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                  <text>1- The Dally Sentinel, MldcDeport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, March 14, 1978

I

Pinch tightens on fuel-starved public
Pr,.•

Ualted
IDterutloul
'llle coal strike became an equally effective coal mino
boycott tOOay as 160,000 UMW miners defied federal backorow«k orders and strangled production in the pits for Ule 99111
day.
Federal proaeculora were poised to arrest any miner who
violated Ule court restraining order against pickelin8 or other
action to continue the now-Illegal walkout, but there was
neither wll'k nor picketing Monday at stW paralyzed aoft coal
operations in the Midwest, where most of the nation's coal Is
mined.
The Department of Energy said 140 more mines -moat of
them non-union -were operating than !lad operated last week,
but with UMW mines still nonproductive, the coal now
remained at a trickle and the pinch tightened on fuel,etarved
public utWties and industries. State revenue losses went up
and thl; number of lald-oll worker• Increased.
"We C&lt;Xllplled with the order, posted schedules and hoped
for the best and nobody showed up," said Dave Baker at
Southern Ohio Coal Co.
"We have 14 mines in our association and nobody went to

Parking
(Continued trom 1111• 1)
that Middleport had a
population of 2,705 as of July
I, 1976.
It was voted to advertise
for bids on selling the old
police cruiser with Coon·
cilman Walters casting the
only dissenting vote.

Easter egg
sale slated
The aMual colored Easter
egg sale of Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will be held this year
with March 22 the deadline
for placement of orders.
Residents wishing to place
orders at $1.50 a dozen may
call Connie Dodson at 992-3236
or Kathy Doidge at 992~246 or
992-7231.
'llle sorority will also stage
an Easter bake sale in front
of the New York . Clothing
House on Saturday, March 25.

DANCE FRIDAY
There will be a dance
Friday, March 17 at Royal
Oak Park from 9 p.m. untll
midnight. Music will be
provided by "Uncle Dugger"
from WXIL.
Admission is $2.50 per
person. The event is being
sponsored by Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority.

Meigs roads
given numbers

Two issues on table
By DREW VON BERGEN

being considered, with coal expired at 4:30 p.m. EST
WASHINGTON (UPI) operators willing to reduce, Monday .
A
Justice
Two controversial Issues but not etlminate, the annual Department spokesman said
the cost of health care lor cost lor health care.
the department was pinning
miners and incentives Ill
At the same time, the its hopes on a quick
boost coal production - were industry wanted the union Ill sett lement, rather than
oo the bargaining table today agree to a controversial pushing immediate
in negotiations between the production incentive clause enforcement of the order.
striking United Mine Workers ·which had been included in
If a new agreement is
union and soft coal industry. the first agreement rejected reached,
the
union's
The strike entered its 99111 by the UMW bargaining ratification process will be
day with miners throughout council.
put in motion lor the third
the coalfields defying a
That clause would allow time.
federal court Taft-Hartley individual companies to pay
U.S. District Judge Aubrey
order that they return to bonuses to miners lor prodQc· Robinson Jr. , has set a
work.
ing more coal than was set as hearing on a permanent Ill).
An industry spokesman a target, If the union local day "cooling off period"
said Monday that full-scale involved agreed to the injunction
for
Friday
talks between the UMW and concept.
afternoon. But he could
·the
Bituminous
Coal
The deadline for U.S. mar- extend the restraining order
Operatllrs Association were shals Ill serve official notices instead,
especially
if
expected · to resume today, of the back.to·work order on bargaining developments
although no specific time was union and company officials appear optimistic.
set.
The last major negotiation
·session, .lasting two hours,
occ urred Sunday at a
Washingtoo hotel. The two
·
sides then agreed to break up
into

MEET THURSDAY
The board of trustees of the
Gallia·Meigs Community
Action Agency wlll hold its
monthly meeting on Thursday, March 16 at 7:30 p.m. in
the central office. All board ·
members are urged to attend.

w&lt;rk ," said Leonard Pnakovlch, prealdent of the Ohio Coal
He said no effort will be made to force individual miners
Aaaociation . "It looks like total defiance."
back Ill tile mines because, ''there Is an amendment to the
Two miners reported for work at a mine in Virginia, but left Constitution prohibiting Involuntary servitude."
without explanation bef«e their shifll began, and three UMW
In Indianapolis, U.S. Attorney Virginia OW agreed with
conatruclion wll'ken1 who showed up at another operation in Brown U!at mass arresta are unlikely ,
the state did the same thing after talkq to an unidentified
She said she had received calls from people wbo thought the
man who drove to the acene and urged them to leave.
Indiana National Guard or the U.S. marshal 's office would be
"'llle fellow said lt wouldn't be a good Idea to go to work,'' "grabbing miners by the artl\8 and let~s and carlin8 them off to
said John Cha!m~n, who llvesln North Carolina. "I didn't take the mines."
it as a threat, but I got the feeling aometlllng could happen If
"Nothing could be farther from the truth," she said.
we went to work."
A Justice Department spokesman sald the government
In the West, where effects of the stl'lke have been minlmal, prefers to gamble on a quick settlement through negotiation
two dozen miners tiJI'IIed out at two UMW operations in Utah, between the UMW and the soft coal industry, rather than on
but pensioners and women wearing ski masks manned illegal immediate enforcement of the court order.
picket lines and turned them back.
While the miners defied ·the court, other unions joined the
There were no arrests.
parade of supporters of their cause.
'llle freeze-out was a blow to federa1 hopes U!at the strike
In San Francisco, leaders of the International Loogs h or e
might be contained until a new contract can be drafted.
m e n's ;md Warehousemen's Union urged a 24-hour dock
"Make no mistake,'' said U.S. Attorney Dan Brown, in strike to protest use of the Taft-Hartley Act against the UMW.
Columbus, Ohio, "The government Ia very diaheartened that
In Chicago, officers of the United Auto W&lt;rkers - which
the miners dldn 't ahow up to work thla morning."
already has donated f2 mUllon to the striking miners - and of

smaller,

joint

subcommittees to work on
drafting proposal:i lor the
renewed talks.
Only tlmited talks .took
place Monday, with chief
industry negotiator Nicholas
Camicia reportedly out of
town .
Rank ;md Ole rejection of
the .last contract agreement,
by a larger th;m 2 to I
margin, was due in part Ill a
proviSion. which called for
· miners to pay, for the first
time, a portion ol medical
expenses under. the union's
heath care program.
The "deductibles" would
have cost miners between
$300 and $700 a year.
Sources indicated Mooday
that a possible trade-off was

James A. Page, of
Fleming, Page and Stlllte ,
Inc. has announced the
following roads in Meigs
County have received new
numbers under the county's
numbering system.
'llle roads are as follows:
Avenue Bridge Road (TR
635); Dark Hollow Road (TR
390); Bashan Road (CR 28;
Bailey Run Road (TR 165);
Bald Knob-Stiversville Road'
(CR 31); Bachner Road (TR
389); Addie Decker Road (TR
209); B.aer Road (TR 152);
Conk Road (TR 162); Dead
Man's Curve Road (CR 396):
Court St. Road (TR 125);
Carmel Road ( TR 109);
Canter Road (TR 101 );
Broadway Ave., Racine ,
Village; Bowman's Run Road
(CR29); Bookman Road (TR
380 ); Boatright Road (TR
61) ; Hudson Road (TR 273);
Horse Cave Road (TR 126) ;
Hog Hollow Road (TR 105);
Headley Road (TR 289) ;
Eagle Ridge Road (CR 32);
Children's Home Road (CR
76); Chambers Road ( TR
640); Happy Hollow Road
( TR 174'); Lagoon Road (TR
Next Sunday, devotional 1002); Morning Star Road
Members of the Meigs
DeMolay Chapter are putting day; the DeMolay members (CR 30); McMurray Road
In a busy week with the ob- wlll go to services at Grace (TR 389); Mitchell Road (TR
Church
In 28); McKenzie Ridge Road
serva nce
of
National Episcopal
Pomeroy.
(TRI07) ; McGuireRoad(TR
DeMolay Week. Sunday,
The chapter will also place 196); McElhinney Hill Road,
members attended services
at Heath United Methodist a bamer on the courthouse (TR 381); Main Street (TR
Church in Middleport. and one on the Middleport 627); Loug Hollow Road (TR
27A),
Monday evening there was a Masonic Temple.
Window displays will be , Leading Creek ,Road (CR
dinner and meeting In "which
·six candidates were initiated. featured In various area 3) ; Locust Grove Road (CR
Senior DeMolay members business houses with each 28) ; Karr Road (TR 211);
and Master Masons were depicting one of the ca rdinal Lovett Road.(TR 139); Laurel
virtues of DeMolay.
Cliff Road (CR Z2); Howell
honored .
Any young man between Hill Road (TR 207); Hiland
On Saturday night, the
annual sweetheart com· the age of 13 through 21 In· Road ( CR 75); Grueser
petition will be held at the terested in DeMolay work is Hollow Road (TR 87); Greenrecreation building near the invited to contact Roy wood Cemetery Road (TR
Kyger Creek Power PIJ!nt. A Shepherd or Jeff Daniels. 217); Bradbury Road (CR 5);
dance will follow the com· Master Councilor of the local Baum Addition Road (TR
petition and DeMolay and chapter is Dallas Sayers and 633); Circle Road (TR 28A);
Job's Daughters from senior councilor Is George Collins Road (TR 637);
Enterprise Road (TR 196);
Gallipolis, Pomeroy and Knightjng .
Forest Run Road (CR 30); SR
Middleport will attend .
33; Shotgun Hollow Road (TR
174); Smith Ridge Road (TR
39); Sorden Road (TR 359);
Ross Road (TR 140); Salser
Road (TR 19) ; Sand Hill
Cemetery Road (CR 399);
SawmWRoad(TR192); Rose
Alley Road (TR 200 &amp; TR
201); Rose HW Road (TR
ATL ANTA (UP!)
. "We hope to revive it, but 199) ; Richard Road (TR 610);
Hustler magazine owner we'll have to see how Larry
Riebel Road (TR 113) ; Rock
Larry Flynt, shot from makes out. This is the first
Springs
Cemetery Road (CR
ambush last week., has time the paper ·has had to
22A);
Reller
Road (TR 210);
developed pnelimonia, gas- suspend publication in its 14
trointestinal bleeding and years of existence ;•• said. Pooler Road (TR 221) ; Old
internal infection, his doctors Managing Editor Ron Forest Road · (TR 224); Oak
HW Road (TR 59); Oak
say:
Ridenour.
Grove
Road (CR 33) ;
The doctors at Emory UniSellers
released
a Number Nine Road (TR
versity Hospital, where the statement from Flynt's
sex magazine entrepreneur doctors saying "Flynt has 265).
Neece Road (TR 195);
was transferred two days experienced continued
Nease
Hollow Road (TR 106);
alter he was gunned down by gastrointestinal bleeding
a sniper 30 miles away in requlrlng several · units of Naylor's Run Road (TR Tl) ;
Lawrenceville, said Mooday blood" ;md he "continues to Grimm Road (TR 136);
Flynt remains in serious experience lever and sepsis Cleland Road (TR 611) ;
Flood Road (CR 38); McDole
condillon.
(blood-borne bacteria) from · Road (TR 154); SR 248 ;
Despite fJ1e complications both pneumonia and intl'a·
Syracuse Flood Road (TR
and fever , Tom Sellers, a abdominal infection."
IZ2); Thomas Road (TR 51) ;
spokesman lor the physicians
One of the bullets damaged TR27; TR43; TR67; TR 100;
at Emory, said Flynt's ''vital nerves in Flynt's spinal
signs have been maintained column and he Is paralyzed TR 111; TR 115; TR 151; TR
· in a relatively stable state." from mldthigh down. He has 164; TR 202; TR 212; TR 205 ;
In Los Angeles, Andrew less than a 50 percent ch;mce TR 245; TR 223; TR 263;
' Jaffe, ·acting publisher and of regaining the use of his TackervWe Road (TR 649);
TR 346 ; TR 275; TR 351; TR
general manager of the legs,
404; TR382; TR641; TR631;
Flyntowned Los Angeles
Gwinnett
County TR 652; TR 643 TR 1035; TR
Free Press, said publication authorities have reported no
1034 ; TR 1051 ; TR 1038; TR
of the weekly paper wou}d be maj&lt;r breaks in their hunt for
1064 ; TR 1053; TR 1056;
temporarily suspended the assailant.
Union Avenue (CR 24 ); TR
March 17.
1059, Van Meter Hill Road
(TR 127); Valley Belle Road
(TR 138); Weed Road (TR
430); Vine Stteet, Racine
Village; Wickham Road (TR
, 82); Wessel Road (TR 137);
Zuspan Holl\)W Road (TR 50);
Wlpple Road (CR. 53), ;md
Scout Camp Road (TR 112) .

Meigs DeMolay
in busy week

Youi-e
Flynt's health
OnYour Way worsens Monday

Ne~d

a new ca rl No need to save
forever! Get low cost financing
on any new model car . .. here ! If
you qua lify .. . we' ll get you behind the w heel of that brand new
auto in no time at al l. Come in!.

WALK-UP TELLER WINDoW AND
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
FRI. EVENINGS To 7 P.M.

"THE
FRIENDLY BANK"

LIGHTNING
ROD MUTUAL
INSURANCE
COMPANY

three other unions, tile United Steel Workers, AmAlgatnet.il
Clothing W&lt;rken and Amaigiiiiiited Meat Qllterl and
Butcher W«lallen of North America, readied a truck convoy
to carry food to miners in aouthem Dllnola.
"Labor owes the miners aome IICIUM'e meals," said UAW
ret~lmal director Robert Jmnaon.
In Ohio, UAW official Bob Hammons lx'ought ..,,000 In cub
and a van loaded wlfll clothing and food to IJMW headquarters
in OUles Bottom, f« dlatribution to striking miners and their
famlliiS.
Loasesln the coal·strlkeaoared ominously - $311.4 million In
tax revenues and $U billion In grou proouct for Willi
Virginia; 30 m«e days of IUIPtJided air quality standarda for
Ohio; 28.8 rnilllon tons in overall coal procmction, and layolfs
and power curtailments throughout the Midwest.
U.S. Steel Corp. - tile nation's largest producer - said It
wW Iring to 1,210 the IIIIDber d W«kers furloughed at Its
C!alrlon coke w&lt;rks near Pittsburgh by the end d. nul week.
'llle steelmaker already has laid off BOO at the ))ll!nt.
General Motors decreed a one-day layoff Monday lor 1,170
w«kers at its Delco Remy plant at Anderson, Ind.

set
Vandalism Luncheon
POMEROY -Meigs County
Retired Teachers Association
meet for a luncheon at
complaints Meigs
Inn, 12:30 p.m.
Saturday,
Raipn Walker, Logan,
are probed president
of the Ohio Retired

Hospital News
Veteraos Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Charles
Bailey , Pomeroy ; Robert
Wood, Long Bottom; Cora
Hilton, !'ortland; Mary
Klein, Minersvllle ; Owen
Watson, Racine ; Nancy
Neutzling, Syracuse ; Ina
Kautz, Pomeroy; Lela
Forrest, Rutland ; Bertha
Smith, Reedsville; Dorotha
McKenzie, Pomeroy; l.oulae
Eshelman, Pomeroy; Freda
Carsey, Pomeroy ; Sharon
Smith, Pomeroy; Kathleen
Counts, Syracuse.
.
DISCHARGED - Mildred
Roush , Sherry Neutzllng,
Erma Wilson, Reginald Hill.

will
the

Meigs County Sheriff Teachers Association, will be
James J . Proffitt reports his the guest speaker and will
office is investigating two discuss three bills introduced
vandalism complaints. The into the Ohio · Legislature
first was received Saturday relatives to pensions. They
from Delbert Lawson, Port· are H. B. 220, H. B. 387, and
land. He reported his tractor H. B. 589. The latter bill is a
had
been
vandalized catch-up bill introdu&lt;'ed by
sometime during the past lew Rep. Ron James. All retired
months. The tractor was teachers are urged to attend
parked on the Clarence the meeting. Reservations
Proffitt property at Portland. are to be telephoned to Mrs.
Damages were estimated at Patrick Lochary, Pomeroy
before Thursday.
$2,000.
The secpnd vandalism
report was received Sunday
from Jim Woodyard, RD
Pomeroy (Gun Club Road).
He reported sometime
SQUAD RUNS
Saturday night or early
'llle Pomeroy Emergency
Sunday morning someone
had .scattered nails in his Squad was called to Pleasant
Ridge at 2:30 p.m. Monday
driveway and also had
lor
Dorolha McKenzie, a
damaged his mailbox. Both
police
department dispat·
incidents are under in·
cher.
vest iation.
Mrs. McKenzie was
wor[&lt;ing with one of the
family horses when she
became entangled In some
garden hos~. She was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
A fla sh·flood watch is in with a possible leg fracture
effect. Variable cloudiness and was admitted.
with ahowers this afternoon.
At 6:42 a.m. Tuesday, the
Windy with highs between 55 squad went to 104 Union Ave.,
and 60. Cooler tonight and fQr Evelyn Landers, who was
Wednesday with showers having difficulty breaflling,
tonight, . turning to snow She was also taken to
nurries Wednesday. · ·
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

RIVER RISES
CINCINNATI (UP!) -The
slowly rising Ohio River is
expected to crest about five
feet below the 52-loot flood
stage in Cincirulati later this
week .
Rain is expected Tuesday
;md a long, heavy rainfall
collid push the river closer to
flood stage than ;mtlcipated.
However, if the rainfall Is
moderate, weather
forecasters expect the river
Ill crest at 47 feet by
Wednesday.
Melting snow and rain
during the weekend raised
the river about 15 feet. The
water level reached 42 feet
Monday · morning and
continued to cnmb slowly
throughout the day.

Weather

---------------------------1

ROADS CLOSED
According to the Gallla·
Meigs Post State Highway
Patrol live state highways in
I
~
1 the 1\lelgs-&lt;lallla area were
ROLAND TERRIL
Florida; three sisters, Esther closed today because of high
Roland Calvin Terril, 78, of. Encino, Calif.; Marie and water. Closed In Meigs
112 Brick St., Pomeroy, died Kathryn, both of Columbus County were SR 681 east and
Monday at Holzer Medical and a number of nieces and west of US 33 and SR 124 at
Langsville.
Center.
nephews.
Closed In Gallia County
He . was a son of the late
Mr. Terrllwasamemberof
were
SR 554 west of Cheahire;
James and Lazetta Smith Aerie 2171, Fraternal Order
SR 141 west of Cadmus · and
Terrill. His wile, Clytie, also of Eagles.
Funeral services will be SR 218 near SR 553.
preceded him in death.
Mr. Terril is survived by a held at 1 p.m. ThUrsday at the
daughter, Betty Whitstine, Ewing Funeral Home with
NOW YOU KNOW
Columbus; two grand· the Rev. John McArthur
Two women, a Russian and
children, Sheila Mlller, officiating. Burial will be In an Austrian, each have given
Gambier, and Ronald Cowan, Beech Grove Cemetery. birth to 69 children - neither
Middleport; four grand- Friends may call at the woman ever gave blrth to less
children; two brothers, Zern funeral home at any time Ulan two chUdren in one
of Canton and Jimmy, after 7 this evening.
confinement.

! · Area Deaths

!

Davis Insurance Agency
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Fedelal Deposit Insurance r.~~rporation

"Across from the Court House"
Pomeroy, Ohio

EXTENDED OUTLOOK ,
Thuraday through

..

Cold with hlgllt In the 30s

.c: ~.

time took 10 days .
They predicted a vote as

early as Monday, and
Nicholas Cal]licia, chief .
nego tiator for the coal
operators, sang praises of the
pact .

Excursion boat
part of regatta

'

·

en tine
PR ICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY. MARCH 15, 1978

"We think we have a
package that would be very
good for the union, very good
for the country,' ' he said .
more to the miners than the
one they rejected in their last
ratification vote, but a few
volatile issues remain.
The new contract lowers,
but dues not elimina te, the

deductible amount miners
must pay for health care,
always free before.
"Miners aren 't interested
in makin~ some insurance

·

United PriSR International
HINCKLEY, OHIO - MANY LEGENDS have been
offered through the years Ill explain why a nock of buzzards
returns to their little commu, lily each March 15.
Regardless of the reason, thousands of tllurists were
eXpected to flock today Ill the town southwest of Cleveland,
awaiting the return of the birds on the Ides of March.
According to one tale, early settlers held "The Great Hinckley
HIJ!ltof 1818," in which they surrounded the area and drove all
the wild game toward the middle of town for slaughter. The
mass slaughter attracted the turkey buzzards and they've
returned ever since.

t 0 cresl

on· Fn·da.·y

According to a . report
received Tuesday afternoon
by Pom.eroy Police, the Ohio
River is expected to flood into
Pomeroy's main street.
A spo kesman for the
National Wea th er Bureau
reported t he river will crest
at 1 p.m. Friday in Pomeroy
at 49 feet , 2.5 feet above flood
stage .
High water wa s caused by

heavy melting snow and
recent rains. The amount of

water will aloo depend a
great deal on weather con· .

ditions.
Water was over the road at
Burlingham at noon Tuesday.
Meigs'
highwa Ys
remaining closed due to high
water were SR 124 at Longsville and SR 681 east and west
of Darwin.
In Gallia County ; SR 554
west of Cheahire, SR 325 east
and west of Vinton, SR 141 at
Cadmus and SR 218 were
closed due to high wa[er .
A revised crest figure of
47.2 feet was given today
for the Ohio River to crest
at Pon;aeroy. Earlier, the

figure had been placed at
49 feet. The river Is expeeled to crest at 10 a.m.
Friday.

1

.•

be

It would all ow co ul.
operators to offer , on a loca l

More acceptable , perhaps,

option basis, incentive pay

are elimination of penalties
coal operators would have
been allowed Ill levy against
pickets during wildcat strikes
under the rejected contract,
and an increase in pension
benefits lor miners who
retired before the 1974

for coal production above a

will

But the pact holds one

selected target .
" If they have a n in cenli've

clause, the newspapers will
have disa ste rs

to write

about, " said Lamb.
Ohio local. president Ken
Conaway agreed .
"It is just normal lor a guy

to want to grab a few extra

bu cks If th ey huve the
opportunity to make it," he
said . " It will meun more
injuries ami nwrc fataliti e·s
because mirie r::; wouid be

getting paid to take an e~trn
chance ."
·
For nil th e negative
reactiun , 1rmny miners -·
Hnticipaling an end to the
strike - Hlr~udy we re
countin ~ paychecks to comt!.
" '11w rirstthing we 'U dO is
pay some bills , said Muric
Rarnctt , Wife of a Wc~ t

(Contin ued on page 10)

Coun·cil rushing to capital

.

among the 160,000 striking
miilers, with some in Virginia

for furth er ratif icution
activity:
I
- Thursday : contract ex·
plained to dislrict offici;~ Is in
Waahirtgton.
- Friday: district officials

burning· reports of the settlement. Others in West
Virginia and elsew here
appea red satisfied .
Ca lls
went
out
to pass on· information to
bargaining counc.il members leaders of un ion locals.
immediately after the · --Sa turday: meeting of
announ ceme nt , ordering union local memberships ,
U!em Ill return to .Washington foll owed by mandatory . 4!1'
as soon as possible. It was hour waiting period.
anticipated a meeting would
- Monday: voting.
be held late today .
A union source said the
The cow1cil rejected the UMW
lnt e rn a .l i·onal
first agreement reached by Executive Board may decide
the negotiators last month, to order all ba lloting
U!en approved the second conducted on the same day in
settlement under White light of com plaints that early
House pressure, only Ill see it voting in the three-da y
turned down by a better than balloting last time influenced
2·1
l]larg in
by
the some of the later balloting
membership.·
against ratification.
If quick approval is
UMW general counse l
reached , a union spokesma n Harrison Combs Indicated to
gave the loilowing scenario reporters Tuesday he would

PVH announces
••
new services

Underwriters

Ass n .

presented the program en·
titled "Fa.-n ily Time" a

r evolutionary old idea, by
using slides.
According to Quickel
(Continued on page IQ)

Village balance $50,420.96
$93.49; street maintenance.
,$5,766.55, $6,751.t8, $3,612.68;

POINT PLEASANT, W.
Va . - In keeping with its
policy of offering the best
health ca re available to
residents of

t he

Mason

.'
serv ices. The Home Hea lth
Care proposal also received 11

· recomm e nd atio n for ap-

proval by the West. Virginia
Health

Systems

Agency

County a rea, Pleasant Valley

Home Health Review Task

Hospita l today a nnounced the

Force.

initiatio n of another new
service. Executive Director
major concessions by the
industry - including those James L. Farley received
word from the Governor' s
involving crucial issues of
Office
of Health Affairs that
work stability, pensions, and
new
Pleasant Valley
the
health care.
Hospital
Home
Health Care
In the coalfields, however, ·
proposal
has
been
approved .
early reaction was mixed
In making th e an·

Receipts, disbursements
and the end of the month
fed eral revenue sharin g, no ba lance, of the funds making
receipts, $26.70, $11,385.33 ; up thuse moneys included :
anti..recession assistance, no sa nitary sewer, $3,899 .50,
recei pts, $106.55, $1,225.01. $6,850.35, $26,920.16 ; sanitary
Receipts
totaled $11,474.90 lor se wer escrow, $75, no
CINCINNATI - CINCINNATI' DISTRICT public schools
the
month
while disburse· disbursements, $142.855.09:
may be forced to close for up to 30 days next fall with school
ments totaled $20,019 .34.
water, $6 ,90 3.01, $6,425.69;
olflciala projecting a flO million deficit in the 1978 budget.
Village Council obligated $10,330.70; water meter
A budget appropriation resolution, being considered today
-by the school board's finance eommlttee, outlines about f96.5 m o neys , respe ctively, in· funds remained at $23,361.22 trusts, $175, $75, $7 ,262.30.
' mtillon in expenses against f87.5 mWlon in Income thl.s year. elude: general, $4,339.35, .as of Feb. 28 with no receipts Receipts for the month
'lllat Is a $11.3 rnilllon hike In expenditures, which achool budget $11,717 . 45 , $28 ,633.32; and no disbursements during totaled $11.052.al while
disburs eme nt s
totaled
·directors said Is due to a 6 percent raise in teachers' pay and cemetery, $1,069, $954.78, the month .
$923.58; fire equipment, $300,
The
balance
In
the
$13,351.04.
Inflation.
$441.39, $2,075.32; swimming obligated moneys of Mid·
The total indebtedness of
TtJi.sA, OKLA- A DISTRICf COURT judge has pool, no receipts, $18.29, dleport's Board ol Public th e t ow n amo unts to
''lentenced an 87-year-&lt;&gt;ld woman to threr Y!!RfS in prison and $2,572.23; plannin£ . co m- Affairs as of Feb. 28 was $1,292,531.68, or $465.35 per
mission , no receipts, $3. $t87 ,368.25.
capita .
•
(Oontinued on J)lle luJ
1

think
thi s
acceptable."

agreement.

