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                  <text>10- The Daily SenllneJ,Middltport..Pomeroy, 0., TUesday, ••eb. 14, 1978

1-----~-n~;tb~----!
BEULAH HARMAN
Mrs. Beulah Lee Smith
Harman, ~7 . formerly of
Middleport, died Feb. 7at the
Palrm Pacedena Hospital In
St. Petersburg, Fla .
Mrs. Harman was the
youngest daughter of the late
Mr. and Mrs. J . K. Smith of
Middleport. She was abo
preceded 1n death by a
brother, J . K. Smith, Jr., and
her husband
Surviving Mrs . Hannan
are three children , eight
grandchildren , one greatgrandchild, and two sisters,
Mrs. C. H (Vivian Smith)
Bmg and Mrs. Vmcent (Jean)
Dabo, both formerly of Meigs
li:ounty, now of Florida.

p.m. Wednesday at the Wh1te
Funeral Home here
Mr. Massie was born at
Rappsburg, Ohio, a son of the
late Roy and Mary W1seman
Mu,ie. He was a retired
maater pilot having put in 47
years servaee on the Ohlo
River. He was employed With
the Oh!o Power Co • Clncinnatl ,
prior to
h1s
rellrement. He was a
member of the Porterfaeld
Baptist Church, Wat erloo
lodge 532, F&amp;AM Lodge, the
Anc ient
and Accepted
Scottish Rite, Valley of
Columbus ; Dtstrlct :.0 of the
United Marine Workers o!
America and the Un1ted Steel
Workers of America.
Surviving are his Wlfe,
Edith Luman Ma ssie, a
daughter, Jean F Massie, at
home ; a
son, Keith ,
Morgantown , W. Va . ; a
brother, Bernard, Ironton ,
and four grandchildren,
Kevin , Denise, Lee and Mark
Preceding h•m 1n death
bes1des his parents were a
son, Jeff, in 1963, a sister and
a brother.
The Coolville Masonic
Lodge will conduct r1tes at
the !uneral home at 7 30 p m.
this evening. Officiating will
be the Rev . Ernest R1ce
Burial Wlll be m the Coolville
Cemetery. Friends may ca ll
at the funeral home any tune.

ANNA F. KAY
Anna F Kay, 79, of New
Haven, W. Va . died Tuesday
morning at her residence.
She was the daughter of the
late James and Dunllla
Goodnight Burris.
Survivors include her
husband, Earl F ., of New
Haven; one son, Robert of
New Haven ; three brothers,
Lawrence of Mason ; Howard
of New Haven and Roy Roush
of Michigan She was a
member of the New Haven
Methodist Church.
Fr~ends may caU at the
Ewmg Funeral Home from 7
p.m . tonight until noon
Thursday.
Pr1vate services wiU be
held for the family . Donations
may be made to the Mason
County Heart Fund.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Carol
Humphrey , New Haven ;
Angela • Myers, Langsville ,
EVERETT MASSIE
Harrison Rood, Reedsville ,
COOLVILLE - Funeral Ronnie Theiss, Racme ,
serv tees for Everett E. Phyllis Clay, Rutland ; Er·
MasSie, 75, Hockingport, who nest Triplett, Rac1ne ; Okey
d1ed Monday at Holzer PuUins, Coolvtlle; Bess EU1s,
Medical Center following a Pomeroy;
Betty W1se,
bnef Illness, will be held at 2 Middleport ;
Barbara
Douglas, Coolville; Elizabeth
Bartoe, Long Bottom; Simon
Powell, Portland ; Michael
Pierce, Middleport, Mark
Bailey, VInton.
DISCHARGES - Judy
Miller, . Ella Sm1th, Brian
Diehl, Rodney P1erce, Mmnie
Johnson, Cloyd Brookover,
Sarah Wells, Helen Car·
penter , Richard DeMoss

SQUAD RUNS
The Syracuse ER squad
answered two caUs the first
on Saturday at 10: I~ a.m. for
Tim Cundiff, Syracuse, and
the second on Monday at 4: 30
p.m. for Simon Powell, RD,
Racine. Both were taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

MEN!

Heavy snowfall hits Kansas City
By ANDREW A. YEMMA
United Press Interuatlooal
The WIRier of 1978, whlch
had routed earlier recordbreaking storms to the north,
east , south and west of
KansasC1ty, now has belted
the nation 's midsecllon wllfl
the heaviest snows In more ·
than a decade
Monday 's snowfall, the
worst in 16 years in Kansas
City, closed schools, offtces
and factories and stranded
hundreds of travelers on
highways and in a1rports.
The system swept across
the Central Plains and
through the Missow-1 Ozarks,
but dimmished in strength as
1t headed into the Ohio Valley
and Middle Atlantic states
Although the Nationa l

By HANS SCHAEFER
BONN , West Germany
(UP! ) - Treasury Secretary
Michael Blumenthal ha s
made a new appeal to West
Germany to spur Its economy
to help put the mdustrial West
back on its feet, but Bonn said
1t would not bow to the U. S
pressure.
Blumenthal met Chancellor
Helmut Schmidt Monday
night lR the sno wbound
cap•tal m what sources sa1d
was yet another effort to
persuade the West Germans
to step up the pace o! their
economiC growth, and thus
help accelerate the Western
mdustnahzed nati ons'

economtc upSwtng
The U. S. attempt to persuade West Germany , one of
the " locomotives " of the
world economy, to stimulate
1ts economy has taken on new
urgency ln recent months
beca use of the dollar's
troubles and the record U S
trade def!Cll
U S pohcy makers also

beheve a German economic
stimulus co uld he lp the
Italy, where leftist partJes
are making strong blds to
take power .
S~! even before BIW.enthai s amval, government
s po k e s m a n
A r m 1n
Gruenewald left no doubt that
Bonn had no plans of boostmg
1ts economy any more.
"1 s~n say for the governme~t, . Gru~newal~, told a
radio mterv1ewer, that we
are of the opinton that. what
can be done we have done,
and there Is nothing more in
Slghl:"
ThiS was an apparent
reference to a $14 J bllhon
stale and communal program
in cludmg tax cuts to

JUDGMENTS SOUGHT
A JUdgment In the amount
o! $2,059.89 has been flied Ill
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by the Pomeroy
National Bank agamst Julius
Preston and Evelyn Preston,
Jackson .
Associates Financial
Serv1ces Company of West
Virgm1a , Parkersburg, filed
a suit in the amount of
$1,007 4~ plus mterest against
Charles L. and Brenda La
Deauex, Rt I, Long Bottom.

INTEREST OF
MEIGS.MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL

Elec. Ed.

ROBERT HOEFLICH
Chy Editor
PubliShed dally except Saturday
by The OhiG Valley Publbhlnl

COmpyny-MultimedLH, Inc
II
Court St , Pomt!roy, Ohio 4$7119
HIUlneM Offtce Phone !192· 2156

Editonal Phone992·2 l ~7
Se&lt;:ond class posblge pMld 11l
PQmeroy, Ohio

N11tiorwl lldvertiSLfltl represerr
l.iiUve W11rd • GriU1tb Company,
Inc ., &amp; ttlnelli und Gallagher D1v ,

7S7 Third Ave , New York , NY
10017

Subs&lt;.oriptlon ra\.es Delivered by '
dlmer where available 75 cents per
wtek By Molor Route where &lt;.'ll.rrter

se rv1c:e not available, One month

WALK-UP TELLER WINDOW AND
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
FRI. EVENINGS To 7 P.M.

~

2fi By ffi8ll

In Ohto Knd W VK ,

One Ye.11r, $2200, Su: month!,
$11M ;

Thrl:!e

months , $7 00 ;

El&lt;lewhere f26 00 yeKr, Stx monlhs
$1:1-SO, Thr ee monthli , S7 50
Sub!Jcrlplion price ~1dudes Sundlly

Times-.Senlinel

"THE
FRIENDLY BANK"

stimulate economtc achv1hes.
Blumenthal came from
Pans where he took part m a
secret weekend meeting of
the fmance m1msters of the
" Big Ftve" Western mdustrlahzed nauons - the
Un1ted States, Br1tam ,
France , Japan and West
Germa ny
Also partlclpatmg m the

I

COLUMBUS, Ga. (UP!) Pollee say they have a
psychological profile of the
"stocking strangler," wbo
has killed s1x elderly women
hvmg alone m the same qUiet
neighborhood, and the profile
ll!dlcates he may be as young
as t4 ,
Detecl! ve Commander
H.W Boone said Monday the
ps y c hological profile
indicates the k11ler 1s
"poss1bly a young man, aged
14 to 20, or something under
.

Help sought
•
tO Improve
·
d ~ sa£ety
1.
1

WASIDNGTON (UP!) Some 20,000 dams In the
Umted&gt;States are located so
that any failure would result
ui loss of life and appreciable
property damage, the House
Goverpment
Operations
Committee sa1d today.
The PJmmlttee adopted a
report calling for legislation
to help states unprove thetr
dam safety programs and
~critlclztng the admlmstration
and the Army Corps o!

E~~~~~rs~re

disaster before we take aclion'" asked Rep. Leo Ryan,
D-Galif., chairman o! the
subcorilmittee that produced
the report.
"Thls problem has been
ignored for years, and we
have had a tremendous tollm
human hves and bilhons of

'

,
r•

.

Psychologlsts who have
studied the crimes also say
"maybe he's had problems
w1th
his
mother
or
grandmother and he IS
possibly schizophremc,"
Boone satd.
The strangler took hls first
VICtim this year Sunday when
711-year-old Mildred Borom
was found strangled in hef
home, located within a mile
rad1us of the other vlctuns.
Uke the other women killed
10 recent months, Mrs.
Borom lived alone.
Boone said the strangler's
familtar 1ty With the llllddieclass Wynton Road neighborhood , which ts heavtly
populated with rellrees,
mdicates ''he 1s famlllar with
the netghborhood."
Muscogee County Coroner
Daniel Kilgore said the strangler lS a black man, but he
refused to explain how that
concluston was reach"ed
The Columbus Enquirer, m
a front page editorial
Monday called for closer
protection
of
the
neighborhood, using National
Guard troops tf necessary.
But a spokesman for Gov.
George Busbee satd there are
no plarlS to acttvate the
Guard.
s e r v 1c e s
Hum a n
Coordinator Agnes Poole said
her agency and a rhurch
"

By LINUA THRANE
MINNEAPOLIS (UPI)
Sen. Muriel Hmnphrey, J&gt;.
Minn ' appeared ready today
to Jessen the suspense and
position
jockeying
m
politics by
Minnesota
announcing whether she will
seek election to the Senate for
the remaining four years of
her late husband's term.
The widow of Sen. Hubert
H. Humphrey scheduled a
news conference today in
Mmneapolis' Federal
Buildmg.
Gov. Rudy Perpich new to
Hillsboro Beach, Fla., last
month to announce the
appointment
of
Mrs.
Humphrey to succeed her
late husband, who died Jan .
13.
It had been widely

o.m. Ill 11:00 p.m.
10 Ill 12 :00 p.m.
Solurdoy.
Porntror Bond Brlcltt

i

National For.est during the

storm.

"'

The search for 12 peraort8&lt;

missing since a Dash Oood

demolished the cmununity or
Hidden Springs, caiU., ...
postponed by .ru.'e than 18
inches of snow. But eight aid
patrolmen missing In the
storm Sunday were sighted
walking out of a snow,
covered mountain area 119rth
9f Los Angeles
•
" They're professionalS.'
They got it aU together,'' said
Shenff's
Deputy
Carl
Reiger!.

Southern Bell
pleads guilty

By JERRY Mri'CHEU
down further in January to
CHARLOTTE, N.C. (UP!)
3.2 percent, according to the - Southern Bell Telephone
Co. entered a guilty plea
Federal Stallstlcal Off1ce.
It was the lowest lnRalion Monday to a smgle count of
rate smce May 1970 when it falsifying records and
misapplying
funds
stood at 3.1 percent.
The unemployment rate allegedly for political purstands at 5.4 percent. Ac- poses - and In return the
cording to the Federal state dropped 24 stmilar
Employment Office, a total of charges.
The plea bargaining arran1.2 .. million persons were
gement, reached just before
without jobs Ill January
the case was to go to trial,
dehghted Distnct Attorney
Peter S. Gilchrist III.
"You've convicted the subSldtary of the largest
corporation in America," he
said. "If you had taken them
group
were
finding
to trtal on all of the counts
roommates for elderly and had convicted them the
women in the area
sentencewouldbethesame."
Mrs. Borom was found
Mecklenburg
County
strangled With a venetian
Superior Court Judge Lacy H.
blind cord a few hours after
Thornburg accepted the plea
the strangler's unsuccessful Monday, but a hearing Is
effort to kill 74-year.,ld Ruth
scheduled Wednesday for the
Schwob two blocks away.
state to present eVIdence to
"The . first time he didn't asslst Thornburg 1n imposing
succeed," said Pollee Com- a sentence.
mander Herman W. Boone, a
Lawyers
said
they
member of the special state- expected the sentence to be Ill
local
"strangler
task the form of a fine.
force."
As part of the plea bar"I don't know if this gainmg, the state agreed that
prompted him to go a few no futwe indiclments against
streets over and attack Mrs. any employees of Southern
Borom," he said. "We feel it Bell arising out of the
lS possibly the same man investigation will be sought .
because the characteristics
The investtgation was
of each one of these (attacks) launched in January 1975
have been slmiliar."
after John J. Ryan, Southern
"It's obvious he Is playing
Bell's former top executive in
With us," Police Chief Cwtls North Carolina said he
McClung said. "He's become operated an illeg~ political
someone reckless.''
slll5h fund before he was fired
Mr. Borom 's killing was the in June 1973.
first since Dec. 28 when
He said the fund was fueled
Kathleen Woodruff, 74, was by salary kickbacks from
found strangled with a thin himaelf and several of his top
scarf in her bed. The first
executives.
four victuns were strangled
The company has denied
with their stockings.
the existence of the slush
Fern Jackson, 60, was the
fund but sa1d an audit during
f1rst vtctun slain Sept. 18. A the ' course
of
the
week later Jean Diminstein ,
mvestlgatlon revealed
71, was k1lled . Florence $142 000 m bogus expense
Schieble, 89, and Martha vou~hers from Southern Bell
Thurmond, 69, were siBill in
employees in North Carolina
October.
from Jan 1 1971 to June 1973
with ~ ~rtion of the money
being used for political payments.
,
James E. Walker, one of
the company's attorneys ,
said Monday the guUty plea
speculated
that
Mrs. stated in effect that some
Humphrey would serve South~rn Bell 'employees
merely as a " caretaker" falsified expense vouchers
until an election in the fall to and some of the funds from
name a successor to fill the the vouchers were used for
four unexpired years of Humphrey's tenn.
But to the surprise of many,
Mrs. Humphrey was noncommlttalin her brief response to
a questton asking whether
she would run In November.
Mostly
cloudy
again
"That's a long way off," tonight, with lows between 15
she said. "I'll have to think and 20. Partly cloudy Wed·
about ll."
nesday, with highs in the low
The statement caused or mid 30s. Probablllty of
tumult in the ranks of both precipitation 40 percent
Mrs. Humphrey's Democrat- today, 20 percent tonight, 10
Fann Labor pjll"ly and the percent Wednesday.
Independent-Republican ,
party.
"You can't run against the
Humphrey name in Minnesola," one hopeful satd.
Rep. Donald Fraser announced for Hwnphrey's seat
even before Hwnphrey died.
Frasersaidhetalkedwith the
senator and implied he had
recel ved Humphrey's
will
blessing. He said he . run
whe re craftsmen shll care?i
even if Mrs. Hwnphrey seeks
the seat.
colorful
"I'm going to run, period,"
he said.
State Sen. Nick Coleman,
Df'L.St. Paul, announced he
would• run only if Mrs.
Humphrey isn't a candidate.
Businessmlm Robert lilorl
said he would go to the voters,
but not againlt Muriel.
• Porcelain-on-aluminum
On the Republican side, the
• Tri1111•r-oparatad whistling
lear of Mrs. Humphrey's
spout
political drawing power was
•
Avocado or Harvest
so great that Rudy Bosebwlt•
felt it necessary to call a news
.conference to ''re-annolDlce''
his candidacy for the Senate
• HOUSEWARES
seat now held by Sen. WendeD
Anderson, DFL-Minn., and
not for the Hmnphrey seat.

TO MEET
APPLE GROVE - The
Apple
Grove
United
Methodist Women will meet
at 1 this evenmg at the borne
of Mrs. Dallas Hill.

•

Ualted Pnss 1Dttr1111tlonal
The state' s coal-burning electric utilibes have been ordered
to share power, Gov. James A. Rhodes praised President
Carter'slntervention In the strike and Ohio Adj . Gen . James A.
Clem will not recommend Gusrdsmen escort coal trucks as the
naUonwlde coal strike entered 1ts 12nd day today .
The power shortages are also especled to Ioree the layoffs of
lalndreda of thousands of auto workers throughout the nation
because of the ~d closure of key component plants 1n

Ohi0.

The Public Utilities C&lt;mmlssion of Ohio Tuesday ordered
the state's electric utihtles to share available power and, when
necesaary, purchase electricity from out-&lt;~f--state utilities
regardless of cost.
The PUCO, in an emergency meeling, unarumously adopted
the order described by PUCO chairman C. Luther Heckman as

"another stop'i!aP measure until the strike Is setUed."
President Garter Tuesday Ordered United Mine Workers
Union negotiators and representatives of the soft-coal industry
into the White House m an effort to settle the strike, already
the loogest in UMW history .
"The movement of negotations in the coal strike mlo the
White House represents a major breakthrough in attempts to
resolve the strike before substantial economic damage is done
to Ohioalls," said Rhodes.
" I congratulate. Prestdent Carter on this move, a nd I w11l
join with all Ohioans Ill praying for the suc~ess of this new
tnillative," Rhodes sa1d.
Clem said activitaling the Ohio National Guard to escort
trucks hauling coal to the state 's power plants is not the nght
move at this stage of the negotlallons.
"The Nabonal Guard will only a rou~f' pmntinn~· ,, ,,, " l-. will

Weather

•'.

"We have always stated:
this was (done) without
Atlanta (corporate
headquarters) approval,·~
Walkers said, "and we stl~
by that ."
;
Ryan still face·s trial oo 11
16-count indiclment charltlnl
him with embezzlement ol
$17,000.
!
•
;•

WahaJtla

e

:

••• :
:

(Continued tram PIP 1) •
•
Sasson, tro'?bone; Tod4
TUcker, bass, Usa Yeag(
French Horn ; KeMy Bon ell
snare drum, April Parsons,
oboe; Mary McFarla~d.!
clarinet; Terrt Johnson, Usa
Davts and Rhonda Ka Y;!
Outes.
.
.,
Supertor ratmgs on en;
sembles - Brass ensembli!
which mcludes Kelth Goldiberry, Kathy Test, Davl4
Rose, . Usa
Reynolds,
Staphkme Estes, Angela
Proffitt, Brett Grinstead,
Melonte Stsson Jlll Taylor
and Brent Hart.
•
Fl~te duet which includes
Ter~1 Johnson and Lisa
Dav1s; flute quarter No. 1
which mcludes Usa Davis,
Jennie James, Terri Johnson,
and Karen Brown; flute
quartet No. 2 whtch Includes
Rhonda Kay, Teresa Ayres,
Rachel . Beard and Kim
VIckers; clartnet trio which
mcludes Mary McFarland,
Brenda Gray and Eldle
Shepher~.

Recelv1ng Excellent (ll)
ratings were: Mark Good·
nile, French Horn; Jeff
Bumgardner, . alto sax, and
the percusston ens,e mble
which includes Kenny Bond,
Jerry
Oldaker,
Mark
Thompson, John Van Meter
and Tom Haymaker.
Lisa Yea go and Mary
McFarland received applicallons w(th their rating
sheets that enables them to
a'!ditl~n .. for
"Honor
Fmahst.
Outstanding
performers at the varlo":"
solo and Ensemble Regions
~re recommended. Twelve
fmaUsts are finally chosen to
perform at theW. Va. Music
Educators Convention In
Morgantown on March 28.
Piano accompanists for the
soloists were Patricia Yeagp
and Mary McFarland.

1.3 million
(CcinUnued tram PIP 1),
of the unpending closure of
two key piBnls Ill Twinsburg
and Sandusky, Ohio.
•·
An American Motors Corp.
spokesman said powec
cutbacks In Ohio may force
curtailment
of
jeep
production in Toledo.

'Crisis Watch'
By United Press International
A glance at developments in the nationwide United Mine Workers
Union strike:
'
UMW NEGOTIATIONS
President Carter ordered both sides in the strike, already the
longest in UMW history , to resume negotiations in the White House.
Carter said the strike was inflicting increasing hardships on the
country and "cannot be allowed to continue."
GOVERNMENT REACTION
Gov. James A . Rhodes said the movement of negotiations in the
coal strike into the White House represents a major breakthrough in
attempts to end the strike. "I congratulate President Carter on this
move," Rhodes said.

COAL STRIKES
The Public Utilities Commission of Oh io ordered all of Ohio's
electric utilities to share power and to purchase power from out-ofstate power companies regardless of cost. Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Electric Co., with a 45 day supply of coal remaining, said it has been·
getting some non-union coal. Ohio Edison Co., with about a · 33 day
supply remaining, has purchased three days of power from out-of-state
utilities.
COAL PROTECTION
Ohio Adj. Ge11 . .,-ames Clam said he would not recommend the use
of National Guard troops to escort coal trucks. Clem said "force has
never solved anything." However, the Ohio Highway Patrol has
adqJitted It had followed some coal trucks moving non-union coal.
PROSPECTS OF UNEMPLOYMENT
The nation's major auto producers say if the strike continues and
key component plants in Ohio are forced to close, it wilT mean the
layorfs or hundreds,Q~ ~housands of workers across the U.S.

WE!;T BEND®~ .-,.
~

.,.5

DEPT. • 1ST FLOOR

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
'I

at y

enttne

Commissioners buy
landfill equipment

'I11e hydr o-clectn c plnnt
bc1 ng const ructed at !he
Hac1nc Locks and Darn IS
unly the second nne or Its kim I
to be erected 111 the Unit&lt;;d
Slates Clw les C Cas.cll,
&lt;"onstrut1.10n m nna~c r of the
pla nt, told mcmbe1s nf the
Pomeroy
Cha mi.Jer
uf
CtH nmcrcc Tucsdny at II s
noun luncheun at the Mctgs
Inn
Cassell ex plamed tlwt the
unly uthc1 plnnt of tins kind IS
located 111 t he stu tr of

Snow likely

across Ohio

Weather

Fiftt'cn Cents
Vol. 2M, No. 21:1

Racine plant
2nd in nation

EXTENDED FORECAST
Friday through Sunday,
cold and a chance of snow
each day, with highs In the
20s. Lows wlll be between
five and 10 Friday, raising
to bet,.~cn 15 and 20 by
Sunday.

United Press International
Relatively dear sk1es and
co ld
temperatures
highhghted Ohio 's weather
overnight w1th some low
temperature records broken
or tied .
Nearly eve ry National
Weather Serv1ce offtce m the
state reported overmght low
readings in the single-digit
numbers.
Zanesville broke its low of
zero for Feb 15' set Ill 1963
Wlth a mmus-four-degree
reading Columbus' record of
mlnus·three -set in 1905 was !led.
Some dense fog developed
Ill eastern OhiO, and driVers
Ill those foggy areas were
urged to use cautiOn until the
fog lifted later In the day
Un settled February
weather w•tl be conlinwng m
OhiO
witiT vartable
clo udiness and occasional
snow flumes expected
through Thursday
H1gh temperaturres both
thiS afternoon and Thursday
will range from the middle
20s to the lower 30s.
Overnight lows, tomght, will
be m the teens,
Ohw
Extended
The
Forecast for Friday through
Sunday calls for cold
tempera lures and a chance of
snow each day . H1ghs will be
Ill the 20s, w1th overnight lows
between f1ve and 10 early
Fr1day,. rlSmg to between 15
and 20 by SUnday morning .
The National Weather SerVlce's Ohio Extended Outlook
for Feb. 20 through Feb 24
mdJCates temperatures will
be much below normal and
prectpitallon will be above
nonnal .

them under observation if there is a posslb!lity of danger on
stale highways. "
The auto industry warned Tuesday that unless there Is an
end soon to the coal strike, power shurtB~:es in crucial states
such as Ohio, would force massive layoffs throughout the
nation
111e shortages ~'Uuld Oih ut down key component plants In
Ohio, said industry spokesmen
"A serious tnterruption o! the parts supply from these kev
plants In Oh10 - or any other part o! the country - could result
in a complete shutdown of GM automollve operations with the
resultant layoff of more than :!00,000 GM employes throughout
the United Stales," a Generul Motu'" spokesma n said
Spokesmen lor Ford, Chrysh'r nnd American Motors have
expressed sumlar observations

•

Wa shm,.:ton

·n1crc arc uwny

hydro-elcdiiC pl ant s
Europe, however

GUEST SPEAKER at the noon luncheon Tuesday of
the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce was Charles C
Cassell, constructmn manager of the hyd1 o-electnc plant
bemg bmlt at the Racme Locks and Dan1 on the Ohio s1de

