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                  <text>10 - Tile Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. TuesdaY., March 7, 1978
Resources some years a~o .
The Commission was rnade
up of many heart specialists
an&lt;l scienllsts throughout the
country.
It was recommended that
saturale!l fats should be
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.:
limited to 10 percent of total
calorie cuntiumption and that
One driver was charged in
the cholesterol intake should four trafllc accidents in·
The
committee
recombe limited to less than 300
An aid tn our
mended an increase in c~r~ milligrams a !lay, both also vestigaled Monday · by the
t•atin~r habit!'
bohydrate consumption to re01runended by the Commis- Gatlia-Meigs State Highway
Patrol.
account fur :;:; to 6:i per cent of sion .
The first occurred at 8:30
DEAR DR. LA MB - I calorie intak e. That's fine if il
They recommended a a.m.
on· Fourth Ave . in
would like your opinion on the means t!ating more fresh reducliun of salt intake,
Reedsville
where an Eastern
Senate Nutrition commith..&gt;e fruil' and vegetables and less which has been criticized
weal
bus
driven
by Sandra
on Dietary Goals for the reliance on fatty foods or because 80 percent of the
L.
Cowdery,
31,
Reedsville,
United States. I have seen some protein foods that,olten population do nul have any
that it has been criticized by contain more fat than pro- medical p'wblerns that backed into a car owned by
the Am erica n Medical tein. They also recmrunended originate from an excess salt James L. Cowdery , Reedsa rt.'tluctiun in sugar intake by inlllke. However, many pe~ ville. There was slight
~oc iation and some hea 1·t
specialisl' as well as 1he about 40 per cen1 wl1ich has pie with high .blood pressure damage to the car. No
meat industry a nd the egg in· l&gt;L.ocn cited as em inconsisten· do better on salt restriction charges were filed.
Richard H. Fischer, 64, Rt .
!lustry. Why would the com- ey since sugar is a car- and the elevalL'&lt;l pressure
l,
Bidwell, was charged with
mittee make sueh recommen- bohydrate: It really isn't in· may indeed be the result of
improper
backing following
dations if so many people arc consiStent sim:e aS I just exccsslve sctll use. While
an
accident
at 4:45 p.m.
rwted ther·e are a lot of car· many do not have this pr&lt;r
aga inst them'!
Monday
on
TR
46 at the
bohydrate
foods
other
than
DEAR READER - While I
blem the nwnber who do is
junction
to
CR
30
in Gallia
sugar
speeifieially
the
fruit
am not in total Gtg r~cmcnt
sufficiently great lQ warrant
with all the provh;iuns, it i.s a and vegetable group and the a conservative approach. Count y.
The patrol said Fischer's
good step forward in telling cere~:~\ group as well as the You may nut know if lots of
car
backed into a vehicle
the public what should be cal'bohydratcs in milk. So sa lt will hann you until it
operated
by. Serene Hill, 18,
done about American eating that complaint is really nit already has. That is a little
Gallipolis.
There
was
habits. Jncidentally it is not picking.
late.
moderate
damage.
They
I'
C
C
&lt;)mlllended
reducall thHt different from recomIt 1s sa ill that lhe AMA comA t wO-ear accident ocmendati ons for some of lhl..' ing the fat commmption from plained about these recomcurred
at 7 p.m. on Georges
ove
t·
40
pcrt:cnt
in
the
Scandina vian countries. The
mendations bec~wse other
Creek
Rd., one and nine
American
diet
to
around
30
commiltec listened to a lot of
risk factors, which inclu!led
tenths
miles
west of SR 7
percent,
a
figure
nul
much
diversi£ied opinions and i:l fler
high blond pressure and high
having done so felt these were different than rccorrunended cholesterol, arc important. where an auto driven by
the valid conce pts thai by the ln\er Soc iety Conunis· Indeed they are, but obesity Vest a G. Ham, 57, Cheshire,
sion for Heat·t Disease is a major factor in !leveloJ&gt;- struck a vehicle driven by
ernerged.
ing both high blood pressure Lyle C. Shillington, 27,
and high cholesterol. This Gallipolis. The accident
leads to still another com- occurred at a hillcrest.
An owl was involved in an
plaint: that the report l&lt;iiled
accident
at 10 :25 p.m. on US
to stress weight control and it
35
at
milepost
9. The. owl fiew
should have. Bul, by reducing
into
the
windshi
eJd on a
fat inlakt! and sugar intake
vehicle
operated
by Robert
the resulting calori e intake
M.
Green,
26,
Bellview,
Mich.
reduction would go a long
How do insurance companies guard against a financial
way in helping prevent obesicrisis?
ty in most people's diet. So in
Insurance compa ni es are a highly regulated industry .
general! think the criticisms Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitled - Laura Watoon,
These regulations. many self.lmposed, are to
are mostly nit picking from
Racine
; Dora Hysell, Long
saf eguard against any possible catastroph ic financial
special interest groups.
cr lsls. The various states requi re a super vised
Bottom
; Linda Martin ,
J Hm sending you The
investment por t folio which states where and how the
Health Leiter nwnber 1-3, Middleport ; Scarlett Lyons,
companies are Investing their money . Insura nce
Diel,
Pr even tin g Letart, W. Va .; Samuel
companies must keep reserves and a var iet y of
surpl uses. To insvre a sou nd margin of safety, most
Atherosclerosis, which is bHs· Rairden, Long Bottom:
companies reserve a portion of their surplus to cover
ed on the Inter Society Com- Nellie ·Lemley, Portland.
Disc harged
Cloyd
possible investmen t or mortality losses and any type of
r~ssiun 's reconunendations,
operating &lt;onflngency Which might arise. Such funds
BroOkoVer,·
Nettie
Hemsley,
for your infonnation. LAMB .
a~r listed in the company ' s Unancial statement as
3-7 PG4 Others who would James LeMaster, Phylljs Van
" con ting ency reserves." A portion of t he co nt ingen cy
like this issue can send 50 lmwagen, Frances Howery.
reserves must be in liqu id or near liquid assets.
cenll with a long, stamped ,
self-addressed envelope for it
Moisten not
to me in care of this
Never moisten eye shadow
newspaper, P.O. Box 1551, or brushes with your own
The Insurance Store
Radio City Station, New saliva. That's a possible way
Pomeroy, 0 .
714 E . Main
992-S 130
York, NY 10019.
to give yourself an infection.

Driver is Striking farmers aid miners
miners who have been on
CENTRAL CITY, Ky . handed out to members of March 14, saying the miners strike lor the past three
charged
(UP!) - Striking farmers families of striking miners. join Ianners' attempts to
months.
promised striking miners in
Police Chief Keith Nunley achieve 100 percent panty.
one point, farmers threw
Other miners expressed outAt several
Kentucky that they said the Iota! -size of tile
in accident western
whole chickens
had just begin to aid their crowd including county sentiments of thanks or into the large crowd at the

HEALTH

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE SERVICE

efforts to weather the effects
of the longest coal strike in
the nation's history .
'' This is not a one time
thing . As long as the miners
ar.e out on strike, we'll do
whatever we can to support
them," said Wayne Kryts, a
Puxico, Mo ., Iarmer.
A crowd of at leas( 6,000
peroons consisting of striking
United Mine Workers and
farmers from 14 states gath·
ered at a rally in Central City
Monday as four truckloads of
food was handed ou t to
western Kentucky miners .
A convoy of 32 cars, trucks
and tractor-trailer trucks
draped with American flags
arrived in the Mu.blenherg
County town late Sunday
night , and at the Monday
morning rally, the food was

residents might have been as
high as 12,000 at the rally in
the city of only around 5,500.
Au thorlties said word of the
rally plus the warmest
temperatures in nearly three
months helped swell the size
of the crowd.
"We realize a lot of you
used to be farmers," 8aid
Alvin Jenkins, one of the
founders of the American
Agriculture Movement from
Colorado. "You were driven
off your lanns and had to go
into the mines to support your
farms ...
James Hawkins, vice presi~
dent of UMW local 23,
thanked the farmers for tbeir
efforts . ·He said UMW
members would reciprocate
by joining in a planned
tractorcade to Washinston on

Union leader believes
some miners will work
DREW VON BERGEN
WASHINGTON (UP!) United Mine
Workers
President Arnold Miller said
today some striking mlners
will go back to work under a
Taft-Hartley injunction. But
resistance can be expected
and violence "is always a
possibility," he said.
~bor Secretary Ray Marshall ·said today the
government does not expect a
lot of violence in President
Carter's attempt to end a
record 92-day strike which
has caused power shortages
and thousands of layoffs.
Carter Monday invoked the
Tall-Hartley
law
and
appointed a thr~ember
board of inquiry. He aloo
ordered
the
Justice
Department to seek a federal
injunction ordering 160,000
striking miners back to.work.
Many miners have said
they would ignore such an
order.
"! know that oome of our
members would go back to
comply with the law - not
because they want to or like
to- but because they are law
By

Good Luck
Eastern Girls
Against Portsmouth
East

abiding citizens," said Miller.
Asked about the possibility
of violent clashes hetween
pickets and miners who
return to work, he said:
"It's always a possibility
when you invoke the Taft·
Hartley law. You always can
expect resistance. I don't
think anyone can accurately
predict just exactly what will
happen,
Miller aloo said Carier's
attempts to push for UMW
settlements with individual
mines could destroy the

sympathy with the farmers'
strike.
Doug Oldham, a UMW
member from Madisonville,
said the farmers' caravan
was an encouraging sign for
the striking mil)ers.
.
"I think we are all tn
support of the agriculture
strike
and w'e really
'
appreciate
what you are
doing," Oldham said.
Nora Lee ' whose husband
..
works the mines m
Madisonville , said the
farmers ' efforts was a "nice"
gesture.
"This will defintely help
my food budget," said Mrs.
Lee who took several pounds
of potat&lt;Jes and flour.with her.
The speechmaking was
held to a minimum as the
major focus wa s the
distribution of the caseloads
of hamburger, chickens , pork
chops, 20 pound sacks of
potatoes, 10 pound sacks of
fl our and cheeses, and
assorted vegetables to the

mudslickened fairgrounds.
Tommy Kersey, a Georgia
fanner whO joined in the
caravan , passed out peanuts
to oome of the rruners. He told
the crowd that he was doing
oo in recognition of President
Carter that "peanut farmer
from Plains, Ala., We're not
going to admit he's from
Georgia .' '
"Farmers are going broke,
every one is in the same
situation," said Kersey who
brought 140 hogs and 14 cows
from his Georgi~ !ann. " U
the miners rleed anything,
we'd rather give it to them ."
While the food was being
hand ed out, annoucement
came of President Carter~s
decision t&lt;J invoke tbe Taft
Hartley Act to try to Ioree the
miners tiack to their jobs.
"I don't believe we'll evet ·
go ba ck," Oldham said,
predicting "trouble" if food
stamp benefits were denied to
the miners.

ELBERFELDS
NEW SELECTION

KNIT SHIRTS
Solid c:olors · styles. An
excellent selection short
sleeves and tank shirts ·
crew necks and collared
{ 14 · 1 4 1!&gt;),

medium (1-5 -15 112 ), large
(16-16'12 ), extra large 07·
17 1hL
Stop in right away
select what you need.

Men's and Boys

Department, 1st Floor

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

At The District
Tournament In
Chillicothe, March 8th.
At 6:30

S.,cky Windon • Sr,

l. 'Chet'

't~

--30--

Jeannie McCiure-Soph. ·

By Dale Rothceb, Jr.
His typewriter is silent, his desk is filled with old papers
and his chair is vacant, but the memory of this outstanding
journalist will Uve on and on.
Even though the shock of teaming that an associate
friend and advisor ha~ died is still present, I feel II is ari
appropriate time to pay tribute to our departed coQeague.
Respect Is an intangible human trait that we all long to
receive, yet for some, it ~omes an Illusive. dream. But for
Chet Tannehill, the word respe~;t would lit his strong, self·
willed character. We fellows . in his editorial
department, came to know, respecl and appreciate this
dedicated journalist. Yet, In my own case, getting to know Chet
wasn't really very easy.
I can remember being a young , naive kid fresh out of high
IIChool getting my first chance at a news reoortillll iob. My fu-st
interview was with Chet. He gave me my first big O)lP.Ortunity
in journalism. But, being young and aggressive without any
(Continued on page 10)

By United Press International
·
COLUMBUS - THERE WAS A "SIT-IN" Tuesday
afternoon In Gov. James .A. !Utodes' outer office conducted by
Rita Warren; who wants the Ohio Senate to pass a bill
reqniring prayer at the start of each public school day.
Mrs. Warren had vowed t&lt;J stay In Rhodes' reception room
and be arrested when the building closed, but decided to leave
and continue her vigil in front of Rhodes' Upper Arlil)gton
home.

WASHINGTON- REP, WILLIAM HARSHA, R.Ohio, will
seek a loth consecutive term from Ohio's Sixth Congressional
District . Harsha, now in his 18th year in the House, is the
ranking Republican on the Public Works and Tra111portation
Conuniltee.
.
.. The veteran congr~an said Tuesday he expects to Pl~Bh
lor the continued CCilnomic and industrial development in his
oouthern Ohio district.

CLARENCE SCHMUCKER,' commander, received
the traveling trophy as "Outstanding Legionnaire of the
Year" Tuesday night when l~e annual birthday party of
Drew Webster ·Post 39, American Legion, was held at the
post how'r Making the presentation Is Bruce Cleland ,
right, who was last year's winner.

CANCELLED
Baton classes of Judy
Riggs held at Roya l Oak Park
have been ca ncelled until
AprilS. Classes scheduled for
this evening have also been
cancelled.

COLUMBIA, S.C.- BABY GRACE, A newborn girl found
squalling on top of a freshly dug grave in a local cemetery, is
doing well.
Hospital authorities- who named the child Grace because
she was found "by the grace of God" -said the ·5-pound, 9~·
ounce Intant was being kept in isolation while llocial workers
tried to find her mother, Authorities said, however, they would
take legal action to try to prevent the parents from regalldng
cu.stody e.ven If they are located.

Teresa Hannun - Stlph.

WASHINGTON -TilE NATTON'S SCHOOlS, often justly
accusecJ of reluctance to play a role in dealing with child abuse,
are beglmlng to recognize and report cruelty against children,
according to a survey taken for the U. S. Children's Bureau.
The report said 36 states require . edu""'""' to report
SUI]lCCted child abuse and neglect. '"'ue Increased
]IBI'Iiclpatlon of schools in child protection programs Is long
overdue;" it said.

THIS AD SPONSORED BY:

. \\f;

· LODGE MEETING
A regular meeting of
Racine Lodge 461, F&amp;AM wUI
be held on Tuesday, March
14, at 7:30p.m. A film, "Our
Precious Heritage" will be
shown. All Maater Masons
are invited.

'

''

SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad answered a call to
Meigs High School at I :57
p.m. Tuesday lor James
Morton, w.bo had cheat bums.
He was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

BOOSTERS MEET
The Eastern Athletic
Boosters will meet Thursday
at the high school at 7:30p.m.
Plans will be made for the
spring banquet.

r'

EVERYONE ENJOYED the organ selections of
Armand Turley at the Tuesday night birthday observance
of Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion, and
especially the young people on hand . Pictured with Turley
are from the left, Paula Kloes, president of the Eighth

Districl Junior Auxiliary; Pam Powers, vice president of
the Department of Ohio Junior Auxiliary ,. and Rhonda
Reuter, who is the auxiliary 's Girls State representative
.this year.

President Carter .opens ·hearings

COLUMBUS - GOV. JAMES A. RHODES wants the
Public UtilitieS Cominission of Ohio to "take every action
possible to stimulate production of Ohio's natural gas."
United Press International
In a letter Tuesday to Pl/00 Chairman C. Luther
The Carter administration
Heckman, Rhodes said, "Each of Ohio's major utilities mu.st . - rejecting demands that it
be encouraged to aggressively drill for Ohio natural gas." .
seize coal mines - to.day
opens mandatory !act-finding
WASHINGTON - FEDERAL LEGISLATION to provide hearings as a prelude to an
fanners and others with interim relief in the wake of chemical injunction ordering miners to
contamination disasters ia urgently needed, Sen. ,Robert P. end their 93-day-&lt;lld strike.
Griffin, R-Mich., told a House subconunillee 'Nesday.
The prospect of success of
Griffin said Michigan's own disastrous PBB the . back-to-work order for
contamination outbreak, and similar occurrences in many 160,000 UMW mine.rs appears
other states, demonstrate the "pressing need" for speedy bleak. Many miners say they
approval of his Toxic Substances Injury Assistance Act.
won't ubey the order unless
President Carter aloo setzes
BEREA, OHIO - THE ·woRST BUZZARD ever to hit the mines.
Ohio cost the Ohio Turnpike Conunission more than $530,000,
There wer e scattered
executive director Allan V. Johnson said today "The total cost reports of violence and
to the commlssion for the period when the entire turnpike was stories of booby-trapping by
closed more than a day, and portions lor more than three days, coal operators.
exceeded $530,000," he said·.
Most miners said they
"Leading the list of expenses are extraordinary employ~ would return to the pits if the
wage and salary costs which amounted to over $220,000 and government would also seize
private contractor expenses were $44,000. Lost revenue from the min es
action
passenger car and commercial vehicle tolls and other sources demanded by officials in
totaled $217,000."
Vennonl and New Hampshire. But Carter rejected
LOtnSVll.LE, KY. ~ A U. S. DISTRICT Court jury that option .
TuesdaY returned · guilty verdicts against two men in
A White House statement
connection with a scheme to defraud federally insured banks said there is "a heliel and a
in Kentucky, Ohio and West Virginia.
presumption on the part of
John Kaye, 72, of Parkersburg, W. Va., formerly of the government that people
Marietta, Ohio, and John B. Calandreua, 42, of Boston, Mass.,
also were convicted on charges of making misrepresentations
to a bank in Louisville in an effort to obtain a loan of $5.5
million to purchase coal rights and transmitting in foreign
conunerce a wire communica lion in a scheme to defraud
banks.

NASHVll.LE ,' TENN.-A 44-year-&lt;~ld truck dflver
from Ohio has become the 13th person to die of injuries
suffered in the explosion of a derailed pr'?P&amp;ne gas tanker at
Waverly Feb. 24.
Charles Ewing, 44, of North Bend, Ohio, died MQ!lday
night. He had been in critical condition at St. Thomas Hospital
in Nashville with rums over much of his body since the 20,000gallon tank car exploded.

Coach Susan Tbompoon lnslmta girls durllle a
timeout.

''

Vol 28. No. 228

i\l

COLUMBUS -THE OHIO SENATE will vote today on
House'fliiSSed legislation repealing the · state's motorcycle
helmet law. The bUI, sponsored by Rep. Terry M. Tranter, DCinoinnati, has been pending before the Senate Rules
Committee since July. It cleared the House 69-23 on June 29.
The bill would allow motorcycle operators with atleast one
year of experience to ride without a helmet. "Novice" riders
and any motorcycle operator under ·18, however, would still
have to wear the safely gear.

GOOd defeDBe ~y the Eastern girls makes scortuc
difficult.

Kaleen Millhone • Sopb.

Fifteen Cents

Tannehill \

Fairhoard ·

Eastern's Becky Windon tries to lind an open shot.

en tine

at

;:;:::::::::::::::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;:;.;.;.;:;.;.;:;.;.;.;.;!;.;:;.;:::;:;.;.:;:::::·:::::::·:::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::;:·:·:::·:::·:::·:·:·:·:·&gt;.:;;;
:~
·~

·=··

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE

SMall

Wednesday , March 8, 1978

l 1News. • •in Brief~

SEE OUR

styles.

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

·::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::."R"-:::;::::~::::::::::::::;:;;;:;.;::·:i:~:::~·=~:::::~:::::~:::::::~::::!!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;.':::::::::~

Wlion.
"We would resist," said
Miller . "We know the history
- when you go to individual
bargaining then the union is
in serious jeopardy.1 '
"We don't really expect a
lot of violence to take place,"
Marshall said in another
interview this morning.
Carter warned Monday
that the adn)inistratlon would
not tolerate violence.
Miller was interviewed on
the CBS Morning News and
Marshall was questioned on
ABCs GOOd Morning America
program.

Good luck Meigs in district cage tourney

•

outlines

new plans
The Meigs County Fairboard
Monday
night
discussed plans for several
new projects. .
Among the new projecls is
a draft · horse show to be
staged in conjunction with the
Meigs County Fair which will
be held Aug. 15·19.
Horses in the category, a
brand new event for the
Meigs Fair, will he housed in
a tent near the horse barns
and will be on e&lt;hi bit
throughout the fair . The
committee In charge will he
Gerald Douglas, C. · W.
Hender.son-and Hugh Custer.
The board also planned
construction of a neW swine
bam to be located ·between
the show ring and the sheep
bam.
John Rose and Benny
Slawter were named to the
committee to oversee the
construction of that facility.
an Smith met with the
board and outlined plans lor
staging a garden tractor
pulling contest at the August
fair. This will replace the
annual tractor pulling contest, but the sam~ prizes will
he offer.ed.
Rules will be modified to
coincide with the types of
1ractors'to be used.
Wallace Bradford,
president, was in charge of
the meeting .

will obey the law."
· County , Ky. " II officials don 't
Nevertheless, some coal .act decisively to prevent a
operators were making confrontation, there could be
preparations - just in case. a sever e loss of life."
" I personally know of six
In West Virginia, a cascade
mine operators who have
of rocks and at least one
placed dynamite along the bullet fl ew at a non·union
perimeter of th el r property,'' mine where about 40 UMW
said Rex Co rn , an official al pickets, armed with clubs
Low Su lfur Coal Co., in Pike and rifles, a11acked a train

being loaded with coa l. They
fled at arrival of state police

and no arrests were made.
In Rockport, Ky ., local
volunteer lire departments largely staffed by striking
miners - rcfu~ed to respond
when fire broke out in 7,000 to
10,000 Ions of coa l heing
shipped on a barge from

anuther non -union coal
e1 mpany.
'llle state fir e marshal's
office was asked to in ·
vestigate the possi bility of
strlke~connecte d arson .
Sen. Robert Stafford, R-Vt.,

" If the majority of .mlnt'fs
flout 1he court and the laws of
land, I think seizure would be
the next appropriate step,"
Stafford said. Durkin put 11
more blunlly , cullin g on
Ca rt er to "st op fiddling

joined Rep. J11mes Jef£ords,

aro und and sehr,e the coal
mine9,"

R-Vt., and Sen. John Durkin,
D-N.H., in calling for seizure.

"The men believe they will
get a better shuke under

sclwre," Ohio UMW district
ufflcial Bill Lamb said .
. "The men would rather
wurk for the g:overnmcn ~
hoping thtH the government
Morris ' neighbor s ln. a would lind out and let people
By RICHARD BEENE
a tip from local officers, told ~rresling officers, "It 's
LAWRENCEVILLE, Ga. picked up Teddy Morris, of aU a mistake." She said middle -c lass Norf olk knuw just how much money
(UP! ) - A 20-year-&lt;&gt;ld man, Norfolk, in ·a tavern Tuesday Morris may have made police neighborhood said they these Coal operators arc
described as quiet and polite , night on a fugitive warrant. suspicious by making calls I&lt;&gt; "never had any problem with making," he added.
him." They said he lived with
has been arrested in Norlolk, He offered no resistance and Lawrenceville.
The miners were not
his parents until about a year without support.
Authorities
said
the
Va., in the shooting of Hustler was held without bond
magazine owner Larry Flynt pending a court appearance fugitive warrant states ago when they moved out of
The United Auto Workers
Morris is wanted in Georgia the split-level house. Morris · Tuesday donated $2 million to
and his attorney on a Law- in Norfolk today .
Witnesses said Morris' girl· lor aggravated assault with worked occasionally for his the UMW, and ea rlier,
rCllcevUle street. '
father, who is In the home sy mpath e ti c farm e rs ,
Police in Norfolk, acting on friend, who was with him, intent to kill .
insulation business.
engaged In their own !ann
Flynt and his local strik e movem ent, shipped
attorney, Gene Reeves, 47, meat, produce and Cllnried .
were critically wounded
Shade, 8:28a.m.. 3::i3 p.m., Monday during a lunch break guods to striking miners In
ATHENS - Effective p.m.
Kentucky .
Darwin, 7:27a.m., 3 p.m., 5:38p.m. ·
Monday, March 12, the
in Flynt's trial on o bsce~lty
The miners will need all the
·
Pratts Fork, 8:32 a. m., 3:57 charges stenuning from the
following revised schedul e 4:47p.m.
financial
help they can get II
Burlington, 7:30a.m., 3:03 p.m., 5:42p.m.
will take effect lor the Apdistribution of his sexually- they defy a Tuft-Hartley
Burlington, 8:35 a. m., 4 explicit magazine. A mistrial
palachian Oh io Regional p.m .. 4:50p.m.
injunction. Refusal to work
Pratls Fork, 7:34a.m., 3:07 p.m., 5:45p.m.
Transit Association (AOR·
was declared.
threatens
loss of the federal
Darwin, 8:37 a.m., 4:02
TA ) Pomeroy-Athen s Route. p.m., 4:54p.m.
Doctors said Reeves was in food stamps on which many
Shade,
7:39a.m.,
3:12p.m.,
p.m., 5:47 p.m.
Pomeroy to Athens
satisfactory condlllon and
Rock Springs (via old Flynt, 35, wbo underwent slx have lived s_ince the strike
Middleport (Corner of Mill 4:59p.m.
Athens (Co urt St. Bus Route 33), 4:10 p.m. , 5:55 hours of surgery for stomach began.
and 2nd) 7 a.m., 2:30 p.m.
Stop),
8 a.m., 3:30p.m., 5:17 p.m.
Pomeroy (Blue. &amp; Gray
wounds,
was
getting
p.m.
Pomeroy, 8:45 a.m., 4:22 "progressively better."
Restaurant ), 7:10a.m., 2:40
Athens to Pomeroy
p.m., 6:10p.m.
p.m., 4:30p.m.
Andrew Jaffe, a family
Athens
(Court
St.
Bus
Middleport , 4:27 p.m., 6:1:i spokesrrian, said early this
Rock Springs (via old
Route 33), 7:20 a.m., 2:52 S\op), 8:10 a.m., 3:35 p.m., p.m.
morning that Flynt "Is
5:20p.m.
sleeping peacefully and his
condition is stable and
-,
continuing to improve. ''
Doctors promised to reve~l
today whether the :Ja-year-&lt;Jid
"born again" Christian and
Clarence McDon'ald was
sex magazine enterpreneur able to save his own home In
was paralyzed by the two Salem Township Saturday
shots that pierced his evening. The house, even
stomach.
though occupied, Is still under
Hospital authorities and construction and there was
Flynt's own aldes refused to still scaffolding around it.
respond directly to . rwnors
Using scaffolding Me·
that the millionaire publisher Donald was able to throw
was paralyzed. However, buckets of water to exthey !laid Dr. Taber Begherl, tinguish a blaze which
the surgeon who spent slx developed around a flue
hours in two separate before the Pomeroy Fire
sessions operating on Flynt, Department arrived .
would discuss that with Damages were set at $2,000
newsmen today . They said Fire Chief · Charles Legar
Bagheri would also explain reported.
why .be left a bullet in Flynt's
abdomen.
Gwinnett County police
chief John Crunkleton
PROBE VANDALISM
Tuesday released composite
The Pomeroy , Pollee
sketches of a white man and Department was this morwoman, both believed to be In ning Investigating vandalism
their early 30s, jVho he sald at the Meigs Tire Center on
are wanted only as witnesses. E. Main St. over night.
He said the man, with
A large window was broken
medl1110-length light hair and oul of the business plus
moustache, was last seen several smaller ones in an
BOB MORRI.S, left, principal of the Pomeroy and Mlddl~jx,rt Elementary Schools, used
wearing a tan leather jacket. overhead door.
" Happy Birthday, American Legion" as hb topic Tuesday evening when he was gnest
The
woman, standing about So
A spray can of red paint
speaker at Dre\v Webster post annual birthday observance. With him are Mrs. Grace Prall,
leet-4
Inches tall and was apparently used on the
president of the post auxiliary, and a Clarence Schmucker, )lO!lt conunander. During the
weighing about 170 pounds, large door and tne panes of
evening Mrs. Pratt on behalf of tile auxiliary presented a cheek to the post. The party was
Continued on page 14
glass and on a larger window.
open to post and-auxiliary members and their families.

