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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

...

.

�2- The Daily Sentmel Mtddleport P om &lt;'I"OY 0 Wednesday Feb 22 1978

Pro Standings

W ahanta Falcons stop
Spencer five, 65-57
BY GARY CLARK
Both the varSity and the
juniOr varstl y cage teams at
Wahama
High
School
rebounded from Monday
mg hts defeats to Metgs m
ove r comrng the Spen cer
Yellow
Jackets
65 57
Tuesday even tng
The wm upped the White

Fslcons season record to 6 10
an d left them wtth the
posstbtltty of ftmshmg t he

regular season With an even
500 mark To ach1eve th"
goa l the locals would have to
cla1m v1ctones m the1r hnal
four contests which are all
scheduled to be pia) ed on the
White Falcons home court
or the lour remamlng dates
two wtll ptl the Bend Area

team agamst Mason County
rtvals m Hannan and Point
P leasant
Coach Ed
fhursday
Barnette
Saturday

The Wtldca ts of
Coon mvade Mason
followed by Lennte
s Btg Blacks on

Next week Wahama closes
out the regular season agamst
Buffalo of Putnam Tuesday

and Ravenswood m the season
fmale on Fr1day
In last m ghts achon

Wahama seemed to top wtth
t he Yellow Jackets throughout
t he game by butldmg a b1g
lead only to lose 11 and build

a nother
The contest was lied on four

and turnovers and stole the ball Blessmg
Honaker
Spencer led only once and that etght tunes
was a short llved lead at 49-48
Spen ~er shot 35 percent Hobbs
differe nt

occas t ons

'TheDove -AGameBird (Part!)
By Greg Batley
As manv of you knuw the mou rmng dove Is not legal game

m Ohio Two years ago dove season was halted m Ohio by
pressure from wh-huntmg and sent1menta l groups Now
s ports men s groups

espec ia ll y Oh toans for Wt!dllfe
Conservation and the Ohio DlvlsiOn of W1ldhfe a re advocatmg
Ute dove be returned to game btrd status as 11 IS tn 32 other
states !'he Wtldhfe l..egtslattve Fund and OWC g1ves the
reasons wh) Ohioans should be permt tted to bar vest this bll'd
The mourrung dove 1s a nat1ve Amen can p1geon It has
been designated as a game b1rd nauonallv for more than 60
}Cars 11 15 a game bLrd under ti c C' m cntwn for the
Protectton of M1gn:ttory Blrds prodauned m \916 by the Uruted
States and C m H.la It IS sumlarly desig nated m the 1937
agreemcn l lx: tw~n the Uruted States and MeXICO In Ohio
hu ntable wtldltfo a lso ts designated by deftn ttton as game But
nmU1er tl1e rnou rm ng dove nor until 1959 the quail was so
classtfted m Ute Ohto Re vtsed Code I he Ohio Genera l
Assembly then a dded QUat! to the game hst The sa me c hange

advocated for the mourmng dove
The mourmng dove IS hsted as the most abundant game

btrd m the natiOn b) the U S Ftsh &amp; Wtldl tfe Servtce The fall
popu latiOn m the Uruted SL:'1tcs ts estimated a t 500 million
birds The mournmg do\ e IS found 1n eve1y county m Ohio

Sance the birds eat small seeds the dove po pulatiOn 1s
assocta ted wtlh crop prod uction The fa ll populatio n m Ohio IS

estiJT13ted at between s1x: m1lhon and seven Tmlhon btrds
A m1grotory b1rd the mournmg dove s pnmary nestmg
pcrwd tn Oltto ts between March and late May The btrds
wmter m the southeln tier of the Uruted States MeXlCO and
CentJ a! Amenca Their hab1tat IS extremely va11Cd ra ngmg
[r om trees and shrubs m residen tia l areas to open grasslands
m the gr eat plams
Hunted or not the mourmng dove has a hfe expectancy of
a httlc over one year ll'loas a natural mortahty rate of 70 to 80
per cent through predatiOn disease adverse weather and
accident The b1rd ts charactenzed by w1 ldhfe bwlogtsts as
havrng a htgh turnover rate In other words there are high
annual losses from the populatiOn ond high annual b1rths to

replace the losses Sta tJ.sllcal surveys conducted m Ohio
mdica te tha t 4 4 young are produced for every adult mourrung
dove p81r dunng breedmg season Ohio accordmg to the Flsh
&amp; Wildlife ServLce IS the most Important eastern dove state m
terms of breedmg denSJlleS
There ts no evtdenc-e that llle mortality of mourrung doves
ts affected by hunttng The call-&lt;:ount survey conducted
annually and natiOnally by the Ftsh &amp; Wtldlife Servtce showed
that populatiOns of llle mourmng dove dechned from 1967 to
1971 and mcreased from 1971 to 1977 Whether the btrd was
hunted or not was of no s1gruhcance The sur vey 1s one of the
most extensLVe m wtldhfc management
Because It IS a migratory bird the pnmary management
of

the mow-mng dove rests With the U S Department or the

Intertor a nd tis F tsh &amp; Wtldhfe Servtce The regulation of
hunting the settmg of seasons hours and bag lmuts allows
levels of harvest compatible With contmua t10n of the species
No hunt mg of migratory game btrds IS pernutted unless a
season IS specifically set by the Secretary of the lntenor He
establishes ' each year the time and lenglll of the seasons
datly bag llmtls possession limits pernusstble methods of
hunting and other hunting restrtchons
The federal goverrunent constders game btrd hunting an
opporturuty to harvest a porbon of migratory game bird
populations through a controlled system The annual

momtormg of mournmg dove populations as well as the
estabhshmg of speciftc huntmg regulations provtde a

safeguard agamst excess1ve harvest of doves One of the
stated obJectives of the federal regulations IS to provtde
eqwtable huntmg opportunity m vartous parts of the country
w1thm luntts unposed by abundance migration and
distm bullon patterns of migratory game btrds Different
regulations are unposed for different sections of the country
The settmg of the seasons by the federal government ts
considered an opportunity' to hunt States can prohtbtt
hunting or unpose more brrutmg statewtde restrictions The
states cannot however liberaliZe the regulations
Thirty-two of the 48 contiguous states pertTllt hunting of
mourrung doves Ohio lS one of Tl states m the Eastern
Management Umt aad has the htghest mourmng dove
' pulation denstty of any of these states Sixteen of the
"\Stern Management states perm1t dove huntmg today and
L yare the states whu:h con tam the maJOI proportwn of the
\ e population Wtth Olno mcluded ttw&lt;e 17 states contatn 81
r cc11t of the estunated dove population for the un1t The
1te.' Ill at do not periTllt huntmg are prunartly more northern
•les- Michigan Marne New Hampshire Vermont etc which have the other 19 per cent of the Eastern dove
"'• tlattqn Dove hunting does not e:ust m many of these states
&lt;lte sunple reason that thetr btrd popula tiOns are small To

contmued tomorrow

,

4 10 1 2 2 9
3-72218
3-10 2-4 3 8

!'he

M e t ~s

Gtrls basketball

squad ra1sed their scuson
1 eco rd to 8-6 last mght w1th a
( nvmcmg 53 34 w1n over
h •St Vtnt on County I he
r ugged contest saw th e
Mat a uder gals pull awa&gt; m
t he thmt quarter h wm 111 a
b1g way as Cuach Juy Bent
l ~y s ~ 1rl s netted 21 1 f a bag
~7 f1 cc Uu uws for the margtn
r { Vll'lOI &gt;

VInton held Me1gs Vtcky
Epple to 12 pomt s but semor

teammat e Glend a Brown
too k up the slack and poured
10 20 pomt s and controlled the
boards w1th 24 rebounds
Mctgs had "

total of 53

caroms The Me1gs crew was
rather ro ld from the held as
the} hIt on 1b of 51 shf ts for 31
pe1 cent
Vmtun could penetrate the
good Metg:s defen se onl y
uccas1onally as onl y one

throw attempts They also
con troll ed the boards by
collecttng &gt;2 rebo unds to
Mct~s 37
Htgb scormg Ktm Kntght
""'held to JUSt 11 pomts by
Mc1gs 1 ern Wilson Wilson
alsu cuntamed her on the

buards by allowmg her JUSt
nme rebou nds
Me1gs ht l 18nl43 stu ts lor a
respectable 43 per cent but
got JUSt 5 of 17 foul shots to go
tn Glenda Brown led the

colder from the held htttmg
15 of 71 attempts 21 per cent
On Monday mght Metgs
travelled to Waverly to battle
the f1 gresses but came home
( n the wrong end of a 65-41
score The h sts placed four
ga Is m double figures led by
Shatfenaker and Bobo who
each had 15 pomts
Waverly rode to the YtlO on
the basts of thetr fantastic
shootmg as they h1t an un
beheva ble 27 of 40 attempts
for 67 per cent They a lso
connected on II of 14 free

Cage
standings
ALL GAMES
Team

Logan

Sou th Pont
Waver y x

Court House

W l

P OP

IS 3 1140 9 47
14 5 1319 1147

13 6 1152 1030
13 6 1315 1086

Port smouth 11 7 1195 1089
I ron ton
11 8 1183 1073
Pt Pleasa nt 10 6 963 920

Ga l llpol ts
Fatrland 15.
Ra venswood
Athens

Wellston
Me gs

9 10 1114 1078
9 10 lOJS 1021
7 9 978 970

8 10 1138 1163
6 12 1221 1291
3 15 1036 1329

Jack son x

3 16 994 1218
x-Comple ted season
Tuesday s results
South Pont 52 Gall lpol s 51

ITny)
Pt Pleasant 46 R1pley 45

Parkersburg 83

Ravenswood

65
Chesapeake 69 Rock Htll 56

Tomght s games
Rtpley at Ravenswood
Court House vs V/ell ston at
Un10lo

Thursdays games
f!Ae gs vs Nelsonvi lle York at
Stewart

J(onton vs
Lucasv lie
PI

Portsmouth at

Pleasant at Parker sburg

South
Fnday s games

Pt Pleasant at Wahama

S ssonvil le

at Rave nswood
Chesapeake vs South Po nt
at Iron ton

7 16 22 34
Brown S 4 14
Vaughan 6 0 12 Epple S 1 11
Wilson 2 0 11 Total 18 S 41
WAVERLY - Fatrch ld 7
0 4 Sharfe naker S 5 15
Kn ght 4 3 11 Shoemaker 4 0
8 Bobo 7 1 15 Hartley 0 2 2
Total 27 11 65
I'Aetgs
1 19 28 41
Wav erly
6 35 49 65

USCG 53 Am tt e r s l 38

Conn Coli 84 Vassa 70

E Na1 76 Bab son 14
Fa rm ont 19 Sa lem 69
G M ason 16 M rsv St 74
Harvard 96 Bran des 9
Ma ne 68 New Ham p 59
M E vers 79 Baruch 75
Rtgrs Nwk ) 74 Pratt 68
N Adms 59 Wstt d 53
Penn St 76 M~ss 69
Rho de sand 7J Prov 64
R I Coli 78 S E Mass 73
R PI 68 W I am s 60
Scrd Hrt 89 S onehll 65
St Fran NY 73 lona 71
St Jos 97 Hofstra 90
Tufts 109 Tr n ty 68
Ut ca 9'2 Co rtland 70
York Pa 104 M ssl ah 90
South
F a St 78 Ga Te ch 12
Ln gwd 72 M Wash 11
N ch ll s St 76 SE La 67
5 NewOrlns 75 Xav er 71
W Va Tech 81 w va 51 78
Mtdwest
Bldwn WI Ice 68 Kenyn 61
Cap a t 00 Den son 63
He d bg 15 0 Nrl1'1rn 69
a Ws yn n Corne 1 67
Moo hed St 100 Bmd j 96
Moun! Un on 91 Ober l n 69
Mon m h 96 I I Coli 95
MusKngm 73 Mar etta 10
Nl e Dme 70 N C St 59
0 Om ncn 87 Cedarvt 70
Oft rbn 15 0 Ws vn 12
Prncp a 70 Mo Bapl 52
Rcklrd 75 01 vet Naz 66
51 Ambrse 85 Grace nd 69
Sl Fran 78 l iT 67
Wm Penn 80 Grnn I 69
Southwest
A k 58 TeK Tec:h 49
C OK ifl 76 Be th Naz 75

N Te11 St 80 Hrd n Smns 74

SE Okla 95 Lan gstn 70
SW Okla 71 Ok Bap l 12
Sl Evrtt 100 LeTrneau 85
TeKas 82 Tech 49
C Ok la 76 Beth Naz 75
N leK St 80 Hrdn Smns 74
SE Okla 95 L angstn 70
SW Ok a 17 Ok Bapt 12
Humb dl St 82 Chco St n
P Lom a 87 Ca l Bapt 68
Regs 00 Colo Coli 54
Sen Fran 51 89 Haywrd BI
San 0 ego 94 Chapman 84
Wslmnr 16 Dmnguez St 56

31 30

1

508

NEW YORK (UP!) - Leoo Spmks IS young and sitU a little
naiVe He thought aU his troubles were over, but now sees
they 're only starting
As the new world heavyweig ht champton, everybody
suddenly wants to get on his bandwagon or better yet to own a
ptece of hun
In St Lows Spinks manager Mitt Barnes, sa1d Top Rank
Inc , offered htm $1 S million for his 24-year-&lt;&gt;ld titleholder, but
Top Rank Prestdent Bob Arum, to whom Spmks ts conumtted
for hts next SIX ftghts derues that saymg he wouldn t g1ve
Barnes 15 cents
Let's go back a btl to the OIYRV'ICS tn 1976
Spmks was about to ftght m the hnal for the llght.!)eavy
wetght gold medal Wmrung that medal meant everythmg to
him and as he and Barnes who had haadled htm smce he was
16 walked dnwn the street m Montreal they t&lt;alked not only
about the medal but also of Leon s future m the professiOnal

1

ranks
Suddenly, tmpulstvely the youghful fighter turned toward
the older man who had fed hun put hun up m his own room and
treated him as tf he were his son down through the years
Mttt, whatever you do don t ever seU me ' pleaded Leon
Spmks
Don t worry Barnes assured hun I never Will
Thts IS M1tt Barnes versiOn of what happened m Montreal
On Aug 1 1976, the day after wum1ng hts OlympiC gold
medal Spinks s1gned a CQntract making Barnes hts manager
The contract was for three years and gave Barnes the optton to
keep renewmg ttfor as long as 12years
Yet the day after he beat Muhammad Ali for the title tn Las
Vegas Spmks was pomtedly asked by UPI s Steve Wtlstem
whetller Barnes was hts manager and he answered He s not
my manager I don thave a manager I manage myself
Before the ftght took place another contract was stgned by
Top Rank Spmks and Barnes gtvmg Top Rank promottonal
rtghts for Spmks next Six ftghtsshould hewm the It tie It was a
shrewd move by Arum ID protect htmself
Two other attorneys m New Jersey Michael Cerreto and
Dan Duva claun they represent Barnes and have been domg
so for the past s1x months but m St Louis Vmce Igoe says he
does
The btddmg for our contract w1th Leon Spmks has gone as
high as $4 2 mtllton says lgoe spellkmg m behalf of Barnes
'If he s mterested, that s what Mr Arum s 1&gt; cents would huy
him Leon Sptnks has never told Mitt Barnes be lsn t hts
manager He has never told him anything even close to that
Spmks and Barnes sttU are very close according to lgoe
who says Barnes IS bemg prevented from talking to the new
champ by certam parties
Mitt feels if be can s1t down wtth Leon for 20 mmutes thts
whole thmg can be resolved ' says lgoe
Arum claims there were tears m hts eyes after Alt lost
because Alt did so much for htm while he was champton He
doesn t really wtsb to see Ah ftght anymore Arum says
Who's he ktddmg'
Even though he no looger holds tbe title Ah sltllts the key
figure If Ah says hedoesn t want toftghtanymore Sptnks ts m
trouble Arum wouldn t be tn such good shape etther
All thts calls to mmd Cus DAmato s troubles wtth the old
International BoXIllg Club which operated m conjunction w1th
MadiSOn Square Garden and controlled boxmg the world over
some years ago
D AmatO had Floyd Patterson who was told he wouldn t get
a !ttle ftght unless he left DAmato but Patterson stuck w1th
him and became the heavywetght champton anyway
D Amato also had Jose Torres who was the top contender
for the hght heavyweight crown
He came to me one day and satd They told me I can not get
a title match as long as you re my manager
recalls
D'Amato
I told htm to take the match He satd he couldn t go wtthout
me but I told hun he could I satd I d tear up our contract, but
only after he got the match
Torres agreed to go along on one condition - that D Amato
prepare him for llle ftght D Amato agreed and Torres
stopped Willie Pastrano m the nmth round to wm the tight
heavyweight t1tle 13 years ago

NHL Standtngs

By un ted Press International
Campbell Conference

PatriCk

DIVISIOn
W L T PIS
NY Islanders
36 12 10 82
Ph adelph a
33 14 10 16
A !ant a
22 22 15 59
NY Rangers
19 28 11
49
Smythe DIVISIOn
W L T Pts
23 18 Ill 62
Ch cago

Va ncouver

M nnesota

15 30 13
12 31 15
13 37 6

43
39
32

Sf Lo u s

12 38 1

31

Colorado

Walei Conference

ZUSPAN GOES UP-Charhe Zuspan (34) of Wahama gets lnstde agamst a Spencer
defender for th1s easy lay up Zuspan contnbuted to his team s wmnmg effort wtth eight
pomts

Meigs to baule
strong N-Y team
rhe Metgs Marauders get

c n the t ournament trail
tomorrow mght when they
meet the Nelso nv1He York
Buckeyes al Federal Hockm g

Ha gh Set oo l m the sect I d
ro und of the AA Sectmnal
and

tickets

may

IS

be

Greg Beck m
But Logan expects all 1 f !us
Marauders t1 see action and
hts squad has been bolster ed
by t he addttlOn of fres hm an
Steve Ohlinger who made a
good showm g In the Wahama
Win

Loga n believes h1s team s

cha nces for a w1n are good 1f
they can contain those two
offenSi ve threats of the
Buckeyes and cut down on the
number of turnovers A wm
lhursday mght could turn
a round
an
othe rwtse
disappomt1ng se ason f or

Me1gs

purchased at t he door

Nelsonville York own s une
of the best records around
and last week the Buckeyes
handled New I exmgton
handtl) m the opentng rou nd
86 36 Point g uat d P a ul

Smith a 5 9 sentor
the

Buck eyes

IS

that

one of

[.()gan s Marauders will have
to stop He makes the N Y
offense click and IS averagmg

20 pomts per outmg
Coach V r g1l Cor mdy has
another t hr eat that the
Marauders wtll ha ve t o
co ntam m th e person of R1ck

Penrod Penrod ts a 6 JUnlOI
who also owns a 20 pomt
average The other starters

for the Buckeyes wtll be G I

Joe Brooker at center 52
Scott Matthews and G JUnior

What are your
chan~es

of survival?

B) Greg Batley
As II ng as we are m our

fam IJaJ emuu nrn ent the
lac k of failmc of any ac

are somethmg we have all
been made aware of but
there ts a nother danger HYPOTHERMIA

death
Tht s has been
graphical!) shown and ex
penenced these past weeks

Hov. to deal wtth nature - on

cond1110ns' (I ) Cold - not
necessanly extreme (2) Wet

- ram meltmg snow un
mers10n m water and even

to avmd exposure and stay

and one defense to contam
Meigs Kenny Young
Smce that sectiOn ;.~I has
been 1n existence Nelson
vtlle-York and Meigs h&lt;:IVe
been the only twn teams to
wtn 1t N Y took the title m

sl! ess can have a detrimental
effect on judgment atltlude

have a problem

Mental

and the Wi ll to s urv1vc As
Wmston ChurChill sa ui The
greatest thmg we have to fear
ts fear ttself

F ear of the

unknown fear of discomfort
or the fear of weakness all
play thetr part

You must

overcome thls menlal ob-stacle ftrst
then S T 0 P
Thts ts short for Stop Thmk
Observe Plan STOP - The
body ts deSigned to do two
thmgs thmk and work Do
one a t a ttme Don t try both
at lhe same-time THINK -

Cons1der the s1tuat1on and
Immediate danger as well as
future problems that mtght
occur from the Situation
OBSERVE - Look around
and observe the problem for
poss1ble so lut10ns The
weather and terram should
be cons tdered Do you need to
traveJ? Also consider the

resources avatlable to you

Oberlin 69
Manetta 70

Musk,mgum 73
011erbe n 75 Oh io Wesleyan
72 (2

ot)

Ohlo Dom n•can 87 Cedarv•lle

70

253
225
209
207

17 25 14 48 174 201

and those needed to sustam
hfe PlAN - Estabhsh a
course of act1on whtch w1ll
best utthze your available

energy and resources Then
commtt yo urself to the appllratwn and success of this

plan wtth a postttve attitude

These are pomts to constder
m any situation of survtval
Weather has been and can be
yet of uppermost Importance

Severe temperature SnQW
dttfts and wmdchtll factors

games scheduled

Wednesday s Games
Kalamazoo at Fort Wayne
Fl nt at Grand Rap1ds

Thursdays Games
No games scheduled

(3 ) Wmd -

This week's college games

WHA Standmgs
By Un1ted Press lnternlfiOnll
W L T Pts
W nn1peg
38 18 2 78
New Eng and
33 20 4 70
Edmonton
30 25 2 62
Houston
29 24 3 61
Qu ebec
26 29 2 54

C ncmnat

24 32 3

B rm mgham
24 32 2
lnd anapol s
17 35 4
Tuesday 1 Result
Quebec 6 New Eng 5 ot
Wednesday s Games
New Eng and at W.nn peg
Houston at Edmontor'l
Thursdav s Game
Quebec at B rm ngham

This Weeks
Oh•a College
Basketball Schedule
Umted Press ln1e.-nahonal
Wednesday
Bowl ng Green at Northern
IllinOIS
Central M1ch at Mtamt
Toledo at Kent St
Oh10 Un v at Western Mtch

51

so
38

Butler at Xavter

Wr ght St at Ak ron
51 ppery Rock at Ashland
5teubenv lie at Pont Park

The first hne of defense ts

(Pal

NEW YO~K (UPI) dry Wet clothes lose about 90 Former
heavyweight
per cent of the msulatmg champton George Foreman,
\alue Wet clothes Will ex
With possible comeback plans
tract heat from the body 240 on hiS mmd, may be Doll
ttmes as fast as dry clothes
King's surprtae guest today
Wet clothes wtth a wmd when the promoter holds a
factor
wtll
actually news conference to annolUlce
refngerate the body Most a fight next month between
cases of hypothermia occur heavywetght
contenders
between 30 degrees F and 50 Earme Shavers and Larry
degrees F
Holmes
The second hne of defense
I asked hun to come and 1
IS to termmate exposure Get
think he wiD ' King satd
r ut of w1nd ram and snow tf Tuesday "I don't know 1f
} ou can t stay warm and dry George ts ever gomg to come
Shtvermg 1s your warnmg back aad fight again but 1 ve
stgnal DON T IGNORE IT' been talking to him often
The thtrd defense ts to recently and maybe he
detect
hy poterhm1a
tn will •
)ourself or others Un
controlled ftts of shtvermg
THEDAH.YSENTIN&amp;.
DEVOTED TO THE
dull slow speech
tn·
INTEREST OF
coherence fumbhng bands
MEIGS-MAsoN ARE.\
CIIE8I'ER L TANNEHilL
stumblmg drowsmess, and
a pparent exhaustion are
.....
ROBERT HOENCH
c~~y.......,,
clues
dolly ...... Solunloy
The fo urth line of defense IS byPubU.hed
Tho Ohio VaUey PubUoltJait
t reatment Admtt you are m
t'ool))lilny Multimedia Inc , 111
Court St Pomeroy Ohio tl7W
trouble Get out of wmd and
Bwnnaa: Office: Phone 892- ilM
weather set out of wet
Edltort.l Phone992-1157
clothes mto dry clothes
Secood clau postl&amp;:e Pilei at
Ohlo
Dnnk warm hqulds Sugar or Pomeroy
National advtrtla:tnr l'eJN'e:lenca ndy wtll gtve qmck energy
llttlve Ward
Grlffidi ~
Inc lklttlnelli and Galltlher ot~
as wtll sugar water Should a
757 Third Ave New York N y
vict im be sem1 conscious
10017
Sl&amp;blerlptlon 1'11\el Dtllvered b)'
keep h1m awake and get h1m

"""

wam1 as qmckly as posstble
as hypothermia has often
been called the ktller of the
unprepared Mamta1mng se1f

control and usmg your head
are your best tools of surv1val
m any sttuatum
J

carrier whtr. avalll.ble.U centa per
week By Mow Route •here e&amp;n1er
servke not. avdable ODe month
t3 25 By mall In Ohlo and W Va
On&lt; Year IDIIII S1tt .-ttl
Ill 50 Thne month• $7 00
Elsewhere t28 00 year Six montn.
SU SO Three month• t7 $0
~"';-;t!on prk:-. includes Sundl1

llnel

Manchester t lnd l at Bluffton
Earlham (I n d) at F1ndlay
Htram a1 Allegheny ( Pa)
Case West ern at John Carroll

Walsh at Dyke

Thursday
Mmnesota at Ohlo St
Youngstown St at Cleveland

St

Tn State ( lndl at Defiance
M1d Oh1o Tourney
Fnday
Dyke at Wilberforce

'
''
"&gt;
•
"•

Umted Pre8 s International Mtke Wohlheter
John Phtlltps paced the
The Otterbem Cardinals
got revenge Tuesday mght, Cardinals now l&lt;Hl w1lh 19
p omts whil e Wohlheter
hut 11 dtdn t come easy
The Cardmals out.scored Brough and Wt!ltarns chipped
Ohto Wesleyan 7-4 m a second m wtth 12 ma rkers ap1ece
The Btshops now 15 II got
overttme penod at Rtke
Center on the Otterbem 20 pomts from Mtke McCo)
campus to hand the Btshops a and 19 from M1ke KmnaJrd
In other OAC playoff actton
7f&gt;.72 setback and elunlnate
OWU from the Ohto Allllettc Tuesday mght Baldwm
Conference playoffs
Wallace bested Kenyon 68~1
Just 10 days before the Capttal blasted Deruson 100same Btshops soundly 63 Hetdclberg whtpped Ohto
whipped the Cardinals 101
Nor1hern 75~9 Mount Umon
downed Oberlin 91-69 and
67
There wasn t a 34iJOml Mlllikmgum edged Manetta
difference
tonight
73 70
exclauned Otterbem Coach
Muskmgum s Dave Snut.h
Dtck Reynolds
scm ed 29 pomts to lead the
The Cardmals ahead 31 28 Ftghtmg Muskies to a victory
at halftune held a 61.,j0 over Manetta
advantage w1th 6 43 to go m
Muskmgum threatened to
the contest but the Btshops run awaJ with the wm m the
battled back to knot the score ftrst half leadmg by as much
a t 62~2 at the end of as 14 pomts The Ptoneers
regulation
time
a fte r a ttempte d a second half
Otterbem
regulars
Ed comeback but the closest
Williams and Don Brough they got was wtthm two
fouled out
pomts 45-43 wtth 10 51 left m
I thought lllat when Ed the game
and Don went out we wouldn t
Pete Ltptra p contnbuted t6
have the phystcal strength to PQmts for the Musk1es now
play wtth them (Btshops) but I&gt; 7
Dave Fahrbach Darrell
Mane tta 101 3 "as paced
Mtller and Greg Btffle turned by Mttch Mtracle wtth 26
m some clutch play for us
pmnts and Phll Marcan tomo
satd Reynolds And so dtd Wllh 16

••
• '
•

•

'•
••••
•
••

'•,

Extra spec1al used car bargams Check th1s
space every Wednesday for otfr Mtd Week 2
Car Spec1afs

'75 BUICK REGAL
Local car 2 door

Was
13595
SPECIAL

'73 BUICK CENTURY WX
2 dr air vlnyl1op
Low mileage

Wasl2495

SPECIAL

$3150
$2150

We are The Fnendly Dealer We can save
you money See or call one of these Fnendly
Salesmen J D Story, Ray Douglas or Btl!
Nelson

JUmpe r '' 1th 4 17 It'll
I.anh 1m put (. l ll!J)( h~ back
un !up 49 :48 "tlh 1 :shurt
JUillptt at the 1 17 nMrk
Sp lllldmg w untc1 cd "tth a
11 n~ JU!Ilptr fr 111 llll t1 rnu
12 H I bd re Jdf Bt O\\Il
&lt;'a lm l) :sa nk I\\ d lilrlt\
t sses I I JG I t ~ t \l loA liS l
51 50 udv lllla gr
Aftu the P Inters foiled I~
S&lt;: t l t.' JdfB1 \\rtpl ('k L'&lt;l t H ~

At ltffm Chm Rett bert
scored 20 poml s a nd pu lled

dfl\\ n 23 rebowu1!:i to lead
Heidelberg to 1ts Vltt( ry O\e l
Oluo Northern

Hetdclberg which Hiso gnl
19 po1nts
from Scott
Patte1 son and 16 from Jnn
Rmc)mrt ca me lk•ck ft um a
45 37 halfhme &lt;leficll to g1ab
the lc ~u.l for good 65 63 un a
Re1chert I 10k shot w1lh 4 27
left
OhiO Nnrtlu 11 was paced

b) Ken t Ra ket "ho scm ed 18
J&gt;O mt s wl1lc R1 1d l .ongberry
addetJ 14 n d P;~t Koster and

Geflge lhwman ch pped

1n

10 apiece
Host Mou nt Umon got
double flgw-e scormg from
f1ve pia) ers as 1t ea~t ly
defeated Oberhn
Mount Umon now 15 10

was paced by

D~ne

Stat p1tt1

"'th 19 Art Kunkle 17 Ed
Poh jala 16 1uu Cope 12 and
Dave l'urax 10
Reggte Hattls scored 16
pomts tQ pace Oberlin whtch
bowed out of tow ney a chon
\.\lth a 10-15 season slate

At Berea Jerry Prestler
SCOt ed 22 potnts and Btl!
Mm row ch1ppeclm w1th 18 to
p I CC Ba ldwin W~:~lla ce to
victory over Kenyon

Umted Press International
Coach Eddte Sutton s
fourthranked Arkansas
Razorbacks have hved up to
his expectations so far - but

of the week

Justice to play
in all star tilt
Rex Just1ce a 6 0 172
pound semor at North Galha
Htgh School has been selected
to play m the North.SOuth
game to be held at Canton 1n
August.
The Ptrate taUback led the
SV AC m rushing last season
with 1165 yards and was
named All SVAC Justice Is a
four year letterman and th1s
year he was selected to the
All Southeast Ohio Dtstrtct
Class A team and the first
team All-Ohto by UP! Only
33 players from all of South
ern Ohio are plck~d for the
South squad tncludtng A AA
and AAA Justice wtll be used
as a defens1ve back

he JUSt didn t figure on those
pesky Texas Longhorns
At the begmmng of the
year I would ha\ e sold o ut
lor 14 2 (which was the record
the
Razorbac ks
and
Longhorns
posted
m
Southwest , Con fer e nce
play) satdSutton I d have
thought that would be good
enough to wm the leag ue But
Texas has dodged the bullet
two or three hmes and
they re m there w1th us
Arkansas forward Marvm
Delph scored 16 potnl• to pace
llle Razorbacks to a &gt;841

b1g

It

b und ({ 1 lin t.tll tns

l11t Bllll D t \ l b Wt; J I II III
lhtn [o m -« tlllli S ffu 1 ~t
With '17 stu rds ldt 1 f
( U l b I till'cl H JlllliJl bIll ( fl\ (
st " ml 1ul l 1 bd \nt n Jnmn~
md DenniS P1ah:l
II Ill ~ tl tlh hp lht
I\ 11 It r ~ \H I I k ~ d the ball up
UHII1 With 10 Sl ( nds It rt
Jl tt ls

D 1 If'

t ltl\\dl
lht Vo: s t
V\1 ~ 1111\ U lll\l'I SJI\ b ! UIItl

f !bu ll plt}tr

Su l Cd the

g;_t l\ (' S

~ I 1!

