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                  <text>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.

�•

c:o~M~:.:~~~~~~~~T

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Jan. 20,1978

'Israel must change position' says Sadat
State Cyrus Vance, Sadat
callecl for a "r....,valuaUon of
CAIRO, Egypt (UP!)
President Anwar Sadat today the whole tiling" and eaid
rejected American proposals "peace cannot be achieved by
for resuming the stalled imposing settlements on
Egyptian-Israeli peace others' land.
"Thla in logic no one in the
negotiations and said Ill=
world
can - understand,"
would agree to join tile talks
Sadat
said,
and bitterly
later only if Israel changes its
attacked
Israeli
Prime
position.
·
Minister
Menahem
Begin
for
Speaking to reporters after
returning
to
his
"old
conferring witll Secretary of
By JIM ANDERSON

mogance."

!JOVereignty, the talks can

everything, but they are not

U.S. olric!als said Sadat
turned down American
propossls for recawenlng the
talks and made this
condiUooal on a "change in
Israel's attitude."
Asked when Egypt would
be ready to rejoin tbf
negotlallons, Sadat . said :
''whenever Israel chooses not
to Infringe on others'

begin ."

read,y to understand that
peace cannot be achlevecl
eKcept on the basis of

Sadat, who was wearing
civilian clothes, was smiling
and jovial before conferring
with Vance for nearly two
hours. But at the news
conference afterwards, he
showecl occasional flashes of
anger.
Sadat said : "They (the
lsraells) want land, security,

justice.''

LIBERTY, Mo. (UP!) - A Lt. Paul Stump of the Liberty
grain dust explosion at a feed Fire Department.
"There just happened to be
mill Thursday night killed
three persons, and critically ·the right mixture of oxygen
and fine particles of dust . It
mju red si x: others.
Authoritles said t he ex~ was sort of like spontaneous
plos ion occurred at the combustion."
Deputy Fire Cl!ie,f George
Desert Gold Feed Co., in an
!Wbinson
said the blast blew
area where grain was being
out one wall of the feed mill 's
loaded into sacks.
"There apparently was a storage building .
Stump said the mill insubstantial amount of dust
and oxygen in the area, which eludes two. grain elevators
caused the e~: plosion ," said but they did not explode. He

.

said the Ieee! mill was heavily
damaged by the explosion
and fire but there was no
damage to nearby buildings
at the isolated area on the
outskirts of Liberty, about 30
miles northeast of Kansas
City.
The dead were identified as
Leroy Stewart, 33, of Stillwell, Kan.; Bruce Mills, 22, of
Liberty ; and Tim Good, 35, of
Weston, Mo.
The Missouri Highway
Patrol said the six injured

·~· , ~
•' Ultng

Sadat replied curtly to
reporters whenever the
political
talks
were
mentiooed. He had obviously
expected Vance's proposals
to center on substance, but
apparently got a mere offer
the two sides would refrain
from public statements.
But in an indication Egypt

workers all suffered critical
bums.
Stump said one firefighter
was injured in a fall while
helping bring the blaze under
control, but his injuries were
not serious.
The incident was the latest
in a series of explo)llons at
grain storage facilities in the
United States. Recent graindust explosion in Texas and
Louisiana killed more than 50
persons.

-By DICK KIMMINS
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Members of the Ohio
Farmers Union kept five
Democratic state legislators
m their toes Thursday during
a !Hirninute panel discussion
oo public school finances ,
grain warehouse bonding,
agricultural pollution and
!ann estate exemptions.
Questions
from
the
audience hit on specific
aspects of bills pending
befoce the Legislature. Most
of the interest was generated
by Rep. John E. Johnson's
proposed
overhaul of
property taxation to lund
public schools.
Johnson, [).()rrville, has in·
troduced
a
proposed
Cmstitutional amendment
and a complex bill that would
shift tile major burden of
public school funding from
property to personal Income

"Our trade deficit is too
But he added, " With
In an ad lib, which drew the
large, inflation is still too high longest and loudest applause careful planning, efficient
and too many Americans stlll of the night, he said he saw management and proper
do not have a job."
"my fellow farmers &lt;~tanding restraint oo spending, we can
Ofthe $25 billion in tax cuts, in the snow" on the way ·to move rapidly .toward a
$17 billlon will go . to Capitol !fUI and added it was balanced budget - and we
individtiaiS, Carter said, and "incumbent on us to monitor will."
added that 96 pl!rcent of very carefully the farm
Carter also said "the first
American taxpayers will situation.''
and prime concern" of the
have to pay less to the
Farmers have been demoo- administration 's foreign
government. Another $6 stratlng in Washington ior policy will be tile secw-ity of
billlon will go to business and two days for higher crop the country.
$2 blJIIon in excise tax prices.
"Security is based on our
reductions.
He was also loudly national will and secw-ity is
' He said, "Ow- tax proposals applauded - although moatly based oo the strength of our
will increase opportunity by Democrats - when he armed forces ," Carter added.
everywhere in th1a nation, but called for ratification of the " We have the will ,t and
additional jobs for the disad- Panama Canal treaties to militarily, we are very
vantaged deserve special "demonstrate our good faith strong ."
attention ."
The second majoc goal,
to the world, discow-age the
Carter said he would ask spread of hostile Idealogies in Carter said, was promoting
for a " substantial increase" this hemlaphere and directly harmony in areas of the
in lunda for public jobs for contribute to the economic world · where
major
youth, a doubling of publlc well-being and security of the 'differences among nations service employment and a United States.
such as the Middle East new program designed to
Carter said his budget wlll threaten international peace
encow-age the private sector be "lean and tight," but that and cited as the third goal:
to hire more young and the deficit would b.e only world ecmomic growth and
disadvantaged people.
slightly less than this year. stability.
Rejecting any type of controls, Carter said he would
seek to curb inflation by
asking government, business,
labor and other groups to join
in a voluntary program to
hold wage and price increase
helow the average ·increases
of tile past two years.

taxes.

''I know you're going to stir
up a hornet's nest with what
you want to do, but I wish you
all the luck in the world,"
said ooe member of the
audience.
The convention cootinues
through Saturday. Tony T,
Dechant, president of the
National Farmers Union, was
scheduled to address the

HEALTH

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
TilE DAILY SENTINEL

DEVOTED TO THE
lNTERES'J'OF

CHESTER L TANNEHll.L
Ex~. Ed.

ROBERTHOEJiUCH
Cttt, Ed!tor
Publliihed dally ez:ceyl Saturday
by The Oh.io VaHey Publishing

Company-Multimedia, Inc.,

Court St.. Pomeroy, Ohio

IlL

~7f9 .

Bll.'ltness OfUce Phone 99'2· Zl56.

Editori.al Phune 992-2157.
Second clau

p&lt;lfttage paid at

Pomeroy,OnJo.
National advertisinM representative Ward - . GrUflth Company,

Inc, BoUinelli aod Gatllagher Div.,
757 Third Ave., New Yqrk, N.Y.

10017.
.
SubScription rates· Delivered by
carrier where avaiJablf 7a cents per

Wetlk. By Motor Ruut.e where carrier

servx:e not available, One month,

$3.2$. By ms il In Ohio and W. Va., •

One Year, $22.00; Six months,
$l l.SO; Three month!! , S7 00 ;
Ebewhere r.!S.OO year; Sill: months
$13 SO; Three months , , 7.50.
Subscription price includes Sunday
Times-Sentinel.

Me and my

SAVE YOUR R;C., NEHI, UPPER 10,
DIET RITE &amp; DADS ROOT BEER
BOrnE CAPS.FOR CHARITY

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
reeled. Some men .have
DEAR DR. LAMB - In one higher counts when they are
of your collliiiilli you describ- placed on thyroid suped the effects of DES on male plements. Recently there has
children: My husband is one been some success reported
such case. Although he is not in using the fertility pili that
completely sterile his sperm r women use, to Increase
count is only 4,500,000. We are sperm production in men.
unable to conceive. Can this The same hormones from the
effect of DES be reversed? Is pituitary gland that stimulate
there hormonal therapy that the ovary in the woman
can correct this dysfunction? stimulate the testicles in the
We would appreciate your ad- man. Using this principle the
vice concerning this matter.
fertility pills were tried and
DEAR READER - DES found to work in some cases.
Another technique that has
(diethylstilhesterol ) is a synthetic substitute for estrogen helped in some cases 1s the
and it was once widely used to use of pooled specimens. A
prevent miscari-iages in large nwnber of spenn cells
women who had histories of can be collected in several
miscarriages or a threatened specimel)S and artificial inabrtion. The spotlight has semination used but that is
been on its effect on the cumbersome and expepsive
daughters of women who us- and some people object to ar-_
ed DES. As I mentioned in my tificial insemination on moral
column there is ground~. I believe the
evidence that it may also . Vatican has come out against .
earlier

have affected some of the
sons by affecting sexual
development and more often
affecting sperm production.
n is certainly true that low
sperm counts and infertility
can result ln a man whose
mother took DES to preserve
her pregnancy.
However, that does not pr&lt;r
ve that this caused your husband's low sperm count.
There are lots of men who
have low sperm counts whose
mothers never went near
DES during pr~gnancy. The
normal count is 60 to 150
million sperm cells per
milliliter (there are about 3.5
milliliters per teaspoon) .
There are some things that
can be done in selected cases
to improve 8 man's fertility
which may help' in your busband's case. lt is importantto
have had an evaluation to be
sure there are no hormonal
deficiencies that can be cor-

JOY OPEN

· GINO'S ·

R. C. BOTTLING CO.

OF MASON

MILL STREET
Middleport, Ohio
992-l542 or 992-ll44

PHONE 773-5536

contacts.''

Mr. and Mrs. Larry Circle,
Terry
and Brent Pattersorr,
Israel."
Kim
Foil
rod spent an evening
He also said he ·asked
with
Mr.
and Mn. Carl ctrcle
Vance to uconvey several
and
f11mily
and enjoyed
precise
messages
to
sleigh
riding.
President Carter" but did not
Rev. and Mrs. Carl Hicks
divulge their contents.
Vance also held out hopes spent Sunday evening with
for a reswnption of peace Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Circle
· and Florence.
talks
"The door to peace is not
Mr. and Mrs. James Circle,
closed," he said.
Mr. and Mrs. George Circle

of New Haven spent Sunday
with Mrs. Mary Circle.
There was no Sunday
School last Sunday due to the
bad weather. .
Patrick Johnson spent
Tuesday night with his greatgrandmother, Mrs. Eunle
Brinker.
Kim Follrod spent a recent
night with Becky Lee.

Farmers question Democratic panel

Carter calls for renewed dedication

MEIGs-MASON AREA

wanted the
American
medlatioo effort to cootinue,
Sadst said the two countries
would maintain "constant

propo.ul
lor
Vance said the United Vance's
reconvening
the
EgyptlanStates will oontinue working
willl both Egypt and Israel to Isr•eU milltaty cunmlttee
negotiations in cairo, but did
prod the peace efforts.
Sadat said he agreed with not mention a date.

" We do not seek peace at · He praised President
any price," Sadat said. He Carter and Vance f&lt;r the
stressed, however, the "door :;genuine effbrta they dia-lor
to peace 1a not closed, but at . me last .few days to bridge
this point there should be a whatever differences that
emerged between us and
r~valuation of the whole

Three die in grain
dust explosion
..

By STEVE GERSI'EL
WASHINGTON (UPI )
President Carter, declaring
tile economy sound despite
some serious problems, is
calling for renewed efforts to
cut unemployment, Inflation
and the trade deficit.
As one approach, he asked
Congress for a $25 billion tax
cut.
Republicans and
Democrats - with mly a few
exteptlons
quickly
embraced the idea of a tax
cut and said Carter's $25
billlon figure was close to
their own target. Their
c omments i ndlca ted
Congress would approve it,
and quickly.
Carter's first State of the
Union address - delivered to
a joint session of Coogress
Thursday night - contained
no si.U'prises or major new
programs. But the president
was repeatedly, though
mildly, applauded during the
nearly one how- that he
spoke.
There was some grumbling
that the speech lacked specifics, even oo the key proposal
to cut taxes, and the normal
amount of barbs from the
outof,power GOP,
"I made the same kind of
speech in 1964 and I got the
hell beatoutofme," said Sen.
Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz.
Speaking to members of
Congress , the Supreme
Court, the diplomatic corPB
and the Cabinet as well as
invited guests who braved a
snowstorm to crowd into the
House chamber, Carter said
"our main task at home tills
year, with energy It central
element , is the nation's
economy.
"We must continue the
recovery and further cut
unemployment and
Inflation," he said.
The president said, "We
reached all of our economic
goals for 1977," but he added,
"We must do even better in
the future.
"We still have serious
problems In which all of us
must work together," he said.

•

_3--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Jan. 20, 1978

I

artificial insemination for
any reason, even when the
donar is the husband.
The number of sperm cells
is not the tqtal answer either,
it depends upon whether they
are nonnal or abnonnal
sperm cells. A large
specimen of abnonnal sperm
cells will not produce a
pregnancy.
I should remind my readers
. that the number of sP.rm
cells often has tittle to do with
a man's sex drive or inclina·
lions. He can be normal in all
regards and not be fertile, so
one should not equate fertility
with masculinity - whatever
masculinity really is, since
each cultw-e seems to have
its own changing definition of
thatterm.
My best advice would be for
your husband and perhaps
yourself to go to a fertility ·
clinic for 8 careful study, to
learn if he can benefit from
fertility pill or other recent
developments. Each case is
different, and you won't get a
good answer without a good

a

pe~:~~~t~'/;;; want inf..,;.,.
j lion on impotency can send 50
cents for The Health Letter
number 3-12. Send a long,
st~mped,
self-addressed
envelope for maillng with
your request to Dr. Lamb in
care of this newspaper, P.O,
Box lii51, Radio City Station,
New York, NY 10019.

convention tonight.
Johnson admitted his plan,
which is pending before Ohio
House committees, waS
''revolutionary:''
" But the alternative is
more of what we have now,
except that it'll get worse,"
he said.
On the panel with Johnson
were Reps. Dale Locker, DAnna, chairman of the House
Agriculture Committee, and
Fred
Deering,
DMonroeville ; and Sens.
Jerome Stano, DPanna ,
chairman of the Senate
Agrlcultw-e Committee; and
John K. Mahoney, D-Spri1Jgfleld.
Johnson led off the session
by detailing major features of
his legislation.
Even after Johnson noted
that his bill would nearly
double state income tax
collections, farmers in the
audience seemed to agree
that the overall effect of the
changes would be beneficial.
Aspects which were
greeted with acceptance
included guarantees that
whatever a school district's
property tax wealth, per
pupil expenditures would be
equal statewide, without the
imposition of additional
property tax levies.

The other panel members
answered questions about
billa they had sponsored that
are important to the state's
agricultural industry.
Stano said he would
introduce legislation next
week to require grain
warehouse operators to be
bonded and· to authorize a
$175,000 agricultural estate
tax exemption by 1981.
Deering promlaed that enforcement of his agricultural
noni)olnt pollutl&lt;in bill would

remain in loCal hands. The
H01180i&gt;assed bW II pending
before a oubcommlttee of
Stano's Senata panel.
Mahoney endorsed Holll&lt;!pssaed legillaUon to guard
againol the acqulsitioo of
huge tracts of agricultural
land by out-of«ate invesiAJrs.
Locker said the proapects
of passing a bW abolishing
delayed
pricing
of
commodities were "very
good" this year. '

A gift for that
special day

Rings
Pendants

Earrings
8rQOchs

Tie

Tacks

i~~:~~~· ·:1t~e~~~:!~:~!~ ,,;.;""'tH
·~.r!/1 :·'*: '*~:;$: :c~:!}l,:.'*·'*tt~~~~~H
·::~:::::=x~~
~ ~l
·

OHIO
~~.NA MAE REEVES. ET

of a (S) f i ve acre lot ol ll!lf'ld
now owned by A . M . Reeves

~

of said Lot 34 rods an(! l 6

..

I"I.Jnn~r'lg sout h a long east l il'! e

Pt•lntlffl,

vs .

links ; then ce east

F~OR4

M4Y
DIXON , ET AL ,

rods.and161 1nks ; 1hencewest

Ot fendlnts .

4 rods and 15

No. 16.66t
- NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION TO : The unknown he i rs ,
de\IISees , legatees. e,;ecutors .
adm inistrators , spouses , and
asstons of A . M . Reeves .
Marv Ellen lh~\les Boring.,
Marshall ertver ~l!'l!V I!S , Jan e
Eleanor Boring Sanders .
Emma
Eileen
Reeves ,
W i lliam Nicholas ·Reeves ,
Eldon
Wlnf l e~d
Reeves .
Elizabeth Reeves , Violet IOfla
Re-eves and Helen E il een
Reeves .
Pla i nt i ffs have brought this
action nam lng vo u as one of
the Defendants in the above
cou rt by fll!ng their Com pla int on December 9 , 1977 .
Theob iect of the Complaint
1 Is to part ttlon the fotlow1ng
Lde.scrtbed real estate :
· Situated 1n Sc tp lo Town .
Shi p , in the Countv o f Meigs
and ~+tate of Oh io, to .wit :
PARC EL NO . 1 : Being tn
t he Sou th eas t Quarter o f
Section No . 23, Team No . 7,
Range No . 14, of the o .c .P .,
ancf bounded as follows :
Beginning 30 rods south of th e
North e as t corner o f said
qu arter Section and 46 rods
an d 22 links West of the East
l ine of said q uart er Sec t ion ;
then ce ( 1J West 23 rods and 3
l inks. (2) South J4 rods and 16
l tnks (3) East 23 rods and 3
links, (&lt;I) North .34 rods and 16
11nks t o the pla ce of begi n .
ning, containi ng Five {5 )
acres, Wtth right of way from
this land through land s now
owned bV Wm . C Reeves and
Lon a Reeves to the publiC
highway .
PARCEL NO 2 : Beg inntng
in the line between Section
No Twen ty -thr ee (231 and
Seventeen (17 ) at the So uth west corne r o f a lo t of land
formerly deeded bV Jesse
Pa ge t o John Page ; thence
East tw en ty .one ro ds to t he
East side of t he Athens and
Ga llipolis- road to th e west
li ne of a lot of land form erly
.deed ed by Jesse Page to
Sam uel Page, thence South
on sa id li ne and along the
East side of t h e roaQ to the
Northeast co rn er of a lo t of
land deeded by me to M a r tt n
Rupe : th ence West about
twen ty .one rods to the line
between sections twe nty
three and se v en teen ; thence
North along said line to th e
p lace of beginning. co n taining som e two acres, more
or l ess, and is a part ot
Sect ions No Seven teen {17).
Town (71 Se\len, Ra n ge
Number Fourteen ( 14 ) in t he
Ohi o Company's Purcha se
PARCEL NO . 3: Beginning
thir ty rods Sou th from the
North East corne r of the
South Easf quarter of Sec t ion
'N o.
Tw en ty -three , town
sev en . RangO. Fo urteen o f t he
Ollio company 's Purchase ;
t hence West seven tv rods,
then ce Sou th aboltt th irty
rods to L . S. Townse nd 's
land ; t hence Ea st seven l y
rods to the East lin e of sai d
Section twenty th ree, the nc e
Nor th along said East lin e
th i rty rods to the place of
beg tnning , conta ini ng th ir
t een and one .eig hth acres
mor e or less, save and except
six acres off th e w es t Stde of
sa id tra ct of land. now owned
by A M . Reeves . ·
PARCEL NO
4 : Also.
another lot or parcel of lan d,
beginning at t he So uth east
corn er of the abo ve descr1bed
lot.. t h e n ce
eas t
about
seven t een rods , or to t h e
State r oad as n ow t rave led ;
thence Northwardly along
Stat e road about thirty -on e
rods and fifteen and one na if
link s
or
to
Co lumbia
Down tng 's So uth tine : thence
West a lon g said Downtng ' s
• Youth ltne aJ!out twentv r ods ,
or t o the East line o f satd
Sect ion tw en t y three , then ce
Sou th along said East l ine
about t1'1 1rtv rods t o t he pla ce
of beg i nni ng con t ai n i ng t hree
acres and sixty .four rods ,
betng so mu ch o f Secfion
seventeen, in town seven.
range fourteen in the Ohio
Com pany 's Purchase .
The am o unt conv ey ed by
th is deed being t e n acres and
elgt1ty -four rods more or less .
Reference Deed : Vol 201,
Page 67, Mei gs County Deed
Records .
The following d esc ribed
r ea l estate si tuated 1n Sct pi o

Fnr a 11 '/ Dlir home

Entertafnment and '
·Appliance Needs

DOXOL
SERVICE

RIDENOUR'S
Gas Serv1ce
Racine, Ohio
t"'heo;ter t" .. 0tt

rods and

~

· :

16 3 6 Hnk&gt;; lhenco norlh )4 ~

REEVES

TV &amp; Appliance

4

;~

] . !;

links 10 the

p lace of beg inning c onta i ning
{l) .acre w lth r ight of-way
through lands now owned by
Wm . C R:ee ... es ' hei rs and
Lona Reeves to publ ic h i gh
wav . The above descr ibed 1

acre lies in Secfion 23, Town

7, Ra~e 14 of the Oh io
Company 's Purchase
-Ret ~ · Deed . Vol. 122.
Paoe 331. Meigs County Deed
Records , at'1d the demand is
that tl'1e real estate be par .
t•tioned end ordered so . hu t if

said rea l es t ate canno t be
part1fionetf, then tl'1e righ t s ,

interes t and l iens ot all the
part ies hereto may be ful ly
determ i ned , adj v sted and
protected ; that t he properties
be
sold
and
proce e ds
d istr i buted ;
t h at
!he
Defendants or the i r he irs .
dev isees , lega t ees , elCec utors .
admin is tra t ors , spouses or
ass igns , be requ ired to set up
and allege the nature of the i r
cla tm in the rea l esta t e herein
des c r i bed or be forever
barred from doi ng same ; th at
lttle to the propert ies be
Quieted , that allowance be
made t or attorneys fees and
to r the Plamtlfh' cost herein .
and for such other re l ie f as
the Plaintiffs may oe en .
ti t led . Yo u are reQuired t o
answer t he comp laint within
twenty eight days after the
last publtcatton o f this noflce.
wtd ch will be pubi•Stted once
each week for six successive
weeks ,
and
the
last
publical lon will be made on
February 17 , 1978 .
In case of your failure to
answer or otherw tse respond
as perm it ted by the Oh to
Rules of Ci vil P ro cedure
w i thin the time stated , judg
men! by default wi'll be
rende r ed aga tns t you for the
relief demanded in t h e
Complaint.

LARRY E . SPENCER
Bv Marlene Harr ison
CLE RK OF CO UR T OF
COM MON PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY, O HI O
Me igs Coun t y Cou.r t hou se
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
(1)

13, 20 , 27 (2 ) 3, 10. ,17 , 61

Apple Grove
News Notes
Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. a nd Mrs. Eddie Hupp
entertained with a dinner
Saturday evening 10 honor of
the latter's parents, Mr. and
Mts. Russell Roush who were
celebrating their 32nd
wedding anniversary. They
were presented with a cake
decorated with white icing
and· red roses by all their
children. The cake was in·
scribed Happy Anniversary
Mom and Dad. Attending
were Mr. and Mrs. &amp;ush,
!Wcky Hupp, Mr. a nd Mrs.
Arnold Hupp, Mr. and Mrs.
IWger Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Dorsa Parsons, Mr. and Mrs.
!Wnald Russell, Michael and
Mandy, Cindy and Edward
!Wush, Larry Hupp and Mr.
and Mrs. Eddie Hupp.
Mrs. Margaret Gloeckner
spent Saturday til Thursday
with Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Badgely and children at
Manasse, Va·.
Mr. and Mrs. !Wy Donohew
spent Christmas and t he
holidays with their son, Mr.
and Mrs. Johnnie Donohew in
Me&lt;ico.
Mr. and Mrs. Carroll
Norris of Syracuse visited
Mts. Eula Wolfe and Aaron
Sunday.
Enjoying sleigh riding a,t
Tanners
Run
Monday
evening were Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Wagner and son,
Ronnie, Mr. and Mrs. Eddie
Hupp, Rocky Hupp, Edward
&amp;ush, Larry Hupp, David
Hupp, Brian Hupp, Mr. and
Mrs. Steve Hupp, Chris Hupp
and Scott Hupp, Billy and
Jimmy Hupp.

The North American continent's largest bird, the condor, produces only one egg
every two years. It if hat~hes,
the offspring remains in the
nest for 18 months.'

~~

e en
s ee

u

,.

ep

L.&gt;
,.

