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                  <text>8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , Mar. Tl, 1978

Utilities •••
(Continued from page I )
of Ohio, only one person is
assigned to review the
r.,P...ts - normally used only
in rate increase request case
- upon which its story was
based, the VindicaiDr said .
Clyde Frederickson, Ohio
Edison's director of system
operations,
would
acknowledge neither the
findings nor the methodology
of the newspaper's study.
"You have to look at the
various types of transactions.
I don't think you can take
lump sum numbers like that

and make any conclusions."
Asked if .the intercompany
relationships constituted a
"daisy chain" established for
purposes
of
profit,
Frederickson replied , ''I

would
say
impossible."

that

is

The board ·of directors and
staff of Leading Creek
Conservancy District and
Leading Creek Water Shed
Association report that equal
employment opportunities
lor applicants, participants,
and employes In CETA
( Comprehensive Em ployment Training Act) are
available.
All training programs,
according to the policy of
both conservancy district and

watershed associaUon, are
administered without regard
to race, color, rellgion ,
national origin, sex, age, or

political affiliation .
If a CETA participant or
applicant feels·discriminated
against ln

KICKOFF SLATED
The

Cancer

Crusa de

kickoff meeting will be held
this evening at 7:30 p. m. at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
in the east-west dining room .
INJURED
Sharon Covert, .Pomeroy,
was t aken

to

Veterans

~mployment

Ceasefire breaks down

~-----i;~;-1)-~;ih~---- ~

Conservancy
has equal
opportunities

or

seeking em ployment, or
training with the dist rict or
watershed, they shou ld
contact Glen na Crisp· or
Charles Russe ll at t he
headquarters in R utla nd .

Hospital News
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Satu rday Adm issions -

Memorial Hospital by the

Richard Dean, Middleport ;
Norman Lehew, Portland ;
at 11 :211 a.m. Sunday arter Earl Griffith , Middleport ;
the car she was driving went Debra Norris, Pomeroy ;
into a ditch on Mulberry Donald Laudermilt, Rutland;
Heights. She was treated and Jack Rankin , Coolville.
Saturday Discharges released.
Sharon Smith, Fritz Buck,
Herbert Shields, Eve rett
Roush, Herbert Miller, David
Riggs.
Sunday Admissions Ralph Clark, New Haven;
Debbie De r enbe r ger,
Pomeroy.
Su nd ay Discharges
Kimberly Tribble.
Pomeroy Eme rgency Squad

CARL DAVIS
carl Davis, 69, Syracuse,
died Sunday night at Holzer
Medical Center. Mr. Davis
was born J~ne 4, 1908 son of
the late Lorenzo and Emma
Campbell Davis.
He was a veteran of World
War II and a member of
Pomeroy Masonic Lodge .
Mr. Davis Is survived by
his wife, Glenna, and one
brother, Lorenzo Davis, ·
Pomeroy.
Funeral services will be
held Wednesday at 1:30 p.m.
at Ewing Chapel with the
Rev . Dwight Zavitz ofliciating. Friends may call at
the funeral · home Tuesday
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.

Middleport, to Clarence E.
and Julia Lewis Boy les of
Middleport,
He Is a former employee of
Buckeye Steel Co., Columbus.
Surviving are his wife,
Loretta Herdman Boyles;
two daughters, Mrs. Lucille
Johnson, Middleport , and
Miss June Boyles, Columbus;
one son, Eugene Boyles,
Middleport ; one stepdaughter, Miss Donna
Taylor, Columbus; one stepson, Kevin Taylor, Columbus; two sisters, Mrs. Betty
Jo Cieving, New Haven, and
Mrs. Janice Miller, Utica , N.
Y.; two brothers, Charles
Boyles, Middleport, and
Marvin Boyles, Whitehall ;
and three grandchildren.
Funeral services will be
held Wednesday at I p. m. in
the Crow-Russell Funeral
Home with the Rev. Charles
Higginbotham officiating .
Burial will be in Pine Grove
Cemetery, Leon.
Friends may call at the
funeral home after 7 p. m.
today.

.

Ulllled Presslntenatloual
Israeli
for ces
and
Palestinian
guerrillas

clashed with rockets and
artillery today in a
breakdown of the cease-fin!
in southeast Lebanon,
Palestinian anct leftist
sources said.
The fighting grew amid
indications Syria was at odds
witll a ban On reinforcements
to the guerrillas in the south ,
a potential complication for
intensified U.N. efforts to
cement peace ln the area.
In Jerusalem, government

•
1Jl..f'
r.1.ergs
man

begins his
sentence

underlined In clashes in the
southeast that erupted
Sunday nigbl and lasted
through this morning,
guerrilla and leftist sources
said,
The rocket and artillery
exchanges occurred between
opposiug guerrilla and loraeli
forces near the stra teglc
lla8bani River Bridge and the
nearby town of Kaoukaba ,
eight miles north of the

sources sa id the ISraeli

John Partlow, 1?, . Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, was sentenced
recently to a term of two to

