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                  <text>Fingers" for man) yt·ar!!.

"'as a manager in tht&gt;
Statlt•r Hillun C'hain hotels
' in ('olumbus, Obiu, lJallas,

Beat•••

Tt·xas

Of the Bend

and

Honolulu.

llawafi . .On weekends ht:

plaj•t•d and sang in the
Uwat&lt;lnassia m Lounge in
tht.• famous Purple Pussy-

By &amp;b Hoeflich

&lt;·ot Club in Honolulu. Stan
had an opportunity to play
with Shcp Fields and the W.

Too often, the work ol good samaritans goes unrecognized.
Not so lor Chuck (l!utch) Gaul, formerly of RBcine, however ,
for his work during the bod winter in the area ol Hilliard where
he resides.

C. Ha11d y Combo
Me mphis . Tennessee.

Chuck was tile subject of a recent feature newspaper story

which teU. of his e&gt;perience. It reads :
"How do you say 'thank you' to a man who gives over 40
hours of his time and refuses payment for his work? That was
the dilemma lacing the Norwich Township Trustees alter the
now-famous big blizzard. According to Trustee President
Durland Workman, they are unable to write a check without a
bill and Chuck Gaul, 5070 Bigelow Drive, Hilliard, abo;olutely
refused to sutxnit a bill for services rendered .

"The trustees hecame just as stubborn as Gaul - they
weren't going to let this good samaritan go completely
unnoticed. They invited Gaul to meet with them last Tuesday·
at the fire house and it was there that they presented hinn with
a beautiful, engraved plaque in recognition of his communityminded spirit .
"The incident leading to the presentation began the day of
the blizzard. Gaul, service manager for W. W. WUliams Heavy
Equipment Sales and Service, set out in a looder backhoe to
visit a friend in Ridgewood . "I caught hinn clearing one of our
roada," laughed Workman pointing out Gaul was clearing
a path down Schirtzinger Road on his way. Workman
innmediately contacted the other two trustees, Webster Junk
and James Rice, and It was quickly agreed to oller to hire the
man to finish Schirtzinger and open up Smiley Road.
"Gaul was more than agreeable to the offer to do the work ,
but he stipulated that he wanted no pay . Time didn't allow an
argument on the matter - Smiley Rood needed to be cleared .
According to ~ork:man, there was one home on the street low
on fuel oil, a diabetic lived in one home and in another, there
was a man with a bod heart condition. 'We needed to get to
them," Workman said.
''It was discovered later that the good samaritan not only
worked 40 hours in Norwich Township, but gave
approximately 31 hours ol his Iinne in other areas. On
Patterson Road in Brown Township, a man in a truck
· approached Gaul and thanked him. Without Gaul 's h.elp, the
man's wife might have died . It was also learned that Gaul
didn't even enjoy the comforts of his home during the weather

crisis - he turned it over to a family without hea t! or one week .
" Chuck Gaul is a happy but humble man. When presented
the plaque, he graciously acce pted it, saying, ' didn'texpect a
thing. I just enjoy getting out - it beats answering the
phone.' "
Chuck and his family have resided in Hilliard for the past
five and one-half years. He coaches T-ball in the surruner and
coaches a girls' seventh grade basketball team . Chuck' and his
family Jive two blocks from his mother, Mrs. Firn B. Gaul , also

a former resident of Racine.

AND SPEAKING OF good samaritans, how about Mr. and
Mrs. Wendell Frecker who presented Racine Village Council
with a check for $2,000 to help pay for a loader-backhoe the
village had purchased for snow removal and other chores in
the village. The council members are " most, grateful."

JOHN B. KNIC:HT

STAN

Knight to :•ll••ml.

optometry college .
PT. PLEASANT - John
Bradford Knight. a senior at
Marshall University, ha s
b1!en

Dcce pt ed

at

HOUDASHELT,

comptroller, · whose stage
name Is 11 Nimble Fingers "

lonll'try locall'&lt;l in Memphis,
Te11n. He will begin 'his four.rcar course there ... in Septembe r. This se mes ter ,

Knight earned a certificate uf'
recognition for being on the
.Dean's list at MU . He is the
.~m of Mr. and Mrs. W. R.
Knight, 2903 Parrish Ave.,
Pr1 in t Plea sant Hnd the
gr&lt;mdson of Mr. Hnd Mrs. A.
it Knight, Pomeroy, and the
late Mr. and Mrs. Olan
(icnhcimcr , Pomeroy .

Kygerville

C:At.LIPOLIS - Icy road
l'ondHlons and two deer were
lhc t'aUse of five traffic ac·
l'idents investigated F'riday
by the Gallia-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrul.

There wa.s mint1r damal.!c and

There was minor damage.
Lewis was cited for Wlsafe ·

nu charges were filed.
A single car accident oc·
curred at 8:30 a.m. on the
Bulaville-Porter Rd. one and
seven tenths miles north of

SR 160 where Norma J.
Ragland, 37, Gallipolis, lost

The patrol said an auto

vehicle.
A deer was killed at 6:50
p.m. on SR 7. north of
milepost 2. The animal ran
into the "path of a vehicle
operated by Brenda C.
Banks, 32, Crown City ..

Another deer was killed in
an accident at 8:40 p.m. on
US 35 at milepost 16. The,
animal ran into the path of a'
vehicle driven by Earl E.
Caldwell, 49, Gallipolis.
The horsepower .i a non·

making ca rriages in the 1870s
and cont inued that trade until
1884, when he took out a
patent and began the

SCUL~TURED CARPET BY DOWNS

f*• *...

BY JAMES SANDS
CHESHIRE - Although
Chesh ire had a settlement in
Gallia as early liS 1794 and is
todoy a fa ir.-sized village, for

im·

mu ch of the 19th century
Cheshire had to take a back
sca t to K}·gerville as the must
pn1sperous and the m ost
populous t 0 \\11 in Cheshire

neck and ne&lt;•k through the
1860s, 1870s, and 1880s,
Kygervllle nosed slightly
ahead because she could
boast of her own poet und
novelist, Almena Saunders.
In the 18!!0 t~ cnsus Kygerville

building of the Kanawha and
Michigan Railroad through
the town . In 1893 Oleshire .

Ohio, before returning tu his
funn at Swr;in Creek, Prof.

Pollitt served as the first
chairman of the Ashland
County Senior Citizens Ce nter
and as a member of the .eight
county hea lth board and the
four-county Nohoco Board of
Corrununity Action .
Prof. Pollitt was also one of
tht! foUr org:aniz~rs of the

Ash land County Coundl un

Aging to rmwide federallyfunded meals
citi zens.

for

seniQr

Mr. Pollitt, a professor
emeritus of English and
American literature of Marshall University, served 12
yea rs 1:1s the national pl,·esi-

* 100% Nylon face

had a pllpulatiun of 350;
Kygervillc's was about half of

Monsanto Cadon eo·ntifluous Filament

*12 ft. width
*4 Colors: Ranch Copper, Juniper, Clover and Gold Mine

that.
In 1893 Cheshire had these
carriage s,

Robert Coleman: millinery·,
1.. Blosser : broom maker, A.
Dunlap: hotel. M. L. Guthrie:
cooper. Stephen Hooper;
wagonmak er, M. L. Malthews; boosts, C. Mitchell ;

00

REG. 14 SQ. YD.
1

· Special

POWEllSVILLE, OHIO - THE PASTOR OF THE
Evangelical Christian Church in Powellsville in Scioto County
said be doesn't knQw why the church's roof caved in SatUrday,
but he thinks it may be divine intervention. Elihu Salyers
acknowledged the damage to the small structure with a metal
roof and said softly, "I don't know why, onlythat.the Lord had
'his reason .' Now we'D pray and He'll show us what we muat

'11 ~~D.

INSTALLED OVER 1/z INCH FOAM PADDING

'

AT ELBERFELD§ WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC STREET

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
.•

built the town's first grist

.Much o.f the town's early.
success can be attributed to
the work of its founder, Asa

Br·adbury, and his brother
.Joseph . Both had migrated to
GaUia from Maine. Asa was
the oldest by one year, Joseph
wHs a lawyer by profession;
Asa was a merchant. Both
were active in the Un-

MeGuffey Societies, and has· derground Railroad and were
spoken at Miami University,
Kent State Universit}', and
many other places on sub-

organizers of the Republic3n ·

Party in Gallia.
In 1853 Kygervllle could

1978 BUICK REGALS &amp; 1978 PONTIAC GRAND PRIXS

jeets related to William boast of a wagonmaker,
Holmes McGuffey and his Calvin Kent ; a tanner, W. H.
famous readers.
Ravenscroft; a saddler, John
Hampton; two cabinet-

.• e e e • ._. • • • •

'•

~1
U

•

••
:

•

·~

•

U

•
•

T 0 daY

•

By

e

Willis T. Leadingham
Realtor

•

•

•
•

•

fiRSJuriME
MYJHS
"f1U

.

A nahonal study done by

• the Chicago-based Family

•Housing Burea u dispels a
1 1ot of myths 8bout the
• buYing of t1rst homes. Here

·e are

a few :

MYTH : Fi rsf.time home
1 buyers have been driven
• out of the mar,ket by
• escalating costs. FACT:
• The survey showed that 44

• percent of today's home
• buyers are firsf .time
• buyers .

•

e· .
CEs t te·•

1 • • • • • • • • • • • •

MYTH : Young people
afford homes

• cannot

eanymore. FACT: Eight
e~ven percent of firsf .flme
e buyers are younger than 35
e "".'lth the average age being

•

: · Ham pton ,
•

Isaac

Hooper, cooper ; William

• Boswell, dry goods ; and
• David Tate, hol,el.

••

sharply that most home e
buyers are turn ing tO e
mult i_. tamily solutions . e
FACT : Ninety percent of e

Bycontrast, in1853theonly

things uf note in Cheshire
were : coughenour's sawmill,

Guthries's grist mill, the dry

goods st.ores ofC . L. Guthrie;
Gates and Company· and
first -tim e home buyers e Parker and Sons · th~ shoe
choose single family • shop of Zen us· Wo~druth and
homes, 7 percent condos e h d
fF'
f El"
and on ly 3 percent choose 1 t e octor 0 ICe 0
IJah
multi -fam ily homes.
• Woodrutll . Judging from the
MYTH : Most home
land records of the 1850s
buyers now spend more on 1 people sold land in Cheshire
mortgage payments than : almost as quickly as they
the recommended one .
bought it.
fourth of tit a ! income . •
A giant step forward in the

FACT :

One

quarter of fhe •

current crop of first time e
buyers tall into the on·e· e
fourth rule of thumh •

• • • • • • •

puyment ,

·

boots ;

e Cas!le, blaeksmi!h; Stephen

e family homes have risen so

e28.
MYTH : Costs for single-

age of 20 J ohoston entered

upon !he study of medicine in
e Columbus .and in 1857
• returned to Kyger to praclice. Also In town in 1853 were
Calvi n King, carpenter;
• Jackson Grey and Taylor

category . Anothe.- 53 •
percent are even more •
con servat ive spending 20 •
percen t or less of tota 11. •
lflCome
for · shelter •

e

and James Johnston. AI the

• • • • • • • • • • e •

e • • • ·• • • ·••

b
.
e~ween Cheshtre and

race

Kygervtlle was taken by
Cheshireinl660whena$6,000
school was erected. The
school was alS&lt;l used by the
Presbyterian Church. In the
1870s Cheshire had six stores
and several craft shops.
.

Rob~rt

Coleman

began

,

CLASSIC CARS
Beautiful white exterior with matching vinyl
bucket seats . AM-FM rad io. factory air, tilt
wheel, and radial tires. Th is car deserves your
· dose inspection . EKtra clea n. ·

1977 CHEVROLET NOVA 4 DR.
Finished in glacier blue with contrasting cloth
interior. This 8,929 mile, automobile has the
economica l 6·cyt"in~er engine, automatic transmission, power steering and radial tires with
Rallye wheels.
·

'3895

GMAC

Extra sharp Firethorn metallic pa int, vinyl
bucket seats, console, cru ise control , tilt wheel,
Rallye wheels, rear defroster . Only 15,741 miles .

ON DISPLAY TODAY

ON DISPLAY TODAY

ONLY

1977 BUICK REGAL 2 DR

1977 MONTE CARLO

1977 GRAND PRIX

1976 DELTA 88 ROYAL 4 DR
Finished in arctic white with a saddle _.l nyl roof.
Crushed velour cloth seats compliment the tilt

Wht!eL factory air, and AM-FM-tape. Local
school executive's trade.

ON DISPLAY TODAY

Super Intermediate finished in classic black with
white bucket seats and white landau top.
Equipment Includes tilt wheel, cruise control 1
console, AM radio with 8 track 5fereo and
ch rome plated wheels. Only 3,289 miles. S.lance
of factory warranty.

'5995
1976 BUICK LeSABRE CUSTOM
This beautiful new car trade Is flnlsl'led In
WE SOLD IT NEW

sterling sliver wltl'l matcl11ng landau top and
contrasting burgundy 60·40 Interior. Loaded with
options such as cruise control. AM·FM stereo
radio, tilt wheel and chrome plated wheels.
Locally owned and only 2.t,31.t miles.

PRICED AT

'

SUNDAY SHOPPERS WELCOME

.FINANCING

'469$

BANK

PHONE 446-2282

,

"Y S WE CAN"

•

FINANCING

SMITH BUICK-PONTIAC
EASTERN AVE.

· The roof, probably heavy from ice and snow, collapsed just
lninutes after one of the church's deadons had left. "Our
ruilding is gone," Salyers said, "but not our belief or our
people."

G~LI,.IPOLIS

because of the miners' strike,
Ohio Power ( 'm npany has
filed with the PubUc Utilities
r.ummissiun u supplement to
1ts approved emergt&gt;ncy
energy pmtrol plall, Tile
filin~ elnrifies mandatory
L' UrtAilmcnt steps b(.·~inning
when the utility's l'{HII suppl)'
declines to JO days - inducting rotatin~ blul'kouts at
the 15-day level.

after another minute had

elapsed on a bucket by Kelly
The
Wild cats' Dave
Continued on page 3

The ''UillfJUil)' a lso mport ed
thut a a p~r cent nro\md~ tht•­
dock \11ll tage n\dul'tion
Fcbruttry
24
bega n
thr o u ghout its ~3~coun t y
service met~, adding that the
cf£ect on S(.•rvlce to CU!,1omcrs
should be untletcct11bie and
that no scrvkc problems
V.•crc a ntieipnil'd . '11ll' voltug:c
r cdud ion is fUlrt of th e
emer genc y plan when the
C11al supply Is at 40 days.

Store. Names are being with·
held pending the filing of
charges later today .
Deputies Investigated
vandalism at the Donald
Randolph residence. It was .
reported that . sometime
Saturday someone broke out
two panes of glass in the front
of their house. The incident is

still under investigation.

C. A . Heller, C'xecutive vice
picsidenl. su id , "Our s upply

of co al hHS diminished td the
4o.day ll:!vel today und it now
UJ&gt;pcars it will ~.:ontimte to

·Weather

Increasing cloudiness this
evening with occasional snow

toward morning. Lows will be
from the mio to low 20s, Qnow
Tuesday, occasiona lly mixed

with rain, with highs from 35
to 40.
'

dc&lt;'lillC to nt least the
SOUTHERN'S Perry Hill (251 snags rebound in this action photo, taken duri!ljj
Saturday night's Class A Sectional championship basketball game against Hanmml~uce in
Morrison Gym at Rock Springs. Southern won, ro.o2. thus advancin~ tu lhe district ut
Chillicothe for t he second year in a row. Hannan Trace players, le ft lo right, are Frank
Mooney (12) ; David Campbell (44 I and David Swain (32) .

•

VOL XXVIII

NO. 221

rt'&lt; luee n nnal use of elec·

tricity by 24 per cent. "Past
efforts have bL&gt;en helpful and
it is even more necessary
lltJw ," Heller said, " in ()rder

lu delny us long as possible
the rnnndatory cut!&gt;IH,ks to
l'mmncrclal and indubirlal
c ustomt~rs which bclo(in at

the

JO~i uy

leve l. Thi s Is the

point when S&lt;HilC pcuple may
IJc losint.; their jobs."

Under the utility 's supph•tHcnt nl filing

with the

PUro, the mandatory curtaihm'ut steps involve the

sa me large usc customers
ilff&lt;·&lt;:tcd in the original plan.
The
bH Sl'&lt;l

mnndatory steps,
on u co ntinuing

dcplrtion In tho number of
dnys Supply of coni, are as
{olluws:
10 percent
:10 rluys
&lt;'1111 ailment.
2!i days - full 30 percent
cuJinlhnent.

:ro t111ys - cnrtulhnent to
levels snffi cit•nt only to
pl'ut cct human life and
s11h•ty. protection ol physi&lt;:ul

level. 'I11is is d(tWfl from the
105-day supply - the greu tc::;t
rese rves in uur hi story - that

plant h1ci1 Hics und em ployers' scct\rity .
15 d11ys ~ scctlonallzed

we hHd on hund when th e
~1rikc began last DcrcmiJcr
ll."

( Contiimed on page I )

en tine

at

e

Last week, the company
issued a further a ppeal for
r~st.omers to renew their
voluntary ronservatio n ef·
fort s und if •I all possible to

30~hiy

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 27 , 1978

Miners will scan pact carefully
Uuited Press International
Ohio miners are being
careful and Ohio utility
executives · are

being

cautious.
While stale officials and
even United Mine Workers
Presid~nt
District
6
President John Guzek, the
highest ranking unionman in
Ohio, have applauded a new

Another
armed
robbery

contract proposal reached
Friday with the soft coal
industry, rank and fil e
mempers by and large say
only that they're going to look
at

the

contract

very

carefully.
And the utilities, aware

that

another

tentative

proposal did not settle the
now 84-day-old str ike, show
no willingness to relax
conservation measures yet.

Steve Elliot, an official of
Local 1323 whose members
work for the Simco Peabody

,.

underground

min e,

contrad and he cannot see it

passing.
Elliot

sai d
severa l
members of his local wiJI

mar·ch with members,of other

'-• '\
. '"'\ •'
;,· ~
··-·

.. • .

'

"'

'

said

Sunday his members are
unhappy with the new

unions

Wednesday

for Uti lily Reform &amp;lnday,
about 300 persons listened to
UMW representatives give

in

Cleveland and Thursday in
Dayton in a show of solidarity
in support for a new contract.
At a miners support rally in
a
Columbus
United
Stee lw orkers

Union

the miners' side of the strike

story.
The rally-goers, who paid
$2 to attend , munched
popcorn and beer whlle
Robert Howard, recording
secretary of UMW I.ocal 1340,
warned "We're getting to the
nitty gritty now. Every miner
In the country is going to gu
over this contraet with a fine .
tooth comb before he's going
to say how he'll vote."
"We been out 8.'1 days and .

hal,l

organized Sunday by Ohioans

-'
'I·

.

'1~

if,
l

•

..

--...
-... ...
"""'

I

..•

l
'
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J.~FOR THE Anny, it was just
' another training maneuver. But lor the residents of the
"seashore resort town of Atlantic City, it was a sweet.,smelling
· lllea. Anny troops hit the city's beach this weekend with bullFor the second Iinne in two
. .dozers and heavy equipment. Their assignment: clear the months, an armed robbery
shoreline of rotting clams.
occurred over the weekend at
· The clams washed ashore during recent snowstonns and Zinn's Ashland Service
:!tate residents had been complaining for weeks 'the stench was Station in Kanauga, Gallia
unbearable. That is unW Peter Karabashian had an idea. County.
·
Wading through Anny red tape, be convinced "C" Company to
Gallia County sheriff's
"iruck the clams to nearby landfill sites as a "training , deputies were called at 2:55
maneuver.''
a.m. Sunday to the station
where Keith Jones, Point
FRANKFORT, KY. - COPIES OF THE TEN Pleasant , a service station
C&lt;&gt;nunandments may soon be hanging in every public class- attendant, reported he had
.:.room and courtroom in Kentucky. A measure requiring been robbed at gunpoint of
· ,e&gt;acUy that has already passed the State House ~espite between $15 and $20.
about the county. Another garbage truck owned by the
POWER outlook for Meigs
• •objections by some legislators It is unconstitutional and
county
has been out of COIJl!llission lor several months and
Countians is not good but the garbage pickup service is
Jones said a young man 5·9.
·''regressive." The bill is in committee in the stale Senate.
problems
have developed in that dwnp trucks were not
innproving.
Meigs
County
Commissioner
Henry
Wells
and
between 18·19 years of age,
&amp;Jpporters of the bUI, which collected ~ C&lt;Hlponsors in the wearing a long anny coat,·
able to keep up with the accumulation of trash about the
John Gibson of the Gibson Motor City, Athens, are
·.;ltJO.member lower chamber, claim they don't care if it is . with long dark hair came into
county. Commissioner Wells said with the new truck and
pictured with a new refuse truck which was delivered· to
the older truck repaired and used as a backup vehicle,
' miconstltutlonal. "I see nothing wrong with passing this the.station and asked to use
the county highway garage Saturday afternoon. The new
service will be much improved throughout the county .
... Jegislatlon," Republican Rep. Looie Guenthner said.
truck will be put into use probably tomorrow to pick up
the restroom. He went to the
garbage and trash at the bins located at strategic points
restroom then came·back and
"'
WASHINGTON - THE NATION 'S GOVERNORS, told Jones the facility was
·&gt;steering clear of discussions on the coal strike, today made a · flooded.
:.: rwort to President Carter on state fuel conservation measures
When Jones went to check
oought an equal voice in national energy planning.
the restroom, another man
::: · The governors also planned to urge Carter to ease his described as about the same
" stand on continued oil and natural gas price controls, saylng height , wearing a blue United Press Internatlnnal
On Friday afternoon, about reporters were allowed near treated and sent home and
laster decontrol than that now favored by the administration is toboggan and red hand·
another 41 were hospitalized,
The deraiinnents of three 40 hours after the deraiinnent the site.
.needed to boost u. s. energy production.
nine in critical condition.
as
officials
prepared
to
·
·
Explo
s
ives
experts
kerchief over his face pulled tra ins,
each
carrying
Authorities immediately
a .410 gauge shotgun ihen dangerous chemicals, killed transfer the propane to tank ca utiously pumped the
""' NEGOTIATORS IN FOUR NATIONS are attempting to ordered Jones into the rest- 20 peop.le, injUred more than trucks, the tank erupted in a prOQBne to another tank car began evacuating more than
arrange a swap of political prisoners including two leading room. They apparently took 200 and forced the evacuation 1,1100-foot tower of flame that · and by Sunday morning the 1,000 residents within a three~
• Soviet dissidents, an American who spied for Moscow, an the money from the cash of about 3,500 people from seared a two-block area and tank car had been drained mile radius of .the accident
:-.Israeli pUot and a group of Chilean communists. '
register then fled.
their homes during a five-day instantly killed five men at and llushed with water to and chemi cal disaster teams
The negotiations have been conaucted in Chile, East
'
Alabama
and
Area law enforcement period in Tennessee and the work site. Seven more, expeJ lingerlng fumes, The from
' ... Germany, Israel and the United States. If successful, they agencies were alerted over
including Waverly Fire Olief debris was hauled away, Jacksonville, Fla ., were
Florida.
would lead to freedom for Anatoly Shcharansky, a 3().year-&lt;Jld the weekend to be on the
The first deraiinnent came Wilbur York and Police Chief leaving a 211-foot-wide crater. rushed to the scene.
. · ·soviet computer expert, and Edward Kuznetsov, nephew of lookout for a 1978 Ford three· Wednesday. It was the worst, Guy Barnett, died later of
An inspector from the
Townspeople were allowed
,. 1975 Nobel Peace prize winner Andrei Sakharov. ,
National
Transportation
burns.
back
to
their
homes
to
begin
quarter ton pick-up truck but the trouble did not come
Safety
Board,
just flilished
Ambulances
and
medical
cleaning
up
the
damage
and
taken from a parking space for two days.
WASHINGTON- SEN. ROBERT DOLE OF Kailsas has at 843 Second Ave. Michael
The Louisville &amp; Nashville evacuation helicopters preparing for the funerals of . with his work in Waverly ,
become the fourih potential 19M Republican presidential Pollock said 1he truck was train was moving through the moved 55 injured to hospitals friends and neighbors.
was en route to Panama City
-candidate to set up a political acl(on committee that could valued at $10,600.
But at 2 a.m. CST S~11day, Sunday evening when he
tiny east Tennessee town of throughout the area, later
.. .... ve as a campaign base.
The 250 pickup with four- Waverly when 24 cars sending the most severely while the pumping operatioil learned of yet a third
Ronald Reagan, George Bush ~nd John ComaUy already wheel drive is red with a jumped the tracks about injured to special burn was going on in Tennessee, a derailment ,
again
·in
have created similar committees which serve as vehicles lor white top and has white rinns 10!30 p.m . . CST. The ca(s centers across the country . 50-car Atlanta and St. Tennessee .
financing campaign travel around the country.
At 3:15p.m. CST, 2ii cars of
piled up ill an area behind Civil Defense and National Andrews Bay Railway train
and spokes.
an
Illinois -Central Gulf
.i:~;;::::::::::::;:::::::::;:::::;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;
Deputies also investigated City Han; where the tracks Guard units quickly set up ran off the tracks in the
freight
train jumped the rails
refugee
centers
for
·
those
Florida
Panhandle
near
tbe theft of two guns; a 12 form a border between a
EXTENDED FORECAST
on
a
trestle
near the west
forced
from
their
homes
by
Youngstown.
business
district
and
a
gauge
shotgun
and
a
.22
YOUTH COMMITTED
· Wedaesday lbrougb
Tennessee
town
of Cades the
presence
of
the
second
,
'
Six
of
the
17
derailed
cars
caliber
rifle
taken
from
a
A
15-year·old
Pomeroy
.
residential
area
.
Friday, lair and cold
about
80
miles
west of
loaded,
propane
tanker.
carried
chlorine;
one
cracked
still
home
owned
by
MI'S.
George
was
A
brief
evacuation
youth
was
taken
to
Riverview
WedDelday and Thursday,
Waverly.
boxcar
next
to
and
the
deadly
gas
drifted
A
burning
Baker
on
Floyd
Clark
Rd.
ordered
once
officials
learned
School
lor
Boys,
north
of
. . but a Utile warmer Friday
There were no immediate
two of the derailed cars the tanker kept firefighters over the sleeping farrri
wllh a chance of rain or Cqlumbus, Friday by Carl R.
injuries and no fire, but one of
·
contained 20,000 gallons each bosy through the weekend community .
'·•. snow. Highs wiD be from
Hysell, Meigs County
SQUAD RUN
Eight people died from the derailed cars was
Juvenile Officer.
:~· the mid HI to low 30s
The
Middleport of highly flammable liquid trying to extinguish the fire
The youth was committed Emergency Squad answered propane. But even though and keep the propane tank exposure to the fumes - most carrying sodium hydroxide, a
-· Wedaelday aDd I~ tile
to the youth .commission a call to Route 124 near both tanks were damaged cool. By noon Saturday, more teen-agers killed .as they caustic lye. The tank car
, upper:ltiiiOiow 401 Friday.
facility by Judge Manning .Middleport at 6:56 a. m. there was no leak and people than 2,000 people had been drove through the gas before cracked and noxious fumes
Lows wDI be Ia lbe teens
and
only the danger was discovered , from the lye forced the
,, Wedlleoday aad In lhe ZOs
Webster for being unruly, Monday for Charles Burt who gradually drifted back to evacuated
About 90 people were · evacuation of 250 rural
emergency
personnel
and
their
homes
and
businesses.
school truancy and for was taken to Holzer Medical
::::: Friday.
r
Gibson County residents.
..Violation ol probation.
Center.
~:?.:=:=:::::=~r=:::::::~===============:===:===:::=:~=:=======:=:=:::::

:: and

40 IN STOCK! I

mukers , DanleJ Cogeshell

do "

PROSPECT PARK, PA.-A YOUNG WOMAN gave birth
. to a boy Sunday while fighting for her life with burns sustained
in a fire that killed her husband and three other persons.
The baby, who developed respiratory problems shortly
alter the birth, was listed in stable condition today at an area
hospital. The mother, Patricia Lange, 23, was in serious
condition at a burn center.