Suspect .c harged in shooting

AORTA has revised schedule

Man saves
home in
Salem Twp.

�. 112-101
Knic k·s trip R ock ets
·
. .

2- The Daily Senti liP I. Mirlrlleoort-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, March 8, 1978

··.O:-:;o···;:;;;,·&lt;'fi!B_,___&gt;IIo.- · lll:=!:i.&lt;:"!KJ~

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·•
··
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (UPI)- Arbitration can be a
touchy business, the kind of head-to-head confrontation which
sometimes can leave deep unhealing' scars. and that was the
one thing Bill Lucas didn't want to happen .
Someone has to win anti someone has to lose anytime a
ballplayer goes to arbitration over his salary, and being
perfectly aware of that, Bill Lucas, who does a fine job as
director of player personnel for the Atlanta Braves, wanted to
make sure his relationship with infielder Rod Gilbreath would
stay the same no matter how the arbitrator ruled .
"We 're not talking about a piece of meat," Lucas told the
arbitrator as Gilbreath, sitting only a few feet away, listened
during the session in New York a couple of weeks ago.
"We 're talking about a young man who came into our
organization elght years ago when I was assistant farm
director, and this man,'' Lucas went on, looking over at Paul
Snyder, the Braves' minor league administrator, alongside
him, "was his first manager."
Bill Lucas paused a moment and then directed his gaze and
attention at Rod Gilbreath: He had something to say to him and
he meant it with all his heart.
"I love you going in and f'll love you going out," he said to
the pleasant, 25-yearo{)\d Mississippian , who smiled and
nodded understandingly.
l.ucas then presented the club's side to the arbitrator, after
which two of the lawyers Gilbreath brought with him spoke up
and offered their reasons why they felt he should get the $10,000
more he was asking.
.
The arbitrator, James Hill, listened to both sides. Twenty
four hours later, he made his decision - in favor of Gilbreath.
When Gilbreath reported to camp for spring training, one of
the first persons he ran into was Lucas, who shook hands with .
him and then with a perfectly straightface, asked
"How would you like to play in Mexico •"
For a second , Gilbreath actually thought Lucas was serious.
Then he realized Lucas was kidding him and they both
laughed.
.
"Bill and I are very close," says Gilbreath, who is being
moved over from second hase to third again.
''He'sone of the nicest guys I 1Ve ever met a nO we came up ln
this organization togclher/' Gilbreath goes on, talking about
Lucas. " I know there are no hard feelings on his part over what
happened at arbitration and if I had lost, there would've been
none on my part. I've heen in the Braves-' organization all my
life. They've always treated me good. I had a salary in mind
and they had one. I know it was strictly business. I also know
Bill meant what he said to me and I fee l the s.ame way about
him. I really love him ."
This really is what baseball is all about, when two men can
say thai about each other and honestly mean it as Lucas and
Gilbreath do.
It doesn't matter that Bill Lucas is black and comes from
Jacksonville, Fla ., and that Rod Gilbreath is white and was
OOrn in Laurel, Miss. Nor does it matter that they were on
opposite sides at the arbitration table . The only thing that
matters is that there probably will be a warm mutual bond
between them all their lives.
And that's one of lhe best by-products of baseball , one of the
qualities which helped it become the national pa stime.
· Gilhreath doesn 't feel put upon that Bobby Cox, the Braves'

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

t&lt;::t
......,

rum:

unltedPresslntematlooal
Bob McAdoo believes the
New York Knicks are l"Oming
together at just the right time
to be strong contenders in the
National

Basketball

As · t'
If
SOCia IOU p1a yo s.
"We've been an in and out
club most of the year, "
conceded the G-foot-lO
McAdoo Tuesday night after

leading the Knicks to a 112101 victory over the Houston
Rockets. " We 've got a new
coach and it has tak.en us a
while to work well together .
" Now

we're

mo~lng /'

M ·Adoo added referrmg to
c
.
the [act the Knicks have won
six straight games at
Madison Square Garden.
Tile Knicks, who seldom
·

Domz·nao unzque
•
~·

play well in th~ first half,
trailed 56-SO at IntermiSSion
but cut loo~ With a 27-10
bur.t 1n th~ th1rd pertod and a
11-4_spurt an the fourth to wan
ea.~lly.
.
We never seem to play
II . u f" t h If .. "d
we m Je IrS a • ~al
McAdoo , who led the Knacks
w1th 29 points and 11
rebounds.
Earl Monroe scored 20
point s •nrl ,Jim McMillian 18

Jazz 84, Blazen II!:
Truck Robinson scored 'll
points and had 19 rebounds
for the Jazz, who remained
unbeaten by the Biaza ; in
New Orleans.
Hawks 1%3, PlstoiiJ 109:
The Hawks moved into a tie
with Cleveland lor third_place
in the Central Division as
John Drew scored 19 points.
Bob Lanier scored 'll points
for the Pistons.
Suns 1261 Nuggets 112'
Waiter Davis scored a
game-high
34 . poihts
and . led
a
30-point
fourth period as the

.

for the Knicks while Calvin
Murphy had 28 and Dw1ght
Jones 21 for the Rockets.
The New Orleans Jazz heat
the Portland Tra1l Blazers,
84.-82, the

AUan~ ~awks

topped the Detroit Pistons,
123-109 the Phoenix Suns
· •
downed ~e Den~er Nuggets,
126-112, and San Antonto
Spurs outscored the New
Jersey Nets, 129-98, m other
NBA games.

Suns broke open a close game
for an easy victory. Ron Lee
scored 7:1 points rot the Suns,
who won despite being outrebounded 115-,12.
Spurs 1~, Nets 98:
Larry Kenon scored 'ZI
points and Billy Pault.z 25 to
lead the Spurs over the Nets.
New Jersey led ~ at
halftime bulthe Spurs scored
41 points In the third period
and 42 in the fourth .
The Aviation Hall of Fame
al Dayton, Ohio, honoring
aviation's out standing
pioneers, was chartered by
Congress in 1964.

-.

•

I

.---------------------------------,

baS e ball p laver

.,

4 DAY FOUR LEAF CLOVER SALE

.l

second base at Indianapolis
TAMPA, Fla. (UPI) Rafael Santo Domingo, .a 22· this season. He's versatile
year-&lt;1ld Puerto Rican rookie enough to make the switch."
Without saying as much ,
infielder training with the
the
Reds' believe Santo
· Cincinnati Reds, is a waique
Domingo
may be the player
ballplayer.
to
take
over
when the legs of
Santo Domingo, who batted
34-year&lt;•ld
Joe
Morgan, the
.281 playing shortstop for the
Reds' Three Rivers [arm club club's All-Star second
in the Eastern League "last baseman, eventually give
year, also is a bonafide st.'Out out .
"There's little doubt in my
for the Reds.
mind
that &amp;mto Domingo will
The club's director of
play
In
the major leagues,''
player personnel Chief
" How soon l
said
Anderson.
Bender explain ed that
can't
say
right
now."
" George Zurow is our
T11e Reds also figure to
scouting supervisor for the
Florida, Caribbean, Central field a fine, young infield at
America and Mex:k'O area . Indianapolis, their American
It 's a lot of territory to cover. Association farm club this
So, Zurow hired San lo year.
First baseman Harry
Domingo as a part-time scout
Spi
lman balled .373 with the
and assigned him the Puerto
. Three Rivers farm club last
Rican Winter League." ·
"I haven't' signed any year. Teaming up at second
players yet," said the 6-foot, with Santo Domingo will be
160-pound Santo Domingo, Ron Oester , who pl~yed
one of two Puerto Ricans in shortstop for the Hoosier
the Reds' .farm system, " but farm club last year.
' ·Qester can field in the
I've recommended tw o
majors
right' now," Said
players to Zurow."
Anderson
. "All he has to do is
"I like the kid's actions,"
said Reds manager Sparky improve his hitting."
Oester and Santo Domingo
Anderson . •·lie pla yed
shortstop at Three Rivers last are both working this spring
year. But he'll probably play at the Reds' Tampa camp .
freshman manager , is asking him to make the switch irom
third to second. This will be the second time he's being asked to
move over.
••J don 't mind,'' he says. ''I came up as a'' third baseman. I
feel I know the hitters. I know who 's gonna hi t a bullet and
who's not . It doesn 't make that much difference to mewhere I
play just so long· as I pla y."
Gilbreath might have wound up playing pro football. He had
scholarship offers from Ole Miss as a quarterbock, but turned
them down to play baseball.
"I'm not sorry," he says.
Neither are the Braves.

MARCH 9-10-11-12

SlACKS
SWEATERS SKIRTS
YOUR CHOICE

.•

...

NO BLARNEY BUYS

GOWNS

STORE HOURS
Mon. thru Fri.

JUMPS

FASHIONS

10 a.m. til 8 p.m.
Sat . 10-S: 30
Sun. 1-5 :30

}0 · 15 · 20

1

1

1

~-

ANY GREEN

rtar ..

rz.~ FASHIONS

FASHIONS

PLAZA SHOP

~ENTER

•

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•,,•
•
.,'
..•
••

-"
,".

".
,,,,'
'~

ALL SALES FINAL- CASH

~----~----~~----------------_. ••~
•

P-----------------------------------------------------------------~ '..

·'

GOOD LUCK MEIGS GIRLS AGAINST WAVERLY
THURSDA A -T 6 P

"'

I

••

~

,.''·

'

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, March 8, 1978

Hedric feels current
NCAA pairings unfair
By RICK VANSANT
OXFORD, Ohio (UPIJ
Mid-American
Conference
champion Miami has once
again been paired against
powerful Marquette in the
NCAA tournament opening
round and Miami Coach
Darrell Hedric isn't happy.
Complaining that the MAC
champ seemingly always "is
paired against the No. 1
seed," Hedric suggests that
NCAA
officials
"put
everybody's name in a hat
and draw for pairings."
"What would be wrong with
a draw like that ?" he
wondered. " It would be fair.
Why does the MAC champion
always have to be paired
against the No. 1 seed?"
Asked what difference it
would mak~ since a team
ultimately has to meet the
best clubs in the tourney
anyway, Hedric replied,
"Don't you think it'd help to
get a game underneath your
belt? And , it'd be nice to pick
up one or two more pieces of
the paycheck."
Miami plays Marquette
Saturday In Indianapolis. The
record of the Mid-American
Conference in general, and
Miami in particular, has been
terrible against Marquette in
opening
round
NCAA
games.
has
been
Marquet te
matched against the MAC
champ five times in lhe past
seven years and has ousted
the MAC representative
every time.
Miami has a 0-3 record
against Marquette in NCAA

Our Interest is
Greater For You

5J5%
On 90-Day

Certificates
5. 75 per cent paid on
90 day Certificates of
Deposit .
$1 ,000. 00
Minimum .
Interest
Payable Quarterly.
A . 1ubstantlal penalty is
invoked on all certificate

accounts withdrawn prior

to the date of maturity .

Meigs Co. Branch

@
The Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan Co.

.•

•
'•••
•
'
Tracy

Burdette

296 Second St.
Pomeroy. Ohio

-FSIJC

- ____
_...,_

play ,losing 13-62 in 1973, 62-47
in 1971 and 90-77 in 1955.
So, you can see why Hedric
isn't anxious to be paired
immediately against the
Warriors, last year 's champs
and ranked No. 3 this year
with a 24-3 slate.
"Even Uwugh I think we
ought to ' have a new way of
getting the pairings, I'm not
going to take on the NCAA

Redmen shoot
for District
22 cage title
TONIGHT'S PROBABLE STARTERS
GAME SITE -Lyne Center
TIPOFF TIME- 8 P.M.
Rio Grande Redmen
HT. YR. POS.
PLAYER
Gil Price
!Hi 4 F
Greg James
6-4 2 F
Skipper Johnson !Hi r C
Dan Purcell
6-0 3 G
Mark Sw~in
6-0 3 G

Coach Art Lanham's Rio
Grande Redmen take on
visiting Central State College
in the championship game of
the 1918 District 22 NAfA
Tournament at Lyne Center
tonight.
Tipoff time for the
contest Is 8 o'clock.
Winner of. tonight's battle
will advance to the national
finals, scheduled March 1318, in Kansas City . Mo ;
Coach Dr. Lu Wims'
Marauders are defending
district champions, having
downed Rio Grande and
Malone for the 1977 title.
One of state's top in·
dependent teams yea r after
year, the Marauders enter
tonight's game with a 15·10
season record, having upset
Defiance 89-llil Monday night
at Defiance.
·
The Marauders have great
leaping ability according to
scouting reports, and can
"shoot the bottom out of the
bucket,'' when things are
goi ng
their
way.
Against
Defianc e
Monday, Central State shot
a fantastic 64 percent (38 of
59) from the field .
"Central St.ate has another
typical ball club,'' remarked
Coach Lanham . "They
depend a lot oli their quick.ness," Lanham continued.
Jim Morrow, 6· 1 point
guard , runs the Ma rauder 1-4

SON SALE
••.

LAWNBOY &amp;BOLENS
Mowers and Tillers
Both New &amp; Used
iust around

'

corner - now is the ,..,,.,..
time to have those
mowers and tiller$

•,

,,fi"
,.

WILKINSON SMALL ENGINE SALt.S &amp; SERVICE
498 Locust St.

Beth Bartrum

Kathy Howard

Terri Wilson

Central State Marauders
YR. HT.
PLAYER
Ben Fowler
4 6-3
3 6-5
Venel Gray
4 !Hi
Steve Bayless
4 6-1
Jim Morrow
4 6-2
Jim Lewis

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

o.

offense.
Coach Lanham's Redmen
shooting for their first trip to
Kansas City in 24 years, enter
tonight 's ga me with a 21·1
record.
One of Rio's seven losses
this season was to Cent ral
State, 72~2. back. on Ja n. 4,
when the Marauders pulled
away in the final minutes of
play at Xenia.
"U'll take a supreme
team effort. Our boys [eel
they ca n win It," Lanham
sa id Tuesday as th e
Redmcn went tbrougb final
drills for the defelldlng
champions.
Admission is $2 for students
and $3.50 for adults.

NBA

Eastern co nference
Atlantic Division
W

Pts.

Denver
Mi iW
Ch icago
Oetr.oit
Kan City

25 22 17
17 J.t 14
13 33 18
15 40 10
14 43 6

Wales Conference

65

Cherie Lightfoot

THIS AD

WIN AT
WAVERLY

pomeroy
rutland
tuppers plains

pom
nationa
bank

GOOD LUCK,
WIN AT
WAVERLY
,

GB

]3
JJ
30
25

Portland at Houston

Cleveland at Golden St.
Thursday's Gam e
·C hicago at Phoenix

67
48

44
40
34

TilE DAILY SENTINEL

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHFSI"ER L. TANNEHILI..

. W. L . T . Pts .
46 9 9 101
25 26 12
62

Thursday's Games

Tor onto at Montreal
Boston at Detroit
Los AngeleS at Buffalo

Exec. Ed.
ROBERT HOF.FLI CJl
City EcUtor
'Pu blilshcd &lt;Wily cxce~l Su lunlay
b y The Ohio Valley Publishing
Company-Multimedia, Inc.,
I ll
CQurt St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Business Offit't Phone 992· 2156 .
Ediloria l Phone 992·21$7.
Second class postage puid a t
POmeroy, Ohio.
NttliOnal advertising represen·
talive Ward · Griffith Company,

Jnc .. BoUine\li and

Ga&amp;~ h er

Div .,

7.$7 Third Ave., New York, N.Y.
10017.
.
Subscription rales: Delivered by
carrier where available 7S cents per
week. By Motor Route where CarTier
service nul IIVIIila ble, One monlh ,
$.1.25 : By maU in Ohio and W. Vll .,
One Yeur , $22.00; Si.J: months,
$11 .50; Three months, $7. 00 ;
Elsewhere $26.00 year ; SU: months
$13 .50; Thre e months, S7.50.
Subscription pric e includes Sunday

Times-Senlinel.

Meigs girls face Waverly in district
believes her tcum is t:apable Hv crag t·d :w IHllnls pt•r
By Greg Bailey
The Meigs Girls cagers will u( doing just that. One of the t·unt(·st thi s season , and
be eyelng an upset when they main points t. ht• Marauder Vcwghan has been hilling in
gu into district hmnumJCnl · ~a ls will h&lt;J vc to kC'cp in mind d,•ubh- figun•s rcct·ntl y wll h
action tomorrow night at is that they mu!:t1 hi t the smm• hoi shouting .
Hruwn Hnd Wilsun llil\'t'
Waverly . The sectiona l boards. tspeci.ally un offense.
champs from Meigs Loca l l.oi:itcly , C.lendo Brown mul LH~t· n ~ a ntt•ring n•IJound s
arc coached by J oy Bentley, Tcri"i Wilsun lwve bcl~rl duiug rigltt &lt;tJHl h•ff in H't.:t•nt Will S.
and have fa ce d Waverly juS1 that , ami the Tigers will a mi ttu• olht·r stm1t'l', Tt·;wt
twice this season, losing both see a much improved !em u. Hurt! C' I1 e. a lwet}'S {'ll ll ll'S
In recent ~ames, Meig,., has · thn•u g)l on dcfe1.tse -as oJl· .
cuntests.
But Meigs has been play in ~ hull a ba lanced scoring at- : punents huvc round slm !JJ,~es
superb ball in t11eir last four wck, and Bentley believes 11111 well and doesn't givl'
or five outings, and Waverly that' s a big plus in her ~;i ri s' them the good shuts.
Wavt•rly wun the right to
will undoubtedly have tu be fHvor. Waverly plays a I.1H1gh
2-1·2 dl!fense, and the ont!-iidc ~ulvam·e In district play with
un their toes.
Cuach Joy Bentley says her shoot ing of A!l..SEOAL Vick)' a win over (;rccnfil'ld Ml'·
team will have to be very Epple ami Pat Vaughan i!-i C'la iu in t IU' Piket(lll St'&lt;'aggressive if they are t.o vcry in)portunt. Epple. t1umt l. Mei'-(S wo11 llll' right
come hume vi ct ors. :lnrl &lt;.;hi' Ci lways &lt;1 st rniH! thnnt .

Wildcats have one more goal
By RANDY MINKOFF
LEXINGTON, Ky. (UPil
- Kentucky has wrapped up
"first place in the UP! coaches
ratings, which pleases J oe
Hall, but the Wildcat cu·a ch
says h4s senior ~dorninated
tetJm ha s one more go al in
mind
the national
championship .

Hall 's Club fini shed atop the
United Press International
rank ings to claim a regular
season cha mpionship for the
fi rst time since the coach took
over for the legendary Adolph
Rupp in 1912. Rupp's tea m
had fin ished first in the UP !

Gallipolis Junior High Girls
defeated East ern 3).)8 in first
rou nd play of the Little Blue
Angels' own tournament
Monday.
·
High scorer for GAHS was
Sa rah Eva ns with 21 points.
Shari Howard and Chrystal
Green each added two. High
scorer for ·Eastern was Patty
Edwards with eight points.
Sa rah Goebel and Cass ie
Sheets. added 4 each and
Rhonda Riebel had two.
GAliS is now 4-Q em the yeai
and will play their final game
this evening at 1: 15 against
Athens for the championship .
Athe ns defeated Ky ger
Creek Monday, 47-12. High
sco rer for Athens wa s Mollieawith 27 points. Kroner added

'Sure , we wa nted to fini sh

1

first gc,i-r1g into the playoffs,
but it's not those nmkings
which r~ally count, it's the
NCAA tourney , and !hut 's
what we have been aim in~ at
i:lll season long ,'' Hall sa id .
Kentu(:ky appeared headed
fol' an unbeaten season this
yeilr , winnin g its first. Hi
games with wins over
na ti ona lly ranked atHI
to urnamcnl bound .squad s
like lndianiJ, Kansas, South
Carolina, Sl. J ohns.cmd Notre

with a ro!IVHU"iug JH-:\!1 win
(ictllit)(•lis 111 tlw .la ckSI.II\

uv~r

'1\l lll"llillllt'lll .

Wnwrly is l"t'\Htivd y ,-;,nu ll

Hlgh scorer for Kyger
Creek was Kim Bickers with
si~ points . Kay Palmer .
Loretta Gilmore and Da nella
Harless added two each.
Kyg e r Creek will play
EHstcrn in the consolation
·game. a:t 6 this evening.
The Blue Ange ls would like
to t11ank referees Henc e
Petrie and Harol d Mont gomery who have donated
their time this winter·.
Team trophies will be given
to the first and second place
teams and a five -women a ll·
tou rney team will be selected
by the four coache&lt; and
trophies will be awarded
according lo Coach Robin
Lane .

tuakP~ Ujl

blll

fur it

li 1 ttwir ltUi l.'ktw ..;s and t·xt'Clll'llt oulstdc s huu \uq~ .
( ;\11:11"1 1 I.JSH

.Sllu('IHilk4'1"

l."i

qtth"k uml kad s liN lt'lllll ill
S}H IH t IJi j..\ Wlt\ 1 ll JJ.J iiVt'l'ilJ.!i'
wlti h' th~ olitt' l' guurd , f:wyu
BuiJ(), i!i tdlting ut 11 12 Pllilll
t' lil&gt; ·
Forward
(' h&lt;' I'Yl
l&lt;'olll"{'htld ll\'l' l'llgl's 12.5 per
)~ !tl llt' t\\ii\ t• ('C IIIi "l" !\ill\
Knight II SUal\y l'Oil11'ld S the
buitt"lls at li'2" 0111d !"L"II I'i':; a t
&lt;Ill

di'VI 'II

dl!t

puillt

J'l'l'

~ ·wt!csl. Till' u! ht-r slillit•r is

1\ tdh\' S(HirfL'Illlkl'r at 5"/" .

S h1W;Hil~H'I' 1 ~ J'4". Fmrduld
ts 5'5'", and Huhu is ~,·4·· .
(;;wu· linH' is {i p .11 1.

Dauw .
Bu t UK was III)St' l a l.
Alal&gt;a11w, 78-112, ami los1 &lt;1
!Jile-uol nt gan tc at L.f.IU in
ovt~rlim~

and Hitll .. g n•w

angry. l·lc labeled hi~ lt·ant
tile "ftJiding five .''
KcJHUL"ky, whic..:h ](1st tu
North C.arnli1w in the fitwls hf
tl w

Ea~tern

re~ iona!

last

ycm, finislwd the s&lt;·a son i:i-2.
nnt.1 ga m e better thHll ln.~ !
year 's 24-:l l"l'gubtr -sewwn
m ark . The Wildcats lust 11111y
IKJt!· r•layer fro m I;Jst yt':JI' 's .
ICillh ·hut g~~ih cd t he serviC'~.: H

of Kyle Mac·y , :1 third 11':1111
All-America guard who has
h•d !he Kcnt.ueky off~n se .
Hall will probably t1irn t.o
Miii 'Y for lcudt:'rsldp in lhl'

upnmtin g tourn ey, w!11l'h

12, Sabo fr,ur and Kyle and
Dopglas l wo each.

tlt'i ~ ht ,

in

bt•gins Sa turday ;t~&lt;tln s t
Flnrida Stale Hl Knox vilh·,
Tcnn,, a plm:c in whkll ll a ll
lw rl never wun until last
Jtlonth when UK dcfea ll:d

• Fishing Tack le

and Rods
and Ree ls
• Gun s and

Reloading

e BaH G loves
Camping
Equip Ill en t
• Ar c hery
• Indoor Games
• We
have Gill
Certificates
601 Mai n St.
P t. P leasant. W. Va .

Tci'lrJcssct) 1 GB-57 .

nu t it is UI C four senio rs
who have prov ided tlw
emotional pcak.s und vu llt~ys
for Hall's team. St arter~ Hick
Hobcy , .Jack nivens and Mike
Phillips, alon g with ".1W J~ 1"
suh '' James Lt.."&gt;C, are looking
fur ihe on ly m~joi' titl e tlwt
has C!:icapetl the1 n llm·iug

VISA '
AcrOss I rom Courthouse

PHONE
675 -2988
Opc:n Sundily 1 p .m . 6 p. m .
M o11 day

thru .Saturday

9,1 .m . !o8p .01 .

lheir l"a rcers.

Senco • Oren • or
U.S. Fiber Insulation

Girls tourney scores
Tuesday 1s

Girls High School

...•

ratings four previous times,
but on ly once did it go un to
win the NCAt\ tournament.

Gallipolis, Athens
girls clash for title

Sonia Ash

FOR MIDDLEPORT AREA
Dorothy Chapman

5
9
9
9 1 'J
17

40 25 .6 15

NEWSPAPER
CARRIER
WANTED
Glenda Brown

11

Seattle at Sa n Antonio

55

Los.Angeles
Detroi t
25 29 9
59
Pitts burgh
20 26 17
57
Washington
12 ~0 12
36
Adams Di vision
W. L. T. Pi s.
Boston
42 13 8
92
Buffalo
38 13 14
90
Tor on t o
36 17 10
82
Cleveland
19 38 9
47
x-clinched division Iitie
Tuesday's Results
NY lsln drs 5, vancouver 2
P hiladelph ia 5, Atlanta 3
Boston 7, St . Louis 2
Wednesday 's Games
Cleveland at NY Rangers
NY lslndrs at St . LOU iS
Vancouver at Atla nta
washington at Montreal
Co lor o!ldo at Pitt sbu'rgh
Los Angeles at Tor onto
Chicago al Minnesota

1

GB

A tlanta at Ph iladelph ia
New .J ersey at Kan City
New York at Mi lwaukee

Norris Di vision

x -Montrea l

18
21'
28

31 .5 16 61 ;&gt;
J2 .508 7
J4 .469 9 1 1
39 .J9 1 14 1 7
Indiana
~3 41 .359 16' ]
Pacific Division
W. L. Pet . GB
Portland
52 12 .813 Phoenix
40 25 .615 12' 2
LosAng
34 29 .540 17 1 7
Seattle
34 30 .531 18
Golden 5) .
29 34 .460 221 ~
Tue sday 'S Results
New York• l 12. Houston 101
Atlanta 123, Det roit 109
New Orln s 84, Portland 82
San Antonib l28 , N J. 98
Phoenix 126, Oenyer 11 2
Wednesday 's Games
New Orleans at Bu f.l alo

as

6 p.m. Team members arc fr ont row, l-1', Patty Dyer,
Tonin Ash ...Tracy Butdl•LH•, Sonia 1\sh, Kathy 11uwurd ;
back, coac h Joy Hcntl~y , BcU1 Hurtmrn , ('twrit• Ut-:lltfuot,
Dorothy Chapman , Terri Wi!Snn, Glf"ntla f\rown, Vkky
Epple and Pat Vau~h111 1.