Coal industry
rejects call

By DREW VON BERGEN
sa td he ts wallmg to contmu e
WASHINGTON (UPIJ ta lks at the Whlte H,.use , as
The soft coal mdustry today Ca rter hns requested
rejected Pres1dent Carter's
On Tuesda y, C'utcr sa1d,
call lor both s1des m the 72· "The present stnlcmale m the
da y-old coal strtke to resume coal stnkc m n~tt s continuing
SOLUTIONS TO STRIKE
contract t alks at the Whlle and lll CI casmg hardships on
The U. S . Department of Energy has called a meeting in the
House
thts co unt ry and a lso on the
In a letter sent to Labor mmers ''
Cleveland suburb of Brook Park for today to begin a study on how to
Secretar y Ray Ma!'s ha ll,
He sa1d he wo uld have to
deal with the strike. Representatives of eight midwestern states are
chamnan E 8 I .etsenrmg of we1gh the use of the Taft·
expected to attend.
the
B1tummous
Co al Hart ley ba ck-tu·work urdcr 1f
Operators Assocaatwn satd th1s latest effort lo fmd a
Carter should deal first w1th settlement falls
the Umted Mm e Workers
In re ject ing ClJrtcr' s
offacials becaUse they are to proposal, the coal mdu,iry
blame for the Impasse .
noted that Miller had ac;
"We are as concerned as cepted the patt , as had
any cihzen about the welfare Marsha 11 and chiC! Ieder at
of this country," LelSenrmg medmtor Way ne Horvtlz.
said " That y, elfare wtll not
"ThiS co untry' s we lfare
be well served by d1scarding w11l not be served by
the results of lour months of a not her
ro und
of
hard
barga1mng
me
re
ly
ullbze
the
existing
boxes
energy
cris1s
1s
over
The
ba
rgam
mg,"
sa
td
Let
scnrm~
The Meigs County Combecause a crowd of rowdaes
posSlblhty exists that m the
missioners Tuesday night without addll!Onal cost.
prevented a law!ul meetmg
(he
consensus
of
the
It
was
near
future
the
courthouse
accepted and awarded the b1d
and
phySically terromed l\S
steps
be
taken
to
board
that
be
closed
on
may
have
to
SQUAD MAKES RUN
of John Gibson Motor City in
Variable cloudiness With own offlcaals.
Th e
Middl epo rt
the amount of $5~,844 for the conserve energy m county Saturdays.
"Coal cornpames are losing Emer gency Squad was called
Dave Spencer, o!flce snow flumes today, tomght
purchase of a 1977 ln- buildmgs due to the present
,manager at the Meigs County and Thursday Hlghs today m1lhons of doll'fs per day for Clarence Murra y, ~47
ternallonal chasSIS and energy crisis.
dec1ded
that
The
board
Highway Department, met and Thursday wtll be m the badly needed to develop new Hea dley St., at 10· 21 a.m.
Cobey packer for the county
each
department
should
with the commiSsioners to upper 20s or lower 30s and energy resources," he con- Tuesday, a med1cal pa tient
landfill operation.
mamtain
a
room
temrequest
the appropriation of lows tomght will be m the tmued "Nevertheless w1th He was taken to Veterans
Gibaon's bid was the only
all deference and courtesy for Memonal Ho sp1tal where he
perature
of
not
more
than
70
as cert1fled by the teens.
EDA
funds
one received that met
the reasons outimed, we are was adn utted
degrees
dunng
the
working
budget
commission.
specifications, in that the
Hl-WWTEMPS
obliged
to decline the requc,;.
that
all
therhours
and
Spencer
presented
a
copy
Truxmore bid was for a side
NEW YORK (UP!) - The The umon must get tts own
BOND FORFEITED
65
mostats
be
turned
back
to
of
the
auditor's
report
on
the
loading vehicle that would
highest temperature reported
Terrence Bre wer , Port·
require the purchase of all degrees at 3:30p.m. on week- 1977 EDA grant which was Tuesday t o the National house m order."
UMW President Arnold land, forfeit ed a $50 bond m
new dump boxes to fit the days and at noon on Satur- rev1ewed . by the com- Weather ServiCe, excluding
M11ler
accepted a proposed the court of Pomeroy Mayor
day, effec!lve Feb. 18.
misstoners. Spencer also
truck.
Alaska and Hawau, was 84 contract earlier this month , Clarence Andrews Tuesda y
nus
pohcy
is
to
remam
in
presented the highway
The specifications called
degrees at M1am1 Beach, Fla .
for a front loader that could effect until the present department's snow removal Today's low was 18 degrees only t o ha ve the UMW mght . The bond was posted on
bargammg council reJect 1t a d1st urbm g the peace
report for costs incurred lor
-:::::::::::~=:::&gt;.~:::::=::~: =:::::::::·:·:·:·:·:·:···:·:·:·:·:;:·:·:·:-:-:-:-:-:-:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:::·:::·:::·:::·:::·: :·:::·:::::::::::::::::~::
below zero at Miles C1ty, overwhelmingly. Miller has charu:e
as
reported
to
snow
removal
~
» the Disaster Serv1ces Mont.
Agency .
~1~~
~~I Also meetmg with the
board · was Troy Zwilhng m
By Uoited Press International
regard to a road near
ClEVELAND - THOUSANDS OF NORTHEAST Ohio Syracuse which needs repatr By ROBERT SANGEORGE McPhillips said late Tuesday .
the southern part of the
college students have been stricken wtth an undetermined due to eroston.
CINCINNATI (UP!) l 'These conditions fairly valley, to 51&gt; mches of ram
variety of flu over the past several days, it was reported today.
stated
that This
week's
slowly dry ."sunshine, high tempera- equivalent in northeastern
Zwilling
State health department epidemiologist Frank
measures need to be taken to moderating temperatures tures Ill the 30s - are sechon. of the reg10n. "But
Holtmauer said throat cultures from University of Akron msure that the road w1ll be and generaUy dry weather absolutely beautiful for
no
weather
students have been sent to Columbus for analysis and it would open during Rood periods for are " perfect" for reducmg preventmg se'rious floods.'' there 's
mechanlam
to
melt
1t right
not be known before Thursday which Ou strain lS active.
emergency vehtcles . The the threat of flooding along Mc Phillips said " It was now and none Ill the extended
wmmtssioners stated that the Ohio River and its these kinds of conditions that
COLUMBIA, S. C. - DR. ALLAN GEORGE Thurmond, they and the highway tributaries , experts at the got us out of trouble last fore cast," the hydrolog ist
S81d.
brother of U. S. Sen. Strom Thunnond , R-S.C ., was indicted supenntendent would mspect National Weather Service's year .'' ~
Making the Situation more
TUesdaY on :14counts of filing falae Medicaid claims.
the road
Ohio River Forecast Center
A combination of factors complicated, the degree of
The federal Indictment against the North Augusta
Attending were Henry have concluded.
would be necessary to create inconsiStency of Ohio Valley
obstetrician alld his aecret.ary, Nell C. Shaffer, said the pair Wells, Richard Jones Qnd Jim
The inconsistent weather a flood threat, the r~ver weather is exceptional, when
rued Medicaid payment forms lor ser:vices he did not perform Roush, commissioners and patterns of late winter and forecaster noted. "Even ram
compared to other parts of
between June, 19'13, and June, 1975. ·
Mary Hobstetter, clerk.
early sprmg In the Ohio won 'I melt much of the snow the Umted States, McPhillips
Di'. Thurmond could not be reached for comment at his
Valley make 1t impossible to cover 1f tl's not wann. We'd added. "We (in the Ohio
home tate TueSday nll!ht. The maximum sentence on each of
predict definitely wh~ther need temperatures in the 50s Valley ) live almost day~o­
the 34 counta II five years in prison or a $10,000fine.
!here will or will not be and 60s and s~bstantial rain ." day with what happens Ill the
serious flooding, explained
Snow cover in the Ohio Gulf of Mexico. As a result,
JERUSALEM -IRSAEU POLICE today stepped up their
PLACE CHANGED
Tom ,McPhillipa, acling hy- Valley is averagmg I 75 we can have floods and
search for Arab saboteurs I'OSPOOSible for a bomb blast that
The location of a public drologist In charge of the mches of ''rain equivalent" droughts here almost any
ripped ;,like llghlning" through a crowded commuter bus, meetmg by the Me1gs County river forecast center .
the amount of snow, when time of year "
!tilling two people and injuring dozens more.
Commissioners and the
But a continuation of dry melted, 1t would take to make , McPhillips
sa1d
the
The esplollon Tueetlay ripped off the rear of the bus Middleport Improvement weather with temperatures in
1.7~ inches of ram. But the
moderatmg temperatures
paSiintl through the predominantly religious Geula quarter In Corp. has been changed to the the 20-to-30 degree range will snow cover varies from bttle also are reducing the
(Continued on PIS• 10)
Meigs Inn at 7· 30 p.m
lessen the chance of flooding, or nothing near trtbutanes m problem of ice jams along the

f1'-Tews. • •in Brie+s§

~

•

mterfere wlth the Iog•c and reasonn\g needed to settle the
stnke at the national level," sa1d Clem
" I know people are fearful their electriCity Will be cutoff and
would like to see the guard ordered out to move coal," sa1d
Clem. " But this will induce hate in the m1nds of the mmer and
they will he less subject to log1c and reasomng They wtll let
emot1ons rule and there is less chance of a settlement 1!
emotions run high.
" I think we are better off to allow those m Washington to
settle the strake, " said Clem " Force has never solved
anythmg."
Meanwhile, 11 was reported today U1at U1e Ohw H1ghway
Patrol, m some mstances, has kept coal haulmg trucks under
s urvetllan('f .
" We have m the past, from lime to lime, been mode aware o!
movements," sa1d Patrol Capt. Robert Huffman. " We do keep

.::: :' ::·:::: :: ·::::: .·:·:· •, :' ·.: ·.. ::.: ::·.: ::

;:

ELBERFELD$

TRIG'TEA
KETTLE

-.'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday , February 15 , 1978

"

political purposes.

2~QT.

MEET WEDNESDAY
EAST MEIGS - The
February meetlnl! o! the
Eastern Local Band Boosters
''· will be held at 7:30 p.m .
Wednesday In the high school
band room

Rhodes orders Utilities to share power

•

Muriel's plans
~ rthcomm·g
are 1.0

dollars of property losses,"
he said.
The report sald :
f
- The national Inventory o
dams complied by the Corps
of Engineers is "mcomplete,
inaccurate and misleading."
- Most states Jack the
manpower and resources for
dam safety programs.
_ Most states would favor
federal' aid for dam safety.
but fear there would be
b u r den so m e f e de r a 1 :·::··:·:·::·::·::·::::·::···::·:: ::·::·:::·:·:::·:·:· :.·:·:·.·,·:·:::·:
regulations '
The
Bureau
of
EXTENDED FORECAST
Thursday
through
Saturday, fair Thursday
Reclamation and the Corps of
Engmeers repeatediy have
and Friday and a chance of
failed to request sufficient
sa 1ur d ay. HI g b•
' funds ' to inspect and repair
snow
Iedera I dams.
mostly will be In the ZOo
and lows will lie betweea
five aod 15.

DAIRY ·vAiJ.Ey

Member Federal Det•d IMUrance Corpoqtian

~o.ooo

some
dams jn the country, and an
additional 1,600 are being
built every year, the report
sa1d, yet most of them have
never been mspected.
"Why must be walt for a

BURGERS
t;W•Umf._
Hra.: 10:00
Sun .•Thon.
Frldor •ncl
5H Us oi!M

convened, but acll~n on many
bills was postponed because
several lawmakers had to
hitchhike to the Topeka
C8p1tol.
Followmg the storm, b1tter
cold settled into the Midwest,
guaranteeing a slow dig-mit.
In Southern California, still
cleaning up the muck and
debris left by weekend
deluges, the bodies of three
persons were found in the
wreckage of a singl...,.gine
plane that crashed into a
snow..Wouded momtains!de
in the San Bernardme

Police h~ve profile.

~
ADOLPH'S
MIDII.EPORT, CillO

Bonn talks was Economics
Mlmster Otto Lambsdor!f,
who
recently
visited
Washmgton and sa1d Schmidt
had no plans to spur the West
German economy for fear
that any add!honal pumpprimmg would invtte h•gher
mflat10n.
West Germany's mflation
rate, already one of the
lowest m the world, slowed

economies of France and 2tl"

OEVO'TEO TO n/E

When you need a loan, what
you really need IS a qu1ck, Simple "yes" . . . and we'd like to
see that you get it I That's why
we try to say " yes" when you
see us for. a loan, and "yes" to
low cost payments tool Get
facts!

m""

other 5e&lt;'tions of the nallon
hit by ferocious storms thiS
winter.
" They're jL'Sl tempting fate
to go out under these
conditions for anything other
than an emergency," saad
Kansas Highway Patrolman
Walter Wilson in Topeka .
-Interstate 70 was closed Ill
western Kansas . Most Dights
mto
Kansas
C1ty
International Airport were
halted until Monday night .
Feder a I
A v 1 at ion
Administration spokesman
Ge.)rge Stanfill said only 19
aircraft took off or landed
during tile day, compared to
the normal 450.
Both houses of the MlSliOuri
Legislature m Jefferson City
canceled sessions. The
Kansas
Le~islature

Treasurer makes new appeal

111E DAU. V SENTINEL

We've Been Saying '"'YES"
To Loans for a Long Time!

"We should count ow blessings ," Missouri Highway
Patrolman George Grazier
sa~d m Jefferson City . "ThiS
Is the middle of February and
"'another few weeks it could
he spring . And then a gam thls
isn't a Boston or a New
York ."
At least two deaths were
blamed on the storm. A car
and an ambulance collided on
an icy patch of highway near
Willow Sprmg, Mo ., killing a
heart patient
in the
ambulance and critica lly
mjwing low persons . A 7:1year-old Salina. Kan
died of a heart attack while
shoveling snow.
Rut there were fewer
reportsoftrafllcacc!dentsor
stranded motorists than in

Weather Service predicted
snow of 4 inches'or more lor
New York, Pluladelphla and
Washmgton, U said blizzardbattered New England would
esca pe the brunt of the
system t)lal began with
deadly ralll$jn"C8Iifornla ilst
Friday
1n the West, another series
of wmter squalls developed in
the mountains o! Arizona and
traveler's advisories were
1ssued for tfie mountams m
New Mexico, Nevada and
Utah .
Since they had escaped
most of winter 's fury,
M i d 1a n d e r s
we r e
philosophical about Monday's
storm, wh1ch slowed the pace
of life to a crawl in Kansas
and Missouri

.

111

·rlley ate made by the
French, Husstans and Sw1ss
people, Cassell state•!
'lbe obJectwn to bUl ldmg
thts type of umt ts the l!lltinl
cust, Casse11 scud , whi ch IS
$54 m1Ulon However , Cassr•ll
cxplatncd, to operate the unit
ts not costly a s 1l dues nul
requu·e any type o! fuel
At present t hey u1 e in the
pr·ocess of insta lling n eurfcr
dam whtch IS attnchcd tu the
locks on the Ohto stdc Pil mg
1s ulso being pla ted out In
the nver wtlh the work
be ing done by the Dravo
Corp . 'l'hlS wlll be com·
pl etcd by lhe end of .Jul)
As soon as thas work 1s
completed th ey w1ll stalt the
cone! etc \\ ork un the powm
house wluch w11l get un·
der w3y m August
The con crete w11\ be
completed m t979 lind thea
they w1ll begm the erectwn of
the hydro units The tutnl
operation 1s expected tu be
completed m Sept 1980
Cassell co mmented.
Dunn~ m nstrudwn peak
there wlll be 120 to 12!i per·
sons employed Cassell &gt;tated
but only rour to ftvc person s
w1ll be employed when the
untls are completed and tn
operation

There Wlll be two hydroelectriC umts at th e Racmc

Slit' .

al so
un1t.s

t'nsSt•ll nbser vt•d lie
nct dcd
tlwt
th e
urc

lwing

built

by the Ohm Power Com·
pa ny The po wcr will be
ued mtu ()nfl of thmr s ub-

slfltwns nt Hnvcnswood
Cassell pomtcd out that ice
m tho riv er has cuu scd some
pmblems us the icc presents
danger not only to persons
wur klng but tu the t."qll t~

mrnt
C'usscll udded thut persons
w111 be unable to see the plant
h nm tliC lu~hwuy After the
wurk ts complet ed a
recrcat hmul nrc•n will be
prov ided 11s well us a fishing
!ltc r , and an oi.Jscrva tion
Jlllth
F1 cd Ct ow, president,
mmourH.'tHI thnt n dmner will
be hcltlun l'cb. 26 In honol' of
C:eorgc Mu ssar, a native of
Mc tgs County und a grnduatc
of Pom cruy 1-hgh School, who
ts presently t he president uf
the Uhlo State Automobile
Mutm1l Insurunce Cumpa ny ,
Co lumbus Hnd son or Mrs
Clarcm:c Mussa r, Pomeroy,
und D1ek Campbell , ed1tor of
the CtUzcn-Journal, who also
attended Pume roy High
School
T1ckets to the dmner arc $5
and m:t y be purcha:ied fr om
th e sc( rctary, ~-:rnmogcnc
Hul st em
A Jcntn)lvr date of April 27
has bet•n set to honor ()octorN
Ruger IJunlels und !Jr. R. R.
Boice, Crow announced.
Cruw r eported that he
hopes to set up a rm•eting
.
with
Gov Jay Roc kefeller m
regard to U. S. 3.1 to the new
brld~e at Ravenswood Crow
named Blll Chllds and Allan
Dowmc to the cnmnuttee to
sec Hockefeller .
Crow also reported that he
has
conta"Cted se veral
Pumcroy fl!gh Alumni In
regu rd to restoring the old
senwr hlgh bulldtng and the
(Continued

Balance $59,000
for Middleport
The balance o! all o! the
ex pendable funds of Middleport VIllage Council as of
Jan 31 tota led $59,065 40
accordmg to the monthly
report of Gene Grate, village
clerk-treasurer
Rece1pts and expenditures
for the month and the bala nce
o! each fund as of Jan 31,
respectively,
in clude :
general, $7,339.15, $7,673 16,

Chances of flooding -reduced
Oh1o R1ver "Generally, ice
only begins to re-form and
strengthen
when
the
temperature drops below 20
degrees ."
An enormous ice gorge and
subsequent difftculhes shut
down lhe Markland Dam,
near Cmcmnatl, bloc kmg
critical commercial barge
traffic on the Ohio for more
than two weeks. Army Corps
of Engineers personnel
succeeded in reopening the
dam just last weekend. ,
"We're in pretty good
shape now in terms of river
lee. There's Ice In the middle
of the river, but we have no
reports of large jams
preventing navtgation . At
some areas we've got 80
percent ice coverage on the

river,

but

no

McPhillips said.

jams,"

$36,011 42; cemetery, $776,
$779.88 , $809.36 , f1re eqUipment , $2, 450, $1 ,164.47,
$2,216.7 1, swlmmmg pool, no
re cm pts, $7 .48, $2,590.52 ,
plannmg com mis sion, no
rece1pts, $3, $96.49 , street
maintenan ce, $1 ,584 94,
$5,339 .57, $4,597 Jl , !ederal
reven ue sharing, $3,115,
$1,332 44 , $11 ,412 OJ ; an·
tJreccssJOn asststance, $385,
$12 02, $1 ,331 56 Receipts for
the month totaled $15,6a0.011
wh1le disbursements totaled
$16,3'!2 Q2
VIllage Council's obhgated
fund s totaled $23,361 22 as of
J an JJ wllh no receipts and
no diSbursements during the
month
The balance o! obhgated
moneys of the Board of
Pubhc Affairs as of Jan . 31,
a mounted to $189,666 78
Receipts, diSbursements for
the month and the end of the
month balance of the various
!unds mclude : sa nitary
se wer, $6 ,966 .57, $6,314 .27,
$29 ,871 01 , samtary sewer
escrow, $855, no dusbursements, $142,780.011 ; water,
$7 ,016 27, $7,967.54, $9,853.38;
water meter trL'Sls, $125,
$150, $7 ,162.30. Rece1pts for
the month totaled $14,962.1K
while disbursements totaled
$14,431 81.
Total bonded indebtedness
of the town standa at
$1 ,300,809.38 or $467.17 per
cap1ta.
II

1\

�3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb, 15, 1978

2- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday, Feb. 15 . 1978

•

Pirates slip past
White Falcon five

Howsam will not file suit against Kuhn zn Vida Blue deal
By RICK VAN SANT
CJNCINNATI IUPI I -Cincinna ti Reds President Bob
Howsam has used some of the
sa me
langua ge
Co m·
miss ione r Bowie Kuhn
used in overturning the Vida
Blue trade to armounce that
the Red s will not ftle suit to
try and gel the Oakland As
ace pitche r.
Howsam said 1\u~sda y that

filing suit aga insI Kuhn would
"not be in baseba ll 's best
interest'' - the same reason

Kuhn gave foc nixing the
Jeal.
Ever since Kuhn blocked
the Reds' deal w get Bhll:
from Oakland in exchange for
minor
leaguer
Dav e
Revering and $1.7~ million,
tho Reds have been trying to
acquire Blue in a deal that
Kuhn would -approve.
But those efforts, Reds'
off icials said Tu ~sday, have
been " terminated ."
"We have tried to alter the
trade throu~h a talk with

thought , the Reds could win
Without Blue, who, if teamed
with Reds' ace ·rom Seaver ,
would hHve given Cinry one
of the be• t 1-2 pitching
combinations in the maj or
leagues.
"The Reds are one of the
best clubs in th&lt;: game, and ,
although Blue would have
been a valuable and desirabl e
addition. we did not consider
th e Blue trade one 10 make or
break our team . We felt we
could win before we mude

Charlie Finley of the A's, but
without success.'' Howsam
said late Tuesda y. "Further,
we do not wish to pursue the
trade through the courts .
Howsam said the Reds had
deeided aga inst go ing to
court not beca use they
thought they would lose, but
because of "our beli ef that
bas eball has been in the
courts too much and another
suit at this time would not be
· in baseball 's best interest."
Howsam also sa id he

thig trade and we still feel
that way ," Hf1wsam said.
Howsam, who had been
si!Pnl since Kuhn'S Jan. 30
veto, (:{ISO finall y aired some
of his opimons about the
ruling. " It seems the Jan. 30
decis ion docs not really
address the Revering·Blue
trade, but is th e commissioner 's effort to promote foc the public record hiS
personal belief regarding
'c&lt;Jmpetitive bQJanee.'
" And that's really what this
decision should be called 'The Co mpe ti tive Balance

Dt"'&lt;.·ision.'''
"We have informed the
(•om missioner Umt we do not
intend to initia te a l.ctwi'l uil in
an effort to overtw-n his
decision on the trade. We
have not done this because we
think he was right , or that he
had th&lt;: power to interfere, or
because we believe a suit
would not be successful. or
because we· recognize his
actions or views as being in
th e best interest of baseball .
"Our decision was made
entirely on our belief that
baseball has been in the

courts too muc!l aod another
suit at this time would not be
in baseball's best interest.
"We have told the commissioner we tntend to work
within the framework of
baseball to resolve the very
serious problems that this
decision and other actions
ha ve raised. We want the
ba seball owners and general
mana ger s to understand
clearly the concerns we have
and make their own good
judgments.
" We appreciate the interest
by our fans throughout this

Marquette trips
rival Wisconsin
United Press lnlernatlooal

Before Marquette 's game
with Wisconsin Tue sday

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor ·

.-

LAS VEGAS. Nev . (UP! ) - One roll of the dice, one turn of
the cilrd, can make a man a fortWle in this city and it's also
possible one lucky punch tonight can make a man a king.
Possible, but highly unlikely.
Something called built-in instinct always keeps Muhammad
Ali moving away from these kinds of punches, only one of
which young, ambitious Leon.Spinks feels he'd need to become
the new world heavyweight champion.
Ali didn't take this fight to lose it. He took it because he felt
he could handle the inexperienced 24-Year old Spinks without a
whole Jot of trouble a nd because he saw an easy chance of
picking up another $3 miiUon without exerting himself too
much.

Professionally speaking, Spinks hasn 't even golleo his feet
wet yet He has had only seven previous fights. His biggest
prize up ro now is the Olympic he won two years ago. So what?
Ali can show him the one he won 18 years ago. Spinks thinks of
, himself as a full-fledged professional, but in Ali's eye he's still
IJoth ing mOre than an amateur and can you honestly picture an
amateur takrng away Ali 15 title ?
f ca n't.
Having S.en Spinks fight in the Olympics , I imagine he' ll get
in there tonight and give it everything he has for as long as he
can . He has a tendency to swing wildly and tha t means he 'll
probabl y miss a Jot. That also means he's bound to get nailed
by Ali at any given time, and when Ali catches him, I think it'll
be lights out for Leon Spinks.
·
Personally I think they should have billed this as a fourroUnd exhibition rather than a 15-r ound title ccntest . Ali has

practically all the adva ntages over Spinks, starting with a ri·
JXllUld pull ir1 the weights . He also has a much longer reach and
20 times more experience .

lf you 've been watching the champion in his last few fights,
then you 've seen how he has been going ~bout his work with the

same enormnus enthu siasm as most elevator operators or city
bus drivers go about theirs .
'
To put it simply, Muhammad Ali is bored beyond belief. He's
bored with wlmt he has been compelled to tlo U1e past 18 years,
bored wiUl lraining and all those elements connected with
boxing, cx~.:cpt of course with the money it brings him and
eventually that could begin boring him as well . To amuse
himself foc awhile , he quit talking before this fight.
''I'm tired of carrying the burden,'' he ~ id . ''Why do I have
to do all the talking' "
But then he became fed up with keeping quiet and began
talking to the media again Tuesday evening. Ali realizes he
doesn't have much longer to go in the ring . Sooner or late r he'll
have to quit and that thought ·keeps creeping into hi~ mind
more and mure, frequently enough so that he felt compelled to
tell • group of school kids the way he felt the other day . He told
them :

·

"I'm thc.greatest and rm the champion now but someday
they 'll be 'a new champion just like you kids will be the new
doctors, the new lawyers and the new scientists.' '
Ali has a way of saying a lot of things, some of which he
means only fo~ the moment. The way he talks now, when he
does talk, he sounds as if he's getting ready to wrap it all up.
Sometime this year probably. Not tonight, though . Not
against Leon Spinks.
·

night , players and coaches on
both sides were downplaymg
the state rivalry , claiming it
was just another game :
But alter the No. 1 ranked
had
beaten ,
Warr iors
Wis consin, 7~'64 , before
, 10,938 screaming fans at the
Milwaukee Arena, Marquette
guard Jim Boylan finally
·
broke down .
''It's not just another game
if we go against Wisconsin,"
Boylan said. "If we lose l\l
Wisconsin we don 't hear the
end of it for a year . They'd
even be talking about it (a
victory) tw o years from
now.
The victory, the 15th in a
row over Wisconsin for the
defending NCAA champions,
was an easy one as AllAmerica guard Butch Lee
punished the Badgers with 29
points. Lee scored 10 points in
a nine-minute streak, in
which the Warriors went
from a 6'6 tie to a 2&amp;-12 lead .
Marquette Coach Hank .
Raymonds was amazed at his
team's easy victory,
·
" I didn't think t~e game
would be that easy honest to
God 1 didn't ," Raymonds
said.
Elsewhere , New Mexi co,
the cou.n try· s fifth-ranked
team, rem itS winning streak
to 13 games with an 87-69
.- - - - - - - - - - - - -.,

:

Pro

:

I

.

I

Sports Transac ttons
Tu es day

Ba se ba ll
Bal ti mor e -

Signed

r el iel

Ba sketball
S1nned
free .agent
.,
center Za id Abdut .Az i z. Placed
guard JpJo Wh ite on the IO ·di!~
1nact i ve reserve I 1st .
Bosrorl

~

pitct1 e r Don Stanhou se to a two .
year contre c t.
Hock ey
Co ll ege Ba s lct!TDilll Results
Minn eso ta - Si g ned defen Se
man Br y an Max w el l otthe N ew By United Pl'"ess lnternat.onat
East
Enq l and Whal er s.
Albnv 89 , P l tt sbgh 42
Allr ed 14 , R IT 72
Babson 75, Conn . Co l i 54
Bos ton 51 . 96 , Fitchbg 78
Cthd r l 102. S.Law·r nce 56
Colmbia 82 , Seton HII 78
C,W . Post 90 , CCNY 84

FROSH LOSE
The Meigs Frush dropped a
31-:!0 thrifler to host Wellston
last ni ght to drop to 3-8 on the
year. Dave Kennedy led the
locals with 20 bi g points wilh
Ch ris J udge ge tting six .
Meigs was playing with just
six players as the flu has hit
that team also. Meigs made 8
of 16 free throws.
Meigs plays Point Pleasant
at MHS tonight al 5:15.
Deever got 20 · points for
Wellston .

lli F. DAIL V SENTINE:i.

DEVOTED TO TifE
lNTF.Rt:.ST OF

MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEH ILl.

E11ec. Ed ,
RORE~THOEfl.lfH
Pubhllht.~l

City Edltur
1ll:4ily except Sa turday
PuuU~hinl!.

by The Ohiu Valley

Inc.,
Ill
Cuurt St., Pumeruy , Ohiu 45769.
Compt~n}'· Mt.llimetlia ,
Bll:t1ne._qs

Office PhQne 992· 2.\i£.

Edi~oria l

Phone 992 ·2 1 ~7.
Second class poslagl' paid at
Pumeruy,Ohio.

National advertising represen·
tit live Wanl · Griffith Company,

Inc., BottlnellJ anti Gall&lt;!gher Div ,
157 -Third AVf , New York, N.Y.
10017.
Subscriplion rates : ~ l ivered by

c&lt;trrier w~ re ll\'a1l&lt;tbkl 75 c~ n t.s per
'.l"t'ek. By 1\l(.ltur Ruute when• t•urner
l!t'fVJt"e nut

aV&lt;t l lC~blc,

O!lt; muntl1 ,

t\.25. ll)' m111l Ill Ohio 11nrl W. V11.,
Yt.•Hr. $22.00 ; Six months,
Sll.50 : Three months, Si .OO:
l·:l!lewhere 126.00 year; Sill nHmlhs
S1 J.50 : Three months. S7.5D. ·
Sul)scnptiun prf1..-e lut'l~.nlt::; Sunday '
Tnnes..SenUnl!!.
On~

J

I

E Conn 66, Wrcstr 55
Ed nbro St. 79, lnd Pa . 67
Glenvl 84 , W ~a . St. 76
Gordon 92, Nichol s 78

Hartwick 52, Union 42
K ing ' s NY 10 1, E . N az 9-d
Mass 87 , V ill anov a 12
Oneon t a 61 , Ithaca 60
Pa ce 97, Queens Coli 89
Pr o v 72, Niagara 70
Rochester 66 , Hobart 62

Scranton 88, Wilkes 74
Si ena 85 , Maris! 67
Ssquehnna 61, w. Md . 57
w . Libiii . M . Harvey 70
wesleyan 60 , Tr in1ty 59
w va . wsl yn lOJ, O&amp;E 76
South
A vern 86, GrnsbOro 16
Cr sn .Nwmn 106. P1kv l 77
Cinch V.!ll 64, Emr y&amp;Hnry 53
Del St . 65. Bowie St . 53
DuQuesne 79 , RIChmond 12
E Car . 78, Old Dom 12
Ga . Tech 69, LOUi$vl 59
Hmptn lnst 100. JC Sm lh 81
Ky St . 121, tiid .. Prdue 77
M iles 10 1. Morehouse 90
N C .A&amp;T 96, N.C Cent 74
. Rndlph .Mcn 95 , G. Mason 79
'r vl an e 86, So . Miss . Bl
wa sh Lee 92, Brock 89
Yngs twn St. 68, Bllr mne 6J

MEN'S

CORDUROY
JEANS
to $16.99 &amp; $18 .00 in
group of men's Levis,
Lee ,
and ' Wrang ler
Corduroy Jeans. Stock up
now, t he y' re warm .

CLEAN UP LOT
LADIES WINTER

One table of ladies' farnous label
casua l and dr ess shoes. Fa ll and
wmter sty les, broken sizes. Save
111 now at th is new low pnce.

1/ -

/2

FLANNEL. SHIRTS ke+'lf::'

10
161 1

17' 1
26

GB
611
7 1' 1
911
9
14

·GB

JO 2f .526 6
28 28 .500 71 1
25 29 .463 9• 1
n 34 .39J IJ I '
20 35 .364 15

Detroit
Kan ss C!y
lnd1ana
Pacific Divi5ion
W L
43 9

Pel . GB

Porfland
827
p hoen1•
J6 17 .679 1• •
Seattle
. 28 2s . 528 151 1
Los Angels
20 '17 .509 J61
Golden Sl.
n 29 .482 18 1
Tuesdav's Aes ull s
Buflalo 101. Seattl e 100
Cle\le 136, N.Y. 127 . 2ol
Philadelphia 11 9 , Indiana 116
Ch icago 102 , New Or leans 95
Kansas C1ty 125, Houston 102
Denver 10 3. Washington 98
Boston 98, Golden Sta re 75
Los Ang 128. San Antoni o 114
Porlland 113. Phoen ix 100
Wedn esday's Games
Ph iladel ph l&amp; at Detroit
New Or leans at Milwaukee
Indiana at Houston
Aflanta at Portland
Thursday's Gam es
Sea tt le at New Jersey
Buffalo at was111ngton
DenYer at Cleveland
Boston at Phoeni)(

OFFn

EACH
VALUES TO 57.00&amp; $8.00
. MEN' S LONG SLEEVE

Values To $8 .00 &amp; $9 .00
Men's Long Sleeve

VALUES TOS12.99&amp; $14.99
CLEANU~LOT LADl'ES
~of

! ~

'

JE4NS :~: ..:~
PAIR

Values to $9.00, one large rack of
ladles' sweate,rf_.:t.and ~cruseS-:": ~~
Famous labels . See these and
save now.

