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10- The Daily St!ntin.;'J. M~tl&lt;ll•t&gt;Ort -Pum•r·uy. u .. llrurs&lt;la), Feu. 2. 1978

:----A.~~;~n~;th~----~
LEROY DICKEY
Funera l services for Lerov
Dickey were held Wednesday
In Columbus. Graveside r 1res
will be held at noon Friday in
Mound Hill Cemetery

AMOS LEONARO ·
Am os Leonard. 76, well ·
known Rock Springs res ident.
died Thursday morni ng at
Veterans M emorial Hospi tal.

Mr . Leonard was taken to

...

Finances may
force merger

l

i

' ' I

ESTHER FOWLER
Es1her Fay Fowler , 61 , of

MlddlepQtl , died Wed nesday
at Hol zer Medical Center .
Born June 19, 1910 in He nderson , she wa s the da ughter
of the late Andrew and Edna

Martin Bugg . '
She was an employee of th e
Cl ements State Tree Nur ser y

and a member of the Salem
Communi ty Church .
Survi ving
ar e . one

da ughter , Marce lene B.
Wi Isorl of Pomeroy ; a son ,
Donald ; one brother , Glenn
F. of Henderson ; a sister ,
Mrs. Lynn Edwards of Mason
along with 12 grandchildren
and
eight
great .
gr andchildren .
Funeral ~rv ices wi ll be
Saturday at I : 30 p. m . at the
Sa lem Community Church
wi th th e Rev . Georg e
Hoschar and the Rev. Her .
man Jordan officiat ing .
Bur ial Will be i n Graham
Cemetery . Friends may call
after 2 p. m . Friday at t he
Foglesong Funeral Hom e in
Mason .
The body w i ll be tak en to
the church one hour before
services .

Ro ck Spring s Cemeter y.
Friends may ca ll at the
funeral hom e F r iday and
Saturda y until ttme of ser .

vices .

Leaders ask Bergland
about farm economy
WASHINGTON (UPII House members who have
heen besieged in recent
weeks by fanners appealing
for higher crop prices," today
asked Agriculture Secretary
Bob Bergland what he plans
tu do to boister the distressed
fann economy,
_Bergland was the leadoff
witness for a series of hearings scheduled by the House
Agriculture Committee in
response to pleas for help
which carne chiefly from
leaders of a !ann strike protest movement.
The hearings will reswne
next week with testimony
from members of cong rcs~
'e~nd

farmer spokesme~ .

Bergland told the Senate
Agriculture Committee in a
similar session last week he
hoped to get !ann prices up
c hiefly by pe r suadin g
farmers to lock up to 800

rnillron bliShel• ot surplu•
grain away !rum the glutted
commercial market in

a

g ,u 1v e rn men t - s p o n so r e d

reserve program.
The senate panel, _ meanwhile, scheduled a bus iness
meeting today and' was ex~ded to vote on an advisory
"sense of the senate" resolu-

tion urging Bergland to use
existin~

admini s trat ive

powers to pwnp ove&lt; $1 .5
billion int o the farm
economy .

The resolution would not
have the force by law,
~owev e r ,
and Bergland
already has publicly rejected
most uf the pr:upq,;ais IJy Sen.
Herma n Talmadge, [),{;a .,
the Senate committee chair·

man . They include plans. to
ra ise wheat, corn, soybean

and peanut supports and a
proposal to pay farmers $3.5
billion to idle up the 50 million
acres of crop .

'

t

1
('

/

Emergency Squad at 12: 18

By THEOOORE U.IFF
Born at Gallipolis . Ohio.
SOU THFI E LD, Mi c h .
July 17, 1901 , Mr . Leonard
(U
PI J
Financially
wa s a son of the late Venton
bel eag uered Ameri ca n
and Jessie Rou sh Leona rd .
He was a lso preceded In
Moto rs Corp ., whic h ha s
death by two br others, Wa y
consistently denied It might
and Claude, and two sister s,
pull out of the passenger car
E t he l Pickere ll a nd Ina
business,
now admits it .is
Bowen . He was a member Ot
t he Rock S pri n gs United
discussing a merger with
M e th odi st Chu r ch, Roc k
other firms.
Sp r i n g s G ran ge , and t he·
Ge rald
C.
Meyers ,
Me ig s Cou nt y , s tate an d
. president of the small car
nationa l P omona Gra nge .
Sur viving a r e his wi fe,
specialist, said Wednesday
Lott ie Smith Leonard ; tw o
the company would consider
sons , Law rence of Pom er oy.
a
merger or some other form
and Harry of M i ll wood. W.
of '!Ssociati-on if it is
Va .; t hree daughter s, L oi s
Tay lor. Ney. Ohio ; Dorothy
advantageous to AMC , its
M iley., Baton Rouge, La .. and . em pl o yee s
and
Bet ty Conkle of Gallipolis ; a
shareholders.
brother, Floyd of . Ga llipotis ;
"The door is open when tile
10 grandchlldren, si x great .
right opportunity comes
gr andchildr en a nd several
ni eces and nephews,
along," Meyers said, in · his
Funera l servi ces will be
first
speech as AMC chief
held at 1 p .m Saturday at the
executive, to stockholders.
Ew i ng Funeral Home with
" It hasri't yet. Nothing has
the Rev. James Corbitt of .
fi ci a li ng , Budai will be in
matured II&gt; a point that

•

I

the hospi tal bv 1he Pomeroy
a .m . Thursday .

•

f

while ago. We'll correct the
situation ."

I

By DREW VON BERGEN

I

•

••••

\

•

Public confidence in AMC's ; ·
ability to stay in business was
a concern of executives,

Meyers said , but " the
concern is not showing up in

l

'I

our dealer showrooms."
For evidence of a revival ,

he recited strong sales of the
luxury compact Concord and '·
profits of S3 million last fisca l
year and $1 .9 million in t he
most recent quarter. He also

warrants further discussion
now.''

Rwnors have circulated
since last year that AMC
· might cease car production
a nd rely instead on its
profitable Jeep and AM
General operat i ons .
Executives have denied the
speculation, citing plans for
new models into the 1980s.
But at a news conference
after the stockholders
meeting, Meyers said ialks
have been conducted recenUy
and hinted more than one
company was involved.
"Talks have been going on
for a long time," he said . " I

assume they will go on for the
time being. Some firms on
our list fit us better than
others. But we will consider
all possibilities that might
suit our 'needs .; ,

He would not name companies courting AMC, or eVen
whether they were foreign or
domestic competitors.
To stockholders, however,
he painted a picture of a
reviving company that .had ·
lost its way in the car market.
"It may sound strange to
say this," Meyers told
shareholders, "but the fact is
we got off the prnd"uct track a

ann o un c ed

\

a no th e r

production increase for Jeep ,

the 14th since 1970.
Meyers also discounted ihe
current dip in industry car
saies, saying most of it was
due II&gt; bad weather.

WHITE TREES - The low temperatw-e Tuesday
night and Wednesday morni(lg caused a heavy white frost

through the s now cover

today , he may see his
shadow. And that would be of
small consolation to Snowweary Midwesterners.
The snow belt took another
dose Wednesday, furth e r
hampering the cleanup
operations from last week' s
blizzard. Light to moderate
amoWJts fell in the middle
and upper Mississippi Valley ,
the Great Lakes region and
the Ohio Valley.
At least 3 inches blanketed
Chicago, which was running
short of road salt. Unsalted
expressways turned into slippery messes . and the
accwnulation set back efforts
of snow removal crews to tow

abandoned cars from side
streets still clogged from the
blizzard.
Four inches fell on
Ottumwa,
Iowa,
and
LaCrosse, Wis .; 3 i(rches on
Omaha, Neb., and an inch or
more on Minneapolis,
Muskegon, Mich., and South
Bend, Ind .

The National Weather
Service cautiously predicted
the slow-moving system
would creep eastward,
allowing groundhogs in at
least part of the Midwest 11&gt;
have a crack at sunlight on
their day .
And of course the sunlight,
if you believe the groundhog
legend, would mean we 're in
for another six weeks of
winter .

There were no predictions
uf an immediate thaw.
Bitterly cold temperatw-es
followed the system in the
northern Great Plains. High
temperatures barely reached
zero Wednesday and lows
dropped to 2().30 below zero in
Minnesota
and
North
Dakota.
TravelerS advisories were

posted throughout the
Mississippi Valley . South of
the snow, freezing rain and ·
.drizzle . extended from
Arkansas through the central
Appaiachians and inti&gt; North
Carolina. Rain and drizzle
dampened most of the Gulf
and Southern Atlantic states.
In the West, 4 inches of
snow fell on Wenatchee·,

enormous ice gorge - 2'h
miles long and up II&gt; 20 feet
thick - jammed against the
face of the Markland Dam at
Warsaw, Ky ., blocking
critical
barge traffic .
Demolition experts failed to
break the gorge Tuesday and
planned to try again today .
"If the explosives don't
work for us, we will probably
have to rely on Mother
Nature to clear the river for •
~. " said Col. Thomas Nack,
district engineer for the
Army Corps of Engineers.
Logansport, lnd., Mayor
Gene Mohahan Wednesday
declared
a state of
emergency, saying the eight·
week-old coal strike had.
exhausted the city's coal
supply. He said the city has a
two-week supply of coal, but
it's so water~oggedit will.not
burn .
In South Bend, residents

Big Water
The California legislature
named a large take on the
California - Nevada border
Lake Bigler, in honor of Gov.
William Bigler (1814-1880),
Wash ., and 2 inches on but the people ignored the
Spokane. Up to a half inch of official name and continued
rain fell on portions of to call it Lake Tahoe, an
Northern California.
Iridian term meaning 'big
Along the Ohio River, an water.''

basic money issues, although
WASHINGTON (UP! ) be said the issues had been
The strike by 160,000 coal narrowed significantly.
miners became the longest in
" Basically we a re still
the industry 's history today apa rt on economics," he said .
as a marathon bargaining
No new meetin g was scheseSSion failed to produce duled when the talks ended,
agreement on a new wage- but Horvitz said he would try
benefit package.
to get the two sides together
Negoliators for the miners again later today.
and the bituminous · coal
The stri.ke, now in its 60th
industry were thought to ha ve day, began Dec. 6, with
been close II&gt; a settlement, miners leaving jobs that paid
but the talks were recessed at up to , 7.80 an hour. The
, !2 :30a.m. EST today without longest coal strike previously
agreement on new. contract recorded lasted 59 days in
provisions.
1946.
Chief federal med iat or
Horvitz said he had been
Wayne Horvitz said the two very hopeful that an
sides were still at odds over agreement could be r eached

that made trees a thing of beauty. This picture shows
trees on the Ohio side of the river and trees in the
neighboring state of West Virginia.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, February 3, 1978

Snow belt has another dose
By
United
Press
lntemattonal
H the groundhog can dig

Issues narrowed--strike goes on

noted the official snowfall
accwnulation of 66.1 inches
for January would reach
close 11&gt; the cowlick on a 7·
foot-2 basketball center.
In San Diego, where it was
sunny and the temperatw-es

ranged from 53 to 65 degrees
Wednesday,
the
only
complaint about the weather
came from golf course
managers whose greens were
soaked from recent drought·
ending rains.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
John
Compton, Middleport; Henry
Cunningham,
Pomeroy;

Pleasant Valley Hospital
DISCHARGED - Mrs .
George Mullinex and son,
Letart; Mrs. Roger Johnson,
Sharon Pierce, Racine; · Gallipolis; Roy Siders, Point
Evelyn Murray, Middleport; Pleasant; Mrs. Robert E.
Shirley Glasgow, Pomeroy; Peoples, Point Pleasant ;
Stacy Wollard , Pomeroy; Lonnie Watson,
Point
Vivian Jones, Racine; Ricky Pleasant; Georgia Robbins,
Lunsford, Pomeroy; Timothy Point Pl~asant; Tiffany,
Deem, Pomeroy; Myrtle Franklin, Point Pleasant ;
Hayes, Pomeroy; Anna William Fielder, Gallipolis
Johnson, Letart, W. Va.; Ferry; Mrs. Donald Bandy,'
Selem Yates, Racine ; Apple
Grove;
Junior
Rodney Pierce, Long Bottom. Gillispie, Point Pleasant;
DISCHARGED - Robert Yvonne Wilson,
Point
Hayden, Barbara Davis, Bess Pleasant; Mrs. James
Ellis, Gladys Blackwood, Mitchell, West Columbia ;
Raymond Russell.
Robert
Poore,
Point
Pleasant; Ralph Davis, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Jack Buxton,
Nothing New
The principle of jet Point Pleasant; Michael
propulsioh was discovered Bailey, Point Pleasant.
Births- A daughter to Mr.
about 100 B.C. py Hero tn
and
Mrs. Forest Long, Point
Alexandria. This was used
Pleasant;
A son to Mr. and
2,000 years later to help make
Mrs.
John
Michael,
Pomeroy.
jet planes . .

m· Thursday's session and
was disappointed by the lack
of success. " You don 't see me
at my most buoyant. We don't
have an agreement tonight,"

he said.
Asked if the talks might not
reswne today Horvitz said;

CLINIC SE:J'
There will be a cancer
clini c at the Middleport
Methodist Church Feb. 8 and
15 during the aft ernoon.
Anyone wishing to make an
appointment are to call 9927531 during the day ·or 992·
5832 evenings.

any agreement before 1t IS
" It 's always possible."
The United 'Mine Workers submitted II&gt; the rank-and-£ile
bargaining council planned to union members. John Guzek,
meet in Wash ingll&gt;n tl&gt;day , a barga ining council member
possibly to review the indus- in Ohio, said the meeting was
ca llc'!lll&gt; provide the negotiatry's latest offer.
The council plaMed a mid- tors " guidance " on an
morning meeting. It must OK unspecified contract issue.
The strike caused ha rdship
-on thousands of min e
famili es , but had IHtle
immediate impact on a major
conswner of coal - the
Sunny this aft ernoon, with elec tric industry . Utilities
highs in t~e mid 20s. In· stockpiled mountains of coal
creasing cloudiness tonight ,
in anticipation of the contract
with lows between 10 a nd 15. expiration.
Cons ie ra ble clo udin ess
But the reL'ent wave of icy
Saturday, with highs between winter weather began to
25 and 30.
deplete the stockpiles ,

Weather

•

e

at y

By ROBERT SANGEORGE

WARSAW, Ky. (UP! ) The off-again, on-again effort
to blast away a marrunoth
Ohio River ice gorge blocking
the Markland Dam is off
again.
U.S. Army Corps_of Engi·
neers officials late Timrsday
reversed themselves for the
third time in recent days and
decided to abandon, at least
temporarily, the attempt to
blast a channel through the
three-mile ice gorge.
Aiter two-&lt;lays of testing
the effects of progressively
larger charges of dynamite
on the ice pack, corp officials
plan to try to clear a channel
through the jam with
towboats.
·The project could take a
month or more, during which
time commerCial barges
carrying critical supplies of
conunodities to cities upriver
will be unable to move
through the Markland locks.
Demolition experts had
minor success Thursday in
blasting the ice gorge.
Several chunks of ice aooue ,_ .
to-10 feet long could be seen.

noating downstream late in
the afternoor. after explosives
specialists working under
contract to the U.S . ·Army
Corps of Engineers set off
three loud·~harges equivalent
to 50 pounds of dynamite
each.
Despite the use of large
charges, Thursday was
mairily a second " test day"

for personnel from Controlled
Demolition, lnc., a private
contractor . The additional
testing was made necessary
when officials of the
Kentucky Bureau of Mines
and Minerals decided they
had to
monitor
the
"con&lt;;ttssive effect" of the
blasting on the community
near the darn .
Charles Schumann, a
spokesman for the cOrps at
the dam, had said today
would be the first of several
days in which explosives
experts would try II&gt; crack a
channel through the gorge.
Later, Schumann said the
dynamiting would resume
·only if the towboats failed to
break through. ·

Towboat crews under contract to the corp, lead by the
6,000 horsepower craft
" Charles

Lehman,"

The stuck barges' have
aggravated the problem by
apparently preventing two
gates at the dam from being
closed. Schumann said
Thursday there is increasing
concern the open gates could
drain the Ohio River pool
above the dam , from
Warsaw, Ky. , upriver to
Chilo, Ohio, where the next
dam , the Meldahl , is located.
A pool of 20 feet is
necessary to keep the river
functioning for barge traffic
above the darn. Low water
levels also would make the
job of breaking up the ice
gorge more difficult. With
current situ a tion at · the
Markland gates, the pool can
only be maintained about
another week, Schumann
said .
The Markland Dam . is
located about 40 miles
downriver from Cincinnati.
Since the ice gorge formed at
the dam a week ago, barge
traffic has been una_ble to
pass upstream to destinations
in Ohio, Kentucky, West Virginia and Pennsylvania,

are

trying w breakup the ice and
push it into the dam's locks,
where it is flushed downriver,
The towboats began the
arduous proCess of slowly
knocking at the ice gorge on
Wednesday . They had progressed only several hundred
yards into the three-mile
gorge by late Thursday. "It's
going to be a long, slow
process,' '
Schum a nn
acknowledged.
The ice extends from the
Kentucky to Indiana banks
and corp engineers estimate
the ice is 40-to-60 feet in spots.
The tons of ice began
pressing against the dam
Friday· evening , when an ice

gorge
several
miles
upstream broke up.
A&lt; the ice began moving, it
sent nearly 100 barges out of
control and noating toward
the dam . Despite frantic
salvage efforts, at ·least II
barges remain caught
against the face of the
Markland Dam .

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
CLEARANCE SALE
CONTINUES WITH SAVINGS
UP TO 50%

National Bank Region Nurnber4
Thousands

Ste:ttcment of Resources and LiobiliUes

Cash and due! rom banks. . . . . .. . . . . ....... .. .. .. .. .... .. . . ...._.. .... ..
. .... 798
U.S. Treasury securities.. . . .. .. ..
.. .. .. .. .. . .. ... .. . . .. ... .. .. .. 1,767
Obligations of other U.S. Gov't: agencies and corps . . ........ . .... . . . .. . .. . . ...... . . 11
Obligations of States and politiCal suixlivisiuns .. .. . . . . ... ... . ....... . .. . • . ... , .. ... 330
Federal Reserve stock and corporate stuck . . . .. . . . . . . . .. . . ..... . . . ...... . ... .. .. . .. 8
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
.
· ·· .
under agreements to resell . .. .. .. . . ........ . ...... . . • . . . •. . , . . .. . . . . . .. .. . . . .. 200
J,oariS, 'rol&lt;ll Iexcluding unearned income) ..... ......... .. . . ..... . .. 6,820
Less:

Re~crve

for possible loan losses .. .... ... , , , .. . , . . .. . ..... . ...... 98

LtJans. Net . . . . .. . . . . . .. . . .......... .... . . .. .. ..... . . ..... .. :. ·.... .. . . ... .. 6,722
Bank premises, {umiture and fixtures. and
other assets representin g b.cmk premb es .. .. . ... . . .. .... .. . . .. . ..... . . . .. . . . . . .. 146

---11--

~~;~~s!~E:rs .......·..·.·... ....... ... .·.· .·... ..' ...·.·: .·.....·.·.·.·:..·....·.· .· .·.. ..·.·.·io.~~

Demand deposits of individuals, prtnshps., and corps ... ... , . . . .. •....... . . . ..... . . 2,125
Ill

.---.. .
oC
Ill

1-

•
&gt;

I ll

.-..

...
t:oe

:)-

Oa.
... uoe

Pomeroy .

This grant will be matched
with $20,275 in local non·
federal funds . and will go
toward funding a Retired
Senior Volunteer Program
(RSVP), through January 3t,
1979.
RSVP participants serve in
public and private non-profit
organizationS such as courts,

schools, hospitals, day care
centers and others.
There are no eligibility
requirements for volunteers
based on education , exACTION .assists Senior
Volunteers with transportation, training and
development, community
support and also assist in
sponsoring r~ognition activities.
RSVP operates through
grants to public and private
non·profit organizations in

~·

Shirts
•Save 50%, too, on Clearance Sale priced Women's Co.ats - Children's

local communities

Coats, Jackets and Snowsuits - Women's Coordinate Sportswear - Junior
Sportswear -:- Women's Blouses and Sweaters - Girls Sportswear - Slacks

Average for 30 calendar days ending with report dale:
Ca sh and due from banks ... ....... .... . .. ...... . ... . . . . ........ ...... ,. .. .. . . . 799
Total loans .. .. . . . ................... . . ....... .. . . ... . . .. .. .. . . . .. .. . . . .. ... 6,655
Total deposits . .. ......... . ' .... .. . .. . .'. , .. . ... . .. .. . .. , .... . . .. . ........... 9,016
TOTAL ASSETS . . . . . .. . . . . ............ ... . ... . ... ... . . .. ... ... ..... .. .. . ... ll,031

Tops and Blouses - Girls' Sweaters.
)

MEMBERS of the Orange Township Volunteer Fire
Department are pictured with two self contained
breathing units and .a portable pump bought through
contributions from the public. Some $1,500 was

•Plus Special Sale Prices on many other ~ems all over the store. Good

I, John T. Wolfe, President, of the above-named bank do
hereby declare that this Report of Condition is true and cor·
reel to the best of my knowledge and belief.
John T. Wolfe
January 2:!, 1978
I

We the undersigned directors attest the correctness of this sl&lt;lternent of resources and

0

W. Arthur Orr

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

Carroll R. Norris - Director·s

•

Clarence V. PriL'e

'

·ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY·
f

'

\ \

'

,..

COLUMBUS
State whiter because of snow,
Senator Oaki.ey C. Collins (R· winds, storm damage, im·
Ironton) today introduced passable roads and-or
legislation which would grant energy-related shortages. If
Ohio. school districts 10 ad· my btU is not passed, these
ditional snow-calamity days will have to be made up
closing days during the before July I, 1978. This
current school year.
would cause very serious
Collins said : "Many financial hardships for many
schools throughout Ohio have school districts which are
been forced to close this alrea&lt;. hard-pressed for
v
\It

futKts.' '

The .Ironton lawmaker
"The · General
added:
Assembly took a similar
appraoch in response to last
winter's energy crisis. This
winter's weather has been
equally severe and has
resulted m the necessity to
close sehools for •r.tended
periods of time."

and its

roster currently stands at
more than 213,000 Senior
Volunteers in the United
States.
For more information on
the Retired Senior Volunteer
Program, contact the Projee!
Director, Alice Wamsley on
East Main Street in Pomeroy.

EMS answers
three calls

The . Middleport
Emergency Squad was called
to near the Mark V Super·
market at 12:47 p.m. Thurs' day for Victor Diehl. 82, who
. had fallen on the sidewaik
and struck his head. He was
'"I know of no ill-effects for taken to Veterans Memorial
·granting the extra snow· Hospital and admitted there.
energy closing days last . At 5:34 p.m., the squad
winter and I am hopeful tHat went to the LaSalle Hotel lor
the legislature will act Cloyd Brookover who was
promptly to grant the same also taken "to Veterans
type of relief to our schools as Memorial Hospital.
they try to recover from this
At 7:44p.m. the squad went
winter's weath'e r-related to 735 Hobert St. for Roy
problems," ,Collins con· Boggs who was taken to
eluded.
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Collins' bill is introduced·

Women's Clothing

belief is true and correct.

.

contributed to the firemen in a recent fund drive to make ·
the purchase of the equipment possible. Fire Chief Robert
Tripp and department members extend thanks to all those
who,gave in the suc~essful drive.

Selections of Styles and Sizes In Men's • ~· • Children's · Girts' and

liabilities. We d~darc that it has been ~xamined by us, and to the best o£ our ktowledge and

A new wa ge-and-berw£it

off er by the industry was
under study by the un ion.
Wages and benefi ts were the
only unresolved issues. The
wtion rejerted an Ct'Onomic
package exceeding 30 perce nt
over three years, sources
said. ·
Wil dca t strik es a nd
solve ncy uf the un ion's
benefit fund') - a pair o{
iss ues
t hat
div1dc't
negotiators ea rlier ...... hnve
been settled tentat ively.

So un·es said ncgotiutun:i
for the Bituminous Co al

Operators Associ ation a!(reed
tentativelv last w!!ekend to
b'Uarru1tee benefits pairl frnm
the w1ion', ailing health aod
pension funds .
Tile uruon agreed 1niners
would reimbur~ the healUl
and penslon funds ror any

re\•cnue lost during a wildcat
stri ke , so urCes sni d . The

companit&gt;s agreed to mitkc

the rc pn ytl iC!ll in cnses wtwrc
iHl

a r bitrat or

hln mes

lmlllngcmcnt {or the wlldt·ut.
NOW YOU KNOW
'l11c llll hon wi th tlw lu._:lll'St

n• purt t•d munlc r n i le is
! . UXt' l 1l J:&gt;._l U I'~ .

Fifto•t•n Ct•rrts
~ H , N u. t n;,

Vol.

Larry Milllione, Charles Savoy, Joe Struble, instructor,
presenting the ~ epartm e nt certificate to ~'ir•· c;hlcf
Robert Tripp, Tim Spencer and Larnnr Lyons . Completing
the training but hut present Wednesday night waN
La wrence Balse r.

Thirteen fire fighters
complete 32 hour course
Thirteeh members of the
Orange Town ship Volunteer

Educa tion in coopc rn tiun

Fire Department received

Distriet..

with the Ea stern Local School

certificates for completin g 12
Instruct or Struble praised
·hours of instruction in fire members of the class fur
fi ghting skills and techn iques
by Joe Struble, 'f. and l. Fire
Service instru ctor Wed· ·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:•;.
nespay night.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
A department certificate
Sunday
through
was presented to Fire Chief
Tuesday.
a
chance
of snow
Robert Stripp and individual
or
snow
flurrtc.R
each
day.
cards to each Ilia n comSlowly
warming
tem·
. pleting the training.
The certificates and cards peratures, wllh high• In the
as well as the instruction 20s or low 30s Sunday and
were authorized and made in theJOs by Tuesday. Lows
will be in the teens or low
available by the Trade and
20s
Sunday and In the nild
Industrial Vocati o nal
or
upper
20s by Tuesday.
Education Services of the
State
Department
uf

perience or income, and

'

Dress, Sport, Knit and Western Shirts - Men's and Boys' Sweaters -

b. No. shares oUtstandinS ... . .. .. ....... . . .. . .. .... ... . . ..... . .. ...... ...... .. .. 125
Surplus .. . ... . .. .. . ..... ...... .. .... . . . ....... ... ... . , .. .. .. ,. ... .. .. . .... . .. . 125
Undivided profits ....... .. .. . .. . , ....... . . .. ... .. ..... ... ... . .. .. ..... .. ..... .. 504
Reserve for contingencies and other capital reseryes . .... . .. . . . . ......... .. . ... ; . . .. . I
TOTALEQUITYCArrnL ...... . . , .. . . ..... .. . .... ... ...... .. .. . .. .. ..... ~
TOTAL LIABIUTJJ·:S AND EQUITY CAPITAL .. ...... .. ... . .. ... .. . ... ... .. . .. 10,0!12

-1-

The Federal agency,
ACTION, has awarded
$23,447 to Meigs County
Council on Aging , Inc. in

•On Men's and ·Boys' Winter Jackets - Men's Corduroy Slacks - Men's
.

THESE MEN received rec.ognition cards for
completing a 32 hour fire fighting course. Thev are
mernb(,rs of the Orange Township Volunteer Fire
Department. The group includes : seated, I tor , Charles
Carr, Cliff Longenette, Norman Weber, Ri chard Spencer,
Keith Miller, Ron Lascar. Sta"nding, I tor , Charles Weber, .

grant

Time and savings deposits of individuals.

prtnshps .. and corps. .. . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... ... .. .... . . .. . . . .. . ... : .. 6,408
Deposits of United States Government ... .. .. ... , . ..... .. . . . . .... .. .. .. . .. .. .... . . 100
Deposits of Slates and political subdivisions .. . ... . . , . .. .. . . .. , .... . . .... .. ...... . . 588
Certified and officers' checks .... . , .... .. .. , .. ......... .- '· . .. 1 .. ... . ... - • - · • .. • • · • • 26
TOT 1\L DOMESTIC DEPOSI1'S ... . . .. : . ..... .... .. . .. .. .. ... .. .. . .. ..... .. .. .. 9,247
Total demand deposits ...... .. ..... ... ..... . .. . .. .. .. .. .. ·. ... ... .. 2,.693
Total time and savings deposrts ... . . . ........ .. ....... . . , .. . . ... ... 6 554
TOTAL LIAB!J.!TIES (excluding subordinated notes and debentures ) . . ... . .. . .. ... . 9,247

Pe n nsyl van iu ,

en tine

Meigs
awarded

RACINE HOME NATIONAL BANK

Charter nurnber9815

MINOR DAMAGE
Medi um. dn nw g~s· were
incurred in an accident un
F ronl St ., Middle)l&lt;lrt, at
10 :54 p.m. Thursday when 11
car dri ven by B. G. Daniels.
Wilk esvi ll e, attempti ng to
back up before pullin~ from a
parking spa ce, hit the Iront o!
another park ed cor owned by
Randall Hayes. Middleport ,
police said.

weste rn

southern West Virgina and
eastern Kentueky.

Blast ,e ffort now off

Consolidating domestic sub.·~idiaries ?{the

in the state of Ohio. a t the close of business on December 31 , 1977 published in response to
ca ll made IJy Comptroller of the Currency, under title t2, United States Code, Scctron 161 .

threa tening a number . of
Appalae hi an sta tes with
electr icity cutbacks. Officials
estimated less than a 30-&lt;lay
supply of q ml in Ohio ,

administrator
Robert Wingett, veteran
member of the Syracuse

and William Hubbard, a
citizen ; news. Kathryn Crow ;
village council , wa s ap- Pool, George Holman, Robert
pointed village administrator Wingett and Mayor London.
Thursday night.
In a letter receive~ from
Wingett will oversee the Jim Diddle of Syracuse Home
trustees of the board of public Utilities, it was noted thut due
affairs and other village to the fuel rate clause ef·
·
operations.
fe~tive January, residents
The village's annual ap- are now paying $2.80 per t,OOO
propriation wa s set at cubic feet of gas.
$104,435.
Council went on record
Mayor Herman London expressing thanks to several
named the following com· people who assisted iri snow
mittees ; Street, . . Eber removal the past two weeks.
Picken~. chairma n, J ohn
Mayor Lond on reported
Arnott, Larry Brogan , that he received 271 phone
Jimmy Joe Hemsley and calls in four days following
Clyde Triplett ; Finance, the heavy snow.
Larry Brogan, chairman ,
Council agreed to purchase
John Arnotl and Clyde smoke ejector fan and por·
Triplett; ordinance, Jinuny table power plant generator.
.J oe Hem~ ley, ~hairman, The purchase of the fire
Larry Brogan and Eber department could possibly
Pickens; Safety, emergency, .lower insurance rates lor the
and fire, Clyde Triplett, residents of Syracuse.
Att ending were Mayor
chairman, Jimmy Joe Hems·
ley and John Arnott ; Plan- London, Clyde Triplett, Eber
ning and development, Larry Pickens, Larry Brogan, J ohn
Brogan, chairman; Eber Amott and Kathryn Crow,
Pickens, and Kathryn Crow; council members , Janice
Recreation and scheduling, Lawson , clerk, George
John Arnott, chairman, Clyde Holman, treasurer , and
Triplett, Jimmy-~·~ Hemsley Robert Wingett .
'I
~'&lt;I

their cummunity spirit in
improving their cffi cil~n c:y in
righting (ires. He commend ed
the rncn for their interest In
the . training and for t he
eoopcr&lt;Jtinn h~ rcceivCll. Ht~
out t hat nw n y
community fire depa rtments

pointed

were requ cstin ~ ll'ttining m1d

that int erest i n fire
prc\' Cntiun ami protection is
growin g lhrouf4h the stutc .

Ohio River

Ohiu Hiver -traffk i!-i being
hampered today by icc Iron\
't11e Ra cine IAJcks und Dam,
some 13 miles away.
Heaviest acc umulations of
the ~:~i·x· feet deeP icc ut:e-the
f\acine and Belleville IAJCks
and darns. Trame has been
reduced to about fi ve percent
of normal flow according to a
locks spokesman.
Th e ri ver wa s cove red
Wednesday with chunks of icc
for a distance of 13 miles .
This is more than one-third of
the length of th e pool between
the Racine Dam and th e
Belleville Dam at Rtedsville.
It it belie-ved that the ice
accumu.Jations arc not as bad
us last year.
Tows were being used more
than usual lor lockage at the
Gallipolis Roller Dam, nine
miles so uth of Gallipolis. Ice
was not as heavy there as the
locks are not as large as those
on other dams .
Several barges tied to the
sh or e were taken down -

stream by the large icc flow.
MEET TONIGH.T
Meigs County REACT wlll
meet this evening at 7 p.m. lit
the senior citizens center .
SESSION PLANNED
The Southern Local Board
of Education will meet Feb. 6
at 7:30p.m. in the high school
cafeteria.

..

