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10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Monday, Jan. 9,1978

Sulfur dioxide
-levels raised
in
Virginia

w.

CHARLESTON, W. Va .
(UPI) - Regulations to relax
the level of suHur dioxide
pollutants that can be let iniD
West Virginia air were approved today by the
Legislative Rule-Makmg
Review Committee.
The vote was 7·1 with
chairman Sen. Robert
Steptoe, D·Berkeley, the only
dissenter .
Air Pollution Control
Commission Director Carl
·· Beard said that barring any
action on the part of the
federal Environmental
Protection Agency the
regulations will become
effective In 30 days.
The new regulations will
permit coal with ··a sulfur
content of up\(&gt; 4.3 percent at
Mitchell power plant; 3.7
percent at Harrison plant;
and 1.9 ·percent at Fort
Martin. It delays, pending
1further studies, changes at
Ohio Power Co.'s Kanuner
plant.

SMITH TO RUN
COLUMBUS CUPI)
Franklin County Prosecutor
George Smith, 42, announced
today he would seek the
Republican nomina lion for
attorney general. Smith was
the Republican canpidate in
1974 arid was defeated by
Ohio . Attorney General
William J . Brown by over
200,000 votes.

Religious freedom doesn't
··
apply to real Americans
according to Abourezk.
Problem areas which
Inhibit Indian practice of
their tradtlonal religion
include such things as lack of
access to sacred sites,

By DAVJD E. ANDERSON

UPI Religion Writer
One of this nation's most
prized rights is freedom of
. religion - the right to believe
whatever religious Ideas and
practice whatever religious
rites the individual thinks are

restriction on the use of

sacred objects, such as
peyote or eagle feathers and
actual Interference with religious rites and ceremonies.
Commenting on the latter,
Abourezk said that "even
today, certain symbolic portioos of the Sun Dance which
deal with fertiU(y and the
cycle of life are banned."
"The prejudice involved of·
flcials' belief that it was
'sinful' in Chrlstian terms,"
Abourezk said . "Such
mi s understanding
is
analogous to attributing the
taking of communion to cannibalism."
Its effect, he said, is the
imposition of one set of

correct.
It also includes the right not

to believe ·or practice any
religion .
Although religi o us
toleration has had a long and
not always trouble free
history in the United States,
~st Americans believe the
constituti ona l principle
allowing free exercise of
religion is firmly enshrined.
But one group of Americans
- native Americans continues to have difficulties
·In practicing traditional
religions.
As Sen. James Abourezk of
South Dakota has pointed out,
in · recent years there have
been increasing numbers of
incidents in which the rights
of Indians 1&lt;&gt; practice their
traditional religion have been
interfered with.
According 1&lt;&gt; Ab11urezk , it
gener8lly has been less a
matter of deliberate interference as a "lack of knowledge ,
unawareness, insensitivity

religious

values

Christian ~ upon another
and becomes "a direct threat
I&lt;&gt; the foundation of religious
freedom in America . It
comes far to close to an
informal state religion."
Some. states have already
moved In the direction of
protecting traditional Indian
practices.
Montana, for example, reand neglect ... "
"This state of affairs is sponding to the eagle feather
enhanced by the perception of crisis of 1974 In which Indians
many non-Indian officials were arrested for possessing
that because Indian religious and exchanging the feathers
practices are different than of the federally protected
·their own that they somehow eagle, passed a state
do not have the same stautus · co ngressional resolution
as a 'real' religion ," setting forth the policy of free

HOSPITAL NEWS

to

serve

on

coounittees whose actions
might aflect traditionalist
practice.
Abourezk would like to see
similar action oo the federal
level and has introduced
would
legislation that
establish a clear federal
policy w protect the practice
of traditional religion.
President Carter has promised that should the legislation be approved by Coogress
it will he "given thorough,
sensitve
and
prompt
attention and consideration."
Abouretk , in introducing
the proPosed legislation, said
the foundation for a
comprehensive
and
coordinated implementation
of the policy could be quJckly
established and the goals of
protection achieved with
little difficulty.
''The Indian traditional and
religious leaders rightfUlly
regard a clear federal policy
as a crucial matter which
must be resolved if the Indian
culture and religion is I&lt;&gt;
survive," Abourezk said.

to Parental Advice·
Let.' s face II. Butch Is far more likely to follo w you r exampl_e than your advice.
So. when it comes to l eaching ch i ldren about thrift , skip the " penny saved is a
penny ear ned " speech ; and , instead ,· take the kids wi th you to Farmers Bank and
let them watch YOU qpen a savi ng s account . ~ow , that' s examp le .

•

•

•

0

0

Farmers Bank·
I'OMEROY, 01-110
'

'40,000 Maximum Insurance For Each Oepolitor
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

NOT INTERESTED' In
Israel's Ideas on tbe
Palestinians' future, PLO
observer at tbe United
Nations, says th~ proposal
to give home rule to &lt;&gt;ecupled territories Is a
''rldueulous joke." Teni
vows Palestinian groups
wlll oppose such an
arrangement by 11 &amp;11
methods available."

Meigs
Property
Transfers

CLOSED MONDAY
JANUARY 16TH
FOR MARTIN
LUTHER KING DAY

Special of the Week
Monday, Jan. Ylh thru Saturday, Jan . 14th

ALL BEEF
HOTDOGS
GERMAN DOG
(Kraut Dog)
SPECIAL 40~
PRICE
I
Footlong German Dog
SPECIAL 60~
Reg . 9Sc
PRICE
Reg. 60c'

This special is Offered to 1cquaint you with tht
goodness of our Government inspected wien~rs
and oUr homemade sauce.

No limit to q""ntlty of purch.lse. Offer good ior
Drive-In or C.Orry-Out Service Only.

·

!

I
v tterollll Memorllll Hoopilal
Mrs.
Roger
Canter
and
son,
Saturday Admissions Survltt"Of"S Include two sons,
RUSSELL PlYMALE
Gladys Blackwood, Rutland ; Arnold Fulk, Zachery Green,
Jack
Hlnkle and Billy Hinkle,
Russell
Allred
Plymale,
66.
Nellie Lemley, Portland ; Mary Harmon , Phfllls Lane, a rHident of 205 Parke-r both of Sylmar, Calif.; two ·
Clara Phillips, RuUand ; Lois George Nutter , George Drive , Springboro, Ohio, and sisters, Carrie M. Judson.
Victoria
S.
Mrs .
Dav id a native of Gallla COtJnty, Hartford.
S ch oo nov e r , . Rutland ; Ratcliff,
Lucretia Werry, Pomeroy. Richards and son, Ethel died al 9:..0 a . m. Sundar rn Hueslng , Ft. Mitchel l. Ky .;
two brothers. Fred E. Hinkle,
the Middletown Hosplta in
Sheets.
Saturday Discharges Akron, 0 .. and Joseph R.
Middletown.
He
had
beeh
In
(Blrths,Jau, 8)
Gladys Cuckler, Jessyca
Hinkle, Lincoln, Ill., and one
fall ing health for tt'le past four
Mr . and Mrs. Bryce Sayre, year::s .
grandchild.
Hatfield, Genrral McCune ,
Funeral services will be
He was born Sept. 27, 1911
Judy Miller, Stanley Shaven , a daughter. Jackson.
conducted we-qnesday I p.m.
In
Gallla
County,
son
of
the
Sylvia Zwilling, Perry Beebe,
at the Fogle!IO!l!l Funeral
late James R. and Delma
Thomas Hendrix, Peggy
Home with lhe Rev. George
PLEASANT VAU..EY
Houck Plymale. He was a
White, Charlotte Coon.
Discharged - Mrs. Eugene retired maintenance welder Hoschor officiating. Burfal
be In the Fry Cemetery.
Sunday Admissions Kincaid, Point Pleasant ; for the Dayton Power and will
'Fr iends may coli at tHe
Light
Company
In
Steven Cremeans, Coolville; Mrs. Cline Stover, Leon; Miamisburg , Oh io. Surviving funeral home 011 Tue-sday
Kathryn Lambert, Rutland; John Harrah, MaS!ln ; Mrs. are hls wife, Katherine from 2 to 4 p.m. and from 7 to ·
Bert Williams, Cheshire ; Don WoUord, Vinton; Mabel Wright Plymale; two sons, 9 p.m.
Lucy Jacobs, Rutland; Nara Goff, Langsville; Mrs. Rus&gt;ell Jr . of Sprlngsboro
Robert Wayne Carlisle,
L. PALMAGE COTTRELL
Hartman, Long Bottom; Roy Charles Blake and son, and
Ohio ; a granddaughter.
Graveside services will be
Reuter, Pomeroy; Kenneth Pomeroy ; Mrs . David Shelly Renae ; a sister, Mrs . held at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday
Imboden , Middleport; "Floyd Atkinson, Point Pleasant; Belva Metz ler of Los Angeles, at Cahtary Cemetery In Rio
Grande for L. Palmage
Spence, Pomeroy.
Earl Wilbur, Lakin ; Nellie Calif.
He
was
a
member
of
the
Cottrell of Columbus who
Sunday Discharges Kent, Point Pleasant; Oloita MlssiOI)ary Baptist Church In died
Sunday.
Florine Ginther , Bessie Bennett, Point Pleasant; Franklin, Ohio and the
Cottrell was a former
Hysell ,
Ediih
Ward, Mrs. Joe Ball, Ashton ; Mrs. Minerva Lodge 98 of the school pr incipal In Gollla
Elizabeth Beaumont, Ken- Frances Pickens, New F&amp;AM and ·the Scottish Rite County and a longtime ·
Valley of Dayton.
resident of the Rio Grande
neth Mullins , Joyce Me· Haven; Dr. Edilberto Rogue , Lodge
Funeral services will be at
Community.
Clellan.
Lakin; Mrs . Dan He slip, 2 p. m, Wednesday of the
syracuse; Claude Marcum, Cremeens FUnera l Home
Ft. Gay , W. Va.; Douglas with the Rev . Eddie Bates
Holzer Medical Center
Burial will be In
Eades,
Cottageville; Mary officiating.
(Discharges, Jan. 8)
Mound Hill Cemetery.
Charles Akers , Vance Wamsley , Point Pleasant; friends may call from 7 1111 9
ATTEND.FUNERAL
Baker , Eva Barcus, Millie Mrs. Frederick Nibert, Point on Tuesday .
POMEROY - Mr. and
Clagg, Elva Corbil\, Ryan Pleasant ; Mrs . Archie
Mrs. C. E. Blakeslee were
JOHN C. HINKLE
Cowan , William Davidson , Newell, Point Pleasant;
HARTFORD - John C. called to St. John's, Michigan
Point Hinkle, 68, Haldford, d ied for the funeral of his brother,
Joan Dill, Audrea Elberfeld, Sherry · Mayes ,
Sunday morning at Pleasant
Pleasant.
Horner Elliott, Linda Faulk ,
Levi. Attending the funeral
Valley Hospital.
Births
A
son
to
Mr.
and
Charles Fick, Elias Hatfield,
with
the Blakesleea are Mrs.
Born Oct. 30, . 1909, Letart,
Gerald Hayman, Robert Mrs . Bryan Higginbolhm , he was. the son of the late Patricia Circle and children
Herdman, Ralph Jeffers , Buffalo ; a daughter w Mr. Joseph G. and Mary Glly Fry of Columbus. The luneral will ·
Hinkle. He was a retired
Nicholas Johnson, Delbert and Mrs. Charles Reitmire, painter.
be Tuesday at I :30 p. m. at
Lawson, Dale Maddy, Troy Pomeroy.
the Osgood Funeral Home.
Martin, George McHaffie ,
Mrs . David Mohler and MOVE UP
OXFORD, Ohio (UP!) daughter, Loveva Ours, Faye
Roberts, Brandy Roush, Mrs. City Manager Lee Davis
Kenneth Sheets and son, resigned during the weekend
(Continued fran .-ce L)
Curtis Short, Melvin Smith, to take a similar position In
others attended Presley film festivals or lrowsed through
Bernease Tabor, Mrs. Randy Albion , Mich .
Elvis
sourvenirs displayed by dozens of exhibitors. However;
Van Meter and son, Sue - Davis said he considers his
expected
large turnouts at the shows and exhibits never ·
move w tile south central
Winnell.
.
materialized.
By far the largest crowda were at Graceland,
Michigan town of 12,000 a
(Births, Jan. 6)
.
where
Presley
died on Aug. 16 and where his coffin eventually
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas professional step up. He will
was
moved
for
burial next to his mother.
Arnott , a daughter, Long receive a 30 percent pay
Botwm. Mr. and Mrs, Ralph increase.
CLEVELAND - A FEDERAL GRAND JURY has
Gibbs, a son, Cheshire. Mr. · Davis came to Oxford, in
indicted
eight alleged La Coss Nostra members on charges of
and Mrs. William, Malone , a 1973 and has been city
racketeering
and conspiracy to kill in the 1977 bombing deaths •
manager foc some two and
son, Jackson.
of
Teamsters
Union leader John Nardi and Cleveland rackets •
ooe.!Jalf years.
(Discharges, Jan. 7)
figtire
Daniel
Greene. The eight are James Licavoli, 73;
Jeffrey Adkins, Laura
Angelo Lonardo, 66; John Calandra, 62; Ronald Carabbia, 48;
Aelker, Carol Barnett, Janye
Pasquale Cisternino, 38; Aladena Fratianno, 64; Allred
Basil, Wesley Beuhl, Denise NEW JOB
Calabrese, 34; and ThOIJll!S Sinitn, 39.
CLEVELAND
HEIGHTS,
Carter, Hazel Collins, Lewis Ohio (UPI) - City Manager
Raymond Ferritto, · 48, Erie, Pa., was named as , an
Dailey, Arline Davis, Harold
unindlcted co-Conspirator. According w the government, be
Robert
Edwards
has
resigned
Dillon, Orville Eastman, waccept a new job with the has confessed participation in the Greene murder and will help
Larry Ferguson, Stella Hall, City of Akron .
with the prosecution of the others. Nardi, an alleged leader in
Connie James, Jane Jordan,
Edwards, 45, blamed his local organized crime, died May 17 in a parking lot near his
Mrs. Gary Lamm and son,
departure on what he termed union office when a bomb in the car next to his was triggered
Albert McCain, Alma Morris, "serious differences in policy by remote control. Once Cleveland's waterfront union boss,
Marvin
Morris,
Jean direction with city council.'' · Greene was slhln by a remote control bomb in a car pa~ked
· Norman, William PenniCk,
As of Feb. I, he will become next to his in the parking lot at .a suburban Lyndhurst office .
Ben Philson,- Tamara Plimts, Akron 's service director ; He building Oct. 6.
. .
.
Peggy Reynolds, Allison served four years as chief
Sirback, .Beulah Swindler, administrative officer of
CINCINNATI- THE 19~ PADDIJNG of a &amp;-year-old boy
John Thompson, Usa Ward, Prince Georges County, Md., will cost the teacher who m~ted out tbe punishment $1,500, as a
Amy Woomer.
before he was hired by result of a damage settlement witll tile youth's family.
Births, Jan. 7)
Cleveland Heights.
The family of Samuel Carpenter ·Jr., also received $25 II&gt;
Mr. and Mrs. Randall
cover medical expenses. The Carpenters originally had sought ·
Evans, a son, Jackson. Mr.
$85,000 in damages from tile Cincinnati Board of Education
and Mrs. Charles Haner, a
IWLA CANCELED
and the teacher , 'Ernie ·Triplett. They accused Triplett of
daughter, Gallipolis.
There will be no lzaak "wholly unnecessary and extremely excessive force" in
(Discharges, Jan. 8)
Walton Directors meeting punishing Samuel.
Mrs. Thomas Arnott and tonight.

News •• in Briefs

Butch's Response

~l

l · Area Deaths

daughter, Nicole Beegle, I

e&gt;:ercise and protection for
Indian rellgioos and urging
appointment of traditional
Indians

--~--- ---------------------1

Alba c. Radford; Hazel B.
Radford to Fred A. Radford,
i!lterest 78 acres , Cllester.
Delbert C. Hayes, dec. to
Dwight H. Rutherford,
Eveleth A. Harshffian, Cert.
of trans., Salem.
Thomas F . Hendrix to
Theria Marie Hendrix, Lots,
Middle(l&lt;Jrt.
\,.
Jimmy Blaine McClure,

Gloria Darlene McClure to
William Edward Bartels,
Diana . Louise Bartels, 2
acres, Chester.
Donald L. Randolph to
Buckeye · Rural Electric
Coop, Inc., right of way,
Orange .
Pearl Randolph to lluckeye
Rural Elec. Coop Inc., right
of way, Orange.
Carroll W.
Johnson,
Mildred Johnson to Gordon B.
Stout, Donna L. Stout, Lot 8,
Goegleln Sub., Middleport.
Danny C. Russell, Debra .L.
Russell to Delbert C. Russell,
2.5 acres, Chester.
Archie E'. Lee, June P. Lee
to Charles M. Fry, Kathy D.
Fry, part 100 acre Lot 296,
acre, Syracuse.
Archie E. Lee, June P. Lee
to Jean Coates, Dor, c:·
:::Oates, part 100 acre lot 296,
826 acres, Syracuse.
Archie E. Lee, June P. Lee
to Daniel M. Dodson, Anna F.
Dodson, pal'\ 100 acres Lot
2!16, &gt;117 aaea, Syracuse.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

s arts irt clearance
This January Sale includes
our entire -sto·ck of Men's Sports
Shirts - a fine selection - solid
colors and patterns. Sizes sma II
!14-141/2), medium (15-151/2); large
(16-161/2), extra large (17-171/21.
Full cut and tapered styles.

SAVE

3

GINO'S

OF MASON
PHONE 773-5536

.

Northent counties hit
hard by.wind an:d snow
By

United

Preai

closed again today by the
drifting snow.
'Blowing and drifting snow
Gov. James A. Rhodes
clogged roads throughout activate d 140 National
northern Ohio late Mmday Guardsmen to help local
and eru:ly today, stranding autllorities rescue stranded
hundreds of motorists and motorists in Cuyahoga,
I 200 air travelers at Huron and Erie Counties.
cleveland Hopkins airport.·A
Over ioo flights were canstate of emergency was celled at Cleveland Hopkins
declared In Cuyahoga, Huron Airport . The Red Cross
and Erie counties.
shipped cots and blankets w
High winds witll gusts up w tile airport and set up a
35 miles an hour swept snow. nurses station.
onw roads In fender high
Officials in the Cuyahoga
drifts from Mahoning County County community of Brook
in eastern Ohio aloog Lake
Park set up emergency acErie to Erie county in north - commodations for stranded
central Ohio.
motorists at the city's old
Hundreds of schools were
recreation center and more
lJnlled Presalllternattoul

than 200 people stayed there Guard got t~or 20 out of theJv
overnight.
cars last rught usmg fetfi'.
- The Cuyahoga County she- wheel vehicles ~nd jeeps."
riff's office said two
"They took them to various
Cleveland area men died of homes in the area and to local
heart attacks while shoveling police stat ions," Derv)'
snow.
said.
.
)
The main problem facing . " It 's , · tetrib le,
just
rescue operations ":as the terrible," said a sheriff 's
continual drifting of snow.
dispatcher at the Erie&gt;County
''There are cars all over the sheriff's office in Sandusky.
place," said ·warrensville "We took a lot of them off of
Heights Police Chief Marvin route 250. There are over 50
Grossman. "We can't even cars abandooed out there."
get tnw trucks in to move · "The roads are all snow
them."
,
covered and plugged up but
Huron County Deputy good;" said Lake County
Sheriff Jalnes Dervy said sheriff's deputy Chuck
"cars are abandooed all over Panico. "We have dozens and
the area" a.nd " the Natiooal
(Continued on page 10).

FUN IN SNOW - Despite icy cold winds which senl
Ule snowfall. into drifts, sleigh riding became a diversion

among UlC 6'ow1gcr

St•t

Monday wtwm schools were

rtismissed in Md ~s Cmmty dut~ to weuther ronditions.

·;:~W:::;~~::::::::~::::;;;:;:::::::::::o;~;:~:~:;:?.;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:;

!News.
. . in Briefsl•
•
•

•

By United PresslnteroiiUonal
WASHINGTON - DAILY COBALT RADIATION
treaiments for.a malignant tumor on his left vocal cord will
keep Supreme Court Justice William ·-Brennan, 71, . off the
bench for the rest of this month . The justice's condition was
disclosed Monday when the Supreme Court 'returned from a
four-week holidaY recess and Brennan was absent from his
usual seat at the right of Chief Justice Warren Burger.
Meanwhile, Justice Harry Blackman, 69, returned w the
bench Mooday for the firsi time since undergoing surgery in
mid-November for cancer of tile prostate: A court spokesman
said doctors sre hopeful the radiation. treatments will
completely cure Brennan, a liberal who has served longer on
tile court tllan any other current member.
Spokesman Barrett McGurn said the treatments were
started Dec. 22after a biopsy earlier in the month "tevealed a
small squamous cell carcinoma- a malignant tumor - of the
left vocal cord."
CINCINNATI - FEDERATED DEPARTMENT
Sl'ORES, Inc., officials announced Monday that Fred Lazarus
III will hecome a vice president in Federated's corporate&lt;!
office.
He will resign a post he has held for tile past -13 years as
chairman and chief executive officer of Shillitn's, the
Cincinnati division of Federated. Lazarus, 65, has been
associated with Shlllito's for 43 years. Edward H. Selonick,
current president of Shillito's, will su&lt;;eeed Lazarus. StePhen
A. Glassman, now Sl)illll&lt;&gt; 's vice president and general
merchandise manager of hard lines, will become president.

VOL. XXVIII

NO. 187

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thursday through
Saturday, ·B chance of so ow
or snow flurries each day .
Highs will he iD the upper
2ts or low 30s Tburoday and
lu \be 30s Friday and
Saturday. Lows will be In
the teens early Thursday
and between 15 and %5 early
Saturday.

POMEROY :MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TUESDAY, JANUARY 10, 1978

Wells is

·By JOHN T. KAOY
'
" We have asked for a
'
United Press International
curtailment of usage by ali of
1 The J&gt;umcroy office or the Ohio Power
Co , warned
Frozen coal stockpiles cou- our eustome rs," said Corn~­
·today of lh~ severe clectrh- puwer supply pr11blcm that
pled with sutrzero weather " We are experiencing major
has de\'Cli1pcd as a result of severe cu ld wea ther, Inability
wday forced two of Ohio's problems. We have instituted
h• get cual into the puwer plants due to freezing tondltluus,
majoc utilities into "critical " a 2.~ percent across the board
and loss of capaeHy bcC"ause of fur('ed unit uutoge~.
supply situations and forced v9ltage reduction .''
Tu help ease the prublern Ohio Power urges all Its
two other utilities to institute
" It is not a problem for us
custmners, in homes, factories, stores, and everywhere power cutbacks:.
right now," said a spokesman
tu reduce their usage of electric puwer In every possib le
LANCASI'ER, OHIO- MORE THAN 100 families in the
· RACINE - Racine town
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio for CEI which serves most of
way. Please avoid using SU('h appliances IL~ clutltlos
Sugar Grove-Rockbridge area of Fairfield and Hocking Council Friday night elr:cted Electric Co. and Toledo the Cleveland area . "But I
He nr y Well s, vctc run
washers, dishwashers, dothes dryers, and ranges ; turn
counties faced the prospect Monday night of eyacuation from Albert Hill, Jr., 1ts president Edison botn said they were know talks are being held to
Meigs
County Conunlssluner,
uff wmccessary lighting, and turu down clcclrlc heating.
their cold, dark homes . Nearly two-thirds of Fairfield County and retaoned Frank W. Porter ,. experiencing a ••critical" discuss what we might do if it
was elected president und
Please cuoperate nuw by reducing the use of
was thrown into darkness by . a South Central Power Co. as solicitor.
. .
power shortage .
• .
becomes a problem."
James Roush, vice president
eleCtricity. By dving this everyone can help prevent Lhc
problem diagnosed ooly v~guely as generator trouble. .
Mayor Charles Payles
Dayl&lt;&gt;n Power &amp; Light and
Charles
Carter,
a
power sup_ply problem from hec.,mlng ~rlllcol and
when the boa rd or t:nunty
· At ·g :30 p.m:'some residents had ·already been four hours name~ members of two Ohio
·power
co .. · spokesman for Ohio ' EdisOn
perhaps avoid possible interruption to cle&lt;:trlc service.
co mmissioners organl?.e d
Without power, and South Central representatives said it could standmg committees, on headquartered in Canton, which serves about 700,000
Monday evening. Jt was the
Ohl" P"wer will keep the public lnfnrmcrl thr.,ugh
tske another four to five hoUrs to restore service. Fairfield fmance, Maxme Wingett, both said the said they were customers, said "we are tight
annuuncements uUtil the ·problem Cases .
third consecutive year Wells
County Sherifrs deputies said evacuation, especial!~ of the Earl Cleland , and Harry experiencing problems with . but holding " . bu t he
ha s been cil-ctc-d president.
elde~ly, was being colisidered, but a decision was put off
Wtllfo~d, and the street meeting electric supply emphasized "we are looking
Th e board re-uppointed
because of icy temperatures and bad road conditions that commtltee, Albert Hill, demands but said the at the situation hourly."
Mary Hob•tettcr its clerk,
would hamper any evacuation effort.
Clarence Bradford and Ben situation was not yet , Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio,
Jumes Cornell as courthouse
Petrel. .
,
.
critical.
which serves customers in 25
ouo
tudian. and Everett J .
WASHINGTON - HAMILTON JORDAN, President
Filing ror dissolution·wcre Holmes
Alfred Ly~ns, Pollee Chtef,
Dayton Power &amp; Light central Ohio counties, said it · Barbara Smilh,' Mid apiary inspoctor.
Carter's tOp aide, and his wife Nancy are separated,the couple presented h1s annual report Instituted a five percent cut- had asked all industrial and · ·.- dleport, has filed suit against Jean Hllodes , Cheshire. and
The
commissioners
did not
has announced. "We have decided to se])Bfate. We know that which showed that 106 arrests ~ck and Ohio Power Co. business customers to " im· Gary Michael Smith, Mid- Je rry
Wyn
Rhodes , reach a dt.ocision on the apour families and our friends will understand and respect our were
Co nni e
A, pointment of a dog warden.
mad~,
$3,615 .90 Wday instituted a . voltage mediately" curtail electricity dlcport , for a limonY. an d Ga llipolis;
mutual decision," the lrlef announcement said Monday. They collected m fmes and 1,426 cutback of _ per cent.
Swisher,
Rt.
1,
Middleport
by
percent
because
of
C
US\ody
of
children
In
Meigs
50
25
The. board appointed the
were married in 1970. They have no children.
and Melvin fl . Swisher, same following to the Community
miles w~re traveled. .
h i 0
E d i s 0 n , fr ozen coal stockpiles.
Common Pleas Court.
0
The irreverent, tun4oving Jordan, who often wears casual
Council warned res1dents headquartered in Akron, said
Toledo Edison said it had
The Jaymar Coal Co., Rt. 1, address.
Improvement CQrp ., Henry
clothes to the White House, drew wide attention in Washington th~t dogs will not he per· It" had a "tight capacity asked for "voluntary " Cheshire filed suit in the
Well s.
Bernard ~' ultz,
gossip circles in t11e past few weeks for a remark he reportedly nutted to run loo~e. If n?tt1ed situation.. while Cleveland cutbacks at the present time amount of $20,500 against G.
Howa'rd
J., rank , Eleanor
made at a recent party given by ABC anchorwoman Barbara up, warrants w1ll be 1ssued Electric Illuminating and because it was not getting c. Towing, Point Pleasant
Hobson
,
E.
F. Robinson and
Walters. Jordan is said to have tugged at the bodice of the and arrests of owners made. Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric electricty from its major for damages as a result of an
Vernon
Weber
.
FIVE KltLED
Egyptian ambassador's wife and said he always had wanted to Dogs picked up without tags said tlley had 00 problems at suppliers.
.
accident on April 8, 1974 on
Appoi
nt
ed
to the TB
TEHRAN, !run [UP!)
see the Pyramida. There l)as been speculation recently on how wtll be taken. to the dog the present time . ·
" Weare ina very bad, very SR 7 two and one-half miles
Association
Board
of
long he will remain in the White House.
pound.
Jack Corns, a spokesman critical situation ," sa id Jack north of the Meigs-Gallia line. Police shot and killed at least Tru,tees we" Howa rd BirchA letter ":as read fr?m for Ohio Power which serves Dyer, ·a spokesman for
Yvonne Bareswilt, Mid- five . anti - ~ o vernm e nt fi eld, Marie Blrchfleld,
COLUMBUS- Sl'ATEWIDE PUBLIC FORUMS will be
~emonstrators in a university
held soon by the State Board of Education which wants to find Buckeye H1lls .Plannmg customersin _53 counties,said Toledo Edison which serves dleport. filed suit in the tuwn south of Tehran in the Thelnw Dill, Elizabeth
out what parents, teachers and·administt'awrs thin)t minimum group tn r~gard to possible it is part · of the American customers over 2,500 sQuare amount of $1,000 against bloodiest street vio lence Cutl er , Jam es
Roush,
grants available for VIllages. Electdc Power system and miles of northwestern Ohio . Mindy • Davis Seymour,
competency expectations ahould be for Ohio students.
Charles
Riffle
,
Mrs.
Dwight
since the Shah of Iran's visit
Recommendations on a minimum competency program The;e will be a meeting Jan . that the system is operating "We have asked all of our Middleport, for damages as a to Washington last Novem- Wallace. Mrs. . B•uce May,
will be submitted to tile state board and to the education 12, m P~meroy which Mayor at " 38 percent of its customers to ' conserve result of an accident Jan. 8, ber, officials said today.
Mrs. Mildrt.! Betting and
Pyles will. attend .
generating ability."
(Continued on page 10)
1978 in Middleport.
commltt.eesof the State Senate and House by July I.
Dollie Hayes.