81 1

M idw est Di vis ion
W L. Pet.

Smythe Di visi on
w. L. T . Pis .

Ct'lic:ago
Van couver
Colorado
St . Lou is
M inneSota

GB

Weste rn Conference

92

24 25 17
22 31 11

L . Pel.

Phila
43 20 .683
New York
35 29 .547
Boston
14 37 .393
Buffalo
21 .t1 ,]39
New Jrsev
16 49 .2.1,6
Central Di vis ion
w. L. Pel.
San Anion
40 24 .625
Wash
34 29 . 540
Atlan ta
32 34 . 485
·c lev land
31 33 .484
New Orlns
32 35 .478
Houston
24 42 .364

NHL Standings
By U nited Press International
Campbell Conference
Patrick Dh."is ion
W . L. T .
40 14 12
37 17 11

standings

By Un ited Pr ess Interna tiona l

Pro Standings

NY Islanders
Ph il ade lphi
Atlanta
NY Rangers

SECTIONAL CHAMPS - The Meigs Girls' basketball
squad coached by · Joy Bentley won U1e sectional
tournament by defeating Gallipolis in the finals . They had
an overall record of 1 2~. They will travel to Waverly
Thrn:sday in district play where they will play Waverly at

Pro
\I
IStandings !
1

I

Tonia Ash '

Patty Oyer

poorer teams but whipping
the likes of Purdue, Dayton
and Texas A&amp;M .
What the Redskins mainly
have going for them is
maturity and desire. Miami
has four senior starters and
this is the first time the club
has made the NCAA
tournament since the seniors
have been in &amp;chool.
"This is what they've been
looking for the past four
years, "
said
Hedric.
"They're tickled to death ."
Miami is led by 6~ forward
Archie Aldrid ge,
who
averaged 21.2 points a game
this year and also broke
Wayne Embry 's Miami
career scoring record with
1,460 points.
Aldridge, who also owns
Miami 's all41me career field
goal percentage record of 62
percent, is helped out by
seniors Randy Ayers, a 6-6
for ward,
and
John
Shoemaker, a 6-2 playrnakin g
guard.
A pair of former Indiana
high school stars - 6-tl
·senior center Bill Lake of
Carmel and 6-5 sophomore
guard Rick Goins of
Rushville - round out the
starters.

about it right now ," said
Hedric. "We've got to get
ready for Marquette on
Saturday. They may be
favored, but our kids are skyhigh and we've never gone
into a game yet that we didn't
think we could win."
Miami, 18-8 overall and 12-1
in the conferenL-e, has had a
strange season - sometimes
losin g to some of the MAC's

Basketball Results
United Press International
Ctass AAA
(At Columbus)

Col Waln ut Ridge 58 Col

Northland 43

Cot Watterson 51
Arlington 23

Upper

(AI Dayton)
Day Stivers-Pat 54 Day Roth
41!
Ket

A lte r 64 Day Colonel
.t4
Fairmont E 45 Day

White
Ket

Wright 44

Ket
Fairmont
Beavercreek 20
Cla ss AA
( At Gahanna)

W . 87

Walkins

Memorial

48

Granvi lle 29

North Uni on 46 Hamilton Twp
40

PER BAG

(AI Avon Lake)

Avon 49 Columbia 24
Medina
Hiahland
Well ington 43 (2 of)
t At Ca n fie ld )
Lit&gt;erty 48 Waterloo 22
Ca mpbell M emor ial
Beaver Loca I 45 .

44

66

MACHINE
RENTAL
'25 00 . PER DAY

Class A

(At Pickerington l
Lancaster Fisher 63 Miller s

port 47

Fairbanks 43 Carding ton 38

tAt Ken t )
•
Cle Lutheran W 38 Mineral

Ridge 27

Sm ilhvil le 44 L owellv i lle 38

R·VALUE COMPARISON CHAR T

0

PHONE

I

A-valu e

1

I I I I

I I. I

2

I I

I

I I I I

3

4

I

I I I I I

U.S. FIBER
ROCK WOOl
FIBER GlASS

992-2156

These values ore for c..1c Inch ot loosc··fifl insulation.
.

THE DAILY SENTINEL

I

City Ice &amp; Fuel Co.

.BETWEE.'-.1
8 AM and$ PM

224 1st

~treet

Point Pleasant

_ _ _ _ _(._30~4);...675-2460
~­

'

,,

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wedne$day. March 8,1978

5- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, March 8, 1978

~~"?~~~~~:::::::::: : : : : : :-:;~:=:::::::~~

Appalachian arts and customs
instruments,
the
As part of the Retired two
Senior Volunteer Program, dulcimer and banjo, which he
Mrs. Henry Turner and Mr. had made fr om lumber
and Mrs. Darrell Taylor growing on his own land. The
visited the classroom of Mrs. dulcimer wsa made entirely
Emma Lou Finch at Meigs from a sassafras tree. The
High School this past week . banjo was made with wood
With the assistance of Cindy from the sassafras and wild
Malloney, student teacher, cherry tree for the neck and
Mrs. Finch's class had been base of the instrument ; red
examining the arts and cedar wood was chosen for
customs of the Appalachi an the resonnter in the "instrument. Taylor appraised
Region.
Mr . and Mrs . Da rre ll his handmade banjo at $300.
While there is no. •tandard
Taylor, who volunt eer their
musical talents on a sha pe or size for the
regularly scheduled basis to dulcimer, the teardrop style
va rious community in· seems to be the most popular
st itutlons , demonstrated style. Each builder uses his
their hand-&lt;:rarted musical own imagination to mak,e the
instruments. Taylor brought dulcimer to suit his fancy.

Taylor reflected upon the

use of musical instruments in
his lifetime to provide en·
tertainment for the individual
as well as the community.
Reared in Jackson County,
W. Va ., Taylor states several
local musicians would gather
at the rear of the courthouse
on Saturday afternoon , at the
end of the work week , to play
and accompany each other on

their various instruments.
During the Depression Years,
a "good" band could look to
their musica l abilities as a
source of income. Patrons at
a public dance would be
charged 5 cent s a dance and
profits divided between the
manager and musicians.

FRENCH CITY ....JUMBO FRANKS .•••••• ~L.~ .• s1.29
FRENCH CITY BOILED HAM •••••••••••'::!~-- ~1.19
HOME MADE HAM SALAD••••••••••••••••~~·. 99~
CUT UP FROZEN FRYERS •••••••••••••••••L.~.• 59~
New Green

BROUGHTONS

2% MILK ........~~.1:.~1.49

CABBAGE ............. ~.~:

Hb . Kraft

6 ·oz. Pak.

'l4 s lb.

PARKAY MARGARINE ...69~

RED RADISHES ....

25

e

2/35

~

11 oz. MORTON T.V. DINNERS •••••••• ~:~~.69~

Mrs . Ta ylor, wh o had
previou sly taken formal
violin lessons, has learned the
touch of " country music"
since moving to this area .
Their selections included :
"Salty Dog Blues," "Flop
Eared Mule, " "Golden
Slippers,"
" Ma r ching
Through Georgia, " " Wild·
wood Flower" and "Don 't Let
Your Deal Go Down."
Mrs . Turner explained her
knowledge of home remedies
for sickness to the students as
she had learned them from
parents and grandparents.
An active member of RSVP
for the past five years, Mrs.
Turner has volunteered many
hours at the hospital, COAD,
schools and Senior Citizen
Center .
Growing up in an era when
doctors and hospitals were
hours by horse and buggy,
rural families relied upon
knowledge passed down from
previous generations for
fi rst·a id t reatment and
common illnesses. A trip to
the doctor of hospital was
used as a last resort, when all
home remedies had failed.
Yellow root; an ingre(iient
found in today's pharmaceut ica l presc ri pt ions,
was brewed as a tea for
stomach disorders as well as
.mouth sores. Mrs. Tu rner
provided a sample of the
biller lea for the class to
taste.
Homema de
bandages ,
made from clean while rags
which had been made sterile
from heatin g iri the kitchen
stove, Was a basic item to be
k~pt in readiness by periodic
restralization.
Mrs. Tu rn er spoke of
poultice made from: tea for
burns~ onion and must ard
poult ice fo r chest colds and
milk and bread poultice for
minor skin jn_fections. While
working at a hospital at 15
years of age, Mrs. Turner
was asked to be a patient to

EF-BOY-ARDEE
15 oz. CHEF: BOY:_A_R.I;)EE

Meigs Tire
Center Now
Has A Good
Selection of
Any Size

35/a oz .

MITY FINE PUDDINGS ••• ~ ................. 3/69~
17 oz.
.
.
GREEN GIANT PEAS ..... ~ .................. 2/69e
30 oz. TEEN QUEEN
PORK &amp; BEANS ............................. 2/99e
48 Count
LIPTON TEA BAGS ...........................s1.29
oz. INSTANT
NESCAFE COFFEE ........................~~~. s3.29

Karen Blaker Ph.D.
money he has secretly bor·
rowed- and secretly loot?
I hope your husband's det'i·
sion to gambl.e full-time
forces you to face something
you have previously been
able to deny: He is a compulsive gambler.
Taking big risks gives him.
a '' high." He has evidentally
reached the point where he
needs more time and money
to maintain his habit. He is
taking the time. Where will
he gel the money'
Do not let him fool you into
thinking he will win it. Com·
pulsive gambling is always a
losing game.
Gambling has been your
husband's mistress . Now he
i.s moving hey into the house.
This is a bad situation ~ and
gelling worse.
If you do not want to be
there when his " life-long .
drea m "
becomes
a
nightmare, why not attend a
meetin~ of Gam·Anon, an
organization for spouses of
compulsive gamblers' Tell
your story, listen to the experient'CS of others, ask them
for adv ice. To find the
chapter nearest you, write to
Gam-Anon, 235 J.lst Street, ·
New York, N.Y., I0016.
If you decide to stay in your
marriage - without outside
help - you will be taking a big
gamble. The probability of
living in fear of debts, lies
and, finally, shady or illegal
dealings wi ll be high. In the
last analysis, however, the
choice is up to you.
Write to Dr. Blaker in care
uf this newspaper , P.O. Box
489, Radi o City Station, New
York, N.Y. 10019. Volume of
ma il pr ohibi ts personal
replies, but questions of
general interest will be
discussed in fu ture eolumns;

A big gamble

DEAlt DR. BLAKER - My
husband spends every Sun·
day at the racetrack . lt hasn't
bothered me too much
because I know he loves to
gamble.
But la st week he infunned
me that he will be giving up
his present job in two months
to be t:ume a fu ll ·time
gambler . He says he has tu
give it all his time and attention to find out if it's ~ winn·
ing ur losing game.
I ~hink it is a crazy idea . We
have three chHdren, a new
horne and w1paid bills. He
says not to worry about
money. But I don 't see how
we will manage. We don 't
have investments or savings.
I asked him to call
Gamblers Anonymous but he
thinks he can work it out
him•eif by living out his "lifelung dream. " Should I take
l11e children and leave' Or
should
I stay and see what
MARKO THE MAGICIAN
happens?
TO TEACH MAG IC - "Fun With Magic," a special
DEAR READER- It must
even.m.g class taught by Mark Wood (Marko the
be
a difficu lt decision. Your
Mag1c1an) w1ll meet for five Monday sessions from 7 to!;
has evidentally been
husband
p.m. starling March 20. The class will be held at the
gambling
for years and you
Jackson Senior Citizen Center located on Mound Street.
have
not
experieJlced
firla nThis Wl ique course is sponsored by the continuing
eial
or
emotional
crises
as a
education department of RioG ranpe College and is open
resul
t.
1o anyone w1th an mterest m magic. Participants will
Now, as he embarks on this
learn baslc mag1e lncks using readily available
new
full-lime gambling
materials: The class will also look at the modern-day
"eareer"
in the face of unmagicians. ln:tructor Mark Wood has a background of 11
paid bills , you may be asking
years m the f1e ld of mag1c as a professional magician .
yourself: "fs it realistic to be
Those mterested may . register by calling 245.,';353
so
WQrrted1 .I h~:~ve been
(extension 299 l or by registering at Allen Hall on the Rio
tru::;ting
hil'n all along and he
G~ande campus. Fee for the course is $10. Any questions
has
never
let me down.11
you may have about the class can be answered by calling
Let me reass ure you. Your
Mark Wood at 1-28&amp;.3068.
concern is well-founded.
In fad, you may a lre~:~tly be
unk
nowingly embroiled in the
prepare a poultice made of his next visit, t he patient
kind
uf cover-up a eompulsive
Fels-Napht ha soap a nd explained his Hmi raculous
gambler
constructs to protect
suga r. The pat ient had cure" t o the surgeon·inhis
addi
ction.
After all, how
received surgery for two charge.
eould
yuu
knuw
abunf Hw
large carbuncles on the back
Mrs. Turner stoites she has
of his neck , which failed to since used the Fe1s-Napht ha
drain and heal properly. On poultice herself for deeply
imbedded splint ers or thorns
with great success. Soot from
the kitchen stove, mixed with
a bit of suga r, was used as a
fi rst·aid means to cont rol
bleeding. Teaspoo n of cod
liver oiJ and turpentine was
used to cont rol severe
di arrhea . Bla ck pepper,
wrapped and lied in cloth to
the size of a small pea, was
placed in · ear . to relieve
Men's 12" stovepipe .
.earache. Field Balsa m and
Russet Backwoods
sassafras root were. brewed
leather . lt- lian Oak
into tea for "tonics." Wild
hon~y was used in· many, of .
outsole wil l. , '·fsale .
these preparations "to help
riding heel . ~ juare
the medicine go down."

Today.

MEIGS TIRE CENTER
John F. Fultz, Mgr .

RETURNS HOME
Mrs. Juanita Bachtel has
returned from Phocniz , Ar iz ~
where she has spent the
winter. She was met at the
airport and accompanied to
Middleport by her daughter,
Mrs. George Dallas of St.
Paris.

9a .m.•s p.m.

Mon . thru Thurs. &amp; Sal.

9 a.m.-1 p:m. Fri.

TAKE ADVANTAGE OF EXCELLENT BUYS FOR ONE FULL WEEK TiiURSDAY, MARCH 9 TiiRU 16

ALLEN

PORK CHOPS

4

VEG

END CUT

303

Cans

$}00

·.... . ·

CENTER CUT ... ............. ..... ~~·...~.1

39

3

LB.$}19

8'1• oz .
Pkg .
46

$}00

8 PAK 16 OZ.

"The Overloaded Ark," "The
Promise,'' and a book of
.
poetry.
Reading can be a pleasure
once more when the print is
easy t o see, and people are
encouraged to come to the
libraries and ask for Large
Print Boo ks .

Auxiliary meets
RUTLAND--Puchase of
c-• rpel mats to be used at the
doors of the Rutland Fire Sta·
lion, .a nd a hot water container for food preparation
for firemen at fires was approved at a recent meeting of
the Rutland Firemen 's Aux·
iliary at the station.
Mrs. Juanita Lambert had
devotions ·using as her \berne
" My Prayer." The meeting
time was changed from 7:30
to 7 p.m. ·and a committee
was appointed for cleaning
the meeting room.

•:j
•';~I
••

.......

.,·;
•••

.{

$}49

CENTER CUT RIB

PORK CHOPS •••••••••L~

.;:,
:c:.t:.,..

.••

t·

•'••
••

.•••

$
59
PORK CHOPS.........~..

11

CENTER CUT LOIN

.1
BOLOGNA ........ 5ge
SUPERIORS BUDGET SLICED

LB.

••

.I

•'•'

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~:~~~~············ ...~~ 8ge

lo ,

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•

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WHOLE
. · . 4·9¢
CHICKENS •••••••••·••••L~...

~:

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'

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...
••
••
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••

.

i:

••
••
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•••
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Dl's CANDY

RETURNS HOME
Lonnie LeMaster, son of
Mrs. Bonnie Le Master, Rt. 2,
Poineroy, who· und erw ent
bra in surgery at Children's
Hospit a l, Columbus, has
return ed hom e and is
reportedly doing very well.

~•

FRESH

EASTER CANDY
CLASSES StiU $5.00

STRAWBERRIES •••••.L~

learn hollow molding
and fi lied eggs.

••••
••

.•

I

t

VALLEY BELL

· What you make you take
home.

I

•

Phone 446-7903

•

KRAFT AMERICAN

'Sf!

Bag

TENDERLEAF

.

TEA BAGS

ODUCE SPECIALS
10

LBS.

69.~

·WHITE or PI

GRAPEFRUIT 5-l.s.79~

8 ROLL

NOODLE SOUP. •• :·~:~~
_COUPON

_j

DOG FOOD

J

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Also Other Models At
Sale Prices

THE FABRIC SHOP
Second St.

Pomeroy, 0.

25LB.

$299

W!C

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TIDE
DETERGENT

10 LB.,
11 oz.

oz.

TV DINNERS ..... ~.o.z-. /

·

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ELF
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$119
CHEESE Sl NGLES
TOILET TISSUE ••••• ~~~...
••••••
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CAMPBELL'S CHICKEN
5/$1. MORTON
CORONET

5 lb.

GAL

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU MARCH 11, 1978

I

NOW!

$}39

298 SEOOND ST.
POMEROY, o.·

,.

• , 9q.99

EVERY DAY,
4 P.M.

2% MILK

People wf.o have always
enjoyed reading good novels
and inlejeSting books don't
have to give up that pleasure
just because th ey begin to
have difflcujty in reading the
small pt,lnt.
Hundre ds , of book s are
published /each year in a
spec ia l fo rm at that uses
extra large print, so that the
words are twO or three times
as large as jthose in other
books.
. ,
These books are called
Large Print Books and people
can borrow them through the
Po meroy and Middlep ort
libraries. The libraries own
about a dozen of these Large
Print Bcioks and they have a
list of ma ny more which they
can borrow for readers from
the St at e· Library in
. Columbu s. li only takes about
a week to get the books in
from Co lumbus and the
libraries do this free of
charge .
Some of these easy-on-theeyes books that are at the
Pomeroy library right now
are : "True Grit," "Profil es
in Courage," ''The Sj&gt;y Who
Came in· from the Cold/ '

SALE

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Sunday 10 am-10 pm

act

ANNUAL
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GIVEAWAY
Register every day
several wi.nners each day.
Bread, milk, wieners, bacon,
R.c ., Coke, 7-Up - many
more items gi·;en .away each
day .

Store Hours:
Mon.-Sal 8 am-10 pm

I

38 oz.

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RING

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"Middle of Upper Block"
· Store Hours
Po meroy, 0 .

th

HELP PHEBE CELEBRATE. • •

$119

HARnEY'S SHOES, INC.
Closed Sunday

WEEK LONG

JUDGEDICTATESPRIVATEMORALS
DEAR HELEN :
•·
I got in trouble with the law, and 1 took my medicine. 1 don't
plan to go that route again. But now that I'm on parole, the
Judge ruled that I'd have to stop living with the woman I love,
unless we decide for marriage. For various reasons, we can•t
marry right now. He says this is part of betpg a "good citizen,"
and my parole officer will lake steps if I don't confonn.
This same judge gave a friend of mine a jail sentence instead
of probation mainly because of his live-in girlfriend. The
charge: possession of a small amoWJt of marijuana. He wasn't
a "criminal," but an older college student whose woman
friend was helping put him through school.
In this day, isn't the judge mixing into private matters that
don't concern him ? ·FLORIDA MAN ON THE SPOT
· DEARMAN :
Regardless of what I think &lt;which is " Nix on public officials
dictating private morals!") your judge is within his legal
rights: Florida has a statute banning cohabitation, and he .
c-•n enforce it under the la w... though this particular law is
largely ignored.
Is marriage really out of the question? . H.
DEAR READERS :
The above letter brings to mind inequitous laws in other ·
states :
In Louisiana; a husba nd controls his wife's earnings and be
bas the power to se!l and mortgage corrununity property, in·
cludmg the home, w1thout the knowledge or consent of his wife.
In Missouri, although it is the husband 's lega l duty to support his wife, It is an obligation defined and controlled solely by
him, and not enforceable by his wife.
In South Dakota and Georgia, a husband can disinherit his
wife completely, ext'Cpt for ber right to live in the family home
for her lifetime.
In New Hampshire, the penalties for wife-bea ting or simple
assault range from a verbal warning to a small f~.
In Maine, if a couple jointly rWJ a business, the profits belong
to the husband.
In Pennsylvania, Texas and Indiana, judges cannot award
alimony. A divorced wife is completely dependent on the good
will of her former husband.
)n Alabama, a ma n who finds his wife in the
of adultery
and immediately kills her may not be charged with murder
(punishable by dea th or life imprisorunent ) but only with
manslaughter (one to ten yea rs). The same crime committed
by a woman can carry a charge of murder.
These and other unreal laws have been compiled in a series
of 51 booklets produced by the ·Nationa l Commission on the
Observa nce of International Women's Year. You may order a
copy of the report for your state by sending $1.25 to the
Superintendant of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Of·
!ice, Washington, D.C. 20402.. H. ·
.
.'

offered by library

Save Your Snow
Tires. Buy

I

Helen Help ·
Us ••• By Helen Bottel

·Large print books

toe.

Recapped Tires.

6

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GET READY FOR SPRING

SPAGHETTI DINNER................... ~.-:-:~a.•.. 89~
MEAT BALLS &amp;BROWN GRAVY. ........... 89~
2 lb.
CONFECTIONERS SUGAR ..... ~ ............... 79e
15'12 oz . HEINZ
CHILl FIXINS· .~i!~~~t.•S:.a.":•••••••.••••••••••• ~: •• ?5e .

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CHOICES

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W/C

limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer
Mar . 11 , 1978

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INSTANT COFFEE
10 OZ. $449 ~/C

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:1

�t- nie pat!Y Sentinel, Mkldleport.f'cmeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, March 8, 1978

8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday. March 8, 1978

Bob Evans and Rio join forces for homestead classes
RIO
GRANDE
CC's continuing education
An introduction to the to be taught by Liz Fanning.
The"Sch ool of Homestead program and will be held in techniques of spinning wool is The course will meet
Living," an educational the crafts bam at Bob Evans lhe subject of another course Tuesdays, begiMing March
vent ure established in Fan11s.
&lt;;!!o peration with Bob Evans
Betty Carpenter will teach
pti·nmz'eti~
Farms and Ri o Grande a special two session Easter
1u
~
~
Co ll ege and Community candy making class, ThursCollege (RC C-CC), will offer day , March 9 and 16.7-9 p.m.
classes
In
patchwork Those participating will learn
ATHENS - Dan 0 . Clark, a piece satirizes grand opera,
clothing, ru gmakin~. W&lt;KJI how to make fill ed Easter fa culty member in the Ohio science and romance, among
spinning and candy making eggs, hollow and solid University School of Music, other things.
chocolat e bunnies and has composed the score for a
Also presented during the
for Easter.
The courses, open to the chocola te coated candy . The short comic opera that will evening will be two other
public, are all part of RGC- co"t if $10.
premiere this month in short plays by Koch, " BerAthens.
tha, Queen of Norway " and
The opera will be presented " George
Washington
by the Ohio U~iversity School Crossing the Delaware." The
of Theater as ·the title fourth piece is " They,"
segment of "A Change of written by Obie award.Hearts," a program of four winning Arnold Weinstein.
short comic plays to be
The production is directed
performed March 8-12 in the by George Sherman, head of
Forum Theater. All per- the Professional Director
formances will begin at 8 Training Program at Ohio
p.m.
University.
Clark's new score is for a
For reservations or more
libretto written by poet and information please call 594. playwright Kenneth Koch 5010.
about heart tran ~plnnt ~ The

O'Pelll'n to

Mrs. Hill hosts meeting

Stop in and see the all new complete
line of Sylvania Portable and
Console TV's.

SYLVANIA NO. l

RACINE-Mrs. Inez Hill,
Racine, hosted a meeting of
the United Women of the
Letart Falls Church recently.
Mrs. Don Bell opened the
meeting with devotions using
a meditation entitled "What
Does Easter Really Mean to
You?" and Mrs. John Hill
read the scripture including
the Easter story. An article
from Guideposts was read by
Mrs. Andrew Cross.
lrwas noted that the thank
Offering box project was successful. New members
becoming active in the group
were discussed with Mrs. Andrew Cross to contact each

one.
It was reported that during
the past two months 34 visits
to sick and shutins had been
made. A letter from Mrs. H.B. Powell of Florida .was
read, and Mrs. Emest Shuler
· conducted the Bible study on
the book of Matthew.
Next meeting wiU be at the

home of Mrs. Cross with Mrs.
John Hill to have the program
and Mrs. Inez Hill, the devotions. Refreshments were
served by the hostess assisted
by Mrs. Shirley Dugan.

The Ohio University School
of Dance will present its
annual Dance Concert March
9, 10 and 11 at 8 p.m., with a
matinee performance
Saturday at 2 p.m. in the
Patio Theater in Kantner
Hall.
Guest artist
Marcia
Sakamoto, former faculty
member and current director
of her own company and
school in Oakland, Calif., will
premier a solo "Bridge of
Dreams."
In addition, three members
of the School of Dance faculty

ARMSTRONG
ACCOTONE

PANELING
MILL SECOND

Efficient life insurance program is needed

quilted vests Is the subject of
the fourth class in the "5Chool
of homestead living" series.
Barbara Thomas will be the
instructor and the course will
meet Saturdays, 1-3 p.m.
beginning March 18 for a fiS
registration fee .
Those interested in any of
the courses may register by
phone. Call the continuing
education office at RGC-cc,
24~353, ext. 299.
Mail registrations will also
be accepted. A check or
money order for the correct
amount along with the title of
the class or classes selected
should be sent to Box 453, Rio
Grande College and Com·
munity College, Rio Grande
Ohio 45674.
'

M

•Y•

Recycling
Xmas bulbs
DEAR POLLY -I wonder
if any of the readers have any
ideas about what t'Ould be
dun!! with seven and one-half
wall small colored bulbs

will prese nt new works .