five years in an appropriate
Penal Institution on a charge
of breaking and entering.
Partlow and two MidCLARA F. JOHNSON
dleport area youths were
Clara F . Johnson. 83.
arrested by Meigs Co utny
Broad Run Communitr,
Sheriff's Deputies following
Letart Rt . I, died Sunday in
the breaking and entering of
Pleasant Va lley Hospital.
tl]e Opal Gobel residence
. She was born ori Dec . .17,
outside
of Middleport. Mrs.
1894, Broad Run, t he
Gollel
bad
come home and ,
daughter of the late James M.
found one of the youths in the
an d Nancy Ann Roush
bouse. Neighbors furnished
Hesson.
other leads and the three
HARLEY T. JOHNSON
She was preceded in death
Harley Thomas Johnson, were picked up. Most of the
by her husband, Edgar W.
83, Rt . 4, Pomeroy, died stolen items were recovered.
Johnson in 1969.
Partlow was transported
She was a member of the Sa turday night at Holzer
Thursday afternoon to the
Broad Run United Methodist Medical Center.
Mr. Johnson was bornFeb. Ohio Penal Medical an d
Church.
1895 the son · of the late Receptio n
18,
Cent er
at
Survivors incl ude two sons,
Th
omas
a
nd
Virginia
Columbus,
Ohio.
Harold E. and Donald BerPart low had entered a
dine Johnson, both of Letart ·R ayburn Johnson. He was
Rt, l i one sist er, Mr s. also preceded in death by one guilty plea to a Bill of InVeat ri ce Hudson, Poi nt sister, one brother, one half- formation earlier and Judge
Bacon had ordered a prePleasant : nine grandchildren si~er and one grandson.
He was · a retired farmer se nt ence invest igation on
and 17 great"graridchildreh .
of Partlow by the State Parole
a
member
Funeral services will be and
Harri
sonvill
e
Lodge
411
Officer.
'
held Wednesday 2 p. m. in the
F&amp;AM.
Broad Run United Methodist
Surv ivors include his wife,
Church with the Rev. 0. H.
Cart officia ting. Burial will Ina Russell Johnson, three
be in Broad Run Cemetery. daughters, Mrs . Evely n
Friends may call at the Thomas, Mrs. Naomi Smith ,
Foglesong F un era l Home Mrs. Ida Murphy; one son,
Tuesday from 2 to 4 p.m. and Harl ey Johnson, all of Rt . 4,
from 7 to 9 p. m. The body will Pomeroy; 15 grandchildren,
be taken to t he church one 17 great-grandQhildren and
several nieces and nephews.
ho ur prior tq services.
Funeral services will be
held at I p. m. Tuesday at
Ewing Chapel with Don
CLARENCE BOYLES
Clarence E. Boyles Jr .. 42, Kennedy offi ciating . Burial
999 Hilock Rd. , Columbus, will be in Wells Cemetery.
died Sunday morning in F riends may .call a t the
funeral home at a ny time.
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
He was born on July 4, 1935,
ISAAC SHEETS

government is consid~ring
sending Defense Minister
Ezer Weizman ID Egypt ID
seek to renew the momentum
of the disr upted Middle East
peace talks.
The Israeli Cabinet voted
unanimously Sunday to
support Pfime Minister
Menacbem Begin and his
Middle East peace policies
and to authorize secret peace
initiatives with Egypt.
In Lebanon, Swedish troops
of a n expanding ll.N.
peacekeeping force wer e
caught in a crossfire Sunday
betw~n the guerrillas and
Israeli occupation troops but
a U.N. spokesman said no one
had fired directly on the
Swedes and no casua lties
resulted.
About one-quarter of an
expec ted 4,000-m an U.N.
force has arrived in Lebanon.
Nea rly 700 Norwegian troops
wer e expected in the next few
days.
The continUed tension in
the south was forcefully

High"'fls get
new numbers
The following Meigs County
Roads have received their
new house numbers:
Story's Run Road (CR345),
Silver Run Road (TR 189),
Yeauger Road (TR 188), Pine
Grove Road (CR 34), Sunny
Hollow Road (TR 164), Bone
Hollow Road (TR 194 ),
Brewer Road (TR 29), Blake
Hlll Road (TR .186 ), Bentz
Road (TR 372), Skinner Road
(TR 83 ), Shady Cove Road
(TR 193), Rose Road (TR
411 ), TR 1055, Starcher Road
(TR 208) , Silver Run Road
(TR 189 ), Sunny Hollow Road
(TR 164), Kin Road (TR 296),
McGrath Road (TR 17 ), TR
145, TR 209, TR 105, Williams
Road (TR 242) , Willow Creek
Road (TR 78 ), Wag ner Roaq
(TR 636 ), TR 273, . TR 289,
Wessel Road (TR 137), Dean
Road (TR 308), TR 120, TR
366, Clark Road (TR 163).

Israeli border, the 110urces
said.
In the ooutheast town d.
Hasbaya, leftist 10urcea said
Israeli ar1lllery bad abeUed
the area of the heldwaten d.
the lla8bani River, 81 weU 81
the outskirts of the v~~~ag.. d.
Mimeu and ·Choualya,
damaging a riumber of
houses.
Palestinian sources put the
number of Lebanese and
Palestinian dead at over
1,100. Iarael claims to haw ·
killed 250 guerrillas and loot
less than 211 men.

Most•••

OAPSE MEETING
A . meeting of the Meigs

Baker
Furniture
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Loca l Chapter 17, Ohi o
Association of Public School
Employes, will be held at7:30
p. m. Tuesday in the Meigs
Junior High School at middleport.

(Continued from page 1l
County.
. Ohio's coal miners went on
strike Dec. 8, and it took 109
days and three proposed
settlements before the UMW
members voted ID return to
work last Friday.
But
while
r atified
nationally , the new coal
contract was defeated In
District 8. One of the reasons
It was rejected involved
complaints from a number of
former miners arouod the
state that the pact doeir Utile
to improve their pensions.
SQUAD CALLED
The Syracuse ER Squad
was called at 12:45 this
morning for Debbie Cundiff
who was taken to Pleasant
Valley Hospital.

ELBERFELD$

Our
•
DepoSit
•IS

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

.

I''
,. limrt 10 be with me.

"Grand ma , I 'm rl lad you have mo

~
• • n aa

'

-

Farttters Bank
POMEROY, OHIO
'40.000 Maximum Insurance For Each Depositor
Member Federal Depos~ Insurance Corporation

months.

