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                  <text>energy and should be temperature as possible for per minute to 3.
repaired immediately. The the wash cycle of your clothes
- Take quick showers
replacement of washers is a washer. Use cold water for all instead of hatha. Baths take
as much as 30 to 50 gallon• of
simple operalion described in rinse cycles.
every basic home owner's
- Presoak heavily soiled water. Shower! UJe 5 to IS
maintenance and repair clothes before washing .
gallons of water per minute.
guide. Afaucet that leaks one
- Scrape dishes before
-Cut down on the number
drop per second wastes 2,400 placing them in a dish- of showers taken. Replace
gallons of hot water each washer . If rinsing is some of them with sponge
year. That's enough to run 160 necessary, use ccld water. baths using a small amounl of
full cycles on an automalic
- Try to run your dish- water in a basin.
dishwasher.!
washer no more than once a
- Limit shower lime to 2
A simple rule of thumb day or only when fully loaded. minutes or less.
applies to energy con- · Between meals, store soiled
- TUm off shower water
servation and hot water dishes in the unit.
while you apply soap to body
every time you use cold water
- When washing dishes by or lather hair.
instead .of hot you save hand, ftll a pan with hot water
- Don 't let bath water run
energy dollars. The following for rinsing. Don't let hot continuously when you shave.
lips will help remind you of water run ccntinuously.
Close the drain and fill the
ways to reduce hot water
- A flow restrictor can be basin with water instead. '
consumption.
purchased for as little as
- Tum down your water
- Wash only full loads of $1.50. Easily installed in a heater thermostat to a
laundry. Use water level or shower head, this device ·~linimum setting if you plan
load size devices on clothes reduces the amount of water to be away from your home
washer.
flowing from the pipe (but not . for an extended period of
Use as low a water the pressure) from 5 gallons time.

Water heating:

Use and conservation
By DIANA S. EBERTS
County Ext. Agent,
Home Economies
POMEROY - Hot water is
taken for granted and looked
upon as an integral part of
most American households.
Uttle thought is given to the
cost of heating water because
its use is constant rather than
seasonal, as with a central
healing system.
The heating of water ac·
counts for a whopping 15
percent of your total energy
bill. You can't do without hot
water, but there are several
ways to conserve it so that
energy requirements and
costs will be less.

WALTER Salamacha, right, is welccmed to the Pt
Pleasant . Fi~ld Office by John Cooper, Districi
C&lt;lnservauomst.

~

Mason Corinty post

1978
NASHVILLE
AND THE
GRAND OLE
OPRY
TOURS
TWO DAY TOUR
DEPARTS
GAU.IPOOS
JACKSON
WAVERLY
FEB. 18-19
®WORLD-WIDE

j

GAWPOLIS

~ mAVEL AGENCY
l3 Court Street
Gallipolis, 0 . Ph. 446-Hf9

••

:e

attended high school there. At
the present time, he lives on a
fam1 in Ohio where he and his
wife raise tobacco and hogs.
Past experience of related
nature include three years in
the SUrveyor's Office in
TilE ESTELLA PIERCE FAMILY, 608 North St.
Washington. D. C. Prior to ·
Woodville,
Ohio is looking for a friend who might he in Meig~
that he served in the U.S. Air
C&lt;lunty.
If
you
khow him would you advise the family. Mrs.
Force in the Strategic Air
Pierce.
writes:
.
C&lt;lmmand and served in the
"!am
sending
you
this
request
about a friend that my sims
Vietnam . theater
of
would
like
to
know
where.
he
is
how.
operations in 1966 and 1967.
· "He worked for us on a farm in Woodville in 1936 and 1937.
Mr. Salamacha said, "I am
He
was about 19 or 20 years old then. His name is Harry
thrilled. to be working in
Johnston.
Out letters rome back to us so we apparently do not
Mason County where ther'e
have
the
correct
address.
are large [arming operations
"!hope
someone
reads this in your paper and he writes to
and many full-time farmers .
us.
He
was
like
a
son
to
me and a brotber to the boys."
I am looking forward to
helping landowners carry out
AND THOSE GENEALOGISTS hand right in there. Qur
conservation work on their
latest
request comes from Mrs. Emily Smith, 1040 Richey
(anns."
Road, Zanesville, Ohio 43701. She writes: ·
"I am seeking iilfonnation ahout my ancestors the
Nebergalls (various, speUings such as Neighborgall' and
Nevergall) who Uved in Meigs C&lt;&gt;Unty around 1840 and later.
George and Juliann Nebergall had children, Andrew, Nancy,
Mary, Elizabeth, George, Jane, Fanny Suzann and John
Lewis.
'
"!would appreciate if you would print this letter and my
request that anyone reading it in the paper who has' any
knowledge of any of tbe ahove people or tlleir descendants

SElliNG lHE STAG£

•

e

:

trac:tion to hom e buyers . •
A large mirror ca n'make •
a room look larger .. . •
Properly placed, It can •
reflect and magnify many e
of your best sellir)g points . e
Defini tely turn off lhe TV

• happy. inviting look. Don 'l
e just sell a house - sell a and

turn

on

e

sqft •

e home!
e
Far evening Inspection,

background music on the •
hi ~fi to create that subtle · •

• brighten yo_
u r home from
• the front porch light on

lived -in atmosphere. Your •
prospects are buying more

• througha lltheroomsinthe than a house ~ tlley are
• house . Little decoratori)lbuyinganewwayof!lfe. S(:'
• touch-es - a vase of make your home LIVE .
flowers, a plant small
· • pillows ~ can ,;~dd much to
• the comfortable feeling of a If there is anything we
• ho~e.
can do to help you in the
•
If you are having you'r field of real estate please
e home shown In the winter , phone or drop m at
e a crackling lire in the LEADINGHAM REAL
e fireplace adds irreslstable ESTATE, 512 Sec... .,d Ave..
e allraction . A working GolllpOiis. Phone 446-7699.
• fireplace Is a malar at- We're here to ~elpl

•
•
•

please contact me."

'

MRS. RUTH SNODGRASS of Racine advises that her
brother, Robert Arix who has lived in Miami, Fla., for
perhaps, the past 20yearsand is now living in the Racine area
has a patent on an invention which will stop car thefts. Interest
has been shown by major business.in the invention. In this day
and age, with one good patent you can strike it rich -so lotsa
luck, Robert Arix.
MRS. DANA COVERT i~ confined to O'Bleness H~spital
Athens, wtth neck and back mjuries. Last wei!k the CQver~
were in all auw accident in C&lt;lhunbus and thought everyone
was o.k. They started home and Mrs. Covert became ill. She
went w a doctor locally and was sent to Atllens for further
examination and then was hospitalized. Cards can be·sent to
Room 339.
·
MEANTIME, HOSPITALIZED in Columbus wbere she
has undergone major surgery is Mrs. Thurston (Phyllis)
Slone, Jr . She's expected to he confined at University Hospital
(or quite some time. You can send cards to room 841.

•

ALSO PERHAPS, you can remember four year old Perry
Levacy, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Levacy who underwent
heart surgery Tuesday. He's doing well. His address is
e open
ej RainQoW Baby and Children Hospital, University Hospital, 2
e South, 2065 Adelbert Road, Cleveland, Ohio,

e
•

e

................... ...•.
·(~···

•

•

• REMEMBER THOSE beautiful candles that you haul out
of storage each Christmas to use as decorations. Better he
looking them up. It appears that you might have to burn them.
Meantime, keep smiling.

"IT·TAKES A HEAP OF .LIVING
TO MAKE A HOUSE A HOME!"

IT tAKES SOME FURNITURE TOOl
,.

for the Tot~! Development
Fund.
The campaign, which is
planned to run through April
30, will have 2,000 volunteers
seeking pledges payable
during a 36-month period.
Four basic pledge divisions advance gi rt s, pacesetter
girts, special girts, and family
girts - are being organized.
Campaign funds will
provide nee ded camping
facilities for currently
enrolled Scouts, including ·
handicapped Scouts, and will
provide 'ror anticipated
growth of the co uncil's
program.
Kelley, a member of the
• Kentucky Bar Association
• and
American
Bar
Association, is a partner in.
Kelley, Galloway &amp; Company
of Ashland. He received the
Kentucky Bar Association's
outstanding Service Award in
1968.
Former chairman of the
Kentucky Public Service
CommiSsion, . Kelly is a
member of the Kentucky

:g
.=3

Quite a surprise the other day to walk into the vocal music
depariment at Meigs High School and hear tbe young people
rehearsmg some of the wonderful songs from Meredith
Wilson's ' 1Music Man.''
Mrs. Paige Hunt, vocal music supervisor, pointed out that
the students are going to stage the Broadway musical on
March IOand ll , Duel&lt;! the terrible weather and no school the
m\lsiCal will be cut just a bit because students baven'thad Ume
wgel it all together. Must admire Mts. Hunt for tackling the
ambitious project, however. Promoters of the new high school
some years back spoke brllliantly on all of the wonderful
things that woilld happen with the new consolidated high
school. One of the seUing points was the &amp;uadway musicals
and plays. They haven't been forthcoming . "Music Man" will
really he a "first". at the high school.
Incidentally, the young people taking part will be looking
for ccstumes of the early l!lrol in order to make their musical
really effective. If you have some clothing which you would
loan from tbe period, do contact Carrie Bearhs, at 992-5036,
Mrs. Hunt at 992~197 or Laura Hoover, 992-7379 right away.
They:ll need to know. Inc(dentally, Laura, a senior at Meigs
· H1gh ts belpmg Mrs. Hunt w1th direction of the show.

Today
:e
By

. ·When preparlr1g your
home to be shown to
prospect i ve buyers , use
subtle showmanship to help
set the right a'mosphere.
Give your home a restful.

it

_

He was born near Pitts·
burgh, Pennsylvania, and

Willis T. Leadingham
Realtor

tlllilecl Preu lnteraatloaal
Ohio enters the 70th day of
the United. Mine Workers
strike today in an energy
emergency witll utilities
desperate lor coal - and
miners determined they
wm 't get it, despite a pledge
of
federal
help
in
transporting shipments.
The last faint hope of a
strik,e settlement ended
. Sunday when the UMW
Bargaining C&lt;luncil voted 3M
W reject a tentative strike
settlement. There was no
indication when UMW President Arnold Miller and the
Bituminous C&lt;lal Operators
would resume negotiations.
Ohio meanwhile is fast

"'" "'

j'

By Bob Hoeflich

Cooper,

District Conservationist of
scs.
r. Salamaeha previously
worked for Soil Conservation
Service in Cabell and Wayne
Counties for three years.
During his period or work. he
has served the cooperators of
the Guyan Soil and Water
Conservation District. He has
received se veral training
courses to better qualify him
to work with cooperators of
the Western District in Mason
County .

•
•

•
•
•
•

&lt;"

~stat&amp;.

:
:

~:

King as
conservation
technician for Mason County,

·~r~

i
:

1

as a replacement for Okey R.
announced John

A thermostat setting of no
degrees to 120 degrees F. on a
water heater Is sufficient if
you do not have an automatic
dishwasher. A setting of 140
degrees F. is recommended if
you do have one. Ternperatures over 140 degrees F.
shorten the life of glass-lined
tanks.
·
Once a month run a bucket
of water from your hot water
storage unil. This will help
remove sediment which
insulated the lank from the
source of heat and wastes
energy .
A leaking hot-water faucet
is an enormous waster o(

A hi
on~~~ ~~~~e~~g;eo~~~·i~d: ;.,i~~ ~~~s~~:~~ank
s and attorney
to headname~Boy
Scout drive
•
.. .._. . .... .
.
HUNTINGTON ·An tified public accountant
campa&gt;gn general ~late Racing C&lt;lmmittee. He
~~""'01
•~mey "" ~- ...mW K'''"'· ... ,.,.,; ::::,:::':.'2m':::~ ~.::::.:!:':.'r'w'!:
.
.
raise $861,480 for if!lproving Kentucky University in 1947.
·
;
:
,
area Scouting facilities, arid his law degree from the
acccrding to Orin E. Atkins, University of Louisville in ,
. Of· the Bend j;(J~..' . ;!~:;
Campaign Cabinet Chainnan 1950. He and his wife, Rui.e,

Salamacha named to
PT. PLEASANT - Walter
Sa lamacha has been selected

household, the number of
bathrooms, and on the
presence and regular use of a
clothes washer and-or
automatic dishwasher. Water
heating units, usually using
gas, electricity, or oil, are
specified in terms of tank
size, · rate ol water input,
maximum estimated hot
water usage per hour, and
recovery or reheating cap- ·
city, rated in gallons per
hour. An over~ized unit uses
energy to keep unneeded
water hot; an undersized unit
cannot supply a sufficient
amount of hot water. A
reliable heating and plum·· ·
bing contractor can deterneeded in

Utilities

The Finest Selection
And The Best Values
ANYWHERE!
BUY NOW&amp; SAVE
DURING OUR
MID-SUMM-ER SALE

KER FURNITURE
IN MIDDLEPORT

have three daughters.
Orin E. Adkins, chainnan.
of the board and chief
executive officer of Ashland
OiJ, Incorporated, was namedas
campaign
ca binetchairman of the Total
Development Fund by
Council President Leo M:'
MacC&lt;lurtney.
•
The Tri-State Area CouncU
recently was rated the top
council in membership, units,'
and quality programs 31l]ong_
78 councils in the Eas~
Central Region of the Boy
Scouts of America, which.
includes the states of West
Virginia, Ohio, Indiana 1..
Wisconsin, 1Uinois, Michigan
and portions of four other
states.
IncorPorated in 1935, the
council serves ten counties in
Kentucky, Ohio, and Wesi
Virginia. The Tri-State Area'
Council is a member agency.
of the Cabell-Wayne United
Way, the Boyd. · county
.Community Chest, and t!&gt;e
Lawrence County, Ohio,
United Way .

HAROLD E. KELLEY

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

FEBRUARY APPLIANCE
CLEARANCE

ELBERFELDS MECHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE
---------..-..-..--.-...._...._...~-----------17.6 CU. FT. GE REFRIGERATOR · FREEZER
j GE

$499

Heavv dutv . perm press cycle . 3
dryirig temperatures . gold finish ..

I

REG.S249.9s ................... SALE

$224

~:6cu~FT.GE'iEFRi"GE"RATiiR"~FREu£R--1-GE'A"uro"M"ATicw"AsHEi___
No frost· adjustable she lves . power saver switch

.

·
REG.

White
Finish
.

SALE

S5 09 , 9.S~··••••••••••••••••••·••·· ·······

REG. sm. ......

ld f'
h
mlsh · eavy duty - perm press . 3
water
levels.
REG. S319.95••••• • •••••••••••••SALE
G

$449
·

.

o

~

.

,~~~~.~-i-~i.~~ ..... ~.~-~~-~A I;Q

95
1---_.._.._.._.._.._..._.._...,...,.._..._.._._..._.~.JI..i!

.

-----------------,._·--·

GE AUTOMATIC WASHER
Perm press cycle · 2 speeds · gold

1

14.2 CU. FT. GE REFR_
IGERATOR · FREEZER

$285

.

~~t.'mu5 ..................

$299

SALE

. Power saver switc h · adlustabte shelves • rolls on
.,.._..._._._._.,......,..__u,.,....,.._.__.._.._..__.._.._
wheets.
·
MAGIC CHEF ELECTRIC RANGE
REG
White Finish SALE
439~ ·JOinch
- conffnuousclean - auto-cooklngconfrol - clock
· l499.9s ••• -................... .. ...... .
t l mer · lfghted oven and black splash . old r
avocado.
g
O

$

. .. . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . $4. 49 h

REG 5509 95

Gold Finish

SALE

-...--.-_.._.._.._..~---------------

GE AUTOMATIC wAsHER
Heavy duty · per :n press cycle. White
finish .

A EG. $309.95 ••••••••••• • ••••• , SALk:

$274
.

r---~~----~-~-----------GE ELECTRIC DRYER
.
Perm Press cycle · white finish . 3
drying temperatures.

REG 5479 95
•

•

.
...... 0

0

$385

SALE

•••• 0

M'A'Gic"CHEF'ELiC1iiC'i'AN'G"E_ _ _

$

~nt';.,c.h . large oven . storage - white

259

REG,$317.00·········••••••••• SALE

------------------GE ELECTRIC RANGE
JO Inch · lighted oven : auto-cooking control . clock &amp;
timer.

REG. 5239.95 ••••••••••••••••••• 5ALE

for piU)lphlet
CINCINNATI (UP!)
Hustler Magazine owner
Larry Flynt has been indicted
by a Hamilton County grand
jury for mailing ccpies of a
pamphlet depleting chi ld
abuse to thousands of
Cincinnati-area home.J and
authorizing tile sale of his
magazine at a downtown
storefront.
Flynt was indicted Friday
on 16 counts of 14 recklessly
furnishing" . w juveniles an
illustrated child abuse
• pamphlet last Ocwber. ThO
material
included
photographs vividly
depicting victiins of child
abuse . .
Flynt also was indicled on
two ccunts of cootrolling
''certain obscene material ...
Hustler Magazine, Ocl&lt;lber
and November 1977 Issues ...
with purpose to sell or
pubUcly disseminate."

. GE PORTABLE DRYER
Perm Press cycle · works on household
current . compact size.
REG.I189.95 ................... SALE

White Finish .......... , •••••• SALE

169

$

')25

$

REG.
Sl59.95
Gold Finish ................. ,SALE

~

~-~---L-~--------------~------~~~-~---~~--~
GE AUTOMATIC W~SHER
. .
GE ELECTRIC RANGE
Heavy duty . large capaci ty tub . perm
$
20 Inch apartment size. stain less top.
$
press . white fin ish.
.
.
I
white finish .
·. .
REG.S329 .95
SALE .
. . 1'01 I REG.S259.95 .................. SALE
.-~

235

295

-~---~-.._.._.._.._ _____ '1"""_____ ~-------

I GE ELECTRIC RANGE
I auto-cooking
36 inch · gold finish . self-cleaning oven .
controls . clock _ timer

WHIRLPOOL ELECTRIC DRYER

'
Heavy duty · 5 cycles · 3 temperatures.

$

. .................. .
·-_____..;._. _.235
. .,. ___ --·... .-.-..-----....

--REG. 5259.95 ................... SALE
r-.--~------

·----------~
· ---1

~REG '479 95

~:vyE~~~T~I~yc~~Y~~omatlc
~.EG.mus

SALE.
J

1

$429
--·-....
$324.