Jenk ins and Isaac Partridge

dent of .the Federation uf

-~~'~&gt;'&gt;~*'''''""~·:::·:·&amp;'&gt;''S'~·=·~-,:,.~s·=:~:::,.~~~-~-,:~

CLEVELAND - THE SLOW PROCESS OF selecting a
jury for the murder ttial of six alleged Malia members
accused of killing Cleveland racketeer Danny Greene moved
into its second week this morning with 60 new prospective
jurors on hand for ·examinstion.
A remote-control bomb detonated in a car in the parking
lot· of a suburban Lyndhurst office building killed Greene in
October. Pollee said they believed he was murdered for trying
to gain control of la&lt;;al rackets.·

Ill iII.

GALLIPOI.IS- Prof. J . D.
Poll itt has been elected to the
governing board uf the
Dow nt own
Hun ti ngto n
Kiwanis Club.
While living at Ashland ,

of Coach Carl Wotre will play

By United Press International
, CARACAS, VENEZUELA - TWO YEARS AFTER HE
, .waa kidnapped by lelliBt guerrillas, the fate of Ohio business
executive William F. Niehaus is still unknown .
Niehaus, vice president of Owens-Ollnois of Venezuela,
waa snatched from his home by seven armed men the night of
Feb. '1:1, 1976. His kidnapers broke off communications in
August, 1976. Reporters and police speculated the executive
had been murdered.
But columnist Jack Anderson, in a recent syndicated
column from Washington, disclosed receipt of photographic
proof that Niehous was still alive in captivity as late as March
19, 1977.

provements also during those
years. While the .town was

busin esses:

Winebrenner.

1News. • •in Brief~

UnfortuniJlely, it did .not last

the race £or Cheshire was the

in township

competition. The Tornadoes

· Meigs County
James J. Proffitt reports that and color of the vehicle then
two adults and one juvenile notified the Meigs County
have been apprehended in the Sheriff's Office . The in·
theft of pop bottles from an dividuals were able to sell )he
establishment riear the bottles at the Kroger Store
before being apprehended.
Meigs-Gallia county line.
Pomeroy police stopped the
Two alert citizens observed
the trio taking bottles individuals near the Kroger
Saturday evening obtained

long .

added

Thursday night aga inst
Fairfield Leesburg at 7:30 at
the high school in Chillicothe.
Hannan Trace got the tip
and jumped off to a quick 2-11
lead, but Southern tied it

Sheriff the license number, make

manufacture of a water
elevator
and
purifier.
Cheshire hml it s own factory !

Kygervllle

'
in the Class
A Sectional
championship played at
Meigs High School Saturday
night .
Southern. earlier crowned
SV AC champions, won the
right to travel to ·Chillicothe
to the Cla ss A District

Faced
with
further
deterioration of a growing
critical s h ort a~e uf coo l

Nab three in bottle theft case

watts.

had 199 people and Cheshire
had 195.
The thing that finally won

once top

,
By Greg Bailey
. Senior Perry Hill came off
.\he bench in the second
period and tossed in eight
uni&gt;ortanl points while guard
John Sayre netted nine to
. spark a second quarter surge
that allowed the Southern
Tornadoes to pull away for an
~2 win over Hannan Trace

metric
unit
used
in
mechanics, is equal to 746

CARPET SPECIAL

the Meigs Inn. "Nimble

Supplemental
•
plan IS filed

Southern advances
to district play

is going to provide in· ,
strumentul music for the
Pom eroy ~hamber of
Commert·e banquet at 6:30
p.m., Tuesday, Feb. 28 in

REP. RON JAMES advises that he is abaodoning his effort
to get the state song changed. l'll drink to that. If you heard the ,Twp.
marble cutter, S. W. Swantuneless song that was to replace "Beautiful Ohio" you
'l11ree ca bins were erected
probably will join me. Maybe the whole stale can't relate to ncar pr~se nt ·da y Cheshire in son; drugs, F ." Sm1lh ; ca r~
"Beautiful Ohio"- although 1 don't know why - but at least , t7!l4 . The &lt;: &lt;~bins were built penters , C. Hngg and William
the melody and lyrics are great
by Paul und Abram Darst, Good: harness maker, A.
Ruhie : blacksmith. William
Ad&lt;Hn Roush :m d Edw&lt;:~rd
musical
inCHARLES STOBART, formerly of Meigs County - a lung McM ullen . F'or some year.;; Strouse ;
while ago - recently fell and is confined to his home at 410 &lt;.~.fler this, however , the only strum ent s, J . S. Riggs:
Yale Ave., Baltinnore, Md. 21229. Stobart graduated from attract ion in Cheshire was physician. W. A. Watkins:
RBcine High School in the 1930s and is a son of the late Mr. and the tavern first started by nour mill, Resencr and Sons;
grocers, T. R. Weed, and
Mrs . John R. Stobart of the Racine area. We're advised that Abr~un Darst.
Mauck imd Boice ; dry goods,
he'd be dellghted to hear from his former classmates and
Cheshire did bcal its rival
Sandfor(.i, Blosser and Co .,
friends .
Kygrrville in having the firs!
post offl&lt;·e, the lirsl chur&lt;b and Mauck and Bradbury.
DURING WORLD WAR II a song entitled "When the meeting, and the first school
Ughts Go On Again All Over the World" enjoyed popularity. in the township. Kygen·ille
What with homes, business houses and towns getting darker, it had the first chun·h building,
seems that the song should be enjoying a comeback. Do try to Methodist ·Epist•npal built in
keep in mind that the bending over you are having to do to see 1820.
what you're looking at is awfully good exercise for the back.
Kygerville was ·Jaid out in
Also If you have to go out into the pitch darkness of night, head 1842 by Asa Bradbury. It
coverings are recommended. Something like a steel heinnel. ~rew rapidly . In 1848 David
· Meantime, keep smiling.
Tate built a Water-powered
sawmill at the edge of town.
in 1850 Asa Bradbury, w., S.

. gt
K"IWanlS
. eIec I S p ro f • p 0 u·Jlt
HUfl t ill
Orl

Patrol probes
five mishaps

'f1le first mishap due to icy
road conditions occurred at control of her car on the icy
6:20 a.m. un Georges Creek roadwa y. ller vehicle sljd orr
Rd. just off SR 7 where an · the roadway striking a fence.
auto
driven by Ca rl R. Veith, There was minor damage.
S,ume people consider
Icy road conditions were
38,
Rt.
I, Ga llipolis, slid on
fruzen or a nge jui ce con~
blamed
on an accident at 5
the
icy
pavement
into
a
tcntrates superior to handp.m . on the Frank Shaffer
~1~1led
car
ncross
the
roadsqueezed juice because they
Rd. eight tenths of a mile
t{lntain less oil £rom the ~k ins way driven by Charles
so
uth nf SR 233.
whi ch can cause a llergies. Derifield , 53, ru . l, c;o.J!Jipolis.

the

Southern College of Op-

in

driven by George E. Lewis,
42, Oak Hill, slid Into the front
of a vehicle operated by
Donna Adkins, 21, Oak HiU.

20 die in train derailments

'.'t'

.,

we CWl stay out 83 more to get
what we need," he also
said .

Charles Grimm, DIStrict 6
field representative for The
Coa l Miners Political Action
Committee, said Ohio miners
should begin going over the
by
proposed contract
Tuesday.
He predicted they wtll be
checking out lour items that
were especially objectionable
in the rejected first
settlement proposal.
Grinnm listed the crucial
points as whether the miners
retain a cost of livtng adjust·
ment, pension benefits for
older miners, whether miners
are penalized in any way for
wildcat striking, and whether
a clause has been removed
that would bave allowed tbe
handling of non-union coal at
UMW tipples.
Utilities around the state
this weekend urged continued
industrial, conunercial and
residential
electricity
cutbacks.
The Columbus &amp; Southern
Ohio Electric Co. pointed out
Ula! even favorable results of
the miners' vote will not be
known for at least two weeks,
and it. might take another two
weeks to ready mines for
production.
Conservation efforts may
be needed even after lhal
time, because.coal piles hnve
dwindled
below
the
minimum, and must be

replenished . Meanwptl• .
alternative fuels and out-ofstate electricity are being
purchased at high cost to
supplement Ohio output.
MEET WEDNf,_"i.'A V
The ladies auxlllary of the
Middleport Fire Department
will meet Wednesday, March
l, at 7:30 p. m. at the lire
. station. ·
Plans lor the anniversary
dinner will be made .
Hostesses will be Kathryn
Metzger, Kitty Darst and Sue
Metzger.
MEETTIJESDAY
The Middleport Chamber of
Commerce wiU meet at 7:30
p. m. Tuesday at the Citizens
National Bank.
··

�3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 , Monday, Feb 'EI , 1978

2-1'he Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Monday, Feb 'EI , 1978

. . . . outhern advances to

Redmen edge Cavs, face ]acke.ts for MOC post-sea~on title

Sport Parade

Den Talk

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sporll Editor

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla (UP! ) - The dugout always
was M1ckey Mantle's pr1vate Httle priSon, and still Is .
He never could wrut to get out there on the f1eld and he still

can't
You can tell by the way hiS hands gnp the edge of the bench,
the way he leans hlS head forward and the ~,~, ay h1s eyes keep
scarchmg and trymg to take m everythmg tha t's gotng on m

front of hun

Nearly 10 years have gone by smce Mtckey Mantle last
played for the Yankees but mall that lime. he really never has
been able to put out the hre lnsode him The old desore 1s still
there and he 's helptng hos old buddy , Btlly Martm, now as one
of the Yankees' sprmg trauung mstructors, a JOb he happtly
takes on every year tlus time
" I 'd g1veanythmg to be playmg agam,' ' he says, focusmg his
gaze aroW1d second base where Bucky Derit and Mickey Klutts

are turnmg over a double play
ManUe keeos watchm• them and talking
"You know, when you're 25 and you're playmg, you thmk of
yourself, boy, this Is all fight and It's never gonna end. Then
suddenly one day It's all over before you reahze tl
"A Iotta kida send me scrap books they kept of me I guess
they feel they ' re too old to ke€p 'em a ny m ore, so they want me
tn have 'em Somellmes I get up cttrl y m U1c rnormng and
lookmg at tile pictures , I don't even think they're me They
look Hke someone else "
Mantle glances down the other end of the bench "here
Martrn also IS watchmg the acuon out on the fteld.
"!told Btlly the only ones I wanna work wllh are the ones
who have good years," says Mantle
He says Jl w1th a straight face, but ~e' s ktddmg You have to
be around Mickey Mantle awh1Je to dppreewte h1s humor It's
dry, Oklahoma style , but 1t's a lnt ftmm er tha n you'll fmd
among some of the top stand~up c om1cs 1n the t.: Ountry
Whitey Ford ts one of the Yanke es' sp1mg: lftstructors also
When they played to~ether, Mantle, Marttn and Ford were
practically mseperable They sUI! are now
" U 11 hadn 't been for Wht ley a nd Btlly I cl sull be pla ytng, '
says Mantle. "They took 10 years off my hfe ·
How "
" Just hangm' around w 1th em, " Mantle sH ys
Then he starts laugh mg. that typc1 a l Mick ey Manlle la ugh
where h1s eyes c rmkle up and hiS white teeth show so much
Suddenly, he grows senous a gam
"I'm here now because I love 1t," he .says "It meant a
he lluva lot to me when the Yankees won the pennant last year
I had goose pimples We had been down so long - and when I
say 'we/ - I mean 1t I'm proud I was a Ya nkee and I'm proud
to be wearm' these pm..stnpes
'' I didn't believe all that st uff aboul the cont1 over s y on the
tea m last year To me, 1t was JUSt goml ~ndlur cd bwkermg We
had the same thmg when we playetl But when I read those
storoes m the papers, I felt bad for Btlly I was afratd he mtght
get bred "
After he retired from the Yankees, Mantle had •t rough for
awhile He made a numbe r of bad mvestments, but now he's m

OPTOMETRIST

l
l

L----·---------------------------OFFICE HOURS : 9: 30 to 12,2 to S (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS) - EAST COURT
ST., POMEROY .

\

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

: Pro
:
:Standings !

j'l think what I m1ss most

1s

the comparuonsh1p,'; he says " I

1

Houston
30 26 J 63
Quebec
27 30 2 56
B•rm ngham
26 33 2 54
Clncmnat1
24 33 3 51
lndtaMpOII S
18 36 4 40
Saturday 's Result s
Quebec 7, lndtanapolls 5
Btrmtngham 7 Ctncmnah 3
Sunday 's Res ults
lndtanapo lts 6, Brrm tngham 3
W nnrpeg 9 Houston 6
New England 6 E dm onton 5
Monday's Games
(No ga mes scheduled )
Tu esday' s Game
Houston at Quebec

NBA Standmgs
By Un1ted Press International
Eastern conference
Atlanhc Dl \i iSIOn
W L Pet GB
Phlla
41 18 695
New York
31 28 525 10
Boston
22 3-4 393 17' 2
Buffalo
19 38 333 21
New Jrsey
14 47 230 28
Central 01\iiSIOn
W L Pet GB
Sa n Anton
37 22 627
wash
31 2B 525 6
Clevelnd
29 31 483 81 2
New Orlns
28 33 459 10
Allant~
28 33 459 10
Houston
24 37 393 14
Western conlerent:e
M1dwest DI\' ISion
W L t:»ct GB
Denver
38 23 623
M1lwauke
32 29 525 6
Ch•cago
31 J l 500 7 11~
Det ro1t
28 32 467 9 1/J
Ka nss Cty
24 37 393 1-4
lnd1ana
22 38 367 15lh
PaCifiC DI VISIOn
W L Pet GB
Portland
49 10 831
Phoen1x
38 22 633 11 1 •
Seattle
33 27 550 w -.
Los Ang
32 29 525 18
Go lden St
29 32 475 21
Sa1urday's Results
Houston 11 0 Buff alo 106
New York 122. Phoen1x 115
Sa n An ton to 112. Cleveland
lO B
Denver 12.4, Philadelphia 115
Seattle 118 D~trort 104
Sunday 's Results
Boston 94 New Jersey 92
At lanta 119, Buff alo 11 7
Milwaukee 122, New Or leans
120 (Ot)
Washtngton 12 1 Gol den State
110
Portland 100, Ch 1cago 99
Seattle 99, Philadelphia 97
Detrort 127 , Los Angeles 124
Monday 's Game
Clel/eland at Houston
Tuesday's Games
San Anton1o al New York
Boston at At la nta
Denver at ln dra na
Buffalo at New Orlea ns
Phoenix at Chicago
Seattle vs Ka nsas C1ty a t
Omaha
wash rngton at Mi lwaukee
Ph 1ladelph1a at Portland

THE DAILY SENTINEL
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESI'ER L TANNEHIU

Exec. Ed
ROBERTHOEFUCH

City Editor

Published ilinly n~eepl Saturday

by The Ohio Valley PubU~hing
CompHny-Mulumet.IW Inc ,
lll
Court Sl , Po~ruy, Ohto tli769
Busme!l!l OffiL'e Phone 992- 2156
Ed1tonal Phone99'l-2l57
Setood ektss po~~brl!!te ptud at
Pomeroy Ohio
Nalwnal atlverlwng reprnenlilllve Ward · Gnff!th Cumpuny,
Int , BottmeiU cmd Ga llagher D1v ,
7$7 Third Ave, New York, NY

10017

Su~rlpt10n

16 West Washington
Athens

'

charily ta!SeS, and Greg James tapped m a missed shot for a
6z..'i:i lead with only 54 seconds left ID play.
Kounouzvelis and Mjke Nau htt qutclt field goals to reduce
!he lead to 62-59, but Prtce put It away with a pair of free
throws in the frnal nine seconds.
In a critical coolest in whtch the score was tied eight times
and the lead changed 10 tlmes, Ill!! gutty Redmen outplayed
!he1r much t.aller oppcnent.s down the stretch to make It three
wms over Walsh this season . ln two previous MOC gameo Rio
Grande posted 90-79 and 8&amp;-77 vtctorles.
Walsh bows out of the 1977-71 season wtth a 11-19 record
while Rio Grande lays tls 111-7 record on the line against
Cedarville tooight.
Statistics show the Redmen hi tUng 25 of 69 ftelders for 36
pet , converted 14 of 23 at the line, and pulled down 37
rebounds.
Walsh drilled 28 of 65 from the floor for 43 pet., canned
three or nme gralls throws, and snared 49 rebounds.
Greg James conii'Jbuted 20 pomts ID the attack, but moot
11Dportantly, grabbed 14 rebounds as he skted over !be big
Cavaliers.
Kounouzvells a sophomore from Canton, scored 16 points
and saved 17 b~unds foc the losers while Craig Luther, a s.:J
sophomore, added 12 markers .

(Continued Iran ~1e I)
Campbell gave the boys of
Coach Dan Cornell another
two pornt lead JUS\ fifteen
seconds later, but jumor T1m
Brmager knotted the score
the next hme down the floor

Spa rkplu g Dave Swa m
ga ve the Wildcats theor last
lead wtth 4·59 showmg on the
clock at 6-4 w1lh a jumper,
but Brmager knotted 11 agam
at~ w1th 4·19 sho ~ mg In the
first penod Sayre gave the

rates Delivered by
earner wOOre 11vall111Jle 75 cents per
week By Motor Route whe n~ c~o~ rner
servn:e nut av1ulable, One month,
~ ~ By mall ln Ohiu wnd W Va,
One Yt~tr, f22 00, SIX moolt\5,
$11 50, Three mun ths, $7 00,
Eb~where

$26 00 ) e11r Six monlM

Three monl h!j:, $7 50
Subscnplion prlct mclu!les Sundlly
Tun t!s-Stl lbntl
$13 50,

•i

seco nds

Unto! then , tt looked as if
the Blazers would see defeat
for the 11th t1me this season
Mtckey Johnson stole the ball
from Johnny Davis and fed
W1lbur Holland, who scored
on the fast break w1th four
seconds left, putting the Bulls
up 99-98
Instead, after a Portland
ttme out, Hollms ga ve the
defendrng champs theor 49th

games.

the Me1gs Co unty club to r act&gt;

The Irish, wearing loud
green knee socks, cut the
Warnors lead to 4:h'!O early m
the second half on thr~e held
goa ls by Tnpucka . Rich

~:~b~n~~~~:~~~~ff.~J ~
57-56.
Tropucka then forced a
jump ball and won the tap
fr om Bernard Toone of
Marquette. Duck Will~ams,
who had H pomts, followed

season-high 37 pomts along
w1th 18 rebounds to lead
Washmgton past Golden
State. Kevm Grevey added 25
pomts for the Bullets wllile
Rtck Barry had 30 and Sonny
Parker 23 for the Warriors.
Hawks 119, Braves 117
John Drew and CharHe
Cr1ss scored 16 of Atlanta's
last 18 pomts to send the
Hawks past Buffalo. Drew
flmshed w1th a game-h1gh 38
while Randy Smtih's 31 pomts
kept the Braves rn contention
in the final minutes.
Bucks 122, Jazz 121 (ot)
Br1an Wmters fired in 37
pomts, mc!uding eight in
overtime, as Mtlwaukee
snapped a lO.game home
wrnnmg streak for the Jazz
Lloyd Walton's two free

College scores

s choo ls

Lisa Shoemaker, Waverlv
Tina N1bert, Gall ipolis
Be th Rlst , Ironton
., Kim Conley , Jackson
Ctndy Jamtson Logan

"

Esn Ill 88. NE Missouri St 80
Empor.a St 74, Mo western 68
Evangel 76, Jolln Brown 69
Fer:rls St 85 Wayne St 84 (otl
Fort Hays 108, PittSburg 93
Frankl in 84, Anderson 82
Goshen 108, Bluffton 107
Grand Val 70, Sag. Valley 68
iot&gt;
Gustavus Adolphus 76, St Olaf
63
Hanover 85, Defiance 84
lll rnors Coli 71 Aurora 6l
lll rno1s St 90, Centen&amp;ry 77
ll lrnors Wesleyan 81, Carroll 72
lnd1ana 68 , M1nnesota -47
lnd1~M St 74, Brad ley 68
Iowa St 67 , M!ssoun 63
KMx 93, Monmou th 87
Lake Superior St 8~ , N Mlch

SECOND TEAM
PLAYER, SCHOOL
Jayna R iggs, Ironton
Becky Kuhn Logan
G lenda Brown, Meigs
Cheryl Fa1rchlld Waverly
Jeanette Vmson, Ironton
Gtnny Young, Galllpolts

were

81

Lawrence 8.4, Lake Forest 60
Lew1s 53, St\ Ambrose 52
Lmcoln 87, Northwest Mo 69
M1Ch1gan 82, Iowa 76
M1Ch1gan St 89, llllno1s 67
Neb Om aha 17, Morningside 76
No Illino is 89, Kent St 59
No Iowa 79, South Dakota 67
Ozark B1ble 103, Bapt1st Btble
100

College Baasketball
Sunda y Res ult s
By United Press ln1 er nattonal
conference Tou{nam e nts
Sunbelt Conferenc ~:­
Ctlarlotte, N c
Fmal Round
New Or leans 22, S Alaba m a 20
Knrckerbocker Conference
New York, N Y
Final Round
N Y Tech 100, Pace 69 .
Stony Brook 88 1 Mercy 82

Celtlcs 94, Nets 92
.Pnnc1pla 78, U of South
John Havhcek scored 19 Purdue 87, W1 sconsm 78
60. Wil lia m Jewell 58
pomts as Boston blew a 21· Rockhurst
Roosevelt 105, ChiC ago U
pomt lead but held on to stop Simpson 72, Wartburg 62
New Jersey. The Nets had a St Joseph 's Q; , Wsn Illino iS 68
Mary's 90, Hamlme 7.4
chance to wrn tt but George St
St ThOmas 79, Bethel 65
Johnson mlsseti a IS-footer m Tr1 State 77, Sf Franc iS 56
Upper Iowa 66 , Central 6.4
the !mal seconds Dave Bmg Valpararso
71 , lnd Central 70
and Dave Cowens had 18 each
Southwest
for the Celtic~. For the Nets, Arkansas 84.
TCU 42
John Williamson scored 31, Bethany Naz 88 , Midwestern 63
Kevm Porter 26 and rookie E Tex Bapt 75, Southwestern
69
Bernard King 25.
Houston 108, Rice 67
Kansas St 65 , Oklahoma 5-4
Bullell 121, Warriors 1110
Lub Ch ristian 72, Tex wesley
Elvin Hayes, playing hos an
69
best ball of the season, had a Nebra.ska 67, OklahOma St 56

East
Bentley 80 Bryant 78
Boston St 88, Fra mrng ha m St
84

best policy. . •

FOR CURBIN
CRIME LOSSES
You can help cut down on
crime losses . losses that
directly
affect
you,
whether they happen to you
or not

'•

•'
•'

·,

Sunbelt Conference
Ch•rlotte~ N c ..
.
. secona ~ound
New Or Itans 79, Jacksonvllll~ 64
S Alabaml! 66, N Carolina 56
Sauthwtst Conference
Fanntvlllt, Ar11.
Arkansas 14, Tcu 42
Houston 108, Rlc;e 61

Rhod e IS la nd U 79 Bos ton U

68

Mrdwest
Notre Dame 65, Marquelte 59
u of 1 Chicago B4 St Norbert
70
Xav •er
(0 ! 82 S w es tern
Memph 1s 58
West
Wa shmgton 83 Californ ia 76
Oregon St 53 S Calrforn1a 47

East
All egheny 90 John Carrol l 68
AIC 77 , Spr rng f1 eld 72
Army 66 Navy 62
Bapi1SI B1bfe 67 , Valley Forg e
60
B U 83, As s umption 76
Bucknell 78 De laware 76 ioi J
Buffalo St 97 , P1ll John stown

"

Catholrc 77 Buffalo 74
Clark 82, Wor cester Tech 81
Colga te 86 Rochester 78
Col um bia 88. Ha rvard 64
ConneCfi CU I 57 Mtmhdttan CO li

C W Pos t 69 Ma r rs! 57
E1senhower 79 Rober ts Wes ly
an 74
Ganno n 98 Phtla Tex111e 89
Geo rgetown 77. Holy Cr oss 61
Gro ve Crty 76 Gene .... a 69
Hartfor d 81 Tnn rly 76
Ha w tho rn e Coli 84, Joh nson Sl
62

costs
Insurance
adversely affected
burglaries, robbertes
plus
earth efts
count less C B rad1os
bicycl es that t u rn
mlssmg

are

by
and
t~e

and
up

One thing you can do 1s to
suppor-t
programs
provtdmg stiffer penalties
for
wrongdoers
and
propqsals for strengthened
crime invest igation efforts.
You can also make It
tougher for crooks. Use

Wayland a apt 82, Dallas Bapt.
79
Wtchita 81 , W Texas Sf 74

Conference Tourn•·
ment
Lexing1on, v 1.
First Round
Furman 83, Tenn -Chaff. 73
VMI 95, Davldaon 80

60

54

Take the crime of arson.
You 're paying an In
creasmgly heavy subs1dy
for deliberately set fir es
through your Ins ur ance
premiums

81

Southern

C nc mnal• 72 Duques ne 64
Keene 51 70 Rhode Island 69
Lo c k Haven 70, Sa lrsbur y (Md !

KniCkerbocker conference
New York , N Y
Mer c y 102, N Y Tech 100
Stony Broo k 92 Pa ce n

Prevention is the

62, B'vr lle Wesleyan 5-4
Pan American 112, Hard .
S1mmons 82
Ph 1lan der Sm1 th 103 , Langston
89
St Mary's 84, Texas Lut heran

UCLA 83, Oregon S7
Utah 68, Tex.-EI !»esc 52
Utall St 113, Porfland St 87
W!!!h!ngton St 67, Stanford 64
Weber St 86, ld!!hO 69
W'm 1Mter (U ) 9-4, Wsn N M
83

This week's
cage games

RON Pack (42) fouled Southern's Perry Hill (25) on
this play during S..turday's Class A Sectwnal Tournament
at Rock Sprmgs. On rtght ts Hannan Trace's Davtd Swam
(32). Soutbern won, 8()..62.