He had been a lifet ime .
mechanic and spent his entire
life in Gallia qounty. In his
earlier days Isaac Sheets
OPerated his own garage near
Mercerville . He also worked
for the late J ohn Williams at
the Ford garage; later for the
Gallipolis Motor Company,
and the Ohio Valley Implement Company (now
So mmer's). His la st employment was as a mechanic
with the GaUia County Highway Department.
Born Mav 21. 1899. in Gallia
County, he was a son ol the
Rev. Ira Sheets and Martha
Fillinger Sheets, and he was
married June I , 1917, in
Gallipolis to Willa M. Sheets,
daught er of William and
Alberta Church Sheets.
Willa and Isaac Sheets aie
survived by lour sons and a
daughter, Winfred (she lives
in Alameda, Calif. ; Ernest,
Lancaster: 'Ivan, Chicago ;
Mrs. Martha Neal, Gallipolis,
and Paul Sheets, Parkersburg. There are 12 grandchildren· and six gre atgrandchildren.
.
Afsc surviving him are a
sister and two brothers, Mrs.
Jaines (Lula) Landon, Table
Rock, Neb .; Okey Sheets,
Huntington, and Claude. .
Sheets, Gallipolis. Five
brothers a nd two s ist ers
preceded him in death.
He wa s a member of
Siloam Church.
Funeral services will be
held at i p.m . Wednesday at
the Mercerville Baptist
Church. Officiating will be
the Rev. Charles Lusher and
the Rev. Bfuce Uni-oe. Burial~
will be in Ridgelawn
Cemetery, Mercerville. Pallbearers will be grandsons.
Friends may call 2-4 and 7-9
p.m. Tuesday at the WaughHalley- Wood Funeral Home.
The family reque.sts tbat In
lieu of flowers contributions
be made to the Gallia County
Unit of the American cancer
Society, Charla Evi ns , Rt. 3,
Box 398, Gallii!Olls 45631. ·
MEET TONIGHT
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Garden Club will meet at 7: 30
this evening at the country
borne of Mrs. James Titus.
Mrs. Charles.Lewis and Mrs.
Jack Robson wlll · be
,
hostesses.
OAT~ CHANGED
A meeting of the Pomeroy
Elementary PTA amounced
for this evening will be held
instead on Monday, April 10.

said he has been advised by
Fire Chief Wayne Davis that
the department is going to
purchase a new system which
will provide an individual
alert system for fire
department members.
The new system will be
bought with lire department
funds at a cost of over $9,000.
Mayor Hoffman highly
commended firemen for thefr
action in making the purchase. The system will be
available in about two
months.
The mayor also reported
pre-applications for federal
block grants must be in by
May 15. There is $14.5 mitUon
dollars available in Ohio lor
such grants. Both Pomeroy
and Middleport were turned
down last year in their applications .

However, Mayor Hoffman
said he had been advised that
bot h towns would fare better
if they wo uld combine their
projects into one application.
Pomeroy officials are in
agreement and Middleport

!News. . . in Brief~1

~

u

By United P ress International
OOLUMBUS- A TOP NAACP ATTORNEY said Monday
Ute state should "crack the whip" ID end school segregation In
Ohio, which ~ ci'I!Jried has more r.acially divided cities .than
any other state in the nation .
Nathaniel Jones of Youngstown joined a parade of
witnesses before the Ohio Legislative Committee on School
Desegregaiioo in calling on state government to use its muscle
and its money to .end the prae)ice. ·

•REGULAR PRICES '69 TO 1169 EACH FOR BOX SPRINGS OR MATTRESSES AND
PERFECT SLEEPER QUEEN SETS UP TO 1419.95 A SET
•THESE BOX SPRINGS AND MATTRESSES ARE WATER STAINED FROM ROOF
DAMAGE BECAUSE OF SNOW AND ICE.

COLDRTRAK

Special

T.V.

RCA TV
Prices

25" CONSOLES

TELEVISION
'

19" COLOR PORTABLES

'5000

~
OR MORE

&amp; STRA TION

5 H.P.

ROTOTILLERS
FOR THAT HEAVY WORK

PATIO &amp; LAWN
FURNITURE
Spring Base ChaiiS.

those smaler

INDOOR • OUTDOOR

HOT WATER TANK

CARPETING

SALE

'495 SQ. YD.
ARMSTRONG CARPET

'335 SQ. YD.
SCULPTURED

DOWNS CARPET
REG. 114.00 SQ. YD.

CHICAGO - FOOD PRICES IN BOTH ClEVELAND and
Cincinnati Increased during December, January and
Felruary with Cleveland recording a hike of 3.1 percent and
Cincinnati had an increase of 2.2 percent, it was announced
today ,
The Department of Labor office in Chicago said fruits and
vegetables were up 6.3 percent for the largest Increase in the
Cleveland area and Ute same items were up 4.3 percent in the
Cincinnati area.

* Featuring the Famous

Tillers available for

PATIO· TURF

CLEVELAND - CUYAHOGA OOUNTY Common Pleas
Judge Frank J _Gorman has ordered deported an 1&amp;-year.. Id
Greek sailor who Jumped ship and later pleaded guilty to
charges of aggravated robbery, kidnapping and feloniou s
8S811ult.
Gorman also sentenced the suilor, Nikolaos Mudoulas to 21
to 75 years in prison, but suspended the sentence, pending a
hearing before the U. S. Immigration Service.

LLOYD

2 H.P _Briggs a, Stratton

NOW

BEIRUT, LEBANON - THE OOMMANDER of the U.N.
pea ce-keeping force met with Palestine Liberation
Organization leader Yasser Arafat today and spokesmen said
the PLO chief expressed readiness to help " ensure the
success" of the U.N. force mission .
Maj. Gen. Emmanuel Erskine of Ghana arrived in Beirut
from JeMISBlem and met for an hour with the PW chalnnan in
talk!! that Arafat said took place in an atmosphere of
.''complete understanding .''