$235 ~ ,~~v:~E ~LECTRIC
~~~~~~:.~'::'~~.:?.~ ?.:~~~:.hSALE
G-;~;;;0-;-;;K;-M;;-----+w-....RLPOoLPORTABLE-------,
I
$ 9
$299
........................ .
RANGE
me . au.to c~klng controls. lighted
1
.•

sensor White finish .
,
................... SALE

Hea vy du'y .i8lb. iub 2 spee&lt;l&gt; n 1ni
b? skel
bleach .&amp; fabr ic !&gt;Oflt,ner

d1spenser . white ftn ls h.

.

REG, 5379.95., ................. SALE

··~-

__..,- -

'

.,....._..__..

I

-

DISHWAS HER
5 cy des fE!aturing super s~:our. 2 speedS
\ . gold finish.
.
. LREG $•• , 95
SALE

._.__.._,_.._.._.,.__.,

I

_

_.._,;WI

I

I

----~~--"~--~-----~

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
' ,.

•

jlhodes have maintained up

Carter to call both sides
in
th e
coa l dispute
to . the
Wh ite
House
to negotiate . Rep . William Harsha , R-Ohio, has
demanded invocation of the
Tart-Hartley Act to get
miners back to work .
The
Columbus
a nd
Souther" Ohio Electric C&lt;l.,
down to a 45-&lt;iay supply has
repeatedly asked for such
protection. It has about 12
days worui of t'Oal stashed
around the state in trucks and
train cars. But truckers and
rail employ~s do not want to
risk an encounter withUMW
members ,
Ohio Edison , base d in

w now that the Guard, which
is undel'SUlHed. would not be
called on to protect l'oal
shipments.
But thi~ weekend, Sen.
Howard . Metzenbaum , D·
Ohio, said he could see . no
reason why the President or
the governor could not assure
legal prbtection to utilities
that want to ship in coal.
Metzenbaum .. and other
members .of the Ohio
congressional delegation
were mostly dissastified with
the.President's action, saying
it wasn't enough and was too
late. "
Sen. John Glenn, ~hio,
and Metzenbaum want

.

at y

Akron, is one or the most
stra pped of the utilities .
Down to under a ~y
supply, the uUlties says it will
probably have to impose a 50
pert'efll across tbe board
power cutback by the end of
tile week .
The Ohio Power Co, serving
eastern Ohio, has a :i!kla)'
supply and expects curtail·
mcnts eurly next week. The
Mooognltela Power Co., Fairmont, W. Vu ., with !12,000
eastern Ohio cusiQmers has
ooly 26 days or &lt;'Dill left.·
Cleveland
Electric
Illuminating and the Toledo
Edison Co with 50-day
supplies, expeet to rely on

en tine

some nuclear power to get by.
Cutbac ks
or
some
proportion . now · seem
ine ,•itable since officials
estimate it will t(lke about 20
duys (rom the day or
settlement to get coal moving
again.
Businesses and institutions
arow&gt;d the state are stealing
themselves .for that . Ohio
Stute University officials In
Columbus, for exumple, will
decide this 11fternoon whether
the school's athletic program
this week will be held .
Internationa l
Harvester
employees in Springfield got
notil'es this week warning of
U1e chanl'c of layoffs.

~' ifh! o•n

Cents
Vol. 2X,
No. 211

-

Rejection ·could speed
up strike settle~nent
•

approval by Illinois miners. sooner,'' Hollen said.
Officials in several states
"It would bave been a
Rank-and-file members of
expressed
concern over the
if
anybody
would
surprise
tile United Mine Workers say
rejection of the coal have sent it (the proposal) growing ' energy cr1s1s
industry's contract proposal back to the field," said resulting from dwindling
may help speed tile eventual Michael Bunton, a member of utility coal stockpiles.
West Virginia Gov. Jay
settlement of their 71H!ay the District 12 executive
Rockefeller
said he was
board.
strike - if new negotiations
Do
uglas
Arrington
,
"very
disturbed
and
are not delayed.
secretarytreasurer
of
UMW
the
entire
_
concerned
about
Some industry sources
agreed wltll the appraisal, District 28 in Virginia, said "! situation.''
In Indiana, William J .
acknowledging that if the haven't heard the first person
agreement
had
been say · he's for it. In fact,
sub!pitted to \be rank-andfile everyone I've talked to or
for ratification -a procedure heard from is totally against
requiring 10 to 14 days ~ it · it."
"The miners didn't want
EXTENDED FORECAST
would have been turned
any part of it. They were 100
Wednesday · through
down.
Friday·
The tentative agreement percent opposed to the entire
said
Ronald
LockMostly fair, but rather
package,"
was rejected by the UMW
of
UMW Local
cold
Wednesday and
hart,
president
bargaining
council : in
6003
at
Beckley,
W.Va.
Thursday
and a little
Washington Sunday by a ~
Doo
E.
Hollen,
general
warmer
Friday.
Highs will
vote.
manager
of
Monongahela
he
in
the
ZOs
Wednesday
Kennetll Dawes, president
and Thursday and In the
of UMW Districtl2 in IUlnois Power, ~ West . Virginia
utility,
agreed
the
rejection
.
·
30s
Friday. Lows wtll be
and a member of the UMW
from zero to 10 Weduesday
btirgaining council, said .be "probably was a good thing."
"It ll)eails they can get
morning, ristug into the
voted against the contract ·
hack
to
the
bargaining
table
teens
and low 20s by
because it would have heen
Friday.
"impossible"
to ' gain
United Press International

Watt, aide to Gov. Otis R.
Bowen, said the contract
rejection left most of the
nation in a worsening
position.
"I gues~ that means we're
hack on square one and
sinking," said Watt, who
serves as Bowen's assistant
(or energy matters.

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By United Press International
COLUMBUS- OIDO STATE UNIVERSITY officials are
considering what to do about athletic events in the face of a
coal strike tim\ is caWng for strict. electric conservation.
Options are ·cancelling the events or moving them to
opponents' facilities.
Athletic officials are expected to make a strong effort to
retain Thursday's basketball game against Indiana. In greater
jeopardy are the Feb. 23 basketball game with Northwestern
and Feb. 25with Minnesota. OSU swinuning and fencing meets
set MarCh 2-4 are also being reevaluated.
PAINESVIllE, . OffiO ~ NINE·YEAR.OLD JAMES
JONES died in a house fire Saturday morning when a rescue
attempt failed. A resident of the two-family house where the
boy lived tried to get w the child through a second-floor
window with a ladder but was unable to reach him, firefighters
said. Adefective refrigerator was blamed for the $15,000 blaze.

RALEIGH, N. C. - LESLIE "IKE" ATKINSON,
convicted of running a drug smuggling ring from North
Carolina and later his prison. cell, has now been accused oft
controlling another drug operation from prison. ·This time ·
Atkinson is accused of being tile brain behind a drug
smuggling ring which centered around Akroo, Ohio.
Jerry Sloan, Swrunit County, Ohio, assistant prosecul&lt;lr,
said in a telephone interview that 30 persons have been
charged in the drug smuggling operation, which funneled $1
million in drugs throngh Akron a week.
YOUNGSTOWN, OHIO - AUTHORITIES ARE looking
for whoever hurled a JO.pound rock off an expressway onto the
city's Madison Avenue Expressway Saturday night. That rock
smashed through tile windshield of a car and kllled a 3-year-old
boy.
JuHan Morales, Campbell, died of a iractured skull. He
was riding with his grandfather, Julian Morales, 48, when the
rock came hurtling into the car, smashing first ·inw his
grandfather's arm and then Ollto his head.

United Press International
Relentless wmter storms
haltered Southern California
with more earth-loosening
rains and the Great Plains
~d Midwest with snow and
1ce today.
The Northeast, still days or
weeks short of recovery from
last week's record-shattering
blizzard, braced for the approach of niore snow.
Searchers looking for more
than . a dozen persons still
m1ssmg from Friday's
deluge, .flash floods and
mudshdes were forced to qwt
Sunday when a new rain and
snow storm moved into the
hills and mountains north of
Los Angeles.
At least 11 bodies have been
recovered, a dozen people
were still missing from the
flooded Hidden Springs area
and three others were
unaccounted lor in other
sections
of
Southern
California since Friday.

SQUAD RUN
The
Middleport
Emergency Squad took Keith
French, Middleport, a
medical patien.tt to Veterans
Memorial Hospital at 6:30
p.m. Saturday.

•&gt;

,,

Fifteen people previously
reported missing at Hidden
Springs were found safe
&amp;mday.
1
'Those mountains are
saturated now," a Sheriff's
Department spokesman said.
"The danger of slides is
greater. Some of the boulders
are j~st hanging there
waiting to fall."
The Nation.a l Weather
Service said Southern
Calif~rnia which only
months ago was suf'fering
from drought - could expect
st&gt;ll more rain today .
Los Angeles Mayor Tom
Bradley declared a state of
emergency in the Sunland
and Tujunga canyon areas
where damage was estimated
at more than ' $22.5 million.
The county flood control
district said it had spent $5 to
$7 million clearing debris and
repairing dams.
The system Swept onto the
Plains Sunday but failed to

••

Six_hurt m
Rt. 35 crash ·

Six persons were injured,
none S£riously, in a three
vehicle collision at 11:55 p.m.
Saturday . on US 3li ai tlie
OTTAWA, OHIO - SEN. ROBERT DOLE, R-KAN, junction to SR 325 in Rio
discussed his !ann bill, the Panama Canal treaties and Grande.·
allef!lltlons that Panamanian leader Gen. Omar Torrilos Is · The Gallia - Meigs Post
involved in drug dealing in a speech Saturday night at Ohio's State Highway Patrol said an
auto driven by Joe W. Lin·
¥lfth C'!"gr~ooal District's ~ual Lincoln Day Dinner.
damood, Jr., 19, Rt. 2, Vinton,
Dole said his farm bill has " potential· to -save the farm failed to stop for the stop sign
eccnomy." His "flexible pority farm act" would adjust target at the SR 325 intersection to
prices for ~rains and cotton, he said, adding It would allow US 35. His car shot across the
farmers w choole the target price they need, up to 100 percent highway striking a pickup
. par!ty, if they scale dowt: production accordingly.
truck driven by Richard W.
Smith, 23, Princeton, W. Va.
COVINGTON, KY.- NORTHERN KENTUCKY POLICE
The impact. flipped Smith's
officers expect as many as 40 m:rests after weekend raids truck in the area causing it to
wbere omclals looked for persons allegedly involved in drug land on a vehicle driven by
tramcking. Thirteen pereons had been arrested by.Satui-day. Dennis Fraley, 24, Oak Hill.
"We'll get them arrested and then take tllem straight to
All drivers were injured,
tile grand jury, said Kenwn County, Ky., Commonwealth along with two passengers in
Attorney Frank Trusty. Tbe raids climaxed a live-month
th~ truck,
Harvey and
inv!!Siigatlon of alleged &lt;!rug selling in the area.
Barbara Phlegai, both of
Princeton, W.Va . and O!eryl
' LOUIS -- ANHEUSER-BUSCH
.
ST.
INC., tile world's Ball, 18, Bidwell, a passenger
in the Fraley car. They were
(Contlnaed on PIP
taken to the Holter Medical

,,
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TAPE PLAYER FOUND
Sheriff James Proffitt
advises thai the Molorola
tape player stolen from the
auto of John Mark Sayre last
Tuesday evening at Racine
parking lot (Southern High
School lot) has been
recovered . 1t was round in a
baiJl in the Dorcas area .

SV AC CAGE CHAMPIONS .:._ Following Saturday
night's big victory over visiting Symmes Valley, the
Southern Tornadoes clinched their Secor'ld consecutive
Southern Valley Athletic Conf~rence basketball
championship. Southern i.s now 10-1 in league play with

Relentless storms hit again

~ Three firemen suffered smoke inhalation and a fourth
suffered a broken rib in a fall.

•••••

seen from labor and I hate to
see it," said tarfy Harper,
34, acting president of UMW
Locall340 in New J.exington .
He said members of his
union would block trucks to
keep any coal shipments
from passing through Perry
C&lt;lunty.
Deputies in the Belmont
County Sheriff's Deparlment
and ~ir.''
Carter also said he has · in Bellaire, headquarters of
asked
the
Justice UMW District 6, said they
Department to work with would he on Ihe lookout for
state officials in seeing that · possible violence this week .
non-union coal could get to They said whether it
hard-pressed utilities.
developed will depend on ttte
"If they try w get the
weather, and if the National
National Guard or the FBI, Guard is called up .
Adjutant General James C.
you will see one of tile worst
civil wars that you have ever Clem and Gov . James A.

-.

ELEcrRicoruR---..,----

i

Adiustable she l ~es · on wheels fOr easy cleaning
cower saver sw1tch · no frost.
REG: $559.95 Gold Finish ...... SALE

federal-state task force to
come up with ways to
ccmhate electrical shortages.
The force will start work
Wednesday in Canton a
location the White House ~id
was chosen because "clearly
Ohio is the hardest hit, is
centrally located and Canton
is accessible by road, train

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, February 13, 1978

'

REG. 5349.95

Flynt indicted

'

running out of time. During
the weekend mOil electric
utilities reported they were
nearing the 3jkjay coal limit
that will signal severe
cutbacks of power to major
industries - and resulting
layoffs.
President Carter, glumly
predicting greater hardships
ahead, declared Ohio and
much of the Midwest an
emergency Saturday .
He ordered cutbacks of
power at all federal
installations and threw out aU
pollution control standards so
that utilities can drag every
possible megawatt from the
coal they have left.
Carter also set up a

are desperate for coal

Center.
There was moderate
damage to the Fraley and
Lindamood cars and heavy
damage to Smith's truck .
Lindamood was cited to
Gallipolis Municipal C&lt;lurt
for OWl.
Georu Washineton
McHaffie, 37, Middleport ,
was charged with OWl
following an accident ·at 5
p.m. Saturday on US 33, four
tenths of a mile south or the
Athens County line.
State patrol officers said
McHaffie lost control of his
southbound car. It ran off the
left side , of the highway
striking. a guardrail then
ovetiumed. There was heavy ,
damage.
McHaffte .was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
then was later transferred to
t~e Holzer Medical Center for
treatment
of
injuries
sustained.

live up to its billing by lbe
NWS as possibly lhe season's
worst. Still, up to 6 inches of
snow fell in western Kansas
and Nebraska and heayy
snows were foreca~t for
Missouri, Southern Illinois
and southern Indiana as the
system moved eastward.
Rain fell heav,ily in some
parts of Oklahoma 81\d into
Texas, where thunderstorms
spread
eastward
into
Louisiana and southern
Arkansas. A tornado touched
down west of Cameron, La.,
but there were no reports of

dama~e

Deputies
checking

IJ 111 b~tl Press I ntcrnatlonul

Ohio: A heavy snow
warning Is In effect In the
soulh and west •:cntrol this
aftcrnoou and tonight. A
winter storm wa\ch ts In
effect lu the cast central
tonight.
Snow spreading north
eustwurd over the slate
today, becnmlng m·lxed ut
· ·umes with siCe\ or raln and
becoming heavy In the
central and south tht• of·
ten&gt;oon and tonight. Ac·
cumulations of four to Hlx
lnrhes are possible in the
west and south by early
tonight. Hlghs will be In the
30s and lnws tonight from
10 to ZO In the north and
near 20 In the south. Snow
flurrtesTuesday wllh highs
· from the upper 20• to low
30s.

or injuries. Winds
damaged three houses at
Schertz, Texas, and blew
down at barn at Beaumont.
Traveler's . advisories
extended from Montana
Meigs Cou nty Sherif;
through the Texas Panhandle James J. Proffitt report s
and eastward through deputies inves tigated four
Kentucky ,
. accidents over the weekend.
The eastward movement or
The fir&amp;1. acclden~ ol.'Curred
the system aimed It ·toward at 5:30p.m. Saturday at the
the Northeast, where there old "creamery c;orner'' in
were scant few residents
Racine.
ready towelccme more snow.
Emer C. Swank, 58,
The NWS predicted at least Newark, was traveling east
light snow by Tuesday .
into Racine and slid on an icy
patch, losing control or his
car which struck a west
bound auto driven by Judith
A. Roberts, 22, Athens.
Swank had minor abrasions
to the chin and a bruised lip.
~. · Norris, W. Arthur Orr,
George Neigler, J . W. He was not treat ed im·
·
Weaver, Jr. and Charles mediately.
Swank
was
cited
for left of
David Yost.
center.
Assets and liabilities have
The second accident oc~
grown from $3,638,500.88 to
$10,608,149.86 . This the curred al 8 p.m. Saturday
bank attributed to the evening on SR 124 appeople it serves, stock- proximately six miles east of
Snow mi&gt;ed at times with
holders, and the con· Racine. It is still under in- sleet or rain, becoming heavy
tinued effort of the officers vestigation. Deputies said tonight . Accum ulations of
and staff to be a service to the auto driven and owned by around four inches possible
Larry L. Griffin, RI. I, Long
community.
by early tonight. Highs todoy
Extensive remodeling was Bottom, struck and broke orr will be in the mid to upper
completed In 1977. The public a utility pole. The third ac- 30s ; lows tonight near 20 .
is invited to visit the facilities cident report taken occurred Snow flurries Tuesday with
Saturday morning but· was
at any time.
highs in the low ·3os.
(C&lt;lnlinued on page 10)

Stockholders hold meeting
· RACINE - The Racine
Home National Bank held its
annual Stockholders
meeting
recently .
It
marked the lOth anni·
versary of the merger of
The Racine Home Bank and
the First National Bank.
Fifteen directors were on
the board at the time of the
merger. Eleven were elected
to serve for 1978 including ·
Charles Hayman , chainnan i
John T. Wolfe, president ;
Clarence
Pri ~e.
vice·
president and secretary;
Earl Cross, Albert Hill, Jr.,
Carroll R. Norris, Freeland

one makeup game remaining to be playL'll. Front row, left
to right are Steve Baker, John Sayre, Dave Dindley,
Dwight Hill, Tim Brinoger and Ool)llie Du~dlng,
manager. Rear - Coach .Carl Wolfe, Perry ·Hill, Richard
Teaford, Scott Souder, Jim O'B~ien, Kelly Winebrenner
and Howie Coldwell, assistant.coach.

CONTRIBUTING greaUy to the ccmedy of Meredith
Wileon's Music Man, a Broadway production and later a
movie, is a group known as the 11 dance committee".
Taking the roles in tile Meigs High School Music
Department's presentation of the musical will be, left to
right, Susan Wright, Unda Eason, Cath)\IBlaettnar and

accidents

Weather

Laura Hoover. The group is featured throughout the
presentation which has a "River City" setting. Miss
Hoo~ is also helping with the direction of tile first
Broadway show at the Meigs High Scllool. Show dates
have been set for March 10 and n. Also a committee
member will be jlrynda Black.
:,.
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�•
3-The Daily Sentinel, Muldleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Monday , Feb 13, !978

•

2- The Da•ly Senlmel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 , Monday, Feb 13, 1978

BY GREG MILLER

or the

W1th every m ember
tea m breakm g mto

the

scotmg column, the UJgan
Clueftams showed why they
deserve to be the SEOAL
champ10ns as they whipped
VISiting Meigs convincmgly
Saturday night, 89-«i Logan
placed four men In double
figures, led by Dave Leh
man's 20 markers
Lehman proved to be a big
factor as he made has first s1x
attempts from the field m the
first quarter to help the ho•1s
build a 22-4 first period lead to
set the tempo of the game
But the next three quarters

saw the Marauders of Coach

Ron Logan play the hosts on Morr1son Gymnas1um The
even terms, but the damage Whtte falcons are one of the
had been done and both teams that have fallen to
roaches cleared their ben- Meigs thiS year, and Meigs
ches for much of the contest will be looking to end their
In these last three quarters, season on a right note Meigs
Meigs offense came abve, but IS now 2-15 overall.
the defense couldn't hold
In the Logan contest, Scott
down the new SEOAL Gasser also hit lor double
champs That Win left Logan figures for the winners by
w1th a 15~1 overall mark and a nettmg 16 Dalton canned 13
13 1 record Inside the league and Albert had 10 The ChiefThey wmd up their league tams of Coach Scott Gasser
ca mpa lgn by gmng to Ironton were hot from the held,
this week while Meigs has
finished 1\s league schedule
at 1-13 Me1g's will play their
last game of the season next
Monday at home, Feb 20,
when Wahama comes to

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sportl EdiiOr
LAS VEGAS, Nev (UPI)- When the bell sounds for the
start of Wednesday night's fight, one rlngsider will have all he
can do to stay put and sit tight m hiS chair
Most of Ken Norton's natural mstincts w1ll be telling hllTl to
getup and start fighting because he believes, along with many
others, that he, and not some pea green kid like Leoo Spmks,
should be meellng Muhammad AI• fur the world heavyweight
litle
• I have nothing personal agamst Spmks," says the No I
contender lor Ali's t1Ue "He's a fme young fellow, but he
hasn't paid his dues yet I've seen hun and he can fight, but
he's not mature and he certamly doesn't have the credenllals I
have "

Nobody, not even Leon Spmks, who has had only seven
professiOnal fights, could possibly argue that Norton bas
fought Ali three tunes, beating bun once and-losmg a pair of
deciSions Only two men have ever beaten Ali and Norton IS
one of them In their last fight on Sept. 28, 1976, Ali squeaked by
on a !:H-ound spilt deciSIOn and many, who were on hand, felt
Norton had actually won
Now Ali talks about fighting Norton agam Only vaguely.
though Whenever he talks about II, he mentions some
outlandish figure hke $12 million or $16 rmlhon and if be keeps
talking that way, there's every likelihood he'll never fight
Norton again because nobody Is rushmg to put up that kmd of
mone) to see an obviously over~he-luli All make faces and
fight maybe 30 secoods every other round
"BasiCally, I think he's trymg to price hllTlSelf out of the
market," says Norton "He talks about how much he wants for
another fight With me and all he's doing IS creating a clllTlBte
for 'purse snatchmg 'That's where promoters are encouraged
to come m with different offers for the fight and the best offer
gets II Generally, this takes a lot of lime Maybe Ah is aware
of that and plans to retire before such a fight IS ever made "
The World BoXIng Council already has sa1d 11 will vacate the
heavyweight title If Ah does not delend 11 agamst Norton by
June, assummg, of course, he beats Spinks Wednesday n1ght
Ali says nobody has anythmg to worry about because he
mtends fighting Norton a gam although he makes a poml of not
say1ng when
A little more than a year ago, Norton showed up at Super
Bowl headquarters m Los Angeles and alter he talked about
football a bit, I remember askmg him pomtedly whether he
thought Ali actually would ever fight hun agam.
'Truthfully," he answered, looking me stra1ghtm the eye,
"! doo't think he ever will "
When I remmded Norton of that, I asked him If he felt the
same way now

'Underneath, I really believe what I S81d before," he
replied "One of the thmgs that keeps me gorng, that keeps me
from l_osmg hope, IS that he m1ght change hiS rmnd If the
pressure IS applied right and the money swts hun 1 suppose
gelling another fight w1th Ali IS a mental thmg with me, almost
like an ob3esslDn
"I feel I beat him m the last fight Obviously I didn't do
enoughlO unpress all the Judges, so I'd like another chance I
wouldn't really want to see the title vacated He'd always have
somethmg to scream about But if I beat hlnn In the ring, he'd
have nothmg to say and that's how I would like II "
Norton IS not the hght promoter Ali IS He never degrades his
opponents or prospective opponents as Ah has so often done,
bUilding up the gate m the process
· I don't think he's alrrud," says the 32-,year-old challenger.
'I thmk he's a man who uses discretion He knows if we f1ght
agam, I'm going to try to w1pe him out of the rrng Look, I don't
knock hun for giving Spinks a ch8nce What 1 knock him for IS
that he hasn't fought me when I'm the logical contender. I'm

R

Meigs-Logan box.

connectmg on 35 of 63 shots for 12
for 55 percent They made
Meigs had battled the flu
good oo Just 19 .,f 31 foul bug all week and Coach
shots, but controlled the Loga n had to shake up hiS
boa rds by garnering 18 lineup Meigs still h~d trouble
rebounds
under the boards as MilS got
Meigs' Tim Coats came off JUst 26 rebounds
the bench to lead Meigs m
The Marauders contmued
&gt;conng and rebounding their hot foul shootmg by
Coats got f1ve rebounds and netting 22 of 28 chanty tosses
tossed m 20 pomts Guard They were once agam cold
Kenny Young was held to 13 from the floor by cashmg m
pomts while Dilly Elkins on JUst 22 ol61 attempts, good
came off the bench also to hit for 36 percent

io R edmen win
two MOC tilts

Coach Art Lanham's Rio
Grande College Redmen
captured two Mid-Ohio
Conference
basketball
triumphs over the weekend
defeating Urbana 99-69
Saturday mght and Ohio
D(lmtntcan Bl 59 Sunday
afternoon

tn

a

makeup

contest at Lyne Center •

The tnumphs left Rio
Grande with a 15-0 season
mark InSide the MDC, H10
upped 11s record to 10-1 with
three games remaining on
their conference schedule
Tuesday, the Redmcn
'
1ravei
to Cedarville to tackle
a tough MDC Yellow Jacket
five Saturday, RIO will play
3l Wilberforce m a non·

conference

game

The had 57 rebounds, 19 by James

following week the Redmen
will battle T1ffm In a pair of
league makeup games, one at
home and the other on the
road
Saturday, Rto connected on
44 of 81 field goal attempts for
54 3 percent to bury the

Urbana Blue Kmghts, 99-09
Urbana dropped to 6-16
overall and H ms1de the
league
Four R10 players f1mshed

nme caroms

Pluymg their third game m
us many nights, the Eagles of
Coach Duane Wolfe JUSt
seemed to run out of steam m
the last canto, although their
hustle and good attitude was
still very much in evidence
Eastern took an early 13-10

than the Baby Eagles
dropped their tilt Eastern
gets a return shot at
Waterford when the Eagles
travel there tomght
Tuesday mght Hannan
Trace comes to Eagleland,
Wednesday Eastern wraps up

ftrst pertod lead and was

their regular season at
Symmes Valley, and then
Frtday Hannan Trace and
Eastern clash m the openmg

Eagles buck by just four, 37
33, but by the last penod the
fatigue lrom their hectic
schedule was beg1nnmg to
show
The wmners were pae&lt;!d by
Kelly Lang's 18 points and
Jeff Watson's 10 The Wildcats hit II of 15 free throws
Eastern was led by Jeff
Goebel who tossed m 12
markers on s1x held goals
Two other Eagle cages hit
double figures Dave Brown

added II pomts whi le Dan
Spencer contributed 10. The
Eagles were cold from the

Rto

dropped to 3-8 InSide the
league
Tljree Redmen scored In
double figures, led by Gil
Pnce's 20 pomts Mark Swain
and Greg James each bad 12
Tom Stenger led the
Panthers with 17 pomts
R10 hit 36 of 69 held goal
attempts lor 52 I percent The Redmen were
mne of 19 at the foul
line for 47 3 percent Rio
had 42 rebounds, 14 by
James The Redmen had 16

No slats were avatlable for
the reserve contest, other

The th ird periOd saw the

In Sunday•s game,
starts, 81--59

f1fteen pomts, the game was

behmd only 26-21 by halftune

pomts The VISitors hit 29 of
72 field goal attempts for 40 2
percent and was II of 13 at the
foul line for 84 6 percent
Urbana had 37 rebounds, 13
by Jim Rmgert The Blue
Kmghts had 19 turnovers

Mark Swam and Greg James
each had 14 Dan Btse tossed
mil

foul Circle as they canned just
6 of 21 tosses They hit the
boarqs for 28 rebounds with
Spencer leadmg the way with

that

~

led by Gil Pnce's 26 pomts

The Eastern Eagles lost
another close cage contest
Saturday mght when they fell
to VISiting Waterford 57-42
Although the final spread was

round of the Class A SectiOnal
Tournament at Meigs High
School It was erroneouslv
reported earlier that that tile
was on Thursday
EASTERN 1421- Goebel6
0 12, Spencer 3 4 10 Bissell 4

0 a, Brown 4 3 II , Hayman 0
11 Totals 178-42.
Waterford (S1) -

Carter 2

1 5 Kmg I 0 2 K Lang B 2 18

Wallace 3 0 6 Gumther 2 0 4

J Watson 50 10 Cunningham
1 2 4 T Lang 1 6 8 Totals 23
11 57
Score by quarters

E

w

13 21 33 42
10 26 37 57

Meigs I")

FG-A FT-A RB PF TP
0-1
12
1
I
1
I2
00
2 2
2
26
01 4
4
5
410 57
2 5 13
1-7
00
I
I
2
.011 8 10 5
I 20
13
2
22 3
4-13 00
0
5
8
36
66
4
1 12
0-2 00
4
4 0
22-61 22 21 26 27

Pl•yer

Foil rod
Hawley

Stanley
Young
Kennedy

Coats

•

Andrews
Becker

Elkins
Blake
Toto Is
PLAYER
Gasser
Kemper
Brag lin
Lehman

Alber!
Krieg
Keynes
Walton

Dalton
Tucker

Clark
Toto Is

Logon Choellolns 1891
FG-A FT-A
7 10 2 2
1 3 00
1 1 00
8 10 4.
45
• 38
36
3•
36
23
1 2 02
68
I2
02
1•
27
25
35 63 1931

1

BOWLING

1

"

RB PF TP
3 2 16
2
2 3
2
3
0 20
10
3 10
5 3
2 3 8
0
3 2
1 13
6 2
I
9 2 6
41 26

• •

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•

"

Score by Cl uarters

Meigs

4 21 .j() 66
22 .... 68 89

Logan

The v1s1tors

turnovers

Ohio DommiCan hit 24 of 60
field goal attempts for 40
percent and II of 15 free
throws for 73 3 percent The
Panthers had 34 rebounds,
nine by John Fenner OD had
20 turnovers
Box scores
(Saturday's game)

URBANA 1691- Falkner 9
2 20
Chambers
4 0 8,
Rengert 6 5 17 Justu't 3 0 6,
Cl1ne 3 0 6 Franfl. 1 0 2,
Playforth 1 2 4 Anders 1 0 2,
Paugh 0 2 2 L1ttle 1 0 2

TOTALS 29 11 69
RIO GRANDE (991 Swa1n 7 0 14,
Pm:e 13 0 26
Royse 2 0 4,
Phelps 3 0 6,
Johnson 1 2 4
Lee 0 0 0,
TOTALS 44 11

James
B1se
Purcell
G1bson
Niday
West

7 0 14
5 1 11
328

99

226
0-.4 4
102

(Sunday's game)

OHIO DOMIN ICAN 1591 Brewer 2 0 4, Stenger S 7 17
Massey 3 0 6, Fenner 2 0 4
Nash 4 0 8
Baldwtn 1 0 2
Lang 2 0 4 Loewend1ck 0 2 2
Str~flholt 5 0-10 TOTALS 24
11 59

RIO GRANDE 1811 -

Swam 6 0 12 James 6 0 12
Pnce 8 4 20
B1se I 2 4,
Purcell 4 0 8 Gibson 3 0 6

Phelps o 3 3 • Royse • o 8

Johnson 1 0 2
West I 0 2

TOTALS 36-9 81

Niday 2 0 04

Lee

000

Bobcats drop
88-56 battle
John Fields ripped the
cords for 26 pomts, mciudmg
two on a dunk to lead the Coal
Grove Hornets to a lopSided
88-56 VIctory over host Kyger
Creek Saturday night
Fields contributed 12 of hiS
26 pmnts m the Hornets' 4I
pomt first half
Other Coal Grove players
hitting double f1gures were
Tim Butler with 15, Scott
Vanderhoof had 14 and Jeff
Withams netted 10
Semor forward Fred Helms
led the Bobeats With 16
pomts Sophomore John
Westfall had 14 pomts and
Von Taylor caMed 10
Coal Grove broke out m
front 18-7 at the end of the
ftrst penod and were never

headed
The Bobeats hit 19 of 58
from the floor for 33 percent
and only 18 of 38 at the foul
stnpe Coal Grove sank 31
of 68 shots for 46 percent and
26 ol 40 at the charity stripe
DIIIcials Whistle\1 58 personal louis Kyger Creek lust

Services are
TuesdJJy
for Emswiler

lour starters, Thompson,
Helms, Westfall and Taylor
The Hornets lost Fields
Coal Grove bombarded the
Little Bobkitlens 69-17 In the
reserve game ShaMon Neal

had 20 for the wmners Bruce
Gilmore led KC with eight
pomts.
The loss left KC With a 2-13
record The Bobeats travel to
Hannan Trace this evenmg
and will play North Gallia m
the Class A Sectional Tournament Saturday night at
Meigs High School
Box score ·

COAL GROVE 1811 Willis 1 2 4, Will1ams 3 4 10,

Foelds 10 6 26 Butler 6 3 15,

Brammer 0 3 3. Vanderhoof
6 2 14, Tyo 2 2 6, Bare 2 2 6,

Hardy 1 0 2. Alford 0-2 2
TOTALS 31 26 88.
KYGER CREEK 156) Taylor 50 10 Smtih 1 0 2.
1 1 3,

W1ll1s

Helms 6 416,

Thompson 2 2 6 Westfall 3-8
14 Springer 0-3 3 ond B
Go lmore 1 0 2 TOTALS 19-1856
By quarters
Coat Grove

Kyger Cr..,k

18416188
7 18 34 56

Miller edges
North Gallia
John Fuch's goal with Just
eight seconds left gave host
Miller a come-from-behmd
71-70 non-conference win over
North Gall1a Saturday night
Coach Ron Twyman's
Pirates had led all the way
unlll the final mmutes of the
contest
North Gallw led 24-17 at the
end of the first penod, Increased 1t to hve pomts 1 39-34,

at the half, but saw that cut to
two pomts, 53-51 gomg mto
NBA Standings
the fourth penod
Mmnesota
12 35 6 30
By Un•ted Press International
Sf LOU IS
11 35 7 29
Trailmg 69-67 with 20
Eastern Conlerence
Wales Conference
seconds
to go, the Pirates'
AtlantiC OIV!SIOA
Norrts DIVISIOn
W L Pet GB
Rex Just1ce connected for a
W L T Pts
Phlia
36 16 692
Monlreal
37 7 9 83
three pomt play to put hiS
New York
28 46 519 9
Los Angeles
22 20 11 55
Boston
18 31 367 16 h
team m a 7~9lead That was
Ptltsburgh
18 23 12 48
Buffalo
17 32 347 17'/i Detro1t
20 25 8 48
followed
by Miller's wmmng
No 1 m the world r1ght now''
New Jersv
12 d2 222 25
Washington
10 34 11 31
COLUMBUS
(UI'1)
A
Central
D•~•s•on
shot
North
Gull1a took a last
Ah IS getting $3 million for fighting Spmks He could've
Adams Dtv•s•on
W L Pet GB
funeral
will
be
held
Tuesday
W
L
T
Pts
second
shotto
"m butthe ball
gotten at least twice that much for meeting Norton agam, but San Antont
34 19 642
Boston
34 12 7 75 afternoon for Harold Winfield
27 25 519 6'12 Buffalo
off
the
rim
rolled
as Norton says, Ali lS a man of dlSCrehon, and at 36, a fighter Wshngtn
31 10 13 75
New Or Ins
26 28 481 B'h Toronto
second
Henry
Semor guard
28 15 10 M Emswiler,
frequently fmds hunself Influenced by that more and more.
C1e.,e lnd
25 27 481 a 1l Cleveland
18 33 6 42 conuruss10ner of the Ohio Siewert led the P1rate offense
Atlanta
25 29 463 9'17
Saturday's Resulls
Houston
20 JJ 377 14
High
School
Athletic with 25 pomts on mne field
Phtla at Bsn pr:fd snow
HARTFORD, Conn (UP[)
Western Conference
Toronlo 3 NY Rangers 2
He
died goals and seven foul shots
Association
Mtdwest DI'•JISIOA
- The New England Whalers
NY Islanders 8 Detro1t 5
Saturday
at
the
age
of
91
W l
Pet GB
Justice had 21 pomts, seven
M0r1treal 7 Sf LOU IS 3
ol the World Hockey Denver
34 20 630
Emswiler headed the goals and seven charity
M nnesota J vancou11er 2
29 27 518 6
AssociatiOn, Sunday obtamed Chtcago
P1ttsburgh 3 Los Angeles 3
OHSAA from 1944 to 1958 tosses Sam Smith also
Mllw
28 28 500 7
Sunday's Results
last year's "Most Valuable Oetro•t
1A 29 453 9 h
when he retired.
fm1shed m double ligures
St L at Bsn ppd snow
Delenseman," Ron Plwnb of Kanss Ctv
21 34 382 ll l/2
Atlanta 2 Ch1cago 2, f1e
He held degrees from Deni- With 12 pomts
lndtaMa
20
34
370
14
Colorado 3 Mmn 3 t1e
the Cmcmnati Stingers
son UniverSity and Ohio State
PacthC DIVISIOn
NY lslndrs 2. Cle11e 2 tie
In a move to bolster their
W l
Pc:t GB
Oetro1t 8 Vancouver 3
University In 1910, smce be
42 9 824
saggmg dele liSe, the Whalers Portland
Montreal 5 NY Rangers 3
Tuesda,y Morning
could
fmd no rules to prevent
Phoenix
36 16 692 6 1?
Phi Ia 4, Wash ngton 1
traded thetr young center seattle
Standings for
28 24 538 U'h
1!,
he
was
quarterback for the
Mondav's
Game
Feb 7,1978
27 21 500 J6112
Greg Carroll and ''future LOS Angels
The Meigs Reserves, hit by
Toronto at Buffalo
football
team
and shortstop
larry' s Wayside
26 6 conslderahons" to
Golden St
27 28 491 17
Tuesday's Games
the
flu bug, just couldn't find
the
Siiturday's Results
for the baseball team while
City Ice 8. Fuel
22 10
Los Ang al NY Islanders
New York 133 M I wa ukee- 122
the
range Saturday night as
Peoples Bank
22 10 Stmgers m exchange for
vancouwoer at wasA ingtof1
servmg as principal, and
Detroit 106, New Or leans 96
Ch1cago at P11tsburgh
Jaymars
20 12 Plumb
they
fell to the host Logan
coach at Utica High School
Kansas City 95 Chtcago 90
Reese Trucking
20 12
49-24 Meigs scored
Papooses
San Antnlo 131 Golden Sf 122
He also offiCiated football
C1tfzens Nat Bank
18 14
Sunday'&lt;~ Results
WHA Standmgs
JUSt
eight
pomls m the
Char lies Angles
18 14
and
basketball
games.
Mllw at Bsn ppd snow
Bv Un1ted Press lnternattonal
Holiday Inn
12 20
New Jersey 112. NY 110
Survivors Include four opening half while the hosts
W L T Pts
Ph Ia 109 Seattle 99
Moose No 1
12 20
were nettmg 30 to bulld an
Wmn1peg
3.4 18 2 70 sisters and two brothers
tndtana Ill Chtcago 94
111E DAlLY SENTINEl.
Gillingham Drug
10 22
New England
31 18 4 66
msurmountable
lead
Kansas City 101 Cleve 88
DEVOTED TO THE
Moose Hearts
a 2-4
Houston
27 22 1 3 57
Den.,er
103,
Portland
101
INTEREST
OF
Meigs
was
very
cold from
Edmonton
27 24 2 56
Mason County Ins
-4 28
Houston 119 New Orlns 112
MEIGS-MASON AREA
Quebec
25 :15 2 52
the
floor
as
they
found
the
lnd Standings - Larry's
Phoen tx 121 Wash 109
CIIESTBRL. TANNEHRL
Cmclnnalt
22 30 3 47
Wayside, M Ward 200 SolS ,
Atlanta 116 Los Ang 103
.,... Ed
on
just
9
of
their
50
range
Btrmlngham
22 :19 2 46
City Ice &amp; Fuel, S J Spears
MondiY's Game
ROB£1\THOEnJCH
POMONA, Calif (UP!) IndianapoliS
16 32 4 36
attempts,
good
for
slightly
New Jersey at OetroJl
179 459 Peoples J Great
Ctty Edtklr
Saturday's Results
Mother Nature was the less than 20 percent They
Tuesday's Games
house 181' R Sizemore 1sub 1
Publlahed dally e•cept Saturday
New Eng 8 Cine nnat• 7
Seattle
at
Buffalo
biggest wmner Sunday m the made good on SIX of ten foul
by
The
Oh.io
VaUey
Publl.thlntl
505, Jayma,.s, 203 P Th~mas,
Winn i peg 5 lndpls 3
New York at Cle.,eland
Cornpany·Multimedia Inc
Ill
495 P
Tl (')mas and L
8,
Quebec
•
Nallonal
Hot
Road shots Oms Ohimger, Br1dd
Houston
New Orleans at Ch1cago
Cow1 St Pomeroy, Ohlo 4676t
Sunday's Resut1s
Sw1sher, Reese's, J Mapry
Association
Wlnternationais,
WashinliJIOn at Denver
....,.,. Office Phone 992- 21~
Dodson, and Cl1ff Kennedy
Cmclnnat • 8 Quebec '2
170 439
Phlladelpt!•a at lnd
Editorial Phone 992-2157
lorcihg officials to postpone shared scormg honors for the
W1nnlpeg 6, Houston 5
Houston
at
Kansas
City
Citizens 0 Casto 1,2
Second clus poatage pt~id at
Edmonton 7 B1rmlngham 0
the $326,000 drag racmg event Marauders With SIX pomts
Bosron at GotdM State
Pomeroy,Ohio
Monday's Gamt'
511, Charlles Anp,ies, v
San
Anton
10
at
Los
Ang
NatiMal advertalnl( reproenfor
the second tlme, although each
\No
gftmes
scheduled)
Grover 166 393, Hoi day Inn,
Phoenix at Portland
tative Ward • Griffith Company
Tunday's Games
one
round of compelltion was
B Copley 183 530, Moose No
logan CaMed 18 of 49 atInc Bottinelli and Gallagher Oiv
Quebec at New England
1, H Vickers 163, C Miller
completed in most diVIsiOns
751 Third Ave, New YorK N y'
Btrmmgham at Edmonton
tempts
for 36 percent whUe
10017
'
380. Gillingham's, J Stiles
Fmal elunmatioliS m eight smkmg 13 of 29 free throws.
SubscnpUon r&lt;~tes Delivered by
145 389. Moose Hearts, D
