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                  <text>·· CO-The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Mar. 5, 1978

WE ARE PROUD OF T·HE ''REDMEN''
OF RIO GRANDE' COLLEGE •
COMMUNITY COLLEGE

MO LEAGUE CHAMPIONS
MOC TOURNAMENT CHAMPION
Best Record District ·22
NAtA
20-7
.
Gil Price Player of the Year, District 22
Grey James Honorable Mention All District 22·

•
Ualted Prell lalerutlollol
United Mine Workers Unioo members in Ohio have rejected
the proposed contract with the soft coal industry by a vole of
four-t&lt;H)IIe and vowed IAl continue the strike until they can get
a contract they can live with or the federal government takes
over the mlnu.
The nationwide v&lt;te against the contract was two-to-one but
the miners in District 6 which covers eastern Ohio and the
Northern Panhandle or'west Virginia with 43 of 43 locals
reporting, voted against the ocooosal bv '8.990 to 2.33li.
The miners have also vowed they wiU not return to work
Wider the Taft-Hartley law If the law is invoked today by
President Carter.
•
Ohio's coal starved utilities today elso hegan mapping
contingency plans on buw bestIAl avoid large scale layoffs.
''One thing this vote did, it sure brought the coal miners
IAlgether" District 6 President John Guzek said today. "They
are really going IAl stick wgether now ."
"I don't have any idea of what will happen next," said
Guzek. " But they won't go back under Taft-Hartley, but they
probably will go back If the government takes over the mines.
"Now with the whole country needing coal, they (the

mmers) sure ought to have some bargamllll! power, sa1d
Guzek.
WUiiam Costello, a spokesman for the Ohio Manufacturers
Association, said today he thinks massive layoffs could be
avoided if the state qnpiements a plan whereby all electric
utilities cutback by 25 per cent and share their power.
" I don 't think the situation is as bad as it was three weeks
ago," said Costello. "If the weather breaks, the demand for
residential heating goes down and .lf we can continue to buy
power, it will be tight bull think we t:an make it." ·
Costello said Gov. James A. Rhodes has the authority to
force the power sharing.
" He could even order ·coal moved around and confiscate
: equipment .tAl do It with," said Costello. "I don't think the
governor is going w let anybody lose their jobs." Although
many miners had consistently expressed outrage at the
contract, national union leaders had expressed hope that the
"silent majority" of miners would okay the agreement.
"The silent majority has spoken all right," said Don Nunley,
an official with uMW District 6, which covers eastern Ohio and
northern Western Virginia. ''The silent majority told them
what they could do with this contract. "

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday ; March 6, 1978
•

u~;

•

.,

•

at

en tine

Taft-Hartley Act lS
invoked by president

By United Press International
SAlT LAKE CITY - THE SHiELD of privacy that
surroWJded U. S. District Judge Willis W. Ritter through his .
s1Alrmy'29-years on the bench will be continued by his fa!llilY in
a private funeral service.
Members of Ritter's family declined Sunday to discuss
funeral plans, other than to say only close friends , associates
and family would attend. Ritter, the nation's oldest chief
federal judge, died Saturday of a heart attack. He was 79
From the day of his selection to the federal bench during
President Truman's administration IAl his death, Ritter ruled
his courtroom with a determination that brought him bitter
opposition .

CLEVELAND - THE UNITED STATES WILL NOT have
an energy shortage in the year 2,000 because there never was "
an energy shortage, Industry Week magazine said today. The
United Stales will cope with. energy demands not through
technological advances or new oil and gas discoveries, but
through exploitation of coal reserves.
Oil and gas accoWJted for 75 percent of all fuel used in the
U. S. last year but they represent only 7 percent of domestic
fuel resources. Coal provided only 20 percent of domestic fuel
requirements but accounts for 85 percent of the nation's fossil
fuel resources.
·

..

SHOW YOUR SUPPORT
MONDAY, MARCH 6TH

•

7:30P.M.

RIO .GRANDE VS. WILMINGTON COLLEGE
FOR THE NAIA DISTRICT PLAYOFF
LEADING TO THE NATIONALS. AT KANSAS CITY
Sponsored by the following Redmen Boosters
'

~

Wiseman Agency

Tawney's Studio
&amp; Jewelers

Bob Evans Sausage·Shop

.Oscar's ·Bar &amp;
Restaurant
Bob Evans .Drive In
Price &amp; Sons Pharmacy
Bob Evans.Steak House
Ohio Valley 9ank
..

Empire Furniture
Bastille
O'Dell Lumber

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

I

J

j,

••

I

MIDDLETOWN, OHIO- GRACE KASSMEIER, 75, died
Sunday morning when fire heavily damaged her two-story
frame home and her husband Edward was treated for minor
Injuries.
.
.
Firefighters searched for the cause of the blaze which did
about $20,000 damage.

Deer dies in weekend wreck

over the weekend when it ran
into the path of a car driven
by Nancy Bartimus, 21,
Reedsville.
·
Bartlmus was traveling
west on SR 124 above ReedsviDe, approldmately ooe-half
mile weal of the AthensMeiKS line, when the accident occurred. There was
slight property damage,
aceordlng to the sheriff's
department.
I

'

Sheriff James Proffitt
announced the sheriff's sale
· of a 1974 Chevrolet Vega
scheduled for Saturday,
March 11, has been cancelled.
The case was handled out of
court.

EAGLE GAL FOULED - Eastern's Becky Windon
(45) left was fouled by Southern's Jaye Ord ( 20) on this
play during Saturday's Class A sectional championship
game. Eastern edged Southern, 42-40, to advance to the
district. See details on page 3.

Truman ordered mine
•
seizure 28 ·years ago

were to enforce wartime
controls on business.

The last government
seizure was in 1952, when
Trwnan moved to seize the
steel Industry by executive
order
and
without
congressional approval. The
Supreme Court said his
action was wtconstitutional ,

MEETS TONIGHT
The Meigs County Fair
Board will meet at 8 this
evening in the coonhWJters
buDding at the f' irgrounds.

\

'..

no w al an impasse. "
WASHINGTON (UPI) shortages .
" One month from now," he
President Carter today
Many t'Oal miners indicated
invoked the Taft-Hartley iaw earlier they would not go said, "at least a million more
in an attempt to end the 91- back to work unless Carter Americans would be out of
day coal strike. But many ordered a federal takeover work if the coa l strike &lt;'lll·
soft coal miners are expected of the mines. But he did not tinucd .
" The time has now come
IAl defy any federal court mention such a move in his
for
me to at1 on the subject,"
Injunction ordering them announcement today .
Cu
rt
er to ld leglsialive
back IAl work.
l!;nergy Secretary James
leaders
shortly before noun .
Ca rter personally an- Schl esinger, mea nwhile, said
Carter
said he talkeel with
nounced the step after the today that the strike has
union
officia
ls and coal mine
threatened
some
states
with
160,000-member United Mine
operators
Sunday as it
periodic
power
blackouts
that
Workers · union
ove rth e propo~ed
.
becan.te
clear
co
uld
e
ven
affect
som
e
whelmingly rejec ted the
contract
would
be defealml
r
esidential
customers.
·
latest offer by mine owners in
by
a
margin
of
at
lclist 2-1. He
"
Many
states
are
on
the
a record strike which has
told
th
e
.
Ca
binet
of his
threatened power blackouts . brink of severe curtaildecision
eurly
today
.and
th en
ments," said Schlesinger.
and job layoffs .
briefed
the
legislative
leaders
"I'm disa ppointed," said
Under Taft-Hartley, the
president said he will appoint Carter. "My policy has been of. both parties at the White
a board of inquiry to report to to do everything possible to House.
Miners have traditionally
him on the strike - a report help collective bargaining ...
ignored
Ta ft -Hartley back-to·
·
but
collection
bargaining
is
that could tak e a week. He
work
orders.
also ordered the Attorney
"The problem/' sald one
General Gri,Uin ·Bell to
prepare a request for . an
injunction ordering 'the
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
miners back to work and
Wednesday through ·
negotiators hack to the table
Friday, chance of snow
for 60 days. ·
Wednesday. II will be
. "I have not taken this step
generally fair Thursday
lightly," sa id Ca rter, noting
and
Friday
with
that "tens of thousands of
moderating temperatures.
WALL, S.D. (UP[) - An
persons" were already oqt nf
Hlgbs wlll range from the
American
Agriculture
work and that several states
mid 30s to mid 40s Wedspokesman said wday the
are already undergoing sharp
nesday, warming Jato the
maverick farmers' group wUI
power cutbacks due to coal
40s Friday. The low wlll be
try to block food shipments
Ia the 20s.
throughout the country I!&gt;
press demands for higher
crop suppOrt prices.
The spokesman, Bill
Martin, said that beginning
Tuesday · morning
the
slrlkil)g farmers wlll try "to
disrupt the transportation of
Pomeroy Police officers processed food and fiber to
investigated two accidents retail ·outlets, by • stopping
trucks and trains through
off his message to Congress Saturday.
requesting seizure
At 10 :25 p.m. a car driven picketing."
"It's going to lake an act of
authority.
by Phyllis Skinner, Pomeroy,
Congress
to end this strike,"
Under the proposal, coal was struck by an east bound
Martin
said.
was to be mined during the truck on Route 7. The Skinner
The striking farmers first
seizure by the same parties vehicle was then hit in the
announced
their "nationwide
as always - the miners a~d rear by a second westbound
operators. But both now vehicle driven by James
would be working under Broome, Middleport . The
government authority.
pickup truck, pollee said, had
''Impartial boards' ' were to crossed over the center line
be set up IAl see that the striking the Skinner vehicle.
Cloudy tonight with a low In
miners got "fair and just" The driver who remained
pay and the operawrs ''fair unidentified left the scene of the mid 20s. Ught snow will
8nd just" eompen'sation for the accident. Broome was begin early Tuesday morthe use, of their property.
cited to court on an assured ning, and It will become
The government would not clear distance charge. There mixed with rain at times in
the afternoon . High tern·
dicta~ a final settlement, but
were medium damages.
when one was reached, the
At 4:27 p.m. Saturday, a peratures will be in the low
government would withdraw car driven by Ross Jones, 40s.
from the picture.
Columbus, pulled from Route
As it turned out, within 7 onto Route 33 near the
ANSWER CALLS
hours of the delivery of Beacon Servi ce Station and
The
Pomeroy
Fire
Truman's
message
to struck a car driven by Diane
Department
answered
a
call
Congress management and Bing, Long Bottom.
'to
Dark
Hollow
al
6:45
p.m.
lahar reached a settlement
Police said Bing was atand Congress never acted on tempting to make a right tum Sunday to extinguish a fire at
a trash collection point.
the proposal.
from Route 33 onto 7. There · The Pomeroy Emergency
Sen. Robert Taft, R-Ohlo, .were no Injuries and medium
Squad was called to former
coauthor of Taft-Hartley, damages.
Route 33 at 3:34a.m. Monday
Truman
later • said
Jones was cited to mayor'~ for Ernest Cullums who was
orchestrated the whole thing court on a charge of failing to
ill. He was taken to Holzer
IAl discredit the Iabur law.
yleld t~e right of way.
Medical Center.

White HmL&lt;&gt;e .sour ce befure
Curter 1nadc his
lUI·
nounccment , "Is tha t the
rejection vote has made It

quest ion able that the 39-man
UM W bar~aining co uncil
represents sent imcnt In the

