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                  <text>8-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday. Feb. 20, t978

Wahama Upsets Ravenswood
a S-9 ' season slate. Raven· points for the locals 15 camo game with the main event to Hilton

BY GARY CLARK

swood saw their record
The Ravenswood Red dwindle to 7~.
Devils, found out Saturday
Wahama actually won the
night that they couldn't defeat contest at the' free throw Une
two Mason County teams on by canning Tl of 37 attempts
successive nights as Coach while the Red Devils
Homer
Preece's Wahama managed just 8 of 14. All told,
White Falcons upset the the Jackson CoWJtians were
hlgh1y-favore'd Red Devils by whl!tled for 27 foulS to just 13
a 61-55 score.
for the locals whlch' accoWlted
Ravenswood had previously for the
difference as
pulled off their biggest upset Ravenswood outgoaled the
of the season Friday night visiting Falcons 23-17.
when they turned hack Point . After a close first quarter In
Pleasant, 63.W, before the, which the hosts held a slim.lSWhlte Falcons suprlsed the 14 lead the White Falcons
JacksOn County live with the caught! ire in the s!M!ond canto
aid of a 27-point second to pUe up 27 . points while
quarter outburst.
limiting their opponents to
The win snapped a four· just eight secon~ period
game losing skid for the White markers and give the Bend
Falcons and was only their ·Area team a 41·23 halftime
second victory In their last advantage.
nine games leaving them with
Of those 27 second quarter

NOT CUTTING THE MUSTARD?

Hospital News

2 0-1
0 2·2
0 1-2
0~
0~

5 4
2 2
2 1
5 0
1 0
Tl 55

Miller
by way of charity !oases as follow .
Pannell
they converted 15 of 18 at·
tempts. Rick Buuard, 5'5" WAHA!M(61 ) FG FT PF TP Fleming
3 10.12 1 16 Kelly
senior, guard paced the White Barnltz
23 ~14
6 U 1 16 TOTAL
Falcon attack In the eight Buzzard
3 5-7 4 11 Score by quarters :
minute span with 12 t.alllea Blessing
1 2 3 4 Tot
3 lio6 3 11
while Rick Bamltz and Greg Barnitz
Blessing added six and four Honaker
1 ~ 1 5 Wahama 14 Tl 11 &amp; 61
Zuspan
I ~ 3 2 Raven
respectively.
15 8 13 19 55
17 TI-'SI 13 81 swood
Following Intermission, TOTAL
Olliclal!K:ene Carpenter and
Wahama continued to stymie
Paul Raines
the Red Devils and built their RAVENSWOOD (55 )
6 ~ 2 16 RESERVE GAME
biggest lead or the night at 23 Stanley
6 1-3 2 13 Score by Quarters:
points and led by as much aa Fowler
1 2 3 4 Tot
Hardy
5 ~ 5 10
16 throughout the period.
2 2-2 3 6 Wahama 13 12 13 24 82
However , Ravenswood Brown
2 ~ 0 4, Raven
made a run !or the victory In Finney
15 12 15 11 53
swood
the llnal stanza but came up
short as the White Falcons
came away with an lm·
presslve 61-55 trlwnph.
'
.
Wahama placed four men In
(Continued from page lJ
double figures with Rick
Barnltz and Rick Buzzard This year, the week4ong session of the AFL.CIO's executive
council Is expected to focus on the economy, trade legialat10n
sharing game high honors .
and jobs. As in the past, AFL.CIO leader George Meany Will
with 16 markers apiece. Greg chair the session with nothing to indicate any retirement plans
Blessing and Bob Barnltz on his part
·
followed with 11 tallles each.
Ravenswood ~ot 15 points
BEREA, OHIO - THREE MEN ARE BEING sought in
from Mark Stanley, 13 !rom connection with the death of a Berea man and the beating of his
Mark Fowler and 10 from Rick elderly parents . Police said Joseph Stanley, 45, was fatally
Hardy.
shot Saturday night by three men who forced their way in Ill the
While shooting percentages Stanley home. The victim's father, Frank, 77, was listed in
were unavailable for the Red serious condition in the intensive care unit at Southwest
Devils the local charges shot a General Hospital. His 7S.year..,ld mother was in fair condition.
poor 36 percent from the field
ROCK F ALI.S, ILL. - TWO PERSONS WERE killed and
and a respectable 73 percent
from the charity stripe which two others injured SWlday when their car hit the rear of a
was the difference In the semi-trailer truck at a four-way stop at U.S. 30 and !llinois 2.
Killed were Jerry Johnson, 24, and Franslsco Olalde, 22, both
game.
of
SterUng, !11. Listed In satisfactory condition were James
The bend area team
28, and . his wile, Olga, 26, also of sterling. Truck
Branch,
collected 32 total rebounds and
driver
Michael
Sullivan, 23, Clinton, Ohio, was not injured .,
committed just 14 turnovers.
Wahama also took the
jWJior varsity contest when
they outscored the Little
Devils 24-llin thellnal period
Three persons were killed over a Portage County near
to take a come from behind 62- in a two-vehicle accident Ravenna.
53 victory.
Saturday in Cincinnati w
Cincinnati: Richard W. SetGary Richards paced the boost the weekend traffic wart, 21, Kathy J . Hawley, 23
Falcon attack with 16 points to . death wll to at least nine, the and David Hawley, 21, all of
help move Coach Lewis Hall's State Highway Patrol said Cincinnati, killed when Setwart 's car collided head on
Utile Falcon record to 9-3 on wday.
the year.
The Patrol survey shows no with another in the Cincinnati
-Craig Easter led the hosts deaths Friday night, seven suburb Of Sharonville.
Lancaster: William R.
with 14 markers as the Little Saturday and two Sunday.
Devils fell to 4-11.
The survey also shows one Deems, 24, Baltimore, Ohi,o,
Wahama tet!U'ns to action car-train
victim,
one killed in a one-vehicle
four times this week with two pedestrian and one person accident on Ohio 158 north of
regularly schedule contests crushed between two cars. Lancaster in Fairfield
This weekend 's count was County.
and two make up dates.
.
· .
· ·· up from the previous Sunday
Tomte the White Falcons visit weekend when six persons
Warren: Robert Odvar Sr.,
Meigs m a rescheduled game wee killed in five accidents 46, Cortland, killed when he
before hosting Spencer during the 54-hour period.
bent to tighten a chain on a
Killed in the Cincinnati car he was towing and his son
Tuesday evening.
hit
the
crash were Richard W. accidentally
Hannan Invades Mason on Seiwart, 21, David Hawley, accelerator, pinning Odvar
rrtiursday
before Po~nt 21, and his wife Kathy J. ~tween the two cars.
Pleasant closes out the week Hawley, 23, aU of Cincinnati.
Chardon: Darryl J . Vargo,
in. a return maich also slated
13, Chesterland, struck by a
for the White Falcon home Friday Night
vehicle on U.S. 322 in Geauga
None.
County near Chardon .
. court.
.
Game time tonlte at Meigs Saturday
Canton:
Janice
is 6 p.m. for the preliminary
Hockensmith, 31, Navarre,
killed In a two-car crash on a
Stark County road near IRISH WINS
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (UP! )Canton.
Toledo : Brent Peacock, 21, Michigan won its third
Tillsonburg, Ontario, can., straight Big Ten women's
diving
killed when he drove into the swimming and
weekend.
championship
this
rear end of truck that was
Michigan scored 1,197 team
trying to merge into traffic on
points
Cor the victory, w·lih
r-m.
Wisconsin
in second at ::»i:la
Ravenna: Thomas . 0 .
Myers, 25, Ravenna, killed In points and Indiana third with
a cartrain crash at a crossing 334 .

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday Admission - Carl
Fulton, Gallipolis.
Saturday Discharges Victor Counts, Conna Knapp,
Jana Evans, Elizabeth
Bartoe, Linda Dye, Esta
David., Raymond Ridgway,
Helen
Sauvage,
Jesse
Browning, Jr.
Sunday Admissions Jennie Williamson. Rutland ;
James Williams, Lone
Bottom ; Earl Riggs, Langsville; Gertrude Pellegrino,
Long
Bottom ; Robert
Manley, Middleport ; Grace
Roush, Ra ci ne .
Sunday Discharges Danny Terzopplous, Brian
Ri!Oe , Ellen Arnott , Her·
metta Hysell , Pauline
Cunningham.

News •• in Briefs

Nine die in traffic

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our entire circulation! Call.

The Daily Sentinel
I

992-2156

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'40.000 Ma~imum Insurance for Each Depositor
Member federal ll€posit Insurance CorporatK&gt;n

'

---------------------------.
! Area Deaths !
I

I

Ark. Friends may call at the
DELBERT C. GARNES
funeral
after 7 this evening.
Delbert C. Garnes, 59,
whose home was 746 Fourth
FRANCES FOLMER
Ave ., Gallipolis,
died
Frances Folmer, 77, of
unexpectedly at 12:26 a. m.
Sunday at Holzer Medical Rock Springs, dled Sunday
Center . He was a con· afternoon at Honer Medical
struction worker and cook. Center.
She was born May 28, 1900,
Born March 30, 1918. in
the
daughter of the late Dave
Columbus to the late Guy and ·
and
Anna Davidson Jamea.
Nellie Pounds Games, he
She
was also preceded In
married the former Virginia
Scott April 9, 1942, in Vinton, death by one Infant daughter.
and she survives with five one sister, Cora; two
brothers, John and Dan.
sons and a daughter.
Survivors include her
They are : Douglas
Games, Columbus; Frank, husband, Scott; one son,
· St. Louis; Charles, in the William of Pomeroy; three
military in Germany; Guy gra ndchildre, Mrs. James
and John , both Gallipolis, and (Judy) Durham of Grand
Mrs. Anthony (Martha) Island, N. Y.; Mrs. Steven
Woodfork,
Chillicothe, and (Jeni) Hill of Forestville, Md.
Holzer Medical Center
and Jeffery Folmer of Rock
eight
grandchildren.
Discharges Feb. 17
live
great·
Also surviving are a Springs;
Dou glas Bayes, Ronald
Brewer , Fl'orence Casey, brother, Lawrence Garnes, grandchildren, Chris and
Curtis Casto, Willis Cox, Mrs. Orient. and a sister. Mrs. Susan Durham, DeDee and
Michael Dameron and Gladys Ragland, Jackson . A Kimberly Hill and Jerod
'
daughter, Edna Denney, brother preceded him in Folmer.
She was a member of the
Ethel Durst ; Eva Elias , death . He was a member of
Springs
United
Arlene Evans , George Mt. Carmel Baptist Church, Rock
Methodist
Church.
Bidwell
.
Goheen, Nora Harvey ,
Funeral services will be 1
Delbert Garnes was a
Beulah Hickman, Mandy
Hill, Jamma Holley, Mrs. former troo p leader of Boy p.m . Wednesday at Ewing
Chapel with the Rev . James
Floyd Jordan and son, Scott Seoul Troop 210, Bidwell.
The McCoy-Moore FWJeral Corbett officiating . Burial
Kearns, Kristian Kerns, Gail
Dehorah Smallwood, Clinton Home is in charge of will be In Rock Springs
Cemetery. Friends may call
Smith, Anna Snyder, Robert arrangements.
at
the funeral home on
Thorson, Mrs. Richard Tipple
Tuesday from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
and son, Gilford Turley, Leah
ALVA STATON
Van Meter,' Mrs . David
Mrs. Alva Staton, 83,
Whaley and son , Mary
MacAndrews,
Ky. , the widow
Wilson.
of Samuel Station, died
Births Feb.18
Mr . and Mrs . Kenneth unexpectedly Sunday while
Newsome, a son , Ewington. she was visiting at the home
of her son, William Staton,
Discharges Feb. 1~
(Continued from page 1)
Mrs. James Baughman and Rt. 2, Vinton .
west
of SR 77&gt; when an auto
She was the daughter of
daughter, Mrs. William
by John G. Black,_27,
driven
Conley and daughter , Dale Please and Kathryn Castle.
Northup,
slid on the snow
Preceded in death· by two
Hom, Alice Lathey, Bertha
hitting a
covered
roadway
Miller , Sandra Mitchell, daughters, she is survived by
vehicle
driven
by
James
C.
Debra Smith, Floren ce four daughters and four sons:
33,
Columbus.
Eggers,
Mrs, Bertha Blackburn,
Watson, Velma Young.
A truck-car accident ocMac Andrews, Ky .; Mrs. Esta
Births Feb. 19
curred
at 12:20 p.m. Sunday
Mr . and Mrs. Keith Banks, Estep, Wellston; Mrs. Lillian
on
the
Rodney-Cora
Rd.110uth
Looney~ .Chesapeaker; Mrs.
a daughter, Gallipolis.
of
SR
588
where
a
car
driyen
Turner
in
Large, Donna Lawhon , Mrs. · Madgaline
by
•
Sye
E
.
Kuntz,
20,
Leo Layne and son, Charles California; William Staton, Galloway; 0., and a truck
McDonald, Donnie Me· Rt. 2, Vinton; Ralph Staton, operated by Charles W. Kall·
Farland, Lenora Mooney, Vulcan, W. Va .; Manuel and
ner, 57, Jackson, collided.
Ja·net Norman, Elizabeth Danny Paul, Taylor, Mich.;
Catherine C. King, 34, Rio
Ohlinger, George Petty, Lena 23 grandchildren, and nine . Grande, claimed minor in·
Raike, Mary Rawlings, great-grandchildren.
She was a member of the juries In a traffic acclden.t at
William Roush, Xylpha
8 a.m. Sunday on the Cen·
Saunders,
Mrs.
Bryan Freewill Baptist Church at
terpoint
Rd ; three miles west
Seagraves and daughter , MacAndrews.
of
SR
325.
Local arrangements a·r e
Addie Smith, Christie Swarts,
The patrol said the King
being
made by McCoy-Moore
Sammy Thacker, James
collided headon with a
car
Tyree, Judy Waugh, Faye Funeral Home.
vehicle operated by Wayne D.
Young, Christopher Zerkle.
Johnson, 19, Oak Hill. There
Births Feb. 17
MRS. BATES
was moderate damage.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
Mrs. George C. Bates, 57, of
Johnson was cited to
I...ouderbatk, a son, Jackson; 733 Beech St., Middleport ,
Municipal Court for failure to
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Otto, a died Sunday at Veterans yield one half of the roadway.
son, Reedsville.
Memorial Hospital, She was
Mr . and Mrs_. Brinley Seth, pr!M!eded in death by her
a son, Middleport; .Mr. and parents, Elmus and Dulcie
Mrs. Ronald Warrington, a Bonnell Collins and one
daughter, Wellston.
sister, Alma Boor.·
. ENTERS HOSPITAL
Discharges, Feb, 18
She is survived by her
Sharon Smith, Pomeroy,
Sherry Adams , Mrs. Arthur husband, George; one will
enter
Universi!Y
Bradshaw and son , Ruby daughter,
Patricia
A. Hospital, Columbus, to,..y
Carmon, Jenny Dennis , Pummel of Springfield; a for observation and treat·
Nolene Hatfield. Melanie son, Clyde M. Combs of ment .
Lewis, Pearl Little, Mable Grove City, Pa.; a sister,
Mahan, Charlotte Marriner , Mrs. William Lough of
Mary Martin. Melissa Me· Burning Springs, W.Va.; two
HI-WWTEMPS
Daniel , Dorothy McGhee , brothers, Howard Collins of
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
James McQuaid, Sr., Jeremy Newport, Ark., and Paul · highest temperature reported
Meaige, Cecil Newell, Edna Collins of Mt .. Vernon, Ohio; Sunday to the National
Payne, Emma Reed, Selcus five grandchildren and Weather Service, excluding
Reynolds , Thomas Scott, several nieces ·and nephews. Alaska and Hawaii, was 76
Funeral services will be 2 degrees at Red Bluff and
p.m. Tuesday at Ewing Redding, Ga. Today's low
Chapel. Burial will ~ in was 19 degrees below zero at
Lonke Cemetery in Lonke, Philipsburg, Pa .

OSP
'

Mason man is stable
A driver was charged with
hit and run following an
accident which sent a Mason
man to the hospital early
Sunday morning in Mason.
Listed in stable condition at
St. Mary's Hospital is Carl
Brannen, 47. According to a
hospital spokesman. Brannen
is suffering from two !raetured legs.
Arrested and charged with
hit and run and · DUI was
Larry R. Grimm Sr.. 28,
Mason.· He was arraigned
before Magistrate Miles
Epling who set bond at $!i,a00.
Grimm remains in jail in lieu
of posting bond.
Brannen had been ·a
passenger in a car driven by
Earl Thomas, Racine , 0.,
just prior to the incident.
According to Mason Police
Chief Joe Young, Thomas and
Brannen were getting out of
their parked car on Second
St., shortly after miclnight,
when Grimm allegedly
sideswiped the car and struck
Brannen before leaving the
scene.
Estimates of $200 and $100
worth of damage resulted to

and struck the Gill car.
Estimates of 1900 and $400
worth of dama ga resulted to
the Gill and Camp cars,
· respectively.
Another car collided into a
parked car on Sand Hill Rd.
near
Point
Pleasant,
Saturday at 12:20 p.m., a ccording to Deputy Perry.
Eleanor L. Sayre, 42, Rt . 1
Letart, was identified as the
driver, while Sandra R.
Roush, Rt. 2 Letart, was
identified as the owner of the
parked car.
Sayre was traveling east
when she came upon the
Roush car which according to
.Deputy Perry, was partially
blocking the westboWld lane.
Deputy Perry stated that.
Sayre did not have enough
time to stop her car before
she collided into the Roush
car. Estimates of $050 and
$400 worth of damage
resulted to the Sayre and
Roush cars, .respectively.
RETURNED HEBE
Robert Lewis Coffey, 25,
Belpre, was returned io
Meigs County Saturday sfternoon from the Washington

the Thomas and Grimm cars,

County Jail to answer a bench

. respectively.
No injuries were reported
in a two-car .collision
Saturday on Rt . 62 near Point
Pleasant, at 9: 25 a.m., according to Mason County
Sheriff's Depuiy J.E . Perry.
Catherine S. Camp, 20,
Front St., Mason, and Amy A.
Gill, 31, Mason , were iden"
tilled as the drivers.
According to Deputy Perry,
Camp was traveling south
when she apparently had
trouble traveling through a
curve in the road. Her car
went left of the center line

warrant issued by Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
Judge John C. Bacon. It
charged· Coffey failed to
comply with the terms of his
probation.
Coffey, originally sentenced for the 1977 Armed
!Wbbery of Thomas Zano was
released by the court on
Shock Probation. The State
Parole-Probation officer filed
the complaint that he failed to
comply with the terms of
pro bali on. Coffeey is ex·
pected to be taken before
Judge Bacon Tues day.

ELBERFELD$
Look for this
emblem
on the package.

By LEE LEONARD
UP! Statehouae Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) -About 40 members Of the United
Mine Workers Union and their families held a peaceful raUy In
the Sll!tehouse Rotunda today and two ol their representatives
met with Gov. James A. Rhodes to seek his help In speeding
contract negotiations.
TI•e UMW members, employees Of the Peabody Coal Co .,
New Lexington, said they hoped to have 200 people
.participating later today.
Glen Wyclnski and his uncle, George Wycinskl, met lor 30
minutes with Rhodes. Rhodes then left Columhn• for

•

Governor
requests
•
pnvate
contract
..

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)Gov. James A. Rhodes today
sent a telegram weight coal
company officials, the White
House, the United Mine
Workers Union and Ohio's ·
congressional - delegation
urging nationwide adoption of
a private coal contract.
·
"Ohio must be saved from
a billion (b) dqllar blackout ·
that would force massive
unemployment, wideapread
school closings and coal and
darkened ·homes throughout
tl1C state,'' said Rhodes.
The telegram was sent
minutes before Rhodes left
for Charleston, W.Va. to meet
with the governors of
Kentucky, Pennsylvania and
West Virginia on the
stalmated coal contrac.t
talks.
Rhodes urged approval of
the P&amp;M Coal Co. · contract
with the UMWA approved
Monday by the union's
bargaining coWJcll. The coil!
company Is not a member of
the
Bituminous
Coal
Operators Association · and
reached agreement outside of
the
BCOA·UMWA
negotiations.
Rhodes said the BCOA
should adopt the P&amp;M
contract as a ''model
contract" and that approval
"will restore mov~ment of
·c ritically-needed
coal
supplies to Ohio utilities."
"Quick aciion io settle the
coal issue Is needed to avoid a
catastrophe of incalculable
proportions," said Rhodes.
The telegram was sent' to
the top officials of the
Consolidation Coal Co.,
Peabody Coal Co., North
American Coal Co., Valley
c.lmp Coal Corp., Island
Creek Coal ·eo., Old Ben Coal
Co., Y&amp;O Coal Co. and tbe
Boich Mining Co., as well as
U1e UMWA, the White House,
the American El!M!tric Power
Corp. and the state'S 23
congressmen and
two
senators. ·
Ohio Senate President Pro
Tern Oliver ·Ocasek of Akroo
and House Speaker Vernal G.
Riffe, Jr., of New Boston also
signed the telegram with
Rhodes .

·probing
thefts
!I)

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see for yourself Big people. the search
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ELBERFELDS IN ·POMEROY

a1 y

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, February 21, 1978

Deputies

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REALLY FITS.Now, HanesoftersTHE BIG
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than fit: irs the quality and style selection
only Hanes has .

Charleston, W. Va., to meet withGovs. Jay Rockefeller of West Yours.' '
·wasn 't enough health benefits, there was penallzaUon for wild·
Wyclnski said the governor told them he wlll "work hard to cat striki'S and not enough time off ,"
Virginia, Julian Carroll of Kentucky and Mill&lt;ln Shapp of
get a settlement in the next one or two days, " but did not say
Pennsylvania to diBcuss developments in the strike.
.
Howard also sald the miners want the "federal govern· Wyclnski said the governor told them he favors a quick what he would do.
ment to guarantee that our families will be taken care of in
The mine worker said he was "very satisfied" with the case of an accident."
settlement of the coal miners' strike, now in Its 78th day, but
governor's
response .
that he had to remain "neutral" between the wlion and coal
He said federalizing the coal minoa Is the only acceptable
Robert
Howard, recording secretary of Local 1340 of the soluUon in lieu of a contract.
operators.
"You can throw out Taft-Hartley and binding arbltratloo ,"
Meanwhile, other miners and their families milled about UMW, said the unioo wants Rhodes to "put pressure on the
the Rotunda, {I'Uiny ol them carrying signs which read: "I'm a coal companies for a quick settlement. We want to get the he said, explaining the miners won't work under their old
contract.·
Coal Miner, Not a Mindless Weasel ," "Rolling Blackouts Will President Involved and get the talks going again," he said .
Howard said the.Jast contract offer by the Bituminous Coal
" We've come too far to go hack now," he said.
Ughten Our Hearts" and "Our Ughts Will Go Out But So Wlll
Operators Association was unacceptablf' hecattlilf' "t hPr~P

Meigs County Sheriff
James J . Prollltt reports
deputies investigated a
breaking and enteri"g in
Columbia Township over the
weekend. Wilbur Dailey, Rt.
2, Albany, Ohio, reported
tha't his residence was en·
tered sometime Saturday. A
· .222 caliber bolt action riDe
was stolen. Monday, deputies
investigated theft. of three
chain saws from a sawmill
owned by Terry Woodyard,
Rt. 3, Albany, Ohio. The
sawmill Is located near
School Lot in Columbia
Township.
Deputies are continuing the
investigation on both thefts.

en tine

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 28, No. 217

Mandatory cut woula close Meigs High
There's no way the Meigs
High School can continue to
remain open for classes if a
mandatory 50 percent power
reduction materiaHzes.
This was the report of
Charles Dowler, district
superintendent, at Monday's
regular hoard session at the
Meigs Junior High School in
Middleport.
Dowler said everyone in the

district had been cooperative
in reducing on · a vo!WJtary
basis. However, he reporteq
the high school, which 'is
considered a large industrial

kilowatt hours. H(IWC\'er, he reduction date for industrial
has been advised by the use rs has not be.en set.
electric company that the · Hoover reported.
"pooling" would not work in , The board also discussed
thalman:ner.
problems In making up sehoul
Board President Wendell missed by students due to the
Hoover, who is associated teachers strike in the Call and
with the Columbus and the "bad weat¥r days ."
Southern Ohio Electric Co., There a re 11 days involved as
serving the high school, said a result of the strike, and 16
the mandatory order of a 50 bad weather days. In ail, the
percent
reduction
is state allows only five days for
scheduled to come from the the latt er. It appears the state
company when the coal is not going to allow ad·
supply is down to a 30 day ditional days at this time,
supply.
Dowler reported.
As of Sunday, the supply
Consequently, Supt. Dowler
stood at 42 days, Hoover · recommended that make-up
.
· reported . However, due to the classes be held on five
almmpany' s purchaseofpower Saturdays, two days during
from otherfirms,mandatory the spring break and the
remainder of the time at the
end of the school year. This
would make June 19 lhe final
day of classes.
Board member~ expressed
Cloudy and cold with some
snow. Highs will be in the mid concern ove r Saturday
20s. Cloudy with snow ending classes because of the attonight. Cold with lows from tendance pro~lems. MrS .
10 to t~ . Partly cloudy and Jennifer Sheets, board
continued cold Wednesday member, exp.ressed her
with. highs from the mid to desire that days made up· be
·' meaningful" to students and
·hit by UM\V pickets, suffered upper 20s.
not just a case of making up
"at least a million dollars
damage.''
"Private individuals and
·
private companies are beingo
terrorized to the point they
can't even operare," said
corns. "The only way _you can
operate Is with guns.
Corns said his family ,Jives
Uolted Press loteroatloual
situation was under control
.within 50 yards of the tipple at
Gene Oiler, Middleport , at II p.m. alter all
the Low Sulfur Coal Co.
president of UMW Local 1886 available state troopers
"Try living with that for 77 in Meigs County, said today and sheriff's deputies from
days," said Corns. "You he condoned the violence. in Hocklog and four neigh·
never know when someone is Southeastern Ohio that oc- borlog counties rushed to
going to throw a · bomb curred Monday.
the company just after8 :30
through·your window.
"I condone it. They went p.m.
"I have carried a gun out to shut down these nonThis morning, Ohio Unlled
continuously since the strike union places. These non· Mine Workers union mem·
started," he said.
union peop~e take a chance hers and their wives were
Paul Wal!meymer, Colum- being out on the road during a expected to demonstrate at
bus, president of Utility Coals nationwide strike," Oiler the Statehouse In Columbus.
Inc., an independent coal added.
Miners based .in New
broker, said there Is plenty of
An explosion, . fire and Lexington, Ohio, planned the
coal In the state but it is not heavy vandalism were Capitol march in an effort to
· moving because of UMW · reported at the Tiffany Mine bring their side of the strike
pickets.
Co. south of Logan Monday story to the· public.
" Independent operators night as more than 200
Hocking County deputies
normally supply better than picketing miners took received a report of a fire set
50 percent of tbe coal in this revenge for 15 loads of coal off by an explosion at Tiffany,
state," h,e said. "But a . shipped out by the non·unlon but later found picketing
handful of people are keeping firm during the day. UMW members blocking
them from their jobs."
Hocking County Sheriff trarric on Ohio· 93, throwing
Hap Thrush reporred .the

user , could not remain open if
an order is received requirihg
the school to reduce usage by
50 percent.
There iS some confusion on
the "pooling" of the saving of
electricity in other schools to
be applied to the high school
usage if the mandatory order
comes, Dowler said. He said
his
interpretation
of
"pooling" is different from
that of the electric company
in that he believed usage
saved in other schools could
he applied to the high school,
giving the larger School extra

•
Non •UDIOn . CO
.

operators will
form caravan
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Non-uni.on coal operators
from southern Ohio, an area
hit by United Mine Workers
Union pickets Monday, said
today they will drive a
caravan of trucks loaded with
non-union coal to Columbus to
show "there ls coal in Ohio. ''
UMW pickets closed non·
tmion mines in Lawrence,
VInton and Hocking CoWJties
Monday and turned over
cars, set fires, smashed
windows and blocked traffic.
The caravan was to start at
the Low SUlfur Coal Co. in
Pike County and will consist
Of at least seven trucks, Said
Rex Corns, tlpple manager-at
the firm in Beaver, Ohio.
"We have a

cr~stOmer

in

Columbus, Capital City Products, and we are going to
deliver that coal today," said
Corns. "The IUghway Patrol
has promised they would
escort the trucks.
"We want it publicized bow
much personal property was
destroyed by UMW vandals
last night," said Corns. Corns
said the Tiffany Mine Co. In
Hocking CoWJty, one of those

