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.. ,. ·:.

&lt;·· :. :,

The SundayTunes-Sentmel,Sunday, Feb. 5, 1978

Agriculture and
our commtmity
By Bryson R. &lt;Bud! Carter
G a Ilia County Ex tension I\ gent
• The Gallia Soil &amp; Water Conservation District is again
offering their Wtldhfe,Plantmg Packet Program. This IS a real
good program and I encourage you to lake advantage of the
offer. Here are the . details . The Distrtct offers Planting
Packets for sale. Deb very of the seedlings wtll he made m the
early part of April The program is designed to meet a sP.,cific
need for small quanttttes of trees and shrubs useful in
developing land to attract wildlife, control eroswn or beauttfy
your area NOTE · It ts not necessary tn be a cooperator of the
Gallia S.W.C .D. to take advantage of thts offer. Orders will be
taken until February 24, 1978 The address of their off tee IS ;29
Jackson Pike, Room 308 C, Gallipolis, Ohio 4!i631; stop by , or
call 446-M88. Checks should be made payable to ; Ga llla
S.W.C .D They will noltfy you as to when and where you may
ptck up your seedlings.
Wtldhfe packets will con tam the followmg variehes; It Will
oot be posstble to subslltuw or make changes in the assortment The varteties are Scotch Pine, White Pine, Nor-way
Spruce, White Spruce, Col. Blue Spruce, White Btrch, Ca rolina
Hemlock, Tuhp Poplar and Sweetgum . The large 79 seedlmg
packet sells lor $17 and the slnall37 seedlmg packet sells lor $9
Crown vetch and all other ground covers, Myrtle, English
Ivy, Pachysandra, will be packed in 5o crown lots and prtced at
$10 per lot.
"Song Bll'd Packets " will contain the followmg. It will not be
poss1ble to substitute or make changes in the assortment . The
varieties are White Spruce, European Larch, Eastern Red
Bud, Btttersweet, White Dogwood, Mountam Ash, and
Persimmon . The packet contams 13 seedhngs and sells for $7
Any one of the seedhngs ltsted m etther of the abeve
packets may be ordered m quanllty (Some extra plants
available also) Orders must be placed in multiples of 2ii, 20, 10
or 5 as listed below. The followmg rates wtll be charged !or
each variety ; White Pine and White Spruce sell for $7 for 25
seedlings. Col. Blue Spruce, Scotch Pme and Whtte Spruce sell
for $7 for 25 seedlihgs. Moun tam Ash sells lor $6 for 5 seedlings.
Persimmon sells for $7 for 5 seedlings Carohna Hemlock and
European Larch seUs for $7 for 20 seedlings. Douglas Ftr sells
for $6 for 20 seedlings. Tulip Poplar, Whtte Dogwood and E.
Red Bud seDs for $6 for 10 seedlmgs. White Btrch, Swee4Jum
and Btttersweet sells for 16 for 10 seedlings.
PLEASE NOTE QUANTITY ORDERS IN MULTIPLES
OF 25, 20, 10, or 5 AS LISTED APPLY TO SINGLE
VARIETIES It wtU not be posstble to order a miXture of
varieties within the order for 25, 20, 10 or 5 seedlings · t.e. - 10
Red Bud, 10 Scotch Pme and 5 White Spruce m the multiples of
2ii wa packet or 5 of 2 types of seedlings m the muiltples of 10 m
a packet, etc ...

Smaller farms
are in new bill
By BERNARD BRENNER
UPI FARM EDITOR
WASHINGTON tUPll Rural policy groups that want
the government to take a
strong hand m preservmg
sma ll and rncd1um -size d

11

accrual accounting" rather

than the .. cash accountmg"

system now used by most
farms

•

In many cases, the
" accrual
accounhng"
me thod
would
mean
mcreased taxes
Also, the btll would provtde
that where a taxpayer 's non·
farm mcome exceeds $3(),000
a year, he or she could no
longer liSe farm losses to
reduce taxes due on nonfarm
income. Thts would make
farm investments less
attractive to nonfariners.
Beyond those tax steps, the
btU would mciude a long list
of spect!ic aids and subsidies
for small farmers, many of

famtl y farms would ftnd
many of thetr dreams
realized tf Congress passes a
btll introduced thts week by
Democrattc Reps . · Richard
Nolan, Mtnn , and George
Brown, Calif
Initial acco unts of the btll
stressed its major secllons
dealing with increases m
farm prtces supports and a
rigid new syste m for
controllmg farm commodtty
marketing By allocat mg
them operated or coordinated
"marketing certificates" to
through
a new Family Farm
farmers .
&amp;t along with those provi- Development Servtce which
Sions, the Nolan-Brown biU would be created in the
also mcludes a long shoppmg Agnculture Departlnent.
Among other things, the
list of tdeas whtch have been
new
plan would create:
promoted by groups such as
"famtly
farm
A
the Exploratory Project for
preservation
program."
Economic Alternatives, the
National
Center
for Federal grants would be
Appropriate Technology, and g1 ven w local orgamzatwns
other critics of the long drift ,or governments to buy up
toward co nce ntra tion of farmland whtch comes onto
American agn culture on the market. The land would
fewer and bip,ger commerctal be sold to new or low-income
farm families m untts of no
farms .
The Nolan-Brown btll larger than 640 acres
-A more hberal farm
would, for example, stnke a
blow at btg farmers and credit program. Mortgage
nonfarm ' mvesto rs
in loans from the Farmers
agnculture by requmng Home Administration would
farmers wtth more t han be offered to young and low$100,000 in gross sales to use income farmers at 5 percent

Bad weather causes
delay in obligations

•

CINCINNATI - Severe
winter weather conditions 1n
Southern Ohto may have kept
taxpayers from bemg able to
meet certam Federal tax
obligations by the January 31,
1978 deadline, th e Dtslrict
Director of Internal Revenue
Service reports.
Due to these unusual
condttions, the IRS will adopt
a lenten! policy of considering
the weather as reasonable
cause fur abating or not
asserting the penalties for
failing to meet thts due date.
Employers who did aot
meet the deadlme for filing
returns, issumg Forms W-2 or
making tax deposits should
do so as soon as posstble and
attach a signed statement
explaming that hazardous
weather conditions caused
the delay . A statement should
also be attached by other
taxpayers who were unable to
meet the January 31
deadline.
January 31 was the
deadline for filing em-

ployment tax Forms 941 and
942 for the last quarter of 1977

and Forms 940 and 943 for tax
year 1977, for depostting
wtthheld mcome and- FICA
taxes, and for issuing Fonns

W-2 to employees Other
mformatton docwnents such
as Forms 1099 were due to be
tssued by January 31, also.
Jndtvidual income tax
returns , Forms 1040 and
1040A, •were also due tiy
January 31 when the election
has been made to forego the
fourth quarter estunated tax
payment. Other returns
which may have been due are
estate, gtft and excise tax
returns, Forms 706, 709, 720
and CT-1.
However, the IRS pomted
out that mterest, currently at
an aMual rate of stx percent,
wtD be due on any unpaid
ta1es from the original due
date of the return to date of
payment, even though
delinquency penalhes were
not asserted .

Lay of th~ land

County Agent's Corner

Feeding the
By JOHN C. RICE
E1t. Agent, Agriculture
POMEROY - Where cows
are kept only to ratse feeder
calve's, the cost of their keep
for an enttre year must be
charged again•! the calves at
weantng time
Provtding wmter feed IS
one of the maw costs of
maintammg a commerctal
cow herd. The operator of
such a herd needs tnformation concernmg the
effect of using various feeds
for cows in the herd without
interfering with the ammal's
prodUctiVIty It IS also lffi·
portant to the indtvtd ual
cattleman that he feeds
enough but does not overfeed
.
There are two schools of
thoug ht as lu the performance of the cow durmg
the wmter feedmg per10d
Cattlemen of the Western
States are satisfied tf the
co ws are in good condttton m
the fall, lose ten percent of
thetr body wetght over the
wmter reeding period Thus,
a 1,100 pound cow m the !all
would come through the
wmter and wetgh 99Q pouods
10 the sprmg.

Cattlemen 1n a maJority of
the herds east of the
MISSISSippi believe that a COW
shout~ gain 10 percent of her
body wetght dunng \)te
winter period to compensate
for the development of the
call and thus would wetgh in
the spring, after the calf has
dropped, appro!dmately the
same as she did at the start of
the winter feeding pertod
There are sttil others who feel
that a cow should be fed ail
the hay she wtil eat dunng the
winter.
Most everyone will agree
that a mature beef cow wtil
eat a bale of hay per day. If
your wmter feedmg penod
starts November I and ends
April30, a cow fed a 40 pound
bale of hay per day wtll have
consumed more than three
and one-half tons of hay
during this winter feeding
period. It IS the opmion of the
wrtler that most cow-calf
operators in So utheastern
Ohto feed their beef cows

COW.

cow and also provtde the
extra energy m the form of
grain and concentrates to
produce a mtlk supply.
The beef cow that is dry
dunng the wmter needs

nutrients only to maintatn
thetr oM! bedtes and for the
growth of the fetus. The
requtrement needs for \hts
unbem calf are not very
large The Commtttee on
An1mal Nutrition of the
National Research Council
con cludes th at the datly
nutnent r eqUirements for

wmtermg a mature pregnant
beef cow, wetghing 1,200
pounds, ts a total of 18 pounds
of feed per day, wtth a total
protem content of 7 5 percent
and a TON of 50 percent. Thts
in agreeme nt with
Mom son's Feedmg Standards
A general rule that ca n be
used 10 feeding the beef cow
1s to provide a mixed legume
or good grass hay at the daily
rate of two percent of her
bedy wetght This amount
wtll
supply
ail
the
is

more than is needed and this

probably a rtses from the fact
that the datryman should a nd
does feed heavy durmg the
wmter In contrast here, the
dairyman must mamtain the

req uire m ents of the cow

ex cept salt and mLneral
whtch should be offered free
chotee' at ail ttmes

Wildlife planting
packets available
by Boyd A. Ruth
Soli Cons. Service
POMEROY - Wildhfe
packets (bundles of seedlings
or ground cover plants to he
planted) are avatlabie agam
thts year from the Metgs Soil
&amp;
Wat er ConservatiOn
Dist rict. Orders wtll be taken
until February 24 either by
mat! or m person at the
District office, second noor of
the Fa rmers Bank BUtldmg.
They are sold in assorted
bundles (Large-a:; for $17 or
Small-39 for $9) contammg
Scotch pm e, Whtte vine .
Norway sp ruce . what e

Position stated by FC Banks
LOUISVILLE - The Farm
Credtt Banks of Louisville,
the Production Credit
A~ socla tions and Federal
Land Bank Associations of
Ohto, Indiana, Kentucky and
Tennessee are fully aware of
the fact that some farmers
are currently experiencing
fmanctal difftculties, due m
part, to factors beyond their
control.
,
Some fanners in the four
state area believe that the
current farmer stnke and
related activittes are the
proper means for achieving
more desirable prices and
mcomes. Others have expressed the optonton that thts
type activity wtll lead to
Increased government Involvement in agriculture and

interest rates wtth pnncipal
repayments held at low levels
in early years of the
mor4Jage. Farm operating
loan mterest rates would be
cut w 3 percent for needy
families
- New
markettng
assistance for small farmers
Subsidies would be provtded
for promoting diJ'ect farmerto - consumer marketmg
programs; a 12-slate pilot
project in usmg computer
systems w help small farms
woud be tested ; and school
lunchrooms would he ordered
to spend an average of two
cents per lunch on local fresh
fann products.
- A long series of research
projects aiOled at developing
" energy efficient ,
environmentaDy-protective,
economically sound"
production systems for small
and medtum-sized family
fanns with sales of up to
$100,000 annually. The
research would be aimed at
farming 'systems which use
less conventiOnal energy and
chemicals

than

IS not

1n

the best mterest of

to participate In such actiVIties IS the responsibtlity of
each mdtvidual farmer. The
Farm Credit System has a

fanners.
It IS our posttion that the

deicston as to whether or not

·BY JOHN COOPER
Soil ~ons. Service
PT. PLEASANT - In our
column in the pas: we have
. talked mostly about soil and
water conservation work that
landowners are domg. With
the weather that "e have
been having for the last
month or so, most work has
. been of the nature of
emergency type activity,
wtth some occasional planmng thrown in. I guess the
weather itself is the biggest
news and we are quite interested m the weather and
the various implications from
it.
We made two or three
observations about the snow
that may be of interest to
some readers On January 19
we measured the snow at
bemg 14 inches deep in our
back lawn. We fo und the
water content of the 14 inches
to be H, tnches. Following
the btgger sno w on January
23, we measured the depth of
snow as betng 17 mches even
though during that period of
tune 6 to 8 mches of snow fell.
When we measured the water
content, .we found that the
snow contamed 3 mches of
water
Then ca me the btg ram that
caused minor nooding. The
most
recent
snow
examinatton which was on
Ground Hog Day, revealed
the sno w pack to he 8 mches
wtth several crusted areas in
11. The water content at that
time was 2 .mches.

spruce, Colorado blue spruce, spruce, scotch pine, Norwa y
whtte btrch, Austrian pme , spruce or Austnan pme are 25
tulip poplar, and sweetgum for $6; Tulip poplar, white
A Song Btrd Packet for $7 dogwood, Eastern red bud ,
contams whtte spruce, white btrch, sweetgum or
European larch, Eastern red btltersweet are IO for $6;
bud, bittersweet, white European larch are 20 fur $7 ,
dogwood, mountam ash, and Douglas fir are 20 for $6;
persimmon for a total of 13 Mountam ash are 5 for $6,
and persunmon are 5 for $7.
seedlmgs.
Orders must be prepatd
Ground covers of Crown
and
they cannot be delivered
Vetch, Myrtle, English Ivy or
pachysandra are sold in 50 Purchaser will be notified
crown lots for $10 each when they are ready for pickup For more infonnation
bundle.
Whale pmc or white sp ruce contact the Metgs SWCD, Box
are 25 for $7 , Colorado blue 432, Pomeroy, Oh10 4;769

We are not trying to predict
a flood, but we would be lax m
not saying that with the
con dtttons throughout the
Ohw R1ver Basin, being as

they are, that It would depend
on the manner in which the
snow melts whether there is a
flood or not .
Anot her item rn regard to
the weather that is somewhat
tnterestmg ts that on January
19 at a bout 7 p m. while it was
rammg very hard stratght
down, our friend , Bill Lewis,
of Oldtown Flats, caDed me .
Btll asked us tf we had a
barometer and we admitted
that ours was not workmg
correctly but he went ahead
to say that hts barometer
was reading at that t ime 28.20
and in looking at the

end of our Conversation he
satd that it had gone down to
~.1 . Of course, we aU know
that a bout mldmght that
night the blizzard came
through Ohio with the edge of
tl touching our local area. Bill
said that •he could not ever
remember the barometer
reading being that low and we
could not etther.

mouth -of the' Kanawha River
was probably due to an
abundance of food that they
are finding in that location.
He satd that the two species
of guUs that inhabit our area
are the ring-bWed gull and
the herring gull. The ringbtlled gull IS 18 to 1ll inches
long while the herring guD is
?3 to 26 inches long. The ringbtlled guU is here only during
Anotheo ttem that may be 1h.e wiJltruiml[ wit!L !!Ill
of interest to some is that we summer habitat being in
have noted many guUs along Canada and Alaska. He
the rtVers, parttcularly near described the herring guD as
Tu-Endie-Wei Park where the llvtng in this area year-round.
Kanawha joins the Ohto. We He said that gulls are
have noted these guUs for two scavengers feeding on refuae
or t hree weeks so we called that they fmd m the water.
Ray Knotts, Btologtst of the
These
gulls
would
W. Va. Department of erroneously be called gulls.
Natural Resources at Me- He said that the normal guU
Clinlic. Mr. Knotts said that found on the Atlantic coast
gulls were somewhat com- has the name of laughing guU
mon in thts area and that the and ts 1; to 17 inches long,
concentration of them that relatively white wtth grey
was now appearing at the wings.

Two agencies are
under same roof
By Steve Hlblnger
District Conservationist
Soli Cons. Service
GALUPIOL!S- When our
ofhce phone rings, tt's
usually

answered

"Soil

Conservation Service." Well,
that's right, you have caDed
the Sot! Conservation Servtce. But you also have
contacted another agency the Gallla Soli and Water
ConservatiOn Dtstrict.
The local Soli and Water
Conservation Dtstricts are
county-based units that are
all part of the state-level
Department of Natural
Resource~

The governing body is
composed of five county landowners. Thts board of
supervtsors is elected
publicly at the district SWCD
annual meetmg. They receive
no pay or compensation for
their servtces.
The local SWCD actually
determine what they want for
a' program within their
county. Priorities are set for
barometer a~am toward the these activities and resource
management goals.
Present supervisors are:
responstbtllty to serve the Ray Hughes, C. A. Duncan, T.
credit needs of eligible farF.
Burleson,
Howard
mers and thett cooperatives,
Childers
and
James
and thts we wtD continue to Allbright .
do.
The other agency "under

the same roo!" - the Soli
Conservation Service - is a
federal agency. It is an
agency under the U. S.
Department of Agriculture.
The SCS furntshes a
technical assistant trained in
soil and water management
to the local SWCD. The soil
conservattontst gtves
technical assistance and does
engineering work within the
SWCD board's planned
program. This is the reason
that conservation programs
vary from county to cowtty.
The SWCD develops the
·program and SCS merely
assists
in
the
implementation.
These agencies cooperate
very closely. The goals are all
the same resource
management and conservation. SCS can supply
trained expertise and the
SWCD can be sure that the
conservation program answers the needs of the locality
because they develop the
programs.
In future articles I will
introduce the local supervisors to you with personal
Interviews I think that these
men do an important job and
manage an important
program. It would be good to
koow who these fellows are ..

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY CHAIR SALE

IT'S VERY PERSONAL
,

~can rocl~ you

~~ to sleep.

-==

It can sweep you
off your feet.

SAVE s6500

On Kroehlers
Personal Relaxer"
in your favorite color.
The 100% DuPont
nylon is protected
by Scotchgard
Have funl Choose your Personal
Relaxer"' recltntng chatr in one of
rhese ftve beauriful decororor colors.
Medal!ton gold, Eden green, Nutmeg
brown. [ltsqult, or Ptmento. It's the
chatr rhar will mal~e you feel good
while If mai~E'5 YOUr room lool~ good.

EXTRAS
ATNO
EXTRA COST

$199

mos ~

commeraial farms currently
employ.
-A new extension and
demonstration program. 'l'hts
would be aimed, presumably,
the expanding current
extension programs which
many activist critics have
attacked as aimed largely at
big, commercia) famting .
The proposed new program
would include creation of a
"Fann Demonstration and
Training Center" m each
stale to help train farmers in
smallfarm operations.

'Conserve electricity': still the word

_W eather biggest news in area

00

Regular 264

By JOHN T. XADY
Uliled l'rft11 IDlerullollal
Ohio's electric uUUties cmtinued today to stress conservation and at least ...., said it will pro'bably have to go to
mandatcry cutbacb by the end of the week. United Mine
Workers Union pickets stenJed up activity aimed at stopping
the movement of noo-UMW coaL
The strike against the aof\coal iridustry by the UMW began
Dec. 6 and Is already the longest UMW work stoppage in the
nation's history. UMW prestdent Arnold MtUer, however, says
he ia optimistic an agreement can be reached by Tuesday.
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric, which receives a large portion of
its coal by barge on the lceclogged Ohio River, said it would
probably impose a mandawry cutback of 2ii percent' on its 550
large Industrial and commercial users even if an agreement on
a new cootraclts reached this week .

Nine die
on Ohio
United Press lnterutlonal
Four pedestrians were
among the nine weekend
fatalities in traffic accidents
scattered around Ohio.
No traffic fatabties were
reported the prior weekend,
when Ohio's blizzard weather
was still in effect.
A Middletown pedestrian
was kU!ed Friday night, five
persons died Saturday and
three Sunday, the Highway
Patrol said. Two fatal
crashes occurred in the
Warr~n area Sunday morning.
'l'he weekend fatalities by
days;
·
Friday Night
Middletown; John Linsey,
64, Middletown, struck and
killed by an auto on a Middletowlt street.
Saturday
Ravenna; Ruthven M.
Hadcock, '15, Warren, killed
in a two-vehicle accident on
Ohio 5 in Portage County.
Cincinnati: Lowell D.
Pedigo, 39, Cincinnati, struck
by a vehtcle as he walked
along U. S. 50 in Hamilton
County near hts home.
Wellsville: James E.
Evans, 31, East Liverpool,
(C~ntlnued on page 8)

WARSAW, Ky. (UPI) Smashmg thell' way through
a huge Ohio River tee gorge,
the
waterway's
most
-powerful towboats have
nearly finished the arduollll
task of clearing a channel for
resumption of commerctal
barge traffic on the river .
Wtth the worst of the tee
pack behind them, Army
Corps of Engineers officials
said they expected barges
would begin moving through
the Markland Dam locks
weeks ahead of schedule.
An tee gorge has blocked
the dam since Jan . 27,
preventing barges carrying
critical supplies of fuel oil,
coal and other commodities
from reaching destinatiOns
upriver.
The major effort to punch
through the gorge was a
surprtse move by corps engineers, who had predtcted as
late as Saturday that the dam
would remam blocked by ice
for at least two more
weeks.
Three 5,000 horsepower
towboats, lashed side-byside, began knocking through
the tons of ice at dawn
Sunday. By late in the day ,
the vessels had cleared a
channel about 100 yards wtde
for 31&gt; miles upstream.
''The towboats have a tremendous amount of power
which can be controlled,
enabling us w move the ice a
lot faster," said Col. Thomas
Nack, district engineer for
the corps.
The enormollll ice gorge
stretched nearly five miles
upriver from the Markland
Dam and was more than 60
feet thick m places, extending
all the way w the river
bottom.
"We would have fmished
clearing a channel Sunday,
except that the to!s were ·

[XTI\A W[A r\
Wrrh rf!versrble
~ ~ ~ ~ cus h tOn~

E.X H\A COMFOI\T
W1rh premrer
COli

spnng

EXfi\A SmENGTH

£XTRA PJ\0T£Cl10N

W!!h double dowels

Wlfh Performof'ICe
rested fobtlc;

o nd herdwood

underconsf ruoron

homes

treored wrth

Xotchgcird' sto111
repellent

Come to the 3rd Floor Furniture Dept., take
advantage of the sale prices on Kroehler and
Berkline chairs.
Wall-A-Way - Rock-0-Loungers - Recliners Occassional Chairs and Swivel Rockers. New
shipment -large selection of fabrics and colors.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
I

dislodgmg so much tee that 11
exceeded the capactty of the
dam gates to pass 11
through, " sa1d Charles
Schumann ,
a
corps
spokesman.
Schumann said the corps
planned to use a "regularsized towbeat" today to break
through the rest of the tee
above the dam. "We'll send
two other tows behind it and
together they should be able
to clear a channel the rest of

danger
!rom
another
precarious situation at the
dam .
Towboat
crews
successfully removed t wo

barges caught agamst the
face of the dam and passed
them through the dam locks .
Eight other barges remain
stuck between the tee and the
dam structure, huwever .

Problems began at the
Markland Dam Jan . 27, when
an ice pack which had been
frozen several miles upriver

broke up and began floatm g
klward the dam. Tons of ice
sent nearly 100 barges out of

the way ."

The towboats broke
through the thickest part of
the gorge Sunday, Schumann control and slammed several
explamed, and the remauung. ol them agamst the face •of
the dam , llespite lranhc
ice is only a few feet thtck
Corps engmeers Sunday salvage efforts.
The corps brought m exploalso were able to lessen the

\'ol. ~K. No. ~tl li

the1r charge upriver . pnvate

contractors planned tn use
helicopters for a thll'd day to
unload steel beams from
barges stuck near the Indtana
side of the dam.
OBSERVE NATIONAL BOY SCOUT MONTH - Members of Pomet oy S&lt;'out 'l'r&lt;Kip 24!1
arc observmg Boy Scout month by placing displa ys in the windows of Davis ln'iUfllll('t' unci
Elberfelds tn Pomeroy . Shown a rC l~r, front , Greg Thomas, Hack F:dward:s, .Julin Murris :
back, Randy Murray ''"d Mike Edwards

Mediators optimistic
WASHINGTON (UPI) and the soft coa l mdustry
Federal medtators, having re cessed F~iday eve mn g
spent the weekend talkmg w alte r ge tttng close to
beth stdes m the longest U.S. agreement.
A spokesma n for the
coal strike in hi story ,
reswned thetr effort s today Federal Med tat10n an d
amtd indtcations a settlement Con c ahati un Se rvi ce sa td
was near
Sunday mcodiaklrs had been
Untied Mtn e Workers " workmg wtth both stdes
Prestdenl Arnold Miller ,(old separately smce then the Charleston (W.Va.) mther m person or over the
Gazette he fell "pretty good" telephone "
abeut chances of reaching a
It was expected that faceco ntract se ttlem ent by to~face talks would resume
Tuesday The slrtke began today The unton 's :l9 Dec 6.
member union ba rgain ln g
Mtller satd there are only a counctl, wh1ch must a pprove
few areas of disagreement any settlement before it goes
left wtth negotiators for the w the rank and flie for a
Bttummous Coal Operators ratification vote, plans to
Associatton
meet Tuesday
Negottating sesstons
Miller satd he would return
between ilie mine workers

Deputies in chase

0

By United PressiDtemational
?iWASHINGTON- THE END OF THE DRAFT and the
switch to an aU-volunteer Army, Navy and Air Force has
added more than $18.4 billion to national defense costs smce
1971, congressional mvestigators said today.
The report by the General Accounting Office, the
Investigating arm of Congress, waa released by Sen. Sam
Nunn, !).{la. II attributed the sharp increase in costs to higher
pay, enlistment bonuses, higher recruiting costs, better
housing and other changes to make military life more
attractlve.
CLEVELAND - AN AUTOPSY SUNDAY showed
Cleveland schoolteacher Michael Rodgers was shot to death,
according to Cuyahoga County Coroner Dr. Samuel Gerber.
Rodgers, 32, a chemistry teacher at West Tech High
School, was shot four times, the autopsy showed - twice in the
bead, once in the chest, and a graze wound on one arm. His
body was found Saturday in a snowy vacant lot when a man
saw a dog digging In the area. He had been missing since Jan.
21 although because of freezing, coroner's staffers said tt
would be difficult to determine the time of death.
MOOOOW - "THE SOVIET ROBOT supply capsule
Progress I, its mission completed, today separated from the
Salyut 6 space laboratory and headed toward a fiery death in
the upper reaches of earth's atmosphere.
The Soviet news agency Tass said the Progress I capsule,
emptied of supplies and fuel and filled with used-up equipment
and garbage from the space lab, was separated at 12:53 a.m.
EST.
• MANAGUA, NICARAGUA-NICARAGUANS VOTED in
a virtual state of siege Sunday amid growing reports of an
Imminent end to a two-week general strike in protest against
the regime of President Anutasio Somoza.
Returns were exp&lt;.cted today from municipal elections
and observers 'S&amp;id the turnout by Nicaragua's 1 million
eligible voters appeared v~ry light.

ffiONTON'S DICKIE JAMES (43) drops m two of his game-high 32 pomts 1n thts actton
photo of Saturday night's Meigs-Ironton makeup contest at Morrison Gym in Rock Springs
Ironton captured its thlrs straight victory, 78-58. Marauder defender on left IS Brent Stanley
(42). See game detatls inside today.