Gladys Bailin's "Grand
Prix" is a group work in three
sections. set to a score by
Lukas Foss. Margaret
Tcheng has choreographed
''Tapestry,'' a group piece for

after they are burned out.
Those I have are the type used on Christmas trees. In this
day of "waste not" it seems
there should be something
that could be done with them.
-CAROLK.
DEAR CAROL K. - I feel
sure we will be getting some
suggestions from our thrifty
and ingenious readers. I do
not have the vaguest idea
concerning the use .of such
bulbs. -POLLY
DEAR POLLY - My Pet.
Peeve is with the makers of
nail polish. It seems they
could make the brushes in
such bottles longer so one
could reach the bottom of a
bottle and use all of the
polish.
An ordinary hand nutcracker is the handiest thing
to use for loosening stubbom
caps on bottles and jars.

women with music of the 14th
century, and Pat Welling has
choreographed a quintet to a
sound score by David Jacobs
and Priscilla McLean.
·MRS. A.R.B.
Reservations may be made
DEAR POLLY - I have
at the Patio Theater box some suggestions for the
office dally from 10 a.m. to 5 reader who has so many
p.m., or by calling 594-5010. burlap hags and wants to
know how she could use them.
All seats are $2.
They can be made into throw
pillows for the patio or a
cabin. Most cabins have
small windows so such bags
could be made into curtains.
With a shelf and mirror and
skirt to match you would
have a nice dressing table.
They can be made into shopping bags or bags for the girls
to carry their school books in.
They could ,have colorful yam
embroidery~'br a louch of
gaiety. Cute halters and
skirts can be made from such
bags and even a cowgirl outfit.. Trim with bright beada,
fringe made from yam, leftover ricrac and colorful buttons. U,t your imagination
run riot. Hope these ideas are
some help ..-ALICE
DEAR POLLY- We have
found that waxing a snow
shovel helps the snow to slide
off easier when shoveling
walks and driveways.
When . taping weather- '
stripping on windows, put it
inside. There is less trouble
with tearing and It also seems
to lower the heating bill a bit.
QEAR POLLY - A good
way to keep carpets and
throw rugs in place is to use a
basting stitch to sew ol&lt;l
fashioned .rubber jar rings to
the bottom. -SHERRY

.99

•

Social

12' WIDTH
REG. '3.95

NOW
ONLY
MOULDING, TRIMS AND
NAILS AVAILABLE FOR
PANELING

PLAIN WHITE

HOGG &amp;ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.

CEILING
TILES
SQ. FT.

773-5554

16~

MASON, w~ VA.

immediate expenses which _them to live reasonably well.
woulct arise If you died (4) You might want to set
medical and funeral bills, aside for the future to meet
unpaid taxes, outstanding • some special goal, such as a
bills and legal fees to settle college education for your
your estate?
children. You can do this, of
(2) Is there money to pay course, through savings and
the mortgage on your home? • investments with enough life
If you have mortgage in- insurance to make sure
surance the outstanding money will be available in
balance would be paid in one case you should die.
sum. Without the worry of
Next, look at what your
meeting monthly payments, pr ese nt resources can
your wife would not have to provide. If you are covered
sell the house under pressure by Soc ial Security your
and perhaps suffer a loss. family could receive a
Mortgage lending institutions monthly income based on a
usually offer. such insurance percentage of your earnings
at low group rates.
and your number of depen(3) How much money dents. In addition, some
would your family need each money may be coming in
month for housing, food , from investments, interest
clothing and so on? Work out earnings or other property
a theoretical budget hascd on you own.
the' least it would takP fnr

Calendar
WEDNESDAY

Demonstration provides test

MONICA AND JARROD HOLMAN
CELEBRATES -::- On Feb. 7th Monica and Jarrod
Holman celebrated their first birthdays at the home of
their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roger Holman. Games were
played and a Raggeddy Ann and Andy cake was served
with Kooi-Aid and ice cream. Attending were Johnny
Wolfe, Lisa Searles, Vicky Angie and Roye Russell,
Thelma and Pam Moore, Brad and Judy Alexa nder, Mr.
and Mrs. James Miller, Tina, Debbie, Jim and Mike,
Bryan, Tracey, and Kelly Hoiman. Sending gifts were
Mrs. Penny Brinker, and Mrs. Mildred Hubpard.

Fo'reign language courses
offered at Rio Grande
RIO GRANDE- Classes in
French, Spanish and German
languages are all on the
spring quarter continuing
education schedule at Rio
Grande College and Community College. Each of the
classes, which are open to the
public will meet in offcampus locations around the
area.
Two courses in conversationalSpanlsh are being
offered. One class, meeting in
Middleport at Meigs Junior
High School, will be held
· Tuesdays, beginning March
14, 7-9 p.m., . and will be
taught by Cecilia Hart. The
second Spanish course with
Elaine McCoy as instructor
wUI be held at the Oak Hill
High School, 6-8 p.m .,
Tuesday beginning March 14.
A course introducing the
style and sound of the French
language will meet at the
French
Art
Colony, "·
Gallipolis, 7-9 p.m.. Wed-

nesdays beginning March 15.
The instructor will be Rochiel
Mongkollugsana.
Two German classes will
be offered in Jackson at the
Senior Citizens Center.
Beginning German will be
held Wednesdays, beginning
March 15, 4-0 p.m., and Intermediate German will meet
Mondays, 5-7 p.m., beginning
March 20. Bernard Goldstayn
will teach both classes.
Bernard E. Murphy ,
coordinator of continuing
education said that with the
exception of Intermediate
German, none of the
language courses requires
previous experience .
Registration fee for each: of
the courses is $25.
Murphy
said
that
registration may be made by
phone' man or in person.
Telephone regi stration is
possible by calling 245-5353,
extension 299.

'

'

'

EDINBURG, Texas (UPI)
-The demonstration by 2,000
fanners in the Rio Grande
Valley· last week coincided
with the start of spring
planting and the two events
provided the first big test of
the farm strikers' goal to cut
production In half this season.
And how successful were
the farmers? It depen~ on
who you listen to.
The semi-tropical valley
where the nation's planting
· begins each year is critical to
the success of the strike.
Some experts say a 100
percent planting there could
produce a domino effect
northward, with farmers
losing faith in the strike as
more and more plant full
erops. .
The four-day demonstratlon involved blockades
closing international bridges
to halt the Dow of cheap
Mexican produce into the
United States.
That effort failed. But there
are differelng views about
whether the jailing of more
lban 200 farmers for blocking
a public road crippled the
strike in the valley or
solidified support.
Dale Jeske, president of the
Hidalgo County Farm Bureau
- Hidalgo leada aU 2t&gt;4 Texas
counties In agriculture

'
Lfz Fanning demonstrates wool spinning. She will
teach a course in the subject at Bob Evans Farms Craft
barn beginning Tuesday, March 14, 7 p.m., as part of the
spring continuing . education schedule at Rio Grande
College and Community College.

Literary Club hears
review of Dibion book
Mrs. Nan Moor~ r~viewed
the book, ""A Bonk of Common Prayer" by Joan Dibion
at the Wednesday meeting of
the Middleport Uterary Club
held at the home of Mrs.
Dwight Wallace.
Tbe book i.s the life story of
Charlotte Douglas as a politlctan's wife and all of her
family, Mrs. Moore said, and
tells of the complex and
powerful life of Mrs. Douglas.
Mrs. Moore noted that many
characters are portrayed in
the book with the story taking

REGULAR MEETING
Pomeroy Chapter 80, RAM,
7:30 p.m. at temple; regular
meeting of Bosworth Council
46, R&amp;SM, 8:15p.m.
. MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Gardeners, 8 p.m. Wednesday at the home of Mrs. Eddie Burkett with Mrs. Grace
Pratt, co-hostess.
TIIURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS Grunge,
Thursday, 7:30 .p.m. at the
hall.
GIRL SCOUT Workshop,
training for troop camping, 10
a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Colwnbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co. social room. Take a
sack lunch~ notebook and
safety-wi.se book. Servit-e unit
meeting will be held in con- · In the spring quarter, Rio
junction with the training ses- Grande College-Community
sion. All leaders urged to atCollege wlU offer a course in
tend.
Uterature for Ufe which wlU
WOMEN'S
AGLOW be directed especially to
Fellowship Thursday at older adults, although It Is
Meigs Inn, Dinner at 7 p.m. also open to regular college
Reservations may be made students. Persons over sixty
by calling 992-5845.
may attend aucjlt free on a
space available basis without
signing up for the course.
ntlJRSDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Hwnane Others are asked to register
Society, 7:30 Thursday night at the Admissions
. or forOffice
'
either
for
eredlt
audit.
at the Thrift Shop across
The course will be
from the Post Office in
definitely
· directed to life
Pomeroy.
enrichment, and wiU be taken

place in California and South
America and a fictitious city
named Baca Grande in Central America.
For roll call members
imswered by giving "an
ansWered prayer.'' Mrs.
Robert Fisher opened the
meeting by leading the
members in the club collect.
Next m~eting will be on
March IS at the home of Mrs.
Emerson Jone s. · Mrs.
Richard Owen will have the
book review. Refreshments
were served by Mrs. Wallace.

' 'Litera!ure for Life ' ' to be
taught by Ruth. Thomas
from all forms of literature of
all times. About half of the
hour wiU be devoted to class
discussion.. The instructor for
the course is Ruth Thomas.
. This class is being offered
10 response to a request of the
class in Uterature for Older
Adults which was held in the
fall quarter. The very alert
and cooperative persons in
the class proved that they had
much wisdom to offer, and
the college appreciat.,. this
~pportunity for interaction of
Ideas.

production - said most
Lcwer Rio Grande Valley
fanners were " turned ofr' by
the demonstration.
But, Phyllis Moore, handling telephones at strike
headquarters in Progresso,
Texas, said fanners blamed
the jallings on overreaction
by police.' That, .she said,
helped the movement.
· The Market News Office at
Weslaco
reported
862
carloads of vegetables mov~
through the valley en route to
northern markets from
Friday ·through Sunday.
or that amount, 348
carloads of produce were
brought across the border
despite the blockades at the
international bridge at
Hidalgo. The other 514
carloads involved material
produced in the valley itself
and shipped to market during
the period.
Hidalgo County Agriculture
Agent Dan Galvan said the .
demonstration, while 'falling
to cut imports, hurt the
movement because of the
clash with l&gt;ollce. • And, he
said, early statistics indicate
fanners are beginning full
· production.
Galvan anticipated 560,000
aeres of Hidalgo County land
- 200,000 in cotton and up to
360,000 acres in grain

Increased deer
problems being·
.experienced
'

.

I•

finance retirement. Hut until
you have all the protecton you
need, the
Association
suggests that you concentrate
on safeguarding your wife
and children against the
possible loss of your earning
power.
To gauge your insurance
needs you must first estimate
how much your family will
need to get along in the event
of your death. Some
estimates put this figure at
two-thirds of your income.
But the actual planning will
take some down ~to-earth
husband and wife talks and
the counsel of a life insurance
agent.
Your family 's needs will
probably fall into one or more
of the following areas:
(I) Is there money to pay

Polly Cramer

-MRS.M ,R. .

SHEET

as a bullder needs a

bltMprlnt to construct a
. _ , you need a detailed
plla to bulld a thorough and
.tftklent llle insurance
JNII'&amp;m, tailored to fit your
lll'Ciflc needs and finances,
the Meigs • GaUia Muon Aoaoclatlon of Ufe
Underwriters.
To measure your Insurance
needs accurately, YOU must
be clear on what you want life
lnaurance to do. Its ba1ic use
lhould be protection. In other
words, life insurance supplies
money to take care of your
dependents If any.thing
happens to you.
Some people do buy life
Insurance for other reasons
besides protection against the
IDu of income through death.
Certain policies, for example,
Ire especially geared to

POLLY·s POINTERS

Dance concert slated

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN'S

SPRING OAK

t4, 7-9 at a cost of $22.
Sheared woo l will be
provided for students and
some spinning wheels will be
available ; however , those
registering are asked to
provide their own spinning
wheels if possible.
Cynthia Langona will teach
an introductory course in rug
making from 10 a.m. to noon,
Saturdays, beginning March
18. The class will provide
instruction in crocheting ,
braiding working, weaving
and rya pil e rugmaklng
techniques.
Materials,
supplies and loom will be
prov ided for the $20
registration fee.
Making pslchwork trims,
skirts, jumpers, purses and

sorghum - will be planted
this month, about the same as
the 1977 acreage. He said a
negligible amount of !ami
may be held back for the
farm strike effort and federal
programs.

But Jimmy Clifford, a
farmer reached at strike
headquarters In Weslaco,
predicted "There'll be at
least a SO percent reduction in
cotton acreage and probably

30 percent reduction in grain .
"We've got people wanting
to cut back. We've got landlords calling up wanting to
release half their land. It's
just remarkable ·what's
happened the last few days.
We have one guy who has
about 3,000 acres of eolton
and he started putting the
disk to it today; he'd gotten it
planted before this happened."

Dun 't overlook any

surant.'e on )'our home. Yo_u
buy it for a specific term and
if you are still living at the
end of the period the policy
expires.
The chief use of term insurance is t o provide a
maximum of protection for a
minimum of premium outlay
only during a speci fied
period. Young families will
usually need more insurance
than they can afford using a
permanent plan only.
However, if your term Insurance is convertible and
renewable you will be able to
change it for permanent
insurance when you ca n
afford It, without a physical

em·

p!oyee benefits that may be
available through your job.
Some 80 million Americans
have group life insurance and

then there is group hea lth
ins urance. disa bility in suran~ e
and pensions.
Millions more have in dividually purchased these
types of protection.
Now you are ready to
consider whethe r any
changes, are nerded in your
faoli,l,Y insuranc~ progr~m .
As you can see. your
family 's financial noeda will
be both short term and long
term and some needs will
decline whil e others will
increase. The obvious conclusion is that the exact
dollar amount you will need
will change as your C&lt;!onomic
conditions change. Nor Is
there one kind uf life insurance policy that will meet
all your need s. In all
likelihood your individual
needs will include several
policies.
Agent Can Help
Every type of policy is
designed to do a certain job or
to fit a certain sit uation. Your
life insurtincc e~gcnt is the
person best equipped to
provide you with assistance
in planning a life insurance
program.
For -i nstance , term insurance provides protection
for only a specified period. It
operates much like fire in-

examination .

time only, usually 20 or 30
years or until age 65. n1is
enables policyholders to
specified premium, deter· complete puyment for their
mined by your age. and the insurance In the ea rly years
amount of insurant'e, as long or larger income, or pcrhups
as you live, and the company before retirement reduces
will pay a specified sun1 to their income, and yet huve
your beneficiary when you the protectio" for life. This
die. This premium slays the kind of policy is widely used
same throughout life, unlike by peopl e in the enthe premium for the tem1 tertainment world, wh ose
insurance which Increases as peak incume may not exrced
a 20-yea r period. The
you grow older.
arc hl ghrr
Straight llfe is built for premiums
general purposes. It can be because they are fully paid up
used for obligations that will In a stated period of time.
If you need more lnsurunce
exist no matter when you die.
you ca n nfford , you will
than
Umiled pay life Is like
have
to build your lr1suruncc ·
&gt;traight life ext-ept that you
program
in stages.
pay premiums for a limited
Straight life insurance · Is
the basic forn1 of pennanent,
lifetime protection. You pay a

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ATHENS - As a result of
the recent weather conditions
and the extended snow cover,
many wild animals are being
forced to seek other sources
of food. Deer particularly
have moved closer to
residences, bamlots, ·highways, and towns in search of
food. As a result of this, many
deer are being injured or
killed on the highway.
During the past couple of
weeks, the Division of
.. Wildlife has been bombarded
with calls reference injured
lind dead deer who have
fallen victim to dogs. The
deer break through the frozen
crust o~ the snow making it
very difficult to maneuver
and packs of dogs are finding
these animals easy prey.
Because of their agility and
weight, dogs can walk on the
crusted sriow,
seldom
breaking through : Dogs
chasing a deer wiD quickly
exhaust the animal, move in
for the kUI, and often bed
down beside their kill. Partial
consumption is made of the
carcases before abandoning
tt.
Dogs . victimizing deer are
· not always psclts of stray
dogs. Many packs are
comprised of tbe family pet.
It Is because of this, Division

SOCIETY TO MEET
CIDLLICOTHE - The next
meeting of The South Central
Oblo Preservation Society Is
ll!beduled for Saturday,
lillrdl II, at 2 p.m. at the
Olllllcothe Municipal Courtroom on the second floor of
the City Building, South Paint
Street, ChiUlcothe. This will
be a joint meeting with the
Chillicothe Restoration
Foundation.
Lynn lsaly, a senior agent
for the Internal Revenue
Service wt1l speak on the
advantages of the Tax
Reform Act as ihey pertain to
historic property.

of Wildlife personnel urge you
to keep dogs confined or
under control at all times.
Known strays should be
-reported · to your local dog

.

w~rden.

Another problem being
experienced by the Division
of Wildlife is an increased
amount of poaching. Deer are
forming larger herds and are
confining their movement to
smaller areas, even standing
along open fields and roadways where the snow has
thawed enough to expose
leaves and grasses. Because
of the easy accesslb!Uty,
daytime poaching has In·
cr.eased and night poaching
continues to be a problem.

CONTRACT VOTE
A special meeting of United
Steelworkers Local 6197 of
Midwest Steel, ~o{IIeroy, will
be held at 7:30p.m. Friday at
the Foote Mineral Union Hall
in Maaon, W.Va. Purpose of
the meeting Is to present and
vote on ratification of a
contract. All members are
asked to be present.

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FREE CWTHING
CHESHIRE -The GaiUa Meigs Community Action
Agency will hold Its regular
free clothing day .lor low
income persons of the area
from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Friday.
The agency's clothing bank is
located in the former high
school buDding at Cheshire.
SITE CHANGED
Funeral services for
Chester L. . ;het) Tannehill,
Meigs County newspaperman
for over 30 years, will be held
at 2 p.m. Thursday at Heath
United Methodist Church in
Middleport rather than at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral
Home. Friends may call at
the fwieral home from 2 to 4
and 7 to 9 p.m. today. The
body will lie in state at the
church one hour prior to
services.

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�10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, March 8, 1978

peopletalk

--~

--- -

By KENNETH R. CIARJt
Ulllted Pretl IaleriiiiUoul
KAFFEEKLATCH : Tourists at Universal Studios in Hollywood got a •W"Jrise Tuesday when they were asked in for
coffee by Robert Wagner and wife Natalie Wood. The occasion
- the studio is adding Wagner's dressing room to the tour as
an example of the typical dressing room of a star. So where
will Wagner dress while strangers troop through his room ? He
has a mobile dressing room , the studio says, but if he wants to ,
he can use the other one from time to time .

~---~-

_____.___""-

j

NO CHAUVINIST: Thomas A. Murphy - chairman of
General Motors C&lt;&gt;rp. - scolded the women Tuesday at a New
York awards dinner for their failure to make engineers of
themselves . He says half of his employees are engineers, but
practically none of them are women - that "in this generation
at least they are hard to find in sufficient numbers ." Honored
by "Catalyst" - a group promoting women in business were : Mary 1. Bunting of Radcliffe College, bank executive
Catherine B. Cleary, Eleanor Elliott of Child DeveloJment
Foundation, former U.S. Deputy Solicitor General Jewel
Maloutaot, Patricia Stewart.• of McConneii.Oark Corp., and
Beryl Roblecbaud of McGraw-Hill.
MOTHER GUARDIAN : PrlsdUa Pretley- former wife of
tne tate rocK ·n• roll king Elvis Presley - bas been named
guardian of her·own daughter. The Los Angeles Superior Court
decree - making her legal guardian of l~y~r-old Usa Marie
- paves the way for probate of Presley's will with regard to
his home in Palm springs. His will - also under probate in
Tennessee - didn 'I name Priscilla as an heir.
STAY, GEORGE: A federal judge in Las Vegas, Nev.,
refused Tuesday to reduce the $100.000 bond comedian George
Kirby has not been able to post to go free while he appeals his
conviction on charges of selling $216,000 worth of heroin to an
undercover agent . The judge ordered Kirby to surrender his
passport - says if he does manage to raise the money, he'll
have to report to the U.S. marshal 's office every Monday to
prove he hasn't left the country.
QUOTE OF THE DAY : Controversial 89-year-old master
builder Robert Moses, in a lecture at the &amp;nithaonian's
National Portrait Gallery in Washington: "Ma ny seem to
believe that democracy means that everybody is entitled to
everything everybody else has."
GLIMPSES: Mme. Vera Slravluaky - the 90-year-old
widow of famed composer Igor Stravinsky.- made her debut
as an artist Tuesday in London with the first public exhibition
of her paintings ... Songstress Julie Budd will highlight the
kick-off dinner for Florida's Dora! Open Golf Tournament,
where ber audience will include such avid club-owingers as
Bub Hope, Jackle Gleason, Fred MaeMurray and Jaek
Nicklaus ... Francis L. Dale - publisher of the Los Angeles
Herald EXBminer, former publisher of the Cincinnati Enquirer
and active Methodist Church layman - has been named to the
board of trustees of the school of theology of Claremont
C&lt;&gt;lleges ... Daily variety columnist Army Arcberd will
interview arriving celebrities at the Academy Award
ceremony for a record 16th year ....

'Otet' Tannehill

"Relax! I've got the chart right in front of me! "

'Crisis Watch'
By United PresslnteraaUonal
A glance at developments in the nationwide United Mine Workers Union strike :
UMW AeUvlty
.
Local leaders from UMW District 6 met at the district headquarters in Dilles Bottom
Tuesday for a briefing on the Taft-Hartley Law which President Carter invoked Monday.

UMW Reaction
BIU Lamb, a member of the UMW District 6 and national executive boards asked
President Carter not to put undue pressure on the miners and said they would p;obably
return to work under a federal seizure of !be mines.
·
Utility Activity
·
·
Monongahela Power C&lt;&gt;., headquartered in West Virginia, today i.riiposed 25 per cent
mandatory cutbacks to industrial and conunercial users in the Marietta, Ohio area .
Iadependent AeUvlty
The Ohio Highway Patrol reported again today that non-union coal is moving freely
and sa1d it had escorted 403 truckloads of non-union coal in a 24 hour period ending early
today.

(Continued from page I)
training has its piUails.
Chet took me under his wing, sometimes driving the point
that in order to succeed, you must be willing to profit by your
Coal SuppUes
mistakes and work hard in the area you fall short.
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric, 42 days.
Chet's knowledge of English and Its composition provided
Cleveland Electric IUuminating, 43 days.
him with a special ability In which to teach young,
C&lt;&gt;lumbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric, 36 dsys.
inexperienced news persons. In my second return to the Ohio
Dayton Power &amp; Ught Co., 49 days.
Valley Publishing C&lt;&gt;mpany (1970) Chet and JUnior Wilson
Monongahela
Power Co., 20 days. ·
have helped ine immensely. ·
Ohio
Edison,
35.4
days.
I will r\ot only remember Chet for his professionalism, but.
Ohio
Power
39
days.
for his friendship, zest for life and his love for sporting events.
Toledo Edison, SO-to~ days .
'
Every year, we (Chet, Junior and I) made two annual
trips, one to the state basketball tournament at Sl, John Arena
in Columbus and the other to Riverfront Stadium in Cincinnati.
Chet, like all all avid Cincinnati Reds fans, lived every game
as if he was a coach or manager.
·
Now,those tripswillbemadewithouthim,buthismemory
will be with us. It isn't right to question why something like this
happe,ns. Our Heavenly Fath~r knows best Somehow.• it just
WASHINGTON (UPI) _
amendment by Sen. Jesse
doesn t seem right; In fact, Its hard to beheve , Chet ts gone , . . The Senate has beaten down llelms, R-N.C., to allow a
So long, Chief.
lOefforts.by treaty opponents Navy electronic monitoring
to
attach
cf!ppling station on Galeta Island to
amendments to the Panama continue operations beyond
sister.
Helen
Carper, Canal treaties, but it now after 2000.
Burlingham, Sunday.
seems the Senate is battling
Senate
and
House
Mrs . Audrey Woode, to a stalemate.
opponents of turning the
Pomeroy, called on Mrs.
Opponents' latest defeat canal over'to Panama called
!Wss Cleland, Monday.
came Tuesday evening with a news conference today to
Mr. and Mrs. Hobart the 58-36 vote laying aside an discuss ways to involve tbe
Newell visited Sunday with
By Clarice ADen
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Long
The Ladies Auxiliary of the and family. The occasion was
fire department · met Wed- to help their grandson,
ne sday evening at the Eugene Long, celebrate his
firehouse with vice president, first birthday. Mrs. John
Karla Chevalier, presiding. Newell and fa.m!ly were also
The meeting opened with visitors.
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
prayer, followed by roll call.
Mr . and Mrs. Willard
Minutes of the previous .Hines, Pomeroy, called on
minutes were read by Ethel Mr. and Mrs. John Hayes,
Orr and the treasurer's Monday afternoon.
report by Opal Wickham. It
noted abnormalities that he
Mr. and Mrs. !Wss Cleland .Why remove
was reported that the tile for received an.announcement of
felt indicated you would be
the floor had arrived and the birth of a daughter to Mr. ovaries'~
better served by completing
would he put down as soon as and Mrs. David Tysinger
the operation with.removal of
the weather permitted. (Sherry McCain), Fort
DEAR DR. LAMB - Could all the organs involved rather
Besides those named, others. Stewart, Ga., on Feb. !5, and you explain to me why tbe than'lemporizing. I do think
in attendance were Clarice has been named Brenna doctors would lake two that many patients need a
Allen. Cleo DeTray, Inzy Tennille. They have a healthy ovaries out along better understanding of the
Newell and Erma Cleland. daughter, Tara, aged two.
with the uterus without ask- possibilities of what the docA potluck dinner was
Mrs. Ralph Keller spent a ing the patient and explaining tor may need to do once the
served on Sunday, Feb. 26 at couple of days with Mr. and the reason you need the surgery is underway .
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Mrs .
When you are in your 40s
Don
Williams, ovaries.
Tom Nice in observance of Columbus.
that
means there are a
I am in my early 40s and
the birthdays of Mrs. Mabel
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Tobas had tumors in the uterus . limited number of years that
VanMeter
and
Eldon and
daughter . Mollie, This was the first time I had your ovaries will continue 'to
Kraeuter, whose birthdays C&lt;Jhlmbus, and Miss Lou surgery and I didn 'I know be active. After the
were Feb. 'll. Mrs. VanMeter . Tobas, Pomeroy, called on about taking hormones or menopause the ovaries serve
was 89 and Mr. Kraeuter 77. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur DeTray, what questions I should ask. I no function other than as a
Enjoying the family affair !Wbyn and Todd, Sunday.
am so nervous and upset degenerated gland capable of
were Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Dr. and Mrs. Billy Robert since my surgery lhat I stili spawning one of the most
Wolfe, Laren and Kent, Mr. Allen, C&lt;Jiumbus, spent the can't come right out and ask disagreeable cancers in the
and Mrs. Dale Maidens, weekend with Mr. and Mrs . the questions I'd like to. I bndy. Cancer of the ovaries is
C&lt;Jilin and Kristie, Miss Leda Clayton Allen. Bill and Karen would cry and that is very the fifth most common causes
Mae
Kraeuter,
Eldon spent the weekend of Feb. 26 embarrassing.
of death from cancer in
Kraeuter, all ·of Racine, Mrs. in Altanta, Ga ., where he
DEAR READER - It may women between 35 and 74. It
Opal 'Eichinger and Laura gave a talk on Monday at the be embarrassing but going is bard to detect, particularly.
Jean, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Convention of American through the emolional ex- after surgery, until after it
Nice, Alta Dill and Mrs. Institute
of
Chemical perience of verbalizing your has already spread.
VanMeter, all local. Mrs. Engineers.
Finally, unles:: you have
fears and problems as well as
V~nMeter received over 80
other
medical problems there
getting some answers may be
cards and many nice gifts,
is
no
reason
you cannot take
a lot more important to you.
including a dozen red roses
Embarrassment is tern· hormone replacements that
Stress passlblllty
from her grandson Charles ·
porary but ignorance is per- will do the ,same thing
On daya when you're under manent if not corrected with endocrine-wise as your
Henry Eichinger and' family ,
Columbus. Mrs. VanMeter · a lot of stress, if you're a
ovaries were doing. You no
information.
would like to thank everyone heavy perspirer, think about
While you believe your longer have a risk of cancer
for remembering her birth· re-i~pplylng your deodorant ovaries were entirely normal of the uterus and unless you
or anti-perspirant a couple of I do not know that this was have lumpy breasts there is
day .
Mrs. Ada Morris visited her times during the day.
true. Your surgeon may have no reason it should cause any

Ammendmen·ts· beaten down

Otester
News Notes

HEALTH

House of Representatives in
voting on the treaties. They
believe the House might
reject them.
But under the C&lt;Jnstitution,
only the Senate votes to ratify ·
lreaties and the executive
branch has made clear it sees
no reason to depart from
breast problems. Complications other than cancer are
even more rare and can be
managed or prevented.
Have a good heart-to-heart
talk with your doctor and
perhaps he can give you some
medicines to make you feel
better. He may need to be
sure yuu are not having a

depression, which sometimes
occurs after an operation and
needs special attention.
Meanwhile I am sending
you The Health Letter
number i&gt;-12, Menopause, to
give you a better idea of this
phase of life. The effects of inadequate female hormones is
the same wheU1er this follows
surgical removal of the
ovaries or from the natural
degeneration of the ovaries.