Crow explained the boat
would arri ve on Friday
even in g, bu t would not
charge for' Yriday&gt;The 5ogr will cost the chamber $1,500 a
d av.
Rides will cost adults $S By DREW VON BERGEN
WASHINGTON (UP[) and children $2.50 . Any
proceeds over the $1,500 The 39-man United Min e
would be divided between the Workers bargaining council
rushed back to the nation's
capital today to vote on the
latest agreement to end the
10\kiay coal strike .
·
Union
leaders
are
hopeful
co uld also be held on the boat.
up
the
Admission to the dance would of speeding
cosl"$15 a cou ple. The dance cumbersom e ratifi c~tion
band is provided by the boa t process, which took nearly \0
owner.
days when it was used two
Power boats will also he weeks ago. Nationwide r;mk
held on Sunday during the and file voting this time could
Regatta, Quickel com· occur as early as Monday.
Bargainers for the UMW
mented, and the Gallipolis
and
Bituminous
Coal
Ski Clu b.
Quickel also reported that Operators Association; who
Shirley
Lewis,
field condu cted talks without
federal mediators since a
representative for Wel come
Wagon, will be present at the Taft-Hartl ey back-towork
chamber's March 21 meeting. order ·was issued Thursday,
Quickel also reported Pat ;mnounced U!e new settlement a t mid-after noon
O'Brien, General Telephone
TUesday.
Co., Jones Boys and Nelson
UMW President Arnold
Drugs are new member s of
Miller and chief Industry
the chamber.
David
Jenkiris,
a negotiator Nicholas. Camicia
representative of the Meigs both expressed hope the new
Co unt y
Jaycees,
told terms would be ratified.
(!We think we have a
member s the Marietta
package
that would be very
Jaycees held "Wackey boat
good
for
the
union, very good
races" and suggested that
for
the
country;''
Carnicia
this might be another ad·
said.
Miller
said
he
thought
dition to Regatta weekend
the
bargaining
council
would ·
which is June 23, 24 and 25. A
.talent night is also hei ng approve the pact.
1'he new docwnent won
plaMed on Thursday ni ght of
immediate prai se from
the Regatta.
Quickel who is a lso President Carter, described
secretary-t reasu r er of the by a spokesm;m as "pleased
;md encouraged."
Meigs·Ga llla· Maso n Life
The pact included several

\

The balance in all ex·
pendable funds of Middleport
Village Council as of !'flb. 28,
totaled $50,420.96, according
to the monthly report of
Village Clerk·Treasurer
Gene Grate.
·Receipts, disbursements
and the balance in ~ach of the
funds making up expendable

rpedical provision . " I don 't

provision U1at could be a nash
point of re jec tion ;.uno ng
safcly-cunsciuus miners.

company rich," said Ohio
UMW officer Bill Lamb of the

The agreement does offer

I,,,N;;;==:~=»=;:~;~=;=:~i;t''·8;i;i;l ohi~e iii~~; ~F{fr§.,~~ ~11!~?~~:::

COLUMBUS- THE OHIO GENERAL Assembly Tuesday
sent to Gov. James A. Rhodes legislation to authorize the
election this year of live new common pleas judges and acted
upon two other bills creating municipal judgeships in Hamilton
an~ Clinton counties.
Given final legislative approval was legislation to add two
·£00UIIon pleas judges in Lake County and create a juvenUe
division of that court.

--- -------·--

Oill, Syraclt'ie Element.Bry .

at y

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

~ ha mpion ;

Tammy Meadows, SouU1ern Junior High; Duniel Weddle, Poll'tlantl ; Leo•

•

e

any better th;m the last one. contra ct so far proposed in
By KENNETH R. CLARK
We 'll probably have to reject the strike was before the
Ualled PriSs lutematlonal
UMW's 39-rn;m bargaining
Negotiators in Washington this one tQo."
In Castlewood, Va ., three council and union lea ders
radiated ·optimism that tlleir
new contract - under angry miners used a match Ill studied ways to speed up the
scrutiny today of the UMW express their opinion of the cumbersome rank and file
bargaining council - will end new pact. Handed a copy of voting process, which last
the l(}(klay old coal strike, press reports on it, they
but reaction was mixed burned them .
''This is no better than the
among rank and file miners
contract we rejected," one of
who stU! must ratify it.
"Fr9m what I can tell, I them said,
Whatever their view of the
think about 75 percent of the
men will endorse it ," said agreement , the 160,000
West Virginia miner Roger striking UMW miners ivere
P, new addition to the anHanunack. "From what I've ' solidly in accord Tuesday on
been told , it looks good Ill ooe point. Reflecting their nual Big Bend Regatta will he
union battle cry of "no the excursion boat, P. A.
me."
"You may as w~ll tell ' contra~t, no work," theY left Denny, a paddle wheeler.
(UMW President) Arnold the coal mines idle in their This was decided at
Miller to stay the hell in second day of defiance of Tuesday's luncheon meeting ·
. Washington," growled Ohio Presid ent · Carter's Taft- of the Pomeroy Chamber of
local officer Rick Stiller. Hartley back-to-work order. Com merce held at lhe Meigs
In Washington, the third Inn .
"This contract doesn't sound .
Bill Quickel, who presided

WILLOUGHBY, OHIO- AN EMERGENCY 6.4-milllevy
designed to run live years and raise o.Uoul $3 rnWion annually
for the WWoughby.Eastlake school district has heen approved
by volers.
Supt. ArthurS. Holloway said the result of Tuesday's vote
w.. 5,234 "lor'' and 5,155 "against ." "We're pleased to be able
to get back to the business of education instead Qf concerning
: ourselves with lhe promotion of levies," said an elated
•. Holloway. ''We just can 'I Jpeak highly enough of the citizens in
the co~unlty who voted to support our efforts."

SlOP IN ON THE FIRST FLOOR - SEE THE EXCEUENT UNE

Rutland ; Jane Manuel, 1.e tart ; Christopher Hobbs, Hacine; Clinton 'l'urrwr,
Salem Center, rurmer.up ; Paulu Swindell , Salisbury, cOlmty

Negotiators radiate optimism over new pact

CLEVELAND- CUYI.:iOGA COUNTY Juvenile Court
Judge Angelo J . Gagliardo has ordered a suburb;m Clevel;md
couple to enroll their chUdren in a sia~hartered, private
Baptist school or face a jail term.
Gagliardo Tuesday suspended a contempt of court
sentence, providing that Thomas W. and .darflla Lippitt place
their two daughters in such a school. Mrs. Uppitt said she and
ber husband would obey the court ruling.

l
!!=~ ---- ~:;_~:m~~ :c;::;j::~ro:!;.:::y ~~:·!

ebaaee ot nurrtes Friday.

Harrisonville; Nick Riggs, Pomeroy Elementary ; back row, Mury Jucubs,

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

ColumbusonMay6.

COLUMBUS - THE OHIO LEGISLA11JRE Tuesday
overrode a gubernatorial veto for the third time this session
and sent to Gov. James A. Rhodes a bill to remove the
requirement that experienced motorcycle operatllrs wear a
safety helmet. ·
The Senate joined the House on a party·line vote to override Rhodes' ,Aug. 30, 1977 veto of legislation to create a 2().
member Ohio Commission on Children. The House voted 64-30
last week to enact the bill over Rhodes' objections that the
proposed commission was costly and ·: ""ecessary and that its
function could be achieved by exi. •.ng state agimcies.

I

TilESE 16 SCHOOL CHAMPIONS vied for Meigs County's champion
speller title at the Southern High School in Racine Tuesday night. They are
front, I tor , Roger Gaul, Eastern Junior High ; Angela Rhodes. Riverview ;
Angie Spencer, TUppers Plains; Ann Diddle, Chester ; Laura Smith, Meigs
Junior High; Tammy Landers , Bradbury ; Sherry Arnold, an alternate.

Meigs County Superintendent of Schools Robert Bowen presents awards to winners of
the annual Meigs County Spelling Bee held at Southern High School Tuesday night .
Receiving the county championship trophy is Paula Swindell, sixth grader at Salisbury
Elementary School and dau~hter of Mr. ;md Mrs. Ned Swindell, Shade and Clinton TUrner, a
sixth grader at Salem Center, received the runner-up trophy.
He Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Roger Turner, Langsville. 'llle
problem word for Turner to end the hour long bee was
"mawkish" with Paula spelling the word correctly and going
ahead to speU the next word "maximwn" correctly.
Pronouncer was Carla Shuler, Southern faculty member and
judges were Tom Kelly, ·Eastern High School; James Diehl,
Meigs High School, and Jim Adams, Southern High School.
Grella Suttle was county chairperson and Russell Moore of
the county office gave the welcome ;md introduced the 16
contestants. Miss Swindell won a traveling plaque for her
school and will represent the county .at the state ~ven t in VOL. XXVIII
NO. 233

nouncement, Farley said,

Coordinator for the Home
Hea lth Services will be
Sandra H. Knotts, R.N., a
.native ol Clay County, West
Virginia and a 1966 graduate
of Charleston General School
of Nursi ng. She comes to·
I;'Ieasa nt Valley Hospital
from Latrobe Area Hospilul
in Latrobe, Pa., where for

Distri ct ,lud gt!

a s k U .S.

Aubrey Robinson Jr. lo
the
(' ll!Tt! nl
restntining order u~ui n s t the
str ike, instea·tl or ~c) ing a heHd
exte nd

with a hearing Friday on u
perman ent 8Cklay injunction .

Middleport
police had
42 arrests
Forty-t wu arr cslS were
11 1/t de by I h" Mi dd leport
l'ol icc Dcpa1tm c n ~ during
F ~ bru u ry , ac&lt;.:t!l·dlng tu ll
rcpuJ1 uf Pulice Chief .J. J .
Crem eu ns.
Eight of the tota t urr csts

were· for speeding, seven for
tlisordcrly murmer und five
fu r co ntributing to the
tlt~linqu cn &lt;.: y

or minors.

'l11crc were two cJ rrcsts
each fur dri ving while inLuxical.cd ; fuilurc to have
vehi cle under control; failu re
to yield the right of· wuy;
Illega l license; llllC each for
ill egal registration ; improper
backing ; running u stop sign;
running tJ red light ; passing
m a no pa ss ing zo ne;
d i;1 u rbin~ the peace; assau lt
and batt ery ; a llowing a dog
· 1o nm loose and fa ilu re to JWY
;:tn old fine~ One c8sc was

transrerrcd to county court
and rour ot hers we re

dismissed.
Parking meter collections

for th e month totaled
$1 ,170.50 and the police in·
vestigat ed 14 traffic accidents.

"This new service will enable
us . to take hea lth ca re
programs into the homes of
Mason Cotinty residents. Our
nurses, therapi sts, and aides,
working under direct orders
of a physician, will treal'the
patient in the home thereby
sa ving him or her the time,
expense and discomfort of a
journey to the hospital lor
minor proced ures.
While approval for the
prog ram has been received ,
and a new coordinator has
been appointed, it will be a
lew weeks before the new
service is operational.
Total cost of the project lor
this year is estimated to be
$56,397. This includes plans

two and a hair years abe was
a team leader for a Home
Health .Ca re Program.
SIGI"·UP SATURDAY
In addition to her ex·
Si gn-up date for those
perience in Home Health, youths wishing to participate
Mrs. Knotts has also been an in the Pomeroy Youth League
' emergency room nurse for summer baseball program
two and a half years and has will he Saturday, March 18 at
worked as an obstetrics, Pomeroy City Hall (upstairs )
·psychiatry and surgica l staff from 10 a.m. to 2 P·'1'· .
nurse .
Registration fees of $6 must
Her husband, Ray Knotts. be submitted.
isagraduateofWest Virginia
University and is with West
Virginia Department of
CENTER CLOSE D
Natural Resources at the
The Meigs County Senior
McClintock Wildlife Station. Citizens Center , E. Main St.,
·The Knotts with their two Pomeroy, will be closed on .
children. Charlotte, 9, and Thur$day a nd Friday due to
Chri•1opher, 6, reside on Mt. high water which will make
Vern on Avenue in Point necessary dlscol)llecting the
for tWo registered nurse, an Pleasant.
furnace located in the
aide, and physical therapy
basement o.f,.the center.

""-

·~

�3- The Daily Sentinel"Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Wednesday, March 15, 1978
2 _ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Wednesday, March 15, 1978

Building better citizens is DeMolay's goal
Building better Citizens out
of teenage boys IS the goal of
the Order of DeMolay, an
Inlerna!Jonal
youth
organization founded on
March 18, 1919, Ill Kansas
C!ly, Missouri , by Frank S
Land and mne teenage boys

The

orgamzat10n

was

named for Jacques DeMolay,
the last Grand Master of the
Knights Templar, who was
burned at the stake by Kmg
Phill ip of France on March
18, 1314, a s a martyr to
loyalty and 1olera1Ion
Today,
members
of
DeMolay stnve to carry on
the line Ideals for which
DeMolay gave hts hie loyalty and service to God
and fellow man
Frank Land served as the
Secretary General
lor
DeMolay unt il his deatti on
NoHmber 8, 1959 By 1920,
the Kansas City Chapter had
grown to 3,000 members, and

own lour-story bu!ldtng m
Kansas City, M1ssoun Under
the guidance of the Grand
Secretary, small office staff
acts as the clerical and admiOIStrauve
group
to
mamtam a central office of
record and prom ote the
growth and development of

the organtzat10n
The youth movement IS
governed by an International
Supreme Council composed
of over 200 outstanding
Masons located around the
world They meet m annual

session to revtew and apo

are sertous and reverent, the
organil.8tlon does not advocate any particular creed,
but teaches only a profound
faith In the one hvtng and true
God
DeMolay has a three-way
program designed to benefit
the mdtvldual DeMolay, the
t hapter, and the commumty
Vanous awards are given
to
mdtvtduals
for
achievement, and Ment Bars
are awarded for dtstmctwn m
CIVIC serviCe, athletiCS ,
muSic, dramatics, rehg10n ,
and other helds Special

recog nition IS g1ven for
brmgmg U1 new members
The Degree of Chevalier IS
the highest honor an ac11ve
DeMolay can receive It IS
earned by outstandmg serVIce In a chapter and to fellow
DeMolays
The top honor In DeMolay
IS the Legwn of Honor This ts
conferred
on
Sentor
DeMolays, over 30, lor outstanding service to their
commuruty and the1r fellow
men
Chapters and mdiVIdual
DeMolays are also requtred

prove the actions of the staff
DeMolay's ntual IS what
sets the orgamzatiOn apart
from other youth groups The
rttual was Written m 1919 by
Frank Marshall, a prominent
Mason and newspaper man m
Kansas City It has been
termed ageless, and as
divided mto the Imuatory and
DeMolay Degrees
The lmllatory Degree IS
chapters were soon mst1tuted
from coast to coast and m ooe of solemmty and consecratiOn, durmg whiCh the
severa l forc1gn countnes
Today there are over 2,300 mlllate dedtcates himself to
active DeMolay chapters and uphold the virtues of IIhal
nearly three miihon boys love, reverence, courtesy,
fldehty,
have taken their obhgalwns comradeship,
cleanness and patnohsm
at the DeMolay altar
The DeMolay Degree is a
DeMolay membership IS
open to any boy of good dramatic and histone porcharacter who 1s between the trayal of the tnals, tortures,
ages of 13 and 21 Although and martyrdom of Jacques
DeMolay chapters are DeMolay, and teaches a
sponsored only by Mas0mc lesson m l!dehly and
bod1es or mdJvidual Masons, comradeship

1t 1s not necessary that a boy
be a son or a relat1ve of a
Mason to belong to DeMolay
The Order of DeMojay IS a
non·proflt corporation with
the
In ternational
Headquarters located m Ils

As the offacers of a

FRANK S, LAND

Repo~
For many months now we
have been hearmg news
reports saymg things like
"The dollar shpped agam m
foretgn money markets m
relation to other CW'renctes
The government mtervened
m mternatwna l exchange
markets to save the falling
dollar " What does this all

mean?

Help signal
simple flag
Motonsts can stgnal need
lor help to pass mg CB eqUipped vehicles With a
Simple highly visible flag
available from the Mmgs
Count) REACT Team
With one m ten vehicles
now able to call for assistance
to REACT volunteers who
monitor CB Emergency
Channel9, use of this flag ca n
bnng help qui ckly The
REACT
member
who
rece1ves the call for help on
his base stauon CB radio,
uses the telephone to notify
the pohce, highway patrol,
auto club, ftre department or
other services
CB'ers who see th1s flag are
requested to call REACT on
Channel 9 and report the
locatiOn and descriptiOn of
the veh1cle 1n distress
Whether or not you have CB
m your car, the REACT
" Help Flag" can be a
valuable aid to have m your

glove compa rtment It can
summon help "hen you most
need It - even 1! your CB
radto 1sn't workmg
To obtain a REACT "Help
Flag" contact any REACT
member or Guy Hysell of the
Meigs REACT team or the
Rutland
Dept
Store,
Evel)n's Grocery or Meigs
Ace Hardware

PAPERS FILED
Articles of mcorporatiOn
have been !tied m Columbus
with Secretary of State Ted
W Brown by Bailey a nd
Osborne Co rporalton of
Pomeroy
James Bailey and Louts
Osborne
are the
Incorporators James Batley,
Rt I, Long Bottom, IS the
agent Papers were filed by
Crow, Crow and Porter of
Pomeroy

People have the power

take part in contest

to help their lives

#

I

ratse money for their activities, and they usually
handle the purchase and
repatr of robes and regaUa
DeMolay pubhshes an
International magaztne
called the CORDON, which
serves as a medium for
distrtbutmg mformallon from
mt ern a tiona! headquarters
and furntshmg tdeas for
chapter activittes
DeMolay does not attempt

to take the place of the borne
or church, but rather to
supplement them
The
orgamzatioo's purpose Is to
offer young men ofloday : (I)
a wholesome occupation for
his spare time; (2) worth·
while assoctates, (3) the best
of environment: and (•) an
mterestmg and complete
program of all-around youth
development.

' M.D.
Lawrence E.Lainb,

Washington

Meigs children will
POMEROY - Children
from 21 spectal classes m
Meigs County are getting
ready
lor
ExceptiOnal
€ h1ldren 's Week by parUcipatmg m a contest to
~es1gn a bumper sticker
based on the week's theme,
Special Kid's Feelmgs
They are Jommg more than
4,500 children throughout
Southeastern OhiO who wlll
have a chance to parttctpate
Ill the contest
Exceptional Children's
Week, which wtll be May 8-12
m Southeastern Ohio, is held
to help p ~omote an understanding and awareness
of the capabilities and
potential of exceptiOnal
children and youth, to mlorm
peopl e of the services
avatlable for these children,
and to develop mterest and
support lor programs and
legislation which Will benefit
these children
Chtldren are categonzed as
excepttonal 1! they are
VIsually Impaired, hearmg
lOlpaired, learning disabled,
crippled, mentally retarded,
emotionally disturbed,
speech or language llllpairOd,
or talented and gifted
"We wanted
to do
somethmg to call attention to
the special qualittes of these
children," said Maxine Kolb,
chatrperson of the excepllonal children's week
plannmg committee, The
bumper stickers will give
people a chance to see what
these children can do and get
the children more mvolved m
the week's activittes.
The con lest IS bemg
sponsored by Chapter 718 of
the Council for Exceptional
Children
(CEC).
a
professional organization lor
persons who teach spectal

IS concerned wtth cleantng up
our env•ronment and makmg
our world a better place to
live
Each chapter IS supervised
m all of tts functwns by an
adult advisory council One
man 1s destgnated as the
official " Chapter Dad" to
handle the supervisiOn of
chapter meetmgs and to
counsel the members
Another helpmg hand for
most chapters IS the Mothers'
Clubs These now number
over 2,000 The Mothers'
Clubs prunartly help the boys

HEALTH

chapter,

young men are taught
responslbthty and given the
opportunity to express
themselves before a group of
their fellows
Although
DeMolay ntual and meetmgs

to observe certam obligatory
days annually to recogmze
and pay trtbute to the public
schools, the less fortunate,
patnots of the country,
parent s, one's rehgtous fatth,
the government and the
Founder of DeMolay
Anti•drug and ecology
programs, lund drives lor
chanty, blood donations,
CIVIC serv1ce, and safe dnver
programs are JUst a few of
the worthwhile efforts
camed out by the young men
m
mdividual DeMolay
chapters Currently DeMolay

children or work m a closely
Men and women m Meigs
associated held Chapter 778
IS open to people m Athens, county have the power to help
Galha, Hocking, Jackson, save their lives from one of
Me1gs, Monroe, Morgan , the most common forms of
Perry,
VInton,
and cancer - 1f they want to use
II.
Washmgton Counties
" It IS up to the public, the
Schools and 169 programs
potential
patients, to learn
In the 27 dtstncts from whtch
lacls
about colorectal
the
the local CEC draws Its
membership will have their (colon and rectum) cancer, to
exceptional children submit take advantage of dtagnostic
designs to the CEC by March tests that are available," S
22 A panel of judges wtll Michael, pubhc mlormat10n
chose a wmner from the chatrman, satd Ha nd to
primary grades, preschool to understand the Importance of
s tgnals
The
sixth grade, and a winner warmng
possibility
of
savtng
hves
from the secondary level,
from colo..rectal cancer ts
seventh to twelfth grades
One of these two destgns will among the highest for any
be chosen t he grand priZe type of cancer provtded that
wmner and be prmted lor the disease ts dtagnosed m an
dlstnbutton dunng Ex- early stage Today, more
cepuonal Children's week than ever, medical science ts
Proceeds from the sale of able to do that, but, we need
awareness
and
the bumper sticker will be public
cooper
alton,"
used lor prtzes lor the wtnThe most common mrung prllllary and secondary
ternal
ca ncer,
col o·
entrants
and
their
rectal
ca
ncer
,
occurs
classmates A field trip to the
zoo IS planned for the younger almost equally m men and
children The secondary women, and usually after the
wtnner and his classmates age of &gt;W It wiU stril!e some
will recetve a cash award to 101,000 Amencans !hts year
spend as they chose One and IS the number two cancer
entry from each district wtll killer. Currently there Is
be chosen for honorable research speculation that
mentton, and all parttctpants dietary hablts may have an'
influence on the development
will recetve certiftcates
Other activiltes planned of colorectal cancer, because
dunng
Exceptional it Is a disease of highly urban
Children's week are an open nations such as the U S
Begmg an AmeriCan over
house at the Southeastern
40
means that one IS at nsk of
Ohio Special Education
Regwnal Resource Center colorectal cancer but the riSk
and an awards banquet IS higher if there IS a history
sponsored by Chapter 778 of of polyps ( bemgh growths) Ill
the CEC where the Lyle Leh· the family, or if an indiVIdual
bas had ulcerative colitiS for
man award will be presented
years
many
This award ts presented
The
colon
(or large bowel)
annually to an educator m the
and
rectum
form the lower
reg1on for thetr contribution
end
of
the
digestiVe
tract and
to special ~ducation
this great length of tissue IS
comprised of rrulhony of cells

These cells are always
dividtn g
to
replace
themselves but sometimes,
the reproduction goes out of
control and excessive tlssue
forms a polyp This polyp,
while It usually IS not
cancerous,
should
be
removed and exam med
~der a microscope, because
that IS the only pos1hve way
to make a diagnosts
Most bowel cancers occur
m the lower portiOn of the
colon and this means that
they can be seen when a
tramed physiCian mserts a
lighted tube Into the body
This mstrument ts called a
proctosigmOidoscope and the
exammahon IS popularly
called "a procto "
"Many
people
are
embarrassed to have tlns
exarrunation, but if they fall
to do so, they mtght literally
be embarrassed to death
Doctors can see early
cancers using the scope and
that can save hves, states S.
Michael
Blood m the stool ts a
warnmg stgnal tnat may
mean colorectal cancer.
"That can lead to some
confuston,tt
she
satd,
·"because bJeedmg 1s also a
stgn
of
hemorrhotds
Hemorrhmds are common
and they do cause bleeding,
but the cancer might also be
present, so It's unportant to
brmg rectal bleeding or blood
m the stool to the attention of
a phystctan."
A new test has been
developed whtch can be
performed ln the privacy of
one's bathroom "It IS caUed
a do-it-yourself guaiac test,
and, everyone 10 Metgs
county should ask his or ber
physician about II ," Mtchael

satd

It means that compared
wllh foretgn money , the
dollar IS worth less than It
used to be For example, m
1970 one dollar would buy
over 3lf.~: West German
marks Today tl ts worth only
2 marks In fact, lor more
than a year, the dollar has
continued to fall to record
lows against almost all maJor
curre ncies m Western
Europe and Japan,
In the short run, the falling
dollar helps make U S
products cheaper m other
countrtes and unported goods
more expensiVe m Amenca
In theory, at least, thiS should
help reduce our current trade
dehctt However , If left
unchecked, the depreciallon
of the dollar has enormous
tmphcahons on our own
sta ndard of livmg as well as
the world economy,
For example, the OPEC
nattons left holdmg shrmking
dollars eventually are gomg
to feel short changed and lie
forced to raise the price of oil
they sell the U S Smce the
dollar ts the world's key
tradmg currency, 1t ts
Important tt mamtam a
stable and consistent value H
Itfluctuates widely,
uncertamty among trading
partners could result in
tanffs, unport quotas, and
other trade barrters
One reason often gtven for
the dollar criSIS IS Amertca 's
unfavorable balance of trade.
The tdea IS that lf we spend
billiOns of dollars more
overseas then foretgners are
spendmg here m the U S.,
lor high exchange markets
wtll be flooded wtth Amertcan
dollars, causmg a declme in
their value In 1977 our
unports rose by 22 percent
while exports mcreased by
only 4 6 percent, resulting m
a record trade deftctt of
around $28 billion This
lfllbalance was caused m
large part by our growmg
dependence on foretgn oil
unport.s which have soared
from $25 btllton 1n 1975 to $44
billion m 1977
There ts no questwn that
the U S must get sertous
about this situation and
develop an energy prorgram
which maxuntzes the supply

By ClaFence

say"
Luther and hts wife hve m a
rough-boarded home up
"Bear Hollow,'' about a
quarter of a mile up a
washed'Out mud road from
I

in fare I ion '1

Miller
of Amertcan produced energy
while stemmmg wasteful
consumption I have spoken
on this subject for many
years now and I wtll continue
to work m Congress toward
the
goal
of
energyIndependence from foreign
soun.-es For the most part,
the President's ongmal
energ y package did not
adequately address tl self to
this goal and that ts one ofthe
mam reasons it has had such
a rough time m Congress
If we unported less foretgn
ml, we would be better off m
many ways However, It will
take years for the U S. to cut
otl unports, even wtth the
best of energy btlls. Thts
problem dtd not arnve
overntght. Furthermore,
even tf our Oillfllports had not
mcreased over the past few
years,

tl

IS

estimated we

would sttll have a masstve
trade deficit because of
declmmg exports.
There
ts
a
more
fundamental problem
causmg the dollar to declme
m value mflat10n The dollar
Is worth less abroad because
11 ts worth less at home .
InflatiOn cuts the purchasmg
power of the dollar, reqUiring
more of them to buy the same
amount of gooda The dollar
Is declmmg m value because
our goverrunent Is creating
dollars at a rate faster than
our economy can absorb
them
The value of a currency of a
country IS a good mdication of
the state of that natiOn's
economy The dollar cmts
abroad
md1cates
that
mternabonal fmance experts
a nd our foretgn tradmg
partners
have
little
confidence tn our economic
policies The mllatiOn rate IS
gomg down m Japan, Great
Bntam, and Germany - but
continues to nse m the U S
Yet the Admmtstratton
contmues to project growing
federal budget dehctts,
causmg a rise m taxes,
consumer
prices,
and
government borrowmg
One of the principle causes
for !bog-term mllalwn ts the
large , persistent federal
dehctts finances mamly
through goverpment
sponsored money creahon.
Unless the Admuustratton
and Congress choose to
confront thts factor head on
by cutting government
spendmg and balancmg the
budget, there Wlll be no
permanent solution to the
doiJar crisis We cannot
expect a stable dollar abroad
unttl we stab!ltze at at home

Folks in this hollow
just call him Arnold
By ANDREW GALLAGER
OHLEY, W Va (UPI ) Folks Just call hlm ",! Jnold"
Ill this hollow, and they were
glad to hear that the Umted
Mme Workers president had
another contract to offer.
But Arnold Miller's neighbors won't exactly be bangmg
on doors to sell the Idea to
anyone
" If they don't gel what they
want, they ought to keep
rejectmg It till they do," said
Zonar Slater, 71
Her husband, Luther, 79,
dtdn't know much about the
last contract, but In 58 years
m the UMW, 32 of them as an
underground mmer, Slater
has never seen locals so
determined
" I never saw t! under John
L Lewts," satd Slater 11 The
locals never had anything to

Whal is an

where Miller calls home
At the Slaters, he's known
as "Arnold''
A hot coal ftre burned m the

livmg room, em•ttmg a warm
glow as the old man sat m a
chatr to absorb the heat. HIS
wife, her hatr a steely gray,
rested near hun Children
and grandchildren walked m
and out during the Interview
Slater lost his $225 penston
last month because of
mass ive cutbacks m the
UMW Health and Retirement
Funds. He still pays $2 50 a
month umon dues
" I just let 11 go," he said
through a toothless grln.
But he questions the
disappearance of $175 mtllion
that was supposed to have
been 10 the pension fund
" I don't blame the
miners," Mrs. Slater said
"I'd stay out ttl! I got the
contract I wanted "
Without the pensiOn check,
Mrs. Slater satd it's been
hard to make ends meet,
especially smce she cares for

