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,:

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."

25" diagonal

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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

�'
3-TheDally Sentinel, Middleport·Pomeroy,O., Thursday, Jan.\9,1978

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Jan . l9, 1978

New storm attacking East from Texas
By ANDREW A. YEMMA

Uolted I'J'eu International
A surprise winter storm
from deep in the heart of
Texas has deposited a half·
foot of snow on parts of the
Lone Star state and Is
heading
toward
the
Northeast, which Is still
digging out from the roofcrushing snows of two
previous storms.
The Texas storm caused a
roof to cave in Wednesday on
a Nocono clothing store,
killing lwo people. One
worker died under a
collapsed roof at a factory in
Jewett City, Conn. And lhe
$70 million Hartford, Conn.,
Civic Center was devastated
by the collapse of Jls 1,400 ton
roof, laden with Inns of snow
and ice. No one was hurt in
that collapse.
At least 36 deaths have
bee n attributed to the

weather since the onslaught
of winter storms last week.
New York reported eight
deaths; Oklahoma seven;
Missouri six: Minnesota
three; Pennsylvania, Illinois
and

Texas

two

each.

said a· Dai!Jis Holiday Inn
employee, Debbie Sandlan.
"We're also blocking a
number of rooms for our
employees so they won't have
to go home. They'Dstay here

Louisiana . Heavy snow
warnings were posted for
northern Texas, Oklahoma
and Arkansas. Travelers
advisories were posted
throughout the South Central
and Midwestern states.
Winter storm watches were
also in effect today for
Mississippi and Alabama,
and In Illinois, Indiana arid

instead."

As the storm spread. snow
Maryland, West VIrginia,
feU
from Oklahoma into MisKentu c ky,
Indiana,
souri
and Iowa and freezing
Connecticut and Iowa each
pelted
northern
reported one winter-related rain
death.
Because of the snow, many
Dallas offices let their
workers out hours early tq
beat the usus! ~ p.m. rush
hour
creating an
unexpected 3 p.m. 111sh hour .
Hotels and motels also
reported increased demand

Em-e rgency plans

for

rooms

from

Texas

okayed by PUCO

motorists unacCII8tomed to
driving in snow.
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - The
" ~ite a few are stopping
Public Utilities Commission
because of the weather. They of Ohio Wednesday approved
say they 're uneasy about emergency plans filed by
try111(! to go any further," seven of the eight major
electric utilities operating in
Ohio.
The plans detail procedures
to handle electric shortages
caused by the United Mine
Workers stnke ~as well as
such short-term problems as
occurred last week with
frozen coal.
The PUCO rejected as tn
vague, the plans submitted
been ag~tn . " He said that by Monogahela Electric Co.,
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Arnold Miller, president of once a ..,kthrough ts made a subsidiary of the
the striking United Mine on maj r items, the contract Appalachian Power Co.,
Workers, told the Charleston could be put together in a few which
serves
22,000
Gazette Wednesday he thinks days.
customers m the Marietta
Miller said members of the area .
progress is bemg made m the
UMW
bargainin~ council
in
bargaining
talks
Monogahela Power sa id
want
a
meeting to get an Wednesday its coal supply
Washington.
The talks with the update progress of the will drop to 40 days by Friday
Bitwninous Coal Operators negotiations. The council is and its customers will be
Association are expected to composed of two top officers asked to start voluntary
resume today . Miller said the from each UMW district.
conservation.
However, M1ller said that if
negohators, "hftve gotten to a
John D. Borrow, PUOO
point where we've talked he called a bargaining utilities diirectnr, said that
about all the maJor items. council meeting, he could hased on weekly reports from
For a long damn time we only say, "Good morning, the electric compan ies,
didn 't do that ... We've gotten gentlemen. I've called you Monon gahe la was in the
tn the meat of the problem." together to tell you there ain't worst shape and that the
Miller added that "nothing nothing to tell you."
Columbus &amp; Southern j;lhio
o( maJor consequence has

Electric was next.
C&amp;SOE requested "prudent
conservation" Wednesday on
the part of residential customers .
The emergency plans filed
by the utilities basically will
not go into effect until they
are down to a 50 day supply of
coal. At that point, they
generally will begin in~ouse
co nservation and as the
supply continues to dwindle
other, more
stringent
conservation measures will
be put into effect.

Progress seen
•
m coal talks

Poacher
nailed on

Kentucky . Another not-sopotent storm was moving oo
an eastward track across the
Midlands from the Rockiea,
where it left good snows lor
the ski "powder hounds.''
Aonce-fierce storm system
tapered off over northern
New England, upper New
York Slate and western
Pennsylvania with light snow
Wednesday night. Heavy
snows continued in Maine,
where Gov. James B.
Longley said he would ask lor
federal disaster declarations
for the more than $13 millioo
damage caused by last
week's wind and rain storms.
"I just hope we do not have
any more heavy rain/' said
Longley. "It's a great credit
to slate govenunent that our
highways and bridges have
withstood
the
earlier
flooding."
In the West, officials
Wednesday ended the nearly
two years of water rationing
in Marin County, Calif. A
month of rains has
adequately replenished water
supplies.
"Thli main thing is to be
able to take a tub bath," said
Betty McGann of Greenbrae.
"But I hope we've learned not
to waste water as in the past.
I think people will still turn
off water when they b111sh
thei• teeth."

•

JFK and the FBI

•

'•

WASHINGTON (UJ;'I) - Here is a kennedy assassination was to detennlne the
coUectiOI) of the more lllmorous briefs from exact movements of Lee Harvey Oowald in
the FBI documents released by the FBI on Mexico a few mulths earUer.
The AUanta FBI olflce sent the Mobile,
the Kennedy assassination:
WASHINGTON (UP!)- In June 1964 J . Ala., office a 'memo that one such person
Edgar Hoover read a newspaper report that worth interviewing was Hilda Mirthal
famed philosopher Jean Paul Sartre had ~azada.Alfaro, in Prichard, Ala.
Two days later came this urgent memo
joined the French "Who Killed Kennedy
from J. Edgar Hoover'• office:
Committee."
"Do not interview Hilda M. Quezada·
The clipping identified Sartre only as an
Alfaro,
aged six ."
author,
'
Hoover promptly scribbled a memo, sent
WASHINGTON -4UPI ) - There were at
to his deputy, Cartha DeLoach:
l~st 1,336 spent -rlfle cartridge cases
"Find out who Sartre is. u
scattered around Dallas after the assassiWASHING'i'ON (UP!) -The FBI files are nation of John F. Kennedy.
They were found on street comers, rifle
unbelievably complete and detailed. ·
Take the guy who wrote J . Edgar Hoover ranges, in private homes and at gun shOJlfl.
a routine complimentary note shortly after The FBI rounded them aU up, carted them
.
the Warren Commission report came out in to Washington and tested them all.
They·
c
oncluded
that
only
three
came
from
1964.
Hoover repllecl with a thank-you letter, the gun the Warren Commission concluded
and on his private file copy ifwas noted the was used to kill Kennedy.
Those three were found near the gun on
bureau's records showed the man had
toured the FBI more than 20 years earUer in the sixth floor of the Texas Sehool Book
1944 and ''fired the Thontpson submachlne Depository.
gun during his tour."
WASHINGTON (UP!) - One !!).page
section
of the FBI files on the assassination
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The FBI
wrapped up the cardboard cartnns on which of Jobn F. Kennedy Is a letter from a man
Lee Harvey Oswald rested his rifle in the wbo claimed numbers could clear up any
Texas School Book Depository and sent questions on the crime.
He proceeded from a discussion of tbe
them to Washingtnn for lab tests.
• Investigators found 20 fingerprints on the numerical values in the word "Kennedy" to
11
cartons - includingone ofOswald'sand five the numerical values in Amerlca,"
"hydrogen
bomb"
and
others.
from the FBI agent who wrapped the
The FBI dismissed tbe man with two
package.
words written across the bottom of his
WASHINGTON (UP!) -One of the first letter: "Appears mental."
procedures in the investigation of the John

•

•'

-·
~

"

'

'"

.

"
"

"'.,

...
"