By Helen Bottel

~
!X

'~§
~

•

YES, THIS IS HARD TO BELlEVE!
DEAR HELEN:
You wouldn't believe the stupid thing I went and done. My
husband (who has three kids by his fornier wife) had a vasectomy before we were married. Later, he regretted it.
Sometimes they aren't fool-proof. I wanted a baby so bad I
had artificial insemination. They wouldn't leU me who the
donor was for fear of gelling in trouble, as I didn't tell my husband.
He was ecstatic when he learned he would be a lather. But
when I was in my seventh month, he had a doctor 's checkup,

'TELEVISION
VIEWING

For Sutu.rday, Jau .'~l. 1'711
all(l was told no spenn was getting through.
I had to confess what I'd done. He demanded a divorce. How
can I convince him I did 1t all for us? - MISERABLY
. 1\f!SERABLE
DEARM.M.:
Bernice Bede Osol
You haven't quite convinced ME, but who am I lo quibble
over details ?
More to the point, yow- husband doesn't helleve your story;
and you probably can't prove it by the "al'\ificial insemlnator"
as you evidently dltin't go to a qualified clinic.
It will take much persuasion, but if yow- man loves you and
wants a baby- enoilgh, he may cool down.
Jau. ~ 1, J978
Ask for a three-months "think-over'' period before he starts You rnav enter rnto an ~ l ltance
oltr emendous ttnpollance lhtS
Clivorce proceedings. - H.
commg year 11 wtll be w1l h unu
DEAR HELEN :
In response to "Chicano from San Antonio" who wondered if who wtll Sf•r vt • dS ...t stabli z1n0
ucncc. m your 1tle
all Mexican men were so possessive they'd light if another mtt
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-f' t·b. 191
man lookecl at their p;lrticular wives sideways (he heing till! To b ~ on ttle sate "tdi' today ,
~g i ve CO · WO t kC t S tWO iW1pers
other man) .
Yes, the Mexican male 1s still the man of the house and I the- ll.td glo ve lt t'3 ln1Cil l Hwy
hope he remains that way. The Mexican family is ciusel~ knit, won ' t pert cum well 1! 1t1(''t te
no t butte•od liP Ftnd ou l to
thus you S1'0 less divorce or d&lt;ryour-cwn thing marnages, wh
om v9.u'ro roman t t~o ll y
runaway tel!ns and abandoned elders.
suited to by sendtl10 t or you r
Machismo is eKpressed in many forms : you lrl' to he cop v of As tr o Gld Ph L!J t1 e•
" macho" by vicariously taking another man's wife. So the Mail 50 ct~ n t s tor cHch ..m d &lt;J
Mexican husband fights for wlml is his. - HAPPILY MAR- lo nn . sc ll ~add r c•ssl"'d , s tam pPtl
envelo p(• 10 A S!tO·GrHph , P 0
RlED CHICANA lN SAN FRANCISCO
Boll 489, Raclto Ct ty Sld tt Otl ,

ASTRO•GRAPH

~

Hogan's Heroes 1S6 :oo--News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC
News 6; Zoom 20,33

by THOMAS JOSEPH

6:3()--NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13: Carol Burnett &amp;

ACROSS
1 Run
5 Formosa
11 Chinese port
12 , Prepare
fodder
13 Greek
township
14 Irritate
15 O'Neill play
16 Face : sl.
11 Concealed
18 Succor
19 Emmet
20 Colloida 1
substance
21 Arrangemen\
23 Fashion
24 Indian
cymbals
25 Sticky
substance
26 Coagulate
28 Puzzling
query
31 Sweetie
pie
32 Salt: Fr.
33 Against

Friends 6; CBS News 8.10. Over Ei'tsv 70.33 .
7:0D-Cross-Wits 3,4; Liars Club 6; Muppel Show~~

Capitol Beat 33; News 10; To Tell The Truth 13;
Gi l ligan's Is. 15; Almana c 20.
'f...
7:3o-Porter Wagoner 3; Gong Show 4; Match Game
PM 6; Price Is Right 8; MacNeil-Lehrer Report
20,33; Family Feud 10; $100,000 Name That Tune

13; Pop Goes The Counlry 15 .
8:00=-Chlco &amp; lhe Man 3.4,15: Donny &amp; Marie

6, 13;

Wonder Woman 8,10; Washi ngton Week In Rev iew

20; So The People May Know 33.
8:3Q-Wall Streel Week. 20,33.
9:oo-Rockford Files 3,4, 15; Mov ie "Return to Fantasy

Island" 6,13: Movie " Bug" 8.10; Han k 20; Good Old
Days of Radio 33.
lO :oo-Quincy 3,4,15; News 20; Hometown Saturday

Nighl 33.
IO ,JQ-Monly Python's Flying Circus 20; 11 :oo--News
3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; Dick Cavett 20; Lilias Yoga &amp; You
33.
ll · J~Johnny

Carson 3,4,15; Baretta 6,13; Mash 8;
Mov ie " Plan Nine from Outer Space" 10; Monty
Python' s Flying Circus 33.
12:QO-Janaki 33 ; 12:05-Movle " Confessions of the
D.A . Man" 8; 12 :4D- Lohman &amp; Barkley 6 ; Ironside

13.
1:QO-M idnlght Speci al 3,4, 15; Movie " Death Curse of
Tart u" 10; 1:4o-News 13.

2:3Q-News 3; 3:0o-Movle "Eye o f the Cat" 3; 5:0Q-FBI 3; 6:o()--Big Valley 3.
Movie Channel 4 5 &amp; 9 P M. -All The

7 &amp; 11

Presi dent's Me n I PG)
P.M. - The Car lPG)

Cable Channel Five -

DOWN
I Diverging
2 Feminist
Bloomer
3 Popular
song
I Evil 5 Inhabit
6 About
7 Suffix with
soc1al
8 Joyously
9 Working
together
10 Goad
16 Vatican
name
22 Cereal
plant

w01k

7.00 - Paul Gaudino Family Fitness
7' 30 - Wrestl ing
8.30 - Sporls-Travel World
9:3Q-Biue Ridge Quarlel
10·00 - 700 Club.

35 Scoundrel
36 Humble
home
:rr Drooped
39 Inheritor
40 Alcohol
41 Bacteriologist's
wire
f2 Missive
43 Corner

SATURDAY. JANUARY 21 , 1978
6:Jo-M ar lo &amp; t he Magic M ovie Mach ine 4; TV
Classr oom 8; U.S. Farm Report 10; Ken tucky

Afie ld . 13.
7:DO-Matters of Li fe 6; Ghost BuSters 8; Public Policy
Forums 10; Grape Ape 13.
7 .Jtr-Saturday Report 3; World of Surviva l 4; Dusty's
Treehouse 6, Wacko 8; Weekend Special 13
a ·oo-C.B Bears 3,4,15 ,- Superfriends 6,1 3; Sk ateblrds

Yesterday's
23 Clothing
style

25 Cover willi
gold

26 Sculpture

down

28 Bookworm

streak

Mr Magoo 10; PTL Club 15; Photography 33.

tax fonns.

glid.reason ro ·
let us·help with
your taxes."

At H&amp;R Block, we understand these new
fonns, we know the laws. We'll do everything we can to save you money. And that's
Reason No. 1 why you should let H&amp;R Block
do your taxes.

. OIIilllliii--&amp;R~BL~O~Cl!!."!!'lt
T F INCOME TAX PE

E

618 E. MAIN ST.. POMEROY, OHIO
open9:00to6:00 Weelcdoys.
9:00to 5:00 Soturdoy
Phone 992-3795
No Appointment Neetss"y

% 2~ Jnn .

l'l Ag•eemdn ts s hout(! be on
tered IIllO cauttous!y today.
U•tless both

tnu lles ore in
complete accord . someone Is
go mg 10 lecl thcy gotiiHl shnr t
enct

Th e Iorm o r wr1l IJur w ltl

schcxtl.

"'Jllis is somethmg I huve
been &lt;'&lt;&gt;nsidering for tlu-ee or
four seasons," Rlchar&lt;ls said.
11
$o, it is not a quick decision .
1 feel our busketbnll pro~ ram
presently is in a position tlutt
successor Lo

luJVe a good opportunity to be
successful .''

NOW OPEN

GINO'S
OF MASON

worth keep11 1g in 1n1nd todrw

ping ou1 o l lm c In 111f' ro rnat lGU

PHONE 773-5536

, -+-+--+-+--!-~ departmen t is &lt;~ S klnn lor lrou
bl~

r-

!oday

.,--t- -1---1 rendevou s

1

Even a lla rrnl n ss

co uld IJf'

~n r ln u !i 1 y

mis juOg od .

::t.

. ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. .
..

VIRGO ( Aug. 2:1·!-lt"p t. 22) A

,b,.-+-+--1 se nsl)lve f rion d COIII d trav u hurt

feelrng s rt he learn s tlt...tl ~uu
some thing l ot ano th e r pat
tha t yu u refu sed 1n 110 l o t '1Im
Play no favor it es
LIIUll\ (S1•pt. ~1-l h· t. 2:1 1 Un·

'1--l-+--l dtd

k -+--1---+-+--+-

L 0 N G F E J, I , 0 W

MPNNPD
NW

NXI U

THERMO.MOST
HUMIDIFIER
Reduce heating costs
15-20 Pet. through
humidification .
Install yourself in 3
easy steps .

On Certificates
Of Deposit
'1.000 Minimum
1 Yr. Term

NW

Meigs Co. Branch

. 4)

-eY

S PI D
WQN . -

DQ FN

""'a lly)

N inet y day i nterest
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SAG I11'AIUUS (Nov. !3-t&gt;&lt;&lt;·.

segment CANn&lt;-:lt (Junt· U·J ul)' 221
38 ''Roscoe' fllat old aUage ot n,!tttr o r n
39 On a win harrower tro r a lonLI(H IH! is

27 Track

One le tter sim~l ly sta nds for ;J not her. In thi s sam ple A is
d e. Si ngle lctler.s,
the w(J rd s arc all
h int s . Each d n} thr ci.'HJc li•l! crs ar c diff ere n t.

ZN

to bf\ a

tamtty today could nrove

poor way to mak.

hc tor e you IO!is lim ~ 1 a u n tl o l
Av o1 d any co n!ru nt.wu ns
Answer
where you ma v tw 011er
ruat chr O on•no tn
29 Actress ta·~ MINI ti\1 Jiy za-.mm· zur 11
Beavers you put cO rHil tt on &lt;&gt; o rr lhttt(Js
30 lngress whi Ch you Q IIIO o ttw rs toda y,
O
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34 Here,· in
Paris

6:30 P .M.-Testimony Time

you

BOWUNG GREEN , Ky .
(UP! ) - Western Kentucky
basketball Coach Jim
Richar4s announced
Thursday he Is resi 0'Tling his
position. effective the end of
N Y 1001 9 €J(• sur t• It) 'IJlPC't l y
the season and told his squad
your bu th Stgn
PISCI-::S 11-.. ••b . :lO· !\Iurdt ::!0) he has asked the school to
Mako pla y ou l of wo rlo. todav. reJtssiKn h im t u a nothur
but don 't play .mli a11ord your position at the Bowling Green

FRIDAY, JANUARY20,1978
5:3o-News 6'; Elec . Co . 20,33; Mary Tyler Moore 10;

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••

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•

4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Jan. 20, 1978

'Mr. Basketball' slaps Ohio State
United Pressloteroallonal
Unfortunately lor the Ohio
State Buckeyes, Indiana's
" Mr. Basketball" picked
Thursday night for his last
game.
R.ay Tolbert, the Hoosiers'

one,'.' said Tolbert. ..We've

just got to prove that we can
play with the best.
"That ·was .ffiJ1 best game
by far," he added. " I didn't
make all those turnovers I
Ullually do."
Ohio State Coach Eldon
Miller called Tolbert " a great
athlete. We don't play against
anyone but great athletes. He
came to play and gave a
great effort."

6-9 frestuna;J An:&gt;wn as "Mr.
Basketball" In hls home state

of Indiana, dumped in a
career high 24 points to lead
his team to a 77-63 victory
over the Buckeyes at
Bloomington.
The win broke a threegame Hoosier loSing streak in
Big Ten competition and gave
Indiana a 2-3 record, identical
with Ohio State's loop mark.
"We really neei:led that

" I' m not dlsappointed ,"

said Miller, referring to the
Buckeye ef!ort. ''But we'll
have to play beller basketball. We can and we have to.''
The Buckeyes cut a 10-point
first-half disadvantage to
three at intermission and
then to on,e at the start of the
last 20 minutes before the
Hoosiers slowly pulled away
to their loth win in 14 starts
this season. The Bucks are
now 9-5 overalL
KelVin Ransey paced the
Buckeyes with tO, while Ken
Page had 14 and Mike Cline
13. OSU freshman center
Herb Williams was held to
only three points during the
first hall and wound up the
night with 12.
In the only other Ohio

NOW OPEN

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N. w.OPTOMETRIST
COMPTON. O.D.

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AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT

I

l

1
1·

!i:t-!..~~;.R.'!.~•••=····-=•==--• .J.

college game Thursday night, . Cobb led all scorers with 26Reggie Jones scored 15 points points and Franklin Edwards
and Fred Powers added 13 to had 16 for the Vikings, who
lead host Air f'orce to a 65-08 lost their fourth game in a
win over Cleveland St~te.
row and dropped to 5·11 on the
Cleveland State's GreR season. Air Force. whlt-h IP&lt;I

30-26 at halftime, moved to ~ 13-aU with 10 minutes to play
with its eighth straight home ih the first ball. Powers hll a
win.
.
20-loot jumper with 8:56 to
Cleveland State led by four play in the first stanza to put.
points In the first five minutes Air Force ahead for good.
but the Falcons tied the eame

Spartans trip Purdue, -60-51
except make the good per- spectacular shots."
Mychal Thompson scored
centage shots I thought we
'n
points to hold on to the
had."
conference
sc0tlng lead and
Spartans Coach Jud Heath·
cote said his team " played pace Minnesota to victory,
The pre-season choice for well, to win." But he added but he gave his coach, Jim
the Big Ten basketball crown, uwe made some mistakes Dutcher, a thrill along the
Purdue, gave it their best and some sloppy plays. I way.
" When Mychal missed
shot Thursday night and still think what maybe the fans
lost 60-51 to the Spartans, who and media don't realize is those two one on one chances
ran their conference record that there were two good with about four minutes left, I
to 5~. retaining a one game teams playing against each couldn't help thinking of the
Michigan State game when
lead over Michigan and other ."
Freshman EarVin Johnson we were in exactly the same
leaving everybody else even
dropped 21 points for the spot and wound up losing by
further behind.
· Michigan tripped winners while Walter Jordan four," Dutcher sajd.
"It's no secret our game is
Wisconsin 83.64 to hang on to had 17 for Purdue.
Michigan's freshman Mike built around Thompson. I
second place, and Minnesota
topped Illinois 70-&lt;lll to move McGee shifted from forward thought he was their best
into a third place lie with ' to guird and the Wolverines player last year and I've seen
Purdue .
Northwestern took the game away from nothing to change my mind."
Indiana broke a three game
knocked off Iowa 62-59 for its Wisconsin. McGee scored 20
losing
streak and Coach
first win and Indiana downed of his game high 26 poirits in
Bobby
Knight
said "I felt the
Ohio State 77&lt;33 in other the second half, and his
moon
was
right.
We played as
coach,
Jo
hnny
Orr,
said
games.
well
offensively
In the first
''McGee
at
guard
was
super
But the key conte~t came
on the Michigan State floor . devastating. I was very
"We played hard and tough pleased with our second half
and they did too," Purdue play. We were terrific."
But Wisconsin 's . Bill
Coach Fred Schaus said.
we had 11\ade our foul shots Cofi eld , while respecting
we'd have been right in that McGee wholeheartedly, said
baby at halftime. We did " He did most of his scoring at
everything we did to win forward. He made some
By ED SAINSBURY
UP! Sports Writer
CHICAGO (UP! )- Maybe
Michigan State is the best
after aU.

RIVERSIDE AMC &amp; JEEP

UP! Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UPI ) .
Thursday was a big day for
Eddie Mathews, for laughing
and for reminiscing, for
cracking jokes and for saying
thank you.
It was the day be was
formally announced as tbe
57th player to be elected Into
the baseball Hall of Fame at
Cooperstown, N.Y., by the
Baseball Writers .Association
of Anlerica.
In his fifth year of
eligibility, the slugging, leftbanded, third baseman wbo
played for the Braves in
Boston, Milwaukee and
Atlanta, received 301 votes,
16 more than the necessary
285. During a 17-year career
that started in Boston in 1952
and ended In Detroit in 1968,
Mathews batted .271 wtth 512
homers, 1,453 runs batted in
and 1,509 runs scored. He is
tied with ErnJe Banks for
ninth place on the all-time
home run list.
Enos Slaughter , a .300
career hitter over 19 seasons,
was runnerup in this year's
balloting with 261 votes, but
has only one year of
eligibility remaining for
election by the BBWA. If he
doesO 't make it next year,
then his only hope of enterlilg
the hall would be selection by
a
special
oldtimers
committee.
Duke Snider, Gil Hodges
·and Don Drysdale, former
teammates on the Dodgers,
placed third, fourth and fifth
in the balloting with 254, 226
and 219 votes respectively.
Next were Jim Burming with
181, Pee Wee Reese with 169
and Riehle Ashburn and Hoyt
Wilhelm with 158 each.
In the 13 years they played
togetber, Mathews and Henry
Aaron combined for 863 home
runs, the most by any duo In
major-league history. In
Atlanta, Aaron said of his
former teanunate, "He's a
Hall of Farner if I've ever
seen one ... Eddie did just

Browner named
player of year ·

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G111ipolis, Ohio

l'l..I!:VELAND ( UPI) -Defensive ~nd Ross Browner of
Notra Dame University today
was
named
National
Collegiate Player of tbe Year
by the Cleveland Touchdown
Club, which will honor
Browner at its 30th annual
awards dinner Jan. 26 at the
Cleveland Plaza.,
Tlle touchdown club also
will honor two members of
the Cleveland Browns running back Greg Pruitt as
the club's offensive player of
the year and linebacker Dick
Ambrose as the 'Browns '
defensive player of the year
- top area high schoQI stars
and ·a yet to be named pro
football player of the year.
TOPLAYSATURDAY
CINCINNATI ( UPI ) . xavler University has scbe&lt;l!led a home game Saturday
afternoon against Centre College of Danville, Ky., to make
up lor a game previously
scheduled against the
University of EvansviDe.
Tbe Evansville team was
killed in a plane crash last
month.

CINCINNATI (UPI) Mike Compton, a former
catcher and minor league
manager in the Philadelphia
Phillies' organiution, was
named Thursday to manage
the Cincinnati Reds' Tampa
farm club in the Class A
Florida St~te League this

College results
College Basketball Results
By United Press International

Eut

Adelph i 83. L.ehman 59

Assml)tn 100, Worcstr St. 68
Bates 86, MIT 65
Bsn Coli 89, Merrlmatk 79
Clrksn 65, Plattsbgh 60
D .C. 74, Shaw Mich . 72
E . StrdsbQ 58, Mntclr 47
Eisenhower 70, oswego 6.5
lona 96, t . Carolina 74
King's 75, Lemoyne 10
Mrgn S1. 83, Del. St. 56
Nrtheastrn 73, Siena 71
R. Wi lliams 74, Currv 68
Scrd Hrt 101 , Tufts 100
Syracuse 106, LaSalle 96
W .Va. 87, Duquesne ?4
South
Bl uefield 90. Salem 88
Cent Ws l yn 85, Mrs Hll 64
Furman 86, Chattanooga 82
G . Mason 104, Stheastrn 89
Lnor Rhyne 71, Brbr Sella 63
Lncln Mem 69 , Crsn ·Newmn

been close but we

' seemed to have qu1te
.
haven't
enough. The players were
beginning to lose confidence
in themselves."
Iowa coach Lute Olson
declared his Hawkeyes were
"more than flat. It was a very
dead perfonnance. We went
through the motions pretty
much aU night."

Braves' Eddie Mathews

fun machines are at

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The Renegade and Golden Eagle

Buckeye Coach Eldon
Miller belifVed defense made
the difference, and said "we
had real problem areas, the
same we've had all year with
defense and rebounding."
Sophomore Brian Gibson,
praised by Northwestern
Coach Tex Winter for his
defense, made . the winning
basket for the Wildcats with
34 seconds to play.
"It was a very important
win for us," Winter said.

Thursday big lhly for

·•rr

By MARTIN LADER

T~e

hal( as we have aU year."

Reds appoint
Tampa manager

about everything anyone
could have done."
The 46-year-old Matbews is
now a scout with the
Milwaukee Brewers. He
managed the Braves from
late in 1972 through part of
1974, but says he wouldn 't go
back . to managing now
because of tbe attitude of
modern day players.
"They're making very good
money, but theY don't run to
first base and then explain
they can't get their head
together," said Mathews,
who never earned more tban
$67,500 a year. " If you ask
them to come in early for
extra batting practice, they
say they have to take their
)Vile ~'bopping .
.
"If I didn't run, I didn't
play. Every day I went out
and gave it everything I .bad.
I may not have had it every
day, but I gave i\100 percent.
I'm not bitter at the way it Is
now, I just !eel sorry for
them. They make all . that
money and tbey're not happy.
Still, says Mathews,
baseball is most important to
him.
"It's everything I've got,
it's everything I've done," he
said. "Everything .done for
me stems from baseball. It's
been my life and it always
will be. It's a way of life. You
travel in the best circles, the
money is good, you stay in the
best hotels. . It's the
ultimate.''

65

McNeese St . 58, SE La. 57
Miss .Coll9-4, NchiiSSt. 82
Milligan 94, Em&amp; Henr y 43
Newberr y 92, Presby 89
St.Augstne 97. St. Paul 80
Shphrd 81. W.Va . Tech 74
S.C. St. q1 , N .C. Cent 83
Twsn St. 77 Md,· Bif.CO. 72
Wn stn.Sim 76, Fy te11i St . 73
MidWe5t
Crghton 87, Drake 77
Kan. St. 57, Russia 54
Ind . 77, OhiO St. 63
Lk Superior 69, J . Wsly 61
Manchester 82, Grace 74
Mich . 83, Wisconsin 6.4
Mich . St. 60, Purdue 51
Minn . 70, I ll inois 66
Ntre Dme 70, Vllanva 69
Nrthwestern 62, lcwa 59
So. Ill. 79, Ind. St. 76
Southwest
Ark. St. 66, La . Tech 54
Cent Ark. 88, Ark. Cell 73
E. Te)(. Bapt 62. St . Eds 50
E , Te)(.127, Paul Quinn 64
Hendrix 75, Oza rks 73
Jcksn St . 87 Ark .·P.B. 79
McMrray 81. Hrdn·Smmns 79
So . Utah 59, W . N.M. 52
St .Mry•s 81, Hous Tltsn 57
w . Texas 76, Okla. City 71
West .
Air Force 65, Cleve St . 58
BYU 87, Arizona 86
Fll rtn 81 Sn Jse 51 66
Pac 18 Snta Barb~n!l 75
S.D. St. 90 UC lrv 65
So. Ore . 67, Wrnr Pac 63
Stnfrd 108, A lska Anch 98
Utah 84. Arizona St. 69

coming season.
Jim Hoff, who Ql81181!ed at
Tampa last season, will
manage · the RA!ds' Billinp,
Mont., rookie team in tbe
Pioneer League, while Greg
Riddoch, who managed at
Billings last year, switches to
Cincy's Eugene, Ore., team
in the Class A Northwest
League.
John Underwood, manager
at Eugene in 1977, and Marc
Bombard will serve as
pitching coacbes in tbe Reda'
minor .J~g~e organization,
uii~er-. Ute direction of Scott
Breeden.
.
Other minor I e a g u e
managerial assigJUilents in
the Cinclimati organization
remain UIIChanged · - Rm
Maj tyka at Indianapolis of
the Class AAA American
Association, Chuck Goggin
with the Class AA team,
which has been moved to
Nashville of the Southern
League instead of Three
Rivers in the Eastern, and
Jim Lett at Shelby, N.C., in
the Class A Western
Carolinas.
Compton, 34, had been a
manager in the Philadelphia .
organization the past three
years. He spent h1s entjre
playing career in the Phillles
organiation, including most
of the 1970 season with tbe ·
major league club.
'
••

5-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Jan. II, 1978

Fitch juggles lineup, cavs win

Outdoors

you euctly where the

• Ulllled Pretllaterutloaal

show

·• The huntlna aeoson 11
: bel!innlJ't« to wind down for
another year, but fer thoee
who don't mind the weather
: there are still plenty of apen •
• IIUIOill &lt;11 a variety of game

boundarin are.

: Qnimals.

.

On public hunttns areu
there are more aea1011a still
open than closed. For
arouse runs
example,
through Feb. 25, fox,
opoooum, sllunlt, and we~~el
run untll Feb. 15; raccoon,
cock pheasant, chulrar and
,rabbit run through Jan, 28 on
public tuntlng areas.
In some Cll8ell the 1aat day
· &lt;11 public areu and the last
day on p-ivate land differ.
Check
the
hunting
'regulations to be certain.
Pheasant lninllng fer both
cocks and hens in tbe "South
Pheasant Zone" runs through
Jan. 28. ThiJ zone is in tbe
south-ooutheaatern part of
the state. again, the huntin&amp;
regulations brochure wUI

NOW OPEN

The 11081011 for crow - aa
always - ill opllt. The lint
hall of that ooa1011 opened on
Jan. 7 and wW continue
through Feb. 25. The aeCIIIId
hall begins juno 10 and runs
through Aug. 22 of thla year.
M you can aee, some of tbe
seaaons wW laot a month
more, otbers wW cloee within
the weelt. II you want to get
out lor some last minute
' lninllng, now's the time to get
yOID' boots laced.