Hill elected

president

president of
Racine council

of board

Court actions instituted

ROME - U. S. AMBASSADOR RICHARD GARDNER

· Auditor won't
pay any bills
without funds

imminent fall nf the Italian government. The governinent of
Christian Democrat Prime Minister Glullo Andreotti is
expected w collapse within the next few days when the
powerful Communist Party withdraws its indirect support.
The Communists have kept Andreotti's minority
government in power for 17 months by abstaining •in key
parliament votes. Leftist factions · within tbe party have
bitterly criticized the Communist leadership for what they call ·
"this collusion with an inefficiept and corrupt government."

Meigs County government
, departments out of funds
before the end of a year ·
should not expect the county
auditor, Howard Frank, to
"write checks fn payment or
thei r bills . the auditor

.

-Ice,--snow-eause
two collisions
Two citations were Issued
by Meigs County Sheriff
James J . Proffitt's depart·
ment by deputies who In·
vestlgated two accidents
Monday.
'
The first accident occurred
at Racine on SR 124, at 9:39
a.m. when an auto driven by
William L. Foster, 45, Rt. 2,
Racine, was traveling north
near the north corporation
limit (downriver side) and
came upon a vhelcle parked
partially ill the highway.
Due to the snow anq lee on
the ro8d bis only coolce was
to go left of center., In the
meantime another vehicle
was coming upriver on SR 124
driven by Richard R. Smith,
211, Middleport. He observed
the auto partially parked on
tile roadway, also·the Foster
auto, and In attempting to
avoid colllslon, and due to
1110w and Ice, his auw went
off the road on the right .
Fostm;'s and Smith's vehicles
aJilded.
.

.
$4'93
'695 SHIRTS..................
,
s895 SHIRTS...................'633
s1095 SHIRTS ... -...........s773 ·
s1295 SHIRTS .... :........... ~13
s1495 SHIRTS ...............s1Q63

sl695 SHIRTS .........,..... ~!~
·Also Sale Priced Our Men's Long Sle.e ve Western Shirts-·and Knit· Shirts.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
•'

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

C&amp;SOE in critical
electricity shortage

fiew to Washmgton today for White House consultations on the

.33.

NOW OPEN

'

commented today .

SWORN IN -These four councilmen took their oath of office to new

terms on the Middleport Village Coqncil Monday night. Receiving their

Mullen , Marvin Kelly and Dewey Horton. King. Kelly and Horton are
incttmbents elected to new terms last falL Mullen is a new council
member.

There · was moderate
oath ftom Mayor Fred Hoffman , II&lt;&gt; r, were Allen Lee King, Charles
damage to the Foster vehicle,
a 1971 Olds and heavy
damage to Smith's 197~
Chevy tw&lt;Hioor. ·
Robert Jennings Arlx, 52,
Miami, Fla., was cited for
psrking his auto on the
roadway. He had been
By Bob Hoeflich
mental services, $66,720.
- personal services, $10,000; fund - payment of prindpal,
. operating the vehicle parked ···'
An appropriations
Security of persons and other expense, $53,100, total, $5.000; payment of interest,
at the accident scene.
$1,800; other, $500, total,
The second accident oc- resolqtlon providing for property - police depart- $63,100.
Cemetery operation and $7,300.
curred around 11:10 a.m. on expenditures of $546,075 in ment, personal services,
Meter deposit fund - other
US 33 at the Dale Hart 1978 was approved when $34,500; other, $20,746; total maintenance - Personal
$2,500. ·
expenses,
driveway. Warren J . Bar- Middleport VIllage Council for police; $~5,248; fire services, $7,780; other,
Federal
Revenue Sharing
' nhlll, 46, Rt. I, · Guysville, met In regular session department : personal ser- $3,865; total $11,845.
Other
expenses,
Fund
vices,
$942;
other,
$5,080,
Administration
water
Mqnday
night.
.
.
traveling south In a 1973.Ford
$18,000.
Breakdown
of
the
funds
$8,022;
total
for
security
personal
services,
$24,600;
total,
truck owned by the Talbott
Anti-recession fund - other
, of persons and property, debt service, $36,570 ; other.
Drllllng Co., Chesterhill, was appropriated includes:
expenses, $2,000.
General governmental $61,270.
$26,430; total, $87,600.
unable to stop and collided
Preceding the meetin g,
Leisure time activities Sewer Construction with a vehicle driven by services - mayor: personal
Mayor
Fred Hoffman gave
Royal Jerome Cook, 71, services, $2,MIO; other, t5,800, parks and playgrounds: capital outlay, $125,000.
the
oath
to four council
Administration sewage Hemlock Grove. Cook bad total $8,300; clerk-treasurer: personal services, $4,~00;
members,
who
are starting
· backed into the highway · personal services, $2,500; other, $11,650i total, $18.150: · personal services, $19,500;
full
terms
of
office.
They are
Community environment debt service, $24,360; other,
while attempting to make It other, $2000; . total, $4,500;
Charles
Mullen,
a new
aollcltor:
personal
services,
·
planning
commission,
other
$28,930;
total,
$7.2,790.
up a slick driveway. Cook
member,
and
incwnbents,
$2,000;
council:
personal
expenses,
$500.
Total
$500.
Policeman's
Relief
and
was·cited by Lt. Mike Zirkle,
Street lights - total, · Pension Fund - other ex- Dewey Horton , Allen Lee
for falling to yield right of services, $1,008; buildings
King and Marvin Kelly . Kelly
and miscellaneous: $50,912. $12,000.
. pense, $1,500.
way.
Total for general gqvern•
Street Mainten~ce Fund • General bond retirement was reel"'\ted president of

Appropriation approve(J
council.

The December report of
Mayor Hoffman showing
receipts of $2,016.70 in fines
and fees and $156 in merchant
police collections for a total of
$2,172.70 was approved and a
payroll ordinance W!IS passed
which makes provisions for
health insurance for some
village employes. Those
already having insurance
coverage will receive pay
increases .

Council discussed a request
from the village •cemetery
trustees suggesting that the
cost of cemetery lots and
holiday burials be increased.
The matter was tabled until
(Continued o~Jlllle 10)

These departments should
not ·ex ceed their ap·
propriatlons or · anticipated
revenues in spending during
a business year, the auditor
said. They are advised of the
amounts appropriated at the

first of each .year.
" Departments

expecting

the Meigs County Auditor to
write checks when lhelr funds
are exhausted should elect .an
auditor who. will do that/'
Frank commented.
Meantime, the budget
commission coJTiposed of

Frank, the county prosecutor
Rick Crow, and the county
treas~rer, George Collins
wa s in session today'
establishing appropriations
for 1978.

Weather
Partly cloudy tonigl&gt;t , low
between zero and flve above.
Partly sunny Wednesday,
highs in the lower 20s .
Probablllty of precipitation
30 peroent today, 10 percent
tonight and Wednesdav.

"

...

�•
3-The Da~v Sentu,.l Middleport P m er ) 0
2 _ TheDa lySentmel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Tuesday Jan 10 1977

Chill holds from Rockies east
By ANDREW A YEMMA
United Prets lnternatlunal
Flesh fr eezmg arac cold
covered most of the nat10n
east of the Rock es mday
producmg energy shortages
threatenmg delicate CitrUS
crops and revJVmg rnemor es
of the biller record-setting
wllller of 1976-77
Exposed flesh may freeze
w1thln one mmute warned a
N$ll0nal Wea th e r Service
off c•al n Er e Pa He
cautioned res dents to dress
as though the r lives
depended an II
1 he a rctic blast was
a~co mp a med
by nea r
blizzard conditions m a swath
from the Great Lakes to New
England
Flas h flood
producmg ra ns preceded the
system m the Northeast
Heavy snows anu nd ated
ind ana and M ch ga n and
t' 1r
zero temperatures
extended mw the Deep South
[r the West an Alaskan
s orm generated high t1des
and sheets of ram batten g
the Ca ltforn a coastline and
ra agmg the piCturesque old
C p lola P1er Monday
As the nercury plummeted
a ~d
energy
demands

mcreased the Tennessee
Valley Aullwnty declared a
power emergency and cut
voltage to liS overtaxed
po~er

system

Conswners

Power Co m Jackson Mich
mvoked a 5 percent brownout
on ts 1 2 million electriC
customers A natural gas
cutoff m Earle Ark caused
a br ef run on electr c heaters
and wood burmng stoves m
the to"n of 2 500
Anytime
we
get
extremely cold weather
we re gotng w have problems
th s wmter sa d spokesman
Lee Sheppeard of the 'IV A
which has exper enced two
power emergencies m the last
three months Customers
to
cut
were
asked
consumption for the next few
da) S
In Ch icago where w nd
weary res dents l'ompared

Monday s 44 below zero
"mdch 11l mdex to last
wmter s once n-a-century
cold spell natural gas
consumptiOn was only 2 5
percent less than the all-Ume
lugft set oo Jan 16 1977
Wmd s up to 60 knots
wh pped waves on Lake
M ch ga n a nd

spret~d

ar

M"

M1cJngan and Indiana where
more than a foot of snow and
near bllnard conditions
paralyzed port1ons of both
states Gusts up to 50 mph
blew the 16 mches of snow
which fell oo South Bend
Ind 1nto msurmountable
drifts and forced the closmg
of the UmverSlty of Notre
Dame
Bl zzard warnmgs were
1ssued along the coast of Lake
SUpertor m Wisconsin and
Mmnesota Monday mght
Travelers adv1sor1es for
snow dnftmg snow 1cy
roads h1gh wmds and b Iter
cold were posted in all areas
downwmdoftheGreat Lakes
through the Ohio Valley mw
the Northern and Central
Appliachians and onto the
Northeastern coastline
Almost 3\'z mches of ram m
eastern Mame preceded the
onslaught of snow and b1tter
cold and caused flash flood
warnings Monday mght
Flood warrungs were also
posted for central and
western Connecticut on the
Rar tan R1ver m northern
New Jersey a nd on the
Chemung R1ver m upstate
New York

Full parity would wreck family fanning

Zero
readings
were
predicted overmght mto
Alabarila and a hard freeze
was forecast for northern and
central Florida threaterung
the c1trus crop that Ill stUI
recovermg from a diSaStrous
freeze last wmter
Some citrus farmers pre
pared to hre up 011 burrung
stoves and smudge pots w
keep their trees warm enough
In avmd damage But Orange
County agr cultural
extensiOn agent Henry
Swanson sad many farmers
no longer could afford the
cost of fuel for the frwt

warmers
1 heard one oldumer say
that the only thmg he lit up
was a cigarette when he
looked out the wmdow
Swanson sa•d
In California about 100
sold~er&amp; from Fort Ord
rushed w the t1de-battered
coast to protect $100 000 to
$200 000
beachfront
residences from ocean swells
that swept over the sea walls
Old Capitola P1er was m
danger of collapse as logs
debr s and concrete swept
down the mam street of town

HOUSTON ( UPI ) - Fam1ly
farmmg could he vtrtually destroyed
if the government g1ves striking
farmers a guartn~d Door of 100
percent of par1tfun4er farm prices
Agnculture Secretary Bob Bergland
S81d Monday
The program could be operated
only w1th a government run
marketmg control system that
would be an admllllstrallve and
bureaucratiC
monstrosity
Bergland s81d m a speech prepared
for the annual conventiOn of the
American Farm Bureau FederatiOn
The proposed guarantee of h1gh
supports would be poht1cally
unacceptable w most Americans
because of high costs and such a
program would dr1ve already high
farm land prices to astronomical
he1ghts and v1rtually elunmate farm
fam~y agriculture Itself Bergland
added
The secretary sa1d he supports the
coost1tullonal r1ght of a farm strike
movement to protest low pr1ces He
praised stnkers for focusmg pubhc

attention on the plight ot many
farmers and sa1d farmers are
entitled w a 'fatt return
But m one of his bluntest rebuttals
to the strike ,!ll(lVel)'lent to date
Bergland srud \bat while the nation
has a responSlbihty to keep the farm
economy prbducllve and strong the
Carter admm•stratian stands by Its
pohcy
that 11 IS not poSSible and
not the role of the federal
governmen~o, to guarantee all
farmers a pfofit year after year
The full par~ty pr1ces demanded
by the strike movement would gave
farm commodities the same
pw-chaSillg power they had - m
companson wtth the cost of thmgs
farmers buy - m the 1911}-14 period
more than 60 years ago
Bergland also told urged the Farm
Bureau to recogmze the poht1cal
reahlles which he sa1d make 1\
necessary for farmers to cultivate
consumer all es m order to mamtam
farm pollllcalmfluence m Congress
The Agriculture Secretary said

Mayor reviews 1977 activity

Ice faulted in 11 traffic mishaps
Two persons were m]ured
neither seriOU5Iy none of 12
t aff c ace dents mvesllgated
Monday by the Oh1o State
H ghway Patrol Icy road
cor d1t ons were blamed n 11
of the accidents

The m]ur es occurred on
SR 7 at n 1lepost 13 m Me gs
County where Elbert P
Ca ns 36 B dwell gomg
north lost control of h1s car
"h ch skidded on the cy
pavement gomg nto a d tch
then overturned Cams and a
passenger James A Cams

of the day for Adk ns At 10 15
a m on US 35 west of SR 160
Adk ns attempted to tum left
as a veh cle drtven bv

R chard A Ross
28
Gall1pohs attempted to pass
There was moderate damage
m that ace dent
A s ngle car accident oc
curred at 7 34 p m on SR 7
four m les north of US 35
where James G Splete 35
Gall1pohs gong south lost
control of hiS vehlc)e wh1rh
ran off the left s1de of the
highway over an embank

!5 B dwell complamed of

ment There was 111oderate

There was

damage
No charges were filed nan
ace dent at 5 05 p m on SR 7
and US 35 The patrol s31d an
auto dnven by Kathryn P
Dav dson 18 Gallipolis slid
on 1cy pavement strlkmg the
rear end of a vehtcle drtven
by Sherman R Yates 43
Wh eelersburg There was

lllnor UlJUr es

moderate damage
Horace R AbbQtt 48
Ptnneroy was c ted to
Gallipolis Muruc pal Court
for fa lure to stop w thm the
a ss ured

clear

distan ce

follow ng an acc1dent at 6 20
p m Monday on SR 160 at old
SR 160 The Abbott veh1cle
struck the rear end of a car
t urn ng left dnven by
Mel bern R Adk ns 19
B dwell There was moderate
damage
It was the second ace dent

m nor damage
A s m lar acctdent oc

curred hve mmutes earl er
on US 35 west of SR 7 when an
auto ctr ven by Ruby M
Jordan 37 Gall polls Ferry

Law.ence E lamb M D

Alcohol adds to heart s work

makes a d fference

what

tranqu hzer a per son IS
takmg w1th alcohol l1br wn

s sometunes used n treatmg
the anxiety that alcohol cs
have when th ey stop
dnnkmg partiCularly durmg
w thdrawal I lhmk your
husband should not use
alcohol at all - not even one
drmk before dmner
Why Be cause a lcohol
mcreases the work of the

heart and ncreases the
chances that he w II have
madequate blood flow to h1s
alread) damaged heart
muscle There was a good
study reported last year by
doctors at the Umvers ty of
Cahforma at Irvine wh1ch
showed that alcohol act ually
mcreases the work the heart
must do
That w11l decrease the
amount of phys cal work your
husband can do In the study I
nen\loned patients w th
angma pam from heart
d1sease developed elec
trocardiographlc changes of
rnadequate circulation sooner
durmg exertion after alcohol
than without alcohol
That s not all The alcohol
acts like an anesthetiC and
the usual warn ng of chest
pam to tell a patient he 1s
overdomg 11 may not occur
Bes1des these Immediate
dangers of alcohol m people
who have heart pam there Is
the problem of calone con
trol Alcohol has tearly as

s desw1ped

causmg

mmor

No one was m)ured

1n

a

smgle car accident at 2 35
p n on SR 160 four tenths of
a mile north of milepost 8
The patrol sa1d Elaine M
Matson 37 Ewmgton lost
control of her car on the 1cy
pavement Her vehicle slid
off the h1ghway stnkmg an
Ohio Bell Telephone Pole
There was heavy damage
At the same tlffie an ac
c dent occurred on SR 7 m
AddiSon Twp
where a
veh cle dr ven by Floyd H
Cleland 20 Cheshire pulled
mto the path of a truck dr~ven
by Clarence A Patterson 28
Calhpohs There was mmor

HEALTH
By Lawrence Lamb MD
DEAR DR LAMB - Would
you please say somethmg
about nux ng t ranquiliZers
and alcohol
M) husband age 57 IS
recover ng fro I a coronary
and the doctor has prescribed
I br un three a day 'ft&gt;e
loctor also told h m a dnnk
before meals s permiSSible
However
my husband
sometlllles has three dnnks
and the combmallon of drugs
and alcohol has me worraed
He also has ang na and has
med1cat1on for th s as well
DEAR READER - It

struck the rear end of a car auto operated by Arnold B
dnven by W lilam D Adams Stump 26 Rt 1 Galbpol s
At 2 am on SR 7 tn Addison
25 of Gallipolis
Heavy damage resulted ma TWp Debra Roll ns 20
colliSion at 3 50 p m on SR 7 Cheshire lost control of her
north of SR 218 n Gall a car on the cy highway Her
veh•cle left the roadway
County
State troopers sa d veh cle stnkmg a s1gn post
dr ven by Marv n W Potts
30 Fa~rfleld lost control on
the 1cy h1ghway and struck a
car dmen by Harold R
Erwm 59 Crown C ty
At 3 15 p m on US 35 west
of RIO Grande Veh cles
dr ven by Floyd E Walker
71 Jackson and Alva G
52
Jackson
Chance
damage

man} ca lor es as rat and

after drmkmg a person Is not
l kelv to slick to a d1et
Modern ev dence shows that
alcohol has no value m heart

damage
No CitatiOn was Issued m an
ac&lt;ldent at 6 50 a m on
Kemper Hollow Rd north of
SR 160 The patrol sa1d a
vehicle dnven by Carl
Martm 23 Gall polls slid on
the ICY highway strlkmg an

d1sease of any kmd and can

be harmful
I am sendmg you The
Health Letter number l-4
Alcohol WISkey Gm Vodka
Rum Wme Beer Others who
want t hiS tssue can send SO

cents w1th a long stamped
self addressed envelope for I
to

me

n care

of

th1s

newspaper P 0 Box 1551
Rad1o C1ty Station New
York NY 10019
DEAR DR LAMB
My
husband had a vasectomy
ahout two years ago then had
a reversal operation per
formed which was successful
Now we have agreed to no

more chi ldren for sure Can
another vasectomy have any
II effects on h1m or cause
unpotence " Would you adv1se
me to take the !mal step to
ster~lizat on'
DEAR READER - No a
second vasectomy would not
unpose any more nsk than
the first and t will not cause
Impotence It m ght be

harder to reverse It a second

lnfernat on a I
Hockey League
Un ted Press lnternat onal

North

Sag naw

23

W L T Pts
13 4 50

F nt

9

Pt Huron

6 12
2 20
0 18

Muskegon
Ka amazoo

south

14

4

42

8 .so
6 30
8 28

W l T Pts

Ft Wayne

To edo

6 10
4 13

1 43
9 37

M !waukee

3

10

36

I
9
6
Monday s Result

28

G

andRapds

15

M !waukee 4 G and Rap ds 2
Today s Games
No games scheduled
Wednesday s Games
Muskegon a Fo t Wayne
Toledo at M !waukee

Mondays
Ohto College

Basketba II Results

Untfed Press lnternat ona I
Dayton 53 Roanoke ( Va 22
xa .... e 07 John Ca ro n
N agar a 85 Cleveland S a e 82
Ashland BA Wash ngton &amp; Lee

77

t1me because of add tiona!

scare ussue and from your
letter plus others It seems to
me there are a lot of people
who do change their m nds A
new marnage loss of a child
or any number of thmgs
happen m life that cause
people to want another ch1ld
even when they think they are
absolutely sure they don t
So my adv1ce to you w1th
the track record would be to
use a temporary method of
b1rth control until you are
absolutely perfectly sure and
reSigned no matter what
re narnage or loss of all your
ch ldren that you would not
want any more pregnancies
Not ali operative reversals of
sterilizations m etther men or
women are successful by a lot
shot It should always be
undertaken as a permanent
form of birth, control

THE IJAJLV S£NTJNEL

DEVOTEDTOTHE
INTEREST OF
I\1EJGS.MAS0N AREA

CHESTER L. TANNEHIU.
ExO&lt; Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH
ctty Edllor
Published da ly exctpl &amp;I urdiy
b) The Ohio Valley Publishmg
Co n~ny Multimedlti Inc
1
COurt St Pomero) Ohio .S769
8113 ness Of e Phone m 2156
Ed ona Phone992 2 57
Se&lt;:ond class postage paid 1t
Pu lt oy Ohio
NilOilCI adt:LSJ!t
t:p£e
tclli e Wa t!
G iff th Company

Jn Bo nell and Gallagher D v
57 Thtrd Ave New York N V

001

Subscr p on ales Oe ered by
earre whe ea a abe S entsper
week Ry Moto Route wht! \': artie
sen&lt;ke no a a ab ~ One month
JJ ~ By mHl 111 Oh o Hnd W Va
On Y a $22 00 Su:
on hs
J 50 Th ee
ontl s $7 00
Elsewhere $26 00 year S x mon hli
$13 50
Three nun ths S 50
Subsc p on prk m lutJ Su d&lt;~Y
Tunes-sen line

Salk to
test for
MS cure

INDIANAPOUS (UP!) Federal drug off1c als have
giVen Dr Jonas E Salk the
man who helped conquer
polio per!lllss on to lest a
new substance he developed
for treatment of persons
suffermg mulllple sclerosis
Ell L lly &amp; Co
an
lnd1anapohs-based
pharmaceullcal f~rm
s
prov dmg the test mater1als
to the Salk !nst tule at La
Jolla Cab!
Dr W !an_,.Shedden v1ce
pres dent of 'Lilly Research
Laboratones
cautioned
agamst persons suffenng
from
the
paralyzmg
neurological d1sease gammg
false hopes because of the
testmg
Shedden sa1d sc1ent sts
probably will not know for
several years whether tbe
substance llllt ally developed
by Salk n h1s Califorma
facllllles would be successful
m tteatmg hwnans Salk also
developed the fttst successful
vaccme agamst polm
Researchers say one m
every 20 000 Amencans
sulfers from MS The disease
usually s contracted by
persons 30 years old and
progresses 20 to 25 years unt I
the v1ctlm dies from an
Infection
Presently there IS no
elfect1ve treatment that
offers any long ume hope for
cure or provtdes assurances
the patient won t have a
progressiVe deterioration
Shedden sa1d
A Lilly spokesman sa1d
Salk asked h1s Indlllllapolls
based
pharmaceutical
manufacturer w refme the
substance and make it
su table for prehmmary
anunal stud1es
The Federal Food and Drug
Admm1strtation within the
past few months gave ts
approval for limtted clmtcal
tests m humans
Lilly ofhc als 1dent1f1ed the
substance as myelin bas1c
protem - taken from a p1g s
nervo~ system
The testing on a handful of
patients w1th MS will he
conducted by three West
Coast neurologists according
to Shedden
E:lch person participating
will be cautioned agamst over
optim sm While there may
be a chance of success there
also IS a poss1b1hty of no im
provement Shedden sa1d
The agent that Lilly and
Salk have been workmg wtth
has shown some prelilnmary
effectiveness m treating thiS
cond1t1on m amm$

ex

plamed William Cairns
L1lly s d1rector of public
relations However he sa1d
anunals never develop MS
but a Slffitlar cohdttion
Shedden sa1d sctentists
would need w attempt to
estabhsh a relahonsh•p
between the cond1t10n m
anlffials and MS

some critiCS charge he bas made his
department too consumer-orlen\A!d
But he replied reality demands
that farmers and their organtzations
must learn In count In Ccngress
what better pohtical allles do we
have than the consumers
Bergland sa1d the adrqinistration
IS pushmg a var1ety of programs
auned at expanding overseas sales
of Arnencan farm products He
added the admimstrauon and the big
farm orgamzation which had heen a
frequent cr1t1c of farm pohcy under
past DemocratiC rule agree on
opposmg any future embargoes on
farm exports except m cases of
genume national emergency
The secretary sa1d he understands
farmer resistance to some
regulatory proposals But the pubUc
IS demandmg protection lor the
envu-onment and health and a
Uvable balance must be found
between the need !Of safety and
farmers needs for chemicals to
produce enough food he sa1d

CoWboys pixied by broncomania

Today's

Sport Parade
By MILTON RIOIMAN
UPI Spot11 Editor
NEW ORLEANS (UPIJ - W1th th05e who know theufootball the stncUy neutral ones like the players coaches and
scouts among the other 26 NFL teams there s not much
question over who should come out on top m SUnday s Super
Bowl XII
Almost w a man they say 11 should be the Dallas Cowboys
Taking mto cons deration all the factors the Cowboys are
the best team m the league accordmg to not only such a
generally unbiased group as the playe.-s coaches and scouts
With the other clubs but accordmg to the oddsmakers as well
The one thmg the Denver Broncos have gomg for them IS
emotion which 1s for the most part an mtang1ble but can
some\trnes make a difference m the outcome
Probably the most notable example of that was Super Bowl
01 m 1969 when the Balltrnore Colts were I!J1&gt;mnt favorites
over the New York Jets Paymg absolutely no attention to that
Joe Namath got up on h1s feet at a soc1al funct10n a couple of
days before the game and gave h s personal guarantee the
Jets would wm To make sure everyone got 11 he repealed h1s
assurance the foUowmg day
It almost drove me up a wall when I heard what he sa1d
remembers Weeb Ewbank who was the Jet~ coach then but
the net result of Joe s statement was that 1t fired up the rest of
our players and caused them wperform w th more emotiOn
The 1969 Jets had ample emotion to begm w th but the
present Broncos may have even more thanks wthe kmd of fan
support that transcends any other m Super Bowl history
Mindful of the orange Jerseys wor~ by the Broncos Denver
fans have VIrtually elllllmated every other color from thett
spectrum In the1r own smglepurposed way they ve done more
for the orange than even Anita Bryant
Until thiS season Orange Crush was merely a soft drmk
Now 1t shows s1gns of turmng mto a legend because that s how
all Denver fans refer to the Broncos defensive umt wh1ch
could be the best m football and IS essentially responSible for
gettmg the team th1s far
All th1s of course draws only amused smiles from the Cow
boys who feel football games are won on the f1eld not m p zza
parlors or by wearmg Tshttts But Tom Landry the Dallas
coach always keeps talking about an added dunens10n and
11 s obvtous that Broncomama as the Denver fans call 1t "" t
hurtmg theu- team a b1t
Much of Denver s emotiOn s I ed m closely w th Craig
Morton a 34-year-old 13-year NFL veteran who was w1th
Dallas nearly 10 seasons lost h1s JOb there In Roger Staubach
then went to the New York G1ants where the fans booed him
out of town and fmally came to the Broncos w1th whom he s
Ughtmg up the sky mthe twi11ght of h1s career
All the Broncos ask of Mortnn s that he not g1ve up the ball m
thett temtory They look to hun to g1ve them good f1eid
poSitiOn and feel the Orange Crush thett defens ve umt Will do
the rest What 1t amounts to 1s that Red M ller the Broncos
head coach has such unbounded fa~lh n hiS defense he
believes 11 can force the necessary turnovers for Denver to
WUI

Landry and the Cowboys are aware that the Broncos will try
n the hope of taking
advantage of some sudden qu1ck stnke wh1ch could turn the
game around early
The Cowboys have a strong defense of their own They have
some emot10n also despite the fact thiS makes the1r fourth tnp
w the Super Bowl and 11 1sn I someth ng altogether new for
them the way It IS for the Broncos
Denver fans make a b•g pomt over the fact the Broncos beat
Oakland and Pittsburgh -two of the NFL s toughest teams
tWice ap1ece th s season They gloat over the fact the Cowboys
defeated the Broncos only three weeks ago
Sometunes emotwn can make you lose s1ght of any number
of thmgs

w force them mto makmg early errors

Sports transactions
Bv Unhed P eu lnternat onal
Monday

NOW OPEN
I

GINO'S

Hockey
C eve and Traded r ght
wng Fed Ahe n and cen e
Ra ph K assen to Coo ado fo
gh w ng enter Chuck A na
son and gh w ng R ck Jodz o
Los Ange es
Acqu red eft
w ng Dannv Gran from Detro t
fo a h rd round draft cho ce
and tutu e cons de a ons
Baseball
Toronto
Named Dens
Menke to manage he
Dune
d n farm c ub n he F or da

s ~te

OF MASON
PHONE 773-5536·

Le~gue

Footbal
Gree Bay - Appo n ed D ck
Co ck d ec o
of pave
pe sonne
College
Kent Sta e Rex Hughes
es gned as head baske ba
coach and was rep aced by
M ke Boyd an ass stant under
Hughes