Warren Commission battled FBI

of both the · FBI and the in Dallas on Nov. 22, 1963.
By MIKE FEINSILBER
chief counsel.
The Illes expose the
UP! Senior Edltnr
Warren Commission: That
"Ford indicated he would
Oswald, taking guidance personal scorn J . Edgar keep me thoroughly advised
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Newly released internal FBI from no one, killed Kennedy Hoover felt for Chief Justice as to the activities of the
•
0
Earl Warren and other commission," DeLoach said
files undermine the public's
critics, and his outrage at the in a memo. "He stated this
assumption that the bureau
and the Warren Commission
commission's criticism of the would have to be on a
worked in close cooperation
bureau 's operations.
confidential basis... "
Samuel Clum of 7t7 Grant to esta btish the wbole truth
"We are being clobbered by
In a Dec. 17, 1963, memo on
Avenue, Cambridge, was behind the murder of John F.
everybody ... The bureau will a meeting with Ford,
arrested Nov. 30 by Guernsey Kennedy.
never live this down and will DeLoach complained of news
County Game Protector Jack
(be) viewed as a second...ate leaks and said, " I told
Instead, the ~.000 pages of
Whit ehair and Wildlife En· files the FBI was forced In
outfit henceforth/' he com- Congr0ssman Ford in strict
forcement Agent Alan mal&lt;e public Wednesday tell
plained.
confidence that apparenUy
• Hamilton for the possession of a jealous rtvalry between
As for conspiracy theoreti- Chief Justice Warren was
•
of six illegal deer according the two over rna tiers big and
cians like author Mark lJine quite close to Drew Pearson
to the Division of Wildlife of small and disclose that
and comedian Dick Gregory, and obviously used Pearson
Hy DICK KIMMINS •
the Ohio Department of Gerald Ford, the House
OOLUMBUS (UP! ) - The the bureau maintained a from time to time to get
Natural Resources.
Republican
leader
at
the
By BERNARD BRENNER
Chief
Justice of the Ohio public alienee while privately
government help, f~nned out Washington was marred by
Whitehair and Hanulton time, volunteered his Supreme Court and the presi- complaining of "monstrous thoughts across to the
UP! Farm Editor
,
across the cap1tal m picket an mcident of violence in
general public.''
found Clum in the .field with
WASHINGTON (UP!) squads and lobbying teams to which two farmers were pne deer, a second was found services as th e FBI 's dent&gt;&lt;!lect of the Ohio State fabrications ... ahsurd ...
Ford reported on the
informant on the Warren Bar Association told a trash .. . gutter talk."
Protest ing farmers, saying' VIsit every member of the · arrested for driving their
commission's
meeting the
m his trunk, and further
Many critics were labeled previous day, enabling
they may be driven off the returnmg Congress.
tractors on an interstate Investigation revealed fcur Commission's internal legislative committee
deviants
operations and disputes.
or DeLoach to tell associates,
Wednesday a boost in judges' sexual
la nd unless they get
The farme rs' trek into highway in northern Virginia
more at his residence. Six
The
FBI
refused
to
store
would
improve
the
Communists.
salaries
''There was no criticism of
and ramming a po1ice car. separate counts were Ciled in
After
the
Warren the FBI at yesterday's
of
justice
Police said they had to shoot Coshocton County Municipal evidence for ~e commission. quality
Each accused the other of administered by state Commission in its report meeting."
the tires out of one tractor to Court by the officers.
criticized some aspects of the
leaking
material to the press. courts.
In 1964, the bureau
stop the fanners.
Acting Municipal Court The commission suggested
FBI's work, Hoover reported appeared preoccupied with
"Nothing
is
more
Spokesmen
for
the Judge James Granitsas found
the slaying might not have important than maintenance to associates he had informed charges that Oswald had
American
Agriculture Clum guilty on six charges.
movement, which is leading a He was fined $750 plus court occurred if the FBI had told of the integrity and quality of President Lyndon Johnson he been in its employ.
nationwide farm strike to win costs, all hunting privileges the Secret Service all it knew the judiciary," said John M. was "outraged" at the Thousanda of pages of the
documents reported on
congressional approval of suspended for six years, a 180 about Lee Harvey Oswald. Adams, president of the state criticism.
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
Within days of the creation worldwide news accounts
L1ke the 40,,000 pages '·bar association in testimony
higher price floors lor crops, day jail sentence was
scheduled a midday rally suspended w1th a stipulation released in December, the before the Ohio Senate of the seven-man commission llnking Oswald to either the
Ford went to Cartha bureau or the CIA. These
today at the Capitol building that any wildlife violations flood of new information Finance Committee.
DeLoach, ·assistant FBI were ''wild and ridiculous
of
details
added
a
wealth
"The
more
money
judges
In win attention for their committed by Clum would
director,
and complained that alleg~Uons" planted by
about
the
assassination
and
receive'
the
better
is
the
demands.
res ult in h1m serving the jail its investigation.
quality of justice that the Warren was trying to run a "Conununists," the bureau
Informational pickets were term, and forfeited his gun to
But nothing appeared to citizens receive. You get "one-man commission" by said.
that they . will affect the bemg stationed atthe Capitol, the court.
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
challenge
the central fmding what you pay lor," said installing _his own man as
DEAR DR. LAMB - I have development of the teeth or the White House and the
Adams.
had a " more than normal" cause staining and discolora- Agriculture Department and
Pending
before
the
problem with acne, not just tion of the teeth. However, strikemovementleaderssaid
committee
is
a
House-passed.
pimples •nd blackheads but the teeth have developed and they would seek a personal
bill sponsored by Rep. Harry
the deep kmd that leaves passed the stage that this can meeting with President
J
. Lehman,
D-Shaker
scars on my face and back - occur in the teenager with Carter.
By
JOAN
HANAUER
would
boost
Heights,
that
ever since the ninth grade. acne, so this is not a good
But Congress was the main
uidted Press lnte1'118tloaal
UPI Television Writer
judges'
salaries
between
~
Smce that time I have been reason to fall to take the focus of the lobbying blitz,
BANDIT'S
BABY:
Wben RallmUDda Nuclmento de Castro
under a dermatologist's care tetracycline that your doctor which began informally
NEW YORK (UP!) - Sex on television, to paraphrase Mark and 45 percent beginning gave birth to a oon three years ago in Rio De Janeiro, she
has prescribed for you.
Tuesday and was to continue Twain, is something that everybody talks about but nobody April I.
off and on.
Chief Justice C. William saved Ronald Biggs from a bial and, probably, prison. On
I have been leery of taking · 1 am sending you The into next week. The strike does.
O'Neill said he thought it Wednesday they were reunited . Miss de Castro, now a dancer
too many drugs and Health Letter number 11-2, movement, which is calling
Even If it Is aU talk, there is more of it.
in Europe, returned to Brazil- just for a month, she says, In
medicines that the doctor · Acne Can Be Treated. It witl on fanners not to plant crops
"As the violence level has been reduced, there has been a inappropriate to "lobby" on 1974, Scotland Yardoought Biggs' return from Brazil where be
prescnbes because of the give you a . good understan- unless its demands are met, growth of programs based on sexusl themes," said Joseph R. behalf of the bill, but added had fled after helping pull off the $5.7 million robbery of a
things you hear about s1de ef· ding of how acne is produced wants a law banning sales of- Daly, chairman of Doyle Dane Bernhach, a major advertising that the "skill and quality" of British postal train in 1963, but the birth of his son, under
judges was paramount to the
feels of antibiotics. My folks and why antibiotics and cer· farm conunodlties at less agency .
state
judicial system and that Brazilian law, blocked the extradition. Says Biggs, ''Wbat lles
highly discourage the use (\f tain skin peeling agents are than 100 percent of the
Actually, Daly didn't say It - he wrote it, in a speech to be
in the future for Raimunda and myself, I'm about to discover."
tetracycline and say that the successful in treating most federal farm parity standard. delivered Thursday at a conference in Key Biscayne, Fla.• but a long overdue pay boost was
COUNTING 11IE LOSSES: First he lost his freedom . Now
Market prices now average was weather4&gt;ound in London and his speech was rescheduled necessary to attract quality
acne will "go away when I get cases. 1 would think from
1110
older" with the attitude that a your description of your pro- only about tw!Hhirds of the for delivery .by another Doyle Dane executive.
~~b!~~ to
for a seat on he's lost his job. Film director Roman Polamld, jailed on a
few scars don 't hurt blem yours could certainly be parity level.
"In the current television season," the Dalv soeecb
O'Neill;s annual salary ~als charge, learned Wednesday he's been dro~ as
anything. I disagree with managed with modern treatStrike spokesmen, after a continued, "I believe these sex-&lt;&gt;riented pr~rams have would jump from $43,000 to director of a movie for producer Dino De LallftDIUa. Polanaki
them because, m the first ment. Others who want thJS meeting Wednesday night, reached new levels in terms of their numbers and the potential
$60,000 and he would beoome ~ undergoing paychiatric study at slate p~n in Chino, Calif.,
pl•ce, I have more than just a infonnation can send 50 cents said they decided not to give _ controversiallty of their content."
the highest paid elected slate ~ndirul sentenclru! o~ a convictlm !Jf havm2 sexual relations
few scars, and secondly I'm With a long, stamped, self- formal
ooganizatio~al
What to do? Conduct a survey, of course, which Doyle Dane official with enactment of the wtth a 13-year-&lt;&gt;ld gu-1. DelJiurentiis says he hates to drop
sure any doctor or any person addressed envelope for it to . endorsement In ~ detailed did, polling 400 Americans on their attitudes toward sex on bill.
Polanski ~s director of "The Hurricane," but he has a film
who has had the problem is me in care of this newspaper farm program which several television. SUIIIIllBrizing the results, Daly suggested:
''Ohio's courts area system crew W81ting on th~,South Pacific island of Bora Bora and he;s
aware that it IS very painful P.O. Box 1551, Radio City Sta: leaders have been drafting.
"I think we can conclude from the survey results that sex on of which I can be proud," said worried a~ut
the uncertainty of Mr. Polanski s
Instead, they sa1d, the television is a major source of concern for many Americans. O'Neill.
emotionally as well as tion New York NY 10019
availability,
'physically.
DEAR DR. LAMB - 1 hope detailed plan for controls on equaling violence in importance."
In addition to the $17,000
It seems to me that It is you can help , convince my fa~m production to keep
Answers to the first question in the poll should dismay the
IN 'l1IIS OORNER ... : Ptelldeat Ctlrter digs softball, but his
totally unnecessary to put up hushand not to shave my prtces up would be used only industry - {6 percent said that television was worse than it annual increase for the chief mother likes a bit more beef in her sports menu. She took the
with It for this long. I'm now daughter's ·head next sum- as a "discussion piece" with , was five years ago, 26 percent found it better and 28 percent justice, the bill would boost day off Wednesday, traveling from her Plains, Ga., home to
associate supreme court jus- nearby Columbus for an evening of professional wresUing.
22, and even though my back mer. She is two and has very lawmakers.
called it about the same.
.
IS clear except for scars, my
In a question about public satisfaction with the handling of tice$ from $40,000 a year to Mloa Ulllan is an avid fan of the grunters and groaners, and
fine hair. He is positive that
face seems to be getting shaving her head wiD make
various themes, {6 percent were generally satified with the $53,000.
one of them - a maal&lt;ed hulk known only aa "Mr. Wrestling
worse. It's not to the place her hair grow thicker and
television handling of sex... elated scenes and themes, while 54 · Courts of Appeal justices No.2" -gave bera blue-dbbon tour of the locker room.
where my whole face is pit- coarser.
would be increased from
THEDAILYSENTIN EL
percent were generally dissatisfied. 1
ted, scarred and totaUy,
$37,000
to $49,000 a year.
DEVOTEorornt-What
gives
the
figures
added
zing
is
that
when
asked
DEAR READER - This
QUOTE OF THE DAY: An officer ala West cOast Naval Air
disfigured, but it doesn't im- seems to be a common
other annual salaries Station in reply to a reporter's question about possible
MEI~~'lr..
whether sex... elated material on television tnday accurately
press me as being the nght nusconception. Each hair hos
CHESTER 1.. TANNEHILL
reflects what is happelliJ1j!, 116 percent agreed, In addition, 60 outlined In the bill:
disciplinary action.against the Navy carrier pilot who dropped
idea to let It go until It comes a ha1r follicle deep m the skin.
-Common pleas court and three 500-pound bi?mba on a U.S. Navy ship Wednesday : "AI)y
Roe.:.r'ii~ruCH
percent agreed with the statements that it makes people more
to this stage and then try to do The hair is somewhat like an
City Edllor
understanding of other people's way of life, and ~percent also prohate court judges fr001 a reference to disciplinary action, or the posalble effect of this
something about it. I'd be onion with the bulb being the
Publlshed dally empt S.turdxy
agreed that it provides people with the k_inds of entertairunent range of $23,500 to $34,000 to a incident on a pUot's!uture career or standing, would be strictly
by The Ohio Valley Publishing
th d ire
grateful for any information follicle. The difference is that
range of $33,000 tn $43,000.
Company-Multimedla, Inc.,
l~'
ey es ·
hypothetical, speculative and totally unwarranted at thla time.
you can give me.
- Visiting juvenile court But between you lind me, I'm awful damn' glad I'm not in his
"""" st., Pomeroy, Ohio 167611.
paly believes those poUed " are willing· to tolerate a wide
there is only one hair shaft.
DEAR READER - You Cutting off the shaft will not
,
~=1 p~..::.":'~ "'" "'"- range of sexual subject matter, depending on ita context and judges from $30 to $38 a day, shoes."
really should do everything produce more follicles any
plus expenses.
·
........, ctau pootoge paid al the extent to which It is perceived to threaten the welfare of
you can to arrest the pro- more than cutting off the topa
-Judges in territories with
~~~hia~vertllinl! """""" their children orlheir concepts of normal family Ufe."
GLIMPSES: Katharille Ilepbum did the town•Wednesc1Jo1
blem, and the first thing to do of onions witl produce more
lative ward . Griffith Company,
He advlaed that while "television should continue to be a population of more than night, attending "Cold Storage" on Broadway ... The doctors
is start following your doc- bulhs.
Inc., Bottil\&lt;111 and Gallagtoer Dov., innovative and experiment, it probably also should leave the
30,000 from a base of $21,000 aay U.. MlnatllJ doesn't have pneumonia, bu't lhe'a sick
tor 's advice. That means
~7 Third Ave .. New YtJrk .. NY. evolution of new sexual patterns'' to others.
to $28,750.
AU it does is leave the stul&gt;IOOJ7
enough for the hoopitaland her troubled Broadway lhow "The
when he prescribes medicine ble that feels coarser as stul&gt;- Municipal court judges Act" has been canceled again, pending her return ·... am.tle
Subocriplio" "'"' Deliverod by
Wilen it came to who should select pro8rams. the viewing
-take it. He knows what he is ble always does. As the hair
""'"where
ava11ablj: 75 " "" ""r pubUc voted for itself lo make the decisions, followed by from a range of $22,383 to Hefner, daughter of Playboy Magazine founder Hap Hehler,
~ . By Motor Route where Ulrrier
doing.
shaft grows out agam it will
serv1ce not available, One monu., broadcasters, then consumer organJzations, with sponsors $31,000 to a range of $30,333 to has been named acvice president of Playboy Enterprlla, Inc.,
I am aware of the concern have
1325. By ""'il "' ~hio ••d w va. trailed only by !he government in unpopularity as censor.
$38,750.
the
same
where she'D be in charge of corporate pr&lt;mOiloil and public
hat many people have about characteristics. I suspect
Ole
Year,
122
'
Sill
months,
Daly'S
answered,
":We
do
feel
that
the
uiiiiJUI
'
te
d~ision
~ty court judges from
111.50; Thre e m ont h s~ . 7.00,
.......
relations ... Funnyman Mel Broob hal been Jwned to receiw
••sing antib1ot1cs in the treat- time will take care of your
-""'" 126.00 Y'"" s1a monlhi regarding program selection or rejection ol potentially $4,000 to $6,300 a year plus up UCLA 'a lint annual Charlea Claplln Achievement Award In a
lent of acne, and it js girl's hair. Meanwhile, a
$13.50, Three months, ! l 50 sensitive programs m"•
rest With the ad•--"·-."
to $7,300 extra ~g on . C8llliiU8 cerem111y on Feb. 1 ... Among bundretii of get-well
&amp;.iblcription price indude:J Sunday
\liD'
... ..,,loURIL
ffiisplaced. Acne problems well-balanced diet and norTimeo&amp;nUnel
Since a prosram drawing a big audience over a sustained the county 's -~lation telegram~ and meuagea pouring into a Torrance, Callf.,
commonly begin at puberty mal life will do the mo5t good 1--.-~---~::---' period can · find advertisers to sponsor it, that puts the instead of $4,000.
holl(lltal for llf.,ear-&lt;&gt;ld Roy Rocwa, wbo Ia reeova fng !rom
or later while the big dan~:er for her.
The bill passed the House in heart 1111111err ,II one tram a fallow ainclng cowboy atar of the
responsibillty for what goes on the air right back in·the Uving
m the use of tetracyclines is
November by an SIHo~ vote. IMfll "";' Geae Aalr)'....
room.
.
'

SIX

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for hike
of salaries

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Antibiotics and acne

TV•• .in Review

peopletalk

"

1

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working

TAMPA, Fla. (UP!) for 90 minutes with some
American Football hitting on Wednesday.
Conference Coach Ted
"He's too hard on us/'
Marchibroda and National complained Cinci nnati
Football Conference Coach Bengals' defensive end Coy
Chuck Knox are taking Bacon. "It's like starting all
different approaches in their over again."
"lt was a real good workpreparation for Monday
night's Pro Bowl game.
out," Marchibroda said. " It
Marchibroda is putting his was an excellent wor:.kout.
AFC squad through lengthy They showed real good
workouts, while Knox has · concentration.''
"I think it was a good
opted for a more leisurely
approach of working his start," Knox said. "We had a
players without pads so far. few problems with the
The NFC unit stayed cadence, but that was to be
indoors Tuesday when it expected."
The squads will continue
rained, and on Wednesday
ran through a 91kninute, non- one-a-day practices, closed to
hitting session in sweat suits. the public; through Saturday.
The players will be at
The AFC worked for an
hour in the rain Tuesday and Tam pa Stadium Sunday
afternoon for a tw&lt;Hlour open
house , where they will have
brief workouts and then sign
autographs.
A crowd of about 50,000 is
expected for the Monday
Driving a slugg ish · car that night game.

MOTORIST
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ON HIGHWAY

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WYNN'S ENGINE TUNE.UP.
This famous oil treatment
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WYNN'S ENGINE TUNE-UP
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NOW OPEN

GINO'S
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PHONE 773-5536

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BUilDING OR REMODEUNG?

.--======::---;'f..EA

"We felt they had their
backs to the wall," he said.
"They had been wounded a
little bit. They don 'I lose two
in a row very often and we
had to prepare ourselves for a
hattie. It was one of those
games when botb teams
played good."
Senior guard Pete Uptrap
scored 23 points and hit a pair
of clutch free throws with five
seconds remaimng to give the
Muskies an msurmountable
7~7 lead.
Uptrap had hit a pair of
free throws with nine seconds
left in regulation to give
Muskingwn a 58-56 lead, but
Robin Gregory hit from deep
in the corner with two
seconds left to send it into
overtime.
In other Ohio Conference
action Wednesday mght ,
Ober1in downed Ohio Northern 71-&lt;15, Otterbein tripped
Oh10 Wesleyan 77-76 and
Mount
Union knocked
Wooster out of a share of the
Northern Division lead with
an 80-78 overtime win over
the Scots.
Meanwhile, in the MidAmerican
Conference,
Toledo and Miami climbed
back into a three-way tie for

AFC stars long, hard

Judges in

HEALTH

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
,Musking~m Coach Jim
Burson
knows
that
sometimes It's better to be
lucky tlian good.
His learn was borth
Wednesday night and still
barely escaped witha 7~9
overtbne victory over Wittenberg in a key Ohio Conference Southern Division
game.
The Muskle win, coupled
with Marietta's 84-82 overtime victory over Capital,
gives Muskingum a game and
half lead over the runner-up
Crusaders in the Southern
Division and, perhaps more
importantly, a 2¥z game
bulge over pre-season
favorite Wittenberg .
" How can you shot 63
percent for the game and
lose?" asked a bewildered
Burson after his team's
thrilling victory. "I'll bet
they haven't shot like that
and lost for awhile. We went
into the game trying to keep
them from scoring inside and
they just shot the eyes out of
it from the outside."
But Burson knew going intt
the game it wasn't going to be
easy.

Marc~roda

counts

Farmers pressing campaign

Muskies survive
hot Wittenberg

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SEE . US FIRST AND ' COMPAR.E OUR
PRfCES;_ QUALITY MATERIAL AT
R·EASONA.ilLE PRICES.

WE

CASH&amp; C:ARRY
,PA·1CES

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VALLEY LUMBER &amp;
SUP~LY

CORPORATION
m s;.3rif Ave.

wins.

Toledo.
behind
Ted
Williams' 20 points, had little
trouble In downing Kent State
64-lll, while Miaml p6sted an
impressive 80· 76 win at
Central Michigan.
Toledo's victory was its
14th in 16 games and lith 1n a
row.
Toledo sc&amp;'red nine straight
points to break a 17-17 tie, led
28-21 at intermission, and
pulled away In the second
half to a 52-32 advantage at
the 9:14 mark.
~
Sophomores Tim Selgo and
Jim Swaney came off the
bench to score 10 points
apiece for the Rockets while
freshman Harvey Knuckles,
another sub, had eight.
Burrell McGee led Kent
State, now 2· 12 overall and l-4
m the MAC, with IB points.
Archie Aldridge scored 27
