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

1n- The DaUySentlnei,MidcDePOrt-PWiel'oy, 0 ., Tuesday ,Jan.l7, 1978

U. S. turns out record harvest ! Area Deat)ls !
and 1978, and was a half
WASffiNGTON (UP!) Despite December snows that percent above a loreclllll
led to fear of possible sub- iasued last November.
The com harvest report Is
stantial crop -losses in 11&lt;&gt;me
areas, American farmers Important to consumers as
have turned out the biggest well as fanners, because
tot•! crop harvest In history, com Is the moll widely used
the AgricUlture Department livestock feed crop. 'Along
with the '!OYbean crop, the
says.
The
agency's· crop com harvest helps determine
reporting board, In a final how much meat, milk and
1977 summary Monday, poultry farmers wiU produce
estimated the com harvest at and thus has a ·heavy Impact
a record 6.357 billion bushels, . on future consumer food
down only 10 miUion fl'Qm a prices.
Because of the big 1977
November forecallt.
crop,
which Is espected to
The new estimate was 1
exceed
combined domestic
percent above the 1976 crop
and
ezport
demand,
and represented the third
Agriculture
Department
consecutive record corn
economists are predicting
harvest.
Officials said production of this year's retall food price
all 1977 crops reached a Increase will be held to a 4 to 6
record 129 percent of the 1967 percent range, slightly below
total despite drought in some the 6.5 percent gain of 1977.
The fanners, the big crop
parts ofthe Coll!ftry last year.
The new aU-crop estimste
was up 7 percent from the
previous record set in ·197~

Speech

(Continued from pace 1)
!!hould happen.
He made the remarks in a
telephone discussion with a
Hattiesburg, Miss., "Great
(ContlntMd from pac. l)
Decisions" progrwn which
and "The Lord's · Prayer,"
was debsting whether the.
and pianist Eugene lstomln treaties should be ratlf~ ..
.. .,.and violinist Isaac' Slem
Carter's
participation
in
played, as Humphrey had
the
Hattiesburg
lllwn
hall
requested.
The congregation sang out debate was part of an
administration drive to win
''America The Beautiful" Senate
ratification of the
and a choir sang the ·
canal
treaties
early this year.
"Hallelujah" chorus from the
He
will
participate
In a
Messiah.
simUar
lelephone
hookup
Then, suddenly, two men
rolled the polished wooden question and ansWer session
a slmUar forum . in
ca.sket down tbe aisle jar: tbe with
Alberquerque,
N.M., tonight.
trip to the cemetery, aild the
Calling
the
canal "quite
trutb came home - the vulnerable," Carter
said: "I
"Happy Warrior" was 'gone.
think
tjlat
If the treaties were
Pastor Didier walked down
the aisle, softly reciting the rejected there would be oome
23rd Psalm·: "The Lord Is my attempt to dlarupt the
llhepherd, I shall not want. He canal.
"We would rejeci that," he
leadeth me beside the still
added.
"We're not operating ·
waters ... "
under
some
threat, or fear or
A black hearse carried
weakness.
We
hope to operate
Humphrey's body to the In
cooperation
and
cemetery. About" 1,000
partnership
with
Pal18JJ18."
persons stood quietly In zero
He said that he expected
weatiler as the coffin was Panamanian
leader Omar
placed over the grave.
Torrijos
and
hls·
_ go\oernment
A military guard fired a
would
do the best they could
rifle salute.
to pre\oent any danger Ill the
/;i)ijglefsounded taps .
canal
If the treaty Is not
A little girl, one of tbe
ratified.
senator's 10 grandchildren,
But he said that If "some
placed a basket of Dowers
dissident
group there or cOmbeside his collin.
munist
group
... or some
Humphre)i's friends slowly
oulside
agitators
try to attack
left the cemetery. And tbe
the
canal,
It
would
be my
senator was alone.
respooslbillty" to defend it.

Last •••

1---------.

NOW OPEN

GINO'S
OF MASON
PHONE 773-5536

"We have
theandmilitary
strength
Ill do It,
I would
take that action," he
declared.
At the same time, Carter
expressed optipllsm the
accords will be appro\•ed.
Carter attended the funeral
of Hubert H. Humphrey in
Minneapolis Monday.
He plans to send Congress
his 1979 budget, his economic
report forecasting the ouUook
for the year, and his tax
package over the weekend.

HOW TO SPOT A BANK
FINANCED CAR

depressed market prices last
lall and helped touch off a
gr&lt;ss roots farm strike
movement aimed at boosting
crop prices to 100 percent of
the federally partly standard.
The crop production
summary Monday estimated
the soybean harvest at a
record 1.716 billion bushels,
up 33 percent from 1976.
Grain sorghum production
was estimated at 790.6 miWon
bushels, up 10 percent from
the previous year.
Some observers had feared
that December sto!1118 might
make a sizeabl• dent In the
evt!ntual final harvest. But
Monday's figures showed the
decline In corn prospects
since a November estimate
was minimal, and the
soybean and sorghum
forecasts
were
above
,forecasts issued during the
harvest in November.
The crop report said far·
mers last year harvest The
crop report said fanners last
year harvested from 71 .3

HHH told
grandchild
of death
MINNEAPOLIS (UPI) Sen. Hubert Humphrey told
his first grandchUd, Vicki
Solomonson, last September
that he was dying.
Vicki, a Downs Syndrome
child, and her grandfather
were particularly close.
Humphrey prh•ately explained his terminal cancer
to Vicki Sept. 25, the day tbe
Muriel Humphrey residence
for young retarded adults
was dedicated. Vlckillves at
the residence In Eden
Prairie.
Robert
Kowalczyk,
director of the Louise
Whitbeck Fraser School In
Richfield, which buUt the
residence, said Hwnphrey
iold his grandchUd .he was
dying and was prepared Ill
die.
"He told ber not to be
afraid/' Kowalczyk said. "He
asked her to be brave."
Kowalczyk said VIcki, -now
17, took her grandfather's
death .very hard at first .
"Then
she · became
composed. We are very proud
of her. She handled herself
well consideririg the stress,"
he said.
Vickl&gt;aitended funeral ser\1ces Monday at House of
Hope Presbyterian Church in
st. Paul with her parents,
Nancy
and
Bruce
Solomon son. ·

CALL ANSWERED
The
Middleport
EJnergency _Squad answered
a call to the apartment of
Lawrence Stewart, North ·
Second Ave., ~t 4:36 p.m.
Monday. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
by private car. A few minutes
later, the squad was called to
825 Beech St. for Chip
Haggerty who was Ill. He was
treated on the scene by Dr. R.
R. Pickens.

NAME CORRECI'ED
In Holzer Medical Center
birth announcements it
!!hould have read Mr. and
Mrs. James Farley, a son,
Marietta, not Fraley as was
amounced.

LOOK AT mE OWNER
iF HE LOOKS RELAXED. HAPPY, CONTENTED.YOU KNOw HE HAS FINANCED HIS CAR THE LOW
COST, PROMPT-SERVICE, BANK WAY.
WALK-UP TELLER WINDOW AND
AUTOTELLERWINDOWOPEN
FRI. EVENINGS STu 7 P.M.

INROOMZ03
Willoughby Hill is a
surgical patient at Holter
Medical Center,. His room
number Is 203 for those who
wish to send cards.

~".b

Oblo Valley Llvestoek Co.
Salurday, Jaa.14,1978
Trends : Feeder cattl•
steady choice kind 3 to 5
dollars cheaper. Plain cows 4
to 6 dollars higher due to
severe winter weather. ...
Total Head: 880
· (CaHle)
Slaughter Steers 37 \0 44.50.
Slaughter Heifers 32.50 tf
38.75.
Feeder Steers (GoodChoice) 2!iO to 300 lbs. 31.50 to
42; 300 to 400 lbs. 33 to 43.75;
400 to 500 lbs. 32.75 to 42; 500
to 600 lbs. 31.50 to 39.50; 600 to
700 lbs. 30 to 38.35; 700 and
over 30 to 38.35.
Feeder Heifers (Good·
Choice) 2!i0to300 lbs. 27to 33;
300 to 400 lbs. 26.50 to 36; 400
to 500 lbs. 2!i to 35.75; 500 to
600 lbs. 26 to 33.5o; 600 to 700
lbs. 25.50 to 32.50; 700 and
over 24.50 to 33.75.
Feeder Bulls (GoodChoice) 250 to 300 lbs. 34.50 io
39; 300 to 400 lbs. 32.50 to 40;
400 to 500 lbs. 30 to 38; 500 to
600 lbs. 30 to 39.2!i; 600 to 700
lbs. 27 to 37.75; 700 and over
23.50 to 34.75.
Slaughter BuUs (Over 1,000
lbs.) 28.50 to 34.15.
Slaughter Cows: Utilities
28.50 to 32.90; Canner-Cutters
24 to 28.2!i.
Veals: Choice and Prime iiO
to 72.50; Standards and
Mediums 42.50 to 50.
Baby Calves (by· the head)
5to 43.
(Hogs)
Hogs: . (No. 1, BarrowsGilts, 200-230 lbs.) 43.50 to 46;
Butcher Sows 37 to 41; Butcher Boars 24 to 27.75.
Pigs (by the head) 12.50 to
33.
NEWOFF1CER
CLEVELAND (UPI) General manager Conrad S.
Schott of the Walmil Co.,
Detroit, has· been named
president of Blaw-Knos
Equipment, Inc., Pittsburgh, ·
succeeding the retiring Earl
E. Vance.
Alfred G. Mugford,
executive Vice president of
White
Consolidated
Industries, parent company
of Blliw-Knoi Equipment and
WalmU, announced Schott's
appolnbnent Mondsy.
Blaw-Knox Equipment '
manufactures steel plant
equipment, Industrial
grating, clamsheU buckell
and steel concreting forms.

.

ai

.

f.m.

p.m. and 7·9 p.m. Wednesday

JOSEPH L. KEMP

Joseph

L.

Kemp,

DEPOSIT!t tMSUREDT0$40,000

at the Waugh·Hallev·Wood
Funeral Home,
95 ,

formerly of Th trd Ave.,
Galllpolls, dled at 9:15a.m .
Monday in Elms Nursing
Home at Wellington, near
Cleveland. He was a retired
employe of the G.a lllpolts
State I nstltute.

EARLY PAYMENTS

CLEVELAND (UPI)
Cuyah&lt;JI!a
CoWJty officials
The son of JOseph and
Sarah Bostic Kemp, he was
once agalll are cmtactlng
preceded in death by his wife,
area
businesses
and
the former Edith Cromlish, in
Industries,
asking
them
to
May , 1972 . Survivors are a
pay their real estate taxes
daughter, Mrs. Vaughn (Ed·
na &gt; Rausch of Porter ; four
early so the Cleveland School
sons, Alfred of Wellington, Board can meet its ~ million
Arthur of Crown City, Clark payroll Friday. ,
of Chillicothe. and Wayne of
It was disclosed Mlllday
Vinton; 12 grandchildren ;
and a number of great· that the board IS $1 miWon
grandchildren.
short of what'aneeded to pay
Services will be held at . Its 12,000 employees.
10:30 a.m . Wednesd.ily at the
Big bUsiness~ mostly,area
Waugh-Halley·Wood Funeral
Home, the Re\1 . Arthur
utilities - came to the
Cromlish officiating, with . board's rescue earlier tills
burial in Providence
Cemeterv. Friends mav call montil and paid their taxes
early so the board could
7-9 this evening at the funeral
home.
receive advance real estate ·
tax revenues to cover· the
payroll.
BUSINESS OPENED
The Duds and Suds
LaWJdry on East Main Street
opened today after having
been closed for the past week
for general redecoration and
equipment rep!Bcement.

HOPE TO MEET
The Southern Boosters will
meet.thls evening at 7:30 p.m.
weather permitting.

The

SP€1D€L .
Digital Watch.
You'll feel good
getting one.
You'll feel good
· giving one.

Veteraaa Memertal Hoapltal Thomas Wllnon, Jr. , Richard
Admitted
Mary White, Ruth Stone, Wllllnm
· Laudermilt, Middleport; Roush, · Jo Ann Conkle,
Scott Ogdln, Middleport; Charles Bush.
Kimberly Conard, Mason;
Virginia Smith, Pomeroy;
Eunice Halsey, Tuppers ·
Holzer Medical Center
Plains , Ella Gladman,
iDlscbargea, Jan.11)
Gallipolis; Maxine Durst,
Kermit
Brown, Camden
Portland; Michael RusseU,
Coe,
Josephine
Crow, Mrs.
Racine; Patricia Cleland,
Gary
Davis
and
daughter,
Langsville; Mary Jacobs,
Mrs.
Howard
Ervin
Jr. and
Rutland; Earl Riggs, Langsson;
Audrey
·
Gilliland,
ville; Lawrence Stewart,
Middleport.
, I • Alberta Hardaway, Donna
Discharged - Mildred Kelley, Pennie King, Mrs.
Arnold, Marlon Ebersbach, Jon Kloes and daughter, Olga
Timmie Roberts, Pauline Nibert, Dorothy Ojala, Mrs.
Osborae
ahd
Derenbe'ller, Jeremy Dalley, . James
daughter, Sandra Parsons,
Roma Sharp, Freda Smith,
Rita Spratley, Randy
Thomas, Vemle Va.n Dyke,
FIREMEN CAIJ..ED.
The
Pomeroy
Fire Gertrude Wickline, Mrs. Von
Department wu called to Womeldorf and son.
(Births, Jaa.11)
East Main St. at 7:16 Monday
Mr. and Mrs. Hubert
to eztlngulsh a blaze In a .
vehicle owned by Tom Goett. Cottrill, a son, ,\!hens. Mr.
At 8:01 p.m. the aid squad and Mrs. Ray Nettles, a
reported to the fire station to · daughter, Robertsburg, W.
pick up John ABh who bad a · Va. Mr. and Mrs. Dwight
finger laceration. He was Shamblin, a son, Cheshire.
taken to Vetl!rllllB Memorial Mr. ilnd Mrs. James Walter, ·
a son, Oak Hill..
Hospital.

ELB
'.

JANUARY SALE
WOMEN'S SWEATERS

SAVE
35%

•
The Speidel Olgltlil Watch It an

extra tJ*;Ial gift. Becilu.e lt't not
JUit • gtft o1 time. it' l an lleglint
gift ot )owo&gt;y too.
There ere 2 women'• LCD'•· wtth
..,. time llwaya ohowlng. Both ...
• unique blend ol dlllel.ll JewelrY
and I!Oflhlalioolld _,ronk:o.

S - Digital Wale~.

time vou took a look at one?

l"''t "

GOISSL_IR'S
JIWIUY
STORE
992-2920

Court St.

Pomeroy,O.

WOMEN'S

READY TO WEAR, 2ND FLOOR
'

ELBERFELD$

XXVII~.

NO. 193

'

Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
suggested home users
cutback on electric usage In
such ways as when several
foqds lire being prepared, Ill
use the oven to prepare the
foods all at once. The utility
also
suggested
small
appUanees be used fu- food
preparation and substituting
In a meal a hot food for a dish
tbat requires no heating or
cooking.
Dave
Zimmer,
the
assistant director of the state
Department of Energy, said
Power
"Is
Allegheny
probably the power system In
the worst shape.
!'They are apparently
going to notify the governors
of the states they serve
asking for a reduction In
system load," said Zlmmer.

at y

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OH 10
'

serious problems as yet .
Some utilities are still getting
coal b)lt others ate not getting
it any more. Cincinnati Gas &amp;
Electric Co. and Allegheny
Power both told us they are
not getUng any coal at ali any
more."
·
Otber Ohio electric utilities
apparenUy are wHiting until
they reach a 50-day supply
before
taking
any
conservation measues.
" Yesterday we had· a liSday supply ," said Dave
Ptoppelmeier, a spokesman
for Ohio Edison which is
headquartered In Akron .
"But we are not burning orr a
day's supply every day
because we stiUhave a ~ouple
of generating units down, so
we are buying oome power,
But we are watchin~ the

situation closely."
Cleveland Electric 11lwnlnating, Cincinnati G~s &amp;
Electric and the Ohio Power
Co. have between a 6S and 7().
day supply of coal on hand
while Dayton Power &amp; Light
Co. and Toledo Edison have
ubout an 80 to 854ay
stockpile.

Weather
Cieur tonight, low to 15.
Cloudy, chAn ce of $now
'l11Ursduy, high . between 2!i
and 30 . Probubility of
preciplta&lt;iun 20 percent today
and tonight, 50 pe rcent
111Ursday.

•

enttne

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 18, 1978

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

.

Ohioans digging out rom storm

NEW SECRETARY FOR THE Pomeroy Chamber of
Cmnmerce is Emmogene Holstein, seated, who look over
her duties Monday. With Emmogene Is Barbara Chapman
who resigned as secretary to accept fuU time employment
with the ,Athens Messenger. Mrs. Chapman extends her
thanks fci the fine cooperation given her while secretary.
The chamber ,located on the front street level of tbe courtbouse, Is open Mooday, Tuesday and Friday from 9 to 4.

IN POMEROY

Cardigans, pullovers,
vests, c:rew necks, coat
sweaters.. Sizes 34 thru
48.
Entire
stock
Included.

-

VOL.

'"Statewide, we have no

of this situation."

•

e

. JIM ANDERSON OF THE ELBERFELD
DEPARTMENT STORE was a good samaritan Tuesday
as he shoveled snow from sidewalks of tbe Pomeroy
National Bank, next door lo the deparbnent store. Even
resldenll! with a desire to shovel ran Into a problem
Tuesday as snow shovels were not available in local
stores.

HOSPITAL NEWS

.

$

emergency by Gov. James A. Washingtoli CoWlty area of
By JOHN' T. KADY '
Ohio.
Rhodes.
United Prtsa IDteruUoaal
" Prudent conservation of
Clem said the program
'1'he Ohio National Guard
has drawn up a "fuel would be outlined at a staff electrlcty wiU help stretch
the current coal supply," said
emergency
plan"
to meeting later today.
The
plan
would
be
ImpleColwnbus
&amp; Soutbem Ohio
transport ·coal to Individual
Electric.
mented
through
county
homeowners and state
"We want to keep people up
Institutions that will run out disaster service offices and
of coal · because of the coo rdinated by the state to date on our situation," said
Disaster Services Agency, Bob Jones, a spokesman for
nationwide miners $-Ike.
Colwnbus &amp; Southern. "We
Meanwhile, the Columbus Clem said.
National Guard trucks and think the media has shown
&amp; Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Department
of extreme Interest In this and
today called on all of Its Ohio
vehicles we want to follow through and
customers In 25 central and Transportation
southern Ohio counties lo would be uaed to transport advise them of the situation
begin
" prudent the coal, as weD as utilization and perhaps get tbese meascooservatlon" of electricity of county vehicles 10hlch ures into people's hands In
because of dwindling coal would be called Into service. the event more cooservation
An official with tile state Is necessary.
suppUes.
"Again, I say we are asking
State Adjutant General Deparbnent of Energy said
James Clem stressed the coal tile Allegheny Power Co., for prudent co nservation
would not be shipped to which Is headquartered In right now and we may have to
electric utillties and wQUid West Virginia, is expected ask for stronger conservation
only go Into effect upm soon to begin cutbacks In tbe In the coming weeks. ! feel we
declaration of a fuel states it serves Including tbe should give advance warning_

.

'

Member Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation

VPI Tde¥111• Writer
NEWYORit (UPI)- ''Siar Wara" may lurn Into IUr bores
• aliena 11'1111 outer JPICe Invade the IDner sanctum ol the

RAYMOND II ELL
ROBERT KIBLER
RACINE- Raymond Bell. . Robert E . Klbl1&lt;, 56, Rt. 4
84, of Route I, Racine, died Circleville, died Sunday at his
uv~n~~.
Tuesday mornl1 at Arcadia home.
Bef&lt;n "Star Wlll'll" wu the bolt office bit It WU lo beamo,
Survlvora
Include
his
wife.
Nursing Home n Coolville.
&amp;bert
WU111er !ben prsldalt ol C8S TeleYIIIOII Network,
Mr. Bell was born July 17, Doris Walen Kibler, a for 1893. a oon of the late Charles mer resident of Goll la lneleted- hillop es:ecutlvt~~ wall$ the moVie lo - the
and Matilda w..r Bell. He County ; two children, Mrs. wave ol the futln.
was also preceded In death by Patricia Meade, Lancaster,
Slllce !ben, .... C""P"''ndecl by tho IIICCell cl ''Ciole
his wife, Murl Van Meter and Davi d Meade serving
Bell; a son. Chester, 0 sister, with the U. S. Armed Forces; Encounteraofthe Tblrd Klnd,"ICience fiction and fanlay are .
and two brothers.
his mother, Mrs. Robert IUnllllc "' cnlbe airwaves u the notworkll try to bitch their
Aveter on of WW 1. he was a Murray of Circleville; two IICbedW. to • .....
member ol Drew Webster slst~s. ln - law , Mrs. Robert
One allen lnvulcn loot place 1.ut S.IUI'day on NBC when the
(Jewell) Evans. Mf. Zion Rd.,
Post 39 American Legion.
Bionic
Woman waa trapped inalde a burled pyrJmld In
Surviving
are
two and Mrs. Lowell (Mildred)
Southern Callfcrnla wb«e lhe ran into a lM!IItlnel
walling for
daughters , Mrs. Paul Fish of Rt . 2, Bidwell .
Funeral 5ervlces will be lhe allena wbo viltted earth 5,000 Ylllll'lliO to' return.
(Wilma) Ervin, Racine, and
Mrs. John (Dorothy) Chaney, held at 2:30p.m. Wednesday
Where elae but Southern c.llfornla?
Minersville; two sons, Don In Circleville. Burial will be
The
Bionic Woman wW even bave an allen beau, which
and Paul , Ra cine ; two In a Circleville Cemetery.
brothers, Otha and Jessie,
mwwlhe llhow Ia lolne In far bwnanoid es:traiA!n'eltlala, beBaltimore. Md . ; 13 grandca-lt Ia UDIII&lt;ely lbllt an animated vegetable or an Intelligent
HAZEL WOODS
children. and several nle&lt;:es
Insect would find even Llnduy W~gn« a temptin« aez object.
and nephews.
Mrs. Hazel Virginia WOOds,
Lee Sleeel. es:ec:utlve prodlleer of the show, Nld, "By
Funeral services will be of 71, died at10 a.m. Monday at
lnveotlpllng tbla phonomenoo of alieni vlllllng earth, we hope
1 p.m. Thursday a! the Ewing
the home of her daughter,
Funeral Home wlfh the Rev . Mrs . James Betz , In 1o auggeot anawera to problema that have plaped manldnd lor
Earl Shuler officiating . t.allipolls. She had retired in centuries."
Burial will be In Letart Falls 1976 after 14 years In the
It llhould be euy fu- ~levlaloo packl&amp;era to weave allella
Cemtery. Friends may coil at employ of Holzer Medical
the funera l home after 7 fh ls Center. She had been In fall · lntoalmolt any llbow. Archie Brier's bigotry certainly would'
lng health for two months.
evening.
eztend to noopeople witb green liln, particularly If they
Born Aug. 12, 1906. In appUed fu- welfare.
'
Pomeroy , she was the
daughter of the late Earl · George Jelfei'IOII could practice reverse bias.
Wayland Carpenter
On ''Family," surely onebody could get illegltlinately
Hartenbach, Sr., and Rosa
LETART, W. Va . Wayland T. S. Carpente.-, 79, Gloeckner Hartehbach. Her pregnant from outer ~pace, while maybe It wu a godfather
Letart, was pronounced dead husband, William J . Woods, from outer t1pace who killed Peter Clinpbell on "Soap."
died In 1954.
on arrival Monday afternoon
And an allen wbo wu good at one-Uners would bowl them
Four daughters survive:
at Pleasani .Valley Hospital.
Born Jan . 23, 1898, Chestnut Mrs . James (Barbara) Betz, over m Johnny_Canon.
Ridge Rd .. .fo the late Chorles Gallipolis ; Mrs. Russell
Friend and Cora VIrginia (Patricia) Sessor, Sarasota,
Monaten of a dllferent ldnd dominated the airwaves Sunday
Freeman Carpenter, he was a Fla .; Mrs . Katherine . when the Incredible hulk.l of DaUU and Denver met In Super
Preston,
LeKington,
Ky.;
and
Cl!lrpenter and steelworker.
are
two Mrs . Ronald (Susie) Phalin, Bowl XII.
Surviving
CBS reMai'Ch estimates that 90 mllllm people watched the
daughters , Allee Juanita Gallipolis. There . are nine
grandchildren and two great- big game, and If they ~ right It wW be an aU-time record
Morgan, letart, and Patricia
grandchildren . A son,
A. Backus, Charleston ; a son ,
Ronald
E. Carpenter , William J ., preceded her in audience (laet year's Super Bowl was watched by 82 miWon
~m~
·.·
.
.
Coolville, Ohio ; one brother, death In 1975.
Also surviving is a brother,
Tbe CBS estlnlllte Is hued on tho Nlelaen "ovemlghll" Earl Carpenter, Weirton, W.
Earl Hartenbach, Jr., Point
Va . , and seven grand tbat Ia, the viewing fl&amp;w'e8 fnm New York, Chlcagp and Los ·
Pleasant. A brother preceded AngelfB.
children.
.
her
In
death
.
Funeral s~rvlces will be
While
CBS
won
hand.Uy
In
New
Yerk and Chicago with a 81
She was a member of St.
conducted Thursday 1
at
Peter'S Episcopal .Chur:ch, and ee per cent lbare' of tbe audience, It was In Loo Angeles
the Foglesong Funera Home
Gallipolis, where funeral ser- tbat the netwwk 8CG'ed a real touchdown witb a 78 share. NBC
with the Rev . James K. Poe
vices will be held at 10:30
officiating. Burial will follow
bad a 4.0 share, and ABC's share wu 6.0.
a.m . Thursday, the ~ Rev.
In the Evergreen Cemetery.
The big game gave CBS a Lol Angeles ratlnl of 47 .8, while
Albe~t
MacKenzie
officiating,
Friends may call at the
and burial will be in Beech
NBC bad U rating and ABC 2.9.
funeral home Wednesday
Grove Cemetery, Pomeroy.
from 2 to 4 p.m . and from 7 to
Friends may call 3 : 30~s
9 p.m.

WEDDING BEUS
CLEVELAND (UP!) Pollee Chief Richard D.
Honglsto and Elizabeth
Coltm, say they'll marry In
San Francisco, where
Hmldsto recen,tly resigned as
sheriff, In mid,February,_
It'll be the chief's seTd
marriage and Miss Colton's
first. Announcement of the
wedding was made Monday.

5ALE PRICED"

SOFA
BEDS
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

By JOAN HANAUER

ONE OF .THE MANY ITEMS
11

FRIENDLY BANK"

Market Report

Ohio National Guard fashioning
plan to carry coal to homes,
state institutions if need.ed

Emergency plan

TV•• .in Review

JANUARY SALE
.

"THE

million in 1978 whll!! soybean
acreage was 57.9 million, up
!!harply from the previous
year's 49.4 miWon acres.
Sorghum acreage was 1U
million compared with 14.7
million a year earlier.
p
1 Ids 0 f aj 0 r
er-acre Y e
m
crops In 1977 Included 90.8
bushes! of com compared
with 87.9 In 1976, 29.6 bushels
of soybeans compared with
26 .1 the previous "vear and
,~
56.2 bushels of sorghums
compared with 48.9 In 1976.
The new report fumlllhed
no new estimates on wheat
and severa l other major
crops, including cotton ,
which were covered 1n earlier
· reports . It prov ided I hese
estimates of other 1971 crops,
with 1976 In parentheses:
Tobacco 1.934 blllion
ounds
(2.136 bushels )·,
P
potatoes 352 million (hundredweight (357.7 miUion) ;
peanull! 3.681 biUion pounds (3,751 billion) ; hay 131.1
million tons (120 miUion).