OI~rks

"

70-Sii

b1~ !o\toQ as till' IHI'IIt\duc!i
shut :1 Sl7Z llll~ 56 pcl'ccnt
f1 1111l Ow ftt•ld, ~mkm~ 35 uf li:t
s!wts 'l11l'\ ('&lt;UUWd 10 tl f tot
fo ul shuts und lul!t't lt•d :t5

.tl

\\ lfh

2 07

.

...

fl &lt;.tl lllll ll Tra('C t•onrapefcd
11 11

18

sh ~\1

,;f 27

!hi uws,

frt•('

40 J&gt;CI CCIJt f1

Olll1lll0

lllld

fluur

1111'1\tJ \fC.I S,
' .tusecl must I)' by the tight
ll Ui l iCfUUS

St!U IIJ CIJI d t-.f l' II M\ il"&lt;l1 u !heir

lknliM'

t mnpbell led thr Wtltlcat

Mmmn hctd 13 pmnt s while
Swmn wus hr l&lt;tl o JUSt l:l a lso
Offlt:m ls for th l' l:llllh'sl wt·rc
!'mi l Wh1t e und GHr)! Duz.m

'

HtiX S{'OI'l'

1
3

SOUTHERN
180)
Brt nager 8 3 19 , Wineb renn e r
8 ') 18 , O' Bn e n 0 0 0, Sa yre 6
J 15, l eat ord S 0 10, Fi nd le y
0 0 0 , Dul ly 0 0 0 D Hill I 2
11, Bet ker 0 o O, P Hill 6 0 11
ForenltHl 1 0 'J., Rous tl 0 00
Total s JS-Jo.ao •
Hannan Trace (62) 0
Ci'tm pbell 6 6 18 P ac k 3 1 8,
Swam 5 J 13, Moo ne y 53 13 .
S B e;, ~,~er 1 0 'J Neill I 4 6 ,
Hll e 0 0 O· Wh 1li 1 0 2 We bb
0 0 0 . Hi ncm .1 n 0 0 0, C
C.1m pbe lt 0 0 0. T Bl'a l/cr 0
o 0 Tot a l&lt;;; 22 ~ 18 62
Score by quarters
Su u tilt:r n
14 'n 16 28- BO
Ha nn iln 1 race
17 10 12 78 61

J

5 8"

'

HI

Yr

5'2"
5'7"
5'9"

5'5"

Avg

1
J

II 3
12 5

'

13 1
12 5

1

tO O
45

'

5' 8"
5'J"

4

pos

Yr

S' 10 1 1' 1 4
Nan cy Jenk 1ns, ironton
Tracy Burdette , Meigs
5 ' 5"
5'8'
Jam1e Mara . Logan
·•
Donna Brandt, Ja ckson
5 8'
3
5 ]"
Ca th y Dan1els, Gallipolis
3
5 7"
Lydia Lavell e , At hens
3
Kim Kn1ght Wa.,..erly
6 '2'
4
MVP - C1ndy Jam 1son Logan
COACH OF YEAR - Don s Ha nno n Iront o n

'

c

G

"'

F

G
G

c

Cmdy Jam ison, Logan

Oklahoma City 64, Oral Roberts

Redlands 91. C~lteth 52
Regis 82, Wes tern St 73
Sacramento St 69. s F St. 66
San Diego 83, Cat Riverside 73
s an 01e90 St. U, Pacific 69
San Francisco 78, Nev Reno 73
santa Clara 79, St Mary's (C )

S1,ultwln's uHPusf' w. as a

Wall. l'\'Hlt.'Jll
\\ llil I hr Srrt li)llfll t• tuu HJlS
\\ould bt.• Souttll'rll wn s up by
dS lllUCh o~s 26 pt~tnts lmt the
Wtldr·.tl s ta111l' bo~ek In ~ou1hm

14

•

dl\lll'

pt'fiUc\ , It

4

HONORABL E MENTION
PLAYER, SCHOOL
HI

Others makmg the forst
team were 1.1sa Shoemaker,
Waverly; Beth Rost, Ironton,
K1m Conley, Jackson, and

"
"'

57

5' 4"
5'1 0"
5'5"
5'5"
5 7'

VIcki Epp le, Me1gs

honorable mention

NE Oklahoma 77. SE Oklahoma

. West
Anzona 90 Wyommg 89
Cal Da1ns 63, HumbOldt St 58
Cal Poly Pomona 107, Bakers
held 99
Cal Poly SLO 68, Los Angeles
St 66
Fresno St 41, Cal Irv ine 37
Full erton 85, Cal. Santa Bar
bara 67
Idaho st 90, Montana St 72
Kansas 70, Colorado 60
Long Beach St 113, san Jose
St 97
Loyola (Cal ) 59, seattle 57
Montana 7~. Bol5e St 67
New Mexico 71,
Brigham
Young 66
No Arlzon~ 89, Gonuga 75
Occldent&amp;l 96, LeVerne 67
Oregon Tech 76, Wsn Wasil St

O'Brmn hnd
c,H'h at mtcrnHSSiun while
lh t:o tugh-sl'tlrmg Swam had

id~t

d.tm.t~l·lwd

ALL SEOAL GIRLS BASKETBALL TEAM
PLAYER. SCHOOL
HI. Yr ,

represented on the f1rst team ,
meludmg Gall ipoli s · Twa
N1bert and Me 1gs ' V1ck1
Epp le
G le nda Brown, Me1gs and
G 1nn y Young , Ga llipoli s,
rated second team honors
and Tra cy Burdette, Metgs,
and
Cathy
Damels,
Ga llJ polts , re c eoved

wtth a basket wtlh 2:48
remaining to give Notre
Dame a 53-57 edge - its first
lead of tbe game
After Marquette's Butch
Lee miSsed a lS.footer, Jim
Baylon fouled Wilhams wbo
converted both ends of a oneand"'ne to make tt 6()..57. The
Irish !hen forced Marquette ,
22-:1, mto three offenstve loWs
and had no \rouble the rest of
the way .
Lee finished H points and
Jerome Whitehead 12 for tbe
Warriors whtle Williams had
14 for the Irish
Unranked Fordham scored
a 63-59 upset vlctory over
18thranked Georgetown
Sundsay m the only other
game mvolved teams rn the
top ~ Bill Lombardi scored
18 pomts and Paul WUHams
added 17 for Fordham, now 818 Georgetown's record
dropped to 21-5

throws w1th etght seconds left
put the Bucks ahead 122-118 to
clinch tt. Gatl Goodrtch had
31 pomts and Truck Robinson
30 for New Orleans.
Sonics 99, 76ers 97
Fred Brown scored 32
pomts, settmg a new all.time
scormg total for a Seattle
player, as the Somes downed
the 76ers. Brown hit the
wmnlng shot wtth 18
seconds remaming and led
five other Somes m doubles
figures.
Pistons 127, Lakers 124
Eric Money and Chris Ford
led a second-hall 74 percent
shooting barrage which lifted
the Pistons to the1r win over
the Lakers Center Bob
Lamer led the PIStons with 25
potnts

l't'nt~r Jill!
Jhrcc prrson.l\s

bren ner and

tlw

1978

1

M1dwest
Adrtan 80, Aquinas 73
Albron 93, Ol1vet 69
Alma 82. Kala mazoo 68
Bethel 6A , Huntington 57
could," said Portland Coach
Bethel 81, St Mary Pla ms 11
Jack Ramsay
Buena V1sta 76 , Dubt.uwe 75
\vm 75 Hope 69
Gettrng the ball to Neal , Ca
C MIChigan 88, W MICh ig an 78
seemed approprlate smce he C MISSOUri 96, Mo Rolla 76
had the hot hand, scoring a Ch1cago St 112, NE IllinoiS 85
62, So lll 1nors 56
career htgh 35 points. But tt Creighton
Dayton 79, Loyola 69
was the third option that DePauw 90, Wabash 88
70, Ka nsas Newman 51
Portland had to take. Chicago EDr ury
MIChigan 76, M1am1 {Ohio )

tlnrd stra1ght, all at home,
and 1ts nmth in the last II
games. Chicago was paced by
Johnson w1th 31 pomts and 21
rebounds
E!sewbere m the NBA,
Boston edged New Jersey 9492, Washmgton defeated
Golden State 121-1110, Atlant.a
downed Buffalo 11~·117,
Mtlwaukee clipped New
Orleans 122-120 tn overtime,
Seattle topped Philadelphia
99-97 and the Detroit Pistons
edged out the Los Angeles
Lakers I'EI-124 m other NBA

Trace 22-1 0 m that tornd
paced set·und canto tu enable

g~rls

basketball
tean1 was selected durmg
Sunday's Jneetmg ln Jackson
by SEOAL gorl coaches.
Logan ' s Ctndy J a mison
was named the loop's Most
Valuable Player Ironton's
Duris Hannon, m her fifth
year as Ttger gal boss, was
named the league's Coach of
the Year
S1x

st reak "

Ha nn an

n•buunds. Wmebrenucr and
Ihi\ had nine caroms u pu~ce .
Suyn· hod four asststs
'!'he hot offense pllttt'&lt;l fiv e
" "'" tn double ft ~ ures. led by
Brinugt&gt;r '$ 19 pmnts, follo\lt t&gt;d
bv Waneb1·cnncr's 18 Sayre
had 15, lh ll 12, anti IUchard
t'eufurd 10

runt est Hut
HlrNady been

l"l'nl•lll\llll-! 111 tht"

The f1rst AII--Southeaste1n

Ohoo League

1-7; Nau 142. TOTA!.'i ~9.
RIO GRANDE (14) - Johnson~; Bose~ ; Price~
23; SWain 244; James 11-4-20; Royse 142; Phelps 1.,'!.0 ;
totals 25-14-04.
Halltime score - R10 Grande 34, Walsh 33.

they knocked off to]H'ated
UCLA And four years ago
they ended the Brums' 118game wmrung streak.
'' We have had some great
comeback Vlctoris but thts
one has to rank as one of the
best," satd Notre Dame
Coach Phelps, whose club is
now 1~. "I compare today's
wm to our victory over UCLA
on Jan. 19, 1974, which
stopped their fl8.t:ame wm

nul score

•'

t

atlal k w1th 8 IIHtrkcrs

WALSH COLLEGE (59) - UngashJCk ~; Moore 446;
Luther~l2; Kounouzvelia 7·2-16; Pridemore 4-lh'l; Feelser 3-

"We were trymg to get the
ball f1rst to (Bob) Gross , !hen
to Uoyd (Neal) down deep ,
second to Tom (Owens) then
to Neal or thtrd to Lionel and
he makes whatever play he

The loss was Ch1cago's

Su ut ht&gt;rn

luUJ' agatnst hun '11w ttnrd
J)('flnd L~nd~\1 ~2-..H, dll\l .+ftt.•r
a Cnst beg1nnt11g to swrt tht.'

lu a t'1•m£vrtable 3&amp;-22 lead al
halfttme
For
Suuthtrn,
Wtnr·

IstrJct .

dream teamannounced

Box score :

VIctory

was not caught by surprose .
Guards Norm Van Lier and
Holland were nght on
Hollms.

Htll got onto the t•ontcst at
the six nun ute ma rk of that
seco nd pennd and helped

•

\11CII

Portland wins

United Press International
L10nel Holhns h1t the
Chtcago Bulls one m ore time
Sunday when h1 s 40-foot
carom shot at the buzzer gave
Portland a 11XJ.99 vtctory .
Four tJIDes m the last two
seasons, Hollms has etther
beaten or sent the game mto
ove rtim e agamst Chtcago
With a key hoop m the !mal

To rna does the tr f1rst lead at

8-6 and from then on the
Wtldcats JUS! co uldn' t catch
up although they stayed just
lwu pomts back the rest of the
penod and the forst half of
that second c ant o

First All-SEOAL girls

Top-ranked Marquette upset

hke to hear the players get on each ot her, the way we always
did I hke to hear Thurman get .on Johnson and Johnson get on
him It remmdsme of the old days with us."
An attractive young gul photographer came mto the dugout
at that pomt and asked Mantle tf she could take his pocture.
"You want some actiOn shots"'" he smd to her, with that
same strrught face agam
'What do you mean?" she UlQUlred
1
'You and me, and we can let him ," sa1d Mantle, mottorung
toward a wr1ter, "take the pic ture "
The gorl photographer laughed and then made Mantle's
p1dure
1
" How come," he sa•d, looking at her, "they didn't have stuff
! hke this when I was playmg ?"

,---------------------------------,
: N. W. COMPTON. O.D. :
I

and 14-14, proceeded to shake over and under the RIO defense
for a mcepomt lead, 31-22, with 4: 12left rn the forst half.
W1th a pa1r ~ 6-3 1rees under both hoards named su.ve
Prtdemore and Mark Kounouzvelis, the Cavaliers created foul
problems and took ever) thing but the paint off the glass boards
durmg thos surge.
Followmg a Rio timeoot, Gill Pr1ce and Greg James ignited
the Redmen into some smooth basketball that eroded the
Walsh lead to 31.:10, with 2:17 left.
James hit a prur of clutch free throws wtth I 31 left to give
the Redmen a J4.33 lead that stood at mtermisston.
During the first half Price tallied 16 Ql hJS game high 23
markers
while James added 10
•,,•,.
The Cavaliers had five players wtth five points or more led
by KounouzveUs with eight.
•
Fans were lllso treated to some real4ife S&lt;!tch Davidson
offtctallng at the well known National League baseball ump1re
called travelmg, three..second violations, and fouls w1th the
same
gusto as he does balls, strikes, and outs durmg tbe maJor
By Greg Bailey
Prehmlnary totals for the 15 counties open in Wildlife league baseball season.
Walsh JUmped mto a qutck J5..34lead to open the second half
Distroct No. 4 for heaver trapping season show a 20 percent
mcrease m harvest over last year A total of 442 beaver were but the Redmen hammered away, had tbe lead and lost It four
taken thiS year compared to 368 taken m 1977. However, the times, mcluding a 41·11 tie.
The vos1tors led by one to three pornts until the Redmen
last two years of beaver harvest have been relatovely low This
low harvest has been attrtbuted to the severe wrnter weatber broke a three-minute scoring drought by both teams to knot the
which kept beaver trappers out of the field. Tbe 1976 and 1975 score at 47-47 with 9:22 left
Followmg deadlocks at 49 a nd 51 RIO grabbed the lead for
beaver harvests show milder wrnter cond11Jons with an
average of 670 beaver bemg harvested. Those counties open m good at 53-51 and built It to~ with 3·50remammg
Sudden death loomed over Coach Lanham;s crew as !hey
WlldHfe Distnct No . 4 for beaver trappmg showed tbe
following totals . Morgan 131; Musklngum 76, Noble 65, Perry made Walsh foul them, but mtssed the front end of four
34, Guernsey 32; Coshocton 20; Athens 19, Hocking 19; Vinton consecutive one and one chartty tosses while the gap narrowed
17 ; Me1gs 7; Washmgton 6, Jackson 6; Ga lha 5; Belmont 3; to 58-5&gt;
Finally, at I.'EI, httle Vmcent Phelps canned a l&gt;l'ir o(
and Monroe 2
Ice oo. the ponds m the Ohio Power Recreation Area lS
rangmg !2-20" and suitable for tee flshing CampsJU. Q ts
provtdmg the best activity at this time. Ftshermen working
thts area are catchmg bass on rapala tee fishing J•gs fished on
the bottom A few crapp1es are also being taken by these same
methods Most area ponds have to be walked m to due to snow
It was not the way a No 1 awful lot of poise. They are a
cover conditions SmaUer ponds are producmg mce catches of ranked team ts supposed to very good ballclub."
bluegill on meal worms and wax worms
Raymonds also knew hiS
play
In Me1gs County, the Ohio RlVer and embayment areas
After leading by as many club's pe rf ormance was
are not safe at th1s time Forked Run Lake IS ex:pertencmg
as 17 pomts, Marquette lost Ullbecommg for a n NCAA
very htUe 1ce fishmg pressure Most acttv1ty contmues to be o n
1ts composure and that was defendmg champion
pnvate farm ponds where fishermen are catching bluegtll at
'There a re no excuses for
more than enough to carry
10..12ft depths on maggots, meal worms,and wax worms
the way we played," he satd.
perenmal gm n t~k11ler Notre
Don 't forget that tomght os the annual !zaak Walton
"If you can't hold a 14-pomt
Auctwn Club members and theor famihes are asked to bring Dame \to a 65-59 VIctory lead after one hall, then there
SUnday afternoon
somet hmg to acut10n, a covered d1sh, and table service. Meat
"Notre Dame had the has to be somethmg wrong
and drmk wtll be. provtded by the club
momentum m the second hall w1th your team."
Everythmg, however, was
and that IS what carrted
n
ght
for Notre Dame m the
them.''
satd
Marquette
Coach
good shape agam workmg for the Reserve Life Insurance
Company m Dallas as vtce president m charge of spec1al Hank Raymonds "No tre second half
After tralimg 39-25 at halfDame was very patien t m the
markets
"People talk about all the money the ballplayers make second half and showed an tune, the 12th.,.anked IriSh
outscored Marquette 40·20
today, " He says "!don't thmk tl's that much out of hne When
wtth
Kelly
T ropucka
I played wtth the Yankees, I made $100,000 a year the last few
spearheadmg
the
attack
years and I could buy a Cadillac for $5,000 Now the players
Tripucka fm1shed wtth a
make $300,000 a year and a Cadtllac costs $15,000 Everything I
I game-h1gh 15 pomts and
IS relative . Besides, ballpla;ers are better busmessmen
grabbed seven rebounds as
today "
th e !rosh pulled off another
Generally, m the Yankees' camp, you'll flnd Mantle out on
upset Last seaso n' they
the f•eld because there's nothing m the world he loves more
WHA Sta ndi ngs
dumped powerhou se Sa n
By Un1ted Press International
than the feel of the grass under hts feet, the sun warmmg h1s
W
L
T
Pt
s
Franc1sco while two seasons
46-year-&lt;Jid bones and the harmless httle rllus10n he has that W.nntpeg
41 18 2 84
he'sgomg to wake up sudden ly and fmd hunsell playmg aga)n, New Eng iQnd
34 22 4 72
Edmon ton
31 27 2 64
the same way he dtd 20 years ago

It wu no easy task for Coach Art Lanham 's Redmen as
they did not shoot well, did not rehound well , did not hit
crue l&amp; I free throws, but they put 1t where 1t counts, on the red·
hghted seorehoard
While Rto was battlmg tooth and na1l to capture the
unportant win Cedarvolle College went to Canton and pulled off
a moracle by whtppmg Malone, 71Mi0, to set the stage for
ton ight's R1o Grand..Cedarvtlle shoot-out for the post-season
Utle at 7 30 in Lyne CenU.r
S..turday mght, the Canton-based Walsh College Cavahers
posted R1o a qwck :&gt;A lead and following deadlocks at 2-2, 6-6 ,

R10 Grande College came from beh ind S..turday mght to
edge Walsh College, 64-09 , at Lyne Center a nd ea rned the right
to host Cedarville College tom ghtm the champ1onsh1p round(){
the M1d.Ohio Conference T~t

•

good. strong locks Mark
possessions wlfh your
social security number
Our
agency
provides
financial protection and
service when crime losses
occur . b(lt many ca11 be
prevented That's why we
say prevention Is the

best policy

Husson 100 Mame Ft Kent 88
Krng s 79, Sou thampton 51
K1ng s Pomt 84 New Patll 70
Lafayette 78, Rtder 65
LaSalle 100, Vermon t 67
Lehrgh 78, wesl Ches.ter 68
Lowell 77, Norwr ch 67
Loyol a 56 St Franc1s rPa ) 55
Marne 97, Northeaslern 85
MIT 75 ConneCfltUt Coli 64
ME!r cyhursl 65 Robert Morns
63
Pennsylvan a 67 Ya le 59
Pla tts bu rgh St 16, Oswego St

pm

Fnday
Seven

M et ro
Tourney
Sem 1fma ls
Saturday
Saturday
Oh1o St at W1 scons1n
Bowl1ng Green at Easte r n
M1ch
Central M1 c h at Toledo
Western M1ch at Kent Sf
M1amt at Ball St
Oh10 Un111 at Nort hl:!rn
ILl ino iS
Notre Dam e a t Da yton
Metro Seven Tourney F ma ls

.

102 W. Matn

C Wesleyan 71 , Belmon t Abbe y
70

DISTRIBUTORSHiP

WILL NOT INTERFERE WITH PRE5ENT
EMPLOYMENT
NO SELLING REQUIRED

Meigs wrestlers
defeat Pointers
The Me1gs High wrestlers
Fr~day afternoon p1cked up a

FOR PERSONAL CONFIDENTIAL INTERVIEW,
CALL
MRS. RUSS COLETTI, HUNT! NGTON , 304·697· 7500
Today thru Wodnesday-9 A M. to 9 P.M.
S.E.I .. CUMMING, GA . (NEAR ATLANTA)

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

Cli!omso n 911 BIScayne 47
Coasta l carolma 66, Newberry
60
Flortda A&amp;M 84 Lane 78
Flonda Sf 85, Georg1a Tech 82
F Manon 91. S C Spar-fanburg
Gardner Webb 91. Leno 1r Rllyne
84

Georg1a 64 Vanderbilt 62
Jacksonville ~ ~ 92, N Ala bam a
82
Kent ucky 68, Tennessee 57
Mercer 92, East Caro lina 75
M1SSrSStpp1 St 70 Flortda 51
MISS Coli 59 SE LC\UtSrana 50
Morehouse 90, Albany Sf (Ga )
86
Norfolk St 71. Hamp'ton lnst 67
North Ca roiiM 87, Duke 83
N C Wllmm_,g ton 59 Pembroke
55
N Kent ucky 71, Thomas More

Twenty year old company will place products In
grocery, department, drug stores, super markets, gift
shops, etc. Distributor will serve these retail outlets
monthly, requ ir ing approxlmatelr, 20 hours spare time
1 per month CPA reports excel ent profit potential
Each location requires $200 mvestment. You may have
25, 30 or 35 locations Compan y, secures locations and
Installs products for you
This Is a bonafide offer and If you are not sincere about
your own business, or do not meet the above financial
requirement, let 's not wasle each other's time.

61

J

CLASS A

At Hillsboro
Lees burg
Fatrt1 e ld
70
Peeb les 66
At MeigS
Sou the rn ao Hannan Trace 62
At Lakeland
Cuyahoga Hts 86 Hawken
Sc hool 46
As h! St John 44 Fa 1rpot4 3 ot
At Columbus
Col Ready 94 Be rne Umon &lt;~5
Cana l W1ncheo: ter 72 Newark

Calh 68
Morral Ridg edale 108 Dan
VIlle 69
Manon Ca t h 52 Cot Wher le 5 1,

ot

At Portsmouth
Lu casvil le Valley 70 Por t E 5&lt;~
At M1nfo r d
Eastern P1ke 63 Oak Hi ll 61
At Oaytan
Bethel
69 MI SS ISS in awa
Valley 55
Ye ll ow Sp n ngs 51 Cov1ng ton
46
At Bellefontaine
T n ad 55 Jackson Cente r 53
Anna 58 Fa 1rlawn 56
At Cmcmnah
Lock land 69 M1dd Fenw1ck 62
New M1am1 84 Cltnl on Mass1 e
64
, At Dover
Malve rn 68 lnd 1a n Valley N 50
At Buckeye North
Shad ys tde 82 Bella1re St J ohn
78

At Warren
Wmdham 75 Bn stol 49
At Lima
Lima Cen t Ca th 69 Ken ton 64

2ot

At New Philadelphia
Trl Valley 76 Claymont 65
At Chagrm Falls
Bedford Chanel 72 Cle Cent

Ca lh 65

At Elyna

Loram Ca tholi c 90 In
dependence 60
Elyna W 73 Oberlm 67
At Manon
Nort hr1dg e 58 Granv1lle 51
At Manetta
W Mu sk 1n gum 5 1 New
Concord J G 38
Rtver Local 70 Maysville 52
At Lucasville
Ports m outh 54 Wheelersburg

52
At Un1oto
Wash 1ngto n CH 54 Vtnton Cty

38

At Federal Hocking
Ne lsonville York 75 Be lpre 69
At Cmcmnati
N College Hill 67 W Brown 55
At Canton
Orr'llille 80 Manc heste r 64
Akron S 53 Fa1rless 51
AI Salem
Beaver Local 51 St Tho ma s
Aquinas 48
E Canton 67 Harf vt ll e Lake 54
At Steubenvtlle
Wellsv1lle 56 Bndgeport 54
At Marion
Manon Elgtn 42 Col Waf
terson 40

At Ashland

78

We are selecting distributors for fast mov ing products
In Galllpo)ls and surrounding counties These products
publicized In newspapers, TV, magazines, etc
•

Boy s H1gh School
Basketball
Umted Press Intern a tion a l
Saturday
Re gular SEason
P rc k e r1ng t on 81 F a 1rf 1e ld
Un1on 80, ot
Tournemanet

CLASSAA

"

~r-----·------------------,

·1
I
l

Kent Sl a t Ball Sl

Central M1 c h at Oh1o Un1v
Urbana at Defiance
Ge neva, P a at Ma lone
Thursday
Oh10 State at Iowa
Metro Seven Tourney
At Cinc1nnatt
LOUISVI lle VS Tu la ne 12 30
pm
Memphis St vs Sf Louts, 7
pm
C1nctnnat. vs Georg1a Tech 9

36-32 vtctory over VJSJtmg
South Pomt befo re an
assembly crowd The ttght
match sa w Mmgs grapplers
73
p1ck up fJVe md1v1dua l wms
Potsdam 81, Oneonta 60
In
the
heavywe tght
Pr rnceton 80, Brown 59
dtvlswn, Dave Davis raised
Rhode Isla nd 82, Mass 75
Roch Tech 92, Alfred 74
h1s record to 11·4, as dtd Gary
Rutgers 87 , Pittsburgh 68
Pnddy m the 138 pound class.
Sacred Hea rl 87, Bndgeport 83
St Bonaventure 69, N1agara 67
Bob Seehg came out on top m
St John s 60, Prov1dence 51
St Peter's 56 F DU Rutherford the 175 pound category while
Robert Nakamoto contmued
SMU 73 Worcester St 62
h1
s dommance over opTUftS 63, Un10n 62
Upsala 89, St T Aqu1 nas 82
ponents as he raosed h1s
Vrllano\la 72 St Joseph's 64
reco rd to 12-3 With a wtn 1n
Wash &amp; J eff 95, Case Wsn
the 167 pound class. Fresh·
Res 87
,
Wesleya n 66 Amher st 57
man Floyd Nibert picked up
W•dener 54 , Gettysbur g 49
hts ftrst win wrth a victory in
South
the 105 divis1on
A labam~ 89, Au burn 86
Next Melgs actmn is Frlday
Amen ca n 82, Gee Wash rngton
70
evenmg when they travel to
Appalach1 a n 51 81, The Crtad el Athens to open the D1stnct
BaptfSt 87, Co li of Char les ton tournament at 7. Act1o" w11l
73
resume on Saturday
Bethel 78, Trevecca 60