Rain squalls, hail, winds
hit California Sunday
United Press loternaUooal
Rain squaDs, hail, ltghtning
and high winds struck
Califorma's heart Sunday,
knocking out power and
causmg mudslides.
In New York, residents
braced for another foot of
snow today. The nation 's
midsection got another dose
of snow S\Uiday but It was
mainly light.
In nortllern California, a
sudden storm wtth winds up
to 50 mph caused mudslides,
felled trees, tore ships from
their moorings and capsized
two boats, sptlling eight
people into San Francis&lt; o
Bay.
~ The wind was ''the worst
I've seen m quite a while,"

WASHINGTON -MURIEL HUMPHREY, TAKING over
the job her husband held for almost a quarter-(!llntu;y, says
she wll1 oot be a "caretaker" as the only woman in the U. S.
Senate and the first woman senator In more than five years.
Mrs. Hwnphrey, a petite 65-year-old mother of four and
grandmother of 10, was to take the oath of office Monday
afternoon in a simple and traditional Senate ceremony.
DETROIT- SYMPATHETIC DETECTIVES are seeking
a desperate but polite woman robber with a bruiBed face who
said she stole • worth of dresses to regain custody of her
(Continued on page 8)

SBid an attendant at Golden
Gate Bridge. A northbeund
car was blown tnto the
southbotmd lanes, causing a

minor acddent.
Rain-loosened earth, rock
and debris slid across all four
of
southbound
lanes
Interstate 5, the main
highway between northern
and Southern Califorma . A
mile alld a half section south
of Grapevine was buried.

•
r

t'iflt•t'n Ct' nts

stves experts from a prtvate
firm to test the posstbtllty of
breaking up the tee Jam wtth
dynamite . Alter two days of
tests last week wtth ; Q.vowtd
charges, the demolition
specialists concluded tl would
take 1,50Q-pound charges to
make stgnili cant progress
blasting the tee.
But such explosions also
mtght have caused damage to
homes and mdustries along
that stretch of the OhiO River,
so the corps abandoned the
blasting plan
While the towbeats made

• •in Brie-fs~!
J

1

'

en tine,

at y

::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;::~=::::::::;:;.;;;:;.;:;.; .;.;.;.;.;.:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·!·!·:::·:·:::·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:

I~; News.

"'ere also fmed.
·, •·J would be against it personally and I think the majority
would,'' satd Cray ''It would end up with the rank and ftle
always getting fined . Arbitrators usually rule against the
wtion and they would In this."
Cray said he and most members of his local are prepared to
stay on strike lor at least another two months.
Ohio Edison , which ts down to a ;19-&lt;lay supply of coal, said it
had not yet decided when to begin mandatory cutbacks but will
probably slick to Its main contingency plan which culls for
such cutbacks when thu supply level reaches 30 days .
In an inridrntdurmg the weekend, Alex-sndm Davis Jr ., was
InJured when a brtck was thrown tl1rou~h his ear 's windshield
as he tried kl enter the C&amp;SOE station tn Cosh&lt;wton County
which was surrounded bv piekets
(Continued on page 8)

Channel cleared at Markland

sometime today, nearly two

highways

preSident, satd last week he did not see how cutbacks could be
avoided if the strike was not settled by the ftrst of the weok .
" But smce that time we have received some coal and have
been able to purchase power,:• said Jones. "We are going to
revealuate the situation "
BtU Cray, Wdkesville, president or UMW Local 1957 m
Vinton County, said about 100 UMW pickets were enroute to
Coal Grove to shut down nonUMW coal loading docks on the
Ohto River.
"The dock is a filter for rail and barge traffic beth," satd
Cray. ''We 're going to attempt to shut them down and all other
non-union operaltons the area."
Cray also satd he doubled whether the UMW membership, at
least the members of his local, would accept any agreement
with the coal operators that would allow miners kl be fmed for
particlpatmg m wildcat strikes , even if the coal comparues

•

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, February 6, 1978

EXTENDED FORECAST
Wedaesday through
Friday, fair weather
Wednellday aud Thursday.
A chance of snow Friday.
Daytime blgb ZO to 30
Wednesday and 25 to 35
Thanday aad Friday.
Moralag lows 5 to 15
Wednesday and Thursday
and In the teens Friday.
,,.,.,.,.,.,.;.c;·:·:-;':·:·;-;-;-;-:·:·;·&gt;:·;·:·;-,:-;-;-;-;.;-;-;.;.;-

"We see no way to avoid cutbacks," said Dave Altemuehle, a
spokesman for Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric Co "Although things
look encouraging it would be foolish to do anything untiltl is
ratiliied. Aitd that may not he easy ."
The Coshodon County sheriff's office said between 200 and
25Q striking miners ptcketed the entrances to the Colwnbus &amp;
Southern Ohio Electric Co. generating plant in that cowtty .
C&amp;SOE said today it will conti'nue to attempt to obtain nonunton coal to keep its generating untts ruMing.
"We're receiving some and attempting to receive some
more," wd C&amp;SOE spokesman Bob Jones. "We haven't received any more at Coshocton. We had that one load in there.
But we're not going to say we're not going to receive coal at
that unit."
Jones said it had oot yet been determined when cutbacks in
power would begm although Robert Sisinger, a C&amp;soE vice

Another mudslide closed
Highway I, the scenic coastal
route, south of Big Sur.
Dozens of vehtcles were
caught in the mud . california
Highway Patrolmen freed
several trapped motorists.
More than an mch of rain
fell in 30 mmutes tn
Campbell, near San Jose.
Snow began falling along
the eastern corridor from
New England to Virginia
areas Sunday and restdents
heard predictions of far
more.
The National Weather
Service issued heavy snow
warn1ngs to warn New
Yorkers and residents of
oorthern New Jersey they
would have more than a foot
of snow by late tonight.
~~we're

afraid this one is

going to be a rough one to
·fight ," said a spokesman for
the New York Sarutatton
Department.
Gale warnings were up
along the coast from
southeastern New York
through southern New
England. He said high wmds
would cause drifting and
would blow salt off streets.

NWS heavy snow warnings
extended from northeastern
Virginia
through
southeastern New York and
over central and eastern
Pennsylvama and the eastern
panhandle of West Virginia .
Washington , D.C , mtght
have :&gt;-7 mches, the NWS
said Etght mches or more
was possible elsewhere, the
NWS said.

Weather
New snow accumulatmg 1
to 3 mches by thts evemng.
Htgh today 10 to 15 Low
tonight 0 to 10 above. Snow
flumes Tuesday, High 1; to
~

MEET TUESDAY
There will be a union
meeting of Local 6197,
Mtdwest
Steel
Corp.,
Tuesday, 7 p.m. at Foote
Mmeral Union Hall, Mason .
SCHOOUi CWSED
All schools m Meigs County
were closed today due to the
snow and the prediction of
more snow to come.

Metgs County Sheriff Kee bau gh Rou d pu st the
James J Proffitt report s that Cherry Ridge Road . A short
aRt. 4, Long Bottom man has dtstance lat er , McGrath
been charged wtth three missed a sharp 90 degree
trafftc offenses followmg a tum . Hts vehtcle went into
chase at I ;30 a.m Sunday at prtvate dnve owned hy
F1Ve Points
Wallace Bradford. Be c'O nArrested wa s Ha rold Lee tmued up the private drive
McGrath, 22 years, Rt. I, before betng blocked.
Long Bottom. He will appear
A 15-yea r old Rt. I, Long
later thts week before Metgs Bottom youth wtth McGrath
County Co urt Judge Robert was turned over to Me~gs
Buck to answer charges of County Juvemle Offtcer Carl
speeding, willfully eludmg, Hysell who transported htm
and reckless operation.
to hts res tdence
Accordmg to the report
Saturday afternoon , Kelly
ftled by Deputy Dana Hayman, 18, Racine, was
Aldrtd ge, McG rath was arrested by Meigs County
clocked on the department's Shenff's deputtes on a felon y
moving radar at 69 mph warrant from Mason County ,
traveling north on SR 7 at W. Va , cha rgi ng tha t
Five
Points.
Deputy Hayma n on or a bou t
Aidndge, southbound at the December 15 aided and
time, gave chase after tur- abetted shoplifting at Heck's
ning at the intersectton . at Point Pleasant
McGrath continUing north at
Hayman tndtcated thal he
a high rate of speed, fatled to would wa1v e extradition to
stop.
West Virginia to face th e
McGrath continued north charges.
through Chester and turned
Sheriff Proffitt said he
left on Sumner Road, con- expects West Vtrgi~ta
tmued north on the Sunmer authonttes to pi ck up
Road to Keebaugh Road. The • Haymao so metim e today.
chase
con\tnued
out

18 athletes inducted ·
By Greg Bailey
Between the varsity and
reserve games at Morrison
Gymnasium Saturday night,
etghteen young men were
honored by being inducted
mto the Metgs Htgh School
Athlettc HaD of Fame '
Charles Hamilton, Booster
President, presented each
athlete a trophy and certificate for recogmtion of
thetr outstanding per- formances as former Metgs
Htgh athletes.
It is hoped that thts Hall of

.,

Fame will stimulate mterest
and · competttton tn the
athlcttc program of the high
school. Hamtlt on, Donald
Wolfe , Coach
Charl es
Chancey (athlettc director),
Principal James Dtehl, and
other boosters all helped in
the selectiOn of these ftrst
inductees.
Meigs Marauder Hall of
Fame frrsl year selecflous
we;:;-OTBA LL
F&gt;erry
Kennedy _ Ail -SEOAL, 39
yard punt average ; Rod
(Continued on page 8)

to Washmgton m time

tAJ

resume negol&amp;
aliuns w1U1 the

soft coal 1mdtL, try klduy .
The progrc88 of the ta lks
was bemg c(osely followed by
Prestdent Carter because of
concern about Ute worsening
cop I supp ly situatiOn in some
cus tern and midwes te rn
states.

The two•nunth old strike
has cut mine production ~'
less than h:a If n£ wha t il was n
year ago and to a mere 32

percent of the ou tput
recorde d just before the
UM W walked out
Once

a

se ttleme nt

1s

reached, 11 may take to days
fur U&gt;e union to rattfy the new
agreement and officially end
the strtke, offtctals satd.
More time will then be
nee ded
to
re npen
underground mmes thai have
been shut down, so largcscuie productton IS unlikely w
resume before the end of
February at best

Squad answers
four calls
Four calls were answered
over the w ee~end by the
Mtddl eport Eme r ge ncy
Squad.
At 4·49 p m Suturday, the
squad went to the l..uSalle
Hotel for Cloyd Brookover
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
At 12 ·08 p m Sunday, the
squad went to 981 Hysell St.,
for Mrs Henry Carpenter
wh o was also t a ken to

Veterans Memonal Hospital.
At 2·23 p m Sunday, the
umt was called to 714 S
Second for Mrs Eleanor
Zeiher, who was transferred
lo Holzer Medical Center
At 8; 20 p m., the squad took
Pete McCloud, 1;9 S. Fourth
Ave , to Veterans Memorial

Hospital.

Fire loss
is $6,000
Loss was set at $6,000 m a
kitchen hre at 6;48 p m.
Sunday at the home of Jack
Hart on Bunker Hill Rd.
Pomeroy fire department
spokesman Jtm Sisson said •
the blaze developed from a
defective furna ce in the
basement . It spread to the
kitchen .
Pomeroy liremen assisted
by a MtddlePQrt tanker were
able to contam the fire to the
kttchen. There was some
smoke..damage.

�2-'The Da1ly Sentinel Mtddleport Pomeroy 0 Monday Feb 6 1978

·Malone Pioneers stop Rio, 96-89

Today's

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sporta Editor
NEW YORK ( UPl) - Hate 1s a strong word one wh1ch
suggests abhorrence and inU.nse hosllhty so when Gil
Patterson heard M1ke Torrez use that word he couldn t help
but do a little thinkmg
Speakmg at a function a couple of weeks ago Torrez who
helped p1tch the Yankees In the world champ10nsh1p last
season and then s1gned w1th the Red Sox as a free agent sa1d
that both Thurman MIUlson and Gra1g Nettles hate Regg1e
Jackson
•
Nobody wttlt the Yankees bothered responding to Torrez and
that only lent added wetghl to what he had sa1d Up to now
there st1ll hasn t been any rebuttal
Gil Patterson says he doesn I mmd speakmg up though
Patterson was wtth the Yankees last year and 1s one of 16
ptlchers on their roster this year He s young only 22 and w1ll
report to the clubs early camp Wednesday at Fort
Lauderdale Fla
Last season he appeared 1n only 69 mmngs w1th the
Yankees makmg three different lrtps up and down from
Syracuse The slx4oot-one 20l&gt;jx)und nght-hander out of
Nortll M1arm started SIX games for the Yanks and beat Texas
for h1s only VICtory but could be one of the club s regular
sta rters th s

VP.r~r

HP throws as hard as Ron Gmdry maybe

e\en hard~r
Yankee owner George Slembrenner 1s especially htgh on
Patterson He thinks he has a chance of becommg the teams
top pitcher eventually and has sent him a spec1ai condtllomng
machine to help hun strengtllen the shoulder tltal was gtvmg
hun trouble last year
Slembrenner ISO t the only one whose eye Patterson has
caught After seemg h1r0 work agamst the Red Sox m late May
of last season Carl Yastrzemski called the big husky
fastballer the best young pitcher he had seen 10 the Amertcan
League m a long lime
Patterson knows It s gomg to be rough fur h1m to wm a
sta rling JOb on a staff wtlh such established pitchers as
Gwdry Don Gullett Cat fiSh Hunter Ed Ftgueroa Andy
Messersrrulh and Ken Holtzman but still feels he can do Ill( he
pllches the way he knows he can
Patterson beheves he spent enough lime with the Yankees
last season to gel to know them and that s why 11 made him
stop and think when Torrez said what he did about the general
atmosphere Ul the Yankees clubhouse
Bemg new I didn t really hang around With any of the
fellows he mentioned but l was m the clubhouse together w1th
them and I never saw any eVIdence that tlley hated each
other says tile Yankees No 1 draft chotce of three years
hack
Three of the people who treated me best were Fran Healy
Reggte and Thurman Fran kept talkmg to me all year gomg
over each batter and g1vmg me t1ps about tllem all the llrne
When tile Ya nks brought me up the second lime m August the
team was on til e road and Regg1e knew I wouldn I have
anywhere to slay when we got back home He smd I know It s
rough on you If you need a place to slay lou can sta) Wllh
me He InVIted me to stay w1tll htm at h1s apatlmenl Alter all
I was JU St a rook1e Wbo was I to him ?
Munson was equally solicitOus says Patterson
Nobody helped me more durmg games than he did It d1dn l
stop only tllere 0111ter He helped me tremendously off the
field too 1 remember before a mghl game m Seattle "e were
w Jlk ng around the c•ty and he keptlalkmg to me trymg to
help me m every way he could
Thurman talked to me about his fanuly and about a lot of
other things l knew he was trymg to make me feel more
comfortable All the guys w1th the Yankees were wonderful to
me and that s somelhmg you never forget no matter ho\\ long
you re 10 the b1g lea gues l saw what Mtke Torrez had to say
and 11 s so hard for me to beheve fiecause I never saw any of
that
Gtl Patterson hasn r been around long Posstbly he doesn t
behe1 e because I e duesn t want to beheve That happens
sometimes too

This week's cage games
Oh1o College

\

Basketbaj Schedule
Un1ted Press International
Monday

Oh o Umv a1 Bowl ng Green
Oak and (M ch ) a Akron

Central St at W V rgm a Sl
fV\ar etta at Otter be n
Oh o Wesleyan at Musk ngum
Baldw n Wallace at Woos ter
LaRoche ( Pal at Steubenv lie
Tuesday
Mount Un on at Kenyon
Youngstown Stat Buffalo
Cedarv li e at Urbana
John Carroll at H ram
Ohi o Oom mtcan at Ttff n
Genev11 ( Pa) a I Wa sh
L ncotn Memor al &lt;Tenn) at
W lber for ce
Wtlm ngton at Manchester

l ind !

Wednesday
M am at Bowl ng Green
Toledo at Eastern M chi gan
Kent Sta te at Oh o Un v
Akron at Dayton
Cleveland St at Wayne St

IMochl

Wr ght St at Eastern It I nels
Wheel ng (W Va) at Xaver
Cap tal at Otterbe n
Den son at Oh o Wes eyan
Mvsk ngum at Mar etla
Baldw n Wa lace at Oh o
Northern
He delberg at Obert n
Sleubenv rte at Dyke
Defiance at Bluffton
Anderson ( lnd) at F .ndlay
The ( Pa) at Case Western
Cumber and (Ky) at Central

St

Oh o Domm can at T 1f n
Thursday
Oh o State at M chtgan
Georg d Tech at Cincmnat
Oberlin at Mount Unton
T ff n at Ashland

\

111E DAILY SENTINEl.
DEVOTEUWTHE
INTERf;BTOfo
MEIGS.MASON A.lt.EA
CHESTBR L TANNEHILL
Exet Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH
City EdJtor
PublJStlt:d dM ly except S..turd&amp;y
by The 01 o Vlllley Pub.. :"~hing

Allegheny

(Pa l at Case

Western
Htram at

Carneg te Mellon

I Pal

John Carroll at Bethany (W

Val

Malone ~t Mt
Vernon
Nazarene
Urbana at Rto Grande
T It n at Mercy (Pal
tn1ernattonal
Hockey League
Un1ted Press lnternaftona I
North

wltptsgfga

Sag naw 28 16
Por t Huron

Flint

Kalamazoo

15 21

Muskegon

advcrtJS ng n:presen

Grifflth Company

Inc Boltmel!i 11.nd Gallagher D v

Third Ave
10017

~7

New Vork NV

Subsc 1ptlon &lt;1tes Del \ered by
carr er whe e au l11.b~ 75 enl.!l ~r
week By Molor Route where earner
sen. e not &lt;~Yailltb l~ One month
$325 By nalmOhwand W Va
())e Y ilr $22 00 Sl.x: mon hs
S 1 SO Three mOrf hs $7 00

Elsewhere S26 00 yea Stx months
$13 50 Tl ree months Sf 50
Subscription pnte tnc ude.!i Sunda,.

Times-sentinel

11

42 182 183

15 24 9 39 168 188
South

wltptsgfga
To edo

Nauona

7 63 2.42 175

22 16 9 53 180 178
23 19 5 51 216 217

Busrness Off ce Phone 992

tative Ward

l

Saturday

Ft Wayne

Ed torial Phone992 2 57
Second class postage pu d a
Pomeroy Ohio

al

Purdue at Oh o St
Cinctnnah at Dayton
Oh o Umv at Ba St
Bowltng Green at Toledo
Central Mtch at Kent S
Western M ch at M am
Oh o Dam n can at Ashland
Loyola ( Ill ) at Xaver
St
V ncent
(Pa)
at
Steubenvll e
Mankato St
(M.nn) at
Youngstown St
Bell arm ne at Wr ght St
Dyke at Central St
Mar etta at Capt1a
Den son at Wtttenberg
Otterbe n at Ohio Wesleyan
Kenyon at Baldwtn Wa l ace
Mount Un on at Wooster
Oh o Northern at Ober t n
Wtlmtngfon at Bluffton
F ndlay at Def a nee

Company Mu lunedm Inc
111
Court Sl Porr eroy Ohio 45769
2 56

(Kyl

W lberforce
Fnday
Cheney St ( Pa} at Akron
Walsh at Cedarvtlle
Detro lnst tute at Dyke

M lw

2 1 14 12 54 17.4 172
17 18 11 45 177 173
16 21 12 .44 155 175

Grand Rap ds

16 2.4 8 AO 163 198
Saturday s Results
Fort Wayne 7 Pprt Huron 3
Grand Rap ds 4 Milwaukee 3
Muskegon 5 Sag naw 5

Kalamazoo 3 Toledo 3
Sundays Results
Port Huron 6 Sag naw 5
F nt S M !waukee 3
Grand Rap ds 7 Toledo 3
Kalamazoo 5 Muskegon 3
Monday s Games
No games scheduled
Tues.day s Game
Toledo at Kalamazoo

team to defeat R1o Grande 10
conference play The Red
men dropped lo 12-li on the
year

Malone upped 1ts seaS(In
record to 10.9 lnstde the
MOC the Ptoneers are 7 2
Gil Price tossed m a
season htgh 35 points for the
Redmen Greg James added
17 and Don Gtbson added 13
Tim Volanch tossed 10 29

pmnts to pace the Pioneers
Art Jordan added 20
R10 trailed 44-43 dur10g the
halfttme internusswn
The Redmen had a three
point advantage on three
different occasions m the
second half before Malone
caught fire and pulled away
to a 11 point lead
Rto Grande reduced
Malone s spread to three 91

66 durtng the !mal two
mmutes of play but could not
catch the Ptoneers
The Redmen htt 39 of 81
fteld goal attempts for 411 I
percent R1o was II of 17 at
the foul hne for 64 7 percent
Rw picked off 39 rebounds
With James snaggmg 14 and
Prtce 12 The Redmen had 18
turnovers
Malone htl38 ol 79 fteld goal

attempts for 4111 percent
Malone won 11 at the foullme
sinkmg 20 of 25 free tosses for
M percent 'The wtnners had
39 rebounds
R10 Grande wiU play at Mt
Vernon Nazarene on Thursday Thts weekend the
Redmen Will host Urbana
Saturday mght and Oh10
Dommican wtll play at Lyne
Center Sunday afternoon

Here s Satur.day s bo1
MALONE C961 -Sommers
3 28
Marshall 6 2 ••
Ducher 2 1 5 Blythe 52 12
Water$ 3 0 6 Mennlefleld I 0
2 1Volarlch 13 29 Jordan tO
0 20 TOTALS 31 20 96
RIO GRANDE (Btl Swam 2 0 4 Jame• B I 17
Price ••735 Blse 6012
Royse 1 0 2 Phelps 3 0 6
Glboon 53 13 TOTALS It 11
19
AA

Hillfltme score Rio _.3

Malone

Miami, Toledo upset
United Presslnternallonal
lt looks like nobody wants
tn wm Ute M1d Arnencan
Con ference
basketball
championship
Both league~eading M1am1
and Toledo - the Redskms
btggesl
challenger
suffered one pomt defeats
Saturday mght lhrowmg
what had looked bke a two
~am race wtde open
M1am1 now 6-2 dropped a
55-04 deciSion at Kent Stale
while Toledo 6-3 contmued
In have tis troubles at home
losmg 72 71
to Ohw
Uruvers1ty
Meanwhtie
Ce ntral
MIChigan dumped Eastern
M1ch1gan 79-67 to move mto
third place With a 5-3 record
and Bowhng Green edged
Ball Stale 69-67 to take over
fourth at 4-3
Burrell McGhee calmly
sank two free tllrows w1th no
t1r0e on the clock to g1ve Kent
tts upset win over M1rum
Kent had a 53.,&lt;;2 lead wttlt
19 seconds left but John Sho
emaker s 18-fooler put M1am1
up 54-53 McGhee was fouled
w1th one second left and sank
both shots as the clock
showed no Ume
McGhee ended w1th 19
pomls and Trent Grooms had
14 lor the Flashes ll was the
fourth wm m seven games for
mtemn Coach M1ke Boyd
who look over for Rex
Hughes