rank-and-file mincworkers."
" No one's really l'!Ure,"
sa id the snu rce, " so why nul
~~~ with t he low we have."
C hairma·n
fi' rank
Thompson , D;N.J ., of the
~l o u s e labor.· rlla nagcm cnt

subcommittee has a bill
ready lor action and Speaker
Thomas P . O'Neill said over ·
the weekend the House could
vote in a week.
Senate GOP leader Howard
Baker sa id : "I will support
hun (Ca rter) in any
reasonable request Ulat he
makes to try to Ket coal bade
(Contin11-.l 1111 1&gt;111• 10)

Maverick farmers will
try to stop shipments

CHICAGO ~ THE YELLOW-LETTERED SIGN on the
building that once buused both the Chicago SWI-Times and The
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Dally News was considerably shortened SWJday, proclaiming · Almost exacUy 28 years ago
IAl passer-by the death of the Daily News.
Harry S Truman wok action
The last edition of The Chicago Daily News - heralded by IAl deal with a coal mining
journalists as being one of its linest - was grabbed by stalemate similar to the one
souvenir hunters during the weekend as quickly as once-rival President Carter faced tAl day.
Sun-Times worll crews removed the paper's name from newsOn March 3, 1950, Trwnan
paper delivery trucks and building signs.
proposed a federal takeover
In these words : .
ATLANTA- ALTIIOUGH THE RUSSIAN flu apparently
"Within a very few days we
bas struck only young people under 25 since it hit the United shall be virtually out of soft
State&amp;, federal health experts think it may eventually attack coal. The danger to national
adults over. that age.
health and safety is real and
That theory stems from past behavior of the Russian immediate...
strain, which caused worldwide epidemics between 1947-57,
"I reconunend that the
and the pattern followed by other flu epidemics, offic~ said Congress enact legislation
Saturday.
.
authorizing the goverrunent
IAl take over the coal mines
WASlDNGTON- JOSIP BROZ TITO, last of the major . and
operate
them
ligures of the' World War II era, begins a round of meetings temporarily as a public
Tuesday with President Carter and top administration service."
'j.'he government has seized
officials on foreign policy issues and modest Yugoslav aid
requests. He was due to land at Andr~ Air Force Base
private businesses 71 limes,
beginning when Abraham
outside Washington laste this afternoon.
Apparently in robust health at 85, Tiw is no relic of ·the I,.lncoln took over the
past. He still Is regarded as a key element in shifting East- Pennsylvania and Reading
West relationships, and an Influential go-between among Third Railroad In 1864. .
During World War II there
World nations.
were 25 to 30 seizures, s6me ·
CENTRAL CITY, KY.- A CARAVAN OF FOUR large involving the use of troops.
. trucks and several dozen cars and pickup trucks arrived in
. Dr. Johnat.han ·Grossman,
Central City late Sunday night from the Mlsaourl Bootheel as Labor Department historian,
striking farmers delivered food to striking coal miners. A rally
said some of the wartime
Is expected later today.
seizures were designed to
City pollee met the caravan at the county line after it keep wai production plants
c:roaaed the Western KentuckY Parkway.
running ; others, such as
Franklin Roosevelt's takeover of Montgomery Ward,
A smaU doe deer was kiUed

Vol. 2M, No. 226

•

COlUMBUS - ALL CLASSES in suburb!Jn. Westerville
were cancelled again today as teachers continued picketing in
defiance of a back-to-work order issued by Franklin County
Common Pleas Court.
Donald Miller, president ol the Westerville Board of
Education, said the board would not seek enforcement of the
order' because overnight talks produced enough progress IAl
bring a l!llttlement within reach .
.,

,:
,- m,..

Fifteen Cents

r

CHIWCOTHE, OffiO- THREE ClflLDREN were killed
early today, when fire swept through a house trailer here,
authorities said.
. The Ross County Sheriff's office identified the victims as
Jimmy CottriU, 4, and his brothers Jerry, 3, and Mark 2.
Deputies salilthe fire was discovered by Peggy Stotrldge, an
aunt of the viclirr\s and when the front door of the trailer was
opened, the trailer burst iniAl flames, trapping the children in
the back bedroom.
No other details were immediately available.

•

Nunley expressed the belief being voiced by many miners PUCO today for permission to invoke mandatory 50 ~nt
around Ohio Sunday ~hen he sal~. "";~men will be better off cutb.c~ on large Industrial and commerlcal customers
If the govenunent seiZes the nones.
beginnmg March 13.
"We'&gt;';, got a right ":' a contract we can live with ," said
John R. White , presl~ent of the Ohio Edison Co., said his
NWJley. Obviously, th1s one was pretty bad. But lh~ men utility can last another week or two before making power
would probably go back to work if the government took over. 1 cutbacks, and the Ohio Power Co. said much the same .
don 't think they w~ld under Taft-HarUey."
.
"I think we're good at least through next week and proiMIIJly
In a statement ISSued SWiday, the governor sa1d, "The
a little longer ," White said. " Beyond that it's pretty hard w
apparent faihU'e of the proposed coal contract causes deep say ."
'
·
concern in Ohio ... The fact that, the contract failed in loeels all
over the UMW regwn underlines once again the need for
Pooald Nofsinger. vice president of American Electric
federal action. We are awaiting that actliln in hopes it wiU Power, the parenlt'Ompany of Ohio Power. ~id, "Things nre
getting pretty tight. "
avert a national electrical emergency."
Rbudes met with C. Luther Heckman, chairman of the
But, he said, it will be anoUter tbree weeks before ""''
Pubhc Utihlles CommiSSion of Oh1o, and reportedly talked to supplies drop to 30 days, necessitating major cutbacks.
officials o!Ohio 's utilities to discuss what stepe IAl take .
"There are so many intangibles in this, " said Nofsinger,
Although there was no word from the meeting , a spokesman
·
"
you
can't really be sure. But one Uting that would help a lot
for the Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Company said it
may have IAl cut back commercial and industrial customers by would be warm weather."
Both officials pointed to another thing tbat would help 50 percent within one or two weeks.
deliveries of non-WIIon coal, but that is not a certain
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric Co. said it would ask the
proposition.

but indicated such action
could
be , proper
if
congressional approval were
obtained.
On that day just over 28
years ago, Truman faced

circumstances not unlike
those of today. An eightmonth series of coal strikes

and slowdowns led by United
Mine Workers' chief John L.
Lewis

threatened

an

economic crisis.
Transportation and
electrical power services
were beginning to be cut
down. Dwindling coal
supplies were being redistributed.
Truman already had asked
coal operators and the union
IAl conlln.ue production in the
national interest for 70 days
while a fact-finding board
reviewed the issues and
recommended a settlement.

Management was willing but
the union refused .

Trwnan next obtained a
Taft-Hartley court injunction
ordering tbe miners back IAl
work for 80 days . They
refused to go, even though
Lewis publicly ordered them
tAl. The government charged
the union with contempt. On
March 2, based on Lewis'

public order, a court ruled the
union was not in contempt.
The next day Truman !Ired

Two accidents
investigated

Weather

Storm kills 28 people
LOS ANGELES (UP!) Another devastating storm
that killed at least 28 persons
in Southern California and
Mexican border towns was
gone today, but seaside
re sidents in Malibu still'
contended with raging seas In
front of them and mudslides
In back.
Forecasters predicted high
seas up IAl slx ·feet that could
still carve away foundatlons
of expensive homes in the
Malibu Colony owned by such

"

celebrities as Linda Ronstsdt mudslides caiiaed most proband Burgess Meredith.
lems, and in FUlmore where
At least eight perSOIUI were the usuaUy tame Sespe Creek
reported 'dead in Southern roared through a buuslng
California and 20 more In tract.
Baja California, Mexico. At
The National Guard helped
least . lour others were Malibu residents fight tides of
missing.
5.7feet and swells up to eight
More than 600 homes in Los feet. Seas destroyed the
Angeles and Ventura counties porch of Meredith's home and
were damaged,
many 'washed away eight feet of
severely. Hardest hit were Miss Ronatadt's property,
houaes in the suburban San although no ·damage was
Fernando Valley, where reported IAl her house .
·severe
flooding
and
Comedian Fllo Wilson ·

\

helped colony residents ,
many of them entertainment
figures.
"I expect IAl be here wday
and tomorrow to do whatever
I can to help the~ people
save their hmnes," Wilson
said.
Many roads were closed,
especially in the mountain
,canyons of Los Angeles, and
several communities
throughout
South'e rn
California were completely
Isolated.

•

food strike" during the weekend at McAllen, Texas.
"We're going to keep tbe
thing (food strike) going on
until we get something
through Congress we can live
with ," said strike leader
Jerry Carpenter of Levant,

Kan . " ... We're going to have
IAl shut the food off to the
public so they'll know how
critical our situatioo Is."
Tommy
Ker se y
of
Unadilla , Ga., said the
farmers will peacefully stop
train and truck shipments
and already had . been
promised the cooperation of
an independent trucking

assoclation.
" We're going IAl do this
thing peaceable, " Kersey
said. " Don't do things that's
going IAl get you in trouble
with the law. We' ve got
enough problems with · the
president without having
trouble with the law."
The striking farmers
Saturday ended their protests
on the International Bridge
connecting Mexico and
Edinburg, Texas.
About 1,000 farmers
blocked traffic on the bridge
lor 30 minutes Sat;urday IAl
protest imports of Mexican
produce. The demonstratlcth
. was peaceful in contrast to a
blockade last Wednesday,
which was broken up by
pollee who arrested 200
fanners .

Abuut 250 of the Iannen
later atleoded a ·31J.rnlnute
meeting with Texas Gov .
Dolph Briscoe, ·who aald he
would work for pro-farmer
legislation. The
other
farmers had already left for
home to' begin organizing the
food blockade.
Standing on a chair In the
lobby of the McAllen International Airport, Briacoe aald
he supported legialatlon
restricting farm impol'tlllnd
expanded markets for U.S.
growers.
Briscoe was given a cool
receptioo by the farmen,
who had been critical of hbn
· for not intervening In the
Edinburg incident. Some of
the farmers jeered at Brllcoe
when he sold he dld Dill
CC!IIdone the farmen' ''llkin&amp;
the law" iniAl ~heir own
hands .

•

�S-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Monday, Mar. 6, 1978
2-The Daily Sentinel, Middle~Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Mar. 6, !978

I

Central Michigan edges Toledo
109-107 in 5 overtime periods

Today's

Sport Parade
MILTON RJaDIAN
UPI Sflrll Edltar '

B)'

VERO BEACH, Fla. (UPI)- For any of those who have the
1dea Ute second time around Is going IAl be different and that it
will be Impossible for him IAl keep bubbling over the same way
he did last year, Tommy Lasorda has only two words.
Forget it.
He's right about Utat, too.
Starting his second season as manager of the Los Angeles
Dodgers after having led them Into a World Series tn his fll'st
one, Tommy Lasorda shows the same unbridled exuberance,
the same unflagging vitality and the same infinite capacity tAJ
keep pumping up his players as he did the very first day he
took over the fob.
"I've been like this all my life," he says, changing iniAl his
street clothes moce Utan an hour after Ute Dodgers wind up
therr workout.
"I was like this when I managed Ogden, when I managed
Spokane and when I managed Albuquerque Why would I
wanna change? I don't think I'd even know how."
II there Is any change In Lasorda at all since last year when
he led the Dodgers to the Western Division title by 10 games
and to the National League pennant w1Ut a playoff victory over
Ute Phillies, it's only in Ute respect he's more sure of himself.
"WeD, you know how that is." he says, "People didn't
questuln my ability as a manager . they questwned my
philosophies. They said a man couldn't come into the btg
leagues his fll'st year as a manager and be close to hts players.
I've always been close to my players before I came to the big
leagues, I'm close to them now and I'll be close to them after I
leave."
One of his p1tchers, Burt Hooton, walks 1nto the room and
asks Lasorda:
"Can I use your phone'"
"Sure, go ahead," says the Dodger manager
Lasorda continues talkmg to a newsman .
"Did you hear we've named Davey Lopes captain of the
team? He has great leadership qualities and he's always doing
those things a captain should do, so we felt we should make
him the captain officially Don Rickles sent D•vey a wire. He
s01d, 'CongratuiBtions on heconung c•ptain of the Dodgers.
Now maybe Lasorda wtll introduce you to Frank."'
Rickles, of course, meant Frank Sinatra, who is a good
friend of Lasorda's.
Reggie Smith, who had such a fine year for the Dodgers last
season, pops his head in the door.
"What kilid of camera d1d you say you were looking for'"
Lasorda asks his right fielder .
''AC8non ,'' says Smith, ''or any other good one ''
r
"Don't worry," Lasorda assures him. "I'll take ca re of it for
you.''
After Smith leaves, Bill Russell, the Dodgers' still boyishlooking shorts!Alp, wanders m. Lasorda sees him and says to
the writer in his office:
" I want you to meet the best shorts!Alp in the world ."
"You lie again" Russell says, sell-consctously.

By GENE CADDES
UPI Spurts Writer
"It 's certainly a tough way
to go out "
That remark by Toledo
Coach Bob N1chols may be
the understatement of aU
tune, coming as 1t dld after
the Rockets had just dropped
a 109-107 decision to Central
Michigan Saturday m five
overtlmes.
The loss eost Toledo a
certam share of the Mid~ Amencan Conference crown
and put the Rockets title
hopes, along w1th those of
Central and Bowhng Green.
at the mercy of Eastern
Mich•gan.
Eastern plays at Mmm1
lllnight In a makeup game
and a win by the Redsk1ns

gives them the outr~ght title.
An Eastern victory would
throw the fmal standmgs into
a three-way he between
M1am1, Toledo and either
Central or Bowling Green,
who meet tonight at Mt.
Pleasant, M1ch ., setting up a
three-way playoff .
and
The
Rocke ts
Cluppewas battled it out for
65 mlnutes Saturday on
reg10nal television before a
rebound basket by Jeff Tropl
wlth ~~ seconds ·left in
overtli'De No 5 gave Central
the lead for good.
Free throw shootmg, or a
lack of 1t, proved w be
Toledo's undoing .
The Rockets went to the
hne only 13 times ,the enure
game 1,1 hitting only three.

"How you doing, Hondo?" Lasorda greets him. "I call htm
Hondo Lacy," he explains to the newsman. "That's because
ne·s tne John ttavucek of our learn. They call Havlicek the best
sixth man in basketball and this guy Is the best ninth man m
baseball. He plays live' positions. Center field, left held, right
fleld, Utird base and second base. He can do 1t all, just like
Havlicek does."
After Lasorda departs, Lacy says 1t makes hli'D feel good to
hear his manager talk about him that way . It shows hli'D he has
confidence in him.
11
There's ooly me thing wrong ," confesses Lacy. 111 don't get
the money Havlicek gets."

·Regional pairings
Umted Press International

Pa 1r 1ngs for the 1978 Ohio
Boys Regional Basket ball
Tournament

Class AAA
(At Kent!
East Cleveland Shaw (21 1I

vs Lorain Admiral King 057), Wednesday, 7 JO p.m .

Cleveland St. Joseph (18-3 1
vs . Toledo Scott 121 ·11,

Thursday, 7 30 p.m .

IAI Canlonl

Youngstown Mooney (17 51
vs Canton Tlmken (18 2),
Wednesday , 7: 30 p.m
Akron Centrai-Hower (21 ·
OJ vs Cleveland St. Ignatius

(21-11, Thursday, 7:30 p m.
IAI Columbus)
Findlay (16·61 vs Miami

Trace (18 -2), Wednesday,
7·30 p m
Columbus Walnut Ridge

I 12 10)
vs
Columbus
McKmley m 51,- Thursday,
7.30 p.m
•
IAI Dayton&gt;
Springfield North (19-31 vs
Kettering Aller (20·11,

Wednesday , 7 p.m .
Xenia (14 8) vs Cinclnm~tl
Withrow (20 1), Wednesday, 9

p.m

Class AA
(AI Canton)
Cleveland Cathedral Latin

(At Bowling Green)
Ottoville {21 3) vs Stryker
120-4), Wednesday. 7 30 p.m.
Marla Stem Marion local

I 16 61 vs Arcad•a 11 8-41.

Thursday, 7 30

pm

IAI Maroetlal

Gnadenhutten

lnd1an

Valley South (19- 1) vs Old
Washmgton

Buckeye

121 -0), Friday, 6 p.m.

Trail

Ross Southeastern ( 19·2) vs

Leesburg Fairfield 120-21.
Friday, 9 p.m .
IAI Dayton)
Bethel 119-31 vs Lockland
(17·5), Friday, 7 p m
Yellow Springs (17-51 vs
Columbus Ready , (19 3),
Friday, 9 p m.

Oh10 Small College

Basketball Tournament
Women's Results
Uftited Press International
'• ...
Consolation
{')hi(, Wesleyan 63 Mt Vernon
Naz11rene 35
Delli!lnce 68 Malone 32
Oh1o Wesleyan 58 Defiance 55
Ohio Northern 67 Cedarville

64

Champlonshi.

Ashland 76 Dayton 66

( 18-J) vs Youngstown Ray en

(20-2), Friday, 6 p m

Brookfield ( 18·3) vs Akron

Hoban 117 51. Friday, 9 p.m.
CAt Bowling Green)

Genoa 119-Jl vs Elyria
CathOliC (21 -l), Friday, 6
p.m.

ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.
(UP!) - Bobby Valentine,
attempting a comeback wtth
the New York Mets folloWing
tAt Alhensl
Columb\ls Mifflin (18-4) vs opera Uons lor removal of a
Portsmouth (1$-71. Friday, 7 bone spur on his right ankle,
P m.
Bellaire I18-4) vs Millers- put in a bid Sunday to oust
burg West Holmes (20·2) , Doug Flynn from his second
base job.
Friday, 9 p.m.
(At Dayton)
The once htghly prized
Trentoo Edgewood (10 11 l prospect from Stamford,
vs Licking Valley (1 8-4),
Conn., requested permissiOn
Thursday, 7 p m .
New Lebanon Dixie 121 ·11 from Manager Joe Torre to
vs Cincinnati Reading 120·3 1, work out regularly at second
Thursday, 9 p.m.
bsse.
CllssA
"He thinks he has a belter
(At Canton&gt;
Sebring
121 -11
vs chance of makiilg the club at
Chalker (20·11, Frlctey, 7 p.m. Utat positioo," Torre said,
Creston Norwayne (17. .4) vs
Mansfield 51 Peter's (23·1), granting Ute request.
Ottawa Glandorf (16-6) vs
Bellville Clear Fork ( 17-4),
Fnday, 9 p m

I

t

\

- ~ ..
1 Pr~ce,

HT YR
6'6"

6' 2"
6' 4"
6' 4"
6'2"

F- Jeff Reep, Cedarville
G- ErlcMounts, Cedarville

SECOND TEAM
POS.-PLAYER-TEAM
G- Dave Gustin, Urbana

C F-Mark Blonkemeler. Tiffin
G- Art Jordan, Malone
F- J 1m Huss, Tiffin
G- Jim Justice, Mount Vernon

HONORABLE MENTION
POS-PLAYER-TEAM
F- Gary Brewer, Ohio Dominican
F- Craig Luther, Walsh
F-Art Freeman, Mount Vernon
C F- Lonn le Moore, Walsh
C-M1ke Rengert, Urbana
AI Turner Award Winner- Gil Pnce

Sr
So

So
Sr
Fr

HT YR
5'10" Jr
6'4" Jr
.1'10" Sr
6'5" Sr
6' 1" Jr
HT YR
6'3"

Sr

6'3"

So

6' 4"
6'2"

Jr
Jr
Fr

6'5"

Pric.e , James
gain All-MOC
.
cage honors
R1o Grande College's Gil
and Greg James
earned f1rst team berths on
the 1977-78 AU-Mid-Ohio
Conference Basketball Team
according to an announcement recetved today
from Cedarville.
Pnce, a four -year let·
terman at R1o, was also
named wmner of the league's
AI Turner Award.
The !Hl Gallipolis semor
was th1rd in conference
scoring this winter with a 20 6
average. He was eighth in
reboundmg with an 8.6
average. From the field,
·..· ..... .
Pnce

GIL PRICE

GREG JAMES

John Havilcek reaches

26,000 point mark
BOSTON (UP! )- Another
day , another milestone for
John Havhcek.
The Boston Celtics' durable

Coal Grove

Friday, 9 p m.

rebounding and defense were
leroctous.
There
was
lntenstty in each overtime.
This should have been a
championship game."
Tropf ' s rebound basket
came only seconds after he
returned to' the game after
suffermg an ankle mjury
which forced him to sit out
the fourth and most of the
!mal overtime.
He ended with 2ll points and
K.C. Janer had 31 for the
Chippewas. Toledo, which
had four starters exit via ftve
personal fouls, was led by
Tun Selgo WJth 31 points and
Ted Wtlhams With 30.
Meanwhtle, Miami moved
into the driver's seat in the
race with a 7H7 deciston
over Ball State.

R1o Grande
IO'IIF- rnm Volarlch, Malone
F- Greg James, Rio Grande
- - ''

Russell stays awhUe, then turns to leave but Lasorda stops
him.
"Where ya going'" the Dodger manager hollers at his
shortstop " It's early yet."
Russell lingers a few more minutes and then when Lasorda
becomes preoccupied, he walks out quietly .
The ne1t player IAl come In Is Dave Stewart, a first-year
pitcher. He has been in pro ball three years and just turned 21 a
few weeks ago. His problem is Utat he has no Ue-in with any
sporting goods company for gloves or shoes
"Laave 1t to me," Lasorda says IAl him . "I'll see that you get

one."

Central, on the other hand
made 35 of 50, good enough
for the win although it was
outgoaled from the field 52-37.
"I'm proud of the way we
played," said NichQ!s "Our
kids never gave up , never
qu11 battling Our foul
shootmg the second half ( 211) hurt us badly. It's a
shame it had to end that way.
I've probably never had a
tougher loss."
Central Coach Dick Parfitt,
"exhausted" from the long
afternoon, 8ald, "it's a shmne
1tknucked them (Toledo) out.
Miami has to lose at home to
Eastern to help e1ther of us
and I guess there's not much
chance of that."
Parfitt described the marathon as "a war," adding, "the

ALL-MOC BASKETBALL SELECTIONS
FIRST TEAM
POS-PLAYER-TE AM

"I don't lie,'' Lasorda insists. ''I tell the truth ''

,,

Eastern girls claim
sectio,n al cage title

gals claim
cage meet
Coal Grove's gtrls advanced to the Class A District
Tournament at Chillicothe
Saturday mght by defeatmg
Kyger Creek's girls, 42-35, 1n
the championship game at
Cheshtre.
In the first quarter both
teams had trouble finding the
hasket as the quarter ended 62 In favor of the Hornets
The Hornets, who had good
height, took control of the
offensive boards durmg the
second period "f play and
outscored the Lady Bobcats
14-9
KC played well defensively,
but had problems connectmg
from the outside, causing
their offens1ye game strategy
to weaken .
The third period belonged
to the Hornets as they contin~ed to control both boards
and outscormg the Lady
Bobcats 16-10.
The Lady Bobcats lrted
hard to come back dunng the
final nenod of olay as they
outscored the Hornets 14~ .
During the fourth quarter,
the Lady Bobcats' press
caused several turnovers, but
the team's effort was too late.
Lady Bobcat Vicki Stroud
led all scormg with 15 points
In a losing ca"se. Mary
Rollins had 9; Judy Darst 5,
Gloria Amos 4 and Sherry
Harnson added 2 m t he Lady
Bobcats scoring
Debb1e Spence led the
Hornets w1th 12.
The Hornets w1ll meet Zane
Trace Wednesday, March 8,
at 8 p. m. at Chlihcothe Htgh
School.

star wa s surpnsed Sunday
when the game was stopped
at the 9· 43 mark of the ftrst
quarter after he sank the first
of two free throws m Boston's
··:· ::' •''• ,,•,•.
112-94 win over the New York
Krucks
The
occasion
was
Havlicek 's 26,000th career
po mt, a mark Havlicek did
not kno~ he had reached.
"I'd on 't really keep up wtth
those thmgs," sa1d the NBA's
Oh1o H1gh School
Uurd leading a!Wme scorer
Basketball
Girls Results
I · an d
I Cham he ram
he hin d WIt
Umled Press International
class AAA
Oscar Robertson . "I knew I
was close but I d•dn't read
(AI Dover)
anyt.hmg before the game. E L1verpool 64 Cambridge 41
When I went to the line, I
At Hubbard
didn't know until someone m ~~~~~~t~rn Mooney 56 West
the crowd yelled '26,000."'
Poland 44 Austlntown Fitch
The game was stopped as 33
the 1~~407 f'\IJ,S , gave ~im. a" ,
I AI~~~~ t!kel
\ lf.'o-mmute standmg 0\f;t:~M ~utAvon 74 Cle Cathedra t Latin
"af.d playllrs lfrom both smes 40
offered handshakes. The ball Columbia 38 Elyria Cath 36
was taken from the game and
saved.
After the uproar, Havlicek
sank the second free !brow
for his seventh and final •pomt
of.the gaine. '
"That would have been a
great longshot het (in 1962)
NEW YORK (UP!) - All
that I would score 26,000
Muhammad
All can do now is
pomts," said Havhcek after
the game. "I wasn't known as walt and hope that new
heavyweight champioo Leon
a{l offem:ave player commg
£rom OhiO State I never Spmks beats Ken Norton.
Ali made a game attempt to
thougl1t I was a bad shooter
rally public support hehind
but that was U1e rap I got .
"I was known as a him m h1s quest for a rematch
delenslve player when I came w1th Spmks but all he
mto the league but over the succeeded m doing in h1s
nationally televised "fireside
years that changed "
Havlicek has played an chat " Saturday was to
NBA record of 1,249 games. provide entertainment for his
fans and a ratings boost for
CBS-TV.
All, who would much prefer
to fight Spmks again rather
Saturday
than Norton a fourth time,
Ohio CoJiege .
will he promised ftrst shot at
Basketb.a II Results
the
winner of the SpmksUnited Press International
Norton fight in May or June,
Ohio Sta te 83 Wisconsin 78
Dayton 66 Notre Dame 59
when formal contracts are
Bowling Green 87 Eastern negotiated 10 San Diego on
Mich 59
Tuesday.
Miami 7~ Ball St 67
" I wilt definitely promise
Central M1ch 109 Toledo 107
15 oil
that we w1U g1ve Ali fll'st shot
Northern Il lino is 76 Ohio Univ at the tlUe m September if
70
Kent Sf 76 Western M1ch 71 Kenny heats Spinks," said
Bob
Biron,
Norton's
Metro 7 Tournament
Louisville 94 Florida State 93 manager. "That 's exactly

Price averaged 51.2 percent,
good for e1ghth place in the
conference.
James, a two-year letterman from Bidwell, led the
Mid-Ohio Conference in
rebounding this winter. On
the year (26 games) he
totaled 312, good for an
average of 12 per game.
Other Rto players finishing
high in the MOC statistiCS this
winter were Dan Btse, first in
f1eld goal percentage (75 of
124 for 80 4 percent) and
Mark Swam, mnth 1n scoring
With 392 pomts, good for 14.5
per game.

Girls tournament
results

Archie Aldridge scored 26
points, including 14 of 16 free
throws, as the Redskins also
took advantage of Ute free
throw lme
Miam1 was outscored from
the held by Ball State, 26-22,
but had a 30-15 advantage at
the charity stripe.
Bowling Green stayed alive
In the race with an 87-li9 win
over-- Eastern Michigan, with
Duane Gray's 21 points
leading the way.
The Falcoos scored the
first 14 pomts of the second
half to break open what had
been a close first half. Ron
Hammye added 17 points for
Bowling Green .
In another MAC coolest,
Kent State wound up a dismal
season on a h1gh note with a

RIO GRANDE REDMEN
PLAYER
Ht. Yr. Pos .
Gil Price
4Hi 4 F
Greg James
6-4 2 F
~ 4 c
Skipper Johnson
Dan Purcell
~ 3 G
~ 3 G
Mark Swain

"Operation Kansas City/'
phase two, will unfold at Rio
Grande College's Lyne
Center at 8 this evening when
Coach Ali Lanham's Redmen
take on Vlsitmg Wilmmgton
College in a first round
District 22 NAJA tournament
contest.
The Redmon completed
11
phase one" last week by
captunng the Mid-Ohio
Conference post-season
tournament.
By defeating Wilmington
tonight and Defiance or
Central State Wednesday,
Rio Grande will earn Its first
trip to the national finals in
Kansas City, Mo. m 24 years.
Tonight's semifinal contest
with the Quakers should be a
thriller all the way. Coach
Lanham said, "Wthnlngton is
very strong on the boards."
The Quakers' Tim Wilson,
6-5 senior forward from
Wilmmgton, Ohio, led
District 22 in total rebounds
durtng the 1977-78 campaign.
He, along Wlth Rio's Gil
Price, were named to the
NAJA District 22 Dream
Team last week.
Rio, for the first time this
winter, is ready physically
according to Lanham. Injuries, flu and other
problems forced Lanham to
juggle his lineup from game-

t AI Minford)

Basketball

Boys Results

IAI Greenfield l

United Pre'ss l~lernallona I
Class AAA
!At Columbus)

28

Spinks will meet

Norton this spring
what we want, towm the tiUe
and then beat Ali again.
Nothing would please us
more."
"If Spinks heats Norton,
we'll put on the Spinks-Ah
light in September," said
Butch Lewis, vice-president
of Top Rank.
Spinks, too, would prefer to
fight Ali first for $5 million
rather Utan risk his tiUe
against Norton for $1 million
and personally feels Ali deserves fll'st crack at winning
back the title, but the 24-yearold from St. Louis has told
Top Rank to go ahead and
negotiate with Norton.
CBS holds a contract with
Top Rank for $1.55 million for
Spmks' first tiUe defense
against anyone but Ali. Top
Rank had hoped to match
Spinks agaiast a lesser
fighter than Norton and put
All and Spinks together for
$10 million in the fall, but the
WBC Insisted Norton be
offered the ftrst shot.

regular season.
Lanham said the Redmen
are "mentally ready" for
tonight's big game. "We must
keep the momentum going
our way. We can't let them
control the tempo of the
game," Lanham continued.
The Quakers will go with a
zone defensively. "Our quickness may be the big difference," Lanham added.
Rio, 20-7 overall, will be
shooting for 1ts 14th straight
victory in Lyne Center this
winter. Wilmington enters
tonight's game with a 15-11

•
•'
'

C::ol Linden McKinley 64 Col
Westland 48
Col Walnut Ridge 55 Grove

City 47

(At Cleveland)
Cle St Ignatius 76 Parma 57
East Cle Shaw 80 Cle John
Adams 77
(AI lorain)
Lorain King 65 Westlake 58

(AI Bowling Green)
Findlay 66 Ashland 65
!At Canlonl

Canton

Timken 74
McKin ley 70 lot)

I AI Marietta l
Miami Trace 41 Chillicothe 40
IAI Copley)
Akron Centra i-Hower
Barberton Q

77

IAn.tedol
Tol Scott 53 Tol St Francis 48
(A!Struthers)
Youngs Mooney 56 Youngs

Wilson 4&lt;1

Class AA
I At Alhensl
Portsmouth 56 Washington
Coull House 54 loll
(At Steubenville!
W Holmes 56 River Local 51
Bellaire 46 Dresden Trl.

Valley 45
I At Toledo)
Genoa 72 Holland Springfield
47
!At Ada)
Ottowa Glandorf 54 Lima
Bath 4&lt;1
!At Ashland&gt;
Clear Fork 63 Wynford 55
Cllss A
(AI Canton!
Norwayne 48 O.lton AJ
Southington 86 Lap-range

Keystone 55
Sebring 71 Windham 60
IAI Ashland)
Mansfield Sl Peter
Greenwich S Central 4&lt;1

83

ORLANDO, Fla (UP\) McLendon :;a1d he was
puttmg so hadly when the
PGA tour was on lhe West

Pomeroy

••

~

•

77

Notre

'

Dame und

Mdrn representutivt!
l.ou•sv111e { 22~) again.&lt;! St
John's m TuiSII, Okla ., U1at
day
West - Puclfle Elghl
champi on UCLA. 24-2,
u~nmst Kansas a nd Bi~ Sky
representative We ber Stnte
(19-9) agam&lt;t Arkunsas ( 283) ln Eugene, Ore , un March
ll; Wes t Coast Athletic
Co nfere nce champi on Sa n
Francisco ( 22-51 uga in sl
No1·th Carolina and Western
Athlct1e Conference chump
New Mex:u.:n (24-3) u~uinst
F'ullertun State 1n Tempt! ,
Ani'. , March ll

Sur v1vMs of the s ub ..
advance to
the1r respec tive rcgimwls In
P1·ov 1dence, lU , Dayton,
Ohio, Lawrence, Kun , and
Albuquerque, N M , the
followm);! week .
The National Invitati on
Tournament also anuuunct..od
opcntng-round (Hilrl ngs of
Utah State 121-61 vs .
Nebraska , Temple (21-4 1 vs.
Texas ( 22-S ). G eo r~ c lown
(21-6) vs Virgmia (20-7),
Army (19-8) vs Hutgers ( 216). Fairfwld ( 22-4) vs , DayliKI
118-9), Illinois St. {:&gt;.:l-:1) vs
lnd1ana St (21-8), Virginia
Cnmmonweallh 124-41 vs . Detroit 124-31 and South
Carolma ( 16-11) vs . North
Carolina St (18-9 ).

" I Utree-putted 21

after an upemng 65 , faded t.o
elghl·under
at
the
tournament's end

greens m

two different tournaments,"
sa1d the lanky Alabaman So
he took a week off and went w
wnrk on his puttmg, cha ngmg
h1s stance completely.
I
I It worked.
McLendon, 32, had no
three-putts durmg the enure
C1trus Open and won the
NBA Slandmgs
$200,000 tournament by two
By Un1ted Press International
strokes
Sunday for the th1rd
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Dlln510n
VICtory m a career that
W L Pet
GB
started in 1968
Phda
43 20 68 3
New York
34 "N $40 9
"This is Without question
Boston
24 37 393 18
the
best putting I've ever
BufHilo
2 1 41 339 7 1 ' :~
he said after
New Jrsey
16 48 250 211 2 dune,"
Central DIVISIOn
pocketmg the $40,000 first
W L Pet
GB
pnze - ·10 times more than
San An ton
39 24 619 wa sh
34 29 540 5
he'd won so far Uus season
C!ev!and
3 1 JJ 484
911 He had missed three cuts and
Atlan!a
3 1 34 477
9
New Orlns
3 1 35 470 91 :~ h1s hest lmish was only a tie
Hou ston
24 41 369 16
lor 13th at Phoemx
We stern Conference
He put together rounds of
Midwest DI~'I!.IOn
W L- Pet
GB 69~~ for a total of 271 Denver
40 24 625
17-under-par on the 7,012M i! w
33 Jl 516 1
ChiC: ago
33 32 SOB
71 2 yard Rw Pinar Country Club
Dctro1t
30 33 476 9' ~
Kan Ctty
24 39 381 15' , course, where the second
Indiana
23 40 365 161:1 round was delayed a day by
P8CifiC 01\.'ISIOM
rain, lorctng golfers to play 36
W L Pet. GB
holes Sunday
Porlland
52 11 625 Phoen •x
39 25 609 131 1
McLendon was up '"th the
Los Ang
34 29 540 18
sun,
shot a 69, changed to a
seattle
'3 4 30 53 1 l81 •
hghter sweater and came
Golden Sf
29 34 460 23
Saturday's Results
nght back out for h1s 68,
Portland 105, Cleveland 100
taking a two-stroke vtctory
Bulfalo 111 , New Jersey 107
New York 99, Boston 9 1
over
Australian David
New Orlns II J, Sea llle 104
Graham, who had rounds of
Denver 123, Kan Ct ly 114
Sunday's Results
73 and 66 Sunday
Boston 112, New York 9.4
Former Texas Longhorn
New Jersey 109, Bulfa lo 103
teammates Tom K1te and
Allanta 10 1. Se attle 94
San An toniO 98, New Ortn s 97
Ben Crenshaw, who shared
washmgton 106, Hou slon 88
the NCAA title m 1972,
Detroit 122, lnd •ana 110 •
Ch1cago 96 Golden State 95
fm1shed at 14 under, three
Ph1la 104, Phoen1x 92
strokes off the pace
Portland 126, MilwauKee 88
Los Ang 128, Cleveland 117
Hale Irwm was four strokes
Monday's Game
hack and Howard Twitty.
lnd 1ana at Kansas Ctly
George Burns and Bruce
Tuesday's Games
Houston at New York
Lietzke were sue strokes
Detroit at Atlanta
hehmd McLendon, a steady
Portland at New Or lns
New Jersey at San Anton to
golfer who has been among
Phoenix at Denver
the tnp 60 money wmners
1975
smce
lnternationa I
Arnold Palmer, who had a
Hockey League
Un1ted Press lnternat1ona I
share of the first-round lead
North
w II pis. gf ga
Saginaw 32 21 9 73 293 225

McLendon sald he workL&lt;I
on h1s puttmg wlth h1s
leachmg pro, Jimmy Ballard,
who changed h1s stance.
" lt was something that was
extremely diff•cult for me 10
do, " McLendon said.
But hiS putts started falling
1n the pru..am Wedncsduy and
"I never went back to try to
do what I used to do. Hell, 1
ain't ever played like that 1n
my life

" I had no three-putts, a nd I
had under :m putts every
day"
By wmmng w1th 17-undcr,
he sa1d he had gamed new
confidence m his carer as 1t
enters liS second decade
' 'The lowest score 1
shot hefore was· a 12-under
It 's been a real stumbling
block to me . I alway • won
most of my money on very
tough courses when the
scores weren't real low ."

Mike Swi!'r
992-7155

1" 5 . Third 51
Middleport, 0

.,· ;

J

"See me for car, borne,'
life, health and business
insurance!'
. ... .....
" """'"'

r

~~' '~
r~~"~

~l j !f ~ II III lhl~ 10 1! I &lt;II&gt; 1 ., ~ I

!l!m• flll•t • ~ 81titi.,,n~I OII lllmv,,

DISTRIBUTORSHIP -----,
WILL NOT INTERFERE WITH PRESENT
EMPLOYMENT
NO SELLING REQUIRED
We are selecting distributors for fast moving products
In Pomeroy, Middleport and surrounding counties
These products publicized In newspapers, TV,
magazines, ett.
Twenty year old company will place products in
grocery , department, drug stores, suptr markets, gift
shops, etc. Distributor will service these retail outlets
monthly, requiring approximately 20 hours spare time
per month. CPA reports $99 and up possible profit per
day. Figure lhe IncOme vou desire per month. Each
location requires$200 investment. You may have 25, JO
or 35 locations . Company secures locations and Installs
products for you,
Th1s is a bonafide offer and if you are not sincere about
owning your own business, or do not meet the above
financial requirements, let's not waste each other's
t1me

FOR PERSONAL CONFIDENTIAL INTERVIEW.
CALL
Mr. Russ Coletti, Parkersburg, J04 ·422 -5 401 Today thru
Wednesday- 9 a.m. lo 9 p.m ., S.E. I.. CUMMING, GA .
(near Atl•nla~ .

Jl

1

I

L------------------------1

28 23 11 67 242 250

25 24 13 63 246 229
Fllnf
27 27 8 62 288 300
Muskeodn '
, 22 32 9 53 219 236
South

•

IAI Flndllyl

We
need all
..
you can
spare.

The U.S. Capitol contains a
nondenominational room
lor meditation and prayer
located off the rotunda.

.

I

MEIGS-MASON AREA

CHE8TERLTANNEHILL

Exec.""

ROBERT HOEFUCH
CM~"""""

Published dally except Saturday
by The Ohlo VaUey Publlalllng
Company-MulUmedll, Inc , Ill

Court St, Pomeroy, Ohlo 45768.
Bua:Uiell Offk."e Phone 192- 2156
Edltolill Phone vrJ.2157.
1
Second due pustqe p11d at
Pomeroy, Ohio
~

taUve W1rd • Grtftllll Compqy
Inc, BotUrielll and Gtllqher Div.~

Reel Cross

757 Third Ave., Ntw Yortr: 1 NY.

'
Dollv""' by
a.l"l1er where nalllble 'll cent1 per
week. By M.u.- Roule Whlrti canier
.eervlce not. aviDI.hil, One month,
JUI 8)' mill in Ohio and W V1.,
fAie YNr, ~.DO, Slz """""'·
Sll.50; Three monlhl, f7.00;
Ellewhere • 011 yur; Sil mom.hl
$13.50; Three montba, fl ao.
~J:.r' lnd- Sundoy

agamst

.'•

Ka lamazoo

Marion Local 50 New Bremen
40

N1U001l 1dvertlllng

Providence and the Mid·
American rhamplon 1 which
has not been dec1ded, agamst
Marquette on March It at
Indianapolis ; Ohio Valley
Conference representative
Weste rn Kent ucky l 15-15 I
ugamst
Syrac use and
Southeastern Cunrer cnce
champiOn, No. 1 Kentucky
(24-2 lagainst Flonda Sta te m
Knoxville, Tenn .. March l 1.
Midwest - Big Eight re.
presrntative Missouri, ut 14·
15 the on ly tournament leum
with u losmg record, .tgah1..,t
Utah a nd Missouri Valley
Con ference
c hampi o n,
Crel~hton (19-8 ), aga mst
DePaul m Wichita, Kan ..
March 12; Houston [25-7)

Port Huron

(At Columbus)
Col Ready 80 Morral
Ridgedale 72
!At O..yton)
Bethel 84 New Miami 66
Cin Lockland 72 Anna 63
Yellow Springs 7A Triad 64
(At Etldal
Ottoville 67 Kalida 57
IAI Napoleon)
Stryker 50 Montpelier 45
IAI Lima)

'111E DAILY SENT!NEL
DEVOO'EOTOTHE
INTEIIl!BT OF

Coast earlier th1.s year, "I
JUst ca n't descnbc 1t "

r------------,
l Pro
l
:Standings I

aq
by
and
the
and
up

A Public Sel"i1Ce of Th1s Newspaper &amp; The Advertls1 ng Counctl ~

•
I

~

Mac

UP FOR GRABS - Four players reach for loose ball in this a chon photo of Saturday's
Eastern-Southern girls champwnshtp basketball game. Eagle gals are Teresa Hannan (55!
~~~~~~~==~-~an:d~Li~'~ta~Y~o~un~g~(~54~)~.So~u~th~ern girls are Carla Teaford ( 11) and Jaye Ord (20 ).
99 2-2 143

.. ·..

Conference.
Tw o
Top-10
teams,
seventh -ranked Depaul
125·21
a nd
lOth·
ranked
Notre
Dame
( 19-0), were named to the
Midwest reg1onal along with
Utah I 23-0) and ECAC Metro
champion St John 's.
Indiana (20-71, wiU be in the
East Reg1onal aioog w1th
LaSalle 118-11 ). ECAC
St
Upstate chumpinn
R(JOavenature (2 1-7) and
Rhode Island (24~ ). wh1ch
upset Provldenc'&lt; Saturday to
take Uie ECAC New England
title
East - Duke from tbe
Atlantic Coast Conferen ce
( 23~) agamst Rhode Island
a r1d Suuthern champion
Furman ( 17-10 ) ugamst
Indiana Ma rch 12 in •
Charlotte , N.C.; Ivy l .ea~ ue
champion Penn 119-7) agamst
St. Bonaventure and Eastern
E1ght winner Villa nova (2 1~)
agamst LaSa Uc March 12 111
Philadelphia
Mideast - R1g 10 champion
Mlchigan Slate (23-4 ) agamst

a ca reer high 29 pomts
to spark the Bruins
to a 96-70 victory ove r
M1ch1gun, 1n a gnme wh1ch
had no bearmg on the NCAA
tournament .
J o inin g independent
Marquette, 24-3 , in the
Mideast Reg10na l were
Syracuse ( 22-li ), Providence
124-7) and Metro Co11fenmce
Champion Flonda State ( 235)
Florida State was one of
f1ve
regular
season
conference winners to merit a
selection and one of four.
which lost its PDst-season
tournament North c.Hrohna ,
Kansas and Ark;m~as also
lost m tournament play but
won NCAA btds The other
conferem.-e wmncr added was
East
Coas t champion
LaSalle.
Tile West Regional boasts
three Top-10 teams ; No 4
Arkansa s (28-3 ), No 5
Kansas (24-4 ) and No 9 North
Caroima (23-7 ) Jommg them
is Fullerton Stale 12H!) of the
Pacifi c Coast Athletic

l'cgwnals w11l

01e thing you can do Is to
support
prograr.ns
prov1d1ng stiffer penalt1es
for
wrongdoers
and
proposals for strengthened
crime invesflgatJon efforts.