Weather

EXTENDED t'ORECAST ·
Thursday through
Saturday, fair Thursday,
chance uf snow Friday and
c\eaJ SaturM)'. Hlgba wl\l

be from the mid 20s to mid
3lls. Lows will be from the
teens to the low 20!1.

rccommemlu.Uons on a

tw,,

levy which would be put
IJcfure the voters at the Jun•'
elccllon. Plcrcc and Mrs.
Sheets volunteered to serve
on the committee.
l}nwler . said he estlmotes
the district will be about
$168 ,0011 short. TI1e committee
will decide the amo1mt ul
money needed and the size of
the levy to be voted upon .
During the meeUng Duwle'r
also presented a com·
inunication
from Myrt
Shoemaker, chainnon of the
finance appropriations
cor\unitlec q! the leglslatutc
in regard to school flnandul
problemS.· The letter stater!
1~6 districts in the stole hav~
indicated that they wlll not
have money to take them
through 1978.
'11JC · board employed Alrm
Holter us a substitUte teucher
for the remainder uf the
schnol
·
year
uml
. MEETS THURSDAY
acknowledged
a
lhfl.nk-you
There will be a CIC meeting
Thursday ~'eb . 23 in the letter from the Meigs Council
Bureau of Support room at on Aging for the repair of the
the Meigs Co unty Court - furnace at the Pomerny
house . The sc~sion begins at Junior Hil::h SciutO), used nt
the sen lor citizens center.
7:30 p.m.
Dwight
Goins,
ad·
ministrutivc ns~istant, suhl
that repa ir worJc; Wns done for
$.101.94.
Joy Bentley, Glennu
Sprague and Rita Slavin were
given permission to attend
the state basketball tour350 and he complied.
nament for girls on March 31
Another witness said he
could see rifles in some of lhe and five men basketball
coaches were given per·
miners' pi ckup trucks and Hl
mission
to attend the men's
least one pistol in a holder on
~tnt.
e
tourney
in Columbus 011
a ·dashboard. But the miners
March
17.
were asked by UMW
Velma Douglas, a cook at
lea'dership not to Carry
Salisbury
School, was given u
weapons because no violence
leave of absence for the
was wanted.
Two trainloads of coal were second semester du e to
stalled outside the Ohio family illness.
·Mrs. Wagner was given
Power Co. Cardinal power
permission
to request 1m
plant near Martins Ferry
advance
draw
of $300,0011 to
Monday, reportedly because
meet
expenses
and
the board
of threats to the Norfolk &amp;
report
approved
the
financial
Western Railroad .
C
or
the
Pomeroy-Middleport
The two 80-car trains
carrying about 16,000 tons of I.ibrnries.
Dan Mor.ris outlined his
coal were moved to the plant
area on ConRail tracks but plans for seeking several tltlc
program grants . Letters
would have to be s wltch~d to
N&amp;W tracks to move Into the from Conrad Ott, silperln·
tendent of Akron City
plant.
Schools, in regard to school
financing, and the Ohio
Bureau of J;:mployment
Services in regard to how the
district pays unemployment
insurance into the fWld were
read and tabled for further
study.
Morris, who is curriclllum
director, reported the Meigs
Local District will be
evaluated in regard to its
special education programs
uall over the country,"
for a two-&lt;lay period. During
according to the unloll
the
evaluation, parents, the
~urce .
One Independent, the staf! and students will be
Garland Coal Co. of interviewed as well as the
records st~dled, t.lorrls
Arkansas, was involved In
reported.
such t,alks Wlder the guidance
Goins said gas meters In
of a federal mediator.
Rutland had been loWld to ho
working incorr!M!tly and that
the district will receive some
refund on bills paid. He also
reported that an ·Individual is
interested
in renting the
Damages were set at about
and he
Rutland
gymnasium
$150 as the result of a fire at
was
asked
to
secure
more
the trailer home of Brenda
Smith mi Rose Hlll ahoul 7 detail on the mptter.
Attending.the meeting were
p.m. Monday. ·
those
named earlier and
Pomeroy Fire Chief
Virgil
King,
board member;
Charles Legar said the fire
Bob
Morris,
elementary
started In the thawing of
~rlnclpal,
and
Charles
water lines under the trailer.
Downie
and
John
Krawsczyn
It was confined to under
of the teachers association.
covering of the trailer.
At 4:54p.m. the emergency
squad went to West Main St.
\ MEETING OFF
for Floyd Spence who was
The Shrinettes meeting lor
dead upon the squad's Thursday night haa been
arrival.
cancelled.

•t
l e r condones violence

Pomeroy's water system
• •
ISm financial trouble
According to village
Fred
Crow,
solicitor
. Pomeroy's water system is in
financial trouble. This was
revealed Monday night
through a letter read by
village clerk, Jane Walton.
According to Crow council
must consider raising water
rates In order to meet the
payment of mortgage
revenue bonds. An additional
$41,817.65 must he raised for
the operation, payment of
principal and Interest on the
bonds.
Crow also emphasized that
if the village did not meet its
obligation and defaulted hond
holders could appoint a
r!M!elver and take over the
water operation.
Crow suggested a com·
mlttee be formed to meet
with· the water hoard to raise
rates and recommend an
equitable program for raising
the water rates.
Larry Powell, councilman,
said t~at the situation was
serious and must be looked

time.
additiono l proble ms, " he..
The board took no action·un said. Ohio law requires that
a new schedule last night ·the school year be completed
preferrh•g apparently to wait by June 30.
and see if some ~dditional
Board Member Carro ll
days will be permitted by the Pierce suggested that
state.
students make up nne hour n·
Dowler pointed out that day thereby makinK up one
Saturday school will cost the day each five-day wc'ek.
district additional money
However, during this
since some employes will discussion, it was pointed out
have to he paid time and one· that under such a plan small
hall their regular salaries for children wo.uld not be
overtime work . He also re\urning to their homes until
pointed out, however, that after dark .
unless Saturday school is
Dowler again warned that
held, then buildin gs Will have · the district is not gnlng to
to be kept open until late in h~:~ve enough money to get
June.
through the 1978 calendar
" Mor e tinle off due to year. He asked for two board
weather or some other menlbers to serve with him
co ndition s would create and clerk, Jome Wagner, In
studying the fin a ncial pic·
lure,
and
preparing

into immediately. He added
that he would like to see some
costs figures and study the
situation.
·"We do have . a serious.
obligation in the payment of
the .honds," Powell noted.
Council, following the
meeting, went into executive
session to study proposed
rate increases. ·
In other business, council
rejected a rate increase
sought by Columbia Gas
Company of Ohio .
The increase, proposed by
the gas company,wastwo and
one-ha If percent the first year
and seven and one-half the
second yeur.
John Koebel, re~resentlng
the gas company was
present. Cou~cll's utility·
commit!~ with Bill Young as
chairman, proposed an increase of two and one-half
percent for each year. Koebel
said he could agree to such an
increase for one year, but
seriously doubted if It would
be approved over a one-year

period~

Koebel told council if they
rej!M!ted the proposed increase the gas company
would go to the Public
Utilities, commission.
Fred Crow also .presented
another letter to council in
regard to restoring the
Pomeroy Senior High School
with funds from the alumni.
Crow recommended the
second floor be used · for
village offices and the first
floor be used for council
meetings . and other civic
meetings.
Crow said lf the village
council is interested he would
attempt
(through the
Chamber of
Pomeroy
Commerce) to have a
committee fanned to look
into the. cost of the repairs
and to contact alumni and
friends of Pomeroy Senior
High School for contributions,
Crow wrote the letter as
president of the chamber
with the idea that something
(Cootinu'!l on pqe 10)

rocks a nd overturning: trucks.
It was not the only trouble
of the day. during which
about 300 miners patrolled
coal-hauling roads between
Ohio and Kentucky in a 1110vehicle caravan, trailed by
police and police planes.
About 150 strikers hurled
rocks at ·Addlngton Brothers
Mining Co., Inc., a non-UMW
facility in Coal Grove earlier
in the day .
Newsmao Jerry Sander
of WSAZ..TV of Huntlogtoo,
W. Va., was asked to turn
over film he had shot of
miners throwing rocks and
overturning empty coal
trucks at a coal loading
dock In Hanging Rock lo
Lawrence County, Ohio.
Sander said the · request
came from a group of about

Maverick bargaining
is ·boosting chances
WASHINGTON (UP!) Maverick bargaining by in·
dependent coal companies
and union miners today
boosted chances for a
negotiated end to the 7lklayold walkout and eased
pressure on an admlnslratioo
reluctant to take more
drastic actioo.
'
President Carter scheduled
brealilast with a bipartiaan
group of congressional
leaders thla morning lor
further consult.atloo on his
strategy.
At the same time, however,
talks Involving the UMW and
Independent coal C&lt;llllpanies
neared settlements
perhaps patterned alter
Mooday's - which could
snowball Into a nationwide
pact.
One jublllant wlioo source
foresaw the virtual collspse
of the Bituminous Coal
Operators
Association
because of the separate

negotiations.
That process JH'oduced the
first break In the record~ong
impasse Monday when the
Pittsburg and Midway Coal
Co. of Denver agreed to
· rerrns with the UMW oo a
contract covering Its 700
workers in
Kentucky ,
Mtsaouri and Kansas.
Within hours, the union
bargaining councU embraced
·the settlement, 26-13, and sent
Jt to the rank WJd file for
ratification.
Presidential press
secretary Jody Powell called
the vote "an Interesting
development which all
parties should asseaa senously." Apprised of the vote,
Carter said, ''That's great."
' The Ziegler Coal Co., a
subsidiary of Houston
Natural Gas, was also said to
be nearing an agreement JlOMibly today - with the
UMW,
and
similar
negotiations were uniler way

Trailer has
$150 damages

1

�2- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday. Feb. 21.1978

TV•• .in Review
w....-

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
(endometriwn I to other loca·
tions. The tissues may be
scattered to the tubes and
ovanes - and by 1ts presence
cause sterility as well as
pam. II may literally seed
ttself to other aras of the
body, usually 1n the pelvic
region. Even though the
tissue IS dislaced to other
aras It enlarges with the
growth phase of the
menstrual cycle and bleeds.
The localized bleeding and
enlargement causes pain and
may destroy surrounding
tissues. Extenstve involvement of the ovar1es may

Is surgery
necessary'!

I

DEAR DR. LAMB Recently I went to the doctor
for mtdcycle spotting and
heavY- fl owing menstrual
per1ods. He dtd an endometrial biopsy and ex·
ammation, diagnosing my
conditwn as endometriosiS
and adenomyosiS and recommended a hysterectomy.
I am familiar with the term
endometriosis, but am not
sure of what all It means. I
have never heard of
adenomyoSIS. Could you
elaborate oo these lenns,
also statmg your opinion on
the surgery? Seems like m
this day of modern med1cines
there should be other cures
available bes1des sometmg as
!mal as surgery. Also do you
recommend removal of tubes
and ovaries as part of the
surgery?
DEAR READER - One of
the reasons your doctor did a
bwpsy was to be able to look
at the ttssue under a
microscope for mformation
tllat would help him decide if
you needed surgery or not. I
would certainly not overrule
his good judgment unless
another competent doctor
looked at the tissues and
surgtcal report and had good
reason to advise a different
course of actwn Just how
those cells look has a lot to do
with what should be done.
Whether the ovaries and
tubes should also come out
depends a lot on what the
surgeon fmds when he can actually look at the organs. A
woman's age and whether
she IS near or past eh
menopause are also mportant
m makmg the decision. Certainly 11 a woman had already
passed through the
menopause and the ovaries
ere no longer active there IS
no good reson to !eve them m
as a potenttal source of

••
••
t

•'

"'

nus model of a "todsy" log cabin has been
constructed by Howard Bahr and Richard Fick, Jr., on

•

•

*O
•ecent
s*orm
VlCttms
I&lt;'
• '
I&lt;'
occurred. Before-and-after
photos of the damaged
property and judgments of
appraisers are helpful in
establishing the amount of
loss.
Taxpayers who need help in
preparing their returns or
clatming refunds should
contact tlteir local IRS office.
Two helpful IRS booklets,
Publication 547, "Tax In·
formation on Disasters,
Casualty Losses and Thefts,"
and Publication 584, "Work·
book for Determining Your
Disaster Loss" are available
free from IRS offices.

CINCINNATI
Im·
mediate tu relief is
available for many Ohio
tupayers who suffered
property losses in the
January 1978 series of bliz·
zards and snowstorms
declared an emergency by
the President, the Internal
Revenue Service announced
today
Tax Law permits tax·
payers m areas deSignated
for
federal
eligible
emergency asststance to
deduct losses on etlher their

cun-ent year's tax return or
the prtor year's return, ac·
cording to the IRS.
Losses to business proJI'erty
are generally deducttble m

Hearing

full while nonbusiness losses

are deductible only in the
that

exceeds

$100, the IRS said. Deductions
are not allowed for the por·
lion of any Joss reimbursed or
expected to be reimbursed by
insurance or other com·
pensation. Individuals can
am,end the prior year's return
by . completing Form 1040X
and submitting it to the IRS.
Corporate taxpayers should
use Form 1120X.
!dJ counties in Ohio were
designated eligible for
federal assistance by the
Federal Disaster Asststance
Administration
Ad·
mintstrator.
Taxpayers should compile
lists of those items dsmaged
or destroyed, and determine
their value immediately
before and after the loss,
111EDA.Q..Y SENTINEl.
DEVUI'EDTOTHE

INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTBR L TA.NNEHD..L
Euc. Ed.
ROBERT HOEnJCH
Cttr Edlt..Publbhod dally "'""' S.tunloy
by The Olllo VaUey Publllhin&amp;

Cmp.ny-MuJUmedll , Inc.,
111
Court St., Pomeroy, Olio .,'lfi,
llullnesl Otllc&lt; l'llone 992· 2156.
Editorial Phone99&gt;-2157
~ Second olaAII poatage paid at
l'lllneroy, Ohio
'

NaU11n1l advertisin« repraent.Uve WQd • Griffith Company,
Inc, BottlneW and Galllgher Oiv.,

'Jill7 Third Ave., New York, N.Y.
101117.
r• SullEripUon l'llel Delivered by
carrii:r where avauable;s cenll per
~lty Motor Route where canier
aervire not available, One montb,
By mall an Otiio and W VII ,

•.a Year,

One
$22.00; Sb: monthl!l,
fll 50, Thr~e months, $7 00:'
where t21S.OO yeir; Six monU.
58, Three montha, $7.5Ct.
Sllbocriotion price lndudeo Sunday

e:

1'1111to4enlloel.
l

.

r··

Route 7 near the intersection of Sumner Road to
demonstrate the log cabins and homes being oHered by
the two men in their new business.

New log cabins different

Tax relief available

amount

.t

...

cause considerable ovanan

destruct ton
AdenomyosiS refers to air
normal extension of the limng
cells mto the muscular body
of the uterus whtle en·
dometriosis refers to extenSIOn of the ttssue outstde the
uterus area
Is there any way other than
surgery that these condiltons
can be treated ' Yes. Many
cases are successfully
treated WIth hormonal
therapy. The hormonal
changes durmg pregnancy
stops the advancement and
pam of endometriosis.
I! surgery is necessary the
extent of the endometriosis
spread and age of the patient
are Important in decjding
what to do about the ovartes.
In a young woman with
limited spread to pelvtc
organs or lack of symptoms
the goal is to preserve the
ovartes. If the dtsease is
widespread and causmg pr&lt;&gt;biems in an older woman
when 11 1s advtsable to
remove the ovaries. The en·
dometrtal ttssue causmg the
problem cannot contmue to
extst without the hormonal
support of the ovar1es.
I am sending ou The Helth
Letter number 5-12,
Menopause, as you may want
this Information soon. Others
who want lhts mformallon
can send 50 cents with a long,
stamped, self-addressed
envelope for 11 to me 10 care
of this newspaper, P 0 Box
1551, Radto City Statton, New
York, NY 10019. ,

ovarian cancer.
EndometriOSIS refers to
displacement of the tissue
Uta I normally lines the uterus

Meigs whips Wahama

By JOAN HANAUER
UPI Telev~

slated
A pubhc hearing Is slated
Thursday, Feb. 23, beginnmg
at 2 p.m in the Meigs
Common Pleas Court room
on the state plan for Social
Services in Ohio under Title
XX of the Soctai Secunty Act.
It will be for the year
beginning July I, 1978, which
mcludes the plan for Meigs
County
Purpose of this hearing IS to
highlight pertinent In·
formation regarding Social
Servtces, problems and needs
and to elicit public comment,
suggestions and recommendations relative to the
county's proposed social
services plan. Interested
persons and orgamzations
are urged to attend.
The announcement made
by Manning D. Webster,
chatrman of the Meigs
County Welfare Advisory
Board.

SUMMONED
The Middleport Fire
Department was called to the
laundromat on S. Third Ave.,
at8:51 p.m. Monday where a
dryer motor had caught fire.
There were light damages.
At 9:38p.m. the emergency
squad went to 186 S. Second
for Ruth Lewts, a medical
patient, who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Everythmg old is new
agam - so the lyrics of a
recent pop tune say -- even
down to lug cabins.
·
Of course, today's log
cabins are a far cry from
those of yesteryear. If you
don't believe 11, ask Howard
Bahr and Richard Fick, Jr.,
who have entered the log
cabm busmess 1n Metgs
County.
The two young Chester
Township businessmen are
serving as distributors for
Alta Backwoods Log Homes
A model has been built on
Route 7 near the mtersectwn
of Sumner Road. Today's
log cabin, dtstrtbuted by the
two young men, comes 1n a
package all precut and
number coded so that the
average handyman can
assemble the home The
model home m Chester
Township 1s a two-room with
bath combmation, but these
homes can be purchased
from some 20 models, some
with four and hve bedrooms.
The precut logs are 4'Vs" thick
so that the interior and extertot
are
formed
simultaneously when the
The
lodgs are latd.
" packages" come with
wmdows, doors, etc . but
some ttems are left for the
purchaser to buy locally so
that he can exercise his own
taste on the finished Interior.
These items Include bath·
room and kitchen fiXtures
· carpeting, light fixtures:

part1tlon wall matertals and
sulrflooring.
All are deSigned so that
they can be built wdh a
basement. However, the
model on Route 7 does not
have a basement. It is heated
wtth electricity and a wood
burnmg stove.
Actually, there is a savings
to the purchaser tf he IS a "do
lt yourselfer ''One can order
the particular model he likes
and then become the bUilder.
The purchaser can buy the
house erected by the two

businessmen and do the m·
tenor work himself The
purchaser has a third
alternative if he is at a
complete loss on how to
proceed w1th the structure.
He can contract to have the
cabin built and completely
finished, inside and out,
through Bahr and Ftck.
The model borne is open for
mspectton by the public from
2 to 4 p.m. each Sunday or one
can make an appomtment to
be shown the model by calling
Fick at 985-3373.

Hospital News
Holzer Medical Cenler
~Discharges Feb. 20)
Carl DaviS, David O'Neal,
James Osborne, Mrs. Vernon
Otto and son, Kathy Perry,
Robert Rhodes, Otha Ruth,
Amta Stevenson, Karen
Tackett, Jol Thompson, Lena
Thompson, Elizabeth Watts,
Sherry White, Dorothy Wilds.
(Births Feb. 20)
Mr. and Mrs. Dewayne

NEW YORK (UP!) - Sltuatim comedy Ia a flllllily llffalr.
Think over the situation comedies that hsve been lllceeaflll
over the years, from. Fred Allen and Ilia Alley of radio comedy
fame, to Mar)l Tyler Moore, "All In the Fomily," e.en the
Fonz and "Happy Days."
In every case, the C(ml,edY Is built II'OUIId • ''famU.Y,"
allholljh it does comedy fame, to Mary Tyler Moore, "Ali in
the Family," even the Fmz and "Happy Days."
In every case, tbe comedy Is "The First Fifty Yean," put
forward, and It holds up under study.
One of the best "famUies" in recent televlslon biltory wa1
the one that made the "Mary Tyler Moore" show a winner.
The key member of the family was Mary, but the characters
in her "family" were so strong that several of them IJIIIIl oil
into sllows of their own- "Rhoda," "Pbylll8" (now gooe) and
most recenUy, "Lou Grant." The Ed Allier lhow hll good
prospects for fall renewal.
·
Take away an actor's famUy identlflcatlon, and It's a new
ball game. Audiences accepted every shrug and &amp;rimlce
Nancy Walker gave Ida Morgenstern, but were less accom·
modating to the two characters ABC tried to impole on the
actress.
It was imposalble to transform the venomoua "happy
homemaker" portrayed by Betty White into a -~~~ heroine,
so Miss White had to try a new character. It dldn 't work. She
lost her family Identification. Gavin MacLeod has a bit on
"Love Boat," but his character Is not the key to the &amp;bow. Ted
White has made several pilots, without hitting the right
formula .
Think back. Where would Deal and Lucy hsve been without
Fred and Ethel? Could Maude apd Walter struggle along
without Arthur and Vivian? The detectives in "Barney
MUJer 's" precinct are funny as a team, one playing oH qainst
the &lt;Xher.
The family coocept works because It guarani- hwnor from
the known personalities of the characters, instead of havfn« to
depend oo a stream of witty one-liners.
Archie can cock oo eyelrow at Edith and he doesn't eVIlll
have to say "stifle yourself" anymore. The audience writes it
in and laughs accordingly.
Even as sophisticated a show as "M·A.S.H" - with its
mature plots and hlgher-thanaverage number of one-linen leans heavily oo the known characteristics of Hawkeye and
Hotlips and their friends. Neither Wayne Rogers nor McLean
Stevenson have been able to make It In shows of their own since
they left the 4077.
After all, If Jack Benny wasn't a 39-year-old tightwad who
played a bad violin bu¥ did a great doubletake, where would the
laughs have come from?

Baird, a son, Gallipolis, Mr.

and Mrs. Jerry Brammer, a
son, Bidwell, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Wilson, a son,
Jackson

,

Ms. Jordan rated best
NEW YORK (UPI) Texas Rep. Barbara Jordan
is the "the very best"
congresswoman, according
to a Redbook poll of 107
members of the House of
Representatives.
The poll, published in the
current edition of the
magazine, rated Yvonne
Burke, D-Callf., and Shirley
Chtsholm, D-N.Y., as the
second and third most
effective congresswomen.
Elizabeth Holtzman, D-N.Y.,
·ranked fourth.
Miss Jordan, a Democrat,
declined to participate m the
poll, as did Rep. Margaret
Heckler R-Mass. Both women
srud 1t w~s their policy to
refuse to take part in such
polls.
The magazine asked au 435
members of Congress to rate
each of its 18 female
members as excellent, good,
average or poor on her
eUectiveness as a legislator,
her ability to serve in higher
oUice and her effectiveness in
represenling women.
Ms. Holtzman said the poll
was uoffensive" and refused
Ill take part. Four other
congresswomen - Martha
Keys, DKan.; Mary · Rose
Oakar, OOhio; Shirley Pettis
R-Calif., and Patricia

Stop smokmg day is Set

any scale ts worth it. The w1ll be to qutt. F1rst dectde if
Meigs Cancer Soctety stands you're going to quit "cold
ready to offer support m the turkey" or gradually. If you
battle of wtll power.
decide to do it gradually, set
Maybe some of the tntermedtate goals for
followmg suggestions and yourself such as 15 ctgarettes
facts about smokmg Will be m the first week, 10 in the
helpful 111 trymg to k1ck the second, and so on until you're
ha btl. Try replacing that down to zero.
cigarette with a hot (spiCY)
Metgs smokers, have you
drmk Tomato JUice with thought about the cost of your
Worcestersh1re
sauce, smoking habit? A two-pack a
pepper and other sea~mngs. day smoker will.burn his way
Possibly chewmg gum or through $365 each year. In ten
suckmg on some sort of candy years he will have spent
will
~elp.
Sometimes $3,650 on hts habtt. In 30 years
changtng your smoking a smoker will have spent
habits by changmg brands more than $11,000 on
helps Keep switching to cigarettes.
lower tar and nicotine
Some of the advantages of
cigarettes but don't increase quttlmg smokmg are· no
your usage.
early morning cough, less
The !mal change you make tensiOn, fewer colds and sore
throats, more acttve sex life,
sounder sleeping, improved
senses of smell and taste,
greater abundance for aU
acllvtttes and sports, no
smoker's breath, clothes
don't smell like smoke, house
doesn't smell hke smoke,
By United Press International
money saved every day,
A glance at developments in the nationwide United Mine Workers
over-aU feelmg of well-being,
and less risk of heart disease
Union strike:
and attack, lung cancer and
p
UMW Negotiations
other ser1ous diseases.
Bargaining by independent coal producers - those not associated
Let us help you ~nd If} you
with the Bituminous Coal Operators Association - with the United
help yourself by pledgmg not
Mine Workers Union may speed up chande~'for a negotiated end to the
to smoke on March I.
Smokers in Metgs county
are bemg urged to sign a
pledge not to smoke on just
one day, March I.
If the next mormng begins
w1th a ctgarette as usual, the
smoker will still know that
the habit IS his to control. And
he'll be one day healthier
Some Will get through the day
and sttck w1th 1t. Some won't
The s1gned pledge IS 1m·
portant, states S. Mtchael,
chatrman of public tn·
formation, because tt serves
as
an
unportant
psychologtcal commitment.
It also helps the Meigs County
Cancer Umt gauge the Impact of their efforts.
When nearly 100,noo
·Amencans dte annually of
lung cancer, the victory on

'Crisis Watch'

nationwide coal strike.
FEDERAL REACTION

President Carter was to meet today with a bipartisan group of
congressional leaders to discuss the coal strike which is in its 78th day,
the longest UMW strike in history.
UMW MEMBERSHIP ACTIVITY

About 600 UMW pickets shut down non-union operations Monday in
Lawrence, Vinton, and Hocking counties. Authorities said they
smashed windows, overturned trucks, set fires and blocked highways.
There were no arrests.

PARTY HEW

The developmentally
disabled hsndicapped per·
sons and residents of the
Meigs County lnfinnary were
entertained wtth a valentine
party Sundsy from I to 3: 30
CONFINED
Chuck Smtth, ~. son of . p.m. by the Personal Ad·
Sharon Smith, Fisher St., vocacy Program. Mrs. Mary
Pomeroy, ts confined to room Skinner, director of the pr&lt;&gt;140 at Veterans Memorial gram for Gallia, Jackson and
M.eigs Counties, ac·
Hospttal.
comparued the party guests
and their advocates in group
singing. Several games were
WENT VISITING
Mr. and Mrs. Wibam D. played and refresliments of
Childs of Middleport returned cake and ice cream were
Sunday from a two week served. Valentine candy and
cards were distributed.
vacation m Florida.

-Schroeder D-Colo ., aald II
would be inappropriate for
them to rate their peers.

Lows still
plagues
midwest
Pren
By
United
lnternaUonal
Arctic air spread from the
ROckies to the Ml'llll•slppl'
Valley today, but snow- at
least
in
appreciable
quantities - gave most of the
nation a breather today.
Californians,
Northwesterners and even
Alaskans enjoyed warmer
temperatures than usual
Monday. But recordsettlng
lows plagued Midwesterners,
many of whom have been
asked by their governors to
cut back oo electrical usage
because of the coal strike.
In Illinois and Indiana,
utility companies and
government have asked
businesses and homeowners
to cut power usage becallll! of
dwindling coal supplies.
Schools in parts of Southern
Dllnols and Indiana have cut
back to four and even threeday weeks.
High temperatures ranged
only in the teens and 2011
throughout most of the Midwest, and even south of the
Mason-Dixon line, aullnormal
50s were recorded.
Light snow, accompanied
by gusting winds fell in a
southern swath of the
country's midsection,
dropping 1-2lnchesin parts of
Arkansas, Oklah&lt;ma, Iowa,
Nebraska and Kansas.
The National Weather
Service said light stow would
climb northeastward over the
Appalachians into the Ohio
Valley and western New
England today.