I duin t ~ll McGhee any
thmg Hughes sa1d of h1s
semor star s pa1r of game
wmnmg free tllrows l was
afrrud He JUSI looked up at
me and smiled
It was a super wm for us
sa1d Hughes
espec ially
since were gom~ on the road
for the next two games ll

was a dream come true
Tim Joyce dtd the tnck on
Toledo scormg 30 pomts and
hiltmg the chnchmg basket
w1th seven seconds ielt m tbe
game
Ted Wtlllams corner
JUmper had put Toledo ahead
71 70 w1th 35 seconds lefl but
OU called out w1tll 26 seconds
to go and worked the ball In
Joyce who hit a layup
That last play was our
ISOlation play where we try In
1sola~ Tun Joyce or Steve
Skaggs and JUSllry to get the
ball to whoever IS open
explamed OU Coach Dale
Bandy
Th1s 1s probably t he
btggest wm personally smc"e
1 ve been a head coach
added Bandy ThiS IS the
ftrst ttme I ve beaten
Toledo
R1ck Wtlson scored 23
pomls and Ricky Gallon
added 21 In lead 1011!..-anked
Lou sv1lle to an 113-76 Metro
Conference
win
over
Cmcmnati Saturday
The Cardmals shot a
sc hool record 66 8 percent

from the fteld as they boosted
11te1r season mark to 14-3 and
5-1 m tile conference
Pal Cummmgs scored 21
for Clncmnati wh1ch dropped
to 11-8 over-all and 4-6 m the
Metro
At Dayton lrv Giddings
and Jun Paxson scored 16
pomts aptece to lead the
Flyers to an easy 9~9 wm
over Ashland
Dayton now IM took a 1().
4 lead af~r trallmg 4.0 and
was never threatened
holding a 49-34 margm at
mtenmss10n
In Ohio Conference actwn
Otlerbetn
handed
Muskmgum tis f1rst loss
dumpmg the Muskies 60-68
In other OC action 1t was
Capital 75 Demson 58
Wittenberg 56 Martella 57
Hetde I berg 93 Ba ldwm
Wallace 75 and Wooster 63
Kenyon 77
In other games 11 was
Detroit 60 Xavter 74
Youngstown Stale 91 Akron
MEIGS and i.Jlgan wrestlers are pictured 10 this action shot taken durmg Saturday s
76 Kentucky State 62 Central
match at Rock Sprmgs Logan defeated the Marauders 41 30 Above Metgs outstandmg
State
51
V~rgm1a
wrestler Robert Nakamoto m the 167 pound we1ght class won a maJor dec1s1on 4-0 over
Commonwealth 63 Wnghl
i.Jlgan s Larry Ogg Here he scores on a take-&lt;lown
State 59 Earlham (lnd ) 73
Wtlmmgton 71 Hanover
( lnd ) 66 Fmdlay 60
Defiance 99 Manchester
(lnd ) 79 W &amp; J (Pa ) 52
H1ram 43 John Carroll 77
Thiel (Pa ) 64 Cedamlle 104
Mount Vernon Nazarene 91
Malone 96 R10 Grande B9 and
The Me1gs matmen hosted - 98 105 155 and the heavy
Ohio Domm1can 71 Urbana
ALL
GAMES
i.Jlgan
Saturday and after we1ght diviSion
70
TEAM
W L P OP fa llmg behind early almost
Scott Hartinger and Floyd
Logan
12 1 865 699
Waverly
12 3 930 783 came back for a win before Ntbert of Metgs took the flfst
fa ihng 41 30 MeigS picked up two matches on forfetts But
Portsmouth 10 5 1014 896
Pt Pleasant
8 3 673 632
a lot of their pomts on forfeits then i.Jlgan s Cass1dy pmned
Wash nq ton CH
Me~gs Johnny Eblm m the
7 4 722 645 as Logan had no one com
112 diVISIOO
pellng
m
four
wetght
classes
Ravenswood
5 4 566 525
61-45 wtth Cowens leadmg the Gall
Three other Logan pms
po os
6 8 835 831
way w1th 14
Ironton
6 8 828 790
followed m successiOn At 119
The game began on an Athens
6 8 884 9 18
pounds Helber pmned Rtck
5 10 1015 1067
emotiOnal note wtth Boston s Wellston
Baker nght before Getger did
Jackson
3
11
726
878
John Havlicek a surpnse
I the same to Charley Stone of
Melg•
2 13 845 11 15 I
starter m place of Doug
Non SEOAL results
the Marauders m the 126
Coiims
PI Pleasanl 67 Oak Hoi! 54
pound class Then at 132
Boyd County 66 Portsmouth
The 37 year-old Havlicek
Herb
Noel found himself the
NHL Stand ngs
named In replace the mJu'!'ed 64 (ot)
By
Un
ted
Press
International
v1cl1m
of a pm by Rodney
Pete Marav1ch on the East Ch II cothe 56 Wash CH 48
Campbell Conference
Lenman
Patrtck Otvls on
squad got the game s f~rst
SEOAL VARSITY
Atl36 Metgs Gary Pnddy
W L T Pts
basket and fm1shed with 10 TEAM
W L P OP NY Island ers
32 1 8 72 always a tough grappler
29 12 10 68
Logan
10 o 653 504 Ph tadelph a
pomts
an a
20 20 12 52 Iound htmself on the wrong
Waver y
9 2 681 552 At
It was a great gesture
17 25 10 .44 end of a !mal 9-8 score m one
Ironton
6 4 642 550 NY Rangers
sa1d Havlicek who IS retirmg Athens
Smythe 0 VIS on
6 5 69.4 684
W L T Pts of the most mterestmg
at the end of the year I Gallopolos
5 6 667 650 Ch cago
21 17 12 54 matches of the afternoon
apprecm~ 11
Wet tston
5 6 753 750 Vancouver
14 23 13 41
11 27 12 34 i.Jlgan s Don Gr1ggs got that
Jackson
1 9 513 642 Co or ado
S
Lou
s
11
32 7
29 wm
Metgs
1 11 645 916
11 34 5 27
TOTALS
43 435248 5248 M nnesota
Spence of Logan then
Wales conference
Saturday s results
pmned
Dav1d R1ggs m the 145
Norr s D"' son
Athens 68 Wellston 65
WLTPts divtston before Van Willford
Gall tpol s 52 Waverly 50
Montreal
35 7 8 77
Ironton 78 Metgs 58
Los Ange les
22 18 10 53 got one of the forfeits m the
P ttsburgh
17 23 11
.45 155 class
Detro t
18 23 8 .44
SEOAL RESERVES
Robert
Then Metgs
9 33 11 29
TEAM
W L P OP Wash ngton
Adams Dtv son
Nakamoto one of the most
agamst Eastern On Saturday Ironton
8 2 421 388
W L T Pts
respected grapplers around
8 3 518 386 Boston
the 18th North Calha goes Waverly
33 12 7 73
Ga
lltpolis
7
A
442
415
took
a unammous dec1s1on
Buffa o
~9 10 13
71
aga mst Kyger Creek
Athens
7 4 547 471 Toronto
26 15 10 62 over Larry Ogg m the 167
On Wednesday Feb 22
Logan
6 A 401 379
Cl eve and
18 3 5 .41
class The !mal poml score
Saturdays Results
Southwestern Will go agamst Wellston
5 6 522 528
Buffa o 4 M nnesot&amp; 2
was 9 0 wtth Nakamoto
Jackson
1
9
281
A58
the wtnner of the Hannan
NY slanders 6 Wash 1
Meoqs
1
1
I
42Z
529
gettmg
near pins in every
TraCf Eastern game while on TOTliLS
Ph lade ph a 2 C eveland 2
43 43 3554 3554
Co orado 2 Atlanta 2
penod
Thursday mghl first seeded
Saturday s results
Boston 8 P tsburgh 1
The 175 pound class was
So uthern at 9 I agamst A Athens 59 Wet stan 38
Detro t 2 Toronto 2
mterestmg as Logan s Mark
NY Rangers 2 St Lou s 2
teams goes aga mst the Galllpolos 48 Waverly 36
t hlcago 5 vancouver
l ron1on 40 Me gs 32
Cullison gol two pomls on a
winner of the North Gall1a
Montreal 5 Los Angeles 5
Tonight s game
reversal at the buzzer to
Sunday
s
Resu
ts
Kyger contest
Jackson at Wel lston
Detro t 4 C e\leland J
share
a t1e w1th Me1gs Bob
The fmals wtli be played on
Tuesday s games
NY Rangers 6 Colorado 3
Seebg
Woltz pmned Me1gs
at
Galltpolts
Logan
Saturday Feb 25
Buffa o A Wash ngton 1
Ironton at Jackson
Toronto 3 Boston 3
Steve Kmzelat 185 and Dave
Monday s Game
Rather than JUSt dream of a new Pt Pleasant at Parkersburg
Dav1s look a forfeit m the
St Lou sa t Ph lad~ [ ph a
Washtngton CH at H llsboro
p OfeCI you hope to launch do
heavyweight diVISion
Tuesdays
Games
Waverly a t Athens

Cage
standings

Logan wrestlers
top Meigs 41-30

East whips West, 133-125
ATLANTA iUPl)- Randy
Sm1th was lhe shortest player
on the floor but he was jUSt
what tile East needed In
offset
the
Wests
overwhelming s1ze
advantage
Sm1th a super qwck guard
came off Ute bench In score Tl
pomls and provide lhe spark
as tile East trailmg 113-104
ran off 15 strrught pomts
mtdway m the fourth quarter
and went on In a 133-125
VIctory over the f&lt;Jvored West

R o Grande at Mt Vernon
Nazarene
Walsh at Urbana

Cumberland

Malone s Ptoneers pulled to
Wtlhln a half game of leagueleadmg Rto Grande College 10
the Mid Oh1o Conference
basketball
standtngs
followmg Saturday s 96 69
VICtory over (he Vlsllmg
Red men
The loss R1o s flrsl10 etghl
conference starts snapped
the Redmen s two year
league wmnmg streak at 13m
a ro" Malone was the last

10 Sunday s NBA All.,Star
game
The 6-3 Buffalo star h1t SIX
stra1ght baskets durmg the
East spurt and teamed w•th
Julius Erving for 21 of 23
pomls as the East roared
from a 108-100 deftcll to a 123115 lead
My JOb was to run fill the
mtddle on tile break and pass
the bail off and sometunes
take a couple of JUmpers
sa1d tile 29 year-old Smtth
who took home a new car as
the game s mllllt valuable
player 10 his second
aooeatance ln an AU-Star

couldn t seem to get 1t back
T~ey
sustamed
thmr
momentum
Smith htl II of 14 held goal
trys and scored 20 of his
pomts m the second half
Ervmg and Larry Kenon had
16 each while Cowens Doug
Collms and Bob McAdoo
contributed 14 for the East
Thompson and Westphal
Ute startmg guards had 22
and 20 pomts for the West
while Walton and Rtck Barry
had 15 each
The much smaller East
team outrebounded Ute West

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

: Pro
:
:Standings l

3-The Dally Sentmel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Monday Feb 6 1978

GAHS upsets
Waverly, 52-50

Ironton trips
Meigs, 78-58

By Greg Bailey
from the foul hne F1tz
The Metgs Marauders patnck standmg ~ dunked
played a strong second half the ball tw1ce and blocked
Saturday mght but 11 was ton three Me1gs shots to present
httle too late as the vtsttmg QUite a problem for the
Ironton Ttgers downed th~ smaller Marauders
locals for the second lime th1s
The hrst quarter was
season th1s tune 78-56 Me1gs promtsmg for the boys of
dropped to 2 13 on the season Coach Ron Logan as the
With three games to go
buzzer soundeJI wtlb M111gs
It was a typical Ironton tra1hng by just three 18-15
style of ball game wtlh the But Me1gs managed only n1ne
Ttgers hetgbt conlrolhng the p mts the second ~anto whtle
tempo of the contest
the T1gers were bUiidmg a 36The reboundmg strength of 24 halft101e lead Metgs was
Coach Buddy Bell s Tigers st1ii wtthm reach 54-40 at the
was the dommant factor on end of the third quarter but
the hardwood as the Tigers that s as close as they got
hauled 10 a big 50 rebounds
Me1gs had another cold
whtle Metgs managed Just 20 mght from the floor as MHS
The Ttgers center D1ck1e connected on 23 of 56 shots for
James was the b1g man as he a cold 39 percent and htt on
amassed a b1g 16 missed jUst 12 of 23 fou l tosses
shots and tossed m a whopKenny Young and gua rd
ping 32 points to take control Btlly Elkms led
lhe
of the boards Many of the reboundmg Wllh four each
Ttger rebounds were under atteslmg to the fact that the
the offenstve boards as the mstde men were bottled up
VISitors JUst seemed to t1p the Young had another good
ball until ll finally went 1n mghl after lately not bemg
Substitute Bobby Wtlhams able to fmd the range He
collected 12 mtssed shots tossed m a b1g 23 markers
whtle sub Robm Ftlzpatnck while Greg Becker netted
got 12 points and Joe Fletcher etght All but two Marauders
got!O The Ttgers weren tall broke Into the sconng
that hot from the fteld column
although they did hit the nets
Next Metgs game IS Fnday
30 times out of 65 tnes f01 a when rtval Gaihpohs comes
good 46 percent They were to town
very hot from the chanty
The Blue Devtls own an
stnpe as they got 16 of 25 unpresstve early season wm
shots to go through
over the Me1gs troops but the
James and Fttzpatnck Devils of Coach J1m Osborne
were the leaders all around , have been havmg troubles of
for the wmners James theIf own lately and th1s t1me
couldn t seem to miSS as he the tale mtght end dtf
scored his 32 on 12 of 22 held ferenlly
attempts and a perfect 6 for 6
MEIGS MARAUDERS (58)
Player
FG A FT A R B F TP
Fo il rod
310
0) 2 I 6
Becker
Stanley

.48

00

3

2

8

12

a 1e

2
4

5

Young

23

s

5
23

1 t

Kennedy

OJ

00

0

0

0

Elkms

25

22

.4

2

6

Andrews

01

00

0

0

0

Blake
Hawley

11

02

3

4

2

13

00

1

0

2

Coats

24

0 1

0

4

4

0' Brien

00

12

1

0

1

Snowden

00

12

0

I

I

TOTALS

2356 1223 20 24 58
IRONTON TIGERS 178)
23
00 0 0 4
00 3 2 2
1 2
48
2 2 6 2 10
25
00 0 3 4
12 22
8 8 18 4 32
13
23 1 1 4
5 13
2 5 9 3 12
00
00 0 I 0
00
22 0 2 2
37
2 5 12 2 8
02
00 I 0 0
30 65 18 25 50 20 78

Harvey
L nn
Fletcher

Hodges
James
Lutz

F tzpatrlck
Thomas
Erw n

WI IIams
Beckett
TOTALS

Score by quarters

Me gs Marauders
Ironton Ttg ers

15 91618 58
18 18 18 24- 78

Meigs Class A
drawings held

The pre tournament
drawmg for the Class A
SectiOnal Basketball tour
nament to be held at Metgs
Htgh School was held Sunday
afternoon at the htgh school
The SIX team tournament will
begm on Friday li'ebruary
17 wllh one game bemg
game
Smith picked up hiS fifth played per mghl begmmng
foul w1th seven mmu~s left m at 7 30
The first mghl s contest
the game and West Coach
Jack Ramsey repeatedly told matches Hannan Trace
h1s team to run plays (second seeded at 6 2)
des1gned to get him In fou l
For Tuesday Feb 1 19711
out but Sm•tlt dtdn ttake the
batt He sa1d East Coach Btiiy
Cunnmgham had g1ven hun
explicit mstructtons not In
foul
Bermce Bede Osol
Cunnmgham who wanted
his quickest team m the
game at the fmtsh dectded
not to pull Smtih when he
ptcked up h1s fifth foul He
was playmg so well I smd
what Ute heck Ill JUst let hun
Feb 7 1978
play sa1d Cunnmgham
The West led by 6-11 center Get nvolved n mo e entoyable
Bill Walton and guards Paul pursu ts th1s com ng year be
cause they wtll have greater
Westphal
and
Dav1d
s gn f cance than usual Not
Thompson dommated for only
wtll you perform and feel
three quarters and appeared be lle they wit p ave to be
to have the game m hand But doo ways to opportun ty as
the East started 1ts comeback well
w1tlt Waltnn on the bench and AQ!MRIUS (Jan 20-Feb 19)
Beg nn ng today make a con
cut the margm to 113-110 certed
effort for better elalton
before Ramsey put h1s b1g shtps wtth key peep e wtlo
Portland center back m
have been hamper ng your am
By then Ute momentum b11tous a ms It may take t me
but 1 pay off F nd out to
had swung In the East
Cunningham sa1d the East whom you re rom ant ca y
utted by sendmg for your copy
could have rolled over and o Astra Graph Leller Ma I 50
died when 1t fell behmd 54- cents for Bach and a long self
37 m tile first hall We got adoressed stamped envelope
great effort srud tbe rookie IO Astro-G aph P 0 Bo' 489
Philadelphia coach
and Radoo C ly Stat on N Y 10019
Be sure to spec tfy your btrth
they just hiUlg m there I S!IIO
thought 11 was a great All
PISCES (Feb 20-Mareh 20)
Star game
There s a strong poss b I ty
We seemed to lose a little you ve been shouldenng re
rhythm when we got the spo(1s b I t es lately that are
lead sa1d Ramsey When part ally the property of others
to If tl'lat someth no latrer
you do that m tile NEA 11 s See
fs arranged
We ARIES !March 21 April If)
always dangerous

ASTRO•GRAPH

~1(}0J[)J[]

W

l!JnwlilriliiiJ

somethmg pos t ve today
Beg n even f a p ece or two s
m ssmg

TAURUS IAptll 20-May 20)

Several developments are
afoot that could have a favor
able effect on you statu s They
could start you on paths you ve
never trod before

GEMINI (May 21 June 201 It
may dawn upon you today that
n many ways you ve been
ltmttmg your thmkm g thus res
tnct ng your potent al Put your
maJor league magtnatton to
work

CANCER (JUDe 21 July 22)
Look around today You may
d scover someth ng to serve as
a backup for your f nanc al
secunty However make no
nvestments wi,hout a full
lnvesUgalion
LEO iJIIIy 23-Aug 2%) An alii
ance of convenience m1ght be
worth cons der ng now The
arrangement won t be perfect
yet 11 Will not be w thout tiS
advantages

VIRGO (Aag %3-.'iepl ZZ) Vour
chances tor advancement
workwtse look very encourag
1ng Be prepared however to
sacnftce m your trek to the top

LWRA (Sept

23oOcU3)

A

new pleasurable pursuit could
start to capture your fancy as of

today Before getting

1n

loo

deep constder what it may
cost m time and money

SCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov ZZ)
Much fru s trahon can be
avoided tf you finish domestiC
prOJec:ls under way before tak
ing on new ones You could
upset the ent1re household

Dunbar at Ravenswood
Portsmouth at Hunhngton
H Qh

Wednesday s games
Waverly at Wellston
Logan at Nelsonv lie York
Frtday s games
Athens at Jackson
Galltpolts a t Meigs
Ironton at Wellston
Waverly at Logan
Wahama at Pt Pleasant
Mtamt Trace at Washtngfon

CH

Saturd ; s games
Galltpolts at Ravenswood
Wheelersburg at Portsmouth
Wash ngton C H at Mad son
Platns

SEOAL FROSH
TEAM
W L P
Alhens
6 1 361
G• ll polos
5 2 306
Wellston
5 2 259
Logan
4 3 337
Meigs
1 5 178
Jackson
0 8 330
TOTALS
21 21 1771

OP
276
274
275
297
259
390
1771

Saturdays result
Galltpolts 53 Jackson 52

Today • game

Galltpolts at Logan

SAGITTARIUS {Nov U.

Den1!1) If Inadequate know
edge hao been holdtng you
back It s t1me to do something

about It Take the academic
stepa needed to overcome this

obstacCe
CAPRICORN (Dee ZWaa l'l
It s h ghly possob e you may
run across somethmg today

that looks like a moneymaker
Think twoce befOfe brlngln~
friends or business associates

Into the deal

P ttsburgh at Colorado
Detro at Los Ange es
At lanta at Vancouver
NBA srand1ngs

Ph a
34
New York26
Boston
17
Buffalo
16
New Jersey
9
central o
W

L

Pet

GB

1A 708
25 510 9 1
30 362 16 ,
30 348 17
"2 116 26 ,
v Ston
L

Pet

lnur to Snt 1dny still 111
&amp; tl e 1stcrn Ot 1 I t:Llg &lt; s
prr season f n 1 It s II Ullcd
Int.:' (,(till AcHitm) s
1ext t pp m nt ho t 1 tusda'
lll~h\

GB

San Anton
31 19 620
Wshngtn
26 23 531 4 1
New Or ns
26 2.4 520 5
C evelnd
2A 2A 500 6
Atlanta
2A 27 471 7 1
Houston
18 31 367 12 ,
western conference
MtdW!St DIVIS on
W L
Pet GB
Denver
32 18 6.40
Ch cage
28 23 549 .4 ~
M w
26 27 .491 7 ~
Detro t
23 27 460 9
nd ana
19 30 388 12 2
Kanss Cty
17 34 333 15 /2
Pacific Dlvtsion
W L Pet GB
_.0 B 833
Portland
PMen x
34 16 680 7
Seattle
27 22 551 13 2
Go den St
25 26 490 16 ,
LOS Ange s
24 26 480 17
Saturday s Results
(No games scheduled)
Sunday s Result
All St~rs at Atlanta
East 133 West 125
Monday s Games
(No games schedu E!d)
Tuesdays Games
LOS AngeleS at Buffa 0
Portland at New York
New Orleans at C eveland
Boston at Indiana
New Jersey at San Anton o
Philadelphia at Chicago
wash noton at Golden St

CINCINNATI (UP!) World Hockey Assoclallon
Execullve Director Larry
Gordon suspended Cincmnall
Stmger goalie Michel Dwn
for two games and fined h1r0
$350 for pushmg a referee
durmg a game last Monday m
lndtanapoiiS Stinger offtCials
disclosed late Sunday
As a result of the
suspension Dlon will miss a
Wednesday mght game
against the Edmonton Oilers
and a Fnday mght contest
agamst the Wmmpeg Jets

WHA Standings
By United Press International
W L T Pts
New Eng and
30 18 4 64
Wnn peg
30 HI 2 62
Houston
25 21 J 53
Edmonton
26 24 1 SJ
Quebec
24 22 2 50
B rm Ingham
22 26 2 .46
Cine nnat
21 28 2 "'4
nd anapo is
16 31 4 36
SlturdiV s Results
Edmonton 4 Quebec 3
W nnlpeg 7 c nc nnat s
B rm ngham 5 lndp s 2
Houston s New Eno and .4
Su"dly s Results
c nci at New Eng ppd
lndpls 6 Birm ngham 1
W nn ,peg 4 Edmonton 3
Mondays Gemes
(Wo games scheduled)
TUeldly s G•me
8 rm ngham at Quebec

ll{' ~ lUI C Ill

tic

the

f1 11 11

I rn
iJ
1'2 3
UVCI all l!ld ~ 2 liiiCCIJ.,:UC phn
(ll{~ ) n " tr ul tl r &lt; tu cft ns

( 11 h C'
llaw htt s ll ~ll s \\ cu
1

~ames

\\ tl h

unlv tlu c

tontests l eft
n tht tl
1977 78 sc hcdu l&lt;
Still
In
mt urniuJ.{
UP IN AIR - Nme of 10 piayet s on the floor are
bunched log ether m this unsusual action shot bel ween
Southern and Wahama Saturday mghl rhe bail must be
up n the mr somewhere J eft ll 1 1ght c&amp;;~ gei s !denttflablt

ft lit "ing "hnt C

are Jtm 0 B11en Kelvm Honaker Gt e~

Rl~:-lsmg 1 t 1
Brm gcr Steve Bakel and B.1ck Barmtz &amp;&gt;uti Ct n c dg~cl

tH

h lim

ONbornc ulllt d tht dt uth
C !.Utii[UIIIS hasko lhaii
F rhtu,
night
tach
nu mbt r o£ tht GAllS h 11111

\Val ma 82-80 m m ertune

u bhu k 11iu t l f t I th
(lurked umh r the lr bt Its )

" 1rt

Cubs take

Southern edges
Wahama 82-80
BY GARY CLARK
Coach Carl Wolfe s Southern
Tornadoes held off a spirited
fourth quarter rally by the
vtsttmg Wahama Whtte
Falcons Saturday mght before
eventually claiming an 82-80
overt1me wm and avenging an
earherseason setback dealt to
the Tornadoes by the White
Falcons
JuniOr guard Todd Rawlings
sparked the fina I period
comeback staged by the bend
area team which saw them
erase a 13 poml Southern lead
and force the contest into
overtime

ference gomg mto the final
period
Southern upped their lead to
14 pomts at 64-52 but Wahama
began to make a strong
comeback bid behind some hot
shooting by Rawhngs and
Greg Blesstng and the
rebounding of semor forward
Kelvm Honaker
The While Falcons pulled lo
wtii!IO two as the !mal mmute
t1cked off the clock Wttll just
40 seconds
remaining
Wahama s Rtck Barmtz
knotted the score at 76 76
Southern elected to go for the
last shot but the attempt by
T1m Bnnager wouldn l fall
sending the game mlo 01 er
time
Richard Teaford put
Southern back on top 1n the
extra penod but Bob Barmtz
layup !ted It e score once
again John Sayre converted
two free throws and Perry Htll
added another to pijl the
Tornadoes up b~ three at 81 78
as tune was runnmg out Phil
Hobbs fifteen footed brought
Wahama back to w1thm one a
81-811 w1th just s1x seconds left
Brianager was fouled as the
Falcons tried desperately to
regam possesston of the ball
and made one of two char~ty
tosses to make 11 82 60
Wahama s last
second
desperation shot fell short and
Southern claimed the VIctory
Team statistics show
Southern httlmg on 27 of 59
percent from the floor for 15
percent and 28 of 41al the free

Rawlings came off the
bench in the second stanza and
pwnped m 16 pomts for the
game ten of which came m
the !mal etghl mmutes ol play
The victory upped the
Tornadoes season record to 1().
3 while Wahama fell to 4-6
Southern also won the reserve
tilt by a 44-40 score to snap a
seven game L1ttle Falcon
wmnmg streak The Baby
Toranodes are now lll-3 while
the Falcon jumor varsity
sports a 7 2 slate
Southern opened up a lli-15
ftrst period advantage behmd
the scormg and rebounding
strength of tllelf versatile
forward Kelly Winebrenner
Wahama unlike games m
the past where they started off
slowly managed to stay close
lttroughout the eight mmute
span but began to falter at the
begnnmg of the second
quarter when reaerve guard
Dwight Hill began to hit from
long range to give Southern a
3&amp;25 halftime bulge
Wmebrenner kept the
Tornadoes out m front m the
third stanza with 10 of his
teams 20 third quarter pomts
Wahama got a well balanced
In an SEOAL makeup
etght mmutes couldn t gam game pial ed at Athen s
any on the Metgs Counttans as Saturday mght the Bulldogs
1t was still ~n 11 pomt dif had to battle from bch nrl to
shp past the vastly Improved
Wellston Golden Rockets 68
65

rratlmg the Rockets by as
much as s1x pomts n the
second pertod the host Bull
dogs deadlocked the score at
44 44 m the third period and
then surged mto the lead for
good at 50 44
Athens led from two to
Like agood neighbor
six
poinls unlll the Rockets
Slate Farm IS there
knotted the score at 60-60
S a ! am l ie I'ISij i i\C t om~a n
with Z 37 remainmg in the
~ OOITl!I&gt;QIOO
D
contest
St

"Call me for
life insurance!'

The better you eat,
the better you are.

en

WI

149 S Thord
Middleport

Eating the nghl foods 1n the r ght amounts IS JUSt as
Important to a good lookmg t gure as exerctse
Anc; good nulnt on also prepares you tor later on
especially 11 you become pregnant That s when your
body must cope w1th 1ts own growth needs as well
as the needs of lhe baby
That s why the Department of Health EducatiOn
and Welfare has prepared the tree booklet Food Is
More Than Just Somethmg to Eat For your free
copy wnte NutntiOn Pueblo Colorado 81009

!)