Values to $9. 00 men'&amp; long
sl eeve dress and sport shirts. :
a!! from our stock . Save now

on

The Athens·County·
Savings &amp; LOan Co.
296 ~cond St.
Pomeroy , Ohio ., ~ _

SWEATERS

SHIRTS
thisof·o~
REG, 14 .50 VALUE
LEVI&amp; LEE MEN'S

DENIM JEANS FLANNEL SLE
Men',s fam ous Le vi and Lee Jeans.
F ir st qualify. Reg . S14 .50 value.
Weste rn and f lare leg s. Good weight.
Stock up now .,
'

One large group of children's flannel
sleepwear. Reduced 50 Pet. Good run of
sizes. Asst, styles .

12

FALL AND WINTER

SHIRTS

Special group men's long sleeve sport
and dress shirts. Values to $5.00. Out they
go now at this low price.

1/ OFF
/2R

NOW

VALUES TO 59•
ASST. '!. TO 1 YARD

PIECE GOOD

REMNANTS

Values to 59c in this group of 112 to I yard
pieces of piece good remnants . See th ese
and stoc k up now .

J&amp;R SPORT SHOP

EACH

POMEROY, 0. ~
J

OFF
REG.
PRICE

•

00

1

•••
••
••

EACH

VALUES TO 69• • 79•
LARGE SELECTION
PL_A IN AND FANCY

WAHAMA Ull - Barni tz ,

•"'

FABRICS

.•

Values to 79c yard in this 44 and 45 inch
width plain and fancy asst.. fabrics .
Regrouped for quick sale.

•

Wd i!t l

32 1 "

JJ

Th 1 ~h

14

26

!7

11
II'

1

8

Ci!lf
Nee ._
Wn st

I~':

F1 ~ l

11' .·
9• 1

An ... lc

7· 1- 15 ;
Zuspan ,
5·3· 13 ;
Bless ing , 4·1-9 ; Buzzard , 3-1·
7 ; R. Barnl tz, 2·3· 7; Weaver,
U -7. TOTALS 2l· IM8.
Score by quilrters :

1

1J
91

J

NEW OHI.EANS 1UPI 1
'11w NPw Ot·lcan."i J:rtz t(lthly
:-;aid Pt~ t c MftrUVIt' h, llw

NBA's

N . Gatlla
13 11 t8 17- 59
Wahama
12 13 12 21-58
Reserve score - Wahama
60 Nor t t) Galtia 58

lt•atlm~

sct•rcr. would

undeq.:o a t~s·1 'l~hurscl::l}l ~~,,·
Frida y .on Ius injured knC{'

and

mi ght mi ss
the
rct n:ti ndcr uf tht• season ,

Oregon t.:1ay 58 Sylvania
North view 46
Ottawa Hills 63 Fayette 54
Ottawa .Giandorf 62 ElmwoOd
42
Ottoville 81 Columbus Grove

53
Port Clinton 71 Bo wling
Green 66
Pymatuning 73 Grand Valley

50

Reading 70 Hamilton Badin
49
Reynoldsburg 80 Westerville
N 59
Ridgedale 54 Wynford 53
Rittman 73 Manchester 64
River V1ew 84 Tri .Valley 61
Sandy Valley 68 Canal Fu lt on
NW 56
Shaker Hts 49 Cleveland Hts

47
Southington 74 Lordstown 49
St Cla irsville 67 Cambridge 65
St Henry 84 Parkway 76
Swanton 73 Adna n (M i ch)
Madison 53
Taylor 44 New Richmond 42
Tiffin Columbia n 70 Shelby 63
Tal Centra l 82 Tot Stri tch 72
Tal Rogers 65 To! DeVilbiss

60

To! Scott 104 To! Start 5~
To! Whitmer 63 Fremont
Ross 51
Tol Woodward 88 Tol Waite 76
Trotwood Madison 88 Fair ·
born P H 75
Warren Hardmg 77 Salem 64
Wa rren Kennedy 57 Li berty
36

Wa shi ngtOn CH 85 Greenfiel d

47
Waterford 72 Meadowbrook
68

Wat er loo 74 Vienna Mathews

70
Wayne Trace 115 Ohio City 55
Wa ynesvi lle 59 Tr i -Vil!age 55
Wetl siJ ill e 76 east Pales tin e 51
West Geauga 63 Geneva 45
Wes.l Jeff er son 48 Nor t h
Un ion 46
Wes t la nd 62 West erv ill e' S 48
Wheeli ng Park (W Val 59
Steubenvil le 50
Willard 72 Upper Sandusky se
Worth ington 57 Grovepor 55
Xenia
Wi I so n
59
Day
Christ1an 58
Youngs Ursuline 71 Ho.J.,Iand
Zanesville
Danv ill e 57

Rosecrans

GOES TO BUCKET - Wahama's Bob Bamitz (14 )
goes to the bucket in the second quarter of Tuesday night's
clash against North Gallla. Attempting to stop Barnltz Is
Jim McComas of the Pirales.

Cedarville 82
Rio Grande 79
RIO GRANDE 1791
Swai n 12. 2 26 ; James 3-2·8;
Price 5-1-11; Bi se 2 2-6 ;
Purcell 7·1 15; Gibson 0· 2· 2:
Phelps 2-1-5; Royse 0. 2. 2,
Johnson 2·0· 4. TOTALS l1 · 17·

.79 .

CEDARVILLE (8 2)
Reep 9-7.26 ; D Reep 5· 2-12;
Potter 0·2-2; Mount s 11- 5-27 ;
Allen 1·0-2; Walters 0-3-3;
Schwenke 3·0-6; Kaufmen, I ·
2· 4 TOTALS 30-22·81.
Halftime score - Cedar·
v il le 46 Rio Grande 43.

are

Cla ss AAA

Ironton 82

Tec1m
Points
1 S pr l ngli ~ ld N, 13 1 13·0) 175
I Ketl ering Fi'l irm on t
Wes t (12 0)
1:.12
3 Eastl ak e N . 4( JJ.Q)
Il l
4 Bay V1I! age ( 15 Ol
11 1
JAC:KS6N {61) - Har less
5 M i dd letown 11 4 1)
105
B 4 20 : For syth .9· 1· 19 : D.
6. Sy lv an 1a Nort hv1ew
Evans 3 7 13 ; Wa ugh 1 Q.2;
I ( 13-0 )
64
Will is 0-1· 1: Martin 2-2 6.
7. Coi.Walnu i RidgC (111 J 58
TOTALS 23 -lS -61.
43
IRONTON 1821 - Lutz 3· 0· 8 Fa 1rlield 1 ( 13-1)
6 ; Linn 2-0-4; Fletcher 7-2·16 i • 9 Ga hanna Linco ln ( 11 1) 34
10. Cleve Lincoln W. { 11 1) 37
Hodges 8-0-16; Ja m es 8·2-18,
Oth er s wi lh 10 o r more
Harvey 1·0· 2; Fit zpatri ck 4· 1·
pomt s: Col umbus Watter son ,
9; Erwin 2·0-4; Wil li am s 1-1·
Struthers . Ci nci nna ti Mother
3; Gordon 2·0-4. TOTALS 38·6·
at Mer cy , Tole do Centr,11
82 .
Ca tho l i c, De l awa r e ( 1) ,
Scor e. by quarters :
Cin
cinnati Oak Hil l s. Can lor1
Jack son
10 19 14 18- 61
M cKi nl ey, Cuyahoga Ffl lls,
Ironton
19 15 23 25- 82
M en t or , A sh l an d . Akron
Reserve score - I ron ton 74
Kenn: or e and Elyna .
Jack son 37.

Ja ckson 61

Roosevelt 68
Da lton 49 Hillsdale 35
Day Belmont 61 Beaver creek

47
Day M eadowda le 62 W
Carrollton 38
Day Stivers -Pat 57 Day
Dunbar 54
Defiance 80 Wapak one ta 61
Delaware 71 Whiteha II 57
Delphos Sf Johns 70 Lima
Bath 59
De! phos Jefferson 70 Mi It er
City 63 {ot)
Delta 90 Bryan 64
East Can ton 63 Carrollton 49
·eaton 42 Ham ilton Ross 41
Euclid 85 Wi ckli ffe 41
Evergreen 73 Petti svi lle 69
Ff\irport 64 Kirtland 62
Findlay 70 Marion-Harding 75

lot)

Cla ss A
TCillll
Po111IS
1 Lakeside Do1nhury ! 117
0)
160
2 Ar canum 7 (7 0 )
1·10
3 Buckeye T rait 2 ( 13 0 ) 105
4 Ad i" ( 10 I )
95
S Lanca s ter Fisher 1 ( 121 ) A9
6 Hunllnq ton ( 10 0)
80
l . (Mdl n'g ton

Lin coln ( 12 2)
B. M1nster ( l ol . l)

601 Main St.
Pt. Plea sa nt.. W. Va.

VIS/I '

17
76

9. Rock y River

Across from ( our·lhouse

Lu lh Wes t! { tJ 2 J
o15
10. Fra nk , Adcnn(9 I )
:!8
Other s w1 111 ten or more
poi nts M an sfi eld Sl . Pe!gr's,
Sa lin evi l le So u t hern , Ea s t
Canlon . ( 1), Fl. Lor ami { 1),
Mia mi
Eflsi,
I mor Q,
Edge rt on ( 1) a nd O tt ov ill(.' ,

PHO NE
675 2988
Sunday. I p . m . 4 p . ltl .
M onday tttru SaturdilY
9.1 m . to 8 p. m .

OJ.tt!ll

Decorative , Useful and EhY·fo. tn st a ll AnYwh ere.

FRANKLIN FIREPLACES
l cl o,11 1or den., MHl

v.1Cil ri on 110111es .
tiH' 1° rl.li1 lo.. l u) is r1
11rc pl i'lr c w 1111 11\i'
d oor s O!H'r•. &lt;111
f'nf'r qy
&lt;;;l v ln u

Class AA
Team
Point s
1. Del phos St. Johns
7 ( JJ.Q)
164
2. Col. Har t ley ( 13·0 )
120
3. Ca mpbei!Mem . 2{ 13- 1) 103
4. Dresden Tri Va l. 2 ( 13

school scores

Southeastern Ohio high
Logan's ba seball coach,
. ·school baseball coaches from Howard
Bozman,
wa s
69 Class AAA, AA and A recently named district
schools ~av e been invited to director of the newly-formed
attend an ()rganization.a l SEO association.
meeting at Athens High
Bozman, along with Ironton
&amp;hool; The Plains, begiru)ing baseball coach Mike Bur·
at 2 p.m. on Sunday, Feb. 19. cham, were recently elected
Southeast District
representatives to the Ohio
High
School
Baseball
Coaches Association.
The ·association has divided {2 oil
the state into six districls, Cadi z 61 Lakeland 38
.
with each district to be Chagrin Falls 66 Beachwood
represented by two coaches 5 1
Ci n McNi c ho la s 73 Blan .
on a state board of directors. ches
ter 47
are Cin Prin ce ton 45 Ox ford
The
directors
scheduled to · meet March 12 Tatawanda 41
at Ohio State to work out Claymont 62 Dover 47
Cle Cent Cath 87 Uni v School
detail s on a statewide 12
membership drive and plan Clinton -Massie 67 E Clinton
the annual Ohio AII·Star 54
Baseball Series to be played Col Ready 89 Col DeSa les 67
Colonel Crawford 59 Mohawk
June 10-11 at OSU .
sa
loti
These two items are in- Continen ta l 69 Tl noi"a 60
cluded in a list of primary Covington 59 Versail les 42
goals set up by the coaches Crestview Allen 76 Lincol nview 59
organization.
Cuya hoga Falls 73 Kent

other areas

CO L U MB US IUP I )
Thi s
wee k ' s Un ited Pre ss In
terna t iona l Ohio H1gh Sc.hool
Boar d o f Coac hes ' gi l'l s
basketball ra tings wi th f irs !
place v otes and w on los t
records in parentheses :

Tuesday's high
Boys Hi9h Schoof
Basketba II Result s
United Press I nternationa I
Akron Buchtel 61 Can ton
McKin ley 57
Akron
Ell e t
61
Akron
Firestone 45
Antwerp 56 Holga te 48
Archbo ld 66 Patrick Henry 59
Aurora 84 Kenston 73
Ayersvllle 64 Hi cksv ille 57
Barnesv ille 82 Woodsfield n
Beallsville 81 Guernsey Cath
79 loll
Bellaire 82 Shadys ide 69
Bella ir e St Johns 72 Martms
Ferry 62
Bellefontain e 50 Urbana 48
Belpre 81 Ca ldwett 56
Bethe l Loca l 67 Sidney Leh ·
man 59
Big Walnut 67 Dublin 64
Bratenahl 74 Elyr ia Christian
59
Brook fi el d 69 Badger 63
Bu ckeye N 79 Stanton 31
Bu ckeye Valley 55 Bexley 53

R~looding

• Ball Glov es
Ca mping
Equipm ent
• Arch er y
• Indoor Gam es
eW e
hav e Gill
Ce rlifi cat es

Girls UPJ cage ratings

Tuesday's box scores

61

coaching clinic, Ohio High
School Ba seball Hall of
Fame,
rules
and
.publications.
Each of the six areas will
have a statewide chainnan,
with two ~ssistants from each
district comprising the work
committee.
Coach Bozman has been
named chairman of the Hall
of Fame committee.
One aim of the group would
be to establish a district all·star game this spring at Ohio
University o·r some other
prime site, Bozman said.
Two 20-player squads
would be selected for the
East~West competition, he .
reported .
The agenda at !he district
organizational meeting would
include an election of officers
and appointment of a committee to set up the aU-star
game.
qfficers of the statewide
as9oclatlon are Bob Chapman, Kettering Fairmont
East, president ; Woody
Kurlis,
Findlay,
vice
president; Howard Converse,
Cincinnati Princeton,
secretary; and Jirn Humpel,
Cleveland Brush, treasurer .

• Fi shing Tackle
and Rods
and Ree ls ·
• Guns and

Blessing, rugge-d big ma n for the
Wahama White Falcons, is shown attempting to go to th e
hoop against the defense of Sam Smith (15) of North
Ga lha Tuesday ntghl. The Pirut es eukcd out " 59.,\B
vtctory .

64

The

VALUES T0$5.00 &amp; $6.00
MEN'S LONG SLEEVE

ONE LARGE RACK
FAMOUS LABELS

Siewert, 6·A- 16 ; Minn is, 6·2·
14; J ust ice , 5· 1-11 ; Me Commas, S-0- 10 ; Shaw. 3·0·6 ;
Sm ith. 1-0· 1. TOTALS 26-7-59.

.· · ·. to meet this Sunday

Special Table. of ladies' first rquallty denim jeans. \lalues to
S14.99. Famous brands . Save
now.

The

tate ot the tape tor l h~ Leon
Sptnk. s M llh&lt;tmmad Ah world
he"v-ywP•ght
championShiP
t 1qhl Wl."dm•sdoly night
Spmks Ali
Ago
24
36
Wf&gt;IOhl
197 1&lt;I :12-41.
Hr1gh 1
6 1' J 6 J
RrAch
76 . eo
C h~s l nornlr11
.J0' ,•
:IJ
CM&amp; I ex pa nd~d
J1. .t6
B1ceps
151 1
1'.
Forearm
11
ll ' 1

entertain county rtval, Point
Pleasant. Then on Saturday
evening the White Folcons
jolll!Mly to Ravenswood .
NORTH GALLIA (59) -

'•

Ladies' Fall and Winter

SPORT AND DRESS

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•

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$1 ooo

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992-2184

....-,

Values to SB .OO famous brand s
men's lon g sleeve dress and
sport shirts . Larg e group .
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Men's Fall &amp; Winter

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Mldw i!SI

Bethel 8J, Goshen 77
BIJ ena vs ta 12 . Smpsn 70
Cdrvlle 82, Rio Grnde 79
D efi.an ~.. e 101, Oberlin 88
Earlha m 80, Mnchster 18
Hanover 80, Andrsn 6)
M ine 80, J . Ws ty Mich ·19
Marion 81. Ind. Tech 75
MarQUett e 75, Wis. 64
0 Oom 62, Stubn vl 61
Wartbg 100, Grnnel l 76
r
Southwest
Bshp Coli 84, Lrgstn 83
E N .M . 92, Pnhnclle 65
Mc Mrry Co t! 86. Su i Rss 79
NeW MC)( iCO87, Ha w ail 69
Tri ni ty 86, St. Ed's 77
west
Denver 78. No. Col. 71
E Mont . 90, Carroll 76
Ida Sl 84, Utah 51 81
Ida . Co\1 71 , Pac pre . 69
PI Lema 67 , Assa.Pa c 65
Pcky MI. 86. Grl Fil s 85
USI U 75, UCSD 73
W. Mont 87 , Mont. T c h 58

DRESSES

·3··

announced
The drawing for the Gi rls
Class A Sectional basketball
tournament has been r~rl­
nounced. The tournament, to
be held at Trimble High
School, begins Tuesday ,
February 28 , when Eastern
(4-2) goes against Trimble (07) at 6::!0. Federal Hocking
10-31
will meet
the
winner of that ma tc h
at 6:30 on Thursday ,
March 2, for the right to
go to the cham pi onship
contest at 7 p.m. on March 4.
In th e lower bracket,
number one-seeded Southern
17-1 ) drew a first round bye.
They will pla y at 8 p.m,
March 2. the winner of the
Miller (1-4 l - Crooksville (0101 contest. Crooksville has
pl ayed all AA schools. The
winner of that Southern
con test wi ll be in the
champions hip game to
determine who Will go to the
Chillicothe District Tournament on March B.

OFF
REG.
PRICE

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Reg . $5 .99 Values. Closeout lot
men's wa r m, f!ar,nel shirts.
Asst . patterns

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ladies' fa I! and win te r sports·
wear Save 50 Pet. now on this
gro up.

OUT THEY GO
LADJ ES
FALL AND W.INTER

MEN'S

J1 16 .69 8 -

28 21 .509
Boston
19 J l 380
Buffalo
18 3 ~ 3 60
New Jer sy
12 43 218
Centl'"al Divi sion
W l
Pet.
San Ant Oni
34 70 .630
WShn gtn
U 26 .509
Ctevetnd
26 27 491
New Or Ins
26 29 47J
A t tanra
25 29 463
Houston
20 34 310
Western Conference
Midwest Di vision
·
w L Pet
Den v er
35 20 .63 6

Ladies Fall and Winter

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VALUES TOS5 .99

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Atlantic Dh11sion
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FOOTWEAR SPORTSWEAR

B y United Press Internat ional

MHw

By United Press Inter nation al

MEN'S FAMOUS BRAND
LEE-LEVI-WRANGLER

NBA Standings

C h t ca~o

Sports transactions

New Mexico, which leads
the country in scoring with an
average of 102 points per
game, incTeased its r1ecord to
20-2 against a Hawaii team,
which now has a 1-21 mark.
F orward Ma rvin Johnson
scored 23 points to lead the
Lobus, who led only ~ 1-45
early in the second half
before a scoring spree brok~
the game open .
Sam Drummer and · Tico
Brown combined for 49 points
to power Georgia Tech over
Louisville, Bob Turner and
Darrell Griffith paced Louisville with 16 points apiece.
Bruce campbell's two free
throws with three seconds left
in
overtime
enabled
Providence ro raise its record
ro 19-4 . Skip McDaniel scored
with 34 seconds left in
regulation lime, tying the
score at 65-65 . Dwight
Williams led the Friars with
21 pomts.
'
HolyCross, 17-4, shot76per
cent m the first half to take a
26i&gt;ointlead and then coasted
to a 114-_76 triumph over
Boston Umvers1ty.
In other games 1 Colwnbia
beat Seron Hall. 82-78, in
overtim e, Tu lane downed
Southern Mississippi, 86-83,
and Massachusetts topped
Villanova , 87-72.

.
BYGARYCLARK
A fourth quarter rally by Homer Preece's Wahama While
Falcon cage team fell short Tuesday night a • Jhe Bend Area
squad dropped a ~9-58 squeaker to the visiting North Gallia
Pirates.
.
Wahama , trailing by five at 42-37 after three quarters of
play made a last ditch effort In the final canto behind RJck
Bamltz, Charley Zuspan and Vince Weaver but the invading
Pirates held on lor dear life to edge out the !ocala by a
~958 margin.
The loss was the ninth of the Falcons a 25-24 lead al inyear for the While Falcons termlsslon.
and was their third in a row
Rex Justice Jed the PlraJes
with Point Pleasant and in the third quarter as the
Ravenswood remaining on vlsllorsbullt a five point bulge
th1a week's Falcon schedule. which
eventually
cost
Wabama has won four con- Wahama the game. After 24
leBts this season.
minutes of play, North GaUls
While the varsity saw Its Jed by a 42-37 score with thO'
record dwindle Coach Lewla final eight minutes forcing the
Hall's reserves bounced back White Falcons to play catch up
alter a 60-49 loss to Point hasketball.
Pleasant ro chalk up their
RJck Bamitz, Zuspan and
eighth win against just three VinCe Weaver began to conlosses with a 60-48 triumph nect In the final stanza as
over the Little Pirates.
Wabama started to close the
In the varolty tilt the Bend gap but before the locals could
Area team was forced inlo overtake the Pirates time ran
action without lwo of Its lop out leaving North Gauta as ~9perlormel'll. Kelvin Honaker 58 winnel'll.
and Phil Hobbs "ere out due
Game statistics show
to a bout with the flu which Wahama with a 39 percent
undoubtedly hurt the Wbite percent shooting mark from
Falcons however, their the floor and 63 percent at the
replacements,
Charley free throw stripe. The White
Zuspan and Vince • Weaver Falcons conunftled 18 torplayed admirable ball by novers and pulled down a
contributing 13 · and 7 polnis mere 24 total rebounds with
respectively.
Zuspan claiming 7 of those.
North Gallla held a s~anl
North Gallia hit on 42 perone point adviiJitage alter one ~eJ)J from !!Je field and a
period but found themselves dismal 33 percent from the
down by one at the half as charity stripe. The Gallla
Zuspan and Bob Barnitz Countlans turned lhe ball over
warmed up In the second 22 times and hauled In ~~
canto to glv.e t.he White rebounds Jed by Calvin Minnis
' "" '
with 1~ .- .
. .- - - - - - - - \ Individually Henry Siewert
took game high scoring honors
with 16 markel'll followed by
Calvin Minnis with 14. Rex
Justice with II and Tim
McComas with 10.
Wahama placed two men
in double figure s with Bob
Bamltz netting 15 and Charley
Zuspan 13.·
7'1•. Pet . per year on a
The top scorers in the
4 year · certificate of preliminary game were Gary
deposit.'
·,
.
Richards with 17, Tim Roush
with
14 and Fred Smith with
$5,000.00
T' _
·i_nimum
13'for Wahama while the Little
deposit,
Pirates got 15 points from Jim
Barnes, 14 from Joe Peck and
10 from Mike ' Sbllot.
Wahoma returns to action
on Friday nlghl when !hey

sllm

Reds."

Nia~ara .

:Standings \Drawing for
girls event
Phila

whole proceeding, but we
believe the fan, Uke the Reds.
is tired of legal bassels and
goings-&lt;Jn . The fan wants us
to play baseball and that is
what we intend to do."
Howsam also said the Reds
" wel come .Dave Revering
back to our roster ."
"He will have every opportunity to make the club at
Tampa (Fla.] during spring
training," said Howsaw. ' 'We
thank Vida Blue for his
patience and the fact he was
interested in coming to the

victory
ove r
Ha waii ,·
Louisville wa s Upse t by
Georg ia Tec h, 69-&gt;9 , and
Providence scored a 72-70
overtime
vi ctory over

TJ1l1' of th1&gt;lapl'

0)

1111'

Yo u

• rrn
ev 1·r1
on II WI Til Til l'

'~ w1m1

o ut b u anp u l

t1Jl( l

\I I il l

(If

t.l! ~ ':&gt;GrHJ'&gt;I
I I

w dh

f· I(ISN1

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CliO)..

10 1

5. Chagrin Fa ll s 1 (1J 0 )
95
6. On t ario 1 { 11 -0)
77
7. 0 1e) Perrysburg 1 ( 1J . l) 4 1
7. (t1 el St . Cla 1rsv il lc ( 14 1) 4 1
9. Avon2(11 1)
dO
10. S Point I ( lO .Q)
36
Other s wi t h !(!n or' more
point s ! Pem be r v il l e Ea s t
wood, War saw River View,
Cha rdon , Cl yde,
Beaver
Loc a l, Columbu s Ham ilt on
Tow nship , We ll 1ng ton and
Mart ins Ferry (1) .

Fos tori a St Wende li n 75
l-ako ta 59
F re derickt own 64 Spa r t a
Highla nd 56
Fremont Sf Joseph 74 Gib .
sonburg 59
Gahanna 45 Chi ll ico the 43
Galion 85 Norwalk 67
Genoa 41 Perr ysburg 40
72
Paines vill e
Gi•l rnour
Harvey .63
Granville 56 Licking Hi s 50
Greenvil le 61 Northridge 59
Grove City 51 Newark 48
Hami lton Ta1t 64 Indian Hi ll

wood h~.o' t l l•· r

r tJ.

lll &lt;•
I' fl '• I I

Ih

[J ,Jli•Pt' r

On

l hu• V!.' ll l tor

11 11'
1111'

. C'll iOy •n ••rl l n l i'l
rt~ il r ln y
llrt• o •
m Od1'"&gt; 11 y ql OWi r lft
t o.11 •,

STOP IN TODAY

WILKINSON SMALL ENGINE SALES &amp; SERVICE
Middleport, 0 .

498 Locust St .

47
Hamilton Twp 69 Col Beec h.
crotl 49
Hillia r d 56 Mt Vernon 44
lnd1an Val ley N 81 Buckeye
73
I I
Iron ton 82 Jack son 61
Jefferson 65 Farmington 64
Jonathan A ld er 53 Col
Academy 49
Kidron Christ 68 Indi an Hill s
Chris t 62
Lake 51 Rossford 46
Lakewood 60 Hea th 38
Leesburg
Fa1rfield
88
Mowrystown WO 67
Liberty . B e nton
59
N
Bal tim ore 58
Lima
Se nior
67
Tal
Macomber 64
Logan Elm 56 CaOai Win .
chester 53
London 81 Springf ield North .
western 47
Malvern 65 Miner va 62
Marion Cath 87 Crestline 49
Massillon Perry 40 ·Ravenna
32
Massillon Chris t 54 Cl e
Baptist 53
MaysVi ll e 67 Morgan ,50
McArthur 80 War r en Loca l 77
M cDonald 62 Berlin Western
Rsv 61 ,
Mill er 68 Miller sport 64
Mingo 73 Sali nev il le 63
M ogad or e 70 Streetsboro 51
Montpel i er 54 Stryk er 50
New Albany 57 Olentangy 50
New Concord Glenn 56 New
Lexington 45
New Knoxville 54 Minster 52
New Phil a d elphi a 80 E
Liverpool 74
Ne'Wark Cath 71 Johns town 70
Newcomerstown
69
Ridgewood 66 {ot)
North Centra l 66 Camden
IM1chl 51
Nort h Co llege Hill 64 Green.
hi lis 62
Nort h Royalton 55 Br ook lyn

ACE

w

54

No~ ton _70 . Ta llmadge 53

HARDWARE

~GUID.L

50-ft. Powr-Center

'EXTENSION

for

CORD
)
( 3 562
1470

use wi1h
TOO LS,
APPLIAN CES .

.

ELECTRIC MOTO RS.

• Bright orange
fo r high
visibility.
• 3 wire
grounded .
• 3 grounded
Powr-Center
outlets.

etc .
EXTRA LOW SAL E PRICE

HANDY, SAFE,
EASY TO STORE

ME

MIDDLEP RT . 0'-'10

NOTlLt ltrW ,,.,,
To The Coal Shortage Open Mon. thru Sat. 9 til 6 Closed Sundays
ACE HARDWARE

:I

'I'

c. onlrollct.l w ill1 n

'I

.'

.

�...
Ir~'''"'F~;;;0;wiih~F~d

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , Feb. 15, 1978

OES pklns remodeling project

Herb discussion held
their

Herbs.

