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..

12- The DaUy sentinel, Mlddleport·Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday,Jan. 3:.!~~------------------ - - - - - - I

andals hit!
KC school

SYLVIA. JEFFERS
Sylvia Jelters, 81.

rooms.
According to Principal
Robert L. Lanning, the school
was entered between 11 :30
p.m. Monday and ~ a.m.
today. The. achool's security
guard had left the school at 11
p.m.
The intruders appa rently
used a sharp instrument to
'break windows out of the
main office and a door en~
tering Lanning's office.
File cabinets were opened

,.

and papers were thrown
about the floor. Apparently
nothing was taken .
The GaUia County sheriff's
department credited the
school guard at Green
Elementary School with the
:apprehertsion ()( two men
charged with petty larceny In

Ron Erskine and Sam Rogers
were on routine patrol at
Mountain State Chry sler
Plymouth at 11:47 p.m. when
two. cars, traveling south,
drove recklessly off the
Shadle Bridge.
·
The· patrolmen slopped the
cars, at which time, the
driver of one vehicle, Tom

Phillips, Rt. 2, Bidwell, said
the driver of the other car
was after him.
At that time, it was
reported, the driver of the
second car, Clementes,
pointed a gun at the
policemen and shot. He then
proceeded across the Silver
.Memorial Bridge.
The. Henderson officers
radioed the Mason County
Sheriff's Department for
assistance.
In tum. the Gallia County
Sheriff's
Department,
Gallipolis City Pollee and
Ohio Stale Highway Patrol
were called. CJementes drove
to the former ferry landing irt
Kanauga then aba.ndoned his
car behind the Southwestern
Ohio Equipment . Company.
At I a.m. Saturday, the
departments gave up the
ch~se . Later, mementos gave
himself up to the Mason
Count~ Sheriff's 'Department.

the theft of gasolin~ from city
owned school buses.
Joseph Franklin, 24, Rt. 2,
GaUipolis, and Bryan Robert
Evans, 19, Gallipolis, were
booked for petty larceny.
Sheriff'.s deputies also
participa\ed Friday night in a
six area law enforcement
agency chase involving a
Point Pleasant man.
·
Keith Clementes, 18, Point
PleaSllnt, was charged with
brandiShing a firearm after
ASK TOWED
turning himself in to Mason
A marriage Ucense was
Gounty authorities.
· issued to Rober! Lee Reeves,
According to the police Zl, Pomeroy, and Marjorie
report, Henderson patrolmen Marie Gillilan, 23, Pomeroy.

un .ted Methodist Church.

and the Gallla County Health
Board .
,

field, Calif., and Rev . Nor.

man L. Sheets 8ellu ry , Gray ,
Ga. and four grandchildren
survive.
Graveside services will be
held at Mound Hilt Cemetery
1 p.m. Thursday. Friends
may call at Miller's Home for
Funerals from 7 until 9 p .m .
Wednesday .
~
The family _ requests no
flowers and that c on t ributi ons be made to the
American Heart Association.

SHERMAN GORDON

Sherman (Eagle) Gordon,
75, a resident of Gall i polis,
died In Holzer Wledlceil Center
at 10 :45 p.m . Saturday .
Mr. Gordon was born Nov.
6, 1902, in Gal li polis, son of
the tate James F. and Vern ie
Lewis Gordon .
: He was one of two children
born to that union, A brothel' ,
Frank , preceded him in death
18 years ago.
.
·
. He married Melessla Lee in

1923 in

G.alllpolis. The

following ·children were born ·
to this union :
Bobby , Roderick
and

Rudolph, all of Gallipolis:

Frank , Columbus; Mrs .
William · ( Paulmenla) Hutch in son , ·Black fork; Mrs.

ATHENS - Florence E.
Houck'. 78, ol .tO Mapelwood
Drive, Athen•. died Sunday

Harrlsonvltle, died Saturday
evening
at
Veler~ns
Memorial Hospital.
,
Mrs. Gilkey was born ,at
Har risonv i lle, the daughter of
the la te .Ric.hard Monroe and
Phoebe Hewitt Frel'lch . She

u·n lverslty . She was a
member ot the First United

her husband, Floyd Cllrdon
Gllkey ; two grandsons ,

School and allended Ohio
Mel hod lsi Church In Athens

r.m. at lhe .(Lola) Clark, Pomeroy ; Mrs.'
Funera Home. In · ·eon (Eleanor) Updegraff,

Thursday at I

Hughes
Athe·ns wl"th the
Rev . . Birmingham, Alabama; Mrs.
Waldemar Hautt officiating. Fred
(Alice)
Whaley.•
Burial will be In West Union Clearwater,
Fla .;
Mrs .
Street Cemetery . Friends Rober"t (Frances) Alkire.
may cal l2 tl.ll 4 and 1 titl9 on Harrisonville ; two sons,

Wednesday.

Three sons died In Infancy.
Mr. Gordon was employed

F. S. MORRiSON

Wade,

!Madge! Claridy, Xenia.

at the TNT plant and cit)"

J lmmy Gilkey and Mlck

and a 55 year · member of the . Nelson Clark, and two sisters
·Athens Chapter 175 of and three brothers .
Eastern Star.
Mrs. Gilkey was a member
•--survivors Include her of
the
Harrisonville
husband , Orlan G.; one Presbyterian Church , a
daughter, Mrs. Robert (Anna retired school bus and truck
Belle) Hartung of Col umbus ; driver, member of the
one niece, Miss h\argaret E. Harrisonville Lend-A -Hand
Burt of Athens ; one nephew. Club, and she also wrote the
James Burt of Houston, Harrisonville news for The
Texas.
Daily Sentinel for a number
She wa~. preceded In death of years.
by two brothers.
S ~e Is survived by four·
Funeral services wilt be daughters, Mrs . Robert

Columbus and Mrs. William

Sandy '(Thelma)

wasalsopreceded In death by

Frederick S. Morrison, 84,

died Fr iday at Chrlslion

Anchora·ge
Retirement
Center . He was born In

McArthur Nov . 21, 1893, the

Cllnlon Gilkey. Albany, and

Howard
Day
Gilkey,
Columbus ; one nephew,
Robert Bl i zzard , Denver ,
Colo .• several othl!r nieces
and nephews ; 13 grand children, and 15 great .
grandchildren.
Funeral services will be
Wednesday at 1 p.m . at the
Harrisonville
Presbytertan
Church with the Rev . Herbert

Grale ofllclatlng. Burial will

son of the late John Sherman be In Wells Cemetery .
and Emma Satters Morrison. Friends may call at the
He was a farmer In Athe.ns Bigomy .Jordliln
Funeral
Home in Albany any time
He was a member of Paint County .
today. The family will
Include
~;~
Creek . Baptist .church ol . Surv l vQrs
Gallipolis where · funeral brother ,· J . Emmett, of receive friends from 2 to 4
services will be held 2 p.m . Gallipolis ; one sister. Mrs. and 71o9today . The body will
Wednesday with Rev . Grover Edward !Nellie) Culiums of be taken to the church one
hour Prior to services.
Turner, Rev . Elbert McGhee · McArthur.
Graveside s&amp;rvlce·s were
and Rev . John King ofWARREN E. BAKER
held Sal urday at Elk
f iciating.
REEDSVILLE - Warren
The bOOy will lie in state at Cemetery In McArthur wlth
the church one hour prior to the Rev. Howard Shavely E. Baker, 54, Rl. 1, Reedsville, d ted Monday at
officiating .
services.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Burial will be In Pine Street
fo llowing an extended Illness.
Cemetery .
Mr. Baker was born at ·
· Friends may call at
Coclville the son of the late
Miller's Horrie for Funerals
Warren and Martha Kibble
this afternoon and evening .
EVELYN FRAYER
Baker. He was also preceded
Pallbearers will be James
Evelyn Fryer, 79, Rt . 2. in death . by one son. Oal'
Howard, Billy Howard, Rodle Gallipolis.·
died at 6;30 a .m. Eugene.
,
Gordon, E'a gle Whiteous, S~nday at her,home
She had · He w~s a memoer . of the
. Wade and Edward been In falling heallh. the
past Baptist Church,
Drew
. two years.
.
Webster Post, American
Sll~ wa1 born Sept. 5, 1898,
LP.tJinn . former emolove of
al Rock Ll&lt;k, W. Va., the U.S. .CorPs of Engineers,
DALE GLEASON .
Dale GleaSon, 71, a resident ·daugt"lter of the late Lilburn and lor the past -seven years
of VInton , died In Holzer McKinney and Melvina Wall was employed at ~ancaster
McK inney .
Glass Co. He was a yeteran of
Medical Center around 10: 30
She .was twice married. W . W. II.
.
p.m . ~nday .
to
Robert
S.
Mr. ·Baker Is survi ved by
He ~as born Sept. 30, 1906, first
In 1916. He his wife, Wilma Rood Baker ;
on Rt . 2, VInton, son of the Aldr idge,
late Frank and Etta Holcomb preceded her in death In 1939. two sons, · Marvin, Pompano
Her second marriage was to Beach, Fla ., and Roger,
Gleason .
He married Verna Card- Richard L. Frayer In 1942. He · Okeechobee , Fla .,; three
well In 1931 In Calleltsburg, preceded ller In death in 1966. daughters, Nancy; Brewer
The followl~g . c~lidren and Mary Ann Baker,
Ky . Stte survive$, along with
survive ~ Mrs. George Edna)
Okeechobee and Ruih Ann
two daughters. Mrs. Ted
(Helen) Harder, Columb.us ; Davies, Kalamazoo; Mich.; Golden. Cannonville, Ohio;
Mrs. Joan Johnson, Wilkes- Mrs. Robert (Gall) Spaide, two step -sons, Lawrence
ville i one sister, Mrs. Faye Bucyrus, Ohio; Mrs. Worth Rood, Lancaster, and Donald·
Sandllne,
Fort Rood 'a t home; a stepCaton , COlumbus . Four (Aii.~el
Sulpher, La .; Mrs. Clifford daughter, Julie Rood, Lan.
grandchildren su"rvlve.
.ThOrntOn. ·caster: three slsfers, Opal
Mr. Gleason wa·s a retired (Margaret )
lumberman . He was a Gallipolis. Two children died Randolph and Edith Young,
.
R~edsvllle,
and
Betty
member of the Vin ton In Infancy .
E Ieven grandchlldr.en an~ Dickens, Little Hocking; two
Masonic Lodge No ~ 131 ;
Vil"tton OES No. 375·; Vinton 18 great.gr~ndchlldren half-sisters, Lej)ma Hall.
surv ive.
Coolville:
and
Louise
The follOwing brothers and
sisters survive: otto, Foster,
W. Va .; Tracy, Florida; Mrs.

stall which buill lhe
Gallipolis Roller Dam in the
mld·l930.s.

Financipg' s A Snap!
'-J

If you've gor a new or used car
in mind for rhe future ... see
us for speedy financing! We'll
give you rhe cash you need ar
rer'!ls you can afford.

"THE
FRIENDLY BANK"

nalf·b&lt;olllers,

Charlu

Hauber, R.eeds'(llle, and Paul
Hauber, Long Bottom . and
five gr•ndchildren.
FUneral services will be

'

Thursday al 2 p.m. at 1he

lhe Morritng Slar United
AVA MARIE GILKEY
HARRISONVILLE - Ava Methodist Church, the Meigs
Mar ie
Gilkey ,
80, County Farm Bureau, •i!ltld

afternoon at Mt. Carme l
Med ica l Center, Columbus.
Sf1e was born In Meigs
County, the daughter of the
late James H. and Emma
Ed ith Chaney Burt . She was a
graduate of Ath~ns High

Contributions may be made
to the memorial fund of the
First United Methodist
Church In Athens.

maintenance department for
several years . He al so
worked at the GS I and was a
m;emQer of tlie construction

It's Clear!

-HOSPITAL NEWS.

Gtuesencamp, Portland; tWo

Eden
United
Bretkren
Church
with
the
Rev,
Elden
Pomeroy 1 one brother, Jack
Funeral servlcts will be Handley, Allanla, Ga.; lwo Blake officiating . .Burial will
held 2 p.m. Wednesday at sisters, Mrs , Or lando be In the church cemetery .
Ga. died Saturday.
She was bcrn Dec . 16, 1896, Vinton Melllod lst Chufch (Margaret) Jurado. Wood· Siriends may call al the White
at Leon, W. ·Va. daughter of with Rev . C. J. Lei-nley and side, N. Y.. and Mrs. Carl Funeral Home In Coolville
the la te James and Eddllll Rev . John Grelser officiating. (Mary
Sue)
Michael, afler 7 p.m. this evening. The
Burial will be In · Vlntorl Mi nerva, Ohio; and several body will lie In •late at the
Grandstaff Jeffers.
churc f1 one hour prior to
She was employed by Atty. .Memorial Park . •
nieces and nephews.
Fri ends may call this'
Henry Cherrington "and Atty .
Funeral services will be servi ces.
Hollis Johnson· as a legal eve ning al the McCoy.N\oore held Thursday at 10 a.m . at
CLARK B. IHLE
secretary f.or severa l. years. , Funeral Home from 2-4 and 7· the Sacred Heart Church "In
- Clark B. lhle,
She was a graduate of Gallla 9 p.m.
Pomeroy with .the Rev . . 66 RACINE
1 Racine, died
MaSOf1IC services· will be · Father Paul Welton of.
1 • Route
Academy .
.
One brother. Charles •. held 7 : 1~ p.m. by members of flcia llng. Buria l will be In l~e Saturday al Holzer Medical
.
llle VInton LOdge.
preceded~ her In death. One
Sacred Heart Cemetery . Center.
The body wllille In stale ol Friends will be received at 'A son of the late Charles P.
doughier . Mrs . Edgar
(Marton) Ramage, Colum- the c!"turch one ho!Jr prior to Ewing Chapel after 9 a .m. on and Irma Roush" lhle, he Is
preceded In death by ·a
bus, survives. One Sister, the services .
Wednesday . Rosary servlc~s also
Mary - Stampfle . Mr.
Mrs. Lena Tracy, survives.
will be held at lhe funeral si-ster,
One n le(~ arw:t one n~phew ,
.home Wednesday at 7: 30p .m . Ihie Was a dairy farmer all" of
his life. He was a memb,er of
FLORENCE E. HOUCK
Mrs. Nara Douglas, Kemp-

a

resident of Gray arxl Lynn
'Haven Nursing Home. Gray.

Vandals stru ck Kyger
Cree k High School early
today, breaking windows to
gain entrance to the school
office and various class·

l

Area_Deaths

CAROL I,NN HANDLEY
Carol Ann Handley. 41 ,
Gall ipolis, died Dec. B1 In
Gallipolis. Miss Handley was
pretede!l In dealll by her
lather, John F. Handley.
She Is survived by her
mother, Mrs. Helen Handley,

N(M OPEN

Mabel McColgan,

was a director of the Central
Ohio Bree&lt;lers Assn .
su·rvivlflg are ....:.,~s~.wtter­

MIIdred Hellman Ihie; a
M'rs .
Jac k
daugnter ,
!Phyllis) Rely'~~! • Flint,
Mich.; a son, Charles N.,
Racine, and Mrs . Elma
Louks, Syracuse ; a brother,
John lhle , Racine , and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services were held

al 1 p.m. loday at the Ewing

Funera l home wittl the Rev .
Robert Bumgardner and
Mrs . Florence Smith of ·
ficlatlng . Burial was In
Gilmore Cemetery.

MARK HARTENBACH

Mark Hartenbach, 87,
formerly of Pomeroy, died
Saturday at a hospital I f~ East
Liverpool when~, he had
resided the past 30 years.
He was ·a son of the late
Al~rt and Hannah Nease
Harten~ch and , was also

preceded In dealh by two
brothers and a sister. While

in PomerOy, Mr, Hartt)'nbach
was employed with the
Ebersbach Foundry and the
Ebersbach Service Station.
He was atso preceded In

death by his wife . •

Surviving are a brother,
Otto Hartenbach of Miners·

ville; a son. Ed !Happy), and

a daughter, Mabel Dawson,
both of East Liverpool.
Funeral services were held at
East Liverpool. ·

MEETING CALLED
SYRACUSE - Tbere wUI
be a meeting Monday, Jan. 9,
at 7 p.m. at the Syracuse
Municipal Building and all
persons interested In laking
&lt;m~ergency medical training
course under the directioo of
Joe StrUble, Oris Hubbard,
ER Chief, reported.

Veterau Memertal Hitopltal
Satardoy Admluloao Emma Hood , Pomeroy ;
Jessyca Hatfield, Mid·
dleport; Patty Harmon,
Rutland ; Mary Hood,
Pomeroy ; Gladys Hood,
Minersville; Thomas Hen·
dricks, Middleport.
Saturday Dlocbar&amp;e• Danlelle McNeil, Della Stahl,
Joseph Rud&lt;Jlph, Sr., Rita
Swan, Linda Watson, Marvin
Dtlrst.
.Sunday . Admlulou
Stanley Shaver, CheShire:·
Kathryn Metzger, Mid·
dleport.
Swlday Dllcbarges - Ruby
Cooper, Hobart Raub,
Kathryn Denison.
Monday AdmlasiOill - Roy
Reuter, Pomefoy ; Otto
Johnson, Middleport.
· Monday Dlscbarcea Lawrence Wolfe, · Darlene
Barrett.
Holzer Dllchargu
Kemp Beaumont III,
Dlama Clark, Mrs. Ralph
Fisher and daughter, Ruth
Fiske, Earl Gilkey, Anthony
Uoyd, Robert Melvin, Mrs.
Gary Mitch and two infant
sons, Donald Mourning,
Debra Nourse, Tamara
Plants, Marjorie Plymale,
Patricia Porter, Jaflet Reese,
Frank Smith, Jolyn Taylor,
Mary Tracey, Betty Wagner,
Rebecca Walker, Heather
Weaver, Donna White, Mrs.
Marvin Austin and son, Leota
Beaver, Robert Binion, Mrs.
Erskine Blliriton, Jr. and
daughter, Heather Bond,
Donald Canter, Richard
crager, Eric Cr1Jmp, Mrs.
Damy Dobbins and twin
daughters, Eliza Downing,
Thomas Ferguson, Richard
FrankUn, Mrs. Carl Graham
and daughter, Barbara
Grover, Sarah Hawkins;
Randy Hughes, Patricia
James, Elizabeth Janey,
Christopher Lee, Patricia
Lucas, Allen Martin, Dennis
Martin, Sr., ROse . Miller,
Kathleen Moody, Louie
Morris,. Lisa. Neville,
Rebecca Oiler, Stephanie
Oiler, Andrea Rouse, Jennifer . Skaggs, Audra Smith,
Mrs. Jack Stevison and
daughter, Ollie Swain, Mrs.
William Tatterson and son,
Glendon Ward, Emma

Willlamo, Trocey Collins;
Doria Corwin, Mn. Francia

Cottrill al)d oon, Lilarkttte
DIUard, Mrs. David Jeffes-i
and ""'' Harvey OdeU, Mrs"
Ruuell RDse and son, Mrs
Edward Sarver and son,
Paula Spencer, Richard
Turner, Nikid Weaver, Leiter
WilliamS, Jr., Leora W~,·
Christopher
Yates ,
Christiana Dempeey, Mrs;•
Charlea Elliott and daughter~
Mrs. Jack Ga':f'elt and soiloj
Mrs .• Jack McCoy and son·
Mrs. Randy Mealge and son,•
Delbert Milam, Charlei

Miller, Marcus Moore, Mrs ..,-;
Donald
Ratcliff,
arid
daughter, Mn. Marlt: Seberlg;
and son, Mrs. Donal&lt;l
Searln8en and daughter.
~
Blrlhl
&lt;
Mr. and Mrs. Jlobert.;
Elliott, Jackson, a daughter; :
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Garrett,~
Jackson, a son; Mr. arid Mrs ..:
Jack McCoy, Henderson, W. '
Va., a' ""n; Mr. and Mrs. ·
Donald Ratcliff, Crown Clly, :
a daughter ; Mr. and Mrs. _
Mark Seberlg, Ratcliff, . ·~
son; Mr. and Mrs. Floyd, ·
Knapp, Letart, W. Va., a :
daughter ; Mr. and Mrs. '
Richard Corvin, Wellston, a}
daughter ; Mr. and Mrs. :
David Mohler, Rodney, a~
daughter ; Mr. and Mrs.:
Kenneth Sheets, Wellston, a;·
•
son.

-..,
I

.

Court actions
filed in Meigs ..
•'

•
Three suits for divorce aDd ~
one diMolutlm bave been ·
flied in Meigs , County !I
Common Pleas Court. FWng :
for divorce were Myrtle :
Norman, P&lt;meroy, against •
Moses Nonnan, Pomew; ~
Marilyn
Sue
Burke;;.
Pomeroy, against Michael
Thomas Burke, Rt. 3,'
Pome~oy.; VIckie Rempe(
Middleport, against Robert .
llj!mpe, Jr., New !lnlmen./
Rmald Leo Dalley, Rt. 1,'
Portland, and . Ruth Ann .
Dalley, Rjtland, fUed for ·
dlssolutim. Susan Darling
was appointed deputy 8heriff, ·

E·lberfelds In ·Pomeroy
Visit Our Warehouse on
Mechanic Street - Plenty of Free Parking.

.

See the fine selection of GE and RCA TV se1s, GE RefrigeratoJS,
Freezers, Utton Microwave Ovens, Carpet and Unole~m by the
yard, Steel Cabinets, Room ·Size Rugs

'

Elberfelds In,Pomeroy

MIDDLEPORT, OH.JO
· , Member Federal Deposit insurance
·
Cor~r~ion

PHONE 773-5536

IJEPOSITS INSURED TOS40,000 '

mansvllle ; Mrs. Della Jor-

Save for the Day
Your Baby becomes · .
a..Big Wheel on Campus

Hall Jehovah Wltriesses.

Funeral s.,_e'rvlces were he1a
this after~Oon at the Waugh.
Halley-Wood Funeral Home

with

G.

C.

.

Reynolds,

mi nister, officiating . Burial
was In Centenary Cemetery.

Specia,l of the 'Week

WILLIAM SWANSON

Tuesday, Jan. 3 lhru Saturday, Jan. 1

ALL BEEF
HOTDOGS
sPECIAL
PRICE
Foollong theese Dog

Reg. 9Sc

SPECIAL
PRICE
·

40C
60C
'

No lirilit to quantity of purchase. OHe·r goOd ior

Drl•.,.ln or Corrv·Out Service Only.

11 :30 p.m. Monday In Holzer

Medjcal Center.
He had been In falling

employee of Holzer Medical

This special is offered to il(quaint yo" with the
goodness af our Government inspected wieners

and our homemadl sauce.

Texas Rd ., Gallipolis, died at·
. health the 1past two years.
· Mr. Swan,son was a retired

Ct!EESE DOG
(Meal sauce and melted cheese) ·
Reg·. 60c

Life styles change, costs of living escalate,
children seem to rush through infancy
' Into adolescence at a galloping
run. Parents who anticipate rising college costs begin educational savings plans with
Farmers Bank at an early
date . Lefus help you arrange an
interest-accruing savings ac·
count that will grow with
your children, and be
ready for college
when they are .

William Swa nson, 62, Rt. 3!

·

center.
.
He was born Dec. 24, 1915,
In Huntington, .w, Va . son of
the ·1,8te Harry Swanson and
Ka therlne HaIley Swans(ln . .
He never married.
One sister, Mrs . Hazel
Guess, Gallipolis, survives.
Five brothers and one sister

pre&lt;eded'hlm In death.
He spent most of Ills life In
Galli a County. He was a
World War II veteran. having

served In the V. §, Army.
Mr . 1 Swanson

was

a

member of VFW PO!t -U6.&lt;,
and Lafayette Pool No. 27,

.'

·Far·mers·Bank

American Legion,.
Funeral services will be
held 2 p.m. Thursdli!Y at
Waugh-Hatley-Wood Funeral

Home with Rev . Frank Hayes
offlclaflng. Burial will be In

Ohio Valley Memory Gardens.

· Friend• may call at lhe
fu'neral home on Wednesday

from 2-4 and 7·9 p.m.
Mil itary graveside rites
will be held by Post 4-06-4.

• 0

..,

POMEROY, OHIO
'40,000 Maximum Insurance Filr Each Depositor
Member Federal Deposit Insurance CorporatiOn

~28.499.50.

Breakdown of the proposed expenditures of the village
during 1978shows: General Fund, mayor, $2,400; clerk, $3,000;
treasures- , $360; soliciU&gt;r, $2,500; elections, $1,500; council,
.1,440; total, f11,200.
General Administration, personal aervices, $4,500; supplies
and materials, $1,300; capital outlay, 2,000; hydrant rental,
•18,000; total, f38.000.
·
SI!CilfltY of Persons and Property, ,Police· Department,
per!Olnal services, $65,000; supplies and materials; ~600;

meters, fi,OOO; cruiser, $2,01)0, total, $109,600.
Cooununity Environment, BuUding Inspection : PU..nniJu!
Commlsslon, total, $2,500.
Transportation Facilities, street Department, personal
services, $22,500; supplies and materials, , $14,000, other,
$8,500; total, $45,000.
Transportation FacUlties, Street Paving, State Highway ,
personal services, $2,000, other, $3,000, total, ~.000.
Public Health Services, Cemetery Operat&lt;on and
Maintenance, perSQnal services, $13,000; supplies and
'

materials, $2,000, capital outlay, $500, total, $1 ~,500.
Distribution of Electricity, utili y, Other, Ul,OOO. Totsl,
$23,000.
Community Environment, Water System Operations, water
pumping, other, $13,000; water distribution, per!Olnal services,
$35,000; supplies and materials, ·$30,000; capital outlay, $2,000;
other, ..,_,000; total , f80,000. Adminlstrat&lt;on, Water, debt
service, $87,282; other, ISOOi total, S87,782.
Sewer Maintenance, perS()nal services, $10,000; supplies and
materials, $18,000, total, $28,000.

.

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at

e
VOL. XXVIII NO. 185 .

'

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

,4,dministration, Sewage, debt service, $29,000, other $\00:
total, $29,400.
General Bond Retirement Fund, payment of principal,
$4,000, payn1ent of interest , $2,887.[10, total, $9,887.50:
Federal Revenue Sharing, city improvement !und, $20,000;
cruiser, $3,000; cemetery to up date, $200; recreation, $6,000;
total, $29,200.
.
Fire Department, personal services, $4,000; supplle~ and
materials, $5,000; other, $3,630; total, $12,630. Total all
approprlaliWls, $:&gt;28,49!1 .50.

entine
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 4, 1978

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

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

Dr. Brown new council president
Also meeting with council loose and ·suggested lhat the Harold Brown, Lou Oswrne:
may run in the red 1" he said.
Pomeroy Council Tuesday vacancy.
·Larry Webruog , coun- were cemetery trustees ordinance on dogs runnin~ finance committee, Lou
night elected Dr. Harold · Meeting with council were
Osborne, chairman; l.nrry
Kelton ,
Trell loose be eiJ!orced.
Brown its president and Fred members of the Board of cilman, Indicated lbal be Aar9Jl
Mayor Andrews pointed out Wehr ung, Lnrry Powell";
and'
Ja ck
Crow, Jr., W8$ retained as Public Affairs , E . F . would not approve the in· S{))(oenleb
solicitor. Council also rehired Robinson and Harry Davis. crease wilb lhe type of waler Scidenabel. Council told the that all a person hus lo do Is nrdinaru·e &lt; 'Ui fllllittt~c . llnroltl
Jack Krautter as street Robinson indicated to council being supplied to Pomeroy oi trustees that they felt that swea r out a wHrrant and an Brown , ch ulrmun , J.o\.i
cards should be mailt'&lt;l to arrest witt be ll)Bd-e. It was · Osborn e,- Larry Powe ll ;
commissioner and named that water rates will have to lhe present time.
su rety and purkl ng com·
ow
ners of lot s at th e su~e&amp;1ed thul the ordinance
Robinson admitted the
Donnie Ward his assistant. be raised soon. He said the
·
mittec, .lim Ncut~Jing,
be
revised
and
L'll!orced.
board
is
"very
disappointed"
C.metery,
asking
$5
per
year
Mayor Clarence Andrews board of public ilf!airs thus
chairmuu.
Lou Os bumc,
maintenance
on
five
grave
Mayor
An.
d
rews
re·
far
has
managed
to
pay
all
with
the
.quality
of
water,
read the' resignation of
Hurold
Brown;
utilitle! tmd
a
ppointed
Jcf
Webster
chief
"but
we
do
have
plenty,"
he
lots.
The
truStees
thought
this
bills
and
have
~
small
Rober! H. Hysell •from the
CO!t"un lttc c,
Boa'rd of Public Affairs and balance. At the present rate noted. He said when the ·a good idea and will pui it into ·. of police and named the sani t ~Hipn
.
following committees for the William Y o !ln~ . chuh·mon,
council named Dale Smith, of expenses Wlless a rate ·Stiffler fire occurred that if operation.
Ncutzling,
Lnrr y
W. N. Bellamy of the year: building cominltlee, Jim
increase
is
obtained,
"we
they
had
not
been
on
the
former
mayor,
to
fill
the
JOHN M. GWYD
present water system Columbus and Southern Ohio Larry Powell , chairman , Wchruug; mobil r homes,
William Yu un K: · Street
Pomeroy ci&gt;uld have lost the Electric Co ., presented a cost
committee,
J.nrry Wrlwung,
on
the
present
street
sheet
entire lower block.
chulnnan, William Yn un~.
Brown suggested that lighting on Main and ~ond
resea rch to improve the Streets and the parking lot
In c r easin g c loudin ess Jim Ne ulztlng.
'111c mayor's rcpo1t for
and
cost
estimates
·on
tonight
with a low in the mid
water
be
done
and
a
financial
John M. Gloyd, 44, who has 1956, and attended Franklin was an internal auditor for a past six years he has been
December
in the umount or
chang
ing
from
mercury
statement
be
submitted
to
~s . Chance of showers or
been appointed executive University In Columbus for private corporation and a with The First National Ban~
$.1,:145.20
wns
rcntl ami llC·
vapor
to
high
pressure
snow
nurrles
11Jursday'
with
council
from
the
Board
of
vice · president of the two yeats. He is a graduate of state agency for !ive years. of Warren County at Morrow,
ecplcd
.
Co
uncil
&lt;'rlt~rod Into 11
sodium.
high
tem
perature~
aboul
40.
Public
Affairs.
It
wai
noted
Pomeroy National Bank, has the American Institute of He was an assistant national . Ohio where he bas been a vice
· ICHSt' ngrCPI/ICII\. With the
·
Council
.
will
st
udy
th
e
Probability
o!
prl
"
Cipitation
!hat
there
are
1,100
users,
Banking and the Ohio · bank examiner based in president and cashier.
begun his new duties.
Reared . on a farm ' ln Bankers Assn. School.
ACtive in civic groups, half of which use the prop()sa ls . and malte a 10 percent today, 2D percent Pomeroy E ll Squml to rcmlcr
Columbus and for six years
decision later .
tonight and 31 percent scry•ic~;:s l&lt;i the v llla).{c of
Madison Counly, Ohio, Gloyd · Gloyd was employed as a ·served with The Peoples Gloyd is 'a past president of minimum.
·-· POmeroy.
The Board of Public Affairs
Wehrung said letters of · '1l1~rsday .
· is a 1952 graduate of London teller with City National National.Sank o! Greenfield, both the Warren County and
Th e rnceting wns O)Jcned bY
conunendation
is
to
meet
and
present
to
should
be
sent
High School. He served as a Bank and Trust Co. in Ohio as an assistant cashier the Highland County Bankers
to
those
responsible
!or
the
co
uncil
at
the
next
meet1ng
YOU
prayer by Lou · O•bor nc.
medic in the U. S. Navy, 1952· Columbus for four years and ~nd a branch manager. The Assn. He is a past , clerk·
.'
.
Attending wei'C Muyor All·
treasurer of the Greenfield its suggestion on the amount attractive Christmas lights
of
increase.
·
·
that
gra
ce
d
the
vlll
ag.
e
The
Jefferson
Memoria
l
in
d"rews,
· Br own , ·' Ncutzling,
~
Lions Club anrl a member of
streets
this
holiday
season
.
Washin·
g
ton,
D.
C.,
wa
s
O~ b o rn e, l.mry Powell.
The
utility
committee
are
'the Lebanon Kiwanis Club.
Jim Neutzling , councilman , dedicated April 13, 1943, the W e hruo~ and Young, connell
He is a current director of the also to meei before the next
staled that his daughter had ~h BMiversary o£ '111ornn s mernl..lt!r!i, omd June Wnlton,
regular
meeting
of
council
in
Lebanon Chamber of Com·
been bitten by a dog running Jefferson's birth.
regard to cost of utilities.
clerl&lt;.
merce .
Marrieq, Gloyd and his
wife , Nancy, have four
children, John Michael,
By liELEN THOMA!!
will be coming to Jerusalem,
Columbus; Terry L., servin~
UPJ White nouse Reporter
planning to play a very strong
in the U.S. Navy in CaliforPARIS (UPIJ - President role, working closely with
nia; ·Lori of Lebanon, and
. Carter arrived today in rain' you, ·and I . think our
Usa who Is a sophomore at
swept Par!s on a flight from consultations with the Shah
Lebanon High SchooL · Mrs.'
'J~awan, Egypt, where he and · (of Iran ), King Hussein (of
Gloyd is attending Miami ·
President Anwar Sadat Jordan), King Khaled (of
Wendell Hoover was
agreed on a compromise Saudi Arabia l and you will reelected president and Mrs. University where she is
solution to the emotional pr~re us well.
.
Jenuifer Sheets was named majoring in nursing. The
lsaue of a future Palestinian
"When we leave here I will vice president of the Meigs couple has three· grand·
homeland
call
Prime
Minister Local School District Board children.
Gloyd is presently residing
carter, in remarks to Sadat (Menahem) Begin (of Israel ) of Education Tuesday night
in
Pomeroy and wiU move ~is
before leaving, raised the on .the phone to expand your in its organizational session
family
to Meigs County next
posslbllity that he would visit good wishes and also to at the Meigs Junior High
summer.
Jerusalem at some unstated prepare
for
(words School in Middleport.
time ·in the future .
inaudible) for Jerusalem.
The board set the regular
Carter, in his second
"But the most di'amatic meeting nigh\ this year for
arrival. ceremony of the day, impression I heve is U&gt;tal the thir~ Monday of ·each
was greeted by President support for your efforts and month at 7:30 p.m. with the
Vplery ·Giscard d'Estain.g also admiration for your exception of January when
•
who expressed hopes thell' (inaudible word).
the bQard . will meet on the
two days of talks would lead
"You can tell I heve read 12th . Pay for · members
U&gt; a more brotherly' a more. the papers. I will never forget beginning new terms, Carol
·united and a safer world.
when we had a chence to Pierce and Hoover, was set
U.S.·French relations are meet for the first time ."
at $40 a month while the pay
•
at their highest point in years
After
the
arrival for those completing terms
on COI!flcil,.was named to council to flU the unexpired term
COUNCIL SWORN IN - Council members were
and Carter replied with ceremonies at Paris' Orly was set at $20 a month in
By 'PAUL WEDEL
. of the late Elma Russell and this was his first time to rw&gt;
' sworn in Tuesday night by Mayor Clarence Andrews. Left
thanks for the help France field Carter was driven accordance
with
new
lor the office. Young, Wehrung and Neutzllng nrc new
BANGKOK, Thailand
to right are Lou Osborne, Bill Young, Larry Wehrung,
gave to the United states in immediately in a motorcade legislation·
(UP!) - Elements of six
members.
Mayor Andrews and Jim Neutzling. Osborn , who has been
its war of independence and to the Arch of Triumph to lay
The salary of the board Vietnamese divisions
recalled the Allied invasion of a wreath'' at the Tomb of the clerk for the year was set at supported by tanks and
Normandy ·which Carter will Unknown Soldier. Then came $15,000 and a service fund of fighter bombers now occupy
visit Thursday.
an offieiallneeting with Gis- 50 cents a student was set for most of the " Parrot's Beak"
Carter flew into Aswan card and 1.a speech this expenses of board members area of Cambodia, Thai
from Riyadh, Saudi Arabia afternoon .. to the French in traveling to various intelligence so urces said
.•
meetings. Liability insurance U&gt;day . .
earlier today and·was greeted National Msembly.
there by several thousand
Ris talks with Glscard were was purchased for members
The ,.,urces said fighting
Emtlans chanting, "Peace! expected • ·to cen(er on and it was voted to join the was · continuing in the 8()().
We want peace!" The same economic problems including Ohio School Boards assn. . square·mile Svey Rieng ·
Supt. Charles Dowle'r was province of Cambodia, caUed
crowds cheered him off with help to Third world Nailons;
shouts of "Long live Carter, energy and the defense of named to serve as the board's the Parrot's Beak by U.l?.
the mlln of peace !'
Western Europe! They see agent to receive and expend troops who fought there
Carter talked with Sadat eye to eye ·on most world federal funds . Charles during the Vielnam War In
for only - 50 minutes but in problems although there ar&lt;! Hamilton, president of the 1970.
their brie-f summit they sharp differences over Meigs Athletic Boosters, who
ln(onilation on the fighting
• . agreed in principle that the nuclear policies with the .attended the meeting , was involving tanl!s, an estimated
Palestinians Should have the French fully as stubborn on given permission to establish 60,000 Vietnamese belonging
a Meigs Local Athletic Hall of U&gt; six" divisions, and 25,000
right to self-determination- their stand as the Indians.
an apparent shift in U.S.
Carter wiU travel by train Fame with details to be Cambodians remains sketchy
policy and one that ran into . 1biD'Sday w the beaches of worked out with the Meigs and aU sources spoke of
iml1ledlate Israeli opposition. Normandy to pay homage to Local Athletic. Boalii. Mary receiving conflicting reports.
The Paris reception was the thousands of Americans Kay Yost was reappointed to
The · fighter bombers
more restrained than the one and allies. who died there on a seven year term· on the involved, the . sources said,
In Egypt. A SO!!,gy rain was . D•Day. On Friday he Middleport
Pomer.or most likely were Ilk powerful
falling and tbe\!:ed carpet , journeys to Belgium and 'Library hoard and Bonnie propelled-driven Als left hi
squlshed as carter stood on it returns to WaShington at end Fisher was · named high · Vietnam by the United States
with the fool taller Giscard of his nine-day' trip.
school girls track coach.
· before the 1975 fall of Saigon.
for the traditlooal playing of
Vandallam in the district
In a related development,
the national anthems.
was discussed at which time the Soviet Union Tuesday for
Carter looked fit and
it was estimated that losses in the first time pablicly bltmied
tanned on this the sixth stop GARBAGE USE
the last breaking and en· its Communist rival, China ,
in bla seven-nation visit, In
CINCINNATI (UPI ) -City tering at the school will run for provoking.the l!order war
were sworn in . Tuesday night by Mayor Clarence
SWORN iN - Left to ri~t, Gerl Walton, treasurer,
contrast to the gray 81ld · officials. are considering a about $6,000 with some In- that reportedly has Cliuaed
Andrews.
ljarry
Davis,
member-of
the
Board
of
Public
Affairs,
and
soggy day that dampened the proposal to allow the city to surance coverage. lloover more than · 2,500 casualties
unlfumu1 of the armed forces dispose o£ Its garbage by and Pierce. were given their since It began last spring .
ai)d the plumed, silver recycling some of· it and oath of office by Clerk Jane
A Radio Moscow report
belmets of the ceremonial processing the rest into ' Wagner.
moniU&gt;red in Hong Kong said,
Garde Republicalne,
fuel.
- · Oth.e r board . members "The worsening relations be•
It was in As wan thai
The private firm that drew pr&lt;Jient were Mrs. Sheets, Dr. tween the SociaUsl Republic
· Carter's
remarks
as' up the plan, Ohio Energy · Keith Riggs and Virgil King. of Vietnam and Kampuchea
The Meigs · County Coni· meet ioon with department Thomas, LincPln · Hill , discussed at length and will
overheard by photographers Conversions, Inc., has asked Present · also were Supt. (Cambodia) has' o)r4ously mission Tuesday . night· representatives to discuss Pomeroy, was appointed a . be continued in a speCial
sugge1ted he may be the cijty council to give Dowler; Dwight Goins, ad- been provoked by Peking." agreed to hold iL• · annual budget problems.
citizen member-at~ large . session Thursday, Jan . ~ at
plannlni a tiip to Jei1i8alem preliminary approval before ' .mlnlstratlve assistant; Dan
Banker Thereon Johnson, Both appointments are for a 9:30 a.m . Attending were
Vietnam has received most organizational meeting
following his .. Egyptian the company begins a Morris,
director-"- of of it1 war material support Monday, Jan. 9 at 6:30 p.m. Rl. 2, Racine, w.as appointed term commencing Jan. I, Henry Wells, Richard Jones,
· otopover.
feasibility study.
,
CUrTiculum; Charles I.Jcjwnie from · Moscow,
The board discussed high- county member-at·large. to 1978 and ending Dec. 31, 1980. and . Jim Roush, com·
while
l'hotollrapbers heard him
U!Y.ler tbe project·, Klass of the Meigs Local Teachers Cambodia leans toward way
department . ap· the Meigs County Planning
County Welfare ·Depart· missioners and Mary Hobtell Sadat, \'We catmollet this and metal would be l'emoved Assn., and Bob Morris, Peking.
proprlations but came to no Commission and Elesnor menl operations and ap- s&lt;etter, clerk.
.,
'opportunit( slip away. We from R•' ·bage for recycling. • el~entary principal.
I
final &lt;jtcision. The board will
propriations for 1978 .Were
Continued gn rage 2

Gloyd new executive vic-: president

Weather

Now

Know

Board
renames
H' oo
' ver

Carter achieves
Sadat agreement

Cambodia

Chap-

Hatnor, Huntington . Four
brothers preceded her In
death. She had resided In
Gall Ia County sir1ce 1944. She
was a mem,ber of Kingdom

Pomeroy Village Council Tuesday 1\ight approved its
ltllllual appropriations ordinance for 1m in the ,amount of

•
commgm
.

mansvHie, W. Va .; Mrs.

don, Shade ; Mrs. Myrtle

Pomeroy spending to top $lhmillion

War threat

Sale Priced.

Edna Sexlon, also of Chap.

GINO'S
OF MASON

'

Commission has budget· problems

..

14

.

•

,

•

�•
2- The Daily Serltinel, Middleport-Pomerov. 0 ., Wednesday, Jan. 4, 1978

'

FUNNY BUSINESS

Today's _

Breac_h of co.n tract alleged in suit
A Pomeroy businessman,
Dennis Boothe, 326\2 West
Third St ., has filed a $5!2,820
judgment action in GaUia
County Common Pleas Court

ag ainst

Marlin

Kerns ,

Gallipolis.

According t o the complaint, , Coalro thereby entering into
Boothe and Douglas Enoch a rontract by both parties .
Plaintiff says the defen·
and others are owners of a
business known as Coalco dant gave him checks
Mining Corporation. Boothe . totaling 122,500 but later
claims that Kerns agreed to stopped payment on some of
purcha se his interest s in the checks with the net result

being that the actual ron·
sideration received was
$4 ,679.68.
Plaintifl charge!!. that
defendant's failure to deliver
the agreed purchase price is
a material breach of the

Hopeful signs in Southeast A.sia
-

lly ALAN PAWSON
BANGKOK, Tbailand
(UPI ) - The shrill sounds of
propa ganda are
being
dt·owned out by the noise of
tltc airplane engines shutUing
senior government &gt;Officials
between Southeast Asian
capitals.
.
·
From all the diplomatic
scurrying now on , Southeast
Asio may settle at last into a
!JUSt-Vietnam position .
"They 're tr ying to get their
poliCies straight, " said one
ex perien ced
Western
diplomat of the current
shuttles.
" But more than that,
there 's some very , very ·
hopeful sigrLS - even, an
optimis t might say, a
mo vement toward some
pence in the area," said one ~
To hermit Cll~dia in
recent weeks have gone the
presidents of Burma and
Laos, the foreign minister of ·
· Mulaysia and the deputy
. foreign minister of China.
A Vie tnamese ambassadoratlarge has visited Bangkok,
the Malaysian foreign
mini ster has visited Burma,
~ " Burmese president has
been to China and North
Korea, and the Thai prime
minister reportedly soon will
visit China and the Soviet
Union . · Vietnam '
s
Communist Party chief has
visited both P.eking and
Moscow.
·
The Vietnamese foreign
minister, Nguyen Duy Trinh,
Hlso has been travelling. He
.went to the United Nations
bJSt fall, and is schedu led to
visit Indonesia, and possibly
the
'J'hai la rid, · over
Chri s lmas-New
Year 's
v:1cation period.
111e first effect of all this

has been to mute the most Communist governments,
scurrilous of the propaganda and partil!lllar ly those of
Indochina.
from S&lt;Jutheast Asia.
Vietnam and Laos have
Even Radio Phn001 Penh,
which rarely has more tNin responded to the ,T hai
scorn for Cambodia ' s neigh· oveltures with cautious, facebors, has recently stressed . to-face meetings . c.tlnbodian
the positive and has declared officials have Indicated they
Cambodia has nothing but might talk over border
differences and the Chinese
peace oo its mind .
All of this has done little as · invited Kriangsak to Peking.
Singapore Premier Lee
yet to halt the killing and
otller activity on the ground K~n Yew said during a
recent visit to Bangkok that
in S&lt;Jutheast Asia.
Particularly on the Thai- area stability is the goal of
Cambodian frontier, . a .. the dipiO!Il,tiC moves and
possible flash point among said Tbailand should not be
the many conflicts, Khmer allowed to go communist.
think we have a
Rouge
attacks
have
cootinued lor 11 months.
Thailand - in an apparent
effoct to keep a cool atmosphere conducive to talks has continued to consider the I .
fighting local, border matter.
Phnom Penh has been
H~RSH EL G. BURKHART
officially silent on the border
Hers hel
G.
I Tony')
war .
.
Burkhart,. 62, S. Front St .•
And in many cases, partici- Middleport, d ied Monday
Veterans
pants in the government-to: afternoon a t
government talltl are r ebel Memorial Hospital.
Mr . Burkhart . was born
forces, · uninvolved in the June 10. 191S at Newton, W.
t'llrrent diplomatic talks.
Va .. a son of the late Robert
" But practically all the and Ann Hall Burkhart. He
governments are talking to was a car sa lesman In West
Virginia a num ber of years.
all the other governments,"
Surviving are his wife,
said an Asian diplomat Helen E. Vaug han Burkhart ;
stationed in Bangkok. ''At two -. sons, Ri chard G.,
least there is room for some Charl es t on, W . Va ., and
Robert W., Nitro, W. Va .; a
optimlsm .11
,
da ug hter ,
Mr s .
Artt-1ur
A key to the optimism is the (Beverly Sue ) Taylor .
new,
military
Thai Charleston ; a brother, John
goverrunent ,and its prime R.1 · Orlando, Fla.; a ha lfDavid Llncolnogger,
minister , fourstar Gen . brother,
Hurricane, w·. Va., and 10
Kriangsak Chamanand , grandch ildren.
~
Kriangsak seized power last
· Funeral services will be
hel_d at l,p.Jll . Thursday a1 the
· Oct. 20.
-Coa t s
·Funeral
Altnost imnlediately aft/'r Rawlings
Home with the Rev . Elmer
officially taking olfice Nov. Geiser officiating . Burial will
II, Kriangsak let it be known be in Vinton M emoria I
. publicly a nd privately that he .Gardens at Vi nton. Friends
call at 1he funeral home
·favored some so rt of may
toda y from 2 to 4 and 7 1o 9
rapprochement with p.m .