I

s 111 tied

992 7155

How to eat
your wa to your
best ure.

b\

st anchn~-;s

l 10p

M1ke Sw1ger

By Unlted Press lnternat anal

W

11eck s C'l•ss AA poll c nlct ed I he makeup conics!
\\ tlh i.1 ~p II khng i 2 2 sc lsOtl I ec01 d and &lt;1 lj I
conlet ence ma1 k

grim

Wtth

Rawhngs 16 lead ng the way
followed by Blessmg and Bob
Barnitz With 13 each Kelvin
Honaker w1th 12 and R1ck
Buzzard
dropped In 10
markers
Wmebrenner also led In
mdividual rebounds with II
while Blessmg grabbed 10 for
Wahama
VVi-I.Mio-I.N

p. {801 - Raw ngs
B l ess ng
4 5 13
Barr lz 53 13 Honake 4 4
12 Buzzard 4 2 10 Hobbs 2 0
4 Zuspan 0 0 0 R Barn tz 4

s o 16

412 TOTALS 31 18 80
(821
SOUTHERN
W nebrenne r 8 7 23 Br nager
6 5 17 Teaford 4 7 5 H II 6

0 12 Sayre 2 3 7 I

H I 0 55

Baker 10 2 0 Br en 01
F ndlay 0 0 0 TOTALS 2128
82
-

Score by quarters
Wa hama
15 10 20 31 4- 80
Soulhern
16 20 20 20 6- 82
Reserve score - Southe n
4A Waham~ 40

1111!~-~----P""''-~~---•••••

mplete upntr &amp; lower
t~

Dent1111es

A1lhu1 Ct10nko Gary
Bentley and Kurt Halter all
converted l wo free throws
each m the f nal hectic '""
mmutes to g11 e Athens a 68-60
lead w1tl 30 sec nd•
remammg
1he hut runn ng Rockets
m maged to htt rwe more
pmnts IS the game faded
down to no lime left
The sco re " as lied at 1919
aft er one quarter before
Wellston took a 35 32 halftime
lead Athens entered the
fourth perwd atop a 54 46 lead
and went on to ra1se the1r
league mark to 6 5 and 6-8 m
all games
Wellston ts now 5 10 overall
and •• 5~ m league play
Arthur Chonko and Gary
Bentley each garnered 16
points to pace the Athens
"in while John Royster
drilled 16 for Wellston "lth

of

tluar

n..:nln"t tht!
Wrllston t.oldt u Hoc kt ts
l'he. Blue De\ 1ls

c. a H

ba ck t ltfr og 11 JSI 1lglly
l uteri Wa vc1l; Hcsult His
then stxth \ tctul y of llu ~ 1 1r

•
zn
race
i I e Me1gs Reset vcs feli I
2 13 S otu1 da) by II opp111~
40 32 deCISil l r the
lo 1101 11/lC I k tte1 S

rcmhuh r

(H' rformiiiH e

over first

throw stripe for 66 percent
The I ornadoes clatmed 34
rebounds and committed 22
bobbles
Wahama shot 43 percent
from the floor (31 for 72) and
76 percent (16 of 23 ) from the
charity hne The bend area
team pulled down 43 rebounds
and turned the ball over 20
tunes
IndiVIdually Southern
placed four men m double
ftgures
w1th
Kelly
Wtnebrenners 23 the games
htgh Brinager added 17
Teaford 15 and Dwtght Hill
notched 12 In hilling SIX of
s even attempts
Wahama had fiv e men
scormg m twm flgures

or blnrk urm bmuts ns u

V Slf

g

tg tlll St ttgt t hlSSCS

uppcl ts
t

GAllS

CfllfCI(IUC 1CC£11

Dr A J

s.. ehll

~: ~ ~ S~~bough

Ray Gilliland and J eff
Monlgomero) each uddlng
14
Athens hit on 25 of 65 fteld
guals and 18 of 25 free throws
whtleWellston canned 29 f60
fielders and seven of 12 ol the
chanty str1pe End tea m
~rabbed 39 rebounds
11te b x score
WELLSTON
1651
Roy s er eo 16 Marl n J o 6
G It land 54 14 Swonger 2 0
4 Norman 1 2 4 W II ams 3
17
M ontgomery 7 0 14
TOTALS 29 1 65
ATHENS (681 - Ben Iley 6
4 6 Topp ng 3 6 2 Halter 2
2 6 Mathews 5 3 13 Sm oth 2
I 5 Chonko I 2 16 TOTALS
2S 18 68
Score by quarters
We lston
19 16 13 17- 65

v1t1ory

J 1mmy Harris two ch trlty

tosses wtlh 2 17 left ~ave
GAHS a 49 ..., odvunta ge
Mark F telder made one of
two fr ee throws at the 1 11
mark Davena popped 111 a
ions JUmper (47 secunds) I
cui Calha ' lea d to three 49
46
After J1m Dutcher miSsed
the front end of a one a net ne

A public aeno ce of the U S Department of Health Education and
wellare The G oce y Manufacturers of America th s newspape
andTheAdve I sing Council
\

I

Sl! C U I

It \\ II~ 51 41

l,s. ll ft

Dutthcr u~tm m1s.std tltt
fruJll rnd f
nr 11111"" n1
w1th 18 sc~u nd ~ lcrt D t\CIUt
~ ln t111&gt;-11 wtt h t neSt tO! Is
ldt W 11\ WU1:i Intel th nnll)
f t ltd "tlh f1v1 sctund ~
l\;l

lllllllll~

Aft&lt; r IIISSIIlg Ins rn sl stu!
W II ISS! red lin ( AilS wh
b~ sphltmg II e l nis o 1 I I
nt xt 1tltn pt

I he ( JJ I!IUI &gt; ill l II J
An ct t cit bblc d wn l lll t
til Ill Je st ed f I
II g I
c 1l1 g
l u ~up
Wall puccd tht Gnlllnu"
nthu k "'ith 23

p 1iuts

llurris uddt d 15 I he luth r
"u~ &lt; r c dlhd with flv
assists I unhum had thn 1
und Murk Smith ont usslsl

(,AilS

phkul ofl 21
b ttuUIH St \If II I IU h IJy
Urown nud I nnhum Wull
rt

h\ 1.! rs

PREVENTION
IS THE
BEST POLICY
As
an
ndependent
Insurance i:lgency
our
primary function s lo
prov ide pol c es wh ch
afford 1 nanclal protection
n case of loss

Prevention saves life 1mb
and property
and helps
confroll nsurance costs and

Al~:~!rve sco~: 13A?;e~!-;s

we lsi on 38

When losses do occur our

po l~y holders can count on
protec1 on and servtce n
time of need But we still
say - prevent on Is the

best policy

SAYRE
HARDWARE

DALE C.

8822525
126 MAIN

NER

W.VA.

•

\\ llh lJ

But we a lso have a v tal
nterest In loss protection
as should our cl ents We
encour.!tge care
c.!tu tion
and safety
preventive
measures wh ch can keep
tha t car ace dent from
happen ng that building
fire from starting that
home burglary from being
committed

NEW HAVEN,

•

\'1111 Ulg 1-i HI

tntcns t) It 1 ngl I I II c 12
n ut c baltlt fh c W I gc1s
1"1 u ly f "' 1unos 2o n 11
G on I 10 8
I err)
W oil s sl t
j I per 2 24 !ell I I I l fu "I
Pf'r I) ltcd 1C ol tO oil Wills
!nut; JUmpcl tl ll c buzzct put
II c Gii lhans thc.nd f01 keeps
Wall Jeff Luuhat 1 Jut n )

FREE REPLACEMENT
GUARANTEE I

2C

I (.1\IIS
lUriiiJ\(\1
Jdf
l ...u ham ~rullbrd tl c 1 t buun I
11111 Ill l•n) Wnil up th•
IHfld!l W HillliCC I run com !
ll s&lt; 1t.: n
hi) up
li nt
p1 Hd I
~ II c ..:nmc s

hnd sht C.AIIS hnd 12 turn

'~

t tlhpuhs pin) c I w th 141 t' tl

m only one or two day s
One or I'AO day ruil
denture servtce
pa t als &amp; (] nes

1\1111 37 sNII!dS left f ilu\\111)

!11" lllue Devti&lt; hi t Ill f I"
was t:~ltu st 1 1 lent ca l
f1 t Ill tJ C ficJtl f01 n4 IJCI tl tl
prelud e to the fulio w11 g
Allin f ulll1 w GA ll S WIJ" I I
va t 81ty contest as t1 c Metgs
r 18 ful 77 pl t tnt
cre" uf ( oa cl Br c• \Vtls 1
J c Duvc 1 s&lt; l l!d 11
" e1c cluse n llic v1&gt;1l rs
p 11ts tt lc ul Wau li y
heels ot the f tsl qua1tc1
ttl t. t.:k B1 k I horw s Hdli d
bu1zer 6 4 but vet c fall g
]() w IVe l il I l 21 d J I fldd
by the way"de by lmlft 11 c
J!.t II tttempts r \fJ J:&gt;C I (tIt
24 16
li e il~el s I sl l at tht f II
I he gan e w 1s st II wtthu o H81T ls a 1d Jeff B1 wn l);l l'Cd ill e lull ~ nl) eight If I I
retch sla11tng the sec 1 d II c Lllue Devtis second P&lt; 1 od Utl CI !)I S f I 47 IJCI I.;t.; I
h olf but Me~gs " as ve1y col t!
W VCIiy h Jd 24 I Cb II ds SI X
Itt ck I S (; \It I Acl hm )
Cc:tch by I elder Dt vcrm 1 I
f1 m the flf 1 r 1ml sc c I JUst
utsc red the ll gCI s It l t
(, rd II WIIS l u i nl y r v
sx P lnts u th ol '" Jl to sltp take 1 28 II I ift 1 e Hi
tUnHV(I Il
v 1ntagc GAllS held 11 11
back 32 22
1
i uesday CoAilS will ho I
Meigs llrtlt i'l rls I &lt;k po ml spread 28 17 w1lh I 3 1
the w;hl s sconng hon 1 s s
cuutmmg 1 the fu st I alf
i ea~ue le tdm ~ lA ~ 1 1 IZ I
h o qUick go 1ls by Wall and 10-111 In o 7 Ill 1 o
he lipped the nets f ' 19
potnt s No other M tru der htt aftc Waverly s J el Gmdun Ct I test It WII\ be P II Cl !
double ftgurcs as lhc tc un
pened second h 1lf scoring N1ghl
went 1 fo 1 10ft m 1he foul! ne ga 1c Gaiha Academy a 32 21
Three Blue Dcv1l scm s
and sank JJ of 38 shots from lead with G In showmg on the wi ll be playlf g thetr finn!
the field for !4 percent
hOI tc gumc Tuesday I hey
cloc k
Ironton now m f ost place
During the next I 27 are Jeff BIUWII I Ci l Y W II
ail alone 1 Hi a balanced W verly made 1 brtlhunt 11r d Brnd Abels !'he lnllet
SC?ormg attack wtth Sm.! tLI c meba ck behind J c Daveu t (rf.l iJiiJ f$ top I Ch Jil l dt.:
geClmg the most p mts w1th and Cord 1 t 1 utscormg the nusstd Fr1d1y nul S iu r
eleven I hrce other piaye1 s home club 14 4 I hat cut dHy s games Mtcz suHcru g
) ad etghl The v clcl s lull f (,aiha s !earl to nc II 15
SJH II l:l d Unklc. Ill fi11I Js
13 cha11ly l sses and canned Wall hit (WOfree throws "1th J1JUrsduy ntght
17 of 39 sh&lt; t s for 41 pc cent
Fdlow111g lu csLIHy s fu t!
1 o t me showmg 1 the dock
c~alllpd! S
t:U1C S
lu
home game the lllue ll v1l
t g ve G fillS a 10 35 lead
Mmr1~0n Gym on Fr It~~
Bo stet s Cl ub wtil contlu ct a
gomg mto the fmul ptH u d
treat f r vms t) pli.Jyc1 s
I
Unlike F rlduy wh en
Box score
thrtr
parents
m
the
GAl
lS
GAHS
f ollopsecl
1.111d
MEIGS (321 - Blaellnar 0
00 Ohio ger 10 2 Fau k 10
lJUdltUIIUIII
Welb.:tnn controlled the
2
D odson 8 3 9
Cl f f
tempo
of the game the
Kennedy o 2 2 Yeauger 1 0
Blue Devils fon ed Waverly
2 Thomas 2 5 0 Br en 0 0
to come after the bull
o TOTALS 136 32
IRONTON (40) - Soead 4
during the final eight
!'he 1 aJ Mahul outside
3 11
G e cha ul
00 0
minutes of play GAllS took
Agra lndiH wus begun ln
w 11 am s 1 1 3 Gordon 4 0 8
only five shots lrom the
Lew s 3 2 8 Fa r ch ld
0 2
lfo!O by Mog ul Emperor Sh h
T Thomas 4 0 8 TOTALS 17
field 1hilling three 1 in the
Jchan 1n mem 1 y of ht s
6 40
last stanza
favnntc
wife
Mur.:~ tz
Score by quar ers
Wavet
I}
began
p1cssn
g
111
mahai
It
was
cumplclcd
In
Me gs
4 12 6 10 ~ 32
1618
Ir onton
8 16 B 8---rA O an effort to ve1take the Blue
Devils out fouled 1n the
process GAHS s mk c1ght of
12 cha11ty tosses 11 clinch the
It

Athens rally trips
Wellston five 68-65

M nneso a al NY Islanders

Eastern Conference
Atlantic D v son

c;&lt;~lhpohs sho\Oomg " com plete revet sal or
form follo11 tn~ Fndav s s1aggermg 22 pomt loss lo
Wellston bounced b 1ck Saturday mghl lo JOlt
po\Ooelful W111 rll 'i2 50 on !he (rAllS h,udwood
W 1vct lv 1a nkcd 12th m the state 111 last

992 2143
102 W Matn

Pomeroy

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Monday, Feb. 6, 1978

Feb. ti, 1978 ·

ru~;i;;·:&gt;:&lt;H;i;~::::::;~;:;&lt;:;:;:~,,~,,.-,

l US. • •

it

A QUESTION OF CHIU&gt; SUPPORT
BY HELEN BOTIEL
DEAR HELEN :
I sat in superior court today and couldn 't believe what 1
heard.

My husband has two children by his fonner wife. She has occasional part-1~ jobs, though she's able-bodied. She too~ us
to court to get more child support. MaMie barely makes
enough to get by on (we have a baby, 6 months old). We're also
paying on old bills his ex-wife ran up, and $900 a month doesn't
stretch.
Not being able to afford a lawyer, we thought the judicial
system would be fair. We even pointed out discrepancies in the
ex's financial statement, and showed how eVery month we
were going more in debt.
But we ended up having to pay $70 more per month to her,
plus her lawyer's fees (when we couldn't retain one
ourselves ). The judge only looked at MaMie's paycheck, not
his bills.
So "she" can sit home and be supported, we may have to
give up our house. Is this fair?
By the way, this same judge granted five women divorces in
five minutes without their husbands even being represented.
I've lost my faith in the legal system. - T. J .
·
DEART.:
The great 20th-century lament : " Child support is killing
us !"
Unless you can make a successful appeal (and don't count on
it ), there's only one way to go, T. J . - find a job until financial
troublesease a bit. - H.
DEAR HELEN:
As an anthropologist, I must strongly
disagree with "Genealogist," whom you quote as say ing , "The
nature of genealogy is blood lineage solely... adopted
children ... have no place on the family chart."
This is just not true . A geneticist would diagram what is
transmitted by physical inheritance, but genealogists are studying family trees - cultural inheritances or extra-genetic
traits.
Adopted children function as blood · relatives, legitimate
heirs who carry on the lines. I do agree they should be identified as adopted because it makes the whole chart more interesting and easier to understand, but, by all.means, they
should be included. - (Professor ) R.E .S., Southwest Missouri
State Univer~ity
DEAR HELEN:
A rebutta l to "Genealogist:' : Helen's
answer to you, " This kind of purity would blot out one whole
· branch of the family" is an exl'eUent one. For example:
My brother, who joined the Mormon church in his ad ulthood,
learned when he did his genealogy work-up , that in the )BOOs,

some of his ancestors were tr~veling west via wagon and came
upon the remains of an Indian attack . They took the two young
survivors as their own children though no forma l adoption is
recorded ,

My brother and I, plus several hundred other relatives
branch from these two survivors. If "ihe nature of genealogy
LS blood hneage solely," then we are all in trouble, including
~&gt;Ge:ne~logist." Even my married name will be carried on by
our two adopted children.- PAT-POURRI

...
Yalanda King
ENGAGED - Mr . and Mrs . Ross 0 . King, New
Haven, announce the engagement and approaching
marriage of their daughter, Yalanda Louise, to Steven
Simms Holsclaw, son of Mrs. Joan S. Holsclaw and the
late John F. Holsclaw , Charleston, W. Va .
Miss King is a graduate of Wahama High &amp;uol and
Parkersburg Community College. She is employed as a
staff nurse at St. Joseph's Hospital.
Mr . Holsclaw is a graduate of Ohio State University
and is employed as an exploration geologist with the
Pennzoil Company in Parkersburg.
--'l!:edding plans are incomplete .

Twins christened
Paul Naaman and Jessica Pomeroy, were christened
Georgette Chapman, twin son Sunday morning at Grace
and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Episcopal Church , Pomeroy.
Paul Chapman, High St.,
The Rev . AI McKenzie
.. . »c:O$' performed the christening
rites at the Sunday church
service. Godparents for the
twins born on Dec. 8 are their
sister and ·brother, Jennifer

Social
Calendar

MONDAY'
SALEM CENTEh PTA
Monday at 7:30 , p.m .
Devotions by Anna Elizabeth
Turner. The program "The
Case of the Missing
H o m ewo rk ' ~
will
be
presented by the sixth grade.
. TUESDAY '
POMEROY CHAMBER
Tuesday at noon at the Meigs
Inn. Shirley Lewis, Welcome
Wagon field manager, will be
speaker.

Sandra Hensley
TO WED - George Hensley , Jr. of Reedsville, and
Mrs. Dolores King, Belpre, are announcing the
engagement of their daughter, Sandra Kay Hensley, to
David Mills, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mills, Pomeroy ,
The hrid.,..,lect was a mid-term graduate of Eastern High
&amp;hool. Her fiance isa 1977 graduate of Eastern. Wedding
pl~ns are incomplete .

ou'll .be happier
Wlllt

TEXAco·
HEATING OIL

SUTTON TOWNSHIP
Trustees regular meeting, 6
p.m. Tuesday at Syracuse
Municipal Building ·
SOUTHERN JI}NJOf\ High
Athletic Boo&gt;ters, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday . at junior high
building; plans for banquet to
be made; all parents asked to
attend .
XI GAMMA MU Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sororily, 1:30
Tuesday night a.t the Columbia Gas Cu. office . Annie
Chapman and Marilyn
Anderson to have the cultural
report .· Becky Anderson and
Karen Goins to be hostesses.
There will be a recipe auc- ·
tion .
POMEROY CHAPTER i'86,
O.E.S., 7: j5 Tuesday night at
the
Pomeroy Masonic
Temple.
WEONESDAY
POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT Lions Club,
Wed nesday noon, at tbe
Meigs Inn . All lions urged to
attend.
FREE· CERVJC~L cancer
clinic at Heath United
Methodist Church Wednesday afternoon; for appointment ca ll 992-7531,
daytime; evenings, 992-5632.
THURSDAY
POMEROY CHAPTER
Women's Aglow Fellowship, 7
p.m. Thursday at Meigs Inn
with Gisela Stevens, world
traveler ,
as
speak er.

Reservations for dinner

-

Chief

LOCATED IN TltE MEIGS PLAZA

Karen Blaker Ph.D.
Protect yourself

meeting
949-2325
County;
773-5768,

Caroline

an'd

Mit ~hell

Delmar Chapman, and
Maxine and Jim Oliver,
Gallipolis.
Paul Naaman was named
for his father and his greatgreat- grandfather, Naaman
Rufu~ Canaday, and Jessica'
Georgette was named for her
grandmother, Mrs. Georgette
Eloise Chapman Rafferty .
Family'members attending
the christen ing were besides
Mr. a n~ Mrs. Chapman ,
Jennifer, Mitchell, and Anna ,
were Mrs. Delmar Canaday,
maternal grandmother, and
Miss Marie Bichman, greataunt.
A reception was held
following the christening
ceremony.

Dinner
dance
planned
PT. PLEASANf are being aMounced
special meeting of
mittees to make

Vikings, .Highlanders
7AC· - ·
BASKETBALL Wildca ts ST
,
wznners

VAUGHAN~$

CHOICES
By Hclt&gt;n Bottel

@

LOCUST &amp; PEARL STREETS
•
ON THE CORNER

separate and both want the
;tereo, they wiU agree on a
fair price and then flip a coin,
with the winner keeping the
stereo after paying the loser
the agreed upon price.
3) If on separation neither
person wants the stereo, it
.shall be sold to the highest
bidder and the money equally
divided.
Any such contrat1 should
be dated and signed by both
·
parties.
In your case, a contract
seems especially important.
Formalizing a contract may
stimulate you to evaluate
your relationship.
·

By Karen Blaker, Ph.D.
DEAR DR. BLAKER - I
heard that a court can rule on
the division of property if a
couple living together decides
to break up. That concerns
me. Although my boyfriend
and I have been living happily together for more than two
years, he has not held a
steady job. I have paid for the
apartment and furnishings.
I had assumed that the
belongings purchased with
my earnings would be mine if
we split up. What can I do to
make certain of that?
DEAR READER - Even if
You may discover that you
you and your boyfriend agree feel uncomfortable supplying
that the furnishings belong to the necessities while he enyou, you might want to set joys a free ride. If so, why not
forth the understanding . ask him to pull his share? Or
clearly in a written contract. do you feel - and fear - he
Last year the California would leave if you made any
Supreme Court ruled that demands? Unless this is only
written contracts between un- a temporary state of affairs,
married people living doing nothing will eventually
together are legal and bin- make you resent his
ding .
dependency even more. And
The written agreement then you definitely will need a
need not be complicated nor euntract to get out with what
notarized. You might use you have ppt in.
these contracts printed
More detailed information
recently in Ms. magazine on living-together contracts
(November,l977) as a model. can be found in "Sex, Living
SAMPLE CONTRACT
Together and the · Law ,"
Cerena Takahashi and Sam Massey and Warner, Nolo
Armistead agree as follows :
Press, P.O. Box 044, O&lt;:cidenI J That Cerena is a dentist lal, Calif: 95465. The price is
and Sam an accountant and $4.95.
each wishes to be responsible
Write to Dr. Blaker in care
for her or his own support, of this newspaper, P.O. Box
and that each will contribute 489, Radio City Station, New
equally to the monthly ex- York, N.Y. 10019. Volume of
penses fur running the mail prohibits persona l
household.
replies, but questions of
2) That Gerena and Sam general interest will be
will share their love and discussed in future columns.
energy, but they agree that
the income of each and any
MEETING CANCELLED
accumulations of property
A meeting of the Midtraceable to that income
dleport
.Garden
Club
belong absolutely to the perscheduled for Monday night
son who earns the money. has been cancelled.
Any joint purchases will be
covered by a specific
Kingsbury
separate written agreement.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Carl
3) That Cerena and Sam visited her father , Mr. Clyde
will maintain separate check- Harrison at Middleport , also
ing and credit accounts and with Mrs. Sandy Carl and
that neither is in any way children ,l,lt Snowvill.::.
responsible for the debts of
Mr. Gary King, pastor of
the other.
the Carleton church and
4) That in the event of Ralph Carl visited Mrs.
separation neither party .o Myrtle White who is a Patient
• this contract will have any at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
claim against the · other for
Mrs. Hazel Arnold spent
money or property unless the weekend with her
there is a subsequent agree· daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
ment in writing.
Patrick Williams and family
JOINT PURCHASE
at McArthur.
·
CONTRACT
Cerena Takahashi and Sam
Armistead agree as follows:.
A thought for the day:.
I ) 'fhat they will joinUy ae- American historian Henry
quire and own a ·stereo Brooks Adsms said, "All
system valued at$900.
experience is an arch, to

College Boskefboll Rewll$
By United Pren tntern~tionAI
EU1
Albrght 70. M hlnbg 67
Albny St 78 , S. Conn, SS

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

We

Glad~

8 Sn St . 9J , R I Coli 78
Crng ie Mlln 69, All g hn y 67
Ch e yney 73, Sh ippns bg 55
Clar io n 87, Cal. Fta . 66

Oa r! mou tn 72 , Bro wn 63

STORE HOURS

Lv ngstn 97, M E ver s 85

FIIIIIIILIU

MON. lHRU SAT•.9 AM TO 9 PM
SUNDAY 9 AM 10 9 PM

SALE DATES FEBRUARY 6-11 I 1978
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

Hvrfrd 78. Swarthmo re 65
Hol y Cr ss 100, Ht stra 88

Howard 94, N.C. Cen t 78

FRYING.
PARTS

4· .

BAITER DIP

$.

OCEAN

FISH ..............~~:. 89e PERCH ..........~~: ... l
ELECTRONIC
VIDEO
GUARD
. TUNING
SYSTEM

4 79

No mm11 ng parts
to wear out
and .no contact
poin ts to c orrode
iri the tuner s.

~742W

Simul ated grained A"meri ca·n
Walnut cabinet . Automatic
F1ne-tu ning Control ..llluminated
channel numbers. Earphone .
VHF and UHF antennas .
• New 100QChromacolor
Picture Tube with
In-Line Electron (iun
• 100"/o Solid-State
Chassis
• Picture Control

·BUTTON RADISHES
FOR

SPECIAL

3 LB. BAG

'399

49c

YELLOW
ONIONS

• PowE(r Sentry Voltage
Regulating System
• one-~nob v.HF and UHF
Channel Selection
• Chromatic One-buuon
Tuning

~ ~~lfA' I The quafity goes in before the n~me.gOes on'
23" COLOR TV CONSOLE FOR
AS LOW AS '5990o

FAMILY FRIES .

MRS. FILBERTS

DEL MONTE

or

Halves

•

Saturday
Arcadia· 88 Carey 64
Asht Sr 87 Madlson 54
Athens 69 Wellston 65

Waynsbg 75, Grove Cty 50
Widnr 66, J . Hopkin s 43
WPI 84, Colby 69
South
Appy St. 75 , W .Car . 68
Catawba 82, E lan 71
Clemson 85 , Stetson 65
Cstl Car . 93, US C Akn 92
Clmbs Coli 74, Al.lg st a o9
Conc ord 72 , Cinch Vat n
Ers kine 55, Presby 52
Frmnl 5 1. 54 , Bluefld 45
F . Marion 72. Chrlstn 70 _
Furman 68 , N .C. St . 67
Ga St . 6'1 , South Ala . 60
Geotwn 87, Pikevl 73
Kent uck)l 88, Ftoridil 61
1&lt;)1 . St. 62, Cent St . 51
Lane 95 , Mite s 79
Lenr' ·RI'Iyn e 84, Hi Pt. 70
Lvngsln 88 . Jacksnvl 83
Lovisv l 83. Cinci 76
LSU 89. Georgia 68

103 N.• 2ND AVE.

~2~J~T~h~a~t~s~ho~u~l~d~t~he~y~~bu~i~ld~up~on~·~"------~----~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Tenn . 86, Mississippi 67

Tenn . St . 85, M . Brown 69
UNC -Ashvl 100 Lmestn e 86 ,
Vandv 91 . Auburn 713
Wak e Forest74 , va . 6'1 .
Wash&amp;Lee' 88. Maryvl 78
W. Ky . 106, Morehed 69
W.Va Wsl yn 08, Shphrd 67
W.Va . Tech 139, Dv s&amp;Eikn s 88

81

Zanesville

Coldwater 69 Warakoneta 64
Col De Sales 70 Co Beechcroft
50
Conneaut 61 Geneva 54 (of)
Canton SQu1h 62 Jackson 53
Cloverleaf .. 78 N Royalton :45
Cuyahoga Falls 73 Garf ield 60
Cambr idge 75 Marietta 73

loll

45

Mid' town Madison 100 Preb le
Shawnee fl6
Minerva 61 Lake 59 ( of)
Morgan 65 Crooksville 55
North Can ton 63 LOuisville 62
Northwestern 66 Hillsdale 48
N Central 80 Evergreen 77
Napoleon 55 Wauseon 52
New Bremen 67 Parkway 45
New Lebanon Dixie 86 Eaton

53
55

Orrville 94 Fa ir less 55
Ottoville 62 Convoy Crestview

39

Ottawa -Glandorf 65 Fostoria

57

.