STATE REACTION

The Ohio Education Association has asked the Public Utilities/
Commission of Ohio to order power companies to maintain electricity
to schools.
COAL SUPPLIES

Columbus &amp; SOuthern Ohio Electric Co., headquartered in
Columbus and serving all or parts of 25 counties, has a 42-day supply of
coal on hand.
· 'Ohio Edison Co. headquartered in Akron and serving 700,000
customers in northern Ohio, has a 33-day supply.
Cleveland Electric Illuminating Co., headquartered in Cleveland
and serving 690,000 customers, has a 49-day supply.
Ohio Power Co., headquartered in Canton and serving 390,000
customers, has a 44-day supply.
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric Co., headquartered in Cincinnati, with
550,000 customers, has a 43-day supply.
Dayton Power &amp; Light Co., headquartered in Dayton and serving
all or parts of24 counties, has a 56-day supply.
Toledo Edison Co., headquartered in Toledo and serving 255,000
customers in northwestern Ohio, has a 50-to-60-day supply.
Monongahela Power Co., headquart~red In West Virginia and
serving 22,000 customers in the Marietta area, has a 25-day supply.
The amount of coal listed by each utility can be extended by
various means such as conservation, the purchase of power or the
purchase of non-uqion coal.

Kroger announces senior
• •

Senior Citizens Club Card to
purchase weekly specials
without
meeting
the
stipulated minimum purchase requirement.
Typically, two or three
1
'Coupon Specials" are
featured in Kroger ads which
offer the item to customerS at
dramatically reduced price If
they present the coupon and
meet a minimum purchase
requirement.
Holders of the Senior
Citizens Club Card can take
advantage of these specials
by presenting their card and
the coupon, regardless of the
amount of their total pur·
chase. The card may be used
one time each week for
purchase exemption
privileges or any or all
coupons each week.

one defennse which saw four
men play a zone defense while
Hobbs guarded Young man to
man.
Bill Elkins t.ro free throws
with five seconds left in the
half gave Meigs a four-point
advantage at intermission,

=a I
.

.
.....

·'.

.

9

:J

.

arrlOrS
remazn zn
top spot

•nch
I
C 1

..

.

..

..

College ratings

Redmen
share of title

"'

•a•

'I

o I

.

. ..

B llS SnlJn
:r

.,

cavs wzn•
trea k

...

'

Bl ue A nLJ'el

top Eastern
gals, 44-27

Today's

'.
.....

Sport Parade

.

74 CHEVY
VEGA GT

I

..•
..

.

Cage

Wildcats,
H :tghland ers
to Clash

1

I

standings

'1695

Karr &amp;VanZandt

I

.

..

..

,,

..

DAVIS
INSURANCE

.

.

AGENCY

...

•

crtrzens savrngs program
Senior Ctti%ens in West
Virginia and surrounding
areas of Kentucky and Ohio,
which are headquartered in
Charleston, W. Va., can now
participate in a "Senior
Cttlzens Savings Program"
recently introduced by The
Kroger Co. to stretch their
fixed incomes at the supermarket.
Pa.rtlcipatmg
Kroger stores include ail
those in West Virgima except
the Northern Panhandle;
plus Ohio stores located in
Marietta
Pomeroy,
Gallipolis, I' Belpre; and
Kentucky stores located in
Pikeville and South Williamson.
Beginning Feb. 26, the 49
parttcipatmg Kroger stores
will begin allowing Senior
Citizens who have a Kroger

5-11 3-6 4 13
reboWI&lt;Is but comm1tted 17 Blessing
•'
Bantilz
5-10 1-1 I 11·
miscues and had 10 steals.
2~ H 3 8
Kenny Young, senior for·
Individually, Ken Young Honaker
Buzz.ard
HO
2·2 4 4
• ••
topped all scqrers wtth ~
ward for Coach Ron Logan's
Hobbs
()..4 2-2 4 2
Meigs Mauraders, capped off
markers on 11. of 19 atte~pts
Zuspan
~~0 0
'~
an Illustrious career Mondsy
and three of ftve at the line.
Weaver
0-4~0 0
nlgbt as the host Mauraders ·
Teammate Chuck Follrod,
••
2HH 1~-23 17 ~7
who also plsyed his fi~l home TOTAl.S
pulled away In the final
minutes to defeat the visiting ~26
game of the season, chipped In
Wahama White Falcons by IJ6.
Wahama took the lead for with 14 tallies The leading MEIGS (66 )
1HS J-5 1 2 ~
'
57.
the first time with 5:36 to play Maurader rebounders were FYolunl g
'
•1
ha
h
t
o
rod
5·11 4-6 3 14 ~~""""'
Young, a ... s rps oo er, in the third quarter at 31.:10 on senior Brent Stanley with nine Elkins
'
1
3
3
popped in 25 point.., in the a three-point play by Rick while Young and Follrod had 8 k
~ -4 5
2 0 4 4
' •'.
Larry Morrison gym in the Barnltzbuttheleadwasshort· seven. and six, respectively. s:'k:r
~ ~
2-5 ll4l 0 4
Manraders' regular season lived as Chuck Follrod and Young also had seven of
.' '
Andrew&gt;
2·2 0~ I ~
finale. Meigs enters sectional Ken Young hit consecutive Meigs' tO steals
Costs
1·10 1·1 I 3
t
I
I
this
Ia
tournamen P Y a er on
goals to give the Mauraders
Wahama was paced by Hawley
,.
1-1 1-2 0 3
I
week as th ey Iry I o savage
the lead for good. After three sophomore ~uard
Rtck
1-4 ().2 4 2
what was otherwise a· periods, it was 4&gt;-41, Meigs. Barnitz who put 19 points Stanley
Kennedy
1-2 0~ 0 2
.'
disappo inting year.
The White Falcons managed through the hoop. He was 3hlinger
0. 1 0_1 0 0
Wahama has also found the to pull to within three during foUowed by Greg Blessing TOTAL
27 -65 12•21 17 66
t977·78 cage season, to be a the final eight minutes at 51-48 wtth 13 and brother Bob
less than successful campaign but the ' Mauraders broke Barnltz with II .
~:~:~.quarters~ ~ 21: 7
as they dropped their loth away with Young netting eight
Ironically, two Whit~ Fakon Mel s
16 14 15 21 -66
•••
game of the season while more points inthe stanza to guards came awa wtlh nme
g
•
wlnmng five . !
give the hosts a hard fQUJ!hl rebounds apiece in Rtck
... t
The White 'Falcon roared 116-57 win.
Barnltz and Rick Buzzard TY/
•
mto Monday_nig~ts' contest
Team statistics show topped
only by Kelvin W
',.
with the hope of pulling off Wahama shooting at a poor 32 Honakers' 11. Blessing also
'•
•
•
•
BAHN ITZ SHOOTS - W!tluunu's Bob llanutz ( 14 )
their second consecutive upset percent clip from the floor (20 nabbed eight rebounds Of the
shoot.s OVCI outst ret ched H l'Jil orMeigs' Kenny Young t 4)
BATILE FOR REBOUND - W~hama •s Greg
but Young and company of 81) and65 percent at free local steals, Honaker, Blll.Zilrd
durmg Monday 's non·t:unf~t cncc basketball ~amc In
Blessing (40) and Meigs' Brent Stanley (42) battle for
spoiled the Falcons high throw line (15 of 23) . The and Rick Barnitz
swiped
Morrtson Gym Mt' igs won . fMi..S7, to up it s st! Wionm llt k tu
rebound durmg Monday's makeup game at Rock Sprmgs.
hopes. Wahama had surprised While Falcons grabbed 40 three apiece to lead in that
3-15
Ravenswood In their last rebounds, committed 15 category.
"
NEW VOHK (UI'l I - The
'
outlng 61 "'5
turnovers and collected 13
WhUe Meigs prepares f or
Meigs took charge of the steals.
sectional tourney action, Marqu ette W.HII OI s kept
th
in to
their lwld un t he No 1
'" I
game Irom ~·e open g P
Meigs shot 41 percent from Wahama returns to the court pu~ttwu m the Ul-'1 l.&gt;&lt;tS"kt·Lball
NE"W Y ORK {UP I )
lilt·
N o t e II \I iHll l' t' IIH'Ill Wi ll! llil' .. .J
III
II
int
i
kl
b
d
an qu c Y u an -po
the field on 27 of 65 attempts tonight when they entertain poll and UCLA c&lt;&gt;ltlllucd 1ts U !1 1 t (,' (t Pn~!'iS lll ! CrrHJI!O II&lt; I I /l.llit'ri Cclll ll ll" lo.('!! l,l ll lOtiC./11" , ,
lead behind Young who was and an even 60 percent from Spencer. The bend area team n se by movmg mto the t1111 ct P.oll• d ot Conches ' lOP /0 .t'I\.,Oltflt!On , li'''"'" 0 11 PI 0 1\ ,11 10!1 1 1
It'tJ(I ba~ kclllt\11 fcl l ii\CI S Wllll
b 11 !t~t • N CAA M £' •nt• l •~ r •l)lt• 101
hot from the field . The senior the charity stripe on 12 of 20 then hosts county rivals spot 1n t 1lt! 1at est Colllpthtl! On (_QI
111 sr ~ l tt ce vo l es ;md n 1 ord&lt;; IU!J JU fHld ll i)IJOil &lt;ll &lt; hlllllj)ltlll
I' '
1
standout hit 5 of 5 field goal tries. Like Wahama the Hannan and Point Pleasant on of votes cHsl by lhe llq,n 11 of thr ouq tl 5u ndt~ y, ! • 11 19 ~~~ .1\ ip U III SI I.J l' l i1 l lll ll 1•)1 lh• \J I 'I
1\0;H{j Qt (Cid C. Ilr'~ l llQ" ' ' l t'.\111\ \II
PMC!l ll1t!!&gt;U5
tries In the quarter as the Mauraders hauled m 40 Thursday and Saturday nights CQachcs.
P n111b tur rt' !l l ly ur• pro iJJ il tu r• ltn IY JI , 1. ,
l cam
Mauraders held a 16-7 lead
r,~spectlvely. Gam~ , tim.es
TilC Wal'l'mrs collected 19 t Mnr Quclt e (191 (}011
&lt;Itt
C ,. n t P n ,1 r y lit' r• •"'ll! ,
~ H!.J
ll dW \1 11 Mt1111t",(lld , N LV .Id" I , , . I "
u c ky tB ! (70 11
, tonight are, • and 7:30 p.m. ,• fir;t-pl ace vol es after 1fiiSlllg 7J Kent
Coach Art Lanham's Rio co unt at 54·all early 1n the after the first eight minutes of
'J'lJ
Vi'l l&lt;t :, Wl '\IC' I l1 ( ,lr Oltrl.t
,.
IJ[l 1\ \11 \70 1!
190
their revnnl lu 20-2 w1th cJ 75~ 1 1\ t k..lll Stl'&gt; ('}~'})
Grande Redmen pulled away second half R10 then shot out play.
w Mr "liiCO 17) (7 1 I I
from a 54-54 deadlock early in to a 12-pomt lead, 70-58, and
Wabama began to warm up
WAHAMA(57) FG FT PF TP 64 victory ove&lt; Wtscoos111 .1nd 6'i Ne
I I ' l l i S 11 Q ,\ t.;t ,\tHI Mo
Kan"&gt;&lt;'IS 111 Jl
I'•·'
(, t nd V&lt;tl ~11 . Wi)yn t &lt;.,t '• I
the second half, then held off the Redmen were never from the field in the second
yq
NORTHFIELD
P
a 57-45 t&lt;lllmph ov &lt;·r 7 Dt: Ptwt 12111
:
Ill 51 jjJ ML N"&gt;l' " ' Ml
8 N o rH• C ttr ol ~t•d ( I ) {'}1 'JI Y ~
ho~t Tiffin for a 93-114 Mid- headed although T1ffin pulled
cantobehindBobBarnltzwho
NORTHFIELD,
Ohi o Barnitz
8-17 3-5 019 Ctncumau
Ill
W&lt;;IYII
5R,
Quttl\
y
•I
~
9 MIChl{j&lt;i ll Si.tl l' ( 19 .1 )
15
Ohto Conference basketball to wtthm four, 86-82, with tallied nine points in the ~UP!) _ Billy Jack's Kntght
I tt1 C01l HI ( l'nl Mu f\ •1
Kentucky, 20·2, 1 dcfemcd 10 ~lo r•d R Stil t C ( 19 4)
JJ
N M1Cil •f) "it Nr brt / 9
11
Pro•nrtcncc
('}!Ill
7
1
victory Monday mghl
three and one-ha lf mmutes period as the Mason Countlans posted hts second straight
MISSISSipp i, 64-52, Tennessee. l 'l ( Tt C l NoJ•" Dan•c) II 'il 16 0 111 0 u 66 . r M lch t-.1
\ "~
The victory assured Rio
remam1ng m the game
0 1&gt;.1,1 Ul'ljl l H:l . MMVtJt l 6.1
16
began to whittle away at the win Monday mght With a four·
90-77, and MtsSISSipJii Sta te , 11 noe l le x;"ls (?1 11
'J I JO'i H Dl.. p,)UW I •I
Rio placed five players in
\ l 1l') Duke 1 19 51
l 'i
Grande of at least a lie for
substantial Maurader lead. length victory over Candy D
U
58·56, to grab c1ght flr&gt;11Jiaec 1.1
St Th~ ~I , H nl llll t' ·IJ
Ill
(
1
rrlSyrilruSC(I6&lt;1)
15
··'
nom mallons and mamt~:tUJ H
the 1977-78 MOC chamdouble figures in scoring,
5W ::0 1 r,Q St Clcl •, t 61J
The White Falcons Pulled to Travel m the featured race at
16 Georq et own 119 -I I
II
Upper town 9 I t tJih l'r I I
plonship.
led by Gil Pri ce's 29
" no el li ! HIOI&lt;; Sl (7 1 ?)
'I
t.
within two at 28-26 mainly one Northfield Park.
solid
second rankin g
Sou thw es t
l f ( l •.:!l Uiah ( IY'd
S
Coach Art Lanham's crew
markers . Dan Purcell
..
h
Un
Arkans&lt;1s
fail
ed
to
om
ner
a
•Otrmy N&lt;11 R5 U Sl\0 M
19 ( T• cl Lou .wi ll t' ( 16 f. I
1
tothe fact 0I Barn1w.' s 00 g
The wmner went the mile In
°
t
l
f'l(
~I !10, 5 r 1\w.tn ll
can wm t~e t!tl~ outnght wtth ;tdded 18, Mark Swain and
19
(
1
iC}
ln
c)ofl
nll
(
16
I)
and the defensive play of 2:06 4·5, hiS best time of the
flrst-p)ace nod a.n&lt;i ,fell to
' Itl am&lt;~r
f',lyn (' 6/ , S Hu u·. "• ' (o~
a vtctory '&lt;lxer T1fhn J'.[ :.11~ trcg James 16 each and
senior forward Phil Hobbs. It season C D Doc was thtrd.
fourth after !lefeatmg Baylor '19 rT! t•l No C •r ~ I 117 I'll
Il l , l &lt;t Tech /0
makeup gam~ kLyne'Center '"'Vince Phelps 10.
Mr Murry 61, Austin Sf
H bb h
ig d
Chnlal, Racey Ellen and
,lnd SMU bul ios lll ~ to
Mt•!W Coli lUI , N M H llntb 9 r
Houston , B4· 75
Thursday, begmmng at 7 30
J1m Huff's 31 pomts paced was o s w o was ass ne
Ok l ~t C!1 r t!&gt; Ul Mdw str n h1
. g Young Barwmor were the first three S
the task Of guardln
p.m.
the losers
UCL/1 , wtth the help of
l1.1rlrt 11 n 6,1
some 1aSI-m1Pute hernws
S 1Sui••• RoSthqse; 80,
9~ 11 st1p ( n il ll'l
Rw h1t 42 of 76 held goal and the substitute forward hmshers ID the opening race
The Redmen , now 17-7
•I
0
lPX.l S 1\/1.. 1 IU /\ 11 ( 1111' / I
CHICAGO ( UP! ) - If agam st Waslnngton Ill HI
overall, upped thetr con· attempts and nme of 13 h e ld th e ho t sh oo II ng to return $353.40 on the Btg
ll'
X
At
l
f1
Ark
&lt;.,
t
1'
1
1
score I e s s Trtple combination of 3·94 · Cleveland Cavaliers' Coach rcs ultl'&lt;i 111 a 6().50 v1ctory,
';, W r r'Jf 8'1 .i\ n QPit• / .t
terence record to l1·2, one· chanty tosses The Redmen M aura de r
The crowd of 2,630 wagered Bill Fttch had hts way , t here earned c1 No . 3 rankmg
r u t!.ll U'• . C n•lqtJ io•t 11
h
t
th
e s t anza as
half game ahead of Malone. had 52 rebou nds, 18 by th roug ou
Wu s l
72
731
would be a dramatic change
1l1e most stgmhcantlcap of
The Ptoneers have completed James, 14 by Price and nine Wahama went into·a box and $3 •
...
IIlii I) CI\ !)I 91, lt ,lWt l lt J I
Puqt : O nd H9 , St Mrl n 's 'I~
in National Basketball the week went to DePaul,
thetr league schedule
by Sktpper Johnson . The
w. . tt lu1 ~ tr 106 :; u1.m ', t lfl
Assoctatlon ofhciatmg.
movmg f1 om loth to seventh
Coach George Jansen' s Redmen had 26 turnovers.
"1 would ltke to see three on the lmsts n£ vaclm1cs o vt:r
Dragons dropped to 12-15 on
T1ffm hit 35 of 80 held goal
THIS WEEK 'S SP ECIAl
offlc1als for each game, wtth Wtsconstn-Gr ec n Buy and
the ye~r and 5-7 m ~he con· attempts and 14 of 20 foul
only two of them work1ng at Loyola of llhnots
terence. .
shots The Dragons had 46
.'
Coach Jack1e Knl glt t' s
ooe time. The thtrd would Sit
Rounding out the top 10
R1o held a 52-45 halftime rebounds and 20· turnovers.
on the s1delmes. Each &lt;mach were. New Mex1co holdmg on Ga llipol iS Blu e An g&lt;•ls
lead before the Dragons
Box score
would be allowed to make to fifth pla ce . Kan sas clefcalcd E~tstcrn 'H -:l7 1n .1
stormed back to knot the
RIO GRANDE (93) ftve substitutions of the refs mamtammg a hold on SIXth , n o n~ l eag u c gal11C Monda y
Swam 7 216, James 7-2-16;
.~
Pr1 ce 12 · 5-29
B1se 2-0· 4 ,
durmg the game when he North Ca &lt;ohna holdmg f1nn cvcnmg
USED
CARS
Ironton 59
GAHS led 14·5, 2:H2u nd :111Phelps 5-0· 10: Purcell 9-Q-18;
liked it," Fitch srud.
m eighth ; M1chigan St.1te
Johnson 0 0 0 TOTALS 42-919
at the quar1crnuu ks
Fitch had just Witnessed h1s shppmg from sev enth t£1 mnth
Speciul!
93
By
MILTON
RICHMAN
Trn
a Nibert and .J ~•n et
Logan 50
club's four-game wmmng as a result of a luss t.o
TIFFIN (841 - Huif 117UPI Sporll Editor
31
Blankene1er 10-0· 20 ;
streak snapped by the Purdue, and Florida Stale G10vc.s paecrl the wumcrs
LOGAN ~JOI - G~sser 4 4· Wrtght I 0 2, Retle 8 0 16 ,
106-95, remammg No. 10 after a loss w1th 11 pomts ap1ecc. Bec ky
,.
NEW YORK (UP!) -If you've capght John Travolta in Chtcago Bulls,
12 , Krreg l -6·8, Keynes 1·0 7-;
Mrchell 1 J -5, Anderson 3·4·
Wmdun kocl. the Eilg lc ga ls
"Saturday NtghtFever," then thatgtvesyou a pretty good line Monday mght , m the only to UNC-Charlulle and a w1 t h II potnts
Lehman' 3' 1-7; Braglln 1 '~·4'; ""lO TOTALS 35-14-84.
NBA game, and while he VIctory over J.oUISVtiie.
Clark 'f-~-~. Halletf- J.Q!f f .,!...'" Halftime score
Rro 52
on Lee Mazzilli.
Box sm re
'.
didn
'I blame the refs directly,
Kemper 1 0-2; Da lton 2 0-4 ;• . ...Tiffin 45
The movte is about a young man growing up in Brooklyn,
;.
4 s p ee d , spor l whee l s,
hts
point
was
clear
Albert 2-0-.4 , Tucke r, . .0· 1 1
whose
whole
life
IS
disco
dancmg
and
who
has
so
many
girls
EASTER
N
GIRLS
(27)
rad1o
26
000
mi
l
e
~
..
TOTALS 17-16-50.
Cleveland's startmg center
Wmdon 5 J. Jl, W.;~bur 0 1 1
runnmg after him, you'd think he was Rudolf Nureyev and
IRONTON (591- Wllltams
Elmore Smtth had hts th1rd
You ng 2 1 5 McClung I 0 2,
Elton John all rolled m one.
0 2-2, Lutz J-.4 10 1 Gordon 1-0 ·
foul
3:16
into
the
first
penod,
Hannu
s 2-0·4, Sordon 1 0 '1
2, B. W1ll 1ams 1-0-2, Hodges
0
Substitute a big-league baseball career for the disco dancing
TOTALS 12 3-27
and
guard
Foots
Walker
had
3-0-6; James 5·2-1 2; Fletcher
and you have yourself a near-perfect ptcture of Lee Mazzilli,
BLUE ANGELS (44) 6 0 12 , Fitzpatrtck 6 1 13
three fouls before Ute per1od
••
Oan1
els 1-0 2, Young 2 o 4 ,
22,
single,
taU,
darkhaired
and
good-looking,
born
and
brought
TOTALS 25-9-59.
ended.
Abe
ls
?,
Q.JI,
Nibert
4
3·11,
up in Brooklyn, and about to start his second season with the
Score by quarters:
"It was like the •efs were
Groves 5 1 J 1. N 1ehm ? 0 .1
You'll Like Our Quality
Logan
10 9 12 19- 50
New York l\'lets.
Fraser J.Q6 , Ca nt erberry 1 o
conducting
a
~lmic
at
one
ALL
GAMES
Way of Doing Busmess
Ironton
20 10 14 15- 59
TEAM
W
L
P
OP
Mazzilli has seen "Saturdsy Night Fever " He liked it so
2 Williams 0 0 0 ~ Ba1rd 0·0·0
Reserves Logan 37
GMAC FINANCING
end.
Lloyd's
of
London
Logan
15
3
1140
947
·"
TOTALS 20·4 44.
Coach Wayne Bergdoll's much, he went to see it a second time.
Ironton 35
992
-SJ42
Pomeroy
couldn't
have
protected
South
Potnt
13
s
1194
1079
Score
by quarters·
"I
could
relate
to
it
very
well
because
that's
my
background,
Southwestern Htghlanders,
Open Evenings ' hl6 :00
Gilmore any • bet~er " ,F,Ifch • Waverly •
13 6 1152 1030 Eastern
5 7 7 8- 27
thtrd place finisher m the the same kind of atmosphere I come from, almost to a •r'; lie . comp1amed.
Tll5 p m Sat
· Court House 13 6 1315 1086 Blue Angel s
14 9 15 6- ad
Port smou th 11 7 1195 1089
Southe rn Valley Athletic was saying after a workout Mondsy in the team's early canip
L.------~----------J
Cleveland trailed by 19 Ironton
11 a 1183 1073
Conference, wtll meet at St. Petersburg, Fla. It was drizzling outside, so he was pomts in the thtrd quarter but PI Pleasanl 9 6 917 875
Hannan Trace in the seml- InSide the clubhouse filing his fingernails as he talked.
cut ChiCago's lead to 84- Gallipol is
9 9 1063 1026
What about all the girls? Does he have thst many chasing had
fmals of the Class A Sectional
77 with 10.2lleft'in the game Ravenswood 7 e 913 887
Fatrland •
9 10 1035 1021
Tournament
Wednesday after him?
The Bulls then reeled off rtve Athens
e 10 113S 1163
"No comment," laughed Mazzilli.
mght at Mmgs Htgh School.
straight pomts to ice the Wellston
6 12 1221 1291
Last
sea..,.,
Mazzilli
started
in
center
field
for
the
Mets
and
Coach Dan Cornell's
•game
Gilmore
took
scormg
Ja
ckson
-x
3 16 994 1218
Wildcats took second place in remained there the whole year chiefly because he was the only honors with 21 points to lead Me~gs
3 15 1036 1329
f'
x - Completed season
,.
the SV AC standmgs wtth a 9·3 one on the club who could play the position. The first part of the
se~en Bulls m doubIe 1gures
Monday 's Re•ults :
year,
he
didn't
do
much
at
all,
but
he
came
on
much
stronger
in
.
mark.
Introducing
We like to go to the Ironton 59 Logan SO
Last week, HTHS advanced the second half to finish with a .250 batting average, 46 runs opposing center aU the time ," Courl House 104 Hill sboro sO
,..,
A New Rock Star to the semi finals with a 55-53 batted in and six homers.
said Gilmore. "We took Metgs. 66 Wahama 57
•'
"I was awed for the f1rst half of the season," he explained
Tomght's games:
VIctory over Eastern. South·
ht
b
t
f
t
I
ta
th
advan ge o
a omg
u
Gallipolis vs South Po1nt at
Roy Shepherd
wes\ern goes mto the contest " It took a toll on me, but after the All-Star game, I Said to
we didn't force 1t 11
Ironton
·
myself,
'Hey,
you're
a
professional
athlete
and
you
have
a
job
w1th a 10-7 overall and 8-4
Chtcago's backcourt of PI Pleasant at R1pley
to
do,'
and
for
the
f1rst
tune
I
felt
relaxed.
I
think
I'm
over
the
rna rk agamst league foes.
Wilbur Holland and Norm Parkersburg at Raven swood
Thursday night, Southern, hump now."
Van Lie added 16 and 15 Rock Hill vs Chesapeake at
I•
.
r
.
Ironton
One evenmg durmg the !mal week of last season, Joe Torre,
the SV AC champion, will
,•
pomts
respectively.
Wednesday
's
games
:
battle the Kyger Creek the Mel.'l' manager, caUed Mazzilli into his office 10 Pittsburgh
·.,
The Cavs were paced by R1p ley at Ravenswood
Bobcats. Southern has a 13-4 before a night game with the Pirates and had a chat with him
.•.
substitutes Terry Furlow Court House vs Well ston al
"You made the club thts year on account of o{ your defensive
record overall and 11-1 mark
work,"
said Torre. HNext year, you're going to have to do 1t with 20 pomts and Campy UT~~orsday 's games:
m the SVAC
Court St.
RusseU With 19.
Pt. Pleasant at Parker sburg
Kyger Creek, 3·14 ad- wtth the bat. Your hitting can stand unprovement and you can
Walt
Frazier
hurt
his
left
South
Pomeroy, Ohio
vanced last Saturday night by get that improvement through experience, by seeing good • leg drtving on Gibnore m the Ironton vs . Portsmou th at
..
Phone:
edgmg North Gallia, 72-71. pitching. What about going out and playing winter ball?"
992-5120
For one reason or another, Mazzilli didn't play bali this past thHirtfid' pertod, andd twaks attded ~~~~~v:!l.eNelsonville York at
The winners of )Yed·
• I'
e court an a en o a stewart
winter
but after that talk with Torre, he went oqt and stroked a o
nesday's and Thursday's
hospital
for
X-rays
from
hiS
Friday's
games.
We' re pl eased to an·
games wtll meet at 7 30 p m. couple of doubles and a pair of singles in the game with calf on down . "He was in P1 Pleasant at Waha m~
nounce h1s appo1nt·
Saturday m the cham· Pittsburgh, as if saying to him, there, do you still think I can't gr eat pam" sald Cleveland S1ssonvrlle at _Ravenswood
•
' .
Class AA Sect tona l cham
pwnship game of the sec- hit?
ment as a Prudent1al
tramer Charhe Strasser .
pionship game at Ironton .
F1re can stnk e at anytimel In stall a
What
Torre
thinks
is
that
thts
year
Mazzilli
is
gomg
to
have
twnal tournament. That
agent tn your commu·
winner advances to the some competition for the center field job and It may do him
smoke alarm system 111 your home
mty He 's quahf1ed to
Distnct
competition at some good.
help you wtth your per·
By nature, Mazzilli Is shy. He has confidence in himself but
and make pen od1 c c hecks of your
Chillicothe.
sonal Insuran ce needs
maybe not as much as he'd like to have. He's the type who
If you don' t already
w1ring Also , c he.c k your tnsurance
'
needs special handling and with it, he poasibly could become a
I '
'
have a Prud ential
solid .300 hitter.
polt
cy
to
make
su
re
that
you
llave
'
agent, and you want to
"I can sense hoiV he feels and I think he has to be treated the
SVAC ~landings
same way my brother treated me'," says Torre, whose older
talk to someone from
adequate coverage shou ld a fir e stnke'
brother, Frank, once played first base for the Braves.
' the Rock , why not g1ve
FINAL SVAC STANDINGS
"Frank never gave me much credit. I had to keep proving
h1m a call
TEAM
W L P OP myself to him all the time. All the newspaper articles and all
x-Southern
11 1 910 682
Hannan Trace 9 3 738 722 the good things people said didn't mean as much to me as a
Southwestern
8 4 800 770 compliment from Frank. I remember him watching me play
North Gall Ia • 6 6 833 830 an extra-inning game when I was with Atlanta. I didn't get a
Symmes Valley 6 6 793 826 hit my f1rst siX times up, striking out twice, htttlng into a
1!le li!iitl! Alto lbw
Kyger Creek
2 10 745 825
•
fhe Prudll!JIIallnstuancll Con~pllny
Eastern
o 12 655 815 double play and a couple of things !Ike that, but after I hit a
homer in the 17th to win the game, he said to me, 'gahdamn,
x - League champ.
ot Ame r~r. a
Middleport, 0 .
992-2342
Southern won the reserve you didn't give up, yuu hung in there.' I lived on that one
Cu•po!lh! Oft•tll Nl!wiHk New JIHSII't'
standings with a perfect 12-0 compliment from him an entire week."
~!....~=
- ""'"~""""="'
· ---------..
- =-u record

BY GARY CLARK

According to Gerald
Higgins,
Director
of
Operations for Kroger's
Charleston operations, the
special program is designed
"to help accommodate the
needs of our Senior Clliuna
who often make several
purchases per week but may
not make one purchue la'l!e
enough to quaUfy for the
coupon savings."
To quaUfy for
Senior
Citizens Club Card, thole
persons H yeara of ace or
older, living on a fixed Income, must simply UIJ ou1 a
registration card • at any
participating Kroger store.
They wiU then be ilaued the
card which quaUfies them to
participate in the Jtrocer
Senior Citizens Savings
Program.

a

..