NORTHFIELD
NORTHFIELD,
Ohio
(UPIJ - Lebi&amp;h Stone
overhauled Maple Lady in the
stretch Thursday nilbt to win
the featured $1,700 ninth race
at Northfield Part.
Lehigh Stone, driven by
Hoye Rickert, covered the
mile in 2:11 and returned
$4.60, $3.20 and $3 in gaining
hls third victory in four
outings this season .
Manican Mass came in
thlrd.
A crowd of 1,841 wagered
~.on .

GINO'S
OF MASON

BOCA RATON, Fla tUPI )
- Tbe $250,000 Grand Slam of
Tennis tournament opens
Friday at Boca ·west with a
match between Bjorn Borg
and
substitute
Brian
Gottfried. Jimmy Cmnors
and
Vitas
Gerulaitls
complete the sernlftnal roWJd
Saturday.

PHONE 773-5536

Ulllled Prnsillleruatloaal
With one vlctory in his last

10
games,
Cleveland
CavaUers Coach BW Filch
sought to change h1s team's
aqging performance.
He ~ucceeded Thursday
ni~ht
a~oln•t
the

Pro·A~
By JOE SARGIS
UPI Sporll Writer
PEBBLE BEACH, Calif.
(UP))- The last of a series
of storms bas pused through
Northern Callfomla and
· hopefully the first round of
the '225,000 Bing Crosby
National Pro-Am will be
played today over three
seaside courses.
Overnight rain, measured
at more .than an inch and a
ball, caused mud slldes and
OOoded CUlditlms at Pebble
Beach, Spyglass Hill and
Cypress Point and forced
PGA tournament offictals to
call off tbe first round &lt;11
Thursday even before a
single shot had been taken.
The forecast is for clearing
weather and no rain in tbe

The Gallia-Meigs

Mrs. Millard

Performing Arts

VanMeter
.,91-2039

Bars

Ohio H lgh School
Bllkttblll RtiUITS
Unlttd Prtnlnttrnetional
Thursday
Bratenat'll 85 Old Trail 35
Cle Wes t Tech 65 Cle Max

55

Col Bro okh a v en 98 Col
Mohaw k 59
Co l M iffl in 74 Cor Briggs 51
Co l North 50 Col East 49
Col North l and 72 Col Marlon ·
Franklin 70
Col Soulf'l 12 Col L.inden 70
Col Walnu t R idoe 56 Co l
Whetstone -48
Co l We-$ 1 68 Col Centr a l .51
Girls
Ohio High SChOOl
· Buketbell Results
Un ited Press lnternatiDnill
Thunday
Avon 41 Oberlin 34
BoWling Green 51 Napoleon

Center

••Bris tol

40 Bloomfield 33
~Ucyrus 40 Tlfflri Col umbia n

33

Campbell 72 Youngs Chaney
11
Canfield -43 Liberty 37
cant on south 53 Lou isville 35

JANUARY SALE

Will Be Taking Enrollments

ONE o'F THE MANY ITEMS

Starting Saturday, January 21

"SALE PRICED"

SOFA

BEDS

Bing died last October
tbe tournament, 'third of the while playing golf In Spain
year on the PGA Tour, will be and now his 16-year-old son
extended through Mmday. Nathaniel, who plays to a 1ABC says it wW telecast bandicap, is in charge, so to
portions of Saturday's second speak. He acc&lt;mpanled PGA
round and Sunday's third and officials J~ck Tuthiii, Ciyde
the windup as well on Mangum and Tom Place
Thursday at a news
Mmday.
While the Crosby generally &lt;M&gt;nference after play had
bas been associated with poor heen called off.
weather, Thursday's washout
"I've been coming down
was only the seventh in 38 here since I wasa ltttle hoy,"
years and that includes tbe Nathaniel Jaid . as smiles
first tournament pilyed at broke oot among newsmen
Rancho Sante Fe in Southern who have covered almost all
California. In that event, of the Crosby tournaments,
Crosby invited a small group "and I never saw the cow-ses
of pros and put up a $5,000 pot In worse shape than tbey are
to shoot at. After the course in now."
was washed out by rain, Bing
After play was ca lled off
kept everyone indoors and Thursday, work crews busied
themselves clearing water
threw a party instead.

Clyde 66 Huron 32
Col Centen nia l 52 Co l Mifflin

so

.

Col East 78 Co l North 48
Cal Martian -Franklin 40 Co l
Br iggs 32
Col Walnut Ridge 75 Co l West
ll
Gaha nn a 53 Worth ington 29
Hamilton Twp 50 Grove City

"

Hil l iard 52 Reynoldsburg SO
Hubbard 53 Boardman -44
Lakev iew 46 Wa rren Western
Rsv . A-4
London
-4-4
Springfield
Shawnee 25
Miner~l
R ldge 41 Soutn
.Range 26
Minster 49 Parkw ay 36
N Cant on
36 Mass i ll on

Ja ckson 32

Norwalk 40 Shelby 38
46 DeMon 37
.
Pa ·t ri ck H en r y 57 North
Baltimore 42
Polan d 44 Golr~rcl 43
Riverda le 72 Wynford 53
Upper Sandusky 43 Ga l i on 41
west Branch 32 Ma·rlington 27
Norw~yn e

MONTREAL (UP!) - The
Mmll'eal Expos Thursday
iiimo~ the signing of t.wo

PHONE 773-5536

In punwmce of Law, I, Geol'fe M. Collln!!, Treasurer ~f Meigs County, Ohio, In
eompllnnee wUh revised Code No. 323.08 of Stnte of Ohio, do hereby give notict
of the Rates of TauUon for lhe Tu Year of 1977. Rates expressed In dollan
and eents Ot;' ea; h one thou•nd dollars tu valul\tton.

TOWNSHIPS

NBA Standings

.

By United Preu I ntern•tlon al
Eestern Conference
Atlentlc Division
W. L Pet.
Phila
29 12 .707
New York
22 21 .512
Buffalo
16 24 .AOO
Boston
1A 26 .350
New Jersey
9 35 .205
Central Di)IISion
w. L P~t .
:Z4 17 .585
Wshn~tn
25 18 58 1
San Antcnl
20 21 .488
Clevelnd
20 25 ,444
Atlanta

GB
8

12 1!~

Wh

2111~

GB
..__
4
6

pitchers selected by the club
In the Jan. 10 draft of
amateur fr.ee agents.
Expos director of scouting
Danny Menendez announced
the two pitchers signed to
minor league cmtracts are
righ_thander Mark South, 22,
of Xenia, Ohio,· and 21-yearold right-hander Paul
Josephson of Shrewsbury,
Mass .-

five players

OF MASON

CLEVELAND (UPI)
Five players selected in last
week's draft have agreed to
terms with the Cleveland
Indians, the American
League baseball
club
announced Thursday.
They are No. 2 pick Bob
Conley, No. 3 pick I.Joyd
Turner, No.4 pick Bob Fuson,
No. 7 pick Ralph Henriquez
and No. 8 choice Russ Cain.
Conley and Turner' both
shortstops, and Fuson, a
pitcher, will be with Waterloo
in the Midwest League wahlle
Henriquez and Cain, .both
catchers, go to Batavia in tbe
New York-Perm League.

. Also,
the
Indians
announced that first baseman
Jack Bake r, acquired
recently from tbe Boston Red
Sox, has agreed to terms and
all of It$ coaches have signed
cmtracts for the upcoming
campaign.
Baker, 27, S-5, 225 pounds,
is the 22nd Tribesman under
contract, with 16 yet to be
signed, according to vice
president-general manager
Phil Seghi.
Coaches agreeing to terms
are Harvey Haddix, Joe
Nossek, Joe Moeller and
Rocky Colavlto.

srHDOI., DISTRICTS

Pierced Ears

0

AND .CORPORATIONS

~

BEDFORD
Meirs LocalS. D. __ 4.SO t.70 24.00 .10 .4Q .60 .20
Eastern LocalS. D. _ 4.30 1.70 28.0{) .10 .40 .50 .20

CHESTER
Ea~tern

Polyester cord DELUXE CHAMPION®

· $1~, 1~~0

'

COLUMBIA
Ale11ander S. D. __ .... 4.30 1.70 29.00 .10
LEBANON
Eastern Local S. D. _ 4.30 2.70 23.00 .10
Southern Local S.D. _ 4.30 2.70 SUO .10
LETART
Southern L&lt;lcal S. D. _ 4.30 2.70 suo .10

OLIVE

Eastern Loeal S. D. _ 4.30 2.70 23.00

'5.60-13
155 /800 -13
'6 .00-13

*A78 ·1 3

878 -1 3

'6.45 -14
C78 ·14
0 78 -14
E78 -1 4
F78 -14
G78-14
H78 -14
'5.60 -15
'6 .00-1 5L

'6 .855 -15

G78 -15
H78 ·15
L78-15

1.95
21 .95
21 .95
22.95
19.95
22.95
25.95
23.96
24.95
26 .95
28.95
29.95
31.96
23.95
25.95
26.95
30.95
32.95

24.96
24 .95
22.95
24 .95
26.95
27 .95
28 .96
30.95
31 .96
33.95
26.95
28.95
29.95
32.95
34.95
37.95 ·

1.46
1.4 3
1. 50
1.69

1.77
1.71
1.93

2.01

2.13

2.26

2.42
2.60
1. 61
1. 70
1.86
2.45
2,65
2.93

All prices plus ta)( and old lire .
•rread design shown
• &amp;-rib de•lun.
in lower of two photos at left .

·POMEROY- HOME &amp; AUTO

1.00 ss.oo
. 1.00 S4.00

Local S. D. _ 4.::10 2.60 23.00 .10 .40 .50 .20 1.00
2.50 ~.00 .10 .40 .60 .20 1.00

MeigA Local S. D. --· 4.30

-40

.60 .20

.40 .50 .20
.40 .50 .20

1.00 2.40

1.00

l.OO
l.OO

1.00 SS.20
1.00 41.60
l.OO

.40 .50 .20 1.00

40.60

.40

.50 .20 1.00

. 1.00 S3.20

ORANGE
Eastern Local S. D. ,- 4.30 2.60 23.00 .10

.40

.60 .20 1.00

1.00 33.00

.10 .60 .20 1.00
.40 .50 .20 1.00

1.00 88.80
5.60 1.00 SB.OO

RUTLAND

Meigs L:lcal S. D. __ 4.30
Rutland Village ____ 4.80

2.80 24.00
1.70 . 24.00

.10
.10

SALEM
Meigs Lo&lt;al S. D. •• 4.SO 1.70 24.00 .10 .40 .50 .20 ,1.00
SALISBURY
Melp Local S. D. .. 4.80 1.70 24.00 .10 .40 ".50 .20 1.00
.20 24.oo- .t o- .40 .5o .20 t.oo
Middleport Village -- 4.80
.20 24.00 .10 .40 .60 .20 1.00
Pomeroy Vlllnl{e - __ 4.30
SCIPIO

SyraeuRe Vllla~re: ____ 4.30
SUTTON
Mtill'l

Local S, n. ---

4.30

1.00 33.20
6.20 1.00 36.90
6.70 1.00 87.40
·j.OO 88.90

.40 .50 .20 1.00
.60 suo .10 .40 .w .20 1.00
.60 suo .10 .40 .60 -~0 1.00

1.00 41.00
10.10 1.00 49.60
5.80 1.00 46.80

Southern I.oeal S. D.. 4.SO 2.10 suo
Radne Village-··-- 4.30

1.00 . S3.20

.60 .20 1.00

Meir• Local S. D. -- 4.80 2.40

.SUTTON

~-00

•

2.10

~-00

.10 .40

•

-~0

.10 .40 .50 .20 1.00

1.00 8S.60

:Real Eata.te taxes· which have not beln paid at the close of each collection carty a
penalty of ten per cent. Taxe~ may be paid at the office of the county tre8_1.urer or
by matt. })Jeaae briq your lut tax neeipt and if you p~oy by mail be aure fO locate
your properly by taxinl' dlatrl~ and encloat stamped aelf addressed envelope.
Alw&amp;ya examine your t&amp;x reeelpt to He that it coven all your property.
Offtce
Hours 9:0~ A .M. to
P.M. ~ily except· Saturday when office cloaes at Noon. Tax
Books will open

•:oo

D~eember

20, Urrl to January 20, 1978.
.
GEORGE l!f. COLLINS, ldelws Co. Treaa.

J~~k

Nicklaus ma)&lt;es his
debut this week. Every pro of
rote with the exception of
Gary Player, Lee Trevino, Al
Gelberger and MUler Barher
is here. ·
•
The field numbers 168 pros
and a Similar nUIIlber of
amateurs. The amateur field
1.s composed in the main or
many of Bing's old friends
(Hollywood and sports world
types) as well as former
President Gerald Ford.
Tom Watson is the
defending champion. He won
the Tucson Open two weeks
ago to launch the 1978 tour.

New Orlns
Houston

19 2A .A42 6
IS 27 .357 9111
. Western Conference
Midwest Division
W. L Pel. GB
Denver
28 14 .667
Chicago
25 19 ..568 4
Milw
25 22 .532 S1!2
Ind iana
18. 23 .-439 91f1
Detro i t
18 23 .-439 91f.z
Kanss Cty
15 29 .3-41 14
Pacific Division
W. L
Pel . GB
Poru.and
35 6 .85A
· Phoenix
2a 14 .667 71h
Seatlle
2~ 21 .533 13
Golden St.
20 21 .476 15111
LOS Angels
18 '2-4 .429 17 111
Ttlundav 's Results
Chicago 105 , Atlanta 95
Cle veland 11 7, Phi Ia 109
Milwaukee 114, Denver 109
Phoenix 134. New York 11.4
FridiV'! Games
Kansas Ci ty aT Boston
'Denver at Buffalo
Seatt le at New Jer sey
Detroit at Houston
Portland ~t New Or leans
Ind i ana at San An tonio
ClevelanCI at Chicago
PhoeniK a·t Gclden State
Washington at Los Ang
Seturday's Game
Indiana at Atlanta ·

Sports transactions
BV United Press tntern•tlonal
Thursdly
Footba ll
Chicago Jack
Pardee
res ig ned as head coach .
New England - Announced
resignation ot ·delenslve back
f ield co ach D fc k Wlllk er . Hired
Frlh Shurmur , tormer de ten
sive coordlnlltor of th e DetroiT
Lions. as defensil;e l ine coo~~ c h .
Montrea l {c;:F L ) Signed
Oak land Raid er s' ass istant Joe
Sca11e11a to a three vea r co n
tr ac t as head coa ch.
Baseball
Cincin nat i ~ Nam ed Mike
Compton
to rnanage
their
Tampa farm club In the F lorida
State Leagu e, Jim Hoff to
manage their Billing farm In
the Pioneer League ant1 Greg

THIS IS FOR THE

BIRDS
•WILD
BIRD FEED ·
•SUNFLOWER
SEED
•SEEDS

NHL Standings
By United Press International

campbell Conference
P~lrlck Divi si on
W. L. T . Pts.
Ph'llal;lelphia
27 9 B 62
NY Islanders
25 10 B 58·
Atlanta
16 17 li 43
NY Rangers
16 19 9 41
Smvthe DIVISi on
W. L. T. Pts.
Ch icago
15 11 12 1112
Vancouver
12 20 11 35
51. Louis
11 26 6 28
Col orado
9 :Z2 10 28
Minnesota
9 28 s 23 ,
Wet eS Conterence
Norris Di vis ion
W. L. T. Pis.
Montrea l
31
7 6 68
Los Angeles
18 16 9 45
Pi ttsburgh
14 20 10 38
Detroit ,
16 19 6 38
Washington
B 26 10 26
Adam s Division
W. L. T. Pts .
Bo ston
21 10 6 60
Buffalo
24 9 10 58
Toronto
24 13 7 55
Cleveland
14 28 4 32
Thursday' s Results
Montreal l, Phil a I , t ie
Boston 4, washington 1
Detroit 4, Chlc~gc 2
.Buffa lo 9, Cle11eland 2
NV Islanders at St Louis
Toron to 3, V~ n c 11e r 3, tie
Friday's Games
NY Rangers at Atlanta
Los Angeles at Colorado
Satu rday•• Games
Det roit ~t Boston, aft :
Phlla at NY Islander s
Vancouver at Mcntreal
washington at Pittsburgh
• Colorado at Clevelend
Ch !cago at Minnesota
Buffalo at St . Louis
Toronto 81 Los Angeles

Riddoch
to
manage
th eir
Eugene f ar m in nl e Nor ti1W OSI
L eague.
M ontre11 1
Signed pllchers
Mark Soutt1 ot xe nl e, Ohln, o'lnd
Paul Jnsephson o f Shrcwsburv ,
Mass .. both selec te es lr1 t11 e
w inter
fr ee tlgent d ra t! . to
minor league con tra ct s.
Sloned tr ee
Philad elph i A
agen t fir s T bl'lsem i'n ou ttlf' ldcr
Orll'lndo Gonz&lt;~lez to a two year
conlrll cl w ith Oklahonl ll Cllv ol
the Alllerican ASsoci ation .
College Foo tball
8os ton Col lege - N&lt;Jn Hld Ed
Chtebek to succeed Joe Yukl ca
AS hll'lld foatbl'lll COACh .
College Basketball
Weslern t&lt;eniLi cky
An
nounced re si gnation 01 CoAct1
Jim Ri chards .

.

•OYSTER SHEUS
AND GRIT

ADVANCE DESIGN!

THE ALL NEW

REMINGTON
Mighty Mite 100

c~:~N

with

With
Purchase of
EAR RINGS

41.60

.10

elf

the situations," said

EE

1.00 33.20 .
- 1.00 82.20

1.00
1.00

out of bunkers and n·
sanding them .
When play start$ lift, clean
and place rules will be in

sinith. '1:1 points and 12 rebounds to
" I have played a lot . help the Bucks snap Denver's
everywhere but here. I really ' 10-game winning streak.
don't mind if I start or not Dave Meyers and Brian
just so we win."
Winters had 18 points apl"""
Cleveland opened a 1&amp;i&gt;&lt;Jlnt for Milwaukee while David
lead late in the thtrd quarter .Thm!pson led Denver with 34
before Erving sparked a rally and _Bobby Jones lidded 22.
that pulled the 76ers wIthin Bulla 1115, Hawlu 95:
three points, 95-92, early in
AI l.nuisville, Ky .. Scott
the final period. But the Cavs May scored a season-lligh 'a
then outscored Philadelphia. points to spark Olicago. Artis
~2. in tbe next three minutes
Gilmore added 21 points and
to opens 10-point advantage. 12 rebounds as the Bulls won
Seven straight point$ by their filth straight. John
Erving moved the 78ers Drew topped the Hawks with
within 111-107 with ,a minute 21 points.
le!t before Smith sealed Suus 131, Knlcka 114 :
Cleveland's victory with a
Paul Westphal scored J1
stu,ff shot with 51 seconds to points and Walter Davis 25 as
Phoenix broke the g_ume open
goin other games, Milwaukee in the second half. Bob
downed Denver, 114-109, McAdoo had 33 ol only 4:1
Chicago topped AUanta, 105- points contributed by the
!15, and Phoenix routed New Knicks' sta1·t1ng front line.
Phoenix won its sixth straight
York, 131-114.
Bucka 114, Nuggeto 109:
contest, while New York
In Milwaukee, rookie suffered its lift~ straight loss
_Marques Johnson contributed. on the road .

Pro Standings

Indian$ ink

GINO'S -

ment of the season, the 7.foot
Smith hit 11-of-14 field goal
attempts in 'II minutes to
offset Juljus Erving's seasonhigh 43 points.
"I felt I &lt;M&gt;uld make the
shots, so I took advantage of

likely to start today

next four days, whlc)l means

NOW OPEN

J

Registration In Middleport can be
made al Gllllons Fashion Center or
by calling 992-6389. In Galllpou, at
446-3632, 446-0727 or 256-1392. This
will be lhe only class enrolhnent
until September.

advantage of the absence of
injured George McGinnis and
Doug
Collins;
broke
Philadelphia •s nine-game
winning streak with a 117-109
victory at Richfield, Ohlo.
In his first starting assign-

High s_chool cage scores
~ayes

Pomeroy
Flower
Shop

Philadelphia 76ers
by
~rtlng Elmore Smith at
ce nter and moving Jim
Olmes to forwwd . Smith
responded with a ooason-hlgh
'II point$, Olmes added 21
and the Cav•. tokln ~

'

The Remington Mighty Mite 100 is
tqdlay's finest and most advance
designed chain saw. It features :

24 Carat
Gold
Over '
Surgical

• Low price . . . lightweight
easy to handle

Steel
Company representative will be in our
store.

SATURDAY-JANUARY
21st
•

9:'00-5:00

. WHI]J

SEWING MlltHINES

Middleport Book Store
Middleport, Ohio

SAVE!
'1.00
PER YARD
• ON
KNITS

SAL£ PRICED

Ph. 992-2641

Those under 18 years of age must be
accompanied by parent or guardian. '

THE SEWING
CENTER
On lh• TIn Mlcldleport

-·----~

\

..

• Chain brake that stops moving
chain in a split second to reduc e
the hazard from "Kick-back"
• Fully automatic chain oi ling
• Cuts trees and firewood up to
20" thick with a 10" cutting bar
• Electronically tested and tuned
for top long lasting performance

MODERN SUPPLY
399 W. Main St.

Pomeroy , o.

992-2164

Store With "All Kinds of
FOR PETS- STABLES - LARGE &amp; SMALL
ANIMALS. LAWNS - GARDENS.