102 w. Main

United Press International
Defendwg
nauonal
champ10n and third..-anked
Marquetle heads the field of
16 teams selected Sunday fnr
at-large berths 1n the annual
NCAA basketball
tournament, but Texas was
bypassed despite ns 22-5
record.
"You can ask why did th1s
team make it or why didn't
that team," sa•d R1g 10
01mnusswner Wayne Duke ,
whn headed the Six-member
selection conunittee. " It was
the subjective JUdgment of
the committee. It's never
easy selecting teams in the
at-large category ''
In the only games played
Sunday , R1ck Apke hit on a
JUmp shot w1th two seconds
remammg w g1ve Cre•ghwn a
54-52 v1ctory over Ind1ana
State and the M1ssour1 Valley
Conference champwnship,
and
guard
Raymond
Townsend , plaYJng his fmal
home ~arne for second·
ranked UCLA, scored

captures
Citrus Open title

DALE C. WARNER
' INS.

Arcadia 68 Van Buren 59

Canton

Insurance costs are
versely
affected
burglaries, robberies
car tnetts
plus
countless CB rad1os
b icyc les that turn
missmg

.

,I

Mc~endon

Our agency
provides
financia l protect1on and
serv1ce when cnme losses
occur .. but many can be
prevented . That's why we
say ..-:- Qreven119n IS .the
best 1101icy.

Admission Is $2 for students
and $3.50 for adults. Coach
Lanham pointed out c!nce
again the admission prices
are set by the national office,
and not Mid-Ohio Conference
or Rio Grande College officials. "This is part of the
national meet," Lanham
SBld.
Tonight's contest will begin
at a o'clock and not 7:30 as
previously aMounced.
Winner of tonight's game
will battle Central State or
Defiance on Wednesday at
the Site of the team wiUt the
best record.
Winner of Wednesday's tilt
will advance to the national '
finals in Kansas City, slated
March 13-18.

Eastern Pike 59

Southern C40) - R1tctlhart
2 0·4 , Roseberry 8 3 19 , Ord
2 5 9 , Smith 2 2 6, Carnahan
0 2 2 Totals 14-12-40.
Eastern (42) - Batey 4·3
11 , Wmdon 4-2 10 : Weber 2 3
7, Sot den 1 0 2; Hannan 2 P4 ,
Young Q. J. J • Mllhoa ne 3 0 6 .
McClure Q. J. J Totals 16-10 42 .
By Quarters
13 15 26 35- 42
Eastern
Sou thern
4 15 27 35- 40

You can also make rt
tougher for crooks Use
good strong locks Mark
possessions w1th your
social secunty number

season record.

(At Chlfllcoltlel
Leesburg
Fairfield

seconds rema ming and a last
second shot by Sout hern
m1ssed 1ts mark.
Eas(ern showed fme team
work and poise as they
donunated the boards most of
the way. Baley led her team
m scoring with eleven points
while Windon added ten. Vtda
Weber added seve n trn·
portant ta llies. Eastern sank
10 of 18 free tbrows.
Roseberry led the losers
With 19 points to take the
mght's scormg honors, but no
other Tornadoette hit double
ligures Ord added mne whtle
the team managed 12 of 19
foul shots
Bnx score :

Take the cnme of arson
You're pay1ng an 1n
creaslngly heavy subsidy
for deliberately set fires
through your insurance
prem1ums .

Boys tournament
results

S Webster 59 Eastern {Pike
Frankfort Adena 42 N Adams

WILMINGTON QIJAKERS
Yr. HI. Player
4 &amp;-:; Tim Wilson
3 ~ Vince Bibbs
I ~ Chris Tucker
I Ii-I Kev O'Dell
4 G-1 Mike Piehuta

durir1g most .of the

Saturday
Ohio High School

with the lead see-sawing back
and forth until regulation
time ran out with the score all
knotted up at 35 all.
In the overt ime, Southern
drew first blood as Roseberry
sank a foul shot wlth 2:42
rema101ng . Center Becky
Windon of the Eagles, who
had controlled the boards a ll
mght, ex1ted with her f1flh
foul on that personal. Jumor
Janis
Carnahan
gave
Southern a three point lead
when she sank two foul shots
w1th 2:11 to go, but the neversay-&lt;l!e Eagles came ba ck
when Hannum sank her two
buckets JUSt l wenty seconds
apart to regam the lead 39-38
for the Eagles wnh I :20
remaming .
Ord netted two at the 1·00
mark to gtve Southern Its laSt ,
lead, 40-39, and then Baley
came through to smk two of
her foul shots to g1ve the
Eagles the edge 41-40. She put
the Icing on the cake when
she sank another with just :09

You can help cu t down on
crime losses . losses that
d~re cf ly
affect
you ,
whether they hap~n to you
or not.

TIPOFF TIME-:- 8 p.m.

Campbell
Memor~al
55
Springfield Local 26
BeaVer Local S5 Southeast 40

Co) 31

best polity. • •
FOR CURBING
CRIME LOSSES

GAME SITE-L.flle Center

Class AA

42

Prevention is the

Tunlgbt's Probable Starlen

IAI Canfield)

. Eastern (Meigs Co)
Southern (Meigs Co) .tO

76-71 win over Western
Michigan. Burrell McGhee
scored 22 points and reserve
Fred Hauck added 21 to lead
Ute Golden Flashes.
AI Dayton, the Flyers
shocked 12th ranked Notre
Dame, &amp;l&gt;li9, behind 23 points
by Erv Giddings and 22 by
Jim Paxson.
TheFlyers,nowl8-9, had to
battle back from a fouriJOlnl
deficit late in the game after
seeing an eightpolnt second
hall lead go down the drain.
Trailing 54-50, The Flyers
went on a 10-2 burst, paced by
4Hi freshman Jim Rhoden,
who scored all six of his
points during that stretch.
That gave Ute Flyers a 6046
lead with I: 40 IAl go and they
were able to hold on.

Rio set for
NAJA opener

~:~;;:~:~;~~~

Closs A
(At Glouster)

By Greg BaDey
offense and raced out to
Two field goals by sub- a 13
4 lead at
stitute Teresa Hannum and I he end of the quarter .
three foul shots by Kim Batey A balanced scoring attack by
accounted for aU seven pomts the winners led to that first
in an overtime Saturday penod surge and proved a big .
night to enable the girl cagers factor m the whole game and
of Eastern High School to the VIctory.
down Southern 42-40 in the
But in the second canto,
Sect10nals at Trimble High Southern ;tot untracked and
School. Along with that win found the range as Cheryl
came the Secl1onal Class A ROse berry and freshman
crown and a trip to District Tammy Smith netted four
comeptihon at Chillicothe on pomts apiece whtle Jaye Ord
March 8. Eastern will play sank three foul shots.
the winner of the Portsmouth Southern's defense held the
Sectional at 6:30. Finals are Eagles to just two points on
slated for Friday to deter- foul shots in that period as the
mme who goes onto Regional half ended in a 15-15 tie.
play.
Eastern's K1m Batey and
It looked like Eastern was Southern's Ord each p1cked
going to run away wlth the up three fouls m that first
contest In the ftrst period as hall.
they stymied the Southern
In the third period, both
teams •' got · their offense
moving with Eastern holding
the lead most of the way .
That penod ended 27-26 m
favor of Southern. In the last
quarter it was mp and tuck

Defending champion Marquette
heads field in NCAA playoffs

10017
SUbocrl- ,...,,

•

is counting

on you.

,,

Fl. Wayne
Toledo
Mllw

w I 1 pts . gt ga

29 17 13 71 225 221
23 23 14 60 243 238
19 28 14 52 192 222

Grand Raptds

21 31

TOP SCORER ~ Southern's Sheryl Roseberry (22)
drives for two of her game-high 19 pomts in Saturday's
Class A championship game. Eastern won, 42-40. Trailing
play Is Eastern's Kim Batey, who tallied 11 points.

9

51 228 253

Sa turday's Results
Muskegon 7, Mllwaukee 3
Port Huron 7, Flint 5
Grand Rapids 7, Toledo 7
• (tie)
Sunday's Results
Fort Wayne 5, Sagmaw 2
Port Huron 4, Flint 4 (tie)
Grand Rap1ds s, Muskegon
Toledo I, Kalamazoo o
Today's Games
No games scheduled
Tuesday's Games
No games scheduled

YOU'LL FIND
ALL AT THE

FRIENDLY
ONEI

Are you a member of

'"" do-lt-yoursolf oet 7

BOSTON (UPI) - John
Havlicek, Ute thlrd4eading
scorer in National Basketball
Assoc1atmn history, scored
his 26,000th point Sunday m
Ute first penod of the Boston
Celt1cs' game against the
New York Knicks.
The 37-year-old Havlicek
trails only Wilt Chamberlain
and O::iCar Robertson in
career pomts.
Havlicek, who wlll reur~ at
the end of this season, hts
16th, has played more NBA
games than any other player,
1,249.

If _,, w•lcom• to the
loc:al '-dquerten for
vour buiklino end ,..

,.

n••d• .

mod•ling
.,. FTt.ndly OMI

•

•

•

() HWI

Mo

'''""" POMEROY CEMENT BLOCK CO.

Th~ Department Store of Building Since 1915

992·5500 or 992-5100
.,

'

.'

�NHL St•ndl nos
By Unittd ,Prtss lnttr,afla nil l

4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 .. Monday. Mar. 6. 1978

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
: Green
/i~
:
••
••• Thumb
••
••
•
•
••• Notes
•••
•• A weekly fe.ature Meigs
•
• Counly Garden Club members.
o(

•

FOR EVERYONE WHO LOVES A GAHDEN
By Mrs. Lois Ann Walker
Rutland Friendly Gotrd en~rs
The garden of Eden was said lu cuntam "every lrt!e that is
pleasant to the ~i~ht and good for fuod ."'
Alllllrough the ages. gardens have been the symbol of fertility and loveliness. The Han~ ing Gardens of Babylon so
astonished travelers that.they were ran ked as oneur the Seven
Wonders of the World . Even before the days of Eu ropean horticulture, ancient Mexican ga rdens were w&lt;1lcrcd Uy
aqueducts and their nowcrs scicntifit·HIIy aJTan~cd .
Gardens are our privalc rerug,cs 1 where .we t:an satisfy our
need for beauty , tranquillity and achievcammt. They are
worlds of nature we help tu create, tending plants, we share
with the sun 1 the rain, and the soil the task of transforming an
area of earth into leaf and blossom.
The successful gardener - the one who reaps a bounty or
these satisfactions - undcrswnds basic prind ples. and can
adapt himself to changing t'Ondilions. He nec&gt;d nol b&lt; an expert.
Emerson culled his garden "an honest" plal:c" wht:l't:! c v~ry
tree and vine told by its Hppearancc what treatinenl it had
receiVed .
And Kipling wisely wrote :

"Such gardenti are not made
By singing, "Oh, How Beautiful !•
And sitting in the sl1ade.""

r=::.-:::::.;~,$-.«-,,,,,,~&lt;~~;,;;~:,:,:;&gt;.::::~-

CHOICES
Karen Blaker PhD.
Clinging vine
DEAl! DR. BJ.AKEJI - I
have been going with the
same boy lo1· fiv e years . People a1·e always joking about
ou r relationship, but I honestly don 't understqnd the puint
they an: trying to make .
for example, last week I

was wurking on our high
school yea rbook with my
girlfri end. She showed me a
pidure of my boyfriend and
me with the caption. ··The
Hind weed and the Tree. •• She
wO:Js jok ing t~ bout putting it in·

the book.
I la ughed but I didn 't
w1dcrstand the humur . I was
afraid to ask. Maybe you
know . What is a Uindwccd?
DEAH HEADE H - A bindweed i.s ::~ Vine that grows wHtl
i n the ,fure.st. It scek,s ou t a

t.O:tll , strong tree ami Wraps

itself •round the trunk as it
climbs toward the light. The
bindweetl nourishes - but in
the process it even tually kill s
the lrec by cutti ng off its supply uf food and light.

Grande Chorale begins Florida tour
HIO GRANDE -

The

Grande Chorale from

Rio

•

Grande College and Community Cullege has ft)Und a
way to get away from the
snow. The 16 member gro up,
under the direction of Merlyn
Ross. begins a ten tour day
Florida concert tour, March
5.
Hi~hli ght
or the 14
scheduled performances will
be an a ppearance Marc h 9 on

Formula
or Success
XL-7S

the Fantasy Fair stage al
Disneyworld. The Cho rale
will also sing in Lakeland.
Bartow, Tampa, Clearwater
and Cypress Gardens.
According to Ross, the
group wiJl perform both
sacred and American musi c
·concertS for churches, high

school groups and service
clubs.
Composed of students who
earned the right lo sing with
lhe
Chorale
through

In your rd~tiunslup with
your boyfriend , an~ you the
bindwectl or the Ire..,·?
DEAl! DH. BI.AKEH Two years ago my husband
had an arrai•· wit11 a neighbor.
In ihc aflcrmalh of the scandal ; she left town. I guess I
shuulll feel guud aga in alxiut
my husband aluJ my marriag~. but I Llun ' t.
I have a nagging suSJ&gt;icion I
c:au't trust him. I dvn't want
to get hur·t again.
DEAR READER - I can
lmdcrsland your need to proled yourself. But nmtinuing
to nurse your uld wounds proba~ly will not help.
In fact. your preocc upation
with the past may even set up
a situation whet'e you might
gel hm1 again . If your husOOml is aware uf your int~nse
suspidon - it 's a hard feeling
to hide ·· he might decide to
illl vc another affair. Arter all,
no matter how he ar:ls you in·
sis! hcis guilty.
·
If yuu wa nt tu give you r
marriage a chanec, give him
the benefit ur lhe doubt.
W';M! 1DR. B))AKER SOtncllliii:s thi Wl&gt;m n's Ji~
thing gets carried too far . l
read an article that says boys
gd more stimulation from
the nwment ~hey ctre bum
and llmrufure, have an advanta ge over girls in the
developmental process.
What co uld possibly happen
i11 the hospital. for example.
llml would he lp ~oys develop
faster than girl~?
DEAH HEADEII - Infa nts
arc usually wrappcd in
blankets i1runediately &lt;ifler
delivery - blue blankets for
boys and pink for girls. Herent research on newborn
babies'indic.:ates that Lllue is OJ
Inurc stiinulating color.
Write to Dr. Blaker in care
of this newspaper. P.O. Box
489. Hadio Cfty Station. New
Ym·k. N.Y. 100!9. Volume of
mail prohibits personal
replies, but questions of
generct l interest will be
discussed in future rolumns.

~

Helen Help

~
.::;

US • • •

By Helen Bottel

WHY DOES MARRIAGE CHANGE MEN?
BY HELEN HOTTEL
DEAR HELEN :
This is a case where marriage ruined a beautiful friendship.
I lived with Dave three years and we got along wonderfully.
Now we've peen married two years and he's as cold as ice.
Once every two months, obviously a hurry-up&lt;luty thing. is all
I can expect. He ignores me in between. I still look the same,
and I try to be laving but this only irritates him. I'm sure
there's no Other woman. How can a man change so radically?WONDERING ABOUT DIVORCE
.
DEARWON :
.
When a mate changes radically, you can be sure he's also
wondering. "Why is she so diCferent ?" You reel that you look
and acl as you did before marriage, but a letter (rom Dave
might tell another story. Does he reel trapped? Is he overworked or: overwurried ? Are there medicctl problems? What does he
resent about your relationship? Encourage honest talk nothing off-limits - and you may Jearn more about your husband than you have over the last five years.- H.
DEAR HELEN:
To women who fall in Jove with older men: have your ning,
but don't marry him. girl'
At 48 lle WeiS a real swinger, enough to turn any woman's
head, even if she was 21 years younger.
We had ten good years of marriage, but now he fancies
himself an old man. He sits before the TV set and won't stir
from home. All weekend, he wears nothing but pajamas,
though going to bed- with me- is out or the question. He retired
at 62 (but was semi-comatose several years before then ). My
met in job is to wait on him ; he isn't sick, just 'anti.''
He's bad-teffipered and demanding, overweight and old !
I'm now 42. H I gel a divorce, I'll be hurt financially as we
live in a ·•no alimony" state. Finding work will be very hard.
There's no hope of changing a man who insists he's through.
What can !do'· VICTIM OFA BAD CHOICE
·
DEAR VICTIM:
. Seems to me you're pretty anti too! Not only are you making
llttle errort to change your old-thinking husband, bul you won't
accept the alternative- a job and a different life for yourself.
Stop hunting excuses and start renovaiing. Your man haS
retired into TV· it is because he conSiders himsell"through."
Prove him wrong with, I. a doctor's examination; 2. a reducing diet; 3. new friends; 4. plans lor interesting trips; 5.
demonstrated love. Perhaps he feels like a. has-been because
you treat him as one. Alter all. 63 isn't ancient- not lor a fairly
healthy former swinger. Put your all into reviving your husband, and I doubt you'll need solution No. 2: the divorce you
fear may hamper your lifestyle. · H.
1

POLLYS POINTERS
Polly Cramer

Suds on synthetic marble
DEAR POLLY - Do you
have any suggestions at all on
bow to clean spots from a Cal
Marble coffee table' No one
seems to have an answer for
me.- GHACE
DEAR GRACE- I presume
this is a synthetic marble. I
have a synthetic marble vanity lop (a different make I and
the directions that came with
it warn against the use of
abrasiv e cleaners. One
should only use a household
detergent and hot water
Paste wax is recommended
for regular• use to maintain
the finish . Stains are to be
removed by the use or dry
fine sandpaper and water.
Then polish with a fine
polishing compound that can
be bought at most h~rdware
o1ores. You might testit on an
inconspicuous spot. - POLLY
DEAR POLLY - I would
like to recommend that the
overweight ladies buy maternity panty hose. These have
Jots or stomach and backside
room, too.- LEONA
DEAR POLLY - I have
three pre-schoolers and have
come up with a few things
that might help other young
mothers. When baby 's bottle
or food is too hot, just drop in
an iCe cube and stir it around
a bit. For bumps or minor
burns that need ice, use those
disposable bottle bags. Fill
with two or three ic-e cubes
and close with a twistie. As
\be ice melts it does not drip
out and more can be easily
atlded if needed. Alter a while
home-washed diapers start to
ran apart. Save them and sew
two together . Never throw
away ankle or knee-high

nylons as they are perlect for
little girls to wear when playing dress up. Every week f
cut up carrots, celery, apples,
etc. and put them in plastic
container s
in
the
refrigerator. When the
children want a snack they
ca n help themselves. This
saves me from· having to
prepare something every
day. -DIANA
DEAH POLLY- My calendar and address book work
overtime. At the beginning of
each new year I write all that
year's birthdays and anniversaries I want to remember in
red ink in the back of my address book and always carry
this in my purse. When I am
shopping I can pick up gifts or
. cards on the spur of the moment. I also find it handy lo
keep a list of all local zip
codes in my address book.
To prevent pi ct ure
negati-ves from piling up and
to simplify reprinting I keep
all nel=!atives in envelopes
marked with the months
there were taken . These
envelopes are filed in a four
by six inch metal file box with
the filing cards dated as lo
years. - MARY JD
DEAR POLLY - When fixing sort boiled eggs lor
breakfast, f put them in
warm water while waiting for
the water to boil. This usually
keeps them from cracking or
breaking.- MRS.R. W. · ·
Polly will send you one or
her signed thank-you
newspaper C!oupon clippers if
she uses yo ur favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her column. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

Women golfers plan new season

~I

1919,

JOHN LONGLEY

. Soct' a·I

SALEI10% OFF

Calendar

Senco • Oren • or
U.S. Fiber Insulation

PER BAG

MACHINE
RENTAL

'25

FOR MIDDLEPORT AREA

PHONE

PER

then

m nvt&gt; ct nn

to

Northwestern, Kansas Stale.
University o( Florida .
Michigan State and Hillsdale.
Jordan. 75. enjoyed his
~uccess
as
greatest
Amherst'st"Oach for 18 years,
where he was 76-42~. He then
took over. al Han'ard, where
he was 27-Jt-3. "He later was
president or the American
F&lt;lQtball Coaches Association
and served as CQmmissioncr
of the Southern Conference
before his retirement a few
years ago.

I

.

]6

l" i~ 17
12 31 11

Herman Koby . Ph . D.,
chairman or the Community
Mental Heallh Center Board.
today announced the appointment of two new board
members, Mrs. June Lee of
Syracuse , representing
Meigs County and Mr. John
Longley or Gallipolis,
representing Gallia County .
Mrs. Lee, holder or a
Master's Degree in Pupil
Personnel from Marshall
University, is presently
teaching Business OHice
Education and involved in
vocational guidance and job
placement counseling at the
Mctson Co unty Vocational

Pt.
Technlcal Center.
Pleasant. She is a member or
the Alpha Delta Kappa
Honorary Sorority for
Women Educators and the
American Association of
University Women . Mrs. 1..ee
was also the recipient of the
Jennings Scholar Program
Award to ·honor outstanding
classroom teachers in Ohio.
The ~ward is sponsored by
the ":'lartha Holden Jennings
Foundation in cooperation
with the Education Research
Council of America . Mrs. Lee
lives with her husband, Ar'chie Lee, in the Syracuse
area.

W,
2S
17
IJ

Chicago

vancou'Jer

d

1111

Norris Division
w . L.

14
18
10
6

8 utt1IO

tJ 14

~7

36 17 10

Cle\i'eland

HI

VAUGHAN'S

ardinal

55
61

48

:

I

88

8i
A1

11

Toronto 4, VAnCOU\i'N 3

44

wash J, St Lou is 3, t•c

.tO
34

[)(!trOll ] , M lnt'I('S(II8 1

Chicago a, Los Angeles 3

Sunday 's Resulh
NY tslndrs 3, PlUsbgh J . t•c

r.

Detro•t "· M•nnesolll l

Tofonto A, NY RMoer s 1

Ph iladelphia 7, 5 1 Louis 1
Boston 6 , V&amp;ncouvrr 3
Chicl'IQO 2~ 1, I if'

25199.59
11 57
12
1? 36

:m

EW FROM ZENITH.

COLOR
SENTRY
the automatic
picture control system!

1978 ;/'ll!'~'to't. SOLID-STATE

CARRIER OF THE WEEK is Tim Hysell, 1~. son of
Mr . and Mrs. Aaron Hysell. 304 West Main Street,
Pomeroy. Tim. a student at Meigs High School, has been a
carrier for The Daily Sentinel for two years . He loves
playing football .
·

CIHIIOM.A(OlOfliT
•.~.~::. giant-screen console TV

LeGrand . Mrs. Churlcne derwood, and Hev . William
Howard. Mrs. Rox ie Un - Middleswart h.

;&gt;;e nilh"s Color Sentry"- The Aulomatic Pl cluro
Control System -controls t~ e color pi c ture whon ll1o
scene changes. or the channe l changes. evon
when the 10om light changes.
The COR SIC A
J 2324P
Mortlwrranoun ·
styhnu Casturs
Druk Oak cCJ ior

.'

{H2526DEI ao
Pecnn color
(H 252flP). Wood

vene01s and

w. COMPTON;

solect hwdwood
solids on top .
Fron t, onds nnd
bnso ot simulnted
wood in
matc hing l in ist1.

SAVE '100

OPTOMETRIST

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

PRICE GOOD ·
WHILE SUPPLY LASTS

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VINYL VELVET •.. A vinyl w11ll covering with 11 be11utlful .aft etJIJihli!ll
fi nish. PtdnHng Is fast Hnd li!MY dna Woodwork Cllll be painted right along
wllh the WHits . S..,ve bl,ytng the exiTII p11lnl . Wat tul ble low Nfln
5hl'en. Appll eii easily, drl~ tn nne.half hnur. Equtpml'nl

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• 100% Solld·State Chassls
• Patented Power Se.ntry
Volta ge Regulating Systum
• One·Knob VHF and UHF

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tuners.

882-2525
NEW HAVEN, W. VA.

126 MAIN

Picture Tube

ELECTRONIC
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TUNING SYSTEM

SAYRE HARDWARE

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I
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O.D. :

N.

38

90

lHiinched cU\Iislon title
Saturday' s Resu lts
&amp;OSI9~ 1, 8ufftl0 l
NY ISindr s 6, PlllsDgh l
Montreal 7, P11il&amp;delphll 1
A!lllnt&amp; 9. Cleve t1nd 3

6$

Pts .
16 8 9 101
15 16 1? 6?

Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Hay, They also have a deceased
mond Kee);ee of Hysell Hun, son. Rolland T. Keesee. who
P01nei·uy ~ will celebratt! their wets killed in adiun in Kur·ea
50th wedding anniversctry on in 1950. Mr. and Mrs. Keesee
have 'll grandchildren and
Sunday,M•rch 12.
£our
great·gramkhildren.
Their children will host an
Mr.
Keesee is retired after
open house at the Keesee
having opemted tht! Ashlw1d
home from 2lo 4 p.m.
Married on March 12, 1928 Scrvice Station on Mul!Jcrry
at the Pomeroy Cou rt House, Avc., Pomeruy, fur 14 yt:!t~ rs .
Mr. and Mrs.. Keesee · lu:1ve The couple attenJ the Chrisseven children, Kenneth of tian Baptist Church ncar
· Gallon, Genevie Pozzie C:~nd Pomeroy pastured by the ir
Billy of Pasadena. Texas : !;itJII , Jim.
Friends and r·elatives uf the
Jack, Elbert Lee and
euuple
ctre invited to cHII durChristine Cecil or Columbus
ing
the
open house hours.
and Jim of Tuppers Plai ns.

99~

Pts.

.-1 13 8

Anniversary celebration slated

8 PAK 16 OZ. BTLS.

T

Bo5ton

Toronfo

L T Pis.

33
Colorado
Jl
St Lou is
IS 39
Minne$0ta
u 4]
W•lts Contertnce

Mr. Longley. Guidan ce resides with his wife and
Supervisor at the Gallia- dau ghter Sheri, in th e
Jackson-Vinton Joint Gallipolis area.
The addition of Mrs. Lee
Vocational School Bucke~e_
Hills Career Center. did his and Mr. Longley brings the
post-graduate work al Ohio board strength to eleven
. State University and Kent members. As a l'ontract
State University in areas of agency of the Community
guidance and vocatio nal Mental Health and Mental
education. He is currently . Hetardalion (648) Board, the
participating in the 12th Center Buard is responsible
ann ual Ohio Vocational for providing comprehensive
Leadership Deve lopment mental health services to ·
Program sponsored by Kent Gailia, Jackson and Meigs
Sla te University. Mr . co unties.
Other Board members are
Long ley also served as
Guida nce Counselor and Herman Koby, chairman;
Director of Guidance in the Mrs. Leah Ord , viceGallipolis City Schools from chairmun ; Darrell Detty,
August 1971 to July 1977. Mr. La wrence Kibler, Mrs .
Loogley is married and Maxine Wingett , Hichard

RC COLA

11 11

NY Rangt-rs
Smwttae Division

Channel Selection
• ltlumlnuled Channel Numbers

INGLES
FURNITURE
106 N.

Middleport . 0 .

2nc! Ave .

SMO
REGAL CRY-0-VAC

PICNIC HAMS
79e

VAUGHAN'S.

ardinal

FRYING

UST &amp; PEARL STREETS
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

l~A~z.

BUDGET

one

$ 99
,INSTANT COFFEE ...............
MAXWELL HOUSE

CARDINAL

TOMATO S,
SOUP..........

3

.8

0 _0 , _

Cons

PAC

LB.

:~~~ ........... ~~:. $} 08

CHICKEN
WHOLE OR

li~: .r

THE 'CADIUAC'
OF PICNICS
. FULl CUT

~43e

Ohio Grown
All Purpose

' POTATOES

NEW GREEN

CABBAGE

20 lb. . 50 Jb.

FLORIDA

CELERY
39~

STALK

gge $199

APPLES

;,L~

•;, BUSHEL

WESSON OIL
GOIOPO'I~

llmil Onl w llh

Ohl CIIUIIOn PI!

!1m.~

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f..ii·.

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99

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ARDINAL

SrOR£S • CA RDINA L FOOD STORES •"="~..,..,..~.
HUNTS

All Flavors

MANWICH }

-ICE CREAM
%- Gal.
Carton

89

BUF. CHICKEN or TURKEY

14 'It oz. Cream Btyl• Corn '
12 oz, Whole Kernel Com

:~:AIIII SANDWICHES ................. .';;~· '1

BORDE!11....

-

·

BANQUET4
POT PIES

1
14Yi

oz. Sweet Peas

Cans

$

B-oz.
Pkgs.