SAVE

.

BRIG~S

•

TOKYO - SPECULATORS TODAY DUMPED more than
I billion unwanted U. S. dollars on the Tokyo foreign exchange
market, sending the American currency to a new Postwar low
despite massive buying by th~ Bank of Japan .
Ban!dng sources said transactions totaled .$1.063 billion.
There wer e almost no customers for dollars e xcept the
Japanese central bank.

perFormance

DAYTON, OHIO - Bryon Ball, Springfield, charged in
connection with last month 's bostage.Uking ordeal from
Richmond, Ind., to Springfield, attempted an escape witll two
other prisoners in Ute Montgomery County J~U .
Deputies said Mon4ay they received a tip that Ball, .
Thurque Thompson and Thomas Childers, both Qf Dayton,
would try the escape Suoday night. Deputies said a fire was
apparently set in one ceU as an apparent diversion and that
they found hack saws, crow bars and other tools which had
apparently been lifted through jail windows.

$139 52.:pi.·Eiec....... $118
$119

30-gal.~ ....... $100

CINCINNATI - AffiPLANE PILOT HENRY JAMES
ALLEN should have yelled "fore." His single-engine plane ran

out of gas Monday and so he crash-landed In suburban
)!:dgewood, Ky. - on a golf course.
Allen of Detroit, Mich., who was alone in Ute plane,
escaped injury, but the plane was heavily damaged . Enroute
from Atlanlaj Ga., to Detroit, Allen said he ran out of gas while
trying to lind an airport to refuel.

'129 40-gal. Gas .......$109

MILL END RUGS

OOLUMBUS - STEVEN E. OONUFF, the p!Mihrowinll
candidate for · governor, ·apparently is without an eligible
runntns-mate and could be disquallfied from the Republican
P'bnary wtder the -ate's new tandem election systems.
The secretary of state's office coilflrmed Monday that
ConUII's choice for lieutenant governor is probably ineligible
to nm as a Republican in the 1978 primary because she is a
registered Democrat.
\

12'Xl5'

'1l?:,d.

NYLON
INCLUDES INSTAUATION AND PAD

:OTHER SIZES ALSO AVAILABLE

CHARLESTON, W. VA. - UNITED MINE WORKERS
PRESIDENT Arnold Miller was in the market today for a new
prea secretary.
He !Ired his old one, Paul Fortney, in. a memo dated
Friday. "I haven't been satisfied with the quality of your
(Continued on page 8)

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
I'

unemp loy ployer
lor
ment compensation . The
village agreed to pay three
percent of each employee's
salary for a two-year period.
Under the plan, if there is
unemployment the worker
laid off would receive the
compensation.

As of this year, the village
is responsible for unemployment benefits and must
pay the entire amount of such
compensation for 39 weeks,
but went under the three

most stayed away from the
mines Monday.
All but one of Ohio's 32
underground mines and 352
ten ta tive ag reem ent was . strip mines, which produce ·
announced in Washington and nearly 50 million Inns of coal
the miners began streaming a- yea r, we re r eporte d
back to the pits IDday.
working IDday for the first
The miners had agreed on a tiine since Dec. 6, 1977 when
new contract last Friday, but the nationwide strike by the
refused to cross the construc- United Mine Workers Union
tion workers' picket lines and began.
Only one North American
the soft coal mines.
The construction workers
began pulling down their
picket lines shortly after the

·::::.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::~:i:::::::::::~:::::·:;:::~:;::~:::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::~-::::::~

MAnRESSES &amp; BOX SPRINGS

lage
will
become
a
contributing ta:.:payer em-

percent plan last night to
avoid the responsibility of the
complete payment.
Under the adoption of the
ordinance unemployment
would be paid by the state.
Cost to , the village will be
from$2,500to$3,000 aMuaUy .
Clerk-Treasurer Grate
aMo~nced the village has
received $22,906 from the
Environmental
Protection
Agency for reimbursement of
monies spent in past years for
tlle sanitary 5ewer escrow
lund.
A letter from the Ohio
Consumer Council in regard
to a proposed rate hike

.'

•I

request by Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co.
was discussed briefly.
Co uncil man Car l Horky
was requested to secure a
firm price on the " pointingup" of the exterior of Middleport VIllage Hall. The
building has already been
sa ndblasted with the pointing
up apparently to be done this
spring or sununer.
Co uncil conferred with
John Hood. president of the
Middleport Youth League
and Mrs. Pat Kitchen of the
teague, regarding the needs
in getting the ball fields at the
community park in shape for
s ummer . Hood assured
co uncil' that volunteer labor is·

available this year. The
matter will be discusse d
again on Thursday when the
recreation commission

Weather

Partly cloudy tonight, with
lows in the mid or upper 30s. meets.
Attending the meeting were
Mostly sunny Wednesday,
with highs in the upper 50s or Mayor Hoffma n, Clerk Grate,
lower 60s. Pro bability of arid council members Horky,
precipitation is 10 per cent Wil li am Wa lters, Charles
today and tonight and near Mu ll en,Marvin Kelly and
Dewey Horton.
zero percent Wednesday.

•

.

at

-.

,

t\ .

construction workers.