points to lead Miami to its
hard-fought victory over
Central Michigan .
Aldridge, who hit on 11 of !6
shots from the floor, was
aided by Randy Ayers and
Rick Goins with 14 points
each and Bill ' Lake with 13.
In another Mid-Am game,
Western Michigan downed
Ohio Univ ersity 73-59 at '
Athens. Todd Dietnch scored
16 pomts and Mark Rayner 12
to pa..cl\ the Western attack.
The Bobcats helped
Western's cause by shooting

CHARLOTIE, N.C. (UP! )
- Eddie McGirt today
announced hts retirement
after 20 years as football
coaeh at JohMOn C. Smith
University but will remain as
the school's athletic directnr .
"I have mixed emotions at
this &amp;time," McGirt, whose
football teams compiled a
119-72-3 record, told reporters
and former football players
at
a
campus
news
conference. "We've bad some
trying times together. This
has been an enjoyable
experience for me these last
20 yearS.
1

George Allen fired by Washington Redskins
By PATRICIA KOZA
WASHINGTON (UP! )
George Allen , who negotiated sil:
months with the Washingtnn
Redaklns for · a contract exten·
sion , says he · heard aboul his
firing as coach and general
manager Wednesday night from
his son - who heard it on the
radio.
"! thought he was kidding,"
said Allen after his 23-year-&lt;lld
soil Greg gave him the news when
he returned from an evening out,
celebrating his wife Etty's
birthday. "lfoundout about 10 : 4~
(p.m.)."
The Washington Post, in
tnday's editions, quoted Redskins' President Edwlird Bennett
Williams as saying he had
"reached a point where I couldn't
• wait any longer for George to
make up his mind."
Allen, who has a 67-30-1 record
and five NFL playoff berths in
seven seasons, said he had
spoken to neither Williams nor
majority stockholder Jack Kent
Conke, the man who persuaded
him to come to Washingtnn in
1971 after be was fired bv lh• I .os

MiddleJIQrt, o.
992-2709 or 992·6611
Open: 7:00to5:00 Mon. thru Fri.
· 7:00 to 3:00 Saturday

team.
" I haven't negotiated or

applied for any job," he said.
" My first interest has heen to
make this (the Redskins ) a better
job,"

The firing came sil: months and
four days after an announcement
that Allen had signed a four-year
extension of his original sevenyear contract, but word later
leaked out that Allen never
signed the contract.
"I thought we reached an
agreement," The Post quoted
Williams as saying. "Last
Saturday was silt months since

United Press International
Ford had a l)etter idea.
Phil Ford, that is, and his
better idea was W score 24

points, eight of them in the
fmal four minutes, tn give
fourth ...anked North Carolina
a stirring 69-64 victnry over

Atlantic Coast Conference
rival North 'carolma State.
NC SUIU! never led, but cut
a 12-point Tar Heel lead In
one, 53-52, with 7:35
remaining to play. The Tar
Heels quickly went up by
seven points with 4:15 to play

'

.S port Parade

den talk

Beaver season
in til Feb. 18.
By GREG BAILEY
With all this snow and cold weather, fur is popular and
practical. Fox trapping season is now closed, but muskrat,
mink, and coon are still legal. With the advent of beaver
trapping once again, the trapper is still offered a challenge,
and here in Ohio, the beaver trapping season came in on
January 14 and closes on February lB.
But.the novice shouldn't attempt to capture thla rodent for
the money involved. Last report had beaver sellihg at $25 at
the most, and the inexperienced trapper cannot be selective in
his catches as there will be many kits caught if the traps aren't
set properly.
One of the most important and most overlooked
regulations in beaver trapping is this:
The trapper must have written ~rmission from the
landowner and the permission must specify the exact trapping
area. Traps must qe No. 2 or larger and a trapper may not use
more than 3 traps. Limit is four beaver per season and traps
may not be set on or within ten feet of a beaver dam, lodge, or
hank den. Each !rap must hear a tag with the user's name, and
the tag must be above the water or ice line. Pelts must be
tagged by a State Game ProtectorbyB:OO P .M. on February 18
in the county where taken. Non...esident.. may trap beaver only
. if the state of their residence permits Ohio citizens to trap
beaver.
Beaver are skinned differently from other fur bearers so as
to form a round blanket. If anyone has any questions on the
trapping or skinning of these animals, contact local Game
Protector Andy Lyles. A 111ined pelt from ignorance of
trapping or skinning would be a terrible waste. Only part of the
beaver trapping regulations is contained in the hunting and
trapping digest.
Speaking of fur, the next Southeastern Ohio Fur Takers
Association fur sale will be on Februscy II at the Morgan
County Fairgrounds in MeConnelsville at 9:00 A.M.
Each type of fur will be sold separately, and each seller
will be signed in and given a tag with his position number upon
arrival. Starting with lot No. I, each sells in order of his
number . While one lot is being oold, two following lots will be
put out and readied for sale. No other lots will be put on sale
display until your number is called. The seller will be in the
sale ring when his fur is sold, and he will have the privilege to
reject the offer if the price is not suitable.
Before coming to the sale, count your furs and make a list
to turn in when you sign ln. Only on muskrats, pick out culls,
damaged, kits, etc.
~
At a sale like this, the fur that has been well-cared for will
hring the most money, and traveling a few miles will be :well
worth the trouble ..All it will cost you is $3.00 to join the S.O.F.T.
and a two percent commission on all tur oold. If you have
quaUty fur, you'll make up your expense on just a few pieces.
If anyone ljas any questions, contact Mr. Kash Jewell,
Chairman of Sales at 962-2989. Write him a~ ~ South 16th
Street, McConnelsville, Ohio 43756. A professional auctioneer
will do the selling.
One final note. All you Izaak Walton members are
reminded that next Mooday, the 23rd, ts the annual white
elephant sale. This is ime of the two times during the year that
you can Iring your wives or best girl to share in the fun . This
auction is one of the big fund ... a!sersoftheyear, so don't forget
it. Weather permitting, supper will start at 7:00. Each family
is asked to bring a covered dish and their own table service.
The meat and drinks will be provided by the club.

we made the announcement with his approval - and nothing
happened.
"No one could say I did not give
George sufficient time tn say yes
to us."
Williams, who owns 24 percent
of the Redakin stock (Cooke owns
the rest ). told The Post he wiD
divide the johs of coaeh and
general manager and begin
searching immediately for
Allen's two successors.
Redskin players expressed
shock at Allen's firing, and there
were hints that some of the
"Over-the-Hill Gang " ma y
retire.
"Everybody wanted to get
George All en and somebody
finally did," center Len Hauss
tnld The Post . "I don'! mean
W1Uiams. I'd have to say the
press got Allen with everything
they've been writing."
While the players stuck up for
Allen, he was sti cking up for
them.
ul 'm very proud of our players
and I'm sorry lt had to end this
way . I think I'm going to take a
vacation now."

An&amp;eles Rams.
Asked If be would ·speak with
Williams. Allen tnld UPI: "I'm
oot going to talk with him if he's
going to handle things this way ..
I'm just disappointed in him.
We've given our heart and ooul to
this football program and the
results are evident. That's the
thanks you get for it."
The 55-year-&lt;&gt;ld ADen also said
he has neither signed a c;ontracl
oor negotiated with the Los ·
Angeles Rams or any other NFL

Ford's24 points key in Tarheel victory

By MILTON IUaiMAN
UPI Sports r.dltGc'
NEW YORK (UP!)- The first time I ever saw Dick Buerkle
compete three years ago in the People's Republic of China. he
reminded me of Pete Rose. Except for one thing .
Rose draws more than a quarler-milllon dollars a year with
Cincinnati. Buerkle runs merely for peanut.., or primarily
hecause he'd rather do that than practically anything eiBe in
the world .
Like Rose, Buerkle, who set the world indoor record for the
mile last week with his 3:54.8 clocking at College Park, Md.,
gets the most out of what be has by pushing himself close to the
limit every time out. Like Rose, also, he's anything but your
classic perftrmer so that whenever he runs, you're much
likelier to see him gutting It out more than employing any kind
of finesse .
" Pete Rose probably works harder than I do," says-the 3(). .
year-&lt;&gt;ld locmer Olympian, who pronounces his name Berkley.
"I concentrate a lot. My brain does all the work, not my body
so much.''
The mile isn 'I even Buerkle's specialty. He generaUy goes
more f&lt;r the longer distances, As a member of the U.S. track
and field team, which went to the People's Republic of China In
compete against the Chinese during the spring of 1975, Buerkle
came over there essentially as a 5,000-meter man.
He ran in the 5,000 meters in Canton, the 1,500 in Shanghai
and the 10,000 In Peking and won aU of them handily.
'
To keep himself occupied between events, he wrote and filed
stories for the Rochester Times-Union in Rochester, N.Y.,
wbere he lived bef&lt;re moving tn Buffalo last summer. More
than that, Buerkle was so friendly and popular on that Chinese
!rip that he wound up becoming the tour's good-will
ambassador. Everybody liked him.
In setting his world record last Friday illthe"National
Invitation indoor track meet, Buerkle finjshed 20 yards in front
of Filbert Bay!, holder of the world outdoor record m the 1500
meters. Bayi, who Is from Tanzania, always has oome
difficulty making the adjustment each time he comes tn the
U.S. to compete early in the year,
Most track buffs still are witllholdlng judgment on how good
a miler Buerkle is, preferring to see how he does in the
Millrose games at Madison Squsre Garden where he'll111n in
the famed Wanamaker Mile on Jan. 27.
Buerkle will be in with Bayi again as well as with such other
standouls as Wilson Waigwa of Kenya, 111nne111p in the event
last year; Steve Seott, the 21-year-&lt;&gt;ld American outdoor ,
champion from the University of Callfornia and Mark Belger
of Villanova, who set an American indoor record in the 880 last
Friday at College Park.
His competition In the Wanamal&lt;er doesn't intimidate
Buerkle, though.
"It's a good (ield," he says, "but I feel I can 1110 with
anybody. I have to like my chances as weD as anyone else's."
Having never,, held any kind of world title before this,
Buerkle, who works for a lens company in Buffalo, stll1 is
rather unused to the feeling, but he likes it.
"It's exciting," he says. "I'm enjoying all the calls from my
friends . The only other title I've ever had was champion snow
shoveler. You ought tn see me shovel snow. I'm not bad at aU."
Buerkle had to stay loose last Friday before be broke the
record. He showed up at College Park without a competitor's
ticket because he never got one. What's more, the taxi that
took him to the fieldhouse where the meet was to be held ·
dropped him off at the wrong door.
"It was raining hard, so I had to wait there awhile," be says.
"I wasn't going to get aU soaking wet and then try to run my

and Coach Dean Smith
o;dered his squad into the
lour corners delay offense .
From the delay game, Ford
scored four points at the free
throw line and added two
fi eld goals, Jeff Crompton
had two points and Tom
Zaligaris added a pair of free
throws tn clinch the victory .
"Basically , J. Ulought we
played really well except for
turnovers,'' said Dean Smith,
coach of the Tar Heels. "But
a great deal of credlt for that
has to go In NC State's very
active defense. They were as
impressive defensively as
anyone we've seen."
Warren led NC Slate w1th
20 points, followed by Kenny
Matthews with 12 points.
In other games involving
top teams, No. 2 Marquette
got by DePaul, 60-74, No. 8
Kansas downed Iowa State,
100::82, Virgin ia held off
Virginia
Tech,
66-62,
Georgetown nipped Seton
Hall, 70-69, Providence
demolished Holy Cross, 110-M,
and Duke tripped Wake
Forest, 81-72.
Butch Lee scored 30 points
and Jerome Whitehead added
22 to lead the second ... anked
Warriors to victory over
DePaul. The Blue Demons,
now 13-2, were led by Dave
Corzine with 18 points und
Clyde Bradshaw with 14.
Donnie Von Moore scored
16 pcmts a nd six othe r
Kansas players hit double
figures to lead the eighthrated Jayhawks tn a romo

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plus a 100 pet. Invest ment
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over Iowa State. Kansas ( 142) took-over sofe possession of
£irst place in the eonferentoe
with a ~ n -cord .
Freshman Jeff Lamp
po11red in 2.5 points dnd Bobby
Stokes sank seven free
throws in the final tw o
minutes as Virginia held off a
furious Virginia Tt'Ch rally .
I.es Henson and Marsha II
Ashford led Virginia Tech
with !6 poinl• apiece.
Derrick Jackson scored 25
poin.l s as
Georgetown
stormed from six points down
in Ole final I: 32 In nip Seton
Hall University for their 11th
straight victory. Greg Tynes
had 23 points tn pace the
Pirates, now 7-7.
Dwight Williams scored 22
points and Bruce Campbell
added 20 as Provlden&lt;" wnllope&lt;l Holy Cross. Providence
raised its record tn 14-1 while
th e Crusaders fell to ll-2.
Sopho more center Mike
Gmlnski and fr es hman
Euge ne Banks scored 21
points each to lead Duke tn an
Atlantic Coast Confere nce
victory over Wake ~"orest .
Duke stayed on tnp in the
league, and went tn 13-3
overall . Wake Forest fell to 23 in the conference und llh'i
overall .

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Buerkle actually had to argue with a security gusrd to get
inside the fieldhouse and you know how that can be. But he
finally talked his way in, whieh is exactly the oort of thing a
guy like, say, Pete Rose, would do.

••••

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••·i•

'•

the lead with Nor thern
Dlinois with Wednesday night

only 28 percent from the field,
while Western hit on ~
percent.
OU, which dropped to 8~
overall and 2-3 in the conference , was led by Tim
Joyce with II points and
• Ernie Whitus with 11 .
In a non-conference game,
forward John Long fired in 30
points to lead Detroit to an 11479 win over Bowling Green. ,
The Titans jumped out to a
17-polnt lead at one point in
the first half, but BG cut It to
46-36 at the half and closed
the gap to just two points, 62·
60, late in the game.
Detroit again took command and led 114~9 with BG
scoring the last 10 points of
the game. The Falcons were
paced by M1ke Marshall, who
hit for 24 points.
ln other games, it was
Youngstown State 101,
Ashland 80: Hanover. Ind. 91,
Wilmington 71; Earlham,
Ind. 88, Bluffton, ~ : Taylor,
·-Ind. 94, Findlay 71; Case
WEstern 77, Hiram 63i
Carnegie· Mellon, Pa . 89,
John Carroll 67; and Malone
92, Urhana 83.

TIRES
GENERAL
TIRE SALES
NORTH SECOND AVENUE
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�•
•

COLUMBUS (0PI )
Things should be a little more
cordial around Delphos St.
John's High School this week
nbw that there are two No. Is.
The Blue Jays have taken
over the top spot in the United
' Press International Ohio
High School Board of Coaches
Class AA boys ' basketball ·
ratings, moving past both
Co lumbu s Mifflin · and
Cleveland ' Calhedral Latin.
The St. John's move into
first place gives the Allen
County school a rare double
as the Lady Blue Jays were
'runaway leaders in this
week's UP! AA girls' ratings .
Joining St. John's as No . I
teams in this, the lhird of
eight weeks of voting , are
Akron Central-Bower in
Class AAA and Mansfield St.
Peter's in Class A. CentralHower and St. Pete have held
their No. 1 ratinJ~:s since the

Cage ratings
-COLUMBUS IUPI) - This
week ' s United Press ln .
ternationa l Ohio High School
Boalfll of Coaches· boys
basketball ratings (with f irst.

place votes and won . lost
records in parentheses ):

CLASS AAA
Team
Points
l . Akron Centrai . Hower
( 12 11 ' 0)
225
2. Kettering Alter (7 11 -1}
188
3. Cin . St. Xav . I I 13-0) 173
• . Cols . Easl (2 9-0l
164

5. Cleveland St. Ignatius

By ED SAINSBURY
UPI Sports Writer
(UP! )
CHI CAGO
Michigan State Coach Jud
Heathcote · believes the
pressure is on Purdue today
to try to knock his Spartans

off the top rung in the Big Ten
basketball chase.
The Boilermakers,
preseason favorites for the
conference
title,
and
Michiga n State, considered at
best a dark horse in the Big
Ten race in the November
estima tes, meet on the
Spartans' fl oor tonight in the
highlight contest of a fivegame. conference schedule.
The Spartans not only have
the best record in tbe league,
12-1, but lead the conference
wilh a W record. If they win,
lhey will be the targei for
everybody else to try to knock
off.

If Purdue wins, it Will be a

to
both
the
.boost
Boilermakers and Michigan,
now tied with Purdue for
second with a 3-1 conference
mark , A Purdue win would
create a three-way tie for
first place.
In other Thursday games.
ntlnois plays at Minnesota ,
matching up 2-2 conference
records, Iowa, 2-2, appears at
Northw estern, seeking its
first Big Ten win , Ohio State
takes a 2-2 record. to Indiana ,
l.J; and Wisconsin, 1-3, plays
at Michigan.
Heathcote doesn 't figure
Puidue as a pushover.

" I figure Purdue will be
Coming back very strong,'' he
said. ''That loss (to Iowa
Saturday) put additional
pressure on them but I know
Purdue will be ready ."
The Spartans probably will
be ready to.o, although
Heathcote said his yo Wlg
team, which starts stellar
freshmen Earvin Johnson
and · J ay Vincent, "can. look
very, very good in one game
and just terrible in the next."
A defeat, while it would
encourage Purdue and Mi·
chigan, wouldn't demoralize
lhe Spartans.
"There'll be 14 games left,
and it's too ear ly , to count
anybody out ye t ," said
Heathcote.
The home floor should be
an adva nta ge to the Spartans,
sin c.e both Johnson and
Vincent are hometown
players and their presence on
the Michigan State squad has
heightened enthusiasm and
attendance.
Th e
Boilermakers wiU be playing
before a hostile crowd.
But that might not
"I think Purdue has the
best starting five in the
leag ue ," Heathcote sa id,
"and it's got three veterans
who have played four years .
together. Then Joe Barry
Carroll
poses
inside
problem.s. When he gets the
ball near the basket, he's
llilstoppable."

96

11 -0)

95

8. Can . Timken (7 -0)
9. Dayton Roth (8-1)

94

11 -1)

61
56

Second T en : 11. Columbus
North { 1) 44 ; 12. Columbus
West 27 ; IJ . Defiance 26 ; 14.
(tie) Princeton and Dayton
M eadowda le, 22 each : 16.
Springfield N or th 16 ; 18 .
Columbus lind~n McKi nely
10 ; 19. Middl etown 9; 20 .
Toledo St. Fran c is and
Barberton, 8 each .

CLASS AA
Team
Points
\. Delphos St. Johns

18 9-ll
2. Col. Mifflin (6 B·i2)

174
164

3. Warsaw River VIew

{3

9·01

160

4. Cleve land Cathedra l

La lin 12

8-31

123

5. Whee lersburg ( 1

9-11

177
6. Elvria Calh. ( 1 10-1) 109
7. West Ho l m~s (8. 1)
57
8. (Tie) Well sville (8.2)
52
8. (Tie) Coshocton (10· 2) 52

10. Archbo ld {1

10-01

41

Second Ten : n. N ew
Lebanon Dix ie :12 ; 12. Port
smou th 25; 13. Hannibal
River 21; 14. Youngstown
Raven I ll 20; 15 . {lie)
Martins Ferry. a nd Akron
Sou th·, 12 each; ,.7. Waverly
11; 18. Vinton 9 ; 19. (tiel
Wynford, Clayman!, Lorain
Ca tholic and North Col lege
Hill , 8 each.

CLASS A
Tea m
Poin t s
1. Mansfi~ld ~S t . Peter'$
( 11 12-01
250
2. Indian Valley South
{4 11 -0 )
224
3. Morral Ridgedale
{4

8-0)

206

4 Kalida 15 13-01.
5. Patrick Henry (2

157
JO.Ql

126
6. Windham ( 1

7. Ada (1

matter .

132

7. East Cleveland Shaw

10. Toi . St.John(1

Spartans drawing
pressure at top

E.Ut!rn Conferenc!
Atlantic Division
W. l
Pet.
Phila
29 11 .725
New York
n 20 .524
Buffalo
16 24 AOO
Boston
14 26 .350
New Jersev
9 35 .205
Central Division

W. l

10·0)

7-21

96
84

B. Clin ton Massie (9.Q)
68
9. Col umbus Ready (8. 1) ·50
10. Southeaster n Ross (9. 1) J-4
Second ten : 11. Dalton 29:
· 12. Buckeye Trai/25 ; 1J. Fort
Recovery 22 ; 14. Wayne
Trace 20; 15, Sebr ing 19 ; 16.
Covi ng ton 18; 17. Ottovil le 15;
18. Stryker 14 ; 19 . (t ie)
Hopewe i i . Loudon , Collins
W estern· Reserve, Ber l i'n
Western
Reserve
and
Southington ( 1), II each .

Celtics plaster Milwaukee
Nets' ninth loss in a row. Charlotte, N.C. Truck
Maurice Lucas added 15 Robinson added 20 points and
points for the NBA leaders t l reboWlds for New Orleans.
while rookie Bernard King Armond Hill led the Hawks
had 25 points for New Jersey. with 21.
Pistons 113, Braves 100:
SuperSonics 106, Rockets 104:
AI Skinner's 12iJoint fourlh
Fred Brown's 23 points
qua rter helped Detroit break lifted Seattle to its eighth
a five-game losing streak. victory In its last nine games.
Bob Lanier had 30 points for Marvin Webster added 18
·the Pistons, who put six points and Wally Walker 17
players in double figures. for Seattle.
Randy Smith led Buffalo with 76ers 126, Kings 106:
32.
Lloyd Free fired In 26
Spurs 109, Pacers 96:
points and Julius Erving 24 as
Mike Gale scored 7 of his 13 Philadelphia ro!led to its
points in the third perind to ninth straight win. Ron B.oone
spark San Antonio past and Richard W_ashington had
Indiana , with Get&gt;rge Gervin 21 p9ints each for the Kings.
adding 23 points and larry Warriors 113, Bullets 106:
Kenon 21. Rickie Sobers
Phil Smith scored a game19
for
the
Pacers.
scored
high
28 points as Golden State
his number."
108,
Hawks
106
:
Jazz
contained
a late Washington
The ·celtics ran off 19
Pete
Ma
ravich
tossed
in
34
its victory.
rally
to
record
straight points in lhe first
points,
including
his
team
's
Bob
Dandridge
had
27 points
quarter to. virtually put the
game away, During tha t final six, to lead the Jazz past and Elvin Hayes 23 for the
spree, Wicks had seven points Atlanta In .a game played In Bullets.
and Jo Jo White and John .
Havlicek four each. Junior
Bridgeman had 23 for the
Bucks.
Dave Cowens had 23 P9lnts
- in a ~rong outside game White 19 and Havlicek 18 for
.the Celtics, who are 15 games
'behind
first - pla ce
Philadelphia in the Atlantic
Division .
ONE Of THE. MANY ITEMS
Meanwhile , Milwaukee
Coach Don Nelson - an exCeltic ~ didn't have one of his
11
better nights.
"They humiliated us," he
said. "And we helped them as
much as we could.';
,
Elsewhere in lhe NBA,
•
Portland dumped New
Jersey , 127·101, Detroit
defeated Buffalo, 113-100, San
Antonio beat Indiana, 109-96,
New Orleans edged Atlanta ,
108-106, Seattle tripped
Houston , 106-104, Philadelphia took Kansas City, 12&amp;106, and Golden State stopped
Washington, 113-106.
tran Blazers ttl, Neli 101:
Bill Walton's 30 points 10
rebounds sent Portland to its .
third ,straight vi~ry and the liiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;:;:;:;:=:

By FRED LIEF
UPI Sports Writer
These are not the best of
times for Sidney Wicks a nd
the Boston Celtics and they
must wo nd er why there
aren't more gam es like the
one Wednesday night.
Wicks scored a season-high
35 points and grabbed 15
rebounds in the Boston
Garden to carry the Celtics to
a 130-116 •plastering of the
Milwaukee Bucks.
"Tonight was Sidney's
nlght," said Coach Tom
Sanders. " We were trying kl