~""' Lawrence

seeking S75,000 judgment
against Lorene G. Johnston,
Wellston, as · a result of a
traffic accident Jan . 7, 1976 in
Gallla County.
The accident occurred on
SR 160 in Huntington Twp.
Plaintiff Betty Capehart was
a. passenger in a car driven
by Ruth E. Thomas. She says
Miss Johnston was negligent
In driving her car into the
Thomas vehicle.
Mrs. Capehart says as a
result of tlfe accident she
received injurtes to. the face,
neck and ankle and incurred
medical expenses and a loss
of income. She seeks $50,000.
Her
hu sband ,
Lloyd .
Capehart, seeks an additional
$25,000 damage for loss of the
services and ronsortium of
his wife. They demand a jury
t rial.

·Sport Parade
By MILTON RIQIMAN

.

DALLAS (UPI ) - Television didn't pick up everything in the

Cotton Bowl crusher that gave Notre Dame the national

·.

championship, and one of the things it missed was how a
severe kick in the face failed to keep a pair of Irish eyes from
smiling.
Terry Eurlck, Notre Dame's feisty little fullback who ~red
a pair of touchdowns against Texas, still is walking around
smiling today although those stitches in hiS ctlin hurt a little
every time he does.
" What's ·a few stitches compared with being No. I?" says
Eurick, -who was kicked so hard that the inside oJ his mouth
was tom open. " I was putting my tongue through the hole for
the rest of the game. They stitched me up aU through my
mouth after the game. It's just a little battle mark I'll always

•·

remember."

e lt111JfHEA Int., 1.M.All. U.S. PI!, Oil,

)

1

JESSIE TALCOTT
Jessie Talcott, 82, died
Tuesday in the Lake Manor
Nursing Home in Denver:.
Colo . She was a native of
Gall\a· Coun ty, dlllughter of
the la te J . T . Hall and Lovlna
May M cDaniel Hall.
She is surv i ved by two sons.
Mar ion f()rlyn lowks of
Columbus , and Maurice E.
Lowks of Hide-A-Wa y Hil ls,
Ohio. Also five grandch ildren
ant(
serveral
great.
grandchi ldren survi ve . One
daugh1er preceded her in·

death .
She is also survived by two
sisters and one brot t"ler : Mrs.

Will

Queen

!Coral

United Press International
Some 600 striking United
Mine Workers, armed with ax
handles, hunting knives and
g uns, invaded eastern
Tennessee Tuesday, vowing
to
block
post-holiday
resumption of production at
non-union soft coal mines.
others burned equipment in
Indiana, and two strikers
were hit by a car on a

Pennsylvania picket line.
Miners entering Tennessee
from neighboring states traveled In a caravan of about 200
cars, heavily outnumbering
area law enforcement .
officers. Two UMW strikers
run
down
in
were
Pennsylvania when a mine
superintendent tried to drive
his car through a picket line
blocking a mine entranee.

HOSPITAL NEWS

of

Springife ld ; .Mrs . Stan ley

The two pickets were weeks by roving pickets who
treated for minor injuries and moved into the area before
a warrant was .issued lor the the holidays.
arrest of 'the superin·
In Indiana, a caravan of
tendent. ·
. ·
about 75 cars swooped down
1 n W a s h I n g t o n , Tuesday on two oon-unloh
negotiations to setUe tlle five- mines In the IIOuthem part of
week strike ~Y 188,000 UMW the state. Windows were
miners remained recessed broken and a bulldozer set
with no date set for afire at the Heritage Hills
reswnption &lt;Jf talks. Each mine near Holland, Ind., and
side blamed the other for the three pieces of equipment
rollapse of negotiations.
were set ablaze at ·another
Anderson County, Tenn ., mine near Santa Claus, Ind.
Slerlff Dennis Trotter said . Somerset County . Pa . ,
the out-of-state pickets Sherif! Donald May said a
moved
in
convoys warrant was issued for mine
around . the New Ri·v- superintendent · Ronald Cor!
er . and Wlndrock areas of following the picket line
eastern Ti!nnessee. He said incident at a Lunar Mining
.he had all available men on Co. mine In Quell!ahonlng
the roads keeping an eye on . Township. May said one of his
the situation.
deputies also was hit by the
"But there's not much we superintendent's car but did
~ do/ ' )1e said. "They not require treatment.
, outnumber us 40 to one and if
Scattered violence was reanything happened there ported for - the second
wouldn't be much we roul&lt;l · ronsecutive day T u e s d a y
do. "
in southwestern Virginia.
Most mines in eastern Authorities reported rock and
· Tennessee either are non- bottle throwing Incidents
union or have miners near Wise ,- Va ., and several
affiliated witll the S&lt;Juthem drivers for non-w)ion co8l
l..abor Union . They hav,e been companies were Injured
. shut down for about tllree none seriously. . .

Veterans Memorial Hospllal
Pleasant Valley Hosplial
Admissions Ronald
Discharged - · La\lada
othet sur vivors include a Dillon, Sr., Reedsville; Harry
Keener, Point Pleasant;
stepmot he r, Mrs . J . T . Hall of Hayma_
n, Pomeroy i Bessie Shannan Gillenwater,
Gallipqlls and t hr ee . hal fsisters : Mr$ . John Plymale Hysell, Minersville ;· Samuel Gallipolis; Harold Clark,
(Marjory) of Gallipolis: Mrs. Long, Gallipolis; Judy Miller, Point Pleasant; Frank
William Ja_nes (Matilda) of Middleport; Edith Wood,
Henson, Point Pleasant ;
Gal lip oli s and · Mrs. Joe
Coo lville ; Elizabeth Donald Wood, New Haven ;
Th om pson [ Ella Louise) of
Beaumont, · Reed sv ille; Densil Barnhart, Oak Hill,
Jackson .
Funeral services wil l be in Gertrude Drake, Vinton;
Ohio ;
Elias
Hatfield ,
th e Howard Park Funeral Ruby Cooper, Portland ;
Gallipolis; Okey Keefer ,
Home in Denver .
y.tilliam Miller, Sr., · Shade ; Poiilt Pleasant; Mrs. Douglas
JOHN NEAL
·Charlotte
Kuhn, New Haven; Stewart and daughter, West
John O' Dell Neal , 74, was
Ginther,.
Chester; Columbia; Melissa and
Florine
found dead a t hi s home on Rt .
2, Bidwell, around 6 a . m .
Linda Watson, · Racine ; Melinda ·Smith,
Pblnt
toda y.
Daniello McNeil, Shade; Pleasant; Misty Wallace,
He was born March 22,
Steve Burton , Rutland ; . Pliny;
Spencer · Hunt,
.1903.
Lawson Beha, Guysvillle ; Gallipolis ; Unuel .Wllson Ill,
Funeral arrangements w i ll
be announced Thursday by
Douglas Freeman, Cheshire ; Point Pleasant ; Shane
Mil ler's Hom e- for Funerals .
Pauline Brewer: Reedsville; Shields, Letart; Lester·
E.lamb,
Debora Wander, Shade ; Putney Sr .. Gallipolis Ferry;
Peggy White, Minersville.
Mrs . Delbert Williams,
Glennie Gallipolis Ferry; Jan Riggs,
Di scha r ges AIRCRAFT SEARCH
AIR FORCE ACADEMY, Little, l..arry Spencer, Oscar
CLEVELAND (U PT )
Colo. (UP!) - Tom Backhus, Price, Mary King, PreS)on West Colwnbua.
Births :... Tuesday, Jan. 3 The Coast Guard searched 28; a former Ohio State Parsons, Fannie Miller.
A
son to Mr. and Mrs.
western Lake Superio r linesman and an offensive
Michael HarbOur, Mason; a
Tuesday for a single..,ngine line coach at the University of
son to Mr. and Mrs. James
aircraft overdue from Silver Wiscnnsin for the past two
Holzer Medleal Center
McKinney, Point Pleasant.
Bay, Minn., to Waupaca, years, Tuesday was named
· I Discharges, Jan. 3)
Wednesday, Jan. 4 - A son
Wise.
but
found
nothing.
offensive
line
coach
for
the
Ada Burge,. SaUy Ervin,
the spinach itself. 'There is
CANTON, Ohio (UP!) - · jobs was not announced. The
to Mr. and Mrs: Charles
ne,
a
Pip
er
The
pla
Ai~
Foree
Academy
.
Henry,
Vanessa
Wesley
not enough oxalic acid in the
Teachers
within the Canton cafeteria workers,
The
selection
was Johnson, Mrs. Floyd Knapp Blake, Pomeroy. ·
• City School System were maintenanee employees, bus
leaf, however , to bind Cherokee- with one man on
calciwn and iron present in board, departed Silver Bay announced by Falcon head and daughter, Joshua Miller,
under a court order to return drivers a nd others are
to their classes today, but ·a represented by two locals of
other foods in the diet. So you lat e Monday night and coach Bill Parcells, who now Henry N ~:cwman , Lance
can't use spinach as an .effec- reportedly had enough -fuel to has completed his coaching Reese, Emma Rogers, · Lois
Canton Professional the Ohio Association of Public
Educator ,s Association School Employees (OAPSE ),
tive food source for .iron and .last until Tuesday afternoon . ·staff . Parcells was named Sims, 'Evelyn Winter,
The pilot wa s listed as H.J. h.ead coach De c. 13,
Births Jan. 3
calcium, but it will not preofficials
said the strike would which last week agreed to
(Contllllied from page 1)
Mr. and· Mrs. Gary l..amm,
vent you from getting 'it In Dunbar, Waupaca, ·and . the succeeding Ben Martin.
continue
until teachers got a join the teachers' strike.
The Cambodians, historic
Backhus becomes the sixth a son, Bidwell . Mr. and Mrs.
pay increase .
other foods , and there is no aircraft's identifica ti on
have
Both contracts
enemies of the Vietnamese,
Tuesday, Stark County clauses permitting the
reason you should not Include · number is N8215C, according assistant picked by Parcells. · Randy Van Meter, a son, have accused Hanoi of trying
Common Pleas Judge Iran reopening
spinach in your diet. It does to the Coast Guard's Ninth Previously selected were Ken Clifton, W. Va.
of
wage
to take over Cambodia and
Turpin issued a temporary negotiations this year. The
rontain other Important com- Distr ic t !leadquarters, Hatfield as offensive . coorfor-C. It to join a Vietnamdinator, AI Groh as defensive
restraining •order ·requiring board has . said it ,has no
pounds s uch as folic acid and Cleveland.
dominated " Indochinese
Ray
Handley
as
coordinawr,
in
the
sear
ch
Participating
other vitamins.
·
teachers
to return to their money for raises.
FIREFIGHTERS INJURED Federation."
classrooms.
Calcium and iron can also are a fixed-wing aircraft and offensive backfield coach ,
CINCINNATI ( UP! ) The court order. issued by
Despite their unquestioned
About 80 percent of the 909 Turpin came in response to
be bound by . the husk of a helieopter from the Coast Craig Randali as defensive Four Cincinnati firefighters ability to crush Cambodian
teachers in the system, which separate suits fUed by the
C!'real grains. Oalmeal is a Guard's Traverse City Air· line eoach and administrative Buffered minor injJII"Ies late resistance and lake Phnom
assistant, a nd Walt Harris as ·
includes two high s~hools, school boa~d naming the
good example. They contain a Station.
Monday while batt)ing a Penh, the Vietnamese have
defensive. secondary coach.
four junior ' higbs and six CPEA and the OAPSE for an
substance called phytin that
blaze in . two apartment not been reliably reported
Backhus, a native of
elementary schools, stayed order to terminate the Strike.
causes this. Since most peobuildings in 'tlle city's Mt. moving beyond the Parrot's
C incinnati, was a starting
home Tuesday for the first
ple use milk on their cereal,
Adams section. ·
The teachers' starting pay
Beak area, whictl juts Into
guard at Ohio State on .the
of classes after the is $8,800, sald • Rubenstein,
day
this outweighs the problem
The buildings were heavily Vietnam at Tay Ninh
CHICAGO
( UP()
Buckeyes '
Big
Ten
holiday vacation .
with cereal.
which was below the median
Offensive coordina tor Sid Confer~nce championship by the fire, but no occupants province .
Alan Rubinstein, head oi of 617 districts In Ohio.
I would like to . offer one Gillman and defensive
of the structures were
In
today's
·broadcast
from
teams in l!lfi8 and 1969. He
the Canton . Professional
word of caution. Since the backfield
Both sides had been
coac h
R oss remained in Columbus as a injur~d .
Phnom
Penh,
the
Educators Association negotiating with a federal
husk or fiber in the cereal is. Fichtner have resigned from
Ice
formedinside
and
Cambodians said they were
graduate assistant to Woody
(CPEA ), ·complained that mediator until the talks broke
the problem, people who are the Chicago Bears roaching
Hayes for two yealJl before , outside the buildings as harvesting rice in Srok Tbong
on a whole cereal and bran staff, Coach Jack Pardee moving to the University of firefighters sprayed '!Vater in Khmum, an area just north of teachers have not had a pay off last week, prompting the
raise for 15 months and said employees' decisions to
husk program for their bowel announced Tuesday.
l:klegree temperatures. One the Parrot's Beak, Indicating
Tampa for a season.
firefighter
suffered
a
hip
the strike would continue strike.
should be certain they are
Backhus moved to Iowa
the Vietnamese have not
teachers got a
until
getting adequate amounts ol
Injury
when
he
fell
through
a
State in I 973 and was
moved very deep Into
"reasonable
"
salary
iron in the diet. An excess of
hole
in
one
of
the
structures
offensive guard and center
Cambodia at that point.
increase.
~ ·whole cereals with marginal
others.
suffered
and
three
·coach for two seasons before
Some
experieneed
In
a
related
development,
injuries
when
they
'
dietary iron could lead to an
back
WAHAMA (641 - PhH becoming offensive line
observers
believe
the
iron deficiency ..) do not think Hobbs 9-5-23 ; Rick Barnltz 6- coach in 1974, He moved to ~lipped on ice and fell.
Vietnamese will sit on their Nathaniel Roberts, a teacher
this has been given adequate 2-14 ; Rick Buzzard 3-l-7 ; Wisconsin ·as offensive line
gains, · continue to call for of mathematics at one of the .
six elementary schools, died
ronsideration to date in the Char lie Zuspan J-0·6i Kefvl n coach the next season.
negotiations and await world
Honaker
4.0-8; · Todd
. )Vake of. the enthusiasm for Rawlings
A large crowd was on hand
2-0-4:
· Greg
and · espeeially Chinese Tuesday of a heart attack
.TilE DAILY St!NTINEL
suffered while. he was on a for the annual New Year's
bran diets. I'm all for bran Blessing 0-2·2. TOTALS 27-10DEVOTED TO 'IUE
reaction.
INI'EREST OF
picket line. ·
diets for those wbo need them 64.
BaD of the Pomeroy Fire
MEIGS-MASON
AREA
EASTERN
!74)
Denny
Officials
sdld
he · Department staged .Saturday
. and I believe it is lmportBnt
STOCK
DiVIDEND
atESTER
L.
T
ANNEHIU.
Spencer 9-5·23 ; Jell Goebel 4.
to include cereal fiber, but it 9-.17 ; 0ave Brown 7-1 - 15 ;
Etlft, £&lt;1,
complained about the cold ntght at the Pomeroy
C!EVELANIJ (UPJ ) - A
,ROBERTHOEFUCII
does increase the need to Brian Russell 3-4-10; Rusty
weather and chest pains Elementary School. ·
quarterly dividend of 46 cents .
ctlyEdllor
keep a check on any tendency Wigal 2-2-6;' Keith Wolfe Q.3.- P.r share of common stock
while' he was picketing. He
'
l'llblisbecl dally except Salunlay
Music for daneing WBB
by The Ohio Valley PUbllatilng
'!"88 found slwnped over the Pl'QVIded by the Red Stewart
for an iron deficiency. Such a 3f Joe Boy(es 0·0·0. TOTALS
for
the.
three
for
tw~
adjusted
25 -24-74.
Cml~ny-Multimedla, Inc.,
Ill
steering wheel of his car.
deficiency would show up in
stock split which became Cowt St., Pomeroy, Ohio 457811.
By Quarters
orehestra. Awarded door
Bwllnfss
Office
Phone
911'
2
il56.·
About half the 18,000 prizes were Rod Manley,
tests the doctor uses to detect Wahama
effective last Dec. Is,' was
6 18 19 21-64
TUESDAYTRIPLtCATE
Phone99'l-21~7 .
• Eastern
9 13 27 iS'--14
students In tlle system also Pomeroy , 40-channel CB
anemias.
declared Tuesday by The Editorial
Second claM J)Qitage paid at
Doc ember 27, 1977
Official
s:
Ed
Lowery
and
Anemia is only one
Pon. ~oy , Ohio.
··
.
Cleveland
Electric
Pis were aboent Tuesday.
radio;
Mike
Hamm
Paut Leffingwell.
t Natiorlfl
advertlsinR represenShamrock
Motel
12
Of the. system 's 909 Pomeroy, ~ rifle;. Jm;
Dluminatlng
Co.
·
,
o
manifestation of iron defi· ·
• Reserve Game . .
tative Ward • GrUfltll Company ·
Roval Crown Cola
12 teachers, 150 cross&lt;!d picket
ciency, For more infQnnation Wahama (36)- Roush 4-4The·new quarterly dividend
Inc., BottipeW and GaUaaher Oiv.:
Neut211ng, P~meroy, 38 piece
0 . Br lckles, Gen. Cont.
12
7$7
Third
Ave.,
New
York,
N.Y.
12;
Richards
3-3·9;
Weaver
3·
on iron, readers can send 50
· is equivalent to 69 cents per
Mark V.
· ·
8 lines, although at Canton 110cket se.t; Fred Crow,
lU017.'•
eents for The · Health Letter 1-7; Smith 2·1·5; Sayre 1-0-2;
share on a pre-split basis and
Royal Oak Pork
2 McKinley High School, only Syracuse, A,M·FM radio;
SubscrtpUon rates:-'DeUvered by
Dingey 0-1-1; Russell li-0-0 ;
earner whert avallable 76 centa per
Francis Florist
.
2 II of the' 112 teachers
number 4-4, Iron and Anemie. Stanley 0-0-0; Totals 13-10-36.
represents a 412 percent in·
Elelillor Wer~y. Pomeroy,
wtek . By Mater Route wh.'rc carrier
High Individual Game ap)Mlllred for classes. They food
Send a long, self-addressed,
crease from the quarterly
EASTERN (33)- Cole 3·0·
aervlce not available , One month,
crafter;
Charlea
Pat Carson , 211; He IBn
were
joined by four
$1.1:5. By m1U In Ohio and W. Va .,
stamped envelope. Address 6; Long0-0-0; Matthews 1,2-4; · dividends of 66 cents per
Phelps
202.
BeHy
Smith
198.
Hamilton, Route 1, Miner•
fMe Year, $22_.00; Six monthl,
your request to Dr. l..amb in Bowers 2·4-8 ; Werry 0-0-0 ;
share paid during 1977.
High Series - Helen Phelps substitutes, live cafeteria ville, pizzeria; Art Gilmore
'11.50; Three months, $7.00;
Wigal 4-2·10; Myers 1, 1-3;
l.W, Pat Carson 530; · Betty workers
and
three Pomeroy. preatobu~aer;
care of this newspaper, P.O. Welch 0·0-0; Barr inger 1-0-2;
The new dividend will be
FJ.uwhere ~.00 y~r ; stf moothl
Smith, 527.
· administrators.
'13 .~;
Three months, $7.50.
B&lt;&gt;X 1551, Radio City Station, Totals 12-9-33.
payable Feb. 15 to share
Rich Jones, Pomeroy, CareD
~bsctiption price includes Sunday '
Team High Game and
Wahame " B" 9 7 8 12-J6
The · number of non- set ; Denn~ Congo, Portland,
New York, N.,Y 10019.
owners of record at the close
Times-SentineL
Series
Shamrock
Motel
552
EastM-n " B' '
5 10 5 13- JJ
teaching employees off their smoke alann.
of business Jan. 20.
1
and 1497.
I ,
•
Folden ( Eltal and Clarence
E. Ha ll, both of Galli poli s.

Backhus
takes job
.
with USAF

M.D.

Teachers ordered

Heart.., murmer is

hacl-&lt;. to classes

serious .pt:ohlem
By Lawren~e l..amb,M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - 1am 18
yea rs old. On a recent
.tlhysica l at school, the doctor
&lt;liagnosed a systemic he.a rt.
· murmur : apparently, I have
l"td it all my life. The school
nurse prohibits me from all

gynUlastics.1 would appreciate it if you
cou ld give me any information on tllis type of heart con·
dition you can so I can determine if I should see a doctor
or nol :

DEAR READER - Yes,
you should go see your doctor, The term systemic heart
murmur could mean that you
have sound (all murmurs are
just sounds ) that is caused by
an active circulation which
most d oc tors · call a
physiological, functional or
innocent inurmur. In that
case, you do not have
anything wrong with you at
all.
•
If the munnur i.~ 'a sOund
ca used by underlying heart
disease, then you need to
know what disease and
whether it is a minor defect
or something more ~por­
hutt.

You need to know exactly
what Y!JUr munnu_r· means,
. and you do not know now. It
wouJd.really be ridiculous foil
you to gQ through life thinking
you. · have heart disease
because you did not unders·
tand a term the doctor used.
lgnoranee is not always bliss.
DEAR pR. LAMB - I love
spinach! My husband was a
. runner ' on a college track
team and insists that spinach
is not good for a person .
He says the coach would
- not let the boys eat it because
it created a chemical reac·
lion against any ca lcium'
foods· eaten, and kept the
calcium from ·getting into the
rystem. I never heard this
before and w&lt;Jnder if there is
any truth lo it.
DEAR READER - It is a
half truth. Spinach rontains
oxa lie acid which binds the
iron and calciwn content. of

•

UPI Sporll Editor

Mine violence flares
r--------------------------,
: Area Deaths ~ l in 3 eastern states
•·r

.~· HEALTH .

·

rollective (S&lt;Jutheast Asian)
Interest to see that it does not
happen," he said.
Lee told newsmen tllere is
no substitute for faee-to-laee
talks with foreign dignitaries.
"It' ·s so much easier to
register a response with your
interlocutor, so to speak, than
to send a message in print,
which is not accnmpanies by
all the overtones of ~he facial
expressions, tOO gestures, the
gesticulations which· often
convey 'm ore than the words
themselves," he said.
Or, as Winston Churchill
once said: "it is far better tr
jaw jaw than to war war."

written contract resulting In
monetary damage to the
plaintiff · in the sum of
$17,820.32.
Plaintiff Boothe further
charges that the defendant
intentionally breactled the
rontract and caused loss to
him resulting in gain to the
defendant.
He
further
charged that failure to cure
the effects of his past con·
duct, constit,..s rontinuing
intentional IIFraud to the
continuing damage and
detriment of the plaintiff.
Wherefore, plaintiffs seek
$17,820.32 lor the breach of
rontract ; $35,000 . in oom· .
pensatory damages and
$500,000 in punitive damages.
In another court action, a
Mason County couple, Betty
N. and Lloyd H. Capehart,
Leon , W . ViJ. filed suit

/'

War .threat

·Linescores

Firemen's ball

well attended
.'
0

Local Bowling

1

'

'

Terry Eurlck Is a flne~ooklng young man from Saginaw,
Mich., who was the second leading scorer for the Irish this
.season with 42 points. He's bright, friendly and far more _
Inclined to talk about his te.anunates' contributions In the 38-10
will over the Longhorns than his own.
Against-Texas, though,' Eurlck wasn't exactly sitting around
counting his change. He scooted six yards over left tackle lor
Notre Dame's first touchdown only seconds after the second
quarter started, then scored again for the Irish on a !~yard
burst less than three minutes later. '
The kick In the face came shorUy affer his second touch·
·down.
"It happened on the next kickoff when I was In on the
tackle," he says. "I dort't know who kicked me, but whoever it
was, he didn't do it purposely. It was an accident and he was
down on the ground when it happened. The Texas players all
showed great sportsmanship. They helped us back up
everytime they knocked us down and we did the same with

them."
The hard way he plays and the easy way he handles himself,
Terry Eurlck reminds you a lot of Rocky Bleier, who also went
to ~otre Dame and now is with the Pittsburgh Steelers. He .
even looks somewhat li~e Bleier and is about the same size, ~
10 and 195 pounds.
" I'm not that big, but I'd love to play pro ball," says the 22year-ol~ senior who was one of Notre Dame's three captains
Continued on page 4
·

GETS SHOT OFF - Kenny Young (4) puts the ball in the air .against Athens . His 36
points on the night set a new individual sroring record for one game. Guarding him is
Athens' 6'·2" J .- K. Smith.

SETS SCORING RECORD - Kenny Young made all kind1 of shnL• em:oul &lt;' to setting his
scormg record m Mornson Gym Tuesday night. Here ho ( 41 slides rtlong tlw hnscline nncl
puts the ball up and m for unotiwr LWo against bi~ Art Chonko ( 14 ) rh•fo•nd ing . Pil'lurcs by
Greg Batley.

Athens barely pass Marauders74-7
By Greg Bailey
A 36-point record setting
performance by Meigs for·
ward Kenny Young .wasn't
.... enppgh .JD. ••c~.untr~ . . an. .. o~t•~'"- sta_~dihg night by Athens'
sophomore sensation David
Matthews as the visiting
Bulldogs of Coach Fred
Gibson raUied for a thrilling
74-72 win over the Marauders
of Coach Ron Log&amp;n.
The Athens 6'4" center
tossed in 21 points and con·
trolled the boards with 16
rebounds, matchiQg the
carom total of the entire

Elkins tied the score, and the • ta llied 12. Meigs had only two
YoUng~~ ·scO ring per- lead see-sawed the rest of the rebolinds in the first quarter,
fo""ance surpassed the old . period with Meigs going up but stiU.m~naged to keep that
OJ!rly J~ad .
school · mark of 33 set "by 19-18 at the buzzer.
In the second half, the BullStaJ:ting
the
second
period,
recent graduate Mlck Daven·
port, Young tosSed in 26 of after a 21·21 tie; Meigs tallied dog defense shut Young off
Meigs' 42 first half points to five straight pOints to break for only 10 more points while
give his team a five-point out to a 2&amp;-21 lead with 4:40 to they were getting a balanced
edge going Into the locker go. Behind some fine free attac,k .from Art Chonko anq
throw shooting, the hosis Gary Bentley. Chonko ended
room.
Meigs started off fast with increased their lead to nine, the night with 16 markers
Young dwnping in two quick 32-23, with four minutes-to go. while Bentley wa ~ right
But Athens caught fire and behind with 15.
buckets to give the hosts a ~.()
Athens regained the lead
lead. Then Athens tallied nine narrowed it to 3&amp;-34 before
unanswered points to take the Meigs broke out to their half· with 5:01 to go in the third
lead. A thtee-point play by time lead, Young had 26 that period when Bentley put
Young and a bucket by Billy first half while Mathews them up 45-44 on ·a jumper.
They kept that lead at the end
.
of the quarter, 55-54.
But Meigs got the tip
opening the last period of
play a nd Chuck Follrod raced
Carter, who has been VMI's Meadowns led West Virginia in for a· Jay-up to let the
leading scorer all season , was Tech with 29 points. Tech led Marauders regain the lead 56held· to nine points In the first :JS-32 at halftime and never 55. The rest of the quarter
balf, when VMI trailed the trailed .in winning its fourth .saw the visitors stay in front
Vikings: 37-33.
game In eight starts. The by one to three points until
With 16 mii'lutes left in the Cavaliers were led by 6-3 . 1:55remained. Those last two
second half, however, he hit a sophomore forward Craig minutes went like this ;
Athens made it 71-'6. on a
bucket to give VMI a- 43-41 Luther with 'E/ points.
lead, and the winners never
The Joss left Willsh 2-11 on fr.e e throw. Young hit a
jum~r to pull within three,
trailed after that .
the :;eason.
Leading Cleveland State
Ashland's defense shut out Chonko sank a foul with ;45
'!"ere Franklin Edwards and Case-Western tlle last 2;44 of remaining to give his team a
.· Gr~g ·· Cobb, who each the ~aine to .win in a non- seemingly solid lead. But
then the hosts caught fire .
regtstered 19.
ronference game.
Elkins, getting his first
Milligan opened a 23-polnt
The Eagles built· a. 33-24
starting
assignment, pumped
lead during the first half and halftime lead Ill 10 points
co asted to victory ove~ three different times in the In two from the corner with
Malone for the championship second half before . Case- just ; 30 left and the
In the Canton tourney .
Western Reserve pulled to Marauders had no time outs
Buffaloes '
6-2 senior within four ; 52-48, with 2:44to , remaining. On the ensuing
forward William Lewis led all go.
· out-of-bounds play, Meigs'
scorers with 20 points and
Ashland's defense kept the Greg Becker stole the ball ,
was chosen MVP for the Spartans scoreless the passed to Elkins, and Meigs
tournament. He scored 34 remainder of the game while had tied it.
Alhens · brought the ball
points In the tourey.
the Eagle offense, led by
court, and the
down
Third place went to West Monty Wicks and Scott
Virginia
Tech·,
which Hamlin, added eight more Marauders shut out Chonko,
Bentley and Matthews. But
defeated Walsh .in the points.
ronsolatlon game.
Wicks, a 6-3 senior forward, su)lstitute Speneer Edwards
· Milligan, now lh'i. never led all scorers with 20 points. was In the open and dumped
trailed in the game.
Hamlin contributed 13 toward in a jumper with just ;01
The top scorer foc Malone, Ashland's seventh win in showing to give the visitors
now !Mi, was 1&gt;-2 sophomore eight games.
the margin of victory. He
The Spartans, 2-4, were led ended the night with eight
forward Tom Volarich with 20
by Mark Terminy with 14
points.
Fres~man forward Don
points.
Meigs team.

Milligan trips Malone-

Uill~d Press International
Siena University and VMI
have been pitted against each
other
in
tonight's
championship game of the
Siena Invitational Basketball
Tournament af Loudonville,
N.Y.
·
Siena, 1n its first season of
Division I competition,
reached the finals by virtue of
a 6~ win over Oklahoma
City University. VMI made
its way to the championship
match
by
defeating
Cleveland
State .71•66
·
Tuesday night.
1n other games involving
Ohio ooUege teams, Milligan
downed Malone 94-'Tli and
West Virginia Tech beat
Walsh 84-78 in tlle Hall of
Fame Classic at Canton,
Ashland topped CaSEM'estern
Reserve 60-48, . Findlay
whipped Ohio Dominican 7361 and Xavier defeated
Anderson 76-&lt;i5.
The Keydet's All-America
candidate Ron Carter Jed
VMI to its sixth win of the
· season, scoring 26 poiitts.
·

NOW OPEN

GINO'S
OF MASON

PHONE 773-5536

Meigs got on ly lti.
Athens is now 3~ on th~
season while Meigs dropped ·
to 2-7 , Mei gs travels to
Gallipolis Friday . The
Marauders have been im~
proving ste,adily, and the ·
Blue Devils will have their
hands full.

Meigs-Athens box.

• •

Athens·

fg fga
0 .4
7 8
B 8
5 '14
3 12
0 1
3 4

Team

Smith
Chonko
Matth ews
Bentley
Walla ce
Black
Edwards
Topp ing
Brunn jng
He Iter
Ha rt

0

IIIIa RB PF TP
001 ' 2 0
2
5

4
11

5
16

1 16
A 21

l

6

3

2 15'

0
0

.0 3 1 6
0 0 0 0

2
0

2
0

l
2

4 • 5

I

2

4

0

I

0

2

0

1

2

0

2

0

2

1

30

34

0
1
2

l
4

• Fishing ·Ta ck le
and Rods
.. and Reel s
ti Gun s a nd
Re loading
• Ba II Gloves
Camping
Equipment

B
0

0
I

27 ll 20

Total s

2
1

0
0
1

15 15

Meigs
Foi l rod
Becker
Stanley
Young
Elkins
Andrews
Blake

Coats
Toial ~

M
A

0 8
3 10
0
l
16 25
6 7
o. 1

0
0
2

I

'4
5
'1

• Ar chery

6
6
2
36
12

• Indoor Game s
h ave Gill

• We

Ce rtificales

4 5 3
0 0 2
2 2 4 1• 2
2 4 4
I
1 6
1 1 0 0 0 3 2
20 55 54 12 14 16 23 72

601 Main St.
Pt. Pl easa nt.W.

19 42 . 54 72
1B 36 55 74

Reser-Ves taken at very last

PHONE
675-2988

Mason County Motor Co.

\

P.

Open Su nd ay 1- p.m .-6
Monday thru Saturday
9 a .m. to 8 p.m .

••• FROM RUBBISH

to~roncomania

••

Va .

Quarters

The Meigs Reserves are was sinkin g only one of four
still look~g for that elusive free tosses a nd one bucket.
first SEOAL 1977-78 win after
Meigs was hot from the
Jetting the Athens Bullpups field, sinking 41 percent of
rome from behind for a 44-42 their shots (18-44), led by Dan
overtime win last night at Thomas' 14 markers. Chris
Yeauger also hit double
Morrison Gym.
Meigs lost at the foul line figures with 10. Ross was ·
where they connected on only · game-high scorer with . 19
6 of 15 attempts while the while Randy Sabo added 10.
visitors sank 10 of 19, The Bullpups hit just 34
although they scored one Jess percent from the field, i7 of
49. Ross tossed In It of his
field goal than Meigs. .
Meigs had the lead all the points in that come-from·
way until the end, at one time behind fourth period.
opening an II point spread in
the second quarter. ·
.
MEIGS - Kennedy 1-1-3;
Athens tied it at 37-all with
1:00 left but ·a bucket by Yeauger 4-2-10 ; Ohlinger 2·1·
· •B · D
l ; Dodson 3-2-B; Thomas 7-0complaining that a $2.4 a fine idea but not at that Metgs
r•tt odson lfBVe the 14 ; O' Brien 1·0,2. Totals 18·1·
million price 'tag for honoring rost, irate citizens said in hosts the short-lived lead, 39· 42.
the team seems a little steep. telephone calls to the local 37. Fred Ross countered with
ATHENS - Burson 2-J.l ;
a last-second bucket t o· send Kasl~r 1-0-2; Ross 7-l -19 ;
Gov. Richard Lamm and news media .
Wood 2-2-6; Sabo 4-2·10;
' 'I think it's a crime. I'm as the game in!o overtime.
Mayor Bill McNichols
Vosler 0-0-0; B. Henry 0-0-0;
proud
.
of
the
Broncos
as
Tuesday declared Friday an
In thatextr~ period, Athens · D. Henry 1-0-2; Scarmack 0·0·
.. official Orange Crush holiday anyone and I agree with the sank 3 of 8 free throws and a o. Totals 11-20-44 .
in honor of the Broncos first symbolislli of the gesture, but field goal for their margin of M
Quarters
trip to the Super Bowl , and I tlilnk it's an out-and-&lt;Jut .victory. Meigs meanwhile A
12 20 32 39- 42
5 )5 26 39- 44
said all Colorado stale waste of the taxpayers'
employees and Denver city mpney ," one callet. told
workers will be given the day United Press International.
" What gives these two
off.
idiots
the right to decide to
The holiday will cost
spend
$2.4 million with one ·
taxpayers about $2.4 million
''the Guys With The Buys"
swipe
of
their pens when the
to pay the employees who
take the day off and for legislature takes months to
overtime pay for those who decide something like that? If
\vock, said State Controller we;re going to spend. money
like that, let's give it to
Dan Whittemore.
.. John Lay, executive crippled children or eiJierly
assistant to Lamm, said the persons who ean really· 'use
Viand Street
purpose of the holiday was it."
"
It
's
absolutely
Pt.
n&lt;it to give employees an
extra day off but ''to try and ridiculous,'' another caller
get a community and said. "There are thousands.of
statewide response to the Bronco fans in this state, but
you don't see them getting the
Broncos."
day off with pay . It's stupid." . .__ _ _ __
Hooocing the Broncos was

SQur side

And By The Way ...
Denver fans Jove their
football team, but not ,2.4
million worth
DENVER (UPI)- Denver
Broncos fans waited 18 years
for their heroes to make it to
. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. ·the big game but even ·. so,
many
of
them · are

points.
Both teams shot over 50
percent on the night, Meigs·54
and Athens 5J. Meigs had a
hot night · at the (ree throw
line, 12 of 14, but Athens got
more chances and inade 20 of
30. Athens dominated the
boards with 34 caroms while

CHUCK FOtLROl) g••ts
In 1thc udlon wtth a layu11
ugulnst Atht''" TucHduy
night ul l\1utrisun Gym .

Check your ctou.,, attica. cellara
and garagea for·unneceallry plies
of rubbish and litter. Don't be a litter
liug! Jheae areaa ot hlftnea end
apartmenta are the culimt)ft
. of home.
and obtain fire
calling our agent tocl•r·

fl,... .

.

Downing-Chll•

Insurance Agency, Inc.

�·.

•

'
; :... The Daily

.........

Sentine~iddleport-l'omeroy, u. , W~nesday, Jan. 4, 1976

S- The Dailv Sentinei,Miildleport-J&gt;tmeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Jan. 4, 197~

·Falcons thumped 74~64 by. EasterD in first win
slate drop to 2-~ on the year
while Eastet'n captured its
initial victory of the young
1977· 78 campaign a gain s\
three defeats.
Four Eagle players scored
in doQble figures, with Danny
Spencer notching 23 to lead
the way . He was followed by
Jeff Goble with 17, Dave

BY GARY CI.Af!K
The Wahama
White
Falcons failed in their bid to
make it tbree straight
Tuesday night when the
Eastern Eagles scored 52
second half points to tak~ .a
suprising 74-64 win .

Watiama .saw its season

Fighting Irish .
Tiatlonal champ
NEW YORK (UPI) from the 39 members of the
When Notre Dame was upset• coaches
board
who
'by Mississippi in its second participated in the voting.
giune of the -Season, Dan Alabama, which routed Ohio
Devine faced the biggest St~te in the Sugar Bowl.-was
challenge of his coaching a close second, only 11 points
career.
behind Notre Dame.
The Fighting Irish could • Alabama receiV~;d 13 first ·
not afford to drop another place votes and 354 points and
game and they needed for a Arkansas finished third with
couple of strong teams to do two first-place mentions 'IJld
just U1at if they hoped to 310 points.
ca pture
the
national
" After the loss to
Mississippi , I felt it was a real

c ha m pionship everyo ne

picked them to win . ·
challenge," said Devine. "It
But that 's exactly the way was a challenge to myself and
it worked ou t in the our staff and our players.
improbable fini sh to the Alon g the way you ale
college football season.
going to fa ce
chal·
Notre Da rne, the p~esea son lenged no matter what
favorite to w\n t~e national yob you are in, and if you
championship, fu lfilled the stay in cvaching long enough
prediction Tuesday when the you are going to ha~e bad
United Press International starts and bad moments. It
Board of Coaches named the just depends on how you react
Fighting Irish . the nation's to th ose bad things."
No. I team m the ftnal
It was the closest balloting
ratings.
for national championship
The Jristi, who ~mbarassed honors since 1966 when Notre
Prevwusly undefeated Texas, Dame edged Michigan State
311-10, m the cntton Bowl by oo!y five points.
Monday, rece1ved 23 first·
place votes and 365 points

Brown with IS and Brian
Bissell with 10 for the win·
ners.
Wabama placed just two
men in twin digits as Phil
Hobbs scored 23 and Rick
Barnitz with 14. l!obbs
however tied Easterns
Spencer for game high
scoring honors with 23
Coll ege BasktHIIII ReSults
United Pr,ess International
E•st
Cent Co nn . 92 , Unio.n 79
Conn . 76; Colgate 57
Fair fld ·88 .- Cn isius 69
Geo town 107 , N .C.Cent 51
Maine 77, Bklyn Co lt. .54
Penn 78. Pr ince ton 63
Siena 69, Ok. . Clty u . 66
Syrac5e 94 , N .Te.: .St. 84
VM I 71. Clev e Sl . 66
W . Conn. 87 . St.Aqulnas 73
Yeshiva 58 , NY Tech 56
SOuth
GeolWn Ky . 75, Pikevl 70
Jaxnvl 89. St . xavier 65
lOUiS\11 78 , Mmph i"'s St . 75
Mc N ees~ St . 5 1. NW La ., -46
Nchlls St. 89, Ill . Tch 70
S. Miss . 83, C.- Stcktn 73
Stet son 73, R ichmon d 56
Union 76, S ellarmine 74
Midwe5t
Ashland 60, c. Wsn Res . 48
Fi ndlay 73, Ohio Dom . 61
Grn Sa-,. 77 , Sh aw Coli 59
Mich . Tch 78, Nrlhlnd 68
Milligan 94, M~ l one 7~
Pa rksde 70, Platt11l 64
P h illips 60. Neb .. Qm 59
SW Mo. 81. P lllsbg St . 67
Stevt'lls Pt. 73. Lor as 67
W .Va Tech 84, Walsh 78
Xavier 0 . 76, Andr sn •
Southwest
McMurry 74, Oat aapt 64
0 . Robe rts 66, Colmbla 60
S t . Mrv's 72 , Prar ie Vw 61
" SW Te~ . S f . 77, Tex. Luth 73
Tex . so. 51 , Tougaloo 45
Tut sa 83, N E Oklahoma 67
West
Air For ce 83, Lew is ~9
BYU 81. Weber St.. 76
(ai. .Stan 80, Fr'lno Pac 67
Gr l Fils 74 , Sttlc Pac 73.
Lws &amp;Cirk 10, W. Bapt 65
Pac LU!h 110 , NW Na z 79
Ulah St . 79 , Fr . Dc knsn -&lt;1~
Wyo. 106, SactO Sl. 88

Bv

Notre Dame

marker apie&lt;:e with identical · at bay.
nine field goals and five free
The opening stanza start~
throws.
off very slow with both teams
Eastern actually won the finding at rather difficult to
contest at the charity stripe put the ball through the hoop.
where they converted 24 of .36 After eight minutes of .Play a
attempts. During the second total of 33 Shots were fired up
half the Eagles canned 18 ol by both teams with a mere
26 which aided considerably seven of those finding their
in keeping the White Falcons mark. As a result of the cold
·
·

shooting by both teams
Easter held a H ltrst quarter
~ a result of the cold
shooting by botb teams
Eastern held a 9·6 'first
quarter advantage.
Things
warmed
up
somewhat in the second
canto, especially for the
White Falcons as they fought -

r - --- . ---- -..,

waverly remains unbeaten
Forward Mark Fielder
tallied ' 22 points Tuesday
night and IQ other Waverly
TigerS contributed to the
· scoring as Waverly, downed
the host Jackson Ironmen 63-

.

Field~r's 22 i&gt;oints was tops

The boJ score:
•
WAV ERLY (63)- Fielder

Highland~rs

1·0-2;

Gordon 1-0-2 ; Dutcher i 2-0-4;

T. Frederick 1·0·2;. Randy

Thomas 2-0-"' ; Thompson 5-1 ·

TOTALS 29-S-63 .
JACKSON ( 44) - Harless
5·5·15; Conger 2-0-4; Dorsey
11.