-

By Unlled Press lnle1'118tloaal
COLUMBUS- THE OffiO LEGISLATURE, crippled by
the heaviest snowfall of the winter, slowed to a crawl Tuesday
with the House session and most conunlttee meetings canceled
because of absent, snowbound legislators.
The Senate, with seven of its members absent, met and
relurned to tbe House a bill extending penalties for smuggling ·
weapons, drugs and llquor into facUlties operated by the Ohio
Department of Mental Health and Mental Retardation. House
Speaker Vernal G. Riffe, Jr,, D-New Boston, canceled further
House roll calls tills week, planning only a "skelellln" session
for today.
·
·

By JOHN T. KADY
United Press lnte1'118tlonal
Ohioans continued ~y to dlg out from under the latest
winter storm to hit the. Buckeye State which dwnped enough
snow to nearly immobilize Columbus and Cincinnati. Anotber
tanker convoy churned through Ice-clogged Lake &amp;-le and tow
truck drivers in Fostoria remained on strike.
Columbus and Clilclnnatl had almost a loot of snow on tbe
groWJd rut more streets were opened by city maintenance
crews which are working around the clock.
Gov. James A. Rhodes late Tuesday ordered the National
'Guard Into Gallia, Ross, Clermont, Licking and Brown
counties to help with snow removal. A few guardsmen were
already on duty In Meigs CoWlty.
The heavy snowfall caused cancellntlon of many activities
across Ohio, Including classes and l)undreds of high school
boskelball games.
· Sam DeAngelo, Columbus city maintenance supervisor, said
most major streets in the state's capital city had been plowed.
"We are sending half the crews onto the main arteries and
tbe otber half Is going to side streets," DeAngelo said. "As of
last night we had.put down 1,094 tons of salt and 920 tons of a deicer mixture of. calci~ and sand.
"Most of OW' hassles now are in tbe newly developed subdivi. sions. Everybody wants to be plowed out rlgbt now. They don't
realize we haye -l,IIOOmUes of city streets to keep clear."
The Columbus Cltlzen.Journal ran a front page picture today
of 24 snow plows just sitting In a maintenance yard.
"Those plows belong on trucks that are junked," said
DeAngelo. "We couldn't use them."
"Our main arteries are open and the Interstates are In good
shape," said Cincinnati highway supervisor Ray Mushaven.
"We hltve 19 truck plows and· 13 firur-wheel drive moWJted
plows out and have put down abuut 200 lllns of salt."
A spokesman fer the Coast Guard In Cleveland said a convoy
EXTENDED · OUTLOOK
Friday through Sunday,
lair and cold Friday and
Saturday aad a cbance of
snow Sunday. Hlgbs wUl be
In tbe upper teens or lower
208 Friday and Salurday
and ID the mid or upper 20s
Suaday. Lows wUl he between siX apd 12 early
Tbursday aad between 15
and 20 early Sunday.

Driver cited
.after _mishap

Joe Gibbs, Jr., 38, · Rt. 3,
MARYSVU.LE, OHIO- UNION COUNTY Wli..L gain an Gallipolis, was cited to
estimated $227,400 a year In tilzes from the proposed Honda Municipal Court for changing
motorcycle plant near East Uberty, state Development lanes without caution
Director James Duerk said Tuesday. Duerk, who met with following an accident lit 11 :15
Union County conunlssloners, said real ...tate and personal a.m. Tuesdsy on US 35 west
..-operty lues would yield $178,160 for the Marysville School of SR 160.
District, f32,250fer Union CoWlty Hospital, mental retardation
Tlie ·GaJlia • Meigs Post
and mental healtb levies, and $16,990 for Allen township.
State Highway Patrol said
Duerk said If Hooda decides to locate an aulD assembly Gibbs' vehicle pulled Into the
plant on a site adjacent to the motorcycle plant, the total _path of a semi operatedJ by
annualloeal revenue gain would be $1,201,300. He estimated John E. HamUton, 51, Leesemployees' wages would produce $?,000 annually In addltl~~urg, Va .. _There · was
lnccme fer Marysville and '!llld the state would gain annuaUy moderate damage.
$46,408 in sales tax and $40,1100 In personal Income tax plus an
A semi-car accident oc.WJdetermlned amount of cOrporation franchise tax.
curred at 9:41 a.m. on US 35
east of milePOst 15 where a
BOSTON - A REDUCTION IN AMERICAN military semi driven by Mervin
strength on Taiwan could belp propel the United States and Leadman, 64, Qulncey, W.
China IDirard normal diplomatic relations, Sen. Edward M. Va., was attempting to pass a
Kennedy, D-Ma8s., said In his first news conference since his , car operated by Mary J .
re1urn from a two-week trip to China. He suggested Tuesday · Herald, 35, Middleport, when
an exchange of vlllll by leaders of the two nations and the the right dual wheel struck
ezpanslon of trade alao would help achieve normal relations. · her car. No one was injured
''The ~ey obstacle to normalization of relations remalna or cited.
the future of the 16 miWon people on Taiwan," Kl!lll\edY said.
" &gt;.:
"I did not expect and cannot r"P."'t progress In resolving tbat
1,9sue." Any change In relations bl!tween the United States and ·
tbina would have to' Insure peace and security In Asia,
MEET TONIGHT
KennedY said, referring especially to "I:alwan, Japan and parts
The Meigs County Comof Solltbea~ Asia.
(!llasloners will meet In
special
session this evening
CLEVELAND - A PASSENGER SHOT TO "DEATH
Instead of Thlp'sday evening
TueedaY night when two men took over a bus and robbed
several of Ita 20 passengers remained Unidentified tbla as was announced. The
momlng. Pollee said two men In leather jackelll carrying a m~ing this evening Is at 7
p.m. In the office of the
aawec1 otr lhotfiW! and a .367 magnum pistol boarded a cominissioners.
(Continued on pace 1 .

of five shipa and three ice breakers tbat left Cleveland earUer

this week had made Ill! way Into Lake Huron.
" But we have another one coming In (to Cleveland)," said
Chief Petty Officer Fred D9ster. "The dOwoboWld convoy of
five ships has one Ice breaker with It and another will meet it
today at the Pelee passage just north of Sandusky.
"The ice on Lake Erie Is rough. There Is thick ice all the way
from Cleveland to tile Detroit River ,"
A spokesman for the Fostoria Police Department said the
strike by private tow-truck operalllrs In that northwestern
Ohio city Is still &lt;n.
·
The iow-truck aperators had contended the city did not keep
tile streets clear enough for them to operate so they refused Ill
haul away any vehicles except those Involved In an accident
and were blockinll a street.
The National Weather Service discontinued the heavy snow
warning for southeastern Ohio and tbe travelers' advisories
for lhe remainder of the state.
The Weather Service said the stonn system which produced
the heavy snow is now centered along the New Jersey.coast.
Winds will also be diminishing across tbe state and the
blowing and _drifting of snow wiD be ending, the Weatber
Service said, and some clearing wiD occur today mainly in the
western section, aUowing for tbe return of some sWlShlne.
Ohio will come Wider another snow threat Thursday as a low
pressure system drifts eastward across the northern Gulf of
Mexico, ferecasters said, and at this time the risk of
significant snow in the state Is not great.
The Ohio extended outlook for Friday through Saturday calls
for fair and cold Friday and Saturday and a chance of snow
Sunday. Highs will be in the upper teens or lower 20s Friday
lind Saturdsy and in the mid or upper 20s SWJday. Lows will be
between six and 12early Thursday and between 15 and 20 early
Sunday,

M.a ilbox destruction
continuing miahated
mailbuxes had 'been dsmaged Matheny, Reedsville. It Is
stili Wider investigation.
over the weekend.
Sheriff Proffitt is asking
everyone with infonnation to
please contact his office.
There have been too many
mailbox vandalism complaints. There Is . surely
someone that has seen
something
or
heard
something about the mailbox
vandalism, he believes.
•
Citizen cooperation in
Pomeroy Village will have
solving these cases Is a must! the expense of lodging and
Donald Karr, Rt. 1, Mid· feeding for 15 Ohio National
dieport, reported Sunday to Guard members who are in
the sheriff's office that a the community helping with
cabin located near his snow removal , Mayor
property had been entered Clarence Andrews said
during the past three weeks. Tuesdsy night.
Mayor Andrews said his
Stolen from the cabin were a
first
understanding of the
four defendants'were fined pot belly stove, two Coleman
and a fifth forfeited · bond jantems; a Coleman heater, a guard's coming to Pomeroy
Tuesday night In Middleport • sleeping bag, and a cheap CB involved the village paying
Mayor Fred Hoffman's court. walkie talkie. The incident is only for fuel used by several
pieces
of
equipment
Fined "(ere Jerry D. under investigation.
Owens, 29, Syracuse, $10 artd
Sheri(('s deputies In- · belmiglng to the guard and
costs, Improper backing; vestigated two accidents used in the snow clearance.
Richard W. Salser, 20, Monday. One occurred at However, Mayor Andrews
Middleport, $50 and costs, 12 :14 p.m. on CR 10 near the said the village has been
spinning tires; $50 and costs, Worley Francis residence advised that it also will have
reckless operation; $100' and near Dexter. Charles A. tO bear the exoense of the
costs, leaving the scene of an Schoonover, 44, Rutland, was lodginl! and feeding.
Village Council President
accident, and $50 and costs, · traveling north on CR 10 and
Dr.
Harold Brown Indicated
illegal car tags; Richard J. Geraldine
Potter,
24,
GUbrlde, 32, Racine, $225 and Cleveland,
Ohio; was today the village will !Ue for ·
costs and three days In jail, traveling south on CR 10. The an emergency disaster grant
dr(vlng while Intoxicated, vehicles collided In a curve on In an attempt to receive
and Robert Stearns, 24, the snow covered road. No reimbu~sement for the
Gallipolis, $25 and costs, citations were Issued.•.There money to be spent. He also
disorderly mauner; $50 and was moderate damage to repOrted that Jay Hall, Jr.,
donated a grader and the
costs,
destruction
of both vehicles.
services of a man to operate
property, and $50 and costs,
that
equipment to clear snow
The
second
accident
oc·
defrauding an Inn keeper.
Forfeiting a $50 bond curred at 1:22 p.m. on SR 681 on the parking lots along the
posted . on a disorderly In Olive Twp. involving river. On behalf of the
manner charge wu Buddy James C. Dovenbarger, village, Dr. Brown extended
McKinney, 61, Middleport. Gallipolis and Herbert thanks to Hall.

Mailbox vandalism in rural
Meigs County has become
such a popular sport by the
lawless that the feds are
being caUed ln.
Sheriff James J . Proffitt,
reporting three more incidents
of
mailbox
destruction Tuesday, said
Federal Postal Inspectors
will be called Into help In the
investigation and
apprehen~ion of the crtminals.
Fred Smith, Robert Bauer,
and Uoyd Hoffman on West
Shade Road in Chester
Township reported that their

Four fined by
Mayor Hoffman

THE HEAVY SNOW BROUGHT many pro~lems to
Meigs Countians, and proof that the snow "Is heavy" was
brought home Tuesday afternoon wben this aluminum
awning at the front of Chapman Shoes on East Main St.
fell to tbe sidewalk. Other such awnings through the
business section were sagging as the snow,. mixed with
rain , continued to fall .

Pomeroy to
pay room
Pensions to stop
FRITZ
" came as no surprise to tbe
&amp; board ' ByVPISARA
Labor Reporter
retired miners, who were.
WASHINGTON (UP!) - A
nationwide strike by the
United Mine Workers will
deprive m&lt;re than 80,000
retired miners of thel'r
monthly pension benefits,
beginning In Feburary.
The union's pension
trustees annoWJced Tuesday
tbat no benefits will be paid
Feb. 1, because the fund Is
nearly bankrupt. !tis the first
time in more than 31 yeal'!l
the union pension funds have
been unable to pay benefits.
The break in pension
benefits was expected to
exert additional pressure on
negotiators fer the union and
the bltwnlnous coal indust,y,
who bave been meeting daUy
with federal mediators since
last Tlmrsday .
But th~ announcement

FISH FRY SET
The Middleport Fire
Department will hold · a fish
fry at the fire station
beginning at 11 a .m. Saturday. Fish sandwiches, french
fries and cole slaw wiU be
available at the station or to
take out.

forewarned to expect no

benefits during a lenghty
strike. The walkout began
Dec. 6, and the last pension
checks were mailed Jan. 1.
The strike also Interrupted
union health and death
benefits.
Barbara Moldauer, spokeswoman lor the fWld~. said the
trustess have ~ived many
"heartbreaking ' letters from
pensioners who depend oo
(Continued on pace 10)
TRY AGAIN
Meigs Counllans not
qualilying earlier are .
receiving second oppli catlons
for participation under the.
state fuel
adjustment
program, Meigs County
Auditor Howard Frank said.
Frank said these are
dupli ca te applications
coming from the Tax eon.-.•
mission Office. AU ~
who receive such ~.;:
plica \ions have to do is to put r
their name and current addresses on these second
applications and return them
to the Tax Commission Office
iri ColUmbus, according to
Frank.

�3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Jan. 18, 1978
2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy 10., Wednesdily, Jan . 18, 1978

Vida Blue hearing recessed until next week

Arab tactics like Hitler's
says Begin .in dinner toast
By MAURICE GUINDI
JERUSALEM (UP[) - A
serious diplomatic incident at
a
state
banquet

ove rshadowed the peace
nego tiations between the
Egyptian and Israeli I oreign
ministers that were reswning

peopletalk
By KENNETH R. CLARK
Unlted PressJnteruaUonal
GOODMAN SWINGS AGAir:J : It was nostalgia time
Tuesday mght at Ne.w York City's Carnegie Hall. Benoy
Goodman was back - m c-oncert again just one day short of the
40th annlversary of his historic 1938 debut. Lionel Hampton
was there on Ute v1bes, and vocalist Martha Tllloa proved to
her fans that she still can sing "Goody Goody." For 8 bit more
than three hours, they turned Ute clock back while London
Records taped it for the ages.
BACK TO THE SLAMMER : Stuntman Eve! Knlevel Is
back in the lockup in Los Angeles, Calif., and this time he'll
stay there. Knievel, doing six months for. beating up a writer
with a baseball bat, bas been on a work-release program under
which he was picked up and returned to jail every day .
Recently, however, he didn 't return. He was AWOL for five
hours. Said Superior Court Judge Edward Rafeedle, in
revoking Ute work-furlough progrum, "You ought to spend the
rest of your time in jaU and spend It in self-examination."
UNDA'S DRUG BUS!': Undo Blair was back in court
Tuesday on the drug bust she took Dec. 20 when federal agents
broke a multimillion-&lt;lollar narcotics ring In Florida and
Texas. The 18-year.old star of ''The Exorcist" slipped into the
Stamford, Conn., courtroom through a rear door for a fiveminute hearing in which Judge Aaron Ment granted the
prosecution a 60-day delay on her extradition to Florida. She
faces another hearing Jan. 23 on a Connecticut drug possession
charge.
PATTON REMEMBERED: George Kennedy has the role
of legendary World War II Gen. George Patton in MGM's
" Brass Target," to be fUmed in March on location m
Switzerland and Germany It's based on Frederick Nolan's
"The Algonquin Project," which deals with a criminal
conspiracy in Patton's death . Costars are Sophia Loren, John
Cassavetes, Max von Sydow and Patrick McGooh'\ft.
GLIMPSES: F1rst Lady Rosa lyon Carter teams Friday
with HEW Secretary Joseph Califano for a first-hand look at
Atlanta's inner city, after which Mrs. Carter joins Israeli
Ambassador Slmcha Dloltz to greet 425 Israelis arriving in
Hartford, Conn., for a IIJ.&lt;Iay "friendship force:•visit ... Ronald
F. Young and Jerry Manne, both Independent traders, have
been elected chairman and vice chairman of the Chicago
Board of Trade ... Jack Lemmon will be in New York in March,
to begin rehearsals for Bernard Slade's "Tribute" ... Ernest
Borgoinc and Elke Sommer will join George Kennedy in the
cast of Joe camp's "The Double McGuffy" being !limed in
location in Georgia .. .
·

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M_O.

Black and blue clue
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
DEAR OR. LAMB. - Last
week I was admitted to the
emergency room of our local
hospital with a problem that
was diagnosed as an acute
gall bladder attack. While the
doctor examined me I pomted
out two black and blue spots,
one under each arm . I told
lum I have these occur all
over my b&lt;)dy every so often
and would hke to have hli:n
check my spleen. He poohpoohed this idea and said the
spleen couldn't possibly be invo lved . I probably just
bumped myself. Well! didn't
bump myself and they have
appeared between my legs,
under my anns and breasts;
these areas are diff1cult to
bump.
He 's a new doctor and I like
him, but it worries me that he
wouldn't check 11 out. About
three years ago my sister-inlaw and her husband were g&lt;&gt;ing from Kansas City to
Oinaha. She looked down at
her legs and saw black and
blue blotches scattered aU
over them. They stoppeil at a
restroom and she discovered
they were everywhere, even
on her tongue. Her husband
being a service man rushed
her to the base hospital. They
removed her spleen immediately and said if she had
had any sudden jolt it could
have killed her.
Then 'there is dear old Dr.
Marcus Welby. He had a
story one day about a young boy who was brought m with

sample. and I'm sure he took
one.
The possiblity is that if you
had a gall bladder attack
your liver may not have been
functioning normally. Peple
with liver disease often do not
produc e eno ugh of a
substance we call prothronil)in which is essential to normall)lood clotting.
There 1s a condition called
idiopathic thrombocytopenic
purpura (ITP) that is treated
by removmg the spleen in
many cases. Dr. Maxwell
Winlrobe of the University of
Utah,
a
respected
hematologist, states that
removal of the spleen m such
cases results in a ° Curc" in
about tw&lt;&gt;-thirds of.the cases,
and 11 remains the ultunate
therapeutic procedure of
choice in ITP.''
.
Now I hasten to point out
that removing the spleen if
you bad easy bruisability
from liver disease or from
taking aspirm or any number
of tther problems would be
useless.
Your good doctor probably
checked your platelets in
your blood sample. These
small cells are important in
blood clotting and are
significantly decreased in patienU. w1th ITP. In any case, I
think it is true that doctors
can learn a lot from patients.
One only need c1te the recent
example of a poor woman
With lead poisoning from contaminated bone meal who
went to many doctors and
bruises, and the parents were never obtained a correct
accused of beating him. It diagnosis . She finally
was finally diagnosed as a diagnosed her own case. Fordiseased spleen. So I (ind it tunately, such episOdes are
difficult to accept the young uncommon enough to make
doctor's op1n1on. Patiehts can news. With the basic good
he lp doctors make a equipment I'm sure your
diagnbSis, but if they don't young doctor has, he will
lisl!!ll - what can we do? I grow with the years - we all
woUld like your opinion and , do .,
any information you can give
Readers who want informame. Am I wrong in what I'm tion on the basics of ane'mia
thinking?
can send 50 cents for The
DEAR READER -- I Health Letter, number 4-3,
wouldn't dare disagree w1th Understanding The Anemias.
both you and Marcus Welby . • Send your request w1th a
However, your fine young long , st amped, ' selfdoctor may have done more addressed envelope to Dr.
than you think. A good way to Lamb, in care of this
find out if there is a disease newspaper, P.O.Box ls:il ,
present that involves the Radio City Station, New
spleen IS Ia study the blood York, NY 10019.

•'

today.
Israeli Prime Minister
Menahem Begin made a toast
at a state dinner Tuesdily
night comparing selfdetermination
for
the
Palestinians to Adolf HiUer's
land-grabbing policies during
the 1930s.
The negotiations already
were marked by sharp disagreement on the bas1c issues
and Ute impact of the incident

was uncertain.
An Egyptian journalist
with close ties to President
Anwar Sadat said only
intervention by Secretary of
State Cyrus Vance could save
the talks_
Moussa Sabry, editor of the
newspaper AI Akhbar, said,
"There can be no way'out of
this basic dlllerence (on the
Palestinians) except by
means of an American
(compromise) draft
American presence,
Ute ref ore, is essential to prevent the talks from
collapsing 11
"Peace
cannot
be
established if Israel were to
restore
its
former
aggression-provoking lines of
June 5, 1967," Begin satd.
He then compared a future,
independent Palestinian state
to Nazi Germany of the 1930s.
"We don't begrudge the
right of the great Arab people
to self-determination If\ an
area that stretched from the
Persian Gulf
to the
Mediterranean," Begin said.
4

'But, mow- determination,

se lf-determination was
misused in Europe m the
1930s, the result was a
disastrous colla pse and
Withdrawal, which was only
miraculously reversed.
"Let never again the
concept of self-&lt;letermination
be misused . Remember the
late 1930s and the result of
that misuse .''
Egyptian Foreign Minister
Mohammed Kamel, seated to
Begin's right, covered his
face with his hands and
fidgeted as Ute Israeli leader

spoke. When he was
introduced, "he unsmilingly
rose, and said :
"I thought that alter the
first part of the day we were
going to have a relaxed and
social event tonight... ."
"As to the prime rnlnlster's
views, I think the place to
discuss it Is in the coming
meeting. I'll keep my Ideas
until then. Thank you very
much," Kamel said, sitting
down abruptly without
offering the customary toast .
Begin looked up at Kamel
during his brief statement,
appearing surprised.
·
Vance sought to smooth the
incident over in his remarks
and said:

"This is a historic opportunity . We all know it must be
grasped or it will slip by.
We'll have times of success
and times of dllliculty, We
must not let moments of
diffil1llty discourage us."
Israeli officials said they
had · warned Kamel and
Vance hours In advance that
Begin's toast would be
political In -content, and a
maj&lt;r statement of his views.
But U.S. officials said they
had been given only 30
minutes advance notice .
Forty-live minutes befoce the
dinher, Egyptian officials
said they were expecting
Begin to give a brief toast,
social in character.

In-service courses offered
thru Appalachian project
ATHENS - Three mJervtce
courses
for
elementary and secondary
teachers will be offered by
the Appalachian Education
Satellite Project (AESP) in
Southeastern Ohio.
·
The courses are "Teachmg
the Young Handicapped
ChiJd : An
Overview,"
"Simple Gifts: Teaching the

G1fted and Talenfed, "· and
'' Desi gn ing Success
Strategies.''
Classes combme televised
seg ments, in·class
discussiOns and activities and
live interactive seminars,
where the participants can
transmit que~tions to a panel
of experts and have them

answered over the air.

Mrs. Humphrey
may serve Senate
observed.
By CHERYL ARVIDSON
It was unclear whether
WASHINGTON (UPII Muriel Humphrey rnlly be Mrs. Humphrey would be
asked to take her late receptive to such an offer.
husband's seat in the Senate She recently has been treated
until a special election can be for angina, a painful heart
held to choose a successor, aliment, and her own health
Washington sources said might be a factor in her
willingness to serve even a
today.
Minnesota Gov. Rudy short time in the Senate.
Minnesota state law now
Perpich reportedly
is
requires
a vacant Senate seat
considering asking Mrs .
to
be
filled
only through a
Humphrey to take the mterim
go~ernor's
appointment
with
appointment, but bas not yet
provision
for
a
special
_no
raised the subject with her,
the sources said. They said he election.
But Minnesota politlcal
probably would' wait a
"decent mterval" of' perhaps sources indicated there
two to three weeks before probably will be legislation
this year to mandate special
making tile suggestion.
elections
for vacant Senate
Hubert Humphrey died last
seal!;
the
same ·practice
Friday at his Waverly, Minn .,
followed
for
House
vacancies.
home after a long fight with
If the law passes, both U.S.
cancer. He was buried
Senate seats probably would
Monday.
The question of his be at stake In the general
succes&amp;lr is " not exactly. a election next November.
Perpich' reportedly thinks
subject you raise at a
Mrs.
Humphrey would be an
source
funeral,"
one
ldeal "caretaker" -a person
with no political ambitions
who would oot want the
THEDAILY SENTfli,'EL
DEVOTED TOniE
Senate job for \ong nor be
INTEREST OF
interested in seeking reMEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L TA.NNEHD.L
election.
Enc. Ed.
,
Humphrey was returned to
HOBERT HOEF1JCH
the
Senate
by
an
Cttr. EdJtor
Publt..hed dally !'JU,."ept Salurday
overwhelming margin In the
by The Ohio VaUey Publiahini
fall of 1976, and nearly five
Company·Multi.Jlll:dia, Inc ,
111
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio ~769.
years remain of that tenn.
Busmeq.. Offke Phone 992- 2156.
Another factor In Perpich's
Editorial POOne 992.-2157
Sec.'OO&lt;.I class postage paid at
hopes Ia send Mrs. Hwnphrey
Pomeroy,Ohlo.
to the Senate is the lack of
Na tional advertising represenanother likely Democratic
tative Ward • GriffJth Company
Inc . BotUnem and Gallagher DIV.:
candidate for the job. Perpich
757 Third Av,. , New York, N.Y.
bas repeatedly said he wlll
10011
SubscrJptioo n.tes: Delivered b)'
never go to Wallliingtan; the
curier w~e avallab~ 75 cents per
only
other
prominent
week By Motor Route where carrier
!lef'Vice not available, One month
Minnesota Democrat who
$3.25. 8y niall in Ohlo snd W. Va.'
rnlght be interested, Attorney
One Year, $22.00, SiJ: months'
General Warren Spanus,
Sll.~O: Thr!!e months, $7.00;
Elsewhere $26.00 year: SU. months
wants and is virtually
113 .50; Three month! , $7 . ~0 .
assured
of getting a federal
Subscription price includes Sunday
Times-Sentinel.
.
judgeship. .

,.

.

By FRED UEF
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UPJ) - The
uncertain future of Vida Blue
will remain uncertain lor at
least another week.
Baseba II Commissioner
Bowie Kuhn held a hearing In
--llls office Tuesdily to help
determine whether the sale of
the talented left-handed
pitcher from the Oakland A's
to the Cincinnati R~ds lor
$1.75 million and minor leage

Programs are broadcast to 45
sites throughout Appalachia
by means of a telecommunications satellite.
Locally, the project is being
coordinated
by
the
Southeastern Ohio Regional
Education Service Agency in
cooperatiOn With
Ohio
University.
" Teaching the Young
Handicapped Child" is a
course lor regular and
spec1al education teachers of
children 3 to 8 years of age
who are integrating handicapped children into a
regular classroom. Course
activities are designed to
promote a broader . un·
derstanding of the needs of
handicapped children and to
assist
participants in
developing
skill
and
strategies for meeting these
needs. The course will be
offered from 6-9 p.m.,
starting Tuesday.
"Simple Gifts" provides
teachers, administrators and
guidance personnel with
information and basic skills
necessary for planning and
Implementing
progr11ms
which meet the educational,
social and emotional need• of
children with superior
abilities. The course will be
conducted from 5:30 to 8:30
p.m . starting February 1.
" Designing Success
Strategies" is based on
William Glasser's ideas to
help teachers, administrators
and counselors develop new
means of positive interaction
with students. The course
examines Glasser's approach
for motivatmg students
toward self-responsibility
and success as learners.
Class sessions will be held
from 6-9 p.m. starting Thursday.
All classes will meet in
Room 254, Radi&lt;&gt;-Televlslon
Building, College Street,
Athens, Ohio.
Courses will be available on
a graduate credit or noncredit basis.
To register, contact Tom
Stack, AESP Coordinator at
593-3511 or 593-7817. Ohio
residents outside Athens call
toll·free at 1-800-282-4401.
In most Apache tribes, the
bridegroom went to live_ in
his wile's community and
aU Apaches showed respect
lor a mother-in-law by never
speaking to her.

'

ftrst baseman Dave Revering•
was in the best .interesU. of
baseball_
The trade was scratched by
Kuhn on the last day of
baseball 's recent winter
meetings .
But after six hours of sworn
testimony that lasted well
into Tuesday night, the
matter was nowhere close to
being resolved.
"We had a lot of testimony
from a lot of people," said

Colt's owners
deny reports

RIO GRANDE - Rio
Grande College received a
$900 grant this week from The
Sears-Roebuck Foundation.
Thomas B. Smith, manager
of Sears in Gallipolis, acting
on behalf of the foundation ,
presented the check to Dr.
Clyde Evans, provost of Rio
Grande College and Community College.
According to Smith, the
grant was one of 42 presented

to 1 privately supported
colleges aDd universities in
Ohio.
The Sears Foundation will
give $1.5 million to almost
1,000 private and 'accredited
two and four·yeat institutions
across the country for the
1977-78 academic year. The
grant to Rio Grande may be
used as the college deems
necessary .

In
addition. to
its
unrestricted grant program,
The Sears-Roebuck Foundation each year conducts a
vanety of special purpose
programs in elementary,
secondary, higher and
continuing education. ·
Altogether, the foundation
had expenditures of over $2.5
million in 1977 for its
education activities.

.

Utilities to fight new
COLUMBUS (UPI) - A
new state law requiring
payment of iaxes on out-ofstate coal used by utilities
was called unconstitutional
by eight electric companies
Tuesday, who said they would
not pay the taxes until the
case is settled in court.
The companies will be
taxed from 15 cents to 40
cenU. a ton, depending on the
sulfur content . of the coal,
which will be burned with
Ohio's hlgh .. ulfur coal.
"We feel Ute new state law
violates provisions of both the
Constitution of the State of
Ohio and the Constitution of
the United States," said John
R. White, chairman of the
Ohio Electric Institute and
president of Ohio Edison Co.
"The state's electric
companles will appeal the
law," he said. 11TO protect our
customers, who ultimately
bear the burden of any taxes
we must pay, we are holding
payment until the case is
settled.
"Due to the wording of the
code, we may have a serious
problem obtainmg refunds if
we pay and the tax is later
adjudged to be unconstitutional."
Funds generated by the
new law are to be used to
support the new Ohio
Department of Energy and to
finance research .Proj eels
aimed at increasing the
market for Ohio coal.
"We have a serious
question whether Ohio's 10
million taxpayers should

support such research or
whether the coal companies
that would profit from an
increased market should
share in research costs,"
White said.
Whit~ said the electric
companies should not be
penalized for Ute purchase of
out.of ..tate coal with a lower
sulfur content than Ohio's.
"The purchase of lowersulfur coal can save the
state's consumers on their
electric bills," he said,
"because the burning of lowsulfw- coal can in some cases
help electric companies to

~aw

meet environmental
standards without the
construction
of
very
expensive sulfur removal
systems." ,
Initial payments under the
law were due Tuesdily.
The utility lnstitue represents Ohio Edison, Ohio
Power Co., Toledo Edison,
Dayton Power &amp; Light,
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric,
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Electric Co., Cleveland
Electric Jlluminating and
Monogahela Power Co. of
West Virginia.