categories, washed out by the D Bell led the winners with
earner where a...allllble ~5 cents per
Nibert 188 478. Mason County
week
By
Motor
Route
where
c111rrter
A
thought
for
the
dsy
start
of a new Southern 12 pomts while Moore had
Ins • M Capehart 209 44&lt;1
servlc~ nol available, One monlh
Spills Converted ~ 0
French
statesman
Maurice
Califorma
ramstorm, were mne Ali logan players hit
f3 25 By mail Ill Ohio and W Va
Casto 0 Hern, S McDaniel
Talleyrand said, "Women tentatively scheduled to the scormg column
One Year, S22: 00 SJJ montha
3-10, S Beverly 3 7 10, 0
$11 50, Three months f7 00,
sometimes forgiVe a man resume at 9 am. Monday
Mack, W Howard 5 10, C
Elsewhere $26 00 year 81:1 months
who
fore&lt;ls the opportunity, should the sides clear by then
$13":50, Three months, f7 50
Miller 27 H Spradling, P
Meogs 181 -O'Brien 0-1
Chicago
SUbsi..TJption prke UjdUdell Sunday
Frashee 5 6 B Copley 5 8 10
but never a man wbo m1sses over the Los Angeles County 1, Thomas 0 2 2. Ohlinger 3 o
vancou11er
Thrle&amp;Senunel
and 9 lQ
,
Colorado
Fatrgrounds v
one''
6, Dodson 2 2-6, Cliff Kennedy

Pro Standings

• •

turnovers
Urbana's top scorer was
Chras Falkner, who tossed In

handed OhiO DominiCan's
Panthers their 16th loss In 20

Eagles drop
57-52 contest
much closer than

and 10 by Pnce Rio had 23

m double figures tn seormg,

R10 hit t 1 of 20 chanty shots
lor 55 percent The Redmen

Southern repeats as
SVAC .cage championS

Cage Scores

SEO champs down Meigs, 89 to 66

Fuch led Miller With 24
pomts Todd Spencer had 12
pomts and Doug Street 12
Accordmg to the charts,
North Gall•a sank Tl of 70
floor shots while grabbing 43
rebounds Justice led m that
department with 15
Miller h1t 33 of 71 from the
floor
The Falcons made 11 a
sweep by capturing the
reserve tilt, 48-46 North
Gall1a, 7-8, will host Southern
tomght and travel to Wabama
In the Pirates' seaSQn !male
Tuesday night
NGHS meets Kyger Creek
at 7-30 p m Saturday m the
Class A Sectional Tournament at Meigs High School
Box score

NORTH GALLIA 170) Jushce 7 7 21. Minnis 3·2-8 ,
McComas 1 0 2 Winston 1 o
2 Smoth6012, Slevert9725

TOTALS 27-16-70
MILLER 1711- Spencer 72 16, Fuchs 12 0 24 , Street 6 0
12 Pompey 0 1 I, Toth 4 1 9, \
Almashy 4 1 9 TOTALS 33 5
71

By Quarters

North Galloa
M 1!ter

24 39 53 70
17 34 51 71

Logan 'B' team trips Meigs 49-24
3-0 6, Blaettnar 1 1 3, An
drews 0·0 0 Tota Is 9~ 24

Logan (81 - Dillon 1 0 2,
Sosk 1 2 4, D Bell 5 2 12, R
Bell 2 4 8, Flowers 0 1 1,

Mara D 1 1, Ruqgles 3 0 6,
McDaniel 1 1 3 Bachus 1 o2.
North 0-1 1, Moore 4 1 9.
Totals 18-13-49
By Quorlers:
Meigs
4 8 14 24
Logan
14304949

Coli... lasket••n Jttsvlh
IY Unlttd Pr..s lnteraatlon•l
last
Attany 11, osweoo 67
Albrghll9, Leb Val 11
Amertcan 71, Hofstra 7J
Army U , U Buffalo $J
BloomsbQ 7,, Kutztwn 74
8rooklvn 95 , Queens 76
Sucknll 57, W Chester 55
can1s1us 78 LaSalle 77
Crnwle Mlln 74, Hiram 59
cathol!c 97 u u 8.1
Clrlon 73. Lock Hvn 52
Colby 92 SE Mass 91
Columbta 62, Dartmth 58
Frdhm 86, King's Pt 73
Frnkln Mrshlt 58, Dcknsn 53
Geotown 83, Oetrolt 12
GettysbQ 90 Muhlnbg 71
Grove Cty 76. Alliance S6
Hamtlton 87, Ithaca I!IA
Haverford 83, Swrthmre 67
Hobart 103 RPI 9~
lone 81, Wls Mllw 68
JOhn Jay 78, Rtgrs Nwk 62
Lafayette 65, Lehigh 6A
Maine 76, Mass 7A
Manhattan 93, Stena 86
Mravian 75, W Md 60
NIIIV 87 Penn St 64
Phi Ia Pharm 81. Allntn 15
Ph118 Tex 63, Adelphi 56
N C 74 Rutgers 57
Princeton 72, Yale A9
R1der Coli 84, Del 64
St Jhn s 84, Oque&amp;ne 69
St Ptr's 75 Sf EltZ ~6
Stevens Tech 51 NJIT 38
Syracuse u , w va 73
Temple 72, St Jos 65
wash&amp;Jeff sa ~ Th1el 56
South
Alabftma 93, Tenn 89
AI ernSt 91 Jaxn St 61
At Chris 75, Meth 1~
Auburn 92, Florida 8A
Berry 87 Ptedmont 73
Crsn Nwmn 83, G twn K v 78
Colmbs 105 Armstrng 78
Duke 104, oavtdson 111!1
E Car 87, USC Atkn 80
E Tenn 80 W Ky 71
Ga Tech 63 Tulane 58
Lndr 82 Charlstn 78
Lnor Rhyne 81, APPf79
LSU 95. Kentucky 9
Maryland 80, Clemson 75
Mt&amp;s 61 vandy 57
MISS Sf 68 Ga 45
Mtd Term 57 Tenn Tch 51
Mntewollo 62 Wm Cary 56
Morgn St 81 N C Ceflf 73
Nchlls Sf 88 Troy St 65
N C A&amp; T 70 Howard 58
N c Ashvl 99, Nwbrry 75
N c Char 82, Marshall 11
N c St 88, Wke Forst 77
N E La 86, Sthrn MISS 1'2
No Ga Ail, Ga Sthwstrn A.tl
No Ala 92, Delta Sta 91
NW La 70, Hous Bapt 67
So Car 1A, Furman 61
Southern 87 Grmblng 75
Sthrn Tech 63 Shrtr 61
stetson 86 So Fla 74
V1dosta St 80 W Ga 72
va Wslyn 82, UNC Grns 67
VMI 84, The Citadel 72
xavier 94 Otllard 81
Mtdwest
Alb•on 102 Alma 101
Andrsn 73 lnd Tech 68
Ball St 82, Oh10 U 77
Bllarmne 65, Wrght St 63
Bethanv 86 St Marys 75
Br&amp;etley 103 N M St 85
Butler 76 St Jos 60
Cent 73 Buena vsta 66
Cent Mo 94 No'east 93
Cincl 42 Dayton 40
Coe 89, Cornell Ia 84
Creighton 71, Drake 63
Empr!a St 69 Plttsbg 6.4
Hllsdle 79, N Mich 72
lnd 86 Nrthwstrn 62
lnd St 102, Tulsa 70
Iowa St 93, Okla St 59
Kalamazoo 74 Aquinas 73
Kansas 75 Kansas St 63
LOUlSIII 63 St LOUIS 61
Loyola Ill 57, Xvler 52
MrCluette 76, Atr Force 59
Mtam1 0 82, W Mlch 61
Mlch St 73, Mlch 62
Mlllkn 90, No Cent 73
Minnesota 78, Iowa 65
M1nn Mrrs 53, M tch Tch .46
MISSOuri 7~. Nebraska 52
Ohio St 91 Purdue 77
Oltvet 68 Hope 66
Qutncy 80, Lor as 63
St Fran 89. Goshen 72
SIU 60 W1Ch1ta 53
Sthwstm 102, Strlng78
Taylor 91, Manchstr 63
Wayne Sf 84 Oakland 71
Wabash 82 Greenwol 64
Wm Penn 51 Stmpson 49
W1s 80 Illinois 73
woostr 100, Mt Unton 75
Southwest
Ab ChriS 80, S F Austn 79
Ar1z 68 Tex El Paso 64
Arkanslls 77, TCU 57
Ark P B 74, Lngstn 70
Aushn 101 Sui Ross 100
Baylor 80 SMU 71
Bthny Naz 97, Cent Ok 7'2
Houston 87 R tee 62
New Mex 103, Ariz St 92
NE Ok 53, E Cent Ok 45
Oktahoi'T)a 63, Colorado 52
Okla C1ty 90, Denver 68
0 Rbrts 88 Hrdn Smns 64
Prarle Vw 105 Miss Val 99
St Mry's 83, Sthwstrn 74
se Okla 90, NW Okla so
Sthrn Ark 82, Ark Tch 71
Te)l A&amp;l 11, East Tex &amp;.&amp;
UTA 73 McNeese 68
UN I 65 Augusta 51
West
AlA 98 Seatl Pac 97
Biola 1A Ambassador 55
BYU 76, Wyom1ng 56
California 70, USC 68
Cal Poly Pom 78 Chpmn 75
Cal Davis 8A, SF State 7A
Chmnade 92 Alska Anch 86
Frsno St 58, Sn Jse St 47
G FD)( 86 Ida Coli 82
ldatlO St 73, Idaho 71
Mont 62 Weber St 52
New- LV 80, Ark St 10
No Ariz 73, Mont St 67
Occdntl 83 Pom Ptzr 51
Ore St 58 Wash St ~~~
Oregon 64 Washington 60
Pacific 88 Cal l rv 61
Prtlnd Sf 77, N Col 5'2
Puget Sound 78 Hawal1 69
R!91s 17 West N M 51!1
Sacto St 76 Chico St 53
S 0 14 Los Ang St 80
S 0 St 76, cat St Flrtn 70
San Fran 82 Loyla 80
Sta Brb 74 Lng Bch St 73
Sta Clara 72, Ppperdne 64
Stanislaus 60, Humboldt 58
UCLA 69, Stanford 63
Utah 74 Colo st 65
Wstmnt IS, Pt Lorna 69
Whttler 92, Clrmnt Mdd 73
Sunday's Results
East
Adelph i 67, Pace 6-4
Colmbla 71 ttrvrd 62
CCNY 112, Baruch 5.(
C W Post 95, Owing 75
Mans,ld 66, Mnhttnvl 53
NY Tch 86 Brckpt Sf 53
Provldnce 61, No Car 59
South
Ellz CtySt 105 VaSt 97
Midwest
DePaul 69, Notre Dame 68
West
Portland 82, Seattle 78

BY DONNIE DUDDING
Southern'! vars1ty and

reserve basketball teams
clmched ihe SVAC league
champiOnship Saturday
night The varsity crushed
Symmes Valley, 106-59 The
SIIS Reserves won, 53-49
The first quarter saw the
VIkmgs take an early but
short-lived lead over the
Tornadoes Then With five
minutes left m the first
quarter,

semo r

Ric hard

Teaford tied the score 1-4,
and Southern began to take
control They ended the
quarter With an eight point
lead, 18-10
'
In the second quarter, the
Tornadoes con\mued to budd
thetr lead, and utJllztng a
strong defense, ended the

stanza With a 22 pomt lead
overthe V1kmgs Through the
combmed efforts of Kelly
Wmebrenner and Tim
Brmager, they held Symmes
Valley's usual high scorer,
Ralph Ingles, to JUSt 6 pomts
m the first half The score at
the half was 45-23
In the third quarter, the

FOR YOUNG
DRIVERS

I

Young men and women
often ask why they have to
pay
more
for
t he1r
automobile msurance
Dr ivers 10 theJr teens and
earl1er twent1es cause far
more than their share of
traffic accidents Reports
the
National
Safety
Council 21 8 percent of all
motorists are 24 years of
age or under. yet these
youthful operators are
{nvolved as dnvers tn 38 6
per cent of all acc1dents
and 37 3 per cent of all fatal
mishaps
A great many young
people
are
sktlled,
responsible
drivers .
Obv1ously, though qu ite a
few are not
There s no substitute for
development competence
.~.nd

the rtqht altofudes,

Including
a
pos1flve
approach to defensive
driving
Our agency provides
flnanctal protection and
service In case of accidents
Involving young dnvers ...
but
many
of
these
ace ldents
can
be
prevented That's why we
say prevent ion IS the
best po llcy
.

Tornadoes continued to run
up the score With just two
mmutes left m the game,
juruor Dwight Hill sank two
foul shots to put the Tornadoes over 1011 for the first
lime all season
The Tornadoes shot 49
percent from the field and 71
percent from the foul line,
With sconng honors gomg to
Wmebrenner With ~ pomts,
followed closely b~ Hill With
17
Wmebrenner also led In
rebounds, makmg 11 out of

992-2143
102 W Ma1n

NORTHFIELD,
Ohio
(UP!) - Sharon Princess
returned to the winner's
circle ,Saturday nilht by
winning the featw'ed pace at
Northfield Park, loing the
mile in 2:0t U, the fastelt
time of the year.
Sharon Princeas' eightrace win streak wu baited
two weeks ago and wu
recently sold to Mary Irvine'
and Ray au-11 for ~.ooo
Her new owners watched her
win her aecmd race In four
outings,thia year, while Jady

True Osborne third.
Flash Gauman won the
first race, hia third lllralght
and fourth In hia laat five
starta. He Clllllblned with
Kr)'stll Mate and I'd Rather
Walk to return
1n the
Big Triple on the comblnat!Gn

eaa.eo

of7~

The crowd of 4 220 ....red

ttM,BII&amp;

In 1914, the American
Society of Composers
Authors and Publlaher1
formed
'

N

Boys
HighSchool
Basketb•ll Scores
United Prenlnternlflon•l
S•turdiY

Ada 103 Waynestleld 58

Adena 57 Southeastern ~
Alexander 84 Belpre 62
Aml!l.lCl
Clearcree k
61
Fa1rfleld 41
ae~llsvlile 90 Paden City ( W

Va) BO

Berne Union S.S Fairfield
Union 54
Bethel Loclll 70 Houston 46
819 W~Jin u l 88 W Jefterson 69
Bloomfield 73 Gr~nd Va'ley

42

Buckeye Valley 73 Olentanov

61
Buckeye W 87 Weirton {W
Va) Madonna 72
Ca nton Tunken 79 Wooster 67
Chesapeake 17 Hannan T race

Blue Devils trip
Red Devils, 54-50
Jumor guard Nate Thomas
and sentor forward Jeff

timeout , worked the hall
around for a game-tymg shot,

Brown came off the bench
Saturday mght to spark
Coach
Jim
Osborne's
Gallipolis Blue Devils to a 5450 non-conference basketball
victor) over the host Ravenswood Red Devils
Although the lead changed
hands 131Imes (II was tied SIX
limes ) the host Red Devvlls
were on top 12-10, 27-26, and
39 38 at the quartermarks

but agam Brown stole a pass
ms1de w1th stx seconds left
He was fouled and Im-

In the fourth stanza, lhe

West VIrginians pullelt
awa) to a 49-43 advantage
wllh 4 Sl remaining in tbe
game.
Coach Osborne ca lied the
lime out to readJUSt the
Galhans' defense It worked
- the Red Devils scored only
one pomt the remamder of
the contest while the Blue
Devils tallied II
Mark Stanley, who entered

the game with a 26-poui t
sconng average, put the Red
Devils on top 49-43 midway In
the final penod.
After the GAHS llmeout,
Terry Wall's short JUmper
cut It back to four, 49-45, with
4 06 left
Big Brad Abels canned two
free throws with 3 24
remammg
Jeff Brown
popped m a short jumper at
the 2.57 mark It was lied at
49-all
The alert Brown then
picked off a Red Devil pass
and hit speedy Nate Thomas
with a lofty pass up court
Thomas raced rn for an easy
payup at the 2 29 mark That
proved to be the game's
Mark Hilton's free throw
With 2 09left reduced Gaiba's
lead to 51-50 Terry Wall hit a
free throw w1th I 14left, then
the Red Devils, followmg a

Pomeror

A Pubhc Serv1ce ol This Newspaoer &amp; The Adverl•s•ng Counc 1

!!
' I

~

Would

you

help
this kid?
When the dam broke a1 Buffalo Creek \V~..:st VtrgmLa a Jot of
peopl e weren'1 as l uck} as th1~ !m !c gu~
] anuc an d the res I of the Mo ~lq famll) made l! up the h1l1
JUst m th e mck of ILmc SclOnds later, a \\ali ot water sv. ept all
thc1r eart h!~ poss essions a•\ay
H ere )OU sec j am1e m the Red Cross shelter thinking Jt
all o\cr
r
One look at that face and wc'rc ;m full yglad wc ~\crc there
10 help

E\ ery year, )OU k.mJ.,..,, Red Cross touches the l1vcs of m1l
hons upon millions o t Amcn c:ms Ru.:h Poor A\ cragc Black
While Chnsuan and Jew \V1th suppon \V1th comfort \Vuh
ahclpmg hand when !hey need ll
So when }OU open }Our heart Wllh ;.our umc or your money
you can be certain 1fs 10 the nght place

40
Claymon t 70 M inerva 59
Clear Fork 53 Frederick. town

third in
tourney

47

Col Academy 49 Bexley 47
Col Centennll'IJ 75 Falrban~s

45
Col N 64 New11rk 41
Col Watt erson 55 Hamil ton
Twp 51
Cor y Rawson 61 Spencerville
60
Crooksv i lle 60 New Lex 48
Da n\l l lle 85 Northmoore 80

The Meigs Freshmen
cagers, coached by Mike
WIIlfong, came home with
third place m the Warren
Invttahonal Tournament

mediately stepped to the
chanty line and sank two free
tosses to assure Galba of Its
eighth victory agamst nine
losses Ravenswood dropped
to 5-6 on the year
Besides playing key
offensive roles In thai
fourth period comeback,
Brown also Jed the Blue
Devils in rebounding wllh
10, and Thomas forced lwo
Red Devil turnovers late In
the game. Thai led to the
West Virginians' do\Onlail.
Terry Wall led all scorers
with 27 pomts The Blue
Devils hit 22 of 54 from the
field for 40 7 percent GAHS
was 10 of 14 at the foul hne lor
71 percent GAHS had 30

Delphos Jeff 118 Oh10 C1ly 53
Fra nklin Hts 70 Lima Senior

63

Saturday afternoon, 42-39 A
see-saw battle all the way,
the Meigs lads pulled away m
the last canto on the strength
of Dave Kennedy's seven

fourth quarter pomts Kennedy had eleven for the
game, as did Kevin Smith
Quarter scores were 7-6, 21211 1Doth Meigs) , and then 2728 In favor of Alexander at the
third buzzer Meigs played
three games, losmg to
Warren and then downmg
NelsonVIlle York 50-38 before
tangling with Alexander

--'

SOUTIIERN'S Scott Souder (34) and 'llm Bruutge• t34) battle Symmes Vall ey's Ralph
Ingels (551 for rebound durmg Saturdays makeup ""ntesl, won by the lmno~does 100-59
The victory clinched the SVAC cage title fm ~o uthm n
TEAM

with Belpre gettmg second
Me1gs IS now 3-7 on the year
and plays host to Jackson
tomght at 5 15 There were
eight teams In the In-

rebounds and ll turnovers

Mark Hilton led the losers
w1th 17 pomts Stanley added
12 and Rick Hardy 10
R&lt;Ivenswood hit 24 of 51
l1eid goal attempts for 47"
percent The Red Devils were
two of eight at the foul lme
RIIS had 30 rebounds, 11 by
Stanley, and 17 costly turn

vitational

MEIGS

FROSH -

D

Kennedy 5 1 11 Judge 3 2 8
Staats J 0 6 Mtller 1 2 4
1 11
Swan o :;: 2 K Sm 1fh
Totals 11 a 42
Alexander Frosh - Guthrie
2 0 4 Hawk 6 2 14, Hollon 5 1
11 Luckett 1 0 2 Brooks 2 0 4,
Gabnel 2 0 4 Totals 18 3 39
By quarters
7 21 27 42
Me1gs
Alexander
6202839

s

overs

Gallipolis will play Athens
at The Plams tomght Tipoff
lime for the makeup varsity
lilt IS 7 30 p m The reserve
game IS slated for 6 o'clock
Ravenswood IS at Ripley
Tuesday

52

SEOAL VARSITY
TEAM
W L P OP

GABS-Ravenswood box
GAHS BLUE DEVILS (541
PLAYER-Pas
'
FGA FT-A PF RB
Jeff Brown f
27
5•
0 10
Jeff Lanham, f
29
22
1
5
Brad Abels, c
25
23
3
8
TerryWall,g
13 19 1 3 0 6
Jimmy Harris g
24
00
4
0
Bill Armstrong, g
01
00
4 0
E V Clarke, c
02
00
1 1
Matt Sterrett f
00
1 0
05
NateThon)as g
12
oo o o
TOTALS
22 54 10 14 14 30
RAVENSWOOD RED DEVILS 150)
PLAYER-Pas
FG A FT A PF RB
Rick Hardy, f
59
00
2 2
MarkFowler,f
36
01
4 9
Mark Stanley, c

MarkHI Iton,g
JoeFoelds, g
Mike Pannell, g
Scott Miller, g
TOTALS

6 14

o1

•

813
29
00
0o
24 51

12
14
00
oo
2-8

3

TO TP
0
1

9
6

2

6

4

27

2

4
0

2
0
0
o

0

11

54

lronlon
Ga ll1pol1 s
Alhens
Wa 11erly
Loga n
Well ston
Jack son
M e1gs

TOTALS

TO TP
3 10
o 6
3

12

3
s 4
0 0
1 1
19 30

7
3
1
o
17

17

5
0
o
50

10 16 12 16-54
12 15 12 11-50

Ravenswood Red Devils

EVANSVILLE, lnd (UPI)
The University of
Evansville basketball
program, shattered by the
81rplane crash truit killed 1ts
enttre

team,

has

been

enriched by $50,0110 from a
benef1t game starrmg
·~e
members of the NFL's
11
Pittsburgh Steelers
'"" .... Likeagoodneighbor, The Evansville team and
_A_
Stilte Fann 15 there Coach Bobby Watson, a PittsCCIID
burgh native were amoog 29
•wouu'"'.
Slit! fl!m lie n~&gt;UIIfl[e &lt;:ompany
k lied'
1
--====~"'::::
"
~'~'
':.'t11 OOIT'I!ngkln 11001, persons
1
m a p ane
- - - crash last Dec 13

"Caalme for
ll I•Dsura.."""

De8iures
In only one or two days.

partials&amp;.

Dr. A, J, Staehll

~

Dr C W.lletol

~

Dr. G. J. Slomb1ugh •
The Rtvtcrc Center
E

1
4
4
5
6
7
12
lJ

507
525
652
650
52 1
662
394
477

liM
480
554
522
485
MS
617
621

53 53 4388 4388

DWIGHT Hill (14) drives m for two of hiS 17 pomts
agaliiSt vlsiinmg Symmes Valley Saturday mght V1k10g
,!lefender on right IS Tey WISem~n (11) - Greg Ba iley
photos.

Girls box scores
SOUTHERN GIRLS (221Carnahan 0 0 o, Roseberry 1
3 5, Smith 1 0 2 Ord 3 1 7
Boso 2 0 4, Crow 0 0
Grueser 2 0 .t totals 9 4 22

o:

EASTERN 1441 - Baley 4

0 8. Windon 5 S IS, Weber 4 2
10 Hannum .4 1 9, Young 1 0
2 Totals 18 a 44
Southern G1rls (43} -Carnahan 0 2 2 Roseberry 3

4-10, Rltchhart 4 412. Smoth
1 0 2 Ord 53 13 Htll 0 0 0

Johnson 1 2 .4 Holste in 0 0 0
Totals 14 15-43

North Gall1a (29) - Hardy
2 0 4 Dodnlt 0 1 1. Pay ne 2 0
4, Just1ce 4 0 B Smith 1 1 3
01ler 3 3 9 Tojals 12 5 29
Reserve s
Meigs Reser\les (20 ) K lnQ 4 2 10, R1QQ S 2 0 4
Drehel 2 0 4 Chapman 1 0 2
Totals 9 2 20
LDgan Reser11e s (25) ~
Hawk 3 1 7 Thompson 2 2 6
Kel ter 3 1 7, Oenn1 s 1 0 2
Carver I 1 3 To1als 10 5 25

51
Mtd Am Chris! 68 Worlh
Chrlsl 66
Northwest 74 Sa ndy Valley 49
Northwood 63 Tol Emman
Bapti st 67
Ollawa G l andorf 58 Wa
pakoneta 54
t-'alnl Valley 64 Westfall 58
Perry 54 Marllngton 44
Ports Clay 51 West Union 39
ReynoldsbJ,Jrg 59 Whitehall 55

loti
R i ver VIew 93 Morgan 66
Sheridan 69 Trl Valley 67
Soufh1ngton 78 Fairport 35
St Henry 68 Forst Recovery

49

70

Tol Rogers 82 Sylvania South
view 67

Tol Scot! 93 Cle John Hay 47
Tol Waite 66 Tol Start 64
Urbana 55 Graham 53
Warren Harding 71 Warren

WR 63

Warren Loca l 56 Federal
Hocking 57
Wa shi ngton CH 77 Madison
Plains 62
Wes l Branch 67 Gira rd 61
W1lla rd 67 Bucworus 55
W1ltlam stown tW Val 56 Fort
Frye 55
1/Vynrora 4J ~uckeye central
J6
Zane Tra c::e 78 Unloto 76
lanes Rose 71 Lancaster ~
FlshPr 54

Host Chesapenkc crushed
\ ISittng Hannan Trace 77-40

son mark

The Panthers were led by
m a non-conference game
D
L McWhorter's 18 points _'
Saturdav meht
The VIctory left Ches- David Swain and David 1
apeake With a 11-2 sea - Campbell each had II for the
Wildcats, now 8-8 on the year
Chesapeake also won the
Ohoo College Basketball
Untted Press International
,
Saturday Results

Ohio State 91 Purdue 77

reserve game, 65-30
Box score

HANNAN TRACE (401 -

M ia mi 82 Western Mlch 1.1

Swains 1 11 , Mooney 20 4

Bowllnp Green 69 Toledo 68
Centra Mlch 86 Kent St 79
Cmclnnafl 42 Dayton 40

2 2, Neal 0 3 3 Webb 2 2 6,
Tim Beaver 0 3 3 TOTALS
13 14 40.

Ball St 81 Ohoo U 77

Loyola Il l 57 Xavter 52
Youngstown Sf

B7 Mankato

51 Mmn 75

Ashland 96 Oh1o Dominican

69

Capital 69 Manetta 51
Heidelberg 83 Denison 71
~1 ttenber.9 48 Musklf'lgum 43
Oh1o Wesleyan 101 Otterbein

Campbell 4 3 11

4-0 8 1

Central St 90 Dyke 72

Carneg1e Mellon, Pa
7.4
H1ram 59
M a l one 87 M f
V ernon
Na Lare'ne 85
12th Ann ua l
Oh1o Region Campus
Tournament
At Champion
Semifinals
Oh1o U lanes 49 Kent Sf ,
Trumbull 48

1771 -

Fulton

2 (14 ;

Shope 3 0 6, Hill 50 10.

McWhorter 9 o 18 D antonl
43 11 Rice 2 2 6 Delker 21
5 Johnson 1 0 2 Smith 1 1 3;
Hatcher 1 2·-4 TOTALS 34 , .
77
Score br quarters !

HT
CHS

Findlay 73 Defiance 71

Wooster 100 Mount Un ion 75
St V1ncent, Pa 73
l:iteubenvttle 52
Bellormlne 65 Wright St 63

s Beaver o

CHESAPEAKE
Boster

Oberlin 80 Ohio Northern 73,
Reservt
ot
1 apeake
65

1~28z.6410

1

Panthers w:_allop
Wildcats, 77-40

67
Wilmington 98 Bluffton 96

r~hnes

Call Fme, Anywhere on Ohio
I

10
9
9
9
7
7
I
1

Ltck lng. Valley 54 Heath 53
Lima Perry 74 Botkins 6J
Lora in King 71 Marion 61
Louls11l lle 61 Canton S S'il
Mans St Peters 90 Can Cent
Cath 66
Marion Cafh 64 Cardington 45
Marion Elgin 7S Kenton 74
MassllloJ"t Christ 77 Kidron
Cent Chri st 72
Maumee 68 Springfield 44
Maumee V Cbunfry Day 68
El yria Christ 65
Maysvi lle 73 Philo 60
Miarnl Trace 63 Col Hartley

Strasburg 45 Fairless 43
Teays Valley 75 Hillsboro 54
T1tlln Columbian 71 Sandusky

Saturday's results
Logan tl9 M e1gs 24
1oneght s games
Loga n a l Iro nt on
Gal l1polls at Athen s
Tuesday 's games
Court House a t Greenfield
Jackson al Ironton
PI Pleasant at Hunt1ng ton
Ravenswood at R1pley

Score by quarters

Gallipolis Blue Devils

648
740
666
789
743
974
844
1073
6477

SEOAL RESERVES
TEAM
W L POP

0
2

11

ALL GAMES

Loga n
13 0 836
Waverly
10 4 8.48
Ir ont on
.. 8 4 795
Athen s
8 5 824
Ga ll ipoli s
6 7 76J
WPII '=. IOn
6 8 959
1 12
678
Ja ckson
MelgS
I IJ 770
TOTAlS
51 51 M77
Saturday s result s
Logan 89 M etgs 66

Ga hanna 55 Westland 52 tot)
Gatmn 76 She lby 52
Gra ndview 52 Mar ysville 51
Gra nville 59 Nor thridge 55
Greenon 57 Bell efontll l ne 43
Grove Cl fy 46 Zanesville 45
Hardin Northern 74 Mar
Pleasant 65
Howland 61 Hubbard 59
Johnst own
J1
Watkins
Memorial 62
Jonathan Alder 63 Dublin 59
L akewood 81 Newark Ca th 66
Leipsic 74 Arlington 54
Lexi ngton 86 Ashland Crest
view 68
L 1berly Benlon 69 Carey 54
L 1berly Union 76 Millerspor t

49
Ltcklng His 97 Uflca 69

W L
P OP
Loaan
15 1 1046 843
Wcw er l y
IJ 5 1097 971
Por tsm ou lll 11 7 1195 1089
Wa shing ton
10 5 1010 875
PI Plf~asant
9 4 788 736
Iron ton
8 8 98 1 906
Athens
8 8 10 111 102 3
8 9 989 974
Gal l1polls
Ra111mswood 5 6 685 659
Well s lo11
6 12 1n 1 179 1
Jackson
3 14 89 1 1060
Me1gs
2 15 970 1277
Non SEOAL re sult s
Gfl ll l pol!s 511 Ravenswood 50
Co urt House 77 Madi so n
Pl ains 62
Whee lersburg 54 Portsmouth

won the tourney

Warren

l

loti

after trunmmg Alexander tn
the consolatiOn
match

dentur~ s~rv1c~.

Uoness flniahed second and

scores

Frosh

wmmng goal

DALE C. WARNER
INSURANCE

school

the Tornadoes total of 62, and
Southern ( 106) - ~1chard
4 6 14 ,
Kelly
Brmager had 13 The Tor- Teaford
nebrenner 10 5 25 T1m
nadoes stole the ball181Imes Wi
Br1nager 53 13 John Sayre
with Perry Hili leadmg with 50 10 Perry Hill 0 3 3. Sieve
five Every Southern player Backer 3 0 6 J1m O' Br ien 3
0 6 Dw oght Hill 7 3 17 . Dave
scored
3 0 6 . Scotf Souder 2
The reserves, who are 4Fmdley
6 TOfitiS 42 22 106
undefeated in the league,
Symmes Valley 1591 defeated the V1kes 53-49 with Ralph Ingles 6 0 12 Brenf
Dave Foreman and Jack Miller 56 16 Eddie Davis 3 1
W•seman 3 3 9 Mike
Duffey takmg scormg honors 7Ga lTey
loway I 0 2 Robin Flack
With 15 apiece , Dale Teaford 5 1 11 Jon Bokovltz 1 0 2
had 12 points The Tor- Mike Klpp 0 0 0, Jeff Spence
nadoes travel to North Guilla 000 tolals141159
Score by quarters
tomght to complete their Southern
18 27 30 31-- 106
regular season
S Valley
10 13 21 15- 59

One or two day full

NORmFIELD

Ohio high

9 12 6 13-..0
18 14 19 27-77

score-Ches .
Hannan Trace

In 1975, The White House
announced that President
Ford would name Carla
Anderson Hills as Secretary
of Housmg aQd Orban
Development
M1aml Midttletown 92 Kent
St Slark 67
Ftn•ls

OU Zanes

73 Miami Mid

dletown 72, of

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Munday, ~'eb . 13, 1978

Martin family takes trip
CHOICES
Karen Blaker Ph.D.

Am I going crazy?
DEAR DR. BLAKER Dun 't think this letter is a
joke just cause it's unsigned.
If my husband discovers I
have writlen, he would kill
me. But I can't keep quiet any
longer.
My husband has terrible
spells where he is abusive to
me and the children and later
recalls nothing about 11. It 's
so bad now that the children
prefer sieepm g at the
neighbor's house. During
these spells he not only tnes
to hurl us but talks 'crazily

finru; the accuracy of your
own pen:cptwn. And you L'an
seek further confirmation if
you need Jl. Think of some
pretext and ask a good fr1end
to stay with you for a week
And consult a therapist who

about people who are out to

put away in an asylum.
Secretly and slowly over
m&lt;lny rughts, he lowered the

kill him. It's been this way for
over a year.

We have stopped seemg
friends ~&lt;.;ause his beha\.rior
often becomes embarrC:tssing.
Since the attacks come and

, go, one minute

r am living:

can help you restore your
confidenct! in yuurs.:lf.

Had the heroine from the
old movie, "Gaslight, " written to me, I nught hO:JVtl uffert~d her similar advke. In
thts film, the husband
tCh•rles Buyer) tned tu have

The Osby Martin family going on to Florida to meet
and Mrs . Ruth Gosney have her family. Among those they
returned from a trip to visited while in Florida wete
Florida . Mr. Martin, his son Mrs . Martin's brother and
and daughter, Adam and Pat, .Mr . and Mrs . Norman
and Mrs. Gosney traveled by Yeaugcr and Mrs. Reva
truck to Florida where they Beach, formerly of Mid·
were joined by Mrs. Martin dteport .
whu Oew from Columbus to
Pat Martin came back to
Orlando.
Ohio by bus, while Mr . and
Mrs . Martin had planned to Mrs. Martin their son, Adam,
go to New Jersey for an F.ight and Mrs. Gosney came in the
and Forty meeting before truck encountering snow and
going on to Florida but was ice enroute . Purpose of their
prevented from doing so by trip was to sell antique furthe snow blizza rd . She niture of the Martin-Gosney
remained in Columbus a few business.
days with relatives before

Michael promotes

his wife (Ingrid Bergman)

mammogram

gas hghts m the house. When

she asked, he denied they had
dmngcd . Un&lt;:tblc to acceQl
what hhe saw ct nd its

with a perfectly rationa l per·

r·amifi&lt;.:ations ( tlrvorLt: l, she
startttd duui.Jtmg her pen·cp-

son and the next I'm faci ng a

twns.

treatment

Parenting classes to begin
The baby's health classes
whi t:h were schedule to begin
J anu a ry 29 have been
rescheduled because of the
recent incl ement weather.
" Rccumin g a Parent : A
fl ealthy Start for Your Baby"
will be held Sunday evenings
from 7 ~9 begmning February
26. Sessiuns wiii be held at the
O ' Biene ss Mem o ri a l
Huspital.
The classes, which are
being offered to help area
parent s-to -be and new
parents, were designed by the
Coqwralwn fur Health
Edu cation in Appalachia
Ohi o (GHEAO). The six
sess1ons mclude information
on normal and abnormal
dcvcl uprnent. feeding, day-to·

day with the child. dealing
with parents' feelings, giving
a home physical exam,
keeping health recorrjs,
preventing accidents and
first aid.
The classes were desiened
to complement , not duplicate ,
inforrrlation
taught
i~
prenatal classes. Parents will

Gardeners have dinner
The Cheshire Garden Club
held its annual Christma s
dinner at the Metgs Inn at
Pomeroy. Afterwards they
went to the hom e of Mrs. Lee
(Dorothy) Tyo at Cheshire
for gift exchange and
program.
'

Chaplains to meet
The deadline for reservations by members or the
Holzer Medica i Center
Volunteer Chaplains'
Assoc ation for their Appreciation Lunche on and
Annual meeting to be held on
Thursday , February 16, at 1
o'clock 1n the Fren ch Ftve
Hundred Room at the
hospital. was today .
Members of the Association
rece1 ved letters of mvitatlon
with ret urn reservation
cards. Any who pian to attend
and have not returned their
cards are urged to cont act
Reverend Arthur C. Lund,
Director of Cha pl aincy
Services at the hospital by
phone, at 446-5153.
Guest sp~ak e r for this Fifth
AnnuaJ Meeting will hr Lee

learn to care for the baby
after it arrives and during its
first year of life.
The registration fee of $15
per family covers all class
sessions, handouts and
materials . For more in·
formation, or to register,
contact Sally Mathews at
CHEAO, 593-5526.

Jaster, Administrator of the
Employee Assistance
Program at Union Carbide in
South Charleston, West
Virginia. Those who know
him there frequently refer to
Mr. Jaster as an ''Industrial
chaplain ." He is a former
Roman Catholic priest who
has served as a counselor and
dtrector of alcohol and other
drug relater! programs as
~eli as a hospital chaplain.
Included on the agenda of
the annual meeting will be
the election of officers and
two clerg~· representatives at -large to serve on the
Executive Committee of the
Holzer Medtcai Cent er
Volunteer Ch aplains'

Mrs .
Wili iam
Scott
(Mildred) called meetilrg to
order and' welcomed guests.
Roll call was then an·
swered by naming a plan\ or
flowers mentioned in the
Bible.
Mrs. Michael J . (Toots)
Fry gave each member the
new 1977-78 programs for the
year.
Mrs. Scott read a letter and
card sent to the club by Mrs.
Harr,Y: (Geneva) Clark, a
member of the club who was
in Florida • during the
holidays.
·Mr s . Phillis Hawley
reported to the club that a
book from the Cheshtre
Garden Cl ub had been
donated to the Gallia County
Library in memory of Mrs.
Everett (Flora) Long who
had been a charter 'member
of the club and a member
since 1958.
Mrs. Fry told about attending the Meigs Flower
show.
Refreshments of punch,
cookies and candies were
served by Mrs . Tyo. Guests
were Mrs. Lee (Louise)
McCarty and Mrs . Mary Call.

&amp;:s::s%

:cc . thteAt

MONDAY
BABY SITTING Workshop
session 6:30 p. m. Monday at
St. ' Paul Lutheran Church,
Pomeroy; Last chance to
enroll in the program.
TWIN CITY Shrine Club,
Monday, 7:30 p.'m. at
clubhouse ; refreshments.
POMEROY PTA, 7:30Mon·
day night at the school.
Founder's Day to be observed
with the recognition of past
presidents. There wHI be a •
program by the jazz band and
an art display . Mrs. Mary C.
Wtley will have a nursery for
the pre-school children.
TUESDAY
REGULAR MEETING,
Racine Masonic Lodge 461, •
F&amp;AM, Tuesday, 7:30p.m.;
ali Master Masons invited.
POMEROY CHAMBER of
Commerce Jlleeting 12 noon
Tuesday at Meigs Inn . Guest •
speaker will · be Charles •
Cassell, chief civil engineer
at the hydroelectric plant at
Racme.
WINDING TRAIL Garden
Club, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at
the home of Mrs . Marilyn
Wisecup. Mr s . Jackie
Brickles Will have the progfam on macrame hangers.
The arrangement topic will
be a study in red and while
with green foliage to be judged by Mrs. Cora Beegle.
Members are to take a
"sweet" recipe suitable for
Valentme's Day.

--~
- ~-~~~~~~~~-~

wice the fun for the price of one

rM '• s'"o' ••',

I!

Calendar

:,---------------------------------,
N. W. COMPTON. 0.0. :

1•.

l !!~!..C!~!=.R_o_~·-----------~------· .J,

·-----------------------------"'1
ir
__
~Ross

00-IT-YOURSELf
HARDWARE HEADQUART~ ~
.For all your do-it-yourself
Home Improvement Supplies
see Cross Hardware

H

A
R
D

-

w

'

• Housewares
•Wallpaper
• Paints
• E lectri ca I Supplies
• Plumbing Supplies

"

A
R
E

~nd cour~geous

Open Mon . thru Sat.
9 : 00to5:00
Middleport

71 N. 2nd Ave.

WENT TO VISIT
Kathryn Ohlinger left
Saturday for Texas where she
wiU visit her brother S. Sgt.
William M. Ohlinger and his
famtly. Sgt. Ohlinger has
been in the U.S. Air Force for
15 years. Kathryn traveleJ
via plane from the Columbus
Atrport .

992-3831

'

HERE VISITING
Mr . and Mr s. Alan
McLaughlin of Xenia spent
the weeken d here visiting his
parents, Mr . and Mrs .
Kenneth McLaughlin, Route
3, Pomeroy.

City Ice &amp; Fuel Co.
'·treet

Point Pleasant

,. .

n
Co
IllO rOWer ·

reat.l .

Mrs. Emel'son

ADDRESS KNOWN
Address of Mr. and Mrs.
Duane McLa ugh lin, the
former Debbie Willia mson, Is
7818 Daetwyler Drive, Lot 31,
Orland o, Fla. Duane is
stationed there with the U, S.
Navy .

VAUGHAN'S

Jonc~ ~ave

United Natwns trt!alies on
human r·i~ht.s rrotirlg that
these ireuties do not provide
for personal ownership.
Her report ulso dealt with
Women 's Convention held in Texas, the
U~ N~Jtionul

t.'qual righl'i umcnt.lment, and

the e-qualities ulreatly pt·uvid·
t!d by dis~:J'il1lilt&lt;.&amp;tiun laws.
It was not&lt;'&lt;l thut fur
Alncnuw1 Histury Month ,
Mrs . Eich will pla&lt;·e pntriotic
flower i. lrnmgcments in the
Pomert&gt;Y bcmk.s. Lcltl'I'S ur

lt.anks were read from th~
stutc uffirCI'S fur· the ('ontl'ibutiuns mudc tu the St. Mury ln&lt;han School ami the Kate
DuJican Sn1ith st:lmol.
A silen t auction wns lw'ld . t\
patriotic theme was t•Hrncd
out in the tublc dct:&lt;)I'Utiuns
which

c-oncerning the DAR's position on the Punuma Canul
treaty. The position heill by
the DAR lS that g ivirr~ the
ccmal away thnmlcns our lUi·
tiona I sceul'ity. Mrs. Junes
aisu gave hi~hli~hts fn&gt;m the

dccorMtcd witll a flag r·cplil'H.
Coluniul figurines were ulsn
use-d orr tire tnbic. Mrs .
Dwight Milhoun , Ml's.
Thumus Ewing, Mrs . .John
ft1,1se, and Mrs . . Ct•rald
Puwcll were ho~tcsst.•s .

POMEROY - A co n·
trtbution to the lnternalionul
End owment Fund was made
by Preceptor Beta Beta
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority at Thursday night's
meeting held at the Meigs
Inn .
Membership manuals were
given to the new members
along with the book , "I nvitation to We ." Rose Stsson,
Velma Rue, June Freid and
Mildred Karr agreed to assist
in the heart fund drive in
Pomeroy after a report was
given by Mrs . Robert•
O'Brien.
A committee of Anne Rupe,
Mrs. Sisso n, and Peurl
Welker was appointed · to
arrange for a permanent
award to the "Girl of , the
Year" in addition to the
traveling ring.
The cultural report on early
Meigs County was given by

Mrs . Eleanor ThmliiiS nnd

fcut un•d

!'ARTY II EUJ
POMF.ROY - A pnrty in
cclebrutinn of the bh1hduy of
Mrs . F~vu lyi"l Spencer wus
held this week at the home of
Mr . and Mrs. llarry Clurk .
Attending were Mr~ . Jounn
Clark and daughter, Shcrri ,
Mr~ .

Vicki J.hanson und son,

Hrent Willinm , Mrs. Yvonne
Tackett, Bill Quilleu. The
cake was decorated with pink
roses with other trim or
purple, gn~cn unci pink .

FARM FRESH PRODUCE
OHIO
G~OWN

·tm~uST&amp; PEARL STREETS

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

ALL PURPOSE

We Gladly Accept Federal Food Stamps
BONELESS ROLLED

CHUCK ROAST.............. ~~~ ..

$}29

POTATOES
DIET RITE

'129
SLICED BACON ..... ..... ~- ~~:. 69e
~~coN. . . . . . . . . . . ~~:?.~ :-~ 119
e
HOT DOGS ................ ~~- -~~: 79

R~~~~. CRO~N

BACON ENDS .........~ .~-~: .....
CRISPY SERVE

E

1-Lb.

Ctn.

·i .

I

REG . OR DIET

ROME

APPLES

FIYGO POP

'

ARMOUR

I

99

Bottles

99¢

I

OR

.

BORDENS

HALF &amp; HALF ..............................c::;:" 49c

CARDINAL
SLICED ENRICHE

VALLEY BELL

2% MILK ....... ,...........~~r!~~~1
BORDENS SINGLES

16 ·0l
............... Pkg.

$

39

,.
1

BREAD
4
$

Vz- Gal.
Ctft.

WHITE
69~

NORTHERN

BATH TISSUE
........ J .';: .'~~~:.
Limit one with $10.00 purchase .

Big 29 oz. Con 69~

HUNTS

TOMATO SAUCE ... ~!T. 1!.L
~xwell House Instant

PIE FILLI
'

LIMIT 2

CRISCO
lb .

can

*I)

'

"'

$ Z9

c

~

u

Lim it One With

110.00 Purchase

•

.

$ l9

4

COFFEE ...................'?. ~~: .J.~~ •••
Ott Monte
Red Sockeye
16 oz. Con $199
9
SALMON
.... ~.·. •• ~~:'.'· ::-. ~~.·- ~?~.
Lim It 1 with Other purchlse.

SHORTENING

THANK YOU CHE

.

cLIP
N

sAVE!

STORES • CARDINAL FOOO STORES

...

'rtx~;~.t·•·JI'ilt I..J~:"'•'

M

Mrs. Norma Amsbt~ry Nt•xt
meeting will be hCid rrt the
Pomeroy l&lt;.,in Depm1mcnt.
Hcfresh1nents were served
by Mrs. Nellie Brnwrr, Mrs.
Karr, Mrs. 'llunnns Hml Mr:;.
Amsbury

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

rdinal

'-~ like

the nutionul defense r·cpm't

SALE DATES
FEBRUARY 13 • 18, 1978

PER BAG

MACHINE
RENTAL
'25

POMEROY-A film on the
presidents uf the Untie-d
State~ was shown at the Friduy meeting of Return
Jonalhan Met~s Chapter uf
the Duughters of the
Americ•n Revolution held at
the Purish House of Groce
Eptscopal Church.
Mrs. Patrick Lochar)' was
narrator for the film shown
by Mrs . Nun Moore. In the
absence of Mrs. Grac-e Eich,
re~ent, who w.s injure-d in a
fall Thursday , Mrs. Gene
Yost, vice t·e~cnt, presided at
tht!' lllt!t!ting. Mrs. UJclmry
was at the pi•no for the rra·
tiurull anthem during the
opening rituaL The president
gt!ntmd's m~ssuge concern·
ing American History WHS

cd with dark green velvet
·
panels t!Xhmding from the .~
·
~I§
neckline tu the fluor . Miss
lit.
Debbie Walker, sister of the ~·
I
lg
gr·uorn, was lhe Oower girl •.,,
and she wun~ a minl green
THE HIGH COST OF BEING SICK
dress ac~ented with dark
BY fiE LEN BOTfEL
green velv~t.
They aU carrted nosegays DEAR HELEN :
Last year I spent 20 days in the h&lt;&gt;iipital, mostly for minor
ur nunt green l'£1l'llaliun.s.
therapy
following an operation on my hip. I wasn't in intensive
white
chrysanth~mums,
b&lt;rby's breath and •ssurtcd care and didn't need special attention. But I am on Medicare,
grec"ns with dark g:l't~cn velvet and I also have medical insurance, so everything was paid. No
doubt this is why they kept me there so long.
strcanu~ n.i. They wore fluwt:!r
The shocker is : my biU came to $6,400! Items whiclj stand
, headpieces .
Clarence Relford, fnend of out •re: phallllllcy, drugs · $1 ,032.71, this for pills and capo
the groom, seryed as best sules; medical and surgical supplies - $1 ,138.19 ; respiratory
man, ami the ushers wen~ therapy (sunple breathing exercises) • $328.99. Even my longJuhrr •rrd Randy Walker·, distance phone bill was twice as much as I figured I'd used . ·
Another bill from .the doctor (who was assigned by my
brothel'S of the groom .
For her daughter 's Wl.'&lt;l- surgeon to stop in and say ' ~Good morning ," (no more) was dmg, Mrs. Dodderer wore a S50 first vtsit of only • lew minutes, $15 thereafter. My surgery
lung, gown of llght IJlue qu1ana came to over $1,200, in addition to the hospital charges . As I
jersey over which she wore a say, it was a somewhat routine operation.
In 1976, when I spent 13 days in the sume hospilitl with a
fluor length cape of duffon.
Mrs. Walker wore a turquoise more serious problem, the charge was some $2,300. Can costs
gown w1th full sleeves of duf· have doubled in one year? When I compluined, the Implication
fon. They both wore corsages was, "You're not paying for 1t, what are you fussing about?"