-4-1 -9 ; Forsyth 1-0-2; D . Evans

2·4-8;

Waugh

1-0-2;

Sfdow

1·0·

2; Marlin 1-0-2. TO AL S 16·
12-44.
Sco r e b y q u a rters !
Waver ly
lA 14 16 19-------63

Jackson-

9 7 16 12- 44

Reserve 1core : Waverly 52,
Jackson 18.

•

capture

crowned
NEW YORK (UP! ) '
National Football League
Commissioner. Pete Rozelle
UPI champs Tuesday
Pi ttsburgh
fin~d

7lf&gt;. Pet. per year on a ·
year certificate of
deposit.
4'

ss,ooo.oo

minimUI"fl

deposit.
A

s utJ~tantial

penalty Is

invoked on all certllicato

.flccounts: wlth.d nwn prior
to the date of maturity .

defensive tackle Joe Greene
NEW YORK IUPI)
The
$5,000 and linebacker Dennis
U n 1 ted PrPS s In t ernational
Winston $2,oo0 lor flagrant
. Soard of Coaches' fina l top 20
fo~ls committed during the
coll ege ' footba l l ratings , with
f irst -pla ce vo l es and r eco rd in
Steclers' loss to Denver in the
parenth.eses
off game
Poi nt~ __ AFC divisional play_
'rea m
1. Notre Dame( 11 1) (23)
365
on Dec. 24.
2. Alabama ( IJ ·l ( I I, 1I
354
Greene was fined for
3. Arkansa s (1J (11 . 11
310
·punching DenVer guard Paul
4. PennSt .( J\ . 1)
:251
5. Texas (ll ( 11 -1)
234
Howard during the second
6. Oklah oma (10-2)
167
per iod of the game played at
7. Plt tsburgh (liJ -2. 1)
129
8. M ic h igan { 10-21
101
Denver. Winston was fined
9. Washingt on (8 ~)
61
for
a persona l foul again.it
10. Nebr aska C9 Jl
45
11 . Flor ida St , ( 10-2)
39
Denver li neback er La rry'
12 . (T iel Ohio· St . (9 -3)
28
Evans on a Pittsburgh punt
12 . (T ie) So .· Cal i t. (8 - ~)
28 ·
return in the third period of
14 . North Carolin{t (8 -3-H
1~
15 , Stanford {9-3l
5
the game. Evans sustained a
16 . ( Tie) Br lg hmYng(9 -2l
4
~con cussion on the f:ll~~ and
16. (Tiel N. Te:o: as -51 .( 9-2)
~
18. Arizona St. (9-J l
3
19. !Tie) San·DiegS t . (10 -1)
2
19. (T ie) N .Caro 1inSt . (8 .4)
2
Note : Bv agreemen t with the
Am er ic an
Football
Coaches
'Associ&lt;! lion , tea ms on proba tion
by the NCAA are ineligible for
top 20 and na tional _ch ampion
sh i p cons iderat ion by t he UP I
Board at co,.c h es . Those teams
currenlly on pr oba tion for 1977
are : Kentuc 'k y , M ic hig an Slate,
R e d 1 and s CC aliL L western
State .(Colo . 1 and-Hou ston.

The Athens County
Savings &amp; loan Co.
296 Second St.

Pomeroy, Ohio

BOWLING

'

'

HARDWARE·

HEADQUARTERS

E arly Wednesda y Mi xed
: L eague
Dec. 28, 1971
Sta ndings
-T ea m
Pts .
8
Zide's Sport Shop
6
Yo ung ' s Super M!d ,
5
Smith Ne l son Mofor Co.
J
T enth F ramers
.2
Ne lson Drug Co.
0
Eagles C.l ub
High ip di vldua l game
Men. Bill Por ter 201 ; women,

Betly S. and Debbie H. 181 :

'SHOP:

PICKEN'S HARDWARE
MASON, W.VA.
OPEN
Mon. , Thurs . &amp; Sat.
8: 00-5:30

rnen , Bob Couch 193; women
Pal Carson 180; men, Ji m
Hawley 1~2, ~omen , B~tty

Smilh

.

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High ser ies - Men , Larry
Dugan, · 537, women, Betty
Sm ith 535 ; men, J im Hawley
533 and Bill Por ter 531 ,
women, De bbie Hawley 512 ;
women, Pa t Carson 505 .
Team
high
g ame Young's Supe r Mk f. 676.
· Team h ig h series - Zlde's

Sport Shop 1985.

· W. L
Pel.
Phil&amp;
22 11 .667
New York
20 16 .556
Buffalo
IJ 20 . 394
Boston
11 n .324
New Jer sey . 8 26 .23~
Cent ra l Oivision w. L Pet.
w'asnnnAo0f1n0, n'•
20 1~ ,588 ,
5
·19 16 . 543
Clevetnd
18 16 .529
Atlanta
17 19 .472
New OrtnS
14 21 .AOO .
Houston
13 20 .394
Western Conf Erence
Midwest Division
W. L Pel .
Denver
22 13 .629
·. Ch icago
20 16 .556
Mi l w
20 18 .5 26
Detro it
• 16 18 .471
Ind iana
15 17 .469
K~nss Cly
13 ·n .3 71
Pacific Division

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3'12
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I 11 1
14 111

GB
-

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2
41
61/:t
6\ !2

GB

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Portla nd
29 5 . ~53 G B
Phoenix
22 13 .629 7112
L os Angels
17 18 .486 12 1 1
· Seattle
18 20· .474 13
Go l d~n St .
15 20 .429 1411-J
T uesda y' s R esu lts
Los Angeles 120, New York
117
Detroit 106, At lan ta 103
Ind iana 104, New Orleans 103
Oenyer 101 , Wash ln.oton 100
Phoenix 125, M ilwaukee 103
Portland 92. Chica!)o 90
- Wednesd ay's Gam es
Los Angeles at Buffalo
Phoenix at New Jersey
Cleveland e t Phlladelp~ia
Indiana at Houston
Denver at San Anton io
Atlanta at Detroit
Ch icago at Golden Sta te
Kansas City · at Seattle
• .. Thursda V'5 Gam es
P h oenilC vs . Boston
·
at Hartford
New Jersey at Cleveland
New Or leans at MilwauKee

buUt its biggest advantage of
the night at 32-24 but the
Eagles · C.me storming back
behind Spencers 14 third
period pdints to take a 49-le
lead going into the final e!Bht
minutes ,of play.
From the o~ning tip off to
start the !mal quarter
Wahl!ma began to fall further
and further behind which
f9rced the locals into com·
milling costly fouls in trying
to catch-up. The Eagles·
managed to convert J.ust
enough of those free throws to
keep the locals from making
any serious threats on the
Eagle lead as they held on to
take a 74-64 win .
· Shooting percentages for
the game show Wahama with
an amazing 82 field goal
attempts, however they
connected on just Tl for a
poor 32 percent. ~Lt h~~
cha rity stripe the Bend Area
team hit on 58 percent of their
\7 attempts by making but !O
foul shots.
Eastern shot 44 percent
from the floor (25 of &gt;4 ) while
sinking 66 percent at the free
throw line (24 of 36).
Wahama outr'eboWlded the
Eagles 43·36 with Phil Hobbs
collecting game high honors
with 14 individual rebounds.
The · White Falcons also
turned the ball over the least
amount of Hm~s with Eastern
winning that Dubious honor
26-20.
The prel4rtinary game was
won by Coach Lewis Halls'
Littie Fa Icons by a 36-33
ma r/lUI to up their slate to 2-i
on the season.
.
·
Tim Roush led aU scorers
with 12 po ints in pacing the
Little Falcon attack. Wigal
netted 10 to ,Jead the Baby
Eagles:
Wahama's next outing will
be against the same Eastern
quintet on Saturday ni ght at
Wahama in a rescheduled
game from December 20,
1977.. East ern will · fi r$ pla y
host t o Southern on -Friday
.
· Io
nIght bel ore journeying
Wahama .

was·taken from the .f1elt1 on a
stretcher .
Gree ne was fined $000
earlier in the season for
threatening to punch officials
after bec.omin g upset about a
number of calls being made
against him.. In 1975 Greene
was ejected .fr om a game
against Clevela nd for kicking
Browns' tackle Bob McKay in
the groin during a brawL
Rozelle a!so said he would
be in contact with officials of
th e Broncos to make a
thorough review of the NFL's
policy on reporting player
injuries.
Rozelle said he was acting
after reviewing var}ous
re ports about De nver
quarterback Craig Morton 's
hip and thigh injuries prior to
last
Sunda y's
AFC
championship game.
Morton spent 2'1, ·d~y·s in .. this season. "If I got drafted I might try it. I 'd like to see how
the hospital a nd did not well I could do in pro ball. "
Like all his teammates, Eurkk fe lt Notre Dame 's
practice at all the week
coovincing victory over the previqusly .top;ranked and un·
before the game. The NFL
was aware only that Morton · beaten Longhorns righUully earned the Irish No. I status over
entered
th.e
hos pital all the other teams in the country~ He agrees Alabama has an
overnight following. the ~iUs- excellent ball club, but doesn 't think Ws as good as Notre
Dame .
burgh gaJne.
.
"We met every challenge people could've possibly asked of
The Broncos listed Morton
as a probable starter, but us, " he says. ' 'One thing I'll admit is that f don 't think there's a
team in the country that can't be beaten on any given day. It
happened to us against Mississippi, but Texas was something
completely_ different. If the score had been close, there
MADRID (UPI ) - Soc~er might've been some question. The way it turned out, though , I
fa n Anton io Cald ero n, a can't see where tbere's any possible question ."
'
Malaga m~anic, Tuesday
During halftime of Monday's game, with the Irish in front ,
offered to donate his kidney 24-10, Dan Devine, their coach, possibly may have leaned .a
so th ai Arge ntine-born little on Notre Dame 's most famous coach of all, the late Kn~te
goalkeeper Roberto J orge Rockne, in the locker room . ...
d' Alessandro can continue his . With some emotion, he first said goodbye to all the seniors
career.
like Eurick and wished them luck. He followed that by telling ·
D'Alessandro was injured his players that the second ball coming up could be the most
in a champi onship ga me imporiant one they'd ever play. Devine concluded
between
his dramatically by Sllying to them, "Now let's go out and win the
Sunday
Salamanca club and Athltic national championship !"
Bilbao. Doctors removed his. All the Notre Dame players were so fired up by what Devine
lei! kidney, whi~h was split in said, they shouted and cheered loud enough to shake down that
two during a goa lside thunder from the sky.
·
collision and said he may
~ ·we went wild," said center Dave Huffman. " You know how
hever be able to play soccer we are. You can tell· us to go home and we'll jump up and
again.
down. "

· A dam s Oivlsion
W. L T.• Pts .
Bost on
23
7 ~ 52
Buffalo
21
1 B SO
To r onto
21 10 4 -&lt;16
Cleveland
10 24 . ~
24
Tu es day 's R esu lts
NY lslndrs 4, VDncouver I
Ph il adel phi a 5, Cleve 4 ~. ·
Monlrea t 2, St,. Louis 0
Wedn esda y's Games
NY Ra ng"ers at Minnesota
Mont r ea l at Atl anta
L os Ang at washing ton
vancou ver at Pit tsburgh
Boston at Ch icago
ColoraOo at Tor onto
Buffalo at Cleve land
Thursda y'S Gam es.
Los A-ng at P hiladel p hia
. T oronto at Detr oit
. Co lor ado at Buffalo

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TANGERINES

NFC player
of the year

Quebec at New Eng l an d

llnURV fiiDD SPEI:ilf.S !

By GIL PETERB
even looked forward to 110me
UPI Sporll Writer
"lime off. "For the foreseeable
BOSTON (UP!)
Red cu\in-e, I'll sit back and paint,
Auerbach lilames the federal get myself together and see
court System for the troubles where I'm headed. There's oo
of the Boston Celtics.
rush . I might even show up
In annom cing the appoint·
(to see a game at Bostoo
men! of Tom Sanders as Garden).
coach, Auer bach told a news • "I don't think I'm going to
cooference that fired Coach be lost in the wilderness just
Tom Heinsohn "was a victino because I was fired as coach.
of the impact (that) courts I'm 8\ill a basketball fan and
bave made oo sports to force I don't hold any grudges.
long-term, no.aJI contracts." That's the way it is.'.'
Auerbach fired Heinsoh~
·
~
•
43, Tuesday as _the coaCII"""
arrived for practice. Despite
·
IS
the winningest record amoog
current National BasketbaU
Associ a tion coac hes,
Heinsohn wa~imable to snap
the Celtics' lethargy, which
bas given them an 11-23
record so far this Season.
Relieved the ordeal was
over, Heinsohn sa~d in a
By GREG A1ELLO
telephone interview , "I did
UPI Sports Writer
the best I knew how all the
NEW YORK (UP! )
time. In 8\2 years, I had ups, Walter Payton 's intense ,
downs, iru! and outs. All I can driving style of running has
say is t)lat I wish them all the been described as " insane"
best .- particularly Red and by no less an authority than
Saleh (Sanders). I'm happy O.J . Simpson, th e inan
I'm sitting here (in his Natick Payton replaced this year as
home ) oow." ·
the prernler ball carrier in
The 3!1-year-&lt;!ld Sanders, a pro fOQtba U.
teamma te on five Celtic
"By 'insane' I mean there
·c h a mpion ship s ·with often is no rhyme or reason to
Heinsohn, was elevated from what the rurmer does, but it
assistant coach for an works out," Simpson says.
indefinite period .
" lt 's an instinctthing. Payton
"Everybody likes Tommy has that."
(Heinsohn ). He 's been
Payton, who led the
associated with me (or 20 Chicago Bears in to !lie
years," said Auerbach. "He's Na tional Football League
insurance man and I love playoffs for the first time
the guy . l:le's a·great guy and since 1963 by rushing for 1,852
that 's why it 's been so yards, was an overwhelming
difficult to fire him .
choice today in voting for
"The players all like him as United Press· International's
a ·person and they all say he's NFC Player of the Year.
knowledgable . But they felt
league:leading
Payton's
there was a communication rushing total was the third
problem.
highest total in NFL history.·
11
••• This new era of the noHe also set a single-game
cut contrai!t and the attitude record by running fqr 275
of (today 's high-paid) yards against Mi nnesota
ballplayers was hard for Nov. 20, breaking Simpson's
Tommy to swallow. If I was mark of 273.
yo11nger and back in the
The 23-year-&lt;! ld third-year
coaching reins, I don 't know veteran also ·threatened
if I could do any better.''
SimpSOn 's season. record of
The timing of the firing 2,003 yards , but in Chicago's
jolted some CeltiC. players final game against the New
but the a ct did not . "He's York Giants Payton wa s
done a lot of good things, just limited to 47 yards on an icy
like the players hav~ ," said field at East R~therford, N.J .
guard Jo Jo White.
"I don't think it (the firin~)
Only Simpson, who set the
bad anything to do with record in 1g73, and Jim
Tommy . I think it had to do Brown, who gained 1,863
with a lot of · people. I yards in 1963, have rushed for
respected him as a coach and more yards in one Season
aper.On, even though I didn't than Payton's league-leading .
go along totally with his 1977 totaL
philosophy.''
Payton, whose soft-spoken
Heinsohn, himself, seemed demeanor earned him the
prepared fur the firing and nickname ''Sweetness,'' was
named on 50 of 56 ballots by a
nationwide panel of sports
· writers, 4 from each of the
conference's 14 cities. He is
the first member of· tbe
Bears' to receive the 25-yearold award.
.
Los
Angeles
Rams'
quarterback Pat Haden and
Dallas Cowboys' quarterback
Roger Staubach split the

·p ayton •

Carter finished with 19
first period lead and were
points. Gene Layton, junior·
never headed.
Pacing the attack was Ron guard, had 14 points; Monte
Jackson , senior guard, with . Blant on , senior forwa rd,
29 points on 14 baskets and a scored 13 points and Jamie
·
free throw. Senior forward Jordan canned 10.
Leading St. Joe was Dave
. Gaga! with 18 points. Tim
Walk er fin ished with 12
points.
Southwestern sank 40 of 75
noor attempts for 53 pet. and
said after their victory over , II of1 9 at the fo ul line . St. Joe
Oakland that It was unknown connected on 22·of 60 from the
whether he. would play until n oo~ and II of 21 at t he
just prior to the game's start. charity stripe.
.
NH &amp;.. Sta nd tngs
The Broncos also closed their·
Southwestern , 4-3, goes to
sv United rress Intern ation al r
prac ti ces last · week to North Ga!lia Friday.
Ca mptie ll Conf erence
Patrick D iv ision
reporters, who were unaware
Box score :
w. L. T. P t s.
of the seriousness of Morton's
Philadelphia
25
7 " 5-4 ·
Southw es t e rn . C91]
NY Islander s
21
9 8 SO
Carter 7-5-19: Jorda n 5-0-10;
condition.
·
Atlanta
12 1.:1 11
3S
WHA Sta nd ings
Blan ton 5·3-13; L ayton 7-0- 1.:1;
Morton played the entire
NY Rangers
12 16 9 33
Bv Un ited Pr ess l nlernation at
Jackson 14 -1-2 9 ; M. Carter 1Sm
y
th
e
D
illisio
n
game and threw two 0-2 ; Jenkin s 1-2·4. Totals 40W. l . T.. Pts .
W . L, T. P ts . New Eng land
24 8 3 SJ
to uchdown passes as the 11·91.
Ch ica g(l
12 15 10 34 Winnipeg
21 . 12 I -43
Ironton
St.
Joe
(SS)
· Va ncouver
11 16 9 3l Qui!bec ·
Broncos defeated the Raiders
17 12 2 36
Colorado
8
17
8
24
Hol m es 1-0-2; Sinozich 3-0-6 ;
EGimonton
16 16 1 33
211-17.
innesota
9 22 4 22 Hou5to n
alker 6·0·12 ; Gagai 6·6-18;f M
15 IS 3 J3
League ntles require teams W
St. Louis
8 25 4 20 Bir mi ngham
14 18 2 30
W(}ginger 2~ 2- 6 ; Cron ce ~ - 2 · 4 ;
Wales Conf erenc e
to
report
possi·ble Lutz 2-J.S and Coo k' . 1-0.2.
Cinc inna ti
13 20 2 28
Norri s Divisi on
Indianapolis
9 22 4 22
incapacitating injuries and Totals 22-11-55.
W . L- T. P t s .
:Tues day's Resulf
·
ay
Quarters:
Montrea l
26 7 4 56
pass the information on to the
Sovlels 3, Quebec 3
Sou t hwest ern
Los Angeles
17 12 6 40
26 55 75 91
Wednesda y's Gam es
media .
P ittsburgh
l l 18 8 30
St. Joe
8 17 29 55 ' Detr
Houston at Cincinnati
oi t
11 18 5 27
'
Birmingham at lndpl s
~ashlngton
7 21 8 22
~

Greene and Winston hit by fines ·
'

N BA St 3 nd i ~ gs
By United Press International
Eastern Conference
Atla ntic Olvlsion

W. L Pet.

~ictory

\easy 91-55
Coach Wayne Bergdoll 's
So u t~western
Highlanders
placed five players in double
figures Tuesday night
enroute to a 91·0&gt; romp over
Ironton St. Joe.
The Gallians jumf"'rl into a

Frederick

1

I

10-2-22; Davena 6-0-12; Crace
1-0-2; Thomas 0·2·2; Holland

P·2-2;

Pro
I
I
1Standings 1
l
1
1

.

for the game with Joe Davena
adding 12, and Chuck
Thompson II fo r the victory.
Rich Harless netted lo
markers for JackS~Jn and
John Dorsey nine .
4&lt;1 . •
The t igers shot 41 pet. on 29
Coach C. D. Hawhee 's
of
71 from the f!por and hit on
Tigers remain hot on the
five
of nine free throws. They
heels of l..ogan with a perfect
also
grabbed « relx&gt;unds led
11-il season mark and fl-O in
by
Fielder
with 12.
SEOAL competition while
Jackson managed a 35 pet.
Jackson is now 2-7 and still
seeking their first league win. average on .16 of 46 field Waverly led by quarter goals, made 12 of 22 free
score~ of 14·9, 28-16, and 44-32 throws, and · snared 32
relx&gt;unds with Dave Evans
enroute to the win.
grabbing 12. ·

from behind to take a 24·22
lead at intermission. The
halftimr shooting statistics
for both teams told the story
with Wahama hitting on a
mere 22 percent from the
lield while Eastern Shot a
disappointing 29 percent.
During the opening minutes
of the third stanza, Wabama

Sanders takes over
as new Celts coach

A spic y tabl e-- toppor u1
11ighly glaled co ramrc
Chorce o l bol ge, bl &lt;,1ck.
wllrte. yollow . grcon
and btown
26 " higll

LOTS OF

LAMPS

Jf2 ·PRICE

ALL

Fairland

COLOR TVs,

rolls over
HT, 76-62

AND

I

STEREOS

other six votes; · .

The sell-&lt;!flacing Colwnbia,
The Fairiand Dragons got a
Miss.,
native has shown little
25-point effort from 5·9 junior
interest
in breaking records .
guard Tim Nichols as · the
He
was
more comfortable
Dragons defeate.d visiting
Hannan Trace, 76--62 in a non- praisin g the blocking of
league contest at Fairland Chicago's young offensive
line on the " Sweetness
Tuesday night.
Coach Carl York's Dragons S\!eep," which Payton's end4jtimped into a 14·9 first period runs came to be dubbed. He
lead then took c omplete showed his appreciation by
control with 22 points in the buying his offen~ve linemen
second stanza for a 36-23' gold watches for Christmas.
Chicago's No. I pick and
halftime advantage.
the
first running back
Bobby Bragg, 6-0 junior
selected
in the 197&gt; draft,
forward, also aided the
Fairland cause with 16 points. Payton set an NCAA scoring
Tuesday night, Bragg and record of 464 points while at
Nichols combined for 21 of 40 Jackson State. He rushed for ·
field goal attempts. They 3,563 yards in college and
were 'particularly rugged in ·scored 66 touchdowns .
the opening minutes of the
third period, teaming for a
nine-point spurt that gave
Fairland a ~ lead.
·
David Swain, 6-2 senior
center, kept Haruian Trace
going with 22 points. He was .
the orily Wildcat · hitting
Chapman's Sem~
double figures:
The loss left Coach Dan
Annual Clearance .
Cornell's Wildcats with·a 3-3
reco~d in all games and 3-ll
Sale Continues
mark in the SVAC.
The Wildcats go to Symmes
Valley Friday.
HANNA-N TRACE - Swain
10-2-22 ; Mooney 2-S-9;
Campbell. 3-3-9; Near i-1-5;
Beaver 1 -2-~; Pack 3·1-7;
Webb 2-2-4. Tqlals 23-16-62.
FAIRLAND - Nichols 12·125; Bragg 9-0-18 ; Love 4-0-6;
Powell 6-0-13; Stuart 2-0'4;
Hamlin 1·0-2; Daniels 1-2-4;
DRESS AND
Riley 0-0-0; Kincaid o-o.o;
WilliamSOn 0.0-0 ; Wilson 0·1·
1; Hayes 1.0-2. Totals 36-4-76.
SPORT SHOES
Scort ·by quarters:
HT
9 14 17 22-62
WITH MATCHING
FHS
14 22 21 1~76

•• thoUSht for the day : Ir!sn
poet James Stephens said,
"Wmten .re wiser than men
becat~~e they lmow leu and
WJderstand more.''

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6- 'The Dailv Sentlne~ MiddleDOrt-P""'-"Y· 0., Wednesday, Jan. t

197~

Woman hurt in wrecked car
on SR 7 Tuesday afternoon

the
comeback.
Pete
need," said Los Angeles winning streak.
Elsewhere in the NBA, Maravich had 38 poinl3 for
Coach Jerry WeSt .
There was certainly no lack Denver edged Washington, New Orleans while Mike
of cm!ldence in tile final 3\la 101-100, Indiana clipped New Bantom led Indiana with 24.
minutes of the final period. Orleam; 10H03, Phoenix de- Sullll 125, Bucb 103:
Paul Westphal fired in a
Nixon took over the offense feated Milwaukee, 12$.1113,
and fired in a points down the and Portland downed • game-high 34 points and
Waller Davis added 19 as
strekh. Bob McAdoo, who Chicago, 92-90.
PhQenix took Milwaukee. The
finished with a game-high 38 Nugceta 101, BuUets 100:
David Thompson's layup Bucks, behind ln-80 with 3:55
points, battled him basket for
basket in the.closing minutes. with I our seconds remainfng to go in the third quarter,
Capitalizing on the Knicks' carried Denver to its fourth were led by Marcus Johnson
sagging defense, Nixon hit his ·. consecutive
victory. with 31 points and Brian
last six shots, the final basket Thompson had 26 points and Winters with 18.
giving Los Angeles a 11&amp;-115 lsael21 for the Nuggets while TraU Blazers 12, Balls 80:
lead.
Lionel Hollins, who finished
Chenier topped Washington
with 'n points, scored 8 of
With six seconds to play the with 23.
f11em in the final 32 seconds,
Knicks trailed, IIS-117, and Pacers 104, Jazz 103:
Mike
Flynn · scored including the final basket
were working for a final shot
when Jamaal Wilkes stole the Indiana 's last ftve points and with one second left, to spark
ball from McAdoo, snapping the Pacers held New Orleans Portland. Artis Gilmore had
the Knlcks' four -~ame scoreless in the final 1:06 in 'll points for Chicago.

FRED LlEF
UPI Spoi11 Writer
The Los Angeles Lakers
have added such impressive
names as Jamaal Wilkes,
Adrian Dantley, Lou Hudson
and Charlie Scott to their
roster but on Tuesday night It
was ooe of their rookies who
provided the heavy-duty
wor.k .
Norm Nixon, a first-year
gua,rd from Duquesne, scored
10 of his career-high 26 points
in the fmal quarter to stake
the Lakers to al20-117 victory
over the New York Knlcks for
their fourtb straight win.
• " He' s got great quickness
and confidence in himself,
which is what a lot of young
ballplayers in the · league

Leading the Bobcat first
half attack were sPphomore
guards Greg Smith and John
Westfall, junior center Jon

Thompson .and senior Fred
Helms.
_ In the opening !llinute of the
third period, Kyger Creek
trailing, 39-31 got baskets by
Westfall and Helms to get
back into the game.

Blue Devils GAHS-lronton box. ••
taken 71-57 PLAYER- Pol. , IRONTON TIGERS
FG·A FT.A PF RB TO TP
David Lutz. g
1·3
0 3
1 1
by Ironton
(71) .

0.4
1-2
7- 12
2· 11

Juan Thomas, g
JoeFiefcher. f
Tim Hodges, f

Ironton used board control
to hand host Gallipolis a 71-57
Southeastern Ohio League
setback Tuesday night.
The Tigers picked off 49
rehoundscomparedloonly23
by the Blue Devils, resulting
in Gallia's fifth loss in eight
!tarts this winter.
Gallipolis dropped to 2-3 in
SEOAL play. C.oach Buddy
Bell's Tigers upped their
mark to 2~ overall and 2-3
inside the conference.
Gallipolis shot a respectable 51 perccnlfrom the field
(25 of 49) and the Blue Devils
were seven of 12 at the foul
line for 58 percent. GAHS had
O!\IY nine turnovers.
Meanwhile, the Tigers
were 29 of 67 from the field for
43 percent. IHS was 13 of 24 at
· the foul line for 54 percent.
Ironton had only 10 tum-

0·0
6·10.
o.o.

0

1

1

14

3

8

Dickie James, c
Keith Harvey. g
Robin Fitzpatrick, 'c
Mark Ervin , 9
Jeff Linn, g
Brian Beckett, t
TOTALS

9·15 6-8 4 11
5·13 o,o 4 '
2-5 o.;
1 7
0·0 0-0 0 0
0-0 0-0 0 0
3-5 0-0 3
29-67 13-24 16 49
~ALLIPOLIS BLUE DEVILS ( 57)
PLAYER-Pos.
FG-A FT-A PF RB
Jeff Brown, t
n
1.1 · 4 3
Jeff Lanham, t
1·2 2·2
J
3
BradAbels.c
t.9 0·1. .3 . ..}
Terry Wall. g
15· ia 3·•
4 a
E. V. Clarke. c
I· I 1·3 4 2
Mark Smith , g
4-8 0-1 0 3
Nate Thorr:'laS, g
1·4
Q.Q
0
I
Matt Sterrett, t
o.o o.o o 0
Dave \'lick line. g
lo
0-0 o.o o 0
Rick Dailey. g
0-0 0-0 1 2
. TOTALS
25·49 ' 1·12 19 23
GAHS Blue Devils

overs.
..
It was Joe Fletcher, 6-1
sophomore forward making
his third varsity start and vl~ory .
Dickie James, 6-3 junior • Gallipolis will host Meigs
forward who really killed Friday. Ironton · will host
GAHli on the hoards. Flet- Wellston.
·
cher picked off '14 caroms
willie James hauled in 11.
Ironton pla ced three men in
l
double figures in scoring. .
James tossed in 24, Fletcher
20 and Keith Harvey, 5-10
junior guard, added 10.
· GaUipolis had only one
player in double figures in
scoring - Terry Wall. The
GAHS senior hit ., consecutive shots from the field
before missing one mid-way
Law Enforcement Exin the final stanza. He
finished the game with 15 of plorel' Post 230 attended
18 field goal attempts ilnd Meigs County Court Dec. 14 in
tlhree of four charity tosses the trial of John Fleming.
Members attending the full
·for a season-high 33 points.
day
of court were Jane
Wall was the only Blue
Miller,
Lisa Thomas, Sandi
-Devil to do anything on the
boards. He picked off eight Miller, Jack Carder, Charlie
caroms to pace the Dev.ils in Geary, Tony Moore, Max
that department. The charts Geary, DaMy Hysell, Donald
·showed GAHS grabbed only · Geary Ill, Pa!flela Miller and
two offensive rebounds all M. L. Hysell, advisor.
The Meigs Post was
night.
initially
-!or/ned in October,
Gallipolis Jed 17-16 after
1977
and
Its membership
one period. Ironton blitzed
the GAHS defense foi 23 stands at sixteen. The post Is
points in a second period to ' sponsored by the Meigs
tl!ke a 39-29 halftime ad· C&lt;Junty Sheriff's Department.

Exp1orer pos
.

niemhers attend
murder trial'

2

20

4

2

24
• 4
10
1 4
0 0
0 0
o· 6
10 11

TO TP
1
5
0
4
2
2' 3 ~
3
0
8
3
2
0
o
0
0
0
1 o
9 57
·•
16 23 13 19-71
17 12 12 t6- 57

Score by quarters:
. Ironton Tigers
·.

vantage.
The Tigers led 52-41 going
into the final stanza. GAHS
closed the gap to seven, 56-49,
with 5:07 left before Ironton
pulled away to its 14 point

o
1
1

Ohio High School
Basketball Results

United Press lnternat'ional
Alexander 62 Trimble 48

Archbold

Fairview 56

90

Sherwood

Aurora 81 Coventry 66

Bellaire 73 John Marshall (W
Val 56
Bridgeport a1 Toronto 61

Buckeye North 47
·Local 46
·cambridge
98

Union

New

Philad=hia 74
Clrclev le . 4 Pickerington 71

Clyde
bsonburg 54
Columbiana Crestview 69
irondale Stanton 49
COpley 101 Manchester 84
Coshocton 55 Claymont 49 ,
Eastlake North 65 Geneva so

Huron 69 NorWalk 65
. Kalida 65 Van Buren 60
Kenton 8l Upper Sandusky 32

Kirtland 62 Ashtabula StJohn

59

Lake 56 Swanton 54
Lakewood 81 · Northridge 62
Lakewood

St Edward 79

Wickliffe 61'
Leetonia 54 Bergholz Springfield 53
Logan 76 Wellston 68
.
Marion Harding 78 Sandusky
Prkns 73
·
Maysvil le 58 Crooksville 55
(oil
Meadowbrook 65 Shenandoah

'

The Logan Chieftains fired
in a sizzling 66 percent of
their shots Tuesday night a~
they battled from a 33-33
halflim~ deadlock to defeat
.stubborn Wellston, 76-68.
Logan's · season mark
jumped to S.l and the Chiefs
continue to hold on to the top
spot in S_EOAL competition
with a perfect 6-0 record.
The Chief~ led 11-9 after the
first period but the host
Golden Rockets pulled into a
33·33 halftime tie. Logan
•
outscored WeUaton 26-17 in
the third stanza to gain some
breathing room and coast·on
out to the triumph.Dave Lehman poured in 23
points, John Albert 18, Ken
Kreig 11, and. Marty Hallett
10 for the winners.
Wellston was led by John
Martin's 15 points with John
Royster getting 12, Ted
"

..

'.

Williams II , and Robbie
Norman 10. . Logan hit on 33 of 55 field
goals and caMed 10 of 18 free
throws with John Albert
snaring eight of their 23
rebounds.
·
Wellston canned 'n of 71
from the floor, converted 14
ol23 at the line, and grabbed
42 rebounds with Ray
. GIUUand picking off 14.
. The box score:
L!rGAlif (76) - Gasser 2·0·
4' Krieg 2-7-11; Lehman 11 .1,
23 • Albert 8·0·16; Dalton 3·06; Hallett 5·0·10; Kemper 2·2·
6, TOTALS 33.10.76.
WELLSTON
168J - ·
Royster 5·2·12; Martin 7·1-15 ; .
Gilliland 3·5·11; Swonger 2 2
6; Norman 4-2-10; Willlam;5:
1-11; Montgomery 1·1·3
TOTALS 27·14-41.
.
L Scare by quarters:
w~~7on
': ~: ~~ ~~__;:
Roserve score: Wellston 42
.
Logan 33.

Morgan 5,. New Concord
Glenn SO
· New Miami67 Ham i lton RoSs

52

Newark Cath 75 Licking
Valley 64

Newcomerstown 52 Gar away

47
Ottawa Hills 74 N Baltimore
57

Oxford Tallawanda 72 Lakota

10
Painesville Harvey 61 Mentor

58

.

Patrick' Henry 67 Bryan 56
Preble Shawnee 66 National

Trail 59
River View 80 Sheridan 68
Rocky River 65 Medina 64

Russia 75 Franklin Monroe63

Southeastern 48 Noi-theastern

29

Southview 76 Lorain 66
Springfield S 9'1 Troy 59
Springfield N 8C Fa ir born Pk
Hills 68
Sf Clairsville 79 Wintersville
71
Stryker 88 Libert~ Center 45
Tiffin i::\iivert 80 Fremont Sf
Joe 61
Toledo
Woodward . 83
Frement 69
Tri-VIIIage 81 Northeastern .

59

.

•

Trlway 57 Tuscarawas Valley

49

'

.

Warren W Reserve 89 Ash

Edgewood 40
,
Warrensville 61 Brecksville

50

Waterloo 59 Crestwood 55
W Holmes 102 Wayne&lt;lale -16
l'

known .

f i duciary
within
thr'ee
months .
Da iP.d this 25th day · of
December 1977 ,

'

International
Hockey League

United Press lnternationa I

North
WifRis. gfga
Saginaw 21 12 4 -16 116 122
Flint
. 17 12 4 38 150 154
Port Huron

Kala.
Muskegon
Ft . Wayne

14 1.l 8 36 111
a 11 a 24 114
9 20 5 23 '109
South
w 1 t piS. gf

14 9
Toledo
13 t1
Mllw.
12 12
Grand Rapids
11 15

114
130
139
go

IN THE

COMMON PLEAS COURT,

PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN . THE
MATT ER OF

11 39 126 114 SETTLEMENT OF AC ·
8 34 120 109 COUNTS, PROBATE
10 34 104 113 CO URT , · MEIGS COUNTY,
6

28 101 124

,
Tuesday's Result
Saginaw 5, Kalamazoo 3
Today 's Games

Fllnl at Toledo

MuSkegon at Milwaukee
Fort Wayne at Grand Rapids

Thursdily's Games
No games scheduled

For

Manning D. Judg_e
Ju(lge
Cour t of Common Pleas ,
Probate Division
Meigs County, Ohio
{ 12) 28, (1) 4, 11 , Jtc

Thursday ,.J ~n .

5, 1978

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol
An interes ting change could ·

325
97
496

630
730
455

647
580

Tuesday•s results :

Ironton 71 Gallipolis 51
.Waverly 63 Jackson 4.4
Logan 76 Wellston 68

Athens 74 Meigs 12

Ravenswood 83 Spericer 52
pt_ Pleasant 51 Hurricane 49
Friday's games:

Meigs at Gallipolis

Welfst_on ·a t Ironton
Jackson at Athens
L09an at Waverly~

t Miami

Trace
Portsmouth at Gr
up
Parkersburg South at Pt.
Pleasant
Saturday's games :
Portsmouth at Ironton
Ra'(enswoad at Warren Local

SEOAL ONLY
TEAM
W .L P OP
Logan
6 o 421 306
Waverly
5 0 322· 230
Athens
· l 3 387 396
Wellston
3 3 · 396 4t3
Ironton
2 3 314 211
Gallipolis
· 2, 3 3/J7 315
Meigs
1 5 n6 448
Jackson
O· 5 25G 344
TOTALS
,22 22 2729 ·2729·
SEOAL RESERVES
TEAM
W L P OP
Waverly
4 1 244 169
Wtllston
4 2 283 262
Athens
4 2 287 267
Ironton
3 2 207 196
Gallipolis
3 2 202 183
Logan
3 3 226 226Jackson
1 4 142 238
Meigs
o 6 209 260
TOTALS
22 22· 1100 1800
Tuesday's results :

·Athens « Meigs 42 (of)
Wellston 42 " ~ogon 33
Waverly 52 Jackson 18
Ironton 42 Gallipolis 36

Greeneview 61

COMMON PLEAS COURT,
. PROBATE DIVISION.
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

(ll 4, H e

IN THE· COURT OF

COMMON rLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
HELEN CARL CHAPMAN ,·

Plaintiff ,

•VS•

\.

·

"

MRS. RUSSELL MORFEY ,

et al. ,
Defendants.

No. 16,296 ·
NOTICE FOR SE~VICE
BY PUBLiCATION
To : Dor is Carl Heales,

whose last known address Is
Box 742, Willcox , Arizona,
and .whose exact address Is
unknown and ·cannot w ith
reasonable d iligence be
ascertained;
·
~ To : RlchiHd Carl , whose
address is unknown and
cannot with
reasonable
diligence be ascerta ined;
To ~ Martha Jean
Carl
Burton , whose address is'
unknown and cannot with
reasonable di l igence be
ascertained; ·
To: Donald Carl,whose last
known address is 4150 W .
Broad Street. Columbus,
Ohio,. and whose exact lid ·
dress Is unknoWn l!lnd cannot
with reas onable diligence be

Two opposing forces 11re at
odds in your career areas
today . Fortunately for you, the
proponent s ol your cause will
be able to nullify the detractors.
PISC~S (Feb.20-Mori;Jl 2.)
Don 'l go to those who· ha"Je
rejected you in the past for
faOJors t~day . On the other
hand , you can probably count
on those who have seen ·fit to
help yOu preOJiously .' , ,.

..,

·~

"

'

To : Sara LOu Merrlt! ,
whose las.t known address 1S
Gira ld Rd ., Columbus, Oh io •.
and whose exact address Is
unknown 'and ca nnot w'lfh
reasonable diligence be
ascertained;
.
To : Helen Ashworth Hyne,
whose l~st known address is
Lancaster, Ohio, and whose
e11.acl address is unknown and
cennot wi t h reuon.-ble
diligence be ascertained ;
To : The unknown heirs and
devisees of Donald Jeffers,
deceased ;
To : The unknown heirs and
dev isees of Paul Ca rl,
deceased :
To : The un known heirs and
dev i see,s of Clyde .c arl ,
deceased ;
.
To : The unknown heirs and
dev i sees of Jesse Carl.
deCeaSed ;
"You are hereby ' not ified
that you ha~Je been named
defendants in a lega l action
'entitled Helen Carl Chapman,
Plaintiff, vs . Mrs . Russell
. Morrey, et a 1, Defendants.
This actioh has been assigned
Cas-e No . 16 , 296, ·in the
Common Pleas Court of
Mei gs County , Pomeroy,
Oh iO, .45769.
The Oblect of the complain t
is to parti tion the followi:':g
reci I estate situated in Scipio
Township, Meigs C.ounty,
O.hio :
The followii}J! desc ribe d
prem i ses sltuafec! in the
Township of Sclp.lo, County of
Meigs, and State of Ohio, and
in the !lovtheas.t (luarter of
Section No . 2, Town No . 7,
Range No . 14 of t t'le Ohio
Company's
P u rchase ,
bounded· and described as ·
foilows, to -wit : e ec;~~innl ng at
the southeast corner of
Section No. 2; thence north
along said section line to th e
center of the southeast corn~r
of Section No . -2; thence west
49 rods ,· then ce south 7 rods;
thence west 11 rods ; then ce
north 7 rods ; thence west 16
r ods, 15 links ; thenc;e south
alqng Mary A . Davis' east
l ine ; thence along said
section line to the place of
beginning , cont.&amp;ln·lng 40
acres, more or less .
You are reQuired to answer
the complaint within 28 days
after the last 'pu blic·a t lon of
this notice, wl;l i ch will be
· published onCe each wiek for
six consecutive weeks. The
lasf publication will be made
on January 11. 1978 . and the
28 days for answer will start
on that date .
· In case of your fail ure to
answer or otherwise respond
as required by the Ohio Rules
of Civil Procedure . judgment
by default will be ·rendered
against you
tor
relief
demande d in the complaint.

,.
•

~rle

·HARDWARE
.

a penchant for conducting
yourself admirably ,with others
In commerci,al de·~lings today :
lo pure ly social situati ons, you
may put your foot in yo ur
mouth .

··Ace Is the piau with
· the- Helpful Hardware Man'"®

TAURUS (Aprii1D-Moy 10) An

ACE

old grudge shouldn't be allowed to Influence your decisions today . If this happens,
another might do something
. ou t of spite in an attempt to
balance th ings.

"·Clean sw·eep"

GEMINI (May 21·June 10) You

are not a good self-starter
today. Someone eLse may have
to prod you a little , but you'll
gratefully accepl the nudge
and go on to be a winner.

CANCER (Juno 21-Julj 12) Before you make a reqUest of
another today, b·e sure you'll
be a~le to reciprocate when the
Shoe is on the other loot . It's
not your nature to be a Iaker
without giving In return.

for

CORN
BROOM

I

LEO (July 23-Aug.21) When you
throw co ld water On co.wo r~­
ers, yOu rna~ get by once. I
wouldn 't adv_
rse you to try the
sour grapes again, if you want
their cooperation .

VIRGO (Aug,23·Stipt .22) Avoid
negative persons like the plague today because you have
more than yOur share of self·
doubts . Hobnob with positive
thinkers and their vibes will be
Infectious .

LIBRA (Sept.13·0&lt;1.23) Being a
good-time Charley with your
money to impress pals is an
exercise in "futilit y today . J
. ~pread it around on your family ...
''you want to make polhts .
reer ~ssociale who has it in for
' you may try to make you look
small in the eyes of others
today . Jf you react with your
best instincts , you co.~n negate

4~strand

stitching.

Made of
genuine
broom
corn

• Sturdy, attractive
-con$truction.
Tough fibres
resist breakage
and shedding.