DEAR DR LAMB - Can
you explam to me what a
''bratn stemmfarct1on'' IS 1
DEAR READER - lnlarctwn mearly means death of
ttssue A myocardial tnfare!Ion means death of myocardial (heart muscle) llssue An
mlarct of the ktdney IS death
of some kidney tiSsue while
an mfarct of the bram means
death of bram tissue
Your brain IS literally a
rounded organ hke a small
pumpkm It Is connected to
your body through many
complex nerve fibers like a
g1ant mass of electr)(~al
wtres The areas for different
function trl lht! bram are connected to these wtres The
wtres all converge and even
cross over each other, hterally commg together as a gmnt
electncal table thai runs on
as the spmal cord The lower
part of the bram that connects to the spmal cord Is
"stem-like" m shape and IS
called the "bram stem "
This area has the mam
nerve tracts to the body and
specialized tenters that affect movement of the tongue,
and mouth If an artery that
supplies blood to thts area ts
plugged so there IS not
enoug h c trculatwn to the area
1t may cause the nerve tissue
there to die or mfarct Thts ts
a st1 oke, m plain language
The relmement of the term to
say 1t IS a " bram stem mfarctwn" simply tells
'' the
at ea mvolved
To put the whole co1, f r
to perspective I am ,:,r•ndiJ
you the Health Leiter numb&lt;
2·5,
Strokes, C :• t--.;~ral
Vascular Acc1dent-Cerebral
ThromboSis Others who
wi:lnt tht!i mfunnatwn can
send 50 cents With a long,
sta mped , se lf-addressed
envelope for II to me 10 care
of lhts newspape1, P 0. Box
1551, Radto City StatiOn, New
York, NY 10019

DEAR DR LAMB - Nme
years ago I had a complete
hysterectomy a nd the
surgeon tben told me that I
would have to take estrogen
daily lor the rest of my hfe
Th1s surgeon has s mce
retired and the doctor I saw
last fall said l shouldn't be
needmg this mediCation any
more and should taper off usmg 11 I haven't taken any for
four months and am most
rruserable with hot flashes
When ovartes are removed,
whtch supply the body With
necessary hormones,
shouldn't these be supplied by
other means? In your opmton
h ow
dangerous
are
estrogens' I'm 62 years old
DEAR READER - Each
case has to be mdtvtdualized
Some women produte enough
estrogens from the adrenal
gland after the ovaries are
removed, or have fatled from
menopause, to have few If
any d!ffiCulltes Other women
dono!
At least m your case one of
the worriSome posstbihbes,
cancer of the uterus, has been
removed All that ts left m
terms of cancer IS the q~es­
twn about breast canL&gt;er, and
if you don't have any breast
disease II ls not hkely to be a
factor there etther. Actually
female
hormones may
decrease lung cancer and
decrease other diseases So tl
IS not a yes or no SJ!uatton
Whalts left then are quesltons about mcreased tendency to form blood clots, a lew
people who develop high
blood pressure with female
hormones and s1m1lar problems. The blood clot problem can be solved by taking
small amounts of anttdottmg med1cmes The other
rare Ind!Vtduals who develop
high blood pressure probably
should
avoid hormone
therapy Thai leaves a lot of
women who could take hormones under careful superviSion and do so wtth unproved
health and safety

Legislature at a glance
COL UMBUS (UP I) - H ere tS
a glance at act•v tv Tuesday 1n
the Ohro Genend Assembly

SENATE
Btlls Introduced
SB 454 Freeman Requires

court

heanngs on

voluntary

d iScha r ges trom hOspttals of
persons mvoluntanlv commit
ted for menta l rllness
SB .455, Meshel Defers until

after an nvestlgatlon Is com
pl e ted the passthrough to
res1dent1al customers of the
cost of purchased power
Senate
Concurs '"
House
Amendments
Am SB 69, Speck Enters
Oh10 .n Interstate Mmmg
Compact 31 0
Sub SB 290 Schwarzwalder
Re11 1ses procedures n the small
cla1ms d1V1S10n of municipal
and county courts 32 0
B1lls Paned
Am SB 425, Meshel Clarifies
licensure of schools offering
dr.ver tram1ng programs for
hand• capped persons 32 0
Am SUb HB 7'2{1 WilkOWSki
Crea tes a fullt1me 1udge for the
Bowlmg Green M un 1cipa l
Court 32 0
Governor 's Veto Overridden
Am HB 502, Panehal Esta
bl1shes a comm1SS10n on Chll
dren's serv1ces 20 12

HOUSE

Bills Introduced
H 8 1149 Zehner Clarifies
what determ1nes a person's
parry membership for purposes
of S1gnmg c.!!lnd•d&amp;cy pet1tlons
HB 1150 S Brown Requires
occupatlonall•censmg boards to
have a ma1onty of public
members
Requires
HB 1151. Htn10
county taw library trustees to
t 1x the com pensation to libra•

one of her 10 children and a
granddaughter They get
Social Securtty checks of $2.a
and $103.
"It's hard to live wltbout
It," she sa1d "I was used to
tt. It's tough "
Gaztng mto the red coals of
the ftreplace, she added1
"Money ain't everything
You can't take money and
buy health. You can't take
money and buy love."
Still, the Staters are able to
adjust.
"We makmg some debts to
get to pay when they go
back," she satd, "mostly on
food and medicine and things
like that."
-1

ans end t he•r aSSIStants
HB 1152, L Brown ldent1f 1es
commun1ty health centers as a
separate category of medtcal
care providers under the
Medtcatd program
HB 1153, L Brown Requ~res
pledge of allegiance be rec1ted
dally In public schools
HB
1154,
J
Thompson
Prov1des for wa1vlng dri11er
license suspensions
HB
1155, J
Thompson
Requ•res tenant representatiOn
on metropot•tan hous•ng au
thorlty
HB 1156, Fauver Perm1ts
regiona l water and sewer
districts to retain financial or
accounttng consultants
House Concurs In
Senate
Am,ndments
Am
H B 115,
Tranter
Remo11es requirement for mo
torcycle and snowmobile opera
tors to wear a l'letm.et 63 8
Am HB 246, E Hughes Adds
two ludges to the Lake county
Common Plees Court and
creates a 1uven1le division and
adds one 1udge to the court of
common plees In Greene,
Ashtabula and Silndusky coun
toes 88 2
Bills Passed
Am H B 983, McLm Allows a
liquor perm•t to be transferred
wh1le the permit Is kept by the
l1quor control department 68
11

Sub HB 605, Fnes PrOh ibits
tampermg with utility meters
and theft of services 87 2
Sub H B 422, Lehman Cre
ates three tulltlme iudoeshlps
1n Hamilton county Mun•clpal
court 90 1
Sub
H B 1032, Branstool
Requires tax commissioner to
furmsh personal •ncome tax
information to welfare depart
ment 72 18
Am Sub SB 282, Celebrerze
Requires boards of Pducatlon t()
keep and report pupil lmmunl
zat1on rKo,ds 07 21

Conferees Ap"lnttd
Am HB 655, Healy Sets
meeting
dates for
county
central committee of major
political parties Healy, Camera
and Norris

GAME SATURDAY
A donkey basketball game
will be played at Eastern
High School, 7: 30 p.m .
Saturday. Faculty will play
students.
Advance admissions are ,1,25 for
students and 50 for adults,
with an additional 25 cent
dlal'l!e on bolh tickets at
door , Sponsors are BOE
students

'I

"

Weston heads Class A squad
COLUMBUS ( UP!) Ridgedale's Brad Weston, a
ball-hawkmg 6 - 2 seniOr
guard, has been selected the
Uruted Press International
Class A player of the year,
the second m his family to

Tri-County
Sport
Shop
• Fishing Tackle
and Rod s
and Ree ls
• Guns and
Reloadmg
e Ball Glove s
Campmg
Equ1pment
• Archery
• Indoor Games
• We
have G1fl
Cert1f1cate s

wm the honor
Weston, whose brother,
Dan, was the 1971 A player of
the year , led Ridgedale to a
19-2 record this year,
averagmg 21 pomts and eight
assists per game Another of
his brothers, Randv, was a
second team AU-Ohio chotce
two years ago,
Named to thJS year's first
team along with Weston were
Tom Miz1ker of Guernsey
Catholic, Indian Valley
South' s Larry Huggms,
whose brother, Bob, also IS a
former UPI Class A player of
the year, Leo Brown of
Mansfield St Peter's and
Baxter Jones of Wmdham
"He's as outstandmg a
player as we've ever had/'
satd Ridgedale Coach Dan
"He has the
Wendell
capabilities of controlling the
game He not only does things

for himself, but lor tbe other
people"
Weston, who averaged 15
pom ts per game as a
sophomore as Wendell's sixth
man and 22 4 per game as a
Juruor, also excells m the
classroom, rankmg etghth Ill
a claS$ of 100 with a 3 6 grade
3verage
~~ Brad ' s out of season
efforts make his awards
deserving," said Wendell
" There isn '! a harder worker
than Brad. He's the type of
person who doesn't let things
go to hiS head He's the same
now as he was as a
sophomore He's the k'md of
kid who makes coaching a
real treat "
Ridgedale had a 60-7 record
durmg the three years
Weston played for the
Rockets He shot 52 percent
from the floor this year 73

percent from the f•ee throw
line and came up wtth H
steals or loose balls a
game
MWker, a 8-4 seruor, W8.9
the top scorer on the three allstate teams, averaging 30 7
potnts per game
The 6-2 Huggins, the last of
the sons of IVS Coach Charlie
Huggms, averaged 20.2 ponts
per game in leadmg the
Rebels back to the State
Tournament semi.ftnals for
the stxth time m !be last
seven years Brother Harry
was a first team ail-stater for
two years
Brown, St . Pete's 6-8
center, averaged 16 potnts
per game to pace the
Spartans to a return lrtp to
the state Tournament, while
Jones, a 6-3 semor, was the
leading scorer on Windham's
unbeaten team wtth a 19 per

game average
Brown and Huggms , both
juruors, will he gmng head-tohead m the openmg game of
the Class A Tournament
Thursday mght when thetr
teanJS Jlleet.
The second team was a
higher scormg urut than the
first, paced by Newark C&amp;thohc's 6-1 Dmo Guanctale's 28
per game average
Clay Dill of LaGrange Keystone was close behind at
27 9, followed by John
Boeckman of Ft Loramie at
24 I, Joe Bratdic of Sebnng at
24 and Mike &amp;hrmdt of
Covmgton at 2l2
Selected to !be third team
were Jeff Rupp of Norwayne ,
Stan Mories of Card ingtonLmcoln, Steve Burns of
Edgerton, Doug Hale of Oak
Hill and Carl Wood of
Batavia

601 Mam St.
Pt. Pleasant , W Va .

VISA"
Acrossffom Courthouse

PHONE

675 2988
Open Sunday 1- p m 6P m
Monday thru Saturday
9amto8pm

rebounds m lifting Central
State to a 7~ NAIA firstround tournament Vlctory
over loth seeded Hampton
"I don't thmk Steve knows
how good he can be yet," said
Wuns "He miSsed all of his
sophomore season and 80
percent of last year wtth
mjuries He's a semor, but
expene nce-w1se Steve
actually is just a sophomore
He's super quick and has a
great shootmg touch. He's

ACE
HARDWARE
A ce

I!&gt;

the place W'lth

sttll gettmg hts conftdence
back"
In the summer between
Bayless' freshman and
sophomore years, his nght
loot was crushed by a pickup
truck while he was working
lor the Ohto State Highway
Department. Bayless
returned for five games
mtdway through that season,
but was low-bridged on a
layup agamst Kentucky State
and suffered an mjury to hts
left knee. That put him out for
the remamder of the
season.
The knee did not respond to
treatment the following year,
swellmg at times throughout
the season, to prevent the
Xema, Ohio, native from
performmg at full strength
Bayless'
personal
rehabilitation program last
swruner prepared him for a
semor season that saw hlm
average a team-leadin~ ~5.6
pomts and 9. 7 rebounds He
was the key tn a 17alR &lt;;;:pjU;rm

th e Helpful Hardwarf.' Man ®

&amp;CAQQL

50-ft. Powr-Center

for

CORD

ON
562)
( 31478

MARCH!
use w1th

TOOLS
APPLIANCES
ELECTRIC MOTORS

• Br~ghl orange
for high
VISlbtiJty.
• 3 wtre

grounded
• 3 grounded
Powr-Center

Lum and Foster
•

spark Reds wrn
By FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
George
Foster,
the
pleasant chap who swlngs
that nasty-lookmR black bat
for the CIDCUUlati Reds, IS
ready to hear the cry to play
baseball.
The Nattonal League's
most valuable player m 1977,
Foster IS regarded as a
posstble threat to Hack
Wilson's league mark of 56
homers m one season or
Roger Maris' maJor league
mark of 61.
Foster's 1977 credentials a ,320 batting average, 52
homers and 149 runs batted ln
- support the belief that he
could do either or both He
showedTuesdaybe'sready
start the season right now
wtth three homers and a
double ,in the Reds' 11-10
vtctory over the St. LouiS
Cardinals.
For all Foster's slugging,
however, a two~wt homer by
Mtke Lwn m the runth IDIUng
gave the Reds their wmrung
margtn after the cardinals
took a I0-9lead with six runs
ln thetr hall of the ummg,
Elsewhere on th11 Citrus
and Cactus circuits:
Mark Fldrych allowed
three hits and one run in three
innings as the Detroit Tigers

w

outlets

Ace Reg.

$924

HANDY, SAFE,

EASY TO STORE

MEIGS PLA

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NOTICE NEW HOURS
Due To The Coal Shorta~ Open Mon. thru Sat. 9 til 6 Closed sun1dllys'

NEWSPAPER
CARRIER
WANTED
FOR MIDDLEPORT AREA

The

19 71
Un 1t ed
Pres s
In
ternatlona l Class A All Oh10
Basket ball
Team
(wtth
hc ~ ght
g rad e and scor •ng
a verage )

FIRST TEAM
Brad Weston , R1dgeda le 6
2Sr . 210
Tom M1 z1ker , Guern se y
Ca tholic , 6 4 Sr , JO 7
L arr y Hugg 1ns
lnd1CJn
Va lley Sou th , 6 2, Jr , 20 7
Leo Brow n, ~ nst !el d St
Peter 's. 6 8 Jr , 16 0
Bax ter Jones, Wmd ham 6
3 Sr , 19 0

SECOND TEAM
Joe Bra idle

Sebn ng

6J

Sr , 24 0

Dn1o Gua nc1ale Newark
Cath oli c. 6 1 Sr • 18 0
M1ke Schm tdl Covington ,
6 41 Jr , 1:J2
Clay
011 1.
L aG r ang e
Key s t on e, 6 3 Sr '17 9
J o hn
B oe ckman .
Ft
Loram1 e. 6 4, Sr • 24 I

THIRD TEAM

Stan Mones, Card ington
Lin col n, 6 5, Sr , 23 0

that brought Central State
back to Kansas City lor a
third stratght year .
"I had a pretty good
freshman year, but I was too
fast for myself," explamed
Bayless "The InJUries have
reduced some of my speed.
Now I'm qutck, but not that
fast. I may bave lost a step 10
overall speed, but my general
qmckness ts still there.
"I dldn 'I need to prove
thmgs to people thts season, I
needed to prove somethmg to
myself. I averaged 15 potnts
and rune rebounds and that's
all rtght. In our team play
concept, that's about the best
one player can do, But I know
I can do better Hopefully,
I've got four games left to
prove myself out "
Central State, a loser m the
ftrst round m each of Its last
two NAJA tournament appea rances, m et Westmont
(calif ) today m a secondround game

defeated the Philadelphia
Pbilltes, 8-3 Phil Mankowski
had three hits for the Tigers
, A w~lk to Ron Hodges and
Bruce Bmscl81r's triple m the
eighth tnn10g gave the New
York Met.s a I~ iriumph over
the MUUlesota Twins.
Tony Perez, ElliS Valehtme
and Andre Dawson homered
m the Montreal Expos' 7-2
VICtory over the los Angeles
Dodgers
Sktp James' tworun double and a sacriftce fly
by Darrell Evans hfted th~
San Francisco Gtants to a 3-1
trtumph over the Mtilwaukee
Brewers
Mtck Kelleher's two-run
double ln the lith il\rung gave
the Chicago CUbs a 8-4 wm
over the Seattle Marmers
Homers by Billy Srmth, a
grand slam, and Pat Kelly
and Dave Skaggs paced the
Baltimore Or10les' 12-1
trtumph over the Texas
Rangers . The Oakland A's
won thetr first game of the
exhibition season when they
downed
the
Cahfornia
Angels, 7-2, with the help of a
two-run double by Jerry
Tabb, whiCh capped a fourrun stxth tmUng,
Dwight Evans' three-run
homer m the second mmng
carried the Boston Red Sox to
a 3-1 tnumph over the
Toronto Blue Jays
Wayne
Nordhagen ' s
three- run
homer led !be Chtcago Whtte
Sox to a 7-S win over the
Pittsburgh Pirates ... Barry
Bonnell drove ln two runs in a
f1ve.run first innmg agamst
Ken Holtzman as the Atlanta
Braves routed the New York
Yankees, 11-1
The
Cleveland Indtans toped the
San Otego Padres, 13-li, wtth
the help of four shutout
lnnmgs by starter Don Hood
Andre Thornton bad three
hits and drove mlour runs for
the Indtans.

Pat Maurer
top A coach
I

COLUM BUS ( UPII

Jeff Rupp Nor w ayne, 6 2.
Sr , 23 0

Marauders survive first test
By RICK GOSSELIN
KANSAS CITY IUP!)
Central State's 6-5 center,
Steve Bayless, does not
realize what a talent he really
IS, says CSU Coach Lu Wuns,
but Hampton Institute (Va.)
has a pretty good Idea
Bayless, a seruor who bad
his two prevtous seasons
rwned by mjunes, hit nme of
II shots from the floor
Tuesday to fuush with a
game-lngh 221'0lnts and eight

Oass A
All-Ohio
team named ..

Ste ve Burns Edgert on 6 4,
Sr . 224
Douglas Hale Oak Hill , 6 2,
Sr , 2J 1
Carl Wood Ba tavt a 6 o.
Sr , 26 0

SPECIAL MENTION

Kev 1n Brooks, M ans f te ld
St Peter 's, Ja ck Fee 1 Mont
pel 1er T1m Ftdler , St r yker
Grant Greenwood, Bethel ,
JeH Hobbs, Clinton Ma ss1e ,
Mtke Hoops, Patn c k Henry
Lee Hood, Ada . Ken Krebs,
Bu ckeye Central. Arn ol d
King Easter n (P1ke l . J ohn
Lyon s Bu ckey e Trail J •m
M c Andr ew.
C o lumb us
Ready , Wa yne Neal Hardin
Northern
Dav td
Near
Macon
E as te r n ,
Milrk
Ovwerker k New Brem en ,
Bruce Shad ow Ay crs,v •ll e,
Perry Wdl 1am s
Ye llow
Sprmgs , Jody Wasser man,
Con tmen tal

HONORABLE MENTION
Greg Andes, Shady s1de,
Lee
Rtck Bacon Fayette
Conwell
Mapleton
Ti m
Cornely , Manon Cath ol iC
Jeff Clarr. Sa nd u sky Sl
/VIarys . Brent Doutt Buckeye
Trai l
Dick
0 1Malfto,
Newbury, Terry DOnohoe,
Tria d , Greg Duszy ns kI,

Cuyahoga

Hei ght s

Jo hn

Hawktns . Berl i n Wes tern
Reserve
Kev tn H omter.
Conttnental. Vtclor Hunter,
Lockland
Gordon E s tla ck S outh ~
mgton , T1m F 1gura Nor
wayn e,
Don
Frank ,
Hopewell Loudon .
Te rry
F1 nk enb 1ne
Anna . Tom
Graff1 ce, South Cent r al.
Scott
K1rk ,
Felt c 1t y
Franklin Joe Kemper Ot
tov1lle , Kevin Lakes, New
M1aml ,
Ron
M cCleary ,
Wmdham , St eve M artin,
W e~ tern
(P I.kt;!) .
Steve
Murphy , Mechani cs burg
T1m
Par c her,
Co l lins
Western Reserve . Kevi n
Roll , Frankfort Adena
Tom R•c h, Middletown
Fe nw 1ck
Greg
Stubbs.
Bea l l sv• l le
T1m
Stechschul te, Ka!lda Mark
Schwartz , Garaway RICk
Schrader, Southeastern
(Ross) , Lane Shoup Monf
pel1er
Dave Snyder
An.f
werp
K1m Sut t on , Oh io
School for the Oea1 Mark
Turner, Wayne Trace , Gr eg
VanderEmbse , Kalida , Doug
We1r , lnd1ana Valley Sou th ,

Gr eg Wtll s, Cl inton Massie,

Joe Wha len . Ashtabula St
John
Player of the year -

Bra d

Weston. Ridgedale
Coach of the-year Maurer
Man s fi e ld

Peter's

Pat
St

Eastern gals

third in meel

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Pat
Maurer had a tough acl to
follow when he took over lust
year as head ba ske tba ll
coac h a t Munsheld St
Peter 's
Alter a ll , St Peter's first
under Bob Frye and U~e n Hon
Barbo , hud bee n a lmost
regular VISitors to the Swie
Basketba ll Tournatn ent and
was a challenger for the No 1
Class a team In the stu te
almost e\'ery yt.•nr
But U1e 35-ycm-olct Maure r,
a g raduute of Cllllton Central
Cathoh&lt;' .IDd Kent Sta te
Umvcrs1ty has etched his
own name m the anrutls of
outsbmding St Pete coaches
In two years at the he lm ,
afte r re plac in g Btu bn ,
Maurer has posted a 4H
rt-cord nnd w1ll be brmgmg
Ius second str.nght St Pete
teum to St John Arema
11\ursda) mght lor the State
Tournament scamfmals
His 25-1 re&lt;'O I d this ye!lr
earned hun the h&lt;mor of
Uruted Press lnterna uonal
Class A cnach of the yew by il
vote of fell ow coa ches,
spurtllwflter s
and
sportscasters from around
U1e state
Maurer edged out Dan
Wende ll of Ridgedale, the
only team to bentSt Pete this
year, lor the coach of the year
honor
Othet s with more than one
vote were Irv Besekcr of
Manon
Loc al , Charlie
Huggins of Indwn Valley
South , Don Can tre ll of
Eas tern ( Pike). Denny
Wnght of Patnck Henry,
Harry Krone of Columbus
Ready, AI Baker of Arcadia
and Dan Kline of Stryker
"I've got to credtt a lot of
what l learned to those two,"
Maurer Slud, 1efe1 nng t.o
Frye, now athletic director at
St. P ete, and Barbo, head
coach at Mllnsfleld Madison
'They are two of the best

success
'They've done a super job
"1th the younger klds, " he
said l hey he lp a lot wtth
ga m e
s trategy
and
lundam enl a ls "
Hawk 's
JUrnor vm slty team was 20-0
U!C past season
St Pete was 22-S last year,
losm~ to Ft t.oranlie ln the
Class A championship game.
l11e Spartans are buck again
w1th .so111e of the same cust
and Ma urer figures they' re
better thun a ye ar ago.
il w e huvc more bench
sh engUt, mor e ::~1ze c.md more
quickness than u yenr u~o,"
he
said
" And ,
the
tournanlent experience Itself
IS going to help
• ''I knew we were gmng to
be good, but I didn't know
how good," he said "We
needed someone to take the
team le ude rsiup and the
scmors ~ even the ones on
Ute bent h ~ lmve done Umt ' '
l ift IM.Il Y ~t-~ N1

1 NF

I

llf\IUU&lt;U I'Ulllt
I N It IU·.'il 01
1\U !loS MASON AItt A

HUIU• H1IIOE tl I( II

lhr tdlwr
tllll )lt Sultlflilll
II} I ht 011111 \, nil ~) I uiJII ~Inu ~
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li iL~ lllL'S.~ Offu 1 l'hunc •1!-! l
I tlllur111l I lhtllt 9EI'l 2 1JI

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Sotulul t l u ~ s pustmlt IIUhl 111
ltllllt ltl} Ohn

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1.1111•111 ( u1 n 1 ~m}
lnt Hullllll'lh 1111111 ttlln.:litl II"
lfJi !lind A\t
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t.u(l\ t Wul tl
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Su l t~ t t l i •IWII

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In

Dd iYt.:l ld

tllllll114ill'lt ll\llil11lllt 75 ttnl~ fll1
\H t k By Mu lot Huut~ wlll t l tlllrhl
'it r\llt not 11\ tulthlt On• lllt&gt;u11•
S.:l ~!! Jly 1111111 In Uhl ' Mlltl W Vu
t im Ytll l $22 00 Si x t lllllll/l~

$11 ~II

l111 ~~

$1 ! so

1111111\ hs

UloOtl

I b c will l l

r 1111.'1

Sl

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)till Si~ 1111 1 11ll t ~
1 1\ un ll l ~
$ / 'ltl

SuilH( I IIJiklll Jll u 1 llllludt s Sumill)

'

lmws"'ioi' nllllt !

WHA Standmg l&gt;
dy Unl1cd Press lntcrnal lonal
W L T
'17 'l
36 27 .t

W1nn1 p1:g

44

N(.'W Englc'lnd

Houston
Quebec
Edmonlon

Pts

90
76

lS ?9 4

7&lt;1

32
32
?9
'1.9

67
66
61
f10

33
33
34
37

3
?

3
Blrm1nghm
2
1J ] 9 I
5Q
lndiAn&lt;'lpOII S
Tuesday's Re sults
New Eng 6 B1rm1ngh am 0
Quebec 6 EclmQnlon 3

Clnc •nnnl l

Wednesday' lo Game s

Ed mon t on .11 Wl" n 1111.2q

depostt.

$5,000,00

mmimul'fl

depostl
Accounts wlthctrawft priDr

Thur sday 5 Game s
(No qam cs sc he du l ed}

to the dale ol maturity

the all-to urne y team and
Eastern was represented by
two g1rls, Sa ruh Goebel und
Patty Edwards Goebel had
12 pomts agmn&gt;i Kyger while
Edwards had SIX Al so
scormg m the Kyger contest
were Becky Ambrose SIX
Rhonda Riebel and f\enee
Riebel four each, and Cass1c
Sheets and Wendy Elk ms tw10
each l.orotta Gilmore led
Kyger With mne, Kay Palmer
had siX , and Danelle Harless
had two

In the recent Gallia
Academy Junlor Htgh Gtrls
tourne y , Eastern brought
home third place They fell to
Gallla Academy 31-18, but
whipped Kyger Creek in the
consolatiOn game 36-17, In the
loss, Eastern JUSt couldn't
stop Galha 's Sara Evans as
she controlled the boards and
tossed m 27 pomts Coach
Pam Douthitt pratsed guards
Rhonda and Renee Riebel,
and was pleased with her
tea m's overall defense. Patty
Edwards led Eastern with 8
pomts Cassie Sheets had four
as dtd Sarah Goebel while
Rhonda Riebel had 2
In the consolation game on
Wednesday of last week,
Eastern had little trouble
dumpmg the Bobktltens. The
team was pra tsed by their
coach and spectal mention
went to Kelll Headley , Kathy
Ritch te, Be cky Ambrose,
Wend y E lkm s, and Lisa
Collins lor commg off t~e
bench and playmg well
F1ve girls were chosen for

712 Pet. per year on a
4 year certificate of

A t'lbstantial penalty Is
Invoked on all certificate

B1rr11 ngh am at Clnclnnal1
Jndpls at Nev. En&lt;lliUHI

The Athtns County
Savings &amp; Loan Co

196 Second St

Pomeroy, Ohio

-----

Senco • Oren • or
U.S. Fiber Insulation

PER BAG
MACHINE
RENTAL
'25 00 PER DAY
R VALUE COMPARISON CHART

0

PHONE

tutors m the country "
Ma ure r a lso cr edited
assistants Phil Hawk and
De nnts Rissle r lor his

I

R-value

1
II I I

I

2
II I I

I

4

3
I I I I

II

I I I

I

U.S FIBER
ROCK WOOL

992-2156

THE DAILY SENTINEL
BETWEEN
8 AM and S PM

FIBER GLASS
These values ore for orle 1nch of

loose·flll msulat1on

City Ice &amp;Fuel
224 1st

$treet

t:o.