of whale carnatwns, baby ':; Well, the government has to pay for it, and I ca n't believe a socalled non-profit hospital uses up $320 per day per patient.
IJreath, tulle and greenery.
Immediately following the What do others feel about the high cost of hospitalization ' ceremony, a reception for 250 FRANK
guests was he1d at the Swan· DEAR FRANK:
Perhpps there's an explanation for such charges, but
ton American Legion hall .
somehow
it eludes me . Comments please, readers?- H.
The three-twred weddmg
cake was topped wtth
miniHlure Urid~ cmd gi·uom DEARPIELEN :
My youngest sister is 23 and always in trouble. When bill coland dc&gt;&lt;:orated wtth yeliuw
lectors descend , Daddy pays. She's been hauled in on drug
roses.
The new Mrs . Walke r is a ch•rges several times. My folks get her off. They pay her traf·
seni or at the Penta County fie fines too. When she was up for shoplifting they hired an exVucattuna l High Sl'hool pensive lawyer to keep her out of jail.
Each lime she swears she's been railroaded, and she'll
where she is pres ident of the
never ca use them any more probierru;, I happen to know she 's
Dental Asststanls
Class . Mrof selling dope.
W•iker
is a 1976 graduate
I was with her the other day when she slipped some earrings
tire Penta County Vocatwnal
High Sehoul and is employed mlo her purse from a store counter. She'll be caught agu in
at La Point Auto Parts Co., soon, and Daddy will come to the rescue.
How can I make my parents see they're just encouragmg a
Swanton.
·
cnmmal
' When I try to talk to them they say they couldn 't
After a short weddmg tnp,
bear
the
disgrace
of her being jailed.· TilED A
the co uple is now at hume at
DEAR
THEDA
:
Ruute I, Lot 15, Grand Rapids,
Someone should make your parents see that their daughter
Ohio.
Among the wedding guests will never be rehabilitated as lung as they cover for her.
were the bride's sister, M1ss Moreover, even an expensive lawyer won't keep her out of jail
Teresa Dodderer , and fne nJ, forever . If you can 't get this across, then suggest they discuss
Btll Lemon, Indianapolis, the problem with a lheraptst who, let's hope, can show them
where parental responsibility ends.- H
Ind .

..

CROSS HARDWARE

BUY 1 &amp; GET 1

1J1L' &lt;ldvic~

I
1

OPTOMETRIST

OFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to 12 , 2 to 5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS . ) - EAST COURT

. . .- --t-rs 1e ~:J
d any

Senco • Oren • or
U.S. Fiber Insulation

Trinity Methodist Church ,
Swanton, Ohio, was the ~tting for the Feb. 4 we-dding of
Miss June Ann Dodderer,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Hobart M. Dodderer, Swantorr, and James Donald ·
Walker, II, son of Mrs. James
D. Walker, Swanton, and the
lflt~ Mr. Walker .
The bride is the grand·
daughter of Mrs . E. A. Dotldcrcr. Coolville anti she also
has sc.ver~1l other rclati\•cs
livnrg in Meigs County .
The ceremony was perfunned by the Rev . Earl D.
Biggers ·at 6 o'dock m till'
eveni ng.
The bride, give n in marnage by her father, wore a
long gown with matching
cape of whit~ qUJana Jersey .
The gown was ,fashioned with
a V·neckhne, lung Sleeves
ctnd an ~mpirc waistline The
full ltmgth t:ape was also uf
quiana jersey with an attadJ·
cd huud and sade slit armhulcs. The gown a11d cape
were butll al'centcd with
white m£~ribuu tnm.
The bride'::; bouq uet was of
while teet 1·oses in no!;;egay
style w1th tvy trailing from
the base fot· cascade effect.
The maid of honor wo s Miss
Vtckte Walker, sister of the
groom. Bndesmctids were
Miss Rene Meller and Mrs.
1 Lor·i Walker. They ali wore
gowns of mint green (ashtoned with cape colla rs and sty!-

Mrs. Walker

FREE

POLLY·s POINTERS

DAR enjoys fi~mr

Miss Dodderer weds rHcl~;'ii'~.~~~
~
ep
:~ US
By Helen Hottel
e e

Social
Calendar

Which women in Meigs llecause ot the rish that such
women will develop breast
have mammograms
should
monster. It's during his raFtnally, sh~ lust all touch
'
cancer.
mammographic
for
the
early
detectwn
of
tional times I questwn my with reality, v;;~sc;tllatmg Ucttestmg
is
a
wise precaution.
breast
ca
ncer
?
own sanity. Maybe I'm the Wt!t!n his perceptiOns and
Mammography
can help
S. Michae l, publi c inher·s. She should ha ve rnvitc-d
one who is cracking up.
breast
cancer
even
pinpoint
DEAR READER - Your · frit!nd.s ln tu valill&lt;Jte her formation chairperson, exbefore
the
development
of
the
plains
mammography
as
a
husband's behavtor may be perception of the thnumng
ftrst
physical
signs
that
a
e
for
laking
X-ray
techniqu
caused by one or a eombimJ- iighl&lt;. At the ve ry ic11st, she
physictan
can
detect
on
pictures
of
the
breast
and
is
tion of factors - alcohol, should have had her eyes
the best way to fmd cancer in examination or a patient.
psychosis, chemicHl i m- dwcked.
The risk factors include ·a
a
n extremely early stage
Ami most unportant, she
bala nce or even smm: cunpersona
l history of breasl
when
It
can
most
successfully
sctou.s trick to drive you ought to hCIVC confronted her
cancer
m
be
treated.
Mammography
one breast. a famtl y
crazy. In any case, yours is husband.
hi
story
of breast cancer
should
be
dune
fu
r
women
I'm
nut
recommending
thaL
obvious ly a n intolerable
either
on
the maternal or
over
the
the
age
of
50
because
you
confront
your
husband
s1tuat1on. Why have you enpaternal
side
or among a
the
inciden
ce
of
breast
Assoctatlon.
-not yet. I am suggcstmg that·
dured it for so long?
woman
's
sisters;
nipple
cancer
increases
with
age
· It could be you are (or feel you get professwna l help to
Yo un ger women, those discharge or abnormahty;
you are ) so totaUy dependent escape this vole~ tile st tm1tion.
bet
ween 35 and 50, should also lumps and thicken ings in the
Fmd out what's wrong wtth
on your husband that you canhave
mammography done if breast , a condition ca lled
not accept the reality of a your husband. If you L:annot
they
have
any of the following chronic cystic mastitis, with
situalton that m1ght mean stop his behavior. then end
faetorsl
which
may mean or without pam ; and early
separation or divorce. Vic- ' the marriage. Your life cmd
have
a
h1gher than onset of menstruation .
that
they
tha
t
of
your
rlrr
idren
sounds
tims of s uch abust! often
SornelLmes a woman is so
prefer suffering immense ter rifying Don't be the vk- average breast cancer risk.
fearful
she ha s breast cancer
physical and emotional pi:iin tnn any more. Do su1 ncthtng!
;·o;.......' P:•':$$..&lt;...·::::-s:··~~·-.u..o ' that
a mammogr a ph ic
Wntc to Dr. Blctker in rc:1re
to facing the world a lone.
may also be
examination
-·~c-,:~a-~Is your dependency 011 your of th1 s newspaper, ·r.o. Box
indicated
to
help
her deal
husband so great that you 489, Radio Crty Station, New
:~:
with
her
anxiety.
would penml yourself tu York, New York 10019.
In the past year, there has
question your own samty Volwne of mail prolutnts perbeen
· controversy surrounsonal
replies.
but
questwns
uf
rather than reCognizing the
the subject of mamding
gem~r·a l
mterest will IJc
biUirreness of his spells I .
mography
and possi bl e
The reaction of yo ur discussed in future c(}lumrt.s.
~
cancer
risk
from radiation
TUESDAY
children to his at'ttons cor1·
exposure.
It
has
been prQven
SYRACUSE; PTO 7:30
that
the
benefits
of mamTuesday at the school. AU
mography
far
outwetgh
any
p&lt;:~ rent.s and teacher~ invited.
theoretical
long-term
risks
HARRISONVII.I.E
FEBRUARY 14TH ONLY AT:
Cha pter· , Order uf th e from minimal exposure to XEastem Star, a p.rn. Tuesday 'r ays through low-dose
manunography. Any woman
lllght e~t the Temple.
in Meigs C:, unty with a
Polly Cramer
WEDNESDAY
A.
question should speak with
MIDDLEPO RT
Com· her physiciar or the Meigs
mumty Improvement Cor- ACS Unit ,!t E. Main St.
t
poration meeting, 7:30 p.m. (Senior Citizens Cent er ), 992Middleport. 0.
som~lhing in a mixm g Uowl l
Curtains won't
Wednesday at Cnlumbus and 7531.
place it on i:i damp towel or Southern Ohio Electric Co.
toke dye
thin piece of fuam or rub~r building; public invtted.
and the bowl stays stili. 1PolMIDDLEPORT
DEAR POLLY - I have ly's note - Thrs is especially LITERAKY CLUB. Wednes·
tried, but unsuccessfully , to good when using a portaiJi e Uay, 2 p rn . at the home of
dye some sun-faded kitchen electric mix er. l
,
Mrs. Bernard r'uitz. Mrs.
Stuff a stockmg with eedar Ruy Cassell to review '' Tnt~l ,
curtains yellow. They are noiron cotton and were onglnal- chip!:&gt; and pluce behind a sofa Tears and Triumphs" ami
ly a bright yellow color. Js when you have a musty Mrs Emerson .Jones to
there something I could add smell -DORA
review " Pa s1ons Child .''
Polly wtli send you one of
to dye to make it "lake'!"
her signed th a n k-you
.JUANITA
DEAR JUANITA- Are you newspaper coupon chppers if
sure you bought the proper she uses your fav ori te
On this day in history:
kind of dye? Also, did you Pointer, Peeve or Problem m
In 1635, the oldest public
follow the directions to Ute her column. Write POLLY'S institution in America ~ the
letter - dyei ng yellow fabric POINTERS 1n ca re of thts Boston Latin School - was
yellow is just about as easy a newspaper
founded
dye job as one could ask for.
Perhaps you forgot to make
the c urta ins c ompletely
damp before putting them into the dye. Reread your instructions.- POLLY
-'
DEAR POLLY - After
soakmg or brushing dentures
I rub them with a small piece
,,f this tough
wartime leader rings
of moistened, wadded up
truer t h ~ n ever as America faces a growing cnsis in electric supply by the
nylon net. This removes any
trace of film that the cleaner
early 1980's
nus.sed. They seem to have
Churchill knew better than anyone that a perilous future
an added bnghtness, too. B.R.
demands tough practical actiom.
DEAR POLLY - After usFaced with electric power demand outstri pping supply, we think
ing one of those foam sheets
in my dryer I use 1t to clean
Churchill .would endorse all practi cal conservation efforts as the
the lint trap. A quick swipe
firs t order of business.
and it grabs aU the hnl and
cleans the trap without leavBut we're also sure hcCI recog nize that conservation alone
ing a trace.
is onl y a tactic. Not a grand strategy for winn ing the energy war.
My Pel Peeve is with the
manufacturers of plastic
If everyone turned out every unneeded light. installed all
ware who print on the wrapnecessary insulation and adjusted every thermostat to the minimum
per whether or not the product is dishwasher safe. If
. comfort level in every home, office and factory, the demand for
such infonnation was em~
electricity would still continue to grow.
bossed directly on the product I would not ruin so many
One simple reason for this IS there will be at least 15 million new
gadgets.- MARGRETH
00
households by 1988. In fact, the demand for electricity grew 7% in the
DEAR POLLY .. My
PER
DAY
Pointer is for those who buy
past year. And experts project that growth to average 5.7% a year over ·
clothes for someone who is in
the next ten years. Which amounts to a total increase of 74% by 1988.
a nursing home, particularly
R-VAlUE COMPARISON CHART
those confined to wheel
But when~'s that extra electricity going to come from? Present
0
1
2
3
4
chairs. Usually their joints
no•.w•r plants can't supply it.
II I I IIIIIIIIIIIII I III
are stiff an '1it is very harrt to
R·value
dress th!'!"· I suggest buying
No. the s1mple fact is~ we need.more power plants.
such clothes, at least ; wo
U .S. FIBER
' . And, because they take 6 to 10 years to get from drawing
sizes larger than those usualROCK WOOl
ly worn. I work in a nursing
FIBER GlASS
.
board to reality. it is only with adequate financial resources and
home and see the pain pa•
,,.. , ,~,. .•,,.:
necessary governmental approvals that these viral electric
tients suffer wben we dress
These values are fo r one inch of loose-till insulation.
1
them in clothes that barely
power fac ilities wi ll get bt:Iilt in time.
.
fit. The style should also be
The time for ~1rgum ent is long past. The hard decision must be made now. Because' the
. considered. -MRS.E.L..
DEAR POLLY - Moisten
future will not watt. As Winston Churchill would pur it, America must press, "Forward,
children's shoestrings with a
cloth before lying them and
unflinchin g, unswerving,
QL!
224 lst
find they will stay tied all
~ndomita91e. till thl: whole task
~y
day.
(304}
675-~460
IS done ...
Working together is the only way. .
When I am beating

Sweetheart
Sundae Sale

5-The Daily Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Feb. 13, 1978

GRAPEFRUIT
5 LB.

99~
NICE-CRISP

CELERY

�6-111e Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Feb. l3, 1978

:---.--A;ea_D
___e--a t_h__s_____

:1

Hospital News

This week~ college games

1

Velerou Memortol Hosplll l
I Saturday AdmiSSions Ollto Colttae
S.lur~y
Anderson , Ind. at Defiance
BasketbaiiSctMdult
Ohio St. at Michigan St.
I
Bessie
Athey.
Middleport.
ERIN FAUDREE
Taylor, Ind. at Findlay
EVERETT MASSIE
United
Press
International
at
Marquette
Cincinnati
Saturday Discharges Erin Michelle Faudree. one
M&lt;lndoy
HO CK INGPORT
Western Mich . .at Bowling W&amp;J. Pa. at John Carroll
Carnegie-Mellon at Case
Pellegrino, James
Gina
Bowlinq Green at Loyola, Ill.
Green
day-&lt;&gt;ld daught er of Lewis F. Everett E. Massie, 75, of
Lawrence
E.
Lamb,
M.D.
Western
Mankato
St.
,
Minn
.
at
Ma11in.
Mary
Pierce,
Crystal
Kenl
St.
at
Eastern
Mich
.
and
Sherri
Wh itman Hockingport. died Monday
Hiram at Setl"lany, W. Va .
Akron
Miami at Ohio University
Faudree, 4 Vinton St ., morning at Holzer Medical McCourt, Joam Collins, Tom
Rio Grande at Wilberforce
C1ncinnati at Xavier
New
Orleans
at
Dayton
ll•v,.id~
Jr.
uf
lll~¢
Umvcrsity
Tlffm at Cedarville
Gallipolis, died Saturday Center following a brief Rutter, Katrine Millikan, Kidnt•v stont·~
Findlay at Bluffton
Northern
Illinois
at
Tol~o
of Flortda, ctt Gamc!ivtlle, Wiscons 1n -Mifwaukee at Wayne St. at Ashland
Mt. Vernon Nazarene at
Alice Clark. Mary Morris,
afternoon in Children's illness.
and
•·aidum
Malone
writes
on
thts
subJt:d
111
the
Wright
St
Steubenville at Central St
Hospital, Columbus.
Funeral arrangements are Salem Yates.
Walsh
at
Mt .
Vernon Robert Morris , Pa . at
1977
ed1\ion
of
"Current
Sunday
Admissions
Paul
Surviving (n addition to the being made by. the White
Cleveland St.
DEAR IJR . l.AMB - I h&lt;od Thc•·•py" used by many Nazarene Tuesday
The morning stars are
parents are maternal Funeral Home in Coolville. Marr, Racine ; Glennie Little,
physidi:i
ns.
Ht! mahn Uus Central St. at Tennessee St. Kentucky Sf at Wright St
an
upcrallun
lust
yeeir
for
the
Mercury
and Saturn.
Middleport
;
Grace
L
.
Rnush,
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Valparaiso, lnd at Xavier
point,
too,
and
suggests
lh(jt Case Western at H1ram
remove
d
of
a
kttlney
stone.
stars are
The
evening
Racine;
Charlotte
Coon,
New
Gannon,
Pa
.
af
Youngstown
Arthur Whitman, Rt. I, Point
the attention stwuld he Rio Grande at Cedarville
St.
Before
l
left
the
ho~pital
the
Haven;
Cheryl
'
sm•th,
Venus,
Mars
and
Jupiter.
Pleasant, mater nal great·
AMY WILLIAMS
Youngstown St . at Bellar~
Capital at Muskingum
diret:ted
toward
hmillng
Lhe
urulogtst
told
me
that
I
.should
Pomeroy;
Anne
Edwards,
Those
born
on
this
date are
grandparents, Mr . and Mrs.
mine, Ky.
POMEROY
Amy
Denison at Marietla
oxalate
.
Prinl'ipal
suun:es
uf Defiance at Oberlin
not
u.s~
rmlk
or
any
milk
pro-the
sign
of
Aquarius.
under
Del.
;
Herbert
Selbyville,
Earl E. Campbell, Belle, Michelle Williams, one-day·
Ohio Wesleyan at Wittenberg
John Wesley, Mich . at Otterbei n at Ohio Northern
French statesman Maurice
W.Va., and maternal great- old daughter of Dana and Ailing, Pomeroy ; Jan1ce duc ts. Thi!S was due, I oxaiC:tte arc teH and frmt Malone
Bal.dwin-Wallace at Mount
pre.!;ume , to the high ca lciwn juk:es. Whtlc he doesn't meu~
Talleyrand was born Feb. 13,
great· grandparents Mr. and Penny Priddy Williams, Crites, Pomeroy.
at
Ohio ·Union
lion It, ~ lugh mlilkt;: of Steubenville
Sunday Discharges - content.
1754.
Mrs. L. G. Keeney. Belle, Route 4, Pomeroy, · die~
Dominican
•
Later I nused the question vt tcunin C can also result m
Wednesday
W.Va ., and Mr. and Mrs. Sunday at Holzer Medical Mary McCallister, Ralph
mcreased
tntakt!
of uxC~Iatc or Cincmna t1 at St. Louis
with
the
doctor
as
to
caldwn.
Wilbur
Nappt:r.
Russell,
James
H.
Whitman, Center.
as t!Verytlung I at~ had a em increased amount 111 the Kent St. at North Carolina
Ch11rleston.
Besides her parents, Amy
Dayton at Miami
calc1um content. He rcplit..&gt;d UI'IRC.
Paternal grandparents, 1s survlved by a brother
Ohio Univ . at Virginia Tech
Holzer Medical Center
Dr.
Thomas
points
out
also,
that I cuuld use a little milk in
Akron at Gannon, Pa .
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis W. Dana, Jr.; paternal grand·
Discharges Feb. 10
(Continued !run page I)
my coffee. J never use milk in in the latest edition uf Beeson Dyke al Ashland
Faudree, Gallipolis. paternal parents, Wendell and Betty
Ray Bailey, Adrianna eoffee.
Wnght St. at Cleveland St
and
McDermott
's
"Textbook
largest brewer, is expanding the battle of low-calo.rie beers by
great-grandparents, Mr. and Will iams, Pomeroy; Barsotti, Michael Browning,
of Medicine" that. "Although Wi1tenberg at Capita l
I'm
in
a
quandary,
do
I
get
introducing a "light" version of Its premium beer, Michelob.
Mrs. Franklin Staats. Rt. 2, maternal
gra ndparents, Betty Carsey. Joey Clark,
at Denison
dairy products are frequently Otterbem
The company aMounced today that beginning next week it
Ohio Wesleyan at Marietta
Point Pleasant , and Mrs. James and Ruth Priddy, George Coleman, Ruby enough cCJicJUm in other food
omitted durmg test pru- · Woos ter at Baldwin-Wallace will test-market Michelob Light in Michigan, Ohio, South
to
hold
my
bones
together.
or
Lewis M. Faudree, Rt. 2, Rutl a nd ; maternal gra nd- Con ley, Betty DaVIS, Mrs.
wh•t shall! du? I'm 78 years eellures. there an: no data to Ohio Northern at Heidelberg Carolina, Georgia and Florida . Nationwide distribution is
Point Pleasant.
mother.
Jennie
Nea l, Paul Douglass and daughter, old.
sugges t that eont1nucll Oberlin a1 Kenyon
expected in April:
Graveside rites will be Delaware ; great· Jack Facemire, Glenna
Bluffton at Taylor
ctvoidance is beneficial m Wllmington
DEAR
READER
I
wiSh
at
Findlay
conducted Tuesday II a.m. in grandparents, Mr . and Mrs. Fetty, Odessa Gallaway,
red ut:tng the lnc.:tdenc.:e or Carnegie-Mellon, Pa . at John
SYDNEY, AUSTRAIJA - A BOY was born two months
the Suncrest Cemetery with Virgil Williams, .Roberts· Elona Gillilan, Jane Green, then~ was an answer to that growth uf c&lt;:~lcarco u s ca lc:uh Carroll
lot
of
urologists
questwn
.
A
prematurely
Sunday in a Yugoslav Boeing 707 jetliner 40,000
the Rev. John L. Bradley burg, W. Va. ; Mr and Mrs. Mrs. William Greene and son,
Urbana at Tiffin
do advise the1r p(:llJCnts with m man
feet
above
MoiDlt
!sa in New South Wales. Tne cabm crew
offictatmg.
(.;uy Priddy, Pomeroy. and Ha rold
Harp er,
Ruth
On the basi.s of recent work Walsh at LaRoche, Pa.
The Wilcoxen Funeral Mrs. Lena Bonnett1 Bancroft, Holm a n, Everett Hu ghes, k1dney stones to avoid 011 thts problem 1 am compell~ Thomas More, • Ky at delivered the baby more than tw~ hours before the jet touched
calcium, but the e:tdvke is on
Wilberforce
down in Sydney after the mother, 17-year-old Mai'ija Todeva,
Home, Point Pleasant, ls in W.Va.
Stacey Hughes. Bessie Kerns, rather shaky grounds. It hap- e&lt;i to IJcheve that, although
Thursday
for help and told passengers she was going into labor.
called
charge of arrangements.
Graveside services will be Mrs. Russell Lanier and son, pens because &lt;.:ertam types of the practice of lumttng lnd1ana at Oh1o St.
The
aircraft purser, Radoye Rakocevic, delivered the
held at 2 p. m. Tuesday at the Richard Manley, Allen kidney stones cunlilm a lot of c:aleiwn intake and. hence, W. V1rgm1 a Sf at Central St
haby
with
help of three hostesses, Gordana Colovlc, Ana
Friday
Kirkland Memory Gardens Martin, Anthony McGuire, cak1wn and the Idea is that uulk in the trci:ltment of renal
Hribernick
and
F1avlca Ursie.
Steubenville
at
Wi
lberforce
VADA MORRISON
near l.akl0 , W. Va., with the Harold Mercer, Hess1 e by limiting the cak1 wn Ill· cakult, IS widespread, It ts
Mrs. Vada M. Morrison, 70. Rev. George Hoschar of- Pan ca ke, Orville Parker,
take you can lower the without i:l sound sctenllflc
218 N. Park Drive, Pomt ficiating.
Hurst Prater, Mrs. Nelson amount that has to be basis and probably causes
Pleasant, died Saturday, 6:30
Seymours an d son, Mrs. eliminated by U1e k•dneys more harm than good. It IS an
a.m . in the Holzer Medical
Donald Slone and son, and. hence, hmit the tend4,!n~ old-fash ioned 1dea and dueCenter.
GORDON WOLFE
Ca rolyn Stevens, Dtann e t:Y to form s tone.s
tors neeti to get up.lo-date
She was born Oct. 15, 1907,
RACINE - Go rdon S. Wallis
Things are just not that O:tnd revtse their thmkmg:
Poca, W.Va ., to the late Rev . Wolfe, 78, died Sunday at h1s
Births Feb. 10
simple. The t:Ommon cu lc1um about · trei:ltment of rena l
Samuel H. and Ollie Pit· Route 2, Racine restdence.
Mr . and Mrs. Rickie stone is a calciwn oxalate stones.
tensbarger Worrell.
He was born May 12, 1899, a Brown, a son. Ray, Ohw ; Mr. stone. By decreasmg ca lcium
So you are pl'obably being
She 1s survived by her son of the late Van and and Mrs. Charles Wood, a
exposed to the chances of
intake
the
end
result
1s
apt
to
husband, Rev. James G Maggie Batey Wolfe. He was son, Gallipolis.
be an lllcreased a bsurptwn of decreasing your bone
Morrison i one daughter, Mrs also preceded m death by a
Discharges Feb. II
oxalate whkh ts far worse cail'IUm i:lnd becoming more
Judith Perry, Logan, 0 .; five son, Bernard, two sisters and
Albert Bur~ er, Stella and more likely to eause prune to degeneration of your
sons , Rev . James W a' brother.
Clark, James Clarkso n, another stone. Dr. William C. spme and to ser,wus fractun!s
Morrison,
Parkersburg,
Surviving are hts wtfe, Dewey Elliott, Ella Evans,
at your age for no t'eal good
Frank D. Morrison, Hen- Ruth P1ckens Wolfe; a son, Frances Folmer, Dorothy
With
rea son. You should be
derson , Richard Morrison, Beryl, Hebron ; a daughter, Kimes, Lenore Lewts, Janet
avo1clmg tea 1 colas, beer and
12'Tape
H4ntsville, Ala ., Bruce Mr s. Marjorie Hoffner, Mattews. Jesse Mosteller,
lnmtmg your fruit jutce m·
J6' Tape
Morrison , Stoutsville , 0 ., and Syracuse; a t win stster, Raymond Mullen, Lena
While
take.
Michael Morrison; Alexan- Goldie Adams, North Canton: Meyers, Pamela Penix, Mary
25'Tape
supply
Authonhes do agree that
dra, 0. , one sister, Mrs. Ada live granddaughters, five Smith, Ida Stiffler, Lester
the most Important thing you
lasts
Herold, Point Pleasa nt ; 17 grandsons; f1ve great· Thompson. Gertrude Vance,
C(:ln do m treatment and
grandchildren and five great- gr and so ns, three great· Carolyn Wakup, Floyd
preventmg kidney stones IS to
grandchildren
granddaughters and severa l Wallace Sr., Irene Wasmer, •
mamtam il dilute urine. You
Funeral services will be nieces and nephews.
Margaret Wilbur , Carro ll
do this uy drmking enough
conducted Tuesday 2 p.m in
Funeral services Will be Williams, Ernest Wiseman,
water to pa&amp;; three to four
th e Beale Chapel United held at 3 p. m. Tuesday at the Bobby Wright , Martha
TRENTON,
Mich.
(UP!
)
_
quarts
of un ne each day Methodist Church, Apple Ewing Funeral Home with Wyant.
The
sprawling
Chrysler
Corp.
rath
e
r
eve nl y s paced
Grove, with the Rev Bennie the Rev. Freeland Norns
Discharges Feb. 12
Trenton en~e plant has throughout the day.
L. Stevens officiating. Burial officiatmg Burial will be in
Edna Blankenship, Mabel
The management of the
wiU follow in the church Letart Falls Cemetery . Brown , Ethel Cook, Mrs. become the latest focal pomt
of
a
tug-ot-war
between
stone
formation then may
cemetery.
Friends may call at the Dennis Evans and son, Michigan and Ohio.
become a ilfelnng prujeet, but
Friends may call at the funeral home anytune.
Marybelle Evans, Melissa
Chrysler officials have con· most ca n be managed with
Crow-Hussell Funeral Home
Fisher, Robert Grimes, Mrs. firmed that representatives mf!didnes and dtet. I am sen~
from 2 to 4 p.m. and from 7 to
Lenville
Johnson
and of the No. 3 automaker and ding you The Health Letter
9 p.m. today . The body will be
daughter, Joanne Kincaid, Ohio Gov. James Rhodes met nwnber 11·2, Kidney and
taken to the church one hour
William Marting, Minnie last week to discuss the Bladder Stones, to g1ve you
prior to serv1ces.
Rtzer, James Sayre, Patricia
more want
infonnatwn.
Others
Stanley,
Elizabeth Yauger. moving
possibility
of the production
company who
this mforma
twn
JOHNNIE ROUSH
its engine
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Births Feb. 12
to that state.
can send 50 cents with a long,
Mr . and Mrs. Jerry
Johnme D. Roush , 73, New
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Chan·
Ohio
rece
ntly
outbid
stamped,
addressed envelope
Haven, died this morning at J ohnso n, daughter Jenny, nell, a daughter, Jackson;
. h'
f
w F d for It to me m care of this
MI
his home.
were Sunday guests of Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Charles
c 1gan or a ne
or
882 2525
N
1
An employe of the State of and Mrs. Robert Smith, Sr. Childres, a son, Oak Hllf; Mr.
Motorhas
Co.lured
transmission
plant Antonio, TX 78292::_B_ox_3_2_6._s_a
_'
several other
·
Mr. and Mrs. Andy Cross, and Mrs. Raymond Denqut, a and
W.Va., he was born on Aul!.
J1, 'f!i04, Broad Run Cilf!l· Mr. and Mrs. Edward Cross daughter, Oak Hill; Mr. and smaller operations souUt in
muruty, a son of the late attended a vegetable meetmg · Mrs. R~eky Fowler, a the past few years.
The availability of the new
Harvey and Myrtle Ohling« m Columbus Monday through daughter, Letart; Mr. and
operation
stems from Chrys.
Saturday.
RouSh .
Mrs . Kenneth Rainey , a ler's plans to phase out eight·
Those calting at the Ewing daughter, Middleport; Mr.
He is survived by his wife ,
Olevia Elizabeth Wears Funera l Home and attendinR and Mrs. Richard Tipple, a cy Iinder engine production in
se rvices
for son , Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. the downriver Detroit suburb
Roush; two daughters funeral
Lowena S. Marshall, New Raymond Bell from a David Whaley , a son, and switch to smaller
engines,
primarily for
Haven, and Wanda L. Kmg 1 distance were Nellie Ross, Jackson .
Chrysler's
new
subcompacts
Ruby
Lafleld
and
Russell
Milton i one son 1 Edwin B.
Omni and Horizon . The
Roush, Charleston ; three Webb of Cairo, W. Va., Dr.
company now buys engine
grandchildren, Karla Gibbs, and Mrs Earl Grimm,
blocks for those models from
Jeff King and Kristi King; Columbus.
Volkswagen.
Mr. and Mrs Lester Rnush,
four grandchtJdren; one
The Odd Ba II league
The company has asked the
sister, Edna L. Burris, son Johnny spent Sunday
February 3, 1978
city
of Trenton for a tax
with Mr. and Mrs. Don Riffle
Hartford.
Mason Bowling Center
exemption
on almost all of its
and
family
at
Wheelersburg.
W.
L.
Funeral services will be
15 1 $200 million retooling effort.
Mr. and Mrs Dale Hart, Mitchell Painting
held Wednesday 2 p.m. in the
Quality Print Shop
14 2
"We realize that they have
Foglesong Funeral Home, daughter Lagina, of Racine. Grande Cafe
8 8
other
options," said Mayor
Mason. with the Rev. George Mrs Jeff Hill, Mrs . Herschel Teams
7 9
Bovitz, wbo sa1d he
Robert
Weirick officiating. Burial Roush visited Mrs. Mary George's Open Air Gar 4 12
had
heard
Rhodes met
High
Ind.
Game
Ann
will follow In Graham Roush .
Carrol l 186, Helen Corsi 181 , personally with Chrysler
Cemetery .
Mrs. Gerald H~yman, son Myrtle Quillen 178.
Friends may call at the Keith, called at the home of
High Ind . Series - Anne representatives to pitch for
the move.
Carroll
479, Wanda Teaford
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Robert
Hart
funeral home on Tuesday
454,
Helen
Corsi
448.
"One of the things that
Friday
evemng
in
Racine
to
from 2 to 4 p.m. and from 7 to
High Team Game could happen Is that Chrysler
9 p.m.
see the new baby of Mr. and Grande
Cafe 714, Mitchel l could wind up taking its
Mrs. Allen Cunningham.
Pamtlng 694, Team 5, 687 .
engine
production
High Team Se ri es
Mr. and Mrs Eddie Hupp
somewhere
else
and turrung
Mitchel
l
Painting
2011
,
Team
VIsited Mr. and Mrs. Russell
5, 19991 Grande Cafe 1965
ANNA HARTENBACH
th;..
building
Into
a
warehou.e
Roush Monday evening.
MINERSVILLE - Mrs.
of
ju.t
150
people.
We don't
Visiting Mr. and Mrs.
want that."
Anna Hartenbach, 81, Arnold Hupp were Mr. and
Minersville, died Sunday at Mrs . Ernest Bush, Mrs.
The plant currently
Veterans Memorial Hospital. Gertie Manuel, Denise and
employs 3,800 workers, most
of the represented by United
Mrs. Hartenbach was born Troy of Racine.
Mrs. Kathryn Hunt enJan. 29, 1897 a daughter of the
Auto Workers Union Local
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Par· tertained in honor of her
late Riley and Elizabeth sons vislted Mrs . Gerald daughter, Mrs. Beverly 372. Local President Robert
Campuell Mcintosh. She was Wells at Holzer Medical Wickline Sunday who was Smith bas said his union is
•also preceded in death by Center Sunday. Mrs. Wells
celebrating her birthday. part of the effort lo keep the
three sisters and three was taken to St. Marys Attending were Mrs. Erma plant in Trenton .
brothers.
Scbool officials have said
Hospital in Huntmgton where Wilson, William Wickline,
Surviving are her husband, she had surgery on her back.
the district would have
Scott and Kyle, Mr. and Mrs.
Otto; two daughters, Mrs.
Brenda Lawrence of Butch Wilson , Cheryl, and difficulty coping with the loss
Charles (Margaret ) Russell, Portland and Perry Hll"t
of revenue from the tax
Robin, John West, Mrs. Hunt
Pomeroy, and Miss Dorothy visited Mr. and Mrs. Eddie and' the bonored guest.
exemption. The potential loss
Hartenbach, Minersville; a Hupp Saturday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt bas not been calculate; but
son, Robert, former sheriff of
Mr . and Mrs. Ronald Fergerson of Point Pleasant officials said the plant puts
Meigs Cow1ty, Minersville: a Wayne, son Ronnie, were visited Mrs. Pearl Norris.
$250,000 annually into the city
Sister, Mrs. Fannie Phillips, recent dinner guests of Mr.
budget and $1.5 million for
Friends and relatives were schools.
two gra'ld· and Mrs. Eddie Hupp, Mr . .
Pomeroy;
sorry to hear of the death of
Tile district has proposed
children, Stephen Harten· and Mrs. Arnold Hupp.
Elmer Scarberry at his home
that
the city instead grant a
bach, Pomeroy, and Miss
Mr . and Mrs. Herbert at Evergreen Hills, W. Va .
Debbie l!Brtenbach, Miners- Roush visited Ott Boston at Friday. Mr. Scarberry had 12-year exemption of half the
viDe.
the Arcadia Nursing Home, been In failing health for taxes on machinery and
Mrs. Hartenbacb was a Coolville, Tuesday. Mr. some time. Mrs. Scarberry modernization. ·
Michigan slate officials
member of the Minersville Boston is improving.
was the former Mildred
United Methodist Church.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Rou.h, Sayre and was reared in this also are watching the
Funeral services will be Cindy Roush , Edward Rnush community. The body lay In developments. An aide to
held at I p.m. Tuesday at the Spt:Ot Saturday evening with · state at the Casto. Funeral Gov. William G. Milliken
Ewing Funeral Home with Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Rou.h. Home at Evans, W. Va. Mr. noted Saturday that Ohio was
16 West Washin~n
. trying to lure mere business
the Rev. Harvey Koch of· The evening was spenl
and Mrs. Dallas Hill, Mrs.
Athens
ficiatlng. Friends may call at making ice cream and Dolly Wolfe visited Mrs. from the state while looking
• tO Michigan for help in Ohio's
the funeral home any time .. playing games.
Scarberry Wednesday.
energy shortages.

I

HEALTH

Crescent·
Slip ·Joint Pliers

When you buy a Lufkin Power Tape

Michigan

and Ohio ·

m plant tug

Israeli says Carter with Sadat

peopletalk

By MATHIS CHAZANOV

By UnlledP,...slnle11111tlonal
"aoLL OVER, TOMMY : The pinball wi!ard of the United
Sillies Is 19-year-old Ken Lllncelord of Columbus, Ga., who
beat out 19 other finalists at the First National Pinball
Dlamplonship of America in Chicago Saturday night.
Lanceford scored 1,333,560 on five balls, edging ·ruMer-up
• lime GrUio,16, of Saginaw, Mich., by a measly 111,230 points.
For his trouble, Lunceford won a new car.

SNOWED: While many Easterners were hoping all the snow
would just go away, VIce President Walter Moodale and his
wile, Joe, were playing in the stuff all weekend. The
Mmdales -spending the week's vacation at.Vail, Colo. , as the
guests of Rlcbard Kvamme, a homebuilder from Moorhead,
Minn. - attracted little attention - except at the resort's ski
lilt lines, where other winter· worshipers couldn 't help but
notice the balf-dozen Secret Service escorts. Tbat didn't stop
the Mondales. who spent all day Sunday out on the slopes.
QUOTE OF mE DAY : Detroit Pollee Sgt. Stepben Burclckl
on the ''friendly robber" who chatted amiably with clerks and
cusbnners of clothing stores before robbing them: "You would
almost have to say that she is very friendly and cordial. Then
:::~ she puliB out a handgun, which isn't a very friendly thing to
--- do."

-·--·-·
:,,

::-~

:.;,,
::"
' •'
~.

...
~·
:.:
: ··
•·
~

....
~·

-

GIJMPSES: Sylvester Staldone Sunday celebra ted the
completion of his new movie, " Paradise Alley, " at a HOHY·
wood party where Olivia Newton.John and mimes Sblelds and
Yarnell showed up ... Bette Davis is back in Hollywood after a
stint in London, where she filmed Agatha Christie's "Dea th on
the Nile" ... Former President Gerald Ford will strike the fi rst
medal - depicting the inauguration of George Washington in a historic series at minting ceremonies at the Franklin Mint
near Media, Pa ., on Feb. 24 ... Stephanie Ann Lee, 21, was
chosen "Miss Chinatown USA" Saturday night in San
Francisco ... Henry Kissinger plans to stump for Rep. Willis
Gradlooo Jr., R.Qhio, at a $50-a-plate fund raiser March 30 in
Cincinnati ... pianist Vladimir Horowitz is in Hollywood for a
series of concerts .. . The Rev. Daniel C. O'Connell, S.J ., has
resigned, effective today, as president of St. Louts Unive r·
sity ... .

..

Sad~I.

In

Jerusalem,

Prime

ATLANTA (UPI) - Based
on the Soviet Union's
experience, a federal health
official says the fast-moving
Russian flu could reach
epidemic proportions in this
country in a few weeks.
"We can only judge by
wbat happt:ned in the Sov1et
Uruon," Dr. Walter Dowdle,
an
influenza
virology
researcher al the national
Center for Disease Control,
said Saturday.
.
The first known cases of
Ru.sian flu in the United
Slates broke out Jan. 19
among high school students
in Oleyenne, Wyo., the CDC
reported a week later. By last
week, the flu had surfaced in
at least 10 other places across
the country.
The pace a t which the flu
spreads was documented m
the Soviet Uruon, where an
epidemic began on that
nation's Pacific coast in the
first week of December 1977
and spread throughout the
country in five weeks.
An estimated 26 million
Russians, primar ily young
people but including some
semor citizens, had come
down w1th the flu before 1t
began to subside.
" In a very short period of
time, it occurred throughout
the country," Dowdle said.
"There is still plenty of time
' (thiS winter) for it to happen
in this country."
Respiratory illnesses have

senators

!10

United Prt!lls lnlernaUoDII
Israeli
leaders
are
unleashilig some of their
strongest attacks on the
Carter administration and
accusing it of taking the side
of Egyptian President Anwar

•

.......

nter
DISAPPEARING
STAIRWAY

epidemic) will happt:n ."
However, he said flu out~
breaks, such as the B~Hong

expresses its regret and
protest over the statement
made by Secretary of State
Vance," Begin said. "The
cabinet expresses 1ts hope the
government of the United
States will reconsider its

sharpt:st crlticiS!ll of the U.S.
administration since he took
office m June 19n They said
Israel was concerned more
by the t1ming than the
substance
of
Vance's
remarks.
position ."
In New York, Foreign
Israeli officials sa1d Mlllister Moshe Dayan said U.
Begin's statement was tho a television interview Vonce
had overstepped his role as
mediator between Egypt and
Israel.
"On this specific point - on
settlements and West Bank Kong acth.'ity last year, I'm afraid he is taking sides
sometimes extend well into now, which won't make his
tne spring months of April job any. easier as a
mediator," he said on NBC's
and May.
The Russian flu virus is a '•Meet the Press."
strarn that has been dormant . The IsraeU barrage came
for 20 years. For that reason, in response to an apparent
yow1g people who have not shifting of American policy
been exposed to the virus IDward Sadat. who visited the
have no na tural protection United States last week . U.S .
against 1t. Some older people offlc iais said Sadat was
whose 1mmunity has waned privately assured he would
receive so phi sticated
also are susceptible.
Olness caused uy the A· American weapons.
In Paris. Sadat me! French
U.S.S .R. flu has been mild so
President
Valery Glscard
far , with vtctuns s1ck for less
d'Estaing SWlday and French
than a week.
Drug firms are preparing Cl sourees said Paris also wus
protective vaccme, but it LS ready to sell Egypt advanced
not expected to be ready m fighter bombers if the An•erican arms deal fell through.
quanlity until next fall.

Nursing home money study
scheduled by senate panel
COLUMBUS ·(UPI l - The
Ohio
Senate
Finance
Committee opens hearings
tonight on nursing home
financing, but the highlight of
thls week's legislative
activity will come Wednesday when Gov. James A
Rhodes delivers his "State of
the State" address.
Rhodes last delivered a
State of the State before a
joint session of the General
Assembly Jan . 12, 1977. Th1s
year, Rhodes is expected
again to dwell on the state's

Workers of Ame rica strike

126 Main St•