(Continued on page ti)

10 mills
are. sought

a film was shown on cancer in children ,

Fourth

-

Coal Co . min e in the
Powhatan Point area,
employing a bout I ,000
miners, was still out.
Six North American Coal
Co. mines and one Y&amp;O Coal
Co. mine were idle Monday,
the firs t day of work
scheduled lor striking UMW
produ ct i o n e mpl oyes,
because of picketing by UMW

CANCER CRUSADE KICKOFF WAS HELD Monda)' ni~ht in )he t'IISl-wrst dining room
at Veterans Memorial Hospital. Shown are the co-&lt;hlalnr1en of th~ l'll nl'el·l-rusudc, Mur tha
Gress and Linda Vanlnwagen, 1-r. Mrs. Gress stated Ihal tile purpo•e of tim crusndc is to\
obtain money for research, education and service. Qutirmen have been n~lmcd fur oil ,,
villages and townships. Volun teer workers will canvass aUvillnges. townships, business
establishments, and industry . There will also be a spedul gilts clulirnum, Mrs. Cress
explained .The crusade will be held during the month of April. At the meeling Mvn&lt;lay night

en tine

'

Tentative agreement reached
United Press International
NegotiaiDrs for the UMW's
14,000 striking)lline construction workerS,\,_Monday night
eached tentative agreement
with soft coal operaiDrs.
The
agreement ,
if
approved by the bargaining
council Wednesday and
ratified by the rank and file
during the · weekend, would
end 112 days of labor strife in

SAVE. 40% to 50%

officials agreed last night to
file with Pomeroy.
The Buckeye Hills Regional
Council has also recommended the two community
efforts be merged.
The mayor said a public
hearing is required before the
filing of the pre-application .'
The hearing was set lor 7:30
p.m. on April 6.
Council suspended the rules
and gave all three readings
ID an emergency ordinance
providing that the vil-

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, Marc h 28 . 1978

By KENNE111 R. CLARK

Isaac H. Sheets, 78, who

resided at 244 Fourth Ave .,
Gallipolis, died at 4 a.m.
Sunday at Holzer Medical
Center. He had been in failing
health for fo ur years and' in
serious condition for five

Middleport Village Council,
meeting in regular session
Monday night, aCj!epted a gift
of a lot at the comer of
Garfield and S. Third Sts.
Gene
Clerk-Treasurer
Grate reported that Franklin Murphy, Columbus attorney
for Mrs. Mary Elizabeth
Thomas, had been in contact
with Bernard Fultz, village
solicilor, and on behalf of
Mrs. Thomas, the.lot is being
offered to Middleport VIllage.
There is no Charge lor the lot
and "no strings attached" as
to what is to be done with the
property, Grate said.
The home of the late Mrs.
Bessie Hartinger, Mrs.
ThomaS mother, was located
on the lot along with another
house. These two structures
were torn down a few months
ago.
During the meeting Mayor
Fred Hoffman reported
~evera l a ppli cations subll)itted by the fire department
for federal funds to updaie its
alert system have been
t urned down. Mayor Hoffman
1

WAREHOUSE - MECHANIC STREET IN POMEROY

'51.95

Council accepts corner lot

MAKING first bid In
polities is Giles Smith,
Rutland. Smith has announced thai he wut seek
the Democrat nomination
for tbe - olflee· bl Meigs
County Coinmlssionet.
Smitll was born and reared
in Salem Center and has
lived In Rutland the past 30
years, He served ln. W.W. II

· Meeting in s pecial s ession Monday night, the
Meigs Local School District Board of Educ a tion
voted to place a 10 mill tax levy be fore vote rs at
the June · 6 primary election,
for three years. He and his
Superintendent Charles Dowler said the
wife, Beatrice, have two
decision for the 10 mill , three-year le vy c ame
dau ght ers, Ma rgaret
Edward s, Rutland and
after several weeks of study by a committee
Charlotte
Hesebl, Eleanor,
composed of himself , Clerk Jane Wagner and
board m e mbers, Mrs . J e nnifer Sheets and Carol
Pierce .
The levy, if passed, would bring an additional
$680,000 into the district annually. It would give
the district a 30 mill tax structure permitting it to
•
receive maximum state aid funds , Dowler said .
ffi
Meigs Local d istrict now has the minimum 20
mills in effect to qualify for state aid.
·
Attending the meeting were Supt. Dowler ,
Clerk Wagner , board members, Mrs. Sheets,
MONTVAIE,N.i. (UPil Pierce, Wendell Hoover, Dr. Keith Riggs and Great Atlantic &amp; Pacific Co.
.
Inc. plans to close 17 of its
Virgil King ; Dan Morris , d 1rector of curriculum ; stores in Columbus · and
Dwight Goins, administrative assistant ; Bob southeastern Ohio because
Morris , e lement a ry principal, and Cha r les th ey are unprofitable , a
Downie and David Bowen, repre senting the Meigs company spokeswoman said
Local Teachers Assn .
Monday .
"Operation s will be
terminated in all 10 of our
Columbus stores on April 22,"
said a public information
officer at A&amp;P headquarters
here. " The other seven will
be closed a few week!! later."
Asked what prompted the •
decision to close the stores,
the A&amp;P spokeswoman said :
By LEE LEONARD
With enactment of th e " In a word , the y are
UP! Statehouse Reporter
legislation, he said, "Ohio unprofitable."
COLUMBUS (UP!)
will be in the forefroot of the
The 17 stores have been
Le g islation r e qui r in g st ates
in
energy sold to S.M. Flickinger, a
conservation of gas, oil and conservation.''
N.Y. ,
food
Buffalo ,
" But it requires few wholesaler and supplier for
electricity by state agencies
and encouraging Ute same in individual sacrifices," he A&amp;P, and will reopen as part
the private sector has continued. "That is a major of the Super Duper chain
received the unanimous unwritten chapter in the within 90 days after their
blessing of the Ohio Senate. energy story. This is not the closings.
The bill, described as a end in itself, but the
The seven stores in
ufirst step" in an overall beginning."
southeastern Ohio that will
state energy policy, cleared
The
bill
requires cease operations are located
tlle Senate Monday night and construction standards for In Newark, Martins Ferry,
was sent back to the House state buildings geared to Cambridge, Logan, cadiz,
for
concurr ence
· in energy efficiency, including a New Lexington, and Athens.
amendments.
"life \ cycle" cost analysis,
A&amp;P has 2,000 retail outlets
The IIIMSII'e, which consti- meamng fuel costs will be in markets predominantly
tutes an Important part of the computed for the life of a east of the Mississippi.
1977·71
De m ocr ati c building .
legislative package on · It also requires fuel
ene.-gy, -.r.a app'oved in economy in state cars and
'
dilfe.-enl form by the House state purchases of supplies
and equipment ; requires
lalt June.
"'Ibis is the lint step In the state agencies to encourage
formulllllon ,d. an overall car pooling and the use of
Damage was set at $1,500 to
state policy on energy," said ma ss transportation ; and a bouse in Clifton Monday
Sen. J . Timothy Mc-Cormack, mandates the teaching o!fuel afternoon from a fire which
D-Euclid, floor manager of economy techniques in driver started in an upstairs
the bill, who conceded it education courses.
bedroom. It was the Homer
"does not speak strongly to
The bW bans outdoor gas Blessing home.
tbe question of private lights unless they are already
Mason Fire Department
In use on city streeta.
conswnption."
was assisted by a tanker from
It al110 forbids the sale after the
McCormack pointed up the
Middleport
Fire
United Slates' dependence on 1979 of appliances with Department, with fii-emen on
foreign gas aod oil, saying it continuously burning gas the scene for an hour.
results in an annual deficit of pilot lights, except for water
A total of 15 men am{ lour
heaters.
$30 billion.
trucks responded to the call.