DALE C. WARNER
INS.
992·2143
Pomeroy

Ohto College
Basketball Sctledule
Un1ted Press International
Monday
Cedarvil le at Rto Gr a nde
Oh1o Conference Tourney
Fmals
At Bere:a
Wooster vs Otterbetn
Tuesday
Akron at Cleveland Sf
Youngs tow n St at ~sh land
Xav1er a t Dayton
Wednesday
Toledo at M1am1

Tournament results

N Carolma A&amp; T 66, Morgan St
63
Pr esby t er~ an 62 S C A1ken 61
Rand olpll Macon 54. Roanoke 4l
S Alab aml! 66, N C (l,artotte
56
Sou th Caro1r na 93, Richmo nd 48

Clea rfo rk '"57 Mans Malaba r
56 ,

CLASSAAA
AI AShland

Ashland 63 Sa nd usky 52
Lex 1ngton
50
Sand u sky
Perkms 45
At Columbus
Westla nd 48 Upper Arltngton

At Troy
Spnngf1 e ld S &lt;~B Va ndLtl 1a 40
At Cm cmn a h
Cm W1thr ow SB (In E lder 51
Cm LaSill le 59 C1n St Xav1er

53
At Eltda
Ccl ma 84 Bowl 1ng G' een 56
At Canton
P e rr y 46 Ca nt on Glen Oak &lt;15
At Cop ley
Akron E 6J Cu ya hogn Fa ll s 61
At To ledo
To l Sl F t a n c rs 76 Ta l Ce nt ra l

65

~

\

;

'

Ha nna n ·fr al'C' S Fr.mk Mo-oney, 12, st~tnds g1o und as
Southc1n s H1chm&lt;l 'l'eH fmd dn ve:-; tuw.u d lmckc l m
SatUI day ' ~ Cl t~ss A Sct.:hon ~ l Tournt~ m l' ll l gd rl ll' .tl HtH.:k
Sprmgs

Ashland to

To t Scott 95 To l Bow s he r 55
G1r ls H lg h Schoo l

Basketball
Umt ed Press Inter nationa l
Regu lar SEason
Mt G1l e ad 64 Cres tlm e 33
Stru the rs 67 Aus tmt ow n F il c h

...

battle HSU
in tourney

Warr e n Ha rd .ng 57 Warren

WR 48

CLASS A

At Warren
Bns !ol 35 So ut hmgi on 12
Mme rai R1dg e 52 Mc Don a ld 9
Maplewood 58 Youngs N 36

CLASS AA

At Wa rsaw
Mu s k1ngum 38 Phil o 32
Claymo nt &lt;~ 1 Tus kv Va lley 29
R1dgewoo d 59 Maysv ill e 43
W Hoi m es 52 Newco m er
s town 41
WarSilW R 1ve r V1 ew 40 New
Concord JG 26
Morgan 46 Coshoc lon 43

MAC cage

W L Pel

3 769 16
4 714 20
4 692 "

5 &lt;!-15 10
6 .571 10
7 462 10
5 9 357 9
5 9 357 12

Ball St
OhtoU

WMtcll
Kent S t

7 696
5 eoo
9 609
14

15
14

m

Oh1o Conference
Basketball Standmgs
United Press International
Final Re gular Seasan
Northern DIVISIOn
Conference All Games

W L Pet

l-lmnbnldl Sl.;Jtl' Umvc1 s1ty
(Ca lif I &amp; tliud ,J) 111 [JH flll d iS
of the NCAA DIVISJOrt ll l WL st
Reg 1on/Jl H, tskPI IMII I Iilii ~
n.1men t
llost Humbold t, 17-B, flmn
AI c.tta, Ca li f , an d Ash\.111d
m c the unly t ~ o il'.uns 111 Ihe
regton al tom ney, Sill ( e no
oth e1 west te am s have gond
cn&lt;) ugh 1 et:o rd s for post
SC d SOil p\dy
Ashland , 19--5 on&lt;J 1 ankcd
ft fl)i w the ftnal NCAA
DIVISio n III n at t on&lt;~ l poll , was
granted an NCA A Dlv ls w n lll
gcune 1s cxped ed to host lile
ntt11(m,li quw te1 fll Jd i tu 111 !ld ·
ment con test ~tg&lt;H n st the

wtnner o f

th e

Midwes t

Reg:1ona l Ma1ch 10 or 11
Woost m a nd 01 tc1 hc tn a 1e

c: nmpetmg for the OhiO
Co nf e r e nce p ost-seaso n
tourn am e nt

1111 c

:m(!

one

seH t Also f1ghlm g f or a bc 1th
400
417 me llethany 1W Va ) an&lt;l
39 1 C~11 neg~e-M c ll on I Pu ) wh 1lc
4SO Album ( Mu h l got tts IJC I t h

14
13
4 10 286 7 17 292
3 II 214 5 20 200

Wooster 10

lollcge

W L Pet

Uns weeke nd
The na ttonct l champumsh1p

m Dlvoswn III wtll !Je hel&lt;l
M.ll ch 17·18 on Rock Island ,

nt

fiiliiiii;;.•-•
Mike Swiger

2 8J3 18 4 818 _.
Bald Wal ' 5 582 13 9 59 '
Mt Unwn J 5 583 14 10
Hdelberg 6 6 500 12 11
992 7155
Oh 1o Nor 4 8 333 12 12
149 S Th.rd St
Ober ltn 4 8 333 9 13
Mtddlepo r t , 0
Kenyon 4 8 333 9 14 39 1
Southern Dt v ts ton
,.__ _ _ _ __
Conference All Gam es ·

w L Pet. w L Pel

;:;~~~~~

: ~ m:~

"See me for car, home,

~ ~l~ life, health and business

Otterbem 8 4 667 r5 8 652 ,.....-.......
Cap ita l 7 5 583 15 J
Oh•o Wes 6 6 500 15 10
Nlar tef ta 3 9 250 10 12
Denison 1 11 083 J 17

I ALI IH :HIIIII ., I l.t i Uf'l J

.J ust \\h t' JI 11 st•t Il lS .J.u.: k
Nu k lo~u ~ l1. rs .11 lltlnphsiH.:d
C\'Ci Vlillll g [IJIIl' IS t lt ,Jt~
Ctli.HI)li S!i, Il L UJI II CS up With

311 11\ l'llt lng new

SAYRE
HARDWARE

pf fiVl' JJII tht•s
on lite ftr w l ft Vt.' il(!l es fo1 ,1 7-

882-2525
126 MAIN

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Vl ll lll \ I ! V I I C J II'I .IOJI L'S Ill
th e $25fl 01111 I.1 Lk 1t • (, l t·r~ sn n
f:ol f f'l ,I SSH

NEW HAVEN,
W.VA.

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l ll tl!'

It

WdS

•lll

&lt;l! ll.l~l ll g ~1 I 111g

)

•

A Publlf Sf'rVr('!" o r 1tl " N('W' p3rr. r &amp; Ttli•Advell l"l ll(j Co1J11Ci l ~

•

~.

gc be r t h Tuesd a \
The wmm·r of Sdl u r cl~ y s

Conference Standmgs
Trough games of
F eb 25
Umted Press lnter naflonal
Conference P,ll Games

W L Pet

As hl,1nd

1 Ul'l 1 will fdt'C

FREE REPLACEMENT
GUARANTEE I

al - l ~u

standings

M1am1 10
Toledo 10
C Moch 9
Bwg Gree n
8
N Ill
8
E M1 ch 6

MISS ION. Kan

Lh-nson titl4·

insurance!'

make
a little
along
y.
•
I
•

41

Col Lmden-McKml ey 80 Col
Eastmoor 59
At Celeveland
Cle J ohn Adams 7J Cle
G lenv1 ll e 62
Parma
Norm a ndy
53
Lakewood 52
Cle St Ignatius 67 Cle E 62, ot

At Eastlake North
Mayfi eld 59 Eastlake North

51
At Lorain
Rocky Ri ver 58 l or am South
view SA
At Steubenville
Cambridge 58 Zanesville 54
Sleu be n v ill e
58
N
Philadelph1a 55

Reel Cross
is counting
on you.

''
•

'

�$-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Feb. '!1,1978
oi--The Daily Sentinel, Muldleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Monday, Feb. '!1,1978

i

I,

Helen Help

~

II US • • •

By

CHOICES

~elen Hottel ~

SHOE IS ON THE OTHER FOOT NOW
BY HELEN HOTTEL
DEAR HELEN :
I had one or two (or three) nings earlier in my marriage,
nothing personal, just things that happened when I was on outof-town trips . People expect them of a man .
But I learned two months ago that my wife has had an affair
with a friend of mine. They both insist it's over, and was never
intense. I believe them, but no matter how I try, I can't forget.
I keep wondering if she compares; or fantasizes I'm "him."
Don't say "It serves you right." Just tell me how I can stop
!citing this destroy me.- Pl..AGUED
DEAR PLAGUED :
You can't forget until you forgive, and you won't truly
forgive until you stop resenting the blow to your male ego.
Work on thQse born-in chauvinistic attitudes which say, " It's
okay for a man but not for- a woman ." Talk to your wife about
her feeings and yours. Understand how she may have s uffered
during your nings and learn how she faced tbem;
When you discover loneliness or latent jealousy brought on
her affair, !think you'll no longer worry that she regrets ending it.
... EspeciaUy if you go ·all out to make your marriage as exciting as, weU, an affHir. - H .
IJEAR HELEN :
My husband had active tuhercuiosis for three years. His doctor told him to quit smoking. Instead, I find packs of cigarettes
hidden in his boots in the garage, buried in various hideouts.
This dishonesty and sneakiness drives me frantic. lf he can't
he trusted about a life-and-death malter, is there any foundHtion for love? What's your solution, Helen?- DISCOURAGED
DEAR DIS :
Don't correlate sneakc'&lt;l cigarettes with lack of iove.
You seem to he saying, ·'If you cared •bout n\e, you'd quit.
smoking '" and this can drive a man todiohonesty .
Instead, try, "I love you so much I'U help you conquer your
llllbit." Then work together on cutting down, one day at a
tune ... And no naggi ng, please.- H.
DEAR HELEN :
You got a deluge o[ smoke bombs from "the enemy " but
here's one inveterate smoker who would like to-say ''Hu'rrah''
for C.E.L. who resents non-smokerS' yak.
I'm all for non-smoking areas in public spots, but for the
•ride world in general, surely anli·dg•rette people c•n find
plenty of places to avoid us evil puffers. I hope all tbe smokers
bless em, are enjoying their bad habit a~ much as I am (and
have been for nearly 40 years). ELAINE
DEAR ELAINE:
C.E.L. will be grateful: yours is one letter out of several hundred which look her side. Among rebuttals : "C.E. L. wouldn't
have been so abrasive had she (as I did ] watched her husl&gt;and
die of cancer, knowing 37 ye•rs of heavy cigarette uS&lt;! prc&gt;babiy caused it. I resent every second-hand breath of
.. smoke ... "- H.
1

Karen Blaker Ph.D.

Bad news
DR. BLAKER - My wife
and I have decided to
separille and now we must inform our children iiboul our
dec.:i!iion. We are quite nervous about tcUing them Hnd
need some reassurance about
our plan . We think it best to
leU them separately because
their •ge differences (three,
six and 141 mean they prcba Illy nec'&lt;.l different expi•nalions. My wife will leU our 3year-uld Hnd I 'U 'talk with the
older IJoys.
Arc we being overly concerned about doing this the
right way ? Or is il as important as it seems?
DEAR READER - First
and foremos t, your concern
for your children shows admirable sensitivity to their
feelings . How and what they
Hrc told about the' separation
is cxtn:mely important.
In fad , your handling of the
situation will be crucial to
how well they adjust once the
inunediate C:risis has pc~ssed.
I think you and your wife
should tell all your children
toget her. Although your
children could benefit from
individual explanations of
varying degrees of complexity , just · hearing the news
together ma)"help offset their
innermost fear of dissolution
of the f•mily. Children need
to be encouraged to depend
on eac.:h othe1· in situations
where the adults appear
unpredictable- Hnd dislHnl.
After this grou p cxpl~na­
tion , the older t:hi ldrcn will no
doubt approach you indivi~ually for more support
or information. When thai,

Crystal Lee , Mr. and Mrs.
Ucnny Roberts, Mrs. Edith
Bm1on, Mrs. Brenda Wya tt ,
Hubby aud Adam, Buck liall ,
Judy Hall, a nd Barry
Ste~art.

tri~

I

values are for one inch of loose· fill insulation .

padded bar
which Iand
coulda
blouses
andonJackets
hang slacks. One stocking
wiii do one hanger if you keep
slretchmg. Hope others find
this as convenient as I do. -

MACHINE
RENTAL
'2500 PER DAY
R·VALUE COMPARISON. CHART

R·value

1

I I I I

II

2

I I I

I

3

I I I I

I

4

I I I I

·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::::]

!
·--------------IIIJ!l----1
U.S. FIBER
ROC~ WOOl
FIBER GLASS

City Ice .&amp;Fuel ·Co.
224 lsi .~treet

Point Pleasant

(304) 675-2460

1

Df;AR POLLY - Please
help me. I have a new
polyester top that has gwn on
it. It came out of the dryer
this way, aml I have

PER BAG

These

Gum fights
the freeze

freezing and scraping with no
results. How can I get this off
as I hale to throw the top
away .- DELORES
· DEAR DELORES ~ The
gum will have to be removW
4efort! you cart use a solvent
on it. The usual treatment is
to rub ice on the wad of gum
and then ca refully scrape off
with a dull knife. Place fHce
down , apply a dry cleaning
~Ul:vcnt and then launder. If
th1s has failed I suggest lHking your top to the dry
cleaner.- POLLY
DEAR POLLY - While
llllnging away out-&lt;Jf-season
clothes I ran out of molded
anu padded hangers. Wire
hangers le•ve unsightly corners in the shoulders of knit
dresses and jackets . I cut the
legs off of old pantyhose just
above the seam connecting
the hose to the panty part so
they wouldn't r•vel. Then I
st•rted a t the top of a hanger
and wound the entire.hanger
with these stretchy legs. At
U'" tup wImre th e su.r
'" t an d
the end met I tied a bow. ! had
a great padded hanger for the

I

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\,.. HARDWARE HEADQUARTERS

For all your do-it-yourself

H
A

Home Improvement Supplies
see Cross Hardware

R
D

w.
A
R

£

-·

DEAR POLLY -- To
A.A.
remove the smell of cigarette
smoke from clothes put them
in the dryer with one damp
washcloth and one sheet of
fabric softener. The S.me
treatment will also tllke
static electricity out of new
clothes. -FRANKIE

,

·~_Ross_l

p

of education and the local
school systems. The F-.F.A.
operates under a federal
chapter granted by an Act of
Congress in 1950 (Public Law
140, Blst Congress.) The
charter provides for a
national board of student
officers elected from the
membership.
F.F .A. activities are
specifically designed to be a
part of the instructional
program in vocational
agriculture. Members learn
through active Participation
how to conduct and take part
in public meetings, how to
take a leadership role in their
schoOl and community.
Each local chapter and
each state association elects
its own officers each year. In
all cases the teacher of
vocational agriculture is the
advisor of the local F.F .A.
Chapter and the State
supervisor of agricultural
education is the advisor of the
state association .
F.F.A. members have full
opportunity to practice the
the principles of democracy
in conducting the affairs to
their organization by exercising their privilege to vote
at chapter meetings, serve on
committees, and otherwise
assist in carrying on the work
of their organization. Elected
delegates to the state and
national conventions, held
each year, are asked to
decide on major issues facing
the organization.
Advancement through the
degrees in the organization
from the Green Hand through
the ·Chapter Fanner, State
Fanner. and American or
Agribusinessman is based on
achievement in farming,
ranchings or agribusiness

Polly Cramer

Senco • Oren • or
U.S•.,Fiber Insulation

0

happens you can expand on
yoor initial expiHnatlon as
yoo see fit .
Another important CIHlsideration is wllllt to SHy. The
more they understand •bout
the separation, the less
vulnerable they will be to
misint~rpret.ations - and
even manipulations - later
on.
For example, they should
know which parent wants out
and why the marriage has
fai led. They should also be
told when the ~eparatiun will
take pli:!.\:C und which pa,rent
theywilibtiiivingwilh.
If this seems em excessive
amount .of infurmation,
remember they probably
have their own ideas about
these issues already from
1\av ing overheHrd your
argwnents. Your account wiii
merely confirm (or correct)
their own cunclu!iions.
You might also consider the
possibility that your ner~
vo osness about telling the
children may stem from your
perception of separation CIS a
· point--of-no-return for your
marriage . Just remember,
you can ehange your minds even after you ·talk with your
chilc.lrcn.
Children ·can adapt to
&lt;:~ !must' any set of cirewnstanees if only they
w1derstand what is happening and how it affects them.
Write to Dr. Blaker in care
of this newspaper, P.O. Box
489, Radio City Station, New
York, N.Y. 10019. Volume of
m;:~il
prohibits personal
rep lies, but questions of
gtmera l interest will be
discussed in future columns.

RACINE - one of the best ·
examples of youth in action
on the American scene is the
F .F.A.,
the
national
organization for students
studying vocati~nal
agriculture in the public high
school. It is an organization
run by the student membo!rs
under adult guida nce.
The F.F.A. is celebrating
its Golden Anniversary. Soon
after vocational agriculture
became a subject in many of
the nation's high schools in
19l7, .instructors became
aware of the need to provide
practical training beyond the
traditional classroom approach. 'l'heir idea was to
make the instruction more
mteresting by making
practical work experience,
competitive livestock
judging, and agricultural
leadership
development
activities part of the instruction. Vocational
agriculture instructors and
students eagerly accepted the
learn by doing principle.
The F .F.A. was founded
nationally ln 1928 after
similar organizations had
started in several states.
Right from the beginning, the
F.F .A.
has
stressed
leadership, cooperation and
citizenship - all vital to
success
in
modern
agriculture.
Today the F.F.A. has a
membership of over 500,000
with. chapters in apprmumately 8,500 high
schools throughout the
nahon . The organization has
state associations in ail states
and in Puerto Rico.
Vocational agriculture or
agri-business programs are
fundedinpartbytheNational
Vocational Education Acts
through the U. S. Office of
education , state departments:
· ~'&gt;i~i$#!..1 :a g · ....

Social
POLLY"$ POINTERS Calendar

.PARTY HELD
Ra ndy l .ee, Pumeroy,
t·elebrated. his ~ l si birthday
recently with a surprise party
held at the home of Mrs .
Betty Reed, Middleport . Cake
and ice crea~r~ served to

• Housewares
• Wallpaper .
• Paints
•Electrical . Supplies
• Plumbing Supplies

. CROSS HARDWARE
Open Mon. lhru Sat.
71 N. 2nd Ave .

Prayer Day
services set.

FFA celebrates 50 years

;::w.*~~::~::::.~::::::::::~..;;;,~:--:::~:·:~::::::::::::::::::::~:::=::-;:::::::::::;:::;:::;t~;.~.;;:~!~~

9: 00to5 : 00
Middleport

992 -3831

careers.
Nearly 8,500 public high
schools have F.F.A. chapters. One of the requirements
The World Day of Prayer
for membership in F.F.A. is S&lt;!rvice, sponsored by Churcli
that a student be enrolled in Women United of Mei~s
vocatiOnal agriculture . County, will be held Friday at
Students may retain their 1:30
at the Pomeroy
membership until they are 21. First Baptist Church .
Competition is a key
" Comm unity Spirit In
element of the F.F.A. from Modern Living" is the theme
. the chapter to the national for the service which exlevel. Each year the F.F.A. plores the connicts. tensions
recognized more than 80,000 and compromises of living in
members at local, stale and a community. It was written
national levels for out- by the International Comstanding achievement in mittee for the World Day of
activities · related
to Prayer composed of women
~griculture ca reer and of Canada. World Day of
leadership development.
Prayer will be celebrated In
Funds for awards are 140 countries and 33 Islands
provided by more than BOO on March 3 with Christian
businesses, organizations and women uniting In study,
individuaals that sponsor liturgy and prayer . ·
F.F.A. programs through the
The first World .Day of
National F.F.A. Foundation. Prayer was held over 90
Inc. The Foundation provides years ago and the first ofnearly half a million dollars fering was taken in 19211.
to make the incentive awards Church Women Unite&lt;l 's
available to deS&lt;!rving F.F.A. lntercontinental Mission
· members in the following program, enabled by World
award programs: Star Day of Prayer offerings,
Farmer
and
Star shows a consistency of
Agribusinessman awards, J9 concern. Annual grants are
agricultural proficiency made to Christian Colleges
awards, public speilking, for Women in Asia and the
national chapter safety, Committee on Christian
Building Our American Literature for Women and
Communities
Awards, Chil\lren, as well as shortnational · judging, contests, term grants to migrant;
establishment in agriculture ministries, native Amerlcant
awards, and through state self-help projects, and:
initiated programs for im- programs for women in!
proving
agricultural prison, for communitY:
leadership.
development and lor ministry•
Recent food shortages in to the aging.
:
this country have reaffirmed
All women of Meigs County;
the need for continuing a are invited ·to join in the!
strong program of vocational World Day of Praye~
agriculture and the F.F.A. ·celebration.
,,
Thus there is a bright future
for trained agriculturalists
MAKF-S LIST
,
ready to serve America.
Paula June Eichinger of ••
Pomeroy has been named to the first semester dean's list:
at Capital University. She i,(
.the daughter of Mr. and Mrs •
Paul ,Eichinger, Mulberrr:
Heights, Pomeroy, and a 197\i:
graduate of Meigs Hig~
School where she was student
cou ncil president and ~
member of National Honor
Society, concert band, chorus
and girls' ensemble. She is
majoring in nursing at
Capital.

MONDAY
OH-KAN COIN
Club
meeting,
8
p.m.
Monday
at
DEAR POLLY - To SHve
time I prepare fres h Burkett's Barber Shop,.239 N.
grapefruit ahead of the time . Second Ave., Middleport , to
i\ is to be used. Cut the complete plans for 15th angl'apefruit in half, place each nual coin show to be held at
half in a margarine con- the Holiday Inn , Kana'uga,
taincr, section the frUit and March 5. Coin auction and
then put on the container's refreshments following the
lid.l prepare half a dozen at a business session.
TUF-SDAY
Lime and they stay nice ami
ANNUAL INSPECTION,
fresh . 1'his is a real convenience as they are always Pomeroy Chapter 80, Royal
ready in the refrigerHior for Arch Masons, 7:30 p.m .
Tuesday; work in Past
Hnyone to eat.~ ANNE B.
DEAR POLLY- We senior Master Degree.
MEIGS LOCAL CHAPTER
citizens are always looking
for ways to rtUJke work 17 of Ohio Association of
easier. 1 run my lawn mower Public School Employees
ove r fallen leaves to save 'l'uesday 7:30p.m. at Rutland
from having to rake them. I American Legion Hall on SR
think this alsohelps next spr~ 124. Robert · LeCiain, field
ing's grass. I put pine cones representative, will be
in washed out holescHused by present. Members urged to
rain and they help hold the attend.
METHODIST Men Tuessoil in piHce. -MARIE
Patricia McKinney
DEAR POLLY - When day at 7:30 p.m. at Forest
.writing a letter to an elderly Run United Methodist
person I always slick a slHmp .Church. The Rev. Paul Yeun,
In the letter so it can be pastor of Albany United
answered without any worry Methodist Church, . s~eaker .
about getti~g slHmps. -SUE
SHADE RIVER ,Lodge 453
DEAR SUE- Many elaerly F&amp;AM, Chester, T.uesday
people who have trouble see- 7:30p.m. Work in EA degree .
ing ur writing as plainly as All master masons are inthey used to appredale not vited.
only a stamp but a stamped,
AMERICAN LEGION Auxse lf-addressed envelope. Uiary, J;laclne Post 602, at the
-POLLY
ball, 7:30p.m. Tuesday.
Polly will send you one of
. AMERICAN Legion Auxher gig ned thank-you iliary, Drew Webster Post 39
newspaper coupon clippers if Pomeroy, 7:30 at the hall:
The Loyal Men and
she uses your favorite Program to be on Women's Class of the MidAmericanism. dleport Churc h of Christ
meeting Thursday. afternoon
her
column.
Write
POLLY'S
Pointe•·, Peeve or Problem in
AMERICAN AssociaTion voted to pay $100 on the
POINTERS in care of this
of University Women ch urch utilities and to send
. newspaper.
Middleport-Pomeroy Are~ $50 to Arlene Spurlock, a
Branch, 7:30 Tuesday even- missionary in Africa.
ing at. lbe home of J eanne
The meeting followed a
~owen, SYracuse. ''Redesign- luncheon hosted by the ofmg the Goal of Educalion" ficers of the class. Mrs .
will be the program topic Grace Pratt conducted the
presented by Sharon business meeting with thank
Johnson, Gallipolis, educa- you notes being read from th e
tion chairman for the Ohio Mt. Healthy Chrisiian Home ,
.·.·.·.·
. :·:·:::· Division,AAUW. Mrs. Jeanne
Mrs. Doris Shook was Bowen, Mrs. J ean Alkire the Grundy Mountain Mission
hostess for a recent meeting Mrs. MaurilH Miller a nd and the El Paso Christian
Coll ege for contributions.
of the Missionary Society of Christine Garst, hoste~es .
Plans were made for the
the Laurel Cliff Free
WEDNF-SDA Y
to prepare communion
class
Methodist Church.
MIDDLEPORT l,ilerary during March and April.
The program on Japan was Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday at
Next meeting will be a
presented ·. by Mrs . Jean the home of Mrs. Dwight
potluck
at the church with
Wright who gave scripture Wallace. Mrs. Nan Moore to
(rom John 6 and had a Poem.~ review "A Book of Common Mrs. Eleanor LohS&lt;! and Mrs.
Audrey Swett to serve on the
Devotions by Mrs. Shook Prayer!'
table committee.
were from the love chapter of
FREE CERVICAL cancer
· Proverbs 31. Mrs. Donna
IN THE HOSPITAL
clinic, Wednesd'ay afternoon,
Gilmore had prayer.
Clarence Murray of MidMrs. Ann Mash gave the at Heath United Methodist dleport is a patient at the
secretary's report, Mrs. Church for Meigs area C.mden Clark Hospital in
Gilmore the treasurer's women i for appointment call Parkersburg, W, Va . His
report, and offerings were 992-7531 days and 992-5832 room number is 148 W.
taken . Members decided to evenings and weekends.
DINNER HELD
join with the Church Women
The
birthdllys of Arnold
United in the World Day of
Richards and Ann Angel were
Prayer observance in March
THURSDAY
at the Pomeroy First Baptist
EVANGELINE CHAP- celebrated Sunday wilh . a
OJUrch.
TER, Order of the Eastern dinner at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Iva Powell served St,ar. 6 p.m. bean dinner to Mrs. Richards. Others atrefreshments. Mrs. Bertha hon or members of Mid- tending were Kevin Angel,
Parker was a contributing • dleport Masonic Lodge 363. and Mr. and Mrs. Edward
hostess. Also attending the The. film,, "Our Precious Smith and children, Vaughan
meeting was Mrs. Mildred Rentage, to be shown. and Saglenda, Columb us,
Jacobs.
Business meeting at 7:30p.m. who spent the weekend here.