\\ llllllll g

II

( AilS

tlled tunc wJt h
llld S left Whlll pll)

('t g ht SIX
H SIUilld

( liJM

n

UJ)

tUilC

I Jeff I.Ji t hill I took a 2.'i
f ul JUil J)t 1 \\ll h f\ t11 suo nds

Jd t ( 11mdllt: 1pcd tugh 1111
1he 111 a nd bl 1t ked till sh rl
pr t: su \ 1ng llu Pt mte1 lt nl
Htd a bc1th Ill ttH t:l ass A.A.
Slt II II l J-1 11 ti s
1g 1111 ~ 1
II l ii t 1\ ul lht s tpc tkc
( lhpi lts IJ " {d uut t I
lif t Ill \\Ill
1 l I01n t I ltu: HI IJt vil s

I Hill ll Cll l I I I IJH

IHl\C one lt' gll l lr SCIS\l l
111 k l q
~ 11 t
left "Ill
!\t hen ~

S ut h P 1111 111 '' 14 a "til
l tkt II ( t l!S I(JC ke t 7 II}
p1 It Id ly f 1 tlr su!Hntl

t1th

nd

1

l11p It the All ens

Dl sl ll l'l
lh e P111lh Ct S
lo\\ l t I Htt.:k l h ll {!lJ6 t1
/.: I
f&lt; t lllt y S fill J! S g \lll!-t
( 1 1t

h I c \\ I s D Aut

111 1 f111 c

(at Chillicothe)

TuesdiiY s

Boys Ohto Htgh
SchooiBasketbtttl
Utufed Press 1111er nat•onal
Tournament Resulrs
Class AAA
(at Columbu s 1
Col M nr o• F rcmkl n 49 Col
Norl h 45 (ot l
Cat Ashland)
Sanduslo. y Per kins 5'1 M:lns
t e l d Sr 50 (o t )
(at Eastlake North)
Wes t Ceau ga l O Eucl d 6 1
(a t Ashland)
Sa ndusk y 7J Cal on 69

( a t Oxford
Mt He cllth )' 85 Lemon M o 1roe

69

M ddl fJ iow n 65 Cm Fores t
l='&lt;l rk 6J
( at (lncnmafl)
Ct 1 I &lt;l Sall f' 51 C n Hught's ,!,4

loll

Cm El der 57 Cu Atk cn SJ
Cm St X .:t v1~er .'l4 C 1 Moe It~ •
48

I

&lt;.:

dwrliCr 88 St Ma r ys 70

Col

ROCK HILL (56) -

c
Car ter

Rob nson
S 11ms 1 0 2 Wagner 0 1 I
Zorne s 2 59 TOTALS 20 16
56

CHESAPEAKE
El 3 19

H II

45

SPtnccrvtlle 89 Alltm East
tat St Marys )
Park wd)' 12 51 Her ry 62

~
11 4 26

1691

McWhort e r 2 0 4 Shope 2 6

69

Loca l 47 Mcndor

Mario 1

U1 on J5

(at Bryan)
Stryk er 58 H il ltop 5J
Nor t h CC&gt;l lra l 49 Fa ye tt e 39
(at Pa t rick Henry
O lt ilw ' H lis 51 T inora 55 l o l l
Hlclo. sv II£ 78 L be y Cen te•
49
(el f VLin Wcrl)
OelpllO~ J1 J I ~.; '&gt;Of 88 Ohio
L ' co lnv

t

w 38

{Ci t Ottawa )

Co un1bu'i Cro.vc ol Lcl p s c 57
K II

d~

61

9} M Iter ( 1ty 62

an Ald er 71 Gra nd v cw

Joni'l tl

55

(i\ f Wes tla nd)
Co l Hart e y 64 F fl irt e td
Un on 36
Col lndepende 1cc 64 L o q~ •
Elm 53
(ilf Newark)
B g Walnut 7'1 Ri ver Va llc::y 65
l c~ 1 ng Va ley 1 4 H gt iH d 56

(a t Memo 1)
Wr~11cr son

Col

57

Mar 0 1

Plea sCI 11 :, 1

M or on EI Q , 65 Joh• s tow 58
lilt Urbana)
Urbana
46
Sp rl n g tt e ld
Shaw 1ce tO

Spn ng t e ld

( 1'1 11

'b7

N orl l

w es tern 47

Della 90 Wau seo 1

7'12 Pet per year on a
4 year cerlthcate of
depo s1t
$S 000 00

depo stt
A

subs1anhal penalty

is

lnvok!MI on a ll certificate
accounts withdrawn pnor
to th e date of matur1ty

70

F us t o n?~ 17 Lr~k o ta l 1

(a t Sandusky )

so 10 Clyde 67
(el l Ironton)

Ct es t~pea k c 69 Roc k H II 56
Sou th Po in t 5? Gil ll po l s 51

The Athens County
Sav 1ng s &amp; Loan Co
196 Second St
Pomeroy OhiO

Cla ss A

Or rck
7 2 16
1 2 4 Scott 4 &lt;1 12

Boster

latl•ma)
Ada 86 Waynes f eld Goshen

I at Grove C1ty)
Mol awJ.- 62 Bloo n Ccu roll

lJ1CI S Wl/lnlllg b4 :-,7

5'1 11

(at Bellefontame)
Trtd d 60 Spr Sou theastern 59
Ji'lck son (~e n ter 48 Hous ton 47

Cltu rsv li e 63 i lc ub~en v li e
Ct! lrd l SO
Jeltc !'&gt;0 1 U 11 0 1 62 T or01 to 5 6

Ed

s~.: m

(ol l

I a t Steubenvtltel

St

1ds Ju
ll gl llll SC. IMI
the tW (
lea n :-; s pltt With South Pu111t
n top b4-56 u1d th e Pdn

I uc:-;day s box

Zane

(a t A shla 1d l
Ont..=tr o 61 Bucyru s 53

( tit Napo leo, 1
Otta wa Gla ldort 54 B YCl , 6

wllhulen l lc ll l0 2tc&lt;.:

-59

(at Mt Vernon)
M orr d ll R tdgedalt' 103 EL'Is l
K l OX 6..J
M.a r on Ca th 56 C.v d lngton 53

Ottovllll' 91

L n n Ba ll 68 Dul phus St
John 66 (o l)
Co

~ lag e t

Cl It co l he
Trd Cf' 51

c tv 5 1

Class AA

(at luna)

I I Irk I I !I C VCU I
B th ( lu s t pc ~kl tnd S 111th
I' tn1 sh 11 cd lht 1un 78 Oh1,
V til e\ ~ 111f CI C ICC Cl\ 'W I!

HI 2

T 1111

CP. l irfll

(.11 Bucyru s)
Cc. lverl 60 At c kcy t.:

41
70 Cr cstl r c 57
(&lt;J I Bnll1an t&gt;
M ng o 15 Sp r ng l eld S3
( ilt Groveport)
Cot R1 r1dy 78 Co l Ac adt:! T y 49
Col Wehr It= 6 t l a 1 ca~ l e r
F tsl t.! r 47
tu c r~ ~

-___ . _

10 Fu ll en 4 0 6 D Anton 0 7

2 TOTALS 7.71569
Score by quarters
&lt;1 12 13 17 56
Ct es apeake 11 16 18 8 69

Rock H1 ll

GALLIPOLIS (5 11
17 Lanham 3 2 8

II

r

PRE-SEASON SALE .

LAWN BOY &amp; BOLENS

Harri s 3 0 6 Slerrelt 0 0 0
Arms trong 0 2 2 C arke 0 2

\ 'Mowers and T11lers
Both New &amp; Used

2 Da dey 0 0 0 TOTALS 9 13
51
SO UTH POINT (52) -

Springs tust arovnd the
cor ner now 1s the

Abets 0 0 0

Wa ll

6 4 16

Conwe ll 3 I 7

Praler: 0 2 2
Howa rd 4 0 8 Adk ns J 0 6
W I ams .:1 0 8 Spau ld ng 6 0
12 Dav s 3 3 9 TOTALS 23 6

noatmg mto the [mals And
we only have to bea t one
team
Te xa s earned a fmals
berth because 11 had a bettet
re co rd a ga m s t thtrd place
Houston than dtd Arkansas
F lo nda State defeate d
Georgta t ech 78-72 Rhode
Isla nd upset Providence 7364 and Notre Dame beat
North Carolma State 7(1.59 m
other games mvolvmg top 20

Tournament Results

umh 1h tnclr d lt\ LIJ)

Brown 7 3

Rawrhacks get share
of title after victory

COLUMBUS Ohto (UP!) Gary
Green of Eastern
(W Va)
Mtchtgan has been voted the
Oh1o Conference
Tourney Quarterfinals
M1d Amencan Conference
Saturday
basketball player of the
Northwes tern at Oh1o St
week
Bowlmg Green at Oh10 Un1v
Green a 6-5 21t).pound
M1am at Eastern M1ch
Kent St at Nort hern lilt nos JUmor from Detrott Central
Ball St at Toledo
Htgh School led the Hurons
Loyola !Ill) at Dayton
to a patr of vtctortes last
Detro t at Xavter
week scormg 45 pomts and
Purdue lndta n apol s at
Ashland
ptcking off 24 rebounds m
Pont Park (Pa) at Wr ght St wms over Ball State and Kent
Westm "'Sler (Pa) at Youngs
State
town St
Agamst Kent State Green
John Carroll at Allegheny
Case West ern at W &amp; J (Pal
hit 11 of 17 from the fteld
Th el (Pal a1 Hiram
scormg 28 pomts
and
Def a nee at Hanover (In d)
grabbmg
18
rebounds
F ndlay al Man cheste ~ (lndl
Earlier m the week he had 17
Wilberforce at R o Grande
Ohlo Conference Tourney
pomts and stx rebounds
(Semlf nalsl
M 1 d Oh o
Conference agamst Ball State
Other nommees for Uus
Tourney
week's honor were Jeff Tropf
Sunday
C nc nnat at Duquesne
of Central Mtchtgan Ttm
Joyce of Ohto Umverstty
Robert Suns of Ball State
Ron Hammye of Bowlmg
Green Tom Dunn of Mtamt
John Harns of Northern
lllmots Ttm Selgo of Toledo
and Rod Corry of Western
Mtchtgan
500 E. MAIN

MIDWEEK SPECIALS!

Suuth P mt t une st 11 llllflJ..\
bol t k l tl I th a 411-17 Icu d 111
lilll S)Xt U I CIJ r\~ ~ I IUIII&lt;JII lllld

OWU eliminated from
title picture, 75-72

Steubenvtlle at West L1berty

POMEROY, OHIO
PHONE 992-2174

1

or

SMITH
NELSON MOTORS

••

lads cam(' b tck t

knot the
count at 6-all C.AHS 11pped
Tuesday mght as aggressiVe orr eight straight pouts fur a
So uth Point came from 16 8 tdvant.tge
b1ggpst
behtnd to hand the Blue (_a lim lc 1d of the mghl With
Devtls a 52 51 Class AA 1 59 left 111 the first stanza
C.AHS led 16 12 alter the
SectiOnal Tournament defeat
m the fruntun Spurts Arena
first wh1 st le st p The Blue
Coach J erry Snuth s lads Dev1ls " c1e 1111 top 33 30
pulled down 41 caroms to dunn,.; thc halftune 1r1
and
45 39
Gallta s 23 and that " as th e tern11 ss wn
b1g difference 111 the fma l ft llow1n~ th1 ec J)enuds
outcome of the contest
Jef£ La nham ~ cha rll ~ t lSs
After falhng behtnd 4.0 at the 7 58 mark put the
dunng the first mmute
Ga lhans a l1cacl 46 39 111 th e
play Coach J1111 Osborne s fma l pC' fl t d

Green player

Hypo

c ustomed prot ecttt n r 1 thern11a IS the lm~,ermg
benefit s only poses a tem of the temperature of the
porary mco nvemence In an body s mner co re Tius 1s not
unfam tltar or hostil e en frcezmg and certam con
v1ronment the loss of any of d1tlons can occur at any
these comforts ca n QUickly termperaturc l}e]ow 50
become a matter of hfe and degrees F What are the

whtch we sho uld all be aware
You must hrst reahze you

Mount Un on 91

258
214
218
195

Tuesday s Results

persptratwn

61
Cap1ta1 100 Oen1son 63
He del berg 75 Oh o Northern
69

Fl nl
27 22 s 59
Pt Huron 24 22 10 SB
Kalama 21 23 12 54
Musk
19 28 9 47

No

mcreases the chtllmg effect
of coldness and wetness

Tuesday s Oh1o College
Basketball Result$
Un1ted Press International
8aldwm Wallace 68 Ken yon

W L T Pis GF GA
Sagmaw 30 19 8 68 264 2Q2

18 28 8 44 191 226

HER terms - may be a must

With a 66 57 wm over
Wahama Monday mght All
SEOAI Kenny Young wtll
be one of the hurdles the
tluckeyes "111 have to jump 1f
t hey re to "tn as the Metgs
se nior IS averagmg 16 5
pomts a game
Coach Logan wtll probably
start three other semors
Brent
Stanley
Chu ck
Follrod and Ttm Coats The
other starli ng berth will
probably be ftlled by JUIIIor

North

Grand Rap ds

for survtval
Here are so me pomts of

have been steadlly tm
provmg They warmed up

International
Hockey League
Umted Press International

Mtlwau

The Buckeyes lack overall
hetght but have QUickness
that compensates They
usually play a I 3 I defense
but JUS\ mtght go to a box

1973 74 75 a11d 77 Metgs
turned the trtck m 197B
Metgs
flntshed
theu
reg ular season at 3 14 but

NOrfiS DIVision
W L T PIS
f\1\Qnlrea
41
7 9 91
Los Ange es
2J 23 12 58
P ttsburgh
20 23 14 54
Det ro t
22 26 8 52
Wash ngton
ll 37 11 33
Adams D1\! •s on
W L T Pts
Buffalo
JJ 12 13 19
Boston
36 13 7 79
Toron to
30 16 10 10
Cl eveland
19 33 7 45
Tuesday s Resulls
Los Ang 4 Wash ington l
P ttsburgh 5 Sl Lou s 4
Boston 3 Colorado 2
Wednesdly s Games
NY I sl anders at Atlanta
St Lou s at Pittsburgh
NY Rangers at Ch cago
Cleveland at Toronto
Los Ang at Mmnesota
Boston at Van co uver
Thursday s Games
en cago at NY Rangers
Ph ladel ph a a t Buffalo
c eve! and at Nlontreal
Wash nglon at Detro t

South
W L T Pis GF GA
Ft Wayne27 14 13 67 209 198
Toledo
20 22 13 53 219 223

Ron

forward
College Basketball Results

GB

South Point eli~ninates
Gallipolis five, 52-51
lnabtltly to cpntrol the
boards cost Galhpolts dearly

UPl Sporll Editor

Atlant a at San Anton o

Greg Patton at the othet

By Un ted Press International
East
Bsn u 70 N eas tn 67
Bryant 12 Assmpln 69

W L Pet

By MILTON RICHMAN

' 22

7 3U

Vthlon
MEIGS -

Sport Parade

Gl

'19 508 7 1
31 456 10'1'
36 390 U' 1
38 356 16' '
Pac lhc Ot\IISIDn
W L
Pet GB
Por tland
46 10 821
Phoenoc
38 19 667 8 /1
LOS Ang
31 27 534 16
SeaH!e
JO 27 526 16 1
Golden Sf
28 JO 483 19
Tuesdays Resulls
Phoen )( 1u Buffalo I 11
New York
Seattle 120
Ph tadelphla 127 Cleve 114
Houston Il l Boston 96
Los Ang 106 Chicago IO.&lt;t
Prt nd 118 San Anton 114 of
Wednesday s Games
Seattle at New Jersev
PMen )( vs Atlanta
at Charlotte
Portland at Washmgton
Houston at Detrolt
c;:;o den St at New Or lean s
Los Angeles at Kan C ty
lnd ana at Denver
Thursday 1 G1me

had the lead m rebounds "tth
a btg 16 Vaughan a nd Epple
also htt double ftgures wtth 12
a nd 11 respectively Metgs

Box score
MEIGS
Brown 51020
Vaughan 3 1 7 Burde tte 3 7
Eppre 4 4 12 Howard o J 3 S
A sh 0 I I
Lightfoot 1 1
Totals 16 21 53
VINTON
Partee 2 1 5
Vtkmg htt for double figures
ns 4 2 10 Doddr II 3 0 6
!'ha t was Mulhns wtth ten Mull
Eber ts 2 0 ~ Ogter 1 0 2 Scotl
point s The hosts htt JUSt 4 of 3 I 7 Total 15 4 34
15 foul shots and wer e even M e tg s
14 25 J9 53

Pet

Today's

JQ
26
23
21

M lw
Detro1t
Kan c t v
tnd ana

Toumament Game tune

next game 1s Thursday mght

W L

37 21 638

Denver

en cago

sco rmg w1th 14 markers and

at Galltpo!ts

ftct Cll
719
511 11•1

San Anton
35 22 614
wash
'29 21 518 5' 1
Clevelnd
29 29 500 6''1
Atlanta
26 11 456 9
New Or Ins
26 32 4ol8 91 J
Houston
23 15 397 12 1
Western Conferenc:t
MtdWest OIViSIOft

s 10 2 2 4 12

Marauder gals
top Vinton five

W L
41 16
30 28

Ph1la
NewYork
Boston
20 JA 370 It 1
sutta lo
19 15 352 20 1 1
New Jrsev
lJ A5 224 18 '
Centr1l DrYJSton

from the floor ( 25 of 70) and an Zuspan
I~ 0-1 0 2
even 50 percent from the roul Bam1tz
25~9 lf&gt;.21 15 6.1
then sank suc ces~nve buckets line 1 he Yellow Jackets TOTAI.'l
to put Wahuma out m fron t for grabbed 36 rebouads CQm
good
mttted 12 miscues and had SPENCERf57)
Taylor
9 18 I 2 2 19
In the mlllal pertod the nme steals
:HI 0-1 3 10
Whtte Falcons rac•d to an
lndtv tdually each team Cra tg
2 14 610 4 10
early 11 2 lead and w.1s out m placed three men m double Stagg
4~ 1).&lt;) 4 8
front by stx after one quarter ftgures wtlh Spencer s Mark Houston
4 19 1).&lt;) t 8
17 II
Taylor topping all SCQrers Boggs
12M2 2
Spenc er stonned back In the 19 markers./ Nonnan Craig Barker
0 I 0-1 I 0
second canto behmd Mark and Ron St&lt;jgg popped m 10 P1ckens
2f&gt;.70 7 14 17 57
Taylor to knot the score at 23 pomts each to comp lete the TOTAl
23 After excha nging buckets scoring for the visttors
the Bend Area team opened
Wahama got 13 pomts each Score by Quarters
17 21 8 I~
up a 36-30 advantage just from Rick Barnttz and Rtck Wahama
11 22 10 14-57
before mtennJsston Spencer Bunard wh1le Greg Blesstng Spencer
htt three of four free throws htl for 12
before the ha lf ended to make
In the rebounding depart Offtctals Ray Redman and
tt 36-33
ment Charley Zuspan and Burton Hickman
Greg Blessing were tops for
RESERVE GAME
In a low sco rtng thtrd Wahama w1th 13 and 12
WAHAMA (81 )
stanza the Yellow Jackets respectively whtle Spencers
Rtchards 13 3 20 Roush 7~
outscored Wahama 10~ to cut Taylor notched 12
20 Smith 5 2 12 Sayre 2 2~
the lead down to three at 46-43
Wahama al•o took t he jumor
Russell 2 Hi Rawlln~s 0-3-3
gomg mto the fmal etght varstty contest with an easy
Weaver II 3 Stanley 11-3
minutes but the Whtte 81~1 victory to up thetr season
Dtngey 0-IJ.&lt;I Arnold 0-IJ.&lt;I
Falcons h1t on 7 of 12 shots and record to 10-4
Totals 31 19~1
added five of SIX chartty tosses
Gary Richards Tun Roush
SPENCER (61)
m the fourth quarter to cap-; and ~' red Smtih paced the
Mcintyre 6-4 16 Fisher 4-4
local attack wtth 29 20 and 12
lure the vtctory
12 Burdette 4-0-8 Hunt 3~
Tea m statistics show the pomts respectively
Mtller 2 I 5 Moore 2 1 S
Whtte Falcons htttlng on 25 of
J1m Mcintyre and Roland
Pinson 2.{).4 Boggs 0 I 3 Rtce
69 field goal lrtes for 38 per Ftsher netted 16 and 12 pomts
II 3 Drake 90-1 I Mabes 0 I
cent At the free throw hne to lead the Yellow Jackets
I Kelly 0-IJ.&lt;I Total 24-IUI
the locals shot 71 percent on 15 WAHAMA (6.1)
Score by Quarters
of 21 attempts As a team the
FG FT PF TP
Wahama
14 29 24 1~1
Bend Area cagers collected 49 Barmtz
4115~213
Spencer
4 17 16 2HI
rebound s
committed 19 Buzzard
5 15 3-4 313
With 6 25 left to play Kelvin
Honaker and Cha rley Zuspan

Den Talk

IS

NBA StlndiiiiS

BV Un1ttd Prus 1nternltionll
eastern Confe-renu
Atl1ntlc Dlv•!uon

52

Score by quarters

Gal l po l s
Soulh Poml

16 17
12 18

2 6....- 5
9 13 52

time to
mowers
repa1red

have tho se
and tiller s

WILKINSON SMALl ENGINE SALES &amp; SERVICE
~98 Locust St
Middleport. 0 j

ACE

teams

HARDWARE

v1ctory ove1 Tex:as rech
Tuesday rught gtvmg them a
share of the SWC champion
shtp
If we had to fhp a com
nght now we would wm
sa td Texas Coac h Abe
Lemons after the Longhorns
defeated Southern Methodist
82 74
I thtnk we have a
guardian angel Thts has
been our lucky year
The Longhorns expected to
ftmsh tn the second diVISIOn of
the SWC thts season won
thetr 22nd game Tuesday
rught won a share of the

conference

champwnsh1p

and earned a dtrect trtp ID the
fmals of ihe conference s
post season
tournament
which gels under way next
Saturday at four sties
It was n t exactly a
claSSIC but t! got the jOb

done ' s a1d Lemons whose
team came back from an
early s1x-po ml deficit on the
30-pomt performance of Ron
Baxter
I don I lllmk any of us
reahzed how btg tllts game
was satd Lemoos

But here we are

-

!\
11

1 .,

tu r''

1 wtll

II 111 lllardwFH• M

&amp;l'J\IWL
• Ftshtng Tackle
and Rods
and Reels
• Guns and
Reloadtng
• Ball Gloves
Camptng
Equ1pment
e Archery
• Indoor Games
• We
have Gtft
Cerhltcates

50-ft. Powr-Center

EXTENSION

CORD

for

562 )
( 31478

601 Mam St
Pt Pleasant W Va

VIS.II
Ac ros s from Courthou se

use w1lh

PHONE
675 2988

TOOLS
APP LIAN CES
ELECTRIC MOTOR S

Open Sunday 1 p m 6p m
Monday thru Saturday
9amto8pm

..........,,,,,.....__,

•

• Bnght o range
for htgh
VISJbJ!Jty
• 3wtre
grounded
• 3 grounded
Powr Center
ou tlets

Ace Reg

$924

HANDY, SAFE,
EASY TO STORE

MEIGS P

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

"OTICE NEW HOURS
Due To The Coal Shortage Open Mon. thru Sat 9 ttl 6 Closed :~unoays
•

I

f

�.