�2- The Da1ly Senunel Middleport Pomcru) 0 Fr1day Feb l 1978

peopletalk
ByKENNETHKCLARK
Urn ted Press International

QUEEN OF DIAMONDS Diamonds are u gtrl s best fnend
- but on I) t! she gels her ~ul Elizabeth Taylor says she d1do I
and &gt;he s swng a Flonda Jewelry company for Ill 43 million
M1ss Taylor ssull - flied tn Los Angeles - says !larry Shuster
and Anglo lnternal!onal Diamond lnduslnes Inc reneged on
a 1976 agreement to pay her a $250 000 commisSion and
royallies totaling $200 OOO cvery SIX months m return for use of
her name and hkeness lo promote the Sillt! of uncut diamonds
She says shes gotten neither the cash nor an accountmg of
sules and says furthermore her name Is bemg used to peddle
Jewelry deSigns and settmgs as well as uncut gems - WhiCh
wasn t cart of Ute deal
THE UNREPENTANT CBS'! V s news director says m Los
Angeles he s sorry about President Carter's delayed
Wednesday rught F1res1de Chat - sorry tlJC network ran 11
at all W1lham Smallts under Whtle House f1re for refus1ng to
c..: ;mcel See How She Runs w1th Juanne Woodward to make

prm1e-tJrne room for Carter s Panama Canal speech He says
1ts news value "as worth only a few film clips on the late
evenmg news V~ewels apparently don t agree A C Nielsen
ratmgs shu\\ the film drew only 34 percent of the audience
while ABC and NBC - which ran the speech 10 prune t1me combmed for 48 percent
FAN CLUB Tum Hayden no longe1 pursUes the radicalism
Umt made hun one of llie Chicago Seven and led htm to found
Students tor a Democ1 at1c Society back m the 60s but he st1ll
runs contrary to Ute establishment He v1slled the White House
Thursda~ -for a conference on national growth and economic
development PreSident Carter told hun he thought the
confe rence was a good one and Hayden d1sagreed saymg
TI1e test of good gnvc rrunent would be If you could abohsh
such conferences

Rut the two did hnd one pomt of accord

l'hey both hke the f1lm Julia - which stars Hayden s w1fe
Jane Fonda

BURNS ON STAGE From 1950 to t958 George Burns and
his late " tfe Gracie Allen broadcast their tele\ ISIon show from
a sound stage at General Hollywood Studws rhursday Burns
was back ag un fm dedication of the area as The Burns
Stage The 82 year-old com1c was pleased - says he hopes
someday he II perform there again !'he studiO plans s1m1lar
honors for other showbiz lummanes m Its 67 year past mcludmg James Cagney and Harold Lloyd
FLYING DOWN TO RIO Rock star&gt; Rod Stewart Elton
and Peter Frampton warmed up 1hursday m RIO de
Janetro on $50 bottles of champagne for Ute Cit) s Mardi Gras
carruval - wh1ch begms Satw da) Their hostess - Reglue
Choukrun who runs the famed d1sco Hegme s SwiSs
actress Ursula Andress w1ll be the ca rruval s ofhctal guest
sta}'lng at the home of R10 Mayor Marc:u s Tumuyu
Juhn

'-•LH¥tr:o;~:o; LUu1s J1 unlan returns to Broadway after 23
years to costar th1s mon th Wllh Patncla Elliott m 13 Rue de
1 Amour at New Yorks C~rcle m the Square Theater
Dusty Spnngf1eld - Bntam s all t1me top fema le smger - 1s
back m the recordmg studio m London agam after a four year
Tippy
hiatus - to produce a new record II Begms Agam
Huntley w1d6w of late televtSion newsma n Chet Huntley Is
seekmg the Republica n nommat10n for Congress 1n Montana
Elena Canav1er - artist teacher and art histormn - has been
named arts advtser to Joan Mundalc, a JOb that pays $26 000 a
year Lauue Kazan opens Unrue s Room a t the New York
Playboy Club on Feb tJ Jan Peerce Will be m concert Feb
21 at Carneg1e Hall

TV•••in Review
By JOAN HANAUER
UP! Television Writer
NEW YORK (UPI) - Unt1l a few years ago any ABC
televisiOn anmversary program m1ght have been subtitled
much ado about nothmg
Nowadays the network can boast such hits as the Fonz
Laverne &amp; Shtrley
Three s Company and Charlie s
Angels
R1ch Man Poor Man
Eleanor and Franklm and
Roots
But ho" did a network Utat until a couple of years ago spent
tls entl!'e hfe grunly m1red m last place ftnd enough matenal
for a !our-hour retrospecllve ' That s what ABC will broadcast
Feb 5 7 11 p rn Eastern tune under the IItle ABC s S1lver
Amversary Celebration
One way was to brmg on some 300 stars past and present an
an endless processiOn of film chps and cameo emcee
performances
The show IS sornethmg the vte"er can tune m and out of four hours 1s tedwusl} too long but much of tt would be
interesting m shorter takes
Some bits are delightful mclud1ng Alan King s rev1ew of
ABC s past glones and hiS sharp rernmd&lt;:&lt; that ABC IS No I
Tins ts very exc1tmg except when you remember there are
only three networks he sa; s companng 1l to a ca r race m
which the compelttors a re a Hudson a DeSoto and an Edsel
The best of the productwn nwnbers offers a beautifully
choreographed Batman Robm sequence smoothly mterspers
ing the dance w1th film clips m a delightful bit of fun lhat even
Bat-phobiCs can enJOY
There are clips from barely remembered shows from
Ozzte and Harnet and Donna Reed to Space Patrol and
The Real McCoys
Ben Casey and Marcus Welby do a good-humored doctor
number m wh1ch Robert Young says he was a teleVISIOn doctor
so long he started to take Wednesdays off to play golf and
Vmce Edwards as Casey IS shown w1th some of his most
famous patients - Robert Blake Joan Hackett George
Harmllon Pally Duke Eddie Albert Melvyn Douglas DICk
Clark (who was execu ti ve producer of the anruversary
spec1al )
Gabe Kaplan of Welcome Back Kotter does a n1ce stand
up turn about Ute ABC s of successful Sitcoms wh1ch mdude
credibility (as m the old Patty Duke show that posed the
everyday problem of what to do w1th Identical coustns) and
tasteful respect (such as m The Flymg Nun somebody lobe
followed by the Shdmg Fnar' and the Floating Rabbi )
Smgers m ctipo and m person range from the late Bmg
Crosby croonmg That Old Black Magtc to live J ohn Denver
smgmg a tnbute to Jacques Cousteau and the men of his sh1p
Calypso wh1le undersea scenes !Ill th e screen
ABC may have ranked th1rd among the networks all those
years but the1 e was plenty worth remcrnbenng What not jom
Davtd Hartman at the end when he proposes a toast to the next
25 years?

Toastmasters meeting set
Makmg the best use uf lime anyone can follow to better
Will be the lheme of the Ohio time management The
~alley Toastmasters meet mg overall theme ts to work
February 9 at 7 p m at the smarter
not
ha rder
Jackson P1ke off1ce of the Following the SIX steps will
Oh1o Valley Bank The pubhc not only help you meet your
IJ' 1nv1ted - particularly goals and gel your work don e
prospective members -or faster but w11l also g1ve you
mterested persons
tune to relax and be With your
' A movie based on the book
familY and enJOY the tune of
How to Get Control of Your your llfe
Time and Your L1fe" by Alan
The program Will also
Lakm w1ll be the mam part of Include formal and lm
the program Used by many promptu
tal ks
and
comparues as an employee evaluations by club mem
tramtng tool the 111m em- bers
phasiZes stx steps that
!.
I.

Tongsun PU:k sl~ted as star ·
of open hearmgs m probe
B) RICHARD LERNER
WASHINGTON &lt;UP I)
House Investigators plan to
questi on Tongsun Park
secretly for about two weeks
and then make h1m a star
w1tness at open hearmgs on
alleged
South
Korean
influence buymg m Congress
sources sa1d today
The
House
ethics
committee s cha1rman John
Flynt D-Ga and Spec1al
Counsel I eon Jaworski sa1d
Thur~day the panel will begm
mterrogabng Park pnvately
Feb 2.1 and the md!Cled
Korean nee dealer w1ll

testify publicly at a later
date
They also satd Park agreed
to
an
un~onditlone~l
exammat1on
CongressiOnal sources sa1d
later Jaworski s staff would
questiOn Park from A to Z to
bwld the1r case from top to
bottom and need about two
weeks to do at smce Juslire
Department o!ftc!als took 17
days to hrush lhe1r just
concluded qu1zzmg of Park m
Seoul
When
all
Park s
information IS m hand the
sources s&lt;a1d Jawor ski Will

try to have him test1fy at
public hearmgs as fast as
poS51ble - probably m a
month - and those session s
C&lt;Juld be the start of d•sc•ph
nary proceedmgs for s1ttmg
congressmen
Jaworski already has said
some current members
evidently broke House rules
for off1c1al conduct and
Park s tesllmony will be v1tal
tn checkmg out allegations
agamst others
One ex:&lt;ongressman cab
forma Democrat R1chard
Hanna has been md1cted so
far and four others are

expected lo be charged but
no current members are said
to be m sunllar danger
Park who made a fortune
m
Washington
alter
becommg Seoul s exclUSive
agent for sales of surplus U.S
nee to Korea 10 Ute late 1960s
IS accused of usmg his
commtsstons to pay off
congressmen as part of a
Korean bid to wm Amencan
military and economic a1d
He has been In Seoul smce
last August when he was
md1cted on 36 counts of
brtbery consptracy ma1l
fraud and racketeer111g

Former UMW official is on stand
By EDWARD J MCFALL
MEDIA Pa (UPI) - A
former Umted Mme Workers
Official who testified W A
rony Boyle ordered the
kilhng of umon nval Joseph
Yablonsk• faces
Jock
today a second round of
defense attempts to d1scred1t
his statements
Defense
i:lltorney
A
Charles Peruto Thursday
suggested Utat Albert Pass
former secretarylreasurer of
UMW 01Sir!Cil9 1n Kentucky
broke an e1ght year Silence
on the case m hopes of
wmmng a lighter sentence for
himself
Pass Thursday tes11f1ed at
Boyle s murder retrial that
the form er UMW ch tef
ordered the 1969 slaymg of
Yablonski hts bitterest umon
foe Yablonski s wtfe and
daughter a lso were killed
Pass sentenced to life m
pnson for Ute slaymgs, also
sa1d Boyle approved a
kickback plan to ram $20 000
10 laundered umon funds to
hire the three gunmen who
killed the Yablonsk1s on Dec
31 1969
Peruto s cross-exammatJon
of Pass Thursday was
marked by frequent clashes

e

between the two

Pass a
baldmg stockily bwlt man
who wears tmted glasses
often gave cocky answers to
Peruto ssometunes sarcast1c
questions
He frequently mlerrupted
Peruto s quest10nmg w1th
Now I ve told you lhat s
not what I satd or You
didn t hear me Let s set the
record stra•ght
Pass sa1d under d~rect
exammat10n by spec1al
prosecutor Rtchard Sprague
that one of the reasons he
!mally confessed was h1s
feelmg of gUJlt for the sm I
committed
In
hiS
parttc1pat1on mUte Yablonski
slaymgs
He smd that after g1vmg a
confessiOn m September 1977
and unphcating Boyle he
was told by Sprague thai
efforts would be made to
reduce his three consecutive
ltfe.pnson sentences to one
concurrent hfe term
Pass also sa1d Sprague
prom1sed he would try to
tra nsfer h1m to another
pnson for safety reasons
Peruto, so metlmes
mumckmg Pass southern
drawl lr1ed to show lhat the
w1tness once a trusted fnend

HEALTH

~~ Lawrence E lamb, M 0
Rt conditwn(ng
takt•s time
By Lawr~nce Lamb M D
DEAR DR LAMB - Befme
a lr1ple bypass two months
ago my restmg heart rate
before geltmg out of bed \las
58 to 62 Now 11 IS from 90 to
110 The doctors m atte n
dancecontemJ thc1 e 1s no
CHUSC for CIJO&lt;;ern
lhe Ill
surance comames contend
the mmlallty rate tnples w1th
mcreased pulse rates abO\e
90per mmtue
Is 11 concetvable that the
1 e10uhng of t he blood with
the ~Jdd1twnal stress of
rcr.nm al of 23 mches of \ e1n
II om the left leg IS causmg
the elevated pulse rate'
Smce the 1mhal heart at
tack mne years ago rnv
wei ght has dec1eased from
193 to t62 pounds I habitually
nde a btc; cle for exercise
approximately seven rrules
both mormng and evenmg
But what the heck constitutes
moderate exercise?
I m delighted w1lh the
SUI gery The alternative had
begun to look rather diSmal
angmal pam constant!; s1ck
before I was through shower
mg or 10 mmutes on a b1ke
and popp1ng p11ls
Unfortu nate !&gt; patients
know nothing and doctors
don t talk Perhapo you have
some mfonnat10n 1 can use
There are JUSl too many
bypass patlen!s who know
nothing or very little about
what has happened and what
conslltutes a good re&lt;.:overy
DEAR READER- There 10
no set rule as to what to ex
lliE DAILY SEN TIN~ L
UEVOTEDTOTHE

INTEREST OF
MEIG..IIij..MASON AREA
CHESTER l TANNEHUJ..
Exe&lt;- Ed
RUBERT HOEFLICH
Cit} Editor
Published dally exl:i!pt S..tun:hl
lly TIe Ohio VuUey Publishing
ComP&lt;Jn)' Multtmedlll. Inc
111
Court St Pomeroy Ohio 4S769
Bus! ess Off1ce Phone !1'92 2156

EdltorLI:II Phone992 2157

Set.•tmd c lass postage pa id !ll

Pomeroy Oh o
N11tionul &lt;tdvert!Slnc rcprcsen
taUve Wurd
Griff t~ Comp.111 .1'
lnt Boll nelli and Ga llugher Dtv
57 Tiurd Ave

10017

N~w York

Ny

Substnpt on rates Delivered by

c.arr cr wher e avalh:tbl~ 75 cents per
week By Motor Rou\.e where !'HITler

.';Cn.'LCe not HVH U.ble One mo th
$J Z1 By rmul m Ohiu und W V~~:
One Yea r IZ2 00 SJX mo ths

'II 50

Three no thli
Elsewhere 126 00 }1!11 S x
SIJ 50
Three no1 I

Sull!cnpt'iun pncc

Ttmes-Sc nunel

u du ~cs

17 00
months
17 ~0

Sand~:~y

pect atter a bypass oper£tllon
As Ill ybur mstan&lt;.:e the opera
t1on IS perfonned to reroute

blood •round an obstructiOn
m an artery to the heart mus
cle - or lfl many cases
several detours for mor e than
one plugged a1tery fhe out
come often depends upon how
much heart muscle was
damaged from the have not
yet ac hi eved complet e
recover) from your surgery
as you have suggested It
takes a long tune for the body
to really reconditiOn 1lself
even With expert help after
maJor surgery
Don t be confused by those
msurance stattslics They are
fm people who never h£td a
bypass operatiOn and the lngh
heart rates tend to 1denl1fy
people who smoke don t ex
erc1se drmk lois of coffee
and sometimes use too much
alcohol are often fat and m
general comprtse the seg
ment of the populatton who
are coronary prone
I would suggest that you do
the lhmgs now that ) ou
should have done before your
!trst heart attack Gradually
mer co.t se your exercise wtthm
the hmtts your doctors
recommend Don I push 11
That IS how exercise causes
trouble A lower level of exer
c1se regularly sustamed
helpo Cui out the thmgs that
are decondJttoners of the
heart that work agamst youcoffee cigarettes alcohol
and try to get r1d of every last
ounce of body fat you can
I lhmk a lot more pal1ents
w1th heart disease as bad as
you have expenenccd could
do much better If they really
got r1d of all the fat not Just
part of 11 A low fat low
calorie d1et w1th we1ght
reductwn unllllhere IS no apprefla ble fat around the
waist does wonders But If
you comprmmse and accept
some fat you will not gel lhe
destred results
I am sendmg you The
Health Leiter number ~
Y •ur Heart Rate What It
Me.ms Others who want thiS
mfonnat1on can send 50 cents
wtth a long stamped self
addressed envelope for 1t lo
me m care of this newspaper
P 0 Bo~ 326 San Antomo
TX 78292 L1mlt your salt and
gel your we1ght down as
much as you can to get lh•
best results from your
surgery

of Boyle, confessed because
he knew others mvolved m
Ute case had rece1ved hghler
sentences or none at all for
cooperalmg w1th autitont1es
Perulo noted Pass was
aware thai Boyle had been
g1ven a new tnal by the state
Supreme Court m January
1977
Jsn t 11 a fact that you
decided, Now I can cash m
and
JUmp
on
the
band\\agon' Peruto asked
Pass
The witness de rued this and
smd Sprague s offer to help

came only after the
confessiOn
Peruto retorted Are you
saymg It was a bonus and not
expected?
'He sa1d 11 and I was glad
he said 1t and I hope 11 comes
true Pass replied
Pcrulo drew from Pass the
adm1sswn that while he
remembered exact dates
gomg back to June 1969
1ncludmg an mcompleted
phone ca ll to Boyle, he could
not remember Ute exact dale
he talked to Sprague and
began atonmg for his sms

No major changes seen
in U. S. unemployment
By SARA FRITZ
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Despite a dramatiC drop tn
unemployment at Ute end of
las t y'ear admm1strat10n
economists do not expect
JOblessness t o decline
Slgmflcantly m 1978
The unemployment flgures
for the first month of the new
year were to be released
today
and
most
ad mmtstra tt on offi cials
anhc1pated bad news
PreSident Carter s top eco
nom1c advtsers were stunned
last month when the Labor
Department announced
un empl oyment
dec lin ed
sharply to 6 4 percent m
December 1977 No one
expected 11 to !all lower than
6 6 percent
In fact
some
ad
m1mstratwn offtctals prt
valely reJected the results
of the December report They
tnsiSied the f1gure probably
understated Joblessness al
the close of 1977
Admmtstratton foreca sters
are predicting a decline m
unemployment to no lower
titan 6 2 percent at the end of
1978 Thus there are
mdtcattons these experts no
longer expect to ach1eve the
goal of 4 percent by 1981
December s dramati c
dechne nonetheless had a
s1gnlhcant
Impact
particularly for nearly
300 000 jobless Amencans

who suddenly are no longer
ehg1ble
for
extended
unemployment benefits
The Labor Department was
forced to cut off these
benefits m 41 states this week
as a result of the nahonw1de
decltne m JOblessness The
benefits are pa1d accordmg to
a formula
based on
unemployment data
Extended beneflls were ar
ranged by Congress durmg
the deplhs of the recesswn for
those unemployed people who
already had exhausted 26
weeks of re gular jobless
benefit s Th1s legiSlation
added an extra 13 weeks of
benefits
An addillonal 13 weeks stretd;mg lola! JObless
compensatlon to a2 weeks ~
was provided under federal
supplemental beneftls Those
beneltts ended Jan 31 when
Congress failed to extend the
legislation

REVIVAL PLANNED
The Rev C J Lemley will
serve as evangelist for a
rev1val at the Jubilee
Chr1st13n Center on State
Route 7 and George Creek
Road begmnmg Sunday
evemng Services wtll be at 7
each evemng WJih spec1al
vocal muSic each evenmg
Closmg date for the revival
was not set

Sermonette
The Slgolllcance of Thls Weather
ThiS wmter wealher IS probably good for me but I would
prefer to live Wllhoul II It has really affected Ute lifestyle of
our farmly Our house IS Situated al the foot of a hill In all thiS
snow we can get our cars Into our dr1veway but not out agam ,
so we leave them at Ute top of the h1ll alongSide the road The
walk up Ute hill IS good for us but the extra exposure to the cold
wealher IS a bit uncomfortable Dnvmg IS qu11e hazardous
nowadays wllh Ute roads pockmarked w1lh snow and tee
These travel conditions have almost brought our church
programs loa slnndstill durmg the monlh of January I always
hate to miSS church bulfor the past two weeks I have JUSI been
unable lo get there
I could probably think of a few more mconvemences
caused by the wealher but I do have a few things to be
lhankful for Our house IS warm and well stocked w1th food My
wile and two children are heallhy and happy So 1t IS not all
bad
One thought on the weather does keep me gomg though
that this wmter IS only temporary Better wealher lies ahead
January 1s almost over and February Will probably be rough
W1lh the commg of March however Ute wealher will start
gettmg warmer Once that happens we Wlll forget the
mconveruences we are pasSing Utroogh Whenever I have to
dig the snow out from around my car I think of this fact and
keep shoveling When sprmg arr1ves I certalnly Will enJOY It
ThiS state of Ute seasons suggests a spmtuallesson to me
lhal sometitmg better hes ahead We presents us all w1th a
mtxed bag of expenences, some good and some bad But
something better lies ahead for us Jesus ChriSt IS commg
soon In John 14 1-Jwe read Let not your hearts be t.-oubled,
believe m God believe also m me In my Falher s house are
many rooms il•lwerenot so would I have toldyoo thai I go to
prepare a place for you• And when I goandprepare a place for
you I will come a gam and will take you to myself that where I
am you may be also ' Weepmg may tarry for the mghl but
JOY comes wtlh Ute mornmg (Psalms 30 5)
But there are a few d1fferences between Ute Second
Commg of Jesus Chnsl and the turmng of wmler Into spr1ng
We know when sprmg will come but ye know ne1lher the day
nor the hour wherem the Son of man cometh ' (Mattew 25 13)
We have no ch01ce but to be ready lor the sprmg but the commg
of Jesus Christ will be meanmgfui only to ' those who are
eagerly walling for hun' (Hebrews 9 28)
Fnend IS your heart rtght With God' Do you want to see
our Savtour Jesus come' G1ve your bear! to hlffi today' Albert Dittes Sevenlh-day Adventist Church

Otamher concerned
By United Pr011 IDiemaUnal
The Ohio Chamber of Com
merce sa1d Thursday Ohio 1s
near, at or already In, a
cr111cal situation ' because of
Ute natioowtde coal strike
Based on reports from
of our
larger
some
manufacturmg members
there will be slgntflcanl
layoffs, m some cases 30 to 40
percent or more when the
coal piles of electriC uWIIes
reach 31klay levels ' sa1d
Wtlliam T Blatr, executive
v1ce president of lhe
chamber 'Then, at 2tklay
levels, there wtll be mass1ve
layoffs w1th plant closmgs
IS
The
picture
undoubtedly as bad and
probably worse for many
smaller busmesses Some of
Ute stale s maJor electrsc
utthtses already are ms1de
the :i&lt;klay level
' Cons1dermg the time-lag
between when agreement IS
reached m the coal strike and
when coal actually begms
movmg agam, we are already
m a criSIS m much of the
stale
Many busmesses are
lossng money With reduced

•

3- The Dally ~ntmel MiddlepOrt Pomeroy 0 Fnda) Feb 3 1978

productiOn and employees
are
e~penenclng
mconvenlences such as shift
time changes, cool work envs
ronments
and
other
accomodatlons to meet
electr~ely curtailments
' U an agreement between
the mmers and mine
operators IS not brought
about m a very few days
these conditions will become
mcreastngly worse

Cookies are Great in '78
theme for Meigs scouts
The annual ~1rl sco ut
cookse sale wtll ~el underway
m Me1gs County next Fnday
Tbe order takmg lm;e IS
from Feb 10 to 19 w1th the
cook1es to be dehvert'&lt;l the
f1rst week In April Agam thiS
year the cook1es are $1 25 per
box and are bemg supplted by
the Little Browme Bakers
The vadetles In clude
Samoas, thm mmts, do-s1

LOTTERY
This week 1 wiDDinR Ohio
Lottery numbers
Gold number -2
Wblle number- 01
Blue number-IZ3
E.tra Cash-382582
Lucky Buck Two
Tbree-dlg\1 number

NOW OPEN

Z33

Slx-dlgll
633307

number-

A Utougbt for Ute day
llorace Greeley sasd The
illusiOn lhat times lhat were
are better titan those that are
bas probably pervaded all

ages'

TELEVISION
VIEWING
FRIDAY FEBRUARYl 1978
5 oo--ttere Come The Brides 3 Star Trek 4 Gun
smoke 8 Mister Rogers NeighbOrhood 20 33
Hogans Heroes 10 Emergency One 13 My Three

Sons 15
5 Jo-News 6 Etec Co 20 33 Mary Tyler Moore 10
Hogan .s Heroes 15
6 O&lt;f-News 3 4 S 10 13 15 ABC News 6 Zoom 20
Adams Chronicles 33
6 3Q- NBC News 3 4 15 ABC News 13 Carol Burnett
&amp; Friends 6 CBS News 8 10 Over Easy 20
7 O&lt;f-Cross W1ts 3 4 Liars Club 6 Capitol Beat 33
News 10 Gilligan s Is 15 Almanac 20
7 30o-Porter Wagoner 3 Gong Show 4 Match Game
PM 6 Pn ce is R1ght 8 MacNeil Lehrer Report
20 33 Family Feud 10 $100 000 Name That Tune
13 Pop Goes The Country 15
8 oo-Biack Beauty 3 4 15 Donny &amp; Marie 613
Wonder Woman a 10 Washington Week n Review
20 So The People May Know 33
8 3D-Wall Street Week 20 33 9 O&lt;f-Rocktord Files
3 4 15 Movie Cruise .nto Terror 13 6 Movie
Deadman s Curve a 10 Soundstage 20; Great
Performances 33
10 oo-Qulncv 3 4 15 News 20 10 JQ-Monty
Pythons Flying C1rcus 20 Symbiosis 33
11 O&lt;f-News 3 4 6 8 10 13 15 Dick Cavett 20 Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33
11 JG-Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Baretta 6 13 Mash 8
Movie The Incredible Two Headed Transplant
10 Monty Python s Flytng Circus 33 12 O&lt;fJanak l 33
12 O~Movie Bob &amp; Carol &amp; Ted &amp; Allee 8 12 4Q-

'

GINO'S
OF MASON
PHONE 773-5536

dos 'an enos tagalongs and
trefoils
Slogan of the ~.:ooku~ sale 1s
Cookies &lt;Jre Gu~at m 78
Tiw sa le ts a tradttlon "hic h
dates back to the carl) 1930 s
and the profits from the
cook1e .S(:Ile g1ve g1rl scouts an
opportumly to ra1se funds for
their troop activities for
c~mp development and for
servH.:es toll oops
Of the $1 25 pa1d for the
cookies thE' prorl11rt rw~tf\

Movie

Four new members \\ere
welcomed at the Monday
rught meeting of the Conway

"The new
tax fotmS.
gOOd reason to
let us help with
your taxes."
At H&amp;R Block, we understand these new
fonns, we know the laws We II do every
thing we can to save you money And that's
Reason No 1why you should let H&amp;R Block
do your taxes

!""!'H&amp;~R~B~L~O~C~It
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

618 E. MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO
Open 9 oo to 6 00 Weekday s
9 oo to 5 00 Saturday

Phone 992 3795
No Appointment Necessary

Murder

Mans ion 10 1 4()-News 13 2 JQ-News 3

3 O&lt;f-Movle The Forbln Project 3 5 O&lt;f-Movle
If I Had a Million
3 6 O&lt;f-FBI 3 7 O&lt;fBewitched 3

Fun With Food
~•

5J L, cents the Black D1a
mond G1rl Scout Council
keeps 55'&gt; cen!s the troop
keeps 15 cents and one cent
goes tow&lt;Jrd bondmg and .1d
IIUillstrattve cu~t.,
Agatn thts year Mrs Mctn
Dorst IS scrvmg as the cOOkie
chcurman for Me1gs Co unty
The cookie sale provides 43 8
percent uf the fundmg for tht
Black D1amond G1rl Scout
Coumt l

Diet Class held at the Mei gs
Jnn They were Karen Pvles

Manlyn Saale
Helen
Blackston and Pauline Hor
ton
L1l Hart won the trophv f01
the most we1ght loss dlllmg
the week Wllh Ann Radfmd
bemg runner up Sharon
Ashley rece1ved her 20 pound
pm and eertiftcate
At the Poml Pleasant Class
fuesdav mghl Conme Fields
and Manon Clonch we• e
taken m CJS new membet s
Hope Ebhn and V~rguua
Johnson shared honors fm
wetght loss durmg the week
and DIXIe Short rece1V'ed her
50 pound pm and t:erhflcCl te
Hope Ebhn and Lmda Cla rke
rece1ved 2Q pound pms and
certlfJca tes
The Athens class reswncd
Wedoesday after havmg been
closed dunng the holidays
and the snowv weather New
membet s atlendmg " ere
Glo11a Shields Susan Loa r
Je&lt;m Wmner and Bar bare:t
Dent

vutt::gar and t,. ~.:up watttl
C r~::am bUttl'r and S UJ.:,If add dry mgrt'tlu:nl':i egg VIl li J.:•lf
and \\atcr Cook m tht: top of a doubl~ lxnltt uut1l Umkl m d
slt ntng ~o n slant l y

J me&lt;~ pi~ pan \Hth ., fl'l:IJ&gt;C of pastr} l3(1kc lhl' crust 11111
rnodt:ratc O\cn 350 d~g t ccs Jnunutes then J)OUI tn tht fJllmg
andcorttmuc bakrn~ Ulltlllht: t 1 ust Is bro\\11

5&amp;7PM -FunWithDickan d Jane{PG )
9 &amp; 11 PM - Two Minute Wornlng {R)
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY~ 1978
6 O&lt;f-Sunrlse Semester 8 10 6 3Q-Marlo &amp; the Magic
Movie Machine A TV Classroom 8 U S Farm
Report 10 Kentucky Afield 13
7 O&lt;f-Matlers of Lite 6 Ghost Busters B Public Polley

SARAH \ ICKERS
HAS PARTY - Sarah
Vlckes daughter of Robert
and Barbara Vickers New
Haven celebrated her
ninth birthday with a
slumber part} at her home

Friday Jan 27 After she
opened her gifts cake with
ice cream and punch were
sened
1 hose attending 10 ere
Joanna Frye, Melissa
Hic kel Melanie Fields
Tina Grimm Jennifer
Miller Amy Hoffman
Jamie Neal Tammy and

CHOICES
Karen Blaker Ph D
comfuttabl c n 11 h
women tha n w1th men ~ I

141av1tate

By Karen Blaker Ph D
M(:lny hut hne c&lt;i ller s fear
app ro tclung: people .about
their p1 oblc ms Some fear
em ban assmcnt others 1c
JCclloil Whatever the reason
the hut Ime phone offc1s pe(lple an anonymous rele~hvcly
tui~Jilu.:C~ I sdtrng for t 1l ktn~
h eely about thcmsclves
In the followmg exchange
In 1926 Woodrow Wilson
a
caller
wanted to talk about
28th president of the Uruted
he1
1dent1ty
problems
Stales died at his hom• m
Ms
C
1m ternbly lone ly,
Washmgton D C He was 68
You have no 1dea how much I
In 1966 the RusSians put an
unmanned satellite on the want to be With someone But
1f you could sec 1111 gmng
moon w1th a soft la nding
tlu ough eat.:h da} } ou d
In 1977 Ethtopla s chief of
state and
SIX
other never know It
I have a goud jOb I eat
gove rnment leaders were
lunch
w1tlt friends I belong to
killed m a gun battle m AddiS
sevm
al
cluils that meetm the
Ababa
cvcn mg.s And I m mvolvcd 111
the campmgn of 1 promment
puht1c1an m the t: lly But
what no one knows about me
1s thai 1 m not close to
1
OPTOMETRIST
etnyone
:OFFICE HOURS 930to12 2to5(CLOSE
Counselo1 Do you hve
AT NOON ON THURS l - EAST COURT 1 alone 1
Ms C Yt:!s th£tt s one of
my biggest p1 oblen1s In fad
I thmk I keep busy to avOid
gomg home It s so bleak
Counse lor Do you want to
get ma1 rted ?
Ms C Yes Well I tell
C\ ct yonc tlmt I do But J m
r eu lly fn ghtened of men I ve
Ill:! Vel da ted a ml:t n mote them
two tim es I don t knoll what
..
they see tn me
I mea n I ca n be pretty but I
try lo tude everylhmg that IS
sex; about me I wear mens
dothtng and I cut my hmr
Robert Allee Roush aod
Sarah s parents
Those sending cards and
gifts were he r grand
mother Ada VIckers and
Louise Rflush

1,---------------------------------~
N. W. COMPTON. 0.0. :
l
l

I

l.~!.!.~~:!.o.~---··-------~----·-·J

sho rt
Somet rmes p e op l~
nustake me for a boy I don t

know why I sa1d before that I
want to gel mamed I really
don I want to - and I never
Wi ll
Counselor Muybc you said
yo u v. ant to gel mur1wd
because that s what you
thought I wanted lo hear
Ms C I have a lot of lrou
ble w1lh that
Counselor What s that '
Ms C W1lh saymg wh.1t 1
t hink other people want to
hear 1 ather than how I really
feel
Counselor How d1d ) ou
know what I wanted lo hear '
Ms C I don I know I JUSt
f1gu red you "ere straight f
thought you would have the
&amp;{Ine attitudes tov. trd le;
btans ~s evet yone else
Counselor At e you a les
btan?
Ms C Not really L1ke I
told you before I m not really
close to anyone But I do feel

7 Jo-Saturday Report 3 World of Survival 4 Dusty s
Treehouse 6 Wacko 8
8

CARS

PRICES

78 PINTO PONY
W th 2 3! t

e eng•ne and

manua l transm ss on

M,

23MPG•
HWY
CITY
33 MPG'
W th 2 3 I Ire eng•ne and
manual transm ss on

'3555*

46 MPG'34MPGI
HWY

CITY

W th 1 6 I tre eng me and
manualtransm ss on

toward \\Um cn s
groups and 1 vc rnct u Jut uf
lesbmn s thm c Of '(Jill sl
the&gt; all thmk I Ill une of
them
Coun:sclm
Wh Jl tbout
\\UI k
Ms C 1 make 11 a po111t to
t.alk about datos with men
\\hUllllldtWOI~

So lguu:-;."
~ uu could say I ~1\ c them the
1mp1 esswn I m ~t1 mght
I'hi::!L :s what I mean I dont
know whctt I un J un
\\ hetteve J I m supposscd to

be
Counselor Why dul ~ ou
dcculc t1 cdll Ih~.: hut Ime
lumght
Ms C 1 w&lt;~nl ed to talk to
someone about fee ling lonely
Counselot Let me gue ss I
tlunk )OUwan ted to feel d ose
to someone safe You wc!lllcd
a dm m.: c to tell sm ncmrc
about you r sel f - that you !'t.'
l:onfused about yom sex ual
p1 cferences
Ms C lt dill feel ~ood to
say 11 after lnd111g 1t for so
long
Counselor Now tlmt you \ c
told me 1::1 th~l t: omyonc else
you could talk tu about tlus
Ms C I here IS one
g1rlfr1end who m1ght undm s
tand but 1 have never had
enu u ~h nerve to brtng 11 ur&gt;
But hcanng myself tc~lk 1bout
these thw g~t h Jt I vc kept to
myself f01 so It ng J ~ u css
they don t sound so bad uutm

the a u Maybe I could shm c
my feelmgs \\ollh someone
Counsel01 I hat would cer
tamly make you feel le ss
lone ly
In thts call the counselm
felt Ms C was lonely bccctusc
she found 11 d1ff1cult to upcn
up to people Aller g1vmg he1
an oppot tumty to exp re~s her
fee lings With the anonynutl
of the hot hnc the coun sel or
encouraged the ca llu t t 1k c
udvantage of her pmsonal
resourt'e::i and try t£tklllg the
same n sk w1th a fn cnd
Dr Blaker cannot take
telephone ca lls f10m her
readers However lhcrc m c
hundreds of c n sts mtc1 vcn
Lion phone lmt:s Ul th~ Umtcd
Slates For the phone numbe1
of one near }ou cQnta ct your
local mental health assoc1a
liOn or mental hea lth 1n
form~ bon se rvK'C
Wnte to Dr Blake• m ca re
of thiS newspaper P 0 Bo~
489 Hadtu C1ty Slatwn New
York N Y 1(1019 Volume uf
mall prohlblls pe rso na l
replies, but quest101" of
general mterest Will be
discussed m future columns