•

By GREG AIELLO
UPJ SJkJriS WI-tter
NEW ORLEANS (UPI )
To Ute supershttous the
Dallas Cowboys began theutrlp to the Super Bowl on an
ommous note
A bus carrying three
players two coaches and a
reporter hroke do&gt;m en route
from the Cowboys practice
field to the airport Monday
delaymg the flight to New

allow It to stay
By the tune the Cowboys
arnved 1n the cool 38-&lt;legret&gt;
weather 1t was dark But the
days problems d1dn t seem
to affect the players None
of that stuff bothered us
quarterback Roger Staubach
S31d
The Cowboys were qu et
and busmessllke an the II ght
a Dallas spokesman sa1d
Thev consider
t a

Orleans for 43 mmutes
And the Cowboys also were
flown n a plane pamled
orange
the Jrlffiary color
of Broncomama And one of
the three c1ty buses walling to
take the Cowboys to \hell'
hotel almost was taken away
because of the delay C1ty
transit off1c1als sa1d IIley
couldn t spare the third bus
any louger but a Dallas
official persuaded them to

busmess trip and that s the
way they act he said
Tie Co"boys mood was m
stark contrast to that of the r
the Denver
oppone nts
who arrl\ ed
Broncos
casually dressed nearly two
hours earher n an orange
plane With a bumper st1cker
next to the ~r reading
SUper Bowl or Bust
Broncos defensive end

r

Top-ranked Kentucky
rips Auburn quintet
United PreSBiotemallooal
It s
becommg
as
predictable as the weather
Top ranked Kentucky
rolled to Is lith stra1ght
Vlci&lt;Jry Monday n ght thts
time decunatmg Auburn 101
77 behind Jack G vens 25
po nts
Kentucky bUilt up a 1U
lead at the outset and then
proceeded to reel off another
11 m a row nudway through
the fir-st ball to take a 54-38

lead at the mtenruss1on
We played smart sa1d
Coach Joe Hall The players
did a lot of clever thmgs on
their own All of them are
tired but that was expected
after a tWo-game road tr p
The Tigers paced by Mike
M tchell closed to Within 10
pomts w1th 7 44 left m the
game but the Wildcats
caught hre agam and
dwnped m e1ght straight
po nts to end the rally and wm

Its
third
Southeast
Conference victory
In other games mvolvmg
top teams No 3 Arkansas
defeated Missoun-St Lou s
87 65
fourthranked
Marquette downed M1ssoun
70-52 and Prov dence beat
Brown 76-$
Desp te the absence of
sentor forward Marvm
Delph who was s1del ned
With a knee stram suffered m
Sundays game aga nst

Houston the Razo rbacks
coasted to their 13th
coo.secuttve VIctor) behind
Ron Brewer s 24 pomts
I was really unpressed
with thetr movement said
los ng Coach Chuck Sm t11
We d1dn I get to see Delph I hear he s a super player but l,lrewer took care f the
game early
Butch I ee wa s held
scoreless for the ftr sl t me
smce his freshman year but
the fourthranked Marquette
Warnors didn t have any
problems
n defeating
MISsoun for the1r fifth
straight v1ctoq while the
Tigers suffmc'&lt;l the r second
stra1ght h&lt; me loss
Provldent'e was led by
B.-uce Campbell who scored
16 pomts and Bill Eason who
added 14 IS the Fnars
ooosted the r record to 11}-2
ProVIdence led 38-Zl at the
half and mcreased Its leJid to
as much as 25 po nts n the
second half
In other ga mes Duke
crushed 1 eh1gh 105 63
F1or da beat Vanderbilt 67
65 MISSIIISIPP' downed
Georgia
75 6J
LSU
demolished 1ea,nessee 121
87 Duquesne beat West Vugmla 89-76 and Utah beat
Nevada Reno 80-70

Hockey warming up £Or
Stanley Cup playoffs
United Press Ioteroallonal
The real battle for the
Stanley Cup doesn t off c1ally
beg1n unt l the weather
warms up m the sprmg but
two of the teams most likely
In tangle m the playoffs are

makmg thmgs pretty hot
r ght now
The Montreal Canad ens
and Ph1ladelph1a Flyers
fought to a ~ be on Paul
Holmgren s lastsecond goal
Monday
allowmg the

Glenda Brown leads
Meigs girls to victory
In a makeup contest over
the weekend the Me1gs g1rls
basketball squad took an easy
65 48 wm over VISiting
Jackson
Led by Glenda Brown s 22
pomts and 14 rebounds the
local club was never
threatened After Jwnpmg
out to a 26 121ead at the end of
the f1rst period the hostesses
had the game won by gomg
mto the locker room at the
half leading 39 18
V1cky Epple also hit In
double figures for the wmners
wtlh 19 and had f1ve ass1sts
Jackson was led by Kun
Conley w1th 19 markers
reserves
The Me1gs
coached by Glerma Sprague
rolled to a 19 12 wm m a game
shortened to three quarters
Andrea R ggs had SIX pomts
wh ie Apr I Kmg led all

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

scorers with 13 to account for
aU the remamder of Me1gs

scormg
Woodyard
had
f ve
rebounds and K ng had four
asSistS G1bson and Jewell "
had four pomts each for the
losers

Next Me gs game IS Thursday when Waverly comes to
town No reserve contest Is
scheduled but the vars1ty tilt
w1ll start at 6 30 The box
score
MEIGS
Brown 11}-2 22
Howard l-G-2 Vauglian 3~
Epple 8-3-19 Wtlson :Hl-6 T
Ash 2-G-4 Chapman 1-()-2 S
Ash 1-G-2 Dyer 1-G-2 Totals
30-5~

JACKSON- Conley 8-3 19
Jewell 1-G-2 Massay 3-3 9
McDonald 4~ Brandt 3 1 7
Schmid I I 3 TotaLs 20-8-48

With

Caution

MoJO' H.....

Canad1ens to run their
unbeaten streak agalllSt the
Flyers to 10 games
Holmgren whu Wok a pass
Bob
from defenseman
Dalley beat Montreal goal e
Ken Dryden at 19 59 of he
ftnal pertod as both the red
and green ltght lit up at the
same tune Referee Wally
Harris ruled 11 a goal
however
f know we ll be there
S31d Flyer Coach Fred Shero
who admitted he was happy
to come out of the game with
one pomt The Canadiens lead
the NHL With 59 pomts and
the Flyers are close behind
With 56
It could have been the
Canad ens lOth stra ght
vlcwry over the Flyers but
Montreal Coach Scotty
Bowman said he wasn t
annoyed at h1s team s play
It s the breaks of the
game sa1d Bowman We
both played well and there
have been many games when
we ve beaten them m the
!mal mmutes
In other games Atlanta
defeated Toronto :&gt;-2 and
Pittsburgh downed the New
York Rangers :;.3
Flames 5 Maple Leafs 2
Leftw1nger
Bob
MacMUian s two goals led the
Flames over the Leafs
Defenseman Richard
Mulhern batted a puck out of
the air Into the net for what
proved wbe the wmnmg goal
at 5 41 of the second per od
Penguins 5 Rangers 3
Pete Mahovhch scored the
go-ahead goal m the second
penod and the Pengums
added three thtrd period
goals w down the Rangers
Bnan
Spencer
Russ
Jean
Anderson
and
Pronovost all tallied for
Pittsburgh In the final pertod

r------------,

:I
Pro
\l
Is
..l.! Il
,.. tant.ungs
NH L. Stand ngs
By Un ed Press nte nat onal

College scores
By Un tees Press. lnternar ona

East

Duquesne 69 w Va 76
LaSs e 91 He st a B7
N aoara as c eve s 82
Prov den ce 76 B own 58

Sa ed Hr 811 Assmpln 85
S Fran NY 07 R M s 90
S F !!In Pa 69 M gn S 68
S pp y R k 82 P Pa k 79
So Conn 89 Keene S 68
South
A bny S
J F V8 95
Augusta 7 UNC Ashv 62
Cn na y 79 N l ex St 0
Co umbus 87 Be y 72
D L pscmb 94 Wes ma M
Dav dson 86 Fu man 01
Duke 05 Leh gh 63
F o da 67 Vandy 65
N Ga 58 LaG enge 57
Ga Tech 94 So M ss 65
Mad son 76 Cha 67
Ken ucky 01 Aubu n 71
M sh
02 Jcksnv 80
M Nese 59 W s P ksd e 50
Me cer"77 F dnaS 4
M s:s 75 Geo g a 63
Mn ev o 75 Tl ladga 64
New Or n s 76 Ok c v n
UN C Cha 54 S A a 53

S h n Tech 95 Ga Co 8
E Ten n 66 Astn Peay 58
Tenn M n 82 D a S 7
UNC W m 73 Appy 70

n

Woffo d 82 P edmon
M dwes
B d y 90 W TelC S 67
C v S ck n 75 M on 63
Day on 53 Roanoke 22
De o 99 Oak and ..58
E
67 nd Cen 64
H sd e 49 Sg nw Va 44

Ma quett e 0 Mo 52
Me cy 66 Shaw 58
IWJ Ro a 7 Ky Wes 63
Rock o d 84 Ca hage 82
So
72 0 ek e 69
Wch a S 7 N M Sl 70
Xav e 07 J Ca r 72
Southwest
Ab Chrs8 E NM 6

A~87MOSL65

Bay or 77 TeM A&amp;M 6
LSU 2 Tennessee 87
Reg s 63 Sn a Fe co 60
sw Tex
D as B~p 59
5 M y s 7.4 S F Aus n 66
Texas Tec h 69 TCU 56
Tex Lu1h 79 Tex A&amp; 69
Xv e N 0 80 nd P due n

Pair etc D vis on

W L T Ph

You Could Be In
For A Big Loss!

Trouble Ahead'
Soc1al Securtly costs have
begun to outstrtp payroll
rece1pts The Conference
Board notes The Problem
the number of retired
benef1cranes 1s rlSmg faster
than the labor force 49
percent agamst 23 percent
between 1965 and 1975 W1th
thiS trend projected to con
t nue over the next 10 years
ncreases in the Social
Secunty tax rate or the
taxable earnmgs base could
be on the "'eoda

SURPASSES GOAL
COLUMBUS - The 1977
S1ght-&amp;ving Campaign of the
Oh1o Society for the
Prevention of Blindness
surpassed 1ts goal by $18 000
rolling up a total of $213 000
Bob Evans of Bob Evans
Farms Rio Gunde an
nounced today Evans was
campaign chatrman of the
statewide Society which Is
headquartered at 1500 W
Third Ave ColumbWI Last
years Sight Saving Cam
pa'8fl )'lelded l166 000

Is your present policy adequate~
If tt doesn t mclude substantial
theft coverage
you could be
mvttmg more trouble than you
reahzet See us for an update
Don't watt

Call Today

Downing Childs
Insurance Agency, Inc.
0

Ch cago

Vancouver

56

52
39

W L T P s
J 6 11
37
1 19 9 3

Los An 9,e es
P ttsbu~gh
Detro I
Wash ll!iflon

277559
7 14 8 42

s

Adams D v son

Boston
Buffa o

SpecUJl'

WLTPts

3 18 9
3 18
8 22 9

35
31

25

W L T Ph

25 8 6 56
23 7 9 55
Toronto
23 12 4 so
Cleve ! nd
1 25 4 26
Mond•y s Resu Is
P tsbu gh S NY Range s 3
Ph a 3 Mont ea 3 e
At ~n a S Toronlo 2
Tuesday s Games
NY Rangers at Bos on
Coo ado at NY sanders
Wetlnesd•y s G1mes
NY s anders at c eve end
Ph lade ph a at Ch cago
Co orado at At ~n a
Mon rea at P sbu gh
Detro t 11 Wash ng on
Los Ange es a Bu fa o
St Lou sat Vanq1uve
Toron o ll M nnesota

NEW YORK (UPI) - fhe
top seven places n t1 s
week s ratings remained.
unchanged from a week ago
Kentucky held onto ti e No
I spot w1th 39 f1rsl plat'e votes
and 417 pomts wh Je NorU
Carolina
Arkans s
Marquette UCI A Not c
Dwne and lncllana Slllte
followed n order
l.ouiSVIlle which sn tpped
Cmcmnata s home courl w1n
mng streak lust Saturday
night moved up one place to
No 8 w1th Syracuse dropp ng
a notch to No 9 Kansas holds
th&lt; No 10 spot
S x coaches from each of
the seven geographical a eas
of tile nalloo compr se the
UPI ratmgs board Each
week they vote on their lop 10
m1d pomts are a\loarded o n
t0-9~7~-3 2-1 bas1s for
votes from f1 st througl IOU•
Here by sections are the
l'OBches who com prase t1 e
UPI major college basketball
ratings board
EAST Lou Carnesecca St
John s
Tom
Penders
Tom Young
Columbia
Rutgers Jack Kraft Rhode
Island
Jack
Powers
Manhattan John Thompsc n
Georgetown
MIDWES r Johnny Orr

Cage ratings
NEW
U

n

YORK

ed

P

(UP

ess

n e

-. ThC
n11 one

Boa d
of
Co~ c es
co log e
baske ba rat ngs w h won os
eco ds
h ough
games o
Sunday
an 8 and numbe o
f s p ace vo es n paren hescs
Po nts
Tearn
4 7
Ken uckv (39 ( 0 0
2 No h Ca o na 12
336
3 A kansa s 0
12 0
179
.4 Ma que te 9
773
5 UCLA 1
2 1
6 No e Dame (7 '1
181
7 nd ana s
0 0
54
8 Lou sv e 9 2
1J9
9 Syracuse
I
07
0 Kansas
1
4B
1 M h gan S ( 0 l
25
12 Geo getown

a

0 2

M ch1gan Bub Ni chols
1oledo Digger Phelps Notre
Dame Ray Meyer DePaul
lex Wtntcr N rU wt.:asternl
Hank Raymonds Marquette
SOliTH Frw k McGuire
South Cnrohna Dean s n th
I efty
North Ca rolim
Dncseli Maryland C M
Hugh
Newton Alaba n1
Durham Florida Stale
Norman
Sloan
No lh
Carolina State
MIDI ANDS Joe Cipriano
Nebraska Norm Stewurt
M1ssuurl
Joe
Hull
Ke lucky
fed Owm s
Kansas Jack Hartman
Kansas State J"' Stowell
Ill ad ley
SOU'IHWESI Guy l.cwls
Houslo Ned Wulk Arlwna
State
Eddie
Sutton
Arkansas Ron Ekke1 West
I ex as State Fred Snowden
Anzona
!loy Danforth
l\dane
M 0 UNT AINS
J 1111
William s Colorado State
Jerry Tarkaman Nevada
Las Vegas Ken Hayes New
Mexico
State
Norm
Ellenberger New Mexico
Dutch Belnap Utah State
J1m Brandenburg Montana
PACIFIC
Bob Boyd
Southern Cal lorn a Marv
Wa shmgton
Harshman
D1ck Hart~r 0. egon Carroll
Williams Santa Clara Gary
Cunningham UCLA Bill
0 Coonor Seattle

70

13 nd ana
2
.4
4 Ho y Cross 9
3
15 1 e) Prov dence( 10
o
15
c) NewMex co 97
a
15
e Nebra sk~ 2 )
10
18 North ca o nes
o
9
9 C n ~ nna
83
8
20 Texas (10 2
6
Note By ag eemen w h he
Coaches
Ame an Baske ba
Asso a on earns on proba on
by he NCAA a e nel g be tor
top 20 a11d na ona champ on
sh p cons dera on by he UP
Boa d of Coaches Those tellm S
c:u en y on p ob~ on o 977
a e C e n e n a y C emson
Haws
M nne!oota N evad~ Las
Vegas Western Ca ol na

UDINE Italy (UP!) Antomo Benetti a member of
Italy s natwnai sk1mg teum
suffered ser ous head mjurtes

Monday m a fall during
lra mng for an mternatwnal
sk
jumpmg
contest
fhursday

CHICAGO
(UP!)
Defens1ve end Harvey Martin
ar d running back Tony
Dorsett of the Dallas
Cowboys runnmg back
Walter Payton of the Chicago
Bears and defensive end A J
Duhe of the M1aml l)olphms
Monday were named for
special awards by Pro
Football Weekly
Martm
was
chose n
defens1ve player of the year
Paywn offensive player of
the year
Dorsett the
offens1ve rookie and Duhe
defens1ve rookie

"The new
tax fo:nns.

let us help with

99826
9 :25 5 23
9 :25 "' 22
Wales Conterence
Norris D vis on

St Lou s
M nneso a

Monea

Best seven
hanging in

A." good reason to

35

Cooado

I

PAYTON Qhlo (UPI) U S Dl.ltrlct Court Jud1e
Carl Rubin late Moaday
overturned the olate bola oa
co educational oporll
ttams
Tbe urdrr by Rubia
problbUo the Ohio High
School Athletic Assodalloo
from enlorclnlllt rule that
contact 1por11 lndudlttl
basketball
football
wrestling and Ice horkey
be limited to all boy com
peliloo
The ruling waa made to a
suit !lied Ia 1974 on bebolll
of two V ellow Sprlogo
Ohio glrlo who were
borred from Jolnloslhe all
boys basketball team at
Morgan middle a&lt;hool

Wu1

Lw s&amp;C k 96 da Co 77
Mesa Co 71 Wst n St 65
u ah 80 Nevad~ Reno 70
Web Sl 76 Chco St 57
W'/o 100 Rooseve t 62

Campbell Conference

Ph Me ph a
25 8 6
NY Is anders
22 9 a
AI &amp;n &amp;
4 15
NY Rengers
13 8 9
Smythe 0 v son

Lyle Alzado t~rmed th e
flight crazy
We were JUmpmg around
hstemng to good musi&lt; a1 d
play1ng cards Alzada sa1d
We re loose That s the way
we ve been all year
Denver quarterback Cra1g
Morton lunped notlt'eably
but left no doubt he will play
Sunday The bruised hlp that
nearly kept him out of the
AF C title game has m proved
greatly he said
It II be fine be said I
had treatments all week and
practiced all week
The NFL announced that
leRendary Hall of Fame
football star Red Grange will
wss the coin for the operu• g
kickoff pr10r to the start of
the SUper Bowl Sunday

'76 Volkswagen
Komb Bus 4 sp radio
1ape player rear window
defogger
oof vent &amp;
I ghts
cu rta ns
seats
coo verts nto bed wh te w
blue str pe 14 500 m

'5495
Karr &amp;VanZandt
You II LlkoOurOuallty

Way of Doing Business
GMAC FINANCING

992 5342

Pomeroy

your 4-.:.....,.
l.(IAes."

At H&amp;R Block we understand these new
fonns we know the laws We 11 do every
thing we can to save you money And thats
Reason No 1 why you should let H&amp;R Block
do your tax~es~~~~~~':'

H&amp;RBLOCit
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

618 E MAIN ST, POMEROY OHIO
Open 9 ao to' 00 WHkd•Y•
9 00 to 5 00 S.turdoy

Open Eventngs hl6 00

Phone 992 3795

T•15pm Sat

No Appomtment Necessary

�•

.

4 _ The Daily Sentine l, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Jan. 10, 1978

Three games on ·
tap :t~is. evening
...... ~

-·

·""'

'

Weather permitting. three
games will be played this
evenin g in the South e rn
Valley Athletic Conference.
League tilts lind Kyger
Creek going to• Hannan Trace
and Southern at North Gallia.
Fairland plays at Symmes
Valley in a non·league encounter.
Frida y night games
feature Kyger Creek at
Southwestern, North Gallia
at Ea stern and Symmes
Valley at Southern.
Hannan Trace continues to
lead the SVAC with . a· 4~
record. Southern, the delendmg SV AC champ is second
with a 5-1 slate.
The Tornado reserve squad
has a 5..0 record going into
tonight 's game at North
Gallia .

5

3 534 497

Hannan Trace

4

3 441 463

North Gal l ia
Sy mmes Vall.ey

3 4 457 498
3 5 480 508

Eas tern
~g er Cr ee k

TEAM

W L P OP

Symmes Valley 3 3 401 362
So uthwest ern
2 3 323 336
Eastern
0 3 125 211
4 257 284

Blue Jays
picking
first today

NEW YORK ( UPI) - The
Toronto Blue Jays, baseba ll 's
worst team last season, will
select (in;t today in the wfnter
free agent a mateur drafi and ,
.if things go Ute way Utey ha ve
m the past three yea t s, the
expansion club could come up
with a player like Steve
Kemp or Bwnp Wills.
While there aren't as many
&lt;(blu e· chip P
athletes
available as there are in the
annUal swnmer draft when
Ute best high school and
'college stars are selected ,
Kemp and Wills were among
several qua)i(y ath letes, Who
have been t hosen in the
· ~winter
dr aft sine~ lt s
DETROI T
(UP!)
inception in 1966.
Injuries
and
plunging
goal
By having the worst record
totals
led
U1e
Delroit
Red
in the major leagues last
Wings
Mon
day
1&lt;1
trade
on•·
season the Blue Jays ha ve
earned the ri ght to pick first lime 50-goal scorer Danny
ln the draft, which will be Grant to the Los Angeles
conducted via phone hoo kup . Kings for a third-round draft
from
th e
ollice
of choice and undisclose d
commissioner Bowie Kuhn . ''futur e considerations.''
The move will reunite
The dr'aft, which will begin
Gran t , 31 , with Mar.cel
at 12:30 p.m. EST, consi•1s of
two phases. In the regular Dionne, who ~.entered Grant
phase, tea ms will draft during his glorious 50iloal
mostly junior college players 1974 season with the Wings.
who have not been previously
GREEN }lAY, Wis . (UP! )
drafted , In this phase the 26 - Ti\1, Green Bay .Packers
teams draft ln inverse order Monday named Dick Corrick,
ol winning percentage in 1977 who has been with Ute team
with ·the American a nd since 1971, as direcll&gt;r ol
Na tional Lea gue teams player personneL' '
alternating choices.
Corrick, who has been in
Following completion ol the ch"rge
of
player
regular phase, a· secondary development, succeeds Doug
phase will be held. In the Hafner, who resigned several
secondary phase teams are weeks ago
primarily selecting a tbletes
who were drafted last June
but did not sign. Order of
selection in the sec'ondary
phase was determmed by a
drawin g of. the league
presidents and the Minnespta
TwinSear.ned Ute right II&gt; pick
first.
There were ·275" players
0
chosen in last year's winter
draft, maklng it the fourth
largest since the prOcess was
originate\!.

RANCHO LA COSTA, Calif.
(UPI) - A Tom Watson Day
ce l ebra ti on h.onorin g
Watson's selection by West
Coast sportscasters and
writer• as Goller ol the Year
lor 1977 was postponed
Monday because of the deatb
ol Watson's grandmother .
The event , includin&amp; a
dinner, was rescheduled lor
Feb. 13.
Watson, who won five
tournaments and $310,653last
year, opened the 1978 tour
with a win in the Tucson Open
last we~k .

DENVER (UPI ) - The
Co lorado Rockies Monday
purchased Ute rights to left
wing Bob Neely from . the
Toronto Maple Leafs, and
traded Chuck Arnason and
Rick Jodzio to the Cleveland
Barons.
Rockies General Manager
Ray Miron said Neely should
provide Ute Rockies . with
some scoring punch. Neely
will join the team Tuesday.

NOW OPEN

GINO'S

OF MASON

PHONE 773-5536
--c

·.

My roof was damaged by hail and I had it repaired. If it
leaks after another storm wUI this additional damage
be covered by my Insurance?
•
If you have all ready collected on one roof repair
necessit ated by a storm, you must prove through
recei pts, c ontra cts, etc .• that the roof was ih fact
repaired by a reputa'ble repai rm an. This woul d qualify
you for collecting from your insurance should anot her
storm cause a leak . If your certif ica t ion of repair is in
order, th e insurance company wou ld look at the cost of
repa irs as necessitated by two separate ca ta strop h~s.
However, in order for your Insurance to pay ·tor the
damage cau sed by the second storm, t he deductib le
must one~ agel in be met. It l.s i mportclnt to not ify your
-compah y las soon as possible aft er such damages. are

l'ncurred.

.

LOS ANGELES (UP!) - It
was li~e a good news-bad
news jokes for Robert D.
Grimes, 30, a yachtsman =
from Olympia, Wash ., when
lire broke out aboard his 26loot sailboat in the Pacific,
just of! Ute coast ol Ute Los
Angeles area.
· The good news was that
· Grimes escaped • in an
inflatable boat, and a Coast
Guard cutter comlng to his
aid poured water onto his
blazing boat, extinguishing
Ute natnes.
The bad news was that the
water-filled boat Uten sank.

"&amp;'d'

two straighl W aeuona an

haven't· polled I winning
aeaaon mark alnce Joe
Scbmldt'aflnalseuon in 1972
(8-4-1) .
Even thcugh there had
been
speculation !bat
Hudapelll would return to the
perliOIInel olllce ol the Lions,
he said he was through with
the club.
"I'm throll(lh as ill t.Qday,"
Hudspeth said. "I'm not In
the organization. I have no
comments on Ute team or any
ol that. 1 just hope everytbing
works out great for the Lions.
I hope they get everybody
together and make progress
and have a solid football

.

The Insurance Store ,
Q92.5130

Pnmeroy, 0 .

Pam Diddle was hostess lor
tbe December meeting ol the
Emma Smith Circle of the

auiatant coach••
releaaed lllong
Hudspeth
were Ed ' Hug es, J oh n
Payne, Wally Ell&amp;lilh, Bill
Beltchick, Fritz Shurmur,

'

:t,

RoldUFie DoJ~..:..~urnle
an
oy """""'•

Mlll

NCMOPEN:

er

GINO'S

NASHVILlE, Tenn. (UPI)
- Vanderbilt football Coach

1-

Fred Pancoait has decided to
resign alter two successive ~
9 seaaons, it was reported
Monday .
School officials, however,
said they had no information
about the resignation plans
reported by the Nashville
Banner. The newspaper sidd
Pancoast would be entering
Ute real estate business.

0f MASON •...
~',.

PHONE 773-5536

Reorganized Chufch ol Jesus
Christ ol Latter Day Saings.
Devotions by Mrs. Golda
Gillilan consisted ol carols
and scriptures appropriate tO
the holiday season. ' Mrs .
. Anna McHaffie condUcted a
short business meeting. Gifts
were exchanged and refreshments served. Members and
friends atten ding besides
those named were Pearl
. Proffitt, Eulah Proffitt ,
• Linda Evans, Beulah Roush ,
Betty Teaford, Et~e!. !Wush,
Barbara Roush; tul'ji'Taylor,
Phyllis Stobart, 'Maxin e
Seller, and Mattie Teaford .

ME ISM

team."
The Detroit Free Press

Ir:~&gt;:·:P~merrt/

Ptim Diddle hosts circle

LAFF • A • DA...:.Y~-

saying that Knox would be
the man to replace HudspeUt. 1 / -L&lt;_...,
The indication was that ~,?t~
Stanford Coach BIU Walsh
"has had the LA job" lor two
weeks or so, which would
· make Knox fair game, the
· ·llewspaper said. However,
Knox said last week he had oo
intentions of breaklnt! ' his
contract with Ute Rama and
that he luUy intends to be
back with the club next year. UJ:5.L===,J,.
Last
month,
Clark "Either do Ute exercise, or
confirmed reports there had chana• the channel ~ '
been talks concerning a move

BULOVA converts ? replica of a $20 gold pi ece
into a beaut iful,. little alarm clock with a reliable
30-h our key-wound movement. The dec o r~tive,
embossed coin cover swivels as1de to reveal a
regal Roman-faceg clock, har1ds:orrrel;• ...,.~~
housed in a four-coin ease. Satin
gold finish. 3 3/,o diameter.
1 '/.'' deep. $24.95

S JEWELRY
STORE

'
/;

Brewers' Class A fann at
Burlin gton, Iowa , to the
Midwest League title.