Downing-Childs
Insurant Agency, Inc.

Prudenf1al

•.

'.

•

�ou edges Eastern ·Michigan

~-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tut!l!day, Feb. 21 , 1978

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday. Feb. 21. 1971

M~~~~- ~lifd(~r;~~iJ~ ~~~~~tbau coach for the

coordinator at Azusa Pactflc
for the past three season s,
has been selected &lt;; the new

I

He repla~s Jerry Scon~.
who resigned after a 4-S
season in 1977.

,------ ---

JIIUR·MI!IOIR
REUTER-~ROGAN
B
INSURANCE

As a business owner, even with the new changes In the
esta te laws, I realize I need better estate planning.
~hat role can life insurance play fo make this easier?

I

Having the cash avail able for your fam il y Is the key to
a sound estate. There must be enough cash to pay
estate cost s .. ta xes . fees and admin istrat ion costs. If
your assets : checking and savings accounts, personal
effects, In ventory and real estate are not su ff icient or
cannot be readil y converted 1nto cash , they m1ght have
to be sold, in a fi xed market ... often at a loss.
Borrowing is not desi rable si nce the money must be
repa1d, w ith 1nferest Sav1ngs accounts, although
started wi th good intentionS, will probably be
inadequate . With life insurance t he ca sh wi ll be there
when It is needed , acquired thr ough small insta llments
.. us ing fe wer do llars to acqu ire a larger sum .

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE SERVICE
214 E . Main

The Insurance Store
992 ·5130

Pomeroy, 0 .

UaltedPreniDternatlonal
Ohio University Basketball
C&lt;Jach Dale Bandy attri~utes
the bench for the Bobcats' 6662 Mid·Amerlcan C&lt;Jnference
win over Eastern Michigan
Monday night .
" I felt we played a hard
game, we did not play a very
intelllgent game," he said.
"But the' bench gave us a
lift."
OU took an early lead, one
which It never lost, but the
Bobcats couldn't pull away
until the second half.
Tim Joyce, who ended the
game with 30 points, scored
the first six points of the
second half as the Bobcats
picked up theu 12th win
against II losses and fifth win
against seven losses in the
MAC.
Eamle Whitus backed up
Joyce with 13 and won praise
from Bandy who said
"Wht'tus played a nice aame
e
for us."
Top-ranked Marquette
downed Xavier 75 ~53 at
Cincinnati,
although

Wa rriors
Coach
Hank
Haymonds wasn't very well
pleased with the defense in
the second half.
Jerome Whitehead scored
;,) P&lt; •ints for the Warriors who
posted their 22nd victory of
the season against two losses.
Marquette jumped to a 3618 halftime, scoring 14 of
their points from the free
throw line to Xavier's I wo.
Butch Lee and Ulice Payne
were the only other Warriors
to hit in double figures with 12
and 10 respectively as Coach
Hank Raymonds substituted
freely throughout the game.
Nick Daniels scored 13 and
Gary Massa 12 for Xavier 10
thts rematch in whi ch

·n en Talk

Marquette won in Milwaukee

points. Northern Kentucky
7~2 .
then stole an inbounds pass
· By Greg Batley
The Warriors conlroled the with eight seconds left and
Attention, au sporl.!rnen! Senate Bill 419, also known as the
off ens ive and defensive Marvin Wilson connected Wildlife C&lt;Jnservation Bill of 1978, is now before the Ohio
boards and maintained a 20- from 18 feet with one second General Assembly. There are some major provisions In this
point difference throughout remaining to knot it at 66-all bill that will benefit wildlife and spOrtsmen alike, and these
the second half.
and send the game into provisions deserve your attention . The Ohioans for Wildl~e
Marquette is now 22·2 and overtime.
Conservation support this bill, and if you also do, then wrtle
Xavier 11-12.
Doellman scored the first your congressmen telling them so. Following is a summary
In a nother game Monday four points in the overtime published by the owe describing these proposals.
mghl . Nort hern Kentucky period and Wright State
There are well over one million hunters, trappers, and
State edged Wright State 77- . never 'taught up.
fiShennen in Ohio. Historically, Ohio sportsmen have been
73 in overllme.
·
Wright Sate is now 14-11: among the strongest advocates of the state's wildlife
Northern Kentucky rallied
Tonight 's schedule is conservation programs. They have provided the greatest part
10 the last 33 seconds of rather slim since the college of the !ina~ support.
'
regulation time to tie the · basketball season nears a
Sportsnien consistently have supported legislation and
game and p~t it into over- close . Wilmington is at An· regulations which promote wildlife conservation programs
lime.
·
derson (Ind .) and the Ohio and responsible sportsman conduct.
Mike Hofmeyer 's layu p Confere nce post-season
The Wildlife C&lt;Jnservation Bill of 1978, which Is now before
with 25 seconds to go brought tournament hegins.
' the General Assembly, mandates formal training for hunters
the Norsemen to within two
In the northern division, and trappers, and authorizes fee increases for fishing,
Ohio Northern will be at trapping and hunting licenses.
Heidelberg, Oberlin at Mount
Ohio's organized sportsmen support the proposed
Union and Kenyon at Bald· legislation.
win-Wallace. In the southern
Twenty-five states now require hunters to pass a hunter
division, Ohio Wesleyan will safety coiD"se before purchasing a license. Ohio, which has
At Columbus
be at Otterbein, Marietta at administered a voluntary program since 1956, would become
Col Walnu t Ridge 65 Col E 64 Muskingum and Denison at the 26th.
Col South 56 Newark 36
C ·1 1
At Ashland
apt a·
The purpose of Ohio's Hunter Safely and Conservation
Ash land
70
Mansfield
Training C&lt;Jurse is to (a) teach safe gun and bow handling, (b)
Madison 50
reduce hunting accidents, (c) teach hunter responsibility and
Le xing ton 75 Vermilion 52
ethics (d) promote better hunter • landowner relationships,
Class AA
(e) glve the hunter a better understanding of his role. In
At Salem
LQ.u i sv i ll e
Aqu ma s
57 I
I conservation , and (f) create an awareness and apprectatton
Ravenna Sou theast 53
for Ohio's wildlife resources.
Class A
Certification under Ohio's program requires the student to
At River View
complete
at least six holD"s of classroom instruction and to
Guensey Ca th 64 Newcomerstown 47
pass
a
final
written examination. C&lt;Jurses are conducted yearN BA Standings
Zanes Rose 61 Lakeland 47
By Un ited Press International
round throughout the state by wildlife officers and certified
Eastern Conference
At Athens
volunteer Hunter Safety Instructors. The training program is
Atlantic Division
Ross Sou theastern 67 Trimble
W L. Pet. GB offered free of charge.
50
Ph1la
40 16 .114
The correlation between hunter safety training and the
Regular Season
29 28 509 l1 1h
E Ca nton 71 Canal Fulton NewYork
Boston
20 33 .377 18 1f:~ nwnber of hunting accidents is vivid. The number of accidents
Northwest 47
Buffa lo
19 34 35B l91h
has steadily declined since Ohio's program was launched 22
Ironton 59 Logan 50
New Jersy
13 45 224 28
years ago. In the past 10 years Ohio has recorded a total of 776
Central Division
Mass!l{on Perry 6rl Massillon
W L f.'(t . GB acciden!B . Only 29 of the people involved had any previous
Jack son 51
San Antoni
35 21 .625
safety training. Ohio's .voluntary program has trained more
Wash
29 27 .518 6
than 283,000 studen!B: 99.99 per cent of them never have been
Cleve lnd
29 28 .509 61n
Girls'
26 31 .456 9 1!~
Atlanta
in an accident. Due to the high standard of Ohio's
involved
New Orlns
26 32 .44B 10
Ohio High School
1h
hunter
safety
training, the Ohio certification is accepted-for
Houston
22
35
.386
13
Basketball Results
. Western Conference
issuance of hunting licenses by all 25 states which now
Monday Night
MidWeSt DI'VISIOn
United Press International
mandate training .
W L Pet. GB
Arcanum 73 Bradford 33
Denver
37 21 .638
The FE C&lt;Jnservatton Bill of 1978 provides that the
Ashland
58
Mansfield
Chicago
31 29 .517
7
issuance
of a hunting license to any first-time applicant is
Madison 42
Milw
30 29 SOB 7'h
contingent upon the applicant's successful completion of
Detro it
26 31 · .A56 lOih
Brisfol 39 Mathews 30
Kan Cit y
23 36 .390 W h
Carrollton 41 Miner v a 39
Ohio's Hunter Safety and C&lt;Jnservation Training C&lt;Jurse.
Ind iana
21 38 .. 356 16112
Claymont 62 Uniontown La ke
Thorough, methodical parent-to-ehild instruction still is
Pac if ic Division
50
W L Pet. GB
the
very
reliable way of good, responsible trapping training In
Crestline 51 Centerburg 31
Portland
45 10 .818
Crestview 74 Lisbon 26
Phoeni x
37 19 .Ml
8112 Ohio. But is not available In every new trawer. More and
Delphos Sf John 's 79 Defiance
Seattle
30 26 .536 lS'12
more, Ohio's wildlife officers and other qualified persons, as
LOS Angels
30 27 526 16
30
.
volunteers; have tried to fill the void on an informal basis.
Golden
st
28
30
.483
lB'h
E Palestine 46 Louisville St
..
Monday's Result
The Wildlife C&lt;Jnservation Bill of 1978 authorizes the
Thomas 42
Chicago 106, Cleve land 95
Division
of Wildlife to . establiSh a formal Instruction and
Navarre Fa irless 51 Orrville
Tuesday's Games
32
conservation training program for new trappers. It is to meet
Phoeni x at Buffalo
Riverdale 7l Elgin 18
Seattle at New York
the same high standard achieved by Ohio's hunter safety
Phil adelphia al Cleveland
South Point 88 Chesapeake 38
program, and is to include : (a) proper selection, use and
Boston
at
Houston
Tinora 43 Hi cksville 32
Portland at San Antonio
placement os traps, (b) trapper responsibility and ethics, (c)
Warren W Reserve 71 E
Los Angeles at Chicago
L 1ver pool 49
trapper~andowner
relationShips, (d) the role of trapping In .
Wednesday ' s Games
Youngs Mooney 41 Howland
Sea ttle at New Jersey
wildlife management and preservation, (e) appreciation for
29
Phoen 1x vs Atlanta
Ohio's wildlife resotD"ces, and (f ) the trapper's role as a ·
at Charlotte
•

H-iah sch 001 scores
~

Boys'
Ohto HighSchoo 1
Basketball Results
Monday Night
United Press International
~~
fla ~&lt; AAA

NEWSPAPER
CARRIERS
WANTED
FOR MASON, W. VA. AREA

PHONE
992-2156

THE DAILY SENTINEL
BETWEEN

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

I Pro
I
IStandings \

conservationist.

Portland at Wa sh ~ngton
Houston at Detroi t
Golden Sl . at New Orlean s
Los Angeles at KM City
lnd i ~tna at Denver

NHL Standings
By Un1ted Press International

Campbell conference
Patnck Oivis1on

NY Islanders

Ph iladelphia

W L . T Pts.
36 12 10 82
33 14 10 76

22 22 15 59
19 28 11 49
Smythe Division
W L T Pts.
Chicago
23 18 16 62
Vancouver
15 30 13 43
Colorado
12 30 15 39
Minnesola
13 37 6 32
St . Louis
12 37 7 31
Wales Conference
Norris Divi s•on
W. L . T Pts .
Montrel!l
41 7 9 91
Los Angeles
22 23 12 56
P ittsb Urgh
19 23 14 52
Detroit
22 26 8 52
Atlanta
NY Ranger s

Wa shing ton

11 36 11

33

Adams Division
W L T Pts .
Buffalo
33 12 13 79
Boston
35 13 7 17
Toron to
30 16 10 70
Cleveland
19 33 7 45
Monday' s Result
Montreal 4, Buffalo 2
Tuesday's Games
Los Angeles at Wl!shington
Pittsburgh at St Louis
Boston at Colorado
Wednesday's Games
NY Islanders at Atlanta
St Lou is at P 1ttsburg h
NY Rang ers at Chicago
Clevelan d at TOronto
Los Angeles at Mmnesota
Boston at vancou\t'er

College
results

Welendahand.

When you're making an addition (of any kind), or need money
for any good reason, talk to us at The City Loan Company.
When major projects require larger amounts, we can arrange a
Homeowner Loan quickly and with consideration.

"The new room ...

CITY LOAN
COMPANY
;:u:::'\ ,, H tk\r~er,,l ...ervlce ol

I::J r:l CONTI&lt;Ol DATA COI\I'OI&lt;,ATION

We find Wdi/S to help.
125 E. Ma in St. • 99~-~ 17 1

College Basketball Resutfs
By United Press International
East
Army 74, Manhattan 58
Br andeis 82, Clark 79
Bucknell 88, Rch slr 70
Crngie .MIIn 93, Cat.Pa . 82
C.W. Posl 102 , Wagner 87
Cr t lnd 68, Blnghmtn 54
Duquesne 83, Mass 70
Fairfld 92 , St. Bonny 81
Hartford 99, Lowell 90
I on a 70, St Ptr 's 57
J Hopk ins 76, F &amp;M 65
Ll U 82, Cen tenary 81
Pitt 97, ViUanova 91
Rider 99, E Strdsbg 68
Shephrd 85 , Wheeling 80
S1ena 126 , DreKel llS
Slppry Rck 68 Grove Ctv 58
Stony Brook 73 , Sthmptn 63
Syrac use 109, Fordham 62
Upsa la 79, Kean 71
South
Appy 72. H1gh Pt . 56
A Peay 80, M 1d Tenn . 72
Ch rle ~tn 91 , Wofford 79
Chait 94, Tenn . St. 81
C1tadel 89, J . Mad ison 88
E . Tenn . 74 Morehead 61
E . Kv 78 Tenn . Tech 64
Fla . 80, Mississippi 63
Ga . Sthern 88, E . Car . 83
Ga . Coli. l ll, P1edmnt 81
Ken t ucky 97, Alabama 84
LSU 101, Auburn 95
Miss St . 55, vandy: 48
Mt .St.Mry 65, Phil a Tex 55
N C.·Chat' 105, S. Ala 78
Nrflk St. 85, Va . Union 76
St . Leo 54, 'Fla. S'rn 44
So . Car 76, Fur[flan 70
S .C . Splnbg 66, Presby 64
D.C. 60, Bowie St . 58
va . 62. wm&amp;Mary 49
W. Ky. 100, Mrrav St . 98
WiS .·Milw 74, Howard 6B
w .va 80, Marshllll 73
Midwest
Augsbg 65, Bethel 59

The bill furtlter provides tbat all first-time appreciation
for Ohio's wildlife resources, and (f) the trapper's role as a
conservationist.
The bill further provides that all first-time applicants for a
trapping permit must have completed the training program.
Any person who has purchased a hunting and trapping license
previously Is exempt.
Ninety-five percent of the cost of the state's wildlife
management and conservation programs is OOrne by sportsmen, mainly through the purchase of hunting and fiShing
licenses. No financial support comes from general tax

revenues.
Current license lees are $4 for ftshing and $4 for huntingtrapping. The current writing charge is 50 cen!B. These costs
have not changed since 1967.
Over the past several years many Ohio sportsmen have
recommended a license fee Increase - an additional "tax"
upon themselves- as the preferred means to meet the higher
cost of wildlife management and conservation programs in the
state.
In December 1975 the Ohio Wildlife Council, after a
thorough review of the financial status of wildlife programs,
unanimously recommended a license fee increase.
During 1976 and 1977 Ute C&lt;Juncil's recommendation was '
presented to nwnerous sportsmen and conservation groups
throughout the state. The Wildlife C&lt;Jnservation Bill of 1978
authorizes fee Increases.
·
The proposed new schedule is $7 for fishing licenses and $7
for hunting licenses. The bill creates a separate $5 trapping
permit, issued only to holders of a hunting license. The new
writing charge is 7~ cents per license.
Organized sportsmen in Ohio fully support the new
schedule.

·Notes from county
game protector .•.
By Greg Baney
Although most hunting

seasons of the year are now
closed, Meigs County Game
Protector Andy Lyles is

are now in his possession. If
you apply, your application
must not be sent before
March I.
If you bait dealers, animal

reminding us of some things

raisers, or others who have

that concern us sportsmen.
After the successful defeat
of the anti-trapping issbe, the
Meigs Co untians for Wildlife
C&lt;Jnservation has been rather
inactive. But the group
showed such enthusiasm and
ability to organize and help
conserve our wildlife, that the
county committee is going to

special permtts from the
Division of Wildlife are
wondering , your notices of
renewal will probably be sent
to you this week. Reply
promptly to avoid trouble.
A final note, lots of dogs
are running loose throughoUt
the county, and many are
chasing deer and other
ammals. If you observe such
a case, contact Mr. Lyles or
some other law enforcement
' person. Do not shoot the
chased animal, even if in·
jured, unless you have been
given authorization to do so.
In response to all the flak
(appropriate military term)
being thrown by the Humane
Society, most of the people in
Meigs Cowtty know that y0u,
Andy, are one of the most
dedicated and efficient game
protectors in the great State
of Ohio. I just wonder If all
· the .members of the Meigs
Coun ty Humane Society
agree with the stones that Ms.
Crawford throws. After all,
she's creating a lot of ill
feeling towards the Society,

continue as an organization.
So this Saturday, February 25
at 7 p.m. at the Fairgrounds,
the .Ohioans for Wildlife
C&lt;Jnservation will conduct a
meeting. Open to all sports·
men of the area, the Saturday
meeting will be held to
reorganize 'the MCWC to
broaden its scope. A county
organization is very im·
portant so that the Wildlife
Legislative Fund can work
with us to help our wildlife
and sportsmen. ·
Mr. Lyles also announces
1978 Wild Turkey applications
Aqu ins 89, Siena Hfs 55
Bethany 86, McPherson B1
Butler 81 , Valparaiso 75
Drake 104, w Tex St . 78
E Ill 81, Mo .-St .L 72

sometimes even undeserved .

Supports part of program

Senate behind closed doors
By NICHOLAS DANU..OFF

WASHINGTON (UP!) The Senate closets itself
behind closed doors today to
hear a report from the Senate
Intelligence C&lt;Jmmittee on
persistent charges that high
Panamanian officials aided
and abetted drug trafficking .
Opponents of two pending
treaties transferring control
and operations of the
Panama Canal to Panama by
Ute year 2000 hoped the drug
issue would prove damaging
enough to sway undecided
votes to their side and defeat
ratification.
But some Senate sources
said Monday the report would
conclude the drug dealings
had no effect on the outcome
of the treaty negotiations.
Sen. Birch Bayh, 0-Ind.,
chairman of the intelligence
panel, was to deliver the
report which also was
expected to conclude that the
bugging of Panamanian
officials by U.S. intelligence
sources, a surveillance
operallon

administration

1fficials confirmed last fall ,

affect
did
not
th e
negotiations.
The intelligence materials
amassed by I he Senate
Intelligence C&lt;Jmmittee on
the drug allegations are
voluminous and intri cate,
actording to administration
and Senate sources.
Besides reviewing these,
the Senate was expected In
debale what supporting
be
information should
included In any report made
public at the end of the closed

session.
Ab3ut a dozen senators
were briefed Monday by the
committee
s taff
in
preparation for the secret
session.
Sen. Charles Percy, R-Ill .,
a treaty supporter, said after
the briefing the drug issue
was a legitunate concern but
should not obscure the longterm benefits the treaties
would serve.
Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan ,, a
treaty critic, said after the
same briefing: "My concerns
are pretty much the same."
Dole has argued that if the

••••

'10000

drug allegations are proved
true , doubt is cast on
Panama's ability to act as the
guarantor of the Panama
treaties.
" ! still don't think we have
all the information ," he told
reporters . " Maybe there is

more to he seen. Hopefully ,
the Senate will see fit to make
it public."
A UPI inquiry turned up a
raft of new allegations about
the " Panama connection ."
Many of these allegations
were developed by treaty
critics, but have not been
den ied by admimstration
officials.
Among allegations
uneovered by UPI.
- Alexis

Watson ,

who

worked as a special
undercover agent, testified to
House investigators and told
a Miami news conference
Feb. 10 about illicit drug
tranSshipment$ at Panama 1S
Tocumen Int ern ational
Airport and in the Free ZOne
of Colon w1th offi ctal
connivance.
- A second Panamanian

witness,

who

requested

anonymity , told
in vestigators

House
that
Panamanian leader Omar
Torrijos discussed with
former
Californ ia
Assemblyman Bill Brophy in
the early 1970s the profits
which might be made by
selling Colombia cocaine in
California. But there was no
indtcation Torrijos ever acted
on this discussion . UP! could
not reach Brophy or

TRADE-IN

On All Uving Room Sunes

MASON FURNITURE
Mon.,-Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat.·8:30 til 5:00 Thursday Til 12 Noon

otherw1se corroborate th e

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

report.
- Raw int e lli gence
docmnents from the Drug
Enfor ce ment Administration

Herman Grate

Mason, W.Va .

773-5592

and obtained by UP! reported
on a v ariety of drug·
smuggling operations betwee n
1971 - 197~
wh ir h

alle~edly linked Torrij!lS and
his brother Hugo. Hugo
Torrij os is currently chief of
Panama's national casmus.

By OREW VON RJ,:RGEN
BAL. HARBOUR , Fla .
l UP! ) - After supporting
part of President Carter's

economic

including limits on the Utreemartini busines1 lun ch whil e

Baker is
urged to
step down

these Lrea ues you oo nm otter
our party leade r ship but
rather another ~ iarlt ~t ep
toward political extinction."

Among Uwse stgning the
letter were Rep. Del Clawson
of Califorma, chairman of the
House Rep ublican Po lic y
Committe e ; Rep. Gene
Snyder of Kentucky, ranking

program

c riticizin g

oth e r

aspects, the AFI.rCIO Executi ve Co unc il turns it s
attenti on tod ay to trade
legoslation.
In the semnd day of the ir
wc ck· lon g , mid -winter
m eeting , th e 3f co un cil
members also will hear from
Benjamin Hooks, exe-cut ive
diredor of Ute NAACP .
Organized labor ha s been
especially critical of U.S.
'c orporations shiftin g
production to other nations to
take advantage of low wages
and special tax breaks.
The AF!.-CIO poin!B to a
re cent Labor Department
report showing about 5~0, 000
American workers lost their
jobs as a direc t result of such
action, and plans to support
special legislation aimed at
stemming that tide.
ln Monday 's two -hour
sesston, t he t'O W1Cil adopted
its own $29.5 b'illion cc:onomic
s timulu s
program,
disagreeing with the Ca1·ter
admi nist ration over
a
poposed $8.4 billion ~usiness
tax cut for fiscal 1979, but
go ing along with It on such
ltems as wiping out income
tax deductwns for state sales

WASHINGTON ( UPl I mino rity member of the
Fourteen House Republicans
House
Pana ma
Ca nal
Monday urged Sen. Howard
and
Rep.
Phil
subcommittee
Baker to step aside as Senate
Crane of lllinois, chairman uf
Republic an leader during the the Amen can Conservati ve
Panama Canal debate
because of his support of the Union .
Other signers were Reps.
treaties .
·John
Rousselot of Cahfornia,
In a letter In Baker, the
Mickey
Edwards
of
Republicans said they think
Oklahoma, Eldon Rudd of
Sen. Robert Gnffin, R-Mich.,
Should take over the party's Arizona, Bill Ketchum of
leadership role because of his California, John Ashbrook of
Ohio, Steve Symms of Idaho ,
opposition w the lreattes.
Griffin lost to Baker, a James Co lhn s of Texa s .
Tennessee Republican, by Robert Dornan of California,
J . Kenneth Robinson of
one vote in last yea r 's contest
Virginia, Don Young of
for Senate GOP leader.
The House rnetnbers said Alaska and Hubert Bauman
Baker's support "constitutes of Maryland.
a repudiation of the
Republican nationa l platform
PI.AY ER-OF-WEEK
of 1976, the official position of
CHICAGO (UP!) - Inthe Republican National dia na's Wayne Radford today
Committee, the majority was named Big Ten Player of
wishes o f the membership of the week for his performance
and gasoline taxes.
our party as well as the in the Hoosiers' games last
The council also decided to
ma Jorit y view of th e week in victories over Ohio support the adm10istralion in
American
people
as State a nd Michigan.
expressed in many current
Radford played 20 minutes ·"'
and past polls."
aga inst OhiO State, hitting
Ohio College Ba sketball
The signers told Baker that seven of nine rield goal atMonday night
wheUter or not he steps aside tempts to score 23 points, and
United Press International
as leader during the treaty scored a career h1gh 30 points
N Kentucky St 77 Wright Sf 73
debate, "you must realize against Michigan . For the
(of I
M arquette 75 Xavier 53
that in following the path you week 1ft&gt; connected on 18 of 25
Ohi o Uni \t' 66 E Mi ch 62
have chosen in support of field goals attempts.

effor ts lo lim tl business
deductions for meals.
P&lt;•Pula rly referred to by ti ll'
administra tion as the ''Uaree-

martini IW\ch.''
In giving its support . however ,
the
co un cil
recommended a three-year,
pha se-in period to IX"event job
losses in the food scr \•iet•

field .
''We're opposed to f.l l't•rtuin
number of citiz&lt;.•ns of this
counliT h8 \'lng the

ri~h\

tu S.ll5 pcr&lt;"e nt . Next year , the
tax 1s schl-duled to lncrease to
6.13 per&lt;•ent.
Meany said he did not Wllnl
to be overl y critica l of
President Carter 's first year
in oflire, but said he would
~ivc hi.m 8
lle prm~t·d

c..ninus

rating.

Carter's work in
til(• t• ner gy field . but
n lttci'Z.t.'tl a lar k of nttPnt ion
lo l'l'l'&lt;lt ing JOb1).

to

have n three-martini hut C'h,
or a two-murtlni lun ch, or
whut have you, ~md h(-lve thl'
taxpuye( pHy for it ,'· said

AFLCIO President GC\.rg,•
Meany .
But Meany wo1dd not back
President Carter' s phm fo r

decelerution of wngrs and
prices.
r '· All of these idem; MC' a
~tep toward eontrols, wagt'
101d

price control. und we urc

opposed to eontrol, period ,"
Meany said. " No matter wlutt
form U1cy may tnke."