REG. PRICE

Mr. and Mrs. Cisco
Williams of Albsny were
Christmas dinner guests of
Mr . and Mrs. Charles
Williams.
Harry Cleland of Columbus
spent Christmas Day with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dallas
Cleland.
·
All children and grand·
children of Rev . and Mrs.
Don )l'alker were . with their
parents over the Christmas
holidays.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Lake,
Loti and Sean, spent Wednesday eveniril! with their
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
•
Francis Morris.
Miss Edith Hayman spent
Christmas with · Ruth and
Grace Ellis in Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hill
spent Christmas in C&lt;Jiumbus
with their son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Waid
Foster and family.
Mrs. Margaret Houdashelt
spent Christmas with Mr. and
Mrs. Milton Houdashelt in
Gallipolis.
.
Mr . .and Mrs. Thomas
Hayman of Syracuse, Gary
· Hart of Cleveland, Mr. aqd
Mrs. Barry Hart and Amy of
Pomeroy spent Christmas
with Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert
IJart.
Dr. Kathryn Philson of
East Letart spent Christmas
night with Marlene Fisher.
MiUie Ripley of Charleston,
Marlene Fisher and family
and Mrs. Bertha Robinson
spent Christmas with Mr. and
Mrs. Pete Shields.
Christmas evening guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Sargent were Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Sargent of Run City,
Ohio and Mr. and Mrs. Philip
Radford and Stephenie, Rick
Johnson and Mrs. Bertha
Robinson.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Robinson, Flatwoods, W. Va.
and her grandson, Raymond
Robinson and cousin from
Columbus spent Monday with
Mrs. Bertha Robinaon.
Mr. and Mrs. · George
Walla ce and · Wilma of
Columbus
wei;!' · en1\TeWS 1\TO(
route · to -Flori lllt--a nd
ll~
1 l4
stopped a short time at her
parents, Mr. an\1 Mrs. Blythe
Holiday visitors of Mrs. Theiss.
RoSe Thomas were Mrs .
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon
Gladys Baughman and Jack Harrison, who is retired from
Gale of Gahanna.
the Navy, have moved from
Mrs. Helen Archer spent South Carolina to Columbus.
Christmas with her son and They'visited her parents, Mr.
family, Mr. and Mrs. Don a,nd Mrs. Blythe Theiss.
C&lt;Jieman of Columbus,
Guests- over -Christmas
Lt. and Mrs: Michael holidays of Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Boring of Hancock Air Base Riffle were Melvin Riffle of
in Syracuse, New York, Columbus, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
visited with his parents, Mr. McKenzie, Phil, Jeff · and
and Mrs. Grant Boring and Jozie, of Gallipolis, Patty
sister, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Shain of Antiquity, Mr. and
Martin and sons, during the Mrs . Sam Curtis of Norwalk
holidays.
and, Sue Brolienhgan of
Christmas diru\~r guests of lnd1ana.
·.
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Pickens
Mr . and Mrs.• Kenneth
were Mr. and Mrs. Bill Turley and sons and Mr. and
Williams of Athens, Ga., l\lrs. Larry Turley spent
Nancy Koblauch and Bill Christmas
with
Mr s.
Dietz of Columbus, Mrs . Clarence Turley at Gallipolis
Gladys WilliaJilS, Mr. and and Mr. and Mrs. Sheridan
Mrs. Lyle Balderson ~nd Russell, Jr . and Paula , at
Kay.
Mason , W. Va .
Holiday guests at the home
Mr. Kenneth Swart spent
of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest several days over the holiday
Whitehead were their with his mother, Mrs: James
· daughters, Jane · and Juli, · Swart .
students at Ohio University ,
Athens; Mr. and Mrs. Isaac
The Almawic
Frydman of Chicago, Ill.;
United
Press
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Sauer By
lnlel'llllllooal
and .Joy and Mrs. Doug
Today is Wednesday, Jan.
Becker of Middleport; Mr.
4,
the fourth day of 1978 with
and Mrs. Bill Meredith of
Beverly, Mr. and Mrs . Roger 361 to follow.
The moon is approaching
Meredith and daughter,
.
Teresa, of Belpre; Tim Kuhn its new phase.
The morning stars are
of Tuppers Plaina, Ed Hensch
of Cleveland and Mr. and .1\fars, Mercury, Venus and
Saturn.
.
If
Mrs: Warren Pickens.
The
evening
star
is
Jupiter.
, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Those bonf on this dale are
Smith and daughter of Akron
under
the sign of Capricorn.
visited with Mr. and Mrs.
Sir
Isaac
Newton,
Ernest Ruth and Mr. 'and
discoverer
of
the
law .of
Mrs. Garth Smith and other
relatives during the holidays. · gravity, and actress Jane
Mr. and Mrs. Denver Wyman were born Jan. 4 Weber entertained with a he in 1642 and she in 1914.
On this day in history:
birthday dinner for their son,
In 1885, Dr. William Grant
Mark. Guests Included llir.
of
Davenport,
Iowa,
and Mrs. Oscar Weber arid
performed
the
first
daughter of Keno and Dave
appendeCtomy.
The
patient
Weber , student at Ohio·
University, who is home for made a complete recovery.
the holidays.
In 1937, abo~:" 10,000 Itallat
Christmas dlniler guests of troops land~ mSpain to bel
MlssForrestKibblewereMr. the nationalist forces m th I
and Mrs. Roger Westfall and country's civil war .
daughter of Tuppers Plains, . In 1948, Bunna became a
and Mr. and Mrs. Wllliam Independent nation after
Congrove and Pam.
centuries of influence and
Holiday gutll!ts at the home cilntrol by Great Britain.
of Mr. and Mrs. Gene Wilson
In 1974, President Nixon
were Mr. and Mrs. Charles reftlsed to release any more
Congrove, ~ Mr. and Mrs. of the 500 documents
Gary McNerney and family subpoenaed by the Senate
of Zanesville, Mr. and Mrs. WaterRale Qxnmlltee.
Robert Sams and Mr. and
Mrs. Gale Sams of Jane Lu;
N(M
W. Va.,andMr. and Mrs. Bob
Sams of Alien 'Bridge, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Martin
Nesaelroad of Long Bottom
viii ted with Mr. aild Mrs. C.
P. Cauthorn and daughters
during tile holidays.
.
Mr. and Mrs. Waller Brown
and Dave visited with Mr.
and Mrs. Stm Cowdery and
1011 of Cblllll!otbe during tbe
holidays.

es

(12 ) 7, 14 , 21, 28 (1) 4, 11. 6tc

h~'t'e

By Mn. Fra..,.. Morris
Mr. Bill Woods of Marietta
Convalescing Center spent
five days over Christmas
with his wife an&lt;! family .
Mr. and Mrs . Frank
Woodgerd of Grandview,
Idaho spent several days over
the holiday with his mother,
Mrs. Bill Woods and other
relatives·.
Mr. and Mrs . Frank
Cleland spent Christmas
weekend with their son, Mr.
and Mrs. Steve Cleland and
children af North Ridgeville.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Frank and family,
local, Mr. and Mr~ . Iierman .
Carson and family of
Coolville and Mr. and Mrs.
Crill Bradford, Jr. of Worthington, enjoyed a family gettogether wiUi a Christmas
dinner observance on
Saturday with their parents,
Mr. and Mrs: Critt Bradford.
Mrs . Mildred Swift of
Columbus and Mrs. Christine
Gould of Nelsonville spent
Saturday with their parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Morris.
Mr . and Mrs . Mike
Hayman and children of
Jonesboro , Tenn . spent
Christmas with his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Hayman.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Birch
and daughters of Bellevue
came Christmas and spent a
couple of days with Mr. an~
Mrs. Elza Birch and Mrs.
Emm11..,Salser.
Mr. aild Mrs. Jack Adams
spent Christmas Eve with
tqeir son, Bobby Joe Adams
and daughter, Melanie.
Mr. and Mrs. Linley Han
were Christmas dinner
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Hart and Legina.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Beegle of
Gallipolis, Bruce Beegle of
Columbus, Vera Beegle an~
Tommy Beegle, local, were
Christmas dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs: Bob Beegle.

Reedsville

Larry E. Spencer /
Clerk of Court
Common Pleas Court
Meigs County, Ohio

ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) You

SCORPIO (Oct.1•·Nov.11) Aca-

W Musklngum ,· 71 New
L~xlngton 52
·
Williamstown (W Val 11 Ft
Frye 63 '
Yellow
Springs
68

youngstown Nt,Joney 83
(Pal E 55

Marining D . Webster
JUDGI;: .
.

Larry E. Spencer,
Clerk of Courts,
Meigs County , Ohio
(12) 7, 14, 21.28 ( 1) 4, 11, 18, 7t

7- 'rhe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Wednesday , Jan .

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

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE,THRU JANUARY 7, 1978

MIXED

his ploy:
SAGITTARIUS )Nov.23-0oc.21)

GINO'S

Doubts will treep lnlo your

mind today, but at leaal lhey
won't be concerning material
things . The problem equid be
what to do with your windfall .

OF ·MASON

!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .J

'

·PHONE 773-5536

1

'

·..

.

FRYER PARTS ........'!'~A

CHICKEN
BREAST•••••••••••••••• :~·.
CRISPY SERVE
BACON•• ~ ••••••••••••••• ~·
USDA .CHOICE

ARM POT ·ROAST. •••••L:.
~

.

lfSDA CHOICE

•

·BONELESS

..

,~· '

CHUCK ROAST••••••••• ~s.

BUCKET

,.----·$., . 49

.. .

j

CUBE .STEAK •••••••••••~~ ••1.,

YELLOW
ONI.ONS

3-LB.

BAG ..

········~······

FRESH
·TOMATOES ••••••••••••• ~~
FLAVORITE 16 oz.
BREAD••••••••• ~ ••••••
GOLD MEDAL .
FLOUR.~ •••••••• :•• :.~;..

4/$1

C OUPON

l

_j

ARGO.PEAS

oPEN

*269

•

Racine Social Events

e~cerlalned;

county road leading from
Adams Mill to Racine ,
supposed to con ta in about 28
rods be the sa me more or
less.
Reference Deeds : Vol. 268,
Page 263 , Vol . 231. Page 327
and deed .,f rom Bonnie sue
Roseberr~
to Lou 1 rene
Roseberry , d.ated Au9ust
15th, 1977, and lef1 to be
recorded on December 2nd.
19n.
You are notif ied that you
are required . to . an$wer the
Comp la int w-i ·t h·i n ·' twenty .
eight days after the last
publi c at ion .
The
ta!}t
publ ic ation w ill be made o"h
I he 18th day of January, 19?8.

QHIO
Accounts an(:! vouchers of
the
fp llowing
named
fiduciar ies have been filed In
the PrObate Court, Meigs
County , Ohio. for app rova l
and settlement :
CASE NO . 20639 Fifth
Current Account of Norman
F .· Hoo~Jer , G\Jardlan of the
Esta te of Esmeralda Bar bara WiltShire. In competent.
CASE NO . 19364 Fir st and
Final Account of Joan Wolfe,
Guardian ' of · the Guar dianship ., Estate of Orville
Chase , an ln com petenl.
·
. CASE , NO . 2125-1 Fir st and
Fina l Account of Kenneth W .
l:blin ,·Guardian of the person
and estate of Anthon")' Eblin,
a m inor .
CASE NO . 20013 First and
F inal Account of Ellis Me ·
Millan, Admini~trator ot the
Estate ot ·Ethel McMillan,
Deceased .
Unless exceptions are fl ied
there to, sa id accounts will be
for' hearing before said court
on the 2nd day of February,
1978 , at wh i ch time sai d
accounts will be ·considered
and co_
n tinued from day to
day until finally disposed of.
Any per-son Interested may
ru e written exceptions to said
a cc ounts or · to matters
pertaining ·to the execution Of
the trust, not less than five
dcly$ priQf' ·~to . the da te set tor
hear ing.

'.

AQUARIUS (Jon .10-Feb.19)

ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P OP
Waverly
8 0 525 408
Logan
8 1 633 501
'Portsmouth
5 1 438 3.11
Washington
5 2 49'1 419

Washington CH

EUGENE

rgov1

Cage -

3 2 320
1 1 123
3 5 475
3 6 577
3 1 658
2 6 4.46
2 1 526
2 1 469

Pl11 intiff ,

,
The Gallla - Meigs Post ROSEBERRY
Addreu Unlcnawn,
State Highway Patrol said tt 11 . ,
Oeftnd•nts-.
Mrs. Wade lost control of her
N"o . 16:.642
auto Whi Ch ran 0 II the right
-SERVICE BY
side of the highway and
PUBLICATION overturned. She Was taken to
H,:'AM~B: EN OA NT
the hoSpital by a SEOEMS
You ore hereby not/ted thot
ambulance.
'
a Complaint tlas been flied in
the Com.mon Pleas court of
.. Cl~rence P. Shan, 20, Red Melg5 count·y, Ohio, cue No .
Level
Ala.' was charged with of
16,6~2 . de~. lng part ition
, '
the f ow1ng descrtbed
failure to stop in the assured reo I estot lo-w it :
· clear distance following a . The toil no real eo tale
In the Townsh ip of
t ra Ill c 8CCl'd ent at 11:40 a.m. ,, Situated
Leb.anon, count~ of Me lg!Tuesday on SR 7, seven and State of Oh io , and
CHRISTIANSBURG, Va. tenths of a mile so_uth of US bounded and described as
follows :
(UPI)- Mootg1111ery County 35.
The north half of the west
Commonwealth's Attorney J.
The patrolsaid Shan's pick- eighty acres of the ~oufhwesf
quarter ot Section 34, Town J,
Patrick Graybeal says a
uptruckstrucktherearofan Range ll. of the Ohio -com ·
special grand jury will be auto driven by Charles J. panv's Purchase, be the same
.
more or less .
impaneled
Friday
to
60, of Middleport.
Also elghl acres (8)
investigator· the death of Ohltnger,
There Was minor damage , describ~d
as
fo llows :
Virginia Tech footbllll player
Prev i ously
entered ' tor
tax ation in the name of
Bob Vorhies.
Samuel Baker. Range 11 ,
The freshman fullback died
Town 3, Section 3~. Lot 6~ 0
No . l4 r acres 90 value -100 ·
in his d!lrmiiDry room 'last
NOTICE OF
qUarter e: . part of southwest
November a few hours after
ACCOUNT
one .tourth. The said eight
Case No. n.2S7
acres be in g a part of the
performing punishment drills Estate of REED
GANDEE
above described lot to be laid
following practice.
Deceased.
off by metes and bounds in
Notice Is hereby given that
Dr.. David Oxley, stale
the northwest corner of said
Fred w . Crow of Pomeroy ,
tract in ·as near a square form
medical examiner for Meigs
County , Ohio , ha s been
as practicable. Being a lso
western Virginia, said the duly appoint ed Administrator two rods in w idth , beginning
the Will Annexed of th e
at lhe northeast corner of the
most likely cause of death I With
Estate of Reett Gandee,
north half o.t the southeast
.was a fluctuation of the heart. deceased, lat e of Middleport quarter of Sect i on ~. Town 3,
But, he added, the exact Village, Me igs County, Ohio . Range 12 , sl;tuate In Chester
are reQ ui red to
Townsh ip, Me igs County,
cause of death may never be fil Creditor;.s
e their c1a1ms with said
Ohio, and running west to the

lake place within your .associa·
lions this com ing year . You
may become the tocal point of
a group where ,yOu have previous ly been only a sjJQke in the
wheel.
CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan.19)1n
1 ·
d · h
·
you r co e ne to ay t ere IS one
Totals 29 -16-74.
who Is inclined to cause probBy Quarters:
Sym. Valley 24 15 18 23-110 lems . You 'll spot this quickly
and be able to neutrilize her
Kyger Creek 13 18 19 24-74 ad~Jer.se effects. Having prob1
1 ·
?
ems se ec ung a career . Send
for your copy Of Astra -Graph
Letter by mailing 50 cenls for
each a nd a lo ng , · selfaddressed , sta mped envelope
Ia Astra-Graph , P.O. Box 489,
Radio City ,Station, N .Y. 10019.
Be sure, to·· specify Y,our birth
sign .

Elyria 44 Findlay 42
Erie (Pal McDowell 61 .. Pt. Pleasant
Ravenswood
Youngstown N 6 1
Euclid Sf Jo 108 Lyndhurst Gallipolis
Athens
Brush 58
Wellston - -Ft Re&lt;;:overy 65 Lehman Cath
Iron ton
61
Meigs
Ft Jem'lln·gs 55 Antwerp 49
Grandville 62 Utica 60 (2 of) Jackson

·..s

· Rockets give Chief~
scare
.before losing
.

Symmes Valley again took
over as Ingles connected
from under and Payne from
outside to give the visitors a
57-50 advantage going into the
last quart'er.
Kyger Creek's· fourth
quarter comeback effort was
led by junior Von Taylor's 10
points and Thompson's II
points.
Sophomore guard Brent
Miller led SVHS' fourth
period scoring with seven
pointS.
Four players finished in
double figures for each te811) .
Ingles led all Point makers
with 25 points. Payne had 22
points, Miller 13 and Davis 10.
Pacing Kyger Creek was
Thompson with 22 points.
Taylor finished with his hest
offensive display of the year
I~ points. Helms had 13 points
and Smith 12:
Kyger Creek held a 45-42
rebounding edge with Helms
grabbing 16 reboun.ds .
The Little Vikings won the
reserve tilt, 49-35. Saunders
and Taylor paced the winners
with 18 and 17 respectlveiy.
Bruce Gilmore topped KC
with 13. Kyger Creek will host
Trimble Friday evening.
·Symmes Valley will return
home to play Hannan Trace.
Box score:
Symmves Valley 180! Ingles 12·1·25; E. Davi.s 5·010; Miller 4'5·13 ; Wiseman 22·6; Payne 9-4-22; Sowards o.
2-2 and Flack 0·2·2. Totals 3216·10.
Kyger Creek (74)- Taylor
6·2-14; Smith 4-4·12 ; Willis 20·4; Helms 5-3·13 ; Thompson
9-4-22 and Westfall 3·3·9.

standings

...

Barbara S. Wade , 40,
Mineral Wells, W. Va. was
taken to the Camden.cJark
Hospital In Parkersburg for
treatme(lt of Injuries suffered
in a traffic accident at 3:25·
p.m. Tuesday on SR 7 two
miles north ofSR 248 in Meigs
County:

Vikings drop Bobcats, 80-74
sixth straight without a win. ·
C&lt;Jach ·Ed Hardy's Vikings
took command behind the
shooting of 6-6 senior center
Ralph Ingles and forward
Ted Payne. Ingles had 19
points in the first half while
Payne caMed eight.
Ed Davis, Viking guard,
alSo had eight points in the
first two quarters.

MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
LOU IRENE ROSEBERRY ,

HARVEY

c~

Visiting Symmes Valley
jumped off to a 24-13 first
period lead then held off a
surging rally to defeat host
Kyger Creek 80-14 in a high
scoring SVAC contest
Tuesday.
'11le victory gave Symmes
Valle~ a 3-4 overall record
and 3-4 slate In the SV AC.
Kyger Creek dropped its

OF

· asCertained ;
To · IJ i rgene MelrlgOn ,
· whos~ last known address Is
Fairflllf Ot l ve- , Columbus,
Ohio, - and whose exact old ·
dress Is unknown and c•nnot
wlfl't renoneble diligence beastertained ;
To : Goldie Archer. whose
address II unknown and
cannot w i th reasonable
diligence be ucertalned ;
To : Mylftl-; l Ash~Orth ,
whose last known address Is
Curren Ori"Je , Athens, Oh io ,
and "whOse- exact a~dress Is
unknown and cannot with
reasonable diligence be
ascertained ;
To : Wi lmer Cerl, Jr .,
whose lut known address Is
1800 Brlnwood Ct ., Columbus ,
Ohio, and whOse euct ad dress is unkno.,..n and cannot
wlth reasonable diligence be
ascertained :
To : Wllla td Cart, whose
last known address Is 6220
Brooklyn Rd ., Jackson ,
Michigan , afld whose exact
address Is unknown and
ca nnot with
reuon·ab le
diligence be ascertained ,·
To : James sow11rds, whose
last known address is lA
Loislana, Detroit , Michigan ,
and whose exact address is
unknown and ca nnot with
re asonable dil i gence be

tN lHE
COMMON P'LEASCOURT

..

&lt;

-

•

Lakers make .it four in row
BY

'

17 oz.

'6/$1

•
'

.WIC

Lim)t 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Jan . 7, 1978

~

!

• ~-~ ~:!

4·I $J
.2% MILK ...·........ ~. $1 ~9, .

COUPON

.
VALLEY BEu··

_ COUPON

COIJPUN

·'

U.S. NO. 1 WHITE

ELF

POTATOES
1
4'
~~-

TOMATO SOUP

69

, Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Jan. 7, 1978

io~ OZ.

7/$1

W/C

Limit 1 Per' Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer
• 1. 1978

j

TIDE DETERGENT
49

oz.

$119

•

�•

..

•
~ ....: The ~i!Y Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, ~an . 4, 1978

HOST PARTY
Mrs. Roy Winebrenner
entertained at her b orne
Olristmas ~ve with a dinner
party. · Atlending were M.rs.
Harold Weaver and Peggy,
St. Louisville, 0 ., Mr. and
Mrs .
William
G.

9- The Dally Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Jan . 4,1978

Wine brenner , Mary Ann, , broke her leg in a fall on Oct.
Pauui arid Becky, and Mr. 31 iJ now at the home of Iter
and Mrs. Thomas Weaver daughter in Dayton . She will
and Chris.
be in a cast lor si• more
weeka. Carda may be sent to
ber care of Mrs. Mildred
NOW RECOVERING
Clark, 119 Devonohire ~ve. ,
Mrs. Ne11le Burford who Dayton 45427.

BABCOCK CONFINED
Mrs. Josephine Babc&lt;JCk,
Tuppers Plains. Is confined to
the Marietta Convales&lt;ent
Center,
117
Bartlett,
Marieita, Ohio 45750 where
ca~ may be sent.

dll pay you the

your sewings?

on

.,

•

llllllllllll•lll!ltlll!ltMIItlllii-illli
-

' Middl.......+

Helen Help

u·s. ••

ll:itNI \

POLLY"$ POINTERS
.
Polly Cramer

By Helen Bottel

'

HER WISHES RE11JRN TO HAUNT HER
DEAR HELEN:
DEAR POLLY - I do hope glance what pattern Ia ln!!de
I had a drifting kind of marriage, not bad, not good. My hus- you or one of yeur readers and the size without having to
band loved me much more than 1 loved him, and that's why 1 • can help me. I put a plaJtlc remove several to find the
stayed. I didn't wantto hurt him.
sear! on my golden maple one I want. - CLEMMA
But I couldn't help those awful, llioughl.s: In depressed piano and it left rough marka
DEAR POLLY - S. H.
moments I'd think, " If he'd die, I'd be free." Then I'd be par· ' or you rrught caD it a fUm on could cut or tear her old
ticularly nice, making up for what he never knew. How awful the finish. l tried wann mild sheets . into squares of a
wishing a man dead, SO yOU .\VOuldn't be the "cruel" one whli soap on it and also a weU- uniform size to underllne
wants·divorce.
known sprl\Y cleaner for crazy quUt or strip type.qullt
Then he died ! It was a sudden heart attack,.no warning. He wood was left ~n lor 12 hours blocks. It does not matter
was only 39. How can I live with myself1 l now realize 1 cared or more but ne11her belped, I how thln the oheets are as
yerp:nuch. and it's too late. Maybe I willed hJs death. The guilt am afraid to try anythlng else long as they hold together
IS kiDmgme.· HELP !
without knowing someone until tJ&gt;e top is In place. The
DE41\ HELP;
else has used it. Please help stitching can aU be done on
Ve~ fl&gt;l'l&gt;!,""rried people haven't, at depressed moments, me Save my costly plano. - lli'e machine. Stripa may be
fantas1zed, Oh, to be suddenly free. without the hurt and MRS. J. C.
applieda!'l'osstheblockoron
misery of divorce." You can't always control your thoughts.:
DEAR MRS. J . C. - the dlagonal In unlfonn or
When you're down, your rrund hunts "easy" ways out no.mat· Plastic Items left on llnlshed · varying widths. Trim edges
wood often leave marks. I to fit backing, stiteh blocka
. tertheguiltthey causelater.
'
Concentrate on the good times you had with your husband have had blurred areas on a together in an interesting
how he wasn't •ware of the had. !think you can truthfUlly say table after a hOt plate has design, tack lining in place
vou made him happy, and that's efiough to ease your cons- been set on a heavy plastic and bind edges of the quilt. It
Clence. Believe tne, you didn't will his death!
table mat, but luckily I have is best to make the entife top
Now, get on with life! · H.
always been able to remove of similar material. Old
them with the same spray neckties coul~ be used for
wood cleaner you used or thls.-PAUUNE:
DEAR HELEN:
.
with
lemon oil furniture
DEAR POLLY- Do teD S.
A corr~pondent ·wondered wbere the tenn " Big Apple"
polish.
If
your
top
has
been
H.
that in our city the Cancer
carne from, in reference to New York City.
waxed
perhaps
Society
likes to get old sheets
heavily
No one reaDy knows, it &amp;eems, but a couple of versions are ;
When big rock hands came to New York they called it the Big removing the wax will so they can be distributed to
Apple, for they considered "Fun City" the big time. The other remove the film. Uquld wax vollinteer groups for making
verSion (I like this one) is that apple growers from upstate applied and wiped oH whlle pads and bandages. Now they
called NYC the B1g Apple because it was their biggest market wet wUI remove the old wax if even take colored sheets as
SU\'11 is the case. Willi a piano white ones are so scarce. for produce. · EL B.
·
l would not experiment but NEVA
DEARHELEN: .
would
call in a professional
Polly will send you one of
Soon my children and l will be leaving my husband 1&gt;111 the
refinisher
lor
advice.
her
sighed
thank-yo.u
divorce won'i be final for 18 months. It's amicable ·but
POLLY.
newspaper
coupon
clippenlf·
definitely a final decision. 1'9 like to sell my wedding and
·
she
uses
your
favorite
engagement rmgs before then, as we need the money. Is there
Pointer,
Peeve
or
Problem
in
DEAR POLLY - I was
·
any law against it?· L.W.
her
colwnn.
Write
POLLY'S
Interested in the reader's
DEAHL.:
.
They are your rings, to do with as you wish, unless, Pointer concerning using her POINTERS in care of this
somehow, tbe settlement decrees otherwise. I see no reason blow dryer on the bathroom newspaper.
mirror to remove steam.
why you can'tselllheni. -H.
Quite by accident I
discovered that If you fan
DEAR HELEN :
. My wife . e~rns $2&gt;,000 a year and loves her work. I hate my your bathroom door open a
JOb. We don t need my salary. Our children do need a full-time few times it will have the
Where is it written that a man can't quit' work and stay home same effect and save a bit of
energy, too. - MRS. A. C.
with the kids, as a mother often does?- JERRY
DEARJERRY:
. DEAR POLLY - When
That unwritten law is going out the window along with many ordering a pattern from a
other male-female taboos. If you and xour wife agree, there's newspaper I clip the picture
no reason why you can't become a full-time househushand. .'rom the paper, circle the size
(But! predictthe rosy glow won't last a year.) -H.
· I ordered and write the date
on it. When the pattern comes
1 paste the picture on the
outside of the pattern en·
velope · and can tell at a

1os:en to
he cherished

CHOICES

MEETINGPOSTPONEO
Meeting of tbe Middleport
Garden Club scheduled for
t,his week has been postponed '
until Tuesday, Jan. 10 and
than a blackisll tinge .... "
These. and many other will be held In tbe social room
similar ·myths make it dif- ofthe Columbus and SouUiern
ficult for a blind person to feel Ohio Electric Co. At that time
like an individual. But most there will be a slide prog~am
troublil)g of all is the notion by the Rev, Dwight Zavltz.
that the blind are ·helpless. Host&amp;•• w:ill be Miss Hallie
The woman you encoUntered Zerkle and Miss Nellle
In the subway Station did not Zerkle.
ask if r.ou needed help. She

Karen Blaker Ph.D.

no.J!lattet;'what rou7e looking,·.
for 1~ saVIngs or Investment
certificates...
~.

Blind anger
DEAR DR. BLAKER - l
was blinded In a car accident
five years ago. Though l went
through a terrible period of
. adjustment, I now feel I
accept being blind. But other
people's attitudes toward the
blind still make me. furious.

GOLDEN PAS$8001(

5 !! 5:.1.~%

5 /.::~,%

• , Compoundtd Dlllyl

e PIV~Pit Q~lrtuty I Ml1lmum $1 ,000.00

RAJ_I

l iElO

,.

'

3·MONTH CERTIFICATE

RATE

'

1-YEAR CERTIFICATE

oz

·670

AIIIIUU
II ATE

• Plytblt Outrltrly • Mlnhn1111 $1.100.08 ·

2·YEAR CERTIFIC·ATE

l· YEAR CERTIFtCA1E

6~,

6~~,%

KATE

• P•p•l• Our~trtr • Mlnii!IUI'I $1 ,000.00

• Plyabll Quarll tl y 1 Minimum $1 .000.00

. 4-YEAR CERTiFICATE

6-YEAR CERTIFICATE

7 ~,%

7t~,%

'

.

!lATE

'

And in addition to all thiS ... monthly or
qu art e r l~ l n c~m:e ... cald on one, two, thr11.
lour, or s i ~ vur certificates. Intern! pay-

ab le monthly II you desire on eertlfiCJitt

W1 lh lilce amoun t of $5.000.00 or mort.
Federal Reoul at lons require a substantial
penalty lor premature wl111 drawill ol certlli·

IIATE

' t o11t lunds.

• Plylblt Ouartertv • Minimum 51,000.00

terms of

you'll find it at

OhioValley Bank
Why settle for less than the best?
When it c omes to your savings, you
want a fair r,ett1rn, the highest legally possible, with ~ guarantee of
saf~ty fo:t: your funds, and ac~
cessibility to these funds

on reasonable notice of ~ithdrawal.
This is exactly what Ohio Valley
Bank wants and promises their depositors. No wonder savings de-

cw~

•

posits continue to be at an
all-time high.

Will!

~ OhioValley Bank
.

.

G·attipolls, Ohio

'

Meml&gt;er FDIC

The leading savings plans are at the leading savings bank.

.

was waiting for the subway.
Just as the train arrived, a
woman apprQached me ,
grabbed my arm and
shouted, " The train's here.
I'll help you. " I got angry and
yelled back, "Maybe I can't
. see but I can hear." In the
awkward silence that
followed , llelt sorry for her. I
apologized and askod her to
help me onto the subway .:..
although I could have
managed myself.
Blind people are. expected
to be· so grateful for any offer
of help. Sometimes we don't
wanf it - or need it. Why
can 't people understand
we're not helpless?
DEAR READER - That is
a tough question. It is sad but
true that the btind are no!
treated as individuals but in

.'

a

number

of

stereotypes. ·
It is common to think blind
people are · miserable and
unhappy, that they deserve
pity, that they are devout and
pure, and that they are
helpless.
Much of the misery that is
supposed to accompany
blindness comes from the
bell~! that the blind llve·ln a

assumed you did.
,
No wonder you were angry ..
It is frustrating to be treated
as helpless when you are not.
On the other hand, perhaps ·
you were too sensitive. Your
feelings of being misunderstood may have been
accumulating for some time.
Although the woman acted as
if you were helpless, she did
not necessarily shout because
she thought you were deal as
well as blind. Yet, that was
your assumption. Possibly
she was only trying to make
herself heard over the sound
of the train.
You mention you could
have managed on your own.
You might have done more to
break down the myth of
helplessness if you had
declined th~ offer of
assistance and entered the
train by yourself.
Write to Dr. Blaker· Jll.-1!
of this newspaper,
, Box
489, Radio City Station, New
York, N. Y. 10019, Volume of
mail prohibits personal
replies, but questions of
general interest will be
discussed in future columns.

Beverly Wilcox, freshman
at Marshall University, I.s
home for the holidays with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs,
Raymond Wilcox. She will
to school on Jan. 16.
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Lambert
·have returned from Berea
where they spent the holiday
with Mr. and Mrs. George
Doolittle, Kristy, Connie and
Sieve. They were
by

mum

LB. 57*
CUT UP FROZEN FRYERS •• ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••
..
HOMEMADE tJAM SALAD ••••••••••••••••••••-•••••• lb. 99*
12 OZ. SUPERIORS PKG. WIENERS••••••••••••••• pkg. 7'1
16 OZ. SUPERIORS PKG. BOLOGNA ••• ~ ••••••••••• pkg. 99'
Kraft 12 o~. Sli. Singles

s lb.

MARGARINE ...... :.·.... 69
1 lb. Blue Bonnet

bag

·

PINK GRAPEFRUIT....

~

89~

bag

H.EAD LETJUCE ...~7.~~. 39~

12 Ol REAMES NOODLES ••• ~····~······
' '

CORN BEEF HASH •••••••••••••••••••••• ~::•• 69~

Soz. 'f.rrow

.

•

.

VIENNA SAUSAGE •••••••••••••• :~:~:!'... 2/ 79~

30 oz: Sweet Brier

.

·

.

PURPLE PLUMS •••••••••••••••••••••••••:::. 59

~

16 oz. Van Camp

PORK &amp; BEANS ........................ 2/69~
PALMOLIVE LIQUID•••••••••• :•••••• ::!~::::. $115
oz; .~ag ner's

·

WEONESDAY
MIDbLEPORT Literary
Club, home of Mrs. Nan
Moore, 2 p.m. Wednesday.
Aruma! business meeting.
Mrs. Dwight Wallace Io
review ''Special People.''

UNITED METHODIST
Women, Letart F.ails Church,
7:30 Wednesday at the home
of Mrs. Inez Hill, Racine.
Mrs. Ernest Shuler to have
the program and Bible Study.
- LADIES AUXILIARY,
Middleport Fire Department,
will nieel at the fire hall
Wed'nesday , 7:30 p. m.
Host"esses will be Bessie

The perfect symbol ot your ·
l~ve . . , a -perfect Ke~ psake
dmmond, guaranteed and
·permanently registered.

New Golden Boy
UCLA's gridiron leader have
By VERNON SCOTT
helped prepare him fOr his
HOLLYWOOD (UP! )
new career on the screen.
"There's some kind of
The young man has just about
parallel between athlete and
everything going for him.
His blonde and beautilui actor but l'm not quite sure
motller was a star. His father what it is." he said. "You
ranks among · the most have to pui a lot of dedication
c-elebrated gridiron stars of and desire into both. I workod
the century, He was reared In hard at perfecting football
luxury, surrounded by techniques and the same
celebrities and he became a applies to acting if you want.
college football bero himself . to do it well.
Now at 26 he is starring in
" I've always looked on lhe
his own dramatic network ca mera as a friend . It doesn't
television show . . '
fr ighten
me
beca use
He is Mark Harmon, son of somebody was a lways taking
Elyse Knox. and Tom piclur~s of my parents Or the
Harmon. The show, "Sam," family.
mak es its debut on CBS Jan.
" I guess I got accustomed
31.
to movie cameras when I was
Mark , an inordinately in junior high school and the
ha~dsome fellow, attained
family was doing cereal com·
mercials in our back yard."
Mark got his first taste of
professional acting when he
was still at UCLA. He played

businessmen in slllts and Ues

NOW OPEN

GINO'S

Mark Spitz -

episodic television and last
year won an
Etnmy
for
best
nomination
supporting actor in " Eleanor

HARTLEY'S MID-WINTER CLEARANCE

SHOE .SALE
STARTS THURSD~Y, JA~UARY 5TH, 1978
NATIONALLY ADVERTISED BRANDS

~0.

2 PRE·

CUT STUDS
"30.00 VALUES

VALUES TC) "50.00

SALE PRICED

:'15 00 to '3000

'.

FOR ,MEN

eFLORSHEIM
eJARMAN .
•MINNETONKA
eRAND
•HUSH PUPPIES
THESE ARE
EXCEPTIONALLY
GOOD VA&amp;:UES

Conroy and soil , ·Steve,

Akron.

each

Store Aaurs

MATERIALS CO.
MASON;

FOR WOMEN

N_ot every siie in every style but a good selection of shoes
displayed on racks for easy selection. Remember Thursday, Jan.
5th at 9:00a.m.
· ··

HPGG &amp;.ZUSPAN
. 773·5554

'12 00 to '2000
eJOYCE
.
eEASY .STREET
eCOVERGIRL
•RISQUE
•CALIFORNIA COBBLERS
eHUSH PUPPIES
•VINER

·--.

VA.

Mon..A.M.-SP,M.
ttwu Thun. a S.t.
'
Fri. ·

-

.

.

HARTLEY'S SHOES,
o.
·

-

"Middle of

Mr. and Mrs. Tim Marlier,
the former Lea nne Sebo of
Pomeroy, Cana l Winchester,
ani announcing the birth of •
sb

pouhd,

si x

Mrs. Oorotha Suiter abd
Mrs. Flossie Loe lor the
early Saturday duty. Mrs.
P &lt;tt Nibert ·and Mro .
James Morrl1on wlll take
the 31111 5 duly. Od Sunday,
Oorolby Woodard aod Mrs.
Vivlao Kirkel will host the I

ounce

da ughter, Jennifer Lynn ,
Dec. 31.
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs . John Sebo of Lebanon.
Va .. fonnerty of Pomeroy,
and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Marlier, La ncaster. Great·

tUI 3 hours wtth JunJe
ReynoldS and Relh Waller
sharing the lote duly. •

Mrs. Carl Hedinger and Paul
Sebo, .Logan, W. Va.

• BACKY ABO ACCIDENT
MIDOLEBURG HF.lGH1'S,
Qhio (UP!) - TI1e nearlysevered left leg of a retire'&lt;!
Cleveland poli ceman may he
saved, optimistic dO&lt;· tors at
Southwest General Hospiwll
·
said Tuesday .
F.dw"r d
n·Ai uto; 51.

Strongsville, wns cutting a ·
lrt.'C
. in the ba ckyard of hlS
home fur use as firewood
when U!C t fl't' fell HK:tinst him
lu.~t S.tlurda y, rur dn~ a chuin
saw h e was us int( agn inst his
~ ~~ . his wife suid.

M(lre than 4'00 stitt'hes were

needed

lu

l'lose- wounds

su!f&lt;•re&lt;l IJy D'Aiuto in the
mishap, according 10 doctors,
who SHiel surgery took 31'.!
hours.

INC.

"NOw 1 really enjoy ·what

I'm doipg , 1 know I have a
long way to go, but 1 want to
become a great actor : It 's not
an ego thing either, just a
goal I think is worth
pursuing.' '.

4

Ca r efr ee . ·. spirit e d
sweaters and jean s · for
your bosy social life thi s
wint er . The y're ver sa tj le
enough to go· anywhere!
Stop in today a nd look a t
o ur fine selection .

GllLIAN'S

FASHION CENTER
ON lHE TIN MIDDLEPORT
~

- 'I ~

presen~,

chose him to play a yoWlg
policeman who works the
bomb and narcotics squads
with
yellow Labrador

DRIVE ALimE &amp; SAVE ALOT. • .lOWEST·PRICES EVER

a

retriever named j'Sarn."

· Mark prepared more
carefully for his role than he
did for UCLA gamf! plans. He
spent weeks riding in Los
Angeles Police Department
squad cars. He .studied the
records of current K-9 units in
large cities. ·
.
11

$

me.

and Franio;lln."
Earlier this year he played
a key role in his first movie,
'·'Comes A Horseman ' ' W'hich
will be released nexi spring.
T~e .cast is filled with
heavyweights - Jane Fonda,
J~son Robards and James
Caan.
Jack Webb, impressed with
Mark's cool screen

Findlay 73 Ohio Dominican 61

VMI 71 Cleveland State 66
Hall of Fame Classic

$

The Monitors ~I Rlverby
lor this weekend will bo

grandparents are Mr. and

and told myself it wasn't for

PHONE 773-5536

CAMPBELL'S CHICKEN .~-:~:e.::~:

Jerusalem will meet Friday
212 E. Moin, Pomoror
at 8 p.m . at 'the ~omeroy """',..."oota•toT ndt· l•h•k Jlo 1
Masonic Temple.
-·
,.., _ _....,. ,..,.

Belva Gla ze, Greg an d
Crystal, Billy Glaze, Mr. and
Glaze, Faith, Paula, Connie, Mrs. Larry 'Romine, and Mr.
Judy and Carl , J r. , In· and Mrs. William Radford,
dianapolis, Ind.; Mr. and Pomeroy.

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attended acting classes for
five years. He att.E:nds movies
Victor
Hugo's
"Les with a zealot's ·dedication,
Miserables," published in the · studying the techniques· of
South' during the Civil War, Montgomery Clift, PaQI
were known throughout the Newman and Gary Cooper ,
North as " Lee's Mlserables."
He began modestly enough
appearing 'in small roles in

NOW YOU KNOW
Badly printed cOpies of

OF MASON

78

Mrs. George Glaze, Brett,
Brian and Lori, Rock Bridg~ ;
Lisa an d Denise Byers,
Co lumbus; Mrs. .Donna
Glaze, Middleport, Mr. and
Mrs. Mike Stewart, Jared

0
'
;:;:::;~:;~:;.;.;:;:;:;:;~:;:;:;·;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :::::;:;::

Scott's world

KLEENEX TISSUES •••••••••••••••••••••• ~:: •• 63~

W. Va. Tech 84 Walsh College

Mrs. Grace Glaze, Mid·
dleport, entertained Ne w
Year's night with a supper for
members· of her family.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Glaze of Panna who
spent the weekend visiting
Mrs. Glue and other
realjives; Mr. and Mrs. Carl

Darst, Nean Stivers, Patty
Kloes. and Kate Bachner.
THURSDAY
EVANGELINE Chapter
small role· in "Ozzie's
172, Order of the Eastern naiional attention as a UCLA aGirls
:" 'The late ozzie Nelson
Star, 7:30 Thursday at the quarterback in · the early produc-ed and starred in the
Middleport Masonic Temple. . 1970s and is now pursuing an show . Rick Nelson is married
. -- , .-acting career.
to Mark's sister, Kris .
FRIDAY
He
is
poised,
self-effacing
"Acting was always in the
POMONA GRANGE,
and
confidently
laid
back.
back
of my mind," Mark
Friday, 8 p.m. at the Rock
Young
Hannon
appreciates
said.
"But
it .was only two
Springs Grange Hall. Racine
the
valu~s
of
his
background.
years
ago
that
1admitted it to
Grange will he host .
He
also
is
aware
that
his·
myself.
.
.
MARY SHRINE 37, Ord~r
future
as
an
a
ctor
is
"Until
thert
r
was
merchan·
of· the White Shrine of
to
the dislng director for Media
Jerusalem, Friday 8 p. m. at unrelated
achlevements
of
his
parents
Central. It got ·me on my feet
Pomeroy , Masonic Temple:
and his own exploits on the . financially and 1 bought a
football field.
·
". borne. 1 realized I wasn 't
Unlike many another happy on a plane trip one day.
athieteturned-actor - say, • 1 looked at aU the ot!!er

200 count White ·

SALE PRICED

• LODGE TO MEET
Pomeroy Lodge · 164
Ft.AM, will meet in res.WU:
session at 7;30 this ll"l!lling.
. All Malter M'IIBOns are in---~,~---...J vited.

l'tiJNE 773-5536

$
119

PIMENTO CHEESE ......

15 oz.

Mrs. Glaze hosts dinner Child born

Harmon newest
"«o-,.~-d~~i'~nw golden b~y in films

•

ENJOYS GUESTS
of the blind person's nonCHESTER
- Spendhtg
world is commort In
literature. Milton, who was Christmas .Eve with Mr. @lld
himself blind, used the Mrs. Curtis Wolfe were Mr.
Gene Van Meter •
"world of darkness" image'to and 1ojrs.
'
G
ranv11le;
Mr. and Mrs.
describe the effect of blind·
Jame~
Clary
and son, Derek,
ness .on t~e Israelite hero in
Newark;
Mr.
and Mrs.
usamson Agonistes."
Wolf
and
son,
Ricky;
Howard
Interestingly, howher,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Frank
Pannell,
·
Milton chose another color to
Belpre;
Marlene
Thompson,
portray his own blindness;
"The constant darkness in Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
and
which I live day and night, · Henry · Hartman
Carla
Sue,
.
daughter,
tnclines more to a whitish
Chester; Mr. and Mrs. Erroll
COnroy .of near Chester, and
their son, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh

GINO'S
OF MASON

spenl the holidays with her holiday visit in Columbus
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Leo with Mr. and Mrs. Handley
Searls . They joined Mrs. Jean Cone, Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Craig and her family for Cabeen and Mr. and Mrs.
Christmas dinner. Carolyn Thomas Watkins and family.
and her father visited Mrs.
J oining Mr . and Mrs.
Charles Warner, patient· at William T. Grueser fo r
th e · Christian Anchorage Christmas dinner were Mr.
Nursing Home at Marietta. and Mrs. Bob Jay, Columbus,
Mike Sayre of Columbus Mrs. Stella Grueser, Mr. and
was tlie holiday guest of his Mrs . Ronn ie Reynolds,
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Don Minersville, and Mr. and
and Brian, Pomeroy.
Sayre.
Mrs. Don Grueser. Aleron.
Mr. and Mrs , Tom Lyons
Mr . and Mrs. Thomas Mr. and Mrs . Micha el
and fal"ily, Pontiac, and Wltkins, Tom, Chris and Pat · Gerlach and daughter, Tara, ·
Bernard Lyons, Lake Orion; of Columbus were holiday spent Christmas Eve with his
Mich., were holiday guests of visitors of Mr. and Mrs. parents, Mr. and Mrs .
Mr. and' Mrs. John Lyons.
William Slater.
Wendell Gerlach.
Mrs.

Calendar

world of darkness . .This view

NOW OPEN

Mrs. George Doolittle, Sr.,
·Sebring, Fla,. and Mr. and
Mrs. Don Doollttle of Troy,
Mich. Dr. and Mr&amp;. Carl Peterson
and children, Carla and
Cr ystal, Columbus, spent
Christmas weekend with Mr.
andoMrs. Chester Tannehlll.
They were joined for
Christmas dinn..- by Mr. and
Mrs. Mark Tannehill, April

ORANGE OR GRAPE DRINK ••••••••• 2/89~
3 oz.
.
Jar $}79 ,
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ACCE NT

• Ohio College
Basketbolt Results
United Press International
Ashlaod 60 case Western
Reserve 48

PerD181 Notes

. 32

For instance, last week I saw you were blind 8nd

PASSBOOK
SAVINGS
'
.

•

0ur series is based on a

real' Los Angeles police,dog
who nosed out the alphabet
bomber and got the medal of·
valor for it," Mark said.
"! spent a lot of time with
the policeman, Duane Shube,
and Hans, who broke that
case.
"Duane has become a gond
friend and adviser. Hans is a
fantastic dog , Duane took a
tiny bit of plastic explosive •
and rubbed it on the side of a
box and tben hid it in the
police academy lot.
"It is the size of about four
football fields, filled with
automobiles and crates and
junk. It took Hans 30 seconds
to sniH it 0ut."
Two months ago Mark was
introduced to Sam. He took
the 4-yearo()ld Labrador to his .
San Fernando Valley home
for six weeks and worked
with Sam and his trainer,
t:;arl Spitz Jr ., almost every
day.
'
'
, Instead ol explosives and
drogs, Sam was trained lD
.snirr out anise. It was

necessary for Sam to obey
Mark's

commands

on

camera as well as Spitz's
directions off cam.era.
Sam, un!Jke Lassie, doesn't
open doors or save imperilled
young children. The dog Is
used solely lor search
missions, detecting drugs and
..ploslves.
Mark, down •ome 20
pounds from his football
playing we,ight, realizes it is
he, not Sam, who must carry
the ohow, abetted by Paul
Burke -wbo plays his captain
oo the new series.
Fie believes his years as

2 PC. CHARLES

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�v
11- The Daily Sentinei,M ddleport-Pomeroy,O., Wednuday, Jan.4, 1978
•

.