Heart Fund Drive
slated for Sunday
The 1978 Heart Fund Drive -recognition of that Walter
•md the hea rt Sunday doo r-t&lt;&gt;- Cruescr, president of the
door ca nvas in Midlllepurt Meigs Cou nty Heart A.ssul'ia werediscussetl at the MomJ.ay liun presented the ch.1b with a
mght meeting of the Mid· plaque of appreciation . He
&lt;tieport Business and Profes· also spoke to the group on
sional Women 's Club held at where the money donated
goes and cncouragL'il CPR
the Columbia Gas Co. office.
M1·s. Grace Pratt, the tr&lt;.~ining a~ a me&lt;:~ns or saving
lives.
t'lub'~ L'IVk pa rtidpation
t.:hairmdn , will have c harge

Speakers for the mct:ting

of Sunday 's .solidtatiun in the
vi llage.' The dub for many

were Dr. Nan Mykel of the
Meigs Mental Health Center
and Mrs. Peg Thomas, direc-

yck! rs has handle...'() the door~
lo·door canvas and in

tor of career development in

MID-WINTER

Westinghouse
Heavy Duty 18 Lb. Capacity
Agitator washer with
Knit Fabric Cycle
Model LA49

Jig 18-lb . capacity

o Heavy Dut; Sp iral Ramp
Agitator- for big wash

selections

0 Five·position water saver
· with '' Re-select" setting

o

Eq md Rights Amendment.

Mr::; . AlwHdCJ Wern er
prcsi dtcl at the meet ing tlur·
!ng whil:h time J\lilns were
discu::;scd for a spri n~ baz(jar
on May 14. Dun11a Davidson i;s
chail'man . Handmade itetns
and ba ked ~oods will be
fcatu n..'tl
. .
A report w&lt;Js givcu un the
rct:cllt dislri{t president:;
meeting attcntled by Mrs.
Marjorie Wal burn. The Inter·
nationa l Weekend tu be held
Feb. 24·::Win Ontario, Ca nada
.was noted along with the
state t.:llllVI,Intion to be held
May 11, 1:1 and 14 at llle Nei l
Hou se in Colmnbus. Mrs.
Dollie Hayc:; was sec ret&lt;.~ry
pro tem in the absence uf
M1·s. Dorthea SiJ, Iscr who w.:1s
ill.

'At the April meeting the
tOf&gt;il' will be · llll!lHlJer::;hip
Willi llio Ohio llPW third vic·e
pre~i llcnl and the district
lti rcd or to IJe preseut. The

0 Knit Iabrie cycle
0 Three agitation/spin speed

0

the Counseling Center Hl Rjo

Gr&lt;Jndc Ct!llcgc. Mr s .
Thum&lt;Js is al!-iu -the regional
rupr csc nte~tlv c uf Jntcrna·
tiuna l Wumcn ':s Year. Their
topic was ' ' Women Helping
Women ." Dr. Mykcl talked
Hbout womt~n support groups
am.l how women can helP
CC:Jch other wW1 their pnr
blcms. Mr::;. Thoma:s spoke
ul&gt;uut ca reer related pr~
blcms Hnd the role of the

r~purted

loads

Five-position water

Federution t~nd Fou ndeiliun

SPECIAL

temperature controlincludi ng 3 Perman en t

t·mrunitlcc with Mrs. David·

WASHER-DRYER

Press settings
Bleach dispenser

$489~~1R

o Double-Action washing

0 Porce lain enamel top and
lid .
.

sun and Mrs. Jea n Moure will
pre~ent the M&lt;:~r&lt;.:h 20 program .

0 Lint filt er and recircula tion
system

0 Lock 'n Spin'" Safety Lid

0 Fabric softener dispe11ser
(optiOna l accessory)
0 Backed by Nationw ide
· Sure Service

You can be sure 1f1' S We;1mRhouse

::~

.

Cheshire Garden Club
I survey bold eagle data

Ill

Us •..

By Helen Hottel

TIJE READERS ALWAYS WRITE
DEAR HELEN :
The Cheshire Garden CJ ub
You asked where the tenn " Big Apple " came from . Here's · held ils February meeting at
my version :
the home of Mrs. William
In the late 30s a dan&lt;-e craze emanated from New York. Call· &amp;ott.
ed the "Big Apple," it was to the 30s what the Charleston was
Mrs . Scott, president,
to the 20s ... the forerunner of the jitterbug and Undy Hop.
ca lled meeting to order with
Vaudeville had peaked and was beginning its decline. The eight members attending.
goal of every vaudevillian was New York City and the Palace
Mrs . Phyllis Hawley had
Theater. Hence the expression for the big time was to play Meditations and closed with
"The Big Apple." ll was not generally used as a reference to prayer entitled "For Those
the city (exeept by show people) until well after World War ll. Who Live Alone."
Then sports;mnouncers and writers began referring to N.Y.C.
Roll call was answered
as the Big Apple.
with patriotic quotations.
Before O'Malley moved the Dodgers to Los Angeles, N.Y.C.
secretary 's report was
was considered lhe pinnacle of the sports world. Consider if read by Mrs. Edward
you will , the Yankees , Dodgers, Giants, Rangers, Knieker· Preston. Treasurer's report
backers, and Madison Square Garden . Thus when a player was given by Mrs. Paul
made it to one of these teams or a fighter got to lhe Garden, he Martin, both were read and
was considered tops ·sportswriters said he'd reached the Big approved.
Apple.
Mrs. Preston conducteQ the
Now the phrase is part of our language.· WILLIAM MC M.
evening's
program on
DEAR HELEN:
" Tradltions and Vision .' '
.I'm surprised that you sided with the Grandfather who Topics used were " Birds of
wanted to hold his grandchild, and the mother accused him of ~'r ee dom " the Bald eagle our
spoiling the baby. You wrote, "Pick up your baby before he National symbol. Native to
cries and do it often."
NortO America, it has been
I'd be a· nervous and exhausted mother if I picked up my the symbol of courage and
babies each time I thought they were going to cry. A child freedom . Mrs. Preston ex·
should cry out some of his or her problems. It's unhealthy not plained their nesting habits of
to allow this .
usually occ upying the same
A grandparent must respect parent's authority and nest. One nest was occupied
discipline . If there's disagreement, it should be settled with by the same pair of Eagles
talk.
for 35 years and was
Our children will play·us against their grandparents, and if it measured and found to be 12
isn't established who is the final boss, conflict develops.
reel tall and 81)-l feet in
Yes, parents and relatives may hold the baby, but there are
times when they shouldn 't. ·ANOTHER MOTHER
DEAR MOTHER:
You read me wrong : I didn't mean to anticipate a cry with a
pick-up, but to cuddle your baby when he's happy and content
just because you love him.
·
•
Yes, parents must have final say, but grandparents need ac·
ceptance too. The mother in question seemed to be closing her
father-in-law out.· H.
WEDNESEAY
•
POMEROY
MID·
DEAR HELEN:
DLEPORT Lions Club,
I vote for Jetting Grandpa help with uttle Jimmy. It won't Wednesday noon at the Meigs
hurt the baby at all to be rocked and cuddled. All four of mine Inn, All Lions urged to attend.
were, and we raised no problem children.
AMERICAN
LEGION,
As a !().time grandma, and eight-time great-grand, I know Feeney-Bennett Post 128, will
that children who are loved all,d talked-to are much smarter meet at 7:30p.m. Wednesday
than those left in a room to cry for long periods, or in their beds at lhe Middleport Le.glon ha!l.
too much. - GRANDMA MARY
POMEROY
MID·
DEAR HELEN :
DLEPORT Lions Club,
Hurrah for your answer to " Mpther Knows Best" who was Wednesday noon at the Meigs
afraid Grandpa would spoil her baby. l'm raising my daughter Inn .
by the means you advocate - much love and cuddling. She's
AMERICAN LEGION Aux·
alert, responsive and happy : she knows how much we love ner .
iliary,
Feeney-Bennett Post
MKB should remember something spoils when it is left on the
128, will meet at 7:30 p.m.
shelf and forgotten. - MICHELE
Wednesday at the hall.

is· a 1976 ·graduate of

Southern High

Sch~ol .

NEWSPAPER
CARRIERS
WANTED
FOR MASON, W. VA. AREA

PHONE
992-2156

THE DAILY SENTINEL
BETWEEN
8 AM TIL 5 PM

Earl Scruggs Revue to
play at OU Auditorium
The Earl Scrubbs Revue tention for his b~njo playing
wlil make a slop in Athens on in the theme music for "The
Saturday, March 4, to be Beverly Hillbillies ," a
featured in an 8 p.m . concert popular CBS television show
in
Ohio
University's which ran for eight years.
Regional folk favorite, Alex
Memorial Auditorium.
Leading the band is Earl Bevan, is the concert's
Scruggs, one of the most special guest.
Tickets for the show are
high ly-acclaimed banjo
$3.50
and $4.50, and are
players in the world. Perhaps
available
in Athen s al
the most famous of Scruggs'
Memorial
Auditorium
from 1·
recordings
is
" Foggy
4
p.m.
daily,
Mounta
in
Mountain Breakdown," the
·
Leather
and
General
Store
inStrlJlTlental which served as
the basis for the score to the and Casa Que Pasa.
movie "Bonnie and Clyde.n
Scruggs also gained at·

a stor.m .

CLOSED
NDA

FRESH RIPE

TOMATOES

lb. 39~

MAINE

sdlool district, however, still
seems to be administering
the tests.
DEAR DR. BLAKER - My
If so, I would advise you to
son wants to know his IQ. He wke advanwge of the ophas asked me about it ever portunity to see your son's
since some of his friends' score.
parents took advantage of a
1 hope you will not take it
new law permitting access to too seriously, It would be apchildren's school records, · propriate, though, to look at it
They evidently found out as an indication of how weU
the IQ scores of their children he would have done in the
and told them. Now my son's school system of the early·
friends tease him, implying I 1900s (when the tests w~re
knov/ hiS score but won't teU swndardized) if he were the
him because it's so low. In child of a white, middle-class
fact, I merely ·refuse to find fam ily.
out his IQ because I don't
If the score means only
believe in intelligence tests. this, you might ask why you
My son's capabilities cannot should bother to find out at
be expressed in a number.
au·~ .
'
Maybe l am overreacting,
As yo ur son continues ln
but I have very deep feelings schoo l, te ache rs and
about this.
counselors may, on the basis
DEAR READER- You are of his IQ score, label him as
not . alone in being unhappy an over· or .under·achicver
with intelligence tests. Fai!h depending· on how the score
in the IQ cult has been differs from the level of l1is
eroding sint.&gt;e the 1960s when classroom work.
the shroud of s~crecy You will be able to fight
necessary to keep any cult such labels more effectivelY,
alive- began to fall away .
if you know their origin.
.
It has never been clear ex·
By the way, if you decide
actly what IQ tests measure. to. find out your son's IQ
Even the definition of in- score, don't feel obliged to in;
telligence is murky.
form l1im. Thatls a separate
Is il tile "ability to judge decision.
well, comprehend well and
Even though you need not
reason well? 11 Is it the "abili· tell him (children have lrou·
ty to carry on abstract think· ble putting it in perspective),
ing?" Or is it a person's ''in· you do owe him an explana·
nate thinking ability'"
. lion of your feelings about U.:
Perhaps a definitiOn jqll;ing· telligence tests. otherwise,
Jy offered at a professional he may begirr io be lieve hi~
psychology meeting comes friends.
closest to the point :
Write to Dr. Blaker in care
"Intelligence is what in· of this newspaper, P.'O. Box
lelligence tests measure."
W!J, Radio City Station, New
Some large cities like Los York, N.Y. 10019. Volwne of
Angeles, Washington and mail prohib it s personal
New York have complelely replies, but questions of
given up intelligence testing general interest wi)l be
for groups of children. Your discussed in future columns.

•

POTATOES
TEMPLE

lo lb.

79e

SLICED ·
.
B~CON ..............

3 for 25~
'

I

BOB WINGE;TT, Syracuse village olflcial and editor
of Ule Point Pleasant Register, talked on community
development. and funding at the Tuesday meeting of the
Meigs County Human Resources Gouncil. He was
introduced by Mrs. Gene Lyons, Council president,
pictured -here with Wingett.

Mrs. Foreman hosts ' ladies
MASON - Mrs. Delwon
Roberts presented the

Allegiance and the Lord's
Prayer.
Mrs .
Lester
homemakers lesson, Foreman, devotional leader,
"Always Attractive in Later presented the 91st Psalm.
Years, when lhe Helping
After lunch the group spent
Hand met on February 15 at the remainder of the day
the home of Mrs. Lester quilting. Atlending were Mrs.
Foreman in Mason.
Delmar Alexander, Mrs.
Mrs.
Earl
Ingels, Delwon Roberts, Mrs. Lester
president, cond ucted the Foreman, Mrs . Addie Brown,
meeting and served as Mrs, Earl Ingels, and a guest,
hostess. The meeting was Mrs. Jane Abbott of
opened with the Pledge of Pomeroy.

that foUr free cervical cancer
clinics for Meigs area women

Monday and Tuesday to Visit

will be held. The dates of lhe
clinics to be held in the af·
lernoons at Heath United
Methodist Church in. Mid·
dleport will be March·!, 15, 22
·and 29. Women wishing to
make appointments for the
free clinics should call 992·
7531, daytime, or 992·5832 in
the evenings or weekends.

numb~'r

~~
..,., IIUII

from the
AMISH COUNTRY

$139

$ .

39
1
'f.·••

.'
.

VALLEY SELL

COTTAGE CHEESE
24 oz .

Crtn.

89e

duumum uf lht.• Cou neil. who
Wi.IS unable tu uttL·ml. The
wurkshup woui(ll&gt;c opcnlu ~II
agl'lll'll'~ 111 Metgs Cu unly ant.!
would be cundutted by ex·
~l'lS Ull the fC.l'CI.S Of Sl'l'UI'illg
projl'l't gra nts. The fcc ill'
proposed was SlO fo r C'uunl'il
mcrnbcn;.
Mrs. Skinner repurtl'll on
ml'ml&gt;urship noting lhHt the
agent')' mcml&gt;er!ihip fcc i:s $15
while the imll vidw:ll mcm Ul'l'·
ship is $5 .
The possibility of Mci~s
County again thts Yl'ar lmv·
in~ &lt;.t he~dth tc;un here
ei~ht
Wt!ek · penud

fur an
Wi.I S

\\'l'rc

uwuaturt•

rlag~

111

dtUl'UIC:Itt' l'U\'t'l't..'tl dk!ITICS.

t\llt!J.ttlin~ bt•sides thus~
munt.'{! wert• VcJ'non Nt•asc.
H"l f'I'OS!i: l.e~fy Chast&lt;•cn,
St'IJJur ('1tizcns ('elltl·r ; Susan
t0 lt•shmLin.
MJtldiL•purt

P om e r oy·

Hobcl't Morris, Me1gs Local
&amp;huuls; Toni Clark, Epilepsy
Association of Southca!;l
Ohiu: Nan Myk~l ~ Men411

llealth Center: Joan S. t 'ulp,
Community At·tion Agcm·y,
;.md Charl ene Huc fhch , 1&gt;&lt;-tily
St•ntmcl.

CHECK WITH US FIRST

l .altrHriot rt ;
Durull~y Will . Hclin•d Senior
Vt•lulllccr: Gl~nna Crisp,

IA'l.lding Cn.'Ck Conservancy
Dtstt·k t : l.t'lctnd 1.. Normun.
Pl'ojcet EmJ&gt;Ioy, Ohio llul'cau
ur Emplu);lnL'III Sci'Vil'l'S:
N;:J ru·y' Ncasl01wy , Ohio
l.&gt;cpartment ur Htmlth ; Sandy
Brown. Head Slal'l i C'a~:ul
Napuru, Hc~td Start ; llelcn
Buil~y. Couununity Ml•nt.al
Health Cenll'l' ; Opa l Gl'ucsel'
and Car)· Aspin. Meigs Coun·

discu.ssc«l l&gt;y Mrs. Eleanor ty lll'i.tllh l&gt;t' flil rlli H'lll ;
Thotn(jS of M ei~s Cuunly
Council on Aging . She said
thal the team wrll consist of
six medical or health cducalion students arri vin~ arwllll
the em.l of ,June. Mrs. Thum~s
The ha1dest part ol 10&amp;11'11 we1gh1 1s
.
gethng starled ~ hlra·Stulogth SUI'UI
said stw is nuw interestet.l m OORiNU will g1ve your w11 1 power lhat
ideas fur possible health or ektra pLJsh It needs. tosrart losmg w~1gh1.
!'elated programs and also in·
Bcg irl with th is ama21ng tiny tllbtct
dividuals to scl·vc on OJ plann· Vou'll eat tess.- ruln tooo and e~ c ess 1m
mto buwl!d ·I,IU energy Instead ol exua 1
ing committee and OJ' as we.g~t as you tollow tt111 Plan
pl'cceptors for lhe students .
Cl1mcally pro'len etlect1ve. the SUPER
A Washington 's birthday DDRt•x Rt&lt;lu cmg Plan wtll enable vOIJ
theme w~s carried out irt Uti' 10 IDse pooncs" anc1 •nches Wllhout
gelling net'IO uS- ol mone~ back You
tal&gt;lc Llt!coratiuns by Mrs. can stalt 1osmg we1ght tDOay w•th new
Margaret E lla Lewi s, Council IU,E~ OD~INU ana see lhe dill~uence in
secretary . Table~ were 'four mirror You owe .1 1 to voursen
cove a·cd in red and placcmats
NELSON ' S DRUG STORE
wen~ blue and white. Favors ~-·-_P_o_m_•_r_o;.
·: ._o_h_lo--....1

-START LOSING

WEIGHT TODAY

j

DO· IT·YDURSELFERS

Dan Morris of the Meigs
Local School District sug·
gesled a subscription to the
Federal Register which con·
tains an outline of grants
available and the procedures
for applying.
Mrs. Gene Lyons presided
over the meeting during
which time the child development program for Meigs
County was discussed by Pat
l..eegan of the Community
Mental Health Center. She
reported that there are no
funds ctvai lai.Jlc now but Umt
the progfarn has first priority
when funds become
available,. Funding, if receiv·
ed, will begin in October, she
reported. Mrs. Leegan noted
that she had talked with Joe
Barsotti of the Gommunity
Action Program and that he
had suggested the Council go
on record in support of the
program and begin gelling
support for it from the community. The Council deferred
action until the n~xt. meeting
when Barsotti will be asked to
discuss the child development p~ogram .
A "grant workshop:• was

AND·SAVE!

STUD
SPECIAL
t~O.

2

PRE-CUT STUDS

PRICES
IN EFFECT

NOW
Pl. PLEASANT

SYRUP
12 oz .

Btl .

59~

Campbell's

Tomato or Mushroom

SOUP

4

No. l $ }

~~ .

Wagon Trail

PANCAKE SYRUP
24 oz.

Bottle

49~

WESSON
OIL
24

oz.

Bottle

99~

Tako lhom Away · At G1oot Sltinp

PAPER

MENS SWEAT SHIRTS
Whllo They Ulfl

$300

P~y/ CoHon

$~

BOYS SWEAT SHIRl$

AIBddln

--

;::, IVItlfKt:t

Carrv-Out

Mrs. Butterworth

REG. 95'

RIIUilf 15.49

Pomeroy, Ohio

lB

BABY BORN - Mr. and
Mrs. Michael Evans,
Portland, are announcing
the birth of their fourth
chtld, Matthew Shane, Jan.
19 at the HOlzer Medical
Center. He weighed eight
pounds, l2 ounces. Other
children of Mr. and Mrs.
Evans are Alicia, 14, Cindy,
12, Ryan, . six. Paternal
grandmother is Mrs. Ber·
nice Evans, Pomeroy, and
the m~ternal grandmother
is Mrs. Ada VanMeter,
Portland.

BOOKS

FROM THE AMISH COUNTRY.
STOP IN AND TRY
SOME TODAY.

of

MATIHEW EVANS

their daughter, Sandy Darst,
and children.
Mrs. Phil Wise of Beverly
ORDER ISSUED
has been here with Rosalie
Village ordinances in
Wise, a surgica l patient at ·
Pomeroy ·provide that dogs
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
be
tied or confined, Mayor
Mr. and Mrs: Charles Mash
spent the weekend in Colum· Cla rence Andrews said
today.
bus visiting relatives.
Owners of dogs in violation.
Mr, and Mrs. Lloyd Wright
of the ordinances will be
are on a two week vacation.
.Afler visiting their daughter, prOsecuted, the mayor
Becky,. and her hUsband in warned . Already a number of
complaint's have
been
Georgia, they plan to go on to
received
on
dogs
running
Florida to visi t relatives.
loose in the to,wn, the mayor
stated.

BACK

•TRAIL BOLOGNA

largest

li&lt;HI , and play~round develupm~nt. Purd~se of l~ pr~
perly when~ the swinuning
pool is located was in 1961 but
il w~~n ' t until several yl'ars
later that the block grant pr&lt;&gt;gram was available tu build
the pool.
The speaker told of inviting
lhe mayors of all the villages
of Meigs County to meet with
him and a representative of
Buckeye Hills to discuss
availability of project funds.
He said &lt;Jl thctt time there
were unly 30 days left in
which to apply for a grant,
and because Syracuse had a
development plan tbey we1·e
able to get funding for the
pool pro jed.
•·
In gelling funding for a prujeet, Wingett stressed the
need for being persistent with
the grant agency . He noted
that in one instance he had
telephoned the agency week·
ly to keep them aware of the
&lt;.'Ommunity's sincerity and
interest in the project
development. ''Officials res·
pond to contacts," th e
speaker said. ·
Getting a grant at any cost,
however, is not reaHstit•,
Wingett said. Before taking
on any project, he said O(J(:!rational expenses should be
considered. DisCUSSed by the
Council with the speaker was
the possible need for a
development coordinator for
Meigs CoQnly-someone with
a knowledge of how to secure

tliSl'U!\St•d ett tl~ llll't'ttng IJy
MI 'S. Man Skinner fur Stt•ve
fm\,'SOII, · ways untl mcan!i

WE CONTINUE OUR FEBRUARY SALE WITH NEW SPECIALS

Salon in Pomeroy, will an·
nounce her opening.

T~e

1111·

01

•CHEESE

people immigrating to the
United States have come
from Germany (6.9 million)
and Italy (5.3 ·million ), The

1111pi'OV~IIlC11l'.i ,

tJI'UVed Circ and police prulec·

grants.

CLIN ICS ANNOUNCED
March will be the first time
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Jacobs
and son, Sean, Beckley·, W.
Va. spent the weekend here
visiting his parents, Mr.. Mrs.
CliffordJaeobs.
Mr. and Mrs . J ames
Gilmore were in Hilliard

!)tfl~l

MASOII

ownership of Terne Miller
Walker. Mrs . Walker, now
employed at Helen's Beauty

CALLA HAMS ........................~; .. 8·9e
99
BOI ED HAM ..~~~~~..........·.........~·.. ~ 1
OHIO VALLEY

~

Karen Blaker ~h.D.

IQ cult

Claiming that there is no
real secret to eonununity
development, Wingett stress·
ed the necessity for setting
objcdives, listing them ae·
co rding to priority,
establishing lime tables, and
then seeking funding. He em·
phasized the need for com·
munity involvement and support.
He spoke of a general fear
of making a mistake or being
rejected as a possible reason
Why some persons and·or
conununities are hesitant
about participating or bein,g
involved in projects.
Wingett, on Syracuse Council for many years, told of the
village selling up development objectt\•es - the expan·
sion of the water system,

/

WE'VE JUST RECEIVED
.A NEW LINE OF:

BOLOGNA ........ ~·························~···

9:00til7:00
Saturday 9:00-9:00

~Inn .

CHOICES

Pomeroy, formerly . owned
and operated by Mrs. Clara
McMaster, is now Undel' the

JACKSON OR OLD FASHION .

We Gladly Accept Fed. Food Stamps
Monday thru. Friday

Mrs . Preston closed with
reading entitled " Birds Birds.''
The ho.tess, Mrs. Scott,
served refreshments of hot
rolls, chicken salad, various
chips, nuts, candy and coffee
and tea.
Two members made flower
arrangements, Mrs. Phyllis
Hawley - for Valentine's
Day and Mrs. Helen Preston
1
- an arrangement featuring
Birds keeping with the
evening's program.

1

, HAS NEW OWNER
The .LalVlar Beauty Salon in

~~:~............................~.~ 119
Feb. 22 lhru fell . 25
Right Reserved To Limit Quantities

Wingett, Syracuse
villa~e councibnan for 12
years and editor of the Point
Pleasant Register, told the
Meigs County Human
Resoun:es Couneil Tuesdcty
at a luneheon mt..o.cting at the

NEW ARRIVAL

START HERE! WITH THESE FOOD VAWES!

STO~E

Bob

crops .

By 197! only seven pairs of
bald eagles were found
nesting at Jake Erie. These
" Birds of Freedom " are
becoming rarer and seen less
each year.
Another reading by Mrs.
Preston was on Johnny
Appleseed . He crossed the
Appalachian Mls. with his
knapsack of apple seeds
slung over his shoulder. The
seeds were traded for food
and shelter. He traveled over
Ohio selling seeds and
clearing Jan4 for orchards. In

Conference Board notes.

CHfBE'

'" Per.;islenl't!, plarming and
promotion are u-., keys lu
L'UJHmunity development,"

the Mansfield and Richland
County areas in Ohio there
are &amp;ill Johnny Appleseed
Trees that &amp;ill bear good

diameter across the top. The
huge nest was 81 feet from the
ground. It was demolished by

.

Wingett addresses Human Resources Council

~

COMPLETES
.TRAINING - Pvt. Terry
B. Norris, son of Mr. and
~trs. Howard Norris, Route
2, Racine, has completed
his basic training at Fort
. Mt•Ciellan, Ala., and is now
srrving with the 120th M.P. ·
Ban., at Fort}lood , Tex. He

5th &amp; Pearl

s- The Da1ly tienunel, Mldaieporl-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , Feb. 22, 1978

I''~'·H;i;;; ii;i~p
-·,~:~:;;;;;~&gt;=·:1

4 - The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb. 22,1978

First Prize

SALAD DRESSING
32 oz.

Jar

69~

Smucker's

STRAWBERRY
PRESERVES
18 oz.
69~
Jltr '
Keebler

VANILlA WAFERS
12 oz.

Pkg.

49~

BOUNTY
TOWELS
Jumbo
Roll

69~ '

HAN.DLE
PINT SIZE THERMOS

Super

AMY WILLIAMS
TURNS ONE - The first
• birthday of Amy Beth
Williams was celebrated on
Feb. 20 at a party hosted by
her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Williams at tbe
home of Amy's grand·
mother, Mrs. Goldie In·
gels. A heart-shaped cake
was served with Ice cream,
potato chips and koolaide,
Gifts were presented to
~ Amy and several games
were played. Attending
were Mr. and Mrs. Larry
: l.audermtll and lamtly,
Mr. and Mrs. Norman
~ Laudermtlt and . lamily,
, Kathy Farr and David,
Donnie and Chris Williams,
~

jlohl ~•n'l ruol.

Kelly

and

Keith

: Johnson.

••
"

•
SON BORN
• Mr. and Mrs. Mike Otto are
~HllnouOcing the birth of a son,
~ Micah John, born Feb. 17 at
~the Holzer Medical Center.
•·He weighed seven pounds, 10
: ounces. Mr. and Mrs. otto
: have a daughter, Stephanie ·
:Renee. Grandparents are Mr.
•and Mrs. Leroy Roush, West:
:'colwnbia and Norma otto,
:Utile Hocking, and Vernon
::ptto, Llano, Texas. Mrs.
~Amanda Miller, Uano, Texas
a · great-gra ndmother •.