Patrick Henry 6.4 Oak Harbor

41
Ports Valley 63 Mlntord 54

Ports Notre Dame 57 Ports E

47

.

Pyma lunl ng 46 Badger 42
Reynoldsburg 49 "' Groveport 6
Rock Hill 55 Buffalo (W Va)

50

Dar Wright 64 Day Stivers-

Russia 76 Jackson Cen ter 74
St Henry 89 Fra nklln Monroe

Po 57
Delphos St John's

76 Elida
Edon 55 Edgerton 54

63

East· Clinton 93 Hillsboro 54
Elyria 50 Fi ndlay 47

Elyria West 67 Lorain (ath 56
Fairfield 68 Ham il ton Ross 48
Fairview 70 Miamisburg 67
Ft Jenn ings -57 Delphos
Jefferson 53
Ft Recovery 67 Versailles 57
Fredericktown 83 Centerburg

50

OhiO St . 70, Illinois 65
Ohio U . 71, Toledo 71
Oliyef 60, Calv in 53
Purdu e 75, Michigan 66
Tri -St .. 87, Marion 76
Va. Com.nwth 63, Wrght St, 59
Wartbg 92, Bu en,a Vsta 74
Wm . Jewll 73, Tark io 60
Wi sconsin 82, Iowa 72
Yngstwn St . 91, Akrn 78
Southwest
Ark . 69, Rice d8
Cmron 77 , San ta Fe 74
E. Tex 89, Ab Chris 74
Houston 94, Texas A&amp;M 89
Jcksn Sf . 106, Pr arle Vw 90
Kansas 69, Oklahoma 68
Lamar 79, Ark . St . 77
LnQsl n 80, B'vl Ws l yn 67
Mdwst rn 7B . Dal Bapt 7J
N.M . St. 97, Drake 84
N . Tex 91 , Hrdn.Smmns 82

St Peter ' s 80 Buckeye
Cen tral ·63
Mendon Union 46 Miller Ctty

Day Meadowdale 67 North.

m.on.t 51

N. Co lo . 83, Vlpra lso 80
No .Mich . 70, Wayne Sl. 57
Ntre Dme 100, Davldsn 16

(OI)
~ns

Newark Cath 62 Northridge

lui I'll

Moorhed St . 80, SW St. 79

Monday, Feb. 6, 6:30p.m. at
his home.
Fonner Governor Arch A.
Moore will be the guest
speaker for the Lincoln Day
Dinner. Moore announced his
candidacy this week for the
U; S. Senate in the 1978
election.
Tickets are currently on
sale from Republican office
holders and from members of
the organization for $2.50
each. Persons attending are
requested to bring a covered
dish . Music for the dance will
be furnished by the Mary
Lucas Combo. The tickets
will cover both the dinner and

Massillon

62

Day Jeff erson 79 Day Cham .

Monmouth 90; Cornell 75
Neb . 62, Iowa St . 56
Neb.- Om 67, UNI 61
No . Park 81 , Wheatn 7d
NW Mo. 82, N E Mo . 68

a meeting ·for

Medina 53 Olmsted Falls 49

73
Cin Taft 76 Dayton Roth 68

Minn . 80. Nrthws1rn 69
Mo. Sthrn 85. Krn)l St. 75

Day Dinner and Dance on
Feb. 11 at the National Guard
Annory, Point Pleasant.
The affair is being sponsored by various Republican
organizations. Mike Shaw,
chairman of the Mason
County Republican
Executive Committee, has

S

Ja ckson 53
Canton Timken

·,

Lima Sr 52 Defiance 49
Londorl 58 Kenton Ridge 56
Lorain 79 Sandusky 69

'Mansfield 53 Lorain King 5 1

Tech 65
Canton

Er-lhm Ind . 73, Wil ni 13
Fla . Sf 72, St .L 68
Franklin 78, DePauw 70
Grnv l 58, Eureka 46
Hanovr 68 . Fndl y 60
Klamazoo 97, Hope 83
L)lola 68 , Geotwn 65
M ich . St. 68 , Indi ana 59
Ml likn 69, Elmhst· 58

Plans
for a
com fi nal

Licking Valley 70 Walkins

39

Meth 7d Va . Wslyn 71
MniPhs St . 101, Tlane 91
Miss. Sf . 69, Alabam a 60
NE La . 91 . 5thrn Miss . 68
Old Dom 82, R. Morris 6.5
Rchmnd 82, E . Cl!ro tlna SO

dale 43
Lelpsic61 Columbu s Grove 49
Lel'llngton
60
Co lone l
Crawford 51
Liberty -Benton 57 Bluffton 41
Memorial 55

Canal .
Win c hester
70
Pickerington 60
Canton M cKinley 66 Cle East

Md . 81 , N ev -LV 68
Mrc r 88 , Bapt Col t 61

!-ake Ridge Aca 48 Br unner

Aurora 57 Streetsboro 45
Ayresville 43 Atwerp 40
Anthony Wayne 71 Swanton

Be~tlsville 97 Waterford 73
Belpre 77 Ca ldw ell 67
Bethel 56 Springfield Calh 41
Botkins 55 New Knoxville 53
Buckeye Tra i l69 Lakeland 46
' Buckeye Valley 50 North
Union 49
Barberton
17
Warren
Reserve 66
Bryan 48 St1erwood Fairview

Da yton 98 , Ashlnd 69
DePaul 63. o . Rbrt s 57
Detroit 80 , Xavier 74
Doane 75, Neb . Wslyn 62
Dubuque 73. Si mpson 67

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

with t4 points. l.urry Cmter
and Gene Luyton had 12
poinls each while rtun

Akr Buchtel 80 Youngs N 57
6ll loll
Ada 71 Paulding 56
Archbold 61 Tinora 49

Midwest

INGELS FURNITURE

Jaime Jordnn led the way

The Pirates, 6-li overall ,
travel to Southwestern
Tuesday and will host
HarUian Trace Friday.

King 74 Blanchester 67

Ohio High School

Basketball Results
United Press International

Cent 75, Luther 65
C. Mich . 79 , E . Mich . 67
Chi Sf 47 , Sf . Fran 41
Coe 79. Knox 70

Gra ham 75 W Mi11on 70 (ot)
Greenan 75 Urbana 45
Greenville· 94 Sf Marys 58
Grove Ciiy 65 Worthington 53
Heath 66 Licking Heights 56
Hilliard 72 Westervi lle N 53
Hou!ton 60 West Uberty.
Salem 41
Johnstown 91 Granville· 66
Kenton 69 Allen -East 47

75

Big Ten Conference
All Gar••
w 1 pet. w.
pet.

Mlch St

8 i .800. 16 :j.842

Purdue
Mich
Mi,n

8 2 .BOO 13 6 .684
6 4 .600 11 7 .611
7 3 .700 11 7 .611

Ohio Sf
Ill
lnd
. Iowa
Nowest.
Wis

5 5 .500
5 5 .500
4 6 .400
3 7 .300
2 8 .200
2 8 .200

12
11
12
10

7 .632
8 .579
7 .632
9 .526
6 13 .000
6 12 .333

"

FOLGER$

COFFEE ... ""'
or

.

eastern 59
StrasQurg- ~9. Tuscarawa s

Valley 58

Ta llmadge 65 Field 61
Trf. Va lley 88 New Lexington

59
Trotwood 62 Piqua 55
Union Local 68
Warsaw River
Concord Glenn
W Jefferson 63

61 loll

Woodsfield 65
View 74 New

60
Col Academy

W Musklngum 76 Maysville

51
Willard 82 Bucyrus 66

Valley 55
Yellow Springs IS Day Chris I

56

Gjrls
Ohio Hogh School

Basketball Results
Uni1ed Press International
Saturday
Ada 54 Tinora 41
Berlin Reserve SA McDonald

13
Gallipolis 6t Athens 35

Cin Oak Hills 62 Forest Park
39

Mansfield

''"'''v

1-Lb
Can

$279. ~
~

Has a new operator, DP.loris
Shepard, starting' Wednesday,
February 8th. Come In and p,et
a uew look. All perms un
spectal.

!\::!\)

:;"

~
=

25.00 PERMS FOR ....... '22.50

JOB SQUAD

~
0

z

~

.

I

,.

•

1,

•

~

"'

- - •• -

2'

·TOWELS
.

n

16 West Washington
Athens
·
.

~

~

S I 0 Rl S • CAR 01 NA l f 0 0 0 S1~ 1'1 f S 'jr.e{:'l':e~}r'llr'lj':;:t~.~J~~P'I·

5 li m o1 tw o wu h C:&lt;:&gt;Up()l'l •nd
, S10 f!O ~'' " ""•••

Open Monday lhru Saturday. Call Diana Deloris
or Janel al 77~0c.
'

Goo.t '-'' C•m.riel Aonl Blue Storu

'z,D STURES

.'

•20.00 PERMS FOR. ...... ..'l8.50 ·

£!Ifill~ ~.ft \/1 8

=
0

170 SIOR ES

' Jumbo
Rolls

•••

SEE US FOR YOUR
II
A

R
D

w
A
R
E

SNOW REMOVAL EQUIPMENT,
SNOW SHOVELS AND
SNOW PUSHERS.
DON'T WAIT. BUY NOW!

CROSS
HARDWARE
.

---------.....1 .___. __________.;.;,; ; ; ; ; ;.;.__
71 N. 2nd Ave.

puints .

Hamlin was the only other
~"' airland p'aycr to hit duuble
figures with 17 points.

TI1c win pushed 1-Jmuwn

rc~ord lu 7-5.
Truce wou lh t!

Trace's oVerall
Hannan

reserve tilt, 56-51 .
The Wild cats wi ll host
Synm1es Valley Tuesduy nnd
go to North Gull ill Fridny.
Box Sc·orcs
Symmes Valley (13)
Davis 4-1-9: M i ller 7 5 19 ;
Wiseman 1-4-6: Payne 9 ·4 22 ;
Sow~~d s 0-2-2; Rigney 3-3-9
and Flack 1·4-6. Totals l4 -23 -

73.

North Gallia (67) - J us!lm
8·- J - 19 ;
Mc Coma s 2 1-5 ;
Winst on 4-4- 12; Sm ith 57- 12 .'
Siewert J . l . J5; Glass burn 1.0

Eastern . (6~) ·_ Goebel 6·7
l4 ; SPencer 8.· 4 20 ; Bissell &lt;1 0
B; Brown 3-0·6; Wigal 6·1· 14 ,•
Hayman 1-2·4; TOTALS 28-10-

66.

Southwestern (67) .- Baker
1-4-6; Jordan 5·4· 14 ; Bla nton
J,o.6; L. Car1er 6-0- 12; Lay ton
4-4-12 ; M . Carter 3 0·6 a nd
Jackson 4-3- 11. 'Totals 26· 15·

67.

By ·quarters :

.

Sou thw est e rn 15 18 13 21- 67
Eastern
12 22 12 70~66
Fairlan~ 03) -

'

Ni chols 125·29 ; Hamli n 8-1-17 ; Love j . J .
9 ; Daniels 4·0-8; Stuart 3-2·8 ·
Wilson 1-0-2. Totals 31 - 11 - 73~
Hannan Trace (82 ) Swain 12-J-27; Mooney 6-2·14 ;
Campbell 8·7· 23 ; Beaver 1-5·
7 ; Nea l 2-S-9; Pa ck 0-2-?.
To1ats 29-24-82.
By Quarters;
Fairland
11 28 52 73
Hannan Tra ce
16 40 56 82

Marauders

get bye in
tournament

Coach Ron Logan's Meigs
Marauders drew a first round
Col Walnut Rldg~ 57 Gahanna bye in the 1978 Class AA
Sectional Tournament, to be
55 lot)
played at Federal-Hocking
High School in Stewart.
Drawings were held
Sunday afternoon for the
tqumamenl .
In the upper bracket,
Sheridan, 10.3, will battle
Warren Local, 8.jj, at 7:30 p.
m. on Feb. 17. Belpre, ~-7,
drew a first round bye, and
will play that winner on Feb.
22.
In the luw,e r bracket,
Nelsonville-York, 10.3, will
battle New Lexington, 3-10,
on Feb. 18. The winner will
play Meigs, 2-13, on Feb. 23.
The championship tilt will
be held Saturday, Feb. 25, at
7:30 p. m. The winner advances to tbe OU District
March 3 In Athens.
Sheridan Is top-seeded in
'Open Mon. thru Sat.
9:00to 5:00
the Federal-Hocking Sec- .
Middleport
992-3831
· tiona!. Nelsonville-York is
seeded second .

SNO,W REMOVAL

'

Etgr.t Per lo

2!1

16 34 52 67

Southview 68 Clearvlew 34
Sorlnqboro 95 Valleyview 78
Spring·, Shawnee 49 North-

Youngs Rayen 32 Youngs N 23
Youngs S 51 Youngs· Wilson 43 .

Z

Dra~om; '

the

with

Sooth Point 79 Oak Hill 63

Youngs E 45 Youngs Chaney
34

~o s1 DR£s • cA ROtNAt Fooo sr ~R E S

Nichol s

16 36 50 73

Ridgewood 68 Indian Valley
N 34

~

hOnors . wus

Norlh Gall Ia

~Iabar 11
Tri -Valley 52 River View 38

. VALUABLE COUPONS CUP N SAVE!!
XIt elll ;;: , ]: 1

canned 23 . Frank Muuncy ,

seolor ~uard, UIS(llnsscd ln14
points.
TaKing game ·s eu rln~-:

By Quarters :
Symm-es Vall ey

Sheri dan l05 Philo 77

Ontario

by calling 992-5845,
or 949-2723, Meigs
446-0946, Gallipolis;
Mason County.
the dance.

Gume scoring honurs went
to the Euglcs' Don Spentcr,
who ripped the ennis for 20
points.
Rusty Wlgnl mu1 Steve
Goebel hnd. 14 ea&lt;"11 for llle
Eagles.
Southwestern will pli.IY
North Gallia Tucsduy.
Falrland-llannnn Trn('e
Cuoch Dun l,;urncll 's
Hannan Tr·ucc Wildcnt·s
jumped into nl6-lllend ut the
end of the fh·st period then
scored a ('Onvindn~; 82-7:1 wiu
over Ohio V~•ll cy Confcrcn('c
roe, Fnlrlund.
Seniors David SwHill nnd
David Campbell &lt;"mbined to
score 50 nf t he 82 point ~.
Swain led the wily with 27
points while Campbell

2. Tolals 26· 11 67.

Wynford 78 Seneca East 48
Wa lsh 81 Mentor Lake Cath 54
Waterloo 65 Garre1tsvllle 61
Xenta WII !On 85 Miami
Conferenc~

Jackson tossed in 11.

Sandusky St Marys 61 Clyde
52 .
Shelby 54 Clear Fork 53

35

'"osroREs

'

Cans ·

reserve game, 49-44 . · ·

school scores

Wm&amp;Mary 9d, G . Mason 13

5

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

2 "0·-sg~

•
LB 49'
FRENCH
FRIES ..· ,. 2BAG
·.
MA~GARINE .... :... :..... 49c PEARS. ........... .

Symmes Valley, 4-7, will
vices of 6-5 center Ralph
Ingles, the Vikings relied on host Kyger Creek lonighl.
the shooting of Ted Payne
Eastern.Southweslrrn
and .Brent Mlller. Both came
Freshman Todd Bak er
through in flying colors as cvnverted a three !'Oint play
Payne cvnnected for 22 point s with four seconds remuining
and Miller for 19.
to give the Southwestern
Synm1es Valley took a 36-34 Highltmders n t hrlllin~ 67-lili
lead at the half and never win over the Ea;t crn Eagles.
iooked back.- - ·- Coa ch- ITuuofe - Wolfe's
Pacing
Coa ch
Ron Engles ~ad iied tht• gmne
Twyn\an 's Pirates were with 19 sc&lt;·onds lefl on two
Rex Justice's 19 points and free throws by guord Mike ·
16 rebounds. Henry Siewert , Hayman.
senlor ~uard, had 15 points
Enstern mude a gool nt the
and Sam Smith and Stacy buu.er to cut the fina l margin
Winston added 12 points each. to one !'Oint.
North Gallia sank 28 of 64
Sout)lwes tcrn's vil'tory
fl oor attempts wnUe Synunes pushed the school's cugc
Valley hit~ of 70. The Vlkes re&lt;·ord to 8.jj ·while F.nstcrn
won the contest at. the foul dropped to 1-tl.
line hitting 23 · of 30 while
~'o ur players hil doublu
NGHS connected on 11 of 23. figures ' for Coach Wayne
North Guilla look the Bergdoll 's
Hi ghl a nd ers.

Saturday's high

Sl eM 100. 51 . Fr an 90
Slppry Rc k 66; Lc k Hvn 55
SE Mass . 93, Salem St. 91
Stony Brook 79 , Bklyn 71
Ssql.lehnn a 88 , Del . Val 66
Temple 88 , Dr~xe l 70
Trntn St. 82, Ram apo 74
Trinl!y 68 . Union 66
Tufts 81 , Babson 78
D.C U. 95, York 83
Upsla 84 , King's Pt . 7d
Ursinus 90, Wa sh . Colt 87
Vll anva 59, G. Wash . 58
Wagner 71 , St. Peter 's 69
Wash&amp;Jetr 52, Hiram 43

RED

CALL 'ART HARTLEY JR.

ASH ST.

Laf aye tt e 56. Buc kntl 57.
L aSal le 62, Sf. Jos . 14
Lehig h 74. Ri der 67
L e~ v at 64, Dcknsn 5 6
LIU 70 , F .D . U . 58
L ycom ing 69, Wil kes 63
Me. ·F r m ngtn ) 73. Bates 68
M ass . 67, W. Va. 65
Mer cyh st Jd , Btlo St . 67
N .Y . Tec.h 78, CCNY 71
No rwich 80 , Nichol s 66
Penn 8 1, Col vm bla 58
Pt. Park 70 , Geneva 65
Pri nceton 88 , Cor ne ll so
Prov 79 , R IU 59
Rutgr s 78 , Conn . 70
SI.Fran Pa . 75 , Nlagr a 64
St . Lwrn ce 88, I th ea 58
St . Vince 69, E; dnbOr o 65

MANY UNADVERTISED BARGAINS THROUGHOUT THE STOREI I

'

City Ice &amp; Fuel Co.

JUniata 73. Scr an ton 71
KeeneSt. 98, Pl ymi1'1SI . 84
Kut ztn 63, E Slr dsbg 57

BACON.,.......~~:... .

li mit on., ,..,th t ovpdn

DISTRIBUTED BY

John Ja y 53. Hunter 49

'

$}lg

CARDINAL

39

one ~oup"" ~.at

FOR FURTHER DII;TAILS

J r s v Ci ty St. 102, N J I T 6d

LB.

lNG DIL

AT 992-2145

Ha rn1tn 88 , Colgate 68

BUDGET PAK

8 '/

The MOZAMBIQUE •

Del. 9]._W Ql&lt;.&gt;ill__ll .
Del. Sl 78, Ph ila Ph,- m 6~ .
Dr ew U. 81 , Conn Coli 12
E . NiH Coli 94 , Gordon 6'1
El ilfWn 70, Phi Ia Te)( 66
Gl ~ vl 96 , Wh eeling 66
Har va rd 76, Yale 74

FAMILY GATHERS - FOW' generations recently
gathered at the home of Mrs. Bess Hendricks. They,are,
seated from the right , Mrs. Barbara Hoffman, her
mother, Mrs. Hendricks holding Robert William Lesley
Keatori, son of Mrs. Hoffman, and Mrs. Neva Gray,
mother of Mrs . Hendricks, and great-grandmother of
Robert.

preparation far · the u'ncoln

announced

posted victories Saturday

night in the unpredictable
Southern Valley Athleti c
Conference.
The Vikings, who managed
Ju•1 only two !'Oints in the
_second . perio.d1r.iday _night
against Southwestern, had
the hitting shoes on Saturday
night leading 10 a 73.jj7 wtn
over North GaUia.
Southwestern had to rally
from a one-point defiCit at the
half to edge the stubborn
Eastern Eagles , 67.$i and
Hannan Trace, a team forced
into an overtlme the previous
night at Kyger Creek, downed
the Fairland Dragons handily, 82-73.
SV-NG
Coach Ed Hardy's Syuunes
Valley Vikings won one of
their biggest games this
winter 73-67 over host North
Gallia.
Playing without the ser-

8 sn Coli 114, Fordh m 93

Accept Federal Food Stamps

.1.

Symmes Valley , Southwestern and Hannan Trace

Amher st 70, M IT 51
Ar my 64, Penn . St . 51

FDDD STORES

,

...;,;;;;;;.:..J

•

I

�7-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Monday, Feb. s. 1978
12 :4o-News 13. t :oo-Tomorrow ~; 1: 30 - Tomorrow

l)t&lt;.:K TRACY
&amp;-The Dailv Sentinel, Middle ;prt-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Feb. 6, 1978

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES

.

15 Wordl ~ tlrtder

,,

Cub
1.00

Olilrwe

1.80

us

3days

l iO

THE RACINE
Volvntee1 Fire
Deportment wrll sponsor o gun
$hoot every Sot~,~rdoy ot 6 pm at
the•r buHding 1n Bo~han . Foe tory choke guns only.

1.71

3.00

&amp;dilys

Elich word over thl! minimum 15
words' iA 4 cenl.! per word per d.ly.
Atb running oth!!r than C'OOieCUUn
day• will be charged Ill the I dly
r1te.

THE RACINE Gun Club Gun Shoot
every Sunday afternoon . Foe ·
to•v choke guns only Auorted
meoh

In memory, Card ~ ThilnU 1md
Obituary : 6 cen1s per word, $3.00
minimwn. Cash In advance.

INCOME TAX Se•vices . Federal
ond State Taxes . Wallace
Ruuell , Brodbvry . 9C'I2 ·7228 .

jectional. Tfle Publi.Jtwr will not be

responsible for more Uum ooe lm.vr·

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Monday
Noon on Saturday

TUesday
thru Friday
4P .M .

the day before publication

Sunday
4P.M.
Friday wttemooo

22. 1n a, tor The

with

i!l

t he

ne w

dump

fo ll owin~

s p ~c

ification s :
158" wheel base, 8.4" CA.
Cha ssis Ca b
350 &lt;: u . in . V -8 Engine
9,000 lb . fr ont al'lie
18,500 lb . two speed r ear
a• le
Power st eering
Sing le v acuum hydrauli c
boos ter brakes
15' ! x 7" heavy du t y r ear
brakes
Rei n fo r cement
Frame ,
Inve rted " I ", 19 .7 SM . 36, 000

PSI

4,500 lb. ea . fro n t spr ings
11, 500 l b . ea . rear spr ings
2,250 lb .· Auxiliary rear
sp r ings
Fron t Tow Hooks (21
5 sp eed , di r ec l tran s m tss ion. Cl ar k 2BSV
2 - 9 :0Q x 20, 12 PR , Gr oup
F i front tires &amp; tub es
4 ~ 9 : 0d x ~a . 12 PR. Gr ou p
F , M &amp; S Super Road Lu g,
rear tires &amp; tubes
Cast spoke whe-els with 7.0"
ri m s
1 - Spare rim 7.0" x 20"
Heavy duty black. vi nyl seat
tr im wit h full w id th seat
Custom Cushi on seal w ith
standar d cab f ull width seat
Chrome Ye llo w solid col or
60 Amp Altetna tor
F . A . H eater , Ammeter
Oil pres.sure gauges• single
electric horn ; f ive 15 ) cab
l igh t s; se at bel t s : dua t
Wester n
type
m i rr o rs ~
Wi nd shield washer &amp; 2 speed
w iper s; dual Western ' t ype
mi r rors ; W indshi eld Washer
&amp; 2 speed w ipers ; 70 Am p
batte r y ;
h and
c ont ro l
throt tle ;· 19 .5 gat. st ee l In cab
fue l t an·k .
, ·
1.- R ·&amp; S Dump Body , 7' x
10', .si des J O,.' H e&lt;'J d &amp; Tall
Gate 36", . U1JO Ho ist. Url ·
der body or Tel esco pi c Ho ls t
with ca ble or F loor control! ;
power · lak.e .off ; 1h
C ab
protector wi th 4.'' lip ; 10
gauge h igh l ensi l f loor 8. 1'2
ga ug e h igh t ensi l sides ;
lig hts . ref l ec tor s, mud flaps ;
'2 " x 6" wood si d e board s
i nstalled and paint ed Chrome
Yellow .
Rear Tow loop
50 gal
" 0 " St ep Tank ,
Ste el L H or RH
Gladhill No 707 Ta ilga te
Spr eader In sta lled
The T ru s te es wi ll consider
bid s for f ht;! trade in of a used
7' 11. 9' R &amp; S Oump bod y ,
including ho lst , with a 707
Gl ad hi ll Spr ea der atta&lt;Jhed,
said du mp bod y can ,be seen
at Tow n shi l) Hall at Rock
Springs , Ohio .
Th e Tru~tees reser\l e the
right to co n si der bids which
hl'!ve
mi n or
v ar i l'll lons ,
prov i ded t he
b ids suD stan t ially comply with these
spec i fi ca t ion s.
Bid to be in Sealed envelope
mar ked in lower left hand
co r ne r / " B id For Dum p
Tr u ck ," and m aile d ot
delivered to 46 3 ' Hook er
Stre et, Middleport , Ohio. Jo

a.

(2} 6 , 13,

10.

31C

Kingsbury
News Notes
Mrs. Neva King had as a
recent visitor Ralph Carr of
Virginia Beach, Va .
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Beal
visited in Reynoldsburg with
Mr. and Mrs. Martin Smart
and daughter, Roma Sue.
Word has been received
here of the death of Rev.
William Genhelmer who
went most of his life as a

missionary in Africa.

count1ng mochin~ Has been
und4tr ser ... 1ce cont roc;t and '"
good condl)lon . Con be §een of
The Dotly Sen tinel . lll Covrt
St , Po,u:troy , OH .
BlACK PADDED liAR w1th
' woodgro 1n top and s.tortJge
shel ve\ . Excellent cond1t10n.
$ 50 qq:z. 7J12

9'&gt;7-7063 .