Point Pleasant
(304) 675-2460

.• .
'.
••

�jll~~;~-~·IPJ"t'IPlll::l:ljlf«./$;f'lf,}.'S~:?.~:.~~:~!::::;$::::::::&gt;;.;,::,~mfji&gt;Sd~II'SI'IWiid

4 _The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , March 1~. 1978

1Helen Help

Jacque Fowler elected
worthy high priestess
Mrs. Jacque Fowler was
elected worthy high priestess
of Mary Shrine 37, Order of
th e White Shri ne of
Jerusalem at a mee_ting held
Friday night at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple.
Other officers elected were
Thomas Edwards, watctunan
of shepherds ; Mrs . Wanda
Gabritsch, noble prophetess;
James Soulsby., associate
watchm an of shepherds ;
Mrs. Sue Souls by, worthy
chaplain ; Mrs. Enna Yoho,
worthy scribe ; Mrs. Barbara
Dugan , worthy treasurer;
Mrs. Vivian May, worthy
shepherdess ; and Mrs. Don·
na Stewart, worthy guide.
Mrs. Nellie Casto, worthy
high priestess, and Oscar
Casto, walchman · of
shepherds, presided at the
meeting during which time
annual reJlQrts were given.
Invitations to attend in·
stallation of officers were
received from Nazarene
Shrine, March 18, 8 p.m. at
Chillicothe;
Lak e wood
Shrine, April 1, 8 p.m . at
Rocky River; and Lafayette
Shrine, April 18, 7:30 p.m.

GalliJlQlis Masonic Temple.
District 16 inspection was
set for Sept. 29 at 8 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple
with Mary Shrine to be the
ftosl Shrine. Included in
District 16 are Mari etU.,
I.afayette and Mary Shrines.
Mrs. Fowler announced installation of officers of Mary
Shrine for April 14 at 8 p.m.
Installation will be preceded
by a business meeting at 4
p.m . at the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple. A rehearsal date
was set' for April 2 at ? rt m :.t

the Pomeroy Masunrc Tern·
pie for all officers includin~
those being installed both
elected and a~JlQinled . and
the installing officers .
For installation ni~ ht there
will be refrestunents with
members to take a vegetable
or a salad . The ham will be
furnished.
At · the conclusion of the
meeting a social hour was enjoyed with Mrs. Fowler and
Mrs . Gabritsch serving
refreshments .

Nelson family entertains
POMEROY-Mr. and Mrs .
J im Nelson entertained last
Sunday with a family dinner
party honoring their son,
Gar·y, and his wife. the
former Diana Epple, recently
married.
Gifts were presented to the
couple. Attending ·were Mr.
and Mrs. Austin Wugan,
Pickerington; Mr. and Mrs.
Max Bolen and Rick, Mrs.
Gary Dixon , Kary and J eff,
Reynoldsburg: Mr. and Mrs.
l..eonard Wogan and (,eonard,
Hebron ; Mr . 1i nd Mrs.

I

..... ,_
1 ..\

t.!l
',
'"
I

''

Richard Brock andDouglas.
Bellefontaine: Mr . and Mrs .
Harold Bolen, Mr . and Mrs.
Keith Weaver, Mrs . Maxine
Nelson , Mr. and Mrs. Ma rron
Grate. Scott, Brian and Kyle,
Columbus; Mr . and Mrs.
Roge r Bolen, Londonderry ;
John Bolen, Cleleland: Mrs .
Jack Bolen and Greg, Dcx·
ter ; Mr. and Mrs. Grover
Stout, Pome roy , and Steve
Nelson, St. Petersburg, Fla .

(

'

i

I
'

Slater, son of Mr. and Mrs.
David Slater of RD 3, Box
20, Pomeroy, enlisted In the
U. S. Air Force's Delayed
Enlistment
Program
today, a ccording to S. Sgt.
Vernon J, Zeger, Air Force
recruiter, 221 N. Columbus
Rd., Athens. Mark Js a
senior at Meigs High
School, Pomeroy. He is
scheduled lor enlistment In
the Regular Air Force on
July 26, 1978. Upo n
graduation from the Air
Force' s six-week basic
training course. Mark is
scheduled to receive:
technlcal training in the
Aircraft Maintenance
Career Field.

sssoo OFF

SAVING ON THIS
BEAUTIFUL
• STYLIST" MACHINE.
Reg. Price
·'·'•
It's got buill·il1 zig•zag, stretch and blind
'
h,e mstitches. 4-slem buttonholer. a bobbin
that drops right in and our exclusive push,
button snap-in cloth plate. Cabinet or
· carrying case extra. Model 534.

..

Fabrics For Easter, Proms,
Graduation, and Weddings

THE .FABRIC SHOP
Second St.

....

Pomeroy, 0.

·COME AND SEE THE

EASTER BUNNY

I Us.··

POLLY~S POINTERS

Dl's CANDY

I,
I

·I
I
'

'

&lt;l

'

t~\ tr. ~

"a}

CHOICES
Karen Blaker Ph.D.

DEAR HELEN:
Three years ago my husband was drinking much too much.
He confessed he was having an affair with an alcoholic. Then
be straightened up, quit the booze, and our marriage seemed
good again.
Recently 1 heard from the woman's brother, that she bad
died of cirrhosis of the liver. He said she was grateful that my •
husband tmd viSited her regularly until the last. I thought he'd
broken off completely.
When confronted, he swore he was only trying to help a dying
woman ; love was Ion~ gone.l can't forgive his deceit · he even
took time off from work to spend with her. Is he worth staymg
inarried to?· MIXED UP
DEARM.U.:
Yes!·H.--DEAR HELEN :
My husband draws a small Social Security check and we
have two foster children. Altogether we take in $357.80, per
month; we use food stampa of which I'm not ashamed.
GIRL SCOUTING offe rs a variety of learning experiences leading to awards. " My
My neighbor lives in a beautiful home, she and her husband
Camera" is the badge being sought by these members of Pomeroy Junior Troop 1276,
both
work; take home pay, over $1,200 a month. If you say food
seated, left to right, Suzan Thoma, Carolyn Casto and Crystal Lane, and standing,_ Debbie
Werry, Betty Lane, leader, and Trina Reeves. Girl Scout Week is being observed this week.
stamps to her,lt'slikea bad word.
1 am lucky if I have toilet soap to wash my own and the
AnY girls between six and 20 interested in becoming scoutsare asked to contact Mrs. Pat
Thoma, service unit director. Scouts and volunteer leade rs in Meigs County exceed 300 in
children's hair. She is "done" at the finest shops.
They have the best of everything. We don't, of course. She
number .
boasted of spending $2,1100 on Christmas. We got by on $30,
partly spent on food. We had a beautiful Chri•-tmas,
nonetheless.
Helen, they have one child. He stays over here all day long
(after school and dn weekends), eats and plays with my kids ..
Why? He's told me several times the door was locked and his
parents gone. They leave nothing at home lor him to eat, even
if he can get in. (My kids verify this.)
Polly Cramer
His appetite is tremendous. I can't see him go hungry, but
one more mouth means that much less food in ours. I mentioned this to his mother, but she denied everything. What can I do
Removing
dry them with crumpled up about the poor little rich boy? • POOR LITTLE POOR
newspapers. - RUBY
water Spots
DEAR POLLY - My Pel MOTHER
DEAR MOTHER:
POLLY'S PROBLEM
Peeve is with those '&gt;Cople I
Make it a business proposition: Keep track of the cost of this
DEAR POLLY - Enclosed see tossi ng lighted cigarette
PLRB's food and care at your _house, then tell his parents
is a colurnn with a Pointer butts onto the street or out of\ you'll board him for X dollars per week (that is if you don't
rrom J.T . say ing that water car windows. lt, seems they mind an extra youngster in the bouse) . lf (hey refuse, and he's
spots can· be removed from a would realize the wind blows still locked out or going hungry, alert a child welfare agency.
REV. RICHARD JAYMES
wood ta ble lop by applying a them around and they could
REVIVAL SET ~ The
H.
thick
coat of jelly, leave il "'' land some place where a
Rev. Richard W . Jaymes ,
overnight, 1vlpe off and polish dange~ous fire' could start.
an , elder In the Church of
When f clean closets I write
as usual. What kind of jelly
the Na7.arcnc, will speak ul
for about two weeks ana does one use ?- MRS. A. J . a list of "the items put in each
revtv;:l1 services to be held
IN tHE HOSPITAL
March 11-26, 7:30 each
DEAR MRS. A. J. and box and then repeat this list
PORTLAND--James H. cards may be sent to him
other readers - Somewhere un the carton or box. The lists Sellers, Portland, underwent there, Room 517. His wife,
evening, at the Chester
along the way an Important are attached to the inside of back . surgery at Grant Ruth Ann, and his mother,
Church of the Nazarene.
word was left out of this the closet door so I know what Hospital, Columb~s Wednes· Mrs. Harold Sellers, are slay·
Born In Shirleysburg, Pa.,
Pointer.
II should have read rs stored in each closet day. He will be hospitalized w~· in Columbus with J~dy
the Rev. Mr. Jaymes
Sellers.
"
petroleum
jelly" such as ' without having to go through
served in the Air Force
most of us always have In our all of them to find something.
during World War II. He
medi cine cabinets. Pl eas e
An easy way to peel an
earned a bac helor of
The monitors at lhe
accept our apologies. orange is to insert the pointed
theology deg ree from
French Art Colony lor the
PQI.l.Y.
end of a teaspoon under the
Oltvet Nazarene College,
weekend will be Mrs. Tom
peel then work around the . Prlee and Mrs. Margaret .
Kankakee, Ill., graduating
DEAH POLLY - Use a orange with !he hollow of the
in 1950. He was pastor of
EASTER CANDY
Brim lor the Saturday, 1 till
discarded
paper towel roll to spoon. No more·messy hands .
Nazarene Church es in.
3 duty and Mrs. MabeUe
prevent horizonta l creases in - ANN , '
Laura and Hamilton, Ohio,
Brown and Mrs. Nellie
ClASSES Still $5.00
a
ga nnent. sUch as ·slacks,
DEAR POLLY - Before
before
going
into
Scarberry the late duly. On ·
that aro hUng on wire cOat disca rding men's worn
.evangelism full time. He
Sundl!y the duty will be
Learn hollow molding
hangers. Slit the tube length· shorts, cut off the elastic
was ordained an elder in
shared by Mrs. Chester
and
filled eggs.
wise and place it over the waistBands: they are great lo
the deJmmination at ser·
Tannehill aad Mrs. Robert
wire bar of the hanger , then use to hold large suii boxes
vices conducted in the
Moore; the3 tillS p.m. duty
What you make you take
tape the slit shut. Garments together. I always have many
former · West e rn Ohio
by Mrs. Carl lrvlD and
home.
can then be hung with no sewing projects going on and
District. The Rev. Herbert
Maxine Kinnaird.
Phone 446-7903
resulting cr eases. - MHS.. M. it really helps to have elastic
Grate, pastor, invites the
M.
bands large enough to slip
pu_bllc to the revival scr·
DEAR ·POLLY - To have over the ends of the boxes so
vices.
- - - - - -·- "_ .._
streak -free Wind ows a nd that I can get something I
m_irror.s I wash them with need easily and quickly .' a nunonra a nd water and then
HOSA w.
DEAR POLLY- When the
ironing board cover does not
WEDNESDAY
fit . cut several pieces of
PO ME HOY Lodge , 164 elastic tape and pin them
WEDNESDAY
F&amp;AM Wednesday 7:30p.m. from one side of the cover to
FREE CERVICAL cancer at Masonic Temple. Purp_ose the other on the underside of
·
is the annual ins pection. the cover. ~ KATHERINE
clinic for Meigs area women
DEAR POLLY _ Mrs.
·
d
Refreshments. All master
H
h
U
d
Wednes ay at eat
nrte
H.L.S. does not need to buy a
M ~ thodi st Church, Mid · masons are invited to attend.
SOUTHERN Junior High special wax to put on zippers
dleport . For appointment call
PTO Wednesday 7:30 p.m. so they run smoothly. Rul.&gt;5
992-7531 daily or 992· 832 on
bing a bar of ordinary hand
THURSDAy
soa p along the teeth of the
weekends or in evening.
MAGNOLIA Club at home
MIDDI.F:PORT Literary
zipper does the trip just a.s
Club, 2 p.m. Wl&gt;dnesday at of Mrs. Dale Smith Thursday well.
the home of Mrs. Emerl:ion 7 :30 p.m.
If you are wondering what
ST. PATHICK 'S Day card to do with small leftover
Junes . fvI rs. J Hrncs ·r·IlW:i l o
·
· 111e 1.1'fc of party in basement of Sacred pieces of soap, save them and
revtew
·· J cnme,
-•
1
1
Cl
11 "11 "
Hea rt Catholic Church
R
d
Laiii'iii;OY.-;"iiniil"';;;'liiploriiiiimiirii
ciiil;;,"•·- - - - - - - - - - - " " ' on a rainy day let the children
grate them and sew them into
'
bath mitts made from old
•
wash cloths . Slightly fancier
versions could even make
nice gifts. - MS. S.K.R.

t

1

SoCl · .I
Calendar_'I

At ease
DEAR DR. BLAKER - I
hope writing to you will ease
my mind. I feel so guilty
about something that happened six months ago.
I had taken my daughter
shopping in town when s ud·
denly, out of !he corner of m y
eye, I saw a woman stagger
and fall . There were lots of
people around and l hurried
on, asswning someone closer
would stop and help.
Later that week an article
appeared in the local
newspaper about the im.'i·
dent. Evidently no one had
stopped to help the girl until it
was too late . She died on the
way to the hospital.
The journalist berated the
people of the town for their in·
sensitivity. I do not consider

Jy watching another hwnan
being in crisis."
.Most of lhe critics blamed
what they considered to be
apa thy unique to New
Yorkers. U)lQn dosor ex·
aminatiun. however, resear·
chers found the observer·s·
t.chavior was not limited to
residents of Ne w York.
In fact, it was a nvr·mal
res)lQnSl' to that kind of situa·
lion.
What really happened th e
night of the Genovese
murder'? It was difficult for
!he witnesses to realize they
were actually watching a
murder in progress. Must had
been awakened from a sound
sleep by whal they thought
was a scream. As they 'watch·
cod from their· windows, lhe
most they got were glimpses
of a man running after and
occasionally catc hing up with

EAST I.E'fART-Plans for
canvassing LeU.rt Township
in the annual Cant't!r Crusade
in April were made during a
meeting of the United
Methodist Women of the East
I"'tart Church held recently
at the church.
Mrs . Focie Hayman will
serve e~s chai nmm for the
housel&lt;&gt;-house canvas in !he
township. The group also
discussed a garage sa le to be
held in early May and com·
. pleted plans for the Wicker·
sham shower.
Mrs. Mabel Shields presid·
ed at the meeting which open·
ed with ~roup singing of
" Alone" and prayer by ("rs.
Eileen Buck. The birthdays of
Mrs. ~'ocie Hayman. Mrs.

Buck, and Mrs. Shields were
eelebratt&gt;d.
The Easter progrwn entitllod "Shrouds and Butterflies"
was pres.e nted by Mrs .
Hayman and Mrs . Belva
Fisher. Their worship center
was a navy blue sky, Easter
lilies, and spring flow ers with
butterfly accents. Each

·n ell

..

r~spun-

• •
d :
:englneere
·
.
.
:
.
.
;tOr
·p·erformance: i!:~r~l~:n~~~:~to
·and rel·•ab.•l.•ty =~~;-~ad~e~'Y ~~:~or\~~;

overcome
•
Write to Dr. Blaker in care
• of Uus newspaper, P .O. Box

_

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Volw~e of mail pmhibits persunalrephes, Uut questwns of
gtmcra l interest wi ll be
discu.ssed in future columns.

:Youth plan
ie for service

e MIDDLEPORT-An Easter
e sunrise scrvi('e at the Brad-

•
•
•
•

e

•

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

e

GREENE'S
SALES CENT~;~(
1• •

•
•
:
t
•

•
•
e

e

•
405 Fifth St~et_ ./
•
New aven .W. Va.
•
1 • • • • • • • • e e1 • e • • • • -

1. • e• •

bury Church of Christ was
plan ned duri1i~ a youth
meeting Wedrw· ~; ·y night at
the church.
The service will he held at 7
a.m. and a breakfast will
follow. Randy .Haynes will
give the sermonette ; Kevin
ami De si Jdfers at the pi'C:tn~
and m·,~c::~ I) will provide the
specu:il music, and Rodney
Bailei• will be lhe sun~
leader . On Easter night at
7:30p.m. the adult and youth
choirs will join for a ca ntata .
Kevin presided at th e
business meeting with Thelia
Raley giving devotions. Plans
fur swimming and skating
pm:ties were discussed.

look -

and l69k sensational

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
MARCH 17th &amp; 18fh
GET A 5x7 COLOR PHOTO OF
YOUR CHILD .&amp; THE EASTER BUNNY
FRIDAY 5 P.M. TO 7 P.M.
SATURDAY 12 NOON T0-4 P.M.
FOR ONLY

EACH ADDITIONAL
CHILD IN PICTURE
50c EliCH

•225

KIDDIE SHOPPE
.nd St.

J

9112-3586

Pomeroy, o.

Natural
Leather
Spring camel
smooth

Sl6111

HARTLEY'S SHOES. INC.
"Middle of Upper Block"
Pomeroy, 0. Store Hours

w.511'

9 il.m.-5 p.m.
Mon . thru Thurs. &amp; Sat.
9 a.m ..a p.m. Fri.
Closed Sunday

Thursday 7:30p.m.
ROCK SPHINGS Better
Health Club Thursday at I: 15
at home of Mrs . Roger
Leifheit with Mrs. Clifford
Leifheit as hostess . Mrs.
Martha King will be in charge ·
of the contest. Mrs. Roger
Leifheit is in charge of
program.
WOMEN'S Association of
First United Presbyterian
Church, Middleport, meet
Thursday 7:30 p.m. at the
church. Devotions by Mildred
Bailey .
THURSDAY
GRACE
EPISCOPAL
CHURCH, Thursday luncheon at home of Mrs. A. R.
Knight, 12:30 p.m.
SATURDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Retired
Teachers , Association, 12:30
luncheon at the Meigs Inn.
·Ralph
Walker,
Logan,
president of Ohio Retired
Teachers Association, will be
the guest speaker. Reservations to be made with Mrs.
Patrick Lochary, by Thursday.

Can Fly But That Cocoon Has
to Go."
Mrs. Barbara Dugan and
Mr s. Shields served
refreshments.

anti gHve a lustory of its
development.
Mrs . Velma R.ue presided
a t the meeting during which
time it was announced tha t at
tile Apri\13 meeting there will
be Cl country store as a money
making project for the
nu~mbers . New officers wiU
also be elected at that time.
The hostesses served a
dessert course at the conclusion of the meeting .

Male lovers
•
have married
problems too

Flower Shop

Mrs. Millard VanMeter
106 Butternut Ave.
Phone 992-2039
992-5721
Pomeroy, o.
We accept all major credit cards and we
wire flowers everywhere.

'

I

.

.

TRACI WRIGHT
TURNS SEVEN- Trad
Wright, daughter uf M~ .
and Mrs. Rodney Wright
observed her St'venth birth·
day on Feb. 20.. A surprise
party was given for her at
school with Mrs. Wright
and Mrs. Kathy l.l.ice. first
grade teacher. as co·
hostesse s. Cuptakt's, popsickles and Kool-Aid wen
served. Trad rc&lt;·cived a
det•orated cake topped with
a child figurine and iusc ril.&gt;ed. " Happy Birthday.
Trad" from her grandmother, Mrs , Frances lmhndeu. She received gifts
from her parents, her
brother, Bobby, Billy and
Lily Kennedy, Earl and
Beulah Belle Wright, Bub
arid Patty Imboden, Wally
Russell and Mrs. Imboden.
She also received cards
from Barbara Lambert
and Decker Cullums.

The Easter theme was c~r·
ned out in devotions, PI'\&gt;'
gram and decorations for the
Munday night meeting of the
United Methodist Women of
the Heath United Methodist
Church. MiddleJ!Qrl .
Mrs. Fr~nt'fli Bre wington
was the program leader using
as her topic, "Shrouds and
Bulterflies." " I Walked T&lt;&gt;day Where Jesus Walked"
was played by Mrs. Beulah
Jones, pianist, as Mrs. Brew ..
ington read the words .
Mrs. Brewington told of the
cxperierH'tl of Mary
Magdalene who led the
women to the lomb with
spices and shrouds to lind the
tomb empty. She said that the
Monarch butterfly which

Christioo symbol is the but·
terfly Ior un Easler we
change our shroud for a butterfly. Then as she again read
a verse of " I Walked Today
where Jesus Walked" silk
butterflies were passed out to
the members. These were
made by Mrs. Brewington.
Mrs. Nan Moore presented
the devotions on Easler
prepared by Mrs. Genevee
Chesher, concluding with an
Ea:;ttr prayer.
Mrs. Pauline Horton, presi·
dent, we lcomed Mr s .
Elizabeth Mourning as • new

comes every spring is a sym~

Way la nd and Mrs. Eleunror

Keep siniling, Nu matter
how things are, they're gunna
get nothing but worse .

RF.CEIVES RANK
The U. s. Air Force has
prom oted J.n rry A. Car·
penter, son uf Mrs. Virginia
F' . Cnrpenler It! l'olnl
Pleasant, W. Va ., to the rank
of &gt;1alf sorgcant. Sergeant
Carpenter is serving at Clark
AB, Philippin es, as a
precisi o n
mea su r ing
eq uipm ent specialist. The
sergeant is a 19&gt;9 graduate of
Waha ma
Hi gh
School,
Mason. W. Va . and attended
Marsha II University, Hun·
tington , W. Va . His wile,
Marsha , is the dau ghter of
Mr . and Mrs. Wyllis ~' . Davis,
Jr. of New Haven, W. Va .

rs Markins
hono-vnd

ONLY~995

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PAtJeiOOK

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C6RTIFICATI!

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The savings will floor you!
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We've rolls and ·
rolla of- all
the newest
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The Ohio Valley Bank has a maximum
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So when you think savings, think Ohio
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the benefits of all our sa'vings plans. You' ll
find out why we guarantee a saver's edge
with maximum rates and a plan to fit your
needs.

YOUR RING
ONlY COSTS ~9 .95
WHEN YOU BRING
THIS !ID JN!

ONLY

SON BORN
Mr. and Mrs. John Walter
Dean, Route 4, Pomeroy , arc
a nnounl'ing the birth of a ~on .
March 8 at the Holzer
Medical Center. He has been
narnL&gt;&lt;i James Oliver. Hi:s
weight was eig ht pow\dS,
eight ounces. Mr. and Mrs.
[)tlan have another son,
Jeremy, four . Grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. J ohn A.
Dean, Mr. and Mrs. Wal ter
Terrell of Pataskala: Earl
Watkins of Massillon. Greatgrandparents are Mr. and
Mrs . Kenneth Markin•.
Hacinc, and Mr . and Mrs.
Hobart Smalley, Mus kogee,
Okla .

PASSBOOK

FLOOR

~ow

rafts

' S,YINOS

ARMSTRONG ACCOTONE

i
'•'

EXCit iNG

two members, Mrs. EnuiUt

averS G£dge?

10%

liMITED TIME ONlY!
b~aulllul

nion table clOthes. It was an·
nounced that the Easter
flowers will be $7 and a
retreat was announced for
April 14 and l~ a! Otterbein
College. Also announced was
a rwruna~e sale to be held
April 4 and 5 by the Eleanor
Circle.
Relrestunenls were serve'!
by Mrs. Horton,• Mrs. Betty
Fultz. Mrs. Maxine Plrilson ,
ami Mrs. Criswell fronm
U.ble currymg out ihe Easter
motif. Mrs. Horton lmd tho
member. Mrs. Clara Criswell clo&gt;iing prayer.
re)lQrlc-d on the World Day of
Prayt!r money ~md how it was
spent and it was noted that
MOST

you a

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S1tad 1um stainless 15

voted to make new t'Cnunu·

CWhoil guarantee

[~~~§
mill~@§
S!IVE UP TO

12' Width
Reg. 13.95

Zeiher are ill . The UMW

bol of the resurrection. The

LONDON (UPI ) --: TheM
House of Lords, Br1tam's
•
highest appeals court, has
made it official : a mistress
can have her Jover evtcted
1 ~
from their home . if he is
Mr. and Mrs. John A. Dean
beating her.
honored her mother, Mrs.
The lords Thursday ruled
Kenneth Jl1arkins of Racine
on a series of conflicting
Sunday with a dinner party in
court judgments involving a
celebration of her birthday .
21-yearold woman and the .
Attending were _Mr . and
man she had been living with
Mrs. Robert Ried, Rodney.
as his "wife."
The woma.n, Jennifer David and Kevin , PaU.skala ,
Davis, obtained a county Bruce and Edith and Robert
co urt order ex:cluding Bruce Ried, Jr., Columbus;
Nehemiah Johnson, 42, 1ather Mr. and Mrs . Hobart
Smalley, Jr., Hobie and Dale,
of her 2-year-old daughter,
Wierton, W. Va .; Mr. and
from their apartment .
Mrs. John Walter Dean and
The judge found she had
Jer emy , and Kenneth
been subjected to persistent
violence and threats of " a Markins .
A birthday cake wa s served
horrifying nature." ·
following
the dinner and Mrs .
Johnson had the eviction
Markins opened her gifts . In
order suspended by another
the afternoon , Mrs . Markins
court but in November, the
enjoyed a call lo her grand·
five-man Court of Appeals
upheld an appeal by Miss · sun, S. Sgt. and Mrs . Richard
Dean, Kenny and Michelle,
Davis In a 3-2 decision .
The case was then seni to Mesa, Arizona .
the House of Lords for a test
To maintain what the
ruling on a recently passed
law , the Domestic Violence govt!rmnent call!l Ll "high"
and
Matrimonial !:lta ndard uf li ving, an urban
Proceedings Act.
famil y of four requirc.s an inGiving judgment, Viscount come or $22,300 Cl year.
Dilhorne, said the law was Fcunilies in Ne w York and
1
'clear and unambiguous" Bus tun n~ed .sol nu $4,500
unmarried persons living more to mainta in this slim-.
together in the same dan.l ur livi ng.
household as husband and
wife were. to be treated as if
they were married.
This meant a man who
mistreats the woman he is
living with can be turned out
of his home, even if he is the
owner, sole tenant or joint
tenant with the woman,

BUY NOW AND SAVE

For Easter Sunday, March .
26th, make your greetings
as heartwan:ning as spring.
"Flowers do it!"
Spring Blossoms
For Someone You Love
•LILIES •MUMS •AZALEAS
•CORSAGES •CUT A.OWER
MRANGEMENTS
•PERMANENT MEMORIAL
ROWERS

Pomer~y

I

I

Fisher read a Poem, ' 'You

Sorority views health dept.

A program on the Meigs
County Health Department
as a part of a study of local
res01.-'rces was presented at
the Thursda y night meeting
of the Preceptor Beta Beta
myself an insensitive ~rson. a woman.
Yet, how can I explain why I
Rather than risk the em- Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
failed to act?
bclrm.ssment of ·· int~rfcring '' Sorority held at the home of
DEAR READER - Put with what might have been no Mrs. Ruby Baer with Mrs.
your mind at ease. Many sen- more than a domestic spat , Rose Sisson as C()-hostess ..
The
program
was
sitive and caring people have the observers dwse merely to
presented
by
Mrs.
Baer
and
found themselves in the same continue watching.
JlQSition of witnessing without
Another factor inte~icred Mrs. Sisson who outlined the
vario us se rvices offered
responding to another person with their urge to help.
through
the Health Depart·
·in crisis- and not ·undcrslan·
Those who witnessed t he
ment,
discussed
its funding,
ding their lack of response.
chase knew many other peo·
Ten years ago, 38 people in ple were also · wat('hing
a New Yo"rk neighborhood because they could see the
watched from their apar1· silhouettes of their neig hbors fi1·st notice that something is
ments while a man stalked against their blinds. Unsure happening. Then he must inand killed Kitty Genovese on of their own per~eption~. terprel lhal event as a cri sis.
. her way home from work at 3 most assumed that somebody Finally, he must decide he
a.m.
else would already have call- has a pe rsonal res)&gt;onsibility
No one ('alletl the police. ed the polit:e if this were real- tu intervene.
There was an immediate ly a ~risis.
In your case, yuu did notice
When a bystander makes a th~: worm111 collapsing in the
public outcry agamst these
~&lt; insensitive creatures bland- decision to intervene, he must street and you did interpret
·e • e e e e e e e e • e e • e •••• e • e e e e • e that OCCUI'I'e~ce aS &lt;::1 (;!'.ISIS.
e But you evrdently decided
you !uu.l no persona_!
•
e sibility to act because you
:
• saw many others 1n closer
proximity to her.
.
Evaluating such a res ponse
:as expected_suc.·ialbehavior _rs.
•
·
e not the same as condomng 111action. We must understC:trH.l
e the obstC:tdes that ran irr•
·
• terfcre wrth our abi lity to r·es·

•

member was given a piece of
the shroud which was ex·
changed during the meeting
for a butterfly pinon . The
gruup sa ng " There's a World
Out There" and Mrs. Marlene

i

S~

' Heath UMW have Easter program

Canvassing plans slated

By Helen Bottel

NO WONDER SHE WON'T WORK!
DEAR HELEN :
Our daughter will be 25 this month and sits around the house
all day. Sbe won't go to work because her lather wants all the
mooey she makes. He tells her girls don't need money and men
do. What wou)d you suggest? ·M.S. .
DEARM.:
Emancipation! And no more donations! Your daughter
should get a job, mmle out of house, and tell her misguided
father she's her own woman · at last.· H.