~~~~!:====·========e=w=:H:a:v=e=n=,=W=,=V=a=·~~~~

mean it (a Russia n flu

against the B1tumioous Coal
Operators Association .
The Oh10 Senate will
convene at 7: 30 p.m., but no
bills are on the upper
chamber 's ca lendar. The
finance committee's initial
hearmg on nursing homes,
chaired by Sen. Harry
Meshel, D-Youngstown , will
follow the floor session.
Ohi o
House,
The
meanwhUe, will convene at
1:30 p.m. Tuesday.
Senate President Pro Tempore Oliver Ocasek, 0-Akron,

SAYRE HARDWARE·

fn~e~w~sp~a::pe~r~,2P~.o~.

claimed 4,049 lives in the
United States during the first
fiveweeksofthisyear, health
officials report. Of that total,
the A-Texas and A-Victoria
strains of influenza have been
blamed for 1,500 deaths .
Last month, U.S. health
offic ials predicted some
cases of Russian influenza
were likely to QCcur in this
country before the end of
wmter, bot shied away from
forecastmg a fullblown
eptdemic before next faD
Dowdle said " just because
there's still time does not

energy resources.
Since
Rhodes'
las t
message, Ohioans have faced
a natural gas crisis and an
electrical supply emergency ,
the latter due to the
prolonged Umted Mme

Apple Grove

News Notes

Minll!ter Menachem Begin
met with his Cabinet SUnday
and afterward formally
protested remarks by
Secretary of State Cyrus
Vance, in which he reiterated
U.8. opposition to Jewish
settlements m captured Arab
lands.
"The government of Israel

Flu epidemic stages near

THE SECOND MU.E : The Stop ERA movement plans a
thank-you rally Tuesday fQr the South Carolina slate senators
wbo voted last week to kill the Equal Rights Amendme'lt in the
slate- and National Stop ERA Chairman Phillis ScblaDy will
be me of the featured speakers. Stale coordinator Janet
Weldlllllll qotes that when poUticians "lake a stand we
advocate , we often forget to thank them. This is an excellent
opportunity lor South Carolinians ... to go the second mile and
show their gratitude ... " After the rally on the Statehouse steps
in Columbia, Mrs. Schlafly will host a brief rally for the

News •• in Briefs

I

I

7-'nit Dilly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Monday , Feb. 13. 1978

Heidelberg at Kenyon

Oberlin at Wooster
Hanover, Ind. at Wilmington
Bluffton at Earlham, Ind .

YOUR CHOICE

aksed Meshel about thn.&gt;e
weeks ago by to hold heanngs
on the state's reimbursement
system for nunnng home:;
Schedul ed to testify ton ight
are Hobert Baumgardner of
the Legislative Budget Offll'e
and Catherme 1-Jawes, staff
director of Ule Ohio Nursmg
Home Commtsswn
Ms. Hawes said she would
ou tline to the Senate
committee the fun ction uf the
comm1sston and the complex
reimbursement s ched ule
used by the Ohio Department
of Pubhc Welfa re to
reim burse nur s1ng home s
th at care for Medica1d
patients.
The Leg islature has not had
any floor sesswns m two
weeks Sessions t he last week
of January were cancelled
.because of the blizzard . L&lt;lst
week' s absence of floor
activity - a few House
comm ittees held hearings was pla nned earli e r th1 s
month.
A full slate of committee
meetings .is s~ t th1s week,
including a con tinua tion of
Ohio House Ed ucatw n
Committee hearmgs on the
" Johnson Plan" shifting the
burden of publi c sc hoo l
financing from property to
personal mcome taxes.
He&lt;Jnn gs on Orrville

DemocratiC Rep . .Jolm 1&lt;: .
Johnson's school finance bill
will be held Tuesday and
ThtU'sday evenings.
House EconomiC Affairs
Committee c hairm a n
Ed ward Orlett, D-Dayton.
has scheduled two hearings
U1is week on Meshel's bill to
allow banks to establish
branches outside the county
m
which
th ey
are
mcorporated .
TAKEN TO VETS
The Pomeroy Emergen cy
Squad answered a call Hl 3: ll
p.m. Su nda y fm Jan ice
Cn tes, who was taken tn
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where she was admitted.