LOCUST &amp; PEARL ST.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

N'S

LOCATED IN THE MEIGS PLAZA

We Glady Accept Federal Food Stamps

p.rn.

FDDD STORES

U.S.D.A. CI-!OICE BLADE CUT

c

RO

PORK CHOPS
9 to 11 CHOPS

BONELESS BEEF STEW
BRAUNSCHWIEGER ...

Pounds

SLICED BEEF LIVER .......

Pound

$199

EXTRA FANCY

FROM RICHARD BROS. ORCHARD

··~v··'~~'1·

.

ROME BEAUTY

APPLES

1 lb. Pkg.

FRESH MUSHROOMS..... 99¢

9~

LB.

"EXTRA SPECIAL"

HEAD
LETTUCE .... ·-·---·------~.~-~.~. 39¢

POTATOES
20 LB.'
.
BAG ......... a

69'

FANCY" I;ALIFORNIA

ALL PURPOSE

BAG

Pound

1

1119
59&lt;

BEEF CUBE STEAK .........

YELLOW ONIONS ...... ~.-~~---~.~~-· 49¢

OHIO GROW

SO LB.

Pound$

59

6 LB. BAG

FRESH &amp; JUICY

~

~

FLORIDA ORANGES ........... -------·~-~~: ..~~:.. 99¢
FRESH-WHITE or. PINK
FLORIDA GRAPEFRUIT
lb . Bag 89¢
RIGHTS

~

~

lh

5

QUANTITY

RESERVED

~jlJI!U
llun d

........................ .

':b.

R~g ..

Man has consumed more
energy- coal, oil and gas in the last· 30 years than in all
previous history.

Drip, Elect.

. " ' '' '"., r. ·I·~

P~rk or ADC

89

1-Lb.

•
.

·~ I; RII.I' "'' "" ~ ~ ~ ' """ M•·•&lt;•O

(Ill ~ (1/UU

Limit one wi1h coupon

DEL MONTE

14-oz ..

BEDROOM

"~"

:.,,

u to l'o n:o ~1

l./\ IIII!NI\1 1\'i\

Sliced or Halves

F

PEA

~Enriohod-·
.........
..

Can

February Sale

MONARCH

"'
:• ,

:!(&lt;1 Ill

0DS !i.JIH S

MAXWELL HOUSE ·

4. 9(w,:.·,

lln \t

&gt;

LIMIT 2

2 '1 00

$

29-oz.

Bottles

Can

25 different suHes
at an average

savin.gs of

CARNATION HOT COCOA MIX 3 ~;~· s2st

10000

5

and Tony Eblin

VAN CAMP

PO I BEANS

6-oz.

Can

Can

2 LITER PLASTIC BOnLE

limil two

COKE

Church class
plans donation

20-oz.

79~

NO DEPOSIT
NO. RETURN

PUREX LIQUID BLEACH .. ,...................:;~,~ 49•

st•ntt

z

top ....
Guo ol •t &lt;!•ttl•fl•l A "~ "l 111 11~ Stnon

~

~

-

()fl 10

0~

IL"III"OAI \~.s&gt;

0!1 21J / I,K)

'bo Sl OAES

FROZEN FOOD VALUES
NATURAL SUN

LEMO.NADE ...........2~:~~ 29¢

DETERGENT

OXYDOL

i': ::=l

49-oz.

A WORD
TO THE WISE
I
1I
I

I
I
I

1

I
1

iI

1

Time is money __ • in the newspaper! One ad, placed on a regular basis has a wider audience
pulls in faster results, which
get you bigger and better sales
and profits for the cost than
any other ad medium 1 So~nd
complicated? We'll simplify • • •
newspaper advertising pays off I

Box

THE DAILY SENTINEL

I
II

992-2156

.

CHERRY PI E............:~~:·.~ 1

39

$129
.

BANQUET ASSORTED VARIETIES

DAIRY VALUES

BORDENS

ILK-

I

1·
1'
1·-

COTTAGE CHEESE

1

.

_,

16oz.

Ctn.

••••• ............ .

SUNNY DELIGHT
.-

DRINK

69¢

.114118

73c!

fla¥•1 Blu• St0,.,. 0&lt;1

1

Q,Q

6

~~0 STOR[~ L~DC-AAIDINAI FOOOSTORES

~
t;,i

lonnl

un~ wllh a~n

""""''~"

"" ~...... ,:::

~~!l!DmiE
I

XIJ·lll :Z•l:l

e "' . .
2~~::.' 89
7.g· etD·.~~.

SAN

• • • • • o o • o • . • o • • • • • • • • • • , •• , , • • • • o . .

64 oz.

•• 0 0. 0 • • •

'!Jq ST~ES

•

.,

"
•

'l

' I

SI ORES

~\lsrO His • cAADIN AL roousr uHl s

i

:i
~ ~
~

B.ATH~OAP

DIAL

._.

t

oo
CARDINAL~~~
~ :~~rnS
10 0 5

V)

- ;

.. . .,

lu i&gt;&lt;! '"'"" ,.. ,,., l"" l""'

:..~

~ [:'~ /

lapjras)/4/78
Ga!ld It! Qtt~l P11¥a1 Il l... S!OIU

~

:'

1 1 ~.,
-~·-~.

83c ;

TOWN HOUSE

&lt;......

........ .... ..

1
-- -

, KEEBlERCRACKERS

CARDIN ALI~~ 0.Do Sl ORES

i

BUTTERMILK

·

I

"'z :i

~arton

'

Xtlt liJ:T

~..,osloRES • CAROINALFoooslORES

Gallon

BORDENS

Y!)

~

BORDENS

I·I '. '

.. _____________ .....I:
I
I

_

BUFFET SUPPER 2~kg. $109

I ··
1:

PHONE

L.J. HARRISS BLACkBERRY OR

·

·

,l!{t}IJi&amp;•J:I

.

�&amp;-The Datly Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy ,

0., Monday. Feb '¥1. 1978

~H'flG1Ps

AppieGrove
News Notes
8\ Mrs. Herbert Roush
M 1~s
GC'ra ld Hayman
~' ! Sited hE&gt; I SISt er,
M rS
li£'11 h:t H11bmson at Ractnt•
Su nday
M1 and Mrs. Wallie Morns

of East I Jver p()(Jl spent tht•
\\ eekend w1th her JXI I cnts .
Mr and Mrs. Arnuld An·
dt&gt;rsn n and fa nnly
Mr an d M"
ll ci·bc rt
Huush, Mrs Gli:idys Shiel ds,

j.l W,.,J.., ,~t

Want.Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

I''"'

.!11&lt;1) ~

~

ltl:n

IN lOVING "'em01 y o l ou1 dew

'"'

OWO'j ! Q UI y ('OI '&gt; OQO IQ

mo 1he1
po~ ... ed
dcv

f;.nh \UIId \J\.~1 t\111 IIIIIIUIIWII [;)

\l ul'li~ 1 ~

Ad:.

4 t t' IIU.

IUIHIIJl)(

1fa) N
I ill~

pt.•r li-vtll

olhU tfl&lt;lll

ptr t.la)

(UI\Sl't,UII\l

'4111 ~ dwr ~rU 111 llw I !.Ia~
~

l11 lllllllVI)

.. ttl ul 111&lt;\illk..s anti
\Jl;li UHr) li Hil l~ IJU Ydll li $:100
lliUIUII\1111 ( a ~ h Ill ,1\h iill!l
Mub1l~ IIlli tit~

Mrs Bob Hall , Mr and Mrs
Hussl•ll
Housh vtsl t ed

:.&lt;tIt" ar11.l 'lard l&gt;illtli
olll ittttpltll ulll} V.llh Ot:&gt;h \UIIJ
\IIller fi Hill t hil t~t' rl!l ittll:i ~il ll }•

Hu\LH d Ho ush at Pleas&lt;1 nt
\.t!l t•y lllrspJta l

Utj!HuKN U tlllit t ln l.tl ~uf T hcStu

an d

M 1s
Hob r rt
Vlliltcd her fath er.

M1
'\shll '}

LllftoJ(J ll ultm. &lt;It th e AI ·
L.Hh.t
Nu r sm g
Hom e
Coo hlllle. ~at urd .1 y
Ht•v ( a rl lll cks, a ret 1red
nurnsle t , llllc&lt;l •he pu lpit at

Wid

flw

rui.Jh~IH.:I

t\11. llKhl
\1! t't hl Ill U)lt l OUI) lHl~ tiL't:IIM_'tJ tJb.
Jldll~litl 'fhr Jfu i.Jh.!ohrt '&lt;~ t il nul lA•
lt ~ JWil~ tiJ [t

Rev

Tun

Snrrt l1 a nd funu h llt~ vc been
t i .Hl sftrre d
I n &lt;-Hruth ez
Lhtll g('
M l !:i T'\u r enc e Suu1h t~1 ·
tended ,, M(•thuchst B1ble
Stuth dl the Hohday Inn .11
( lll llwuthe ove r the weekend
1e mls we r e S(JJI y 1u l ose a
g1uJd m.!Tghbui , Gm dun Wol fe
ll f I IH' S tr ulg lJuq~ olTCOJ MI S
\Vulfl' IS still cm1f1ned tn the
Vctt'l.!fiS M I!II \O fl&lt;i l Hm; pllal
due t n c~ hroken a nn \
M1 s Dll ll )' W1\lfc I l'l 'C JVed
wurd IJf tht~ death c1f hm
d.1u g ht ct , M1 s
O e l ~1 r cs
! Wo l fe ) Caspe1's fathcr ·m·

r·,

lc~ w

C~t spei

ctl the
UntVC J sl 1 }
1-1 s p1t.ll .
lHI U111bus Sund.1y r unc r.11
scr V H es nnd m l cl r11 enl wc1c
hl' ld a 1 S1rhJC}, Ohw
J oseph

I_,.1 UI

C1uss

spent

lire

\\L•c kend i~l l h los pa 1c11ts,
Mr .md Mt s Andre" Ct uss
11 &lt;~ 11 1 .tllcnd s Oh1u Si dl e
Um ve 1stt}

M1 a nd Mrs 'I om Brutvum
dnd c: h tld1en uf Ctncmn att
spent the " eekencl \\.lth Mrs
V,t Siuta Gnnun
M r cl m l Ml s Dana I..c" IS

of Cl ift on spent Sunda;
cvct nn g i\llh M1 and Mrs

fu t

111\.1 11

tf ll\11 Uth• Ull U I

r t't trn~·rlJV n
Phum !I'J'l WXi

IIddy
M1s

l'VCillll J..(

Nm a

G1aha111 . 90
VCd l S uld, passed away at ol
nlll smg home 111 Sidney. Oh iu

I une utl serv f( CS were held at
the

F.wm14

F unet a \

H~tm e

tth mtc t rn cnt tn I ctart
Cc m e tCJ y
MIS
G 1JI h (trll was a fur m er
\1

r.l! ls

I CSJdcnt or t he East Lctfl!1
C'OilllllUnlt }'
Mr
.1 nd Mrs He rbcat
Huush Husscll Roush , Mrs

Gla dys Sh tc lds Howard
Housh VISited Ott Boston .1t
the Ar cadm Nursmg Home,
C'tJo lvil lc Mr Bos ton 1s

WA.NT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
Muod 11 l
Nuullu n Sa l u l d il~

1111-'Miill
l lu u f- ru hl)
~ p M
1111 dn ) lit fu1t' puhli1.tth l l l
. . lltl' \,1\
II \1

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF Grace Paynter ,

DECEASED

cue No 12, 182

NOTICE OF

APPOtNTMENT

OF FIDUCIARY

On February 8, 1978, 1n th e
Melg:l County Probate Court,
c ue
No
2'2 , 18'2,
Paul
Paynter, Rou t e 3, Albany.
Ohi O Wa! appo rntect Ad
mlnlstrator , WUh Will An
nexed ot the estate ot Grac:e
Paynter , deceased. tete of
ROllte 1, POrtland OhiO
Mann ln9 0 W~bsttr
Probate Judge Clerk
I 2) 13 . '20, 27, 3tc

Tuesday, Fob 21, 1978

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

llllpl OVIIl g

Langsville
Fnends here

A mo re exc ii1J19 soc1al life •s m
th e o fl m g thr s c omtng yea r
Etlher a new romanc e or a
str eng ttl entng a t bond s w1 th
on e yo u pre sen ll y love IS lt kely

PISCE S tFeb 20-March ' 20)
E&lt;J e n th ou gh a tru s ted con ll
da nte may be sepa rated tram
yo u see k h tJ f counsel m a
~ ex rn g pwbl er'n
He1 advrce
could g1ve y ou th e answe r
F1nd out to whO m yo u re ro
ma nt tcalty SUit ed by se nd1ng
for. your c opy of As tra-Graph
Len er Ma1l 50 cen ts for each
and a long self-add ress ed
s tam ped e n ve lo pe to AstraGraph P 0 Bo x 489 Aadro Ctty
Sba hon N Y 10019
sur e to
specif y you r b1rth s 1gn

se

(March

21-April 19)

C l ose a ssoct atton s a n d
partner ship S c4 n be rewa rdmg
today You ne ed to tea m up
wrt h peopl e who have as grea J
a de srre to m ak e a p rofi t as yo u

do
TAURUS (Aprii20-May ZO) Don I

learned
of the death of Btll Musser of
ha ve

Athen s The Mussers lived

Fob 28 1978

ARIES

1n

Langsville sever al years ago
He IS SUI \'lVCd by hi S Wife,
Ruth Pickens Musser and
(o ur chtldren
Ron Myers of Columbus
spent Fnday and Saturday
1 cccntly wuh Mr and Mrs
IJi rr y Ba rr
Mrs Dorotha Handle)
spent t~ o weeks at the home
o [ her brother, Howard
Spurlock, Hurn cane, W Va
Mrs Elvtra Barr IS home
aft er spendmg fo ur weeks at
the home of her son a nd wtfe,
Mr a nd Mrs Mike Barr of

Svracuse

spare JhP. ar- colade s 1f you 1e
te amed with o ther s o n a projec t
today You r pra1 se w il l make
th e m all th e more r ece p t tve to
your mnovat tve 1de as
GEMINI ~May 2t -June 20) Brm g
up yo ur ambitiOU S p lans to new
people you meet to day who
m1ght be In terested You Impress them w1ltl you r en thtJ SI
asm It won I ht.ul to bubble
ov er a b tl

CANCER [June 21-July 22) Fond

a differe nt place wh e re yo tJ can
meet new people One may be
a spec 1al som eone who s
un 1que Th e as soc tat1on w111
provrde a fre sh ou tl ook
LEO (July 23-Aug 22) The doll!
cul t ts no c hal lenge :You can
cope w1th the tmpo s stble
today Have conftdence You
can re solve probl ems tha t once
seemed.tnsurmo un table

ts a med1cal

VIRGO (Aug 23-Sepl 22) Your

pati ent a t the St J oseph
Hospttal at Parkersburg, W
Va

Impromptu thoughts w111 proba bly be the be s t th rngs gomg for
you today Don I dtsc ard any o f
th em elfOO 1f th ey seem a btl
far out

Larry

Ba rr

Saturday's
Oh1o College Bas ketball
Umted Pres s lnlernatumal
Oh1o St 103 N ort hwestern 76
Bow ling G r een 90 Ohto U 76
Ea st ern M1ch 76 M taml 69
N orthern tllinots 89 Kent 51 59
To ledo 89 Ba l l Sf 72
Dar, ton 79 Loyola , 111 69
De r ott 82 Xavter 77
Potnf Park , Pa 95 Wnght 51

B5

All eghe ny 90 John Carroll 68
W&amp;J ( Pa ) 95 Case WEstern

87

Ha nover , lnd 85 Defiance 84
Cen tral State 80 W i lberforce

52

Goshen 108 Btutf t on 107
Rio Gr ande 64 Walsh 59
Ceda rv1 lte 76 Ma lone 60
Oh1o Conlerence Tournament
North
Otlerbem 69 W1tteoberg 63
South
W oos ter 64 Baldwin Wa llace
59, at
Sunday
Cmcmn a tl 72 Duquesne 64
Xav 1er 82 Southwester n
1
M emph1s 58

Sunday's Sports Transaction ~
B y U n1 ted Press 1nternaf1on'at
Baseball
New
York
Yankeess
S1gned 1n f 1 e 1 d e r s Oamaso
Garc ta and Dommgo Ramo s
Montreal S1gned Pt fc ter
Randy M11ter

Ll BRA (Sept 23·0cl 23) Move
with all possible speed If you
see an oppo rtunity lo make a
profit today T1me ts of th e
esse nce so don ' t d rag your
tee t

SCORP10(0ct .24-Nov ZZ)

SAGITTARIUS. (Nov.Z3-0oc .21)
Yo u may not ex pect help fro m a
cer tam person today , but rf he
offe rs let h1m mo'lle wtthout
mterference He knows what
he s dorng better than yo u do

(Dec 22-Jan 19)

Friend s w111 ft nd you a delig h t·
fu l companron today , pr ov1ded
you don I gtve them unsolicited
adv1ce as to ho w they should
run th en affatrs

AQUARIUS

go 01

(Jon 20-Fob 19)

Combtne agg resstveness and
patience today to reac h th e
u nreachable goal You should
know when to s1t back and
when to emulate the uger

Thirty-four percent of the

natwn 1S t1mber lies wtthtn
fede rall y owned nattonal
forests.

WAN I 10 of•nl

Q ~nlOIJ I IQu'l! l

01

ltQI IVI loCOIIXJ Ill lht&lt; (OUI \hy
loll Y'IL 3ijbt; or w1 ol o O~n
~dlt o&lt; lo. Ito • 4ll lolullond Oh1o
4 ~115

l lO N"OMV lllAOOW w1th allot
to ch"'l'"'' L•ke rmw o!&gt;ktllg
S11SO Phono lb 1• J6Q8 :.rm

Let

Pomeroy Landmark
soft~n &amp; cond1t1on
your
water w•th Co op water
softener, Model UC SVI,

lo11ed gml !.1111 llli'&gt;'&gt;Cd and
!. till very deo1
Occp m ou1 heo11 ~ he will alway ~
stay
l oYe d and re mernbc1t•d c11e ry
{h1ld1on