$1

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BORDENS , .

CHIP I DIP .......................ci!;::~ 59

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IDA TREAT AEG . or CAINKLE CUT

CHIFFON SOFT STICK

FRENCH FRIES

MARGARINE
1 lb.
8ft$ '
cartans -:r
.

'

992-2·1 56

THE DAILY SENTINEL

Phll&amp;deiPhli

Atlanta

Appoint two new members to board

CROSS HARDWARE

NEWSPAPER
CARRIER
WANTED

W L

PatriCk Ohtislon
W l T PIS .
NY lslanaen
J9 \4 12 90

JUNE LEE

Honor roll

·~

w

NEW YORK (UP! l Charley Bachman and Uoyd
Jordan, two early-day
coaching s tandouts, were
named SW!day to the College
Football Hall of Fame lor
1978.
Bachman, 84, who played
rootball on the same team as
Knule Rockne, was a coach
for nearly 40 years. He began
his career at Great Lakes,
where he guided the Sailors to
the national championship in

•

dinner meeting were: Allee
Women golfers at Hidden nounced other officers who naments are held.
Valley Country Club already have been elected by the
Women members of Hidden Icard, Mary Ingels, Lilllan
are mapping plans·lor another women's group. Topper Forte Valley are being urged to play Greene, Mary Adkins, Eva
Healthy with
For standability
a
olive season .
will serve as vice-president golf and .to join the Women's B•Uey, Luella Morgan,
auditions, the group has also
strong stalks and
and disease
Plans
for
the
opening
day
and
Norsle Anderson and Golf Asaoclation. Ladles Day Thelma Gelwicks,Topper •
t our ed exte n s ively
long ears. It adds
resistance it's hard
luncheon
were
made,
comBessie
Wilson will hold the ,is held each Wednesday Forte, Betty Barnette, Rela
througho ut Ohio, Kentucky
Donald Harming, PrinciPal,
mittees
were
appointed
and
oUices
of secretary and morning and Sunday af- Pauley, Ellen Cole, Norene
and
West
Virgin.a.
Last
fa
ll
up to top yields .
to beat. Consistent
has announced the third six
the Chorale perfo rmed for the weeks grading period hono r several tournaments were treasurer, respectively.
ternoon's once the season J,.ayne, Lillian ijyer, Nell
performance.
150.000 people who attended roll for the Bradbury announced during a dinner Mrs. Warner announced begins. Persons interested Kennedy, Bessie Wilson and
the Bob Evans Farm Elementary School. Making a meeting or the Ladies Golf new committees as follows: may contact any member of Jean Warner.
Festival.
Golf Chairperson _ Alice 1M org811izatlon.Dues are $5
grade of "B" or above in all Association Frtday evening at
Ross, associate professor of their classes were :
the Pleaaant Point Inn.
Icard: rules _ Lillian Hyer, ,each year. Through belonl!lng
MEETING OFF
music at Rio Grande, joined
Grade 5 - Lisa Ashley, . .\pril 12 has been selected .chairperson; Betty Barnette to the ass~tlon, members A meeting~ uf the Midthe Rio facility in 1966. Ross' Tamra
Clark.
Peggy as the opening day for women a nd Mary Arnold; tour- inay participate In area golf dleport Garden Club schetlul-1
Wife Edie, an instructor · in Crenieans, Steve Crow, golfer!i, A pot,luck luncheon ' na tnen t . - Mary Arnold, lnvltatlonals, state events and
ed for tonight hils been
music, is an accompanist and David Fisher, P. J. Harris, will be held at 11 a.m. in the_ cha irperson ; Mary Ingels
nlimber
of
local
events.
a
Next meeting will
cancelled.
perform er' with the Chorale . F rances Hoffman. Lisa clubhouse for members or the and Lillian Greene; handicap
DEPEND
ON
DEKALB
be
on
the
first Monday in
During
Friday's
dinner
I F• • •" ' o.,, ,.......,,.,
'" • ·,
Debbie
Swank,
Rio Hoffman. Sandy Hoyt, Shawn I.,adles Golf ASBOclatlon and - Eva Bailey, chairperson;
April.
meeting
Ms.
Icard,
HVCC
sophomore from Chesterhill. Johnson. Tammy Landers, their guests. A golfing event Lillian Hyer and Topper
GERALD ROOD &amp; SON
treasurer , urged all club
.is the group's president.
Mary Beth Long, Scott will follow If weather permits. Forte.
. 304-882-3144
members to submit dues for
McK inl ey ,
C arl
Plans were also 811nounced_ ~oclal - Betty Bemette, this year as soon as (IOII!IIble.
Letart, W. Va .
Rt. 2
Mo odi s paugh , Danny for a · clean-up session to chairperson; Ellen Cole and
ThlckHooey
Family memberships are
Thomas, Tlm Wamsley, Billy prepare the clubhouse for the Winnie Morrow ; ladies day The
famed
heather honey
~. for two persona it is $225
Weaver and Beth Wolfe.
new season. This will begin at Mary Adkins and Neil and for single membership the of Europe is so thick it will
Grade 6 - Chris Burdell, 11 a.m. April 10 811d all Kennedy, co-chairperson or
not flow out of a jar turned
Megan Cale, Charles uav1s, members have been asked to the morning group; Alice cost Is $17~. Membership upside down. If the jar is
Jhnmy Farley. David Foil- participate.
'
Icard and Reta Pauley, co- covers golf, tennis and shaken, however, the horiey
swimming.
rod, Tlm Frazie.r, Brent
will pour easily. The
Jean Warner, newly elected chairperson of the· afternoon
Recognition was given tq phenomenpn has a name George, Tracey Herman, president, presided and an- group; telephone - Topper
Jennifer Meadows, Michel
·
Forte, ch~irperson; Norst~ Eva Bailey, a birthday Utixotrophy - and is common
Mourning, Cheryl Rime and ~!;:!!· .. :,$.e.•~~A: Jlbbblb.i · · j ·: · ¥derson an&lt;J_ Luella Morgan. honoree.
t o _cer tain j elly lik e
Anthony Smith.
·
Members attending the substances.
Membership
Welllj)an',
chairperson; Sonia
Betty
Fisher and Hilda Mae Gygas;
decorating · - ' Mary Fowler
R
and Norene Layne, co·
SERVICES HELD
chairper so ns ;
Kate
D
Funera l serv ices fur
Somerville and Sara Bulformer Meigs County resilington; publicity - Thelma
tlent, Mrs. Noah (Jennie)
MONDAY
On all Wallpaper in stock March 6th thru 11 On~.
Gelwicks, Mary Pullins and
II
Gibbs were held Sunday at
RUTLAND Garden Club Jean Warner.
Get
Ready
for
Spring
Now.
the
Waugh'Halley-Wood
Monday,
7:30 p.m. home of
'
R
Allee Icard, who is -a ·
Funeral Home. Gallipolis Mrs: Dayton Parsons. Mrs.
E
with burict l in the Grctvel Hill Paul Winn wiil review the member of the West VIrginia
Cemetery at Cheshire. Mrs. book "A Thread or Blue State
Women's
Senior ·
Gibbs
died
at
the
home
of
her·
Tournament
Gonunlttee
, and
Denim.
"
Hostesses
wiU
be
Open Mon. thru Sat.
da~ hter. Doris, in 1111\!itJu'fi' Mrs. Parsons and Mrs. Carl the
local
Golf
chair-.
9:00toS:OO
• nhl .~vera l . local fesia~h!s Dennison.
person, released infor·
992·3831
Midd
called afthe funeral home&gt; ,
matioil con ce.rning sevPOMEROYCHAPTERIOO, eral
eve nts .
Tourna·
Order of the Eastern Star, 7 ment dates include the
p.m. Monday :lice of line of- .
following: Slate West VIrginia
ficers.
Women's Amateur to be held
TIJESDAY
at
Sleepy Hollow, near
PDMEHOYCHAPTERIOO,
Hurricane,
July 24, 25, 28, 27;
O.E.S., reuglar meeting, 7:45
Senior's
to
be held at
at the Masonic Temple. Last
month for members to pay Pipestem State Park, Sepdues.
tember 11, 12 and 13.
XI GAMMA MU Chapter of lnvltatlonr's - 18 hole tourBeta Sigma Phi Sorority wiD nament at Green Hilla, near
meet at 7:30p.m. Tuesday at Ravenswood, August I; '
the home of Mrs. Doris Ew- • Parkersburg Country Club,
ing. Co-hostesses will be Mrs. June 14.
&lt;':.'
00
Ruth Rifne and Mrs. Susan
Betty Bernette suggested
DAY
Oliver. Mrs. Janet Peavely that 8110ther ooclal event to be
wiD present the cultural held late in March, but no
report.
R-VALUE COMPARISON CHART
definite time was &amp;nnoWiced.
Cl!ESTER COUNCIL 323. Mrs. Barnette and members
0 '
1
2
J
4
Daughters of America. 7:30 of her committee are upected
II I I IIII I IIII I III I I II
Tuesday al the hall. Good of to fonnulate these plalUI and R·volue
the order conunitlce to have rele.ase lnlonnation later.
U.S . FIBER
a silent auction.
Preparatlona are under way ROCK WOOL
for booklets concemiDg By· FIBER GLASS
WEDNESDAY
JUNIOR American Legion Laws. These will be
Auxiliary, Drew-Webster . distributed at the spring· These values ore for one inch of loose-fill insulation.
·
Post 39, Pomeroy, will meet luncheon.
at the home of Mrs. Harry · Lillian · Hyer, chairperSon
Rules
Com•
Davis Wednesday at 3:30 of the
miltee
who
is
also
p.m.
MIDDLEPORT Amateur a member or the oUicial
Gardeners, 8. p.m. Wednes- board of HVCC, along with
BETWEEN '
224 lst ~treet
Point Pleasant
day at the home of Mrs. Ed- other members of her com8 AM and 5 PM
die Burkett with Mrs. Grace mittee will discuss rules
(304) 67S.24GO
Pratt, co-hostess.
before this year's lour-

XL-7lb

Ad,m s Division

C•mpbell Conlerenct

•

City Ice &amp; _
Fuel Co.

~
~

l!l
~

~

00-2:0·01

,Ji;J

CAR01NAt ~~

~

~

'b~STORES

791

�I&gt;-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 , Monday. Mar 6,1978
~------------------------~

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

Prostatitis
trt•atnwnt
DEAR DR LAMB - Can
you poss1bly tell me what
causes prostal1lls and can 11
be treated'
DEAR READER - The en·
ding " Ills" means mflamma-

lmn, so proslatlt1s means mfiammallon of the prostate
gland lnflalrunatwn can be

acute or chrome so you can
have acute proslahhs or
chrome prostall l1s
Acute proslcttJhs 1.s £curly
eommon cmd IS caused by a
bactenal mfedaon The mfec-

Ung germ may be any one of

a dozen dtfferent orgamsm.s
That IS why a culture and
studies to learn what antlbaollr w1ll &lt;:ontrol 1l a1e
often nnp01 tant Ch1 ontc pi uslatllis as sumetunes dJvtdell
mto those cases of bactenal

ongm 1bactenal p1 oslalllls)
and those not caused b)
badena 1nonba.clertal p1 ostahllSI
Acute prostalitas

eas1ly treated

IS

It

usually

causes

symptoms of em ac ute mfec-

liOn and often painful unna·

lton Gonorrhea IS one of
many examples of acute prostalllls but you can have prostatJlls from other genns
w1thuut haVIIll:: any sexual

JelatiOns at .a ll Hence .acute
prostatitis IS not necessanl.Y
a venerea l dJSei:ise
ChroniC ba cteri al pro·
stallhs IS usually more dlf.
ficult to treat and c hrome
nonbactenal p!Osla tihs may
p1 ove to be a d•fllcult and
never-endmg cha llenge to the
phySIC ian and the pallent
Prostalllls should not be con·
fused with s unplc berugn
enlargement of the prostate
tlwt usually Ot:curs as men
gel past m1ddle age To g1ve
you more mfonnatwn on the
disorders of the prostate. Ill·
cludmg prostalll lS and
ca ncer, I am sendmg you The
Health Letter numbe1 J.fi,
P1ostale Gland Others who

want this 1ssue can send 50
cents w1th a long, stamped,
sell-addressed envelope lor 11
to me m care of lhts
IJewspaper, P 0 Box 1551,
fuld1o C1ly StatiOn, New
York, NY 10019
DEAR DR LAMB - l am
&lt;18-year-()ld fema le My hair IS
losmg 1ts texture and body
and 1s falhng out at a rather
alannmg rate I reahze as
one gels older that the hmr
does bet.:ome thmner but my
condition seerns to be In excess of what one m1ght con·
s1der normal.
l have been told that takmg
one vitamin E capsu le a day
can help lh1s s•tuatwn Is that
fad or f 1el10n?
I read tn one of your culwnns that .an overdosage of
v1tamm A can actua lly moke
the hair fall out Does thiS apply to v1tamm E as well'1 Is
there anythmg that can be
done to prevent baldness?
DEAR READER - Yes,
pe1 s1stent conswnpt1on of excess amounts of vttamm A
can lead to hair loss. ThiS
slops when the toxiCamounts
ol v1tamm A mgest1on stops
There IS no ev•denl"t: that
v1tamm E e1thcr helps prevent baldness or causes It
You might as well lakt! a
glass of water and 1ts cheaper
-won't do you any good won't
do you any hann, excepl m
the pocket book
Excess ha n lu.ss IS a symptom It can lJt! caused from an
uvcract1ve thyrOid or an
underactive thyroid. It may
be related to changes 111 male
and female h o1 mon e
balances, nutntwn , recent
preg nancy ur a rl!cent ope1 a
lwn What should a person do
then w1th excess ha1r loss' If
1tlooks hke 1! IS not because
of mcref:lstng age alone you
should see a dermalologlSI
llntl let hun see the admd
cund1t10n uf your hair and
sca lp to determme the
undorlymg cause of the problem

From the Meigs
mental health centP.r

Inner growth

By Boyd A. Ruth
Soil Cons Service
POMEROY - The U S
By NAN MYXEL,PH,D.
Soil ConservatiOn Service
CLINIC OOORDINATOR
(SCS ) has revealed that the
We continue to see lolks~llhe Clime who have known they Rural Lands Program under
needed help lor some tune, and don't get to us until there IS an the new federal slnp mmmg
overdose , or extreme cnsis situation They say they weren't law w11l mvolve landowners
really sure what we d1d down at Mental Health, and were prunar1ly m 26 counttes tn
alr111d to come and see unlllthmgs really got bad.
Ohio
A listmg of our services mcludes CriSlsllne, Child and
Robert E. Qullllam. SCS
Adolescents, Forens1cs (for those mvolved 1n the legal state conservationist said,
system), Psycholog•cal Testing, Outreach (home visiting), "When the President s1gned
Speech and Hearmg, General Outpa tient (adult the new Ia w, he set m motton
psyeholherapy), Semor Fnends, Psychiatry, Emergency the potentia l apparatus lo
Services (staff always ready to see you), Alternatives reclaim abandoned mme
(substance abuae counselmg ), Personal Advocacy (for Sites on rural la nds In the
developmentally disabled) •and Consultation and EducatiOn Ohio coa lfields " Accordmg
(Includes a preventive approaeh )
to f1gures avai lable, only
In addition to offermg broad variety of se!VIces for Me1gs Penn sylvama leads Ohio m
counlians, we also believe that we remember to be human. Jl total acres ol abandoned
you don't know who we are, or about our services, we feel mane
Sites
needmg
that's our fault Please leellree to call or stop by and have a reclamation
cup of coffee Our Clime nwnber 1s 992-2192
Qullham sa1d lhalthe total
SENIOR FRIENDS IS GROWING, and w1U be h1rmg three reclamahon effort on rural
to five persons 55 years of age or over lo work In M e~gs, very lands m OhiO cuuld cost In
soon. Tbese folks will work 10 to 20 hours a week at nursmg excess of $200 million. He
homes or with older Individuals m their own homes Contact
the Meigs Clinic for more mlormalion
CRISISUNE workers answered 63 calls from Meigs folks
Umted Press lnternat1ona1
last month . Overall concerns were, m order of frequency, ByConference
Playoff Results
family, Interpersonal problems, manta! problems, medica lAtlantic Coast Conference
Cha mp1on sh1p Game
health and general depressiOn Thls service remams an
Duke 85 Wa ke Fores t 77
excellent community resource, for a vanely of needs Call 992B1g E 1ght Conferenc e
cnampeonshtp
SS541or a friendly, helpful voice, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week
M ISSOUn 71 Kansas St 68
A NOTE FROM ALTERNATIVES substance abuse
Beg Sky conferenc e
program - at the Clinic warns about a dangeroua drug m
Champeonsh•P
Weber St 62 Mon tan a 51
Me1gs County In these da)'ll of a snowy while world there IS a
East coast Conference
while powdery substance that 1s more deadly than the snow,
Champ•onsh•p Game
LaSa lle 13 Temple 72
known as angel dual Officially this drug IS Phencycbdme
Eas tern E 1ght Conference
(PCP ), a tranquilizer used for animals II was developed m the
c na mp1onsh1p
Vdlanova 6J w va 59
early 1960's as an anesthetic but due to the adverse $Ide effects
Metro Seven Confer e nce
was banned for humans In 1965. Since 1973 PCP has become a
Ctlamp•onshlp
major drug of abuse nus has caused a great deal of concern
Louisvi l le 94 F la Sf 93
southern conference
among drug abUse counselors bceause of the VIolent
Champeonshlp
lendenc1es associated wllh the drug Accordmg to Pat Leegan,
FIJrman 69 Marshall 53
Sou thwest Conferenc e
AlternatiVes drug prevenllon speciaiiSI, people us1ng PCP
Champ1onsh•P
become more Irritable and belligerent, and might become
HoiJston ?2 Te~tas 90
NCAA Olvn It
violent. It Is an extremely mtense kmd ol "high" thai can
So Atl Reg1onal
eas1ly gel someone very scared. Among Meigs Angel Dust IS
Champ1onsh1p
being put In Wllh marijuana and the pr1ce jacked up People
Eltl Cly Sf 84, Tw sn St 73
Con solati on
aren't even told what they're really bu}'lng Ills also possible
Al bn y St Ga 81 NY Tell 78
that PCP used even f&lt;r a short tune may produce long term
NCAA 0 1\n Ill Reg1onat
F•rst Round
behaviOral changes Ms Leegan urges folks to, stay away from
Hmbldt St 64 Ashlnd 0 57
the drug "We jusl don 'tknow very much about it, but what we
NCAA 01\' Ill
do know Is that It is very dsngerous," she says.
Northeas t Re-g1onal

Cage Scores

College Ba sketball

Mtdw est
Bwlng Gr n 87 E Mtch 59
CentralS I R tpon 66
Cen t Mtch 109 T ledo 107
Dayton 06 Not r e Dame 59
DePa ul 96 111 sr 84
Il l inOIS 67 Purdue 66

lnd tana 71

Iowa 55

R es ult ~

Ke nt Sl 76 W Mtch 71
L ncoln 84 sw Mo 83

Marquet te 80 Oe tr ot l

77

M lch 99 Nrlhwstrn 88
M ch Sl 71 M tnn 70

M am t 0 74 Ball 5 1 67
OhtO Sf BJ WtS 78
Olivet 88 , HI Co li 67
Roc khSI 59 Evangel 54

Slhws t rn 70 Wash bun 67
Wts Mtlw 102 Vlp r ili SO 58

View from the Statehouse
From the Office of·
Stale Rep.
Ron James
92nd House Distrtctl
Consumer legtslallon
requ1rmg savmgs mstttutlons
to fully dtsclose account
mterest rates, charges and
penallles was passed last
week m the Ohio House of
Repre se ntativ es
The
legislatiOn, House B1U 794,
will go to the Senate lor
consideration
As approved by the House ,
the btll would reqmre every
finan cia l InStitution to
mamtam and d1 spla) a
wr1tten schedule of account
charges
and
their
calculation, mterest rates,
the annual y1eld of the rate
and the method used m
calculal ,ng and paymg In·
terec 'he b11l would also
requ1re lhat the mlormallon
m the schedule be trans·
m1tted m wrihng to each new
deposttor In addition any

changes In account charges
or penalttes m the schedule
would have to be conveyed IQ
affected depositors
In other legtslatlve actton,
the General Assembly
cummemorated Ohio's !75th
anmversary of statehood on
March I, by holdmg session m
Chllhcuthe, the state's first
ca pital The House and
Senate met for busmess
sessions m the Ross County
Courthouse whose fowtdatlon
mcludes stone from the
ongmal 1803 statehouse
Spectators filled the second
floor courtroom to watch and
hsten to the House debate
House Bill 875, !eglslallon
reducmg from 4,000 hours to
2,000 1 the mmtmum number
of hours of employment
which an apprenticeship
program must prov1de m
order to oblam state approval
Legislators, newspcople,
and spectators ahke were

treated to a rare glunpse
the old ways of the House
when Representative A G
Lane lone, who was presiding.
called for a roll caD wh1ch
was taken by votce and
tabulated by hand The roll
call took four mmutes and the
b11l passed handily, 79 to 3
In Columbus, the Houae
now votes by an electromc
voting machine and roll calls
take seconds, not mmutes
Until twenty·IIVe years ago,
however, there was no votmg
machtne
Other events m Ch11Ucolhe
mcluded an address by the
Governor to a jomt session of
the Houae and Senate, a State
Supreme Court hearmg and a
luncheon In essence, state
government was
headquartered m Chillicothe
for one day and Ross County
offiCials and Ross County
Representative Myrl
Shoemaker worked hard to
ensure a suceesslul birthday
for OhiO

Southwest
Bthn y Na l 54 Ok Chns 52
Cent Ark 86 Sthrn Ark 72
Colo 51 70, UTEP 6 1
Hndrsn 9 1 Ark Col t 80
New Mex 93, W~ommg 74
Ouach (la 84, J Brown 6J
SW La 45 , Ar k. St .4 2
SW Okla 73 Camrn 69

west

Anz 88 Ar11 Sf 75
Pan Am 8J Haw a11 74
Pr f lnd U 88 Sl t1 e U 71
Slan frd 86 Calli 85
UCLA 91 Su thrn Ca l 78
Utah 81 BYU 7d
wash s t 57 wash 52
Sunday's Result s
M1nourl Valley Confc r(!nce
Champ1onsh1p Game
Cre19hlo n 54 tnd Sf 52
ECAC DIVISIOn II &amp; Ill
Metro Tourney
Champ1onsh1p Gam e
Trntn St 80 c W Post 72
NCAA Division 11
Gr ea t Lakes Tourney
F1rsl Round
lnd St Evnsvl 86 No Ky 18
Eail
A lba n y 101 Ham I ton 95
Essex 69 Mercer 68
Jr sv Cty 105 Va Wslyn 100
Kea n 80 wash&amp; l ee 64
West
Nev Reno 90 51 Mry 's 84
UCLA 96 M1Ch1gan 70

SP.orts Transact1on s
By Un1te d Press Internationa l
Sundav
Baseball
Toronto - S1gned ou tt 1elder
shortstop Bob 8allor lo a 1978
con tr ac t
Los Ange les - S1gne d pllcll
ers La nce Rautz han and R ck
Sutcl1ffe

Food labeling tells story
By Diana S Eberts
Ex.t. Agent, Home Ec.
POMEROY - Consumers
would be beller shoppers 1f
they knew how to use the
mlormahon available oo food
labels, says Lo1s Hungate,
ExtensiOn economist at The
Ohio State Umverstty
The brand, name of product
and style of pack appear on
the prmc1pal display panel of
au foods The style mdlcates
product difference such as
chunk or solid tuna other
descnphons must also appear on th1s panel
"Although he may not know
the details, the smart shopper
ls aware that a 'juice drmk' 1s
not a 'juice,' and a 'process
cheese food' IS not a
' cheese,' " ex plams Hungate
The net contents IS the
we1ght of the food without the
package Packages ol the
same s1ze do not always
contam the same amount of
food. The directions and y1eld
statements, when available,
can also be uaed as m·
dicat1ons of the number of
servmgs 1n the package and
the cost per servmg
"A soup, for example, that
must be miXed w1th milk is
not eomparable, pncewise, to
a soup that 1s mtxed water, or

to one whtch IS served as IS, "
Hungate says
The hst of mgredienls IS
one of the most mformauve
parts of a label It w1U tell you
whether your dsrk bread is
made from regular white
flour and whether sugar 1s the
predommant mgredtent m
your cocoa mix
The
mgredtents are listed m the
order of the predominance by
we1ght So, you can tell If the
ju1ce drink conlams more
water than jmce. Preservatives, colors, flavors and
other addthves are alSo on
the label But, standardized
foods such as tee cream,
mayonnaise and capsup are
not required to have
mgred1ents listed
Th e
manufa ctu r e r ,
processor,
packer
or
distnbutor 's name and address are also g1ven on the
label If you should need
addillonal mlorma110n about
the mgredients or have a
comment to adtlress to the
processor, wr1te to the
D1rector
ol Customer
RelatiOns at the address on
the label
Umt pr1ce mformat10n IS
available m some stores and
IS listed for foods such as
lresl! meat and m1lk On e s1de
olth1s label giVes the pnce of

Erosion on old strip
mines must be stopped

Waltham Ma ss
Cha mp1on sh1p
Brande1s 69 Bosron 51 68
Consolation
Clark 89, Su ff olk 87
NCAA Dl v Ill
South Atlantic Regio nal
Champ1onsh1p
Kea ne 83 Va Ws l yn 15
con so1at1on
Wash &amp; Lee 66, Jrsy Cty St 65
west V1rg1n1a conference
Champ1onsh1p
w v a wstyn 70, Wheeling 67
consolahon
Fa.rmnt 82 , M Harvey 66
PCAA Tournament
Champ1onshep
FIJIIrtn Sl 64 Lng Bch St 53
NAI~ Reg1pna1
First Round
E Mont 110 D1cknson 19
NAIA RegiOn al
F~rst Round
Ha Waii H1lo 59 ore Tc n 58
NAtA 01\:ISIOn V
F1rst Round
HUS50n 106 Mame 80
R Wil l ams Coli 75 WNE C 6J
ECAC DI\:ISIOn I
New England Tourney
Champeonsh•p
RllJ 65 P r ov•dence 62
ECAC DI'~ISIOn II &amp; Ill
V.etro Tourney
F•rst Round
C W Po 5f 79 Kmgs PI 71
ECAC 01 \: Ill
Eastern Playoff s
Champ1onsh1p
Stn y Brk 40 51 Lwrnce ) 4
Consolahon
Potsdam 64 Mnhttnvl 60
ECAC Metro N Y
Champtonshtp
Sf Jolln s N Y 65 Army 63
ECAC Upst ate Southern Conf
Champeonlhep
Sl Bonny 63 Va Cm mnwlth
r

,,

East
ca t Pa 69 Getty sbg 64
Dartmouth 42 Yale 40
Geneva 75, Mess1ah 59
Ha m1 1t0 n 8J, UIIC:: a 81
M iddl ebury 52 USC'G 44
Penn 98 Cornel l 74
Scr antn 84 Upsala 11
W1 ll 1ams 50, Am her st 40
South
A la 66 MISSISS pp1 63
Auburn 81 Georg1a 80
Kv 92, Nev Las Veg lls 70
McNeese St 59, La Tch 42
MISSISS IPPI Sf 68 LSU 67
T(!nncssee 91, Flonda 90

added that cost ·share
assistance and techntcal
asSistance will be available.
"Landowners may enter
mto a 3 to 10 year long-term
agreement
wllh
the
Seeretary of Agriculture to
bceome eligible lor the cost·
sharing," QuUham stated
Cost-sharmg
on the
reclamation work could run
up to 80 pereent Qullllam
added that "excepllons could
be made to reduce matchmg
cost·share 11, (II the main
benef1ts to be gamed from the
work are related to lnl·
prov mg olf·Sile aesthetic
values, or other oll·slte
benefitS, and (21 the mal·
chmg reqUirement would
plaee a burden on the land·
owner whtch would probably
prevent him from parllcrpatmg 1n the program
accordmg to the act."
Under the new law a
conservatiOn plan would be
developed lor eligible and
partlclpatmg landowners m
rural areas "Tins means,"
sa1d QuiU1am, "there will be
a good deal of difference from
one s11e to the other. Plans
w1ll vary based upon ex·
peeled land use, s1te and so1l
cond1llons, and the age olthe
spotl area ''
Actual eost to reclaun the
abandoned !T)me sites Will
also vary, but could runas
high as $4,000 per acre
"This " sa1d Qmlham ' "1s an
mdicauon that most ol the
easy acres are already
reclaimed or naturally
revegetated Much of the
reclamation eost will go mto
regradmg and mslalllng
engmeermg structures for
water control, and topsotlmg
and revegetallon to cover
toXIc material and to prevent
erosiOn and sedimentation ' '

---------------------------.
uu.. rbh•
,.,met!,
IIIMUI
1
o1
are ..
Tile)'
lie
iMI lila . . ., . ... jar llelabjlld Ill ra ..d!e IIJ
lhe lllllarl Ull -.1 bnlped will! tile ..,_,. ...
dretl. ~ _,. he '11'1111M111 ,... pabJ!teb.

of the M1sstsstpp1 Rtver It
was Tard1veau's notion that
Marnesta and Audram try to
buy land from the Spamsh,
who then owned the
LouiSiana Temtory
In a letter from Tarljiveau
to the Spamsh governor,
Carondelet, Tardiveau explallls the des1rablhly to the
Spamsh of setthng their
colony wllh French Royalists
rather than w11h Americans.
"The French settlers
1n
their
proposed
(Amencans) place would be
those of respectable b1rth and
fortune "
"The Frenchmen straaded
at Gallipolis," Tardlveau
writes, " would form the
nucleus of the proposed
selllement wbUe the sponsors
would send more from
Europe."
Further Tardlveau explained
to
Governor
Carondelet that 1f the project
was approved by the Spamsh,
Tard1veau himself would go
to Europe (Savoy , Swlt·
zerland, Germany, Flanders,
and Holland ) to enhsl the
support of those French
Royalists who were driven

Annual Report of the Meigs County Health Department

I1

... -~---""" ...--~·--·

I
I
I
I
I
I

I

I

Marijuana has tax value?????
Mardl2.1978
The way 11 seems to me Meigs county ls losmg a lot of
valuable tax revenue by impoundllll! that $60,000 worth ollocal
agru:ultural produee caU~ marijuana We know that stuff IS
just gomg to go up m smoke anyway and It seems !hal someone
should benefit from It . Why shouldn't•! be the lax-6Upported
institutions of Meigs county'
Why don't we lei some of our local poilUclans vote to slap a
big tax on the pol and tben lei some of our enlerpriSIIII!
business people market 11 as Genwne Meigs County Herbal
Tea 1 unagUJe lots of people would want to support local
lnd\ISiry and would buy 1t even If there were a 25 percent tax on
1t That would be $15,000 from this latest batch alone And aU
that tax money could go to help Me•gs county.
Maybe we need to look at this marijuana questiOn from the
angle ol free enterpriSe, local industry and TAX REVENUE
Is 1978 the year for the Meigs County Tea Party' - Yours
tnlly, Susan Fleshman.
:_.