�7:'TbeDiilJSentinei,Mi~Pomeroy

WANT AD
CHARGES

lltESE MESSAGES OF OUR RELIGIOUS HERITAGE ARE SPONSORED EACH WEEK BY lHE FOWMING
fR N TY CHURCH Re
W H
Pe n pas a Roy Maya Sun
day schoo supt Chu ch School

9 So m

030

et'teo sol Tuesday
730pm uncle d edonofMs
Pou Nease
POMEROY CHURCH OF !HE
NAZARf:NE Co ne Un on and
Mu be ry ftev Clyde V H•nde
g

m

wo sh p s• vee

Cho

son pa ~ (' Sunday 5thool 9 30
o m Glen McClung sup ma n
ng wo sh p 0 30 a m ev&amp;n ng
sewce 730 mdweek sevce
Wedf\esdoy 7 30 p m
GRACE EP ~COPAL The Rev
A be t MocKanz e
acto
Se

cas ond Sunday schoo a

2

noon
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHR S

212 W Man S John MeA hu
paso Bble shoo 930 om
mo nng woshp
030 om
Vou h mee ngs 6 30 p m e en

ng wo sh p
ngh

poye

7 30

Wednesday

mea ng and B be

sudy 730pm
THE SAL VAT ON ARMY
5
Bu e nu A ve Pome oy En oy
ond M s RayWnng off es n

ch a ge

Sunday ho ness
10 a m Sunday Schoo
10 30 o m Sunday s hoo Ieoda

m ~te ng

YPSM

Elo se Adams

7 p m

so a on mee ng
va ous
speoke s and mus c spec o s 7 30
p m Thu sday 0 a m o 'l p m
lad es Home eogue a women
n11 ed 7 30 p m p are mee ng
r;md B b e s udy Bob Es ep
eade
Re
Noe
He man
eo he
BURL NGTON SOUTHERN 8AP
ShadeT ST CHAPE Rou e
Pa s o
Bobby Elk ns
Sunday
s hool S p m Sundov wo sh p
5 45 p m Wednesday p aye sa
ce730 pm
POMEROY WESTS DE CHURCH
OFCHRS 200W MonS Je y
Paul m n s e phone 992 7666
Conse Q e non ns umen ol
S ndoy wo sh p 0 o m 8 be
s ud y II a m wo sh p 6 p n
Wednesday B b e s udy 7 p m
OLD DEXTER B B E CHR S AN
CHURCH
Re Rolrh Sm h
pas a Su days hoc 9 30 o m
M s Wo ey F one s supe n en
den P eo h ng se c;es f s &amp;
h d Sundays lo ow ng Su day
Shoo
GRAHAM UNITED METHODS
Pea hng9 30a m f s ondse
cond SundO')'S of eo h mon h
h d ond fou h Sundays eo h
mon h wo sh p se ce o 7 30
p m Wednesday e en ngs a
730 P aye ond8beSudy
SEV ENTH DAY ADVENT ST
Mulbe y He gh s Rood Pome oy
Pa so
Abet Des Sobboh
Schoo
Supe n Emden
Cia o
Mc nye SabbahShoo Sou
doyo e oo a 200 w hWo
sh p Se
e o ow ng a 3 S
RUT ~ND F RST
BAPT ST
CHUR CH
Ss e
Ho e
Wo ne
Sup
Sunday Schoo
9 30 a m
ma ng wo sh p
10 .115 o m
THE H LAND CHAPEL G~ e
Cos o pas a
Sunday Schoo
9 30 o n e e 9 wo sh p 7 30
Thu sday e en ng p O'fe se
e
7 30p m
POMEROY F RST BAPT ST
Oo d Mann m n s e
W om
Wo son Sunday school sup Sun
day school 9 30 a m mo n g
wo :sh p 10 30 am
F RST SOUTHERN RAPTIS
Mu be 'I A e Pome oy Pou
Wh e Pas o Go y Basham Sun
day schoo sup Sunday schoo
9 30 o m
mo n ng wo sh p
0 30 e11en ng wo sh p 6 30 p m
M dweek p aye :se 11 ce 7 30

RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD
Re11 Jomes D Guynn pas o
Sunday school 0 o m Sun®y
wo sh p 1 a m Sund ay e"en ng
se v c• 7 p m Wednesday wo
shpse ce 730pm
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCti
Neo long 8o om E.dsel Ha
pa;s or Sundoy school 0 a m
Chu di
1 30 p m
p aye
me• ng 7 30 p m Thu sdoy
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL
Th d A e he Re W II om Kn
e pas o Ronald Dugon Sun
day S&lt;:hool Supt C 9sses fo all
ages e en ng 11t ., ce 7 30 B ble
study Wednesday 7 30 p m
youhse11ces F day 730pm
M DDLEPORT FREEW LL SAP
T St Co ne Ash ond P urn N09
He man pasta Sotu day even
ng su
e 7 30 p m Sunday
Schoo 10 30om
MEGS
COOPERATIVE PAR SH
METHOD ST CHURCH
Robe t T Bumga ne
0 acto
POMEROY CLUSTER
Re11 Robe Hoyden
Re11 James Co b t
CHESTER Wo sh p 9 15 a m
Chu ch School 0 o m
POMEROY wo sh p se 11 c&amp;
9 5 a m Sunday school 10 30
o m
Re11
Robe t Ho}lden
m n ste
ENTERPR SE Wo sh p 9 am
Chu ch Schoo Oa m
ROCI&lt; SPR NGS Wo sh p 10
a m
Chu ch School 9 So m
UMYF630p m
FLA WOODS Wo sh p
am
Chu ch Schoo 10om
M DOLE PORT ClUSTER
Re 11 Robe Bumga ne
HEATH
Robu
Bumga ne
Pas o
Wo sh p
0 30 a m
Chu ch Schoo 9 30 a m UMYF 6

pm
RUT AND W bu H
Pas o
Wo shp 030om Chu d\S hoo
930om
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Re11 Ho vey Koch J
ASBURY
Wo sh p
am
Chu ch S hoo 9 50 a m UMW
f s Tuesday B b 9 S udy Thu s
7 30p m
FOREST RUN Wo sh p 9 o m
Chu ch S hool10o m
M NERSV llE Wo sh p 10 am
Chu ch School9 a m
SYRACUSE Chu h Schoo 9 00
o m Wo sh p se v ce 7 30 p m
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Re T mo hySm th
Clus e leode
Re11 Ste en W son
Asso a e
BETHANY (Do cos
Wo sh p
9 30 am Chu ch Schoo 10 30

om

CARMEL Ch uch Schoo 9 30
am Wo sh p 10 30 a m 2nd and
4th Sundays
APP E GROVE Sunday School
9 30 om Wo st-. p 7 30 p m lst
and 3 d Sundays P aye meet ng
Wednesday 7 :lO p m Fe owsh p
suppe f s Sa u doy6 p m UMW
2nd Tuesday 7 30 p m
EAST LETART Ch uch Schoo
s 2nd 3 d Sundays 9 30 a m
ou h Su doy 10 30 a m Wo
p 2nd Su oy 730 pm 4h
ndoy 9
P ove mee ng
edn
y 7 30 p m UMW s
Tue oy7 30pm
ESLEYAN (Roc ne) Sunday
ool Oa
Woshp
om
U
nesdoy 3 30 p m
y hu sdoy 1 p m Cho
P ac ce Thu sdoy8p m
LETART FAL S Chu ch Sc:hool
Is 2nd 3 d Sundays 0 15 am
4 h Sunday 9 15 om Wo !1-1 p
Is 2nd 3d Sundays 9 IS am
pm
4 hSundoy730p m
MIDWAY COMMUN TV CENTER
MORNING STAR Wo sh p 9 30
Oex e Rd longs e Oh o Re
a m Church Schoo 10 30 a m
C yde Fe ell Pas o
Sunday M d Week Se v ce Wednesday B
School
1
o m
So u day pm
peochng se ces 730 pm
MORSE CHAPEL Wo shp
Wednesday e en ng 8 b e s udy a m Chu ch School 9 30 a m
o 730p m
PORTLAND Wo sh p 7 30 p m
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH
Chu chS hoc 930om
Ba ley Run Rood Rev Emme
SUTTON Chu h Schoo ~ 30
Rowson pas o Hand ey Dunn
a m Wo sh p Is and 3 d Sundays
sup Sundays hoo 10 o m Sun
030om
day e enng se
e 730 Bbe
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
each ng 7 30 p m hu sdoy
Re R cho d Thomas
DYE SV llE
COMMUN TV
Paso
CHURCH Rage C u ne pas o
Duane Sydens eke
Sundoy schoo 9 :10 a m Sunday
John Doug os
mo ng wo sh p 0 30 Sunday
Assoc a &amp;s
e11en o e ce 730
JOPPA
Wo shp 10 am
M DDLEPORT
Chu ' h School 9 a m
P aye
MT
'JR AH BAPT ST Co e
Mee ng Wednesday 8 p m
Fou h and Mo n M dd epa
LONG BOTTOM Sunday schoo
Re Hen y Key
pasta Sun
a 930am Wosh1psev esc
day School 930am Ms E n 7 30 p m B ble s udy and You h
Baumgo dne
sup
Mo n ng mee ng
o
8
p m
on
wo shp 045a m
Wednesdays
MIDDLEPORI CHURCH OF
NORTH BETHEL Wo sh p
CHRIST N CHR STIAN UN ON
om Ct'lu ch School10 om
low ence Mo ey pasta M s
ALFRED Sunday Schoo 9 30
Russe I Young Sunday Schoo
a m Wo sh p 10 45 a m P aye
Sup Sunday School 9 30 a m
mee ng Wednesday 7 .tiS p m
Even ng wo sh p 7 30 Wednes
UMW 3d Tuesday B p m
day p aye m&amp;et ng 7 30 p m
REEOSV l E Sunday Schoo19 30
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD
a m Wo sh p 7 30 p m P aye
Roc ne Rou e 2 ne Re James Mee ng 7 30 p m
Tuesday
M Muncy pas o Sunday schoo
V s a on7 30p m 1stThu sday
9 45 a m mc,J n ng wo sh p
S LVER R DGE Wo ship ~am
om
e ennSj wo shp 730
Chu ch School9 a m
P aye mee ng Tuesday 7 30
TUPPERS PLAINS Wo •h p
pm
Yo ung peoples mee ng
am Chu ch S hoof 0 am
7 30 p m Thu sdoy
KENO CHURCH OF CHR St
M DO EPORT F RST BAPI ST
Geo ge F ede k sup Se v ce
Co ne S x hand Polme he Re11
weekly 9 30 a m on Sunday
Pe e G ondol pas o Mann ng P each ng f s and th d Sundays
Klees
supe
enden
Sunday of man h by Cl fto d Sm th 9 30
Sthoo
WMPO Rod o p og om
om
7 .4S o m Su day Schoo 9 5
HOBSON CHR STIAN UNION
om
Mo nng Woshp
0 S Re11 Ke h Eb n pas o Sunday
a m
You h a t 11 es and Schoo
9 30 o m
Leana d
fellowsh p fo un o and sen o
G lmo e f s elde even ng se
h gh s uden s 6 p m Sunday v ce 7 30 p m Wednesday p oye
B~~en ng wo sh p 7 30 p m M d
meeng730pm
week p ant se v ces Wednes
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD
day 730pm
Roc ne Rau e 2 The Rev Cho let
CHURCH OF CHR ST
Md
Hand pelS o 5undoy school 9 •5
dlepo
5 h and Ma n Geo ge om monngwoshp 1om
Gloze m n ste
M ke Ge och
Even ng se v ces Tuesday and
•upe n enden
Te y Yankey
F doy 7.30pm
youth m n s e B be schoo 9 30
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH
a m
mo n ng wo sh p 10 .30
OF CHRIST
Duane Wo den
am
e11en ng wonh p 7 30
mnse Bbe clan 930 am
p aye se 11 c:e 7 p m Wednes
monng woshp
030 om
day
even ng wa sh p
6 30 p m
M DDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE Wednesday B b e s udy 6 30 p m
NAZARENE Rev J m B oome
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST
pas o Mrs Ma y lathey Sunday Geo ge F ede ck supt Sunday
school sup Sunday school 9 30 mo n ng servlc&amp; 9 30 a m w th
om
mornng woshp 1030 p eoch ng on I s and th d Sun
o m
Sunday
e'longel st c day of mon h by Geo ge P ckens
meet ng
7 00 p m
P ore
NEW ST VERSVILLE COMMUNI
mee ng Wednesday 7 30 p m
TY Chu ch Sunday Schoo Sit
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN 11 ce 9 45 a m Wo sh p serv Cit
MINISTRY OF MEIGS COUNTY
10 30 Evang&amp; sf c Se 11 ce 1 30
Ow ght L Zov tz d acto
p m
Wednesday
P aye
HARRISONVILLE _melt ng 7 30
PRESAYTERIAN
Rev
E nest
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST
St ckl n pastor Sundoy church Pome oy Ho son11 lie Rd
Don
school 9 30 a m M 1 Home
Kennedy pastor 8
McE oy
lee sup
mo n ng wo sh p
Sunday school supt
Sunday
030
schoo 9 30 a m mo n ng wo
MIDDLEPORT Sunday schoo
sh p and commun on 0 30 a m
9 30 a m R cha d Vaughan sup
Sunday even ng you h Ch s on
Ma o ng worsh p 10 30
Endeo11o 6 p m wo sh p se
SYRACUSE Morn ng worth p 9 v ce 7 p m Wednesday even ng
am Sunday schoo 10om M s
p oye mee ng and B ble 5 udy
Sampson Ho sup
730pm

MEIGS TIRE CENTER INC
John F Fultz

Ph m2101

LINDA'S LADY FAIR
BEAUTY SALON

THIS SPACE
FOR RENT

Pomeroy

PHONE 992 2156

Call949 2838 For Appointment
Aacme Oh o

EWS &amp; SONS SOHIO

PHONE 992 2156
BISSELL SIDING CO

SWISHER &amp;LlltSE
PHARMACY

'

Pomeroy

FRENCH'S SUNOCO
SERVICE CENTERS

THIS SPACE
FOR RENT

Ado"""""
:1:.

.. """""'
Canlper
" -w&lt;r&lt;l, IUO
ODd
!;!;!/:!'1
I .,_

Ph 949

...MollOeHomtll.._and
_on)JI _ Yarda1el
_ _

-.. z,..t- 1or""' COI'Tf·
... &amp;a Numbor In C...IIITbe Sentinel

P J PAULEY, AGENT
Cso of
0
804 w Main
Pomeroy
Ph V92131B
Nehonwide Ins
Columbus

mo

RACINE FOOD MARKET

196 W lnd

Ph 949 2626

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
llonday

Noon on Satw'tJiy

PHONE 992·2156

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
&amp; SERVICE, INC

VIRGIL B TEAFORD SR
RIALTOR

THE FINEST IN MOBILE
HOMES

216 E Second

Ph

as avery small ch ld you t udged off to church t ghtly holdmg your
mothers hand?

RACINE PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

It was qu1te an event
you sat very stra ght
hstemng mtently
w de eyed
perhaps you d d f dget a little dur ng the sermon but you
thnlled to the wondertu mus c of the organ and the chmr
and you
proudly ra1sed your own small vo1ce n s ngmg the hymns

Ractne

Ph 949 1881

After the serv1ce surmunded by all the sm ling faces you somehow
felt good and happy deep down ns de Yes gomg to church was worth
while
Down through the years you have COJJJ!' to realize more and more
that your church can play an mportant part n your hfe 1n the lives of those
dear to you and n he hfe of your commun ty It can bnng a message of
goodw II and fnendhness of hope and courage
that you cant afford to
shut out of your l1fe

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE
SERVICES
114 E Main
Pomeroy
Ph V92 5130

r

WAID CROSS SONS STORE
GROCERIES&amp; GENERAL
MERCHANDISE

Wednescl4y
Mark

DAN THOMPSON FORD, INC

71-30

CARS&amp;TRUCKS
461 S 3rd
Middleport
Ph 9912196

Thurscl4y
Mark
8126
Fncl4y
Mark
827 91
Saturcl4y
Mark

POINTVI£W CABU TV
SYSTEMS, INC
For The Best In TV Vteweng

Call991 1505

92 29

hRowiru
EQUIPMENT
SALES SERVICE

Yes gong to chu ch really s worthwhile

Ftre EKt ngutshers
Ftre Dept Equ p

Rulland

mo

HEINER'S BAKERY

KEN GROVER PHOTOGRAPHY
PROFESSIONAL SERVICE

BAKERS OF GOOD BREAD
Huntington W Va

Aerie I Schools Weddings
Chester
Ph 98S 4 55

RIDENOUR TV &amp; APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE
Chester

Rae ne

985 3307

949 l020

ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH
P ne G ave The Re
W II om
M ddleswo h
Pos o
Chu h
se ces 9 30 a m Sunday Schoo
0 30om
BRADBURY
CHURCH
OF
CHRISl M Oono d Ro ey pas o
Sunday school 9 30 a m wo
sh p se ce tO 30 o m Sunday
se ces 7 pm
youh goup
Wednesday 7 p m
ANTIQUITY BAPT ST Re Eo
Shu e
pas o
Sunday schoo
9 30 a m Chu ch se 11 ce 7 p m
you h meet ng 6 p m Tuesday 8
beS udy 7p m
RAC NE CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE Rev John A Cotf
man pas to honkl n Imboden
cho man of he Boo d of Ch s
ton l f&amp; Sunday School 9 30
o m
mo n ng wo sh p
0 30
Sunday even ng wo sh p 1 30
p m P oyer mee ng Wednes
doy 730pm
RAC NE FIRST BAPTIST Don L
Wo ke
Posta
Ronne So u
Sunday school sup
Sunday
schoo 9 30 a m mo n ng wo
sh p 10 •O am Sunday e11en ng
7 30 Wednesday e11an
wo sh
ng B be study 1 30
DANVILLE WESLEYAN Rev R
D 8 own poslo Sunday School
~ 30
a m
mo n ng wo sh p
10
you h se v ce 6 45 p m
e11enng woshp
730 pm
p aye and p a se W&amp;dnesdoy
730pm
SILVER RUN FREE BAPT ST
M es T ou
pos o
Sunday
sckool 0 a m Stev&amp; l ttle sup
E.ven ng serv ce 7 p m p aye
mee ng Thu sday 7 p m
CHESTER CHURCHOF GOD
Re11 Bobby Po e pas o Sun
day school 9 30 o m wo sh p
se vee 11om e11enngse 11 1t
7 30 you h se 11 ce Wednesday
730pm
LANGSV LLE
CHR STIAN
CHURCH Rober Musse pasta
Sunday school 9 30 o m Roy
S gmon supt ma n ng wo sh p
10 30 Sunday even ng •• v e
7 30 m d week se v ce Wednes
day730pm
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE
Rev
Dole Boss
pas o
Bob Moo e
Sunday
School supt Sunday schoo 9 30
om
rnorn ng worsh p
0 •5
o m evangels tic ser11 ce 7 p m
Wednesday sorvlces
praye
ond pro se 7 p m
Nozo ene
youh 7 pm
Daly poye
mee ng 8 30 o*n Men s p aye
I'Jiee ng Soudoy 7pm
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST Elden R Bloke pas o
Sunday School 0 o m Howo d
McCoy supt Mo n ng se man
1 o m Sunday n gh s&amp; v ces
Ch 1 an Ende0\10
7 30 p m
Song se \1 ce 8 p m P each ng
8 30 p m
M dw&amp;&amp;k P ave

•s

Pomeroy

Ph 992 3325

Pomeroy

f.

ly

RJEL OIL AND
GAS SERVICE
CAll us

IN lOVING memory of my deor
husband Dol on A G o11er
who was kllted In the coal
m nes Jan 20 1967
It doesn t ma er whe • we go or
what we do
There will o ways be some lit le
th ngs o make us h nk of you
Your face and 'IO ce a • f esh n
mnd
We ne11e 1hol fo get no matte
how he years go by
Ou love Is wl h you ye
Sadly m ned by w le My t e
ch ld en and g ondch ld en

Pomeroy Landmark

F YOU hove a se v ce

offe
won to buy o s&amp;ll some h ng
ae look ng lo w o k
o
who e11a
you II ge esul s
los e w th o Sen ne Won Ad
Call991 2156

Sunday

RACINE PLANING MILL
Syracuse

Ph 992 3978

meet ng Wednesdoy 7 p m Ror
Adams oy eode
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIS!
QCoted a Ru land on New L mo
Rood ne x o Fa es A e Po k
Re
Roy Rouse pas o Robe
Musse Sunday Sc.hoo sup Su
day school 0 30 o m wo sh p
7 30 p m 8 be S udy Wedne
day 730 pm
Sou day ngh
p aye se v ce 7 30 p m
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRIS! AN
Rage Wo son pas o Kanne h
Bye Sunday school sup Mo
ng wo sh p 9 30 o m
Sun
doyschoo
0 30 o m e en ng
se ., ce 7 30 Wednesday B be
Sudy730pm
MT
UN ON BAPT ST Don
W son
Sunday
sc hool
supe n enden
Sunday ~ hool
945 om
e11enng woshp 7
p m P aye mee ng 7 p m
Wednesday
TUPPERS PLANS CHR S AN
CHURCH
Eugene Unde wood
pas o
Howe d Co dwe
J
Sunday School Sup
S day
School 9 30 a m Mo n ng Se
man 10 30om Sunday e en ng
se11ce1pm
I;ETART
FALLS
UNITED
BRETHREN Re F ee and No s
pas o Floyd No s sup Sunday
sc.hool 9 30 o m mo n ng se
man 10 30om P aye serv e
W&amp;dnesdoy 7 30 p m
CHURCH OF GOD OF PRO
PHECY 0 J Wh e Rood of 60
Re" Geo ge G oyle pasta Sun
duy School 10 a m A hu Hen
son Sup
Mo n ng Wo sh p 1
om Young Peopes se
e 7
p m E11en ng se 11 ce 7 30 p m
Wednesday M d Week P aye
Se 11 ce
7 30
p m
You h
meet ng 6 30 p m E en ng wo

•hp 1730pm

CHESTER CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE Re\1 Herbe I G o e
pas or Wo sh p se ce 1 o m
and 7 30 p m Sunday Sunday
Schoo 930am Rchad8o on
1up P oy• mee ng Wednes
day 730pm
BRADFORD
CHURCH
OF
CHRST Gob e Mzs paso B
be Sunday School9 30 o m mo
n ng church 0 30 a m Sunday
e11enlng se 11 ce
7 00 p m
W&amp;dnesdoy se v ce 7 30 p m
LAUREL CLIFF FREE MEIHODIST
CHURCH Re11 F oyd F Shook
pas or Lloyd W gh
Sunday
Schoo Sup
Mo n ng Wo sh p
9 30 o m Sunday School 0 20
Q m W&amp;dnesdoy P aye and B
b e Study 7 30 p m Sunday e en
ng wo sh•p7 30p m Cho P oc
ce Thu sday 7 p m
DEXTER C~UR CH OF CHRIS!
Cha es Ruslhll S
mn se
R ck Macombe
sup
Sunday
school 9 30 a m wo sh p se
11 c• 10 30a m B ble Study lues
day 730pm

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FOR RENT

Fooluring
Deep Steam Extraction
Ph 991 2106
Ph 991 7630
Rt 3 Pomeroy

Middleport Oh o

PHONE 992-2156

BING'S MARKET
&amp; TEXACO SERVICE
Vernon &amp; Bertha B.ng

Longsv lie

REORGAN ZED CHURCH OF
JESUS CHR ST OF LATTER DAY
SA NTS Po o d Ro no Rood
W om Ro ush pa s o Russe
Ra
bu h
hooD eo
S doyShoo 930om Mon
gwo hp 030om S ndoy
e e
g e
e p m Wednes
day e en g p ay e se ces 7 30

pm
BETH EHEM BAPT ST Re Eo I
Sh e pas o Wo sh p se
e
9 30 a m Sunday s hoo
0 30
a m B be S udy and p aye se
eThu sdoy 7 30p m
CAR E ON CHURCH K ngsbu y
Rood Go y K ng po o Sunday
s t10o 930om eenngwo
sh p 7 30 p m P aye mee ng
Wednesd ay 7 30 p m
LONG BOTTOM CHR Sf AN
B u e Sm h pos o
Wo o e
Damew ood Sup B ble School
930 om
Peochng se ce
045om No e enngse ce
HVSE l RUN FREE METHOD ST
CHURCH Re
He be
A I ng
pos o S doy S hoo 9 30 o m
Monng se ce
030 om
E angel is c se 11ce1 p m P aye
mee ng Thu sd o9 7 p m
FREEDOM GOSPE M SS ON a
Sa d Knob
Re
ow ence
G uesen amp S pas o Rage
W to d S Sunday schoo sup
S ndoy schoo 9 30 a
Sunday
een g se ce 7 p m Poye
mee ng
Tuesday
7 30 p m
E nes
Dee e
doss
eade
You h mee ng Wednesday 7 30
pm
w h Don ond Mo ho
Meadows eode s
WH TE S CHAPEL Coo" e RO
Re Roy Dee e po s a Sunday
s hool9 30 a m wo sh p sa "ce
030om Bb esud yo dpaye
se " e Wednesday 7 30 p m
RUTLAND
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST
Oenn s Sm h
pas o
F onk
Yaung Sunday s hool sup Sun
day school and com mun on 9 30
o 11 Wo sh p and co mun on
0 30om
RUTLAND
COMMUN TV
CHURCH Sunday S hoo
9 30
om woshpse ce
am
Wednesc:foy p aye me&amp; ng 7 30
p m youth se v ces Sunday 7
p m Sunday n ght wo sh p 7 30
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE Re11 L oyd 0 G mm
J
pas o Sunday school 9 30
am woshpse11 ce 030om
B ood as
e o:.r-e WMPO young
peopes
se11c: e
630
eangel stc se ce
7 pm
Wednesday 7 p m
MASON COVNTY
F RST SO UTHERN BAPT ST Co
ne a Se and and Ande son
Mason Pas ar F onk low he
Sunday school 9 .45 o m wo
sh p se v ce 1 a m and 7 30
p m
Week y B ble S udy
Wednesday 7 30 p .,