1~,1978

5 _ The DaUy Sentinei,Middlepart-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, March

a

metal that looks

hke wh1te gold But 1t's

stronger Wears better .

$349
Per Yard

And 11's ta rf'liSh· Prool· Be st

of all , It cos.ts much tess
than gold !

..,.....

,()8Jt

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN MATERIALS CO.
773-5554

MASON, W.VA.
';

~

~
·

Ohio Valley Bank
Gal hpo l ,s. Qti, 0

~~ (' fl'l.lr • FDIC

The Leading Savings Plana Are AI The Leading Savings Bank

211 1! . MAIN · ,OMIUOY

·,

�-!

200

By
United
Prell
International
As many as ?00 people in
Willoughby
Hills
and
Eastlake, both in Lake
County, were forced to
evacuate
their homes
because the Chagrin River
overflowed it.s banks because
of serious, cracking ice jams,
authorities said .
In Willoughby Hills, which
appears to be the hardest hit
area at this time, firelighters
started telephoning residents
aU :30 a.m. Tuesday warning
of possible flooding. It came
as the day progressed and,
luckily, not until after many
residents ha.d fled their

J
CAijL Gheen, president of the Meigs Higb School

Distrib~tive Education GaSses of America Club and

chairman of the classes in District 13, holds a fra med
certificate presented the Meigs DECA Chapter at the Ohio
Distributive Education Leadership Conference held
Friday and Saturday in ' Columbus. The award was
presented the Meigs Chapter for lt.s recent program
against shoplifting in-&lt;~ehool campaign. The certifica te is
signed by John C. Mahany, J r ., president of the Ohio
Council of R!!tail Merchants ; WiUiam J . Brown, state
attorney general and Bernard C. Nye , assis~nt director
of the distributive education service.

residehces.
''The worst area is Dodd

Road," a police dispakher
said . uwe have a mile-long

ice jam in the Eagle Road
area, too.
"When it goes, it's gojng to

forced· to evacuate
flooded Horvath's ground
level swimming pool in the
back yard. Only the top of a
ladder in the pool protruded
from the water when the
Horvaths were evacuated.
Edmund
Tis c hler,
Willoughby Hills, said he was
carried to safety on a front
end loader by two firefighters
when water flooded hi s
Milann Road home.
In Eastlake, downstream
fr om Willoughby Hill s,
portions of Lake Shore
Boulevard were closed
because of flooding . A
number of homeowners also
reported
that
their
basements were flooded .
But the worst has not yet hit
Eastlake.
"There's a big ice jam in
Willoughby Hills with quite a
bit of water stacked up
behind
it," a
pollee
dispatcher told UPI. "We're

take about 13 feet of water
with it. A couple of houses
(reportedly valued at $40,000
to ' $50,000 each) in the area
already have been knocked
off thelr foundations and we
think they 'll probably go
down the river when the ice
jam lets loose. The peak of
the flood level (Tuesday) was
about 19 feet. That's six feet
over our normal flood level,
which usually is 13 feet."
Among the first homes to
be evacWJted were on Milann
Road near the river and
about 12 others on adjacent
street.s.
John and Cheryle Horvath
said their ranch-style home
had eight inches of water
inside.
1
' This is the first time in
· fiveyears we have Hved here
that the river has flooded our
home," Horvath said.
· The overflowing river also

•

GET READY FOR SPRING

Legislation approved

~~

Meigs Tire

p~ople

1

Center Now

confidentiality ofincome tax
records should not be
breached.
·" I think tllis cure is worse

Has A Good

than the illness," complained

Rep. Robert W. Jaskulski , DGarfield Height.s.
The role of the State

Selection of

AUditor. was of particular

Any Size

concern to opponents of the
bill.
"I don't tllink the power
proposed here ought to be
given to Tom Ferguson, John
Brown, Buz Lukens, Sam
Speck or anyone else who
seeks that office," said Rep .
Harry J . Lehman , D·
Cleveland.
"We are permitting too
many eyes to pry into tax
records. We should approach
· thi s
matter
oh ,
so
cautiously," added Lehman.

Recapped Tires.
Save Your Snow

Tires. Buy
Today.

MEIGS TIRE CENTER
John F . Fultz, Mgr.

due primarily to the ice
jams.
.
Riverview Road between
Brookside Road and Canal
Road
along
the
In·
dependence-Valley View
line in suburban Cleveland

comes ... "
Rain combined with snow

melt
due
to
warm
tempePBtures caused the
rivers
and
streams
throughout northern Ohio to
continue to rise.
The Cuy ahoga River ,
according lo the National
Service
in
Weather
Cleveland, was to crest at 19
feet about midnight Tuesday
while small streams and
rivers in the area continued
to experience some flooding

was closed because of severe

flooding, according to
Cuyahoga County engineer
Ronald Stackhouse, who said
some commercia l structures
were experiencing flooding
late Tuesday.
·
High water signs also were
posted
Tuesday
along
Tinker's Creek Road between
Dunham ana Canal Roads,

Extension given
Meigs farmers

United States Department of

color, sex, or national' origin.

Agriculture, Archie R. .
Stega ll, County Supervisor of
FmHA for Athens, Meigs and
Vinton counties said today.
This represents an extension

Further information can be
obtained from the Pomeroy
FmHA office located at 221
West ·Second St., Pomeroy,

fro m
the ·
pre vious
deslgnalion which ran from
January 25, to February 3.
FmHA emergency loans to
eligible _fanners, r.anchers,
a nd aqUaculture operators
are to enable them to return
to their normal operations
after having sustained losses
res ulting from na tural
di s asters . Individual

bC

a medical patient, who was

unable to

2 QUART

BY HOOVER.

HOLDS 24 TAPEs'

WHISniNG

VACUUM

8 TRACK

BOYS or MENS

LOW CUT

TENNIS
SHOES

Amer lc ftn

SWEEPER
BAGS

TEA
KETTLE

Mad"'

)lu rdy
up pe" ·
•&gt;ovlded ~ole R-a ( e&lt;
slr(pe lr lm C irDii~~
lllve blue df'nlm ,
~·e'l n . '"'"" ~nd

Royal

Sd ve \1 00 on eo~ch
Bl&lt;tek pl!ullc handle
Gle~ming c.hrome
!inhh l o Mch s1or e

-or

and

c11nl~ l er ~IY!IIS

1
in package

~nd ~

TAPE
CASE

5e ars

Hoover

mo5 !
lillY
Olher
!lr&lt;M1d Up r lghl. lank

s.we JJc

'$"3AI99'
~nd

C. E ,

f-o r

CHEST
Under Bed
or
Chest SIJie
Wood Gr1ln or Swirl

Regylar U .99. Blut
denim . blac k. red "'
gretn ,;tlllgatcr 10011
Wllh hilndlt: . Holds 2•

't.59
Value

lnp~S

66~.,.

'4.99

co.ndition .

Earlier in the week, doctors
laid Flynt, who has wounds in
the abdomen , was trying to
fight off an abdominal
Infection and sepsis (bloodborne hacteria ), and be had
contracted pneumonia.
Flynt and his . attorney,
Gene Reeves, were hit March
I by a sniper's bullet.s in
Lawrenceville, 30 miles from
Atlanta, as they. returned to
the
Gwinnett
County
courthouse where Flynt was
on trial for dis tributing
obscene material.
Reeves, 47, wounded in the
arm and the stomach,
remains in guarded condition
at Button Gwinnett.
The J:&gt;.year-old Flynt, who
bas
undergone
three
operations since the attack, is
paralyzed from the mid-thigh
down and doctors said his
chances of regaining tile use
of his legs are less than :;o
percent. ,
In a prepared statement,
doctors said Tuesday Flynt's
"lnfec tlon
and
the
deteriorating pulmonary
lllatus continue as his most
threatening problems."
Because of Flynt's "dirnW·
llhed pulmonary status, he
bas
been placed
orr
mechanical ventilation (a
respirator) for pulmonary

Pot &amp; H1naer Not Included

FLOWER FILlED

CEMETERY

ARTIFICIAL - WASHABLE
Who HIS A Beller Selection AI Our low Prites?

eo.rr""--

CA~IDW

VASE

DISCOUNT
PRICED!

FRESH TOO! JUST ~RRIVED
~
:
Jell1 Bird Eap · Chlcb
~
Pinned Eap · Bunnies
• ·.
; .Peanut Butter Eap ·
•
VISIT SHOPPERS MART · ARST!

sse

ISUPport," the statement said.

iJ.i,i;,~
MILK atOCOI.ATE , EGG
-~, Ludtns "love~ Eap"
~· 4 oz. · Hollow Mil• Chocolate
': t

iiJr'

...' . ..........

Re&amp;ular '1.29

~

~o•..-.

AND WIIITE TOO
Man1 Silos, Shapes

I,
L_

All Are
Boxed

69'

.,,

mtFICIAl

,.

EASTER BASKET
GRASS r · ~·

'

2 01. 49~ J
!!'!!i
Baa ·
~

CANNON VELOUR

BATH TOWELS

Pr lnls,

WOVEN STIAW

EA_ST
_ ER
BASKETS

49.4

TO .S}59_

bl.!oztr

tlrl p u ,

Tr:iw1l. he.!lvv ..-eight.

2
·

.
TO $219

solids ,

Second! bi C11nnon 5. ll., . 8e1t1r

FOR

$500

I
f

II

_,~
,

J
' l i~j
I

_ ·,.,...

"- ~ ·._,

I

But Tom Sellers, a spokes·
man for doctors, said Flynt's
. 1astrointestinal bleeding
"Jias been controlled by
lllleriographic occ
. lusion
of
the bleeding vessel."
Arteriographic occlusion,
Sellers said, was a special
Internal X-ray technique used
to identify the source of the
bleeding.
Flynt's vital signs remain
liable , Sellers said .
Gwinnett · county

authorities,_meanwhile, said

they do not have any suspecls
,.
In the search for th·e
- - - - - - - - ...,..._... _..............__ - - - - - - - - - - . ~ . usailant.
·""'

33, en route to an 84·71 victory

borrower to . restore bis

operation and return to Psual

CHAMPIONSffiP TEAM - R. C. Cola of Middleport won the first am1ual Bend Area Jaycees Basketball Tournament
by .defeating Fenton Glasa Qf Williamstown in two straight games with scores of 86-82 and 56-55. R. C. advanced to the
championship round by defeating Clark's of New Haven, 7!H&gt;3. The Bend Area Jaycees expressed their appreciation to Gary
Clark and Ron Quillen for officiating the games. The finals standings are R. C. Coal, first place; Fenton Glass, second and
Clark's, third. Pictured, left to right, are Rusty Wood, Co-tournament director; Red Robinson , Gene Wise, Rod Ferguson,
Mick Davenport, Doxie Walters, Ron Ferguson, Lee Combs, Rick Bailey, Mike Johnson and Dave Gillispie, co-tournament
director.
Sta\es be recited at the start
MORNING PATRIOTISM
of each school day.
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Rep.
Brown's biU will excuse
Les Brown , D-Columbus , those pupils if recitation of
introduced a bill Tuesday to the pledge is "con trary to his
require that the pledge of religious convictlons or those
allegiance to the Unite d of his parents or guardians."

..

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sparta Editor
DUNEDIN, Fla. (UP!) - The big rematch is all set and
should be corning up in another couple of days.
Not the one between Leon Spinks and Muhammad Ali for the
.world heavyweight title but the one between Ted Williams and
Carl Yastrzemski for the world singles title, or at least that
small part of tile world not spoken for already by either Jimmy
Connors or Bjorn Borg.
Some of the Boston Red Sox were talking about the origi_nal
match between Williams and Yastrzemski before Tuesday's
game with the Toronto Blue Jays. It was held in Winter Haven
a week ago this past Sunday and Yastrzemski had ID chase up
and down the court and pull shots out of his ears before beating
Williams, who'll be 60 in August and is serving with the Red
Sox as a batting instructor this spring, 7-li, 6-4, 7-li.
"I blew him off the court," said Yastrzernski, perfectly
aware he was going to get an argument from some of the
~ers listening to him in the Red Sox dugout .
"Don't believe it," piped up Jacic Rogers, the club's travel·
ing secretary. "We almost had to carry him offthe court.''
Yaz frowned.
"He surprised me," admitted the Red Sox' 33-year-old left·
fielder. "He's so big, he takes one step and he gets to any ball
you hit."
How did tile match come about in the first place?
Yaz laughed.
"He was popping off in the clubhouse for a week about how
he can play tennis, and you lmow him, he doesn't pop off about
anything if he can't do it well. After a little needling back and
forth, we played. He's a very prideful man even on the tennis
court. l had him down fiv~othing in the first set and he tied it

Twenty-five of the total

t he

emergency runs were in town
and four out of town. Four
calls were those involving
motor vehicles. Toial hours
spent in emergency runs
were 115.5 a nd emergency
vehicles were driven 471.4
miles.
Manhours on fires totaled .

average

firemen answering each caU

.

$239

24 oz. BROUGHTON

Box

alTTAGE CHEESE ..... 89~

.. .. 2Paks35'
30 Count

A.ORIDA CELERY.... ~~~.~~- 49'
5 lb. Ba!!

. .

A.ORIDA ORANGES .... ~.~~.99'

" He wasn't on the bus/ ' said Rogers. "Unless he's driving

2 lb. ORIEDA FRENCH FRIES ••••••••••••B.a!. 8~

over.''

Later, Doerr, who was Williams' closest friend when they
were Witll the Red Sox together and who hasn't seen him in
nine years now,learned that Ted had stayed back in Winter
Haven to help some of Boston's kids with tllelr hitting.
."Too bad," Doerr said, a little sadiy. "I was hoping to see
hiin again."

JUMB_O
VIVA TOWELS!!~.~:! ••••••••••••••••••69~
oz.
.
(40c om
$
.
4
POWDER
29
TIDE
SOAP
15'12 oz.
WHITNEY PINK SALMON •••••••••••••••• }l.79
171

•••••••••••••••••••••••

Local Bowlfua

I

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes

Early Sunday Mixed

March 12, 1978
Jack's Dairy Bar

10'1&gt; oz. CAMPBELL$

Tom's Carry qui
Gi bb's Grocery

CHICKEN
NOODLE
SOUP.
•••••••••••••••••
3/79~
4B oz. TEEN QUEEN
PURE
VEG. SHORTENING •••••••••••••••••
$1.29
3 oz. AR,MOUR
.
.
POTIED MEAt •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 2/45t
2 lb. DOMINO

GRANULATED SUGAR•••••• ~ •••••••••••••••':.:.63

4

6 oz. INSTANT

WHERE:

against

Detroit's Terry Ty tet• had
. 19puint.s,JohnLong 17, Terry
Duernd )6, and Smith 12.
" Any time you are out-

Grace Episcopal Parish Hou se, East Main Street , Pomeroy, Ohio
(beside Old Pomeroy J r. Hiah School)

WHO:
Robert Hutchinson , Chemical Specialist, will be here to give the
lates t information on all chemicals. seed corn &amp; fe&lt;tilizer .
We are inviting all of the farmers in the Meigs, Ma son and Gallia
County Area. all Vo· Ag s tudents , and anyone else th a t is inle&lt;esled
on attendonq.
Refres hments - Door Pri~es . Information .

rebounded by ·15 in the first
haU, you know you a re in
IIouble," Detroit Co&lt;ICh DaveGaines said. " It hurt our
runnin g game when we

couldn't pull it off the
boards .''
In other second-round NIT

POMEROY LANDMARK
MGR

0

JACK W. CA RSEY ,

Drive A Little and Save A Lot- Free Delivery within 75 MilesYes! We Service At Your Local Hotpol nt Dealer.
Store Hours: B: 30 to S: 3o-Mill Closes at S: 00 P.M.--'-Serving MeiQS .
Ga llia &amp; Ma son Counties .

AOVJATISEO ITEM POLI CY
.... f l - - ....... I I - . f~Nod 10 1:J11o , . . . , ,
flor 11 ~ Kropo S1o&lt;e u o ~n u

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

. . . '-"· -

_. oM. ..,..

n-do ' '-"'""' " 'F'~
fi)Ur choo« o t 1 c(lfl"'lptr..,...

.................... reftK'IIniiiiiW
~.....,.

.......... '1"0111 0

• . . . . . . . . . . pnct~

..,_~ II&lt; I ' l ift

pu'"'... ,,. ..,...,_ ,,..,,

lO .,.,.

CCW~ItGHT lt11- IHI 11.11004'1
CO. ITIMI ANO N1CU 0000
SIJHOAV MAllO! U , 1971 y..u

.

l,lt.JUIOA'( IIIIAICH 11 , lf71lfll

..

MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE•••••••••••••:~r s3.29
15 oz.

DEL MONTE SPI ACH•••••••••••••• ~ •••••• 2/69'

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE

Save

so•

$

Macaroni &amp;
. Cheese Kraft
' Dinners .......... .

HOME
MADE
HAM
SALAO
•••
~ •••••••••••••L.~.• 994
FRENCH CITY
PEPPER
LOAF OR HONEY LOAF•••••• ~~}1.79
FREN-CtfCITv .
12
oz. pkg.
WIENERS•••••••••••••••••••• :.~g:. 79'
FRENCH
CITY
.
RING PUDDING ••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~~~ •. $1.19
.

York

YOU CAN DEPEND ON KROGER

Was there anything riding on tile match?
"A couple of -bucks," Yastrzemski said, laughing soine
more. 11 The smart money was oh me."
The bonversatlon swung back to haseball, and Yastrzemski,
Starting his 18th season with the_Red Sox, said he still enjoys
talldng hitting with Williams.
"What do you talk about? " someone asked him.
"We talk ahout a lot of different things, things like ·
movement, developing rhythm with your hands, arms and
body from a standstill," Yastrzemski said. "The big tiling is
1M! you have to analyze what he says and apply it to your own
ability. ''
Yastrzemski loo.ked over 'toward the batting cage where
Bobby Dol.rr, who used to play second base for the Red Sox and
Ia working with some of the Blue Jays on thelr hitting tllis
!ping, was watching them take batting practice.
" Bobby Doerr was an excellent hitter, too, and his theory on
hitting is different than Ted's," said Yaz. "Bobby says hit '
down on the ball. Ted says catch it on the U!&gt;'Cilt . Me? I'm an
,
uppercutter.''
Doerr and Williams both were with San Diego in the minors
together and came up to the Red Sox a year apart, Doerr in
1937 and Williams in 1938. Doerr Hved in Oregon and Williams
In San Diego and when Williams was due to report to the Red
Sox for the fll'st time in the spring of 1938, Eddie Collins, tllen
general manager, cailed Doen- and told him to make
arrangement.s with Williams to meet in Los Angeles and COll)e
to Florida !Dgetller on the train . ·
"There was a flash flood around San Diego at the time and it
washed out tile telephone tines," recalled Doerr. "Well, you
!mow how Ted is always thinking. He got hold of a ham
operator in San Diego and had him contact another ham
operator in Los Angeles, telling me to go the best way I could.
''Babe Hennan was on the train with me and tile train Ted
took in San Diego connected with ours in El Paso. Ted was so
excited about going to spring training. He kept talking with
Herman about hitting aU the time. I remember him picking up
tllis pillow and swinging it in the aisle as if it were a bat."
Rogers cwne by the batting cage as Doerr was talking.
"Did Tedcomeoverwith the team? " Doerr asked him.

Prices Effective Thru Sat., March 18th

VELVEETA CHEESE......

Thursday , March 16, 1978-7 : 30 P. M.

up.''

· Phone 742-2100

.

WHEN:

nex-t

fense.

Sport Parade

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT STORE

2 lb. KRAFT

which

Georgetown.
Kendal " Tiny " Pinder
scored 18 points and Charles
"Hawkeye" Whitney added
11 as NC State shut down
Detroit's high ·s~ori ng of·

Today's

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

credit sources for operating

night,
them to

New

--

calls were emergencymedical runs; three were
structure fires ; two were
mutual aid calls, one a
vehicle fire and three were
listed in
miscellaneous

the

Tuesday
advances

Larry llird. lndiArtll State 's
All-America forward , It'd all
scorers with 23 points and
!.'Uard Barry Morgan addt'd
18 for the Sycamores. Abdel
Anderson led Rutgers with 16
points and llailel' had 13.

I1;1 ;1~1 =I ;Iii: I=I~ I tlf;1 II~ I=I :j i I~CCJ

SUnday's NIT semifinals in

Wayne Davis.

123.1 with

~

crushed Detroit underneath ,

The Middleport Fire
Department answered 34
calls during the month of
February, according to the
montWy report of Fire Chief

of

vulnerable

outrebnunding U1e Titans , 64-

made last month

category.
Twenty-one

~nost

were

secQnds left to send Rutgers
past lndian;J State und into
the semifinals . Rutgers. now
~. will moet the winner of
Wednesday night's Texa s·
Nebraska RUrne.

games. Jlutgers clipped
Indiana State, &gt;7-56, and
Georgetown beat Dayton, 7162.
Center James Bailey hit a
IO'Ioot jump shot with 15

inside.
The Wolfpack completely

....

years following a natural
disaster to permit the

STORAGE

Streams and rivers in

southern Ohio also were
swollen for several days by
the melting ice and snow, as
well as the Tuesday morning
rainfall.
' The Ohio River will crest
two feet above flood level in
CincinnaU Thursday, Ohio
River Forecast Center
officials predict, but no major
flooding
is
e•pected.
Forecast officials said
Tuesday the river will reach
S4 feet in Cincinnati at 10 a.m.
Thursday.
Although minor flooding
occurs in low~ying areas
when tile river hits the 52-foot
stage, it takes several more
feet of water to prodoce
major flooding .

Headquarters For
Admiral Quality
Color TV's. See Us:
BAI&lt;ER FURNITURE

annual emergency loa ns may
be made each year up to five

funds.

Wolfpack were well uware of

Detroit's speed, so U1ey attacked the Titans where IIley

taken to Veterans Memorial
being 13.
Hospital.

reorganizing the operation to
make it more effective. Also,

FIBREBOARD

Ohio 45769.

SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy ER Squad
was called at 3:&gt;3 p.m.
Tuesday to the Howard
Searles residence on Flat·
woods Road for Anna Searles,

obtain cr e dit fr.o m' other
usual sources to qualify for
FmHA assistance.
Long and intermediate
term loans may be made for

ATLANTA
(UP! )
Doctors at E!llory University
Hospital say Larry Flynt, the
owner of Hustler magazine
who was shot from ambush
eight days ago, has slipped
Into critical condition and is
11Sing a respirator to help his
lire a thing.
.
The decision to put Flynt on
llie .critical list Tuesday indi·
cates he has taken a turn for
·llie worse.
Since last Thursday, the
day after he was transferred
lo Emory from Button
Hospital
in
Gwinnett
Lawrenceville , Flynt -h as
seriouS
remained
in

United Press lnternaUonal
The North Carolina Stale

according to.Stackhouse, who
said the Cuyahoga River and
Tinker's Creek both were
rising rapidly.

34 fire runs

Athens, Meigs and Vinton
A p pI i c a t i o n s f o r
County farmers who suffered . emergency loans may be
property damage or severe made immediately at the
production loss from the Pomeroy FmHA office .
abnormal snowfalls and Applications for physical
blizzards between January losses will be received until
18, 1978 and February 3, 1978, August I, . 1978 and for
may
be
eligib le for production losses until
emergency loan assistance January 31, 1979.
from the Fanners Home
Benefits
of
FmHA
Administration (FmHA), the programs are available
tural credit service of the without regard to race, creed,

borrowers must

992-2 t09

~

just wailing to see what will
happen when it breaks. It has
to move . And when II

Dayton five ousted from NIT

R.C. Botlling Co.

"

Town Kiln
Cline's Construction
High Men's Series

John Tyree 545 .

62
58
SA

46
AA
22

Ed

Hi gh Women's . Series Gerrl Rought 511. Maxi ne
Dugan 503.

High 1-Mn's Game -

Ed

Voss 241, Darrell Dugan 200.
High Women's Game lv\arlene Wil son 213, Gerrl

Rought 1119.

· High Team Series- Tom' s.

Carry Oul 2040 .

High Team Ga me- Tom' s
High Women' s Series Ca,rry Out 757 .
Mi 'Y Voss 538, Peart Russe ll .
Voss 574,

• 491
.
.
•
High Men 's Game - Ed
YoU 208. Bill Willford 200.
High Women's Gam~ MlrycVoss 192, Pearl Russell
1

•

1•.
High Team Series - Jack's
Dlliry Bar 2000.
High Team Game - Tom 's
Carry Out 678.

Team

Glbb's Grocery
Town Kiln

R.C. Bollllng Co.

Cline's Construction

SO

«

4o4
18

High Men's Series
Ed
Voss 585, A. L. f'l1e_lp$ 530.

Sh&amp;mrock Mot el

I

: Save

FARMS . U.S. O.A. "I""'"''"'

~ ~~~~;:.

38
26

20

Belly

Smith 202, Pat Carson 195,

Pat Carson 187.
. High Series - Betty Smith
51J7 , Pat Carson 551 , Helen

.c·l

Teem High Game
Shamrock Motel 490.
Teem High Series

I
I

..

I

I

~----1
I
Ollt • 1 ~

49c

LI MIT ONE

~OUPQ N PUI ' AMIL ~

o·

S.
~!9

I

Phelps 459.

"

'tiCM Ul

I

111 11115 '011 10

I

0111 01 AU Of

I

1111 U COST

cunu couPO•s

I
I
I
I

~:

---·-····

I

29
Sprite or
6
Tab ................... Pak

I

liMIT I ttl WITH COUPON UO $7 50 IOOII!O!Il PURCHASI
;EICtUOINC THIS !t[M t
~I

Kroger
Flour

:

· c ::~·~:~:,:~~. :

49

ONtl /.1,0

,...tMASI

umus ro, ro

l!MIT i BIG WITH COUPONINO IT 10 IOOIIIO!It PUHCHASl
.
· oUCtUOINC THIS IIEM)

I
I

39

•

I
I

:

10W30

I
I
I

Ulll(lll utii(.IJIJ Ifill I IICAI lUll

I

Hi Nu 2%
Lowfat Milk~

$

I

I'

:.
1

( ; ; c:T;i;·lEIOTTLES

I

CMnli COUP'U S

Gallon
Ctn.

:

Kroger
Grapefruit 4 o -oz.
Juice ......... .
Auto Pride
Motor
Oil ..... ........Quart

rmr C0$1

Clorox
Liquid Bleach

I
I
I
I

Kroger
Fried
Chicken .:

I

Oil 01 AU Of

- --········-----..

I

PIOHN HEAT 'N'

I

I

PUICIIISI

ll...,IT O NE COU P ON PU' f AMI I y
COirtll COM ltiNfiUU II lilt• U U t i

I
I

Texas
Ruby Red
Grapefruit .... .... Each

o~r" ~o

UTI IU S '0.. TO

Roll

I

40 StZE TEXAS WHITE OR

,-----... I

l!MIT 1l8S. WITH COUPON UO $7 .10 IOOIIIONIL PUACHISI
tiiCtUOINC THIS IIEM I

I

Kroger
Grade A
Large Eggs

" I
I
I

1-lb~ll9

1
I
I
I

. $2.31

Gunnoe's
Country Sausage

1

1- •• •

45

Gen. Contractor .

Royal Crown Cola

HI. ROLl

• . [) I

60
511

Royal Oak Park
Oavld Brlckles,

Shamrock Motel 1409. ,

FRESH BONE tN WHOLE OR

UM\1 O NE COUPON

PE~ ~AMI I,

~P'OII~MI~ .. , ••• ,, U,~IrJII11JitN J il tll

I);

1:
1

I

@)
•

''

SIIJI(I IO II'tl!t&amp;ltl m11 5 10ti11 AIII

I

·-······-------------~----~
"D~S~

. r··"'''"'IIIMIPMWilson's Bavarian

C \-)""'&gt;-)
.