UJi A\

THIS ISTHE BIGGEST
SEWNG UGHTWEIGHT
PROFESSIDNALCHAIN
SAWIN THE WORLD.
GET IT FROM

POMEROY HOME &amp;AUTO
ANDIT'SAmm:.
better ideas

at Your lOcal

Ford Dealer

992-2094
606 E. Mam

Pomeroy, OhiO

·~ 1111

The ffCipi
l' F:NNING fUNS GtK&gt;D tJI Clllll
3 mcdmm umuns flllt:h l: hoppt.-d .! mcdlUIH bt.ll I){ Pl~rs
fmt!l\ chttppt.'il :J tllt r' sU. lk ~ fin~.: I\ ( hop~d 8 pound " ]{ an
('OHJ se h ground txd I stx~JIIIH.: r e.un llf tom tlo p tslt 1 No 1
cdnsofsh.'"'"tt o mull~ ~ 2 Nu 2 tlll 'i llflu mtl lst.llli.l' !~ u 2
c,ms ofw ~t ttl \~tntlt g ulu ( \U\t s fmel) ,JtLppt.·&lt;l 2 0vtth sur

Gcbhtrdts I tglt Btunltlult J.Ml\\ thr l tu~l uunt t ~ t J t h J
Utblt spoons Si.lll ~ \m tlk htlj.\ uf Ull!g 1110 I OUt .jJUlllt t}lll t'f t.:hlh
s.a iS&lt;j I lllt.""t.hum gru:n hut t lull ptpl)(l g trht salt t~ t '"tt
eocu sely ground J&gt;t PJXI lu t..t ~t c
Hub t I0-&lt;1 u 11 t put "tOt t httlt L uok111g ul \ dtl m 1Uil1'; ]K fJ
pet s md &lt;lltor\ UHl L Kk gl nlh ,Ltl rmg ufltn fnr tbuutlO
trunutc s lnc i UI ~l Ju 11 111d tddllu mtut stll tlllt unl1llh~.:
t't..•dnu;,s ts g( Ill: \d \lilt lli WJIIHIIg ll !g l t'\IH lll !'i mil :-; IIIIIIH. I
WILO\Ut"dftl tth t ~l l \\tl.U tltlttlfhOUI ~ :o:. tllllng ftllltllllH
lo tum

$:\..:$:~

'

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::;...... ~..~

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(,( " 1

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~

'

Helen Help
Us ... B) lit 1, " Bott. I

x'

Wi\1 .~

DEAHHEII N
I 1H Ill m y nml 20:s SJH~Il L\ l l lgt.: l ook ~ l IllS~ I\ H( l\
dJcss H c~.: tntl) J \H\ s I I)(Ht tf.: ht d b\ n nutlrllt tjt.: llmt 111 11
ll1llll who p clld Ill~ H fc\\ t lllj luucnl s 1 IIIH]IItllll tl Jl Ius \\If~ s
IIOl I.Jctll).! SCX IL tJiy tdi VI II ' 1111!1 t
sk t d Sllllll' dUtt 1 IJt I
SOntlqUL"titU II S Hh lllllll\ st X !ti l' W lilhtlljlh l) ):-i \ ll Jllt&lt;IJHl' 1
I w.t~ l!ll1b 111 a:s.':il'd but tJ wd to llllh 1t \\ tlh H sunplt
No l
fct:JtiU S Jnt.tlllu\t l:i lUS \\Ifl lHJt\t tnt :-; tht th 1\IOit spHt Ultth,
s.th:k H IIUll lilt H fr L(jlH ntlv
Jt s lnnc

m or~

Uncertam
dtsclosure

Ca ndy
Staats,
Dana
Drapper, her sister ,
Kimberly and brother,

Forums 10 Weekend Special 13

~

There w~ s a cluh bowl shm\down \\hu.: IL took pldtc 111 Husil
mond Ca!Lf rct:c ntl) \\Inc h had so1nc 35 000 l J ~tl' r s Ntr\\ I vL
heard evt 1\ lln flg
Any" ays J '} Penmn~ton a Las Ve~ as rt!a l estate b roke r
and no\ Ice duh cook wal'i the ch~mp al:COI dmg to 111fo ll l:l iV
cd 111 Ill} mad
An mterestmg tlung about the rec1pe IS that 1t c.JIIs for e~g ht
pound:s of lean Loarsely ground beef cans ami t:Hns or tonMto
stuff along 111111 a quanllty of othe1 uwcdwnls but onl)
se1vcs a dozen The othc1 Uung no beans nt uu.: ludell md

The better ideas keep coming lrom your local Ford Dealer

Mov1e Channel 4 -

oo-Hong Kong Phooey 3 4 15 Superfrlends 6 13
Three RobOnlc Stooges 8 10 8 30-Giobetrotters
3 4 15 Speed Buggy 8 10
9 oo-Scooby s Latf A Lymplcs 6 13 Bugs Bunny
Road Runner B Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10
10 JQ-Pink Panther 3 4 15 Batman Tarzan 8 10
11 O&lt;f-Baggy Pants 3 4 15 Krofft Supershow s 13
11 3D-Space Sentinels 3 15 Little Rascals 4 Secrets
of Isis 8 1 In The Know 10
12 ro-Land of the Lost 3 15 Weekend Speclal6 Movie
The Frogmen 4 Fat Albert 8 10 Action News for
Kids 13
12 3Q-Thunder 3 15 American Bandstand 13 Point ol
View 6 Space Academy 8 10
I oo-Jetsons 3 Mr Magoo 8 10 PTL Club 15
Photography 33
I 3D-Bewitched 3 CBPA Bowling 6 Viewpoint 8
Film Festlval10 Trl State Today &amp; Tomorrow 13
2 oo--Adventures of the Lone Ranger 3 Movie
Tarzan Goes to India A Movie Carnival Story
8 Movie The Rat Race 10 Cliffwood Ave Kids
13 Ascent of Man 33
2 3D-Witness to Yesterday 6 Llckely Spilt 13
3 O&lt;f-Pro Bowling 6 13 Wrestling 15 Guppies to
Groucers 33
3 3D-Marshall Basketball 3 Area Showcase 33
4 oo-&lt;:ollege Basketball 3 4 15 That Nashville
Music 10 Body Shop 33
4 30-Wide World of Sports 6 13 Sports Spectacular 8
Nashville on the Road 10 Catch 33
5 O&lt;f-Pop Goes The Country 10 Adams Chronicles 20
Zoom 33
5 3D-Porter Wagoner 10 Once Upon a Classic 33
6 OQ-News 3 4 10 Golf 6 13 Lawrence Welk 8 God
Has The Answer15 Zoom 20 Studio See 33
6 30-NBC News 3 4 15 CBS News 10 Que Paso USA?
20 Music 33
7 OQ-Llttle Rascals3 Lawrence Welk4 Hee Haw 6 8
Lawrence Welk 15 Bugs Bunny 10 Wild Kingdom
13 Elec Co 20 Battle Line 33
7 3Q-We Think You Should Know 3 Lowell Thomas
Remembers 33 All Star Anything Goes 10 Can
Primitive People Survive? 13 Once Upon a Classic
20
8 O&lt;f-Biack Beauty 3 4 15 What s Happening II 613
Bob Newhart 8 10 Royal Heritage 20 33
8 3lf-Operation Petticoat 6 13 Tony Randall B 10
9 O&lt;f-Movle Ring of Passion 3 4 15 Love Boat 6 13
Jeffersons 8,10 I Claudius 20 Shakers 33
9 3D-Maude 8 10 Renascence 33
10 O&lt;f-Fantasy Island 6 13 Kojak 8 10 Soundstage 33
11 O&lt;f-News 3 ~ 6 B 10 13 15 Black Perspective on the
News 33
11 1~ABC News 6 11 JQ-College Basketball 3
Track 11. Field ~ 15 Movie Five D&lt;ssperate
Women 6 Movie Clash by Night' a Movie
Goodbye Columbus tO Movie A Place In the
Sun 13 Janakl 33
I oo-Movle The Secret War of Harry Frlgg 4
Wolfman Jack 6 l JQ-News 3
1 4~Movle Godzllla vs the Smog Monoter tJ
2 O&lt;f-Movle Games 3 3 30-ABC News 13
4 OQ-Movle I II Never Forget What s lsname 3
5 JQ-Bewllched 3
Movlt Chonnel 4 5 &amp; 7 P M - Seven Percent Solution
9 &amp; 11 P M-The Sentinel

Charlene Hoeflirh

Phyllis Pultz tMs t.otn~ up w1th a n: tl~ for a \lltt~tl p1~
\\ hn hIS 4u1l ~ thfft 1ent fl um tlw un~s we vc shart.'il \\ tlh) uuut
lht! p:..tst l hi' mgrt.'o{hentsat e'2 tbps buller 1 l Ulh Ugar 3 tbps floUI I tsp &lt;11111 Hnun 1 ~
L-ip dov~s 14 t.sp dll ~p ll~ un~~~~hth tsp salt l l'g!t ~ tbps

Four members taken
into Conway Class

Lohman &amp; Barkley 6 Ironside 13

1 O&lt;f-Midnlght Spectal 3 ~ 15

as far ftS 1m tOlltC l n~d dull \Hlhuut ktdnc\ 11 1u l Ul.,Ul 'i 1Jf

some sur t as not t hlh at all Wrung

f1H th~sc

rnuldlt 111 tl fl 11l1~: 4 1 \~ tkt up

I h1 11

UOI Cd \\lthlltcll Hlht Sf tndplUI~ t ( lltplt ti s hnut
g1Hndcluldt en and the br ulgt ~ lub I t nlr Itt ~
l "uhes you ll not tnu ol1 l tu JU up utlht ~ h1 \~t!l \\lth hun tu
WC II ius fdVIlllh !Jt!lhllllt! i:t St'X\ ll~g \i gcl' ~ llll U l ll t l\\ 1\ S
1 clu111 to thl! flannel nmnbt; r tftcl lu ~ c1 slu:p I
Don t ku.l yoUt sc lvcs ''hen lrc s H tthn~-:, 1 b ok ul 1 1 m
he s 1cally thmking tiJout I h tt lUrer spit ' wniJI 111 WlSI
DEAHW lSE
Not one slHI) Ht tlu nmldlu ngcd &lt; h (ISll Wll\ 1 xlus Iu s
IHCileil ~

ctudupwpo s Jt JOniJ~kn•t. kmg lu s wlft s luk ~

Wtst

CUIIll.! (li!IIUW
L: l tss'

\\

)

til l \I l L llllllllll 1 1 h ll s l•Uilll s

H

DEAH HI I F:N
\HI boll! know tsks nu fu1 H d uu t s 11
htmto gtl J K III H SS ~tm ftull\11 1\ I p;l~ t nd 1 s tv
bcmt tt lltl but nut m\nld 1\eslllt s ''lu1 1f l
w mtcd to Lur11lhc guy dow11 and Ill\ m1lt h ul tit' It h s nil
l:OUld dctncc wtth hnn '
Myhusb,md nuluttll\ s tvs Yt s WIIH II
DEAH WHI CH
Nuwd t\ s lite j)l' llll s:-;1 n lu i IS. Sl'X Isl
though ellquellc lt mb um c s IHI rl W Is g •uti 1 1u Ill ! s I d
I ttl!cl St ttlt Jo1 Wt U)d V ll (XI LIS\,! II ~ k II
1l ~ Ill I L ~
band , rul hope he h(t ~ 1 p 11 t ct \\ 11l111g II
Whl'n

1 111111

nc~..:cs:x:uv for
No I Jnct~

POLLY'S POINTERS
Polly Cramer
uld

Help fo r
copper bowl
PO I I Y- Om of m

coppcl bow ls h 1s blue
st~uns

1k

1/u

11

h 11 r-

lf lh
til 11 I l lh d
fo r Bul 1 solved Il l pr ohl\ 1
by Willig Ill~ l l.:g \1 (11 1\lllffll
tl IS 11 1d then d tl IJ lh II
11 un 11111fftn L11 1s

By Poll\ Cr lOll r
POl 1 Y S Plltlllll M
nr~ AR

L 1 1kbu

hhlll \\ U:i ) h1d IIWil

'-!It t..: ll
the L:Vi,.

Ollll al'i tlmugl
pe l IS dclt.:t\01 tlln g WI 11
can I do tt) d ean llus tnd to
itVI)ld
futut C dt t CIIUI tllt

Al
IJEAH A I
l \W III k l f
yuu W:il! ll t sc bt wb 11 tl lht y
&lt;Jre JUSt fu1 dct..:Ol tti CJII Jt

sou nds as 1f this \Jilt tnilY
have been used feu somc thmg
that the Oti !CIS WCIC IIUl
Aflel use cllW JY S wISh
Uw1 oughly m wur 11t soap
suds 1msc tlrut oughly tml
thy th nuug hl y I hey 111 I} ht
&lt;..: unoliing 01 Jt 111 JY be Umt 1
clcetnCJ uscc.lun Lhc bO\\ I was
not cntu ely 1cmovcd ll11 s
often hitppcn:-; when brass 01
copper IS washed after deem
mg Hub wrth 1 cut lemon and
sa lt and then rrnse cmd dr y
well - POI I Y
DEAH POI I Y - lllunk the
lady w1th the yel lo w
macrame purse shou ld for get
the ~olo1 1crrtovcr and usc
while dye My husba 11d
makes beaul•ful ma~1amc
belts and dyes ,,II the c01d DOROHIY
DEAH POl I Y - I have to
Utke mcdJcatiOn four tunes a
day and often ilecome so absorbed In my sc wmg or other
work thai I lose 11ack of lime
and will forget to take the
med1cme So when I take my
medtcme I set the aiHrm
clock for the next tune und
feel much better for rt ROSA! IE
DEAR POI I Y - I would
Uke to thank Anne for her t1p
for cleanmg carbon off the
oven door It works fm c
No doubt many of the
remlers h8Ve m ver h~r d the
pi e&lt;:~ sure
Of mr~kmg ami
eatmg popovers I h&lt;:td not
tasted any for years and had
never made them myse lf un
111 I ran across a recipe m an

t &lt;.. UIJk cslrr:l'l ll\\f lkt.l llm

I jill: h till

Ill ~ II ltlllkl

1:-11 nd ftl l
the 11 ~ MH~ J II
Ul AH PO l l Y - lit 1\t jUst
rduJnl'd flou J llt t..t 111111tl
trip tu C II l lll t
nd
sumc~\llcll il lllg tht w y l

shut tnd lhu 1 1 c

let~tnc d

Ute full uwur1 t&gt;u nit 1
w tsh I w 1s I ltl 11r-tl
wm1 g 1nbiHfL!:!, th uhul 11 t
flilj)i!l t1 w~.:l 11 dulh fu1

In u

~ 11

WW'i lll llg Wll tti(LW ~

lll(f II

II

wr s chll)lllatcs s lJ c tkll g I
thmk It due s l t.:.1 t1fu Jib -

IMCX.E:NE

71/o Pet per year on a
4 year cerflhcale of
depOSit

'ss,ooo oo

mm1mum

depOSit
A suostanttal pena1ty rs
mvoked on ali certtflcate
accoonls wllhdrawn prior
to the date of maturtty

The Athens

County

Sav1ngs &amp; loan Co

296 Second St
Pomtroy Ohto

--

FSIJC

------

�5- Thi!: DC:~i!y S~n t mel Mldtlll'ptlrt· P mnt&gt;rul . t J • 1-' rul&lt;1.1 F d) . l l~Jifl

Point matmen turn

Bobcats edge Eagles
for first court win
Trailing 3&amp;-35 at lhe half
visiting Kyger Creek out:
scored host Eastern , I{H; in
the third period then held off
a last quarter surge for a 60·
57 SVAC victory Thursday
night. The win was th·e
Bobcats' first of the season
after nine st raight losses. The
loss left Eastern with a 1-10

record.
In the "cliffhanger of the

cellar dWellers ,"

Coach

Keith Carter's Bobcats shot
52 percent from lhe field
connecting · on 26 of 50 attempts.
.The Eagles managed only a
Jl pet . effort from the field
122·721 but were hot at the
foul circles hilling 13 of 20
attempts.
Eastern took a 15·14 advantage allhe end of the first
period behind the shooting of
WHERE'S 1l!E BALL? - Kyge r Crc'ek's Von Taylor

Thw-sday's KC-Easlern game. The Bobcats held on to

111) and John Westfall (211 ha ve Eastern'.s Da ve Brown

de feat Eastern , _60-58, to win their first ga me of tlle year .

1:t4) covered in his a ttempt to get the re bound during

junior center Dan Spencer,
the outside shooting of Mike
Hayman and l wo baskets by
Brian Bissell.
During the second period,
both learns scored 21 points

as the action continued at a
hot pace . Kyger Creek's
second period was led by tH;

faU added four points.

Facing Eastern's second
were Dave Brown and

st~nza

junior center Jon Thompson's Mike Hayman with eight and
nine points. Sophomore guard six points respectively .
Greg Smith canned

eight-

Following lhe third period

points
and
another tip, Kyger Creek quickly tied
sophomore guard John West- the game on a basket by
Thompson . Before the period
ended, Thompson, Smith ,
Westfall and 6-4 senior Fred
Helms had paced lhe Bobcats
to a 51-42 lead going into the
final period.
Things really got close
during the final eight
minutes. KC buill an 11 point
lead
before Coach Duane
The Meigs Girls basketball
Wolfe's
Eagles got hot.
learn kept up their winning ·
Suddenly,
following goals
ways Wednesday night by
by
Jeff
Goebel
and Rusty
soundly thumping Athens al
Wigal,
lhe
lead
was
cut to &gt;:iMorrison Gym, 69-49. The
47.
Eastern's
press
also
led to
local gals shot a sizZling 51
Bobcat
turnovers
which
percent of their shots from
helped the Eagles to gel
the field .
Vicky Epple led Meigs with closer.
Spencer connected on a
24 big points while Glenda
technical
fo ul attempt
Brown also hit double figures
charged
against
the Kyger
with 10. Other scorers for

Marauder
girls whip
Athens five

Meigs

were Burdette and

Chapman with eight points
each, S. Ash with six, Light·
foot and HOward with four
each, Vaughan with three,

Creek bench to cut the count

to 57-53.

Later, the Eagles were
within one point with Spencer
at the line, but he missed a

and Wilson with two.

one·plus situa ti on. Kyger

. Athens was led by Lazelle
with 14. Kyle and Eldridge
each had eight.

Creek iced the game on the
foul shooting . of Thompson
and Helms.
Thompson took game
honors with 19 points and 12 of
KC's 40 rebounds. Smith had
13 points and Helms followed
with 13 points and seven

EVENT SATURDAY

The.ceremony honoring the
initial inductees of the newly

hack

goes to South·

Greg Wigal paced the wln· ·
ners with 12 points. Steve
Russell led the Bobkitlens
with 11 points.
Kyger Cree~ (60) - Taylor .
3·0-6; Smith, 6-2-14 ; W illis, 00-0 ; Hel ms. 6· 1· 13 ; Thomas. 83- 19 ; Westfall , 3-2-8. Totals 268-60.
Eastern (57) - Goebel , 2-04: Spen cer , ~- 4 - 16 ; B issell. 43· 11 ; Brown , 3-A-10 ; W igal , ·22-6; Hayman, 5-0-10. Totals

•

SOj&gt;homore Mike Callandros defunct TV AC wrestling
( 1~ l recorded lhe only other Tournament.
The following is a break·
pin for Polnl Pleasant as he
held hls opponent , Lloyd down of how the wresllers did :
-98, Blll Veazey (P) pinned
Nibert, to the mat in the
Scort Hartinger IMI , first
period.
- 105, Mike Callandros (PI
pinned Lloyd Nibert IM I,

NOW OPEN

By Quarters;
Kyger Cree k 14 21 16 9- 60
Eastern
15 21 6 15- 57

se-:ood period.
- 112, John Ebl en

•
•
••
•

GINO'S

..••

OF MASON

.

22· 13-57 .

•••
.,

iMl
outpointed Mike Howard 1Pi,
seeond period.
·
119, Matt Blankenship (Pi
pinned Rick Baker (M), firs[
period .
~126, Dave McCrumb !Pi

PHONE 773-5536

•

••

Pomeroy
. Flower
Shop

second pei'iod .
· Meigs' victories came at 112

pinned Herb Noel, first period.
- 132, John . Fruth (Pl
pinned Charlie Slone,

•
"

20%

•

•

••

••
••
•

first

OFF

ON All FELT

•
•
•'

Western Hats,

••

Western Boots

ATTENTION

•'
•
•

..

.

•'

both to~k thei 1· opponents by

Gi rl s
OhiQ High School
B'as ketba ll Result s
United Pr ess Internat ion al
B~dger 51 Ma thews 34
Beaver Loca l 78 Lisbon 31
Brislot 37 Grand Val ley 25
Canf ield 70 West Bra nch J2
Carroll 36 M ismlsburg 32
COl 'Brookhaven 48 Col Nor th
A3 (ol)
Col Ce-n tennial 44 Col Beech croft 26
Col Eas t 102 Col Read y 32
Col Ha rtley 57 Col Wehr le 39
Col Marion- Fran klin 41 Col S

16

Col NortHl and 43 Co t Miffl i n
19
Col WalnUt . Ri C!ge. 74 Cot
Central45
Cpl Watterson 71 Col DeSa les

Hi gh Sc hool at
Saturday.

OHIO POWER

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

:I
Pro
:I
:Standings \

TI1c Meigs Wr ~:stli ng team, ptns.
Meigs will have its first
&lt;.:oachcd by Jim Sheets. ga ve
home
1·uatch Saturday .with
a good account of themselves
Logan
at the Larry Morrison
at Point Pleasa nt Wednesda y
·
Gy
mnasium
. The boys hit the
night bcfort.• bowing to the
mats
at
I
p.m.
Wrestling is an
highly-to uted Dig L'llacks •t5· ·
up a nd coming high sehoul
2ll ..
Fou r Meigs grapple rs won sport and 'local fans arc in for
by pins and one by a ma jOr a treat by attend ing one of
deci.siu n. 1n the 112 pound these enco unt ers. Pound for
ca tegory, John Ebl in easily pound-an d second for second,
defeating his opponent on wrestling is one of the most
pomts, t:l-2 . GarY Priddy, ~emand i ng physical sports
wrestling at 138 po unds, arou nd. even ahe ad of
pinnl'.d his opponent as did fuolball or basketball. And if
Huber~ Na kamoto in the 167 anyone has ever witnessed
one of these meets, then you
round category.
The big boys, Bob Seelig in k 110W that they are far from
the 175 rlass and Da ve Davis bori ng. Wa nt some weekend
excitement '? Go to Meigs
Ul the heavy weight division ,
I

p.m .

Li berty 53 Poland 36
Loudonyille 62 Nor-thwes tern

25
Medina 59 Nort h Ol ms ted 39
Mil l e r spor t 78 Fa ir fi e ld
Un ion 55
N ew ton Fa l ls 38 LaBrae 30
N or thri dge 50 Dixie 28
Stru-the rs 56 Hubbard 16
Sylvan ia North vie w 84 De lla

27
Tro twood · Madison 76 Fai r born Bak er 21
Wester vi lle N 41 Mt Vernon 39
Wes ter v i lle; S 53 Chill icoth e 49
W hi tehal l 61 Hilliard 60

NBA Standl·ngs ,
By Un i led Press tn.ternational
E astern ConferE!11. ce
At1.1ntic Divi si on
w. L Pet . GB
Phila
33 14 .70:1 ....
N('w York
26 24 .520 91 •
Buft a lo
16 29 ..356 16
16 30 .348 ,161 2
Bos ton
N!:'W J(' rsey
9, 41 .180 J51 ;
Central Divi sion
W. L Pet . GB
San Antoni
31 18 .633' '-.
Wshngtn
Jf&lt; J'l .54i
J' 2
New Or lns
26 i4 .5JO 5~' l
CICvelnd c·
23 :14 .4B9 7
Al lan to
24 J7 .471 8
Hous ton
17 3 1 . 35~ 13' ~
. West ern Conf er ence
Midwest Div isi on
W. L Pet . GB
Denver
3 1 18 .633
Chicago .
27 23 5&lt;~0 J l•
Milw
:16 i 6 500 6' 1
De tr oit
J3 J6 .469 8
lndit'na
19 29 .396 11' '
Kanss Cty
17 ) 4 333 15
Pacific Di vision
· W L Pc't . GB
Porti MCI
39
8 .BJO ..._
Phoeni x
33 l6 .673 1
Seattl e
27 '22 .55 1 13
Go'lc:len St .
25 25 .SO(] 15' ·;
Los Angels
/3 26 469 17
Th ursday 's Re sults
Cleve 110, Wa shing ton 93
Atlan ta 1b1 1 Ind iana 105
Kan Cit y 113! Detroit 101
San Antonio 113. N.Y . 113
GO lden 51 , 105, M ilwau kee 102
Friday's Games
Wash i ngton at Bos ton
Cl eveland at Bu ff alo
Los Angeles at New Jer sey
Ind ia na at Phi ladelphia
New Yor k at Hous ton
San An ton io at Chicago
Oel roi1 at Denver
Mi lw .:~ uk ee at PhOen'ix
GOlden Stale at Por t land
Saturday's Games
( No games schedu led-)

..•"•
'

COMPANY

TIGHT DEFENSE - Eastern's Brian Bissell (14 )
goes high in the air over the outstretched hands of Ky@er
Creek's John Westfall ( 21) dunng action in Thursday's 61).
57 SV AC win by Kyger Creek.
NHL Standings
By Unl.ted Press International
Campbell C.onference
Patr'ick Oivisi·on
W. L. T. Pts.
NY tstanc:ler s
31 11 8 70
Ph iladelphia
29 12 9 67
Atl anl a
20 20 11
51
NY Ranger s
16 25 9 41
Sm ythe Division
W. L

Chi cago
20 17
Vancouver
14 22
Colorado
11 26
St . Louis
n J:l
Minnesota
11 33
Wales Conference
Norris Division

T .' PI S.
12
52

13
11

41
33

6

28
21

5

W. L. T . Pis.

Mon tr eal
35 7 1
Los Ange les
22 18 9
PitiSbll r gh
17 22 11
Detr oit
o 23 1
Washi ng ton
9 31 11
Adams Division

n

53
~5

41

29

FOR PETS - STABLES - LARGE&amp; SMALL

~chool

Ba sketball Results
Uni.ted Press li1ternafiQnal
Ashtabula Harbor 50 Ash St
John 44
Berne Union 63 Fairfield
Un ion 41
Bloomfie l d 72 Pa i ne sv ill e
Harvey 6il
Brookvi l le 52 N ationa l Trail

CUSTOMERS

•••

70

67

60
40

NOW OPEN

GINO'S

Friday' s Ga mes

(No games scheduled )
Saturday' Games
Buffa lo at M innesota
Wash at NY Islander s
Ph il a at Clevel and
Colorado at Atlan ta
Boston at Pittsburg
Del ro i l al Toron to
NY Ran ger s a i .St. LotJ iS:
Montrea l a t Los Ang
Chicago at v anc ouver

R1cine. Ohio
Chester1 Ohio

is

ref~rE'c

Pmtl Finll·y .

POMEROY LANES
Tuesday Triplicate
Pts .
Shamrock Motel
28
Royal Crown Cola
18
Royal Oak Park
\4
D . Brickles , Gen . Cont.
14
Mark V
12
Francis Flor i st
10
H i gh Ind . Game - Annette
Pnalin 206. Betty Smith. lB L
Betty Smi th , 172 .
High Series - Betty Smith
514, Annette Phalin 496, Pat
Carson and Bev Hensley 474 .
High Team Game and
Ser ies - Shamrock Niotel,
482 and 1364.

Jan. 181 2978
Standings

NEARLY PINNED- Referee Paul Finley checks close ly .to see if .John F'ruth , Point

Pleasant's 132-pound wrestler, has the shoulders of Meigs' Charli e Stone pinned to the Jndt.
Moments later the referee si_gnalled the pin, which wa s in the ·nrst pcrlnd. ror J." rutil .

Team
Points
Eagles Cl lJb
26
Clines Cons!. Co . ·
IB
Columb ia Nat. Life
18
Pomeroy Cement Blk . Co. 14
H&amp;R Firestone
12
Bill's Body Shop
6
High Ind . Game - Ed Voss ·
2J3, Ed Voss 225, Keith Phalin
211.
High Series- Ed Voss 635.

so

·

Toi•ighf' s games :

Br~ s w c tb~ll

.

Wel lston at G &lt;.'lll lpoll s
Logan a f Ja ck sor\
Me i gs at Waverly
At he ns ill Iront on
Pt. Pleasant a t Ravenswood
Saturdav ' s games :
Well ston a t Alhens
Wit ver ly a t Gnl ll pol l s
l r on 1on at M ei g s
Oak H ill a t Pl . P ICt!ISi'U11
Wi l mington at Wt'l!&gt;h rng ton

Res ult s

By United Pr e!&gt;s ln1cr nal 10 nal
Ea st
Atlt!'lpl.\1 Hl , Ul&gt;.l yn Co li 6~
1\mtu;orc;. t HO, Tru, .ty M
Osn Sl Rl. BrdgWir Sl !0
B r&lt;~ nd t.'•S 82 , WPI 68
Cal Pn 9 2,. Pt.•nn S t 1.\rnd 1!.1
C lo~rmn AO . Slppry Rrk 6 ~
CH
Duylon 67 , Duquesnt~ 65
Ra ve nswood at Spencer
Del V&lt;ll 16, WA Shmqlon 7'}
Ashl a nd a t Ports mou th
Lolt.1y t•lt (• 19 , Forcu,·am 76
Mrqll tt e 7:1. Pt.•nn St 60
SEOA~ VARSITY
M,J ss 77, Hol y Cross 76
Team
W L
P OP
Nchol s 91 , Worclws fr ij7
Logan
9 0 605 40S
Qul'l'ns Co l 95, M . Evors 83
Pi ll A1 , Co11liSilJS b6
Wa v erl y
8 1 54 1 449
R Morr is 6, , Cft·: Sl ;6
Alhens
5' &lt;1 500 559
~ E Mi;l 5S . 100, f; N at RJ
t ro n l on
4 4 50•1 446
TuO s 11'3, Mass ·Mrl ln,e Yl
Well slon
4 5 603 619
Wes 111c1 Sl 5~. N Ac:l m s Sl
Ga llipolis
4 5 55'1 515
South
· Jackson
1 8 474 594
Er:&gt; k11 H' 8•1, Wott or d 7'1
M ~ig s
1 9 536 148
Frn1 n 1 93 , Al drsn· Brd us 11
l i mptn f\4 , Eli / Cd y 19
TOTALS
J6 J6 4395 4J95
J Md1 S1l 86. Ar lo. LR 11
J Hopk.m !&gt;·71. Ursl nvs 70
SEOAL RESERVES
Lrll S in (&gt; 69 , USC Spr l"bg 6!
Team
W l
P OP
l0119Wd 15 M WS hllgton 13
Waverly
7 2 4Ur 299
Md Bal l 79, 51 Mry 's 15
Iron ton
6 2 333 J12
Mel IM 511. 74 , Slsbur y n
Newberr y 97 , Pr esby 68
Athen S
6 3 444 385
Rut gers 81, Bowie St. 1l
Gall ipol is
5 4 JJ7 324
1en n Wsl yn 97, Tscl rn 69
Well ston
5 4 42'il 41 2
Un •on 95 , Cinch Va t 93
Logan
5 4 364 354
USM 101, NW l c1 96
J
ac
kson
1 8 256 421
Vr1 Union 1Q7, J .C Stn lh 85
Meig s
1 9 351 433
Wake Fo r es T 79, Duke 60
TOTALS
36 36 2940 2940
wps h Lee lUJ, E . M nnon ltC' 7~
W C.'lr 117. Cr sn Nwm n 74
January 28 resull :
Midwest
Waverly 49 Gal l ipolis 78
A11 dr on 80, M nchstcr 77
January 31 result :
ASI&gt;.Ind 111 , Mt Vrli n NtH llll:
.
A lhims ·61 MeigS 40
Re ttH' I 75 . Gr&lt;'l ce 72
Ironton · 36 Gallipol i s 34 (ot)
Elmhurst 117, Cor ro ll 113
Februarv 1 results :
Gr Val Sl . 76 , Nrlh wd 67
Meigs 34 Jackson 24
l tl,nOIS 74 , Wisconsin 7 1
tnd Tccll 74, l-lntng tn JJ
, Logan 57 Wellston 43
Ind . 86. Northwester n 70
February 2 result :
M•c h 65 . Mich St 63
Waverly 58 Jackson 35
M,c ll . re ch 19. st. Cld 75
M.nneso ta fl 2, Iowa 11
SEOAL FROSH
PurdtJc 71, 0 1110 S l t.Y
Team
W L
P OP
Sou 111 90, Dra ke IH
Athe_n s
6 1 361 276
Sl JOS 65, 1 r' Stal e 67
Southwest
Wellston
5 2 259 27S
Cen l Ark . 66 , Ark T e n 56
Gallipolis
4 2 25J 222
E . Tel&lt;. Bap 1 89 , LcT rn eau 73
Logan
&lt;1
3 JJ7 297
He, Cier son 77 , Hcn dr i)j 13
M eigs
1 5 178 159
Mdwst rn 1&gt;7, Tel( WSI\In 67
Jackson
0 7 278 337
Ok.l a , SR. A 70, O k napl 69 .
TOTALS
.20 20 1666 1666
Ou achi ta 83, Ark , Colt 65
Monday's results :
OtM I&lt; S HI , t-l l'lrd in g 69
Wellston 41 Logiln 38 (ot)
fi o Ar~ 58. Ark Mntclt o 52
Tv l~ a flA, 13r ad lr;.•y RO
Mhens 45 Meigs 29
Wt•st
Thursday's re5ults :
Air I or cl:' !IY , .PtH1 A m 7J
Wel'lston 40 Ga ll ipoli s 37
Ai'n4)ilS${1dOr U9 . LA [J,1p l H
Logan 57 Ja ckson 35
Co lu St 65 . UTEP ~9
Saturday's game :
E ·. Ore 65, W Brtp l 63
Gallipoli s at Ja ck son. 1 p.m.
Grnd own 16, Occld rl tl 60

NEW HOURS

A. L. Pnelps Jr. and Keiln

Due To The Coal Shortage
Open Mon . thru Sat . 9 til6
Sunday 12 til6

Pha lin 546, ·Ray Roach 543 .