Ph 74l 904S

RALLS

K&amp;C JEWELERS
Keepsake D aniond Rmgs
212 E Main
Pomeroy

BEN FRANKLIN STORE

Ph 992 37BS

MASON CHURCH OF CHR ST P
0 Box 487 M e S Mason W
Vo Sunday B ble S udy 10 om
Wo sh p
a m and 7 p m B ble
S udy Wednesday 7 p m Vocal
mus c
MASON ASSEMBLY OF GOD
Oudd ng Lone Mason W Vo
Ches e lennon Paso Sunday
S hoo
9 ~5 a m
Ch ld ens
Chu h 6 4S p m Young Peop e s
Se ce 645 pm E11on~e s c
Se C!&amp; 7 30 p m Women s M s
ono y Councl10 am f s and
h d Tuesdays P aye and 8 be
Study Wednesday 7 30 p m
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHR ST
IN CHR STAN UNION The Rev
W om Compbe pos o Sunday
School 9 30 o m James Hughes
sup e en ng se v C!it 7 30 p m
Wednesday even ng p aye
mee ng 7 30 p m Youth p aye
se ce each Tuesday
FA RV EW B BLE CHURCH
e a t W Vo R 1 Re11 Cho les
Ho g 011es pC's o Wo sh p se
ces 9 30 a m Sunday schoo
1 om e enng woshp 730
p m Tuesdoy
o age p aye
meet ng and B ble s udy 9 30
o sh p se v ce Wednes
ooy 730pm
CA VARY BIBLE CHURCH 26 N
Second
M ddlepo t
A on
Blackwood pas o Serv ces on
Sunday a 10 30 am and 7 30
pm w h Sundays hoo a 930
a m B ble study Wednesday
7 30p m
NOEP~NDENT
HOLINESS
CHURCH NC - Co ne Fou th
and l ncoln Sts M dd epor Rev
0 Dell Manley pasta Sony Hud
son Sunday Schoo supe nten
den Sunday schoo 9 30 a m
evenng woshp 730 pm
p aye
and p a se se 11 c.e
Wednesday 7 30 p m
THE PEOPLES CHURCH OF
POMEROY - Corne Ma n and
Cou t S s
th d floo
011e
L ghthouse Res au an
tienry
Cook paso Sunday school 10
am mornngwoshp 11 am
e11en ng serv ce 7 30 Wednes
day even ng se 11 ce 7 30 In
e denom nat ana fu I gospel
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD Pas o
Denn 1 Ba ••
Sunday
School 10 o m wo sh p serv ce
1 30 o ~: 1 ond 7 30 p m Proye
mee ~9 wednesc;toy 7 30 p m
RUT AND APO STOL C CHURCH
OF JESUS CHR ST Thomas L
Homes pasta
B be s udy
So u day 7 30 p m E11ongel sf c
p m p aye meet ng Tuesday
7 30 p m B ble S udy Thu sdoy
7 30 p m
POMEROY
WESLEY~N
HOL NESS
Ho sonv lie Rood
Dewey K ng
pas o
Ed son
Weo e osf stan Henry Ebl n
J
Sunday schoo supt Sunday
school 9 30 o m mo n ng wo

sh p 1 o m Sunday even ng se
11 ce 7 30 p aye meet ng Thu s
day 730pm
SYRACUSE F RST CHURCH OF
GOO - Not ftentecostol Re11
Geo ge 0 e
pastc:ir Wo sh p
se ce Sunday 9 ifS a m Sun
day school
o m wo sh p se
11ce 7 30 p m Thu sdoy p aye
mee ng 730pm
MT HERMON Un ed 8 e h en
Church Sunday School 9 30 a m
Wo shp servce
045 am
P each ng se "ces e11ery Sunday
o e no ng w th C E Wednesday
p oy&amp; mee ng 7 30 p m Re11
Jom&amp;s
each
pas o
Do11 d
Hoi e lay leode
JEHOVAH S W TNESSES
m 1':1
eos of Ru land 1unc:t on of Route
12• and Noble Summ t Rood (T
17• Sunday B be lectu e 9 30
a
Watch owe study
0 30
om Tuesday B ble study 7 and
8 S p m Thu sdoy heo at
school
7 30 p m
se 11 ce
meeng830pm
HOPE BAPT ST - S70 G on S
M dd epo t Bobby E k ns posto
Sunday School 0 a m worsh p
se \1 ce 1 o m e11en ng serv ce
7 30 p m
Thu sday p aye
mee ng and
b e study 7 30

a

pm

Ph 742 1777

YOUNG'S CARPETING

MARK VSTORE

RUTLAND FREEW ll BAPTIST
Chu ch - leland Holey pasta
Sunday school 0 a m even ng
se 11 ce
7 30 p m
P aye
mee ng Wednesday 7 30 p m
CHURCH OF GOD of Prophecy
locot&amp;d 011 the 0 J Wh e Rood
off highway 160 Sun.day School
0 am Supe ntenden John
Loveday F s Wednesday n ght
of man h CPMA se v ces seCond
Wednesdor WMB mae ng h rd
h ough
fth you h se v ce
Geo geC oy e paso
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL - 570
G ant S M ddleporl Re\1 Bobby
Elk ns Sunday school
0 am
morn ng worsh p 11 even ng
woshp 730 pm
Thusdoy
even ng l:ile study and p oyer
meeting 7 30 p Ill Aff I a ed w th

a

S BC
BRADFORD
CHURCH
OF
CHR!ST-Gobr e Mraz pasta
Sunclay school 9 30 a m morn
ng church 10 30 a rn Jun or
chu ch prog am unde d ec on
Of Karen Mraz for ch ld en 2 10
dur ng egu a chu ch hou
n
chu ch basement Sunday e11en
ng IS&amp; v ce 7 p m Wedn•sday
sevce 730pm
JUBILEE CHRIST AN CENTER G1t0 ge s C ee~ Road Chu ch
school 9 30 a m mo n ng wo
sh p 10 30 evening se v ce 7 30
Prayer meeting Wednesday 7 30
"";T PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH
Co ner of Sycamore and Second
Sts Pome oy The Re'l Will am
Mldd eswa th
Pas o
Sunday

INCOME fAX Se 11 ces Fade al
and Sto e Tax•• Wando Eb n
2212

m

THE RACINE Vo unt"
F re
Depa tmen w II sponso a gun
sh90 e111t y Sotu day a 6 pm at
th81r bu ld ng n Bashan Foe
tory choke guns only

RESPONSIBLE OLDER ady to I 111t
n and c:o e for aged ody n
Rutland l gh housewo k and
cook ng no laund y Mo e to
home
han woges
Co I

7&lt;27078

TME RAC NE Gun Club Gun Shoot
e11ery Sunday of 1t noon Foe
tory choke gurn on y Assor ed
meats

IPM
Friday afternoon

FOR RENT

Pomeroy

Ph V911581
Mason
Ph 773 5711

Ph 949

IPM_ , _
tile daybo!&lt;n

Pomeroy

THIS SPACE

1 CONVENIENT MARKETS

Racme

.:.-=.

Ph 991 3N3

F

Third St

IN MEMORY of Gt&gt;O ge Schule
who poued away one- year ago
Jon 18 1971 The Engl&amp;s Fom

Phone.,.2151

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO

THE STORE WITH A HEART

1100 E Mo1n

oc1o-

The PubU.W the .....
abjlctiooal. the PM~!* will Ml be
~ror mcntban OMiooor-

to odlt ornloehey

MEIGS COUNTY BRANCH

MIDWAY MARKET
BOB'S MARKET

c..bja idvaace

WeAre Now
Tak111g New
Customers For

NOTICE

ROSEBERRY'S PENNZOIL

Racine

'"

bc:b word ovw lbe mh»mr 1$
wardl • • e.u .- ..a ,. dar
qlllor - - . .
wW bt -..,s at the 1 cloy

m w Moon Pomeroy 99l 9962
110 N 2nd Middleport 991 3411

PHONE 992 2156

Racine

1..2$

....WIIIm

V1ny1 &amp; Aluminum Sid ng Slorm
Windows and Insulation
Phone 949 2101 or 949 lhO
FREE ESTIMATES

WE FILL DOCTORs
PRESCRIPTIONS
992 2955

...

t dor

Com ple1e Auto mot ve Serv ce

Locust &amp; Beech Sfl
Middleport
Ph Wlttll

Let The Want Ads Turn Un)Danted Items Into Cash

~

........,.,.
....,.

THIS SPACE
FOR RENT

0 Friday Jan llll It'll

Mllldleport Oh1a

•s

Schoo of 9
a m and Chu ch
Se vces II om
SACRED HEART Rev Father
Paul 0 We on pasta
PPone
992 2825 Sa u day even ng Mass
7 30 Sunday Moss 8 and 10 a m
Confess on So u day 7 7 30 p m
CHR ST AN BAPTIST
On he
Rou e 7 bypass James E Keesee
pasta Sunday school 10 om
mo n ng wo sh p I a m even
ngsevce 7

Fairview
News Notes
By Mrs !Jerbert Roush
Mr and Mrs Russell
Roush Cln~y David and
Edward Mr and Mrs
Ronald Russell Michael and
Mandy were Sunday dinner
guests of Mr and Mts Dana
LeWis at Clifton
Michael Russell son of Mr
and Mrs Ronald Russell 18 a
medical patient at Veterans
Memorial Hospital
Mr and Mr!t Russell
Roush Mrs Gladys Shields
and Herbert RoUBh visited
Ott Boston at Veterans
Memorial 'Hospital
Mr and Mrs Bob Lawson
and Cathy Mr and Mrs
Edward Lawson and son
Eric Syracuse were Sunday
guests of Mr and Mrs
Olarles Lawson and Wilda
Funeral services were held
at the Ewing Funeral Hom!
Wednesday
for
Doy
Higginbottom a former
resident lntennent was in
Letart Falls cemetery

ATKINS ENDORSED
CINCINNATI (UPI)- The

Hamilton County Republic~~~&gt;
Party s nominating com
mlttee has endorsed fonner
CinciMati television newS"
man Tom Atkins to run
against incumbent Democrat
Thomas Luken for the Ohld
second district congresslooal
seat

.
leave

so

r

r~le

SEC 11 That secretar a
c erlca and or bookkeeping
record keep ng hou y em
ployees be employed at a
ma)(Jmum of 35 hours per
week
except
to
an
emerg~ncy that shal
ar se
sa d emergency of extra
hours o be approved by
Counc
\
SECT ON II hetolowng
are hereby declared as ega
hoi days tar he emp ovees of
the v llage of M ddleport
New Years Day Memoria
Day
ndepen~ence Day
t_abor Day
Thanksg v ng
uay Ch stmas Day
SEC IV That sed salar es
w 1 be n effect retroact veto
January 1 1978
SEC V
Each full time
employee of the v llage sha
be entlt ed to sick leave n the
amoun of one and onl! fourth
( 1 •) days per month and
Sha
be entlt eel to Bccrue
said s ck eave up to one
hUndred wenty (120) days
SEC v
Each tul ttme
employee of the VI lage
nc ud ng full t me naur y
rate emp oyee!i st)a 1 be
ent 1 ed dur ng each year
after he f rst vear to two
weeks vacation
excluding
legal hoi days w th pay
Em plovees with f tteen or
more years serv ce shal be
eflt I ed to three weeks
y~cat on w th pay each year
SEC V I Each employee
of the VIllage ent tied to
vecat on shall use
the
v•cat on me n the year of
entlt ement or sha be pa d
for any unused portion
vacat on at their preva I ng
wege rate at tne time of
payment If at the end of any
year any such employee has
an accrued and unused
vacet on time the Clerk shall
make payment to the em
p oyee for such unused tlmt
w th n th rty days (30 after
the end of the vacat on year
vacat on year shall mean
each 12 months period
tollow ng the first luI year of
employment
SEC V I
That I group
hosp tal and m ed ca in
suranct plan be prov ded lor
a I vmployees of the VII age

RACINE
PLANING MILL
INSULATION
SERVICE

of M dd epo t who e ect n
wrl lng o part c pate n the
same and that he prem urns
the efo
be pad by the
V age up o the amount o f
lhe prem um ~uo ed fo
he
presen contrac
SEC
X
That all em
p oyees des ring
a par
t c pa e n he p an sh !I f le
an e ect on w th he C erk
w h n ten days at er he
effect ve da e a
h s or
d nance
SEC X
That satar ed
employees who do no elec ed
to part c pate be pa d an
ex a $40 00 pe man h n
add t on to he p esen sa ary
schedule and those em
ployees paid on an hour y
bas s who do not e ect a
pa t c pate n the nsurance
pia be pa dan add tlonal 20c
per hour Any emp oyee may
at any me elect tow thdraw
from 1he p an and n such
e11en such e ect on for w th
drawa shall llkew se
be
t ed
n wr ng w th
he
C erk Any emp ovee who
elec s not to part c pate In the
pan may f e a subse~uent
elec on o par c pa e and f
acceptab e to the nsurance
company on a non ated
bass then such emp oyee
may become a part c pant n
the plan Upon pa clpat on
n he p an he add It on a
com pen sat on
sha I
be
cance l led
L kew se
any
employee who par c pates n
he pan may f lean e ect on
ow thdraw from he plan n
wh ch even h s wages or
sa ary as he case may be
sha I be ad usted as prov ded
r1 his paragraph
SEC X All 0 d nances n
confl c w th th s 0 dina nee
are hereby ret:~ea ed
SEC X I Th s 0 dina nee
sha 1 ake effect and be n
fo ce from and aile January
1 978
Passed the 9th day of
Janua y 978
At est

NEW COLEMAN elec.
u o es
down d ol ype .42 350 BTU
$275 bS 500 B U $37S Co
992 7034

Blown Insulation
CelluloSe Fiber
Blown lnlo Walls
and Attics
- Sovt Futl .. Monty-

SMALL fa m fo so e 0 down
owne f nonced Mon oe Co n
y W Vo Phone (304 772
3 102 0 304 772 3227

H

LAVENDER
CONSTRUCTION

($16

000)

Terms of Sa e Cash In
hand sublect to real estate
tnes
James J 1-roffltt
Shtrlff
Mlllt County

I ) 20 27 (2) 3 10 17 Sic

Pumps

Phono 991 3993

CASH FOR Junk Co s Fry&amp; s T uck
and Au o W ecke Se v c&amp;
Phone 7.42 208
a Pennzo I
Rutland 742 9575

Will PAY top dollo lo used shot
guns
fes psos swods
dagge a go ko s m n bkes
G avely s or who ho11e you
Open 12 7 pm F fe s 3d S
Rl 7 M ddlepo t next o
$peedqueen
Laund omo
992 7494

BURROUGHS SENSI MATIC oc
count ng moch ne Has been
unde se
e con ad and n
good cond on Con be seen a
The Do y Sen nel 11 Cou
5 Pome oy OH
HA'f' FOR sale $55 pe on Co n
fa soe S2pe bu Callofe 5
pm 985 4131 a 985 3537

HOOF HOLLOW Ho ses Buy sel
Ode or a n New and used
saddles Ruth Ree\les A bony
MEIGS COUNTY Humane Soc e y
Co el ne and adopt on Se ., ce
992 7680 742 3162
5427

m

RISING STAR t&lt;ennel Boo d ng
ndoo
and outdoor
uns
G oom ng al b eeds C eon
son to y foe: t es Chesh e
Phon&amp; (61.4 367 0292
AKC DOBERMAN P nche pup
pes 8 weeks old ed &amp; ust
Ped1g eed w th Chomp on
8 ood ns Also cer fed heal h
ce f cote $150 f m you
cho ce male a
feme e
6 4797 4500

a.

_____

Box34

NEW LISTING

2 year
old
3 bedroom
fu I
basement home
Has 2

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?
Let Pomeroy landmark
soften &amp; conddton your
water wtth Co-op water

softener Model UC SVI
Now Only •279.95

Tn-Siate Upholstery
Shop

SaveJOpct foSOpct
on heat ng cost
E Kper ence end
ful 'f nsured
Fr~e Est
Cal 6U 6479 or 992 J815
1 6 1mo

1163 1nc1 Ave Gallipolis
446 783:1-446 1833

Let us test vour water Free

Pomeroy t.andmarll

ALUMINUM SIDING
SOLID VINYL SIDING
SOFFIT&amp;CELINGS
GUTTERS &amp; DOWN
SPOUT

easr

step
Instructions

C

Bruce Teaford

FREE ESTIMATES

Storm
Wmdows &amp; Doors
Replacement
Wmdows
Atum mum
S1dmg Sof11lt
Gutters Awmngs

LARRY LAVENDER
Syracuse Ohto
Ph 992 3993

EXPERIENCED
Radiator~
Service
11'1:11!~
J he ..~ I
or t.ti~~Aea
udr;

........ 0

MEIGS PLAZA

c...

m

197 JEEPSTER CO/&gt;IANDO V 6
engine 4 wheel d 11e au o
ons
new exhaus sys em
Con be seen a Sao 5 23.4 E
Mo n St Pome oy tom 9 o 5

pm
1975 GRANADA 2 d 11 nyl oof
AM FM ed n ng seo a Good
cond on must sell 992 2763

970

CHEVY

KIMBLE ORGAN
'l manua l
keyboo ds w th full octo e foo
pedo s
Ge old
Powel
2622 afte pm

m

s

LEAVING TOWN

sal

ONE PAIR of new ce sko es
Wh e g Is about s ze 5
992 1529

FOR SAlE

SAW Mill SLABS
$500
SPECIAL CAR BARGAINS
969
Olds Delta 88 w h air n ce
$3600 967 Chev Cop ca 307
tu bo
onsm ss on
rnog
whee' CB od o N ce $3750
Call742 3010
972 CHEVY IMPALA good n
t&amp; a t res OI"Jd body mota
needs wo k reosonobl&amp; p ce
John Von Meter 992 7288

Br•nd fe

POMEROY
FUREST PRODUCTS
992 5965
Ba1fey Run Road
Pomeroy 0

MAIN
POMEROY 0

NEW Ll:t ,.,.. - une or
the nicest homes ava lab e
near Middleport J Bdrms

2 bafll$

BRADFORD A.u t on,.e
Com
p e e Se 11 e Phone 949 2487
o 949 2000 Ro ne Oho C
B adfo d
HOMES TES fo so e I oc e and
up M dd epo
nea Ru and
Co 992 748 1
NEW 3 bod oom house 2 baths
all e ec 1 ac e M dd epo
c ose o Ru and Phone 991
748

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
Sweepe a ooste s
ons all
smoll appl on es lawn mowe
ex o S a e H ghwor Go age
on Route
Phone (614 995

BATHROOMS AND K che
e node ed e om
e pun
bng
ope y ad go eo
mo n anon e
3 yea s o~~:
pe en e 992 3685

3825

SAVE ON
CARPETING

COUNTRY MOBILI Hom&amp; Pork
Route 33 no h of Pomeroy
La gelots Coll992 7•79
2 BEDROOM 12x60 Mob e Hom•
n Syracuse Comle ely fu n sh
ed storage bldg W II ent o
const uct on wo k• o couple
w th child $1 SO pe month Co
992 2897

12 and 15 f1 width Carpet
rubber back

PHONE V92 6333
OHI&lt;e Hours 9 A M to
PM

Reg S6 95 not tnstalled

Close
Thursdays
Saturdays at nQQn

4.88 SO YD

1

anc

NEW

LISTING
3
2 baths din n~
area kitchen has bu t n

1 ac e
many
other
feahtres never I ved n for
$45 000 00

ga age fnmlly room New

WOOD

BURNING

oven and range

$31 900 00
MODERN RANCH -

on

an

ac e lot S-41 000 00 Located

on the Crow Sub dlv slon
near Five Points

NEW LISTING - 2 year
Fuqua doub e w de

2

mobile home 24 x56 with
porch n eKce ent condlt on
nclud ng a I "furn ture &amp;
app lances Lo ca ted on
corner ot 00 x200 In the

TWO STORY - We I kepi
formal d nlng 3 Bd ms
large bath large utility

Arbaugh

ca petlng

Only

Will buy th s

nice two .story home 3
Bdrms 1 2 baths n good
shape ready to move Into

$12

soo 00 - Will buy this

beautiful older home n
Pomeroy
or glnal
woodwork must be seen
3 Bdrms

HOWERY
AND MARTIN Ex
o a ng
1ept c sy1 &amp;ms
do e
bo khoe dump uck
m&amp;stone g ovel
b o klop
pa ng Rt 143 Phone (61.4)
698 7331

od

years old
3 Bdrms
attached gatage
good
subd v slon rea ly n ce
S2S 900 00

$19 500 00
SIJ 900 00 -

EXCAVATING doze
backhoe
o d d he Cha es R Ha
eld
Bo ~ Hot~ Se v ce
Ru and 01\ o Phone 742 2000

car

one

total e ectric home

Flrep ace 5 y~r o d ranch
type home J Bdrms
modern k tchen 2 car
gara!iJe approx
carpet ng
&amp;

IN THE COUNTRY

5434

GeorgeS Hobstetter Jr
Broker
101 l Sycamore St
Pomeroy Ohto

bed oom 1

story
3 AND " RM furnished ond un
fu n shed opts Phon• 992

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

Candy Stripe
Rubber Bock
Regulor 16 95
S.ve$488Sq Yd

wafl designs 2 ca garage

garage
STARCRAF'T FALL Sole M n
motors 20 and 22 T aVe
Talers 18 S $3 799 25 7
Bunkhouse $4 875 Fo d down
$1 700 up We sell se 11 ce and
quality Open Sundays Camp
Conley S af'c:roft Sales Rt 62
N of P Pleasant

arge tam y room

w lh WBFP split enlry
w th nice beamed ceiling &amp;

1,

storag@

buildings
remode lng
started ONLY 561!00 00
CALL
FOR
MORE
INFORMATION PHOTO
LISTING HELPS SELL
PROPERTY
HENRY E CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK KATHY &amp; LEONA
CLELAND
ASSOCI ,li-TES
"22259 991-4191 991-2511

•

'"

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Realtor Assoctates

AI 972 OLDS Del a 88 4d
HI PS PB AC AMFM
ado new t es Co n ex
cellen cand on W II cons de
smo e (:(1 as ode n Call
5786 or
l529

0

Middleport Ohio
11 9tfc

J bedroom

Sue P Murphy
Helen L Teaford

step

Located In

bock ,ome Bath natura
gas furnace c ty and
ac e S20 000

Phone 992 1181

by

11££ HARIMARE

apa tm ents fo $9 600
t
has a 1 bedroom apartment
and bath up plus a stud o
down now
ented You
better see th s one

Jack W Carsey Mgr

SALES AND SERVICE
1 9 li e

8 1 mo

2

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

8A M lo4 30PM

Cellulosic !woodf1berl
Thermal lnsul~t1on

RUTLAND
&lt; bedrooms
battl f eplace all c ty
ut lit es 2 car ca po t and
one t h rd acre lot s 4 000
SYRACUSE - We have 4

ROUTE 33 -

300 Main St
Pomeroy Ohio
PomeroY 992 6282
or 992 6263

JIM KEESEE

baths n ce d n ng room
elect c baseboard hea
carport w 1h ut I ty and 2
acres S36 500

POMEROY

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

Blown Insulation

BUSINESS CORNER - 01
Route
124
Bus ness
bu d ng w th J bedroom 2
bath home Has a 2 car
garage All for $351000

CARTER

J&amp;L

-upholsteryProlesstonll Service 39
experience
Free
estimates
pickup
&amp;
delivery
service
Resident al &amp; Commercial

Phone 992 3325

Chester Oh•a
10 30 c

,__

yrs

216 E Second Street
Pomeroy Ohio 45769

lha II&lt; jlnolon
Mot Tile lm ttiOrs

Jack's Seotic
Tank Service

Q l!