Meigs Co unt y She riff
James J. Proffitt r ~ports the
fourth arrest in 'the lwu
break ing and enterings of the
Grace Gardner property in
Rutland Township.
Arrested Monday afternoon
was Carl Edward Moo re 1 34,
Syracuse . Moore is cha r ~ed
with the March 18 breaking
and entering Qf the Grace
Ga rdner pro perty . It is
alleged that Moore is the
person that broke and ran ·
aft er being caught carryi ng
items from the house by
James Thomas of Pomeroy.
Thomas and his son had gone
to the Gardn er residence to
repair

a windo w that had

Fiftt•en Ct•nts
Vol. ~X. No. ~'II

~rson
"'cek.
Sheri H ProU111 rrpurh•d
two other l)l'r~·n~ rt&gt;Cunwd
this wcckt.•ud fro111 Mdh·m \
Cqunty ,_ llhn,ru l u li.ut•
L'harge-s ul brr.lk1n an•l

llw Sheriff pcrrdin,14 l'niHl•h-Hon of pre-st•ntenec In'••..;t 11:utm n rt' pilrb to bt•
llf{'lwrt •tl IJ)' a pa rulc ·
prullt.ltunr ufrkl'r frum the
Otuu Allull Parole Authority .

entering uf .Uw llr
ncr prf] pt;rl) •n

l'lllS HUt ln~

(I 111
• n•t
TownshltJ un IM c ~
.,f
Murch 16 ha\ bin t •1t
befur

Mtht

""""') ( um

rnon Plens (\, ...n Jud Jvhn
C. Bueon ,on H11l " uf fn
rorma tlon. AhPr \\' UI \fl rtf.(
ll1cir ri~ht s , Jiru'nld Uwt;.: ht
MrDuniel , 24, Ut. I. Mid·
dleport, and Murk IInley, 2ti,
Middleport, cnttJrt!&lt;.l ..:uill y
pleas on B&amp;E char~c!j ,
McDaniel lutd also been

been damaged during the charged un n Bill of ln~
Thursday night B&amp;E. Dwight formation ror the Jurumry 0
Haley, Jr ., was ca ught near breaking und cnlcrinK nf the
the scene. However , a second Pomeroy Wine Store. He nlso
person ra n. Both ar e being · entered a ~uilty plea to t htH
held in the Meigs County .J ail
pending hearings Int er this

.n abbed

Charge.
Both dcfend8nt s were.
remanded to the c u ~i ody of

l'ur&amp;un t' row , As!-i isuwt
Att o rney,

t ••pr~·Stnt cd the Statt• uf Ohio.
Jn .,th('r }lt'ti vit y, Sheriff
Pruffitt 1'C!)or1S hi!-; iii!!)Urt~
tiH'III l,"i l n v t• s ti g ntin~ n

hn..•Jlkm~ aiJcl t•n\L"ring un
ltti.N4~ Hill .
Albt•i1 MtH1in .•Jr ., BClprc,
rt'lh111Cd the house of the lute
Carl Arno ld had been cnt(:rcd
by brcnk ing out H i&gt;tme or
glass in the kitchen door. It
WHS

ransttcked.

Hems r eported mi s:-~ l n 15
from thul residem·c iududc ;
9 shut H &amp; R plstul 2:l cal .,

dcsls lamp , desk cnlc.:ulotor,
Hnd a pair of fie ld blnoculnrs.

'l11c incident "is still under
1 n vesti~ution .

Begin's letter calls
~:v:~~~for renewal of talks

StOreS
SEO clos··e

Energy bill
clears ·Senate

Fire loss
is $1,500

By MATHIS CHAZANOV
TEL AVIV , Israel (UP!) Prime Minister . Menachem
Begin sent President Anwar
Sadat a letter calling for the
renewal of direct Middle East
peace talks between Israel
and
Egypt ,
Israe l
government officials said
today.
The letter, transmitted by
Ute U.S. Embassy in Tel
Aviv, calls for a renewal of
the momentum that stalled
when the parallel talks of
foreign and defense ministers
fell apart in January, they
said.
The text was not disclosed,
but newspaper reports said
Israel was standing by its
insistence on keeping Jewish
settlements in Ute Sinai aild
effective control over the
occupie d West Bank of
Jordan and the Gaza Strip.
. The mllltary command
said Israeli troops captured
the Khardaly Bridge over the
Li tani River in southern
Lebanon and handed it over
ID U.N. troops after a brief
shootout with guerrill as
waiting in ambush .
In Beirut, the Palestine
Liberation Organization news
agency Wafa said "certain
enemy armored vehicles'' at-

Hearing clinics
are scheduled
Susie Heines, coordinator

for the Speech and Hearing
Qinic, aMounced today thai
a full clinic will be held
beglMing Saturday, April I
from 9 a.m . to 12 at Pomeroy
Elementary ~hool.
Clinics w.ill be held each
Saturday from April I until
the first week in June. The
clinics are open to all ages,
children through adults. They
are especially interested in
pre-schoolers.
Mrs. Heines may be
reached by calling the school
on Saturday or at her
residence 98HI63.