Apple Grove

Three who survived longes_t News Notes
day on beach to greet Carter

'

.planners) and when ":e
By ALINE MOSBY
'
OMA HA
BEACH, engineers came ashore three
hours later, 3,000 American
Normandy, Fra,..,e ( UPI ) When President ~immy kids were killed on that one
Carter visits one of the D-Day beaCh," said Herm.l,t. "We
landing beaches of World had to remove the dead, take
W8I 11 Jan. 5, am on&amp; the their papers and rings and
welcoming crowds will be , get the Red 9 ross to the
three men who lived through wounded . I saw some awful
that longest day -that began sights."
Carter and President
th e liheralioo of Europe .
Valery
Giscard d'Estaing ar~
Leo Heroux, 54, of Central
scheduled
to fly from Paris to
Falls, R.I., hit the heach with
Bayeux
and
drive to the U.S.
n U.S. combat engineers unit
military
cemetery
on a cliff
in the greatest amphibious
troop landing in ali' history. overlooking Omaha Beach.
There are 9,3ll6 crosses and
June 6, 1944.
When the fighting was over Stars of David in white rows
Heroux married a French arriong the trees and the
fc1 r mer's daughter and grass, including most of those
scttled down in this this rich 3,0110 bodies Haroux and his
Nor mandy farm region . He buddies carried from the
still lives in Bayeux, 12 miles beach.
Waiting to show Carter
from the beach where as a
scared GI he crawled ashore. wbere some Georgia boys are
"'rhe
minute
the buried in the 172-acre
11ewspapers said Jimmy memori~l will be cemetery
Ca rter was coming here director Met:lyn Grove,
Pa..
Now,
people carrr~ . ~Y my office to Bradford,
·.
incongruously,
he
stoOd
S&lt;J)', Hey, Leo, yoU re golng
to ~ee yow- presldeot,"' sald a pointing to the ruins of a Nazi .
grinning Heroux, who runs an blockhouse where guns
:mto driving school near the boomed at him when he, too,
dty haH where Carter will staggered under his heavy
pack from his D-Day landing
speak.
sh
ip onto the Normandy
" I'm taking the day off and
sands
33 years ago.
l'll see him if I have to sleep
"I
lay
over there in tbe
in a walling line the night
water
all
morning, pinned
Ocforc ."
'The people of Normandy down by Nazi fi re," said
rtever .have forgotten the Grove, who also married a
land ing of U.S ., Canadian and French girl and stayed· in
Bntish troops. The day is Europe. "I was so scared, so
seared ' in
Heroux's seasick.''
Now cold rain fell softly on
memory.
the'qulet
tombs. Now instead
"Between the first landing
of
guns
the sound of
at 6:30 on the beach (named
ltmaha by Gen . Dwight lawnmowers clipping the
l~ l~ e.nhower's
D·Day grass among the tombs
1

1

competed with the crash ol
the waves. A .trotting horse
was .being exercised on tbe
sand and a woman romped
with two children.
Carter wiU be the firs!' U.S.
president in office to visit DDay be.aches .and the first 10
visit any U.S. military cemetery in Europe since
President Woodrow Wilson in
1919, Grove said. He hurried
off to direct workers
polishing a bronze statue of
an American youth rising out
of the waves in front of which
Carter will speak.
·
Below on Omaha Beach
stands a stone villa whoS&lt;'
French owner, Michel Hardelay, wUI welcome Carter as
a D-Day witness, too.
He recalled that incredible
June 6 when he peered at
dawn from his bomb shelter
above his villa to the foghidden, stormy sea. He
stared again. As the fog rose
he saw hundreds ol warships,
warplanes and barrage
holloons.
"It was an astonishing
sight," said ruddy-&lt;:heeked
Hardelay.
He pointed to the l;Oa wall
across his street. 11 There is a
umk track, covered with
cement now . . And in the
distan ce, look at those
concrete landing caissons
noated over from England,
still there after 33 years.
When the sea ts low I can see
the ruins of sunken ships

..

from my :window.''
Today Omaha Beach is
covered with ultramo dern
vacation houses and ice
'cream stands instead of black

Christmas weekend guests
of . Mr. and_ Mrs .. Vernon
Donohue were Mr. and Mrs.
&amp;bert Harden and Eric of
Marion, Mr. and Mrs. U,well
Burton and Sherry of
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Winebrenner , Ricky.
Vicky and Jody of Newbury,
0.
Visiting Mr . and Mrs.
&amp;nald Russell and children
during · Christmas holidays
were Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Russell, Mr. and Mrs. Steve ,
Hagey, Brian and Stephanie,
· of Wolfpen , Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Russell Roush. Cindy Hnd
Edward, Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa
Parsons, David Roush.
and
Clarence . Story
daughter, Rosalee of Darwin
were Christmas Day guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Erwin
Gloeckner, Mrs. Elsie Davis
of Parkersburg, Rosalee
Story were Tuesday guests of
the GlockpefS .....
Christmas weekend guests
of Mrs. Kathryn Hunt, Mrs.
Erma Wilson were Mr. and
oil and barbed wire . . Signs
warn of dangerous waves, not
hombs. Streets are named
after the liberators such as
Street of the Third Division ,
USA.
On the narrQW road
winding to . the cemetery,
fanners in honor of Carter
clipped the hedgerows from
which Nazis once lobbed
shells on to the advancing
Allied troops.
We are so pleased carter
is coming here," said
Hardelay . "Young people of
the world don't hear much
about D-Day . Now perhaps
they will understand ."
'

Steel industry in Youngstown -has uncertain f~ture ·

W0 'Ifp. eil

r

IO - The Daily Sen~inei, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Jan . 4, 1973

1

Mrs. Butch WUson, Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Mrs. &amp;bert Murphy and
Mrs. Charles Burri, Ronald
Worley, Stacy of Beckley, W. - family ol Eagle Ridge.
Wilson, Billy Wilson of
Va., Mr. and Mts. Doyle
Mr. John Murphy, Barbara
OfeS Knapp , Karl, Kevin and and Mr. W&gt;d Mrs. &amp;bert
Bolivar Dam, Cheryl WUoon, 1\TeW S 1\T
Robin Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. 1 ~ j
1 lj
Charles and Mr. and Mrs. · Murphy are apending a lew
William Wk:kline, Sc&lt;Jtt and
-Mr. Uncoln Russell and Harley T. Johnson were days in Florida.
Kyle .
Mr. and Mrs. James F. Christmas Day guests of Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. John DownS.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Durst, Russell of Middleport were • and Mrs. Char)~y D. Smith. Adam , spent Christmas
Rick and Roger, spent Christmas Day dinner guests
Mrs. Louise Earnheart, boliday with his parents, Mr.
Christmas Day and weekend of Mr. and Mrs. Clinton granddaughter Patty Earn- and Mrs. Downs of Glouster.
with Mr. and Mrs. George Gilkey and family of Albany. hart of Columbus were
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Monday visliors of Mr. and
Morris, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Durst. Mr. and Mrs: Bob McElroy, Mr. and Mrl. BiU Mrs. Harley Johnson.
Durst and families at McElroy, Jeff and Joey, Mr.
N!r. and Mrs. Harley E.
and Mrs. John Wood, son, _....l!ohnson, Tammy, Cheryl ~nd
Springfield.
Christmas Day guests of Mrs. Mable Wood 01 Wilkes- T~':"Y were Saturday evemng
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Wolle at ville, Anna Davidson, Mr. vtsttors ·or Mr. and .Mrs.
Racine were Mrs. Eula Wolfe and Mrs. James Reed and son Rowan Sheldon and family of
and. Aaron, Mr. and Mrs. of Lancaster, Mr. and Mrs. Athens and enjoyed a
Holiday visitors ol Mr. and
Jack Ord, daughter Beth and DaMy White and son were ChrtstmBB party.
Mr. e.nd Mrs. James Mrs. Kenneth Wilt of
friend, Letart. W. Va., Mr. Christmas dinner guests of
and Mrs. Jim Lewis, Pl. Mr. and Mrs. LeO Davidson. Reeves, Bryan, Mr. and Mrs. Minersville were their
Pleasant , Mr. and Mrs. Wilma and Donna. Also Paul Darnell, J~ff, Mr. and children and grandchildren.
son visiting were Mr. and Mrs. Mrs.
Eugene
Haning, In the group were Mrs. Kathy
Stanley
Bordum,
Christopher, Pl. Pleasant; Carl McElroy of Columbus. Rhonda, &amp;nald, Mr. ~nd Burke and sons, Bucyrus;
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Rottengen
Patricia Thoma of Ken- Mrs. Jack "'Ellrm, Btil, Mr. and Mrs. Rick Wilt and
and baby, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry "' lucky was Christmas holiday Carolyn and Mr. Robert daughter, North Lawrence;
Coughlin and two children of guest of her parents, Mr. and Reeves were Christmas Mr. and Mrs. Larry WUt and
New Hampshire: Mr. and Mrs Howard Thoma
dlnnerguestsofMr. andMrs. sons, Rodney; Mrs. Dottie
Mrs. Mitchell Hopkins ,
·
·
Fred Tuckerman.
Pierce and daughters and
daughter Heather of Akron;
Mr. and Mrs. John Downs, sons, Middleport, &amp;ute 1;
Mr . and Mrs . Willi~m
Adam, Mr. and Mrs. John E. Unda Hubbard and daughter,
Hoback, sons John Bill and and Mrs. Jack Ord, New Murphy, Chris ol Racine, Mr. Syracuse, · and Kenny Wilt
Aaron Stephen ol Colorado Haven.
and Mrs. Robert A. Murphy, and a friend ol Harrisonville. ·
Springs, Colo.; Mr. and Mrs:
Mrs. Iva Orr called on Mr. Veronica, Bill Slack were
Others visiting with them
Carroll Norris, Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. Charles Michaels, ChrlstmasDayvisitorsofMr. were Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Victor Wolfe' daughter Vicki, and Mrs. Ralph Durst and Mrs. John R. Murphy, Hysell, Bradbu ry; Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Wolfe, Tuesday. '
Peggy, Cannel and Barba'ra. Mrs. Richard Wilt, Pomeroy,
Lee Ord, Jack Codner, Mr.
Mrs. Wilbur Gathers and
Mr. and MrS. William &amp;ute I, Mr. and Mrs. )lfark
and Mrs. Austin Wolle, Jerry daughter Sandra of New Boyce of Columbus and Mrs. Pierce and son, middleport;
and Amy, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Alba ny, 0 .. spent Tuesday George William Venoy of Mr. and Mrs. Robert CWldiff
Snodgrass, MicheUe and with Mr. · and Mrs. Tom Columbus were Christmas and family, Minersville;
visitors of Bertha Russell. Bruce Hawley, MinersVille,
Bethany of Burlington, Ala., Norris.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenny Theiss,
Mr. and Mrs. 'Gerald Mr. Earl RusseU spent and Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Sugar Grove, 0 ., Mr. and Hayman, son Keith spent Christmas at home with Mrs. Whitlatch and family,
Mrs. John Ord, of Wilkes- Christmas Day thro ugh Edna Russell of Kentucky. Syracuse.
ville; Mr. and Mrs. Bill Tuesday with their son, Mr.
Mt's. Helen Johnson and
Grate, son Travis and Bill's .and Mrs. Ted Hayman and Mrs. Geneva Shumate were FIRE FATALITY
' CHESTERLAND, Ohio
aunt of Rutland.
family at ·Westerville.
Christmas dinner guests of
Mrs. Eula Wolfe received a
·Mr. and Mrs. Ted Hayman Mr. and Mrs. Larry Johnson, (UPI) - Ronald Solis, 35, .
Chesterland, died Tuesday
phone ca Bfrom her daughter, and children spent Friday Gina, Tahnee and Brady.
Mrs.Gien(Odessa)Swortsof . night with Mr. and .Mrs.
Mr.and Mrs. J ohnMurphy when fire of undetermined
Dixon, Ill. Christmas Day. Gerald Hayman and Keith. and family visited Mr. and origin ripped through his
Mrs. Eula Wolfe, son Aaron
Mrs.
Donna
Kelly, Mrs. John E. Murphy and ranch home, . according to
were breakfast guests of Mr. Columbus, Mrs. Marie Skein Chris of Racine on Christ- firemen, who said a dog and
cat also perished in the fire
and Mrs. J im Lewis at Point and Mrs. Margie Southall of mas.
\
Pleasant Monday and called Evans visited Mrs. Margie
Peggy
Murphy
was tor which a damage estimate
on Mrs. Gamet Roush, Mr. Hunt Saturday.
overnight guest of Mr. and was not availaBle.

By STEVEN PROKESCH
Pl'ITSBURGH (UPI) United Slate8 Steel Corp.
officials said they feel YoiDlg-

By BF&amp;IE FORD
MONTGOMERY, Ala.
(UPI )'· - Gov . George
Wallace and his wife,
Cornelia, '• may
reach
agreement on their divorce to
avoid a public skirmish when
it comes up for trial today,
sources close to couple· say.
Reliable sources said Tues·
day the "whole thing may be
over" before Judge Joseph
Pbelps opens the hearing on
the Walla.,ces' seventh
wedding anruversary.
Wallace's lawyer, Maury

NOTICE OF APP~tCAT I O N TO
THE PUBLIC UT~LITIES COf.1MISSION OF OHIO
FOR A N INCREASE IN ELECTRIC RATES,
TO WHOM-IT MAY CONCERN '
PUrsuant to th e requ iremen ts of Section 4909,19 of th eRe·
vised Cod e o'f Ohio. th 8 Co lumbus and Southern Ohro Elec tr ic
Corm~any hereby gives notice that o n June 30. 1977, it flied
with the Public Ut ili ti es Commissi o n o f Oh1o, an Appl rcati on for
authority to amend and increase its electric rate schedules which
1:1re under the Jurl'!tllction o f the Publ iC UtilitieS Commi ss ion· of
Ohi o.

The E nV tron ment~I · Cost Ad ju stment Rider and the Delayed
Pnymen t Charge Clause. Which are sh own below, are included 1n
all propo~ ra t e ,schedules

PROPOSED RI DER NO.2
EN VIRONMENTA L COST ADJUSTM ENT

.•

USDA CHOICE

........................
,
I
1I
PAPER
!
II BREAD ! I,~ SOAP
2.
9
4
~
! 3 $1' II
I
..
.................
,
.................... ."•·····-········
I
.I
FAVORITE . .

HI-DRI

TONE

·

I

99C

TOW~LS

I

LOAVES

ROU 49~

CHAMP

.

II ,DQG FOOD ·
I
! 25BAGLB. $329
1

1

!
iI

I-

DISTILLED.
WATER . II

1

GALLON

i,. _.JUG

5
94
. .

M [nimum Charge

~

79tr

FRESH

&amp;LEAN

.

SLICED .
BACON

GROUND ROUND
LB. $109

LB.

$5.00

Energy Ch ~;~ rg e :
First BOO KWH .. , ..
Over 800 KWH .....

\

FAT MILK ••••••.•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Ml
........ ~ ............ }.~u.~~~~ 89~

P~r

3.60d
1.50il

$5.00
3.60d pe r KWH
3.60d per KWH

~~o

Winter
Summer ·
(Oct rhru May.J (June th ru Sept.}

Month :

.-

Customer

69•·

.. COLA

PLASTIC GALLON

$2.75

Cha r g~ :

Energy Charge : ·
First 200 KWH .
Next
KWH .
Nel&lt;i 100 KW H.
O~Jer 800 KWH ....... .

'5oo•

3.50&lt;
3.15&gt;1
3.15&gt;1
1.50ol

$2.75
3.5()(/
3. 15tt
N/A
N/A

per KWH
!)E!r KWH
per KWH
per -KWH

'In any summer bi ll ing month, if usage el&lt;ceeds 700 KWH ,
billin g will be rendered that month under Schedule A · A and
thereafter fo r aH subsequent mvnths through the four months
~
o f the nel( t summer per iOd .
Minimum Charye' Customer Charg e
Th e res idential ra""tes applicab le in the terri tory o: t sid.e of
Franklin Coun ty have been modif ied and increased and a ne'w
schedu le has been added. fo r small use customers . Customers in
thiS area foimerly served under ~hedules A -S, R·S·D. and R,s.g
w ill be 9e rved under modified Schedule R·S and new Schedule
R-S·1· a small use load m~;~nagement ra~e ~\la ilable t O consumers
whq normally do not use more t han 600 KWH per month dur rr;g
the summer per iod

8-16 oz.
BOffiES

Pre~ntly , all residential customers in the territory o utside

F rank lin Cou nty are served under &amp;;hedules R·S , R·S· D, and

THURSDAY ONLY

RC COLA OR

Reserw The Right To

Surnm er
Winter
(Oct. thru May I (June thru Sept.)

Cus t omer Charge .

LARGE
·
· DOZEN..
EGGS .............

~~.,.DOUBLE

·MILK............. ......................... 1. 39

We Aceept Federal Food

$3 00 per mon th

Per Month :

US GRADE B

ggc_

12 GAUON

SUPER MARKET- OPEN DAILY 9 10 10 P.M.
SUNDAY 10 10 10

3.50ti pe r KWH
3.001/ per KW H
3.0o.t per KWH
3.00ti per .KWH

PROP OSED RATE- SCH EDULE R·R· 1 (FRANKLIN COUNTY!

1

-

2.621
1.50ol

9.25d per KWH

" Charge· Customer Charge
Mt nimum

00
BANANAS:
.............
~-~~
:-~
1
ICE CREAM ....~-~~~~~.. 99~

.

3.00il

'

GROUND CHUCK .......~~.99C

-

-

9.20d
3.50ol

Summ er
!Jllne t h ru Oct.l

PROPOSED RATE!- SCHEDUL E A· R !FR ANKLIN COUNTY)

COFFEEFILTERS

100 CT.

Wint() r
[Nov. t hru Ma y)

F irst 30 KWH ..
Next 170 KWH .
Next 6o6 KWH .
Next 700 KWH
Over 1500 KWH .

MR. COFFEE

L.................: ..................
SCOT LAO

I

L..........•••··~·•

I
Ii
~

I,

I'
I

I

I
I

REG. SIZE.
1
BAR

PRE SE NT RATE - SCHEDU LE R·R I F RANK LIN COUNTY)

Per Mon th ·

.

DIET RITE
8- 16 oz. .
BOffiES

~

DR. PEPPER

89~

75 or over ..

1n no even t shall the above rate app ly to the first 200 KWH
consu med during any month .

PR OPOSED RATE - SCHEDULE R-S !OUTSID E FRANKLIN
COUNTY)
W m te r
Summer
(Oct. thm May ) [June thru Sep t )

$5.50

E ner 8:Y Cherge
F irst 800 KWH.
Next 700 KWH
Over 1500 KWH .

3.90ol
1.90ol
1 50ol

$5. 50
3 . 90~ per KWH

3.9QtJ per KWH
3.60ci per KWH

Minirnurn Charge : Custome r Charge

COUNTY)
Winter
Summer
(Oct, thr u May·) (June thru Sept. )

Per Month :

$2 75

Customer Charge·
Energy Charge.
First 200 KWH . .. .
Next 500 • KWH ,
Next 100 KWH
Next 700 KWH .
Over 1500 KWH .

$2.75
4 05J. per KWH

4.051
3.451

3 45i per KWH

3 45~
1.901
1.501

N/A
N/A
N/A

per KWH
per KWtl
pe r KWH

"In any summer btl!lny m onth, if usage e~Cceeds 700 KWH,
b il ling wilt be rendered tha t m o nth under Schedule A·S ahd
thereaf ter "for all su bsequ en t months thr ough the four months
of t he nel&lt;t summer period

PROPOSED RATE - SCHEDU LE Rt:M !SYST EMWI DE !
Per Month :

$ 5.00

Demand Charge :
F irst 4 KW o r less of Billing Demand .. .
Q..,er 4 KW ... . ·

$19.00
$ 4.75 oer KW

l .OW per KWH

~ M 1n imUm Charoe : Cust omer Charge f? lus Dern and Cha rge

Determination o f Billing Demand . T-he BiJl iny Demand wrll
be t he ma)( imu m one (1 ) hour integ·a ted ki lowatt d emand re co rding of an intugrating demand meter dunng the summer
months !June th rough Sep tember) within t~a past twel'o't! (12 )
rnonth per iod endi ng with and uklu d rng the current billing
month :
The Genera l Service-Sma ll -Secondary ra te has been modi! JeQ_
and incr eased . Th ose cvs~omers former lv ser.,.~Jd under ~ched uhfs
GS· 1, GS- 1·0, and C·S-8 will be served under mod1fiad Schedule

GS- 1.
Pr ese ntly , all general service sma ll-seco ndary customers are
served under Schedu les GS·1. GS· l ·D, and C·S·8.

PRESENT RAT E- SCHE DULES GS· I and GS-1 ·D !SYSTEM
WIDE)
Winter
Summer
(N ov. thru May l (June thru Oct. )

Per Month :

Deman d Charge.
· First 6 KW o r less ol MaiC Demand - Inc luded with Energy Chg.
Over 6 KW . , .. , .
. ... , .. , . . . $2.20
$3.20 per KW

E ncrgy Charge .
First
30
N el&lt; t
370
"N el&lt; t
600
N ex t 4,000
Next 15,000
Over 20,000

KWH .
KW H .... .
KW H .. .
K WH ,, . . .. , ...
KW H . ." .... .
KWH .......•..

g 25(•
5 Oo.t
320ol

2,351
2.15&lt;1
1.951

S.25o• per KWH
5.00i per KWH
350i . pP.rKWH
2,65i per KW H
2 45i P,Cr KWH
. 2 25i per. KWH

•14 .25d pm KWH on Sdll.'du le G S· 1·D
M 1ntmum Charge·

$3.00 per month - Schedule GS- 1
$4 .50 per month - Schedule GS· l ·D

PRESENT RAT E - SCI-IEDULE C·S·B !POMEROY)
Per Month '
K rl owett·hours equa l to 50 t imes the kil owa t't s o f monthly
Billjng Demand :
7 .275ti per -KWH
5.575d per KWH

First 30 KWH . . . . . . . . . . . .
0oJe r30 KWH .

Ki lowatt-hour s equal to 150 times the kilowatts ol mo nthly
Bi !li ng Demand :
'
3 475~ per KWH .
2,175ri per KWH

" F1rst 3,000 KWH . . .

O'er 3.000 KWH ... , ·

Ki lowa tt-hours in excess of 200 times th e kilowatts of monthly
Bi ll ing Demand . .
1 575:( per KWH
M i nimum Charge. $2.50 per month

30 KWH . .
170 KWH
N~xt 600 KWH ..
Next ::700 KWH •. .. , .
Over 1500. KWH.

1Q.IJOC'•

F irst
Next

,4 .05;
. ..

3.3o.t
3.0o.t
.1.50il

3.301 per KWH
3.30ol, per KWH
3.q&lt;Jd per KWH .

•12.00d per KWH on .Schedule R·S·D
Minimum Charge: $3.25 Per mon t t1 ·Schedule R·S .
$3.85 per month · Schedule A·S·D

Per Month :.

Energy Charge ·
First 400 KWH~ •· .

$2 75
6.01lt

$2.75
6 . 0~ per KWH

•Plus 150 KWH pm KW in excess of ·6 XW Maximum De·
. mand in summer mon t hs and 1 W KWH per KW in 'e •cess p f
6 KW Max imum Demand in winter months.
Next 600 KWH} ........ .
Al l,additio nal ,::wH ..... .

91\t/, pnr 1\WII

~CllCII lll/111 tlt•lllfl11(1. 1)ft! II&lt;! I II·.~

Pf~OPU ~LDHA i f

Demand 01arge
Frrst 50 ~W Or luss of
Maxi mum Demnnd
Ne,.; t 950 KW .. .
Ne~t 2,000 KW .. .
. OvN 3.000 KW
El&lt;cess KVA Dmnand Ch01rgp

On· Pt 'o l~ I lou rs

1- tr:. t 3,000 K VA ~1 1 l t ·~s , 1t
Max illlllltl Do •rll rl tld .
Ovt•r 3,000 K VA
0 11 -1-'t•,J"-

1.90
1.8U

1.70
,.
.3

"

Energy Charge
F trst 250 KWH per KW of
Ma ximu1n"Dema11d. Out not
less than !""&gt;b.CXlO KWH , as fo ll ows .
F irs t
5,000 i&lt;.wt t . . . . .
2 .43d
Nf:!x I .15,000 KWH . . . . . .
2.13d
Nex t 30,tJoo KWH .
1.B3u'
Nex t 50.000 KWH ... .
l .63u'
Ovor 100,000 KW H
1.33d
Nex t 200 KWH per KW of
M;;tximun1 Ocn1and, b ut no t
thnn 50,000 ~WH .. .

$147 ,GO
2 65perKW
2.55 por KW
2.45 t1Ur KW
3!:l per KVA

$11 0 .00

PI~OPOSED RATE - St;:: HEDU LE

I

3.55&lt;1

3.75«' per KWH

2.60&lt;1

2.80d per KWH

'), IOPtlrK V/\

uu

90 IIIl i KV/\

t \.,\11 ~

:;s I )l' f\ 1,\!ld , , , ..

rir sl 180 KWI I H!it KVA u t
MII)(IIIIWT (!Jt•ll\,11\d

.••. ' •

Nt•xt :l:lU KW ~ Ipt'1 KV/\ .
Ovl!l 1100 KWH ~~·• r..VA

t 6(}jti&lt;'l K.W tl

12011 l &lt;t 'l KW I I
ltlli !WI KWII

2.731J. per KW H .
2.43o/ t +Uf · ~W I ·I
2. 13ci per KWH
1.93ci I)CJr kW H
1.634 p~tr KWH

.931

.•1.234 Pl!r KW H

.7~U

1 034 pur KWI!

Mn dlri UI1l M &gt;"ot i!I Tiy Cl t,tri Jo '
ilh • oiJ ljJIItlil lh' ( ~ )11 1[\f\lj t llolt()t'
01Ptilit•d 10 till' Ma:.qrrlt tlll Ut •rtl tllld

$( 111 I l
Pll i V/\ll Alll/1. Ll l-;1 \IIN (, Sr iW IC I H/\ 1\ S
UU SA L · 1 /\ND/\ L 7 (SYS II MW l tJ I I
l in • /\L 1 ~~ · ll•:&lt;lult• I1L1'; ll1•t•11 ,dli 'rt•d Ill r,•llt :t:l tlu l tu lluwlllll
if1Cf lld5W; J~1oJ il r lhll l M:,Jt toltt • tl ltltl' l f)U \'Y flll l.1111p , ill I!/ no 111 '1 •
IJCiSl) ra t• · tof tlh ' 11!1 Wil l i l,lllip , fi OJ ln ti .IC· IJ,l~1 1/ltu &lt;JI till ' -10()
W(l\t 1.1111\ 1, I W l., r . ~.ld lllth Jr t lcJ ! Io il j\()l v .J nt l S Pil!! (1 \ Wlt"U, oiiHI LIJ
. 1nr f!tll l i "l GO fa\1 \ spa r! p ( wi rt •. I it t• A.l 2 So ln •d11 lo ' liM l 11'i '11
alt.,rGd lo t n ' fi! !Ct ot /!!d r11 Cti)1JS1 l.lll tl11' t.Ja ~ ~ · r&lt;J iil ol 11 1\' 1 /bw utl
lamp .i:J tld L1 5rJ 111t lt:tllol'l " 'r 11111 t q t 1IIJO if• 1qfOUI\d ci ll' II\F

GS·2 (SYSTEM WIDE)

\
$2 10 .00

$160 00
2 90

\

2.60'
35

3.90 per KW
3.7!') pAr KW
3 .60 p~ r KW
.35 pm KVA

1.50

1 50 wor KW

2 75

..

.'
Energy Chorqe
F1rst 200 KW H IJ Or KW o f
Maxtrnum Dt•ma11rt . bu t not leS5
than 50.000 KW H. as fol lows
Firs t 20,000 KWH ..
Ne){ t 30 ,000 KWH
Ov er 50.000 KWH . .
Next 250 KWH per KW ol
Ma"i mum Dumand , but no t less
thon 50,000 KWH .
Over 450 KWH per KW o f
Maxi fnum Dcntand, but no t loss
than lOO,OOO'KWH .

2 . )Qo/.

2 40ol
I 9 Qo/.

1.20&lt;

2.9(}J pur KWH
2.60ct Pl!r KWH
2.101/pcr KWtl

1.50rt pu1 KWH

INT[HR UPTI8LI I:IO WI H 11A II

SC! !I I)Ull I P [SYS II fvl

WID[)
Tlrt · " !'lli llllllll ,,.,..._,ilthlt• vv l to~w· It,,~ bt ••:n lm: wtJ$t•d 11Ut1t 3 &lt;1 .t:J
kil o o,~ u lts to 1~i8 ~Jto\Vt\ 11 ~ A dl'lllollld thoHlll' o l .$ 2 00 IJW KW 1•111
lt1 01ltl~ 1\,)~ bt •Ur1 itllll)dur. t'i l , If., • 1 111'l •IY t htirlj(' IIIJ~ h r•t•l \ ll "l hll.l ll l
trqrtt Jl 2 1ori pl'r KWH Ill t1~.W ·I~I' I KW11 , ,md &lt;ll"l~"dl t o l .TN ll\'t
KW t&gt;~ 'r llou f (.i l ltoh •trttl ttlt ll\ Iii! ~ lth•tr , 1\ ht 1~\.

SPCC I/\ t PH U V ISIUNS 1\PP ! tf ~ A I LLl
l lN!JI II SPI Cll IJ lJ
CONDIT IONS TO SPI.C i f II IJ SCI II DU ll S, Sl -l i'I'Ll Ml N I
NO. 14 (SYS I I M l(V LU I )
rt~ J t l ruvh; i o r l~ l f'IU 1'11! 1 tu Doily U ll ·l'l l&lt;.llo, St. I lilt'{' oll ld! " " !t il
rutl lol( l' S1'rV rCI: lloiVt l llt'n t\ ( \J ' I Il h ~ l Til l~ lllllllllll/111 tll(.)l lthly
chai \,JI' JUJ , Hf l~.ik:d t)Wil SNVJL I • I Ia~ ll!'lltl lllt"IO 'd'f'(l lt t dl1 s, :? 2\)
tr, $7 !10 pt •f KW ot :.~•rvJrt• tfllllllt l'!ll"ll l T l lll lllillhl lltl lltH(Itl !h ly
d l.tr• jll t!l i\J o•l SPo i ~OJIIoJI St• f\ll ll' tli ll IH•t•IJ ',('1 oi l IIIJ lt·t,:, llidll
$? l b

QP'I 10NA L UNMI I I HI 'D C UMtv11 HC I /\ L SlllVI CI I !Jil
SMA LL II XI D 10/\ IJS
SUPPLFM l.Nl NO. 16 ~ S Y S II M
WID! )
!' Ill; (!III 'I II Y C!lat tlll l td~ l ltJWl itt\..ll'd ~ud (111111 &lt;1 / l'..J p•:J KW il
to 4 !JUi i'(' r KWII

0 501

0.801/ per KW H

Off.Peak and Ort ·Peak Hours ·
O ff ·Pco k. I tours shall h n (ll'ftned a~ all o f th e l1oUrs o f Sun
da ys. New Yt~ ar s Day, President 's Day, MemOrial Day, lndcpun·
de11ce Day, LaiJm Day. Thanksgrv in g Doy and Chr is tma s Ouy,
and the hours Oct ween 10 00 P.M. o f each day and s·OO A .M of
the fo How ing day fo r all days ~ On · Peak Hours arr. (.I ll hours not
defined as Off -Pr.ak H ours.
D ~ ter mina~i on

$9 ,{lOLl tiO

1 7~1

t tu :rqy Clt, 1rq1'

Win ter
Su(llllH:H
(Oct. thru Mayl (JufKJ ttm 1 Su1.1t.l

On·Pea k Hours
F ir st 50 KW or less ot.
MaKirnum Der nand ,
Nell i 950KW ..
Null t 2.000 KW . .
Over 3,000 KW
Exc~ss KV A De1nanrl Cl1argn

XCI

$G,IJIJIJ.UO

O il Pt •o k .md lltll 't•, Jio. l l tnJrlo, l)•• li '11 11l11o~ltntl ,,f M&lt;:t ~ h11\ll11 l lo •
l fl;t n ri , clllft I ~ C t ".~ llt 'l!lcUld
St•t• l'ttii iO';t)d St)H'lhl lt• (,:) 2.

l ~ss

Over 450 KWH per K.W of
Ma)(irnUm 0HIIli.llld. bu t not l t~s
th an 100 ,000 kWH ... , . , . .

f,t l!111l U'I
Wtilt••f
IUt t thru Mc~ v l (J .. u,. t l 11u Si·pr )

Oem.uul Clm rqt •

Wtnti!t
Sutnrn er
(Nov. th ru May) (Juno t l\ru Oc t.)

Per Mo nth .

~:Ci tll lll tl {, 1\(SYS I IMW ID I I

P1•1 Mun11t

111· /\r S JU!l /\ CiL Sf"n V IC I
SI' A CF H I~ A II N G
Ml N"f NO :1.0 ) tSYS I r M Wl lJ\ )
'I Ill ~
O ti , PI ~ftk

(St!PI 'Ll

i ~ .1 tlPW scl wUult J t11 Wh Jl.il survit.:u h.lrnti l!td t\1 :•I'' ''.. JI Io •d
l lU lJ fS nnt l thu t~ l ~o t rqt J~ oll ll Wl lt) lluw!,
Cu',l tol 11t't

Clhlrqt ~ . $b .00. Ut •ltturr d Ctt o~lttl
Ch.1rqo·- 1 O(Jri p l'r YV./11

'!il UO l't '1 KW, u1td I lli't ' IY

of Ma ximu1n OemanU

For consum ~&gt; r s whO""".oe M easu red Demand is dl}tcrmlned dur·
ing both On -Peak and Off.Pcak. Hours. the Ma ximum Dern&lt;.tnrl in
any mon th shall be t he greator of (a l the Measured Demar 1d dur·
ing On·Peak· Hu'urs vi the cur rent mon th o r (b) the Minimum
Bdl rnu Demand. if any, sncc 1fil.-'d i n the service co ntract or lt l
60% ol th e hryhcs t Measured Demand during O n-Peak Hours in
the last eleven (11) 1110nths of !d) 80% Of tt10 highest Measured
'Demand in the last P. teven ( 11 ) montll s 'du r in!.l the sUnune r
period . Fdr all Qth er consumers. all hours am co nsidered ·as On
PCak H ours.
· ·
'·
·
E)(cess Dem and ·
ExBess Dem and ih an y month sha ll be the amount by which
the ~asurcd Demand du11ng Oil -Peak Hours ol the cummt
mon th exceP&lt;'"!s th e Max imum .Demand lor th e rnon111,

If and when the E x~es s Demand IS gr'eater th~n the Maxi mum Demand for t il e month , each KW ul Excess De.nnand tha t •
e~&lt;ceeds the Ma)( imum Demand w ill scrv~ to increase the MEJl&lt;l ·
mum Dei'l'l&lt;Jnd by 0 .5 KW for purposns of ca lcu lating ttu' lrnergy
Charge .
Minimum Month l y Charge : The applicab le dellland CIHJr(Jc
appl ied to t he Maximum Dema nd .

The General Servicc-Largc·Tr3nsmlsston rate !Schedu le G·4 1
has been mod ified and increased A prov isi on has l)een adell~
which allows for t!xcoss dwmmd at a roduCed rate dUrin [] off ·
peak hours,
Presently, all general se rvicc· lar&gt;;:~e·transm issio n custOmers are
served under Schedu le G-4 .

PRES ENT RATE - SCHE DU LE G-4ISYST EM WIDE!

Wint er
Summer
!Oct . th ru Mayl (June thru Sept .)

Custo"mer Charge:

1 nllll'

Ov,' r ·1~10 KWII Pi'r k VA ui

PRESENT RATE - SCI! [OLJL E GS: :l (SYST EM WIDt.)

E~CccssDmn,md

Energy Charge:

All KWH .. .. .. . . .

I ~."l:kt Jl• 'l KWH

, I 0:1./ pt•r KW I I
1 :JIV pt•r KWI I

Nt'l&lt;t :&gt;oo KwH P''' k.V/\ t•l
M,nulillll11 tJI'tlllllhl l)tJI IIlli 1\'S',
t! wu 1\JO,OliO KWII

Off -Pe01 k Huurs

C u st omer. Charge

PROPOSED RATE - SCHEDULE GS-1 !SYSTEM WID E)

l O.OQd t" per KWH
, 4.05i per KWH

Presently. all general service-mediu1l1 customers aru S(•rvcd
un&lt;1er Schedule GS-2.

Demand CIHlfge.
An e~Cpe rimental re!idential load managqmerH rat e, Schl..odul1:1
R LM . has been introd uced. Thi s rate is ava ilable .3t the Compa. ny's option t o il lim ited number of cus tomers for the purpose ol
d etermining t he effec ts of dem and bdlmg ~ consumer load
·management.

A·S-9.

Summer
. Wmter
!N ov. thru Mayl !June thru Oc t.l

The GP.neral Service -Medium rate IGS·2, Sys1ern WidP.} hns
been modified and inc reased . A pmvislon has bt."(!n 1:1ddtKI which
all ows fo• excess derrwnd at a n..&gt;duced rato du r i n~ ofl peak hours.

Per M on t h

PRESENT RATE - SCHEDULES A-S AND R-S·D !OUTSID E
FRANKli N COUN TY!
Per Month :

8- 16 OZ. BOmES

Las t 240 per month
Last 360 per month
Last 520 Ptlr mo•tth .

30 to 49 . .
50 to 74 ...... .

I h,\J

I :13&lt;

•

Min tm um Charge : Customer Charge

Pre5ently, all residential customers in Franklin County arr.
served undm Schedule A· A .

..

KWH to wh ich
1.575d awl'les.

Elec tric Water Heater Equ ipment
Ccipact t y in Ga llo ns

Minimum Monthly Chmge
$2.50 per KW o t Mal&lt;imum On·
rn rmd, but no t less than $2,75 .

ti 1J11 I()(},Qf}() KWII , ol\llJifPW\
ru st ~u .ouo t..:Wtl
Nt' Jo:t bO.OOO KWH .
Owt 100,000 KWII

thun 200 ,000 f...WH

IN CLUDABLE KILOWATT-HOURS

T he residential rate in Fran kl in County has been n'lqd ified
and increased and a neW schedu le has been added for small use
custome rs. Custo mers in th is area fOrmerl y served under Sched·
ule R·A wi ll b e served under modifled Schedule A·R and !')ew
Schedul e R'·R· 1, a sma ll use load mana9emen t rat e av, il ~ble to
consumers who normally do no t use more than 600 KW H per
m onth during th e summer per iod .

GROUND BEEF........... ~~: 7 9 .c

Wa te r Heater Service · 1.575( pe r KW H as.apeclfilXI btJiow

PROPOSED RATE - SC H EDU L E R·S-1 (OUTSIDE FRANKLIN

The above tanff IS net if fu ll payment IS received w1th1n 15
days of bill. On· all accounts not so patd. an ~dditional cha rge of
f ive per cent (5%) ol the t o tal am oun t b illed. but not less t han
f ilteen cems ( 15&lt;tl will b9 mad e.

ENGLISH OR .· .
LB
BONELESS ROAST.•.....•... ~. .

The Ma ximum Df'nlnnd in any rnonth shall nul be lvss th(ltl
th tl ywatur ol !a) the M(lxtl nLml fl ecordud D~Jtnand for t he c ur
rl!nt rnonrh or (b) the Minimum Billin9 Demand, il anY, Sf.&gt;L'Ctfit&gt;d
in the service Cl"ltttrac t or (c) 6o% of tiH! hlght ts t dmnand
· rm:ordud in the I!.lsi t.dov~;J n I 1 1! mo nths or (dl 80% or lllt1 11ii)lu!$t
d emand recorded in tile last clu'o'tJn (1 1) rnonths dll11n0 tlw
f
summer ~erio d .

Mtnimum Charge . .$2.50 per fTJO nth

A . INC LUDABLE COSTS

PROPOSED DELAYED PAYMENT CHARGE

CENTER CUT

7.275ri per KWH
5.975tt' per KWH
3.3754 Pt!'r KWH
2 1251/. pe r KWH

30 KWH
40 KWH
130 KWH .
200 KWH ........ , ..

Customer Charge :

Includable KJ iowatt·Hou rs shall ba t he total kiiDwatt·h our
sal es of the Company for ·the lrrst th ree of th e rmmediately pre~ed ing four bil l ing mon ths

ARM R.OAST. ... ~.: ..... ..L~~. 8 9 c

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

First
NeKt
Next
Over

Per Month .

Includabl e envi ronmenta l pollUtion control costs shall b e t he
operation end maintenance e~Cpenses directly incurred and the
amortizati on of the c05ts of equ ipment used 1n red t.Jcing or re· .
mov 1ng su lfur and other pollu ta nts from fuel or stack gases and
disposing of rt:d ated wastes, bu t shall exclud e th ose costs re lated
to th e installation and operation o f elec tros tattc or mechan ical
prec iprtators and any return on i n'&gt;~estment . T he I ncludable Costs
shall be th e t ota l includable f;l nvir onmental pd llutr on contro l
costs fo r the first three of tlo e imm ed iately preced tng l our ca len·
dar m onths.

&amp;LEAN

Per M o nth

The Environmental Cost Ad JU stment to be charged in the
current month under rate schedules t ha t specJfy Environmental
Cost Adjustmen t sha ll bo t he average cost per kilowatt-hou r f or
the first three o f the rmmed iately precediflg four calendar
months determined by dividing the Includable Costs by th e Inclu dabl e Ktlowa tt·Hours . desCribed in Paragraphs A and B,
below, Pl us app li cable excise taxes

8

FRESH

PRESENT RATE - SCHEDULE R-S-91POMEROYI

T he subs tance of the rate revisions p roposed in the Appl ication filed on Ju ne 30,1 977 , 1s as follows ·

USDA

USDA CHOICE

Smith, said he was not aware .although she did not say bow
of any agreement. He saiq much alimony she wanted.
Wallace made his wile an
Pbeips ruled that testimony
offer soon after he filed lor dealing with the grounds for
divorce in September, but ber the diYorce would be taken in
lawyers had not accepted it. Jrivate to protect the Wallace
Smith did not reveal tbe family, but testimony lor the
monetary settlement will be
termS of the offer.
Wallace,
58,
cited open to the public.
Mrs. Wallace moved out of
incompatibility as the ground
lor the divorce . Mrs. Wallace, the governor's mansion Sept.
38, charged physical violence 6, a few days before Wallace
and
cruelty
in her filed for the divorce. Wallace
countersuit. She said tbe told the court she left
governor failed to provide her vohmtarlly and rejected a
the necessities of life, $500 check he tried w giv~ her
after the separation.

•

· ,.,r· _...LIL ~rift

CHUCK ROAST

plants in that area _of Eastern
Ohio.
But a U.S. Steel spokesman
said layoffs mliy be made at

~

company

CHOICE

stown, Ohio, will continue to
decline as a major steelproducing region but said
they have not decided to close

Wallaces
may cover up
differences
.
.