Others who want this issue
can send 50 cents with a long,
stamped, self-addressed
envelope for it to me in care
of this newspaper, P.O. Box
1~1. Radio City Station; New
York, NY 10019.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I was
told by friends that if I drink a
glass of grapefruit juice
before I have a meal it will
bum up the calories in that
meal. Is this true?
OEAR READER - Completely false. In fact an &amp;ounce .glass of grapefruit
juice will contain about 90
calories itself. This is just
part of the general misinforll)ation about using
.grapefruitfor a diet. The only
way drinkirig a glass of
grapefruit juice before eating
will help is if it cuts your appetite . so you don't eat as
many calories of rich food as
you might otherwise.

Market Report

TV•••in Review

Ohio Volley Uveatock
• Market Report
Prices taken from the
auction of Saturday, March 4.
Trends: Feeders, $3-S higher ;
Slaughler Cows-Bulls, active
to S3 higher; veals, $5-8
higher; Hogs, $1-1.50 higher.
Total Head 513
(Cattle)
Feeder Steers : (good·
choice) 250 to 300 lbs. 47.51158; 300 to 400 Ibs. 4~ ; 400 to
500 lbs . 45·SI.50; 500 to 600 lbs.
40-47.25 ; 600 to 700 lbs. 3945.75; 700 and over 34.50·11.
Feeder Heifers (Goodchoice) 250 to 300 lbs. 37-44;
300 to 400 ibs . 35.511-42.00; 400
to 500 lbs. 35-41.50; 500 to 600
ibs. 33-40; 600 to 700 lbs. 2837.00; 700 and over 'l/.511-35.50.
Feeder Bulls (Good-choice)
250 to 300 lbs. 45-53.50; 300 to
400 lbs. 41-51.50 ; 400 to 500 lbs.
43-48.50. 500 to 600 lbs . 38-45;
600 to 700 lbs. 35.SIH4.25 ; 700
and over 31.50-39.
Slaughter BuDs (Over 1.000
lbs.) 30-37.60.
Slaughter Cows: Utilities
• 30.10-33.$0; Canners-cutters
25.50-30.
Veals : Choice and I&gt;rime
· 66-71;
Standards
and
Mediums 54-62.50.
Baby Calves ( by the head)
15-60.
(Hogs)
Hogs (No. I, Barrows-gilts,
200-230 ibs. 47.50-48.75.
Butcher Sows 39.50-42.25.
Butcher Boars 2&amp;-30.50.
Pigs (by the head) 14·32.50.

Federal funding
could be lost

..

,,

...

helters 460-790 lbs. 34.75-39.

Hogs : Barrows and gilts 1

higher, sows 1 higher, feeder

pigs 3 higher. Feeder pigs,

barrows and gilts 1-3

.,,

Berry's World

••

.'

200-2~0

lbs . 48.35-48.85 sows 1's 380·
395 tbs . 41.50; 1·3 475·560 lbs .
38.50-40; 2-3 480-510 lbs. 36.15·
37; feeder pigs tot 1's oil tbs .
.W; 1-2 451bs. 35; 2-3 25-35 tbs .
21 -24.
Sheep : Slaughter lambs not
compared. Few choice and

TAX HAVEN

I

..

prime 6l-9llbs . wooled 63.5065.
constitutional practice.
In the Senate, legislators
today were scheduled to
consider an amendment by
Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Aiaska,
which would oor warships of
enemies of Panama or the
United States from transiting
the canal in time of war.
Outlook for adoption of the
Stevens amendment was no
brighter than any of the olher
defeated amendments, but he
held more interest because
the Alaska Republican is
assistant Republican leader .

Meigs PTA reps attending

1

"Magnum Force/' a CBS
By JOAN HANAUER
Tuesday
movie.
UPI Televlalua Writer
NBC's ill-fated "LoGie
NEW YORK (UP!) - For
an hour on Thursday night Change " three-part IDial·
··•
CBS will be alive with the series, plagued with g1 *
sound of music - not from including a 17-minute Jlil1llll "'
-~
the show of the same name of the Wednesday segment •
but sung by Julie Andrews Tuesday , scored in IIIe
with zest, sweetness and a bottom 10 in the list of •
surprise touch of sex appea I. rated shows, while NBC'I " '"1
The oceasion is a special, "Love, Sex and MarrlaiiJ '
"Julie Andrews : One Step Test" and ABC's "Ravine
·•
Into Spring," to be broadcast · Babies ID" scored 38th and
47th respectively, neither hit· ' '
3-9 p.m., Eastern time.
It 's hard to teD when Miss ting the 30 share of audience· 'I
Andrews is most delightful. that is the measure of
" ...
She has a !overly time television success.
Ben .Vereen's classy ··l
romping with Jim Henson's
Muppets (Miss Piggy is "Roots" special finished in J•·
jealous in her superior way the bottom 10, while the
while Kermit is his own green special of the week with a · '
se lf and Rolf radiates highly respectable score with
"Television : The Fabulous
adorableness ).
But it 's an entirely '50s," which placed 15th with ••
different Julie Andrews who a 34 share, while Goldie Hawn
''
joins Leslie Uggams, both came in 22nd with a 32 share.
Among the new series, the
practically sewn into bareshouldered, low-cut, red- news was almost entirely
sequined sheaths, to sing bad. "How The West Waa
1
jazzy blues from "Blues in Won ," which is an old new
the Night" to ''A Good Man is series, carne in lith, but ' ··•
"Baby,l'm Back" was down
.•
Hard to Find."
in
33rd
with
a
28
share,
The only carping a critic
might indulge in is to wish "~ark" was 46th with a 'II
Miss Andrews would sing a share, 11Class of '65" was 50th
few per·sonal show tune with a 26 share, and "Chuck
·1
favorites, · including almost Barris Rah Rah Show" came
anything from "My Fair in 52nd with a 24 share.
"Project UFO" did better Lady.''
it
was pre-empted.
Alan King is billed as
The
10 top network
making
a
surprise
appearance . He does, but it's television programs for the
brief. If you go to the kitchen week ending March $, • 1
for a beer, or anywhere else. according to the A.C. Nielsen .. J
r.for any other reason, you'll Co., were :
1: "Laverne &amp;Shirley"; 2: .~
miss him.
Miss Andrews• special "Happy Days"; 3: "Three's , ~
comes at a time when Company" ; 4: ''M-A-S-H"; rt: ,,,
'"
specials appear to be in a "Little House on the
11
A!hens Livestock Sales
·
Prairie";
6:
0ne
Day
At
A
.
;:::
temporary decline, In the
Saturday, March4,1978
7:
"Charlie's
' past week's Nielsen ratings, Time";
Cattle ·
nine of the top 10 network Angels"; 8: "GO Minutes"; 9: l,j
Feeder Steers ( 400-1100 lbs.) shows were regular series. "Magn um Force" (CBS
43.50-48.25; Good 34.75-39.50. The exception was Clint Tuesday
movie) ;
10, ·~~
Feeder Heifers (400-700 Eastwood as Dirty Harry in "Barney Miller."
"
ibs .) Choice 36-42; Good 29.51134.20.
.
Feeder Bulls (400-000 lbs.)
"
Choice 41.25-44 .75; Good 3541.
.,
Slaughter Bulls (over 1,000
.,
lbs.) 34.115-36.
. J
Slaughter Cows: Utilities
'"'
:J!l-34.85; Canners and cutters
26.7s-29.10.
.
COLUMBUS ( UPI l
risky policy if the coal crisil ' ·····
. Veals (choice and prime)
Federal help to Ohio in continues, by proyidinl · :~
56-64.
obtaining extra power could short·term adequacy b1t
j~
Baby Calves (by the head )
be lost through the Rhodes l o ng -ter m shortagu
~~
12-60.
administration's failure to representing higher coa· -'. .;
(Hogs)
impose mandatory electrical sumer costs."
~~
Hogs (No. I , Barrows and
conservation and curtailmenl
-Federal authorities are
:::;
Gilts, 200-230 lbs.) 47.90-48.
levels , says two state concerned about Rhodea'
~
Sows 39.7H7.30.
legislative energy experts. failure to impose mandallwy
Boars 20-33.50.
In a letter to Gov. James A. conservation levels beca1111
Pigs (by the head ) 21-26.
Rhodes Tuesday, Sen. Neal qf inequities with other " 1
(Lambs
F. Zimmers Jr., D-Dayton, states. They Said Indiana II "
Slaughter Lambs 6H6.25.
chairman of the Senate saving 20 percent and Ohio · ::.~
Feeder Lambs 38-40.
·
Energy and Public Utilities . only 7 to 10 percent.
~
Committee,
and
Rep.
-Ohio's petition · to the "~
Thomas J. Carney, D- Federal Power CommiBslm '"'
COLUMBUS (UPil
Boardman, chairman of the lor additional electricity .· · ·•
Tuesday's Ohio llve.stock
auctions :
House Energy and Environ- ''could be rejected" unless
Compared with ' last week
ment Committee, said mandatory conservation is :"
slaughter steers and heifers
federal
officials "termed imposed.
.. 1
50 higher, slaughter cows
Ohio's
utility
plans
Rhodes has called for in· · 1
2.50 -3. 50 higher , slaughter
bulls and feeder cattle inconsistent and were critical creased voluntary statewide
steady .
of a lack of central conservation, power sharing • '
Slaughter steers: Choice 2coordinating
force."
among electric utilities, and a . "
3 960·1260 tbs . 45-48; high good
In
addition,
said
Zimmers
maximum 25 percent curtail- ·'
and low- choice 2-3 950-1285
''
tbs. 43.50·45 ; good 2·3 1000· and Carney , the federal offi- ment to large users .
1300 lbs . 40-43.50.
He said further industrial ·" • •
ciais said the Ohio governor
Slaughter heifers: Choice 23 850-1075 lbs. 42-44.50; high should use his own powers cutbacks, such 8S those im- ,, ,
posed in Indiana and other .:
good and low choice .2-3 875- first and appeal fo !be federal
1200 lbs . 39.60-42; good 2-3 825- government "only when the states, may be avoided by ·~
1075 lbs . 36.50·39.60.
stale is unable to effectively ~oluntary conservation.
Slaughter cows: Utility and respond to the problem.''
commerctat 2-4 900-1600 tbs .
"
The lawmakers said they
32.75-37.50; few 37.50-39.25;
cutter 1.2 825-1375 tbs .· 28.25- met March 2 ·in Washington
'"
33.75 ; ca nner 720- 1250 lbs . with William Peacock, Jerry
., I
25.50-29.
Pfeffer and David Bardin of
Slaughter butts: . 1's 1250· the U.s: Department of
TRIOFIN.ED
..,,'
.1350 lbs . 40.50-42.00; 2's 1050Three defendants were · · r
Energy, and Phillip S.
1450 tbs. 36.25-.W.
fined
$25 and costs each in the ' ,u
Vealers : Prime 125-140 lbs . Hughes, assistant secretary
court of Middleport Mayor
62-63 ; choice and prime 160- for intragovernmental and
Fred Hoffman Tuesday night,
240 lbs. 68-74; 100-120 lbs . 46- iru)titutional relations.
51.50; chotce 150·220 lbs . 63all
appeared on disorderly
Zinuners and Carney said
68; good and choice 170-240
conduct
charges. They were 'W
lbs . 50-59 ; 85-110 tbs . 41-o14.50 ; they were told :
, III
good 160-230 lbs. 30-48; 70-85
-Failure of Ohio to require Ell Ebersbach, Middleport; ,,,
Donald
Uttle,
Middleport,
lbs . 27.50·30.50.
'"
Feeder ca·ttle: Steers adequate statewide electrical and !Wy Boggs, Middleport. _,
·r choice and prime 460-575 lbs . curtailments "could be a
42.50-46; good 475-785 lbs .
37.50-41 ; choice and prime

Daily Sentinel, Middleoort-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, March 8, 1978

•I

'

..

•

~

I

r~~~~in Ohio
competencies
lor
schools being

over the sta te this
and neJd by the
Department of Education.
Thirteen forwns on education competent'e have or will
be conducted and the questions to be considered are:
What should students be
able to do' Thal is, what competencies should students be
able to demonstrate ·at
\'a rious g rad~ levels in
readings ,
mathematics,
writing , an,d other areas.
How well should students
be able to perform ?
How will their perfonnance
or com pete ncies be
met:tsured?
When and how often should
eompetencles be measured ?
For instant.-e, should competencies be measured at certain grades for promotion or
as one requirement fm· high
school graduation.
What plans will he
developed for students who
do not meet expectations?

•
'",,
•

·•

staff

knowledge,

~~What we want to do is to
WILLOUGHBY HILLS ,
Ohio (UPI) - Fire chief blast a large hold in the river
Charles Schumacher todsy to act as a pressure release
planned to dynamite portions hole when the water begins to
of the Chagrin River in rise
undern eat h , "
Willoughby Hills as a means Schumacher explai ned . "The
to lessen tfie threat of spring water then runs over the ice
flooding in this Lake County and tend~ to relieve pressure
upstream."
conununity.
0
lt's close enough to thaw
A team of eight men is to
time to begin blasting blast two test holes, which
pressure release holes in the are used to check ihe
downriver end of the 'cut' in thickness of the ice and the
the Horseshoe Glen area amount of dynamite it'll take
(Trailard, Glengate and to blow a large hole.
11
S.ince the river is several
Mayfriar Drives ) , "
miles of impacted ice, it is
Schumacher said.
He warned Tuesday that humanely impossible to blast
wea ther conditions or fire the entire thing," he said. " So
emergencies that may arise we blast relief holes in the
could force the change the critical areas."
day the blasting is done .

Social
Calendar

END MARRIAGE
In Meigs County Cummou
Plt•as Court P;rtsy As h

BULOVA co nver t s~ repi&gt;cn of •1 $:'0 quid p~t'rt"
a boHul rful )rille almm ciN'" wr til .,· "'ir.tblt'
30 ~ hou r key ~ wound rnovf'mpnt I tw tie~...ordtl¥t'
onto

ornbossed co m cover t;wivpls ~~~~tilt' 1L) ll'Vt'&lt;ll d '
regal Rornan -focerl clock, il d•Hboii&gt;L'Iy
housed on a four-com c Jsc Sdi tll
gold finish 3""" drame tcr.

1 %"dee p. $24.95

YOU CAN DEPEND ON KROGER

ADVERTISE D ITEM POLICY
.... o/1 t ' ........

fOI

~IJed l!&amp;mS J\ li!Q~IIIl&lt;l 10 IM! l ~dtlll'
.... In ...ell KI&lt;JYMI Siul~. 8 • &lt; ~&gt;11 ,t ~

~I' no111d.., !1"111 •d 11 we &lt;kl I U" ou• ol ~" •&lt;I~~·
v&lt;&gt;u• c h01t~ o l d .tv mp~•dbl "

... rtern. -will of!io• ¥'?"
.... • .....twri I VIILiible

l &amp;li&amp;C!Ing l h6 .o~mtl !WIWII I\r&gt; ljl d l dU

cf111* wfiOC:h ~ltn11tle you to pU&lt; ~hd)l) lht! ;l&lt;l~tlll•!.&lt;•o l ''""'
8t .... ,.,a....n~ puce ""'"' "' ]IJ onyt

l f11 ~ 1 Hl IIIOGEit
ITEMS AND PliCU GOOO

COI' YI!IGHT

CO

SU NDAY MAICH 5·SATUIIOAI'
MARCH11 . 1t711N

WI RUUIV E THE lllC.HT TO UMIJ
QUANTITIES

TOTA l SATISF ~ C TION ( ,U AA AN t U

NONf

SOU:I

D£AlU$

Tail-Less
T·Bone Steak

TO

.

(¥4o'Yin~ ~Oiol

tiUV " o; rO\ie• •l OJU41~1 '1 -I I~• , , Ill' I ,1.1
UII.IKIIO" l ~dl.,_, o! n&gt;ilnufdd u •~•
I I H ill 11 ,. , 111
V101fltld . Kfi)Qel ..Ill Ol pl e CI yOWl ol~ m •&lt;o1111 ·1" " '&gt;d'" '' I" , , ol
Ill 1 c~rlblebrtnd u• •el.,n&lt;l ~ ou• '"" J. I'~"'"~" '' ,.

$ 99

Save '
61 4

9 73 293 225

28 24 11 67 244 259

Kalamazoo

Flint
Muskegon

22 32 9 53 219 236
South

wltpls. gfga
Ft. Wayne

Toledo

29. 17 13 71 225 221
23 23 14 60 243 238

Tuesd~y's

Result
Kalamazoo 9, Port Huron 2
Wednesday's Games
Flint at F ort Wa yne

Ka lamazoo at Grand Rapids
Muskegon at Toledo
Thursday ' s Game
Port Huron at M ilwaukee

ROUND TOP

$

Kroger 20-oz.
White
Bread ........ .. .

20·01.

Lvs.

hcess tat , bone and waste arc removed accordi ng to rigi d
kroger Hondordj before eoch cut is weigh ed and priced . No
wonder you get more mea• for ~ o ur mon ey at Kroger .

I
I
I

HOLLY FARMS , U.S.D . A . INSPECTE

I

Mixed
Fryer
Parts .. .. ........ lb . .

I
I
I
I

I
I
I

tiMITONI : out•ON P L W t AMII~

...... -.... ----- .. .. ----.- ... --.ll'
I

1

hat
lse
but

-®
WOOD
be
more
fun?

Baking ·
.Hens

tovNl•iUIII
·oiiODivUlii-IC"
~ ~ ~wnt t iUCII I I
CIItaP1'!1 C•Ia mll l i!IU IL W I
,.

D•

I

Embassy
Salad Dressing

-"

•
I·
I
I
I

Quart

I

Jar

I
WHOLE KfRNEL OR

•

3

Sf;ks;ly

.E

Golden Corn ~~~ns
Grade A
Large Eggs ... .Doz.

Red
JUMBO
88 SIZE
Delicious LB .
Apples ......... .
S~ ·

KIOGER

Sc

69'

I
I
I

FRESH

$ 29

I

I

---- -----

&gt;U III CI !O

i~ ,II~H 1 I

,; ~

2

·

Elberfelds

flO ZEN SALISBURY
•
PAIIMAGtAN. ROTtNA WITH MEAT

~~;~~C~;

'N'

NOODLE

$ 29

Buffet
2•1b.
Supper ................ Pkg.

8

.,US DIPOSJT

'

•

---------·

I

i?

Buzz Buttered
Brand Beef Patties

$139

I

i

P2k0 -o.z.
9

-1

I

1

:
Ul,7
!&gt;0
PUWlASI

· 1I

""' "'

1

~~ !IIUSH)UJO

t:lf Ttl! Sf COS!
ClfnfR COU~DN S

UMI1 2 PKCS WUH COUPON IMO 17 50 AOOtliOHi l PURCHASt
illCL UOtMG IHIS tllM J
·
IIM!I ON~ COUPON l' tll fAMil 'f

I

I

1

1

1

.....................................
COWI'tl l COI!DS U ~ DIL III C ~ ~ 'I I \lUll 111(11 1 I' ll
mH CT IGl"'ll tll ll Sll ll l l OCil !&amp;Ill

Ol

.

'

•

1)~ S,~tuiaU

Avdilable In Sto1es W11h 0£'11 Oe~.:u1ml'n h

Kroger
Grapefruit 46 _01
Juice ..... ..... cans
&amp;;;,;;ih;~;rES
$
Root Beer or
,
Orange Crush·.... Palt

C1

y

• ll l lti(;I L ~ ~~ ~~

FROH N FNOM fUE MEAl DE PARIM ~ Nl

II

l

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I
1

IIDIER COST CUTTEI COUPOI

;

1

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llll 01 Ul Of
IIII SI COST
CU THI

p ·~---o l

LLM.Il O N f CO UI'O t&lt; I'll! I AMI I

I

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"Next To

0~1 i1 ~ D
PUICKASI

COijN)~ GOODS U OII •nc~ &gt;II I~I DI! II .CH II Iill

JOe i '

Strawberries

North Dakota University
Appointed John Gllsparln i head
hockey coach and Terry Abram
assistant hockey coach .
Soccer
Houston (NASLJ - Signed
top-draft choice Art Napolitano
of Hartwick College to a oneyear contract .
.. ' - - - - - - - - - - '

"

UMtl t tAR WtlH COUPON IMD 1150 IOOtltOMit PURCHAS!
lf.l ClUDtN G1HtS tiEM r
01

I

I
~--- 1

I

Kroger Grade AExtra

CHAPMAN
SHOES

f.........

l:'."·
~.... ,
·. .
,

" '•

IIOIIER COST CUTTEI CGUPOI
I

Detroit Named
Fred
Hoaglin o.f fens ive l ine coach .
Chicago Named Doug
Scovil of
Brigham , Young
receiver coach.
Buffalo Named Jack
Donaldson receivers coach .
New York Jets - Promoted
Jim Royer to pn1 P"'rsonnel
coordinator .
Basketball
Buffalo - Signed swtngma n
Eddie Owens and placed Billy
Knight on the ln tured reserve
Hockey
NY
Rangers
(NHU
Returned goalie Hardy Astrom
to their New Haven (EHLJ
farm team .
Philadelph ia (NHLl Re .
turned gOlllle Rick St. Croix to
Maine (AHLJ .

Fresh Picnic
Pork
Roast ............. lb.
Serve 'N'
Save
12-oz.
Wieners ...... i&gt;kg.
SLICED ... lO . 79

Milwaukee

19 28 14 52 192 222 .
Grand Rapids
21 31 9 l ! 228 253

THE KROGER TRIM MEANS
BETTER VALUE IN OUR MEATS

WHOLE

26 24 13 65 255 231
27 27 8 62 288 300

Pomeroy, 0."

•

1l r

.,n "''e-ckcncts.

FLEXSTEEL"

· football

-

or 992.-$8.32 in the l'v~nings

TIME IS MONEY

w t t pts. gf ga

Saginaw 32 21
· Port Huron

Sports Transactions
By Untted Press International
Tuesday
Baseball
California - Signed pitchers
Don Aase and Dave Frost and
firs t baseman Willie Aikens .
Chicago (AL l - Sent pitcher
Ralph Garc ia to Juarez of the
Mexican League and catcher
Fernando Camargo to Monterey
of the MeKican League.
Nlontreal Renewed t he
contrac t of left-handed pitcher
Ger.eld Hanna,..s.

College

Plea,.nt Valley Hospital
Discharged - Mrs. ivan
!Wush. Letart ; Betty Harris.
Letart : Ha z~ l Johnson. Point
Pleasant ; Mrs. Waiter t.uh.
Leon; Waiter t.uh. l.eon:
Raynh&gt;nd Great. Middleport ;
Noel
Chandler,
West
Culumb1~ ; Sandra Siuuns.
Gallipolis ; Mrs . Dona ld
Nichols, Puint Pi~asant: Mrs.
Burtlm
Peters,
Point
Pleasant:
Mrs .
John

Hankinson. New Haven.
Warn~r .
P~11ner o y.
and
Binh : A son to Mr . and Jouues Warner. Pumeruy.
Holzer Medical Center
Mrs. James Parson, Mason. fiiNI for di ssol ution of
( Disr harges. March l)
marriage.
F'ay B~ll . Larry Barcus, . ·
E ugene Bare. Marvin Boggs, ·
Gary Cox, Linda Dav is,
Tho mas Edwards. Cecil ·
Elmore, Fred Facemore, Sr.,
11
Ti na Fi:ln ni n, Jacqueline
Franklin, Homer · Fuggett,
John Ga mble, Robert Grubb,
Joyce Harris, Glenn Montgomery, Jonathan Nelson,
Buy "Fiexsteel" for Fine
Cec ilia
Pixley, Em ma
Pullins, Mrs. Za t Salmons
Sofas, Chairs, Love Seats
and dau ghter , Howard
Sam ples, Dawn Say lor,
Beatrice Slinker , E lea nor
Zeihcr.
(Births. March 7)
Mr. and Mrs. John Fisher . ·
a daughter, McArthur.

lnternationa I
Hockey League
United Press lnternationa I
North

FRIDAY
DANCE Friday 9 to 12 ln
archery building at Royal
Oak Park, Sponsored by Ohio
Eta Phi Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi. Admission $2.50
per person. Refreshments ·
will be sold. Everyone
welcome.
POMONA GRANGE. 8
p.m·. Friday at the Rock Spr·
ings hall. Rock Springs
Grange to be host.
RETURN Jonathan Meigs
Chapter, Daughters of the
American
Revolution,
Charter Day luncheon, I p.m.
~' riday at Trinity Church .
Good Citizenship award winner will be a guest. Hostesses
will he Mrs. Harold Sargent,
.Mrs. Richard Henderson,
Mrs. Pearl Mora and Mrs.
Daniel Thomas.
MARY SHRINE 37, Order
of White Shrine of Jerusalem
regular meeting 8 p.m .
Friday at Pomeroy Masonic
Temple. Election of officers
wiD be held and all reports
must be in at this time.
SATURDAY
MIDDLEPORT
LODGE
363, F&amp;AM, will host 12th
Masonic District ritual
meeting Saturday beginning
12 noon. Master Mason
Degree to he by Past Masters
Unit of Aladdin Temple
Shrine, ColUmbus. Second
section of degree begins at
6:30p.m. Evangeline Chapter
OES will serve dinner at 5: 15
p.m.