PUBLIC NOTICE
Bids will ce re ceived by the
T rustees
of
S&amp;tlsbury
T o wnsh ip , M ei gs ·county ,
Ohio. unti l 12 o'c lock no on . on
tru c k

OC ·

[~~~~fl~l::~-~OI~: ICI~:~d bi~l~l~~ ~~~~
dust con trol and spvnol m1~ 1ng
salt l or Ianners l:xcelsror Soh
Wofks . Mom Street . Pommoy
Oh1o or phon a Cf92 3891 .
ECONOM'Y TRACTOR w 11h oil at
tochmenh L1ke new o~k 1n g
521$0 . Phone (014)098 ·3290

FIREWOOD
-· ·fOR SALE

POMEROY FOREST
PRODUCTS

rtt'l."insertlon.
Phone 992-2156

Febr uary

SENSI·MAliC

SAWMIU SLABS
$5.00 A BUNDLE

The Publillher re!M'rvf!S the rlghl
to edit or reje(.1lln~ lllk d~med ob-

purchase ol

BURROUGHS

1965 CHEVELU:. 4-dr . A .C.. 283
eng . 2 bbl. , auto. trans . h ·
·
eellen! eonditlofl . Tru(~· 1eppe1-- P:NNOUNClNC fA£ O p4ililng Of std B It . bed. 28 111 . h1gh.
the public octounling otl ite ol
742-7485 .
Roger
luckeydoo .
l iceri sed
publ ic accountant tor occontJng SELLING OUl due to ill health:
and bookk eeping serv1ci&amp;s and
Sllloll gr ocEH y slore and gas
preporo !ion ol l edvral ond
st.otion wi th stock and equip
state ta x returns at ?9 i Wa lnut
rn ent. l oca ted at l angsville on
Sr .,
M i ddlep ort .
Ohio .
Rou1e 124 . Very good bvy . Coli
~'J - 2b6b .
Hours by appoin t.
992 -5808 or 742 -9045 .
ment ,
1977 JEEP CJ 7. $5.000. Coli
CLEARAN CE SALE begins Mon ..
843·3155 bel ore 12·00. noon or
Feb. 13 at Sew -N-Sew Outlet.
after 6:00pm .
Bailey Run Road
Main
Street
Ra cine
All
Phone 992 -5965
polyes ter double kni h 1educed 27 LOCUST FENCE posts . 90
each. Ph one 742 -235GI .
40'1• and 50' • . Thread big spool
Sfor $1 .
ONE 22 Magnum ri fl e. 3 AM · ~M RUG S
WALl Ho ngmg~ ond
ste reos , tool bo:w: lor sma ll bed
olgons . Nice l01 Ch11Shno s
pickup. 5 lr . brush hog
Reosonqble , Call 9'n·221 4.
homernode log spli tt er.. 9 1n' B 8
197~ FORD F :150 Cus lom 17 SO M
D ~onde r . 992 -6229.
LOST IN l ong Bottom · Reedsville
14 .00 !ires wm ch. Only 14 000
B'
STD
.
TOPPER.
28"
high
drea -51. 6er nord dog . orQund 3
rn1 . He ade rs . ca. l ope deck
7.42 -24BS .
yaar $ old . Call (014) 378 ·020q .
Over $3 ,000 m e)( tros . Se11ous
Reword .
·
calls on ly oiler 12 noon
TWO COOD mud and snow tire~
696 -1072 . S6 .800 .
.
on Ford 1 irn~. G -78- 15. S3Q'
LO ST : 15" wheal cover ot the bot·
991 ·7565 .
.
tom of lin co ln Hill near the
water line break . '2 - 14 -78 . Goes CONDITIONED HAY l or sole .
to match ed set. Co li Wl -3'lfl7 or
9q2·7201 ,

MobUe Home aale!J 1nd Yard sales
are atte~ .!!!!Y. with cash with
(Wtler. 25 cent charge lc:i itdi CllrJ'Y·
ing Box Number In Cllre ol The Sentinel.

•

TELEVISION
VIEWING

''

..

1.2&gt;

l.lO

2: dllys

HAY FOR SALE
HAY f-OR SALE .
965-424 8.

STAR CR AFT FALL So le. Min1·
mot.ors , 20' ond 22 '. TraVel
Trailers . 18' 5'' $ 3 , 7~ . 2S' 7"
Bunkhouse $4 .87 5. Fold-down ,
$1 ,700 up . We sell service and
quali fy . Open Sundays . Comp
Conle y Sta rcroft ' Sole ~. Rt. 62.
N. of f t . Pl easan t.

985 -38.49

or

HOOF HOL LOW Horses . ·Buy , sell·
trade or tra in. New and used
saddles. Ruth Reeves , Albany .

(614 ) 698-3790.
RISING.. $TAR Kenn el . Boarding .
Indoor and ou tdoor r uns.
Gr-ooming oil br eeds . Clean ·
sanitary faCi liti es. Cheshi re .
Phone (614 ) 367 -0292 .

3 AND .4 RM . furni shed an d vn · . REGISTERED BLUET ICK
lu rn!s h ~d opt s Ph one '1fl2·
mo. old . { 328
5434.

pups

0

-

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork .
Route 33 , north o f Pomeroy .
Large lo ts. Coll99 2-7479.

--HOUSE FOR rent . 992 -348q al ter 5
pm .
-----TWO TRAIL ERS for rent. I furn ish·
--

-----.--~-

Let Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; condition yo ur .
wa1er with Co-op water
sottener , Mod~l UC· SVf,

Commercial properly oppro• 17
ocre.s. level land . located ot
luppers Pla1ns on Oh•o, Rou te
7 Phone [bl4) bb7 o304 ,
VA ·FHA. 30 yr . f1no ncmg . also
(Oflnon&lt;mg. Ireland Mortgage
77 E. State Alhen ~ . phone {614 }
S92 3051 .
TWO STORY 3 bedroom frome
house. F.A lurno c~ . stormw 1ndow~ . f~replo ce . lnM•ddlepon .
Phone 992· 5867

HOBSTETTER

REALTY

Jack W. Carsey , Mgr.
Phone 992 -2181

B &amp; S MoBILE HOMES , Pt . Plea son ! . W Vo beside Heck 's
1973 Brood more 14 ~ 64 2
bedroom
1973 Dorion 14 )I( 60 2 bedroom
1977 Vit tor1on 14 :w: b7 J bedroom .
2 bo1h
1972 Coventry 12 J( 65 3 bedioom
1969 State sman 12 x 60 2
bedroom .

am

Close
Thu!'sdays
Satur·days at noon.

Addit ion . . Including
furniture and a pplianc es .

$1].000.

LISTiNG(

1973

14' x60'
Mobile
home,
excellent cond it ion, located
on 150'xl65' level lot in
A r baugh ad.ditlon, Tuppers
Pia ins. Oh lo.
Kitc h en
stove, r efr i gerator , &amp;
wood -burn ing stove {new)
in cluded in sa le. Going to
sell fa st at $11.000.00 .
Check with