I
I
•

. A•.,lable In Stores W&gt;th Deh Drpartm!nt' s

WHITE OR

Standings
.

Francis Florist
High Ind . Game -

56
50

Boxes

.

Tuesday Triplicate
March 7, 1978

~rk V

Early Sunday MIKOd
March 5. 1978
Jack's Dairy Bar
Tom's Carry Out

1,&gt;4 · OZ.

Boneless Bottom
Round Steak ....
Boston Butt
Pork
Roast
HOllY
Mixed
Fryer
Parts ..

C:orned Beef ·

,...~,

$259

~1

lb.

CAP 'N UW'I CAPTAIN'S CI101Cl

..

FRESH

.

~~n~~: o $1 19

�Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

8-The;:~;n::·Mid~e~~~::::oy,o

.• wednesday, Marchi5. W a n t

CHARGES

If

]5 Wur4&gt;\JI Und~r
CJ\.llrl(t'
ra:;h

1.00

I dtt)

'"'

t~~,.

180

J dil\ ~
6d.. ~ s

JOO

uwumuiTt Cll!&gt;h m •nh• otJt~· ~~

TH~ RACIN~

9 ...

IIIiA

,wt't' tttctl uuly Ydth l"ash 'At\h

uti..lt•t 25t t'lll L:h!I I'!,W fu1 i!dS l'a u y•
IIIK 1\ux Nurnbt•1 In Can: of The Stoll·
wwl

Ru ssell , Bradbury . 997 :72~8 .
TIRED OF cooki ng? Try our
Budut ts and Barrels o f Chrck
N Ou!'
Dairy Isle , M td·
dleporl

Tl~t.· l'uUh~1~ rt"st'rvc~ Lilt• n ~~:ht

I ·

Check our low, low

on
pnces •

ME IGS CO UNlV Hu mane Socu~+t~

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Tutsda)·
tluu r rulil)
~p M.

l.odurl! puOiil·rtl!u!l
Swtdily
-IP.M

Jo'riday ilftl!l llOOII

Laurel Oiff
News Nott&gt;s
Attendance at the morning
service Sunday, March 12 at
the F ree Methodist Church
was 100. A group of yo ung
people from th e Oakdale
Christian High School gave a
program Sunday morning at
the loca l church.
Mrs. Mabel Tra cy is
in
visi ti ng
rela t ives

BOWLING
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Tri -County League
Feb. 28, 1978
Standings
Team
Pts.
Eagles Club
64
Pomeroy Cement Block Co .
&lt;4
Col umbia Nat iona l L1 fe
42
Cline 's Const. Co.
38
8 1l l's Body Shop
32
H &amp; R, Fi r estOne
28
Hi gh tnd game - Kenny
Pa yne 222 1 Don Nelson 210 ,
Ed Voss 205 .
Hig h i nd . se r tes - A . l.
Phelps , Jr 561; Ed Voss 5.41 1
Don Nelson 526 .
Hig h team game- Eagles
Club 916.
t-:11gh team senes - Eagles
Clu b 2489.
Tri -County League
Marcy 8, 1978
Standings
Team
Pts .
Eagles Club
70
Pomeroy Cement Block Co.
52
Columbia Nat1ona l L1 fe
42
Bill's Body Shop
40
Cline's Canst. Co.
38
H . &amp; R Fi r estone
30
High ind game - Henry
Cla twor thy 215; Keith Pha\ 1n
214 ; Ed Voss 210.
High ind . ser ies - Henry
Cla twor thy 599 ; Ed Voss 547 ;
Jerry Van l nwagen 527 .
H•gh t ea m game - H. &amp; R.
Fires tone 852 .
High team series
Pomeroy Cement Block Co.
2487
Early Wednesday
Mixed league
March 8, 1978
Standings
Team
Pts.
Young 's Super Market
52
Zide's Sport Shop
52
Eag les Club
50
Nelson Dr ug Co
42
Sm ith Nelson M otor Co.
33
Tenth Framers
33
High ind . Game
Men ,
Bob Couch 213; women , Pat
Ca rson 194; me n , Larry
Dugan, 10 ; women , Nlaxine
Dugan and Ca r olyn Bachner
171 ; men , Bi ll Porter 206,
women, Carol yn Bachner 170.
High ind . series- M en , 8111
Porter 563. women, Ca rolyn
Ba c hner 498 ; m en, John
Tyree S58, women, Pa1
Carson 48.4 ; men. Bob Couch
539. women, Deloris Tyree
417.
High team game- Eagles
Club 705.
High team series - Eagles
Cl ub 2008

Th rt l t

Shop

acro H

fr om

Pomeroy Pos r Oil ice
AS A non ·union rruner . I would

....

DI::ALERS AUCfiON Sole . Publk
1n..,11ed Fri , 12 00 noon Lots bl
new merchond15e sold 1n quon
111y ol O h1 o Rt ver AuCIJo n
Metgi PIOlO , Mtddleport. O h1 0 .
Regular OU(I Ion ~ales F11doy
and Saturday. 7 pm

PI Pl t:o
sent , W Vo be!i.1de Hock ~
1973 8roadmore 14 • b.4 'l
bedroom
l'il73 0onan 1.4 .oc ~2bed•oom
197:2 Vlctonan 14 • 67 J bedr"oom
'1 both
1972 Coventry 12 x 65 3 bedroom
J9b9 Stote5mon 12 • 60 2
bedroom

$25 o p•ckup load.

landmark

&amp; condition your.
with Co-op water .
softener, Model UC·SVI.
Now Only ~
9,95

Phone " H18t

27

us test your water Free

Pomeroy Landmark.

FOUND STRA''f' young block
fema le house dog Terner type
(ule. good d•spos•tion Wh1te
spol on chtn Mulersville or eo

Jack W. Carsev . Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

99'1 -208b

%i_J~~:::=::

FIREWOOD. 5plt1 ond del1"'e'ed
LOST AROUND Peach Fork ·Long
S45 a cord or S35 o truckload
Hollow area in Meigs Co Mole
All hardwood 843·2933 Of
FREE CO lLIE pups to o good
Ge1man short -ho,red Brtltany
992 62'il5.
hom, . 6 week5 old . Wormed
m•~o~ed Ton collar . A"swers to
HEAL THY YOUNG ptgs lor sole
Have shah
A. do ra~le
th e nome 9! Nebo Reword
949 2774 , af ter 5 p m.
992-5%5 durtng th e day
991 2592 .
992·5209 evenmgs
COAL LIMESTONE sond. gro~t e l
col etum chlor ide, fertilizer dog
LOS T BORDER c.ollle fl'10 le. Dark
food and oi l types o l .. olt Ex·
reddish brown and wh1te .
~:e l s1or So il Works, Inc., E. Mom
Wh1te
slnp
aroun
d
neck
.
Seen
Califonita .
St POmeroy .992-3891.
gone '1 weeks An5wer5 to the
Mr. and Mrs . Hoadly
nome of Kelly $25 1eward CORN $7 o bu Coli 985·3537 or
Caruthers , Beach
City,
b14 667 ·6101.
9854131 .
VIsited Friday with M r. and LOST female Sl . Be1nard I'' 197 1 '• Ford p•ckup truck Good
Mrs. Roy H owell. They
years old Brown and wh11e.
ltrcs and body . Run s. good . See
Small por t col he and par I
ol Rutland Furntlure or . coli
returned home Saturday.
shepho1d J.ght brown 4 mo.
742121 1.
Mr . Vernon Howell , alter
old Phone 992 -7684
FOR SALE Men s u~ed work
spending two weeks with Mr.
Jackets ond ponrs , men 's work
and Mrs . Howell, returned
boots. mme boo ts dre5s \ hoes
tun e with Mr. and Mrs .
l or th~ whole lomdy.
Caruther s.
Bodey s. M•_d~epo_r t
TIMBER . Pomeroy Forest Pro·
Mr .
Pa ul
Archer ,
ducts Top p11ce lor s1ond1ng
5ow 11mbcr . Coli 992 S'il65 or
Co lumbus, called on Mr .
Kent Hanby_. 1 · 446 · 8 ~7~
Charles Diehl, and Bertha
COINS , CURRENCY , tok~n s old
Parker on Saturday.
poc ke\ wat ches and chains.
Mrs. Nellie Tracy, who fell
sil"er and gold We need 1964
recenlly at her home, was
and older 5i lver cams Buy sell ,
tak en to Kimes Nursing
or trode' Coli Roger Wamsley ,
742-233 1
Home, Athens. Her son , Mr.
Alston Tracy, Columbus, took OLO FURNITURE 1ce boxes , brass
beds •ron beds. . etc complete
ca re of her .
households. Write M. 0 Miller
Rt 4, Pomeroy Ohio or coli
For Thursdly, M1rch 16
992 -7760

-

-

.

.ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

---

NO IT EM TOO Lorge or too small
Will buy I piece or complete
household New used or on h·
que5 Morlm 's Furntlure , 20 N
2nd S1
Middleport . Phone
992.6370

FEEDE R PICS $2 7 each for all or
$30 each mdtvtduol ly rupper5
~
.
Ploms Ohio 614 -667·3368 .
CHI P WOOD
Poles ma x .
d1ometer 10 " on largest end. $8 !WO FIRE STO NI: I' own ond Coun·
per 1on Bundled slab, $6 per
try 800-16 5 !I res wt th 8 hole
IOfl Del1 vered to Oh1o Pall et
nm&lt;;, l 1kenew $100 992 -6398

-- ----·-

c~ ~t: 3.:_ ~ome ro y

Don 't tear l aking on more responsibili ty or becoming involved in management si tua IIOn s th ~s taming year. Your
work may be harder , but the
re turns wi ll be grea ter m proportion
PISCES (Fob. 20·March 20) A
task you felt was left up to you
to handl e w1 tl be par ttally assum ed by someone else today
II will be a load ott yo ur che st and mmd Havmg troubl e selectmg a career? Send fo r yo ur
copy of A s tra-Graph Le tt er by
ma1 l1 ng 50 ce nts lor eac h and a
long , self-addressed. s tamped
envelope to Astro~Graph , P.O
Box 489 Rad•o Ctty Stati on,
NY . 100i9 . Be sure to specify
birth sign
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19) Good
forl un e comes principally Ia
th ose who work lor 11 Don't
trust 1n blind luck today and
e~epec t all the good things of
life
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You
may have been regardi ng too
tigh tl y benefits of a pro1ect
you've been workin g on . Today
you' ll realize Its true potential
GEMINI ~May 21· June 20) Perslsten ce is th e key to bargain ~
ing lor you today If you're
bu y•ng or selli ng , tim e 15. on

GOOO

USED

9f1J ~6~9:

lra cl or

ONE GAS dryer Good con dit1on
w1th
165. 992-6398

hy_dr~ul •c. ~!· ~t5 h..:_ 74'2_:307~

FARM CONSIGNMEN T Equtpmenl
$CASH$ tor junk cor5. Frye·s.
s.ale m Alhens . OH. For more
call
Athens
Truck and Auto Ports . Wrecker
1 nformal101,
Serv1ce. Tire sole an d Repair.
662 2302 .
local
contac t
Rutl and , 742-208 1 or Pennzoil .
J42-25q3
742 9575 .
.
- - ~- ----~-- FT
TRUCK
Camper , se ll ·
WAN TED TO buy Good used
cantomed Sleep5 4 Cos tS 950
baby lur ni t ~re Coli 992-5326.
992 -6124 .

IF YOU ho"'e o ser\llce 10 oiler , WIL L CARE l or I he elderly 1n our
won t to bu y or sell somethmg '
h o~~ · _F' h~o~e992 73 14 .,

:eha t~~:i;g fo;o~W'~el resul~~ --'-----------~
1

la"e' w; lh a Sent;nel Want Ad
Colt 992-21:;5:::6c__

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

HOOF HOLLOW Horses Buy. sell We have enlarged our
trade or train . New and u5ed service department and
saddles Ruth Reeves, Albany
will service Hotpoin1 and
(614) 698.3290.
·other brands.
RISING ST AR Kennel, Boarding
Indoor and outdoor runs
Grooming oil breeds. Clean
somtory faci l1t1es Ches hire
Ph one (~.!._4 ) 367 -0292 . ~.:Jack W. Carsey, Mgr .
AKC REGISTERED Bo•er pup p1es ,
Phone 992-2181
.
Hov e hod shots and beer .
wor med . 10 week s old
·-· 992 . 2726

. Pomeroy Landmark

9.,
lilil.

YoUJ side

CANCER (Juno 21-July 221 II
you feel ltke you can move a
lew mountatns today , you can 1975 GRA NADA v .8 automatic,
oro bably do it . Yr.ur faith 1n
power steer ing, AM rod1o.
yourself is paramount. Others
power broke5 . ai r conditi ong
find it infectious.
Excellent condition. $2,900.
VIRGil B. SR.
llf4.tlOII
LEO ~July ~Aug . 22) It's f ine to
Phone 'il92·3B66.
992·3325
be a little pugnacious today , 1976 CAMARO. Good condition.
216 E. Second Stree1
but don 't go to ex trem es . Cool
992-608-4
RUTLAND Real nice
11 tor awhile •f you get so
ol der home with good
comba1ive it makes you nervarnished woodwork . Has 3
vous and Irritates others
or 4 bedrooms, furnace , 2
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22) There
baths, 2 car garage, and
may be a situatton you find you ST ARCRAFT FALL Sale . Mtni·
level lot. Need 135,000 .
can't cope with today . An asso·
1noton, 20' and 22', Tra Vel
NEW LISTING - 5 ocres
Troller! 18' 5 · $3,799 , ·25 T
elate may be ready , able , to
of nice laying land w11h lots
Bunkhou1e $4 ,875 . Fold ·down,
lend a hand .
of firewood . TP, water
$1.700 up . We ~ell ser..,•ce and
l!BRA (Sept. 23-0ct . 23) Mos!
quality . Qpen Sundoy1 . Camp
ava ilable. Good for builder
thing s In lite can be a game If
Conley Storcraft Sales, Rt, 62,
or pri vate party . Only '
you look al them. In that llghl.
Earl Wednesday
N. of Pl. Pl eosonl . '
$6500 .
Even ttresome chores can be
Mixed League
easy today , when you make
ON . HARD ROAD 4
March 1. 1978
them contests.
bedroom older home that
Standings
SCORPIO (Oct. 2._Nov. 22)
looks good . Basemen1,
Team
Pts.
There is no substitute lor a
natu..ral gas F .A. fur nace.
Zlde's Sport Shop
50
4 RM . fu rnis hed and unAll city utilities. Ask ing
quick and subtle wl1 . You' ll find 3 AND
fur n•shed opts . Phone 9f12You ng 's Super Market
.&amp;4
repartee can do wonders
S28,000.
Eagles Club
« today .
5 34
OLD BRICK - 9 room s,
' ·
Nelson Drug Co .
42
city water, natural gas, 2
SAQ!TI AAIUS (Nov. 23-Doc. COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Smith Nelson
31
Route
33,
north
of
Pomeroy.
porches, and 2 lots. $.5500.
21)
Work
as
a
team
with
your
Tenth Framers
27
lo,ge lo15 . Coll992·7479.
SMALL 2 FAMILY partner or loved one today
High Ind . game - men , Jim
This will yield a far better return 12 • 60 MOBILE HOME near Dex·
Owner rents one for
Hawley, 221, women, Isabelle
than trying to run In slf!gle
Couch 199 ; men, Tom Smith
,., Phone '192·5858-,·----:--,
Income. 2 baths, all city
204, Marlene Wilson 195 ; · harness .
TWO BEDROOM apar tment . Call
uti lities near stores . Asking
CAPRICORN (Doc . 22-Jon . 191
men , A. L. PHelps, Jr. 203,
59 •600 ·
before
8
om
.
992·-22
:
::
8
;.:
8.:...
_
_
0'\ly
If coworkers do a good job , let
women , Pat Carson 185 .
.RT. 33 - 3 bedroom bloc ~
7
them know abou t it today. They
High ser ies - Men , Jim
FO R
rent .
Renta ls
with natu ral gu fUrnace,
deserve your kind words . Your
Hawley ,
593 ,
women ,
ossiutonce rates for Senior
city water, and one acre.
Marlene Wilson 539; men, A.
esteem In their eyes will profit
C1l1lens . Conlo&lt;t Village Menor
Just outside of town .
L. Phelps, Jr .. 592, women,
too.
Apt• .• M;ddlepo't 992· 778 7
BETTER
BUY
NOW
Betty Smith 530; men , Tom
AQUARIUS (Jan. ZO.Fob. 191 FoR RENT -;;-.;R"od;.~M~Ie
BEFORE
ANOTHER
Smith 563, women, Isabelle
People with clout you know
home 3 bedrooms Prefer
ROUND OF INCREASES.
Couch 524.
socially sland ready to help you
SUE P. MURPHY
odvlts. No pels. Caii949.26J8.
High team game - Zlde's
In your work or career today. - - - - - - -d
HELEN L . TEAFORD
Sport Shop 737.
Tal~ business first. Ha~e tun THREE BEDROOM hovse . o u ts
GORDON B. TEAFORD
High team series - Zlde's
only Inquire 40'il South F1i th
ASSOCI.ATES
later.
Sport Shop 2106.
~ve ._ M i~~~
---L__ __:::;:.:.::.::.;.....:;.:__ ___,
tNEWSF'APER ENTERPRISE ASSN.J

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

No. 200 - Wil kesvil le area,
approx . 1 acre, road an 3
si des. Gas furnace. 2 story,
bottom story alt carpeted
and refinished .
Price
S18,000.

MOORE'S
Muffler
Brakes
Shocks
Ti res
Battery.
Installation Service

804 W. Main
Pomeroy
992 ·2298
After Hours Call
992. 7133
CONTACT :
Lois Pauley
Branch Manager

Ph. 992·2848

I

'

)

...-·

.~

{•

.

Portr1ils

PIISpotts

Route 2
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
EJtlmales by Appointment
Phone9f2.71lt
2·2Hic

WELL , \Vti..\T' RE 'l''OU

EASY HAS DI?GU15ED HIMSELF FOR A
~J6HT RENDEZ.VOU5 WIT~ THE D06 NAPPE;R· · WHO'S AFTER DAFFODIL'S
SOL AR E NERGY PROC!'$S ~
HEY. LAD')';
ARE VOL' Ml55

Syracuse,
Free Estimates
Phone 992. 3993
3·3·1fc

WEDNESDAY , MARCH 15, 1971
5 ro-Here Come The Br ides 3; Star Trek 4 : Gun smoke

5TAR" IIoJG AT. 5T UPID ~

I TOL D 'o'OU l'M
,\~ 1$5 DO!ll31~ 5 ~

OKAY, IF YOU ;J&gt;A'I 50·
HONcV: ... A GUY PA ID
Ml' FIVE B~CKS T' 61VE
VA THI:; LETTEil.J

DOBBI~5~

•'

CARTER

Special Octtsions

8al&gt; lfaollich

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

AI Tromm

Anniveruries

2-16-1 mo

~==========~

742-2328
Free Estimates
Work Guaranteed
2· 10·tfc

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

-

-------~

--~

HOMESITE S for sole. I acre and
up. Middleport , near Rutland .
Col l 'il92·7.481

~

__

__

--"--.-~~--

HOBSTETIER

REALTY

GeorgeS. ttobslefttr Jr.,

Braker
107'12 Syc.more St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
PHONE 992-6333
Office Hours:
h .m. to 5 p.m.
Closed Thursdays and
Saturdays al n111n.
Your Fu II Time
Re.al Estate Broker

We haYe one trailer and
one double wide mobile
home wlth lots. In Tuppers
Plolns, Ohio.

Box 3·

Chester, Ohic.
10·30·c 1

Young's
Carpeting

IOJJ!t 3, POJM..,. 0.

Phone Mike Youn1
At
992·2206 or 992-7630
'7"' llritinllon
Nit The lmllalll~

We need Listings.
We hive buyers for mony types ol prowty.
CALL JIMMY DEEM, IISOclato, 949-2388.

I

[]](]

WHAI FUI': DO YOU
FROM A :&gt;KUNI&lt;~

.

Now auange the wcled letters to
lorm the surpnse answe• . as s ug ·.
gested by the above cartoon

•

••••
'

TURLEY'S WRECKER Service .
Ra cine, Oh1o Coy or night
949-2657 .
GOLF Cl UB Spec1ol $5 . Bog, gr ips
. cleaned . Shafts , clubheods ·
John
cle an ed , poli shed
~ Teof~~.£~ster , 0~--

'

,

•

'

,.,'·I'
•

'
"

.,......--:-:-D
: ::-G
-=--::
81

••
"I

"'

•

~:!e~ork

•

25~~ton for

You is d'privin'
these fine folks
o' their riqht t'
happiness '

"

sq. yd.
&amp; up
Fl\ANK &amp; E K NIF:

--

I

..

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

YOU

TH! MEMOFtY TRAINING
CI.R$S ? .•. Go DOWN TWO
FLIGHT$ OF- S.T'.AIR.$, MAICI: R
~JGI-4'r' AND 1\No 1-Ef,. , '1\#~NS ,.,.,,

'r'ftl'l! ,..~ THIRD fL.EVA'fOR '!'0
PAVIJ.ION ~I)( ANO ,.&amp;JRN 1-SfT
M 'PHi GOffff Sl-tOP, THEN
GO DOWN CORfZIDOR 'TH~E! 't'O· •

Rutland

:

Vulnerable : North-South
Dea l er : South

CGJD

R y J J

CA

CG

XC

S B

NYCNJY

SUD

YG
CG

VQ E: BY

v

BJSN
NY

l

Y-

ZVGVGY

NYYJ . Y .
H . . FCHY
Yesterday'• Cry ploquole : THE GREATEST MISTAKE IS
TRYING TO BE MORE AGREEABLE TIIAN YOU CAN
BE. - WALTER BAGE:HOT

I

.I"
.'
'
''

North

East

South
1 NT

Pass
Pa.ss

2•

Pass
Pass

2+

Pass

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
North's two·heart bid was
South to bid two spades . Thi s
bid has the advantage of
allowing the strong ha nd to
be concealed during the
play .
Dr George Rosenkra nz,
Mexico's greatest player,
w as sitting West Rosenkram., like all champions,

possesses a killer instinct.
At a bridge table, he is
completely devo1d of m ercy.
Which is why he is Mexico 's
greatest player.
This hand was played at a
national championship In
Chicago. With the op~ ning
club lead there is n o chance
for declarer to make two
spades . H e must l ose three
club trick s , a diamond and
two spades .
Most defenders would be

'
BARNEY

.'

'•
'•
!-4Eif, CHUCK , THIS IS
GONNA CRACK 'IOU UP~
A (E 'IOU LISTENING ?

MARCIE 1{45 THIS THEOR'i
ABOUT WJ.l'i I FALL
ASLEEP IN SCHOOL ALL
THE TIME .,. IT'S A WILD
THEORI(.. WAJT'LL l/OU HEAR
IT. .. IT'S REALLI( WILD...

WELL,1\I.ARCIE'S USUAW(
l&lt;i6HT ABOUT A LOT OF
Hl~ tt:&gt;.. ~H t:&gt; P~ETN

DO 't'OU LOVE

ME, CJ.WCK ?

NOW I KNOW WHAT
THEY MEAN WHEN
THEY SAY BAD LUCK
COMES IN
THREES
II

2

a Jacoby Transfer forcinH

XC

HVD

""

15 IN STOCK

It:

Here's how lo work

II X Y n 1. R ,\ II X R
J. 0 N (; F E I . I. 0 W

rRYPTnQUOTES

QY G X ,

West

Opening l ea d : •

One le tter simply stand s fnr ano ther I n this, sample A. is
u ~cd f ur I hi' lhrt'f' I.'s. X fnr th e I\\ o 0 ':-., (•t c Sm glc lcttcn,
aPos t rophes. the l L•ngt h :• ncl forrna t~ Pn nf the '' "rds arc all
hint s. Each da!- th \' code lt't tcrs are dtffercnt.

YGW

JEZEBEL!

• 76 4

is

BCQY

WHEN l 'TOLD HI~ ABOUT I&lt;ON1 AND
J'OW l ALMOST MAI&lt;RIED HIM1 HE
LOOKED CRUBHED. LIKE I Wt&lt;B

• K Q 98:1

34 Memorable
period
35 Golonka or
Francis
37 Boring thing :
colloq .
38 Mitzi or
Janet
39 Jannings
40 Insect
41 Holm, e.g.

XFY

WI NN I E
• WHATS ALL11-liB ~ONBENSE
A~UT TUTU LEAVING YOU ·•·
CHECKING- INTO A HOTEL
LAST NIGHT?

• A KJ

BAILY CRYPTO&lt;llJOTE -

and Alan Sontag

13th club brings good luck

Caesar

As Low As

MAKES A
.BED FOR

~~=~sh

b-+- +--

Rubber Back Carpet

If YOU NEED
A SOFA THAT

ACROSS
DOWN
1 - M organa
I Whip
5 Pagoda
2 Main a rte~·y
ornament
3 Abused
8 Forsaken :
4 Anecdo~ l
poet.
collection
9 Convey
5 Prmceton
13 Space
athletes
11 Peanut
6 ·' Who KJiled
Yesterday 's AnsWer
15 Give Society ?"
16 Ethereal
27 Concealed Wedrlt'sdu y, Mun·h 15
whirl
author
19 " I - Dream " 29 - law
·:..:.:::_::.::.:::.:__ _ _
16 Chalice
1 Gl's
veil
mailbox
22 Tree trunk
30 Hunt
11 F unction
10 G ram·
23 Beverage
3! Em blem of
18 F ull of suds
manan 's
u.s.
Oswald Jacoby
24
20 New M exican
concern
36
Indian
!I Withstand
21 .. I 'm all - ! .. 12 Kind of
shipment " 37 '~ Agnw -"
22 Outdo
port
NORTH
J. J:;
23 Kind of
,.,-_,.,~~=­
•
10
7
6
5
4
:J
bear
• Q82
25 Plunder
• lO
26 I ta lian
• K 9:1
i sland
EAST
WEST
21 Young seal
• J !I
+ KQ B
28 D octors' org .
• 10 7 4 :1
• 965 .
• 76 42
2~ French
• A .J 5
• A .J 8
• Q 10 52
writer
32 Offer
SOUTH
+A 2
33 Hail to

::------.,.1 1

•

•

It brinq joLJ
;;m' hope t' our
hearts'

All carpet installed with
padding . al no charge.
Expert installation.

742-2211

PAGAN EN CO RE GOPHER
Poi n ted m one direct iOn b ut h tHI d e d 1n th a

An swer

by THOMAS JOSEPH

DRIVE A LimE
&amp;
SAVE A LOT

Call742-22tl
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

1 Jumbles GUILD

I

•••

SAVE ON
CARPETING

4 • 88

Jt

(Ans we •s tomo rrow)

ot her - A.PIN

Gt\SOI .I NE 1\ J.J.EY

•

s

''

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

WATER~Ell o;:~lim;AI5o oi l ond '
gas well work . Hea ton Drill~ng
Co., Oov~d S. Hea ton , Rt. 3,
Pome r oy
Oh1o . Ph one
985-.4335 .

Ye s l~rday

r AS( I I XI I I I

·~

------

------------PULLINS EXCAVATING . Complete

XI

Answel: AS"(

•

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

WILL do roofing. cons truchon .
plumb ing and heating. No job
too Iorge or too s.moll . Phone
- 74_2·_2_
34_8:_ __ ~--~
HOWERY AN D MARTIN Ex
cavol ing , sep ti c sy5 tem 5,
dozer, backhoe. dump truck .
limes tone
gro"'el, blacktop
po..,•ng. Rt 143 Phone I (61-4 )
698·733 1.
sATHRoO~AND K t tchens
remodeled, cerom•c tile. plumbi ng, carpentry, and general
maintenance 13 yean ex perience. 992-3685.

5 H H NOT
A WORD··

·~

EXC AVA TING. doter. loader and 8RADFORD, Auctioneer, Cqm·
· plete Serv1ce. Phone 'il 49·2&lt;487
backhoe work , dump truck s
or 949-2000. Racine, Oh1o, Critl
end to-boys for h1re. wdl haul
Bradford .
fill dir!, to liioil , l1mestone and
grovel Coil Bob or Roger Jef ELWOOD BOWERS REPA IR fers, doy phone 992 ·1089 , n1ght
Sweepers toas ters , irons, oil
phone 992.3575 or 992- 5232
sm all op phan ce~ lo ~ n mower,
ne•t to State H1ghwoy Garage
EXCAVATING dozer backhoe
on Route 1 . Phone (614) q85and d1tcher . C harle ~ R. Hal
3825
Bock Hoe Serv i ce
l ield
Rutland . Oh1o . Phone 742 -2008 .