The council a lso

was

opposed to increases iu thu
·Social Security tax and saifi it
would like the lax rolled ba&lt;·k
from its current 6.05 percent

w~~~
ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY
Hrs.: 10:&lt;10
Sun. -Thurs .
Friday and
See Us at the

a.'m. til ll :Ou p . m .
10 til 12 :00 p .m .
Saturday .
Pomeroy Bend Br idg e

NO WASTE

MINUTE
STEAKS
FRESH &amp; LEAN

~~~~:~ ......~~~~ 119

19

LB. • ,

, ,

'"""'~... .
. '/

BUCKET STEAK

GROUND
· $}29 ·
ROUND•••••••••••••••~~·. . ___ _

VAllEY BELL

SUPERIOR

ALL MEAT
WIENERS ....•.•.•.•......•...••.•....•.~~~

LOW FAT

79¢
99¢
HAM SALAD ••.•.......•.•.. •.

MILK

SUPERIOR

ALL MEAT
SLICED LB ·
BOLOGNA ....••.•..•.••.....•... ~ ...... ·
HOMEMADE

-

99~

Pkg .

1 LB.

CRACKERS

89~

49~

Room
Conditioner

29~

SUNSH.INE

ALPO

Everydav Low Price

00

25 lb.
Bag

$1

LARGE
BAG

LARGE
GRADE B

99

29¢

EGGS

69¢

=~~~~. . . . . . . . . . :~:.~~. 99~
7-.UP

.DOG
FOOD

DOG
FOOD
Cans$}

4oz.

Jar

SOLID
DEODORANT

PARTY
ICE

INSTANT
COFFEE

GLADE

SCOT LAD

3

'139

MELLOW ROAST

RITZ
CRACKERS

HOT
COCOA
14 Ct.

GALLON

~~·

HERSHEY'S

Box

'

NO WASTE ·

FRESH &amp; LEAN

I lb.

~"-

8-16 oz.
bottles

•384

DR. PEPPER

99~

8-16 Oz. BOnLES

RC COLA
OR

HOLSUM

SUPER MARKET ~ OPEN .DAILY 9 TO 10 P.M.
SUNDAY 10 TO 10

We Accept Federal Food Stamps,;.,We ReseiVe The Right To Lmit Quantities

HOT DOG BUNS
OR

8-16 OZ. BOTTLES

BARBECUE BUNS
8 PAK

D.IET RITE

9~

99~
"I

�•

RE:AL COOl DOllAR S'PE:CIAl)
~~
~. I
'" . '.
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'·

'..

'

BAYER ASPIRIN

GILLETTE
TRAC II

Childs
36's

9's

I

~~;-~~~r~ce." 29¢

~~i-~.-~~~= "" $17 9
DAY CARE
Liquid Cold Medici1~e 11
6 oz .

AMINO
Dep Shampoo
2 oz . Trial Size

39' Value ·
F.I.P, Price ...

25¢

EVEREADY
Disposable Flashlight
3215BP

~~;-~. ':."~~="' 95¢
LUX SOAP
Reg . Size

34' Value

F.I.P. Price

5/ $1

Electa Circle plans for
POLLY"$ POINTERS
scholarship fund donation: ~_Pol_lvC_ram_er__~
The r:Jeda Circle ul the B.

Wetlbum w1ll prc:-.cnl devt; Wars." The Jove g1ft offering
tlons at the teet .
wa' taken with Mrs. Beulah · Wants a
The ci rcle also dec1dcd that White g i vi~g the dedication
clean ladder
at the M ICJdlepurt First H&lt;ip- whutcvcr IJ&lt;.1 Iance there is in &lt;:.~nd prayer . For the program,
tisl Church voted lo semi ~i fls the l rca~'iury 01 MCJy Will be Mrs. Well read a letter !rum a
DEAR POLLY - I wonder
of money to the scholarship sent tu Bacont: College.
if
you or any of your readers
book by Currie Ten Bourn.
stude11 t whu J.S ulJseving &lt;:t lli1··
Miss Bhode~ Hall guvcdcvt;
could
tell me how to clean an
Refreshment~ were served
Lhda y in Ma1'dl and lu l&lt;•h lioris u::;mg I· Cor. 13, and a by Miss Hall and Mrs. Gibbs aluminum extension ladder,
spcdal inlercst missionm-;· of mc&lt;.l itlion lCJken from Guidt! tu those named ani! Mrs.
also how I can pull it apart.
the &lt;·trdc.
,Posb entitl ed ""Three Tiny f; thei Hughes and aguest,
Mine is very . dirty ... nd so re·
Mrs. Texonn'* Well prc:mJ- Wu rds That Could Stop All Mrs. Kirby Oler.
mains useless. -F.B.
ec.l at the meeting during
DEAR F.B. - .Soapy hot
whirh time a thank-yOu note
water and soap-filled steel
wool pads should clean your
WC::I S rec.td from Mrs. Lettie
ladder if it is just dirty. Spills
Housh fur a Clwistmas gift:
Mrs. FreUi:l Hood re ported
of paint, etc. , would be a dtf·
lhallhe while croos quokl has
ferenl matter. r would im·
agine that the places where it
been t·omleted .
~rhc ;.mnual fe llowship tea
pulls apart are clogged up
of the Sm1born Society wao
with
dirt, paint spatlers or
CAN ISOLATION BE SELF-INDUCED?
announl'ed fol' the £irst Mon- DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
something similar. I am sure
Ui:iy in t\pnl with Mrs . .JC::tnif'e
I'm a 19-year-old male, not bad-looking, average grades, a our many men rectders will be
sending in other ideas, too.
Gibbs and Mrs. Beulah While good senoe of hwnor. l don't think I'm an unlikable person.
·POLLY.
to assist with the ser·ving , and
Yet I've res igned myself to a life of isolation. Throughout my
Mrs. Elnisc Wilson &lt;:~ nd Mrs.
DEAR POLLY - My Pel
jwtiur hi gh and high school years I never had a friend. I had to
Freda Hood lu help with llw practically l)eg people to sign my yearbooks. To this day I've Peeve is with people who
claim they do not have time
cle anup. Mrs. M ~ rj o ri c had no dates, never been to a prom or dance ; don't know any
to write letters. We all make
girls·C::tnd very few fellows.
time
for the things we really
I guess I'm the greatest thing that never happened. If teen
want
lo do so I think that is a
years arc the best of your life , I dread thinking what the worst
poor
excuse.
will be ! How can I slop being- THE LONE STRANGER
I save money by making
DEAR LONE :
my
own pillowcases . I can get
I'm sure you 're not an unlikable person, but most definitely
five
standard size pillowcases
you're an unapproachabl e person. Somehow you've built a
from
a full size sheet, six if I
wall that~ shuts others out and yoHrsell in. Its bricks (I'd
HARHI SONVILLE - The guess ) arc lw()-thirds shyness and one-third resentment that put conlrasting hems on two
of them . One such sheet will
purchsc of new pcdistals no one sees your basic worth.
also
make four king or queen
were taken on '*s the proj t::d
So why don 't you give people a chance? Speak first , reach
. of the year when the Har- luward t_hcm, offer your help, smile, be interested : don't size cases. I buy a sheet that
"risunville Chapter 255, Order withdraw and expect gtrls lo seek yuu . They may be as afraid contrasts in color with the
printed ones I use on the bed.
of tlJC Eastern Stctr met of rejection as you are.
-MRS. W.O.
rccenlly !II the lenlple.
. Shift uut uf neutral and do something that brings you
Mrs . Ste ll&lt;:~ Atkins, worthy
· DEAR POLLY- I am sure
recognition, even if it's just saying " hello" and using that
matron, amJ 1-&lt;:t rry Well , wor- sense of hwnor to keep the conversa ti on going . Mainly, think Ruth will love me forever
when she reads my answer to
thy patron, presided at the well of yo urself and Jet it show. Good luck ' -SUE
ber problem of mildew-like
meeting. A srlluul of instru cstains on her rubber mat I
tion Wi::IS i::llllloun ced for Mon - DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
have wonderful luck using a
day at the Fort Frye Hig h
I could sta11 , " I have a terrible problem ... " but I don't. I just
Sehoul at Beverly. All offi-cers have something to share with you, a poem written by my best · strong solution of chlorine
bleach and water. Let the
were encouraged to i: l ttend . .It friend Debbie HusselL
mat
stand in it for two or
was noted that just two years
TOO YOUNG
three
hours . Lift the ·mal up
ago the chaptt::r muvcd into
ll 's getting all the hand-me-&lt;lowns \hal no ·longer lit your
and
down
while it is soaking
the new temple . A practi ce sister.
1
,
so
the
solution
gets under it
for in iticttion will be held i1t
It's wearing shoes that are luo big and getting lots of blisters.
Even
though
it
is
often notal&gt;the March meet mg .
It's going to bed at nine when the rest stay up till len.
solu
lely
necessary
I use a
.Refresluncnt.s in keeping
rl's playing Chinese checkers, and Daddy lets you win.
brush
to
go
over
it Do
stiff
with Valentine' s Day were
It's sitting in the middle when you're off on long car trips.
::;crved.
hope
this
works
ru;
well
lor
ll's climbing fences in a dress and hearing that awful rip.
Ruth
as
it
has
for
me.
-MRS.
It's being called the family baby when relatives are here.
W.H.M.
It's jwnpmg up and down to see yourself in a high mirror.
DEAR POLLY - We lived
All these things happen · to \be ones they call "too young. "
in
Miami where fleas get in·
But none of these are half as had as happenings yet to come.
doors
frequently. I want to
It's liking a guy who's older and thinking that he cares.
tell
Sharon
M. and Mildred
It's r ealizing again you're underage, and only friendship is
they
can
rid
their carpets of
there.
fleas
by
sprlnkiing
moth
ll 's hearing him say he likes you , but \hen those bad words
flakes
all
over
the
carpets
come :
" If only you were seventeen, instead of so darn ymmg!" and leav ing them there until
. they evaporate. - PEARL.
DEB'SFRIEND
DEAR POLLY - Many
housewives hav~ trouble stu!H. Sun born Missionary SOt'lt'ty n 1eeting Sunday aflemoon

Project
•
announced

Big diamond look
Small diamond price

OLD SPICE
AFTER SHAVE

Listermint

4:Y• oz . W / Free
Shave Cteam 6 oz .

12 oz.

~2j~_-;.::~=-" $189

$1 .59Value
F.I .P. Price .•.

99¢

Windshield_Washer
Fluid

Yes , we know the secret of
giving you the rea l big
diamond look .. ·. at a
surprising ly sma ll price.
· The 8 diamond s mounted In
this ring just th e righ t way
to g i11e the look of one big
diamond . That's our and
your little secret .. . and so
is the .low price ,

1 Galton

$1 .19Value
F.I.P . Prlbe " .

79¢
·

GILLETTE
ATRA RAZOR
$4.95 Value
F.I. P . Prlc•

$299

HANOI-

7-- The

Freud bio rev ze we
by Literary Club
e

Irvin g Stone's '·Passions of
the Mind" on Sigmund Fre~d
was reviewed by Mrs . Emerson Jones al the Wednesday
mee ti ng of the Middleport
Literary Club held at the
home of Mrs. Berna rd Fultz.
Mrs. Jun es described
Freud as a researcher into

Hitler's Nazi regime and died
there .
. .Mrs. Roy Cassell revlewed
Dale Evans Rogers ' "Trials,
Tears and Triwnphs", an ac·
count uf her _experiences of
traveling over the country
witnessing for Chtist She
· wrote of her own sorrow and
also of the Lriwnph in overcoming tria ls and tears with
the help of God.
For meeting life, the advice
she gave in the book was to in·
•

the recesses of the llwnan
rn.ind ami ta lked of his attempts lo prove that many il·
lnesses are the 1·esult of ex·
perienccs s~ored in the br~::~ in .
Tracing the life of Freud, the
author describ~d Freud 's
disappointment at not being
having accepted by other
great medical minds. Freud '
liv ed in Vienna until he was 80
Court St.
years old and then went to
Pomerov r 0 .
....___
- - - - ' England in · 1~39 to escape

GOESSLER'S

d.

ling a turkey. I would illtt,to
pass on my easy way . Make a
cheesecloth bag, fill il willl
sluffing and put it inside the
turkey . When the turkey has
fin ished cooking the stuffing
can be easily removed from
I!Je inside. No more stuffing
scattered about.- ETHEL
DEAR POLLY -· My
Pointer should be of special
interest to those who ca rry
their lunch lo work every
day. 1 know from experience
that you can keep your ther·
mos butlle from having a
musty smell by simply ad·
ding one teaspoon of baking
soda to the rim~e w1:1ter after
the bollle is washed. This will
insure a clean fresh smell and
liquids will be fresh tasting.
-KAREN
Polly will send you one of
her signed thank-you
newspaper coupon clippers if
she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her column. Write POLLY'S
POINTE_RS in care of this
newspaper .

LEAN- BOSTON BUTT

PORK 'ROAST••••••• :••.••••~~~.99e
FRESH SLICED

PORK STEAK~~~~ 1

BONELESS

CUBED PORK ••••••••• ~~.~ 1
FRESH SAUSAGE .••••L.~.~ 1
LEAN SUPERIOR

SLAB BACON•••••••••• ;~~. 99e
SUNDAY ONI.Y SPECIALS

BARBECUED CHICKEN ••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~~ •••

Pepettd 9lt us (9f H&amp;ust Value!

TUESDAY
WOMEN'S AUXILIARY,
Veterans Memoria l Hospital,
Tuesday 2 p.m . in the hospital
conference room. Wafter
Lucas,
hospital
ad·
ministralor, will speak.
PO MEROY Chamber of
Commerce Tuesday at noon
at Meigs Inn. David Pratt,
president of the Big Bend CB
Radio Club , guest speaker.
XI GAMMA MU CHAP·
TER, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, 7:30 Tuesday night
at the home of Mrs. Carol
McCullough with Mrs. Annie
C"'hapman and Mrs . Donna
Byer as co-hostesses. Mrs.
McCullough and Mrs. Karen
Goins to have the cult ural
report .
DORCAS CIRCLE, B. H.
Sanborn Missionary Society,
Middl eport First Bapti st
Church to meet at 7:30
Tuesday at the home of Mrs .
David Darst. LOVE J OY
Circle of the church will meet
with Mrs. Dorothy Anthony.
XI GAMMA MU Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, will

KEEBLER

~::~~:.............. !.~?~. 59¢
4
~~6~ ............... ~~~;~. .89
NABISCO

DERMASSAGE

DISHWASHING

F.I.P , Price,,.

99¢

'

US NO. 1 IDAHO

BAKING POTATOES
10 LB.$_
}19

Pm{;($ GOQD THRU SATURDAY, FEB. 25
WE ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS

START LOSING
WEIGHT TODAY

The hardesT part ot· loSing weight is
getting started. New Extra-Streoglf1 StiPER
OORIIEI will give your will power that
· extra puSh it needS to start losing weight.
Begin wilh th is amaz ing tiny table!

LARGE SIZE

TEMPLE

NO DEALERS PLEASE

FOR SLICIN(i
OR SALADS

Open Mon.-Sat. 9 am • 9 pm

'You'll eat less- turn load and excess tat
mto burned·up energy instead of edra

!

FRESH LB, 39~
TOMATOES
·

Open Sunday 9 am · 6 pm
-- --- - · - t.

COUP:ON r

GLAD 2 PLY'

GLAD

'fRASH BAGS

SANDWICH BAGS

Pome; Jy , Ohio ·

..

•.
-..
~

~

No. 255
15 CT. PKG.

•

~·
0" ... '
f '"'l•-

----~--

COUPON

NELSON'S DRUG STORE

"H you use

Prlce ...

59¢

oz.

PRODUCE

~

60Ydo .
$1 .16Value

$1 .39Value

32

BTLS.
LIQU·IO •••• ~ ••••••••••••••••••••
,..

l:::td:lc~\~~~m~r~1

weight as you tallow ltle Plan.
Clini cally proven ei!E-ctive. tho SUPEA
ODIIIIIEI Reducing Plan •ill enable you
to lose pound s and mches wilt10ut
getting nervoos- or money t:lack . You
can start losing waight today with fleW
llffil ODIH•U and ste the difference in
your mirror. You owe It to voursell

-

'

$}99

'

'

'•

69¢

No. 155
150 CT. BOX

W/C

COUPON

COUPON

SOFT-WEVE

COLGONITE AUTOMATIC

BATHROOM TISSUE
...
No. 285
W/C

3 99¢
2 ROLL
PKGS.

DISH DETERGENT
No. 205

W/C

OZ.~BOX

50

$}49

W/C

~

JOHNSON'S
DENTAL FLOSS

34 oz .'

12 OZ.

FRANKIE$.... ~~~~.~~: .......... ~!~~. 69e

JEWELRY
STORE

44¢

Toilet Bowl Cleaner

$1 59

FRESH WHOLE

Co upon Expires Feb . 25, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

100Ft.

BOWLENE

19

SUPERIOR

WRAP
79' Value
F'.I~ P. Price . .•

49

TONY'S STORE MADE

::.t
McCullough and Mrs. Karen
Goins will give the cultural
report. C()-hostesses will be
Mrs. Annie Chapman and
Mrs.
Donna
Byer.

elude a Ume lor prayer,
spend some time alone With
God, and lead a clean life.
Mrs. Roh&lt;rt Fisher presid·
ed at the meeting with
members joining ·her in the
club collect. For roll call each
member gave some advice orl
health .
Refreslunents were served
and the next meeting wil _be
held at the home of Mrs.
Dwight Waliace.

09

69¢

'

~~;~·~~~~

the short
form, we do it
for less."
If yuu qualify for the short fonn, we charge

a very low prif:e. The simpler the return, the
less we charge. That's Reason No. 2 why
you ~hould let us do your taxes.

H&amp;R BLOCit
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

618 E. MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO
Open 9: 00to6 : 00 Weekday s
9:00to5 : 00 Saturday
Phone 992-3795
No Appointment Necessar y

Coupon Expires Feb. 25, 1978
TWIN CITY (;ATEWAY

Coupon Expires Feb. 25, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

Coupon Expires Feb. 25, )978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

COUPON

COUPON

CAP'N

MELLOW ROAST

CEREAL
No. 7.55

STOCK AND SOME EQUIPMENT FOR SALE
Canned goods, household
paper. goods &amp; health &amp; beauty
aids

GIFT ITEMS

30%oFF 4Q%OFF.

16 OZ. BOX

W/C

1-LB. CAN

W/C

Coupon· Expires Feb. 25, 1978 TWIN CITY GATEWAY

Coupon E xpires Feb. 25, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

::;

89¢

,I

DOVE

SYRUP
....
~

••·
•••

•..."

.No. 125

,.

24

oz. Bn.

99¢

No. 95

2::: 69¢

Coupon Expires Feb. 25, 1978
TWtN CITY GATEWAY

Co upon Expires Feb. 25, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

W/C

0~

BOX

W/C

Coupon Expires Feb. 25, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

SCOTTIES

MRS. FILBERT

W/C

TISSU~

99¢
.
2
BOXES

Coupon Expires Feb. 25, 1978
TWl CITY GATEWAY

\

MARGARINE

99¢
2
I

200Cl

-,

."

25

Coupon Expires Feb. 25, 1~78
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

FACIAL

BEAUTY BAR SOAP
W/C

NO. 175
16 1h OZ. BOX

s-i·~'~~::~~~~==~~~~~~==~~:tl

r-~~~~~~~~~~:.=~~~~~~~Q
MRS. BUTTERWORTH

No. 155

W/C

l·LB.
PKGS.

W/C

Coupon Expires Feb. 25, 1978
TWIN ClTYGATEAY

�•
IO :DO-Famlly 6,13: Reach for Tomorrow 33 : News 20.
10:»-Biock Perspecllve On The News 20' 11 DONews 3,A,6,1,10,13, 15: Dick Covell 20 : Over Easy
33.11 : 30- Johnny Cer.son 3,A, 15 :
Mo,vle

8 _ The Da1ly Sentmel, Mlddl~port-Pomeroy , 0., Tuesday, Feb 21, 1978

peopletalk

The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into

ROYAL COMEBACK: She's tile Princess of Monaco now,
but b!l ck in 1954 when she won an Oscar for her performance m
" Country Girl," she was plain old superstar Grace KeUy of
Philadelphia. Now, after 26 years m royal retirement ,
Princess Grace will return to showbiz in her home state .

Samu el Hazo, director of the Pittsburgh International Poetry
Forum , says he's persuaded her to read poetry selectiOns m a
program en titled ''Btrds, Beasts and Flowers" 10 ronjunrtion
w1th Sunilay's opemng of the Interna tional W1ldhfe Year
OUT OF THE PAST : Folkstnger Bob Dylan took hiS golden
oldies to Japa n Monday, and the fans cheered as he recalled
U1e rebellious '60s with " Biowin' in the Wind ," and '' Like A
llolhng Stone." Hut at least one Tokyo devotee was
disappointed Sa1d the .Japanese youth - one of 10,000
)a mmmg the con cert hall - " He has no new spirit , no
crea tivity any more He's bec01ue too conunerc1al." But,
soft ening the cnticism , he added , " I'll hke Dylan forever."
TOP OF THE MARQUEE: " People's Cho1ce" awards went
to a clutch of stars Monday night tn Hollywood, with Carol
Burnell and Bob Hope topping the ltst as entertamers of the
year Hope won the laurel over Johnny Carson and J ohn

WANT AD
CHARGES
1$ WIJ(ds\1" Unckr
C..h

100

IW.y

Notice•

Chart~ I."

125
1'10

l dllly!l

us

300

SWays

175

Ea~h word ~e r the m lnunwn 15

wunb

15

4 ('eiii.J per won! pl'r dH)'.

Ails rwuiU\IS othtr 0\M.n c llltlleC Ull ~~
l.l.itys will bl!! ~.: hart'~ Ill lhr. 1 day
rctito .

In nwmury, (;11rd of n umkl; ~tOO
Otllluary 6 t't!/lt.li per wurtl, $3 00

1rununwn Cu h II\ a dv &lt;~onloe

Mobile Home !lllles 11 nd Yard S~tl n;
lll&lt;t:e pted Dnly wllh 1.:*sh Wllh

&lt;~ ft!

vrdt'r 25 cent charge ror ads C!lrry
u1g Box Numbtr In C&lt;~. re uf Ttk St:11
Und

Ttw PuiJhsher reSl'nres tht' n i!Jhl
IU ~II ur ftl)el1 &lt;m )' 11&lt;b det-nkd ob~ll 0111i I

The Pubhshe r w1 1l not br
rt'Spon5ible fur lnllft! lhiln ant• tm:ur·

m. l

m~rtlun

Phone992·2 Jjfj

Wayue, th ough Wayne was named favonte moVIe actor . Mtss

Rurnett outdrew Barbra Streiswtd and Mary Tyler Moore .
.la ni!'S Garner took the nod as 1977's top television performer,
and [)an Haggerty and Suzanne Somers "ere favonte
pe rformers tn a new televiSIOn program - " Eight IS Enough •·
F'avor1te mustcal stars - Linda Ronstadt and Peter
Frampton

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

GLIMPSES: Jackie Gleason and Clea•·un Uttle begm a
natwn altour 10 "Sly f ox'' March 4, openin g 10 Sa n D1ego .
Nancy Addisun, of ABC-TV's " Ryan's Hope, " has been stgned
to costa r with Jam es Cubum m the Stx·hour CBS·TV mini·
series "The Dam Olrse, " based on the novel by Dashiell
Hammett . James Whitmore takes h1s 'Will Rogers ' U.S.A."
to Ford 's Theater tn Wash mgton D C. next month, running
from March 6through ~prtl 2 .. Laurie Bee&lt;hman, late of New
York r~t ; 's Rambow Grill , gets her own sho" at JP's , Ma rch 1&gt;ll - the fir st tune the !';ew York club has booked any arttst for
Norwegtan Cru~11 Prince Harald and
an entire v. eek
Pr in('rss Stmja are m Smga pore for a five-dRy official vtslt .

.;:.:.·x·x·:-;·:·: =·~:-:·:·:· ·: .-: :·.:· ·:· .·.•··•• :- -: ·-: :- :: :-: :·.: .-•••: .-••..• ::-:-·-:···: · :::-·:·: ••. ·

:::

Mason County

·:

News Notes
•,

Tuesdii&gt;

thrn Frida)'

lht- WI ~

4PM
bdort' pub\Ju tlu.m
SunWt~

"

4P M

Fndll)' afl tomoon

lJcrlNwillwiJ

child, a so n, Jason

Mtss Rebecca Kouns and Mr. Kevm Brown of Mason were
marrtt!d on Ja nuary 19, at Cll£ton Umled Methodist Church .

'l11e color scheme of pmk and white were usetl on the table
which was centered wtth a weddmg cake. A lace table cover
ovm ptnk htghhghted the table along w1th hghted candles
Homemade mmts of ptnl&lt; roses with green leaves whtch
were made by Mrs George Burns were alsq served . M1ss
Cm ne H&lt;Jtcher registered lhe guests Miss Jill Taylor served
th e pun ch. Cake was also served.
Those attending mcluded Mr and Mrs. Otha l.tevmg ,
Nestyle Clark, Mr and Mrs Hazen Roush, all of New Haven,
W Va .; Kent Brown, Kettermg, Ohio, Mr . and Mrs. Wayne
Jones and Scottie, Mason , W Va .,Belva Roush , W1lma Blake,
and Rev. and Mrs J oe Hatcher, all of Clifton, W.Va., Mr . and
Mrs. Carl Kearns, Mason, W Va., Carn e Hatcher, Chfton, W.
Va ; l~eorge Kearns, West Columbia , W Va ; Ann Wallace ,
lndtanapolis, Ind., Mr . and Mrs . Tommy Jenks, l.outsa, Ky. ;
M1 and Mrs WtlhamE Brown, Syracuse, Ohio; Mr and Mrs
Ferris Justis, Mason, W Va ; Mr and Mrs Tom Taylor, Ji ll
and Barrey, Mason , W Va ; Conrue Roush, Dexter, Oh1o ; J1m
Cowen , Jackson, 0 , Ed M1dkiff, Nelsonville and Jackie
Osborne, both of Nelsonville, Ohio, Mr . and Mrs Harvey
Nowland, Mason, W Va , Teresa Fraley, South Pumt, Ohio; ·
Mr Hnd M1·s Joseph Kerns, West Palm Beach, Florida ; Mr
and Mrs . Mark Kouns, Columbu s, Ohto, Carol Rtggs, South
Pumt , Ohio; Mr . and Mrs. Dale Kouns, Syracuse, Ohio; Mr .
and Mrs Joe M11ler and Tammy , Middleport, Ohto; Mr . and
Mrs Mel Clark , West Columbia, W.Va., Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Exlme and Joshua, Jackson, Ohio ; Mr and Mrs Fred
Morrow, Syracuse, Oh1o; Mr and Mrs Bill Brown, Mason, W.
Va
POMEROY - Mr . and Mrs John M1chael, Rt. 3, Pomeroy
are announctng the btrth of their f~rst child, a son on January
26 at Pleasant Valley Hospital He we 1ghed 8 pounds and 4
ounces and has been named Chnstopher J ohn.
Maternal grandparents are Mr and Mrs Walter Werry ,
Mason ; paternal grandparents are Mr . and Mrs Everett
Michael, Rt I, Mtddleport. The maternal great-grandmother

is M1·s Lucretia Werry, Pomeroy

,

MASON - Mrs John Dtllon (Pa ula Werry ) was honored
with a miscellaneous shower recently at the St Joseph Hall
Annex m Mason wtth Mrs. Richard Carson·, Mason, and Mrs.
Wayne Graham , Pt Pleasant, servmg as hostesses.

The honoree rece1ved many gtfts . Mrs Carson served the
cake and Mrs. Graham served the beverage.
The new Mrs Dillon IS a registered nurse at Veterans
Memonal Hospttal.
Mason and area personals

Mr. and Mrs. John Troy and sons, Timmy '8nd J ohnny of
Lexmgton, Ky. spent a few days vtsttmg her parents, Mr. and
Mrs Russell Capehart
Mr . and Mrs. Larry Ktng, Chrtsty and Jeff of Mtlton, W.
Va . vtstted recently wtth Mrs. Minnie King at New Haven and
attended the fun eral of Mrs. Larry King's father, Johnny
Roush.
·

Mrs. Mary Pickens, Clifton,

VIS! led

on Saturday evening

and Sunday with her grandson and famtly, Mr.' and Mrs.
Kenny Hoffman and son at Middleport.
Mr and Mrs. Denver Blake, Mr and Mrs. Richard Gilkey
or Clifton went to Lancaster, Ohio to see the Chrtsty Minstrel at
Lancaster H1gh Scbool.
The Almanac
Umted Press International
Today is Tuesday, Fell. 21,
the a:&gt;.nd day or 1978 wtth 313
U&gt; follow.
The moon ts approaching
tts full phase.
The morntng sta r IS

Mercury.
The evening stars are
Venus, Juptter, Mars and
Saturn.
Those born on this day are
under the sign of Pisces.

0

CA. l FEMALE Longho ,red dog
La brador type
Both
very
l ov eab l e
N 1ce
l 11e ndl y
lookmg pel S. q4q 7607

742 233 1

1%5 CHE VE LLE 4 dr A C 283
eng 1 bbl aul a t rans Ex
ce ll en t cqnd 111on Tru ck to pper
std 8 It bed 28 In h1gh
742 24a5

NO II EM TOO l arge o r loa sma ll
Wdf buy I p1ec e or c:o mp le le
ho use hold New u sed or anl1·
qu es Mor lm s Fumtture 70 N
2nd 51 . Mlddl epa r l Phone
9rn 6370

HA Y FOR SALE
HAY FOR SALE
9BS 424 8

-

-

____

-

FOR SPECIAl! peop le AKC Dober
pay s m the long run to take
man Pmsc her pups Red and
sh o rt cu t s 1n your work e s pe
ru sl Good ped1grees $175 and
cra ll y an 1mportan t task The