find the man who was hot and
get the ball to him . Tonight it
was Sidney -the guys on the
floor recognized it and called

SALE PRICED"

GB
8

13
IS

22

Pet . GB

17 .585
San Antoni
18 .581
Clevelnd
21 .475 41 '
Atlanta
24 .455 5 1 ~
New Or1ns
19 24 .442
6
Houston
15 27 .357 91 ~
. western conference
Midwest Division
W. L Pet . Ga'
Denver
28 13 .683
Chic ago
24 19 .55B 5
Mil w
24 22 .522 6 1 1
Indi ana
18 73 .439 10
Detroit
18 23 .439 10
Kanss C1y
15 29 .341 14 1 1
Pacific Division
W. L Pet. GB
Portland
35 6 .854
Phoenix
27 14 659 B
Seattle
24 21 .533 13
Golden St .
20 n .476 15 1 7
Los Ange l s
18 24 .429 17 11
Wednesday 's Results
Boston 130, Milwaukee 116
Portland 127. New Jersey 101
New Orleans lOB, Atlanta 106
Detroit 113, Buffalo 100
San Antonio 109, lildiana 96
Seattle 106, Houston 104
Phila 126, Kansas Cily 106
Golden Slate 113, Wash 106
Ttlursday's Gam es
Ch icago 'JS . Atlanta
at Lou isville
Philadelphia at Cleveland
Denver at Mi lwaukee
New York at Phoenix
Friday 's Games
Kansas City at Boston
Denver at Buffalo
Detroit at Houston
Portland at New Or leans
Indiana at San Antonio
( lf&gt;ve land at ChicMO
Phoenix at Go lden Stat e
washington at Los Angeles
14
25
' 19
20

W~hngtn

{1

SHERR! CONFINED
Sherri Marshall, cystic
fibrosis child of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Marshall, Hemlock
Grove, is confined to
Children's. Hospital Colwn·
bus. Her room nwnber is 429
for those who wish to send her
cards. Mrs. Marshall is in
Columbus with Sherri. On
January 30 she will celebrate
her 13th birthday.

Your "Extra Touch"
Florist Slnce19S7
/

NBA Standings

By United Pren International

Kettering Alter ( 11-1), down
somewhat from the spread of
last week. The Eagles got 12
first place votes and 225
points to seven firsts and 188
for Alter.

12
11 -01
6. Tol. Scotl t I 8· 11

!&gt;-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Jan. 19, 1978

:I Pro :I New law provides for local voting
:Standings \ on. Sunday carry-out of beer, ~e

Allen County has
two teams rated No. l
balloting began.
St. John's, 9-1, polled eight
first place votes and 174
points from the coaches,
while runnerup Mifflin
received six firsts and 164
points and No. 3 Warsaw
River View had three firsts
and 160 points.
latin, which has lost three
times in close games to AAA
competition, tumbled from
the top spot it held the first
two weeks of the ratings to
fourth, well behind the
leading Blue .Jays with 123
points.
Rounding out the top 10 are
Wh eelers burg in fifth ,
followed by Elyria Catholic,
West Holmes, Wellsville and
Coshocton tied for eighlh and
Archbold, a newcomer, in
tenth .
Central-Hower, unbeaten
lhrough II games, holds a 37point margin over ruMer-up

..

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

4--The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Jan. 19, 1978

NHL Standings
By United Press International
Campbell Conference
Patr ic k Division
w. L. T.' Pt s.
Philadelphia
27 9 7 61
NY Islanders
25 10 8 58
Atlanta
16 17 11 43
NY Rangers
16 19 9 41
Smythe Division
W. L . T. Pis.
15 16 12 42
Chicago
Vancouve r
12 20 10 34
St. LQUiS
11 26 6 28
Color ado
' 9 12 10 28
Minnesota
9 28 5 23
Wales Conference
Norri s Division
W. L. T. Pts.
Montreal
31 7 5 67
Los Angeles
18 16 9 45
Pittsburgh
14 20 10 38
DetrOit
15 19 6 36
Washington
8 2no 26
Adl'lms Division
w. L. r . Pts.
Boston
26 10 6 58
Buffalo
23 9 10 56
Toronto
24 13 6 54
Cleveland
14 27 4 32
Wedn esd ay 's Result s
Atlan ta I, PiltSbllrgh 0
Mon tr ea l 7, CleOJeland 4
Chicago 5, Wash i ngton 2t
NY l sln drs 5, Minnesota 2
Detroit 4, Colorado 4, t ie
NY Rangers 3, Los .Ang 0
TtlUr sda v's Games
Montrea l at Phlli)de lphia
Washington at Boston
Chicago at Detroit
Ci eveland at Buffalo
NY lslndr s at St. Louis
Toronto at VancOlllier
Friday's Gam es
NY .Ranger s at Atl anta
Los Angeles at Color ado

WHA Sta ndings
By Uni,el:l Pre ss International
w. L. T. Pts.
26 1J 3 55
New Eng land
Winnipeg
26 14 1 53
Quebec
20 16 2 42
Edmonton
20 19 1 41
Bi rmingham
18 21 2 JB
Hou ston
17 19 3 37
CinCi nriat'i
16 24 2 34
IndianapOl is
13 24 4 30
Wedn esday 's Results
Birming ham 3. Ci nc i 0
Edmonton 1, New Eng 0
Winnipeg
Quebec 1
Thur sday's Games
( No ga mes sched uled )
Friday 's Games
·
Edmonton at Birmingham
Quebec &lt;It Cincinnati
Houston at Indianapolis
New England at Winnipeg

s,

be held by any of the
following: (1 ) two or more
contiguous precincts In a
municipal coil\&gt;oration, (2) an
entire municipal corporaUon,
(3) a part of a township
completely surrounded by a
municipal corporation, '(4)
two or more contiguous
precincts in that portion of a
township which is not within
or surroWlded by a municipal
d ividual coVerage available
to
divorced
persons corporation, and '(5) the
previously insured under entire area in a township
taint contract.
Which is not . within or
HB 1028, Rankin. Prohibits surrounded by a municipal
discrimination i n home
Bills Int r oduced
corporation.
HB
1023,
McClaskey . , financing.
Persons interested in
HB
1029,
I.
Thompson.
Sets
Provides for state opera t ion
legi slative sa laries at ha lf the holding local option elections
of the Warren G. Harding
annua l
sa l a ry
of should contact their local
home flind museUm .
congressme.n,
authorizes
HB 1024, Ga lbraith. Limi ts
distri ct offices and staff for board of elections for further
land conveyance fees · to a
percentage of the seller's · legis l ators, and provides details on the procedures to
postage
allowance
for
equity.
follow.

COLUMBUS - "Amended currently allowed to be sold
House Bill 123 which became for carry-out on Sundays
effective Wednesday does not (except in those areas
allow the automatic carry-out prohibiting the sale of 3.2
sale of malt beverages and percent beer). The Sunday
wine on Sunday/' Director carry-out sale of 3.2 percent
Clifford E. Reich of the Ohio beer may be continued as
Department of Liquor
Control said.
"This bill only provides for
a local option election on the
question of Sunday carry-out
COLUMBUS (UPI)- Here
sales," the Director said. is a glance at activity Wed "Communities-can decide for- nesday in the Ohio General
themselves whether or not Assembly :
HOUSE
they want carfy~ut sales on

authorizOd.
Since November 17, 1969,
Ohio law has permitted local
option elections for onpremise Sunday sales.
Local option elections m.ay

FLORIST

PH. 992-2644
352 E. Ma in, Pomeroy
Your FTD Florist

Lawmaking at a glance

Sunday."

The DirectQr said that until
loca• option elections are
held ,
Sunday
carry·
out
sales
approv. ed by the voters, and the
apprllpriate permits issued,
HB ' 1025, Norris . Requires
such sales are illegal.
ma!l i ng of forms to t hose
1
Local option elections may persons required to, file
be held at either primary or f inancial discloS'ure
general elections. Petitions statements.
HB 1026, Norris . Increases
are filed with the local board retail
vendors' fee froi'T,l $1 to
of elections ninety da ys $10.
before the election. The first
HB 1027, Carney . Requires
election in which voters may hea lt h insurers t o make i nconsider Sunday carry-out
sales is the June, 1978
primary.
Only 3.2 percent beer is

Cousineau
is honored ·

College scores
College Basketball Results
By United Press International
East
,
Allghny 70, Wash&amp;Jeff 57
C: ·Mellon 89, J .C,roll 67
Clar ion 98, LaRoche 82
Drel(el 62, Lehigh. 59
Fairtld 112. Hofstra 86
Geo twn 70, Seton Ha ll 69
Ind . Pa . 73. Wstmnstr 62
Kean 66, Rlg r s-Nf&gt;wk 65
Lafayette 85, Upsa la 11
Mnhttnvt 102, Cncrd ia 80
MrcyhSt 82, St. Vince 68
Ml11nbg 70, Ge ft ysbg 68
NY Poly 70, NJ Tech 54
Ni agara 90, Buffalo 80
Pitt 99, R. Morris 66
ptt.Jnstn 63, Slpry Rck 6 1
Prov 90, Hoi y Cross 64
RIT 76, Geneseo 15
Vermont 82, Bra ndeis 60
Wilkes 75 , Albrght6B
South
.·
Amer 67, w . Chstr St. 59
Campbll 54, W. Car. 50
Duke 81, Wake Forest 72
G. Wash . 91, Rutgers
Jcksnvl 70, s . Fl.a . 60
Lngwd 103, UNC·Grnsbro 10_
2
Lynchbg 80 1 Brdgew ter 12
N . Car. 69, N C. St. 64
Salisbry 82, Ba ll 70
Shorter 101, Ga . Coli 89
Sthrn Tech 61, Berry 56
S. Car, 79, Ga . Sthrn 72
S. Ala. 77, N .C. -Wilm 66
St Bonny Ill. UU 83
. 'Tem pl e 68, Navy 59
New Or ins 75, Tulne 62
Va . 66, Va. Tech 62
Midwest
Det B4, Bwlng ·e rn 79
E Mich . 86, Ball St . 77
MrQllelte 80, De Paul ?4
Mrietta 84, Capital 82
Miami 0 . 80; Cent M ich : 76
M i ssouri 70, Colo. 68
M i lw 79, Hous Bapl 77
Nrthwstrn 75, Dana 62
Oberlin 71, 0 . Nrthrn 65
Ottrbn 77l 0 . Wslyn 76
St . Jno 74, St. Thos 64
Sf . Olaf 100 Sf . Mrys 80
St . Jos. 62, V lprso 57
Taylor 94, F indlay 71
·o
Toledo 64, Kent 51. 46
Tri .St. 84 , Goshen 53
W. Mich 73, Ohio U. 59
Yngs twn St. 101, Ashl nd 80
Southwest
Ast n Coil 106, P. ·Quinn 81
Nebraska 78, Oklahoma 64
SW Okla. 63, EC Okla . 57
West
Nev ·Reno 95, U.C.Davis 82
N. Co lo. 82, Den ver 73
Occ idnt l 104, Cal Tech 63
Prtlnd 57, Puget Snd 53
' St.Mr y's 99 , Prtlnd St . 97
washington 69, Seattle 60
Wash . St. 69, Ida ho 61
Whittr 86 , Pom . Pitzr 55

n

CLEVELAND (UPI) Linebacker Tom Cousineau
of Ohio State · Univ es rity
today was named " Amateur
Athlete of th e Year" by the
Sports Media Association of
Cleveland &amp; Ohio.
The 6-3, 227iJOund junior
earned Big Ten recognition
for the second year in a row ,
last season, picked up a spot
on
United
Press ·
International's first team and
also was chosen for ·the
Walter Camp team in AllAmerica balloting.
Cousineau, of suburb an
Fairview Park, will be
honored at SMACO's awards
banquet Feb. 13 at the
Cleve land Plaza , as will
second baseman Duane
Kuiper of the Cleveland
Indians
and
catcher
Thurman Munson of the
World Champion New York
Yankees.
Also to be named at the
banquet wiU be SMACO 's
choice for the ''Pride of
Cleveland Award." Among
the nominees a re Cleveland

legislator s.
HB 1030, Fauve·r. Requ ires
publ ic noti ce be given to .
requests by hospi tal service
associations and sick ness and
acci den t insurers fo r contract
and policy changes.

IIILL PASSED
A m . HB -485 , D eering.
Extends elig lbi lify for in·
structiona l grants to nursing
studen ts. Vote: 29 -0.

BILLS INTRODUCED
S B 404, Carney. Requires at
least o ne cre wman on
ra ilroad ca boose.
SB . 405 , Pf el fer -Schwarz.
wal der. Prohi bits residential
measured telephone r ates .

There Will be a regular Union
Meeting of all Mid-West
Employees. Members of Local
6197 Friday, January 20th at
7:00 P.M. at the Foote Mineral
Unloft"Hall In Mason, w. va.

Senior Friends staged
social events last month

Heahh Center with Athens
RSVP and Athens and
Washington CoWltY Senior
Friends. Cookies and punch
were served and favors were
given to those who were able
to attend. Afterward!! we
visited those who were unable
to attend.
Not aU of December , was
just parties. In the hospital
and nursing home. as usual,
we had craft activities, fed
patients, listened to a
problem or an idea and tried
to give helpful answers.
Senior Friends who have
community contacts ot do
errands and take contacts to
Doctor and Hospital ap·
pointments.
We are all looking forward
to another year with the
party at Friends
the Athens
Mentala Senior Friends Program in
co-hosted

By Jewel Welch
December was a busy
month for Senior Friends.
Having started early we were
able to complete the
Christmas decorations for
our friends at Arcadia
Nursing·· Home. We did not
have any travel problems.
and most of the work we did
at home.
Senior Friends had their
Christmas party at the home
of Olive Smith. who was also
our hostess last year. We
exchanged gifts, refresh·
ments
were
se rv ed,
Christmas songs were sung
and a wonderful time was had
by all. Our special guests
were Pam Riffle, Jan Nor·
thup and Kathie Filsinger.

NOW OPEN

GINO'S
PHONE 773-553b

NOW IN
PROGRESS

KNEE HI
STOCKINGS

SAVINGS FROM

20%
.TO

REG. 69•

50%a

ONLY

On Fine Wearing
Apparel! For
..__ Men &amp;' Women

16

OL

Reg. 13.75

Browns owner Art Modell,
Yankees ' general partner
Geo~ge M. Steinbrenner III,
presodent Ted Bonda of the
Cleveland Indians, owner
Nick J. Mileti of the
Cleveland Cavaliers.

ONLY
100 TABLETS
REG. 12.35

\
\

KElliNG

ONLY

DRY ROASTED

FILM_

$129

PEANUTS

C-110-12

oz.
ONLY
7%

A lhought for the day: Gen.
Robert E. Lee said, "Duty is
the sublimest word in our
language. Do your duty ln all
things. You cannot do more.
You should never wish to do
less.' '

lh cup butter',

~c up

sugur , 1 egg, beaten, 1 cup molasses or

honey, 2\2 cups nour, w, t.&lt;;p. soda, 1 ~, tsp. bilking powder, l
tsp. cinnomon,l tsp. ginger, \2 tsp . salt, ond seven-eighths cup
hot wa ter.
.
Cream butler and sugar in bowl , stir in egg and molasses.
Sift nour, soda, baking powder, spices, and salt together, ond
stir Into butter mixture. Add hot w•ter and mix well. Pour Into
greased, shallow bloklng pan, sprinkle lightly with additl~Moal
sugar, and bake at 350 degn.-es fv•· 35 minutes.
If you're not a lover of gingerbread, then you might enjoy
this. strawberry dessert.

ANGEL CAKE GELATIN DESSERT
medium angel food cake, 2 three OWoce packages
strawbero-y gelatin, 2 cups boiling water, 2 10 ounce packages ,
frozen strawberries, a nd two envelopes of dessert topping mix .
Crwnble ca ke into bite-sized pieces. Dissolve gelatin in bcJil·
ing water; add frozen strawberries. Mix well ; refl'igeratc for
about 15 minutes or until partially thickened.
Prepare dessert topping according to the puck a ~e dim··
lions; fold topping into gela tin mixture. Alternate layeo'S of
ruke pieces and geMin mixture in 13 x 9 Inch layer. pa n wilil
all are used , ending with gelatin mixture. Refrigerate for
several hours or until firm. Servd 12.

r

.,

.

POLLY·s POINTERS
.

Polly Cramer

Try silence on slob
POLLY'S PROBLEM
D)';AR POLLY- My roommate is really messy a nd

when it is her tum to do the
dishes she does a sloppy job.
Her room is like the city
dwnp and when I try to tell
her she should be neat she
does not listen. I am ve ry
neat so please tell me how I
can teach her to be neat, too.
-LORI.
DEAR LORI - Perhaps
your roommate rea lly enjoys
"bugging" you and keeps her
messy ways just to upset you
as your letter sounds as if you
must really keep after her .
Stop saying a word, forget
her untidy room and closet he
door when It is open. After all
that Is her domaIn and if she
likes it looking like the dwnp
that is her choice. If you pick
up and clean up after her she
may feel there is no reason to

NOW OPEN

GINO'S

ICY HOT

ANALGESIC,

REG. 12.38

BALM
REG. '3.00

ONLY

Won't Want To Miss

...144

SAVIN()$ FROM

DANA

~
0

SPRAY
·COLOGNES
Tabu
Ambush
20 Carats
2 oz.

%
OF SHOES

The Almanac
United Press International
Today is Thurllday, Jan. 19,
the 19th day of 1978 with 346 to
follow.
The moon is between its
first quarter a nd full phase.
The mornin g sta rs are
Mercury , Venus, Mars and
Saturn.
The evening sta r is Jupiter.
Those born on tl1is date are
under lhe sign of Capricorn .
Confederate Ge n. Robert
. E. Lee was born Jan. 19, 1807.
On lhis day in history:
In 1861, Georgia seceded
from the Union.
In 1938 , the Spanish
Nationalist air force bombed
Ba rcelona a nd Valencla ,
kill ing 700 civilians and
wounding hundreds more . .
In 1965, a ·"c heating"
scandal rocked the Air Force
Academy In Colorado . A total
of 100 cadets later resigned:
In 1975, Communist China
published a new state
co nstitution,
whi ~ h
eliminated the post o! head o!
state and ratified the basic
precepts and policies of Mao
Tse-tung.

2 oz.
REG. 69'

$}279

Open Monday thru Thursday &amp; saturday
9: 30to5 :00
·
Friday 9:30 to 8:00
N.2NDAVE.
MIDDLEPORT,O.

WORKSHOP CANCELLED
Tonight's workshop of the
Belles and Beaus Western
.Squa re Dance Club has been
cancelled. Workshop classes
will be reswned when the
weather peronits.

ONLY

FLEECE LINED
SUEDE SHOES

heritage house

Casseroles make good cold-weather meals and for the busy
. homemaker they can be a real time saver. lf the snow has you
in the mood to try something new, we share with you a beef and
biscuit recipe.
BEEF-BISCUIT.CHEESE CASSEROLE
I lb. ground beef, 2 tbsp. in!!tant mi nced onion, \2 green pepper, chopped, one-eighthowu~ can tomato saut'e, 2 tsp. chili
powder, \i tsp. garlic salt, I-ll-ounce can refrigerator
biscuits, tli cups shredded extra sharp Cheddar cheese, 11 cup
sour cream, and l egg, slightly
beaten.
Brown ground beef, onion, and green pepper in skillet; drain
olf the fat. SUr in tomato sauce, chill -powder, and garlic salt;
sinuner, covered. while preparing biscuits. Pull each biscuit
apart into two pieces, and place half the pieces In the bottom of
a nine inch square baking pa n.
Corribine \i cup cheese, sour cream, and egg, mixing well.
Remove beef mixture from heat, stir In sour cream mixture.
Spooo over biscuits. Arrange remaining biscuits on top;
sprinkle with remHining cheese. Bake at 375 degrL'CS for 25 to
30 minutes or Wltil the biscuits are brown.
With a casserole such as this which makes" heuvy meal, •
light, not·t()-lilling dessert, is probably right .
How about gingerbread with whipped cream. Not particular·
ly light, but a wfully good. You can buy·lhe "box" kind -j ust odd
water and mix- or you ca n go a ll out and nmke it from seratch
with molasses or honey. We share u· favorltc gingerbread
recipe.
GINGERBREAD

REG. '1.60

QNLY

ROCKERS

Officers were elected at t11e
first meeting qf the .Meigs
County Shepherds Club held
recently at the Meigs County
·Extension Office. ·
Elected were Dan Dailey,
president; Herbie Ervin, vke
president; Tammy. Ervin,
secretary: Sonia Carr.
treasurer: and Angie
Spencer, news reporter.
Two movies were shown,
one entitled " Care or Ewes
Before a nd After Lambing"
and the other "Getting Your
Sheep Ready for Show Day ."
It was decided that along
with the queen and princess
traditionally selected by t~e
club, that one of the boys will
be picked to represent the
club as a Shepherd.
.Next meeting will be held
Feb. 6 at 7:30p.m. at the Ex·
tension Office. Advisors are
Nick and Eleanor Leonard ,
Anyone interested may join
the club.

''' ??

1

fly Charlene Hoeflirh

ONLY

-MEN ' S

PLATFORM

~

/

C-126-12

TUSSY
CREAM
DEODORANT

59~

NOW IN PROGRESS

TO

rFun With Food

or

4 oz.

SALE

ELECTION SET
RUTLAND - Election of
officers will be held for a new
Veterans of Foreign Wars
Post being formed at a
meeting to be held at 2 p. m.
Sunday at the Rutland
An~erican Legion Post 467
home. State and national
officers of the V.F.W. will be
present.

EFFECTIVE
THRU
SUNDAY,
JANUARY
22ND

OF MASON

Triaminic''
Syrup

Sole

SATURDAY
MIDDLEPORT Fire
Department fish fry Satur·
day, starting at 11 a. m, at
fire station; fish sandwiches,
french fries and cole slaw to
eat there or take out.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.:S:e~n~i;or ~~~----------~
JIIDIIY
PRICES

JANUARY

With Lug

Social
Calendar

».::~::..~~~~~~·' ' ''''''''*

Officers named
by Shephjftis ·
club recently

ONLY

$}88

BALM BARR
CREME

ONLY

SWISHER LOHSE
Pharmacy

24~

Kenneth McCullough, R. l'tl .

·

UNDER PADS

l
DUnON DRUG CO.
.

122 N. 2nd Ave.

Parke· Davis
20's-23x36
40's- 17V&gt;x24

By REXALl
REG. $2.39

ONLY

'124

•

OFF
Includes
• Winter Coats &amp; Jackets

• Jeans
eOresies
eTQps

C~orles RIHie, R. Ph .

Ron old Honning, R. Ph
Mon . thru Sat. 8: 00a .m . to 9 p .m .

•

, • Nightwear
PLUS: MUCH MORE!

Sunday 10 :3010 12 ; 30ondSio9p. m.
PRESCRIPTIONS

Friendly Service

E. Main

PH . 992-295S

Pomeroy,O.

Open Nights lill9

ONI,Y

. •

Middleport, o.

PERMANENTS

V3

On All Sportswear

FOR DRY SKIN
10 oz . Trial Size
Reg. 59c

•

Hours
' 9: 30-5, M· Th.-Sat.
9:30-8, Fri.

•

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

KIDDIE SHOPFE

Near Stiffler's in Pomeroy
2nd Street ·
992-3586
Pomeroy, o.

CLINIC RESET
The Meigs cervical cancer
clinic schedule&lt;t for Wed·
nesday was not held due to
weather conditions. The
clinic has now been
rescheduled for Wednesday,
Jan. 25, and will be an af·
ternoon event rather than all
day. Those wishing to make
appointments for the free
clinic to be beld in tbe
basement of.) Heath United
Methodist Church, Mid·
dleport, should call 992-7531
daytime, or 992-5831 In the
evenings or on weekends,

�s-The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Jan. 19. 1!178
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Karr
called on Mr. and Mrs. Percy
Frick and Mrs. Della Curtis
recently.
Rev . and Mrs. Hick,
Cbester called recently on
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Karr.
Due to bod weath~r Sundsy, Jan. 15, only 47 persons
were at the meetl!lg. There
was no meeting Sunday
e\lening.
Mr. Alston Tracy and Mr.
Woodyard, Columbus, spent
Friday and Saturday with
Mr. Tracy's ·mother, Mrs.
Nellie Tracy.
. Mrs. Bertha Diehl , Racine,

LaU1'el ruff
'

News Notes
By Bertha Parker
Attendance at the Free
Methodist Church Jan. 8 was
82. The morning service was
conducted by the Men' s
Fellowship. Songs were sung
by Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Barton , Rev. Shook, Dian
Lewis and Betty Wills. A
poem was written and read
by Franklin Martin, and the
Bible read by Mr. Wright and
Rev. Shoo k.

.
viSited recently with Mr. and
Mrs. Walter Hellman.
A number of years ago I
was a child. We went to a one
room achool. with a potbelly
stove. For heat we had as
much snow as we have now.
Everyone walked to school,
!lome walked a mile. Our
teacher was Miss Norma
Joacham of Rock Springs.
She rode a horse a distance of
two mllesand never missed a
day of schooL Miss Joacham
was a sister to Mrs. Gladys
Morgan of RockSprings. This
is a sentence she wrote on my
Twocanlt~asecret

ACE,
"An is the plan w.ith
' the Helpful Hardware Man"®

"Clean Sweep"

SHE'U.RUNAWAYINTOTROUBl.E
RAP:
I want to run away from home, but I'm a 14-year-old girl. I
have tbese live friends who are boys (I don't go with any of
them) . They said they'd run with me, but my girlfriend said
I'd probably end up pregnant or something. Can't you be with
guys unless there's sex? -WHY NOT-'
DEARW.N.:
Don't count on a .sexless runaway situation involving live
boys and one,girl. Why? Propinquity, protection, temptation,
human nature ...
There's got to be a bet~r route lor solving your family problems. If you can't communicate with your parents, then find
an adult· teacher, clergyman, friend - who will act as a gobetween. But don't run!- HELEN ANQSUJ:;

DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I feel very sorry lor the girl whose mother said she wouldn't
be a live-in haby sitter to her illegitimate grandchild and in·
sisted on abortion or adoption.
It's parents' duty to stand by their daughter and take care of
ber physically. A baby is part of the girl's bodY: How can they
refuse it? So what il it means a few more years taking care
the child while the mother finishes school? When you bee e
parents, you accept aU problems. -ARDIT-H
... And the other side of the coin:

CORN
BROOM

DEAR RAP :
You bet I side with the mother who won't give up her career
to raise an illegitimate grandchild. PareniB have rights too.
II a girl Is "adult" enough to have an affair, she should be
responsible enough to take care of her pregnancy without roping the parenls into years of baby-sitting. That means abortion, adoption, or dropping out of school to be a full-time
· motber.
.
Cave-in pa.rents don 't rate my sympathy! • M.R.T.