VIRGIL B TEAFORD SR

Carpet &amp;UphOlStery
Phone M1ke Youna

At
992 2206 or 992 1630

Residential
and
commerclll
Call for
estimate 24 hour service
Anvday anyhme
Phone 985 3806

houses to sel he e Th s 9
room brick has city water
natural gas elect c and
extra ot for just $5 500

(6 14) 698 3290

AKC REGISTERED pek ngese pup
p es Phone (304) 882 2683

II

..... 3 , _, 0

Furnaces
Heat
&amp; Auto Controls

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

992 7608

TEAFORD[H

Young's
Carpetmg

12 8 1 mo

Closed Jan 10
Tol 8111 1978

~6

Super101
Stu111 Eltract10n

PHONE
742-2570

Syr.cust URIO
Frtt Estlm•t•s

on y

12 30 1 m

GA5-0IL- COAL

m nw

m

SHERIFFS SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
IN THE COMMON PLIAS
COURT MEIGS COUNTY
OHIO
Case No 16612
Belpre First Ftdtnl Savings
&amp; Loan AUOC Plaintiff
VI
Robert D
Hensley and
Sharon L
tt•nsley et •I
Dtlendants
In pursuance of an OROER
OF SALE n the &amp;bO'Ve en
tl'led action I wll offer for
sale at publ c auction at the
front steps of the Court House
In Pomeroy Meigs County
01:110 on SaturdaY. February
18 1971 at 10 15 o ctocl\ AM
the follow ng descr bed rea
estates tuate In the TownshiP
of 0 lve County of Meigs
Slate of Ohio o w t
Being a portion of Lot No
25 ot George P Mccune s
Second Addition to the
v tage of Tuppers Pia ns es
the same Is recorded In the
Record of Platts of Tawns
and v llages In vo ume 3
Page
29
descr bed
as
fol ows
Beg nnlng at the Northwest
corner ot said Lot No 25 at a
ttekt thence East following
the North line of sa d Lot No
25 a distance of 148 5 feet to a
stake
thence South and
para I e w th the west lne of
Lot No 25 1 d atance of 10 5
feet to the south I ne of sa d
Lot No 25 at e stake thence
West following th&amp; south line
of Lot No 25 a distance of
Ul 5 feet to 1 stake on the
west line of Lot No 25 thence
north following th• west line
of Lot No 25 a distance of
1•1 5 teet to the place of
beglnnlnv belnv the west
ua 5 teet of Lot No 25
Reference Vol 20.4 page
A85
Me gs countv Deed
Records
cannot be sold tor tess than
two thtrdt or tht appra ted
value Property appraised at
Sixteen tnousand do Iars

Bolters

and St Rt

oppo n men

"-

Repairing

Antiques Bought &amp; Sold
Dtclr. Seyl•r
Phone 997 2798
100 kerr 51
Pomeroy Ohio

OHIO
HEATING SERVICE
REPAIR &amp; SERVICE

Pomeroy Ohio

Gene Grate
Clerk

M L Ke y
Pres dent of Counc 1
13 20 2tc

;IITTUUIIIIIIKS

lARRY LAVENDER

Corner Union Ave

B &amp; S MOB LE HOMES P Plea
sont W Va bes de Heck s
1973 B oodmo e 14 K 6.4 2
bed oom
973 Do on 14 )( 60 2 bed oom
972 V c o on 4 67 3 bed oom
2 both
972 Co11en y 2 K 65 3 bed oom
969 S a esmon
2 x 60 2
bed oom

Refinishing

Ph !12J!tJ

OLD FURNITURE ce boxes b ar.s
beds on beds etc complete
households W te M 0 Mille
R 4 Pame oy Oho o c.oll

696 1072 $6 BOO

Antiquts &amp; Modern
Upholsterinst Service
Cu1tom
Proftsslonll

II!IDOWS
AlUM IliUM
SIDIIK-SOFFITT

JOHNIE'S BEAUTY
SALON

WOOO
Poles max
d omete 0 on Ia gest end $8
pe on 8undled slob $6 pe
on Delve ed to Oh o Pallet
Co R 2 Pome oy 992 2689

Wood Metol Plostlcs

Rti'UCti!NT

NOTICE

FORD F 250 Custom 7 50 I(
UOOt es wnch Ony 4000
m Heode s CB Tope deck
Ove $3 000 n ext os Se ous
eels ony ofe
12 noon

ole

S~ac.,.,Ohlo

other brands

-

We Sir p P•lnt Varnishes

floaocloJAIIIIIIIIa
-lolOiiiiiUIIi&lt;t
!lOIII
IIINDOWSIDOOWS

1 8 1 mQ

NO ITEM TOO La ge o too small
WI buy 1 p ece o complete
household New used o on
ques MotnsFun ue 20N
2nd St
M ddlepo t Phone
9916370

CHlMICALS

llln

WOOD AND WOOL FIBER

service department 1nd

Joek W Carsey Mgr
PhonU91-218T

FREE ESTIMATES

P!ACINE 0

99l 3978

W l BABVS T N my home ony
age Phon&amp; 992 6 80

We hiYt enl1rgtd our

Pomeruy Landmark

__J

992 258

will servlee Hotpolnt oncl

Be
orda ned by the
Counc 1 of the v ll&amp;ge of
Middleport as fo lows
Sec I Tt1 at the follow ng
w~ge sea e s hereby adopted
tor employees of the v 1 age
of M ddleport
"Chief of Po ce $731 oo per
month
Regular Patrolman
5 yeers or more serv ce
S3 30 per hou
... year to 5 years servo ce
S.t 15 per hour
Less than
year service
S3 00 per hour
Ell:tra Pol ce S2 95 per~ou
s reet Emp oyees
5 years of mo e se vice
SJ 13 per hOur
1yea to5yeassevce
$2 99 per hour
Less than 1 year se v ce
$2 85 per hour
Pool &amp; Park D ec or
s•o.o~ 25 pe month
L teguards $1
per hour
Sec e ary to Mayo $314 00
per mon 1'1
Extra C er ca Help $2 97
per hour
c erk Cemetery
ustees
S90 00 per month
Va unteer F rem en $21 40
per year
Counc men elec ed beta e
1978 SAI)O per meet ng 24)
Counc lmen e ected for
1978 $8 00 per meet ng 24)
Preslden of Coone s o 00
per meet ng (2.4)
Boa d of Publ c Affa rs
U 00 per meeting 2}
Clerk Board of Pub c
Affa rs $496 00 pe month
D spfttcher $100 00 per
month
Clerk We er Depltrtment
S2 84 per hOur
Wate
&amp;
Sewage
Super n endent $3 70 per
hovr
(
1 t mes over 40 hours
S~ 55 per hour
Wate
8i Sewage Ass t
Super n endent $3 35 per
hour
Meter Reader S3 13 per
hour
Wate
&amp; Sewage Dept
Extra He p
5 yean or mo e se vice
S3 13 per hour
1 year to !i years )e v ce
$2 99 per hour
Less than
year se v ce
$2 85 per hour
Meehan c S3 48 per hour
Cemetery
5 years or mo e service
$3 13 per hOur
1 yea to 5 yea s service
$2 99 per hOur
Less than
year u vice
$2 85 r,er hour
Re ef 0 spatche $257 per
hour
Sw m m ng lnstruc or $3 00
per hour
custod an
SAO 50
per
monm h
AI e)(fra hours tor hourtv
emp oyees w 11 be at the

hourly

BUS NESS OPPORTUN TY Own
you
own bus ness
a eo
d s bu o fa Rand McNally
Mops No se ng se 11 ce p e
es obi shed oc coun s
n
11es men s SZ500 o S 'l 500
secu e by nven o y and &amp;qu p
ment W e ndude nome ad
d ess
e ephone and 3
efe ences
o
Pe sonnel
N A M 0
3928 Man o
Rood B m nghom Ala 35213
oil f ee 800 633 844

numbe

A TTEN T ON MARE Own&amp; s
AQHA s ud Sl!l 11 ce A oduc ng
a Sou he nOho Co oko so
e sonof0 9e Beed o col
o con fo mo on ond d spoli
on Phol)e 698 82-4 e e
gs
o w e fo b eedng con oct
8. le Echo Quo e Ho ses
402:lS SR 692 flame oy Oh o
A5769

APPUANCE
SERVICE

.

.ORO NANCE Nu 106178
Aft Ord ntnce to utablish
Vlll•ge Jobs and Wage Rates
•ttd
establisnJng
legal
hollday1 vautlans and sick

Q

Pl~: ,o.r~ ~.G.;:n·N~':' ~hon~l__ B_ u_s__i_n_e_s_s_ S_e_rv
_ z_·c_e_s_
-llal-·

ad~lt

on Tuppers

Pia ns Oh o known as the

Ralph Brooks property
This Is a good buy at
$21 000 00
NEW

LISTING

3

bedroom
kitchen with
dining area living room

balh with shower

full

-·····
•

~

$32 000
We have need of ushngs

all

types

homes

land

com mercia I etc

Cheryl Lomloy
Associate

Home Phone 7421003
Hilton Wolle Sr
Associate

Homo Phone 949 1519

Goad

selection all on sele

lnstolled wlltl podding no
tlC1r• to pay

Call742 1211
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSU TAN

RUTLAND
FURt41TURE
742 2211

Rulloncl

Convenient Shoppmg Hours

"••
•••

,
•

MON., TUES., WED.
8100 TIL 5:00
THURSDAY 8 TIL NOON

basement with garage
O&lt;:ated on two acres of land

lust outs de the limits of
Tuppe 1 Plains Ohio on
roule 7 Prl&lt;ed to go fast at

lO rolls of carpet In stock

FRIDAY TIL 5

••
••

.•
:

e

CLOSE SATURDAY
AT 5 PM

...

~

RUTLAND FURNITURE
1422l11

ARNOLD GRATE

RUTLAND

•

:

e

,•••••••• .............., •••• •••J

�'

8-The~~Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Fridav, Jan. 20, 1978

~The DaUv Sentinel. Middleoort-Pomeroy. 0 ., Friday, Jan. 20, 1978

- In 1989, Richard Milhous
lflson was inaugurated as the

TAKE A LOOK 1(1' HER
PICTURE, TAA~.

'u'•4 ~-~I'-~'J::

!71" president of the

e'~I ~PR~ETTY CUTE, HI ~~~::!~~~! i~~~:~

States. He was inaugurated
for a second tenn on this date
in 1973. ·

United

NOTICE OF ,.
APPOINTMENT

Cue No . n2

Es.t1te or Slmuel 0 . Stout.

Deceased.

Not ice is hereDy given that

Betty Mar ie Stout. of Route- 2,
Albany, Oh io , has bun duty
Adm lnlst ratr iJ&amp;: of

appointe~
th~ Estete

of samuel

o. Stout ,

dece ased , late of Me i gs
countv . Ohio.
Cred itors are reQ u ired to
file tne·i r clbl m s with sa id
f i duciary
w i th in
three

monthS .

Dated this 30th
De ce mber 197"7 .

day

of

Mann i ng 0 . Wellster
Judge

Astro roof; fuel ·lnledlon eng. loaded .

(1 )

LINCOLN CONTINENTAL.. ........... ~~'95

PLeAl&gt;IO ! HO !U:!!-INE,.
. DOW"! HERE, OLD SON ..
'&gt;'OU'RI! L00Ki"'EI AT A
MAN IIIH09E SOL&amp; AM·

A Or ., new radial tires. Loaded .

1973 PONTIAC CATALINA~ .................'1295

IITIOI&gt;J 15 SPeeDY

RETIRI!MEIIIT!

2 Dr . H.T ., till ~nee!, AM r•dlo &amp; tape.

1973 PLYMOUTH DUSTER ................. '1595
Auto., P.S.

1968 CAMAR0 ............................... '495
v.a. 3 st&gt;d.

.

1966 CHEVELLE.. .............. :........ .....'395
~

cyl. , auto., 2 dr .

·

\969 AM: REBEL WGN ........... ~........ '395
\ulo .

.

1963 DODGE ...... .~ ......... ,.... ........ '195

,-TRUCKS-.
1971 CHEV. % TON PU ................... '1295
Auto., P.S .. p. B.

1970 CHEV. % TON PU ................... '995
6 cyl., • spd.

1973 MAZDA PICKU~...................... '1895
4 cyl., 4 sp.

..
••

UTILE 01\PHAN ANNIE

See Roger Riebel
667-3463
1 mile north.
Tuppers Plains, Ohio
•

St. Rt. 7

•

~/Sff THA1'
lliESE ARE

LEAPIN' U1P,RDs! WHAT

DYNP..,ITE '" THE "ABANDONED

MISS ~OT A OHE!

P1ER '?

r--../

just anyone with
this
ffiiSSIOn,

Mr.
W11\let!

1----

I can't drive 40ur
cqr down to BalmL!
Beach, Mr. Show!

I have~

I'll leave

qaraqeto
loo~ after.

Air, AM-FM, V. root, loW

it for service!

mileage .

Meanwhile.
reconsider 1

'4795

Full

power ,

1977 CADILLAC
DEVIUE CPE.
Full power, a1r, cru1se.

T+T wheel, AM. FM &amp;
tape, landau
m i les .

air ,

low

mileage, light blue.

1

I

I

POMEROY, 0.

I
II

PH. 992·2176
lnler111lional
Hamster
New Idea

'I

L~!:~-----J·

ou'll be
WITH

TEXACO
HEATING OIL

Vinyl root. tull power. air,
stereo.

YOUR VERY LIFE MAY BE IN

DANGER. ... 50 PROCEED
SLOWLY .... AND

9, 200

Fuel Chief

75 Cadillac cpe.
DEIIIUE .

HEATING OIL

Full power. factory ·a ir,
lea the r seats, T&amp; T wheel,
st ereo. 32,000 m iles.

CALL ART HARTLEY JR.

T+ T

Fu l l power &amp; air,
wheel , AM-FM . &amp;
sharp.

tape-,

1975 ROYALE CPE.
white vinyl
v inyl trim .

DISTRIBUTED BY

white

•

4 DR. ·
roof .
Was $2795

V iny l

air .

'1295

NOW •2495

roof ,

•3995

72 .OLDS 88
ROYAL
4 Dr .,

FOR FURTHER DETAILS

LoW mileage, sharp car ,
~lr, AM· FM &amp; tape, blue.

'7500

. 73 CADILlAC
COUPE DEVIUE

WINNIE

roof .

YOUR CHOICE 1976
DEVILLE CPE. or SEDAN

'6295

BUT Ya.J DON'1' KNOW

II Equipment Co. II

ransom and parachuting over
Colorado.

Total For Ant i Rece n ton
Tot11 For General
Ass •st ance
2,000.00
Governmrntat
Total For Ftderal
Ser'lll lces
66 ,720.00
A~PROPR:IATION
Reven !Je Shar i ng and
SECURITY OF PERSONS
ORDINANCE
Anti- Recess i on
•
AND PROPERTY
M'IOO\.EPORT
10 ,000 00
Ass i stance
POLICE OEPARTMENT
TOTAL All
A RESOLUTION to make PersonatServ lces
H ,SDOOO
APPROPRIAT IO NS
appropr.at ions tor Current Ot her
70,748 .00
5A8 ,01S .OO
EKprnHS and othe r E){ · Total For Police
pend itures o f The Vi) tage of
Depar t ment
SS,7A8 .00
Secllon 11. And the V l rf'age
M lddtepoft , State of Ohio .
FIRE DEPARTMENT
Cler k i s hereby authorized to
during the fiscal year end ing Personal Services
9•2.00
draw his warrant $ on the
December :n , Jq78.
Other
$,080.00
V H taoe
Treasurer
for
Section
1 • B E ~ IT Total F or Fire ·
paymentl fro m any ot the
RESOLVED b,- the Council
Depertment
6,072.00
appr-opr i ation~
toregolng
lor the V illage of M iddleport. Total For Security ot
upon rece iv ing proper cer
State of Ohio , Thill , t o prov idePersons and Property
rlttc.ates
and
vou chers
for the cur rent e~t.penses and
61 . 270 .00
thtre l or , approve&lt;l by the
o lher e)t pend itureso fthesa l d
LEI SURE. TIME
board or offi~ers authoriled
Vdlage of M idd le-port during
ACTIVITIES
by law to approve the same .
the f i scal
year ending
PARKS AND
or an ord inance or resolutiOn
D ecem ber Jl , 1978 , the
PLAYGROUNDS
0 1 counCil to m au the eK
following sums be an d th ey · Personal Serv ices
o~ , SOO . OO
penditures ; prov ided tnat no
.are her eDy set aside and Other
11 ,650.00
warrants. shalt be drawn or
eppropriated as follows . viz : Total For P&amp;r"ks and
pa id •for uln tes or wages
Sec tion 1. Thai th ere be
Playgrounds
16, 150.00
ex c ept to persons ~n,ploy~d
epprop rial ed
f rom
the Tot al For Leisure T l me
by author it y of and In ec
GENERAL FUND :
Activities
16,150.00
co rdan ce w ith tllw or or
GENERAL
COMMUNITY
d l nan c e . P rovided f ur th er
GOVERNMENTAL
ENVI RONMEN T ·
that the approprlatlo ns for
SERVICES
PLANNING
contingenc le!i can only be
MAYOR
COMMISSION
expend ed upon appeal o f two
Personal Serv ices
2 500.00
Ot her
500.00
th ird s '.late o t Council for
Other
S.soo.oo Tot al For Planning
item$ of ex pense con.s tifu t lng
Tot at For Mayor
8,300 .00
Com minion
500.00
a l egal ob liga t ion llgl'llnst the
CLERK Tot al For Communttv
v i llage . and t or purposes
CLERK"· TREA SU RER
Environment
SOO.OO
other th an t tiose covered by
Personal Ser vices
2. 500 .00
STREET LIGHTING
other
specifi c
ap ·
t he
Ot her .
2,000 .00 Other
12,QOO.OO
propr ia t iorn heretn made .
TOtal For Clerk ·
Tot al F or Street
Sec t ion 18 . Th 1S resotvllon
Clerk .Treas urer
4,500 .00
Liohtl no
12.000.00
sha ll t ak e e ff ect a! the
SOLICITOR •
Tot al For Transportation
ea rlies t period allowed by
LEGAL ADVISOR
Facil i ties
12,000 .00
taw .
Personal Servi c es
2,000 .00
Grand Total
Total For Solic i tor GENER A L FUND
Passed Jan . 9, 1978
Legal Adv isor
2.000.00
Appropr ia t ion
156,6-40.00
Attest : Gene Gra te
COUNCIL
ST . MAINTENANCE
Clerk ot Council
_.Per son al Serv ic e~
1.008 .00
FUND
Total For C.o ~n c i l
1.008 .00
P ersona! Ser vtct!s · 10.000.00
CE RTIFICATE
BUILDINGS AND MISC .
Oth er
53, 100.00
Sec tion 5705 .39, R .C . - " No
Other
50,912.00
Total For Street
approprl&amp;tlon m ens ure Sh811
Total For Bu ildings
Maintenanc e and
b ecome eff ec l ive un til !here
and Misc .
50 ,912 .00
Constructi on
63, 100.00
Is f i led wlth the 8P,Proprlatlng
Tota l For Stree t
authority bwo th e county
Construction ,
au ditor a certl t lcate thaT th e
M a intenance and
total appropria t ions f rom
R epal r Fun d
63,100.00
each
fu nd, taken tooeth er
PUBLIC HEALTH
w i th a ll other ou t sli'ndt ng
SERVICES
appropr i~ t lons. do not e~tcced
CEMETERY OPERATION
such of li t l t' t es ti ma t e or
AND MAtNTENANCE
am en ded oft icle. t es t im a te.
Personal ServiCes
7, 780 .00
Wh en the 11pproprlol'finn does
Othe r
J.86S.OO . n o·t e~t.ceed suc h ofllcial
TOt al For Ce metery
estimate , th e cou n ty auct11or
Opera ti on and
Sh a ll give such certit i ce te
M ain tenance
11 ,6A5 .00
forthwllh upon rece i v i ng
Total For Ce m et ery
trom
the
appropriat i ng
Fund
11 ,6AS .OO
authority a ce rtified copy of
AOMINISTRATION the appropr lol'lion Meas ur e."'
WATE .R
Personal Servi ce
24 ,600 .00
Th e Stat e Of Oh iO Meigs
Deb t Servi ce
36, 570 .00
Count·y , ss ,
Other
26, 430 .00
Tot a l For Administra tion
t , Gene Gra te, Clerk ot ·th e
- wat er
81 ,600 .00
V illa ge of Mldd leporl , Oh io In
To t a l For Wa te r
sa id Cou nty , and in whos e
( Reven ue) Fund
87 ,600 .00
custody the Files . Jo urna ls
SEWER CONSTRUCTION
and Re cor ds a r e requ ired by
Cap ital Outlay
125. 000 .00
the La w s of the Stat e of Oh io
Tota l For Sewage
125,000 .00
to be k ep t. do her eby ·ce:rt lt y
ADMINISTRAT I ON
that the foreg oi ng Ann ual
- SEWAGE
Appropriation R eso l u·tion Is
Per son a I Serv Ices
19 ,500.00
tok en Stnd co p ied from th e
Deb t Service
24,360.00
or ig inal Re sol u t ion now on
Ot her
28,930.00
t i le Wllh sa id V i llage , that th e
To tal For
for egoi ng Resol u tio n ha s
Adminis tr ation been · com par ed b y m e with
Sewage
12,790 .00
the ~ai d or ig in a l and t ha t th e
Total For Se wer
same is a tru e and co rr ec t
( Re\len ue) F und 197,7 90 .00
copy th ereof .
Sec t ion 12. Tt1et there be
Witness my si~;~natu r e , tt1 1s
approp r iated
from
the
Sth day ot Janua r y 19 76 .
R E LI EF
P OLI CE MAN 'S
AND PENSION F UND
Gen e Gr &lt;l!e
OtMr
1,500.00
Clerk of the V(ltage
To tal For Policeman 's
ol Mid d leport
Rel ief and P ension
,.
M ei gs Co unty , Oh io
1.500 .00
F und
Sec t ion 13. That there be
ORDINANCE NO . 10'0·11
ANNUAL

AT 992-2145

CUT. CRUISER

' C'AREFUL,'1\Ji\!;f()tJI&lt;E ONlO
TJOE ll?AILOF CJUMETH!N/3'...

r---------,
I MEms I

In 1972, ap airline hijacker
was captured .with Air Force
aid afler collecting $50,000

FLA&lt;i "· FOREIGH!

1976 GRAND PRIX

I wouldn't entrust

Mann in!i D . Webster
Jvdge
Co v rt of Common Pleas,
Probate Division
{I) 6, 13, 20. 3t c

HEY! LOOK, SANOY! EASif'l' IN
TO THAT ~RK PI~R ... A DORTY
OlD TRAMP GTfAMER ... AND TH'

GOES? KANSK 15 PlA'IIH ' WITH

DELIVERED AT ONCE·--

NOTICe OF
APPOINTMENT .
Cue No. 22286
Estate of H1rry S. Moore ,
Deceased .
Notice is hereby given tha t
Frank W. Porter, Jr .. of
Route 3, Bo:. 36A , Racine ,
Ohio, has been dulv appoJnted
EKecutor of th e Estate of
Harrv s. Moore, deceased ,
tate o f Me igs Countv , Ohio .
Credi tors ore reQuired to
file t he ir c t'a l ms with said
f i duciary
w i thin
three
months .
Dated this 30th day of
Dec ember 1977.

I
II-

RIEBEL'S USED CARS

6. 13, 20. Jtc

SHERIFF ' S SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
IN THE COMMO N PLEA$
COURT , MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO
CASE NO. 16SS1
The Athens County S•vints &amp;
LOin Co .. Pl1 inliff vs. Elden
E . SLICk Ud Cand ice M.
SliCk, Oefendlftts
In pursUan ce to an OROER
OF SA\..E in the above en
ti11ed action , 1 w ili offer fo r
sale at publ ic av.ct i on, at the
front steps of the Co urt House
in Pomeroy, Oh io , Meigs
County on Sa turda y , the 18th,
day of February . 1978, at
10 :00 o ' clock a. m . the
fOllow i ng descr i bed rea l
estate . slt uate in the coun ty
of M eigs and State of Oh io. to
wit :
Situated i n t he Vllla,gt of
Sy racus e, County ot Meigs ,
and State of Oh i o and
describ ed as fol lows :
Be ing 35 feet off of the west
side of L ot No . 77 in said
Village of Syracuse, in the
County of Meigs, and · State of
Oh io.
I
Property appra is ed a t
SJOOO . and cannot be sold f.or
less than t wo -thirds of the
appra ised va lue.
Term s of Sa te : Cash in
hand , subiec t to r ea l es ta te
taxes .
• 1
J1mes J. Proltltt
Sheri ff
] Meigs county , Oh i o
(l) 20, 27 C21 3, 10. 17 , 5tc

City Ice &amp; Fuel Co.
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

ASH ST.

1974 CUJ, SUP. CPE.

'2395

Air, A'jj.",...\.0'• blue,

black

v~

73 PONTIAC
CATALINA 2 DR.

...

72 CHEVY IMPAlA ·
HT CPE.
was S1495

Air .

Other

2.500.00

D eposi
Tota
l Fort Fund
Meter
Total For Meter
O ep~;~si l Fund

2,500 .00

&gt;Jt•

75 PINTO
WAGON

.r.:::-:l r.:
.......: . . I

TM!RE'$ BEEN 'SoltiiE:
SOR'r' of Mf$"'"A'C~ .,. seeMS YouR
C:OMPU'r'!ll

ENflOLLtD
GOMP&amp;ti'E~

lt.l R

Sootc c:L.c,l• .