/

I

proving

skills and assignments, providing new muterials arHJ ~
equipment, and involving
parents and the community.
The forum material to be .
c.:onsidered came frum ~t task
force named a year ago by
State Superin(en den l of
Public Instruction , Franklin
B. Waller. The forums are be·
ing held now so that parents
and other citizens interested
in the educational process
will have some imput before
the re&lt;;ommendations on a

nunimwn competeru·y pru-~rmn for Oh10 ts submittl\(j lu
the Stlltc Board and the
chai rmen uf the Senat&lt;· and
House Education Cuuumttct•s
of th e Ohio General
Axscm bly. This must bt· dolll'
by July I, 1978.
The final report to ltll' eom·
m.ittcc is tu include rct.:ommcndation.s re~arding the iliiplcmcnlatwn of a IIHnilllUll l
curnpctency examinati u1t a.s a
prc-ret.j uisitc fo r promotion uf
all pupils tu grades five and
nine Ojfld fur gntduatiun from
high sehoul. Tht! contention of
the advisot'y mmmiltec is
that the citizens of Ohio have
the right to t!X~d \!very
yo un gste r tu luwe the
necessary skills to get and
keep a joil, to be successful in
further education, &lt;:tnt! to
make wist.! decisions a.s
dtizens and conswners.
The Meigs County PTA
representatives will be · participating in the forum to be
held on April 15 at the Warthington Hjgh S"houi. The
public is invited to testtfy.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Mary Roush,
Hacine ; Bessie Barnhart.
Pomeroy; Violet Ritchie,
Portland: Frank Wolford.
Vinton; Mami e Nelson .
Belpre ; Chester Mundry.
Reedsville; Ronald Davis.
Pomeroy .
Discharged - Carl t' ulton.
Helen Leifheit. Mar)• Ebl in.
Gloria Manuel. Bertha
Lasher.

Dynamite will be used

list .

SEEK LICENSES
Marriage licenses were
issued Tuesday to Clarence
Triplett, 46, Portland. and
Carol Marie Mullins, 38,
Portland; Kit R. Neal, 36,
Ml!ldleport and Carol Jean
BOgardus, 25, Middleport.

11Je possibility of interven·
tiun ur remedi;1tion such as
individualized tutoring pr&lt;&gt;gra1ns in . particular skill
areas. could be helpful to
&gt;tudents who do not meet
ntinimwn levels of per·
lormance.
What is the impact uf a
minimwn t.•ompeteru.•y pro-gram on students?
What is the imp&lt;:td of a
m.i nimwn competency pn~
gram on the school currununily? This will consider the
possibility of setting new
methods of instruction, im~

County PTA
representatives will attend
the public forwns on

CERVICAL CLINIC
Ttw n&lt;'xt free ' ce rvical
cnm·cr clinic for Mel~ S area
wumen will be held n n
W('dncsday. March t5 . at
Heath United Methodist
Church in Middleport . Those
wishin~ to rnakt\ appointments mal' ca ll 992-JSJI daily

HOSPITAL NEWS

CAP'N uw·s

PMCaptain' s Choice
)"'"&gt;--/. (~:.';.~ ' Batter-Fri Fish
- ~~
' ~:.~ ~~~~~It~
, ::.::~~=~...

r

~, .... t.bt• 11 AM 7

..

c

SLICED

1\ , ,;

r ~""''~_::·
69

:::r tbs2

$449

lach
WILSO N"S BAR VA IUAN ·.

~::~~d. tbs2 59

-·

�12 _The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Wednesday , March 8, 1978

Want Ads Turn Unwanted· Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES
1~ \\ uut, 1,11 U!t\lt'l
C 'h._u!'~:

c ·a~h

115

liJO

lli.J)
!dod\ :,
Ji.W)~&gt;

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11\lllll llUIIl. l'a~ h m itllntut't'

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4.1\'l't' J)\t•U

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THI;
WACIN~
Volunle!E!r
Fue()eporlment wtll ~pon so r a gu1,
~huo l evo• y Salu•doy at b pm at
th en buddmq 111 Bo ~h on Foe
lo•y chok t: qu11\ only

hu\bond
father gro11dforhet who was
lulled m on auto occodnet 1 '}
vaa•~ ago today Mar ch 8 1966Twelve 11eor s ago you we re wdh

t ... d t

Ad:-

Nolkeo

IN LOVING •nemory of lotobefl
Rus ~ell

L!~

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uniJ wrth ea:.h w1th

unh•r til t't'll\ d~&lt;u ~l' f·ll' ad!'&gt; t'i UT)'·
LILg 1\oiX r-;ulnl.wr lu \'a n: uf Tilt' St&gt;ntuwl

'f)w Pu!Jii ~ l tt•r l"t'!&gt;t'I' H·~ lht· 11~hl
1Jit&gt;thl or n' J•·tl an} ad:. th·t'lllt.'ll uliJl'~' ll1'11iil The· 1-'ubh ~ ln•r "'111 nul ht•
I\'!&gt;].. IlL~ Ill it' fur llll&gt;H' th.tn "'" ' llll'ul ·

l 'lhllll! 'l!ll·2l:ill

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

l:ard of Thanks

INCOM~

MundUY

Nv&lt;ijll/11 Sa\Ulllll)

Nulirt:o

Tut·Ml:.~
Ltu·u ~·n da\

SKAT E A WAY announces An I'J vCrsory Po rty So t. March
18th Races prores. balloons
Fr ee ICC cre am . Wdl be dosed
Wed .. Mar ch 8th thr ough March
16th . Reo pen Fn doy March
17 th

4 I'.M
the tlay lx·fun·pubtw.J\lUII
Sumluy
4 I'.M.
~·rulay

aftrnHiull

For Thursday . March 9

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

March 9, 1978
You may he corne tnvolvcd . al·
most by ch an ce . tn a very

m 1eres tu1g

e n tc rpn se

1t1i s

r.omtnQ yea r. It co uld turn ou t
to be a proft tabl e second
source o ltn ~;o rn e .

ORANGE TOWNSHIP Vo turllee•
Fu c Dept Tuppe1s Ploms wrll
sponso1 o co m.•gnrnent sole
Apnl 15th at the Fue Hou5e .
Anyorw ho,nng anyth ing to con ~·g n . con tact one ol I he follow
mg hr omew
c; l,/l o ld
l ongene ll e
Ol-4 -667 3890. Hoben Tripp.
Chorl e., ( orr . Gordon Coldwell
DAIRY
DISPERSAl
Sale at
Fa1r plon e lives tock
Sole .
Fair plane W es l VA. Jus! all Rt
2 1 and 177 41 head Hols tein
Da1ry colli e . 30 cows . ~ev1:nol
fresh cow s now more to
lru!&gt;httn by sole dote. 11
Het l ers 3 bred. 8 open . M01 ch
9 lJOpm .

PISCES iFeb.ZO-March ZO) Any

Check our
.prices on

btg deals you're inVo lved m
today shou ld be close d as
s wll tly as pO;iS tb le YOL• ha ve a
tendency to dilute yo ur pOSt·
\ton by overse lltr1Q
H avtng
tr ouble setecttng a ca reer ?
Send tor your co py a t A ~ t ro ­
Gra ph Leiter by mailing 50
ce nts fo r each and a long . selladdressed , stamped enve lope
10 As tr a-Graph . P 0 B ox 489 .
Radio Ci ty Stati on . N Y 10019
Be sure to specify yoU! b nth
sign

low.

low

FERTILIZER, .NITROGEN,
POTASH, FERW-PELS
&amp; BLEND
Pomeroy Landmark

9.-

_Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
....
Phone992 -2J81

ARIES !March 21-April 19! The
road to Hades is paved with
good tnlenlt ons Today , yo u
may add some !r esh pav1ng o l
your. own
Dehver on yo ur
prom ises

TAURUS

(April

20- May

201

Someone you ·re very fo nd o f
may ask you 'to help so n out
her prob!'em s to da y A ss is t her ,
b ut be wary o f making a larg e
loan or co-s tgning lot h er
GEM INI (May 21 -June 201 A
situation that you think you
haiJe completely tied down
co uld backfire today
Take
notlling fo r granted , espec ial ly
the obvt ou s s hoo·in s .

CANCER !June 21-Ju ly ZZ) Op·
timis lm is an as se t. but betng
unrea list ic is n 't. Today you
may th ink you're l tl e former
while you may real ly be t he
la tte r
LEO (July ' 23·Aug . 22~ Unless
you·~e absolute ly certa in of
wha t yo u '_re doing , don ' t grasp
the man agerial reins tra m others today . II you blunder . it' ll
be big .

VIRGO (Aug .Z3-Sepi.Z21 Toda y
you co uld be mtlmidated by
someo ne di s playmg th e trapp ings o f pow er and pu t yo ursell
in a subse rvient posttton need ·
lessly .
LIBRA (Sepl .23·0ct.23) Your
motto lor today ma y· be . " Don ' t
do now what can be put otf until
tate r ·· Unfortuna tely . tt's later
than you think .

SCORPIO (0ci.Z4-Nov .ZZ) Even
ff you' re holding a lull hou se,
don ' t raise th e s lakes , Tod ay .
you may be ju st swee te ning
th e pot lor o ther s

MACINl Gun Club Gun !)hoot
thl~ 11 ~undo~ afternoon f-o e
to1y choke gum pn ly Auc;11ted

Cl ~ARANCl

Al8Ul ZAHL
I wrsh to e..:pre~s my since •e
thank s to ou• rno11y lr •ends
rclo !t ves ond neighbors lor lh t~
messages o f ~ympo lhy . the
beoullfut ll owe r ~ and othm
oc rs o f krndncs!&gt; shown me dur
"'9 my rece.n ! los~
- Ru rh Lulh Cl Oil

NOTICE

IH~

How sweotthe memory sloll
But death has lef1 a J onehncs~
The w o dd t on never f,ll
Sadly 1m~1ied by w•lc B e ~~
•hdd1cn ~o r bo1o Robert Jr .
lho mm , fern Arthur Son 1n
low Keru1y
and grond~on
lot ob~:&gt;r' Wtf)la111

Lvello KuHI would ltke to thank
evn1y Ont.l' o f her hrend ~ and
her mo th c•
for
th e fine
p•f'-.Qnls. and monev . l or her
bu thdoy whr ch was MOI'C h 5
luelloKrng

l'l't'\ l/l'&gt;l'r\IUJ)

t "or llcnt

In MPmory

TilE ALMANAC
United Press International
Today is Wednesday ,
March 8, the 67th day of 1978
with 29B to follow.
The moon Is in its new
phase.
There is no morning star.
The evening stars are Mercury, Mars, Venus, Jupiter
and Saturn .
Those born on on this dBie
are under the sign of
Pisces.
U .S. Supreme Court Justice
Oliver Wendell Hollnes, Jr.,
was born March 8, 1841.
On this day in history:
In 1894, New York became
the first state to pass a law
requiring
dogs to be
licensed.
In 1917, strikes and riots Iii
St. Petersburg marked the
start
of
the
Russian
Bolshevik Revolution.
In 1961, the U.S. nuclear
submarine Patrick Henry arrived in Holy Loch, Scotland,
from Charleston, S.C., the
first American sub to use the
Scottish naval base.
In 1977, the U.S. House of
Representatives approved,

with some modifications, a

tax

progra~

stimulus

proposed
Carter.

by

President

IIH.'Oi!o

SALE begn1~ Mon ..
feb 1J o l SewN -Sew Ou tlet .
M u111
Sll eet
Jf ocme
All
pol,..ester double lu11ts redu&lt;ed
40•. and 5() 0 • Tht eod b•g ~pool
5 !or $1
lAX Sf"!rv•clil'!&gt; fede•ol
and state
To 11es
Wollo~e
Russf"!ll B•odbu•y 99'17'1'18 .

SHOO"I ING M'AlCH F.o•k ed Run
Spar bmor' Club every Sunday
olielllOOII Foctor11 choke gon!&gt;
only

lurnt~hed ar' d un
opt~
Phone l#{J2

H0Mt511t~ f01 .,ole

~4:14

t "or Sale
ECONOMY lHACTOR w1th oil at
tochrnenls l&lt;ke ne-w osk•ng
$1150 Phone (614 ) 698 3290
WAll

and
lo• C hn!iiiii Q ~
l&lt;eosonable Coll997 72\4

olg an ~

Ho ngtng~

N ~ee

Hl:DUCE SAl-~ 8 fa st wdh GoBesc
loblet5. 8. l: -Vop 'wa ter pill s ·
N ~ l so n Dr ug

Pomeroy Landmark

FIRl:WOOD
9-t Q 2129

. . . -Jack W. C•rsev,Mgr.
~
Phone991· 2181

$2 5 a p Kkup load .

HH~WOOD ,

spl•l and del•vcred
$45 a cor d 01 $35 o tru ckload .
All hardwood
843 '1 933 or
992 '6'195 .

Help Wante d

H~ .AL THY

SERV ICEMAN WITH pl umb ,ng and
heatmg eJCpeHence . Etlu ctiYe
•mmedtotely Wnte BoJC 466
Pommoy a • c:a li 992 ·'1&lt;na o{ler
5

COA L.

YOU NG p1gs for sol e.
94Q -277-4 . afler 5 p.m .

Auction
PUB LIC AUCTION Frido11 7 pm .
New and u~cd merchandi se.
A lso Sa l 7 pm . l ols o f new
mi s( o l Oh10 H1ver Au ct1on .
Me1g s Pl o7 o . M•ddlepo rt .

11-lobile H o m.,.

LIME STO N~ ,
~ olc •u rn ~hlo r•d e ,

sand. gravel .
fer til i1c r , dog
food . and oil 111pes o f soh . E~
co:.&gt;b•o r So ltW or ks. l nc .. E Mom
Sr,.. Pomeroy . 992 3891 .

l:ARLY AMERICAN li vi ng 100m
wile and love ~ea t . 6o th 3
mon1h5' old . Also stereo . Con
lre see n I mile out 1-43 o• coli
992 -5780
CONN TR UMPEI with c.ose. Ver y
good condi t1on : used very li llie.
$175 99'1 -5768.

for Sale

M OBilE HOME wtth e10.pondo on 3
oues D• ilia d well. Sepl• c ton\..
l m m e d •o t e
p os~esS1o n
742 -307-4

Wanted lo Huy
TIMBJ;R, Pomeroy Fores t Pr o·
ducts . Top pn ce for standing
sa wtimber , Ca ll 992 -5965 O {
Ken t HOiiby , 1-44b-6570.
COI NS, CURRENCY . token 5, old
poc kel wo rches and chain s.
sd...-e'r and g old We need 19M
and old er sil ve r cot ns. 8 u11 . sell .
or trade Coli Roger Worn &lt;, ley ,
7-42·233 1.
OLD FURN ITUR E. 1Ce bo11es . brass
beds. 1ron beds , etc. . comp iE&gt; te
hous ehold5. Wr it e M . D. Miller
Rt . -4 , Ponreroy , Oh io or call

9'n.nbo.

.NO HEM fOO Lorge or too small .
Wil l buy 1 piece or co mplet e
household . New, used , or on II ·
ques . Mart in's Furni tur e, 20 N.
2nd St ., M·ddlePort
Phone
992 ·6370 ,
CHIP WOO D
Poles
moJC
dtome ler 10 · on largest end $8
per ton . Bundled slob, $b per
ton . Oellve1ed to Oh1o Pollet
Co Rt 2 Pom eroy. 992 -2b89
GOOD
USED . tr actor
wll h
hydrauli c. 3 pt. hitch . 742-307-4 .
$CASH$ for 1unk cars. Fry e s
Ttuc k and Aut o Ports . Wrecke r
ServiCe ftre sale and Rep0 1r .
Rutland , 741-1081 or Pennzoi l ,
742-9575 .

\' iu:d:Sa1e
IF YOU ho ve a service to offer .
won t ro buy or se ll something ,
o e l oo~•ng lor work
or
wha teve r .. , you 'll ge t result.s
foster with o Sen tinel Wont Ad
Coli 9q2 -2 150 .

HOOF HO LLOW Horses . Buy . se ll
h ade or train . New and used
saddles . Ruth Reeves , Albany.
(b14 J698 -3290.
RISING STAR Kenn el , B oor d ~ng.
Indoor and ou td oor runs.
Grooming all breeds . Clean
5o ndory faciliti es . Cheshire.
Phone(614)367 -029'1 . ·

Let Pomeroy landmark
soften &amp; tondition vour
water with CO·OP water

softener. Model UC-SVI,
Now Only . 279.95
let us test your wate r Free

USED TRACTORS · -47 Ford N 53
Case Va c, 59 olAF 35 Dies el . b-4
John Deere 1010 Gos 71 MF
1OS Diesel , 7-1 MF 135 Di esel. 75
MF 1135 Die sel wt,lh cob and
air . 77 MF 285 Di esel Used Im pl ements
MF 11 0 Manure
Sp r ea d~ • , Allied
Ira ni end
loader . Fre emon lron t end
loader . Do v1s fr on t en d loader .
Case 120 Ha11 SalEH. MF 10 Ho y
Boler Matthews Ro1ory Sy th e.
MF 20 Ho)l Rake . For d Ho y
Rak e. MF -11 Mower .
Shinn s Tra ctor Soles . l eon WV .
Phone (304) -458 -1030.
CORN $2 a bu. Coi l 985 3537 or
985 -.4.131 .
1976 CHE VROLET 1 • ron pi ckup .
l ow mileage . Good condition . 4
speed , 350 engine hea 11y duty
brake s
$3750.
Reedsv il l e.
tll4 -378 -631 1 oher 6 pm .
12FT . ALUM INUM boot and 7 11
horse motor lor so le_ lik e new.
Con tact Richa1d royl or . 587
!"a ~ n St., M id~ l eporl 992 -6025 .
MODEl 12 Winches ter shotgun 18
in fu ll. Good condilion . S300 .
Phone 742-235'il.

'
USED UNICO
992 -3-430 .

Dry e r .

Phone

1973 CHEVROLET PICK UP Tr uck .
Low mileage . One owner . For
deta ils . Coll992 -297-4 .
KING SIZE round bed co mple te _
Red vel ve l head board and bed
sreod . $299 . lnge1'5 Furnit ure .
Q'n-2635.

CAPRICORN (Oec.Z2-Jan .19) II
won ' t be easy Ia admit to your
shortcomings today Yo u ' ll be
too busy taking the mo1es oul

of the eyes of othe rs .

AQUARIUS (Jan .ZO·Feb .19) The
urge lo splurge is · upon you
today . You ' ll regret it later if
yo u overwork your cre dll card s
by pi cki ng up the tab .

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

j NEW SPAPE R ENTERPRISE AS SN 1,

with

MaJor

Hoople

---

1968 CHE VE LLE . Phone 99'1- ~19 .

-

....,..._.

1976 CAMARO . Good condition .
Coli 992 -6084.
1973 PINTO. 2 dr. 4 !&gt;peed. h ce llen t condl t io n . $1 150.

991-5533 .

ST A RCRAFT FALL Sole . Mini ·
mo tors , 20' and 22 '. Tro Ve!
Trollers, 18' s·· $3 , 7(/q : 25' 7"
Bunkhouse $4 ,875. Fold·down,
$1.700 up. We sell service and
quality . Open Sundays . Camp
Con ley Storcrolt Soles , Rt . 62 ,
N . of P·l Pleosonl.
..:..·

£;;-

WANT TO rent . 2 bedr oom house
in the countr11 for the wmmer .
Coil Susan 997.581 3.

Sldtwolks ,

804 W. Main
Pomerov
991 -2298
After Hours Call
992·7lll

CONTACT :
Lois Pauley
Branch Manager

Located In The

'

MEIGS PLAZA
Middleport, Ohio

Open
9: oo til 9:00 Mon .- Friday
9:00 til6 :00 Saturday
12 :00 ti 16:00 Sund1y
2·2-1fc

HOBSTffiER
REALTY

Remodeling .

DAVID &amp;RICKLES
Routt 2
Pomeroy, Ohio45769

CARTER

ATTENTION MARE
Owner s:
AQHA ~ tud 5e rvice . Introducing
to Southern Ohio , Cortoko , sor ·
re ll son o f O!Oe . Breed for co lor , -c.on formol ion ond dt~po'si­
tian·. ~hone, 0~8· 82.41 evenings
or .....,r,te for breeding contrac t.
Belle Echo Quarter Horses ,
402'15 SR 692 , Pomeroy, Ohlo
-45769

·- ----..........
APPUANCE
SERVICE
We

have enlarged our
service department and
will service Hotpoint and

:other brands.

Pomeroy Landmark

9 ... Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.

'li(

Phone 992 -2111

I'M !!&gt;URROUr.JD£;0 1
:t"R'IIIIIc;
TO PRE55URE ME INTO
MARRYING DAFFODIL
E~iR'IONE'S

Work Gu1r1ntHd

DO&amp;IIIN~l

2·10-lfc

GOLLY, MOW

Uf\IP&lt;.EiASAIIIT!
STILL IT· ERWOULD liE A
I!REAK FOFZTHE COMPAIIJ 'f-··
PROCESS~

6,13 ; Movie " Mahogany" 8, 10.
9 : 3 0- Great Performances 20 ,33 ;

0

1}ftl}~ fN~
THAT SCRAMBLED WOAD GAME
~ ~ ~~ ~
byHenriArno!dand BobLee

Phone 985.3806

Jack's Septic
Tank Selvice

SALES ANDSERVtCE
11·9-tfc

Box 3·

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Chester, Ohio

10·30·C

Unscramble these fou r Jumbles,
one tetter to each square. to form
lour ordrnary words.

f'IL Hl-2174

LARNS

rJ

PHONE 992-6333
Office Hours :
9 a .m. to s p.m.
Closed Thursday s
Saturdays at noon.

1
and

Ohio.

One three bedroom home, 2
acres of ground on Rt. 7,
Tupper s Plains, Oh io.
One 4 bedroom , ranch,
very modern. West Shade,
Near Chester, Ohio.
one 3 bedroom, new, Crow
Sub -d iv i sion, near Five
Points .

Cheryl Lemley
Associate
Home Phone 742-2003
Hilton Wolfe, Sr.
Associate

Blown Into Walls
and Attics
- Save Fuel &amp; Money-

lAVENDER
CONSTRUCTION

bedrooms, natural gas, ci ty
water, sma ll lot that needs
little care. Only $7500 . ,

NEAR

SHOPPING -

4

bedroom frame house that
look s good. Basemeflt ,
·natural gas furnace. All
utili ties . Ask ing S28,000.

REAL IIUY - 7 bedroom
house, fireplace , bath,
basement, din i ng , and
a lmost an acre . Need S7500
or good offer .
BRICK -4 bedroom s,
bath , gas furnace , dining , 2
porches , and all city
conveniences . Would like

At

1·16·1 mo.

ni ce

VA -FH A , 30 yr . f inancing , al so
re fi nanc in g Ire land Mortgo_ge .
77 E. Stole . Athens , ph one (614 ]
592-305 1
.
FOR SALE by o.,..ner New ho u&lt;,e
wi th 3000 sq . ft . living spore
and opproJ; . 12 acres of land . 8
rooms . 2 bo ths. 2 cor goroge.
kit chen hos buill in appl iances
,such os i5 lond co ok top stove .
trash cornpoc !or . Toppon oven ,
dishwasher . ice ma chine ond o
Nut one Food Center . P-hone
949 -250 1.

El WOOD BOWERS REPAIR ~
Swee pers. toasters , irons , all
sm all opplion1=es. Lawn mower,
ne1d to State Highway Carage
on Route 7 . .Phone (6 14) 9853825 .

and

JUST COMPLETED new hou.se in
M iddleport. For more informa tion coll992 -2238 or 992-5304.
NICE HOME in rural area with 26
acres . New olu mtnum siding .
comple t e l y insula ted and
remodeled ins1de . Storm w in dows . large carpeted li vi ng
room end both. Cal l985-41 11 or

992·5621 .

---

-~---·

APPHOX . ONE A. ri yerf ro nt in
S)l racu se. Porttolly remode led
house and frailer hookup .
992 -3618.
\

--~-

---- --.~~L~

THREE BEDROOM wi th both 5. 96
acres fully carpeted , just
remode led , all electric, dug
cellar o ff ki tc hen . .C out·
buildings in Meigs Mine area.

992 .3993 .

land . 6 rootn home w ith 2 or
3 bedrooms, Jll:. ba1hs and
l a r~e tot .

Realtor Associates

HERE'S ONE YOU CANT BEAT
VERY NICE COUNTRY HOME WITH 68 ACRES - At
thi s price you will not find a nicer little farm In Meigs
Co. A spotless medi um sized
room home (new
furnac.e , Pl:z baths). good ole barn &amp; 3 other

a

outbuildings. Extra good bottom land pluo some hlllo &amp;
woods. EKcellent location . $.46,900. If you don't like our
price let us hear yours .
.

TO

liE
4

BRICK
&amp;
Level I acre, 3

bedrooms, 11/:2 baths, lovely
kitchen. carpet i ng, garage,
porch . Very private &amp;

about 3 yrs. old . $31 ,900.00 .
APPROX. 2 ACRES - 7
story frame, 4 bedrooms.
' v~ baths, some carpeting ,
formal
dining,
block
storage bldg. 2 car garage.

$9 ,000.00 .

1112 STORY FRAME -

In

good repair, 3 bedrooms,
bu i lt-in· kitchen, nat. gas
F . A.
heat.
nice
lot .

$14.000 .00.
HOW LONG HAS YOUR
HOUSE BEEN ON THE
MARKET? LET US SELL
IT. ·
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR

HA~~E~:~~y &amp; LEONA .
ASSOCIATES
"2-2259- 992-2561
997-6191

(g.
i f ~~

TQP

PRICE DRASTICALLY REDUCED -

WHoiO" \'()ULD HAPPEN "10 .
"Ill' "1'RIJC£' IF A BUNCH
OF MOCMANS CARRIED OFF
1'\JNK'S LI'L. Gl~ WHILE
HIS ISle FI!A5T WMJ
GOIN' ONl'
1

$14.300.
$11,700 will buy a good 2 bedroom house with bath.
Garage and storage building . Nat. gas heat, Driveway
is eled. heated. Nice Ohio River vi@W. Furniture can
be bought extra. Price reduced for quick sale.

'11;5, YOU

.
WILL ... IF 'rOU
DO EXACTLY
LIKE J: 'Tell.

YEPI -ni~U~

EXACTLY

WH.Ili1'

'&gt;()U

"THREE. ARiij
GONNA 00.

'&lt;OUI

NOW L.15TEN

GOOD! HERE'$
WHAT 'tOLI'Illi .
eoNNA DOl

GASOUNE ALLEY

stand

50 ACRES - FREE GAS. W~y worry about tho high
cost of heating your home, drying your clothes, hoi
water etc. We have a 1'12 story house with 3 bedrms.,

and bath, dining room with fireplace. Full basement.
Large pond stocked. Priced only $~7.500.
4 ACRES of nice laying land not fer from Southern
High School. Nice building sites . Ideal for now home
INIIders . Call now lor Info .
KIDS IN

YOUR HAIR,

LOOK

HERE -

Five
with
shining oak flooring, large kitchen with dining area, 2
full baths, 2 bedrooms down and 3 upstairs. Completely
Insulated with F.A. nat . gas furnace. Largo porches &amp;
garage. Loc In Chesler. Price $19,800.
•
,
bedrooms, nice 11h story house, large living room

We need Lls!lngs.
We !lave buyers for mony types of proorty.
CALL JIMMY DEEM, essoc1111, 949-23N.

XI l XXI)

10; Nashville On The Road 13; Television Honor

Society 15 .·
B:OI)-Chlps 3 . ~ . IS; We lcome Back, Kotler 6,13: Julie
Andrews 8,10;. On~e ' Upoh A Classic 20,33 .
B:JO-F ish 6,13: Original• 20; Boley, Oklahoma ·AIIve &amp;

OZONE SHERRY GOBLET
Where to look for wild life in the big city -

THEZOO

Well 11

9:00-James .at 16 , 3,4, l5; Barney Miller 6, 13; Hawaii
Flve·O 8, 10; Advocates 70,33.
9 :31&gt;-Carter Counlry 13; Other World 6.
10:01&gt;-Ciass ot '65 3. 4, 15; Baretto 6, 13; Barn a by Jones
8,10; Anna Kareenlna 33 ; New s 20.