Wilts host

·· · ·~~ ·.·

tragedy or equal proportion to
the Sheet &amp; 'l'ube cutback."
" I doo 't know how much of
this we can stand before the
govenunent decides to take
some
steps and do something
new
major
expenditures
to
border
might
replace
the
Imports lilso were cited as
the plants - which employ
it," said Richley . "We
•bout
upgrade
the
plants,
the
works
in
Youngstown,
the
about 5,000 - as his company a reason for the poor demand
hope
tg
quickly divert the
takes addiUilnal steps to cbn- for the pllljlts' products, mOst spokesman aaid the company spokesman said:
president's
attention from
is stU! considering add.!Uonal
" Looking .down the road, .
solidate two plants and of whlch is steel bar.
New
Deihl
and
Saudi Arabia
con· U.S. Steel and tbe industry
During the past three suspensions and
u p g r -.a d e t h e I r
so
be
can
start
thinking
about
feel there is going to have to
months, O.S. Steel has · solidations. '
competitiveness.
Ohio
and
Youngstown.
" ... Upgrading the competi- be new capacity built because
the
plants'
U.S. Steel Olairrnan Edgar reduced
" The idea that the
tiveness
of the mllls would existing capacity would st Ul
·by
half,
down
to
capacities
Speer recently was quoted as
foundation
of this valley is
saying that "at some point 60,000 - tons of~ finished require the suspension and fall short of what this t-ountry steel is a thing of the past,"
consolidation
of
some
opera·
and
its
people
would
need
."
down the line that capacity products a month, by conShying away from saying a said Richiey. "We have 10 get
(ot- U.S. Steel's Ohio and !lll!idating 11 bar mills into tions in the months ahead,"
the spc.1kesman said. ''This at Conneaut mill would mt:un on with a job of real
MacDonald works ) will-have sb.
"There has definitely been worst would mean a gradual Ute t.'"nd of lhe Youngstown diversification. The valley
to be replaced" and the two
area plants, he still said, should not be dependent on
a weak demand for. the elimination of jobs."
plants Closed.
The move would add to last "Youngst-own just doesn't steel in the future llecause it
But a U.S. Steel spokesman · plants ' products," the
steel
industry seem to hove a long-range IS just not going to be here ."
aaid today, "There has been company spokesman said, year •"s
cutbacks,
which
has
resulted future as 11 major stee l
no decision made nor any adding that the plants' orders
NEW .YORK (Uf'l ) - New
in
more
than
26,000
layoffs center.' '
Umetable set regarding any have only amoW&gt;ted to about
York
Nets ~t arting guurd Bob
since
early
August
,
including
Youngstown
Mayor
.J.
60,000 tons of. fi nished
closings."
C urrin~tnn wlll 111iss Uw
S,OOO
layoffs
at
Youngstown
Phillip
Rich
ley,
who
tnok
month
since
products
per
U.S. Steel officials aaid the
Sheet &amp; Tube's Campbell offi&lt;-e Tuesday, sa id he was club'.s nflxt U1rec or f ur
Plants' ~~markets have moved early 1975."
"sl&gt;ocked and flabbergastl.'d" ga mes becnu.ow (lf the di!nth of
Confirming a statement by works near YoungSiown.
away a.nd they suffer from
Asked if the $3.5 bUlion mUl at the report that U.S. Steel · his mother, It was announc(."(l
" the disadvantage of being in a R.W. Smith, U.S. Steel's vice
Wcdnesdny.
higher cost location to preside nt and general that U.S. Steel has proposed might cloS&lt;' its Youngst0\\11
Carri nKton's mottu~ r died
assemble .the raw materials manager, that the hation 's to build near Conneaut, Ohio, fa cilities . which he said Wt'tlncsdHy .
on
the
Pennsylvania-Ohio
would
be
·'a
n
eco
nomi
c
largest steelmaker plans no
needed to produce steel."

Per M o nth

Winter
\ Summer
(Nov. thru May) !June t hru Oc,t.)

Demand Charuc
F1rst !.:JOO KVA or less ol
Max imum Demand .
Nel&lt;t 500 KVA..
Nex t 2,000 KVA.
Over 3,000 KV A . .

. ' $660.ocr-r

Energy Char oe.: ..
Fir st 250 KW H per KVA of
Max imum Demand. but not less

1.30
1.20
1.15

s~. :;if
2.00 per KVA
1.90 per KVA
1.80per KVA

I t ,.., ust \n l.)t• '( l tl1o~t thr· c~ li\' ' "'l l• t rusi d wt l lt.~ l Ul~ h otllf'l'', !l1 ll
wil l hl rnc rt'0~1 ·d ,Jnnuul!v b;;•~td tltl tlor• tf'st yP, If by 91)/'UI, tl11
dV Pf i) ll~l ~Jt !ll&lt;'rdl 'II VII o f;I J',!IllT IPr\ ht!IIJY 1/ /':\%. &lt;tt tr i 11IIU•t ~J· IV
iCC' hy 17.49°;,, 1f tilt• Ill! rP&lt;~~·~ sourrl llvrt' qr.lll.t&lt;·d

ANY PF RSON. ri 11 M, COHrc1HA'II ON. OR ASSOC IA
T ION MAY F I LE. PUHSUAN 'I TO Sl C'II{JN 11V00 10 ur ll ll
RCV ISED COO C, liN QBJCCT II II•I. TU fi-l l INCRLA$1 UFI
INCREAS.L S PII U POSL IJ HY r W COMPI\NY WH ICif MAY
ALL EGE THAT T HC C6MP /\'NY' S APPL1Ct1 T IOJ'I:I CON.! /\i NS
PH UIJOSA LS TIIAT A RC UNJUST AND OISCFI IM IN A1011Y

011 UNR E A SO NAIJLC .

_.

.

Th f' Co nlpOIIy\ 1\t ll diCol ti Otl and Cwnp ta in t and AIJI)('oll st.JII''i
!hilt th n ratq o l H' \Ufll f111 !1 1 1 ~ Vo tl !lt' n! tlol' p rnpt:r'l y off cc;li•tl ~~ II •
adf!Qilllle, unJt r ~ t . unn:asonnbln onU l n~u ffl co~!'rtt to yiu ld lll'&gt;t
cotnpt·n~ tl on oncl tlr,H lht
rut 1·~ prup osml w•ll rt n l pmrluu·
, /09fl1 tt1an a latr rowrn ofl..;il' Cil tlr o pHrtY &lt;J illl &lt;I t" l!lll:P~:,.;ry l or
th• ~ ::JS~l;Jti.il t GI' "o f adtlqu atc Sl'rvrtt •, un, JrnvcJI!H nt n ! l:.u'nlngs &lt;Jilll

,,.,._mtia! loommdw!SS.
Tile Co mpany pray s tha t tim Co rntfli s$ion ~1 ) approvu ttw
p roposed No tice l or N ~;Jwspatw r Pub lic att on. (2) l i ~ a dtiw for a
lmaring, (31 l ind th at thu prcStmt rato s, pri ces, charnos and o ther
prov1 sio ns of. tll f; scht.odulcs afl ecwd by such Apn lica iion nnd .
Com plain 1 and AppOa l, includmq th u ones to ntail100 lr1 CoiUJJl·
bus CitY O rdinance No . 88 1· 77, aru. unJUSt and urm)asunublu a nd
msufllc len t to y ield j(1st cnmpnn50t inn lor thn serviOf! rr.ndernd
theround~r . (4 ) l ind that ColumiJus .City OrQmancc No. 881 ·77
·is unlawful. (5 ) lind a11d determine that t hu 1a1es. p rices. charges
and o tl1cr proVISions of the scht.'dules tcf'ldcred for fili ng are just
and reasonable. C11'1d aJ.Juruv o suc:h schJ;..&gt;Cf ulos in tho l or tendered
and make S!JCh sc hedules o ff t~c ti'.'C as soonas .it ispraS[flcab!o to
d o so. (6) fi~o; and d e terrn 1nc the lust and rea5onable I
and
chQrycs to bt: charged and
1
the
t he
util ity scrv J:ce withiu ih,r.,~tv o f
Cumm.mv such o ther and lurthur
entitled,

I
COLU MBUS AND SOU TH ERN OH IO ELECTR IC COMPANY
BenT. nay, Pres1t1ent and Chief Operating Off icer

_ •_..,.,_

..

�'

•

13- Tile DailvSentinel, Middleoort-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , Jan . 4. 1978
..... g.,
.....«&amp;~:"~:t:~::::~:;~x-:~:&lt;:.~!:::~:::::::::::::::=:-':::::::~:::::;.;.; :::-~:::;::·:::::-:-:·;·.::~:.:::·:·:•:!:~:::::~::·::·:::::::·:;:;:,:;:::.::·
i . .....
-ll M"""'n "A ty
:~~
QUEEN NAMED

12 _The Thnly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday. Jan . 4. 1978

~

Rented furniture is big new American indust~
Ore., Jl. leader in tile f1eld.
Few Americans realize
how lransient the populace is
in some parts of the counlry.
A pas!Dr in Costa Mesa,
caur., put It succinctly not
long ago when he said he now
ministers to a procession
instead of a congregation.
Studtes indicate 42.5
percent of the U.S. populatiQ!l
changed residence in 1974,
compared with 20 percent
JUst five yeers earlier. A
med ian profile indicated
those who moved ~ere yowtg,

'

Mountain names
can be switched
.

Mt. McKi/lley .
Our 25th president ha s been
long since dead and tltere are
no
provist ons
for
PQsthwnously changing his
name to William Denali. But
perhaps a trade-off cQuld be
arranged.
One possibility would be to
remove McKinley's name
from the · Alaskan peak and
rename the highest peak in
Ohio m h1s honor.
But since Campbell Hill,
tile htghest peak in Ohio, is
only 1,550 feet above sea
level, that compromise might
not be acceptable to
McKinley's admtrers . So
another suitable landmark
must be found ..
Mt. Everest, for instance.
Whereas MI . McKinley IS
merely the highest SUIIlllllt in
North America, MI. Everest
is the tallest on earth. The
step-up in elevation should
make the switch palatable to
the McKinley lobby.
More important, MI.
Everest IS located in Nepal,
which ts a long way off. If the
Nepalese object to changmg•
its name to MI. McKiitley,

Project hopes to control old mines seepage

ALL KROGER STORES

Serve 'N' Save
Wieners

OPEN
24
HOURS
Except Closed Saturday Midnight Til9 AM Sun.

STOCK UP ON THESE MONEY

.

SAVING VALUES DURING KROGER'S

who cares?

.

I IIII) Ut ...

I say we m the United
Slates are entitled to call Mt.
Everest anything we want !D.
For that matter, the Nepalese
themselves have another
name for it. They call tl
Sagarmatha.
Failmg that, there ts one
other poss1ble compromtse.
Change tile name of Mt.
McKinley to Mt Hoover;
change the name of Campbell
Hill to Boulder Hill; change
tile name of Hoover Dam to
Denali Dam, and bwld a new
dam on the Ohio Rivl!r,
nammg 1t after McKinley.

Clorox
Liquid Bieach

wl!

1

'

a-o1·

$

·····-····- .........

pkgl

Stokely
Catsup ....

$1
'Stokely
Spinach 315· ·$1
Cottage
12-oz.$1
2
Cheese
.....
P~;tp~N' 4 $
Beans . .
1
Kroger 4 $1
KROGER WHITE OR PINK

Grapefruit 'I
Juice ... ... &amp;?c~ ..
...,
6

3

..

14·•··
$1
Btls .

KROGER

. _..

Cans

Ctns .

16·01 .

c."'

9-1 12- 0Z . TUBES BUTTER ME NOT

•

•

• . . .. . ... .
:J~ICe

;:
§
§

ii

~=

~

· ~o!jgm;:;lili

~

i
i.
i

0

.

,......,

"""

WITH COUPON
--111Wfllllllll l l111

MIUtl ID.,..ICAatl IIIII l

llltli liJIS

1.
:

.....

~ GJIIII,IHI.IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIII 1111111111tliiro

~11111111m " """ ' O[I(;'''o""""

:

ii
§
:

•~

=
=

IIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIII

16·CT. PKG. FIEIZIR PLEIZIR
ASSORTED POPS
BUY ONE 16-CT. PIG. ATTHE
REGULAR PRICE OF $1.09
~EFTONRI16E-CTE
. PIG,:,""

,._~

E:

:

i
i
i

.. :

COUPON
tiW't/l- !fUll LI""T I 501-! !AIIIIt I 11!1
- l ll!l.wtPIU IIIIIILIUiliJII

:
:
.....

_K~tllllllllliii~UIIIIIIIItllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllil

p1111 ,,.i:OijijoRIII:IIGilllf!L_ _IUI{!

24' OFF

=
~
:

Concentrated
All Detergent
M~:;::.='~1~~:r.k','~1u

FvGJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII,IIIflllfl

cons

FR;;;.rRTON

Chicken

c

Dinners ... ~~~~~

20 LBS. MEAT S2()00
U.S. GOV"TGRADED CHOICE.

&amp;;tt~m

REGULAR OR CHUB"PAK
ANY SIZE PKG .

Ground
Beef .. -~

Round Steak,b

10·12-LB.

Mixed
Fryer Parts ,~·
fi\£S\\ GR££tl

(SIICED .. .IB. 79') WHOLE

Smoked
PICniCS .......
o

I

~:~:.:2 5~~2
I

GROUND BEEF.. ............. ·.. ··· .... ·•··.
RIB STEAK ................................. Ib.'l.79
BEEF CUBED STEAK ...................... lb. 11.69
FLOUNDER FILLETS ........•. "' ............. lb. 99'
"JACKSON- BOLOGNA ...................... : .. lb. 99'
COOKED SALAMI... ..................... .. "' lb. 79'
lb. '1.49
LONGHORN
•••••••• 0 •••• 0 ••••

20 Years of Experienced Meat CuHers To Cut and
Serve Meat To Your Specifications.
Open 8 00-4 :30 Mon. thru Fri., sat. 8:00 to 1:00

7
9
c Q;;~O~;OPS
3
Pork Loin ..

We Gladly Accept. Food Stamps

NO CENTER SliCES REMOVED

••a

Chuck Roast
End Cut Pork Chops
Ground Beef Patties
Bologna
Home Made Sausage
Superior Wieners

for home killed

l~-39-.

·lb.

3 lb.
2 Jb.
6 lb.
3 lb.
3 lb.
3 lb.

• •

.tb.

a£ANS

Rome
Apples

1

Bone_less Top$17 9
Si.rloin Butt lb .

lNS~ECTED

LESS THAN 25-LBS ... LB . 15'

$ 59

U.S. GOV"T GRADED CHOICE
AVG . WHOlE

HOtLY fARMS . U.S.D.A.

99

JANUARY SPECIAL

5 lb. Bologna
5 lb. Home Made Sausage
3 lb.- Longhorn Cheese
3 Ib. Perch Fillets
6 lb. Superior Wieners
3 lb. Beef Liver
3 lb. Jowl Bacon

2 $219

M;;;;E~EXCEPT HAM FRSOZENS

I iii

6 lb. Beef Chuck Roast
12 lb. Ground Beef Patties
3 lb. End Cut Pork Chops

129
69C

~!;

"lLOWESl Plum

49 LBS. MEAT 54900

~~k ~~~fa~~fn~~
Gradel
large Eggs o••.

Harold Roush, Sunday School
superintendent for 17 years,
and h1s wife, Mrs. Marjorie
Roush . Gifts on behalf of the
church were gtven by Roger
Johnson . on behalf .of the
youth grou p by Bruce
McKelvey, and on behalf of
the Sunday School by Mrs .
Shirley Johnson.
Treats were given to the
children and cookies and
punch were served in the.
soctal room to conclude the
evening.

We sell only U. S. D. A. choice bee I.

~:ffee ... 3~~~~$ 83g
KROGER

The Christmas program at ·
the
Portland
United
Methodist Church was under
the direction of Bruce
McKelvey.
Taking part were Danelle,
Charlie, Greg Weddle and
Vicky, Teresa and Neal
Barker in an original play,
and Dawn Mtchelle Johnson
and Oonette Talbott. There
were Chnstmas carols by the
congregation and at the
conclusiOn 9f the program
g1fts were presented to

llltll'ltlr!IJ&lt;UKOfOIII
Ill Cl 1"1

SPOTliGHT

KROGER HI NU

at Portland Church

W!THCOUPON

Kroger Welcom es
Your Federal
food Stamps

46·oz

iiiiiiiiiiiii.IIUIIIIIt 11

FREE "

Tube•

2 $1

-.. McKelvey directs program
1'

4-CT. PKG.UPTON CUP-A-SOUP
BUY TWO 4-CT. PKGS. AT THE
REGULAR PRICE OF $1.38
GET ONE4·CT. PKG.

1 O-Ct.

BISCUitS ····

-r;;;;ato

Slllltlllu.uwtilllllltk.AI Iuf1

puuu1111111

'lONEY POD

~=~:~'Peas 3'~:::$1

tiii'II_ . .III"....!LIUWI I ltl l

1 Of

FRES$13
lb .

9

wun

OiN

[\ : c:~;NE~R~~~~ ofw~!

began in preparation for the
FEBRUARY
dleport damaged by broken Technology, one of the lieU hospital.
Feb. 21 - Thecentraloffice construction of the new
Feb -1 - Plans were made water lmes and problems to and Howell schools.
~
::::
to reopen Meigs Local the heating and cooling
Feb. 17 - Bob J. Ord was ol the Meigs Local School Sti!Der Department Store.
Feb. 26 - Plans were
given
a new • three year District was reorganlted with
Schools on Feb. 3 with kin· . system became a county
The day after Christmas a fal1)ily dinner was enjoyed at
contract as superintendent of Dan Morris moving into the revealed for the construction
·
cummtssloners
problem.
dergartens
remaining
closed.
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jooeph Ush and USII with the
Edison Hobstetter was
Feb. 9 - Old-time baseball tile Southern Local School d~rector of curriculum post. · of a new building b)' the
following attending : Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Piersall, Mr. and Mrs.
Feb. 22 - A public fund Meigs Branch o! the Athcn.elected president of the pl~yers were honored at a District.
Olarles Yeager, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Smith, Mr. and Mrs.
Feb. 18 - J . Pillon D. dri~e . for burn victim , County Savings and Loan.
Pomeroy Naltonal Bank for banquet staged by the ·
Eddie Llsh and Frankie, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Knapp, Mr.
the 36th yen..
Pomeroy
Chamber
of" Cross, prominent Ra ~l ne Chrtstlna Smtth, was laun· The Kibble Foundation unMarty Yeager, Mrs. Ralph Ross and Shllwn. Deanne Fenton
businessman for ~ years ched by lhe auxlllary of the nounced the awarding ol 19
Feb
.
3Kaiser
Aluminum
Commerce.
and Mike Prall of Srnithfield, Ohio and Gertrude Mitchell,
at t;tavenswood announced
Feb. 10 - Meigs Local died , at a Huntington . MiddlePQrt Fire Departm~nt ; college scholarships.
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Larry Noble, Jeff and Chris.
Feb. 23 - Nita Wtsmskt
Feb. Zl - Qan Thomas. son
mdefimte layoffs of 1,000 classes resumed agairr with
ANew Year's dionner was also held at the Ush home with
was named county health , of Mr. and Mrs. Don Thomas.
employes due to the energy juntor and senior high
the following members oflhe family attending: Mr. and Mrs.
department hypertens ion Pomeroy became an Eagle
crisis. Two homes on Condor students sharing the h1gh
Larry Noble, Jeff and GhriS, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Knapp, Mr.
nurse. tA&gt;ad limits on county Sco ut . ·
St.,
Pomeroy,
burned
and
school
on
a
part
time
basis.
and Mrs. Eddie Lish and Frankie, host and hostess, Mr. and
roads were reduced 25 perFeb. 28 - A fuU scrvtce
Syracuse Council approved Possibilities of a nuclear
Mrs. Joe Llsh and Usa.
ce~t .
program
for
crippled
appropriations of $139,347.50 power plant in Great Bend
Feb: 24 - George (Bud I ch1ldren was announced by
lor
the
year.
were
discussed
at
a
public''
MASON- Mr. and Mrs. Charles Yeager entertained their
Young, Route 3, Pomeroy, the Meigs County Health
Feb. 4 - Old Man Winter meeting In Racine.
relatives and families during tlie Christmas holidays. The
wus electrocuted while m - Department with Mrs Opal
continued to be brutal and
Feb. 13 - Boats tn the Ohio
home was beautifully decorated for the holidays and on Christstalling
a citltens band radio Grueser, R.N., as "&lt;!oor ·
plans were made for again battled ice jams ar residents
mas Eve the following attended dinner, Mr. and Mrs. James
antenna
.
dlnator
closing t he Metgs Local observed along the rlve·r
Diehl, Pomeroy; Miss Jo Ellen Diehl, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Feb. 25 ~ Clearing away
ITo be continued)
Schools
·
banks.
Ron Rutherford, Mason, Ohio; Mrs. Rhoda Yeager, Mr. and
6
Christina
Smith,
Feb
"t!i
Seth
Nicholson.
Feb.
SAN ANTONIO , Texas
Mrs. Ralph Rose, Shawn and Amy, Mr. and Mrs. Marty
11, was seriously burned at Route t, Rutland, a lc!cal (UP!) - Penelope Tyson, the
Yeager, aU of Mason.
the home of her - grand- history bull and former 27-year-old wife of an Air
Guests Olrlstmas Day for dinner included Mrs. Yeager's#
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert teacher, died . The Women' s -r'orce sergeant, Tuesday
parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Piersall, Pl. Pleasant; Mrs.
By JOAN HANAUER
California . "'He handed me
Roush,
near Pomeroy.
Auxiliary of Veterans night gave
birth · to
Gerlrude Mitchell, Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Knapp,
UP! Television Writer
this book and told me I had \f&gt;
Feb.
7
Despite
tile
frigtd
Memorial
Hospital
honored
quadrupletsthree
girls
and
Syracuse, Ohio; Anthony Wilson, Pomeroy; Deanne Fenton,
NEW
YORK
(UP!
)
read it. •lt "s 11 fulry tale ." I
temperatures, talk began members for thetr volunteer one boy.
·
Mike Pratt, both of Smithfield, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lish
Narnla
IS a magical land
about the possibilities of service.
CINCINNA T1 (UP! l
Wtlford Hall Air Force discovered by four children said. and he said, "Shut up
and Lisa, Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Lish and Frankie, Mason; Mr.
and read It '"
Feb. 16 - Jon W. Bunce hospital spokesman Bruce
and Mrs. Larry Wolfe and Jeff, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Ross, Three young women and a major floods in the sprmg.
as they wander through the
Connell reud the whole
Feb.
8The
Metgs
County
was
named
to
the
President
"s
Eberhardt said doctors began
Shawn and Amy, Mr. and Mrs. Marty Yeager, Mr. and Mrs. man were killed and two
back of a wardrobe closet bt series for enjoyme nt, und it
Welfare
building
in
M1dClub
of
the
Ohto
Institute
of
other people injured Tuesday
taking the infnnts by an old English country home .
Larry Smith, all of Mason.
WIIS!l't until tllroc or four
night in a lour-automobile
Caesanan sect1on in two·
In Narma the children meet years later that he began
minu~
intervals
starling
at
MASON - The Mason Mothers Club entertained w1tl1 a accident on a stretch of In·
an heroic lion namod Asian looking with a professional
7:17p.m.
•
Christmas dinner at tile newhomr of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Ross terstate 75 known as "Dead
who seeks to free Narnla eye Into tile rtghts to the
He sa1d the babtes were
in Mason . The home was beautifully decorated for the Man's Curve."
the spell of the evil books.
!rom
placed tn an incubator and
Identities of three of tile
festivities. Hostesses included Mrs. Ross, Mrs. Donna Fowler
White
Witch.
To furth er ba ck hts
they and their mother were
dead, along wtth details of the
and Mrs. Joyce Redman.
C.S. Lewis, who ordtnarlly urgumenth e points to U1e fu ct
doing fine .
Gifts for exchange were placed beneath tile lighted mishap, were still unknown
Eberhardt said Mrs Tyson concentrated on more mature that , " The Chronic les"
early
thts
morning.
Christmas tree.
pu bl1she r,
had not taken any fertility themes, wrote seven books Am e rican
The three women were
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Ross, Jack Fowler,
that make up "The Macmillan, has sold 6 million
drugs
He
said,
however,
she
guest, Mrs. Doona Fowler, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Redman, Mr. killed when their southbound
and her husband, Sgt. Chrontcles of Narnla" pnd coptes of tile books in U1is
The colder it is outside, lhe payment plan.
and Mrs. Nolan Swackhamer, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lish, Mr. car went out of control, htt a
became a children's classic. country In tile htst five years,
and Mrs. Charles Yeager, Mr. and Mrs. James Proffttt, Mr. guardrail and went airborne, harder heating systems have
The gas company manager Kenn~th Tyson, assigned to
He also said, "1 am abnost perhaps half to college
and Mrs. George McFarland, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Stewart, landmg atop a ·northbound to work, and the more fuel said that whtle cold weather mthtary secunty, had mclined to set it up as a canon youngster
they us~ to keep homes is the big culprit in drivmg up anllctpated a multiple birth. that a children's story which
Mt and Mrs. Robert Kincaid, Mr. and Mrs. Homer Noble, Mr. auto
"' lam at tills moment three
Eberhardt said at birth the
The
driver
of
that
car
was
wann.
and Mrs. Roy Test, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Bumgardner.
fuel bills in the winter, there
Is enjoyed only by children is blocks !rom the UCLA
male mfant weighed 3
taken to a Cmcmnati hospital
Smce
January
and are other reasons.
Mason and area personals
a bad children's story. The campus.'" Connell said. "and
Mrs. Matilda Noble, Mason, nnd grandson, Danny Harbour, where he died a short ti111e February traditionally arc
High winds often a c- pounds, 9 ounces. the ftrst
good ones last."
the bookstores ullnround tlw
the culdest months of the company cold temperatures girl weighed 2 pounds. 91h
New Haven, visited recently with Mrs. Noble's son and wile , later.
Chtldren 's Television campus have huge displays uf
Charlene Earls, 19, Cm- year, fuel bills usually are at making furnaces work longer ounces; the second g~rl 2 Workshop, tile folks who gave
Mr . and Mrs. Dick Noble at Mifflin, Pa. While there Mr.·
ctnnati, owner of the south- their peak durmg these two and harder to keep homes pounds, 15 ounc"es ; and the us " Sesame Street" and 'The Chronicles." Think about
Harbour wenl wr hunting.
those kids who were In
Christmas Day dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ray bound car, was one of those months
warm . Also , the number of last girl, I pound, 13 ounces. "Electric Compahy ." now eollegc seven m· ei~ht years
Tyson, 33, IS from
Although they can't control days between meter readings
Redman, Ray and Lori, at tlleir home m 1\lason included Mr . killed. Pollee were not sure
Fayettvllle,
N.C , and Mrs. wtll be turmng the first book ago - they arc likely to be
was
drivmg
tile
whether
she
the weather, area residents sumett mes vartes due to
and Mrs. Lew Long, Middleport; Mr. aod Mrs. Thomasof the Narrua series, "The young parents now .
Redman, Mason; Jan Long, Columbus and Dorothy Long, vehicle at the time of. the can do something about the holidays .or weekends failling Tyson Js from DeSoto. Mo . Lion , the Wttch and the
" 1 think 'N Urnta ' cou ld
Eberhardt said it was the
craSh and satd they could not size of their heatmg biUS by wtlhin the billing pertod.
Pomeroy.
Wardrobe," into - two hour- become one of the true
Mr. and Mrs. James Noble and grandson, Gary Schwabe, identify the other two women reducing the amount of
"Gas bills also are affected ftrst quadruplet birth at the long animated specials to be dasslcs
of
family
New Orleans, spent a week wttll tile Nobles' daughter and ;ron- in the car.
•.
energy they use .
by the price Colqmbla must hopaital and tile fir st m San broadcast in early prime entertai nme nt,
watched
Antonio
since
October,
1974,
They also did not idenltfy
"A good place to start is the pay to purchase gas it sells to
in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Ebner and daughters, Nancy and
time on CBS-TV In 1979, every year the wuy '"1'110
Martha at Clifton. While here Mr. and Mrs. Noble also visited the driver of the northbound thermostat on the furnace ," you -and other customers," when Sheha Hansen gave sponsored by Kraft, Inc.
Wizard of Oz' ts watched ."
according· to J. M. Koebel, · the Columbia manager said. btrth to ldenllcal quotll'uplet
his mother, Mrs. Matilda Noble and sister and family, Mr. and vehicle.
T~is IS CTW's first move
The show is lx!ing done in
Two compact cars in tlie manager lor Columbia Gas of "These costs have been rising daughters.
Mrs. Stanley Harbour in Mason.
UltO pnme time com mercial
animation
bccau•c the
Eberhardt satd Tyson
A Christmas Eve get together was held at the home of northbound lane also were Ohio in the Gallia-Meigs sharply because of tnflatlon
television, and its flrsl spcrlul effects of - fM
Trooper and Mrs. George R. Young and farmly. Attending involved in the crash, area . "Studies have shown and the fact that producers wanted the newspapers expenment with full-l ength
example - turnin~ Narnia
were Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lathey, Mrs. Leona Goff, Mr. and authorities said. The driver of that for every degree a home must drill deeper and in more called about tile btr\hs
animation.
frnm eternal winter Into
"He- told the doctors he
Mrs. Alburtice Young , Olarles Murphy Latlley, Gay Ia Walker. one of the small cars was not thermostat IS set below 70 remote areas to find the
Davtd Connell, CTW's vice beautiful sprmg, would taku
wanted
publictty
because
he
Rickard Young, Karyn Wiley, Michael Scott Young a'nd Phil hurt , but the driver and degrees. fuel comsumption is supplies o! gas you need."
president for produdton and un uitlimlted budget In the
Wiley. Gilts were exchanged and refreshments were served. passenger in the second car reduced about three perqnt.
Other
conservation was so happy about it." executive producer fot the $25-30 million area .
11
were both taken to Cincmnalt
The lower the setting, the suggestions olfered by Eberhardt said.
first "Namia" show, belleves
Instead. With u really
MASON- Cheryl Hanmg, Harrisonville, Meigs County, Genefal Hospital.
lower the consumption and, Columbta include:
tile show . will be a huge excellent animati o n
Ohio and Joseph Edward Lish, Mason, were united in
Alexander Speare, 21, most importantly, the more
- Plastic storm window
success with the whole spec1aUst like Chuck Jones
E·R CALLED
marriage on December 23 at 7:30 p.m. at tile hotl)e of the Olivet, Mich., was reported in dollars saved," he said.
kits, avatlable at reasonable
The
Mtddleport family.
("How The Grlnch Stole
groom's parents, Mr. aod Mrs. Joseph Llsh, Mason. The Rev. fair condition. His passenger,
Columbta is urging its cost, to prevent cold air from Emergency Squad answered
"1 first Oecame c.ware of Cl!rlstmas" and " llikklTikki·
Wilbur Perrin, ,Pomeroy, performed the double ring Tom Harmon, 22, for whom customers to s~t thetr entermg a home through the a call to 582 Beech St. at 3· 32 the books 111-12 years ago Tavt") as producer-director ,
ceremony. Cheryl is the daughter of Irene Haning, police had no address, was thermostats at the lowest windows.
p.m. Saturday for Thomas when I was visiting a friend the art work can be
treated and released.
com"fortable level, but no
Harrisonville.
- Staple
or
tack HendriCks who was taken to for a drink In his New York spectacula r and within
The brtde, given in marriage by her brother, Greg Haning,
The impact of the airborne higher than 68 degrees
weatherstripping
between Veterans Memonal Hospital apartment," Connell said in a budgetary bOunds.
wore a blue Door length gown. Altendants were Mr. and Mrs. car on the northboUnd vehicle
Koebel pointed out that a door and window frames to where he was admitted.
telephone interview from
Robert Knapp. Mrs. Knapp wore a pink floor·lengtll gown, "nearly welded the two special free booklet offermg keep out drafts.
together," sa1d police. "No Cost, L&lt;iw Cost" tips on
styled like tile bride's.
.
- Close off unused rooms to
Mr. Lisllls employed in construction by Bristol Steel. They Rescue crews look nearly 45 conservation is available avoid healmg urmecessary
mmutes to cut the bodies through all Columbia offtces. space.
are residing on Martin St., Mason.
She is a graduate of Meigs High School and Mr. Lish of from the wreckage With
He also urged customers
- Make sure furntture and
having
difficulty paying their drapes are not blocking
power
tools.
·
Wahama High School.
A reception followed the weddipg at tile home of his
The accident site was so current gas bill to contact the heatmg regtsters.
parents. The home was decorated for tile Christmas holidays. named in 1963, when eight local gas company office to
- Use caulkmg around
The table was covered with a red tablecloth. The wedding cake people were killed there.
work out an extended windows and door frames, or
decorated in white was highlighted with red poinsettias and
any other cracks on buildmg
picnic lunch, but a rally was show the strength of the
United Press Internatlooal
topped with miniature bride and groom. Red lighted candles in
exteriors, to prevent heat
so the farmers movement
when
the
cancelled
Farmers
in
Texas,
gold holders were also used. Refreshments were served.
from escapmg.
growners
meet
Fnday
with
could
roll
back
on
Loop
286
Attending the reception were the Rev. Perrin, tbe
- Make sure furnace filters Michigan, Illinois, Ohto and for a flyover by sympathetic Agrlmlture Secretary Bob
honorees, his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Ush, Mr. and Mrs.
are clean to .msure efficient Tacoma, Wash ., took to the pilots in
crop-dusting Bergland In Omaha, Ncb.
streets Tuesday m the
Robert Knapp, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Smith, Mr. and Mrs.
furnace operatlOn.
Farmers in four Michigan
airplanes.
Charles Yeager, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Noble, Jeff and Chris,
- Turn the heat setting on national farm strike to
counties
demonstrated In
Pollee
reported
only
mmor
Frankie Lish, Lisa Lish, Mr. and .Mrs. L. E. Piersall, Pl.
water heaters to normal, protest low farm pnces and trafftc tieups from tile green bone-chilling
cold
Pleasant; Deanne Fenton, Mike Pratt. both of Smithfield,
rather than high, since the tile importati on Of foretgn and red tractors.
temperatures
to
clog
·
Ohio; Irene Haning, Steve, Greg, Tim and Chris, all of
normal settmg requires less beef.
C.R. Johnson, dressed in highways with U~etr openThanks
to
the
generosity
of
Striking
Texas
farmers
Racine
Baptist
Church,
Mrs.
Harrisonville, Ohio; Joe Cline, Albany, Ohio.
gas
yet
provides
water
hot
blue
jeans, a red-checked cabbed tractors Tuesday to
individuals
and Freda Wyatt, Pomeroy
encircled Lubbock , Tex .,
enough
for
any
bathing
or
flannel
shirt and u cap with demonstrate their support of
organizations, residents ol Chapter OES, Mr. and Mrs.
Tuesday m a 27-mtle parade
washmg.
·
an
Amencan
Agnculture a nationwide farmers' stnke .
the Meigs County Infirmary Larry Clark. Ohio Valley
- Make sure fireplace of trac!Drs with a message to strike emblem, drove his
In St. J ohn's, Mich., 20 to 25
again enjoyed a pleasant Commandery Knights
the1r "city cou~lns" that they
Christmas hohday being Templar, Meigs Jaycees, dampers are closed when the want higher prices for their · poster-covered tractor 20 tractors crep t along a
miles from his Ropesville, highway and tw o minor
honored with parties and Arthur Hill, Evelyn Gibnore, fireplace is not in use. An products
open
damper
causes
heated
Texas
cotton, corn and accide nts involving farm
1
bemg presented with gifts. Laurel
In Kenton, Clhto. about 40
Cliff Freewill air to be sucked up the
tD participate in machinery were reported .
maize
farm
Contributors who were Methodtst Church, Meigs
farmers circled downtown in
chimney.
The group disba nded after a
tile
protest.
extended thanks today by Mental Health Center,
tractors and pickup !rucks
"They
(the
public)
slfy
why
message
!rom
Gov.
Supt. Mildred Jacobs in- Margaret Sheets, Pomeroy
and vowed to JOin a larger
don't
you
get
thpse
tractors
Milliken
assuring
Willianun
cluded the auxiliary of
tractorcade Jan . 20th to the
NAMES OMITfED
Reservation lists at the Deadly Sin," hy Lawrence Chapter 53, DAV; Mr. and Elementary School grades 4,
State
Capitol in Columbus. off the streets and Into the the strikers they would be
5
and
6; Pomeroy First
Survivors of Clark !hie,
and
"The Mrs. Judson White, Roy and
Pomeroy and Middleport Sanders,
In
Tiffin,
Ohio, about 75 field? We will, just give us represented at the meeting
Libraries are a pretty good Salamanca Drum" by Rose Ann Jenkins; Pomeroy BaptiSt Church, Chester Route 1, Racine, erroneously Seneca County l"rmers some Initiative," said with Berglaod .
Methodist Young Adults not included m his obituary
indicator of what people are Dorothy Eden.
In Shelbyville, Ill., 200 proBrown Troop 1271; Mr. and Sunday School Class, iA&gt;yal mclude two sisters, Mrs. cU"cled dowiitown in trac!Drs, Johnson, kicking tile dried
asking for according to
Most requested non·fiction Mrs. Dick Karr, Sr., Mr. and
wttll
the
toe
of
h1s
grass
testing
farmers met with
farm vehicles and pickup
Librarian Susan Fleshman. titles include James Herroit's Mrs. Ted Matthews, Mrs. Men and Women's Class of Frances Roberts of Racine, trucks, eventually ending at a ' alligator cowboy boot .
Gov
.
James
R. Thompson,
The
farmers
are who charged the federal
Although the libraries can "All Things Wise and Won- Ray Sauer, Mr. and Mrs. the Middleport Church of and Mrs E lma Louks, shopping center for a rally
sometimes buy two copies of , derful," Wayne Dyer's "Your Charles Blakeslee, Mr. and Chrtst, Chester Junior Girl Syracuse; four grandLubbock area growers demandmg 100 percent government was not doing
books in popular demand, it Erroneous Zones," Gail Mrs: Frank Cleland, Ertc S&lt;'out Troop 1049, Chester children, Lois, Melis~a. ahnost surrounded tile ctty on parity, a hasic break-evert enough to open internationa 1
Kathy and David !hie and two
can find no way to have Sheehy's "Passages"; David Chambers and the Sheltered Brownie Troop 1061.
a highway in a movmg cham point between the rising cost markets for farm goods ..One
available a sufficient number Balsiger's ."Lincoln Con- Workshop, Mr. and Mrs. Jack . Elizabeth Searles, Rutland aunts, Mrs. Faye Dunlavy, of as many as 1,100 lractors of production and the farmer was arrested for
of copies for everyone," the spiracy," David L. Diles' Hawley , Pomeroy Eagles Juruor Girl Scouts, Pomeroy Middleport, and Mrs. Ebna during tile morning, police declinmg price tllelr products failure to obey a police officer
bring m tile marketplace.
librarian said. "So patrons "Twelfth Man In The Hud· Club, Rock Springs Adult Church of Christ. Jayne Holter, Minersville.
and was released on bond.
said.
are asked to place reserves or die," and Erma &amp;mheck's Sunday School Class, Racine HoeDich, Mr. and Mrs. Mike
The
farmers
also
hope
the
At noon they traveled in
requests, and they are then "The Gruss ia Greener over Methodist Youth Group, Hammer, Rutland Freewill
caravlln
to a state park for a Lubbock demonstration ·will
Baptist Church, Joppa United
E-RCALI,ED
filled cbronologicaUy in the the Septic Tank."
. Enterprise United Methodist Methodist WSCS, Opal
The Pomeroy Emergency
order in which they are
I
· Sunday School, Mrs. Maxine Harris, Mr. and Mrs. Larcy Squad was called to Enreceived.''
Coats Gaskill, Keno Church Brogan and c'illdren, Kelly terprise at 12:53 ·a . m.
Heading the fiction list in
of Chr~, Mrs. Otto Bradford, and Shannon, Rutland Wednesday for- Pauline
recent months bas been
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Trussell, Nazarene Church, Margaret imboden who was taken to·
regard to his position with
Colleen McCullough's "The
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The Regula.
First Southern Lewis, Middlepo•t United Veterans Memorial Hospital.
LAFF- A. DAY Pomeroy
Regul8.
a
township
trustee
Thorn Birds," which Is the
Ohio
Bell," satd Wargo. "I
Baptist Church . .
PentecoStal Church, Dr. and At 10:50 a. m. Tuesday, the Ohio General Assembly, off long acttve in Stark Qounty
wanted
to know whetller he IS
saga of three generations of ..._.
Jack and Carolyn Bachner, Mrs. Keith Riggs, Mr. and squad went to tile Salem tD a quiet.start in 1978, was to
politics,
will
be
sworn
in
going
to
he a representative
the Indomitable Cleary ...J
St. John's Lutheran "Church, Mrs. Osby Martin, Mr and Center area for Mrs. Ger- meet briefly again today and
Wednesday.
of
Ohio
Bell
or Stark County
family beginning in the early
Willis and Dorothy Davis, Mrs. Robert ·Martin, Kyger trude Drake who was taken to then head home until next
His
nomination
was
con1900s.
•
in
thia
Legislature."
Marion Ebersbach, Mt. Creek High School, Mr. and Veterans Memorial Hospital week.
other popular novels have
House Democrats chose firmed by a ~~ vote of tile • Senate Democrats aiso held
~-:=--.J), ~oriah Baptist Missionary Mrs. Harold Sauer, Pomeroy where she was admitted.
been "The Rich Are DifRobert
L. Regula of Canton to Democratic caucus, which a caucus and Preaident Pro
ely, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Natarene Church, Feeneyferent," hy Susan Howatch;
fill
-a
vacancy
in the 49th met for a discussion of filling Tempore Oliver Ocaak, 0HILOTEMPS
~.lA- Brown, Gayle and Edna
Bennett Post, American
Akron, Slid tile Se111te will
"Investigation," by Dorothy
NEW YORK (UP!) - The District created by the the vacancy.
/ •- ~
Price, R. C. Bottling Co., Legion, junior auxiliary, Xi
The
lone
dissenter
was
vote Jan. lion overriding the
Uhnak; "Stone Bull," bv
Pomeroy Seventh Day Ad· Gamma Mu Chapter o! Beta highest temperatur• reported resignation of Rep. Irene B.
Rep
.
John
P.
Wargo,
0veto of Gov. James A. Rhodes
Phyllls Whitney; "The Hobventist Church, Mr. and Mrs. Sigma Phi Sorority, Norman Tuesday to the National Smart, who was elected to a
Lisbon,
who
said
he
was
not
on
a collective bargaining bill
bitt," by J . R. R. Tolklen;
William Brown, Rutland Newland, Salvation Army, Weather Service, excluding judgeship in November ,•
satisfied
that
Regula
would
for
public employees.
"Coma
"
by
llobin
Cook·
The
lawmakers
got
to
try
{
Church of Christ, Middleport Mr. and Mrs. Purl Van Alaska and Hawaii, was 71
"We
had 21 voles (when the
sever
his
ties
with
ohio
Bell
"The Immigrants," by
out
the
new
$15,000
electronic
Church of the Nazarene, Meter, Mr. and Mrs. Roland degrees at Tucson, Ariz.
Telephone Co.1 his employer. btU was passed ) before, 1\(Kl I
Ho,.ard Fast; "The Devil On "ExacUy how much do you love Dorcas Missionary Cucle of Morris,
scoreboards
in
U1e
House
to
Tod~y'
s
low
was
14
degrees
Mrs. Barbara
~~we
Were given no hope they're still there," said
Horseback," by Victoria him . . Ill terms of dolllll • 1nd Middleport First Baptist Sargent and Jimmy's Pastry below zero at Glen Falls, N. accept
Mrs.
Smart"s
information
on tile man with Ocasek.
Holt; "Dynasty," by Robert centa, that is?"
Y.
resignation and appoint
Church, Esther .Circle of the Shop.
Wlegant; "The Second
II
I.
' '·

By Alma Marshall

~

busmess tnclude Mohasco
Corp.'s Cort Furniture Rental
Co. and National Service
Industries' Certified Leasing. -

• well educated, held high up to a new environment they dl'lorced persons setting up cost of new furmture in 10
GranTree operates 63
mooths.
The
wholesale
cost
is
furniture
rental stores m 28 in
status occupations • with , perceive as of!ering a better r'»!w homes.
roughly
half
what
it
would
eight
western
states and
Treece
said
there
probably
above average incomes, and chance of success Many
Canada.
cost
tD
buy
the
same
furruture
are
not
more
than
20
tended tD be socially active . relocate for economic
Other major firms in the
People move around for an reasons or to acl\teve social companies engaged in the outright at retail.
"The
average
rental
period
business
on
any
significant
enormous Variety of reasons and personal growth ," he
scale as yet although many is only eight to nine months,"
and many move !DO fast to lug said. ·
furniture with them, Treece
The furniture rental furniture stores have tried .he satd, "another indication
told
United
Press busi)less also is spurred by rental,s from time to time, of tile extreme mobility of
International. They want changing lifestyles: :the large only to find them n·ot t.oday's society.''
.
1
Furniture usually remain~ .
• ' instant
living," and don't number of couples that share profitable.
in
the
rental
inventory
about
The
first
furmture
rental
want to"to buy furniture until ahhome wtthout being
they are in a position lo select married. tile growing number comparues rented to theaters 22 months . By that time. it
a permanent home.
of singles of tile same sex who and movte producers for either has begun to show
"Some move either to share a domicile, and the stage sets, a restricted . wear or its continued
By DICK WEST
destroy the past or to move Increasing
number
of business. But Treece satd one fashionableness has come
WASHINGTON (IJPI)
Boston firm has been renting ' mto questioh. It is sold off in
Among tile prices we pay for
furniture for private homes GranTree's used furruture
longevity is a high degree of
for at least 20 years. The real show rooms.
vulnerability to attacks of
"Our customers include deja vu, which is the feelmg
growth of the busi ness
recently
.though, he said, .has been m newlyweds,
MARTINS FERRY, Ohio iron-bearing water emerging explained in a prepared constructed to prevent water the past half dozen years divorced persons, colleges t u of having been there before.
I had such a seizure the
(UP\ ) - "nle Bureau of from a hillside in several statement. " In addition , the drainage mto the area. Built because lhe mobthty of . d e n t s, professional
in
four
stages,
the
project
will
other
day when the u.s,places
into
a
residential
actd
water
enters
and
Mines of the U.S Interior
&amp;ard on Geographic Names
pollutes the Ohio Rtver · divert tbe acid seepage to a society and the cbanges m athletes, executive trainees,
Department has approved a section of Martins Ferry.
announced it was postponing
" Vegetation - has been t hrough the ctty 's storm nearby limestone formation, lifestyles have accelerated so diplomats and other foreign
proje&lt;:t tD control the seepage
professional people in the actton on requests tD change
where it will he neutralized much in that time .
of polluted water from an killed, the foundations of 'drainage system."
The furniture rental fees United States and many
the name of MI. McKinley
Under funds from the before it enters the natural
abandoned coal mine near buildings have heen seriously
are
not cheap. In general, whose reasons for renting we
back to its original Indian
watershed.
App
a
la
c
hian
Regional
damaged,
and,
because
of
the
Martins Ferry.
GranTree charges fees that don't even know," Treece name. Denali.
Total
cost
of
the
project
wUl
Development
Act,
a
saturation,
a
potential
for
Inspectors lor the Bureau
will re&lt;:over the wholesale said.
The requests came from
of Mines discovered acid and mudshdes exists," offlctals p&lt;;rmanent barrier will be be less tban $200,1100.
Alaska, where the 20,320-foot
peak and the Indians are
located The opposition carne
mamly from Ohio, President
McKiitley 's home state.
The board has put the
• matter astde until Congress
dtsposes of a pendin g
resolution to retain the
present name.
In 1931, which is where the
deJa vu comes m, a huge dam
on the Colorado River was
DOES NOT INCLUDE HINTON. WHITE SUlPHUR AND 514 S. THIRD ST. IRONTON
named for PreSident Hoover.
during whose ierm the
project was authorized.
· But after Hoover left office
Ullin 3 I'I(C$ Will COIINIII UD $7 51 AtoiTIOIIAl PVICHASE
in 1933, the Interior
(UCIUDIIC THIS ITIM)
Department began calling it
lil.moNECOUPONPERfA.M.IlV
~
Boulder Dam.
OF
--=~~=~~~~~~-::~! 1111
' I
In 1948, Congress approved
---··-·-~--·-···~-legislatton renammg 1t
MROGER COST CUTTER COUPON
Hoover Dam, and there is
ADVERTI SE D ITEM POLICY - - - .
stands
today . In the interim,
tach pi ,,., ... .i(h F"'t ole(J ] l!f'!]~\ I
J h l ]01 I B~\Iol ;
11
.......,._ lo• """''" '" N ero "'""'"' ~hJ•a ll• cllill •)
however, there have been
--~ ~~~ notfil n '"'' o~!l "
d&lt;l '''"out " ' ~ " l{l ~ e•
attempts to name 1t Boulder
t..cl ~~ - ... ~l &lt;Jtlll• , ou , uu• &lt;hu~&lt; • ,u l d ' U"'l&gt;'"' "'"'
".,., wneo .-•ll•t•• ''"fl"" h"\1 """' ~o~rne w ~ "II' o• " • •~ •
Dam agam.
c r.clo. ......,c h ""'" llflt•lle vou ' " Ill•' ( " '"' 1n 11 • o~ •.,· -1 ''""'
It was,
I believe,
;;~
";M~~;;'";
'-:;
' •~
&lt; o~•;
"'";'"~~~·';
";
' _ _ _ ___,
newscaster Davtd Brinkley
• • TOTAl SA TIS FA C fl ON GU ARANTEE
who suggested a reasonable
1 ~hu1 g Yov cuv " ' I('Oiil'" •s yu dldni&amp;IK1 l o t ~ Q!Jt lo lo:l l
way to enc;l the dispute - why
:.ilill• ct•o n •ego:l rdlli'S!!I ot ona nu fa c lu• JJ 11 ~uu &lt;1 1! not
·.at oahed I(•OQII' ""''"' "'Pil ( t! ~ o u1 •lllrn ....,,tn thll s.amtr tlr dt lll
not ask Hoo'ver to change his
,, , i eomp.tr~w• Otand o• ••l und ~ our ovr c ha~ ptoql
name to Herbert Boulder?
,;..;.;;.;.;.;...._----~
Nothing ever came of the
COPVItiG&gt;H1 1HI- 1HI KIQCil CO HIMS ANC PIICIS GOOQ ~UN
proposal and no solution that
C A~ IANUAIY I ,.,. fHIU SATUIOAV JANUA.IV 1, t•III N
liMI11 Cllt WllH COUI'OII AND $7 51 AIIDITIOIIIAl PlliCHASE
si mple
can even
be
(£lClUOINC TN IS IHIJ
" ' IIS£1Vf ! HI ttGHT TO (IMII QUA.Nfllli$ NONE SOLD TO
considered
with
respect
to
••
IIMitQNI
COU'"ONPU~,I,MilY,
~
CIAUtS .