•

tempted to advance on the
bridge but were turned back
by guerrilla lire.
A U.N. spokesman in Israel
said40 Swedish suldi ersofthe
U.N. for ce wereat the bridge,
but he said he was not IDld of
any lightin g. The Israeli
command said the shootout
came as army engineers
cleared the road of mines .
The Swedish troops began
' building barricades ucToss
Ute br idge they have been
trying ID reach lor almost a
week. It lies in a deep gorge
dominated by guerrill a
positions in the 12thcentury
Beaufort Crusader castle.
A U.N. commander told
reporters his men would open
fire if necessary ID block the
·passage of · agg ressive
forces.
"We will hold th e bridge
and try to prevent somebody
ID get over it," said Col.

Jonas Lundgren, comman der
of the Swedish battalion
tu;ually stationed in the Si nai.
A U.S. G;lla&lt;y turgo plane
landed at Tel AViv's BenGurion Airport today wlU1
su[&gt;plies for the U.N. troops,
the first of live expected
airlifts. 1l1e plane did not
carry tank.&lt; or other hea vy
equlpment, a report on Israel
Radio said.
The commander of the U.N.
peace -keeping force, Maj .
Gen. Emman uel Ersk!w oT
Ghana, arrived in Beirut
today from Jerusalem and
met with PW leader Yasser
Arafat fo r an hour .
Spokesmen for both sides
sai d afterward that Arafat
told Erskine the Pl..O · was
ready "to give all necesBitry
facilities to e n ~ u re the
success" of the · U.N. force
mission.

Governor Rhodes
prays for peace
OOLUMBUS (UP! ) - Gov.
James A. Rhodes prayed for
peace and understand ing
among all men today during
the annual prayer breakfast
he hosts in the Capitol
Rotunda .
About ,
150
guests
breakfasted on tomato or
orange juice, scrambled
eggs, hash brown potatnes,
rolls, donut rollS, coffee, tea
or milk. Among the guests
were the governor 's cabinet
and members of the General
Assembly.
''Lord ,
make
us
instrwnents of your peace ,"
P'BYed Rhodes.
Before the meal was
served, the 1110-voice Ali.Ohio
Yquth Choir sang " Morning
Has Broken," "Cum Bi Ya"
and 11 TJ:te Lord's Prayer ."
After prayers by Rhodes,
Ohio Supreme Court Justice

C. William O'Neil, Mrs. Judy
Brachman a.nd 1-l'Ona rd Lancaster, the choir sang ' jAva
Maria," the ''All eluia
Chorus" · fro m Handel' s.
" Messiah," th'e "Battle
Hymn of the Republic" and
" Amazing

Gr ace."

The

guests joined in the last two
selections.
state Sen . Harry Meshel,
DYoungstown , lll'ld Walter
White, R-Lirna, and Rep. Ben
Rose, RLirna, al110 offered
prayers.
Also present at the annual
breakfast was Mrs. Rita
Wurran, of BrockiDn, Mass.
She has been agressively
lobbying the Legislature for
the last several months to
pass a bill requiring up to one
minu~ ol silence for prayer
or meditation at the start of
each pubUc school da y.

�2- The Dailv Sentinel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Tuesday March 28 1978

TV. ••in Review
By JOAN HANAUER
UPI TelevtsloD Writer

HEALTH
Lawrence E Lamb M 0

Raw frtuls
and d1ahetes

qmrements 1n d abetlcs If

you get the majonty of your
carbohydrates from fresh
fruits and vegeUibles and
DEAR DR LAMB- In one OjVOid sugars a 1d starches
of your t'OIUilU\S you recom you wdl ha ve fewer promended thai a d1abet1 c blems You can do this and
severely llm1t starches meet the objectives of the
sugars and milk lsn t thiS m ADA to lower the percenUige
contradict on to the new of fa t u the d1el
D1a belles w1ll need some
recommendations of th e
nulk because It ts our mam
Am e r~ can D1abet c and
source of calc1wn It does
D~etet1c ASSOCiatiOnS for
greater amounts of starches conUI n m11k sugar that
so thai the fat conte1 t of the behaves like Ulble sugar
Ar other source of calctwn
diet Will be reduced '
DEAR READER- No The and good protem IS to use un
Amencan DiabetiC ASsoc1a creamed low fat) cottage
twn wants the fat reduced but cheese Part of the m11k
that does not requ re you to sugar has been lost m the
cheese makmg prQ&lt;Oess and
use sugars and st.a1che~
There are a lot of other car thiS avo ds some of thai probohydrates that you should blem It lg also a good Idea to
and could use that have ad f get your m lk w1th other foods
ferent act1on m relat on to or n the preparat on of other
blood sugar (glucose) levels foods
S nee you are nterested 1
and msul n
To Illustrate U e 1o nt tf a diabetes I am sendmg y u
ormal person eats a raw ctp- The Health Letter number 3
ple conta1 mg 50 gra us of II Diabetes D1agnos s
carbohydrate the blood sugar PreventiOn and Manage
WJ II not r se at all Why' ment Others who want tht s
Because t Js packaged m 1ssue can send 50 cents With ot
bulk and 11 s slowly absorbed long
stamped
se lf
u to the blood stream It will addressed envelope for 1t to
not cause a sudden net.'&lt;l for me m care of th s newspaper
msulm to le\ el out the blood P 0 Box 1551 Rad o C1ty Sta
g ucose level Now f you I on New York NY 10019
DEAR DR LAMB
dr nk 50 grams of sugar m
Do
water your blood glucose vttamms have ca lor c
eve l w II nse sha rply counls 1 Smce tak ng mltny
because t s uruned alely ab- Vltanuns a day A D mull B
sorbed from the small m Bone Meal C E wl eat genn
testme mlo the blood stream and ro 1 I fmd I am gammg
The concentrated sugar m the we1ght
DEAR READER
No
mtestme and blood sugar
response w1ll demand lots of V ta runs do not mcrease
msuhn