10 :31&gt;-Monty Python' s Fly ing Circus 20.
11 .:00--News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13,15: Dic k Cavett 70; Over
Easy 33 .
11 : 31)-Joh~.ny Carson 3.4, 15: Starsky &amp; Hutch 6, 13;
Movie Commandos" 8; ABC News 33; Movie
"Roman Holldoy " 10.
l2: 0D-Janakl 33; 12 :4G-Toma 6,13 ; 1:00-Tomorrow
3,4; l :50-News 13.

Movie Channel 4 S &amp; 9 P.M. - Day of Animals lPG)
7 &amp; II P .M. - Manhallan Merry-Go. Round (G)
F'ur rc tca M• Wt!dne~T&lt;t}' ; Murch 8, 1978,

15 Ethereal
I~ Elector
19 Miehelangelo s ta tue
22 Most
unbiased
incentive
23 Oregon
S Perfume
city
9 Bugle call
II " Poker Flat" 24 Kind of
eagle
a uthor

26 Oboe, clarinet, etc.
29 ~' innish
la ke
30 Currency
of Iran
32 Greek
deity
35 You : Ger .
36 Merry

~

c---._ _
!\&gt;~-

-~

~1-U~Y!
NOMr 51-tf:"$ .
Hop!LI$S&amp;.V
IN &amp;..Ov!
WIIPH A

1

c::=========:-7
I-·-I DIDNT WANT 10 8.E
'
'
• Mu , IVE BEEN 5TAYIN&lt;7

B2

WI'TH 'THE WI NKL€:7 n!E
PAST FEW D'\'&gt;'9 .•• :71NCE
HEARING OF \OUR

WEAR 6lAS5E5, MARCIE!

ANO NOT EVEN kNOW IT,
SilL THAT CAN CAUSE
E'iE FATIGUE, AND
MAKE '{OU 5LEEf'!l...

BESIDES, IF 'iOU WORE
GLASSES, 'iOU M16HT
LOOK LIKE ELTON JOHN !

Pass
Pass

.,I'

hand was played In

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE ~Here's

how to work
A X Y D I, B A A X R
is , J, 0 N G F E J, I. 0 \V

MO N K

CNOONH

zx

GXLXO

CENTS!~ IIEE HEE HEEl!
COULD BE SQUINTING

3.
Pass

--'--'-"'-~ M;;~·i,;o City in October, 1977,

LEND VOU THUTTY

~OU

Pa ss

Soulh

=+--+-l---1 By Oswald
Jacoby
Alan Sontag
it :

.S
X p •

~ 1918 Kinr Featurt'l S;yndiule, Inc.

1 DON'T WANT TO
BE TOLD THAT I HAVE 1D

East

spade six which West won
with the quee n . Reygadas
had now established his 10 of
spades, upon whic h he hoped
to discord one of dwnmy 1s

losing diamonds.
Upon winning the s pade,
West made the excellent
s witch to the deuce of dla·
monds. Eisenberg, sitting
East, won with the ace : -He
realized that to defeat the
contract he had to score
three diamond tricks . Consequently, he now made the
world-class play of the diamond four . He had set up
this defense by winning the
revlous tric k with the ace
nstead of the king , which
would have been the Bland·
ard play.
Reygadas was at the
crossroads. If he mls·
g uessed the loc ation of the

r.

remaining diamond

honors,

king and jack,. he would go

BARNEY

Buy whir• you can came In
lnd ... Willi you're to!!int
- Good stlodlons - Fulfy
alocked.

North

Ope ning lead : • K

~Harbor,

WXUUEKEUV

· Flooring In Stock

West

Pass

Guam
39 Cagtures

SJHSRU

CEN'WIL CIIY _

+A K 4
... Q8764
SOUTH
• 10 6 2
' K Q J 10 4

Vulne rable : Neither
Dealer : South

32 Last letter :
Brit.
33 Blaekbird
34 Expunged
36 Federal law J.,..,~-'-1enforcer
37 Dog Star

38

'7

• Q6 3

CRYPTOQUOTES

ALONE ! i3UT TIMNIY AND I
HAVE OUR 0NN AP~­
MENT... HERE lN

9' and 12' Vinyl

l•

+

,fo A 5

WXQVU VN
CX
WSEB CSQT.~
SGNG
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: WHEN ONCE A RIGID IDEA OF
DUTY MADE ITS WAY INTO A NARROW MIND, IT CAN
NEVER GET OUT AGAIN .-JOSEPH JOUBERT

Rullonct

NORTH -arB-A
• A J
' A9853
• 10 9 5
K 103
WEST
EAST
• 943
• KQB75
'

One letter sim ply stan ds f or anot h er. In th is snmpl c 1\ i s
u sed ( or t h e three L 's, X for th e two O's. Pte. Sin gle l cttrrs.
Jpos trophcs. the l en gth :mel f ormat ion n f th e wor ds nrc all
hi nts. E ach rlny th e rode l c tt&lt;'rs arc clitTer('nt.

RESCUE.

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

Wise guess scores points

• J 872
... J 9

road
28 Ecstatic
_.;F~RA::;:;NK,;;.:&amp;:,:E;;,R:;.N:;;IE;:__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _"""l\~-: : ; - : ; ; - - - - - - - - - - - - , 3 1 Lightning

WINNIE

Coi1742-22H
TALKTD
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

k':~n

27

'

BRIDGE

Yesterday's Amswt!r

poet

*4.18 :."'u~d.

742-2211

4; $100,000 Name That Tune 6; Tattletales 8;
MacNeii · Lehrer Report 20,33; Thai' • Hollywood!

26 Tenement

flHODODINORON!

As Low As

1 : t s-Marshell U . Report 33: 7 :31&gt;-Ho llywood Squaru

niCkname

949·2057 ,

·

WAS [

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
40 French
I Wild party
river
S Daisyiike
DOWN
flower
I Wild
10 Reverbera te
a nima l
11 Last
2 Eqllily
drive
member
vehicle
3 Wild
12 On
guess
13 Finally
I Jwnp
14 Tippler
over
15 Sky Altar
s Philippine
16 Gennan
· tribesman
article
6 Man's
17 Threenifkname
legged
7 Shopping
19 Languis h
20 Thames
estuary
21 Peruvian
Indian
22 Roseoe
Arbuckle's

TURLEY 'S WRECKER Service .
Roc:i ne , Ohio. Doy or n1ght.

Rubber Back Carpet

Valley Bluegrass 20.

gested by the above·car1oon .

24 Engender
25 English

WATER WEll Drilling. Als o oi l end
gas we ll work . Hea ton Onlting
Co., David S. Hea ton, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy ,
Ohi o . Phone
985· ..335 .

All a~rpel lnslolltd wllh
podding ol no chorgo.
Expert lnstollotlon.

Now arrange the circled letters to

form th e surprise Br)Swer, as sug -

~

ALLEY

NEIGLER'S FOR building houses.
Coll949 -2508 for hou~e designs
and estimates . Guy H. Neigler .
Ra cine.

l'h acreo nice

laying land with a nice '2x64 all carpeted mobile home
completely furnished . 2 rooms built on with nice familv
room with fireplace. Garden space, work shop, block
cella r and city water. N ice country setti ng . Owner may
take nice mobile home as part payment. Price nOW

Hogi;in' s Heroes 15.

6 :00--News 3,4,8, 10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6 :31&gt;-NBC News 3.~ . 1 5: ABC News 13; Carol Burnell &amp;
Friends 6;. CBS News B, 10: Over Eosy 70.
7:31)-Cross.WI1s3,4; LlarsC iub6 : Gong Show8; News
10; To Tell The Truth 13; Gilligan's lo. IS; Hocking

The latest JUMBLES are h6re tn ·JUMBLE BOOK J10 and JUMBLE
BOOK 1111 . Avail able tor $1 .35 EACH, pbal pald !rom Jumble, clo lhla
newspaper, P.O. Box 34, Norwood, N.J. 07648. Make chock&amp; payable to
NowspaperbOoka.

WILL do roofing , construclion,
plumbing 'and healing. No job _..
too Iorge or 100 sma ll. Phone •,
742-2348.
HOWERV=:A:-:
N::
D- M
cc-:
A::c
RT" IN
: -:--cE
::-x-.
cavat in g , septic sys t errts.
doz~r , backhoe, dump tru ck ,
li mestone , grovel, bla cktop
paving , ~1 . 143. Ph one l (614)
698-7331.
'
' {
BATHROOMS AND Ki tche ns
remode led. ceramic tile, plumbing. carpentry. and generql
maintenance. 13 years exper ience. 992·3685.

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

5:3()-News 6: E lec. Co. 20,33 ; Mary Tyler Moore 10;

I Jumbles : NOTCH
Answer

EXCAVATING, dozer, ba ckhoe
and d itcher . Charles R, Hotf ield , Bo ck Hoe Ser..,ice,
Rutland , Ohio. Phone 742 -2008 .

SAVE ON
CARPniNG
DRIVE A Uffi.E
&amp;
SAVE ALOT

[J

Print answer here: HE
Yesterday 5

EXCAVATING, dozer, loader and
bo'ckhoe work : dump trucks
and· to-boys for hire: will haul
!ill dirt , to soi l, limestone and
grovel. Colt Bob or Roger Jet·
fers, day phone 992 -7069, night
phone 992-3525 or 992- 5232.

ARNOLD PRIDDY and Dick Smith
auto r epair. Overhaul motors,
916 locust 51 .. Middleport or
co!l 992 -7768.

1

Heroes 10; Emergency One 13 ; Petttcottt 15 .

WHO WA$ I:OING THE
WFCON6 WAY DOWN A
ONE-WA'Y 5iREET
WA5N'i A~111'1=•;;1=n

(Answerslomorrow )

---'

natural gas heat, k itchen
has range &amp; ref . Porches.

$11 ,000 .00.
LOVELY
FRAME -

ARE ,.Cl tPPERS '~,~

REMODELING , Pl umb ing, heating
ond all types of general repo.ir.
WorK guaranteed 20 year• ex perience . Phone 992·2-409.
-· -----SEWING MACHINE Repai rs , ser·
11ice, all makes . 992 -2284 . The
Fabric
Sh o p ,
Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Soles and
S er v ic~ . We shorpQn Scissors .

MAGG I ES
UNHOLSTERY .
Re f ihishing,
reuph ots tery ,
rebuilding . Beautiful select ion
of materials and vinyls. Fre e
elilimote. Tel. 742 ·2852 . Locolion : Salem Cen te r :

lot .

6; Gilligan ' s Is . 8: Sesame St . 20,33; Gomer Pyle,
USMC 10 . ~ : 3G-Little Rascals 3, 15; Gllllgen'o Is. "
Brady Bunc h 8. 10; Mary Tyler Moore 13.
5 : oo--Here Come The Brldea 3; Star Trek 4; Gun smoke
B: Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33: Hogan 's

1· 8

THERE':5

WINTER GET to your house? let us •
make necessary repairs . A I
Tromm . Conslruction. 742-2328,

$25,000.
WILL TRADE for vacant

HELEN L. TEAFORD
GORDON 6 . TEAFORD
SUE P. MURPHY

rJ

PULLINS EXCAVATING . Com plete
Serv1ce . Phone 992 -2-478 .

closets,
large

:

:;·:-··:r-~o

dining. equipped kitchen,
carpeting

ICHAWES I
LOTS MORE 0' US THA" l\lERE

BRAD FORD . Auct ioneer. Com·
piele Service. Phone 94':1-2487
or 949-2000 . Racin e. Ohio . Crtll
Bradfor d .

$23,500 .
NEW LISTING - Modern 3
bedroom one floor plan .
Several

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

lltl Tlillrlitllllrl

'Pll9liC OPINION" -', .

-

II

I I [ .

TH' PuBLIC, TOO ·

Commer c• ol prope rly appr011 . 17
acr es , le ve l land , located of
Tuppers Plo1ns on Ohio. Route
7. Phone (61-4 ) b67 ·0304 .

j

Sons 4 ; For Rich er , For Poorer 15; ; M erv Griffin

IKRUTEYj

Heal Estate fur sal~

T~~!.~~~[B
3

.·

Pheae Mike Youn1

tt...U.'E~~·~
~ '· ~
:

Lilias, Yogo &amp; You 20.
3 : 30-AIIIn The Family 8,10: You Bet Your Llte70.
~ : 00--Mister Certoon 3: Edge at Nlghl 13: My Three

A TlliUCK DRIVER

l'lfLL, THAT DIDN'T

TWO STORY frame house . 6
rooms ond both . cellor . oul bu.ldings , 4 acr es land . ot edge
of Rut land . Complete trolle r
hoo k -up also. 2 bonk s approis ·
ed proP.e tt y a1 5 15.500 Phone
992 -7094 .

I []

9!12-2206 or 9!12-7630

3·3-tfc

COUNTRY forrnlond wi1h sec lud ed woods . water an d good acce ss 1n Monroe Coun ty. W. Va .
$ 1.000 down, call (304) 772 31 02 or (304 ) 772 -3227 .

216 E. Seco~d Street

Carpeting
..... v-.o.
Carpel a UphGisltiJ

Weddinp
Portraits
Passports
Anniversarin
Special Omsions

ULIGE

0

"Tiit--

Home Phone 949·2S89

REALTOR

Young's

Syracuse, Ohio
Free Estimates

NEW 3 bedroom house 2 ba th s.
all e l€'c. , 1 OCI€', Middleport ,
do se to Ru tland . -Phone 992 7481 .

REASONABLE

Superiof

Stum Ext!Kiion

Phone 992-3"3

l ;GO-Another World 3, • , 15; General Hospital 6, tJ ;

l""'""' '""c""...,,,....,. .. ., ...., _

THE PHOTO PLACE

Cellulose Fiber

Your Full Time
Real Estate Broker
We have one trailer and
one double w ide . mobile
hpme with lots. in Tupper s.
Pl~ins.

Blown Insulation

10 : 00- Poli ce

Woman 3,4, 15; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6, 13.
l0 :3G-News 20: Book Beot 23.

Residential
~nd
commercial.
Call for
estimate, 24 hour service.
Anyday, anytime.

8 A.M. lo4 :30 P.M.

Nice
location, 3 bedrooms, bath ,

- .

CAPTAIN EASY

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

Pomerov 992 ~ ,282
or992-626l

$36, 100.00.
BUDGET HOME -

WIL L CARE for the elderly 1n our
home. Phone992 -73 14 .
·

'.

742-2121
Frn Esllmoles

Esll males by Appointment
Phone 992-7119
2·2'-Hc

300 MainS!.
Pomeroy, Ohio

GeorgeS. HobsteHer Jr. ,
Broker
107 112 Sycamore St.
Pomeroy , Ohio

AI Tromm
Construction

General Contracting

GETTING HER
SOLAR ENER&lt;;'f

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

heat, c;:arpeting. 2 car
garage, about 4 years old.

~·i~ 00~~:_=:: ·~1

THURSDAY, MARCH t , 1971
S:45-Farm Report 13; PTL Club 13; S:5s-Sunrlse
Semeoter 10; 6 :00--PTL Club 1S.
6 : 2s-For You .. . Bleck Women 10: 6: 3G-Ooctors on
Call~ ; News 6; Sunrise Semester 8; 6 : ~s-Mornlno
Reoort 3.
o:SO-Good Morning , Wesl VIrginia 13; 6 :S5-Chuck
Whl1e Reports 10: News 13.
7:00--Today 3,4,15: Good Morning America 6, 13 ; CBS
News 8; Bullwlnkle 10.
7 :3o-Schoolles10; 8:00--Capt . Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame
51 . 33.
9 :00--Merv Griffin 3; Phil Donohue 4,13, 1S; Edge ot
Nlghl 6; Family Aflelr B; Match Geme 10.
9 :31&gt;-Emergency Onel 6; Andy Griffith 8: Family
Aflalr 10.
10 : ~Santord &amp; Son 3,4,15: Tattletale• 8: J oker's Wild
10; Not For Women Only 13.
l0 :3G-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; Andy Griffith 6;
Price Is Right 8,10; Rick Faucheux 13.
11 :00-Wheel ol Fortune 3,&lt;.15; Happy Days 6,13;
11 :31)-Knockout 3, 1S: Family Feud 6, 13; Partridge
Family 4: Lov~ of Ute 8.10: Seoame St. 70; Nove 33.
11 : ss-CBS News 8; Loving Free 10.
12 :0Q- Newscenter 3; $20.000 P yrami d 13; News .4,6, 10;
To Soy The Least 15: Gembl1 B.
12 :31&gt;- Ryan' s Hope 6, 13 ; Bob Braun A; Gong Show 1S:
Sear c h for Tomorrow 8, 10.
1:00--F or Richer, For Poorer 3; All My Children 6,13:
News Bn Young &amp; th e Restle ss 10; Not For Women
Only 15 .
1:31&gt;-Deys ol Our Live• 3,A, I5; As The World Turns
8,10 ; 2:GO-One Life to Live 6,13 ; 7:3G-Docton
3,4, 15; GuldlnQ Light 8, 10.

Heroes 10; Atterochool Special 13; Petticoat 15.
5: 30-News 6; Elec. Co. 70,33 : Mary Tyler Moore 10;
Hogan' s Heroes lS.
6 :00--News 3,4,8,10,13,1S: ABC Newo 6: Zoom 70;
6:31&gt;-NBC News 314,1S: ABC Newo 13 : Carol
Burnett &amp; Frlonds6: CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20.
7:00--Cross.Wito 3; Croso-Wito 4; Liars Club 6 ; Sha No
Na 8; Capitol Beat 33; News 10; To Tell The Trulh
13; Gilligan's Is. 15; Cheracferlsllcs of Learning
Dloabllltles 70.
7: 1s-Marshalt U. Report 33.
7: 30-Funny Farm 3; Sha Na.Na • ; When Havoc Sruck
6; F amlly Feud B; MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20.33;
TheJudgeiO; In Search of 13; Wild Kingdom IS.
8:oo--Circus Hlgh llghh 3,4, 15; Thai Second Thing on
ABC 6, 13; Return ot Captain Nemo 8,10: Nova 20.33.
9:00--Biack Sheep Squadron 3,4, IS : Charlie' s Angels

Roofing
Remodeling
Room AdditiOOs
Garages

Ntw
&amp;

equipped kitchen , N.G.F .A.

..

•::....

$18,000.

bedrooms, formal dining,

~·

"llffit
-.Wa.Oretlro
-.. .-

No. 200 - Wilkesville area,
approx . 1 acre, road on J
sides. Gas furnace. 2 story,
bottom story all carpeted
and
refin ished .
Price

A
HOME
CHERISHED

19b7 VW BUG . Good work cor .
$2 75. Co ll 992 -5732 ,

(30&lt; l 45B · Ib30 .

Patios ,

MAIN
POMEROY, 0.

-

1977 DODGE CUSTOM 100 pi ckup
lb,OOO actual mil es Shinn 's
Tractor Soles , Leon WV. Phone

Kitchen Coblntls, Roofing.
Concrete

CALL THE WISEMAN REAL ESTATE AGENCY
IN GALLIPOLIS - 446-3643 EVENINGS CALL 446-3796 or 446-7881

19b2 CHE VY Ton and ', Hot bed ,
53 ,000 mi les. hce llenl condit•on. $1200 . 9-49 -2042 ,

1964 RAMBlER WAGON . 6 cyl , 3
speed Irons ., engi ne newly
ove rhoul.ed ond body in fatr
(ondition 985 -3818.

ACE HARIMARE

CE TOP and bottom o..-en eleCIJIC
ra nge. SIOO. 992-5-4'11

1975 GRANADA V-8 ou to mot ic ,
pow er ste eri ng. AM rad io.
power brakes , oir condi tiong.
EJCcelfen t condition . 52.900 .
Phone 992 -3886.

WE DNESDA'!',MARCHI, lt11
8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 70,33; Hogan's

Construction

Landmark

SAGITTARIUS (Nov .Z3·Dec .ZI)
Responsibilities esse ntt alt y
yours shou ld no t be pawned oil
on unw tlling as s1s tants today .
Th e y may attemp l lo pas s the
buck them se lves and nolhing
will be acco mplished

WALLPAPER.
PAINT &amp; SUPPLIES

1HRH HOOMS and both up s lo u~
opt in Pomero11 Wrrto 6 011
7'19 C co rh e Doily Sentme!
1-'oniCIO'f OH
l'WO U~DW OOM apart ment (oil
bc lo1c 8 ar11 9'12 22B8

Business Services

5 : ~HereCome The Brides 3; Star Trek 4; Gunsmoke

1'J 11 bO MO~Il~ HOMt: ne-o1 l&gt;e11
lcr I-' hone 99'1·5858

B &amp; S MOBilt: HOMl:S. Pr fll oo
~an t , W Vo beside Heck s.
t9 i'3 llroodrnore 14 ,.. b4 'l
bcd•oom
19i'3 Do non 14 11 bO '1 bed• oorn
1972 Victonon l-4 11. b7 3 bedroom
'}both
1972 Co11ent1y 12 1165 3 bed•oorn
1969 Sta l e~ morr 12 &gt;o: 60 2
bed roo m .

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

1 acre and
up M•ddlepor I near Wutlond
(ollqq'l 74tH

(OUNIHV MOSilf Home Pmll
Haute J3 nor th o f Pome1oy
lur9e loh• Call qq2 /479

RU G~

TELEVISION
VIEWING

lteal Jo:stale for Sale

J AN() 4 KM

lullus hed

-•

11 : ~News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; Dick Covell 70; Lilias,
Yoqo &amp; You 33.
11 :31&gt;-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Pollee Story 6, t3; Hawaii
Flve·O 8; ABC Newr 33 : Movie " Without Reser.
vatlons" 10.
17:~J anakl .33 ; 12 :4G-Myslery ot the Week 6. 13;
Kolak 1: ! : ~Tomorrow 3.4; 2 :1G-News 13.
Movlo Chonnet 4 S &amp; 1 P .M. - On The Old Spanish TralltGl
9 &amp; 11 P .M.-Carrie ( R)

1/0U MUST BE TETCHED
IN TH' HAID, SNUFFY

DID IIOU
HEARTHATr
OL' BULLET?

at the fourth an nual Pan
American Invitational tournament. The hand provides
an excellent example of the

importance, even at the
highest levels of bridge, of

the educated guess.
The bidding was routine.
The play and defense were
not. The hand developed Into
a confrontation between a
great defender and a shrewd
de'clarer. The defender was
· foilr-tlme World Champion
Billy Eisenberg. The de·
clarer . was one of the best
players in Mexico, Miguel
Reygadas.
Reygadas won the opening
lead with the ace of spades
and drew two rounds of
~rump. He then played the

OC BULLET
JESTPUTTH'

BITE ON ME
f"ER THUTTY

CENTS

down . This was a money
tournament, so more was at
stake than glory.
Reygadas guessed right.
He knew that Eisenberg was
capable of the subterfuge in

diamonds . Furthermore, the
fact that West had not overca lled the heart opening bid
indic ated that he probably
did not have both a good
spade suit and the ktng of
diamonds.

By "guessing" correctly
that Eisenberg held the king
of diamonds, Reygadas
played his queen which enabled him to score an over·
trick by discarding

dummy '!i last

diamond on

the established 10 of spades .
1NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN ,)

(For a copy of JACOBY MOD-

£ RN, send S1 to: " Win at
Bridge, " care of tnls newspaper, P.O. Box 489, Radio City
Station. New Yor~. N. Y. 10019.)

�14 - The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , March 8, 1978

Riggs t~p speller at Pomeroy
taking part in the competition
were Bill Gobel, Bill An·
derson , Melvin Van Meter,
Sean Doidge, Kelly Ginther,
and Karen Spencer.

Nick Riggs , son ol Dr. and
Mrs. Keith Riggs, Pomeroy,
a sixth grader , was winner
lor the second year Tuesday
ol the annual Pomeroy
Elementary &amp; hoot spelling
bee.
As winner, Nick will
represent his school at the
co unty event on March 14.
Runner-u p ·wa s Glend a
Gum , a fifth grader , daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. George Gum,
Ro ute 4, Pomeroy . Riggs is a
&amp;udent of Pamela Crow and
Glenda, a student of Mary
Hysell.
Other room cha mpions

Cage tourney
will be held
this weekend
A double elm ininatio n
basketba ll tournament will
be held this Saturday and
Sunday at the New Haven
Comm uni ty Bu ildin g .
Sponsored by the Bend Area
Jaycees, entry lee will be $50 .
Trophies will be given to
the fir&amp;, second and third
place teams with individual
trophies going to the players
on the first place squad.
For further information
contact Steve Halstead at6751333 between 9 a.m. and 4
p.m. or Dave Gillispie at 81123197 a(ter 5 p.m. Deadline lor

St.trllng ThurscUy morning
.tt 9:;10 •nd Thursd•v
evenir19 at
. Cl•sus
free . Tht
tor

entries is noori Frlday, March

10.
;:;.;.;.;:;-:·:·:·:·:·:::·::;.;:;:;:;.;.;.;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::

MEET TONIGHT
The Southern Valley
Athletlc Conference cage
coaches will meet at 7:30
p.m. this evening at Kyger
Creek High School to select
the all conference cage
squad .
:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

Pronouncer lor the event
was Barbara Shult• and
judges were Bonnie Fisher

and Mae Young. Mrs. Shultz
is the title program teacher
at the school .