• l(ll LUnt.· to pn:purt&gt; u wble
aesthl'ltl' • .~,etl u J)-! w1tlt an appropnat~

culuwr; .

medicinal

outtl
va lues, were d1scusscd Uy
Mrs. Suzy Ce:trpenter at il rt'L'f!nt meeting of tht• Hutlc.tnd
Friendly G~rdcm•rs -hcl_d at
the home of Mrs M~rg1

priZe

arnmgcmcut.
M~ . Bishop gav•~ devotions
u.s m~ PsC~hn JOO. Mr&lt;.: .Ju:uuta

brou~l1t

by Mrs. Judy

Snowden. Mrs. Marie Bir~
dlficld won the tiOOr pnz~:.

financing it w~r~ dtscUSSl&gt;d
&lt;.luring a recent meeting of
EvanKI! Iine Chapter 172,
Order of the Eastern Star.
Mrs. Bessie King, wurthy

matron. and Bob Kin~. worthy p;Jtron, presided at the

B1shop .
Hefcrring to the Tune Life
Encyrlopedie~ of Gardeninl{.
Mrs. Carpenter nott.!d L h&lt;.~t
during: the past five yellrs. th~
sa le ami qu est for infonnation on herbs has doubled.
She named .several wlnc;h c:an
be grown In th1s ellmate ....
basil, IJorage. dill and scnncl.
annuals. and rosemary , sa~ ,
Utrrogun, thyme, lavender.
mint, horsc ra&lt;.hsh and ~.: h1 ves,
!)erennials .
Herbs can be frozen ur
dried , she said, noting that
when using in cookiug l4lc&lt;Jspoon of drit!d herbs equal one
teaspoon of fresh t,mes.
Resides using herbs in (.'OOking. they arc suit..Jblc fur
fragrance and se~ch ets. and
they also have medicinal purposes.
A quiz on herbs w&lt;.~ :-:. con-

l.ombert wun the tr(lveling

The remodeling projcoct of
the Middleport Masonic Temple chapter room and ways of

POLLY·s POINTERS
Polly Cramer

Flour sinks
to bottom

Cui lhe length so it is lhe
width of tht! door, and make it

which time a
report was given by the ways
and means corrunittee. Th~
IJnuoln Day di nner was
tlsil'ussed, und' a rwrunage
mt!ctin~ durin~

sale to be held at the temple
on March 3 and 4 was planned. All members are asked to
have thtdr rwrunage at the
temple no later than March I.

five inches wide. Make a onch.alf ineh seam, close one end,
fill with sand cmtl stitch up t·he

Those with items to con-

one of t.hc rcaUcrs wu•dd tell open end . -MRS.T.E.B.
JllC hOW tO keep the notlf I)J 1
IJEAH POLLY - My Pet
the me&lt;:tt while- tl is frying . Peeve is wi th those people
Min~ ~ mk s to the bottom of who put their tr&lt;Jsh out
the fry iu ~ pou anll slick!; . severa l days befo1·e pick-up
.c.w.
llay . Vcmtlals or animals-tear

An Easter baUtar and bake
salt! was set for March 25, anti
a family proclud..s party was
a rnm~eed
for March 2.

DEAH POLLY - I do wish

tribute may caU

Je nevee

meeting a thank you note was
rcml from Mrs . E dn&lt;:~ Russell
who mal.le a done~ lion towards
the club's a(· tivi t!es.
Plans were discussed for
the annual open meeting in
APril with each member at

When doing a lot of hand
sewi ng co&lt;tt your fingertips
wilh se veral coats of cui·
or less nai l polish as a protection aga inst needle pricks. It
dHcs the trick.

by

Mrs.

Juanita

I.ambc1t ttnd won by Mrs.
Carpenter .
DurinK th e busine ss

uwde saml ruJI:-; tlwl work
grca l fur kce pu1 ~ cold air
from cunung in tmdcr.nel:l lh
doors. l used s o111~ ldtuver
upholstery moJk ri ;d,. J.Hil cmy
Hlrong material t.'.atl be used.

at the temple.
At the March 11lL"Cting
Masons will lM! honored.
11lCrc will be a bean dinner

for &lt;Ill Ma•ons and their
w1vcs Ucginnin~ &lt;Jt6 p.m. and

r~mt!tnbered .

those planning to attend are
asked' tu t•untad Mrs. King,

thanked

Mrs. Cht!sher, or Mrs.
M&lt;iryln Wilcux. The film,
··our PrL•ciou.s Heritage··. on
M.asunry will be shown .

ware to install it and the installation . The money can be
given HS a personal ~ ift or in
memorium with names to be
placet.! on u phique tu be in·

legance 1n any roo

water.- C(.ARA
DEAR POLLY - I am han·
tl i ~appctl

and When my walls
need was hing, ( usc spong£""
mops, I use one to wa ~ h arid
another· to' tlip in clea r water
for rinsing . I &lt;:tlso use them to

wipe off lhe tops of door cas. &lt;:~nd window sills. Hope
· will help others who are
'harldi «Jil~''d. - BESSIE .
ut,/H\ t'U'LL.' -Do tell the
reH ders that one teaspoon of
nwrgi(l rine will keep potatoes
from boiling qver no matter
how rapitlly they boil. Nu
mm·e stove top d eaning . -

',

GHACJE.
Polly will send you one of

FLEXSTEEL

FINE UPttoU:f('El)\1!:1&gt; f"VJ\1'111:\ IHE

FINE FURNITURE
AT SPECIAL SALE PRICES

her s igned thank -y ou
newspC:tpcr coupon clippers if
l:i lu; uses yu ur fa vo rite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her cOitnnn . Write POLLY'S

POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

The first motiqn picture to
wi n an Academy Award was
" Wings ," in 1928.

the chapter

Kinl:!

for

ho.o;piU!Iizatiun. A report was
~i ven on a revision of the

nuwer corrunittee rules. A

The altar was draped in

donation was made to the

memory of Car l W. Ellen.
woocl . past grand patron of
the Grand Chapter of Ohio. A
conununication was read

O.E.S. HospiU.I Circle.
Robert and Beatrice Kuhn,
Ann Thomas and Betty Van
Matre served rdreslunenl::i.
Bill King was marshal pro
tern for the meeting, and sun·
shtne page was EIU. Mae

irom Gra nd Chapter, O.F..S.
Hospital Ci rde, anc.J a . note
frum Mrs. Ada Root. Patridtt

Norton.

l.og;m was initiatOO into the
order ..

Executive committee of the

Middleport PTA met Monday
morning at the school to
make decis ions regarding upcoming meetings and to ·transact some unf in is hed
business of the unit .
The January meeting was
cancelled due to the snow and
ice , and the February

meeting slated for Monday
night h.a s been cancelled due
to the eueq~y curtailment in
the

sc hool distri ct.

The

~NA V/b!UN

Social
Calendar

i'' :; ,..
. ~ l l ' ,I

&amp;&gt;uthelh 'Ohio Electho

·co.

~

US. • •

Mrs. nemard Fultz. Mr•. ·
Hoy. C&lt;tsscll tU r;evie·w.''Trial,
e~ nd

Triumphs' ' and
Mrs. Eme1·son Jones to
review " Pasion:; Child ."

By Helen Bottel

CAN HOMO BE CONVERTED?
DEAR HELEN :
My ex in-laws and I get along fine . Maybe too fine. Tbey keep
pushing me to try again with my former husband, thinking I'm
!be only one who can "bring him back to reality."
You see, arter seven years o£ marriage (no indications that I
could see) Bo told me he is homosexual now and asked for a
·
·
divorce.
HiS lover iS jealous of me. There's no reason for it. "I don't
wantBo back. But his family won't stop. They say it's my duty
to "save 11 him. Each time there's a lovers' quarrel between
the two men, they shove him toward me again. How can I Stop
this when I feel so sorry for the poor mother and father? • NO
LONGER IN LOVE
DEAR NUL:
Think of yourself first : You're weU out of a situation you ca n
probably never change. So tell Bo's parents you want no more
of it - and if theY won't U.ke that for an answer, break off communications with them.- H.
DEAR HELEN :
My daughter loves family gslherings. Since her marriage,
she has been deprived of them, as her husband simply will not
attend.
His mother died three years ago and he a~ts as if being
aroWJd happy familie• is a terrible burden.
Does she give in to this spoiled mama's boy or attend our
holidays without him, thus giving the impression he is a louse?
- UPSETGRANDMOTHER
.
DEAR GRANDMOTHER:
Here's another case where a long-distance guess could be all
wrong. l have no way of telJing whether your son-in-law is
selfish and "spoiled," or whether he's suffering a prolonged
bereavement which needs therapy to cure.
Perhaps his wife knows him well enough to diagnose. Let her
handle the situation. -H.
DEAR HELEN:
' I read somewhere that certain macho types of husbands
''put their wives on pedesU.ls sod then use the pedestals as
footstools." That's the story of my life.
My husband " blibies" me, says he thinks I'm wonderful, all

HEARING TESTS SET
For Senior Citizens Of
MEIGS COUNTY

of the causes ' of heart~

to.s,s will be explained aryd

cl inic of rnnnth, Wedne'Sday

diagrams ol how the earWof~ will~ shown.

al Heath Uniled Methodist
Church. Som~ openings still
available. Call 992,7531,
daytime, ,992-5832 eveqings.

We Also Service and Rep1ir An MakeS of Hearing Aids.
Batteries and Supplies For All Makes for Sale.

WEDNESDAY
SPECIAL joint meeting of
Meigs Courity ~omm issione~.S
and Middleport Comm unity
Iinprovemenl Cor p., 7:30
p.m. tonight a~ Columbus and

&amp;&gt;uthern · Ohio E lectric Co.
building in Middleporl.

~

Anyone who has trouble hearing Is welcome to haV~ a
hearing test using the lat~Jt electronic equipment to
determine If his-loss is one whidl may be helped. Some

FINAL CE RVICAL cancer

FIRST PLAYW&amp;ib..tr Ni::IL SIMON ·(,: Barcl~ot'lri the
Park," " The Odd Couple;" etc.) wrote " The Goodbye
Girl," a widely applauded film comedy slurrjng his
actress-wife Marsha Mason . Then Simon wrote "Chapt,c r Two," a current Broadway smash about the real- .
life ups and downfj of ttl ~ couple's relatjonship- Stay
tum~d for chapter three.
SID~ GLANC~S

IF YOU -eANNOT COME IN'
·
CALL THE HOTEL FOR A HOME APPOINTMENT.
' '
PHONE 992-3629
.

..

Prop,os_ed nu~sing home to be
dis'clfssed and public invited; '

-;\

·

Split can ti ieverecr'

FEBRUARY meeting of

adjustable shelves
0 Adjuslable fresh storage

.
· : ·
pan
?·Day Fresh Meat Keeper
Large vegetable c rispe r

~)"\ TlltJRSDA Y .
MEIGS Democrat Central

Butter and cheese serve rs

Removable egg server

Commi ttee meeting 7:30p.m.

Adjustable door shelves
Automatic interio r lights
Magnetic door gaske ts
Full length Woodgrain

· changed to Meigs Inn rather
than 'Grace
Episcopal
Church.
FAMILY PANCAKE
SUPPER 6 p.m . at Grace
Episcopal.
FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT Masonic
Uidge 363, F&amp;AM, inspe&lt;tiort,
7:30 p.m. Friday at temple:
all Master M~sons invited.

handles
S lim-Wall design-foam .

tor- for HIS sake.
DEAR HUSBAND - You
are the one making the good
poinl.&lt;l. Your way of handling

DEAR DR. BLARER - For
five years f have been waking
up about 2 a.m. and reading
until f oan fall asleep again. It the situation is reconunended
doesn't bother me - but my by most sleep experl.&lt;l.
In fact, you may not havt! a
wife is very worried about my
problem at ·all. You
sleep
sleeping " problem."
llUIY
merely
need les.s sleep
She is consU.ntly on my
at
this
point
in
your life.
back to see a doctor and get- &lt;1
alsu side with
The
experts
prescription for s leeping
you
on
the
issue
of sleep
pills. f think sleeping pills are
dangerous, but s he claims medication. Although sleeP"
doctors wouldn't prescribe _ing pills are sometimes effective, they often sta rt a pcrsun them if that were true .
f know when I get up at on a treadmill of increasing
night I disturb her sleep dosages that lewi l•1 drugbecause I can hear her moan- induced insomnia .
One of t!'Very seven
ing and groaning. Maybe

DEAR DR. BLAKER- My happy with this method of
husband has had insomnia for treating insomnia .
And tell your wife that docfive years. It doesn't seem to
tors
(who are hwnan lou )
concern him - but I can't
toward the old and
tend
stand it.
familiar.
~,!:very year they
He is such a grouch during
still
write
19
million prescri l&gt;'
the day. I think it's because
he dOesn't get enough sleep. I tions for lxtrbiturate hytr
notics even though these

that junk; but he's the big ruler . I'm the " little wife" who
cooks and cleans and isn't supposed to have a brain. So long a~
I conform to his idea of what a woman should be, I'm
pampered and petted.
There's got to be more than this. Should I gel out now before ·
several babies make the break too hard• - BORED TO DEATH
DEAR BORED:
Before you break out of your marriage, try breaking your
husband's concept of it. Mscho men have been known to
change, given the proper impetus by determined wives.
So ..~ knock off the brainless bllllny role, find a worthwhile
job and interesting friends, and prove you're a worthy partner,
not an appendage.- H.
P.S. If he can't take equality, then the answer to your final
question is uy es!"
.

Price:~

·SALE:.PRICE
..., ,.
95
..

$499

Stop in and look over our:
complete .
lin ~
' of
Westinghouse Appliances.

CIITUP

·

Adjustable glide·Out rollers

You can be sure 1f 11s l'lesMghouse

e

1 lb. BLUE BONNET

10 lb.

.

sge

.

MARGARINE ... -.. :~·:~--- 59 · MAINE POTATOES ......

~

1 lb. KRAFT

New Zealand's flightless,
chicken-size kiwis arc unique tJ!{~
in that their nostrils are at the :.~IS ~1t1111Wf1EA. _ _ f\lllot us
tips of their besks. No other ' - - - - - - -'-----'-----"-'='----7'-_:-_J
bird is so constructed.
"I have a hus~J:and and three children, so I n6ed a decor

NfLSON'S RfG. 39' fACH

$}Z9

. VELVEETA CHEESE.~~: ..

6 oz. CELLO PAK

e

I 29

RED RADISHES-.... 2

1 lb. BOOTH OCEAN PERCH••••••••!1.59

that will coordinate. with a mess! "

200 Count

PUFFS TISSUES ••••••••••••••••••••••••• !'::•••. 63e
JUMBO
VIVA
TOWELS ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••~:~ •• 69~
15'12 oz. WHITNEY
PINK SALMON. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••:'."•• $1.69

BEEF LIVER .. ~~~~:.~ ................ ~ ...... ~~;. 39e
49
._.,;~ · · ~ WIENER·s......
·
'1
20 COU~T
...................... ..
~

.

BEEF 'STEW•••••• ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~:.".~. 98~
3 oz. ARMOUR

POTIED' MEAT, •••••••••••••••••••••••.•••••••. 3/59~

.

PORK NECK BONES................... ....~:.39e

1331• oz. SWANSON

CHICKEN BROTH. •••••••••••••••••••••••••• 3/79e

JOWt ......~~~~~....................... !.IJ}~.'1 49 tLrnm-~..........,......-;~ - -..
.

.

· · ·

.

L8 ,

-

BULOVA COMMODORE
CORDLESS ELECTRONIC CAMPAIGN CHfST CLOCK

tack, such as rabbits otnd

deer, sleep little and lighlly,
while liun.s snore their way

through 16 hours of the day .
Prt!dators can afford to
relax ; the vulnerable must
.stay un guard.
Write to Dr. Blaker in care
of this newspaper, P.O. Bmc
489, Radio City SU.tion, New
York, N.Y. 10019. Volume of
mail proh ibits personal
replies,

but

questions

ol wood

r Bmpd~n C h\'st~ ;

SCO IIOVdlJi' l~ US('d Ill

Duptrcatt•(l In df•tarl N the
solrtl wood cnt&gt;1 nf't lrrw; twd
rn dOH~ wnlrhJI nntt !rt/11hi N 1
wrVl a11 trQIIn brQS'l frr11M1
COljl\'1 plii ll'!\

U1c Holzer Medicul Center .
Maternal grandparenU are

Mr. and Mrs. Ellis McMillan,

l mprf'SSrw aloe\.. ll'fll \lli"·

Racine, and the rl'_laternal
great-grandmother lS Mrs.
M)'rtle Blackburn, Loga n, W.

C. tn ss ~)nrw lt op, wlnto IIH't,l!
d rat . l1ou,nr 1nunlf't.tH ilrld
3 1 dn~· cnt(!ndnr . ::pun qal't
prnduturn 2 1" o. !:'I" ~3 1 4 ••

Va. Patemal grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Leo C. Hill,
Hacine. Mr. and Mrs. Hlll
have another daughter, T~rri

rltJ(' lurnliiH(I hl r Wnll 01
mtlnlt'l
$99.95

l.ynn, fiv e.

of

Closed Friday evenings until further nolice
due to the coal shortage.

genera l interest will be
discussed in future columns.

DD·IT·YDURSELFERS
AND SAVE!

available, the eligibility requirements, and the. home
visits made by personnel.
Another feature of the
UMW meeting was the
prayer and self-&lt;lenial pr&lt;r
gram presented by Mrs. Nan
Moore. Mrs. Moore gave a
mediU.tion preceding the taking of the offering and explained tl1at the money goes ,

STUD
SPECIAL
NO. 2

Welcomed into membership were Mrs. Anderson and
Mrs. Barbara Shuler. Mrs.
[)unna Byer played the piano
prelude to open the meeting.
Mrs. Pauline Horton, prcsidentj gave an article from
Guideposts, and Mrs. Mae
Lambert had the devotions
reading an article by
Catherine Marshall and a
prayer of praise by Helen
Steiner Rice.
Thank you notes were read
bY Mrs. Clara Criswell from
the Rev. and Mrs. Robert
Bumgarner, Mr. and Mrs. C.
F. Hibbs, , and Mr. and Mr8.
James Ciatworthy.
Mrs. Maxine Philson gave
a · resume of the year's
finances for the UMW and
Mrs. Byer presented an
Eleanor Circle financial
report.
Mrs. Criswell annoWlced
the a nnual World Day of
Prayer of United Church
Women of Meigs County for
March 3 at the Pomeroy First
Baptist Church. A planning
meeting was set for Msrch 26
at 2 p.m. at tbe Chester
United Methodist Church.
Mrs. Kathryn Knight
reported on the Lenten
breakfast at Trinity Church .
The Lord's Prayer in Wlison
closed the meeting. Tbe
refreshment tsble . was
decorsted in the valentine
motif. Hostesses were Billy
Jo Krawsczyn, Mrs. Jessie
Houchins, Mrs. Jesn Ann
Bradbury with Mrs. Emina
Wayland contributing. '

Pinto, Northern, Navy
October and Mixed

SAUSAGE...................................."....139
.
BEANS 3~~:e$1
I

FACIAL TISSUES
200 Count

22 oz.

BORDEN'S CREMORA ••••••••••••••••• ~:: ••$1.49
HORSERADISH MUSTARD ••••••••••••••••. 2/49e
6 oz. KRAFT

Assorted Flavors

59~

.

.

e

KOOL AID •••••••• ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••6/69
:

DAUGHTER BORN
Mr. arid Mrs. Eddie YoiUig,
Route 3, Pomeroy, are announcing the birth of tbeir
first child, a daughter, born
on Feb. 13 at the Holzer
Medical Center. The baby has
been named Amy Patricia,
She weighed ReVI'II p()unds,
eigllt ounces and was 20 inches lung. Maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
John A. Jeffers, Minersville.
Paternal grandparents were
the late Mr. sod Mrs. Dick
Young. Great grandparents
are Mrs. Mary Hysell,
Pomeroy, Mrs. Audrey
Yollllg, Pomeroy, and the late
Mrs. Lucille Jesse.

PRE.CUT STUDS

'174
2"x4"x12'

'201
'242

2"x4~'x14'

2';x4"x 16'

'271

lh" COX PLYWOOD
Cert.
Mill

r:1nys

ot o ld

LAUAN
PANELING

Plain White

CEILING
TILES

$379

16e

SHEET

24 oz. LIBBYS

.

~ ...................~.:

hours do !:io from boretlom,
emotiunal distress, laziness - 1
ur worse still - to avoid facing: the day·~
An insight from the animal
k ingdom may apply .

programs.

FRENCH CITY WIENERS .. --···--· ..................1.~:.79e
FRENCH CITY
.
.
$
BOILED HAM .:.. ____ .: __ ............................. ::•..'.~:. ! ..119
..
FROZEN FRYERS ................_.. _____ ........ -....... ~.~:. 59e
HOME MADE HAM SALAD ...... -.... ··-··-.. -...'~·.. 99e

GOLD • WHITE • PINK • AQUA

2/39e

ed you with evidence that
people who .sll&gt;cp over eight

buildings, and to World Missions for youth and children

Effective Thru Sat., Feb. 18th

A DRAMATIC
NEW LOOK IN TIME

CHILD BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Roger B. Hill,
Racine a1·e announcing the
birth df their second child,
Devon Marie, born Jan . 20 at

your pre:-;suring tactics. How
would yuu feel if he bomlxtrd·

Creatures susceptible to al·

saturday, February 18 at the
Jackson Production Credit
Building with Cecil sayre of
New Haven ss the caller.

A nwqnrllf'('ll \ ctor l.
111 ~ prrt•d Ill' thr fuw ~1rsrnn

He mighl. be grouchy during the day partly because of

Heath UMW
look at welfare issue
Alook at welfare programs
and problems was taken by
women of the Heath United
Methodist Church at a
meeting Sunday afternoon at
the church.
Mrs. Marilyn Anderson,
employed with the Meigs
County Welf~r.e f:1epartment,
discussed the various
a·ssiStance programs

were Nora and Don Lucas.
John and Wanda Waugh and
Ginny and Wally Henry.
The nell club dance will be

-and nugging, too- can ~
. dang~rous to health. Both cttn
ca use in.sutimia.

that's why she is being so Americans suffers from
pushy about my getting pills. slt!eplessness. Although one
I'm mad at her - but maybe in six has tried some type of
sleep medication, few are
she has a point.

Phone 742-2100

REG. 5669.95

insula tion
Separate temperat ure

co ntrols

sleep nine hours every night
and feel great. As far as I'm
L'tmcerned, he must see a doc·

The lion and
the lamb

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT STORE

".

0 Two freeze r ~~·~~ ''~'1':,''·'~~~:::,_-~Jl~:;.i::
0 Ice co mpartment wilh 2 ·
Modol RT 2177
quick-release 1 ~13-Y!\ ~"·"
..
Ice cube se rve r
'

by Gill Fox

Karen Blaker Ph.D.

A pie a.uction was held was called by Bill Gene
Saturday eveni ng as the Evans, cl ub caller. Fourteen
French City Swingers Squsre pies were sold to the square
Dance Club met for their dancers presenl.
Guests for the evening
~third annual ple 81lction. The
square dance ~nd pie auction included representatives
from The Boots and Bonnets
of Hontington, W. Va.; Trisleepmg p11ls have been Grande Squares of Gallipolis
rendered obsolete by phar- and several couples parJrncologica1 proKreSS and ticipaling In the club 's
sleep research.
" rerresher course" and the
DEAR , WIFE - For your club 's square dance lessons.
hus band's sake, please
Serving on the hostess
understand that slt.&gt;eping pilb committee for the evenin~

toward maintenance and im-·
proYements to missionary

Com pletely Frost-Free
o Equipped for
·
Ice Maker
0 Freezer shelf

CHOICES

~

BELTONE Consultant Who Will Be At :
Meigs Inn., Pomeroy, Ohio
.
Thursday, Feb. 16-9 a.m. to 12 noon

tlay, 2 p.m . at the humc of

room.

UMIT 4 PLEASE

I

Mr. H. w. Mattingly

MI DD L E PORT
I JTERARY CLUB, Wednes-

Pie auction held by dance club

I

i Helen Help

Will Be 'Given By

building: public invited .

Tce~ rs

5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Feb. 15, 1978
~ r:rli&gt;W»~n·ii'.~~ ~,,~,,~:,:~:~::;,::'$::::f.~~-;:;,;~

ELECTRONIC
HEARING TESTS

~ra~~
. ~eeting , 7:30 p.m .
~W«l '
· &gt;lit Oaluil!bus ~.n&lt;l&gt;

ne,l!,ay in high school band

BATH SIZE

BUTIERMILK PIE
1 cup sugar, I U.blespoon melted butter, 2 tablespoons of
flour, ¥• teaspoon saJl, 1 teaspoon lemon flavoring, and two
cups of buttermilk.
·
Mix all the ingredients lllllil smooth, then add two well
beaten egg yolks, beat again, and then add two egg whites
which have been well beaten. Pour 'the m1xture mto unbaked .
nine inch pie shells, sprinkle genrously with nutmeg, and bake
about 35 minutes at J5(J degrees.

·- WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPOR T
Co mmunity Improvement Cor-

Local
Band
Boosters, 7:30 p.m . . Wed·

DEODORANT 'SOAP

available to us sometime.
If you've never tried a buttermilk pie, you really must
sometime. This recipe from Velsia Roush provldes enough filli.ng for two nine inch pies.

It is seldom that someone would say that a certain recipe
helped them keep a job which paid part of their college expenses, but Geneva Nolan of Syracuse, retired Meigs County
extension agent, says that Denver Rolfs did just that.
Mrs. Nolan while Jlt\ending Ohio University worked as a
Founder's Day observance waitress at The Colonial Restaurant in Athens. While she was
has also been cancelled.. A a waitress, it was everyone's job to make sUre everything was
meeting of the Meigs County ready at serving time. One weekend there was no one to make
Council of Parents and the rolls so Mrs. Nolan volunteered snd from that time on it
Teachers to have been .held became her job' and made her a little more valuabie to The
this week at the Middleport Colonial which was quite a party place in those days.
Elenwntary School has been
And she still uses that same recipe postponed until March, with a
·
DENVER ROLlS
regular PTA meeting also
y, cup sugar, '1. cup shortening, either liquid or solid 'll cup
sched oled to be held . 111 mashed potatoes,l.pint milk, '1. cake yeast, I teaspoon baking
Marcil: Anothe~ executlvf(,. powder, ;2 teaspoon soda, 1teaspoon salt, and 2cups flour .
corrumtlee meetmg has been
Scald the milk and add the sugar, salt, mashed poU.toes and
set for March 13 at the home shortening. Cool to lukewarm. Sift flour, baking powder and
of Mrs. Susan Bacr.
soda together . Add to liquid mixture and beat until smooth.
Tben add yeast, which has been dissolved in y, cup lnkewann
water. Mix thoroughly .
Let rise a bo.ut two hours or until light. Add enough flour to
make a moderately stiff dough. Let rise. Keep in cold place lUItil needed, keeping it worked down. Will keep for several days
in a cold place. Make out into cloverleaf rolls, put in muffin
(ins and bake as needed at 400 degrees F. Makes about 35 rolls.
Mrs. Nolan suggesl.&lt;l that instsnt poU!tocs could very weUbe
used in thi~ recipe as well as warmed-up leftovers.

Eastern

DIAL

::;~ Charlene Hoeflir.h
' It's only a few weeks 'til Easter and at the Senior Cltizerui
Center where fWld raising projects never cease, candy Easter
egg workshops will begin on March 3. We 1Ulder8tand that they
have delicioa.s recipes for the candy eggs which wlll be Jced
and sold at the Easter bazaar. Perhaps the recipes wiU be

PTA plans for future meetings

Keep a supply of plast1c
spoons on hand to Ul:ie for' tak·
ing liquid medicines. Avuii.l
ill-tasting or stained spoons .
If ,YOU rub yuur dour
.st.:reens with kerosene the
fli es will stuy uway .
'l'o dea n windows in freez·
ing weitther ) moiste11 a soft'
doth with kerosene instead of

Mrs.

flowers during her recent

Chesher, 992·3335.

Orders may be placed with
DF.AH C. W, - When Oour- the pli.stic bags and upset the Mrs. Chesher, or Mrs. King ,
ing chicken Lo fry I fi nd the garbage ca ns so the contents . 992·3747 or 992-3748.
It was dedded to send ld·
dampness !dt tAftcr wtA:; hing are ste~tteretl everywht!re. tcrs to -a ll members about the
the chi&lt;'ken pieces l'a uses the VE HN.
flour tu .S t1l'k . Sume mc;Jb
DEAR POLLY - To pre- remodeling project. The ~ci l·
ce~n be dipp-.:0 in beaten eggs
vent srww from sticking to ing has already been lowered
or milk befun· they arc the windshield of your ear rub and in the letters member.s
nourell. llow i:tbuut this the ~lass with an union that will be asked to donate a
rea de rs·~ -PO I,J .Y.
ha s been e ut in half m.inimum of $25 to cover lht!
cost of one panel, the hardDEAl\ POI.I.Y - I hav e l' I'I)SSW i S~ ,

ducted

M... Euvetta Bechtle
reported for the cheer comITllttee noting that Mr• . King ,
MildrL'&lt;l Humphreys, Paul
Damcll, Evelyri Lewis, and
Adria Wilcox had been

sLall~d

,

'7'5

PER SHEET

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.
773-5554

MASON, W. VA.