(614) 797 4500 or (61&lt;1 )
up
bo ss may un e l&lt;pe c ted l y dec ide
797· 4197
to c h ec k on you today
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept.22) Be AKC REG ISlE fi:E D Bo.er pups
Ha ve been wormed l si sho ts
your own person Save you r·
sel f
you
tng
end

a lot o f headaches today If
l et ano th e r do your th 1nk·
you c ould get the wrohg
o f the slick

LIBRA (Sept .23-0ct.231 Fulure
pl an s mu st b e based o n an
ho ne. st p roJ ectio n o f w hat you 11
be abl e to manage Overload
yo u r set r today and you ' ll only
b u y gnef fo r tomo rrow

SCORPIO (Oct .24-Nov .22) To
day you may thmk o n an en·
It re l y d iverg e nt plane than oth·
e rs m yo ur gro up R1gh t or
w • ong
you frnd yourself
mar c h1n g to a d tff e rent bea t

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Dec.21)
Don ' t bu tt your h ea d aga •ns t a
stone wal l today tt may be
courageo us to rush rn w h e re
angel s lear to tre ad but 1f you
can t wm 1t's also very foohsh

CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jan 19)
D1stmgU1shmg b e tween be1ng
apprehens1ve and mtUitrv e may
be hard today
Be fore you
move make c er tain you know
what tbe tr ue an al yS IS 1s

AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Fob.19) If
Amenean educator Ahce you buy someth•ng for a la rg e
Freeman Palmer was born s um of money ha~J e an expert
appra1se tl before you pay
Feb 21, 185S.
Co mm ercial deatmgs JUSt
On this day in htstory:
aren I your b ag today
In 1878, the New Haven,
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPIUSE ASSN I
Conn ., telephone company
publlshed the first phone
book. rtltsted 50 subscribers.
In 1965, Black Mushm
leader Malcolm X was fatally mtnistration offt cta ls John
shot at a rally in New York Mttchell, H.R. Haldeman and
City.
John Ehrlichrnan to prtson
In 1975, Judge John Sirica for thetr roles 111 the
sentenced former Ntxoo ad- Watergate cover-up.

satll W Vo bes td e Hec k s
1973 Bw ad mo1e 14 • 64 7
bcdr o orn
1973 Do110n 14 x 60 7 bedroo m
1977 VIC !OI IOn J4 X 67 3 bediOCtn
7 balh
1972 Coven try 17 x L'l 5 3 bedroom
19M State sman 12 x 60 2
bedroom

092 1716

~;;'".".g-_c:'::?}~
~=

-=----= .::.

==
-==-=--= - - -:;: ;

Jq69 CHEVY 4·dr h ceUen t cot\d1
flon
S495 Model 12 Wtn
cheshH
shol gun
$300
742 2359
1'~77

Chevt olel Suburban P S
P 8 auto Irons Call949 2220

1972 OLDS 4 dr Del ta 88 In good
cond1!1on
S1,075
992 -5786
noon to 6 pm onlr, or 992 · 253 9
1975 G RANADA V a outomollc
Po we r steenng power brakes
01r co nddion,ng AM rod1o h
eel l en t condt !l on
$2 900
Pho ne q92 3886
1968 CHEVEL LE NOMAD Slotron
Wagon AM FM rod 1o B·lrock
s1er e o 4 extra trres odd n ms
.ncluded New gas tonk recenl
ly tnstoll ed See Rolph or Cren
son Pratt 01 121 71h A venue

~d l e_pc:r t

STAR CRAFT FAL L Sole
M1n 1
mo tors 20' and 22
Tra Ve l
r rode rs IB 5 S3 7fl9 25 7
Bunkhouse $4 875 Fold down
$1 700 up We sell ser..-1ce and
quoltty Open Sundays. Comp
Con ley Storcr afl Soles , Rt 62,
N of Pt Pleasan t
-~

--

----~~---.

~~il {o:H~i='~-;~~= WANT TO r ent o small hou!e or
lratl er located rn 1he tountrv
Ca ll 992·3866 or w r ite Dean
Schrock , Box 49 Rutland . Oh1o
45775

985 384 9

or

FH:DUU: SAFE &amp; l osI wdh Go Bese
Tabl e ts 8. E Vop w a fer p1ll s
Nelson Drug

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Weddincs

Cellulose Fiber
• Blown Into Walls
and Attics ·

P011l1ib

- s.ve Fuel &amp; Money-

PmPQI'ls

LAVENDER
CONSTRUCTION
_
Syr1cuse, Oh1o

~nniYttUiits

Special OcciHIOM

J&amp;L
Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE
Cellulosic (woodfiberl
Thermal Insulation

HAY FOR sa le 992 7306

E xpene nce and
fully rn sur ed

HAY FOR Sole l 500 ba les ol
"T11no lhy Ha y Phone 992 7573
PICTURE W INDOW and balh tub
Alle r 6 caii 9Q2 34 0 I
FIREWOOD
949·2129

$25 o p1c kup food

175 BU MANURE s pr ~?a der Proc·
llcally new Phone 949 2072

-

-

~-

-~-

EAR CORN 52 10 biJ Ground ea t
corn $75 l on M1 n1m um I 1on
Ca ll a ft e r 6 pm 9B5,:JSB1

-- -G tb son e leclm

~

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

ONE
WHITE
refngerotor Good cond tl 1on
~125
One copper tone Roya l
&lt;;:h,el elec tm sl ove Good can
d1lion , $75
Phon e [614)
667 3.477

NEED A WAT R
SOFTENER?

Nl

~ .C"P

.
RNR
Lakin, W. V•

2

s 1 mo
-·-

~----

~------

JU ST COM PL ETED new house rn
Middlepor t For more •nformo
hon co ll992 2238 o r 992 5304

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

FIVE ROOMS and bath Brand ne-w
s1dmg
Fvll
~a seme nt
In
Bo shon
'I~ ac re
Ideo! l or
couple
SlO 000
e l de rl y
949 244 3

HOBSTETTER

-~

- - - - - ---

I THINK I SfE .. ·'LITTL E
MO"STER " STUCK '1tJU UP
... PUT THill LUMP ON YOUR
HEAD ... STARTED CNER TO
THAT SAFf ...

------ -----HOWER Y AND
MARTIN
Ex
cova11n g
se ptt c sy5tems ,
doz:er backhoe dump tru c; k
gravel
bl o c~ top
li mes to ne
pov.ng Rt I 43 Phon e 1 (b 14)
6'18-733 1

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

BATHROOMS
AND
Ktt ch ens
remod e l ed ce ramte !tie, plum
bmg car pentr y and general
matntenoncc
13 years ex
~ !'e" ':~~~~36Bl__ _____ _
PULLIN S EXCAV ATING Complete
Se rv1ce Phone 992 2478

-

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

TURLEV S WRECKER
Serv1ce
Ra('me Ohto Doy or mgh t.
949 2657

make necessary repotrs A I
Tro mm
__._ Cons lrucll on 74 2 232a

_ ___

~-~---

MAGG IES
UNHOL STERY
Rel1m s htng
r eu phol ste ry
reb utldrng Beouttlul selec t1on
of' mot enals ond vtnyt s Free
es ltmot e Tel. 742·2652 l oco·
11on Solem Cent er

A- WAY, INSTEAD ...

A•t&lt;tE, I'M 8f&lt;liNNtrKi

TO THINK YOU'RE A
DA~EROUS WOMAN "

ot&lt;LY

WHEN

1

1M PUSHED!

home. Real n1ce kitchen ,

9a.m . to5

P.M.
Close Thursdays
Saturdays at noon.

and

-

1974 Spring manor , 12' x

included . Going lasi at
$11,000. Known as the Keith
Miller property, Arbaugh

addition (Tuppers Plains,
Ohio) .
A t976 FUQUA, 24' x 56'
double wide, mobile home,
located on 100' x 200' corner

lot, all electric, 2 baths, 3
bedrooms , lncludi ng all
furnl1ure, known as the

Ralph Brooks properly,
Arbaugh add ilion, Tuppers
Pla ins, Ohio A good buy
for $21 ,000
We have 3 bedroom home,
nice, with 2 acres ground

near Tuppers Plains. Ohio
on Rl. 7, priced al $32,000.

large bedrooms, fireplace,
2112 baths, 2 car garage,

1948 sq. II ol floor space.
Almost l lf2 acres. S70,000.

NEW LISTING- 2 fa mily
9 room house, 4 bedrooms,
2 baths, natural gas,

central heating, city water
and view of the Ohio River
on 2 lots.

NEAR

STORE -

Lot

with city water,
sewer and elec:trlc ity
O.Vner will let 2 bedroom
trailer go with sale All fOI"

SOxlOO

$6,000
EXTRA NtCE - 7 rooms,

(US!

baths,
s tove ,
refrigerator, . dishwasher
and furniture. Natural gas
furna ce
and
fenced
backyard . Comp lete for
Jill

' l
:1
.~

.
'

BRADFORD
Au c11...n ee1 l n1n ~ • .,..
p lele Senn ce, Pho ne 9d"/ 2 W / ' '
or 949 2000 Roone Oh1u l rd l. ~a... ' 1
~ ~~d__!~d
.... t l ..,

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR

.," . .

.

. ..

Sweepers 1oo~l e t s 1ron s oi l •.-.; ...
small oppltan ce~ I own tnm~•.' l ' J '\
ne xt to Sia l (;~ H1gh wa y G"' "Yii •o'llll
on Rou te 7 f'h one (6 1t ) c,, ~.,_ ••
3825
' ~

REM- ODELIN G Plu mbm g , hl!Ctlll' {.l ~
and oil types of .9 L'nem l rP JF11 r
Work guarant eed 70 yoat s ·-: '•'
penence Phone 99'1 2409

.,

~

MACHINE Repo1rs ' r
v1ce all m nke s 992 221:!4 rt •
Fobrtc
Sh o p ,
P a m e r~\
Auth onzed Smge r So le5 (u d "
__§~~t : We s h a~pe n So ssur ~

It was
just thiS
padlock!

1

EXCAVAT ING doz er fo o&lt;.l er ut' d · ~
bac k hoe work du n1p t' l'( '
ond lo boy s l or h1re wtll hu,,t
fill dtrl Ia sod, lun esl ofl(, 01 J
gro..-el Coli Bah or Roger 11 f ' ....
fer s doy phone 99 2 7039 t uq :.~
phone -992. 3525
. o r 99 } 52:.tl

I'll put it backt
don't want Mr. Show to
know wetouched it 1

$38,500.
RANCH - 3 nlce size
bedrooms , 2
wa lk 1n
cl osets, modern bath ,

equipped large kitchen,
dining, sundeck and 2
acres. $25,000

LARGE - 7 room older
home In Middleport. Bath,
natural gas heat, city
water and 2 car garage.

Associate

Only $15,000.
DON'T HURRY YOUR
REALTOR tN SELLtNG
YOUR PLACE OR YOU
WILL LIKELY HAVE TO
TAKE LESS.
C. Bruce Teaford
Helen L. Ttolord
Suo P. Murphy

Home Pltofte 949-2589

Reahor Associates

Also new 3 bedroom home,
Crow' s Subdivision, Five

EXCAVATING d&lt;;r1e r , bt..nl1l" "'
and d tt cher Charl es R Hut
h Pld , Ba ck Hot!
Se1•'~ &lt;. •
Rutl and Oht o Ph on e i' 1~ 200d

----- --

.•,

-

Points, selling for $39,500,
Cheryl Lemley
Associa1e

Home PIMine742-200J
Hilton WoHe, Sr.

DC' You

THE
FetL.ING ,..,.,_
LifE IS II

CONTEST l
G;ss the nu111ber
of betnt In the

MAIN
POMEROY , 0 .
VERY NICE -

Jtr

and rlln a

Ge'l"

1-0if' L.t$S'

PRIZE! . .

2 &lt;lo.-y

fram e, 3 BR, ba th, for ced
air hea t, utr lit y 1&lt;. ,
carpet1ng ,
panelmg ,
garage , garden , o1h c r

"""'·"'"... ~::N6JNG
'I"HAN 1,.

USED

fea tures. JU ST $19,500 00

5 YEARS OLD - Ranch, 3
BR , bath, lovely """"'tn, ..Li :!!'

,.o BE:?

formal din ing, all carpeted ,
electric BB hea t, fireplace,
2 car garage, storage shed
$J 1,500.00.

BUT IT WON'T
TAKELONGlD

LARGE OLDER HOME - •
3-4 BR , modern kitchen,

GETm11-IE
COUN'TY COUf&lt;THOU5-E:

utflfly , NG hoi wa ter heat.
carpeting ,
pan e lin g
carport, corner lot. All th iS

l 1LL PUT ON 50ME

MU!'IC.IMYf'.JE
11-IAT WILL

8, 10; Mary Tyler Moore 13
5 00-Here Come The Brides 3, S1ar Trek 4, Gunsmoke

I I XI I I X)

8, Mlsler Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33, Hogan's

Yesterday s

I

Heroes 10; Emergency One 13. To Be Announced IS

5·30-News 6, Elec. Co. 20,33, Mary Ty ler Moore 10,

Jumbles TA EN
Answer

PRIZE ABSURD EXCISE
Be careful how you do this when you want
to meet an attractive sketer -

Hogan' s Heroes IS .

6.DO-News 3,4,8,t0,13,15, ABC New s 6, Zoom 20
6.30-NBC News3,4,15, ABC News 13, Carol Burnell &amp;
Friends 6, CBS News 8, 10, Over Easy 20
7.DO-Cross.WIIs 3,4, Liars Club 6, Sha Na Na 8:
Capllol Beal 33, New s 10, To Tell The Trulh 13;

HELP 'y()t.J

T&lt;EtAX!

s Is

Immediate possession , 3

bedrooms. bath, NG he• I.
room, carpet1 ng.
storms, p a rkin g, older but
In very good condition
cold

St3,900.00
l STORY FRAM E - 1-J
BR, bath, level lol. good
neighborhood ,

so m e

Going

at

SIJ,OOO.OO
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK, KATHY &amp; LEONA
CLELAND
ASSOCIATES
"2-2259- 992·6009

Gilligan ' s

29 Love
33 Timetable
abbr.
34 Golf tenn
35 A feast
- !amine
36 Animosity
38 Haul
39 Cling
together
tO Girl-wale~
USecretary
of State
(1959-1961)

Is

l S,

Charl'lcterlstlcs o f

Na Na 4, When Ha\loc Struck 6, Family Feud 8,

MacNoii·Lehrer Report 10,JJ; The Judge 10, In
Search Of 13; Wild Ktngdom 15
8·00----GrlzJiy Adams 3,4 , 1~ ' Elghl Is Enough 6,13,
Movie "Specil'll Olympics" 8, 10;

·...-

.,1 1...

Nova 20, Boxing

33
9·DO-Biack Sheep Squadron 3,A, tS, Charlie's !Ingels
6,13: Great Performances 20

IO :DO-Pollce Woman 3,4, 15, Slarsky &amp; Hulch 6, 13 ,
Mary Tyler Moore 8,10
10 30-News 20, 11 OD-News 3,4,6,8,10,1J,15 , Dick
Cavett 2D.
ll . Jo-Johnrw Carson J,•, 1~ . P9ll ce Story 6, 13 , Hawaii
Flve·O 8, Movie "Circus World" 10

Yesterday's Answer

12 00-Janakl JJ; 12·40-Myslery ol lhe Week 6, lJ ;

Kojak 8; l · OG-- Tomorrow. 3.•; 2 · 10- News 13
30 Hanuner
Movie Chonnel 4 out
5&amp; 1 PM - Seven PerceniSolullon lPG I
31 Papal veil
9 &amp; 11 P M - The Sentinel IRI
.
32 Went on a
rampage Tuesday Feb 2f . 1918
37 Feline

25 Kind of
sate
28 Laundry
tlem
27 More
impartial
29 Aromatic
sptce

38~~

---------:---:-=----------

BRIDGE

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Queen comes out
NORTH
• A 53

:1121 A.

+

Q 6 53
• 10 9 8
... A Q 2
... 10 6 5
SOUTH
• KJ742

'J7
+

KJ 2
... J 7 3

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

from the acron y m AHC H
South assumed that West

would lead a h ~art 1f he held
ace-king Hence, East hchl
the heart king as well as the

West North East

South

Pass
Pass 3t
Pass

Pass

It

Pass
Pass

Opening lead t 10

~ rli:n~ l&amp;F!)Vb
A Mume render asks whe n
playing s tandard American
do you respond to r1Hrtnc r' s
notrump opcmng w1th

'Q
.864

By Oswald Jacoby
aad Alan Soatag
South was very di.saphmts. Each day the code letters are d11ferent
potnted with the dummy. He
CRYPTOQUOTES
mtght have suggested to his
partner that a ratse to two
z THNTXW PTEF ILJKMHF l. F • spades would sliow his full
strength, but South was too
CFCMF'l.ZUQ
IPLFF
IPZUQW : busy trytng to figure out a
way to collect nine tricks
BTAFW,
UTCFW,
TUS
He knew where the ace of
AT U' I
clubs was, but thai left two
LF'CFCMFL
NP TI
I P F
I P Z L S club losers and there cer-

2/2 1 1!

7 52
+ KH
... Q5 2
No, we don't Even if he

has the max1mum 18 highcard po1nt~ there 1s no guar ~
antee of nine trick s. We JUSt

don 't respond with 4--J-3-3
and a bad 6 putnt:s .
' NF.WS I~i\l'f: ll I~ NTI-': ItPHlS£ ASS N 1

East produced the queen
of dtamonds at tra ck one

Do you have a qu~s r1 on for
tfl e experts ? wnre
Ask' /h e
Experrs · care o f /hi S newspa·
pe r lnd1v1dual ques tions will
be an s we red rf acc ompamed
by sramped self·addressed
envelopes The mos t mteres t·
mg que s11ons wlfl be used m
lh1s co lu mn and w111 rec e1ve

South led a spade to the ace

cop•es of JACOBY MODERN I

to go wtth the clubs, so hts
problem was to avo1d the
lo.-. or a trump.

BARNEY

1

~

;;;

'

' '

~ '

0 1978 Unilfd Fealur• S}ndltllf lot

'

' ."'

-'

"

~--~"~2~~19~,~--~~~~J . ~

I'VE 6EEN 14AVIN6
STA'IING AUJPIKE,I'AARCIE .. 1
IF '(OU SEE ME
OFF, 00 SOMETiiiNG
TO WAKE ME UP. .

BETTER TAKE THE

ATTENDANCE RIGHT AUJA.'{
MA'AM .. .'iOU'RE GONNA
BE SHORT ONE PUPIL!

SHORE, I'LL PLAV CHECKERS
WIF -1./E,SNUFFY-- UNDER
THESE CONDITIONS--

THAR'Ll BE
NO CHEATIN'-- NO
NAME- CALLIN I
AN' NO fiGHTIN'

'

murked with that card

One lett er stmply stands for another. In lhtS sample A i1
used for the three L s, X for the two O's, etc Smg le l etters,
apostrophes, the l ength and formation of the words are all

® 1978 KtnJ Feature• Synd&amp;cale, lne

king and dropped We•t'"
doubleton queen .
It was a comtnnal1on or
" A" I Analyze the lead 1 a nd
"R" ( Rev1ew the bidding 1

daamond qu een He would
have responde d if he held
the spade queen so West wa ~

Vulnerable Both
Dealer. West

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

hand East followed to the
South hopped up with his

... K 96 4

I.

and a .spudc b ac k towHt 'tl ht s

the second w1th the ten, but

' 942
+A 74

ti!rl---lf-+-+--i-

of hiding

first spade with the s ix , to

WEST
EAST
• Q8
• 10 9 6
' A Q 10 6 5 ' K 8 3

Ia

l earning

Olsabllllles 20
7 Is-Marshall U Reporl ' J·JO---Funny Farm J; Sha

tamly were two heart losers

far

replacement

•a

IPZUQ
ZW
BLFS
THHFU
Yesterday's Cryploquote: WE CARRY OUR NEIGHBOR'S
FAILINGS IN SIGHT; Yt'E TIIROW OUR OWN CRIMES OVER
OUR SHOULDERS.-PROVERB

kitchen, utl ll fy, ctlrpeling,
finished garage. lots of

$25,900.00 .
MIDDLEPORT

•P'II•·

z

lor just SJ I,900.00
2 YEARS OLD ~ 1 flour
plan, 3 BR, balh, nice

remodeling

THE [

Ingale"

__

space,

Gilligan 's Is. 8, Sesame S. 20,33; Gomer Pyle,
USMC 10
• 30---LIIIIe Rascals 3, t5 ; Gilligan's Is 4; Brady Bunch

fo rm the surpnse answer os sug
gested by the above cartoon..

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
42 Indigence
I After alpha
DOWN
5 Tailoring
1 Moslem
need
princess
II Malevolent 2 Each
12 Wasp
3 Prongs
13 Classy guy
4 High : mus.
14 Fonn of
5 Spanish wine
escarole
6 Endearing
15 Engtish
tenn
rtver
1 Shrewmouse
16 Prior: pref. 8 Type of dye
11 Detective
9 Daydream
10 Fretted
Archer
Ill "The - of 16 Bog product
Eldwin
19 Trampled
Drood"
22 Irish river
20 Choler
Z3 Vt&gt;eal work
21 Sting 24 Apprentice
Z2 Oklahoma
city
Z3 Coagulate
, ....,_ rc:c-c- 25 On the h~~~lk---1-~~+-26 Get rid of
27 Neighbor
ofSwed.
28 "OdeNight-

"'

T~~~~~IB

Pomeroy, Ohio

4 , For Richer, For Poorer 15. Merv Griffin 6,

Now arrange the ci rcled letters to

~'Dt:d'

-~~!:!,~ ~~ ps

~..,_,_

WA5.

IO,wlltl ... IIIM1110~.11.......,..forS135!X*·
Plld from ..Jurnt:M, c/o tta ••
Box 34, NDrwoocl, NJ. 07141. lt10fuct.
~ rwr-., lidciNM. zip «de~ IIWMc:Nd&lt;a payllbletD Nwtu 3
l

Syracuse, Ohi o
Ph . 992-3993

---SEWING

2 30-Doctors 3,A, 15; Golding Llghl 8, 10
3 DO-Ano1her World 3,A, 15 : General Hospll al 6.13:
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20
3 3D-All tn The Family 8, 10; Ohio Journal 10, 4 ooMisler Car loon 3; Edge of Nig ht 13 . My Three Sons

(Answers tomorrow)

J~8c;Jc*No

TEAFORD GOLF CLUBS , ~cbclw ,-

.

[]

World Turns 8, 10, 2 oo--one Life to Live 6, 13,

" BREAK THE ICE"

J- 1B1 rnn

WILL do roo fing conslruct1o n.
plumbmg and heating No JOb
100 Ior ge or ~oo sma ll Phone
742 2348

I

Only 151.30-0ays of Our Lives 3.4,15; As The

THE
DACH~HUND

... BUT WE~T THAT·

LARRY lAVENDER

99HI14

107 1/~ Sycamore St.

electric:, with new wood·
burning stove. All furniture

~

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

REAL TO~
216 E. Second Street
COUNTRY - 7 room ranch

Office Hours :

GEHL MODEL 90 por tab le gr mder
m txer Peor less portab le roller
mt ll , Case 4 16 sem t·mounted
p los He ss ton 9 fl hay b1ne
Call 965 3341 or 992 7519

10 30 ,.

10, Not For Women Only 13

10 30-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15 ; Andy Griffith 6,
Price fs RightS, 10; Rick Faucheux 13, Gomer Pyle.
USMC l9
1l DO-Wheel ot Fortune 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6, 13( E le&lt;
Co 20. 1l 30-Knockout J, t5, Family Feud 6, t3,
Partridge Family 4' Love of Lite 8. 10, Sesame Sl
20,33.
1l .55-CBS News 8, Loving Free 10
12 :DO-Newscenler 3; $20,000 Pyram id t3, News 4,6,10,
To Say The Leasl 1S, Gambll 8.
12:»-Ryan's Hope 6, 13, Bob Braun 4, Gong Show 15,

....

D

Prlntansw9rhers:

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

PHONE 992-6333

- ----

Iur-SEWEREST THING TOU KNOW

Gutters-Awnings

WINTE~ GET Ia your ho use? lei us

~E~u:~ . S37~~ _99 ~5541

-·-·

Ch ester, Oht o

Siding-Solfill

NICE THREE bedr oo m ho use w 1th
·garage
1n Rust tc H ills

- -----

rx:J

Windows &amp; Door s
Replacement
Windows
Aluminum

ANY SEWING mochme cleoned ,
01\ed 8. od1usted $5 98 FREE
ptckup and deltvery Belpre
Oh iO 1· 423·5497

ELEC TRIC HOSPITAL bed
be s1de table 992 2676

- - - - r- -

Box 34

VA FHA 30 yr ftnonctng al so
refmon cmg Ireland Morlgage
i'7 E State Athens phone {6 14 )
. -592-305 1
--., __

________

ICINUDE

7·30-SchoolloslO; B·DO-Capt Kangaroo 8, 10, Sesame
51. 33
9:00----Merv Grill in 3. Ph it Donahue 4, Edge ol Nlghl6.
Family Altair 8; Malch Game 10, Phil Donahue
t3; ,15
9.30-Emergency One 6, Andy Grllfllh 8. Famll)
Alfalr 10
10 DO-San lord &amp; Son 3,4,15; Tall lelales 8, Joker's Wild

Searc:h for Tomorrow 8, 10; Eelc Co 33
I :DO-For Richer, For Poorer 3, All My Chl lldren 6, 13.
News 8, Young &amp; the Restless 10, Not tor Women

IDAGOIAI

Storm

P~

r

I I

MVRPHY BeD.

FREE ESTIMATES

ATTENTION M ARE
Owners
AQ H A stud ser111Ce ln !rod uctng
to Sout hern Oh1 o Ca rl oko sor ·
rei I so n of Otoe Breed fo r co l
o r co nformalion and d1 sposi
lion Ph one 69a 8241 evenmgs
01 wnle l or breedmg contracl
Be ll e Echo Quarter Horses
40225 SR 692 Pomeroy O h1o
45769

Cornme r ctol proper ty appro:.: 17
acre s, level land located at
Tuppers Plams an O ht o Reu l e
7 Phone (614} 607 6304

USW
~!'$,,'THIS 15 A

-,

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

_r:

--~--

-

He doesn't have ----~
a chan c e

f'S~GHIATRISTS

'
•'

an d

223-1mo.

NEW 3 bedroom house 2 both s
all ele('
1 ac re , Middlepor t
dose 10 Rutland Pho ne 992·
748 1
.
---COUNTRY farmland wt lh secl ud
ed woods wol er and good oc
cess 1n M onroe County W Va
$ 1 000 down call (304 ) 772
3102 or (304 ) 77'2·3227

,.

byHenrrArnoldandBoblee

n

I I

I ALVJA'&lt;S l1VJ(im'

Phone 985 3806

WI LL CARE for lhe elderly tn ou r
home Phone992 7314

. - ..

i I ''

Anyday, anytim e.

::ieriK.t.#~""-"::: -~o
- - _ _ _ ;:o_::;_

Unscrambfe these lou' Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to torm
four ordtnary words

commercial
C.Jtl
f or
est1mate , '24 hpur s e n~t c u

"Tht Ori1in1ton
Net Tht lmitlton

60', located on level lot,
mobile home 150 x 165', all

-

Res1dent1 a l

992-2206 or 992-7630

-

~ ~ ~~ !&amp;

~OA..'

SALES ANO SERVt CE
j
11 -9·11:.___]

At

773-5955

{,

'I

News 8: Bullwlnkle 10

ltl111rut ID'ft fil THAT SCRAMBLED WOAD GAME

'

' I ~~ r

$EPTIC TA NK
CLEANIN G

Route l PomefOJ', o.

THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL

991 6295

Vlrglnla 13; 6.5s-Chuck While Reporls 10 ' News
13
1 ,DO-Today 3,4, T5, Good Morning America 6,13: CBS

9 30-Soal' ~ Mary Tyler Moore 13.

8A.M. Io4,30P .M.

Carpet &amp;Upholstery
Phone Mike Youna

•

SOYBEAN HAY
Lorge round
boles WW looO on yout !ruck
br deliver 992 3336

-

Camera 6, MacNeii .Lehrer Report 20,33, Price is

6:'25-Chr !stopher Closeup 10. 6,J News Conference
_. , New$ 6, Sunrise Semester a
6 As-Morning, RepOrt 3. 6 5,0-Good Morning, Wesl

9·0G-Three' s Company 6,13, Mov ie "A Question of

Pomeroy 991 6282
or 992-0263

Young's
Carpeting

~
· r.

.=.-:::
....,.ct.

Let us test your water Free

LAR GE ROUN D bo le!. of hoy A nd
ear corn Coli alter 7 p rn
bl-4 843 2256
•

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 22, ltll
5:4s-Farm Report 13; 5.50-PTL Club 13, 5 5~
Sunrise Semester 10.
\
6.110-PTL Club 15, 6 ls-

300 Main 51.

Superior
Steam htraction

Hobstetter Jr.,
Broker

FIR EWOOD spl1f and def1vered
$.4 5 o cord or $35 o truckload
All h01 dwood
843 2933 or

Open

. - - - - -- - - --

GeorgeS.

-

PO
INHEiN I FEEL
UNLOVED!

9 . 00 til9 : 00 Mon.- Frrday
9 : 00 til6 . oo Saturday
12 : 00 t1I6 :0D Sunday
2·?tl c

6:30-NBC News 3,A, 15, ABC News 13, Carol Burnell &amp;
Friends 6: CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20.
7·00--Cross·WIIs 3,A; Liars Club 6, Pop Goes The
Country 8' Capllol Beat J3. News 10, To Tell The
'
Truth 13; Gilligan's Is 15; French Chel 20
1 15- Big Green Maga~lne J3 ; I ·JO- Hollywood
Squares 3,4; Let's Go To The Races 8, Candid
Right 10, Thai' s Hollywood 13, Television Honor
Sot Iely 15.
8 00----Awakenlng Land 3,4, 15, Happy Days 6, 13;
Celebrity Challenge ol lhe Sexes 8.10, Hollywood
Television 20,33, 8·30-Laverne &amp; Sh ir ley 6, 13;
Shie lds &amp; Yarnell 8,10.

A~WAY9

Pomeroy, Ohio

E t
I
ree s lma es
Work Guaranteed

Wood Stoves

softener , Model UC-SVI ,
Now Onty 279 .95

and

I

·-·

F

REALTY

9. _Jack W Carsey, Mgr,
ail Phone 992-2181

OF COUR!&gt;e
I'M OVER~ATINS!

(•

;===========;I L________2:...:,tO::...;:If:.:c.J

Let Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; cond1hon your
water w1th Coop water

Pomeroy Landmark

MEIGS PLAZA
Middleport, Oh io

I •,

742-2328

FreeEst
Call 661 ·647' or 992 l 81S
1 , 6 lmo

---

HAY f-OR sole 949 2870

WALLPAPER.
PAINT &amp; SUPPLIES

.." ..
PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC. . .'"". .. ;.'
-- ·

AI Tromm
Construction

Sih e lO pet to SO pet.
on he-ating cost

-

NICE PIGS lor sale Ca ll oiler 5
Q49 2857

•

II

5 3D-News 6; Elec. Co 20.33; Mary Tyler Moore 10;
Hogan 's Heroes 15.
·
6·00----News 3,A,8, 10, 13, IS; ABC News 6: Zoom 20

CARTER

Roofing
Remodeling
Room Additiolls
Garages

------

Phone 992·2181

Heroes 10, Emergency One 13 ; To 8&amp; Announced

Gulli" 8,10

HOMESITES l or sa le, 1 a cre and
up M1dd lepo rt near Rut land
Co ll 992 7481

9.- .JaGk W. Carsey, Mg ,· .

"Crescendo" 6113, Movit' " Att,.ck on Terror ' 8.

ABC News 33: Movie "Thr.., Godfalhers" tO.
12 :DO-Janakl 33: 1:110-Tomorrow 3.A: I : 1s-News 13.
5 &amp; 1 P.M. - Fun With Dick &amp; Jone I PGI
9 &amp; 11 PM.- Two·Minute Wrnlng ( Rl

TUESDAY , FEBRUARY 21, 1911
5:DO-HereCome The Brldes3; Slar TrekA, Gunsmoke
8, Mlsfer Rogers' Neighborhood 20, J3, Hogan's

Located In The

PIMine 992-3993
I 18 1 mo

2 \G I mo

-

Pomeroy Landmark

TELEVISION
VIEWING

ACE HARDWARE

Free Estlm1tes

WILL DO rug weovmg-- $2 per
yard Mrs Jtmm re (Ma ry ) Krng
CR 32 approx I ' 1 ll'l1les from
Me1gs Memortol Gardens No
pho1 e

We have enlarged our
serv1ce department and
w1tl serv 1ce Hotpo1nt and
other brands

•611

Blown Insulation

THE PHOTO PLACE

8 8. 5 M O BIL E HOM ES Pr Plea

O LD FURNITURE 1ce box es br ass
bed s •r on bed s ell:: complete