Hawks leave for Hawaii duty

'

II

::..;:::::::.'!::..~::~~~~"':'%....\~~:~~~~,~~..-:...'~~""':"....::::--:-..-.:·:~1

Social
Calendar

~

Generation Rap .,. · ~

U. S. Navy Petty Officer Hawk has been stationed in
I
.
~
R. Hawk and his wife. Guam . He rctun1ed horile in
~:
Ry
llt•len and Sut' Bollel
~
f:\
~
.
»
Holiday visitors ol Mr. and Jn , ldt Saturday for Hawaii November 'and he and his
Mrs. James Mason Fisher where he will be stationed at t Wife havt' hflot'n visitin~ ~·irh
THIS MOM TAKES THE CAKE...
were Mr. and Mrs. Gordon J&gt;earl Harbor lor the next their parents, Mr. and Mrs .
RAP :
.
TUESDAY
Marion Hawk and Mr. and
Fisher and son, Mason, West three ~· ears .
Some mothers treat their teenagers like gradeschoolers but
MIDDLEPOHT
Garden mine is1 ridkulou,s. I'm 17 and a senior. Mom hasn't told me the
F
or
the
past
15
months.
Mrs
.
Chester
Wells.
Since
Lafayette: Miss Barhara Kay
Club, 7: :JO Tuesday at the !acts ollile (I learned in sciHKII ). Worse, she cuts all articles
graduating from the Great
Fisher, Bridgeport ; Mr. and
Lakes Naval Training Mtddleporl Pres byterian pertaining to sex out ol the nowspaper before She lets me see it.
Mrs .
Roland
Fisher,
Center, Hawk has been Church . Thc .Rev .Dwight
What should! do? · FED UP
Columbus. They were joined
,.,J •
stationed
in Florida, San ?..avitz will show .slides. Hallie OEARF.U.:
on Christmas day by Mr. and
Jose, Calif., and Guam. Mrs. · and. Nellie Zerkle will he
Read the uncensored newspaper at schooL - HF:LEN liND
Mrs . Bill Fisher and son, ·
.
Wells graduated from hostesses.
SUE
Billy, Torch, and Orris
Eastern High School in 1977. , OHIO ETA PHI Sorority at
P.S. That includes our corw1ut, protective Moti.Cr ol F.U.:
Harris, Minersville.
7:30 p.m . at th~ Columbus See? You can't win!· HANDS
Mrs. Rose Ginther has
and So uthern Electric
retumad home ·from Wayne&amp;·
building in Middleport. DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
ville- ,Jwhere i she , spent the
A card shower lor Mrs. \Ida
·Hostesses Cheryl and Lynne
holidays ' visiting ·. her son, Root, a former member, was
This boy Jules and I have hat"l ~uch other since first Krudc .
Crow .
We're in sixth now. Last week he teast.&gt;d me till I sockm.l h~n .
James: end his family. other plaMed during a meeting of
guests at the Ginther home Theodorus
POMEROY Chamber ol and then we really got into it. I would have won, except the
Council 17,
·
were Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Daughters, of Amehca, held
Commerce noon lun cheon t~acher separated us .
Ginther ol Waynesville, and recenUy !'t the home of Mrs.
This is what I can't undersUtnd. Ever since. Jules has bc&gt;en
Tuesday at Meigs Inn.
Mr. and Mrs: George Ginther E;.dna Reibel, council deputy.
Representative of AORTA real nice to me, and yesterday he c.ame over and t•lkcd lor two
Bus system will he speaker. · hours. He's really not bad. How come we had to have a list
Mrs. Root will observe her
ol Columbus.
Dr. and Mrs. Richard Fox 99th birthday on Jan. 15. She
TUESDAY
RACINE l.odge 461 F&amp;AM light before we realited we lilted cuch oU1er'! 1\nd do you think
and chiidreh of Mason were is confined to the Hillcrest
EVENING CIRCLE, Tuesday 7:30p.m. Work in he lilies me only becall.'lel'nl• good lighter'! - TEflll Y ANN
holiday visitors of her Manor Nursing Home on United Methodist Women, EA degree . Dues payable at DEAR TERRY ANN :
May he the light was nee-ded to finally end the little-kid feud
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy Fulton Sl., Sidney . It was Rutland
Church,
7:JO · meeting. All master masons
you'd already outgrown, a fi reworks way ol swit c hin~ !rom
Holler and family .
reported · that Mrs. Eu lah
im•ited.
Mrs. Mildred Shuster an d Haggy had lost her husband Tuesday night at the church.
·hate to like.
HARIU SONV ILL E
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich by deaUt. Meetlngs of the Installation of officers to be
Enjoy your new friendship !. HELEN
and Jayne spent the weekend Council lor the next 90 days conducted by the Rev . Wilbur Chapter, O.E.S. 255, 8 p.m. at
Hilt , pastor. Ellen Rile to the Temple.
ln Columbus visiting Mr. and will be held. at the deputy's
TERRY ANN:
MEIGS COUNTY Pomona
Jules may like your spunk , but he isn't attruclcd only beMrs . Mike Hamme r and home instead ol the IOOF · hove the program and Janet
Williamson to be hqstess.
Junior Grange, Tuesday , 7 cause you're H good fighter . He finally discovered you 're (,1 ~ irl
halL
family.
p.m. at the Rock Springs und he's a boy, tlllit's all . - SUE
WEDNESDAY
Grange
Hai L
POMEROY Cha pter 80
M],;JGS
HIGH School PAT RAP :
RI\M and Bosworth Council
meeting,
7:30
Tuesday ut the
Four years ago 1 wus scei11~ this wondcliul guy. At Utat time
46 R &amp;SM Wednesday 7:30 p.
00
hi
gh
school
with
Deputy
my
life wul:i a rnes:;, but he h ~lped me realize J wus worth
Ill.
. Sheriff
Darrell
Slone somet~i n g. - -presenting a program ahout
Then 1 was called out ol town suddenly, without time to condrugs.
All
parents
and
rthe
Ulct
him . 1 wrote later, and my letter was retm·ned . When I
LEXINGTON, Ky . (UP!)
public
are
invited
to
attend.
came
back, he'd moved.
- A Cincinnati, Ohio, man
WEDNESDAY
I've
tried to lind him, but he just disappeared.
paid the top price ol $215,000
MIDDLEPORT
Amateur
Helen
and Sue, I've changed so much, "'"l he s!Hrted it · I
for a 2-year-&lt;Jld filly .by
Gardeners, Wednesday, fi ::to owe him a lot! Without his encouragement and love. I would
Herbager
outol
Dan's
Dream
Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp;
have continued us a nothing. Now I'm something, und very
at the opening session of the p.m. at the Meigs Inn.
P 0 MER 0 Y
M10 · hllppy with tl)yself.
8:30 til 5:00 Thursday Til 12 Noon
January Horses of All Ages
Should I continue my search fm· him , or ju~t bc . ~luli I'm
Sale Monday at Keenelarld . DLEPOR'I' Uons Club, noon
W
ednesday
at
the
Meigs
Inn.
THE
NEW ME .
Robert G. Kluener bought
All
Lwns
urged
to
attend.
DEAR
TNM :
Herman Grate
the hor se, a half sister to live
RA
CINE
GRANGE
,
Be
glad
you' re the New You; always be gr!llclul lu llic young.
stakes wi nners including
Mason, W. Va .
773 -5592
W
ednesday.
7:30p.m.
at
the
·
man
who
inspired the change; but dun't exped lu find him
Costly Dream.
·
ha ll . Third and four th after four years. If he wuntt..'1:l to continue the relationship, he
degrees wm be given.
would have conlactc&lt;l vou.- HEI.EN AND SUE

~~nal Notes

~nnis

caru S hower
pkmned

Social

.....................~·~··········--

'

TRADE-IN

•100

On All Uving Room Suites

MASON FURNITURE
Sat.-

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

SHOP MARK V
FOR LOWER

PRICES
.

the cost of
of
a
lung

ygUR BUDGET WITH... i
~ t::) (Q)[JU~

"

$1
09
SAUSAGE .............. ..
79¢
WIENERS .................