Made of
genu1ne
broom
corn

•

FILMS OFFERED
Children ·are Invited to
the Pomeroy Library at 7
· p. m. Friday, Jan. 20, to
watch an hour of short
movies, the second in a
series of Friday night
programs lor children at
the Ubrary.
This week the films
shown will be "Many
Moobs", "Red Carpet",
''Walch Out for My Plant",
.. Tree~ouse"
and
''Christmas Cracker''.

Sturdy, attractive
construction.
Tough fibres
resist breakage
and shedding.

By Helen and Sue BoHel

PUSHY:
Where's your liberation? II a girl can't ask a guy (who obviously likes her) on a casual Dutch-treat date, we women
haven'tcomealongway, baby! -SUE

ACE

4-strand stitching.

Protests scheduled in
•
• h• h
O.hto
agatnst tg.sent tocourt

Generation Rap

DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I'd really like to date a guy in my class. He's taken me on
quite a lew field trips where we have to provide our own
transportation. He's always friendly, and says "Hi" in the
halls. And he doesn 't have a girlfriend.
How do I get him to ask me out without seeming· PUSHY?
DEAR PUSHY? :
.
There's always a girl-ask-boy dance or party coming up. Invite this fellow before someone else does. (And if he turns you
down, don't disintegrate. Think what men have faced all these
many years.)· HELEN
·

HARDWARE

for

f:~

• 1291 5

MEIGS PLAZA

are live--action features.
The programs are free and

open lo the public. Grade
school-age
kids are

Coonty CourthoUJe at 7:30

Pf,;;:~~ely

_7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Jan. 19,1~

alter the

ro..~ti'2:at:"ti:i!t':

United PreulnteruaUoaal
will be
President and rally in Washington.
Groupil in several Ohio Mrs. Carter anil)IOillbers of
Said
Vi
Weigand,
cities have scheduled Cmgre.s with a letter listing chairperson of the local
protests Sunday, the fifth the names of the pro-Uie ceremooy, "We have planned
anniversary or the U.S. Cllll.!lltuents.
this year's observance with a •
Supreme Court's decision
The Greater Cincinnati wider variety of activities to •
legalizing abortion.
Right·to-LIIe organization reflect our concern lor •
Church bells throughout the has scheduled a candlelight human Jlle at all stages and •
jkounty Catholic Diocese of ceremony to "signify the at all levels of our society, but •
Toledo will toll lor two name of human llle In the our fundamental proposition :
minutes on Sunday to mark womb" Sw"lay night.
has not changed in five years,
what it calls the "Day of
Rev. Melvin J. Steinbron-ol thatu human lllnmendment · =
In!amy."
the suburban College HID to the Constitution must be
"Human llle Is our must Presbyterian Church will passed w protect bwnan
precious gift and, in many preside at the candlelight beings from the time of
ways, our most fragile cerrnony and
service conception to natural
possession," said Bishop ..:on;;;;the;;;,ii;i;i~;;;,;~~Hamll;;,
-:;,:;;.ton:.....:::::;::;..
" _ _ _ _ _ _...,
John A. Donovan of the •
Toledo Diocese.
"Society expresses its appreciation of the value of
human llle by protecting the
life of each and every
member of the human family
through laws and social
institutions. In recent years,
however, the sancity of
human llle has been violated
and even denied in many
parts of the world by

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Stalehoase Reporter
OOLUMBUS (UPJ) - The
.

'

fOY OPEN

GINO'S

·oF MASON
PHONE 773-5536

Ohio General Assembly is in
adjournment
for
the
weekend, but a smaUgroup of
protesters Is determined to
remain In the Statehouse
rotunda until a ~ill allowing a
minute of meditation In
public schools Is passed.
That may be sometime
after.March, according to the
chairman of a Senate
cornrtlittee which received
the House-approved bill
Wednesday.
The meditation bill, spon·
sored by Rep. Dale Locker,
D-Anna, was switched from
the
Senate Education

'
Committee, where It has
rested since last July 19, tn
the Judidary Committee.
The transfer came less
than 24 hours after siz people
pressing lor action on tbe
House-passed measure were
arrested when they refused to
leave the Senate chamber.
However, Senate President·
Pro Tempore Oliver Ocasek,
D-Akron, said the change had
nothing to do with the
demonstration. He said the
Education Committee was
too busy with other matters tn
give the meditation bill swill
at!e!ltion.

-

Students from Catholic
schools iii the diocese and
Interested adults will travel
by bus to Washingtnn, D.C.,
to take part in the National
March for Life on Mooday.
In addition tn the National
~ch lor Life, participants
from the Diocese of Toledo
plan to meet with Ohio

.........
·-·
·-""'·-.-.
---·••.
...,
"'...
..
_

Senators and congressmen
Md participate in a threehour vigil in Washl!lgton. ·
Roses from
pro-life
constituents in the diocese

Rely On Us For
Fast Service!

NOW OPEN

·-'·
. •.
••.
'
•'

Our team of experienced pharmacists strive for precision •and qccuracy in filling all prescriptions ••.
work as quickly as possible to get
your order to youl

GINO'S
OF MASON ·

·

PHONE 773-5536

..

'.•
p

-·

•

••

•••

VIUAGE PHARMACY

MASON.- Mr. and Mrs. Reginald Hart, and Regilla, of
Wheeling visited on Saturday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Willlam Zirkle. AI th1s time the birthdays of Regina ·and
Willlam (Peck) Zirkle were celebrated.
Attendl!lg the dinner were the honorees, Regina and Peck,
Mr. and Mrs. Reginald Htll'l, Mr. and Mrs. Gene Thomas,
Chris and Robbie of New Haven and 1\{rs. Zirkle. Calling in the
evenl!lg were Mrs. Martha Hart and Brent, Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Wolfe, Pt. Pleasant

"

Middleport, Ohio
Va.

'•

w.

.•

especially welcome.
~

.•·
•
•.."

STA-84 is ideal for your new hi -li system!
Auto-Magic feature fine tunes and locks on FM stations for lowesl distortion - automatica llyl Walnut veneer case.

Mr. Frank McDermitt is a patient at Pleasant Valley

Reg.

, Hospital, where he is recuperating ·rrom pneumonia.

29995

(MOST STORES)

SAVE EVEN MORE ON THE SYSTEM!

CUT
14980

•••• ooH'T

"

•••VIALK

''·

•

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••••••RUN
TO -OUR
JANUARY·
MIDDLEPORT DEPARTMENT STORE

Regul11r

Separate

$

ACRYLIC YARN
4 oz .

80

619

Boys Perm

To

Reg. $10.95 Sale S]B

TWIN P. CASES

'3"

Stereo Receiver
• Two Optimus.-58 Walnut Veneer
Speakers, 12" Woofer. Two 3"
Midranges
• LAB -54 Changer with Mag. Cart.

BASE/MOBILE CB RADIO
WITH CLOCK/ALARM

81 x90 •••••••••••••••••• .•3.33

$328

•

SPORTSWEAR

Reg . $6.50 to $11.00

SALE

$500

To

Reg. S8.95 to $29.95

Missy and Jr. Sizt

DRESSES
Reg. $10.95 to $29.95

Wrangler Tops ·
Many Styles
Reg. $5.95 to $18.00

MEN.'S

JACKETS &amp;COATS
' Reg. 517.95 to U9.95

..

88

To

• •• • •
•
• • •

SAVE

•

••• •

•

11111111111

••

Reg . $19.95 to U4.95

GIRLS
DRESSES

Reg. 510.96 to $29.95

Men·s and Bovs·

SWEATERS

Yesl I want more no obligation Information an
starting
own family bualne»...Piease send
me all the necenary Information.

Reg. S6.95 to $13.95

Olmplete~

Washlble
Reg. $4.50

'

.,

~E

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Blu·Max Foam Insulation

P. 0. Box 1157
Aqualales
Parkersburg, WV 26l01
304/428·82.41

•
'
...:3•...
•

___________________________

2t-1542

Reg.199 95

79'!~

. TRC -467 puts you on 40ch .
wilh features galore! ANL
switch. lighted S / RF meter.
Supe ~3 3 % otn
•

SAVE
4Oat70· . .

1

Pomeroy. Q.

SNOW TIRE

t

•
,
•

.

5

Reg.39" Ea.

,

SHACK ·s

.·•
.
.• ·'

.......

-

•

AUDIO

TRC-456 with separate
huilt -i n ·speaker, LED 40 ch . ·
readout, squelch, ANL

40-1981

Ea.

Most items
also availat&gt;le at

Silver Bridge Plaza

"

Radio Shack

. Dealers .·
, Look fo r t his
sign in .vour
neighborhood . . ._ _ _ _ _1111111!
MAV VA.RY AT INDIV\OU AL STORES

·'

said, "but it will probably he
sometime in March be£ore we
can get to it."
Meanwhile, Thomas J.
Moyer, ex.ecutive assistant to
Gov. James A. Rhod~s. said
the governor is "allllious" for
the bill tn pass and will sign it
if il reaches his desk.
However, Moyer said, the
governor disapproves of Mrs.
Warren's
methods
of
disrupting
normal
procedures.
Although 29 senators
showed up lor Wednesday's
session, a controversial bill
permitting optnmetrlsts tn
u.Se diagnostic drugs was
postponed lor the second
straight day .
Sen. M . Morris Jackson, DCleveland, the chief sponsor,
said he needed addition•!
to

prepare

for

MOORE'S
STORE

John Patt'erson, Dor is
Pa1ter so n to William S . Cole,
parcels, Orange .
Donna L. Mifch to Larry L.

State of til&amp; Union speech and
only the second apl"'arance
for carter before a joint
ses.slon since he took office a
year ago .
In quick succession, Carter
will detail his plarmed 12:&gt;
billion IW\ cut proposal in a
message to be sent to
Congress Friday, and will
formally unveil his new
fiim'Ret and annual economic
re'Pod...Monday .
It is U1e unfinished energy
program , however, that has
tnp legislative priorily this
year, wilh all concerned
ht)pin~ It will be enacted by
middle or late March .
Emphasis then will shift tn
the tax cut and the already
boill!lg Issue of lhe Panama
Canal treaties.
SeMte sources close to the
canal issue were optimistic
that final action could come
within live weeks or openin~
debate, but the outcome
remained in que.tion.
In a series of pre-scs!don
meetings at the White House
earlier ·
this
week ,
congressio nal leaders
cauUo ned Carter to slow
down the rush of iegislalion
that marked his first year In
the White House and give
luwtnakers time to ooncen·
Irate on and complete the
major progr·ams .
Ca rter
stili
has
govenunental reorgnization
plans he wants complete-d
this year as well as the
massive overhaul of the
welfare system. 11 proje'&lt;'t
that may die with the
adjournment of the 9Mh
Congress this year .
Carter has also told the
leadership he is al!llured there
are now the votes needed to
pass the. oonswner proledion· ·

agency bill, a measure that
has been pushe-d for nearly a
decade and l"hi ch business
has sUccessfully resisted .

1&lt;-. or Frldny, .fnu. 20, 1978 ·

ASTRO:----::
· G=R--=-=
A,=-=
H
Bernice Bede Osol

Jun. 20," 1.978
Many thing s that cHu seil yo11

stress and lrus!rat ion thi s pMlt
year will suddenly Olii l tr0 111 til e
scene. Look torwa1d to th o
coming year wi l1'1 h l)pu anll j
good chee1.

an

On~
'

On All Tires In Stock.

·Free Installation.

MOORE'S.
STORE
W. MAIN ST.

.

AQUARIUS !.lun. 28-Jo"cb. 1!)1
Don 't be too surplised today If
M ilch, Lot , Middleport.
you seem to get more atten t1on
Belva G. Sloan to Robert W.
Sloan, Karen S. Sloan , par- hom others 1t1an usual. Yow
popularity and influo nco is
cels , Bedford .
Belva G. Sloan to Kerlneth . growing s oci ~llty . Uk o to l in ~!
0 . Grover, Mary A. Grover, · out mo re of what l1es ahead to•
you ? Send lOr your co py of
12.7 acres, Bedford .
Greg Eben to Joseph As tro-Gr&lt;lph Lott e• by maihnu
·Wilson Gray, Ida Mae Jean 50 cents tor each a nd a IQIIU .
sell-addressed, sttunped env(!Gray , 2 acres, Letart.
lope to Astro-Graph, P.O . Bo )(
489, Radio Cit y Stati on . N. Y
10019. Be sure to speedy yo lH
birth sign.
l,lSC~:.'\ (Feb. 20-Munh 201
MERGER OFF
Today you might become inCLEVELA ND (UPI)
volved in &lt;,~ mutual adm iration
The Oglebay Norton · Co., socie ty . Someone you're Ci:l(lur
Cleveland, and Medusa to assis t will feel likewise . Eac t-1
Corp., Sbaker Heights, have will strive to ou tdo th e other
ARIF.S (Mnr•~h Zl·Aprll 19 )
announced
that
they Though
your reason ing may be
mutually have agreed to a s hade fu zzy today 1 you 111 still
terminate negotiations with be • .. ler t eno ugh lb recognl7 o
respect to the prcipose_d th e po tential of some th ing now
and get a strong toeho ld .
merger of the two firms.
TAURUS (April 20.Muy 20)
Condi tions that directl y aflec l
your career and Income ate
imbued with grea t prom i se
today . MoYe swiltly If opportu nity knocks .
GEMINI I May 21-Junc 20 I
Some of the necessary break s
you 've been hoping for pertaining to a long-range interest _
cou ld star t popping· today.
Trust your luck .
CANCER CJunc U·July 22)
Sl tu allons that you ~ seem to
have the leas t con trol over arc
likely to be the verj ones tha t
will shower you wittl the larges t
rewards today .
LEO IJuly 23-Aug. 22) B~
aVai lable today to groups
wh ere you have the possibilities for makin9 Infl uential con ·
tacts. It'll be worth th e effort.
VIRGO (Aug. Za-8epl. 22)
Don' t hide your light under a
bushel tod ay regardin g ideas
to impro\le methods at work .
Big things cou ld result - e~en

Regular Price Per Tire.

TR-882 records tapes for
. home and car at big savings!

WAS ESTABLISHED. IN 1954. CB IN 1960.

" I will give the bill every
consideration I can," s~Je

•

SAVE
30o/o

MC-500 delivers wide range
sound you'd expect from a
much larger speaker!

N

AT

REALISTIC
,8-TRK. DECK

2388

.

·~

~~ ------------~-----------­
~E

Reg.119"'

Hl;.fl SHELF SPEAKER

•
•
•

__________________________

CITY, STATE, ZIP --~------~----------

SHOES

sso

S4Q

..
•

----------------------------------------·D
BLU·MAX FOAM INC.
mY

MAR~UERITE'S

SAVE SAVE
•
•

~---·

•SHOES •BOOTS
•PURSES

MOBILE CB BARGAIN!

* A Minimum lnvealment
* Complete On·Site Training
* Adve.rtlslng and Marketing Aida Furnished
* All Equipment Furnished
* Constant Training and Counseling

JACKETS and COATS

Reg.
24995

Realistic 40 channel TRC-455 is designed wilh the
se rious, value-conscious CB 'er in mind! Digital
clock tu rns on radio at pre -set time. with or withoul
alarm .

Your advantages as a Blu·Max Family Team:

COATS and JACKETS

S7Q

~Qt

JANUARY
CLEARANCE
SALE
CONTINUES

E. Maiu

For a small Investment af!d yourapanrtlme, you'll soon become a
financially sound business team.

SSOO

..~···~· Tread House ShOEsj
Reg. S2.49 to S6.49

•

•

Now Is the time for either you youl'lelf ora husband and wife team to
step Into one of the most exciting bualnen opportunities olf~r'ed by
be&lt;:omlng a franchised Blu·Mox Foam Insulation dealer. Look for our
ada In Time, Sports Illustrated and TV Guide. Mallin this coupon or ·
give us a call at Area Code 304/428-a241.

D
TOPS

•

•

•

••

LADIEs ·

Coats &amp; Jackets

•

HOW ABOUT--=---·
"OLD.COLD NOSE" .. ::-·· .·:·
AS A BUSINESS PARTNER?

'

GOWNS and PJ'S

•

•

•

•

16 oz. Fiber Loft .... '1.33

LADIES FLANNEL

GIRLS

•

· 90x108 .................. '3.99

FAMOUS BRAND

Reg . $12.00 To $34 ,00

Com forts

~~;5 '12'9

12"

'l'

QUILT BATTS

Reg. $3.99 to $6.49

$2011

SHEETS
Mt. Mist

Pr~

SHIRTS
SALE

Dacron

sever~ I

two months.

lime

Mrs. Blanche Jones entertained with a family dinner on
Sunday in observance of Willlaf!l Camp's birthday. Attending
were Mr. and Mrs. William Camp and lamtly, Mr. and Mrs.
Ernie Compson and family.

e Realrstic STA-B4 AM-FM

Polly Filltld vva.,shilbll!\

88'

Skeins

River No

being asked to move

maj&lt;r bills during the next ··

Property
Transfers

llems Price

OPEN FRIDAY TIL I-SATURDAY TIL 6

mittee would hold hearings
on the bill "but I don 'I know
when and I don't know how
many. We never deny a billa
hearing," said the Senate
leader .
Sen . Valiquelle also
protested that her schedule
was light and th•t .she was

amendmenl:l to be offered.
Mrs. Joe Scltes and son, Dean of Letart spent Monday with
The
Senate
did
her mother, Mrs. Helen Williams at Cllftnn.
unanimously adopt Housepassed legislation. providing
Recent dinner guests of Mrs. Zelma Hunter Included Mr .. for instructional grants tn ·
and Mrs. Harley Haribson and children of Goldsboro, N. C.; nursing studeniB.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hunter and family of ChapmansviUe, W.
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Homer Hunter and daughter, Mr . and Mrs.
Herman Hunter and daughter, all _of Belle, W.Va.; Mr. 1111d
Mrs. Robert Maison , Tuppers Plains, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Hunter and family of Chester, 0.; Mr. and Mrs.
Herschel Hunter and daughters, Parkersburg; Mrs. Virginia
Curtis, Weston, W. Va.

CHARGE IT

•'

opening prayer in the Seruite,
Mrs . Warren ' had loudly
complained about the
absence of prayer in the •·
state's public school system BY GENE BERNHARDT
and was escorted from the
WASHINGTQN (UPI) chamber. She was later President carter already has
allowed to return .
told lawmakers he wants
Lt. Gov. Richard F. Celeste
final decisions on energy, a
warned Wednesday that a tax cut and a consumer
similar outburst would not be protection agency. He will ·
tolerated and that " the outline other goals tonight in
business of the Senate shall
his State ol the Union
proceed:"
message tn 8 joint session of
Ocasek said the Education
Congress.
Conunittee, which has held
The Carter visit was. timed
the meditation bill since last
lor the opening d•y of the
July 19, has a "very crowded
second session of the 95Ul
agenda ,'' including an Congress, which already has
attempt to deal with
set an adjournment target of
Cleveland's school financing
Oct. 1 so members can get
problem.
home and campaign for
He said-the Judiciary Com·
November's gen e ral
elections.
It will mark carter's first

MASON- News is scarce, and so Is people - many of us
are snowed In - the only active critters I see are the birds
lryl!lg desperately to find something w eat. They have already
eaten 10 pounds of wild bird feed and half of another bag.
Please feed the birds!
Mrs. Fred (Sarah) Spencer, clerk at Mason Post Office,
was pleasantly surprised on Thursday evenl!lg, January 12, at
the Meigs Inn when Mrs. Spencer, Mr. and Mrs. Willlam .Zirkle
and Mrs. Charles Yeager went there for dinner. Already at the
Inn to greet co-workers and help observe . Mrs . Spencer's
retirement from the Mason Post Office were Postmaster and
Mrs. Dallas Walker; Shirley Sullivan and Mrs. Jackie Sisson.
Mrs. Zirkle and Mrs. Yeager are both postal clerks.
.
Mrs. Spencer's retirement was effective Friday, Jan1111ry
13.
GifiB of luggage and cake were presented tn the retiree.
Besides serving her community, she is also active at
Mason United Methodist Church where she has beld many
offices. She was a leader of the Good Luck Clover 4-H Club for
. many years, and is now assistant secretary of the Mason
Extension Homemakers.
Good luck, and God bless.

.....

Some of the movies are
aDimated stories and some

100% Orion

" We don't .do things under lor a hearing until March.
" Th&amp;t 1 S ridiculous !"
duress around here," said
Ocasek. " We've been talking shouted Mrs. Rita Warren.
about this (changl!lg coaunit· who led the delegation of a
dozen people- p1 :llesti!lg lack
tees) before."
The committee transfer of movement of the bill.
concluded the abbreviated "They've been sittl!lg on the
legislative work week, bill for six months.''
Mrs .
Warren
was
curtailed by heavy snows
across the state. The Senate dissatilied with what she
adjourned until next Mondsy called "game-playing" and
at 7:30 p.m. and the House vo wed her contingent would
until 11 a ,m. next Tuesday. stay overnight in the Capiwl
Sen. Marigene Valiquette. rotunda .
"We're going tn slay in the
D-Toledo, chairman of the
Judiciary Collll1).itteE:, said rotunda until March if we
she would not be able to have to," she said ." "We're
schedule the meditation bill not leaving this building until
we get this bill on the Ooor
Md either passed or killed .
They 'll have to lock us up
over the weekend."
Following Tuesday ' s

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

penni&amp;Sive abortion." .

·Carter to set
go_als tonight

Meditation hill brings out detennined protest group

ceremWty, area Rigb~

POM

ad~ancement.

LIBRA !Sept. %3-0cl. 23) You
, may think your social tile is
In teres ting now , but it cou ld
become e~en more so. Someone quite lasclna tlng is about .
to make an entrance .
SCORPIO lOci •• 24-Nov. 221
Something tha t you want
changed, fo r your benefit and
that of those you loYe, looks
like It can be . brought about
rather smooth ly today .
.
SAGITTARIUS I Nov. 23-Dec.
ZU Perhaps you·~e felt t hat
Cupid had lost interes t in you
lately . Not necessarily so, as
tOday's events may bear out.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan .
11) You may begin to exper f.
ence, as of today, a shift in
conditions that wil l benefit your
career and finances . The advantages could be big .

.

I NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I

�(

11-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, u .,·'J'I1ursday, Ja~. 19,1978

l.IO
U D

lcl.lyl

2.25
3.7:S

Etch wotd over the Jllillirnlm1 15
1II"'O'ddll 4 ccnlf ptr word per dly .

AM runnJnc other than ~UYe
_ diYI 'II'U1 be charal:ed It the 1 dly

..

,.

_

In """""~'· Card Ill Tha1\U .00
Qlltuary: I ctnb pu word, f3.00
minlmwn. CUh in adv~ .

Mobtlt HDml! ula and Y•nl Ales
are ~ only with c.u.h with
order. 25 cent chargll!i for ads e&amp;IT)'fil Box Number In Gate~ Tbt StnUnel.

The PubUsher r•rva the r1&amp;ht
to edit or re)ed any ads dee!TIH objecU!QII, The Pubtisher wiU ~ be .
responsible for more than one 11\correct insertion.
Phone 1192-2156

wont to buy or sell something ,
oe loo king lor work . . . or
whatever ... you'll get resu lts
fo ster with a Sentinel W ont Ad .

Call9'12-2156,

COUNTRY FOUR bedroom home
with gorage near Tuppers
Plains , N ice . $100 plus u tilities .
Coil (6H) 667·3330, otter 6 or

iP.M.
Frld1y at~ moon

- PUBLIC NOTICE Efra l n
Pf!rez
whose
res idence is unknown , but
whose last known address
was 1710 Chester Road ,
1

11

~gtTc:r·~~~ t ~nh r~e ':t~ da':~~

December , 1977, thai Pamela
M . Perez , Pla intiff, flied her
Com plaint aga inst him In the
Common Preas Court of
Meigs Countv , Ohlc , Case No .
16,66ol , praying for divorce
upon the grounds of gross
neglect of duty and e)(treme
cruelty, for custody of the two
fT)inor chi ldren, tor alimanv
and support. and w i ll further
take notice that th i s cause
can be heard at anytime
follow i ng twenty eight days
trom t he date of the last
publi cation of th is notice and
that the last pu bl icat ion w ill
be made on the 19th day of
January , 1978,
Larry E . Spencer,
Clerk of Cov rts
•
Me ig s County , Ohio .
( 12 I 8. 15, 2 2, 29 (ll 5, 12, 19 , 7t

•

IN TME COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
BOBBY J . RlJPE ilnd
KAREN K. RUPE,
208 Mulberry Street,
Pomeroy , Ottio,
Plaintiffs,

vs ,

ARTHUR GENHEIMER ,
Residence Unknown
Et at.,
Defendantt .

Case No . 16,695

NOTICE

SERVICE BY

PUBLICATION
Arthur Genhe i mer, whose
pla ce ~f residence is unknown
and whose last address is
Ul"lknown and "th e unknown
he i rs , devisees, l egatees ,
distribiJtees. administrators
and e)(ecutors , if any, of
Arthur Genhelmer , deceased ,
whose names and places of
residence are unknown and
cannot
with
reasonabl e
diligence b e asc·e rtained ,·
W i lliam Schmidt , whose
plaCe of residence is unknown
and whose last address Is
unknown and the unknown
he i rs , devisees , l egatees ,
distributees, administrators
and e)(ecutors , if any , of
William Schmidt. deceased ,
whose names and p l aces of
res i dence are unknown and
can not
with
reasonable
dil igence be ascertained , H .
F . Schmidt , whose place o f
res i dence is unknown and
whose
last
address
is
unknown end t he unknown ·
heirs , devi sees, legatees ,