Sadat was flying to Rome
tOday to meet Pope Paul VI
and Premier-designate Glullo
Andrectti , ending his eightnation tour.
In a related development,
Israeli Radio reported the
Defense Ministry
had
ocdered bulldoters to stop
preparing the ground for
expanded settlements In the
Sinal Peninsula.
A high-.-aaklng official said
the move was a gesture to
Cairo. " It was decided that it
was best that Opt:rations be
curtailed."
Vance said Friday that
Jewish settlements were
illegal and "shouldn't exist."
But Begin said, "The
gov,ernment of Israel stands
by its view that Ule lsr aeli

Three
wrlon members
.
will testify in trial
MEDIA, Pa . (U P! ) Spt:cial prosecutor Rlchsrd
A. Sprague, who has called
three members of a United
Mine Wockers loca l to testify
against form er
UMW
President W.A. "Tony"
Boyle, resumes his case
today In Boyle's murder
retr ial.
Before the trial recessed
for the weekend Saturday, a
Delaware County Court jury
heard William Prater, a field
representative for UMW District 19, testify that he did not
mtend to appear at the trial
as a witness unUI he found out
that another UMW official
lwd tesf! fled.
Prater was the third
official of District 19, located
ln Kentucky and Tennessee,
to testify against Boyle, 76,
who IS charged with
masterminding the 1969
murd ers of uni on rival
Joseph "Jock" Yablonski, his
wife and daughter .
Ear lier ,
William
Turnblazer and Albert Pass
testified of Boyle's alleged
mvolvernent in the scheme to
kill Yablonski.
But Prater testified
Saturday that he wusn't sure

WASHINGTON (UP!) Meanwhile, declining coal
Warning that sinking miners supplies are nea r the critical
might defy any presidential point In Ohio, West Virginia,
order to dig coal, UMW chief Kentu.cky and several ather
Arnold Miller today nttacked states .
Some
power
th e
union
barg aining companies are reported
council 's reJection of a ready
to
announce
proposed contract Sunday. emergency cutbacks.
Had the United Mine
No timetable bas been set
Workers CoWlcli submitted for further talks, but they are
the so ft coal contract to rank: expt:cted to reswne this week
and-file mmers, they would despite Sunday's strong 30-&lt;l
have strongly voted to end the vote by the council against
record 70-day strike, he said. the contract.

OPENING SIZE · 25'!.'' x 54"
CEILING HEI GHT TO s·9"

INSYllll

' I GEHBI'B I

FOLDING

TABLE LEGS

SHELF HANGERS

8"' J: 10"

SHELF IRACKO

REG. 1.59

REG
95•

2'8". 6'8"
3·LITE

---

SERVICE DOOR I I.
I
I

4488

• 11/8'' serviCe door
• Select western wood
·• Vinyl glozed for easy l)':unflrlg

and regfozing
• 1/8" tempered safety glass

I.
I

.

I

did ."

Prater
reJected
a
tontention by de(ensc
attorney A (.'har les Perutu
that it hud been ''strongly
suggested" lo him Uutt lie
could tncrlminutc Buyle in
UuJ slaytngs.
But Prater told U1t' co urt
that after he hml ctmfcSSL'tl i11
1973 to U1e murders, he tnok H
lledc\ector test administered
by the t' BI in which the line nf
questioning led him h1believe
thnt the FBI suspectctl
Boyle's Involvement In the
crimes.
Prnter, who is currently
ser ving u prison sc ntcn t:t~ fw·
his role tn UIC sluyings, nlStJ
ex plained conntcls ill dtl tcs
he was lnforn\t!d of Uoc plol to
kill Yablonski with Ultl tMcs
sworn to in teslirno11y by
Turnbluzer ancl Pass.

•
$20 WORTH OF CRYSTALS
WHEN YOU BUY,ABEARCAT"
CRYSTAL SCANNERI

Mlllcr suid m answer to a
question thut if President
Cnrter uses UIC Tuft-Hartley
Luw to Ol'dCI' miners buck to
work without a contract,
"there's u .stron~ fJOS.'iibUlty
they would " tgnorc lt.
" Men don 't Ukc to wurk
under tlw ~c kind
nf
conditiOns," 3Hid Miller .
A.•i for reports frnm the
bargaining council that most
miners would have voted
against the contract off er
from the soft coal Industry,
Miller said :
"1bat 'a not consistent witl1
reports I've gotten In the
field. I think !10 per cent of our
lndustry wanted to work and
they would have accepted
this c&lt;ntract."
" 1. think this co ntract
should have been submitted
lD the membership."
The UMW president was
Interviewed on the CBS
Morn~ News.

Local Bowling
POMEROY LANES
Early Sunday Mixed
January 29, 1978
R. C. Bott ling Co.

Series -

Here's your chance to get 1n on the
action of public servtce broadcastspolice, fire. emergency. weatherand save $20 1n crystals. Buy a
Bearcat~ Crystal Scanner between

and recetve direct from Bearcat four
free cr~sta l s ln the frequencies of
your c hoice. That's a $20 retail value.
from the world's lead1~g scanne r
ma nufa cturer V1sit our Scanner
Department for comp le te detail s .

Feb.1, and Mar.3t, '78
WE HAVE A BEARCAT.CRYSTAL SCANNER FOR YOU:

High

Team

774. 2196.

Game and

Jack's Dairy Bar

-~~

Early Sunday Mi xed
February S, 1978

• Srllooth\y sanded
• Natural fmtsh
• May be patnted, stotned,

I.

Gi bbs Grocery
Tom's Car r y Ou t
Jack's Dairy Bar

shellacked

Town Kiln

•
•
•
•

PARTICLE BOARD
PLYWoOD
STUDS
MILLWORK

V1s1t our lumber deportment
where you're sure to find the
qunhty moteriol you need for all
your building requirements .

thiid's sondboK to a new

RC Bottling Co.

BUrcat • Hll'ld · HIId

B•lrCII "i Ill Plug·10
modules al lows halerung !o
any singl e band or twoblind co.mblnahon, scans 8

DIIIUI " 6 HtiJh qualtl~
two band ~o~e rage ala

channel'

UC!Itrtg publi C ser-w!CB
thanniiiS

moderato pnce Scans 6

The p ortable ltghlwetght .
~ -c hermllllcanner tor
o•otenwnal'

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO.

Store of Building Since 1915

Pts
32

30

30
30
30

Cline's Canst.
14
High Men's Game
Ed
Voss 21.4, Jerry Rought 195 .
High Women's Game Betty Smith 213, Marlene
Wilson 200.
High Men 's Series - Ed
Voss .574, Jeff Wilson 533.

P.Qnnco ,.

High Women 's Series Betty Smith 567, Marlene
Wilson 510.

or r e ~TJ~Mleled room

The

28

Gi bbs'

J

from c

Pis

REG. 2 09

DELUXE LAUAN

I

[

keep objects on shelves

MAHOGANY
SHELVES

-

"1 wus nut con vi need of
Tony Boyle's ){uilt in my own
mind,'' Prater said. 11 1 did not
wunt to testify .und send 1111
lnnocent ma n to u fl•dcr11l
penetentlary . But when I
read in Philadelphlu. thut
Alb ert PHss made n
statement, I figured he k.1w w
more ubout the l:USe thun I

8" X 24"

• One·p•ece g•rder type
• Angled slightly over 90'llo

• For mokmg tables for porch,
lawn, bosemeot
• Includes hardware

I

77c

plot or not.

Grocery
28
Tom's Carry Out
26
Jack 's Dairy Bar
24
Town Kiln
14
Cline's Cans t.
12
High Men 's Game ...... Jeff
Wilson 21 ~, Larry Dugan 211 .
High Women's Game ~
Betty Smi th 199, Stephan1e
Rought 191.
High Men's Series - Jr
Phelps 595, John Tyree 583
High Women 's Ser ies Betty Smith 527. Slephanl e
Rought 514.

• 1'' tubular steel legs

• Ceilmg mounted

• Hold shelves up to 12" wide
• Two hongers per set

SALE
PRICE

REG.
40.95
EACH

• Completely assembled and ready to mstall
• 3/16 '' steel ladder rods under every rreod, eleven treods
• Roil handle, top grade southern pi ne has plano hmge

if Boyle was involved in the

Miller attacks rejection

OPENING SIZL 22" x 54"
CEILING HEIGHT TO 8'9"

IASY
TO

settlement program Is in full
harmooy with international
law and that it always has
heen legal, legiUmate and
essential."
Begin said the Israeli
determination to keep Its
settlements i'n the Sinai
Peninsula should have come
as no surp-ise lD the United
States, since he told
President Carter about it
during his visit to Washington
in December.
He said the esta bllslunent
of a Palestinian homeland
would place almost aU of
Israeli's civilian population
within range of enemy fire .
"The situation would thus
be created of mortal danger
to (Israel's ) very existence."
Begin said.

High Tea m Game - Jack's

INGELS FURNITURE
106 N. 2ND AVE.

MIDDLEPORT1 0.

Dairy Bar 717
High Team Series - Tom 's
Carry Ou t 1987

CANCELLED
A meetin g of the Rock
Springs Better Health Club
scheduled for Thursday has
been cancelled. There will be
a regular meeting of the club
In March.

�'
8-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Monday, Feb. 13, 19'18

i51io~GRAPH Let

The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

Bernice Bede Osol

WANT AD
CHARGES
15 Wunlaor Under

"""'UIQ

....

150

Yo u 've had an in ner l ee11ng
that b1g thing s can happen to
others but not you Th•s coming year you are going to

realize you, too . can be the
reciprent of glad t1dmg s

AQUAIUUS tJan. 20..'cb.19 i
Don 't turn you r house 1nto a
m•htary academy for hubby or
children today You can get the
JObs done by makmg game s

out of them . They 'll be fun
Instead o r chores. F1nd out wh o
you ·re romanti call y suited to by
sending for you r copy of Ast ra·
Graph Letter Ma11 50 cents for
ea c h and a l o ng
self·
addressed , stamped envelope
to A stra-Graph , P 0 Box 489.
Radi o C•ty Slalion . NV . 10019.
Be sure to spe c•ly your b1rtr1
sign

PISCES

'·"
"'

In ml!mory, C.rd of Thanka and
Obtt1111ry . B ctnll per word, $3.00

ANNOUNCING rHE open 1n.g ol
the pub he occount tng o tf1 ce ol
Roger
Luckeydoo . licensed
pubhc occo unlont lor accont111g
and boo k~ ee ptng ser vices ond
pre porot ion of lederol ond
stole to• return s ot 291 Wolnut
M l ddl ep or! ,
Oh io
St
992 -2bb0, Hourr. by oppo tn t
rn ent •

3.00

Elch W'ord over the minlmwn 1~
wordllt t centl prr W'Of'd per dMy.
Adl runn.inll other than (:f.lri.MCutive .
day1 Will be .ctwrved ut the 1 day
I'll. I.e .

ARIES CMarch 21-Aprll 191

'

minlmwn. Cuh m •dvwrw:e

MubUe HOffW! JMlet •nd Yard ules

a r~ llt."Cepted

only with caah wilh
m:ler. 25 cent chllrKe
ada carry·
illg 8QI; Nwnbtr In Cne d. The ~n­

ror

Unel

The PubU.her rHt&gt;rves the righl

w odil or rekc\ any ad.li deemed ob--

jecliooltl. The Publisher wtll not be
responaible for mort Own oot incorrect lnaertlon.

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
MoOO.y
Noon an Saturday
Tu-y
thru Fr1dwy
I.P M
Ull' dtly ~(ore public~:~tion

TAURUS (April 20.May 20)
Analyze a longtime desire l or
some thmg
Perhaps you ' ve
want ed It l or the wrong reaso n s
and would qu tckly lose mteres t
1f you ob tamed tl

Swoday
tP.M.
F'nd11y aft.ernuun

GEM INI IMay ZI·Juoe 201
Whtle you may reall y b e grate ful to those who do ta~ ors lor
you today . don ' t be surprised If
PUBLIC NOTICE
BtdS wil l be received by th e
you feel y ou c an ' t e:.:press your
Trustees
ot
Saltsbu r y
gra ttt ud e ad equately
TownshiP. · M eigs Co unty ,
CANCER I June 21-July 22 1 Ohio
, unt tl 12 o'c lock noon . on
Guard agatnst a preconceived February 22, I'HB. lor th e
notion about w h at othe r s purcnase o l a new dump
sh o uld be doing for you today tru ck w ith t he t oltow1ng
Ju s t because you didn ' t expec t spec if! ca lions .
158" wheel base . 84" CA .
tt 1s no reason a lip o r favor
Chassis Cab
tsn ' t po tentiall y profitable
350 cu 1n V 8 Engi ne
LEO (July 23·Aug.22 1 The
9,000 lb . front axle
burn ed chtld tear s th e fire but
18 ,500 lb two speed rea r
you re not a c hild any more . axle
Pow er steertnQ
Don ' t tore~er shun so m eone
Single 11acuum h ydrau l ic
b ecau se they erred m the dtm
booster brakes
and distant past
15 " x 7" heavy duty rear

iAug .23· Sepl.221

Where you r caree r is con·
ce rn e d you' r e tn a strong post
lion today Oddl y enough , you
may fo resee dtsas ter tns tead o t
success

LIBRA 1Sept.23-Qcl.23) The
area ~

In whic h yo u ar e lu c ky
tod ay may not be read tl y apparent It seems you re atmtng to r
th e moon and c an ' t see that
your shots htt lower ta rget s

SCORPIO

I Oet.Z4·Nov . 221

H ear th and home sho uld be
uppe rmost today , bu t u nfortuna tel y lht s won ' t be the c ase
Oiv tdf ng your devolton wtll do
JUSt tce to no one

SAGITTARIUS

CNov. 23·

Dec.21) There s a hard way to
do thing s today and th ere s an
easy way . Yo u ' ll know tne
dttference , but yo u mtg t11 eiC perimeJlt and wtnd up makmg
ltlings tough on yourself .

CAPRICORN 1Dec.22·Jan.l9)
If you 're not tn a posl tt on to
c lose a business deal to day ,
don't stew over 1t Eft JO Y yoursell . Leave econom ic olives to
ri pen on the vine .
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT ,
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
IN
THE
MATTER
OF
SETTLEMENT
OF
AC COUNTS .
PROBA TE
COURT , MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO Accounts and 110uchers of
the
f oll ow tnQ
named
fidu.clar tes hll\le been ftl ed In
the Probate court , Meigs
County, Oh io , for approva l
and settlement
CASE NO . 19866 Final and
D t stributlve
Account
of
Manning D
Webster , Ad ·
m inistrator of t he Estate of
A dd te Headley , Dec eased
CA SE NO . 21346 Fina l and '
Distrtbutrve
Acc ou nt
of
Bernard V . Fultz , E'lt:ecutor
of the Estate of Ander,son 8
Ktbble , Decease d .
,..
CASE NO '2 1957 Final and
Distr i butive
Account
of
Kathry n
Wildermuth ,
El'tecutri x of tne Estate Ot
Sarah A . Koehler , Deceased
U nl ess el'tcept ions are f tled
tnereto, said accounts will be
tor hearing before said Court
on tne 14tt1 day of March,
1978, at which time said
accounts will be co nsidered
and c ont inued from day to
day unti l ftnaiiY disposed of.
A ny p erson tnterested may
tile written eH eptlons to sai d
acco un ts or
to m atters
pertaining t o the execution ot
the trust , not l ess tnan five
days prior to the dl!lte set f or
hearing
Manning 0 , Webster
JUDGE
COMMON P LEA S COURT ,
PROBATE DI V I SION ,
ME IGS CO UN TY, OH 10
(21 13, lie

Fairview
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Sunday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Lawson and
Wilda were Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Lawson and Eric of
Syracuse, Mr. and Mrs. Rick
Morris and Michelle, Mr. and
Mrs. Bob f,awson and Cathy.
Robert
Lawson
and
Clarence Lawson are employed in Tennessee.
Mr . and Mrs. Hoyt
Fergerson of Pomt Pleasant
visited Mr. and Mrs . Homer
Warner:
Mr . and Mrs . Russell
Roush, Cindy, David and
E dward lvere Sunday dinner
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Dana
Lewis at Clifton.
Mrs . Ronald Russell visited
Mrs. Carol Russell at'
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday evening.

"

3 AND 4 RM furn• shed and un
lur nrs hed opt s. Phone 992
543A

MASON rWO bfX:Iroom opl Por t1olly !urn Fully cor peled No
pets Depo sit requrr ed $200
per mo Alter 5 p m coli (304)

t 'or saJe.. Rent or Tmde
FOR SALE Of Trade· 1973 Ford
F 100 pickup In good cond•t•on
4b.OOO mtle s For o 5loh or1
wag on
o f eq uol
value
949 2322

(H IP WOOD
Po les •no"
d•omet er 10 on !Oi gesl en d sa
pe1 ton Bundled slob, Sb pe •
ton Deh11e1ed to Oh10 Poll e t
Co . Rl 2, Pomero y 992 2689

88~

SILVER DOLLARS and CO irl ~
doll ar po1d Call 74 1 2316

Uelp:Wanteil '

POMEROY
LANDMARK
f- , 11

OlDfR lady to live
i n ond co re lor aged lady rn
RuTla nd l1ght housework and
cook •ng , no laundry More l or
home
thon wag es
Colt
742 -2078

SA LE SPERSON

NEEDED

by

M•dwes.t manufac tu rer to coli
on est abl ished busmessas
Comm •SS •on so les, $1'25 and up
per sole Colli 800-247 2440
TEXAS Oil compan y needs
mature pers on for short tn ps
~u rround tng Pomeroy . Contact
cu stomers We !torn Wnte 1 V
Otck
Pres , Southwes tern
Petroleum, Ft Wor th, TX

.It

Top

1971 LIBERTY TRAil ER. 12 x 60
l wo bedrooms 2 c eres Call
992 5943 after 5 00 Of 742 -27b8
onyhme

RI SI NG STAR Kennel Boordmg
Indoor
ond ou tdoor run'!&gt;
Groom mg all breeds Cleon
Chesh1r e
son ltar y loc•l thes
Phone (6t4) 367 ·0292