Team HighGame - Eagles
Club 972
Team H;g h ser; es

ACE HARDWARE

Eagles Pub 2675 .

'INN PLACE'

Until further notice the Farmers Bank Cit 221

0.

.

U.S. Fiber
insulation
LIFT OFF-Pete Sommer (right) Point Pleasant's !55-pound grappler shows a little
muscle with his opponent Van Wilford of Meigs as he a ttempts lo bring him down . Sommers
picked up h.ls !3tll win by outpointing Wilford, 1Hl.

'
•'

•'
West Second Street In Pomeroy will accept

YT&amp;T

payments of customers electric bills.

The Ohio Power Company will temporarily

•••

FROM
\

BELPRE. OHIO

Sales In Pomeroy.
••

.
~

•

..
•

.

'

service building or by calling 992-3786.

TONIGHT &amp; SATURDAY'
10 til 2

•

y

bills can also be made at the Spring Avenue

Frigidaire Heavy
Duty Washer
and matching
big-capacity Dryer.

4 PIECE GROUP

open an office at their service building off

For all vour home
Entertainment and
Appliance Needs

n•·

lron 1on 59 Gallipolis 47
February 1 r esults :
Jackson 60 M ei gs SJ
Log an 74 We ll storl 68
February 2 resu Its:
W.=tver ly 53 J ackson 51
P t . Pleaso!\nt
N i tro 45
Ravensw ood 83 Spencer 62

Hudson pirml·d Higgs fo r his 13th win u ~airist n o losses.
Point Pleasant went on to beat Meigs 45-28aml cha lk up its
seventh dual wm of the yea r aRa inst no loSS(IS. Lookinf: on

AT THE

OF MASON
PHONE 773-5536

ENROUTE TO 13TH WIN- Mark Hudson-, Point

Pleasant's 145-pound grappler. applies pressure to M ei~s·
David Riggs midway through t h e first period of the1 r
match Wedne sday evenin~ . Less tha n. a l ll inuti• latt'r .

APPEARING NOW

W . L . T . Pts.

Bos ton
32 12 6
Bufl alo
v 1013
Toronto
".16 15 B
18 30 4
Cleveland
Tt1ursdav ' s Resu lts
NY .l slndrs 5, Atl anla 2
Phi lad el ph ia 3. Col o. 0
Buffa lo 3. Bos ton 1
Mont re al 4, Vanco uver 4

Ba rboursville 7 1 Por tsmou th

56

•

••

A fire at the Ohio Power Com~any office building in
Pomeroy has resulted in the temporary closing of the
office.

Requests for service and payment of .• electric

TV &amp; Apeliance
Gas servtce

•

49
Cle East Tech 61 Cte Collin.
wood 52
Day Cham -Jul
74 Day
tsetmont 64
Day Roth 101 Day Colonel
White 95
lancaster fisher 56 Bloom
Carrol l 51
Mayfield 57 Mentor 44
Mt Verrion 62 Whitehall 47

Dunbar 6'1 Ravenswood 57
Pt . Pleasa n t 40 Ri pley 35
Athe ns 81 M ei gs 00

Midd

~ractor

RIDENOUR'S

......A;,;,N,;.l~M;,;,A~L;;,S;.,.,;L,;.A,;.W~N;,;;S10·10G;;,;_A,;.R,;;D;;,;E;,;N;,;;S,;..----~

"

\

30

DOXOL
SERVICE

he Store With" All Kinds of §t,uff"l

Boys
Ohio High

Pomeroy

793
696

S 7

January lO results :
Whee.l ersburg 5J Waverly 40
Janu.uy ll re sults :

Jan. 17, 1.978
Standings

992 -2164

•

Spring Avenue at the rear of Fulton-Thompson

Day S.tivers -Pat 73 Cin
Withrow 57
Delaw ar e 57 Reynold sburg 31
Ea st Pales tine 60 leeton ia 28
Girard A4 Warren Kennedy 34
Grove City 75 Zanes v ille 44

399W. Main St.

•
'

60

TRI COUNTY

MODERN SUPPLY

•

'•
•
,•
•

770

S 7 7l0

4 8 0'90 086
4 9 865 \'36
3 10 087 830
M e1gS
2 1l 736 9A1
January 28 rtsults :
Waver l y 51 G all ipolis 48
Rayenswood 70 Warren Locttl
69
Port smouth 78 Vi nton Count y

BOWLING

Good Thru Feb. 18, 1978

••

38

Ct"estline ~9 Fre der ic kt own·28
Cuyahoga Falls 40 Nordonia

Vests

•

. HAYMAN SHOOTS - Mike Hayman. junior guard for the Eastern Eagles collec ted. IO
, 1~m ts

Meigs wrestlers
to host Chiefs

Winter Coats

•
••
•

6 J 54J 519
~ J 517 462

Ironton
Wells ton
Ja.ckson

Cn l le ge

Team
Points
Zide ' s Sport Shop
26
Young 's Supet Mkt.
20
Ne lson Drug Co .
16
Eagles Club
14
Smith Nelson M o . Co .
11
Tenth Framers
·
9
High Ind. Game - {Men)
A . L . Plle lps Jr . 226; A. L.
Phe l ps Jr . 211, Bob Couch
192; (Women) Betty Smith
190, Carolyn Bachner 179,
Carolyn Bachner 175.
H igh Series - (Men ) A . L .
Phelps Jr . 579, Bob Cou ch 533,
John Tyree S32 ; (Women)
Betty Smith S36, Isabelle
Couch 494, Carolyn Bachner
475 .
Team High Game - Zides
Sport Shop 706 .
Team High Series - Zides
Sport Shop 2010 .

W l
P OP
ll I 8H 660
11 2 190 680
ID 3 893 764
6 3 609 516

Galllpclls

POMEROY
BOWLING LANES
Early Wed . Mi~~: e G

•

!Jcforc fOuling Ol;! l in Thursd ay·~ SVAC.con.tcst between Eastern and Kyger. Creek
(losm15 In are lhe Bobca L'S ' Greg Smi th ( :13 ) and Von Taylor ( 11) .

period.
- 138, Gary Priddy tM)
pinned Todd Pridemore ,
second period.
- 145. Mark Hudson !PI
pinned IJovld Riggs 1M), firs I
period.
- 155, ·Pete Sommer 1P 1
outpointed Vaa Wlllord 1M),

is a replacement for the now

contest, 11-6.

Eastern' s Little Eagles
took the reserve game 35-28.

ALL GAMES
Te am
Logetn
Waverly
Ports.
Wa$hington
P1 . Pleas .
Ravenswood
Alhens

45·-28

pounds where J ohn Eblen
decisimied Mike Howard 14-3 ;
al 138 Gary Priddy · pinned
Todd Pridemore ; at 167
Meigs expense Wednesda y Robert Makam olo pinned
Rocky Evlck ; at 175 Bob
evening, 4;..28.
Seelig
pinned Steve Kinzel ;
. It was a convincing win for
and
unlimited
Davis pinned 11-6.
the locals who recorded seven
- 167, Robert Mokamoto
Alan
Whitman
.
pins, including first period
plnoed Roeky Evlck !Pl.
IM)
This
match
was
originally
victories by Bill Veazey (98 ),
second
period.
·scheduled
to
be
held
at
Meigs
Matt Blankenship (119 ), Dave
175,
Bob Seelig 1M) ptnaed
High
S
chool.
However,
a
last
McCrumb (126), John Fruth
Jeff
Lowe
IP ), first period.
minute
change
put
the
action
(132), Mark Hudson (1 45 ) and
185,
Tim
Nibert (PI plnned
in
the
Point
Pleasant
Junior
Tim Nibert (185 ).
Steve
Klnzei(M),
first period.
High
gym.
For Hudson, last night 's win
-Unlimited,
Davis
IMI
The junior high gym will be
was his 13th of lhe season
pinned
Alan
Whitman
1
P
1
first
the
sc
ene
of
more
mat
action
against no losses. Joining him
in this category was Pete all day Saturday as Point period.
Sommer (155) who decisi011ed Pleasant hosts an eight-team
Van Wilford in a hard· fought Invitational tournament. This

western Saturday night. Next
week, the Eagles play
Federal Hocking Monday;
Waterford Tuesday; Kyger
Creek Friday, and Waterlord, Saturday.
Kyger Creek will host
Hannan Trace this evening
and will go to Buffalo, W. Va.
Saturday night.
Next week, the Bobcats
travel to Symmes Valley
Monday. On Tuesday; KC will
host Southern .
They play Eastern Friday,
Buffalo , Saturday, and
Hannan Trace, Feb. 13.

formed Meigs · High School
Hall of Fame will be held rebounds.
Four players hit double
Saturday, February 4, be- ·
tween the Reserve and' figures for the Eagles.
Varsity games at Meigs High Spencer led the way with 16
School. An earlier ceremony points; Bissell had 11 and
had to be postponed due to Brown and Hayman, 10 each.
bad weather. Meigs High H~yman fouled out early in
plays Ironton that night in an the third period.
Eastern also . lost Wigal
SEOAL cage contest.

Meigs~

Apparenily a month 's layoff
had very little affect on the
Point Pleasanl High School
wrestling team as it tuned up
successfully for its upcoming
Invitational tournament at

la te in the fourth period while
Ky ger Creek 's Westlall
exited in the fourth quarter.
Eastern

Standings

..•'
••
....•

THE MEIGS INN

w

~

••

-'
•

992·3629

Pomeroy, Ohio

SALES599

To h e lp deliver de pe n da bl e p er·
forman c e . thi s Fr igida ire He avy
Duty Wa s her h as a heavy q uty
mo la r a nd olh e-r comp on en ts use d
in Frigid a ire Com me rc ial Wa sh ·
ers. It ke eps th e shape a nd st re tch
in knits long e r with t he ge nii~
wash action o f th e Fri g idaire
Kni ts cyc le, helps kee p wrinkles
nul of permanenl press items with
3 Permane nt Pre s s Wash cycles .
Team it up with the big - lo ad d rying capacity of th e Frig idaire "'
Dryer. It lets you d ry as much as
an 18- lb. load all at o nc e . and pro , vides tender care for e verylhing
from delicates to denims .

PER BAG

MACHINE
RENTAL
•2500 PER DAY
R·VALUE COMPARISON CHART
0
1
2
J
R·volue

I

I I I I

I 111

I I

I

I I I I

I

4
I I I I

I

U.S. FIBER
ROCK WOOL

FIBER GLASS
These va,lues oro fOr one inch of .loose -fill insulation.

. City Ice &amp; Fuel Co.
224

fst c:-treet
I

Point Pleasant . J.
(304 J 615-2460
•

�••

"

1-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy 0 Fri·'"l' F"b 3 1978

tilt in last seconds.

Bucl&amp;
Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sport&amp; Editor
NEW YORK (UP!) - There was no one to see him off no
delegation at the pier to wish him bon voyage or a single ~ord
about his departure in any of the newspapers.
Hewasallby himself,completely alone, a man who had once
been the heavyweight champion of the world and now was
considered all washed up.
Walking up the gangplank to board the SS Bremen in the port
of Bremen, Germany, the only thing on Max Schmeling's mind
was the hope he wouldn't get seasick his si x days on the ocean
to the United' Slates.
When he reached New York on April21 19:16 his arrival was
virtually ignored. Less than two months J~ter , however, he wa s
to become one of the world's most celebrated figures simply by
sending another man 10 the floor with his fists.
·
This wasn't just any other man Schmeling beat, this was a
young, eye-&lt;:atching Joe Louis, who had strung together 'll
straight victories, all but four of them by quick, lighlninglike
knoc~uts. And bere carne the JO.year-&lt;Jld Schmeling along to
astonish everyone by flattening him in 12 rounds at Yankee
Stadium.
Schmeling still remembers his left eye was practically
closed and he barely could see out of the right one at the end.
"Louis hit me a good one, but it was below the belt and the
referee ,( Arthur Donovan ) stopped the fight for a few
seconds," he says. "! was mad. I wanted to finish him off
When we began fighting again, I caught him with a good righi
to the head. I got him against the ropes an&lt;! I was punch ing so
hard that I remember the saliva fl ew fr om his mouth . 1 knew 1
had him. I hit him with three more rights to the jaw and he
went down for good."
Overnight, Schmeling's entire life changed.
Back in Germany, Adolf Hitler suddenly became a boxing
fan..
. He fired off a congratulatory cable to Schmeling and Ia ter
mvited4!i.m to dinner . Paul Joseph Goe bbels, the Nazi minister
of propaganda, played follow the leader. He also rushed off a
cable.
·
When Schmeling returned home, he discovered he was a
national hero ~ve n though he had refused to join the Nazi party
and kept calltng Httler "Mr. Chancellor" instead of "Mei n
Fuehru." Th~ t didn:1keep the Reich Ministry of Propaganda
from portraymg hun as the perfect symbol of Nordic
supremacy ln the rest of the world.
Although Louis nearly annihilated him in one round in 1938
for the heavyweigh t title, Schmeling, now 72 and an affluent
businessman in Hamburg, still enjoys enormous popularity in
Germany . .
For someone who generally seemed content merely to
pursu~ ~is callin~ and not become involved one way or another
tn pohh?', possibly no other he~vywei ght in the history of
boxing, mcluding Muha mmad All and J ack Johnson had his
background scrutinized more closely ·or more often tha n
Schmeling. People were perpetually curious about. him. Was
he a Na~i or wasn 't he? Whose side was he really on'
From all evidence, he tried to straddle the fence the best he
could . When it cam e to politics, he was on nobody's· side. A.t
heart, h ~ was a professional prize fighter, bent primarily on
plymg hls tradec
Schmeling, who won the heavyweight title from Jack
Sharkey on a foul m 1930 and lost it back to him two yea rs later
always disavowed Nazism. Urged by s0me in the Nazi Party t~
fire his J ewish manager, J oe Jacobs, he refused.
urwon 't do it, " he said. ~·He's my manager and ffiy- friend ."
More than tbat, Schmeling always referred to the United
States as his ''second"home_''
Some of the intrigue surrounding his two fights with Louis is.
shown in NBC's special, "Ring of Passion" to be televised
Saturday night at 9 p.m. EST.
Written by Larry Forrester and produced by Lou Morheim
the special is exceptionally well done, but perscinally, I think
the best tipoff on the kind of fi ghter Max Schmeling rea lly was
has to'do with the IOlh.round knockout he suffered at the hand~
of Max Baer in 1933 . ·It was a swel.tering night and in the
dressing room after the fight, one sympathetic newsman tried
·10 offer Schmeling a convenient alibi by suggesting that he
might've been weakened by all the heat.
Schmeling wouldn't buy it, though. Looking up , he said:
"It was just as hot for the other guy. wasn't it'"

United l'ress International (:J;\Ucke_l'es. •i'; •
11te back door was closed, , Ji 'Maybe • f'Jsn'l -11 ~
but Pur.due 's Jerry Sichtin~ shot at the time, but during
found hts way to the basket Ute game I would take it "
anyway .
said Sicl!/lng, who scored j3
" We were going to points on~'the night.
backdoor them , but they were
The lfuckeyes, down by 13
looking for it," said Sichting points early in the second
alter he sank a 10-foot jumper hall, ba!Ued back on the
wit~ eight seconds left shooting' I of Ken Page and
Thursday night to give the Kelvin Ransey to knot the
host ll&lt;lilermakers a 71.09 score af~9--69 with 50 seconds
victory over the Ohio Stale left and ' set Ute
staue
for
•
0
·.~·'

OutdoiJ.r s
'

United l'ress International
February and March are
two of the best months to fish

the Mad River near Urbana
for the trout stocked by the
Ohio Depa runent of Natural

Resources.
co ld·water species
which is most ~ctive when the
This is

t.1

water temperature remains

below 6&gt; degrees. ln. fact,
trout may die if it gets much
warmer than 75 degrees.
Access to the Mad River is
available at many "fishing
easements" provided by the
Department of Natural Re·
sources just for that purpose.
The se ease ments can be

found at many sites along the
state and county roads where

they ·cross the stream.
Wading is usually the most
popular method of fi shirig for
trout, and probably the most
successful.

But

bank

· fishermen and · people who
float the river in canoes also
do well.
Waders will need to be sure
their gear is in good condition
with no leaks which could be
serious if they are discovered
after you are some distance
from the car. Heavv socks
and thermal underwear will

. .i!·l·

also add 10 long term comfort
of these ·fishermen.
Most popular baits for trout
in the Mud River are the
salmon eggs sold at many of
the bait stores in the area.
Cheese 1ana nightcrawlers
also do well.
Fishermen who prefer to
u,se arti~ifial bails should try
small ~nnefs and various
fly s and nymphs. 'colors are
important, but it's difficult to
be sure .just what the trout
prefer on"a given day. Trial
and err~r are the best
m~thods In this case.
Tackle need not be of the
same weight as you would use
for bass later in the year.
Most of the trout are under
two p®nds and will be
sluggish .from the cold water.
Ultra lighl· gear with four
pound test.Jng Une should be
sufficient for the casting or
spinning angler.
Trout are delicious eating
and t he streams are not as
crowded this time of year as
they will be later in the
spring. This is an e&lt;cellent
time to make the trip to the
Mad River for some early .
action on trout.

II

' ·yf

~ ., •

CLEVELA
NFL CommND (UP! ) lozelle will lSSloner Pete
ak
be the featured
ltiJe er at the Sports Media
llf C~eland &amp; Ohio's first
;."':,118
sports banquet
• • · 1 at Clevelancl Plaza.

'

''/ \

...

tlnter

The actual game-wmrung
there's no question 1n the
points
were credited to freshmind ol Dayton Coach Don
Donoher that the Flyers man Jim Rhoden, whp was
never would have defeated awarded a basket on a
Duquesne without Zimmer- goal tending call against Duke
John Moore with :30 left lo
man 's hot hand.
uzimmerman hit some play, and Doug Hl!!Tis, who
money shots in the second made the first of two free
half and that's what did it," throws 19 seconds later after
Donoher said after the a deliberate foul by Jeff
Baldwin. game.
The Dukes, paced by fresh·
The 6-foot-2 Zimmerman
scored a game-high 21 points, man substitute Ron Dixon
and 15 of them came after the with 18 points, fell to 7·10.
intermission, callowing . Meanwhile, Reggie Carter
Dayton to rally from a 7-point and George Johnson scored
deficit and gain only its 20 points apiece to lead Saint
second victory on the road . · John S to victory over Cincin~
The F lyers are lU overa ll. nati.

S-.ed and Milling
HEADQUARTERS

REVIVAL
JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENTER
St. Rout e 7 and Georges Creek Road

•399 95

C. J. LEMLEY,
EVANGELIST

Electric Start
1-0NL Y
Will Trade

Mulberry Ave.

EA CH NIGHT

COL UMBUS .!UPI I - THis
week's Un i t ed Press In-

Class AAA

Points

l. Ak ron Centq1 I-Hower t 16)•

.:.

'/

.,•.
....•••.

Searching for the clever way to say "I Love
You? " Our Happy Valentine Ads . will be
published on February 14, and offer you a truly
unusual way to proclaim your love and best
·
wishes .
.

To My Wife, Ann ...
A fter 14 wonder f u l

To

Mom and

~

Dad

" If the c oal s upply run s out , virtually e ve ry
Ohioan would be touche d, e ithe r in the ir homes o r
at thei r jobs or both ."
This stateme nt by Govern or James A.
Rhodes targets the serious s itu a ti o n that now
confronts us all.
Ohio Power Compa ny is fa s t approaching a
50-day s upply of coal - th e po int whe n our emergency' plan will go into effect.
·

--.

'

....~------:-------.
------------------------·----~--------,
WRITE YOUR MESSAGE BELOW AND BRING IT
;
. 1
'

5.
9.
13.

'•

3.

6.
10.
14..

7.
11.
15.

• Use le.ast lighting possible
• Lower thermostats
• Turn down thermostats on electric water
heater to 120 •
• Only,use dishwasher and clothes dryer when
they are fully loaded

4.
8.
12.
16.

•
"

,•·'

'•

PHONE 992·2156

••'
•

THE DAILY SENTINEL

'

.•'
•'

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

9. Da yton Roth 19 ll
65
10. Columbu s Eas t 110-31 33
Second ten : 11. Toledo St.

30; 12. Day ton Meadow·
d.a le 22; 13. Pr inceton 20 ; l4.
Alliance 18; 15. (tie ) Ba rberton and Col umbus U nden,"'
16_ e ach ; 17. ( t ie} Defiance
Jo~n

a. Clinton M assre {1 0-1)
38
9. BockeyeTroll (12-0I
32
10. Sou theaster n (Ross) (10~

73

1)

Second ten : i 1. Sebr ing 11;
12. Ada 17 ; 13. Sout hlrig ton
14; 14. (tie} F t . Recovery a nd
Da lt on, 11 each ;

16. (t ie )

Maco.n

be~in

Local

Bow~

Pom eroy Lanes
Sunday M iners
Stand ings Week of 1-15-78

w.

Team

Points

1. Delphos St . Jotms ( 5) (11 -

1)

136
2. Wa rsaw River View £5)

110-01
123
3. Columbus Mlftll n IH Ill ·

JACKSON 1521 - Harle55
S-4·14; Conger S-0-10 ; Dor sey
1· 4-6 ; Forsy th 7-4· 18 ; D .
Eva ns 1-0-2; For syth 7-4· 18 ;

0. Eva ns 1-0-2; Ma rt in 1-0·2.

12) 19-3)
94 TOTALS 20-12-52.
WAVERLY ISJ) - Fielder
5. Wheelersburg Il l 111 -ll 79
6 . El yria Cathol ic Ill 13·11 12 l -3-5: Randy Thom as 1-0-2;
7. Coshocton 110)2)
56 Davena 11 -0-22; Arnett 2-4-8;
8. New Leba non Di xie ( 1)

111 ·01

9. WestHolmes( 9-ll ·

46

3?

10. Archbold 111 -0)
36
Second ten: 11. Portsmou th
28 ; 12 . Waverly 26c 13 .
Ma r tins Ferr y 20 ; l ll . Wel l s¥111.e l B. 15. (t ie) You ngstown

Crace 2-2-6; Rick Frederick

2-0-4; Rick Thomas 1-0-2;
Gordon 2-0·4. TOTALS 22-951.
Waverly

·

Reserves -

10 14 16 12- 52
B 12 21 12- 53

Waver ly 58

Jackson JS.

Me and my

'

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•

v

''
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••
•••
•"

Conserving elec tri c ity helps coh~ erve coal . It
cou ld make the difference between a c ris is and a
c atastropHe.
Ohio Power built up a hug e stockpile in an ·
tlcipation of a coal strike. S in ce the s tart of that
strike on Decemb1,1 r 6 (and It's already certa in to
be the longest c oal s trike in history) apprehension
has grown a s coal suppl ie s dw ind led .

We wanted you to know why we are asking all
of our cus tomers to seriously conserve their use
of e lectri c ity.
Again , quoting Governor Rhodes: "Wllhout
ad equate e lec tricity, Ohio would be confronted
with wide spread blackouts that would trigger
' . unemployment and severe s ocial and
mas s1ve
ec onomi c di s ruption."

Working together is the only way.
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'"

Rhonda Gi bbs 381 .

Team hig h game -

Team

No . 5 331; Team No . 3 305;
Tea m No. 5 297.

Team high series - Team
_No. 5 9 14; Team No. 3 862 ;
A lley Ca ts 79fl.

Sunda y Miners
Sta ndings Week of 1-22-18

w.

L.
16 0

Team No. 5
Team No. 3

10

Alley Ca ts
Hot Shots

6

8 B
6 10
4 12
4 12

M en's high game ....,.. Ralph
Gibbs 190'; Rltk Ma rlin 116 ;
Les Gibbs 165.
.
M en's hl!;l h ·series - Ralph

Gibbs 499 ; Rick Marlin 4&gt;5 ;
Charles Searles 432.
Women' s high game Sher y l Gi bbs 134 ; Rhonda

Gibbs 133; Sher yl Gibbs 132.
Women'S hig h series Sheryl Gibbs 376; Sue Sea rl es
371 ; An n Morris JA5 .
Team high game - Team
No. J anti Coun try Bumpki ns
'197 ; Tea m No. 3, No. 5 a nd

Hot

Sh ots

284 ;

Cou n try

Bu m pkIns 276.
Tea m hi gh serfcs -

Team

No. 3 839 ; Cou ntr y Bumpk ins
806 j Tea m N"o. 5 803.

SocialCalendar
SATURD,I.V

HARRISONVILLE Lodge
411 , F. and A.M. will hold a
special meeting at 2 p.m.
Saturday for work in the
master mason d e~ ree.
Refreshments will be served
at 6 p.m. and the regular
meeting will be held at 7: 30
· p.m. All master masons are
Invited to attend.
SA T URDAY
NI GHT
dances at Rutland Legion
Hall will resume Sa turday
beginn ing at 9 p.m.

• Whenever possible, use smaller, portable
cooking appliances rather than the electric
range and oven.

• Refrain from using Self·Ciean cycle on
electric oven
, .

'}

Score by quarter s:

Jackson

• Wash clothes in cold water whenever possible

• Reduce sign and display lighting
• Reduce parking lot lighting
• Reduce volume of ventilation air

0

Women's hig h gam ~ - Sue
Searles 180 ; Rhonda Gibbs
155; Arm Morr"is 151,
Women 's hig h .series - Sue
Searles 460 ; Ann Morris 393;

Countr y Bum pkins

Jackson 52

o

Hoi Shols
.
6
Sunday Duds
8
Counlry BUmpkin s
0 8
Men's h igh game - Rick
Martin 170 ; Ralph Gibbs i67;
Charles Searles 163 .
Men's high series - Ra lph
Gibbs 475; Rick. Martin 458 ;
Char les Searles 454.

Sundlly 01-JdS

Wa verly 53

Class AA

L.

B
8
6
1
o

Western Reserve 5,

19. Toledo St. Francis 13; 20,

Vanda lia-Butler 11.

at

l.EBANON RESULTS
LEBANON, Ohio (UPI) Courageous l.ady captured a
wire-lo·wire victory in
featured eighth race at
Lebanon Raceway Thursday
night - her second win In as
many starts this season .
The winner, driven by Herb
Coven, eovered tile mile in
2:02 and returned $5.110, $.1.20
and $3 .80.
Sneaken Deacon came In
second and paid $6.40 and
$4.20 while Ole War finished
third and kiekc'&lt;l baek $3.60.
The 4-8 nig htly double
l.'tnnbination of 'l'umi Tax and
Eustace Choice was worUl
$46.40.
A crowd of 1,108 wu~ered
$109,738.

Eastern, Stras burg
and Eas tern (Pike) 7 each ;
19. Berl in Cen ter 6; 20. Colli ns

and,Columbus West, 1.4 each(

1

Ohio POwer Company

.
•

I

Points

l. ( tie Mans St . Peter 's "\
161 I 14-01
150
1. I tie) IV South 151111 -0)

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

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Class A

HERE ARE SOME EXAMPLES OF HOW TO CONSERVE ON ELECTRICITY:

.

FOR FURTHER DETAILS

Team

We are therefore requ e sti ng a ll of ou r c us-

OR .MAIL IT WITH s1.00 BY FEBRUARY 11TH TO THE
DAILY SENTINEL, P. 0. BOX 729, POMEROY, 0.

2.

S. Columbu s Nort h (1 4-0 ) 134
6. Toledo Scott (1 ) 18·11
11 7
7. Cle St. lngatlus 11) '( 13-11
11 3
8 . Ca nton Tim ken {9-1J
99

3)
116
-4. Cleveland Ca thedra l Latin

to me rs . to take immediate s teps now to reduce
th e ir use of e lectricity to help stretch rapidly
d i m i~i shing coa l s uppl ies .
At Ohio Power, we have already reduced our
own elec tri c consumption to only what is essential to ope ration s.
We are also advising large industrial and
commerc ia l use rs of electricity of the vital need
for e xtra cons ervation efforts.

13 each; 17. Nort h College
Hi l l 9 ; 18. (tie) Reading and
Claymont 8 each ; 20 . Han
ni ba l River 7.

112-01
257
150
2. Kettering Alter 1411 13·11
3. Mor ra l Ridgeda le (Zl
205 110·01
. t31
3. Cincinna t i St . Xav ier ( -4 )
4. Windham 131 111 -01
86
115-01
169 5. Columbus Ready 11 0-21 70
4. E . Cleveland Shaw 131 113· 6. Ka lida I11 114·01
67
0)
141
7. Patri ck Henry ( 11 -0 )
50

Royen (l) ond Brookfield Ill

Mike and Sue

Wa lter Z.

Both
time•coal
are
running
out...

CUSTOMERS NEED TO
CONSERVE 'ELECTRICITY!

We cou ld n't have picked
a nicer pa ir of parents i n
the wo rld! Ha ve a,
Happy Valent ine's Day!

love wi th you !

A dlscussion uf mourninM:

dove legislation Will
2:30p.m,

Team No. 5
Team No. J

Boys ' cage ratings

985-3301
CHESTER, OHIO

UNTIL JESUS COMES.

AT 992-2145

1

Middleport, 0.

Island, N.Y. He was the Reds'
In his high school career,
Ulir d round selection in the Gibson pitched five no-hitters
recent free agent draft.
and eight one-hitters . He once
1
' Gibson is
one of the had 21 strikeouts in a seven
outstanding young pitchers in inning game and struck oul20
the count ry," said Joe batters in a seven inning
Bowen, director of scouting game on three occasions. He
for lhe Reds. "He would wa s his leag ue's most
undoubtedly have been one of valuable player three years
the first players taken in the in a row.
draft es:cept for the confusion
The Reds also announced
about his eligibility."
they have signed their No. 5
Reds officials said Gibson pick in the draft , eatcher Dan
chose to graduate from high Sarrett of Tampa, Fla., •
school at the semester break student . at Valencia J unior
last month, making him College .in Orlando, Fla.
eligible to be signerl

Team

1.

n

••xi

COLUMBUS (UPI ) - A
waterfowl symposiwn ~nd
mourning dove rally will be
held Saturday at the Holiday
Inn Nort~ at i-71 and Ohio 161.
The program for tlle waterfowl portion of the meeting,
_which begins at 9:30 a.m.,
· will include a panel of
specialists from the Ohio
Division of Wilcllife and the
U.S. Fish and Game Service
as well as representatives or
Dueks Unlimited and the
t.ea~ue of Ohio Sportsmen.
The panel will discuss rules
and events affecting the past
waterfowl season and those
that will affect the 1978-79
sea !!(ln.

Al ley Ca ts

16 WORDS s1.00-CASH WITH ORDER

.... ,

mandiug lead. ~8 . with get beat as muc h as what we
9:31lelt lo play in the game. did was give them the win ."
However, the Wolverines
Elsewhere among the top
charMed from behind on a teams ,
No .
2-ranked
pair of field goals by senior Marquette had an easier
guard Dave Baxter and a lime, defeating penn State,
spectacular 29-foot midt'Ourt 73-SO, No. 6 UCI.A downed
jumper
from
rese rve Stanford, 101 -64, South
sophomore guard Mark Alabama stunned Florida
Lozier as the buzzer sounded . State, 58-56, San ~·rancisco
Michigan had called time -lost to Portland. l0HI7, St.
out with three set'Onds on the Bonaventure upset
clock and Ule st'Ore tied
l'rovidenee, 72-04, and Wake
hoping to get the ball t~ Forest beat Duke, 79.&lt;i0.
forward Alan Hardy for a
In other games, Purdu~
quick layup. The Spartans defeated Ohio State, 71-09,
however, sealed Hardy off: . Lafayette downed Fordham
The ball went instead to 79-76, St. John 's defeated
Lozier who glanced at the Cincinnati, 75-66, Illinois
downed WiSl'Onsin, 74·71,
clock
fired .
"The things we told our Massachusetts edged Holy
kids to do tonight just didn 't Cross, 77-76, Indiana defeated
get done," Coach J ud Northwestern, 86-70, and
Heathcote said. "We didn't Ml!lnesota beat Iowa. 82-71.

STARTING: FEBRUARY 5 THRU

sti ll head-over -heels in

,

106 N. 2nd Ave .

CINCINNATI (UPIJ Paul Glblon, a recent high
school gradUille deacrlljed by
a CincinnaU Reda scout as
"~• of the oulltandlng young
PitChers In the country "
signed a contract with !he
Reds Thursday.
The IS.year old leflhander
had a 35-6 record ancl a o.96
earned run average over
lhree years at Center
Moriches High School in Long

TIME: 7:00 PM EACH NIGHT

year s of marriage, I' m

ASH ST.

Pomeroy

UPI Spurt&amp; Wrtter
The No. xanked Michigan
;State Spartans thought lut
week was bad after they were
holod up in a hotel for 72
hours because of a bliuardbut that wu beflll'e this week
came along.
Monday nl&amp;ht Indiana beal
them, 71-ll&amp;, the Spartans'
first Bi8 Ten lou of the
season. Thursday night they
lost their ~econd straighl
game, this time a 65-63
decision to Michip n. The
loss drops the Spartans Into a
tie for , firsl pl.oce 1n the
CO(I!er~ wilh 7·2 Puraue
while the Wolverinet are just
a game back at $.3.
The Spartans had raUiod
from a first-half deficil and
he ld a seeminKIY com•

records In pa r entheses} :

WITH

City Ice &amp; Fuel Co.