I

HOMEMADE

PURE. PORK

~~~

SUPERIOR

RC COLA OR
DIET RITE
• .

maladies and disasters that could befall a person. But some of
us insist on increasing the odds for catastrophic illness and
'a premature death by smoking and drinking excessively.
Your Blue Cross and Blue Shield Plans can't blow out
the match every time you decide to tight up. Or pour that
third martini down the drain. We're helping_ to hold down
health care costs by doing things within our area of influence .. .
like pioneering and broadening ambulatory programs such as
pre-admission testing, post discharge testing, same-day surgery
home care ... by being involved in utilization review and peer review ...
by exiierimenting with second opinion surgical consultation... and, as
active participants in the health planning process, by advocating better
use of health tare resources, discouraging waste and preventing
· unnecessary duplication of facilities and services.
And, as always, we're helping company groups and individ\lal
subscribers get the greatest value out of every health care doUar they spend.
We'll take the responsibility for setting up effective, economical health care
pr:ograms. But the responsibility for holding down health care costs is something
we all share.
Frankly, some of the reasons for the high cost of health care make us sick.
Please, take care of yourself.

9

8-16 oz.
BOTTLES

.

ALL MEA_T

THURSDAY ONLY

oLYou'd
destroyed liver?
think there were more than enough natural

.I

~

.

, .

·..

·.

L~;. ·

SLICED

'

BACON ENDS .............. ~~:

59~

99¢
HA~ SAI.Il[)................. ~~.
HOMEMADE

Hi~.lf

COKE
SPRITE

59~

CHICKEN
OF THE
SEA

TUNA

79e

4

QUARTS

$1

PORK
ROAST

L&amp;g

~

FAMILY PAK

PORK
.
. LB $}09
CHOPS •..•.• :.... . .
DAIRY SPECIALS

BROUGHTON'S

HOMO MILK .......•......~.~~~~~.. 79~
BROUGHTON'S

ICE MILK ....•:............:2.?~~~~~...

0~.

'

LOIN
END

.

79

~

.

VALLEY BELL
24 OZ. ·

MR.
COFFEE

COTTAGE CHEESE ....... ~~~.T?.~ ..

89~

COFFEE
FILTERS
100 ct. 79~

EGGS.'....~.~.~~~ P.~.. ~- ........................... -~-~~ ~~..69~
BANANAS ............ :............._.............,....~.~~:.- ~ 100

Blue Cross.
Blue Shield.
All of us
helping each of us.
® • .....
....... ..
..,~

~

~,

FLORIDA ORANGES ........................~?.~~~ , 69~

~,0 . . .., . . . .. -~

®' ~~..~'"'"' s.-·loj.......... ....,......__

DR~

TORONTO (UP!) -, Denis
Menke, a 13-year major
league veteran, Monday was
named by Ute Toronto Blue
Jays to manage their
Dunedln farm club in the
Class A Florida State Leag~e
next season. -···
..
•
Menke retired as an active
player in 1974. He managed

.
.
---1
REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE SERVICE ~~id':::'trfh!im~,i~:a~~~~

~----------=-~....-

214.E. Main

,;,_ ~uon
·
•
••••The Uona suffered thro"•h

=:::

Daily Sentinel, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Jan . 10. 1978

"'

lRIUI·IITIOI · RB
REUTER·BROGAN INSURANCE

~e

~-The

=:.e:-.•dfor
Bills' coochin&amp; job, vacant
since the !Irina ?' Jim

~:~1!e ;~rg~ g~~~ ~!~e!~ ~~~:"athtiu-~~Y~~ ~lnr~= '~":rc~~~; •

4 0 251 239
4 1 335 285
J 2 345 320

0

Kent State ·Coach
say.s ·change needed

for winners

SVAC ONLY

Kyger Creek

PONTIAC, Mich . (UPI) l.os Angeles Coach Clluck
This week's g11mes :
Knox and former San
Tues day, Kyger Creek at .
Francisco Coach Monte O.rk
Ha nnan Trace ; Southern at
to
a
23-12
advantage
at
appear
to be the prime
The
Flyers,
who
forced
14
Norlh Ga llia ·and Fairland at . lJ aited Presslateraatloaal
intennisSibn.
candidates
for head cooch of
turnovers
to
neutralize
the
Sy rnrnes Valley .
The Roanoke Maroons
The
22
points
was
the
UteDetroitLionsnowthattbe
deliberate
game,
Fri day - K yger Creek. at
handed
the
carne to Dayton Monday
So uthwestern ; North Galti a
few est scored against a NFL club has officially fired
Maroons a 53-22 setback.
at Eastern and Symmes hoping to surprise the mighty
Dayton team since Ute 1941-42 Head
Coach
Tommy
The
Maroons,
now
7~.
took
.Flyers witb a ·slowed-down,
Valley at Southern.
on
ly
13
shots
during
Ute
first
season.
lJiudspeth
and
his
entire
Sat urday Eastern at ball-eontrol game, but the
The Flyer.s, oow 9-4, were elght.man staff.
hall
as
the
Flyers
moved
out
.
Sy mmes Valley.
strategy !ailed.
•
paced by . J1m Pa~son, who
Lions' owner WUUam Oay
dumped m 15 yomts. Erv Ford aMounced the longGtddmgs al.., chtpped in wiUt rumored firings Monda'y but
12 and Jim Rhoden had 10 lor · refused to reveal Ute nan'.e of
Dayton.
the new head ·coach or even
'.-"'
Bruce Hembrick and Ken when he planned to make the
Belton. led Ute Maroons, wtth announcement.
six pomt aptece.
.
However , Ford
had
.Elsewhere Mooday m~ht, previously said that he
Ntck Dame is ftred in 19 pomts planned 10 have the situation
KENT; Ohio 1UPI ) - Con- officials during his te•m as wlead host Xavter to a 107·72 cleared up
by Ute Super Bowl
troversial Ke nt
State coach .
·
romp
over
John
Carroll.
Utis
Sunday.
He was once suspended for
A stingy defense allowed University basketball Coach
The Musketeers, now 8-5,
Ford said Ute existing conRex
Hughes
resigned'
two
games by MAC Cornmisthe Southern Girls Hi gh
School basketball team last Monday alter Athletic sioner Fred Jacoby , lor ·
Don
Dufek violating Ute c o n f e r e n c the season - Ute team's pact and his assistants will
week to take a 50-36 win over Director
announced
his
contract
would-- e's unsportsmanlike cond~cl longest win streak since the be h;..ored.
visiting Eastern.
not
be
renewed
for
next rule, the only coach ever 1~7 campatgn .
The visitors were within
"I have the highest
season
.
suspended under that rule .
striking distance untilthe last
Guard
Chuck
Pat
paced
the
·personal
regard
for
"It 's in Ute best interest lor
fn last Sa turday's game, a Blue Str~ks, now 1~. with 12 Tommy," Ford
quarter when the home team
said. "He is
scored 16 points to 10 lor the Kent State University and the 93-61 loss to Central pomts while Saul Syvas and an outstanding individual.
basketball program that we Mic higan, Hughes was Terry Markushic added 10 But for Ute sake of loyal Lion
Eaglettes.
Senior Guard Jean Rit- make th is change ," said ejecte d !rom the contest apiece.
fans and the general good of
chhart led all scorers with 16 Dufek. " I have been when he was called lor three
Dave Payton and Gary Ute football team, we just felt
markers but two other evaluating the entire al)lletic technical fouls .
Massa added 18 apiece lor the a change as necessary at this
Hughes came to Kent State Musketeers and Steve time."
Tornadoettes hit doubl e program at Kent since my
figures to spell the demise of arrival over a year ago, and from the University or Spivery chipped in with 12.
Hudspeth came to !be Uons
Eastern: Cheryl' Roseberry it's my evaluation that a So uthern California where he
In
other
games,
Niagara
in
1974 as a pro seoul, later
served as an assistant for two
canned 13 and Freshman change is needed.
edged Cleveland State 85-ll2 was personnel dlrecl.or, Uten
Dufek said Mike Boyd, a years under Trojan Coach
Tammy Smith chipped in 10 ,
and
Ashland
downed was named to replace Rick
Hughes
assistant, would lake Bob Boyd.
Both teams sank 14 foul
Washington &amp; Lee 84-77 ·
Forzano lour games into the
shots, Becky Windon and over the· team fo r the re~t or
Weber led Eastern with 11 the season. He said Hughes'
polnts each . Windon had nine contract, which runs through
ol her points at the cha rity !he end ol June, will be
honored.
·
b1ripe.
fn
3-lf,
years
as
head
coach,
The Southern Junior High
School made a clea n sweep of Hughes' teams compiled a '%1things as they rolled to any 63 record, Including a 1-10
sta rt this season and a
easy 38-14 win .
/\Iter jumping out to a 17-13 current seven--game losing
first-q uarter lead, it was aU !:li.reak .
Hughes had more Utan his
downhill lor the wiMers.
share
ol run-ins with Mid·
Melanie Weese led with 17
American
Co ~ference
points while Evans and E.
Smi th had six each. Sa lser
had five and R. Smith iour.
Spurts Briefs
Sheets led E"stern with her
~ix, and Goebel 'had live ,
Ambrise tossed in two, and
ST. LOUIS (UP!) - Lou
Edwards added one. The box Holtz, who directed Arkansas
score:
· to an 11-l"l se~son· in his first
EASTERN - Batey 2-2~ ; year a t the helm, was named
Windon I-9-li :· Weber 4-3-11; 1977 College Football Coach
HaMwn 1~·2 ; Stevens O.{)~ ; of the Year today ·bY The
McClure 2~-4 ; Matthews 04 Sporting News.
0; Milhoim 0-11-tl ; Young 1~-1.
Holtz led the Razorbacks to
Totals 11-14-36.
a rUnnerup spot behind Texas
SOUTHERN - Carna han · in the Southwest Conferehee
1-0·2 ; Roseberry 6-1 -13; and ended the season with a
Ritchhart 5-6-16; Smith 3-4- 31-6 thrashing of highly rated
10 ; Ord 2'3-i; Teaford 1-0-2; Oklahoma in the Orange
Boso 0·0-0t Crow 0-0-0 ; B&lt;lwl.
\·
Holstein 0-0-Q. Totals 18·14.-50.

the difference

I 4 243 320
· 0 7 406 491

Hannan T rac e
Sout hern
North Gall Ia

.

..

Good defense

SVAC STAND IN GS
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P OP
So ufhe r h

Lio"QS refuse
to reveal
&gt;t

to 1be Uonl. CWk II l18o

Slowdown tactics fail, ,:,. ,. ·. . , f A
•d c ch
name 0 ew gn. oa ~~·
Flyers :r ip,: foe, 53-22
.

-

•

•

8-16 OZ. BOmES

'1.~

'

PEPPER

;•r

89C

ENGLISH
WALNUTS
•
Size

FAVORITE

BREAD
•

SUPER MARKET- OPEN DAILY 910 10. P.M. ·
SUNDAY 10 TO 10

We Accept Fedeti!l Food Stamps;,.We ReseM The Right To

Lm~

.•

�•.

I

6- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., TUesday, Jan. IO,Ifl78
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
The OhiO D epa rt ment o f
Nat ura l Rtso~o~ r ces. thro&amp;~h
the D ivision of P arks an d
R ec r t!!a tlon , pursu an t to an d
in a cco rd a n ce w it h t h e

7-The Dally Sentinel,Middlepori· Pomeroy, 0 ., TUesday, Jan. 10, 19'18

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

keroserie for a day or two and
then Ill!&lt; this as a base under

pro vi sions o f Section 1501.09
and 1501 .09 1 or t he Oh io
Re\I ISe d Co de proposes to

WANT.AD
CHARGES

cont ra ct for the ope r a tion ot a
m ar ine

an d

ref resh m en t

m lsc::ell aneous

concess ion

at

Fo rk ed R u n St a t P Pa rk
loca ted in M eigs Coun t y .
OhiO .
Off h::i al bi d pr o po sal s w ill
b e rece ived i n t h e o ff ice of t h e
D e partm ent
of
Nat u ral
Resou r ce s. Ofvi!»ion o~ Par k s

anct Rec r ea tion. Concessions

Unit. B ui l di ng C. Thi rd Floo r .
un t il 2: 00 p .m ., Jan uar y 20.
19 78. Bids w ill be pu b li cly

opened

tn e r ea ller

by

IN LOVING memory of Or.,ifle

1$ Wgrda or Under

! doy

Chw~·

"""'....
'·"'
1...

Zdlt)'l

3dayl
6dayl

1.1$

....

- uo

1.01

3.15

•••m

th e

Ch ief or h is au thor ized 119 en t .
Th e r igh t 1S r eserved to rei ec l
an y a nd a ll bids .

The cont ra c t Will be ior a
te rm at fo u r (_. ) yea rs a n d
eleven 111 1 mon th s from
Fe br u ar y
I.
1978 .
to
Occe m ber 31, IU2 .
• J
1
The Division of Parks a nd
Rec r e a tio n w il l fu rnis h
doc k's , one b u ild ing ap
pro Kim a teh l2f eet bv 20 •teet ,
15 ro wb oar s w ith oar s and
one refr ige rated ice tlouu.
The co n qt s sio na lr.e w il l
fu rn ish all oth e r eq vi p m ent ,
me r cha nd ise .
mat e r ia ls ,
u ti lfties.
la b or ,
et c .,
neces sary to oper,3t e the
co n cessi on s to appr o ved
s ta nda rds .
11 sha ii..J)e l he inten t of th e
con t rac t tt) at the se ason ot
ope ra ti on for the mar ina at
For ked RIJ n Stat e Park will
be tram Apr il 15to October 1.
The abov e dates are .in t en ded to establish only
mi n l m\Jm guidel i nes
regardin g
season
ot
Certain
clr ·
o p e rat io n .
cums ta nc es m a y necessitate
e ~o:t e nd ing or s hortening the
operating season6 for the
v ario u s fa ci l itie s . In any
e11en t. season and hours of •
operation will be subject to
annual review .·
Requesls for b id proposal
forms should be make to the
Depa r tmen l ot
Natural
Resources , Division of Parks
and Recreation , Conceu ions
Un it , FO unta in
Square .
Bu ilding C. Third Floot.
Columbus ,
Ohio
4322&gt;4 .
Te lephone : 614-466-3277 .

In memor)' , Card ol fb.anka and
Obituary: fl (.'t'nU poet wT;.rd, 13.00
minimllm. CUh In Mdvance. • ,
Mobile Home aLes 1nd Yard •kl
are eccepted unly wltb cuh wWI
order. 25 cent chlra(e for adl c.any ..
in~ &amp;1. Number In Care of The Sentinel.

ri-

• Tht Publisher rHet"'S the
lo·.ut or reject any adl deetnled objecliONII . The Publ,iaher wiD .not be

responalble for mote thin one incorrect inaerUoo.
Phone 1112-2158

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Monday
Noon on Saturday

Thesdily
lhru Friday
4P.M.
th~ dwy before pobllcaUon

Sunday
4P.M.
F'rlday ldt.emoon

·:-::-:=-...,..,-:--:-c---

OF INVENTORY

go••

Will CARE for !he elderlr in our
home. Pt'lone 992-731&lt;6 .
- - -PIANO lUNING • Lone Doni ttls .
New phone number, 991 .258 1.
If no answer . coll
_
.
· -- __ ~ · - -992
- 2082
_
M9BilE HO~E repo in :_992 ·58SB .
PI~NO fUNING ·-lane Oon ie ls . 13
years of service . New pho ne
number . 992·2581.

ENERGY
CRISIS
IS REAL

I WANl to thank every one who
helped in any way the night of
my accident . Also , I wish ·to ew pr•ss my appr«iotion to my
family , rela tives. fri•nds and
neigkbou fol' all of tn'~t cords,
gifts ond hone coils received
while I was in the hospital.
Alta Dill .

FOUND IN j;fod~ Springs oreo: lol l
!~in
reddish brOwn dog .
Ev ide nce ol kaving nod pu ps
r•cent ly . Call 992-2716.

Thermo
Foam
insulatio n c uts the
home owners heating
&amp; cooling bill by as
much as 50 per cent.
As a The rmo- Foam
dealer
turn
th e
energy cr isis in t o an
Opportunity.
Vi r t u a I I y
a n
untouched
market.

You need

n o t be an
insulation contractor
to run a Thermo
Foam d ealership, you
are fa ctory trained.
V
d . SOO F
ou n ee $ 7 ,
. or
more
information.
call Mr . Bell collect.

404-939-9222.

LOST : ONE mole ba Ke r dog .
So lem Center or eo . 992·5872 or CASH paid for oil mokes ond
mod&amp; ls of mobi le homes·.
61&lt;t-b69·5749.
Phone oreo code 614·423·9531 .
TWO BEDROOM Troiler . Adults LOST ABOVE EAstern High School TI MBER . Pomeroy Fo;est Pro·
on RL 7: sma ll brown pony witk
9 nly. 992·3324 .
ducts. Top price lor slonding
g{Jten hol ler . Child's pei. Ph .
sawtimber. Ca ll 992 ·5965 or
HOUSE FOR Lease on lincoln Hill
983·3323 .
Kent Hanby . l •446·6570.
in 'Pome roy . 5 bedroom1 . ·
Deposit required . 9q2-3.riB9 lOST: in Mulberry Avenue vicini·
. alter 5_pm .
ty . Iorge reP mole Irish Setter . CO IN S. CURRENCY . token s, old
poCket wolche s and cha ins.
-Ph . 992·6279 .
~i l ve r ond gold . We need l fi64
TWO . BEDROOM home . Storm _.,;.;._::.c.:.::c= " ' - - - - - -ond Older sil ver coins . Buy. sell.
windoWs and doors . Insulation .
or trade' Coli Roger Wamsley .
Ph . 992·3()qO,
7•2-2331.
COUNTRY MOBilE Home Po~k .
Route 33. nor th of Porrteior
lMQe lots . Coll991.· 747.9.

ForWednt'sday, Jan.
1971 SU PER HU G VW. GoOd
mechanical condi tion . Needs
.bodywork . 992 ·615&lt;6 .

. ~ OLO FU RNITURE . 'ice boKes , brass
11, 18
bods, iron beds. etc. . cample te
households . Write M. 0 . Miller.
Rt . 4, Pomeroy, Okio or call
992-7760 .

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

(I

'UYJI) jj

Business ·s ervices

RESPONSIBlE Ol DER l ad ~ to hvtt R &amp; S MOBIL E HOMES, Pt . Plea
in and care f,or ogRI ladr m
son t. W. Vo . beside Heck 's
Rutland. light ho uu•wo rk a nd 1973 Broad more 14 ~.: 6.4 2
cooking , no laundry . More lor
bed room
ho me tha n wo gu . Ca ll 1973 0 &lt;1ri on 14 • 6D 2 bedroo m
H2·2Q78,
1971 Victoria n ) Ill • 67 3 be droom .
lba rh
l'Hl Co'IMtry 12 x b5 3 bedroom
1969 Sta lrt!mo n 12 x 6D 2
bedroom.

INCOME TAX Services . Federal
and Stole To lCel . Wondo Eblin.
992-2272.
TH E RACINE VoiiJnteer Fire
Deportmer) t will sponsor o gun
•hoot ever~ Soturdov o t6 pm ot.
their building •n Bast-Ian . Foe·
. torv choke guns only.
THE RACINE Gun Club Gun Shoot
every Sunday afternoon . Foe·
lory choke guns only . Auorted
moo!• .
'·
WANJEO: CHRISTIAN music ians
10 lorm a ;roup . Cot19~q · 2B70 .

ROBERT W . TEATER
Director · 3 AND 4 RM . furn ished and un·
furnished opts . Phone 992·
( 12 1 27 111 3, 10, 17 , 4;1 (
5&lt;3::..
'
FOUR ROOMS and both . Adults
NOTICE ON FILING
only . No pe ts. 992·5908.
AND APPRAISEMENT
The Stitt Of Ohio, Meigs
County, Court of COmmon
Plus, f"robltt Division
To the Exec ut ors or Ad m inistrators of the esta tes , to
s u ch of the follow ing u are
res ldtfliS of th e Slale of Ohio,
viz : - the sur11 lvlng spouse •.
t he next
of
kin ,
the
beneficiaries unt1er t he w ill ;
a nd lo th e attorney or at ·
to rn eys representing anv of
!he afO-rementioned persons :
Reed Gand~e ( Np . 22257J ,
Middleport. Ohio.
.
General J . Hall ( NO . 22270) ,
R . D. 2, Racine . Oh io .
VIo la Irene Cundiff ( No .
222.40}, Syrac use , Ohio . •
MaK Manuel, Jr . (No .
22065}, Rac ine , Ohio.
Yo.u .are hereby notified
th&amp;t the Inventorie s and
Appraisemenf5 of the estate
of
th e
.!l fo r eme nt lo n ed ,
deCeased, la te of said Co unty , ·
we r e fi led In !his Co un . Said
Inve n tories
and
Ap
praisements will be for
hearing before th is Court on
the IJ!h day of Janua ry , 1978,
at 1:00 o 'clock P .M .
Anv person des iri ng to file
e~.:cep tions theret o m us t ri le
them at least five days prior
to the date set tor hearing .
Given un der my hand and
Sea I ot sa ld Court, fh Is 29th
day of December 1977 .
Manning D. Webster
. Judge

Watson. who pas.d owov
1
.klnuor y 'I 0. 1971 .
Our h•orts ~~~&gt;1 11 o c ~ With
sodneu,
'
Secret teor• will flow .
Whot it m•ont to los• vou . Or·
viii•.
No OM w ill ev•r know.
,
When dovs are dork ond dreary .
And everything
wrong .
We
to heor you whisper ,
"Che8r up and carry on."
Eoch time we see your picture.
You seem to smile and soy .
"Don't av , I'm onfv sleeping."
·we will m. . r again someday ."
Sadly misted by wife, Faye; Son .
Jim . Mother, Effie : sisters and
brothen ond rhe John Oil/
Family .

NO ITEM TOO Lorge or too sma ll.
Will b,uy I piece or complete
household . New . u~ed , or a nti -· ·
ques. Mo rfin 's Fur nitu re , 20 N,
2nd St. , ~ddleport : Phone
992-6370. .'~''

BURROUG HS SE NSI -MA TIC oc·counting machine . Has been
under '&gt; erv•ce con tract and in
. good condit1on . Ca n be seen a t
The Daily Sen tinel. Il l Cour t
St. . P o m ~ r oy . OH.
LARGE ROUN D Sole ~;de rs
mode at $QUa re tubing , $76.
Vermee r Iorge.. rou nd baler,
S250. Disco unt unt il Feb . 15.
1978. Woodmo ste r ca binet
wood heat e rs. ther mostol . a sh
pan . hinged top for coo king.
brick.lined . $242 . Coalmaster
some os above but Shaker
grole lor coo~ , $264 .. Blowe r. for
e ither, $48. Mer rill Chose . (bllll )
..
b98.:102L

Let Pomeroy landmark
soften &amp; condition your
water with Co-op water
soft e ner, Model UC-S Vt,
Now Onlv ,

279 ,95

SlUm Extraction

Young's
Carpeting

PU,HI7l

-·---USED TV 's_ Color and

GOOD
Black end Wh ite. Har rison's TV ,
276 Sycamore Street . Mid·
dlepo rt , Okio. 99'1·2522.

-----

c:;__~

We Are Now

Taking New
Customers For

FUEL OIL AND
GAS SERVICE
CALL US
Pomeroy LJndmark
·~ ~~ac.k W. Carsey, Mgr.

Carpeh UpiiOIIIIIJ

Pomoroy, Olllo

, ..... llit1 Youn1

Phont Number

At

992-2206 or992-7630
"Tilt Orltioolon
lol Tilt lllilolon

,,

CINingoof

Phone
992-7608

,,

CloMcfJon. JO
Til lith, 1978

Professionals who dye rugs
any more. - I'OLLY.
DEAR POLLY - We had a
problem with half our rubbish
remaining ln the trash cans
after the garbage men had
emptied them. FinaUy I put
an old plastic bag over the
bottom of the can and it all
eame o ut when emptied. You
do not have to . wre an entire
bag Just any old piece of
plastic t hat }"ill cover the
bottom. - WILMA.
DEAR POLLY- To start a
barbecue fire I soa~ a brtck in

,.
"'

Middleport
Peoonal Notes

Mr. and Mrs . Robert
Garwell , G'ietii • nd Justin , of
Des Moines, Io wa, spent the
holidays here visiting her
mother , Mrs. Ir, Butcher and
------------------With key rlngs. They come in
different sites and make a
stronger holder for the strap
which adds life to the purse.
- MRS. J . M.
Polly will send you one of
he r
signed
thank -y o u
newspaper coupon clippers if
she us e s your favorite
Pointer, ~ve or Problem in
ber column. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

:

r-~~~----~~----,

CARTER

SEPTIC TANK
. CLEANING
Residentill
•nd
commercial. Call .f or
estimate, 24 hour service.
Anyday, anytime.
Phone 985·310.

~·s

lDO~In

or99HU3
8A.M . to4 :JOP.M .

Chester, Ohio ·
10·30·c ,

lllltlltiiiiSinic•

.

Wll~~-

:.

.....

FREE ESTIMATES

SALES AND SERVICE
11 -9-tfc

:
•

...:::~~

:

l(f'!At(l(fll

:

Ml~
AWIIIUI

•

:

SIDIII$.S(/fffl

•

St.

Porn traY m1212

Tank Service

8oxJ4

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.
PomtrOV, Ohio

Septic

I:UTIUUniiiCS

•

LARRY LAVENDER

:
:
1
•
•••
•

s,r.-. 01\it
P1Lttz.3ttl

...

-

,..,....

ALUMINUM SIDI~G

CHEMICALS
We Strip Paint - Varnishes·
e tc .
Wood-Metai-PI•stics
Antiques &amp; Modern
Upholstering Service
Custom . Professional
Refinishing - Repairing .
Antiques Sought &amp; Sold
Dick Seyler
Phone 992-2798
100 Kerr St.
Pomerov, Ohio

NEW HOLLA ND -_ mower 45t .
Kawa saki 90 motorc ycle . One
Arab ia n more . 992·7084 .
RAIDER 100 'wa tt linea r. $125.
949·2Jn

Corner Union Ave.
ond St. Rt.

POlLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I would
like to dye my sculptured rug
another eo lor , perho ps
chocolate or maroon. II is
oow beige. Can you or any of
your readers leU me how to
do this. - DOROTHY.
DEAR DOROTHY - My
advice is to forget 11. I once
dyed a low pile rug and that
was such a task that I will
never do It agaln. But a
sculptured one is an absolute
"NO, NO". I do not think
there are even many

'-

. crystal on my

L - - - - - - - - 1 -~

Pomeroy LJndmarll

THREE ELVIS re cord s. collectors
items. Con be seen at Clifto n,
V"!_ · V~ask for Roge r Klein_. __
FIREWOOD, SPLIT. del ivered .
stacked . S25 per Io rge p ic kup
load . 742 -2256 .

JOHNIE'S BEAUTY
SM.ON

..o.

twrol.r~

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Polly Cramer

NOTICI

Sv,.,.,

let us l.est your water Free
Jack W . Carsey, Mgr .
. Phone 992·21 81

POLLY"S POINTERS

Sometimes when washing

dishes I get steam,.inside lhe
wrfs{ watch so
I press it on lhe side of a c up
of HOT coffee , hold it there
and ii cleans up. - HELEN .
DEAR POLLY - My vel
told me that all one had .to do
lo get ril ol fleas in the house
is lo leave a dog ln lbe house
for a few hours and the neas ~
will naturally go I o the
animal. - FRAN .
· DEAR FRAN - What do
you ilo to give the poor dog
relief ? He certainly would
need Immediate attention :
Did your Vet give you any
suggestions on that little
problem? - POLLY.
DEAR POLLY .:.. I have
press with a wann iron. This help for the reader who h'as a
does a great job of pressing purse with round loops
and-&lt;tr creasing . - ROSE. holding 'the straps thai come
DEAR
POLLY
- , apart I replace such loops

the kindling lo start the fire .
The brick keeps burning and
helps lhe lire along even if the
kindling is damp .
If the nylon coil zipper in a
puUover llhirt curls after
washing and rying pull on
both ends Immediately after
removing from the dryer. It
will straighten while slightly
damp. - MRS. M.M .
DEAR POLLY - To press
clothes, including creases in ~
slacks and pants, place a
sheet of bro wn paper bag
paper ( grocery bags slit open
are line) on the article to be
pressed, Qampen paper
slightly with a wash cloth and

SOLID VINYL SIDING
OHIO
SOFFIT &amp; CELINGS
HEATING SERVICE SPOUTGUTTERS&amp;DOWN
Euy
step
by
step
REPAIR &amp; SERVICE1 ·instructions.
Boilers, Furn.ces, He•t
ACE HARIMARE
Pumps &amp; Auto-Controls.
GA5-0IL-COAL

PHONE
742-2570
12-18·1 mo.

••

••'
•
••
'

•'•

Located In

The Clue To

MEIGS PlAZA
Mlddle)Oirt, 011/o
11 -9-tfc

•

RACINE
PlANING Mill
992 -391S

-Upholstety-

RACINE , 0 .

INSUlATION
SERVICE

Prof,t nional Service, 39
yrs. experience. Free
estimates,
pickup
&amp;
delivery
service .
Residential &amp; Colnmir'cial.

Tri-State UpholsteJY

WOOD AND WOOL FIBER
"SINCE 1947
12-11 .1 mo.

Shop
1163-Znd Avo., Gallipolis
«6-7a3J-446·11ll

Gene Crooks and children are
still in Spaln but will be
Jeff and Juli e .
retumifl8 ln lbe spring when
Mrs. Chesler Erwin has ~ beglns his new assignment
returned from a holiday visit • as a dentist at Ana polls.
with Mr. and Mrs. Don Erwin
Mrs .
Mae
Sauer
ol
and children , Winfield, W .
Columbus
visited
&lt;;hristmao
·Va ., and Mr . and Mrs ,
Day here wllh her daughters,
Michael Erwin and famlly,
Mrs. Judy Croob and Mrs.
Salis bury, Md.
Cinda Harris, and their
families.
Mr. and Mrs . · Daniel
Thomas and children, and
Visitlng durlng the holidays
children have returned from
wllh B. B . Zeigler and Mr.
Flo rida where they visited
and Mrs. Earl Davenport
with his m other , Mrs .
were Mr. and Mrs. R . L.
Elitabeth Thomas and Miss
Zeigler, Mr. and Mrs. R. S .
Nancy Tho mas at St. Pete rs·
Zeigler, and Mr. and Mrs.
burg. They spent Christmas
William
Zeigler
and
with Mrs. Thomas' family 1
daughter,' Deidra, Belpr,e ;
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Crooks ,
Mr . and Mrs . Cha uncey I.Uoy
before going to Florida. Other
and sons, H. C. and Scott,
guests ol Mr . and Mrs .
Crooks wer~ Mr. and Mrs. Beaver, W . Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Alloway and son, Ryan,
Edward Crooks and children,
and
Mr. and Mrs . Ron
Middleport. Cmdr. and Mrs.
Springer, Belpre.

Mr. and Mrs. James Butch~r.

•'

tbne Selvice

.

••"
••'

El~c ..
plumbi'ng,
carpenter
work.
painting,
paneling, •
any job that needs to ••
be done around your •'
••
hom~L

•

•
,,••

PHONE

M2·5705

Sales • ••

•••

,,

12-7-1 mo.

"-------------------~ =•

••

Ail:

Increasing

19oo v .w . wBh 197il v .w . mo oo"
Phone .992·2181
Also two new snow tir•s .
ONE 1972 GMC pickup truck . HOMESITES for 5ole. I acre and BRADFORD, Auctioneer , Com· •4
moun ted onV .W. rims . Best of .
I ;JAl!. l!: :ll·,· lw.· I'/
plete Service. Phone 949·2487 !
up. Middleport. near Rutlond .
Good runni ng condition. Price
CHIP
WObO.
Poles
ITI
OK
.
fer . Co11992·386b.
..!JIJ UJ ..!.J J
or q-49-2000. Roc'ine, Ohio 1 Crill "
$375 . Clyde BCrnefte , Br iar
Coll992-7&lt;il.
dlomete~ 10" on largest end. $8 1976 Suzuki ~M 100 MXER , 4 mo ..
1971 VW SU PER Butle . $1 ,300.
o ld. 0 hOurs on engine, new
Ridge 'Rd ., Langsv il~e . OH.
Bradford.
::
per ton . Bundled slob . $6 per
NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 boths,
Jan. II, 197S
EKce ll ent condition . ~ 1970
ports' needs a ssembled, $200.
Phone 742-2523 ,
, ton , O ~!ivered tO Ohio Po ll et
. oil alec .., I acre, Middlepo rt , ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR - :
CheveUO , $500. Podded bar . Oppo rt unity wi ll come 10 yo u
I 9'77 Suzuki ~M 125 B MXER , ex·
Co., Rt. 2. Po meroy . 992-2689:
Sweepers. toosters·. iron$ , oil "'
da•e to Rutlond. Phone 992s'tools. $300. 992-2987 .
tro s, e.l(cellen t cor1ditian . $675. 1971 CHEVROLET PIC KUP 307 V·8,
th ts co mmg year tn package s of
small appliances . La wn mower. ~
7&lt;81.
CAS H FOR Junk Cars . Frye's Truck
One
cou
ld
be
Y
ary
mg
s
•zes
PP
_
q92
:JoB2
.
------~
standard
,
52,000
miles
.
Good
1975 PlYMOUTH DUSTER , 2·dr ..
next to State Highway Gcfrage
---,
condit
ion.
PH985-3934
.
and
Aulo
Wrecker
Service
.
SMALL farm for sole , 10'1, down.
auto . Slant Si.l( , dark green Wi t~ ve ry small Out prec iou s . An·
FO R sO le , Ro und boles. PH .
on Route 7. Phone (614} 985· .~
Phone 7&lt;62 ·2081 or Pennzoil HAY
ther
co
uld
be
la
rge
tn
bo
th
o
owner
linonc:ed.
Monroe
Coun·
843·2524 .
. HAY FOR SA.LE . Timothy. olfclfo
white vi rwl top , P.S., radio , a ir .
Rut land 742-9575.
ty, W. Va . Phone (304) 772· ~3~~~~5~.~~~~~--~~- :
:-=-._-:~-~----Dlld d over. Ph . 257-364&lt;6 .
Good condit ion· 1 owner. {304) s•l e a nd ... a lue .
REMODELING , Plum bing, heating
3102 or (304) 77 2·3'127..
t'AI'IUCOHN l fJe(·, 22-Jan. AUJO BODIES ond sc.ro p meted, f:l N FORO Tractor , new tires .ond
77'3·5977 .
rims ; eKcell ent mecho ri lcal con ·
·a nd oil types of general repair . :~
191 Good thi ngs ju s t s ee m to . Rider's Salvage, 9q2.5468.
By Ca rol yn G. Thomas
COUNTRY
·
farmlond
with
sedud·
lc;I7A GRAN TORINO . V-8, P.S.. co me yo ur way today a nd yOu
dition. Also . l Holley cor ·
Work guaranteed 20 veors e)j . .1
Dep ut y Cle rk
ed woods. water ond good ac·
P.B., A.C. , good condition, wo n' t be th e on ly one to no ti ce SILVER DOLLARS ·&amp; coi ns. Will pay
( I ) J, 10,, 2fc
bureter. 1 Singer Zi9 Zog sew ·
_,.,
'•:.:
"'::.:•:.:·.:.P:.:
ho
::.:nc:•:..99
:.:.::2..:
· 2:::
'""
=·_ _
ceu in Monroe ,Coun1y, W. Vo. ~ P:.:•c.'c:
J times worth , ond up . Co li
,•
good tires . Earl Cron . •t. A poac ner not · e nlll led to
ing machine with button ko ler .
$1
,000
down,
coli
[304)
772742·2316
..
.
949·2568 .
sha re your bounty may se ek
PH 992·7201.
VA-FH A, 30 yr. financing . Ireland
SE:!~.G ~~~~~~ ~~~~~~· . ~~r~ ~
.3102 0' {30&lt;)772·3221.
part of the ac lton . Ftnd o ut
197~ DODGE CORONET Sport
Mortgage . 77 E. State, Aikens ,
Fabr ic Shop , Pomeroy . t
mo
re
a
bo.ut
yo
ursell
by
se
nd·
phori e: {61 4)592·3051.
Commercial property opproK , 17
Cou pe. hcellenl condi tion .
Authorited Siriger Sa le5 ond ~
tng
fo
f
vour
copy
ol
Astra
acres,
level
land,
loco1ed
ot
1%8 Pontiac Cotolino . Coli
Servi ce. We sharpen Scinors.
'§"
Graph LeHer . Ma tl 50 c ents lor HOOF HOLLOW HOrses . Buy . sell
THREE VEAR old . 11/ 1 story, ranch
Tuppers Plains on Ohio, Route
&lt;
erode s Griffith , 992-5782.
!rode or trai n . New ond used
e ac h and a long . se lf sty le home . 4 bedrooms. 2 cor
7. Phone (61•)667-630&lt;6,
EXCAVATING, doze r. loader and
lfi69 CHE VROlET IMPALA. 4-door. addre ssed . s ta mped en11e iope
Saddl es . Roth Ree'o'es ; Albany.
garage, ce ment drivewo~ , 1 A. .,...cc'-"====-==--~
backhoe work ; dump trucks ,.
Fine condition . S550. 742·2359.
{61&lt;)69a.3290.
to Ast ra -Graph . P 0 . Box 489 .
ground . $33,900. Prlvote
ond lo-boys for hire: will hou l ~
Radio Cdy Station . N _Y t0019
owner . Seen by appointment .
fill dirt , Ia soil , limestone and :·
FERGUSON 20 Tractor. New reor
COUNTY Humane Society,
Be sure lo spec ify your btrth ~EIGS
949 · ~801 .
grovel. Coli Bob or Roger Jef· · ~;
Coraline and adoption S'erv ice .
tires . S1 .:Klo. 742·2523 .
stg n.
fers , dov phone 992·7089: night ~
99n68o.
7.&lt;2
·3162
.
992
-5427
.
)q69 DODGE CORONET , 318 AQUARIUS !Jan. 211-Feb. 19!
phone 992-3525 or 992· 5232.
;:
II you haye a fun th ing on the AKC REGISTERED pe kingese pup·