-

--

. - --- -

, REGISTERED BLUETICK pups b
"!&lt;'~ o~d 328 __ _
MEIGS CO UNT Y Humane Sooet~
on1 mol corelme on d adoplron
serviCe (free ommols ) 992·7680
or evenmgs ond Sundays
992 5 427 . Mad
c -o M
Crawford Rt. 4, Bo" 326,
Pomeroy Ohto 45769 Member
shtps and donollons PO Box
~~~o y~~~5?_b~:..- _
REGISTERED Bl UE T•ck pup s, 6

J.

. ~~- o ld . ( 30• 1_1!~·33_2B -·--FOR SPEC IAl people AKC Dober ·
man Ptnscher pup~ . Red and
rus t Good pedigrees $125 and
up. (bl .rl ) 797·4500 or (614)
7q7 .AI97.
, AKC REGISTERED 8 o~r:er pup s
Ho\le been wormed , 1st sho ts

Wolfpen
News Notes

992-272b.
AKC
REGISTERED Doberman
pups 8 weeks old , hove health
cert ifica te .
$75
Phone
843 -3053

1970 MERCURY COMET 4'E/ eng
C-6 auto tran smi ss ion 4 new
t.r es
New brakes , $900
949 2417 .

- - - -·=--:C"

1969 CAMARO S.rtOO 992 530 1
1964 RAM BLER WAG ON
6
cy linder 3-speed Irons Body
and engme rn fo1 r cond•fton

985 3818
1973GRAND PRIX. A .C.. P.S..
P.8 .. AM 8· 1roclo. 55,000. mdes
985·3969
1961 OLDS 98 Good cond1fton
Con be uen ot 655 Sycomore
Street Mrddlepor t, Oh10 Ask -

_ !n~S_!_?~-----­
PUBLIC NOTICE

Not tee IS hereb y given tha t
on F ebruary 1St t1 , 1978; at
10 · 00 AM a publi c sale w ill
!&gt;e he ld at TM F l!lrmers Bank
&amp;
Sav ing s.
Com,pa n y,
Pom eroy , Ohio, to sen for
cas h the fo llowing co llateral
towlt .
\
1914 F»'ontla c, 2 Or ., Mfr
serial no. 2V 87T 4N 162 421
The Farmers Ban k &amp;
Savings com parw . Pomer oy,
Ohio reserveS; the right to b td
at this sa le.

12 1 10, 12, II, 31c
PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS' COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF Grau F&gt;aynter ,

DECEASED
Case No . 22,112

NOTICE CF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

on Februarv 8, l 978, In tne
Meigs Cou nty Probate Covrf.
Case
No
22 , 182,
P au l
Pa ynter, Route 3, Albany,
Ot1 Jo was appointed Ad ministra tor, With W i ll An .
nexea of t he estl!lfe of Gra ce
Paynter, deceased , tl!lte of
Route l. Portland , Ohio
Mann ing D Webster
Probere Jvdge .cterk
(21 13, 20. 27 , 3tc

•••

HI

Sl ARCRAFl FALL Sole
M1nr
mo tor$. 10' and 21 lroVel
Tr oll ers, 18' 5 · $3 7 ~ . 25 7
Bunkhou se $4 875 Fo ld down
$1 .700 up We sell ~ ~r v1c~ ond
quollly Open Sundays Camp
Con le y Stor crol t Sol es , Rt 62
N of Pt Pleasan t

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
W e have enlarged our
se rvi ce department and
wtll serv1ce Hotpoint and
other brands.

COAL ltmestonc an d co lcrurn
ch londe and calc •um bnne l or
dus t control ond spec to! mix mg
salt lor former'!&gt; , Ex cels•ar Soli
Works Main Str eet , Pom eroy,
Ohro or phone 9n 389 1

Pomeroy Landmark

9a .Jack W. Carsey, Mgr
1611 _ Phone ¥92·2181

RUGS
WALL
Hongtngs ond
olgon s N1ce l or Chn stm os
Reasonab le Call 992 22 14
B &amp; S MOBILE HOMES Pt . Pleo ~o nt W Vo b e~rde Heck s
1973 Bro odmore 14 li 64 2
bedroom
1973 Do non 14 x 60 2 bedroom
t972 V1ct or 1011 14 x 67 3 bed • oom,
2 both
1972 Coven tr y 12 11 OS 3 bedroom
1969 Slalesman 12 ~ W 2
bedr oom.

Cornmer crol properly approx 17
acres leve l land located ot
Tupper s Ploms on Oh to, Rou te
7 Ph one (614 ) bb7 ·b304
VA FHA , 30 yr fmon cmg olso
rehnon w 1g . Ire la nd Mortgage,
77 E. Stole A th en s, phone (614 )
592 3051
NICI:: rHREE bed r oom hou se w1 th
go r oge , 1n Rust1 c Hdl s,
Syrac us e $71 OOCI 992 554 1

t965 CHEVEL LE 4-dr. A C . 28 3
eng 2 bbl. , au to tram. fl&lt; ,
cellent condt l lon. Truck topp er '
std B It bed , 28 rn h•gh
742-2485

JUS T COMPLETED new house ' rn
Mrddleport For more mforrno
lion cal/992 2238 or 992 -5304
~

HAY FO ~ SALE
HAY FOR SALE
985 -4248

985 ·384 9
.....

·-----··"'

or

~

);!EDUCE SAFE &amp; l ost wtth GoBe se
Joble ts &amp; E-Vo p wo ler pills ·
Nelson Drug

---

-~

- -- -

·-

-

TWO STO RY 3 bedr oom !rome
house FA furnace slorm w •n
do ws firep lace In Middleport
Phone 99'1 3.457 or 992-5867

-

FIREWOOD SPLIT ond deli vered .
$45 o cord or S35 o tru ckload
All ha rdw ood . 843·2933 or
99 '2 6295
NICE PIGS for sole. Coli of ler 5.
949 2857
SELliNG OUT due to 1ll health .
Small grocery store and ga s
slohon wi th stock on'd equip
men t Located ot lang svi lle on
Route 124 Ve ry good buy . Coli
992 -5868 or 742 9045
THREE BROWN Bel evedere shorn
poo bowls . 992·3829 oiler 6 or
- p_~~ !2~ ~5 ~52_
ROU ND BALE D hoy for so le Co li
843·2524 .
HAY FOR SALE 1500 bol es
__Ttmothy_~~ 99~ · 7573 __
HAMMERMILLS FOR ce llulose in sulollon manula ctunng 16 10
48 ' ovo iloble Thermco ln dustnes 1-41 2-9'22-2853

Carsey, Mgr.

FIREWUOD. $25 per p•ckup lood .
9•9 · ~:c
l ::;
29:.:.__ _

HA Y FOR sole . 992-7306.

9

passenger. Wagon 318 engin e
WttM e~lros . Very good cond1
Iron $1000 742-3074

ranch type located on
corne r , 1 level acre , 3
bedrooms, bath , formal
dtning , f trepla ce, carport &amp;

HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK, KATHY &amp; LEONA
CLELAND
ASSOCIATES
992·22S9-992-6099
992-6191

IB
llt' " lTOit

tub

-··----

9:"_9 2870.__

Love ly

Put yourself in ou r hands.
Whether you 're house
hunting, selling or both
- Your interests are OUR
interests!

Phone 9'12-l181

H~ YFOR ·~• ·

$10,000.00.
BRAND NEW -

$12,000.00.

Landmark

PICTURE WIN DOW . 8oth
After 6, call 99'1 3.. 01

14 acres , seve ra l bu ilding
si t es, c lose in on good road .

'

12 A 12 chetn ltnk fen ce wt!M gate,
3102 0&lt; (30•)772 3227
posls , ond forge dog hov se. I
-~~yeo r old Coli 992 ·'2967 of fer , COU NTRY form fond wi th secludS :~pm .
_ ~- __ _
ed woods. wote r ond good oc cess tn Monroe County , W . Vo.
EAR CORN S2. 10 bu . Ground eor
$1 000 down, coli (304) 772corn $75 ton . Minrmum I ton .

··------

Coli oft er 6 pm ~5-3:_e_J.:...

3102o&lt; (J04 )7n3227 .

-- --------- ·----

&gt; I

~·
,,,

\lf}~N} \e)\1 ~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

''

~

"'

.=-::
.....cu

•
••
I
:.
••
•

At

992-2206 or 992-7630
''The Ori1in1tun
Not The Imitators

..,...

l!f;;'0l"

!92 2174

p~

POIItroy

2231 mo

SEWING MACHINE Rapo.rs , service. o il mokes 992 '1284 The
Fobrt c Sh o p
Po rn e 1oy
Auth onzed Srnge t;: Sales and
Serv tce . We r.Morpen SCJsso f ~
EXCAVATI NG dozer loader ond
backhoe work du mp tr ucks
and Ia bays lor hire w tll haul
ldl d1 ~ 1 , to so d. limes tone ond
grove l Co li Bob or Roger Jef fers , day phone 992·7089, nrght
p ho~e 992 ·~525 or~9~2 _5~3~ _
EXCAVATING dozer , backhoe
and d1tc her. Ch arles R Hot
held . Back Hoe Serv 1ce .
742 2008
.Ru llond , Oh. to. Phone
WIL L do r oohng , con stru-c lton
plumbing and healing No job
too Iorge or too small . Phone
742 -2348
HOWERY
AND
MARTIN h ·
covot•ng
sep t_r c sys tem s
dozer . backhoe. dump truck
grave l
bla ckt op
limes ton e
po vtng Rt 143 Ph one I (614)
698 -733\

BA THR OO,MS
.

El WOOD BOWERS REPAIR
Sweeper s toosler s trons , olt
srnoll o ppilon ce ~ lawn mower
ne)( t lo Stol e Highway Coroge
on Rou te 7 Phone {6\4) 985·
3825
-

IHASNIB

r

-

•

.I

r'

LIE

2·5- 1 m o

WALLPAPER.
PAINT &amp; SUPPLIES'

HOMESilES lor sa le, 1 ocre ond
up .Middleport neor Ru Jiond .
Coli 992 · 7481 .

TEAFORD[H
VIRGILB.SR .

Saturday's

Located In The

TUPPERS

PLAINS

-

Over two-thirds of an acr-e
is thi s 3 bedroom home
with Oak floors , ut il ity
room , bath, breezeway and
garage .

BRADFORD , Aucti on eer
Com
plete Servtce Phone 949 / 487
or 949 2000. ~o c rn e , 0 !-uo Cnll
Bradford .

All

CORNER LOt -

Only $9,600.
TOWARD ROCK SPRINGS
6 room stucc o block
home. Has natura l gas
f urnace , c ity water, 2
baths , and almost 1 acre .

Want $20,000.
Don ' t be cilught in another
snow storm, bur near town.

Call9'12-3l25
Helen L . Teaford

Sue P. Murphy
G. Bruce Teaford
Rea Itor Associate5

NEW 3 b edroom house , 2 bat hs ,
all elec , I acre . Mtddl eporl ,
dose to Rutland Phone 992·
7481

ticks!

As Low AS

•4•88

sq. yd .
&amp; up

Flooring In Stock

(~ill:;le~

where you can come in
see what you 're getting
Good selections - Fully

stocked .

----------------------------------

HOSPITAL ADMINISTRATION

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

~

742 -2211

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••
•
•
HOBSTETTER •••

Close
Thu rs days
Saturdays at noon.

ant

We have Two Tr•ilers with

lots In Tuppers
Ohio.

Plains,

1 home In Tuppers Plains,

Ohio.
1 home on West Shode,
near Chester, Ohio.
1 home,
New,
Crow

Subdivision . Rt. 7 near
Five Points.
our

listings

be lore you buy .
Cheryl Lemley
Associate

Home Phone 742-2003
Hilton Wolfe, Sr.
Associate

.Home Phllne 949-2S89

•
••
~

••

OFF

••
••
••
•••
••
••
•

I I I I I )

••
••

Arnold Grate

..

6/RPIE 6ETTII'IG

I CAN'TBELIEVE
IT J

•·
·- '
••
•
•

Squares 3; Let ' s go to th e Ra ces 8; Hollywood
Squares 4, Candid Camera 6; Mac N e il -Lehrer

Reporc 20,33: Price Is Righi 10; That' s Hollywood
13; Television Honor Societ y I S

8 0()-1 Love You 3,4, IS;

branch

...
-

41 Ready to
serve
42 Fall flower
43 Punch : sl.
DOWN
1 Kahoutek
&amp;nd Halley
2 Breakfast
dish
3 Time
keepers
4 Spanish
queen
5 Prison
topic
6 Prevent
7 Kids • game
8 Suppressed

1 I : 30-Johnn y

•

..

0 "

• '' II

It "

"'..- ""·
•
•

···~···-··············· ~··~
, .:

Carson 3,4, 15,

Joe!"6,13; ABC News33,
33.

Yeslerday'o Alllwer
9 More
saintly
1% Donkey
16 Actuality
22 Negative
23 Circus
truck
25 Gainsay
26 Hula skirt
material

27 Birthplace
of Vergll
28 Reap
29 Soprano

S&amp; 7 P .M. - And Then There Were None IG)
9 &amp; 11 P.M. - Carnal Knowledge IRI
Cable Channel F lve 6:3()- P .M. - Testimony Time
7:00 - Paul Gaudino Family Fitness Show
10 :00-700 Club

Mal bin
Monda y , f't&gt;bru ,tn t 3, 1978.
30 Tenant
32 IU will
38 Pennit
39 Japane,..
vegetable

BRIDGE

Oswald

and Alan

scards can help partner
NOR Til
• 10 8 J
'

211:1-A

.1 6 4

EAST
• 72

AK ~
' 01085 :1
K J 10 8
9 6 53
Q 10 6 4
J :1
SOUTH
AK Q96 4

+
+

+
., 72

+ AK 92
Vulne rable Nort h. South

Pallid
Yalta
conferee
39 Single

West

Nortli

East

Ob i
Pass

Pass
u

Pass Pa so;

thing

Pass
I

It:

YyOcpeiSW
niiiindgJileil(ad:O:IiJ'I K_
'and Alan Sontag

PRYYQG
FWW

C R D 0

ZQENFWOC

ha ve been devised to help

them . Sometimes a rea lly
expert defender will devi se

D C his own special s 1gnal t o h elp
RF

hts partner.''

Oswald:

'' East doesn't

get an average, rather

111 dummy , but South is sure
tha t the dlamqm.J finesse wlll
work . Th er e fore h e decides
to run off all his trumps and

hope ror bad d iscarding by
te ll hts p a rtner , tha t h e ca n

holp with diamonds, but
can ' t he lp w1th cl ubs . , He
can 't spare a hig h diamond,
but he ca n throw the three
and then the Jack of clubs. If
he docs this, West will hang
on to t hree cl ubs a nd South
will only make ten tri cks ."

___J

Oswa ld : " Defende rs are
One letter Simply stands for another. In thi1 1ample A 11 alwa ys at a dtsa dvantage in
used for t he ·three L 's, X f or the two O's, et c. Single letters, tha t they can't see ea c h
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all othe r 's cards . ••
hints. Each da}' the code letters are ditferent.
Alan : " Defensive si g nals

CltYPTOQUOTES

lea ds . He cOuld take ten
tricks by the s imple exped ient of ruffing has fourth club

Oswa ld , "£ast wa nts to

-+~1--- De ale r So ul h

Here's how to work
AXYDLBAA . XR
LONGFELLOW

Alan · " The defense s t~tl·ts
w1th thre e ro unds of h ea rts.

t h e dcf en se. ''

• 2

CRYPTOQUOTE-

II .W~ERE'S MY CALENDAR?

I CAN'T FIND MY
CAlENDAR ...

GOOD! I UKE TO
C.HECK OUT THE WEEK

I FOLLERED
GRANDMAW'5
CHAWKLIT COOKIE
RECIPE WORD
FER WORD--

BUT THAR'S
SOMETHIN'
MISfiiN'

bottom !1COt"f' ' '

;md draws lr·umps with two

+8 75

J 5

a

So uth rurrs the third lead

+ A Q 74

House" :
1955 song
stmer -

ZQ E
f i Q E

Away ,

Janakl

12 : 30:-----Movte " Foster and Laurie " 8; M ovie "Keeper
of the Flame" lU.
I : ~Tomorrow 3,.4; 1:40-.---News 13
~
Movie Channel 4 -

24 Parcel of
land
25 Family
member
26 cagney
film
28 Sex
31 Operated
32 - Clen&gt;ente

DAILY

Mov ie "S tay

I~ ; OO-News8 , 10 ,

than

A Carolin a reader wanlc;
to kno w why we give honor
bonuses in rubber bnd ge.
It 1s JUSt a matter o f
tradi tion. Honor bonu::~es go
all the way bac k to whist and
no on e w a nts t o be the one to

do away with them .
IN!-:WSI'APF;II EN'IF

HJIIUSfo~

ASSN 1

(For a copy o l J ACOBY MOD·
ERN send St to " Win at

Bfldge " care of thiS newspa·
per, P 0 . Bo"K 489, RadiO City
Station, New Yo rk. . N. Y 10019.}

BARNEY

.::._
· ;~

•

li

O f Ra'ce and Blood

10 ;0()-F a mlly 6,13.
11 00-News 3,4,6,13,15.

(i·J 1918 Kine F•aturu Syndirate, lnt&lt; •

~

••

~l

a.10;

20.33 ..
8;3()-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; Shields 11. Yarnell 8,10.
9:00-King 3.4. 15; Three's Company 6, 13 ; Movi e
" TwlllghC' s Last Gleaming " 8,10.
9. 3()-Soap 6, Mary Tyler Moore 13; Dupont-Colombia
20. Awards In Broadcast Journalism 20,33 .

ABRAHAM UNCOLN

'
fl :
. ..,

••

!~
"•

Hoppy Days 6, 13; Celebrity

C hallenge of the Sexes

have much of a hand, but i(
G FEPPWFFCEO . VQUY
FPQGG he is defending i n matchSaturday'• Cryploquote: .T inS COUNTRY, WITH ITS INSTI· point duplicate he ca n u se
TUTIONS, BELONGS TO THE PEOPLE WHO INHABIT lT .- his cards to sa ve a trick a nd

'
'

II

Rutland

rapher 1S

MAI?R!EI? 701?0/'11

•

RUTLAND FURNITURE

fi!,.,.ING

OfF
FLIGH'r Of ,.,..E

. :;,-_J

, Cl\lsed Saturday At 5 PtM.

•• 742 -2211

••'l'tie

..

.

0

U$ ,.0 Tu~N

~ ~

Friday Til 5

40 French
police

~OOM. '1"HE:Y'D l.lfC.E: § ~=Pa

':

8:00 til 5:00
ThuJSday 8 til Noon
1

•

,.He

~ ~- I

OPEN
Monday-Tuesday-Wednesday

ACROSS
I Cryptog-

Ia

GUARANTEE
ON FRAME
All Styles &amp; Colors

20% • 30%

~~

%'r'5

p

TH! INTf~GOM.

0

••
••
•

/

8wM8Lfftl" ON

0

•

P.M.

rI

33 ''This -

Coll742-22 11
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

•

:~~~~ ~92~:~~3 '

Now arrange the circled Htrters to
form the surpnse answer, as suggested by the abOve cartoon.

!}:.tic(/ ~~c~' , 23 Extremely

9'xl21 Vinyl

7 room

incom e propert y . One apt .
rented , owner lives in one,
anot her to be renovated

ftlr. Show
didn't tell LJOU it

Rubber Back Carpet

gas, clty water , 2 lots , fr.ont
and ba ck porche s. $5,500.

WINTER CET to your house? le t us
moke necessary repa1 rs A I
Tromm . Construction . 742·2328.

Office Hours : 9 A.M. to.,

Hogan's Heroes 1.5 .

6 .00-News 3.4,8.1 0, 13, IS; ABC News 6; Zoom 20
6 .3()-NBC News3,4,15; ABC News l3; Corol Burnell&amp;
Fr iends 6; CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20 .
7 Off-C ross-Wits 3.• : Liars Club 6: Pop Goes The
Country 8; Capitol Beat 33. News 10: To Tell The
Truth 13; Gilligan 's Is. 15; French Chef 20 .
7 · 15- BIQ Green MaQazl ne 33. 7 30- Hollvwood

{Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles MUSIC FRAUD PESnE ALKALI
Answer; Wt;u d a fiatflght at the Houile of Lord•
might involve - " DUKES''

concern
5 Repair
hastily
10 Foreshadow
II King
Arthur's
island
13 Arizona
city
14 Entertain
15 LOOge
member
16 Favonng
17 In the
~-&gt;----..,.--:------:---:-:-----.
center
18 Private
eye
19 High : mus.
20 Foot :
, prefix
·v' 21 Footing

SAVE ON
CARPETING
DRIVE ALIITLE
&amp;
SAVE A LOT

9 ROOM BRICK - Nat ural

FEBRU ARY IS the month to hove
your upholster1ng done before
th e sprmg 1 us h. V •s1l us lor
good se lec!lon of labrtcs '
Rea sonable prices ond good
workmo ns hrp
Bob ' s
Uph o lstery , Ma in Street ,
Rac1ne In bo ck of SewN Sew
Outlet Store .

0

15.
5:3()-News 6; Elec. Co. 20,33; Mary Tyler Moore 10;

ONE OF THE$E.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ALL.F.YOOP

"

2 2-lt c
- ---,
L-----------~~~-:
I

IHII. l TOQ

corner of Rt
124 Has
bu Si ness r oom. residen ce
of 9 room s, 2 ba ths, and
doub l e
garage .
Only
$35,000.
NEW ~ 6 room ranch
home. Equipped ki tchen ,
dining r oom, 2 full baths.
full basement, carport and
2 acres. $36 ,500.

ANY SEWING mochrne clean ed
oiled &amp; ad1usted . SS 9B FREE
ptckup ond del1 very Belpn;t,
Ohio 1·423 5497
'

REALTY

I

Heroes 10; Emergen c y One IJ ; To Be Announced

NEW-JUSTOFF PRESS! JUMBLE B00K f1t with 110 PUUiellllvlll·
able for $1.35 poatpald from Jum!Jie, Clo thl e newspaper, P.O Box 34,
Norwood, N.J. 07&amp;48. Include your name, addreaa zip code 1nc1 make
cn.tlca payable to NfttPfQI'rt»oka.
'

MEIGS PLAZA
Middleport, Ohio

BUSINESS LOT - On lhe

WRECKER Serv• ce
Oh to Day or ntght

GeorgeS . Hobstetter Jr.,
Broker
107'12 Sycamore St.

IE'DI DOCEI
KJ []

ACE HARDWARE

216 E . Second Street

-

----

Ut&gt;LJALIL'o' HAVE TO 85
A ~ IX -FOOTER 1t&gt; ei.E

Prlntanswerhere:

9:00til6 :00 Saturday
12 :00 li 16 :00 Sund ay

MAGGIES UPHOLSTERY Ref,msh,
reupho l stery ,
rebu •ldtng .
Beoultlul seleclron of moterrol
and vmy ls Free es ttmot e l ei
742 2852
Location
Solem
Center

--·

Bunch 81 M ary Tyler Moore 13.

5 :DO--Here Come T~e Brides 3: Star Trek 4: Gun smoke
8: Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 10,33 ; Hogan's

9 : 00 ti19 i 00 Mon.-Frida y

PULLINS EXCAVATING Complete
Serv1ce Ph one 992·2478

Ra ctne
949·2657

-

- -·
' I

Sons 4, For Richer, For Poorer 15; M erv Gr ltrln 6;

Gilligan's Is . 8; Sesame Sl . 20,33; Gomer Pyte,
USMC 10.
• :3()-LIIIIe Rascals 3, 1S, Gilligan' s Is . 4, ~rod\

Open

A ND
Ki tch ens
remodeled ceromrc ltl e plumbing , carpent ry , and general
momlenance
13 years ex
perienc9, 992-3685

TU~LEY ' S

-

REMODEliNG Plu mbmg, heoftng
and all type s of genera l r epa tr
Work guc:rronleed 20 years ex
peri~_:~: P~o n~ 992 -2409

8.10; 2;0D-&lt;&gt;ne Life Co Live 6.13.
2:3()-Doctors 3,4,15 ; Guiding Light 8, 10; 3:00Anolher World 3,4,15 ; General Hospital 6, 13: Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 20.
3;3()-AII lnThe Family 8,10; Consumer Survival Kll
20.
4·00-Misler Cartoon 3, Edge ot Nlghl 13, My Three

t
I KJ J

..

~

Lakin, w. Va .

l : Jo-Oays of Our Lives 3,4, 15 , As T he W orld T urns

I rJ

I

~~;~

773-5955

News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women

Only 15.

IFFYT

''
•I''

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

1 :00-For Richer. For Poorer 3; All My Children 6,13 ;

KOOtJ, lll~ cu ~~ l\11' ~:w ~oo:. j

Carpet &amp;UpholStery
Phone Mike Youn1

15; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10; E lec. Co . 33.

byHennArnoldandBoblee

Ui!,UH , Bib JAMI~ , I 0lJW5 ...t4J

11 ·9-tlc

lc

\!1) ~~ *

Unscramble these lour Jumbles,
one letter to eac:h square, to form
four or&lt;hnary words

-

Roule I p..,.,.,, 0.

Laok over
SMALL form for sole. 10•1., doWn ,
owner fmonced Monroe Coun ty, W Vo Ph one (304 ) 772-

'

1

SALES AND SERVICE

h

$33,000.00.
NEW LISTING - Approx.

ba t h , . f ormal
d i ning ,
hardwood floor s, 2 porches ,
overlooks
t )le
river ,

Let us test vour water Fret

--·.

bri ck &amp; fr ame ran ch,
equi pped kitc hen , fC'rma l
dining , 2 baths, util it y ,
ca rport , 1 l eve l acre .

$6.900.00.
POMEROY - Older home
but lovely 3 bedrooms,

softener, Model UC-SI/1 ,
Now Only '279,95

PO IA RA .

NEW LISTING - 3 yrs old

story bri ck , 2 rooms down,
2 apa rtm ents up, good
locat ion , n eeds repair .

let Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; condition your
water with Co-op water

DODGE

0.

s torage
BUY
NOW
$35,900.00:
BUSINESS BUILDING - 2

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?

1973

MAIN
POMEROY,

....
~

Wood Stoves

Young's
Carpeting

i

10 .00-Love Boal6, 13; Lou Granl8.10; News 20; CloseUp 33 .
10 :3()-Farm Digest 20; II :00-News 3,4,6,8,10.13,15;
Dick Cavell 20; Mac Neil -Lehrer Report 33.
II :3()-Johnny Carson 3.4.15; Pollee Story 6.13; Movie
" The Legend of Valentino" 8. ABC News 33. Movi e
" Tortilla Flot" 10.

-

J

8A.M.Io 4:30P.M.

Supe1i01
Steam Extraction

T V

AlTi:N fi ON MARE Owner s
AO HA stud ~erv l!: ~ lntroducmg
to Southern Oh•o Cor loko sor
rell son ol Otoe Br eed for col ·
or , conformolr on and d1 spos1
11on Phone b98 8241 ev en•ngs
or wr rte lor breedmg co ntract .
Bell e E&lt;ho Quart er Horses ,
4022 5 SR 692 . Pom eroy . Oh1o
45 769

ECONOMY TRACTOR ....,,th all at ·
to chments Like new oskrng
$2250 P!l one (bl4 ) 698·3190
HOOF HO LLOW Horses Suy 5ell
trode or tratn New ond used
saddles Ruth Reeves . Albony
1bt 4) 098 ·3290

!(

...
.....

. ~·

Pomeroy , Chin
Pomeroy 992-6282
or 992 -6263

Chester, Ohto
10-30-c ,

20 ; 9:3()-()ne Day AI A Time 8, 10.

· :~ :

JOO Main St.

1 Y. •tJ.

J,H k W Cl! ',i'V Mqr
Phont· 'N} 7181

L&amp;mping Equipment

Box l4

1-18-1 mo.

'l.t I·· p, II r

IF YOU hove o servrce to oller ,
wont lo buy or .. ell somethmg
oe loak tn g l or work
or
what ever
you II get resul ts
Ios ier w1 th o Sen l mel Won t Ad
Coii991 -/ 1Sb

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

Jack's Septic
Tank Seivice

Phone 992-399J

8 :QO-King J ,,., IS; Honeymooners Valentine Special
6, 13; Mash 8, 10; Hard Times 33 ; Adams Chronicles

...

Phone 985-2806

LAVENDER
CONSTRUCTION
Syracuse, Ohio

Good Times 8, l Ot Consumer Survi val 20,33

I - ~....
"·
"·
"·

CARTER

TUESDAY , FEBRUARY 1J4, 1971
5:45-Farm Report 13; 5 : ~PTL Club 13; 5 :55Sunrlse Semester 10; 6:oo-PTL Club 15.
6 : 25--Concerns &amp; Comments 10; 6:Jo-FocUs on
Columbu' _. ; News 6; Sunrise Seme,ter 8; t. :45Mornlng 'Reporl 3; 6 : ~Good Mornlnv. West,
V lrglnla 13.
6· S5-Chuck Wh ite Reports 10; News 13. 7:00-Today
3,4, 15; Good Morning America 6,13; CBS News 8:
Bullwlnkle 10
7 :3()-Schoolles 10: 8:00-Capt . Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame
St 33.
9 :00-Merv Griffin 3; Phil Donahue 4; Edge of Nlght6;
Family Affair 8; Match Game 10;
9;3()-Emergqncy One 6; Andy Griffith 8; Family
Affair 10.
10 :00-Santord &amp; Son 3.4.15; Tattleta les 8; Joker' s Wild
10; NoC for Women Only 13.
10 :3()-Hoilywood Squares J.A. 1S; Andy Grlfllth 6;
Price Is Right 8.10, Rick Foucheux 13.
11 .00-Wheel of Fortune 3.&lt;. 15. Happy Days 6.13;
11 3()-Knockoul3, 15; Family Feud 6, 13, Partridge
Fa mily 4; Love of Lite 8,10; Sesame 51. 20; Roval
Herllage 33. 11·55-CBS News 8; Lovi ng Free 10.
12 ·OO-Newscenler 3; $20,000 Pyramid 13; News 4,6,10;
To Say the least IS ; Ga mbll 8.
12 ;3()-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Bob Braun 4: Gong Show

8 3()-Baby. I' m Back 8,10, Turnabout 20,33.

- - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - ·· u

Residential
and
commercial.
Call lor
estimate, 24 hour service.
Anyday, anyt1me.

Free Estimates

ll ·• lilllllll /\ptllt,lt\(

1974 SKYLINE 14 11 5b 3 bedroom
total electrrc. $7500 992 -20 19
TWO BEDROOM Trolle r 8 x 45
Furn is h ed $1495 992·3J24

r~,

(jr tlt'l 1! [ l1·: tr

RESPONS IBL~

121 6, 13, 20. 31C

•

3356

WILL CARE lor the elderly in our
home Phone992.J314

'

TANK
CLEANING

- Save Fuel &amp; Moner-

Senires Offered

THEY Wfltf! &amp;UP~UA­
C!I.i&amp;TA IIONIION~ ...
AT t:U..SO A POUNOI

2-10-lfc 1

~EPTIC

Cellulose Fiber
Blown Into Walls
and Attics

LOST
IN
1upper s Plo rn 5
Nor wegron Elkhound Answers
to th e r•orne '' l&lt; •ng ~ e wo r d
td4 b67 3900

.'
.'"••-•

742-2228
Free Estimates
Work Guaranteed

1- 18-1 mo.

Blown Insulation

•

'·

~.

AI Tromm
Construction

Syracuse, Ohio
Ph . 992-3993

•

.. '..

Room Additions
Garages

LARRY LAVENDER

TO grve oway 949 2b59

Lost and t'onnd

OLD FURNITURE tee b o~r:es , brass
bed s rron be d ~ , e tc corrt plo tc
household s Wrtt e M . D M•lle1
Rt 4 l'orn eroy Ohro or coil
992 7760
NO ITEM TOO Lorge 0 1 too srno ll.
Will buy I prece or comple te
household New used . 0 1 onll·
que!t M or hn s Furn ot ure 20 N
2nd St
M•ddleport . Phone
992 6370

PS I

Mrs . Donald
Russell
returned
home
from
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Wednesday after undergoing
surgery last week and is
improving.
Mr. and Mrs . Charley
Smith were Sunday morning
callers of Mr. and Mrs.
Harley Johnson.
Mrs . Paul Pierce and
family of Mason were visitors
of Mr . and Mrs. Larry
J ohnson and family and
Geneva Shumate.
Peggy Murphy visited
recently with Mrs. Thelma
Giles.
Mr. and Mrs. Harley
Johnson and farriliy were
recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs . Doyle Knapp and
family.
Mrs . RicharJI Warner
returned home after spending
a lew days In hospital. Mrs.
George Warner helped care
for Erwin Beth whlle Mrs.
Warner wu in oospltal.

PUPPI ~S

Sa\o' e JO pc1 . 1o so p et .
on heating cost
Eltpertence and
tully Insured
Free Esf.
Call · 667 -6479 or 992 -3815
1-16- lmo.

6:00-News 3.U .IO, I3,1S; ABC News 6: Zoom 20.
6 :Jo--.NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnell &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20.
7.00-Cross-Wits 3; Cro55-Wits 4; Liars Club 6; Marty
Robbins' Spotlight 8, Capitol Beat 33 ; News 10; To
Tell The Truth 13; Gilligan' s Is. IS; ; Daniel Fosler.
M.D. 20 .
7' 15--Labor News 33; 7:30.., That Nashville Music 3; In
Search of 4; Nashville on lh Road 15; Muppet Show
6; Match Game PM 8; Mac Neii -Lerhrer Reporl20;
Wild Kingdom 10; Candid Camera 13; Know Your
Schoot s 33.
8·00-Bob Hope 3,4,15; Six Million Dollar Man 6,13;

..
~n~
Remodeling
••

I '

Movlo ChAnnel • S &amp; 9 r&gt;.M. - Annie Hall i PGi
7 &amp; 11 P .M..,.-The Sling l PG )
Cobto Ch•nnel s 6:30 P .M.- Testimony Time
7:00 - Paul Gaudino Family Fitness Show
7·30 - Pt. Pleasant.Wahama Basketball
IO :Oif-700 Club.

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 13,1911

.

LONG HAIRED k11ten to good
ho,f.e 949 /093

COINS CURREN CY token s old
pocket wolj;hes and cho tns
Stiver ond gold We need 19b4
and older sd ver corm Buy sell
or !rode Coli Roger Wormley ,
742 -23 31

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork
Route 33 north of Po1ne roy
Lorge lo t!lo Coll992 -7479

brakes
Reinforcemen t
Frame ,
In verted " 1" , 19.2 SM. J6,000
4.500 lb ea fro nt s. prtng s
11 ,500 lb ea . rea r spring s
2,250 lb . Auxi lt ary rea r
sp r 1ngs
Fron t To w Hooks (2)
5 speed . dire ct trans m tss ton , Clar k 285V
2 - Y:OO x 20, 12 PR , Gr oup
F , fro nt ttres &amp; tu bes
4 - 9 00 x 20, 12 PR . Group
F , M &amp; S Super Road L ug .
r ellr t ires &amp; tube s
Cas t spoke whee ls with 7 0"
rims
1 - Spare r i m 1 0" • '20 "
Hea'lly du ty black v tnyl seat
tr i m wtl h fu ll w td lh seat
Custo m Cust1 1on seat with
st and ard cab futt w tdtt1 sea t
Chrome Yellow soltd co lor
60 Amp Alternator
F . A . H ea ter , Amm eter &amp;
Dll pres!iure gaug es , smgle
elect r 1c horn ; five ( 5) cab
li gh t s
sel!l t belt s, du a l
Western
t ype
m tr rors
Windsh ield washer B. 2 speed
wipers . dual Western ty pe
m 1rrors , Windshield wllsher
&amp; 2 speed wiper s; 70 Amp
battery ;
hand
con trol
tn ro tt le ; 19 5 gal. steel in cab
t ue r tank
1 - R &amp; S Dump Bod y, 7' x
10 ' , Stdes JO , ' Head &amp; Tat!
Gate J6" , U 7JO Ho tst. Un
derbody or Te lescop iC Hots.t
with cl!l ble or Fl oor controls :
po w er tl!lk e o ff ; '·• Cab
pro t ector with 4" l ip , 10
gauge high tens.il floor &amp; 12
ga ug e high tensil s1des ,
lights , reflector s. mud flaps ,
2" x 6" wood side boards
Installed and pa int ed Ch r ome
Yellow .
Rear Tow toop
so ga l " 0 " Step T ank ,
Steel L H or R H
Gladhill N o . 707 Tailgate
Sprel!lder In s tall ed
Th e Tru!ltees wilt constder
bid s for the trade In of a used
1' K 9' R &amp; S Dump body ,
Including holst, w ith a 707
Gla dh ill Spreader attached ,
said dump body can be seen
at Townst1 1p Ha ll at Rock
Sprtng s, Ohio .
Th e Trustees r eser~e the
rtg ht to consider bids which
ha ve
mi no r
vana t to n s ,
prov 1d ed th e b tdS su b
st ant 1ally comply w tth t he se
speciflca t tons
Bid to be in seated envelope
marked In lower lett hand
corn er " Bid For Dump
Tr u ck, "
e nd matted or
delivered to 463 Hook er
Street , M idd leport. Oh io

CAT HMALE Longhotred , dog
Lobrodor type
Both ve ry
l r.e nd lv
loveob le
N rce ·
lookr ng pe ts 94 9 2b07

liMBER
Pomeroy Forest Pro
ducl!t l op pr rc e l or stond•ng
sawltmber Coli 992·59bS or
Ken t Ho nby . 1·44b·8570

so·•.

Forftent

The matn proble m today is that
you ha~e hopes that ca n be
fulftlled . but you lack the abtl tty
to get in to a posit ton to make
the most or your opp ortumlte s

VIRGO

CLEARANCE SALE begm 5 Mon
Feb 13 at Sew-N·Sew Outl et .
Mo rn Str ee t, Rocme
All
polyeslef double knd s reduced
lhrood br g spool
40·. an d
S lor $1.

Cellulosic (wood fiber)
Thermal Insulation

Give Away

CA SH po ld l or oil ..rnok e!t ond
rn odels of . rnob•le h om e ~
Phone oreo code 6 \ .rt 423·953 1

Storm
Windows &amp; Doors
Replacement
Windows
Aluminum
Siding- Soffilt
Gutters- Awnings

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE '

3,4.

TELEVISION
VIEWING

i

... "'

FREE ESTIMATES

J&amp;L

Charleston Offl&lt;e EPL Inc .• Charleston, W. 1/a. 2SJ02 .
Please call J04-J4S -1479 between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m.
Monda , February 13 and Tuesday, FebrWtry 14.

Wanted toBny

12 :00-Janakl 33: 12 :4()-News 13; 1;01f-Tomorrow

Business Services

Mate or Fem11lt : Join 1 growtng contern ,as i
professional photographer. Work in the Eastern half of
U . S. and get paid top dollar and trawel aUowantes. No
experience needed . Paid tra ini ng to qu•lified
appliunh. Don 't min this opportunity to become 1
professional in a growing field . Must tave dependable
tr•nsportat i on .
Interviews will be held week of February U., 1978, in
Charleston, W. Va . ,at Eastern Photographic:
~aborator ies, Inc . , 1716 Pennsylv•nia Avenue ,

Phot'lelJ92...2158

1Feb.20.March 20)

Tt1 e mmd 's an ama2mg ph enomenon and can overcome
matter Marshal your poSttlve
thoughts today and you can
ac c orrtpll sh many po st lt ve
thtngs .

C1111r11&lt;
1.20
1.90

THE RACIN E Gun Club Gun Shoot
ever y Sunday olternoon Foe
lory chok e gun\&gt; only. A ~s o rred
meots

Feb. U , 1971

OPPORTUNITY
TO EARN AND LEARN

l Hi: RA CINE 1/olun t e~ r Fu e
Deportment w.J I sponsot o gvn
~hoo t ev er y Sotv•day ot b prn ot
the• r b,,u ld •n g .n Ba!thon Foe
tory chok e gvns only

...

J

EXCEPTIO~AL

Notil!t'&amp;

The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Feb. l3, 1978
TRACY

WHAT'S MISSIN' IS
GRAND MAW

�I~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• Monday , Feb. 13,1~78

Defense budget
up--jobs down

Carter accused of shirking duty
Ualled Press lntemallonal
A spokesman for the Ohio
'Manufacturers Association
said today President Carter
is "shirking his duties and
responsibllities" if he does
not take stronger action to
end the nationwide coal
strike.
Striking United Mine
Workers Union pickets said
they will move into central
Ohio today in an atiempt to

stop the movement of nonunion coal to electric power
companies, sorhe of which

have reached the critical
stage.
"I think that if the
president does not use all the
power
and
authority
available to him as president
he is shirking his duties and
res ponsibHities, :· said
William Costello, energy
coordinator for the OMA.

' "And those few dissidents
who are out committing

lawless acts, keeping persons
from working who want to
work, should be prosecuted,"
said Costello.
"U I was an independent
trucker I am not sure I would
want to be out there and put
my life in jeopardy t'' said

Costello. "This is anarchy
and should not be allowed."
C. Luther Heckman, chair-

man of the Pubtic Utilities

Bill Cray, vice president of
UMW Local 1957 in Vinton
County, said roving pickets

The president also said he
asked the Justice Deprtment
translated the predictions
WASHINGTON (UPI) Sunday , Ohioans "should
to work with state officials in
Into
jobs and COOlJlllred the
Every
time
the
defense
prepare for the worst .
will move into cent.al Ohio seeing that non-union coal
budge! increases by $1 totals with the number of jobs
"I am very disappointed today to see "who is going to gets to utilities.
but not too surprised," said try and move coal."
"U they try to get the billion, 11,600 American jobs, created in each state by
•
Heckman after the UMW
·Cray, who was in National Guard or the FBI, many of them in Ohio, are military spending.
Between
1970
and
1974,
the
Bargaining Council rejected Washington Friday along you will see one of the worst lost, reports a study released
a
tentative
contract with several hundred other civil wars that you have·ever Sunday by Sen. Edward report said, New York lost an
average of 392,000 jobs a year
agreement with the soft coal miners who opposed the seen from labor and I hate to .Kennedy, D-Mass.
due to military spending.
The
study,
prepared
by
the
industry . "It becomes more tentative contract see it," said Larry Harper,
imperative that the president agreement, said "we are acling president of UMW Lansing-based Public Other big losers; Illinois with
get involved."
going to stay out W&gt;til we get Local 13oltl in New lexington. Interest Research Group in an annual average loss of .
a good one if it takes until
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Michigan, said the current 165,000 jobs; Michigan,_·
· spring or summer."
Electric Co, down to a 45 day $107 billion military budget is · 155,000; Ohio, 136,000, and
Cray said the rank-and-file supply of coal, said Sunday it costing 1,240,000 jobs. Tbe Pennsylvania, 121,000.
Marion Anderson of the
miners opposed a clause in was "pleased the president proposed $117 billion 1979
budget
will
mean
a
total
loss
Michigan
PIRG, said that
the contract that would fine and the administration are