992-2 115

By JENNY KEIJJjER

Reds sign young lefthander

SUGAR RUN MILLS

BAUM

SPECIAL SINGING

R,I.LLY S,l.n!RD,I.Y

Indiana hands MSU
first defeat, 71-66

basketball rotl ngs (with firs t-

ou 'II be happier

DISTRIBUTED BY

son

Seeds - Bird Seeds - Olysfer Shells and Grit .
·'Fertilizers - Lime · Cement &amp; Mortar . Stock
Salt - Wafer Softener · Re medi es . Salt Litters - Vaccine - Roofing - Paints . Red
Brand Fencing · Baler and Binder Twin e Sprays • Gates.

~~CJ1'·Q

CALL ART HARTLEY JR.

.

Smooth
ceramic
glass
cooking
surface
wi p es
clean .
Plus
continuous
cleaning oven .

WITH SNOW BLADE

(Umit 16 Words-Sizes Illustrated Below)

' ~ EATING OIL I

WALTHAM, Mass. (UPIJ
- AI Shields, who started
varsity basketball at Bentley
College and built the Falcons
into a national Divi.sioo II
power over 1~ seasons,
announced Thursday he will
retire at Ute end of Ute season
to concentrate fuUtime on his
job as athletic director.

smooth·top electric range

LAWN TRACTOR

PHONE 773-5536

.r-.=uei Chiefl

as the amateur athlete of the
Y'\BT·
•
The Pride or Cleveland
Award will be presented 10
SMACO's selection of the
sports figure, to be
announced the night of the
banquet, whose contributions
have had a positive effect on
the local community,

8 HORSEPOWER
FAIRLAWN

OF MASON

HEATING OIL

'

1

SAY "I LOVE YOU" WITH A
.$1.00 SENTINEL VALENTINE AD.

TEXACO

- ., u ' ' .
SMACO bas selected New
York Yankee Thurmon
Mun!!On the top professiooal
aU~ete of the year, Duane
Kupier as the Cleveland
lndi~s · Man of the Year and
Oh1o State's Tom Cousineau

pl ace votes a nd won-los t

GINO'S

I.

•·Our turnovers almost beat
us,· · he said. "We were
shuffling our feet. We were
trying to do too many things
too frequently.
The
Boilermakers
committed 20 turnovers,
c'Ompared to Ohio State's 13.
The Purdue victory,
coupled with Michigan's 65-93
victory over Michigan State,
moved the Boilermakers Into
a first place tie with the
Spartans, both with 7-2 slates
in the ·Big Ten. The loss
dropped Ohio Stale to 4-5 in
Ute loop.
Elsewhere Thursday night,
Dayton survived a see-saw
game with a 67-05 victory
over Duque!llle at Pittsburgh
and Saint John 's lopped
Cincinnati 75-66 at New York.
Officially, Jack
Zimmerman didn't score the
game-winning points, but

J

ternat iona l Ohio High School
Board of Coaches' boys

NOW OPEN
AFTERNOON TILT
Saturday's Rio Grande at
Malone basketball game
will be played at 3:30p.m.
aad not 7: 30· p.m. as
previously announced.

Sichting's game-winner.
Page lnpped all scorers
with 23 points and Ransey
added 18, while Eugene
Parker added 13 markers for
Pllrdue.
Ohio State Coach Eldon
Miller said the Buckeyes
shollid be proud of their effort
despite the loss.
"We're not going to hang
our heads," said Miller.
"Both teams played hard and
Purdue deserved 10 win ."
Pllrdue Coach Fred Schaus ·
also had good words for the
young Buckeyes.
"Ohviously, they're a good
ballclub and they're going to
get better," he said. "We beat
a team that shot well from
outside and played good defense against us ."
However. Schaus wasn't
too happy with his team's
performance_

'

R.·C•.BOTTLING .CO.
MILL STREET
Middleport, Ohio
992-3542 or 992-3344

. KEOKUK, Iowa (UPI) - A
funeral will be held Satwday
. for Otto H. " Ja ck"
Saltzgaver , 73, a seco nd
baseman for the New York
Yankees and the Pittsburgh
Pirates during the 193t6 and
'4U&gt;i, who died Wednesday at
a Keokuk hospital.
After his playing days were
over, Saltzgaver managed
minor league teams at Wilmington, Del., and Little
Rock, Ark . After his
retirement from baseball, he
.operated a boWling alley and
skating rink in Keokuk:
· He is · survived by his

widow, Ma·ry, a son·, a
daughter
and
grandchildren.

six

�H- 1'he DatlySentJnol MI&lt;Idleport Pomcr" 0

~ rlllal

Feb 3

191;7!8- ------------------------------------------------------------,
THESE MESSAGES OF OUR RELIGIOUS HERITAGE ARE SPONSORED EACH WEEK BY 11tE FOWMING
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FOR RENT

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Re v

W

H

Penn po s to Ro w- Mo11 e Sun
da y sc hool su p Chv ch Sc hoo l
9 IS om wo !.h p se v ce 10 30
om Cho
eheo sol Tue!.Coy
7 30 p m undc d ect on ol Mrs
Paul Nease
POMEROY CHI;;IKH OF THE
NAZARENE Co e U on and
M u be y Rev C yde V He d e

w

PQsto Su da y l&gt;Choo l 9 30
o m G en M e( vn g \ upt mo n
ng w o sh p 10 30om even ng
!ie v ce 7 30 m d w ee k se " e

Wednesday 7 30 p m
GRACE EP SCOPA L

The Re"

Albe
MocKenzle
ec o
Se
"'ces ond Sunday sc hoo l o
2

noo n
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST
712 W Mo n S Joh n MeA I u
po s o B b e schoo 9 30 a n
mo n ng 'w o sh p
0 30 a m
You h meet ngs 6 30 p m e en

ng wo sh p 7 30 Wedne sday
n gh p aye m eet ng and B ble
s udy 730pm
THE SALVATION ARMY 115
But ernu Ave Pone oy ~n voy
ondMs RoyWnng off ce s n

c ho ge
mee ng

Su ndov ho n e H
0o m

Sunday School
0 30 o m Sunday school leode
YPSM E a se Adams 7 p m
~olvot on
mee ng
vo ou s
speakiP s and mus c spe c a s 7 30
p m Thu sdoy
0 a m o 2p m
loa es Home league o wo nen
nv ed 7 30 p m p aye nee g
and 8 b e study
Sob Es cp
eode
Rev
Noc
He man
eoche
BURL NGTON SOUTHERN SAP
TIST CHAPEL Rou e I Shade
Paso
Bobby E).. n s Sunday
school 5 p m Sunday wo sh p
5 45 p m Wednesday p aye se
vee 7JOpm
POMEROY WESTS DE CHURCH
OF CHRIST 100 W Mo n S Jer y
Pou m n sl e phone 99'2 7666
Conse valve non nst ume to
Sunday wo sh p
0 a n B b 1::1
study I o m wo sh p 6 p m
Wednesday 8 b e ~ udy 7 p m
OlD DEXTER BIBlE CHRISTIAN
CH URCH
Rev Ro ph Sm h
pasta Sunday sc hoo 9 30 o n
M s Wo ley F one s supe nten
de
P each ng se v ces I s 8
h d Su days lo low ng Sunday
School
GRAHAM UN TED METHOD ST
P each ng 9 30 o m I s and se
cond Sundoys of each mon h
th d and foo h Sundays each
man h wo sh p se v ce at 7 30
pm
Wednesday even ngs a
7 30 P aye and B b e S udy
SEVEN TH DAY ADVENT ST
Mulbe y He ghts Rood Pame oy
Pasta
A be t D es Sabba th
School Supe n e nden
Co a
Me n y e Sabba th Schoo So u
day ohernoon a 2 00 w h Wo
sh p Se v ce Ia low ng a J 5
RUTLAND F RST BAPTIS T
CHURCH
Ss e
Ho
e
Sup
Sunday School
Wo ne
9 30 a m
mo n ng wo s p
0 45o m
THE H lAND CHAPEl Geo ge
Cos o pas a
Sunday School
9 30 a m even ng wo sh p 7 30
Thu sdoy even ng p aye se v ce
7 30p m
POMEROY FIR ST
BAP TIST
Dav d Man
m n se
W II om
Watson Sunday schoo l sup Sun
day sc hoo 9 30 o m
no ng
woshp030om
F RST SOUTHERN BAP 1ST 182
Mulbe ry Ave Pome oy Paul J
Wh e Pastor Go y Bo shpm Sun
day schoo sup Sunday schoo
9 30 a m
mor n ng wo sh p
0 30 even ng wo sh p 6 30 p m
M dl:'&gt;'eek p aye
se v ce 7 30

pm
M IDWAY COMMUN TY CE N T~R
De .~e. e Rd angs
e Oh o Rev
Clyde Fer e
Pas o
Sunday
Sc; h ool
a m
So u day
p each ng se v ces 7 30 p m
Wednesday even ng 8 b c study
at730pm
FA TH TABE RNAClE CHURCH
Bo ley Run Rood Rev Emme
Rowson pas ta Handley Dunn
su pt Sunday sc hoo 10 am Sun
day even ng se v ce 7 30 8 ble
teach ng 7 30 p m Thursday

OYESV ILLE

COMMU N TV

CHURCH Rage C Tu e pas o
Sunday sc hoo 9 30 o m Sunday
mo n ng wo sh p 10 30 Sunday
even ng se ce 7 30
M DDLEPORT
MT MORIAH SA PT ST Co net
Fou th and Mo n M dqlepo
Rev Henry Key J
pasta Sun
day Schoo 9 30 a m M s. E v n
Morn ng
Boumga dne
sup
wo sh p 0 45 o m
M ODLEPORT CHURCH
OF
CHR ST N CHRISTIAN UN ON
low ence Manley po slo M 5
Russell Young
Sunday Schoo
Supl Sunday School 9 30 a m
Even ng wo sh p 7 JO Wednes
day p aye mee ng 7 30Q m

RU lLANO CHURCH o()f GOO
Flev Jomei D Gu ynn pastor
Su day ~c hoot 10 a m Sunday
wo sh p 11 a rn Sunday e'Je ng
~e v ce 7 p
Wedne'idoy w o
~hp !oe v ce 7 JOp ,.,
HAZEl COMMUN JY CHURCH
Neo l on g So om Ed~el Ho
pos o Su da y schoo 10 a m
Chu rc h
7 30 p m
p aye
mee ng 7 30 p m Thu sdoy
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAl
Tl d Ave he Rev W II om Kn
e pa !o o Ro aid Dugan Sun
do.,. S.C hool Supt C a sses fo a I
ogeli e ~
g ~ e v ce 130 8 ble
s udy Wed nesday 7 30 p rn
you h se v ces F day 7 30 p n
MIDDlEPORT FREEW ll BAP
T ST Co ne A~h and P vm Noel
He non pas o 5otu doy even
g se v ce 7 30 p m Sunday
School 10 30om
MEIGS

COOP ERA I VE PAR SH
METHODIST CHURCH
Robe

1 8umgo ne

John F Fultz

Ph nl 2101

Pomeroy

LINDA'S lADY FAIR
BEAUTY SAWN

Complete Automotive Serv1ce
Locust &amp; Beech Sts
Mtddleport

Call949 1838 For Appoi ntment
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ENTERPR SE Wo sh p 9 o n
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ROCK SPR NGS Wo sh p 10
o M Chu ch Schoo q 5o m
UMVF630pm
F ATWOODS Wo sh p
om
Chu ch Schoo 0 o m
MIDDLEPORT ClUSTER
Rev Robe Bumgo ne
HEATH
Robe
Bumgo ne
Po5 0
Woshp
1030 om
Chu ch School 9 30 o m UMVF 6

pm
RUTLAND W bv H
f'os o
Wo sh p 10 30oM (hu ch S hool
9 30a n
SY RA CUSE ClUSTER
Rev Ha vey Koch J
ASBURY
Wo sh p
1 a m
Cl u ch Sc oo 9 50 a m UMW
l 5 vesday B b e S udy Thu s
7 JOp m
FOREST RUN Wo sh p q om
Chu h School l Oam
M NERSVIL E Wo sh p 10 o n
Chu ch Schoo19 a m
SYR ACUSE Chu ch School 9 00
a m Wo sh p serv ce 7 30 p m
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev lmo hySn h
Clvs e l eode
Re v Sleven W son
Assoc a e
BETHANY
Do cos ) Wo sh p
9 30 a m Chu ch School 10 30

om
CARMEL Ch uch Schoo 9 30
Wo sl p 0 30 a m 2nd and
4 h Sunda ys
APPl E GROVE Sund ay Schoo
q 30 o m Wo sh p 7 30 p m sf
and 3 d Su nday s P aye mee t ng
Wednesday 7 30 p n Fe ows h p
suppe f rs So u day b p m UMW
2nd Tuesday 7 30 p m
EAS T LETAR T Ch uch Schoo l
s '2nd 3rd Sundays 9 30 a m
Fou h 5u day 10 30 a fl Wo
sh p 2nd Sunday 7 30 p m 411
Sunday 9 30 a m P aye nee! ng
Wednesday 1 30 p m UMW st
Tuesday 7 30 p m
WESlE YAN (Roc ne
Sunday
School 10 am Worsh p 1 a m
J UMYF Wednesday 3 30 p m
Bb e S udy Thu sdoy 7 p m Cho
P oc ce Jl u sday8p m
~ET ART FALLS Chv ch School
l si 2nd 3 d Sundays 10 5o m
4 h Sunday 9 5 a m Wo sh p
1st 2nd 3 d Sundays 9 5 am
4 h Sunday 7 30 p m
MORNING 5TAR Wo sh p 9 30
a m Chu ch School 0 30 a m
M d Week Se v ce Wednesday 8
a

pm
MORSE CHAPEL Wo sh p
a m Chu ch S hool q 30 a n
PORTLAND Wo sh p 7 30 p m
Chu ch School 9 30om
SU TT ON Chu ch Schoo q 30
a n Wo sh p 1st and 3 d Sundays
0 30 om

NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev R ho d Thomas
f'as o
Duane Sydens eke
John Doug as
Asso a es
JOPPA
Wo sh p
0 a m
Chu ell Schoo l 9 o m
P ay e
Meet ng Wednesday 8 p m
LONG BOT TOM Sunday sc hool
o 9 30 a m Wo sh p se ces ot
7 30 p m B be s udy and You th
mee ng
a
B p n
on
Wednesdays
NORTH BETH El Wo sh p
a m Church Schoo 0 a m
ALFREO Sunday Schoo 9 30
a m Wo sh p 10 45 a m P aye
nee ng Wednesday 7 45 p m
UMW 3 d Tvesdoy8 p m
REEDSVIl l E Svnday Schoo 9 30
a M Wo sh p 7 30 p m P aye
Mee ng 7 30 p m
Tuesday
V s Ia on7 30p m s Thu sdoy
S LVER RIDGE Wo sh p 10 am
Chu ell Schoo 9 a m
TUPPERS PlAINS Wa sh p 9
a m Chu ch Schoo l 0 a m
KENO CHURCH OF CHR ST
Geo ge F ede ck supl Se ce
week ly 9 30 o m on Sunday
P each ng I st and th d Sundays
of monlh by ( IIford Sm h 9 30

..

12.1

315

E.ilt.-h wurd over the mmunwn 5
words 111 I t.-ents ptr word per tilly

.

Ad!

,.

n&amp;nnUlH ~r

Uw.n

days wUI be rhaJ'Ked

Vtnyl &amp; Alum1num Stdtng Storm
Wtndows ilnd lnsulat on

WE FILL DOCTORS
PRESCRIPTIONS
t92 29SS
Pomeroy

,..
,..,

110
300

BISSEU SIDING CO

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

Phone 949 2801or 9492860
FREE ESTIMATES

~-ut v~

lhtt 1 day

11.

In memory CMnl of 'Illllrtk.ll ~trd
Olntuary 6 \''fnla per word 13 00
mmlmwn CUhinlldV¥r~tt!

Mobile Home sales and Yard s.a~

THIS SPACE
FOR RENT

FRENCH'S SUNOCO
SERVICE CENTERS

PHONE 992 2156

282 W Motn Pomeroy 9P2 9962
510 N 2nd Middleport 9P2 3451

The Pub LSher r~rves tilt- r e:ht
to tldit o reled an} ads deemed obJeCliOI'UI. The Pubhsher w U not be
n:sporllj ble fo 1 vre Uwn 1.me Ill or

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

Ph 949 9130

Ph 9912318
MEIGS COUNTY BRANCH

RACINE FOOD MARKET

THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO

THE STORE WITH A HEART
Ph 949 2626

Racme

Pomeroy

196W 2nd

Ph 992 3863

Pomeroy

MIDWAY MARKET
BOB'S MARKET

FOR RENT

Ph 992 1512
Mo,.n

PHONE 992-2156

Ph 77'J .... 121

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
&amp; SERVICE, INC

THE FINEST IN MOBILE
HOMES
Pomeroy

1100 E Maon

Ph 992 7034

216 E Second

DAN lltOMPSON FORD, INC
To many people a hfellmeis a number of days weeks
months and years It IS the lime measured from the day of
our birth to the day of our death

WAID CROSS SONS STORE

•

GROCERIES &amp; GENERAL
MERCHANDISE

For The Best 1n TV V1ew1ng

Call9'12 2505

EQUIPMENT
SALES SERVICE
Ftre Extinguishers
F1re Dept

THIS SPACE
FOR RENT

HEINER'S BAKERY

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE

BAKERS OF GOODBREAD

Aero• I Schools Weddtngs

Huntmgton W Va

RIDENOUR TV &amp; APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE
en ester

Raetne

CHUR CH

OF

CHR ST M Donald Ro ey pas o
Sunday sc hoo 9 30 o m wo
sh p se v ce 10 30 a m Sunday
se v ces 7 p m
you h g oup
Wednesdov 7 p m
ANT QU TV BAPTIST Rev Fo I
Shu e
paslo
Sunday sc hoo l
9 30 a m Chu ch serv co 7 p m
you h mee ng 6 p m Tuesd ay 8
beSudy7pm
RACINE CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE Rev John A Coli
man pa s o F onkl n mboden
cho man al he Boo d of Ch s
on l te Sunday School 9 30
a m
morn ng wo sh p
0 30
5vndoy even ng wo sh p 7 30
p m P aye mee ng Wednes
MT MOR AH CHURCH OF GOO
day 7 30 p m
Roc r1e Rou e 2 he Rev James
RAC NE FIRST BAPTIST Do L
M Muncy pas o Sunday sc hoo
Wo ke
Posta
Ronn e So se
9 AS am mo n ng wo sh p 11
Sunday sc hoo
sup
Sunday
a m
evenng wo shp
7 30
schoo 9 30 a m mo n ng wo
Prayer mee ng Tuesday 7 30
sh p 10 40 a m Sunday e en ng
p m
Young peop e s mel) t ng
wo 5h p 7 30 Wednesday even
7 30 p m Th u sd oy
ng 8 ble study 7 30
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPT ST
DANVILLE WESLEYAN Rev R
Co ne S )( h and PalmeT the Rev
D B own pas o SUnday Schoo
K by 0 le
pas o
Robe
9 30 a m
rna n ng wo sh p
Pofke supe n endenl Sunday
10 -'5 you th se v ce 6 AS p m
om
WMPO Rod a p og om 7 45 a m
even ng wo sh p
7 30 p m
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UN ON proy e and p a se Wednesda.,.
Sunday Schoo 9 15 o m Mo n
Rev "''"I~ Ebl n paso Sunday 7 30p m
ng Worsh p 0 Sam Youth oc
Schoo
9 30 o m
l eona d
v es and fel ows h p Ia un o
S LVER RUN FREE BAPT ST
G lmo e f s e de even ng se
and sen or h gh s uden ls 6 p m
M es Trou
pas a
Sunday
v
ce
7
30
p
m
Wednesday
p
aye
Sunday even ng wors h p 7 30
schoo 10 a m Steve L If e sup
mee ng 7 30 p m
p m M d week p aye se v ces
Even ng se v ce 7 p m p oyer
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOO mee ng Th u sdoy 7 p m
Wednesday 7 30 p m
Roc ne Ro u e 2 The Rev Cho es
CHURCH OF CHR ST
M d
CHESTER O WRCHOF GOD
d epa J 5th and Mo n Geo ge tiand pastor Su nday schoo 9 45 Rev Bobby Par e pas or Sun
a n momng warshp
am
G a~:e m n s e
M ke Ger och
dey schoo 9 30 a m
wo sh p
Even ng serv es Tue~doy and se v ce II a m even ng ser v ce
supe intenden
Te y Yankey
you h min ster Bib e sc hoo 9 30 F day 7 30 p m
7 30 you h lie v co Wednesday
BEARWALLOW R OGE CHURCH 7 30p m
am
morn ng wor&amp;h p 10 30
OF CHRIST
Duane Wo den
o m
even ng wo sh p ? 30
li\NGSVILLE
CHR STIAN
m n ste B be class 9 30 a m
p oyer ~e v ce 7 p m Wednes
CHURCH Robe t Mu sse pas o
morn ng worsh p 10 30 a m
dov
Sunday schoo 9 30 a m Roy
6 30 p m Sgmon sup
M OOLEPORT CHURCH OF THE even ng wo sh p
mo n ng wo sh p
Wednesday
8
ble
s
udy
6
30
p
m
NAZARENE Rev J m B oome
10 30 Su nday even ng sen ce
KE NO CHURCH OF CHRI ST 7 30 m d week se v ce Wedn.as
pasta M
Mary lathey Sunday
school sup Sund ay schoo 9 30 Geo ge F ede ck supt Sunday day 1 30 p m
o m
mo(n ng won~h p 10 30 monng sevce 9~om w th
SYRACU SE CHURCH OF THE
o m
Sunday
evon ge st c p each ng on t s and lh d Sun NAZARENE
Rev
Dole Boss
day of month by Geo ge P ckens
meet ng
7 00 p m
P aye
pos a
Bob Moo e
Sunday
NEW STIVERSV llE COMMUN
mee ng Wednesday 7 30 p m
School sup t Sunday schoo 9 30
UN TED
PRESBYTER AN TV Chu ch Sunday School se
o m mo n ng wo sh p 0 45
v ce 9 45 o m Wo sh p se v ce a m evangels c se v ce 1 p m
MINISTRY OF MEIGS COUNTY
Ow gh l Zov z d ec tor
10 30 Evonge s c Serv ce 7 30 Wednesday se v ces p aye
HARRISON V ILL E p m
Wednesday
P oyer and pro sa 7 p m
Noza ene
PRESBYTERIAN
Rev
Ernest mee ng 7 30
youth 7 pm
Do y poye
Strick In pastor Sunday chu ch
ZION CHURCH OF CHR ST meet ng 8 30 am Mens p aye
school 9 30 a m
Mrs Home
Pome oy Ho sonv lie Rd
Dan meet ng Soto day 7 p m
B I McE oy
Kennedy pas o
Lee
supt
mo n ng worsh p
EDEN UN TEO BRETHREN N
Sun day sc ho o sup
Sunday CHR ST Elden R Bla~ e pas o
10 30
schoo 9 30 a m mo fJ. ng wo
MIDDLEPORT Sunday 1choo
Sunday Scho ol 10 a n Howa d
sh p and commun on 10 30om
9 30 a m R cha d Vaughan supt
McCoy sup
M o n ng sermon
Sunday even ng youth Ch s on I o m Sundoy n gh ser v ces
Morn ng wo sh.ip 10 30
SYRACUSE Mo n ng worshi'JII 41 Emtl eavor 6 p m wo sh p se
Chr sl on Endeo vo
7 30 p m
v ce 7 p m Wednesday even ng Song se v c• 8 p m P each ng
o m Sunday school 0 a m Mrs
prayer meer ng and 8 ble s udr 7 8 30 p m
Sampson Hal supt
M dweek P aye

OlDER lad y o I e
o d r o e to agPd lady
Ru o d l gh hou\oPw o k o d
oa k g no lo\Jnd y Mo e lo
I o ne
ha
wag es
Co
47 107!:1

LADIES (OR MEN ) NEEOW f O R
GOOD PAYING lEMPORAfh
Off-ICI: l kE WORk PU:A) ANI
NO EXPERIENCl: NI:CESSAHV
ALSO NEED I A DIES (OR MEN
WITH CAR FOR liGHT DHIVEHY
WORK APPLY N PERSON ON

l &lt;(NOPHONECALL S 10MRS
CARl ER S ROOM
9 MEIGS
INN POMEROY 9 o 9 30 AM
MONDAY f!EBRUARY 6

~

AH( RAF1
fA l So f'
M
nu o
?0 o d ')'}
I aVe
1 o e ~
8 5 S3 79'fl15 7
8u khou'Se S4 875 f old dow
S 700 up We se 5e v ceo d
qual y Open ~ u da y~ Co p
Co e y S o &lt; at So es R 6'1
N oiP P eo so

Business Services
l lONOM Y
o t

HAL OH
!&gt;

c

S'n50 PI o

I. e
f"

N CE TRA LER 4x68 2 to s G ood
Sept c a k I Po Ia d
we
Pho e 843 3152

n 1..

Featuring
Deep Steam Extraction
Ph 991 2206
Ph 991

3 AND 4 RM iv s.l c da d u
f u shed ap s Ph o e 99'2
5434
COUNlRY MOBilE Ho e Po k
o h ol Po e o y
Rou e 33
loge a s Coll992 7479

es
He od e

400

Lost and t ound
LO Sl ON Go ewoy Po k ng l o
R ng keys F nde p ea se col
9&lt;12 3477 Rewa d
NORWEGIAN ELKHOUND los
a ov d Un o Ave 8 ock w
5 ve and wh te Wea ng ed
col a
A '§we s
a N k.k
992 2aaq

w

0 e $3 000
ex
eel s o ly ai r&gt;

00

t..96 072 St. 800
HOME ~

P

P o

so
W Vo be~ du He&lt;lo.
973 B oo d o e
4 ,.. 64 :J
b d 00
973 Do o
o1 -: bU :J b ed 09
Q7'J v ~ t o 0
67 3 b ~ d oo
"
7 bo
97?(ovP
y 7 x653 be l oo
9o95aesa
2 xbO'J
bed oo n

Range No 14 of the 0 C P
BUHROUG HS
and bounded as t o ows
a I e
cou
g
Beg nn ng 30 ads Sou h of th e
No th eas
corne r or sa d
quarte Sect on and 46 ads
and 22 nKs Wes of he East
Monday
ne o t sa d quarter Sec on
Noon on Saturduy
h ence ( ) Wes 23 rods and 3 Wanted tollay
I I
I
: • '
BLA CK
nks (2 So u h 34 ads and 6
TueiJday
waodg a
nks
3
East
23
rods
and
3
!.hruFnday
nk s (4 North 34 ads and 6 CASH pa d o a I makes an d
4PM
PUBLIC AUCT ON So e F 7 pm
o f mob e homEO&gt;
n ode
nk s to he p ace o beg n
the day before publlcul o
New a d used
e cho d se a n ng
Phone a eo code b 4 423 953
co n a n ng F ve
5)
Oh o R e
Auc a
Me gs ac es w h r ghr ot way trom
Swnl.lly
tiM BER Pomeroy Fa est P a
Plow
M dd epo t
Oh o
h s l a nd hrough lands now
4PM
duel s Top p ce to sa d ng
owned by Wm c Reeves and
Spe a ou c on So
7 pm
Fr day afte noon
saw! mbe
Co
992 59b5 o
T uckloods o f n ew lu n lu e Lon a Reeves to he publ c
Ken Ho by 1 44b 8570
h ghway
and m s I om sto e claseou
PARCEL NO 2 Beg nn ng
ne be ween Sect on COINS CUR RENCY oken!o o d
n he
pocke wo hes and ho ns
No Twen
hree
23
and
s l e o d gold We need %4
Seven teen 17 al he South
f ll 1\il Yntlr
we-s corn e-r of a o ot and
and ode s I e con s Buy se
o mer y deeded by Jesse
o
ode Co Rage Wo ns ey
Gl'lll't ,il I l!'l II f( T
hence
Page o ohn Page
IN THE
742 233 1
SHERIFF 5 SALE OF
dtHi
Eas
wen y one rod s o th e
CO
MMON
PLEAS
CO
URT
REAL ESTATE
Eas s de o f 1 e Athens and
OF MEIGS "COUNTY
H1ilp1 1tnl J\pplt.lrlt r",
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
Ga po s oad to the wes
OHIO
COURT MEIGS COUNTY
),t II' I 't I ( I •',
ne o a o o and forme v
EDNA MAE REEVES ET
OHIO
CASE NO 16551
deed ed by Jesse P age
o
AL
The Athens County Sail mgs &amp;
Samue Page thenc e So u h
Pia nt fts
Loan Co Pia ntll vs Elden
on !&gt;a d
ne and a ong he
J,n k W (.Jr wy Mqr
E Slack and C-ancl ce M
REE VES
Eas s de o he ro ad to he
FLORA
MAY
NO
TEM
100
La
ge
o
oo
sma
Phonr· Y'V/ } I B 1
Sla~;:k
Cefendant s
Nor1hea5 co rner of a to of
DIXON ET AL
W I buy
pe e o
amp e e
n p u rsuance to an ORDER
and
deeded
by
me
o
Mfj
n
Oelendants
household New used a o
OF SA L E n the above en
hence Wes
abou
No 6 6611 Rupe
ques Ma t n s Fu n u e 20 N
t t ed ac on
w offer for
wen
y
one
rod
s
to
the
ne
- NOTICE SY
sa eat pub l c auct on a he
~n-.ces Offered
2nd S
M dd1epo t Pho e
between sec t ons tw en ty
PUBLICATION front steps of he Court House
h ee and seven ecn th ence
992 6370
n Pomeroy
Oh o
Me gs
W l CARE to I e e de y n ou
North a ong sad ne to he
TO
The unknown hers
CH P WOOD
Po es
mo-:
Coun yon Saturday l he 8 h
hone Pho e99773 4
pla c e of b eg nn ng
con
clev sees ega ees e)(ec utor s
day of February 1978 at
d ame1e 0 on a ges end $8
an ng some wo acres mor e
adm n stra ors spouses and
MOB lt HOME opa ~ 992 5858
10 00 o clock a
m
the
pe on Bund ed sl ob S6 pe
or l ess and s a pa rt o f
ass gns ol A M
Reeves
follow ng descr bed rea
Sec ons No Seven t een (17
o
De e t1d o Oh o Po e
Mary
E
en
Reeve
Bo
ng
PIANO TUN NG La e Do e
3
est a e s tua te n he County
Town
7
Seve n
Range
Marsha 0 1 ver Reeves ane
Co R 2 Pome oy 99'2 7b89
Ne w p o e
ot Me gs and Sta le of Oh o to
Number
Fo
urt
een
14
n
he
Eleano
Bor ng Sa nder s
w t
WANT TO BUY House a mob c
Oh o c ompany s Purchase
Emma
E l een
Reeves
S tuated n lhe V llage of
PARCEL NO 3 Beg nn ng
home n coun y w h so T1e
W
am N cho as ~eeves
Sy ra cuse Co un y of M e gs
h r y rods Sou h from the
E do n W nf e d
Reeves
oc eoge on and co ni oc Con
and S a e o f Oh o and
No h East co ner o f h e
E zabe h Reeves v o et on a
pay
d own
poyme
d esc r bed a s t o ows
Sou h Eas qua er of Sec on
~eeve s and
H e en E leen
eosonob e
0
y n e es ed
Be ng 35 f eet off of the west
No
T wen t y t hree
own
Reeves
peop e need o ma
r) o ma
s de of L ot No 77 n sa d
seven Range Four een of he
0
Pia nt ffs hav e br oug h fh s
a
a PO Box 9 longsv e
V la ge of Sy racu se
n he
Oh o Company s Purch ase
0
ac on na m ng you as one of
Count y of Me gs and Sl a te of
OH 4574
hence Wes seven l y
ods
he Det en dan s n he abov e
0 w
Oh a
hen ce So ut h about th rly
cou
by f ng
he
Com
Belle
S LVER DOllARS and o ns Top
P ope y app a sed at
od s lo L
S
Townse nd s
pan t on December 9 977
40/25"
$3000 and cannot be so d f or
_21
o
a
pad
Cal
7-42
23
6
and
hence Ea s seventy
The ob ee l of the Com p an
45769
ess han wo thi rd s of the
ads o h e Eas
ne of sa d
s to part on the fo ow ng
app r a sed 11a !ue
Sect on tw en ty lh ee
hen ce
desc bed r ea esta e
T erms of sa e
cas h n
No h a ong sa d Eas t I ne
S tu a ed n Sc p o Town
hand sub eel Ia ea esta t e
y r ods to l he pace at
h
sh p n he Coun y of Me gs
a)(es
co n a n ng th r
beg nn ng
and S ate ol Oh o tow t
IF YO U hove a se v ce o o ft e
James J P'roff tt
een and one e gh h acres
PARCEL NO 1 Be ng n
won to buy o sell some h ng
Sher ft
h e Sou t heas
qua er of
more o ess save and e)(cepf
oe look ng lor wo k
o
M e g s county Oh o
Sect on No 23 Tea m No 7
s )( ac r es off lhe wesl s de of
who eve
you II ge esu 5
( ) 20 27 ( 2 3 0 7 5tc
sa d ract o f and now own ed
las e w h a Sent ne Wo Ad
by A M Ree ves
Co 1992 2 156
We have enlarged our
PARCEL NO
4
A so
ana her at o pa ee l o f and
serv ce department and
beg nn ng a th e So iJ heasl
w II serv1ce Hotpotnf and
co ner ol I he above descr bed
other
brand s
o
hence
eas
abou
seve n een rods
or
o th e
HOOF HO LLOW Ho se5 Buy se
Sta t e o ad as now rave ed
ode o t a n New and used
t he n ce Nor hwar d ly a ong
by THOMAS JOSEPH
sodd es Ru h Ree es A bony
Sl a t e road abou lh 1y one
r ods and f tteen a nd one ha lf
ACROSS
43 Abound
1 •~.::.
8 _::
32:.:9_::
0"-~--I nks
or
to
coumba
_Jack W Carsey Mgr
RISING STAR Kenne Boo d ng
1 SCarlett s
DOWN
Down ng s Sou h ne th ence
Phone992218
ou
doo
uns
ndoor
and
home
I Word with
wes a ong sa d Down n g s
G
oom
ng
a!
b
eeds
Clean
You h ne abou twenty ads
5 Broncopigeon
son o y lac I es Chesh e
or o he East I ne of ~a d
busters
2 Guthrie
Sec on wenty hree thence
Phone (614 ) 367 0292
Sou th a ong sad East
ne
home
and others
REG
STEREO BLUETICK pups
about th rty ads t o the p ace
10 Russian
3 Sacred
of beg nn ng con la n ng t hree
28":_c_~~~~
mo o l ~ ( 3~
HOMES TES fo so e I a e onP
acre s and s xty four r ods
City
memento
ONE
YEAR
ad
moe Peek A Poo
up M dd lepo
eo Rll land
be ng so much of Sec t on
11 0 T herome
I Between
Col 992 3844
Co 992 748
seven t een
n town seven
13 Governor
range fou teen n he Oh o
Miss and Ga
MEIGS CO UN TY Humane Soc e y NEW 3 bed oc n hov se '2 ba hs
Y~sterday s Answer
Com pa ny s Pur chase
Grasso
5 Second hand
on mo co el ne and odop on
ol e ec
ac e M dd epo
The amou n conveyed by
close o Rutland Pho e 992
se v ce {I ee on mals) 992 7680
of Conn
ad word
19 Hebrew
28 Goods of h s deed be ng l en acres and
o
even ngs and
Sundays
748 1
hinhest
e gh y to ur r o d s more or less
14 Afncan
6 Japans
Prophet
!J&amp;•
Refe ence Deed Vo 20
992 54 27
Ma
co M
SMALL
fa m lo so e 0° dow n
desert
highest
quality
Page 67 Me gs Co un y De ed
20 Political
C owfo d
R
4 Box 326
ow e I nonced Mon oe Cau n
IS Whyvolcano
Pome ov Oh o 45769 Membe
list
30 Timely
R~c~~dia l ow n g desc be d
y W Vo Phone (304 772
sh ps and donal ons PO. BO•
Love You•
7Tothe23 Engages
rubber
r ea es at e s ua ed n sc p o
~2 a (304) 772 3227
682 Pome oy Oh a 4 576~
degree
16 Acto~
as gear
stamp
Townsh p Me gs Coun y and
COUNTRY t o mlond w h sec ud
0
1
REGISTERED BlUE T ck pups 6
Jaffe
8 DISCipline
teeth
31 Nose out ~~~ ~n n~' a ~h~ N E ~ wn!
ed woods wo e and good oc
mo
old
(J04)
882
3328
17 Sea call
9 Leading
24 Elame s
32 Bum a b1t o f a 5 f ve ac e a of and
cess n Mon oe Coun y W Vo
home
36 Regard now owned Qy A M Reeves
$ 000 down co (30-') 772
18 AcadeffiiC
lady
un n ng south a ong eas t I ne
3 02 0 (304) 777. 3227
21Raw
12 Scoundrel
25 Barren
38 Palm leaf ot sa d L ot 34 rods and 6
Comme
c ol p ope y opp ox
7
26 Pub measure 39 Old pro
I n ks thence east 4 rods and
t6Smartmg
nuneral
6 3 6 nks t hence north 34
ac es
e e land Ia a ed a
22 Horne of
r ods and 16 nks th en ce w est
Tuppe s Pans o Oh o Rou e
4 r ods and 5 3 5 nks to the
song
7 Phone (6 4 ) 667 6304
pla ce of beg nn ng co nta n ng
23 Billiard
(1) acre w t h r ght of way
shot
lhrough la nd s now owned by
] 96S CHE VELLE 4 d
A C 283
Wm
c Reeves h e r s and
26 DISCUSSIOn
eng 2 bbl au o f on ~ Ex
L ana Reeves o publ c h gh
ce e cond on T uck oppe
group
wa..y The above descr bed
sd8ft bed 28 n hgh
acre I es n Sec on 23 Town
27 Town near
742 2485
7 Range 14 of t he Oh o
Padua
Company s Pur c hase
_S_E.L'..'l~IN:::G~:O:o"u--=Tc-cd-u-e 7o- l- h-eo th
28 Proper
R ef erence Deed Vo
122
Smo I g ace y s o e: and gas
Page 33 1 Me gs Co unt y De ed
29Constancy
so on w h sock end equp
Reco ds and t h e demand s
33 Opposite
men located a longsv e on
hat th e real estate b e pa r
1 1 oned and ordered so bu t f
Route 124 Ve y good buy Coil
of vert
sa d r ea l es a t e can not be
_ 9_
92_S_B_
6B _o _74_2 _
90.~4-'S '----3i ObJet
pa
toned
hen tne r gn s
976 FORD VAN 4 B own S
n eres and ens of a I he
dNEW LISTING
A house
par e.s he e to may be fu y
Moson WV (304) 773 5986
35 Concealed
to be cher shed and Ia ge
--dete rm ned ad us t ed and
BULL THREE yf!'tl ngs 5 he fe s
too Approx
600 sq ft of
pro ected that he prop er! es
37TS and
hoy fa
sa e
Col
A so
be
so
l
d
and
p
oceeds
lt v ng space 4 bedrooms 2
others
ds rbue d
tha
t he
992 720
car garage 1 acre 4 yrs
39 Weather
Defendants or their ne rs
o d modern and n the
9)7 JEEP CJ 7 SS 000 Coli
dev
sees
lega
ees
executor~
cock
co unty S36 100
843 3155 befo e 12 00 noon a
adm n s rators
sp ouses or
40 15th cent
A STEAL __.. 6 acres In the
ass g n s be req u r ed o set up
afte 6 00 pm
and a l ege the nature o f her
country
arge garden
helmet
27 LOCUST FENCE posts 90
c a m n he rea 1 es &lt;li t e nere n
garage '2 yr old double
41 Advantage
each Phone 7A2 2359
desc bed or be for e ve
w de $500000
ba rr ed from dong same that
42
tOil ONE
22 Magnum f e 3 AM PM
OVER 3 ACRES - Home
f
e to the pro pert es be
and sweat
s ereos too l bo)( fo sma ll bed
b een modern zed barn
qu e ed tha al owance be
5 ft
b ush hog
p clc.up
made for attorneys tees and
and business butld ng
homemade og spl er 9 n B &amp;
th e P a n t ffs cos here n
JUST LOOK $11 500 00
DAILY CRY~'TO&lt;lllOTE- Heres ho" to \\Ork It for
and fo r such o her rc ef as
D san der 99'2 6'229
OLDER HOME - N ce
he Pia nt tts may be en
AXYIJLHAAXR
locat on 3 bedrooms bath
B STO
TOPPER
28
h gh
ted
You are requ red to
Is LOI'&gt;GFELI OW
enswer the compla nt w h n
742 2485
N G heat k t c hen w th
twenty e ght days after th e
range &amp; re f
P orc h es
One Jetter s1 mply tands for an o th er In t h1 s sa m ple A 1s
TWO GOOD mud and snow t &amp;S
ast p ub ca on of th s not ce
$11 000 00
on Fo d
ms G 78 5 $30
used f or the three L s X f or the t" o 0 s et c S ngle letters
which w I be pub shed on e
JUST LOOK - 2 acres
992 7565
apostrophes the l ength and formation of t h e words are all e&lt;~ch week t or s )( su ccess v
small barn 6 yr old home
weeks
and
the
ast
h nt s Eaeh da) t he code )&lt;' t ers arc chffcrcn t
pub cat on w II be made on
3 or 4 bedrooms FREE
February 17 1978
GAS br ck &amp; f rame perm a
CRY PTOQ U OTES
In c ase of you r fa ure lo
pane w mdows c arport
answer or otherwise re spon d
JUST $3200000
QZVDXMJU as pe m t i ed by the Oh o
FSEZ
MX
JSLYMJU
Rues o r C 11 I Procedure
THIS OFFICE STANDS
Ler Pomeroy Landmark
w th n he t me stated udg
READY TO SERVE YOU
soften &amp; conclthon your
F DJ
LYDJ
D m ent by defa u l1 w II be
EZDR
D
WSE
WHENEVER
YOU RE
water
w1th
Co-op
water
r endered l!ga nsf you for the
BUYING OR SELLING A
relief
demanded
n
th
e
,.flener
Model
UC
SVI
J
BMX
CRDXLMT
PROPERTY
(CALL
Com pia n t