dlst"ribUtees , adm lnistrators
and execUtors, H any, of H . F .
Schmidt , deceased , whose
na mes
and
places
of
residence are unknown a'nd
c·annot
w ith
reaso nable
d iligence be ascertained ; C.
1. Schmidt , whose· place of
residence is unknown and
Whose
lest
address
Is
unknow n and the unknown
heirs, devisees , l egatees ,
distrlbutees, administrators
and executors , I f any, of C. t .
Schmidt. deceased, whose
names
and
places
of
residence are unknowh and
cannot
with
reasonab l e
diligehc .e be ascerta i ned ;
Asta
Schmidt
Gehman,
whose place of residence is
unknown and whose l ast
eddress is unknown and the
unknown heirs , devisees,
legatees , dlstributees , ad ministrators and e:Kecutors , it
any , of ASia Sch midt Geh man , deceased , whose named
and p l aces of residence are
unknown and cannot with
reasonable diligence be
ascerta ine d : Miranda Sch ·
m ldt,
whose
place
of
residence Is unknown and
whose
last
address
Is
unknown , and the· unknown
heirs, dev i sees, legatees ,
distributees , admin istrators
ahd e:Kecutors, If any, of
Miranda Schmidt, deceased ,
whose names and places of
residence are unknown and
Ct!nnot
w i th
reasonable
diligence be ascertained ;
Anna Schm ldt Weckman ,
whose place of residence is
unkhown and· whose last
address is vnknown, and the
unknown heirs , de'otisees ,
legatees , d i strlbutees, ad ·
mlnlstl'"ators end executors , if
any, of Anna Schmidt Week ·

days later.

9'12 -2B97 .

SOFTENER ?
Let

Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; condition your
water with CO·OP water

~ack W. Carsey, Mgr.

Langsv i lle , Oh i o , hereb &gt;t
gives notice tnat he w ill file
his petition In the Probate
Cau r.t of Me i gs County ,
pravrng for .!ln. order of said
cqurt author izing the change
of his nam e from James
David Adkins to James Dav i d
Spires ; that said petlflon wi l l
be heard on the 20th day at
February , 1978 at 10 :00 a .m . ,
or as soo n thereafter as said
co urt may hear if.
James David Spires
Applicant

( 1, 19, 11 c

soften~r.

Model

Now only

•279,95

UC-SVt,

Phone 992-2181

Let us test your water Eree

Pomeroy Landmark

9.- _Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.

~

RESPON SIBLE OLDER lady to live
in and core lor aged lady in
Rut land . Light housework qnd
cooking , no laundry . More for
wages . Col i
home than
742 -2078.

Phone 992 -2 181

-

fOR SAlE

SAW MILL SLABS
$500

Sll VER DOLLARS &amp; co in s. Will poy
top dollar. Call 742-2316 ,
PAY top doll or lor used sho t
guns, nfles, p1s tols , swords ,
daggers, .go-korts , mmi b1kes ,
Gro11ely"s or what ho ve you .
Open 12 ·7 pm . Fife's, 3rd St .,
Rt. 7, Middleport . ne•t to
laundromat .
. Speedq ueen
992 -7494 .

Bundle

MEIGS COUNTY Humane S!)c1ety ,
Corellne and adoption Service.
992-7680, 742 -3162 , 9(,12-5427 .

RISING STAR Kennel. Boarding .
Indoor ond Outdoor runs .
Grooming o/1 breeds. Clean
sanltory locillties . Cheshire.
Phone (614) 367-0292 .
,

TEAFORD[H
II£ • t TOR

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR.
216 E. Second Street

puppy .

Slum Eltr1ctlon

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

P ...n. 992-3325 .

Carpeting·

•••l,r ___o. ·

BUSINESS CDRNEH-

o;,

Route
124.
Business
building with 3 bedroom , 2
bath home . Has a 2 car

A· l 1972 OLDS Delta BB . 4 dr.,
H.T., P.S., f&gt; .B., A .C. , AM-FM
radio. new tires . Cor in e:w -·
cellent co"nditipn . Will consider
smaller cor os trade in . Ca ll
992 -57B6 or 992- 2529.

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. SJ6,500.

1971 JEEPSTER COMA.NOO . V-6
engine , 4-wheel drive, ou to .
trans ., new exhC!JS' system .
Con be seen at Sears, 23-4 E.
Main St ., Pomeroy . l ~om 9 to 5

pm .
1975 GRANAOA. 2-dr., vinyl roof.
AM-FM, reclining seotl , Good
condilion, must sell . 992 -2763 . .

CARTER

-Upholstery-

PWMBIN~ -~

Professional Service, 39
experience .
Free _
estimates,
pickup
&amp;
delivery
service,
Residential &amp; Commercial.

300Maln St.

3102 0' (304) 772-3227 '

.HOBSTETTER
REALTY ·

1970 CHEVY
KINGSWOOD
wogon . Pr. steering , pr.
brakes , oir , a lot of new ports ,
. good rubber ond interior.
George Harris . 992-2451 .
1

years

RANCH - 2
3 Bdrms ..
garage, good

old,

allac)led

.subdivision, really nice ,

utilities, 2 car carport and
one-third acre lot . $14,000.

$25,900.00.
TWO STORY -

Well kept;

rormal dining,

3 Bdrms.,

We have 4

Jarge balh, large utlllly,

houses to sell here. This 9
room brkk has city water.
natural gas. electric and
extra lot for just $5,500 .

garage, carpeting. Only

nice two story home,

POMEROY '

2

Bdrms .. 1'12 balhs, In good

apartments for $9,600. It
.has a 1 bedroom apartment
and bath up, plus a studio
down now rented . You
better see this Ol)e.

shape•. ready to move Into.

-

$19,500.00.
IT3,900.00 -

S12.5DD.OO -

'
Will buy this
3

Will b\ly this

beautiful older home In
Pomeroy.
original
woodwork, must be seen.

3 bedroom

IN THE COUNTRY- l'h

block home, Bath, natural
gas furnace, city, and 1
acre. $20,000.

story, 3 Bdrms.. storage

ROUTE 33 -

CHECK
WITH
US
BEFORE YOU BUY. WE
HAVE
SOME
NICE
PROPERTIES FOR YOU
TO COMPARE.

Telford
Sue P. Murphy
Helen L. Ttoford

C, Bruu

Realtor Associates

buildings,
remodeling
started. ONLY $6,'19Q.OO.
CALL
FOR
M'ORE
INFORMATION, PHOTO
LISTING HELPS SELL
PROPERTY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK, KATHY &amp; LEONA ,
CLELAND
ASSOCIATES
992-2259,
992~

BlcMn Insulation
.

.

.

1

Pomeroy, Ohio
PHONE 992-6333
Office Hours: 9 A.M. to••
P.M.

1n«.

.

.

,;:
"'

II Amuse

......________________
11·9-lfc

'

....~

·-:-

698-7331 .

BOWERS REPAIR -

Sweepers, toasters , irgns, all
small opplionces. Lawn mower,
next to Stole Highway Gai-oge
on Rout&amp; 7. Phone {614) 9853B25 .

BATHROOMS

AND

1

:'

;:-:R:-;u;';ll~an:'d;'';'CO:Ch:::;o:',:'7:':4C:2·:'309~2'-::·--,...

27· ....: de mer
28 Large
barrel
29 Behavior
33 Malt

'

$0MiBOpY~

! ' ,,-.

~Uff &amp;.f:G,

~

ERNI&amp;. % I)ON•T

l'NOW WHA,. A
NOi'EL PRIU LOOJCS

•

l.olf'l:,

....
..

IU'f'

~M

SUP! l'r'S

.
"

CENTRAL CllY. ..

. IT16 NOf MY IMA61NAi10N.
60METH IN13'B BEEN
THROUGH HEIZE ...

••
•

..
•

•

~

•.,
'',,"• ....

1;-;--t---t--

&lt;fo

shipment
38 Moorish

"•'

...
' -.

We have need of 1. , •nos.
all types, homes, l1nd,
commercial, etc.
Cheryl Lemley

-~~
•
'' .

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
"Your Chevy Dealer"
992-2126
·
Pomeroy
Open Evenings Until I P.M.
•

,.

..

..'.
•
'
'

••

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

:
•

-'

HE SA"S I(OU BORROWED
H/5 RULER,AND THEN
'iOU SROKE: li.../5
TI-IAT TRUE ?

defense . West must open his
singleton club. East takes

K J83
EAST

his

• s
" J 10 9 7
Q !0 5
• J 9 B4 3
... 6
·
.. A 10 5
SOUTH
K864

+
+z6 53

wheel In, but a spade lead
. would lead tb its defeat.

.. Q9742

' We are going to discu~s
this same hand tomorrow In

Vulnerable: ~;~~\~:·~~;~~:! - connection with the defense

-:;;;~-+'-I--ll Dealer: West, 0

drum
39 Eye
40 Principle
41 Turf

against a heart contract by

King of hearts.

1'

Pass

North• E~st
Double
Double Pass

Pa~

Pass

West

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
is

IT WASN'T

M'Y

FAULT

I WAS MEASURING
THE 5T~EEi, AND A
RAN OVER

gives his partner u

Five clubs would probably

'

b-+-+-+-+-+--

ace,

club ruff, gets in again with
a heart provided West underleads his ace· king-queen
•nd a second club ruff sets
South.
·

+

A X Y D 1."'8 A A X R
l . ONGFELLOW

4•

Pa:ss

East and West.

..

South

Pass

N~t®~~v~
A Utah reader wants to
know what we open with:
. X XXK

By Oswald Jacoby
aod Alaa Soatag

.. A K KX

'~K XII.X

•··

The standard opening is

North doubled one heart
one spade. With 5-4-4-ll disfor takeout. He doubled four
tribution you should open
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
hearts as a general penalty · your flve-&lt;:ard suit. We also
double baS&lt;!d on high cards.
CRYPTOQUOJES
operl one spade, but would
South knew that North was
not crlUch:e a one--club bid.
ORXF showing a very good hand
w
QUIDQO
ZP
and decided to try f~r the
(Do yov nave a question for
vulnerable game. He also
C Z I U-Q
HV
XEU
the exp~r/s ? Write ··Ask the
decided to bid his four-card
EXperts ··. care of I his newspaspade soil rather than his
per, fndlv!dual questions ~Ill
DWZXEUQ
PRKPHKK
five-&lt;:ard club suit.
• tJe anSwered if ~ccompan1ec1
West opened lhe king of
by stamped. seff-address~d
envefopes . The most lnrereslhearts and continued the
inQ _que~tions wllf be used In
suit. South ruffed in dummy,
this cofumn and wlff rBce lve
cashed the ace and queen of
lrwnps and led the king of . copJes of JACOBY MODERN ,/
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE t\SSN . •
clubs. East took his ace and
Cuor. 1,rf8 Kinlt" F~aturea Svndit.ate. Inc;.

COME OUT OF THAT
L06,SNUFFY
FOR YOU ... SOME
FROM ~HOOL ...

Four spades could have ·

been beaten by most unusuat.l

K 76

WEST ,
• J 10 9 2
' A K Q B2

,

0

Tuppers Plains, Ohio, on

also sure of his contract.

A Q7 3

't 4A

BARNEY

•

roule7. Priced fa go fast •t
$32,000.
'

Assoti•t•
HOme Phone 949·2517

NORTil
•

xz

VERY RECENTLYI

.just oulslde the limits of

Associate
Home PhOne 742-2003
Hilton Wolfe, Sr.

Cotton for

suu sure or
a sJN!de trick, but South was

z u

"•

bath · with shower, full
basement wlt_h garage,
located on two acre$ of land

-111111-=.l~~::.._:S~U~i~t~W~O~:r~h~ d~e~?!as

One leltt! r simply stands for an~othcr. In this sample A Ia
u sed for the three 1/s, X for th e two O's, etc. Single letters,
aPostrophes, the len gth nnd formation ol the words are all

'

_.IN STOCKI

37

NO'f A NeoN IOV.J T•t.

~

NEW LISTING
3
bedroom, kitchen with
&lt;lining ar .. , living room,

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

name

.-•

New Chevy 2 Wheel Drive and 4 Wheel
Drive &amp;taxer.

BRID6

player
Gabriel
Z5 Homo sapiens 37 Dizzy's
'1:7 Precept
jazz

35 Maxim
36 Russian
girl's

FRANK &amp; ERNIE

•'

SO COME ·ON AND PICKUP
· YOUR TRUCKIII

===:::--:=--=E=------:--

vinegar

!:

MAGGIES UPI-IOLSTERY. Refinish,
reupholstery,
rebuilding . , .
Beautiful selacricn of material •
ond vinyls. FrH estimate. Tel .
7-42 -2852 . Locorion : Solem •.

Tartu" 10; 1 :40--News 13.

weight
2 :30-News 31 3 :oo-Movle "Eve ot lhe Cal" 3; 5:0fl30 Custom
FBI 3; 6:00-Big Valley 3. ·
31 - lily
32 Bird sound'rnursday, Jan . 19
'·
34 UtUe
___.:___ _ _

entrance

ULUNS EXCAVATING, Complete., (
Service . Phone 992-2478,
.....,
NEIGLER'"S FOR building houses, ;:. \
bathrooms, all kinds of- repaift:'
work and what hove you . Gu,_.
Neigler, Racine, Ohio. Call
9 9
.4 -2508 evenings.
Nlc;INSKY ELECTRIC Servlce,'-1

in ih-+'4 Too!

$21,000.00,

zo

Z1 Kind of
digger
22 Drum roll
23 Falvn 4pon
24 Football

' Pylhon's Flying Circus 33 .
•
12:00:--Janokl 33; 12 : 0~Movle "Confession• ot the
OA Mon"8; 12 :4!&gt;-Lohm6n&amp; Borkley6; Ironside
13.
1:00-Midnlght Special 3,4, 15; Movle " Deolh Curse ol

25 Mushroom
Mine ·

p

Got Chevy Pick-Ups

mobile home. 24'x56' with ·
porch In excellent condition
Including all ·furniture &amp;
appliances. Located on
corner lot, 100'&gt;e200' In the
Arbaugh addition, Tuppers
Pfalns, Ohio, known as the
Ralph Brooks property .
This , Is o good ~uy al

will be .

remodeled , ceramic tile, plum - 1
bing, carpentry, and generql
mointenonce. 13 ywrs ex ~
perience. 992-3685.
.~ '

It Needn't We've

NEW LISTING - 2 year
_old Fuqua double wide

we\1 and a

Yesterday's Answer
18 Some
Z9 Jewelry

event

Kitchens

Hang You Up •••
Bog You Down?

near Five: Points.

drive our motorcar
·down for us!

· Helen••
poet ·
5 Indian
official
I Seaweed

Heroes 10; Emergency One 13,· My Three Sons 15 .

5:31&gt;--News 6; Elec . Co. 20,33 ; Mary Tyler Moore 10;
Hogan's Heroes 156:00-News 3,4,B,1 0,13,15; ABC
News 6: Zoom 20,33.
6: 3o--NBC News3,4,15; ABC News 13; Carol BurneH &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20,33.
7:00:--Cross-WIIs 3,4 ; Liars Club 6; Muppel S~ow 8:
capiiOI Beol 33: News 10; To Tell The Truth 13;
Gilligan'• Is. IS ; Almanac 20.
7:31&gt;--Porler Wagoner 3; Gong Show~ ~ Match Game
PM b; Price Is Right B; MacNeil -Lehrer Reporl
20,33: Family Feud 10; $100,000 Nome That Tune
13; Pop Goes The Counlry 15.
B:OQ-Chlco &amp; lhe Man 3,4,15; Donny &amp; Marie 6,13;
Wender Woman 8, tO r WashlnQton Week In Review
20; So The People May Know 33 .
B:3!&gt;-Wall Slreel WHk 20,33.
9 :oo-Rocktord Files 3,4,15 ; Movie "Relurn to Fonlosy
Island" 6, \3; Movie " Bug" B; 10; Honk 20; Good Old
Bv.f y of Rlidlo 33.
10:oo--Qulncy 3,4, 15; New• 20: Hometown Saturcloy
Night 33.
10:31&gt;--Monly Python' s Flying Circus 20: 11 :oo-News
3,4,6,B,10,13,15; Olck Cavell20; Lltlo• Yoga &amp; You
33.
.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Baretta 6,13 ; Mash 8;
Movie " Plan Nine from Outer Space" 10; Monty

4 " To

13 Excite ·
14 Mining find
extract
15 Word in Jew7 - granted
ish diet8 Ennoble
ary laws
9 Where
l"iA:~I:=-:-:::ii-::::::;:;;~) !~ Good deal
Dakar is
Exhaust
quest house Terminate 11 Expeditious
17. Money : sl.
zt "-:- Date
W1th an ·
1
lUUllA&lt;&gt;'I..I., Angel"
ZZ Car buff's f,.,...+-1:--+--

'

DOES THIS WEATHER

acre lot. 541.000.00 . Located
on lhe Crow Sub-dlvlsfon,

We want ljOU to

;

~p~h~on~e;9;9~2~-3~5~25~o~r~9'1~2-~S~2~32~.~. .:~C~e~n~le~'~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ '·'::

oven and range, one car
94tr.age, family room. New
total electric home on an

routine

HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex~ ' 1
covoting, septi~ Sy!temt, ... (
dozer, bockhoe, dump truck , · 1
lime:stone, grovel, blocktQp ,; :
paving, Rt. 143. Phone 1 (61.4)

BRADFORD; A~ctloneer, Complete Service, P~one 9-49-24B7
or Cil49-2000. Racine , O~io , Crltr
Bradford.

NEW LISTING
3
bedroom, 1'12 ~lhs, dining
area, kllchen has bulll-ln

12 Mechanical

',:.!·
•

Locoted In

1· 18-1 mo.

(Answers tomorrow) ·
Jumbles: GAVEL YACHT MISERY PRAYER
Answer: The aort of thing junk dealert might fight
over-"SCAAP" METAL

premium

··~·

Middleport, Ohio

I

by THOMAS JOSEPH
DOWN
ACROSS
I
Legwninous
I Beetle
tree
Bailey's
2 Socrates'
swampy
marketplace
5 .Appoint. ments
3 Clerical
headwear
10 Exchange

s~t~S'~~~~tS~~~rN~

ltEIGS PlAZA

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as aug·

~~-

.
I£E HARIMARE . ,,
..•'

Syracuse, Ohio
Ph. 992-3993

AWAY Fl'tOM WHEF&lt;:E
IHE 6H,oi.R:K W~
LUR:KING.

NEW JlJSTOFF PRESS! JUMBLE BOOK 111 with 110 puuln II lYaii·
Able tor $1 .35 postpaid trom Jumble, cfo thl• newepaptr, P.O. Boll 34,
Norw~. N.J. 07848. Include your name, addre11, tip code and make
checko Plylblo to New•p-r&gt;erbooka.

A

instructions.

(]

Gilligan's Is, B; Suome St 20,)3: Gomer Pyle,
USMC 10.
4:31&gt;--Llllle Rascals 3,15: Gilligan' s Is. 4: Brody Bunch
B. 10; Mary Tyler Moore 13 ,
•
s :oo-Here Come The Brides 3; Star Trek A; Gunsmo~e
8; Mlsler Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33: Hogan s

TOOK 'THE 6WIMME~

a: A 'T 1 I r I I )" oF( I I I J

Yesterday .s

.

JIM ltffSEE

SOFFIT &amp; CELINGS
GUTTERS &amp; DOWN
SPbUT
stop · by
stop
, ~sy

LARRY LAVENDER

l

SE'E THAT YOU CONTINUE
TO WORK FOR OUR
GREAT CAUSE!

1---------J·.'

Storm
-·
Windows &amp; Doors
Replacement
Windows
Aluminum
Siding-Soffit!
Gutters-Awnings

EXCA VA liNG, doter, loader and
bocl~hoe work ; dump trucks
and lo-boys for hire ; will l-loul
fill dirt, to soil, limestone ond
gravel. Coli Bob or Roger Jef.
fers, day phone 992 -7089, night

T~OUCiHT IT WAS
YOU Ill TilE DARK---_.

WE

:

DID NOT KNOW

THA'T TillS ONE
WAS OUR NEW
LEADER!

S.ave lO pet. to 50 pet,
" ~
on hntlng cost
,
E)(ptrlence and
fully Insured
Free Est,
Call ; 667·6479ar992·3815
,
1-16-Jma, 1 ,

FREE ESTIMATES

REMODELING, Plumbing, heeling
·and all types of generol repair ,
Work guaranteed 20 years ex perience. Pl-lone992·2409.
SEWING MACHINE Repairs, service, all l'(lolces, 992-22S4 . The
Fa b ric Shop , Pomeroy .
Aulhorized Singer Soles ond
Service. We sl:lorpen Scissors.

; IT WAS A MISTAKE 1 •

BRIKG ME. PAPER ...
PEN·-- AXEL WISHES
TO DISPATCH OllDER5···
THE HOUR 16 ffl;Ri" !

Cf\01\ Yoi.RSELVES! A'I(EL
IS k1NI&gt; AND FORGMNG •· •

•

l
..A
--:.~:""~'-;;~~~;=~..,g:•:•~led~by~lheabovecartoon.

.C.ellulosiC (wood fiber! ~
Thermal Insulation · ~

1163-2nct Ave., Gallipolis
446-7833--446-1833

ElWOOD

t
L

1M8ECILE.1 WE

0

FRIDAY, JANUARY 20,1971
!:4$--Farm Report 13; S:lO--PTL Club 13: 6:00:--PTL
Club l!;
6: 15- .
6 :2s-Soclellos In Transition 10; 6 :30-CDiumbus
Today 4; News 6: 6 :•5-Mornlng Report 3; 6 :50Goocl Morning. Wesl VIrginia 13.
6: 5s-&lt;:huck While Reporls 10: News 13; ,7:00:--TDday
3,4,15 ; Good Mornlng Amerlcir 6, 13; CBS News 8:
Bullwlnklo 10.
7:30-Schoollts10; B: oo-Copl . Kangaroo 8,10: Sesame
St . 33.
9:oo--Merv Griffin 3; Phll Donahue ~. 13, IS: Family
All air 8: Edge of Nlghl6 ; Matcl1 Game 10.
•
9 :30-Emergency one 6; Andy Grlllllh B; Family
Affair 10,
10:00:--Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,15: Tollleloles B; Joker' s Wlld
10: Not For Women Only 13.
10:3!&gt;-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; Andy Grlflll~ 6;
Price Is Right 8, 10; Rick Faucheux 13,
11 :oo-WhHI of ~orlune 3.4,15: Happy Doys6, 13; Eloc.
Co. 20.
11 :3!&gt;-Knockoul 3,1S; Fomlly Feud 6, 13; Partridge
Famlly • : Love of Life 8, IQ; Sesame St . 20,33.
11 :55-CBS News 8: Loving Free 10 .
12 :00:--Newscenter 3; S20,000 Pyramid 13: News ~.6 , 10;
To Say The Least 15; Gombll B.
12 :3!&gt;-Ryan's Hope 6,.13 ; Bob Braun 4; Gong Show 15;
St!arch tor Tomo!'"rOw B, 10; Elec. Co. 33.
1:oo-For Richer, For Poorer 3; All My Children 6, 13;
News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women
Only 15.
'
1: 3o-Oays of Our Lives 3,A, 15; As The World Turns
B,10; 2 :oo--&lt;lne Life ID Llve 6.13; 2: 3o--Ooclors
3.~.15 ; Guiding Llghl B,O 10.
3:00-Anolher World 3.•. 15; General Hospital 6,13;
Lilias Yogo&amp;You20 ; BeslofFomllles33.
3:30-AII, In The Family B, 10; Crockoll's Vlclory
Gorden 20 ,
.
4:00-Misler Cartoon 3: Edge of Nlghl13 : My ThrH
Sons A; For R.lcker, For Poorer 15; Merv Griffin 6;

x

PON'1 Li"T" HIM
lN ... Hi" Will KILL us I

•

o•

I I I

·1BUNCOEt
V
"'J
J

Chesler, Ohio __
10-30-c 1 '

J&amp;L

Tri-State UuholsteiJ
Shop

Pomeroy 992-b282
or 992.-6263 ·
I A.M. !o4:30P.M.

57 A . FARM. 5 rooms and bath ,
.Good born and outbuildings ., COUNTRY farm/end with secluded woods, wafer and gdod oc·
Al l fenced . 247 -2242 offer 5 pm ,
cess in Monroe Co.unty, W. Va.
Shown by oppointmenl only .
$1 ,000 dowr-, call {304) n2·
Must sell .
3102 or (304) 772 -3227 .
FIVE ROOM house in Middleport .
Seen by appointment only . Col/
gfler 5 pm , 992-5-4~2. Must sell .

$31,900.00.
MODERN

•

•

Pomeroy, Ohio

SMALL farm for sol&amp;. 10"Y. down ,
owner fina nced. Monroe Count.
ty, W. Vo. Phone (304) 772.

Fireplace, &amp;-year old ranch
type home, 3 Bdrms.,
modern kitchen , 2 car
garage, approx. 1 acre,
carpeting
&amp;
modern .

.
•'

• 0

TURBS

!~ RELILK
I
J I I
~

and

.r--~---...,.-...,.,
' '"'

yrs.

HEATING INC.

!
i

Tank Service· ' :·

Bo• 34

n

Cl 1•111'1',_0'0111f1T- ........ _

,

J!Ck's.Septic

Closed Jan. 10
Til 18th, 1978

2·2l-llll1

Jumbtes,

BORN LOSER

•l

Anyday, anytime.
P...ne 985.3106

--" · ·

these fouf

·. 11

commercial.
Call for
estimate, 24 hour servJce.

Union Ave.

I::~J:~-~1Drh:i::o

"'ilt Qricillllors
Not TIM llllllltn

Close
Thursdays
Saturdays at noon.

Residential

and St. Rl.

992-2206 or 992-7630

VA-FHA, 30 yr . financing . "lrelonCI
Mortgage , 77 E. Stole, Athens ,
phone (614)592.:3051.

S45,000.00.
WOOD
BURNING

Unscramble

one letter to each square, to form
four ordinary words.

SJPTIC TANK
CLEANING

Phone
992-7608

all elec , 1 acre , M iddleport,
clo:se to Rutland . Pho!'~e 992.
7481 '

RUTLAND - 4 bedroom$,
bath , fireplace, all city
SYRA-CUSE -

Corner

At

ocres , level lend, located ct
Tuppers Plains on Ohio, Route
7. Phone (614) 667-630.4.

wall designs. 2 car garage,"
1 acre,
many
other
features, never lived In for

-

and

12-lB-1 mo.

JOHNIE'S BEAUTY
SALON

Young's

HOMESITES for !Ole, 1 acre and
up. Middleport , near Rutland .
Coli 992-74B1 .

wilh WBFP, spill entry
with nice beamed ceiling &amp;

TliATSCAAMeLEDWOADOAME
.,
,.
by Honrt Arnold
Bob i,ee
JJrg~~
'

742-2570

NOTICE

Superior

._c~~~--------------

the nicest homes a'otailable,
near M iddleport, 3 Bdrms.,
2 baths. large family I'"OOm

-·
·-

~

WILL do roofing. con5truction ,
plumb1ng and heoting . No job
too Iorge or too small. Phone
742-234B .

NEW LISTING-.:_ · one u1

10 :31&gt;--Lock. · Stock &amp; Barrel 20; 11 :oo-i'jews
3,4,6.8,10,13,15; Dick Cavell 20 ; Over Easy 33 .
11 :30--Johimy Carson 3,4,15; Slorsky &amp; Hutch 6, 13;
Movie " KIII&lt;Iozer" 8; ABC News 33; Movie " Of
Love and Desire" 10.

PHONE

Froe Elllmotn
P ...n. 992-3993
1-18-1 mo.

Broker
107•12 Sycamore -S t.

Pedigreed with Champion
Bloodlins . A lso , cer1il ied health
certificate. $150 firm . your
choice male or female .
614 -797 -4500.

tq~Y.!~l.ON_

Dick Seyler

P'-e 992.2791
100 Kerr St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Tutankhamun 33 .
10: 1»--CiitSS of '65 3,A, 15; R&amp;dd Foxx 6, 13; Barnaby
Jones 8, 10; I. Claudius 33; News 20.

Boilers, Furn11cet, Heat
Pumps &amp; Aulo-Conlrols.
GA$-OIL-COAL

LAVENDER

Refinishing . Repairing.
Antiques Bought &amp; Sold

formance at Wolf Trap 33.

.

9:00:--Stateof the Union Addressl5; To Be AnFlOunced
20.
9:30-Hollywood Squares
Treasures of

f!&gt;UDDI!~S :

'

- Sivt Fuel~ Monty-

Upholstering Service
Custom - Professlona I

_

· B:3!&gt;-Fish 6,13; WDdehouse Playhouse 20; In Per-

OHIO
'
.
HEATING SERVICE E
REPAIR &amp; SERVICE ~

Blown Into Walls
and AtticS

We Strip Paint - Varnishes ·

EXCAVATING dOzer , backhoe
and ditcher. Chorles R. Hotfield , Back Hoe
Service,
Rutland , Ohio . Phone 7.42 ·2008.

MAIN
E!OMEROY, ').

QIIIUUIIIIIIICS

Cellulose Fiber

· George S. Hobstener Jr.,

AKC DOBERMAN "Pincher puppies . 8 weeks old, r ed &amp; rust.

AUIIIIIUI

Blown InSulation
etc.
Wood-Metal-Plastics
·An~qoes &amp; Modern

8, 10; Once Upon A Classic 2Q,33.
'30ME PENTAGON &amp;RASS lS
G!'TTlN' INDICTeD FOR COLLUSIObl
WlT~ T~ElR OlD· SC~OOL·Tlf'
DEFENSE' CONTRACTOR

SIDIII&amp;-SOFFITT

12-11.- 1 mo.

Co~merdol property appro)( . 17 NEW 3 bedroom house , 2 baths,

BURROUGHS SENSI·MATIC accoun ting machine. Has been
under serOJ ice contract and in
good condition. Can be seen o f
The Doily Sentinel, Ill Cour t
St ., Pomeroy , OH .

AKC REGISTERED pekingese pup pies. Phone (304) 882-2683.

r~=

l~ -. Pho~e 992.·.2]81 .

B &amp; S MOBILE HOMES , Pt . Plea sant , W. Va , beside Heck 's.
1973 ' Broadr'nore 14 x 64 2
bedroom
1973 Dorion 14 x 602 bedroom
1972 ViCtor ian 1.4 x 67 3 bedroom
2 both
.
1972 Coventry 12 x 653 bedroom
1969 Sta tesman 12 x 60 2
bedroom ,

(61.)698·3290 .

"SINCE 1947

SALES AND SERVICE
11-9-llc

service department and
will service Hotpoint and
' other brands.

-~~~~
flols l Attics
S11)D

lARRY lAVENDER

9. _Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.

992-5965
Bailey Run Road
Pomeroy, 0.

H60F HOLLOW Horses . Buy , sell
!rode or train . New and Used
saddles . Ruth Reeves , AI bony .

---··

·APPLIANCE
SERVICE

FOREST PRODUCTS

USED PIANO. Priced rea 5o nobl~ .
Syroc u ~ e Presbyterian Church .