Color-photo ID cards
offered to non -drivers
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
state Bureau of Motor
Vehicles is offering color.
photo identification cards to
all non-&lt;lrivlng Ohioans for
Ute first time under a law
effective Tuesday.
The J.D. Cards became
available to any oon-&lt;lriver 18
or older who wanted to plow
through the snow to a deputy
motor vehicle registrar and
pay $3 plus a 50-cent
surcharge for the deputy's
services.
The cards, renewable
every four years, will be
official identification for
check-cashing, liquor
purchases, voter registration
and .other purposes.
They contain the bearer's
name, address, photograph,

birthdate, age, sex, height,
weight, hair and eye color.
Social Security numbers are
optional.
The J.D. cards have been
available to the elderly and
handicapped for a year.
The new program, passed
by the General Assembly last
year' was authored by state
Rep. Sherrod Brown, DManslield.
"For year.s, thousands of
Ohioans have had difficulty
cashing checks, establishing
credit and proving ldenUiica·
tion," Brown said. "From
now on, those people will
have tile same rights and
privileges that those of us
with drivers' licenses take for

NOW OPEN

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Pl. Pleasant, W.Va.

PHONE
675-2988

1930s, only one day short of
the 40th anniversary of his
historic swing concert.
The great concert hall on
West 57th Street was sold out
only three hours alter it was
announced several weeks ago

Bollen

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Goodman turns clock back
NEWYORK(UPI)-Fora
little more than three hours,
Benny Goodman turned the
clock back 40 years Tuesday
night.
Goodman returned to
Carnegie Hall, Ute scene of
his greatest triumph in the

GINO'S
OF MASON

VISA"

that Goodman would return.
Most of the fans, who stood
in line for ho'll's to buy the
tickets, then braved a winter
storm to get to the theater,
were middle-aged. Some of
them had witnessed the
ociginal event of Jan. 18, 1938.
Not all the greats who
accompanied Goodman Into
musical immortality were
there, of courae. Gene Krupa,
perhaps Ute greatest whlte
drummer of his day, is dead.
Harry James, Goodman's
premier trumpet-player, had
another engagement, as did
pianist Teddy Wilson.
But some of the faces and the sounds - were as
familiar as Goodman's
clarinet. Lionel Hampton was
there Ia play the vibes and be
teamed up with Goodman,
just as he did four decades

ago, for "Air Mall Special,"
"Lady Be Good" and "How
High the Moon."

Vocalist Martha Tllton was
Uiere too, to deliver "Loch
Lomond" and "Goody
Goody," and Mary Lou
Williams - the band's
principal arranger of the '30s
and '40s- t00k over the plano
keyboard.
Goodman's return to
Carnegie Hall won't be lost
for fans who were unable to
attend it in person. London
Records taped the concert lor
a new release.

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Uniled Press International

No matter where they are,
the Portland Trail Blazers
always seem to emerge with
a victory, and Tuesday night
was no exception, as the
Buffalo Braves found, out.
The Braves had a chance to
tie the game when Randy
Smith was fouled by Lionel

........----··--1!111!,..
"

guideline was established to
protect the league's I~ pro'perous clubs. ·
" At 1400.000 you've got an
area that looks like a limit,"
said Kuhn . "As much as
anything, we want to make
players available to all clubs.
When you get past that range
($400,000) you put them out of
the reach of most clubs."
Marvin
Miller,
the
executive director of the
Players Association who is
representing Blue, said the
hearing Is far from over.
''They're laking a lot of
testimony,"
he
said.
"They 're talking to a lot of

witnesses and there are a lot
of parties to be crossexamined . It 's a form al
proce&lt;!ding. The witnesses
are being sworn in ."
Besides Miller and the
lea gue presidents, others
attending Tuesday's hearing
included Charlie Flnle)•,
owner o[ the A's, and his
attorney Neil ,Paplano; Bob
Howsam, president of the
Reds, Dick Wagner, General·
Manager of the Reds and
Reds' attorney
Henry
Hobson ; J ohn Gaherin,
adv1sor for the Player
Relations offi ce; George
Calafatis ,
a
lawyer

ups record to 15-1

the benches.
It also may have been the
turnlng point that sent the
sixth-ranked Hogs to an 84~
victory in a Southwestern
Conference game.
"We lost on the fight,"
Metcalf said. " It got their
adrenalin flowing and clidn't
do anything for us."
Arkansas, which raised iU;
record to 15-1 and it&lt;; l"nnfPr~

Hollins with two seconds
remaining, but rnlssed both
free throws and they went
down to a 96-94 defeat .
A
glum
Cotton
Fitzsimmons, the Braves'
coach, said quietly after the
game: "We're 0-3 against
Portland and it is very
heartbreaking. We needed

Today's

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Ec!Hor
NEW YORK (UPJ ) - News pulletin: Muhanunad Ali isn't
talking to anyone. What did they do, wire his jaw? First he
stops fighting and now he quits talking. All he has to do is keep
it up awhile, which you know he can't, and no one WQuld bother
watching him fight Leon Spinks In Las Vegas next month. The
proflloters paying Ali $3.5 million '!fe likely to remind him of
that soon and suddenly he 'U be talking to everybody again ....
Most common complaint among those who watched the
Super Bowl game was that it took too long, nearly four hours.
Blame all those TV commercials for that. The NFL people
never will because without those commercials there wouldn't
be all that money rolling in and if it comes to a choice between
money and salislying the fans, guess who's going to wind up In
second place? ... .
Craig Morton, who has played for both, says it's more fun
playing for Red Miller than for Tom Landry beca"'* Miller
never allows anyone with his team to get uptight. Morton
points out, however, there is nobody more knowledgable In
football than Landry. ''I don't think there Is any greater coach
in the' world than him," the Broncos' quarterback says about
his former boss with the Cowboys ...
According to NBA scouts, Mike Thompson of Minnesota,
Phil Ford of North Carolina, Butch Lee of Marquette and Rod
Grlffin of Wake Forest are the top college players in the
country right now. In other words, they're the ones moat likely
to be chosen f1rst in the league's June draft and also the ones
most likely to get the most money ....
The Yankees have been looking for another Mickey Mantle
and now they have one. Mantle's oldest son, Mickey, Jr., has
decided he rnlght like to play professional baseball and bas
tooked good enough lately so that Billy Martin bas told his
father to bring him to the Yankees' camp In Fort Lauderdale
next month ....
Too much snow finally got to Leon Spinks. The Olympic gold
medalist now being advertised as a heavyweight title contender after o'11Y seven professional fights left his training quarters
at Kutsher's Country Club In New York's Catskill Mountains
Tuesday because ail the snow that bad accumulated there
made it difficult loc him to do any rondwork. He went to Upper
Darby, Pa., where he'll work out unW he leaves for Las Vegas
later this month ....
Youprobablyneverheardofthe "AI Hrabosky rule," mostly
because there IBn 'I any such rule actually In the books, but
that's what it's known as in baseball and that's the one Jon
Matlack resorted to In making the Mets cough up an additional
'IOO,OOOalter they traded him to the Texas Rangers. Hrabosky
bad been promised eertain bonuses based on future
performances while be was still with the Cardinals. Then they
traded him to the Royals. Before agreeing to report to Kansas
City, [irabosky insisted on getting the $110,000 he had been
promised if he achieved thoae futllre goals.
·
Side agreemenw are nothing new in basebail. Many clubs
have them with their players since they can not put such an
agreement in writing because they are illegal under baseball •8
basic agreement. Bowie Kulm Tuesdily declared a
moratorium on Ute rule until he can get ''full disclosure." If he
can ever get that, he ought to be given a nice bonus himself ..•.

I

OfferexpiresJanuary31, 1978

'.

Feeney stated in their
testimony that a $400,000
ceiling was set last 'spring
concerning the sale or trade
ol a player.
That guideline figure was
reached after Oakland sold
Paul Undblad to the Texas
Rangers for that amount.
If a transaction involving
$400,000 or more is made, the
commissioner would then
have the option of looking into
the propriety of the deal,
Miller said.
When asked about this,
MacPhail said: "I can't comment on that."
Kuhn, however, said the

ence record to 3-1, was led by
Ron Brewer with -29 points.
Carl Godine . scored 18
points and Willle Foreman 14
for the Aggies, who fell to 1-3
in the conference and a.&lt;;
overall.
Moncrief, usually 8 wellcomposed player, said
Williams pushed him to his
limiU..

Braves fail at foul
line, lose 96~94 tilt

II ·

~

~

United Press lnlernattonal
Texas A&amp;M Coach Shelby
Metcalf may have learned an
important lesson Tuesday
night: Let sleeping hogs lie.
With Arkansas leading, 21!18, Razorback guard Sidney
Moncrief and A&amp;M 's Jarvis
Williams began trading
elbows and then punches that
sent both teams running from

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Kuhn . "We just ran out out of
time
because
of
commlttments from a lot of
people."
The hearing will reswne
Jan. 24 at the commissioner's
office. Alter the testimony
has been completed, Kuhn
said he hopes to reach a
decision in about three days.
But while Blue's late was
temporarily left tangled In
legallsms and red tape, a new
fact emerged from the
talks.
Miller said American
League President
Lee
MacPhail and National
League President Chub

~rkansas

his blood. It was the latest in
By JENNY KELLN£R
a
series of mfections and
UP! Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UPI) - The respiratory ailments that
racing career of Triple Crown have plagued Slew since last
winner Seattle Slew, in limbo fall .
"It was some kind of an
since July, seemed headed
toward obliv.ion Tuesday as infection," said Taylor, who
rumors swirled regarding the •owns the horse with his wife ,
colt's irruninent retirement to Karen, and Dr.,Jim and Sally
Hill. "As far as his retiring,
stud.
But in Miami and New there's nothing to that right
York, Mickey Taylor and now. We really haven't had
Sally Hill, two of the colt's time or thought anything
owners, denied those reports. about anything . Everyone is .
However, ' Taylor adrnltted just jumping the gun to
that the plans for the colt are conclusions here."
· "All his systems stopped," .
sUU indefinite.
Taylor of the colt's
said
" We'll be considermg
44
mysterious
ailment. "We had
everything," he said. In the
,four
or
five
vew come down
next couple of days/we'll
figure out what we're going to for consultation and they all
wound. up scratching their
do ."
Monday, Seattle Slew was heads. If it was a virus, the
scratched from the $25,000- white.,eU count would have
added Tallahassee Handicap, gone the other way, and not
Ute opening day feature at dropped . But now it's back to
Hialeah, because of a fever normal.
"Maybe if he'd been just an
and a low white-cell count in
ordinary horse, we wouldn't
have bothered to get the tests
and wouldn't have known any
different," he added. "He 's
Tri-County improving now, but he's not
back to his old self yet. He's
still super grouchy, which is
Sport
unusual for him. He's like•a
little kid that won 'I let anyone
near him."
Shop
From he~ home In Garden
City, N.Y., Sally Hill sa1d:
11
• Fishing Tackle
Nobody wanted him to run
and Rods
more than we did. He was so
and Reels
good - and I personally think
he'll be great again.
• Guns and
"If we wanted money we
Reloading
could
have syndicated him a
• Ball Gloves
long
time
ago, right after the
Camping
Crown.
But once you
Triple
Equipment
syndicate a horse, they don't
• Archery
want him to run. And we do ."
• Indoor Games
• We
have Gift ·
Certificates

'

DR. CLYDE EVANS (right), Pro\•ost of Rio Grande College and Co111111unity College,
receives a glft from The Sears-Roebuck Foundation presented to Ute school by Thomas B.
Smith, manager of Sears, Gallipolis. Rio Grande was one of 42 schools throughout Ohio to be
selected for a grant.

Support wante!l
on two programs Rio receives Sears grant
Steering
and
Policy
By HELEN THOMAS
Cormnittee, O'Neill wanned
UPI White House Reporter
him " we can't have 66
WASHINGTON (UPI) Cautioned by Speaker messages like we did last
Thomas O'Neill to hold down year."
Carter laughed goodthe number of legislative
this
year, naturedly, assuring the
proposals
President Carter today was speaker he would not serve
attempting to drum up up half that number in the
·
support for two priority Items new session.
The chief executive already
on his list.
acknowledged
he
The ratifica tion of the has
overloaded
Ute
congressional
Panama canal treaties and
passage of Ute Consumer plate with complicated and
Protection Agency were controversial legislation
getting top attention at the • during his first year.
He said Tuesday, "I don't
White House .
Consumer advocate Ralph think we're gomg to get a
Nader was among consumer permanent trend toward
leaders Carter invited to · solution of our economic
discuss his legislative agenda problems until we solve the
generally and the campaign energy problem."
The economy and energy
to pass the consumer
protection bill specifically. will be the main thrust of
And in rnlcknornlng, the Carter's State of the Union
president planned to discuss address Thursday night in a
the treaty prospects with the joint session of Congress.
Council of the Americas, a Next week, Carter will
group ol busmessmen with submit the next federal
trade links to Latin budget, his controversial lax
reform message with a $25
America.
When Carter met Tuesday billion cut, and his economic
with members of the House message.

.

this game."
"Buffalo played a great
game," said Portland Coach
Jack Ramsay "We were
hard pressed to win. We get
tough competition from
everybody, which is good for
us. Cotton has done well with

this team."

"Williams was guarding
me really close," he soid .
"He had been pushing me all
night, and that's when I got a
little fed up wlth it.
"You can call it rough or
you can call it dirty/' he
added. "No doubt about it,
A&amp;M is the most physiCal
team we've played."
In other games involvmg
top teams, No. IONotre Dame
dumped Manhattan, 81~.
New
Mexico
defeated
Nevada-Las Vegas, 89-76, and
downed Rice, 79-64.
Senior forward Dave
Batton scored 24 pomts and
grabbed 13 rebounds as Notre
Dame pulled away in the
second half. Rich Branrung
added 16 points for the Irish,
who raised their record to 9-3.
Steve Grunt had 17 lor
Manhattan, now 7-7.
Marvin Johnson fired m 24
points and Willie Howard 16
as New Mexico cracked open
Nevada-Las Vegas' zone defense and rolled to Its flflh
straight victory. Reggie
Theus led the Rebels with '/:/
points. New Mexico upped its
record to 12-2.
Behind Johnny Moore's 20
pomts and Tyrone Branyan's
21, Texas built an early lead
and went on to top Rice.
Texas boosted iU. season
record to 13-2 and its
Southwest Conference mark
to fHl while the Owls slumped
to 3-11 and 1-4.
Elsewhere, it WllS Boston
College 94, Northeastern 75;
Cornell 69, Rochester 59;
Yale 69, Williams 57; Florida
State 76, Clnclnna ti 66; VMI
79, Marshall 71; Houston 100,
Baylor 89; Texas Tech 45,
SMU 43 ; Air Force 68,
Wyoming 65; Utah State 74,
Weber State 65, and Santa
Clara 83~ ·California 61.

representing Revering ; and
severa l other attorneys.
Howsam said he was enco uraged
by
the
proceedings.
" Our position Is why
shouldn't the deal be approved?" he said.
Meanwhile, the 28-year.old
roue, who has won 20 or more
games three times in the
majors , was not at the
hearing .
George Stelnbren ner ,
principal owner ol the New
York Yankees. was present
because a similor situation
involving his team and Blue
occurred 18 months Hgo and
Steinbrenner had asked to
speak at the hearing.
u1 guess there's not much
we can do if Clncinna ti gets
him
( Blue),"
sa id
Steinbrenner, who le[t the
hearing early.
.
" We made our beef that he
(Kuhn ) can negate it. We

Champ· celebrates
~

36th anniversary
MIAMI BEACH, Fla .
(UPI ) - Muhanunad Ali took
only a small bite of his $7~
btrthday cake Tuesday, then
silently went to work taking
off weight.
"
Ali turned 36 Tuesday while
preparing for h1s title defense
agamst Leon Spinks Feb. 15
in Las VegllS, and after his
birthday party and workout,
an aide announced he was no
longer going to talk to the
press.
The
aide,
Jeremiah
Shabazz, said, however, he
did not know how long Ali's
si lence
would
last .
Presumably it would be
through most of his preparations for Spinks.
" Muhammad Ali has
adopted a new policy, for
what reason only he knows
He's not g?ing to talk to the

Fitzsimmons agreed,
pointing out his team Is
playing gOild basketball.
"We're moving the ball
better and playing good
defense," he said.
In other games , Atlanta
downed Kansas C1ty, lll-90;
Chicago nipped Indiana, f05104; New Orleans edged
Houston, 99-95; San Antonio
beat
Seattle,
119-113 ;
Mil waukee defeated New
Jersey, 119-109 ; Denver
· tapped Cleveland, 1~9; and
Los Angeles dumped New
York, 121-108.
Hawks 111, Kings 90:
Charlie Criss pumped in 10
points in the fourth quarter to
Florida State und Seminole
repel a Kings· rally after
Coach Hugh Durham have
Kansas City cut a 25-point
thelr revenge.
deficit to 10. Criss and John
The Seminoles lost on the
Drew, the game's high scorer
road to Cincinnati by two
with 27 points, bull! the
points on a controversial shot
Hawks' lead back to 20 points
at the buzzer which gave the·
with seven minutes left.
Beorcats a 77-75 victory Dec.
Bulls 105, Pacers 104:
'/:/ . Durham protested the call
lnonana
guard
John
bitterly, to no avail.
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Williamson poured in 41
The Seminoles hosted
pomts (llf a losing cause as .Freshman guard Mike Drews Cincinnati m a Metro
Ute Bulls raced to their fourth of Ball State has been voted Conference remuU:h Tuesday
straight triumph. With six the Mid-American Co n- nlght and won, 76-&lt;&gt;6, to go IJ.
seconds remaining, Indiana ference basketball player of 2 for the season and 3-1 in
called timeout to set up a play , the week.
conference play.
Drews, a 6-foot-4, 180for the winning basket, but
Forward Harry Davis '
failed In several attempts pounder from Danville, Ill., scored 22 points lis the
from Inside.
·
was mstrurnental in two Ball Seminoles cashed in · on 24
Jazz 99, Rockets 95:
State wins lust week .
free throws and trailed only
Pete Marovich put the Jazz
In the Cardinals' 69-64 win momentarily in the first hall.
ahead to stay when he hit a over Valparaiso, Drews had
Gene Harrls scored 15
20-looter with 7:46lelt In the 15 poinU; and four rebounds. points for the Seminoles, Krls
game and went on to rack up But, it was In Ball State's 74- Ande,_n added 11, Mickey
30 points to spur the Jazz. 73 conference win over Dillard had 10 and David
Calvin Murphy had hit on Central Michigan which Thompson scored nine.
three straight jumpers of 18, Drews really starred.
FSU led by 10 points at the
18 and 12 feet to put Houston
He hit 18 points in that hall, increased Ute lead to 15,
in front, 67-65, with 2:40 game, including the wlnnlng then saw it drop to five as
remaining in the third basket with seven seconds Cincinnati's 6-loot-10 center
remaining. It was also a Bob MUier scored 11 of his 17
quarter.
Spurs 119, SUpersonics 113:
basket by Drews with 14 points and Pat Cummings
Ge-orge Gervln scored 36 seconds to go which got the tallied 8 of his 12 points in the
points to · put a stop to the Cardinals to within one point second ball.
Sonics' seven-game winnjng of the Chippewas.
Steve Collier added nine
Toledo's Ted Williams, who points and Mike Jones and
streak. Gervin 'ICOI'ed 16 In
Ute third quarter to help the scored 24 points in the Eddie Lee each had elghl lor
Spurs break open the game as Rockel!;' liiHi4 victory over Cincinnati, which dropped to
Ute they hit 57 percent from Northern Illinois, was !h), and 3-4 in the conference .
Ute field.
·
runnerup for this w~ek's
In other games Tuesdily
honor.
Bucks 119, Nets 109:
night, Akron blasted PurdueJunior Bridgeman came off
Other nominees were Joe Indiana 103-77, Central State
Ute bench to score 21 points Faine of Bowling Green; Ted stomped Shaw (Mich.) 93-71
of
Central and Creighton overwhelmed
and teammate Marques Anderson
Johnson scored 29 pilints and Michigan; Ken Harmon of Cleveland State 114-&amp;.
grabbed 15 rebounds to lead Eastern Michigan; Burrell
Several other games scheUte Bucks. Rookie forward McGhee ol Kent State; duled Tuesdily night were
Bernard King scored 35 Archie Aldridge of Miami; postponed because of heayY
points for the Nets, who lost Paul Dawkins of Northern snow.
their eighth straight.
illinois ;· Steve Skaggs of Ohio
University; and Herman
Randle ol Western Michigan.

Seminoles

avenge loss

to Bearcats

Drews named
player of week

240SEI240SG
Tl;le lightest welgtit
saw ready to go after
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The 240 has the culling ability
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from broken chain . (Swed·O·Mallc chain brake,
electronic lgnlllon, and electrically heated handles are
optl0'1al.l

WiWnsoa Small EiiRile Sales &amp; Service

don't care who gets him.
Cincinnati or oakland, bul
it 's not fair ."
Kuhn had previously
vetoed a similar attempt by
~'inley to sell Blue, which
resulted in 8 lawsuit by
Finley. Finley tried to sell
Blue to the Yankees for $1.5
million •nd outfielder Joe
Rudl and pitcher Rollle
t'ingers to the Boston Red
Sox lor $2 million in struight
cash transactions.
At that time Kuhn nlxed the
deal and said it was not in the
best mtorests ol the game . He
reusoned that it was not right
lor Finley to dissolve the A's
in such a manner or loc a
t'Ontendlng club; such as the
Yankees, to buy top quality
pluyers ~ru~tead of trading lor
them
The Reds. however. regard
this curn~nt denl us different
because they have Included a
lop 1n~1or league slugger.

press at aU ." Shabazz said .
Ali' s trainer, Angelo
Dun&lt;lee, had said earlier
wh en !:lomeone remarked
ubout the heavyweight
champion 's uncharacteristk
silence during the workuut
lhut All d1dn 't want to lose his
t.'OIU...'tmtrution .
"He' s afraid he would
neglect his work," Dundee
Sllid.
Dundee said Ali's weight
was down to 235, "but we
don 't worry about weight."
"He's still got that middieuge spread, but there's
muscle underneath, t hank
God ," Dundee sa1d. "And his
legs' ure magnificent."
All boxed a spirited five
rounds with sparring 11artner
Michael Ooaks Tuesday und
when he was told he had
provided more action than he
did in one of his title defenses
last year, he Hsked seriously,
"Y.ou thmk so?"
Allllr four rounds, Ute two
fighters put on a bit of a show
for the more than 100 wnters
and fight fans present in the
dingy Fifth Street Gym .
Ali told Ooaks, "One more
round ."

"Two." Ooaks snapped
back .
"That's because you 're 19
and I'm :16 ," Ali said.
"One.' 1
When the final round
hegan, the 206-(lound Douks
took off his headgear to taunt
Ali , but the champion then
went to his corner where
Dundee
removed
his
protective helmet.
Neither fighter did any real
damage, alhough several
clean shots were landed
during Ute five rounds.

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A

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Savings &amp; Loan Co .
296 Second St.

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MASON, W. VA •
OPEN
Mon .. Thurs. &amp; Sat.
8:00-5:30

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

4- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Jan. 18, 1978

:I
Pro · :Teamster
bosses ripoff
I
success or to Teamsters 11,582 from the Bakery
FRITZ
:standings l ByUPISARA
Labor Reporter
President
Frank Workers international union .

Leaders retain top
spots .in UPI poll
.

Columbus Walnut Ridge, a
narrow 61-ro winner. over
Lancaster Fisher Catholic
Friday night, managed to
hold on to the third position,
but from there on down, there
was considerable shuffling.
Ketiering Fairmont West,
7.{), moved Into the fourtll
spot, with GahaMa taking
Columbus
over
fifth .
Watterson, fourth last week,
fell to sixth, while Sylvania
Northvlew jumped from a tie
for ninth to seventh.
Two unbeaten newcomers,
Eastlake North and Bay Village, grabbed the eighth and
classification&amp;. ,
ninth
positions, while
North, the defending state Fairfield, loser only to
champion and 7.{) this year, Middletown by two points,
-convinced 14 of the 21 coaches fell froin eighth to tenth.
voting this week that it
Two Queen City teams,
deserves the No. 1 Class AAA Cincinnati Mother of Mercy
ranking. ·
and . Cincinnati Hughes ,
The
Lady
Panthers slipped from the top ten.
received 181 points to far
St. Johns, with a 7~ record,
outdistance Middletown , increased Its margin over
another unbeaten team, for runnerup Dresden Tri-Valley
the top spot .' Middletown, 9.{), in Class AA.
finished the week with 119
The Lady Blue Jays
points .
received nine first place
By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS (UP! )
While the weather continued
to play havoc with schedules,
the three leaders in the
United Press International
Ohio High School Board of
Coaches' girls basketball
ratings had little trouble
holding their No . I spots.
Springfield North , Delphos
St . Johns and Arcanum, the
first week leaders In the
second annual UP! girls
ratings, breezed through
another week as the top
teams in their respective

Girls cage ratings
COLUMBUS IUPII - This

wee'k's United ' Pre·ss In ·
ternational Ohio High School
Board of Coaches ' g i rls
basketball ratings with first ·
place votes and won . lost
records In parentheses :

ClassAAA

Team
1. Springfield N.

Points

14 l/.0)

2. Middletown 19-01

3. Columbus Walnut

Ridgel5·11

4. Kettering Fa ir . W. 17·0)

~

3. Campbell Mem . 2 (7· 11
74
4. Pembervi lle Eastwood (4-

11

.

5. Col. Hartley 19·0)

76

65

6. Co. Watterson {6-ll
7: SYlvania Northview

64

54
49

43
37

73
67

6. Warsaw River V,iew (5-21 62
7. Ontario h(6·0l
52
a. Chardon(6.1)
41
9. Perrysburg 1 (7 . 1)
29

181
119 10. Chagrin Falls 18·01
Others with ten or
93 points , Avon, Upper

5. Gahanna Lincoln (8·0)

1 18·01
8. Easl. Norlh 4 110-01
9. Bay VIllage (IJ .OI
10. Fairfield 18·1I
.

17·01
132
2. Dresden Tri Valley 17·0) 77
9

75

more
San·
dusky, Leavittsburg Labrae,
Lima Bath, Archbold and
Oregon Card inal Stritch .
Class A
Team
,
1. Arcanum 7 (3·0)

Points
131

2. Mans. St . Peter 's 3 16·11 112

Others with 10 or 'more 3. Ada117·11
105
points : Cincinnati Mother of
4. Lakeside Dan . 2 (6-0)
98
Mercy, Cincinnati H!J ghes · 5. Lan . Fisher Cath . 217·11 97
(·1). Kettering Fa!qnon1 6. Rocky River Luth W. (J.
East, Mentor (1) , Kettering
1)
66
Alfer, Cir,cinnati Oak Hills, 7. Minster117·1)
55
Struthers (1) , Delaware ·a. Huntington (9-0)
52
Hay es,
Toledo
Central
9. Frank . Adena (7·11
43
Catholic, Napoleon, Toledo
10.
Card
..
Lincoln
16·01
41
Libbey, Canton McK inley,
Others with ten or more
Cleveland Lincoln West and
points : Buckeye Trail IlL
'Elyria .
New RIOgel, Sali ne ville
Sou th ern , East Canton (1).
Class AA
Holgate, Btufllon, Oltoville
Team
Points
( l L Edgerton and Stryker.
1. Delphos St . Johns

votes and t32points while TriValley, also 7.{), finished with
77, followed closely in third
and.lourth place by Campbell
Memorial with 74 and
Pemberville Eastwood with

73:

Eastwood, a tournament fl.
nalist last year, suffered a 3428 defeat · at the hands or
Perrysburg Monday night , its.
first loss of the year ,
Columbus Hartley, a
winner over both Walnut
Ridge and Watterson this
year and ~ on the season,
moved up two spats to filth,
whiJe Warsaw River View,
which
lost
to
West
Muskingum Monday night for
its second defeat, tumbled
from fourth to sixth.
Rounding out the top ten
are Ontario, Chardon,
Perrysburg and Chagrin
Falls. Chagrin Falls (8-0)
replaced Avon in the top ten.
St. Peter's, despite a 54-17
loss to Ontario Friday night,
took over the runnerup spot In
Class A.
Arcanum, one of the teams
by
the
hardest
hit
weatherman, is wtbeaten in
its three games and received
seven first place votes and
131 points this week. St. Pew
picked up three firsts and 112
points, while Ada, loser only
to Delphos St. Johns; is third
with 105 points,
Lakeside Danbury and
Fisher Catholic took fourth
and filth with 98 and 97 points,
respectively, with Rocky
River Lutheran West sixth
with 66.
Minster, Huntington,
Frankfort
Adena
and
Cardington-Lincoln round out
the Class A top wn .
Cardington-Lincoln and
Huntington , which handed
Adena its only loss, are
newcomers to the top ten this
Week, with New Riegel and
Buckeye Trail falling out.

sportsman and·q:~odified cars

at Riverside International
Raceway.
'Driving a modified 1976
Camaro, the 34-year-old
lnsolo covered the 2.62-mile
road eoursein 1:21.305for a
speed of 116.007 miles per
hour .
Steurer
of
Glen
Chatsworth, Calif., was the
No.2 qualifier with a speed of
112.360 mph ·In a 1972 Nova ,
And Veteran Bojjby Allison of
Hueytown, Ala., was third in
a .1977 AMC Concord at
112.263 mph.
ClUCAGO (UP!) _ The
Chicago White Sox, riding on
the crest of last year's
·success, arB seUipg season
tickets at 50 percent ahead of
last winwr, Sox • President
Bill Veeck has announced.
Next Monday, Veeck,
Manager Bob Lemon,
Business Manager Rudy
Schaffer, Coach Orestes

"Minnie" Minoso and pJayers
including Eric Soderholm,
Ron Blomberg, Jack Kucek

San Anton io 119, Seatt le 11 3
M ilw 119, New Jersey 109
Denver 104, Cleveland 89
Los Ang 121 , New York l08
Wednesday's Games
M ilwaukee at Boston
Portland at New Jersey
New Orleans vs. Aflanta
at Charlotte
Buffalo at Detro it
San Antonio at Ind iana
Seattle at Houston
Ph iladelPhia at Kan CI-ty
Washington at Golden SL
Thursday's Games
Chi cago vs. Atl.;~nta
at LOuisv ille
Philadelphia at Cleveland
Denver at Milwaukee
New York at PhOeniM

NHL StandfrtQS
By United Press International
campbell Conference
Patrick Division
W. L. T. Pfs .