and

Grand

\ ard ~·l•·
II YOU hoYe o .. ~ ~ 111Ce Ia o!l.;-1
wont lo buy 01 "'"II '&gt;Qmc lh,.,g
oe look nq lor work
01
whatuvt~•
you II go t re&lt;;,ulh
l o!. IOI w.th o ~o...nlmel Wo r1 1 Arl
Call '191 11.~6

~~~lN G

STA R Ke11n el Boordurg
lndoo1 an d ou tdoor 1uns
G1oom mg all breeds Clean
sor1 tlory fac1 ltltes
Che1oh re
Ph one (b 14 )36! I.Jl,'n

MbiGS COUN TY Humane So c 1131 ~
on nnol car elmc and odopli on
sel vi{"C (fr ee onuno lsl 991 7660
01 even 1ng ~ and S u nd a ~ s
9 ~2 5427
M o ll
c o M
( rowl ord Rl
4 f:l ox 326
f'ome ruy 'bh10 45"1 69 Mcltl bOf
~ h t ps an d dono i 10ilS PO !l o~e
6!l:J Pome1oy Oht o 45769
COLliE S l AKC Re g 4 year s old
I Al&lt; l reg 3 yeors old Ony 4
p up~ lel t £:143 2753

AutuSale•
1968 VW OUI OtnO I IC 'io l iCic
l--ou con dlt on eng.ne
good $425 247 37 91

~h

ft
1uns

19 ' 2 V ~ G A Good r u1W 1 11~ co ndt
11011 S200 Coli 997 5530 ol ter
bprn
1974 PINT O 2 doo t b: cellenr con
d11 1on
R(!ason for se llmg
bough! b1gger cor 99'} 55 13
197 4 APOllO 2 dr l ow m 1l ~ og e
A C P S P 8 8 !rock rope
Ver y good con d11 1011 Contact
Peggy G 1ro lom 1 132 Bullernu t
Pomeroy Oh1 0 ( M e 1 g~ H1gh
~ e111 0 1 )

l9b9 Do n G TS 340 ou lomotK
SlOO Phone 992 7196 alter

500

t:ampi.Bg t;;quipDH!nl
STARCRAFT FALL Sole
Mm1
lllOIOfS 20 and 22
T1 oVel
Troll ers 18 5 $3 799 25 7
Bunkho use S4 875 Fol d down
$1 700 up We sell ser v1ce and
qual1ty Open Suodoy s Camp
Con ley Storc ro l t So les fh b2
N of Pt Ple ason t

Sl01e Al ter

8 x 57 TRAILER lor sol e Wou ld
make o good camper Phone
949 2344 ony11me ofl er 5 30

PROBATE COURT OF

MEIGS COUNTY,OHIO
ESTATE O F 8 ess 1e Olr ver ,

DECEASED

Case 22,'2 98

NOTICE OF

APPOINTMENT

OF FIDUCIARY

On February 21, 1978, m the
MetQS County Probate Cou rt,
Ca!e No
22 , 298
Calv in
Oltve r
100 Ookland Dr .
N rro , w Va 25143 was ap
pointed E)(ecu t or of tiH'
estate of Besste Ol 1ver
deceased late of M 1ddleport
Ohio
Mannmg 0 uvebster
Prob.Jte Judge
( 2' 27 ( 3) 6, 13 , 3f(:

RESPONSIBLE
PERSON

blldiOOin

-,...

"-

Spo111gh1 a. Capitol Beat 33. News 10, To Tell the
Truth 13 . Gilligan' s Is 15. Daniel Foster. MD 20
1

Show 6; Match Game PM 8 :

Carpet l UpholsteiJ

Route] POIIIICIJ, 0

MEIGS PLAZA
Middleport, Ohio

Phone Mob Young
At

Open

992-220li or 992 7630

9 ·OO 1119 . 00 Mon.· Frtdly

mo.

"Tht 0r1JIIIItrs
Not The lmttltors

12 OOtil6.00 Sund1y

&amp; BLEND

l ormlond •wrlh seclud
woods w ol er and good ac
ces'&gt; 111 Monroe Counl y W Vo
Sl 000 down call (:JO&lt;I } 771
J IU20I (304) 112 322/

I C/O~

4 dr
A C 283
0 119 '). bbl
au la I r on ~ b
~ olle nt ~ ond 11 10r• 1,u,k loppe1
.. ,d 8 It bed '1 8 uJ IHgl1
142 :l J U~

HAY
HAY

~ O h' ~All:

9!l~

~ O h'

~A li:

985 Jll49

o•

4241:1

Ri: DULI:. SAH &amp; fos! w dh Go B e-~e
I crblcts &amp; 1: Vop wo t e1 p il l~
Ne lso n Drug
'
Nll l:. f'IGS fo• sole (a ll aft or ~

9J 9 285!

HAY I 01{ ~ole 949 2810
SiS o p1ck up load

NEW LISTING -

stor y home Features 4
bed room s b a th, forma l
dm1ng, ut tl!ty R Ga rage &amp;
slorage bldg
Leve l lot

!.11,000 00
NEW LISTING -

1974

Mobile,
14x 65
Two
bed room s, bath, equ1pped
kJ! chen , all furm tu r e, 1
acre Ask for deta ils
JUST LOOK - 311? acres
barn, busm ess room
2
bedroom home, r ecently
r enovated , bath , basement
for ce d cur heat $11,500 00
6 YEARS OLD - Very m ce
r anch type , 3 4 bedroom s,

ba lh , ulol ot y, FR EE GAS
HEAT, carpo rt, storage ,
small ba rn , about 2 acres

serv •c e d epartment and
will serv 1ce Hotpo1nt and
other brand s

Pomeroy Landmark

9. _Jack W Carsey, Mgr
~

Phone 992 2181

ATl i:.N fiO N MAR E Ow ners
AQ [-fA Stud serllt CC ltllroducmg
to ~o ul hern Oh1 o Con oko sor
rei I son of Otoe Br eed l or col
o• ~.o n lor rna t1011 and d1spos1
t. on Ph one 698 8241 CIIC'Il 1ngs
or wr de fo1 bwed1ng con tract
Uelle l:cho Quart er Horse5
40225 SR 692 Pomeroy Oh10
45 l b9

Eagle lndustril!!'
l938 M ea d ow brook Rd
Minneapolis , M1nn SS 42&amp;

~O Y B~ AN

HAV
l ar ge round
boles Will lood on you1 h u~ k
01 deber 992 333b

NEW LISTING - Close m ,
lots of rem odeling , new
Sl d tng, car pe lmg , so me
pane lmg , 3 bedrooms ,
ba th, fo rced a 1r furnace
Nt ce
for
the
money

$15. 000 00
3 YEARS OLD - Beauto ful

$37.300 00
LET US SELL YOUR
PROPERTY
HENRY E CLELANO
REALTOR
HANK , KATHY &amp; LEONA

[B

CLELAND
ASSOCIATES
992 2259-992 6009

IHA l iO~

9926191
Com merc~ol

pr operty opprox 17
ceres le 11el lond loc ated ol
Tupper '&gt; P lo1 ~s on Ohto Route
7 Ph one (614) 667 6304

• VA FHA 30 yr hnoncmg also
re fmonwog Ir eland Morlgoge
n E Store Athens phone (614)
592 305 1

and

HOMESITE 5 lor so le 1 ocre ond
up M1ddl€port near Rutland
Coli 9!jl'] 748 1

Tv~!~~?.~D

G ~Hl

lD

NEW J bedroom house 2 ba ths
all elec 1 acre M1ddleport
close lo Rulla nd Phone 992
748 1

HOBSTETTER

Office Hours · 9a .m tos

992-3325
REALTD
'216 E. Second Street

MODEL 90 portabl e gnnder
rH1xer Peerl ess pm roble roller
r111ll Ca se 4 1b sem t mounted
p l o~ Hess ton 9 II ho y bme
Call9 85 334 1 or 992 75 19

GOOD

HI:Al TH Y YOU NG p1g s for 5ole
949 '1774 ult er 5 p m
Will DO ~ rug weov1119 $ 2 per
yord Mr s )unn·ue (Mory ) l&lt;,mg
Ck 3'1 opprox 1' , m1l e~ from
M et g ~ Memor ol Garden s No
pl1 011e

lieal:Ji:statdor Sale

If you want the
lowest prices on
Baler Twine now's.
the time to buy.
Call us today.

JU ST CO MPUTED rr l:l w house tn
M1ddlepor1 Fo1 mor e mformo
!ion cal l 992 2138 or 991 5304
l b A ( R~ S on Flat woods Rood In

qu1re at 790 South 3rd A \le nue
M1dd lepott
TWO ACRES
All bnck 3
bedrooms 2 bolh s Io rge k1 l
chen dlnmg ond f om1ly room 2
fireplaces '1 cor garage ull lily
room AU l enced Wd l c o n~ 1d er
rrade l ocated 111 Maso n WV
Call Sorn er ... 11Je Reo! Es tate
{304 11:; ~IHU (tl ll\., j n r
h7l H II j1 ,, nmc .. l

Pomeroy Landmark

9'_. -Jack W Carsey, Mgr
tliil Phone99'2 2181

•
1

TO THE hun te r wh o wonts h15 own
lor1d 20 A up hdl land w1th
sto hd1119 limber
$6 500
!?92 7330

Will PAY cosh l or guns mm1
b1k es boot s or what hove you
F1l e s 3rd St Rl 7 M1ddlepor1
992 7 4 ~4

~-

MOBIL E homes on 5 O C ie ~
All clear ed fenc ed &amp; 1n gran 4
rn tles k- om Arcod•o ond 55
rn tle s fr om Fori Myers Flo ndo
747 3 15b

THR ~I:.

I :J JOINTS of I m bl ack 1ron p1pe
21 loo t lo ng Al so woo d w1n
dows w11h CO$ n g ~ and gloss
Phone Reed sv tlle b) 4 378 6279

l WO SlOHY h ome hou~c. 6
roomS and both cellar out
bu tld mgs 4 cures lonO 01 edge
ol Ruii(H d C ompl e l~ lroder
hook up ol ~n 2 bonk 5 oppro• s
cd pr operty 01 SIS 500 Pll one
9~2 7094

REOUCE SAH otld lost w th
GoBese roblttls .Y. E Vop water
ptlls Nelson Drug
Vor.ous hou.\ehold
Co l i

R eo~on o h l ~

\

"'

•

GARDEN

NEW LISTING - 13 acres
mostly
bottom
land
M 1nera ls, d n lled well, and
2 bedroom res1dence
103 ACRES Sctpto
Townsh ip
wtl h
the
mmerals N o bulldmgs
Good hunt1ng land
50 ACRES - 2 gcod natura I
sprr ngs, smal l fr esh water
st r eam, all mmerals and
fenced

mobile home 150 JC 165', all
electric, with new wood
burntng stove All furniture
mctuded
Gomg fast at
$11 ,000 Known as the Keith

Miller property. Arbaugh
addition (Tuppers Plains,
OhiO).

OLDER HOME -

Has 3 bedrooms, large
storages a nd close l s Full
basemen1. 2 porches, and
garage

40 ACRES -

56'

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

lot, all electric, 2 baths. l
bedrooms, Including all
the

Plains, Oh lo. A good buy
for $21.000
We have 3 bedroom home,
nice, with 2 acres ground
near Tuppers Plain~, Ohio

on Rt 7, priced at $32,000.
Also new 3 bedroom home,
Crow's Subdivision, Five
Potnts. selling for $39,500

Cheryl Lemley
Associate

Homo Phone 742-2003
Hilton Wolfe, Sr.
As so elate
Home

Fancy

master bedroom, 3 others,
p len ty of c losets, nat ga s
F A
fur nace and c1ty
wa ter on 3 lots
Nt~E

x

60' , located on level lot,

Arbaugh addition, Tuppers

4

E&lt;cetlent

hu nttng land Good site for
country ho m e w 1t h 8 acres
nea rly level
COUNTRY - 3 bedroom
modern ho me w1th fa m i ly
r oom , wood burner car

port and 2 to)s
HELEN L TEAFORD
GORDON 8 TEAFORD
SUE P MURPHY
Realtor Assoc1ates

MOBIL E HOM\: with expo11do on 3
ocres Dr illed we ll Sep t1c lank
lm rn el'11 a te
po sse ss 1on
142 3074

TWO S"TORY 3 bedroom frame
house F A furnace storm w1n
dews fHeplace In Mtddtepor t
Phone 992 3457 or 992 5867
14 BUilDING LOTS oil surveyed
wrth occess lo water ond
sewage l ots wt ll range from
50 :rc 154 lo 56 x 221 Oul of
hrgh w ater and w1 thln wolkmg
d1stonce of town Pr1 ced at only
54500 for olt 14 lo ts Plen ty of
room for 2 3 or 4 fom1l1es to
bu dd Buy toge th er ond seve

992 2529

'---"~--:--

VETERAN ,

THE SCRAP Hf AP.
ANN IE

SattJrday s

'M

~

SEW ING MACHINE Repo1rs ser
v1ce a II mokes 992 2284 The
Fob11 c Shop
Po m e r oy
A ulh on zed Smger Soles and
ServiCe We shar pen Sc1ssors

~

•

."T" :

.'

---

EXCAVA TING dozer loader end
ba ckhoe work dump trucks
1
ond lo boys lor h1r e w1ll haul
ldl d 1rl to soil l1mestone and , .:,
grovel Coli Bob or Roger Jet· • •
fers dey phone 992 7089 mgh t 'l' ;
ph~one 992 3525 or 99__.2 ~~32
1

11 -

...-."'5:0~'

HOWERY AND MARTIN b
&lt;:ov atmg
septiC sys tem s
dozer back hoe dump tr uck
l1 mes lone
gro ... el
blacktop
pavmg Rl 143 Phone l (614 )
b98733 1

tr1be

GASOLINE ALLEY

BUSINESS BUILDING located on
lots 102 103 ond 104 w1th 114
frontage on Ma1n St
tn
Pomeroy Bu1ldmg Is cemen t
bl ock w tlh wood from e 2nd
story. Ho ~ beou11lul oil furn1sh
ed opporrmen t o.... erheod Free
pork1ng Close lo shopptng
plaza Busmess downs101rs for
so le separa tely lnqu1re ot 605
W Mo 1n Sl
P_a"1eroy Oh1o
from noon to 6 pm only or ca ll
992 578b or 992 25.~29:.;__ __

~~

:=--::-;;;:;&gt;

=----•

- --

·=

WINTER GET to yov r house? L&amp;l us
make necessary repo1r s AI
Tromm Cons1ruct1on 742 23'18 o~

MAGGIES
LINHO LSTERY ·Refmulllng
reu ph o lst er y
rebutldmg 8eou t•f ul seleclton
of motenols and v1nyls Free
es11mote Tel 742 2B52 Loco
t1on Solem Center
TEAFORD GOLF ~
CcLU
ccB::-Sc:,e-:b-o"lo~nc
ed New gnps
~-- - ~-~-

SAVE ON
CARPETING

••• AND THIS 1$
T'H! O?H!R ON!:.

••• •

tl.ll '

I'M AWAKE, MAAM ...
BUT I CAN'T RAISE
M~ HEAD...

RUnAND
FURNn'URE

742-2211

Rolland

..

""'

Coll742-2211
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET ~ONSULTANT

~

""

;

- ~"­

.

"'

:ro

6,13, ABCNews 33
11 55-Movie "The Thousand Plane Raid " 8 Movie
"Se ven Days In May " 10
12 OQ---Janakl33, 1 OD-Tomorrow 3.4, 1 IG----N ews 13
Movte Ch1nnel • S&amp;7PM - SevenPercentSolutlon(PG)

9 &amp; II PM - The Sen11nel t R)

Release

MA'18E 'IOU COULD DO
ME A FAVOR, MA'AM .

MMBE '10U COULD
SEND OUT FOR A

NEW NECK!

Monday, Feb. 27

BRIDGE

mckname

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

-+--+-f-+--tDeduction tells distribution
NORTH
• 94

2-27 A

• 75
t

LY Z

A 862

+AQ854
WEST
EAST
• J8 6:1
• Q 10 52
¥ A963
• Q J 10 2
tQ!0243
• J
• J 9 72
SOUTH
+AK 7

·----

• K 84
t K 95

+KI06 3

suit, makmg 1t 1mposs•ble
lor declarer to get that type
or count They may be !oolm g their partner also, but
they take the c han ce "
Oswald " In spite of this
poss1b1hly, South was reasonably s ure tha t West' s
c,J euce l ead was an honest

fourth best and tha t he dtdn;t
hold any ftvc-card s u1t ·~

Alan

"Th e

Vuln e rable Both
Dealer:South

-

-''--'---'-Trl I W.:sl

North Easl

Pass
Pass

3 NT . Pass

AXVDLBAAXR
J. 0 N G F E I, I. 0 W

XLEZZL

DEEMBZX

SW
DL

VI - DJQ · Vl,
LYZ

YSAXZ

Soulh

tNT
P.ass

Openmg lea d· • 2
By Oswald Jacoby
aod Alao Soolag
Oswald · " It was custom·
ary tn the old books on play
to gtve an e xample of how
declarer would figure out
the d1slrtbut10n tf lhe openIng lead was a deuce. II was
a certamty that the leader
could not h a v e a flve-eard
su1t anywhere If the lead
was against a notrump
contract "

Alan
"Today. players
have a bad habt! o! leadmg
the deuce from a fJve-card

IT'S SADDER LUCK
IF I DON'T

next

st e p

m

South's nnulys1s was to
count h1s wmner.s and to see
that h1s only problem about
mne tr1cks would be 1f s ome·
one held all

is

BARNF:Y

ts IS, French Chel 20

.tU

Movie "Magnum For ce" 8, 10, Jerusa lem Peace
33, Conver~atlan With Howard Thurman 20
9 Jo---Soap 6, Mary Tyler Moore 13
10 OG-Famlly 6. 13, 500 Mile Sculpture Garden 33
News 20 I0 . 3o--Biac k Perspective on the New!
11 3Q---Johnny Carson 3,4, 15,, Movie " To Find A Man "

38 Possesse'i

SW JZBZE TZEBDJLZX
saturday's Cryptoquote: HE WHO WOULD BE WELL
TAKEN CARE OF MUST TAKE CARE OF HIMSELF - W G
SUMNER

.,' ..,'

slacked.

poet

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It :

sJ z

'" ' -

35 Czech rover
37 Man's

CRVPTOQUOTES

Flooring In Stock

...................

This''

One letter slm(,ly st .mds for .m ot her I n thts sample A is
us&lt;'d f or 1hC' t hree I .'.;, X fm t he l wo O's, (' \ C Sin g le letters,
apostro phes the l eng th :w et fornw1wn of the \\nrds ar e all
htn f s tnrh ci.t) th e code letters arc dliTer('nt

As Low As
sq. yd.

Buy where you can come In
1nd sH wh.lt you're geHrng
-Good selections - Fully

aware of
29 Food
gutdes
30 Nttwtt
31 ' Bell tolls"

Boone

role
ramy
23 DeliciOus
season
mollusk
8 Support
9 See I Down 24 Carry
and
11 " Mr Home
others
Run''

VI

9'x12' Vinyl

27 Becom e

18 Lean-to
21 Newspaper
sect10n
22 Richard

7 Indta 's

~ IH B11y NEA In&lt; 1 lol Rtlj US Pal 011 r~Ar/lft

.'

&amp; up

bane

Made of

1-'27

Rubber Back Carpet
'4•88

2S Duffer's

THA'I"
"r'Hf:
FIR.ST DO&amp;.L.IIft :t
eveR tAilNtO

•••

All carpel Installed with

need

1

•
•

padding at no charge
Expert Installation.

13 Ar!tst's

Yeslerday 's ABswer

~~=::=::1= 28 Nav1ga!or's
~
abbrevtatlon
29 Not possFRANK &amp;ERNIE
essing
·~~::~::::~~--~-------------------------------------------------------------------,32 Rtng name
33 Daughter
of Cadmus
34
Anonymous
~
Jane or
John
36 Fmd selffuUIIImen! sl
39 Jnsllfleltve
40 Forst-rate
"
41 Hotbeds
•

/

G~llgan '_s

a •OD--Chuck Barris 3.4 IS ; Happy Days 6,1J , Celebrll y
Challenge ol t he Sexes 8 10. N ew Orlean s Concerto
20,33
8 3D-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6, 13 Sh iel ds &amp; Yarnell 8.10
9 DO-Loose Change 3, 15, Three's Comp any 6. 13,

- tdea f'

~ -----1

&amp;
SAVE A LOT

Country 8. Capito l Beef 33. N ews 101 To Tel l The

Tru1h 13,

27 Perch

•

DRIVE ALITTLE

oo-News 3,4,8,10,13,15. ABC ews 6 Zoom :zc
6 3()-NBC News3,4,1S, ABC News 13 Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6, CB S News 8 10 Over Easy 20
7 oo-Crosswlts 3,4, Liars Club 6, Pop Goes TI-re

Price Is Right 10, That ' s Hollywood 13, Televl5ion
Honor Society IS

to rtches"

or

Rogers" Neighborhood 20.33. Hogan' s

7 . 15-BIQ Green Magazine 33
1 3o---Hollywood Squares 3,4, L e t' s Go To The Races
8, Candid Cam era 6. MacNei l-Lehrer Report 20.33 ,

4 Rose Bowl
yell
5 " Rags

mob

8, Mls1er

6

3 A Shaw

nuss

16 Turf
17 Landlord
19 Mother
lode's gift
20 Barnyard
scratcher

USMC 10
4 JO-Little Rascal s3, 15, Gilligan ' s I s 4, Brady Bunch

, ,..

%1 Ausp1c1ous
22 Jury Its!
25 Bequest
getter
26 " That's not

__ ..

~--

What vtsitors to Europe m1ght com e
across - THE ATLANTI C

author
6 Endmg for

15 " Memones -

.\

·
• :..;
_,.. •
-:: •

bear (the
last straw )
12 Under
co nsid14 Indi&gt;Chtnese

BATHROOMS AND K1tchens "
._.,
remode led ceramiC hie plum ..v
bmg carpentry and general
mo.n tenonce
13 years ex
,_
per1ence 992 3685
•
..,_,.........
'
PUlliNS EXCAVATING Complete n
Ser...,1ce Phone992 2478
...,. ,

·----

FANCY

house''

erahon

~'

ANY SEWING moch1ne cleon~d
ode d &amp; od1usled $5 98 FREE
p1ck up ond delt very Belpre
Oh10 I 423 5497

can

Sons 4, For R lcher, For Poorer TS, Merv Gri ff i n 6,
Gilligan ' s Is 8, Sesame St 20,33, Gomer Pyle,

Heroes 10, Emergency One 13, Pettl to&amp; l 15
S Jo-=::News 6, E lee Co 20,33, M ary Tyl er Moore 10,
Hogan s Heroes IS

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
42 Endmg for
I Bandy
gang or
blows
gag
' 5 Prepared
DOWN
to fare
1 Marksman
10 Olympus
2 Concerrung
queen
!he 'btg

ALLEYOOP

Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20
3 30-A II In The F ami l y 8, 10 Consumer Survival Kit
20
4 OG-Mister Cartoon 3. Edge of Night 13. Mr Three

(Answers tomorrow)
MARAUD EO\.JITV

~

,.
'

Foucheu)( 13
11 OD--Wheet of Fortune 3,4 15 . Happy Days 6. 13.
11 30-Knockout 3, 1S, Family Feud 6,13. Partridge
Famil y .4 . Love at Life 8,10. Sesame 51 20 Roylll
Heritage 33
11 .ss-.-CBS N ews 8, Loving Free 10,
17 ooN ewwscenter 3, S20 000 Pyramid 13, News 4,t!l, I D.

rn WAS"( I I I)"

Jumbles QUILT
Answer

10 .3G-Hollywood Square s 34 15, Andy Grlttllh 6, Rick

8, 10 M a ry Tyler Moore 13
S 00--Here Come The Br ides 3, Sar Trek 4, G unsm oke

NEW - JUST OFF PRESS I J UMBLE BOOK 1111 wllh 110 puu lea ls &amp;'.'all
able 101 Sl 35 postpaid lrom Jumble clo lhls new spaper, PO BaM 34,
Norwood N J 07648 Include you r name addre:ss ZIP code and make
checks payable to NewspaperbOo ks

, .....,

REMODELING Plum bmg heotmg
and oil types of general repm r
Wo rk guaranteed 20 years e11
pe~1':.nce ~one 9~2 1_409_ ~

------

I

9 3G-Emergency One 6, Andy Griffith 8, Family
Altair 10

3 oo--Another World 3,4,15. General Hosplfat 6, 13,

w

3825

-~-~---

ARE WILL YOU
woRK FOR ME 2
RUN MY STORE?

9 QO-M erv Grtfftn 3, Phil Donahue 4, 13, 15. E dge of
N ight 6 M atch Game 10, Family Afflllr 8

3,4,15 , Guiding Light 8,10

"

~

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers toasler s 1rom all
small oppl1onces Lawn mow9r
ne)( l to Sto re H,gh,way Garage
on Reule 7 Phone (614 1 985

-·---

THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL

Rolph Brooks property,

bedroom s. 1If• st ones w1lh
all ci ty ut1llttes Na t gas.
F A furna ce 3 lots
RT 124 - 3 bed room fram e
home w1lh bath , nat. gas
hea t
clly water and
garage

FAMILY ROOM -

and

known as

MR JOLT

Print answer here ·

liKE FUN YOU

BOl THAT
[)()fSN' l COUNT
ANYMORE • I 'M ON
SURE

~-'---~-

PM

K

OVER FIF1'(,

BRADFORD Avct1 onee1 Com
plete Ser111Ce Ph one ~49 24B7
or 949 2000 Rocme Oh10 (n it
Br adford

Will do roofmg cons lruct1on
1
plum btn g and heo tmg No jOb _.
lo6 Iorge or too small Phone ...,
742 2348

PHONE 992-6333

197.4 Spring manor, 12'

UTILE ORPHAN ANN IE

SHUCKS! YOU
CAN' ! BE MU CH

Kan~aroo 8, 10, Sesame

51 33

Only 15

Now arrange the Circled leners to
form 1he surpnse answer, as sug·
gested by the abOve canoon

• '

GeorgeS Hobstetter Jr.,
Broker
101112 Sycamore St
Pomeroy, Ohio

Close
Thursdays
Saturdays at noon.

'.

10
7 3G-Schoottes 10; 8 oo-Capt .

3o-Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15, As T he World Turn s
8,101 2 QO-One Ute to Live 6, 13 , 2 '3Q--Ooctors

WHY "THE A5T~ONAU"I5
WEREN'T AEILE TO
LAND ON THE. MOON.

EXCAV A liNG dozer bocklloe
end d1tcher Charles R Hoi ' ....., 1
l 1eld
Bock Hoe Serv1ce'
;
Rutland Oh1o Phone 742 2008
-~

REALTY

furniture,

f'OSP\TI&gt;-i- 1

SALES AND SERVICE
11 -91fc

~

A 1976 FUQUA, 24'

Flkl: WOOD spl11 or d dehve1ed
$45 o cord 01 S35 o tr uclc load
A ll hardwood 843 79 33 or
992 62 ~5

1-111\~

News 13.
1 00- Today 3, 4, 15, Good Morning Amer ica 6,13. CBS
News 8, Good Morning Ameri c a 6, 13 Bullw lnkle

To Say The Least IS , Gambl1 a

'

8 A. M lo4 :30 P.M

TURLEY S WRECt(ER Se1 v1ce
Roc1 ne Qh,o Da y ar 111gh1
949 JbSl

8. 6 45-Mornlng Report 3. 6 .50-Good Mo,nlng.
West VIrginia 13; 6 55-Chuck White Reports 10;

12 30-Ryan's Hope 6, 13 , Bob Braun 4, Gong Show 1S,
Search for Tomorrow 8. 10. E te e Co 33
1 oo-For Richer For Poorer 3: All M y Children 6, 13.
N ews 8. Young &amp; the Restless 10, Not For Women

300MalnSI.

WATE R W~L l D1 11lmg Al so ml and
gas well wo rk Heo lon Drtlhng
Co Oo vtd S Heat or1 Rt 3
Pom e roy
Oh 10
Pflon e
98 5 4335

-

IW!', CHAAU5 ,I HE.~ro \t)() ~m

I I (

Pomeroy, Ohio
Pomeroy 992-6282
or 992-6263

NEIGLER 5 F O ~ bu1ldmg houses
Coli 949 '1508 f or house des1gns
and e s t 11not e~ Guy H Ne1gle r
Roone

r a nc h
type ,
mod e rn
equtpped
ktt c hen ,
3
bedrooms 2 baths, e ledrtc
B B heat, f orma l dining
R , I acre ground

by Henn Arnold and Bob Lee

h

PWMBING &amp;
HEAnNG INC.

2 10 tfc

Older 2

LITAP
'/ml, I i&lt;flBIVW !&gt;- v.YJMA!.l'S
HW!' \).) !&gt;- 1R4\SA,.,A.\lf

CARTER

Free Est• mates
Work Guaranteed

MAIN
POMEROY, 0.

~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAllE

~ ~L!2l l'-

oo;~&lt;An~-

742 -2328

C Hi: V ~ ll l:

"

2-24-1fc

Construction

9.- _Jack W Car sey, Mgr
tliil Phone99'2 -21BT

"'

. .•

\!:1,1

Unscramble these lour Jumbles
one lener lo each squa re to form
lour ordtnal)l words

J

Route 2
Pomtroy, Ohio 45769
Est• motes by Appolntmenf
Phone 992-7119

AI Tromm

Pomeroy Landmark

6 Jo--- Focus On Columbus A; News 6 , Sunrl!e Sem es ter

10 GO-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 1.5, Tattletales 8, Joker' s Wild
10, Not For Women Onl y 13

ft\f\i\Ml fii)\1

~

' --~ ·

Genel'lll Contracting

Roofing
Remodeling
Room Additions
Garages

~:.•d

-·-·
--·
-·

DAVID BRICKLES

!-;stat• for Sale

C OU NT~Y

20

•.

Remodeling .

2 2 ttc

oo-

loose Change 3,4, 15 , Movie "Such Good Fr iends "
6,1 3. Mash 8, 10: Hard Times. 33. Adam s Chronicles

Concrete
Patios .
Sidewalks .
New
Construction i 4

9:00tii6 00 Saturday

12111110

tl~al

FERTILIZER, NITROGEN,
POTASH, FERT-0-PELS

MacNeil Lehrer

Nashville On The Road IS ; Know Your Sc hools 33
8 oo-Little House On The Prairie 3.4. 15. Six Mtlllon
Dollar Man 6, 13. Good Times 8,10: Con!umer
Survival Kit 20,33

l&lt;•lchen CobJnets, R;,.flng ,

Located In The

TUESDAY, FE BRUARY 21, 1978
S 45--Farm Report 13. 5 S()-PTL Club 13, 5 55Sunrise Semester 10 , 6' 25-C oncerns &amp;. Comments
10.

3G-Thai Nashville Music 3, In Search Ot 4; Muppet
Repor1 :ZC , Wild Kingdom 10. Candid Camera 13.

WAllPAPER,
PAl NT &amp; SUPPLIES

3.4
Movte Chnnet C 5 &amp; 1 PM - Fun With Di c k a. Jane t PG)
9 &amp; 11 PM - Two Minute Warning (R)

7 15- Labor Scene

Spect~l DeCISions

ACE HARDWARE

Check our low. low
prtces on

We have enlarged our

Wanted to own an d ope rat e
calld~ &amp; contectton ~endrng
roule
Pomeroy
a nd
surroun drng area Pleasant
bustness H igh pr ofi t 1t em s
Can start part t1me Age or
ex penen ce not 1mporta n.t.:
Requires car and SI49S to
S499S ca sh •n~ es tment . For
details wrtte a nd rn c: tud e
\IO r u p hon e number

COLOR TV
11ems
99 '1 b362

s

-'.

21 6-1

Young's
Carpeting

~ MO ~ Il~ HOM ~ ~

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

1nsur~ nc e

1974 SKYl iN E 14 ~e 56 J bedfoom
torol al ecInc $7500 997 20 1~

&amp;

L ehrer .Report 33
11 3G-Johnnr Carson 3,,., 1S; Poli c e Story 6 ,13 , M ovi e
" Sc ret~~m of the Wolf " 8f AB C News 33 , M ovi e " T he
Professionals'· 10
12 00--Janak l 33. 12 ·-4G-News. 13, 1·oo--Tom orrow

5 oo-.-Here Come ThP Brides 3, Star Trek A; Gu n smoke
8, Mtster Rogers' NetghborhOOd 10.33 . Hogan' s
Her oes 10. Emergenc y One ' 13, Petticoat 15
JG-News 6, E lee Co 20.33, Mary Tyler Moore tO,
Hogan' s H eroes 15
6 00-News 3 A,8, 10 13,15: AtsL News 6. Zoom 20
6 Jo-NBC News 3.4. 15 ABC News 13, Carol Burnett
&amp; F riends 6 ; CBS News 8, 10, Over Easy 20
7 oo-Cr oss W i ts 3.4 . L i ars Club 6. Marty Robb ins '

AnniwiBirits

Steam Edract10n

PI Pl ea
~ dill W Vn hes1d£J l~e c k 'i
197J l:lro9d note )4 ~o; b4 2
bt-1'11 00 11 1
iC,JJOorrorll4 .. oO'Jbedromll
1917 Vi&lt;IOitOn 14 • b l3 bcdroo111
"I ba th
147'1 Cov en11 y r '} "b5 3 be d1oom
l9b9 ~IO I O~ Ill0t1 12 lC 00 'J

~

ll .OD-New• J.U . 10. 13.15.6. Olck Caven 20. Mac Neil

MONDAY . FEBRUARY 27.1171

Passports

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

$32.000 00

IN PORTLAND need boby s1tter 5
day$ a week from 7om to Opm CONDITIONED ORCHARD gro ss
For more mlormott on clil:
and clover t"l oy Al so 8 N Ford
843 4803
Must ho ve own
Tr pc lor
i:x cell enl (ondii iOrl
997 no r
tr onsporlo tlon

Mobitec Home.; fur Sale

'A~~~~~
THE
c:
MARIA-

L.IZZ ...

Woddincs
Portraits

'-•·

Supenoi

WALL H ong1ng~ orl d
NICI' fm C htl '&gt; l rn a ~
k1 O!.onoblc Coli 99'1 n 14

Wil l CA Rl: lor the el der ly 111 our
home Phone ~~'1 73 I 4

O Nl: HOOVER sp 11 washer and o
Hoover m ul 1 dryel 1 mero l k11
chen ~ 1nk I po u' ol be1ge bow l
mg \ hoes 7' l N 997 7537

ol hce Musl be able to type do
bookkeepmg and h lmg E~e
pertence preferr ed d poss1ble
H o u r~ 9 4 5' • days a week
Wr de c a Box 547 Pomer oy
Oh1o

TELEVISION
VIEWING

HOP E IN T HE FORM OF -

.,

~"'-~·
..,.lollor to ...

News 20, Originals 33
10 ·30- Farm Olgest 20. Anyone for Tennyson ? 33

8 30-Baby . I' m Back 8.10, Turnabout 2DJO,ll; 9

o l ga n~

ljeruc&lt;•s Offered

30 yeor s o l suc(t'S~ I u l bu~ u• e~~
we 01 &lt;.&gt; ~ell mg th ~ gonerol
ho1Uwo re
outo rriOI IY(I stor e
P1 rced o l IIWUIIlOI Y Conletl
Sorm1 rC1 ville Real htole phone
1 304 Ol5 3030 Pt Pl e o ~ an t

HOSPITAL be d
tabl e 992 "J~J / 6

S EE6

~

Chester, Ohto
10 30 C I

RU G~

9 J 9 2129

Business Uppprtunitics

H~ CT RI C
be~ 1d e

B uT B ENEATH THE S HIP, T RACY

Jack W Carsey , Mgr
Phone 992 '2181

f-II&lt;~ WO O O

M oo 1c ~

Box J

9·JO-Or1e Day At A Time 8,1 0: 10 ·0D-Lou Gran1 8,10;

_,

Service

Jack's Septic

Pomeroy Landmark

HOOF HOllOW llo•ses Buy se ll

PO M ~ R O Y

Restdenl1a ,l
and
commerc•al
Call
for
esti mate, 24 hour serv1ce.
Anydav. anrttme
- Phone 985 3806

TRACY

SPILLED
t&lt;EROSENE
IGNITESANO A
FALLEN

THE PHOTO PLACE

EXPERIENCED

Tank Service

Let us test your water Free

IN l OVING rnematy ol my dear
hu'&gt;bund Flo yd D H1tf le who \\&lt;anted to llu)
lei r U'&gt; 27 yeo ' " ago today H e~~
sadl y l ll l'&gt;~ed by h1s wd o o11d l i M~i:~ l'omo •or Fore'&gt; ! Pt a
duch l op p11 ce fo1 slonrlmg
d11ldren l 1l e I'&gt; no t the !&gt;am.e
'&gt; Ow lunbor L oll 9?'1 ~qb~ or
!.lllCC he wen t away bul we
Ken t H011by I 44b f.IS70
w1ll '&gt;CC h1111 when 1h1&lt;, l1 le 1~
QV(!I
lO INS lU kJH-Nl V t¢ker1 " ol(!
HoI'&gt; no I d(;'Od lm ,.,. t U '&gt; I OW(IY
pod•l&gt;t wo l du"'~ and cho1ns
W11h Jesus mtho1 Beoutt ful place
s•l ve r and gold We need 19M
lol led lwuven whe1e we w 1ll be
and older o; dvm COitl\o Buy O:. t&gt;ll
to g t~ th~~:~• loruver
01 tfOrle Cal l HCl(jC I Wom ~ l e y
I rn 1s'- hun ove r~ day
/ 42 23J l
Hr'&gt; w le l ela and &lt;h1kl1 en
OlD f-U RN!lUIH: 1re boxes brm~
beds 1ron bed" l'!r r omplc!e
hou'&gt;ehold .. IN1df'&lt; M 0 Miller
Notice!
I-ll 4 f)Orl1e10y OhiO or cal l
992 "!7b0
THl: ~A CI NI: Volun i CEH
F1re
Deportmen t will sponsor a gun NO IHM TOO lor ge at roo !.moll
shoo! evm 'I Sa tu rda y at b pm ot
W1ll buy 1 p1ecc 01 cornplc!! c
rhc 1 build ng 111 Bo '&gt; hon Foe
household New u~ cd or Cl/l l l
tm y choke guns on ly
qurs Mor t111 s l utmlut e 2() N
/nd ~~
M1ddlep01r Pllonc
lHl: lo!ACINl: Gun Club Gun Shoot
qcn bJIO
cv c1y Svnd oy oh ernoon Foe
to'Y choke guns onl y Asso1 1ed CHI P WOOD
P o le ~
mo~e
r PPO I ~
diOJtlC ICI IU (1 11 Iorge'&gt; ! end sa
pe1 ton Bur1dled slob So pet
CllARANG SALt: be gm ~ Mon
1or1 Dehvc 1ed to Oh1o Pollet
h.'b 13 at Sew N Sew Ou1le r
Co HI '} Po rllCI OY 992 7689
Mo111 Srrce l
RoCIIIC
All
po ly es ter double k1u1 s r edu ced Sll V ~ H l&gt;OlLA ~ ~ and CO lliS Top
40 9 o on d 50 °~ lhi C' Odb1g Spoo l
dol la r po1d Coll742 '13 16
5 fo 1 $1
SCA SHS lo1 junk cot o, Frye'&gt;
INCOMl: fA X Set v1 cc s l-- cde1 ol
Tt uck an d Au! O I'm to, Wreckc1
and s!o le To• es
Wol!or e
~e t vr ce r I c ~ ole and Rep ou
H u~ MJ I I Brodbvr y 99 2 1228
l&lt;u lland 74'1 2081 or P()1 n ru I
14'1 9J7S
PO Ml:ROY TWIN C1ty Cob Opens
l:l om clos~~:~s 6 pm ~~ 2 3190
WANJ 10 bu~ j lo '10 oCte!. on
1u10l wa ter 111 Me1gs l ocal
LA MAlo! Beauty Solo n fllo rmed y
~c h oo l Dt~ II IC I
Su toble l01
owned by Clo1 0 McMo .. le ~~
bu lclu1g o11 d o c~ u.,. ~ to good
unde r new ownersh1p ol !(!rr le
f OO d ~ 9'16 1 39
M lle r Walk er Wo t&lt;h l o r open
ulg 111 neor fu tur e S h t~ ~ ~ WA NI TO !)U Y Small dozer
p te~en lly work mg at Hehm ~
Guod s hap e 992 7106
Beau ty Sol on f' o rn~:~ r uy
WIL L f' AY c o ~ h l or gu11 s mm1
b r ke ~ boot .. o what hOv() you
hi e$ 3rd St Rt 7 M1ddlepo t
l'et• for Sale
9'n f 494
!1 ode o r !rom New and used
sa ddles Ruth Reeves Albany
(6 14) 698 3190

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

Now Only ~179.95

11~0 1