!s

a.n1 or

ola ln. New 11 Mil prletl. Red
~!lid Ge$1Qn ,

•208
2"x4"x 14'

'242

STONEWARE

WRIGlfYS

CHEWING
GUM
Juiq

rrun . S,.Oimlnt

DoublomiM

lqolor 15'

.BALLERINA.
lAMP SHADES

PACkS

Fill

•

$1

COI!IIC

GARDEN

3r.. &amp;r

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�8 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb. 22, 1978

9- The OaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomerov. 0 .. Wednesday, Feb. 22,

Michigan, Ohio border dispute to be 'refought' in Gallia play
'

COLUMB US, Ohio t UPI ) - The bQrder dispute between account."
While working !11 the script and music for "Gallia Country,"
Michigan and Ohio, fought on the ground and in Con~ress with
different results, will be refought this summer on the Durleux said he sat on the banks o! the Ohio River for several
hours trying to get the !eel or the river for the music.
battleground of the outdoor arena of ''Gallia Country."
"Gallia CQuntry's" being an entertaining history of southMichiga n won the ground ba ttle in 1833, and Ohio won the
eastern Ohio, po~ a little problem at adding a scene for the
Congressional battle in 1835.
The Congressional battle gave Michigan what is now the battle "Up North ."
Rep . Samuel Vinton, a former Gallia County prosecutor,
mineral-rich Upper Peninsula and Ohio got the disputed
territory between the two states where the Lake Erie port of played an important role in the Congressional battle, along
with Sen. Thomas Ewing and President Jackson.
Toledo is located .
But the result of the battle in "Gallia Country ," an outdoor . In the play, Vinton, on his way to Columbus for an 1840 state
drama of the area surrounding Gallia County in southeastern political convention, makes a stagecQBch st op at a saloon in
Ohio along the Ohio River , has not been determined by author
Lee Durieux, a writer employed by a CQiurnbus advertising
agency.
"Gallia Country" premiered on the Gallia County outdoor
stage in 1973. Each year Duriewi, whose avocation is history,
tries to slip in a new scene .
He uses history, satire and song and dance to recreate
history to entertain his audiences.
Dialogue is in the vernacqlar of the people of the area .
By KENNETH R. CLARK
Durieux learned it in conversations with the people as he
Unlled
Press International
researche&lt;l his play. He composed the songs himself, both
TERROR
OF
THE
TREATIES:
New Hampshire Gov .
lyrics and music.
Meldrim Thomson is carrying his battle against the Panama
Durieux attributes his musical talent to horse manure.
He tells about a minister 's wile who gave "peye-ano" lessons Ca nal tr eaties to his state's highways - urging motorists to
on Saturdays, and figured if he took those lessons, he wouldn 't turn on their headlights today to demonstrate "determination
have to shovel horse manure on his family's (arm in Mount to keep our canal. " It' s all part of Thomson's "Keep Our Cana l
Day ," but the chairma n of the national Conservative Caucus
Vernon.
" Alter spending IB years on the farm , l went off to college," won't be around to t"Ount sealed beams. He's in San Antonio ,
he reminisced. "Someone told me I should major in accoun- Tex., to deliver an anti-treaty speech. He's also laun ched a
ting, so I did. I hate it. l can 'I even balance my own checki n~ petition and post ca rd drive to persuade New Hampshire 's U.S .
senators tu vote against the treaties - on threat or defeat at
the polls.

Adamsville in Gallia C!&gt;unty . The bartencter asks him to tell
about the "OhioMichigander War you had a hand in settlin'
'bout five years ago."
Vinton begins his version, but it is far too advanced lor the
local folks . The stage goes black and when lights come up
again, is set for the war between Ohio's Militia under the
command of Gen. Bell and the Michigan Militia. (The name of
the leader for the Michigan side has not been uncovered .)
The first thing Gen . Bell does is walk to the controversial
boundary line, pick up the Michigan state sign and break it into
several pieces .
In the dialogue between the two generAls, Bell wants to know
where his counterpart recruited his Indians. Wben the
Michigan general replies "Michilimackinac," Bell conl!!nds
they look like Ohio Indians.

peopletalk

·:· ·:·:::.:·:·:·:·:· :-:· :·:·:·:-:· :·:·:·:·:·:-: ·:·:· :·: ·: ·:::::::::: ::::.;::::;::::::::::*~:C.C~:&lt;;:;:..";o';~~-om·!S"fi:i'IR'rlii·AI§~

I:\

I

egance tn any roo

,,cca s i o n,

ed his contra ct rights in the movies, "Straight Time" and

" Aga tha" - among ot11er things by refusing to let him do the
job his own way. He's suing in Los Angeles - lor $158 million
and an order blocking distribution of the films . Warner
Brothers and J arvis Astalre - Hoff man's former manager are codefenda nts .

QUOTE OF TiiE DAY : Sen. Charles Percy, R-111., a supof the Panaina Cana l treaties, on controversy sur·
rounding the 1972 New York grand jury indictment for heroin
trafficking of Gen . Omar Turrljus' brother, Molses : " If you
can't do business with someone because his brother is involved
(in drug trafficking ), then you can't do business with
anybody."
p:~rter

FLEXSTEEL

GLIMPSES: The Freedoms Foundation of Valley Forge,
Pa ., has named Lowell Thomas the 1977 winner of the group's
George Washington Award , and Helen Hayes and Washington
G&lt;~v . Dlxy Lee Ray are tapped for American Exemplar Medals
... Richard Burt·on - up for an Oscar for his performance in
"Equus'' - took wife Susan on a busman 's holiday Tuesday,
attending the Broadway show "Dracula '' and visiting vampire
st.a r Rie.hard Lungella backstage ... Gina Lollobrlglda - on
location in Uma , Peru , for a n~;~.tional television network spe·
cial - says her next film project will be a love story costarring
Anthony Qull!ll ... Anne Baxter replaces Lana Turner in NBC·
TV 's " Little Mo ," currently in producti on with Glynnis
O'Ct~nn.ur as Maureen Curuwlly, and Michael Learned ... .

FINE FURNITURE
AT SPECIAL SALE PRICES

Dunfee
to lead
hoedown
Ron
known buth for

CASING BOLOGNA .. ~r.~~~J~~ sl.O~:!i::~.!~}l.19
FRENCH CITY

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~O NEY

LOAF OR PEPPER LOAF•••••••~~;sl.79
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oz. SWANSON

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12 oz . LIBBY'S
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$
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12 oz. Can
SPAM•••••• ·••••••••• ~ ~.-••••••••••••••••••••••••• , .$1.~19

Dunfee.
hi s cross-count ry running and
his ability a s a CbuntrY music
singer , will lead an oldfashioned hoedown as part of
this week's family recreation
ni ght activities at Rio Grande
Coll ege and Community
College 1RG C-CC).
The public is invited to
enjoy square dancing and a
si ng-a-long, 7 to 9 p.m., in
Lyne Cent er, Friday, F e~ . 24.
Dunfee is a member of Rio
Grande's cross·co untry team
and has performed iJJ thi s
area while a student at the
co.llege. Last season he was
named to fir~t team in both
the Mid-Ohio Conference and
Di st rict
22,
Nati ona l
Association of Int ercollegiate
Athletics.
· Lyne Center's gym and
swimming facilities will also
be open to the public Friday ,
at no cost, with the stipulation
that children must be at least
six years Old and be ac·
com panied by a parent or
guardian .
Activities available include
baske tb a ll , vo ll ey ball ,
badmin ton and handba ll .
Family recreation night is
sponsored weekly by RGCCC's community recreati on
class.

l1 '12 oz . THANK YOU

46 oz . WE LSHAI D

GRAPE DRINK.•••••••••••••••.•••••••••••••~~- 59~
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4 Roll WHITE CLO UD

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CRUSHED PINEAPPLE •••••••••••••••••••. 2/$1.29

I

COLUMBUS IUPII - Here dealers to obtai n specia l
a glance at activity transporting license plates.
Tuesda"Y in the Ohio General 83-1.
Am . HB 945 , Fox . Allows a
Assembly:
municipal civ il se r vice
defense to keep the peace
SENATE
c'ommission
to
place
Bill Introduced
often prevents larger ex·
vo lunteer fj remen paid on_a
SB
433,
Freeman.
Earpenses later on due to war . In marks the state incom e tax tee -for -seryice basis in either
other words , by not and lottery proceeds for the classi fied or Unclass ified
service. 86·0 . •
educat ion .
a~equately preparing for ou r
SB 434, Roberto. Increases · Am . HB 946, Baumann.
defense now, we often invite
perience requ irements for Increases fr om $3,000 to
war which causes a great er ex
admission to the tec hnical Sl5 ,000 the size th at a ward 's
ex pense later and great examinatio n
for
ar. estate must be to enable the ·
term ination of a guarchitectural registration.
human suffering.
dianship
or to authorize the
SB
435,
Roberto.
Defines
an
Washington also has some
court to take certain act ions
un
inco
rporated
mutual
fund
practical advice on the as a taxpaYer and provides without the appointment of a
matter of deficit spending : that such fu hds 11eed not list guardian. 86-0.
Am . HB 1064. Shoemaker .
avoid it! He seems to be investments in stocks of any
Ma kes a su pplement ap .
saying !hat the only lime the corporation.
SB 436. Milleson . Fa - propria tion to the d epart m~nt
accumulation of debt is ex· ci litates
payments of tax of economic and commun1ty
cusab ie is in times of refund s by the state treasurer development and the ad emergency
like
an for over payments to the coal jutant general. 84-2.
unavoidable war - but that resea rch account .
Bills Passed
as soon as peace arrives, th e
Am . S B 32 3, Stano.
debt should be repaid Req uir es
par tne r s h ips
promptly so thai we do not operat ing under a fictitiou s
VETERANS MEMORIAL
burd en those in . later name to f ile with the cou nty
ADMITTED - Connie
recorder
a certi fica te
gen ~ r ation s with paying the
lden tlty inQ members of the Mu sser , Pomeroy ; M~ry
bill. America has failed to pa rtnership . 32-0.
De.renberger ,
Pomeroy;
follow this wise recom·
Sub. S B 3,57, Gi ll mor . Melissa German , Midmcndation and is paying for it Allows owners of hist oric dleport ; Annette Night ,
watercraft to purcha se
dearly.
permanent
watercraft Rutland; Matthew Hawley,
Since 1960 our federal registrat ion plates . 32-0.
Pomeroy. . .
·
government has run a deficit
'Am. SB 347, Nabakowski.
DISCHARGED - Dorothy
in 16 of the last 18 years (and Extends the immunity from • Norris, Simon Powell, Betty
liabi lity of paramed ics
these years can be charac· civil
to those in training for cer - Manley, Charlotte Coo n.
·terized as more or less a tim e tification for such status . JJ .O. Lydia Ebersbach.
of domesti c peace). Next
HOUSE
'
Bills Introduced
year we will add another $60
HB 1.093. J . Thompson.
Pleasant Valley Hospital
million plus, which will bring
Provides a tax credit for . DISCHARGED - Ilene
the total federal debt to cor porations that hire
Roque, Lakin ; Neva German,
nearly $900 billion . Interest une mployed persons.
HB 1094, J . Thompson. Point Plea sant; Patri cia
on the debt will amount to
Maso n;
Mrs.
around $4,000 fo r every man, Requ ires ·all sta te agencies to Stanley,
kee p the Legislature in woman, and child in the formed of their contracts William Young, Gallipolis;
Nation. If we let this trend with minority a nd small Mrs. Vernon Dalton, Hen·
derson; Lester Hall, Apple
continue, will we not be businesses .
HB
1095,
J
.
Thompson
.
saddling later generations Earmarks state lotter y Grove; Mrs. Wallace Burns,
St.
Albans ;
Edward
. with a burden " which we proceeds for education .
Meadows,
Southside;
Vera
ourselves ought to bear?"
HB 1096, Mallory. Requires
Washington goes on to ·say: voting members of the Ohio Ma,rlin , Point Pleasant;
Commission on Aging to be Loretta Noel, Gallipolis
" Th~ exec ution ol these
equa lly divided politically . Ferry ; Mildred Slurgeon,
m aXim s belongs to your
HB 1097, Tansey . Prov ides
Pleasant;
Lui a
represent at ives, but it is for cont inu ing Ohi o Turnpike Point
necessary that public opinion tolls after the bonds ha ve Wheeler, West Columb ia;
retir-ed .
Ruth Bonecutter, Point
should
coo perate .
To been
HB 1098, Locker E~pands Pleasant;
'c hri sto pher
facilitate to them the per- duties of a physician's
Facemire, Apple Grove;
formance of their duty it is assistant.
HB 1099 , Taft . Gives Mrs. Elmer Lowry, Ashton ;
essential that you should
practically bear in mind that townsh ip trustees emergenq Conwelzie Buckle, Apple
powers to deal with snow and
toward the payment of debts Ice remova l from township Grove ; Mrs. Randy Gardner,
Gallipolis.
.
there must be revenue; that roads.
BIRTHS - A son to Mr. and
Holfs&amp; Concurs
to have revenue there must
in Senate
Mrs. Robert Wamsley , Point
be taxes; that no.taxes can be
Amendments
devised which are not more
Am . Sub. HB 473, Fix . Pleasant.
or less in conven iefit and Author izes prosecutors of any
county to establish programs
unpleasant. "
SQUAD CAI,LED
Seems logical , doesn't it ? for divers ion of certain adult
tram the criminal
The Pomeroy Emergency
To accomplish these goals oC offenders
justice system . 75-5.
squad was called to the
financial integrity and moral
Bi lis Passed
Am . HB 857 , Cook . Debbie Elam home on Wolf
responsibility, all ol us are
going to have to participate. Author izes persons engaged Pen· at 8:41 a.m. Wednesday
in rust -proof ing , recon . for Arvella Donohew who was
Our elected representatives dition
lng
or installing
need ·an informed and active
eqUipment or trlrQ on motor taken to Veterans Memorial
vehicles for motbr vehic le Hospital as a medical patient.
electorate consta n t l y
reminding them or their duty
as guardians of the pub.lic
· trust.
Finally, when it comes to
public financing , nothing is
free. Government can givE!
the people only what it takes
from the people in one of
thre e ways : (1. ) taxing .
directly through regular
taxes, (2. ), taxing indirectly
through Inflation caused by
massive federal deficits, or
(3.) borrowin g !rom the
public directly, saddling
future generations with debt.
It is that simple.
Our Nation has had 38
Pr es ident s since George
Waxhington, but very few
have offered as timely and
useful advice as he has. Truth
has a way of spanning the
ages in terms of its practical
releva nce and wisdom.

~CROSS

I

"""

-

IF THE ELECTRICITY
-GOES OFF.
BUY
A KEROSENE HEATER
AT:

H
A
R
0

Hospital News

w
A
R
E

'

CROSS HARDWARE
Ope n Monday thru Saturday
9 : 001o 5: 00
71 N. 2nd Ave.

992-3431
Middleport, 0.

II

I_I I

II

I I I

I

3
I I I I

II

I

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

i?~f l

auc11on tr·por ls ·
Compared wi th las! week
staug hler steers sleady 10 1
h •g her. s 1aughter h~i t e r s and
' h 11 11 s c: 1Pi' c1 y . siAltqhler co ws 1

ami down.
if .•-' ·.ou are u·'utn""' 1l pl·u•~'l'
,...... i)'

you should S('t the llltl s dt• ·

Ol

II

AND ON MULBERRY HEIGHTS, John Terrell reports a
group of robins and Is sure that spring is just around the corner
since in many cases robins are looked upon as harbingers of
spring. Hope you're right , John .

TV•• .in Review

You").

Since this is a comedy the enemy Gorgon, who wants to
conquef the universe, says, "The Source is here, I feel it." "Is
the Source dangerous?" he is asked. "Only II it's on your side,"
comes the quick reply.
Unlike the Force of "Star Wars," the Source of "Quark" is
an invisible presence with a frail ego and a booming voice that
makes it more like the Wizard of Oz.
For those who prefer "Star Trek" to "Wars," there are
remindefs - Quark Is forever dictating "star notes " to what
probably is the ship's computer, and he reports baek from his
United Galaxy ship to Space Station Perma One, where he
deals with CQnrad J811ts as Otto Palindrome, whose boss is The
Head. The Head is.a hug&lt;Kiomed head scene on a screen.
In comedy terms, unfortunately, Ibis show does not go where
no show has gone before - the gags date back to Buck Rogers.

2$575 ~~~~ ~
Mixed

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Veat e r s Prime 150 1YO lbs
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choice 170 '160 lbs 61 70 , HS

RADIO· STEREO

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choice 195 280 Ibs 49 6'1 ; good
11 5 175 1bs 34 48 ; 55 9 5 lbs . 21

See the great new

120

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tt ogs · Barrows and

Zenith vafuesl

gil t ~

1.50 3 lower , sows 1.50 lowCI' ,
Ieeder pigs steady . Su pply 10
pet. barrows 1-'tnd gills . 5 pt I.
sows. 15 pet Ieeder pig:;
Bar rows and gilts · I J 110
235

INGELS

lbs . 48.JS 48.80 ; sows I J

FURNITURE

365 4·15 tbs . 39 40.50 ; Ieeder
pig s pe r hd . 1 2 35 50 lbs
JO.SO 33 ; I 3 3S 40 lbS. 26 17 :
per c wt . 1 3 130 135 lbs. 40 11?.

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ll•h to4hy
the
Anottler rHton we're
doUcoto fht.,or ... ,artlc:ulorlr of r-lty fro1h fl•i'l 1uch ••
you'll no""" find at your Krot•r •!oro.
Atl&lt;rol•' • """• pro!J'IIIe you top quolllr . .'. ond elM tho
lreti'l"t flth 11Yplloblo. 4nd In an Grd wllh our poU'J of
111lemotlwolokllng, •• toll rou rltht ori tha poc:lto•1
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KROGER

Kroger
Pork 'N'
Beans ................

OIE$1.51

PIICIISI

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Florida
Oranges

39.10.

YEARLING HEIFERS Good and choice 500-600 lbs .
27 .60·30.25 600·750 lbs . 2'1.75.
STEER CALVES - Good
and choice under 300 lbs .
AJ.IO, 300· 400 lbs. 36, 400-500
lbs. 42.10, 500·600 lbs. 42.
28 .
.
BULL CALVES - 400-500
SLAUG HTER COWS Commercial 33.85, Utility 31 , lbs. 39.75.
HEIFER CALVES - Good
Canner &amp; Cutler 23 .85·25.
and
choice under 300 lbs . 39,
BuiiJ over 1.000 lbs . 30-36.50. , J00-500
lbs . 41.50, 400-500 lbs .
HOGS - U.S. 1·3 190-240 32.75·36.10.
lbs . 47, U.S. 1-3 240·26o lbo. 45,
BABY CALVES (by head)
Sows, U.S. 1-3 300-500 lbs . 35 ,
- Beef 2'1-49 . Holstein and
Boars 300-600 tbs . 27 .75, Pigs
Brown Swiss 21 -29.
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Good !lnd choice 500-600 lbs.

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COLOR TV

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Sla ugh ter bu lls
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d1 v1 dua t U OO lbs. 4 1 75 : 1'"&gt;

THE KROGER TRIM MEANS
BETTER VALUE IN OUR MEATS

The, 10 top network television programs lor the week ending
Feb. 19, according to the A. C. Nielsen Co., were : .
1: "Three's Com~y ;" 2: CBS Sports Spectacular; 3:
"La ~eme &amp; Shirley;" 4: " Happy Days;" •5: "Bob Hope; " 6:
''M·A...S-H; '' 7: ''Love Boat ;'' 8: "60 Minutesj '' 9: (tie ) ''Soap"
and 11 Charlie's Angels."
.

U.S. FIBER
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HOtLY FARM$. U.S.O .A. INSPECTED

By JOAN HANAUER
UPl Television Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) - If anything could stop "Star Wars"
from living up to its billing as the wave o! the future in
entertainment, it's "Qu8rk."
"Quark" is a new NBC 'science fiction comedy series that
mqkes its debut Feb. 24, 8-9 p.m., Eastern time, then is
scheduled to "subside into a halfhour !rom 8-8:30.
The show has stolen liberally from "Star Trek" and "Stilr
Wars" to prodnce something tbat Gould be subtitled "Star
Bore."
.
The lea&lt;\ is Richard Benjamin as Adam Quark, who com·
mimds an mterstellar garbage ship. His crew includes GeneJean, who has a lull set of both male and female chromosomes:_
One never . knows whether Gene-Jean is going to come on
macho or mi.Ssish.
Another crew member is Ficus, a deep-voiced chap whose
unemotional logic is supposed to resemble Mr . Spock o! "Star
Trek," ,illthough in Ficus' case his personafity ·stems from his
vegetable origins.
There also are a shapely pair of blonde twins in what used to
be called hot pants, one of which is supposed to he the clone of
the other.
·
Andy the cowardly robot completes the crew.
In their first adventure, they are out to destroy the Gorgon
Death Star, a space ship modeled after Darth Vader's mask in
"Star Wars." They are helped in their mission by The Source
(in fact, the tiUe o! the episode is, "May the Source be with

· Point Pleasa nl
v ~livestock Report
February ·l8, 1978
SLAUGHTER STEERS Good and choice 800·100 lbs.,
39 - 4~ . 10, Standard 800 -1100
lbs. 34-J8.
S~AUGHTER HEIFERS GoOd and choice 700-1000 fbs.
30 .25. Standard 700-1000 lbs.

com me rcia l '} 4 900 1650
19 75 35 eviler I 'J aso 1350
77 .75 31; canner 750 1775

Serve'N'
Save : · u-o1.
Wieners ... ,.. Pkg.

HOW DO YOU IJKE those pot holes that are appearing
magically as the snow thaws? They're going to be rough on the
new car, aren't they? Oh, well, keep sniiliiig.

..

Slaught er heifers · Chplce 3

4 875 &gt;050 lbs . 38 SO 40.70 ;
good 7 3 850 1071 lbs. 36. 70 39
Slaug h fer cows : U1tll ty and

89

$

4
I I I

-10.2s •a so

Tail-Less
T-Bone Steak

fl&lt;.&gt;l

GEORGE FREELAND on reading an account de~ling
with' Barbara Offutt and her jar of praying mantis reports
that the praying mantis is invaluable to gardeners in that it
devours harmful insects. Fact is, George )las ordered some
fr om Belpre to use in his garden this spring.

. R·VALUE COMPARISON CHART

2

.....

HEALTH

f'EBRUARY
~

lower . Ieeder cattle too few
tor a pr1 ce test
Slaugh ter stl'ers Cho1ce 2
J 1070 1200 lbs . •6.35 &lt;8 10
couple 48 80 49.75 . good and
choice ')- 3 900 1275 lbs. 43.SO
4UO : good 7 J 950 1200 lbs,

tO L UM BUS tU PI )
lues dav ' s Oh10 livestoc k

Inakmg thL•motiun ufgriltlllg

yuur tL't'lh wtuiL• lllU\' ing lht•
parl! ~ ll) u~·n Juwt:r jaw up

O'OU

MACHINE
RENTAL
'2500 PER DAY
1

~~ -~

. .1•1 MilO&lt;-'

PER BAG

0

.

Market Report

or cxce~ fat in that ctrea strands kitl~tc:ht."1.l to the skm
Can·, s pul-rt•d tH' t' chin
usually has both too muclt slant! uut like t'ttn1s. Thi s is
tutal fat on the body and a the plutysma musdc and it 1s
Pomeroy and Gallipolis have been given excellent fat
fcuniliHI l'haral'tcristic. to nut always well devclupt"tl. t~ uc t u tilt' in can• of this
reconunendations for tourists "seeking the roots of Ohio" in
develop
f(tt in that area.
nt· wst~'t"'r . P.O. Box 155 1,
the March edition ol Woodall's Trailer and RV Travel
St rt•n gth cnin~ it adds tont! to
DEAR DR. I.AMB- While l
The
other
puint
about
your
magazine .
Hmlio l'1ty ~tat1 on . New
th1
s
urc~-t
.
You
can
also
muvt•
was working out for bulk this
Curtis Jenkinson, a subscriber, passed along on loan his past winter r added some letter is that cerUti n weight the musl'it·~ thut nwkc UJ) tlw l'nrk. NY 10019.
llt-:AH OH. t.t\Mll - 1am tJ
March copy so that we could look over the comments made bv weight to my fat'&lt;' anti neck tretining programs to p\Jt un fl uor of ttw mouth under) our
bu
lk
arc
£attuning
prugram.s.
~'
l'HI'S
ulll und 111 gnod he~ilth . l
Jerry DeLaughter about his trip in Ohio. He writes, in part:
t•hin by leaving your umulh
area , and I have acquin.-d a
"Nowhere is Ohio's charm greater than along its slight double chin. I would 'l11at is nut what you want for upcn and stickillh your tongue g-ut my fi rst pcrilKI six nwn·
venerable river . Though much o! the Ohio's length from Pitts- like to know if there is health. Hegardie.,; · of how in auU uut. Put your fin~t:.· r ths ago und haven't gotten it
burgh to Cairo suffers !rom industrial blight, there is a anything I could use or any much m· in whet t way you arc WH.Il•r· your. t:hin and feel the et gain. My motht•r said it 's
segment which preserves the river as it once was. It's a 63-mile exercises I could do to reduee exercising you are eating tlx1 m uscicl'i move as you mow nun nul. Is it'~
m :AH IIF.ADI::H - That is
stretch from Gallipolis to Marietta. We 'd urge any travelers to my lower chin and firm it up. much for the amowlt of work the tongue.
ct
t~ig
event fur ;my ~irl cmd tt
drive that stretch.
you
do.
I
would
suggest
that
Meanwhile I am .s't•nding
I would like to add I am on"Just east ol Pomeroy Is Royal Oak Park, an ly 19 years o( age and weigh you cut bHck un the L:alories. yo u The · l-lee~lth Le ltt•r signa ls matu nng ouul h~t vi ng
extraordinary private campground, and a gratifying 165 pounds. Your advice will If .somcoJtL' has sold you on number 54, Weight Tr· ~;1ining lltun· adult rcspon.s ibilitit·s,
taking protein powders or fur Energy etnLI Weight Con· !Jill'ticularly in your pcr~u1wl
(ijscovery. Owner Horace Karr is in the construction business, be greatly appreciated.
drinking
half milk-half cream trul. to give you some in· life.
and he has built campgrounds at three of Ohio 's state parks. 'I
DEAR READER -- It
Muthcrs arc pretty Smart
didn't always agree with their planning;' he told us, 'so l seems that people just do nut mixtures '" a body develop- furmatiun un huw to increu .sc
decided to build a campground my way.' The result is a scenic understa nd that you can 't in~ mea!)ur~. just stop Lhal your· bu lk without £&lt;Jttening a mi she is dght. \.iris often
waterside setting with more than 200 cool , roomy forested sites spot reduce fat. You can't nonsense at once.
yourself. Others who we~nt to havt• irreg ular periods whc1l
You can help finn up tim fi nd out why muscle ~tnmgth they first start. Stilrti n ~ ami
- all with electricity and water, many with sewer hookups . just rt.&gt;duce lhe etbdomen, the
There are plenty of amenities including recreation areas and hips, (at arms or a double area under the chin but the and development help pre· stopping is more common
progranuned activities, swinuning and fishing . What chin. Loss of unwanted fat firmi ng exercise will not vent ug l)• fut dcpul'i its illld lha11 not. Don 't worry e:tb\mt
impressed us most were U1e big shady sites, the completely has to be from a total loss uf eliminate the excess fat. The how tu do it ca n semi 50 cents it, just relax und enjoy li fL'
exerci.sc i.s diffi c ult to with a lung. stamp.ed. sel f~ whilt• nalurc\takcs ~:a re of tht.:
natural setting; tbe inunaculate maintenance and Karr's fat from all of the body.
philosophy .
A person who has a double desc ribe but it ~onsists of Hddrcssed envelope for th is rust .
"A lot o! builders bulldoze the trees out of the way first ,
thinking it 's ~asler to build that way, and the!\ they come back
in and replant. You kuow how long it'll be before you have
trees after planting ? Makes no sense.' "
YOU CAN DEPEND ON KROGER
"From Royal Oak Park we made a short run down to
Ohio's second oldest town, Gallipolis, with its nineteenthcentury storefronts facing a broad vill'l]!e_!(reen and lacy white
bandstand in the park , could serve as a magazine illustration
of 'small town America '.
"City dwellers traveling through this part of the state will
no doubt enjoy Bob Evans Farm, 15 miles west o! Gallipolis at
Rio Grande . Evans, a successful Midwest sausage producer
and restauranteur , has opened his big family !arm to visitors
and there's no admission fee. There's a good restaurant and
souvenir shop on the premises, as well as 20 varied attractions
which include a lively farm museum and a barnyard zoo that
children love.
"For the best sampling of the Ohio River in her unblighted
ADVERTISE D ITEM POLI CY
~ ol " - .,.,...,~ ol llmt II f~UOfld !O 1M! IMIU~
prime, take State Highways 124and 338from Pomeroy to Little
....... IDI' .... 11'1 .a&lt;;h ll &lt; ~ S1or1, IU CI&gt;P! 11
(Of''t'IIOH'I
..,.., ..
~y AOtld on l h&lt;t .,;1 11 do non t&gt;ul ol fin 1~11
Hocking. It's about 40 miles longer than the more direct
ltiOGII CO. ITIMJ AM:I
-..d il.n - will ofter vo-~ you• cho•U o l 1 comPlll • bl-'t
f1tiCU GOOD Sl*DA't' ,
highway 7, but well worth it. Here we found farms and villages
111m, ""*" ...~. t'fi«;l ln\1 !hi a.ne l h'li'1Q I 0• $ ,,..,
fllltUAIY " ' "11 fMIU
d'..:l...t1ich will entflifl 'tO" 10 poi iC MM!hl l(fvl!l&lt;l •Md '" '"'
J.t.Tu.)A't' , PIU\IAI'f' 2&amp;
instead of industries and cities ; and here we saw cliffs which
M the tOWn~ P"•c• ""'tun :KlliiVI
'"liN .
confront the river abruptly, sliced by .road or water into
WIIUIIVllHIIIOH l TO
TOTAL SA TISFACTION GUA RANT[E
impressive rocky layers. Midway, near Portland, is a lonely
liMIT QUAIIIITITIU . NO iillf
lOtD TO DIALIII$ .
h:r.,:h&lt;OQ
tou, • t ll&lt; t;&gt;Q•" •• 11u•• 1 ~ t MO to&lt; ~OUt lOIII
reminder of Ohio's .first settlers: a single, synunetrical motlnd
'IIQ••~
i lll nuffi CIU!I&lt;
.u u " "
Ml• lf..:l. ~~;,...,..- ....11 liipiKI fOUl """' ••"Ill !he Ume i&gt;&lt; l l'd
left bY unknown 'Indians' a dozen centuries before any white
o• I CGmOI&lt;tOII bfind ot 1tl11nd vou• cu&lt; ~hue "'"-"
EW"o~ans saw the river. "

is

Senco • Oren • or
U.S. Fiber Insulation

. Beat...