Philadelph ia
27 9 7 61
NY Islande rs
24 lO B 56
Allanla
15 17 ll 41
NY Ri!lngers
15 19 9 39
Smythe Division
W. L. T. Pts.
Chicago
\4 16 12 40
Van couver
12 20 10 34
St. Louis
11 26 6 28
Colorao;lo
9
9 27
Minnesota
9 27 5 23
Walu Conference
Norris Division

n

W. L . T. Pts .

Montrea l
30 7 5
Los Ange les
18 15 9
Pittsburgh
14 19 10
15 19 5
Detroit
Wash ington
B 24 10
Adams Division

65
45
38
35
26-

W. L . T. Pts.

H udson has
h ot h and·
.

LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UP!) Tommy Hudson had the hot
hand Tuesday and vaulted
into the ielld alter two rounds
of the . $125,000 Showboat
Invitational professional
bowling ·tournament.
Hudson, fourth after the
and Ken Kravec will staff the first round, averaged 248
phones and talk to any caller Tuesday and holds a 126-pin
who wants to buy season lelld·over Jim Plessinger, thetickets.
first-round leader from State
Schaffer said. "We think College, Pa.
.
fans will enjoy talking to a
Hudson rolled games of 255,
Sox of their choice to 258, 256, 223, 236, 289, 245 and
determine their ticket 216 lor 1,978 and a !&amp;.game
needs.''
total of 3,823. Plessinger
rolled a second-round total of
SAN DIEGO ( UPI) 1,773 for a two-day score of
Former Cy Young pitcher 3,697.
Gaylord' Perry, who posted a
Third plaee belongs to past
15-12 pitching mark for the Showboat champion Dick'
Texas Rangers last year, has We)ler, bowling's aU-time
confirmed he is being traded leading money winner.
to the San Diego Padres, the Weber's score of 3,672 is a
San Diego Union reported mere four pins ahead of tour
Tuesday.
rookie Joseph Grosklng of
The Padres, of the National Memphis, TeM.
Leagu~. will give the Rangers
In fifth place was Bo
l~ft-handed reliever Dave
Bowden, one of four players
Tomlin and an estimated. to'roll a perfect game during
$125,000 to complete the the second round.
· tr~de, the newspaper feport
The 348-man field will bowl
SBld.ll noted the trade cannot eight
more
games
he consummated until Feb. Wednesday with the top 48
15, when the next mter~eague remaining in the tournament
trading period arrives.
rolling another eigh\,jlame
round Thursday morning.
The
top 24 will theo enter into
QUEBEC CITY, . Quebec
(UP!) -The World Hockey match play for threegame
Association will draft eligible rounds.
The top fiv~ will battle it ·
junior hockey players four
out
for the f.!l.OOO first prize
months ahead of the National
check
Saturday in a
-Hockey League's regular
nationally
'· televised
junior draft, it was
showdown.
arinounced Tuesday.

Sports ·briefs
RIVEHSIDE, Calif. (UPI)
- Jimmy Insolo of Mission
Hills, Calif., set a course
record and earned the No. 1
starting position Tuesday lor
Saturday's
race
for

FittSimmons. Presser's es.
Umated income was nearly
$260 ,000 ; Fitzsimmons
earned $155,302.
Virtually all top-paid
Team~ters benefited from
multiple union titles, a
that
PROD
system
researcher Robert Windrem
described as "something
similar
to
legal
embez:dement." Federal law
does not prohibit multiple
union salaries.
PROD prepared the list to
support • drive to oust
Fittsimmons. The group has
filed internal union charges
against Fitzsimmons on
grounds he allows his friends
to loot the union treasury.
The group's records show
Friedman, who heads Teamsters Local 507 and Bakers
Local ·19, nearly doubled hia
reported annual income two
years after he earned $183,626
in 1974.
PROD said Friedman's reported 1976 income included
$121,006 from Local 507,
$229,742 from Local 19 and

WASHINGTON (UP! )
Union dissidents Insist a
Eastern conference
system of multiple salaries
Atlantic Divis ion
W. l
Pet. GB that allowed one · Teamster
Ph ll a
28 11 .718
leader to pocket more than
New Yor k
2? 20 .524 71'1 $350,000 in 1976 amounts to
8 utt alo
16 23 .410 12
"legal ..mbeulement."
Boston
13 26 .333 15
New J ersey
9 34 ,209 21
Top 1976 Teannster salaries
Central DIYit lon
W. L Pet. GB were published Tuesday by
Wshngtn
24 16 .600
PROD Inc., group claiming to
San Antoni
24 18 .57 1 1
represent 5,700 union reforClevelnd
l9 21 ..4 15 5
Atlanta
20 23 .465 5112 mers. The figures were com-.
N ew Orln s
18 24 .429 7
piled from union records filed
Houston
15 26 .366 9 1 7
with
the Labor Department.
Western Conference
Miitwest Division
Harold Friedman, a littleW. L Pet. GB
known Teanister leader from
DMver
28 13 .683
Cleveland, was listed as
Chic ago
24 '' .558 5
Mil w
24 21 .533 6
earning multiple salaries
Ind iana
18 22 .450 91,,
Detroit
17 23 .425 101 1 totaling $352,330 . PROD
Kanss Ct y
15 28 .349 14
researchers said he was
Pacit lc Division
W. L Pet. GB among 19 Teamsters with
Portland
34 6 .850
reported salaries exceeding
PhOenix
'17 14 .659 71h
$100,000
and 54 over $70,000 in
Seattl e
23 21 .523 13
GOlden Sf .
19 22 .463 15117 1976.
Los Ange ls
18 24 .429 17
Also prominent on the top
Tuesday's Results
moneymakers list was Jackie
Portland 96, Buffalo 94
At lanta llJ ,· Kan City 90
Presser ,
a
Friedman
Ch icago 105, Ind ian.!! 104
associate
and
potential
New Orlns 99 , Houston 95
NIA Stlndlnts

BV Unlttd Prus International

Boston
'· Buffalo
Toronto

26 10 6 58
23 9 10 56
24 1J 6 54
C l e v~and
14 26 4 32
Tuesday'\ Result
Toron to 2, St . Louis 2, tie
NY Rangers 5. vancouver 4
Wednesday's Games
Pittsburgh at At lan ta
Montrea l at Cleveland
Washi'lglon at Chica90
NY l slndrs at M,lnnesote
Detroit at Colorado
NY Rangers at Los Ang
Thursday's Gaines
Montreal at Philadel,phia
Washington at .Boston.
Chicago at Detroit
Cleveland at Buffalo
NY ISindrs at St . Loui s
Toronto at Vancouv!!:r

Division II

and III ratings
MI SSION , Kan. IUPl )

His Local 19 salary was
nearly one-third of the total
dues revenue, PROD said.
Presser,
appointed
Teamsters vice president in
1976 on the reaignatlon of his
father, William, recelved
salaries from three unions
and a severance payment
from one, according to
PROD. He also was listed by
PROD as a beneficiary of 10
other Teamster severance or
pension funds.
Donald Peters of Chicago, a
former trustee of the Central
States pension fund, was
credited by PROD with
earning the largest arnolDII in
1976 derived solely from

College Basketbell Ruutts
By United Press International

East

Bsn Colt 94, N'eastn 75
Conn . 56, Mass . 19
Cornell 69, Rchstr 59
E. ,Niu 79, R.I. Coli 71
Hartford 78, Amherst 67
Hartw ick 77, Elmira 62
Potsdam 100, Clrksn 8I
Pratt 66 , NY Mritme 51
Spgfld 70, Asstr'ptn 59
Sutflk U. 84, Ftchb9 73
Utica 80, N.Adms St : 68
Yale· 69 , Williams 57
South
C. -Newmn 122, Tsculm 9l
Fl a. St . 76, Cinci 66'
.J .Hopkins 71, Wash . 67
La . Colt 84 , Dillard 67
VM I 79, Marshall 71
Midwest
Akron 103, Prdue.lnd . 77
Bethel 74, Sterling 72
Briar Cliff 97, Coe 72 Buna Vsta 65 , Wm Penn 61
Central St , 93, Shaw 71
Central 79, Simpson 67
Crghtn 94, Cleve St . 63
Doane 88, Concordia 69
Ft . Ho!Vs98, KrnySt . 82
Hstngs 99, Wayne St. 96
Mrycrst 95, Grinnll 74
Mo. Sthrn 71 , Rockhst 63
Ntre Dme 81, Mnhattn 64
Park 90, Mo. Valley 74
wr"tbg 83 , Upper tow a 75
Drury 82 , Mo . Wstrn 75
Southwest
Ark. 84 , Texas A&amp;M 68
Houston 100, Bey lor 89
Okla . Cty 88, Cntnary 61
Texas Tech 45, SMLJ 43
Texas 78, Rice 64
West
-Air Force 68, Wyo. 65
Biota 55, AmbSSdr SA
G, Fox, 10~, Pac U. 98
Grnd Cnyn 961 N. Ariz·. 83
New Mex . 89, Nev -LV 76
NW Naz 7.6, Ida . Coil 57
Rvrsde 77, uc .s.o. 54
Sta Clara 63, Calif . 61
Sttle Pac sa, w. wash . 57'
USSR 79, Brighem Young 78
Utah St. 74, Weber St. 65
Wstmnt 91. Cal Luth 76

Tigers-Reds
benefit tilt
set AprillO

This week' s NCAA Division II
and Division ·Ill basketba ll
polls released Tuesday :
Division II
I . Wisconsin , Green Bay

(15·0) 120

2. Merrima ck, Ma&amp;s.

112-1) 10.6

3. Cheyney, Pa ., State

CINCINNATI (UP!)- The
18·0) 101
Cincinnati 'Reds and Detroit
4. Northern Kentucky
111-2) 95 Tigers will play their aMual
5. Towson , Md ., State
exhibition game to benefit .
111 ·2) 90 youth baseball in Cincinnati
6. Springfield Mass .
(10·1) 82 on April 10 at Riverfront
7. Lincoln, Mo . 110.21) 71 Stadium, Reds' officials
8. Valdosta, Ga ., Slate
announced today .
02·31 63
Proceeds from the 7 p.m.
9. Liv ingston, Ala . (11 . .1) 55
10. West Georg ia
(12 ·5) 44 game will be used to buy
equipment
for
3,200
Division Ill
youngsters participating in
1. Scranton, Pa .
(10-2) 120 amateur baseball in the
2. Ashland, Ohio 110·21 111 Cincinnati area . It will be the
3. Humboldt Stale, Calif.
112·31 99 3oth annual "Kid Glove"
4. Boston, Mass ., State
game. Last year's game
110·0) 92 grossed about $1IO,doo and
5. North Park, Ill. (13·2) 06
previous games have raised a
6. Transylvania, Ky .
110·11 .82 total .of $1.3 million.
7. Hamilton . N . Y . (8· 1} 80
The Reds and Tigers also
8. Kean , N. J .
19·1) 64 will play an exhibition game
9. Minnesota, Morris
112·31 48 in Detroit May 10 to benefit
amateur baseball In the
10. Stony Brook, N. Y.
(10·01 41 Detroit area.

5- Tbe DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Jan . 18, 1973

union

By MIKE FEINSILBER
UPI Seaior Editor
WASHINGTON (UP!)
The FBI is laying bare the
remaining 58,754 pages in its
lnvestiga lion into who killed
John Kennedy and - the
questillll it stiU can't answer
-why.
Heavily censored raw files
released today were expected
to shed light on how the FBI
helped persuade the Warren
Commission that Lee Harvey
Oswald , whatever his
motives,, acted alone and not
as the agent of a conspiracy .
All told , the FBI was
making public 50,604 pages of
Investigative files and 8,150
pages of its communications
with the Warren Commission,
Except for material the
FBI is pennitted by the
Freedom of Information Act
to withhold, this opens the
bureau's entire Kennedy file
to public scrutiny for the first
time .
An earlier release of documents Dec , 7 showed the late
FBI Director J. Edgar
Hoover concluded that
Oswald fired the fatal shots,
but Hoover initially was
skeptical that Oswald had
acted alone . He put Oswald
"in ·the category of a nut."
Twenty days after the
slaying, the files showed,
Hoover was still expressing

Tuesday's

Ohio High School
Basketball Results

United Press International

Ashtabula Harbor 60 Geneva
59
Ashtabula 75 Ashtabula St
John 61
Brooks ide Sl Clearview A7
Brunsw ick 81 Buckeye 71
Cha·g rln Falls ·73 Aurora 56

Cle Central Calh 84

I~·

dependence 81

Cle East Tech 73 Cle John
Hay 6.4

Cle Glenville 67 Cle East 64
Cle John Marsha ll 75 Cle
Rhodes 56
Cle John Adams 81 Cle Collin·
wood 72
Cle St Jgna tius 86 Cle South 60
Cle West Tech 79 Cle Lincoln
West 59
Connea ut 71 Mad ison 64
Elyria West 57 Southview 49

Euclid St . Joe 100 Cle Max

Hayes 69
Fairport 56
Paine's ville
Harvey 52
Fairv iew 59 Brooklyn 52

Flrelands 73 Keystone 70 12
otl

Lorain 71 Westlake 70
North Ridgevill'e 105 Midview

72

· Paines

Riverside 68 Ash

Edgewood 63
Parma Normahdy 63 Rocky
River 50

Shaker His 61 Parma Valley
Forge 54

Solon 62 Mayfield 59 (ot)
Tot Macomber 55
Tol
DeVilbiss 54
Tol Rogers 72 Tol Woodward

concern''

over

Whether he was the only man
involved .
Ultimately, as the FBI
conducted 25,000 interviews
and checked out thousands of
tips, Hoover appeared
satisfied no conspiracy
existed.
But despite an intense
effort to investigate every ·
aspect of Osw~d's life and
movements , nothing in the
files established a motive for
Oswald .
This failure to establish
why Oswald acted bas helped ·
fuel theories that he was the
agent of a foreign or domestic
conspiracy.
The Warren Commission
was left tn speculate that five
of Oswald's character traits
may have led him to slay the
president ,
·These were : " his deep-

rooted resentment of all
authority" ; "his inability to
enter into
meaningful
relationships with people";
"hls urge to try to find a place
in history" ; "his capacity for
violence,u and "his avowed
commitment to Marxism and
communism."
The FBI's first release of
40,001 pages -a quarter ton
of raw files - covered
material gathered from Nov.
22, · 1003, the day of the
slaying, to September 1964.
The new documents reflect
materials gathered
the

62
Twinsburg 64 Cle Benedictine

Recapped Tires

55
Warrensville 61 Bedford
Chanel 74
West Geauga 75 Mentor 66

Straight or Rough

NOW OPEN

Recapped Tires

GINO'S

Now At Meigs
Tire Center.
Also Come hi and
Get Your Tires Studded

OF MASON
PHONE 773-553b ·

.. Quality Tires At

Lumbttrand
Built/in; Supplies

ClllllLitllll!E5i

years since the killing , New
"tips" are still in""stigated,
the bureau says.
Oswald was seized within
hours of the Kennedy killing,
but two days later, hef&lt;re he
could be questioned with any
degree of thoroughness, he
was killed by Dallas
nightclub owner Jack Ruby ,
later convicted of murder .
A House Select Committee
has hired a slaff and has been
meeting in closed sessions to
examine anew the assassinations of Kennedy and of Dr.
Martin Luther King .lr. , the
civil rights leader.

COLUMBUS IUPI) - Here
i s a g l ance at a c ti v it y
' Tuesday. In the Ohio General
Assembly :

SENATE
Bills Introduced

Frost·Frlll
Refrlp!itor·fl.eier wllti
Twin Vtl'iallllie Crispars

GINO'S
Of MASON
PHONE 773-5536.

Phone992-2107,

Model lin41~

d Equipped f.or Auto~alie
Ice Ma.kE!r ~opt i onal)
0 Freezer door !!lhell

0 Ice 'co mpartment With 2
Qutck· relee!!l&amp; hays

Sports Transactions
By United Press International
Tuesday:
Baseball
Minneso1a - Signed pitchers
Davis May and Garv Serum ,
catcher Terry Suiting and
infielder John Pillman .

~. .

429.95

1

HOMEMADE HAM SALAD•••••••••••••••••• ~b:. 991
FRENCH CITY BOILED HAM •••••••••• ~!~~~ $1.19

Sale Price

Westinghouse

FRENCH CITY BULK WIENERS •••••••••• .t~~.99

DALLAS IUP!) - Quarwrback Roger Staubach and
wide receiver Butch Johnson,
who teamed for a 45-yard
touchdown to help the Dallas
Cowboys to a Super Bowl Xli
victory, will undergo surgery
Wednesday, team officials
said Tuesday.
Staubach broke a bone in
his right hand Sunday and
also has a tendon pull
requiring surgery. Johnson
fractured a bone in his right
hand.

4

$}l 9
BAKING POTATOES...... .sag
10 lb. Idaho

each

;\ \

g
7e
APPLES ................ ..
3 lb. Bag

Golden ·Delicious

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.
773-5554

·

MASON, W. VA.
ma

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PANCAKE SYRUP. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• gge

·ngs &amp;Quality

By RICK. VAN SANT
ATHENS, Ohio (UP! ) Michael Branch, on~ of the
"Vietnam EISht" POWs who
made anti-war statemeots in
captivity and received a less
than hearty welcome home,
says . " poor treatment "
accorded returning Vietnam
War veterans has led to
violence by some .
And in one specific case,
Branch contends one of his
"Vietnam Eight" friends
committed suicide because of
. 11

,We Gladly Accept Fed. Food Stomps
Monday thru. Friday
. 9:00til7 :00
S~turdayt:00-9:00 .

CLOSED

Tender Lean

BACON

ROUND

12 oz. pllg.

STEAK

CHEESE
lb.

FLOUR

4 sge
~o.

$139

Stze

1

~.69~

PICKLES

Bag

•

I

. I

BEEF
LIVER
Sliced

lb.39~

2

\

59~

thanks· whatsoever.

By ROBIN STAFF.ORD
ROME IUP!) - Any
Italian planning to blow his
wife's brains out because she
has taken a lover had better
be quick about it.
As the law stands at
present he can only get from
three to seven years in prison
ifhehasa reasonable lawyer.
But one of the last distinc-

Furnari's daughter .
In a nearby court another
man got five years for
stealing 50 artichokes.
Last April, in a Palermo
court Giuseppe M&lt;l'rici congratulated

son-in -law

Giuseppe Bianco for killing
Morici's daughter Angela
because of numerous alleged
affairs .
"My son.jn~aw is a good
tiofls between male and
man
who saved the family
female under Italian law is
about to collapse -and when honor," Morici told the judge.
it does the wife-killer risks "We should kiss his hands lor
life in jail just like any other what he did."
When, as expected, the
murderer.
·
Italian
Chamber of Deputies
The Italian senate has alalso
abolishes
the crimes of
ready unanimously voted
hOnor
law
,
Italy
's feminists
abolition of fascist era law
No . 587 that says, under the will have nailed one of the
contradictory
heading last sex discrimination laws
"Crimes of Honor 1 " that to their mast.
Before divorce
was
"whosoever shall cause the
in
Italy
In
1970
permiited
death of a spouse, daughter
there
was
more
than
a
or slst,er when discovering an
passing
suspicion
that
some
.
unlawful carnal relationship
husbands
had
encouraged
a
and in a state of anger due to
the affront to his or the tittle adultery by their wives
family's honor shall be so they could get rid of them
imprisoned for three to seven at minimal cost to their
liberty .
years.''
Marcello Mastroianni did
Allbaugh technically this
just
that in ''Divorce means a wife can get off
Italian
Siyle," which became
lightly for . murdering a
a
smash
hit film.
roving husband, there are no
new
bill will also
The
recorded c~es of one having
el_
iminate
another
law saying
tried to in the past two years
that anyone killing a newwhen 79 such ' 'crimes of
born baby "to protect their
honor" were committed.
In a Catania, Sicily, court own honor or that of a close
in 1964 spectators applauded relative" gets only three to 10
for several minutes when years jail, and that if a man
Gaetano Furnari got only 35 kidnaps a woman foc love or
months jail fo.r fatally sex reasons he can escape
'llhooting Prof. Francesco prosecution by marrying her.
In practice kidnapping a
Speranza in front of his
students
for
seducing woman in Italy's poor south
meant IDltil recently that she

" Most guys, Including
myself, had their egos built
up. They build up even a
sell$0 of arrogance In you,
that you were above
American civilans. And when
they were sent to Vietnam,
most of the guys didn't even
consider the Vietnamese
humans, It was easy to loolt
down upon those people."
Branch, a native of
Highland Heights , Ky ..
returned home March 16,
1973, and resumed col)ege,
receivin~ a bachelor's degree

trucks off the barely open
interstates. and placed the
Natlooal Guard on standby.
Near Cairo, Ill .. resldents
thrust a yardstick into the
snow and It sank 18 inches. No
official total was available
because weath erma n Don
r Semanclk, who lives in Missourl, couldn't get to work.
Millie Mignone, a weather
observer who lives about 300
feet offa countyroadnorth of
Mari on, Ill , said she
measured 16 inches of snow
Tuesday morning .
"If we needed help, all we
etmld do is just sit here and
scream," she said .
The winwr shlppinKseason
on the St. Mary's River
system in Michiga n near!)'
slopped when 6 feet of slush
trapped 21 freighters. The
Coast Guard lce -bre11,ker
Mackinaw slowly moved one
ship at a tin&gt;e through the
froten areas.
In the South . thun ·
derstorm s mov ed north

"I think the reason the from Northern Kentu cky
public reacted this way is University ,
where
he
that Vietnam was 10,000 majored In history and
miles away and-most people sociology· and minored in
felt it was really no big threat poiiUcal science.
to the United States. If they
After completing work on
(soldiers) went over to fight, his master's degree at Ohio
well fine, but if they didn't, University, Branch hopes to
fine too.
write and teach and
"A lot came back expecting eventually get a Ph. D.
jobsandwheojobswerehard
Divorced by his first wife
to get, that caused problems upon his return home, Branch
too. "
has remarried .
Branch also cited drug
problems and regrets about
killing.
/''
"A lot of the guys over vfOSS fetUffle
there were at least on grass
and some on opium and
· heroin. Drugs were a lot 1''
cheaper over there and once
Paul Cross; Ohio State
they got back, they found University sophomore, has
them more expensive.
returned from a l!klay holi"A lot of them have killed day trip to Belize in Central
Vieinl)fllese and at the time it Americu. He took the trip
was no big deal. Bul when with a group of 28 OSU
they came back I think it stud ents and faculty
bothered some of them and members as a part al the
they began to have regrets." University's scuba diving
Branch also blamed the program .Ill phys1ca
. 1 ed UCU ·
military's "ego-building" of · lion .
·
its soldiers.
The group flew to Belize
and then went by boat to
Glovers Reef where they
spenJ the time scuba diving .

d

t:.-om S America

Laws on murder changing

was virt uall y doomed to
marry her kidnapper. No
other man would accept a
woman whose· virginity was
in doubt.
But in 1965in Sicily, Franca
Viola set a sensationill pfece·- ·

dent by refusing to marry her
kidnapper and he was · sen-

wnced to 13 years imprisonment. She later married
another man.

There is a 1970 case on
record where another Sicilian

girl, Anna Guarnacci,
abducted Giuseppe Riggio
and he subsequently married
her. Later, when he changed
his mind and accused her of
kidnapping him, a court ruled
it was ton late and that he
should have thought about
tha t before the wedding
ceremmy.
From being one of the most
backward European nations
on women's rights ltaly has
be&lt;i:ome one of the
progressive.

most

Women only got the vote in
1945.
But since then, despite
powerful Vatican opposition
on the divorce and birth
control issues, both are now
lawful.

Cross

is

majoring

in ·

agriculture. He is the son of
Mr. and Mrs . Andrew Cross,
Racine.

Assets, earnings
at all-time high
COOLVILLE - The Trl
County Bank of Coolville at
its annual stockholders
meeting
Wednes·day ,
January II heard J . Sterling
!.amp, chuirman report the
bank had experienced a good
year with assets and earnings
reaching an all-time high.
The following directors
were elected to serve during
1978: J. S. Lamp, chairman ,
and D. K. Graham, Carl E.
Sm~h, Kenneth W. Stealey
and Jack E. White.
In the organitatlonal
meeting that followed, J. S.
Lamp
was
ree lected
president, Kenneth W.
Stealey, executive vice
president and cashier; D . K.
Graham, Carl E. Smith and
Jack E. White, vice
pr~sldents; Maxine Rader
and Hazel G. Westfall,
assistant cashiers: Dixie

Savel, comptro ller, and
Cecilia Murphy, head "bookkeeper.

~;e 89~

7-U·P

8 Pak

16 oz.
.

I

1~

was legaUy dominant.
Women have won equal pay
for equal work in law, but
there are still cases of
discrimination difficult to
prove in .court.

APPLE SAUCE ••·•••••••••••• ~· ••••••••••••••••••••39e

TISSUES

INSTANT COFFEE ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• s3.29

Pkg .

.$'11!. ~.
&amp;

2 lb.

Aunt Jemima

I'

NURSES STRIKE
BRUNSWICK, Ohio (UPl )
- A wage dispute triggered li
walkout by about 35 nurses at
the Pearlview NursinK Home
Monday, according
to
admlnistra·tor James
Seppala, who said other
employees were Cllring fqr
the elderly patients.

In

•dditlon

fo our

oHerlng 1

Quon!IIY

Rights Rosorvod

6 :00 A.M.- 11 :00 A.M.

Mond•v thru Friday

ORDER FROM OUR REGULAR
ME.NUSATURDAY&amp; SUNDAY ·

SPECIAL LUNCHES FOR
GROUPS ONLY

(Phone For. Resirvations)
DINNER SERVED NIGHTLY

DEODORANT S.O AP

~·

BATH SIZE
Please

(With This Coupon)

' 5130 to 1DIDO
I Buffet Style Friday 4o Sat. Evenings) .

I ,•uFfn

ON

suMDA vs · /

Llvo Entorfolnmont In tilt LAiungo tram 9:00·2 :00
Mondly

White-Gold- Pink-Aqua

thru 51turdly.

PT. PLEASANT INN

Nelson's Reg . 39c Each

.62 North

PANCAKE FLOUR •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.5!r

deposit

Maurice Reed, Ji' r:urH:cs
Reed to Grant A. Smitl1,
Elizabeth L. Smith, Lot I04,
.45 acre, Oil ve .
Marcella H. Snowden. grin .,
Arnold Snowden to Holand D.
Morris, Alcena F . Morris,
1.88 acre, Salisbury.
Belva G. Sloun Lo Edwurd
A. Young , Debbie Young,
22.67 acres, Bedford.

reaulu menu we •re

4 oz. Sanka

4 Roll

Syracuse.

"All New"

------------alGI_____.

oz. Joan of Arc

oz. Stokelys

Lyle W. Hy so\1. Leo na
Hysell to Dremu Housh, P ~ .
acres, S-H.liSbury.
'D&gt;elma Custer. 'D&gt;chna V.
Miller, Jnmcs B. Miller to
11&gt;ehna V. Miller, James B.
Miller, Lot 5, McBride's Add.,

sectors where the husband

10'12 oz. Campbells

79c

Meigs
Property
Transfers

In other sweeping reforms,

Price good thru Jan. 22, 1978

97'

CREAM OF CHICKEN. SOUP.••••••••••••••. 2/574.

were predicted to turn Into
snowstorms over norU&gt;ern
Texas. Heavy snow warnings
were posted In the Colorado
and New Mexico Rockies,
where the Pacific system was
moving ,
But the NWS said the
Western
system
" Is
becoming less of a thrcpt as it
moves eastward ." Los
Angeles Mayor Tom Brudley
called for an end to his city 's
Ill and at or y
wa t e r
conservation program , begun
last July, because of the
plentiful ruins, which have hit
Southern California in recent
weeks . As Bradley was speu king, a new system w11s on Its
way with more ruin and
snow.
But, Brndley cltutioned :
"This is not to say we arc
home free because we will
need nornial ruin und snow
for U1e next yeur ortwo to fill
re servoirs nnd to bring
underground water levels
back up to pre~lr o ught
levels."