us

Mr. and Mrs. John W. Deaq
and Jeremy visited recently
with Mr. and "Mrs. Kenneth
Marklns at Ra.c ine.
Mr . and Mrs . Kevin' Wolfe
(De nise Hendricks) are
announcing the arrlva' of a
baby girl at Parkersburg.
The baby has been named
Denise Daniel. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Young,
Yvete and Wesley spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Beal and Visited also
l!'ith Mr. and Mrs. Homer until moving to Mason ,
Bailey and Mr. and Mrs. Texas, passed away at their
Frank Douglas.
home there. Funeral services
Mrs . Elizabeth Murray were held at (lli)ton , W. Va.
~~pent several days visiting
Mr . and Mrs. Richard
Mr. and Mrs. Olen Harrison. Houdashelt and Audra have
Mrs. Jennie Holley who returned
home
after
lived in this community with vacationing at Myrtle Beach
her daughter, Mrs. Nev White and Florida.

-

~~~utia ~-,~-t ~"'

WHEN YOU THINK OF
REALTY , think of us.
HENRY E. CLELANO
REALTOR
HANK, KATHY &amp; LEONA
CLELAND
Realtor
Associa1es

Positions Available
is seeking applicants for the following positions:
1) Training Coordinator : T he Coordinafor wil l be
resp_onslble for p rogr am implem en tation , scheduling
and coordina1ion ·Of 1raining for the CETA Ti tl e Ill
(YETP ) Program Parti ci pants . Salary for this
position Is $9,250. Applicants should possess a degree In
Busines s. Education, or other re lated field. Prefer
combinat ion of degree and re levant work e&gt;e perience .
2) Trainer : The Tra in er will be responsi bl e to the
Training Coordinator and wi lt assist in the scheduli ng

of tra ining for the CETA Tille Ill ( YETPI Program
Parll cl pants. Salary for th1s position Is $8,180 .
Applicants should possess a df'gree in Ps Ych olog y,

Soc(al Work. or other related field . Prefer combination
of degree and related work experience.
Applications and -or '' furt her Informat i on is
available from the Ohio .Jobs Servi ce Offices or the

Community Action Agency Offices In Cheshire at 992·
7000 or 367·7341 . Resumes may be mailed fo David
Gloeckner. Manpower Director. P.O. Box 272.
Cheshire. Oh(o 45610. Deadline for applications wil l be
Feb . 8, 1978. The Gallia-Meigs Community Action
Agency Is an Equ•l Opportunity Employer . M-F

1

,wj\IJ~~!

p~ !t2-2174

992-2259, 992-~09

IB
i! EA.l !OII

NEW 3 bedroom hou se, 2 baths ,
all eleC.. I acre . Middleport ,
c'o se lo Rutland. Ph one 992·
7481. .'
_.:.c:::.:.:-.~__:__: - .- - ·

Wood Stoves

r ••"~~~''""CI'oufo'-

"!:~ Lj~
~en

Carpeting

.

RNR

·

Sunrise

6:A5-Mornlng Report 3. 6:50-Good Morning, West
Vlrg(nla 13 . 6:SS ~Chuck White Reports 10: News
13.
1:0()--Today 3.~ . 1S ; Good Morn ing Amerlco 6,13; CBS
News 8; Bu!lwlnk(e 10.
7:30--Schoolles 10. 8:0()--Captaln Kangaroo s, 10;
Sesame Streel 33.
9:0()--Merv Griffin 3; Phil Donahue 4; ·e dge ot Night
6; Phil Donahue 1S; Family Affair 8; Mai ~h Game
10: Phil Donahue 13.
9:JD-Emergency Onel 6: Andy Grlffilh 8; Family
Affair 10.

11 :3D-Knockout 3. 1S; Family Feud 6,1 3; Pftrfr ldge
Family • • Love of Life 8. 10; Sesame St. 20; Royal
Heritage 33 .
11 : S~CBS News 8; Loving Free 10.
12:0()--Newscenter l ; $20.000 Pyramid 13; News •.6, 10;
To Say the Least lS; Gambit 8.
12:3D-Ryan' s Hope6,13; Bob Braun • • Gong Show 1$;
Search for Tomorrow 8,1 0; E lec trl c Company JJ.
1:0()--Truth or Consequences 3; All My Ch ildren 6, 13;
News 8; Young and the Res tless 10 ; Nol for Wom en
only IS.
1 :3()-0ays of our lives 3,4, IS; As the World Turns 8 , 10.
2:011-0ne Life to Live 6,13.
7:3D-Doctors 3,4,1S: Guiding Ligh t 8, 10.

Pomeroy, Ohio

...

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

'111o GripuiM
1-23-1mo.

Closed Jan. 10
T!l 18th, 1978

AFRAID TO

\,,

COOPERATE WITH
TI1E. PQLICE ·- •

Blown Insulation
Cellulose Fiber

Saturday's

I

(Answers tomorrow)
BRANDY
An9wer : What a succe11ful tree aurueon might do -

Jumbles : PHOTO

home, bath, natural gas
~eil1 , city water and near a

store. Only S7.SOO.
HANDY - rn town, near
stores, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
natur~ gas furnace, city

water . Asking just S15,opo .
ON RT. 124 - Small village
property, · has . 4 or 5
bedrooms,
n ice
ba t h i
. nafural
gas
fur-nace ,
basement and la rg e lo1.

$28,000.
ON RT.

i -

New brick

business building with
central air and heat. 2,900
SCI. tt: of floor space. 21arge
offices and large storage.
Leading Creek water . Only

$35,000.
17SACRES - 8room ranch
home wl1h gas well.

Equipped

kitchen.

gas

forced air furnace and
m inerals. Lots of pa~ture

land. $6S,OOO.
BRICK - 7 rooms. 4
bedrooms. all c!ty utilities,
2
porches,
basement,
natural gas F .A. furnace,

in Middleport. $73,500.
SYRACUSE - 3 Bedroom
frame home with bath,
basement, city water ,
.natural gils F .A. ,furnace,
porch and garage . Over 1
acre land with garden .

Want S17,SOO.
HAS YOUR PROPERTY
INCREASED IN VALUE?
WE
HAVE . PEOPLE
WANTING TO BUY . LIST
IT WITH US.
Helen L. Tuford
Gordon B. Teaford
Sue P. Murphy
Realtor Associates

1974 SKYliNE U x 56. 3 bedrpom ,
total elec tric . $7500. 9q2·2019 .
NICE TRAILER . l-4 x68, 21o ts. Good
we ll. Septic to nk . In Por tland .
Pho ne 843-3252.

TWO BE-DROOM, Trailer 8 .)( 45.

Fum; •hed$1 495. 9'&gt;7.3374 .

&amp;
service .

delivery
Resldonlial &amp; Com morclo f.

Phone 991-3993
1-18-1 mo.
SEWING MACHINE Repair$. service , all makes. q&gt;92·2264 . The
Fabri c Shop .
Pome roy .
Avthor ized Singer Soles and
Ser\llce. We sharpen Scissors.
EXCAVATING , do.zer . looder ond
backhoe work. ; dulll·p trucks.
and lo-boys for hire: wi ll h'oul
fill dirl , to soil , limestOne and
grovel. Coli Bob or. Roger Jeffer s, doy phone 992 -708GI , night
phone 992-3525 or 992- ?23~ . ·
EXCAVATING . doter , backhoe
'and ditcher . Charl es R. Hotf ie ld , Back Hoe Serv ice ,
Rutland . Ohio. Phone 742 -2.008 .

~

Tri-State Upholstery

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Shop

DOWN
I Chef's need
2 Mountain
· nymph
3 Dividing
profits
4' N .Z. parrot
~ Graffiti

1163·2nd Av• .• Galflpofis
446-7833-446-1833

·

446-4367

BRADFORD , Aucti oneer , Complete ·ser'w'ice. Phone 949-2487
or 949-2000. Racine, Ohio, (rift
Bradford.

•'

item
6 Loaded
7 Kirghiz,
U.S .S.R
city
8 Bubonic
. plague
9 Leading
lady
i.2 Iterate
16 " Vaya con

387S .
REMODELING . Plumbing , heating
and oil l'(pe ~ of ge11erol repair .
Work guaranteed 20 yeOrs e~&lt;: ·
perience . Phone992 .24Q9.

Mr Show's
expense
check

SAVE ON
CARPETING

741·1346.

•Yesterday'•
19 Abound
22 "Who -

tum to?"
%3 Negligent
24 Flatter
25 Actress
Kirk
27 Peaceful
29 Stephen
Vincent -

"

Aluwer

:ro Relative
of

"plea

7: JG-Hollywood Squares J,.C ; l et's Go l 'o 111e ~aces 8 ;

Candid Camera 6; Mac Neil -Lehrer Reporl 20.33:
Price Is Righi 10; That's Hollywood 13; Television
Honor Society 15.
8:00--Just for Laughs 3,4,15; Happy Days 6.13 ;
Celebrity Challenge of fhe Sexes 8,10; In Per
formance at Wolf Trap 20,33 ;.
8:3D-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; Shields &amp; Yarnell 8, 10.
9:0()--Dean . Martin 3,4,1S; Three's Company 6,1 3;
Movie "Hustle" 8,10.
· · ·
9;3D-Soap 6; Hollywood Telev ision Theatre 20,33;
Mary Tyler Moore 13.
10:06'-Fom lly 6.
'

11 :00-News 3,4,6,13.1S; Dick Cavett 70; Over, Easy 33 .
11 :2Q-News 8.10; Johnny Carson 3,4, 1S; Movie " Death
Among Friends" 6.13: ABC News 33.
11 :SD-Movle " Francis Gary Powers : The True Story
of the U-2 Spy Inc ident," 8; Movi e " Girls! Girlsl
G!rlsl " 10.
12 :0()--Janakl 33. 1:00-Tomorrow 3.4. 1: 1D-News 13.
Movlo Channof
s and.9 p.m . - Annie Hall (pgl
7 and 11 p.m . - The Sling (pg ).
Cflllnntf Five
7 p.m. - Paul Gllludlno Famllv Fitness Show
10 p.m . - 700 club.

31 Pancake for re lea se M ond ay, February 6, 1978.
topping
36 Dock·
workers
group
Jacoby and Alan
37 Dance

BRIDGE

Oswald

s~p

bounced 7

Candy Stripe
Rubber Back
Regular 56.95
S.ve 14.88 Sq. Yd.

HOWERY
AND MARTIN EM ·covot ing , septic sys te ms."
dozer, backhoe. dump truck .
!i mesh;m~ .
grovel , bl ack top
· paving, Rt . 143. Phone 1 (61 4)

s moke 8; Mr. Rogers' Ne ighborhood 20,33; Hogan 's
Heroes 10; Emergency One I 13 ; My Three Sons IS .
S:3D-News 6; E lectric Company 20,33;. Mary Ty ler
Moore 10; Hogan's Heroes 15.
·
6:00-News 3,.,8.10, 13. 1S; loom 10.
6:3D-NBC News 3,. ,1S; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett
·.and Friends 6; CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20.
7 : DO-Cross- ~lts 3,4 ; Liars Club 6; Pop Goes The
Country B; Capitol Beot 33 ; News 10; To Tell The
Truth 13; Gilligan' s Island 1S ; French ,Che f 10.
7: 15-Big Green Magazine 33.

11

artist's

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers , toaslers, irons , al l
smoll appliances. lawn mo wer,
next to State Highway Garage
on . Route 7 . Phone (614) 985-

WILL do roof ing, cons truction ,
plumbin g and heating . No job
too Iorge or loa small. Phone

BATHROOM S AND Kitc h ens
re modeled, cer amic _ti le. plum·
. bing . carpentry.,. ond general
maintenance . 13 years eXpOrience. 992 -3685 .

NORTH
,,..,
• AK
'Q J 9 5
AK953

+

PULliNS EXCAVATING . Complete .
Service . Phone 992·2.478 .
NEIGLER" S FOR building house!&gt; ,
bathrooms , oil kinds of repai r
work and what hove you. Guy
Neigler, Racine , Ohio. Coli
949~ 250 8 evenings.
MAGG IES UPHOLSTERY . Refinish.
reupholstery ,
r ebui lding .
Beautiful se lection of mater ial
and vinyls . Free e~ timale . Tel.
7.42 -2852. l oc ati on · Solem
Center.
TURLEY 'S WRECKER SeNi ce .
Racine , Ohio. Day or night .

12 and 1~ ft. width Carpet .
rubber back.

4.88 SQ. YD. ·

+ ....

Reg. $6.95-not"insta lied
30 rolls ol carpel In stock.
Good selection all on Yie.
Installed ·with padding, no

•

extra to pay .

ocean

Call742-2211
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPETCONSULTANT ·

RUTLAND

'

•..

· Rutland

•

'

•

'

..

DAILY

CRYPTOQUOTE ~ Here's how to work It :

lH~

is

AXYDLBAAXR
I.ONGFEI. LOW

One l eiter simpl,y st ands f o r another. In this sample A Is
u sed f or th e three L 's, X for t he two O 's, et c. Sing le l etters,
a ~wstrophes, the l ength and f ormation o r the word s are all
hmt; . Each day the code l etl c r s ar c differen t.

X D' N

20.% • 30%

e

..••
~

Friday Til 5

•

Closed Saturday At 5 P.M.

•

DS YD

DKEKIXNXJH

Copr. 1978 King Futures Sytxlicate , Inc.

OVT TO THE WILD
COUNTRY WHERE MAN
HAS NEVER TROD!

6E~OND CIVI~IZATION !

JH ·· PAW AIN'T HOME.
SHERIFF-- HE'S-·
UH·· HE'S OFF
INTEXIZ

SOMEWHARS

i

'·

s•

lly
Jacoby
and
Sontag
Alan : "South didn't have
to use Blackwood to know
about aces . North had

Clearly shown aces in diamonds and spades while
ioo~ing at tbe other two. He
decided to show the ace of
clubs and let North take
over. Whe n North just bid
six South passed. 1 '
' Oswald : •' There are
eleven MJ . tricks . South
drew trumps and led a dla·
mond. Had the suit broken 33 South would have made a
grand slain. At 4-2 break .
~ould give hlm an easy

LOWEEZY SMIF !!

HIDIN' A
ICKEN THIEF
WILL GIT 1./E
THREE DAVS
IN TH'
HOOSEGOW

•

'

'

's ace a nd

klng to set up East's queen .
Then he -cashed a ll his
trumps and the ace of

clubs."
Alan : " East had to hang
on to lhat queen of spades

lead: • 3

sroull slam,

.•·

.Rutland ••

Pass

Pa ss

c ashed dum.r'ny

the ace and nine of diamonds
were both good . "

3+
3•

s•

known as rectifying the
count. West was In wlth the ·
jac k and led a spade. South

Pass

Pass
Pass

Pa"'
Pass

ten· in order to do what i s

and was forced to discord all
but one diamond whereupon

Soulh

Pass . ••

a

3NT

North .East

Pass
Pass

mond lead . Of course, South
had drawn tr umps first."
·
Alan: '' When Wes t s howed
out South paused to regroup.
Things looke d almost hopeless, but Soulh found a delayed Vienna coup to bring
home lhe bacon ."
Oswaiq : "He led
club
from dummy and played his

aI.•

West

but

W est

showed out on the first dia-

•

...·-·........................
Arnold Grate

ON A HIKE

•

RUnAND FURNITURE

'

HJ

TSXEO

BARNEY

HERE'S THE WORLD
FAMOUS BEAGLE
LEADING HIS TROOP

:

.

742-2211

.

:

ThuiSday 8 til Noon

:
•
•
•
•

.;

•

Mond::~u:s;~Wednad~

AXNK

EKJHVLO
E .
EKIXHNJH
Saturday's Cryptoqutoe: A MAN !EARNS ONLY BY TWO
THINGS : ONE iS READING AND TilE OTHER IS ASSOCIA·
TION WITH SMARTER PEOPLE.- WILL ROGERS

1

.OFF

\

y

C H JAN

All Styles &amp; Colors

:

'' The Jobs People"
J1.
I----------------:---

DIDN',. Hf " " " !
Ml\fliZY IO'r'M
~
Of -r"HfM?
._

ON -FRAME

•

GALLIPOLIS BUSINESS COLLEGE . . I:

.•

CR YPTOQIJOTES

e

:

IT •• WHY

Berkline Chair Sale

•••
••
•••
•

37 Couple
$ 38 Filched
: , 39 ~eut.
~
Island
~ to Growing
•
out
41 Soccer's
~
Mess(ng

•
•

FURt~UTURE

742·2211

•

•

.••..................•.......
949·2657.

"' 8 2
WES.T
EAST
• 9832
• Q 10 7 6
,883
. ....
+QJ107 B
4KJ96 53
4Q74
SOIJTH
• J 54
'AKI0742
• 82
4AI0 1
Vulnerable: Both
Deale r : South

1

Sontag

Bad s lit forces coup

698-7331.

...
~~§~~~~~~f!I~~~~~~d-1~
Business Administration.
Day and Night Classes still open .
Financial Aid Programs
Placement Assistance
Plus GED TralninQ .

AURAL GARLIC

able lor S1.35 poalp1id from Ju rnble, clo,thla newspaper, P.O. Box 34,
Norwood, N.J. 07648, Include your narn.e; addreu, zip code 1nd m1k1
Checka JMiyable lo Newspaperbook • .

p!ckup

'216 E . Second Street

GREAT BUY - 3 bedroom

rn [I r )r xxJ

NEW - JU ST OFF PRESS! JUMBLE BOOK 11 1 with 110'puu ln II IVIII-

vrs. experience . Free

Free Estlmatei

REALTOR

-Upholstelyestlmotes,

LAVENDER
CONSTRUCTION
Syrocuso, Ohio

'!!~?.~~IB

Prlnr answer here:

Now arrange the drcled letters to
form the !lurprlse answer, as suggested by the above canoon.

BRANCH OUT

- Seve Fuel &amp; Money-

----

J I D [j

'5 THAT A FACT? I
JUST DON ' T AIM TO
BOTHER. YOU COPS "
MAYBE I'VE GOT A
NEW AN Gl E--·

Profession•! Service, 3f

and Attics

HOMESITES . for so le, I acre and
up. Middleport , neor RUtland.
Colt 992-748 1.
'

PUT YOU AU..
TR'f TO HANDlE
IT ALONE ··· \OU
CAN'T 'NIH '"

S:QO-Here Come the Brides 3; Star Trek 4: Gun·

WHA'T 'THE
F'OI.I.OWIIII 6 A ~y
OFF' SoOMETIME&amp;

tENFRYZJ
All YOlJ SMALL
STORE OWNERS··.

992-7608

Not lhtlntitJIDa

2-5· 1 mo .

".",;~....."-

Phone

992·2206 01992·7630

20 .
4:0()--Spec!al Treat 3,4.1S ; Edge of Nlghl 13: Merv
Griff in 6; Gilligan' s Is land 8; Sesame St reet 20,33 .
4:30-Brady Bunch 8. 10; Mary /yler Moore 13.

·-·
I
I (J

[J

Changeot
lPhoneNumber

At

Lilias. Yoga and You 20.
3 :30-A!IIn The Family 8.1 0; Consumer Survival Kit

IINDARC

Union Ave.

ond St.

C1rpete UphOlStery
Phone Mike Young

.

773-5955

Corner

lllllt l0 P~, 0. '

:
••

I

"""""""-...

I []

JOHNIE'S B_EAUTY
SALON

Young's

-:~

.

NOTICE

Superior
Slum Extraction

•

1
I
I
I
I

FLAU1j
I I

News 6;

Semester 8 ,

ll : I)()- Wheel of Fortune 3, .. , 1.5 ; Happy Days 6, 13.

j'ja THATSCRAMBLEOWORD GAME
~ ~ ~~ ~~
byHenri Arn&lt;HdandBoblee

I

6 :30-f()(US on Columbus .. ;

10:3Q-Hollywood Squares 3,. , 1S; Andy Griffith 6;
Pr ice Is Righi 8,10: Ric k Foucheu• 13.

_~ ftfl~l.\fl fii)'ft

... l3UT I'D ~'ll' I1'(U:
MOTWR'S ~.AJ.Jt?'rt

o:oo-PTL Club 1S. 6 : 7~Concerns and Comments 10.

lO :oo-Sanford and Son 3, .. , 15; Tattletales 8; Joker's
W ild 10; No1 tol' Women only 13 .

Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one letter to each square, to torm
tour ordinary words.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Chonnof Flvt
7 p.m . - Paul Gaudino Family Fitness Show
7:30-fronton At Meigs Basketball
10;00 - 700 Club ·
TUI;SDAf, FEBRUARY 7.1f71
5:6--Farm Report 13. 5:50-PTL Club 13. S:5S Sunrls. S&lt;omester 10.

3 :00--Another World 3,4, 1S; Generllll Hospital 6, 13;

Blown Into·Walls

Associate
Home Phone '49-2589

POMEROY
LANDMARK

\

Chester, Ohio
10-30-c

.___

.......

9:00 tlf 9: DO Mon :- Fridoy
9:001il6 :00 S.turdoy
12 : 00 til6 :00 Sunday
2-7-tfc

Ailton Wolfe, Sr.

-- --

The Gallia-Meigs Community Action Agency

Located ln. The

Tank Selvice

Box 34

Service

MEIGS PLAZA
Middleport, Ohio
Open

ANY SEWING machine cleaned.
oil"d. &amp; odiu sted. $5 .98 . FREE
pickup and delivery. Belpre.
Ohio. 1·.423-5497 .

Cheryl Lemley
A ssociate
Home Phone 742·2003

9.
Ail .

Danny E. Kiser, Ezra
Kiser, Hazel Kiser to Donald
R. Pelfrey, Willens Pelfrey,
Parcels, Salem.
Louie
B.
Frederick ,
Charlene K. Frederick to ·
.John F. Hill, 'll A. , Chester.
Barbara Whittin_gton,
CWford E. Whittington to
Cleatus Arnett, Mearlene
Arnett, Parcel, Rutland.
Floyd Hoffman , Peggy
Hoffman to Bob Bauer,
Susan Bauer, 4.2 A., Chester.
Bob 'Bauer, Susan Bauer to
William Pooler, Jr., 4.2 A.,
Chester.

Frn Est.
Call : 667 ·647' or 9U ·311S
1· 16-lmo .

,.._ .... .......
......
._ .... .
c-.

ACE HARDWARE

Jack's Septic

before you

Pomeroy landmark

RE SPONSIBlE OLDER lady !o l1ve
i n and core l or oged lod y tn
Rutland . Lig ht housework ond
cooking, no laundry . More for
h ome
than wages . Coli
742·2078 .

fully insured

buy .

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

ABANDONED HOUSE dog , small
young fema le. Adoptab le.
Rescued from cold . 985 -3884.

OO"fN!I! ... rM
CAPTAIN I!A!Wl

WALLPAPER.
PAINT &amp; SUPPLIES

Phone 985-3806

'

Nice 3 Bedroom bungalo~
w it h basement &amp; garage.
$32,000. 2 acre of ground .
Tuppers Plains .
New 3 bedroom home wi th
garage
in
Craw ' s
Subdiv ision . $41.000.
Nice small home located in
Darw in, Ohio on St. Rt . 33,

--

Meigs
Property
Transfers

8:0()--LI Ifle House ~n the Prairie 3.~.1S ; Six Million
Dollar Man 6,13; Good Times 8,10; Consumer
Survival Kit 20,33.
8:30--Baby, I' m Back 8,10; Turnabout 20,33;.
9:0()--Mov!e " Midway" J.~. IS ; Movie " The Init iation
of Sarah" 6,13; MASH 8,10; Hard Times 33; Adams
Chronicles 20. 9:30 - 0ne Day At A Time 8,10.
10 :oo-Lou Grant 8, 10; News 20; Originals 33.
10:3D-Farm Digest 20; Anyone for T~nnyson? 33 .
11 :oo-News 3.~. 6. 8 , 10 , 13, 15; Dick Cavett 20; Mac Neil.
Lehrer Report 33.
1 I: 3D-College Basketball 3; Pollee Story 6, 13;
Johnny Carson 4,15; Movie " How To Break Up a
Happy Divorce" 8; ABC News 33; Movie " Blue
Hawaii" 10. 12 12 : 00 - Janak! JJ.

Miff PAI'FOOIL.

Save lO pet . to so pet .
on heating cost
Ex p erience and

SALES AND SERVICE
11 -9-lfc

Resident i al
and
commercial .
Call
for
esti mate, 24 hour servlc:e.
Anyday , •nytime.

Nice Double Wide 24x56 on
corner lot in Arbaugh

PUBLIC NOTICE
The M e igs .coun ty co uncil
on Ag ing, 'In c. who is a
SM AJ.L lorm lor sa le. 10% down.
private nonprofit co rporation
owner finan ced.'' Mon roe Coun ·
Intends t o submi t an liP ~
A.KC DOBERMAN Pi-n scher pups .
ty , W. Vo . Phone {304) 772·
pli ca tion tor a capi ta l grant
Ho ve oil shots. l oi'ls clipped, 2 WIL L CARE for the elder'ly in our
3102 or (304] 772 -3227 ,
under the provisiOn of Sec lion
moles. 992 -257:1'.
horn e. Pi1one 9q2. 73 14 .
16(b ) (2) of the Urban Mass
COUNTRY farm land with seclu dTransportatiOn Act' of 1964, as
ed woods, wo!er and good ac·
~O BIL E HOME r_
epoirs . 992 -5859
amended , to provide trans ·
ces,s in Monroe Coun·l y, W. Vo.
portatlo n s ervice for ftl e
$1 .000 'down , call (304) 772·
el derly end ha ndi ca pp ed
3102 or (30.4 ) 772-3227.
w ithin M eigs Coun1y . Tl'le
CASH pa id l or all mak es. and
grMI applicat ion will request
models
of
mobile
homes
.
one (1 ) Modified School Bu s
Phone a reg code 614 -423-9531 .
SB, 17-0, 17 PliS!enger .
If o~~pproved, financing tor
TIMBER
. Pomeroy ~ores ! Pr o·
the cap ita I grant Wilt b e on a
ducts. Top price l or slonding
ma tc hing ba si s with 80
We have .enlarged our
sawtimber . Call 992 -5965 Or
per cent from U . S. Urbi!ln
ser vice departme nt an d
~e_nl Hanby , J . Joi b - 8~7~
Mass Transportat i on Ad mini stnl.tlon ( UMTA ) and ~ 0
will service Ho1point and
COINS. CURRENCY . tokens , old
· percen t local agency .( non other brand!..
pocke t wa tches- and cha ins.
tederan share . There Is no
si lve r ond gold . We need 1964
stat e financing
I n t hi s
MAiN
progrem .
and older si lver co1ns. . Bu y,. sell .
II is proje ct ed that 85
or trqde' Ca ll Roger Wa ms ley ,
POMEROY, 0.
elderly persons will use th e
742 -233 1.
service five 15 ) dllyS for
c.:...::=:.~-'--~ - - '- BRICK &amp; FRAME RANCH
_Jack W . Carsey, Mgr.·
var ious activities including
OLD FURNITURE, ice bo..: es, bra ss
Ag_e 3 yrs . 1 acre, 3
transportat i on to medical
Phone
99~
2181
beds . iron beds . e tc . co rrrplcr c
bedrooms ,
1112
baths ,
fa cililies , so ci al service
households. Wri te M D. Miller ,
agen cies , shopping dir tr icts
ca rpete d. · garage; ve ry
Rt. 4, Pomeroy . Ohio or coli
and for other needed ser .
A TTE NTION MARE Owners ·
private. $31 ,900.00 .
992 -7760 .
vices .
_:..:::_:.:.:::~----· AQHA stud se rvice . l n lrod~cing
HARD TO BELIEVE - IS
The M eigs County Council
NO IT EM TOO Lorge or too small .
to Sou thern Ohio . Cor toko . sor·
on AQ!ng , Inc . invites com ·
r ooms, 3112 baths, hot water
Wi ll buy 1 piece or com plete
rei I son of Otqe. Br eed lor co lm ents and .or propo sals lrom
h ea·t, u tili t y, bas em ent ,
hov.sehold . New , used . or ant i·
or . conformat ion ond disposi ·
all Interested public, private
ques
.
Mar
ti
n's
Furniture.
20
N.
garage
. walk to shop. JUST
and para -t r. ans it or,erators
l ion . Phone 698·H24 I evenings
2nd St.. Middleport . Phone
$16,000,00'
includi ng ta x i opera ors. for
or write lor breeding con tr act .
the prov i d i ng of tran s .
992 -6370.
CLOSE IN - 3 yr . old
Se ll e Echo Quarter Horses.
portat i on service for th e
40225 SR 692 . Pomeroy . Ohio
RANCii TYPE - I acre. 2
CHIP
WOOD
.
Poles
mo,;
.
elder l y and handic appe d
45769.
diameter 10" on larges t end , $8
bath s. 3 bedrooms, formal
within our service area .
Operators wh o a re l n .
par ton . Bundled slob , S.b pe r
dining, equipped kitchen,
teres ted in. offfring' pr oposa l s
ton . D ~ li vered to Ohi o Pollet
storms &amp; Insulation. Very
to provld~ !lervice, should
Co ., Rt. :2 , Pomeroy , 992 -2689.
private. $37,300.00 .
co ntact Eleanor Thomas ,
SILVER DOLLARS and coins. Top
·o LDER BUT NICE - Lots
Ex ecutive Director, Meig s
County counc il on AGing , Inc .
~ ol lo':._p oid . Ca ll 742·23\6.
of remodeling, equipped
at s enior c itlzens Center •.a ox
kitchen, 3 bedroom , bath,
722, Po111erov , Oh io to obta in
ca rport , small st orage
lull details of the type of
I t\ I 1 y 1\j II
t(ansportation serv ice that Is
bldg. $17,200 .00.
needed r.rlor to preparing a
(i, ·rl•• t .l·fl (lttr TV '•
POMEROY - 4 LOTS YOU
hove
o
service
to
offer,
IF
proposa .
1 v~ story f rame , good
wont 'to buy or se ll somethi ng,
.1tHI
Written comments and -or
or
oe looking tor work
proposals shou l d be sub . '
condit ion, 3·4 bedrooms,
~1 ·t 1 p· 1111 1\ppll,l;l&lt;
miffed w ithin 30 days to the
whatever , .. yov 'U get result s
bath , carpeting, por ches,
1
\,,I• f • I(&lt;
i!lgency at the above address
foster w ith o Sent inel Won! Ad .
basement . $12,000.00.
w ith a copy t o the Ohio
Co11 992-21 So.
APPROX. 3 ACRES - Age
Departme n t
of
Tr ans port at ion ; 25 South Front
J,,( k 'v'V C.r! 'd 1· Mqr
2 yrs. Lovely equipped
Street ;
C olu mbus , Ohio
ki t chen, 3 bedrooms (walk Pl111t1f ·J~Ol ~18 1
.43215 ; A1tention : Program
in close t s). 2 baths, formal
Manager , Sec t ion 16(b ) ( 2)
Prog r a m .
·
d
in ing room, fa mily room ,
CAT . FEMALE . l ongho ired , dog.
JOB WANTED . Female, 22 , High
loads of other features .
l abrador type. Both ve ry
sc
hoo
l
groduote.
3
years
work
(2 ) 6, 7, 2tc
frien dl y . Love ab le. N iCeJ UST S7B.OOO.OO.
at res t home. An.,- decent work
look ing pets . 9&lt;19 ·2b6V .
WANT TO SELL?- Take
_o~~p t_~b~ Pho_ne 949-2~5 .
it easy - let us do 1h• work.
SIX MONTH old mole lOng hair ed
Our long list of satisfied
so lid white co t . 992-2572 or
992 -6134 .
customers speaks for i.tself.
~-~

&lt;wood fi tier 1
Thermal Insulation·

ceuulo-slt

300 !Min St.
Pvmeroy, Ohio
Pvmerov 991-6282
or "2-6263
I A.M. !o 4:30P.M.

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

P.M.

REDUC£ SAFE &amp; fast wdh GoBese
Tab le ts &amp; E-Vop "wo ter pills "'
N e1spn Drug '

ed. 2 bed room . 1 port ly lvrn ., 3
bedroom . 742·3122"

CAPTAIN EASY

PHONE "2-6333
Otfice Hours : 9A .M . to ·•

NEW

Pomeroy landmark

HtlnNG INC.

1·18·1 mo.

Have
Business, · and
i nves t ment .property in
Pomeroy.

Le1 u s tes t your water Free

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

PWMBING &amp;

Syracuse, Ohio
Ph. 992-3993

$19.900 .

Now Only • 279 ,95

J&amp;L

CARTER

Storm
Windows &amp; Doors
Replac:ement
Windows Aluminum
Sidin!I-Solfitl
Gutters-Awnings

LARRY LAVENDER

GeorgeS. HobsteHer Jr.,
Broker
107 '1~ Sycamore St.
Pomeroy , Ohio

MONDAY, fEBRUARY • • 1971
6:0()--News 3.~.1. 10, 13,1S; aBC News 6; loom 20.
6 :30--NBC News l .• •IS; ABC News 13; Carol BurneH
and Friends 6; CBS News 8.10.
7 : ~ross- Wits 3;,4; Liars Club 6; Marty Robbins'
Spotlight 8; Caplfol Beat 33; News 10 To Tell the
Truth 13; Gilligan' s Island 15; Daniel Foster, M.D.
20.
7: !~Labor News 33.
7:30--That Nashvll.l eMuslc 3; In Search of~ ; Nashville
on the Road lS; · · Muppet Show 6; Match Game PM;
MacNei! . Lehrer Report 20; Wild Kingdom 10;
Candid Camera 13; Know your Schools 33.

Business Services
FREE ESTIMATES

3.

Movlo Chonntl
S and 7 p.m . ..:.. Pipe Dreams
9 and 11 p.m. - ( Will. ( Will For Now

WELCOME
HOME,
PAW!!

A Missouri reader wants
to know if a non- life master
has won a major team game
in the last 10 years.

We don't thin k-s o, but Alan
Greenberg who won thls
year's Reisinger with Kyle

Larsen,

Mike

Lawrence,

Jimmy Cayne a nd Jim
Jacoby just made life mas-

ter earlier in the tournament
week .
I NEWSPAPEft EN Tf;n RP IH SP.;
,\S..c;N. t .

(For a copy of JACOBY MOD-

ERN , send It to:

''Win at

Bridge ... ca re of this newspaper. P.O. Box 489. Radio City
p tation , New. York, N. Y. tnnt.Q r

�II-The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Monday, Feb. 6. 1978

Athletes. • .

Nine. • •

(Continued from page I)
Gilkey
AII-SEOAL
quarterback :- Lennie
Van Meter

(Continued from page 1)

AII.SEOAL , scored 100 ooints.
222 yards in 1 game ; Mike
Ba(r - A!I ·SEOA L tackle,
led team in ta ckl es , All
Southeastern Ohio ; Clarence

" Tiny'' Wi lliams - All
·SEOAL ; Dennis Boggs All
SEOAL. 28 points in one
game, 116 points in one
season . 5.8 yards a11erage per
carry in one season ; Terry
Qua lis - AII ·SEOAL.
BASKETBALL All ·
SEOAL. 226 career quarter s
played , 16 free throws made
in one game, 210 ca reer free
throws made, 58 career
games played, 302 ca reer
field goa ls made, 304 career
free throws .attempted , 814
career point s scored. 791
career field goa l attempts, 26
consec ut ive tree throws
made ; M.lck Oa11enport AII -SEOAL 2 times . 33 poin ts
ln one game. J.SO points in one
season,1 17611fie1dtd go~ls indo~c
game, 4 e goa s rna e 1n
one season.
BASEBALL - Rick Van
Matre - 2 years varsity
leading
pil che r ; Mike
Nessel road - All SEOAL 2
years, led club ln hitt ing; Jeff
McKi nney - AII -SE OAL .
winn ing pitcher through
Sectional , District, Reg ional
tournaments : lost 1·0 In State
Tournament ; Br ian Hamilton
- AII ·SEOAL tirst ba seman 2
years , hit over .400 one .vear .
GOLF - Bill Hackett .Meda list 13 tim es in 1967-68 .
WR~STLING
.,...... Mi ckey
Ly~s State to urna ment
entrant three limes ; Fra nklin
Rizer - Most Ma ruader wins
and points scored.

killed when strm:k by a
vehicle as he walked on OhiO
Route 7 in Wellsvi lle.
Painesville : Richard D.
Hayer, 17. Painesville, killed
in a collision on U. S. 20 in
Lake County.
Ak ron~ Richard B: Hyman ,
34, Akron, killed wh en he lust
contrul uf Ius car on !·77, the
'-'as lank ruptured and the car
b

was engu lfed in flames,
,
Sunday
Warren : Duane E. Bennett,
39, Warren , kiUed in a one-car
h f
crash on Ohio 45 nort 0
Warren. Poli ce .say he was
speeding .
Warr en : James n. Wright ,
Wh eatlaud , Pa ., a
pedestrian kmed in a two·car
accident on [..8().
Lisbon: Lee A. Ball, 19,
Hanoverton, killed in a two·
ca r accident on U. S. 30 tn
Col umbiana County .

5 1,

SUBSIDY MADE

State Audito r Thomas E.
Ferguson reported that his
ufrice released $87,1 89.18 in
January criminal cost su bsidy program payments to 62
countiCs. Mei "S Co unty 's
t&gt;
payment was $671. 09 .
TRACK - Joh n Ritt:hh.a rt .
- 433~ points in 1968, dash
records .

nee ln

any roo111

FL~xs~rEEL:
fiN'S U PtiOU{J''fJ)\ED PU,A.NJ1'l1HE:

FINE FURNITURE
AT SPECIAL SALE PRICES

:-, ----A
___r_e_a__D
___ea_t_h__s_____ ! Weather blamed
h
h
bill
or Ig
s
1

1

ELDA H. CARSEY
Elda H. Carsey . 65, was
found dead at hts Route 4
Pomeroy . residen ce Sunday

I
death . Children born to this
union were Lamar Whitaker,
Columbus, and Mrs . Leslie
&lt;Mae) Mathies, Alexander,

attemoon .

Va . One son . Odell, preceded

Mr . Carsey died of natural
causes and had been dead for
ap pro~t l mately 24 hours
be1ore hlsbodywas fou nd . He
was a ,-et ired carpenter and
was a member of the
Ha rri sonvi lle Presby terian
Ch urch.
Mr . Carsey was born June·
25. 19 12 at Pratts Fork, a son
of the tate Char les and
Mahalia King Carsey . On
Ju ne 22, J93.S, he was married
to Dora Anest ine Cain who
preceded him In death on
Dec. 10, 1975.
Surviving are· a daughter.
Mrs , Charles (Con nie )
Chapma n. Route4, Pomeroy ;
two grandsons. Lance and
Monte Chapman, Roufe 4,
(PJomker ovc; twobrothRers,1Tho3r
a e 1 a rsey , au e ,
Pomeroy , and Joseph, of
Albany ; two sisters, Mrs.
Beryl Wyatt and .Mrs. Katie
Knicely, both of Dayton, and
se11eral nieces, nephews and
cousi ns.
Funeral ser11ices will be .
held at 1 p. m. Wednesday at
the Walker Funeral Home in
Rutland with the Rev . Dwight
Zavl tz offic iating . Burial will
be in the Wells Cemetery.
Friends may call a t the
funeral home any time after
10 a . m Tuesdav . The family
wi ll rece ive friend s at the
fu nera l home from 2 to 4 and 7
to 9 p. m. Tuesday .

her in death . Three chlldren
died in infancy ,
Her second marr-iage was
to Taulby Owens. Children
surviving are: Mrs. Virgin ia
CoOk, Gall ipolis ; Joh'n
Owens, Pa triot : Robert K.
Owens , ludlow Falls, Ohio
and Jack ONens, Gall ipolis.
One broth~r survive~ .
Frank M.oore, Ale~tander , Va .
Two brothers and one sister
preceded he r in dea th.
Seventeen grandchildren and
one great.grandchild survive.
Funeral services will be
held at Sa lem Baptist Church
on Tuesday at 2 p.m. with
Rev . George Hall offic iating .
Buria l Will be in Salem
Cemetery.
w:;.i~7~~ FuaXerac?t~oa,;,et:~
Monday from 2.4and 7·9 p.m.

CLYDE .\LEXANDER

Clyde E. Alexander, 77, a
r ~si d ent of Vinton, died in
Holze r Medi ca l Cen ter
Sa turda y eveni ng .
He was born Ma rch 12,
1900, in Vinton, son of the late
Lewis and Ru ie Russell
Atexet nder.
He married Nita- Qui ck ie in
1922 in Pomeroy. She sur.
vives, a long With two
daughters : Mr s. Vid or
(Dorothy) Ciance tta ,
Steubenvil le and Mr s. Tom
(June) Davis. Columbus.
Three grandchildren survive.
Two sisters and two brothers
preceded him in deat h.
Mr . Alexander was a
membe r of the Vinton
Masoni c Lodge, F&amp;AM No .
131, and former owner of the
Alexander Garage and
Chevrolet Sales in Vin ton.
He was refired district
manager for the agency of
Investors Dive rsifie d Ser .
vices in Vin ton .
Funeral ser11ices will be
he ld 1 p.m. Tuesday at the
McCoy.Moor e Funeral Home
wit h Rev . Jerry · N ~ al of.
f i ci~ti ng . Burial will be in
·Vinton Memdrl"ifl Park .
Friends mc;.y ca ll at the
funeral hOme betw~n 2·4 and
7-9 p.m. Monday .
LOLA OWENS

Lo la M . Owe ns, 68 , a
resident of Rt . 1. Patf1ot, died
Saturday in Holzer Medical
. Center.
She was born in Pi k.e
Coun ty , Ky. on Jan . 10, 1910,
daughter of the late Hi liard J .
and Nancy B. Moore.
She was twice married . Her
fir st husband , Thurman
Whitaker , preceded her in

STELLA DARNELL

Mrs . Stella G. Darnell . 92,
of 191 Mulbery Ave ., died
Monday at Holzer Me&lt;l.ical
Cen ter .
She was a daughter of the