.....

'.

..

•

..

POMEROY
LANDMARK

v \

RACINE PLANING MILL
Syracuse

Ph 991 3978

j

Keepsake Dtamond Rings

212 E Mam
Pomeroy
Ph 992 3785

Vo Sunday 8 ble S udy 0 a m
Worshp
om and7pm Bb e
S udy Wednesday 7 p m Voco
mus c

MASON A SSEMBLY OF GOO
Dvdd ng Lane Moson W Va
Ches e lennon Posta Sunday
Schoo
9 45 a m
Ch ld ens
Chu ch 6 45 p m Young Peoples
Se v ce 6 45 p m E-..· on~e s c
Se v ce 7 30 p m Women s M s
s ono y Counc
0 a m f r s and
h rd Tue sday s Proye and 8 b e
S udy Wednesday 7 30 p m

HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHR ST
N CHRISTIAN UN ON ihe Rev
W I am Compbel pas o Sunday
School 9 30 a m James Hughes
sup
even ng serv ce 7 30 p m
Wednesday even ng prayer
mee t ng 7 30 p m You th p aye
serv ce each Tuesday

FA IRV EW

BIBLE

CHURCH

Lelo t W Vo Rt I Rev Char es
Ha g aves pasta Wo sh p se
v ces 9 JO a m Sunday school
om evenng woshp 730
p m Tuesdoy cottage p oye
mee ng and B b e s udy 9 30
o m Wo sh p serv ce Wednes
doy730pm

CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH 26 N
Second
M dd epa t
A on
8 oc kw oad pas to
Se v ces on
Sunday o f 10 30 om and 7 30
p m w h Sunday schoo a 9 30
a m B ble s udy Wednesday
7 30p m
INDEPENDENT
HO LINES S
CHURCH INC - Corner Fov h
and L nco ln Sts M dd eport Rev
0 Del Manley pastor Sony H ~:~d
son Sunday School supe nten
den Sunday school 9 30 o m
evenng woshp
730 pm
p eye
and p o se se v ce
Wednesday 7 30 p m

THE

PEOPlES

CHURCH

OF

POMEROY - Co ner Mo n ond
Court Srs
h d f oo
ave
l gh hous e Restaurant
Henr~
Cook posfo Sunday sc hool 10
om mo n ng wo sh p 11 am
even ng se v ce 7 30 Wednes
day eyen n g se Yce 7 30 In
te denam no a no fu ll gospe

RUTlAND CHURCH OF GOO Pas o
Denn s Boles
Sunday
Schoo 10 am worsh p se v ce
1130am and730pm P oye
meet ng Wednesday 7 30 p m

RUTLAND APOSTOL C CHURCH
OF JESUS CHR ST Thomas l
Holmes
pasta
81ble study
Sa u day 7 30 p m Evangel s c
p m p oyer meet ng Tuesday
7 30 p m 8 ble S udy Thursday
7 30p m

POMEROY

7630

WESlEYAN

HOLINESS - Ho r sonv lie Road
Dewey K ng
p&lt;~stor
Ed son
Weaver on/slant Henry Eb n
Jr Sunday school supt Sunday
schoo 9 30 o m morn ng wor
sh p 1 a m Sunday even ng ser
v ce 7 30 praye meet ng Thurs
day 730pm

~"~

RAU.S
BEN FRANKLIN STORE

K&amp;C JEWELERS

Vernon &amp; Bertha Btng
langsville
Ph 742 9045

meet ng Wednesday 7 p m Roy JESUS CHR Sf OF LATTER DAY
Adams lo y leode
SAINTS Po land Roc ne Road
CHURCH OF JESUS CHR ST W o n Roush pa s a
Russe ll
lo oted a Ru and o New l mo Ro II
chu ch sc hoo 0 ec o
Rood ne-: 1 o Fo es Ac e Po k
Sunday 91: hoo 9 30 o m Mo n
Rev Roy Rou se pas o
Robe
ng wo sh p 0 30 a m Sunday
Mu sse Sund ay Schoo l su p! Sun
e en ng se ce 7 p m Wednes
day schoo
0 30 a m wo sh p day even ng p aye se v res 7 30
1 30 p m B ble S udy Wednes
pm
day 7 30 p m Saturday
gh
BETHLEHEM BAPT ST Rev Eo I
poye sevce 730pm
Slu e pasta Worsh p se rv ce
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRI STIAN
9 30 a n Su nda y sc hool 0 30
Roge Wat son pas o
Kenne h a m 8 b e S udy an d p aye se
Bye Sun day sc hoo sup Mo n vee Thu sdoy 7 30p rn
ng wo sh p q 30 a m
Sun
CAR ETON CHURCH K ngsbu y
e en ng Rood Go y K ng pas ta Sunday
doyschool 10 30 om
serv ce 7 30 Wednesday 8 b e schoo 9 30 a m even ng wo
S udy 7 30 p m
sh p 7 30 p m P aye mee ng
MT
UN ON BAPT ST
Don Wednesday 7 30 p m
Sunday
schoo
W l son
lONG BOTTOM CHRI ST AN
supe n ende
Sunday ~ c hao!
B u e S n h pas o
Wol ace
9 45 a m
e en ng wo sh p 7 Damewood Sup 8 b le School
p m P aye mee t g 7 p m 9 30 a m
P each ng se v ce
Wednesday
045om Noe venl'}.gsevce
TUPPERS PLAINS CHR STAN
HYSEll RUN FREE METHODIST
CHURCH
Eugene Unde wood CHURCH
Re"' He be
A ng
J
pas o
How o d Co dwe
pas or S\Jndoy Sclloo 9 30 am
Sunday Schoo
Supt
Sunday Mo n ng se v ce
10 30 om
School 9 30 a m M o n ng Ser
Evangel s c se v ce 7 p m Proye
man 0 30 a m Sunday e en ng nee ng Tl u 5doy 7 p m
sevce7pm
FREEDOM GOSPEL M SS ON o l
lETAR T
FA Ll S
UNITED Bod Knob
Rev
low ence
BRETHREN Rev Fee ond No s Gluesencomp S pa.s tO Roge
pas o Fl oyd No s sup Sunday W l o d S Sunday schoo sup
schoo 9 30 a m mo n ng se
Sunday
Sunday schoo l 9 30 o
mon 0 30 o m Praye se v ce
even ng se v e 7 p m P aye
Wedne sday 7 30 p m
m~;Je ng
Tuesday
7 30 p m
CHURCH OF GOD OF PRO E est Dee e
c ass leader
PHECY 0 J Wh te Rood o ff 60
You h nee ng Wednesday 7 JO
Re Geo ge G oy le pas o Sun
pm
w h Don and Mar ho
day Schoo
0 a m A hu Hen Meadows eode s
son Supt Mo n ng Wo sh p 11
WH TE S CHAPEL Coo
e RD
a m Young Peoples se ce 7 Rev Roy Deete pas o Svndoy
p m Even ng se v ce 7 30 p m
s hoo 9 30om worsh pse v ce
Wednesday M d Week P aye
0 30 o rn B be s udy and p aye
Se v ce
7 30 p m
You h se v ce Wednesday 7 30 p m
nee ng 6 30 p m Even ng wo
RUTlAND
shp730pm
RUTlAND CHURCH OF CHR ST
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE De n~ Sm h pasta
F onk
NAZAREN E Re He be G a e
You g Sunday sc hool supl Sun
pas to Wo sh p se v ce I o m
day school ond com mvn on 9 30
and 7 30 p m Sunday
Sundoy a m Wo sh p and comvn on
Schoo 9 30 o m R cha d Bo on
1030om
sup t P aye mee ng Wednes
RUTLAND
COM MUNITY
da y 730p m
CHURCH
Sunday Schoo
9 30
BRADFOlW
CHURCH
OF a m wo sh p se v ce
el m
CHR ST Gob e Mz s pas o 8
Wednesday p oye meer ng 7 30
ble Sunday Schoo 9 30 a m mar p m you h se v ces Sunday 1
n ng chu ch 0 30 a m Sunday p n Sunday n gh wo sh p 7 30
even ng se v ce
7 00 p m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE
Wednesday se v ce 7 30 p m
NAZARENE Rev lloyd D G mm
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST J
pasta Sunday schoo 9 30
CHURCH Reli Floyd F Shook
a'm wo sh R se v ce 0 30 a m
pas a
l oyd W gh
Sunday 8 oadcas I ve ove WMPO young
School Supt
Mo n ng Wo sh p peop l e s
se v ce
6 30
9 30 o m Sunday School 0 20 e angel s c se~v ce
7 p m
a m Wed esdoy P eye and 8
Wednesdo~ 7 p m
be S udy 7 30 p m Sunday even
MASON COUNTY
ng wo sh1p 7 30 p m Cho P oc
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST Cor
ce Thursday 7 p m
r:1e of Second and Ander son
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHR ST Mason Pas o F anll Lowther
Cho les Ru sse
S
mn se
Sunday schoo l 9 AS a m war
ft ck Macombe sup Sunday sh p se v ce I a m a d 7 30
schoo 9 30 o m wo sh p se
p
We ek y B b le St udy
v ee I030o m Bb eS tudy lues
Wednesday 7 JO p m
day 730p m
MASON CHURCH Of: CHR ST P
R!ORGAN ZED CHURCH Of 0 Sox -ttl7 M er St Mason W

SERVICE

Rt 3 Pomeroy

BING'S MARKET
&amp; TEXACO SERVICE

Alfred

10 40

78

tn

CHURCH

OF

CHR ST- Gobr el Mroz pastor
Sunday school 9 30 a m morn
ng church 10 30 a m Jun or
chu ch program under direct on
of Karen Mraz for ch ldren 2 10
du ng r egula church hau
n
chu ch bos~ent Sunday even
ng se v ce 7 p m Wednesday
sevce730pm
JUBREE CHRISTIAN CENTER Geor~e s Creek Rood
Church
school 9*30 o m morn ng wor
sh p 10 30 evening serv ce 7 30
Prayer mee ng Wednesday 7 30

pm
ST PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH
Co ne of Sycomo e and Second
Sis Pomero)' The Rev Will om
M ddleswarth
Pastor
Sunday
Schoo at 9 45 o m ond Church
Servkes 1l a m
SACRED HEART R..., Father
Paul 0 Welton pastor Phone

Pomeroy Landmark

9a
Ail

Middleport Ohio

SYRACUSE fiRST CHURCH OF 9'12 2825 Salu day even ng Moss
GOD No Pen ecoslol Rev 7 30 Su nday Moss 8 and 0 a m
Worsh p Confen on Satu day 7 7 30 p m
Geo ge 0 ler pa sto
serv ce Sunday 9 45 o m Sun
CHR STIAN BAPTIST - O n he
day sc hoo 11 am wo sh p se
Route 7 bypass Jam es E Keesee
v ce 7 30 p m Thursday proye pastor Sunday school 0 o m
meefng 730pm
morn ng wo sh p
a m even
MT HERMON Un ted 8 e h en ngse vce 1
Church Sunday School 9 30 a m
Worshp sevce 1045 om
P each ng se v ces every Sunday
a ternol ng w th C E Wednesday
p oyer mee ng 7 30 p m Rev
Sunday School attendance
James Leach
pastor
Oav d
on Jan 8 was 42 the offermg
Holte loy leader
JEHOVAH S WITNESSES 1 m le $22 71
eos o f Ru and 1unct on of Route
Worship services were held
124 and Noble Summ f Rood (T at
with an attendance of
17&lt;1 ) Sunday B be Ledu e 9 90
28
with
Rev Charles
o
Walth ower s udy 10 30
am Tuesday 8 b le study 7 and Dom1gan speakmg from
8 15 p m
Thu sdoy theoc of c James 4 on closer contact
school
7 30 p m
se v ce With Chnst 1n lhis new year
meet ng 8:30pm
which has Just begun The
HOPE BAPTIST - 570 G ant St
Just a Closer Walk
M dd e por Bobby Elk ns pastor hynm
Sunday Schoo
0 a m wo sh p With Thee was sung for the
serv ce I ~ a m even ng serv ce
cloSing of the service
7 30 p m
Thu sday p oyer
From the church bulletin
mee ng and B be s udy 7 30
pm
Let God be your gu1de and
RUTLAND FREEWILL BAPTIST thmgs will be great m
Chu c:: h - leland Ho ey pasfo
There was an attendance of
0 o m even ng
Sunday schoo
28
at church on Jan 15 not
se r v cs
7 30 p m
P oyer
mee ng Wednesday 7 30 p m
bad for weather conditions
CHURCH OF GOD of P ophet:y
but low Jan 22 - Services
oc afed on the 0 J Wh te Road
cancelled
due to more snow
all h ghwoy 160 Sunday School
Super ntendenf John and cold weather
0 a m
Loveday F sl Wednesday n ghf
Jan 29 - Four people
of month CPMA serv ces second came out but services not
Wednesday WMB meet ng th d
held due to both Sllow and 1cy
h ough f f h youth se v ce
roads and high water
George Croy le pastor
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL - 570
Due to roads and high
Gran Sr M ddleport Rev Bobby water OSie Follrod " staYm2
Elk ns Sunday school
0 am
w1th her mother Edith
morn ng worship 11 even ng
worsh p 7 30 p m
Thu sday Harper at Tuppers Plams lo
even ng 8 be tfudy and praye
be able to get to her em
mee ng 7 30pm Aftlaedwth ployment at a bank
Athens

SBC
BRADFORD

9

(6 4 698 J190

HUGS
WAll Ho g g!&gt; o d
ol ga s N cc o Ch s as
N e o ~o ob e Col 992 '22 14

torRent

E1 It S MO B ll:
97-41 SKYL NE 4 x 5b 3bed oon
ota e ec c $7500 992 20 9

at a

h

w

:.t w

-Upholstery-

and their daughter Kathy 1s
staying with her grand
mother Clara Follrod and
aunt Nina Robmson to get to
her job while Pete Is at
tending lo things on the farm
and keeping the home fires
burning
Some are receiving their
photos by mail for the church
directory soon to be made
up
tbarles and Helen Woode
received word from their son
Clair and family tn Dayton
0 have had flu and Sue ha•
had pneumonia Her father
.Robert Whlte, II able to leave
the hospital as soon as t~
weather pennlts

•

0

0

EED A WATER
SOFTENER?

DCE S

TSAJLZXX

RZKMXYDF

Yesterday 1 CrypiD,quote ()NI,.Y A PERSON WHO CAN UVE
WITH WMSELF CAN ENJOY THE GlFT OF LEISURE tiENRY GREBER
Copr 1978 K nR Features Sy nd cat. Inc

LARRY E SPENCER
By Marlene Harr son

CL ER KOFCOURTOF

COMMON PLEA~
M EIG S COUNTY OH 0
Me gs Coun t y ,..our thou se
P'omeroy Oh o 45769

{ J 3 20 27 (2) 3 TO 17 6f

Now Dnly

'279,95

Let us test your water Free

Landmark

TODAY!
HENRY E CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK KATHY
CLELAND
REALTOR
ASSOCIATES
9'12 2259 992-6191

JOHNIE'S BEAUTY
SALON

Young's

Carpetmg
Ra&amp;~tt 3

POtMtOJ, 0

Carpet &amp;UphOlstery
Phone M1h Youna

Tr~State Upholstery
Shop

At
992 2206 01 992 7630
'Tht Or Jiftltoll
Not TtJe lm tltOtt

116'J lnd Ave Galltpohs
446 7833-44~ 1831

'1J' ""

WALLPAPER.
PAINT &amp; SUPPLIES

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING
and
c omme rcia l
Call
for
esttmafe 14 hou r ser\ltce
Anyday ~nyttme
Phone 985 3800

Radiator-

~!~~!~ ~
f

MEIGS PLAZA
Middleport Ohio

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Ope11
9 00 hl6 00 Saturday
12 oo ttl6 00 Sunday
2 2 ti c

CARTER

Wmdows &amp; Doors

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

Replacement
Wmdows
Alummum
S1dmg Soflltt

Blown Insulat10n
JIM KEESEE
Ce llulos1c (wood fiber)
Thermal ln sulallon

300 Main 51

Gutters Awmngs

Sa C JO pet to SO pe t
o h ~ f gcos t
E xpe e C\!
d
fu ly insured
F ce E sf
Ca l 66 7 6479 or 991 3111.5

Pomeroy Ohio
Pomerov 992 6182
or 992 6263

lARRY LAVENDER
Syracuse Oh1o

BAM lo4 30PM

Ph 992 3993

SALES AND SERVICE

1 16 I

11 9 li e

1 18 I mo

VA FHA 30 y
I no c ng a so
e rto c g
elo d Mo gage
77 E S a e A I e s pho e (t.. 4
591 305

BRADFORD
Auct oneo
Co
piiQ e Serv e Pho o 9-'9 1487
o 9492000 Roc e 0 o C
8 od o d

NF.W HOME Full bod oo
Fu y
co pe ed ol e ec c I M d
d cpa
P ed $ 9 900 Ca
b l4 446 3045

ElWOOD

BOWERS

Cellulose F1ber
Blown Into Walls
and Att1cs

REPAIR
0

•

- Save Fuel &amp; Money -

OJ

lAVENDER
CONSTRUCTION
Syracuse Ohlo
Free E1tlmates

REMODEl NG Plumb g heo ng
and al ypes ol ge e a cpa
Wo k guo on eed '20 yea li CK
pe once Phone 992 2409

HOBSTETTER

SEWIN G MACH NE Repo s
v ce o nokes 99'J 21B4
Fo b c Shop
omf!l
A u th o zed S nge So es
-.-2_e~e..!!...e s ~e Sc ~ s o

REALTY
GeorgeS Hobstetter Jr
Broker
07 , Sycamore St
Pomeroy Ohio

PHONE 992 6333

o~o

l ll d
anc

s

~soeod

EXC A VATIN G doze
bock! oo
o d d che Cho os R Ho
I ed
Bo ck Hoo Se v c; e
Ru land Oh o Pho e 742 7008

Have 4 Bedroom ranch
located 3 m les from Rt 7
West Shade
Ntce Double W1de 24)(56 on
corne r
ot
n Arbaugh
Add tlon
n c l ud lng
furn ture and appl ances

1 18 I mo

oy

and

g ovel Co Bob o Roge Je
le s day ph one 992 7089
gl
phone 991 352S o 992 5?37

PM

Phone 991 3993

!oe
The

EXCAVA TIN G doze loode a d
bock hoe wok du p
ucks
o d o boys to
c w II haul

Office Hours 9 A M to

Gne 1\wav
(A
FEMA 1: lo gt u e d do g
l ob ado
vpe
Bo
vtJ 11
I e dly
Lo Qob o
N o
opk g pe 94? 260

PUPP ES PAR I sl So ll

~o d wl
992 6 J4

e ca

99'} '15 7') o

SAVE ON
CARPETING

---

Candy Stripe
Rubber Back
Regular w. 95
Save $4 88 Sq Yd

HOWERY
~NO
MAR J N h
cov et n g
sep c sys ens
doze
bo khoe dump ruck
I me s one
g ave!
b ock top
pov ng Rt 43 Pho e 1 6 14

w th basement &amp; garage
S32 000 2 acre of gr ound
Tuppers Pia n s
New 3 bedroom home with
garage
n
Crow s
Su bdiv son $41 000
N1ce small home tocated In
Darw n Oh o on St Rt 33

1a

a o o Ca ll 997 720
S X MON H o d a
o g l a od
Wv

Will do oaf ng co s u o
pt umb ng o d heo ng No 1ob
oo Ia ge o oo smo
PI one
742 2348

52 000
Ntce 3 Bedroom bungalow

o

Blown InsulatiOn

lfurruJe&amp;S Servtces

Close
Thu rs days
Saturdavs at noon

Pome10r

PU91111•

J&amp;L

FREE ESTIMATES
Storm

,11ill!l

II. . • 0 ._... ..

9 001119 00 Mon Frldav

Chester Ohio
10 30 c

lwt.... •

k

~·.-·· ·~·:. :.Jillltl

Locotta In The

Jack's SeptiC
Tank Service

Closed Jan 10
T I 18th 1918

EXPERIENCED

ACE HARDWARE

R esl d~nttal

eo,. J4

NOTICE

Superior
Steam EltractMJn

Professtonal Servtce 39
yrs
er:pertence
Free
estimates
p clc,up
&amp;
delivery
service
Res1denf1al &amp; Commercii I

APPLIANCE

YOUNG'S CARPETING

PHONE 992-2156

949 2020

pm
ST JOHN LU THERAN CH URCH
P ne G ave The Rev W II om
M ddleswo th
Pas o
Chu h
se v ces 9 30 a m Sunday School
10 30a m

MARK V STORE
Middleport OhiO

Ph 985 41SS

985 3307

kl ~tt.JN~t8lf

•

Regardless of the past our age or m whatever stale we
fmd ourself today at church we can fmd thai we sllll have
A LIFETIME Tb LIVE

Ph 949 2550

KEN GROVER PHOTOGRAPHY

BRAD BURY

POINTVIEW CABLE TV
SYSTEMS, INC.

lsn t a lifeti me more than chronological years? lsn I a
l1fehme really a successmn of meamngful events that occur
m the hfe of each one of us'

Pomeroy

Ph 992 5130

Ch1ster

CARS &amp; TRUCKS
461 S 3rd
Middleport
Ph 992 2196

Rae ne

REUTER BROGAN INSURANCE
SERVICES

Ractne

tor Sale

Ullnpmg J:.;quipmenl

"

Ph 949 2882

214 E Ma n

Pomeroy

Ph 992 3325

RACINE PLUMBING
&amp;HEATING
Thtrd 51

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

ANNOUNC NG THE open g o f
he pub c occoun ng off ce of
Roge
lu keydoo
e sed
pub! c a covntont to o o ng
and bool.keep ng se ces and
p epa at on o f fede of and
s a e O~C efu ns a 29 WiJ nw
St
M dd epa t
dh a
992 2666 H0\..1 s by oppo n
ne

anted

r

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD SR.
REALTOR
I
M

NOTICE

pm

'111

, ..

THIS SPACE

2 CONVENIENT MARKETS

THE RAC NE Gu C vb Gun Shoo
eve y Sunday of e noon Foe
to y choke guns on y Asso ed
mea s

THE FEBRUARY AAA 0 ve s
Educe on C ass w II beg
TuesdO'; Feb ua y 7 h Fa n
fo mo o
a
Sen SO'!" e a
742 2170 between b DO and 8: 00

Phone99'l,-2156

Nationwide Ins C~ of
Columbus 0
804 W Ma 1n
Pomeroy

HE
RA( Nl
Volu ce
F P
Oepo ne w I sponso a gu
shoo t eve y Sa u d a y a bpma
the bu ld ng n Bo shon Foe
tory choke gu so y

NCOME fAX Scr v ces Fede o
and So e To)(es
Wo ace
Russe B odbu y 992 7728

red Insertion

ROSEBERRY'S PENNZOIL

NCOME l AX Sevces f edeo
a d 5 a e la. es Wo do lbl
9'fl '1 '12 7'1

are a :teptt-d only with ash w II
vrder ~ ent chu ge fOf ads CKrry
mg Bot: Nwnber InCa e ul The~

unel

•

Help

Chari!~

100

PHONE 992 2156

Ph 992 9921

D ec o

POMEROY CLUSlER
Re v Robe Hoyden
Rev James Co b
CHESTER Wo sh p 9 5 o m
Chu ch School I 0 a m
POMEROY wo sh p se 11 ce
9 5 a n
Sunday schoo
0 30
am
Rev
Robe
Hoyden

1$ Wonb or Unde
C.sh

698 733
BATHROOMS AND
K tel ~:~ns
e node ed ce om c t le p um
b ng co pe y ond gene o
non enonce
13 yeas e-:
pe ence ~2 3685

$19 900
Have
Busmess
and
n ves tment pr o p erty n
Pomeroy

PUlliNS EXCAVATING Comp le e
Se v ce Phone 992 2478

----NEIGLER S FOR bu

d ng houses
bo h ooms all k nds of epa
wo k and who hove you Guy
Neg e
Ra e ne Oh a Ca ll
9-!9 2508 even ngs

Check wtth us before you

buy
Cheryl Lemley

MAGGIES UPHOLSHRY Ref n sh
eupho ls e y
reb u l d ng
Beau lui se e on of mo te ol
and v ny ls F ee es t mo e Te
742 2852
l oca t on
So e m
Cen e

ASSOCiilfe

Home Phone 742 2003
Htlton Wolfe Sr
Associate
Home Phone 949 2589

TURLEY S

12 and IS ft wtdth Carpet
rubber back

488 SQ YD

1

Reg S6 9S not m stalled
30 rolls of carpet 1n stock
Good selecfton all on sale
Installed with paddtng no
extra to pa

v

CaTI742 2111
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

WRECKER

Roc ne Oh o
949 2657

Ooy o

742 2211

Rutland

T~~!.~~~[H •••••••••••••••••••••••••••
•
•
REALTOR

216 E Secohd Street

RIVER FRONT -

3 lots

and 7 room house Bath
nat gas furnace
city
water
and
excellent
garden
Want
only

••
••
•
:

GUARANTEE
ON FRAME

Sl6 500 00
CORNER LOT - On State
road 3 ,bedrooms both
nat g as furnace
water and gllrage

$15 500

IN THE COUNTRY -

GOOD OLD HOME - Has
3 bedrooms with large
c losets and storages 1 /2
baths nat gas furnace
city water and garage

S27 SOO
40 ACRES -

Small barn
spring and dug well Good

houses 1e and nice hunting

land
45 ACRES -

L C water

e ectrlc and septic tank
Wll take a qu ck offer of

$10 000

BUY Rt;AL ESTATE ITS
A KEY
TO YOUR
SECURITY
AND
WEALTH
Helen L Tuford

Got-d

Tooford
Murphy

ta or.Assoclates

20%- 30%

5

$7 500

:

All Style• &amp; Colora

ci ty
Need

room fra me home Cistern
bath fireplace and almost
an acre of land Ask ng

••
••
•

••
••· ~
••
••
•

••
•
••
•
:

OFF
OPEN

Monday- Tuesday-Wednesday
800td500
Thursday 8 til Noon

.

~-~5

Closed Satunlay At 5 PM.