under the current defense
and evacuated all but miners for participating in becoming more aware of the of 1,360,000 jobs.
The study said jobs are lost budget, Cleveland lost 31,300
essential personnel from the wildcat strikes but also energy problems in the
because
military spending is jobs, Columbus, 17,200 and'
area . Firefighters also opposed other issues.
Midwest region.
''capital
intensive''
Cincinnati, 27,000.
sprayed flame-retardant
"In the proposal they
But the utility said Carter's
Under the proposed $117
-foam on the craft and into the agreed on they took away our statement on the coal ·strike requiring a lot of production
lock.
cost of living," said Cray. · was "nothing new except that equipment and expensive billion budget the .figures
The added danger from the "The $2.35 an hour raise they he has admitted that there is . materials - . and produces · would read: Cleveland, 34,200
gasoline spill might never were claiming amounted to an energy crisis as a result of fewer jobs than ii\Vesting the lost joba, Columbus, 18,800,
and Cincinnati, 29,400.
same money ·in other areas.
have happened if the stuck about a buck and a half over the coal miners strike."
States that gained jobs as a
"This study vividly
barge was a "doubled- three years. Some of the
impresses.us with the need to result of military spending
hulled" craft, corps officials safety provisions were taken
noted. The barge is exempt out. Coal miners have fought
scrutinize the military budget included Texas, with an avecw insure that there is no age of 96,000 more each year,
from
a federal
law for those safety rights for
waste, no fat, no expenditures California, 66,000; Virginia,
mandating double-bulls for years.' '
which do not materially 50,000; Hawaii , 41,000, and
fuelcarrying vessels because
President Carter during the
improve
our
national Georgia, North Carolina and
it was built before the federal weekend declared Ohio and
Jim Page, project engineer
South Carolina with 30,000
regulations went into effect. much of the midwest an for the Meigs County house securjty ," sllid Kennedy.
Pedigo said the gasoline energy emergency area and numbering project an"A majority of our penple each.
spill, flushed through the lock ordered cutbacks of power at nounces the following roads and a majority of our states
State has six
and
downriver,
was all federal installations and have received their new lose jobs each time we
commit another · billion
considered minuscule and threw out pollution control house numbers.
dollars to the arms budget. traffic deaths
presented no danger . to standards .
Yost Road, TR 117.
drinking water.
He also ordered a federal
wm•s Hill Road, TR 204. And 'every person, in. every
United Press Jnteraallonal
With the 16 days of tension · tas~ force to come up witll
Welsh Town Road, 'TR 116. state, loses something At least six persons were
mooey
to
spehd
on
goods,
or
and frustration behind them, ways to combat electrical
Wells Run Road, TR 29.
killed
this past wj!ekend in
vacations,
or
more.
school
Chuck Schumann, anotller shortages, The Task Force
Weber Road, TR 415.
traffic
accidents throughout ·
teachers,
rather
than
on
corps spokesman, summed will start work Wednesday in
Vinegar St. Road. TR 119.
the
Buckeye
State, the State
up the mood of the crew at the Canton.
higher
federal
taxes."
Trouble Creek Roa d, TR
Highway
Patrol
said today.
The
study
said
26
states
Markland Dam when the
138.
Two of the victims were
with 60 percent of the nation's
fa cility reopened late
Townsend Road, TR 54.
population will lose jobs as killed in a car-train crash in
Saturday: "There were some
Swan Road, TR 260.
defense spending increases. Vermilion saturday.
people really near tears."
Sumner Road, CR 36.
The patrol survey showed
Sugar Run Road, TR 155. States in which military
(Continued from page I)
no
deatha Friday night, five
do
spending
is
concentrated
Stout Lane, TR 368.
Saturday
and one Sunday.
110t
lose
jobs.
not reported until late
St. Clair Road, TR 241.
"The
Empty
Pork
Barrel
:
Saturday night.
Snowball Hill Road, TR 123.
Unemployment and the
Carla Sue Nollingham, Rt.
5arson Road, TR 409.
3, Porn hoy, reported to
Rock Springs Road, CR 20. Pentagon Budget/' was
deputies she was going east
Rose Valley Road, TR 605. based on earlier studies made
POMEROY - TI!e Meigs
by Yale University Professor County
on CR 30 (Forest Run Rd J
Putman Drive, TR 278.
Bookmobile
Bruce Russett.
Center in regard to its where her father's pickup
Pomeroy Pike; CR 25 . ·
Schedule:
The current stu&lt;ly used a
Operational Grant by ' the truck that she was driving
Perry. Run Road, .TR 144
Monday, February 13 formula
developed . by Pomeroy' Eiem. 9:30-11; and
HEW Regional Office had . was sideswiped by a west (TR 138 to TR 139) and TR 139
Russett to predict how money 12-2 ; 30; Snowville 3-3; 30;
bound auto . The mirrors on
be~n met and the Center is
(N. CR 31).
now waiting approval of the the Nottingham truck were
Old Portland Road, TR 69. would be spent for consmner Pageville 3 : 45-4 : 15;
torn
off.
The
accident
ocgrant.
Old Mill · Street, New goods, construction, services Harrisonville Store t:30-5;
and stale and local Wolf Pen 5:15-5:45.
Mrs.
Plummer
also curred Saturday morning. Portland Road, TR 66.
government if it were' not
The other vehicle involved
reported
that
the
Nease Road, TR 121.
Thul'!lday, February II spent
on arms.
Management Team which did not stop. It was described
Mount Olive Road, TR 114.
Racine
Elem. 9-11:30;
The research group Portland Elem.
consists of Dan Sch- as an older model auto, red in
Morgan Road, TR 422.
1-3; Portland
wendeman·,
Administrator color, possibly a Falcon. That
Minersville· Road, CR 403.
PO 3:15-3:45; Racine,
(648); Malcolm Orebaugh, accident is also still under
Mercer Road, TR -292.
Wagner's Hardware 4: 15Aqministrator (Cen ter ); investigation.
Lovers' Lane, TR 81.
5:15; Racine Bank 5:15~:15;
The fourth accident ocRobert Huestis, M.D.,
Long Run Road, TR 149.
Syracuse Swimming Pool
Medical Director (Center); curred at 1:30 p.m. Sunday on
Little FQrest Run Road, TR
6:30-8; Minersville; Brown's
and Joyce New, Fiscal Of- the Mt. Olive Road, one mile 274.
Trailer Court 8; !5-ll:30.
ficer (648) ; under which .the east of CR 28 at Keno .
Umberger Road, TR 62.
Friday, February 1'1 James H. Starcher, 27, Rt.
Center is now functioning has
Holter Road, TR 420.
Congressman Clarence Bradbury Elementary 10:30.
taken steps to correct the I, Long Bototm; was · Hensley Road, TR ISlA.
Miller was adviSed today by 12.
fiscal deficit .incurred by the traveling east on Mt. Olive
Hayman Road, TR 144 (TR the Farmers Home AdOFF TONIGHT
Center due to unauthorized . Road and lost control 139 to CR 31).
ministration of the: U. S.·
A meeting of the Pomeroy
the
ice.
His
spending. The 648 Executive on
Hartinger Road, TR 601. Department of Agriculture
Director, Maxine Plummer, 1971 Volkswagen sedan slid
Green-Up Lane, TR 425.
that loan applications for PTA scheduled for tonight
and the Management Team, off th~ road on the right
Epple Road, TR 428.
physical , losses
and (Monday) has been cancelled
qworking with State and and went over a 2S foot emDutch Town Road, TR 403. production losses incurred as due to the electrical cutbacks
Federal officials, have bankment. The vehicle struck
Dewitts Run Road, TR 138, a result of late January's for schools.
brought· the debt back .into and lodged against a tree (SR 124 to CR 31 ) and TR 144 winter storm will be received
MEET TOMORROW
line with the previously approximately 5 feet from the (east TR 138).
by the F.H.A. through Augilsl.
RACINE
- The Southern
Flatwoods Road, ·cR 26.
established o perating bottom of the ravine.
I, 1978, aild January 31, 1979, Athletic Boosters will meet at
budgets.
Hemlock Grove Road, CR respectively.
Starcher complained of
7:30p.m. Tuesday at the high
At their recent meetings, bumping his head. There was 39.
The emergency · loan school.
the 648 Board and the Center m:i citation, but the· vehicle
Curtis ·Hollow Road, TR program was put into effect
Board approved extending was heavily damaged.
272.
BECOMES CANDIDATE
for aU ,Ohio counties as a
the Joint Board Committee
Crew Road, TR 79.
COLUMBUS - Randall W.
result of the emergency
arrangement to June 30,1978.
Craft Road, TR 157.
disaster declaration made by Sweeney today announced
The 648 Board also extended dedication of Center and 648
Cornell Road, TR 39.
the President on January 26. that he is seeking the
the contract with the Mental Board and staff that services
· Coolville Road, CR oH.
Individuals desiring in- Democratic Nomination for
Health Center through June at the Center have been able
Allen Street, Amberger, formation about emergency the Office of Secretary ot'
30, 1978. The Managemeni to continue with little in- Road, TR 118.
loans or other types of State. Sweeney, the Director
Team, under &gt;Which the terruption of Center services
Bigley Ridge Road, TR 261. assistance available through of the Ohio Vietnam Era
Center has been operating to the residents of Gallia,
Block Plant Road. TR 642. the F .H.A. should ·get in touch Veterans Bonus Commission,
until a Center Direct.Qr can be Jackson·and Meigs Counties.
Browning .Cemetery Road, with the local County has in the past held the
selected, will also function At the end of December, the TR '408.
Supervisor of the Farmers positions of Chairman of the
through June 30, 1978, or until Mental Health Center in
Bryson Road, TR 17 SW. Home Administration ser· state Records Commission
such time as a Center Gallia and its satellite units in
Rock House Road, TR 203. ving their county.
and Chief of the· State Land
Jackson and Meigs had apDirector is named.
Office.
Mrs. Plummer stated it proximately 2,447 open cases
was a tribute to the and a total of 2,276 new adCommission of Ohio, said

•

-

''CRISIS WATCH"
By JOHN T. ltADY
lhllled ....... 181enatloul
The Rhodea Admlniarati&lt;n
says 1.3 mUUon Ohio.,. will
be out of worll by the end l!f
the II)OIIth If the •mal strike
conllnuea but ooe Ohio utility
announced todly It has
rnanqed ID purchaae at leut
Uu-ee extra days of eii!Ciricty
from out-of-lllate power companies.
II hu llao been learned
that Ohio coal producers and
retailers presently ~ve one
ml1lion tons of coal above
growd but no way to move It.

Critical supplies at last moving
WARSAW, Ky. (UP!) Ohio River barges hauling
critical supplies destined for
upriver communities are
moving past the ice-plagued

Markland Dam once again,
after more than two weeks of
frustration and fe'ar for the
Army Corps of Engineers and
private towboat operators.
Expressions of relief filled
the air when the £irst barges

loaded with fuel oil, rock salt
and other commodities
passed through the Markland
locks late Saturday . The
facility is located 40 miles
downriver from Cincinnati.

For six days the dam's
locks had been blocked by a
huge fuel barge that became
wedged In ice along the upper
approach to the main lock
·chamber . Steady freezing
temperatures

last

week

repeatedly
thwarted
attempts to move the barge.
"Snakebi!len - that dam's
snakebitten,"
was an
observation repeated often by
workers on river vessels and

at the Markland Locks to
describe the series of
problems which have plagued
the dam since Jan. 27.
But corps engineers said
warmer

temperatures,

MY' OFFICE
WILl BE

CLOSED
February 18th
March 2nd

J. J. Davis M.D.

Despite frantic efforts to

strong ice - dissolving
chemica Is and the greater

corral the runaway barges, at

buoyancy of the unloaded fuel
barge finally did the trick,
when five 'hours of gentle
nudging
by
towboats
succeeded in freeing the craft
Saturday afternoon.

least 17 were caught on the
fat-e of the dam. One towboat
involved in the salvage
attempt also became stuck
between the dam and the ice
gorge, later sinking with no

" We even had men
chipping away at tlle ice with

one aboard .

axes," said Martin Pedigo, a
corps spokesman.
The motor vessels used
special "soft li,nes," with a
spring~ike effect to push and
pull gently at the barge. On&lt;-e
the craft had been moved
about 25 feel from where it
originally was stuck, corps
personnel were able to close
the upper lock gate and lower
the lock pool.
There were 29 tows
· (klwboats hauling barges)
waiting to move upstream

and !9 »;ailing to travel
downstream when the locks
reopened Saturday night,
Pedigo said. " We will be
locking those goin,g upriver

first, and that probably will
take the first day or two.
After that, we'll alternate
locking between up and

On Feb. 4-5, the most
powerful towboats on the
Ohio River were used to
smash a channel through the
ice pack, apparently clearing
the way for reswnption · or
navigation Oll llie waterway.

But the fuel barge, pushed by
the . towboat
Exxon
Pennsylvania, became st~ck
in an ice buildup inside the
lock early Monday, only a few
hours after the facility had
reopened .
Two major efforts to free
the barge last week only
succeeded in tearing fwo
holes in Its hull, resulling in
leakage of about 1,100 gallons
of gasoline and vapor.

Both times when the leaks
discovered, corps
officials feared an explosion
were

downriver traffic."
When barges began moving

Deputies

GREAT HABIT
GET

Schedule made

Stonn loans
now available

missions during 1977.

legance zn any roo

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~

~

•·a

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ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Striking United Mine
Workers Union pickets
Monday shut&lt;lown several
non·union

days of "interruptable"
po'""' from utillti&lt;B in the
solllh, west and so.ah east.
A spokesman empbaslzed
that the power could be lost at
any time if utUIUes in those
areu feel they need the
electricity.
Ohio Edison had planned to
institute mandatory, 50
percent cutbacks by the
weekend but the purchase of
the power extends that lime
frame, a spokesman said.

mines

· near

McArthur and say they will
move into the southern part
of the state Wednesday in an
effort to keep non-union coal
from moving.
State
Development
Director James Duerk had
said before Ohio Edison's
purchase that the layoffs
probably would have started
this weekend when Ohio
Edison
Imposed
that
mandatory cutback.
Due•k said the initial

.....,

cutback would force the
layoffs of 425,000 persons with
the total climbing until it
eventually reached "at leut
1.3 million" by Feb. 28 when
the other_ utilities start
euttin~ back.
A survey by the Ohio
Department ol Energy
conducted Jan. 6 showed the
state's 25 top coal producers
had 500,000 tons of coal above
ground while retail outlets
had 700,000 tons of coal on
hand.
Vincent Yl!!l, a stalistican
with the department, said
about a million tons of that

coal is still available.
Haowever, it is not moving
because of roving UMW pickets.
Yen also said most of the
state's leading coal industries
-Ill'" still re~ c:qa[,

'Bill Cray, v'ltle Ptdllll!nt1of
UMW Local 1957 in Vinton
County, said about 150 pickets
shut down several mines near
McArthur on Monday.
"Some of them started
working again and we wanted
then to know we are still on

strike," said eraY. ~&lt;we don't

want them running, we ~ want
them shut down.''

•

e

John Prout, a UMW
organ iter out of Bellaire, said
today he felt the striking
miners, already involved in
the longest strike in UMW
history, could stay out
"another month or two .
"I think a strike lhis long
;bows people how important
:ual is," said Prout. "We
lBVe been
treated like
!lllimals for 100 years. Now
we want a decent contract
with decent benefits.''
Prout said the oontract
rejected by the UMW
Bargaining Council was "a
piece of garbage" and said

UMW president Arnold 'Miller time to the energy crisis.
should resign .
Ohio Senate President Pro
" That would be the best Tempore Oliver Ocasek, Dthing that oould happen 111\he Akroo, said the Senate may
union," said Prout.
cancel all nightirne floor and
With the strike 71 days old committee sessioos because
today, Ohio congressmen of the Cilal shortage.
have again asked President
• Ohio State University and
Carter
to
personally Bowling
Green
State
intervene in the strike and University )lave shut off all
colleges and the slate - elevators and curtailed the
legislature ·practiced func - use of lighting.
The
Chrysler
Corp.
tioning in semi-darkness.
G&lt;&gt;v. James A. Rhodes also conflrmed Monday that It
postponed his State of the may shutdown all produl'llon
State address scheduled for by March 1, idling 160,000
Wednesday night, saying he workers nationWide because
(Continued on piCe 10)
nl'eded to devote an of his

en tine

at

Fifteen Cenls
VoL 2~. No. 212

Suggestions, darknes~
•
•
pressures contmumg
SAM NEAL

"CRISiil WATCH"
the coal haulers.
By JOHN T. KADY
A spokesman for the Ohio
UDfted Preso IDtematiooal
Department of Energy said
·Ohio officials fired off ooly 20 percent of the 700,000
suggestions to the president tons of coal known above
on ending the strike. colleges ground last month has been
and the State Legislature shipped out. Producers had
practiced functionil)g in about 500,000 tons above
semi-darkness, predictions of groiDld in the Jan 31 survey.
massive unemployment
Vincent Yen, a statistician
multiplied and United Mine with the deparlment said
Workers made plans to keep most of the state's leading
up the pressure by keeping coal-using industries also are
non-union coal away from still receiving coal. "They
utilities.
don't want 111 say how much
On Day 71 of the nationwide they are receiving," he
coal strike, with Ohio on the added.
brink of what many officials
G&lt;&gt;v. James A. Rhodes and
say will be catastrophe, UPI, · Rep. Clarerce R. Brown
has learned that coal independently
asked
producers and shippers have President Carter Monday w
nearly a million tons of coal appoint a three-member
mined.
panel 111 mediate a contract
Ohio manufacturers, utiUty between the UMW and the
spokesman, congressmen bituminous Cil8l operators.
and others have asked for
"The contract negotiations
protection lor independent have become stagnated and
haulers, but Gov. James A. broken down,'' the governor
Rhodes has . refused tQ said at a news conference.
- mbbillr.e the National _Guatd "We need new Ideas, new
1D protect railways and concepts and new people If It
truckers from roving UMW (the miners' strike) Is going
ptckets.
W be settled.
. President Carter hill! asked
Rhodes told Carter in a
the Just,ice Deparj.menll'! see telegram a presidential panel
what can be done to protect .

. N.eal·
Sam
named to
PVH Po.st
POINT PLEASANT-James
L. Farley,
Executive
Director of Pleasant Valley
Hospital, today announced
the appointment of Sam Neal
as Director of Personnel and
Publie Relations.
A native of Huntington,
Neal 1s a graduate of Mar-· shall University, and has
more tllan 15 years expel'lonce in the broa~Mtand
joum11ism flelda. He has
been a reporter for WSAZ.TV
in Huntinfllon. wJEH radio in
Gallipolis, and the Herald
; Dispatch newspaper hi
, Huntington. He was also
· Bureau Chieffor the Raleigh,
North Carolina news bureau
- of WTVD-TV in Durham,
North Carolina.

: ~~f!~~~~~~~~~

L

could be "helpful in resolving
disputes between elected
lea.der~hip
di~t.is(ied members,"

union

and

But he declined to recommend speoific negotiators
and what interests they
should represent.
It was not the only correspon~ence Carter got from
Ohioans Monday.
The state's two senators

and 22 of its 23 house
members telegrammed the
president urging that he call
all parties to the White House
and that he personally
Intervene in the strike.
Only Rep. John Askbrook,
ROhio, did not sign the
telegram. That's !lecause he
called on Carter to invoke the
Taftll8rUey Act and force
miners back to work.
Also Monday, Columbus
City Council unanimously
passed a resolution urging
the president to take
imniediately steps through
perso.nal lntenention _in
negollallons to settle the
strike. 11\e resolution further
asked Cl!rter w use "every
device . ·within
his
consitltutional responsibility
... to forestall a national

catastrophe."
Carter acted this weekend
to help Ohio by declaring the
state in an energy emergency
and allowing suspension of
air pollution controls.
By burning dit\f coal,
Ohio utilities will save
a
small
amount
of
the fast - disappearing
fuel. The U. S. Environmental
Protection
Agency said today, 'that it
intends to closely , monitor
Ohio air durfng the
suspension.
.
Those areas known to have
had ambient concentrations
near or in excess of national
alert standards will be
intensely moililoud. The
agency said a substantial
threat to public he~th could
result.
The areas In question are
Steubenvllle in Jefferson
County, Ironton in Ll!wrence
County, East liverpool in
Columbiana County, Canton
in Stark CoWity, Youngstown
in
M1honing
County.
Middletown In Butler County,
Cleveland h1 Cuyahoga
County and Monroe and
Belmont counties.

&lt;:

•

osses,expenses name(
.
'

·

-

.. Gallipolis, Director of College
.
.. Relations for Rio Grande
Middleport Mayor Fred program- is 100 percent
•· College in Rio Grande, and Hoffman told members of the funding, but no applications
.. most recently was President village Ciluncil Monday night can be fUed until the final
and General Manager of the Ohio Controlling Board · criteria for applications Is
Ambleslde Gardens, Inc., in ~as been advised of losses complete.
Councilman
Gallipolis.
and expenses incurred in Charles Mullen said he will
•· As Director of Personnel Middleport because of the attend the Marietta meeting.
" and Public Relations for winter of 1978.
Councilman Mullen and
Pleasant Valley Hospital,
Mayor Hoffman said Councilman D,ewey jiorton
Neal will assist in the plan· ·figures were sent to the state bot~ volunteered to serve on a
nlng and administration of in case there are provisions committee being formed by
personnel management made for reimbursement the · Pomeroy Chamber of
programs within the basic from emergency funds. The Commerce to promote a new
pollciesolthehospltal. This total losses recorded in the roadlromRoute33tothenew
includes the formulation, town, public and private, as .a Ravenswood, W. Va., brldse.
implemen.tation and result of the severe weather
AletterfromDwightGoins,
supervision of programs were $88,000, the mayor said. Meigs Local School district
relative to selection, ·or.ienThe mayor presented a administrative assistant, was
tation, promotion, training resume of the expenses the read thanking the village for
and welfare of aU personnel, village incurred in clearing its work with the dlsirlct in
and
employer-employee streets showing costs of helping g~ schools opened
relalionshipa.
$7,564.90 including $2,630.28 through snow clearance.
In the Public Relations for labor; repair parts for
Mayor HoHman reported
area, he will plan programs eq~ipmenl, $787.04; salt, an audit by the state from
of policies and performance $2,753.85; fuel, $1,029.87; Nov,.24, 1975 through Aug. 25,
that lielp bulld public Ciln- P r I v a t e co n I r a c t o r 1977 showed the village has
fidence and increase public assistance,
$211,
and "very satisfactory records.''
tmderstanding and ac- miscellaneous, $142.95.
Several councilmen com· ·
ceplance of the hospital.
The report stated extensive mended Clerk-Treasurer
Commenting on the ap- use of equipment resulted in Gene Grate for the report.
pointment, Farley said; "We many repairs being needed
Mayor Hoffman said step I
are pleased to have a man ·and added that it was for- of the sewage planning for the
with Sam Neal's ability and lunate for the town that the village by Floyd G. Browne
~- e.perience· on our ad·
village has its own mechanic and Associates has _been
ministrative llaff. We feel his 1D keep equipment in repair. completed. A public hearing
backgrotmd will ' enable him
"It would have been lm- on the first step will be held in
to offer valuable service ·to possible to have these repairs council chambers on Feb. 22
:_ Pleasant Valley Hospltai as made If we bad t~ depend on at 7 p.m. The report deals
' we continue to grow.''
someone else to dO the work,"
·'
·
·Hoffman stated.
ill other businesa, councll
approved the report of Mayor
-•
Hoffman lor
January
· Deputies probe
showing receipts of $1,022 in
fines an&lt;l fees and $94 in
Two persons were Injured
merchant
pollee
coUections
and
both cars were
;; minor accident
for a total of $1,116.
demolished in an accident
.Jtwasagreedtoenterintoa Monday evening on Route 62
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Department Monday in- contract with the Walter H. near West Columbia.
According to Mason County
, veotigated a single car ac- Drane Co., Cleveland, for the
. · elden! on SR 124 in Miners- firm's continuance of sheriff's deputies, Sharon K.
codifying village ordinances· Wright, 25, Rt. · I, Rutland,
; viDe at 3:45 p.m.
_.
and a passenger II) her car,
Kenneth R. Heltemes, 23, . each year.
Cost to the viUage for the. Patricia A. Childers, 37,
Lancaster, was traveling
, west when he observed an five year contract wlU nm Middleport, were treated at
approaching vehicle lb~t had about $t75 a year but the Pleasant Valley Hoxpltal.
slid acrou the center line. updating wUI include not only · The drtver of the other car,
· . Heltemejl clll his wheels to villllge ordinances but state · Vennelda I. Ware, 61, Po!nt
Pleaull\, was not Injured.
the rlglrt striking • guardrail. laws as well.
Mayor Hoffman announc;ed
According to officers, the
. 1bere was no Cilntacl be; tween the two vehicles. There a eommunlty block grant Wright car slfd on an icy spot
were no Injuries and no development meeting will be in the roadway Jltrlking the
hel&lt;l in Marietta, Feb. 18. The Ware vehicle.
. cltaUon was iYued.
~

Presideats' ~ ! ·

Edison,

·- --~----------------------------------------------------~-------------------------------------

-

CLOSED

Ohio

headqllll1ered in Akron and
serving 700,000 CllltOmers,
said it hu purchNed three

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesdav, February 14, 1878

Roads receive
new numbers

Center awaits
grant approval

through Markland late Saturday, it was the first time,
except for a few hours last
Monday, tl1at the troubled
Bernard F.
Niehm,
dam had been open since Jan .
27. On !hal day , a mammoth spokesman for the Joint
lee gorge several miles away Committee · of the Galliabroke up and floated Jackson-Melgs Community
downstream, blocking the Mental Health and Mental
Retardation (648) Board and
face of the structure.
The tons of ice moved the . Gallia-Jackson-Meigs
downriver '811d sent nearly 100 Comm unity Mental Health
barges out of control. Some Cen ter Board, announced
barges were ripped Erom that Maxine Plummer,
their moorings on tlle river Executive Director, reported
bank, while others were torn to the 648 Board at their
away from ' their towboats. January meeting that all
ions
on

1.3 million could be
out of work
.

with erosion damages by the
Ohio River to the sewage
lagoons of the town. This
report was necessary before
the U.S. Corpa of Engineers
will get involved with the
erosion problems, Mayor
Hoffman pointed out.
The mayor reported on
attending a meeting of the
Meigs Soil and Water Conservation District where it
had been emphasized that
help might be available
through the district In
planning and development of
the river bank area. The
program could incl~de
development of picnic and
fishing spots along the river,
the mayor said.
.
Plans were made for the
utility commission composed
of Councilmen H.orton,
William Walters and Marvin
Kelly to meet with John
Koebel of Columbia Gas of
Ohio on the gas tate structure
in the village.
Council also discussed the
need
for
additional
patrolman particularly from
8 p.m. to 4 p.m., but at this
time was unable to take any
action because of additional
costs which might be in·
valved.
So far, there appears to

Two Meigs Three vehicle
p~bed
women hurt accident
Three· vehicles received
light damages and a driver
was cited to mayor's co uti as
the result of an accident near
the intersection of North
Second Ave. and Race St. in
Middleport at 1:49 p.m.
Monday.
Middleport Pollee sal&lt;l a
car driven by Bobby G. Rupe,
Dexter, struck the rear of an
auto driven by Ruben Collins,
Middleport. Rupe, while
backing his car after striking
the Collins car, hit a parked
pickup truek owned by
Carroll Johnson, Middleport.
• Rupe wu cited to coutt on
a charge of traveling too fast
for road conditions.

have been no additional
crime in the collilllunity due
to the lack of street lights. the
mayor reported.
Mayor Hoffman said he
would be looking to action the
town can take as the electric
energy problem ptoblems
more pronowtced. ,

Also di$ctiSSed w~ the role
of the town in the renewal of
permits for bars.
Councilman Catl Horky
announced that he is seeking
a bricklayer to ~lnt up
village hall which was sand·
blasted a number of months
ago. ·
CIAISED MONDAY
The claims sections of au
Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services local offices will be
open President's. Day,
Monday, Februarjr 20, normally a legal holiday for aU
state employees. ,

Appellate
court to
convene
Judge Homer E. Abele,
McArthur, Presiding J~dge
of the Fourlh District Court of
Appeals, announced that the
Court will be hearing c&amp;sellln
Vinton County on February
18. Cases from Vinton and
Metgs Counties are to be
heard on this date.
The Court of 1 Appeals
directly reviews Ill cues
heard or tried In low courts
in which a decision Is being
appealed. These caseo may
have been" tried ln. eomm'on
Pleas, Probate -or Juveolle,
Mliniclpal alid 'Cowlt,y Co\irts,
and may be either civil or
criminal cases. ~. ;,
The Fourth Dislflc! Court
of Appeals ~ fifteen
Cilunties In Southern Ohio.
They are: Adami Athens,
Brown, Gallla, Highland,
Hocking, Jacklon, Lawrence,
Meigs, Pickaway, Pike, Roas,
Seloto,
Vinton..
and
Washinfllon.
o

LORI WOOD, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Wood, Spring Ave., Pomeroy , Is serving
as accompanist for the presentation of Meredith Wilson's "Music Man" by the Meigs High
School music department on March 10 and II . Here Miss Wood rehearses with some of the male quartet which is a featured group in the musical. F'rom the left are Ttm Coates, Jeff
Daniels and Dorsel Thomas.

'Crisis Watch'
By United Press International
A glance at developments hi the nationwide United Mine Workers
Union strike:
·
lJMW Negotlallons
LabOr Secretary Ray Marshall met with United Mine Workers
Union President Arnold Miller on Monday and has scheduled a meeting
with representallves of tile soft coal industry for today_
UNEMPLOYMENT
Slate Development Director James Duerk says If the' strike
continues, 1.3 million Ohioans will he out of work by Feb. 28. lie said
the first layoffs will be when Olllo Edison goes to a mandatory 50
percent cutback .
ELECTRIC POWER
Ohio Edison, wh!ch had expected to go ln.to a mandatory 50 pet.
cutback within a week, announced today It had purchased enough
power from companies In the south, west and southeast. to extend that
cutback for at least three days.
COAL SUPPLIES
Coal producers and retail outlets In Ohio have nearly one million
tons of coal above ground but no way to ship It because of roving UMW
pickets.
GOVERNMENT REACfiON
Gov. James A. Rhodes and Ohio's senalors. and members or the U.
S. House of Representatives again have urged President Carter to
personally Intervene in the coal strike;
.

UMWMEMBERSHIP AtTIVITY
Roving UMW pickets shut down non-union mines near McArthur
Monday and say they 'fill be In southern Ohio on Tuesday_
John Prout, a UMW organizer from Bellaire, called the contract
. that was rejecled by the UMW Bargaining Council a "piece or
garbage" and said UMW President Arnold Miller should resign.

Wahama's band given
15 sn.perior ratings
MASON - The Wahama
marching band under the
direction of Charles Yeago
and Michael liarbour,
received IS superior ratings
(I) and three excellent
ratings (II) at the Region II
Solo and Ensemble Festival
Saturday
at Marshall
University.
,
The superior ratings were
the largest number given to
any_ school participating.
Stlldents were judged on the
five rating scale with I or
superior, the highest score
and V, ,the lowest.

The festlval' was sponsored

bY the West VIrginia Music
Educators Association .
The festival had previously
been scheduled for Feb. 4 but
due to inclement weather
conditions . had to be
rescheduled. The many days
· of school closings made it
hard on the performers
giving them only about two
weeks to . prel'are. The
·students worked a lot on their
own time during their noon
hours and after school trying
to prepare lor this contest.
Their efforts paid off with the

•

following results;
Superior ratings (I) on solo
- Brett Grinstead, Melanie
(Continued an 1111• 10)
SPECIAL MEETING
A special meeting of the
Meigs County Commissioners
with the Middleport 1mprovement Corp., Will be held
at 7:30p.m. Wednesday atthe
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. building In
· Middleport. DisctiSSions on
the proposed nursing home
will be held .

,.

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