....

•

thru:,11Jlg your luwt•r jaw fur·
wanl .anc.J ltghltming lht•
IHU SI_'It•S lUH.iel' th(' Skin U\'CI'
the nct·k. Yvu l.'an du tlu s by

rrro orrr,y !C[IM* '" ' "r
•",•,•••,:,:,.•, UY"..........~ . :: • • • ,.,• • • y ;"" • • , •
mn.___, il'!~---·-·-·-·-»':':·
.-.·.·.-.&lt;i:,':·:·:·:·;--&gt;:-:-.·.~

By Bob Hoeflich

Legislature at a glance

BEAT THE COLD

,

CHOC. PUDDING •••• ~ ....................... ~2/994

Farewell
Address is traditi onally 1·ead
(m the House floor each year.
A great deal ha s changed
si nce l he speech was
deli ve red on that autumn day
in 1796, but much of
Was hington' s adv ice is still
timely today . Now is a good
time to review the address
and examine a few excerpts
in order to understand "better
those principles which ha ve
kept American ~trong and
free for over 200 yea rs.
"Of all the dispositions aqd
habits which lead to political
prosperi ty, reli gion and
mora lity are indispensa bl e
supports . . Let it simpl y be
asked, where is the security
for prnperty, for reputation ,
for· life, if the sense of
religious obligat ion des'e rt th e
oath s which are the in·
st rum ents of investigati on in
courts .of justice ? Arid let us
with cauti on indulge the
supposition that morality can
be
m a int ained with out
religion ."
He r~ we cpn see what
Wash1 ngton felt to be "indi spensable" to the success of
our Nation: faith in God and
Hi s precepts. In fa ct,
Washin gton says there can be
nu real morality, jucstice, or
protection of human dignity
without this belief. We musl
remember that our co untry
was founded by · men and
women who believed in God
and loo ked to Him for wisdom
and direct ion.
All we have to do is look at
histor y to see how ''i n·
dispensa bl e" this truth really
is. Every nation which has
rejected the existence of th e
Crea tor has come t o a
devastati ng end . Am er ica
would be treated no different.
If we want to enjoy our
prosperity for another 200
}'ea rs, we n e ~d t o heed
w as hington's advice .
"As a \'c ry imp ortant
so urce of strength and
sec urit y. cherish public
cred•t. One method of
preservin g it is to use it as
sparingly possible, avoiding
occa s.ions ·of expen se by
c ult iva tin g peace,
but
rememb ering also t hat
tim ely di sburse ment s to
prepare
for
da nger
fr equently prevent much
greater di sb ursements to
repel it ; avoiding likewise the
accumulation of debt , not
only.by shunning occasions of
expense, but by vigorous
exertions in time of peace to
discharge the debts which
unaVo idable wars have oc·
casioned, nut ungenerously
throwin g upon post erity the
burden which we ourselv es
ought to bear."
How re leva nt is thi s
counsel for us tod ay?
Washington is saying that
government spending should
be used "as sparingly as
possible." To avoid large
public buqgets, we should
purSue peace·; but always
remember that money spent
now on a strong national

~

·' 't
•

Of the Bend ~\I t.~

Alter the two generals meet in the middle o! the battle
ground for the song and dance routine to "Toledo War," the
two sides decide to take out their frustrations by playmg the
old Indian game of Indian Baggataway . The two generals are
the coaches.
Throughout the contest , Indian maidens cheer their
warriors.
The scene ends with the players, bloodied and exhausted
!rom the long contest, carrying their respective generals off
the field on their shoulders.
DurleUJI says he decided on Baggataway since "isn't that
what the public thinks of In the rivalry between the two
states?"
. (Although the dispute was settled in 1835, the modern-day
version is renewed each November, alternating between the
two states.)
·
This year's presentations ol "Gallla CQuntry" are scheduled
lor July &amp;-9, 13-16, 20-23, and 27-30.

r-~---- -----------------------~-------,

10 oz . NESCAFE

INSTANT COFFEE •••••• ~.~•••••••••••••••• ~::.s4.89

Geo r ge

Washington's

GETFING INVOLV ED: Discovery Center in Fort Lauderdale, ·Fla., is billed as a "participatory museum" - one in
which visitors are urged to touch exhibi ts a nd get involved
with the displays, but officials fee l Eugene Bentley Jr. took
them a bitloo literally. Tuesday , Bentley locked himself in the
museum's staff bathroom - nicknamed "the historical
bathroom e.hibit" - and wouldn 't come out. Police, who
broke down th e door , found him in the baUJtub, all la thered up
and scrubbing away . They dried him off and booked him for
trespassing .

FIN£ UPH OLST't&lt;JR g J) F1l 1HNITI IU E

~:::"''

This week we celebrate the
bilthday of our Nation's first
President. In honor of the

DUSTIN SUES : Dustin Hollman says United Artists violat-

'

W ashll,.gton
8
Report '

0

Whan you •hop lor fl1h , loollar lleth that It mo ltt on4
llrm . and 1kln tho! I• thlny and 'lnfodad . flturoon 112to
S/ .. ·lb. por ponon IGrll!t ... a"d ttoolu .
(If Y"'"' howo
,.uottktnt about how muc. h to t.uy or how to fl'~aro , atk
rour lhot•• meat (Utfar) .
Cook f lth eently and ot modltolo hoot-. A voo4 rule of
lhumb It 10:1(10 mlnutetlf lt't I" thick . fl.,o lf It' I 112").
Tnt wllh a lorlr. ... when It tloltat oatllt . lt't ,_kodl

VdieaU-44~ S{u«a/4.
hailablr In St~res W1th Dell Department s
Hotfoodsl;oilobltllAI-lPI
f hB k d
res a e

' I

r--,

r:.:)\.."&gt;-

t_:

Glazed Donuts

·~ SJ19

;;;;;;•Mun•~gc $;ithfi~cid $259
Salad .... •· U
Hams ..... •-

'

'

�\

_,

I

10 - The DaUy Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb. 22, 1978
F lnanctl l Re port
Of Town sh i p s

CHARGES

M• ••• Cou nt y
Coolville, Otuo

I~ Words or Undtr

......""

Cull

Janu tr y 23. 1971
1 c erf 1h the tollow •ng

repo rt to be correc1

Hel en Swarn
Townsh ip Clerk
Tel N o 696 n 16
A r ea code 614
Su m m a r y of Ca sh

Ba lan c-es, Recetph
And E x p endt t ures

Bi l•nce J a n 1, 1977
Gener a l F und
S 1,232 48
Motor V eh i c le Li c ense
Tax F u nd
J,J47 29
G asoli ne T a x F und
2.531 87
Federa l Rev enue Shanng
Fun d
37&lt;4 25
A n 11 R ec
1 \9 oo
Total s
7 604 89
T o tal A ece tQfS
Gen era:! F und
10,171 13
Motor Ve htcle Ltc ense
T axF und
7,7 4339
Ga so11ne Ta x Fund
14 ,20000

Federal
Fund

R e ~J e n ue

Sharmg
2,674 00

Ant• Rec
To ta ls

The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash·....~•

WANT AD

F or F i sca l Y ur Endmg
D• c e m ber 31 , 1977
B edtord Town sht p

•

.

,,.
,,...
"'

dwrge

300

r..~cn word over lhe mllltmum 1$
words 11-t cen\1 per ~~rani per &lt;by .
,\ds n&amp;nn1nac ol.her than t'\11\.Sa.""U.Uve
days wW be char ged at the l day

""In memory Card
Otntwuy 6
mlnunum

L"enlll

Ct~th tn

TI'IMnks and
per word, 13 00
o(

MdVIAJlCf:

Mobllt Home AieJland Yard •lea
only with cash with
16dtr 25 l.'ent chitrHe for llds CllrryUlH Bux Nwnber In Care of The Sel1~tre acce~

Uilol

The PubUsher rtlt'rvu Lhe nKht
w edit. or reitct 11ny Kd.li deemed objectional The Publisher will not be
responsible for more than one incorrect msertion

16 1 00
Phonf: 9'J2..11~
34,949 52
Total R ecet pts &amp; B•ta nus
G ener a l Fund
11 ,&lt;103 61
M otor V eh1cl e L 1cense
11 ,090 68
T ax F\.fOti
G allol meTa)l( F un d 1673187
Feder al Reve n ue Stlaq ng
Fund
J 0&lt;18 25
An t i R ec
280 00
To t a ls
42 ,55 4 41
E xpend1tur es
10 330 98
Gener a l Fu n d
Mo t or Ve h ic l e Ltcense
Te10: Fund
9,077 97
Mor&lt;lay
G a so l ine Tax F und
16.723 53
NoonpllSaturdaiy
F edera l Re\l enue St'1ar 1n9
F und •
2,909 16
Tue5d.By
A nti Rec
278 30
lhnlli'Mdlly
T ota ls
39,319 94
IP M
Balanc: e De c l l , 1977
Utt tby before publiut10n
General Fund
1,072 63
M oler v eh iCl e L1ce n se
Sunday
2,012 71
T ax Fund
I PM
G asollne Tax Fun d
8 3&lt;1
li'ndcty aft.llmoon
Fed eral Reven u e Shartng
F und
139, 09
Ant i Rec
1 70
Total
3 234 47
Cash Balanc e, Recetpts
And E xpend•1ures
Thursday Feb 23, 1918
By Fund
G en eral Fund
Ba l an c e, Jan 1 1977 1 132 48
Rece1ph
Gener a l Pr op erty T ax Rea l E sta t e an d
T r at ler (G r ass l
3,986 53
T ang1b l e Persona l Propert y
Tax (Gross)
21 71
Es t a tP Tax
(G r ass l
9 12 97
L oca l Gover nm en t and
St at e Inco m e T aw
2,477 53
C1 garette L1cense Fee s
and Fmes (G r ass l
18 75
Feb 23 , 1918
In tang ib les
2 753 64
Tot al R ec ew t s
10 11 1 13 Extra res p on s lb lllt tes ar e l1kely
Tota l Beg lnnmg Bala nc e
Pl us R ece1pts
11 403 61 tht s commg year but they w111
be ampl y re warded Th e re w111
E11pend1tur es
al s o b e lo ts of t1 rne fo r partymg
Tota l E)(pen di t ur es
- Admm1s tr at1ve 9 07 0 33 with an e\ler· e)(pandm g c ~r c l e
..,.__ Tow n Hall s Me morial of fn ends
Buil d in g s and G r ou nd s
135 65 PISCES 1Fob.20-March 201
- F 1re Prot ec tio n L 125 00 A\lold barg a•n•ng tod a y wtlh
Gr and To tal E xp pe rsons you hardl y know
Gen er a l F und
10 ,330 98 Bar ter With tho se wh om yo u
Ba l Dec 31 1977
1, 072 63 are c lose to and respec t You It
To t a l E~~;p P lus Bal ,
D ec 31 19 77
11 ,403 61 l1nd far more pro f1Jabl e gtveand -take Havi ng trou b le seMotor Veh•cle L1 cense
Tax
Fund lec!lng a ca ree r? Se nd to r yo u r
Ba l Jan 1, 1977
3,3 47 29 cop y of A s t ra -Graph Le tl er by
Re ce tpts
ma1hng 50 cents for ea c h and a
Mo tor V eh iCle L 1cen se
T ax
7,241 19 long sel f-addresse d. s tamp ed
Ot her
5022 0 enve lop e to A stroGraph , P 0
7,74 3 39 Bo)( 489 Radt o C tty Statt o n ,
To tal R ece1p t s
Tot al Beg mn lng Ba lance
N Y 10019 Be sure to spec1fy
11 ,090 68 yo u r b1 r th s1gn
P lus Rece1p t s
E xpend1ture s
ARIES (March 21-April 191
Tot al E x pend 1tur es
- Miscel laneous
6 590 77 Yo u II grea tl y enJOY th e small
- Mam t enan ce
2 487 20 10bs yo u hardly ev er ge t a
Grand Total Ex p c hance to do Wo rk around the
Motor Ve h icle L1 cens e
hou se to da y , but d on 1 lea Ye a
T a l( Fund
9 077 Q7
Bal, D ec 31 19 77
2,0 12 71 ho st of thm~ s undone
TAURUS (April 2(1-May 201 Try
Tot al Ex p Pl us Ba l ,
Dec 31. 1977
11 ,090 68 to go somep lace to see a few
Gasoline Tax Fund
new laces to d ay L1 sten to thetr
Ba l , Jan 1, 1977
2. 531 81 ta lk and Id eas but keep It on a
Rece1pts
14 ,200 00 so c1 a1 le vel
Ga so l in e Ta x
Tot a l R ecei pt s
14. , 200 00 GEMINI (May 21-June 20) You
manag e thmg s we ll loday
Tot al Begtnn 1ng Ba lan ce
16,73 1 87 wh e ther 11 be applymg your
Pl us R ece1 pts
Expendttures
um Qu e to u ch to a work s1tua·
Tot al E x pendi t ures
- Miscel lan eous
-4 ,470 00 tl on or g et11ng Invo lved 10 mak·
- Ma 1nt enanc e
12 ,25 3 53 •n g small changes around
Gr and Total E x p home
Ga soline Ta x Fund
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Pu l
16 ,723 53 a h1 g h pn o r~t y today o n getti ng
8 34
Ba l , Dec 31. 19 77
1n touc h w tth th ose c lose to yo u
Tot a l Ex p Pl us Bal ,
Dec 31, 1977
16 ,73 1 87 but tar away , wh o ha\le an
tnteres t 1n yo ur w ork an d w et
Federal Revenue
Shar.ng Fund
fare Put It off and 11 w on I
374 25
Ba l , J a n 1, 1977
happen
Rece1pts
Gr an t s- F ed eral
2, 674 00 LEO (July 23-Aug 221 Personal
Total R ec e•pts
2, 674 00 gain s are ve ry poss1ble today
Total Begmnmg Ba lanc e
but not tl yo u sit on )'ou r hands
Plus Rec e1pt s
3,048 25 Yo u must pro Y•d e tt"l e 1mpetu s
E111pend1fures
for ac t1on T he results w11t
Tot al E x p
2,909 16
Bal • D ec 31. 19 77
139 09 follow
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept 221 SelfTot al E 111p PIU S Sa l ,
D ec 31. 1977
3,048 25 confid e n ce key s moYmg ahe ad
Ant• Rec. Fund
today You can jugg le a tot o f
161 00 th1ng s and do II w ell , so long as
Sal , J a n L 1977
Receq31S
119 00 you re s ure o f yo u rself and
Oth er
Total Rece i pts
119 00 keep bu sy
LIBRA (Sopt 23-0cl 231 Le,el
To t al B eg 1n n1ng Balance
Plu s Recei pt s
280 00 with a pa l tod ay He II feel m or e
E x pend•1ures
278 30 li ke let ting you 1n on some
Sa lan es
278 30 Yaluabl ~ se c r et s II he kn ows
Tot a l E x p
1 70 where you stand he s like ly to
Bal , D ec 31 1977
Tol al Ex p Plu s Ba l,
fe el he c an tru st yo u
Dec 31, 1977
280 00 SCORPIO (Oet 24-No• 2211l 's a
Township Debt - Notes
lin e da y to get with th e c r o wd
Purpo se For Wh 1ch Not e
and tour the mall Bu y on ly
Debt was Crea te d
what y ou want , howeve r , and
Tra c tor Ba c khoe Comb
Outstand 1ng Jan 1.
not wh at t he y re pu s hing
1.800 00 today
1977
Redeem ed Durmg Y ear
1.8 00 00 SAGITIARIUS (No¥.23· Dec.21)
1977
Do yo ur share toda y Your
6 p et
Rat e of In!
1977 cohorts will readtly JO in m too
Date of F mal Ma t
T otal Red eemed Du n n g Th e a sp ec ts are g oo d for gam
1,800 oo Th ey II c ome 11 e veryb o dy
Y ea r 1977
(2) 22 , li e
, ptl c hes 1n

NOTICE ·

WANT-AD

ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

CAPRICORN (Dec 22-Jon .19)
REAL PROPERTY
SALE
Th e follo win g prop erly IS
offer ed for s ale b y Steven T
Sloan as admin istra to r of the
es ta t e of Effte OaV iS Star
ch er
1 A ppro )( imatel y 73 ac r es
m ore or le ss, located In
Sec t 10n 29, Leb anon To wn
Ship M e1gS County Oh iO
A p p r a 1sed
v alu e
S7 ,945.00
'2 A ppr 0 111 1m atel y 15 ac re s
more or less , loc ated m
To wnsh 1p, M e1gs
Su tton
Co unt y , Oh10
Ap pra 1sed
v alue

An hone st e val uation of what
you can d o and what 11 s wort h
1s essent ial tod ay Realism wtll
fend alf t hose who co uld try to
ch eat you

AQUARIUS (Jon 211-Fob .19) In
busines s you can s tar today 1t
you ' re w1llmg to be as goo d a
lt s tener B$ you are a ta lker
Your prosp ects enJOY you b ut

lhey like lobe heard , too
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRI SE 4SSN )

riR EWOOD S75 o p1c kvp load
IIMBf:R
Pomero y Fore!.t Pr o
IN LOV IN G m emo•y ol Pearl C
9491119
duCii l op pr1ce for " landing
Jacob!. who po u od away
~ow li mher Coli 9'12 S9b5 or ONt:
WHI1t:
C tbson elec tHI
fob· uo ry
1977
K.en l Hanby I 440·8570
1£&gt;Inger a tor Good coudtllon
Wouldn 1 '' be wonder ful d we
S I :JS One copper lone Roy al
&lt;-ould !iee?
Chief elec trtc stove Coo~ co n
COIN S CURRE NCY 1oken s ol d
Dea r Dod as he used 10 be
d dt on
S lS
Phone {b1 4)
poc k et wat che s and chom!i
Wouldn I '' be wonderful to see
s1l ver and gold We need 19()4
COl 3477
h1s sm1le
ond older silver COHn Buy !.ell
And to hove h•m bock for a lrnle
or tr ade Co l i Roger Wam sley SO YBEA N HAV
Lor ge round
wh1 le
742·133 1
bale " W.ll lo od on you • h ue!..
Co uld we be w•Ong lo r w an t1ng
Of deh Y('f 9fl2 333()
Ol D FURNITURE 1ce bo,.; e\ b,o,.s
hun so
I:LI:
CTRIC HO SPil AL bed and
bed s 1ron beds e tc co mpl e1e
Wh en the Ar~ ge l s wo nt ed h1m too
b
e~ 1de !able 992 1676
hou
~
e
h
o
ld
$
Wn
te
M
D
M
1
lle'
Could w e be wrong f o r ITH !t.smg
Rt 4 Pmn e10y Ohto or call H ff ~ WOOD spl1t and delivered
hun so
992 7760
And a ll the thm gs we used to do
$45 o co rd or 535 o lrucld ood
No we wou ldn I d•slurb hts
All hard w ood 843 2933 or
NO llEM TOO Lo1 ge o• too small
peaceful res•
1191 b295
Wtll buy 1 p1ece 01 comp lete
F01 we k now above all !ho t God
house-hold Ne w u ~ ed or on11
knows best
ques Mor l m s Fur n1 lure 20 N
So he call e d h •m to h •s ho rne on
2nd St
M1ddlc por1
Phone
htgh
99 2 6370
Bu1 we m1 ss Dod e,.ery day lhot
W000
Poles
moM
CHIP
go es by
d10mel er 10 on lorges l e nd $8
Soa n tog e ther a ga m w e w1 ll be
per 1on Bundled slob Sb per
lo ge th e r
for
e 1er n 1t y •,.I
~' 1 ;, I '(r1111
lon Delrvf3red fa Ohio Polle t
Mno Pe~;~rl Jacobs and Fom1ly
Co Rl 2 Pome roy 992 2689
11&lt;-1.11 F 11 :lill
G OOD USED
l roc to r w1th
.1 • Hl
hydraulic 3 pt htlch 741 3074
H•rlpr 1111 /lppll&lt;i!l&lt; I
Sll VER DOLL AR S ond com s l op
THE RACIN E Vo lunl ear Fu e
\o~l•, 1'11!1"
dol lar po1d Coli 74 7 231 6
Oeparlm en l w1l l sponso r o gun
!i hool e \ler y Solurdoy 016 p 111 ot $CA SH$ lo• 11..111k ca r s Frye s
J.1ck'11'1J (,~,·,1·y Mqr
l r uck and Aut o Port s Wreck er
lhe1r bu tldlng m Bos hon Foe
~e r v1c ~ Tu e so le an d Repo1r
to ry cho ke guns onl y
Ptlill11' 'J9? 710 1
Rutla nd 742 208 ) or Penmo•l
THE RACI NE Gun Clu b Gun Shoal
741 9575
LAHGI: ROUND boles of hoy A"d
e ve ry Sunday o ll e rnoon Fo e
car co rn Co li oher 7 p m
tory chok e guns on ly Ass oned WA NT TO buy 5 lo 20 a c r e ~ on
614 B4J 2156
rur al w at er 11 1 Me1gs Loc dl
mea l !&gt;
Schoo l 01 sl r te t Su1tobl e f01 GEHl MO DEl 90 portable gnnder
CLEARA N CE SA LE beg•ns M an
budd1ng and access lo good
m111er Peerless por table ro ller
Fe b 13 at Sew N Sew Ou tlel
f OOd 991 61 39
m ill Coso 4 16 sem1 mounted
Ma 1n
St r eel
Ra c1n e
All
pl os Hm s I on 9 ft ho y btn e
po lye st er d ou bl e kmt s r educed
Col l 985 33 41 or 9917519
40",. and so•• Th re ad b1g spoo l
S lor Sl
HEAL THY YOUN G p1 gs l or ~ol e
11 49 277 4 a lter 5 p m
INCOME f A)( Ser vtces Federal IF YO U hove a serv1ce to off er
wa nt to buy or~ se ll some l h1ng
a nd s1a1e ToM es
Wa llac e
HOOVER WA SHER oq d lo1ga
ae Jookm g for work
or
Hus se ll Bradbury 99'1 7218
Wo rm M or n1ng stove for sole
wha tev er
yo u 11 get res ul ls
Good cond 1110il 992 2639
l o ~ t e r w11h o Sen tmel Wan t Ad
LAMPS LANTER NS 3 burner 01l
Coll 992 2156
sl ave Col i 1149 2531 ev enmgs
ltelp~~~"d

(2 ) 15, 19 , 12, 3t c

-

- Save

HOOF HOl LOW Horse"' Buy sell
!rode or trmn New and used
saddl es Ruth Reeves Al bany
(014 ) b98

Anmon
AUCTION FR IDAY 7 pm Lo ts of
n e w and used merchand1 se
Also So t 7 pm Loh of new
merchond1 se at Oh1o R1ver A uc
t1 on M e1g s Pla za Mt ddleporl

COUNTY MEIGS
PUBLIC NOTICE
The foll ow ing doc u ments
were re ce 1v ed or pr epar ed b y
T he Oh1 0 Env 1ronm ent a l
Pro t ec lion Agen cy dur1ng th e
pr ev tous wee k Tpe eff echve
da te o f ea c h f mal a c tton 1S
st al ed The Issuance d a t e of
ea c h propo se d a c t1on 1S
stal ed A nyo ne ag gn ev e d or
ad ver se l y aff ec t ed by a f m al
a c110n to iSSu e, den y , m Odi f Y,
r evo k e. or ren ew a p er m1 1,
licen se, or \la r lanc e or to
approv e or d1 sappro v e plan s
lind spe c 1f 1cahon s ma y f ile
lin app ea 1 w 1th Th e En
v1r o nm enf l!l l
Bo ard
ot
Rev 1ew , SU1 t e 305, 395 E
Br oa d St , Colum bus , OhiO
43216 , w1 t hl n t hi r t y (30 ) days
of th e effective dat e, pur
suan t lo Oh1 0 Revt se d Code
Secf1on 37 45 07 , unless s u ch
fmal a ct1on wa s pr ec ed ed b y
the sa me or su bst ant ially the
sam e pr op osed a ct ion
All
su ch fmal ac t 1ons ar e so
1dent1f1 ed Such per sons m a y
r e(lu es t a n &lt;~d 1 Ud1 ca t 10n
hearmg b eto re Th e OhiO EPA
on &amp; propo sed ac llon to 1ssue
den y , modif y
r ev oke
or
r enew a p er m1 t , l 1cen se , or
v anan ce or to app ro ve or
dr sa p prov e
p l an s
a nd
specif ic atiOn s, w 1thm th1 r ty
(JO J d ay s of t he 1ss uan ce
date 0 R C 3745 07 does not
pro v1de fo r a d 1Ud 1ca f 10 n
hear 1ng r eQu est s or appeal s
on ord ers , ve rlf1ed c om
pl a m rs, or
enfor c em ent
comp l ia nce sc h edule lett er s
W1thm 30 da ys of pu b llc at1on
10 a ne w spap er 1n t he affec ted
county any person m a y a lso
( 1) subm1 t w r. tt en co mm ents
rela t1ng to ac hons, proposed
act 1ons , venf 1ed c om p li:~ 1 nt s ,
or enf or ce m ent cc m plran ce
sc:h edule le tters , ( 2) request
a p u bli C m ee tmg regardmg
propo se d acti on s , an d or (3)
requ es l n ot i ce of f u rth er
act 1ons or pro ceed ing s All
req ues t s fo r ad1Ud1ca t •on
he a r ing s
and
publiC
m ee t1ng s and oth er com
mun 1c at 10ns
con ce rning
pu b l 1c m eet1 ngs, ad lud lc at 1on
h e ~r 1 n gs
verd 1ed
co m
p la1n ts 1 an d r egu lat1on s ,
should be addr essed to Th e
L ega l Recor ds Sect 1on, Oh iO
EP A , P
0
BO )(
10 49 ,
Col umbu s, ohio 43216 (614 )
466 60 37 Unless otherwise
sta ted m pa rt iCU lar not1 ces,
all oth er c omm un1ca t 1on s
1ncludmg
comment s
on
propos ed a ctions , Should be
addressed etther to T h e A1 r
Perm 1t s and comp 11an ce
Mon l t o r 1n g
D 1vls1on
or
Per m il and App r ovlll s ec t 1on ,
w h 1ch ever 1s appropnate , at
Th e Oh tO E PA , P 0
Box
1049 , Co l u m bu s, Ohio 43216
Issua nce of perm 11 tO 1n
st a II
Ohro Po we r Co mpany
Ra c1 ne, Ohto ,cffec tive da te
02 13 78
F a c 11 1ty
d esc riPtion
wast e water
Applicat iOn No 06·340
wa s t ewa te r
t re atment
ta cd •t 1es
f or
Ra c tn e
Hydroelec tr ic Pr o1ect , Ro ute
"338 , Ra c1ne, Oh 10
Issuance of cer l1flc a t10n
Ohi o Pow er Co
App le Grov e Ohio , ef
fec t1v e date 02 l4 78
Pert ai n s
to
40 1 cer
llfl cation , gr an t

First Fast Food
There are 15,000 fish and
clups shops in Bntam. As one
of the original convenience
foods, f1sh and ch1ps are
supposed to be eaten while
out on the street or walkmg
som ewhere
Englishmen
have been relishing fish and
ch1ps for the last 100 years,
eve r s1nce the lndustr~al
RevolutiOn produced the fust
factory workers and their
need for cheap, qu1ck, a nd
nounshmg food

3290

RISING STAR Kennel Boordm g
lndo01
ond outdoor run s
Groommg all breeds ( leon
stlrHio ry focd 1hes Chesh1re
Phone (61&lt;4 ) 367 02n

Phone 991-3993
1-18-1 mo.