•••
••
•••

•••
••
••

.
•

RUTLAND FURNITURE

:

Arnold Grate

:

: 742 2211

Rutland

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••

�•
U-11oe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Poroeroy , 0 ., Friday, Feb. 3, 1978
Township Annual

10-ThcOmlySl'nluwl .\ l llld k pnrl -l'" llh lu\ I' /·;.1.1\ FdJ .1

Appropr l o~tlol'l

l~liH

Resolution
The Board of Trustees of
..,&amp;.alisburv Township , Meigs
&lt; ounty , Ohio, mel in Regular
~ ess lon on the Jra da\1 of
;l.anuarv , 1978, at the office of
t£1trk w i t h the fOllowing
..,..embers preser'lt :
• D enver G. Hysell

DICK TRACY
::.:.=_ _ _ _"""'

•

Guy A . R USS.£'11

Donald L , Moore
111 Mr . Guv A . Russell moved
"tht adopt ion of the foiiCJw l ng
~ ResolutiCJn :
, BE IT RESOLVED by t he
Board
of
Tr us tee s
of
fSatlsbury Townsh i p, Me igs
,Countv , Oh io, that to pro\l i de

tor the currenT e.11penses ana
otner ew.pend itu res of sa id
Board of Trusten . during the
f iscal ye.H . end ing Decembe-r
315 1978, the tol l owing sums be
and ltle same are- nerebv se1
asi de and appropriated for
the-· several purposes tor
which expend it ures are to be
made for lind during u id
f.isca l yea r , as fol lo ws . \Ill :
Generil Fund
That there be appropr ia ted
from the GENERAL FUND
for
MISCELLANEOUS
PURPOSES :
Administrative
Sa la r ies - Trustees s 2,500 .00
Salarv- Cierk
2, 800.00
Supplies -

•

AS A FECCOW

5CIE~Tt;T.

1976 CADILLAC ELDORAD0.. ............... 18995

SHE' D AT L!::AST LI5TEN

TO YOU! ... COUCD&gt;J'T
YOU ·· WECL --

Astra roof, fuel injection eng . LOADE D.

1975 COUGAR XR7... ........ ,............. .'3695
Landau roof , P.S.• P. B.-. air, ra l ly wl"leels, new -ra dial
.t ires. twin racing mirrors. EXTRA NIC E.

1974 CHEVROLET IMPALA. ................. 12495
4 Dr . H.T .• burgund y , P·.S., P .B ., air .

1972 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL ............. 11995
4 Dr ., new radial tires . loaded .

-1973 PLYMOUTH DUSTER .. ............... 11595
Automatic, P .S.

1973 PONTIAC CATALINA .......... ,.... .. .11295
2 Dr ., H.T., ti lt wheeL AM radio &amp; ta pe.

: 1968 OLDS 442 ........................ :.... ~995
E&gt;&lt;tra clean , sharp.

1969 AM REBEL WAGON ................... 1395
Automatic, runs good.

SHOP EARLY FOR YOUR CHOICE

TRUCKS
1973 DODGE VAN ...... ,................... 12495
Tradesman. B·300, l.W. B. New tires, V·8, standard ..

1973 MAZDA PICKUP .......... :.... .. ,.. -:'1995
ln.l ine , 4 cylinder, 4 speed.
.~

I.ITTLE OHPH,\N A~N II'

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-HAlti'DCUFFED

(g(~K ~~~-~ ~JU~bN~ t~~)-

OH .' WHY Ol.NJT
YO U POL IC E
I HR OW 1 HC'I5E
HOODLUM S IN
.JAIL:?

NEED I I NOW ... I'M JUS r

KECrtN 1 11 LOCKED··· T1UH1 .'

--

••

BECI'USE we HAVE
NO THING O N TH EM
THAT WILL STICK IN

1973 INTERNATIONAL ..................... ~~695
' v.a,

automatic, P.S .• P. B. , LWB .

1968 FORD RANGER ........................ 1895
P .S .. P.B ., LWB , 4

COURT .. .

spee~.

RIEBEL'S USED CARS
See Roger Riebel
667-3463
1 mile north
Tuppers Plains, Ohio

St . Rt. 7

....
GASOLI NE Al.l.EY

Well ,that wouldn't appiLJ to
Doo Pinq ' He's not a doq dOCJ '

1his lool-\s l1ke
a de\iqhtful
place to eat .

VALUE
RATED

~keeztx '

Adm illistration
300 00
Equipment Adm inistration
300.00
Insurance
5. 500 00
Buria l Expense-s
300 00
Memor ial Day Expenses
150.00
Employer ' s Retirement
Contribu l ion
800 .00
w orl!.men ·s Compensation

150.00

Aud itor 's and Treasurer 'S
Fees
300.00
State Exam i ners '
Ch11 rges
300.00
Elect ion Expense
1.200.00
Con t ingency Account
900.00
Other E xpenses
300.00
Tot al M i SC@'Ifaneous
Pu rposes
15,800.00
That there be appropr ialed
fro m the 4ENERAL FU,IIIO
for
TOWN
HAL L.
MEMORIAL
BU I L DING S
and GROUNDS PURPOSES :
Ut i lit ies
225 .00
Maintena nce Supplies
and Mater i a ls
275 .00
Total aTown Hall
Purpose s
500.00
Tha t there be appropr i ated
from the GENERAL FU ND
I for FIRE PROTE CT I ON

PURPOSES '

Material
Total Ga5ohne
Fund

4 000

Ta~o;

oo

15,850 00

Road Jhd 8r1dgt Fund

Mi$Cellllneous.
Salari es - Tru stees
700 00
Employer ' s Ret irement
Co nlr ibutlon
100.00
T 001 S bnd E qu 1p m en t
500.00
Suppl ies
500 .00
Repairs
200.00
M• inteni nce
Sa l ar ies
500.00
Ma ter ial
500.00
Total Roa d "nd Bridge
Fund
3.000.00
Cemetery Fund
Thai tttere be appropr iated
!rom
the
CEMETERY
FUND ;
Land Purchases
700.00
Tot al Cemetery Fund 700.01)
Federal Revenue Sharing
Fund

Sal ar l es - Emptove ~.s

SHERIFF ' S SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT. MEIGS COUNTY .
OHIO
Cue Na . l .. 12
Belpre F irst F•deul Slvlntl
I Lnn Assoc .. Pl1 i nf iff

tore-go,n.,
~-~onnua t
Ap
:Jro p r•ation Resolut JO n is
taken and co p •e• tro rn lhf'
or i9 rnat Resolu ti on now on
We w ith sa id Board . tnaT the
foregoing R en l ulion hU ·
been co mpared by me with
the sa id or lo ~na l and that the
same is. a true and co rrect
copv thereof .
WITNE SS mv signature .
this Jrd aav of January , 1078.

V$ .

Robert
Sh~ron

Richlrd Sa dey
Townsh i p Clerk
(21 3. ltc

s,soo.oo

Su pplies
3,5 00 .00
Equ ipment
3. 000 .00
Contra cts - Repair
1;500 .00
Contr acts - Servic'es 2,200 .00
Renta ls
150.00
Adver t islf1g and
Printing
100 00
Workmen's
Com·pensat ion
and
D isabled workm en's Reliet

Cont ra cts
840.00
&gt;00 .00
Tota l Fire Prote cti on
Emp loyees
Purposes
840.00 Pu blic
Thatlhere be appropr i at ed Retirem ent
Syslem
850.00
from the GENERAL FU ND
for
CEMETERY
PUR . Federal Revenue Sha r ing
Fund
11,000.00
P OS E S:
Anti -Recession Fund
Salar i es
900 .00
1.000.00
Too l s and Equ ipment 1.000.00 Salari es
750.00
Repairs
200 .00 Sup p li es
Repa irs
soo.oo
Total Cemetery
·
Purposes
2. 10(1 00 Workmen 's Compensa t ion
50 .00
That ther@' be appropr i at~d
Employees
from lhe GENERAL FUND Pub I i c
for SANITAT I ON D UMP Retirement
150.00
Sys tem
PURPOSES :
Sa laries
1. 200 .00 Ad11ert i slng &amp;
Printi ng
50 .00
Other Ex p·e·n $eS
300 .00
Tolttl Ant i -Recession
T ota l San i tary Dump
Fund
:2,500 .00
Purposes
1.500.00
Recap i tulation
Motor Vehi cle licen se
Of Funds
Ta101 Fund
General Fund
That th ere be appropriat ed
from the MOTOR V EHI CLE M iscell.aneous General
Purposes
15, 800 .00
LICE NSE TA X FUND :
T own Hal l Pu rposes
500 .00
Miscellaneous
Sa lar ies- Tru st ee s "'1";'000 .00 Fi re Prot ec t ion
Purp oseS
840 .00
E mpioyer• s Reti rement
Cont rib u-tion
200 .00 Cemete r v Pu rpo ses 2,100. 00
Sa n i tarv Dum p
Workmen 's Compensatio n
Purposes
1,500 .00
50 .00
Tool s and Equ ipment
500 .00 Total General Fund 20 ,740 .00
Su pp lies
1, 000 .00 Moto r Ve l'l ic l e License
Ta )( Fund
6,000 .00
Repairs
550.00
Gasol ine Ta)( Fu nd 15,850.00
·Main ter,an ce of
EQuiPment
200 .00 Road and Br i dge
Fu nd
3, 000.00
Maintena nce
700.00
Sala ries
500 .00 Cem eterv F-und
.
2, 000 .00 F ederal Revenue Sharing
Ma l er lal
Fund
17, 000 .00
To tal Motor Vehicle
license Tax Frmd 6.000.00 Anti . Rece ss ion Fund 2.500 .00
Gra nd Tota l O t All
Gasoline T u. Fund
Fu nd s
65.790 .00
. That th e re be approp riat ed
M r . Denver G . Hy se ll
from the GAS'O LIN E TAX
second ed t he Reso l ut io n and
F UND :
th e roll being cal led upon It s
'Miscellaneous
Salari es- Trustees
2, 000 .00 adop t ion t he vo te re su lted as
follow s :
Emp lo yer 's Retirement
Mr . Donald L . Moore . Aye
Contrjbution
700 .00
Mr . Guv A . Rus sel l , Ave
WorKmen 's Compensation
Mr . Denver G . H vsef l, Aye
150.00
Tool s and Equipment 2,000.00
Supplies
2, 500 .00 Adople d January 3, 1978
Repairs
1, 000 .00
THE STATE OF OHIO ,
/Yiaintenance o f
Equi pment
500 .00 MEIGS COUNTY, ss ~
I , Ricl'lard Bailey, Cl erk of
Ma in tenance
Salari es
3,0 00 .00 th e Board of Truste es of
Sa l isbur y Towns hip , Me igs
Cou n ty, Oh io, and In wno se
c ustody the File s, Jo urnaJ s
a nd Record s of said Board
are ,req uir-ed by th e La ws qf
t he Sla te of Ohio to be kept ,
do h~reby ce~ti f y that th e

ORDINANCE NO . 1062 -71
An
Oraln&amp;n c e
TO
STIPULATE T HE PRI CES
f:OR
OPEN I NG
AND
CL O SIN G Ofi GRAVES ·:
SALE
OF
LOTS
W I TH
PERPETUAL CARE AND
CHARGES FOR HOLIDAY
BURIA LS
Be i I erda Ined bY th e
Council of the Vi llage of
Middleport as fol lows :
Sec . I . That !he pr ice ot
opening and clos ing ofl oravn
in !he Vi l lage Cemeteries w itt
be as follows :
Inf ant 28 " .11 50", S25'.0o
Babv 30 " ;K 60", 135.00
Child. 30 " X 67". 135 .00
You th 36" )I 82" , $75 .00
A du l t 40" X 96", $100 ,00
Sec . I I : That a l l HOl iday
burials be $15 .00 extra or
1115.00 , and that env burial s
after 3 : 00 P .M w ill be 15 .00
e:~~ Ira .
Sec . 1I I : That !') II Weffare or
Counly burials for indigen t
persons w i ll be $60 .00 .
Sec . IV : That the lois in the
Rive rv i ew
Cemetery b e
pr iced et 1280.00 ; half lo ts at
$190.00, both of which wi ll
inc lude '' Perpetual Ca re ."
Sec . V : T ha t lots in l he
M iddlePort H i ll Cemetery be
priced a t S200.00 r h alf lo ts at
$150.00, both of whic h w ill
inc lude " P erp etua l Care ·•
Sec . V I : Thai I he su-m o f
S100. 00 der i ved from th e sa te
ot each .lot be placed in The
" Perpe t ua l
Care
Tru st
F u11d" and used to r t his
purpose on ly .
Sec . VI I : That cor ner
stones are . pr'iced a t the
currel'1 t p ri'ce rate and
PERPETUAL
CARE
MARKERS
f or
ea ch
ceme tery are pri ce d at the
current price rat e.
Sec . v 111 : Tha t the yea riv
tot care sha l l be $8 .00 per
yea r .
Sec . tV : That all or ·
d inances in confl ict w i th this
or di nan ce
are
h e rebv
repealed .
X : This Ordinance
Sex
Sha l l Take effec t and be in
fo rce fr om an aft er Janua r y
23, 1978 .
.
Passe d t he 2Jrd day of
January 1978
Attes t : Gene Gra te
Clerk
M . L. Kelly . ·
Presi dent o f counci l

(2) 3, 10, 2tc

EAST RUTHERFORD,
N.J. (UP! ) ~ wa lter Russell
of Atlanta has heen named
the presiding judge for the
remainder

harness

of the current
mee t

at

the

Meadowlands by C.: h•rles
Carella, chairman of the New
Jer~y Racing Conunission.
Russell repla ees Donnld
Perfec t who is unable ID
c'Ontinue in the post due to ,
illness.

Positions Available
The Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency

responsible for prog ra m Implementation , scheduling
and coo rdination of training tor the CETA Title Ill
(YI;:TP) Pr ogram Participant s. Sala ry for thi s
position is 59,250. Applicants should possess a degree In
Bu siness, Educa t ion , or other related field . Pr efer
combina1 1on of degree and relevant work e)Cperlence .
2) Trainer: The Trainer w i ll be responsi ble to the
Train ing Coordinator and wilt assist In the scheduling
of train i ng for the CE TA Title Ill &lt;YETP) Pr o gram
Partici pants. Sa larv for this position is S8 . 180.
Applicants should possess a degree I n Psycholog y ,
Social Wor k, or other related f ie ld. Pre fer com bin ation
of degree and related work experience .
Appti ca1lons and .or f u rther i nformat io n is
availab le f rom the Ohio Jobs Service Of fices or the
Community Ac tion Agency Offices In Chesl"llre 'at 'X'2·
7000 or 367 ·1341. Resumes may be mailed to Da vi d
Gloeck- ner, M anpower Directo-r , P.O. t Bo~e 272.
Chesh ire, Ohio 45620 . ·oeac;:t line for appli catlon s·w ill be
Fe b . 8, i978. The Gallia -Mei·gs Communi ty Action
Agency is an Equa l Oppor tu nity Employer . M-F

U1\7E!&lt;67A!\!D YOUR.

IJf\JW1LLiNG,\JES:7

~

RElURN

TO CIVIU7ATk):\l .)LD· -, IM EP
BUT I'vE (JOT 1D GET

BACK

.: HAV~ i\ WIFE A ND
SON WHON\ I LOVE
VER'&gt; MUCt' . I •~AN T
TD S E E THEM
A0AIN .

I'LL HELP I&gt;,J ANY WAY
'I CAN ... PROv'IDI NlT
YOU RES~:o_::r MY
WISdES AN D LET ME
RE'MAIN 17EHI'&lt;D f

NOT Yf.T

• 'rOU ACCEPTEO
RONS PROr::tJ3AL 1
DIDNT YOU ?

1

TOLD HIN1 I
NE.E-D MORE
T IME .

~ IRDIE , DON'T MAKE THE SAME
M157"AKE I MADE. I \\/AITED /DO
LONC'T, I&lt;EF.USED 10 ACCEPT THE
FAC T THAT BI LL WAS DEAD, "THAT

OUR BIG
PRICE CUT
SALE
·Has Been
Held Over
FOR
ONE
MORE
WEEKI

.

1976 Cadillac DeVille Cpe•••••••••••••••••••••• '7500
1976 Cadillac DeVIlle Sedan••••••••••••••••••• '7500 ·

I COULD
BOMEONE'S ATTEN ·
TION AND BE
RE&amp;CUE-D1 EH?
ATT~-'ICT

HE WAS NEVER CGmfN&amp;

BACK!

I

1975 Cadillac DeVille Cpe.•••••••••••••••••••••'5600
1976 Cadillac DeVIlle Cpe •••••.••••••••••••• •••• '6300

1976 MAVERICK 4 DR ...................... SAVE

1976 Pontiac Grand Prlx•••••••••••••••••••••••'4795
1976 Oldsmobile Cutlass Supreme Cpe........ •4495

1977 MUSTANG II 2 DR ....................~VE

1976 Chevrolet Camaro Cpe•••• ~•••••••••••••• '4495
1977 Oldsmobile 98 Regency Sedan (Demo.) '7800
1976 V.W. Komhl Wagon••••••••••••••••••··~··549-5
1973 Cadillac DeVille Cpe•••••••••••••••••••••• •249·5
•
•

Hi!

:t'M S!LLJIVG

Jlfl NC.li~N,.T'ION
INSu~ANCf.

•~

••
&gt;

'&lt;
c

•

••
•
journal'ist Horace Greele ~
was born Feb . 3, 1811.
!

The Almanac
United Press lnternalional
Today is Friday, Feb. 3, the
________ ........ ----- - ·- -------- - ·------- - - '34th day of 1978 with 331 to
follow.
The moon is between its
last quarter and new phase.
mak~s
The morning sta'rs are
·· · ·-- -~~- -;-,dubs . 1 Wt::;t du l' k t: LI 1:1 11tl · Mercury and Saturn.
dun 11 1 1 .\' ' :-~ qut~en wu11 Nu w
T·he evening stars are
Fa:-; II.'} disc~.mh ~ d his k in .~ of Venus, Jupiter· and Mars.
.\ II II I'll
• :!
d ubs l 111 d LnHil l} ·.-. at·c of
Those born on this date are
heHits ~Jlld Was read y l u
• .\ .I 1 J ~
Wlder
the sign of Aquarius.
i.l tlit \'k t nunp.'i
I .t
Ill' dcddl· d that .,,n 1u 1::.Lu:- · Pioneer
American
• lJ 4 :1

BRIDGE

Easley

On this day in history : :
In .1913,
the
16th•
Amendment, creating the:
income tax, became part of,:
the U.S. Constitution after:
ratification by Wyoming.
:
In 1917, the United StateS"'
bro~e off diplomatic relations:
with Germany after dermB.n:
declaration of unrestricted "
,.
submarine warfare 1·n World•,
War I.
:

overtricks

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ki n ~ uf trw up:; The QU l:t' ll
dro ppt:d arul I•: &lt;ish'} n111 th e Unscramble these four Jumbles.
n .:!-.l uf his t m mp~ . The las t one lener to each square, to form
t nutq) l ce~d squt•t::w d Wes t fourordinarywords.