househo lds Wr1 1e M 0 M1l ler
Rt 4 Pomer oy Oh 10 or call
992 77 60

CHI P WOOD
Po le s ma x
dlam e ler 10 an large sl end sa
Feb. 22, 1918
per ton Bundled sl ob S6 p'er
Wo dt m tand em wtth tho se yo J
l or) De l111ered !o Oh1o Po lle t
hav e a c lo se rappo rt w 1th th 1s
Co Rt 2 Pomeroy 992 268 9
co mm g year
Har mony rs
SIL VER DOLLAR S ond co1 ns Top
esse ntral Th e pe o pl e you team
do llar pa1d Call742 2310
up Wi t h w1 ll pla y a b1g par t 1n
$CASHS for 1unk cars Frye s
yo ur p e rso nal l•fe
PISCES (Fe b 20-March 201 Tru ck a nd Aul a Pon s Wrecker
Serv •ce 11-re !o01 e and Repou
W he n yo u se n-s e yo u have the
Rulfand 742 708 1 o r Penn zotl ,
uppe r h amJ tn de aling o n a one·
742 9575
you r e
IO·o ne baSIS today
p ro b abl y n ghl Thai d oe sn t 5 l o 20 a cres on ru r al wol er Hl
Me1gs l oca l School D1 slrt cl
me a n you sh oul d try to gn nd
h1m or he r down Ftn d o u t rno re
SUI I able l o r ~uddmg and acce ss
Ia goo road 002 b 139
a bo ut you rse lf b y se n drng f o r
yo ur r:o p y of A str o ·Graph L e t·
te r M a •t 50 ce nt s fo r e ac h an d a
lon g self -ad dr ess ed stamp e d
e nve l o pe to Astr o · G rap h P 0
IF YOU ha ve o ser v1ce to off er
Box 489 Aad 1o Ctt y Statt o n
w on I 10 buy or sell sotne lhmg
N Y 100 19 Be sur e to sp ee d y
ae lookm g for wor k
or
your b trl h s1g n
wh a t eve r
you II ge1 result s
ARIES (March 21 -Apnl19) Keep lo51er w llh a Sen1 1nel Wan t Ad
rec o r d s ctl yo ur rn s1ruc t,on s
Cal1992 2150
and d o c um e nt a ll yo u d o t oda~
So me o ne wh o 1s tes s than
hon es t may att e mp t to 1rnp lt·
cate you tf th e y g o of up
TAURUS (Ap11l 20-May 20) It IS HOOF HOLLOW Ho rses Buy sell
!rode o r tram New and used
ne ve r Sfll ar t to try to ke ep w1 th
saddle s Rulh RQevcs Albany
th e J c n eses That s doubl y
(614) 608 J100
tru e fo r yo u tod ay Bu y only
lh1n gs yo u realty n ee d Avo•d RISING STAR Kennel Boardtn g
trn an c •al tr oubl es
Indoo r and auldoor rum
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) G room1ng oil br eeds Clean
H ere sa good mou o to hang on
sanitary factlllies
Cheshtre
your d o or tod ay What yo u s ee
Phone (614) 367 0292
here s ay h e re and hear he re
MEIGS CO ut-HY ijiu rn ane Soctcty "
when you le ave make s ur e .,,
on,mcl coreline and adopl iOf\
s tay s here
-~e'f"v;(e (frl-e ontmol~ ) 992 1680
CA NCER (June 21 -July 22) Why
or
e..-enmgs and Su ndays
knu c kl e und e r to day JUS I be·
91)2 5427
Mod
c o
M
caus e o ther s mak e a lo t o f
Ct owl ord
Rt
4
Box 326
no1 s e ? A mo use may ro ar h ke a
Pomeroy Oh1o 45769 Member
hon but •t s s ttlt a m o u se
sh •p s and donollons PO Bo•
682 Pomeroy
Ohto
Stand up for yo ur rtg h ts
....._ -.._. -45769 -

LEO (July 23-Aug.221 II never

ECONOMY TRACTO R w1 th a ll 0 1
ta chn1enls l 1lo. e new OS ~ 1119
$2250 Phone t6141698 32'10
RU GS
WALL Hang1ng s and
algons Nl(i? l or Ch11s1rno s
Reaso nab l e Coll992 12 14

11MBE R Pomeroy · ~ 4_: r •[ !i'I'O
ducl !r-1J;Jp put e ~01 s ta ~ dln g
50wl llnber Coli 992 596 5' o r
PO M ER OY Moor e !t SJ ore Alt e r
Ken t Hanby I 446 8570
30 yeo ' !&gt; ol wtc es sl ul bu~ me~s
we ore !tell1n g th1 s gene1ol CO INS CURRENCY token s ol d
h01 d wo 1e
out omo 11ve stor e
pock e t wa tches and cha 1ns
P11c ed a t '" "entory Con ta ct
stl'w'e r and gold We need 1964
So rmne rv dle Real E!i tat e phone
an d o lde1 s•l.,er co, ns Buy sell
I 30 4 67S 3030 PI Pl ea san t
or tr ade Cal l Roger Wamsley

'\)i!.)IJJJ

Hostesses were Mrs. Wtlham (Isabelle) Brown, Mason ,
and Mrs Don ( Edra ) Kouns, Syracuse.

Oh•oo• phoue 902 J891

l:lusiness Opportunitieo -

ASTRO·GRAPH

An nex

Gh-eAway

Wanted t&lt;&gt; l:luy

\ EW HAVEI&gt;i - Mr. and Mrs. Patnck Ktmble of 8205
Sprmltle Road , Portage , Mi chigan, announce the b1rth of a Wednesday Feb . 22, 1978
daughtor , Jesstca Rae , oo January 26, 1978 at Bronson
~l e thodi st Hospita l. Kalamazoo. M1ch1gan The Infant wetghed
i pounds JLz ounces
The mother 1s the former Betty Scarberry of New Hav&lt;:,n . Bernice Bede Osol
\ larcrnal grandpa rents are Mr and Mrs Johnson Scarberry
of New Haven and paternal grandmother IS Mrs. Kathryn
K1mble Ka lamazoo. M1ch1ga n. The K1mbles have one mher
CLIFTON - Mr and Mrs Kevin Brown, the former
Hebecca 1Becky I Kouns of Syracuse, Ohto, was honored w1th a
reeept1un on February 11 at Clifton Uruted Methodist Church

RA CINE Volu n l ee'
Fu e 3 A NO 4 RM l urnr shcd and un
l u m 1~ hcd opt s
Phon,.., flq")
DeporlmPnt wtll spons.o1 o gun
!J 434
~oa t every Salufdoy at 6 pm 01
!he~r bu1ld1ng 10 Boshon Foe
COUNI RY MOBIL ~ H ome Po1 t.
tOfl' cho k e gun\ vn ly
Rout e 33 north o f Poml"' •oy
large l o ts Call Q97 747'1
1H~ RA CINE Gu n Club Gun Shoo1
eve ry Sunday a lteutoon Foe
MASON I WO bed1 oom opl f'o 1
l or v choke guns on ly A S!tO tled
t10l ly l ur " f 1Jily ca rpeted N o
!!leah
peh Oepos tl t eqvored $1(X)
pur "'O All er 5 p m co li 1304 )
ClE AR AN CE SAl l: be grr1!t Man
681 JJ5b
Feb 13 ol ~e w N Sew Ou !lc l
M om
SJre (t r
Hoc1ne
All '1w 0 BEDROOM 1ro1le 1 I adult
po l yesh=:n double lo. n1h red uced
pr efe r ~ l)d S60 pc1 mon lh M1d
40 · . and so·. l hte od btg !&gt;poo l
&lt;il epo r I 992 524/
5 fo rSI
IIU: Bl OCK bud d•n g N ('w u,1n
INCOME TAX SePJ i c~!&gt; Fed l!r91
&lt;re iC float 7400 " Q I! CO tth-' t
and !&gt; l ate l o.: eJo
Wallace
Po" lt'' o y ond 1nd 51 Mo "OI\
Ru sse ll Btodbut y 991 7178
Ideal t o r gm ag•• o • 'lotogt•
l:l04j 8811971
NOI!C l: IS hereby grven thol rhcre
will be o pu bhc hco11 ng 011 17lfb0 mob da home Utth t'•':. lu r
Thur sday !he 73rd doy of
nl '\ hed Con~ l t\JC I IOll tn.-&gt;n \Jnl ~
Febr uo1y JIH8 beg1nnong o l
304 773 5873
7 00 p m ot the Com mon Pleas
Cou1I Room 111 I be Cou1t Hous e
'" Pomeroy on the SIOIC Pion
l or Soc• al Ser..-1c es "' Oh •o Ttlle
'lobi.le Homes tor Sal•
XX ol the Soo o l S.ecwlly Acr
for rh e yeo r beg u ~r11 n g July I
19 7 ~ SKYLI NE 14 x 5o
bed i CI-\.lm
1978 w h1ch sla te pio n 1ndudes
to to! elt:! (' ln ( 5 7500 Qq'} 'Z(WJ
1he p lan fo r MeiQ!&gt; County
Oh1 o Th e ob1cc l ot 1h1s heor mg !l !( 57 TRA il ER tor ~ a l e Wovld
rno k e o good c:o m pe t Ph otw
IS 10 hi ghlight p~r lln ent on .
949 '2J4.t Oll ytii11C ohi'l S J0
l ormohon re gard ing Soc;10 l Ser
v tces pr ob lem!&gt; and need s and
to el. cll publ1r com men t sug
gest,ons and 1 eco m m endo t ,o n~
rela t• ve to the covn l y 5 pr opos
For Sale
ed SOCI OI SCI II ICC!t plan In
1ere5ted per sOn s and 01 90 11110
COA L lut1estane and cak,v m
l iOns 01 e utged to an end
ch lot•de 011d co lc•u'Tl br me tor
Me1g s Counly Well01e Adv1501y
d us1 co nlt ol ond spe c,a l tw• mg
Bo o rd
:.a ll !01 10111•ers E.: cels rot Sa i l
Work s Mom Slree l Porne t oy

..

Business Services

T H~

UiO
180

2 dll~

For !lent

,

OVi.SIDE, AS DUSK
TURNS TO ll'\RK-

LUKEY TAKES ALL TH'
FUN OUT OF PLAVIN'
CHECKERS

'

�•
10 -The Daily Sentinei,Middlpeort-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Feb. 21. 1971

Woman wi~~r~~~~~~~!o~~~~ ~-----Ar~;-o~;th~----~
injured c;~~u~rt:~r~~;~~i~~c~~~; c!:~illt· di~a:,nd~y ~: ~~nE~;t:~~;;o~~c"utf.~~
prog ram for prospective I
students on Sunday , March 12
in UD' s Kennedy Union.

1

ELZA M. ADAMS

Angela, Amanda and Amy

,

Contract may be model
£or future ag1•eement
·

,

noon, a slide presentauon, .O' Bieness Hospitallollowin~ ol Toledo. Funeral services
student life inform~ lion, a brief iJtness. He was born in will be at 10 a.m. Thursday ~t
'
financial aid co unseling, and Carthage Township, Athens the Ewing Funeral Ho~J~e
.
academic advismg of ' the Cuunty, the son of the late with the Rev . Robert Hayden By DEAN REYNDLDS
·the BCOA, and varying holdings in Ute West - not
university 's undergraduate Martin L. and Amanda officiating. The fan:tilY wm
WASHINGTON (UPI)
interests were e&lt;pected. One involved in the eontr act
programs. A conc•rt of the Kincade Adams. He was aLso receive friends from 2-4 and The just-negotiated contract, source close to
the dispute - as well as the
UD Wind Ensemble at3 p.m. preceded m death by one son, 7·9 p.m. Wednesday . Burial which coal miners working negotiations suggested the states covered by the latest
. w1U conclude the program. CQvert : two sisters and one will follow ln Chester for Pittsburg and Midway industry bargainers had agreement.
For further informa.tion call brother.
Cemetery .
Cual Co. in Kentucky, Kansas made too many promises to
As outlined by Ute union
the UD Office of Admissions
He was a Conner member
and Missouri wUI soon be . each other on specific points source, here are Ute major
at 513·229·44ll .
of the Wood County Board of
reviewing, may be a model within the contract, thus points the new coo,tract conVERNON HARRAH, SR.
HI-LOW TEMPS
Education in Parkersburg,
Vernon William Harrah, for an overall accord Utat binding them at Urnes to tains that are not to be found
ORK UPI
Th
wher e he was assistant Sr.. 67, New Haven, died might end the recor d~ong sections Utey didn't really In Ute BCXJA stand:
NEW Y
I
)e maintenance foreman for
care about.
-..Substantially modified
highest temperature reported sc hool buses. He was a Monday In the St. Joseph roal strike.
As for Ute P and M st ability language. The
By swinging a deal Monday
Hospital, Parkersburg.
Monday to the National
Weather Service, excluding l'ctrpenter
during
hi s
He was born Aug. 30, 1910, with the United Mine· ·contract, there are several source called it "radically
AI k8
d H
..
80 retirement. He had been a
Workers, P and M, an major differences wiUt the different . P and M agreed
an
awau, was
resident of Coolville for the Asbury, W. Va ., to the late
as
James H. and Pluma M. independen t company not latest, reject&lt;!d BCOA offer. that only instigators of
degrees at Palm Springs,
16
affiliated
with
the One source said a number of wildcat strikes need be
Cahf 'l'oday's low was 14 past
years.
Harvey Harrah .
companies "could live quite disciplined instead of all
Coal
Operators
Bituminous
He was a carpenter at the
below ze ro at Huron ,
well with the P and M those who observe the picket
may
also
have
Association,
1301 Plant, New Haven, a
junction to milepost 26.
· ·
dsughter, Mrs. Steve (Lelah) veteran of World War !1, damaged
contract ." The UMW bar- line.
ind~stry
gaining council passed it, 2&amp;The patrol sa id the Bates
MEET TONIGHT
Julina of Canton ; a son, superintendent and deacon of solidarity.
- No work incentives. The
union Utought"Utese might he
ca r struck the rear end of an
RACINE - The Supthern WarretJ M. Adams of Mt. the Graham Baptist Church,
One union source predicted 13, Monday night .
About 700 miners are in- counterproductive and force
auto operated by David W. Band Boo;1 ers will meet at Vernon ; a ste~&gt;-son, Robert member of the JOUAM, New that solidarity has already
volved
in.Monday's tentative miners to work too hard,
Walker, 22, Gallipolis. There the high school at 7:30 this McA fee of Athens; a sister, Haven for 30 years and been shattered, and liketJed
settlement,
but P and M is · while spreading disharmony.
was minor damage.
evening .
Mr s. Emma Starkey of Garpenters IA&gt;cal 1159.
Ute split to the celebrated
considered
a
large
- Reinstated cost-of~ivlng
UMW
inlightmg
.
Survivors include his wife,
Albany,
Ga.;Davis
a half-sister,
... - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . . . .
Mrs
Velma
of Clark&amp;- Jocie B . Ha rrah ; one
geared . to
There are about 130 independent because of mine allowance
burg , W. Va .; fiv~ grand· dau ghter, Mrs . Grace member companifl~ within
government fhtures. The
children and ten great· Cathryn Sayre, U:Juisville,
grandchildren.
Ky .; three sons, Glen C.
Funeral services will be Harrah , Parkersburg;
Wednesday at 1 p.m. at the Vernon W. Harrah Jr .,
White Funeral Home in Wichita Falls, Texas; Roger
Coolville with the Rev . John L. Harrah, LA&gt;uisville, Ky.;
Baughman officiating. Burial three brothers, Basil R.
wHl be in Coolville Cemetery. Harrah , Mason; Donald
By United Presslllteruatlonal
Friends may cal\ ,at the Thurlow Harrah, Asbury, W.
BEULAH, MICH. (UP!) - IT TOOK 11 YEARS FOR the
funera l home any time.
Va ., and Otho C. Harrah, past to catch up with North carolina chain gang fugitive
Dunbar; mne grandchildren. Edward Davies. The worst part was Ute waiUng. Davies, 40, a
Funeral serviees will be familY man described by friends and co-workers as a "model
CATHERINE GRANT
SHELBYVILLE, Ind.
conducted
Thursday, · I :30 citizen,'' now faces almost certain extradition back to the state (UP!)- Ali Ohio ptl.son farm
Mlss Catherine Grant,
where he got Into trouble all Utose years ago for passing bad
formerly of Middleport, died p .m . in the Foglesong checks.
fugitive wounded during his
·
Funeral
Home.
The
Rev.
Columbus.
capture and a female
recently in
All because he made an IUegal U-turn in the nearly companion were beid today in
Memorial services were held William Hatfield and the Rev.
northern Michigan resort town of Honor during a fishing trip
on Feb. 13 at the Broad St. Hennan Jones will cfficiate. last October with a friend . Police did a computer check on Ute Shelby County JaU whlle
Presbyterian Church, Burial will follow in Graham
officials decided what
Davies and discovered the long-outstanding fugitive warrant. additional charges or other
Cemetery.
Columbus.
. And do your part for the energy crisis.
Friends may call at the
Miss Grant, a daughter of
CHARLESTON, W. VA. - JOHN H. STEINBECK, 30, action to take.
funeral
home on Wednesday
We'll lend you the money to buy a snappy
A Shelbyville policeman
the late Mrs. Homer Grant,
little co mpa ct that gets plenty of miles to
for many years a music from 2 to 4 p.m. and from 7 to Cleveland, was killed Monday evening when his tractor trailer who helped capture the two
rig crashed Into a bridge abutment and burst into names on the
the ga llon The money you save on gas
w.. hit by a jacket from a .:ISteacher in Middleport, was a 9 p.m .
West Virginia Turnpike.
graduate of Middleport High
caliber service revolver, but
ca n go toward your mon thly payments.
State police said the rig, loaded with welding equipment,
School and Ohio State
not seriOIISiy injured.
Talk to our loan officers today .
struck a bridge abutment just south of the Memorial Tunnel.
Richard Farrell, 114, Elyria,
Unlversity. She wa s em ~
MAKE RUN
The truck careened into a guardrail, overturned and burst into Ohio, identified by police as a
ployed at Oho State for a
The Syracuse ER Squad · fiames, police said.
fugitive from Ute Ohio Refornumber of years.
She is survived by a sister, was called Sunday at 12:30
CASTAIC, CAUF. - ABOUT 300 INMATES at a jail farm matory at Mansfield, Ohio,
Christine , Euclid Heights, p.m . Sunday for David Diddle rioted for more than two hours Monday night, swinging farm was wounded slightly in the
who fell and fractured hJS leg.
left arm. He and Barbera
and several cousins.
He was taken to Holzer tools and burning down Ute infirmary, before !hey were Hall, 18, Lorain, Ohio, were
subdued by a force of ahout 50 sheriff's deputies. No serious
Med1ca l Center.
injuries were reported in the fighting at the Wayside Hooor arrested and held on charges
"TRE
stemming ·from his escape.
FLOYD SPENCE
Rancho.
Officer Jim Dlle, 33, was hlt
Floyd E. (Bud) Spence, 73,
One inmate, injured in a racial gang fight tbat brought on
FRIENDLY BANK"
above the left eye wilh the
died Monday evening at his
the outburst, was hospitalized in good coodltlon, a sheriff's ricoebet bullet jacket. He was
MEETING SLATED
home at 257 West Main
Pomeroy Board of Public spokesman said. The violence began as a gang fight between taken
to
Indianapolis
Street, Pomeroy.
Affairs will meet the second black and Mwcan-American inmates, wlth ahout 50 involved, MeUtoc;llst Hospital wbere be
He was the son of the late and fourth · Wednesday of deputies said. When guards tried to put an end to the fighting,
E. Herman and Addie Halsey each month at 4 p.m. at more Inmates joined in and turned on the deputies, swining
Spence. He was a member of Pomeroy City Hall:
boes, axes and other implements.
the Ohio Fuel Company
Quarter Century Club. He
JERUSALEM - U. S. ENVOY ALFRED 'ATHERTON
was a retired employee of
MET with Israeli Foreign Miriister Moshe Dayan Ieday,
Culumbia Gas of Ohio with 33
opening a new round of shuttle diplomacy In an effort to bring
years service.
Egypt and Israel back to the negotiaUng table.
Surviving are h1s wife,
(Continued from
-ij
Atherton, who arrived in Israel Monday, also is trying to
Els.ie Roush Spence; a can be worked out In order to bring Jordan into Ute talks and reportedly will pay a visit to
daughter, Mrs. Frank preserve the building.
Amman. His talks with Dayan were expected to focus on
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
(Carol ) Sisson of Pomeroy;
lsareli
settlements on occupied Arab lands.
Meeting with council was
three granddaughters, Don Hwmell, representing
WASHINGTON- THE SUPREME COURT WAS at full
the Pomeroy Youth League.
HuMell asked council if they strength today for the first time In weeks and facing the need to
would donate funds toward rule on "reverse discrimination" al Ute University of
Calilornia and public sale of the Nixon White House tapes,
the program.
By LEONARD CURRY
Council agreed to donate among other issues.
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Justice
William
Brennan,
who
had
to
miss
the
January
$500. They had earlier
The
Commerce Department
,
to
take
treatments
for
a
malignant
tumor
on
a
vocal
sessions
designated funds lor the
today
revised down to 4
cord,
W83
starling
the
second
half
of
the
1977-78
term
with
his
recreational program (rom
·colleagues
today.
His
doctor
says
full
recovery
is
expected,
percent
ita estimate of
revenue funds.
national economic growth in
Lou
Osborne
said
CHICAGO- TilE FROZEN BODY OF A suspect in the $1 the final three months of 1977
something should be done
immediately 'about the .hole million burglary of a North Side jewelry store, ·w.. found because of a worsening
on Mulberry 'Ave. ··at the Monday stuffed in the trunk of an abandoned car on Chicago's balance of trade.
In a preliminary report last
bottom of Breezy Heights. It Southwest Side.
·
Pollee
said
John
A.
Mandell,
33,
last
seen
alive
Jan.
16,
month,
the department said
was · po,lnted out that . the
may
have
been
Ute
fifUt
victim
of
a
reported
feud
between
the
gross
national product in·
problem was that of the water
Chicago
mob
leaders
and
members
of
a
maverick
burglary
creased
U
percent between
department.
Oct.! and Dec. 31. GNP is a
Larry Wehrung stated a ring wbo refused to buckle to mob juriadiction.
dollar evaluation of ali the
meeting with public input wUI
• NEW HOMES
QUINCY, 'MASS. - AN ELDERLY WIDOW wbo goods and services produced
be held in regard to the
conditions of the streets. barricaded herself Inside her home with a shotgun for 12 days by American businesses and
• OLD HOMES
individuals.
Wehrung felt it necessary to W83 ordered to a .mental hospital for observation.
spokesman
said
Mrs.Mary
Regina
CoMor,
71,
Although the downward
A
police
• COMMERCIAL
look into what has to be done
arrested
at
her
home
Monday
afiernoon
after
she
"put
up
revision
was small, it
was
and what council has to work
BUILDINGS
a
litUe
struggle.
She's
pretty
strong
for
her
age,"
the
spokesestablished
finnly lhat the
with.
noting
that
Mrs.
CoMor
had
to
be
put
under
economy
is
slowing down
man
said.
Council again discussed the
• nR•: tWS!STANT
• Sui. u~l oold I hea l t'ldw11 nlo e\tl")' romn and uvoh
• Gt¥" IH!I'ma n ~nt tMul~lll!n pro t ...tlu " to r Wnot• r ""d
• PHt "'111ta nl Cfta tn hua hl~ •nvln&gt; nm•n t for rod•nt1
restraints
during
her
ambulance
trip
to
Medfield
State
·
after
almost
three
years of
$5
permissive
license
tax
that
SYm mPr
'
and tnllfd.l
• 1"'111'"01 ' 'll~ m ' 1RIIwla11nn hflpo •hut ""' notoe
• f 1re rut aLint - Mtn tm al tmnn ty
Hospital.
improvement
from
the
worst
soundly
defeated
last
was
• Nn de" nup m..a typt of l nnl auun
• Sa fdy far your fam Uy by nrro un dt nJ et~bln an d '"""
recession of Ute po!li-World
• l'ay. f~r t~~tel f In thor t period of u me
wl\h tr. ulatton foam
November
.
• •·o" '" tnto odd aha!~' •oat"" Aro11 nd Plll6 "''""II and • Moli iUN' Mlatanl
TALLAHASSEE, FLA. - FLORIDA PLANS to hold War II era.
Harold Brown, in regard to
ducla
• Chtmi t ally ola b~
• l:Aay to 1pply
Theodore
Bundy, suspected of 36 rape-murders in the West, as
GNP increased 7.5 percent
the 10 p.m. curfew, stated
SAVES MONEY • FIHERb'SJSTANT•EASYTDAPPLY
possible
until
it
can
be
determined
whether
he
is
in
Ute first quarter or !977, 6.2
long
as
that this was meant to control
responsible
for
the
murders
of
two
F1orida
State
University
in
Ute second and 5.1 in the
loitering ~ly, not to harm
~.
third.
When comparing GNP
any of thl business establish·
So far, !lleriff Ken Katsaris bas not come up with any for the year, 1977 was
ments.
"In no way were we trying physical evidence to support a murder charge, but his Staff is estimated at 4.9 percent
to harm the business preparing a case of auto theft and burglary that could keep compared wiUt 6 percent in
1976.
Brown Bundy in jail in Tallahassee for six months or more.
establishments,''
FREE ESTIMATES • NO OBLIGATION
The department said the
added.
.
WARREN,
OHIO
GENERAL
MOTORS
CXJRP.
is
nation's
international trade
.
.
Mayor Clarence Andrews
shipping
portable
diesel
generators
worth
$2
miUion
to
Ohio
to
of
goods
and
services, which
reported the old. International
1~-------------------------MAIL THIS COUPON
I
keep
operations
going
~t
lis
critical
parts
plants
during
the
was
in
deficit
f/.7 bUJion in
truck needed a new motor.
1
I
electric
crisis.
GM
officials
said
today
seven
2,500
kilowatt
the
final
three
monlhaof
1977,
Cuuncil felt that the recent
1 TO :
I
generators are en route to Ohio and more may be sent later. w.. the primary reuon for
rebuilt
motor
would
still
be
1
I
Two of Ute diesel units are going to OM's Packard Electric Ute slOWI!l' growth rate.
under warranty. Mayor
I
93 7th Ave.
Middleport. 0 . 1
Division at Warren, and two turbine generators "" going to
The department said real
1
Andrews
is
t9
contact
Mark
:
Pl e.;:;se SA!nd me further information on Foam lnsulltlon. I
output after adjustment for
Smith at Meigs Equipment in each of the Fioher Body plants at Mansfield l!lld Columbus.
inflation wu reduced fU
regard to the situation.
I NAME
I
blUion from last tnGDUt's
The Mayor's report In the
I
I
preliminary estimate . to
amount of $1,077 was read
I ADDRESS
I
$1.361
trillion. GNP was
1 City
Zip
Phone
I
and accepted. The meeting
estimated
at .1.347 trUJion in
was opened by prayer by the
Rev. William Middlesworth. Veterans Memorial Hospital ' Chester; John Vroman, Ute third quarter. ·
The department said
Attending were Mayor
Admitted Florence Middleport; Shirley Jones,
Andrews, Jim Neutzling , Heilman , Rutland; Jack Pomeroy; Carman Kiser, im(iorta of good!! and servteea
Powell, Brown, Young, Cornell, Portland; David Racine; Mary Pickens, were almOet ~ billion higher
lhan previously · flltlmated.
Osborne, and Wehrung Hobbs, Dexter; Chuck Smith, Clifton.
Discharged - 'Mary Bentz, Part of the increase waa in
councilmen , Jane Walton Pomeroy; Herbert Reedy,
clerk, Chief Jed Webster, Albany; Gerald McDaniel II, Leona Hubbard , Glennie foreign government
Captain Henry Werry, Middleport; Autumn Walker, Little, James Meadows, investment in U.S. securltlea
Koebel, Rev. Middleswartb, Rutland; Ida Roush, Proc· Edgar Roush, Douglas to shore up the dollar on
Don Hunnell and Jack torville; Herman Haddox, Mitchell, Judy Buchanon, international euhan&amp;o lllllr·
Middleport; Troy Branllen, Margaret Barrett, Ora Rife. keta.
Krautter.

Autumn R. walker, 18,
Ru.t1and was taken t"
1
Veteraru; Memorial Hospital
for trea tment of 111 juries
su ffered in an auto accident
at 11 ·30 a .m. Monday on CR
15 in Meigs Co w1ty.
The Gallia-Meigs Post
Sta te Highway PatrOl sa id
Ms. Walker going so uth , lost
rontrol of her car which ran
off the right side uf the high·
way hitting a bridge. n 1ere
was moderate damage. No
citation was issued.
Patricia K. Bates, 23.
Gallipolis, was charged with
failure t o stop within the
assu red clea r di sta nee