4 ACRES of nice laying land not far from Southern
High School. Nice building sites. Ideal for now homo
builders. Call now for Info.
KIDS IN YOUR HAIR, LOOK HERE Five
bedrooms, nice 1112 story house, large living room with
shining oak flooring , farge kitchen with dining aree, 2
full baths, 2 bedrooms down and 3 upstairs. Completely
Insulated wi1h F .A . nat. gas furnace . Large porches &amp;
·
garage. Loc In Chester . Pr lc~ $19,800.

~ ~· """ " oW

'

[)

\A(JEPIE

••
"•
•'

9:00 til 9: 00 Mon.· Friday
9:00 til6 :00 Saturday
12 : 00 til 6: 00 Sunday
2· 2·tfC

Buy where you can come in
and see what you're geffing
-Good selections - Fully
stocked.

50 ACRES - FREE GAS. Why worry about the high
cost of heating your home. ~rylng your cla1hes, hot
water etc. We. have a 111~ story house with 3 beclrms.,
and bath, dining room with fireplace . FUll basement.
Large pond stocked . Priced only $42,500.

&gt;• • ... C•&lt; I ii&lt;'' ..~ .

"'...

PLAZA
Middleport, Ohio
Open

NEIGLER:Sfo R building houses
Coll 949-2508 for house des1gns
and est•motes Guy H. Ne1gler ,
Rocme.

$11,700 will buy 1 good 2 bedroom house with balh.
Garage and storage building . Nat . g&amp;s heat. Driveway
is elect. heated. Nice Ohio Ri ver view, Furnit ure can
be bought exira. Price reduced for quick sale.

I

•

MEIGS

Carpet• UphOlStery

\

lOSHUE

''

Loca.t~ !J1__The

Ah've noth1n' 1'wear!

]
•t 1

MATH,

•

AcE HAR11NARE

9' and 12' Vinyl
Flooring In Stock

PRICE DRASTICALLY REDUCED - 1V2 acres nice
layi ng land with a nice 12x64 all carpeted mobile home
completely furnished. 2 rooms built on with nice family
room with fireplace. Garden space, work shop, block
cellar and city water. Nice country setting. Owner may
take nice mobile home as part payment. Price now
$14,300 .

I

' fleW

WALLPAPER.
PAINT &amp; SUPPLIES

Superior
Steam Edraction

MAGG IES
UNHOLSTERY .
Refini-sh1ng , reup ho lstery ,
rebwlding Betlutiful select1on
of material s and vinyl5. Free
eshmote TeL 742-2852 . loco
t1on . So lem Cen ter.

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

~THA1 SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~~~ ~·
byHenrJ Arn oldandBobLee

\.9

4

One 4 bedroom,

Cheryl Lemley
Associate
Home Phone 742·2003
HIHon Wolle, Sr.
Associate
Homo Phone 9•9-2589

FJOOI2eo
OUT nu~

3·12·1 mo.

WINTER GET~ yo~;ho~se? let us
mak e nece55ory repai r$. AI
Tromm . Cons truction. 742-2328 .

Sub -division, near Five
Points .

I?

Fl~LL'f

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

One thrN.bedroom home, 2
arres of ground on Rt. 7,
Tuppers Plains, Ohio.

One 3 bedroom , new. Crow

~

0.

Serv1ce. Phone 992-2478.

ranch,
·very modern, West Shade,
Neor Chester, Ohio.

THAT'S e:ooD.
&amp;O.t&gt;;t:;
ll11S CNJfFOI2. 'IOU HJ
TOJA\'1 &lt;;;
M/1\l...

5'/~0£;.~,

:V4 miles off Rt. 7 by.p•ss on
51. Rt. 143, toward Rutland,

NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 baths ,
all elec 1 acre M•ddleport .
close to Rutland . Phone 992 748 1.
COUNTRY farmland wi th sedud ·
ed woods. water end good Oc·
ces~ in Monroe County, W. Vo.
$ 1. 000 down . call (304) 772. 31 02 or {304)
_,_ 772-3227 .

'\1'\1jfNf)e}11

Unscramble these tour Jumbles ,
one lener to each square, to !arm
tour ord1nary words

ROGER HYSELl
GARAGE

Jack's Septic
Tank Service .

15
·5 .3()- News 6. Elec . Co . 2Q.33, Mary Tyler Moore 10;
Hogan's Heroes IS
6 :0Q- News 3.4,8, 10, 13. 15; ABC News 6. Zoom 20
6 · Jo-NBC News 3,4, IS ; ABC New~ 13: Carol Burnelt &amp;
' Friends O; CBS News 8,1 0; Over Easy 20
l ·Oo-Cross Wits 3; Saca 1a wea 4; Liars Club 6 ; Sha Na
Na 8;: News 10; To Tell The Truth 13; Gllllgan's Is.
IS ; Characterlstlcss ot Learning Disabilit ies 20:
Big Green Magazine 33 .
7:3o-Funny Farm J . Sha Na Na 4, When Havoc Sruck
6: Fami ly Feud 8: MacNell ·Lehrer Report 20,33;
The Judge 10; ln Search of 13: Wild Kingdom IS.
8·QO-Grlnly Adams 3; Eight is Enough 13, Concert
Behind Prison Walls 4; Billy Graham Crusa de
(1, 15,8; Nova 20,33 , Return o f Capt . Nemo 10.
9 OQ-Biack Sheep Squadron 3. 4. 15 , Char lie' s Angels
6, 13; AFl Sa lute to Henry 8,10. Grellt Per
torman ces 20,}3.
10 ·0{)-PQiice Woman 3,.4 , 15; Starsky &amp; Hutch o. 13 ;
Sources of Country M usic 33. News 20
10 Jo-You .BetYour Li fe 20; Book Beat33

~

~I'IIe

Residential
and
commercial.
Call for
estimate, 24 hour service.
Anyday l anytime.
Phone 985· 3806

THURSDAY , MARCH 16, 1918
S·45-Farm Reporl 13.
5 ·55--Sunrlse Semester 10 ; 6·00-PTL Club 15
6;15-For You ... Biack Woman 10
0:3()--0odors on Call 4; News 6; Sunrise Semester 8;
6 45- 0ocJors on Cnll4; News 6, Sunrise Semes ter
8; 6 :45-M orn lng Report 3.
6 · 5o-Good Morning . West VIrginia IJ ; 6 :Ss-Good
Morn ing, West VIrginia 13, 6 ~5- Chuck White
Reports 10: News 13.
1 oo- Todoy 3,4, 1S, Good Morn ing Amer lci'l o,13, Good
Morni ng Amer ica 6, 13 ; CBS News 8; Bullwlnkle 10.
J 3o--Schoolles tO : B: oo-Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame
Sl JJ
9 oo-M erv Griffin 3; Phil Donahue -4 ,13,15; Edge ot
Night 6; Family Alta ir 8: Match Game 10.
9 3G-Emergency One 6 ; Andy Griffith 8; Family
Alta i r 10
to .oo--Sanford &amp; Son 3._. ,15. T attletales 8; Not For
Women Only 13.
10 :3G-- Hollywood SquaresJ, 41 ,5; : Price Is Right 8. 10:
Rick Foucheu;.o: 13
n :OQ-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15: Happy Days 6,13i
11 :3l)- Knockou t J ,\5, Fam ily Feud 6. 13; Par ·
trldge Family 4; Love at Life 8.1 0 : Sesame St. 20.
Nova 33 : 11 •55-.-CBS News 8: Loving Free 10.
12 .OIJ- Newscen ter 3; S20;000 Pyram ld 13; News ~ . 6, 10;
Gambl1 8,
12 .3()-Ryan 's Hope 6, 13: Bob Braun 4, Gong Show 15 ;
Sea r ch for Tomorrow 8. 10: Elec . Co . 33.
·oo-For Ri cher . For Poorer 3; All My Children 6, 13:
News 8; Young &amp; the Restle~s 10; NQt For Women
On ly 15.
1·30--Days of Our L•ves 3.4, -4, 15 ; As The World Turns
e, 10; 2: 0G--One Life to Live 6, 13; 2:30--Doc tors
3, &lt;. 15: Guiding Light 8.10 .
3:00--A nother World 3,4, \S ; Genera l Hospital 6 . 13;
L il ias, Yoga &amp; You :10.
3. 31&gt;-A II In The Fami l y 8, 10; You Bet Your Life 20.
4:DO-Mi ster Cartoon 3; Edge ol Night 13; My Three
Sons.4 ; For Richer, For Poorer 15 ; M erv Gri ff in 6 ;
Gilligan 's I s. 8; Sesl!tme St. 20. 33 ; Gomer Pyle,
USM C 10
4 31&gt;-Li tt1 e Ras ca ls 3, I S; Gil li gan 's I s. 4 , Brady Bunch
8, 10, Mary Tyler Moore 13.
5 oo- Here Come the' Brides J; Star T re k 4; Gunsmoke
s· M ister Roger s' Nei ghborhood 20,33 , Hogan ' s
Heroes 10 ; Emergency One 13. Pettl coal Jun ction
15.
S:Jo-- News 6 ; Elec Co. 20,33 ; Mar y T yl er Moore 10;
Hogan ' s Heroes IS
6:GO-News 3, 4,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20 .
6: 30-- NBC News J,.4, 15, ABC News 13; ; Carol Bu rnett
&amp; F r lends 6; CB S News 8,1 0; 0\ler Easy 20
7 oo--Cross-Wit s 3,4; B ill y Graham Cru sade 6 , Gon,g
Show 8 : News 10; To Tell The Truth 13; Gi ll igan s
I s. 15; Hocki ng Val ley Bluegrass 20 ; Mar sh All U.
Repor t JJ
7 Jo- Holt ywood Squares 3,4 ,; Talllet ales 8; M ac Neil
Lehr er Repor t 20.33; Mulrf leid ' 77 10, Nash vi ll e On
The Road 13; Te lev ision Honor Socletv 15
8 Oo-Hal l ot Fam e 3,4 ,15, Wel come Back , Ko tl er 6,13.
Waltons 8,10; Live fr om the M et 20,33
8 JG-F ish 6. 13; 9.0o-Barney Mil ler 6,13.
9.J()-PIIol 6, 13 .
lO :Oo--James a t 16 3,4, Hawaii Flve ·O 8, 10 ; B i ll y
Gr aham Crusade 15
11 :oo-News 3, 4,6,8, 10,13.15: Dick Cavett 20, Over
Easy 33
11 :3()-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Slar sk-y &amp; Hut ch 6,13 ;
Movie " How The West Wa s Won " 8; ABC News 33 ;
Movie " N•no l chko1" 10
l 2. 0G-Jemakl33 ; 12· 4G-Toma 6.13; I :OG-Tomorrow
A ; 1 :so-News .13
Movie Channel 4 - ·
5 s. 9 P .M . - The Eag le Has Landed !PG)
7 S. II P .M - Wh i tt. lPG)

H

iALESANDSERV!CE
11 ·9·11&lt;

SEPTIC TANK
. CLEANING

NICE HOME •n rural area w11h 26
acres New olurmnu m siding ,
co mp l e t e !~
Insul ated and
temode led •nside Sl orm win
dows large carpe1ed ltving
room and both Ca ll 985·41 11 or
902-562 1
FOR SALE by owner New house
with 3000 sq. ft hvmg space
and opprox 12 acres of land 8
rooms. 2 baths. 2 cor garage .
kli chen has buill 1n oppl1ances
such O!i. IS land cook top slave.
trash compactor Tappan oven
d1shwosher , ice mo&lt;h•ne and o REMODELING . Plumbing , healing
and all type s ol general repair.
Nutone Food Center Phone
Work guaranteed 20 yeo1s ex949'-2501
perien ce. Phone 992 -~~-BUY FROM owner and 5ove 3
bedroom home m Midd leport SEWlNGMAcH!NER;poir!., ser·
vic e, all molo. es . 992 7284 The
lnqu•re ot4 Qq Sou th Fif th A11e
- -- ~- -· ..
Fa bnc Shop , Po m eroy
Authorized Su"'ger Sales and
Serv1ce . We sharpen Scissor$ .

.-·'

300 Main 51.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Pomeroy 992-6282
or 992·6263
8A.M . to4 : 30P.M .

Construction

THREE BEDROOM w1th bo th 5.96
acres fully carpeted, just r
re modeled , all electm ,' dug
ce lla r off kttchen
4 ou t·
buildings In Me1 gs Mme area
902-39'13

rn

l'Ai'TAIN f.I\SY

lAVENDER
CONSTRUCTION
Ohio

Roofing
Remodeling
Room AdditiOns
Garages

Weddines

TWO

CLELAND
REALTOR
ASSOCIATES
'il92-22S9, 992-6191 11 EAt TOR

- Save Fuel &amp; Money-

General Contracting

.

..

·::.·

and Attics

THE PHOTO PLACE

VA FHA 30 yr hnonc1ng also
ref mandng Ireland Mortgage,
77 E State Athen5 phone [61 4)
502.3051

NEW
LISTING
Pomeroy , 6 room s and
ba1h, 3 Bdrms, part
basement, 1 car garage.
Only $6, 900 .00 .
·coUNTRY Appx . 6
acre, s
garage
and
ou tbuilding . 2 year pld
double wi de In good shape.
Garden space, woods and
pasture On ly. $15,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT Level
lot, nice 3 Bdrm ranch ,
r ea dy to move into. A
STEAL AT $18.500.00.
MINERSVILLE - Older 2
story home In good repa ir .
garage and workshop, 3
Bdrms, carpe1ing , Forced
Ai r Heat. Appx . 1 acre wgarden space A GOOD
BUY $19,500.00
SYRACUSE
This
secl uded 3 acres can be
yours for only 528,000 .00.
Home is only 2 years old, 3
Bdrms ,, 2 baths , other
features .
BRICK - 3 BDRMS, l'h
ba1hs ,
din 1ng
room ,
W . B. F . P ., central a ir ,
covered patio, nice oak
tri m and ki t . cabinets.
R~nch
ty pe home In
exc ell e n1 co nd i ti o n .
S35,000.00.
WE HAVE BUYERS FOR
ALL
TYPES
OF
PROPERTY. LET OUR
PHOTO LISTING WORK
FOR YOU .
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
HANK, KATHY &amp; LEONA

·;;::.

Blown Into Walls

VIEWING
8. M tsler Roger~ · NeiQhborhood 10.33 ; Hogan 's
Heroes 10. Emergency One! 13; Pett i coat Junction

....•.••

Cellulose Fiber

DAVID BRICKLES

REST.
TRACY.••

'
'
'I.

Blown Insulation

Kitchen Cobineb, Roollnt,
Concrete
Patios,
Sidewalks,
New
Construc t ion
&amp;
Remodeling.

11.0()-New • 3.4.6.8, 10.13, t5 . Dick Cavett 20: Llllos
Yoga 1!. Yoo lJ
11 3o-Johnny Carson 3,A, 15 ; Pollee Story 6, 1J; Hawaii
Five o 8; ABC . News JJ. Mov ie .. The Naked
Runner .. 10; 12 ·()0-Janakl 33 .
12 40- Myslery of the Week 6, 13 ; Kojak 8. 1· JJOTomorrow • : 2: 1D-News. 13.
Movi• Ch.tnnel • 5 1!. 9 PM - Day ofT he Animals l PG I
7 &amp; 11 PM. - Manhattan Merry Go.Round (G)

TELEVJSJ(JN

READ THE

'

Cornmerc1al property approx 17
acres , level land, located ol
ruppers Plotns on Oh•o . Rou te
7. Phone (014 ) b67 6304

STOR Y frame house. 6
rooms and both cellar , ou t·
buddmgs , 4 acres land , at edge
of Rutland Comp lete l ro •ler
hook-up also 2 banks opprois
ed property ot $15 500 Phone
9Q2 -7094 .

Pomeroy, O.
3·15·1fc

TEAFORD[H

APT

00 WITH IT.

,.

HOM!::~

I'"'"''"
wa1er

9a _Ja ck w. Carsey, Mgr.

Why?

8 &amp; S MOBilt

Pomeroy

.Pomeroy Landmark

ltke to re turn I Q my rob but the
unton rnt ne r s won I leT m e

WALl Hong1ngs and
olgon~
N• ct: fvr Chr~s,tmas
Rco sonoble Coli q97 2214

FIREWOOD
q49 2129

FERTILIZER, NITROGEN,
POTASH, FERT~PELS
&amp; BLEND

Business Services

HUCS

·I THOUGHT GREED
HAD SOMETHING TO

''
"·I
.....,'
'

for :;at.,

lCONOMY HI:ACTOR wllh all attachments l•"-e new oskmg
$1250 Phone (014 ) 6'il8 3190

REDUCE SAFE &amp; los! w1 th GoBe!&gt;e
rablets &amp; E-Vop water p1lls "
Nelson Drug

·

Easter Bowar and bake sole.
Fr t a nd Sar Me~ c h 17 &amp; 18 at

tht• Ua)

-·II

MACINE Voluntee• Ftre
Oepo• tmenl
spon5or o gun
shoot cve1y )olurday ot6 pm ot
lhf'u buddu1g 111 Boshon l-ac
1orv chQke guns only

TH l

Pomeroy Landmark

S:J 00

tu t"llll tlf rt')l.'d &lt;Ill)' ads dt•t•mcLI ulljt'I'Uun:.l Tilt• PuUh.'ihcr will nul~·
I'I.'O.j)UIIloib1t• {QI' 111011! Llia11 l!ll~ iJlll)ll ·
f t' &lt;IIIISl'r\IUII
l'l10tlt· 9!n-2Jj6

ll.t!all::otatc

Gun Club Gun Shoo•
pv tiHY Sul"ldO~ oltemoon Foe
1orv choke gu"s on ly . Assorred
llluOtS
(lfAHANn SALE beg1n1 Mon
Feb 13 at Sew.N-Sew Outlet .
-Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Maul Street
Roctne
Al l
Phone912·21BI
polye!oler doubl e kr11ts •educed
-40 '". and so· •. Tlueod btg spool '
5 lor $1 .
INCOME rAX Serv•ces Federal
and store Taxes
Walla ce . - - - - - - - : - - - ; - - - ,

M••lult• tlu tt tt' sa lt:s ;~nd Y.otnJ s11 ll'S
htl

Notice•

Baler Twine now's
the time to buy.
Call us today.

1.75

111 ull'll\ury, C:&lt;trtl ul Tlwnks .ll.tll
S 1'1'111:&gt; I)Cr II. Ut'd ,

want the

lowest prices on

1.25
190
!!5

r&lt;l\t'

OllitU&lt;-11 \'

rou

9 _The Daily Sentinel, Mid~eport·Pouw·o)' . u., Wednes&lt;hl) . Morth 15. 1~78
OJfKTRAC!'

I'M HONGRY,
AUNr
LOWEEZV

sa tisfi ed with this r:1thcr
cut -and -dried f'esult. Not
Hose nk ram
Eusl won th e opcrung club
lcmJ with t he jack when
dec lare r play ed luw frotn

dumm y . East retu rned H
hea rt , won by dedarcr in
du mm y w1 th the q ueen. De·
clarer return ed the Slnt(leton
lO of diamonds and West
topped th e kmg with his uce .
We !;it f Hoscnkra nz) led the
queen or dubs whtch was
covered by the k ing and won
by East 's ace . East r Ph.arned
a club that rosen kranz won
with the 10.

EveryO rw at th e tabl e
knew decla r er was down
one . B ut Hosc nkra nz wa s
think ing ubout tha t extra
hundred pom t s his partnership would score ir the contra ct c ould be set two tricks .
M ot·c i mporta nt , smce this
wa s a duplic ate tournament,
plu:; two hundred would virtu a lly as:surc him of a top
score on the board .

ll.osenkranz

disco vered

th e onl y )&gt;lay th a t would set
th e contract two tr1 cks . He
led th e 13th club Declarer·
had no counter . If he ruffed
in dummy, East would over ruff, and South would have
to win with the ace of trump .
Thi s w ould esta bli sh an ex -

tra trump trick in East's
hand, a llowing the defense
to score three trump t ricks ,
setti ng th e contract two
t ricks .
Of course , if declarer does
not ruff i n dummy, th e result
Is t he same. West's enlightened lead of the 13th club did
indeed earn his partnership
a top score .
t Nt: WS I'AP~: II

ENTt:HPitiSt : ASSN I

/For a copy of JACOBY MOD·
ERN. send St to. ..Win It
Bridge ," care of this newspape r. P.O. Box 489, Rae110 City
Station . New York. N. Y. 10019.1

MIIW!!

FETCH ME MY
CORN·SQUEEZIN'S

�10-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, March 15,1978

Negotiators
(Continued !rem pace 1)
VIrginia miner. "I figure
we're $2,000 to $3,000 in debt."
" With our family , we need
a station wagon," said Jerry
Nibert - a lf&gt;.year veteran of
the mines who sold his 1973
Chevrolet for $300 to meet the
financial pinch of the strike.
"I figure I can make the down
· ayment from my second
· aycheck ."
Mary Maynard, of West
VIrginia ~ the only woma n
local president in the UMW had mixed emotions.
11
We can still turn it down,"
-tte said of the new pact. "We
can reject and rejeet ... we
are prepared to staY out until
next Christmas if we have to.
We 're united now, we're
staying together and other
big unions are with us." ·
But, she hesitated , " I
believe our men have gone
just as far as they can go."
SUpport for miners from
other unions continued to flow
TueSday - this time from the
Hotel and Restaurant Employees and Bartenders
International Union in
Chicago, which readied an
airlift of $1SO,OOO worth of
food to strikers in Ohio.
While miners mulled the
new proposal, coal operators
pleaded for containment of
the strike.
James Whitney, public
relations
director for
Peabody Coal Co. in St . Louis,
offered to guarantee hospital
and medical benefits and
retroactive pay increases to
any miner returning to work .
Peabody employs 11,000
miners.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Friday through Sunday,
fa ir through the period but
cold Friday with highs between 25 and 35 and the low
between IS and 20. Milder·
Saturday and Sunday with
high tempe ratures between
45 and 55 and lows between
25 and 35.
;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;~:;:;:;:;: ;:;:::;:;:;: ; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;::::::

Excursion

(Continued from Jlolll 1)
" Family Time" is based on
two essential elements, there
is a continuing deterioration
ol the family unit and that a
certain amount of wefk ly
family tim e together working, playing or simply
talking - ca n effectively
counter this deterioration.
"Family Time" is an effort
to get speeding families to
slow down , Quickel com~
mented. Most families do not
spend much time together
uninterrupted by ball games,
chures, television , meetings,
loud muslc and quiet music,
most families do not spend
much time together listening
to each other," Quickel
added.
Attending were Quickel,
Emm oge n ~
Ho ls tei n ,
secretary, Phil Kelly, Bill
May er, Jenkins, John An·
derson, Stan Houdashelt, Roy
Shepherd, Kyle Allen , Bill
Grueser, Fred Morrow, Joe
Young , Dale Warner, Mr . and
Mr s. Virg il Teaford , Pat
O'Brien, AI Richards, Archie
Stagall, Hank Clela nd , Benny
Ewong, M.e rri Ault, Jim
Freck er. Leo Vaughan, .
Beulah J ones and Kat.ie
Crow.

•

Israeli forces in search mrssron
By MAnUS CHAZANOV

Uolled Prete IDteruaUonal
Israeli forces swept acroM
southern Lebanon today in
their most massive search
and destroy operation against
Palestinian strongholds with
the objective of eliminating
them as a threat to Israel.
Syrians fired on Israeli
warplanes that attacked a
Palestinian coastal base
south ol Beirut.
In a land, sea and air
operation aimed at fuliilling
Prime Minister Menachem
Begin's vow to "cut off lhe
evil arm" of terrori.sm ,
Israeli forces ranged over the
length of the 64-mile long
border, and cut at least five
miles inside Lebanese
territory .
Israel said Its combat jet
aircraft attacked a coastal
guerrilla base at Da!llour
between Sidon and Beirut on

couldn't find those flat sandles"

Reports from southeastern
town of Hasbaya said the

Israelis had thrown the
guerrillas back from the key
southern stronghold of Khiam
and were pushing · the
Palestinians ba ck from
neighboring Ebel es Saqi.
Rightist sources in Beirut
said at least 35 people had

Pesticide
•
sesstons

r--------------------------~

:

Area Deaths

l

Randolph and Willie Johnson, who started their prison
terms Tuesday, pleaded guilty to charges of false imprison·
men! and child endangering last October and were sentenced
March 3. Police said the Johnsons also beat 16-year-old Laura
regularly, often denied her use of a toilet and kept her alive
primarily on a diet of peanut-butter sandwiches.

- - :t:r·

Spring Sl1oes and Handbags arriving daily .

CHAPMAN SHOES
"Next to Elberfelds" .

announced

Pesticide training schools
I will be held on March 2t and
Smith, Betty Robbins and 2l! at Sout~ern High School in
LONA N. BOWLES
uma N. Bowles, 66, Leon, Ruth Kidd , a ll of Point Racine at7 p.m. each evening
W. Va., died this morning at Pleasant, 19 grandchildren (should attend both sessions)
Veterans Memorial Hospital and 23 great-grandchildren . and on March 28 at Meigs Inn
Funeral services will be in Pomeroy, from 10 a.m. to 3
in Pomeroy, Mrs. Bowles was
the daughter of the late Jim held Friday at 2 p.m. at the p.m.
Both schools will cover
and Nancy F lowers Burdette. Leon Methodist Chu rch.
training
to buy 'restricted
She is survived by one so~. Burial will be in Leon
for for ages and
chemicals
James
Bowles ,
Point Cemetery. Friends may call
grains.
Both
schools are (or
Pleasa nt; six daug~t ers, at the Stevens Funeral Home
priva
te
applicators
who do
Marie McClure, Charleston; in Point Pleasant Thursday
own
spraying.
The
use
their
Goldie Gra ham, Rutland; from 2 to 4 and 7to 9 p.m.
of
Tordon
10-K
will
also
be
Beulah Little , Lefln : O ~iP
covered. There will be some
spent on vegetab les at
Southern High School if
needed.
Permits fo r restrict ed
(Continued from pace 1)
chemicals can · be written
fined her $1,000 for attempting to hire an undercover again this year .
policewoman as a prostitute.
Training and certificates
"It's a sad commentary on the image of TulSa that the received last year for Tordon
city's oldest proprietorship should be a bawdy house," Judge IO·K is stili good to purchase
Raymond Graham said Tuesday as he sentenced Paulme Tordon 10-K with this yea r.
Lambert, the owner of a downtown rooming house .
You will stili need to sign up
with ASCS in regards to cost
MINNEAPOLIS - A WOMAN WHO SAl!) she shot and sharing .
killed her husband four years ago because he beat her is trying
Study materials for these
to collect his $SO,OOO in insurance and $390 a month in penston pesticide schools wil\ be sent
benefits.
upon request. Anyone having
Juanita Thompoon, who claimed she shot her husband, any questions should contact.
fireman Harry Thompson Jr., in seH defense, was investigated John Rice at 992-3895.
·
by a Hennepin County grand jury but was not indicted.
Tests wiil be given by the
Ohio · Departme nt
of
LONG BEACH, CAUF. - TWO PARENTS who admitted Agriculture at the end of both
keeping their adopted teenaged daughter imprisoned in her schools on March :!ll.
room for two years have begun serving a two-year sentence of

I

their own .

..

-~:;;;:--

Pomeroy, 0.

CHICAGO - A BURGLARY SUSPECT hiding from police
apparently leU asleep in the furnace of a car wash and was
severely bumed, police said Tuesday.
Police dogs were unable to find the suspect and officers
called to investigate the reported break-in at the Aqua Car
Wash thought the suspect had managed to leave the building . ·
So when Stuart Levy, 30, owner of the car wash, came to work,
be fired up the furnace.