By LeROY I'UI't;
UP! Business Writer
· NEW YORK (UPIJ - The ..
growing • mobihty
of
American soctety is creating
a huge new business m rented
furruture for homes.
Volwne is believed tD he
rwtnmg about $200 million a
year currently, tripling the
totaUive years ago, and It
could hit $1 billiorr annually
by the early 1980s, according
to Walker Treece, chatrman
of GranTre e Furniture
Rental Corp. of Portland ,

i

News Notes

• Meigs County ··
m
1977-News Highlights

::::

Racllle Junior Hlgb Cbrlstmas dance at tbt junior
high spoDBored by the PTO.
Bev waa crowned by
Sherry Beegle. Sue Trible
was flnt runnerup and
Amber W1rner was second
ruuerup.
Other candidates were
Tammy Ervin, Denise
RUDe, and Laura Wolfe.
Escorts were Jo Bob
llemsley, Brian Cleland,
Re• Thorton, C. T.
Chapman, Jay Rees and
Richard Wolfe.

Quads
b orn
' b .
y
surgery

Death
strikes
•
aga_
1n

TV •••in Review

Heating bills
can be reduced

•K•

Farmers· in five states
protest in the streets

Parties, gifts feature

Christm~s at

infirmarY·

Popular novels found
on reservations lists

.·Assembly tidies up, goes ho~e
..

.

.

""'

.......

'"

0

o

'

. .

•t•1 •

•

.~

'

I •

I

�..

.·

•
14- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Wednesday, Jan. 4,1978

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

. WANTAD
CHARGES

.

15 Words or Ufllkr '
Cash
Chaflle
Jday

!doys
3dlys
. 6da)'l

l.OO

l .~

Ull
l .OO

U$
3.7$

uo

icc

uo

Each word ov~r the minlmwn IS
wordlll 4 centJ per word per dlly.
A&lt;W nuutiq other than coraecutiv~
Qaaya will be cllarKed 111 till! I d11y

raie.
In memory, Card o{ Thanbfand
Obituuy : &amp; eentll per wotd, p .oo
minimum. caah in adva~.

. Mobile Home•les aM Yard ales
llt"e accepted only with CISh. with
mter. ~cent charge for ads carl")'·
intt Bol Nwnber Jn Care ul The S.:n-

Unel.
The Publisher reserves the ri~ht
to edit or reject any udli dttmed objectional The Publisher will not be
~lb le for more than one incor"
n!ct Uulertion.
Phone 992-2156

NOTICE

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
Monday
Noon on Satu.rda)'
Tueoday
. thru F riday

Sunday

tP.M.

FridSy artemOOfl

COINS . c;URRENCY , tokens, old
pocket wotct)e~ ond ckains ,
sliver and gold . We need 1964
and older silver coins . Buv . sell .
or trade ' Call Roger Woms la:y ,
742-233 1.
OLD FURNITURE . ice bo~~;es , bran
beds, iron beds . etc. , complete
households . Wr ite M. D. Millvr ,
Rl. 4, Pomeroy , Ohio or coli
NO ITEM TOO Lorge or too small .
Wi ll buy 1 piece or complete
household. New', used, or an tiques . Martin's Furniture , 20 N .
2nd St.. Middleport. Phone

CHI P WOOD
Po les mo)l' .
diameter 10" on largest end, $8
per ton . Bun dled slob, $6 per
RACINE · GUN Club has disconton . Delivered to Ohio Pallet
tin ued gun shooting un til Jon .·
Co., Rl. 2, Pomeroy . 992-2689.
B, 1978.
CASH FOR junk Cars . Frve's Tr uck
Setty's Car~Yout now open lor
and Auto Wrecker Service.
business . 3 miles sout h of Mid Phone 7-.t2-20B1 or Pennzoil
dlepoft on-Rt . 7.
Rutl and 7 4 2-9~75 .

APPUANCE
SERVICE

We have enlarged o u r
se r vic e department and
will service Hot point and
oth er brand s.

Pomeroy Landmark

9,. _Jack W. Corse y, Mg : .
Ail Phone 992-2181

phone (614) 592·305 I.
1.3 ACRES

Broker
101112 Sycamore St.
Pomeroy, Oh io

Rood, 992 -7006.

SIX ROOM house, a ll elec.tric ,
corpeted , cor port . $26,000. Ar·
row c'ompe r , $600. 992 -7B85. 10
o"m to 6 Prn . No Sufldoy colts.•

PHONE 992-6333
Office Hours : 9 A.M. to .,
P.M.
Close
Thursdays
Saturdays at noon .

MEIGS COUNTY Humane Society ,
Cor aline a nd od optiqn Service .

992-7680, 742-3162. 99B427_

RISING STAR Ken nel . Boordi~g .
Indoor a nd outdoor runs .
Grooming all breeds. Clean
soniiory faci lities. Cheshire.
Phone (614) 367 -02q2.

1972 Elcomino, oul omatic. PS and
PB . air, new poin t, tires,
crogers, will sell or trade car of
equal valu e. Coll 949-2880 .

POMEROY
LANDMARK
For All Your
Ge neral Electric T.V.'s
and
Hptpoint Appliances
Sale Prices
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

BEHIND THESE DOORS
-you w ill find fea tures
galore. L ovel y m od ern
k itchen. 3 or 4 bedrooms.
insu lal lon. s·tor m wind ows
&amp; doors. na t . gas hot water
h eat . c:arp~? rf .
A skin g

$31.915. 00 .
NEAR BASHAN -

About

10 nice la ying acres on
bl ac k to p
road . W a te r

,Phone 949-2801

r oo m house.
ba th, city wa1er. na tural
gas
ce nt r a l
h eatin g .

Boiltr s, Furnaces, Heat
Pumps &amp; Auto-Controls.

GA$-OIL- COAL

PHONE

742-2570

7:00 p .m . Close- out on MOBILE HOME tor rent in Racine.
Qlrls tmo&amp; toys and other gifts
A lbert Hill. 949-2261 .
and misc. At Ohio Ri ver A uc·
lion, Meigs Plaza. Middlepor t, TWO BEDROOM Trai ler . Adul ts
only. 992-332-.t .
Ohio. ·
·
·

•

-~.

f

Taking New
Customers For

FUEL OIL AND
GAS SERVICE
CAll us
Pomei11J Landmark ·
. ...-~Jock W. Carsey, ,Mg r .

aijl;

Phone H2-2181

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

EASTERIII DISTRICT - : PI&gt; a cres ol levelland, pi ce
12x64 &gt;II carpeled mobile home with 2 BRs, living
room , kllchen and balh, 2 rooms buill on, nice family

rOO m w ith firepla ce, plenty of garden space , som e fruit
• tree s. Large workshop and block cellar. City water a nd
septic tank . N ice cou ntry setting on County Rd. 28.

Pr ice S1 5,900.

UPPER SYRACUSE -

· _

Good 2 bed,oom house with

bath . Two m ore small bedrooms , could be finished
upstairs. ~ l so garage, sto~ag~ building , str ~ wberry
patc h and ga rden space. Driveway is electric 'heateet.
. Nice Ohio Ri ver v iew .. f urn it ur e can be bought ex tra .
Pric e for
sale. House arid
112,600.

RACINE CARPET
SHOP

Lat T e

ONSIE

Rilcine, O~io

BORN LOSER

Dave Parsons
Own·e r

A~~.

11-25-1 mo.

MI",1;~ -~/tl

CARTER

WETHERALL CONCRETE
Hartford

LITTI E ORPHAN ANNIE

.I

Yesterday's

FREE ESTIMATES

LimE ORPHAN ANNIE COMIC STHIPS DELAYED IN MAIL

Bkiwli
lnsulltion Senic:ts
fin~ndtl Anilab~
~ttics

~

ti t i a I a n d
comme r cial . cau
for
estimate, 24 hour servi c e.
Anyday, ·anytime .

··R e s i d e

Phone 985-3806

4-ao.J•.._

Jack's Septic
Tank Service .
Box34

Ste1111 Extraction

Young's

Chester, Ohio
10·30-c ,

l0 ,..,..,, 0.

Carpet • U~holstery

Phone Mike Young ·
At · .. ~.

992-2206 or 992-7630

18

'TheOri&amp;iniiM

11ot Thel~i!Jiols
l ·2l-1 mo.

GASOUNE ALLEY

Home SeNce

'EXPERIENCED

Elec., plumbing,
carpenter
work,
painling ,
paneling,
any job that needs to
be done around your
home.

A complete selection
of Coal &amp; Circulating
Heaters at low prices .
Fully stocked.

992-5705

Rl. 143. Phone 698·7191 .
12-1- 1 mo.

r~

1~\-

.

..

Gl's:
2 wds.

9 Inlet
10 Goad
16 Campus
figure

22 Offs pri ng
. 23 Cha pel
na m e
· 24 Beloved
25 2 Down, in
the mo vies
26 Looked
upon

Jdnakl 3j _
12: 4o----Toma6.13 ; 1:00-Tomorrow3.4 ; 1: 5()-,-New s 13.

Wedn esd ay ,

29 Aesop
specialt y
30 Liberated
. 35 M.D .'s
group
36 Org .
foun ded
in 1886

BOOKS

A MANUAl.. - - YGti

'-'u5T .

992 -7608

"':.---------------~------_;,...;..____~!:!;!~'·~-'J

'------------;..,.:~ liil

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag .

South plays .swindle
cool
.

SAVE ON
CARPETING:

WINNIE! DO YOU HAVE A

FEW M NIJTE('; 10 5PI\~?

W EST

EAST

•
•

•

"" Kqn

'4.88 SQ. YD•

~

+
ofo1 07(i4 2

SOU TH .

•

~15 :12

+ A .I 5

•

... .J H !I

Vul ner"b le : Norlh · ~outh ,

_De aler: East

1-,-;,.-+-+--+-+---+-

K ing

ur cl u bs.

Wt:sl

North

I"

cn:+- +--+-+-+-

P&lt;1 ~s

11 Wanted" .-::

2"

6+

O pcn i n~

lead :

·
Easl
p .1 S."
4'J

- Pt~ s!oi

poster

I+
l'ass
I' ;p..$

By Oswald Jac oby &amp; Ala n

DA ILY C RYPTO (I U OTE - Here's h ow to w o r k It:
i\XVDI. BAA X R
is L 0 ..N G F E I , L 0 W
One letter simply stands for anot her. In l h is sam ple ·A is
u sed f or the th ree L's, X fo ,· the t wo 0 '...;, de . Si ngle lc Uers.
apostrophes, the le ngt h ::i'nff' fo rma t inn of l hc words Are . all
h in ts. Each d ay th £' code l l'ttcrs are differ ent .

- K F Q"S r

HF
Y S

IVS CF

B V L B
R S A
W LP

tri cks : e ight diamond s, two
henrt!:l und n cl ub. Thcr~~ wus
only on e poss ibi lity fo r JJ 121h

tric k. Jt risked going down
three tricks. lnstcud of one,
but the shun bolms made It
Wo rth while.

De clurcr , immediat~ l y
played dumn1y's jack of
heart s. E~t s l ir.moc cnlly
played low . South played his
seven nnd the jack won the

Sontag
North F ell in love with th is

Now

the sl um was

u c uk e-

wa lk . South wnnted to sta nd
up and c heer . He h ad p ulled
a ra re a mi fi ne swindle. But,
bei ng an cx:pert, he rei ned in
his emotions long enough to
com plain .

"Yo u bid th ~ t hand like a
lil na,tic, " he told North .
"Y~ u

ma de it ,

d idn ' t

hand. He had won rive na·

·yo u?" qu ipped North .

tiomil cha mpio ns hips, b·u t
never ha d h e ld eig ht-ca r d
t rump s upport for a pa rt-

made and they got into the

ne r 's opening b id .
· He cue bid t wo hearts to

East a nd West were also

act.

" Why didn' t you c over th e
jack of hea rts '! " c.urped

. te ll his partner he had a · West.
.
'Wh y did n't you
lend a
s trong hand with dia m ond .
s
pade
·!
"
s
hot
!Jack
East.
s upport, Two h earts us ually
No one wa-.s happy , except
I VLBFHt K s hows firs t-round cont ro l of
Sout h .
.
hea rts , but No rth s tre t c h ed

I J CC
BS

the dummy q uickly and rCc·

ognizcd llwl he lwd j Us t one
chance : a b l uff.
South could. see 11 lop

trick !
So u1!1

P:tss

N K J P U

J B .-

s.

Q.

W t KYFP
Yesterday's Cryploquote: LET J O Y START TilE NE W
YEAR AND STAY WITH YOU ALWAYS THROUGH N INETEEN SEVENTY EIGHT. - THE PUZZLE EDITORS

12 and 1l fl. wi~lh Carpel •
rubber bock.
· ·

A(/ Ill 7

., Q 4
2

+7

39 Word on·• ~ •

BVF

K&lt;! 111 !1a li·l"

K .I R
10Hil6 SJ

mo l lead o f t he k in~ of d u~•·

South, a Iso mnnY' times u
natiomt} champion , st udi ed

,)

'f A K 7

said he
36 Scoff
37 Nail polish
38 Iro nwood

R SA
5UREJ71ANA 1
WH,A; 1 •: ; ON
YOUR MI NV?

Ph\

.. 1\ 5

CR Y PT OQ UOTES

C.ndy Slripe
Ru-lllrck
Regularl6.95
Save$4.88 Sq. Yd .

Shoppmg Hours

DO

IIN~ING.

Closed Jan. 10
Til181h, 1978

BRADFORD, Auctio neer , Com·
plete S8rvice. Phbne q49·2487
or. 94q-2000. Raci ne, Ohio , Critt
Brodford.

l)oN•-r'

.4

BRIDGE
.,+

homo!' '

---~- luT' - -foR C:HA5,..T'Y.
you DON.,. . ~eD

Jan .

NO it'l'!l
• 6 4

~=-----------------~---....:---~---...--......, 34 "Ecce

lllilU

•

'

the point, so in lov'e was he
with his eig ht d iamonds . '
. On his fi naltu r n , he lea ped

to slam without even using
B lackwood. A s pade lead
w ould . have m eant ln • tant
de feat. B ut W est , not being
clairvoyant m a de lhe n or -

fNEWSI'AI'EH

ENTt-~ lti'IU S t:

A.'i.'i N. J

(For a copy o l JACOBY MODERN, !iBnd $1 to · 'Win iJt

·Bridge," care of this newspaP"', P.O. Box 489, Radio Cily
Slalion . New Yo'~· N. Y. 10019)

Rev. sus.nol inslallod
30 rolls of carpel In slod&lt;.
Good selocllon all on sar..
lnslallod will! padding, no
extra lo po.y.

IT'S HIGH TIME

·-~"!"

••

RUTLAND' FURNITURE

••
:

RUTLAND ,, e

t·····~··~·,··············'

Call742-2211
TALK TO
. WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
742-2211