~~~.w~;n~:Ya~i~e;\ a~t4~~~ ~etees

El~~~iv~~~~lu~d:!~if:

BCOA suggested a lid on such
ralaes, regardless of the rate
of infiatlon .
- Health and
safety
guarantees reverted to the
favored language of Ute 1974
contract.
- No SUnday work. 1bere
W83 none under the old
contract, bul the BCXJA had
sought a change In this rule .
- No probationary periods
for new employees.
- No fine for wildcat
slrikers. The BCOA had
yielded on this point, as well,
after asking thai strikers be
fined $1AJ a day.
--Coal operators must pay
the union for using union-run
equipment to process nonunion mined coal. Several
BCOA members
were
opposed to this con·cession.
- The union pension was .
retained as is.

JN=~~~~Fugitive and
friend held .

UNLOAD...
YOUR GAS GUZZLER

Growth

Pomeroy's

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

..a•

.revised

down

I'm insulating
America against
the .high cost
of fuel bills!

.

was held overnight for
observation for a fractured
skull.
Pollee said Dile and officer
Robert Nolley were called to
a downtown service station to
check out a report of a
suspicious vehicle. They '
spotted a Farrell and Miss
Hall ln.stde a van .
Nolley walked up to it oo
Ute passenger side to question
them, and the door was

opened.
The van backed up, almost

runnin8 l!olley down, and hit
Ute patrol car. The two
officers started fired seven
shota into the van . The van
stopped and Nolley made the

arrests.
Farrell was charged with
being a fugitive and Miss Hall
with aiding and abetting a
fugitive. Police said Farrell
had been serving time in Ohio
for an armed robbery
cmvictlon.

Social
Calendar
WEDNESEAY
POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT Lions Club,
Wednesday noon at the Meigs
IM. All Lions urged to attend.
AMERICAN LEGION,
Feeney-Bennett Postl28, wiil
meet at 7:30p.m. Wednesday
at Ute Middleport Le~iOD hall.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY
MID·
DLEPORT Lions Club,
Wednesday noon at the Meigs
Inn.
AMERICAN LEGION Auxiliary, Feeney-Bennett Post
128, will meet at 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday at the hall.
AUXILIARY MEETS
The Rutland
Ladies
Auxiliary will meet this
evening at the firehouse at
7:30 p.m. Carl Hysell
juvenile probation officer'
• will be the guest speaker:
Members are to bring a
guest.

Elberfelds

HACKETT FOAM INSUlATION

~-------------------------•

HOSPITAL NEWS

HOUSEWARES DEPT.

1ST FLOOR

Elberfelds

·I

Postal hours reduced

Due lo the energy criSIS,
hours of the Pomeroy Post
Offu"e are bemg curtct 1led at
once, Postmast er J ames
Souls by said today .
F1fteenminutes is bein ~ cut
from the time thE.&gt; service
window is open each day. The
hours now w1ll be 8:30 a.m to
4:30 p.m., Monday through
Friday, and 8:30 a.m. \O t2
noon on Saturdays. The lobby
of the post office will no
longer be open 24 hours daily.
In the new set up,.,the lobby

will be closed auuul 5 p.m.
wlwn the last employl' leaves
r.. r the day. On weekends the
lubby will cluse at 5 p.m.
&amp;uurda)' and i1 wHl remain
c lusc ~ Sunday.
The new cutback will a\su
change the time mall must be.&gt;
taken tu the post uffice to gu
uul. Pri11r to this time. the
ma it co uld be left there as
late as 5 : 10 p.m . Nnw ,
huwever, businesses and
resi dents should nnte that
their outgoing mail should be

I'Nationalize cOal, ' says ·UMW

United Pres• lnteroaUunal
An Ohio UMW official says
about 4:30 p.111. tn ~~~nut that
President Carter should
day .
llnw long the new polidcs nationalize the coal industry,
will be in effect renwins nonunion l'Oal prOOucers have
unknuwn at this tirne, started to fight back and a
Pustn iaster Suulsby said. He group of UMW members
alsu point s (I Ut that ot her pust from Ohio will go to
uffi res in the l't•Unty will be Washington to lcndsuppor11o
afferted in a different gain "a contract we &lt;'an
manner by the cutbucks accept.'' as lhc UM W strike
Resi dents having
any mtered its 79t h day today .
Gov. James A. Rhodes has
qul'Stions abo ut rha nge's·
called
fop a coal strike
shoul d
contact
their
settlement to avoid a "billion
respe&lt;"t ive post offi ces.
at the pust u£fice eaeh da ~ hy

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, February 22, 1978

dollar blackout" h, Ohiu and
Sen. Jrlm Glenn, O.{)hio, told
President Ca rter if a
settlement is not rea ched
soon layoffs that may exceed
1 million are " immmenl ."
John Guzek , president of
UM W
01slr1ct
6
headquartered in Bellaire
and with 16,000 members in
Ohio and the Northe rn
Panhandle of West Virginia,
also rejected a suggestion the
negoti ations be put into
binding arbitration .

•

·· a believe th~ presidenl

ou~h t to take Ute industry
O\•er," said Guzek . "Lei the
president sig n lhe contract
for them (the coal operators).
They didn't want to si~n a
con tract in all these da)'S,
why should the)' want to s1gn
ooe now .
" Binding arbitration wlll
rail1f the companies bArgain
like they
have
been
bargaining . and it will
t-ertainly blow up in the1r
fa ees," said Guzek.

An independent l'oal producer . .-llo say~ "the only waJ'
you can operate is with
b'Uns". brou;{hl a shtpment uf
seven tru&lt;"k loads of nonunion (•oal to r.a pitol Cil)
Produ cts m Co lumbus
Tuesday . Without the coal,
the firm would have had lO
do:JC Monday.
The tru&lt;'ks came from the
Low Sulfur Coal o Ill Pikt'
County and Wt!l'(' t'S(.'urtL&gt;&lt;I by
Ole Ohio Highway PHtrolHn't
Col mnb1Lil cit y p~Jl ii'c .

en tine

at

" l'lriv~:~h· indi viduals and
priwue (~mpumes tu·e being
terrorized to t.lte point they
c:uu't C\'en operate,'' said Rex
Co(ns, an ufficul of l.ow
Sulfur Coal. "The on ly wsy
yuu t'itn operate Is wllh
).!Uil:-o ,"

A urlion t)fficial in District 6
swd tuday u grou p of Ohio
tnitH.' rs would tnwel to Wash ·
ington 'J1mrsday .
··w,, want to lend moral
su pport to llw Hnrgi nin g
(ConUnued on page 12)

l"ifh•l'll l 'l'lltS
\ 'ul . :!K. No. :! I X

Hannan Trace grade
school hit ·by blaze
.

I.AJsscs may run as h1gh as
1600.000 in a li re which
destroyed the older section of
the
Han nan
Trace
Elementary School Tuesday
night.
Five arcct f1re depart ments
responded, however. th e
blaze was out of control upon
arrival.
Firefighters from Crown
City, Gallipolis, Rio Grande,
Rome Township in Lawrence
County and Middleport Joined
efforts for more than five
hours to save a newer section
of the school Constructed 1n
1960.
Firemen were forced to
shuttle thct r trucks back and
forth to a waler supply during
efforts to bring the blaze
under control. The a larm was
sounded al 8 p.m.
The older section, built in
the 1920s, contained seven
c las srooms, r es tr oom
facihtles, and four special ·
rooms includmg the school
hbrary.
All were destroyed when
the two floors and roof fell
in. Eyewitnesses reported
flames were .. :tl:wotjgL,out
as high as 60 to 70 feet.
The fire , according t o
Gallia
Co unty
Schoo l
Superintendent Thom as
Halrst on, starte d in the
basement area of the building
in a storage room near the
furna ce. Contrary to rumors,
it was not directly caused by
the furnace.
Several children a nd adults
were ,m the structure at the
time of the blaze, bul all
managed to escape unin~
jured.
Two ins tru ctor s. Tom
WJ!hams and Mike Woddle,
who had been there during a
rinky dink basketball game,
found the area where the fire
orlgmated before ca lling the
lire department.
Aecordtpg to school of·

$55,000
loan is
approved ·
Meigs
County
Com·
missioners in regular session
Tuesday night voted to enter
mto an agreement with the
Racine Home National Bank
to borrow a sum of $05,000 to
purchase a new refuse truck
for the Sanitary Landfill
operation. The loan covers a
three~yea r period at five
percent mterest per aMum.
In other bu sin ess the
following bids were rec.eived
for a tandem dump truck for
the highway department ;
John Gibson Motor City ,
$28,670; Pomeroy Motor Co.,
$27 ,086. The following bids
were received for a pickup
truck: Dan Thompson Ford,
$4,81l5 ; ·Pomeroy Motor Co.,
$4.943. Ail bids were tabled
for further study.
It was announced Meigs
commissioners will meet in
special session Thursday,
Feb. 23 at 7:30 p.m. in the
courthouse for the purpose of
holding a • joint session with
the CIC to discuss the con·
struction of a nursing home in
Middleport as proposed by
John O'Neil of Cleveland.
In other developments,
commissioners will meet in
special session Friday, Feb.
~4 at 7:30 p.m. with
representatives of Ameritel
Enterprises for the purpose
of discussing the construction
of a nursing home un a site
located on old route 33.

fici als, and at least one
vo lunteer flrenum , there
Wl're no explusions .
It "as rcp011ed the building
had been closed after classes
were held there last Thursday because of excessive
heat. Schuol distriet officw ls
c:o n d u ~l ed an inspect ion last

Thursday and found the
bu ilding's walls were too hot.
Supt. Harnsnn sa id the
Co lumbus Heating and
Venti lati ng Compa ny wa s
ca ll ed Imm ediatel y. Th e
bu ilding was closctl Fnday
while two furnace experts
from that hrm checked the

I

Independents
fight back

problem.
The men worked three days
repainng the furnace to get it
ready for classes Tuesday.
State fire marshals Frank
E1snaugle of Jackson and
Jack Monte of Iron ton were
sched uled to inspect the ruins
today . The bUIIrlmg is insured
by the Wisema n Agency of
Gallipolis.
The school serves more
than 580 students In grades
kinder ga rten through
eight. As of this morning.
Supt. Hairston was un·
(•ertain when and where
rlasses wuuld resume for
the students.
Several alternatives .arc
bemg studied Students may
have to be moved to other
attendahce a reas in th.c
eounty schQO I system. The
·Hannan Trace High St:hool,
across SR 218 only houses
around 200 students.
Another choice could bcf tu
~o ntinu e classes in the
bUilding's new section and
begm using two new portable
class rm,nns recently brought
l&lt;&gt; the school.
It was the second major
sehoul fire to hit the Gallia ·
County Loca l School DistriCt
in two weeks. On Feb. 12, fire
ravaged the antiquated
Centerville Building; forcin g
the board to rind alternate
classroom facilities for 154
students and teachers.
Just this mornm~. those
student s were to · begin
cl asses at Ca mp FranciS
Asbury ncar Rio Grande.
Last mght' s ~~f!~~esents
morethan achal
. forthe
edu &amp;iUOn.
board
of
It was also the 1third
major fire to hit a counly
SC'hool in the last three
years. In 19761 vandals set
lire to the Hannan Trace
High School causing
damages in ex.cess of
(Continued on page 12)

By JOHN T. KADY
a ngered by United Mine
United Press International
Workers vanda lism of nonInd e pendent coa l union facilities during the 79ruin and day-old miners' strike, have
begun to fight back.
•While the Norfolk &amp;
Western railroad and most
truckers have declined to
haul coal in Ohio during the
s trike be ca use of UMW
threats, the independents,
acknowledging " the only way
you can operate is wiUl
guns," loaded seven coal
trucks In Pike County and
escorted by Ute Ohio Hlgbway
Patrol and Columbus city
police drove up to Capital
City Products, a firm down to
its last week of fuel.
Gov . James A. Rhodes,
DON W.SWISJiER
meanwhile, has called for an
Senior VIce Pres.
end to the record-length
strike before Ohio is plunged
into a 0 billion - dollar
blackout.''
He met with a delegation of
UMW workers and their
families in Columbus before
Promo ti on of t wo em- flying to Charleston, W.Va . to
ployees of the Peoples Bank confer with governors of
of Point Pleasant was an~ other coal producing states.
n1Junced
recentl y
by
The mdependents' caravan
Pres ident V1tus Hartley, Jr . startedattheLowSulfurCoal
Uon W. Swisher has bct!n · Co. in Beaver, Ohio, as a
prnmut ed to senwr vtce response to UMW activity m
president and Jeanne M. southern Ohio Monday night
Barney has been named vice that saw three non-union
president-cashier.
mines
closed ,
trucks
Swisher, VI, has been an overturned, windows
employ ee of the Peoples smashed and fires started.
Bank on a [ul\time basiS smce
"Private individuals and
June of 1971 when he private companies are being
graduat ed fro m- Marshall terrorized to the point they
University w1th a degree in can't even operate," said Rex
business management. He Corns, an official of Low
was f1rst employed at the Sulfur Coal. "The only way
bank during the summer you' can operate is with
after completion of his junior guns."
year of college.
Curns said his family lives
He was later promoted to . within 50 yards of the tipple at
the positi on of assistant the coal firm.
WASHINGTON (UP!) cashier a nd loan officer, in
"Try living with Ulat for 77 Labor
Secretary
Ray
July of 1974 was elevated to days," said Corns. "You MarshaU called negotiators
the job of assista nt vice never know when someone is together today alter soft coal
president and then became going to throw a bomb companies asked Ute United
vice president in January of through your window. I have Mine Workers union to agree
1976.
carried a gun continuously on binding private arbitration
Swisher, a native of Meigs since the strike started."
in the 79-(Jay-old coal strike.
Co unty , 0. and a 1967
"We were at the point of
The UMW was expected to
graduate of Pomeroy High having to shut down the plant reject the management
School, is married to the next Monday," said Capital request, which would not
former Elame Davis o( City President Richard require further federal
Middleport and they have two Helland. "This shipment will intervention in the nation's
sons, Phillip, age 5, and Eric,
(Continued on page 12)
strike.
longest
coal
Negotiations broke down at 3
age eight months. The
Swishers reside on Birch Ave.
a.m. Saturday when the
Ohio Power Co. today
in Point Pleasant.
UMW kUied a second coal
urged its 600,000 customers
In addition to being
rontract offer.
selected as the outstandlnfl" in 53 counties to begin
The
White
House
culling back on all electric
football player in the
announced Marshall called
usage by 25 pereent and
UMW negotators to his office
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
&amp; Southern Ohio
Columbus
Utis alternoon and Ute Labor
League in his senior year of
Electric Co. held a mass
high school , Swisher played
Department said there would
meeting for all mayors and be "a joint meeUng of union
at
Marshall
football
city managers In the 23 and
management
University and earned the
counties it serves to discuss negotiators" tonight.
role of starting quarterback
the eleelrlelty shortage.
President Carter has
there as a sophomore. He was
Meanwhile, an Ohio ~layed taking one of several
also a member of the Sigma
United Mine Workers options to end the strike : a
Phi Epsilon at MU .
Union
official
says Taft-Hartley back-to-work
The new senior vice
President
Carter
should
order, federal takeover of the
president also serves as
nationalize the coal In- mines, or binding arbitration .
secretary to the board of
dustry; non-union coal The later two require
direclors of Peoples Bank, is
producers have started lo · congressional action.
a member of the Point
fight back and a group of
But the Bituminous Coal
Pleasant Rotary Club, past
UMW members !rom Ohio Operators Association called
member of the board of
will go to Washington to a private panel of impartial
directors of the Marshall
land support to gain "a abritrators -to be chosen by
Univer s ity Alumni
conlract
we can accept'', both sides - "the fairest
Association, ·Mason-Gailla
as
the
UMW
strike entered approach" to decide on the
County Chapter and ·member
Its
791h
day
todoy
. ·
merits of the latest contract
of several other fraternal and
offer.
civic organizations.

Swisher
promoted

Binding
•
deal IS
sought

1'1 1!-

--.
building housed more Uum !lfi() students ln gr:.~dm~ t&lt;. -n. It
was the ~cond schoo l in Ualiia CHunty 's I ,n(.' ;a] Sc huol
District hit by nrc in the past two week~.

DAMAGES may run as high as $600,000 in a lire
Tuesday night which destroyed the original section of
Hannan Trace Elementary School at Mercerville. The

EXTENDED FORECAST
Friday through Sunday,
fair Friday and u l'hauce of
snow Saturday and snow
flurries , mainly in northern
Ohio, Sunday. Highs
generally wlll be in the 30s
and lows wtll be in the
teens.

Deer are
accident
victims
Two deer were killed in
highway accidents Tuesday
investigated by the Gallia·
Meigs Post Slale H1ghway
Patrol.
The first occurred at 1:50
p.m on SR 7 where a deer ra n
into the path of a vehicle
operated by Randall Russell,
23, Cheshire. There wa s slight
damage .
At 8:10 p.m. on SR 143 in
Me1gs County, a deer ran into
the path of vehicle driven
by Andrew E. Grover, 40,
Pomeroy . There was minor
damage.

a

Three actions
filed in court
In Meigs Counly Common
Pleas Court Tuesday, Garnet
Williamson, Rutland, filed
suit against Eugene Wells,
RD, Ewmgton, and Frank
Wells, RD, Wilkesville for
$1,524.75 lor amount due on a
hay haler.
The Pomeroy Cement
Block Co., Pomeroy, flied suit
in the amount of $5 ,316.85
against David 0 . P~rso ns,
Racine anrl Linda Parsons,
Racine .
A suit for support under the
Reciprocal Agreement Act
was filed by the state of
Florida, department of HRS
on behalf of Patricia David·
son against Donald H.
Davidson.
GET LICENSE
A marr1age hcense was
issued to Richard Downie
Macomber. 19, Dexter, and
Vicki Lynne John ston, 18,
l.angsville.

Otamher hears CB leader
Dav1d Pratt, pr esiden t

or

the Big Bend CB H.;ull u Club,
tuld members of lh c Pomeroy
Chamb er of Co mmerce
Tuesday that :Jo nulliun CB

Pntlt said ( ' B'~ ~tn ' Wil'tl b)
lllll St Jaw Cll fol'l'e ttll'lll
agencies, sud1 ~t s Ohit; ~ t ;ll\'
PHirld , Sltl· t · i ff '~ dep.t r1 ·
mcnls. lllt:(l l Jll l li ~e dep::nt-

unitti .1re bcmg used in the
United Sta tes.
Pretti reported 1ute million
new licenses are being issuetl
each month . He stated that
there has been a tremendou~
growth smce 1965 .

the mid-wt:s1 LI St:
them :t great dcuJ
CB's ~trc al su used by the
r:o&lt;.tsl ~ uvrd on oceans und on
lCJ I"!4Cl' Iukes J'J:HU obser ved .
They a rc alsu used by ntany

m c nts, fi r e d cpaJtlll en t s.
i-'H1111CI 'S Ill

sltUI· IItS, tJy 11"itVl']J •r:-; !m
l•iL'(' IJJ'I\ y [l '(.tbllll.''i,

l' r ;t11

1 l'JHirll'cl

ni t CH

opt:I'I:J\UI'S hu Vl' '' ltarH.lh.:s "
whll'h i:-; tnu rc less a 1ud''
mtll\l' . "'ll iii Hik s" Wt ' JT llrst
u~w d by tl tl' nlilitmy ;md
111&lt; 11 1}' !"!II II o S IHII II IIS U~ C I'!Jl!C
ltii ii iCS lu IIC'I p Jtk nl ify the
p~111. uf till' ('ullll1 l'f they :ire
s tlltiJ I L• ll 1/l ,
Prall C(I IJI (Continued on page 12)

.·

'Crisis Watch'
By United Press International
A glance at developments in the nationwtde United Mme Workers Unior1str1 k1·:

UMW Negotlati•ms
Coal operators have called for an 1mpartial arbi tra tion pan el to dJrCI't a se ttlcinent

of Ute UMW strike based on their latest contract offer.
UMW Rear linn

UMW District 6 Presldent John Guzek said President Ca rter ,should untiumthze the
coal industry and predi cted binding arbilration would fa1i 1f operators bmgiJin like they
have been bargaining.
Ohio Government Reacti.Jn
Gov. James A RhodeS met with governors of other coa l producing states in
Charleston, W. Va . Tuesday . He also calil&gt;d on all parties to tho negotm twns tu come up
with a settlement before Ohio is plunged into a "billion dollar blackout."
Senate Reaction
Sen. John Glenn, D.{)hio, met with President Carter Tuesday an d urged hun to take
action by this weekend to end the strile. Glenn sa id up to 1 m i11ion Ohioans could be hud
off by an electricity shortage .
'
Coal Activity
independent producer shipped seven truck loads of coa l to u customer in
Culumbus and vowed the only ''way you can operate is with guns ."
An

UMW Membership Activity
UMW District 6 members will travel to Washington Thursday to lend moral support
to the UMW Bargaining Coun cil to come up with a ' 'cuntrn ct we can ac(.: ept. ''
Coal Supplies
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric Co ., headquartered in Columbus and serving all
or parts of 25 counties, has a 42-&lt;iay supply of coal on hand .
.
Ohio Edison Co. headquartered in Akron and serving 700,000 customers In northern
Ohio, has a J:klay supply . .
Cleveland Electric Illuminating Co., headquartered in Clevela nd and serving 690,000
custome'rs, has a 49-&lt;iay supply,
Ohio Power Co., headquartered in Ca nb'm tmd serving 390,000 customers, has &lt;i 4:!day supply.
Cincinnati Gas&amp;: Electric Co., headquartered in Cinciruiati, with 550,opo customers,
has a 4~ay supply.
Dayton Power &amp; Light Co., headquartered in Dayton and serving all or par.ts of 24
counties, has a 50-&lt;lay supply.
Toledo Edison Co., he.adquartered in Toledo and serving 25:i,OOO cusl()rners in northwestern Ohio, ha s a Stl-to~ ay supply .
Monongahela Power Co., headquartered in West Virginia and servi ng 22,000
customers In the Marietta area, has a 23-&lt;lay supply .
.

,-

The limoWlt of coal listed by each utility can be extended by various means such as
conservation, the purchase of power or the purchase of non-union coal.

lv

...

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