BREAKFAST
BUFFET

While Quontltios Lui
•••••••••••••••

from Um Gulf of Mmdcu and

wives have equal rights with
husbands in child upbringing,
financial matters, .choice of
.residence and other marital

·'

CHILl BEANS.~································Z/79'

PAPER TOWELS
· Jumbo
Roll

BORDENS CREAMORA ••••••••i~
15'1~

Bounty

··Sm ucker- .Kosher

DILL

5 lb.

PEACHES

FRANKS
lb. '1 29

military harassment."

ARMOUR CORN BEEF.••••• ~··········~ ....·•.sl"19
LONGHORN

Jan . 18th thru 1tst
Rignt Reserved To Limit Quantities ·

Air Force cargo planes to
carry more than two dozen
utility trucks and 50
personqel from utiiiUes in
O!icago ion'd Detroit Tuesday
nighl.
Late Tuesday, Louisville,
Ky ., had 17 inches on the
ground . Gov. Jullan Carroll
declared a
s tate of

12 oz.

Chicken Noodle . Mix or l\1\alch

tl·lumbia

over kUling - probably is to
blame.
"A lot of veterans expected
to he welcomed home as
heroes," says Branch, now 30
and working on a master's
degree in international
affairs at Ohio University .
"But when they came ba&lt;;k it
was like , 'Who are you and
what do you expect''
"They were sent to
Vietnam and were ready to
give up their lives and they
came back and there was no

"He was a very good friend
of mine, Larry Kavanaugh,
and at first 1 thought his
suicide mi&amp;ht have been
ca~sed
by
marital
problems," said Branch.
"But I've come to lind out it
was military harassment."
By "harassment,'' Branch
said military officials mon.itored Kavanaugh ' s
movements and somewhat
controlled his
actions
because of his anti-war
stance .
Branch
said
treatemeot he received was
slmilar to Kavanaugh's and
that it apparently got to
Kavanaugh.
"When I came back, 1 was
pol in a hospital ward by
myself with two MPs at the
frontdesk. Allmyphonecalls
were censored and at press
. cooferences ) was told what
to say."
As for the depression
suffered by other veterans,
Branch figures a myriad of
things - a non-heroic·
welcome, no jobs, drug
problems and melancholy

11 oz.

PHEB_£'' STORE

inches.
Utility repair crews
throughout the Northeast ,
particularly on Long Island
and in Rhode Island , w&lt;rked
frantically to repair lines and
equipment damaged in last
week's ice storm - before the
new system hit.
Presfdent
Carte r

v.·etnam ei•ght haras·s·e d

suffer ing from sickle cell
anemia .
HB
1014 ,
Tranter .
Eliminates ban
aga inst
advertis ing legal serv ices f or
d i vorce or d issolut ion .

NOW OPEN

r:J Comp1etefy FrOit'-Free

o Two adjustabltu~erve•
D Twin vegetabl' crfiP.I:I·, .
D Butter server
0 &amp; ill-in egg'storage
0 Deep door ihelve!!l
0 Magnetic·door gaskets
0 WOOdQ,[ain-handles
O'Separate temperalur'
controls

on the Northeast today .
Heavy snowand win let storm
warnings were up in portions
of Ohio, the Virglnias,
Pennsylvania, Ne,. Y&lt;rk and
New England.
The National Weather
Service said 5 more Inches of
snowcouldlallinlheseareas.
In ·Altoona, Pa ., the

P~ci!ic

SB 401, Meshel. Prohibits
HB 1015, Saxbe. Extends
mea su red telephone se r vice· i mmunity
from
civil
rates.
dama,ges to public employees
SB 402, Collins . Author i ze opera'f lng motor vehicles or counties to construct, pur. other transportation devices
chase or operate a fa cility fo r
in response to an emergency
the elderly .
call.
SB 403. Meshel. Requires
HB 1016, Saxbe. Suspends
state education
advan c e
paymentS
of •Certain
worker ' s compensation mandates on teacher .student
premiums for three month rat ios and m inimum salary
per iods rather than eight 'chedules .
HB
1017 , ~noemaker .
month per i,ods.
Requ ires advance payments
Governor's Appointments
Robert
F.
Baker , of workers ' compensation
premiums for three month
Wapakoneta, to the State
periods rather than eight
Veter inary Medical Board .
...
Barbara F . Schreiber , ' month periods.
HB
1018,
Baumann .
Can t on, to the Ohio Privacy
Au t hor izes Ohio Educationa l
Board .
Television · Network Com Bill Passed
to
televise
Am . Sub. HB 630 , Me· mission
proceedings of Legislature .
Claskey . Proh ibits ~aking
HB
1Ql9,
Gilmartin .
certain items into a mental
Requires mental health
health or retardation facility .
department to obtain a
24-0.
reve r si onary properl y. in ·
Resolution Adopted
terest in each community
SR 492, Ocasek . In tribute
facility funded
by the
to Sen. Hubert Humphrey .
department.
HOUSE
HB 1020; F inan. Clarifies
Bills Introduced
prevailing wage law as it
HB 1012. Rankin. Prohibits
re la tes to township em ' res i dential
measured
ployees engaged in work on a
telephone rate schedule.
public Improvement .
•
HB 1013, Jones. Authorizes
HB
1021,
Stinzlano.
bureaus
of
crippled
Prohibits
measured
chi ldren ' s servi ces to treat
tel'ephone service rates .
Persons aged 21 or older
HB 1022, Kurfess . Includes
cr imes of killing a ·law enforcement officer or f irema n
with in
category
of
aggravated murder .

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.

NO. 2· PRECUT STUDS

14.0 Cu. Fl. Clll*hy

UuJted Pnsa lnlei'JIIItloiUII
Residents of a &lt;.'Otridor
from
Arkansas
to
Pennsylvania are burrolting
out from mder a foot or more
of sn ow, while the storm that
caused the mess heads
northeast.
But the National Weather
Servicesaidatemporaryand ·
slight reprieve from winter's
nastiness is in store . A
system
that
ominously belted California
Monday showed signs of
weakening on its trip through
the Rockies.
The storm that swept
through the South and Ohio
Valley on Monday and

Lawmaking at a glance

John F. Fultz. Manager

WIStinctia(Jse

I~!!.i~!.!~~~!~!~~~~~~~~~ ~~.~-~-~~~,....:,

. FBI is te11ing it all

Teamster treasuries
$198,867.
Vice -president Roy
Willlams of Kansas City was
dted for the largest raise
between $91,116 in 1974 and
$168,800 in 1976.

.A Reasonable Price

HCmEI~~I

WHA Standings
By United Press International
W. L. T. Pts.
New England
26 12 3 55
Winnipeg
25 l4 1 51
Quebec
20 15 2 42
Edmonton
19 19 1 39
Houston
11 19 3 37
Birmingnam
17 21 2 36
Cincinnati
16 23 2 34
Indianapol is
l 3 24 4 JO
Tuesdily'S Result
Quebec 5, AII ·Stars 4
Wednesday's Games
Cinci al Birmingham
New Eng at Edmonton
Quebec at Winnipeg
Thursday's Games
( No games schedu led )

.

"' '

.,

�•
.

6- The Dativ Sentinel. Middleoort-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday. Jan. 18, 1978

.{

.

Reading, writing, math are problems
B y
p AT R 1 c 1A
MCCORMACK
UPI Education Editor
The nation's 41 black
private culleges are joining
hands to solve a problem
facing all colleges: growing
numbers of students poor at
reading, writing and math ,
Presidents of the predominanUy black private schools
agreed recently to adopt a
common policy insuring aca·
demic excellence at their
institutions.
Their blueprint may h,elp
all colleges to solve the
problem of poorly prepared
students_ a blight touching
almost every institution of
higher education.
Among new requirements
are these :
-Students who have lower
than "B" average in English
must take a proficienc·y

examination In English
before being allowed to
graduate.
_ Students must make a
passing grade of at least "C"
in freshman E;nglish.
- Students found to be
defident in communications
and mathematicalskills must
take mandatory remedial
courses.
- High-ranking work-study
students and scholarship
recipients will be used as
tutors to help those students
inadequately prepared for .
these courses.
- Pr...:ollege courses will
be offered to incoming
freshmen idenUfied as weak
in com muni ca tions or
mathematical skills before
they begin the fall term.
-'- Each school will adopt a
manuel! or the uniform usage
of correct English.

:

Dr.
Hugh
Gloster, academic excetience but that
pti!'sident of Morehouse the new steps were necessary
College in AUanta, said the to bring aU schools up to1he
black institutions have within same standard.
their grasp the possibility of
Cook said the emphasis oo
being part of the academic English and communications
eUteofthenaUon, "andtllat 's skillswiUmeethead-ononeof
what we're reaching for."
the most pressing problems
Gloster and Dr. Samuel facing colleges, white or
POLLY'S.PROBLEM
DuBois Cook, president of black : " That of virtual
DEAR POLLy'- How do I
Dillard University in New illiteracy among many get pencil marks out of
Orleans, are oo.&lt;:hairrnen of a ·freshmen."
material on which I had
committee which prepared
"Unfortunately, tile black marked dots for darts? I
the report on pursuit of colleges are hurt more thought 1 was marking the
excellence.
because tbey still suffer from wrong side but was mistaken
The presidents of the 41 the legacy · of segregated, and would like to remove
schools reached agreement slum and ghetto school these marks from tan
at the aMual meeting of the systems," Cook said,
material.- MAGGIE.
Board of Directors of the
"Most of the students we
DEAR MAGGIE _ A soft
United Negro College Fund in get are even more deficient in · eraser should remove or·
Birmingham. The 41 schools English and language skills dinary pencil marks from
constitute the membership of than the national average, firm or stiff labri~ or you
the UNCF.
which is low enough.
could sponge with equal parts
Gloster said the presidents
On the other hand, some 2:i of water and alcohol. For in·
fell some of their institutions per cent of the students delible pencil marks use just
already had achieved
Continued on page 7
. alcohol as water causes such

1

fOR MEN AND· WOMEN .

1

Prices Reduced For
Quick Sale:

I.
I
1
I

LA DIES SHOES

! Values to '25.00
I Reduced To
$
I

7

00

.PAIR

·

1

I

Values to sso.OO

I
I
I

NOw

$} noo
U

to $2noo
V

SHOP EARLY AND SAVE AT

I .HARTLEY'S SHOES, INC.
I

''Middleol Upper Block"
store Hours .
Pomeroy, Ohio
a.m.·S
p.m.&amp; Sal.
•·.on .9lhru
Thurs.
All Sales Final
9 a.m.-8 p.m. Fri.
Shoes displayed

II.

'

Closed Sunday

...._._~· -·- ·-··

for easy selection.

-··-··- ·-~

II
I e Sweater.
1
Knits
1 • Sh "rred Or
1
I
I
ess
E:' b ·
I
ra nc

~h~~~un

the bottoms of bottles. Car·
tons and bullies collect
moisture in the refrigerator
and this causes the price to
get on anything that is touched. It seems managers of
stores could come up with an
ink tbat is moisture-proof. -

I • 60" Polyester

MENS SHOES

·1

WithANewArrivalof
Spring Fabrics

,

I
I·
I

1

1

JoHNNIE.
DEAR POLLY - An odor

Prints
VIsit The

PRICE TABLE

1/

/2

'

1

j®

&amp;

TABLE
-

I

,. , .
''·

.

POLLY . .
DEAR POLLY- My Pet
Peeve is with the purple
marks left on my countertops

The fabri·C ShOp

"''110'110 , ....10,
2nd St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
- - - ........iiio_______________..

can be eliminated from a
refrigerator-freezer by put·
ling in each part a separate
package of five tablespoons
coffee wrapped in a paper
towel and tied with a twistie
or rubber band. When we
made a long distance move
trom Ohio to North Carolina
the moving company did this

~: ;:f~:~r~~o~do~ri"f~~~=~ .

part.- MRS. R. E.L.
DEAR POLLY- I SUSP&lt;:Ct
the reader who detests fitted
· k so
sheets had
' th em s hrm
they are too tight. Fortunate-

Insurance ripoffs cited iri new washington.hearings

.......

WASHINGTON (UPIJ Drivers, home owners and
bualneumen from across the

-

It's nice to be on the inside lookmg out for a time'- but that
TIME has passed and we're ready to get on with it. So, snow,
.
ly 1 noticed tllat a relative snow, go away, come back again some other day....... .
AND how are the residents of the Bend occupymg thetr
bad had this happen and I,
·
too, had avoided them until I snowbound days? We asked a lew.
For Rose Ginther of near Chester, it's no trouble at all. Sbe
had to stay in bed several
months and then fitted sheets quilts. And when she's not quilting, she knits.
Martha McPhaillinds it's a lull time job just trying lo keep
seemed .more attractive to
kids
busy, what with school out. And with the deep snow she:s.
me.
I bought queen size fitted learned a new wrinkle about sleigh riding ......an mner tube IS
sheets for a regular size dou- fantasti~.lt glides over the top of the new fallen s snow. .
And Fay Wa118ce, a bit bored by her meeting cancellatiOns,
ble bed. ·I stretched odds and
ends of elastic out as far as fills her time by "eating and reading. "
Clara Lochary is p,ulting her snowbound time to good use.
possible and stitched a p,iece
She.'s
compiling a historY of the Pomeroy Episcopal Church
in the center of each side and
an
ongoing
project lor the past three years -and has hopes of.,
each end. Only one sheet out
seeing
it
completed
soon.
of several did not stay tucked
Her
hobby
of
painting
with Artex is keeping Alice Nease ~­
in so 1 fixed that one by sew·
copied
these
snowy
days.
And then in a day or two to add a ht·
ing short strips of elastic
across the ends about six in- Ue diversion she plans to put in a quilt. Alice recently spent two
ches from the corners. AlS&lt;J days in Cincinnati attending an Artex seminar.
After three weeks of visiting with her sons and daughters,
one could buy·nat sheets and
Bowles is borne and content just to sit inside and
Margaret
slip on those wheel-like sock
snow
come down. She visited Mr. and Mrs. Charles
watch
the
SQrters as !.do on tbe bottom
Lockett,
Mr.
and
Mrs. Randall Keith Bowles and family, and
&lt;'Drners 'of the top sheets.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Fe
pi
Martinez in Cleveland, and Mr. and Mn1.
Remove to wash.
Bmest
Bowles
and
children
in Columbus.
THELMA.
Writing
some
letters,
mending
and patching, and doing some
DEAR POLLY - Small salt
and peppper shakers are reading are keeping Erma Smith occupied until the weather
sometimes very hard to clean breaks and she can get back into the swing of her club and
as One caiUlot get a finger in-· church activities. And while Erma does that her sister,
side. Fill such shakers with Genevieve Meinhart, occupies herself with baking and cooking
vinegar, let il set a while and ..... and is she a whiz at that.
Carol Ohlinger is getting.a head start pn spring housecleanthen shake. For touchy cor·
ing.
Yesterday she wallpapered the kitchen.
ners put a little ball of cotton
And
Jim Adams has his eye on the vegetable market. He's
on the end of a potato peeler,
put inside and swish around. planted thousands ollitUe cabbage seeds in hot beds this week.
A favorite pasttime of the Harry Clark family is bird wat·
Shakers come out shiny as
ching. The family is faithful in feeding our feathered friends,
new.- MRS. M.D.E.
DEAR POLLY - ~ keep a and spends hours at the window watching them fly in and out. •
small pump spray bottle in
my bedroom and after I put
on my pantyhose I spray
RECENT VISITORS
A 16th-century Benedictine
some water on my hands and
Mr.
and Mrs. Harry monk
dabblin g
with
then run my damp hands up
my legs so the hose are McGuffin and daughter, medicinal elixirs discovered
secure and light and a better Tabitha, of Moundsville, W. ·Benedictine liqueur. Each
Va. were recent visitors of hottle still bears the initials
lit. -LIL.
Mrs.
Dorothy McGuffin, Mr. D.O.M., " Deus Optima
Polly will send you one of
and
Mn1
. Ronald Hanning, , Maximo ," To God most good,
her sig ned thank-you
and
Mrs.
Sanford Thomas most great.
newspaper coupon clippers if
and
Dave.
Mrs.
Bessie Ashley
she uses your favorite
and
Mrs.
Dorothy
McGuffin
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
also
visited
in
Moundsville
her colwnn, Write POLLY'S
with the Harry McGuffin
POINTERS in care of this family
.
.
newspaper.

vour
to
results·
...

~

II

Y

THE
DAILY
SENTINEL

HfARING TESTS SET
For Senior Citizens Of
MEIGS mlJNTY
ELECTRONIC
HEARING TESTS ·

Agift for that

Will Be Given By

special day,

Mr. H. W. Milltingly
BEqONE Consultant Who Will

Be At:

Rings
Pendants
Earrings
Broochs ·
Tie Tacks

Meigs Inn-Pomeroy, Ohio-Thursday Jan . 19
Anyone wno has trouble hearing Is welcome to have 1
hearing test using the latest electronic equipmeri't to

determ ine!! his loss Is one which may be helped. Some
of the causes of hearing loiS will be explained and
diagrams of how the ear works will be shown.

W. Also Service and Repair All !,likes of Hearing Aids.
Bottorlosand Supplies For All MlkH for Sale.

IF YOU CANNOT COME INCALL THE HOTEL FORA HOME APPOINTMENT.
PHONE "2·3629

Q.!~
211 I , MAIN . POMI!ROY

employing practices that
e1clude large segments of
cities and whole classes of
cunswners regardless of lhe
loss records of .individuals,"
said Metzenbaum, chairing
the Senate Judiciary subcummittee on Citizens and
Shareholders Rights and
Remedies.
"There has been an 111surance curtain drawn In
America to pr..ent average
auto policy holders, who are
good drivers, lro111 un·
derstandlng why they are
paying sue~ high rates," said
Los Angeles County Super·
visor Kenneth Hahn. "The
laclls they are helng ripped
off by the biggest companies
In America."
He said a resident of Watts,
a black community, with a
good driving record pays $960
a year in auto insurance
while the same driver in San
Diego County pays$385 and in
Milwaukee pays $188.
Joseph Cia mpa , 21, a
Boston machinist, testified
his insuranc~ was raised
from $1 ,400 a year to 4:? ROQ

Liquid
Bright Bleach

Embassy
Salad Dressing

"I
I
I
I
I

It-••

ADVERTISED ITE M POLICY
bet! of J ' - .....,,.

=·::n
~

for ....

11'1

r-'IUUd 10 be !-.dol~

MCI'I l'l:.roe-t S!ort,

~ ROied 111 i h&gt;1 _.j I( -

UCICII tt
do ru ll 0 111 Q( .Ill tlf~tf&gt;

:.~.".~=.~'7~c::: !'.,~::~~~~~

a.dt whict'i Will ..,lrtle VI)U 10 pure hiM 1!\lt!f..enolld &lt;ltm
Mll'lltiOYtntMCI pttc:o: """"'" J0 dip

C!

Karen Blaker Ph,D.

Hope for hyperactivity: 11
By Karen Blaker, Ph.D.
This is the second of two
col umns on the qietary
management of hyperactive
children. The following let·
ters Were written in response
to my Oct. 7 Hot·Une conver·
s.ation in which [ mentioned
the Kaiser·Permanente ·diet
as a new mode of treating
hyperactivity .
DEAR DR. BLAKER- You
referred vaguely to the
Kaiser·Permanente diet in
your Oc.t, 7 colwnn. But you
didn't say specifically which
foods to avoid in the·additivefreediet.
DEAR READER - There
are so many food items now
containing additives that it
would be impossible to
,satisfactorily answer your
question in the space
avaHable . . However, a coriiplete list can be found in Dr.
Ben Feingold's book, "Why
Your Child · Is Hyperactive"
(New York : Random House,
1974 }. The book is available in
many libraries..
DEAR DR. BLAKER- My
hyperactive son is aspirin·
sensitive. Is it.true he will not
respond to t he Kaiser·
DEAR READER - It's true
that
aspirin-sensitive
children may not respond to
the K·P ollet unless they also
stop eating all fonds contain·
ing natural salicylates (a
c he mi ca l
s tru ctur e
somewhat like aspirin), Feingold's book lists those foods
and explains how to reintroduce them once the child
is doing well on the K·P diet.
DEAR DR. BLAKER After we start my son on the
diet, how long will we have to
wait before we see results?
Our family is desperate. He is
so wild. We can't live with
him much longer.
DEAR READER - I can
assure you that many parents
share your frustration and
exhaustion. Some children
• begin calming down after a
lew days, while others
behave -in erratically for the
first two weeks. If ·the diet is
going to work, you wili see
results by the end of the first
month .
DEAR DR. BLAKER - I
have read some glowing
reports about this no·
additives diet for hyperactive
children. It just couldn't be
that great. What are the rna·
jor difficulties associated
with the diet ?
DEAR READER - Many
mothers .. and fathers
"''"llplain that it is extremelv

.
..
difficult to feed a family with
so many dietary restrictions.
But they all agree it is easier
- and psychologically better
for the child - if the whole
family goes on the diet, at
least when eating at home.
Extra shopping time is required. Labels are sometimes
hard to read and may provide
inadequate information.
Food preparation also takes
longer. Many items - such as
mayonnaise and baked goods
-mustbemadeathome. '
Furthermore, a diet and
behavior diary must be kept.
This is also time consuming.
An additional problem is
tllat almost all children's
medications from aspirin to
antibiotics contain additives.
Therefore, a physician must
often be consulted even for a
minor cold .

If the ollet works, however,
these disadvantages become
only minor inconveniences.
Write to Dr. Blaker in care
of this newspaper, P.O. Box
489, Radio City Station, New
York, N.Y: 10019. Volun'le of
mail prohibits personal
replies, but questions of
general interest will be
discussed in future columns.

MEETING RESCHEDULED
The annual congregational
meeting of the Middleport
First United Presbyterian
Church scheduled for tonight
will be held Wednesday, Jan.
2:i, at 7:30p.m.

WORKSHOP POSTPONED
The Region 11, Ohio
Association of Garden Cluhs,
workshop on program book
and publicity scheduled for
Saturday has been postponed
until Feb. 18. Mrs. Charles
Kuhl, regional director,
reports that the workshop
will be held at \bat lime at
Trinity Church in Pomeroy.

I
I
,
I
I
Ill liT I CTN. WnH COUPOUIO $7.50ADIITIONILI'UICMW: I IIIII 1Jll WITH COUPON Ul$7 .501001110111 PUICHIS~UMIT 2 PKCS. WITH COUPON IND 1750 lgOITIONII PUICHISI
1
(llCIUIING THI$1TIM)
I
(IICLUDIIG THIS ITEM)
•
(IXCtUOINC THIS ITEM}
I
J
LIMIT ONE COUPON PEl fAMil V
I
LIMIT ONE C()UP'ON f'U: FAMILY
I
L'MIT ONE COUPON PER FAMil 'I
I
cwt~C.IIIIIM!....., 15-JIIUIY U.1171
I
CM'II ........,......., ll·IUIII'f ll. 1171
'
I
t~UIIT IS·LU~IIoll lllfllf 11. 1111
I
&amp;IUCT JI.WUWU ITill lliW TU.U

-·'----------------~--

. ·-- ------------·
M'f'UWH 11111 l lotal IUU

Country Club
Ice Cream

WI 111111\11 T~ ..otfT TO liMIT QUANTniES . NOMI

KK.D TO DIAUIIl .

"Dei.U4U44tlf.

$ 99
Each
lANDRY BEEF OR

59
5
=~B-Q 2
lb.
CHOPPED OR SHREPDED CREAMY

DRASTIC

ggc

u.s. GOV'T, GK••DE
BEEF CHUCK CENTER

KROGER INDtVIDUAtt YWRAPPED SLICES

. ... .~:~:~· $139
3 $1·

Blade Cut
Grapefruit2
•
....•01. $1
Chuck
Steak
lb.·
JUICe ,.... ... .
cans
.
U.S . GOV'T GRADED CHOICE , BEEF CHUCK

~!::~~

Boneless .$169 GradeA
Large Eggs Daz.
Boston
Roll~~U.S . GOV'T GRADED CHOICE,

Kroger ·
White Bread .....
Green Giant 3a·.
Sweet Peas ~~:

KROGER

ARM POT ROAST

·sgc
.·

MA.IT IASICIJ CIADI A.._lAIGIIOGS ... DOl:. w·

3 '.$

GREEN GIANT KITCHEN SLICED OR

Cut Green
Beans ...... ..

Bone In
Rib Roast.

SAVINGS
ON

KROGER WHITE OR PINK

16·01 .

cans

20·0Z.

2

~;~~-

9C

SLICED INTO CHOP$.:No CENTER
SLICES REMOVED FRESH

Sliced
$
t·lb.
Bacon .......
Pkg.

Reading

ON PROPOSED
IMPROVEME NT S TO
THE VILLAGE OF

MIDDLEPORT AND

ADJACENT MEIGS
COUNT'¥' AREA
EX ISTING SEWERAGE

FACILITIES
NOTICE 1S hereby gi\ten .
that the Village of Mid ·
· dl epor t. Oh io, pursuant to the
r equire m ent s of th e Ohio
En\l lro n men t al
Prote ction
Ag en cy aild the Un ited Sta tes
Protecti on
Emiron men tal
Agen cy, will hold a PUB-LI C

19

Gen enU i y d isc u ss t h e
con ten t s ot th e dra ft ot m e
Emlronment31 Assessm en t
ar'ld Financ i a l lntorm 8 tlon
per tai ning to th e proposed
Improvements to the existing
wastewater
treat men t
l &lt;'tgoons
and
combi ned
sewerag e· $ys t em In th o
Mlddl e porf .Meig -s Count y
Planning Area .
- Obtain commen ts and
advi ce from 1!11 conce rn ed
citize n s on t h e p ropo sed
lmprovem en t s In r~terence to
their t easi.bl llty , cost, and
Im pact on the com munity and
t he env iro nm ent In general.
...... General ly provide for
&amp;nd en co urage publ ic p ar ·
ticip&amp; lion in t he p la nning of
public f acilities .
- M ee t t he requ ir ements of
th e United Stl! fes Env iron ·
menta l Protection Ag en t: v
(Se c tions 3 5. '9:~5 - 7 and ·8 of
Part 35, and Sectio n 6.53 of
Subpart E of Part 6, Chapter
1, T itle 40, USEPA Rules and
Regulation s) .
Draft
c op ies
of
th e
Facilit ies P!en. wh i ch in ·
el ud es the propo se d i m ·

E nv iron ·

49c

Mixed ·
-Fryer Parts . lb.
. (

·J

Serve 'N'
Save Weiners ~~~:

KROGEII'

Krusty
Rolls ....
KEEBLER

1,

3tc

3

2 $209
sgc ~~~g~~s 4~k;:$1

1;.••. $1

- Pktlo.

Zesta
Saltines ...~:~·:·

Fried
Chicken

~~b~.

FROZEN

....

GINO'S
·

on our faculties exceeds the

nattonai average, We have
cumplete accreolltation and
approval from the same ac·
· crediting •=elations that
rate white schools.
"Remedial programs are
long-established
requirements at · blnck
colleges, "and they are
effective .
"We can take a youngster
with
s ub -standard
preparation a nd, in four
years, prepare hlrlt lor
admission to the best
gradUBte professional schoo ls

anywhere.''
Among the UNCF member
schools are some of the oldest
colleges lor bla cks in
America , Wilberforce was
founded in Ohio In 1856. Other
well,known
and
long.
eotabllshed UNCF sc hool s
include Fisk University in
Nashville, Tuskegee in
Alabama, XBvier in New
Orleans, Atlanta University
and Morehouse.
An honoc progrum will be
established at each member·
school not now having one, In
addltloo, each school wiU set
up honor societies in all
major fields and bring to
campus a college-wide honor
society.

It costs $100
to hear Grace
PRINCETON, N. J . (UPI )
- Princess Grace of Monaco
will deliver a poetry reading
at Princeton University's
McCarter Theater In two
months. Tic kets for the
benefit affair wiU sell lor $100
apiece.
At the March 6 ' per·
formance, the former movie
star Grace Kelley, along with
the Royal Shakespeare
Festival' s Ri chard Pasco,
will give a series of readings,
titled "Birds, Beasts and
Flowers," lhe theater said
Friday.

NOW OPEN
KROGER HEAT 'N' SERVE FROZEN

Cont i~ued from pogc 6
graduating from the black
private &lt;'O IIeges go on to
graduate schools, Including
top ones In the nation .
"Our colleges right now are
Htrong," Cook su.id.
"The percentage of Ph.D.'s

OF MASON
PHONE 773-5536

..

GILLmE

guys ... gals! Try

Rus.set
ng Potatoes

GOOD NEWSI
DISPOSABLE RAZORS

59

(3 Disposable Twin Blade

Razors

PUBLIC HEARING

Jen . 18, 25, Feb .

HOLLY FARMS. U.S.D.A. INSPECTED

Quarter
$139
Pork Loin ... lb.

(2·L•. PKG. $2.37) SERVE 'N' SAVE

years .

Fred L . Hoffman. Mayor
Vlll ege of Middleport , Oh lo

69c
Middleport, 0.