-

•••

The Almanac
Joseph Holfml!rt was 1JorJi::
Unlled Presslnleraatlonal
Jan . ~. -1876.
:
Today is Friday, Jan. 20,
American actress Patricia•
the 20th day of 1977 with 345 to Neal was born 52 years ago:
follow .
today.
:
The
moon
is
approaching
On
tllis
day
ln
history:
~:
Oswald Jacoby and .Alan Sontag
its full phase.
In 1892, the first officially:
The morning stars are recognized basketball gam.,.
Mercury, Vem.., Mars and was· played at a YMCA~
drops
the
deuce.
What
Saturn,
tralnlng Sl!h&lt;)olln Springfield,:
NORTH
should
West
lead
at
trick
'The
evening
star
is
Jupiter.
Mass.
The · game was~
• 5
two ?
Th
i
.,Jl09 7
He should lead one of his
ose born on this date are
nvented by Dr . James:
• J98 43
low diamonds.
under the sign of Capricorn. Nalsmlth.
•~
&lt;fo A I0 5
There is a common sense .
Polish-American
planlst
.
•
WEST
EAST
simple convention in this•
·
:
AQ73
• K864
situation.
'ftj'}I)N} fill} j'jl T'HATICRAMBLED WORD GAME :
·· 4
.,653
Wh~n
your.
partner
leads
~~~~.,
b\IHenriAmoldandBobloe :
+AK 76
the kmg agamst a suit con- Unscramble these four Jumbles,
-· "'
.KJ8 3
.Q 9742
~ract
an~
you
have
two
cards
one
latter
to
each
square,
to
form
..
. SOUTH
tn the su1t you automatically lourontlnary words
• J 10 9 2
., AKQ82
one unless it
Q lO 5
The deuce cannot be the
higher of the two cards.
V '\J
Hence ~t is either a singleK A...
"-. _.A
, .,11!1~~~""-~'- .... ,...,..,...,..
le: Ea s t · West, ton; or 1t ~haws queen-deuce
or queen and two small
e r : outh. Opfni
The low lead cannot hurt
King of diamonds . .
with any of those possibililies.
·

speed
Was $1995
4

·BRIDGE

.6

I o· RFl D '

I

I.

North East

Doub le

4•

Double Pass

BARNEY

/llTER!.'

West

South

••
Pass

Pass
Pass Pass ·

~®9~

~PRUMBEI

IUPGLEN I.

v 'I

-

Georg.e 's
Demo .,
full
power, factory. air, stereo,
6,000 miles.
NOW

·

•.

,.

'1295

Power&amp;ali.

Was 12195

Wassm5

73 CUTLASS
4 DR.
"
Ail-. .:

•
'

roof,

'3295

73 CAPRICE

76 Cadillac
Deville Cpe.

76 CHEVY CAMARO

76 VW KOMBI WAGON
Root vent, and llgnt, seaT
converts Into bed. AM-FM
14,000 miles. Shar p .

D . brown &amp; tan roof, full
• power, air, leather Interior,

AM-FM stereo tape. new
· tires. 48,000 miles.
Priced to move out

'5495
or

12

H&amp;R F ires tone

10

' BIII 's Body Shop

6

High Indi vidual Game B i ll Qu illen a nd Ed Voss 223,
Ed Voss 2 18, John Tyree 217 .

High Serfes - Ed Voss 643.
John fyree 557, Bill Radf ord

546.
Team Hlgh Came an d
Series - Eag les Club 944 and

2593.

Early Wednesday Mixed
January 11 , 19711

Zldes Sport Shop
Young 's Sup . Mk t.
Sm it h Nelson Ml r. Co .

Pis
18
18
II

Ten th ·Framers
9
Eagle s Club
8
N el son Drug Co.
High Ind . Game Bi ll
Port er 1'9 2, Bob Couch 187,
Larry pugan. l a4, Men ; Be tt y
Smith 191. Lpls Hawley 1~9 .
Ca r o ,yn
Bachner
l BO ,
Wom en .
High Ser ies - M en : A. L.
f-'rielps Jr . 530, Larry Dugan
515, Bob Co u ch 505. W omen :
Betty Sm i t h 573, Pa t Carson
491 , Loi s Hawley 473.
Tea m Hig h Game - Ten th
Framer s 676.
.
Te~m High Seri es ....,.... N elson
Dru g Co. 192.4.

a

*******.****'

~

ON THESE

MID-W. IN. TE~
·

V-8, automatic, P .S., low

mileage. Sharp.

'4495

OFF ON
4 DR. LTD'S

i·

0

:;.-_;..._

_;~;....;;_...,,.,...":'":':"-:":":::::---j

Quad.tape st ereo system . cr uise controL power

tl-

:

i
..-

windows. •lr, del uxe Interior . light group, plu s

~

many more ex tras.

::

~::::::::

'1000
OFF ON
·2 DR. LTD'S

1976 Ford ~ranada 2 dr, Std .............. 12995
1976 ChiYSier NY, 4 dr, Fully Equip.... .. .'5495 *
1975 Chevy M~ILb~ Classic, 4 dr.......... '2995 ~
1974 Vega 2 DR. Aulo..... ~ ................1295 :
1974 Buicll AIJOIIo VB 4 dr......... ....... ,1995 ~
1973 Chevy leguna Wagon ................ '1595
. 1973 Pontiac Bonnevile 4 Dr. HT......... 11695 ~
1973 Buicll Centu!j 4 Dr., Air.............. '149 5 ,..
1973 Ford Torino 2 Dr. HT................. '1695 :

i

1973 Maverick 4 Dr......................... 11495

1972 Ford Stationwagon .....................'895

OFF ON
ECONOUNE

TRUCI&lt;S

VANS

1973 Dodge Club Cab, 6 cyl., Std..... .... '1895.
1973 Chevy 'h Ton PU, VB Std........... '2395
See: Pat Hill. Rocky Hupp
or Darrel Dodr,ill '
For a good deal on a new or used vehicle

Karr &amp; VanDUSint~s"Zandt

DAN THOMPSON FORD

"You'll Like Our Quality 'w ay of

992-2196

:

~

i,..
,..

Open Evenings TII6:00
Except Thurs. and Sat. Closed Sunday

courteous sa
Harris.
'

i

1964 Ford 'h Ton, Rat Bed, Std........... '295 :

,.

'1595

$.
...

1972 Olds 4 Dr............. ;...... . ~ ......... '995 :

'1000

Wagon . Stand•rd shllt.

*1.

'3695 00
:
!'~----'!"'
1976 Ply. Roadrunner, Sharp .... _......... '3295

73 PINTO

Ooirlg
GMC Fin11nclng '
Open Evenings UnH16 :IICI-'TII5 p.m. Sot.
Pomeroy

..~

.,..

"SPECIALSI . *,,..

steering , air.

76 PLYMOUTH
VOlARE

. '2995 .

0

Columbia Nat' I Llle

•

'1495
75 CHEVY .
MONTE CARLO

'1995

10•0.5
•••••••---t
1

14
11

00

Power&amp; .A i r .
Was $4695

Was 52495

Full power, air, vinyl
·sharp ,

Porn . C. Blk . Co.
Cl ine 's Cotls. Co.

WE'VE GOT 'EM!
59 95
BIG FORDS!
!~===·=::::::==:::::i
ROOMY
FORDS!
1974 Dodge 4 wheel ·Dr. j
'1000

98 WXURY SEDAN

Loupe, air.

73 OLDS 98
HT SEDAN

Air .

Pts .
18

Eagles Club

,.1-'l-~-T-H-.-E-.-8-(Jy.-----0-F-.---T..H......,E---'1--f!_A.,.;;,R....... ' Lipsll!?!~~~n~~~~~'~"'"~o~~"' FM·

NOW

73 BUICK
LESABRE

POMEROY LANES
Tri County league
January 10, 1978

.

2,5 00 .00.

71 OLDS

~as ,,,~44

XI I J I I

I

'2495

BOWLING

Loog wide bed, lock out nubs, • s peed, power

'1695

4 Dr. HT, air, S0-50 seat.

. A Carolina reader wants
the point-eount
'I 1 I
liy Oswald Jacoby
range for an opening bid of
..A
I
and Alan Sontag
two nolrump.
. In standard American it is
22-24 points. In· expert clrWe are showJng the same cles
it shows 20 to 22. The .
•
•
hand as yesterday except reason for th~ differe
.s
r
'I
1
""""118 ... drcled lett.., ,. · •
• that ~e have shifted the
nee I
f.... .A
. f\._ ·..A fonn
the surprise lnlwer u aug. ..
.
gelled by 111e lbovt c:ortoOn .. ·
;
direction to make South the that almost II experts use
the
two-club
opening
fol.
•
declarer.
lowed
by
a
twD-notrwnp
reAnswer
here:
HE
"Y
~"
"
The bidding is the same
"" _
_
_ _
. _ .,1 • ••c.ept thai in yesterday's bid to show a 23·24 point
,
(Answeratomorrow) :
art1cle the player with the notrump-type hand .
East cards elected to bid
Yesl d . Jumblea: ANKLE BURST KILLER BOUNCE
:
(For a copyo fJACOB YMODer. aya
·
.
,
.•
four spades. This time we fERN,
send 11 to: " Win at
Anaww. TooktMtwlmm.,~fromwheretM
~
find that he has passed the . Bridge," cart~ of this newspa•h•rkw.lurklng-A"STROKF"OFLUCK
1
four-heart double.
per. P.0 . Box 489. R•alo C1ty ·
West opens the king or Sta/ion.
New York, N.Y. 10019./
t&gt;Oiilflilm- No, •O.-IIo-l10_Io_lor.,.ll_
diamonds and his partner 1!'EWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN . 1 yournwni~~-'=~=--':.:i~N.J. 07141. ~
'

:;-~---~--.,......,....! to know

I'LL L'ARN "fE
TO DRAW ONTH' r---- - OADBURN WALL

.

V. roof, air, stereo .

V-8, automatic, P.S.. air .

•495

f""J

'-'-T=r:...:;:..!.+-,1?"&lt;:1

72 DODGE CHARGER

;b\.0

+

~~t::~~~!~~er

73 CADILlAC
SED. DEVILL£

CHARGER

77 OLDS 98
REGENCY SEDAN

Air , P .S.1 P . B., tape, clean .

'4495

7~

71 DODGE 2 DR.

76 CUTlASS SUP. CPE.

'1895

NOW '1695

Deduction solves second lead

+

V-8, automat ic, P .S .

74 CHEVY VEGA
GT CPE.

i'(Jday, Jan . 20

+2

73 CHEVY NOVA
SS COUPE

6 cy .

•..•
•

NOW '.1~95

'1395

(1)

rr\ .;1\'\'J''.A.

Sec tion 16. That
th ere the
be
appropriated
from
FE DERAL
REVENUE
SHARING F U"NO
Other
1a,oop.oo

'

'2995

Clydo Scrooo

Rober t Mllter
tts Board of Direc tors
70, It

DON'T WAIT •·•• =
JOG, 0 V£ R "'Jf,.
~~ . $~ ~EIII,.•"

aMETER
ppropr iated
fr om F UND
th e
DEPO SIT

Tot a l For F ederal
Revenue Sha r ing 18.000.00
ANTI -RECESSION
ASSISTANCE FUND
nther
2,000.00

CAUTIOIJ6LY .1

WHAT.

appropria t ed
from
the
GENERAL
BOND
RETIREM E N T F UND
Paymen
nci pa l 5,000.00
Paymentt o
o ff P
Inrit erest
1,800.00
Oth er
,
500.00
Tofal FOr Genera l Bond
Re
ti rement FundFUNDS
1,300.00
AQDITIONA·L
Sec 11on 15. That ther e be

NOTICE OF FILING
OF PETI·TION FOR
TRANSFER OF FUNDS
Notice I s hereby given fhlllt
on the 18th dey of January
1971 ,
the
Uodert i'il ned
,:~et itl oner , filed a petit ion In
th• Court of Common P i en of
Meigs Covnly, Oh to, be ing
Cause No . 16102 on tht Ooc "-et
of u ta Court , ask ing tnat
n ,ooo 00 be Jransterre.d froni
the- Operation ~ and Mll ln
tenanct Fu nd to me Gener al
Fu nd , as prov ided by taw , for
tht reasons set forth I n .u ld
petition ; and that uld
ptlltlon w i ll be for I'IUrlng on
I he 18th da y of February , 1978
at 9 ·00 AM ,
LEADING CREEl(
CO N SERVA NCY OISTRICT
By ~ Jack w. Cri sp

Middleport

�••

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

portions of Pemsylvanla and
stroog winds piled It Into
drifts that closed roads ,
achoola and bU!Ineaea ·In
many areas. Another loot of I
BEULAH E.' CORDRAY
anow waa forecast ·for the
ALBANY - Beulah E.
area today .
, 88, of Route 1,
The PI!Uadelphta airport Cordray
Athens , died Wednesday
was cloaed. Harriaburg and afternoon at the Kimes
McKeesport were under a Convalescent Cen1er in
stall! of emergency with Athens. Sl'le was the daughter
the tate Newton and
roado- doaed-to- ail but · of
Jemima Roberts Hibbs.
essenUal traHic.
She was also preceded In
Parts of Connecticut allo death by her husband, lester
were ·hard hit and the snow L.; two sons. Herman and
two daughters ,
spread northward Into Clifton;
Pauline end Ethef; two
Boston. Heavy snows were brothers, Ar tre and Charles
forecut
across
New and one sister, Jessie. She
England, still reeling under was a member of tM former
Hebbers.llle Metnod lst
snows and ice dumped by a Church
. She Is survived by
pair of storms earlier this one daughter , Mrs. Reed
(Helen) Jeffers of Albany ;
week.
Major New England two sons, Robert of Westerville; John o f Fullerton.
airports - Including Boston's Calif.;
one daughter-In-law,
Logan International - shut Leola
Cordray ;
eight
down:
grandchildren anc;l 22 greatA foot of snow buried grandchildren and 14 great ·
t.grandchlldren .
portions of Marylan.d, closing grea
Funeral services will be
schools in much of the stall!. held Satu rday at 2 p.m. at the
A surprise snowstorm Blgony Jordan Funeral Home
hobbled Washington with si.J: In Albany with the Rev .
Norris officiating.
'Inches of anow. Suburban Freeland
Burial will be in Alex~nder
schools shut down and city Cemetery . Friends will be
schools opened late. City and received today from 2 till 7
federal employees were p.m.
allowed to arrive !all! for
wock.
An Ice storm sn~pped ·
power lines across p(rtions of
North carolina, knocking out
power for some . ll4,000
(CGnllnuliflrom s-at 1)
persons.
.
snow and It's drifting. You
(Continued frcm pqe I) ·
The s\orm also batll!red wouldn't .believe it. It's
service when a break ocmost
of Ohio with .heavy . unreal."
cuti'ed in a main oo West
snow,
piling up four-foot
"The situation here Is ll!rrlMain st. Workers restored
snowdrlfts.
AU
state
offices
ble,"
said Ross County
services about 3 p.m., two
closed,
hundreds
of
roads
Sheriff's
Deputy Joe Diehl in
and one-half hours befter the
were
Impassable
and
most
ChUUcothe.
"We have a lot of
break occurred.
Mayor Andrews sa id schools - Including Ohio road closings down here. We
earlier
Thursday
a State Unl versity - shut plow them open and they
close right back up again."
heliocopter with National down.
Dayton, Ohio, repocted 20.2
"Right now thing here are
Guard officials and possibly
Inches
of
snow
on
the
ground
JW'etly
well In a mes~," said
Gov. James Rhodes would
early
today,
breaking
the
pld
Cincinnati
Pollee Dispatcher
arrive in Pomeroy. However,
record
of
16.!
Inches
set
on
Greg
·
Curre.
"Qoews have
he was late.;notified the flight
Jan
,
15,
1918.
been
out
all
night,
wockbig !:!had been cancelled.
Snow and slm shut down hour shlfls to keep the roads
The seniol;' citizens center
in Pomeroy was open, but schoola and businesses . In open."
were Tennessee, a victim of week- · Yockvllle city olliclala In
senior . citizens
easll!rn Ohio have aoked the
discouraged from lighting the 'long snow and Ice.
National guardsmen aided Army Reserve to help In snow
weather and programo at the
center were discontinued snow removal ·crews across removal.
snow-weary Kentucky, where
The Coast· Guard said a
temporarily.
repeall!d
beavy
snows
have
convoy
of five oce carrier•
Staff members were on
left
food
supplies
dwindling
being
eocorted
to Cleveland
duty and were spending their
and
closed
school•
and
.Harbor
by
the
Icebreaker
time working on emergency
situations .of senior citizens businesses for much oil the Northwlnd was having
difficulty getting into the
and were accepting volunteer week.
A northern storm system barber.
help from persons in helping
"They are having JW'Oblems
to clear snow from the front that spread mow over the
and
Midwest because of the Ice," said
of homes of senior citizen• Plains
Thursday dlsslpaied .during Chief Petty Officer Craig
.needing help.
the night, leaVing the eastern Mitchell. "But we expecl
storm system In control of the them Inside ·the harbor
weather foc most of the · sometime today."
eastern half of the natiOn.
· Barge traHic on the Ohio
. The sprawling eastern River was also slooed ·today
storm sent a dusting of snow by Ice chunks.
,
as far east as Chicago and
"The Ice chunks are
spawned thunderstorms and IJulldlng up at some locks and
more than 20 tornadoes In delaying barges for several
Florida. Twloters downe.d hours," said Jerry Sclununk
STARTING AT
lrees and power lines and of .the Army Corps of
cauaed scatll!red damage but Engineers. "Even though the
11:00 A.M.
m Injuries.
barges are backed up, they
AtThe
The new storm bred In the are slowly getting through."
MIDDLEPORT
mountains of Utah and
The National Weather
FIRE DEPARTMENT 1 Arlaona spun over Texas, Service said snow bad
packing snow and sleet.
dlmllshed 'In southwestern
counties and will dlmb\illh ·to
flurries in central and
southeastern areas by
afternoon and In the
-.northeast by tonight.

! Area Deaths !

Gallr.a•'

Emergency

r liSitTRi-11

1 SARJRDAY

II JANUARY 21st . I

I
I
I
I

I
I
I
L

------Can

·
I
EFFIE MOLLQHAN
Effie Ethel Mollohan , 72, a

resident

of 227 Fourth Ave .,

Gallipolis, died at 9:35 p.m.
Thursday In Pleasant Valley

Hospital. She had been In
tailing health two years and

serious for two weeks.

She wos born April I, 1906
In Pike County, Ky . daughter
of the late Butler· Taylor and

-Mary Charles Taylor .
She was preceded In death

by her husband, Everett, In

1969.

Survivors Include' lour

daughters,
Mrs .
Paul
(MaKine) Urwin, Charleston ~

w. Vo.; Mrs. ·James (Kay)

Vornholt, Gallipolis ; Mrs .

Mary

France!

Moore ;

Sprlngtleld; Mrs. Mike (Jo
Ann ) Doyle, Gallipolis, 13

grand and seven grea t grandchildren . A grand daughter preceded her In

death.

Two brother-s and four
sisters survived. They are
Monty Tarter, Nitro,

w. va .,

and Ceci T&amp;ylor, Zebolon,
Ky .; Mrs . Fannie 1 Williams,

Charles ton ; Mrs . Lawrence
(Florence ) Honoa'IC.er , and
Mrs. Allee Hass of Sciotoville, and Mrs. Ilene· Rose of
Charleston, W. Va.
She was a member of the

VInton Fellowship Chapel.
Funeral services will

be

held' atJ. p.m. Sunday trom
vvough-Halley -Wood
the

Funeral

with

Rev .

Elmer Geiser and

Home

Rev .

Alfred Holley ofl lc lallng .

Burial will be ln Centenary
Cemetery. VIsitation will be

held at1he funerel hOme from

2·4

and 7-9 p,m, Saturday .

C&amp;SOE
(OlnUnued from Jllll 1)
productivity
"would
prejudice the commission
ag•lnst the applicant."
A crowd of a bout 100
jammed the PUCO hearing
room. Nine members of the
Ohio Asaoclalon of Utility
Investors, a 1,550 member
group of public utility
stockholders,
made
stall!menta.
Robert Weisberger,
president of the group, denied ·
It Is a front foc electric
companies.
"Our position Is tluit the
Public Utilities Commission
• Is charged with protecting not
only the consumer•, but the
investors," said Weisberger,
Other members of the 88soclation said they dislike
· paying higher electric
rates,but . that without
adequate rate relief for
C&amp;SOE and other utilities,
they would not earn on their
Investments and would
liquidate them.
NEWTON, Mass. (UPI)Ed OllebM, coach of the year
in
the
Mid-American
ConferenCe last season, has
been named head football
coach at Boston College.
The :J6.yearo0ld coach, who
WIIS head coach at Eastern
Michigan University for the
past two seas&lt;ins, succeeds
Jde Yukica, who left to
become head coach at
Dartmouth.

WAHREN, OHIO - A STRIKE by the 100 ll!achero In the
Brookfield Township school district ended today when the
ll!achero returned to the claSII'oom, only to he sent home again
because of bad weather. ·
The teachers voted to end the strike alter Trumbull County
Common Ple&amp;B Court Judge Donald Ford said be would lake
legal action against them for disobeying his order to return to

Prices rose

=:,ur

ear1s

in December
'

Repairing your old car?
Is it worth it?
If not, see us for a low-cost Auto Loan.
We're out to satisfy "the boss:"" (You I)
!

.

'

By SARA FRITZ
was 188.1 - meaning that
WASHINGTON (UPI)
goods and aervices costing
Consumer prices rose 0.4 $100 a decade ago now cost
percent In December, endliJg $1111.10.
1977 with a 6.8 percent annual
Despite substantial
inflatiM rail!- far above the Inflation, the average
jl'evious year's figure, the American worker enjoyed a
Labor Department repocted 3.4 percent Increase In
today.
earnings after inflation and
Food prices were blamed tans. It was caused
primarily for the higher · prlmarUy by a change In the
Inflation
rate
during tax i!lructure.
President Carter's 'first year
Food prtces 1'011! 8 percerit
In office. The Inflation rate lhroughout 1977, following an
w&amp;B 4.8 percerit In 1978, lncreaae of on~ 0.6 percent In
Gerald R. Focd'sla.st year In the previous yell!'. Coffee
the White House.
!W'ices were up 47.8 percent
No significant reduction of last year ,aomewhat less than
Inflation Is ezpecll!d In 1978, in '1976.
and economl8tl gener8lly he·
Prices for new can, fuel oU
Ueve carter's new voluntary · and gasoline also 1'011! more
. anti4nflatlon program will In 1977 than In 19711. Uaed car
have lltlle impacl.
prices went up allghtly leu,
The 1977 Inflation rail! was but medical coets climbed 9
high by hlatoricl! standards, percent- almost as much as
but compared ,avorably with In lfl6.
rateo of 12.2 parcent In 11'74
Ccmmcidlty prices other
and 1 percent In 1975. than food 1'011! u percent In
lnflation was greateot during 1977, and aetvlces were up 7.9
theearlymontbs of W17 !l'ben percent. ·
severe winter weather
Household goods
caused food and fuel furniture amlloor ccmrlngo
llhortagea.
- also roae subunUally.
In DeCember, food prices Apparel am gasoline prices
roee jut 0.2 percent. Other cootinued to rile, but fuel oU,
goods roae- 0.5 perceflt, and tobacco, gas and olectrtclty
aervlceo were up 0.5 percent. JW'ice&amp; declined.
The ConiUIIIer Price Inda

'

McDonald said the TriState Area Council Is allo
planning these other o)r
servances
of the an·
niversary: Window displays
In local stores and churches,
attendance at church services · Pack Blue and Gold .
Banquents, shopping center
demonstrations, and public
Dag C.remonles. Also, ~ery
scout is being asked to
prepare and post a sign in his
own front yard Indicating his
involvement in Scouting.
McDonald added that all
participating packs, troops
and post9 will be awarded a

.

custom

Suocessive

oftlctala aald Saturday.
Gov. Jameo A. Rhodes, Adj. Gen. James
Clem and otall! Transporlatioo Directoc
David Wier told reporters Saturday
morniJw that even with "sunshine on our
side" 350 Natiooai Guards members
remain on duty In 32 snowo&lt;:lobbered
counties, that 23 roads mostly In the nocth
central area remain closed and that

week to hire cOIIUDel'cial trucu to deliver

federal officials are considering decla{U.
13 ol the 32 counties disaster areas.
While. Montgomery County h88 oot
lormally requested state aid, the city of
Dl)ylon was g•ttlng Guard ·aid Saturday In
replenishing a nearly depleted supply of
road salt.
Copt. Chester Lewis, public lnfocmation
officer of the 372nd Engineer Battalioo In
suburban Kettering, said a 25-truck
. convoy would travel to Toledo, pic!&lt; up 500
tons of the salt sod deliver it to Dayton.
The city, burled under a staggering 22
Inches of snow, was forced to turn to the
Guard afler trYing unsuccessfully for a

diet"
firings or rrumnal acnon woutd be taken
But while Rhodes admitted the break In
At th e some lime he promised against any wrongdoers.
Clem said 111e cost of the Natlooal Guard the weather had helped put the state in inunediate investigation inln any alleged
Clem said damage caused by lhe stocrn
ol!ort and the need to contract fO&lt; private at least "l•ir condition", Wier poln1ed out lavorattsm oc improprieties by state
Is
just begtnnlng to be assessed. M11.fh of i1
snow-removal equipment was near- that a thaw or rain at 1lllo point would workers ill snow removal. Rhodes was
will be roof ca ve~ns caused by the weight
f250,000 and a request ''"' reimbursement bring e new series of problems - Ooodlng especially concerned about reports lhat a
unusual snow acrumulations .
will be made to the state Controlling caused by melting ollhe deep snow cover state plow was seen clearing the parl&lt;ing orThe
roof overhBilg of an Bir freJMht
1
Board.
across the $late,
lot ol a Wendys Restaurant in Columbus. building at Port Columbus collapsed
The National Weather Service had
The governor praised the National The governor Is a stockholder In thai Ssturday, blocking front entrances to
something that sounded like good news Guard, the Salvation Army, lhe Red Cross business.
Delta and Eastern airlines frel~ht officea.
Saturday. The service predicted that a and "thousands of Ohioans" for "vallant
Wier said he hod alllll received a report
Friday, two M o nlgom~ry County
high pressure system moving eastward effocts ... over the past week which have of a state worker salting the lot of a Fairground
escaped i11jury when
would bring sunshil)e to Ohio by Sunday msde i1 possible foc stricken aroos to cope Cleveland bar. He promised that a secUoo of workers
lhe
roof
and only light snow or flurries in the wllh lhe effects of lhe storm as.weU aslhey · investigations would be lhorou~h and display building, fell of!n.the roundhouse, a
the

snow-nu~lt.ing

streamer with a $50 merchandise certificate going to _
the unit judged to have the
greatest Scout Annlverssry
Month program.

VOL. 12 NO. 51

GALLIPOLIS.:... POINT PlEASANT

SUNDAY, JANUARY 22, 1978

are affected adversely

front under deep snow

Legal changes affecting
religious rights have taken a
tum for the worse in the past
year, says Albert Dittes,
religious liberty director of
the .Pomeroy Seventh-day
Adventist Church. He says
the church's members will

M. T. EPUNG Co. of Gallipolis donated five trucks, twO'
loaders (ooe of them above) and manpower Saturday to help
rid the Old French City of Its second worst snowfall In
modern history. Gallla recorded 20 incbes during the 11-day

NEW YORK (UPI) -The
highest temperature reported
Thursday to the National
Weather Service, excluding
Alaska and Hawall, was 82
degrees at Fort Myers,
Orlando, and Homestead,
Fla. Today's low \V&amp;B · 28
degrees below zero at
Bemidji, Minn.

SIDE GU.HCI!S

gso

$9
.
·

COMBINATION
(ffER From

For
Only

95

MEET CANCELLED
The gymnastics mm. between Meigs and Wellston
has been canceUed.
·

Model
1455A

by GIN Fox

REGULAR S79-95 UPRIGHT
With REGULAR $19.95
CLEANING TOOLS. You

IAVB $21MtiSI

BuyNowl

GALlJPOLIS- Galli&amp; County's Civil
Defense Unit and Gallia County sheriff's
deputies ·were busy Friday and Saturday