�6 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , f'•b.
NHL ~landings
By United Press lnternalional

vancouver
coloradO

Minne~ola

Clmpbell Conference

15 11 1l
11 28 13

17 3S 6

0
37

10 15 I I
Ad11m~ Dl\rn1on

~0
Z9

1

Sl Lou 1s
11 35 1
e as ton
34 11
Wi les Conference
Buffalo
31 11
NorriS Di VISiOn
Toran to
29 15
w L T PIS , Cleveland
18 33
Montreal
37 1 9 81
Tuesd11y ' s Resulh

NY Ranger s

lo!i. Angeles

21 21 11

P •II Sburqh
0("1ro•l

19 7J 11

18 018 10

46

~n

?fi

fl

ss
~

~~~

31

w L T Pts.

P11t rlctc Division
W L T Ptr. .
N '( ISiaMerS
)A 1:l 9 17
Pll il adelph ia
31 U 10 14
Atlanf~t
'11 11 13 57
Smythe Di 1riSion
w. L. T Pis .
Ch icago
1? 111 ~~ 511

1

15

13
10
6

15

68
41

NY lsla(lder!&gt; J. Los Ang 1

Vai'\Couver A, wa shmglon '1
P dtsbvrQh ?, t":h i c.=~on 1

Wednesday 's Games
Vancouver at NY Rangers
Atlanta at Cleveland

Boston at Toronto
Mont reel ,at Sl LOUtS
Colorado at Ch1cago
ThurldiiY ' l GiMt$
M innesota at Philadelph ia
Allanta at Oct ro i !
Los Angeles at Buffalo

NV Islanders at Colorado

Hannan Trace edges Eagles .
~·ur

By Greg Raii&lt;'Y
the eighth time this

scaS&lt;Jn. the Eastern Eagles
last nigjlt lost a cage battle by
seven p!Jints tJr less. This
lime the hnst Eagles were
victims uf the ltannan Trace

Wildcats of Coac h Dan

dll pay you the
••

on your savings?

Curnell , 6!:1-67 . The tu n test
kept fans on the edge ur their
seats all night as the winning
J&gt;a sket wasn't sc;ured until
just two seconds rern&lt;:~i ned in

the game.
The Wildcats looked like
they were going to put the
~ame on ice early as they
qui ckly built an 8-0 lead with
just t:30 elapsed. But the
~~ agle s of Co ach Duane
W(J ife , never sayi ng die ,
came storming back tu
narrow the score to 1 2~ 1 0 nn a
bu cket by Jeff Goebel with

F'EBRUARY
~

COLOR TV
BLACK &amp; WHITE
RADIO • STEREO
JUST IN/ .
See the great new.
Zenith values!

INGELS
FURNITURE
!06 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, 0 .

no matter what you~ lookiflg
for in savings or investment
certificates...
PASSBOOK SAVINGS

GOLDEN PASSBOOK

3-MONTH CERTIFICATE

5 ~.5:.1.~%

5~~.%

5 }(.~,%

• Ptubte Outrtertw • Minimum 11.000 .00

• Ptytblt Qnrltrly • Mlnlnnm 11 ,000.00

~ I UD

UH

• Com poundd

Dtil~ !

2-YEAR CERTIFICATE

3-YEAR CERTIFICATE

6 A~illl~l

6 ~l

6~~.%

~AtE

lHE

•

·~ •ble Omltrly •

' - .;__

Minimum $1 ,000.00

___;_ _ _ _ __J

• Ptyable Qutrllrl~ • Mifttmum Sl ,OOO.DO

6-YEAR .CERTIFICATE

4·YEAR CERTIFICATE

7 r,~.ro

7:~.%

UTE

e Ptyabll Oulrltrly • Minimum S(DOD .OO

• P1y1bl1 Qu11lelly • Min im um S1.000.00

4:00 showillll on the clock in foul shots with H-T sinking II
the first pertod.
of t5. Eastern made II ol !6.
With :16 secnnds left , Dave
Goebel had a great night
Uruwn gave the Eagles their lur the Eagles with 22 points
first lead, but it was short· while Sophomore Brian
lived as the Wildcats' high Bissell continued to improve
scoring Dave Swain hit for as he ripped tbe cords for 21
two at the buzzer to give the points and collected seven
visitors the lead again, 20-19. rebounds. Eastern shot 40
The rest of the half was sec-- percent from the floor and
saw with tlie lead changing collected 24 rebounds, led by
hands seven times in that Da n Spencer's nine. Spencer
ha lf . In that first half, Swain also hit for .12 points. The
ripped the nets for 14 points, Eagles had only ten tumbut Goebel kept the hosts overs.
•.
close by pouring !6 of his own
In the reserve tilt, Hannan
markers. The half ended 36- Trac~ pulled away in the last
37, Wildcats, with Goebel period for• a W-40 win . The
hitting a shot as the buzzer Wildklttens' Eddie Whitt led
went off.
all sco rers with his 24 points.
Hannan Trace had a five For Eastern, ~onaid Myers
poi nt lead three times in the had ten and Ray Werry nin e.
third period, but with :17left,
Dan Spencer hit a t wo-puinter
for the hosts to knot the score •
at the quarter, 5 1 -~ 1. Eastern
took the lead on the tip off to
start the finaJ period on
another Goebel bucket. But
during that last canto, the
lead changed ha nds nine
times, and no one knew what
the outcome was going to be
until the final seconds.
Eastern was up 6H3 with
2: 02 left to play. But then
Swain got hot ai the foul line.
He hit for two to knot the
scnre. One minute later he
was fouled again , and again
he made both ends of a oneand~me to give the Wildcats a
two points lead. With :30
seconds to go, Goebel connected and again the score
was tied .
Ha nnan Trace called time
and made plans for a final
shot. With just :02 rem aining,
Swain got the ball in the
com er and his shot gave the
Wildcats another win. Swain
poured in eleven of his team's
18 fourth quarter points;
Swain took scoring h';inors
ior the night with a big 26
points, followed by David
Campbell's 19. f'rank Mooney
e:tlso hit doubie figures with
ten. Both teams made eleven

The Wolverine
Piglron boot.
It's made of pigskin.
And solid steel. ·
It's built for ·comfort.
It's rugged.
And·it's flexible. ·

• Ptytble

Ot~trttrlr

And in adelil lcn ro an !h is ... monthly ar
quarterly mcome . , , paid on on•: two. three ,
four. or SIX y~ ar cert ifica te s lnterest.payat&gt;le . monthly 1! you desire on certlllcatn
w1th lace amcurit ot $5.000.00 or more .
Federal R,e!Ju lattons reqwe a sub!lanlltl
pen alty lor premature withdrawal ol certilicate funds
·

OhioValley Bank

EASTERN

tm -

Jeff

Goebel 9-4-22 ; Dan Spence,.~0.12; Brian Bissell 7·7·_21;
Dave Brown 4-0-8 ; M1ke
Hayman 2-0-4. Tota ls 21-11·61 ·

Hannan

Tra ce {69) · Swain
9 - 8 · 2~;
Frank Mooney 7-0-14; Davtd
Campbell
8·3-19 ;
Steve ·'
Beaver 1-0-2; Randy Neall -0- '·
2; Ronnie Pack 3-0-6flotals
29 - 11 ~69 .
'
Score bV quarters :
Eastern
. 19 37 51 67 •
Hannan Trace
20 JB Sl 69 ·•

·David

I

February 12, !976
Dear Editor :
.
I am writing in response to the Hoofs &amp; Paws article of
February 12, 1978 along with various other articles.
1 for one have bad It! As the wife of the Meigs County
Game Protector (Andy Lyles) I have a front row seat to many
things. Let me inform you, Marion Crawford and Major Miller
that you are not the only ones with a problem. Your
insinuations about NEVER being able to get in touch wilh
Andy has gone too' far . Everyone that calls him seems to think
they are the only one with a problem. I cannot tell you the
numerous times people have called and cursed at me because
my husband is not right there to answer to their every little
whimper. Believe me he spends more time answering to the
people of Meigs County than he does to me . There have been
limes we have made plans to go out for an evening but , as we
are stepping out the door, the phone rings and he is off again.
He does not have an 8to 5.job, he is on duty 24 hours a day
and is entitllljllo two d~~ fllt-'ii'r week. !'can go back through
his weekly activity re~ lild'ahow you weeks and months at
a time that he didn't take 0~ day off. I have watched him go
for weeks with only 3 or 4 hour• of sleep per night. We have a
recording system on our telephone (which we pay for out of our
own pocket,;it isn't paid lor by the State.) The recorder is on
when we·att:iii'Ither one at home so ti]at people can leave a
name anJ num!Ji.r., ·three-fourths of the people· don 't leave
anythiJ1g, I knew .what his jqb consisted of when we were
married·, I just didn't realize there are so many unappreciative
people.
How willlt rest on your 81»,1plders (M. Crawford and Maj .
Miller) when the fire department gets a call about a home
being oo .fil-e with people trapped inside, and the fire
department responds with: "You will have to wait your turn,
we are out rescuing a cat in a tree.''
Believe me, my husband and I like animals . We have four
dogs of our own tbat are treated like Kings and Queens. Who do
you lhink takes care ol all the wild young animals tbat people
pick up and take him for a while to play with, then get tired of?
When these yolUlg animals are picked up , their mothers are
not far away. Mothers don't very often aQ&amp;ndon their young .
Don't you Ulink it.'s pretty inhwnane 19 take them from their
mothers and their natural environment (it Is illegal)' When
lhey !D'e taken from the wild (especially fawns) they usually
end up dying. How humane is that?
Let me remind you, Major Miller, that you are RETIRED
from the service and that the 'fire depai!ment, Sheriff Proffitt
and his deputies, lhe dog warden along with Andy are not your
PLATOON, They are here to assist all the public not just you.
~Cindy Lyles,' Route I, Long Bottom, Ohio.

MOONEY DRIVES - Hannan Trace's Frank Mooney
(13) drives .on Eastern's Dave Brown during Tuesday 's
SV AC contest at Eastern. The Wildcats won a thriller , 6967.

"

Our flex point is designed
so that the pressure of the steel
never reaches the foot.

Store Hours
. 9 a .m.-S p.m.
· Mon. thru Thurs. &amp; Sat.
9a .m .-8p .m. Fri.
Closed Sunday

"Middle of
Upper Block"
Pomeroy, 0.

..•

.

.,,•

( ~) .

Weare not responsible for typographical errors.

•...

.
v

Pomeroy Bowlinp lanes

Tuesday Triplicate
February 7, 1978

Standings

ream

·•

P1si"

COLGATE

Will!

MFP

TOOTHPASTE

2t

,~
21

Contractor

OhioValley Bank
Mem~erfotc

Mark V

•

NELSON'S REG. '1.13

'

L,'

WILL BE CLOSED
SUNDAYS
UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE
DUE TO THE COAL SHORTAGE

i

YOU CAN DEPEND ON KROGER

Team

hiQh

ADVEAfiSEO ITEM PO LIC Y
•«~U~..:I to

bdl of .._ - - - . . ; n - ,.

boo '~

........,. lgo .... in toloCh k rog.o Stor•. ..clip\ H
~t&gt;QI..:Iin lhor.lld . 11-doryn o-ut o t an~
tiMid ir.m. -Will offer VOU VOIII thooU of I compar_.,
illlm, wfMn ......... fei'IKlor\GI !Itt ..,-nil UlllngS DO I , _
Cf'leek 'Oittlocrt Mil enlir .. vou 10 purcl&gt;aM 11&gt;- ~·1..:1 d..,
•"" ICMI"!iled Pfice -rnn 30 &lt;~~~rw

It"-

CM'I'lt!GHT
Tltl ~10011
CD. ITIMI ANO NICII GOOO

.....

MIMDAT fiUUAI'I' II , l.,l
ntiU l~TUIDA¥ KUU.&amp;Ih' 11 ,

,

TOTAL SA TI SFACTION GUARA NTEE
(.~f1lnll 'f'9U tNy •tiO; rO(IIf II 11Uif.A1MCJ lot
N1•1taoon •~go~•._ ot ,...,uf1nu•• • II

~Out

WI IUIWI 1. . liGHT TO lWIIT
QUAffl'll.S. NONI SOLD

lOIII

DUdl!ll.

-•.tu ••• rnn
N~•f..t , l(roe- ••••II ;...,.· ~ou• ""'"'""'"'the .arne br.,.d

o&lt; • t~l&gt;blebund ot '''""" I'OU' I"J"Ohu• ptoCI

U.S . GOV'T GRADED C~OI.q.
BEEF CHUCK
~·· :..

Center
Blade Cut
Chuck Steak ......... lb.
SliCED ... LB. 79·

~~:::.s.~~·~:.~ .·
WHOLE OR HALF , BONE IN

' '

..

Fresh
• Bostoifi.Uff.. , .. '"'
Pork Roasl...... .

69

lb.

c~
I
I

=

8C
65C
1

.

38 · 0l,

n

I
01(

$

gam e

-.

Sha mr:ock Motel 498.
Team high series

- ',

Shamrock Motel 1392.

· A-VALUE COMPARISON
Pomerov Bowling Lanes

Morning Glo,.ies
TJeam

ones· Bqys
Newell Sunoc:o
G. &amp; J . Auto F'arts
.G ibbs Grocery

R-value
93.
81

u $0

llllllU TOll 10
Ollf 01 .IL 01

· HHSI cosr
CUTIU COIII"'~S

Btl.

0

1

2

3

II

II

II

II

II I

I I I

I II

4

II

I

68

66

these values are

(IICtiDIIG IMIS 1111)
ltMt1

COUPON,.. f.AMtl 'I'

I

-~

........
, ,

Salad
Tomatoes ........ Ill.

Rinso Detergent

- ----- :

c

011[ 51 SCI
"ICJilS(

IIIII 11011111

~:2~ ~~:~~~::mOIIIt

:

~

LIMIT ONI COUPON Pia 'AMil V

.
DF

'-·---··_____.,
224 1st

~treet

Point Pleasant ·

(3flt) 675-?460

•:

"---"' I
I

Box

[I

I

I

tlnll COWPOU 1 .

. . . . -======:~.e::r'~': 11. 1111

11••••••••••...._............. ..... .
'Ddieau44t.~t-

Spuiatt

Available In Stores Witlo Dtli Deport•...!'•
Hot f 00!11 luiloitt I Ul·JPI

~-~
INCLU!)IS .
lS· ,.ICES
IATTII
FRI·FISH

CA,' N lE W'S

Admiral's Choice
Batter·

$
lido

'

I

II 11 11

for one inch of loose-fill insulation.

City Ice &amp; Fuel Co.

I
I .

I
I

lilt. WITM COUI'OII liD 11.51 IDDITIONII PURCHISI

U.S . FIBER
ROCK WOOl
FIBER GLASS

7~

Boy~ and Gibbs Groce ry 809.

Htgh team 3-games
Jone~ Boys 2282.

CHART

Pts .,

187.
:
High ind . J-games - VIcky
Gillilan 502; Lena Howard
477.
High team game - Jones

I
I

I'~IC HAS I

L

MACHINE
RENTAL
'2500 P~R DAY

I'

"' I

14'&gt;

High individual game - '
Betty Smith 200 ; Peggy:
Br ick les 192; Betty Smith 172.
High series --:- Betty Smith;

Karr &amp; VanZandt
30
High Ind . game - VIcky
Gllllran 197; Lena Howard

LIMIT 1 PLEASE

I

20,

Sears

The leading savings plans are at the leading savings bank.

'

UliTllS lot TO
O~ l 01 AU
Of UlfSl COSt

Feb. 7, 1978

7 .0Z.

,..,

LOCATED IN THE MEIGS PLAZA

4

SmrKist
·
6Y2-oz.
Tuna .. .. .. .. .. .. .. eon

PER BAG

4~ :
24•

.Shamroc;k Motel
Royal Crown Cola
Royal Oak Park

Carson 462 .

'

MAKES LIST
Ingrid Hawley of Pomeroy,
a se•1ior at Capita l Univer·
.sity, has heen nam~ to
Who's Whu Among Students
.in American Universities and
Colleges.
A business administration
major in accounting , Miss
Hawley is the daughter of
Mrs . Dianne Hawley, 102
Wol fe Drive, Pomeroy. She is
a member of Zeta Pi La mbda
sorority, Tau Pi Phi honorary
and the Senior Committee.
She has also been an orien
talion leader and a member ·
of the Capita lian staff.

MA.KIT IASKIT GlADE AA LAitCI IGGS ... DOZ.12'

526; Sharon Hensley 469; Pat•

cw~

,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _j

Local Bowling:•

Franci s Flo,.ist

. While Quantities Last. Quantity Rights Reserved

..

Il l -

HARDWARE

Kroger
Grade A
Large Eggs ..... Doz.

•

Brickles-General

PRICES GOOD THRU FEB. 19, 1978

Callip..lhs ut 6 p

Crisco
Oil

•
.,

BUFFALO, N .Y,. (UP!) Jockey Steve Cauthen and
Heisman Trophy winner Earl
Campbell have been named
recipients of the Dunlop ProAm Awards as the nation's
top professional and amateur
athletes of 1977.

CHECK WITH US Fl RST

p.m .: Vt•b . 20 al Wa\'t' rly at
6:30 p 111.; ~'(·b. 21 at Vinton
a1 5 p Ill ; Fe b. 23 HI

ACE

Senco • Oren ·• or
U.S. Rber Insulation

. BISSELL GETS TWC) ~ Eastern's Brian Bissell (II) ·,:
ch-1y~ m for layup to score two of his 21 points against •
VlSltmg Hannan Trace. Wildcat defender is Steve Beaver 1•

HARTLEY'S SHOES, INC.

On ~\1 b 16 at 6 p.m. MNgs
"1!1 ~lay at Athens: Feb. 18 at
huttil' aga1nst Gallipolis at 1

In response to article. ..

ANSI Class 75 Rating

Available in 6-inch (01368)
and 8-inch (01388)

HOST WA VERLY
Approachrs tn Family
The
Mei~s girls !&gt;asketb11 II
Uving . The course was tu
squad
will
play Waverly this
have run sevrn weeks, Sim·e
evening
at
6:30p.m . Ht humc .
so many have been unablt· to
There
will
be no rrscn•£'
get in from outlying districts,
the Workshop is being ex- t.:ame.
I E"nded an extra week .
Anyune still interested or who
has already enrolled may be
interested to know th at the
last session wm be reviewed
and tl"'r• is still an Oi&gt;'
port urJity to finish the course.

sonalities.

,

.

Why settle for less than the bes t? on reasonable notice of withdrawal.
When it comes to your savings, you This is exactly what Ohio Valley
want a fair return, the highest ·le- 3Bank wants and promi~es their degaUy possible, with a guarantee of positors. No wonder savings desafety for your funds, and acposits continue to be at an
cessibility to these funds
all-time high ...

..

Box score:

I Initer Growth

• Mlnlmufll $1,000.00

you'll find it at

Gallipolis, Ohio

Eastern travels to Syrrunes
Valley tonight for their last
regular season match before
getting another shot at
Hannan Trace Friday night
in the opening round of the
Class A Sectional Tour- .
nament at Meigs High School.
Game time is 7:30.

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, f'eb . 15, !978
THE YOGA GROUP is
slated to begin Wednesday,
Maroh I from 11 :30-1 p.m., at
the Meigs clmic. Fee for the
By Nan Mykel, Ph.D
One block bet ween us and the 6-week group has been set at
Clinic Coordlaator
way we want to be is habits. $5 . If this fee works a hardDr. Bill Whitney, director These haliits may once have ship on anyone he is enof Outllatlent Services, is a! been rewarding , but now they cuuraged to- lalk with Pat
Meigs every Tuesday seeing are tunnels that lrap us. We l.eegan, group leader.
clients. He has just written a keep running up and down Participants are as ked to
new brochure describing . these tunnels now either wear loose' clothing, and not
Outpatient Services and I because we believe them to to eat for at least an hour
would like to share some of be ' right' tunnels or because before the group. The yoga
hll thoughts with you : ·
we don't see any choi ce. One will be predominantly Hatha
" Most of us have had of he goals of therapy is to Yoga with a little bit of theory
and meditation. Pat trained
ipteial, good experl~nces : create more choice .
being independent; knowing
"There are times in life through the Ananda Marga
our feelings and limitations when each of us has ex· Yoga Sociely. The group will
and not being afraid or perienced ourselves as lesS be limited to 12, and folks are
discouraged by them ; being than what we would really asked to brihg a blanket.
THE PERSONAL ADdear about what we want and like to be. We feel that our
VOCACY
Sitter's Workshop,
acting on those wa nts ; real self, at least in the
under
supervision
Of Mary
sharing Jove and closeness; present moment, is not
Skinner,
has
'been
rolling
being accepted of oursel ves enough. We may imagine a
despite
ice
and
right
along
end others even though none hoped-for-self that ha s a
olusareperfect; taking good better job or ma rriage. We snow. On Feb. 6, they had an
risks; and simply enjoying may wish to be less tense, interesting roleplay by Nancy
ourselves in the present depressed, lonely or con- Kohlrelser and Dr. Bernard
moment. These are the parts fused. We may dwell on Niehm. f'eb. t3 the Sitters'
ol life we would like more of. problems from the past or Worksllop has moved to the
"White no one can tell us worry about the future . We Lutheran Church due to the
bow to be our kind of alive, may feel we don't act right in large enrollment of 25 peroften a therapist can help us certa in social situations. An sons in the program. John
discover how to increase understanding and objective Brammer gave an in ·
formative ta lk Qn the ABC's
th ese special experien ces. therapist can .often help."
of Guiding the Child, a!S&lt;l
~--------------------------Autocratic vs. DemotTatic
1
Letters of opinion Ire welcomed. Tbey should be
1 less than 300worda long (or be subject to reduction by
the editor) and mUBt be signed with the sli!Dee's address, Names may be withheld upon pubUcaUon.
However, on request, names will be dlscl011ed, Letters
should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not per-

UTE

1·YEAR CERTIFICATE

. %

.

'

1~ , 1976

Wash•ngton

frtlh Baked $
Cllerry Pitt ,_,

891oMit11 5llctd

Y

liked HCIIIIoo.

$21

~

�8 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 . , Wednesday , Feb.l 5.1978

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

1

WANT AD
CHARGES

!Cti!JIIJ~

W

JJlf~wr ~w\J

!~

1

nu;

Cah

'"'Y
2W.yll
6dwys

O...rge-

1.00

1.~

1.::.0
1..:1

LWO
2.~

3.00

3 7~

r.ach word ovt&gt;r the mmimwn 15
Lt i cent5 per word per day.
Ad! ruMLnll other thaln l'OI\!M!l'UUve

words

dwy11 will be

chiirt~:ed

11l t.he I d¥y

nile .

In memory, Carrl of Ttuanks and
Oblt Wiry : 6 cenLII per wont, ta .OO

mlnlmum ClASh in adv11nce
Mobiie Home salf!!JII.nd Yllrd SKies
&lt;~te n-c;ept~ only with cash W'lth
orde-r . ~ cent liwt!le fur adJ cMryin ~ Sox Nwnber In Ctire ol The &amp;on·

tinel.

The Publi61'M! r rmorvn UM! right
to t!dil or rejec.:t 11.ny adli deemed obja•liooal. The Publ111ht!r wi ll nut be
Mpon.~lbte for mort! thlln one lncor·
tl!t.'t insertlu11 .
Phone !192-2!56

SIQil .

PISCt::S ( J."'eb .26-Man: h 20}
Yo u have th e unique ab •l•ty
today to turn ·· nothmg " Sllua!lons in1o some th ing benefiCial . Don ' t 1gnore sma ll opportunitl tes .
!\HIES ( Mar&lt;' h 2 1-1\pril 19 )
Say wha t needs to be s a •d
todat . no t what you lh1nk a
Mondwy
fr 1end rn1ght l1ke to hea1 SmNoon on Sllturday
t erJty serves E:llaSion solves
nolh1ng
Tuesday
T Al/HUS tl\prii20-May 20 J An
thru Friday
as sociat e wh o oc cas •onatly
-iP.M.
the dc!y before- pub UCfltion
s ucceed s w•th c ra lty ta c tt cs is
no ma tch lor you today You II
Sunda)'
see thr o ugh h•s gu11e and tall
~P .M .
n.,·.
h•m .
Fridll)! Hfll'l11001l
f;J.:':~IINI I May 21-Jurll' 201
Your abi l1 ty to a rouse the sp11 1l
o f c oo peration tS your g re atest
a s set toda y. What you can "t c ut
atone can be act11 e11ed with
e nthu sia s tiC athes .
CANCEl{ t June 21-.July 221 ,
The Almana'c .
Where you a1e mot •va ted by
United Press International
selflessness your e fl orts will
Today is Wednesday, Feb.
be amaz•ngty e llective today l5,.the 46th day of 1978 with
Be a giver . not a tak e r
LEOIJuly ~:J-Au~.221 Yo u ·ll be 319 to follow.
ab le to adap t yourselt wi tll
The mOon is between its
ease today even m un lamilrar first qUarter and full' Phase;
g roups One who tacks this
The morning stars are
talen t will eye you wdh envy
v JR(:O 1!lug .Z3-Scpt.2Z 1 By Mercury and Mars.
ove rcom ing •na te uncer tamties
The evening s tars are
a nd rpee tlng c hall e nges hea d Venus, Jupiter and Saturn.
on. subs tanna l advantages ca n
Those born on lliis date ure
be ga• ned today ca ree rw 1se. · under t he sign of Aqtwrius .
Do n t be ltmld .
I.IHHA (Scpt.23..Uct.23l You
Susan
B.
Anthony,
may become 1nvo tved 1n an American pioneer fighter for
m!:: •den l today where you 'll be women's rights, was born
temp ted to 1es pond to p~ tt 1 -'" . Fet;J .,.}.;), 1820. ·
' '
ne ss. wit h pett ines s . hut yoV
On this day in history :
11se above 11
SCORPIO 10ct.24·Nov .22 i In
In 1898, the U .S.. baiUeship
negolla l.ng c Ommerc ta! mat- "Maine" exploded in Havana
ters you rr'lay fee t •nt•m•dated harbor, ktlling 260 crewmen
to day . Yo u sho uldn 't. It wo uld and leading to a U.S. declarabe a m1s take to ba1gahl fro m tion. cif war against Spain.
weak ne ss
SIIG ITTIIR! US 1 Nov .2 3In 1933, President-elect
Uec .21J A pleasa nt s urpn se Franklin
D. Roosevelt
may be 1n s tore today. when narrow 1
escaped
yo u learn ol tne co mpl imen ts assassination in Miatnl, Fla.,
oa. •d vou by an as·socta te wh o m when a fanatic fired
. . sever'}
you tel l didn ' t res pect you
CAPRI COKN moc.22-Jan .l 91 bullets at him and fatally
Pelf o rma nce . not app e aran ce . wounded Chi_cago Mayor
IS wtlut re at!y co unt s 1o day If
Anton Cermak instead .
you r en ~ea11o r s_are ho nes t and · In 1972, Attorney General
p rod ucti ve , don 1fear what o th· John Mitchell resigned to
ers may think
d.
l p
·d t R. h d
(NEWSPAPER EN TERPRISE ASSN )
tree
reSt en
IC ar
Nixon's reelection campaign .
In 1973, the .United Slates
and Cuba
signed
an
·., ~[fl:l)lenl ca lling for a
1 .....1.0 crldtduwn on airplane
hijackers.

NOTICE

AD~~~ti'WNG
DEADUNES

RACINE Volunrec1 Fue
DeRortmenr w1tl spon!ioJ. D gvn
shoo r every Sorurdoy ot 0 pm at
I~Hllf bulldmg 1n 8oshgn For
rory rhoke g uns only .

THE RACINE Gun Club Gun Shoot
every Sunday afternoon Far
Tory ( hoile gur1' only Assorte-d
ANNOUNCING THE openmg ot
the publiC occountong olfo ce ol
Roger luc keydoo . ltcensed
publoc accoun tan t lor occont tng
and boo kkeeping serv•Ci!!S ond
preporot•on of federa l and
sto le to.: returns o t 191 Wolnul
l:o l
M tddlepor t
Oh1o
9&lt;12· 2606 Hours by oppomr
rrienr

CL EARANCE SAlE begtns Mon
Feb 13 o r Sew-N-Sew ·Durie)
Main Stree t , Ro cme. All
potyesrer double knt t!&gt; reduced
40°. and so• .. . Thr ead b•g spool
5forS1.
PHYlliS' Snip a nd Cud . Formerly
Shirley Kay 's Beauty Solon 1n
Pomeroy . Now open lot
bu !&gt;tnus~ in l ong Bollom , Ohio .
For
oppomtment
ph one
985-3577 .
MEIGS COUNTY F1s h ond Gome
Aun . woU hold an 'irnporton!
mee"tmg · Friday Feb. 17 at 7:30
pm . ~or members only Will be
held ol Coon Hun ters Clu b
House on Snowball Hill .

FAll Sole M'"'
molar!&gt; ?o arld 22 TtoVel
Traders: , lij 5 SJ 7W , 25 1
Bunl-; house Sl '875 fold ·down
S I 700 up We ..,ell o;ervfCE! and
quol•ty Open Sundays Cpmp
Conley Storcrofr Soles. Rt. 112 .
N o f Pt Pleo!:&gt; OIIt

SI ARCRAFT

1-901 OlOS 98 Good tond111on
Con be lt.Ccn o r 055 Sycamore
S!fcct Middleport Oh1o . Ask
'"9 $12S
-

COU NrRV MOBil E Heme Pad.,
Route 33 north of Pomeroy
Lorge lots Coll992-7479
MASON TWO bedr oom apr. Par
trolly fum. Fully carpeted. No
pets . D epo~J! requ11 ed S200
per rno . Alter 5 p .m . colt {304 )
882 335b
EFFIC1ENCV APARTMENT Lady
p~~:~lened . Coll992 -3140

KRoolin~

Cellulose Fiber
Blown Into Walls
and Attics

I:

DEAlERS AUCJION Sole Public
trlvtted. Jhun;, Feb . 10 , 11 am .
I rue I.. loads of ''ew merchandise
sold rn quantify at Oh•o Rilo'er
Avctoon , Mei g!&gt; Plozo . Mid ·
dleport . Ohro.
PUBLIC AU CTIO N Frodoy 7 pm .
New and use-d me• chond1se .
Also Soturdc y 7 pm . LQIS ol
new mt sc at Oh1o R1ver Auc
lion Meogs Plaza . M•d.dlepo rt .
Oh10

Remodeling
Room Additions
Garages

HOOF HOllOW Horses. Buy sell
trade or lroin . New and used
saddles . Rut h Reeves . Albany .
(b 1• l.b98·3290.
fU SI NG ST AR Kennel , Boordmg
ln docr and ou tdoor runs .
Groommg oil breeds. Clean
sori ttarv fa cilities . Che!i hir e .
Phone'(614) 367-0292.

MEIGS CO UNlY Hurn one Society
ommat corcltnc and ad opt ion
Ru s~e ll~ B r&lt;:_d ~ury . 9~2 !!._28
service (lree on •mols) 992-7680
or eve nings and Sundays
992 -5427. Moil : C 'O M
Crowlo rd , R! 4, Sox 326
Pomero y, Ohio 45769 . Memb llf ·
t OS r ON rood be tw een Athens
5htpS on&lt;:! donot •o n ~ PO Box
and ~omeroy . Southern Tor - . 682 , ~ marcy , OhiO 45769 ,
nado ~eke ! St ze 4. Purple wlt,h
Jere"'y on front and To rond oe!i 'REGIS l ~ED BLUE fi~:· pv~ , 6
mo old (301) 882-332B.
-1
on boc k 949-2869. Mrs Dill
FO R SPEC IAl peo ple . AK C Dober man P•rsc her pups Red ond
, ru st. G ood pedigrees . $1 25 a nd
up .~ (614} 797 -4500· or (6 14)
all mak-.. ~ond, .•• '"' 7"f» -.SI97
~ • 1
of mobile homes .
- .--- - ·
. ..!.
Phone or eo code 614 -42.3-9531 . AKC REGI STERED Boxe r pups .
Have been wor med . 1st shots
TIMBER, Pomeroy Foresl Pro·
~2 - 2726
du ( ts Top pnce lor standing
sow~ mber . Coli 992-5965 or AK C
REG IS TER ED Doberman
· Kenf.Ha~by , \l -446-8570
I~ pupif ~~~~~:!. ~ qlq.. hove heal th
o.:o.:r"~aY~ ~
~~. 1·
certi ficat e ~
$7'5 '
Pho11 e
COINS , CU~RENCY , token s, 0 d .. 843 3053 .
pocket welches ond chams.
sdver ond go ld . We need 1964
ondoldersJivercoms Buy . sell,
- -~
or 1rode" ~~I! Rog er Wamsley. ~ ;:§';G11.0": :..:. ~_::~ --:. :- ~-:,
7 42·2~31.; ,.' (
;O':l lJt.~E t.u ~i-19-n R-:,;,~JBMffi o~.,-,-;.-..

oloF~uRe, k~~~- ~~~;·; ' t0At,~ ~· bf1J.estdf-i~&lt; ·_~ncr~'C_oldum

. beds.li ron beds , e tc. , comp lete
hou seholds . Wr ite M. D. Mil le r
Rt. 4 Pomeroy , Ohio or ca ll
992 7760.
,·

1974 Stt.VLINE 14 x 56, 3 bed room ,
to tol e lec lric . $7500. 992-201 9.

--

----

1971 LIBERTY TRAILER. 12 x foCI .
Two bedrooms. 2 a cres Call
992-5943 after 5:00 or 742·27b8
any tim e
B .: 52 TRAILER for sale . Wou ld

make a good campe r. Phone
949-2344 onyt•me afte r 5:30
.

-

-

GROW EARTHWORMS lor profit.
Free Dora
WORM WORLD,
1810 S. Josephine. Den.,.er, Colorado 80210 or t: oll Mr. Jornes
cc l!ec l (303) 778-10'16.

----

.

POMERO Y . Moores Sto re . After
30 years ol suc.cess fut bu siness
we ore selltng th1s general
hardware , au tomo tive stcre .
Pr~ced at Invent or y. Con tact
Somm e r11d le Real Estate : phone
1-:)04-675·3030. Pt P!eoson l.

LAVENDER .
CONSTRUCTION
Ohio

AI Tromm
Construction

Free Estimates
Phone 992-3993

Y

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

POI!leroy Landmark

BQWLI NG

d

lEAFORom·

By

9'.

Bollen

• ACE

CON50LTIN&lt;9

Sn.125.-e.ed,

·---

I

••

-It\ I•

'

CIJester, Ohio
10-30-("

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
by Henri ~rnold and Bob Lee

. Young's
Carpeting
Roote

l P"";{s o.

Carpet Up
tery
Phone Mile Young

Pomeroy 992-6282

NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

992-2206 01 992-7630
"The Oriainllll'l
Not Yhe l11illlo11

SALES AND SERVICE
11 -9-tlc

.,

SMIT~

At

or992-6263
8A.M. to4,JOP. M.

p~

992·2174

'"

Wood Stoves
Ni...,_
. ,~'rr.

==·~

•

Blown Insulation

ACE HARDWARE

JIM KEESEE

Located In The

Cellulosic {woQd fiber)
Thermal Ins ul ation

J&amp;L

.

.

H ·\IC'

2-5-1 rna.,

BRADFORD , A'-J clioneer , Comp t e!~ Service. Phcne 949-2487
Of 949-2000 Racine , Ohio , Crr11
Bradford .
'

NICE THREE bedroom hou 5e with
ga rage , tn Rv s li c H i lt ~ ,
!X~ use . $27 .000 . 992-5541 .

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
Sweepers . looslers , irons . oil
smotl app lia nces . lawn mower,
ne xl to State Highway Goroge
on Route 7. Phone (6t4 ) 985·
.
3825

:...13

e

I

.......
•• •

FREE ESTIMATES
Storm
Windo ws &amp; Doors
·Replacement
Windows
Aluminum
Sidi n g - Soffit!
Gutters-Awnings

1

......"'::,,

us'

MAIN

-..

.....

,.,.

•r

•

.
- .•

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

• ••

••
•
'•

Rulland

•a:a:·r•ME GUARA NTEE
ON FRAME

G

1

builder's
material
Donnouse
Scwnp
Put up
slakes

m.
•

HANK, KATHY &amp; LEONA
CLELAND
ASSOCIATES
992-2259-992-6099
992-6191

I

•

:

~
e•

1'

27 January

16 Phonetic
tenn
19 Buffalo's
lake
22 "The Marble

:u Sltining

9Glut

25 Piece of

!%Heavy

glass

Iabbe

30 Pay

boost
34Quarry
3&amp; Bowling's

8 Miss Prynne 23 Isolate

wore it

birthstone

29 Watered

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Finesse into safe hand

ball fame

•

plate
26 Back of
lhe neck
27 Frenchman
28Courtroom
vow
29 To lhe-

I

&amp;.UNc.H, fRMt - ICeEP liN eYE

ON ,...lNG$.

•!

"J

"+

Wesl
Pass

Pass
Pass

to work

YGKQ

IAJMM:

HJTTYAM
CEYKA

Q KG Y

GKACVYM

e ··~

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

: :·

:

WON!

Closed Saturday AI 5 P.M.

;
I

:·
•.
,.•
e
r

• • • •

ever,

..
•

~

~--~

BARNEY

HOWDY, SNUFFY-- WOULD liE

• ~~ -

A

• • • •

S J C Y A

· ~

t

•
•

K T

Four spades and three notrump would have been easy
contracts to make. However, South, seduced by his
beautiful diamond suit, enthusiastica lly leaped to
game in diamonds, which
was not an easy contract at
all .
After ruffing the opening
heart lead in his hand, South
surveyed the dummy . He
could count 10 top tricks;
seven diamonds, two spades
and one heart. If West held
tbe club ace, the king of
clubs would be the lllh trick .
This was most unlikely, how·

, ,

1 ., ,

Rutland

SAKCY

(t:) 19'78 Kin( t'tlhtret S)'ndktte, Int .

:·

CONGR~VLATIONS! I

CAN'T BELIEVE IT!

LET ME SEE WHAT IT
SA'{S ON THE TROPH'{ ..

HOII! ABOUT THAT?
''MOST IMPROVED BIRD"

Pass

It:

AXYDI, BAAXR
I.ONGFELLOW

MEJNYMZYJAY
Yeslerday'o Cryploqaote : TilE YEARS DON'T LAST AS
WNG AS YOU TIUNK THEY ARE GOING TO.-WALTER
UPPMANN

:·

East South
2.
3+
Pus.'&gt; 5+

Opening lead : 'I 3

H Y T' M

SY

....

A K Q J 10 8 7
• 87 32
Vulnerable. North -South
Dealer : We st

CRYPTOQUOTES

KT

+42
• AQ J

SOUTH
• 95

31 Part of
RSVP

_.I,.

WINNIE

9 73

+96
• 10965

One letter simply stands ror another. In lhis sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc . Single letters.
apostrophes, the length :md formation of lhc words nre all
hints. Each day the code letl crs are different.

-·

Ei\ST
• 10 6
" KQ 108 54

• QJ 2

Ia

••

K4

WEST

I

l

2:/ tS· A

+53

•

llAJ.LY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how

I
),

NHltTII
AK8743

" A 62

33 Fauf!'!l
35 Stored
37 Recipe
direction
Post-applause
song

'

lr,, 1~•7K .

BRIDGE

25 EuchariSt

GOINcp "1'0

'-

WcdncS(Ii.ly, F c hn,;u·_y

Carter

-~----~~--------~~----------------------r---uffim
rock
:E!M

,oo-

THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 1,, 1971
5:• 5-Far m Report 13; 5 : 50-PTL Club 13 ; 5 :55Sunrlse Semester 10 ; 6 :DO-PTL Club 15.
6 :25-For You ... Bisek Woman 10; 6 : 3D-Ooctors on
Catl-4; News 6 ; Sunrise Semester 8; 6 :4S- Mornlng
Report 3; 6 : 50-Good Morning, West VIrginia 13 .
6 :55-Chuck While Reports 10; News t3; 7 :0Q- Today
3,•,\S; Good Morning America 6,13; CBS News 8;
Bullwlnkle 10; 7· 30-Schoolles tO.
8:1l0-Capt . Kangaroo 8;10; Sesame St . 33 .
9:1l0-Merv Grlllln 3; Phil Donahue 4.1 3, t5; Edge ol
Night 6; Family Allolr 8; Mat ch Game 10.
·
9 :30-Emergency One 6 ; Andy Griffith 8; Family
Allalr 10.
JO :oo-Sanlord &amp; Son 3,4,15; Tallletales 8; Joker ' s Wild
10; Nol For Women Only 13.
10 :30-Hollywood Squares 3.4.15; Andy Griffith 6;
Pflce Is Right 8,10; Rlck Foucheux 13.
ll : oo-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15 ; Happ y Days 6,13.
li :Jo--Knockout 3, 15 : Flllmily Feud 6, 13; Paftrldge
F.amlly 4 ; Love of Life 8, 10; SEsame ST . 20; Nova
33; 11 :55-CBS Nows 8; loving Free 10.
12 :1)().-Newscenter' J ; $20,000 Pyfamld 13 ; News ... 6, 10 ;
To Say The least 15; Gambit 8.
12 :3G--Bob Braun .c; Gong Show 15 ; Search fof
Tomorrow 8, 10; Elec . Co . 33.
1 :oo-For Rlchef , For Poorer 3: All My Children 6, 13;
New!. 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women
Only 15 .
•
1:30-Days of Our Lies 3,41, 15; As The World Turns
8, 10; 2 . oo--one Lite to live 6,13 .
2' 30-Doclors 3,4,15 ; Guiding light 8,10; J :ooAnother World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6, 13; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 20 .
3 ' 30-AII In The Family 8.tO; Antiques 20.
4 :00-Mister Cartoon 3; Edge or Ntgnt IJ; MY 1 nree
Sons 4; For Ricller. For Poorer 1S; Merv Griffin
6 ; Gitllgo~~n 's Is. 8; Sesame St . 20, 33 ~&gt; Gomer Pyle,
USMC 10.
; :30-lltlle Rascals 3,15 ; Gilligan ' s Is . 4 ; Brody Bunch
8,10; Mary Tyler Moore 13.
5 :00--Here Come The Brides 3,· Star Trek ~ i Gun smoke
8; Mister Rogers 20,33 ; Hogan' s Heroes 10;
Emergency One 13; To Be Announced 15 .
S : J~News 6 ; Elec . Co . 20,33 ; Mary Tyter Moore 10;
Hogan' s Heroes lS .
6 :1l0-News 3,4,8,10, t3 ,15 ; AB C News 6; Zoom 20 .
6 :30--NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13 ; Carol Burnell &amp;
Friends 6;' CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20
7:oo-cross-Wits J,A ; liars Club 6; Gong Show 8;
Capitol Beat 33; News 10; To Tell The Truth 13;
Glfllgan's Is. 15; Hocking Valley Bluearass 20.
n~Marsholl U. Report 33 ; 7· 30-Hollywood Squa.
· res
.3,4 ;
$100,000
Name . That
Tune
6; Tattletales 8; MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20. 33 ;
That's Hollywood 10 ; Nashville on the Road 13 ;
Marty Robbins' Spotlight 15 .
B:oo-Chlps 3,4,15; Welcome Back, Kotler 6, 13 ;
Waltons 8,1P; Natlqnal Geographic 20,33 .
8 :JG-John Denver 6,13 ; 9 :()()-James at 16 . 3.(15;
World 20,33 .
tO :QO-Ciassot . ' 65 3,4,15 ; ·sarette 6, 13 ; Hawaii Flve-0
8, 10; Anna Karenlna 33: News 20 .
10 :3G-Lock. ·Stock &amp;
Barret 20;
ll :oo-News
3,4,6,8,t0,13,15; Dick Covet! 10; Ove Easy 33 .
11 :30-Johnny Corson 3,4, 15 ; Storsky &amp; Hulch 6.13;
Movie " Murder on Flight S02" 8; ABC News 33;
Movie " Inherit the Wind" 10.
12 :DO--Janak.l 33; 12 :4o-Toma 6,13 ; 1 :oo--To morraw
3,4; .1 : ~News 13 .
Movie Channel 4 5 &amp; 7 P.M. - Se'llen Perce nt Solution ( PGJ
9 &amp; II P .M . - The Senllnol IRI
Clble Channel 5 6 :30 P .M .-Testimony Time
7:00 - Paul Go11udino Family Fitness Show
10 :oo- 700 Club .

37 Btirfly

born

YOU

Ct •

YesterdaY's Answer

of fool·

_I

1
1

••• •-•••••••••• •••

affair
%3 Nevers

Please.Skeezix1
Let the man
open
the
box!

Monday-Tuesday-Wednesday
8:00 til 5:00
Thu"'da·•
8 11'1 Noon
•• '
friday Til 5

Arnold Grate

20 School-goer
21 Irish river
22 Lavish

GASOUNE ALLEY

.

RUTLAND FURNITURE

1 742-2211

~.I

16 Lose pace
17 Inlet: Sp.
18 Inferior: sl.

•

OPEN

1

shaped

- 15 Nervous
spasm

-"'

•

•

sword·

I Map of a
city
2 Architecluralstyle
3 G.). job
I Belore ·
5 Longrunning
Bway. show
I Lank
7 Equus
aslnus

•

:

e

ogist's wire

40 Principle
41 Three pips
DOWN

5 Shack·

,-., I'

OFF
e

(Answers tomorrow)

33 Bacterlol·

weapon
~~j~~ ~~~;~~rfJ~~~~l rc==~n1:1\r.G;;r'JiJllmTT7TTTT77.7T,7T,77?'7~ 1 Medieval

I,

20%-30%
•
•
•

xx rx xJ

TITLE PLOWED APATHY
A revolutionary invention - THE WHEEL

Answer

ACROSS

.."·'
..

All Styles &amp; .C olors

At

by THOMAS JOSEPH

. . ..

•••
. ...
•

e

gested by lhe abOve cartoon.

~t:VIO''*"tt:f'

---

~~···········
•..............
Berkline Chair S&lt;!~e . _,,_.,i,d• . •

HENR;E~.L~~iLAND

'----~-~-----·-·~·~·-'0;..'.-J

.

"'

Call742 -221 1
TAL K TO
WENDEll GR ATE
CA RPET CONSULTANT

742 -2211

tJ

I

~~eo~~:~t
J~~~~~a'b~: f~~·,~~ ~~i~.M~~~P=~~~~~~?!~~!~!
newspaper, P.O. Box 34, NorwOOd, N.J 078-t&amp; . ..,._. c ec ,.,... ,

-

9'x 12' Vinyl
Aooring In Stock

are OUR

~15 Tlt.tE ... j'-IA'=&lt;"ll7""'"~r--''

_, _

88

int:.~~;.~nleresls

SURE WORkED--·

.

Rubber Back Carpet

WINTER GET to your hovse? l e ! us
make necessary repairs . Al
Tromm . Conslructic n. 742 -2328 .

Now arrange the drcled tettera to

form lhe surprise answer. as aug·

!v""""·'v, I Jumbles: CHEEK

_ _ .-

... .
-.....

&amp;
SAVE A LOT

POMEROY - Older home
but lovely . 3 bedrooms,
bath,
formal
dining,
hardwood lloors, 2 porches,
overlooks
the
river .
$12,000.00.
Put yourself In our hands.
Whether you're house
hunting. selling or both

THAT PICTURE AND
SfORY IN YOUR PAPER

HA'/E
A REAL CASE,

'.,

WRECKER Service .
Rodne , Ohio . Day or nigh! .
949-2657.
=~'=--:-----ANY SEWING machine deoned ,
oiled &amp; adj usted , $5 .98. FRE E
pickup a nd deh11ery . Belpre.
Oh1o . 1-423-5497 .

'11/HA'T NO 50~FEiFII:.
WOULD 'TAKE
L'r' IN~ 1'01'/N.

NIIWfPIP&amp;rbooka.

---

'
DRIVE AUTILE

repair.

SUR!' ... JiiE

~

SAVE ON
tARPETING

needs

I GUESS YOU WERE
RIGHT, MR . STICK·"

---·-

LARRY LAVENDER ' ""'

TURLEn

1

rJ

- ~"'
~·

· REALTY