-~fin~

ME IGS COUNT Y Huma ne Soc1ety
ommol corelu1e an d adop t. on
servu; e (fr ee 0111mols) 992 7680
or
e.,.enmg s or1d Su ndays
99 2 5 4 27
Mod
c o
M
Cr a wford Rt
4
Bo)l( 326
Pomeroy Oh1o 45769 M ember
sh1p s and donohons PO Bo:o:
b82 ~om~ roy:.. Oh10 45769 ~
A KC REGISTE RED Bo)(er pup s
Have been w ormed 1st shah
992 2726

AI Tromm

1969 CHEVY &lt;I dr h cell en l oond1
lion $495 , Model 12 Wm
ch est er sho t gun
$300
742 2359
1972 Chevrole t Suburban P 5
P 8 aul a Iron s Co ll 949 2110
1975 GRANADA V 8 outom o!1c
Powe r sleer1ng powe1 brak es
01r cpnd i110n1ng AM ro d a E11
cel lent con d1t 1a n
!.2 900
Ph on e 992 3886

landmark
k W. Carsey , Mgr
Phone 992·2181

WILL CARE l or th e elderly m our
hom e Phon e 9917314
MA RE 0 yY ne r s
ArTE NT IO N
AQ HA stu d ser.,.1ce lntroducmg
lo South er n Ohio Cor toko so r
re ll son o f Oloe Breed lor col
or con for mot1 on ond d•sp0s1
t1 on Ph one 698 8241 even rngs
or wn te l or br eed ng con tra ct
Belle Ech o Quo rler Horses
40225 SR 692 Pomer oy O h1 o
457 09

WIL L DO ru g weovmg $2 per
yo rd M rs J1mm1e (Mary) K1ng
CR 32 opp rox l 1'r mtl es from
Me1gs Memor ol Gard ens No
phon«:_ __
m

my

horne

- -----------r

STARCRAF T FAl l Sol e
Mm1 ........
mo tors 20 ond 22
TraV el
Tr a 1 l e r ~
18 5 $3,799 25 i
Bunkhouse S4 875 Fold down
$1 700 up We se ll ~ er Y t ce and
quoltl y Open Sundays Camp
Conley Slorc roft Sol es Rt 62
N of PI Pl ea sant
We have enlarged our
servtee department and
wtll servtce Hotpomt and
other brands
WANT TO rent o small house o r
tr ad er located m t he co un tr y
Ca ll 992 3866 or wrd e Dean
Schro cK Box 49 Rut land Oh1o
45775
_Jack W Carsey, Mgr
Phone 992-2181

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

~~~;~:~~;

Pomeroy L3ndmark

9-.
llllit

------COUNTRY MOBILE

Home Pork
nor th of Pomeroy
~o~ge l o l ~ C o~l 1192 74]q
Roul e 33

HOBSTETTER

REALTY

TIL E Bl OCK bu ild 1ng New con
crele fl oor 1400 sq It Corner
Pome10y and 2nd 51 M aso n
Id ea l l or garage or storage

GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr ,
Broker
101 112 Sycamore St
Pomeroy, Ohio

(3041882 2971
-12.:60
-•'-'- - .... ------mobil e h om e U~t l1t 1e s fur
n1shed Co n 51ru chon men onl y

304 773 5873

PHONE "2 6333
Offit;;e Hours : 9 a.m . to S

P.M.
COAL hm esl one and calc1um
chiOt 1de and colc1um bnne for
du st control and spectal mt )(mg
so li for fo r mers E,.;ce ls1or Soh
Wor ks Mo 1n Street Pomeroy
_ _?_h 1~ p~_o_~ 99~ ~89 1 __
ECONOM Y T~ AC T OR wi th all at
lochments l 1k e new o skmg
$22SO Phone {6 14) 698 3290
RUGS
WAL L H cngt n g~.......~~d
ofgon s N rce l or C hn s tm o~
Reosonoble Coll992 22 1&lt;4

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

B &amp; 5 MOBIL E HOMES PI Plea
son I W Vo bes1de Heck s
1973 Broodmore )4 x 64 2
bed room
1973 Donan 14 llbO'l bedroom
197:2 V1ctonon 14 x 67 3 bedroom
1both
1972 Coventry 12 M65 3 bedroom
1969 Statesman 12 ,.; 60 2
be droom
J9b5 CHE VELLE &lt;4 dr A C 183
en9 2 bb l
aula Iron s h
cellent cond1 11on Truck to pper
"'d 8 II bed 28 1n h1gh
742 2485

--- ------HA Y FOR SAL E
HA Y FOR
985-4 248

.

-.~

SALE

985 38 49

--- - ....

or

_ ___ -

Close
Thursdays
Saturdays at noon.

and

Slum Exltathon

CLEANING

Young's
Carpeting

Restdenttal

Box 34
2-2~1

THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL
-

1974 Sprmg manor. 12' x

60', localed on level lot.
mobtle h om e 150 x 165', all
electr ic w1fh new wood·
burn 1ng stove All furniture
mcluded
Going fast at
$1 1,000 Known as the Keith

Miller property, Arbaugh
addition (Tuppers Plains,
Ohio).
A 1976 FUQUA, 24'

K

56'

double wide , mobile home,
located on 100' x 200' corner

lot, all electric, 2 baths. 3
bedrooms , In-cl uding all
furn 1ture, known as the
w

Ralph Brooks property ,
Arbaugh addition, Tuppers

Plains, Ohio A good buy
for $21 ,000
We have 3 bedroom home,
n1ce, with 2 acres ground
ne ar Tuppers P la ins, Ohio
on Rt 7 1 priced at $32,000

Crow's Subdivision. Five
Points. selling for IJ9.SOO

NICE PIG S f or sal e Coli alter 5
949 1857

Cheryl Lemley

Also new 3 bedroom home,

Associate

Home Phone 742-2003
Hilton Wolfe. Sr
Associltte

Home Phone 949 2589

33

-'

BORN LOSER

'

Ci.-iCKCLICK

CA T FEMA LE Longho1red dog
Labrad or type
Both
... ery
fne n d l y
l o ve abl e
N ice
looJ.. mg pe ts 949 2b07
HALF REDB ONE l emal e 6 mon
ths old Ph one 985 3504

1974 SK YLIN E 14 x 56 3 bvd room
Iota! elec tr1c $7500 992 2019

- -- --------x 52 TRAIL ER for sol~ Would

~

mak e a good camper Phone
949 ~~~4~n y~~e ~~~~_:JE._ __

Storm
Windows &amp; Doors
Replacement
Windows
Aluminum
S•ding-Soffitt
Gutters-Awnings

Weddinp

rJ

,,,

NEW 3 b edroom hou se 1 baths
· ell eloc
I acre Middl epo rt
dose to Rutl and Ph one 991
7481

.•

•

Ye sterd ay 5

}

COUNTRY farmland w tth seclud
ed woo d~ wa ler and good ac
ces s 10 Monroe Co un ty W Vo
$1 000 dowfl coli (30&lt;4j 772
31 02 or ( 30 4~ 772 3227

- - -Commercm l properly opprox 17
----~--'"r--

acres , level land located at
Tuppe r s Pla1ns on Ohto Route
7 Phone (614) 667 6304

----- - - - -

VA FHA 30 yr fmon Cing also
relinonc1ng Ire land Mortgage
77 E St at e Athens ph one (614}
592 3051
JUST COMPLETED n e w house m
M•ddlepor t For mo1e mlormo
t1on ca l1992 2238 or 992 5304
FIVE ROOMS ond both Brand new
s1d1ng
Full basemen t
In
Bashon
' 1• acre Idea l lor
eld er ly
co up le
Sl O 000
949 2443
16 ACRES on Fla twoods Rood In
qu1r e ot 796 South 3rd A venue
_M ~ d~l ep~.!._ ____ ___ _

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

--------------ANY SEWIN G mach ne cl eaned
o iled &amp; a djusted $5 98 FREE
ptckup an d del1 very Belpre
O h1 c 1 423 5497.
WINTER GET to your hou se? l et us
mok e nec on ory repa1 rs AI
Tromm ConstruCtiOn 742 2328
M AG GIE S

UNHO LS TERY
r eupho lstery
r ebu1ldmg Beouflful se lect1on
ol mot enols and vm yls Free
es t1 mot e Tel 742 2B52 Loco
t1on Sale m Center

Refm 1 ~ h 1 ng

-::-::-~

TEAFORD G OLF CLUB S reboionc

__!E._!::~~~_.!_ _ _ _ _ _
NEIGLER S FOR butl d1ng hou ~es
Col l949-2508lor hou se de~ 1gns
and est1mol cs Guy H Ne1 gler
...,..,........_ .........
Rae me

___

HOMESITES l or sole I a cre and
up M1 dd l eport near Rutla nd
Col l 992 7481

-------

COUNTRY - 7 room ranch
home. Real nice kitchen,
large bedrooms, fireplace,
2112 baths, 2 car garage,
Almost 1112 acres. S70,000

9 room house, 4 bedrooms,

natural

gas.

central heati ng, city water
and view of the Oh1o R 1ver
on 2 lots

NEAR

STORE -

lot

SOx100 wtth c1 ty water,
sewer and electrrclty .
OWner will let 2 bedroom

troller go with sole All for
just 16,000
EXTRA NICE - 7 rooms,
1112
baths,
stove,
refrigerator ,
dishwasher
and furn iture Natural gas
furnace
and
fenced

backyard . Complete tor,
S38.500.
RANCH - 3 nice size
bedrooms,

2

walk In

closets. modern bath,
equipped large kitchen,
din i ng,

sundeck

and

2

acres. $25,000
LARGE - 7 room older
home In Middleport Bath,
nafu f ol gas heat. city
water and 2 car garage

Only $15,000
DON'T HURRY YOUR
REALTOR IN SELLING
YOUR PLACE OR YOU
WILL LIKELY HAVE TO
TAKE LESS,
C. Bruce TN lord
Helen L. Teaford
Sue P. Murphy
Realtor Associates

So ns 4, F or R ic h er, For Poor er 15, M erv Griffin 6

~~~g~ ~ ; Is 8 Sesame ST 20,33, Gom er Py le,

0
Now arrange th e c1rcled letters to
torm the surprise answer as sug
gested by Jh e above ca rtoon

..

rI I

XI I :t: J"

Jumble s TIGER YOUN G ADAGIO INDUCE
Answer Wh at t he dac h sh und wa 5- THE UNDERDOG

ALLEYOOP

=~~ .;wH~I

·•· IN THE CAP•
LI!M, ON Tltli
DAY AFTIR 'TH.
'TAL VILLAGE 01'

2 161 mo

AM I GONNA FIND

OUT WHAI "fUNK

NEl('T' FUL.I.

WJoXf5

MOON(TO ...

by THOMAS
ACROSS
I Bugle call
5 Hamelin
mUSICian

~~to - podr~da
FOR?

•

'

'•

'

Get hold of
12 Pearl Buck
herome
13 Reviewer
14 Playthmg
15 Equahty
16 Ending for
elephant
17 CeremonlOllS

REMODELIN G Pl umbmg heot mg
and oil types ol general repotr
Work: guaranteed 20 yea rs eM
penence Phone 992.2409
:___:__c_

19 Nest
20 Burden
Zl Appraise
2Z Conceal
Z4 Oared
25 Suggestion

GASOUNE ALLEY

depos1t 1t and Poo P1nq
on Show's doorstep, col lect
our monew and ~~

StwiNG MACHINE Repo1rs ser
v1ce oil make s qq2 1284 The
Fab11 c
Sh o p
Pom e r oy
Authon zed Sm ger Soles and
Serv1ce We sharpen Sct sso r ~

Shado ws o nthe Grass 33

JOSEPH
2 Apportion
3 Shift for
oneseU
4 - LUIS
Ob1spo
5 U S naval
hero
6 Here . Fr .
7 Try to help
8 Green
copper
arsenate
9 Ebbed
11 Burn
15 Sumrrut
18 Perfectly
Zl Anagram
of tore

9 00--C iass of '65 J, .t 15, B a rney Miller 6,13 G r a m my
A wa rds 8. 10, Advocat es 10,33
9 J~Ca rter Country 6, 13 , 10 ~Ba re tta 6, 13 Anna
K arenlna 33, New s 20
Ba rr el
20. 11 OQ- Ne w s
10 JQ- Lock , Sto ck &amp;

3, 4,6,8,10,13,1 5, Di ck Cavett 20, Over Easy 33
11 JQ-Johnny Car son 3.4, 15. Star sk y &amp; H u t c h 6 13
~ovte " The Super Cops" 8, A BC N ews 33, Mov l ~
They Were Exp endab le ' 10
12 oo-Janaki 33, 12 -40-T o m a 6, 13 , 1 00- Tomor r ow
3,4, 15, I 5~ N ews 13
Yesterday ' s Answer

22 Vocal work
Z3 Football
player
24 Table wme
26 " MASH"
character
28 Wntten m
symbols

29 Torment
30 French
decree
35 Never, m
Nuremberg
36 Nickname
of 1936

~~~,--,:;---,

EXC AVATIN G dozer load er and
backhoe w ork dump t ruck s
an d lo - boy ~ lor htre w tll haul
hll d~rt to so1l hme ~ tone and
grovel Call Bob or Reger Jef
lers day ph6ne 992 7089 mght
phone 992 3525 or 992· 5232

2 car garage. storage shed

$31,500 oo.
LARGE OLDER HOME 3-4 BR, modern kitchen,
utility, NG hot water heat.
carpeting,
paneling ,
carport, corner lot . All this

lor lust S3t,900.oo.
2 YEARS OLD - 1 floor
3

B R , bath,

nice

kitchen, ~!lilly. carpeting,
finished garage. loll of
space,
fer
replacement

below
costs

ofos

;_'l·u:d.

Immediate possession, 3
bedrooms. bath, NG heat,
cold room, carpeting ,

storms, parking, older but
In very good condition
$13,900 00.
I STORY FRAME - 2 3
BR, bolt-o, level lot, good
some

remodeling Going at
$13,000 oo.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK, KATHY &amp; LEONA
CLELAND
ASSOCIATES
992-2259-992-6009
• "2-4191

Flooring In Stock

SOUTH

+A Q J Ill

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
742-2211

Rutland

'

J B .1

4

KJ

• AK.I 6

'RNIE

fRANJt.LY, % DOfV"" ~!!
HAS CHf.clt.aNG
COMIC 9fRIP,

ius1NESs

Vulnera ble Nort h-South
De ale r South

OSHA

DIM!t.ISIONS OF A
AIIIYIIN~IfY!
.

We st

I

••

•·•

••
~

-

CRYPTOQUOTES

• AND NON RJR TI1E NEW&amp;. 11JTU
-JOHN50N 1A HOTEL EXECUTIVE 1
BELIEVED KILlED IN A
PlANE CIV'-&amp;11 ---

HAS BEEN I&lt;E&amp;OJED AT
&amp;E.-'1 BY A PAB81NG FREIGHTER
SURVIVING- 1WO YEARB
ON A DEBOLATE
PACIFIC ATOLL •..

.1\IZ. JOHN5-0N IN RE!v'Af:KAI:&gt;LE
CONDITION AFTER HIS HARIZOWI NGORDEAL, IS ON HI&amp; WAY 10 BEINGI&lt;EUNITED Wl111 HI&amp; W IFE ANDSON J

QJCBP

VJP

MZNB

PQJ

GLLVXKPXZF

Z L

PBJUU

LJ J V
CFG

LZB
GXU

JYJBMZFJ . -

-·•

-·'

©

:·,.••

,.,,•'
..••
•.,

••

19'18 KmR Feat.ures SyndK:ate In(

BARNEY

." ''

'•
••

+3

no-

trump opemng bid usually
shows 22 to 24 h1gh card
pomts On the diagrammed
hand, however. North and
South had the understandmg
that the bid showed only 20
to 22 high-card poonts
West found out thas Important information before h e
made his openmg lead by the
s1mple and darect procedure
of askmg Th1s c ruclaltnfo r -

•

'·'·

Pa ss

opponents mean s A two

WINNIE

1:

3.

Pass
Pa ss

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
To defend a hand prope rly , the defenders must know
what the boddmg of their

.•,.

'·

SouLh

Pass

Opemng lead

•
•

"

No rth E ast

2 N'l

•

___

..........
.. _,,_

I PICKED A POT FULL

•nd see what you're genlng

Call742-2211
TALK TQ
WENOELt. GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

+

• 32
(/10 'I R.
A Q 10 4 2 ,fo 9 7 6 5 I

luy where you c1n came In
-Good seletlions - Fully
stocked.
·

EAST
+6 .1
'Q 6

4

'9'xl2' Vinyl

$25.900 00.
MIDDLEPORT

neighborhood,

'4.88

2112 A

A 10 9 7 2

WEST
+K9 2
'K 5 4

~

As Low As

Don't be afraid to ask
• 7 54

All carpet inatolled with
padding 11 no charge.
Expert Installation.

Rubber Back Carpet -

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

NOH TH

:·'·

SAVE ON
CARPniNG
DRIVE A LlffiE
&amp;
SAVE A LOT

BRIDGE
'

WILL do roofmg co n ~ l r u c llon
plumbing and heoll ng No tob
loa Iorge or too small Phone

carpeting ,
paneling,
garage, garden ,
other

Wednesday Feb 22 1978

• 8 7 54

EXCAVATING do ze r backhoe
and d1tcher Charl es R Hat
l 1eld
Beck Hoe Sen11ce
Rutland Ohm Phone 742 2008

BATHROO MS AND K1tchen s
re modeled cerom1c file pl um
bmg corperHry and genero l
13 years e)l(
momtenance
- ~ enence 992 3 ~_
5_______ _

Movie Channel 4 S&amp;9PM - LionlnWinteriPGI
7 &amp; 11 PM - Meet John Doe IGI

qet out!

698 7331

features. JUST $19,500 00
5 YEARS OLD - Ranch, 3
BR. bath,• lo,ely kitchen,
formal dining, all carpeted,
electric 8B heat, flrepla&lt;:e,

4 JG-Lttf le R asc al sJ , JS, G ill igan ' s I s 4 Brad y Bunc h
8, 10, Mary T y ler M oore 13
S oo- Here Com e T he Brides J , St ar Tr ek 4 Gun
sm oke, 8, Mi st er Rog er s' N eighbor hoo d 20,33,
Hogan s H e r oes 10 Emerg en c y One 13, To Be
A nnounced I S
5 3G- N e ~s 6, E lec Co 20,33, M ary Ty ler M oore 10,
Hogans H er oes 15
6 00--News 3, 4,8, 10, 13, 15, ABC Ne ws 6, Zoom 20
6 Jo-NBC News 3,4. 15, A BC N ew s 13, Car o l Burne tt &amp;
F r iend s 6 , L BS News 8, 10 Over Ea sy ~0
7 QO--.C r os s W its 3, Common Sen se 4 Liar s C lub 6
G ong Sho w 8, Capitol Beat 33 N ews 10, "To Te ll
T he T r ut h 13, G illigan 's I s 15, Hoc ki ng Va lley
B l uegrass 20
7 15-Mar sh a lt U Report JJ 7 JG- H oll ywoo d Squares
3,4, $100,000 N a m e Th a t T une 6 Tattle tale s a
Mac Neil L e h r er Report 20,33, T lla l ' s Holl ywood 10'
Nash \/ l it e on th ~ Roa d 13 , Te lev ision Honor Soc ie t y

B 10, On ce Upon A Class ic 20,33
8 31}---- Fi sh 6, 13, Bugs Bu nny 8 , 10, Orlg lno ls 20.

~

3825

Li li as

15

Special Ocasions

ELWOOD BOWERS RE PAIR Sweepers toa ste rs 1rans all
sm ell opp l10nce s Lawr mower
ne)( t to State H1ghw oy Goroge
on Rout e 7 Ph one (6 14 ) 98 5·

3 GO-

8 oo-Chlps 3, 4, 15, We lcome Back , o tter 6, 13, Pean u t s

AnnlwtiSitits

BRADFORD, A uc t1 onee r Com·
plete Serv1ce Phon e 9&lt;49 2487
or 949 2000 Rocme Oh1o Cntt
Bradford

Wome~

Yoga &amp; You 20
3 3D-All In The Fam il y 8, 10. Anl lques 20
4 01}----Mister Ca rtoon 3, E dge ol Night \3 , My Three

'

Plssports

'

Jo-Oays o f Our Lives 3,4, IS, As The World Turns

N ~ w spape rb oo k s

HOWERY
AND MARTIN Ex·
co vot1ng , sept 1c sy stem s
dozer ba ckho e dump truck
l1mestone
gra vel , blacktop
pov1ng Rt t4 3 Phone 1 (614)

plan,

N ews 8, Yo un g &amp; the Res tl e ss 10, N ot F or

On ly IS

The latest JUMBLES a1e here In JUMBLE BOOK 110 and JUMBLE
BOOK Ill 1 A ~all a bl e tor $ 1 35 EACH, pos tpaid tram Jumble, c/o thl a
newspaper P 0 Box 34 Norwood N J 07648 Make checks pa)'abl• to

7422348

MAIN
POMEROY, 0 .
VERY NICE - 2 story
frame, 3 BR, bath, l«ced
a ir heat, utility R ,

To Say The Least t5 , Gambi t 8

12 31)-.Ry an ' s Hope 6, 13, Bob Braun 4 Gong Show 15,
Sear ch f or T omor r ow B 10, E le c Co 33
1 OG-F or R icher, For Poo r er 3, A ll My Children 13

I

______ _

,~~!.~~~m
REALTOR
216 E. Second Street

12 oo--Ne w scen fer 3 $2(},000 Py r am~d 13, N L"wS .t ,6, 10,

(Answers tomorrow)

....;

Fami ly 4. Love of Life 8, 10. Sesame Sl 20. Nova
33 : 11 15---CBS News 8. Loving Free 10

8, 10, 2 00--0ne Li fe to Live 6, 13
2 3D-Doctors 3,4, 15, Gui ding Ligh t 8, 10,

r

I

11 31}----K nockout 3, 15. Fam il y Fe ud 6, 13, Partridge

byHenn ArnOidandBob l ee

..

Prrnt answer here

'
•

TURL EY 5 WR ECKER
Sarvtce
Ro cme Oh1 0 Dey or mght
949 2657

4, 13, 15; Edge ot Nlghl 6
Family A f fair 8, M ac t ch C am e 10
'
9 30-Emergenc y On e ' 6, And y Gri ff ith 8. Family
Affair 10
10 00-Sanford &amp; Son 3 4, I S, T a ttle t a l es 8, Joker s Wllct
10, N ot For Women Only 13,
10 30- Holl ywood Squares 3,4, I S, A ndy Griff ith 6
Price is Righ t 8, 10, Ri c k Faucheu x 13
'
11 06--Wheel of Fortune J . ~ . 15 , Happy Da y s 6 13

•I

Syracuse. Ohio
Ph. 992-3993
1-18-1mo.

PULLIN S EXC A VAliNG Complet e
Ser ... 1ce Ph one 992 24 78

Gr lflln 3. Phil Donah ue

Lee~~rnlng

A nother W orld 3,4, 15, Gener al Hosplfa l 6, 13

I

I I

UTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

·,.;,.,.

Portraits

LARRY UIVENDER

8 O&lt;r-Capt Kangaroo 8. 10. Sesam e ST 33 , 9 OG-Mer v

I ARRIVE- All MIXEDUP
- AT A MED ITERRA NEAN
BEACH!

IVIRQUEj

•

'

00--TQday 3,4,15. Good Morn ing America 6,13; CBS
News 8, Bullwlnkle 10, 7 31}-'-Schoolles 10

7

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

•• " i"" -'~

FLIPER

•'

2 boths ,

Ci..iel&lt;

CL-iCK

-

'""""'

of

I CINIGd
I I

GLICK

·:.
·- :

111! H11h SL

Chara c terist ics

Ic___:___;.=
RESEAl
~'h-.l _:;:.:
1 =,D
; ....+----,-t""""J

. ..

THE PHOTO PLACE

m'\t

,.,,..., r... o..:• ' -

SMOKE'

C~ I GI'-

Gt..1GK

"I

I'OO!:i'T IT ! llXliJ'T

Ct..ICI'4- ICI&lt;
C!.1Gf'.

'·•

FREE ESTIMATES

15 ,

Unscramble lhese tour J umbles
one lett er to each square. lo lorm
four ordtnary words

,.•'

P~!!l-2171

Is

~ ~ ~&lt;.!;ltL!a oo

'

10 30 c I

N ews 13

Olsabllltles 20

"•

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Chester, Oh1o

mo

Gi~ A-way~~~~-~~~

8

--

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

'The Orltlnltors

G ill iga n' s

.....'•,
..,.'·'·

''"" the .. ,....
IIHMt ..r N tN

Phone 985-3806

flot The 1111tatols

HeRSELF OUT
OF SIIAPE'!

,:'

estimate,
Anyday, anytime.

AI
992-2206 or 992-7630

SHE FEELS U&gt;JHAP P'I Oil.
U~ LOVeD, SHE 60E.S
WECC SORT OF' A
f'EEPINEI FFCE/liZ'f!

TO OVERCI\T

'\f\1'\l~

...
.,.

Call
24 hour service.

R"'lt 30 P - . 0.
Catpel• Upholslety
Phone Mtke Young

1 K~ OW- &amp;UT \\ltlE&gt;I EVell. y ,,, ~IE A,&gt;J

5HE TE'ND5

ABC News 6, Zoom 20
31}----NBC ~ews 3,4,15, ABC News 13: Carol Buroett &amp;
Friends 6 CBS News 8 10, Over Easy 20.
7 00--Cross Wots 3.4. Liars Club 6, Sha Na Na 8
Capitol Beat 33, News 10 To Tell The Truth 13,

6

M ovie " Special Olympics " 8 10, N ov a 20. B o x ing

2 5-1 mo

Service

6 45--Mornlng Report J . 6 5D-Good Morning
West Ylr9 lnia 13: 6 55--(:huc k While Reports 10'·

Mac Neil Lehrer Re porl 20,33. The Judge 10, In
Search Of 13, Wild Ki ngdom 15
8 00--Gr lzz ly Adams 3,4,15, Eight Is Enough 6,1 3,

,,••,.

and
for

con'lmercial.

NEW LISTING- 2 family

_._

HAY FOR sole 949 2870

SEPTIC TANK

1948 sq. fl of floor space.

REDl.J CE SAFE &amp; fe st w1 1h GoBese
l obl ets &amp; E Vop wat er pil ls
N ei ~~O_!:~ _ _... _. __

HAY FOR sol e 992 7306

Supetior

Woman 10

6 30-0octors on Call 4, News 6 , Sunr ise Semester 8,

7 15---Ma rshall U Report , 7 3D-Funny Farm 3. Sha
N a Na 4; W hen H avoc: Struck 6, Famil y Feud 8,

•

MOBI LE HOM E w tth e)(pando on 3
acr es Do lled we ll Septi c tonk
l mme d 1o t e
p oss e ss 1on
742 307 4

3 AND 4 RM fu r nt ~ hed ond un
tu rn1 shed opt s Phone 99'1
5434

PUT ITTH1!7 WAY,
EM Y- - DAFFODIL HAS
A SL16HT !OMOTIONAL
PllO~L!OM 1

-· .

Lnln, w. va.

THURSDAY, FE BRUA RY 23, 1978
5 45---F arm Report 13, $ 5()..- PTL Club 13 5 55-·
Su n r i se Seme st er 10 , 6 25- F o r You
Black

6 00--News 3,4,8 10, t3, 15

LET '~

33. 12 41}----Mystery of the Week 6,13,

5&amp; 7P M - sevenPercentSolullon (P Gi
9 &amp; t1 PM - The Senll nel ( RI

Hogan' s H eroes 15

CAPTAIN EASY

'

m-5955

SALES AND SERVICE
11 -9-ff C

2-10 ttc

~~e;~U,:~~~~

Senires otterdl

WILL BABY SIT
992 b309

or 992-6263
8 A.M. to4:30 P.M.

Free Estimates
Work Guaranteed

.

~Janak l

Kol ak 8, 1 DO-Tomorrow 3,4, 2 . H)- New s 13
Mov•• Channel 4 -

5 31}----News 6 E lee Co 20,33. Mary Tyler Moore 10.

~

m'·?J:
•

INR

Pomeroy 992-'282

742 -2328

~-

~-...... ~
.
~-

300 Main St.
l'omeroy, Ohio

Construction

Let Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; condttton your
water wtth Co-op wat,r

Let us test y our water Free

.,...._

NL

F1ve 0 8, Movie " Ci r c u s World " 10

12

Heroes 10, Emergen cy One 13, To Be A n nounced t5

Wood Stoves

PWMBING &amp;
HEAnNG INC.

Remodeling
Room Additions
Garages

I•

.

CARTER

~

r v

soltener. Model UC-SVI.
Now Only ~279.95

9. oo lil9 00 Moii .-Fridoy
9 00 lol6 : 00 Slturday
12 oo Ill 6 . 00 5undey
2-2-Hc

Gill igan's Is 8; Sesame S 20.33 . Gomer Py le,
USMC tO
4 31}----LIIlle Rascal s3. 15, Gilligan' s Is 4, Brady Bunch
8. 10. Mary Tyler Moore 13.
5 oo-Here Come The Brides 3, St ar Trek .ol , Gun smoke
8, Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20.331 Hogan's

Sa v e lO pet to so pet
on hea1 1ng co st
E x per•enc e end
fully 1nsure d
Free E st
Ct~ll . 661-,479 or 992. 3115
1-U · Imo.

Open

Free Esttmates

-·- ,

IN POR TLAN D neo d boby s Her 5
do11 s o week !rom 7om to 6pm
For more
nl01 rnot 1on -=all
843 4803
Must ho ve o wn
Iron spor to lion

Money-

LAVENDER
OONSTRUCTION
Syracuse, Ohio

LANDMARK

c.

Fuel &amp;

4; For Rlcher, For Poorer lS , Merv Griffin 6.

....
•••
••

Cellulosic (wood fiber J
Thermal Insulation

Loc:ettd In Tile
MEIGS PLAZA
Middleport, Ohio

Woman 3.4. 1S; Star s ky &amp; Hutch 6, 13,
Ma ry Tyler Moore 8.10
10 31}----News 20; 11: ~New s 3,4,6,8. 10,13, 15; Olck
Cavett 20.
11 31}----Johnny Caroon 3.4,1S. Pollee Story 6. 13, Hawaii
t O . ~Poll ce

WEDN ESDAY , FEBRUARY 22, 1171
J 30---Ailln The Family 8,10. Ohio Journal 20, 4 00-Mister Car toon 3. Edge of Night 13. My Three Sons

~

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE .

ACE HARIMARE