One recent unulysls reveals

that th e Adrn fnistr atlo n's
government contml prnpt!Sitl
will cost cons ume'" $48
billion more than the
deregulation, over the next 13

menta l Assessment, and
financia l information wi l l be
evallable for public ln .
spe c tion from February 1,
1978 until Fe bruery 15. 1978,
Monday through F _ridey. be tw een the hours of 8 o clock
A .M . and 4o'clock P .M . at the
Mayor 's office, 237 Race
Str eet. Middleport , Ohio .

Whole
Smoked Picnics

106 N. 2nd Ave.

and gas prices will still climb
bul supply shortages will also
grow.

NOTICE OF

prove m en1S, th e

The price of t he

s upplies. Kccp controls on

237 RACE STREET

CHOICE

7" INCH CUT

INGELS FURNITURE

nccess~ry .

Th e pu r po se o r th is hear ing

USDA

Per P~ekl ·

••

our sty llttt specilllte In
perm's 1nd hair cuh .

Tuesdav thru Saturday

· Fresh
Broccoli .lunch

For both men and women .
Debbie Powell, Dian•

Lewis,
Dorothy
Winebrenner.

a'tg.C.

Tuttday NIO~I. Spacial Mill's Night far
Cuts and Parms. Ask fvr Diana.

TIJ Our Heat Perms '25.00

::~:. 3~69c

Phano m-:ltl2 for appolni mont.

DOROTHY'S BEAUTY SAJ.ON
'rd Sf.

~

Nel10n'1 Rag. 79$ each

••

gus

two basic su bstitut es foreign liquilied natural gas
and·synthetic gas - costs 2, 3,
or 4 times more than the
current co•1 of derc~ulated
intrastBte naturnl gas.
So the situation facing the
Congress and the country
boils down to this. Deregulate
natural gus and its price will
go up but so will domestic

IS IO :

Whole
Bar·B-Q Chicken

use

caMot easily convert to other
fuels when shortages occur.
s ubstitutes
become

AT 7:00, P .M .

Drlicot111m
Hot FooH l••ilo~lollll·l PM

com rner clu l

businesses that

IN THE COUNCIL
CHAMBERS AT
CITY HALL ,

ln!l~ lo Storts With

NOW IN PROGRESS

smaller

H EA RIN G on
FEBRUARY2l , 1978

. Stuu:a/4

PHONE 773-5536

Prices Good thru Jan . 22, .1978
While Quanflllos Liost
Quonllly Righn Reserved

Limit 2 Please

•

All FLAVORS

OF MASON

and dwindling supply that has
caused the conswners' price
to skyrocket.
Eighty percent of the
consumers' natural KBS
prices is due to the cost or
transPOrting the gas from
wellhead to market. Since the
cost of any pipeline is fixed,
the lower the amount of gas transported by the pipeline,
the higher the transportation
cost to the cunswner. As the
domestic gas · supplies
decrease, the $40 billion cust
of the natural gas pipeline
systen1 is divided among
fewer and fewer customers.
Thus, each one pays a hiKh•r
price.
Since homeowners and

Roll

COP'YIIIGHJ ltrt- fHl 'IIOGit CO . triMS AND P•ICIS
OOODSUMCIAY JAMUAIJ U THitU 'ATUIID.._l JANUAIY
11 . I~ IN

GINO'S

Miller

·lb.

32-oz.
1 Jar
1

MUlCT TtiPNCIIlUTift I *II. TUU

By Clarence

99

2

I

Gal.
Ctn.

fl

year by the Electric lnsurance Co. simply because
of his age and the fact he lives
in East Boston. He hail no
accident record at the time ul
For the past twenty years,
the increase.
Irma Carroll, of Raleigh, because of government
N. C., told the subcommittee regulatloo, the demana lor
that Allstate Insurance Co., . natural gas has sk)'I'Qcketed.
tried to charge her $339.50 a Today nearly one third of aU
year for Insurance that had our energy Is provided ily
been $189 with another natural gas.
But last winter the
cumpany only because she
r
egulated
natural gas prices
had been widowed. She got
up
with us. More than
caught
the rate reduced.. lo $182.40
a
million
workers
were laid
alter complaining to the state
off; more than $600 million In
insurance commission.
Four 1ervlcemen and wages were lost, Ransom
women testllled thai lbey prices were paid for foreign
· were charged extra for car substitutes to keeP. homes
Insurance because they are In heated.
Natural gas deregulation
lhe mlll\lry.
has
been one of the hardest
In addition, homeownen~
fought
provisions of the
&amp;nd businessmen from
energy
bill. The issue of
Cleveland, New York and
whether
to remove, 'modify,
Chicago testified that in·
surance companies are or keep government controls
raising rates excessively or on natural gas prices has
canceling insurance because deadlocked a joint Houseof the neighborhoods their Senate cunference committee
property is sit uated in, lor months. Wh en the
cOngress returns to session
regardle~s of the condition of
month, conferees will try
this
the home or business.
again to reach an agreement.
The
natural
gas
deregulation Issue can be
broken down into three key
facets : prices, quantity or
supply and the supplier.
Since 19:-.4, natural gas sold
in the interstate market has
been regulated by the
Federal Power Commission.
The Brookings Institute, a
Washington hased research
organization, has noted that
government regulated prices
discourage production and
disguise shortages or natural
gas. It is this regulated price

Gunnoe's
"
Country Sausage

NOW OPEN

Pennanente diet?

our advertising message will get a long
distance con.nection when you place an
ad in the newspaper! You'll communicate to
our entire readership ... at a surprisingly low
cost. Get bigger sales going for you .. ,. call!

country told Congress diiiCI'lminate agaln.!t them lbalq" - the pracllce ol
Tuesday that insuranee . becau.se of their sex or where ..ttlq ratet baoed .. factors
· beyond coalnll of lbe policy·
.
companies, big and llll&amp;U, they live.
A Los Angeles County of· holder- Hid Coocms muot
flclal called It 'the consumer recoaalder ill 1M5 esemptlou
crlals of the century, and the. . of the laauranoe buluotry
from federal anUirusl laws.
publle Is mad ."
Sea. Howard Mebenbaum,
"In pursuit of the ideal
many property
policyholder,
J).()bfo, oJM,111og two days of
and
casualty
Insurance
hearings on "insuraoce redcompanies appear to be

.

.

CHOICES

992-2156

7-Tbl Dilly Sentinel, Mlddleport.Pomeroy, 0., Wedmeday, Jan. 11, 19'78

•"!

l:.rase pencil marks on cloth

r---ANAL~EARANCE of'SM.E--.., . ,..---™---~-N-K_s_P_R_I_N_G___.. ::·~::i~rddfE~v:.~:~
I
I

..
'

'·

�a- Tbe DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., WednesdaY, Jan. 18, 1978

Let The Want Ads· Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES
l5WordaotUnder

c...

Idly
2dlys

Ull

3.00

u~
u~

mtmOr')'.

Clrd d Thanks and

Obituary : a c-enu per word, 13.00
rJl!ninuam. cash In advtnee.
MobUe Home ales and Yard .u.&amp;es
art ~pled only with euh wllh
or"der. 25 cent charge for ads CalrT)'•
inll: Box Nwnber In Care olThe Sen-

Unet

•

The Publilher rnrrves the ri&amp;hl
Wedit or reiect any11cb deemed objecUooal. The Publilhfr wiU nol be

TWO STC1RY 3 bedroom frame INCOME TAX S9rYiCe$ . Federal
and Slate lowes Wando Eblin.
house. F.A.. furnace , storm win·
'W?-2272.
dowa, fireplace . In Middleport.
Phone992-3457 or 9fn. S8b)' .
THE RACINE Volunteer Fire
Deportment will ~oponsor o gun
shoot e.,.er)' Saturday ot6 pm ot
the ir buildjng in Bo$hon ... Fa~ tory choke guns onlt:_ __ _
RESPONSIBLE OLDER lady to live
in and core for aged lady in THE RACI NE Gun Club Gun Shoot
every Sunday after noon . Fac ·
Rutland . Lig ht houuwork. , ond
cooking, no loundty . More for •tory choke guns only . Assorted
meets .
home than wages . Coli
742-2078.
INCOME lAX Serv•ces . Federal
end State To)l(elo . Wallace
WANTED : AUTO mechan ic for GM
Russ ell , Bradbury . 992-7226
deolenhip. Wrife: Box 743.
Pomeroy , OH •5769"

---

--

I"CCIPPO&amp;lble for mote \han one incor·
rect lnstrdon.
Phone 1192-2:156

GROW EARTHWOfi'MS for profit
Free Ooto - WORM WORLD.
1810 S. .Jotephine, Den,..er , Col·
orodo 80210 o' coli Mr . James
coll.ct (303) 778· 10'16.
·
~ --=--·-·--

COAL, li"mest,o ne, o'nd calcium
chloride ond cclcium brine for
du$t control and ~oPecio l mb:in51
salt for lormqn, hcelsior Salt
Work1, Moin StrHI, Pomero~ .
_2hio o~hone !!2_:_3891 ._ _
CAMPER. $600. Also, horse
tra iler. $450. Phone {614) 698·

WILL CARE lor the elderly in our
-~ p~~· '1&lt;12· 73:,:1:.
4 ·:.._,_
MOBILE HOME repairs. 992-5858.
PIANQ TUNlNC.··lone Daniels . 13
years of serv~ce . New phone
number , 992-258 I, _ __

3290,:·c.,.,.-,-:-:=--:--,-ECONOMV TRACTOR with oil ottoc hmentl , Like new , ask ing
$2250. Phono (614) 698·3290.

SGz%~ =-~-

~

-

-

--

_
~

--r---

We Are Now
Taking New
Customers For

DEALER AUCTION Sale . Public
welcome. Thu rs, 11 om . New CASH paid for oil makes ond
merchandise sold in qu ant ity ot
models of· mobile homes.
Ohio River Auction . Meigs
Phone oreo code 614 · 4 23 - ~531 .
Plaza , Middlepor t, Oh io .
Regular auction Fri. 7 pm . New TIMBER . Pome ro y Fores t Products . Top price for stand ing
merchandi se a s well os some
so....;timber . Call 992-5965 or
used furniture schedu led in.'
Kent Hanby . 1--446·8570.
COI NS, CURRENCY . t o~~ n s , old
pocket watches and choin s,
W. Carsey, Mgr.
Monday
silver and gold". We need 1%4
Phone99?·2181
.
For Thursday, Jan. 19, 1978
Noon on Saturday
and older silver coins , Buy, sell ,
or trade' Coli Roger Womsley , ATTENTION MARE Owners.
"AQHA stud serv1ce. Introducing
742-2331.
_ __
to Southern Ohio , Cortoko , sor·
4P.M.
OLD FURNITURE . ice boKes . brass · re ll son of Otoe . Bre&amp;d for cot·
the day before publication
bed • . ''o" bed• , "'' ·· ,omple••
or ..conformation end disposi·
Bernl
households . Wrrte M. D. M•ller,
tion. Phone 698-8241 evenings
Swodly
At. 4, Pomero y, Ohio or call
4P.M.
or write lot. breeding contract .
992 -7760.
Friday afternoon
Belle Echo Quarter Horses ,
402:15 SR 692 . Pomeroy . Ohio
NO ITEM TOO Lorge or too small.
45769.
Will buy 1 piece or comp lete
household . New , used, or anti. WILL BABYSIT IN my home , any
que s. Martin's Furniture. 20 N.
age. Pho ne 992·6180.
2nd St ., Middlepor t. Phone
Jao. 19, 1978
992-bJ70.
An inleresling pos sibility may CHIP ' WOOD . Poles ma x.
dev8lop for you thi s corning
diameter 10" on largest end , sa
year thai wlll open a second
pe r ton . Bundled slob, $6 per
c hannel of income . lt could
ton . delivered to Ohio Pollet
have lhe potenlialto equal yo ur
Co., Rt . 2, Pomero . 992·2689 .
presenl earning s .
We have enlarged our
CASH FOR Junk Con . Frye's Truck
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 :Jao.
and Auto Wrecker Service . · service department and
19) This is a good day to talk
will service Hotpolnt and
Phone 742 ·2081 or Penm:oil
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
lhings out with co- work ers rn
Early Sunday Mixed
Rutland 742·9575.
other brands .
order to resolv e mi s underJan. 8, 1978
standings . Belter communica- GOOD USED tr acto r with
S1andings
hydraul ic. 3 pl. hitch. 742·3074 .
ti o n can be established . Having
Teim
trouble
selecting
a
career?
SIL
VER DOLLARS &amp; toi ns. Will pay
R.C. Bottling Co.
20
Send lor your t:o py of Astra3 times worth and up. Cal l
Jack's Dairy Bar
16
_Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
742-2316.
Tom's Carry Out
1.4 Graph Lefler by mailing 50
1e i l. Phone 992-2181
Glbb's Grocery
10 ce nts lor epc h and a tong , self- WILL PAY lop dollar for used shot
Cline's Construction
B addressed , stamped enve lope
guns . rifles , pistols. swords.
Town Kiln
2 to As tro-Graph, P.O . Box 489,
daggers , go· ko rts , mini bikes,
Radio City Station, N.Y. 10019.
. High Men;s Game - .John
Gro11ely"s or who! hove you .
Tyree ~23, Larry Dugan 214.
Be su re 10 s pecify yo ur birth , Open 12.7 pm. Fife's, 3rd St. ,
LARGE ROUND Bole feeder~
si gn ·.
Women's High Game Rt . 7, Middleport , neKI to
mode of sq uar e tu'!ing. $7b .
Mary Doss . Pearl Russell
AQUARIUS IJau. 20-Feb, 191
Speedqueen
Loundromo I .
Vermeer- la rge round baler ,
17~. MaXine Dugan 173.
A rec reat iOf1al bre_a k today will
992·7494 .
$250. Discount until Feb. 15 ,
Men's High Series - Larry
"s e rve as a healthy release to
1978. Woodmoster cabinet
Dugan SSS , John Tyree 549. prevent tensions from building . USED PIANO. Priced r9J]sonobly .
wood heaters , thermostat. ash
Syracuse Presbyterian Church.
Women' s H'igh Series ._ Set so me time aside lor a fun
pail , hinged top lor cook ing,
Phone q92-2310.
f;Aa)l.ine Dugan 493, Helen
activity .
brick-lined . $242. Coolmoster
Phelps 475 .
.•
PISCES !Feb. 20-March 201
same as above but Shok.er
Team High Game - Jack's
Several
mailers you 've been
grote for coo l. $264 . Blower lor
Dairy Bar 704.
wanting to get otl your back
either, $48. Merril l Chase. (614}
~ea m High Series - Ja ck's
can
be
fina
li
zed
today
.
You
·u
69!3·3021.
IF
VOU
hove
o
service
to
offer,
Dairy Bar 2088.
know whic h ones, and what's
wont to buy or se ll something . HAV FOR sole . Round boles. PH .
neede d to be done .
oe looking for work . . . or
843·2524.
whatever ... you 'll get resu lts
ARIES !March 21-Aprll 191
Early Sunday Mixed
fo ster with o Sentin el Wont Ad . HAY FOR sole, $55 per ton . Corn
There isn't much that" wil l esJan. 1, 1978
for sole , $2 per bu . Coli after 5
Coll992-2156
cape your notice today . You' re
Standings
pm , 985 -4131 or98S&lt;J537.
c urio us and a quick s tud y. and
Team
eager to either gain or impart
Tom's· Carry Out
14
1977 CHEVV STEPSIOE pickup. 350
R.C. Bottling Co,
12 knowledg e .
cu ., 4 bbl. Sharp $5 ,0tXI . Call
Jack's Dairy Bar
8 TAURUS (April 20-Ma~ 201
'~&lt;~2 · 2912 .
Cline's Construction
8 Keep ybur wit s about you. today HOOF HOLLOW Horses . Buy , sell
trade
or
trai11
.
New
ond
used
FIREWOOD
FOR ' sole. Phone
Glbb's Grocery
4 in matters financi al or material .
saddles. Ruth Reeves , Albany .
74~&lt;1131 .
Town Kiln
2 You stmuld be ab le to im~
(614) 698-3290 .
High Men's Game - Ed
WilL PAY top dollar for used shot
provise something advantaVoss 213, Ed Voss 205.
MEIGS COUNTY Humane Society ,
guns, rilles , pistols , swords.
geous .
Women's High Game Corelin e and odopt ion Ser..,ke.
daggers , go-kane , mini bikes .
GEMINI (May 21-June 201
Marlene
Wilson
192,
992-7680. 742-3162 . 992-5427.
Grovely "s or 'f'"hot hove you .
Others will view you wllh
Charlotte Willford 180.
Open . 12-7 prn . Fife's' 3rd St.,
amazement today regarding AKC REGISTERED pek ingese pup·
Men's High Ser les - Ed
R•. . 7. MiddlE!"port , new t to
your abilities ro juggle several
pies . Phone (304) 882·2683 .
Voss 597 ,• Larry Dugan 545 .
Speedqueen
Laundrom at .
projects and s till do a good job
Women's High Ser ies RISING STAR Kennel. Boarding.
992-7494.
with e ach one .
Marlene Wilson 517, Mary
Indoor and outdoor runs.
CANCER (June 21-July 221
Voss 487.
Grooming o11 breeds .· Clean 8 N TRACTOR . New tires and
rims . Excellent m"echo nicol con ·
Keep a _low profile today in
sani ta ry facilities. Cheshire .
Team High Game - R. C.
doing things with "your peer
dition . Phone 992 .720 1.
Bottling Co. 700.
Phon&amp; (614) 367 ·0292 .
gro up. Let someone else in
Team High Series- Tom's
NEW KENMORE w9sher and
your c rowd be the grandstan- AKC DOBERMAN Pincher pup·
Carry Out 2022 .
·
dryer. G~een . l '/ 1 year old ,
pies. 8 weeks old, red &amp; rust .
der .
green side by side ref rigerator .
Pedigreed
with
Chornpion
LEO I July 2:J..Aug. 22) Today
Misc. furniture . Call (6 14 )
Also
,
certified
health
Bloodlirts.
you wilt feel more at ease with
667·3330,
after 6 or 985 · 3~88 .
cer tificate . $150 firm , your
people Who don'! lake the mmalo
or
female
.
choice
HAY
FOR
sole.
(61 ~) 696·1288.
selves or life too seriou s ly .
The Alnuumc
614·797-4500 .
Other types could tu rn you oft.
SNOWBLAOE FOR Gravely Trac·
By
Untied
Press
tor , 992·71 -90.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221 FUll-BLOODED cocker puppy .
United Presslnlernalionai
992-6293 .
Great personal salisfac.li on will
Today is Wednesday, Jan.
be gained today from siluations
where you use ·your mental
18, the 18th day of 1978 with
prowess to meet and overco me
347 to follow.
chal lenges.
.
1972 OLDS Delta 88. 4 dr .,
The moon is between its
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0et. %3) A-1
H.T.. P.S.. P.8 .. A.C., AM-FM
first quarter and full phase. Sometimes it isn't too smart to
radio . ·new Ures . Cor in exThe morning stars are
offer advice when it is n 't soliccellent condition. Will consider
ited . However, today if you
Mercury, Venus, Mars and
smaller cor as trade ln. Call
have suggestions that could
992-5786 O&lt; 'W2·2529.
Saturn.
he lp a friend , lay them on h im
The evening star is Jupiter.
1971
JEEPSTER COMANDO . V·6
SCORPIO (Oct. 2l·Nov. 22) In
Those born oo this date are
engine , 4·wheel drive, auto.
joint ventures today let your
trans .. new exhaust system.
under the sign of Capricorn.
cou nterpart do the hecivy lifting
Con be seen of Sears, 234 E.
and you do the brainwork . Your
American orator and
Main St .. Pomeroy , from 9 to 5
mastermlndihg should b~nefi t
statesman Daniel Webster
Plfl
·
eac h of you .
waa born Jan. 18,1782. AciAlrs
SAGITIARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
Cary Grant and DalU!y Kaye 21) Today you may have to
were born oo this date decide an issue where the
alternatives appear to be of STARCRAFT FALL Sole. Mini- RUGS. WALL Hangings and
Grant in 1904 and Kaye in
equal value . Slant your judgofgons, Nice for Christmas .
motors . 20' and 22'. TraVel
1913.
.
ment toward that which was
Trailers , 18' 5" $3 ,799, 25' 1""
Reosonoble. Coll992·2214 .
On this day in history:
previously successful.
$4
.B75.
Fold-down.
1976
FORD F-2.50 Cus tom . 17 .50 K
Bunkhouse
In 1943, Moscow said the u;.
( NEWSPA~E R ENTE RPRISE ASSN )
$1 ,700 up. We sell1ervice and
14 .00 ti res. wi nch. Only 14,000
month
Nazi
siege
of
qualil'p' . Open Sundays. Camp
mi. Headers . CB. Tope deck .
Leningrad, Russia, had been
Conley Starcroft Soles , Rt . 62,
Over $3.000 in e)l(tros. SeriOU$
N. of Pt . Pleasant.
calls only after 12 noon :
lifted.
696-1072. $6.800.
In 1966, Indira Gandhi,
daughter of the late Indian DROWNING
B &amp; S MOBILE HOMES , Pt. Pleo·
Prime Minister Nehru, was
&gt;onl . W. Va . bo&gt;ido He&lt;k '&gt;.
CLEVELAND ( tJPI)
1973 Broodmore 14 x 64 2
named aa the new premier of June· Hufford, 51, Cleveland,
3 AND .. RM. furnished and un - bedroom
India.
apparently d-rowned in a
furnished opts. Phone 992 ' 1973 Dorion 14 X 60 2 bed room
5434
In 1968, the United Stales bathtub at an East Side
·
1972 Victorian 14 x 67 3 bedroom.
·
COUNTRY
MOBILE Home P:ork.
2 bolh
.
and Russia agreed oo a draft "halfway house
. "for released
Roule
33,
norlh
of
Pomeroy
.
1972
Coventry
)2
K 65 "J bedroom
of a nuclear nonproliferation Ha Wthornden
Hospital 1 Larg' lots . Call992-7479.
1969 Statesman 12 1 K 60 2
treaty.
mental patients, according to
THREE BEDROOM trailer for rent . ~b":e':':dc~o~9::_:
m:.,.
In 1976, Lebanon Prime police Lt. Charles Howard,
Not 011er 2 children allowed . No BURROUGHS SEN SI-MA TIC ocMinister Camille Chamoun wbo said no one was in charge
petS. One trailer lot for reAt .
counting mochi"ne . Has been
resigned aa fighting between of the house's 10 occupants' ·· - '7-'4:.
2·::..3,.:
12:=2:.,.---:e-c--c-e--~. under service contract and in
Moslems and Christians carewben the body was fowtd
2 BEDROOM 12~~:60 Mobile Home. good condition. Con be seen ot
The Doily Sentinel. \111 'Court
intensified in Beirut.
early Monday .
in Syracuse . Co mletely furnished. storage bldg. Will rent to :::~S;::'-:=·P=o~m:'":::'0:'!'c.·~
O:::Hc:..
construction worker -or co uple ·
wit h child . 1150 per month . Call
992-2897 .
SOFTENER?
COUNTRY FOUR bedroom home .
with garage n&amp;ar Tuppers Let Pomeroy Landmark
For Accounting, Secretarial Science, and
Plains. Nice. $100 plus u.til ities. .soften &amp; condition yqur'
llusiness Administration.
Cal l {6U) 667 ·3330, after 6 or
water with Co-op Water
Day and Night (:lasses still open.
985 - ~988 .
.
·.Ofloner, · Model UC• SV~.
• Financial Aid Programs
TRAILER SPACE FOR rent . Coun try . 4 miles from town. Rt. 7 .N. Now Only
• Placement Assistance
Phone 61.4-247-2911 .

FUEL OIL AND
GAS SERVICE

. NOTICE

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

th=y

CALL US
. Pomeroy Landmark

-~-----.-

----- ---- -FOR SA.Lf

. .

SAW MILL SlABS

·POMEROY
FOREST PRODUCTS
992-5965

Bailey Ruri Road
, Pomeroy, 0.

As'Ro ·GRAPH

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

BOWLING

Pomeroy Landmark

SMITH .NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

MEIGS PLW

WOOD AND WOOL FIBER
"SINCE 1907
12-11-1 mo.

•Middleport, Ollio
11 -9-lfc

--.

....
,...

FREE ESTIMATES

CHEMICAlS
We Strip Paint.

Varnishes ~

fiftllltitl Aaiioblt
llowolnll Walb Uttics

etc.
.
Wood-Metal-Plastin
Antiques &amp; Modern
Upholstering Service
Custom - Professional
Refinishing . Repairing .
Antiques Bought &amp; Sold
Dick Seyler
Phone 992-2798
· 100 Kerr St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

510111

IE,LACliiENT

WINDOWS
Willi NUll
SIDING-SOFFin
GUTIEISMIIIIGS

lARRY lAVENDER
$JfKIIII, Ohia

,h.t!HH3

JOHN IE'S..B.EAUTY
SALON

St11m Extraction

Carpet &amp;Uphlllstery
Phone Mike Y011nr

At

Corner Union Ave.
and St. Rt.
Ponieray. Ohio
···~••
Change of
I ro..~··· Number

992-2206 or 992-7630

992-7608
Closed Jan. 10
Ti118tlt, 1971

'11lt Urijini!M
Not Tilt lmiU!M

OHIO
HEAnNG SERVICE ,
'
REPAIR &amp; SERVICE,:
PHONE
742-2570

•.

-,..."""-,=--

rI CLASSES NOW FORMING
•Plus GED Training

_

I
1
I

-----·

GAWPOUS .BUSINESS COU£GE
,
"The Jobs People
·I

.____
I

446-4367

I

1'

,.

--- -:=

NEED A WATER

•279.95

Let us test your water F.ree

Pomeroy Lindmark
1973 VW SUPER Beetlo . Runs
good . Will trade for huck of
equal value. 992 -2292.

Jack w. C.ney, Mgr.
P-992-2111

Rf ALTOII

VIRGIL li. TEAFORD, SR .
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 99'2-3325 ·
BUSINESS CORNER - On
Route
124.
BusineSs
building with 3 bedroom, 2
bath home. Has a 2 car
garage. All for $35,000.
NEW LISTING - 2 year
old 3
bedroom,
full
basement home. Has 2
baths, nice dining room,
electric baseboard heat.
carport with utility and 2
acres . $36,500.
RUTLAND - 4 bedrooms,
bath. fireplace. all city
utilit ies, 2 car carport and
one-tt'lird acre lot . $14,000.
SYRACUSE - We have 4
houses to sell here: This 9
room brick has city water,
natural gas, electric and
extra lot for )ust $5,500.
POMEROY
2•
apartments for $9,600. It
has a 1 bedroom apartment
and bath up. plus a studio
down now rented. You
better see this one .
ROUTE 33 - 3 bedroom
block home. Bath, natural
gas furnace , city, and 1
acre . $20,000 .
CHECK
WITH
US
·BEFORE YOU BUY. WE
HAVE
SOME
NICE
PROPERTIES FOR YOU
TO COMPARE. . .
c. Bruce Teaford
Sue P. Murphy
Helen L. Teaford
R"e ctltor Associate's

CARTER
PWMBING &amp;
HEAnNG INC.

. ..P...OME
NEW LIST!
- - Oneol
the nicest homes avall.!ble,
near Middleport, 3 Bdrms., ·
2 baths, large family room
with WBFP, s~llt entry
with nice beamed ceiling &amp;
wall designs. 2 car garage,
1 acre , many other
features, never lived in for
$45,000.00.
WOOD
BURNING
Fireplace, S year old ranch
type home, 3 Bdrms .,
modern k ltchen . 2 car
garage, approx. 1 acre.
carpeting &amp;
modern.
$31 ,900.00.
MODERN RANCH 2
years old , 3 Bdrms, ,
attached garage, good
subdivision, really nice ,
$25,900 .00.
TWO STORY- Well kept,
formal dining, 3 Bdrms.,
, large bath, large utility,
garage, carp~tlng . Only
$19,500.00.
S13,900.oo - Will buy this
nice two story home, 3
Bdrms., 1'12 baths, In good
shape, ,eady to move Into.
S12,500.oo - Will buy this
beautiful older home In
Pomeroy ,
original
woodwork, must be seen.
IN THE COUNTRY- l lf&gt;
story, 3 Bdrms., storage
buildings,
remodeling
started. ONLY $6.900.00.
CALL
FOR
MORE
INFORMATION, PHOTO
LISTING HELPS SELL
PROPERTY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK, KATHY &amp; LEONA
CLELAND
ASSOCIATES
992-2259, 992-4191,992-2541

Shop
1163-lnd Ave., Gallipolis
«6·783:J..-406-1833

Blown Insulation
teilillose Fiber

PULLINS EXCAVATING . Complete
Service , Phone 9&lt;12-2478.
NEIGLER"S FOR building housss ,
bathrooms, Oll kinds of repdir
work and what h.ove you . Guy
Neigler, Racine , Ohio. Coil
94~- 2508 eyenings.
NJClNSKY ELECTRIC Ser.,.ice.
Rutla,nd , Ohio . 742-3092
MAGGlES UPHOLSTERY . Refinish.
reupholster.,. ,
rebulldin.g .
Beautiful selection of materiel
and vinyls . Free estimate . Tel.
742· 2852. Location : Solem
Cenler.