~~~. ~.'

(Ill

YOU CAN' T
r.tAKE NDTHtl'\'
STICK ON

~

HOBSTETTER

NEW LISTING - 3 yrs. old
brick &amp; frame ranch,
equipped kitchen, frr.mal
dining, 2 baths, utility,
carport , I leve l acre .
533.000.00.
'
NEW LISTING - Approx .
14 acres, several building
sites, close in on good road.
$10,000.00.
.
.
BRAND NEW Lovely
ranch type located on
corner, I level acre, 3
bedrooms, bath , forma l
din ing , fireplace, carport &amp;
storage .
BUY
NOW
$35,900.00.
BUSINESS BUILDING - 2
story brick, 2 rooms down,
2 apartments .up, good

us,...

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

"'

0.

r1

Print answer here:

JUST COMP LET ED new house rn
Middleport. For more mformo·
~t•on colt 992-2238 or 992-5304 .
--~
REMODELING . PlvmbiQg , hea ting
FIV E ROOM house in Middleport .
ond o!l types of ge ne ral repair.
Syracuse, Ohio
Partial bolJ-1 . Base ment . Fully
Work guarontdbd 20 yea rs ex- 1 ",A. • Ph 992 3993
corpeted-~"~~~2~55 ,~~~••
per•ence . Phone992-2.409 . .. :", ~,·_...._"'-;:
·
~
....:..-•
.... ,..,
'
~- l -18-1 m o.
.,.,
SEWING MACHINE Repo1rs. ~cr -" ie'"').''-'~'-~---:-~~~~.:......1
vi(e , all makes . 992-2284 . lhe
~·
Fabri c Shop , Pomer'av. ~-::----=-::::--;:-~-==------:--.:::-.;
Avthomed Sin ger So les and J!'~\\~~~~:t"
"- . '"
Service. We sha rpen Scissors .
OP)IR'ff\1\AN · lt(AN:tliU .
Colt · •
EXCAVATING , dozer , loader ond
742-3002 .
..~:~e :";.·
backhoe work; dump truck.$
and lo-boys lor hi re; wtlt haul
fill d1rl , to sotl , ltmestone and
GeorgeS. Hobstet1er Jr.,
"
gro...,e l Call Bob Or Roger Je fBroker
fers day phone 992-7089 nig ht
1071/1 Sycamore St.
phcne 992-3525 or 992- 52~ 1.
Pomeroy, Ohio
EXCAVATING
. doter . backhoe
.
PHONE 992.-6333
and ditcher. Char les R Hot~­
Office Hours : 9 A. M. to ..
fie ld . Bock Hoe Sennce .
P.M.
Rutland . Ohio Phone 74'1 -2008 .
Close
Thursdays
anc
Will
do roafmg , const ructi on,
Saturdays at noon.
plumbing and heating . No job
too Iorge or too small. Phone
We have Two Trailers with
742 2348.
All carpe l installed with
ldts In Tuppers Plains,
pad ding at no cll i1 rge .
HOWER Y ANO MART IN Elf.
Ohio.
.'
Expert in5li.lllation . .
covoting . sep tic sys te ms.
••
1 home in Tuppers Plains .
•
dozer
.
backhoe
,
dump
tru
ck
.
Oh io.
''
limes tone , grovel. L!ocktop
1 home on W~st , Shade,
Povi!lg, Rl. 143. Phone I {614)
As l.ow As
near Chester, Ohio.
698-7331 '
New ,
Crow
1 home .
sn
sq. yd.
BATHROOMS AN.O Kitchens
.-'
q,
&amp; up
Subdivlsio.n. Rt . 7 near
remodeled , cerom~e tile , plum' ,,,"
F ive Points .
bing cprpenlry , and general
'
mo•nlenon ce . 13 ysor s ,ex·
Look over our listings
perience . 992-36a5 .
_ _:_ 1
before you buy.
PULliNS EXCAVATING . Complete
Ser\o'tCe Phone 992-2478 .
Cheryl Lemley
Associate
MAGGIES UPHOlSTERY . Relin1sh ,
Buy whe re. you ca n come in
Home Phone 742-2003
reupholstery ,
rebuildi ng.
and see what you're ge tting
Beautiful selection of mate rial
Hi It on Wolfe, Sr .
- Good selec tions-- Fully
and vinyl$ . Free est1mote . Tel.
Associate
stocke d.
742-2852 . location : Solem
Home Phone 949-2589
Center .

POMEROY,

IWRONC \

REMI~ISCIIJ0 .

IYUTPEDt
I I I J

'.

VA -FHA . 30 yr linan c! ng , also
refinancing . Ire la nd Mortgage,
77 E State Athens phone (61 4)
592-305 1.

tJ

I

;•tll ., .... c....., ,_. ... - -

1Ts.w:xxlli!J0.

1

s.we 30 pet. t o 30 pe l,
on heat in g cost
Experience and
fully .nsured
Free E st .
Cil ll · 661·6479or992-381S
1- 16-1 rn o

Open
9:00til9:00 Mon.- Friday
9:00til6:00 Saturday
12 : oo til6 :Oo Sur,tdav

0

CO

CAl..~ IT

•

.

'

IT, I

IT. 'OJ PRO&amp;-J3L'(

•••
I
I
•

WALLPAPER.
PAINT &amp; SUPPLIES

•

'(E;AH ...
'IJJ,fJJ ~ 00

I

MEIGS PLAZA
Middleport, Ohio

YJHE~ I

~~

Pomeroy

?2 3-1 1110

"279.95

•

Box 34

la_brodor

sMOBiLE

Pomeroy landmark

_...

SuPflior

300 Main St.
Pameroy, Ohio

·

-

Steam ExtJaction

HEATING INC.

RNR

-

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

6; E lee . Co. 20,33 ; Mary Tyler Moore tO;

6 :1l0-News 3,4,8, t0, 13, 15; AB C News 6; Zoom 20.
6 :30-NBC News 3,4, t5; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friend$ 6 ; CBS News 8, 10: "S"tate ot the State
Address 20.
J ·oo-Cross-WIIs 3.4: L iars Club 6; Sha No No 8;
Capitol Beat 33; News JO; To Tell The Trulh tJ;
Gilligan' s Is. IS; Chl!lractetlsttu of Learning
Disabilities 20.
7: ts--Marshal\ U. Report 33.
7:Jo-Funny Farm J ; Sha Na Na 4; When Havoc
Struck 6 ; Famllv Feud 8; MacNeil-Lehrer Report
20,33 : The Judge 10 ; I~ Search of t3 ' Wild K ingdom
t5
8:oo-Movle " Mountain Man" 3,4,1S; Elghll$ Enough
6, 13 ; Boxi ng 8, tO; Nova 20, 33.
9: 01&gt;-Charlle' s Angels 6, 13; Live from Lincoln Center
33 ; The Islander 20 ; 9 :Jo-Mexlcan Murals 20.
10 :oo-Pollce Woman 3 •• •15 ; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13;
10 :3o-Wodehouse Playhouse 20.
11 :oo-News 3,4,6.8,10. 13. 15; Dick Covell 20; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33.

f!~
~

CAT . F£MALE Lon ghoire d. dog .

11

-r

-

R esi d entia l
a nd
commercial.
Call
for
estimate, 24 hour servtce.
Anvday, a nytime.
Phone 985-3806

1-18-l mo.