~~~ ~~

Business Services

l0Al j,,,. ~ ~ "'" Ot l&lt; l l OI..tUtl ~
, hi(JI•dt ond r ol! ow" b111W lo1 ·
dlJ'tt l Orllo ol u 1d ~pQ r 10l nu .. 111g
'&gt;Oi l lo• lo•mf·t~ l:.o , ci .. IOt Soh
W o• k ~ Mo m SIIC(!I Pontl'IOY
01\ •Q o• ph o1tt.1 YQ'l JtJ91

lh(' IP ,.,. alway '&gt; .,.oHr t• Ill ti c thmy
ro rhmk ol you
t'or ncn!
Yout lace ond VOICC o1e ll c'&gt;h 111
1n111d
J AND 4 HM lu1 m&lt;.hed ond un
We IIPYel !.hall f019CI 110 lllai1Cr
lullliShC(I Opl'. f'l 10110 99'J
what the tune
~434
Sadly l!ll~'&gt;ed by ~ our daughters
Mtld1cd Arnold and l uCielrO COUNikY MOBill: Home Porlc
~ oure :tJ 11011h ol f-l orr\ero y
'Jm1t h
Lo1 g~ lo t ~ Coli 992 / 479
IN LOV ING Ml:MORY ol H u l&gt;H~II P
flau1ter St who pa ssed away 1/xOO mohtiC home Ulllllt(h lur
111\h(!d (OII'&gt;IfuC IIOII IH('Il Ulll y
~ cb '17 I ~7'1
J04 f'lJ ~13
Un ~ocotl o1rd unhco1d ~~ Qlwop

Im- LADY AN fED to work 1n

provisation ts one sk tll you
possess tn ab unda nce today
It II come m handy to help
ctrc umvent caree r obstacles

CAPRICORN

w(&gt;

who

c ~u l dlfw

Mr

)&lt;

1 motwr whcH'
who I we do

dot•~o1r

W lo

J:dt he Hupp
M 1 r~ nd Mrs t:rnest Bush
spr 11 t l uesd,w evcmng Ydtil

.md Mt s Arno ld Hupp
Don Bell VIStl ecl Mr .ami
!\h s F\ 1U l E1 vm. Ba sh an Hd ,
J\.1(1 11d ay cvcmng
Mr s Fut: Jc Ha yman VISited
l\lt ~111d Mrs Wallie Stover

Amondo Ka .,.pol

doy

NOTICE

tlw !lrcal ~1d hodt st Church

Suru.ld) ev cn111g

t l.'~~ l n"!4

ll

--

\\anted to H e n!

ltll\
I fll)
100

§ tla) ~

~!emory

ln

UIHk'l

I •"II

1lte Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Feu '¥/, 1978

four

rnissmg

clubs Then he noted that
East could not h()Jd all four
sm ce that would mean that
West he ld some ftve&lt;ard
SUJ! At !rJck two South led
the kong o[ clubs East dtd
show out, but South pocked
up the suit by means of a
double fmesse "

An llhnojs reader claims
that he picks up ve ry bad

hands and wants to kno w the

odds agamst holding no ca rd
higher than a jack
They are a pproxtma tely
52 to I
r NF~ WSP,.\I 1 F.It

F NTf&lt; Fli'HISF.: ASSN I

(For a copy o f JACOBY MODERN SfJnd $ 1 lo
Wm at
Bridge , · care of /hiS newspa-

per P 0 Box 489 Radto Ctly
Sta tion New York N Y 10019)

�••
ll-The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Feb. '!1, 1978
nieces and nephews.
He was a retired employee

--------------------------- ,

l
I

Area Deaths

l

I
ccndu
cted
Thursda
y
at
t1
a.
NORA LAWSON
Mrs. Nora Waye) La w- m io the Foglesong Funeral
son, 65, Rt. 4, Oak Hill , died Home w1t11 the Kev. 0 B.
Saturday mornm~ m Hoi1.er Ha tch ~r () Hicta tmg. Burial
MediCal Center , Ga llipolis. w11l be in the He nry
She was born at Thunnan. Cem etery.
Fnends may call at th e
Oh1o, daughter of 1he late
funeral
home any tlme on
Robert H. Lawson and Ethel
Wednesda
y evening
Watson Law son. who survives.
BUD RANDOLPH
She was a member of the
HO C ~INGPORT Bud
Comlth MISSIOnary BaptiSt
1
Dmg
1
Handolph,
82,
of
Church
Hoc
km
gport.
died
Sunday
Three s1st er s surv1 ve : Mrs
after noon a1 Selby General
Frances S1m s, a nd Mrs
In
Marietta
Ha zel Allen,
both of Hos pital
rono
wm~
a
brief
Illness
. He
Columbu s,
Mrs
Mary
was
born
al
Reed
s
ville
,
Pa yne, Bidwell ; thr ee
Me1
gs
Cnunty
,
son
of
the
late
brother s,
Rev
Les ter
Lawson, Xen 1a , Hollis James and Mmm~ Buchanan
La wson, Galllpnlts and Handolph . He was a lso
Howard Lawson , l.ugan , W. preceded 10 dea1h by two
v·H Sev eral nteces and s1sters and one brother
II &lt;spent the greater pa rt of
nephews survtve.
hiS
hfe 10 Hockmgport where
FuneraJ servtces will be
he
was
a fa rmer
held I p m . Tu esday ~ ~
Surv1vor
s 1ncludc three
Kuhner-Lewts Funeral Home
in Oak Hill Bunal will be m l~lllgh t crs, Mrs D 0 (Hena )
Cornith Cemetery Fnends Bh1kc a nd Mrs Cecal ( Nma )
both
of
may caU at the funeral humc Kuckhuld ,
Hockm
gport
and
Mr
s
on Monday frnm 2 untll 9 p.m
W1lham {Gr&lt;Jce J Smeeks of
Coo lvill e .
a
brothe r.
ELLA CUNUIFF
Haym
ond
of
Yp
silanti,
CLIFTON Ella M
MJChtgan;
se
veral
meccs
ami
Cu ndiff, 94, Pennsauken, New
Jersey, former ly of Clifton, nephe ws
Funeral scrv wcs will be
W. Va died friday in Cherry
Wednesday at l p rn at t he
Hill, New Jerser y
Born June 7, 1883, Chfton, Wh1te Funeral Humc m Coolshe was t he daughter of t he VIlle w1lh the Rev T1m
late Dartus and E ll en Snyder offiC iaUng Burial Wi ll
be 1n Stewart Cemetery m
Wluttmgtun Henry
She was preceded 10 death Hockingport . Frtends may
by her husband, J . Howard call after I p 111 Tuesday
Cundiff, 10 1951
EVF.REIT CONNOLLY
Survivi ng
are
one
RACINE - Everett l:ondaug ht er , Mrs . Robert
nolly,
75, Ruutc 2, Ra cme,
(Ruth) Ncsb1t , Pennsauken,
died
Sunday
ntghl at l-lolzer
N J , one son, Huward J
Med
1ca
l
Center
He was
Cund1fl, Cherry Hill, N J.,
111
death
by Ius
preceded
SIX grandchildren a nd 18
great-grandchildren
E1ghl parents, Anderson and Mary
meces, Mrs. Blanche Jones, Allee Campbell Connolly a
Mrs Norma Riggs, both of ~ n Hnd a brot her •
Surv1vlllg are tl1s w1fe,
Mason;
Mrs
Evelyn
Nel
lie E., three sons, Gene of
Ohhnger, New Haven; M1 s
Ca
li
forn ia,
James a nd
Theresa Becker, Mtddleport.
Mrs Mabe l Armstrong, George , both of Syracuse,
Waverl y, 0 ; Mrs . Alma iwu da ughters, Mrs. Wliilam
Reese , Manetta, and Mrs
K10g, Chilh cot he , Mr s
Thelma Exhne, Elizabeth, W Kathy Boney of Belpre; a
Eve l yn
Va " Mrs Ruth Ze rkl e, step-daug hte r ,
Boggess
of
fiH
cinc
, 18
Florida; one nephew, Romeo
g
ra
ndch
ildre
n
,
10
g
r ea t
Henry , Huntmglon.
~r
cmdchlldren
and
several
Funeral servi ces Will be
4

nf the Bosworth Towang
Cn mpany of Gallipolis.

l'unera l servaces wall tie at
I p.m. Wednesday at the

F.wmg Funeral nome with
the Rev . Freeland Norris
offaciatmg

Bunal will be tn Sand ,H1II
Cem etery l''riends mHy call
at the funera l home after 7
tins evcnmg

SYLVESTER HARRIS
SYRACUSE - Sylvester
I Bud l Hams, 78, of
Bloon ungdale , Ohio, a former
Sy ra cuse res ident, d1ed
Sa turday
at
Harrtson
Cummu mly Hospital, CadiZ
He was preceded 1n death by
h1s w1fc, an infant daughter
and a brother .
Surv ;vmg
are
three
children, Maxme, James and
Mar) Lou of Bloomingdale;
ftv e ~randchil dren; four
sastcrs, Ethel Ramey of pt
Pleasant ; Myrtle Durst of
Cuulvs!ll! ; Jess1e Cottrill of
Syracuse, lrene of BloomIngdale , two brothers, D1ck
of Syracuse a nd Wil bur of

•IS

Johnson, D1ana Johnson ,
Seaford Jordan, Eij1th
Kearns, Geraldme Layne,
Patty Montgomery, Mildred
Moore, Mark Mora, Melissa
Nance, Henry Pierce, Ellen
Russell, Elsa Russell, Teresa
Sayre. Sandra Slone, Barbara
Stephens,
Ellen
Stewart , Pauhne Wayne, Ray
Wllhams, Evelyn Wmter .
(Births, Feb. 25)
Mr. and Mrs . Thomas
Simpson, a son. Jackson
1Discharges, Feb. 26)
Bonny Allen, Ca rolyn
Colema n, Mrs Jason Davts
a nd da ughter, Mrs. Edward
Fulton and son, PhylliS
Garland, Miche lle Hall ,
Diana Henson, Robert Hill,
Amper Howell, Lewis l,wg,
Pomeroy
Sunday Discharges - Earl Gerald S~vte ..
( Blrlhs, Feb. 26)
Riggs, Fl orence Hellma n,
Mr and Mrs Ernie GardMary Derenberger, Stephen
ner, a daughter, Gallipolis.
Cochran, Janey Koch.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday Adm1sswns Kenneth Stout , Middleport ;
'ciadys Sigler, Middleport ;
Janey Koch , Pomeroy ;
Bermce Molde_n, Pomeroy;
Milley Cunningham, Tuppers
Plams; Ruth Wolfe, Racme.
Saturday Discharges Sheila Smclalr, Anna Wmes,
Lash Douglas. Hanford
Stanley , Annette Kmght,
Helene Sayre
Su nda y Admtsswns Kelly Johnson, La ngsville ,
Phyllls
Vanlnwagen.
Pomeroy , John Htll, New
Haven ;
Ella
Stewart,
Cheshire;
Viola Moon,
Chester ; Frances Howery,
Al ba ny , Leroy Bartrum,

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, Feb. 24)
Mrs Keith Ba nks a nd
daughter, J onaUiffn Bare,
John
Bocock,
De bra
Wm1crsv! Lic.
Hra mmer , La nce Clifford,
J&lt;~ uncra l serv1ces wtll be 2
p.m Tuesday at the Dunlop Terry Doty, Richard Dow,
Fune1at Home m Wmters· Bessie Fell, Willa Gilmore,
Mmam Greer. K1mberly
v11lc
HaMmg, Lowell Hamson,
E lmon Hut c hmson, Tra cy
LewiS, Sam McCarty, Harley
AUTOPSY EXPECTE D
McC
ulty, Jam es Mont OXFORD , Oh10 (UP I]
gomery,
Mrs. Kenneth
An a utopsy may be held on
Newsome
and
son, Wtlb.ur
Ule lx1dv of M1am1 Umversity
Patt
on,
Tamara
Pla nts,
semor Rtchard M Sammons,
21. New Alba ny, who died of Robm Potter, Bruce Pra ter,
Sa lem,
David
an apparent heart atta ck J oanna
dunnJ,!;
an
intramural Sizemore. Arnold Skaggs,
baske tball ~ame on th e Rockford Spurhck, Mrs Paul
Tucker and Mrs Norma
cmnpus Saturday
Sanununs collapsed on the Ward, Lon Warden, Paul
cuurt and was taken to a Wh1te, Mrs Rubert Wtlson
lwsp1tal where he was pro~ and son, Wtlham Woomer ,
Mrs. M1chael Yeagle a nd son
llOWlted dead Sammons had
(Births, Feb. 24)
a history of hea rt problems
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Holt,
and underwent hea rt surgery
Jr ., a son. Ray Mr and Mrs.
for the mlment
M1chael Justus, a daughter,
Vmton Mr and Mrs Randy
MEET MARCH 8
McGu ire, a da ughter, Crown
TUPP ERS PLA INS - The
C1ty ; Mr and Mrs. Paul
Orange Towns hi p Ftre McW111tams, a son, Wellston.
Ocpartment will meet at 7 30 Mr. and Mrs. Shan Faulk , a
p 111 on the second and fourth
daughter, Kerr.
Wedu esdays of each month
1Discharges, Feb. 25)
The s~ren w1il so und as the
Larry
Adkms,
Mr s.
rneet mg 1s begmning each Dewayne Ba ird and son,
evenmg and residents should Glori a
Blazer ,
Debra '
no te thai the siren is not a fire Bricker ,
Lu ke
F1elds,
ctt ll
Charlotte Griffith , Betty
Jenkms, Zelia Jesste, Anna

Our Direct
Deposit

Honor roll

HOSPITAL NEWS

Thfec ho memak e r s
recently represented Me1gs
County on the Jackson Area
Fam1ly Lt vlng Con cerns

• Pleasant Valley Hospital
Discharged - Bob Moore,
Syrac use: Oscar Frye,
Ga lhpohs; Clara Staats ,
Letart,
Philip
Craig,
Redhouse; Patricia Hayes,
Leon, Howard Pn ce, Pomt
Pleasant ; Mary Nibert ,
Gal hpoh s F erry , Mrs .
S1der s,
Point
Robe rt
Pleasant,
Mrs . Arnold
Marcum, Leon , Richard
Huffman , Charleston, Shawn
Hill , Ashton; John Hill ,
Ashton; PatriCia Shambhn ,
Ha rtford ; Mrs. J ames
Burdette, Poml P leasant;
Mrs J oe Ell1s, Cottageville;
George Newlon ,
P o int
P leasa nt , Mrs. Dempsey
Campbell, Elkview ; Robert
WIIhams, Rutland; Mrs
Be rnard
La mp.
Pomt
Pleasant ; Mrs. Birdie Kmg,
Leon; Jason Fry, Robertsburg, Donna Grinstead,
Mason; Mrs Earl Snyder,
Cheshire .
B1rths - A daughter to Mr
and Mrs . Bobby Sturgill,
Vmton. a son to Mr and Mrs
Karl Bla10e, Gallipolis
Ferry, a son to Mr and Mrs.
Dennis Butcher , Chiton
NOW YOU KNOW

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From the opening Up, C01ch Lennie Barnette's Point
Pleasant Big Blacks, were off and running as all five starters
scored in double figures in an ...y ~ win over their C&lt;&gt;Uilty
neighbors - the Wahama White Falcons.
The Big Blacks, playing without their leading scorer, Ed
Nibert, who was fighting a bout with "the flu; used their
1uperior heighth and some hot shooting In the flrst half to pile
up an enonnous lead whlcli enabled them ID coaet to their
second victory of the year over the White Falcons.
PPHS defeated Waharna by
a ~ margin some two
weeks ago in their first en·
e&lt;&gt;unter at Point Pleasant.
The vlaitors shot a hot M
percent from the field in the
flr.!t half of action while
Wahama hit on just 25 percent
which accounted for the Big

I
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.,.
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I

EniJOV
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INGELS ' ·
Fu RN ITU RE
106 N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport,

o.

I

converted 20 of 28 shots for a
71 percent average.
Both Wahama and Point
Pleasant get back into action
next week as they began the
final week of the regula+
seo:nTuesday, the White
t rtaln Baffalo of
Falcons en e
Putnam and their all-otate
didat ~ ck Noffsinger.
can
e. ""u
Wednesday evening, Point
Pleaanat visits Nitro.
Both teams wind up the
regular season at home next
Friday night with PPHS
entertaining highly-touted
BarboursvUle and Wahama
welcoming Ravenswood.

By JOHN T. KADV
Ualted Preu lDtemaUonal
The - top United Mine .
Workers Unlm official in
Ohio said tOday the " silent
majority" among the nation's
IM,OOO coal miners would
approve the
tentative
agreement reached between
the UMW and the Bitimunous
Coal Operators Associatlon
despite dissatisfaction
expressed by some local
UMW oftictals.
- Meanwhile, roving pickets
were reported at a non·union
coal operation today in
Jefferson County.
The Ohio Coal and Construction Co. at Rayland
along the Ohio River resumed
operations {oday after being
shut down since' the strike
· staf\ed.

1160 north of US 35.
The patrol said an auto
operated by DaMy 0 . Logue,
1 '!1, Vinton, hit the rear end of
a vehicle driven by Ruby R.
Marcum, 22, Vinton
1 Taken to the Holzer
Medical Center for treatment
of injuries were Mtchael R.
Marcum, 25, Vinton, and
James Waller , 31, GaUipobs,
passengers m the Marcum
car. Logue was cited for ,
failure to stop witHin the

I
I
1
I

assured dear distance. There
was moderate damage.
Brent A. Clark, 16,
Gallipolis, was mjured in an
acc ident at 10·24 p.m.
Saturday on SR 588, east of
milepost 5 in Green Twp.
The patrol sa1d tbe Clark
car going east struck an icy
spot in the roadway causing
his car to fishtail into a
vehicle operated by Earl E.
Neal, 37, Gallipolis.
,
Followmg the impact, the
Clark car struck a ditch then
overturned. 'J'l1ere was heavy

By KENN1:111 R. CLARK
United Press IDternational
Rdcks and bullets flew on
the picket lines and coalstarved Midwestern utilities
scrambled for anything
burnable
Monday
as
increasing numbers of
disgruntled UMW miners
damned the very contract
their
leadership
was
preparing ro sell them.
Eighty-five days deep into
the roal strike, few rould
book odds for or against the
pact designed to end it.
"This contract lS rotten
from the word go," fumed
Gene Oiler, president of an
Ohio UMW local.
" lt's.pretty bad. It's pretty
bad," sa1d Bill Cray, another
local officer, "I don't think it
wUl be ratified, but I don't
know who Is really going ro
back tilL• thing and who is

not."

~!!;~ge.

He added that if supply
goes down to 15 days and is
still in a declining stage,
homes will also be affected.
"To the extent practicable,
those customers proVIding
services which are essential
to the public health and
safety will be spared the
rotating blackouts," he said.
The utility executive
stressed that the energy alert
must remain on, regardless
of tentative agreements or
other reported settlements of
the coal striker until
deliveries of coal are be10g
received at power plants on a
steady basis . He further
pointed out that even with an
end to the strike it cculd take
as long as 20 days to get
substantia l amounts of coal to
the pla nts.

By United Presa!Dternational
MEDINA, OHIO-A FORMER MIAMI University
freshman charged with the mass murder of his parents and
two brothers went on trial today in Medina County Common
Pleaa Court before a three-judge panel.
Michael Swihart, 19, Brunswick, is charged with one count
of aggravated murder, three counts of murder and one count of
aggravated arson. He has been in jail without bond since being
charged last Oct . 25 - two days after Ibe four members of his
family were found 'dead in their home.
TRUCK DRIVER MILANO
CLEVELAND
MARTENJUK wept when a judge placed him on five years'
probation, instead of jailing him for three to 10 years, for the
salt overdose death of Martenjuk 's tl-yearo(lld foster son.
Martenjuk, 34, Cleveland, last Jan. II was cmvicted of
involuntary manslaughter in the death of Robert W. Arnold.
The boy died last Aug. 23 after being taken to a hospital
suffering from severe .Wmach pains, vom11ing and
convulsions.
ELKINS, W: VA. - ERIC WALTON, THE ALLEGED
"Ohio Valley e&lt;&gt;nnection" in an international drug ring, sat
stoically pollee officers took the stand ro testify agalllSt him in
a cmspiracy trlal. Walron, 26, a Wheeling resident who once
lived in Belmont County, Ohio, is charged with e&lt;&gt;nspiracy to
deliver drugs in a large-scale operation.
A Jury of 10 men and two women was seated in the U. S.
District Court ro hear the trtal.

operated by !!icky E. Clark,
At 3· 45 p.m. Sunday on the
21, Racine . There was w. T. Watson Rd. five tenths
moderate damage .
of a mile north of us "" '"
White was Cited to Meigs Gallia County,carsdr1ven by
County Court for failure to Billy F. Hunter, 51, Vinton,
yield the right of way.
and Robert L. Saunders, 25,
Another Meigs County Gallipolis,
stdeswiped
accident occurred at 6:5(1 causingslightdamagetoboth
p.m . Sunday on SR 7 at the vehicles.
junctiOn of US 33 where .
A deer was killed in an
Martin E
Seehg, 20. accident at 6:5(1 p.m. on SR
Pomeroy, lost control of his 325, one and one tenth mUes
car which ran off the road- eastoiSRIBO. Thepatrolsaid
way striking a guardrail. He the animal ran into the path
was charged with speed for of a car driven by Jeffery H.
conditions.
Burger , 19, Rt. 3, Gallipolis.

DETRoiT- A FEDERAL JUDGE SAYS THE Detroit
Pnlice pepartment's afflnnative action promotion Jli'OIIram is
uncOnstitutional because it discriminates against white
officers and pou!d "sow seeds of internal hatred."
The 60-page ruling Monday by Chief U. S. Dis!rict Judge
Fred Kaess marked tile first time a federal court has labeled a
big city pollee department's afflnnative action program
unconstitutional. It drew an angry reaction from Detroit
Mayor Coleman Young and city attorneys said tlley would
appeal. .
WASHINGTON - FEDERAL RESEARCHERS SAY
sugar.food TV commercials are Inherently unfair and
deceptive, and the result Ia !hat at any one time Americans are
walking around with I bllllon unfilled cavities in their mouths.
A cenlral Issue in the Federal Trade Coouniflslon staff
proposal to ben sugary TV rommerciala aimed at children Ia
- the question of whether a child 15 any match for a $400 million
advertising blitz.