HOMESITES for sole . 1 acre and
up . Middleport , nea r Rullond.
Call 992-7481 .
NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 baths,
all e!ec ., 1 acre , Middleport,
close to Rutland . Phone 9927481.

HOBSTETfER
REALTY
MAIN

Tri-State UpholStery

SALES AND S.E RVICE
11 -9-lfc

GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr ..
Broker
1071/t Sycamore St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
PHONE 992-4333
OHice Ho.u rs: 9 A.M. to,,
P.M.
Close Thu·r sdays an;c.
Saturdays at noon.
NEW LISTING 3
·bedroom,,.,, baths, dining
area, kitchen has built-In
oven and range, one car
garage, family room. New
lolal electrlc home on an
acre lot. $41,000.00. Localed
on the Crow Sub-division.
near Five Points.
NEW LISTING - 2 year
old Fuqua double wide
mobile home, 24'xS6' with
porch In excellent condition
Including all furniture &amp;
appliances. l~cate~ on
corner lot, 100'x200' lti .the
Arbaugh addition, Tuppers
Plains, Ohio. known as the
Rolph Brooks property.
This Is a good buy al
S21 ,000.00.
NEW LISTING
3
bedroom, kitchen wllh
dining area, living room,
bath with shower, full
basement with garage,
located on two acres of land
lust , outside the limits of
TuPP,ers Plains, Ohio, on
roule 7. Priced to go fast at
$30,000,
We have. need of listings,
ali types, homes, . land,
commercial, etc.
Cheryl Lemley
· Asoociate
Home PhOne 742-2003 HIHon Wolfe, Sr.
Asooclate
Homo P...,._ 949-2519

''
I

Blown Into Walls
and Attics

-Save Fuel &amp; ~ey- .

lAVENDER
CONSTRUCTION
Syracuse, Ohio
Free Estimates
Phone 992-3993
1-18-1 mo.

BRADFORD, Auctioneer. Complete Service. Phone 949-2487
or 94~-2000 . Recine. Ohio. Crift
Bradford.
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR SwF.:epers , toaster!- , ironS, all
small appliances . Lawn mower ,
ne)l(t to Stole Highway Gar(lge
on Route 7. Phone {61•) 9853825.

SEWING MACHINE Repairs , service. oll. mokes. 992-2284 . The
Fabr ic Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Soles and
Service. We sharpen Scissors .
EXCAVATING. dozer, loader and
backhoe work ; dump trucks
and lo-boys for hire: will haul
fill dirt, to soil, limestone and
grovel. Coli Bob or Roger Jeffers , day phone 992-"7089, night
phone 992-3525 or 992- 5232.
EXCAVATING. dozer , backhoe
and ditcher. Charles R. Hotfield . Back Hpe Service,
Rutland , Ohio. Phone 7•2-2008.
WILL do roofinQ , conslruction,
plumbing ond heating. No job
too large or too small. Phone
742-2348 .
HOWERY AND MARTIN . Ex·
c.ovoting , septic sy1tems,
dozer , backhoe, dump truck,
. limestone. gra..,el, blacktop
paving, At . 143. Phone 1 (614) .
698-7331.

:

1:

ACROSS
3 Outer coat
4 Scotch pike
I North
Dakota
5 Former
6 Julia Ward city
6 Attacked
7 Loathe
8 One of the
11 Strange
DiMaggios
12 Ancient
Greek coins 9 Wing : Lat.
13 Comic illlok 10 Sn is its
character
symbol
15 Edwardian 14 Network
17 Don Vito
nickname
Corleone
16 Be over·
abundant
19 Transmitted
17 Vamoose!
20 "I - Men"
18 Upanishad -21 Sandarac
22 Strauss
tree
22 Hacienda
. opera
25 Approach
room
26 Dwelling
23 Colonel
27 DeviHish
Rudolf28 Oak~

t

,

fREE ESTIMATES

Storm
Windows &amp; Doors
Replacement
Windows
Atumin'um
Siding-Soffitt
Gutters-Awnings

,'
•'

I

l

LARRY lAVENDER
Syracuse, Ohio
Ph. 992-3993

The Better Business Bl.lreau
and GaraqeOwners Association
.--~?...., recommend I¥)U hiqhl4,asdoes
Yes . .
POA!

BATHROOMS AND Kitchens. :;
remodeled . ceramic tile , plum·.. '
bing, cOrpentry , and general '
maintenance. 13 years ew• perience, 992-3685.

Wednesday , Jan . 18

Yesterday's Answer
24 Burden
35 Demol.27 Napoleonic
ish : var .
victory
38 Heavy
site: 1800
blow
29 Indonesian :r7 Dandy
island
38 A Gershwfn
33 Salt
39 Disease of
tree
'sheep
34 Egyptian
40 Partner of
deity
hoose
0

cluster
cake

C.ildy Stripe
Rubber Baok
RegulorSU5
5aVOS•4.88 Sq. Yd.

1\10, :t I)ON ''r'

R"t. S6.95-not install~

iiE~r~o:llselection
~s~o,f carpet
In stock.
Ill on salt.

1

..••
..•

wltJ1 padding, no
to pay,
--------

•
•

C.ll742-2211
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

..

LooOP_,.He •LOOP
IIGAIN!

'.,

••

~

I

RUTLAND

•

..
•
,.'.
,,•'..

. ...
. . ..
...,_
_...•..

...
I.

11~~:=::::::::::::::::::-:;,-T-- (St6't)I BHOJLD
• ·50 IZON'B C7ETTING8EIZIOU:7 ABOUT l'lii&lt;DIE
.•. AND $HE 1:7 WOR.fci'Et:'

.

ONLY HAVE &amp;UCtt
PIWe&gt;LEM&amp; f

. :Ae&gt;GUTIT
I
.

MON., TUES., WED.
8100 TIL 5100 .

DAILY CRYPTO(}UOTE- Here'• how to work It :
A X V D I. B A A •X R
Is LONGFELLOW

CRVPTUQUOTES

cu

PBM

.B OF

OBF

I RL

CL

JGF

HCSR

PBMY

BFR

H G"U L,

BFIP

E R

RFLAMOCGOK

EGYLBF

BARNEY

........

~

I THINK THE POWERS
OF DARKNESS ARE

':''

'I

RUTLAND FURNITURE

,,••
....'
.,
,,
•

·•-ll• ._...............
ARNOLD GRATE

•I•

Yesterday's Cryploquote: IDS 'I'oNGuE IS lJKE A PIG'S
. fAIL, GOING ALL DAY LONG, AND NOTHING OONE .SPURGEON
(:0,t . 19'JH King Jo'ealure!l Sy ndiCMt ~. Jnt' .

• ~"'"

RUTLAND .

f

OUT TO GET ME ...

AJ8732

.7

+ KQ53

WEST

EAST

fell ) , the heart a ce and the
club ace. One way South
might try to make the con•
tract would be to duck the
first two rounds of clubs and

then win with the ace, hop-

• J 76

ing West had only three
clubs and the ace of dia·

+

mond.s.

Pass

.DOWN
I Young • ·--•·"
2 Medldnal b+--4-1-+plant

EYMJR

'

•

Pass

. One letter simply sl~nds for another. In this sample A is
used for the three l~' s , X fu"r th e two O's, ('tc. Si ngl C' lettC'rs.
apostrophes, the length aOd formil tin n of !he wnrds are ~11
hints. Each day the code le.tters are different .

o'

.94

NORTH

'" 2•

- - - - - - , 42 Goslin
of old
baseball
43 Chaplain
44 !loss

WAN Nil
~E! . yGu I&gt;O

••

Bad bid spawns top play

If West had this holding,
East would have no fast ·
entry for his . established
club suit, .a nd declarer
• 6
would scamper home with 10
• J 107
tricks .
• A42
Most players would try to
make the contract this way .
Vulnerable: both, Dealer:
They would, of course, fail.
North, Opening lead : Five of . But South knew Lhe bidding
clubs.
marked East with the dla·
mond ace .
Wesl North East
South
South won the third round
a
of clubs and ran six rounds
Pass
Pass
3 NT
3"
of spades, carefully watch·
Pass
Pass
Double Pass

.So Fait"
32 Falsehood ·
' 34 Nigerian
. tribesman
:r7 Ring
gladiator
41 Window
style

SAVE ON
CARPETING

'4.88 SQ. YD.

. Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

• 83
.IOH
• KQ5
+A 4 .
9862
• 965
.KQJ1083
SOUTH
.• AKQ1052

29 Incipient
30 Robert -or
Alan

••
•
••

BRIDGE

..,_..,.,....~.,.,.....,..,...

31 11 You-

12 and IS 11. widllt CorP.t
rubber beck.

THURSDAY , JANUARY 1t, 1t11
5 :4S-Farm Report 13; 5 :54)--PTL Club 13; 6 :CJO-PTL
Club 15.
C II . N
,
6 : 2.1-NewWorld 10; 6 : »-0&lt;I&lt;torson a 4; ews9;
'6 :.&amp;$-Mornlng Report 3; 6 :54)--Good Morning.
West Vlrg_lnla 13; 6 :5S-;'Chu&lt;k While Reporls 10;
News 13. .
CBS
7:1)()-Today 34,4, 15; Good Morning America 6.13;
News 8; Bullwln~le 101 7: 36-SchooiiH 10.
e , ro-&lt;:apt. KangaroO 8,10; Sesamo S1. 33; 8 :» 9:oo-Merv Griffin 3; Phil Donahue 4,13, 15; Edge of
Night 6; Family Allalr 81 Malch Game 10.
9:»-Emt&lt;gtncy ()no 6; Andy Grlffl1h 8; Family
Altair 10.
,
·
10:oo-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,15; T atlletales 8; Joker s Wild
10; Not For Women Only 13.
10: 30-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15 ; Andy Griffith 6 ;
Price Is Righi 8, 10; Rick Fouchoux 13.
11 :DO-Wheel of Forlune 3.4,15; Happy Days 6,13.
11:36-Knockout 3,15; Family Feud 6,13; Partridge
Family 4; Love of Life 8, 10; Sesame St . 20; Nova 33 .
11 :55-CBS News 8; Loving Free 10.
12:1)()-Newsconter 3; $20,000 Pyramid 13; News U . IO;
To Say The Leas1 15; Gambl1 8.
12 : 30-Ryan 's Hope 4,6, 13; Bob Braun 4; Gong Show
15: Search for Tomorrow 8, 10; Elec . Co. 33.
1 :oo-For Richer. For Poorer 31 All My Children 6,131
News 8; Young &amp; the RtsllfSS 101 No1 For Worn""
Only 15.
1 :»-Days o1 Our Lives 3.4.15; As The World Turns
8,10; 2:1l0-0ne Life to Live 6,13; 2: 3(}-Doctors
3,4, 15; Guiding Light 8.10.
.
3:1)()-Anolher World 3.4.15; • General Hospital 6, 13;
Llltas Yoga &amp; You 20.
3: 30-AII In The Family 8, 10; Antiques 20.
4 :oo-Mister Cartoon 31 Edge of Night 13; My Three
Sons..4; For Rlc:her, For Poorer 15; Merv Griffin 6 :
Gilligan's Is. B1 Sesame St . 20,33; Gomer Pyle,
USMC 10 .
.
4:36-Little R•scals 3,15; Gilligan 's Is . " Brody Bunch
8, 10; Ma'ry Tyler Moore 13.
5 :oo-Here Come The Brides 3; Star Trek 4i Gunsmoke
8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20.33; Hogan s
.Heroes 10; Emergency One 13; My Three Sons 15.
5 :30-News 6; Elec . Co. 20.33; Mary Tyler MOOI'e 10;
Hogan' s Heroes 15.
6 :oo-News ~.4,8,10,13 , 15 ; ABC News 6; Zoom 33,?0.
6 :30-NBC News 3,4, IS; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6 ; CBS News 8. 10; Over Easy 20.
7 : ~ross- WI1s 3,4; Liars Club 6; Gong Show 8 ;
Capitol Beat 33; News 10; To Tell the Truth 13; .
Gilligan's Is. 15; Hocking Valley Bluegrass 20 .
7:1.1-To Be Announced 33,
7:30-Hollywood Squares 3: Co lleg ~ Basketball 4i
SIOO,OOO Name That Tune 6; $25,000 Pyramid 8 ;.
MacNeil-Lehrer Repor t 20, 33; That's Hollywood 10;
Nashville on the Road 13; Marty Robbins' Spotlight
IL
·
8 :ro-&lt;:hlps 3,15; Welcome Back. Kotter 6,13 ; Wa11ons
8.10; Once Upon A Cla5Sic 20,33
8 :30-Fish 6,13 ; Wodehouse Playhouse 20; In Performance at Wolf Trap 33.
9 :~S tate of the Union Address 15; To Be Announced
20 .
9 : 30-Hollywood Sq uares
4; TreGsures of
Tutan.k hamun 33 .
lO :oo-Ciass o1 '65 3,4,1S; Redd Foxx 6.13; Barnaby
.Jones 8, 10; I, Claudius 33 ; News 20.
10:3(}-lock, Stock &amp; Barre.! 20; ILOO--News
3,4,6,8,10,13,15; Dick Cavett 20 ; Over Easy 33.
1i :3(}-Johnny 'Carson 3;4,15; Slarsky &amp;. Hutch 6:~3;
Movie ' 'KIIIdozer" 8; ABC News 33 ; Movie Of
Love and Desire:· 10.
12 :()()-Janakl 331 12 :4(}-Toma 6,13 ; 1
Tomorrow
3,4; 1 :50-News 13.
Movie Channel 4 s &amp; 9 P .M. - Nickelodeon IPGl
7 &amp; 11 P .M. - Rocky (PG )
C.bel Channel Flve 6 :30 P . M .~ Tesllmony Time
7:00 - Paul Gaudino Family Fitness
7:30 - Coach' s Corner
8:00 ~ Journal
9:00 - Cable Spotlight
10:00 - 700 Club.

:ro:-

by THOMAS JOSEPH

~

t ••••_._.....

'T I I I I J' rI II I J

~

1-16 -lmo.

Convenient Shoppmg Hours

)42-2211

Now arrange the drcled letter11 to ·
form the surprise answer. as ·suggested by the above cartoon.

(Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles: NOBLE FENCE DEBATE OVERDO
Yesterda 's
y I Answer: One nteda another to wrtte h: - ELEVEN

(:ellutosic (wood fiber);
Thermal tnsulailiin· '

CLbSE S~ TURD A Y
· AT 5 PM

•

Mswel:

(j

OVER.

The lateal JUMBLES are here In JUMBLE BOOK 110 and JUMBLE
BOOK 111 . Available tor SU5 EACHJ poelplld from Jumble, do thl1
newspaper, P.O. Box 34, Norwood, N•. 07648. Make checka payllble to
Newspaperbookt.
·

THURSDAY I Tl~ NOON
· FRIDAY TIL 5

'•

SoFIT OF THIN&amp;
.JUNK 1:7EAl.E~M16HT

) (]
AXEL? TYPICAL OF FUMBLING
FOOLS LIKE PETER AtiD
Ft&gt;LA -- · THEY BOlCH THE
SIMPLEST JOB"'

,·· ~

.....
•
•

•

I

FIGHT

ORRPHAM ANNIE-THEY MEET AS STRANGERS

Save 30 pet. to 50 pet.
on heating cost
Experience and
tully insured
Free Est.
Call : 667-6479 or "2-3815

tJ

•••
ORPHAN ANNIE

,.

c•

l

BloWn Insulation ~:
JIM KEESEE .~

REMODELING, Plumbing. heating
and oil types of general repair.
Work guoronteed 20 year$ experience. Phone 992-2409.

.••

tSMIREY

'·

10-30- ~ ~r. .

Professional Service, 39
yrs. experlenee. ' Free
esllmotes.
plokup
&amp;
delivery
service.
Residential &amp; Commercial.

rx

1

'
'

J&amp;L

~yHanriAm&lt;&gt;dandBobLoe

I I I

FOR."

F€\'J OJ 111~
~"'~ f\OMl:; '?

12-18-1 mo.

Chester, Ohio·

-Upholstery-

300 Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Pomeroy 992-6282
or992-62U
8 A.M. to4:30 P.M.

'7Tc:R

Jack's Septic
Tank Service
Box 34

HAT scRAiiauio woRD OAIIIE

LAVEG

BORN LOSER

Residential
and
commercial.
Call for
estimate, 24 hour service.
Anyday, anytime.
Phone 985-3806

T.

'-.i!=;E:t_

FUrn1ces, Heat
Pumps &amp; Auto-Controls.
GAS-01 L-COAL

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

~

Unscramble theee lour ;;Jumbles,
one lene r to each square, to form
four ordinary words.
l-

Boilers,

9.

TEAFORD!B

'lrftlil..\.0 ID'it

~ ~ ~~ "

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

NOTICE

Supe~ior

• ..tol ~~•.0. '

a:

INSULAnON
SERVICE

ACE HARIMARE

Young's
Carpeting

...

RACINE,O.

992-3971

WINDOWS &amp; DOORS
SMALL form lor sole . 10% down,
owner financed . Monroe County , W. Vo . Phone (304) 772·
·3102 or (304 ) 712·3227 .
COUNTRY formlcnd with secluded woods , water and good access in Monroe County , W. Vo .
$1 .000 down, ca ll {304) 77.23102 O&lt; (304)772-3227 .
Commercial property opprox . 17
acres , le.,.el land. located at
Tuppers Plains on Ohio, Route
7. Phone (614)667-6304 .
VA·FHA. JO yr . financing . Ireland
M9,r tgqg e, 77 E. State, Athens ,
phone (61&lt;) 59l-3051.
57 A. FARM .' 5 rooms and balh .
Good born and outbuildings .
All fenced . 247-2242 after 5 pm .
Shown by appointment. only .
Must sell.
FIVE ROOM house in Middleport.
Seen by appO intmen t 9'nly . Coli
.:' f~~ 99_.3-5452 . Must sell.

8,00-Grluly .O.dams 3,4, 15; Eight Is Enoogh 6,13;
Good Tlm01 8. 10; Nova 20,33.
B:»-Monlt Carlo Circus Festival 8, 10.
9:1)()-Biack Sheep Squ•dron 3, 4, 15; Charlie' • Angels
6,13; Dance In Amerlce 20.33.
9:»-Enter!alner of the Year Awards 8.10.
10:1)()-Pollce Woman M,15; Beretta 6, 13; News 20;
Eyewitness 33.
10 :30-Wodehouse Plavhouu ?O; 11 : Oo-News
3,4,6,8.10, 13,15; Dick Cavelf 201 Lilias Yoga a. You
33.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Pollee Story 6,13; Hawaii
Flve-0
ABC News 33; Movie " Five Finger
Exercise" 10.
12 :oo-Janakl 33; 1~ : •0-Mystery of the · Week 6,131
Ko)ak 8; 1 :oo-Tomorrow 3.41 2: 10-News 13.
Movie Channel 4 S &amp; 9 P .M. - Mars A !lacks The World (G)
7 &amp; 11 P .M . - Man Who Skied Down Everest (G)
C.ble Channel Five ~
6: 30 P .M .-Testimony Time
7:00 - . Paul Gaudino Family Fitness
7:30 - Wellston al Meigs Basketball
10 :00 - 700 Club.

RACINE
PLANING MILL

ALUMINUM SIDING
SOLID VINYL SIDING
SOFFIT &amp; CELINGS
GUTTERS &amp; DOWN
SPOUT
Eaay
stop
by
step .
imtructions.

I

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 111,1971

Business Services

Locoled In

$500 . Bundle

·~ ~~ack
illil:

'ce Bede Osol

·

TELEVISION
VIEWING

'

1.~

Elth wont OYer the minimwn 15
wurdl Ia 4 cmt.l per word prr day.
Ads nannin¥ other thi&amp;n COOI«.'Utivl!
dlya wW be chllrged al the I d.)'
role.

1n

...

..

1.00
J.:.O

TRACY

. ·'
'
• ••

Cborgr

uo

3days
I day•

9- Tbe Dally Sentinei, MidtDeport·Porneroy, 0., Wednesday, Jan . 18, 197&amp;

'IE BETTER GIT OUT OFD
THAR, PRISSY·- 01: BULLET
WILL SNAP 'lORE HEAD
OFF IF HE KETCHES 'IE
IN HIS 8EDBOX-·-

Even chainpion players
make ludicrous bids at
limes. Although North-south
belong in spades, they ar·
rived at an "impossible"
lhree-notrump contract
·when South, suffering an
aberration of re~Json,
refused to rebid hiS spades.
This hand was played in a
high-stakes rubber bridge
game at the Cavendish Club
hi New York City. Three of
the four players were for·
iner World Champions. The
bidding could charitably be
called poor. but the play was
nothing short of brilliant.'
Mter the club opening
lead, declarer could count
only eight top tricks: six .
spades (asswnl~g the jack

ing East's discards. The

spade run exerted exceptiOnal pressure on East.
When the sixth spade was
cashed, East was down to
king, queen · of hearts, the
ace of diamonds and the
king, queen of clubs.
East was squeezed. He
could not throw the diamond
ace because that would set
up declarer's king, queen.
He could not throw a heart
honor because that would
establish dununy's hearts.
Thus East threw a club.
Soul~ led a diamond to
East's ace and East could
cash only one club trick
before conceding the laat
two tricks to dummy 's ace of
hearts and king of diamonds .
(For a copy ol JACOBY 1.10(}.
ERN, send $1 to : '' Win ·at
Brl(lge, '· care of this newspaper, P.O. Box 489, Radio City
Station , New York. N . Y. 10019.)
{NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN, )

�-·--- - - --·--""

,:

Hospital News

-

Israel says Sadat's demand
for Holy City preposterous

Velei'IIU Memorial Hotpltal
ADMITTED - Sonya
Collins, Shade; Michael
Parsons~ Parkersburg ; Ada
Warner, Pomeroy ; Colin

Chevalier, Reedsville; Gary
Hostetter, Reedsville; BiUy
Kennedy, Middleport; Unda
Freeman, Cheshire.
DISCHARGED - Martha
Mustain, Mildred Hudson,
Patricia Cleland, Angela
Hubbard , Paul Johnson,
Mildred Tubbs, Alberta
' Laudennilt.
·
Holzer MOdica! Ceoter
IDIBcbarget)
LDren Blankenship, Ruth
Brown, Penny Bush, Donald
Canter, Mrs. Paul Clark and
daughter; Mrs. Gary Colvin
and daughter ; Homer Jones,

Dairl May, Jr., Barbara

EQUIPMENT OF THE 216TH ENGINEER Battalion
\ of the Ohio National Guard, Ironton, moved down East
Second St. In Pomeroy, Tuesday afternoon. The large
grader In front went out of commi.sslon Tuesday but was

McCalla, David McCoy ,
Danlelle McNeil, Mrs.
WiUlam Metzler and son;
Scott Mitch, Shawn Mitch,
Melissa Nance; Mary Napper, Melba Perry, Mitchell
· Rose, Ruth Setzer, Unda
Shambaugh, Garnett Summers, Maggie Walker, Mrs.
Charles
Walton
and
daughter; Eleanor Veiher.
"We've been getting
Jaa. 17 Births .
addltlonal precipitation
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Shinn,
every three days or so," son, Leon, W. Va.
McPhillips said. ''This means
the river is deeper, and when
')
you have a deeper river • you
Pleasaal Valley Hotpttal
have more heat coming
down."
Discharged: Matthew Duff,
Despite all the snow on the Point Pleasant; Ronald
ground In the Ohio Valley, the Bostic, Marietta, 0 .; Bertha
hydrologist lllid there is UttJe Lemon, Lakin; George ·
·chance of flooding, should a ' Newlon, lAing Bottom, 0. ;
tha ·
Granville
Hill,
Point
~! :~·'t"'iet
Pleasant; Charles Westfrom snow that you get from moreland,
Cottageville;
rain."
Helen Honaker, Leon; Walter
lee chunks on theOhio this Knapp, West Columbia;
week are averaging from five Drury Harper, Tuppers
Inches In thickness at Pitts- Plains, 0.; Mrs. Hubert
burgh to 2\ll inches at Settle and son, Racine; Mrs.
Cincinnati, McPhillips Paul Pozzie and twins,
repocted. At Louisville, there Gallipolis; Kevin Dennis,
is almost no ice. "As far as Gallipolis; John Folden,
we know, there haven't been Apple Grove; Mrs. Timothy
any navigational problems or Siders, GaUipolls Ferry.
Birth- A daughter to Mr.
gorging or blocking," he
added
and Mrs. Michael Legg,
·
Gallipolis Ferry. ll&gt;

repaired at the Pomeroy Motor Co. and presaetl back Into
service In short order. Guardsmen were working two
shifts in the community helping to clear snow and ice.

Ice in river no concern--yet
By ROBERT SA:NGEoRGE

greater now of waU!r down
the Ohio this winter is making
a freezeover more difficult,
the
river
forecaster
explained.
"In the middle of the bitter
cold last year, what everyone

January," he said.

With the low flow, some of
CINCINNATI (UPI ) - The
the more shallow tributaries
ominous flow of Ice chunks
down the Ohio River has
actuaUy froze aU th' way lo
their bottoms, with Utile or no
steadily increased In recent
water coming Into the Ohio,
days, but It's noth,lng to worry
McPhillips said. But In recent
about - yet.
It would take four or five overlooked was Ulat we were days, . the river forecast
days with an average air In the mlddleola drought. We center
has
measu(ed
tempera!Ure. of about 10 de- recorded only about 20,000 anywhere from 105,000 to
grees lo cause a "freeze- cubic feet of water per second 200,000 cubic feet of water per
flowing . past
over" of the waterway, the flowing past Cincinnati then, second
acting hydrologist In charge which is particularly low for Cincinnati.
of the National Weather
Service's Ohio
River
MEETING CANCELLED
Forecast Center said late
BONDS FORFEITED
A meeting of the Area Fire
Tuesday.
Five persons forfeited
"The river ice will melt and Emergency Association bonds of $200 each, aU on
unless
the
average scheduled this evening at petty theft charges, In the
tempera!Ure goes somewhat Chester has been cancelled court of Pomeroy Mayor
below 20 degrees.'' said Tom due to the weather conditions. Clarence Andrews Tuesday
McPhillips. "And l1l08I of the The meeting will be night . They are Melody
Ice you see In the Ohio River rescheduled later.
Larkins, Pomeroy i Tammy
Is being carried in from the
J 0 Tyree, Pomeroy; William
tributaries."
Barton, Mason; Wanda HiU,
SHOWER DELAYED
The forecast for the next ·
Mason, and John Rickard,
LETART FALLS - A Clifton! w.
several days does not call for
temperatures cold enough lo shower to be held Thursday
start a river fre~ver, for Mr, and Mrs, Bill Parsons
· at the Letart Community Hall -----------~---------------.
McPhillips said.
.
At this time last year, has been changed to Th ursnearly the entire length of the day Jan. 26 due to weather ·
Ohio River was frozen solid. conditions.
I
_
I
Barge traffic was at a
DONNA JOHN&gt;TON
Valley St .. Dayton, and then
siandstill oo the ice-jammed
Mrs.
Donna
I.
Johnston,
86,
the
body witl be brought to
ASK TOWED
water"ay, hampering
a resident of Copeland Oaks, Rawlings -Coats
Funeral
A
marriage
license
was
delivery of critlcaUy needed
Sebring, Ohio, and a retired Home, where last rites wi II be
supplies of fuel oil and salt for issued to Ricky Allison Casto, sc hool teacher was dead on conducted by the Rev . Robert
21, Mason, and Unda Sue arrival at Alliance Clty Bumgarner at 2 p .m.
highways.
·
Hospital af 1: 49 a .m . Saturday . Burial will be in
But the substantially Newberry, 20, same address. Tuesday .
the Wells Cemetery.

U::

va.

=

!- Area Deaths

fiSHFRY-11- :~!~N c~~~E~fo~~dy

1
1 SATURDAY
I .

I
JANUARY 2.lsl I
. STARTING AT
I
11:00 A.M.
I
I
At The
I
MIDDLEPORT
I..1FIRE DEPARTMENT I•

I
------·

Riggs, schedulOd at Royal
Oak Park this evening, have
been canceled.

WDGE TO MEET
Pomeroy Chapter BO will
meet this evening. Work in

:::'a":ter'~::~!~s

daughter of the late Elbert

and Eldora Hunt Shelton.
She is surv ived ·by · her
husband. Goff B. Johnston,
also of Copeland Oaks. Six
' sisters and three brothers
survive.
Funeral services will be
held 1 p.m. Friday at the
Waiton -Schrader Funerat
Home In Alliance. Burial will
be In Alliance City Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home on Thursday
from 7 until 9 p.m .

and mark
HARRY L. KNOPP
HARRISONVILLE

SALE PRICED"

·BEDROOM
SUITES

TAKENTOVMH
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad answered a call to the
home of Mrs. Robert Warner,
Mulberry Ave., at 12:33 p.m.
Tuesday. Mrs. Warner, a
medical patient, was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where she was admitted.

Friends may call 2·4 alid 7-9

p.m. Friday at Rawlings.

Coats and on Saturday until
time for the services.
Masonic serVIces will be 'held
by Harrisonville Lodge at 8

p.m. Friday.