Phone ~2 - 2310 .

1973' VW SUPER Beetle. Runs
good. Will trade for truck of
equol value . 992 -2292.

WILL BABYSIT IN my home, ony
age . Phon e992-6i 80.

.._

WOOD AND WOOL FIBER

CHEMICALS

-

,___lllo
~-- ·

RACINE, Q.

WIIDOIISI. lli'IACUIOT

l'k HZ-2174

Carpet • Upllolstery
P,hone Mike Y01n1

Pomeroy Landmark

POMEROY

WI~L

STARCRAFT FAll Sole. Mini·
motors , 20' and 22', TraVel
Troilers , 1B' 5" $3,799, 2.5' 7"
Bunkhouse $4 , 875~ Fold-down ,
$1 ,700 up , We sell service• on"
quality . Open Sundays . Camp
Conley Storcrof• Soles, Rt . 62,
N. ot Pt . Pleasant .

$275. 65,500 BTU , $375. Call
992-7034 .

We have enlarged our

GOOD USED t r a cto r with
hydraulic. 3 pt. hi tch . 7.42·3074.

I

I
I
. 446-4367
I
GIUIPOUS BUSINESS COllEGE
"The Jobs People
I

1976 FORD F-250 Custom. 17.50 x
14 .00 tires · winch . Only 14 ,000
m1. Headers. CB . Tope deck .
Over $3,000 in extras . Serious
colts only after 12 noon :
69b-1072. $6,800.

CASH FOR Junlc Car s. Fr~e ' s Truck
and Auto Wfecker Service .
Phone 742 -2081 or Penn zoi l
Rutland 742·9575 .

(I) 12 , 19, 26 (2) 2~ 9, 16, 6t

LEAVING TOWN - selling oil fur nitu re ot reasonable prices .
9:30am to 7:00pm . 992·7066.

ATTENTION MARE Owners :
AQHA stvd service. Introducing
to Southern Ohio', Corloko , sorrell son of Otoe. Breed lor col·
or, conformation o,nd dispos i·
li~n . Phone 698-8241 .evenings
or write for breeding contract.
Belle Echo Quarter Horses ,
oi0125 SR 692 , Pomeroy , Ohio
45769 .
RUGS, WALL Hongtngs and
ofgans . Nice for Christmas .
Reasonable . C0/1992 -2214 .

SMITH NELSON
MOTQRS, INC.

~-

INSULAllQrt
SERVICE

NEW KENMORE wgsher and
dryer . Green . 1 '/, yeor old,
· green side by sidtt refrigerator .
Misc. furniture. Coli {6U) ,
667-3330. otter 6 or 985-3998.

KIMBLE ORGAN . 2 manual
keyboards with fu ll Octolo'e foot
pedals.
Gerold
Powell.
992 -2622, after 5 pm .

.......

FREE ESTIMATES

.PLANING-MILL ·

99H?71

Will PAY fop dollar lor used ,hot
guns , rifl&amp;l , p istol$ , t wcrds ,
dagger s, go-karte , mini bikes .
Gravely's or what hove you .
Open 12·7 pm . Fife's" 3rd St.,
Rt. 7 , Middleport, nel'!t to
S.peedqueen
Loundromot .
992-749-t.

SNOWBLADE FOR Grovely Tractor. 992-7190.

•••
•

,---------.....;;;;.--:·

'JOONE.

Mtvlt Clllnntl 4 ~ &amp; 9 P.M. - NlcktlDdeOn (PGI
1 &amp; 11 P .M. - RO&lt;:ky (PGl
,· C.llol Chlnnol Flvt .
6:30 P.M. -Testlm..,y Time
7:00 - Paul Gaudino Family Fllnes•
7:30 - Coach's Corner
1 :00 - Journol
9 :00 - Cable Spolllghl
10:00- 100 Club .

J_!iURSDAY, JANUARY 19, 1971
,
6:30-NBC: News 3,4, 15: ABC News 13; Carol Burnell &amp;
Frlendt 6; 'CBS News 8,10; Over Eosy 20 •
7:0Q-Cross-WIIs M ; Liars Club 6: Gong Show 8:
Copilol Beal 33; News 10; T,o Toll lho Truth 13;
Gilligan's Is. 15: Hocking Valley Bluegrass 20.
7:15-To Be Announced 33.
7:30-Hollywood Squares 3: College Basketball • :
S100,000 Name That Tune ~ ; $25,000 Pyramid 8;
MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33; That's Hollywood 10;
Nashville on lhe Road 13: Marly Robbins' Spotlight
15.
.
B:OQ-Chlps 3, 15: Welcome Back, Koller 6.13; Waltons

L---~------------------------------~----------------------_.,::·

for sal•. S2 per bu . Coli after 5
pm , 985--4131 C'r 985·3537 .

HAY FOR sole. (614) 696-1 288.

"•
•

Business Services·

b98-3021.

PIANO TUNING -- Lone Ooniels . 13
years of service . New phone
number, 992 -2581 .

OLD FURNITURE , ice boxes , brass
be&lt;;ls , iron beds , @IC ·. , cQmplete
households . Write M . D. Miller,
Rt . 4 , Pomeroy , Ohio or co li
'192 -776/J.

cocker

Vermeer Iorge ,fou nd boler,
$250. Discoun t until F~ . lS,
197B.
Wood moster cabinet
wood neaten, thermostot , ash
pan, hinged rop for cooking,
brick -lined. S2.t2. Coalmaster
some os obove byt Shaker
grate for cool , $264. Blower for
either, $48. Merrill Chose, (614 }

MOBILE HOME repairs . 992 -5858 .

COINS, CURRENCY , tokens . old
pocket watches end chains ,
silver and gold. We need 1964
and older si lver coins . Buy, sell,
or trade ' Coli Rog~tr Womsley,
742·133 ].

FUll.BlOOOED
992 -6293.

fee-den '

WILL CARE lor lhe elderly in ovr
home. Phone992-731.4 ,
'

TIM BER . Pomeroy Forest Products. Top price for standing
sa wtimber . Call 992·5965 or
Kent Hanby , l -446-8570.

Larry E . Spencer
Clerk of Cour t of
Common Plees ,
Mei gs County ,
Oh io .

For Accounting, Secretarial
Business Administration.
Day and Night Classes still open.
• Financial Aid Program s
• Placement Assistance
•Plus GED Traininq

ECONOMY TRACTOR v,nt~ oil attachments . like new , asking
$2250. Phone (6lol) 698 -3290.

CASH paid for all makes and
models of mobile homes .
Phone a reo code 614 -423-9531 .

CH IP WOOD .
Po le~
max .
diameter 10"" on largest end, $8
per ton . Bundled slob $6 per
to n. Delivered to Ohio Pollet
Co ., Rt. 2, Pomeroy. 992-2689 .

Bole

COAL . limes to ne, and calcium
chloride and calcium brine for
dust control ond special mbdng
salt for fo rmers , Ex celsior Salt
Works, Main Street , Pomeroy, •
1974 SKYLINE 1ol • 56. 3 bedroom ,
Ohio or p~one 992 - 3891 ,
total elet:fric.' $7500. 992 -2019 .
CAMPER , $600. Also , ~orse NEW CQLEMAN electric furnaces,
trailer , $450. Phone (614) 698 down-draft iype; 42,350 BTU ,

WANTED AUTO mechanic tor G M
dealership. Wr ite : Bo:w 743.
Pomero y, OH 457 69 "

NO ITEM TOO Lorge or too sma ll.
W1ll buy 1 piece or complete
household. New , Used, or anti ques . Martin 's FurnitUre, 20 N .
2nd St.. Middle port . Phone
992 -6370.

ROUND

mode of square tubing, $76.

ONE PAIR of new ice skates.
White , girls, about size 5.
992 -2529.

3290.

man, deceased , whose names
and places of r esi dence ar e
unknown and cannotwilh
reasonable diligence
be
ere
hereby
asc ertained
not ified that plaintiffs have
brought th is ac!ion nam ing
each of you as one of th e
detendanfS i n the above
named co urt by f ilin9 t he ir
pet itiOn on January l Oth .
1978.
The obje c t of the p et it ion is
thai
lh e d e fe n dan ts b e
r eq uired to set up tt"lei r
alleged estate or interest in
the here inafter des cri b ed
property or be forever barred
from \3SSert1n9 the same , a.nd
that plaintiffs tit l e be forever
quiete d as against any c l aim,
estale or interest o f the de ·
fendants and for such other
relief. legal or equitabl e as
may be fo und to be proper ·
end neces sary to a ff ord
plaintiffs full relief , with
judgm en t tor costs herei n'
that said real es t ate is
descr ibed as foll ows :
The fo l lowing rea l estate
si tuat ed in the County o f
M ei gs, State ot Ohio , and in
fhe Village ol Pomeroy , fo wl! ·
T.R.6.CT ONE : Fra"c tion 17,,
Town 2, Range 13, Dounoed
arid described as fo llows :
Beg in ning 310 l -3 feet North
of the corner of th e Fac tory ,
former ly KnoWn as t he Prob st
Furn i tur e Factory , on Sugar
Run Stree t, t hence North 65
Oeg . 50' West 181. feet to a
stake : then ce North 25 Oeg .
East
87
2-3
fe e t
to
a stake : t hence South
59 Deg . East 175 teet to
a slake, thence South 22 Oeg .
10 ' We st 66 1-3 teet to the
place of begi nn ing .
TRACT TWO : In F raction
No . 11 , Town No . 2 and Range
No . 13. o f the Ohio Com pan y's
Purch ase and bounded and
described
as
foll ows :
Beginning 177 feel Northerl y
from the co rner of the Fac tory , fo rmer ly known as the
Probst Furniture Factory ,
on Sugar Run St reet ; then ce
Norlh 65 Deg . 50 minutes
West 183 feet to · a stake ;
then ce Nort h 25 OE!g , Ea st 66
2·3 teet to a stake the corner
of a l ot now or formerly
ow n ed
IJy
W i lh emina
Genheimer 's l ot ; t hence
South 65 Deg . 50 ' E_ast 181 teet
to a stake, thence South 22
Oeg . 10 minutf!s west 66 1-3
teet to the place ot beg inn i ng .
EXCEF'T the follow i ng
parcel from Tract Two :
In Fraction 17 . Town No . 2·
and Range No. 13 of the Oh io
Company's Purchase, and
bounded and described es
follows .
BEGINNING
177
f eel
Nort he rl y from the corne r of
the Factory , form erly known
as the Probs! Furniture
Factory , on Sug.ar Run
Street ; th ence Nort h 65 Deg .
501 West 183 fe et .i then ce
North 25 Deg . 00' East .42 .7
feet to a st ake : then -ce So uth
12 Deg . 00' East 182 teet to ti:J~
West side of said Sugar Ru n
Street ; t hence So u th 12 Deg .
10' West 64 feet along the
West side o f sei d St reet , to the
place of be g inn i ng, con tain)ng 22 -100 ~cres
Reference Deed : VoL 269,
Page 27 Deed Records, Meigs
County , Oh lo.
You are required to answer
the Petit ion within twenty .
eight days atfer the last
pul&gt;ticatlon of this . notice,
which will be pubilshed once
each week for Si)( successive
weeks,
and
the
last
publication wit! be made on
February 16th . 1978.
In case of yaur fa ilure to
answer or o'herw ise respond
as p~rm I !ted by t he Oh ro
Ru les · of Civil Procedure
within the t i me stated ,
judgment by default will be
rendere d aga inst you for the
relief demanded In the
petition .
-

LARGE

HAV FOR sgle, $55 per ton . Corn

NEED A WAT R

CALL US
Pomeroy Landmark

,
Science, and

.

cons. tr uc.tion worlcer or couple
with child . $1 50 per month . Call

RIEL OIL AND.
GAS SERVICE

ordered each man in his crew
to eat 20 pounds of onions,
followed by 10 pounds two

r cLAssEs Now FoRMING
· .

to

WeAre Now
Taking New
Customers For

· Capt. James Cook applied
the onion remedy in the 18th

CHANGE OF NAME

Sunday

in Syracuse. Cc:vn letely furnish -

INCOME TAX Services . Federal
and S.tote ToJoees . Wolloce
RusselL Bradbury . 99:2-7228 .

J8 mes Dav id Spires , Rt . 1,

the day befo~ publication

2 BEDROOM 12x60 Mobile Home

9BS·39BB.

Nobn on saturday

4P.M.

COUN TRY MOBILE tiome Pork .
Raute 33, nor th of Pomeroy ,
Lorge lo ts. Coli 992-7o179. ..

ed. sto rage bldg . Will rent

NOTICE OF

Thesday
thruFnW.y

~3-&lt; .

THE RACINE Cun Club Gun Shoot
'!very Sunday ohernoon. Foetory choke guns on ly. Auorted
meots.

of the Pacific. At one point, he

_,

3 AND 4 RM . furnished and vn·
furnished opt1 . Phone 992 -

TW£&gt; STORY 3 bedroom frame INCOM~ TAX Services . Fttdara!
house . F.A. lurnoce , storm w in·
ond Stole To•e!. . Wondo Eblin.
dows , fireplace. In Middleport .,
'192·2272.
Phone 991·3457 or 992-5867 .
THE
RACINE Volunte•r Fire
Deportment will sponsor o gun
shoot every So tu rdoy ot 6 pm at
their buHdlng in Boshon. Foe·
tory choke guns o nly .
IF YOU hove a service to olfer.

voyages to the remote areas

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

TELEVISION
VIEWING

~------------------------------------------------------~
.J~:

century for scurvy on his

NOTICE

3,A; 1 : 50-News 13.

..

ll Wotdi«Undtr
Cuh
CMrae
U» •
US
IJO
1.111

ldo7J

12:00-Jonokl 33; 12: -1()--Toma 6, 13; 1: 00&lt;-Tom or row

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash· -

WANT AD
CHARGES
1doy
l do71

n

I CAN'T,
SHERIFF-I'M STUCK!!

•

�lD-TheDallySentlnel,Middleport-Pomeroy, O., Thursday,Jan. 19, 1978

.

:-----~-;-i)-.;;ih;----!

.

Independent truckers
snarl capital traffic

MICHAEL, 7, . aod
Mattbew, %,
Martlo
celebrated their Jaouary
birlbdayo at the borne of
their pareoto, Mr. aod Mn.
Hugb Marlin, Reedsville.
Cake and tee cream were
served to their graod·
pareats·, Mr. a ltd Mrs.
Graot Boring aad to Belb,
Amy aod Sara Berkblmer

aad Jeff Chevalier.

CALLED TWICE
The Middleport E-R Squad
was called to Old Route 7 in
the Silver Run area at 1:58
p.m. Wednesday.for BiU File
who had fallen and suffered a
back injury. He was taken to
Holzer Medical Center. Just
..., the squad was returning
from the center, it was
dispatched on a second call in
the Sllver Run area, this one
for Ray Durst, who was taken
to Veterans '" Memorial
Hospital as a medical patient.
REPORT CORRECTED
A report that Veva Searles,
55, Rutlanq, slid on an icy
street striking a car was
incorrect. Mrs. Searles slid
off the highway and a car
driven by James H. Quivey,
59, Pomeroy, slid off the highway and struck the Searles
car.

WASHINGTON (UPI) Independent truck drivers
blocked a main cmunuter
traffic corridor during the
morning rush hour today in
support
of
fanners
assembled in the · nation's
capital 1o protest low farm
pr I.ceo. ·
ThoWlands of Virginia commuters found morning rush
hour traffic Slatted by a
caravan of 12 tractor-trsller
trucka that shut off the 14th
Street Bridge, which spans
the Potomac Rlver south of '
the' city.
A spokesman for the
protesting Ianners said they
had r!othlng to do with the
demoostration. A spokesman
for tile Independent Truckers
AssOciation said his group
had closed the bridge "to join
with the farmers."
Traffic slowed to a creep
when lbe trucks drove onto

E con
· 0 my

AUTO DAMAGED
A car driven by Randall
Lee Moore, Middleport, was
damaged Wednesday when it
was struck by the village
back hoe driven by Paul
McDaniel. McDaniel arrived
at Larue! st. where the Moore
vehicle was staUed in the
Bl!ow to ~lve help when t~e
brakes on the backhoe falled,
permitting it to slide into the
front of the Moore car.
UNIT CALLED OUT
The Pomeroy E-R Squad
went to 802 E. Main St., at
6:20 p.m. Wednesday for
Goldie Hawk who was ill. She
was .ta.ken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At 7:44
p.m. the squad went to
Liberty Ave. for Fauna
Taylor who was tllken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital.

News(OaltiiMitd
•• in ,.._
Briefs
pip
1)

Embassy In Wasbington, Wui be the luncheon speaker
Saturday.
The OFU, headquartered In Ottawa, Ohio, Is a division of
the NFU and has a memberhip of 9,0001annfamlllea.
CLEVELAND - FORD MOTOR CO.'S PAYROLL atlts 14
Ohio facilities neared the •1 billion level for 1977; the
automaker aMOunced Wednesday.
The combined payroll at the 12 plants and two parts
distribution centers totaled $947 milUon, Ford said, an increase
of nearly $280 million from the fonner high ol$688 million set
In 1976.
.
CLEVELAND.- CRIME STATISTICS REPORTED to
the FBI by•.Cieveland police show crime increased by 3.5
percent in 1977, compared to 1976, with crimes last Y"l'r
totaling 54,995 - with 53,141 reported in 19'18.
The greatest lncref!SO occurred in robberies, up 18.8
percent over 1978. Homicides were up 5.5 percent: rapes up 2
nercent: and ~~~~ravated assaults down 4.8 percent.
Ma1ur crm1111 agaulll people - IDmicidea, rapes,
robberies and awavated assaults- iDcreued 10.1 percent
last year when 9,421 ;were reported, compared with just 8,41181n
i976. Auto thefi8- 1ncrea8ed 5.5 percent, larcenlos decreased
12.4 percent and breaking and entering increalled 19.7 percent.

Wet' HC'n/e!Y~ t~~ RJI/rltv/~.

-~

the bridge about 8:30 a.m.
EST and then stopped
enUrely whal trucks were
balled at the oouthern and
northern endo. Traffic flow
reswned more than an hour
later after pollee ordel:ed the
truclui off the bridge. A pollee
spokesman said there were
no arrests.
The demooltratlons BS the
95th Coogress returned for its
second session was· marred
Wednesday by violence In
which two Ianners were .
arrested lor driving their ·
tractors on an interstate
highway In northern Virginia
and ranunlng a pollee car.
Pollee said they had to shoot

High earning rate •••

Insured safety for
your money •.•
your cash
readily available.

slowed
to 4.9%
growth

Slaug"hter

helfers :

HOME NAOONAL

BANK
.,.,,....

a,~,_

..,"'''DI-••oo•

'

RACINE

OHIO

Mrs .

Davis ;

a

Herbert

· (Jean) Hamilton , Canton ,

and a son, Donald Davis,
Lewisville ; two grandsons
and four granddaughters.
Frlend5 may call at the
Reed Funeral Home In
Canton from 7 to 9 p. m.
Thursday , Funeral services

will be !here at 2:30 p. m.
Friday. Burial will be in
Canton.
CLARENCE ERVIN

A man who played taps a1
tne funeral of President
Wil liam-.

McKinley

died

Wednesday at Manchester :
Clarence Ervin, close ·to 100.
years of age.
The last Of 12 chllclren of
Robert and Sarah Chain ·
Ervin·the Chains came from
around svracvse in Meigs
Couniy, Clarence Ervin is
survived bY a son, Junior Ervin, Manchester.
Among the sis ters who
preceded him in death was
Mrs. Anna Laura P lymale,
Point Pleasant . Two Point
Pleasant nieces also survive:
. Mrs. Clinton (Nellie) Sayre
and MrS. Faye Carpenter. A
nephew is Ervin Plymale, St .
Albans, who is widely acquainted in Gallipolis.
Services will be held at 2
Satu rday afternoon at the
·Rafferty Funeral Home,
west Un ion, and burial will
be in Manchester cemetery.
Clarence Ervin was a
·veTeran of the Spanish ·
American War.

81 ,

Pomeroy, died Wednesday

evening

at

Memorial Hospital.

Veterans

NEW YORK (UPl)
Eddie Mathew~, • slugglnc
survived by hi s wife, Anna L.
Qulvy , Pomeroy ; two sons, third bueman for tbo BraJames Hillier Qulvy,_At. 2, during the UIIOI and 111101
Pomeroy ; Joseph, Jr~. Rt . 4, wiD II lied foe-ninth place oo
Pomeroy ; three daughters, the all-time bome run 1111
Mrs . Hampton IVIrglel
Jol'\nson ~ and Mrs . Ed wilb 51Z, today wu elected to
(Charleen) 51aler. both the HaU Qf Fame by the
Athens, and MI.. Debbie BasebaU Writers Auoclatioo
Qulvy, Rt. 4, Pomeroy; a
America.
stepson , Charles Cheadle. of ln
a balloting of 379
Columbus; a sltl&gt;daughter,
Ruth Loughry, F'erndale ; members of the BBWAA,
seven grandchildren, and she Mathews received 301 votes
gre&lt;i't-gr andchlldren .
to ....Uy achieve the 75
Friends may call from 7
this evening until 9 Friday percent of lbe v&lt;M neceuary
evening at the Ewing Funeral .for elecllon . Enoe Slaughter
Home. Burial will be In Wells mi8aed by ju.st 24 votes and
Cemetery at 10 a . m. Duke Snider by 31. · ~
Saturday. There will be no
Rounding out the top five
funeral service.
vote-getters were former
Dodgers Gil Hodges and Don
LAWRENCE E. STEWART Drysdale wllh 2211 and 219
Lawrence Edward Stewart.
56, N. Secood Ave., Mld- respectively. No one else
dltPQrt, a coal miner, died received as many as 200
Wednesdey at Veterans . 'votes.
.
Memorial Hospital.
Mathews'
career
lasted
Mr . Stewart was born June
26, 1921 In Meigs County, a from 1952 through 1968 son of the late Colonel W. most of it spent with the
Stewart and Mrs. Ell,n Braves - and during that
Conkle, Middleport, who
survives . Also survivln~ are a span he drove in 1,453 runs
sister, Mrs. Melvin (Mil - . while compiling a .271
dred) Sydebotham, Me - average.
Connellsville; four brothers,
Teaming with aU-time
Richard. Route 1, Cheshire:
Harold and Hubert, both ol IDme run king Hank Aaron
Middleport, and Rolph ol for . 13 seasons to form the
Orrville, and several nieces National League's most
and nephews.
potent one·two punch,
F1.1neral services will be at
hit 30 or more
Mathews
1: 30 p. m. Friday at the
Rawlings -Coats
Fuheral IDmers In nine consecutive
Home with the Rev . George seasons from 1~1. He hit
Oller offlclaflng. Burial will more than 40 homers in four
be In Riverview Cemetery.
Friends may call at the seasos and led the NL in
IDmers in 1953 (47) am 1959
funeral home at any time.
The son of James and

Christina Gilkey Qulvy, he 11
1

( 46) .

for Saturday through Monday
cans for mostly doudy weather, with more snow m
Sunday ; probably ending
Monday. ~gbs will be in the
:11B, witll overnight lows belwel!n 10 and .20.AreBB in Ohio bit by the.
storm that moved through the
state earlier this week have
just about finished clean-up
operations and streets are
basically dear In Cincinnati
and Columbus, two of the
hardest hit areas.
EXTENDED FORECAST
Saturday ·through
Monday, .mostly cinudy,
with
snow
Sunday,
probably ending Monday.
Highs wiU be · in the 20s, ·
With overnight lows between 10 and 20.

Weather
Snow tonight continuing
through Friday and possibly
mixed with sleet or rain:
accumulations of one to three
inches possible. Low tonight
low 20s. Highs Friday upper
20s.
Probabllity
ofprecipitation · 90 percent
today, near 100 percent
tonight, 80 percent Friday.

HD..OTEMPS
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
highest temperature reported
Wednesday to the National
Weather Service,' excluding
Alaska and Hawaii, was 79
degrees at Miami, Fla.
Today'• low WBS 'll degrees
below zero at Williaton, N. D.

A relatively poor third
baseman when he joined the
Braves In 1952 after oaly
three seasons in the minors,
Mathews developed Into a
fine defensive player wiD
established major league
records for moat career
assists and moet clwlces
accepted. He alao holds the
au:ume record for moat
homers. hit by a third
baSeman (482).
Mathews, who broke Into
the big leagues with the
Boston Braves In 1952. spent
15 seasons wilb · the Braves
before winding up hiB career
with Houston arxl Detroit. He
played on two world
championship team - with
Milwaukee In 11167 and with
Detroit In 1968. He alao
played-on the 1958 Milwaukee
peMant-wlnninl! club.
Mathews holds folD" NL
records - most gai!leS
played by a third .baseman
(2,154), · most aMtals by a
third baseman (4,284), most
coosecutiVIl years 30 or more
'

MEETING SET
The .J14elgs County Com_.
missioners will meet In
special session Friday at 5
p.m. to dlscUIS the sanitary
landfill and garbage pickup
service.

seuorul.

'Vealers:

ChOice

and prime

175-230 lbs 55·70 ; 95·130 lbs
27.50-35 ; good and choice 17.5260 lbS 41 -53 ; 70· 1t5 lbs 15.00-25 ;

farms : . Medium and 1arge
trame l'lolstelns 75·95lbs· 5·9.
Feeder cattle ;

prime ste.e rs

Choice and

325-550 lbS

35-

39.75 ; mlxl'd GOOd a"d choh;e
310-485 lbs 31.5o-35; 525-800 lbs

cholct and
prime 410·650 lbs 30.25-35 ; good
anCI choice ~25 -.f75 lbs 25·29 ;
.500-7!0 Ills 24.!0-28.!0.

Hogs : etrrows and gilts 75

25% OFF
HUSH PUPPIES WMM .

(Qollk I~,.._ Jllllll)
crowd by saying "in classical
French, It meana chutzpah"
- A Yiddiah word defined u
"shameless audacity or Impudence."
He said the negotiations
were "quite succesful - out
of seven paragraphs of the
fleclar.atioo of principles we
agreed on five, two were left
out for further negotiations
and suddenly he was
recaUed.''
Jn Cairo today, an Egyptian
delegation oource said the
immediate cause lor the
walkout had been hard-line
&lt;:OJJ1IIlenta by Israeli leaders ·
outside the conference roonl,
but an additional factor was
Cairo's "disillusionment"
with what it saw as proIsraeli "compromise
proposals" from Washington.
The .Ource said Secretary
of State Cyrus Vance's
position during the lalkll bad
represented a roUback on hls
and President Carter' s
earlier commitment to
guaranteeing
the
Palestinians a voice in
determlng their future.
Later, the semi-official
Middle East News Agency
quoted Informed SQurces In
Washington as saying the
Sadat move had prompted
Carter to "authorize Vance to
take a mcre active role in the
negotiating process.''
Sadat, accusing I!D'ael of
trying to sidetrack hiB peace
· Initiative, Wednesday night
ordered tile rebim of Kamel
and bis delegation from
Jerusalem, where Israel and
Egypt were conducting their
first
fullscale
peace
negotiations. The e:dlaUBied
Egyptian diplomats landed in
Cairo before dawn today.
The Israeli cabinet reacted
swiftly to Sadat's move,
1ssuin8 a communique th&amp;t
assailed Egypt ' s
"astonishing lntranstgence"
but .expreued wUllngne.u to
resume the talks.
hrael, Egypt and the
United States an said they
beUeved lbe pellce lalkll could
be salvaged. But unless
reversed, Sadat's dramatic .
move threatened to end the
peace Initiative he launched
Nov.
19
with
his
Wlprecedented trip to Jerusalem;
.

DID YOU MISS·HER
Anyone who mlased ilh
terviewing Neva Jones ollbe
Job Corps and wish additional information may call
Carl HyseU at !f92.3096.
ASK TOWED