.

Meigs
Property
Transfers

mills. The reason was that
the Spamsh expected the
formation ol a French Legion
to be raised m the West for
the purpose of taking
Loms1ana One should keep In
mmd that France and Spam
were then at war m Europe
Andre Mtchaux, who
v1slted Gallipolis m 1793, was
one of the leaders In this
scheme Whether any of the
French at GallipoliS were
mvolved In this, we do not
know. Actually the Leg10n
never materialized, bat its
threat delayed resettlmg ol
the 100 Gallipolis lamibes lor
18 months.
Marnes1a's grand plan ol a
French Slate remamed just a
dream Few Europeans
settled here at what was
inown later as New Madrid
Of those that left Gallipolis
lor New Madr1d the most
notable were: Joseph Van·
denbemden, Francois Ger·
vals (Jean's brother),
LUZieres (who later bceame
lieutenant-governor ol the
Louisiana Territory), and
Antoine LaForge (who was
probably Gallipolis' first
lawyer).

..

Dr. Selim Blazewicz.

...

Health Commissioner

OpaJGruese1, R N , PH N
for Me1gs Co unty was
previously the Cnppled
Children
Nurse.
Mrs
Grueser IS supervisor of the
Nu1s1ng Department w1lh
fave employees v. ork1n g
under her directiOn Mrs
Grueser has set up regular
unmumzatw n scholosts and
venera) dtsease cltmcs It has
been through the efforts of
Mrs Grueser that Me1gs
County no\\ also has tts own
orthopedic
c I• n 1c s
ellmmatm g th e lengt hy
travel to Galha County or
Athens County Her largest
job IS nursmg follow-up from
OPAL GRUESER
doctor referra ls, schoo ls, the county Mrs Grueser ts
clmtcs and the rheumatiC
cons tantly workm g to
fever program Recogmzmg develop prog rams to meet the
health services needs wtthm
need

, T,B prevention
large program

At1.Ive a,nd mact1ve cases of
tuberculo s i s, po s itive
reactors to the tuberculin
skmtesl and suspected cases
mcludmg anyo ne hav mg
pubnonary or other les10ns
which are suspiCious of, but

L

The Other Place Lounge 20 4
Reese Trenchtng

18 6

14 10
10 14
6 ta

Mike Young's Gulf

A 20

High game - Selby Manley
t78 t75, Rose Riffle t52
High

se ries

-

Se lby

Manley 503, Rose Riffle 406 .
Carol Bu'ck 379.
Wed Aft. League
March 2, 1978
Standmgs
Team

Farmers Bank
Ed's Crossrds Groc.
No 6

WMPO
Ruth's Beauty Shop
Fraley's Logging

Ed's Crossroads Groc

No I

High game -

W

L

132
tD9
83
70

60
83
ID9
122

134 58

48 t44

Lena Howard

t95; Teresa Little 182, Pat
Bentz 165
High
Howard

series

-

Lena

46 , Teresa Little

"" · Pat Bentz 451

•

\

JANE BROWN. R N.
not proven to be tuberculosis,
are followed m these clmics
Free chest x-rays are giVen to
all pos1l1ve reactors All
chem o ther apy
and
chemoprophylactic medd•·
cations are pa1d for from the
TuberculosiS Levy Fund

The plannmg, setting up ol
notifying pallents
regardmg the cl•mcs, and
nursmg lollowup 1s done by
Jane Brown, R N w1th the
assistance of Ruth Grmdstaff, secretary
Me1gs
Co unty
The
TuberculoS IS Chmc IS
supervised by a Board ol
Trustees appointed by the
Board of County Com·
miSSioners The Chmc ts
located on Mulberry Hts 1n
the former Children's Home
Bulldmg
X-ray and techmcal
raciJitles deemed necessary
RUTII GRINDSTAFF
m the detectiOn of tuber·
Ruth Grmdstall Is em· culos1s are obtamed from
ployed as the Secretary ollhe Veterans Memorial Hospital
X-ray evaluation and MediCal
Tub ercul os is DtvtslOn
serv1ce
IS recetved from a
Working for Mrs Brown, she
mamtains files, asststs m Consultmg Specialist from
notllymg people of Chest the Umvers1ty Hosp1lal B11ls
Chmcs, assists durmg the are submitted for approval
climes Her duties are many and payment ol the Board of
and var~ed durmg the year County CommiSSioners
Dunng 1977 . A f1ve day
She
transcnbes the
Stop
Smokmg Program was
clmtclans Impressions ol
held
The Clmic worked w1th
pat~enls after each cUmc and
the
three
day Screening Multi
not1fles patients of •·ray
Phase
Program
reports sent to their pnvate
S1x Dr 's CllJ\1cs were held;
physicians When special skm
testing clln1cs are held she 314 Chest x-rays were taken ;
handles all records, her 2,391 luberculm skin tests
of11ce is m the Tuberculosis were done; 34 countyskln
Clmlc on Mulberry His. and is testing clinics were held ,
paid from the TUberculosis E1~hl Acllve Cases ol
Tuberculosis were found and
Levy Fund
treated .
2,166 other chntc serv1ces
were given
clln~es ,

Late League

Swtsher Trucking
Tom Boyd, Inc
~ene Chaney

serv1ees; then there must be local funds available to lllkc over
when Ule outside mon1es dry up Furthermore, tlw grunt
progra ms have proVIded additiOnal operatmg monies which
have helped offset mflauonary pressures on the lleall h
Department s already llnliled budget Your support !01 the
general health levy wlll guarantee a futur e lor the level of
health serv1ces Me1gs County needs and luiS a r1ght to expert
We asSOCiated with the HeaiU1 Departmenl are lookln~
forward w tho gmund breaking lor the new MeigS County
Mulll-purpose Health lac1hly When completed this fH Clhly
w11l bring together the local healU1 organluitlons to more
effectively serve the residents of Meigs Cow11y
In closmg, let me say lhat any servtce a gene} can be only
as good as those who are served Wlmt 1t tn bt' Pubhc Health
Services ca nnot el&lt;lsl Wllhoul public support
The ye•r of 1977 was a ~r!lil l yem· of growth and chanKc 1978
Will be a yeur of service

» :.

ll J

GENE LYONS

•

I

'

Assistant
Administrator
Gene Lyons, Assistant
Adnumstrator ts m charge of
the department as a whole
She assumes respons1b1hty
and authonty for the
budgetmg , management and
supervisiOn ol the employees
She 1s the lla•son between the
Health Commtsswn and
Board of Health Mrs Lyons
prepares r e po r t s,
pubhcatt Ons f1scal reports
and represent s the Health
Department and Board of
Health at va rioUS meetmgs
Mrs Lyons ts not only m
charge of the Hea lth
Depa rtmenl but also six (6)
other Federal projec ts
funded through the agency

''

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RALPH GRAVES

DR LEWIS TELLE

ROBERT BEEGLE

CARL GORBV

are providing these programs

MARGE MANUEL
DEBORAH LAVALLEY
Marge Manuel IS the
Deborah
Lavalley. R N ,
Heanng
and
VISion Skin testing
P H N , 1s the new Cr1pple
Technician that goes mto the
Ch ildren Project Nurse Th1s
schools ol Me1gs County to performed by
program IS federally funded
screen for hearmg or v1s1on
serv mg over 150 clients m the
problems During the year Jane Brown, RN
co unty From this program
1977 Mrs Manuel screened a
Mrs
Opal
Gr uese r
total of 1,645 students for
R N.,
established the orthopedic
Jane
Brown,
hea rmg problems and a total tuberculoSIS nurse works out chmc for Me1gs County The
of 2,077 students for VISion ol the Tuberculosis Chmc, m Cr1pple Ch1ldreo program IS
Students havmg VISion and the former Children's Home designed for
c~1ldren
h ea r~ng
problems are Bmldmg located on Mulberry suspected to have chrome or
referred to Mrs. Grueser for Hts , a dlVlson of the Health
hand
cond iti ons
evaluation and contacting the
Department She Is paid fro m,
major roll
parents If the student has a
OQ~t\;\'l!l lhe
severe hearmg or vts1on loss, the Tuberculosis Levy Fu!~II l ~;~~~~~
She Hoes all the tuberculin I
Miss· Lavalley
Mrs Grueser schedules the skm testmg rn the county,
works under the d1rect10n of
student lor e1ther the hearmg gu1dance to all the tuberculin
Mrs. Opal Grueser, R N
or vtslon chmc held several
tunes a year. If you suspect patients, contacts, and
your child or student of suspects
She VISits the homes,
havmg a hearmg or VISion
county jail, Infirmary, and
loss, you can contact the
hospitals when necessary,
Nursmg Department at 992·
conducts commumty skm
3723 for assistance
testmg clim es, school
Debbie Garrison programs, works Wllh Roy L
Donnerberg, M D , chest
Part Time
chmc1an from the Umvers1ty
Debb1e Garrison was Hospital. on the chest chmcs
employed as a part-time held at the clinic, mamtams
typ1s1, a fil e clerk, and the county wide Tuberculosis
recepllonist at the Tuber· Reg1ster and the lla1son be·
culosts Clmtc Tins service tween the dociors and the
was made available by the public The Tuberculosis
Young Adult Work Ex· Chmc offers many other
pertence Program at no cost serv1ces to the Public dealing
to the Tuberculosis Levy With respiratory diseases
Fund. Debbie was a semor at The tuberculosis levy was
Me1gs H1gh School, working renewed at the last general
20 hours per week at the electiOn, 1976 for a f1ve year
Tuberculosis Clinic until the period by a large majority
tune ol her graduation In The Tuberculosis nurse and
SHARONWLE
June from Me~gs H1gh secretary are paid from the
School
Tuberculosis Levy Fund
Sharon lhle , R N and
Ferndora Story, R N ,
P H N 's, are federally
Deaths - Total 159, Male 91, Female 68.
funded
project Nurses lor the
CAUSES OF DEATH
Well ChlldSemces Program.
Shock 46, Stroke 1, Heart related 73, Th1s program provides
Medullary Failure 13, cancer 14, Kidney Fatlure fam1hes at no charge, a
complete ped1atnc work up3, Pneamoma 5, Lung Failure 2, Drowning 2.
for
children age b1rth to 21
OTHER FIGURES
years
Smce the clinic started
Total Births, Male 1, Female 2. 2 Residential In October,
1977, seven (7)

Births, 1 Doctors Offtce.

DALEDUITON

Your Federal and State Tax Dollars

PEARL SCOTI
Pearl Scott IS the Deputy
Registrar and Deputy Clerk
Mrs Scott IS m charge of
1ssumg birth and death
records She also acts as
receptlontst, ass ists Mrs
Lyons If needed, schedules
appomtments for the vartous
departments and ma1ntams
varwus records Durmg the
year 1977, Mrs Scoltlssued a
total of 1,209 certificates and
permitS for VItal stal1sl1cs

F~nd

March 2, 1978

w

add1tlon to those nurSing semces previously provided
In addition to the servwes of personnel provided by the
nursmg serv1ces grants. your Health Department utlhzes staff
proVIded by CETA programs and the Leadmg Creek Program
The Health Department st,tff provides you w1th direct services
and also makes available U1e servi(~S and resources of the
Oh1o Department of Health and the Umted Sta tes Public
Health Service
Last November U1e Board of Health sought passage of 11 1
mill levy to prov1de funds lor the operahon of the Heallh
Department the levy fa1led to pass - we must try agrun The
momes generated by the levy w1ll fw1d 100 per cent of the
operalmg costs uf U1e Heallh Deportment; thus freeing the
townsh ips and \ 11lages from bearing the cost
You ask · Why the Levy when we have all ol the stale
funded programs menuoned previously'" Because all stale
and federal programs are funded for a hnuted lime only If the
people of the local health distnct w1sh lo relam these hea llh

(

The Tu berculos•s program
is one of the largest health
programs 1n the county One
ol the serv1ees offered the
people of Me1gs County JS
Chest Chows every SIX to
eghl weeks
These chmcs are conducted
by Roy L Donnerberg, M D
Chest Chmc1an from the OhiO
Stale University Hospital ,
Columbus, OhiO These
cliniCs are made possible
through qhe funds provided
by the Tucerculos1s Levy

Mason Lanes
Sland~ngs

--

...

Opal Grueser Supervisor
of Nursing Dept.

BOWLING
r .. m

...

-..-~ --~ ·--~

Memhet:s of th,ecMeigs County Board of Health

capacity of 2,000 was used as
an auditormm. n us tent was
erected m the center ol the
park on the river Side
The centenntal ran from
Thuraday to Sunday. Each
day had speeches, music and
receptions .
Both
the
Governors ol Ohio and West
V1rginla attended the alla1r
The excurs1on beat Bostoma
took visitors a short distance
above Pomt Pleasant In the
evenmgs ftreworks dtsplays
were held on the river's bank
On Sunday special cenlenmal
semces were conducted at
eaeh ol the churches and m
the afternoon services were
held In the Betz Opera House
A reception was held m the
Elks HaU for the Governors
and members of the
legislature.
Groupo that made up the
centennial parade are as
follows . Gates Second
Regiment Band • W. Va,
Gov. Fleming and Stall • W
Va, Gov Campbell and stall,
Party Band, Grand Anny
Posts and other veterans,
Oh1o National Guard from
Middleport, Ben Hur D1v
U R K P . ol Galiipolis,
Patnarchs Militant Band ol
Columbus, Grand Canton
OhiO No. 1 of Columbus,
Cannon F1dellty No. I ol
Hunlmgton, Canton Sanns of
GaU1pobs, Canda Hose Co of
Hunlmgton, Gallipobs F1re
Dept
and c1t1zens m
camages.
The pupils ol Umon Schools
were drawn up In One on
Th~rd Ave , between State
and Locust, and rev1ewed the
parade amid great en·
thus1asm . ' At Court, the
Governors and thetr staffs
left the processiOn and look
up a position on Second, just
above Court, and the parade
passed In rev1ew before
them While this was bemg
done the schools marched
down Second They were
headed by Pres Alcorn, Supt.
Mohler, and Prot Karr, and
each school accompamed by
ItS teacher When Court
Street was reached a hall was
made and the pup1Is faced
Second Street and sang
''America.'' At the conclusion
of the song, three rousmg
cheers were glven lor Govs.
Campbell and Fleming

Thurs

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

...

·--~ --~---· ...

The year 1977 was a year of growth and change for your
local Health Department With the a1d of Federal and State
grant programs the stall and services ollered have expanded
to levels heretofore Impossible due to budg1tary restnchons
We now have morequaltfied health professiOnals servtng more
people than ever before More staff means more faces - new
laces - and w1lh them a change- a new loo k lor your Health
DeparUnent Olange also has meant the move to a newer·
more modern office convemently located at street level
W•th the a1d ol Oh10 Department of Health personnel m
wrltmg the grant applications, tbe nursing staff oow mcludes
such service programs as· HypertensiOn Screenmg Program,
Child Health Services (Well Child Cluuc) and Screemng
C1m1cs, Cnppled Children's Servll:es and soon to be mcluded
will be a Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) program and
Center for Human Development Referral Program These
programs reach all ages; are available to anyone hvmg w1thm
Meigs
Without regard to mcome and are prov1ded m

.. : -..·: •'• :· ·: .;. ·: .; .•: .:· :·

French City
vignettes •••

·- -·

The Health Commissioner's Message

I

I
I

By Tom Saunders
GALI1POI1S - As early
as April, 1890, the c1t1zens of
Galhpolls, through their
Board ol Trade, took action to
secure a proper celebration
oflhe approaehlng centenmal
ol the City's settlement
On April 22, 1890, at a
meetmg of the Board of
Trade, the folloWing gen·
tlemen were elected on
executive committee of
arrangements . John L.
Vance, ch~1rman, C. Fred
Hen king , W B. Shober. H R
Bradbury, Joseph Mullineux,
J A McClurg, Geo. House, J
C. Hutsmp1ller, C. W
Hen king, Dr J Eakms, B. F.
Barlow, P. A. Sanns, J. C.
Pnestly, B T. Enos, E R.
Menager, C. D. Ken, J. M.
Kerr, S. A Dunbar, A W
Kerns, Wm Kling, A
Ulerman, and Charles
Regmer.
The commlltee at 1ls f1rst
Roger Eblm. Judith Eblin
to RS D Oll&amp;GasCo ,4 meetmg sent an mv1tabon to
the General Assembly of
acre~, Rutland
Theodore T Reed, Jr , Ohio, l p be present at the
Nancy B Reed to Dale K centenmal, the lllVltatlon was
Anderson, Julia Rodrtquez - presented to the House ol
Bayo
Anderson, Lot s, Representatives by Ron J.
Eakms, a member ol the
Pomeroy
House from GaUia County
La~ren Hollman, Mer1um
Hollman to Lauren Hollman. The mv•lalion was accepted
Mer1um Hoffman, Parcels, by the Assembly and
arrangements made by the
Salem
Preston Patterson to members ol that body lo
allend .
Garland J Cope, Norma J
Dn August 19 the Board ol
Cope, 20 acres, Lebanon.
Ralph W Ours, Murl Ours Trade set up the following
to Wilham B Osburn, Loretta comm1ttees advertising ,
L Osburn, lnl m surface, 70 amusements, athletics,
badges, decorations, drmking
acres, Lebanon
entertainment,
Gary D. Jones, Janet water ,
Elliott, formerly Janet Jones, fireworks, grounds and
horses
and
Lu Elholl to Wilham B supplies,
Osburn, Loretta L Osburn, 70 camages, hotels, boarding
houses, etc., mtelhgence,
acres, Leb3non
Vernon
L
Weber, light, music· vocal, music ·
Margaret B. Weber to Donna mstrwnent, military display,
Rae Weber, 3 acres, Rutland. press, progrannr.ne, railroad
Millon Hood, Freda Hood to and mner transportation ,
Carl L Wolfe, Brenda S receptton, sabbath
programme ,
samtary,
Wolfe, Parcel, Salisbury
Dale E Warner. Addie schools, steamboat ex·
Bertma Warner lo Gene curs10n, tent and am ..
Warner, John Warner, Jerry phltheatre, township com·
Warner, Gale Warner, IJllltees, and ladles reception
committee
Parcel, Sc1p1o
A large tent With a seatmg
Cora H1llon, Affldav11 ,
Lebanon.

from their own country as a
result ol the ' French
Revolution
In another message from
Tard1veau to Carondelet,
Tardiveau g1ves the Spamsh
dossiers on a number of the
French settlers at Gallipolis.
The dossiers were not concerned Wllh the pohlics of the
settlers as mueh as Wllh the
dilferO(It skills that many of
the French possessed.
In April 1793 Carondelet
conducted several Interviews
w1th Audram, Tardiveau and
Pierre de Haul! de Laasua de
Luzteres Luzieres was one of
the French 500, bulm 1793 be
was hvmg m Pittsburgh.
Carondelet advanced to these
three the sum ol 2,500 pesos
lor
the
purpose
of
100
lam1Ues
brmging
from GaU1pobl lo Lowsi·
ana The governor also
gave them 9,000 pesos to build
Oour mllls at New Madrid
and at St Genev1eve The
man contracted to build these
mills was Joseph Van·
denbemden of GaU1pobs.
Construction ol the mUls
was held up bceause the
Spamsh requested forlillcatlons be buill around the

I
I

How••·•nqalll,uma.olbedlld 1tiAUa'l
lllolld be Ia 11004 lUte, 8ddrellbll ..._, aol I*"
IMIUIIhlel.

Grand plan of populating whole state of U. S.
the 1tem as packed and the
other Side of the label gtves
the pnce per uml, !halls, the only with French turned out to be only dream
pnce per pound, out:lce or

other standard. measure
BY JAMES SANDS
"The unit price should be
GALI1POI1S- One of the
used to compare the pr1ces of leaders of the French ex·
compelltive products of ped1Uon to GaU1pohs m 1790
different brands or package was Claude-FrancoiS Adr1en,
stzes of the same Item," Marqu1s
de
Lsezay·
suggests Hungate.
Marnesla It was Mamesla's
The nutr~llon label must be dream to establish a soc•ety
used II the food contains m AmeriCa free from
added nulr~enls, or 11 a poht1cal stnfe, but based on
nutritiOnal claun is made for European customs
the product The label mual
MarneSia d1d not stay long
follow a standard format and In GallipoliS He lived lor a
provide Information on short time m Marietta and In
servmg Size, number of P1ttsburgh, and returned to
servings per container, France m 1792 upon the
number ol calories and the urgmg of the French minister
amount of lat. protem and lo the US, Ternan!
carbohydrates 1n a servmg
During Marnesla's last few
The percentage ol the U S weeks In America , he
Recommended
Da1ly discuued 'tl'lth Pierre
Allowance of seven key Audraln, a merchant In Pills·
nutrients must also be listed burgb, the pouibillly of
on the nutrition label.
buying enough land from
Nutrition labels are often Coogress lo poJIIIla!e a whole
listed on produ cts volun· stale with French lm·
tanly. Food manufacturers mtgraat.s, Audraln proceeded
and processOrs who use the with the negotiations io
nutr1llon label in this manner Coogress to buy ·lands.
do so to show the customer
While
wa1t1ng
lor
that they are acceptmg their Congress's reply to Mar·
soc1al responsibility to nesja's request, Audram
prov1de such inlormalwn
brought mto lhls scheme
The processor may also do Barthelem1 Tardlveau, a
this bceause hiS competitors French tra der and land
are doing so.
dealer who hved m the area

7-The Dally Sentmel, Mlddleport·Pomeroy, 0 , Monday, Mar. 6,1978

I

MARK CLEEK
Mary Cleek, Nursmg Clerk,
worked out of the Leadmg
Creek Program durmg 1977
She IS secretary for the
nursmg department and
carnes out various off1ce
dull es In settmg up appoJntmeJtts, answermg phone
(a ils, helps w1th chmcs and
mamtams the files a nd
records for the nurses Mrs
Clee k works under the
d~rect•on of Mrs Grueser
She IS now employed through
county CETA Program

FERNDORA STORY
climes have been held at the
Health Department w11h a
total of 72 clients being seen
The program has become so
successful that 1! stays
booked a couple ol months m
advance . PJ...ints wishing
their &lt;hild and-&lt;Jr children be
seen by the pediatnc1an
sl!ould call 992-7160 or 992·
3723

NANCY ACKERMAN
Nancy
Ac k e rman ,
Samtat1on Sec retary, "
fund ed from the Leudmg
Creek Conservancy D1~1n ct
Mrs Ackerman's roll 1s to
assJst the Samtanan 1n
mamtmmng proper recnrds,
t:Jkmg applicatiOn for Installer, cleaner sewage
systems, foo d hcense and
vendmg She mamtams the
fee turned m for license or
permits Mrs Ackerman also
ass1sts the Asst Adrmn when
deemed necessary lf yo u
have any problems cuncernmg .sanltatwn , the
samtallnn department Wlll be
glad to ass1st you.

NITA WISNISKI

N11a

WISnl skl ,

II N •

P H N , IS CUI rently Wlll k U 1 ~

on the hypert ension (hig h
bloo d pressure) pt ngrdrn,
wh ich IS federally funded
from the Ohio Departmen t of
Health Th e program tonslsts
of blood pressure climes,
hom e VISi ts and puhll c
education sessions Projects
m the past Included blood
pressure cl iniCS a t vurlnus
locations such as Pnmc1 ny,
Ra cme, Rutland, Sy1acusc,
and Chester and S 0 C C
E ducatiOnal classes have
been held at Vetera ns
Memorial Hospita l Talks
with CIVIC groups Incl uded the
Rotary Club, L10ns Club,
Church groups and Women 's
Arnencan Legion Auxiliary
and Semor Citizens Multiple
home v1s1ts were made last
year for people unable to
acqu1re transportation
Future plans mclude blood
pressure classes in March,
with reduction classes und
contmued pubh c and In·
div1dual teaehmg

bemg unsafe Mr Aspm
answered approximately 140
Gary Aspm, State CETA nmsance calls ranging from
Sanitarian has been mam .. garbage, sewage, refuse and
tainmg Meigs
County ammal. Mr Aspm made 175
samtary program since the mspect10n s on restaurants,
county sarutar~an quit last bars and vending machmes,
June . During the year 1977, 28 school mspeotions, 3
Mr Aspln laid out 222 sewage swimming pool Inspections. A
systems, collected 121 private total of 44 animal bites were
water samples ol which « reported with 16 heads taken
were unsafe and 38 samples to Logan for rabies
on publlc systems w1lh 3 exammations
GARY ASPIN

'

�&amp;-The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport,.Pomeroy,O., Monday, Mar. 8 197A

·isTio:·ilaPH
Bernice Bede Osol

®

~mil

Vl!JI!.IU
[j]~wilir!lm\7

ByMn. HerberiR-h
Mr. and Mrs. Don BeU were
Sunday dinner RUells of Mr.
~ Mrs. Paul Ervin, BBBhan

WANT AD
CHARGES
t5Wordi(WUndtr

"""'

ldoy
2dayl
3da)'l
Bdllyl

able to nurture . to liS lull week.
promise may bloom in abun+
Mr. andMrs.CharlesWolft

dance this coming year. It or Carroll, Ohio, Mrs. Mattie
could bring forth fl~wers that Hill of Columbus vlBited Mr.
wil l surprise even you .
and Mrs. Arnold Hupp
PISCES lfob .ZO·Mirch 201
I

recent Y·

1.00

Clio[!;

1.10

1.10

3.00

1.10

1.2$
.Ui

Each word. over tht minimum 1$
wurdlll 4 t.&gt;enll per word per dAly.
Ada running Olhtr than l'OI\SeCUUve

dlya wUI be chargtd at the 1 da,y

rate.