MYR1LE LAWRENCE

Myrtle lawrence, 62,
Bucyrus, died early Mond(fy
morning.
She was born May 26. 1915,
in Galllt County to Jerome·
and Rosie Elliott Houck .
Survivors i"nclude her
husband, William Lawrence,
eight children ; an uncle,
Homer Elliott In Gallia
Coul')ty; three brothers,

Harry Lee Knopp , 88, for merly of Harrlsonv.llle, died William S. Houck, Elkhart,
Tuesday In Dayton , where h.e Ind.; Franklin and ·Denver
Houck, both Rt. 2. Crown
~ad resided several ·y·ears.
City.
He was born Dec. 23, 1889,
Services wilt be held at 11
in Meigs County, tt)e son of
the late Henry Riley and a.m. Friday at the Mui')Z·
Ellen Cutler Knopp . He also Pirnstl.l l Funeral Home,
was .preceded In death by a Bucyrus, and burial will be In
son , Paul , and two grand- Bucyrus.
children .
Mr. Knopp was a member
of the Good · Shepherd United
OTIS E. RtCE
fv\ethodist Church . Dayton ;
otis
E. Rice, 61 , Eureka
Harrisonville Masonic lodge
Star Route, Gallipolis, died
411,
F&amp;AM ;
Amer i can
at 6:30 p.m.
Legion Post 200 at Dayton, suddenly
Tuesday
at
Holzer Medical
and the Disabled American
Center.
He
had
been In falling
Veterans. He was an army
health for a year. He had
veteran of World War I.
Before his .retirement he · been employed by the Chris
Craft
Corporation
lh
Was packing specialist at the
Gallipolis.
Wright -Patferson A ir . Force
He was born July 27, 1916,
Base.
'
In
Gallla County to Charles E.
Surviving are his wife, and
Bertha Mae Kheune
Myrle-;
daughter, Mrs.
Rice. Survivors include his
Frances Knopp Sanders,
wife, Eloise Taylor, whom he
Athens ; two sons , William,
married Sept . 10, 1943, In
New Carlisle, and lilchard,
Lawrence County; four
Dayton ; a sister, Mrs. Sylvl!!t
brothers
,
Irvin
Rice ,
Eynon , Columbus ; tour
Gallipolis
;
Earl
,
Upper
grandchildren and six greatSandusky: Harold Rice ,
grandchildren . .,
Mansfield;
and Clarence,
Funeral services will first
Dayton;
three
Mrs.
be held at 11 a.m. at the Charles 1 Edithsisters,
I Broyles.
MaQetti Funeral Ho!Jle. 1508
Grove City ; Mrs . John
(Ethel) Marlay of Kettering ;

ONE OF THE MANY ITEMS
11

She was born in Gallia
County on Nov . 9, 1'891.

!

E·RRUNMADE
The
Mlddle.port
Emergency Squad answered
a call to Riverview Place at
3:341 a.m. Wednesday lor Ann
Davis who was taken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital.

w

SNOW CAME TUMBUNG DOWN -This view up Court Street looking toWard the Ohio
River shows how the snow poured down Tuesday morning at appro~tely 11;4$ a.m.
Later In the day It turned to half:C.ow, half-rBln, causing several businesses In Pomeroy to
close early.
-

Pensions
(Continued from page 1)
their benefits. Unlike some
strikers, retirees are not
eligible f&lt;r food stamps.
T h e announcement was
aimed at 80,600 miners who
retired prior lo 1976. The
trustees said there Is only $1.5
mUllon left in the trust that
finances these pensions, fer
short of the $20 million ·
needed to pay orie mooth 's
benefits.
About 7S percent of these
retirees receive reduced pen.
slons benefits of $225 a month
because they elao get black
lung dlsabillty payments. All
otherswi¥&gt; retired before 1976
are entitled to $2SO.
Benefits will cootlnue lo
pensioners who retired after
1976, because their benefits
are financed through! a
separate trust. Thelle retii-ees
receive an average monthly
pension of $425.
The old pension trust is
financed primarily by
company-paid royalties
based on the tonnage of coal
produced. This trust was
depleted during two years of
frequent wildcat strikes,
which cut production.
Benefits and wlldcata are
the chief Issues In the
negotiations.
The Industry reportetlly
has offered lo guarantee the
lllllvency of the financially
troubled health and pension
funds. ~ exchange, Industry
officials are demanding a
richt to penaUze miners who
wildcat.

News •• in Briefs
(Continued frtm ..... 1)
Regional Transit Authority bus at an east side lntarsection.
They said the driver, Allee Brans, 34, waa told to change
the front sign to "charter" and became hysterical. A male
RTA bu8 driver, who hapPened to be ridirig the bus took over
the collirols, change.the sign and drove off through the east
stele , Police said the man who was kUled in the 3Cknlnute
hijack robbery apparently.trled to resist the robbers when they
tonk his money. The rob~ fled oo foot.
CLEVELAND- THE CITIZENS BAR ASSOCIATION of
Noo.attorneys, Inc., has fUed a lawsuit seeking to remove
seven Cleveland councUmen from office. The suit, brought
Tuesday In Cuyahoga County Probate Court, contends the
aeven are guUty of mllfeaaance and malfeaaance In office for
directly or Indirectly receiving gambling money from the
Sebring Exhibit and SUpply Co., Cleveland.
Meanwhile, Cleveland bulldirig commlssloner Carlton
Rush said he would review the department policy that gives
councllmen control of carnival permits In their respective
wards. The policy review waa ailnount:ed In the wake ,of
charges that nine· present and former councilmen have ·
, accepted cash to 81low camlvals operated by Selrlng II!
operate in their wards:

HARTFORD, CONN. - THE MASSIVE ROOF of the.
HarUord Civic Center caved In beneath tons of snow, Ice and
water before dawn today, virtually daatroying the heart of the
f70 mUIIon facility where 5,000 people had been watching a
college haslu!tball game six hoUI'I earUer. Authorities ordered
an Immediate lnvestiption. There were no Injuries.
"I can't begin to describe the abllolute horror and just to
think peaple were here a few hoUI'I ago,'' said a weeplng·Gov.
Ella T. Grasoo. The winter atorm which wrecked the center
e1ao smashed in the roofa of supermarkets in Manchester and
South Windham, and a factory in Jewett City, kUling one man.

DIVORCI!: ASKED
,
Macy Becker, Rt. 1, Middleport, flied suit for divorce
in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court against D. P.
Becker, Worthington.
Granted divorces were Ruth

Ann Smith from Homer
Smith, Leigh A. Cline from
John Cline : Marriages
dissolved were David Wayne
Grindstaff and Rutah Carol
Grundstaff; Larry L. Mitch
and Donna L. Mitch.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

RCA

DOUBLE SAVINGS SALE
VISIT ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE AND SEE THE
GREAT SAVINGS IN STORE FOR YOU!
Receh/e A Bonus Check, Direct From RCA, On Selected .Portable
and Console Televlsl.o ns For Up To '75.00
OFFER GOOD THRU FEB. 19, 1978

As An Example, Receive A lSO.OO Bonus Check From RCA When You
Purchase This Fine RCA Console Television

Mrs. Robert (Pearl) Horner,
Cleveland .

Prices Good thru Jan. 22, 1978
White Quanfltles L.ut

Quantity Rights

Rtservoct

He spent most of his life In
Gllllla County. He was a

member of the Church of God

on Gllrfleld Ave .
Fun~;"ral

servfces will be

held at 2 p.m . Friday at the
Waugh . Haltey . Wood
Funeral Home, the

SURE
UNSCENTED

50Z.

liMIT I 'PLEASE

•

XL-100

Friends may .call at the

••

fu.neral home 3: 30-5 and 1·9
p.m . Thursdav. ·

ANTI-PERSPIRANT
REGULAR DR

Ren

Rev .

Arnold Cromllshand the Rev.
Everett Delaney officiating ,
and burial will be In Ohio
Valley Memorl~l Gardens.

c

PUBLIC NOTICE
. The
Farmers
Home
Administration baa for aale,
fro in ·lime to Ume,
residential properties ' in
Athena, Meigs and Vinton
CIJIIIlties. Any Ucenaed real
estate brolu!r lntereoted In
listing these properties
lllould contact the Farmers
Htlne Admlnlstratlon at 221
West
Second
Street,
Pomeroy, Ohio 4571G .
elephone (114) lltMI44.

nan

Ualted Preu llltenaUaUI '·
CONTADORA ISLAND, PANAMA - PANAMA'S
wtl1lngneu lo amend the Pa111111111 Canal treaties to specify the
U. S. richt to defend the waterway has apparently ail but
gual'lllleed Senate ratlftcatlon of the controversial pacts.
Panamanian leader Brig. Gen. Omar Torrljos told vlsltlntl
members of the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations C&lt;mmlttee
Wedneldayhewlllnotobject to changes to clarify U.S. defense
and naval paaaage rlshts after the year 2000.
·
- BUt he wanied hi! would not tolerate a flood of
amendments
the Senate. At a news coaference on this
holiday IB!and off Panama's Pacific 'coast, Sen. Clulrles Percy,
R-ID., said Torrijos told the cornmlttee members at a two-hour
meeting "that If the treaties Included an amendment, that
would be aatiafaclory because II was diScuaaed before the Oct.
23 Panamanian plebi8clte."

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ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

NEW ORLEANS - ·ARMADIU.O MEAT is. considered a
delicacy In South l.Dulslana, but health officials are warning
residents to f&lt;rgo the treat until it Is detennined whether
armadiUos can tranomlt leprosy to huma111. Health officials
said Wednesday they bave found over 50 armadillos with
leprosy in the state the last two years.
There have been no rep&lt;rts of hUill8lUI contracting leprosy
lr&lt;lm eating armadillo stew, but the health officials still
warned Loulalana connoisseurs lo avoid eating armadillo
meat. "Don't play with them," said Dr. Gerald Walsh of the
Gulf South Research lnatitute In New Iberia. "And If you bave
to eat 'em, cook 'em well.
"The annadillo is the only known animal xpecles that will
naturally develop leprosy following Inoculation of the
organism Into the animal.
NEWPORT BEACH, CALIF. - NEW RESEARCH Is
beginning to indlaite that ordinary aspirin can reduce the
threat of stroke symptoms and recurrent heart attacks among
people with diseased arteries. Study results are just becoming
available and there is no evidence yet to support theories the
anti-dotting effects of aapirin on blond will prevent atrokes or
heart attacks amoog people with no signs of disease.
But Dr. WUllam Fielda, head of neurology at the
University· of Texas Health Sciences .Center in Houston, said,
"There's no question aspirin has an effect."'
Flelda outlined at an American Heart Association meeting
Wednesday the results of a two-year study by 10 lmtutltions on
the effects of aspirin on people who already had suffered "little
strokes" or had other 'stroke symptoms. Half the patients were
given two aapirlns twice a day and the other half received
dummy pUis. Eighty-five percent of those receiving aaplrln
reported no additional symptoms during a period of up to two
years, compared with 58 percent of those who took dummy

By MAURICE GUINDI
JERUSALEM (UP.! )
Prime Minister Menahem
Begin said today Israel wants
lo reswne peace talks that
were broken off by Egypt but
finds Egyptisn demands for
return of Jerusalem lo be
preposterous.
Begin also said the
establishment
of
a
Palestinian slate would he an
unacceptable threat 1o Israel
and the Jewish slate would
not leave its Sinai settlements
unprotected by a defense
force.
·"Let no one frighten us with
this Inconceivable concept Q(
pressure to be exerted upon
us,'' Begin said, speaking in
reaction to the sudden
decision by
Egyptian
President Anwar Sadat lo
brmg his delegation home
from the foreign ministers'
conference.
"We presented a positive

plan, a human plan, a decent
plan, a real peace plan- farreaching, sweeping,'' Begin
told a group of French lund
r&amp;lsers at a lunch In the

parliament buUdirig.
11
No pressure can be
exerted on us to turn fairness

:.&gt;lo endeavor-and his top
diplomatic aide.
The decision 1o call back
Kamel and the other negotia- ·
into tmfairness," he said.
Begin al8o said the two tors came late Wednesday
days of negottations In the without notice, and 'left
Israeli capital had rellulted In Middle East peace efforts a
agreement on five of seven shambles.
In Jerusalem, Begin said
points for a stateml!llt of
principles lor _ a peace loday he found Kamel a '
likeable man - "I told him
settlement.
PAUL SMART
In Cairo, Sadat met with so" - but considered his
the head of his recalled public statements In Israel
delegation to the Jerusalem unacceptable .•
talks amid Indications be was
"He just landed, and !old us
looking to the United Stalell to we would have lo give up
salvage his twiHilonth drive Jerusalem," Begin said,
pausing for a moment and
for a Middle East peap! •.
ruefully,
Sadat, at his Test house on · repeating
the bank of the NUe, received ''Jerusalem.' '
"May !·tell you, la~es and
Foreign Minister and chief
Bernard V. Fultt was
negotiator Mohammed gentlemen, it was the most elected chairman of the
Kamel today some nine hours preposterous statement ever board of directors of Citizens
after he returned lo Egypt on made by a guest. Imagine, i National Bank in Middleport
the president's orders.
come lo France and say Paris at the annual mL-cting of
Presidential sources In should be divided Into two. stockholders und directors
Cairo said Kamel's talks· The very nest day I would be Tuesday.
were not only a explanation lo asked lo leave France."
Fultz ·succeeds Paul S.
the president of the
He al8o said jokingly there Smart who retired. His
stalemated negotiations with was another word in the retirement marked the
Israel, but a strategy session language of the great F'r,ench completion of 49 years serbetween Sadat - who runs authors and convulsed the vice to the bank. Mr. Smart
foreign policy as virtually a
(Colltlnuld on 1111• 10)
served as president untll1973.

•

.

'

· located In Columbia Town· The reports were signed by
ship.
his grandfather Montague W.
Valley Ford, near the Howery. Verlln als&lt;J found a
center of the township, was set of pigeon hole comthe first postofflce to be partments which had
established In 1857 and the evidently been a part of a
· ftrst to be discontinued in postolfice. Other postmasters
1900. All Columbia Township werel..ibbieReeves, widow of
postoffices were established Worth Reeves; Nannie
before rural free delivery Radcliff; James Gaston and
was started in 1896, after Opal Fitzpatrick. Clerks were
which the ' postoffices . were Fern Radcliff arid Mrs:
discontinued one by one, Mendal Jordan.
transferred to a postoffice
DYESVIL!E: (1884·1933)
near the railroad.
. B. P. Wilson, A. .R. "QUU"
Carpenter was the last Curry, Dick Curry, Albert
postoffice to serve in Romil!e and Winfred Tumer.
Columbia Township. It was
MT. BLANCO : (1858-1904)
closed November 8, 1963 The Solomon Townsend
when the mail service was Family History implies the
translerrecf 1o Albany with Mt. Blanco postofflce was
Pomeroy serving a Umited established In 1845. This
number of people.
writer is inclined fd believe
Columbia Township had no the store building which
postofflces in the Blcen- housed the first postofflce
tennial Year.
wail built · In 1845. Records
Information about post- from Washington indicate the
.maSters, clerks and rural Mt. Blanco Postofflce was·
carriers has been recorded established in '1858. The
from Interviews of people Solomon Townsend History
living in !976 and Is believed also indicates that Barrett
to be quite accurate. Allen was the first postCorrections are appreciated. master. Mr. Allen, requested
If time and money were the name Mt. Blanc. Upon
availableltshouldbeposslble learning that name was
1o get accurate infonnation already in use he settled for
from some agency In the name Mt.· Blanco. The
Washlri:gton.
postofflce waa moved' In 1111 ·
CARPENTER: (1883--1963) lrof!l 'the store across the
The writer tho!lght 11e had road to Dr. Townsend's
seen a pcistofllce In Mrs. Cori residence. The postofflce was
Swearingen's ·residence. later moved to a corner rotlm
Verlin Howery, the grandson in the Gallway blacksmith
of M. w. Howery, :~~~ys he has shop where Thomas M.
searched that prbperty and Galaway did d011ble duty as
can lind no evidence of a · blacksmith and postmaster.
postoflice. Verlln also About 1904 the poatofflce was
searched the attic of his transferred to Carpenter.
.grandfather's store wbete he . Rural ·Free
Delivery
~ound an Inventory of elltabltshed In 18111 80unded
postofflce suppUes and a the knell for many amaU
number of postoflice Npqrts. rural posloffices.

POINT ROCK: (1886-1911)
Carrie or Edna Litle and
Milton Merritt.
VALLEY FORD : (1857·
1900) No one was found who
remembers a Valley Ford
postmaster. .
.
ZEAL: (1892-1904) Sam
Martin and Jasper "Jap"
Rutherford.
Rural MaD Carriers
It appears that only Car·
penter had rural mall
carriers. Joe Bowen · had a
star ·route from Dyesville to
Point
Rock.
Frank
Tewksbury had a star route
serving Valley Ford, Mt.
Blanco and Zeal.
Rural carriers from
Carpenter wete Pearl Goff,
Frank Wood, John llawltngs,
Frank Gibson and Gay
Johnson.
RaUway maD clerks from
Columbia Township were
McClellan "Ciella" Stansbury, Wesley Ogdin and
OWen Woodyard.
Mail Carrier lllcldenls
No doubt there were many
interesting episodes regarding ru111l maUcarriers. One
carrier was reported to have
stashed the heaVy Seara,.
Roebuck catalogs in a culvert
along the route,
A private canter picked up
a letter at the Carpenter
Postoflice in the fall of the
year and pia~ It In his
hunting coat pocket. The next
fall the undelivered letter
was found In the hunting coat
pocket. The carrier then
delivered it with the current
man. The recipient took the
carrier to task about delivery
being one year late and
thereby learned the re880n
for the late delivery.
••

other directors reelected
include James Arnold , Ou le

Dutton, Harold E. Hubbard ,
Rodney Downin g, Rose
Reynolds, and Jay HuU, Jr.
Officers reelected for the
next year are Harold E.
Hubbard. president ; Man·

THURSDAY, JANUARY 19, 1978

and cashier; Gene Grate,
assi&amp;iant vice president : l.ois
McE lhinny, RSS isl a nt vi et~
pr esident , und E dwu rd
Durbt, nsslst n nt CHShler.

President Hubbard, in his
annual
re port
to
o1ockholders, statt'&lt;l that the
p.ubt )1Car was the best the

bunk hnd ever enjoyed with
increased growth in assct!:i
nnd eumin~ s .

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Little movement
in ·coal strike
United PresslnlernaUonol
Striking United Mine
Workers quietly turned away
coal company drivers who
tried lo .clear snow from the
street&amp; of Providence, Ky.,

NORMA
above,

WILSON,

Pomeroy,

Js

credited for having more
property · paioled and
cleaned up In the v!Uage of
Pomeroy Ia the paint-up cleao-up
campaigo
sponsored by the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce.
Mrs. Wllsoo taught scbool
for 41 years aod Is now
retired. Mrs. Wilsoo extended her lhaoks Ia Paul
Voss and Randy Lee for
assisting ber In palotlng
her properties.

Columbia ToWilship in the year 1883 p ·.
rmts
1e ad to
arrest
By. H. E. Throckmorton
CARPENTER- James M.
Evans In his History of Meigs
County listed six postofflces
serving people of Columbia
Township in 1883.
It' would not be long until all
butonewouldhediscontinued
as rural !ree delivery
provided faster and more
efll.cient service to the
nation's farming communlties. .
These communities by 1900
were becoming more important and necessary each
year to the cqntlnued Ol&lt;pansion .of the industrial
economy of a nation -that In
approximately 900 years bad
colonized the eastem shore,
subded powerful native
populations, expanded 3,000
miles westward to the Pacific
Ocean, and organized an
energetic, heterogenous
people into the most powerful
political and eeonomic. entity
the world had witnessed to
that time.
The sii postofflces were
known as follows, and located
aa Indicated:
Lee, In Athens County;
Harrisonville, Scipio
Township; Mt. Blanco,
Columbia Township; VaDey
Ford, Columbia Township;
Vales Mill, Vbtton County,
and WUkeSvnie, In Vlnt~n
County.
Evans Rutherford and
Jeremiah L. . Carpenter of
Columbia Township were
stete representatives at one
time. Jeremiah L. Carpenter
also served as state Senalor.
~ men were active in
locallnll pollofflcea, and in
getting the KiM Railrolld
and the Southeastem Tesi
Far" (moved In the 1980s)

retirement of Mr. Sma rt.

ni ng Klocs, vice president

enttne

·a t

Treaty getting
Bentsen's vote

.Six postoffices served people in

Manning Kloes. Vl'CC
president and caShier , was
elected to the board to fill the
vacancy created by the

•

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

By JOHN F. BARTON
In Texas .
WASHINGTON (UP!)
"Nevertheless, I am firmly
Sen. Uoyd Bentsen, D-Texas, convinced that Senate
pills,
announced today he will vote approv81 of the treaties, if
CLEVELAND- PARKER HANNIFIN CORP. had record , for the Panama Canal amended as I p&lt;opose, is In
rialea and earnings lor the second quarter and first half of treaties if they are amended the best Interest of the United
.fiacal 1978 ended Dec. 31, the corporation announced lo include the Oct. 14 States of America,'' he said.
agreement issued by Pres!- ' 11 will vote In favor of the
Wednesday. .
. .
dent Carter and Panaman- · treaties If they are amended
Quarter sales of $14211lillion were up i&amp; percent from the
to Include the text of the Oct.
previous year, bringing earnings up $1 mUIIon lo $6.8 mlllion, ian leader Omar Torrijos.
14
memorandum
of
according to chairman Patrick S. Parker. Six month sales of
· Bentsen's disclosUre came understanding issued, but
$275.2 million were up 19 percent over 1977 and eal'r)lngs grew
shortly before the Senate . ~ver _signed, . by President
from $11.8 mUIIons In 1977 to $13.4 mUIIon.
Foreign Relations Committee Carter
and
General
COLUMBUS- THE THREE-DAY STATE convention of opened Its final three days of Torrljos."
Torrijos told members of
Ohio F81111erS Union opens loday with a keynote address by hearings on the controversial
Bea Radclllfe, president of the South Dakota Farmers Union treaties lo turn the canal the Foreign Relations
and chairman of the National Fanners Union Executive back to Panama in the year Committee Wednesday in
2000.
Panama that he will not
Committee.
Bentsen, who recenUy re- object to changes In the
Tony· Dechant, president of the National Farmers Unioo
and president of the International FederaUon of Agricultural tUrned from Panama, told a treaties to clarify U.S.
Producers, will address OFU members at a banquet Friday. news conference be is ''well defense and naval passage
James R. Smith, !Kr!cultural counsellor with the Australian aware that II)Y support for the rlshts when the canal Is
treaties wm not be a turned over.
(Continued on 1111• 10)
POlitically popullir decision"

.

MANNING I(,Ult; S

Fultz elected chairman of
bank's board of .directors

e
VOL XXVIII NO. 194

BERNARD FUJ.TZ

Wednesday , but the heaVy
snowstorms kept strike
activities at a virtual
standstill in the Appalachian
coalfields.
Today there was still no end
In sight for tr.e strike, now in

its seventh week, which has
kept 160,000 miners away
from their jobs and caused
stockpiled coal reserves 1o
fall to critical ~Y levels In
at least four states.
Negotiations continued In
Washington between the
UMW and Bituminous Coal
Operalors Association, but no
progress was reported.
A spokesman for the Pyro
Mining (:o. near Sturgis, Ky.,
said it offered to help several
western Kentucky
communities remove snow
from ·Tuesday's storm. But
when crews tried lo begin
their task in Providence, they

appeaiEld to their customers
Wednesday lo cut back oo
consumption of electricity
because of rapidly dwindling
suppliei! of t"Oal.
Three Pennsy Ivan I u
utllltles · askeq Gov. Milton
Shapp to order electric
energy
c onservation
measures and to develop
plans to provide poli ce
protection, if necessary, lo
deliver non-UMW coal.
The Allegheny Power

soon.
Five West Virginia miners,
including two officers of a
UMW local, Indicted Wednesday In connectioo with the
Jon . 3dynanilting of a section
of Norfolk &amp; Western railroad
track near Ada , W.Va .
about JO minutes before un
· Amtrak passenger train was
due to arrive. The break in
the track activated a signal in
Narrows , Va ., which halted

System, serving parts of
Pennsylvania, · Maryland ,
West Virginia and Ohio,
announced a three-step plan

the train.
Federal agents st~id the
trucks where the bla:-;t
occur'red are normally used

that could lead to electric
cutoffs for several hours a
day if the strike Is not settled

for trains hauling coal.
No trial date was set forthe
five suspe&lt;:ts.

The ex(Jlosion occurrml

Human needs for
coal will he met

Uotted Presslotematlooal the need for such action, but
preparing ourselves
Gov. James A. Rhodes said we
just
in
cnse,'
' said Clem. ''We
today Ohioans who heat their
will
cooperate
with the UMW
with coal or other
were turned away without homes
0
If
and
when
the
time t"Omes."
human
needs''
customers
violence by about J5 UMW
He
added
the
plan does not
who
are
running
out
of
coal
pickets.
Include
hauling
coal to
because
.
of
the
nationwide
Many non-UMW mines
electric
utilities
or
other
miners
strike
can
obtain
have not operated since
conunercial
\J,sers
.
emergency
supplies
with
the
Tuesday because of the snow
"SUch hauling Is beyond the ·
and hazardous rosda leading help o! the United Mine
capacity
of National Guard
Workers
union
and
the
Ohio
lo the mines. A LDulsville Gas
Meigs County Sheriff &amp; Elecirlc official said the Department of Energy.
equipment," said Clem.
James J. Proffitt has . coal produced at non-UMW
The Ohio National Guard
reported an arrest lor the mines was becoming hard lo' silid Wednesday it will haul
Syracuse Elementary School handle because II was frozen cool to ·residences, state
breaking and entering, arid 1o the ground.
Institutions and other needy
also the Investigation of a
Meanwhile, utilities in users when they run out.
traffic accident on icy SR 248 Pennsylvania, Ohio, West
Despite the coal strike, the
near Chester.
UMW
has been cooperating
Virginia and Maryland
The sheriff said Syracuse
with the state to see that
Chief of Police Millon Varian
families and other small
arrested George William
users of coal do not suffer
Brown, 19, Mason, W. Va.,
because of the strike, said
Wednesday evening on the B
Rhodes.
&amp; E charge.lt was Dec. 7 that
Rhodes said thai coul had
the school was enlered, a
RACINE - Schools of the
been found for residences In
television set taken but dropabuut 60 cases In the past few Southern Local School
ped when some young folk ac- .
days using this procedure. District opened for the first
OOLUMBUS (\!PI) ' -, A
casted the invader, who lied.
He said residential users time this week this morning
Pursuit by two youths failed public hearing was scheduled unable to obtain coal . can while Meigs Local and
lo begin today on a request by contact officials of the UMW, Eastern J.ocal School
then to overtake the man.
Sheriff's Investigator Gary the Columbus &amp; Southern of they can call the ODOE for Districts remEiined closed.
Wolfe filed the charge after Ohio Electric eo. for a $45.5 help In finding commercial However, by 10 a.m. the
the criminal laboratory commUIIon rate Increase:
district began closing down
suppliell.
pared fingerprints. Brown, In
The hearing wiD he held
State . Adjusiant General again as heavy snowfall hit
the Meigs County Jall, will
before the Public Utilities MaJ. Gen . James C. Clem the county again.
have a p relimlnary hearing Commlsslon of Ohio.
It was reported attendance
said the Ohio National Guard
in Meigs County Court.
Astaff report by the PUCO has standby emergency plans was running about 75 percent.
Deputies 'said that James recommended the utility be to haul coal to "human One bus did not run and
G. Splete, 35, ,Gallipolis, was awarded a range of rates of needs" customers If the coal several buses ran · only on
tra\oellng east Tuesday on SR return that would yield an strike continues lo the point roads which 'the drivers felt to·
248 when he saw John F. Hill, added $U mUIIon a year at where the .ODOE can no he safe.
36, Rt. I, Long Bottom, on a maximum·.
longer handle the volume of
At the Portland Elemen"
farm tractor cleaning off a
Oppoalng the rate Increase requesta.
tary School, work has been
driveway. In the belief that request are ihe city of
Clem pointed out that coal underway since the ·weekend
Hill was coming out onto the ColumbuS, Consumers' wiU be hauled only to homes bi repairing damage caused
highway, Splete applied · Counael of Ohio .William A. or Institutions such as by a fire lri the furnace room .
brakes, and slid across the Spratley, Franklin County hospitals where Ufe would be The damage was discovered
road to strike the front end of Welfire Rights threatened If coal supplies after the fire was out.
the'lann tractor.
Organizations, the Coalition ran out. The hauling wm have
School officials said they
No one was hurt, no citation of Concern~d Utillty Uaers, to be authorized by a were In luck because the lire
was issued, no damage was Ohioans for Utillty Refonn, governor's declaration of a apparently started In the
done the tractor, but Sp!ete's . General Motors Corp. and, fuel emergency.
furnace room and caused a
auto had moderate to heaVy Ohio Council of Retail
"We are weeks away from water pipe to break which put
damage.
Merchant~-,
out the bla;;e.
',

Hearing on
rates set

are

Schools
stopped
by snow

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