molor . $375. Coll992-5011 .
EXCAVATING,
dozer,
backhoe
\,
agenda to day. doi1 ' t bring a
pies . Phone (J0.4 ) 882·2b83.
Po•.:e. 1y Bowling lanes
atld dilcher . Chorles' R. Hot· ~
gloo~y . Ger l o r Gu~ along A • RI SING- STAR K nn 1 B d.
Tri - ~ountv leaaue
f ield, Bock Hoe Servi ce , ~
pess1mtsl co uld ram on the ,
e e . oa r •ng.
· Jan. l}978
parade
Indoor on~ outdoor runs
Rutland , Ohio. Phone 742·2008 . •
Stanalngs
MAN
PISCF.S ~ Feh. %0-March 201
Gro.oming o~l . .breeds . Clean
llf
AITQII
Will
do roofing , conStruction, ~
T-eam
Pts. If VOU hove o service to offer; Trus t a little in yoUr tuck today . somrory foc•l•t te! . Ches hir e
POMEROY,
0.
plumbing
c:~nd hMting. No job ~
Eagles C!ub
12
won t io buy or sell something , Conc e ntrate o n the m~j or as·
VIRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR.
Phone (6 i4 ) 367-0292.
too Iorge o r too small. Phone 1•
Cline's Const. Co .
10
oe looking for wo rk .. , or
1
216
E
.
Second
Streef
JUST·
LISTED
Ap..-ox.
&gt;
742-2348.
~
Pomeroy Cement Block Co . · 8
wha tever ... you ·n get re•ults pe els of gett ing a job do ne. The AKC REGISTERED Doberman
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769
acres with lovely newer
pups . B•3· ;J053 after 5.
Columbia Nat iona l Llfe
8
fos ter with o Sentinel Wont Ad . small r::leta ils wilt take care of
HOWERY AND MARTIN b - =
lher'nse l11es.
home. :~'_ bedrooms with
Phon.• 992-3325
H&amp; R Firest one
8
Ca ll992 · 2156~
covollng , septic systems, -.
ARIES !March 21-Aprfj 191 AKC Dt;)BERMAN P!nche r. pup·
walk
·ln
closets,
2
niodern
Bill 's BO!Iv Shop
2
pies . 8 weeks old, ned &amp; rust.
doter , backhoe , dump truck, :
Social
si
tual
io
ns
could
be
awk
·
baths, kitchen with loads of
NEW
LISTING
-3
High irydlvidual game Ped igreed with Champion
limeslone, grovel. blacktop ,_
ward today , e);c epl for the fac t
Bill Radford 224; Ed Voss
cabinets, range &amp; oven,
be droom s, bath, util ity
Bloodlins.
Also,
certified
t1eolth
paving , Rt. 143. Phone 1 (614). ~lha t your r'nlnd is excep ti o nall y
222; John T . and Don N. 202.
cerlif icoht. $150 firm , your
formal dining room , famliv
building, natural gas. city
698-7331 .
:
In 192;,, Mrs. Miriam "Ma" ke en and agi le Stay ale rt. You
· High series- Bill Radford
choi'c e mole or femo le ,
room , 2 yrs. old . $28,000.00.
lo
water and front por ch.
can
outwit
emba
rrassmen
t.
571; Ed Voss 566 : Henry
Ferguson was sworn in as TAURUS '(April 20-May 201 614·797 ·4500,
Want jusi 57,500.
JUST LISTEO - About &lt; BATHROOMS AND Kit~hens ~·
Clatworthy 542.
remodeled, ceramic tile, plum- "
governor of Texas, the
You're sharp ·at making and
yrs . old brick &amp; frame . 1
MIDDLEP·ORT
'- 3
Team high game - ' H &amp; R
bing. carpentry, and general :
nation's second woman state re taini ng money today , bu t
acre. 3 lovely bedrooms.
bedrooms. 2 bath:;, natural
mointelionce. 13 years e)(· ,..;
Firestone 884.
keep
thi
s
In
mln(j
:
Those
c
lose
chief executive. Five days
Jlh baths, kitchen has 27 fl.
gas furnace , a11d city
perience. 992·3685.
~
Team high series - Eagles
to you won't appreciate you r COAL. limesto ne , and cofc ium
GeorgeS. Hobste~!!r Jr .,
(lblnets. range &amp; oven,
water. Located near the
Club 2486.
earlier, Mrs. Nellie Tayloe
PULLINS EXCAVATING . Compl9te ~
abilily and cou ld fou l up the
chloride ond coki um brine for
Broker
double glass doors to
business sect ion . Now
Ross had become governor of
Early Wednesday
~£~rNI
(May
·
,
'uae
,
dust
con
trol
ond
special
mi11ing
101112
Sycamore
St.
concrete
patio,
large
Wyomm-c
-"-"" 1~
·~ 01
salt fo r formers . EKtelsiOr So li
p
Oh '
Ml' xed League'
·garage, porch. $31.900.00.
Today you have especiall'v fine
omeroy ,
to
RACINE - 4, bedrooms,
~
... · :_ ·.-:..:. . ..; ' · " ; " ' .. :· ..
J1n . 4,1978
. Works, Ma in Street. Pomeroy.
PHONE
YOU WILL ADORE THIS
beth , city utlillles, natural
Standings
one· to-one relat ionsh ips. Don ' t
Ohio or phone 9q2. 3891 .
992·6333
Team
sig n any long-term agree·OHice Hours : 9 A. M. to.:,
-Newer 3 bedroom frame.
gas central heating, large
WANTED DEALERS: to install ' :
·- Zlde's Sport Shop
ments, however, for tomo rrow CAMPER . $600 . Als·o. horse
P .M.
,.
modern bath, very nice
lot and exira building .
sprayed loom insulation In old -:
, S
M
may be dilfer'ent .
tra iler. $450. Phone (614) 698·
Close Thursdays
anc
Asking
$28,000.
kitchen,
carpeting,
Young s uper arkel
ond new buildings. Tremen· :
I&lt;
A thought for the day :
CANCER {June ~!·July 221
3290
Smith Nelson Motor Co.
7
·
Saturdays at noon.
paneling, all In excellent
TUPPE 'l!S PLAINS dou! energy saver . Every .home ..
Eagles Club
6
Ulysses S. .Grant, 18th
You are adept at masterm ind· ECONOMY TRACTOR with all ot·
condition, nothing more to
Bre'eze way, l50x200 lot, 3
and bui lding owner con use it . :
Tenth Framers
3
president of the United ' [ng t~i.ngs for Oth ers today· Bul
toch ments . Uke new . osking
N'E W LIS Tl N G
3
We are th,, only manufactu rer r
do. JUST 118,500.00.
bedr.ooms,
bath,
gas
,
·b
youmtghtoverlooklhefactthal
$22.SO.
Pho
ne
{ol&lt;
)
o
.3290.
bedroom.
1'h
baths,
d
ini
ng
6 ~8
Ne Ison 0 rug Co .
2
Stat
thot trains how to Install Wllh 111
· es,
sa ld ,
"WI or
·ther~ could be some spinofl
LOCATED ON OLD RT. 33
central heating , nice oak
o
n the Job tra ini ng· and by tac· :
High Individual game
disgraces
no
man.
benefits for you In ttte process . APPLES . FITZPATRICK Orchards
area, kitct'len ha s built-in
- About 19 acres, water
floors and garage. Wlll
tory e)(perienced instoller•. No ~
men, A. L. Phelps Jr . 194,
U f
t
I 1
LEO !July- Au~ 221 Assoc ·
St.. te Route 689 . Phone
oven and range, one car
available,
overloo~s
both
consider
reasonable
offer.
women , Isabelle
n or
•
fHS ol any kind. We ore in· :
· Couch )95 .·
1 una
11 e 11Y,~d• • yqu ltes will go wout o •tl1eir way to•·
Wilkesville
. 669·3765.
garage , 1am 11 y room . New
POMEROY RURAL - 50
old &amp; new Rts. 33. Mostly
teres led on ly ih selling this • .
men , Bill P or Ier 185, women;
occas ona Y
n · men pu ll strings for y9 u toda y. How·
total electric home on an
acres with minerals, waler
wooded. $5,000.00.
.
Max ine Dugan 181; men,
disgrace labor." ~
e.ver, you may uncharacteristi· RUGS, WALl HangiOgs and acrelot . $41 ,000.00. Located
foam insulation that we C
~,
algons. Nice lo' Christmos.
L. rry Du~an .183 women
and electricity .
MIDDLEPORT - - One
monufocture. Con be oppliod .,
' ··
~, "n ' , ··\ "' caf uv
bBilk if th'ey ·mak e requests · Reosonoble. Coli ?'12·2214.
on I he Crow Sub-d ivision,
Betty Smlt 179 '
..
NEAR POMEROY - 175
floor plan, 2·3 bedrooms. 2
oil yeor roun~ . Write; lmpt~rial •
0 ·yoi.J .
Me
L
·
·
near
F
lve
Points.·
·
HI 9 h ser Ies Coatings &amp; Chemk:als , 4700 '
acres with gas well, 8 room
fireplaces, ready to move ·
n , arry - - - - - - - - - . . . , . . - - - - - VIRGO ~AUJ. " h-Sept. - Z2l 1976 FORD F·250Custom. ,7 ,50:.;
Wisshickon Ave .. Philo .. . PA
Dugan 518, women, Betty S.
I ,f. .
S helv~ self-doubts today. Go
1~ . 00tires · winch . Onlyl4 , 000
NEW LISTING - 2 year
Into.
Lvel
lot . good
modern ranch house. barn.
J9U4. Mr . 'Warren, (215) ,.
and Carolyn B~r S 11 : men , A.
181 · 111 ; Delma Karr l~ .
afterthatbigscoreyoufeUwas
mi. Headers . CB. Tope deck.
old Fuq Ua double w\de
minerals, and. fruit.
neighborhood , ~as been
844-0706.
•
L Phelps, Jr . 516, women,
High serl·es _
Le'na · unattainable . With g'o and
Over 53,000 in e11tros . Seriou~
bll
MIDDLEPORT
4
remodeled
nicely .
Isabelle Couch rt94; men, Bob
mo e home. 24'x56' with
Couch 509, women, Ma xi ne
Howard 463 ; Delma Karr 441 ;
gusto vou mar. be ju~t lucky
coils only after 12 noon:
porch in excellent condition'
$13,000.00.
bed roo m
brick ,
bath ,
O'!f,an 452.
Vona Taylor A23.
enough lo get II.
.
696· 1072. $6 ,800,.
Including all furnit ure &amp;
POMEROY- Basement, 3
n.atUral
gas
central
LIBRA IS.pl. 23-0et. 231 Mos l
heating , 2 porches and
bedrooms, . carpeting, one
eam hlgh .game - Zide's
of the day you are in good - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . appliances. Lo cated on
Sport Shop 671 .
sp'r'ts
d r d ·1
1
· - corner lot, 100'x200' In the
floor plan, gas forced air
basement. Ask ing $23,500.
Team i'llgh series ·- Zide's
Muon lanes
l&lt;lr an 'n I easy o get
furnace . Call about this
NEW LISTING - Business
Sport Shop 1989 .
Thursd1 y late le•gua
a ong wlt~ all. A c antank e rous
Arbaugh a~dltlon. Tuppers
..... 518,000.00.
Jan . s, 1978
know-it-all may p ush you loCl
Pla ins, Ohio. known as lhe
building that can be
1
separated Info 3 rentals.
WE HAVE BUYERS FOR
.
W. L.
'sc•'olaRiePri•O
·n lh~~~tfte~oNon . . Ra lph Brooks p roperty .
Gene
Chanty,
u
32
~
'
••·
ov.
"I
Th
.
1
a
g-"'
buy
at
YO,UR
PROPERTY,
Want
a
good
In-vestment,
5
Wedntsd•y Afternoon
Money mauers are right down
IS
'"fU'o'
1
The Other P ace Lounge
$21 000 00
ESPECIALLY
NEWER
try this one. only $35,000.
League
your alley tOday . You ' re bot h
We hive enlarged our
'
· ·
STARCRAFT FALL Sale. Min iHOMES, AND FARMS .
Don'l 'be five minutes late.
J1n. 4, 1978
Team 1
~
gifted and lucky in 1111ngs finan ·
service department and
motors, 20' and 22'. TraV•I ·
We
have
need
Qf
listings,
Ttam
W. L. Team6
LET
OU~
PHOTO
BUY
FOR
YOUR
47 49
cl al. Oon ·t: f1owever ,.,. expect
will service HOtpoint and
Troilen, 18' 5" $3.799. 25' 7" ,
all types , ttomes, land,
Farmers Bank
98 46
LIST
lNG
.
SERVICE
SECURITY.
AN
Tofri Boyd, Inc.
..,. 52
the world lo stand up and cheer
b
d
Bunkhouse $&lt;1,815. Fold-down ,
Ed's Crossroads Groc .
(Om mercia I, etc.
at your gains.
other nn s.
WORK FOR YOU.
INVESTMENT IN ONE
$1
,700 up. We sell service and •
Mike
Young's
Gulf
26
441
SAGITTARIUS
t
Nov.
13-Dec,
No. 6
98 46
Cheryl Lemley
HENRY E. CLELAND
OF THE ABOVE, IS
quollty. O~n Sundays. Camp ~
High game - Selby Min ley
tJ 1 Your big idea may come in
W.M. P .O.
81 6J
Associate
BROKER
TOMORROW' S SAVINGS.
Conley Storcroft Soles . Rl. 62, :
159 ; Betty Wise 157 : Grace
for some sharp c rit icism rrom a
Rufh 's Beauty Shop
75 69
Home Phone 742· 2003
HANK, KATHY &amp; LEONA
N. of Pt. Pleoaant.
IIPJ
Helen l. Tutanl
Chaney 152.
ld 11
·
Fraley's Logging Co.
94
H igh series .
S.lby
s e rie Sttler. His sour grapes
Hilton Wolfe, Sr.
CLELAND
C.
Bruce
TN
lard
Ed's Crossroads Groc.
stem from jealousy . Don' t let
1972 ARISTOCRAT TRAVEl i
-J•ck W. C.rsoy, Milr.
Associate
ASSOCIATES
Sue P. 1Aurphy
Manle~ 419; Belly Wise 312 ;
him daunl yo,u .
No. I,
. 30 114
Trall.r . 18'. $2,200. Coli ~ .
~
Phone992-ZJIJ
~omP Phone 949-2589
m .tut.m1ttl·f92·2MII
Hlgh ·game ....,. Lert'a ll&lt;loward . carol Suck 389.
Realtor Associates
.
!NEWSPAPER ENT!RPAISE ASSN.!
-C99
~2~-~
3~
~·:.._________~__ ::

Advertise

=

In The

01

Newspaper!.

BOWLING

"

TEAFORD[g

HOBSTETTER

REALTY

m.ooo.

··

e~.~P~h~on~e~992
~~·2~•7~8~.~§ t
~~5~e~rv~l~c
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-··

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you guessed it! Newspaperadverti~ing does it all and

f

- ~ may be the answer to your slugg•sh sales problem!
Now that· yo~u· h~rye the answer •.. call us right now·!

£

\

APPUANCE
SERVICE

entinel

!;

Pomeroy LJndmarlt

so

i l, ..

9a

'

.

"

can you solve this riddle? What advertising medium
can get your message across to the most amount of
people ... and for the least amount of money? We'll
give you a hint. It's black and white ... and read all over
the community ... (our entire circulatiQn, in fact!) ...,,

II

·,·

•

On
In
from
In

lhle day In history :
11161, Florida steed.ed
lht Union.
19211, the League of

..

Nalions came Into being as
the Treaty of Versailles went
Into effect .
In 1970, a oorslng home fire
ldlled 31 in Marletto , Ohio.

NOW OPEN

GINO'S
OF MASON
PHONE 773-5536

•

'

�8 _ The Daily Seottnel,M iddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., '1\Jesday, Jan. 10, 1978

.

NCAA"delegates face same old problems
By DAVID MOFFIT
UPI SJI&lt;IriS Writer
ATLANTA (UPI ) - The
National Collegiate Athletic
Association picks up this
week right where it !ell off a
year ago - seeking to heal
the breach between the maJor
footba ll powers and the
org an i z a t io n 's
less
prosperous schools.
The major powers say
NC AA r eor ganizatio n is
nee&lt;le&lt;l so they can decide for
themselves how much to
spend on thetr ' athletic
programs rather than having
schools with limited mcomes
makin K that decision for
them by outvoting them on
the convention noor.
NCAA President J . Neils
Thompson of the UniverSity
of Texas tried unsuccessfully
to push a reorgani.zation plan

through
last
yea r' s
convention at Miami Beach
and prorn lsed to return with a
new proposal this year.
The NCAA Council and a
number of other committees
begin meetings Sunday at the
7G-stQry Peachtree Plaza in
downtown Atlanta . The
opening session for the full
co nve ntion will be held
We&lt;loesday morning with the
closi ng session set for Friday
afternoon.
" We'll get restructuring
somehow," Thompson said
following last year's defeat .
"We need to make a survey of
the delega tes wh o were
opposed to it. I think then,
maybe. we can come up with
something that will pass."
A total of 21 reorganization
cunc ndmen ts a re on the
agenda but the one expecte&lt;l

to draw the mO.t attention is
a lengthy proposal by the
NCAA Council which would
require schools in the lop
divis ion to sponsor a
minimum of eight spor!S,
including football a nd basketball, and t.o draw an average
of at least 17,000 fans to i.ts
football games over a fouryear period.
If the propos~! is accepted
- and that is questionable U1e top 75-80 powers would be
pla ced in . a separate
subdivi sion and be the only
schoo ls voting on issues
rela ting to their football
programs.
NCAA Executive Director
WaIter Byers expressed
, doubts at the close of the 1977
convention that such a
reorganization plan can gain
majority support..

" AI ooe tune, 1t appeared
that the situation could be
resolved on the coovention
noor ,"said Byers. "I believe
we are past tha t period now . I
belie ve thos e fa voring
reorganization will now take
a more a~gressive stance ."
fur d ham's
Pete
Carl es im o,
who
had
reorganization tabled a year
agn , . -s aid . the
NCAA
{Oembers hip agreed that
Some sort of reorganization Is
needed . But he said many
were "wary'11 of the proposal
as it was presented at llle last
coovention .
Cariesimo said then, "I
wouiH like to see the Steering
Committee go back to the
drawing board."
The football powers insist
th ey want to remain within
th e NCAA , but some ha ve

indica ted a willingness to
leave the organization if they
feel that becomes necessary.
Most of \hose si:hools are
me mbers of the Co lle~e
Football Association !CFA l .
Byer s said he has .
•·r eser vations" about the ·
CF A as a solution. But' he
added , " The NCAA ha s
entered a difficult period and
I suSpect there will be. som~
sort of convulsion before 11
ends. The process could be
destructive."
Thompson agreed. ":rhe

fu ture .of the NCAA is a\ t.o llll!ke the same peMystake ," he said after being pinching cuts as those schools
named president for a two- whi ch operate on ,. , a
•
year term . " If we don't start shoestring.
"
We
'r
e
just
\reading
doing something to pacify
those schools which have the water t'' said University of
desire and the ability to run Georgia Athletic Dtrector
to p- qualit y athleti c Joel Eaves. "This will not be
programs, we're not going to resolved until we can act
have an NCAA farther down 'separately, with institutions
of like interest making their
the ro8d."
decisions."
own
Officials at \hose schools
Another
issue which is
that are committed to bigexpe'
c
ted
to
draw heated
time college football, some
debate
at
the
convention
is a
with athletic budgets running
al
to
bue
athletic
propos
as high as $6 million, have
expressed dismay 81 having

scholarships on economic
need . The football powers
managed to block that
proposal a year ago.
" I hope 'pee!! has not
become a symholic issue, a
battleground between tllose
who support big time football
and those who don 't/' sald
Father Edmond Joyce of
Notre Dame, one of the
founders of the CFA. "Need Is
not one of our biggest
problems. But it does offer a
threat t.o the NCAA as we
know it today."

Johnny Miller sees cpmeback

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy O.,'fUes&lt;lay Jan. 10 1978
DICK TRACY
'
'
'

•I
•

When we win, we celebrate

TUESDAY, JANUARY It, tt71

2::10-Doctors 3,4,1 5; One l.lte to l.lve 6,13; Guldtng
Light 8, 10.
3:06-Another World 3,, ,15; Lilias Yoga I. 'You 20 .
3:ts-General Hospital 6,13; 3::10-AII In The Family

•••
•
•'

.
•••
•

&lt;:DO-Special Treat 3,, ,15; Merv Griffin 6; Gilligan's
Is. 8; Sesame 51. 20,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC tO;
Dinah ·11.
4:31&gt;-BradY Bunch 8;,10.
5:06-Bonanza 3; My Three, Sons 4: Gunsmoke ~:
Mlsler Rogers' NeighbOrhood 20,33; Hogan s

·''

i7
'

•
•,,·
•

•'

Now, You Know

.

&lt;; News 6; 6:•$--Mornlng Report 3; 6:St&gt;-Good
Morning. West Vtrglnta 13; 6:S$-Chuck Wh ile
RepOrts 10; News l J.

7:06-Today 3,. ,15; Good Morn ing America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Bullwl nkle 10 .
7: 30-Schoolles 10; B:oo-Capt . Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame

St. 33.

ev

Unscramble these four Jumbles,

one letter to each square, to form f-~~lr-.::::-~ - --T'
tour ordinary words

BORN LOSER

11 :31&gt;-Knockout 3,1S; Fomlly Feud 6,13, Love of Lite
8,10; Sesame St .

1l :S5-CBS

CDJf;' IJ01li6R
~.1()()

II I r

Address 13.

2:3o--Doctors3,4,1S;

FLYTALb

BUT THEI-! Al(EL RAM

0\.IT AflfR HIM ,., \ HAT

STRANGER 1 5~ S MART._, 1
HOPE HE. KNEW WHAT
HE:. WAS DOIN' ' '"

THAi POOR

I

Now arrange the circled letters to •
lorm the surprise an~wer , as sug·
gested by lhe above cartoon.

y

I

Jumbles: PANSY FRAME LIQUOR MAT!JRE
Answer: What Dracula waa looking for whHe driving
o_n a C:Duntry road - THE MAIN ART£RV

JtmbiiBook No. 10, with lhlll- ·110 puulee, • 8WIIIabll Jor lt .Mpolt·
p-.:1 from.,lumblll, cJo lhla •~"~ ;:spr, 801134, fV'wood. N.J. 01141. lndudll
your n~mt, ldciNM, ~ oodt Mil make d'l8cD ~ ID tis a ;: 4 L ' f, .

.~a1'11¥~tar'

Af'TE:IZ \1:lLJ GET

'THEM, WArT UN11L
HE&lt;AIZ MY VOICE .. ·

r

by THOMAS JOSEPH
VOU KNOW WKA&gt;
39 Folk ACROSS
DO !HEN.
singer
t "I Believe
Pete
in You - "
5 B1vouacke&lt;l 40Gennan
river
11 Great Bar·
rier Island
DOWN
I Dullards ·
12 Unwilling
2 Slanting
13 Uprising
l Help : 3 wds.
t4 Hard to
4 Consume
reach
5Lisl
15 Sprite
6 Ward off
16 Chalice
7 Biograph-..
ve il
ical sketch :
11 Coxcomb
abbr.
/7.--:--;--""~~'"-;:S;:-ho...,u'ld:;:n-;'t~~r,:;:~=:L:L:::- 18 Future box8 Worker's
office draw
we .stop
20 Chemical
incentive:
?
2wds.
suffix
9 Tallin is its
ei1;~tf!. 21 College
capital
V.I.P .
. 22 Agitate
23 Caucasian
language
%4 Arizona
city
Z5 Easy
task
~
i 26 ~trip of
,
wood
'. ' .
· . . · .; 27 Half a
score
28 New Mexican city:
2 wds.
31 Total:
abbr.
32 See '20
Across
33 Jockey
'~lfll.• A·~OuB,..,
Turcotte
"
34 Prodded
3G Soil'
I
•
37 Hire
"
Formerly

;ro

••
•

.
'

::
·-

y e!terday •• Answer
tO More
26 Handyman's
complex '
need·
'16 Winglike
,28 Prolonged
!9 Gather
attack
22 Stone29 Coercion
paver's block 30 Register
23 Windflower 35 Former
2' Hair
U.N. name
Z5 Passing
36 Female
phases
deer

•

Z ,_NI' •

' -

ruesday . Ja n 10

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

is that the opener must start
with either first-round con·
trot in ut least throe suit~ or
• (}10Hfi1
first-round control in two
• 4
and sec:Qnd in the other two .
AQ 7 2
South probably overbid u
....1 4 2
trifle when he fail ed· tq stop
EAST
WEST
at four spades, but the slam
~
• 2
was unbeatable.
, . QJ 10!16 5:1 ' A 8 7
East took his ace of hearts
+" t05J
J 9" 4
... 96
... K tO 8 5 J and put immediate pressure
on South by leading b•ck a
SOUTH
club. South thought and de• AKJ7 5:1
cided to refuse the finesse
• K2
and hope for a squeeze that
K6
would materialize if the man
... AQ7
with the king of clubs held
four diamonds . He cashed
Vulnerable : Ea st · Wcs t. ail his trumps and the king
Dealer: South , Op c nin~ of hearts and sure enough ·
lead: Queen of hearts.
East had to choose be~ween
West North East
Sout.h unguording his lack of diamonds or chuck ng the king
t•
of
clubs.
4 NT
Pass
4.
Pasli

•.
+

+

•

Pass

DAILY CRYPTO(jUOTE- Here's how to work It:
Is

A X Y D I, B A A X R
1. 0 N G F E I. I. 0 '1'1'

letter simply stands ror another In this sample A ia
for tht• thn•e L's. X f() r the two O's, ("(C Single letters,

, One

WINNIE

u ~cd

.. .

·.

',',

·.....

apostrophes, the lcn~th :md forrn atinn of the words are all

'!:~\ ~~

{,\~~·-~~

hints. Each rlay thl' code lctt~rs are different .
I'RYPTOQUOTES
CY
HG

MV

MLYTX
ZMNPD

KXFQX. -

C

FHGTNXPHMY

EMJ.YF

MV

HPCKHCY

1 AYMZ ~

CFCQX

Yesterday's Cryptoqaole: NEVER TELL ANYBODY WHAT
YOU'RE GOING TO DO UNTIL YOU'VE DONE IT,..CORNEIJUS VANPERBILT

Puss

5+
Puss

Pn ss
Pa fis

-- -DO 'IOU

6U'{5 HAVE

A PUCK? ·

61VE ITTO ME ... I
WANiTO GHOW i.{OU
A LITTLE TRICK ...

THEM TWO ARE .AS

o•

By Oswald Jacoby &amp; Alan
Sontag
The jump to game when
partner has not limited his
hand is never a slam lnvita·
lion in itself, but . obviously
partner may have enough to
warrant continuing to six or
even to seven once or twice
. during a lifetime.
The general rule for a
jump to game In a major Is
that you hold good trump
support, but never as ma1.1Y
as 13 points In high cards.
Th~ J;!:eneral rule fo.r going on

Copr. 1978 K1ng f'ealurea Syndicate, Inc: .

HOW DO '-IE
LIKE HAVIN'
TWINS,
MELISSY?

I IO · A

+

/,...IS IS

I

Tyler Moore 10; Hogan's Heroes 15,
1&gt; :00---News 3,4,8,10, t3.1S; ABC News I&gt; ; Zoom 20.33.
6:Jo-NBC News J.t, IS; ABC News JJ ; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8, 10; Qver Easy 20,JJ .
7:QO-Cross -Wits 3; Cross-Wits -4 ; Lairs Club 6 ; Sh~ Na
No8; New$\0; To Tell. The Truth 13; Gllllgo~ sIs
15; Characteristics of Learning Disabilities .20; Big
Green Magazine 33 .
7 : 3~Funny Farm 3; Goln' Home ·4, When Havoc
Struck 6: Family Feud 8; MacNeil-Lehrer Report
20,33 ; The Judge tO; In Search of 13; Wi ld Kingdom
IS .
.
8·oo-Grtzzty Adams 3 3, 4; College Basketball 8. IS;
· Eight Is Enough 6,13; Nova 20,33; Good Times 10.
8:30--AIIce 10,· 1i' : DO-Black Sheep Squadron 3,41;
Charlie' s Angels 6, 13; Dance In Amerlc." 33; Movie
. "VIgilante For'ce" 10; Ollnce lri Amerlc:a 20.
lO :QO--Pollce Woman 3,4, lS I Baretta 6, 13 ; Celebrity
Concerts 8: News 20; Best of Families 33 .
l0 : 3~Wodehouse Playhouse 20.
11 :oo--:News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, l Si Di c k Cavett 20 ; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33.
11 :30--Johnny Canon 3,4,15 : Pollee Story 6, 13i Hawaii ·
F.lve-0 8; ABC News 33; Movte "Arrowhead" 10.
l2 :Dt&gt;-Janakt 33: 't2 :4t&gt;-Myslery ol the Week 1&gt;. 13;
Kojak 8; !:DO-Tomorrow 3,4; 2:1o-News 13.

NOR Til

Hiu.o •••..

r

T

South· squeezes out 6

·

FRANK &amp; ERNIE

Light

s :oo-Bonanza 3; My Three Sons 4; Gunsmoke 8;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33. Afterschool
Special 13; My Three Sons· 15.
5:Jo-Qdd Couple 4 ; News 6; E lee . Co '2 0, 3Ji Mary

(Answers tomorrow)

Yesterda 's

Guiding

ts. 8; Sesame St. 20,33; Gomer Py le. USMC tO;
'Dinah 13. . .,
~ : J(}--My Three Sons 3; Aftersc hool Special 6 : Par
- trldge Family .a; Brady Bunc h 8, 10; Utile Rascals
IS.

r xxr xxx J

THE

Si~ANaER ...

Life to Llve6 ;

J :oo-Another World 3,4,15; Lilias, Yoga &amp; Yo u 20; o
Be Announ ced 13; Best ot Fa milies 33
J : t s-Ge~erol Hospltalj ,l3 : 3:3o-AI'I In The Family
8, 10; Ohio Journal 20.
·
4:06-MIIster Car toon 3; Little Rascals, Our Gang .4.
For Richer , For Poorer 15; Bewitched 6; G illigan s

PART OF A
L.OCK SOUNDS AS IF
IT HOLDS WATER'. '

I

OH · OH .. · 5 0MEONE COMIM'
TO MAX'S R,OOM ·.. MUST
BE AXEL -·· OH. GEE ···

One

Rl~

THI~

ORPHAN AMNJE-BAD NEWS TOMIGHT!

ANNTJ:"

Free 10:. 12 :00--Least l.S;

News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women
Only IS .
1. JQ-Oays of Our Lives 3,4, 15; As The World Turns
8,10; 2:0G-$20,000 Pyramid I&gt;; State ot t~e Slate

ID

UTTIEORPHAN

L.ovtng

12 :3()-Ryan' s Hope 6,1 3; Gong Show 15; Searc h for
Tomorrow 8,10; Elec.. Co. 33.
l :oo-For Richer For Poorer J ; All My Children 6,13;

PLIME

.,

20 , 3~ .

News 8;

Newscenter ·J; News .t ,6, 10J To Say The
Divorce Court 8; Midday 13.

[j

TmMt.l
GHNR!

,.

k

Mouse Club 6; Fomll y Altair 8; Match Game 10.
9:31&gt;-Edge ot Ntghll&gt;; Andy Griffith 8; Famtty Attolr
10
.
I O : ~Sanford &amp; Son 3 . ~ . U: Big \Ioiiey 1&gt;: Tattletale•
8; Joker 's Wild 10; Mtke Douglas 13.
tO ·JO--Hollywood Squares 3•,1S; Pri ce Is Right 8, 10.
11 :OG--Wheel of Fortune J, 15; Happy Days 6. 13;
Marcus W:eiby, M.D. ,. ; Elec . Co . 20 .

\1'

~

,,

9:DO--Merv Gr iff in 3; Phil Donahue 4; rtew M 1c

1}\)~ fji)'\l ~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~ ® ,
by Henri Arnold and Bob lee

•

"•
••

Vinton council
in early hassle

Property
Transfers

6:25-Chrlslopher CloseUp 10; 6: 30-News Conference

6:tJO-News 3.&lt;.8.10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33 .
6::10-NBC News 3,4,\5; ABC News \3; Carol Burnet! &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20,33 .
7:06-Cross-Wits 3; My Father, My Brother and Me AI
Liar&amp; Club 6 ; Pop Goes therCountrv 8; News 10;_ To
Tell the Truth 13; Gllllgan'• Is. IS; French Chef 20;
Me and Stella 33.
·
7:»-Hottywood Squares 3; Lei's Go To The Race• 8;
Next Step Beyond &lt;; Wolfman Jack 6; MacNeil Lehrer Report 20.33; Prl&lt;e Is Right 10; That's
Hollywood 13; Television Honor Society 15.
8:oo-Mon From Attontls 3,•,tS ; Hoppy Days 6,13;

~

First .clinic is January 18

Meigs Co.

BY THE WA'(.• -.:;;&gt;
1 JUST HAPPEN
TO HAVE P~ES?
' SHE · DEVIL!

Cross star

Beaver season
opens ]an. 14

WEDNESPAY, JANUARY \1 , 1118
s :•$-Farm Reporl\3 ; 5:St&gt;-PTL. Club 13; 6.0G-PTL
. Club 15.

H@roes lQ; Emergency One 13; My Three Sons 15.
s : ~dd Couple ' ' News 6; Elec . Co. 20,33: Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Hogan's Heroes 15.

~ELEASES PE·
SCRtB I ~G THE

Questions plague

TV.••in Review

" You' re e Big Boy Now" 10.
12:0G-Jenakl33 ; I ~ OG-T'omorrow ) ,.t; 1: 10---Nev

8, 10; Consumer Survlv•l Kit 20.

.. '

peopletalk

~oly

TELEVISION
VIEWING

VITAMIN'S BEEN
HELP HIM .••

'

and Arnold Palmer it's been working with my son
list with $61,025.
By JOE SARGIS
"I don't live and die with doubtful if any golfer has John (who is 7) and I've bad a
UPI Sports Writer
anything," he said. " I don't picked up more. outside lot of success to this point. It's
TUCSON, Ariz. (UPI J
Johnny Miller Is an engima - · look at 1977. as being terrible . money than Miller.
fun watching someone that
Despite ail the. sucC:ess, on young improve. Heck, my
to himself and to those who What it did for me was sort of
have foilowe&lt;l his pro golf made me aware of where I and off the course, Miller lather started me out when I
was. It re-awoke me."
seems almost undisturbed by was ei~t, so I've been on
career .
Then, he tried to explain what is happening to him .
After winning eight events
both ends of tile game."
what
he
meant.
"When
I
can't
play
in
1974
and
four
more
in
!975,
What ·about the immediate
northwest states. For years and •Arkansas players and giving them greater time in
By MIKE TULLY
anymore,
"I
think
if
you
look
back,"
or
lose
my
desire
to
everyone
was
predicting
he
future?
they endured everything fans all remained in the their lives . And if the
UPI Spurts Writer
Miller ,said, "you will see the stay out here," he said, "I'd
"I have no goals," Miller
rainstorm s to the ballpark long after the games celebrations remain in the would replace Jack Nicklaus same tiling happened to Jack like to turn to teaching. I'm
from
NEW YORK [ UPI )
as
the
top
player
on
th,!'
PG
A
said,
"outside of the fact I'd
realm
of
fun
and
reiease,
they
Sp(Jrts celebrations are_ in . Seattle Pilots. The Portland to savor bowl victories. And
(Nicklaus) at the same stage not interested in a club pro like to win again, and soon.
Tour.
are
a
colorful
part
of
our
in
Alabi.lma
,
where
fans
felt
Bl a~ ers ~ ma de
Americans didn 't invent '.f r.i:til
Then, something happened in his career: People were juo. I'd prefer to teach, Don't write me off . I'lL be
them. but they sw-e are doing tneptitude a household word. they had been deprived of a ·culture.
to
the angular , blond writing him off, the way some especially you.ogsters. I've back ."
[n fact , the way Americans
Then a combination of Bill nati onal c hampi onship ,
their best to perfect them .
Californian
enroute to have with me, but he came
react to victory on the field of
Walton, Jack Ramsay and reaction WijS bitter.
And in future yea rs,
stardom.
He
lost
some of his back, if you could call it that .
It proves that Americans sport, that old saying might
America will be witnessing assort ed other cha ra cters
"lt wasn't easy for me
competitive
desire
tmd gave
won the NBA title, selling off are placing an ever-higher just as well go, ' 'It's not
more and mor e of them .
being
out (on Tour ) last year .
up
practicing.
The most obvious example, an epidemi c of "Bia· va lue on their sports, and whether you win or lose, but
Miller also played less and For the first lime 1. had to
what
you
do
after
the
game."
that
conof course, is the "Orange zermania '
less and with money coming leave my wife and the kids
Crush." When the red-orange tinues today.
in from ail sides, he spent home. My oldest [son John) is
Philadelphia ·develope&lt;! a
clad Denver Broncos began
more and more time in front in school now, so here I am
hockey hangover from the
handling opponents with
of
cameras
doing out here hacking it all alone.
time the Flyers won the
unusual ferocity , a soft drmk
commercials than on the golf It's not a good feeling, so I'll By KENNETII R. CLARK
···
manufacturer coined a term Stanley Cup in 1974 to the day
Just hav~ to get useti to it." United Press International
course.
they repeated in 1975. No self,
SWAN SONG: After a quarter century as queen cif the opera,
describing ail the mania that
Miller said he will play
So , it came as no surprise
respecting fan was without a
Rocky Mountain residents
more this year than last when coloratura soprano Beverly SIUs is quitting. She lold a New
when
he
slipped
to
two
Flyer key-chain . Kate
York press conference Monday she'll retire in 1980 lo become
can muster:
victories in 1976 arid none in he competed in 23 events. co-director, with Julius Rudel, of the New York City Opera.
Smith's
rendition
of
"God
And if the Broncos can
However, he mi~d the cut
1977.
says she, "I'll be 51 by then .l've sung every role I ever wanted
Bless America" was a good·
defeat the Dallas Cowboys in
"I've · never been one to twice and withdrew from five • to sing; I've sung in every opera house I've wanted to; by 1980 I
luck charm for the Flyers.
next week 'S Super Bowl
practice ," Miller said other tournaments in 1977, so
making her the most
game, tourists shouldn 't be
NEW YORK (UPI I -In his I've ever seen coming mto recently wh1ie gelling ready in effect he played.in only 16. will have recorded every opera I've wanted to record . I did
venerated Philadelphian 0 \\11 quiet way, R-onnie Perry college," Holy Cross Coach
surprised to find ora nge ski
"I had some definite swing what I set out to do." She says she wants her final performance
to play in the $200,000 Tucson
since Betsy Ross .
.
slopes.
would like for nothing better George Blaney has said. Open , first PGA event of the problems last year, " )\Iiller lobe a fundraising gala, adding, "I made my debut with City
In 1970, one day after the · than to be left a lone.
The reason for a il the
"You see him running the new season. "When I was said. " Some of it was due to oPera in October,195:i, and to say goodbye in October, 1980Boston
Bruins
won
their
first
excitement is simple.
- After generating enough drills in practice and he runs going good, I never practiced . the slump I was in and some 25 years later ~ would tidy it up nice!~."
Stanley
Cup
in
29
years,
half
There just aren't enough
hoopla to last him the res\ of them textbook perfect. You And now that I am trying to of it to just plain bad habits. I
JORDANS SPLIT: J'resfdent C&amp;r~er's administration leans
championships
to
go of Boston converged on City his college eiigibilty, the · see him taking his shot, get my game back I don't like didn't play after October, so
Hail in 91J.&lt;legree heat, a sophomore guard from Holy always the correct form ."
heavily
on the sanctity of marriage 'and the family, but he's
aroWld .
it when I hit good shots in I've had a lot of time to work
losing
anotlier
of his troops to the other side. HamU\on Jordan,
Denver has had ¥ pro curious way to celebrate Cross just wants to play ball
So il wa s not totally practice. The place for good on my garne.n
triumph in a winter sport.
Carter's
top
While
House aide, and wife, Nancy, are splitting
football team for 17 years and
unexpected that Perry shots is on the golf course ."
and forget about the rest.
Did Miller seek any outside
When the "Steel Curtain"
oi
marriage. The Jordans are the second
after
eight
years
this is the first time anything
"l':ve answered more qUes- becam.e the focus of much
Like it or not, Miller is help?
defense bro'ught f!ittsburgh a
to part company. Treasury Secretary
administration
family
good has happened.
,tions than I've ever answered attention this seasOn. He was
."1 looked at film of myself
champion in the Super Bowl in my life," he said after the placed on the cover of two practing these days because
W.
Michael
Blwnenthal
and his wife separated last year.
The plot IS repeated in
going back ail the way to the
in 1975, the wild crowds in the recently concluded Holiday national sports publications, he doesn't like where his
other places.
1966 Open," he said. "I sure\
streets gave a.mple evidence Festival. "And I'm getting a and virtually billed as the game is and he wants to play had
SENIOR CITIZEN: Former President Richard Nixon joined The way professional
a good swing way back
and
win
again
.
Still,
he
seems
that the city had never seen a
the
ranks of other senior citizens Monday, celebrating his 65th
sports have evolved, with so
Second Coming of Pete undisturbed
little sick of it.
by
what iheo. I wish I could duplicate
pro football title.
birthday
and becoming eligible for Social Security benefits. No
many teams in each league , it
Maravich.
"So~I~etimes I wish I could
happened to him m 1977 when it now. I alsoaskedmyfather
Recently the Tampa Bay
one
at
Casa
Pacifica, the former "Western White House" in
is a mathematical certainty
But offensive wizardry is he placed 48th on the money t.o work with me, which he
just put some tape over my
Buccaneers proved that mouth .''
san
Clemente,
Calif., would say how Nixon and his family
that many cities will go for
not his style. He simply
did . He always he)ped me
1
lesser accomplishments can
marked
decades without seeing a
the
occasion.
Nixon, now a virtual recluse, has agreed
Dw-ing his freshman year prefers to integrate himseU
when I was younger and
relea se the stored emotions of
championship .
·
to
open
up
the
grounds
of the estate to public bus lours on Feb.
disciplined,
Perry averaged 23 points per into . the
struggling. Still, for the most
Consider: if all major a fan. After winning a game game and was considered one patterned game of 18th26,
marking
the
50th birthday of the town of Sao Cle!Dente, but
part I lrie&lt;l to cure myself
to go along with 26 straight
sports franchises in the four
of the best first year players ranked Holy Cross and let the
even Uiough I know the doctor his office has not said whether he'll be at home that day ...
defeats, the Bucs new hornr
major sports survive this
points fall w!lere they may .
who is his own Patient is a
to 6,000' fahs at .the airport. in the country. He was lOth in
season, then . 26 baseball
. GLIMPSES: Old friends Ethel Merman and Rlcbard
"I don't want \0 find myself
the
nation
in
field
goal
fool.
"It was," said Coach John
teams, 18 hockey teams, 22
in a situ,ation . where
" I feel I have it together Rodgers joined Mary Martin ala party at 8ardi's in New Yor~
McKay, " almost sweeter pe rcentage and 19th in everything [s being set up
basketball . teams and 28
scoring , but thai' hardly
again, and don't worry, 'Monday night, celebrating her opening with costar Anthony
U1an the victory.'.'
football teams will be
aroWld me," he says. ul more
people are going to hear from Quayle in the Broadway play "Do You Turn Somersaults" ...
Encouraged . by
the Conveyed the full picture.
shooting for five titles.
In 25 games he committed or less take whatever shots I
me. I know I have \he ability MacKenzie Phillips, the 18-year-old costar of "One Day at a
They all can't win, baby. showing, Tampa Bay went just 45 turnovers, a statistic get and the rest is left up to
to win again and l 'm sure I Time," has asked to enter a drug diversion program in
out and won the next week .
That in · turn mean s that
will. If. I'm patient I know Beverly Hills, Calif., following a recent drug-related arrest ...
By that time, of course, the that would add years to the me.
when Xopolis finally gets .a
own
talents
aside,
His
life of any ulcer-ridden coach.
something good will happen. I Chrysler Board Chairman John J. Riccardo Is Motor Trend
winner 20 years from now, fans had become blase.
Perry has the shadow of his
'
'
He
wBs
the
most
don 't know if I ca n do it right Magazine 's "Man of the Year," for developing a new line' of
The ent hu siasm isn 't
the celebr~tion will make the
fundamentally sound player lathe• before him.
away but I think I can soon." small, front-wheel drive autos the magazine hails as the wave
"Orange Crush " look like an necessarily confined to
While Miller attributes his of the future .. : Singer Paul WIUiams is suing Barwood Films
professional sports.
exercise in solemnity.
fail to 1~ziness and bad Ud. in Los Angeles for $100,000 on grounds the company
Notre Dame , Washington
Ask t~e people in the
habits, pi~king up a lot of welshed on his 2 percent of profits composer's fee from sales of
outside money certainly was soundtrack albums from ;t.e film "A Star is Born" ....
HEADS PARTY
The first cervical clinic for Church in Middleport. The
a cootr,ibuting factor, at least
Forest Clark, 59, chalnnan
Meigs County women has clii)ic will be in operation all
in blunting his desire. • ·
of the board of directors of
been set for Wednesday, Jan. day.
Miller does commercials
tbe Peoples Bank - one of
18. at Heath United Methodist
There
are
openings
at
the
for
at least a dozen firms in
Its
orlgillal
blcorporaloro
By JOAN HANAUER
clinic
and
women
wishing
to
'the
United States, Canada ·
and
president
of
Duke
UPI Television Writer
make an appointment for the Cleaners, Vanity Inc., K.
and Great Britain. He also
NEW YORK (UPI) - Calamity fans now cim watcl;--the
clinic which is free of charge
has picked up a couple • of
F. C. Inc., and Scotch Clean
.televised catastrophe of the week in a new syndicated series
may call 992-7531 during the Centers, bas been elected
clients in Japan and
that capitalizes on the public appetite for disaster ,
day time or 992-51132 in the chairman of the Mason
Australia, so there is no lack
"When Havoc Struck" is the title of the new series, hosted by
evenings or on weekends.
of money for the growing
II the first meeting of 1978 held Jan. 13 between the
County, W.Va. Democratic
Glenn Ford and sche&lt;luled to make its debut Jan . II, 7 : 3~
Miller family, which now Is an indication of things to Vinton Council and the Gallia
party.
p.m., Eastern time, with a hurricane show called "Camille
numbers Eour children and come, there will be in- County Sheriff's Department
Was No Lady." The shows are all docurnentaries ·oo real-life i~
soon will be five.
teresting council sessions for the purpose of eoteril)g
calamities. After tlle initial chapter on Hurricane Camille, the
Ohio's 1978 beaver trapping The Almanac
Last year, Miller was from now on in the Village of in~o a contract for police
United Press fnlemalfooal
show will go on to "Great Airship Disasters," "Volcanoes," season will open Jan. 14 inguaranteed $180,000 to play in Vinton.
protection. l)iayor Neekamp
Today is '1\Jes&lt;lay, Jan. 10,
"The Dust Bowl" and "Ufe at the Limit," about auto racing. stead of Jan. 18 as reported
t)Vo
tournaments
in
AI the Jan. 6 council indicated it was his feeling
For !2dlsaster-filled weeks it will depict flood, drought, bridge earlier,
Meigs
Game the loth ctay of 1978 with 355 to
Australia. It has . b•en meeting, councilman Collis th'a t once . a cootra,ct Is
collapse, mining cave-in, fire, earthquake and calamity at sea. Protector Andy Lyles said follow.
estimated he picked up Adkins charged that certain finalized, the council will
Herbert Schmertz, vice president of public affairs for Mobil today. The trapping season
The moon is between its
Archie E. Lee, June P. Lee another •$300,000 or $400,000 fellow council members have attempt to aboli'\h the .Vinton
on;says his company has strung together 50 television stations for beavers will be closed at6 new phase and first quarter. to Kenneth E. Buckley, Alice from his various . other ac- a "conflict of interest" since Police Department. Mayor
The morning stars are J . Bucklev, .622 A., Syraucse, tivities .
that will carry "Havoc" all on the same night and lime. It will p.m. on Feb. 18 in Meigs
they are also volunteer Neekamp has gone on,record
Mercury, Venus, Mars and
be followed with a second series, "Between the Wars" - World county.
Archie E. Lee, June P. Lee
Miller doesn't like t.o talk firemen receiving money opposing such a contract
Lyles
also
reminds Saturn.
Wars, tllat is - hosted by Eric Sevareid.
to Carl S. Weaver, .55 A., about his outside activities from the village for lire runs. liecause he feels the village Is
The evening star is Jupiter. Syracuse.
. Mobil has had. difficulty getting the kind of programming residents that the annual
e&lt;cepl to say he will have to
Adkins cite&lt;l Sections 731.02 getting ·adequate protection
from the commercial networks that it wants for its corporate district fish and game
Those born on this date are
Rose S. Reynolds to Jay play better to justify what he and 731.12 ofthe Ohio Revised from its pollee department:
sponsorship .-- the image messages that never discuss wbat hearing for citizens as well as under the sign of Capricorn. Ha ll J r., .30 A., M'ddl
1
eport . is ]leing paid in corhmercial Code to substantiate his
Another hot issue ac-.
· you put in your· automobile - and for \hat reason has gone outdoorsmen will be held at I
Early Amerioao ,patriot
Kenneth Eugene Hayes, fees .
argwneot.
cording to Neekamp was
heavily into public broadcast imderwriting and attempting to p.m. Sunday, Jan. 29, at the Ethan Allen was born Jan. 10, Darelene Hayes to Kenneth · "I want them to feel they
According to Adkins that council's refusal to pay a haul
put together syndicated schedules.
district headquarters, 360 1738.
Eugene Hayes, Darelene are getting their money's section· prohibits members of bill for stone places around
Judging by the initial episode on Hurricane Camille, the East State St. in Athens.
In 1925, Mrs. Miriam ~·Ma' ' , Hayes, 1111 A., Bedford.
worth," he sald. "I know I council from holding any parking areas of tfie v!Uage.
"Havoc" shows will be well worth watching. Schmertz insists
.Anyone wishing- to com- Ferguson was sworn m as ' • Darrell E. Smith, Imogene have been busy doing a lot of other public office with a few Neekamp authOrized the
· !hey also are educational because they tell you what to do until ment on any present hunting governor of Texas, the G. Smith to AJan R. Cun-. this stuff. Maybe it's had an exceptions which are the project.
the hurricane arrives.
·
1
laws or suggest new laws is . na~on's seco?d ·won:'an state ningham, 'Beverly C. Cun- effect on my game, but I'm positions of notary public,
· Ot\ler bualness at Friday's
What to do ahout hurricanes ? When they are of the magni- invited to the meeting. The ch•ef executive. ~IVe days ningham, 2.24 A., Sutton.
militiaman
and Council meeting was as
not sU..e that it hailTffiliik state
tude of Camille, which may have been the most destructive district meeting precedes the earlier, Mrs. Nellie Tayloe
Bernard Wilson, Myrtle it does, I will cut back. I still volunteer firemen 'without follows:
storm ever to strike America 's shores, the smart peOple state session to be held at 9:30 Ross had become governor of
Wilson to Ronald G. Wright, want to play lournament golf pay. Charles Easter, newly
- Harold Brown was apevaeuale.
.
a.m. on Feb. 3 at the Wyomtng.
Linda Wright, Deed of and I want to win .
elected council member and pointed President Pro Tern.
Camille destroyed 5,600 homes along the Gulf Coast of Department of Natural
"One thing, thongh , I'm a volunteer fireman, took
Correction, Salem.
- Street Committee apMississippi and left 12,900 homes damaged . -·
A tho~ght for the day:
,Resources Headquarters,
to
A&lt;lkins' pointed was Rodney AlderA. R. Knight, Evelyn G. going to smile a lot this· year exception
The "Havoc" re-creation of the storm uses reRI footage of 195~ Belchor Drive, Fountain Ulysses S. Grant, 18th Knight to Columbus Southern no matter how I play. I'm remarks.
man, Chairman, Charles
president of the United Ohio Electric Co., Ease., going to enjoy the game no
her awesome wind and w~ves, and re~ survivors to t~IJ their Square, Columbus.
At that point, according to ~ast~r i .and Elva Adkins.
incrljljible stories.
.
States,
said,
"Labor Chester.
- ~ Finance Committee
matter what. r have nothing Mayor Howard Neekamp,
That bavoc is no respecter of persons was underscored ala
disgraces
·no
man .
John W. Manuel, Megan lo lose because I'm nowhere clerk Phyllls Mulholand appointed was Harold Brown,
. news conference for the show. There was a group of viCtims of
Unfortunately,
you Manuel to Columbus &amp; South- now and the only way I can go entered the discussion. Chairman, Collis Adkins, aijd
COii!ING TO TOWN
havoc incidents at a table, with Odalee Boho recounting her
A representative of the Job occasionally find men ern Ohio Elec. Co., Ease., is up. I would like to win a Councilman
Adkins Gary McClaskey.
childhood surviving the Dust Bowl in Oklahoma,' when her Corps, scheduled to be at disgrace labor."
·Employed Thomas
Sutton.
tournament soon !Jecause it responded by saylli8,
family made jelly out of cactus and was prepared to eat Pomeroy City Hall, today and
"Madam, you are not here Moulton to 'replace Warren
Grover Salser, Dortha P . might help my confidence."
rattlesnake if necessary.
Wednesday, has been
Until he went into a slwnp, to tell this coWicll how to ·Sheets as VUlage Solicitor.
Salser to Columbus &amp; SouthSitting next to her was Zsa Z..a Gabor, whose .home burned changed. The representative
-Employed Rose Bush as
ern Ohio' Ejec. Co., Ease., Miller had 17 tournament · conduct its business. You are
down in the Bel Air fire of 1961, looking like she invented will be at the city hall
victories
and
lifetime
.Janitor
for Village Town
here to take notes."
Sutton.
•
glamot as she snuggle&lt;! into her fur wrap and listened with Tuesday and Wednesday,
A turk~y can grind in ·its
It was decided to tnke the Hall.
David C. Flagg, Julia B. earnings of $1,144,065. Only
amazement. Miss Gabor had already taken instant exception Jan. 17 and 18 from 9 to 5 on gizzard up to 24 walnuts ln . Flagg to Danny B. Brown, nine players in the history of matter to the' village .solicitor
- Designated the Filst
lo being called a "victim" - "I was not a victim, the insurance '1\Jesday and 9 to 3 on Wed- their shells, as well as steel Corpelia C. Brown, Dannie D. the game ever have won
National Bank as depository
for his legal opinion.
compal\1' was the victim," Miss Gabor declared, then grinned. nesday.
needles and surgical lancets. Brown, 20.825 A., Sutton.
more . But outside of Nicklaus
A special meeting will be of village funds.

FttziNltrtcks 1,10; Hollywoacf Tettvtston TMotre
20; GrHnPHct: IIOY"fftl to Sav8 the Whale 33 .
&amp;:»-Laverne &amp; Shlrlty 6.13; 9:06-Three's Comp.ony
6. 13; Mash a, 10; Mod leal Convo&lt;;;otlon 33.
9::10-SO.p 6 ; One Day at o Tlmo I , tO; Mary Tyler
Moore t3.
'
to :oo-NBC Reports 3,•,15: Family 6,\3; LOll Grant
8.10; Newo 20; Jacques Llpchltz 33.
tO :»-Black Penpoctlvt on the News 20; tt :DO-News
3,&lt;,6,1,10,13, U ; Dick Cavell 20; Over ·Easy 33.
t t ::IO-Johnny Corson 3,&lt;,15; Movie " Night Walch"
6.13; Movie " Callow" 8; ABC News 33 ; Movie

,.

ONE HOLLERS AU DAV

AN' T'OTHER HOLLERS
DIFFERENT AS DAY
AN' NIGHT, LOWEEZV .. ALL NIGHT

A Nevada reader wants to
know the chance that a hnnd
will include exactly 10 highcard pointa.
It is just over 9.4 percent. ,
(Do you have, a question for
the ·experts? 1 Wrlte " Ash the
EKp er/s ... ca re of tl)~wspa·
per. Individual qUestions will
be answered If accompanied
by stamped . Self-addressed
envelopes The most Interesting 'question s will be used In
this column and wlllfecelve
copies of JACOBY MODERN.)
! Nl:: WSPAN•: R

1-~ Nit: l !t 'lllSE lr.S.~N . l

�'

---------------------------,

10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Jan. 10, 1978

Iran on Sadat's side
except f~r · one issue
MAURICE GUINl&gt;l
CAIRO, Egypt (UP! )
The Shah ilf Iran, who
supplies Egypt with mooey
and Israel with oil, said today
he supports President Anwar
Sadat's Middle East peace
efforts "and the ball Is now on
the other stde."
But he stopped short of
endorsing Egypt's demand
for the return of the old c1ty of
Jerusalem to the Arabs
A new round of Arab-Israeli
peace
talks
begins
Wednesday and an advance
party of Israeli negotiators
has already arnved an Cairo.
Shah Mohammed Reza
Pahlavi and Sadat briefed
reporters at the airport of the
southern winter resort of
ASwan just before the Iranian
leader left for Saudi Arabia
and talks with King Khaled.
repeated
his
Sadat
opposition
to
Jewish
settlements on occupied Arab
lands and confirmed Egypt
will demand $2.1 billion in
corllpensatioo from Israel for
oil it extracted from occupied
lands
The Shah, who arrived in
ASwan Monday for talks with
the Egyptian leader, 531d . " I
wanted to express to the
By

president

my

warmest

the future the old City of

Jerusalem, seized by Israel
in the 1967 war and annexed
to form part of what is now
the Israeli capital.
"As a Moslem obv10usly I
would say that the Moslem
boly places (Al-Aksa- and
"l&gt;&lt;me of the Rock mosques)
must be run by Moslems," he
said. Sadat and other Arab
leaders have demanded Arab

Schools closed
for second day
Meigs County schools were
closed for the second consecutive day Tuesday as
roads remained teacherous
and temperatures dipped to
zero.
Highway employes of the
towns and county were
working to keep roads open.
In Pomeroy workers were
fighting
breakdown of
equipment.
The
Columbus
and
Souithem Ohio Electric Co.
appealed to customers for
curtailment of power and
asked for a cutback In consumphon by both industrial
users
and
residential
customers.

feelings of friendship and
support of our people for his
efforts to bring peace and
stability to this region after
so many years of conflict.
"I think the ball as now on
the other side. Egypt has
opened its arms an a very
and
manly
dignified

CALL ANSWEREl&gt;
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad .answered a call to
Butternut Ave. for Dwight
Carl at 12:16 a.m. Tuesday.
Suffering with a laceration,
manner."
Carl was taken to Veterans
Sadat said he was· "deeply Memorial Hospital.
grateful for the support he
(the Shah) has given me."
But the !raman leader
PAT CANCELLED
sidestepped a question about
Meigs Hagh School PAT
----~----•
meeting has
scheduled
for this
•
evening
been cancelled.

r

NOW OPEN

GINO'S

CLASSES CANCELLEl&gt;
Baton and gymnastacs
classes of Glona Wallace
have been cancelled for this
evening.

OF MASON
PHONE 773-5536

ASK TOWEl&gt;
A marriage license was

assued to Delbert Putnam, 19,
Ct!oiville and Tammy Lou
Rarringer, 16, Rt. I, Reedsv\lle.

DRIVE A
BARGAIN now...

on sale-priced auto loans

Ready for the open road? Now's the
perfect time to wheel and deal an
auto loan. You can also arrange for
our advance financing too! This
great opportunity won't last forever,
so come, get all the facts soon.

"TilE.
FRJENIJLY BANK"

i ....:!~ n~~~~~.. !Mine picketing
l
d
b
"
ld
s 0 we y co
James E . Brumfield, 71 ,

'died unexpectedly

control of the entire old caty.
The Shah's backing for
Egypt came at a critical
moment m jJeace efforts set
in motion by Sadat's epochmaking ·visit to Jerusalem
last November ·
Egyptian War Minister
Gen. Mohammed Gamassy
and Israeli Defense Minister
Eter Wetzman will head their
respective teams in Wednesday's peace talks

C&amp;SOE in
(Continued fnm page I)
El ec tric - frozen co al
sU)ckpiles.
The utilities are having
trouble breaking the coal
loose from the stockpales
hecause of the freezing rain
that coated 1t on Sunday. It
then lias to be pulvenzed tD
he put into boilers and if 1t as
st1ll frozen 1t causes
difficulties wath firing the
boilers, a spokesman sa1d
Ct!lumbus &amp; Southern Ohio,

"The situation is cr1tical

units.
11
This condition

ex1sts

sU!tewide and throughoot the
east central part of the
United States. There IS no
additional electric energy
available in this region.

"Ct!lumbus and Southern IS
asking all customers to
reduce thetr use of major

electrical appliances until
this temporary problem can
be corrected. Specifically we
ask customers to postpone
use of electric dryers,
washers, diswashers and
reduce the use of electric
heating and water heating
equipment and tD set thermostats no higher than 65
degrees."
Doo Speyer, a spokesman
for Daytoo Power &amp; Ught,
said the " bitterly cold
weather~~ and the frozen
stockpiles ha.ve caused
"extremely high electric reqmrements and major prob-lem's in getting fuel to
generating units.
"This
problem ~ is
aggravated by the need to use
frozen coal from reserve coal
piles because regular coal
deliveries have been reduced
due to the coal strike," the
utility said.
"Increasing electric loads
this morning coupled with the
unavaibility of emergency
power from other utility
compames has caused
electric requirements to
exceed Dayton Power &amp;.
Light's available capacity.
Therefore· the company is
instituting its emergency
plan
for
electrical
shortages.
"The first step is a five
percent voltage reduction
being instituted immediately.
The company Is also asking
all customers to reduce their
use of ~lectricity to essential
items for the duration of the
emergency.''

died Monday at

Memor ial Hospital.
Mr . Reuter was a former

He was born in Lesage, W
Va on Aug . 14, 1906, son of the
late Emmeh Brumfield and

veteran o- World War II. He
wes fo r merly a Pomeroy Fire
Chief and was a past com -

Elizabeth

mander of Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion. He

snow.

Member Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation
DEPOSITS INSUREDT0$40,000

Southers

Brumf ie ld
Rtblch.
who
survives
He
marned
Beu l ah
Watle~ ce m 1929, and res1ded

In Crown C1ty . He moved to
Creston 1n 1973
He was a farmer most of
his li fe
Mr . Brumfield IS survived
by his wife, and four sons
Norman R: Brumftei(L Crown

C1ty . Myrlon Dale Brumfield,
Sandusky ; James . Edward
and Pau l Aaron Brumfield,
both of Creston . His mother,
Mrs
El izabeth Rlbi.c h,
Temple City , Calif , sur-vives
a long wtth 10 grandchildren
Three brothers survive ·
Joseph, Noah and Wtlliam ,
all of Temple C1ty . Four
sisters survive Mrs Willa
Thonlenson , Chill icothe ; Mrs.
Bertha Oilton , Mrs. Kathleen
Slager, both of California and
Mary, GallipoliS

Funeral serv 1ces will be
held 2 p .m Thursday at the
Crown City Methodist Church
w tth Pastor James Foster
offlctattng Friends may ca ll
at the church from 12 noon
until the ttme of the servtces
Bunal will be m Crown C1ty

friends .
Mr. Cottrell was a teacher

Rite

Friends
may
ca ll
Schoedlnger Northwe st
Chapel , 1740 Zollinger Rd ., 2 •
and 1-9 p.m Tuesday.
Funeral services will be 10
a .m . Wednesday at the
chapel, Re11 Dale Bum .
bardner offlctaftng
Graveside service Is 1· 30
p.m Wednesday at the
Calvary Cemetery , Rio
Grande. ·

LETHA QUALLS
Funeral services for Mrs
Letha Qua tis, 88, Pomerov ,
who d ied Thursday at
Veterans- Memor,1al Hospital
were held Monday afternoon
at the Ewing Funeral Home

with the Rev . Edward But .

f1ngton officiating Burial
was In tht Minersville Hill
Cemetery Several grand children
and
great .
grandchildren survive Mrs

Quails.

TWO ASK HELP
The Middleport E-R Squad
answered a call to an apartment at Third and Ash Sts., at
7:45a.m. Tuesday for James
Brewer, Jr. , a medical
patient, who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 3:22 p.m., SEOEMS took
Mrs. Lida Wtlt, 424 Broadway, to Holzer Medacal
Center.
FEES l&gt;ISTRWUTED
State Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson reported today the
fourth quarter 1977 liquor
' permit fees distributed of
$940,622.32 to Ohio's cities,
villages and townships.
Gallia County received
$341 08 and Gallipolis Twp.
$99.25.

'

M01gs Ct!unty got $2,636.63
and Pomeroy Village,
$1,044.63.

~

ADl&gt;RF.SS SET
(UP!)
President Carter will deliver
his state of the wuon address
to a joint session of Ct!ngress
on Jan. 19, the White House
said today.
W~IDNGTON

Hoover

,

,

Veterans

,

Pomeroy councilman and a

belonged to the -United
Method ist ... Church
In

Pomeroy
A resident of Beech Sf, Mr .
Reuter is survived by h Is
wife ,

Maqor i e

Forbes

Reuter ; three daughters ,
Sandra Witham.

Gahanna ;

Linda Barber. Grove City,
and Cherie at home ; two
sons. Ron of Harrisburg,
Otuo, and Jeff E . Reuter, at
home ; three grandchildren ,
Jill.
Michelle
and
Christopher. a stsfer, Mrs .
Dean
(fern)
Davis ,
GalllpoltS i two brothers, Dr
Raymond Reuter , Canton ,
and Paul of Tipton. Ia ., and
several nieces and nephews.
Two brothers, Russell and
Guy, precede~ him In death.
Funeral services will be
held at 1 p m . Thursdav at the

Ewing Funeral Homf~lth
the R:ev Robert Hay n
officiating . Burial will be I
Beech Grove Cemetery .
Fnends may call at the
funeral home any time after 9
a m Wednesady .

CHARLES WAGNER
Funeral
servtces
for
Charles H. Wagner, 57~~ ROute
2, Pomeroy , who died
Saturday at Holzer Medical
Center were held at 3 p.m.
Monclar at the
Ewing
Funera Home with the Rev
Dewey King otflclattng
Survivmg Mr . Wagner are
hts

w 1fe ,

Al i ce

Sear les

two daughters,
Jacquelyn Sue Wagner and
Robtn Lynn Wagner , both of
Pomeroy, and two brothers,
George of Columbus, and
Will tam of Logan Burial was
1n the Letart Falls Cemetery.

Wagner ;

N. 0 rthe rn

and aministrator In the Ohio
School system for many
(Continued from page 1)
,
years . He was a member of electricity
in any way they
Masonic Lodge, Thurman , can."
Ancient Accepted Scottish

For Terrific Buys and
January Savings
Shop Baker Furniture

e

Reuter, 57 •. well

Stebbln! St , In Creston. Ohio,
near Akron , wh ile stlo'lleling

in a statement released by ats Cemetery .
Funeral arrangements are
Colwnbus headquarters, saad
the
condition
exists . under the direction of Murray
Funeral Home tn Creston
throughout Ohio and "the
east central part of the
L. T. COTTRELL
United States."
L.
Talmage
81, of
"Ct!iwnbus and Southern JJIJ ReddingCottrell.
Rd ., died
Ohio Electrtc is asking ail Su nday at the residence
consumers to immediately followtng a ion~ Illness. He
reduce their use of electnc was preceded tn death by
energy for the remainder of wtfe, Nellie Clark Cottrell He
•s survived by slsters-m-law ,
today and tonight," the utility Mrs. G C. !Sophia J .l
said "The company is asking Llggitt, Mrs Theodore (Lola)
commercial and mdustrial Merriam , Adrian, Mi c h.,
customers to reduce their use Mrs Wilbur (Gladys) Alban ,
Lancaster , several nieces
of electricity by SO per cent." and nephews and many

and requjres immediate
cooperation from all our
customers," Columbus &amp;
Southern Ohio - Electric Co.
said. "Yesterday's rain and
snow followed by today 's
sub(eezing temeratures has
caused extreme difficulty in
feeding coal into generating

Rov M

known Pomero y res1dent ,

afternoon at his home lll

Name Brand Furniture
and Floor Coverings
eLane
e Frigidaire
e 'Samsonite

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Monday

Dyer said Toledo Edison
recetves a lot of its electricity
from other utilities that are
faced Wlth the same problem
as Colwnbus &amp; Southern Ohio
dozens of cars alongside the
roads and some right in the

UoltedPreB81nlerualloaal
Bitter cold and heavy snow
threw a chill over United
Mine Workers picketing
activity tn the sixth week of a
nationwide coal strike while
federal negotiators sought to