.

George Hupp had eye
aghation , since you laid fi rm surgery at Holzer Medical
toundations and your building Center Monday. His son,
is go ing up on schedule. Find Clarence Hupp of Norwalk

ln menwry , Clard rJ Thalnkl ~~~
ObHuary : 6 unLI per word, $3.00
minimum. Cash in ldVlnCt!.

ou t to whom you 're romanll·

urder. 2$ cent charge for ad! carry·
ing Box Number In care of The Sentinel.
'

you 'll make it It's not a lime for

Bo• 489, Radio Cily Station ,
N.Y. 10019. Be sure lo specify
your birth sign.
ARIES CMerch 21·Aprl11tl Most
lhings you put your mind to will
be relatively easv to accom-.
plish Joday . This doesn 't. how·
ever , apply to betting on long
sl1ots .

was here over the weekend to

shoot every Saturday at 6 pm

.
~

and family of Westerville

~

M daY
Noon o~turd.ily

4P,M.

Frldaly afWrnoon

Mr. an&lt;l Mrs. Leon
Woodrum, McArthur, and
Mrs. Rolland Crabtree, local,
were guests of their mother,
Mrs. Murl ·Galaway.
Recent guests of Mr. and
volunteer for any worthwhile ward Roush, Rick Durst,
Mrs.
Walter Jordan, Joshua
project where you 're needed Mrs. Grace Knighting, Jeff
loday. Extending your assist· Knighting, Rocky Hupp, Mr. and Jeremy, were Mr. and ·
Mrs. Clinton Gilkey, Albany,
ance freely could plant s~eds ~nd Mrs. Arnold Hupp.
Miss Karen Gilkey,
and
tor a handsome harvest .
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Wheeler
Athens.
LIBRA CSept.23-0ct.231 Today of Fremont, Ohio, Mr. ami
Mr. and Mrs. Carrol
others lind you .to be ·a person Mrs . Larry Foster a11d
lhey wanl lo IISien to and children of Columbus were Woodgerd, DyesviUe, called
emulate. Get out and lake
r
1 It
weekend guests of Mrs. Anna on her mother, Zella Perry,
advanlage 0 your popu ar y. Welch and called on Mr. and at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
SCORPIO (0ct .24-Nov.221 The
Victor Perry.
pathway to success is posled Mrs. Dorsa Parsons.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Crabtoday wilh signs that say "Stick
George Hunt, brother-in·
tree,
Russell and Kevin, were
lo lt." Sink your Ieeth Into an law of Mrs. Margie Hunt, Is a
Sunday
dinner guests at the
endeavor and don't let up until patient at Pleasant Valley
you've finished II.
H It· 1
home of his parents, Mr. and
SAGinARIUS CNov.23·Doc.211
osp a·
Mrs. Arthur Crabtree to help
Give coworkers the ir share of
Mrs. Dee Spencer, Mrs. his father celebrate his birththe kudos today , 11 you give Bessie Parsons were visitors
day; .
credit where It's due, the re~ at Belpre Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
turns will be i n su rpri si ng pro~
Leslie Roberts, Chad
portions,
Roberts, Charles Mlchael and were In Columbus on WedCAPRICORN (Doc.22-Jon.191 Becky Mlchael were lU with nesday and Thursday ior the
annual Directors and , Policy
It's a cardinal rule of your the flu.
personality that you must gtve
Friends and neighbors holders meeting of the
equal value lor what you were sorry to lose Everette
Grange Mutual Casualty
receive . Today that virtue will Connolly from the Letart Insurance Cornpa~y and
be worth more to you than ever·
before.
community. Mr. Connolly attended tile dedication of
AQUARIUS CJen.2tJ.Fob.191 Let passed away at Holzer the new office buDding of the
a smile be your umbrella Medieal Center Sun~ay. compeny. They a!Bo visited
bOday. A llght· hearted at11tude. Funeral services were held. his slater, Mrs. Earl Jewell In
will open doors and soften ; W~esday a.t tile Ewing Columbus.
. Francis Rife, Baton ·Rouge,
opposition .
Funeral Horne with In·
Louisiana,
spent several days
termon! In Sand Hlll
l'HE ALMANAC
here
with
his parents, Mr.
Cemetery at Long Bottom.
Uaited Press lote1'118tlotUll
·
a
nd
Mrs.
0.
M. Rife, DyesMrs. Caroline Miller of
Today Is Monday, MArch 6, Racine vialted Mrs. Helen viUe area, and his brother·lnthe 85th day of 1978 with 300 lo Slack, Mrs. Pearl Wlllls law and sister, Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Wooten and family.
foUow.
Monday.
The moon is apjl'oachlng
Mrs. VIvian Phelps ls a . He and his parents spent a
it!i new phase.
medical patlept at Holzer day In Columbis with his
There is no morning star. Medical Center.
uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs.
Harold
Vorys (the former
The evening stars are Mer·
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Mccury, Mars, Venus, Jupiter Dade, Troy, Ohio visited Mrs. Lenore Darst.)
and Saturn.
Mrs. Donald Wooten acGladys Shields and Mrs.
Those born oo this date are Edna Roush over the companied her daughter,
under the algn of Pisces.
weekend. They vlslted Joan, to Columbus and
British poet Elizabeth Howard Roush at Pleasant · vialted her uncle and aunt,
Barrett Browning, wife of Valley Hospital and Ott Mr. and Mrs. Harold Vorys,
poet Robert Browning, was
Boston at the Arcadia Nu,.. tile ffrst part of tile week.
born March 6, 1806.
sing Home, Coolvllle. Herbert Joan Wooten, who works in
On this day Ill history:
Roush accompanied them to Lancaster, stays with the
In 1838, Melican forces the hospital and nursing Vorys at their h&lt;ime. Donald
captured The Alamo Ill San home.
Wooten also visited the Vorys
Antonio, Texas, kUling tile
on
Wednesday and his wife
Don Meadows is a
last of 187 Americans who surgleal patient at University returned home with him.
had held out 13 days.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Stanley
Hospital, Columbus. Cards
In 1~7, the United Statea would be appreciated. Mr. and Anna, Edison, s\)ent tM
&amp;ipreme Court handed down Meadows is a former weekend here with their
its landmark ruling that resident.
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
Negro olave Dred Scott could
Smltll,
local, and Mr. and
MI-. and Mrs. Lester Little
not aue fer his freedom In a of Hockingport, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Eugene Stanley,
federal court.
Edward Hllpp vlBited Mr. and Albany.
In 19114, King Paul of Mrs. Dorsa Parsons.. . ,,.
Greece died at the age .of. 11:1 ,
FUNNY BUSINESS
Mr. and Mrs. Hoyt
· and was repllced by his aon, Ferguson of Point Pleasant
Prince Cmstantine.
spent Sunday wltll Mrs. Pearl
In .19118, Joeepb Martin of Norris.
Massachusetts, who twice
Mr, and Mrs. Herbert
beld the pool of opeaker of the Roush, Mra. Pearl Norris
House of Repreientatlves, vialted Rev. James Morrison
died at the age of 83.
at l;'olnt Pleasant and visited
the Crow-Russell Funeral
A thought fer the day: Horne and paid respect io
British poet Elizabeth Mrs. Vada Morrison. Rev.
Barrell Browning said, "If and Mrs . Morrison were
thou must love me, let It be former pastor of the local
for naught except fer love's United Brethren Churd! at
sake."
Letart. Mrs. Morrison passed
away
at Holzer Medical
LAFF- A- DAY
Center. Funeral services
were held at Beale Chapel
&lt;llurch with Interment In tile
nearby cemetery at Apple
Grove, W. Va. Wednesday.

..

"Look, Ethel, Mr. Cargill lsJJ 't
paying me to say 'yes, dear' all
day! ..

'

More irom Less
By the year m, aU of our
essential needs will be provided by only 10 percent of
tile population. The other 90
percent wiU be employed In
''bnln" or service jobs, according to The Conference
Board.

9'12·6295.
HEAlTHY YOUNG pigs for sole .
949·277-4, alter 5 p.m .

··--

-

Route2
Pomeroy, Olllo 457"
EstlmoiH by Appolntmenl
Phone m -7119
2:24-lfc

OlD FURN ITURE; Ice boKe s, brass
beds . iron beds , etc., complete
households. Write M.D . Miller .
Rt . -4 , Pomeroy , Ohio or call

9'11-7760.

.

NO ITEM TOO large ur too small.
Will buy I piece or complete
household . New used , or anti ·
ques. Mortin"s Furniture. 20 N.
2nd St. , Middleport . Phone
m -b37o .
·.~
1

CHIP WOOD . Pole s max .
diome.ter lO" on IC:11gest end , $8
per ton . Bundled slob, $6 per
ton . Oe.livered to Ohio Pollet
Ca., Rt , '2. ·Pomeroy . 992·2689.
$CASH$ for junk ca rs . Frye's
Truck and Au to Ports . Wrecker
Service . Tire sole and Repair .
Rutland , 742·2081 or Pennzoil .
742-9S75.
WANT TO BUY: house byowner .
Wold prefer_out of town loco·
lion. 992· 7730,

IF YOU hove a service to offer ,
wont to buy or sell something ,
oe looking for work , . . or
whatever ... you "ll get resul ts
foster with o Sentinel Wont Ad .
Coll992 -2156.
.t'R.OBATE COURT OF

MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
liSl~TI! OF 11.-. ~;
DEe!ASI!D
ce..
1c• oP .
AI'P0fNTMIII't
OF FIDUCIAllY·
C!Tf!:tbruerv 21, 1tJt. In tht
Melga Count_y Prob•tt Cour.l ,

22·t:&amp;,.

Cut No . 22,291, Calvln
Ollvtr. 100 O&amp;k14n&lt;f Or. ,
Nitro , W . VI. 2510 w.s IP ·
point"t&lt;f EMtcutor ot the
eltate of 8t1Sit Ollvtr.
dtcus~ . lat.t Of Middleport ,
Ohio.
Mat'llnlng c . v...._.bsttr
Pr.obote Judo,e

(·"t-J-I.21-(4.~.,t ~c

J

9'12·5780.
FRONT FENDERS , grill . hood. 2
doors lor 1969 Chevelle 2 door.
Good cond ition . Also 2 tool
boxes , 8 foot long to lit on
pickup. Phone Charles Bissell.
Bashan 949 ·2860.

Mama."

'

.

USED TRACTORS · 47 Ford N 53
Case Voc , 59 MF 35 Diesel. 64
John Deere 1010 Gas, 71 MF
165 Diesel , 74 MF 135 Diesel , 75
MF 1135 Diesel with cob ond
air, 77 MF 285 Dhasel. Used im·
plements · Mf . 110 Manure
Spreader , Allied front end
loader , Freemon front end
loaQer , Davis front end loader,
"Case 220 Hoy Bohrr , MF 10 Hoy
Soler , Matthews Rotary Sythe,
MF 20 Hoy Rake , Ford HO't"
Rake, MF 42 Mower .
Shinn"s Tr actor Soles: leon WV .
Phone (304) 458·1630.
CORN $2 o bu . Call 985 · 3~37 or
985 -4131 .
1969 CHEVROlET QUMP Tru ck
with air cheater. 992-5.541 .
1976 CHEVROlET lf. ton pickup .
low mileage. Good condit1on . ~
speed, 350 engine heavy duty
brakes.
$3750. Reedsville .
614 ·378·6311 olter6p~ _

Bollen

d en 1 I I I
a na
commercial. C•ll for
estimate, 24 hour servlee.
R·t '

I

Anyday, onytlme.
Pllone 985·3106

''"1098·3290.
RISING STAR Kennel , Boarding.
Indoor and outdoor runs .
G"roomlng all breeds. Clean
sa nitary facilities . Cheshire,
Phori a (614) 367-0292.

1975 GRANADA V-8 automatic ,
power. steering, AM radio ,
power brOkes. air· condlt iong .
EK cellent condition. $2,900.
Phone 992-3886.
1962 CHEVY Ton and •; , flat bed .
53,000 mile5. Excellent condi ·
lion . $1200. 949·2042 .
1967 VW BUG. Good work cor .
$275 . Coll992·5732.
1%4 RAMBlER .WAGON. b cyl. . 3
speed trans ., engine newly
overh~uled ond bOdy- in lair
condition . 985·3818 ,
1967 CAMARO. 3 speed , Crager
wheels , traction bars, headers ,
4-bbl . 9tjl2-5623 .

1968 CHEVEllE . Phone 992 -5019.

STARCRAFT FAll Sole. Mini·
motors , 20' ond 22'. T~aVel
Trailers . 18' 5" $3 ,799, 25' 7"
Bunkhou se $4.875. Fold·down,
Sl ,700 up. We sell service ond
quality , Open Sundays . Camp
Conley Storcroh Soles, Rl . 62,
N. ofPt . Pleason1 .

3 AND 4 RM. furnished and un·
furhished opts, Phone 992-

. 5&lt;3&lt; .
COUNTRY MOBilE Home Pork .
Route 33, north of Pomeroy.
large lots. Col1992· 7-479.
12 x 60 MOBilE HOME near Oex·
ter . Phone992-5858.

Box 3,

Chester, Ohio '
. 10·30·&lt;

ECONOMY TRACTOR with all ot·
toc;hments. like new , a5k ing
$2250. Phone(614)698·3290.
RUGS. WALl
Hangings and
ofgon5 . Nice for Christmas .
Reasonable . Coll992·2214.

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

Call

liS

B &amp; S MOBilE HOMES, Pt . Plea·
sont. W. Va. beside Heck's.
1q73 Broodmore 14 w 6-4 2
, bedroom
1973 Dorion 14 x 60 2 bedroom
1972 Victorian 14 x 67 3 bedroom .
2 both
1972 Coventry 12 x 65 3 bedroom
196q Statesman 12 K 60 2
bedroOm.

-.

~

MOBILE HOME with ekpando on 3
ocres. Drill w•ll. Septic tank.
Immediate
pouesslon .

7&lt;2·307&lt;.

IT~!

Seor~h of 4; Muppet
Show 6; Match Game PM 8; MacNeil-lehrer

! IWN

MEAN MY
ltL'r'· WH ITE CARCASS IS 0'-JE'
OF ITS NEuDTMIJLE IISStrSI

THIS FIRM DOESI&gt;I'T

Report 20; Wild Kingdom 10; Candid Camera 13;
8,fJO-Llttle House On The Prairie 3,A,t5; Sl• Million
Dollar Man 6 , 13; Bocy Human 8. 10; Notional
Geographic 20,33;
' 9:oo-Movle "Sybil" Part t . 3.•. IS; Movie '"The Seven
Ups '" 6, 13; Mash 8.10; Meeting of Minds 20;
Shepherd's Pie 33.
9,3o-&lt;&gt;ne Day At A Time 8, 10; Makem &amp; Clancy 33.
lO :oo-Lou Gran I 8, 10; News 20; Originals JJ.

FERTIUZER, NITROGEN,
POTASH, FERT.(}.PELS
&amp; BLEND

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

HEAnNG INC.

'

~ ~ ~

'.
'

\111'7 ISIJ'T

"
'.
••
'.
'.

11111;;

~

OF

.'•'' ..

t
J I I TI

'
'
•
,'
~

rALTEC

.'

949·2"7.
INTERIOR PAINTING ond drywall
finisking. Colt Doyle Knapp,

I I

992·7789.
TE'AFORD GOLF . Clubs buffed for
:spring .
ARNOLD PRIDDY ond Dick Smith
auto repo"ir. Overhaul motors .
916locus t Street, Middleport.

Will CA~E _for the 81derly in our
home. Phone 992-7314.

APPUANCE

SERVICE
We have enlarged our

service department and
·will service Hotpoint and·
other bunds.

I PDIIIeroy Landmark

9.;. ~Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.

8

Phone 992-2181 .

45769.

Answer: (
·.I

Saturdays

:
"1
'

•
•

LOOMBAH! l&lt;tNS E!IJ%
AN' QUEEN LiMI'l'l
HAVE LEFT FQI':

EXCAVATING, dozer, loader ond
backhoe work ; dump trut.ks ~·
ond lo-bays for hire : will haul •~
fill dirt, to soil, ljmestone and ~
grovel Call Bob or ' Roger Jef· ~ ·
fers, day phone 992 -708q, night
phone 992 -3525 or 992· 5232.
,,

,*"' ;

EXCAVATING. dozer , backhoe "t
and ditcher , Charles R. Hat· •1
field,
Bock Hoe Service . ....~ ·
Rutland , Ohio. Phone 742-2008 . ~ ·

698-7331.

'·

GASOLINE ALLEY

Another woman
had a bilby 1

The
dooro;;tep

six babies

months!

I wear it

basket

'

BATH~OOMS

AND Kitchens
remodeled , ceramic tile. plum· 1
bing, carpentry, and general
maintenance . 13 . years ex·
perience. 992· 3685:

PUlliNS EXCAVATING. Complete
Service . Phone 992.i2478.

WILL DO rug weaving. $2 per
yard . Mrs. Jimmie {Mary) King,
CR 32, opprox. I 1/~ miles from
Meigs Memorial Gardens. No
phone.

is

at

the

FRANK&amp;ERNIE

Ff!L L.lf(l!: St:lhNGt
MY PSVC:HIA IRIS,.

j~bs .

CARPEtiNG

GROUND AND trailer in Five Will DO boybsitting in my home.
Point! area . t 10 acres with
Children 4 years and under.
electric , water ~:~nd sewoge.
Syracuse area , any shif,l .
992·31SO.
12x50 2 bedroom troller , fur·
nished Including wosher and . --""-'-"-----~­
drye-r. Awnings . lront and brick
with storage. Harry Deems, .
Parkersburg 304·•22 ·8941 or
DISTRIBUTORSHIP
"992-34\JS.
Will not interfere with present
ACRE , '/~ mile off Rt. 143. 20
employment, . No selling re·
acres near For~s t Acres Pork .
qui red . Twenfy Jeor old com992·7790.
pony . See our o on the Sports
Page, today!
MOBILE HOME with expondo on 3
acres . Drilled well. Septic
tonks. Immedia te possession .
7-42 -3074.

DRIVE ALITTLE

acres fully carpeted , just
remodeled, _
a ll electric, dug
cellar off kitchen. 4 ~I ·
~uildings In Meigs Mine area.

992·3993.

wtll DO odd
985·3981 .
•

HOMESITES for sale, I acre and
up. Middleport , near Rutland.

Cafl'l'/2·(&lt;81.
NEW 3 bedroom house,· 2 baths,
oil elec., I acre, Middleport,
close to Rutland. Phone 992·
7-481.
COUNTRY farmland with secluded woods, woter and good OC · 1
cess in Monroe County, W. Va. ·
$1 ,000 .down, call {304) 772·
3102 or (304) 772 ·3227.
Commercial property opprox. 17 '
acres, level land. located at
Tuppers Plains on Ohio, Route

7. Phono(6fA) 667·63&lt;W. -

VA-FHA. 30 yr. finandng, also
refinancing. Ireland Mortgage,
17 E. 'stat•, Athens, phone (61-4)
592·~51.

I

I

'roDIIY • •

WAHR WEll Drilling . AlSo oil and :
gaS w&amp;ll work . Heaton Drilling 1
Co .• David S. Heaton , Rt. 3, ,
Pomeroy , . Ohio.
Phone
985-.4335.

SAVE ON

S.'L\.o

:

,.HIN#(
CALL. IN

39 Faucet
problem
40 Quick look
41 Soccer star
· DOWN
1 Matronly
title
2 Macaw
3 Trombone
ja.z great
4 Pub potable
oEmploy
anew
6 Dutch
cheese
7 My : Fr.
8 Quick brew
9 Suppress
10 Perfumed

Society 15.

8:oo-Chuck Barris 3,4.15; Happy Doys o,tJ; c;BS
Reports 8, tO; E venlng of Pops 20,33 ..
9:oo-Movle "Sybil"' Part 2 . 3,4,15; Movie "Lost of fhe
Good Buys" 8, 10.
9: 30-Three's Company 6, 13 ; A Matter ot Size 33; Dick

Cavett 20.
;o ,oo-Havlng Babies 6.13; News 20; 10 : 3~Aibcrt
Paley : Mefalsmlth 33: Monty Python's Fllylrig
Circus 20 .
ll:OG--News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15 ; Dick Cavett 70: Over
Easy 33.
11 :3D-Johnny Carson 3,4.15; Movie "Star Spangled

Girl"' 6, 13; Columbo 8; ABC News 33; Movie
" Treasure of San Gennaro" 10.

\2 :00--Jlmnkl 33;

16 What's left
19 German city
zo Woo
Z3 Defrosting
211ron
Curtain
country
25 - War

27 Sky sight
30 Upright
31 Without
funds
33 A Gardner For release Monday March 6, 197B.
36 Elderly
_ _ _ _ _.;:..;_______:::--::-___,-----37

~-+-+-t-t-.Join

J/6-A

• Q8 7 6

WEST
•

'A7632
+A 9
• 82
EAST

5

•

3 2

' K Q J 10 9

'8;4

•

.A9654

+ KJJ0 53 +Q 7 2
Q 10
SOUTH

'+

• A K J 10 9 4
·-··
864

•

KJ 7 3

4 ,+--f-+--11~~~~:~.able:
: SouthNeither

b+--t-t---t---t-

West

AXVDI. BAAXR
LONGFELLOW

apostrophes, the length and formation of the wnrds are
hints . E;tch day 1h r 't o de lett crs nre different.

K WU

YUKUFXVPRKVGP

ZVHU

VP!CFRPOU

lCOOUUY

JFUKKE

all

I GH K

WR I

G H

lRZUIXUP
XRYU

HGF

ZVHU

DVYGDI

DVZZVRX HURKWUF
.
Saturday's .Cryptoquote: WHO ENDS THE DAY WITH
WHOLESOME FOOD, BEGINS THE NEXT IN A HAPPY
MOOD.-ANCIENT SAYING

.

•4.81 ~·,;d.
...

9' and 12r Viml ,
Floorinr In Stock

:t ') J978 Kmg t 'l!'atures Sy ndicate- , In ~ .

BALLS 0' FIRE!!
HERE COMES
5HERIFFTAIT- -

luy whore,.. con come lit

Coll742·2211
TALK TO
WENDELL ORATE
CAIIPI!TCONSULTANT ·

in spring charity game
NORTll

CRVPTOQUOTES

atocktcl.

BRIDGE

~:~~tain

North East

Dhl. Pass
Pass
I"ass
Pass
Opening lead ; 'I' K

u seci for the three I.' s, X for th e two 0'5,· etc . Single letters.

KG

'{ES, M~AM ,iM AWAKE r

THE MOVIE? OH, l{E5,
MA'AM, THE MOVIE
WAS GREA"f!

Wi'IAT WA5 IT ABOUT?
WELL, UH ... IT WAS ...
WELL , T THINK ...

I DON'T SUPPOSE IT
WA5 ABOUT DONN'(
ANDMARIE,WASIT? ~

.•
i

B; \ :Cia-Tomorrow

Movie Channel 4 S &amp; 9 P .M. - Airport ' 77 lPG I
7 &amp; 11 P.M.-Gumboil Rolly I PGI

Yesterday'• ADiwtr

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A II

.... _

WlNNfE

-·-t

\2 : 40--Ko!ak

3,4; 1: 1o-News 13 .

istic

.•
THANn $·"'
L---_
. ..;_:__:·:.__;_:.;:~:::::J:=;;::::::;:;;,,:..,::==:...;;....;__.:_
_______________________
...J

ond
YGU're .-ntnt
- Good Mlect- - Fully·

l iars Club 6 ; Pop Goes The

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

I•

Rubber Back Carpet

742·2211

ACROSS
I Spanish
belle
o Neglectful
11 Russian
lake
12 Heavenly
13 Fish
•
14 Quarrel : sl.
15 Between
Mo. and La .
16 Border
17 First-&lt;iown
yardage
18 Be of im·
portance
20 Insincere
talk
2I Gaelic
22 Some time
back
23 Character-

&amp;

' Country 8; Capitol Beet 33; News 10; To Tell The
Truth 13; Gilligan's Is . 1l; Fren~h Chef 20.
7: 15- Big Green Magazine 33 ; 7:30- Hollywood
Squares 3,4; Let's Go To The Races 8;1 Can·
did Camern 6;MacNeii-Lehrer· ReDOrt 20,33;Prlce
Is Alght 10; That's Hollywood 13 ; Teleylslon Honor

DAILY CRYPTO&lt;lUOTE- Here's how to work It:

Alt cupot lnitolltcl Witt
peddlnt ot no chorge.
Expert lnotollatton.

RUTLAND
FURNI'IURE

7:0Q-Cross-Wits 3,4;

BOGUS NORMAL ALPACA
Answer : Which of their house guests wu lhe
c leanest. o f course? - THE ·SPONGER

SIINE.
~

&amp;
SAY£ A LOT

. AI Low AI

I I X]1rs "[ XXXXX)"

Jumbles : FROZE

25 Subdued
in color
26 Immense
27 Painter .
Chagall
Z8 Swedish
wine
measure
29 Bury
32 Take up
arms
33 Ike's
wartime
COllUllBnd
34 Favoring
35 City of
India
Hairdo
Metal-decor·
ating art

UNHOLSTERY .

Phone

992-3618.
THREE BEDROOM with borh 5.96

19erforms
miracles'

1

Refinishing,
reupholstery,
rebuilding . Beautiful selection
of materials and vlnvls. Free · ·
estimate. Tel. 742-2852. loco·
tion: Solem Center,

JUST COMPlETED new house in
Middleport. For more information coll992-2238 or 9&lt;12~ 5304 .

992-5621.

thinh it

still

NEtGLER'S FOR building houses. "
Colt 949·2508 for house designs :
and estimates. Guy H. Neigler. ~
Racine .
',

NICE HOME in rurol area with 26
acres. New aluminum siding,
completely Insulated and
remodeled Inside. Storm win·
dows . large carpeted living
room and bath. Ca11985-4111 or

lfqet it back
before the batten.J
runs
down'

1heLj

WINTER GET to your house? let us
make necessary repai rs . AI
Tromm. Construction . 7-42·2328.

MAGGIES

Hogan 's Heroes 15.
6,oo-News 3.4,8.10.13.15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6 : 3~NBC News 3,4.15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett
Friends 6; CBS News B. 10; Over Eosy 20.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

SEWING MACHINE. Repairs, $er· ~
vice , oil makes, 992·2284 . The,,.
FabriC
Shop,
Pomeroy . "
Authorized Singer Soles and
Service. We sharpen Scissors .

HOWERY AND MARTIN Ell':
cavating,
septic systems .
dozer. bockhae. dump truck .
limestone. gravel, blacktop
poving, Rt. 143. Phone I (614)

5:30--News 6; Elec Co. 20,33; Mary Tyler Moore 10;

Now arrange the circled leMers to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by the above car1oo11.

~

'•

Will do roofing, construction ,
plumbing and heating. No job ~
too Iorge or too small. Phone
742-2348.

A
eELL
L.OUD
AND C.LEAR'?

NEW - JUST OFF PRESS! JUMBLE BOOK J11 wllh t 10 puutetle avail·
able lor $1 .35 poslpaid 11om Jumble, c/0 tr.ls newspaper, P.O. Box 3-4,
Norwood, N.J. 07648. Inclu de your name, address, zip code end ma~e
checks payable to Newspap~i book~ .
·
.

,

Sweepers, toasters , irons, all "
srnatl appliances. lawn mower . ~ :
next 1"o State Highway Garage. 11
on Route 7. Phone (61-4) 985~ . ~
3825.
I
•
REMODEliNG , Plumbing , heating
and all types of general repair.
Work guaranteed 20 yeors ex ~
perience. Phone 992·240Ci'.

' ·•

(Answers tomorrow)

.I

"'
"

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

r]

IYAHRLD±

IJTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

BRADFORD . Auctioneer, Complete Servke. Phone 9-49-2.487
or 949-2000. Racine, Ohio, Critt
Brodlord.