PWMBING &amp;

Llkln, W. V1 .

c'hlo,.de ond cotcwm 6nne fo r
dust cont rol ond spec toJ mill: ing
sol ! for lorm e rs. Ex celsior Salt
Wor ks. Ma in Srreet , Pomeroy ,
·•
____. _c-:&lt;&gt; ..
Ohio o r phone 992- 3J191 .
NOITEMlTo()GLorgeorloo~rt.oU',r
-----;"'"'":...:..-'---"--'"' WILL
Will !6.Uj}.) piece or cof\l'P I 4t ti"1 , ECONOMY1 ..T RA~T~ R t"r.. th a ll _at ho me .
lachments l1k e new , osk mg ~
housebold·. New, used. or' on1i·
ques . Mortin "s Fur nit ure ." 20 N.
~22~._Phone ( b~ 4 L6~8]~90
ATTENTION MARE Owners :
2nd S!. . Middlepor l. Phone RUG S
WALL
and
AQHA s lud se r ... ice. lntrodtJci ng
992 6370
Hongmgs
to Southern Ohio, Co rloko , sor~- _:_
·
'olgons. N1ce fo r Chns !mos
rell so n ol Oto~ . Breed !or col4
CHIP WOOO . Po les max .
ReosonQblo Ca li 992 -221
or , con forrnolio n ond dtsposi diarnet9r
on largest ena , se j.•B &amp;
HoMES P t. Plea
!ton Phone ~98- 8'}41 ev.enings
per ton. Bundled slob , $b per
son !, W. Vo. beside Hec k's
or wr1te lor breedmg wnlrocl .
ton Deli vered to Ohio Pollet 1973 Broodmore 14 x 64 2
Belle Echo Q~.~cr ter Horses ,
Co. Rt. 2, Pomeroy . 992-2689.
bedroom
40'}'}5 SR 692, Pomeroy , Ohio
G0oo USED tractor w 1th 1973 Dation 14 x 60 2 bedroorn
~ 5769 _
hydr'Ou li~, 3-pt. hilch. 742-3074 . •' 1972 Victodon 14 x 67 3 bedr oom,
---- ~
2bolh
SIL VE R DOLLAFIS ond cotns. Top 1972 Coveni'ry 12 x 65 3 bedroo m
dol lo rpmd . Colt 742 -23 16.
1969 Stclesrnon 12 .: ()() 'l
bedroom
WANTED TO bUy : Good used
· bunk beds , ccmplete . Pho[le 1965 CHEVI!llE . 4-dr ., A C. , 283
? •_
2 ·_
30_
7~
" •1 eng.• _2 1.bbl auto Irons Ex·
cellen t condi h on Truck lopper · We have enlarged our
std B ft be d . 'J8 m high .
serYice department and
742-'1485 '
will service Hotpoint and
IF VOU have o ser v•ce to olfer , HAl' FoRS:ALE - .
other brands.
won t to buy or sell so mething , HAY FOR SAlE 985 3849 or
de ' lcib~lngr for wor k . .' 1. tH "' ~ 1 985- 4'148 l
''
· t'··
whote-v~r.t-!. •. · yotJ ''I get r~ult~ i R~iO"uc_E_SAfE &amp;-f~St wi th C.~ ;;;r;J
fo ster w1th o Sentine l Wont Ad .
foblets g E-Vop "warer pi ll s" "
Ca ll 99'} -21 S6 .
· _Ne:cl:=:
'o:..n:-.cO:cr.":'-9-:-c~---:--:-c
FIREWOOD . SP LIT and delive re d .
· A thought for the day: In ,
; ~-. . .·-•
----;:··-:14~ Q icord or $~5 91w11[ucklood ..
- - - - - - - - - - .hl s first inaugural adctress in
f= •
• Al l har dwood . f 843•29G3 ,pr .
11
Depression-plagued 1933,
•
:·
ij
Al.--r:~:e·rv
.
f
-'--'J.)
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Pres ident
Franklin
D.
Feb . 7, 197B
The following property is NICE PIGS fo r sa te Coli oil~r 5.
HOMESITES for sole. 1 acre and
Roosevelt told the nation,
offered for sa te by Steven T .
949 -2857
Tn -County League ·
up . Middleport , ne ar Rutland .
S
to~n
as
adm
inis
trator
of
the
" The only thing we have to
Standings
Coll992-7481 .
es tate of Eff ie Davis St ar - SElli NG OUT due !o ill health:
Team
Pts . fear is fear itself.''
J ' • Cher
Smon.l grocery . stOre ·,ond gas
Eag les Club ·
44
• 1. Appro)(imatetv 73 acres
stallon wtl h stock !iJ.d equip - NEW 3 ·bedrcorn house . 2 boltls ,
Pomeroy Cement Block Co .
ott elet .. 1 acre . Middi9Port,
'Jn~e or · tess , to cated 1 in
men l. Located aj lcing!i.,.jlle on
34
dOse Ia Rullond . Phone 992' Settiop 29, Lebanon Town Ro ut e.124 VerygoodbtJy Cot!
Sm
ith
Nel
so
n
Motor
Co.
29
Cline's Canst. Co,
32
7481 .
's hip , Me1gs County , Oh10 .
QQ'J . 5S68or7 42.9Q 4s
Eagles Club
28 • Appra ised
-.:a tve
~~--:---,-Columbia Na t. Li fe
28
Nelson Drug Co,
26
57,945 _00
HAY FOR SALE . t 500 bole.s SMALL for m fo r sole , 10% down ,
Bill ' s Body Sho p
24
17
2. Appro)(imatel'l 15 acres
Tomothy ho y 992 . 7573
owner financed. Monroe Cou,n·
Tenth Framers
H&amp;RF irestone
1A
more or tess , located in - - - - - ·
--.----------·ty , w. Va . Phone (304) 772·
High ind . game
Men,
Indiv idua l game - Ed Voss
Su 1H,OI1 1 .TQwnship , Meig s ~ FIREWOOD $'}5 pe r p•cilup lood.· •·· J102 o r (304)772-3227..
Har vey Van Vranken, 220 ;
211 ; Don, Nelson 208 ; Ray
Co unJ Y~' Ohlo .
• -·· 11ll9-21!29 .
~
...:c-=cc..-='-'':-'~='----c-cwomen. Myrtle Sl . Cta·lr and
Roach 202.
Appr.a 1sed
v alue
COUNTRY farmland with ~edudPat
Carson
187
;
men,
Harvey
High series - Don Nelson
52 ,500.00.
ed woods , water ond good ccVan Vranken 215, women,
556 ; Ray Roa ch ssoi Bill
TER:MS OF SAL E :
cess in Monroe County, W. Vo
Gerrl Rought 186 ; men ,
I. This properly cannot be
$1 ,000 down , ::-oil {304) 772Radford 536 .
sold
for
~· tess than the ~P Bruce
Hawley
193,
women,
r e am hlgll game - H &amp; R
pra isedl value .
]102 or (304) 772 -3227 .
Myrlle St. Clair 182. .
,
Fires tone 884 .
2.
CaSh
in
hand
at
th
e
time
let
Pom~roy
.
Landmafk
Commercial
property opproll: i?
Higtl
series
Men
,
Harve'y'
·
Team high series
the aCt U+ t deed transfer .
•
acres , level .lond. tot:oted at
Van Vranken , 602, women , of All
1"!1:- ~ your
Pomero y Cement Block 2463 .
bids mu st be de liver ed
soften &amp; conditun,
Jerri Rought 520 ; men·, Jerry to -the taw office ol Walker ,
water with Co-op water
Tuppers Ploms on Ohio. Route
Cline 528, Pa1 Carson 491 ; Mollica &amp; Gal t Co ., L.P A , 35
softener, Model UC-SVI ,
7 Phone (614) 667-&amp;104 .
North College Street , Athens ,
Bruce Hawley 517, women ,
Early Wednesday Mixed
Ohio , on or before 10:00
Now Only
Myrtle St. Cla ir .482 .
Feb. 8, 1978
o 'cloc k. a .m on Satu rday ,
Team
high
game
Eagles
Standings
Februarv 25, 1978 . For any
Club 688.
Pts .
1
Team
addil10nal
information
Team high series' - , concerning fh tS p rope rty ,
let us te_st vour water Free
Young 's Super Market
36
Young's Super Market 192.4. ' inquiries should be made to
Zide's Sport Shop
30
VIRGIL B SR
.
'
H"'- 11011
Steven T Sloan at the above
address ,
_Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
216 E. Second Slreet
All b1ds will be opened
~
Phone 992-2181
publicly at 10 00 o'c loc k a .m .
FUNNY BUSINESS
on Sa turday , February 25 ,
BUSINESS LOT - On lhe
1978, at the abov e taw office.
corner of Rt . 124 . Has
II lletQ U.S I'll. Ill.
HA YFOR sole 992-7306.
buSiness room , resi dence
(21 15 , 19 , 22, li e
of 9 rooms , 2 baths, and
HAY FOR sole 949-2870.
double
garage .
Only
S~Ali BLOCK chevy-~ e~
$35,000.
rn clutch. 4-speed lrons mis·
NEW 6 room ranch
sia n. Good condil ion 5125 .
. PUBLIC NOTICE
home . Equipped kitchen ,
949 2860.
Notice is he r eby given lh&amp;t
dining room , 2 full baths,
on February 20th , 1978, at REFRIGERATOR . NEW slave, baby
full basement, carport and
•
0
10 :00 A.M . a publiC s&amp;te w ill
bed ond dresser , washer ond
2 acres . $36,500.
be held at The Farmers Bank
dryer.
coffee
,
bed,
and
lamp
.
&amp;
Savings
Companv.
TUPPERS PLAINS Reasonable pr1ces . 992-552 1,
Pomeroy , Oh iO, to sell for
Over two-thirds of an acre
9:30 am ,to 7:00pm.
(;aSh -•the foll owi ng collatera l
is this 3 bedroom home
tow It :
DINETt e
120. ~
with Oak floors. util ity
1915 Chevrolet.
Nova
chatr , S5 Two 3 woy tamps, s·s
room, bath , breezeway and
Couple , Seria l No . 1X2705 each . All ol abo ve. $45
W184771 Model 1XX27
garage .
992-5418.
· The Farmers Bank &amp;
9 ROOM BRICK - Natural
Savings Company, Pomeroy , 1972 J;. !on Dodge pickup. ~1 . 100 .
gas, city water. 21ots, froot
Ohio reserves the right to b id
Might trade lor small cor
and back parches . S~,500.
at this sale .
Phone 7 4~- 2460 .
CORNER LOT - 7 room
t2l 12, lS, 19 , lie
Income property . One apt .
rented, owner lives in one,
another to be renovated.
Only S9,6n0.
TOWARD ROCK SPRINGS
- 6 .room stucco block
Colorado, once 'primarily a
home . Has natural gas
nmining and grazing state,
furnace. ci ty water , 2
now draws · the largest
baths, and almost 1 acre .
segment of its income from
Want $20,000.
manufacturing, followed by
Don't be caught in another
agriculture, tourism and
snow storm. buy near town.
Caii992-332S
mining . Its snow-capped
Helen L. Teaford
peaks, ski centers, ghost
Sue P. Murphy
towns and health spas make
G. Bruce Teaford
it a popular v•ca lion·
Realtor Associates
recreat19n area.

,.;rt..&gt;lf:H&gt;if-5

-·

lho Week 6.13; Kolek 8; 1

ToniorroW .t; 1: 30- Tomorrow 3; 2 : lG-Nrws 13•
Movie Cluinnel 4 5&amp; 7 P .M .- Fun with Dick and Janel PGI
9 &amp; tt P .M .- Two Minu te Wa rning ( R )
C.blo CIUinnel 5 6:30 p .m .- Testimony- Time
7:00 - Paul Gaudino Fsmily Fitnrss Show
7:30-Wohomo Basketball ! North Galllo)
· JO :OG-700 Club .

Hogan' s Hetr9eS 15.

r--------------·
-$EPTIC TANK -~....,.

Syr~cuse,

742-2328
Free Eslimites
Work Guaranteed
2-10-tlc

773-5955
type. Bo th very
lr•e ~d ty . Lo'Jeoble . Nice
loo~miJ pets . 949-~£7 .
_.
,~ /1 . WALKER AND ', bird dog
,_. _p up s. Co~t 949-2621 ._

s:JO-News

-·
.'

.CLEANING

· -Save Fuel &amp; Money-

CARTER

IN COME fAX Sen11Ces Federal
and stOl e To.:es
Woltou:

(0''

Blown Insulation

w,~~~:~r;1 of

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1S, ttll

L-----------------------------~----------------~----~--------~--~ 0;

1,.Auction

,,

Business Services

.-or Rent
3 AND 4 RM lurntshed and un lurn•shed opts Phone 99'}
5434

TELEVISION
VIEWING

•

,,

t9e• RAMBLER WAGON
6
cylmde r 3-speed trans Body
Orld engme 1n fotr rondtlion
9B5 J818

1UO-College Basketball3; Pollco Story 6. 13: •Johnny
Corson •· 15; Howoll Flve-0 8; ABC News 33 ; Movie
" San Francisco" 10.

Il l '

..-----------------......:-, .~

Auto Sal..

Wlll"t1s or Utldfr

l1U.ys

Ft•b . 16, 1978
Take t1rne th1s com1ng year to
add to your knowledge by
studymg subjec ts that you lind
pleasurable'' Your enJOyable
pursu1t could take a prolitable
turn
AI,IUAKIUS 1Jau.20-Feb. J9 1 A
wily al'llagOnlsl may tty to put
down somC"one you !1ke in lro11l
of mutual lnends today Step
forward 1n hi s defense should
he appe ar o ve r ma tched Havmg trouble s e1ec t1ng a career ?
Send lor your copy ol As:roGraph Le tter by matltng 50
cents tor e a c h ami a long sell·
addre s sed s tamped cmc lope
to Astra-Graph . P 0 Boll: 489.
Rad1o City Stat1o n . ~ Y 10019
Be sure to spec 1fy you r blr1h

--

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

For Thursday, Feb. 1,, 1978

CARE TO CHIP IN ~ LEETLE
SOMETHIN'TO HELP PATCH UP

TH'CHURCH
ROOF?

I'LL BE
PLUMB
TICKLED ,.,...,,1\~
PARSON

because East had

oven.:alled two hcurt~ .
South co uld lclld a club al
trick two, lqse two· club
trick s and eve ntually ruff a
c lub, but Eust eou ld foil that
plan by leading trumps each
, time he got ln.
South found n better plan.
He drew the m.1lslanding
tr umps in two ro unds and
led the nine of spHdes. He
was trying to duck a spade
into the safe East hand , thus
kee ping Wes t from leading
through the vulnerable king
of clubs . Wes t clever ly
slopped this move by play·
ing the jack of spades which
South won ln · dummy with
the king
South had one more
weapon in his arsenal . He
led a heart to hi s hand and
trumped . Then he led the
five of. spades. W est was
unable to play the queen
because that would topple
East's now singleton 10.
West played low, North
played the eight and East
won with the 10 . East was
end played!
If he led a hea rt, the ace
would win in dummy . If he
led a club, the king would
win in dummr . The best he
could do was cash the club
ace, hold declarer to the
contract, and grudgingly
congratulate South ,o n a
well-played hand .
fNt-: WSPAPEH ENTRHPIU.Sio: ASSN .t

(For a copy of JACOBY MOO-

ERN. s end 11 to: "Win at
Bridge." care of rtus newspaper, P 0 . BOK 489, Radio City
Staflon . New York. N. Y. 10019,)

�•

10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. Wednesday Feb 15 1978

Methodist missionary's schedule
given for churches in two states
MASON - '!'he Rev

~·rank

Anderson , recently rctunJ&lt;'d
f1 om Za1re, will be spei:iklllg

-u~.
/{!JP.es
~u

lntc;
shic;n.

m a number

or ch uf(hes and

1n sp1te ol grea t dlff~eullles
lie 1s a United Methodist
miSSionary and wtll be
spe akm~ accordmg to th1s
S&lt; hedule
Sunday Feb 19 - 9 40
am . The Heights Umted
Method ist Church of Pomt
Pleasant. 1045 am, the
Tnn1ty Un1ted MethodJSI
C.'h urch of Po111t Pleasant
2 30 p m •. a rally at the St
Paul s Un1ted MethodiSt
(.'!lurch , 7 30 p m , a rally at
the New Haven Untted
Methodist Church
Monday . Feb :'lJ - 8 30
a m , a t.hstrlL1 mmtsters

appreciation for general
work and effort Ut Jaycee

proJects was John R HuMel.

January arrests
total 19, report
Nmeteen arrests

tmgtnn,

pm

7 30

Charge rally

1n

Unton

the Umon

LllUI Ch

1uesday , Feb 21 - 6 15
p m , KiwaniS Club of Poml
Pleasant at th~. K1n Folks
Hcstaurant , 7 30 p m,
Heights Umted Met hodiSt
Church, he w1ll have a shde
program
Wednesday, Feb 22 Noon the Good Shepherd
Un1ted MethodiSt Chu rch
qu1Itmg group 7 p m , St
P.1u l's
Chur~h

Umtcd Methodist
He wlll present a

slide pro~r.Jm
Everyone IS IIWJted to
dltcnd the meet1ugs, conce f nmg the recent conflict 111
Za are

Red. Navy

Smce 1972, the Anderson s

Black &amp; Brown

COORDINATING
BAGS

CHAPMAN
SHOES
Next to Elbertelds
'"Pomeroy
992-281 s

FRANK ANDERSON
M1mstr1es for three months
Mrs Anderson, along With
uther miSSIOnary waves and

children, left Sandora pnor to
Ute Katangese mvas1oo and

worked at l.uburnbashl for
two and one-half mon ths
before commg to the Slates
Born 1n I &lt;&gt;S Angeles, Calif ,
Anderson spent his early hfe
m England He rece1ved a
bachelor of sc1ence degree m
soc iology fr om Corne ll
1,Jmvers1ty a bachelor of
d1v1mty degree from D r ew
Univennly and a master of
&lt;Jrts deKree m education from
the Umverstty of Rochester
Before entermg missionary
set v1ce he was pastor of
Umted Method 1st chu rches 111

have been ass1gned to the the Central New York Co n·
nuss10n station at Sandora ference
where Mr Anderson is a
He IS a member of the
professor at the Institute for Western New Yo rk Con·
the Development of lndus tr) fcrence He was mamster of
and Agnculture tlDIAS ) and C'h nstlan outreach at the
teaches co urses m math
Umted Methodist Church m
sc1ence and related subJects Kenmore, N Y from 1966 to
Mrs Andel son teaches 1971 From 1962 to 1964 he also
English as a foreign langm1ge
served m Za1re as a professor
and operates the n11sswn at the Congo Polytechmc
1ad10
Institute
Dunng the Za 1re l'OnflJct ,
Ande rso n rcma med at the
llliSSIOn statiOn and was uut of
GRUESER RATES
cont.1ct wJth Iu s fam1ly and
the Boa rd of Global
LEADERS CLUB
Waller M Grueser, held
representative of the Midland
Mut ual Life Ins uran ce
Company, quahf1ed for the
Company's Leaders Club It
was announced by James B
Mcintosh, PreSident of the
Columbus Oh1o-based hrm
Mcintosh sa1d the Leaders
Club ts compoSed of the
com pan) 's top 68 sales

SINGER

SEWinG
mACHinE
IAI
OFF

were on charges of con-

tributing to the delinquency
of a minor and fo ur others
were on a dtsorde~ly manner
charge
There were two charges
each for drJVmg while mtoxJcated and reck less
operation
There was one arrest each
on the followmg charges left
of center, no operator 's
li cense, assured clear
distance, pcrmltt mg an
unlicensed person to operate
a motor vehicle, and res1strng
arrest
Charges were dropped 1n
two cases The department
also mvest1gated 17 motor
vehicle accidents dunng the
month

parents of a daughter, Lon
Ann , age fiVe

(Contmued from page I)

Sycamore Streets m Racme

1s associated with the Ed·
ward P Ttce Agency m
Columbus

Racine. • •

for new members who have

shown effort and mterest In
Jaycee work went to Ken
Searles and John Kauff
The group discussed
securmg Jls own meeting

quarters and established a
phone crew whiCh will June·
twn by phone m gettmg
Jaycees out to help w1th

Hospital News
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Adm11t ed
Helen
Sauvage, Syracuse, Tammy
Blake Middleport, V1ctor
Counts, Syracuse, Clarence
Murray, Middleport , Betty
Manley, Middleport, Grady
W1lhams , Harrisonville ,
Dorothy Norrts , Racme ,
Sandra Patterson, Racme ,
Vtctorla W1se, Pomeroy ,
J ames Roush , Hartford ,
Dana Glassburn , Bidwell ,

Judy Gmther, long Bollom ,
MarJorie G1bbs New Haven,
Ora R1ce, M1ddleport, Lmda
Bragg, Vmton
DIScharged - Celesta
Bush, General McCune, Paul
Marr, Cheryl Smith, Jamce
Crit es, W1lham Morns, Carol
Humphrey
E..SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad answered a ca ll to
Laurel St at 2 25 a m
Wedn esday for Webster
Hodge, a mediCal pat~ent,
who " as taken to Veterans
Memonal Hospital

IN HOSPITAL

Vetermanan John Moore IS
a patient at Lake Reg1onal
Hosp1tal, Lacoma, N H ,
room number 136

CLU B TO MEET
The Me1gs County Better
Livestock Beef 4·H Club w1ll
meet on Thursday evemng, at
7 30 p m at the County
ExtensiOn office All boys and
g ~rls m 4-H &lt;arrymg steer
projects '" 1978, plus any
other boys and g1rls m·
terested m takm g beef
breedmg projects, are mv1ted
to attend

LENTEN SERVICE SET
The v11la~e . Crow md1cated, or phone 949·2629
Tnmly
Church and the
would use the upstmrs for a
Pomeroy
Umted
MethodiSt
Clty·hall and downsta~rs to jle
CL~SSES'OFF
Church
w1ll
hold
combmed
used for vanous actiVJbes
Baton classes of Mrs Judy
Crow reported that the R1ggs held on Wednesdays at Lenten serv1ces at 7 30 thiS
clcanmg of the parkmg lot Royal Oak Park have been evemng at Tr101ty The public
cost $400 and thus far $140 has cancelled for the remamder IS mvtted
been co ll ected, and $60 of the month
pledged Cro w noted that they

'Ti..,::::=~::.~~~~:&lt;:::~:#;:~;:,~:~::::::::~:::~:::~:=:=;~::::;;,:~;;~~,,'l(:

Beat

1s due the Ben· Tom Corp
~
Crow Introduced the
• • •
foilo•mg
guests,
Pat
O'Bnen, Pomeroy attorney,
I
Judge Hobert E Buck and
Greg Dav1s
By Bob Hoeflich
Atlendmg were Cro w,
Em mogene
i1olste1n,
secretary , Cassell , B11l
Mayer, Dale Warner , Phil
The ~Mual rad1o-thoo for the benefit of the Meigs County
Kelt), Mr and Mrs VIrgil
Hearl
Flind has been set for Tuesday, Feb. 21, and the activity
Teaford, Pat O'Bnen, Roger
,
can use your talent
Dav1s Allen L Rtchards, Leo'
The day4ong broadcast to raiSe funds lor the heart chapter
Vaughan, Thereon Johnson,
wili be held at the EpiSCOJl8l Parish House in Pomeroy Those
Allan Richards, B11l QUickel,
who are willing to g~ve the1r talent to the activity should call
Judge Buck, Ted Reed, Joe
Mrs James Soulsby, 992-2377, or Mrs Margaret Newnan, 992Young , Boyd Ruth , John
3450 as far as poSSible before Sunday These calls are
Anderson, John Koebel, Jack
Carsey, Hank Cleland, necessary so that you can be scheduled for your appearance.
Now don't be backward - g~ve these two ladies a call nght
Beulah Jones and Katie away You can brmg your own accompamst if you 'd like
Crow

Of t h e Bend

MACHINES NOW
TliRU FEBRUARY 25th

~

THE FABRIC SHOP
Pomeroy, D.

I.

HAZEL CAPEHART
Hazel E Capehart, 81, New
Haven, d1ed Tuesday 1n
projects
Jaycees made plans to Pleasant Valley Hospital
make repa1rs lo the equlp- after a long Illness
Born Aug 'l/, 1896, Umon
ment at the Pomeroy
Communlty,
she was the
Elementary School The
playground equipment has daughter of the late Millard
Emma
Roush
become dtsplaced due to the and
Bumgarner
bad weather Plans also were
She was preceded m death
made lo complete the mini·
by
her husband Harry S
park m Pomeroy as soon as
Capehart
Aug 13, 1967 She
weather permats A vote of
thanks was g1ven Rtchard

The couple also a re the

response has been favorable

representahves
Grueser mamtams off1ces
at 300 R1ver Vte\11 Dr1ve and

Jr Th; s~rmgbnard award

BABY BORN
Mr and Mrs Robert W
Crow Syracuse, announce
SAVE ON HOURS
the b1rth of a son Robert
RUTLAND - Due to the
Wilham Crow II born Fr1day energy CriSIS the Leadmg
Feb 10, at O'Bieness Creek Conservancy D1str1ct
Hospital, Athens The mfanl off1ces wtll establi sh shorter
we1ghed e1ght pounds and hours, 10 30a m lo4 30pm,
three oun ces Maternal effectiVe today until the
grandpareJ]tS arc Mr and energy cns1s 1s over
M1s 'tofn '' He'rtdershot ,
Ga ban na , paternal g rand ·
parents, Mr and Mrs Robert
MEETING CANCELLED
H Crow, Syracuse, great
The Magn0ha Club meetmg
grandmothers Mrs Mane fo r Thursday evenmg has
Dorsey, Albany, and Mrs been ca ncelled
Josephme Crow, Pomeroy

CLOTHING NEEDED
A plea IS bemg made for
clothmg and household goods
for the Belly Wllhams family
who lost everythmg they
owned when hre destroyed
the1r Rt I , Long Bottom
home on Tuesday, Feb 7
Clothing SIZes needed are,
lad1es, blouses 42-44, and Size
40, 20 and one-hail slacks and
18 stacks, or 15 1o 16m stretch
slacks, boys clolhmg needed
are shirts large and medium
and 34 and 32 wa1SI In pants
The clothmg may be left at
the Raymond Smder home at
the comer of Third and

are short $200m paymg what

ON ALL SINGER

Second St.

wez e

made by the M1ddleporl
Pollee Department dunng
January, accordmg to the
monthly report of Pollee
Clue! J J Cremeans su~
nutted to council Monday
mght
Four of the total arrests

mcetmg at the First United

Methodist Church of Hun·

Runnel, Searles, Kauff
, get Jaycee certificates
Three
awards
were
presented when the Me1gs
County Jaycees met Monday
even1ng allhe Me1gs Inn w1Ih
M1ke Mullen pres1dmg
Rece1vmg a rertlflcate uf

qther lucatluns on the ad
\ ances the church has made

---------------------------1
! Area Deaths !~

Roseberry lor a desk model
Amencan flag wh1ch he
presented to the group The
flag was created from
stamless steel
'l'he group discussed also
the need tor new members
Anyone Interested m )olmng
the group which works
towards

comm umty

1m~

provemeniiS asked to contact
a Jaycee or attend the next
meeting to be held at 8 p m
on Feb 27 at the Me1gs Inn
Actlve members are to be
from 18 to 35 years of age
However, assocaate mem·
bers, over 36 a nd under 18,

are mv1ted also The Jaycee
rreed closed the meetmg

Omrch growth
noted in Papua

was a former employee vf the
SuperiOr Porcelam Co , New
Haven , and a member of the

New Haven Umted Methodist
Church
Surv1vors

mclude

one

daughter ,

Lethia Belle
Bumgarner, Letart, three
sons, LewiS F Capehart,
Garden Grove, Ca hf , Harry
A. Capehart, Columbus, and
Wayne L Capehart, New
Haven, one sister, Mary G
Hoffman, New Ha ven, II
grandchi ldren and 13 great·
grandchildren
Funeral serv1ces w11l be
held Thursday, I 30 p m m
th e New Haven Umted
Methodist Church w11h the
Rev J ohn Campbell of·
fJCiatmg Bunal wtll follow m
the Umon Cemetery

Fnends may call a t the
Fog leso ng Funeral Home
today from 3 to 4 30 p m and
'The Seventh-day Ad· from 7 to 9 p.m The body Will
ventlst Church IS the fo urth be taken to the church one
largest denommat10n m the hour prwr to serVICes
South Pac1h c nation of
RUSSELL DIXON
Papua, New Gumea," says
COOLVILlE - Russell L
Clara Mcintyre, supenn·
tendent of the Sabbath School Dtxon, 54, of Coolville, died
at th e Pomeroy S D A Tuesday at Roswell Park
Church "With nearly 70,000 Memonal Institute, Buffalo,
AdventiSt Sabbath School N Y , followmg an extended
members 1n 854locauons, the Illness
He was born at Coolville,
people speak about 700 dlf·
ferent tongu es
Pidgin the son of the late Vern and
Enghsh 1s the only un1fying Bertma Russell D1xpn A
SISter Abbott also preceded
factor ''
Mrs Mcintyre adds that h1m m death
Mr D1xon was a member of
the deveiopmg natwn IS
the
Wes leyan
Umted
heav1ly weighted towa rd
MethodiSt
Church
He
was a
young people, and the Ad·
building
contractor
for
a
ventlst Church operates 105
elementary and three h1gh number of years and served
schools ' Our schools ate the m the European Theatre w1th
only ones m the country that
rece1ve no fmanc~al help
from the Papua govern·
menl," she says
Durmg t he f1rst quarter of

1978 we are Sludymg the
culture and needs of people m
thiS remote part of the
world,' ' says Mrs Mcintyre
Papua, New Gumea, con·
sututes the eastern half of the
Island of New Gumea, and
w1lh 1\s populatiOn of 2 5
mtlhon the natton became
mdependent on September 16,
1975
At the end of next month,
members of the Pomeroy
church will JOin AdventiSts
around the world m donatmg
an offermg to furmsh mission

a1rcraft and youth centers for
the people of Papua, New
Gumea, as well as a new
library for Sonoma College,
the denomination ' s higher
education ' mstltuhon on
nearby New Br1tam Island
Th1s sprmg the college w11I
graduate Tl teachers, mne
clergymen , and 11 off1ce
workers

Services at the Pomeroy
church, on Mulberry Heights
Road, begm at 2 p m , and the
pubhc 1s mv1ted to all ser·
v1ces, which are on Saturday

the Armed Forces durtng WW :
II
Surviving are h1s w1fe,
Mane TumU D11on; two
sons, Ronald of Coolville,
Brooks of Columbus, two '
daughters, Mrs
Jerry ·
!Ginger) Sm1th of Coolville
and Laura Lee D11on at •
home, a stster, Mrs. Beryl :
Castel of Columbus and four
grandchildren
Funeral services Will be at ·
I p m Fnday at the White •
Funeral Home with the Rev
Robert Brooks officiating •
Bunal will be in Coolville
Cemetery Fnends may caU
at the funeral home after 1 ·
p m Thursday.
DOROTHY TIIOMA
Dorothy
V Stafford .'
Thoma, 61, Letart Falls, 0 , •
formerly of Mason, d1ed '
Tuesday m Pleasant Valley .
Hosp1tal
The owner of Dot's
Restaurant, Mason, she was ..
born Aug 2, 1916, Cleveland"•
0., the daughter of the tate
Harry and V1ola Pascal ·
Carroll
She was preceded m death
by her first husband Jack
Stafford Sr , m 1973
Survivors mclude her:
hu sband W1lham Thoma ,•
Letart Falls, 0 , two '
daughters, Cathleen A. '
Barnes, New Albany, 0, and
Linda C Carpenter, Mid·
dleport , four sons, Jack H.
Stafford Jr , San Jose, Calif., '
Benny L Stafford, New
Haven, Larry W Stafford,
Grove Port, 0 , and Joseph R ;
Stafford, San J ose, Callf , one
brother, Buddy Carroll,'
Santa Anna, Calif , one
SISter, Helen Lober, Lima, 0
Funeral services wili be
conducted Fr~day, I 30 p m
m the Foglesong Funeral
Home with the Rev Gary R'
Kmg off1c1atmg Bunal will
be m Miles Cemetery,
Rutland, 0
Fncnds may call at the
funeral home after 3 p m
Thursday