~~~

.•• .
~...••

J&amp;L

WAllPAPER.
PAINT &amp; SUPPLIES

Cellulose Fiber
Blown Into Walls
and Attics

POMEROY

(2 1 22 . lt c

Color
Color, a n electromagnehc
wave . phenomenon, ts a
sensation produced through
the exc•tallon of the retina of
the eye by rays of hght. The
colors of the spectrum may
be produced by viewmg a
light beam refracted by
passage through a prism,
Which breaks the hght mto
wave lengths Customarily
the SIX primary colors of the
spectrum are thought of as
red, orange, yellow, green,
blue and VIolet

Blown Insulation

TELEVISION
VIEWING

IS WONDERING
THE SAME THING •••

•
"
••

Business Services

n

6. 13; Great Performan ce s 20

•

.

t'orSale

Wanted to Uuy

In Memory

12.500.00

T ERM S OF SA LE
1 T h 1s pr opert y c annot b e
sold for l ess than th e ap
pra 1sed v a lue
2 Cash m hand at the t im e
of t ne actual deed transfer
A l l b idS mu st be del tv er ed
to 'th e l aw off 1ce o f Walker
M ol ltca &amp; Gall Co , L P A , 35
North Col lege Street , Athens ,
Ohio , on or before 10 00
o'c loc k ~ m
on S ~t u rday
February 25 , 1978 For any
add i tio n al
1nformat1on
c on c er n tng th i s property ,
1nqu ln es should b e made to
St even T Sloa n at the above
addre ss
,
All b idS wil l b e opened
publi c ly a r 10 00 o 'c lock am
on Saturday , F ebruary '.25,
1978, at the above law off1ce

9 ~Black Sheep Sq~adron 3,4, 15, Charlie's Angels

.

ltJDA'/ 15

THAT HOWEVER, NEED
NOT CONCERN ANYONE
IN THI5 CLASSROOM

L/OU WOULDN'T
HAVEBEEN INVITED

AN'IWA't'!

OF BLACKBERRIES,
AUNT LOWEEZY

matlOn gave West the key to
defeatmg the contract
West 's opening daamond

I
I SEE TWO
POTS FULL

was won by South's
South now l e d has club
jack West w on w1th his
quee n He t ontmu ed w1th hrs
last dnunond and South t o ok
th e trick
South led ho s club king
Wes t coverCd w1th the a c e,
and dummy ruffed w1th the
spade four DcciHrer traed o
t r ump rmcssc, losmg to
West's kmg
W est now p onde red He
hud s tarted with 12 high ·
ca rd points and dummy wrth
four If decla re r had only 20
pomL~. there w a s room an
Ea s t 's lmnd f o r two more
pomts If those points w e r e
ther:e 111 the p~r son of the
queen of hearts. the contract
could b e bea ten
West bnJV c ly s witc hed to
hrs small heart and declarer
was defoated • If declarer
played low nllowong East to
wm w1th the que en , a diamond r eturn by East would
grve West a wmmng ruff for
the settmg tuck If Instead,
decla re r rose w1th the ace of
hearts, East a nd West would
eve ntually score both the
kmg a nd queen of hearts
lea d
ktn g

separatel y t o d e feat the c on-

tra ct
It wa s a brilliant coup by
West What mad e 1t all possible wa s W es t ' s askmg a
ques t1on befor e makmg the
openm~ leHd
1NI-.WSPA I'F:H EN / I~ H P i liSE ASSN 1

(For a copy o f JACOBY MOpERN send S' to
Wm at
Bndge
care of tht s ne wspaper P 0 Box 489 RadiO 0 1ty
Sratlo n N ew York N Y T0019 )

•

�12 - The Da1ly Sentm~l Middlt pt rl P u1u 1 \ 0 \\ ~o'l.lllt'Mtl\ h h U Jll'itl

Photo show on at Rio this Friday

Center bids awarded
MARION - Contracts •ell
awarded to successful lml
ders on a new statewide
tram1ng and de' elopment
center to be built cast of till e
General Telephone Co
f
OhiO announced today
Robert M W&lt; p.11 of
Marton president stud ~\ nrk
un the ne" three h;vc l
structure Will !itart .,..hC11
weather permitS rargct f
com pletion IS late 1979
General contract wds
awarded to Mosse1 Con
struruon of Fren1ont M&amp;M
Electrw Co of(.allon " on the
bi.d for electncal wm k J A
Guy Co uf Dublm will fm msh
heatmg au cu ndlttumng .ltHI
ventilation cq utpment The
plumbing cont ratt ~ en t t'
Farber Corp &lt; f ColumiJus
Wopat
Si:! ld
CXIS tlll~

trauun~

ftl.. llltJt.s

\\lit

huUS( d Ill )&lt; IM.'d lJU 111t I S
mar du.... nl&lt;mlt Marl!tll
1 h(' n\'\\ $3 9 1111lhun lCJJter
~\til pn \Ide f tUiitae~ ft r
tc&lt;.hmcal 1nd 111 tna~c n 11
tralllin~
JHt grams
fu1
Gcncr"l s 5 lllfl empl )OOS
f:cru I tl SlfVUi Ill• re th Hl I
thn d r Ohu I'; I uul trl I
Ill\'

lOII Sll Ud U 11

SIIC

IS

dbuut biX nt1\cs c:.tst

t

f

Bombs explode,
hurt 2 111 Heirut

!\1111 I l l II 111l llllt.'l:';t;l\1 II
f Ohlv IO'J 111d 911 II IS ad
Jllllll I
till ltlllf)CJH}'S
u lrnnu strfltl\l
u mplex
v.lmh "a s t pcnld 111 1974
IlL signer of the tenter "as
HUIII S
l it. kWuud iind
I lll ~ l'lllilll 1\r d 11lCdS Inc
M Jrl i II
I x:tu 11

rt &lt;tan~ular shaped
bu1ldmg are 114 by 226 fed
lllt llu cr levels wrH pruvnle

~ 111&lt;.: 8:1600 squ an feet uf
O ~t r sptC(
1 ht f 1&lt; rl~t y will mdude 13

I ts sJ t

11

s

Hannan.

SHOES
"Next to Elberfeld s

Pomeroy 0

pu r-pt sc ru1 01
111 .HidJtlun a business
sah:s ten ter IS pla nned In the
build111~

sh
t

WI U

It wtll provide 1
111
uf
V lfiUUS

p ~ r ttlllrl

S\SlliiiS

811

Ali
\\pH' lm Ill\ l011111l •I
11

firS!

custtBJer s
eS timated St rne
4 800 cmplt ycrs Will co m
pld ~ C UISl S the first yc If
the (enter IS Ill I per Il iOn
Subjects r m~ c fHun basi(
llc&lt;.:LIIUL) to udvanced
tcJtdH ll!L fl:( h/lt Jogy

1;u1 .. nddy m n tvls I tbl

I 1\C Ill Ill
Hllllnt t:Vl'r'

hdd II Htt ( r 1mlt: ( 1lll14!.:
and ( uu mun1ty ( ullcgc wtll

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t~Jic&lt;.l

1.:1.

b) ( arS(tfl J llunt w1U be
I h~.: Neg~ll\l lw a~c
displayed thr' ua.:h M H t h i (II firil)lll g ab~tr&lt;JI! UIH.IJ.:CS
Included rn 1he exh1b11 Hrc :..r t1 catl'd fr 111 nega tive pnnt s
VtHICl) 4i purtnnts md
A nceptlun 11pcnmg the
landscupl s m ht th ntlur and exhibit Will be held at 8 30
black ilncl ~~h1t e
p 111 F nda) 1n tho colle~e
dnung hall lho public 1s
1/lVIIl'd
Hunt 2a IS J soph 1morc at
Rn G1 amle l'hc 1971 OaUhll
ll1 gh School ~radua t e IS also
C:l veteran I f the us NdV)'
After he co mpl et es hiS
ph to studies at the colle~c
h(l plans to \\ork "lth elthcr
pc rtra 1t
r
UhJ gtJZJ ne
ph tugr0:1phy

Tractors
parade in
Columbus Financial
By JANET
WALSH

CO! UMBUS (UP ! )
Farmers Unvmg tractors
trunrned w1lh American flags
today began settmg up a
motorcade from the Ohlo
State
Fairgrounds
to
downto\l.n Columbus m
support o( better pnl.'t!S for
farm products
A lot of people think we
are asking for a handou t but
were JUS! askmg for an even
break sa1d Gale Long a
fa rmer from Farmersvrlle m
Montgomery County
fhe
money
goes
to
the
middleman SIX years ago the
pnce per bushel for wheal
was $5 and now 11 1s $2 oO but
the pnce of bread keeps gmng
up
The rally and tractorcade
was planned b&gt; the Amencan
Agriculture Movement whose
Ohio office IS headquartered
m Spencerville

Randall H• berts has been
elected cluef of the Racmc
F.MS Squa d Bi ll Bird was
elec t ed assistant ch1ef
Ot her s elected a re Rf}
Dowell u:~ptam 6ever ly
Dowell II De lures Wolfe
president Ben Petrel v1ce
president Huberta Ma1dens
( eda
Mae
t reasure r
Kraeutei sctretary
1 he squad du11ng 1977
made 287 runs wh1le travclmg
10 n42 2 nn lcs fhey an
swered ca lls 1n the v1Hages of
Hac me and Sy 1acuse and
I etart Sutton I e banon
Chest er Olive and Bedford
1 ownshtps
fh e EMS extend spec~ Jl
thanks to members of the
Raetn(' Gun Club for their
donatwn

Nationalize
(Continued from paae I)
Council to get a contract we
can accept
sa 1d the
offucral And we won t go
for any bmdmg arblt.at1on
Rhodes met w1th a
delegatiOn of UMW members
and th eir w1ves Tuesday and
then met \Uth governors of
other coal producmg states m
Charleston W Va
Ohm must be saved from
a billion dollar blackout that
could force masstve unem
ployment Widespread sohool
closwgs and cold a nd
darkened homes throughout
the state sa1d Rhodes m a
telegram to coal negotiators
Qu1ck action to settle the
coa l1ssue IS needed to avoid a
catastrophe of mcalculable
proportions
Glenn met wtth President
Carter Tuesday and told the
Pres1dent he should take
aclwn by thiS weekend to end
the strike
Based on vts1ts to
VJrtua Uy every corner of
Ohio l m convnced that
layoffs that may exceed one
m1lhon unemplo yed are
unmmenl Glenn sa1d he
told the pres1qent
I told the president that
Ohlo has entered the cnt~ea l
stage, sa1d Glenn l urged
the pres1dent m the strongest
way I know how to take act1on
by thiS weekend The
sttuatton IS that crtllcal '

report is

announced

fhe balance of all funds t•
P1 men&gt; Village Cn unt:ll as
of Jan 31 totaled $242 550 35
ateordmg to the mr. nthly
report of Jane Walto11 Vllictgc
clerk
Rece1pts and expcnthtul es
far the rnunth and b0:1lan&lt;:c 111
the aL1 1ve funds 1especllvely
~ere
genera l $10 216 04
$11 53t 38 $26 !71 97 revenue
sha nng $4 871 no o•
pend1tures $27 357 87 anti
recessiOn $600 no ex
pcruhturcs $2 136 07 scwc1
$5 492 51 $1 132 02 $.17 780 65
f11 edcpa11ment $800 $h63 75
$4 660 49 cemeter) $210
$612 57
$41 66
Sll ee l
department nu recctpts
$5 469 38 $1 720 75 sta te
haghwc~y
no rcCC!pls rH
expen ditures
$4 B09 83
~ ate1 ' pe1 atmg $10 745 60
$5 607 80 $9 580 21 guarant v
111eter 175 1196 67 $5 491 99
pa rkmg mete r $590 no ex
pcndllurcs $22 114 44 utility
fund no rewpts $1 373 02
$6 639 80 Receipt s ex
pen cl 1tu res aml ba la nce
respect1velv 1n all 1d1VC
funds
were
$33 602 15
$26 787 56 $152 505 73
Balance m the macttvc
funds were bond reti rement
$65 308 36 sewe r bon d rep&lt;ur
fund $24 7311 26 Rewpl s
ex penditures and balance 111
a ll funds respectively were
$33 602 Ia $26 787 58
$242 550 35

Sales tax
collections
are increased

SQUAD CAl LEO
fhe Middleport squad was
ca lled ft the mlerscctwn of
H utes 143 and 7 at 2 04 a m
Wednesday for Kenny Snuth
who was taken to Holzer
Medical Cen te1
At 9 23 p m the M1d
Ulcport Ftrc Depa rtment
a nswered 1 mutual md ta ll to
Ga lh a Co unty tu asstst tn the
f1re at the Hannan 11 ace
Elementary Sc hool Tile
department d1d not ret urn to
~1 a tto n until aboul 1 am
W c dn~:s da y

MEETS THURSDAY
Mtddlepm t Cub Scout Pack
245 will meet at i p m I'hurs
da} at the Feeney Bennett
Post 128 Amencan LegiOn
Hall Frcends and fam cli es
are welcome as well as an)
&gt;nungster who " ould ltke to
Julll the pack

i

I
~

::-..~~~'»-'=~~!11

MATHEW KJNNEN
Mathew A Kmnen 75 of
Route 1 Reedsville died
early Wednesday mormng at
Veterans Memona l Hosp ita l
fo lio\\ mg a bnef Illness
He was born m Athens
County the son of the late
Michael and Mary W1sen
ba ugh Kmnen He was also
preceded In death by l wo
brothers and two SISters
He was a member of St
John s Catholic Church at
Guysvi lle He was a fanner
Survtvors Include one
brother Paul of Athens two
Sisters Mrs Nellie Bernard
of Guysville and Mrs Celia
Collins of Route I Reedaville
and severa l meces and
nephews
Funeral services will be
held Fnday 11 a m at St
John s Catholic Church w1th
th e Rov Fath er Frank
Palata off1 clatmg Bunal w1 U
be 1n the ch urch cemetery
Fnends "111 be recetved at
the Wh1te Funeral Home tn
Coolville after 1 p m Thurs
da)

V*=:w

Social
Calendar

THURSDAY
PRECEP'l OR CHAP1 ER
Beta S1gma Ph1 Thursday at
Me1gs Inn at 7 4o p m
FRIDJY
HARRISONVII l E
M&lt;1
so me I odge 411 F&amp;AM
Fnday 7 30 p m at temple
Annual mspectton Wm k Ill
fellowcraft degree
All
master masons mvtted

FRANKIE NEIGLER
Frank•o V Ne1gler 90
Rac1ne d1ed Tuesda} a t
Hnlzer Medtcal Center Mrs
Ne1gler was prece ded m
death by her parents George
and Adahne Burn Pickens,
her husba nd Howard one
Sister and two brothers
Mrs Ne1gler \\a s a
membe r of th e Racme
Baptist Chu rch
She IS survived by one son
Gecrge J Ne1gler Racme
one daughter Mrs Ch de
(Selma 1 Cross Columbus
one brother Tttus P1ckens
Syracuse two sisters Josre
Pickens Coolville and Mary
Sheets Dayton five grand
children and three great
grandchildren and several
n1eces and nephews
Funeral services will be
he ld Thursday at I p m at
Ewmg Chapel with the Rev
Don Walker offiCIBl ing
Bunal Will be m Letart Falls
C..cu,etery Fnends may call
at the funeral home at any
Ume

Oiler, Nunley in traveling ,group

lhml s 11d I u "Ill Jlsu :-;tu w

u}

llllflii S

---------------------------,
!I
Area Deaths !I

IAAA

1• ,.!rl

tcl c phune
IV:IIJ&lt;tiJie
[of

w, pat

• •

II&amp; A
V&amp;&amp;Y

llu \

d

bustncss

fAA IAY&amp;AU.

0 111

a labl1ratury

, ffln sp ttt and a multi

MAYORS COU RT
l&gt;umrld Scd~\I C k Tuppers
PI un.s \HIS fmed on three
c. h (tr~cs and w ls g1ven a 90
1-' 1111} (), l c!~ tom~ht "'1th dd) J ul scnttcnce when he
\\ S 111 tlH tee ts
Cloudy
1ppencd 1n the Lo urt uf
!lui sda}
\\ 1th
st 4 \\
P mu y M&lt;.~;m Clare nce
&lt;JC\t: l p ng h) Cd r!)
tf
i\n h tc " s I ucsdH~ mght
tcrnm n 1 d I tgl s 11 the lo"
St tlv. lt k was fm ed $50 and
4 1 11 1d lOs
L :oil s
n 1 charge of not
1 tvmg mupcrc.1tor s license
$25 tnd C1 sts n a &lt;.:o nt empt uf
Drivers t'tlt d
t 1111. c haq~c and $300 and
t sts plus H 90 d J)' Jatl sen
. tltt r .tee tdent
Lcmc tt a ch ar ~e 1 f delaymg
I Y-1 vch Jcl cs \\ Cic hca vtl)
the pl.' I fmmance uf a public
da JH&lt;tgt: d ~mel both rlttVCIs
uff1c1tl admg lll the \me of
\'t rt Ctttd It Cf Uli ilS the
dut\
1esu lt f ,m acudcnl4 n Nc11th
f rfelltng bonds m the
Second A~e
11 1 41 p m
&lt;: 11111 I uesd 1y m~ht wei e
Nettle f mdkcy Col umbuS
I uesclay
Mtclcllcp It p \1&lt; c s t d t
MIS" $200 posted nn a petty
c u di!Ve n bv :'VI r s l nllh
II d t ~h 1rge a nd Mart m
Scc lt g hl
Pt meroy
$36
H ~~s Muldlcpt 1t pulled
f1! m Dw n1 nd St
1 tc
p4 skd on a speedmg cha 1ge
Sect nd 1\\ C' tnl tltr p th f
Me j I Will ie f \e defendants
I \l'h ttll.' d I L
J 't 11\qgltl
\\t' l l:! f n((! md ll SIXth f01
~ 1 \ I L Nc ~ ~ 1! 1\ n w \.1
fu tcd .:1 bm ct n the cour1 r
M s B ggs \\ Js uted 111 1
1\ltdd \t pr 1t M tyor F 1 ed
&lt;.:hll ~l ff nll f4 11 \I Cidlh t:
II ff111 m I u~sdav rught
11gJI If \\ \ II d S 1\ I C W IS
I tncd wm e Hubby G Rupe
&lt;.:hi::I I!-:Cd "ll h lJ vmg whll&lt;.
W Ocxte1 $10 and costs
Jntt X!C li C'd
11avcllng too fast for road
Mr s
B ggs d nd hu
wnd 1t1cns lmda D Ferrell
daugh tc t \HI e ldkl!n tr
J5 Ha1tf&lt;1 d W Va $13 a nd
Vct ercms Mcm4 11 11 H4 sp1t Jl
1.1 sts spcedmg Mtke Snuth
b}
tht:
Mcltll1pc11
'I MJcldlcpOJ1 $2.5 md cnsts
1\cg tl 1eg1.strat1on Cha rles
Enu 1 gt:r L~ Squ td
I)' cc Ill 20 Pomeroy $25
nd ct .sts Illegal hccnse and
II I ~I I
Sout hern
Mid
ll l p 1t $5 and cost s
1!1 '' ng a dog to run loose
(ConUnued from page I)
f 1 fnt1ng a $25 bond wi:ls
$toO 000
llH JHiJS M Gllil lah 20
the b( ud IS cxpc~ t e d tu
&lt;he
st er pt sled nn a charge
tn f t n spcu II s ess 1HI
' f pass1ng 111 a no passm~
II tr sdn lll f.!. hl\( rhscusst hc
z ne
S!\11 \1 I

CHAPMAN

In

r

r duncnswns uf the

Weather

I

I

pl~tnntd

1

BE!RU f l-ebanon (UPII
- Tw o bombs exploded
w1thm 10 mmutes of each
other m downtown lJ,CJrut
today wuwuhng two person:s
and damagmg shops pollee
SO Uft'eS Said
They said a person was
Hrl CSt~d
HIHI
being
qut stu ned 111 t mutu n w1th
the b t111lm gs
The f1r.st bomb exploded
outs1de a shop 1n the
downtown
commercJ&lt;:d
distnct and 10 mmutes late1
the sec ond blast occured a
few blocks away police sa 1d

Jilt

ph1 l1 j4 1UJ)h )'

Collect 1ons of sales tax on
111 lor v~h 1 clcs were up t1
n table 28 43 penent fur
Jan um y th1s ye&lt;.t1 com pared
tt J&lt;.~nuat) 1917 &lt;:~cco rdmg to
the 1 cp rt of Mrs Gertrude
01 nahey state treasurer
B(ICC!pts for the month of
J 1nuary thts yea1 totaled
133 213 78
com p'h ed to
, ecm pls of $25 86 I 11 fo 1 l
Janua ry 1977
Ilctall sales tax collectwns
fu r this Januar~ we1 e alS!
Increased but mly by J 54
percen t In January 1977
"lleclwns tot •led $&gt;8 572 54
l&lt; mpa1 ed to $59 477 73 fm
Ja nuar; 1976
CLOTHING DAY SE1
F rec clothmg day " 111 be

held ,,t lhe Salva tiOn Arm)
Pomc1oy un f hursda) Feb
2:J f1 um 10 a m until noon All
area r esidents tn need f
doth mg are welcome
CB E RS TO MEET
I he B1g Bend CB Cl ub meet
the seco nd Tuesli~IY &lt;md lasl
F1 1day ( f e 1ch m ulh a t 7 30
pn
d the Rock SprUIBS
( II ange

Independents ...
(ConUnued from paae I)
keep us go mg for at least two
more days
The hrm employs between
350 and 37&gt; hourly workers
and makes processed fats for
other food conJpames
Rhodes se nt a telegram to
e1ghl coal company off1c1als
the White House the Uruted
Mme Worker s Uruon and
Oh1o s
c ongressional
delegatiOn urgmg nat1onw1de
adoption of a coal con tract
s1gned between the UMW and
a priVate coal producer on
Mondijy
Oh10 must be sa\ ed from
a billion dollar blackout that
would force massive unem
ployment Widespread school
cloSings and cold and
darkened homes throughout
th e s ta le
sa1d Rhodes
Qu1ck ~&lt;'lion to settle the
coal1ssue 1s needed to avoid a
ca tastrophe of mcalculable
proportiOns
In a joml statement from
West Vlrgmta the governors
smd
We enco urage, we
ms•sl we demand that the
Bllummous Coal Operators
Association go back to the
barga~nmg table w1th the
Uruted Mme Workers Umon
and gel th1s stnke settled
Rhodes sa1d 1f the
operators fail to react to the
governors stateme nt we
are gomg to Washington and
Sit down w1th tl)em Th1s
str1ke must come to an end '

By Umted Press Jotemallonal
CAIRO EGYPT - FRENZIED, FIST SHAKING
CROWDS shouted slaughter to all Palestmull\s aod down
w111'i Cyprus, today at the funeral of 15 army conunandos
killed m a shootout w1th Cypr~ot troops at Larnaca alfport
A g mn~ookmg President Anwar Sadal Jed tbe mourners
behind three yellow-pamted army ambulances bearmg lbe
coffms wh1ch were completely hidden by red while and black
Eygplian nags covermg the glass wtndows on both sides and at
the back
COLUMBUS - GOV JAMES A RHODES s1gned
legislation Tuesday that goes mto effect May 23 to lighten
penalties for fraqdulent liSe of credit cards The governor also
s•gned a bill, effectiVe the same date makmg 11 a crune to
convey drugs liquor or weapons onto the grounds of a
dentenuon fac11lty or mental mst1tut10n
Current law makes It a f~rst degree mtsdemeanor to
knowmgly use a stolen or expired cred•l card for merchandise
worth up to $150 The penally IS a maxunum siX-month )811
term or $1 000 fme, or both For fraudulent use to purchase
merchandise worth more than $150 the penalty IS a priSOn
term of stx months to f1ve years and a fme of up to $2 500
VALLEY FORGE PA THE FREEDOMS
Foundation has named Lowell Thomas as the 1977 wmner
of 1ts h1ghest honor - the George Washmgton Award
Also honored at the foundation s 29th annual banquet
Tuesday mghl were actress Helen Hayes and Washmgton Gov
DIX)I Lee Ray who were named wmners of the American
Exe mplar Medal