J

I K

'

Olllo

Phone m.2111

TWO STORY frame Bouse. 6
rooms ond ba1h. cellar, out·
buildings. 4 acres lond, ot edge
of Rutland . Complete trailer
hook·up also , 2 bank5 apprais•
ed property at $15,500, Phone
992-7094.

WHB~~

••
'.

13.

11 :3D-Knockout 3, IS; Family Feud 6, 13; Partrldue
family 4; Love of Life 8,10; Sesame St. 20; Royal
Heritage ;JJ; 11 :5s--CBS News 8; LOving Free 10.
t2 :fJO-Newscenter 3; no.ooo Pyramid 13; News 4,6, 10;
To Soy The Leasf 15 : Gambit 8.
12 ' 3~Ryan ' s Hope 6,13; Bob Braun 4; Gong Show t5;
Search for Tomorrow 8, 10: E lee . Co . l l .
LfJO-Cro••·Wits 3; All My Ch ildren 6, 13; News B;
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1:JG-Oays of Our Lives 3, • .15 ; As The World Turns
8,10; 2:tJO--One Life lo Live 6, 13; 2 ' 3~Doctors
3.A.IS;' Guiding Light 8, 10.
3 :oo-Another World J ,-4 , 15; General Hospital 6. 13 ;
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
3:30-AII In The Family 8,10: Consumer Survival Kit
20.
4 :00-Speclal Treat 3,4, IS; Edge of Night 13; Merv
Griffin 6; Gllllgon ' s Is. 8; SesameS. 20,33 ; Gomer
Pyle, USMC 10.
4:31).,-Brady Bunch 8, 10; Mary Tyler Moore 13.
s:oo-Here Come The Brides J; Slar Trek 4; Gunsmoke
8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33 ; Hoglln 's
Heroes 10; Emergency One 13 ; Pettlco&amp;t 15.

by Henri Arnold and Bob LH

BORN LOSER ·

lAVENDER
OONSTRUCTION
Syracuse,

Pli.H2·2174

Ul,-!!a ®

Women ~Only

Price Is Right 8,10; Rick Fouc heuK 13.
11 :00--Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6, 13.

lour ordinary word9.

-

FrHEsllmatn
Phone tf2·399l
!----'~-----3·.-3·.-lf.....,c , ,

10; Not For

10: J~Hollywood Squahs 3,4, 15; Andy Griffith 6;

UnscramtMe thete tour Jumbles,
one leMer to each square, to form

''

11-9·11~

St. 33.
9:00-Merv Griffin 3: PI\ II Donahue -4, 13, 15; Edge of
· Nlqht6 ; Family Af!olr8 ; Mate~ GomeiO.
9:31f.Emergency One 6,' Andy Griffi th 8; Family
Affair 10.
10:fJO-Sonford &amp; Son 3,4. 1$; Tattlelales 8; Joker' s Wild

\1il THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

'ftfl\l~\b)1t

'

-Sivt F.U.l &amp; Money-

Pomeroy Landmark
9. _Jock w. c.r..y, Mgr. :

Jlil

"

PUJMBING &amp;

News •B; Bullwlnkle 10.
7: 3G-Schoolles 10; B:oo-Capt . Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame

Nash\'llle On The Road 15; Know Your Schools 33.

.SOU~CE?

DIRECTOR!;!

Blown Into Walls
aild Attics

ATTENTION MARE Owners :
HAY FOR SAlE
AQHA stud service. Introducing
HAY f.OR SALE . 985·3849 or
to Southern Ohio, Cortoko, sor ~
965·4248.
rell son of Ot~e . Breed for col·
or, conformation and disposi·
lion. Phone 698 ~82-41 evenings
Check 11tlr low, low
or write' for breeding contract.
price$ on
B.e lle EchO Quarter HOrses,
40225 SR 692, Pomeroy, Ohio

APPROX. ONE A . riverfront in
Syracuse . Porlialtr, remodeled
house and troi er hookup.

=-~

Aaour

f!OAI&lt;D OF

Cellulose fiber

RadiatorService
,_ ........... ,
-..

Pomeroy Landmark

TWO ·BEDROOM apartment. Coli
before 8 om. 992-2288 .

. =;·

OF

DAFFODIL'S
Ur.JREQl)tTED
PA~SIOIII

Blown Insulation

EXPERIENCID .

today.

TWO STORY 3 bedroom frame
house. F.A. furnace, storm windows, fireploce ,· ln Middleport.
f'hone 992-3457 or 992·5867.

.... ·=:: .

Mews

GNATS~ JU5T f!ECAUSE

HAVE YOU NO
LOYALTY: MAIIIL.
HOW CAN YOU
DEPI(IVE YOUR
COMPANY OF THIS
VIrAL ENEii:fSY

WHAT

'IOU llEFtJSEP TO MAI&lt;RY
M~S DOe81NS·· EVEr.J THOUGH
$f,tE- OFFERED Md&lt;E:E tNDU.STiltE.S·
HEii: NEW SOLAR ENER6Y
PROCE.SS ~

AGITATE'S THE

... ''
'',

.

TURlEY 'S WRECKER
Service.
Racine, Ohio. Day or night .

FOUR ROOMS and both upstairs
apt. in Pomeroy. Write Sax
729-C, co The Daily Sentinel ,
Pomeroy. OH.

~-

•.
&lt;

IALES AND SERVICE

1977 DODGE CUSTOM 100 pickup
16,000 qctuol miles . Shinn 's
Tractor Soles . leon WV . Phone

' ce llent work cor . Call949·2333.

7: 1s-Labor Scene Jl.

7:3Q-That Nashville MuSic 3; In

Pomeroy, Ohio
Pomeroy ff2·4212
orm..2u
~A.1.\.1o4:30P u .

742-2321
FrH Estlmo111
Work Gu•ranteed
2-10-ttc'
. -.

Jack's Septic
Tank .SeiW:e

· ··-Jock W. Corsey, Mgr.
. . . . Phone 99!·211!_
HOOF HOLLOW Horses. Bu-,. , sell
trade or train. New ond used
saddles . Ruth Reeves . A lbany .

'''' .'

300 Mllln St.

Consta ilction

.

~LEANING

i

AI Tromm

SEPTIC TANIC

. •
1,. · t~67(30&lt;1&lt;58·1630
VOlKSWAGON BEETlE . Ex ·

MarloH 'lirli!idb ' l11l.ue hi•
New York stage debut Oct.
19, 1944, playing Nels In the
Broadway hit "I Remember

Garages

COAl. liMESTONE , sand , grovel ,
calci um chloride. fertilizer . dog ~--.....,::-------...;
food . and all types of salt . Ex - "1
celsior Sol i Works.-lnc ., E. Main
Sf"., Pomeroy , 992·3891 ,

good condition: used very little.
$175.992-5768 .

COINS, CuRRENCY . tokens , ord
pocket watches and chain~ .
slh.. er and gold . We need 1964
and older silver coins . Buy , sell ,
or trade " Ca ll Roger Wamsley ,
Ul-2331 .

Room Additicils

DAVID BRICKLES

ANTIQUE OAK argon . 1890"s or
early 1900's. Exceptional condition Qnd fully functional. Co lt
992-:JJBJ or q&lt;J2-2-448 after 5:00.

EARlY AMERICAN living room
suite and !ov• seat, · 8oth 3
months old. Also ste:reo. Con
be seen 1 mile out 143 -or colt

Friends 6; CBS News 8, 10; Over Easv 20.

CAPTAIN EASY

CARTER

~~
Remodeling
··

Concrete
Patios,
SldiWIIkl ,
New
Conslruction
&amp;
Remodell"'.

TUESDAY, MARCH 7. 1971
Report 13; S:lO-PTL Club 13; S:Ss-Sunrise Semester 10 .
6;fJO-PTL Club ll; 6 : 1s-6:25-Concerns &amp; Comments 10 ; 6 : 3G-Focus on
Columbus o4; News 6 ; Sunrise Semester 8; 6:o4sMornlng Report 3; 6:50-Good Morning, West
1/lrglnla 13.
6,Ss--chuck White Reports 10; News 13.
7:fJO-Today 3,4, 15; Good Morning Amerlco 6, 13; CBS
$ : A~Farm

l :fJO-Crou.Wits 3.4; Llors Club 6; Morty Robbins'
Spotlight 8; Capitol Beat 33; News 10; To Tell The
Truth 13: Glll'lgon 's Is. IS; Daniel foster. M.D. 20;

'

Kltchlft Ceblnets, IICOifl"',

MATCH Forked Run
S~d~m~ Club ev!fry Sr,~ndoy
of . ~n~"Q~. FoetQry ( hoke' gun!i
0 ly .

TIMBER . Pomeroy Forest Pro·
duch. Top price for 5lond ing
sawtimber. Call 992·5965 or
Kent Hanby. 1·446·8570.

'1tlt 8riciRIM
Jilt 1'1111•-

·

-·''·.

,_--::-::-:::-~::!;:-"--, ~.

General Contracting .

CONN TRUMPET with case ." Very

·

-~.

SOYBEAN HAY . Lorge round
boles. Will load on your truck
or delil1er . 992·3336.

ORANGE TOWNSHIP Volunteer
Fire Dept . Tuppers Plains will
sponsor o consignmen t sole
April 15th at the Fire House .
Anyone having anything to con·
.sign. contact one ol the following firemen :
Clifford
longenette
6!4 -667 ·3890, Robert Tripp,
Charles Carr , Gordon Coldwell.

Carpenter
Personals

FIREWOOD , split and delivar&amp;d .
$-45 a cord or $35 a ' truck load ,
All hardwood . 8413-2933 or

2 - i~l m~

INCOME TAX Services . Federal
and stole Taxes . Wallace
Ruuell , Bradbury . 992-7228.

SKATE A WAY announces An ·
niversory Party Sc;~t , Ma rch
18th. Races , prize5 , balloons .
Free ice c;reom. Will be dosed
W.d. , March 8th through March
lOth. Reopen Friday March
17th.

Sunday

At

l,4.Movie Channel 4 -

S &amp; 1 P.M.- Ode to Billy Joe lPG)
9 &amp; 11 P.M. - Demon Seed (RI

6:fJO-News 3.A,8,t 0.1 3.1 5; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6:3o-NBC News 3,4, B : ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;

Open
' ' 00 tii,:OO Mon .• Frlclay
, ,ootti6:00Situ,r dly
12:001116:00 Sunday
2-2-lfc

992·2201 tlf 992·7&amp;30

REDUCE SAFE &amp; fast with Gotlese
Table!$ 1: E·Vop "water pillt' "
Nelson Drug'

With a K1 .." 10.

ll :oo-Janakl JJ; 12 : o4D-News 13; 1:0&lt;&gt;-Tomorrow

Hogan' s Heroes 1.5.

..'

MEIGS PLAZ4
Middleport, Ohio

PIIOIII IIIU Y111111

11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,•, tl; Pol lee Story 6,13; Me.
Millan &amp; Wife I ; ABC News 33; Movie "'ft Slarfed

MONDAY. MARCH 1, 1,1
$:00-Here Come The Brldu 3; Star Trek4; Gunsmoke
8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood ?0,33; Hogan's
Heroes 10; Emergencv One 13; Petticoat 1.5.
5:30-News 6; Etec. Co. 20.33; Mary Tyler Moore 10;

• Locattcl In The

c!;ii'~

Jack w. \.ill .s.ey, Nil'.
-tf2·2111

'

..'·'
_•:
,
'

_$!1PPUES_

10 :30-Monly Python's flying Circus 20; Anyone FO&lt;
Tennyson? 33.
lt :fJO-News 3 ,4.6.1. 10, 13 ,1~; Dick Cavett 20; MacNeil ·
Lehrer Report 3J .

TELEVISION
VIEWING

'·
'•

ACE HARDWARE

Carpeting

Let us test vourwo11r FrH

FIREWOOD . $25 o pi ck up load.
94'il·2129 .

,
~\

P~ltU

Young's

every Sunday afternoon . Foetory choke guns only . Assorted
meats .

SHOI)TING

..,'

WAU.PAI'ER.

S.(lllrilr
Exboclilllt

s-.

NICE PIGS for 1ale. Call after 5.
94'il-2B57.

ClEARANCE · SALE begins Mon .,
Feb. 13 at Sew·N·Sew Outlet .
Main Street, t Roc;ine. AH
polyeSter do~ble ·Rnits redu ced
.. ... ..., -4()'1, and 50.%. Thread big spool
Slor$1.
·

Tueadily
thn.t Friday
4P.M.
lht day before publication

THE PHOTO Pl.ltCE

THE RACINE Gun Club Gun Shoot

Phonem.-21~

·w. and Mrs. Ted Hlayman

Qf

their buitding in Bashon . Foe·
tory choke guns only .

mpon!lible fur more than one lncor"·
l'ft:t lnaert1on.

Cefiter Tuesday.

c.....,

PDIIIirow Lindmark '

THE RACINE Volunteer Fire
Oepoitment will sponsor o gun

to edit or re~'t 111ny W deemed ob)e&lt;.1ior1111. The Publisher will not be

NOTICE
... .. ...
'
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

Lit Pomeroy Larodmorlt
. sotlan &amp; condl1lori your
wottr with
wotot
softener. Modal uc.svt,
. Now Only 279,95

•

The Publilher ~ lhe righl

RUMell, Mandy and Mike,
visited Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Ruaaell at Wolfpen Sunday.
Vlcld Roush was returned
home from Holzer Medical

TAURUS (April ze.May 201 You were weekend guests of Mr .
can couni on No .1 today more IUld Mra. Gerald Hayman and
than anyone else . II follows , Keith. Mrs. I,J.nda Jewell and
lheretore. that you may listen children of Letart, W. Va.
to many voices , but heed only visited the Hayrnans Sunday.
the dictates of your own conMr. and Mrs. Edward Hupp
science.
•~ .....a witll
" In
GEMINI CMay 21.Juno 201 If you entertaurcu
a go g
get an idea that seems so large away" party for Mt. and Mrs.
in scope that uappears imp rae- Don Hupp and sons, and a
Heat, don ' t discard it. What "welcoming home" party for
your mind can conceive can be Jeff Knighting Saturday
accomplished .
evening. Jeff had been
CANCER (June 21-July 221 stationed Ill Germany Ill the
Someone you've helped in Ihe United States Army , M·
past wants to reciprocate tending were Mr. and Mrs.
loday , bul you 'll feel he 's being Dan Hupp, children David,
overly generous . It should be
his decision , not yours .
Larry, Chris, Scott and
LEO CJuly 23·Aug.221 Don't be Brian, Mr. and Mrs. Steve
an old luddy·duddy if your Hupp, Melfllda Barnette, Mr.
toved one comes forth with a and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons, Mr.
brainstorm you think Is too far~ and Mrs. Jlm Hupp, sons
out. Give ft -the courtesy of Jinuny and BlUy, Clarence
careful consideration..
Gl d
H tto
Ed
VIRGO CAuu.23·Sopt.221 Be a Hupp, · a ys u n,
-

-

Business Services

NE
A WATER
SOFTENER?

Smith.

MubileHOfTJie ~ana Yard saleJ
.w.re. »ec.-epted only with Cllsh wllh

cally suited by sending tor your be with him and vlB!ted Mr.
copy ol Aslro-Graph Letter. and Mro. Arnold Hupp and
Mail 50 cents for ea.cl1 and a family.
•
· lorlg , sell-addressed, stamped
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
envelope to Astra-Graph . P.O.

IN lOVING memory ot our deor
mother, Amondo Kaspar , who
paned away tour years ago to·
day :
It doesn't matter where we 90 01
wtlot we do
Ther• is always so~ little th ing
to think of you .
Your foc:e and voice ore fnuh in
mind
.
We never shall forget no molter
whotthe ti me.
Sodly mlued by your daughters,
Mildred Arnold and lucretia

9-TheDaily Sentinel, Mlddleport•Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Mar. 6, 1978
DICK TRACY

''
...'

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

AppieGrove
News Notes

Morch 1, 1111
Miss Loma BeU is visiting
An enterprise you were never friends in Colum~ for a

Don' t rock the boat today and

.

'

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
Oswald : "This Y,ear's
spring charity game of the
American Contract Bridge
League for the benefit of the
Mental Health Association
will take place on Wednes·
day, March 15. We hope
manY of you readers \"ill
play in lt."
Alan : " With over 200,000
participants it is the largest
duplicate game in the world .
The hands are dealt by computer and as such are just
what you meet in ordinary
play. Some simple, some
complicated and some Inter·

--AN' KIS

MEAN Ol
DOG

csting ."

Oswald , "He•• is hand

dne from the fall gam~. The
normal contract Is foUr

spades by South . The whole
play hinges on the play of tht:
dub suit. At some stage of
the proceedings , South will
lead a club from dummy .
Assuming East plays low,
South can rise with the klnR
and make five odd for a good
score Or play the jack and
just make four for a poor

score."
Alan : "Some North-South
pairs will stop at a part
score contract for very bad
scores, while their lucky opponents will get good
Scores."
Oswald , "Top North·
South scores will go to th08C
few pairs who got a chance
to double their opponenlll at
the five level and collect
penalty bonuseH of 500 points
or more."

A Kansas reader wanta to
know if experts slick to the
old-fashioned fourth-best
lead when leading from o
long suit.
The great majority do, but
a few modernists have ~n
experimenting with third
and fifth best leads.
I NEWSP!.PER ENTF.HPIUSE ASSN . !

(For a copy of JACOBY MOD·
ERN, send $1 to: " Win a.
Bridge," care of this newspaper, P.O. Box &lt;89, ftadlo Cif}
Stallon. New York , N. Y. 10019.}

�10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Mar. 6, 1978

__s_____ ~

l~-- ---A---r-e--a--D--e--a-t_h
I

1

OLLIE SPENCER
Mrs. Ollie Spencer,
Columbus, formerly of Meigs
County , dit&gt;d Saturday in a

Col umbus hospital.
Mrs. Spencer was born in

Roane County, W. Va .,
daughter of the late Amba
and Angenetta Sargent . She
was preceded in death by
several brothers and sisters,
her husband, Seldon, and a
da ughter,
Mrs.
Elsi
Stephenson.
Surviving are

SOilS,

Selva,

Silas, Otia and Cecil Spencer ;

a dau ghter , Mrs. Ruby
Horsnyder;

two

sisters,

Louisa Webb and Mary
She ppard, and seve ral
grand children and great·
grandchildren .
Funeral services will be
held at 9:30a.m. Tuesday al
the Schoedinger Funeral
Home, 2741 Cleveland Ave.,
Columbus. The body will be
brought to the L&lt;'lart Falls
Ce111etery in Meigs County

fo r buri al at 2:30 p.m .
Tuesday.
DORA O'BRIEN
Mrs. Dora O'Brien, 93,
Irving, Texas, a former
Meigs County resident, di ed
Sunday at the home of her
daughter in Irving . She was
burn in Meigs County , the

daughter of the late Frank
and Marne Curtis Blackw ell.
She was also preceded by her
husba nd , Ed ward, and two
sisters, Mrs. Nora Taylo r and
Mrs. Ada Grimes.
The O'Bricns operated a
farm in Burlingham for many

years.
•
Survivors include two sons,

George, Maybroo k, Texas,
and Dale pf Vicksbur.g,
Mississippi; two daughters,
Mrs. Pea rl Glover of Irving,
'i'(.• xa s,

with

whom

she

resided for several years, and

Mrs. Robert (Jean) Moore of
Florida ; eight grandchildren
and II great grandchildren .
Funeral services will be
Wednesday at I p. m. at the
Hughes Funeral Home in
Athens with the Rev. Fred
Shaw offi ciating. Burial will
be In the Burlingham
Cemetery. Friends may call
on Wednesday until the time
of service.

Hospital News
Veteraaa Memorial Hospllal
Saturday Admissions Benny Spears, Syracuse.
Saturday Discharges Connie
Manley, John
Schneider, Ella Stewart,
Barbara Whaley, Jerry Cline.
Sunday Admissions - Leah
Ord. Syracuse; Minnie
Bengel, Pomeroy ; Ted
Hatfield, Jr. , Deller; Ralph
Hall, Pomeroy; Lillian
Roush,, Middleport.
Sunday [)ischarges Myrtle Fitch, Roy Jones, Otis
Knight, Margaret Gloeckner.

Holzer Medical Center
!Discharges Marcb3)
Robert Armentrout,
Ronald Bails, Bette Baldwin,
John Boggess, Melba Boggs,
Bob Morris, principal of the lnel Bugg, James Bush ,
Pomeroy and Middleport Victor Cales, Magdalene
Elementary Schools, . will be Cannichael, Dorothy Clark,
speaking at the annual Mitzi Dean, Ella Eads, Vesta
birthday party of Drew Hufford , Dollie Jividen,
Webster Post 39, American Maude Kelley, Edward
Legion , at 7 p.m. Tuesday . Klodowski Sr. , Clara I.Joyd,
Refreshments will be Helen McCain, Sam Me·
served at 7 with the program Carty, Edward McNabb ,
to follow. Plans for the new Holly Miller, Ellen Moss,
post home will be displayed. Garnett Pickens, Robin
Armand Turley will be on Proffitt, Charles Rowland,
hand to present organ music. Maxwell Runyon, Claudia
The party is open to legion Rutherford, James See,
members and the auxiliary Brady Sheets. Freda Smith,
Theresa · Staley, Wanda
and their families.

Morris named
guest speaker

Taylor, Green Vance.

(Births, March 3)
Mr. and Mrs. William
Russell, a daughter, New
Haven . Mr. and Mrs. Zat
Salmons, a daughter.
Gallipolis. Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Thivener, a daughter,
Gallipolis.
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Cin·
1Discharges, March 4)
cin nati Gas &amp; Electric Co.
Fred
Allen s worth,
officials said today they
believe they can get through Kalherine Austin, Auswell
this week without mandatory Barnell, Floyd Bennett, Mrs.
Gerald Boggs and daughter,
electric curtailments.
The utility's 500 largest . Arthur Brooks, Virginia
commercial and industrial Caldwell, Mrs. Rodaey Cook
customers would be cutback and son, Ennal Cremeans,
25 per cent if CG&amp;E's coal David Diddle, Bert Fayne,
supplies drop to tbe 4!klay Jerri Hawley, Jerry Herd·
man, Della Norton, Mary
level.
CG&amp;E today had a 42-day PhilHp s, Elvarie Rose ,
supply, which was e.pected Garnet Russell, Elsie
to stay at that level several Shaffer, Catherine Shifflet,
days despite the United Mine Glenna Taylor, G~neva
Workers union strike. Tbe Vance, Floyd Wallace Sr.,
utility is able to purchase Zola Wickline, Carl Williams.
(Discharges, March 5)
non ~UMW coal, oil and
Ronda
Cheatwood, Effie
outside power.
Conley, Mrs. Ernie Gardaer
and daughter, Shirley
Graham,
Ruth
Holt,
LAWRENCEVILLE, Ga.
Paulmenia Hutchinson,
I UPI) - Larry Flynt,
Joyce Kiser, Betty K()ehler,
publisher of controversial
Kathleen Moody , William
Hustler magazine, was
Ramey Jr., Linda Riffle,
shot today in this Georgia
Mrs. Leland Selbe and
city where he Is on trial for
daui(hter, Rutb Smith, John
obscenity.
Voyrs, David Ward.
Flynt was ·reportedly hit
(Births, March 5)
In the abdomen wllh shots
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Ed"
from a passing car. His
wards, a daughter, Clifton.
condition was not known.
Mr . and Mrs. Timothy
Witnesses said the shots
Ousley, a daughter, Wellston.
ca me from a p~sslng car as
Mr . and Mrs. Charles Fix:ley,
he lefl a cafeteria near the
a son, Jackson.

Cincinnati
firm can get
through week

Gwlnnett County court·
house.

BAI&lt;ER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

HEADQUARTERS FOR

''FRIGIDAIRE" QUALITY
HOME APPLIANCES

Pleasant Valley Hospital
DISCHARGED - William
Chapman; Henderson; Olive
Meadows, Glenwood; Alice
Gaskins, Point Pleasant ;
Harry McDermitt, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Archie
Pierce, Middleport; Ben·
·jamin Fields, Hartford; Mrs.
Garland Bostic, Gallipolis
Ferry; George Vaughn, Point
Pleasant; Harry Lucas, Point
P!easaql; John Oshel, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Roland
Smith, Middleport; James
Pierce,· Point Pleasant;

Wahama Almost Upset
Red Devils In Finale
to the team In lqnlghls sectional tourney
opener.
II was almost artotber maJor Lillewise Miller Is In the same
upset Saturday night but boat for the Red Devils.
Coach Homer Preece's To make matters wone
Wahama While Falcon's Wahama alao lost the services
dropped a tough 73-M decision of Its leading rebounder, Greg
to \be visiting Ravenswood Blessing who InJured his
Red Devils of Coach Jack ankle with 54 seconds to play
Wiseman.
and had to be treansported
The contest was the regular t~ the hoapltal by the
season finale for botb schools emergency squad. His ser·
as sectional tourneys begin vices apparently will also be
this week In West Virginia lost lor tonight's contest.
cage circles.
AvaU.ble statistics for tile
In fact, tile White Falcons game show Ravenswoods
enter into post season play Mark Stanley as the leading
tonight as they engage In scorer wltb 34 points on 15
Class "AA" Region One field goals and 4 of 6 free
Section Four action by taking throws.
.
on Spencer Yellow Jackets
Joe Fields and Mark Hllton
at Spencer In a 7:30 p.m. also connected In double
contelll. Delalls of the White flgllres for the Red Devils witb
Fal.On..Spencer match-up can 14 and II markers respec·
be found elsewhere in the lively.
today's Register.
Wahama placed five men in
Getting back to Saturday twin digits with a well·
night cllmall9battle, Wahama balanced scoring attack. Rick
f~ll behind early as tile .~d BIJZUll'd topped tile locals with
Devils scored the games first 14 foll9wed by Rick Barnltz
eight points of tile game with 13, Phil Hobbs with 12,
before the Falcons Rick Greg Blessing with 10 .and
Buuard dropped in a free Kelvin Honaker wltb 10.
tbrow to make 11 8-1.
Shooting percentages for
Ravenswood went on to Wahama show a 40 percent
~utscore the locals by a 211-11 '!lark from the floor and a 55
margin in tile opening cantO perceQI average at th'e line.
but the While Falcons cut the The White Falcons committed
lead to six at 3:1-28 at half.
18 turnovers and had four
WatWna put' together a steals along with U total
moat productive tblrd stanza rebounds. Blessing's H was
in which they outscored the lops for Wahama.
visitors 25-18 to take a 51-511
In tile Junior varsity con·
advantage going into tile final test, tile Little Devils handed
eight minutes of play.
Wahama its sixth defeat
II was Greg Blessings• against 10 wins with a ~
bucket that knotted tile score ·victory.
at 32-32 for first lime In the
Craig Easter, Ron Pannell,
game. Phil Hobbs, Rick . Mike Brown and SteveVarner
Buzzard and Rick Barnltz paced tile winners witb 18,12,
paced the local attack in the - - - - - - - - . quarter witb 8, 6 and 5 points,
THURSDAY DINNER
respectively.
The Women.'s Aglow
Ravenswood seemingly
blew tile White Falcons hopes Fellowship will meet Thurs·
of another upset win In tile day at the Meigs Inn for a 7
early minutes of tile final p.m . dinner. Reservations
canto when they built a may be made by calling 992·
5845.
commanding 69-0Slead bui the
Bend Area cagers staged a
last ditch rally that saw them
t.
outscore \he Jackson Coun·
tians 13-ol ·but time ran out
giving Ravenswood a 73-68
trlwnph.
Tragedy struck tile White
Falcons late In tile game on
two separate occasions.
Rick Buzzard, Falcon senior
. guard, was eJected from the
game when he was Involved in
a fracas with Ravenswood's
Scott Miller,. The 5'5 threesport star will probably be lost Ohio will be in Washington,
D. C. March 13·15 to talk with
Ohio congressmen and meet
with government officials.
Christina Hall, Southside; Maida Mora, Meigs County
Sherry Hall, Southside; Fred Farm Bureau president, will
Harmon, Point Pleasant;
Michael Anderson, Point
to represent this
Pleasant; Mrs. Paul Harmon, New Haven; Raymond
Hoffman, Point Pleasant;
William Browning,
for corn and wheat,
Gallipolis; · John Rogers, program
n at i o n a! b a r g a in i n g
Point Pleasant; Enoch legislation for agriculture,
Marcum, Kenova, W. Va.;
James Johnson, Middleport.
BY GARY ci.ARK

Mora

attend
••
session

pr~~~~~~is f~%mthr~::oau~
~.~.tending

Life styl~s change, costs of living escalate,
children seem to rush through lnlancy,
into adolescence at a galloping
run. Parents who anticipate ris·
ing college costs begin edu·
catlonal savings plans witti
Farmers Bank at an early
date. Let us help you arrange an
interest-accruing savings ac·
count that will grow with
your chi ldren, and be
ready for college
when they are..