A marriage Ucense · was
Issued to Francis Paul
Broderick, 22, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, and Uoda Sue
Lane, 25, Gallipolia.

. '

1

r~liStrTRY
.SATURDAY
JANUARY 21st

I
-----STARTING AT

I

11:00 A.M.
At The

Elberfelds ·1n Pomeroy·
JANUARY

J.J 205 ·2.U lbs .U.OS-46.75 ; sows
1-l'325'3f0 lbs 31'!50'31; lot 551
lbs .41 .75 ; fefder pigs lot J,J ao
lbs. 25 per heed, 1-3 102-148 lb.s .
39 .50·.43 ..50 per cwt.
ShHI:' : Wool~ and Shorn
lambs steady. Choln Md
prime 97·110 lbS woote&lt;l 56. 75-

58; c11olce and prime 92-lll tbs
ll'lorn with no 1-2 J*tl 59 ..0·
60.10; lot choice •nd prime H
lbs n ro_

·

•All Fall and Winter Clothing for Men, Women,
Boys &amp; Girls at Clearance Prices.

on Fumiture, Bedspreads, Sheels, Metal
C8binels, Yam &amp;.Mateliai.

~SM

•SIIop F~ Td 8:00, SaWclly Til 5:00.

plot steady. Barrows 1ne1 un.t s

THE Middleport,
SHOE0._BOX

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

'Thursday's 7-10 inch SJowfaU has left area highways snow two-county area.
•
covered, icy, sllppery and in hazardous driviflll conditions.
The fir"! occurred at 12:10 p.m. on SR 233, one mlle west of
With the additionbl SlowfaU, Ga)lla arxlthe Meigs County area SR 141 where Charles L. Lambert, 36, Patriot, traveling west,
haa 17-2llnchos on the grotmd.
• met an eastbotmd vehicle and drove to the right. His right
Lt. Ernest Wlgglesworth, conunarxler of the c;tallla-Meigs wheel dropped over an embankment causing hiB truck to
!'oat State Highway Patrol said today aU major state highways overturn oo its right side. There was m_oderatedamage.
with the exception of US 35 and SR 7 north are in bad coodition.
Both drivers were charged foUowmg an accident at 12:45
He said state highway a-ews were bwly c'leariflll Olher stale p.m. on SRlU at the jtmction !o SR 325.
routes such as SR UIO SR 218 and SR 588 aU In Gallla County.
'The patrol said a vehicle going soutll driven by John W.
Lt. Wllll!lesworth urged ~ motorists to be extra careful Cox, 34, Thurman, slid through the intersection striking a
and recmunended tllat ooly persons with chains, snow tires westbound car driven by John A. Clonch, 63, Rt. 2, Patriot. Cox
and four-wheel vehicles traveL
•
was cited for failure to yield while Clonch was charged with
Sb:. trff{ic accidenta were investigated Thursday in the Ull88fe vehicle.

II
-I
I

VOL. XXVII

'

',

NO. 195

:=::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

A single vehicle accident occurred all :10 p.m. on SR 7 at ' GaUipolis, was lumina left when tt sUd onto SR 141.
At "the same time, an auto goiflll east driven by John R.
2fBwhere a car driven by Carl E. Perry, 26, Jackson , struck a
Davis,
22, Lower River Rd., Gallipolis, attempted to stop, 10111
snowbank causing moderate damage.
control,
slid on the icy roadway •trilling a vehicle driven by
Neighhorbood.Road was the scene of a collision at 3: ~ p.m.
Rlchard R. Hinclunan, 32, Rt. 2, Gallipolis. There wBS sllsht
eight tenths of a milesouthofSR 141.
The patrol said a vehicle driven by Steven E. Jollnson, 25, damage to the Davis and Hincluruin vehicles and oo damage to
GalliJ!Olis; slid left of center strikin&amp; the left side of a vehicle the Sanders car . No charges were ll)ed. ·
A Meigs County accident occurred at 10 p.m. on SR 7 Iii
operated by Lionel B. Triplett, 30, Rt. 2, Gallipolis. There was
Chester Twp. oorth of Pomeroy where a vehicle driven by
minor damage.
A three-vehicle accident occurred at 5:30p.m. on SR 141, Alfred T. Smith, Jr ., SO., Parkersburg, slid on the snowy
highway striking the rear end of a car operated by Hanford E.
one tenth of a mile west of Gallipolis.
.
Stanley,
66, Rl. 2, Pcrneroy. There was moderate damage and
Officers said a vehicle driven by Merrill C. Sanders, 63,
oo citation wll!l issued.

FRIDAY, JANUARY 20, 1978

POMEROY -M LDDLEPORT, OHIO

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

\o

EXTENDED FORECAST
Sunday
through
TueJiday, a chance of snow
Sunday and Monday, with
s now flurries In nortbeastero
counties
oo·
Tuesday. Continued cold
through the period, with
highs ranging lrom the '
teeos to tbe middle 20s aod
overolght lows between
live and IS . .

Weather
Windy and co ld today,
blowing a nd drifting snow
and highs in the upper 20s.
Flurries and cold tonight and
Saturday, low to 15 and high~
Saturday to middle 20s.
Probability of precipitation
near 100 percent today. 40
percent tonight and 30 percent" Saturday. Accumulation
to 5 inches.

DR. EDWARD LEWIS

Here iB one of Pomeroy's streets following the overnight \n!liO Friday.
The snow on this street as was the case frequently was undistu ~d by foot-

Dr. Lewis to· he honored
Dr. Ed Ward Lewis or
Henniker, New Hampshire, a

native of Middleport, will be
presenting ''man of distinction " aw&amp;rd at .the awards
banquet ·sponsored by the
Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce to be Wednesday,
Jan. 25 at the Meigs IM at
6:30 p.m.
Tickets to the dinner are $5
each and there are 110 tickets
available. other awards will
be made, suctr ,as to men of
the year.
Dr~

Lewis 1 ,is missioner,

evangelist, 'teacher, author,
numismatist, · lecture r,
retired parish minister ,

former officer in the U. S.
Marine Corps (vol. res ) and
coach of football, basketball,
basebaU and soccer.
Dr. Lewis is the third of

Dr. Lewis. married artist Church, founded in Nor.wich,
nine children born to Mr. and
Mrs. George Harry Lewis, a Judith Andress, daughter of Con n., in 1760, had the
Welch coa l miner in the late Dr. and Mrs. J. Mace greatest advance in it s
southeastern Ohio. Though Andress. They have four history to date while Dr.
they lived in a "company children, or. Edward .Turner Lewis served with the people
house' ' with ''three rooms Lewis of Wakefield, )\lass. ; there from 1950 to 1957.
The other was the First
and a Path," ·t.wo Lewis sons sports editor )\lark Andress
Lewis
of
New
Haven
,
Conn.;
Congregationo
l
Church,
becaine coll ege graduat es
fashion
designer
Judity
Dee
United
Church
of
Christ,
and to this day they are
Lewis
Zerbst
of
New
York
founded
in
SL
Joseph,
Mich.,
believed to be the only local
miner's family to have two and Sao Paul, Brazil, and Dr. in 1854, which had · by fa r its
sons with university' degrees. Matthew French Lewis of most outstanding growth
The first son was. the late Manchester, New Hamp- from its founding to the
Art "Pa ppy" Lewis, All- shire. They also have five present when Dr. Lewis
served the Lord there. In
American and professional grandchildren.
His
parishes
have
been
in
fact, that church led all other
football player, who later
Michigan Churches from 1958
Ohio,.
Massachusetts,
Con·
coached at Mississippi State
to
1963 in growth in new
necticut,
New
¥ork,
and West Virginia Univermembers
and increased at
Michigan
and
North
Carolina
. sities
as
well
as
worship
so
that . by 1963 the
(as
interim
).
While
the
other
professlonaUy at Cleveland
.
church
membership
had
churches
he
served
had
and Pittsburgh. The other is
Dr. Lewis, the only native son acceptable increases, two risen to 1,372 and the church
in the history of Meigs CoWlly were very. remarkable. l'be . school enrollment was up to
United Congregational 644 .
to have five degrees.

Gallia, Meigs among
By JOHN T. KADY
Uolted Press International
One of the•worst storms 1n
Ohio history battered the
State
from
Buckeye
Cincinnati to Lake Erie
today. Gov. James A. Rhodes
asked President Carter tD
declare · 13 counties as
disaster areas.
New snow depth records
were set in Columbus and
Dayton and the National
Guard was ordered into nine
cotmties.
Rhodes asked Carter to
declare Hamilton Gallia
Scioto
Meigs 'Adams'
Ja~. Licking·, Clermont:
Athens, Ross, Lawrence,
Coshocton and · Belmont
COWities BB di8aster areBS w
make them eligible for
federal ald.
The National Weather
Service says another low
presslD"e area Is forming In
the Gulf of Mexico and more

snow may be on the way to
Ohio.
The Weather Service said
up to 8 inches of new snow
had laUen in •southeastern
Ohio and from two to five
inches over the rest of the
state, Ol\Cept in the
oorthwest.
Rhodes ordered state
offices throughout Ohio
closed ·and sent about 300
Ohio National Guardsmen
into Hamilton, GaUia, Scioto,
Meigs, Adams, Jackson,
Ucking, Clermont and
AthenscoWitiestoaldlnsnow
removal am help roscue
strarxled motoriSts. . .
.
Ohio State UniverSity, Ohio

~isaster

County paralyzed

C&amp;SOE
sees

,

COLUMBUS (UPI ) - An
attorney for the Columbus 4&lt;
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
charged Thursday that the
Public Utlllties of Ohio Commission staff and Cooswner's
Counsel of Ohio • are
interested solely iii "putting
this company down the
drairi ."

Samuel Porter made the
statement during a hearing
on a $45.5 million rate hike
request filed by the utlllty.
Porter said the comments
of the PUCO investigative
sitaff, which railed against
C&amp;SOE for bad management,
ita dividend policy and its
(Continued on page 10)

areas

prinis or 8utnmobile tracks. Most residents appurcnliy stayed by lhc home
fires as the county becume practically paralyzed by U1e uddllloru•l eigh t
inches of snow which fell.

.

University, the University of fast as we plow them. The Sandusky: " We are . haVIng
Cincinnati, MoWit Union and only way we are going to trouble w1th snow plows and
otterbein Colleges were catch up Is when this storm wre.ckers. They are all
closed by the heavy snow as . quits."
getting stuck. Our problem
was Cleveland Hopkins
"II is a nightmare here," oow is getting Bl!OW plows out
Airport.
said Dayton city police dis- of d_itches." .
_Drllta up to fout feet high patcher PhyUis Hooks. "Our
Hillsboro li) southwestern
were reported in Columbus side streets are impassable OhiO had _25 inches of snow
which had 17 inches of Bl!ow and almost everybody 1s and Pohce Chief W.T.
on the grotmd, breaking the staying home."
Wo?dland . said
most
old recOl'd of 13.6 inches set in
The Hancock County busmesses m that commumty
1910and Dayton had 22 inches sheriff's office at Findlay had closed_ as weU as c1ty and
oo the grotmd breaking the said winds with gusts of _up to county off1ces.
old mark of 16.4 inches set in 33 miles an hour had piled
"We have about 60 ID 70
1918.
drifts up to six feet high on . road:!. closed In this county,"
"I think we are (alling numerous roads and had said Pickaway County
behind here," said Sam ·limited visibility to 20 feet. Sheriff's Deputy Mark
Deangelo, Columbus city
"You wouldn't believe it," Hoffman in CirclevWe. "We
maintenance supervisor. "It said Erie CoWity Sheriff's Lt. bave fi~_or sll\ inches of new
blows back on the roads as Robert
McDowell
at
(COntinued on page 10)

Pomeroy uml M i ilt.lh~ llm1 .
The National Guurd which
had been In Pomeroy moved
night.
out with the exception of one
Friday morning resident s place uf equipment whl&lt;:h
round themselves st randed In was to lea\'C today.
their homes surrounded by
Street and
highw ay
deep snow . Roads were . depa rtments which had be-en
covered with the thick snow working around the clock for
and officials a·sked residents day S were exha usted as the
to stay home if possible.
new snow fell crcntlng the
Businesses in Pomeroy and ·additiona l problems .
Middleport for the most part · Equipment has not hel d up
did not open Friday . well and departments were
Groceries did open. Banks faced with new snow d e;jring
closed as .did the county with ou t so me
needed
co urthouse. There was no equipment.
mail delivery to be made In
_In Pomeroy , it was

Mei gs
Co unty
wa s
paralyzed by another eight
inc.hes sno w that fell Over-

E-RCALLED
The
MiddlepQrt
Emergency Squad Bnllwered
a can to 582 Beech St., at 5: 16
p.m. Thqrsday for TQm
Hendrix who wBS taken to
Veterans Meinorial HoSpital,

Pomeroy Mayor Cla rence
Andrews declared a state of
emergency in Pomeroy
Thursday as additional s now
continued to fall and dif·
ficult"y was encountered in
clearing st reets due to traffic.
Members uf the Meigs
REACT team were stationed
at entrances' to. the community 'i'hU:rsdaY aft ernoon.
Vehicl es were stopped.
Drivers were
questioned
regarding theic business In
the co mmunity. Mayo r
Andrews said people needing
to enter the tow n for

grocer ies, medic ine and
other business matters were
permitted to do so.
Grocery stores did a lively
bu sin ess during th e late
morning and early afternoon
hours wh en snow storm
wa rn in gs we re forecast
particula rly after new snow
began to fall.
SchoOls remained closed on
Thursday except in the
Southern Distril1 and that
di strict began sending
stud.en ts home about 10 a .m.
as the new school began to
accunlulate.

END LOADER wBS reaUy moving the snow In downtown Pomeroy
Thursday afternoon. The giant pi!!CO of equipment arxlthe liperator, David Smith, are beiflll
used in the village frl!!' of charge tjlrough the generosity of the equipment owner, Jay Hall,
Jr.
I

Mea ntime, Mayo r Andre ws
sa id th e Natiomd Gua rd

would be leaving at s ;:m p.m .
Thursday to rctum to Iron·

ton. Fifteen guardsmen have
been in the town helping with
snow clcaranc;e si nce Mondliy. It was expected that one
piece of equipment used by
the guard would be left in
Pmn eroy a long with th e
operator For continu ed
assistance.
Thursday brought added
problems for lower Pomeroy
residents who lost water
(Continued on page 10)

Middleport digs out
Middleport Ma yor Fred Hoffman said this morning

¥.

Tins FRONT

reported thut every effort
would be made to work the
b1t'L'et depurl.mcnt uro und the
clock . Howeve r , thli ne w
snow t reated a compl ete jub
nf cluaring 3guln.
,. Not helping mutters wus
that snow continued to fall
~., riday · morning and
was
predicted to continue into
Saturday.
.Alth o ugh P om eroy
rc.scmblctl u ghost town
Frl duy morning , a few
rrsidents were out with snow
shove ls attempting o nl"C
more to tlig themselves out.

Emergency declared

THREE RUNS MADE
SYRACUSE - Three runs
were report ed by the
,Syracuse Emergency Run. At
. 12:01 Friday, the squad took
Denzil Boggess of Antiquity
to Veterans Memorial .
Hospital. Two.other patients•.
were taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital Thursday.
They were Unda .Watson of
Maplewood Lake at 8:30a.m.
and Emma Adams, Racine,
at 11 :30 .

•

1

.'

11

II.FIRr~=~:NTrll ·

'UNED BOOIS

hlghl'!', .,.... 25 hlghtr, feeder

Area roads icy, slippery, dangerous

Israel

GOING ON NOW
Come In and look over our
sale table. SHOES FOR THE
WHOLE FAMILY,

..•

bome 1'11111 (9) and moet h&lt;me
runa 00 road, seaaon (30). He .
Wll named to the NL All.slar ••
lealll 12 Umea.
Following bis active
playing career, MatbeJrs
!lel'Ved ooe year u a coech
for tbo Braves then manat!ed
the club lor two and a lialf

By MARTIN LADER
UPl SporU Wriler

Couple

high yieldln; choice 2's 9.40·1 100
lbs .fo4.50-46 ; choice and prime
2-4 850-1130 lbs 40-4.4 ; choice 2·.4
850-1100 lbS 38.50·-41.50; 2·3 700850 lbs 36.75; good and choice 2·
JIOO.l12S lbs 35·38,50.

30.50·34; helftrs

RACINE

Weeks

JoSEPH C. QUIVEY

Jowpll Clive Qulvy,

40 : standard 2·3 950·1300 lbs 3336.85.

good 65-130 lbs S-18; 80.95 Jbs
6.50·1.50. Calves returned to

Meigs County · ·
People

Brlttla

daughter ,

Market Report

33.-36.60.

For

HARRY DAVIS
CANTON - Harry qevls • .
1/1, of 201 Park Ave .. Cantoo.
a former Pomeroy resident,
died early Wednesday
morning at fhe Tlmkln Mercy
Hospital, where he had ·I&gt;Mn
con fined for the past m0f1111.
Born on Dec . 10; 1908, he
wu the son of . the late
Delbert and Blanche Davis.
He Is S&lt;Jrvlved by his wife,

HOSPITAL NEWS

1550 lbs 38.80 ; 2·•s" 1200-17.5() lbs

A Home Bank

I

Ohio hit by new snowfall

commercial

Sin·ings Acmunt at
.'

out the Ureo of one of the
tractors.
Don Patterson of The
Plains, Va., a spokesman lor
the farm strike movement,
said Iannen were not
resp&lt;mible for the bridge
blockade.
''The only infonnatloo I
have from aome of OW" people
Is that It was done by the
Independent
Truckers
Association taking action on
our behalf ... we didn't koow
it was goiflll ID happen,"
Patterson said.
The truckers asaoclatlon
earlier had.p~blicly endorsed
the farmers strike and
offered to help flinners . But
their official aMouncement
on Dec. 5 Sald, "We are not
urging
blockades
of
highways."
The truckers said in return
lor their support they were
BSking farmers to endorse a
pending house bill wtlleh
would give independ'ent
truckers right to haul freight
"restricted because of
antiquated ICC rules.''
In addition to scheduling a
mid-&lt;lay rally on Capitol Hill
ID demand higher prices for
farm products, the farmers
stationed pickets at the
Capital, the White House and
the Al'grlculture Department
and strike movemeill leaders
said they would seek a
meeting with President
Carter.

·

By JAMES IULDRE111
WASHINGTON (UPI)
The nation 's economy,
slbwed by reluctance of wary
businessmen · to restock
shelves, grew by only 4.9
percent lBSt year compared
to 6 percent in 1976, the
Ctmmerce Department said
today.
The
Gro~s
National
Product, measure of the
nation's overall goods and
Uolted Preoalnternatio..l · Service says up to lout inches
services, slowed to a 4.2
Snow weary Ohioans today may fall by tonight-even
percent growth rate in the faced another winter storm before the snow becomes
fourth quarter compared to with heavy snow .warnings heavy--lite service iB stiU
~.1 percent in the third
issued for southwestern Ohio Wlcerlain as to jUBI how much
quarter. GNP growth also and a winter storm watch in total snowfaU we wW get. The
slowed in the second quarter. effect for the rest of the state Weather ~ce Is advising
Americans went on a
the exc.eption of Ohioans to remain alert for
buying spree last year and wi!h
updated information, as the
northwstern counties.
many businesses wer
rY
The National Weather storm develops during the
of restocking at year's en , Service says an intensifying day.
the department said today.
Wednesday was mostly a
system, now
· "The slower rate of growth i:ew pressure
ed off lbe Louisiana cluudy night in Ohio, with
resulted from a slowdown in
will ·
move temperatures in the teens. In
the · rate of Inventory . coast,
oortheastward today and will the few areas where clear
accumulation,'' the reach Carolinas by early skies prevailed, readings
announcement said.
dropped under the llklegree
Friday,
The report came as
at
midnigh~.
The Weather Service says mark.
Presiilont Cart.er prepared to snow will spread northeast- Cincinnati reported an eightgo on television tonight with ward, ahead of the low degree le!nperature.
hls state of the union message
The IRlowfaU Is expected ID
am will probably
to Congress and the nation. presslD"e
continue through Friday with
become
heavy
·tonight.
In
He 'indicated earUer In the
iows tonight between 10 and
week be· hopes the message southeastern Ohio, the Slow 20 and highs Friday D)ostly in
may
be
mixed
with
sleet
or
will supply life to the
the :11B.
slumping stock market.
· rain.
The extended Ohio forecast
Although
the
Weather
Investment by. business
rose by $8 billion in the fourth
quarter, tl_le Commerce
Department said, compared
with $5.1 billion the third
quarter. Nonruldentlal
. PLEASANT VALLEY
Holzer Medical Ceoter
coostructlon rose $2.3 billion
IDisebarf!es
Jaa.18)
DISCHARGED - Flossie
and residential ·Investment
Maxine
Antal,
William
Trout,
Gallipolis: Beulah
rose f1 billioo, compared with
Arthur,
Ossle
Auxier,
Robert
Oliver,
Pleasant;
$1.6 ,billion arxl $1.7 bUliqn, Burton, Mrs. Ray Campbell Marla Point
Bennett,
Point
respectively.
,
and son, Jeffrey Cisneros, Pleasant: William Wallace,
Exports of goods and Larry Davis, Minnie DaviB,
Point !'leaunt: Russell
.ervices feU by ~ .3 billion in Elizabeth Deal, Mrs. Paul Jr,.
Henderson; Mrs.
Leporl,
lbe quarter, whereas they
Edwards
an~ daughter, Mrs. Blake Northup, Gallipolis;
had increBBed by $2.2 billion
Durst,
Point
lbeprevlousquarter.lmports Terrence 'Fortner and Margie
Timothy
Willet,
Pleasant;
daughter,
Maxine
Griflllb,
decreased as well, however.
City; Mrs. Jack
Prices, as measured from Marie Grubb, Joyce Harris, Crown
Kinney,
Apple
Grove.
Naorni
Haskins,
Verlln
the effect of the GNP rate,
Henderson,
Ruben
HigginBIRTH
A
daughter to
rose 6 percent In the quarter,
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Hesson,
botham,
Stanton
Kayser,
compared wilb U percent
Andrew King, ·Mack Layne, Point Pleasant.
the previous quarter.
Tiffany Marquis, Pamela
VeteraaB Memorial Haopital
Miller, Doyle Mitchell, Karen
ADMITTED - James
Pauley, Lynne
Pella,
Meadows, Long . Bottom;
Shannon
Pettit,
·
Alice
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Wed Thacker, Andy Tredway, Ullie Adams, Lo11g Bottom,:
nesday's livestock auction :
Compared with last w&amp;&amp;k Charles
Turvey, Mrs. Chad Granen, Racine: Uoda
slaughter steers and heifers
Richard
WOes
and son, Mlna Roberts, Pomeroy: Millard
steady to firm '· slaugt1ter cows
Darst, Cheshire:
Eva
S0-4.10 hlgl,.er , slauQhter bulls I Wilbelin, Chad Wyatt.
high,.-, feeder cattle steady to
Stewart,
Proctorville:
Myrtle
(BlrthsJan.l8)
so higher ,
Slaughter steers: ChOice and
Mr. and Mrs . Roscoe E&lt;Uson, Albany. ·
prime 2·4 900-1275 lb&amp; ·42.50·46.;
DISCHARGED - Roberta
daughter,
tew higtl yield ing 2'5 45·46.75 : Brumfield, a
Dailey,
Linda Watson,
some with excessive mud 40- Crown City: Mr. and Mrs.
Kathryn Lambert, Michael
.&amp;3 .85 : average to row choice 2·3 Samuel Spears, a son,
850·1300 lbs 42-44.7.5; good and
. Heck, Janealie Johnson,
low choice 2-J -900 -1310 lbs 40. Gallipolis.
Maggie Gilmore.
.42 .15 ; good 2·3 910-1400 lbs 36·

Sl11ughter cows : Utility and
~ ·•
875-1775 lbs
25.85·33 .75; tllgh yielding util ity
1-2 JOOO. JAOO lbs 33.50-35. 10;
cutter 1-2 800· 1220 lbs 23-31 .85;
canner 1-2 650·1350 lbs, 23·27.75 ;
slaughter bull s, IndividUal 1

Open )OUr

I

Mathews vot~d
to hall of fame

•

-

WHAT ELSE CAN HAPPEN? Adding to Pomeroy's pockelfuU of problems Tlnlrsday
afternoon was a break in the water main at the intersection of West Main St. arxl Butternut
Ave. The Une broke at about 12:30 p.m. leaving residents of lower Pomeroy without water
service. Wes Manley of the Pomeroy Water Department is shown examining lbe problem.
Repair to the main was fortimately completed at about 3 p.m.
·
~

.

all main streets in the
CQmmunity were in " fairly
gOod" shape whl le secondary
streets were still s now
covered, icy and slippery. He
urged all citizens · to travel
only if it is necessary.
Hoffman said the village
has received volunteer
assistance from Ri chard
Bailey wh o is usi ng his
scraper to clear the streets ..
Also Jay Hall has donated
use of an inloader and driver
and th e village has borrowed
a truck from the county highway department.
"Overa ll , Middl eport
continues to fight an uphill
battle to clear the street• in
·wake of Thursday's storm,"
the mayor said.
WAREHOUSE LOST
Bob Tripp, fire chief of the
Orange Township Fire
Department, said today his
department responded to an
assistance request from the
Coolville Fire Department at
12:40 a.m. Friday. The call
was to the Myrl Coakley
insulation warehouse on CR
56 which was destroye d.
Firemen were on the scene
Wltll 2:30 a.m.

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