late John and Saman tha
Rider Gould . She was also
preceded in death by her
husband, Samuel , thr ~e
daughters, Gert.rude Elnora
Darnell and Ruth Glass; a
son, Ora ; il sis ter and three
brothers.
Surviving
are
two
dauQhters, Mrs. Will iam P.
(Willa) Cal11o a nd Mr s.
James !Margie) Aldridge,
both of Columbus; two sons,
Her sc hel of Springfield ; Paul
of Pomeroy ; a sister. Cora
Scott of Grove City ; six
grandchildren ; seven greatgrandchildren and fl11e great
- great . grandchildren .
Mrs . Darnell was a
mem ber of the Pomer-oy
Church of the Naiarene and a
charter member of The
Plains Church of the
Naza rene .
Funeral serv ices will be I
p.m. Wednesday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev .
Clyde Henderson offi ci ating .
Burial will be in West Union
Cemetery. Friends may call
at the tuner a I home from 2 till
4 and 7 till 9 Tuesday .
NELLE ·sHAW

Miss Nelle Shaw, 77, died at
8 p.m. Sunday at Pleasant
Valley Hospi1al. Her death
was ur1;expected . Her home
was 454 Third
Ave ..
Gali lpol is.
She had retired as a
teacher In the Columbus
Publi c Sc hoo ls ( Barrett
Junior High School) but was
acli11efy hi charge of the arttherapy program at the
Gallipolis State lnstitu.te until
her death .
Born in May of 1900, she
was the last of the family of
Lewis and Helen Kerns Shaw.
Preced ing her in death were
three sisters and four
bro1hers. 5urviving are three
nieces and th ree nephews.
Miss Shaw receiveP her
bachelor 's degree from Oh io
State Un iversity and her
master 's degree from Ohio
Universitr .
Funera services will ·be
held at 1 p.m. Wednesday at
the McCoy . Wetherholt ·
Moore Funeral Home , ·the
Rev . James · V. Fraz ier of·
fiCiaHng , and burial wilt be in
N\ound Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call 7-9 p.m.
Tuesc;lay ,

Velerau MemoriAl K..plt.J Esther Thomas, Clara
Turner, William Warner,
Saturday Admissions •
•
Gwen Folmer. Pomeroy; Leora Wright.
( Blrlbl, Feb. 4)
Edna Russell, Rutland; Betty
Mr.
and Mrs . Richard
Area residents who are lowest comfortable level, but Spaun, Racine; Walter Armstrong, a son, Jacbon .
Robinson, Rutland.
wondering why current home ,., higher than 68 degrees.
Mr. and Mrs. Jackie Berry, a
Saturday Discharges heating bills show a marked
"For every degree that a Ruth Dye, Charles Werry, daughter, Patriot; Mr. and
increase over last month home thermostat is set below
Rick Lunsford, Clyde Sayre Mrs. Timothy Betz, a son,
need look only to recent 70, fuel use is reduced about
II,
Stacie Woolard, Oscar Gallipolis. Mr. and Mrs. Paul
weather statistics to find the three per cent and the lower
Imboden, Anna Hartenbaeh, Myers, a son, Gillllpolla. Mr.
answer.
the consumption, the more
and Mrs. Ron Peters, a
J . M. Koebel. area money the customer saves in Clarence Murray, Evelyn daughter, Proctorvllle.
Murray.
John
Hite,
Mona
manager for Columbia Gas of his home heating biiis, ;;
DIKbaJ1et, Feb. 5)
Neal, Alonna Cleland, Ada
Ohio, points out that weather Koebel said.
Luther Brown, Mrs.
Warner, Marvin · Randolph,
across the state in January
Sharon Warner , Mary William Buttrick, and
averaged 24 per~enl colder
Lavender, Timothy Deem, daughter, Robert Christian,
than for the month of
Janet Jenkins, Howard Mrs . David Dobbins and
December.
daughter , Cecil Elliott,
Phillips.
" The colder the weather
\lfarguerlte Gilmore, Mrs. .
Sunday Admissions The Pomeroy Emergency Mildred Arnold, Pomeroy; Benjamin Hash and son ,
outside, the harder heating
systems must work to keep Squad was. busy with calls Frances Martin, Pomeroy; Wanda Jones, Paul Martin, ·
homes comfortable a nd the Sunday.
Mary Morris, Pomeroy i Mrs. Charles May and son,
more fuel they require, " the
·At 11 :59 a .m., th e squa d Helen Carpenter, Mid- Helen Morning, Thomas
manager said. "Since last went to the St. Paul Lutheran dleport ; John Smith, Tuppers Neal, Esther Nibert, Mrs.
month's heating bills covered Church where Mrs. M,ary Plains ; Robert Knotts , Charles Patton and son .
a period when the weather Morris had become ill. She Vinton; Raymond Ridgway,
Blrtb
was warme[ while this was ta.ken to Veterans Cam br I dg-..;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Donald Slone,
Cloyd
month's bills are for a period Memorial Hospital wher~:oshe Brookover, Rutland ; Virginia a son, Crown City.
that was much colder, this was admitted.
Pierce. Middleport ; Gina
month's
heating
bills
At 8:2!1 p.m., the squad Pellegrino, Long Bottom ;
naturally will be higher than went to the Ray Little Charles McCloud, Midlast month 's.
residence on Route 143 where dleport .
" While none of us can do a person had fallen. No transSunday Discharges anything to change the portation was required .
Sharon Pierce, Robert HathAt 8:58 p.m., th e squa d bum.
weather, we can do
something to help hold down went to the Paul Darnell
Elvin E. Thom(lSol), 55,
Holzer Medical Center
our home heating costs by home on MulberrY Ave., and
Rutland, was injured In an
(Discharges, Feb. 3)
reducing energy consumption transported Darnell to Holzer
' Roberta Adams, Mrs . accident at 11 : 15 p. m.
through good conservation Medical Center.
practices," t he manager
AI 11 :14 p.m., the squad Roger Atkins and son, Saturday on SR 124 in '
said.
· went to E. Main St. for Mrs. Candice Brothers, Lucy Rutland.
The Gallia-Meigs Post
He urged all customers to Lunsford who was taken to Carpenter, JoaMe Conkle,
State
Highway patrol said
Harry
Crabtree,
Christopher
keep their thermostats at the Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Davis, Paul Goddard, Steven Edwin K. Cleland, 24, Mid,
Hammond, ,. Unda Humph· dleport,lost control of his car
reys, Eli ·Lambert, Mrs . whleh slid off the roadway
Frank Martin and son, hitting Thompson's vehicle.
Samantha McKinney, The Cleland car then over(Continued from page I)
Yovonne Miller, ROy Newell, turned.
Davis was one of a feJ workers going to the station where Billy Patrick, Ricky Porter,
Cleland was charged with
cSupervisory personnel were working after tlle International Mrs. David Ritenour and reckless operation. There
Brotherhood of Electrical Workers refused to cross a UMW daughter. Lani Rossiter, was heavy damage.
picket line after . striking mln~rs got angry that 39 train Bertie .Shafer, Jerry Shaffer,
Another Saturday mishap
carloads of non-union coal was shipped In Friday night.
Rebecca Shirley, Bobby occurred· at 4 p. m. on Bob
Supervisory personnel continued to man the plant today.
Slone, Ola St. Claire, Helen McCormick Rd. four tenths of
Striking miners also halted coal deliveries during the Taylor, Freda Walker, a mile south of SR 160.
weekend at C&amp;SOE 's Picway station south of Colwnbus . Geneva Waugh, Miller
The patrol said an auto
"Sheriff's deputies · ih Hocking and Franklin counties also Whealdon, Oakley Willett, driven by Robert E. Shaw, 19,reported truckloads of coal was dwnped.
Andrea Williams.
Gallipolis, struck the rear
Akron Mayor John Ballard said Sunday afternoon he would
(Birtbs, Feb. 3)
end of, a vehicle driven by
. ask all city buildings to cut down on electric usage and that he
Mr.and Mrs. Keith ~·Itch, a Florence J . Howard, 50,
would ask representatives of the sign industry and businesses son, Portland. Mr. and M~$ ­ Mason. There was minor
to see what they could do.
Jack Nelson, a son, Pedro. damage.
(Discharges, Feb. 4)
A final accident occurred at
Donald Barreti, Martha 4:06 p. m. Sunday on Ml1l
Bevans, Forrest Clark, Elva Creek Rd. one and seven
DATE CHANGED
SEEK LICENSE
Corbin,
Henry Elliott, Mary tenths miles north of
· A reg~lar meeting of the
A marriage license was
Grant,
Evelyn Gruser, Gallipolis where a vehicle
Eastern Local Schoo) Board
-~ssued to Mason Randall
Christie
Halley; James driven by Randy J. KitchWood, 22, Rutland, and Robin has been changed to 8 p.m . Halley, Frank Johnson, field, 31, Bidwell, sideLynn Rathburn, 17, Rutland . Wednesday in the high ·.school Wanda Malone, Dorothy swiped a vehicle opercafeteria.'
.McMillian, Terry McNelly, ated by James D. Taylor, 32, '
END MARRIAGES
HEREFEB. 8
was
Genevieve Price, Ernest Gallipolis. ' There
Glenn E. Enslen, Jr. and
On Febru ary
8, a RobinB&lt;ln , Marie Saunders, moderate damage. · No one
Janice R. Enslen, Mid- representative from Donna Smith, Donna Stobart, was injured or cited.
dleport , has fil ed for Congressman "Clarence E ."
dissolution of marriage in Miller's office will conduct an
Meigs County Common Pleas Open ·Door session from 10
Court.
' a.m.-12 noon in the Court(Continued from page 1) ·
Minnie Wise, Langsville, house In Pomeroy.
seven children.
filed suit for divorce aga_inst
If anyone has any questio.ns
The woman, described as In her early 40s with a bruised,
Wesley Wise, Middleport , concerning the Federal
bandaged
fal'l, walked Into a dress store Friday on the
Rhonda Jean Wilson , was Government, please stop by
preumse of shopping. After chatting with two employees, she
granted · a .divorce from to discuss them with the i&gt;ulled a handgun from her purse and aMounced a hOldup.
·
Thomas Edward Wilson.
representative.

.

l!!J

I

''

a

Q ~
$\U

Farmers Bank
POMEROY, OHIO ,
'40,000 Ma.m1um Insurance for EacH Depositor
. Member Federal Deposrt Insurance CotporatiDn

counted. And it could be a no
vote.
Sen. John Glenn, IJ.{)hio,
called on President Carter
late Monday to bring both
sid!lsln the coal dispute to the
Wblte House if the tentative
settlement is rejected by the
union bargaining council thai
meets today to consider it.
He said, " In the event the
coal strike is not settled In the
next few days, the situation In
Ohio will be critical. It's
already very grave."
Monday, about 200 striking
miners gathered around the
Puskarich Mine Co. In Sherrodsville, Carroll C~unty ,

cutback by industries, many
more layoffs will result . H.O.
Canfield, Inc . in London
which employs 185 said it
may also have to lay off.
"We see no way to avoid
cutbacks," Dave Altemuehle ,
a spokesman for Cincinnati
Gas &amp; Electric said earlier
Monday. "Although things
look encouraging It would be
foolt.ll to do anything until it
is ratified. And that may not
be easy."
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric
Co . .-..:elves a large portion of
its coal from barges that
must plow through the icedo,k!f' ~"~ flhi n Rivp.- r, ... tl-.nr

heckling employees, two of
whom were seen carrying
rifles, and breaking two
windows at tile plant.
ult makes no damn
difference," said one of the
miners about tile tentative
settlement, "We have to vote
on it yet.'' "·
The Pure• Corp. In Londoo
laid off 30 of its 330 workers
Mooday, citing a 25 percent
mandatory cutback in
electrical usuage by Ohio
Edison. Plant manager
Charles Lane said that if Ohio
Ed supplies, now at the 46day level drop below 30 days,
necessitating a 50 percent

compliCJIIing the problem of
electric shortages brought on
by· the coal strike.
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Electric Co. said it would
reassess its po:sition on
mandatory cutbacks of power
and when they would start .
C&amp;SOE said it would cootinue
to attempt to obtain nonunion coa l to keep its
generating units operating .
Some coal was delivered
Friday at its plant .J!l
Coshocton County but
shipments were stopped, at
least temporarily, because of
tile presence of UMW pickets.
" We ' r~ rPf'f'h•i ... O" o.::"'"""'" 'lnd

•

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, February 7, 1978

One hurt

a1

attempung to receive some
more,'' said Bob Jones, a
spokesman for C&amp;SOE. "We
haven't recelved any m(H'"e at
Coshocton. We had that one
load In there . But we 're not
going to say we're not going
to receive any coal at that
unit .11
The Coshocton County sheriff's office said between 200
and 250 UMW pickets were at
tile generating station's gates
Mooday .
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
also said electric bills would
be higher In March.
1
' Due to the coal str ike and

diminishing stockpiles of
coal, Colwnbus &amp; Southern
bas used mcc-e expensive oil
and puchased power to
provide electric service.
" For this reason , even
though you may have
conserved electric energy.
the fuel charge portion of
your bill may be higher," the
company S!lid In _a notic-e to
customers.
Bill Cray, Wilkesville,
p-esident or UMW IJJCal 1957
In Vinton County, said he
doubted whether the \lt&gt;1W
membership, at least the
members of his local, would

en tine

accept any agreement with
the coal operators that would
allow miners to be fined fot·
participating in wildeot
strikes , even if Lhe ('Uili
t'Ompanies were also fined .
"1 would be against it

personally and 1 think the
majcc-ity would,'' sllid Cruy .
" It would end up wiU1 the
rank and file always geltinH
fined. Arbitrators usually
rule against the union and
they would In this."
Cray said he and mo'i
members of his local Hrc
prep~~red to •1ay on strikt• lor
at
least another twn
months.

Fi£tren Cents
Vol. 2K, No. 2111

in three
accidents

By Ulllled Pressloteroatlooal

SAN QUENTIN, CAIJF. - L. EWING SOOTT, an 81-yearold prison inmate who has refused parole during his two
decades behind bars, said Monday the first thing he will do
when he gets out In March is divorce the wife he was accused of
murdering.
Scott, a Los Angeles businessman, has steadfastly
maintained his Innocence In the death of his wife, Evelyn,
whose body was never found. He refused parole In the past
because be said it amounted to an admission of guilt. However,
tile Community Release Board this year voted to give him a
discharge anyway, no strings attached.
,..

Conserve eleGtricity. • •

·News •• iii Briefs

ELBERFELDS ·1N POMEROY
RCA .

DOUBLE SAVINGS SALE

..

ADCAID
Stale Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson's office announced
today the February, 1978,
distribution of $34,554,934 in
Aid to Dependent Children to
504,638 recipients In Ohio's 88
counties .
Meigs County received
$&amp;4,346 for 1,040 recipients.

Ualted Preill International
Announcement 1n
Washington of a tentative
settlement of the 63-day-&lt;&gt;ld
coal strike did not stop news
In Ohio of cutbacks by
utiUtles nearly depleted of
coal, layoffs by Industries
facing power rationing and
mounting tension over
transport of non-union coal.
still-picketing miners and
still-worried utility
executives reminded that it
will take about 10 days after
rank and file United Mine
Workers members see the ·
pact before their votes can be

POmeroy Squad
b usy Sunday

GUY SHRIDER

Three county posts are "up
for grabs" in the November
General Election.
The Meigs County Board of
Elections reports petitions
for the June primary election
· must be filed with the board
before 4 p. m. March 23. The
three posts Include one seal
on the board of ·county
commissioners now held by
Henry . Wells : the county
probate court judgeship, now
held by Manning Webster,
and the auditor's post, now
held by Howard E. Frank.
The county court judgeship
will be filled in 1978, but
petitions do not have to be
filed for the position until
August.
Residents were reminded
tod.ay they must be registered
voters, if they sign any
petitions of candidacy. If not
registered,
their signature
.It' s ~atura l to feel guilty about puff ing off a planned savings
will
be
Invalid.
program . Buf fh e hardesf part is beginning . We understand how ,
In order to vote in the June
pressure ca n bu ild up when you're the one res ponsible for your
primary elections, residents
fam ily 's fin.ancial security . Regardless of yo ur income or goal ,
must be registered no later
Farmers Bank has a savings plan to help relieve t he tension. See us.
!loan May 6.
You ' ll sleep better .

Settlement will not end cutbacks

~

ZANESVILLE - Guy V.
Shri der , 92, Rt. I, Glenford,
the father of Miam i
University Athlet ic Director
and former GAHS coach
Rirh.rtrd G. Shrider, died
Sunday at Good Samaritan
Hospi1al. Services wi II be
·held Wednesday in Glenford .

3
posts
up for
grabs

HOSPITAL NEWS

VISIT ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE AND SEE THE
GREAT SAVINGS I~ STORE FOR YOU!

_,.

Reteelve A Bonus Check, Direct From RCA, On Selected Portable

PORTLAND, ORE. -CLEO, THE oldest female lion at
the Washington Park Zoo, was found dead In her moat
Monday, apparently killed by one of the four other lions In tbu
compound, a zoo spokeSilllln said.
"There was no sign of blood," said Paige Powell, but
"there were marks or. her neck and she had been chewed on In
other areas."

'

.

i
·'

AIR FORCE ACADEMY COLO . - AN AIR Force
Academy spokesman has refused to call an outbreak of flu at
the mllltary school an epidemic although almost 25 percent of
tile 4,300 cadets were bedridden and two cases of A-U.S.S.R.
bave been conflmled.
"Approximately 1,000 ~f the cadets visited the .hospital
Monday and are c.onflned. We are not calling it an epidemic,
we are calling It an outbreak of a flu-like illness," said Cap!.
Tom Boyd.
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT CARTER has signed into
law a bill forblddlng use of children under 16 In pornographic
rllaterial and outlawing the interstate transportation and sale
of such material.
The Protection of Children Against Sexual Exploitation
Ad of 1971, signed Monday, amends the criminal code and the
M8liD Act, which forbids taking anyone under the age of 18
across state tines for prostitution.

. '

WASHINGTON -A NEW VACCINE against pneumonia iS
now being distributed, with the first public vaccinations to take
place Wednesday, the drug company which made the medicine
1sllid Monday.
The vaccine, described as the first of its kind when it was
approved by the Food and Drug Administration last fall, is
called ~·Pneutnovax.''
Merck, Sharp and Dohme Inc. of West Point, Pa., said
700,000 doses of the vaccine are being shipped to fiU order by
doctors and druggists, and an additional I million doses are
expected to be available by the end of next week. ·
NASHUA, N.H . .:... ROBERT AND KARIN LAMON sat In
jaU today rather than let their IS.year-&lt;&gt;id daughter attend
schools were sex education is ta\!Sht. "If protecting our
daughter's moral values Is a crime, then we are guilty," Mrs.
LaMon said In a three-page statement distributed to repocters
Monday as she and her husband were taken to the Hillsborough
County Jall.
The LaMons were found guilty of contempt of ·court for
refusing to comply with state District Court Judge Aaron
Harkaway's Jan. 10 order to produce their daughter so he
could determine if she is a truant.
WASH!NGTON - SOVIET BUYERS have ordered
another 150,000 metric tons of American wheat, the
Agriculture Department announced Monday.
The sale, amounting to 5.5 million bushels, brought total
(Continued on page 10)

and Console Televisions For Up To '75.00

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~

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• RCA XL-100, the reliability of.100% solid
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• RCA Super AccuColoi black matrix picture
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• Lighted channel Indicators.
·

25" diagonal

ELBERFELDS.IN POMEROY

NEW 4-11 AGENT- Mrs. Dlana 'Eberts, a native of
VInton Courlty, and graduate of Ohio University, has ·
a.s8UIIIed duties as Meigs County 4-H agent. She is a
fonner home economics teacher In Vinton County
Schools.
I

1\

Bill Young, a member of
Pomeroy Council, told fellow
councilmen Monday night
4
' The
power scare is not
over." Young had just attended an earlier meeting at
the Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric company in
Columbus.
Young reported Columbus
and Southern Ohio and Ohio
Power have a 50 day supply of
coal. How long this stockpile
lasts depends on W!!ather
conditions, Young noted .
Young said when the coal
strike is settled and miners
return to work, it will take
three weeks before coal
would reach power plants.
Because of his report and
since street lights have been
turned off in Pomeroy,
council agreed to impose a 10
p.m. curfew for all persons in
order to assist the pollee
department in patrolling
village streets. The curfew
will remain in effect' until the
energ'y crisis i~ over.
· John Koebel of Columbia
Gas of Ohio met with council
concerning the expiration of
the· gas company•s contract
March 6. He presented an
ordinance that would incre.ase rates two and one-half
percent the first year and
seven and one-half the second
year.
The new contract is for a
two-year period. It would

mean a 65 cent increase the
first year and $4.29 the second
year.
The minimum now is $3.65
under the new contract the
first year it would be $4.68
increasing the second year to

$5.06.
The proposal was turned
over to the utility committee
composed of Bill Young ,
chairman, Larry Wehrung
apd Jim Neutzling for study
and recommendations.
Also' meeting with council
were Fred Boger and Mark
Vogt of the engineering finn
of Burgess and Niple. They
were asked what could be
done to improve the hard
water problem in Pomeroy.
They suggested a test well
be made if a loca tinn rr-uld be

found in Syracuse. If would
cost approximately $3,000 or
a treatment · plant could be
built at a cost of $350,000.
It was reported the deeper
a well is, the harder the water
gets, but if you don 't go down
deep enough water would
contain a high amount of
nitrate which is harmful.
Boger is to get cost figures
and maps for council and
report back to them.
Others meeting with
council ,were members ol the
Board of Public Affairs, E. F.
Robinson, Harry Davis and
Dale Smith.
A proposal was submi.tted
to Increase water and sewage
rates. There were · three.
proposa ls a 30 twrrent in·

crease, 35 percent mcreuse or
~ 40 percent increase, all on
water alone. Robinson said
additional revenue will have
to be received in order to
meet the debt service for the
yea r.
Larry Wehrung said that he
could not see asking for an
increase with the type of
water being offered to th e
residents of Pomeroy.
Lou Osborne, ~;:quncilman,
sa id that it was Imperative
that council have the money
to meet the Indebtedness.
Council took no action, but
agreed to make a declsion
wjthin a week or so. Co un·
cilman Jim "Neutzling asked
about
parkir1 g meters
missing in certain sections of

the town. He wus Informed
that this was the result uf
va ndalism . No new meters
are available to replace the
unes that are missing .
Neutzling also discussed
the dangerous hole in the
streei at the foot of Breezy
Heights. He was tnld It was
caused from water drainnge.
The question seems· tu be,
who is really. responslble for
repairin g the area . N o
decision was made.
Brown told council that
they possibly had a fairly
good chance to secure a gronl
for a comprehensi ve phm
throu~h
Bu ckeye . Hill s
Hoc king Valley Reg iona l
Development.
Brown also reviewed some

ordinances that should h•·
changed and incrcusc fim::-;
on

fleeing

un

offict•r .

n1ltrijnuna, resistin~ UITt':il
and intox.ication.
Mayor Claren&lt;:e Ancl rt· w~
read a letter from tht• Ohio
Anny National Guard whkh
ex pressed gratitude in the
way that members Wl' 1'4
treated while In Pomeroy. II
stated ''We deeply UIJIH't:dH it•
the manner in whkh you
provided food and lm1Ailll4 fo r
the truops."
The letter also btntt.'ll lh til
1

severa l members

or

tl w

guard remarked about the
!-fpirit of cooperntlun I hey
received from t he citi7.t'IIS of
PomercJy .
The Mayor's re(mrl rur llw
month o( December )!)77 in
the amount of $1.•1tJ4j.50 wm;
read and accepted.
Mayor Andrews ahw
reported he h~d I'CCcived u
letter from the M ci~s Loi 'H l
settlement.
Board of Edu cutio11 tp; The-three-year agreement tendinK thanks fur tli 'IHiilll~
·was arumunced at a news the parking area nt Pumcruy
conference by ofllclals of the Elementary.
Federal Mediation and
The rneeUilg wal:l opened by
Conciliation Service and the
prayer by the Hev . Wllllmu
UMW . BCOA President Middlesworth.
Joseph Brennan and other
Attending were Mnyur
industry officials, who were Andrews, Young, Wchruu/--: ,
present In the building, did Brown, Neutzllng n11d
not participate.
Osborne, councllmc·n, Jarr&lt;'
Labor Secretary Rny Mar- Walton , clerk , Chief J ed
shall was pleased at the Webster, Tom Werry 111111
breakthrough, saying th e . Donnie Ward.
. strike " has meant great
suffering for UMW members
and their families '' and " has
brought
the
country
perilously
close
to
widespread coal 'shortage·s ln
the midst of a seve-re wlnter. '' ,
Marshall urged both union
and management councils to
approve the agree ment,
calling It a "fair contract, · CHARLESTON , W.V u.
genuinely good for both ( UPI ) - Just as officials uf
parties."
the United Mine Workers
Horvitz
praised were aMounclng a tentative
Rockefeller for his efforts in c ontract
settlement,
endlng the deadlock, and the members of UMW District 17
governor, In tum, said he were unveiling on agn.oement
. hoped the agreement would to allow striking miQer.s t.u
meet tile human needs of the borrow up to $500 to tide them
miners.
over.
Union officials said .lt could
Officials of the Cha rlestontake 10 days or more before based district, the largest in
the full membership decides tile union, said the agreement
whether to accept the tenns. with the UMW Federal Credit
H ratified, some mines may Union allows eligible striking
need additional time to get miners to borrow up to $500
operations back to normal from· the credit union ,
again.
beginning Thursday.
Miner
Gerry
Vance
Miners who had good credit
reflected a hope thai· the long ratings before the strike
strike might soon end.
began Dec . 6 can apply mnl
"I'll be glad to get back to officials say the miners do not
work, lf it's a good contract," have to be members of the
Vance said. "It will be a credit union.
whole lot better for everyone
Officials said they hope lo
concerned.' '
issue checks within 48 hours
after loans are approved .

UMW. Council checks contract.
·

goes to the Wlion 's 160,000 the contract. The ·current
By DREW VON BER(JEN
WASHINGToN (UPI) rank and file members for average wage is $7.80.
The United Mine Workers ratification.
Other provisions included a
bargaining council, which
A special council of the guaranteed health benefits
has
rejected
similar Bituminous Coal Operators program for all active and
agreements in the past, was Association also must ratify retired miners and their
deciding today whetber to tile pact.
families, and restoration and
accept a tentative settlement
UMW President Arnold improvement of pension
to end tile record strike Miller called the tentative . benefils, Miller said.
·
against the soft coal industry. ·settlement "by far the best
The 64-day walkout has
The agreement, reached agreement negOtiated in any .caused coal stockpiles to
Monday and announced at a major industry in the past dwindle to critical levels in
'
.
news conference by chief two years."
some areas .-President Carter
federal mediator Wayne HorHe said the agreement Intervened last Friday,
vitz, must be approved by the included a wage increase of asking
negotiators
to
39-member council before it $2.35 per hour over the life of continue efforts for a

New 4-H
Hillside strangler·
agent
named offers to surrender
Meigs County has il new
extension service agent in
home economics. She ls Mrs,
Diana Eberts. Mrs. Eberts is
the first home economics
agent the Meigs Extension
Service has bad since the
resignation of Marta Gilkey
two years ago.
A graduate of Vinton
County High School in 1971,
Mrs. Eberts received her
baehelor of science degree in
home economics education In
1974 from Ohio University.
She received her master's
degree in home economics
education
from
that
university In 1976.
For the past two and onehalf years, Mrs. Eberts has
been
teaching
home
economics at the Vinton
County Junior High School.
In her new post Mrs. Eberts
expects to be active iP the 4-H •
field since she was a 4-H club
member for 10 years and
credits that club WOGk with
her decision to enter extension work. She also hopes
to see the homemaker clubs,
which were formerly active
in the county, revived as
locations where women can
ex:change new ideas and
information.
. In the 4-H field she hopes to
develop more membership
and 11\ore'leadership.
·
Mrs. Eberts Is · looking
forward to meeting Meigs
Countian8 and Is anxious to
know their interests so that
decisions can be made on
programs the extension
service wUI sponsor.
Mrs. Eberts and her
husband, James, who is a
certified public accountant
and operates a business office
in Wellston, are both natives
of .:Vinton County. They are
currently living In McArthur,
but expect to move into the ·
Albany area In the near
future. Mrs. Eberts can be
reaehed at the Meigs County
Eztenslon Office, 992-3895.

strangled In a distinctive
LOS ANGEI.F..S (UPI)- A and their safety." .
manner and tlleir nude bodies
The
strangler
is
the
target
man claiming to be the
dumped
in the hilly
of
a
93-&lt;lfficer
task
force
that
Hillside Strangler, rape killer
residential
area o( the
has
mounted
one
of
the
of 12 girls and women, has
offered to surre.nder, with an biggest manhunls In tile Los northeastern Los Angeles and
accomplice, to Mayor Tom Angeles areas since the Glendale aoea .
search for tile Sharon Tate
Bradley .declined to say
Bradley.
why he considered tbe letter
The mayor Issued a public . murderers in 1969.
The strangler - or stran- genuine, not the work of a
appeal to the strangler
glers,
based on several crank, but it was reported it
Monday ' to continue lhe
reports
of two men - is had been e~amined by
communication, assuring
sought
for
the killings of 12 Investigators of the Strangler
him he would be safe if he
girls
and
women between Task Force, which approved
gave up "to me, here in my
Sept. 9 and Dec . 14. Tbe Ule mayor's announcement.
office."
The writer indicated he
Bradley said the man wrote victims ranged In age from 14
him, saying "he is the to 28, but most were would forward a "certain
after receiving
Hillside Strangler and that he attractive young women in item"
assurances
of his safety,
their
late
leellS
or
early
20s.
wanted to turn himself and a
Bradley
said.
Bradley would
Several
were
prostitutes
9r
friend ,in to the mayor's
not
elaborate,
but it was
otherwise
connected
to
the
office, but that he was
concerned that It be only the . seamy Hollywood "street apparently something only
the true strangler could
mayor's office, Instead of the scene."
Most
were
sexually . possess, proof of his identity.
police department, because
of some fear for their lives molested and all were
.

'

Loans
are offered
to strikers

One injured
in accident

'

FALCONS MAKE ALL-STATE BAND - Five
members of the Wahama White Falcon Marching Ba"'
were recently named to the 1978 West Virginia All-State
Band. Pictured In front,lefllc right, are Clarinetist Mary

McFarland, FluUst Jennie James, Trumpeter Debbie
Starr and Bassist Todd Tucker. Back row: Aaslstant Band
Director Mike Harbour and Band Director Charles Yeago.
Absent is Mark Goodnite, who plays tbe French Horn. ·

Two cars were heavily
damaged, one person injured
and one driver cited to court
as tbe result of an accident un
Coal St. at 12 : II p.m. Monday .
Police said a car driven by
Susan Altherr, Ja ckson,
traveling west on Coal St.,
failed to stop at a stop sign at
the intersection of 'cool and
North Third and struck a car
operated
by
Connie
Scholderer,
Route
2,
Pomeroy.
Mrs .
Ernes -tine
Moodlspaugh, a passenger In
tbe Scholderer car, received
cuts, bruises and a back
Injury. She was. taken lo
Veterans Memorial Hospital
by
the
Middleporl
Emergency Squad.
Altherr was cited to aPP&lt;ar
before Mayor Fred Hoffman
on a charge of failing to stop
at a stop sign.

'·'

'

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