POMEROY, OHIO
'40,000 Maximum Insurance For Each Deposrtor ·
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

I!

l'

killed in a 011e-&lt;:ar accident 011
Ohio !40 in Scioto County, •
Lebanon :
Brian
R.
Murphy, !6, Lebanon,
pedestrian killed by a hit-and·
· run motorist on Ohio 48 in
Warren County.
Saturday
Hamilton: Jeanne M.
Smith. 58, Cincinnati killed
in a one-car accident on
Interstate 75 in Butler
County.
Ravenna : Ronald M.
Watson, 20, Ravenna, killed·
in a one-car accident on a
Portage ~ounty road .
Sunday
Antwerp: William Kale, 45,
Hicksville, killed when his
auoomobUe ran headon into
two parked ears on Ohio 49 in
Paulding County.

Good Luck Eastern girls zn Class A District

Concerned about !he basic
deterioration of the family
unit and convinced that a
certain amount of weekly
family time together can
effectively counter the trend,
!he Meigs • Gallia • Mason
Association of Life Un·
· derwriters has undertaken a
FamilyTime proJect during
Life Insurance Week, March
f&gt;-!1 . •

·

•

. Durin~ thl~ week, L1fe
Undei'WI'Iters 10 tile Me1gs •
GaU18 • Mason area will
explain the concept of
FamilyTime to local and
civic groups using a booklet,
FamilyTime - A Rev·
olutionary Old Idea.
The)leautiiuily illustrated
booklet underscores the
conviction that the family Is
an indispensable component
in ·personal and group
development. II ldentifi~·s
specific functions, topics,
activities and events that can
foster .famlly communication
and bring families closer
togetber.
It is divided into three parts
11
Share Times/' "Activi~y
Times" and "Outing Times.''
"Share Times" uses exer•
cises to introduce children to
fundamentals · about which
lhey need to know ~ for
example, how to write a
check, table manners,
emergencies, etc. .''Activity
Times'' recommerids various
family acti vltles. " Outing
Times" invites families to
share activities outside the
borne.
A final portion of the
booklet is devoted to parents'
needs and concerns. Brief
ideas are expanded to speak
to common struggles among
parents.
Copies of FamilyTime - A
Revolutionary Old Idea can
be obtained from members of
the Meigs • Gallia •. Mason
Association" of Life Un·
derwrilers or by sending $1.25
to the Ohio Association of Life
Underwriters, 21 East State
Street, No. 730, Colwnbus,
Ohio, 43215.

'Crisis Watch'
tionwid:!'t!:.~~~!.~':!:;!~kers

Ill!

A
glance
at the na overwbeimingly rejected a contract proposal
Unionby
:. the soft coal
UMW
members
industry in balloting during th.e weeke!ld.
'
•
.
UMW Ohio Vole
Ohio's UMW members rejected the contract by a vote of four-t&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;ne.

~;::lopsided

Ill\

:::
UMW District 6 President John g:'k
vote has brought tbe union
} membership closer tban It has been in years.
:·:·
)
Federal Reaction
::::
President Cart&lt;'r Is eipected to announce today what steps be will take to get the
.... miners back oo work and is expected to invoke the Taft-Hartley law.
.

:~:~

,:::

:.,•:.: .'!:···

Gov. James A. Rhodes has

sajdtt~;~~0~1il he sees wbat tile president does

.•,·

::;:

=:·.:'.

i
:..··· ·
...
• .....
···'

~?

&lt;·:

::::

.:.:
::::
::::
::::
:,::
:. •.•:..
)

before he Institutes a plan ofactlon oo keep Ohio's coal-stai'VI)d electric utilities running. · .·'..

::Wre:.m~:::n ~!~:k

'1:..·''.1·'.

UMW members say they
under provisions of tile Taft.
Hart;ey law unless President Carter also nationalizes the coal industry.

..

:'!h~:~~w~ic~h7f ~~::e"d ~·~

Save for the Day .

~iuw~:~ro~eea7n~~·~l·":.·

Uoiled Presslnten18tlonal
At least sev.en people were
killed in weekend traffic
accidents around the state,
an Ohio Highway Patrol
spokeswoman said ooday.
The only multiple-fatality
mishap occurred Friday
night. Roger F . McGlone and
David Belcher, both 19 of
South Webster, died in a one·
auto!llobile accident on Ohio
140 In Scioto County.
The state's non holiday
weekend roadway death
count runs from 6 p.m.
Fridays until midnight
Sundays.
· Friday Night
Warren :
Joseph
t: .
Williams, · 16, Blanchester,
killed iii one-:ear accident on
Ohio 28 in Warren County.
Portsmouth: Roger F.
McGlone and David Belcber,
both 19 of South Webster.

~Y~Ei!~~~Ii:~~~~;:
)
pa

presidents wm make the trip
which is an annual event
sponsored by the Ohio Fann
B_ureau Federation (OFBF).
According to Wallace
Hirschfeld, OFBF president,
" The presidents will be
making every effort possible
to convey the farmer's
message to the lawmakers.
Some farmers in Ohio have
made it through a pretty
rough year and they (the
presidents) will be trying to
make the future brighter for
agriculture producers.''
In addition to meeting with
congressmen at a breakfast
session on March 15, the
OFBF delegation will meet
with U. S. Secretary of
Agriculture Bob Bergland;
Barbara Bloom, deputy
administrator, EPA; John
·Gilligan, administrator of
AID (Agency for In·
ternational Development);
Jim Starkey, Agricultur'l
Specialist with the Office of
Trade Negotiations; Lynn
Daft, While House advisor on
agriculture, and Dr. Van
Howling, chief veterinarian,
Food and Drug Ad·
ministration.
Also planned for the trip Is
a breakfast session with
Ohio's Senators John Glenn
and Howard M'etzenbawn.
" Presidents
will
be
prepared to gather specific
information from each of·
fici•' they meet. This fact
finding mission is elrtremely
valuable to lbe organization
and its members," ·s aid
Hirschfeld.
·

Score by Quarters:
1 2 3 4 Tot
Wahama
11 15 ~ 17-M
Ravenswood 20 12 !8 23-73
Olflcla!J.Burton Hickman and
Ray Redman
Preliminary Game:
Wahama (liS) Richards 7+
18; Weaver 1-2-14; Rou.tlt 4-814 ; Rawlings :1-l-6; Sayre 0.:1Z; Smith !4-2; Totals 211-!5-65.
•
RAVENSWOOD (63) Easter...
6-11; Pannell $-2-12; Brown 35-11; Varner 4·:1-10; Elkins 3-1·
7; Watson I·U; Totals 22-1963. ·
Score by Quarters:
I 2 3 4 Tot
Wa.
10 10 17 lw:l
Ravens.
21 9 16 17~
Officials: Ray Redman and
Burton· Hickman
Total 'Fouls: WahJma 22 •
Ravenswood 18

Seven die in traffic

0

:if~~:::~~::l:ra~~:::::;

a

11 and 10 points, reopectlvely.
WahJma placed three men
in double figures with Gary
Richards II the high, while
VInce Wea•er and Tim Roush·
chipPed in with H each.
WAHAMA (18)
FG FT PF TP
Buuard
6 U 2 14
Bamltz
4 $-7 o 13
Hobba
6 0.1 2 12
Bl ssing
5 0.2 3 10
e
Honaker
4 2·2 3 10
Barnltz
2 2-3 0 6
Weaver
I 1·2 0 3
TOl'ALS
28 12·22 10 88
RAVENSWOOD (7S)
FG FT PF TP
Stanley
15 ~ 4 34
Fields
7 0.1 2 14
Hilton
5 1·1 3 11
2~ 2 4
Fleming
Miller
I :Z..2 4 4
I ~3 2
Hardy
1~ 1 2
Pannell
I ~ 0 2
Fowler
33 7·10 19 73
TOl'ALS

•

Undenvriters
undertake
project

Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio

E~~c ~c:;s It will ask tile Public Utilities

:'::

r

::,,,,: : :,.: :f:::,:.,::,.,::::::l::,,::,::::.,.::::;:,::::,::::,:::::,,.:.::::::::::,".•
p·

·r e·SI"dent. •

(Continued tnm .... 1)
into production!•
.
. Frank Moore, Carter's .
chief lobbyist, said "I don't
think we're going 00 have to
ask for new leglslatlon,"
indicating at least 1!\e first
step would be Tafi-Hartley.
Eltber seizure or enforced
mediation would require coogresal011al action.
Industry sources said the
executive council of the
Bituminous Coal Operators
Association was meeting
today in Washington to decide
what to do now that the
contract is rejected and the
president is ready to act.
·Energy Secretary James
Schlesinger said Sunday, "H
we cannot get a national
agreement I believe tbal we
will have regional or
company by .company
bargaining tbat will get lbe
miners back to work."
But most officials feared
·the angry and divided UMW
would
force
new
confrontations.
They began voting Friday,
28 years to the day after
Harry Truman ordered
federalselzureoftbenalion's
coal mines in a similar
standoff. Tbe actual seizure
In tbat · case, however, was
averted.
---------Thomas Jefferson, third
U.S. president, was the son of
a civil engineer of Welsh
descent.

PRACTICAL
HOME
CHARMER
Ev.wyday preuy

dusler. Ruy several
of the many pastel
Aha des.

LINGERIE DE
2ND FLOOR

•

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, March 7, 1978

at

Commissioners approv
s~~ond nt1rsing home
Meigs County, which has
been without nursing home
facilities for Us residents,
may have two IOO·bed
facilities in the near future,
according to plans finalized
last night by Meigs County
Commissioners.
Earlier the commissioners
had given the green light to a
100 bed facility in Middleport.
Last night, all three
commissioners, Henry Wells,
Rich Jones and James Roush
voiced their approval of a
second facility and necessary
paperwork involved is ex~
pected to be worked out in the
next couple of weeks.
Meeting with lbe com·
missioners were Prosecuting
Attorney Rick Crow and
County Auditor Howard
Frank along with Bruce
Pinkney,
representing
Ameritel, builder of the tOO
bed facility; Jerry Peterson,
a bond counselor of Peterson
and Young, and Charles
Roberts, a bond underwriter
with Hereth, Orr and Jones .
During the meetirig, of·
ficials reviewed paperwork
involved in the project. It was
reported 71 documents must
be completed before the
closing of the agreement be·
tween the commissioners and
Ameritel can be completed.
. Pinkney, Peterson and
Roberts indicated practically
all of the necessary

documents are finished and
should be in the hands of th~
county commissioners for
review by the .latter part of
this week.
The 100-bed facility , if
constructed, would be buill
on eight acres known as " The
Genheimer property"localed
on former Slate Route 33.
Questions raised at the
session Monday night in·
eluded an audited financial
statement on Ameritel
operations for t977, stressing
the point that Meigs County is
not to have liability on the
proJect should it not be
successful.
Peterson indicated there is
no concern about the
financial statements.
The point was brought out
by . commissioners that
Amerilel has signed a
general contractor to do the
building.
·
Commissioner Jones said
signing a contractor was in
violation of an earlier
agreement with Anlerjtel in
which it was stated local
contractors would be given
an opportunity to bid on the
$1.6 million proJect.
Pinkney reported · the
contract was awarded so the
necessa ry paperwOrk could
progress.
He said, however, that
Amerilel feels the contract
figure is high and can get out

of it for $4,000.
He assured commissioners .
that local contractors will be
given an opportunity to bid on
the general contract before
construction ever gets underway.
P;i.kney ·outlined a list of a
number of nursing home
facilities which Ameritel has
and indicated that they are 95
to 98 capacity filled on a year·
round basis.
The local facility would be
built through Ameritel under
a group known as the
Pomeroy Health Care Corp.,

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 28, No. 227

''

~ • .t .. -·· - · · -

.f

its officers also being officers
in Ameritel.
None of the officers are
related to the general coo·
tractor already signed.
Bonds to be sold on the
project are printed and will
be sold to a variety of in·
dividuals, Peterson said. It
was learned that Amerilel
could not back out of the
project because another
facility is to be constructed in
Middleport.
The stale has indicated that
Meigs County needs 207 beds
for nursing home facilities.

Gas and
water
.
hikes sought
'

en tine

..

.
•

'

·~·

.

,. .

(

' ~1

I

}

reading and voted "no" on
approval of the first reading.
The first reading passed,
however, 5 to I.
Meeting with council was
coun· John Koebel of the Columbia
climan, who ·has
opo Gas Company presenting a
posed to the proposed rate counter proposal on a gas
increase stated he was not in · rate increase . The first
favor unless the water was proposal, turned down by
near the Meigs Senior Citizens Center , It uppear• that tile
MEIGS RESIDENTS worry ing about the erosion
improved and 10 percent of council, proposed 2.4 percent
huge pieces of ice as they broke up have taken a part of tile
caused by !be Ohio River may have additional cause to
the revenue from the waier the first year and 7.5 percent
river bank with them.
worry because of lbe ice along tile river . At this section
be put in escrow.
the second year.
Wehrung, in a letter to this
The new proposal is 2.4
newspaper
last
week,
asked
percent
the first rear and 5.0
·~:~::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:~;::;;::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::~:::~:~:::::!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::~:~
residents to attend Monday's the second year.
meeting to express their
William Young, utility ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;.;:;.: .;::.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:~:·:·: .;:;.;.
views. There were II chainnan, said he felt the •· EXTENDED FORECAST
:::·
'
~~ residents in attendance.
proposal was a good one, but
Thursday through
Wehrung
explained
he
did
·added
that
he
wanted
the
Saturday,
fair Thursday
By United Press!DteruatiOIUII
not'
want
to
default
on
bonds
minimum
rate
$4
the
first
·and
a
chance
of showers
COLUMBUS- THE STATE Controlling Board Monday
·
that
are
due:
He
also
said
he
year
and
$4.35
the
second
late
Friday
and
Saturday.
~ down' Central State University's request to spend
wsa
not
against
a
42.9
percent
year,
which
would
be
a
70
Highs
·will
be
In
the
40s or
$310,000 to replace Its president's home destroyed by tile April
1
increase
i£
something
was
cent
increase
over
the
twolow
50s
and
lows
wm
range
1974 tornadnes which ripped tbrough soutbwestern Ohio.
going
to'
be
done
to
improve
year
period.
For
15,000
cubic
from
the
upper
20s
to
the
Board members said tile proposed 3, 766-square fool, nine·
the
water
system:
feel
of
gas
the
present
rate
Is
mid ios.
room, home was too expansive for tile 2,000-sludent university
Wehrung also said officials $43.83, the increase the :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::-:;:::;:::::::::::::;:::::
at Wilberforce. Plans submitted by the Ohio Board of Regents
United Press International
coal that moved througn Ohio Sulfur Coa l Co. In Pike
indicated the home would have three bedrooms and three are looking ahead for a water first year for 15,000 cubic feet
The
Ohio
Highway
Patrol
without escorts.
County, which has urmed Its
batlls, a sitting room, a study wltb a fireplace, an ei&lt;panded treatment plant so he wants would be $44.39 and for the
SATURDAY
CUSSES
said
today
non-union
coal
However , one non-union emp loyes, says President
to
set
aside
money
for
it.
second
year
it
would
be
$46.61
l!ltchen, a $1,200 music-intercom system and large living and
A full day of classes will be shipments have been moving operator says independent Carter's decision to invoke
Wehrung indicated he for $15,000 cubic feet.
dining rooms suitable for large parties:
held
In the Meigs local freely in tile Buckeye State owners •1lll have to prolel1 the :ruft..Hartley Act will not
would vote for a 35 percent
Koebel agreed to change
School
District Saturday as and said it escorted 254 truck themselves · and said he
NEW ORLEANS - THE 5TH U. S. Circuit Court of increase, enabling the Board the minimum charge. Council the district begins making up loads Monday and ear ly knows of at least six protect non~union (.'(lffiiJHnies
aguinsl roving pickets.
'
of
Public
Affairs
to
meet
its
then
gave
the
ordinance
its
Appeals has ordere,d tbe release of 8 Texas man sentenced to
tilne lost this school year due today.
opera !Drs wbo have booby·
"We still have w protect
bond
indebtedness.
first
reading.
life in prison for bilking his victims of $230.
to weather and a teachers'
The patrol said there were trapped their property.
ourselves,"
said Corn. " He
It
was
pointed
out
that
if
tile
Koebel
will
take
the
The appeals coort Monday ruled a Teias habitual criminal
strike.
"many more" truck loads of
Rex Corn, an official of low (Carter ) has called on gover·
village
did
not
meet
its
minimum
change
back
to
his
statute imposed cruel and unusual punishment on William
nors to provide protecUon but
James Runimel and ordered his release from tile Texas State obligation, the bonding C01J1pany, hoping it will Executixe .e ditor of Sentinel, Tin1es-Sentinel
it
was not spelled out what
company
could
take
over
tile
approve
the
·
change.
If
so.
Penitentiary.
water system.
council will give the or·
kind or to what extent. I was
hoping he would request
The residents attending dinance Its other two
CLEVELAND-COLUMBIAGASOFOIDO,whlchserves
federal
troops be called up
complained
about
the
poor
readings
necessary
for
parts of nortbeastern Ohio, including Parma and Avon Lake,
and
placed
on a 24-hour guard
has avoided natural gas cutbacks to its industrial customers quality of the water and passage.
on
coal
facilities.
However,
asked
for
some
figures
on
tile
Mayor
Andrews
said
since last March I by making an emergency purchase of
until
(Gov.
James
A.)
Rhodes
water
company.
Pomeroy
will
not
benefit
natural gas.
acts we are no better off than
There are 1,200 water under the Federal Disaster
we were.
CLEVELAND -A FEDERAL JtioGE has granted tbe customers, all with meters relief for 75 percent reim·
'" It does open tile.door to M
the
group
was
told.
They
bursemenl
of
funds
spent
on
Firestone Tire &amp; Rubber Co. a temporary restraining order
Rbodes
follow what Indiana
played
with
dance
orchestras
.
were
alao
informed
that
tile
snow
remova
l.
President
Chester
L.
(Chet)
Tan·
After."
· ' preventing \be federal goverrunenl from relessing a survey 011
particularely
the
"
Klein
has
been
.doing," saJd Corn.
water
company
is
pumping
13
Carter
set
the
dates
for
the
Surviving
are
his
wife,
nehlll,
63,
South
Fourth
Ave.,
steel-belted radisl tires used on new cars. Judge John M.
Cats."
As
a
spare
time
acIndiana
National
Guardsmen
million
gallons
of
water
a
disaster
area
from
Jan.
27
to
Middleport,
a
Meigs
County
Carol
J
.
Bachtel
Tannehill
;
Manos granted the order Monday and set a full hearing on the
have
tivity,
he
operated
the
been
escorting
coal
month,
but
only
six
million
is
Jim.
31.
Pomeroy's
occurred
newspaper
nian
for
more
two
sons
,
C.
Murk
of
motion for March 17.
trucks
in
that
state.
·
Culligan
Soft
Water
Service.
Pomeroy and John V. of
than 30 years and executive
The llremaker Charges tbat tile survey undertaken last ' going through the meters. No earlier than that period.
"The
thing
that
ls
·scarlng
A
graduate
of
the
Mayor Andrews said he is editor of The Daily Sentinel
Cincinnati; a daughter, Mrs.
year Is "Wegal, biased and unfair." Portions of tile report, one could ••plain where the
highly critical of some Firestone products, were leaked oo tbe balance of the water is going · writing to Governor James and Sunday Times..Sentlnel University of Washington at Carl Lee (Janice) Peterson, me is th.al many Independent
unless there are many leaks. Rhodes, our congressman died early Tuesday morning Seattle, Mr. Tannehill was a COlumbus; two brothers, operaoors, especially those
news media !sst week.
It was also reported that and senators to see if help can at Holzer Medical Center. He member of the Heath United Eugene
and Sherman, who have experienced
Methodist
Church
in
Mid·
Oregon
;
a
sister,
Mrs. Shirley violence in the past, have
one-half
the
customers
are
be
provided.
had
been
in
failing
health
for
CLEVELAND - · THE OHIO PUBUC Welfare
minimum
users.
The
total
Pomeroy
spent
$44,000
on
dleport
where
he
was
a
choir
a
little
over
a
month.
Robinson,
Oswego,
Ore., four taken ste(JB to protect their
Department may have been bilked out of more than $250,000 in
He
was
a
member
member.
indebtedness
against
the
snow
removal,
including
grandchildren
and
his property ,'' Corn warned.
..
Born
Jan.
18,
19!5,
in
Medicaid payments, according to tile FBI, which said it is
"i personally know of six
of
the
Middleport
·
Pomeroy
water
system
is
$1175,000
not
village
·la\Jor
and
damages
Kansas,.
a
son
of
the.late
Mr.
mother·in·law,
Mrs.
Juanita
investigating dauble billing, fraudulent billing for tests never
1
mine
operators who have
that occurred.
and Mrs. Vernon Tannehill, Rotary . Club serving as Bachtel.
administered to patients and kickbacks tq pbyslclans for including interest. ·
placed
dynamite along tbe
. Most of the residents
"Meigs County is left out "Chet" as he was· af· program chairman.
Funeral services will be
ordering unnecessary lab work.
of tbelr property,"
perimeter
Over
his
long
newspaper
complained
about
damage
again
when
It
comes
to
stale
fectionately
known
by
his
held
at2
p.m.
Thursday
at
the
Allegations by the FBI were made Monday In a search
said
Corn.
"H officials don't
career,
Mr.
Tannehill
wrote
Rawlings-Coats
Funeral
done
to
appliances
by
the
new
and
federal
aid,"
.
Mayor
friends
and
co-workers,
came
warrant affidavit used to confiscate two truckloads of records
act
decisively
to prevent a
and
edited
thousands
upon
to
Meigs
County
after
the
end
Home
with
the
Rev.
Robert
water.
One
man
suggested
Andrews
stated.
from the Northern Ohio Medical Laboratory, Inc., Euclid, and
confrontation,
tbere
could be
Bumgarner
officiating.
thousands
of
newspaper
Pall·
going
deeper
with
the
well,
He
urged
those
attending
to
.
of
World
War
II.
He
had
the ArUngton Medical and Surgical Services clinic, Akron.
bearers will be his newspaper severe loss of life."
and another ssid a water write to . their represen· served as an officer in the U. stories.
S. Anny.
Even so, he found time to associatt'S iJJcluding Richard
tatives.
CLEVELAND- CUYAHOGA COUNTY Common Pleas softener would help.
pen
personalized columns, S. Owen, Larry Boyer, Dale
Wehrung
and
Mayor
An·
The
mayor
suggested
an
Mr.
Tannehill
had
no
prior
Judge Nonnan A. Filers! says jury selection In !he bribery
LIGHT DAMAGES
trill! of a pollee sergeant and collrt bailiff will get under way as· dr.ews said they inherited tile explanation be given as to · experience In newspaper his latest being "The Day Rothgeb, Hobart Wilson, Jr.,
The
Pomeroy
Fire
Robert Wingell and Bob
soon as he disposes of defense motions aimed at su(ipressing water system and are stuck why Meigs County can't get work, but what he lacked in
Department
was
called
to
with the operation and ex· assistance when the county experience he made up for in
Hoeflich.
some testina011y and evidence.
.
Mechanic
St.,
at
4:40
p.m.
pense.
had
as
much
snow
as
tile
Honorary
pallbearers
will
hard work. He was known to
Tbe motions were made Monday in the trial of Cleveland
One person suggested an northern part of the state.
his friends and co-workers for
be J . Sherman Porter, James Monday where a sanitation
Pollee Sgt. Richard Moritz; 43, a supervisor in the accident
Danner,
Fred Hollman, Bob packer truck was on fire .
engineer
be
contacted.
Council
also
suggested
14
his
dedication
and
hard
work
investigation unit, and Cleveland Municipal Court ballllf
Wehrung
explained
that
Ibis
.
new
parking
meters
are
·
in
tile
newspaper
field.
He
Roberts,
Lee W. McComas, Damages were light.
Emanuel Porter, 46, ballllf to Municipal Judge Theodore
frequently
became
involved
had
been
done
and
he
was
needed.
Fred
W.
Crow,
John Will, Ben
WUIIams.
SQUAD RUN
supposed to·be at the meeting
lou Osborne presented the in community projects
Philson and Dean Circle, all
The
Mi'ddleport
CQst of new Rockwell water through his newspaper en·
long·time friends and news·
CINCINNATI - PROPOSED FEDERAL legislation to but did not appear.
Emergency Squad was called
Wehrung added "Evidently meters: a 250 would cost deavors.
paper associates.
give a $500 tal credit to people patronizing private schools
\be engineer Is not going to $35.75 each; 250 • 500, $35; 50Q..
Through the years, he was
Friends may call at the to Cole St., in lower Pomeroy
would only hurt education, complaina Rev. Jesse Jackson.
funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 at 6:32a.m. Tuesday for Sam
Jackson, director of tbe Chicag&lt;Hlased People United to come back with a workable 750, $34.~. 750-1,000, $33; with an avid sports fan and in
a $3.50 trade·in on old bronze earlier years worked with the
lo9 p.m. Wedaesday and until Fry who was Ill. He was taken
Save Hwnanlty (PUSH), sal~ Monday that such a program solution."
It was pointed oct there are and $150 for a klllo check tile Little League basebali'teams.
lime of services on Thursday. to Holzer Medical Center.
would "bankrupt urban education, continuing the pattern of
He
was
adept
in
all
phases
of
Burial will be in Riverview
polarization and hostlllty which makes our culture da,ngerous two new members on the meters.
NEW HOURS
Board of Public Affairs. Both
The meeting ·was opened new!IJlllper business having
Cemetery.
and unlivable."
.
CHESTER ~ Postmaster
are competent men and are with prayer by tbe Rev. learned the mechanical
Opal Eichinger has an·
CLEVELAND HEIGHTS - ABOUT 200 CITY resident&amp; trying to work out a solution. William Mlddleswarth. At· aspects when he first came to
nounced new hours for the
The new rates for the water tending were Mayor An· · Pomeroy when The Sentinel
attended Monday night's city council meeting to urge
post office in Chester. The
lawmakers oot to enact an abortion control ordinance similar . will increase tile minimum drews, Dr. Harold Brown, was In the process of
window
will be open from
Periods
of
rain
or
snow
rate from $4.20 to $6 and the Jim Neutzling, Larry Powell, becoming a daily newspaper.
to one approved last week by Akron council.
8:30
a.m.
until 12 noon and
tonight
and
Wednesday,
with
Versatile, Mr. Tanoehlll
Young
and
Council last month was· preaented with petitions bearing proposed turn on and off fee Wehrung,
from
I
to
4:30
p.m. Monday
lows
tonight
in
the
upper
20s
Osborne, councilmen, Jane alao played a trombone and,
4,000 olgnatures of resldenla asking tbal the local abortion to SIO.
through
Friday
and from 8
or
lower
30s
a.
n
d
highs
lrequently
during
his
earlier
ordinance be amended to place mere reotrlctlons on abortion . Wehrung voted "no" on Walton, clerk and Chief Jerl
a,m.
to
I
a.m.
on
Saturday.
Wednesday
in
the
upper
30s.
C.
L.
TANNEHILL
years
in
Meigs
County,
he
giving the ordinance tile first WebSter . .
cl.lnl•
Operations, as sougbt by anti,aborllon advocates
;
'
l't
II
!
"'

I!News. . •in

Briefs\~!

Non-union coal
has been ntoving

C. L. ( Chet) Tannehill~
63, claimed early today

Weather

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