OSP has escorted 1,650 truckloads of coal

Spelling
champion
is named
Laura Smith, 1&lt;1 , da ughter

:·:·:-:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:=:=:-:-:·:·:·:::::::::::-:-:;:·:::::-:;::::::: ol Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Smith,
Route 2, Pomeroy, became
EXTENDED FORECAST
the Meigs J unior High
Friday tllrougb Sunday~
School's cha mpion. speller
lair Friday and a chance ol
Tuesda y afternoon.
showers Saturday aad .. 1 As school champion. La ura
Sunday. Highs will range
will be a represe nt:,:~~ive in the
lrom the mid 4h to tile mid
co unty spelllng bee scheduled
50s and lowo wiU be In the
at 7:30 p:m. March 14 at
305 or lower 40s.
So uthern High 1Sc hoo l i n
' '· .
Racine. .., : •
Runner-up in Tuesday's
event was Kathy Parker,
daughter of Mrs . Ma rgaret
Park er , Pomeroy . Mi ss
PANCAKE SUPPER
The Po meroy Volunteer Pa rker misspelled " mali ce"
Fire Department is making which was spelled correctly
plans lor a pancake supper to by Miss Smith who then
be held !rom 4 to 7 p.m. on spelled the pext word 1 'nibs' '
Saturday, April I, at the lire correctly to win the bee. Both
Jeff Thornton ; second row , Mari~ Pickens, Carol Morris,
CAST MEMBERS - The junior class at Southern
Miss Smith and Miss Pa rker
station on Butternut Ave.
Bunni McGraw, Terri Zirkle, James Smith; third row,
High &amp; hool will present a tllree act comedy "The Girl
A bake sale wilt be held in are 14 and a re eighth graders.
Brice Hart, Brent Patterson, Kelly Taylor ; fourth row,
That I Marry" Thursday at the high school at 7:30p.m.
Jeann e Bowen pronounced
conjunction with the pancake
Dale Riffle and Debbie Pickens. Absent were Dennis
Admission is $1.25 for adults and 75 cents for students.
supper . Proceeds !rom the words lor the bee staged by
Wolle and Susie Scarberry. The play Is ~ing directed by
First row, 1-r, Naomi Foreman, Pam Spencer , Cindy
evening 's activities will go to the junior high's language
Jesse Browning .
·
Pa tterson , Becky Crow, Lorl Chapman , Janis Carnahan,
arts department. Serv ing as
the building lund .
judges were Roger Birch,
Emalene Pratt and Carla
Saelens.
Other room finalists in the
school bee were Rowena
MEETS FRIDAY
Andrion, Sharri Marshall ,
POMEROY - The VFW
Renee Willis, Brad La rgent,
Post wilt meet Friday,
Mike Tromm, J eff Carson,
March 10, at 7:30 p. m. on
Deni se Turner , Eddie
the lirst lloor of the
Daniels,
Fred Young, John
ta.es forced his district to questions as to why the
courthouse.
Olston 0 . "Nick" Wright ol By LEE LEONARD
Cremea ns , Shirley Mc- Mason , W. Va . will represent UPI Statehouse Reporter
close because ol a cash distri ct did ·not conform
Donald, Becky Tillis, Greg the West Virginia Wildlife
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The shortage last December.
expenditures to . incoming ·
Bush and Terry Adkins.
supe
rintendent
of
Medina
"It
was
an
insidio
us
revenues .
Federation at the 42nd An'
city
schools
told
a
state
thing
..
.it
ju13t
crept
up
on
us,"
~~ we dOn't have any frills, "
nual Meeting of the National
legislative
panel
Tuesday
said
Black.
he
said. " If we pare our
Wildlife Federation, March
that
his
district
was
lulled
He
said
his
district
finished
budget
back to the bone, then
MAYOR'S COURT
17 through 19 in Phoeni&lt;,
lalse
"sense
ol
theyear$60,000inthered,
but
there
won't
be anything to
into
a
Seven defendants forfeited
Arizona .
security
"
by
cash
balances
ol
lost
$35,000
in
personal
keep
more
people I rom
bonds and another was fined
High-ranking government
in the court ol Pomeroy o!!icials · and experts In the more than $100,000 in the property taxes when a major sending their children to
rubber company Jell town, other schools."
Mayor Clarence Andrews conservation field will ad- early and mid-1970..
But
superintendent
John
and
is still owed $3a,OOO by lbe
Black said enrollment in '
Tuesday night.
dress the national convention
Kaczenski
told
the
House
Erie-Lackawanna
Railroad.
the
district was declining
Forfeiting were Joseph Van of the NWF , the nation's
Finance
Committee
that
Black
was
questioned
because
parents are sending
Meter, West Columbia, $50, large s t
con se rv a tion
sense
ol
security
came
to
an
clos
ely
by
lawmakers
their
children
to nearby
disturbing the peace; Keith education organization .
.
end
last
December
claiming
his
district
should
p
r
i
v
a
I
e
s
c
h oo I s ,
abrupt
Corona , SmUhfield, $250 ,
Durin g · the three-da y
reckless operation ; Ross · conference, delegates !rom when the district could not not have negotiated a - 12 predominantly Christian
. Jones, Columbus, $30, failing all 50 states, Guam, Puerto· meet its payroll ~tnd had to percent pay raise lor schools.
teachers , who struck in lbe
Don a Id C r e w s e ,
to yield the right ol way;
Rico and the Virgin Isla nds close lor lour days .
Although
the
balance
was
spring
of
1977,
wben
there
superintendent
of RootstoWn
Richard Dailey, Middleport, will also set policy lor the 3.5
$193,000
as
late
as
1975,
.
was
not
enough
money
to
pay
School
District,
Portage
$30, speeding ; Melvin Duff, million M
rite mber group by
Kaczenski
related,
lor
it.
County,
painted
a
simllat
Dexter, $25, speeding ; Ricky adopting reso lution s on
expenditures
were
increasing
He
said
the
district
lett
at
picture
of
his
district,
which
McKnight, Pomeroy , $29, energy · ~ nd environmental
by
64
percent
while
revenues
the
time
that
revenues
would
closed
for
17
days
last
year
speeding, and David Grind- issues. The meeting is
stall, Racine, $250 posted on climaxed each year with the were growing by only 51 be adequate to support such a and is faced with closing
·
pay raise. .
again unless the budget is
an assault charge and $50 on presentation of ' Connie" percent.
In addition, he said, the
Black also had to counter cut.
a disorderly conduc'l charge. awards for out standin g
Fined $50 and costs on an achievement ln the co n- carryover balance depended

Convention

~elegated

IS

nrune

District was lulled into
false sense of security

'
.
Who11 guarantee
you a

averS G£dge?

1

'""

. ;.,

intoxication charge

was

1'/illiam Reeves, Pomeroy.

Suspect

servation field.
Olston 0 . " Nick" Wright is

showed it was

probably a .44-&lt;:aliber Marlin
deer rifle.
The shots, pollee said, were
apparently !ired from the
ground
lloor
ol
a
. tumbledown, abandoned

• ,.,.......ritdt

• Mtt~••t1aa.•

hotel, across the street from

the sidewalk where Flynt and
Reeves fell.
Jaffe, a Flynt executive,
rev~aled that Flynt's 24-yearold'wi!e- who is president of
the organization S.YE:AA

companion sex magazine

·CERTM'ICATI.

Chic to "get rid of fat and
· dead weight."
Crunkleton was asked if

7·r;.o/o
. "'*' ......,.,

police were considering the
sniper JTIBY have been one of

"

those !ired, and he snapped,
uNo comment."

• Ml,...lfll$1,0!)0 .•

•• ...

. h:

A FULL
SERVICE
BANI~

~ Ohio Valley Bank
Mrmor • ro1 C

The Leading Sa rings Plans Are At The Leading Savings Bank

and stunned by the vicious
and senseless assault ... our
prayers are with you." AI
Goldstein, publisher of the
New
York
based
pornographic newspaper
&amp;rew, arrived bedecked in a
bullet-proof vest, spoke with
Flynt and reported that the
Ohio publisher could n&lt;Jt
move his , toes . . Comedian
·Di&lt;*.Gregory visited Flynt:
• In the ho~ilallobby, a man
and two women - followers
of an Indian swami - look up
positions In corners and, their
eyes closed, swayed in

concentratioo. They said they
were exerting a healing Ioree
lor Flynt.
1
This went on m~ ol the
day until the mM, a!U!r a
long period o( unusually
vigorous swaying, suddenly
shouted "Larry Flynt! The
j)ower of God ·is Invested in
me , Get up and walk and
come bere!" Pollee hustled
him to jail on disturbance
charges but the two women
remained , swaying in the
lobby.

ELBERFELDS

He said inept fiscal
reporting contribUted to the
rude awakening, and the
voters defeated a 4.5-mUI
levy last year .
Kaczenski 's
testimony
came during a continua lion of
the cominittee's examination

ol school financing problems.
Robert
Black,
Nostalg ia is what ma kes
superinlllndent
of
Garfield
you recall those long summer
Lo cal School District In
evenings on the· front porch
Portage County , told the
while forgetting about the committee loss of a major
mosqlJ,itoes.
industry and unpaid railroad

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....
•

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~jNirN

1978_,.e: ·

.

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Georgians were "shocked

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So when you think savings, think Ohio.
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with maximum rates and a plan to fit your
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Gal l 1p611S. O h1 0

·

being

Mrs.
Flynt,
looking
haggard, spoke briefly with
,.~"!::. giant-screen console TV
newsmen and said the
Zenith
's Color Sentry" - The Automatic Picture
Gwinnett County police were
Control
System - controls th e col or pi cture when the
"doing an adequate job, and
·
sc
ene
cha
nges, or the c ha (ln el c hanges, ev e n
they are keeping . me
when
the
room
light c hanges.
informed."
Gov. George Busbee 8ent ·
The CORSICA
Flynt a telegram saying
J1324P

::.;

'

had

recently !ired 25 per cent of
the stall ol Hustler and its

o~rations wqs

the
the president of the West
community "resented " any
Virginia Wildlife Federation.
talk ol new operating levies
He served two terms as
because it believed there was
president ol the West Virginia no need,

(Continued from page I)
Trappers Association Inc.
was portrayed with a !at face . !rom !972to 1976. He has been
and stringy hair.
.
a school teacher for 25 yearS
Crunkleton ·refused to and is eurrently employed by
discuss the weapon used to the Mason County Board of
shoot Flynt and Reeves but Education as the Director of
police said privately that a So cial Services and At·
bullet removed from Reeves' tendance.
stomach

upofi for

eroded by 84 percent.
Kaczenski
said

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(H2526DE) or
Pecan color
(H 2526P). Wood
veneers and
select hardwood
solids on top.
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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, March 9, 1978

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

" We want to kmd of sit back an see ho~· he (Preside nt Hut h said, "they have to live with these people. l! the pickets
Carter ) implements the Taft-Hartley Act," said Ri ll Cray, \'lee stay ofl the road and don't cause an)' problems, we will
preSident of UMW Local 1957 in Vinton County. "We want to proba bly go back to work."
see w~at tbe consequences will be."
In Pike County, !.ow Sulfur Coal Co. ollicial Re• Corns said

Some independent producers made runs with armed drive rs. his firm has w ntinued to rWl coal and is shipping out abo ut
The Cravat Coal Co., St. Clairsville, Wednesday resumed 1,000 tons a dlty .
operations lor the first lime since the strike started Dec. 6.
"The higbway ~trot halii done an excellent job," Corn s said .
The R&amp;F Coal Co. , however, said no decision had been made " But m ost of our dri\'ers ore unned. and some of thl:! Ul have
on whether to start up production again. The firm, friends riding shotgun with them."

headquartered in Cadiz, is one ol the largest non-union prQducers in Ohio and has about 350 employes working at 30 surfac-e
rrunes.

" It depends on what everybody else does : what the miners
will do, what kind ol protection ·we will get ," sa id R&amp;F
Controller Joe H~th . "It depends on a lot ol things. We are
ready to go back to . work , but we sure don' t want anybody
getting hurt .
"A Jot of our workers live right beside union members ;"

•

at y

The manager ol the Hardy Colli Co. in 'IUscantwas County,
Paul J on es, sa id he has eontinued tt1 ship t'Oltlthroughout most
of U1e last two monU1$. 11JC lin11's cn1pl oyce.s are rr pn•sented
by an independent w1ion, hi! said .
"We !eel the highway patrol is doing a prell y good job,"
Jones said. "111C)' drive by here every now und Uwn 10 keep l::l n

eye on Ut i!tgs. We also have •

~ood sheriff

here ."

Most non-wtion product•r s said they hnw kept prkes within

(Continued on page 10)

en tine

Fiflt' l' ll l 't•nl s
Vol. 2!\, No . 229

Workers may retum if
benefits are ass·u red
United Press Internallonnl
A United Mine Workers
ollicial says striking miners
·might return to work W'!der a
Taft-Hartley Injunction il
their
pension
and
bospltallzation benefits are
guaranteed under the 1974
contract.
"They might return to wock
and I emphasize the word
'migllt/" Frank Dwyer, vice

president of UMW Local 16!9
India na , Pa ., ~a id
Wednesday. "This would be

Dwyer said it isn 't exacUy
return under provisions ol lhe clear what the government
contract prior to last July 1, would do if it seized the
s aid
the
when the benefits st ill mines . He
government .would probably
existed.
" If we went ba ck under set the profit margin lor the
Tall-Hartley, though, we coal companies and the wage
would more or less be scale lor the miners, but he
admitting defeat, ' ' Dwye r said it 's unclear if the
govermnent would guarantee
said.
He said miners would be the miners ' health and
lar more likely to return to pension benefits.
He said there was no wa y
the pits if the govermnent
seized the coal mines and the miners could live with lbe
However , he said tlley might

in

seriously considered because
it would guaranU!e hospital

funds and penSions lor
pensioners. ' '

He said the miners would
not go back to work under the
present contract that expired
Dec. 6 and contained cuts in
hospital and pension benefits.

rJV;,;;;;·::··:·:·~:·:.;;:,:T;;,,: : n;i:;,~;l,

,;.

opened up the coal operator 's

J;

new contract.

"We want to support the
::1 books to scrutiny.
~
~
"! think the government pensioners and their depenUnited Presolnlematlonal
would take a close look at the dents," he said . 11 This ls all
BERKELEY, CALIF - ORMAN GRANGER, a books ol the coal operators they have . We have w have
University of California climatologist, said this season's
Over the past years," Dwyer samething for the 700,000 old
rainfall would be 63 percent above normal ending California's said. "They would lind timers."
three-year drought and it seems he was right oli the button. · substantial reasons why the
Aside from the pensions,
The drought is pver, and while the rainy season has a few contract proposed to us lor Dwyer said the proposed
storms to go, Granger '~ estimates for · some measurement pension
benefits
a nd contract In general is not
points are almost exact. All the other experts missed the mark hospitalization could be acceptable, particularly
by wide margins.
hospitalization
benelits,
increased right now.
standards and
"The pension fund for the salety
ATLANTA - LARRY FLYNT, OWNER OF Hustler retired miners is absolutely grievance procedures .
magazine, was taken to Emory University Hospital ridiculous. The government
" There's no way we can
Wednesday night !rom Button Gwinnett Hospital in would ask why they are function under it," he said.
Lawrenceville and was put back on the critical list as soon as bolding back on pensions for "We're not going to be lied by
he atrlved, by Dr. John T. Galambos. Galambos also the old people.
this contract.
lmmedlalely started 'treating the infection he said had already
11
" II we accepted the
l'm sure there would be a
set in from Flynt's "dirty wounds" infected by the contents of lot of weeping and gnashing proposed contract as is, there
his torn Intestines. Today he is being operated on again to of teeth over this (by the would be absoluU! chaos the
remove bits of bone and a bullet w relieve pressure on his Bituminous Coal Operators whole time. We would have ·
spine.
·
Association). The BCOA is more strikes in tbe next three
·'
not eXcited abOut anyone years than we've had in the
· HARRISON, ARK. - THE ARKANSAS Health looking into their books."
last six years."
Department has gr~nted evangelist Daniel Aaron Rogers
permission to take his mother's body to Missouri to attempt a
resurrectloo on Sunday. Rogers has kept his mother's body
frozen since ·she died Feb . 2 from flu. He and three pastor
friends will pray for her resurrection in a private room at the
Clarkson Funeral Home in Reeds Springs, Mo . II they don't
work, an evangelist from Indonesia, S. A. Madal, who has had
visions ol Mrs. Rogers being raised !rom the dead, has agreed
to fly to Missouri to try again.
The Tri·County Community !rum March 13 through
WASIDNGTON- BEFORE TONGSUN PARK returned Concert Association Will March 18. Drive headquar·
from South Korea, it was estimated that ·up to two dozen kickoff its campaign lor new ters will again be located in
incwnbent congressmen might have violated House rules of members for the 1978-79 the offices ol the Gallipolis .
olllclal conduct by accepting cash or gifts from him. But concert season at a dinner at Area Chamber ol Commerc~.
Wednesday, two members of the House ethics committee said . 7 p. m. Monday in the Rio 16 State St. in Galipolis. Th e
Park'.s testimooy and other evidence will lead to disciplinary Grande Coll~ge Cafeteria.
headqUarters phon!.! number
Over 50 drive workers and will be 446-7117, and the hours
action against only about six current col)gressmen, unless
significant new evidence surfaces in the Korean influence- captains from Gallia,· Meigs, will be 10 a. m. lo 4 p. m.
Mason and Jackson counties
buying probe.
Mrs. Evan C. Roderick of
will attend the dinner and will Gallipolis is . se rving as
ROME- PREMIER-DESIGNATE GIUUO ANDREOTTI have the opportunity to meet general chairman of this
told reporters Wednesday he hoped to submit a cabinet list to Marge Sown, the new year's annual membership
President Glovami Leone Friday or Saturday to end Italy's representative from the New campaign, and Mrs. Grant
third longest govermnent crisis- 52 days solar. Andreotti's York office of Community Stanley is cha irman lor
Christian Democrats and the leaders of tbe Conununist, Concerts, Inc.
Ma so n County . Enlistin g
Special entertainment . at workers in J ackson County
Socialist, Social Democratic and Republican parties have
agreed in principle m a ne\v govermnent. And altbough the the dinner will be presented are Mrs. J ohn Warner and
pact dld not include Communists in the cabinet, it made them · by Sandra Wilkins.
Mrs. John Lambert and in ·
. The campaign for new Meigs County, Mrs. John T.
part ol the parliamentary majority lor the first time in 31
years .
members will be conducted Wolle.
.

Concert association's

kickoff set for Monday

, COLUMBUS - SENATE,PASSED LEGISLATION .
authorizing the state attorney general to Investigate and
p-oaecute cases of suspected Medicaid lraud Is in position for a
fioor vote in the Ohio House. The measure came out o1 the
House Finance Committee WJ!dnesday on a ~I vote after the
j)anel reversed Itself and removed a provision requiring that
evidence of Medicaid fraud be turned over to county
prosecutors for acllon.
,

&lt;XlLUMBUS - A SURVEY &lt;XlNDUCTED by the Ohio
Department of InsiD'ance released Wednesday lntiicated tllat
Ohio insurances · companies wrote $23.8 milllon in product
'llabWty policies in 1976 and paid or incurred claims totaling
•15. 7 million. The statistics were bnsed on a quesliooaire
mallod to 498 insurance .companies by the Department o1
Inaurance; 295 of the questloonaires were completed. The
!'Isle said 74 of tllose compenies issued proouct liability
coverage within Ohio.
·
.
SAN DIEGO
A- POWER OUTAGE, luckily striking
during the day(lme, blacked out 11108( of lin area of 1.7 million
jnhabltants Wednesday, jamming traffic and trapping some
elevator palllllftg~rs, but ended with no serious injuries or
daJ!Iage. The 4~our blackDut, caused by _a n e:l)llosive highwltage lllort circuit in a generating plant, covered most o1 the
dty of San Diego, second largest In California and much ol San
Diego County from the Mencan border to Orange County.

THIS PART OF former West Main St. , in Pomeroy
used by many motorists as a "short cut" under the
Pomeroy-Mason bridge remains closed to traffi c over a
week since it was closed due to a gasoline.leak a t the
Certified Service Station on lbe present West Main St.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Saturday through
Monday ,

sho"·ers

of

a chance

Saturday

and

Monday and lair Sunday.
Highs will be lo the fOs and
lows wlll be in the 30s
Saturday and In the 20s
Sunday and Monday.
.;.;::::::::::::::::::::::=:·:·:·:·:·:::::·:;;:;:::;:;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;.

Four drivers
are approved
'11le Meigs County Board ol
Educa tion Tuesday night
approved

bus driver

cer-

tification lor David Chase,
Harry Pickens, Amos Tillis
and Geo rge Moore, Jr .
The board discussed a
communication fro m

th e

Ohio Bureau uf Employment
Services in regard t o a

payroll percentage that can
be paid regularly lor benefits,
but decided to continue on the
present policy since there
have been no unemployment
claims !rom the employes for .
The board amended its

~

-

I

~""""'"'""'

P!G

DESPITE INC~EMENT WEATHER, excellent
progress is being made in remodeling the exterior ol the
former Country Cousins Restaurant in Pomeroy. The
building Is being converted into a Burger Chel scheduled
to open this spring.

Pomeroy Fire Chi ef Churles L_egar said that a trench hud
been dug in the locu tion a nd some dirt mtwi ng and
cleaning up would have to be done before Uu.! street ca n be
r~pe ned . The re is no. safety dunge r, . howt~~cr , he said.

:::: ::::: :: ::: :::::::: :;:;.;.;.;. ;. ;, ;.;. ; .;:;:;:::;.;:; ·:~·:: ; :;,:-:::::::·:

several years.

AKRON - AKRON MAYOR JOHN BALLARD has
decided to puss the buck to the courts on one of the hottest
political Issues to confront his city in several years - an
abortloo cmtrol ordinance. Ballard said Wednesday he will
allow Akron's controversial abortion measure to become law
without his signature. "There has been considerable debate
~bout the Iesallty and constltullonallty of the ordinance,"
Ballard said. "I doo't feel I should presume to decide tllese
questloos - the coiD'ts are the proper place for the resolution
of questions of law.

\

Channel _SelectiOn
Illuminated Channel Numbers

INGLES
FURNITURE

with blood," said Lamb. "II will bring more strife than the
civil war. He will be successful in setting brother against
brother."
Tom Van Horn, president ol UMW Local 1601 ol the Y&amp;0
Coal Co., who has a brother that works lor a non-union coal
company that has been idle since the strike started said he
would " let him know about it" if he returned to work during tbe
strike.
" It's a pretty touchy situation ," said Van Horn. "! don't
think he would go back to work but then if they called him , be
has a job to protect. But I'd let him knowabout it ."
The Oh io Highway Patrol said coal continues to "move
fr eely" througho ut Ohio as an increasing number ol non-union
producers resume mining in an elfort to provide coal to the
state's fuel-&amp;arved utilities and industry.
UMW members in southern Ohio are apparently waiting to
see the outcome of the Taft-1-lartley . court orders belore
resuming picketing activities.

--

Plctur&lt;l Tube ·

il

ByJOHNKADY
Ullilod Preu lnlemallooal
An Ohio United Mine Workers Union ollicial says ordering
strlldng coal miners back to work will "bring more strife than
~since tile ClvU War" and the Ohio Highway Patrol says It
has escorted 1,650 trucltloads ol non-union coal this week, as
tile UMW strike entered its 94th day.
Meanwhile, a 25 per cent mandatory cutback imposed on
industry and bUsinesses in the Marietta area has caused no
maj« JX'(Iblelll5 as yet and Cincinnati Mayor Gerald Springer ·
· says a proposed coal allocation program may punish the
~een Ctty f« dqing a good job in conservation.
Blll Lamb, a member of the national UMW Executive Board,
tostilled Wednesday in Washington before a special board
·investtsating the strike before obtaining an injunction in an
attempt to force miners back tow ork under the Tall-Hartley
law.
" Each ton of coal the president produces will be covered

Deputies probing complaints
The Meigs County Sheri ff's
de pa rtment is investigating
t wo theft compla ints.
Lester ,
RD,
E rn est

Wilkesville, told the sheri ff's
department two baby pi gs
were taken from his farm

nea r the Meigs· Vinton County rrom her car. 'J'tu! thi e ve~
li ne.
were considerate. as the good
Patty r.rossnicklc, Rt. 1, b.a ttcry was l'cplnced with an
Ree d sv ill e ,
r c port c ~
old one.
sometime late Tuesday or
~a rl y Wednesday
morning
sum eon e tuok the b.attcry

With
th e
r cqu c s lccl
crnergcn('y Clln!-icrvnti!m !If

electrici ty,
Sheri f£

M ci~ s

.I ames

.I .

Co un ty
Pruffitt

Icy road gets .crash blame

asked area residents tu be
alt~ 1t tu suspiciuus uct iviti cs
aruund their property and

Icy road co nditions w en~
blamed fo r two· traffi c accident s inv estiga ted Wed-

pror)crt y of their ncjg,hburs
particu larly , since rn a ny
outside securit y l i~h ls have

nesday by the Gallia-Meigs
Post State Highway Patrol.
According to the patrol the
first was at 7:45 a.m. on SR
554 where Lynda F. Smith. 29,
Rt. 1, Bidwell , going west,

moderate dumo gc,
A second mishap occurred
nn US 35, two and one t enth
miles west of SH. 7 whert:
Freda B. Cottrell , 45, Rt. I,
Gallipo lis, l o~1 control of her
ca r on the icy pa vement. Her
c&lt;:tr struck a guard r a il
c::tusing moderate damage.

lleen shut off.
fl el p yourself ami your
nelghbors muk c il. tough un
the criminal,'' Sheriff Pro rfi tt
sa id .
0

lost t"Ontrol or her ca r which

slid of! the right si de of the
hi ghwa y strik ing 3n e m,.
ba nkm ent.
The re
was

Rutland council
initiates plans
RUTLAND .-

Meeting in

r eg ula r sess ion Tuesd a y

Dr. Ahmad joins
HM Clinic staff
Robert E. Dani el, Holzer
Clinic Administrator, today
announced the recent a d-

evening, Rutla nd Village
special education plan to Co uncil made plans to ha ve dition to the clinic &amp;aff of Dr.
comply with changes in the Appalachian Cable Vi sion Ijaz Ahmad, a specialist in
requirements and authorized provide cable service for Neurology. In addition to his
Superintendent Ro be r t Rutland residents. Co uncil clinic duties, Dr. Ahmad will
also be in charge of EEG,
Bowen to attend a meeting on also discussed li censing of
·EMG Lab at the Holzer
schoo l finances at t he amusement machines in the
ML--dical Center .
Mohican Lodge at Perrysville village. It was decided to
Born in Bhera , Pakista n,
on March 20 and 21.
have an ordinance ready to Dr. Ahmad received his F.Sc.
be acted upon at the next from Forma n Ch ristia n
meeting.
College in Lahore, Pa kistan
J oan St ewa rt, co un cil and his MB :1)S degree Irom
A~SWERS CALLS
president, pres_ided in the Ki ng Edwa rd
Medi ca l
The Pomeroy Emer gency a bsence of Ma yor E ugene College in Lahore. He
Squad was called to Maple Thompson.
'
completed his internship· at
Place at 10:20 p. m. Wed·
COuncil members attending Be rge n Pin es Hospit a l,
nesday for Ben Neutzllng who were Dick F etty, Bill Para mus, New J'ersey in
was ill. He was taken to Williamson, John Jacobs and June, 1970. From Jul y, i971 to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. Wendell Grate an d Clerk June, 1913, Dr. Ahmad was in
At 9:59 p. m. the squad Vernon Weber.
surgical residency training at
went to the home of Wanda
Long Island Jewish Medical
Adams, P omeroy, who was
Center in New Hyde Park,
also taken to Veterans
ANNOUNCE CHANGES
New York . He then started
Memorial Hospital with a
Due to the energy shortage, res idenc y
tra ining
in
hand injury.
three Meigs County Post Neurology at the University
Oflices have ann oun ced of Kansas Medical Center,
another reduction in hours for Ka nsas City, Ka nsas which
window service on Saturdays. was. completed in June , 1976.
SQUAD CALLED
The hours will now be from
Dr. Ahmad completed a
The
Middleport
8:30
a .m. to 10:30 a .m . at one year EEG Fellowship in
Emergency Squad was called
to 107 Park St. at 1:01 p. m. Pom eroy and Middleport June, 1977 at the Mayo Clinic,
Wednesday lor Barbara Post offices and from 8 a .in . Rochester, Minnesota. Dr;
Smith who was taken to to 10 a .m. at the Chester Po&amp; Ahmad is single and resides
at the Tara Apartments in
Veterans Memorial Hospital. Office.

'.

DR. IJAS AHMAD
Addison.
Mr. Daniel said the clinic

was pleased to have Dr. Ah·
mad here bee a use he brings a
spec ialty to th e Med ical
Center that has been absent
fo r the past lew years and
will provide a m ore extensive
ra nge of se r vice to out

patients.
The addition of Dr. Ahmad
brings the Holzer Clinic stall
to 40 specialists.

·'

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