reopen staUed negotiations
with an inf&lt;rmal ltle&lt;lting of
union and industry leaders.
Jeering coal miners lroke
the wmdows of cars owned by
two non-UMW mmers in

Harlan Ct!unty, Ky. State
police at Harlan sa1d no
arrests
were
made

immediately in Monday's
rock~hrowing incident at the
Karst-Roberts Coal CAl.
Near·zero
temperatures
and icy roads kept most of
Kentucky 's volatile coalfields
quiet, and few incidents were
reported elsewhere.
" They're pretty well
•weathered-out' today,' 1 sa1d
a state pollee dispatcher at
Hazard, Ky .
In Washington, chief
federal mediator Wayne J,..
Horvitz swnmoned leaders of
the UMW and Baturrunous

Appropriation
(Continued from page I)
the next meeting. A request
for a cab license by Robert
Clonch was also tabled unt1l
the next meeting.
Bernard Fultz was again
appomted solicitor and
Mayor Hoffman presented
counctl members , with a
review
of 'the
accomplishments of 1977 and
suggestions for work to be
done m 1978 (see page 2). He
asked co uncil members also
for their suggeshons for the
new year.

Mayor Hoffman announced
meeting with a represen·
tattve of the Buckeye HallsJ:Iocking Valley Regaonal
Plaruung CommiSSIOn for 7

a

/a
lQ c sses
called o#
R•

'II

As a result of the electric

power shortage and bad '
weather, classes at Rio
G r a n d e Co II e g eCommunity
have
·been eancelledCollege
untO 8 a.m.
Thursday, Jan. 12, a
college spokesman announ ced I od a y •
Rio students attended
classes Monday followllig
lhe weekend storm which
dum ped up to lh ree or
more laches of snow and
ice Ia the area. AU other
area schools were closed
Monday and agala today.

roads. I would be thankful if
they would get the Guard in
here, too."
Ashtabula County Deputy
Sheriff John Laird said most
roads in that county were
tnipassable.
Walter Ct!y, a deputy with
the Mahoning" County - - - - - - - - - - sheriff's .
office
10
VeleraD8 Memorial Hospital
Youngstown, said there were
Admitted ~ Brenda Roush,
a lot of motorists still Pomeroy; Denzti Boggess;
stranded ~arly today.
Racme ; Jo Lynn Batley,
"We got to a lot of them but Reedsville ; Ruth Stone,
some of them wanted 00 stay Leon , W. Va · i Gust ave
With thetr cars," satd Coy Jagnow , Jr ., Rock woo d, P a.;
"There are aba nd 00ed cars Ray Cl ark, F.an byv1·11 e, P a.;
everyw here. M ost 0 f the Mabel Swan, Langsville ;
roads are closed and those Terry Walker , Rutland·,
that are open are only one
Paula Hysell, Minersville.
lane.' '
Discharged
Roger
Carol
Ossman,
a G
cornmunacaUons officer with
rindley.
the Lorain County sheriff's
department, said "even the
snow plows are having
trouble getting through.
"We have a group here
called the FlaUanders Four
Wheel Drive Club that has
been a big help in geUing out
some of these people," said
Ms. Ossman.
Thousands of Cleveland
Electric Illuminating Co.
subscribers were wtlhout
power during various periods
from Sunday night until today
and about 200 families in
Fairfield and Hocking
counties in southern Ohio
50%
were also without electric

Coal Operators Assocultion to
his offiCe Monday in an effort
to end an 11-day stalemate.
Horvitz' ·aides said the
meehng was designed to
dtscuss prospects for a
reswnptioo of negotiations.
The two sides have not met
since Dec. 30, when industry
officials walked out.
The 188,00i miners have
been on strike since Dec. 6. •
All bough the natioo 's coal
supplies remaiit adequate,
the walkout has been marred
by violence - including last
week's killmg of a retired
Kentucky miner.
Sources saad the talks :
broke down after UMW ,
Prestdent Arnold Miller
abruptly reJected a so-&lt;:alled
" labor stability" package ··
discussed over the table for
several weeks. The plan
would have penalized miners •
who go on wildcat strikes.
Miller reportedly gave his
tentative coosent to the plan,
but later concluded the idea
would not be acceptable to
the rank-and·file who must
ratify
any
contract
agreement.
Miller said Monday in
Charleston, W.Va., he is
willing
to
resume
negotiations . at any time.
However, he said, striking
mmers have told him they

p.m. Thursday at the county
commisstoners office at
.which tlme any possible
project for Middleport should
he presented. He also announced that a conference
held
among
will be
representatives of the Farm
Home Admtnistration and
vtllage officials at 2:30 p.m.
on Jan. 24 to discuss the
commuruty's application for
a government loan grant on
the sewage system.
Councal voted to increase
the allowance of officers for
clothing from $75 a year to
$100 for three regular officers
and $150 a year for any
trainees which might start are prepared to stay out six
workang for the pollee months to get the right
department. After a lengthy contract and he saw no
discussion it was also voted unmedtate end to the strike.
"I wid the operators, put
unanimously against issuing
some
meat oo the bone,
any special permits allowing
because
the membership Is
heavythroughtrucktrafficin
going to vote on ratification,"
the community.
Th e VI·ll age has an or- Miller said.
In other developments,
dtnance prohibiting such
-About
200
pickets
heavy truck t r arr·1c san·ce
maintenance of the town's dispersed without serious
streets IS a matter of com- incident after blocking a slate
mum•t y concern. However, highway outside a coalfacthty
near
last year permits were Issued loading
Metropolis,
Ill.,
for
a
short
to allow several heavy trucks
to travel through the town. time. The facUlty was closed
The amount collected was $5 by a violent protest Dec. 14
reopened
last ·
a year for such vehicles, 1t and
was reported.
Wednesday.
- Miller endorsed the
New council member
Mullen commented that he National Day of Prayer for
believes that people can no the coalfields scheduled Jan.
longer look to the community · 22. He promised to attend
rallies in West Virginia, Ohio
1 h 1 b t in
d
or e P u
stea must and Pennsylvania as part of
realize that they have a job to the prayer day organized by
do in helping their com· Wayne
Alderson,
of
muntty. .
Pitlsburgh,
a
labor.Al"!J attending the meeting
besides those named above management peacemaker.
-A hearmg for Ralph
were Clerk-Treasurer Gene
Grate and Councilman Carl Anderoon, 50, Prater Creek,
Horky, Russell Mills com- Ky., charged in the shooting
death of a retired UMW
plained of destruction •·
w a
fence on his Fourth St . member, was expected to be
property and requested a held later this week.
st t l"ght
·
11 •·hind Kentucky officials believe the
ree 1 '" an a ey ""
his property. The matter was slaying may have been over
personal matters, rather than
referred to committee.
related to the strike.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

JANUA·RY CLEARANCE SALE

?Americancyood,

SASSY STRIPE

NO IRON MUSLIN

SHE·ETS and PILLOW-CASES

service.

A CEI spokesman, who said
the problems were caused by
downed lines or 1ce focllUng
on lines, was unable tO say
early today when full service
would he restored.
In southern. Ohio, nearly
two-thirds of Fairfield County
and part of neighboring
Hocking County were thrown
into darkness late Monday by
a South Central Power Co.
outage.
The National Weather
Service said driving would
remain hazardo!L!I throughout
the state today. The Weather
Service said even where
highways have been cleared
of snow they remain slippery
because salt is of litUe help
when temperatures reach

--

COITON - GREEN; BLUE, YELLOW AND CAMEL
- --

"Little relief can be
expected today as winds
remain strong and gusty and
temperatures find it difficult
to reach even 10 degrees,"
the weather service said.
"There will be more snow
flurries especially in the
northeastern snow belt."
The extended forecast for
Thursday through Saturday
calls for a (:)lance of snow or
snow flurries each day. Highs
wUI he in the upper 2ns. or low
30s Thursday and in the 30s
Fna..t and Saturday. Lows
will be in the teens early
Thursday and between 15 and
25 early jiaturday.

.

majo~
say~ situation

ROY J. SHEPIIERl&gt; ill

Partner join:s Davis agency
Roy J . Shepherd Ill, a native of Jacksonville, Fla.,
has been named a partner in the Davis Insurance Agency,
Pomeroy, Bill Quickel, owner, announced today.
Shepherd for the past. six years has been associated
with the Prudential Insurance Co. in Columbus serving as
a brokerage representative for the company during the
past year_ The Davis Co. will carry the Prudential line
among others.
Shepherd Is a member of the National ASsociation of
Life Underwriters and the Professional lmurance Assn.
He is a Kentucky Colonel, a member of the Ohio National
Guard, 122nd Army Band, and Is a member of New
England Lodge 4, F&amp;AM, Colwnbus. He is residing
temporarily in Cheshire.

Stage set for
crucial talks

·-

,,,

replied: ."Do we look llke we
By W.G. KIROLOS
are stalemated? I am
CAIRO, Egypt (UP!)
Israeli Defense Minister Ezer hopeful."
more
Gamassy y.ras
Weizman arrived in Cairo
guarded.
"I
cannot
say
that I
today for crucial talks with
ophmistic
or
President Anwar Sadat and am
Egyptian mtlltary leaders on pessimistic," he said.
Israeli withdrawal from the
Egypt was ready to present
captured Sinai Peninsula.
a blueprint for total Israeli
"I more than sincerely withdrawal from the Sinai hope we shall make a complete with maps , a
substantial advance on timetable and a demand for
problems - and we do have dtsbandmg Jewisli setproblems," Weitman told tlements, the semi-official
reporters.
Middle East News Agency
Egyptian War T¥Iin!ster said.
Gen . Mohammed Ga11189Sy
"The Egyptian scheme
greeted the 10-member calls for total withdrawal
Israeli negotiating team at from Sinai in a short period
Cairo Airport. The two and the liquidation of setministers, dressed in civilian tlements," MENA said.
clothes, chatted for 25
The plan almost certainly
minutes before boarding a will be opposed by Israel and
twin-englned Egyptian a~r officials forecast tough
force Mystere 20 for ASwan, negotiations
, 500 miles to the south, to meet
Diplomatic sources said the
with Sadat.
Eyptian and Israeli positions
ASked if he was carr)ing remained wide apart on the
specific proposals to Sadat, sensitive tssue of Israeli
Weizman replied: "I am sure settlements, the duration of
Pr"sldent Sadat and I are withdrawal and the width of
very specific gentlemen."
buffer zones separating final
The two ministers were to boundary lines.
return later to Cairo to chair
In Tel Aviv, government
a joint Egyptian-Israeli sources said Israel will insist
military committee where on a three-to five-year period
Gamassy said the question of for completing its pullback
Jewish setUements an the from the Smai and will ask
Sinai will he raised.
for American monitoring
Weizman then added; stations to prevent a surprise
"There are quite a lot of attack such as the one that
problems that have arisen in launched the 1973 war.
the last 30 years and
settlements Is one of them. I
hope General Gamassy and I
will
reach
some
COURTIIOUSE TO CWSE
recommendationR ''
The Meigs County CourtAsked wtrether U.e two
house
will be closed Monday,
' sides faced a stalemate oo the
Jan.
16
for Martin Luther
settlement issue, Weizman
Kang Day.
appeared irritated and

5 twiN

BED:Y-1~~~-~~••~!

~.~439

....................
s499 PILLOW CASES..~~~-~~~-~~~ ......... .r.~: 5399
5 49

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

--

critical

By JOHN T. KADY
United Press Iotematlonal
Ohaoans still digging out
By Ualted Press International
from
under that heavy
Four of Ohio's major electric utilities today continued five
snowfall
ea~lier this week
percent voltage reductions because of frozen coal stockpiles.
only
a brief respite
may
get
Cleveland Electric lliuminating said It was in "worse shape"
because
more
snow is on the
than TUesday with Ohao Power Co. the only utility to return to
way.
normal production.
r
The National Weather
· Colwnbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric Co., Dayton Power &amp;
Light, Toledo Edison and CEI all said they were continuing Service says a low pressure
their five percent voltage reductions instituted Tuesday and system will be formang in
urged consumers to continue to use electricity for only texas ·IDday and deepening
as it moves toward Ohio on
essential purpoaes.
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric and Ohio Edison CAl . both called Thursday. Snow is forecast to
begin late Thursday m
today for a continuance of conservation efforls but did not
western
counties and is
institute any power reductions.
expected to move across the
C. Luther Heclanan, chairuwe are in worse shape state Thursday night and
man of the Public Utilities
than
yesterday" said Jerry Fnday.
Commission of Ohio, said
Clean.up operations are
Mix,
a spokesman for
Tuesday PUCO would
continuang
an the northern
investigate the power Cleveland Electric
of
the
state today and
section
shortages announced by the lllwninating. " It all relates
nrost
of
Ohio's
major electric
back to the wet and frozen
utilities.
are
watchang
the
utilities
"The utilities had best he coal and our problems with
weather
to
see
if
conservation
able to docwnent that they that. We are in bad shape
are m the situation they say right now. We have lost 10 efforts can be halted.
Ohio Power Co. late
they are in/' said Heckman . percent of our generating
Tuesday
lifted its 2.5 percent
power
because
of
the
wet
"We would welcome an
voltage
reduction imposed
coal."
investigation," satd Don
earlier
that
day because of
Mix
satd
the
East
Lake
Speyer, a spokesman for
frozen
coal
stockpiles that
Dayton Power and Ltghl CAl. generating plant, which
have
plagued
the utilities.
"Our people have been generates 650,000 kilowatts a
Mayor
Dennis
Kucinich
working around the clock to day, is down because of this
off
a
snow
emergency
called
get as much power as problem and CE!expected to
lose the generating plant at in Cleveland but National
possible."
The main problem Is the Avon Lake which also Guardsmen remained in that
frozen coal supplies- generates 650,000 kilowatts city.
Gov. James A. Rhodes
supplies the utilities had put before the day ts out.
I ,500 guardsmen into
ordered
Jack Corns, a spokesman
in anticipation of the .
the
northern
area of the ~tate
for Ohio P.ower, said that
naticinwlde miners strike.
Tuesday
to
help rescue
Utility spokesmen said in utility was able to reswne
and aid in
stranded
motonsts
the past fresh coal was used normal service late Tuesday
emergency
situations.
either exclusively or mixed night because of conservahon
The troops were sent into
with the frozen coal but now efforts, the ability to
Huron
, Erle, Cuyahoga,
purchase
power
from
other
no fresh coal is available.
Lake, Knox and Mahomng
and
the
use
of
coal
it
sources
, The coal a.musl be
pulverized ·and then blown managed to break away from Counties.
Cleveland police reported
into the boilers at the the stockpiles.
Bob Jones, a spokesman for
generating plant. If the coal
Ct!lwnbus II Southern Ohio
is frozen, this means the coal
Co. ,
saad
1s more like a mud like Electric
Clear and not as cold
substance when it is shot Into conservation efforts in tonaght, lows near 10.
central
Ohio
appear
to
he
the boilers, causing a
Moderating temperatures,
reduction in generating working but the utility" still
increased
cloudiness Thursbas problems.
power.
day,
highs
bet
ween 25 and 30.
"We are still asking for
There has also been
Probability
of
precipitation is
difficulty in breaking away conservatiOn efforts on the
20
percent
through
Thursday.
the coal from the stockpiles part of all of our customers/'
that were frozen into masses said Jones. "We still want
, by rain followed by near zero commercial and industrial
temperatures earlier this psers to cutback by 50
percent.''
week.

Weather

Emergency ended
The Ohio Power Company's appeal to customers Tuesday
to reduce their electrical consumption ended today.
A company spok~n said:
"We have been able to keep the power curtailment time to
a minimum for four prinelpal reasons;
"The cooperation of our customers in reducing their
electrical usage
:'The increased availability of .power generating units
which were out of service
"Reduction in wind velocity and high chill factors which
had caused coal to freeze in power plant storage piles, and
"The company's ability to obtain power from other areas.
"Ohio Power thanks Its customers for their cooperation in
helping it get through this critical time."

capacity charge

~~l!lo'IJW~
S699 F1JLL BED.. ~.~~~.~~-~!......................~. 55!19

PRICE fiFTEEN CENTS

Ohio Power·at full Voltage
C&amp;SOE, three other
Ohio utilities More snow coming

~,;;;:-:·:~fol Whistle blown on

zero.

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY ll , 1978

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL XXVIII NO. 188 -

By United Press lntenaattonal
WASHINGTON ~ UNEMPLOYMENT DROPPED
llharply to 8.4 percent in December, the lowest rate since the
early days of the recession more than three years ago, the
"We could all he freezing
Labor Department reported today.
'
The dramatic 0.3 percent Improvement over November today t1 the Environmental
exceeded President Carter's goal for 6.6 percent joblessness Action Foundation had its
by the end of 1977.1! Is expected to ease current pressure on the way."
That comment was made
admlnlstralion for more economic stimulus. A record 58
by
C. A. Heller, Ohio Power
percent of Americans were working in December, culminating
Company's
executive vice
a rapid 4.1 milllon rill! in employment during 1977 - the
president,
in
reference to a
biggest annual gain IJI the post-World War II era.
wire service story in which
WASHINGTON- AMERICAN RETAIL purchases theenvironmentalgroupsaid
- dropped 0.7percent in December- the largest drop in nearly consumers Jl&amp;Y higher
a year.
electric bllls,.because utilities
RetaU sales ate· considered ' the trueat indicator of mal n I a l n excessive
COII8liiiiel" spendlng trenda. But the Commerce Department, in generating capacity.
releulng the ligures, said most of the decJtne was due to a 0.2
Simply put, Heller said,
percent fallofl In automobUe sales and a 8 percent drop in Ohio Power on Tuesday
bulldtng materlaiJJ, neither of which Is tradttlon8Dy related to needed every bit of Its
. generating capacity to meet
Chrlltmaa purcllasea.
·Department tiiOre sales, a more ae&lt;;urate puge of Chrllt· all of Its customers'
mas abopPnl!, cilmbed 0.5 percent, the department said.
requirements.
In Tuesday's situation, all
, COLUMBUS - 'l'HE OIDO GENERAL ASSEMBLY is power companies throughout
confined to spinning Its wheel&amp; this week ~- many of 'ita Ohio - lltcluding Ohio members are atuck at home in the anow. Attendance in the uked their customers to
H - was 10 ll*'le TUesday that the billa on the calelllW' reduce usage of electric
power.
could not be voted.
The situation was the result
And In the Senate, tt will be virtually lost week. President
Pro Tempore Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron, said he would ban to primarily of weather conpolllpone tultli neil week a vote on overrldlnrl the veto of Gov. ditions of the past few days.
..._ A. R.bodel oo a collective barplnlDa bill for publle Heavr ralnl on Sunday,
......,__ ''Sill of -llltllllilln In lllll'IIOIIId," aid Ocaiell, followed by a dr. .lc drop of
"and I ..eel fOlD' of thfln." He ilfesaed to the tfne.Gfthl teinperatanl, beavy IIIOWI
1111Jorlty ..eded to override, meaning at least lll ~ta, and bitter winds catued coal
piles at generating planls to
lilnce f!epubUcana favor Rhodel' veL
&lt;

freeze. This frozen coal
presented complex problems
an getting it into the plants for
the generation of electricity.
Tuesday's power supply
Situation spotlighted the
fallacy of charges of "excessive reserve margins,"
Heller said.
He explained that the EAF
apparently hased its charges
on an arbitrary percentage of
reserve figure which uses
federal studies which are
eight to 14 years old. These do
not reflect the current,
modern day situation.
"The Environmental
Action Foundation Is completely off base," HeUer said,
"in its assumptioq that
anything more than a 20 per
cent

res~rve

is

excess

capacity. 'ro the contrary,
ample reserve capacity. is
vital to all users of electricity."

He explained that ample
reserves are needed to cope
with equipment breakdowns,
ane&amp;pectedly

hiJih custamer

demands and
unusual
weather conditions such as
(Cctatiqued oil pap ,ll)

Salaries
raised

The Meigs County Board of
Commissioners Tuesday
night adopted the 1978
general fund appropriation
resolution calltng for the
spending of $908,000 In 1978.
Included was an across-theboard Increase of approximately 8 pet. in salaries
for courthouse ;employees.
Keith Woods, dog warden,
handed the commission
h1s

resignation

ef-

fective Feb. I. The board
granted Elizabeth Hobstetter
and Donna Koehler permission to attend a meeting
of the Southeastern Ohio
Municipal and County Clerk
Court Assn . meeting in
Marietta on Jan. 18. The
board extended the plan of
cooperation between the
county' the commission' and
the prosecuting attorney's
office through Feb. 3.
A discussion was held over
the operation of the county
sanitation landfill truck and It
was agreed to upgrade its
operation, if possible

Bo~der
A Syracuse resident barely
escaped a dip in the icy
waters of the Ohio River
early Tuesday morning.
The Gallia-Meigs P9st
State Higbway Patrol said
Carl E. Moore, 34, was
draving west on SR 124 when
his car slid off the highway,
striking a large rock. The
rock stopped bls car from
entering the river. There was
moderate damage to his car.
The accident was not
reported until late Tuesday,
That was one of nine traffic
accidents Investigated
Tuesday by the Ohio Stale
Highway Patrol, all blamed
on icy road conditions .
At 6:50 a.m. Tuesday an
accident occurred on Third
Ave. in Racine where an aulo
driven by Marvin Hill, 28,

153 stranded vehicles were
towed away from Memorial
Shoreway and taken to \
temporary auto pounds.
The Mahoning County sheriff's department reported
IDday all roads were open but
ley in that county ,
"The driving is still hazar- ·
dous," said Deputy sheriff
Walter Coy " We are urging
motorists to stay at home .
Some are coming out and
flndmg out they arc gcttmg
stuck on U1~ ice agam ."
Lake County Sheriffs
Deputy Chuck Pani ~o in
Painesville said "all roads
are passable but they are hke
an ice skating rink "

Panico also satd the
National Guard had set up an
emergency telephone system
10 Mndison because ali
te lephone lines to thut
community were out.
\'All the stranded vehtcies
are unstranded," said Huron

Ct!unty deputy Lee Millhause
in Norwalk . "The roads are
passable but icy ."
State Transportation
Darector David Weir saad 61
state highways were closed
Tuesday by the drifting snow.
Hundreds of schoo ls
throughout northern and
central Ohio remained closed
tDday because of the blowmg
snow, bad roads and bitter

cold
Mnny bm;h'l.esses·ncross the
sta te,
particu larly
in
nurUtem Ohio reported high
absenteeism Tuesduy due to
the cold and snow.
General Motors Corp. sa id
60 percent of Its workers in
Parma and Cleveland were
off Tuesday and 52 percent
were off at Euclid.
Bepubhc
Steel
in
Cleveland, which employs
9,200 persons, reported

''sevcrc' ub.scnteeism.
'l11e Genera l Motors Corp.
plant in Columbus reported 30
percent of Its employees were
absent becalllie. of U1e bud
weaU1er .
1

Transit system works
Dave Vaughan,
representatave of the Appala chian Ohao Regional
Transit Assn. bus system,
was the guest speaker at the
noon luncheon Tuesday of the
Pomeroy Chamber
of
Commerce at the Meigs Inn
Vaughan explained that the
transit system came into
being nationally m 1971 .

Crow read a letter from
Pumeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews than k i n ~ t he
chamber and others mvnlved
for the attractive Chnstmus
decorattuns. Crnw added tlm t
Mayor Andrews and counctl
members had bee n very
cuopcratlve 111 plac mg Ihe

the fine Wtn k she has done fur
the
chamber
No
reJlla cemcntlms been named

provide rural transportation lighting fund thus tar for next
for persons who do not drive . year . He indacatcd more
He made these other pomts· lights can be added next year.
Interest was generated for
Crow announce d the
AORTA in Metgs County awards banquet has been
through the work of Ted tentatively set for Jun 25
Reed, president of the Far- and a "Gonl! Show"
mers Bank and Savmgs Co
sometime in Fcbrullr~
.• The 14 buses in service (by
He suggested that mem·
the end of the month will be bers charter one of the
16) are equapped with chair AORTA buses to tour the
lifts. It is hoped to move Gavin mines, Kelly Mfg.,
freight s0on. Freight han- Imperial Electric and Salt
dling wall be tested fir!ll to see Company.
af it as feasible.
Mrs. Barbara Chapman,
The buses are available £or secretary, who ha s accepted
charter groups.
full tim~ employment with
There are two departures the Athens Messenger, was
from
Middleport
and given a round of applause for
Pomeroy dally to Athens and
two arnvals £rom Athens to
Pomeroy and Maddleport
daaly . He sa td the serviCe IS
"lookmg good" m general.

only cost to c11ch merd111nt
will be $1 .30 per vasal.
Crow sa id In has up1111un at is
lime to try for uc.iiun on
continumg the nuw htghway
tha t ends ncar Meigs Hl~h

Its main purpose is to

A bus leaves Middleport,

(corner of Mail and Second),
at 5.30 a.m. and from
Pomeroy at 7:30 a.m . and
again from Middleport 2:30
p.m and Pomeroy (Blue and
Gray Restaurant) at 4:30
p.m.
The bus leaves Athens at
6:28 a.m and 8:10 a.m. and
3:35 p.m. and 5:20 p.m. for
Pomeroy and Middleport.
The fare is $1.25 one way
from Pomeroy to Athens with
daily raders given a 20 pet .

us yet.
Mrs Chapman said Shirley
J.ewls of Welcnmc Wa~on ,
Charleston, will meet with

the chamber F'cb 9. She sa1d
the chamber w"s under no
lights.
obligutlon uccordmg to Mrs.
Crow a lsu repurted tha~ · Lcw1s but sllC wuulcl come in,
there ts $800 In the Chrt!:!tmas set up the proJect , and the

School to the new dam across

from Ravenswood . He UJ&gt;--

pointed Ted Reed and N. W.
Cumpton to C&lt;J-chulr u
committee on the proJect.
Attending were Crow , Mrs.
Chapman, Vaughan, Davis,
Roy Shepherd, Ball Quic~cl,
John Anderson , Wa lter
Gruescr, Hunk Cleland , Phil
Kelly, Bill Mayer, Joe Youn~ .
John Gloyd, Heed, and
'lllercon J&lt;Jimson.

Fire-Aid units
made 515 runs

The Mtddleport Fire one was in Pomeroy. and two
Department answf'red 515 were In Cheshi re Township
Of
th e
December
calls durmg 1977, according
to the annual report of Chief emergency runs, 21 were In
town ; seven were out of town
C. Robert Fisher.
Of the total, 94 were fire s or with two of the calls involving
fire re lated including 31 motor vchtcle accidents.
Officers for the 1978-79
structura l f1res, 22 vehicle
fires and 14 brush and trash period elected by the Midfares . or the total 13 were dleport Department arc ·
Wayne E. Davis, fire chief;
mutual a1d calls. There were
dtscount.
three false alanns. Losses in Bub E. Byer, assistant fire
Bus schedules may be structural fires included du el; Jeff B. Darst, captain;
picked up at the office of the $33,475 to buaidings and Donald 1.. Stivers, first
of $10,100 to contents Losses in lieutenant; Kevan A. Dailey,
Pomeroy Cha mber
Commerce.
the 22 vehacle fares totaled second lieutenant. Harold E.
Connections can be made $4,780.
Wolfe, thard lieutenant.
from AORTA to transfer in
ol the 421 emergency runs, l.arry 1.. Baker was selected
Athens for Columbus. With 300 were in town and 121 were emergency squad chief ;
Vaughan was Martin Davis out of town Twenty-six calls Kenneth Imboden, assistant
associated With AORTA.
mvolved vehicle accidents chacf, and Kenneth L. Byer,
Fred Crow, C of C Total maieage for ail vehicles capta in
presadent, stated that he felt o! the department during the
Admimstrative oflacers will
the project was worthwhile year was 11,501.2.
be C. Robert Fisher,
and congratulated Reed for
During l&gt;ecemher of 1977, presadent; Wayne E. Davis,
his part in bringing the there were nine fires, one vace president ; Jeff R. Darst,
service to the county. Crow false alarm, one mutual aid sec retary; and Robert
suggested that a similar ca ll and 28 · emergen cy McElhinny, treasurer. John
project could be useful be- medacal runs. Of the total fire Metzger and Kenneth L. Byer
tween Pomeroy and Mid- calls five were in town; three were named to serve as
dleport and possibly Racine. were in Sahsbury Township; dependency board members.

prevented frigid .,dunking
Racine, shd on the ice County accidents occurred at
striking a vehicle operated by 12:30 p.m.1 on SR 7, three
James H. Young, 56, Racine. tenths of a mile south of US 35
There
was
moderate · where an aulD driven by Anna
damage . Hill complained of Knight, 29, Gallipolis, struck
minor injuries but was not the rear of a vehicle driven by
immediately treated.
Robert K. Theass, 35,
A collision occurred at 7; 20 Cheshire.
There
was
a.m. on Main St. in Pomeroy moderate damage.
when an auto driven by Veva
An accident occurred on
Searles, 55, Rutland, slid on Roush Lane, north of
the Icy street striking a car Cheshire, when a car driven
driven by James H. Qulvey, by 16-year old Virginaa
59, Pomeroy. There was WalS~PBn, of Cheshire, slid on
minor damage.
the llilow-covered highway
Another accident occurred into a parked truck driven by
at 10:40 a.m. on Third St. in Brett Wyatt of Mason, W Va.
Racine when an auto driven There was minor damage.
by Ronald R. Eakins, 21,
A three vehicle accident
Racine, turned into Third St. wu Investigated at 3:50p.m.
lllrlking a vehicle owned by m\ SR 518, three tenths of a
Dwayne L. Williams, 29, mile east of US 35 where an
Chester.
auto driven by Joseph Merry,
The fl~st of five Gallia 17, Gallipolis, ' ran off the

roadway stnking a car driven
by J erry L Wade , 18,
Gallipolis, and another
vehicle operated by William
H. Adkil)s, 53, Gallipolis.
There was moderate to heavy
damage. No charges were
filed .
1

An accident occurred at

3&lt;45 p.m. on the PatriotCadrnus Road where an auto
driven by Timothy Davies,
17, Gallipolis, slid off the
roadway strikmg a parked
car owned by Basil Crews,
Patriot. There was minor
damage
The !mal mishap occurred
at 4:35 p.m. on SR 775, three
miles south of SB 141 where a
vehicle drtven by Stephen
McCormick, 25, Gallipolis,
ran ofP \he left side of the
roadway ~to a ditch. '

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