Rulland

c=-:-~-----;~:=:=z=;;~~~

I DONE SOMETHI!\1' I

CLOSE SATURDAY

ARNOLD GRATit

kiwi

8 Certa in

~~~=~~~~~~ 31 sResident
:
m
uffix

Phone

FRIDAY TIL 5

742· 2211

7 Brown

11 :3o-J ohnn y Ca rson 3, 4,15; fll'llr sk y &amp;. Hu lch 6, 13 ;
President Carter 's Tr ~ p 8; ABC News 33; 12:0

Yes terday's Answer
19 Aid t o
28 Uq uid
'Hawkshaw
. measure

33 Ma lay
gibbon

Change of
lPI-eNumber

THURSD~ Y 8 TIJ, NOON

e

8 : 30-Wh at 's H appening!! 6, 13; Wodehouse P layhouse
20; Holl ywood Te levision Th ea tr e 33 .
9 :oo--Ja m es a t 15 3,4, 15; Barnev Mil ler 6;13; Hawaii
Flve-0 8,10; Hometown Sa turday Ni gh t 20.
9 :30-Carter Count ry 6, 13; 10 :()()----Ciass of '65 3,4, IS ;
· Redd Foxx 6, 13; Barnaby Jones 8,l0: I , Ca l ud~us
3j,- News ~ 0.
· 10 : 3G-Lock, Stock .&amp;- Barrel -20.
11 :OG-News 3,4,6,8, 10, IJ , 15; Dick Cave tt 20; Over
Easy JJ.

U.S.S.R .
c ity
' 28 Be first at
bat : 2 wds .

m ·2174

Pomeror, Ohio

8:00 TIL 5:00

••
:
••••
':

13; Mar ly Ro bbins·, Spo lllgh t 15.
8 :00-C hlps 3,4, 15; Wel come BaCk,Kott er 6, IJ: . Wa llons
· B, 10: Once UpOn a Classic 20,33

:!7 Klrghi z,

and 51. Rl . r_-

MOil~., lUES;, ~ED.

!•

JIGGER

signal

Corntr Union Ave.

Owner

_;pULllNS EXCAVATING. Comple te
Service . Phone 992-247B.

.

BeSTOW

Bunch 8, 10; Lill ie Rasca ls 15.
s :oo-Bonama 3; M y T hr ee Sons 4; Gunsmoke 8 ;
M is ter Rogers' Ne ighborhoOd 20,33 ; Hogan's
Heroes 10; Emergency One 13; My Three Sons 15 .
S:JQ-Odd Couple 4; N ews 6; E lec . Co . ~0 , 33 ; Mary
T yle'r M oOre 10; Hogan ' ! Heroes 15.
.
6 : 0~ N ews 3,4,8,10, 13.15; ABC News 6; Zoom'10,33 .
6 :3o-NBC Ne.w s 3,4. 15: ABC News .13; Carol Burnc)i &amp;
Fr iends 6; CBS NCws ·e, 10; Over E asy 2:0,33 .
7 :0Q--Sororlty '62 3; Cross-Wlls 4; Liar s C lub 6; Gon9
Show 8; News 10; To Tell Tl}e Tru th 13; Gilligan 's
I s. 15; Hocki ng Valley Bluegrass 20; Book Beat 33 .
7 : 3G-Holl ywood Squllres 3,4 ; 5100,000 N ame That
T une6 ; $25 .000 Pyramid a; M ac Nei l-l ehrer Rcporl
20,33 ; That ' s Hollywood 10; Nashvil le on The Road

24· Repudiate
25 Quot e
UTime

tM

JOHNIE'S BEAUTY
SALON

I

CLOSED FOR WiNTER·

BATHROOM S AND Kitchen s
remodeled, ce~a m ic lile, plumbing , carpentry, and general
maintenance. 13 yea rs eK·
perience. 992·3b85 .

JJI J

23 Be nwnb

Iittle!

enerq4~

NOTICE

RACINE CARPET

SHOP

j[

4 : 31}-My Three Sons 3; Par tr idge Family 4 ;; Brady

. 32 60 mins.

WILL do roo fing, co nsiruclion , •
plum bing and heati ng . No jo b
too large o r too small. Phone
7-42-2348 .
Special Orders pr Showing
or Carpels by Appornlrrlenl
HOWERY AND MARTIN h ·
ca.voti ng , ~e pti c systems. , Only .
dozer , backhoe, dump truck ,
Phone 949-2814
limestone ;· grcivel , black top
paving, Rt . 143. Phon e 1 (614) _ _ Oave Parsons,
698-733 1.

••
•

down a

12-7-1 mo.

EX:CAVATING , dor.er , backhoe
and ditcher. Charles R. Hat tiel~ .
Soc M Hoe Se rvice,
Ruflo nd , Ohio.'Phone 7-42-2008.

•••••••••••••
Convenient
•

to save enerq4.

Skeezix. we'l l save

...._

'""'·

I

DRAWl

Drury

ice cream! I tur ned
]-----"' t he f reezer. 22 Withered
wood

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

PHONE

We ' re in Carpenter lust Off

Radiator
Service
._.._tor to

(IJ

!King : S p.
5 Cast out
6 Author

21 Str ip of

Youwatit

Appalachian
Stove Company

Gilligan·s I s . 8; Ses~me St . 20,33 ; Gomer P yle ,
USMC 10; Dinah ll .

Now ..-range the circled leflers to
form the surprise answer, as suggested by the abOve ca rtoon.

no~no :

Int~rest

Live 6, 13; Guiding

8. 10; Anti q ues 20.

3 Wds .

20 Actor
Holbrook

to

4 :0G-M ister Carloon 3; Little Rasca ls Our Gang 4 ;
For Richer , For Poorer 15 ; Merv Griffin 6 ;

DOWN

15 He r e : F r .
16 Dis taff
cottontail
17 Rwnina nt's
· food

lite

Know Your Schools 33 .
.~
3: 1s-General Hospltal6, 13; 3:3()- AII In The Fr\mlly

1 Visua l
2- Polo
3 Lega lly a

rive r

One

Light 8.10.
3:00-Anolher Wor ld 3,4, 15; Lilia s Y.oga &amp; You 70 ;

·10 Knicks'
coach

13 Salver
·
14 Ne braska

Carpeting

us at ' 1100 East Main
Street , Pomeroy , Ohio or
Phone 992-7034. 10-29- lmo.

8, 10; 2 :Oo-520.000 Py'Omld 6, 13 .
2 ~ 30-0octor s 3,4 ,15;

·
Answer : Whv one is not •p{ t o be bored In t he company
of nudhrt:a- THEY'RE NOT"WEARING"

atte nda nt

See

I :30-0ilys of Our Lives 3,4,1 5; As The World Turi'ls

(Answers 1omorrow)

12 Kay Thompson 's brat

Suptrior

Rau~

Search for Tomorrow 8,10; Elec . Co. ~3 .

1 :oo-For Ri cher , For Poorer 3; All My Ch i ldren 6, 13:
Young &amp; the Rest less 10; Not For Wom en Only 15.

Jumbles: FAINT

ACROSS
·1 Tentmaker
5 Obscure

Ph. 99Z·l99l

•Mobile
Hom·e·
Underpinning ·
, • Rilol Coating
•Tie-Downs
• Awnings - Carports .
•lnsyrance
Repairs

3,15; Family Feud 6, 13; Love ot Lite
B. 10; Sesame St. 20: Nova 33 .
' ll :.Ss-CBS News 8; loving Free 10.
l 2 :0o-Newscen ter 3; News 4,6, 10; To Say Th e Leas1
15: Divorce Court 8: Midday 13.
12 :3o-Ryan's Hope6,13; Bob Braun 4; Gong Show 15;

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ALIEYOO~

'

11 : 3o-Knoc~out

~JdM'6td'

LARRY lAVENDER
' s,.......o~~~o

Home Sales

byHenriArnoldandBoblee

N ew~pape r_boo ks .

SIDINfi.SOFJITT
GIJTTERs.AWIIIICS

Kingsbury

9 : Jo-Edi;leot N lghl6 ; Andy Grlfll ih B: J oke, ·s Wild 1o.
10 :00-Sanlord &amp; Son 3,4, 1$; Big Valley 6; Magall ne
B, 10; Mike Douglas 13.
10 : 30-Hol lyWC?Od Squares 3, 4, 15 ; 11 :DO-- Wheel ot
Fortu('le 3,1S; Hftppy Dav!i 6, 13; Mar cus Welby.
M .D. 4; Price Is Right 8.10.

Mllojfta-

ll Co\lrt

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

Mickey Mouse Club 6; Family Atlalr 8; Ma t e ~&lt;
Game 10,

The lat esi JUMBLES are hera ,In JUMBLE BOOK t10 and JUMBLE
BOOK 1111. Avail abl e for $1 .~ EACH, poslpald from Jumble, cJo l hta
newspaper, P.O. Box J.l, Norwood, N.J. 07648. Make checka payable 1o

STORM
WINDOWS I DOORS
REPIACEMEIIT
IIINDOWS
AUIMINUM •

on heatin_g cost
Experience and
fully insured
· Free Est.
Call : 667-6479 or 992-1815
H -15· 1 mo.

News 8; Bullwlnkle 10; 7: 30-Schoolles 10 .
•
B: oo-Capt. Kftngaroo 8,10; Sesame St. 33 .
9: DO-Merv Griffin 3: Ph lj Donahue 4, 13, 15; New

b

Answer here: AT

1 mo.

BlowJIIntct W1lls l

VIrginia 13 ; 6 : 55-C huck White RepOrts 10; News
1J.
7: 00-Today 3,4, 15; Good Morn ing America 6. 13; cas

~ THATSCRAMBLEDWOROQAME

r ()

I I

Henderson

11 -1 0-1 mo.

Save 30 pcl.lo so pet

SALES AND SERVICE
11·9-tf c

I

882·2175
675-1582
UNION OPERATED

Cellulosic (wood fiber)
Thermal Insulation

)00 Main 51.

•

Wodd 10.
6 ~ 30-0octors on Call 4; Su nr ise Semes ter 9; 6:-.t s-M.ornlng Repor t J ; 6: SO-Good Morning, West

I KI J
SHUBIL I
(J I

"Get A Load Of This"

Blown lnsulatioo
JIM KEESEE

Pomeroy, Ohio
. Pomeroy 992 -6282

"'' ' .. ""''"'~-·_,

OF
·
BOB'S UNHOLSTERING
And
TRIM SHOP IN RACINE

J&amp;L

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

... I AMii:CI~lO~ n
'OJ Rl~ 00 lif '0' a=
M'1 HeADt

pen ng

Be the open fng of the i n·
door season for you w ith
your old furniture reupholstered in beautiful
warm colors &amp; patterns
from . Bob' s. II you are
looking for savings It will
pay you to pay us a visit.
Located in back of the Sew
N' Sew outlet on Ma i n St.,

6; Sunr ise Semester 10.
6 : QO-Nashville Scene 6; PTL Club IS; 6: 25-New·

Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one letter to each square; to lorm
·
•
four ordinary words .

Third Slreel

•

ID1t

'illi~Nt

~ ~ ~~ ®

I :Otl--Tomorrow

THURSDA \' , JANUARY S, 1978
5: •5-Fa'm Reporl 13: 5: SD-PTL Club 13 ; 5: 55-News

'

CONTINUOUS
GUMR SERVICE

PARTS · LABOR
GUARANTEED.
REASONABLE
RATES Ph. 3711%50
Rotmillt,O.

Racine , 0 .

12- .18-~ mo.

Ask ing $16,500.

•279,95

1 2 ~ 40-Mystery
of !he Week 6. 13;
3.4; , : 1o-New~ 13.

Rogers'

Feud B; Mac Neii .Lehrer RepOrt 20,33 ; The Judge '
10; In Search of 13; Wild Kingdom ·15.
8 :00-Gdzzly !,ldams 3,A, 1S; Thai Thing on BC 6, 13;
Good Times 8,1 0; Nova 20,33.
B:3G-Szysznyk 8,10: 9:00-Biack Sheep Squadron

Pomerov, Oh i o

~17-TFC

OHIO
HEATING SERVICE
REPAIR &amp; SERVICE;

bath, natur a l ga s furnace.
ci t y water, aluminum
si din g, a nd corn er lot .

SOFTENER?

1971

7: 3o-Funny Farm 3; Match Game PM 6; Family

Phone Hl-2798
100 Kerr Sl.

~ · !.Ore?...

$16,500.
•
I . SYRACUSE - 3bedrooms,

NEED A WATER

COUNTR Y MOBILE Home, Pork .
DEALER'S AUCTION. Public . in· Route 33 , north of Po meroy .
vited. Thurs., Ja n. 5. 11 :00 om .
Lorge lOI S". Coll992 ·7~79 .
Truckloads of 'new merc handise
HOUSE
FOR le-ase on lincoln Hil l
sold in qua nt ity. Ideal for store
in Pomeroy . S bedrooms .
owners. gas stations. flea
Deposit required. 992-3469
markets, ya rd ~ole• . etc . At
olterS pm ...Ohio Riv er ·Auction , Meigs
Pl ar.a , Midd lepor t. Reg ular ouc· TRAILER SPACE for rent. Coun try.
lione very Fri. ot7 pm.
-" miles from fown. Rl. 7 N, Ph.
6 1 ~ -247 -2911 .
.
SPECIAL AUCTION . Sot ., Jon. 7.

949-~llt.O

No Sunday Calls Plea se
11-21-1 mo.

"'LlOII

1976 GRAN D PRI X SJ . All ex tras . HAY . $1.'25 and $ 1. 50 pe r bol e.
availab le . 513.000.00.
$7,500 - 2 be droom frame
l ow mileage. Tom Ande rson,
(6 1 ~ ). 37 8-631 1 .
NEAR
NEW
HYDRO
hom e being over hauled.
992 -3348, alter 4 pm. .
THR EE ELVIS records , co llectors
UNIT - 2 nice lots with
F ireplace,
c i s1ern,
2
1972 FORD GRA N Torino Station
itemS . Co n be seen o t Clifton,
r ive r fro n t age . 2 stor: y
por ches, and large lot o f
W ·..V'o ., osk t or Rog er "n Ieln
· .
f ra me home. 3 bedmom s,
Wagon. 35· 1 engine. A . C. , .~ut o .
a lmost an ac r e.
51_.000 miles . $1 ,300. 949 -2082. ON E G AS range , like ne·w . $75 . ·txilh , 2 fir eplace s, coal
. NEW LISTING
j
To so., "Hi" to Grandrna on d.
furnace . J u st $6,800.00.
·
bed.room hom e i n Pomeroy
Grondpappy .
.
1971
FORD TORINO Stat ion
1Cjl74 250 CR Husky . excellen t
YOUR DREAM come true.
ou t of flood ar ea . 2 ba ths,
Bu t Dad do&amp;sn'l know or reo lir.e
Wagon . 302 fl'lOtor . P.S. G'oo d
COfldit ion, never raced. Ex yo u're gQne Mom.
condition . White : $250. Call
ce llen t motocross bike . Priced . 3 yrs. old , 1 mlle oul, lovely
d i n i ng
room ,
f ull
e qui ppe d
·ki tchen,
3
Stil l calling out you r nome ,
(6 U ) 667 -3252 .
very reasonobl ~ . 94Cjl-2692 oi
basem e n t. _ ~ a t ur a l ga s
9 ·~ · 2028.
bedroo m s, 2 bat hs, st orm s,
cen tral
heatin g,
and
We just try to ma ke him hopp y ·
f :2-50 1/ . ton 1973 Ford Pickup . 4st or ag e · b ldg . 1 acre.
ga rage . $27,500.
As we know you 'd do the so me .
d
p
5
p
B
Wh
't
$1
200
FIR
EWOOD,
SPLIT
,
del
ivered
,
·
spee , .. , . .
•e. ,
.
$37,300.00.
Vick i, inco Ilegeto be oteach er,
( 6 !~ )667 · 3252 .
stocked. $25 per large p ickup
SlO, SOO F or thi s 2
iUST
LISTED
3
Lik e her Gro fldmot her of years· --,!~:!.:::~::!.::::_______
load. 742·2256.
bedroom . fram e home near
1966 V.W. with 1970 V.W_ mo tor. ~==-:...::-==----agO.
bedroom home, equ ipped
stores.. All city uti lities.
Your stUdents, ~ Our neighbors ,
Al so twO new snow tires GOOD USED . TV's. Color and
k itchen ,
le v el
Yar.d ,
4o ACRES With a ll
mou n \Qdo~ V.W. rim's. Bes t of·
BloeM ·and Whi te . Harrison 's TV. · carport, e l ectric baseboard
your friends ,
mineral s, som e of the land
A I! miss yoo , they so often tell us ,1:":::_'·:,:C:::o:::ll:,:9:,:92~-::3::
866~.-:--276 Sycamo re Street , · Mid"heat . many other features .·
lays nice, that coul d be sol d
..
-:d leport , Ohio . 992-2522 .
$1 7,200.00.
so .
197 1 VW SliPER Beetle , $1 ,300 .
in 5 a cre lot s. Small barn.
The people of the co mmunity ,
Excellent ccYndi tion . 1970 CHA RLOIS BULL celt. 10 mos. old .
PUT YOURSELF IN OUR
45 ACRES - in t he sti cks
The ladies aid and Chu rch .
Chevelle . $500. Podded bor .
Se~o~en - E ig hths stocM . Norman
HANDS . ·WHETHER
w ith w ater t ap , sept ic tank, '
A ll miu the empty seot you ocstools. $300. 992· 2987 .
Grueser, 992 -5358
YOU ' RE
HOUSE
~ nd electric. All lhls at a ·
cupied,
-'==c:::::c..:..:_:....:=_:_.-HUNTING , SELLING, OR
p rlte t hat a n yone can
And feel the d ~ep , deep hu rt .
1976 MONTECARL O. Excellen t
BOTH
YOUR
affor d.
We know God in Heaven,
conditi o n ~ P.S., P.B., A .C., ·
INTERESTS ARE OUR
NOW IS THE TIME ·r o
Will tok e good core of rou.
cruise control, · AM-FM lOpe ,
INTERESTS!
.
S.ELL THAT BIG FUEL
A nd oil t he wond erfu me{TiorMis
many more extras. $3 .695 .
HENRY E. CLELAND
you go11e U S ,
992 -6243.
EATING 1HOUSE.
Let Pomeroy Landmark
REALTOR
Helen l . Teaford
soften
&amp;
condition
your
Will ease the pain and see us 1975 PlYMOUTH' OU STER . 2-dr. ,
HAN!&lt;, KATHY &amp; LEONA
G, Bruce Teaford
through .
a uto. Sl ant Six , dark green w ith
water with Co-op water
ASSOCIATES
Rea1tor Associates
So until we' me'et , Mom .
w hite vi nyl top, P.S., rad io fa ir ,
soflener, Model UC-SVI ,
992
-2259- 992-6191
Good conditi on' 1 owner. (30.t)
In that beaut iful Heaven above,
Now Only
Your family w ill al way s..cher ish,
773-5977.
Your goodness , thoughfulness.
and most of oil -your love .
Sad ly missed by all your family
and friends .
J. M .. Mildred . Vict or , Potty and STA RCRAFT FAll Sole. MiniVic ki.
.
w. caney, Mgr.
ino ton , 20' and "22', TraVe l
kiDS •. IN YOUR HAIR, LOOK HERE F ive
Tr ailers , 18' 5" $3,799, 25' 7"
Phone 992-2181
be d r oOms, nice 1112 st or y house. la r ge li v ing room with
Bunkhouse $-4 ,875. Fold-dow n,
shin i ng oak flooring, large k itchen with din ing area. 2
WOMAN. OR counle to lille w ith
$1 ,700 ." up . We sell service a nd
full b aths, 2 bedroom s dow n and J upstairs. Completely
d
P"
quality . Open .Sundays. Camp
insulated w ith F .A. nat . gas furnace. l a rge por ches &amp;
mi dle-oged lodv in ~t. PleoConley Sto{croft Soles , Rt . 62, FIR EWOOD. $25 d elive red .
949-2358 or 985·3567 .
ga r a ge . Loc. In Chesler . Pr ice $19.800. '
N . of Pt . Pleasant.
sonl , W. Vo. Salary nego tiable
Phone 1-30~-6 75 -~999 .
·
NEW HOLLAND mOwer -4Sl.
MIDDLEPORT - SPAC IOU S HOME TO .FI T YOUR ,
A DDRESSERS WA NTE D
lm - 21;,~~~-ERRY 197"6. Equipped .
KowOsoki 90 mo torcycle. One
BUDG ET. 3 Bedroo m , lovely · carpeled living room ,
A rabian rryare . 992-708-f .
mediately. Work ot home, no _:..:.:..c:=---'------with slldlng gla ss doors, family room w ith fireplace,
u p e~ i ence
necess ar y , e~r: - 21 FOOT TRA VEL tra iler . Self5 FO OT brush hog . $200. Two 14'"
. nlce d ining. r oom , kitche n w ith lot s of cabinets. All
contain~ . Tandem whee ls, e~r: cellent pay . Wr ite Amer ican
snow tires on wheels". 7~2-27 61 .
Service, 8350 Park Lane. Suite
Ira nice. 992-5254.
.rem odel ed inS i de &amp; ou t . Corner lot. Close t o sc hools &amp;
shopp ing area . A "ste al " at $2 1,500 : Shown by
269, Dalla s, TX"75231.
1972 ARI STOCRAT TRA VEL EIG HT FEE DER pigs. • 0·•5 lbs. $25
each.
Tup p er's
Pl ains ,
appoin tment 0111 y .
·
I
Tioiler. JB '. $2,200 . Coli
. 6 1.. ·667-3368.
992·3580.
REPAIRMAN _FOR small engines
FREE GAS ~ Why worry about the high cosl of
9 PIGS . 11 week s. ol~ . Call
an d chain sow r&amp;poir : Mu st be e)l' · hea ting yot.:r home, outs ide lights, heating your water,
~85·3565 .
perien ced and furn ish r e fere n ce~ .
dryi ng your clothes1 et c. We' ll sell you vour own gas
RA IDER 100 watt linear . $125.
Must be dependable and reliable.
we ll . .Not only that we' ll throw in a good 11f2 story house
~·9·2322 .
Imm ediate full time opening 3 AND 4 RM. furnished and un ·
and 3 bedrooms· a nd bath, ni ce dining room atld full
fu rnishvd opts . Phone 992 - HAY FOR sole. PH . 949 -2388.
ovoUablv . Appl y In person only.
base m ent; al so ov er 50 acres of land w ith a large
S&lt;:JA.
AI ~ 98 l ocust St ., Middleport, OH.
beau ti f ul pond stocked w it h fi sh . Cal l for appoi ntment.
FOUR ROOMS ond both. Adults
l"ced I"' qui~k sale at $37,500.00 . .
o nl)' . No pet s. 992- 5~ .
WeAre Now·

Pom1eroy Landinar\1

'

or 992·6263
8 A.M. lo 4:30 P,M_

LOT ~ -1

CAPTAI N E ASY .

Dick Seyler

- Transmission Service

General Contractor s

We.. have nee d of listings,
all types, homes, land,commerdal, etc.
Cheryl Lemley
Associate
Home Phon e 741-2003
Hilton Wolfe, Sr.
Asso c iate
Home Phone 949-1589

l

Refin ishing • Repa iri ng .
Anllques Bough! &amp; Sold

Automatic

Bistell Siding Co.

room ranch brick . Locate&lt;
3 m iles from Rt. 7, up Wes ·
.Shade Ri ver. Call fo r ar
ap pointm ent . ·

.VIRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR.
:i16 E. Second Slreel
Pomeroy, Ohio 45749
Phone 992-3325

Antiques &amp; Modern
Upholster ing Service
Custom . Professi onil l

SWAIN

Storm Windows
Ca II Professiona I
Builders

TEAFORD(g
MAIN
POMEROY, ' 0 .

1

Wood-Mel• I· Plash es

12-11 -1 mo.

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Siding :

anc

~E

RACINE, O.

"S INC E 1947

Middle pori, Oh io
11-9·ffC

New 4 bedroom, 2500 sq. It
l ivi ng spa ce, 2V2 ba ths, 1:

1

•

Neighborhood 20,33; Hogan' s
t1eroeS 10; Emergency One 13; My Three Sons l.'i.
5:Jo-odd Couple &lt;: News 6; Elec . Co . 20,33 : Mary
Tyler Moore 10 ; Hogan ' s Heroes 15.
6:00-News 3,4.8, 10,13, 15; ABC News 6 ; lOOm 20.33.
6:3G-NBCNews3,4,15; ABC News 13 ; Carol Burnett 1!.
Friends 6; CBS News 8,1 0; Over Easy 20j33 .
7:QO-Hee Haw Honeys 3; C.ross-W11s 4; Liars Club 6;
Sha Na Na 8; News 10; To Tell The Truth 13;
Gilligan's Is. 15; Counlry Corner 20 : Big Green
Magaz ine 33 .

CHEMICAlS

We Strip Pa int- VArnishes ·
etc .
.
.

WOOD AND WOO L F IBE R

MEIGS. PLAZA

or

Mlsler

lNSUlAnON
SERVICE

FREE ESTIMATES

GeorgeS. Hobsleller Jr.,

O N l eading . Creek

992-3978

step

by

LocaTed In

3102 oc (304)772·3227 .

VA -FHA, 30. yr . fina11cing . Ireland
MOrt gage, 77 E. S ta~ e. Athens ,

RACINE
PlANING Mill .

ICE HARIMARE

(6 14)698·3290.

·. AKC REGISTERED peklngese pup·
pies. Phon e (30-.t) 882-2683 .
IN MEMOR Y o f Edna Morgcin . To
mom , from Mildred :
One veer ago todoy, you left us .
How sod for everyone .
Bu t the fo'm ily will remember,
All the wonderful memories .
since you 've gone,
Pot and lorry's little Steven ,
Wa Sborn si nce yo u went away,
He W 9S given the Morgan n~me.
Dod and you r nome is here to
stay.
y ic and Darlene ore home to stoy
again,
Which would hove mode you very
happy.
Toclose.
have Victor 1 Jr. and lisa so

En y
step
l nstruc::tlons.

SMAll form lor sole, l o•;. down ,
owner' financed . Monroe Coun ty, W. Vo . Phone (304) 772-

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

JA NUA R Y~ .

Eyewllness 33 .
10 :,o-Wodehouse Playhouse 2 lO t 11 : 00- News
3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; Dick C~vetl 20; Lilias Yoga ~ You
33.
11 : 3o-Johnny Carson 3.• . 15; Pollee Stqry 6,13 :
Presldenl Carlen Trio 8; ABC News 33 : ·Movie
··The Slender Thread " 10; 12: 00-Jonokl 33 .

5: 00-Bonanza 3; My Three SonS 4; Gunsmolc.e 8;

ALUM INUM SIDING
SOLID VINY L SIDING
SOFF IT &amp; CELINGS
•
GU TTE RS&amp; DOWN
SPOU'I'

NEW J bedroom house , 2 baths ,
• olt alec ., 1 acre . Middleport ,
close to Rutland . Phone 992 ·
7481 .

NOTICE

Lane Corp. 517-263-8520. ·

WED NES DAY,

HOMESITES for sole , 1 acre ond
up. Middleport, near Rutlond .
Call 992-74Bl .

Commercial property opprox . 17
o&lt;res, level land, located at
Tuppers Plains on Ohio , Ro ute
7 . flhone· {614) 667-630 4.

INCOME TAX Services . Federal AUTO BODIES and scrap metal ,
and State To;~~~es . Wando Ebli n . · Rider's Sal\loge, '192-5468.
9fl2-2'272.
GOOD USED tra ctor with CUSTOM FRAME hitch ·far late THREE BEDROOM. both cin d •;, .
model Chevrolet or G .M.C.
Total el ectric. Brick lront .
hyd r·oUiic. 3 pl. hitc h. 742-3074 .
Truck . 992-7066.
Carpe ted . 1 o"cre o f land. Priced
WANT TO Buy · Mobile Home wi th
for quick 5olet PH. 99'2-3667 or
2 or 3 bedrooms. Ol der type . BURROUGHS .._ SENSI-MATIC ac·
992·3312.
co un t ing machine. Has been
7-42·307.4 .
.
We need a Few good men
under service contrac t and in TH REE AC RE form. 5 room house.
a s a successful stee I
good conditio n. Can be sevn ot
Partia l Do th . City water . 9 miles.
.building . company . We are
The Doily Sentinel , 111 CQurl
from town .. $4,500 . Owner hos
lookinv for a self starting
St . . Pomeroy . OH.
to leave area b-ec;puse of
em ploym ent. Ph. 992-29 89 l or
rrian in vour area to be our
If YOU hove o service to off er, LARGE ROUND . Bo le feeders
appointmen t .
won t tO buy or se ll ~ome th ing :
local Representative. You
mo de of square tub ing . $76.
oe lookii"g for work . .. · or
can share in the profitS of
Ve rmeer Iorge round bater , THREE YEAR old , I •;, !ifor y . ranch
whatever
...
you
'll
get
results
an established com Pany.
$250 . Discount un tir Feb . 15,
style home. -4 bedrooms. 2 cor
fo·ster wi th o Sentinel Want Ad .
1~ 78 .
Wood moster
cobinel
while bein'g your own bon.
garage , cement driv!"woy, 1 A .
Coli ~92 · 2156 ,
wood heal ers , thermostat . ash
ground . $33 ,900 . Privo te
You will 'be part of the
pa n , hinged lo p fo r cookif!Q ,
owner. Seen by appointmen t.
rap id growth i n the
brkk-lined, $2-42. Coolmoster
94 9-280 1.
A g r ·i c u 1 t u r ·a I
&amp;
so me as above but S h a~er
C ommercial · Building
grate for c·ool, $264 . Bl owe r lor
HOOF HOLLOW Horses . Buy , !ell
Boom .
Building
either , $48. Merrill Chose , (61-4)
trade
or
train
.
New·
an
d
used
ba ckground pioeferred but
698 -3021.
saddles . Ruth Reeves. Albany .
not necessary . ,tnterviews
Friday
&amp;
Saturday ,
J~nuary 6 &amp; 7. Call !he

Business Services

696· 1072. $6,800. .
B &amp; 5 MOBILE HOMES , Pt . Plea·

1970 1'2 x 65 mobile home with
toni, W. Vo. beside Heck 's.
24". porch and owning . Ex ·
1'173 Broodmore 14 x 6-4 2
cellent condition . lot for ren t.
bedroom
1973 Dorion t 4 x tiJ 2 bedroom
Call 985-3979.
1972 Vi ctor·ian,.1 4 x 67 3 bedroom ,
2 both
1972 Coventry 12 x 65 3 bedroom
19~9 Statesman 12 x 60 2 ·
bedroom
COUNTRY farmla nd wit h seclud ed woods . water or.d good oc ·
cess in Monroe Coun ty. W. Vo .
$1 ,000 down , call (304) 772 3102 .. (30&lt;J) 772·3227 .

TELE VISION
VIEWING

' '

__ _

limestone. and calcium WILL CARE tor thtr eld&amp;rly in our fLWOOO BOWERS REPAIR home, Phone 991 -7314 .
Sweepers, toasters, Irons ; oil
chloride and colc~ um brine for
lor their prayen , ~ilts , ·flow•rs.
small aj)'ptlonces. lawn mower,
dust control ond special mhdng PIANO TUNING · lone Daniels .
cords . their l•tten ond phone
ne,.t to State Highway Gorog-e
1alt for formers , b:cels ior Salt
; coils during my stay ot Mercy
Ne""' phone ni.Jmber, 992 -2581 .
on Route 7. Phone (614) 985Works , Main Street , Pomeroy.
Medico! Cen ter , Springfield ,
If no onswer, cGII99'2-2082.
Ohio or phone 99'2· 3B91 .
Ohio .
382:::
5 ·-,-~-;-:--,--WILL DO !'(ping. Manuscript•.
Pauline A . McClintock .
REMODELING . Plumbing. heating
CAMPER . SQOO. Also. hor1e
statistical , rtirsumes, etc . Coli
and ell type5 of generol repqir .
trailer , S-450. Phone (61~) 698 992·3817 , evenings alter 6 ond
~ark guaranteed 20 yea' s QX ·
3290.
w•ekends .
perivnce . Phone 992 ·2"09.
ECONOMY TRACTOR with oil ol · MOBILE HOME repa irs . 992 -5858 .
SEWING MACHINE Repairs, ser tochments . Like new. asking
PIANO TUNING ··lone Daniels. 13 . vice , all mok.es, 992·228-A . Tht!
$2250 . Phone (61,)698-3290.
yeor1 of service: New phone
Fabr ic Shop . Po meroy .
APPLES . FITZPATRICK Orchards .
·number, 992 -2581 .
Author lr.ed Singer Soles ·and
State Rou!e • 689 . Phone
Service.. We sharpen Seiners .
Wilkesvll le 1 669 -3785 .
EXCAVATING, doler , loader Ortd
RUGS,
WA~l
Hongings and
backhoe work : dump trucks
afgons . Nice for Christmas .
ond lo·boys for hire: w jll hau l
CASH poid for qll makes and
Reasonable , Coii992-21U .
GROW EARTHWORMS for profit .
fill d irt , to soil, limestone and
. models of mobile home1.
Free Ooto --WORM WORLD ,
grovel. Coli Bob or Roger Jef ·
PhOne area code 614 -423-9531 .
197b FORO F-250 Custom . 17 .50 x
1810S. Josephine. Denver , Col fer.s , doy pho_ne 992-70B9, night
14 .00 tires · w in£h. Only U ,OIX&gt;
orado 80210 or coli Mr . James
TIMBER , Pom&amp;roy Forest Pr t.~ ·
phone 992·3525 o' 992- 5232.
mi.
Heodens.
CB.
Tope
de-ck
.
·
collact
(303)
778-1026.
ducts . Top price for ~tanding
Over $3,000 in extras. Serious _:::::,:=:_.!::;:::!.~~~--sawtimber , Coli 992 -5965 or
calls only oher 12 noon:
Ken t Hanby , J ..U 6-8570.

992-6370 .

will be held In Ohio on

--~

I WOULD l1ke to thonk oil those COAL .

992-7760.

~ P. M .

tht day before publication

J.... JS; Ch arlie' s Angels 6, 13; Movie " The Great
Scou1 and Cathouse Thursday " 8, 10; Dance In
America JJ ; ShowdOwn at the HoedOwn 20 .
lO : oo-pollce Woman 3, 11 , 1~ ; Baretta 6,13; News 20.·

'

ABOUT THAT

HOW MAN&lt;f SKATING
ARE THERE, SIR ?

, MARCIE, AND
GET !-lARDER
HARDER ·

SOMETIMES I THINK
THE ONL'ITHING THAT
KEEPS ME GOING.IS
THE ENCOURAGING
WORDS OF M'&lt; COACH ...

6ROWL, SV4KL. SNAP
GROIIJF, 6AI&lt;K, WOOF!

DADBURN OL' LOOSE
FLOORBOARD

�..
•

Carter honors .WW t!,ead buried on Normandy beache3

Wednesday,Jan. 4, 1918

16 - TheDaUy

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

-'
.,-JII:LIIH TIIOIWl
llPI Willie
Reporter

1tlousan&lt;b 'of people - ·
American and French
a.' OMA -HA
BEACH, veterans and men, women
and children from the
Normandy, France (UPI) Preliclmt Carter ~ a surrounding ·villages pilgrimage today ID the waved French and American
Normandy beaches where O.ga and altouted "Jimmee,
V.S. troopa lllontted uhore .Tunsnee" u Carter and his .
IIIII died In tbe 1944 lnvulm wife Rosalym landed by u.s.
l1f Ewope, Work!" War· II's Air Force helicopter at 5:10
a.m. EST.
IMptt ~y.
Carter is the first
To tbe· muiDed beat l1f
Incumbent
American ·
ckuma, he laid a wreath In the
president
to
v.lslt tit~
cemetery • where 9,318
NormandY
battlefields
and
American aoldlers lie burled
cesnetery.
IIIII paid hornace to ''the
'!be Carters were met In
brave men and w&lt;men of the
put who ~ve lnstred our cold but "sU1111Y weather by
.President Valery Glscard
predou freedom IOOay." .

JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE
BEGINS-THURSDAY, JANUARY 5.TH AT 9:30 A.r.,.
Special Clearance Sale prices all over the store - All sales final- No exchanges
No refunds - Sale prices llm.Jt•d to stock on hand.
January Clearance

10 Only Men's $26.95

January Clearance
Little Girls'

SALE I

SNOWSUITS
Good selection of styles &amp; colors.
Sizes 6 to 24 months and 2 to 4.

Reg. S17.00 . .•... .... . ... . Sille S11 . ~0.
Reg . s 18.00· •..•• . .•. . •.. . Sale $12.60
Reg. $21 .oo .......... .. .. Sale $14.70
Reg . $23.00. .............. Sale 516.10
Reg. 527 .oo......... ;_, ... Sale $18.90
Reg. S28.oo .............. Sale 519.60
Reg. $29 .oo .... .......... Sale $20.30
Reg. 536 ..00 ............... ~ ' le $25.20

COORDINATED
SPORTSWEAR ·
REGULAR sg;oo TO 25.00
1

SALE PRICES'
FROM $629 TO

$1749

MEN'S CORDUROY
SLACKS AND JEANS

GIRLS'
TOPS

A good selection of styles in sizes
29 to 46 · lengths · 30 to 36 . Solid
colors - straight and flare legs.

Save .30% on any

Men ' s $14.95

of our tops for
little girls

r.ordurov Slacks ........ Sale $10.15
115.95
Corduroy ~lacks ..... . .. Sale $10.85
Men's

30%0FF
ry Clea ranee Sale!

Men' s Sl6.9S

.

Corduroy Slacks ........ Sale $11.55
Men' s Sl1.9S

·

Corduroy Slacks .......~ Sale $12 .15
Men's $18.95

Corduroy Slacks ........ Sale $12 .85 .
January ·

MIEN'S

SPORT COATS
OUr entire stock of men's sport
shirts on sale. Siies S, M, L and
XL.

Men's U.95

Soort Shirt~ ............... Sale S4.93
Men's S8.9S
:.oort Shirts. ......... .. : •.• Sale $6.33
Men's S10.95
Sport Shirts .. : ............ Sale S7.73

ranee Sale

MEN'S KNIT SHIRTS
Long sleeve styles in sizes S, M, L
and XL. You' ll really save.
Men's S5.95
Knit Shirts· .- ... -. ... . •.•. Sale 53.85
Men 's S8.95

Knit Shirts ................ Sale $5.75
":'en's S10.95

Men's s :2.9S

Knit Shirts... .............. Sale $7 .15

Sport St;irts .............. Sale $9.13

Men's 512.95

·

Soort Shirts,, .... ; ...... Sale $10.63
Men's SJ6.'1'5

.

Sport Shirts ....... .'..... Sale S12.03
Januarv,Clearance Sale!

MEN'S
. WESTERN SHIRTS

True Western sty I ing . · long
sleeves · solid color and patterns.
OUr entire stock 1nduded .
Men's S12..!.5
•
Western Shirts •. : •.. ·•· ·· Sale $9.00
Men's- S13.9S

Western Shirts .. -........ Sale 59.70
Men's $14.95
·
We$tern Shirts .......... Sale $10.40
Men.'s S15',95
Western Shirts .......... Sale $1 L 10
Men's 117.95
Western Shirts .. ...... .. Sale $12.50
January pearance Sale

MIN'S

\

WINTER JACKETS

Sizes 36 to SO - wool plaids · nylon
cotton blends - and denims . OUr
entire stock on sale.
"""'s $21.95
Winter Jackets ........ : ...... $16.00
Men's S24.95
Winter Jackets............ ; .. $18.20
Men's 529-.95

.....

,

Winter Ja.c kets ...'. .......... . 521.85
'Men's S39.95
Winter Jackets............... $29.15

Men's 15t.95
~
1'\
Wint~ Jac.k ets ............... $43.75
Men's Sl9.95

Winter Jackefs ...... ... :: .... s65.65
January Clearance Sale!

BOYS'
SWEATERS
Coat

style$ ·and SlipovetS ..

Sizes 8-20 - Good Selection.
BOYS '8.95 SWEATERS .... . '4A5
BOYS '9.95 SWEATERs.......•4.95
BOYS '11.95 SWEATERS.. ....•5.95 .

Knit Shirts ........... .. ... Sale $8.45
Men's $14 .95

-~

Knit Shirts ... , ........... Sale $9.75

1 Reg. S749 2 pc. Rust Tweed Early Am.
1 Reg. $849 2 pc. Brown Floral Early Am.

MATCHING ANKLE LENGTH

1 Reg . S489 Sqfa only green-gold matelesse,
Traditional ·
•
Slle $369
1 Reg . S629 Sofa only gold brown "elvet,
Contemporary
Sale $489
1 Reg. S879 2 pc. blue-brown beige velvet '
Contemporary
Sale 5669
1 Reg . S695 Sofa only multi-t;olor floral , jacquard Sale

KNITTING YARN
Good selection of solid colors variegated colors, sparkle colors.
Buy what you need and SAVE!

lh·-

$469

.

'

· 1 Reg . S624 Sofa only, rust velvet Con1em_porarv

Prices Start At Only $6.66

$699
1

Reg. $955 Sofa &amp; love Seat, mod~rn flora I

SHIRTS

Sale S699o

1 Reg. $898 ·2 pc. Early Am. Nylon floral
Sale $69f
1 Reg. 1595 2 pc. Suit, inllll colored plaid ·
Sale Sl99
1 Reg. S96i Sofa &amp; ~ove Seat, gold, grey, beige
Sale
5699
.
1 Reg. 1624 Sofa only, Wear Dated, gold velvet Sale $449
1 Reg . $624 Sofa on tv, Wear Dated rust velvet Sale S449

1,Reg. $614 2~c. Rust, gold green multi-color Sole 1499
1 Reg. 1970· Sofa &amp; Love Seal, green velvet
Sale 1699
1 Reg. 11089 3.pc. section• I w-bed, gray velvet Sale1199
1 Reg. $767 Love Seal &amp; Chair, vinyl patch
Sale S499
1 Reg. 1739 i pc. green tweed Early American Sale S~49
1 Reg. $749 2 pc. green tweed Early American Salel549

'

\'

. 1 Reg. 1979 2pc. velvet floral Early Am. · · Sale 1749
1 Reg. 5:864 2 p..:. brown , green, gold plaid Early

Am.'

Sale 5649

1 Reg . $8JS 2 pc. Velvet Floral Early Am .
Sale S612
1 R~ . $1049 2 pc. velvet floral Early Am .
Sale $799
1 Reg. S1D9B Sofa &amp; Rocker Early Am., gold floral Sale

$849
I Reg. 19912 pc. velvelfloral Early Am. .

Sizes medium ( 15-15112), large ( 1616'12) , and extra large (17-17112) . 2
pockets - long tails - 100 per cent
cotton presh'r unk . Colorful plaids.

1 Reg. $720 2 pc. gold rust

multelassie CDntem.

·January Clearance Sale!

January Clearance

BOYS'
WINTER JACKETS

MUSIC DEPT. SPECIALS

Boys 524.95

Our entire stock of dresses and
pantsuits. Sizes months lhru 7 to
14.

25%

Prices start as low as $4.501

.

JACKETS ... .... ................ 114.97
Bo
.
.vs m.95
llJ 97
JACKETS........ .. .............. ·
January Clearance Sale!

AM-FM stereo radio, 3 · speed record
changer, 2..wood finish speakers. . ·

SALE •229
Reg . 5179.95 Panasonic Thruster Speakers,
8 inch woofer - 8 inch radiator, 21f&gt; inch
tweeter - 30 watt.

SALE '155 PR.

Long sleeve styles In solid colors
and patterns. Sizes 8 to 18.
Boys $4.95
Sport Shirts ........ : .......... $2.75
Boys $5.95
Sport Shirts •.•••••••••••••.••.•• $3.25
Be·~ 56.95
Sp, rt Shirts .............. ..... $3.85

Reg . $ 90.95 Wardrobe ............ Sale $72.95
Reg.~ 75.95 Wardrobe. ............ Sale 560.95·
. Reg. S 59.95 Wardrobe ...... \.. ... Sale 547.95
Reg. S 74.95 Utility.... ............. Sale $59.95
Reg . $ 64.95 Utility................. Sale $51.95
Reg.$ 54.95 Utility................. Sale $43.95
Reg. 5109.95 China..... . ....... ; ... Sale $87.95
Reg. 5102.95 China. ................ Sale $82.95
Reg.$ 95.95 China. : ............ , .. Sale 576.95
Reg . s 75.95 Base................... Sale $60.95

. January
, WOMEN'S

nee

SPORTSWEAR SALE

Si2es 28 ~hru 46. Solid. printed or
plaid styles.
Reg. $7.oo ..... ...... .... ,.. Sale $5.25
Reg. S9.00. ................. Sale 56.75
Reg. m.oo. ............... Sale $8.25
Reg. su.oo .............. . Sale $9.75
Reg. $16.00............... Sale $12.00
Reg. $18.00 ............... Sale $13.50

Reg. s 9.oo .............. .Sales 6.75
~eg . 512.00 ............... SaleS 9.00
Reg. $18.00 ........... .. . Sale $13.50
Reg.$26.00 ............ ~. Sale$19.50
Reg. $32.00 .............. Sale $24.00
.Reg. 548.00.............. Sale $36.00

MECHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE

METAL CABINET SALE

~'

.

Choose regular or e~tra sizes of
quality sportswear such as
· Devon, .D ouglas M.arc, Bradley or
Jane .Colby'.
. .

January Clearance

January Clearance

HIDE-A-BEDS AND

COAT SALE

January Clear1nce

BOYS'
SPORT SHIRTS

· Reg.$4.00 ... .. .. ; ........ . SaleS3.00
. Reg. $5.00................. Sale $3.75
· Reg. 57 .oo ................ Sale $5.25
Reg. s1o.oo.......,........ Sale 57.50
Reg. 512.00 ...... : ......... Sale $9.00
Reg. $15.00 .............. Sale 511.25

BLOUSE
SALE

-SALE •299

DELPHOO, omo - A SPOKFStiAH for the American
Agriculture Movement, ·the fon» behind the nationwide
Iarmer's strike, said Wednesday night consumers are wrongly
blaming the Mlerlcan farmer for high food prices.
Alan Ranoom, a fanner fr;im Georgia, told a meeting of
about 175 DOi thweltem Ohio farmers here, that .Increased
p-ocery pr1ceo oouid be attributed to other. Items sold at
fli'OCei"Y 1114re8, such as cigarettes, which the consumer
purchu111'and adds to his shopping budget. Ransom urged the
,farmera to refuse to ae11 their products until Congress and the
Carter admlnlltraUon work to provide farmers with 100
perlll!llt parity for their products.

Blanket sleepers, robes, gowns
-and footed pajamas.

January Clearance

Reg. 5349.95 Panasonic Amplifier, AM-FM
stereo receiver, S-track player-recorder.

.30%0FF

By United Prell lnlenlatloDal '

CHILDREN'S
.SLEEPWEAR SALE

DRESS SALE
REDUCED

'

Jan!'ary Clearance

Litlls Girls'

Sale

Reg.~~69.95 Panasonic Component Syste,;;,

'

SLEEP OR·LOUNGES

:t-$339.00 .
~leep or Loflllle ......... ,, ... $249.00
1-1389.00. ..~ .
·.
'
Sleep or Lounge. ~ ............ $299.00
1-1444.00

OUr entire stock of ' women's
. winter coats In junior. missy and
half sizes.
·

.

SAVE

Sleep or Lounge Love Seat.... Sale
$299.00
1-$648.00
Sleep or Lounge ............ $449.00

30%

1-$649.00

Hide A Bed.····· ·· ··~········S449.00
1-$1001.00

Sleep or Loung~
w-matchin!J Chair .... .. Sale 5699.00

Sale prices start at only $25 .19

------·--~-·--·--~--~~--~ ----~~----~-l~---~------·---~·--·~-~---·~------~---------~~--·----·----~--~1

OPEN. FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8:00

-..•

E.LBERFELDS IN POMEROY
-

.•

Well, If the Palestinians
choose King Hussein, 1 shan
agree."
The Jordanian monarch
and the shah of Iran will visit
Egypt next week for .
consultations with Sadat.
Hussein is not eager to
assUine responsibility for the
Palestinians he drove out .of
Jordan in a bloody civil war
1n 1910.
Cl!rter said the . parties
Involved ·1n the Middle East
conmct "must recognize the
legitimate rights of the
Palestinian people and
enable the Palestinians to
participate · . In
ihe
delermination · of thelr
·
future."
In Jerusalem, Israeli
Prime Minister Begin said he
was glad Carter had not used
the term "Palestinian state"

warned Israel would ...,ver
agree to Sadat's request that ·
Israel accept the right of
Palestinians to "selfdetermination."
"We don't beat aroWld the
bush' " he sa~'d. ''The term
seHdetermination means a
Palestinian state, and we will
not agree to such a mortal
danger to Israel."
Israel is concerned that a
Palestinan entity, whether
linked to Jordan or independent, would be used by
Moscow and Arab radicals as
" sprmg
· boar d
f or
a
·
'
'
·
•
th
aggresston
agams ~
e
Jewish state.
·
The next step in the Middle
East peace effort comes Jan. ,
I~&lt; with th e mee tin'g of two
Egyptian-Israeli committees,
' .
·m
one on po'lit'teaI tssues
On
J erusaIem and the Other
.

A Meigs County man with
an apparent great hate for
rural mall boxes - especially
if they belong to someone else
- laces two counts of theft
and-or damaging such
propllrty and of resisting
arrest.
Eyen so, Bruce Fleming,
Rl. I, Long Bottom, laken
before county court Wed·
nesday, was pennitted to post
a recognizance bond and go
free.
Fleming was arrested ·
Wednesday afternoon on a
U.N.
REPRESENTA· ' warrant charging him with
TIVE Is a very Interesting
the destruction 'of a mailbox
owned by · Z~Ua Goppick.
participant lo the Egyp.
When Lt. Mike Zirkle and .
tlan-Israell Cairo tal lis,
Investigator Gary Wolfe of
Secretary-Geoeral
Kurt
Waldhelm believes, but 11
would be IDapproprlate for
him lo cbsilr the COD•
ference, as participants

the Meigs Sheriff's Department went to his Bald Knob
resideqce to serve the
warrant, Fleming ran Into a
trailer, locked the door. and
refused to come out. Deputies
had to forcibly enter the
trailer. Fleming was then
transported to the sheriff's
office, charged with resisting
arrest and damaging the
mailbox.
Meanwhile, orficers obtained a search warrant for
an outbuilding at the Fleming
resldence In Order to recover
a mailbox that had been
stolen from near the , in·
tersection of CR 28 an~ SR 124
owned by Mrs. Paul Bearhs,

Rt. 3, Racine. Exec uting the
sean.t. warrant Wednesday
afternoon were Sheriff James
J. Proffitt, Lt. Zirkle. In·
vest lgator Wolfe, ond investigator Mike Mullens of
the l'OUnty prosecutor's of-

fice .

·

The mallbox was recovered

and Fleming !Pwas charged
· with theft In this case.
Wednesday at 5:50 a.m.
Carole S. Bush, Rt. 3, Racine.
driving on SR 7 struck mod
killed a deer approximately
I&gt; mile south ol Tuppers
Plains. There wus moderate
to heavy damage to the grille
of her auto, and she was
uninjured.

·'

Retailers giving only
~~Briefol-iemeepting•~i~:::: ~: ~~~ mild help to farmers

Save 30 Per Cent on our
reniaining 'stock of coats for little
boys and girls. Sizes 2 to 14.

Janu;~ry Cle;~rance

Sale S749

1549
1 Reg. $619 lpc. gold tweed Early Am.
Sale 1479
1 Reg. $698 2pc. gold-rust jaquard Conlemporory Sale
IS49

JACKUS ...................... .. '8.37
Boys $21.95
.
.
JACKETS ....................... 113.17

WINTER
.COAT.S

1 Reg . $961 Sofa&amp; Love Seat, modernflamestitch Sale

1 Reg. S879 Sofa &amp; Love Seat, green rust iacquard Sale

Boys $13.95

. CHILDREN'S

FLANNEL

Sale

S469

$649

A GOOD SELECTION IN
SIZES 8-20

January Clearance

January Clearance Sale
Men's $7.95

S-a le

1 Reg . S829 2 pc. iust, green, gold plaid Early Am . Sale

PRICE

v., OFF

1 Reg . Sll06 Sofa &amp; Love Seat, gold tweed Earfv

Am.
Sale S995
1 Reg. l1203 Sofa, ~ove Seal, Chair, tan naugahyde Sale
S895
1 Reg. l523 ~ove Seal, tan naugahyde
Sale U99
1 Reg. $638 2 pc. Floral Early Am.
. Sale S488
1 Reg. 1595 2 pc. multi-color Plaid Early Am. Sale U99
2 Reg. S779 2 pc. brown tweed Early Am.
Sale1599

·Palestinian card" to Carter.
By MAURICE GUINDI
Sadat i5 pressing for the
ASWAN, Egypt (UPI)
creation
of a Palestinian
President Anwar Sadat, '.in a
major policy ahlft, says he homeland on the West Bank
,.ould support Jordan's King of Jordan and the Gaia Strip,
Huaeeln as leader of the which 1..-ael captured in lhe
Palestinians rather than 1967 Middle East war. In an
Yasaer Arafat 's Palestine attempt to ease Israeli fears,
be is proposing that such a
· Ubefatlon Organi%8tion.
homeland
be
under
Sadat said Wednesday
Jordanian
control
at
least
for
after meeting President
Carter for 45 mlnuteli that , the time being:
Interviewed following
''lor sure" he would support
Huueln, . abandoning his Carter's departure, Sadat
longtime support for the PW was asked if the peaceu the sole representative of making process would be
facilitated if the Palestinians
the E'alelllnlans•
The Syrians. and PLO in)· threw their weight behind
mediately assailed Sadat's Hussein Instead of Arafat.
"For sure, yeS, for ·sure,"
parley with Carter as a new
step In the "sellout" of the Sadat replied. "The PLO has
Palestllllans. The PLO said In shown &lt;eallrresponsibllity In
a atatement In Beirut that the last lew weeks especially
Sadat had "offered up tbe after my visit to Jerusalem.

Choose from two large racks of
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sl49 WINTUK

profoWld will for peace alld
freeedoot ... We are ready to
work in peace with all those
who want to see freeds&gt;m
spread over the world."
The two prellidents then
strolled along the cliff
overlooking_ Omaha Beach
and walked among lhe 9.386
white marble cro8l1ell ·and
Stars of David, which stand
row on row in the grassy
cemetery bordered with
white pllpiars still In leaf.
Carter was scheduled to
wind up his visit to America's
oldest ally as guest of honor
at a state banquet at the
Grand Trianon In Versailles
REBECCA SMITH
tonight. The president has a
Rebet!rli Smllh, daughter
sevenUt and final stop on his
world trip in Belgiwn Friday . of Mr. and Mrs. CarToll
Smllb, Route 1, Mid·
During his ~irst day in
Paris, Carter referred . dleport, who enlisted In the '
w.. t Vlrgtola NaUooal
several times to the special
Guard,
March 18, 1917, wiU
friendship ·between France
leave
for
Fort jackaon, S.
and the United States anll in a
C..
oo
Jan.
· 15 for lour
speech at the Palais des
months of basic and A.f.T.
Congres Wednesday night
pledged that America 's trallllog. Sbe Is a 1973
commitment to the defense of graduate of Meigs High
· School.
Europe Is "allsolute."

Man held on two
mail box ·counts

Yasser Arafat_'s PLO
may lose Sadat suppo

January Clearance

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PRICE FIFl'f~N CENTS
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Before me ar:e more than
9,000 white a-osses erected in
memory of those who died
here:..
'
"We now have about 200,000
American fighting men In '
Euro!)ll sure that this threat
i5 never before liS again ...
"We are proLII of what we
have done togetber. We are
sure thai our friendo;hip w.ill
be everlasting." ,
Giscard replied, In French
and th~n in Engiish.'"FJ:ance
expresses its gratitude to the
families of all fltese men who
have fallen foc ber freeoom .
"Today, our two peoples
stand together in their
11

•

•

1 Reg. S130l Soli Love Seat, chair, brown floral Early

5529

Carter was greeU.d by an
honor guard of the U.S. 1st
Infantry Division and troops
of Ute French 50lst Annored
Regiment.

The two presidents stood at
attention as a blll!ler sounded
"·T aps" ~-the traditional
farewell bugle call - and a
military band played tile
Marseillaise and the StarSpangled Banner.
Carter, wearing a topcoat ,
recalled In a brief speech that
in June of 1940 ''General de
Gaulle, leader of the French
Resistance forces , ·said the
flame of the French
Resistance would not. die.
FoW' ye~rs later oo the 6th of
June 1944 the Allied forces
came to the beaches ... to
begin a heroic action leading
to the liberation of EW'ope ..

VOL XXVIIl

BY WATER ' PIK

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Omaha beach, ''he said, "Of
the 25,000 who came ashore
about 2.000 died, American
Rangers had to scale a
vertical 1oo.foot clllf whUe
the Gertnallll above coiled
down grenades upon them.
On Omaha Beach hundreds of
our troops lay dead and the
sight was so impressive that
the German commapders
thought, until too late, that
victory was won by

d'Estalnc and his wife Antle·
Aymone, who had arrived by
helicopter live · minutes
earlier.
·
The landing zone wan fi!W
hundred yards from the
American Cemetery of Saint·
Laurent. jhe cemetery
.overlooks Omaha Beach,
scene of the fiercest fighting
and heaviest Allied loSBeS of
[).Day, June 6.
Carler, looking tired on the
eighth day of hia nine-day,
seven-nati.on tour, recaUed
.some of that fightilig.
''The 1St and the 29th
·American divisions were the
ones who iaqded near here on

I

0

Geaeva conference on the
1\tldeast.

ret.; ...e thlaS y· e· ar
.

.La

·

.

County board
f ed
'
-b dg d . ed.
et a

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Slatebouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - StaU!
Rep. ·A.G.·· Lancione, DBellaire, the dean of the Ohio
General Assembly with 31
years of service, announced
today. he will not run for reeIecUon this year and will
retire at the end ofthe se ssl on
· Dec he
m em r .
... OOLUMBUS - AN UNIDENTIFIED WOMAN fell or
Lancione; a · former House
Speaker who wl!1 be 71 next
,jumped ID her dealh WednesdaY·' afternoon ..from atop Ohio
·Stadllan, Ohi9 Slate University police said. Authoritlea month, said he wants
. ....,to
devote more time to hIll wue,
nsceived a report at 3:48 p. m. 'that someone had fallen,
Madel lne, and to spend more
1111111fe1111y fn1m a caner who had seen a WOIJI8I1 seated on a
1aw prac11 ce.
time WI'th L•ledge at the IDp of lhe stadium, Officials found her body on the
'd h,,.,.
· sup
· port'mg no
H
e
881
e
Ill
pev-t nen ID lhe.IJI.foot-tall alhletlc'facillty. . ·
particular Democrat ID take
The woman was treated ,at· thei scene 8Sld taken to
overhia
99th District sea\, but
Un!Vel'llly Hoapltal's Emergency l\OO!n, wherei ,abe was
will break his retirement vow
pronouit~ dead about an hoJI!" .later. ·Pollee -iald they
If fonner U.S. Rep. Wayne L.
IUIJ)8Cted Do fotlllplay. '
. ' ' •
.
Hays of Flushing seeks the
.. ,
'
seat.
·
OOLUMBUS - PAUL LANGOON, AN 0ffiCIAL of an
In
that
case, sald'Lancione,
organization that clalml to be the only national anti-busing
he
will
run
against Hays and
P'O~ In lhe m~mtry, Wedneiday night was. elected president
beat
him.
'11f the Oolumbu Board of Educatloit. Langdon, a 22-year
"Thirty-two years al oite
veteran of the-board, wu cbolen on a~ wte. ,
He wu elected ID the Board of DireCtors of the NaUonal political 'job is . quite 'a
· .AIIoclatlon of Neighborhood Schools In Aupst. NANS claima career," said the five-foot..to have cbsi~ In virtually
city that ~ been touched two-inch Lancione, who
became Democratic floor
by delegregatlon. Only two ollter school board members ln·the
naUon are on the NANS board.
· leaderonlytwoyearsafterhe ·
joined the House In 1947.
"I am proud of my tenure
NEW YORK- RADIO CITY MUSIC HALL, home of the
In
lhe House and I am sure I
. Rocketlal and a top tourist attraction In New York City for 46
could continue my 'legislative
)'earl, pianl to clole lladoon after alavlah Easter show, It was.
'learned -ly today. A IIPOkamast for Mayor Edward Koch ' accomplishments, t.!t thia ls
l1lld Altm G. Manhall, Cent.- prealdent, lu1d lnfonned the a good time to step down . I
...w mayor l1f the ball'a planned cw.lag laS.. Wednesday. am 70yearsold'&amp;lid, although
kller Wedneaday, Marlball tearfully btlarmed union bealthy, I am not getting any
younger.'.'
offldall.
'
.
"Lance," as he ls known to ·
. 'lbe center opened Dec. 17, 1932 and baa attracted throlll!h
close
friends, was born !n
.ibe yean1 DM1ft lblm 2110 million IOW"II!I.frCliD all over the
Cementon,
Pa., the son of an
.c:ountry to aee the blgh«epppng Rocbtlea, the emavagant
·ataae pro&amp;.etiolis and family lllma. Attendance bepn to slip
In 1872, Ito-, and In 1117&amp;, Radio City 1011 an estimated ,1.3

.
By DAN. CIIISZAR
United Press IDtematlooal
Striking fanners begin!ling
Ute fourth week of their
national boycott have
mustered only non-&lt;!Ommital
support from supllnnarkets
and food distribution centers,
who offer encouragement,
but refuse to shut down in
sympathy.
Leaders o1 Amer ;can
Agriculture, the group
heading the strI"..e, tods y
prepared tor . a Friday
· Om aha, Neb.,
meet ing tn
where fanners wlll present
deman.ds to Agrtcu
· It· ure
secretary
Bob Berg 1an d .
" 1 h
utt e ope was heid. for th e

.

.

federal government to yield their tractors.
Farmers encircl ed the
to the farmers' demands for
breakeven prices on their t'en ter with 200 tructors when
products.
Safeway olficluls rcht.;c..t t&lt;i
American
Agriculture cl&lt;ise the center. The officials
farmers in Colorado were ioffered
to ·
place
promised support by two adverti se ments in newssupermarket chains and a papers a~y in~ lhey were
· meat wholesaler, but won no "sympaU1etic" with farmers
sympathy shutdowns.
c':111eem•, and would allow
Two fanners were arrest ed the Ameri ca n Agric ulture
In a scuffle w1th poli ce movement to distr ibute
Wednesday
during
a 'pellllons In Safeway stores.
demonstratton
· . in whi c h
The farmers, who drove
striking farmers blocked tractors and piclcup truck.•
en tr ances to Saleway sto r•;•s from Colorado. WyominK and
·
Nebraska to the ce nter,
Inc.'s regiona1 d'lslr lbulll\11
1
D
Th
center n
enver .
e Ita Ited food deliveries to a
fanners iater were re1ea sed flve-!llate w-ea for only about
( ConUnu~ on page 1,0)
whe n they · agreed to move

inunlgrant cubi miner. His
famUy moved to Bellaire in
1910, and young Lancione 0
. UC8ti0D
graduated from high school
at 16 and went on to Ohio
U
Opt
State, where he earned ·a law
degree.
.
At age 21, he was one of the
A budget Of $285,369.39 for
youngest ever admilled to tbe
1978
Was adopted When the
Ohio Bar. He served as
·
Meigs County Board of
assistant prosecutor tn Education met Tuesda·y
Belmont Cowtty and was in night.
the Army during World ·War
Included in the budget are
n. Then he came to the antt'clpsted
expenditures for.
Leglsl
. ature, when there were
·ew
special
education
n
only 16 Democrats and I23 four
cia••••
wht
'
ch
may""
started .
Republicans.
~
Tf
·
.
G
be)
during
1978.
·
1
· A.G. ( or Atner1cus a
has been Speaker Pro
County Supt. Ri&gt;hert E.
Tempore, Democratic .whip .Bowen swore in 'the four
and Democratic floor leader. members returning to new
He served as Speaker In 1913- ·terms on the county board,
74, t.lt was ouimaneuvered . Oria Smith, RDbert Burdette,
by his close friend, Rep. Harold Lohse and George
RACINE
Male members f:ID for regular · ;Methodist Church wlis
Vernal G. Riffe. D·New Perry. Harold Roush, chauvinism may have ended meetings. Law provides· that authorlr.ed to use {he junior
Boston, for the top spot tbe holdover member, was Wednesday in the ad· members can now receive $40 high audilorium from I to ~
following session.
elected president and Oris . ministralffln policies of the but It was the consensus of p.m . on Saturdays and
I.ancione has been senling Smith, vice pre~ident.
Sputhern Local Board of the board that the payment Sundays, January through
as chainnan of the Rules
A payment of $40 a meeting Education when three women should remain at $2AI due to April, for games. The Junior
Commiltee and was given a was established for board were sworn as new members the financial condition of the high boosters were given
seat on Ute state Controlling memb·ers, payable for a of the board.
district.
permission to use the junior
Board and his own private maximuin of 12 meetings a
Beginning .new tenns were
Liitd~ Spencer was given a high gym on Jan. 7 during the
office in relurn for stepping year and the . boa&lt;d · Janet sue Grueser, Shirley two year appointment a! evening hours. Tammy
aside for Riffe without a authorized a payment of 15 Jolmson and Be\ty Wagner. clerk-treasurer and It was Bradlo.rd was accepted as a
fight.
cents a mile for traveling The fourth member receiving agreed to purchase alxind for tuition student. '!be January
Lancione
has
l;teen expenses in 1978. Regular an oath was Gene Yost.
her through the v. D. Ed· meeting was set for the 24th
responsible for supporting meetings we,re set for 7:30
The board chose Oanas Hl11 wards Insurance Agency. It at 7:30 p.m.
legislation to cQIDbat coal p.m. on the first Tuesday of . as president for lhe new year was voted to join the Ohio
miners'
"black lung" each monlh.
and Gene . Yost, vice School Board Association.
disease, of which he Is • Bus driver certificates president. Regular meetings UabiUty insurance for board
convinced his father died.
wer~ issued to Patricia Pape, will be held on the lhird members was purchased and
He said he wil,l continue to Jerry Blaclt and Hilton Wolfe, Tuesday of each month at aservlce fund for expenses of
take an active role In Ohio Jr., and liability insurance , 7:30 p.m. In the high school board members to meetings
. Democratic politics.
for board members were cafeteria. It was agreed to · was eStablished at $1,000 .
purchased:
continue P.BYing all board·. The
Racine
United
Pomeroy
Pollee
In·
vestigated 30 accidents an4
m!llloo.
.
made 26 adult arrests and two
of juveniles In D&lt;:Cember
1 according to a report sub,
.
!WITL\00, CHilE- PRESIDENT AUGUSTO Plnocbet, '
mltted by Chief of Pollee Jed
·bolsterecl by ' an ov....-helmlng vote of confidence ln(lila
UDited Pre111lnle1'118Uoaal foW'-weeko()ld strike and sehd traveled through western In Madisonville Wednesday. decline in anllclpated . Webster to Council 'l)lesday .
.'JIIUituy regime, hu told the Ctllean people to forget about
.eJectloal· llltll 18111.. .
Tenalon quietly heightened 188,000 UMW niembers In 22 Kentucky for the second Anwnber of UMW-members demand for coal, plus a drop nigh!.
straight day, bUt disbanded were at lhe ooildlng the off in coal car traffic.
The depaljment issued 888
,
Plnodlel racked up a n-ly 4-1 margin Wednellday In a
In the Appalachian coalfields states back to !heir jobs.
:pet«-no ballot on wbelher Chilean• IUf1IIOl"l his rll!ht-wlng Wednesday as weapon·
Authorities in Eastern after six hours.·State police. previous day, protesting
When those cutbacks are parking tickets, collected
iDillWy regime lg&amp;lnlt a U. N. cbarle d. maulve human
wleldln&amp; roving United Mine Tennessee today conttnued who monitored the caravan, alleged
slowness
In made next •eek, a $3,031 from the parking
·
said
there
were
no
spokesman said, a total of meters, and drove the crulser
Workers
pickets
marched
their
cloae
watch
m
tbe
processing
food
stamps
for
[rlabta vkllatlona.
through eutern Tenneam . movement of 110me 11011 out-of- controntallons.
qoo Norfolk &amp; Western 4,150 miles.
miners and their famUies.
The area of concentration
Arrests and kinds made·
State pollee at Hazard, Ky., employes will be oUt of work
WASHINGTON- AN AUTHORl'I'Y ON THP! So~et KGB and caravanii containing stale pickets reportedly
.
were: operaUng under
IIPJ IIIIICJ lllld tllday the manber l1f Ruulan and Communllt lllllll'eds of miners IWI!pt . anned With knives, guns, ax in KentuckY .las the . non· reported a coal-dumping lnci· In 14 states.
bloc IDIIIIIgtaci Cllrlc:en operating n tbe United. Slates bail
through weottern Kentucky, handles and baseball bats, mionPyroMinlngCo., where dent just over the Letcher
In Diinoia, the. American suspension I, reckless
1w .., by f1J1111b1f 110 pe1 cenc to IIIII' since the dawn of aD threatening to J:1ose noo· · who .were apected to roam a burned wooden raUroad County line near Pound, Va., Electric Power ,Service Com- operation 3, fleeing an offlctr
trestle last mooth forced the Wednesday.
pany's Cook coal-loading 1, left of center 1, 'a ssauh 4,.
. liMite Ill trl2.
. • UMW operatlona.
their region again,
Julm a.rran, authclr of a lr14 book on the KGB, which li
In Metropolis, shut leaving scene 2, lntoxlcaUon ·
terminal
Meanwltlle, lhe recesii"COD·
A deputy said the pickets finn to truck out it:l coaL
· Also in Virginia, Norfolk &amp;
James Hawkins, vice pres!· Western 1\Bllway In Roanoke down by violence involving 2, splledlng I, passing on
reprdld UI!IDOIIIIbe 11101t definitive on tbe subJect, laid In · tlnued In Washington w&lt;re their weapons plainly In
an article In 1111 JanUI1'1 illulll1f the 1\eader'a Dlgllllt that so negotiations beiween the ~ew Wednesday, but ·without dent o,f UMW Dlittrict 23, said said Wednesday it will ~lose abou.t 300 miners Dec. 14, double yellow line 1, .
no pick.U returned ID the Its West End Car Shop next resumed opera.tions disturbing the !)~lace 5, faUure'
'IIIIIIJ Scm.t iplll are Cll*"atlna in Amlrlca, U.S. COIIIter· UMW and the Bituminous Incident.
A caravan of 11early :110 Kentucky Department for Tuesday and furlolll!h 300 Wednesday with supervisory to yield 2, disorderly conduct
lrHP'I•ctoftlcenare-bletok"P Inset d. them. ''Today Coal Operlkn AYoclatlon.
t11ere are _ . p!Gf I Nl OmnnmW IDiel at work In No date bas '-t set lor lhe cars and trucks carrying Human ResotD"ces Building employees because of a and security per110nnel.
I, asaufed clear distance 1,'
and destructloo of JH'operty I.
l'eii!Jllptlon f!( ta1lts to end the some 800 striking . miners
t Ulllanued on pq1. 10)
·,

Ladies in majority ·on b.oard ~

every

30 accidents

investigated
in Pomeroy

War closer in Appalaehia coal fields

\\I

A

...

.

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