Hoffman fines 5 at Middleport
Ftve defenda nts were fmed
and SIK others forfeited bonds
m the court of Middleport
Mayor
Fred
Hoffman
Tuesday mght
Fmed were Donald Lovett,
54, Middleport, $50 and costs,

!allure to have vehicle under
control, Debra E Fife, 19,
Cheshire, $27, speedmg; J S
Kloes, 40, Middleport, $27,
speedmg, and Gibson Prmce,
2~.
Parkersburg, $350,
dr1vmg wile mtox1cated

disorderly manner , Donald
L1tlle, 41 , Middleport, $25 and
costs, assault and battery,
.Betty'"' Armentrout , 36,

Two actions 1~or d1vorce

Middleport, $1&gt; and costs,
d1sturbmg the peace, Elwood
Ph1ll1ps, 66, Middleport, $10
and costs, failure to y1eld the
r~ght of way, Michael R
M1ller, 22 , Middletown, $25
and costs, Illegal license
Forfe1tmg bonds were
Ernestine FIScher , 61 ,
Racme, $50, posted on a
disorderly manner charge,

-Browme Stewart, 32, Mid·
dleporl, $&gt;0, disorderly
manner charge, Darrell
Jenks, Mason, W Va , $25,

TWO SEEK DIVORCE

have been flied m Me1gs
County Common Pleas Court.
Sharon K . Stark, Pomeroy,
filed for d1vorce against
Edward A. Stark and
Elizabeth Mane Booth, RD,
Reedsville agamst Archie
Ray Booth, V1enna , W Va
MARRIAGE LICENSE
A mamage license was
1ssued to Del Lehmar Ogdm,
'rl, Wilkesville and Unda
Carol S1gman, 19, Mid·
dleport

News •• in Briefs
(Continued from page 1)
the beart of Jerusalem a lew blocks north of tbe old walled
c1ty, uprooted seats and shattered apartment windows for
hundreds of yards around

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
SALE! DOGWOOD PATTERN

KODACOLOR II FILM

C110-12
FOR COLOR PRINTS
12 EXPOSURES

Ll MIT 1 PLEASE
NELSON'S REG. '1.29

MR AND MRS CALVIN LANE, Route I, Middleport,
wnte
"We, too, had wooderful neighbors durmg the bad snow
storms. 1
"Jack and J'ohn Clark would come and shovel out our
driveway and take my husband to the doctor and grocery
store Tbey refused pay for 1t
"Cindy and Tina Smith brought the paper to our door when
the snow was almost up to their knees. As we both are seruor
citizens, we are thl!lldulfor what they all did for us."
The Lanes have learned that theseverewmter weather did
brbtgoutalot of goodqualit1es in a Jot of people so it wasn't aU
bad, was it'

By JOHN T. KADY
Unlted Press International
Rovmg Umled M1ne
Workers Umon p1ckets cut off
a source of supply for one of
the state's top electric
producers Wednesday and
the pickets are expected to be
out m force agam today ,
vowtng to "Slop the runrung
of scab coal" m Oh1o
Meanwhile, Gov James A
f\hodes today planned to
meet m Washmgton w1th
other governors to discuss the
nationWide coal stnk.e wttll
PreSident Carter who has
negotiators for both s1des at a
Wh1te House

• resolution Wednesda) urging

barga101ng

table
The Ohio House of
Representative" Ad(lpff'ti 1i

both Carter and Rhodes to
' brmg the full prest1ge and
full powers"nf the1r offices to
assure speedy and safe
debvery of mal w1thm Ohio
Also
Wednesday,
repre~entatlves

of

coal-

starved mtdwestern !&gt;tales

and federal energy officials
huddled m Cleveland to
discuss what steps can be
taken to deliver power to the
area
The rovmg pickets closed
two mmes m Lawrence
County Wednesday as the
UMW stepped up act1v1ty
auned at shuttmg mm-wuon
mmes
One of tht' mmp.::

r1r)~ ,-.l'l

··:···· '• .;..· :: ::: :: :: . ·=· . . . •

BATH TOWEL ENSEMBLE

~

~

··

By United Press lnlernational
1 CHICAGO - THE NATIONAL PTA, ESCALATING 1ts
two-year campaign agamst teleVISIOn v1olence, has 1ssued a
hstmg of the tO most VIolent, 10 worst and 10 best shows
"Violence is still a pervas1ve factor m TV programs,
according to PTA members," the 6.ikmlhon-member Parent
Teachers Assoc1ahon sa1d Wednesday " While most of the
VIewers agreed that the amount of gratu1tuous vwlence m the
regular series program had di!mmshed somewhat, the current
level 1s sllll unacceptable "
Of the lObes\, three have been canceled- "F1tzpatncks,"
"Rafferty" and "Mulligan's Stew." Of the tO worst and 10 most
violent, three have been cancelled- Redd Foxx Show, "Man
from Atlanhs" and "Bustmg Loose "
COLUMBUS - COMEDIAN BOB HOPE AND Dr Albert
B Sabm, ileveloper of the oral vaccme agamst poho, top the
hst of 18 Ohwans named as charter members of the Ohio
Seruor C1t1zen's Hall of Fame by Gov. James A. Rhodes
Wednesday The first enshrmement w1ll take place March I at
theOhw State F111rgrounds. Rhodes swd the new Hall of Fame
would recogmze the "leadership, 1!U1ovat10n, motivation and
contrtbutionsof older Ohioans for the benefit of mankmd "
WASIUNGTON -A SIUP BEARING 101,000 CASES of
Israel! oranges IS e•pected to dock m Phlladleph1a Fnday and
the Food and Drug Adrr\inistrahon says 11 IS easy for
conswners to see 1f the frUit has been sabotaged "1th mercury
FDA emphasized that 1\ knows of no mercury The FDA also
report there have been recorded cases of persons eatmg up to a
pound of 11 w1thout ill effect
COLUMBUS
STATE SEN
ANTHONY J
CEI.EBREZZE JR , !).Cleveland, today was to announce h1s
candidacy for the Democratic nommatlon for secretary of
Celebrezze, 35, scheduled news conferences

SPECIAL SALE PRICES

s3.99 BA'TH J(MEL............................................ 52.50
'2.99 MATCHING HAND TOWEL ...................... 12.00
'1.69 MATCHING WASH CLOTIL ...................... 11.25

Elberfelds In Pom

By ALLAN R BRUCE
Unlted Press International
Power producers gave millions of Amencans a blunt
warnmg Wednesday cut
back voluntm tly on the use of
elec tfl clly unt1l the coal
stnke IS over or we'll fm ce 1t
upon yo u
The nation's two biggest
users of b1twmnous coal The Tennessee Valley
Aulhonty and the American
Elecln c Power Co - both
warned customers that coal

HEIDELBERG, WEST GERMANY THREE
AMERICAN soldiers huddimg m their broken down tank
retr1ever to escape a freak cold wave have died of po1sonous
fumesm the latest tragedy marking U. S. wmter war games m
the Rhineland Earlier, a runaway automobile struck and
killed a U S serVIceman on a snowbound highway and an
American tank crushed a West German pollee off1cer to death
A U S Army spokesman sa1d Wednesday the three
untdentified Gls had sought refuge from subfreezing
temperatures during the mght m the1r disabled tank retnever
on a remote highway near the snow-blanketed town of
Rockenhausen
HOUSTON - A 21-YEAR.Qill OIL-FJELD WOI\KER
WHO UNDERWENT A HEART TRANSPLANT AS "a lastditch fmal resort" because of heart problems started by an
abcessed tooth was reported m critical but stable condition
today The operatiOn Wednesday ended an e1ght-year
moratonwn on such transplants by Dr Denton A Cooley
Cooley had stopped performmg heart transplants m 1969
because most patients' munumty systems reJected new
hearts.

COLUMBUS
Registration for all non·
passenger motor vehicles
except motor homes and non·
commercial veh1cles, w11l
begin March I and contmue
through May 31 at specially
designated deputy r&lt;gistrar
locatmns, Oh10 Bureilu of
Motor Veh1cles Registrar
Dean L Dollison sa1d today
DolliSOn said that H B 166
makes two major changes
which Will go mto effect for
the 1978 registration per1od
They are :
-Creates a category of
non-commeretal vehtcles,
which IS any motor vehtcle,
including farm trucks, Mth a
load capacity of three·
quarter ton or less 1hat IS
used lor purposes other than
for profit The cost of

a

at y

natlonwtde

('Oal

strtkc

because leaders of slates
affeued most by the power
shortages do not " ant
1mmed1ate
fcd e rHI
mtervcnt10n

Instead,

the

fL•dPf ,11

govcrrunenl w1ll wurk .t~ a
cleunnghou se
to
h ~ lp
du;semmale mforma tlon

comptled b) the 12 :states m
the Mtdwest arr~ctctl mo~1 m
ell\ effort to lessen the llllpll('l
of U1e walkoul
· nus 1s an e mer~en q
situation whkh neL-ds were
not llntiCiptlled by us ,'' l~nllp
S
Hughe s,
us sJSimtl
sel' rt.•tar)

f o t

mter gn vernmcnto~l

and

UlslltutwiJ&lt;tl 1 elutton!'i

tlf lht~

en tine

non ~

home

A motor home

The effects of the strike,

which began Dec 6, have
caused energy dtsruptlon m
several states OhiO and Indiana are the hardest hit, and
maJor utlhttes tllere ha ve

sesswns cha1red by l.11bor
Secretary Ray M.1rshall
todav

announced they w1il reduce
power next week, a step that
could lead to culbacks m

COAL SUPPLIES
Rovmg Umted Mine Workers Umon pickets Wednesday shutdown
two non umon mines m Lawrence County, one of which supplted coal to
Columbus &amp;Southern Ohio Electr.c Co The pickets were a lso expected
to be out mother areas of Ohio today man effort to stop the movement
of all non·umon coal m Ohio

FEBRUARY Is Boy
Seoul Monlh and m
recognition of the ob·
servance The Dally Sen·
line! pays trlbule lo Bob
Arms, Scoutmaster of
Pomeroy Boy Seoul Troop
249 The troop is one of the
oldest and most aclive In
Meigs County and has
produced over the years a

number of Eagle Scopts.
Arms has no children ofbis
own in the troop ~~I
devotes endless hours In
training mem hers in the
skills of good scoullng
Adults who serve on the
troop committee Include
Oon Thomas, Patrick
Wood , Hank Cleland,
Harold Norton and Ray
Laudermnt. Tomorro\\ 's
Daily Senllnel will feature
several photographs of
troop members In t~elr
learnjog

procc~~oses

through
the scouting program

Although about an mch of

IS

Bargamers for the two

Sides met for 90 mmutes
Wedn esday mght 1n th e
Roosevelt Room of the Wh1te
House
and laid
th e
gro Wtdwork for the renewed

By United Press International

new snow fell ove rmght,

defmed as a "self-propelled
rec reatiOnal vehtcle , constructed w1th permanently
mstalled fac1ht1es for cold
storage, cookmg, and con~

1

- The pres1dent mv1ted the
governors of 12 st1:ttes to the
Whtle House toda) to l'tmfer
on esca latmg I" ublcms
caused by the c..:n.tl strike
Car te r 's press secre l&lt;H y
Judy Powell , sa1d ''Even
wtder the absolute best of
cJrt.:umstances I tlunk tt IS
clear that 11 would be a
matte1 of se vCI al weeks
before a normal productiOn of
coal could be resumed '
- About 65 mmers were
a rrested near the V1rgmu.1-

'Crisis Watch'

Oasses going
despite snow

commercl81 truck IS $25
- RaiSes the fee from $ii to
$25 for reg1strahon of a motor

mdustry offt c1als of massive
layoffs 1f th e na twn 's longest
contmuous coal stnke doesn l
end soon
In oth er developmen ts
Wednesday
- Representatives of the
Umted Mme Workers Umon
munities are blacked out to and the Bltwmnous Coal
Operators Assoctatlon, press·
conserve power
The TVA and AmeriCan ured b) President Carter to
ElectriC Power serve a total end the 73-day-&lt;~ld walkout
of 11 milhon people m 12 reswned contract Utlks at the
sta tes
Their warmngs Whtte House Wednesday
followed predictions by auto mgh t

are
rapt dl y
dwmdhng and
severe
measW"es to reduce the use of
electricity he ahead
Those measures could even
mc lude rotatmg blackouts planned outages where com ~
mumt1es or portwns of com-

supplies

WASHINGTON (UP!) The soft coal mdustry and
Uruted Mme Workers umon
...--- w1th a persuastve boost
from Pt estdent Cartet were back to full scale
negot iations today m an
effort to end the record coal
stnke

Columbus and Cincinnati to make h1s
ann&lt;lwtcement But two orgamzat10ns, the Senate Democratic
caucus and the Black Elected Democrats of Ohio , Jwnped the
gun Wednesday and 1ssued statements endorsmg him

re~istertng

ease the Situation. he sa1d
Operators Assoc1auon met m
Invited were the governors
the While House Wednesday oflllm01s, Indiana , Oll1o, M1
mght to try to end the 73-&lt;lny· ch1gan. MISsouri , Kenlu&lt;kY,
old walknut , Carter tnvtll'd West V1rgmm V1rgm1a ,
the governors of 12 states to Pennsylv&lt;:~m.t l t! nnessee ,
eome tu Wa!ihtnghm today to Maryland and Wt sconsm
llli:tp w a) s to ease the
Even und~r the absolute
problems caused bv the best of t:lrcum stan&lt;:es, 1 thmk
strike
IllS clear that 1t would be a
A spoke&gt;1nan for f\hodes matter of seve ral \\eeks
sa1d th e go\ernor Yl OUld before a normal produt.: Uon of
attend the meetmg 1\hodes coal could be resumed, ·
has been urgmg Carter to Powell srud
mtervene m the strake
At the Cleveland meetmg,
Carter medw sec1 etary ofhc1als of the federa l
Jody Puwcll sw.d mo!&gt;1 of the goverrunent sa1d they do not
governors would Hltend The plan to order mandatory
governors either were from energy cutbacks to help
!:l-1ates hard htt by U1e stflkt&gt; ~;often the effects uf the

Department or Erwrgy sa1d

Wednesday
made
the
fullowtn;.:
a
wurkshup 111 suburban Brook
Pat k , otuu, uttended by
Hu ~ hes

stuh•menl

fcdet tt l ofh t: Jals nnd re ~N"l' st..~ntatJvt•:s of the states
d cu lm~

wlth the en(•rgy
uisls He stud · ~\!e ~mnt.&gt;d on
tl~e

problem ,'

but QUICkly

nntcd that no s pt•c tfl('
solutions \\Ct c adm·vl'd
And ufflce wurket s nt the

t;encJ .al Eled1 u; Co atrL'mft
eng me plant h1 the Cint'llmatl
b Qf Fvendnle an~
bt: mgmg hunps from hnmc to
hght "01 k phi\ cs dnrkCilt'&lt;l
I&gt;&gt; energy c omst•t vu t ton

s ubu~

111Cd :-i lU C:s

F lflt•t•n ( ' t•nts
Vo l !M Nu 21 1

Kentucky border as a 1ocklhrowmg mc1dent d.unaged

~eve 1

nl cars State pollee s.ud
hncd up along
V1rg 1ma 421 1 ~ route Jlllncns
fu.oqucntly usc on U1c1r way to
Kentucky mme.s The mmcrs

p1ckcts

were charged With wtl.twful
and refusal tu

H~s~mbly
di~pcrse

- Anothe1 100 mme1s ~ath ­
er t.&gt;d on the steps of the stdte

Capitol at Omrleston W Va ,
vowmg to p10long the stnkc
.1s Ion~ as nece~ury tQ obtam

Full scale talks have begun

Cleveland,

Registration to
start March 1
85

ur 1n a position to offer help to

Citizens warned to reduce use

m

SANTA FE, N M -THE NEW MEXICO Supreme Court
has upheld an mdictment chargmg a 23-year-old woman w1th
contributing to the delmquency of a 15-year-&lt;~ld male because
they engaged m sexual mtercourse The ruling reverses a
decisiOn of the Court of Appeals, which found the woman d1d
not v1olate any state laws by engagmg 1n consensual sexual
mtercouse With the youth Feb 12, 1977, at her Clov1s, N M ,
borne

Blue, pink, or gold do11wood pattern on wh1fe background percent cotton, 15 percent polyester. Very attractive.

•

As negotiators lor the UMW
and the Rltlmmous Coa l

···!·!·!·:·:·:·:·:·:-:•!••!•!

,_
1News. . . in Brie~s\~

state

Lhose nunes down and WL'
hope they stay down We are
gomg to keep thiS up the best
we can unul this ~1rtke 1s
settled ·
Another UMW p1c ket
leader smd unum members
James Howell saJd several would he out throughout the
hundred piCkets \\ere m the state to "stop Ute rUMmg of
area They also closed the scab coal" in Oh10
'There 1s too mu&lt;:h sea b
Collms Co,al Co mme and
coal
movmg tn lhl~ state,"
forced one driver to dwnp a
srud tl1e UMW member who
load of coal
'We had a pretty good crew did not w1sh to be 1dent1f1ed
Meanwhile, the OhiO
down there and we are
satlsfaed tlley are shut, at Chamber of Commerce sa1d
least for nuw ," R1ll Cray, v1ce m a telegram tu PreSident
pr0&gt;1dent of UMW Local 1957 Carter that an energy
m Vmton County and one of disaster ts unmment unless
the p1c ket leader s, .a1d federal achon IS taken to
toda) · We're glad to get be~Hl l r1,1l nr• d r hnn If'.! I~
Wednesday was the Super1or
Coal Co wh1ch su pplied
Ollumbus &amp; Southern Ohio
F.lectrtl' Co with ~me of the
nnn-umon coal U1e ut1hty was
recetvtng
Lawrence County Sheriff

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, February 16, 1978

COLUMBUS - REP THOMAS J CARNEY, DYoungstown, introduced legislation Wednesday which may
result in the electric utihty industry's reversal of current
policy of not paying OhiO's new coal exc1se tax . The blll would
create a spec1al t8ll refund account wlthm the state spec1al
revenue fund where receipts from the coal exe~se ta• on coal
purchases greater than 500 tons a year would be deposited

MAE AND ELMER NICHDJ.IDN HARMON would have
been marned 77 years thiS month Formerly of M01gs County,
the couple had m recent years been w1th a daughter, Vebna, m
Columbus. Unfortunately, Mr. Harmon died on Jan 6 and Mrs.
Harmon died on Feb. S. They both were returned here lor
burial in tbe White Oak Cemetery between HarriSOnville and
Dexter
LONNIE LeMASTER remains a patient at Children's
Hosp1tal in Colwnbus following brain surgery. He IS expected
to be there for some three more weeks although he's up some
and IS gettmg along well Loome sent valentines to his classmates at tbe Salisbury Scbool where he would have been a
fourth grader thiS year had he been able to attend classes.
Cards to i.onmemay be sent to Room 3007 and needless to say,
cards would go a long way m helpmg the youngster have some
happ1er days r1ght now.

Roving pickets cutting off source

schools of Me1gs Co unty were
open today
In some mstances, buses
d1d not run or were able to
make only a pa rt of their
runs

Absentemm, whi ch has
run h1gh m the Me1gs High
School thiS week due mostly
summg of food , and for to mfluenza, was down on
Wednesday
sleepmg"
On Monday and Tuesday,
The reg1strat1on period lor
non-commerctal vehicles and absenteeiSm ran about 45
motdr homes begms March 7, Jl"rcent of the student body at
the effectiVe date of H B 166. the h1gh school, Dw1ght
admmtstrat1ve
Owners of such vehicles are Go1ns,
reqUired to s1gn affidavits assistant of the d1stnct, sa1d
However, only about 25
statmg thai the mtended use
of the vehicle IS not for percent of the student body
was absent Wednesday
busmess purposes
Wh1le absenteeiSm was
Dollison stressed that no
passenger car validation running h1gh m the h1gh
Slickers Will be 1ssued m school, 1t was about normal at
elementary schools of the
March
d1Sir1ct, Goms reports

UMW NEGOTIATIONS
The soft-coal mdustry and the UMW resumed negottatmns at the
Whtte House today Talks re-opened Wednesday mght and Labor
Secretary Ray Marshall sa1d the sesston was "good, hea ted m some
cases.''

commemal and mdus111al

opet uttons and possibly

nt.~ ss

l.1yuffs

In .nldltJOn U1e nation :stop
a utnm akers scud energy
reductions mciY lead to the
layo ff of hundreds of
thousands of workers b) the
end nf Ihe month
It was the longest
contmuous nattonwltle strike
1n history
Ca rte r spoke for h vt•
mmutes at the oulSI!t of
Wt"tlnesday mght s sesswn ,
and accor d111 g to press
secretary Jod y Powell, ut ged

LEGISL!\TIVE REACTION
The OhiO House of Representatives adopted a resolutwn urgmg
President Carter and Gov James A Rhodes to "brmg the full presllge
and full powers" of the1r offices to assure the speedy and safe delivery
of coal w1thm Ohio The resolullon was adopted 87-4
BUSINESS REACTION
The Ohm Chamber of Commerce said m a telegram to President
Carter that "an energy disaster IS immment unless federal act10n 1s
taken to begm coal productiOn agam "

warned of a possible back~o­
workorder 1f ta lks fall , sa 1d If
the new negotia tiOns break
down "II would hurt bt~h the
operators a nd the un10n, but
most unportant of all 11
would hurt the country '
Carter has power under the
Taft-Harley Act to order the
mmers back to work for an
lltklay coolmg off periOd
Both Marsha ll and UMW
optun1SI1c as they left the
sessiOn
"We're most anxmus to
eome back tmnorrow and get
down to busmess, ' Said
Mille r
" I 'm somewhat
uptumsttc that af we follow
the format we set here

tomght , we'll ge t very close to
where we want to go to "
Marshall sa1d the mood
was good, heated m some
cases "
' I t wasn't angry," he
added "Just fu:mly stated

pos1t1ons"

' I thought 11 went well ,"
Marshall sa1d "The pos1t1ons
were latd out 1n general
term s It se t a good
foundatiOn for our wo rk
tomorrow' '

No quorum, no action

Na lwnn I Gm11 d tit ilCII and

:-.1ctte

poh~ .

but 10 of the O:J

truckl:l were (hsubk'&lt;l by nn1ls
tostiell on Uw lughwuy
- Hundreds of Ohio pkkots
fo1 ct.•d one trul.:k drtvcz to
du mp h1s load of i.:OUI uml
t loscd d nunc uml luncUng
duc k OW IU'd
IJy
twu
COIII(}d !IICS thC:t l suppl y 114111 ~
UMW Clllll lo Columbus &amp;
~1u ther n Oh iO EIL'C trlc 01
~flee wm k ~rs ut the
General EIL'Ctllt: Co 1111 c..: rurt
cng m ~ phmt m the Ciuc..: nmat1
su!Jml1 of F.vc 1tdo~lc ()lllo, HIt::
IJI mgmg l.1mps h om tlu mc lu

hght
by

WtJI

k

tlurkt•nt.'tl
IJOO:-Iervuliun
A plant off lciul

pl~u.:es

energy

measures
l':ldl d dbo ut 75 e1nployees have
been :o;UJ&gt;plywg their nwn

hght111g the

IM~t

few dctys

th e negol1.1Lors to 1 each a OOcau:-;c the company turned
(1Uick setthnenl to p1 event uff ovcrhcctd hlo( hts to snvc
clcctru;Jty
harm to the nation
Cm tct , m a hvc':tnmutc
J'he pres1de nt , who has

president Arnold Miller were

GOVERNMENT REACTION
Gov James A Rhodes and governors from 11 other states were to
meet wtth Prestdent Carter today to discuss the coal strtke and the
resultant power shortage At a meetmg m Cleveland, federal offic1als
told representatives of the states hardest hit by the coal stnke that the
government does not plan to order mandatory energy cutbacks

lJ1C II demands llw mm~rs
slgnuturtts ft~r n
!X!tltiOII Ul m~'(j Ut I(.'{ ~1 lhn ~
UMW Pres1dcnt Az nold
Mili CI Pctltwns scckm~
Mtller s rccu ll u\so wt•rc
( n culatt.'ll m UMW D1sh 11.:1 2!i
111 wcsl ctn Kentulk.Y
- A ('UilVtlY U.lrl ymg 1,240
tuns of l'O dl to un dct litCHI
pl.mt
zolh•d
tluuu g h
suuthwet;teln Jmh.ma w1lh an
.111 a nd ~~ uwtd L'Snn t of
co lle~.:ted

Industry officials left the
scene without commentm g
Earher m the day. M1ller
expanded the un10n team
from SIX to mne, addmg three
members of the UMW

!l'tatcment dt the resumption
of c..:ontrad t~tlk~. told both
s1des thai ' 1f 1t b1 eaks down
here tl would hu1 t both the

opera tors and Ute umon but
mo~t tmportun l of all, 1t
would hurl the country "

Sheriff
probes
theft
Met gs Cou nt y Shc 11ff's
deputies a rc JnVC:iligatulg th e
theft of a battery, t1res , and a
set of c ho~m s Laken ftum a

p1ckup truck i&gt;arkcd along SH
124 \I. est of Sulcm l enter
Wesley WI SC, IU
I,
Ew mgton ,
c:1.tlled
t he

department I ucsday f•ventng
ufter he rctumed lu hh.!
vehicle ami rhseuvet ed thC
1tems m1 ssmg
Sheriff James Proffitt
requ es t s
that
anyone
tra veling m the VICinity who
m1ght have seen anyone
around the vehicle (197:1 Ji'ord
p1ckup truck 1 coni act the
shen ff 's office Immed ia tely
W1lh the current electn ca l
cns1s, many a rea residents
a nd busmcsscs are tummg
off their outSide sec urity
llghtmg
Me1gs County Sheriff
Proffitt urges area residents
to be on the alert to no1ses a nd
to strange a nd suspiciOUS
act1v111es on the1r properties
Motonsts can also· be of
asSistance m that as they
dnve along they can be on the
alert to suspiCious persons
a round darkened bulldmgs,
etc
The Sheriff also requests
that h1s off1ce be notified
of
a ny
1mmcd1alely
SUSpiCIOUS actiVIties SO that a
deputy can Investigate

w1ll be sub-contracted O'Ne1l bargatmng council , who had
ca lled the general contractor voted 3~ to reject a tentative
the co nstructiOn manager settlement reached by Miller
and ms1sted that work on the
The Bituminous Cnal
fac1hty could be done by local Operators Association at first
builders.
refused Carter's call for the
• The only function of the CIC White House sesston, but
and the county board of changed position Within three
commiSSIOners Will be to hours With
Marshall 's
approve the project The interceSSion.
commiSSioners would gtve
The rejected coa l pact
approval for the Issuance of would have boosted mmers'
industnal revenue bonds, tax average pay from $7 80 to
free, to construct the home at $10 15 an hour over three
the nursmg home , had taken options on ground, no cost to the county
years, guaranteed mediCal
Cost to residents of the benelits cut off durmg the
requested the meetmg hired an architect, whose
yesterday w1th CI C directors work IS 85 percent complete, home "Ill be $31 private strtke, and restructured the
and the Me1gs Co unty and has a general contractor room, and $27 sem1-pr1vate umon's deple ted penswn
CommiSSIOn
O'Nell sa1d he has gone lo a O'Neil also pomted out that funds
Bernard Fultz,
CIC lot of expense and time not to medicare and med1ca1d will
Rank-and -file
mmers, ' :::::::::::::::::::.:·:: ::::··:·:::':·:::::::::::::,:::,';':' :':,:,:,:·::,:,:-:·,:,.
president, who set up the next be serious about a nursmg be ava1lable
however, were infuriated by
EXTENDED FORECAST
Jones md1cated that he saw a proVISion allowmg coal
meetmg, satd he w11J not be home
Saturday
through
no
problem,
but
was
Inable to attend the Feb 23
Jones Slated that he would
operators to fine Wildcat
Monday,
fair
and
cold
terested
m
local
contractors
session
hke to see local builders have
Sinkers up to $20 a day. And
weather
during
the
period,
bemg
Involved
m
the
project
II was reported the new an opportumly to b1d on the
they were unhappy w1th the
with highs in the ZOs ond
Fultz, as a ctbzen, expressed pension changes, elimmat1on
nursmg home would be contract to bUild the home
overnight lows hetweeo
located 1n Middleport at Page
O'Neil explamed that thiS a des1re to see the nurSlllg of coSI-of·hvmg increases and
~ero and 10 abeve zero.
and Powell Streets It w11I would be possible as all work home become a reahty
w1th controversial production
cost appruXIIllately $2
mcentives
Due to a lack of a quorum ,
CIC directors co uld not take

nulllon Between 55 to 60
peo pl e w11l be employed
achon Wednesday endorsmg rece1vmg a payroll of $700,000
l'Onstructwn of a nursmg annually
home m Middleport
Richard Jones, co m·
Smce there wasn't enough m1sstoner, asked 1f O'Netl's
members present, another certificate of need had e•·
meetmg w1ll be held Feb 23 p1red, a nd O'Neil explam ed
m the bureau of support at th e that 11 had, but 1t had been
Me1gs County Courthouse extended by the Slgmng of a
The sess10n will begm at 7 30 general contractor. wlu ch
pm
keeps the prolect current,
John O'Neil of Cleveland, and on hie m Manetta
who ts expected to construct
O'Neil also sa1d he has

·~

,."

•

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