COOKING SCHOOL!
TH~JRSDAY,

MARCH 16th
at 7:30p.m.
at 'INGELS FURNITURE

This Cooking School will be conducted by an Amana Consumer
Consultant. If you own a Microwave Oven, or you're thinking
about buying a Microwave Oven •••

You're Invited
·to see a live demonstration of microwave cooking
with the

Made only by

been killed in the Israeli
shelling of target in the area
of the southern port of Tyre.
Leftist Lebanese sources
said Khiam fell to the Israelis
at about 8 a.m. (1 a.m. EST)
after heavy fighting in the
town and that 30 people were
estimated to have been killed
on both sides. No more
precise casualty breakdown .
was avallable.
Beirut report said prelimi·
nary casualty ligures listed
at least 65 dead and many
more injured in the border
battles.
The leftist sources in Hasbays said an Israeli force
estimated to include 100 tanks
and half-tracks, troops
carriers and 4,000 soldiers
was fighting in the southeast
Lebanese region.
Israel said ·its troops ,

Driver cited
after mishap
cars received medium
damages in an accident in·
vestigated by Middleport
Police at II :45 a.m. Tuesday.
Police said a car driven by
James L. Bright, Middleport ,
struck a station wagon driven
on Mill St. , by John W. Tillis,
34, Rutland.
Bright was cited to co urt on
a charge of failing to yield the
right of way.
According to the report , the
Bright car was coming from
an ailey onto Mill St.
Two

Three fined in
mayor's court
.Three defendants were
fined and two others forfeited
bonds in Pomeroy Mayor
Claren ce ·Andrews' cou rt
Tuesday night.
Fined were, Walter Knapp,
West Columbia, $250 and
costs, reckless ·· operation,
$200 and costs, fleeing an
officer; Douglas Robie,
Mason, and Timothy Stewart,
Mason, $200 and costs each,
petty theft .
Forfeiting bonds were
umnie Taylor, Middleport,
$50, left of center; Wanda
Adams, Pomeroy , $50,
disorderly conduct.

,------·-,·

1 Social 1 Democrats will
·meet Thursday
II Calendar
·
. II

Meigs County Democrats
will meet at 6 p.m. Thursday
THURSDAY
MAGNOLIA CLUB, Thurs- at the Meigs Inn. There will
day, 7:30p.m. at the home of be a discussion on candidates, registration, and
Mrs. Dale Smith.
central Co mmittee posts.
FRIDAY
DANCE Friday Royal Oak Petitions for central comPark from 9 p.m . until mittee candidates will be
midnight. Music by Uncle available at the meeting.
Dugger. Admission $2.SO per ' Ail · central committee
person. Sponsored by Ohio candidates are to allend and
Eta Phi Chapter of Beta ail candidates and other
interested Democ rats a re
Sigma Phi Sorority.
welcome.
SATURDAY
ANNUAL INSPECTION of
Ohio Valley Command ery.
DAMAGE $1,000
Saturday with degree
Damages
to the mobile
working beginning at 3:30
home
of
Sharon
Kuhn, Forest
p.m. Dinner for Knights and
Run
Road,
as
the
result of a
their ladies at 6 p.m. and full
fire
Tuesday
morning
were
form opening at 7:30p.m. All
$1
,000.
set
at
Sir Knights requested to call
Ca use of the lire was a
reservations to David Fox,
cigaret
thrown into a waste
247-2548.
The Pomeroy Fire
basket.
SQUARE DANCE at ·
Department
extinguished the
Chester Firehouse Saturday
blaze.
6:30 to 11 :30. Music by String
Dusters. Proceeds to go to the
Chester Youth Commission.
BASEBALL MEETING
SUNDAY
Anyon e interested in
SMORGASBORD
at playing independent baseball
Southern High ca feteria this summer should attend a
Sunday from 11:30 to 1:30. specia I meeting Friday,
Adults $2.25 under 12 $1.25. March 17 at the Syracuse
All you can eat. Sponsored by Municipal Building.
Southern Band Boosters.
Managers and team officials
COUNTY WIDE PRAYER are urged to be present.
meeting Sunday at Chester
Church of the Nazarene 2
p.m. Glen Bissell leader.

IN THE HOSPITAL
Paul E. Burton, Racine,
has been admitte.d to the
Vetera ns Administration
Hospital in Huntington, W.
· Va . His room numller is 330,
Fourth Floor.

R~c..-u;./#"L-'1

waging the bigest military
offensive ever conducted in
Lebanon by the Israelis
would remain oo Lebanese
soil "as long as necessary."
Israeli Delense Minister
Ezer Weizman said the
immediate goal of Israel's
biggest military offensive
since the 1973 October war
w88 to establish a defenalve
strip 4 to 6 mlles deep along
the rocky, hilly frontier to
prevent the Palestinians
from using It 88 a staging
area.
"We will stay as long 88
necessary," Welzman said.
He added, however, "We
don't want to occupy southern
Lebanon ,''
Weizman and the armed
forces chief of stafi, U. Gen.
Mordechai Gur, said they
hoped
Syria
would

11 cases are
tenninated
Si&lt; defendants were fined
and five others forfeited
bonds in the court of Mid·
dleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesdav ni•ht.
Fined were Bonita J .
Darst , 52, Rutland , and
Charles Pullen, Middleport,
each $225 and costs and three
days in jail on charges of
driving while intoxicated;
Sheila Sargent, 16, Rutland,
assessed costs and placed on ·
probation for three months
alter being charged with
assault and battery; Donald
Lovett, 54, Middleport, $50
and costs, disorderly man·
ner ; Kenneth R. White, 35,
Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
unsafe vehicle; James L.
Bright, 24, Middlep&lt;Jrl, $10
and costs, failure to yield the
right of way.
Forfeiting bonds were
Stephanie R. Minor. 19,
Cheshire, $27 , speeding;
Charles R. McCloud, 52,
Middleport, $350, driving
while intoxicated; Richard
W. Saliler, 21, Middleport;
$25, failure to have vehicle
under control, and $27,
speeding ;
Michael R.
Stewart, 2t, Cheshire, $30,
spinning tires, and Theodore
C. Fisher, 21, Pomeroy, $37,
speeding.
MEETING SI..ATED
The Meigs County Junior
Leadership Club will meet on
. Thursday evening, MarCh 16,
from 1:30 to 9 p.m. at the
Meigs County Extension
Office. Anyone interested in
joining the Junior Leadership
Club must be at least 14 years
·old as of January 1, 1976 (or a
high school freshman) and
planning to be a 4-H club
member this year. For more
information, caU the Meigs
County Extension Office at
992-3695.

TO SELL
The Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter Day Saints will be
se11ing Easter egg candy at
the following locations :
Greg's .Market, New Haven,
March 17-18; Kroger's, Silver
Bridge Plaza , Gallipolis
March 25; Jones Boys,
Gallipolis, March 18 and 25;
Commercial Savings and
Loans, Gallipolis, March 18
and Penny Fare, Gallipolis,
March 16. The organization
will be selling eggs from tO
a.m . until closing time.

MEET MONDAY
Racine Elementary PTO
will meet Monday at 2 p.m. in
the 'school cafeteria. Final
plans for the spring carnival
will bt made.

understand the operation was

limited and would not send its
forces stationed in Lebanoo
to engage the Israelis - an
action that could touch off a

new war.

Two deer .
killed on
highways
Two deer were killed in five
traffic accidents investigated
Tuesday by the Gallia-Meigs
Post State Highway Patrol.
The first deer kill occurred
at II :SO a.m. on SR 160 at the
Gallipolis City Limits. The
animal ran into the path of a
truck driven by Dayton
Williams, 58, Gallipolis.
There was slight damage.
A seeond deer kUI occurred
at 7:45 p.m. Tuesday on SR
325, one and three tenths
miles north of SR 141. The
patrol said the animal ran
into the path of a vehicle
operated by Terry L. Lakin,
18, Gallipolis. There was
moderate damage.
A semi outfit was involved
in an accident at 9:15 a.m.
Tuesday on SR 7 in Meigs
County. Officers said the
semi driven by John W. Coen,
36, Hockingport, ran off the
right side of the highway
damaging the berm.
A single car accident occurred at 10 :20 a.m. on SR
160, north of SR 325. Officers
said Pearl E. Little, 65,
Middleport, turned left onto
SR 160, lost control of his car
which ran off the right side of
the highway into a ditch.
There was minor damage . No
charges were flied.
A final accident occurred
on SR 554, west of Bidwell at
1:50 p.m. Tuesday when an
auto driven by Gregory J . .
Ball, 18, Rio Grande, after
passing, cut back in too close
striking a vehicle driven by
Jackie L. Suver, 19, Bidwell.
There was minor damage.

Hospital News
Hol•er Medical Center
(Discl!arges, March 14)
Becky Anderson, James
Bearbs, Mrs. Gregory Briggs
and son, Virgin,ia Brooks,
Mrs. Carl Caudill and son,
Hflen Damewood, Hazel
Dillon, Roger Ewing; Jr.,
Bettie
Foster,
Mary
Freeman, Mrs. Steven Keller
and daughter, Betty Lane,
Mrs. Roger Martin and son,
Cynthia Morgan, Shawn Niti,
Lena Sloan, Ruth Wills.
(Births, March 14)
· Mr. and Mrs. Eddie
Fleming, a daughter; Kerr.
Mr. and Mrs. Wallace James,
a son , Jackson . Mr. and Mrs.
George Radcliff, a son,
Reedsville.
Pleasant V~lley Hospital
DISCHARGED - Steven
Nutter, Hartford; Mrs.
Donald Hall, Point Pleasant;
lisa Loomis, Point Pleasant;
Mrs . Charles Stanley,
Mason ;
Mrs.
William
Masters , Gallipoii.s ; Joe
Oliver, Jackson ; Mrs.
Sherman Jordan, Leon ; Mrs.
Dale Simpson, Buffalo ;
James Watson, Henderson.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Leah Ord,
Syracuse; Evelyn Landers,
Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED - Charles
Bailey, Harold Hanson,
Lester Zimmerman, Orville
Allen, Thomas Kirkham, Gay
Fields, Shirley Coleman,
Robert Wood.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC ST.

GENERAL ELECTRIC COLOR T.V.
• Color Monitor Svstem

• 100'4 Solid State Chassis

Here's What You'll See:

Model RR·40

- Factory specialists and Home Economists will
illustrate by actual demonstration. the do 's and
the don'ts of microwave cooking .
·
- They will explain the many benefits and
advantages of microwave cooking. including
how you can save energy and money on your

electric bill.
- They Wi II cook a complete course dinner and

explain the cookinQ pr,ocedure of each type food .

Other Models Available

- See how you ca~ brown, sear , grill, fry, bake
and saute with a microwave oven browning

skillet.
- There will be a question and answer period so
you can get the straight facts about microwave
cooking .
- You will receive li1erature explaining how
microwaves actually cook. It is i::ompletely
different from conventional methods .

INGELS FURNITURE

106 NO. SECOND AVE.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992·2635

•

Western e&lt;irrespmdents
who witnessed the Damour
raid said most of it appeared
to be aimed at a banana
plantation near lhe sea, not at
heavily populated areas.
There were no immediate
reports or casua lties.

the Lebanese seashore, 13
mlles south ol Beirut.
Israel's armed forces radio
said the attacking jets came
under lire by Syrian
commandos but the planes
did not return the fire.
The radio said the Syrians
were based near Osmol!&lt;,
from where II terrorists
embarked on the bloodiest
Palestinian strike int~i Israel
Saturday, killing 32 Israeli
civilians.
It marked the first
indication
of
Syrian
engagement with Israeli
forces fighting in Lebanon.
Damour was overrun by
Palestinian and Moslem
leflist forces in Lebanon's
197f&gt;.76 civil war . It has been
occupied by Palestinian
refugees from the Tal
Zalength of the atar camp
overrun by Christian rightists
during the war .

News •• in Briefs

"Remember last year when you

•

'

• Modular ChOssls Design
• Black Matrix ln·Une

FISH
FRY
AT TliE

MIDDLEPORT
FIRE STATION

SATURDAY,
MARCH 18th
11:00 TIL ??m

Picture Tube
• VHF Dipole /UHF Loop

perFormance
TELEVISION

Antennas
• Custom Picture Control
• Sharpness Control

• ,t;utomotlc Frequency
Control
• Automatic Color Control
• Set·And-Forget Volume
Control

$39900

f9"dlogonoi/YA7366WD
·
Walnut rtnlsh on Ngh impact plo!IIC.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
'

10-milllevy will be sought
EAST MEIGS _ Meeting in
regular session Tuesday
night, the Eastern Local
Board of Education voted to .
place a IO.mill emergency
ral.lng lev before district
0
v:::'era at tbe ~une 6 primary
etecti
In 1~: voters turned down
five mill emergency levies in
June AugUBt and November.
Ac~ording to the in·
formational material of the
board at that time, if the
district had approved one of
the levies, the action would
have brought in $55 000 in
taxes plus an additional
$100 000 in st t
·
'
tahe 7ome~. il d
However,
e evy a e
resuUing in bills and salaries
not being paid in December.
SchooIs were cIose d for 10
n.. be d t 0
da ys in 1at e ""'em
r ue
the financial condition of the
district .
A
It f th 1
f il s a . r~~~ 7 ~ 1 e ~;~
. y~a~~a;to be lncr~a=~J to:~
mills since the clerk has
*100 000 d f' 't b
pro jected
• ,
e· oct Y
th
d fa !976
~:'ri~ offici~ Is repori that
unless the JO.mill levy is
8pproved in June, schools

caMot remain open for the
calendar year ol 1978.
It was agreed that the clerk
be authorized t o borrow
money against t he second
half tax collections to pay
one-half of the December
payroll a nd other bills not
paid in December.
The board discussed a
grievance with a teacher. It
was dropped at the end of the
discussion .
caiamity days were
discussed and tentative
makeup days .were set.
According to plans an·
nounced there will be no
ctsses on Good Friday but
classes will be held on
Monday,
March
27 .
Previously, a teache rs
meeting had been scheduled.
that day. Classes were set
tentatively for four Satur·
days, April!, 15, 29 and' May
13
The distric1 schools w10re
closed for 10 day s for
financial reasons and 15 days
due to weather conditions
during
January
and
February.
Five of those days are
excused under Ohio Ja w,

leaving 20 to be made up at
the present time. However,
some additional days may be
forthcomong from the Ohlo
legislature. As the sotuauon
now sta nds, wothoUl a~Y
additional days, &gt;1udents woll
be attending classes unt il
about June 14.
Agroup of parents from the
Chester Elementary School
mel with the board and
received approval to replace
the school gymnastum floor.
Coh1 would be about. $3,000.
Parents hope to ratse the
funds t!rrough a fund drive.
Plans were made for the
board to seeure costs on
needed roof repairs at the
Ch t
h 1
es er sc oo .
.
The board approved senoor
hlgh track · coaches workong
. . ed tune
.
basos
. WI'th
on a llrmt
· ·
h' h bo
d ·1 d
JUniOr tg
ys an gor san
app roved fou r personhs,
Marly Baum, Dor ol y
Woodard, Paul Voss and Jane
Ann Karr~ to the substitute
teachers itS\ . .
The board discussed the
· d ·
· ·
for
requore
unmunozattons
students of the district and
adopted a policy to strongly
urge . parents to meet t~e
requirement s for theu

choldren as soon as possoble.
A survey of the unmomzatoon
status of each student woll be
taken soon ..
The Jumor Class ask~
peml.lSSlon to move the an
nual JUOUor-semor prom from
the high school gymnasoum.
The request w~s demed. •
Edgar Pullms . was =~.
ployed as a full Ume m n
tena nce man and ap·
ph ca tions are no w betng
received. by Superontendent
John Rtebel for a nt~hl
custodian post at the htgh I
school.
.
A dlscusston was . held on
the current negotoattons wtth
teachers and routme fund
transfers were approved
.
.. .
·
The tdenlthcalton and
placement of handicapped
s·t udents po ,.ICY was amended ,.
t
con form to state
o .

1 en

reqAut trend~enttsh.

•

teachers association .

•

at

'

..
··- • •
t

•

.... ~· .

-~ ·,~'£""' . '} ::., .-:...•~~--:::;$~~~~~~~tti!=!i ...,.,". .

.
e mee1mg were

mg
board l)lembers Doug Bissell,
Dorsel .Larkins, ~orothY
Ca la wa), James Caldwell
. and Deryi Well, Supt. Rtebel ,
Cler k El
·
Bost on. ·~e
~ oose
'"
parent group from Chester,
elementary proncopals and
represe ntat Lv~s . of the

e

Pomeroy-lVIiddleport, Ohio
Thursday, March 16, 1978

.

. ' ., ·.'

••

Bureau reported that the river would crest In Pomeroy
Friday at 1 p.m. at 49 feet. 'llois report was revise&lt;!
Wednesday by Ute WeaUter Bureau which reported thnl
the river would crest in Pomeroy Friday atlO a .m. at 47.2
feet. Thellood sta~e in Pomeroy is 46.5 feel.

THE OHIO RIVER KEEPS ON RISING - The dip be·
tween the two parking lots in Pomeroy Wednesday was
filled with water. Pomeroy businessmen were keeping a
watchful eye out as the river was rising three tenths of a
loot an hour . The first report from the National Weather

•

enttne

Fiftel'll l'ents
Vol. 2M, No. 2:14

Ohio's representatives are split on pact
By JOHN T. KADY
old coal strike.
The mem bership voted
Uolted PresslnternaUonal
Ohio's two representatives down the last contract by. a 2on the United Mine Workers to-1 margin .
"I voted for the other one
Union Bargaining. Council
and
if I thought the other one
split on the vote sending a
new contract to the was fair, then this will be a
membership with Di•tricl . 6 . real goo'd one,'' Guzek told
President John Guzek UPI ln a telephone interview
endorsing the pact and UMW from Washington where he 'is
Executive Board Member heads the UMW construction
bargaining team. "If I can
Bill Lainb opposed to it.
The Bargaiping Council vote for the other one, I sure
voted 22·17 to send the can vote for this one."
The new contract reduces
contract to the rank-and-file
members for ratification in the amount of deductibles
an attempt to end the 101-day miners ait.d retired miners
would have to pay on their
doctor and pharmacy bills
and covers all hospitalzation
costs. It also eliminated
penalties against wildca t
strikers' and provideS for

Several

local option incentive pay
where the local union would
have to agree to a bonus for
increased production.
Some opponents \\'ant all
doctor and phllnnacy bills
paid as they were in the past
and also feel a woik incentive
clause "would. force miners
and coal co mpanies to
disregard safety regulations.
"They (the coal operators )
hlt on every argument thrown
against the last contract,"
said Guzek. "The incentive
clause is optional and local
unions themselves would vote
on it. It would be up to t hem.
"I don't know why this
co ntract
shouldn't
be
ratified," said Guzek. "They
took out. everything the
· miners were raising hell

about. But there are some
people who will vote against
anything . It's awfully easy to
vote no. You don't have to
explain ii then ."
Lamb, of Cadiz, Ohio, said
"you don 't go backwards" in
contract negotiations.
·
"I just think it's going to
have tough sledding, " said
Lamb.
Leonard Pnakovich,
president of the Ohlo Coal
Association, St. Clairsville,
said Wednesday he believed
· miners might be willing now
·to accept a contract .
"I think the compromises
made by both sides will be
beneficial,'' Pnakovich said.
" I think the atmosphere is
nOw set for acceptance aDd
ratification of the third

buses did
not run ·
Due to I he threatening flood
and fear of having students
stranded, several buses did
not run this . morning in the
Meigs Local School District,.
according to Dwight Goins,
administrative assistant .
'Buses did not go ' from
Sycamore Street to upper
PoJ1leroy, from the Beacon
Service Station to Salisbury
Elementary, Minersville,
Pomeroy' Golf Course Hill
and part of the.route on lower
Leading Creek.
Parents who took their
children to school were
responsible in seeing that
they get home.
Goins added that even
though the buses did not run,
the district was able to hold
classes the entire day.
Enrolhnent today was 6.2.7
percent.

Deputies
probing
vandalism

contract.
" If they expect to mine coal
in this area , then they have to
bring production up. l don't
know how the companies in
thi s area .are going to survive
in the open market at eight

tons of coa l mined per man per man. The decline was
ca used
by
altitudes,
(per day ).
unwillingness
to
work,
the
"When both parties entered
negotiations lor the 1974 con- whole bit.
"The coJnpanies can't go
tract, it was t7 tons per man
and they ended up the t974 up with benefits and wages on
contract producing eight tons one side and come down with

Swollen rivers receding
United Press International
Ohio rivers swo1en with ice
and melting snow reeeded
below danger levels today,
but some in Northeast Ohio
remained a threat.
The Grand and Chagrin
Rivers in Lake County both
were clogged with ice. Two
bridges over the Grand River•
connecting Painesville with
Faifport Harbor were closed
by the police because ice floes
banging against their piers
caused them to vibrate.
Only one road remained
open to Fairport. The ice jam
between the bridges also

threatened to back water up
aga in at Painesville's flat s
area where an apartment
complex along the river was
evacuated Tuesday night and
Wednesday morning.
.
In Willoughby Hills, a mile-.
long ice jam rernained
stationa~y on the Chagrin
River . Water flowed through
the pack allowing the Chagrin
to settle back into its banks
downriver. in' Eastlake .
Residents of flooded areas in
Willoughby Hills remained
away from their homes, but
those flooded out of their
homes and house trailers in

Eastlak e Tuesday moved
back in Wednesday.
National Weather Service
hydrologist Grant Vaughan in
Cleve land said conditions
wer e ,better in the rest of the

state.
"The lower Scioto around
Circleville and on down Is out
of its banks into th e
lowlands," he su id', " but
there have been no
evacuations and only a few
roads are covered.
"The Upper Scioto abOve
Delaware is a lso out of its
banks but it's minor, just a
half-a-fool or so above Oood
stage.

Auditor signs bonds

MRS. EMMA LOU FINCH, right, instructor of the class, gives a nod of approval to the
Appalachian music by Darrel and Carol Taylor, who entertained as part of their work with
the Retired Senior Citizens Volunteer Program.

Open house is conducted

The special education class
Meigs County Sheriff
of
Mrs. Emma Lou Finch,
James J. Proffitt reporl.&lt;!
by Cindy Mahoney,
assisted
deputles are investigating
vandalism to mailboxes on · Ohio University student doing
her stUdent teaChing at Meigs
Rt . 3, Racine.
Mrs. Hazel Bearhs and Roy Hig!J School, · has been
A. Sayre reported that studying the Appalachian
sometime during Wednesday area .
their
mailboxes
were
damaged. No other details
The ·Ohio River In
were released at Ibis. time.
Pomeroy this morning was
The incldenls are under
practically at a standstill.
investigation. •
II Is believed that water
Wednesday
evening,
wlll nol gel In any of lhe
depuUes investigated a one- · busbl..s establlsb.menls.
car deer accid~nt on SR 7
Tbe Nalional Weather
approximately 500 feet west
Bureau has not revised 118
of US Rt. 33 in front of the
repoJ;Ithat It will crest at
Rock Springs CI'IOetery.
t7.2 Friday al 10 a.m.
James E. Corbitt, Jr., 19, :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::;:::::;:::::::;:::;:;:;::
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, told deputies
be was traveling east on SR 7
POSTPONED
when two deer ran frOm the
The kickoff for the Cancer
right Into ·his path. He at· Crusade to be held this
tempted lo stop, but was evening has been cancelled
unable to stop before striking and rescheduled for Monday,
March 27, at 7:30 p.m~ the
the second deer.
There was no damge to bis East-West Dining Room at
Veterans Memorial Hr,tpltal.
!1Jto.

As a result of many hours of
work by the Meigs County
Board of Commissioners and
its clerk, Mary Hobstetter,
Meigs County is getting a
second nursing home.
Industrial revenue bonds
were signed Wednesday by
Howard Frank, Meigs County
Auditor, putting wheels in
action to build a 100 bed
faciii iy. Seventy-one
documents were signed by
Frank.
The facility wilt be built by
Ameritel Enterprises Corp.,
Columbus on eight aeres
known as 11 The Genheim.er
property" loCated on old
State Route 33.
Richard Jones, com·
missioner, stressed issuance
of industrial revenue bonds
would place no obligation
(inancialty on Meigs County.
Henry Wells, president of
th e board, issued t,he
following statement : "For

·r,,.,

Wednesday, the class .
entertained with an · open
house to give the public and
other faculty members and
students a glimpse of what
the class members have been
doing.
There were .displays . of
books and pamphlets on
Appalachia, work of the
students in making candies,
batik and other craft work, a
dimensional map of the area,
refreshments of "Ap·
palachian foods" such as
cornbread and sassafras tea,
and Appalachian music
played by Darrel and Carol
Taylor on the guitar and
violin, respectivelY.

~·

I

•

~
j

i

lncrcmm t he ·production nnd

would not destroy sufety . Th~
penHilies Hre so ~vere under
Ute law nobody would bl•
willing to lake a chonlle . The
compa nies are willing to puy
to get Ule production up ."
Meanwhile, State Highway
Piltroi efforts to lieep non·
union coat moving to Ohio
electric generutin~ stations
continued to be succ"esfulthl s
week while Ohio mlnct•s
continued to defy a Taft·
Hartley injunction ordering
them back to work.
Steve Elliott of UMW Local
1323 at Coshocton suid trucks
were hauled coal to till'
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio'•
Conesville generating plant
under Patrol escort without
incident Wednesday.
"We had planned to picket
the generating plant and shut
it down, but we couldn 'I get to
it," he suid.
"While ali those big trucks
roared by , with flapping
•nudguards and in bad
condition , patrolmen and
safety inspectors pulled over
a ll the cars with UMW
slickers on the bumpers and
inspected them.
"Even if they only had a
burned out taillight, they
were given tickets, had to
post bond and get the cars
fixed in a couple days.
"That's not right for them
not to stop those trucks, but to
pull ali of us over. We'll try
again tomorrow (Thursday)
to picket the generating
plant."
Ohio Energy Director
Robert Ryan said Thursday
Ohioans ·apparently are
responr!lng to a .ca ll by Gov.
James A. Rhodes for
increased conservation ef·
forts .
.
" If e verybody malie a
conscious, full-time effort to
conserve in every poasible
way, we can reach the goal of
25 per cent conservation on a
voluntary basis,'' said Ryan.
"The whole purpose of his
effort
is
to
avoid
unemployment."
But in Cincinnati, city
council voted to turn the
lights back on on highways
and freeways.
"I don't think the prlorites
are proper,'' said councihnan
David Mann. "I'm worried
about safety. It's an ill8lle of
safety versus a modest
amoWlt of energy." .

Student returns
to his classes .

Weather
lows tonight will be ·bet·
ween 20 and 25. Partial
clearing, windy and colder
· Friday, with snow flurries
ending and high tern·
peratures between 35 and SO.

struction cost will be one
miliiondollars. lt should be of
assistance in stimulating our
economy
durir•g
co nstruction . .
"This is only the first step
in our endeavor to brin ~
about adequate medica l
facilities to care lor the
elderly. Another such nursing
home, to be located in the
village of Middleport , is
' presently in the pla nning
stages. It is anticipated thai a
formal atiDouncemcnl concerning that 'project wlli be
forthcoming at an early dote.
"The board wishes to ex·
. tend its sincere thanks to all
those people who ha ve
worked so hard to bring about
thi s co unty improvement.
Special thanks to the Meigs
Co unty Community Im·
prov ement
Cor poration,
without whose help, thi s
project would not have been
pOssible", Wells concluded.

many years one of the most
needed fa cilities in this
county has been n nursing
home. The signing of this
agreeme nt today bet ween
Pomeroy Health Care Corp.,
and Meigs County means this
project wilt at long last,
become a reality . Within the
next year to 18 months we will
have operating in our county
a tOO bed nursing home.
Hopefully, this will bring to
an end the sad experiences of
the past, whereby many were
iorced to tra nsport their
relatives at! over the stale of
Ohio in order for them to
receive the care they so
desperately needed and so
rightly deserved.
"This new facility , which
will border on old SR 33 in
Chester Township, wilt mean
jobs for approximately SO full
time employes when com·
pleted and in operation.
" Additionally, the con·

productivity on the other. The
incentive clause would help

NURSING HOME BECOMES REAUTY - Industrial
revenue bonds have been signed for the construction of a
nursing borne iii Meigs CoWlty. Howard Frank, county
auditor, signed 71 docwnents putting the wbaels in action
for the construction of a 100 bed facility . The board of
Meigs .County Comrnissionel'l have worked dillgenUy
~

toward· the goal, along with Mary Hobstetter, clerk.
iilown are,l-r, Mary Hobstetter, Howard Frank, auditor,
Henry Wells, Jim Roush and Richard Jones,
commissioners. Jones stressed the bonds do not In any
way obligate the county financially.
l

4

James Morton, Pomeroy, a
st udent has returned to
classes at Meigs High School,
Principal James Diehl said
today.
Diehl said · Morton had a
.slight altercation with
another student recently and
later complained of chest
pains. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he was released the
same evening. Diehl repons
Morton was absent from
school last week due to chest
pains, bl\' is now in

rtw·

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