morni:Jlg ariswering distress calls aU over
the county.
.
Mike Swisher, Gallia County Disaster
chairman, said members with four wheel
vehlclea had been busy transporting food

to people and people to get food.
Persons low on fuel w-ere taken to the

shelter at the GaUls County:Senior Citizens
Center on Jackson Pike. CD, members
picked up. 2:i mattresses from R(o Grande
College for the center. .
Working Friday were Bob Cox, Dave
Kelley, Bob Rothgeb, Mike NuU and .Bob
Donnally. There were no major difficulties
according to Swisher.
Swisher said, "Everyone seems to be
coping with lhe weather pretty well." He
noted that the Civil Defense . Is not
equipped to haul fuel oil and coal. "That's
why residents are being transported if
necessary to the shelter," he said.
·
Swisher also expressed his ap-

preciation for the hard work performed by
township trustees and the county highway
department.
·
County Engineer James Baird said
Saturday that bi.llk of county rqads (467)
mUes will he open by late Saturday. Highway crews have been working two shifts
since

•

Ja~.

8 in order to keep

~he

county

roads In a P8888ble condition.
Baird noted that several privately
owned graders and other highway road
equipment has been leased to aid the
cause. "We have made a lot of progress in
the last 28-,10 hours and we are doilig all
that we know to do," Baird said.

Mirror spread
law violated

• With Llg~t
Don't Waltl Como In TOday I

SAVE

30 40UP TO 50%
DURING OUR JANUARY ClEARANCE SALE

PAUL SIMON will be awarded a
man of the )'ear award at

awarda balll!uet to.be held Wednesday,
Jan. 25 at tbe Meigs lntL Tickets to tbe
'dllmer are $5 and tbere will be.available
seatlug for 110 people. Simon Is
receiving the award for his outslaadtng
work be has doae for tbe ehatnber ID the
patn~up &lt;leaa-up of Pomeroy this past ·
summer. Simon operated Simon's
Market In Pomeroy for 27 yean.

JIM FRECKER WilL receive a·
mao of the year award al the llllllual
awards baaquei to be held Wedaesday,
' Jaa. 25 at the Meigs Inn. Frecker Is the
owaer aad operator of tbe J&amp;R Sports
Shop to Pomeroy. Mr. Frecker'a, work
In organfzln8 and directfog the Regatta
and other parades tn Pomeroy and wltb
lhe Christmas lf«hllllg woa him tbe
dlsllllcllon. Tickets to tbe dinner are f5
per penon and tbere are 118 available.
Other awards will also be given.

Storm and other notes

·: .

a

Home Furnlshings-!st.Fioor
"How can I make myself a scotch and soda with
gr~llavored Ice cubes?"

u.e auual

ByUPI
POMEROY - A frozen aocumulation
CINCINNATI - A sharP rise in the ·of slush on the inner side of fenders,
RUTLAND- Because Ohio law says Ohio River. lrom the Anthony Meldahl
mirrOrs may extend on both sides of a Dam 30 rid1es bel9w Cincinnati, to especially above and back pf the front
motor vehicle for a total width of nojllote K~smosdaie south of Louisville, Ky., may wheels, Meigs County Sheriff James J.
than 96 inches, according to 'Meigs County help alleviate an Ice problem at two damo. Proffitt says, sometlmes retards car's
Sheriff James J. Proffitt, a sideswiping The National Weather Service said ability to tum.
The slush forms after long driving
incident at 6 p.m. Friday brought a Charge Ssturday rises of two to two and one-half
with
few turns. In most instances it can be
against a Ellringtoo truck driver.
feet were occurring on the lower gauges
kicked
loose. Added weight to lhe rear of a
The accident occurred on SR 124 west bet ween Mel dahl and Kosmosdale.
car,
such
as a lull gasoline tank, will help
of Rutland, where Everett L. Schuler, 23,
Friday, Army Cotps ol Engineers
for
better
traction in snow.
Rt. I, Middleport, traveling toward ·' officials said low water for this time of
-- .
-Rutland In a 1975 Ford pickup, was year on the Ohio didn't have sufficient
POMEROY
Deputies of Sheriff
sideswiped by a westbound truck operated current ·to wash away mushy ice fast
James
J.
Proffitt
IJiade
several runs
by Stephen E. !larder, 22, Rt.l, El!ington. enough to keep It from stalling tows at
Friday
during
a
heavy
snow
Sherilrs deputies said Harder's truck Melds hi and Markland, near Warsaw, Ky. medicines to stranded familiestoIn deliver
Meigs
had mirrors reaChing out lor il total width About 50 towboats waited up to 110 hours at County.
of 108 inches, Harder posted bond to ap- the bottlenecks for their turns at the iceRoads continued in poor condition
pear In Meigs County Court. · ·
iog~ed locks.
Ssturday, the sheriff said, and he suggests
residents stay iri unless it Is necessary forCOLU!&gt;!BUS - Gov. James A. them to he out.
·
Rhodes satd Saturday he has requested
GALlJPOUS - Evelyn North, deputy emergency assiStance from the Federal
registrar, Gallipolis Motor Vehicle Disaster Assistance Administration for 13
Ucenoe Bureau, announced Saturday 9110Wo&lt;:logged counties. They are: Adsms,
Identification cards are .now avaU.bie for Athens, j3elmont, Clermont, Coshot1on,
area retldents.
Gallis, Hamilton, Jackson, Lawrence,
Under a new Ohio law. any resident of Piketon, Meigs, R'oss and Sci.oto
the State of ohio whn does not currently counties. The governor h88 proclaimed
hold a valid operator's li.cense or tern- total of 32 counties emergency areas and
POMEROY - The Meigs County
porary permit of this state or any other sent In Natiooal Guard personanel to help Commissioners
last · week acquired
Uconslng jurlsdlctioo,is eligible to receive with emergency service• and snow authority through the state of Ohio and
an ID card, (11'9viding they are 18 years of ~emoval.
•
Adjutant General's Office of the Ohio
age or older.
In addltloo to the I~ counties already National Guard to employ private conIndividuals wishing ID cards must listed they are: Brown, Crawford, tractors to use graders and 9!10W moving
furnish their Social Security Card, or a Cuyahoga, Erie, Fayette, Guernsey, equipment that would have been paid lor
document containing their birth cer- · Harrison, Huron, Jefferson; Lake, b~ the State ol t:ihi.o.
tlftcato.
Mahonlng, Morgan, Morrow, Noble,
These efforts made by both the county,
The coot Is $2.50, plus $1 for the deputy Perry, Sanduky, Trumbull, Vinton, and engineers office and the commissioners
registrar's fee.
Washington counties.
were In vain. as no equipment could he

ID cards anive

• EdOI Kl-.nt~r tftl1n1
10iilh Inti'\ 11ong tho, .•·: ·~· a
bollrdl\.

period (Jan. !1-20) and the official accumulation following
Friday's storm was 18 Inches, second only to the 20.8 Inches
which accumulated during the post-Thanksgiving snow on
Nov•. 24, 2:i and :Ill in 19li0. (See today's Dateline column lns!de
today for addltionl! Information on the storiD).

Widespread distress relieved

REGULAR

HILO TEMPS

PRICE 25 CENTS

- clintb~

Open Friday Night Til 8

'MEETING DELAYED
Ammlng of Area 6 Health
System• Agency Board of
Trustee• scheduled for
Saturday at 1:30 p.m. In
Marietta has been postponed
until Saturday, Feb. 11, at
1:30 p.m. at the Ramada lnn.

MIDDLEPORT- POM EROV

Religious rights

Elberfelds In.Pomeroy

Carson,

tntintl

tntt5

annive!'Sary

HOSPITAL NEWS

Ada

meantime.

chemical.

•

oboerve a dsy of special
emphasis on the oubject at
WCX'k.
services this Saturday afternoon at 2 at the chUI'!'h.
MOWCOW - THE SOVIET UNION TODAY FIRED an
" Last year Adventists,
automatic ·transport spacecraft toward the Salyut 8 space
Jews and other Ssbbatarlano .
station, apparently to carry supplies to two coamonauts
were pleased with the
m8ni1Jng the station.
•
Supreme Court's decision In
"An automatic transport spacecraft (Prpgress 1) was
the case of Paul Cummins, li
launched In the U.S.S.R. today for docking with the orbital
Worldwide Church of God
complex Salyut 6," the official news agency Tass reported.
Sabbatarian
who was ordered
.The transport space craft will apparently use the same
This week's winning Oblo rehired by his employer, who
docking ports employed earlier this month when the Soviet
Lotle.r y numbers:
had fired him for refusing to
Union complell!d Its first dual ~eking In space.
Gold number-3.
work Friday nights of
White number-58·. Saturdays.
Blue namber-0%1.
"But j;he high court refuaed
Extra Casb 354335.
to
decide the
case
Lucky Back Two
definitively;
it
split
4-4
and
Holzer Medical Center
T~ree-dlglt aamberVeteraas Memorial Hospital
upheld
the
lower
court
ver(Discharges J811. 19)
365.
ADMITTED
Lydia
dict lor Cummins. Then last
Dorothy
Barrett,
Douglas
Sil-dlglt IIUmber- June, j.arry Hardison,
Hysell, Racine ; Linda Deam, Leo 'Clark, Judith
1®158.
Watson, Racine ; Sidney Doughman, Bert Fayne, Eva
another Worldwide member,
Durst, Portland ; Phyllis Fowler, Anna Hamilton,
Ioiii his. similar case against
McMillen, Racine; Owen . Clara Hilgenberg, Paula
TranB World Airlines. This .
NOTICE OF
Watson, Racine; Richard . Jewell , Janet Matthews, ,
time the court voted 7-2 in
PUBLIC SALE
DeMoss, Pomeroy; Linda Monta Metzler, Anthony TO WHOM
favor of the airline and
IT MAY CON ·
Ferrell, Hartford; Robin Morris, Jamey Nelson, Kathy CERN ;
against the Sabbalarian that
Notice Is hereby gi ven that
Ritchie, Tuppers Plains; Pittinger,
Dora Queen, Peggy on JanUar y 23, 1978, at 10:00 an employer need not grant a,
Thomas Hendrb , Midworker his Sabbath off for
A .M. a8ub1tc sale wi lt be held
dleport; Ethel Adkins, Roberts, Brenda Smeltzer, at p . . Box 193 Gallipol is. religious reasons ." The
Mrs.
Gr.
e
gory
Stalnaker
and
Ohio to sell for cesh the
Racine.
collateral, to wit : decision held that an .emson, Ellen Vance, Albert following
1972 · Ford
ser ial No . ployer must make an acDISCHARGED - Carl Welsh.
2F01FU8119, s~ l d collateral
Moodispaugh, Mary Jacobo,
commodation lor religious
being held to secure an
(Birt~s jan. 19)
Gladys Rumlield, Scott
obligation arising under a reasons If It Is not an undue
Mr. and Mrs. William
Instalment
(sate
Ogdin, Randall Werry, Amos James, a daughter, New retail
contract) 0711-86054 held bV hardship, but found that TWA
Leonard, carrie Deem, Ella
General Motors AccJtptance had made all the acHaven; Mr. and Mro. Robert corporation
_ as secured
Gladman.
carney, a son, Oak. Hill; Mr. party. Said public sale is to be e&lt;&gt;mmodatlons possible.
He adds that other religious
according to the
and Mrs. Michael Evans, a conducted
taws of the State of Ohio . liberty
losues . facing
· PLEASANT VALLEY
son, Portland.
General Motors Acceptance
Include the right
Americans
Discharged: Mrs. Thomas
Corp·oratlon reserves the
right to bid at this sale .
HoOey, Buffalo; Mrs. Homer
to choose · 'no\· to join labor ·
The collateral IS presently
Blessing, West Columbia;
stored and m av be seen at P. unioM, the right to .teach
ooe's children In the home
Elmer Do an, Point Pleasant;
Q . Box 193 Gallipolis, Ohio
45631 .
LIONS TO MEET ·
past .the mandatory school
June Cassell, Gallipolis
The Pomeroy-Middleport
Ferry ;
Mrs.. Michael
GENERAL MOTORS age (usually six years) and
ACCEPTANCE Sunday " blue laws" in
Fetherolf, Gallipolis; Mrs. Uons Club will have a noon
CORPORATION
luncheon
meeting
Wednesday
varioua parts of the nation.
James Hammonds and oon,
(1 ) 20, 1tc
Gallipolis; Herman Carter, at the Meigs lnn. Plans are
Lakin;· Ira Blain, Point being made for the obPleasant; James Greer, servance of ladies night at the
Mason; Michael Stewart, Meigs 1nn at6:30 p.m. on Jan.
Poin\ Pleasant; Erie Phillips, 26.
Gallipolis; Jimmy Tucker,
Buffalo; Patricia Hill, CotROTARY CANCELLED
tageville; Mro. Keith Bragg,
The
Middleport-Pomeroy
Point Pleasant; Mro. Elias
Rotary
Club meeting thl•
O.vis, Buffalo; Mrs. Richard
evening
In Mi~dleport bas
Austin, Gallipolis Ferry; Carl
Rairden, Hartford; Mrs. been.canr;elled due t.o parking
Gerald Hodges, Point problems. and snow.
Hartford; Lorl Greenlee,
Point Pleasant.

afford

.......
FDIC

HUNTINGTON - The TriState Area Council, Boy
Scouts of America, has
completed its plans for ol&gt;serving U.S. Scouting's 68th
birthday during Scouting
Anniversary Week, February
$.11.
Patrick R. McDonald,
Council Scout Anniversary
Chairman, said this. year's
CLEVELAND - LT. GOV. RICHARD CELESTE, who emphasis Is on leadership
had planned to announce his running mall! for the 1978 recognition and recruiting,
gubernatorial race Jan. 2:j, said•Thursday the announcement and Cub Scout packs,5cout
troops, and Explorer posts
would he postponed lndeflnlll!ly.
Reason for the delay, according to Cleste supporten, was and ships throughout the
because of inclement weather - thua delaying prospective e&lt;&gt;uncll are planning special
events to honor their
candldateo from being Interviewed by Celesle.
volunteer ieadera.
On Wednesday, February
COLUMBUS - HOUSE MINORITY LEADER Chaires F.
Kurfeas of Bowling Green, a Republican candldall! for 8, members of the three
governor ,Is asking GOP county chairman, commltll!emen and Scouting programs will Join
other party leaders to help choose his 1'IIMing mall!.
. others across the country in
"As we consider a running mall!, I want to have the_ ceremonies of rededication to
lroadest possible Involvement In cooperation with RepubUcan Scouting's princlpl...
party members and leaders," !Curless wrote In a letter to the
party leaders.

Pleasant;

~ou

OOLi.JMBUS (UP! ) -

*&gt;nnl that have dumped nearly two feet
of .,.w on Ohio In the pall week, forcing
bJIJnew and IChools lo close and
travelerotollop, will coot the state at least
a ""'rter of a mllllon dollsrs, state

ByUaltedl'relll.lltenatiollal

KARACHI, PAKISTAN - A LONE GUNMAN hljaclted a
Pakistani airliner with 42 penons aboard and demanded $2
mUllan In ranaorn, aaylng he needed the money lor cancer
treatment, olllclalo said.
The gunman, who .._td he had no political motive, seized
the Pakistan International Airlines turboprop plane with 36
passengers am six crew memben on a fllcht from Sukkur to
Karachi 350 mUes to the aoulhwest, the offlctala said. He
ocdered the plane to take him to Bombay, India, but the pUot
to,Id him there was mt enough fuel and It landed insll!ad In
Karachi, Airlines Chairman' Nur Khan said.

•

Storm's cost.to ·Ohio esti111ated at $1/4 million

1978

Fs:u~l
·S nowstorm batters east ews~·~ . .i~~Brief~ :~day=
emg not
e • •

' By JOHN LF&amp;R
Ualted Pr- l.llterulloaal
A bllndlng snowsttrni battered much of the Eut today,
closing major airports,
Isolating New York City
under twOoloot snowdrlfta,
and closing achoola from
Washington to New EnRland.
A new winll!r storm - the
third of the week -swept out
cl the Weot- and- began-a march across Texas.
The persls!A!nt Mslaught of
snow and bltll!r cold has
claimed at least 47 Uves In Its
push from Texas to New
England this week .
A foot of snow feU In
midtown Manhattan by early
ll1&lt;l'lling marking New
Ycrk City'• worst anowfall .
since 1969. And snow
cootinutd to pile up.
Mayor Edward Koch
declared a citywide snow
emergency. School• wer;
closed and rail service was
Interrupted. Ali airports
serving the city shut down
and 32 mph winds pUed up
roa&lt;k:logglng drifts faster
than an army of 1,500 snow
removal worker• could
remove them.
·
New Jersey w&amp;B paralyzed
by more than a foot of anow.
Up to 30 Inches of snow hit

. .

.

'

1~The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Jan. 20,

'

I

. MIDDLEPORT - This town Is
climbing out from W)der the ·hardest snow
in at least 'l1 years, Mayor Fred Hoffman
said Saturday.
Measurements of from 18 to 22 inches
of snowfall In a 48 hour period beginning.
Wednesday stopped every moving thing In
town for a while except four-wheel drive
vehicles and a few others with the best
snow-type treads .
· Main streets, however, were pretty
well opened by Friday noon and others by
Friday evening. Saturday the secondary
streets were being Improved. Hundreds of
residents were digging snow o(f and from
in front of their cars preparatory to putting
them back in operation .
As soon as possible snow will ~
pushed back to curbs. Heavy equipment Is
unable lo do much In this project as long as
cars are parked at curbs.
Mayor Hollman · said Saturday all
primary streets through the business
district and roads leading into and out of
town are in good condition.
Streets in residential areas are snow
covered, but passable. Village crews have
:,Cen working 24 houro a dsy for the past
week keeping all roads open.
Local equipment and manpoWer is
being used to keep streets open. Residents
of the community have been very
cooperative and patient in assisting with
snow removaL
Snrtw was hauled from the business
disirict Friday night and . Ssturday to
provide uptown parltlng spaceo.
"I want to thank everyone who has
donated their ~rvlces and equipment in
assisting village crew~ . l .thank residents
· for their splendid cooperation and
patience, and hope we will contin!Je to
receive their cooperation in our efforts to
clear more snow from the streets.
Anyone having an emergency
situation should call the Police Dept. at
992-3145 ."
Residents are asked to clear their own
sideWalks and driveways so pedestrians
will not have to walk in streets.
There Is widespread damage reported
to carports and porches from heavy snow
throughout village, the mayor said. Not
since November, 1950 has Mellfs County
been"" paralyzed by snow, It Is belleyed.
IN

5rEFANIE (LEFT) AND KEU.Y ROUGHT, daushters of Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald Rought of Pomeroy measured lhe snow In this neighborhood Friday
afternoon, Their finding : 17 Inches.

County roads are
98% clear says official
POMEROY - County highway cr~ws
in Meigs County have approximately 98
pet. of the county's 250 miles of' county
roads plowed ace&lt;&gt;rdlng to David Spencer,
office manager for the 'Meigs County High-

and t hree cinder ·truck.s working con·
staniJy. The department has btn·ruwi!d
another grader from t he Ohio Power

way Garage.

been placed on county roads but the stock

. Spencer said crews are now applying pile is now running low.
cin9ers to the roadways. He noted that
Various township trustees in Mel~s
since Jan . 8, the department's 33 em- County hove also been basy working 15-20
ployees including County Engineer Wesley ho urs a day to clear township roads.
Sushi, have been working 18-20 houro a
Meanwhile, a spokesman for the
day to get the .Vads Into pa588ble driving Meigs ·County State Highway Garage at
condition. ·
Chester said Saturday thot state highways
Spencer said {.Te'ws have recorded 950

PO~ROY

hours of overtime while working to clear

Activities remained at practically ~
standstill in · Meigs County · Saturdily the roads .
The Meigs County Highway Departmorning as the result of Friday's heavy
ment
has three: snow plows, three graders
snow which paralyzed the area.
Mall delivery was not being made
again Saturday for the second consecutive
areas were urged to clear the snow around

their mailboxes so that mall can be

POMEROY -

An auction planned
by the lzailk Watton
League hlls been cancelled . .

Wonday evening

delivered when delivery is reswned:

Meantlme, many business houses

remained closed for the second day
Saturday although groCeries and drug
stores were maintaining )lours for the
convenience ol tbe public. Banks .which
closed Friday were doing business on
Ssturday morning. ·
There we.r e only snow flurries

Saturday morning, and hopefully the lull In
snoWfaU

\{rould give .resJ.dents a chance to

dig out before more predicted snow falls
this week.

were In "pretty good shape." Mnin routes

notably USJ3 and SR 7were rcpof\ed II&gt; be
In real good shape. Secondary state ro.ads
were snow covered in spots but overlill
are tn "good shape," he' noted.
1

Cancelled, postponed, and still on

day and residents In town and In the rural

possibly on Monday.
Snow removal remained a problem
with not enough equipment and not enough
manpower available to do the job. Several
privately owned,pieces of equipment have
been offered to Mlddlepof\ for use and It
was felt that a great deal of snow could be
removed Saturday and today. In Pomeroy,
a· bulldozer aod four men from the Ohio
National Guard remained In town at the
request of Mayor Clarence AndreW. to
asoist village workers In helping clear
roads.

Company.
Thus fur, 4,000 tons of cinders have

GALLIPOLIS -

meeting
scheduled

Th~

annual Parish

sate stated to begin Friday hlls been
~os t poned

Indefinit ely . Gi rls wil l be

notjfled by their leaders when the sale will
be

held.

or the Ep i scopal Chur ch
GALLIPOLI S A specia l board
today nas been postponed.
meeting 1)1 the Galfla County Distri ct
Library Board ot Tru!tees will be held

GALLI POLIS -

The

Girl

S~out

cookie

Tuesday, Jan . '24. at 12 noon In the clerk ·

treasurer 's office at the library ,

Purpose ot the meeting l.s to open bids
· for millwork on the Dr . Sa muEl L. Bossard
Nlemoriaf ·llbrary .
·

Mail delivery
stopped Friday

RACINE ~ The Southern Local School'

Board will mee_t Jan . 24 at 7: 30 p.m . in the
high school cafeteria weather permitting .

GALLIPOLIS - For the first time In
many years, mail delivery in Gallla
County came to a virtual halt Friday.
According to Jim Betz, · assistant
postmaster here, rural delivery was
suspended because of Thursday's heavy
snowfall. City delivery by foot was made
by postal erriplo}'ees. 'f11ere was no rural
service Friday for routes, one. two and
·three and just partial service on Eureka
Star and Patriot Star Routes.
Rural carrl~rs were attempting to
deliver mall Ssturdsy. Again, patrons·

Richard MacKenzie,

GALLIPOLIS -

chairman of t he Gallipolis City Com .
mission , has called a specia l meet ing for
Tuesday, Jan . 24 at a p.m. In the City
Building .

1
•

According to City Nwlnage r Christian

P. Morris Items up for discussion and

action are the Municipal Swimm ing Pool,
appolnhhent of various positions on boards

and COITl tn lssions, a review of the First
Avenue tr-affic situation. reltwav spur at
the GSI, rezoning of Bastlan t Or . and
payment of bills.

POMEROY - A ,r4!9u tar meeting .of
the PCJmeroy·Middleport Lions Club has
been schedUled at 12 noon Wednesday at

were reminded to dear .the area near their the .Ytetgs Inn ,

Snow removal help difficult to find

I

located. In special oesalon Friday Richard
Jones and Henry Wells met and a motion
was made to advertise for bids for lhe
purchase of a new front loader refuse
packer and packer body.
'
The commissioners are •lso accepting
applications for dog· warden. A!&gt;yone interested Is to contact the office of the
county commiasiimers ai lhe earliest
possible date.

mailboxes In order that the msU carriers
csn get ln.
If mail service continues to be
disrupted, people may come to the post
office to pick up their mail.
According to Betz, mail service was
also disrupted In 19li0 during that big snow
stonn.

.

MIDDLEPORT -

cervical

The free Meigs
he s been

cancer · cttnlc

rescheduled for Wednesday at the Heath
United fv'ethod l st Church In Middleport .
There are openings at Wednesday's clinic

and fl.etgs ar~_e women wishing to make
appointments may _call 992·7531 dally or

992·5831/n the evenings or on the weekend .

POMEROY - A meeting of the Meigs

County Regional Planning Commission

EXTENDED FORECAST
Monday tbrougb Wedauday,
moderating temperatarea and • chance
of onow each day. Hflh&amp; will range
tram tbe 30s aorth to tbe lower lOti
IOultb. 1.4\WI WW be In tbe Z0, MoacJ8y
aid Tueoday aDd In ·the teeDS Wed-

scheduled for f.Aonday ha s been postponed
untlh\\onday, Jan . 30. In the agriculture

center of The Farmers Bank Building at
3; 10 p.m . The annual report will be ,Qiven

and officers and erryployes will be nllmed ,

. ROONEY -

W~it e'•

Antiquo Shop ot

Rod.n ey will be closed Indefinitely because
of a roof collapse caused by Friday 's
heavy snow.

..lday,

I

,.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
(!

'

I•

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�</text>
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