twd htd fou r

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thiL't.'d scvc 11 whe r t:! ~v cn six
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Nu IJuHk un IJ nd t.;t' l11 stury
wou ld lw c·umpl l'te wlth o ut
~l 1 f'nt= di :i('US:-ii Oil of the U/11· •
~~~ I'd
Blac k'.l.nud

vl·rsc.t ly '

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E::~ h · y Blot ckwO( td.
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upL' fl('d f111ir ~ padt·~ Ht • Wi t.'i
pli.i)'tllg ! IIH(d l-phll l t . .!up[! ·
· c:att_· ag.e:d u,. ., t a co uplt_• w ht•
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r , ~., rum• and lnl ! hi' d• •uc·\" of

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n·:;~)nm l

two

:-s p'&lt;~dt!~ .

With 1-!1 hi~lt - t ·.urd volnts tirul

two good s u it~ we don 't let
t he voi d of dr~nHmd s k eep u:.
fn un showrnl-( vur :-.lrength

IMOLDEYj
Mswel:

o

Bm rrlt.,

ca re o r trHS

urwspa .

Jlt!l PC) Bm · J89 Rt:~dro Ct fy
$/dltOII ,Nt! w York N Y t00t9.)

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"[I I IJ[ I liiJ~
tomorrowt

CKI

. .d 11u r f i r s t turn to bid .
\i',W.\ 1',\!'1· lll-::&gt;'1I· 1\I 'IUS)': 1\S,'iN
I
Yesterday's
1FL r d copy oi .JriCOR~ MOD ·
ERN sena $1 m ·· wm ar

WHAT iHEY 60T
AT THE PE~Ol.EUM
DF&lt;IL.L.ER5' ANNUAL
SHINDIIS.

Now arrange the Circled letters to

form the surprise answer, as sug·,.
gested by the above cartoon.
~

Jumbles: BLESS PIKER

(Answers
DECENT EROTIC

Answer: lenlf'swere "scattered" under the
raltrOIId - " TRESTLE "
'

•

•
"
:

A.C., li ke new.

THRU
FRIDAY, FEB. 10

1977 GRANADA 4 DR ............ ........... $AVE
V -8, P. B ., auto. trans., v inyl roof, e lect. R ., r. window
defrost .

1977 COUGAR XRL .......................15995

1975 GRANADA 4 DR ....... :........ .... .. $AVE

Red ~ white, extra sharp.

V-8, P .S., P.B., A .C. , radio, · vlnyi
bu ckets, auto. t ra ·ns . 2 In Stock.

top, reclining

1975 LTD ..4 DR ........................... ... SAVE
V-8, auto . trans ., P.S., P. B., A.c., 'cr uise· confro l, rad io,

AM-FM.

.

1974 MAVERICK 4 DR..................... $AVE
P.S., auto. trans. , A . C., 6 cyl. , 3 In stock .

1973 MAVERICK 2 DR .............. ........ $AVE

1973 Chevrolet Caprice 4 Dr. H.T. Sedan ••••• •1995

6 cyl., P. S., auto. trans., rad io, vinyl top.

.

.

1973 Buick LeSabre 4 Dr•••••••••••••••••••••••'1995
1975 ford Pinto Wagon •••••••••. ••••••••••• ••. •2495
1973 Ford Pinto Wagon••••••••••••••••••••••••'1495
-1972 Chevrolet Impala 2 Dr. Cpe••••••••••••• '1295
Chevrolet Veg(ll G.l. Cpe. •••••••••••• ••• '1695
Oldsmobile Cutlass 4 Dr••••••••••••••••• '1995
Dodge Charger 2 Dr•••••••••••••••••••••·'1295
Oldsmobile 98· L.S. Sedan••••••••••••••• '1495

P.S., auto . t ra ns ., P.B., A. C., v inyl top, radio, v.s.

1973 PINTO STA. WGN .... ................. $AVE
4 cyl., auto. trans., A . C., tug. rack, radio,, Squ ire option .

1975 COMET 4 DR................ .......... $AVE
6 cy t., std •. tra ns.

302, auto . t ra ns ., P.S . , radio, tutone blue.

•

1975 F-250 ................................... $AVE
v.a, 4speed trans.,

H .D . gun and suspension. P. B.,

P.s.·

1975 F-100 ....................... :....••••... $AVE
302

v.e,

"You'll Like Our Qua'!.lify Way of Doing Business" GMC Financing
992-5342
Evenihgs untit6:0~TII5
• Sat .
Pomeroy

1973 CHEVY LEGUNA WAGON ....... ~~":~. 11295
Was $1595

1973 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE .........~?~. 11295
4 Or ., H. T. Was $1695

1973 BUICK CENTURY ...............~?.Vf. 11295
4 Dr'., air. Was $1495

1973 FORD TORINO ................. ~?-~. 1295
1

2 Or . H.T. Was $1695

1973 MAVERICK 4 DR ..... ......... ~?~. 1 1295
1974 VEGA 2 DR .......................... 1295
Automatic

1972 OLDS 4 DR ............ , ...............'995
1973 AMX JAVLIN 2 DR .................. 11295
Red and Black

TRUCI&lt;S

V -8, P.S., P. B., auto. trans.

1974 C-10 CHEV ............................. $AVE ,
V-8, P .S., 3 speed trans.

1973 DODGE CWB CAB ............. ~&lt;;l~. 1 1695

DAN THOMPSON FO ......
See Pal Hill, Rocky Huppor O.rrell Dodrill
For A Good Deal on 1 Now or Ustd Vtlllclt

Open EVoningslll6:00txcopt
Tllursdoy ond Salurdly. Closed Sundoy
992-2196

1973 FORD ¥z TON ........................ 11895
L. W. B. Sid.

75, 76, 1i Cadlllacs Have Extended 12.000 Miles
or 12 Months W.a rranty Available !f Desired

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

V-8, 4 Or. Was $1995

1974 C-10 CHEV... .........:............... .. $AVE

1965 0.100 CARGO VAN ................... $AVE
1966 PONTIAC LEMANS 2 DR... ..........tAVE
1974 CHEV. MALIBU 4 DR................. ~AVE

-~

1974 BUICK .......................... .~P.~- 1 1795

1969 OPEL KADET .......... ....... ....... .. '395

P. ~., · a:uto. trans.

SPECIALS

.

Si lver, 6 cyl.

1

1976 F-100 ...................................$AVE
v.e,

1976 PLYMOUTH ROADRUNNER...........13295
1976 GRANADA 2 DR.......................12895

Was $1495

TRUCKS

1977 Oldsmobile Cutlass Cruiser••••••••• ~ ••• '6295

See one of these courteous satesmim: Pete Burris. Marvin Keebaugh
or George Harris.
·
·.

FRIDAY. FEB. 3

Golden Glow meatllic ~int, V-8, wh ite ful l vinyl roof.
auto . trans., w-s.w radia r t i res. P.S., console, P.B.• AM
radio W·tape sJereo, exter ior accent grp. , prot. grp.,
tinted glass . New Car Warranty.

1976 Plymouth Volare .Sedan••••••••••••••••• '3295

1972 Oldsmobile 88 Royale 4 Dr. Sed •••••••• '1295

·-·

P.s ..

1974 GALAXIE 500 2 DR .. .... ............. $AVE

1974
1973
1972
1971

... llq\':I~-

Low mileage,

197~ Oldsmobile 98 H.T. Sedan ••••••••••••••• '2995

1973 Chevrolet Nova SS Cpe., ••••••••••••••••. ·1~95

~

H} 0 1&lt;&gt; \\o.a ld .l ;u-uby

URIAHS FIXIN'TG
PUT A LETTER IN
TH'MAILBOX

ito

·

and Al a n Sontag

LAND O'GOSHEN!!

•

tn

·

BARNBY

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GA~E :
. ·by Henri Amold and Bob Lee ,;

®

P''''-'r:::-:::-:::-:~:=-"1

s hou\cl not

;Uk

•
:

1973 Cadillac DeVIlle Sedan •• ••••••• ••••••• ••• '2495
1975 Oldsmobile Delta 88 Royale Cpe ••••••••'3995 &lt;
'
1975 Chevrolet Monte Carlo •••••••••••••• •••• '3995
1973 Oldsmobile Cutlass 4 Dr. Sedan •••••••• ,•2395

Oet t nd•nts
In pursuance cyf an ORDER
OF SA L E in th,e "bOve en
ti tled action. 1 w il l offer for
S&amp;le al p~blic auction , ftf th e
front steps of the Court House
in Pomerov , ¥e lgs Countv .
Ohio, on ~ .t tu rda y. FtbruMV
18 . l*H8 at 10 . 15 o cloc lo. A .M .,
lhe toHo w ing described real
es t ale ~l t u ate rn th e To wnsh ip
Of OII&lt;Je , County ot Me l~s.
Shte ot Oh io , to w 1t ,
Being a oort lo n ot Lot No
'I~ o. t George P
M cCun e·s
Sec ond Addition to t h &amp;
V ti i&amp;Qe ot Tuppers P tl\ lm. . as
the sar'ne is recorded 1n tl'l e
Record ot Pl l'l lt s of Town s
And V Ill ages, In volume 3.
Page
29 . descrlb~ d
~~
fOl lOWS'
Beg inn ing I'l l the N or thwest
corner ot sa id Lot N o. 25 I'll 1'1
sti'l~e . then ce El'ls l follow ing
the Nortl' line of said Lcrt . No .
75 II d f!i lt'ln C(' Ot Uti 'i ! tel IO l!
stake . t hen ce So uth ~ t'd
parallel w it h me we st tine of
Lo t No . 25 ., d 1 Sit~~n ce ot JAB . ~
teo 1 to ttu• sou th l in e of sa id
Lo t No 75 a t 11 striKe ; thfln cc
We st tollowing the sou th line
ot Lot No 15 ll dis ta nce ot
148.5 fee t to l'l stllkc 01~ the
w cs tl lnco t L ot No . 15 . th cnc'c
nor th fol l owin g t h e wes t l lrHJ
ot Lot No . 25 a dis l l'l ncc Of
tA 8.5 teet to the pta cl' ot
beg~ nn l ng , being
the wes t
\.18 .5 teet 0 1 LOt N O :25
Re ference : VOl . '1 04 , pege
48 S. Me i gs County Oo c t1
Records
Ca nn e l be S()lcf tor less 111 1'1 "
two .lhlrd s ot thf" epprrtl scd
va lue Property appr11i ~l·d ttl
Si)t tee n t trou sa n d d oll ors
'"'6,00 0)
Terms o f S&lt;tle
Ca sh In
he nd , sub f'Cc l to rertl 1• s t~1 ~
ta xes
Jam es J . Prolfltl
Sherl tf ,
Meigs Co unty
( 1 l 20, 11 (1) 3. 10 . 17, 5tc

--=-:
As==
r =-:
Ro
=-.-=-=
oR=-cA·P ii
Bernice Bede Osol

~IJ~l!JIJ

~ UalfulliillWLI
F'·b. 4; 1978
Thi s co mmg y ~a r you may Uu
drawn back into a sHualiont ha t
was never cqmple te ly 1m:o111ed
to your sa ti sfaction You will
approac h 11 fro rn a dif ferent
angle . T111 s lime, lh c res ults
wl' ll pl oase ·you ,

AQUARIUS puu.

20--Jo~eb. Uh

Your tacu lt y to 1 a nticipa ting
problem s is what w il l k eep you
l ro m ge tti ng i n t o . t ig ht
squee1es today Stay a step o t
two ahead at a ll limes Find ou t

1977 Cadillac DeVille ·cpe•••••••••••••••••••••• '9700

~ !.CA.'\!

Hentlty 1nd
H ensley , e1 11.

'
.
1) Training Coordinator : The Coprdinator wilt be

MEAN A "GREAT DEAL" TO -YOU

WINNI E

L.

is seeking applicants for the folloWing positions:

USED
CARS
'

D.

Middleport. 0 . ·

6 cyl., standard . Was $1895 .

1973 CHEVY ¥z TON ....................... 11895
L.W. B . Standard, green.

to who m vou 're roma ntically
sulled b\t sendtng tor your copy
of Astro·Graph Le tt e r Mall 50
ce nts to r eac h and a long , Aelf- .
addresse d , stam ped onvolope
lo Astro-Gmph , P 0 8 0.11 489 ,
~adlo Cit y Station , N.Y. 10019.
Be sure i Q spoclly vour bhth
sign .
·
.
I'ISC:Io~S tJo"t:b . 20.Mo rch 20)
Friend s fee t sec ur e in confidIng in you lodtJv . becau se
vou 'ru a sympalhe ti o liste ne r
and bec au se lhev k now you' ll
no1 vio late 1t1el r trus l.

ARIES (March 21-Aprll 191
You . th rive on co mpet ition
loday .ll isn' l bem g fi rs) I ha t will
. be so important . it will bo th e
thrill a t ru nning a good race..

TAURUS !April 21)-May :WI
This is a day wh e n yo u can
chalk up poin ts by u sing your
Ideas to turthet frien d s' arnbl!ions . Be a boo ste r . Those you
hetp w llllater gl~ e you a leg up.
GEMINitMay 21-.June 20) As
a probl em-solver vo u should
o utshine your peers today .
Wh ere they me~y _ see no sol.u tlo ns, you co u(O carne up with
several sol id an s wers .

CAN CER c,June 21-.July 22 1
Take a back seat loda)' In
activities call ing lor teamwork .
You fun c tion bes t as one oil he
Indians instead o f try ing to be
the chie f .
1.~:0

CJuly 23-A ug. 22 )11 wi ll

be

th e lillie th oughtlvl tht ng s that
you do today tha i w!ll enlarge
you r fan cl ub. such as o rfur ing
encouraging word s o r advi ce .

VIRGO CAug. 2J.Se pt. 22 i This
is a good day to get togeth.e r
socia lly wl th perso ns who can
De helpful to your c areer. An
exc hange o f id eas wilt ben e fit
all.

LIBRA

C Scpt . 23-0ct.

231

Someone who you may m ee t
for the firs I tim e loday will have
a special signiricance in your
life . Th is pe r son co uld usher in
a happier ·era.

SCOJIPIO COcl. 24, Nov.22 J
You 're a wetcorne sigh t today,
but you wilt be especially
warmly rece ived if you drop in
on one you 've promi sed to vi sit
·but ne ve r got around to.

SAGITTARIUS

I Nnv . 2l-

Dec. 21) You're in a profitable
Idea cycle . l l's highly co nceiv·
able lhat you might come up
with a money mak li'lg brain
Child IOday .

CAPRICORN 1Dec.22-Jan. 19 I
Under mo sl conditions you
won' t be overly insis tent upon
having your own way today .
The exceplions are areas
where money Is tnvolved.
tNEWSP,toPEA EN1EAP.AISE ASSN I

r---------,

I · MEfGS I
II Equipment Co. II
I

1

lI
I

POMEIIOY, 0.
PH. m-zt76

lnternotionll

I·

1
1
1

llllllller

I
I

11tw 1c1u
Equip!llent

L---.------J
I

"

'

�•
12- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepm1-Pomeroy , 0 .. Fr1doy, Feb. 3,1978 ·

They are afraid they wi!l
alienate the labor vote . But
by doing nothing they would
alienate the pyblic. I think
you will lind people veiy
uptight over thi~ one ."
The Ohio Chamber of Commerce says "we are already
in a crisis in much of the
state.
" Many businesses are
losing money with reduced
production and employees
are
experiencing
inconvenicence sue~ as shift
time changes. cool work environments
and
other

Farm Bureau warns farnters·
facing a major catastrophe
By JOHN T. KAOY
United Press International
The Ohio Manufacturers
A5sociation and the Ohio
Farm Bureau .Federatio n
said today if the nation wide
coal strike does not end soon.
hundreds of thousands of
persons will he out of work
and farmers will face a
·
catastrophe.
Ohio' s electric utilities are
running short of coal and
have asked for voluntary
conservation with ·mo re

stringent measures to foll ow
if the strike by the United
Mine Workers Uni on already the longest in the
nation 's

hi story

continues.
" If this thing goes another
10 days we will be into 50
percent mandator y

&lt;1.1rtailments in some areas of
the slate," sa id William
Costello, energy coordinator

lor the Ohio Manufacturers
Associa tion. " When they
start those cutbacks there are
very lew industries that can
really operate with only 5()
percent of their electric load.
And when Utat happens we

will
start
ge tting
disloca tions."
Costello told UP! if the
strike is not over by Feb. 21
"there will probably be
300,000 to 400,000 people laid
off . II it goes to the end of the
month we are looking at
600,000 to 700,000 iai.il off.
" I t11ink the president is

going to have to become
persona lly involved in the

negotiations," said Costello.
" I' m not

talkin~

about the

Taft-Hartley law but to gel
into
the
negoHating
procedures and tell them let's
ge t this damned thing settled.
1
'1 think it would be
disastrous if they would let
this thing go to the point that
600,000 to 700,000 ' persons
would he out of work to
pro teet the
collective
bargaining situation with the

miners," said Costello.
Costello said the first
industries to be hit would be
glass and plastics.
"They have to keep the
glass and plastic in a molten
state," said Costello, "and
the furnaces are controlled

by electric,ity ."
C.
William
Swank,
executive vice president of
the Ohio Farm Bureau
Fede ration, said farmers

---------------------------1

MEETING PLANNED
The Meigs Area Holiness
Association will hold its In·
door
Camp
Monday ,
I
February
6
through
Sunday,
Co lum bus ;
tou r grand child r en; an·d n.ine -greclt - February 12 at the Rutland
grandchildren . She wa s a Omrch of the Nazarene with
member of the Bethel Ridge services each eveni ng at 7:30.
Baptis t Church ,
Or. Terrell C. Sanders,
La st rit es wilt be held at 2
p .m . Sun d ay at M i l le r' s DiStrict Superintendent of the
Home for Funerals . Th e Central Ohio Church of the
officiating i'nini st er· will be Nazarene , will be the
th e Rev . Joseph Godwin,
pastor of Ga llipoli s's F irst speaker. Ralph and Joann
Baptist Church . Intermen t Dunmire of Nashville, Tenn.,
wi l l be in the old Mer cer vill e will he the song evangelists.
Cemetery.
An invitation is extended to
Calling hours wil l be 2-4 and
the
public.
7-9 p.m . Saturday .

Area Deaths

!·
I

EFFIE RUCKER
Eff i e· Parnie Ru cker . 81,

died at 12: 30 a .m ; today in
Pike
County
Hos p i ta L
Wa verly . She had been ill

over a year .
She Was borh Nov . 20, 1897 ,
in Guyan · Twp .. Galli a
County, one of ~igh t children
of Thomas Thorn1 on and
Tennessee Sheets Thornton .
She went to school in Gallia
County and married Asa
Les ter RucKer in 1919 ; he
died Oct. 10. 1970.
They are survived by one
son, John Neal Ru c ker ,

NOW OPEN

GINO'S
OF MASON
PHONE 773-553b

!

OPENINGS AVAILABLE
1;he ne~t free cerv ica l
cancer clinic for Meigs area
women has bee n set for next
Wednesday Feb. 8 in the
basement of Heath United
Methodist Church in Mid·
dleport . There . are several
openings for the afternoon
clinic. Women wishing to
make an appointment are
asked to call 992·7531 or 992~832 in the evenmgs or on
weekends.

EXPRESSES THANKS
Meigs Co unty Sheriff
James J . Proffitt wishes to
extend his thanks to the
Meigs County React group
~:~nd to the various indivisllals
that used their lour-wheel
drive vehicles to assist in
delive-ring fuel , medicines,
and other supplies to snow
stranded residents during the
recent snow emergency.
These civic-minded people
· acted during this emergency
without any thought .of
receiving a financial reward.

"are facing a catastrophe .
"Farmers not only need
electricity lor light and heat
but to operate all sorts of
fann machinery,'' he said.
"You need electricity to milk
cows and to cool the milk .
"You also have these self
contained pig operations,"
said Swank. "They depend oil
electricity for ventilation. U
the electricity goes off the
pigs smother. The same is
trur nf po ultry - f'hkkrn~

STORE STRUCK
Meigs County Sheriff
James J . Pro!!itt reports that
William Cross of Cro~s· Store
at Racine reported Wed·
nesday
morning
that
sometinw hetween 7 p.m.
Tuesday evening and 6 a.m.
Wednesday morning, an
unknown vehicle struck and
knocked down a post on the
front porch of the store. ·
Several ele&lt;:tric wires were
torn loose when the porch
roof sagged.

meeting of Trinity Church in ·
Pomeroy will be held at the
10:25 a.m. Sunday morning
worship service,.the Rev. Bill
Perrin announces.

GINO'S AUCTION
Sunday, Feb. 5,

1 PM

At
Mason Fire House
Mason, W. Va.

Sometimes. in the da)' today operations of our bank .
~~e

forget totc l luurcustomers

how wondcrful we think they are .

For lh is rt:u sOn \ VC havc'set us ide thi s·period

around S1.Ynlcnt inc's Day as ou r
"Customer Appret1&lt;1tion Time" .. to let yOt~ kno11
how 1•ery imporrant )'Oi l are.to us ...
and to conPt'J' our thanks fo ryour patronage.

1

~

!iJIIcut
doamo nd;
throe bHt h star s.

Mothe r s

by

national

Beaulth,ll styles w•th stars
for 1 to 6-ch•ldren - or
gra nd chli~en. Cor&gt;1 e 1n and
see the rad •a nt col ors of

the bar* tJI

FDIC

genuone d•amond ,

th~

the glow•ng
b~rth stars m colors that
match the b~rth m ont~ ot
e t~ r. h chdd

•• ,.. •·• bank
Memb••

•s expressed

her c/"u ldren by

~ pG!iiM'OV
rutland

lo~,re

Jbe~

w• !I F111ed 1812

"It looks to me like the
president is going l.o have to
intervene sooner than he

wants to just to get something
going, " said Swank. " It

always worries me that
neither the president nor the

Congress wants to move.

au

the miners and mine
operators is not brought
about in a few days," the
chamber said, ''these
conditions will become
increasingly worse ."

HOSPITAL NEWS

... .9~../..Y:,._

Health agency
plans meeting

The Area Six Health
Systems Agency , Inc., will
conduct a public meeting to
.review app'tic8tions for
construction projects to be
located in Its health service
area at 7:30 p.m., Monday, MG Transport
February 6. The session will
be held at Marietta's Holiday on strike here
Inn.
· M G Transport has been on
Harrison Community strike since Tuesday midHospital, Inc. in Cadiz is night with pickets for Local
proposing a modernization 1557 United Steel Workers of
project to cilst $808,700. Also America braving the cold of
t~e Love Nursing Home is a Upper SR 7.
proposed 100 bed nursing
!Wbert L. (Bob) Schaef·
home to be constructed in fing, operations manager of
McArthur at a cost of the local shipyards, said that
$1,512,000. The recom· supervisory personnel are on
mendations
from , this HE JOB._He said the M G's
meeting will be presented for three boats alsc are on strike,
considerations
at
the with a different local con·
Agency's Board of Trustees dueling the strike.
Meeting scheduled lor 1:30
Negotiations
are
in
p.m., Saturday, February 11, progress through Cincinnati,
at the Ramada Inn in Schaeffihg said, and he
Marietta.
. doesn't know what the issues
Area Six Health Systems are. M G Transport is a
Agency, Inc., is the «xJn- subsidiary of Midland
ditionally designated and Guardian, and it repairs
funded Health Systems barges and boats.
AgenCy for eighteen eastern
and southeastern Ohio
Shoulderbag strategy
counties. The primary
If shouiderbags persist·
purpose of the agency is to ently fall of! your shoulder,
promote eflechve health think about wearing the strap
planning
and
health , across your chest, or buy
resources development yourself a big clutch and
- within its health service are~. hang onto it.

This handsome neVI edition
will be cherished over the
years for its beautiful page
selling, qualily binding, and
special helps that make the
New Scofield today's leadin!!
evangelical study BiNe. King
James Version text.
Now-Two Styles
Handy Size (5!.4 x, 7%"),

India Paper. With gold edges,
gold roll, Family Record.
Black, Blue, Brown •.Burgundy.

"'"

""'~~' .~

I

Questions athletic policy

divisions of Ohio Circuit No. 7
to attend the convention
together. Completion of the
regular. Circuit convention
early in the year will allow
more tUne for arrangements
to be .made to attend one of
the international conventiOn·s
planned lor 1978,
The convention theme is :
" Oo Ali Things For The Sake
or The Good News." The
highlight of the assembly will
be the public discourse,
Sunday, February 5, 2 p.m.,
entitled, "Have Faith In The
Good News." It stresses how
faithful men and women of
old considered the good news
as precious. Hebrews chapter
II is emphasized as serving
as an example lor us.
The speaker is Jobn 0.
Busby, District Overseer of
District No. II, which in.'
eludes t9 divisions of circuits
in Ohio and tbree in Indiana.
Busby is 47 years old and has
been in the lull time ministry
since 1947. His hometown Is
Columbia, S. C. He has been
married 24 years and his wive
travels with him .
•
All. sessions are free and
the public is invited.

Dear Sir:
Can someone please explain 1o me why Southern High
School is perrnitted to hold basketball practice and games
when the schools are closed because of weather conditions. It
seems to me, if weather conditions .are too dangerous for
classes, they are too dangerous lor extra-eurricular activities.
Just how much influence does the. ~thletic department have
upon the operation of our schools? Is this why we passed'the
levy'- A concerned parent (Name withheld on reauest.)

Trustees commended
Oear Sir:
It is usually during a crisis, such as the recent snowstorm,
ihat one really appreciates the efforts of our elected persons in
performing their responsibilities to the fullest extent. The
trustees of the Letart Falls Township need to be commended.
lor their efforts in clearing the highways. These people were on
the highways early in the morning untll late into the night
every day since the storm began. Sometimes, needing extra
equlpment, they used their own to remove the snow.
I travel the same road five days a week, and can always '
see a difference between the roads in Letart Falls ToWr!ship
and those of other townships. The roads in Letart Falls
Township are often better than som~ of the county roads ..
During the time the water was on the road at Antiquity, I bad
to drive aroWld on the flood road. The roads In Letart
Township were very clear, and I had no difficulty on them. It
was quite a difference from some other roads I encountered,
which were covered with snow and ice.
I appreciate the work the trustees are doing . It must be a
very difficult and often thankless job. Their efforts to keep the
roads as clear as pOSSible ai'e worthy of attention.- Sincerely,
Oon Bell.

·Elberfelds In Pomeroy
SALEI RADIOS
•

Discontinued models 2nd floor.

limited quantify. -

Music Department . on

10 lie• Ill •ll•te.,. r .. lo• ;Old

!!&gt;~f&gt;Q• ~leo!

~ov

..el-n
,,'

117 f' . MAfN • POMEROY

.

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE
99Mill St.
Middleport, 0.

-

-"' ..... "'
.
.
+Ji- ~ ....

-LOSS WAS SET at $47,500 in a fire Friday morning which
·leveled the nine room frame home of Mr. and Mrs. Ollie
Vernon Locas, 128 Jackson Pike, one balf mile west of
Gallipolis. Gallipolis fire chief James A. Northup said the fire

VOL. 13 NO. I

GALLIPOLIS - The Executive with SEOEMS in which he held positions
Director of the Regional Life Squad Ser· as Director of Training, . Director of
vice, William H. Taylor, is resigning that Programs and Activities, and Director or
position accordiilg to the Southeast Ohio Operations.
An Ohio Certified Instructor of
Emergency Medical Services (SEOEMS)
Emergency Medical ,Technicians, Taylor
central office.
Taylpr .presented that information to bolda seats on several major boards
Jim McLain, President of the SEOEMS relating to emergency medical services,
Board of Trustees, last week, stating, "I inciu'ding . the Ohio Board of Regents
h'ave been actively. involved in the Paramedic Advtsory, Board.
Before coming to SEOEMS, he served
operation of the system sinc.e before the
first station opened over five years ilgO. 22 ye8rs in the U. 8. Air Force, after which
"Around 45,000 . eme_rg~ncy runs he was Chief Ranger at ·Lake Hope State
later," the SEOEMS executive cont)nued, Park.
.
.
1find I must look to other priorities of my
Taylor, 47, and his wife Nancy live in
McArthur.
life - my family ·and my health."
Ted Turner, formerly SEOEMS
Taylor contloued that he leaves the
SEOENIS'systein "with feelings of regret, Finance Director, has been picked by the
but I also feel I have made a significant system's Executive Board as Acting
contribution to the succe!IS of the system. I Director. Turner will serve a !ltklay
leave you an excellent field personnel and ·probation, at wbich time, the SEOEMS
stall to carry on the service's vital func· Board will determine whether to appoint
Turner Executive Director, or to start
tlon."
1'aylor hecame Director of the system search proceedings to fill that position.
in January, 1976, cuhninati.ng a career
1

'

1

Babysitter forced
to help in kidnap
. NEW YORK (UPIJ - A babysitter
formerly employed by lop American
fashion designer Calvin Klein, said
Saturday she was herself abducted and
then forced ID participate in the $100,000
kidnapping of Klein's 11-yearold daughter
. Marc!.
The daughter, abducted on her way to
scbool Friday morning, was released un·
barmed nine hours later after Klein,
negotiating with the kidnappers by
telephone, dropped the ransom money
near the IDp of an escalalor in midtown
Manhatlan's lowering Pan Am building.
Pollee said the former babysitter,
Christine Ransay, 23, of Manhattan, who
was with the Klein girl when she was
found, told Investigators three men
accosted her when she returned from a
date early Friday morning and forced her
to lure Marci !rom a bus.
"AI this time she (the babysitter) is
being treated as a victim in that she is not
being charged with any crime. Howeyer,

Meigs ..court

we are han&lt;Ulng uus matter very
cautiously because of the legal
ramifications involved," a police
spokesman said.
Inspector Robert Pirro, head of the
Police
Department's
Special
Investigations Division, said detectives
were "working with information supplied
by various sources" ln an effort to locate
the three sUBpects.
In a related development, it was learned
that a 36-year.oid New York man and his
pregnant wife were mistakenly seized as
the kidnappers by aboutlO FBI agents in a
·midtown garage within an ho\D' of the
ransom payment.
"It was incredible," said Geoffrey
Arend, pubUsher of the trade magazines
Air Cargo News and Air World. "Suddenly
about 10 FBI agents descended on us and
shook us down a bit. One of them pulled my
wife from the car - she's nine months
pregnant - and rifled her purse.
"It took them about 10 minutes to realize
they'd made a mistake," Arend said. HJ
guess they were pretty embarrassed. They
apologized. They were jusi trying to do
their job. When they left, one of the agents
told my wife, 'I sW'e hope you don't have a
miscarriage, lady.'"

Minor traffic mishap
probed by city police

GAL!JPOIJS - City pollee officers
investigated a minor traffic accident
POMEROY - Rohert M, J"bnson, Jr.,
Friday on Third AVe. and Grape St. Of.
20, Rt. 3, Rlcine, artested last Wednesday
fleers said the brakes falled on a car
on grand theft cbarges entered a guilty
driven by VIrginia 0. Hutchinson, 26,
plea Thursday when arraigned on a BUI of Gallipolis, causing her car to hit the rear of
Information in Meigs County Common an auto operated by Ruth A. McMahon, 37,
'Pleas Court.
Gallipolis. There was minor damage and
Judge John Baeon releaSed Jobnson on · no citation was isaued.
his own recognizance pending a prePolice officers Friday night . laclude
sentencing report.
Gme Boster, 50, Gallipolis for OWI;
SIQ!riff James Proffitt aaid most of the
Raymond H. ·.Clarbon, 50. GaUipolts,
Items stolen were recovered. Jobnson was disorderly conduct; Donald Gene Mccbal'l!ed with laking oeveral items from a ' Bride, 33, Bidwell, dlaorderly conduct; and
car owned by John Jenkins which was Rllph A. Barcus, 36, Rt. I, Gallipolis, OWl,
parked at the Whitehouse l!t Pomeroy.
resiallnt! arrest and recl&lt;l"l'S oj&gt;e&lt;aUon.

1 Only &lt;;:itizens Band $26.95 Antenna .Trunk or Roof Top
SIS 00
••••• 0 ••••••

GALLI POLIS- POl NT PLEASANT

.

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 PM
'

Elberfelds ·In Pomeroy

nesday and snow Ourrles aortbeaat
Lews will range from zero

Sen. Byrd
.

By UnJt~ P":ess loternatlo~l
Electrical workers at the Conesville
generating station in Coshocto~ County
bave refused to cross a United Mine
Workers picket line .tbrown up 'fter
trouble at the plant Friday night when
Columbus and SoU!hern Ohio Electric Co.
tried ID ship in non-union coal.
· · Friday night and Saturday, striking
miners al!o halted . coal deliveries at
·C&amp;:SOE 's Ptcw8y station south uf
Columbus, and in separate incidents ,
dumped out two truckloads of coal being
shipped through Hocking and Franklin
counties.
&amp;J.pervisory JM!rSonnel were .running the
Conesville plant, C&amp;SOE's largest,
Saturday, but utility executives faced the
prospect of UMW picket lines heing set up
and stopping operations at other
generating stations.
R.E. Sisinger, vice president for
11
corporate
affairs , said,
This
irresponsible action by both the United
Mine Workers and some employees,
worsens our ability to provide electrical
energy to customers during an already
serious crisis."
Despite a temporary restraining order
obtained. by the utility Friday night in

optim.lStiC
on p anam a

.

e

e

.

·

·

-

.

·

·
WASHINGTON (UP() _ Senate
Democratic leader Roher! Byrd said
Saturday he was increasingly optimistic
the Senate will ratify the Panama Canal
treaties. His loughest job, he said, may he
to defeat crippling amendments.
0 1 think we have two problems," Byrd
!Did a news conference. "The first is
getting the necessary two-thirds majority,
This is achievable.
. "The other problem Is that of defeating
amendments which on the swiace .may
appear 1o be good and appealing, but
which would inevitably result in the
ultimate destruction of the treaties or in
their renegotiation -which would not in
my view be in the best interest of the
United States."
The West Virginia Democrat told
reporters he was increasingly optimistic
the treaties would get the 67 votes needed
lor ratification, but noted only a simple
majority - M votes- would be needed to
amend them.
In answer to reporters' questions, Byrd
said It was virtually certain that crippling
amendlrients would · be offered by
opponents of the treaties in an effort to kill
them.
ASked why be feared such amendments
might succeed if he expects a two-thirds
. vote for raliftcatioo, Byrd said some of the
amendments might be "so appealing on
the· surface" they would get votes from
supporters of the treaties.
The Democratic leader also said
rejection . of the treaties by the Senate
would be "a very grave defeat" for
President Carter,
He said it would hurt U.S. relations with
other countries, especially in Latin
America, and also affect the president's
ability to carry out his domestic programs,
Byrd said debate on the treaties will
begin Thursday and that It would take
from three to five weeks before the Senate
is ready to vote.
Byrd declined to say whether he can
actually coWll the needed 6( votes at this
time.
"It's going to be difficult," he said. "It's
stiJl an uphill fight, but it's winnable.''

SUSPEND TWO GRID PLAYERS
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (UP!) - Two
Florida A&amp;M University football players
have been suspended from school lor an
Indefinite period following allegations by a
coed that she was g1111 raped in a men's
dorm, FAMU officials said Saturday.
University President Walter Smith
r.onflnned the auspensions, but declined to
reveal the identities of the athletes or to
name five other students who ,.... placed
on probation· following the Monday night
incident.

~

-,.,·

miles up river . This is a picture of tlw it.'t! jnm at the Hncine
site. Jt is believed that the it:e.accwnulations are not us bml
as last year .

MIDDLEPORT- POMEROY

Coshocton County Common Pl~itS Court
banning picketing within H mile of Um
station, UMW members were reported
there Saturd~Y .
Friday night , a Norfolk &amp;Western train
with about 39 cars of coal - half a day's
supply - for the. generating station wHs
temporarily halted by angry miners. One
was arrested bY she~lff 's deputies when he
drove his car onto the tracks in front of the
train.
The . unidentified miner was Iuter
released on his own recogn izanCe.
Authorities pushed his car off th_e tracks
and the coal was delivered .
By 11 p.m., however , a crowd of about
100 mine workers were picketing the
station and the third shift re£used to cross
the line. Employees ill ready Inside agreed
to stay on and they were relieved Saturday
morning by C&amp;SOE supervisory
employees bused in from Columbus.
Bob l Jones, a C&amp;SOE spokc~irrui n in
Columbus, said he· did not want to say
when another shipment of coal was due in,
because that would give warning to the
miners .
Hocking County Sheriff's depulies
rewted that miners Slopped a trucker

PRICE 25 CENTS

south of Logan Friday night. 'Phey suid he
was threatened with a be8ting, but !(nt
awuy unhanncd. His load of cool,
however , was emptied at a truck stop.
F'ranklin County Sherilf 's deputies said
a group u( striking miners in pickups and
car~ with Kentucky registrations stoppi..'&lt;l

a coal truck driver at a truck stop Mld
rorced him ID dump his load Fri&lt;,lny night.
TI1ey th~n broke the door window 011 Ule·
driver's stde or his truck with a rock. '
lri other coal-strike relulcd riews:
· - 'l11e' Ohio Power Company, Ohio'H
ILJrgest electric utility •. serving customers
in 5:1 counUe:;, !laid Friday it probably
won 't need as much start~up time when the
strike erids ns other power companJes.
James Gahri.s, manager or the firm 's
l..uncaoJter district · office , said on-site
mines at Ohio Powci' generating stations
near Beverly and near Gallipolis would cut
mine production start~up and deUvery
time which has bt.&gt;en csthnated .by other
utilities as about 20 days arter a new
contract is signed in Washington.
- 'fllC Ohio Edison Compnqy bnsnd in
Akron announced lhat jL has less than a 40day ~UJlJIY nf coai1Cft and urged ctitmnerS
t.o cut back \heir us~ uf eleclricity by 25 ·
percent

Carter will tell Sadat
'must negotiate peace'
By WESLEY G. PIPPERT

THURMONT, Md. (UPIJ - President
Carter aDd Egypt'S President Anwar
Sadat debated Middle East peace
problems in quiet, wintry isolation
Saturday and U.S. sources said Carter
would tell Sadat firmly that "peace can't
he declared, it must he negotiated."
"This sununit is going to he more than
procedure and atmosphere," one informed
U.S. official said of the ·Camp David talks
that began in earnest Saturday morning.
"The president has gone up there with a
large package of substantial· ideas from
the State Department on bow to break the
Egyptian-Israeli deadlock.''
The Egyptians and Israelis broke off
direct peace negotiations in January
hecause of disputes over Israell withdrawal from oeeupled Egyptian .terriiDry and
wbat form a Palestinian homeland should
lake.
SUggesting the Camp David discussion
might get rough before it concludes
Sunday. U.8. officials said Carter would

BUS AND CAR COLLIDE
POMEROY - Medium damages were
Incurred to a school bus and a car in an
aecident on Linr.oln.fllll Road at 12:15 p.m.
Fr,iday. A car, driviln by Michael O'Neil pi
Pomeroy, traveling downward, hit a '!flOW
bonk on the right and slid into the uphill
bound bus driven ·by Teresa Cremeans of
Middleport. No injuries were reported and
no citations given,
At 3:50p.m. the Pomeroy Emergency
, Squad took Alma Vaughan of Mulberry
Ave. to Veterans Memorial Hospital and at
5:40 p.m. Helene Sayre of Flatwoods, lo
Veterans Memorial.
·

resist pressures to tilt toward Egypt's side
and start pressing Israel toward the
proposais Cairo. favors .
One source noted ao Egyptian
diplomat's comment !hilt Sadat would
urge carter to "knock some sense into the
Israelis," and used it to Illustrate the tough
approach he said the president would take.
"He hopes to knock a little bit of sense
into both sides," 'this official said.
"He will tell Sadat that peace can't he
declared, it must he negotiated . And the
Egyptians must understand that (Prime
Minister Menachem) Begin's plan for
•self-rule' In the West Bank and Gaza was
a responsive gesture that deserves serious
considers Uon by the Egyptians.' ·
A news blackout was in force at the
president's Maryland mountain retreat
itself, but White l!ouse o!!lclals said the
formal conference 'gOt underway aboUt
10:15 a.m. with the two iea.ders sitting
down alone for a private 45-mlnute talk.
Secretary of State Cyrus Vance, national
security adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski and
Egyptian officials joined them later in !he
morning.
Talk!! - lnchicjing discussion of lh~
general peace principles in dispute
between Israel and Egypt - were to
continue through Sunday, when the
leaders were returning to Washington.
Besides the disagreements on matters of
substance, both U.S. ·and Egyptian
officials said frictions have developed over
Carter's decision to keep the discussion
private.
·
A major secondary objective of Sadat's
six-day IJ,S, visit is to conduct a public
relations drive for Egypt. lsra.el's Foreign
Minister Moahe Dayan was to arrive in
Washington Tuesday to start a countering

..
&lt; .

.

-

and 10 early Monday and 10 to %0 by
Wedaesdoy. Highs will be Ia the upper
teens or lower 20s Monday and In the
upper 20s or lower 30s by Wedaeaday.

e

.....

Picket line sacred
.
at Conesville plant

EXTENDED FORECAST
Moodily through Wednesday, a
chance of snow Monday and WedTues~ay.

-

tntitttl

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 5. 1978

Taylor resigns
SEOEMSpost

1 Only Panasonic $39.95 AM-FM Portable Radio........ sale
$28.00
1 Only Channel Master 527.95 AM-FM Luggage Style
Portable Radio ............................ _............... Sale $18.00

ICE JAM - Ice in the Ohio River at the Racine Locks
and Dam is hampering river traffic. The ice accwnulatlon
goes from the Racine Dam ID the Belleville Dam some 13

tmts -

2 Only $34.95 RCA AM Portable Radios ............ Sale $15.00

Mount........ ...........................................

originated in a fil'l!l floor bedroom. It was caused by a child
playing with matches. Mrs. Lucas and two small children
managed to escape without injury. Fifteen volunteer fire
fighters responded lo the first major fire during the present
wintry conditions . .

•

Man pleads ·
guilty m·

.1 Only Lloyd's $52.95 AM-FM Table Radio ...... Sale $25.00

'

~J
I I&lt;

.

···~·~=-'-· .-

Area convention
is this weekend
Jehovah 's Witnesses in the
Middleport area will be at·
teriding a special circuit
convention February 4 and 5
at the London, Ohio Assembly
Hall. This convention is a
special arrangement lor both

,_

SALEM, IlL. - TOM TELFORD doesn't need any
groWldbog to tell him which way the winter wind is blowing, he
bas his own pet barometers- three black bears.
Telford said Thursday the three bears began hibernating
for the first time since he's had them during tbe bitter winter of
1976-77. They dldn~t come out until the end of February. Two of
them took lo their dens again last Oecemher.

I

12 b~r lh 's t ars '
ln1•u1....,

CLEVELAND - FRANKUN COUNTY COMMISSIONER
Michael J. Oorrian today wi!l be named Democratic Lt. Gov. ·
Richard F. Celeste's running mate in Ohio's gubernatorial
election and incumbent Republican Gov. James A. Rhodes will
announce his bid for re-election March 4, it was reported
today.
Celeste called a 9:30a.m. news conference in Columbus to
announce his l'llMing mate, then wi!l travel lo Cleveland to
make the same announcement at 1 p.m. at the Cleveland
Plaza, according 1o The Cleveland Plain Dealer.

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

A Red Letter
New Scofield ••.
·The gift for
a lifetime

You are invited to stop in our bank
and branches on Saturday, Feb. 11
and Tuesday, Feb .. 14 to have
coffee and cookies with us.

/

losses."

accommodations to meet
electricity curtailments,"
said the chamber .
" U an agreement between

By Uoiled Pressl!lteJ'DatlO!Ial
WASHINGTON - DEFENSE . SECRETARY Harold
Brown says the nation must prepare for war in. space or it·
could lace the possibility of bavlng to respond oo Earth to
bostile Soviet attacks on U. S. satellites.
"There is a danger of a situation where war is only in
space, but we don't have the capability to respond in kind,"
Brown told the House Armed Services Committee Thursday.
The Soviet Union now has a ''killer" satellite that can
maneuver Close and destroy some orbiting U. S. space vehicles
- notably ·communications and navigations satellites. Brown
said Soviet capability "will be substantially improved by the
mid·1900s."

Holzer Medical Ceoter
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Celeste Bush,
(Discharges, Feb. 2)
Middleport ; Clyde Sayre, II,
Hoover Ayers, Mrs. John
Syracuse ; Pauline Brewer, Barney and son, Bar.bara
Reedsville; Lasch Douglas, Bently, Ray Camlnk, Nellie
Shade ;
Ada
Warner , Eblin. Shirley Frazier,
DETROIT - GENERAL MOTORS CORP. officials
Pomeroy: Victor Diehl , Virginia Gould, Mrs. Ronnie
Middl eport ; Marvin Han· Hall and daughter, Wendall acknowledge illegal warranties were used as a sales lure by
Harris, Alma Harvey, Nancy Cadillac dealers in Florida and Georgia, but they contend it
dolph, Pomeroy.
Discharged - Rick Long, . Helm, Della Henry, Lorerie was "a local problem" and was halted in 1976.
. A GM spokesman said Thursday the extraordinary
Pauline Markins, Sidney Hom, Ja.nice James, Dollie
Durst , Ruby Cooper, Jason Jividen, Ann Lemley, Ethel warranties, which extended protection three times longer !ban
Fortney,
Junior
Hill, Lewis, Charles Long, Howard those other GM car buyers received, apparently resulted from
Catherine Roach, Clara 'Neekamp, Terri Ohril, Mrs. ~ "improper administration" an~d did not' amount to fraud .
Joseph, Jestie Molden, Ann Bruce Prater and son, DQnna
CHAMONIX, FRANCE - AN AVALANCHE ROARED
Reed, John Richards, Coulter
Johnson.
Shuler, Jay Storie, Joyce down on a chalet in the village of Tours in the French Alps
OATES SET
Pleasant Valiey Hospital
Tremblay, Jahet Williamson. loday, killing at least four people, police report. Two other
Olive Township Trustees
DISCHARGED - Erica
people were believed to be missing, police said.
(Births, Feb. 2)
will meet at their o!!ice in McKinney, Point Pleasant;
Rescue crews immediately went to work digging out the
Mr . and Mrs . David
Reedsville on the fir st Glen Paxton. Point Pleasant; Dobbins Jr., a daughter, victims, police said. There were no other immediate delails of
Saturday of eac h month Roy D. Gibson, Gallipolis; Bidwell.
the disaster available.
during 1978.
Mr. and Mrs. D. Steven
Mrs . Robert DiVietro,
In winter meetings will Pomeroy; Henry Vester, Henthorne, a daughter,
start at 6:30 p.m. but will Point Pleasant; Amanda
Wellston.
start at 7:30 p.m. during Taylor, Point Pleasant ;
Mr. and Mrs. Charles May
Letters of opinion are welcomed. Tbey should be 1
months when Daylight David McComas, Point II , a son, Jackson.
less
than 300 words lone (or be subject to reduotloll by 1
Savings Time is not in effect. Pleasant; Edward Meadows,
Mt. and Mrs . Charles
the edlton awl must be signed with the signee's ad- I
Southside; Mrs . Claude Patton. a son, Wellston.
dresa. Nomeo may be withheld upon pubUcaUon. I
Thornton, Leon ; Mrs. James
However, on requeat, names will be dlsclooed. Letten
MEET SUNDAY
Jeffers, Southside; Kenneth
Show off
shooid he In good· taste, addreaolnl! lsaues, not per- 1
The
Meigs
County Adkins. Pomeroy; Larry
To show off a smashing new
sonalllles.
1
Historical Society trustees Lit~hfield, Gallipolis; Rose pair of cowboy boots, wear
I
will meet Sunday, Feb. 5 at 3 Lawhorn, Point Pleasant ; them with skinny jeans with
I
p.m. at the Meigs County Freda Turley, Hartford.
the legs tuc~ed in.
.I
Museum. Butternut Ave .,
I
.':
~I
Pomeroy. The meeting Is
I
open to anyone Who is inI
terested .

MEETING SUNDAY

The annual congregational

and turkeys . They are totally
dependent on electricity . The
whole concept is designed lor
electricity and if it is cut back
we could have more livestock

•
.ln

'

public appearance! campa ign.
But Carter's wants ''quietdl plomacy'' at
this stage of negotiations: and U.S.
nfficluls reportedly got the E;gyptlans to
ca ncel one news conference S8dat planned
before he leaves WashingiDn Wednesday.
All !his seems ID have created a chilly
atmosphere reflected in the five-minute
greeting ceremony accorded the Egyptian
when he arrived at the White House, en
route to Camp David, Friday .
Lacking even the customary honor
guard, the ceremony Impressed some
veteran White House obiervers as the
most perfunctory and WJceremonlous
White Houe welcome -they had ever seen
accorded a head of state.
At camp Davis. where a one-foot blanket
of snow covered the forested compound,
officials said Sadat and his Wife retired
early Friday to recover from their i2-hour
flight from Morocco, while president and
Mrs. Carter stayed up wo watch a western
mm, "How the West Was Won. II

U.S. TO USE SATELLITES
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The United
States plans to use one of its weather
satellites later this year in place of a Soviet
satellite that Russian authorities said
could not be launched in time to participate In a global weather experiment.
The Soviet sate!Ute was to be rocketed
into a "stationary" orbit 22,300 miles
above the Indian Ocean . to gather at·
mospheric data from that part of the world
for an International climate research
effort directed by the World Meteorollglcal
Organization.

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