SEE WHArS IN STORE
.
THE LimE GUYS

HACKENSACK, N. J. - A SUPERIOR COURT JUDGE
will question 18 potential jurors today on their mov!&lt;&gt;tloing
· habits in lhe trial of a doctor charged with killing hospital

* Smart Spring Styles

patients with overdosea of tile Illll8Cle relaunt curare.
A tentative panel was seated Monday after 19 other pe&lt;&gt;ple
were ,~ during lengthy questioning about their
knowledge of tile murder case against Dr. Marlon E.
,Jaocalevlcli.
'

for Easter

*2, 3 and 4 piece Suits
* Sailor Suits

No charges were

A Meigs County accident
occurred at 5:10 p .m .
Saturday on Foreot Run Rd.
at TR 403 State troopers said
a vehicle driven by Eli D.
White, 57, Miner~vllle, turned
left mto the path of a vehicle

Few of their district
leaders a'greed with the
crillclsm after a 5'h -hour
briefing on the new contract
with tile Bituminous Coal
Operators
Association
Monday in Washington , but
gloom rode 10 their ranks as
they emerged .
"Everybody's greedy and
wants more,'' said Lou Antal,
president of DistriCt 5 in
western Pennsylvania. ''How
can you get more tf there LSD't
any more?"
"I'm a little nwnb,, said
Otue Barton, of District 6 in
Ohio. " It's not going to be
easy. It's going to be an all
around tough hattie."
UMW Vice Pr"'ident Sam
Church was one of the few
o ptimists
predi c tin g
ratification of the pact.
" You hear the people who
are dissatisfied," he said.
" The silent maJority doesn't

rnent, etc."

*Toddler Sizes 2 to 4

FROM

\

NEW YORK - JEB MAGRUDER, ONE-TIME White
Houle aide and now a dlvintty student, says Richard Nixm
planned to perpetuate his presidency by clloom. successors
&lt;:aJIIble of -destroying their opposition.
Masruder is the latest WatergatepersonalltY'to publish his
ven1on of the hlltorlc events which led to their own
IJnprlaoiunent and Nixon's resignation. The book, "From
Power to Peace," Ia to be publlabed in May. Tbe Trib obtained
an advance copy of the manuscript and detailed lt in today's
edltlona.

MANAGUA, NICARAGUA-NICARAGUAN

IN POMEROY

Glllek approved the C&lt;llltract the other representatlves he
but Lamb was oposed to it. talked with Monday had the
"I think the majocity wm same opimon.
Oiler, who said he has so
approve the contract," sa1d
one UMW Local President far gone over JUsl nine of the
who did not wish to be 125 pages of the e&lt;&gt;ntract, sa1d
identified. "Th"'e pe&lt;&gt;ple are a stri ke clause " dtshungry . And remember they . crtminates agamst minare gomg to be voting by ers" because 1t would alsecret ballot. I think it wUl be low a coal operator to flre
any picketer the operator
ratified.''
But tllere is opposition ro m1ght . r ecogni&gt;e, while less
well-known miners would go
the e&lt;&gt;nlract in District 6.
Gene Oiler, president of wnolested.
He said the miners were
Meigs County Locall886, sa1d
also
dissallsf1ed w1th a cost of
representatives from about
adJUS\IIlent.
living
20 locals talked informally tn
Oiler
sa1d the local
Bellaire Monday where they
representa.tives
who met
met at district headquarters
while picking up copies of the Monday would "bring out
their opposition" loudly at a
tentative settlement.
"Ttns contract is rotten district conference about the
from the word go," he proposal expected to take
Wednesday
or
declared, and said nearly all place

•

Thursday.
Other Ohio UMW officials
UPI talked with also were
unhappy with the proposal.
"It's pretty bad, It's pretty
bad," said Bill Cray, vice
president of UMW Local 1957
tn Vmron County. "I don't
think 1t will be ratified. But I
don't know who IS really
gomg to back this thing and
who 15 not."
Sieve Elliot, president of
UMW Local!323 10 Coshocton
County, said he' d1d not hke
the e&lt;&gt;ntract because It does
not make up the funds lost
durmg the strike by some
UMW retirees.
"They're the ones that built
th1s union," said Elliott. " We
have bee n out for 84 days
nght now and we should stay
out another 84 days until we

TROOPS

STORMED a university Monday nlgbt,ldllln&amp; three lludents,
and battled against masked
.

ln!llans

beating drums and
·

1Contlnuell on pig&amp; 10)

have much ro say "
As the umon leaders
prepared to ta ke their
campaign for rallfication inro ,
the field , vocal mlnorilles did
their talking with a torch m
mmois and with rocks and
bullets in Alabama .
About 200 miners set fire ID
railroad ties and ripped up
rails on a hoe leadtng to the
Illinois Power Company 's
Baldwtn plant.
Alabama state police
escorted non-UMW workers
ro safety after nearly 100
rock-tossing miners shut
down the Crawford Mirung
Co. when it tried to r eopen
Three bullets hit a company
vehicle, but no arrests were
made because pollee said
they could not identify the
gunman.
In Kentucky, Robert Dean
Prater, a 23-yearo(l)d Pike
County miner , was arrested
after he and several others
were caught stoning a coal
truck.
While"th'e mill'ers wrangled
with their leader.slup, coalhungry Midwestern utilities
remamed under seige and
schools continued to feel tbe
pmch .
In West Virginm, where
coal stocks plununeted below
the 22-&lt;lay level, desperate
measures were underway.
1 'They're
out
there
scraping it, pushmg lt into
piles, and digging it out of the
mud, if they can, ro see
what's burnable and what's
not," said Lyle Corder of
Monongnhela Power Co.
In Tennessee , TVA assisted by delivery of nonUMW mal and by pw-chase of
more than 400,000 rons from
Western fields - held lts
stocks at a precarious 24-&lt;tay
level, and in Ohio, Toledo
Edison Pr"'ident Joltn P .
Williamson urged cusromers
not to relax in their
conservation efforts.
The Kentucky Public
SerVlce Co. proceeded with
plans for a mandatory
electrical cutback and the
state's
larg~st
utility
prepared ro turn ID high
sulfw- coal to stretch 1ts
supplies.

CLOSED
A part of former West
Malo Street uoder the
Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge
has been closed to traffic
due to a gasoline leak.
Pomeroy Fire Chief
Charles Leaper said a leak
had developed In an un·
derground storaKe tank at
the Certified Service
Station.
Gasoline apparenlly ran
uuder tbe road aad down
Into the old West Main
Street area, Legar said.
Gaaoltne left In the
storage laak was pumped
out and a new tsnlr. Is being
lnatalled loday ,
Tbe village placed sand
over lhe Weal Main Slreet
area
as
a
safety
precaulioa.

COMMISSIONER ILL
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to the
rounty rommissloners office
at 11:58 a .m. Monday for
Commissioner James Roush,
who collapsed there. He was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital for treatment and
released. Roush became ill
later and returned to the
hospital where he was ad·
mUted about midaight.

today kept up a media
barrage to urge cm1inulng
conservation
Columbus &amp; Soll\hern Ohio
Electric Co., with a JuU page
ad in the Columbus cttlzenJow-nal, says "the coal strike
is not over.
"At Columbus &amp; Southern ,
we're pleasad that a tentallve
agreement
ha s
been
reached," the ad said. " We
hope that this agreement wm
mark the first step in the long
process toward resumption of
normal coal deliveries. Yet
ow- optimism is clouded by
the fact that our present
supply of coal is low, and the
time nec-essary to bring the
c'Oul • lrlke to an end will be a
time when we will stU! be
rely10g largely on present
coal supplies."

FIU.een Cents
Vol . 2M, No. 222

Ratification
road is tough

TilE OH-KAN COIN CLUB made plans for Its 15th annual ccin show to be held (rom 9
a.m. ro,5 p.m. Sunday at the Holiday Inn at Kanauga when it met at Burkett's Barber Shop
in Middleport Monday night. Officers oftheclubwill take a leading role m the staging of the
annual show. They include: seated : John Bryan , sergeant-at-anns, and DoMa Davidson,
show registrar ; standmg from the left Edward Burkett, president ; Felix Alkire, vice
president; Roger Wamsley, secretary, an.d David Horton, treasure r. The show --:hiCh Will
feature a display of upward of a quarter milhon dollars worth of rare co ins, paper currency,
stamps, medals and related Items is open to the public

First reading okayed
on 4~2 council vote ·
By a 4-2 vote, Middleport $700,000.
Cle rk-Treas urer
Gene
Village Council meeting in
Grate
read
a
letter
from
the
regular session Mo.nda y
mght, approved first readmg Bureau of Unemployment m
ol an ordmance to provide reference t o payments
mcreased penalties for ovcr- r equired from politiCal
parkmg at a village parking subdivisiOnS in regard to
un employment of village
meter.
Charles Mullen suggested workers. As of J a n I,
the ordinance, whtch if glVen polihcal subdiVIsions must
final approval, w1ll provide a pay the full cost of benefits to
$1 penalty for parkmg employes.
However, subdiviSions can
overtime at a meter , if paid
withm the first 24 hours of the pay a percenta~e of the
violation and an add11lonal $2
penalty if not pa1d within the
first 24 hours a fter the
violation.
Councilmen Marvin Kelly
and William Walters voted
against approving the or-

dinance and Councilmen
Mullen, Allen Lee King, Carl

WASHINGTON ( UPl ) - A
ll&gt;ugh r atification road lies
ahead for a proposed settlement to the natiOnwide coal
stnke, some United Mine
Workers Un1on distri ct
officials mdicated Monday
alter a briefi ng by nKlional
leaders.
" If members in Di•irlct 12
are willing to take the lime
and evaluate th1s ctmtract .
I'd say iliere Is a chance for
rut1ficat10n, although I would
say at 1s not fl good chance,"
sa1d
John
Hen ry
of
Lewistown, lll.
Henry said his district has
abo ut 15,000 voting members
and would look over the
t e nt ative
agr eeme nt
carefuU y, even If tl means
marathon sessions.
But nHltona l secretarytreasurer William Esselstyn
sa id
he
thought
the
guaranteed pensiOn provision
was: the best part of the

72 babies
examined
at cl:iitics

Seve n well baby clinics
have been he ld since
Initiation of that ne w
pro
gra m for the Me igs
payroll. There was some
in- County Health Department
confusion on
the
last October .
terpretation of that prov1s1on
From October through
as to whether 11 pertams to
the first $6,000 of the village December, the seven clinics
pa yroll or ._the total annual attracted 72 patienta maldng
85 visita, A total of 73
payroll .
was
It was agreed to table the im mun iz attons
administered
bringing
57
matte r unt1l a clea r In~
children
ro
the
completed
terpretatton can be secured
from Solicitor Bernard Fultz. immum&gt;ation le vel, Mrs.
Co uncil a lso ta bled a Sharon lhle, R.N., county
request for a new contract clinic nurse, reports.
Procedur"' and laboratory
( Con1inued on P88• 10)
tests done included eightythree history a nd physical
examinations, two developmental screening t.,.ts, 19
tuberculin skin tests, 84llrine
checks for sugar or infec\ion,
46 blood tests for iron
defiCiency anemia and two
newborn blood tests for
protein Imbalance.
Sheriff Proffitt commended
A total of 66 conditions was
the a lert c1t1zens for in· sc reened by the clin ic
formatiOn instrunl)entalm the pediatrician
with
Iron
apprehensiOn .
deficiency anemia, ear
Shenff Proffitt said today infection, upper respiratory
the department has made an mfec tlon , urinary tract
arrest in th ~ Thursday Infection, various skin
break10g and entering of an ciJ!ldltions and problems with
unoccupied structure owned the growth of bones being the
by Norma Wilson , East Main majority of conditions fo1111d.
Street, Pomeroy According Sixteen referrala were made
to t he report, entry was to other special clinics.
gained by break10g out a rear
At the present time, there Is
window .
no charge for the clinic
Sherifrs lnvest1garor Gary services, however, the
Wolfe has fil ed charges department is working
agains t Blaine Qualls, toward a sliding fee scale,
Pomeroy. Qualls has been (that Is ) payment for
released on recognizance . servtces according ro the
bond pendmg hearing In amount of family income .
. Meigs County Court later this UntU the scale is completed,
week. Sheriff Proffitt reports clinics
are
accepting
Ronnie WiUiams has also donations. At preaent, clinics
heen charged with theft in- are state flUlded, but funding
volving another Unoccupied is only lemporary.
house owned by Norma'
A pediatrician
from
Wilson. That house located on O'Bleness Hospital In Athens
East Main Street, was a lso serves at the clinics and
entered last Th nrsdey. In- provides a thorough physical
vestigator Ga ry Wolfe exammatlon for children
discovered a theft had oc- through 21. Records are kept
curred there while in- confidential.
·
vestigahng
the
other
Anyone interested in
breaking a nd entering. having their child attend a
WUII~ms was also released clinic Ia asked to contact the
on recognizance bond.
department at 992-7160 or 992-

Charges fi~ed
•
zn theft case

Horky and Dewey Horton
Meigs Coumy Sheriff
approved the first readmg. James J . Proffitt reports
Mullen said mcre'asing the James Kritschner, 19, New
penalty to $1 from the present Haven, W. Va., Warren C.
5(1 cents would tend to en- Fields, 18, Hartford, W. Va.,
co urage motonsts to deposit and a Mason youth have been
cc ins in the parking meters, if charged with the theft of
nothing else.
empty pop bottles taken from
Supporters also com- J ay Mar Coal Company
mented the increase would property Saturday even10g
bring in more money to the The two adults have also been
village . Opponent William charged with contributmg to
Walters said the increase the delinquency of a minor,
would hurt business and
Sheriff Proffitt advises his
encourage shoppers to go to office was notified by two
other towns or locations even citizens, who reported there 1
where there is no parking had been three subjects
charge.
taking pop bottles at the Jay
Mayor Fred Hoffman Mar
Coal
Company .
reported he has the plans for Authorities were given a
the plaMed nursing home to description of the vehicle and
be constructed in lower 1ts license number.
Middleport . He said the
Officers were notified, but
village request for $60,000 the vehicle was not located
through the Appalachian until after the trio redeemed
Regional Council to provide a the empty bottles at Krogers.
sewage facility for the area
Pomeroy Police spotted the
has been given top priority by car just west of Krogers, and
the state and has gone ro stopped it The driver, J ames
Washington, D C. for ap- Kritschner WKS arrested by
proval.
the Pomeroy police lor
The nursmg home would be driving while under the inan advantage for the town fluence He will appear 10
economically, Mayor Hoff- Meigs County Co~rt to an-,
man said, m that it would swer the petty \heft and
employ 55~ persons and contributing charge along
With an aMual payroU of with a DWI charRe.
I ('

•

get what we want. "
Should the contract be
approved, says Leonard
Pnakovich, pr.,.ident of the
Oh1o V.Uley Coal Association,
headquartered
in
St.
ClairW!IIe, "Coal should be
flowing within a 24-hour
penod."
Pnakovic h Mond.ay
disputed claims by the state's
maJoc power ccmpanies that
getting coal production t&gt;ack
ro normal would take 10 to 15
days.
"Coal should be flowmg
within a 2~our period," said
PnakoVICh. "A lot of the coal
can be loaded directly into
barges or railroad cars In 24
hours, after a three shill
operation, a mine can ship
&lt;&gt;ut a 10,000-ton unit Ira in ."
Meanwhile, Ohio utilitles

en tine

at

Oiler feels pact rotten

Supplemental

Weddle, Melame Weese.

conlract. You can sit around
and listen to a lot of"things.
One guy wiD e&lt;&gt;mplain about
this and another guy will
complam about something
else . I don't care what
conlract you take to them,
somebody will be griping
about 11.
" But I think the silent
majority will accept the contract," satd Guzek. "I think
it's a fair one. I don't like
everything 10 it myself. But
you don't get everything you
want . No body does and
nobody ever will."
Guzek and UMW District 6
International Representative
Bill Lamb were both
members of the Bargaining
Counc il which approved
sending the contract out ro
the mmers for rauncatlon.

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, Feb. ~. 1978

Three persons hurt

persons were mjured
I mThree
six traffiC aCCidents inI vest,gated
over the weekend
by the Gall1a-Me1gs Post
II 'State
Highway, Patrol.
Two persons were mjured
at 4.10 p.m. Saturday on SR

John Guek, president of
UMW
District
6
headquartered in Bellaire
and with 16,000 members in
eastern Ohio and the
Northern Panhandle of West
Virginia, told UPI he felt the
agreement, although not
perfect, was "a fair
contract."
"The miners now have a
choice.'' said Guzek. "Before
they didn't have a choice.
They have lost all this time
due to not having a contract.
They
blamed
(UMW
Presulent ) Arnold Miller and
the BCOA. Now if tbey want
ro con1inue the strike, it's up
to them, They have the
choice.
" I think they will vote lor
it," said Guzek. " I most
certainly do. I think it's a fair

I

Blacks 47-21 lead at intermisslon
Scott H~wsrds' 12 points
topped Point Pleasant in the
half followed by J elf Holland
with 11 while Artie Vaughan
and Tfm Newberry notched 10
markers each.
WahamawaspacedbyGreg
Blessing and Bob Bamlu in
the first two quarters with slx
POINT PLEASANT (94)
points apiece.
FG .FT.PF .TP
Rick Bamltz .Wle the show
7-11 1-1 4 15
In the third stanza by hltUng Vaughan
7-H
0-1 2 14 '
on four of five field goal at- Newberry
7-16
11-2 2 14
tempts in the quarter but the Howard
u
7-3 4 13
Big Blacks still outscored the Bibbee
4'.1
3-4
I 11
Bend Area quintet by a 2H6 Holland
3-3
2-2
0
8
margin to lengthen their lead Stepp
2-2
4-4
2
8
to ~ going into the final Minton
].3 3-5 0 ~
eight minutes.
Vaughan
2-1 Il-l I 4
Reserves finished out the Workman
H~O 2
contest for Point Pleasant as Martin
37-32
20-28 16 94
the race for the wire became a TOTAI..'!
scoring contest::-.. between
Wahama's Rick Bamltz and WAHAMA (63)
Kelvin Honaker and PPHS's
FG .FT .PF . TP
Bryan Stepp, Jay Mlflton nd Barniu
8-18 1-2 3 17
John Bibbee.
Honaker
4-10 2-3 5 10
Stepp and Honaker even- Blessing_
~ 0-1 3 8
tually \von out with eight BlllZ8rd
3-10 2-4 3 B
points each in the period but Bam!!&gt;
U 2-2 2 . 8
the damage had already been Hobbs
2-7 !;! 5 5
done with the Big Blacks Rawtings
2-2 ~ 2 4
holding a ~ advantage Zuspan
1-2 1-2 I 3
when the final hom sounded. TOTAL
'l/.Q 9,17 24 63
Team statl!tics show the
winners with a 45 percent Score by Quarters:
!234Tot
accuracy mark from the field
6
18 16 23-33
Wahama
on 37 of 82 attempts. At the
24 23 21 26-94
Pt.
Pleasant
free throw ltne the Big Blacks

~~~~~. c~a:~r:'~r;;~~·er~o~ ~~;:r~~~~~ :.~J:~. D~~~tt:

:\H'Ii[l!':f"'1r\'l!\!l)',' f~l
FEBRUARY cLEARANcE DAYs

The

POMERm, OHIO

BY GARY CLAU

I

1
~~---~John Porter, Tracy Riffle,

Faster because your Social Security check is mailed
directly to The Farmers Bank and credited to your
account. Safer because there's no chance of loss or theft.
Surer, because you can be away on vacation or with
loved ones and never ask a favor of anyone. Inquire
today at The Farmers Bank, Pomeroy . Member FDIC.

Farmers Bank

wtth names m r:apttal letters
makmg a ll A's were:
SENIORS - Lois Bailey,
Shelley Chevalier, Sheila
Cro uch , Danny Dudding,
Donnie Dudding , LARRY
FISHER,
Okey
K1ser ,
TERESA MEADOWS, TIM
NEASE. Mike t-/orton, JAYE
ORD, Danny R1f0e, Cheryl
Roseberry, J ohn Sayre, Scott
Souder, Richard Teaford,
RcKanna Walk er, BARB
WHITE , Che r y l Wilson ,
MYRA WOODS.
JUNIORS ~- Rick Ables,
TAMMY BRADFORD, Pam
Brauer, Barbara Buchanan,
Lori Chapman, Becky Crow,
Mel Dailey, Teresa Ervm,
Dave Fmdley, Bill Harris,
BRICE HART, Don Hendncks, Dwight Hill, SETH
HILI., Sharon Hill, Loyal
Holma n, Jeanme Johnson ,
Caro l
Mom s.
BRENT
PATTERSON. Cmdy Patterson, DEBBIE PICKENS,
Mane Pickens, Curt1s Pr1ce,
Dale R1ffle, Ed Roush, Suzy
Scarberry, Kelly Taylor, Jeff
Thornton, K1m Ward, MARY
KAY DEETER, TERRI
ZIRKLE
SOPHOMORES - Me g
Amberg e r,
Tom
Bass,
Cricket Ca rpenter, Steve
Collman, Larry Cund1ff,
JACK DUFFY, Amy F1sher,
Dave Foreman, Pam Ha r den, ROSEMARY HUBBARD, Toni Hudson , Beth
Huffm a n, Brtan Johnson ,
MELISSA IHLE , Cmdy Lee,
Manuel, Tro y..
Carmen
Manuel , James Meadows,
Steve Norton, John Pa'pe,
Perry Snuth, Amy Souder,
Kent Varney.
FRESHMEN - Bonme
Boso, PEGGY BUSH, PAUL
CARDONE , Steve Cucle,
Eddie Duffy, Enc Foster,
J ody Grueser, Eric Harns,
SonJa H11l , Teresa Holsteln,
Armmtha Holter, Della
Johnson, Bob Lee, JANET
MIDDLESWART,
Carl
Morns, Mary Obllz, Kim
Hud son,
CHARLO TTE
PICKENS, Becky Rhodes ,
Ma rk Simpson, Mary Beth
Slavin , Dale Teaford, J uhe
Thoren, Robin
W11son,
JACKIE WOLFE, Paula
Wolfe
Principal Jennings Beegle
has annOunced the Southern
Jumor High School honor roll
for the thtrd s1x weeks
grading lJerwd
Makmg a grade of "B" or
above m all their subJects to
be nanled to the roll were:
EIGHTH - Jenny Manuel,
Melmda Salmons, Rita
Slater, all A's; Bnan Ash,
Den1se Deem, Kenn et h
McHaffie, Kelly Pickens,
Richard Randolph, Lisa
Roush , Randy Tucker and
Kent Wolfe.
SEVENTH - €mdy Evans,
R1chard Hobbs, Bruce
Johnson, David Salmons, all
A's; Kathy Baker , Zane
Beegle, N1ck
Bostick,
Tyrone
Bnnager,
Bnan
Burkhamer,

Silent majOrity will approve pact

'

(Continued from Jllge I)
blackouts on a rotating basiS
from one area to another in
ExtensiOn Area
order
to equallze the hardship
Anyone
havm
g
a
ny
Comnnttee Those attendmg
as
much
as possible.
sugge~110ns
or
would
hke
the F'ebruary 21 meetmg
Heller
pointed
out that only
mformallon
a
bout
the
mcluded Mrs Becky Cotthe
large
industrial
and
e
du
c
atwn
a
l
pr
o
grams
tenll , Mrs. Frances Spencer,
commercial custom ers are
a nd Mrs. Marilyn Spence r. sponsored by the Cooperative
covered by the first three
The group was accompamed Extenswn Service , please
mandatory steps above. &lt;~ The
to the Jackson Area Ex- conta ct the Me~gs County
30anti 25-day curtailment
tensiOn Cen ter by D1ana Extension Of!ice.lt is located
steps
no doubt will force some
Eberts, Me~gs County Ex- in the basement of the County
layoffs,
but 1f we reach the 20Home
Building
on
Mulberry
te ns iOn
Agen t ,
Home
dsy
supply
level and the
Heights
in
Pomeroy
The
Economics
stockpiles
are
still decltning,
telephone
number
IS
992-3895.
The Famtly L1vmg Conthis
step
will
virtually
cerns Committee consist s of
ehminate production at
most plants ana Will auow
______________,
these c ustomers only enough
..:1 •
1 Angie Glenn, Becky Lee, Kim power to maintain eqmpMaynard, Marlene Meagher,
lliiit
Tammy Meadows , Pam

~

"Grand ma, I'm glad you have more t1me to be with mttl"

RACINE - The Southern
H1gh School honor roll lor the
third six weeks grading
per1od has been announced.
Makmg a grade of "B" or
above to be li•ted on the roll

Wahama drops
94-63 battle

3723.
'•

e&lt;&gt;ntract a nd gave " positive

assessment on raUncation .
"I think It's going to go,"
smd Essclstyn
Unde r
the
UMW
co nstilu twn , the uni on's
leadership was required ID
cond uct lhe briefin g.
Dlstnct officials, bicludlng

pr es idents.
secret ory ~
treasurers and lnleruHtlonal

Executive Board members,
we re r equired by the
co nstitutiOn to push for
ratifiCation at meetings back
In U~elr districts .
Th e next s te p in the
ratific ation process
Is
meelin~s with leaders of
vario us loca ls w1thin t he
district
UMW president Arnold
Miller , who d1d not attend the
bncfmg, was said to be
negQhotlng a contract for
mine construcUon worke rs.
Earlier In the day, In the
same hotel room, Joseph
Brennan, hend of the Bituminous Coal Operarors Association, gave a S1m1}ar briefing
to about 80 senior executives
of
companies
and
associa tions r e presenting
companies covered by the
natmnal contract.
Brennan srud afterward no
action on acceptance was
made and he was uns ure
when such a vote would be
taken.
Tom Gaston , repre!ICnting
the IO,()()t).member Western
Kentucky District, said the
meetmg was pn~ductive and
" I think It's going real well."

DWI charged
after wreck
James R . Pooler , 33,
Reedsville, was cited for OWl
following an accident at II 10
p.m . Monday on SR 246, east
of milepost one.
The Gallla-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol said
Poole lost control of his car
which ran off the right side of
the roadway then overturned.
Pooler was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital for
treaiment of minor injuries.
There was heavy damage to
his car.
A second Meiga County
accident occurred on SR 124
at TR 1105 where a vehicle
driven by William E. Rizer,
5(1, Syracuse, pulled into the
path of a vehicle operated by
Ca rol J . Bush, 22, Racine.
There
was
moderate
damage. Rizer was charged
with !allure to yield the right
of way. ·
A Gallia County accideat
occurred at 6:30 p.m. on SR
Ill, west of milepost !I where
vehiCles driven by Jamea A.
Westfall, 51, and Virgil
Hatfield , 51 , both of
Galllpolls, collided. There
was minor damage and no
citation was Issued.
The accident occurred
when the Westfall car started
to pass just as the Hatfield
car was making a left turn,

WARNING ISSUED
Syracuse Police Chief
Milton Varian announced
today he has received several
complaints about do11
running loose in the villa&amp;e,
especially at night. Varian
warned that dogs mlllt be
ronfined at au times or
violarors will be taken to
e&lt;&gt;urt.

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