Chamber
(ConUnued from pa&amp;e I)
mented
P1 all staled the loca l dub
had worked with the U S
Forest Serv1ce once m the
Dar wm area and assisted the
Pomeroj Ftre Depa rtment m
the Stiffler f1re He sa1d they
were mumtormg for 24 ho urs
fur three days dunng the
St1£fler fu e l'hey also helped
f~remen physically when
ftrcm en became exhausted
but added they d1d not go Into
an) hot spots
T" 1ce CB ers ass isted
\\ hen children were lost une
of those was 1ecenUy 111
Mason County when a child
had been m 1ssmg for seven
hour;; m below zero weather
Another tlme occurred 1n the
Darwm area when a f1ve yea r
old boy was lost There was a
b1g pond m the area and 1t
w&lt;:ts feared that he may have
dr wn ed Both youngsters
were found safe
The club has also ra1sed
$3 400 1n conJunctiOn wtlh f1ve
other CB Clubs 10 help w1lh
hu sp1tal costs for a boy m
JU red m a mot orcycle ac
~1dent

Pratt noted the Club has a
storage bu1ldmg filled w1th
clothing that they Will g1ve to
persons m need Last Chnst
mas the cl ub rmsed enough
money to purchase toys fcr 65
child I en as " ell as food
baskets for the needy
They have assisted the
semor Citizens the Sj racuse
B1ke ~li ke ass1sted m traffic
control and momtored the
ga les at the Me1gs County
Fm r for the last three years
For lhe last three yea rs the
dub has set up a coffee sa fet~
brea k at the roadside parks
on U S Rt 33 24 hours a day
g1vmg awaj free pop coffee
to drtvcrs who stopped
fhey have donated to the
Salisb ury G ~rl s Soflb 111
tea m Brown1e Troops
Chnstma
Sm1lh
fund
Pomeroy ER Squad ladder
truck fund and also ass1sted
cl ub members
\
At the present lime there
a r~ 80
~ lub
members
Imtmt10n dues arc $1 50 a
smgle $3 a couple and yea rly
dues are $5 each The only
obhga tton for a member 1s to
att end all meetmgs and help
If posSi ble Pratt commented
Durmg the recent snow
storm CB ers "arned people
of what to expect and ad\ tsed
them to get m an ample
suppl) of food fuel and
med1c1ne They supplied
four wheel dnve vehicles and
ca rs and trucks w1th chams

Pratt also s;ud they asked
residents to check on the1r
nerghbors fhe club momtors
over channel 13 24 hours a
day for anyone needmg
ass1stance He added that
cha nnel 9 IS also a n
emergency channel Pratt
noted all persons havmg a CB
radiO Hrc to obtain a license
The cl ub
hold a fund
1a1sm ~ on May 7 at the Me1gs
County Fa.rgrounds Door
pnzes of $500 $250 $150 and
$100 will be g1ven away W1th
Pratt was Charles Hysell also
a member ofthe dub
Fred Crow president told
members they have collected
enough money to pay for the
remova l of 1ce from the
parkmg lots The total bill
amounted to $4110
Crow also reported a h1gh
way co mmittee ts bemg
formed to proceed With ef
forts to connect a highway
w1th the new brid ge at
Ravenswood Crow satd he
felt the f~r st step would be to
meet With Gov
Ja y
Rockefeller
Crow also reported that m
the effort to renova te the old
Pomeroy
Semor
High
bu1ldmg a meetmg will be
held tbere Wednesday
mormng to obta in an
estima te on t he cost of
reno\ atlon
Crow mtends to contact
a \umm to ass1st hnanctally
w1th the renovatiOn Crow
also stated as soon as all
cou nty roads are property
named and marked they hope
to obtam maps of the roads
Cro" satd a fe nce 1s gomg
to be pla,ced on the vacant lot
next to the Dally Senlmel
bu1ldmg
On Feb 26 the chamber Will
honor Geo rge Massar
pres iden t of th e State
Automobile Insurance Co
Columbus former reSident of
Pomeroy and R1ck CamJ}bell managing ed1tor of the
Ctt1zens Jou rnal at a dmner
a l the Me1gs Inn
T1ckets are $5 and may be
purchased from Emmogene
Holstein secretary of the
chamber Crow also noted
that Ben Philson and Stan
Houdashelt w1ll present a
program
Attendmg were Crow ,
Holstein Bill May er Phil
Kelly Walter Grueser Roy
Shepher Kyle Allen Pratt,
Hysell Bt!l Nelson Vernon
Weber Leo Vaughan E F
Rob1nson Joe Young Mem
Ault Bill Qu1ckel N W
Cum pton Mr and Mrs V1rg1l
Teaford Boyd Ruth Hank
Cleland Pat 0 Bnen, Archie
Stagall Beulah Jones and
Kalie Crow

"'!I

CLOTHES
FOR KIDS
Famous make kntl shtrls and slacks
S1zes 6 mos to 18 mos and 2 to 6x
I

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

By JOHN T KADY
Uniled Presslnternallonal
United Mille Workers Umon members from Ohio were to
leave for Washmgton today another OhiO uti11ty IS to reach the
40 cloy coal supply mark and heaVlly armed Independent coal
producers begm steppmg up shipments of non wuon coal as the
UMW strike entered Its 80th day
Meanwhile Monongahela Power Co, headquartered 1n West
Vlrgmta and w1th 22,000 customers m the Marietta Oh1o a rea
says It will go to a 30 percent mandatory cutback of electr1c1ty
011 March 2 Which will mean some 1ndustnal !ayoffs
A group of UMW offiCials from southern OhiO Including Don
Nwlley, Glouster, Oh1o, a D1stnct8 executive board member
and Gene Oller, prestdent of UMW Local 1886 in Me1gs County
were to leave from Port Colwnbus to meet w1th Rep Clarenl'f'
Miller R.Ohto and Undersecretary of Labor Frank Burkhart

m WashlllJ!lon
Nunley sa1d he was told by MIUer that a meeting may also be
arranged With U!bor Secretary Ray Marshall and President
Carter
Nunley also indicated thai a separate contract negotiated by
the UMW w1th Pittsburgh and Midway Coal Co may not be
applicable to other coal producers
He pomted oulthat P&amp;M 1s bas1cally a str ip nune operation
and S8Id a local agreement, which was not part of the overall
contract IS what he feels Will make It acceptable to the P&amp;M
mmers
P&amp;M usually has layoffs m the wmter because 11 IS largely
a strlp mme operahon, said Nunley So the company agreed
to work two 12 hour shifts mstead of three shifts to keep more
men working This IS the deal worked out loc• lly w•th th•

'

e

Pomeroy-Mtddleport OJno
Thursday, February 23 1978

Ohio Power urges cutback
Ohw Power Company s
coal supply depleting as the
resu lt of the prolonged coal
stnke cs expected to d1p to
the 40 day level on Fnday
With no end to the &gt;1nke
currently m sight we ,nust
now urge our customers to
reduce their electric energy
usage by at least 25 percent
wherever posstble
C A
Heller
the
company s
Ex:ecut1ve Vtce Presrdent and
Chief Operatmg Off1cer san!
He suggested usage of
electricity be !muted t o
esse nti al needs to help
weather the current cns1s
The diminiShing supply of
coal poses a severe threat to
Oh1o Powers ability to
produce electnc tty
Mr
Heller said addmg that •t
could take up to 20 days
following the end of the stnke
before coal m any substantial
amount would move to most
OhiO Power genera tmg
plants
OhiO Power headquartered
at Cantor. and servmg nearly
600 000 customers m 53 of
OhiO s 88 co unties had a 105
day supply of coal on hand
the greatest reserve 1n the
company s hlstory - when

the Umted Mme Workers
stnke began last December
6th
In con JunctiOn w1th the
Capacil) and Energy Control
Prugram approved by the
Public Utility CommiSsiOn of
Ohw the Company on Fnday
plans to mslltute a number of
co nse1 vat1ve measures
designed to help stretch the
exiSting coal suppl)
These mclude curtailments
of power to certam mdustnal
custome1s
wtth
1n
tm1 upttble clcruses m their
ene1 gy cunti act s around the

EXTENDED FORECAST
Saturda y
through
Monday a chance of snow
Saturday a nd .Sunday and
fair weather on Monday
R 1ghs will be In the upper
20s or low er 30s on
Saturday and In the 20s
Monday Ovcrmght lows
wdl be ln the upper teens or
lower 20s ea rl y Saturday
and between ze ro and 10
above zero by early
Monday

•

at y
New postal
schedule
announced

George Massar
to be honored
George
D
Massar
Columbus will be one of two
men to be honored at the
Pomeroy
Chamber
of
Commerce dmner to be held
Tuesday, Feb 26 at 6 30 p m
at the Meigs Inn
Massar, an attorney, 1s
presently president and
d~recto r
of the State
Automobile Mutual In
surance Co Columbus
Massar wa s bo1n 111
Pomeroy Jan 29 1922 the
son of Mrs George Massar
Mulberry Ave Pomeroy
and the late Mr Massar He
IS a graduate of Pomeroy
H1gh School
He graduated from OSU's
College of Commerce m
Busine~s Admm1strat10n tn
1943 Massa r rece1ved hiS law
degree m 1949
He ts a member of
Covenant Pr ~s byt e r1an
Church,
trustee
and
secretary of Grant Hosp1tal
trustee of the Columbus

Automobile Cl ub , having
served as v1ce president m
1968 and preSident from 1972
74 and cha&lt;rman of the board
from 1974 to 1976
He 1s presently trustee of
the American Automobile
Assoc1ahon He was With the
law f•rm of Gmgher and
amstenscn Columbus from
March 1 19o3lo Aug 23 1977
He setved m both World
Wa r !I a nd the Korean
conniCt as a Capta m m the
mfantry He IS a member of
the Scwto Co untry Club
Columbus Athletic Club and
Amencan Bar Assoc1ahons
He and h1s v.1fe Marga ret
B
Massar, have two
children
Stephen and
Melissa
Tickets to the dmner may
be purchased from Em·
mogene Holstem secretary
of the chamber or Barbara
Chapman al the Athens
Messenger, and the New
York Clothing House
)

the coal operators as a whole
UMW President Arnold
M11ler promised to negotiate
1mmed1ately wtth any
compa ny that wants a
contract
The operators replied that
a settlement with one small
mmmg com pa ny m the
M1dwest could not establish a
pattern for 160 000 mmers
and satd the umon was so
inflexible 11 hardly seemed
fruitful to negottate further
U!bor Secretary Ray Mar
shall was gomg to the While
House today to dlst'UsS the
next steps If either he or the
umon formally declares
bargammg at an unpasse the
Wllon IS legally free to begm
talks
w1 th
md1v1dua1
comparues
The coal sttualion 1s not
gettmg better 1t s getting
Marshall sa 1d
worse

Wednesday as more electn c
uli ht1es m U1e Eust and
Midwest began reduc mg
power to save coal .....
mean mg tndu:st n cs wQuld
have to cut back or dose to
save fuel for hmntJ1S
We rc very co ncu1ned
about
th e
steud 1ly
deterloratmg siluatton m the
eas t~rn
corridor
satd
President Curter s pr uss
secretaty Jody Powell
Some dec1s10n "illllHve tu
be made th1s weekend Mm
sha ll told a news conferent'C
Wednesday
We
"1ll
continue (talkmgl as long as
11 seems to be gomg
anywhere U 1t does not the
president wrll have to det:lllc
what to do next
AdtnlnJ str a tton so urces
sa1d any action would depend
on which M&lt;de Ca rter
constders less coopera tive lf

Schools face losing battle

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Sta!ehouse Repurter
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Three supermtendents whose
schools closed last year told
•stllte legislators Wednesday
they are f1ghtmg a losmg
battle between nsmg costs
a nd
rnmtmum
sta te
re qu1rements and voter
reluctance to mcrease taxes
to pay the price
We are caught m the
m1ddle sacd James Jones
supermtendent of Northwest
Loc al school diStrict m
Hamilton County
J ones
JOmed
Mark
Rutledge supermtendent of
Parkway Local m Mercer
County and John Martm,
supermtendent of SciOto
Valley m Pike County m
lesllfymg before the House
Ftnance Corrumttee on the
condition of schools
The comm1ttee 1s hearmg
from supermtendents m an
effort to determme the
reasons for the closmg of lo
scjlool d1str1cts last year and
a host of others m fmanc1al
trouble
The hearmgs are part of an
overall leglslallve study to
fmd out how Ohio s taxation
Pleadmg gudty to a child and school fmancmg can be
endangenng charge J ack changed to keep schools m
Goode 36 Salem St
Rutland
Tuesday
was
sentenced to SIX months 1n
Ja d by Me1gs County Judge
Robert E Buck
The charge followed an
mvesl1gat10n by Cynthia
Mills, Me1gs County Welfare
Department, and Carl Hysell
Me1gs County Juvemle Of
f1cer
Goode was arrested for
The Southern U.cal Board
excessive corporal punish
of EducatiOn Tuesday mghl
ment m d1sc1plimng his e1ght
formulated plans for makmg
year old daughter
The up the tune lost last October
sentence was partially beca use of flnanc1al d1f
suspended on conditional flcullles
terms
The board dec1ded to hold
classes on Feb 25 March 11,
March 24 Apnl I April 15
April 29 and May !3 all of
which are Saturdays except
OccasiOnal snow thiS af
March
24
tern oo n and tomght ac
The
plan
was adopted, 1!
cumulatmg between one and
was
reported,
after employes
two mches by Fnday mor
been
polled
to determme
had
mng H1ghs today Will be betheir
preferences
m makmg
tween 25 and 30 With a low
up
the
lost
tune
tomght between 15 and 20
AI the present tune schools
m the district w1ll close June
13 Th1s date mcludes makmg
TWO RUNS MADE
The
Middleport up seven and one-hall days
Emergency Squad was called for calanuty days not allowed
to 391 Lmcoln Sl at 12 41 over the present five day
Wednesday for Mrs Wlbna limitation by the state
Panna lee, a medlcal patient
If add1t10nal weather days
who was taken to Veterans are allowed by the state
Memorial Hosp1tal where she legislature these w1U lie taken
was admitted
from the June 13 closing date
At 6 18 a m Thursday the movmg 1t to an earlier date
The board agreed to enter
squad went to 350 S Second
Ave , for W111fam Wyatt, also mto contracts for new m
taken to Veterans Memonal struments, equ1pment and
Hospital
band urufonns begmmng tn

the black
People see the1r taxes
gomg up every year and they
don t see the difference
between federal state and
school taxes sa1d Rutledge
I thmk they d vote for
more dollars tf they felt1t was
fa 11 and that tlley were
gettmg their mQney s worth
out of the schools
Rutledge w11l find out m
June Parkway will subm•l
an operating levy of at least
SIX m1lls to the voters who
have turned down two
consecutive proposals and
have not raised taxes smce
1971
Rutledge srud that 1f the
new levy farls the schools are
fa cmg
an
enforced
vacation from Nov 10 to
next Jan 1
Martm sa1d hls schools are
m danger of losmg cookS and
bus drivers to JObs on a
nearby atomtc power plant
unless wages are ra1sed
But the Sc wlo Valley
supermtendenl srud the board
of education doesn t have
enough money to grant the
pay ra1ses
Marlin pamted the gloomy
PICture of a vtCIOUS fmanc~al
cycle for a poor rural school
distnct whose voters cannot

afford more taxes to qua lify
the schools for more staLe
a 1d fh e result IS only
penalties and losses he sa1d
We ve got to keep the non
ce rttflcated
( perso nn el l
sa1d M~rtm
salanes up
addmg that the d1stnct was
JUSt recently able to brmg the
pay of a begmmng school
coo k up to tho federal
mmnnum wage of $2 65 an
hour
The superin tendent said
that bus dnvers makmg $J 50
to $4 an hour and custodians
ea rrung $2 8ii are startmg to
look towa rd the B F
Goodnch a tom1c power plant
at Piketon for JObs
If we can t keep up we re
gomg to lose our support
staff said Marlin
He sa1d that with the real
estate tax rollback schools m
hts dtstnct arc recetvlng only
19 6 m1lls of uperahng money
m the d1strtct
Martm sa id th e Scioto
Valley school d1stnct fa1led to
open last September after
three failures of operatmg
lev1es Voters then passed an
B 4-mill levy but 1! w11l last
for only five years
Jones of Northwest Loca l
satd teac her pay tncrements 1
state r~Ulrements and r1smg

Southern board okays
seven make-up dates

Weather

I~

~

tf!t•t n ( o•nts
\ ol !H No l l'l

Talks all but dead

Deputies
checking
complaints

Me1gs Co unty Shenf£ s
Deput1es Wednesday m
vest1gated theft of a two mch
Black &amp; Decker water pump
from a core drilling truck
looated on the Brooks
property near Pomt Rock
J11n
Ferns
Athens
reported they were dnlhng_a
t est n ole on the llroolts
property Just off SR 689 and
had left the equipm ent
around 5 p m Tuesday The
theft was d1scovered Wed
nesday mormng The pump
was ms1de a locked cab whrch
had been pr1ed open
Tuesday deputies 1n
vesligated a complamt from
Dav1d Blake, Rt 2, Pomeroy
He reported an Aud1ovox tape
player was stolen from his
unlocked auto parked at the
Me1gs H1gh School parkmg
lot The theft occ urred
sometJme Monday
We dnesday even1ng
deputies mves t1gated a
complamt from J1m R1£fle
Bashan who reported he had
two t1res slashed on h1s car
parked at h1s residence
All mc1dents are st1ll under
mvestlgallon

"lthll'flt.. service area Wednesda} to assess the s1tuauon
Meanwhile the U." Sulfur Co• I Co m Pike County which
shipped seven truckloads of coal to Columbus Wednesday with
an Ohlo Highway Patrol escort, made another shipment to
near Lancaster In Fairfield County on Thursday
Numerous rines and shotguns are kept in the firms off1ce at
Beaver 1n P1ke County
We carry arms all the time sa1d Walter Adams 45, a
partner 1n the operation It s like guerrlla warfare
Adams IS also practical and sa1d U1e P1ke County sheriff s
office does not have the manpower to eope with large bands of
'"' mg UMW pickets
The P1ke County sher&lt;ff has five deputle,. and two cars "
satd Adams If we ca ll and sa) we need help should a group
arnve, 1t nught take several hours You can bleed a lot in
several hours

en tine

cluck voltage reductiOn of up
to &gt; percent and mcreased
By JOHN MilNE
WASHINGTON (UPI )
purchases of energy from
Efforts to end the 8lklay coa l
ne1ghbonng ut1ht1es when
strike through collective bar
practica ble
REEDSV!l I E - Post ga mmg are all but dead
We are rapidly a p
master
Margaret
R
bnngmg the gove rnm ent
proachmg the Ume when ou1
Nessclroad
has
announced
a closer to action to try to for ce
coa l suppl) reaches the 30
ne\\o schedule of hours for the open the nation s mmes
day level At that ume
Post Office
Reedsville
U!te Wednesday night the
cutbacks m electnc usage
The week day schedule •s coal mdustry negolla lors
Will be mandatory for
Monday rejected the Umted Mme
bu smess a nd mdustrlal Wind ow open
lh1
ough
Fnday
8
30
a m to Workers latest contract and
customers In many cases
12
noon
and
I
30
to
4
30 p m sa1d further talking probabl)
the cutbacks will 1esult m
and
on
Saturday
8
30
to
10 30 wouldn t do any good
economiC hardships fm tn
am
The UMW proposal offered
du s tr ra l
co m mercia l
es tabli shm en ts a nd for • !'he post office will not be ear her m the day was baSed
em ploy ees
Mr Heller open on Saturday afternoons on an agreement reached
Ma ll placed m the outs1de box earlier With the tndependent
concluded
on Sa turday will be picked up Pittsburg and MidWay Coal
and taken to Athens by the Co , and unpiled the umon
star route carrier
would try to dmde the 130The lobby of the post off1ce member B1tummous Coa l
"ill be closed at 5 p m Operaors Assocta tton 1! tt
Monday through Fnday The were reJected
ne w schedule WJ\1 go mto
While the umon barga mmg
effect lh1s Saturday
counc1l made the proposal to

Father is
sentenced

GEORGE MASSAH

company It wasn t m the contract •
Another group of District 6UMW members were to leave the
Bellrure area today to meet with the UMW Barga1rung Council
m Washtngton to encourage the council not agree to a contract
the membership would not accept
The OhiO Power Co Wednesday urged 1ts 600 000 customers
m 53 OhiO COWitles to cutback oo all electric use by 25 percent
Oh10 Power headquartered m Canton, sa1d 1ts ooal supply
will reach the 4lklay !0\ el on Fnday
With no end to the strike m sight we must now urge our
l'I!Stomers to reduce the1r electnc energy usage by at least 25
percent wherever poss1ble sa1d C A Heller v1ce president
of OHIO POwer
Columbus &amp; Southern Oh10 Electric Co headquartered m
Columbus met with mayors and c1ty managers from ctties

l""'

the 1978 79 school
A number of buddmg uses
were approved dependmg
Supermtendenl Bobby Ord
sa1d on the electrical supply
Situation These mclude the
JUmor hl~h gymnasmm and
cafeteria for the all sports
ba nquet of the South~rn
Jumor H1gh AthletiC Boosters
on March 18 the Racm~
Elementary School for the
Racme Elementary PTO for
a spnng carmval on April 1
• the h1gh school study hall on
March 2 for the Racme Cub
Scout Blue and Gold banquet ,
the JUntor high gymnasmm
on Feb 24 for the juruor h1gh
PTO for a dance , the h1gh
school cafetena and kitchen
to the band boosters for a
smorgasbord on March 19
The reSignatiOn of Mrs
Elma U.uks a teacher at
Syracuse effective May 31
was aecepted Robert Lcw1s
was employed as a stubst1tute custodian and Patrtcra
Pape as a substitute bus
dr1ver for the current school
year
Mrs Sue Grueser, Mrs

Sh&lt;rley Johnson and Mrs
Betty
Wa gner
board
members were named along
w1th Sup! Ord to attend a
Southeast Region Boa rd
mansh1p update conference
on March 8 m Athens
Permanent appropriations
for 1978 were approved by the
board and Include
Salan es
$79&gt; 766 38
supplies and materials for
mamtena nce
f7! 747 84
equipment repla cement
$36 750, contract and open
service orders $08 459 fill ed
charges, $220,027 64 , capital
outlay, $t600 direct service,
$37 537 77 for a total general
fund
appropr1at1on
of
$1 222,088 63
Lunchroom appropriations
total fl02 905 89 and bond
retirement, $110 6ii4 57
The clerk was authorized to
seek an advance draw on ta x
collections for meeting
March bills Attendmg were
board members named
earlier and Dallas H1ll,
pres•denl , Gene Yost v1ce
president , Supt Ord and
Clerk Lmda Spencer

msurance dlld ut lht&gt; costs
p t hi ~&lt; di n et tn d f ndnct.JI
bmd last ) ~ar
He Said schools wllll•• ve to
close c~ gm n for 25 days next
faJI \ffileSS VOle! S apJlliiVC II
9 25-null ope rating levy on
th e ballolm Apnl N&lt; rthwcst
Loc.1! closed for 10 days I.L&lt;t
year

Noone hurt
in accidents
No une was InJured or c1ted
m twu minor trafftc t~CC Jdents
mvcsligated Wednesday by
the Galha Me1gs Post State
Highway Patrol
1 he first occ urred 0 11
township road 286 m Meigs
Cu unty four tenths of 1 mil e
west of SR 7 1he patH I sm d
vehicles dnv cn by Charles
Casto 24 Rt 2 Coolville, and
Karen Bolin 23 fuppeiS
Plams collided 1'here was
moderate damage
A Galha Co unty aCCident
occurred at 2 30 1 111 Thurs
day on US 35 SIX tenth s uf 1
m1le east of CR 5
The patrol said a sem1 ng
dr1ven by James Dunlap Jr
33 Charleston ••ttemptod to
pass s1desw1ped an auto
operated by Joyce Kern s 23
Middleport
There was
moder.1 tc d~1m agc to the
Kerns auto

Registration
begins March 7
COLUMBUS - While 1978
passenger car reg1strat1on
won t get underway until
April non passenger vehiCles
such as house veht cles
tra1lers and motorcycles
may be registered beginmng
Maroh l Reg1st rat10n of
motur hom e~ and non
comme1Ctal vehtdes beg ms
March 7
Any motor veh icle 1n
cludmg a farm truck w1th a
load ca pacity of three
quarter ton or less, wh1ch 1s
not used for business pur
poses will now be registered
as a non-com mercial veh1cle
The foll owmg speCia lly
destgned hcense agency w111
be accepting non passenger
a nd n o n com m e r c ial
reg1strat10ns through May 31
at Gibbs Grocery
!86
Mulberry Ave Pomeroy

now you know
The Baby Ruth candy bar
was not named for basketball
great Babe Ruth but was for
the daughter of President
Grover Cleveland

lndusll y Is the ~renter
p10blem the sources soid he
would ask Conbrrcss for n law
a ll owmg
the
fcdcru l
~-:overnme nt to seize the
mmes und opcr ute tht 111
If the mme1 s 111 c d~mctt
nwre mtractable Cm tcr is
like ly to mvokc lhc lnfl
Hartley Act and seck a courl
mjunl'tlon to send nlmers
buck to work fm 1111 80-&lt;luy
coo lin g off peril d wh ile
negotm twns conlmue
U!usl lik ely the S&lt;JU I ecs
say 11:i U1e tlurd option askm g Co ngress for un
arbitration law wh~eh would
bo bindinK on both s1dos
On W&lt;" lnesday the govern
ment wns caught between
Utca nm chy of tke UMW mad
U1e po;1unng of U1e BCOA
as one admuu stroUun source
pu t 1l
I he day begun with the
&lt;:ompumes off er In~ 1mpartiul
arbitra tiOn ))(~sed on their
latest contract offer - one
U1at wa• ro]e&lt;ll'l Feb 6 by
the unio n s bur~uin in~
COUIICII

l'hat ar bttl at1on deal winch Ma rshall c11 !led
hi ghly unusua l - wa s
rejected not by Miller but by
Konne(h Da~ es a UMW
distri ct pr cs tden l from
Spnnb•fleld 111
I he RCOA 1s made up of a
g1 oup oL pigheaded pecplc
who Will not stt down and
negotiate sa1d Dawes who
smd he spoke fo1 a maj01 1ty
of the co une~l
He sa1d the P 111d M
agreement coveJJng 700
mmers m Kentucky Missouri
and Kansas showed that the
WIIOn IS dealing 1n good faith
and the coal operators are
not
I urge coa l compumcs
reJected the P und M
agreement say1ng it was too
weak on Wildcat strikers and
d1d not allow probationary
]l\!riods for new workers or
mcent1ve pay
f'he bargaining council met
Wednesday a fternoon a t the
Lubor Departm ent w•lh
Mars ha ll s1tllng 111 a nd
emergmg nccas10nally Lo cu ll
mdustry oUr c1als on th e
telephone

Committee
'

recommends
bond issue
COlUMBUS ( UP!) - An
Ohio House commi ttee today
recommended a pproval of a
November vote on a $300
million hlghway bond Issue
whlch would be funded by
excess gasohne and truck
wc1ght tax revenues
As amended the proposed
constitUtiOnal
amendment
would generate $3110 million
to be distnbuted accordmg to
a formula yet to be drafted by
the L&lt;!giSiature
Prev 1ous h1ghway bond
Iss ues h3ve been fund e d
through a 1 cent merease m
gasohne taxes and boosts m
taxes lev1ed on trucks
accordmg to the1r number of
axles and we1ght
The two taxes are currently
generaling $27 m1llion a year
more than the amount
reqwred to rehre alreadyw
1ssued bonds Rep Arthur
Bowers D-Steubenb1lle, sa1d
th at his resolution would use
th1s excess money to fund a
new bond ISSue
Bowers resolutiOn was referred to the House Rulef
Committee which
wlll
schedule floor action on tbe
matter
J

II

'

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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="49307">
              <text>February 22, 1978</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="3730">
      <name>kinnen</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2386">
      <name>neigler</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