It has Oeen shown that
ea t ng raw fr UitS a nd
vegeUi bl es can Significantly

decrease the msubn re

your calor e ntake The only
relat onship vttarruns have to
calunes 1s that many of them
are used to form complex en
zymes that are n your cells

Banner year seen
for SEO squads
By CRAIG DUNN
Sports Editor
Logan Dally News
II many of the returnmg

John Jenkms (19-ro 12 RBis
320) are the three who will
lead the Ironmen
The Southern Tornadoes
lettermen of area teams th e 1977 Southern Valley
come through w1th seasons Athletic Conference champs
I ke they d1d last year the (11 t) have four 300 h1tters
Southeastern D1str ct of Oh o commg back
will have a banner year m
John Sayre (25 73 13 rans
baseball for 1978
scor ed
17 RBis
333
One of the top prospects m average ) M1ke Huddleston
the area 1s Wellston H gh (23-66 23 runs scored 20
School semor Ken Butcher RB!s
348)
Kelly
who had a 20 plus h Umg Winebrenner (24 73 15 RB!s
streak ijl one pomt last 329 ) and Richard Teaford
season and h 1 422 for the ( 25~9 23 runs scored 17
season He had 35 h ts 111 83 at RBis 362) are four seasoned
hats and 19 runs scored 17 veterans from last season s
RBis and a whopp ng 16 17 3 team
doubles
Sayre was 8-3 on the mound
HIS
teammate
Ray w1th 80 strikeouts In 72 111
G lhland hit 431 w1th 25 hits rungs p1tched last year
m 58 at bats last sprmg 11
Chuck Howerth of New
runs scored and 11 RBis Lex mgt m was an all
Sophomore Jeff Montgomery Muskmgum Va lley League
will he a rna 1or !actor for the select on last season for the
Rockets on the mound after Panthers wtth a 426 average
comptlmg a 4 3 record w th a 23 h ts and 13 RBfs and a 966
2 84 ERA (ast season
fielding percentage
Fa rland
has
four
A pa r of senors are the
noteworthy r et urn ing let team leaders of Glouster
termen com ng back th s Trunble
Pilcher shortstop
season Semor Rick Uwe (28 Kevm Meade was a 391 h1tter
hits m 86 at bats 12 runs (25-M 21 runs scored 2 2
scored 22 RBis
325 p1tchmg mark w1th a 5 96
average) should be one of the ERA last year and Greg
top players w th jun or Steve Holbert ( 323 21 hits 3 2
Hamlm (2().54 370) JUnior p1tchmg record 2 76 ERA) IS
Joey Stuart (20 77 324) and a top area prospect
semor Kenny Po\\ ers {24 76
In 14 games Nelsonville315 ) domg their share of the Yorks Joe Brooker hit 444
work
(16-36) and Doug Campbell
The defend ng So uth (15-12 357) were the lop
eastern Oh10 Athletic League hitters and Brooker com
champiOns
the Logan plied a 1.0 p1tchmg record
Clueftams returns x starters Those two along w1th Paul
from last season s fantastic (ArtiS ) Smith a pitcher will
30-5 squad wh1ch went 14.0 m lead N Y 1n Tri Valley
league act on
Conference play
Catcher Brad Tucker a
E1ght home runs and 27
364 hitter wlth 40 hils and 44 RBis were the stats that Oak
RBis IS the cleanup hitter 111 H1ll s Doug Hale compiled
the LHS lmeup and has such last year m addition to a 343
players to back him up as battmg average
f1rst baseman Ed Bush (30-98
Greg Potter returns to the
23 runs scored 26 RB!s 19 hill for the Oaks this year
stolen bases 319 average) after rurmmg up a 6-2 record
th1rd baseman Dave Lehman last year with a 2 03 ERA and
(35-&amp; 24 runs scored 30 42 strikeouts
RBis 10 stolen bases 412
Fmally Ra y Boster of
average ) outfielder Mark Chesapeake s 263 average
McDaniel (11-46 239) and last year (19 72 10 RB!s 25
pitcher B1ll Heft (12 wms no runs scored) w1ll probably be
losses
I 69 ERA
70 unproved upon thiS year
strikeouts) AU mentioned
Love of Fa1rland m ad
above are senlors except for dit10n to his hilling statistics
Lehman who IS a JWUar
had an 8-2 record on the
Senlor outfielder Pat mound last season Mlh a
Summers
( 429)
and super ERA of I 14 and 121
sophomore pit cher Chns whiffs compared to just 24
North (3-0 pitching record 25 walks m 66 and two thirds
stnkeouts 2 68 ERA as a ummgs
freshman 111 1977) are other
All area coaches are en
top players for the Chiefs
co uraged t o send their
The Jackson Ironmen
statistics and team record
SEOAL champs m 1976 have (both tn league and other
a trw of semors to lead them
1 t o Craig Dunn at the
flu s season
t.&gt;gan Dally News 72 E
Jell Mannermg (33-75 25 Main St Logan 43138 by
runs scored 10 doubles 31 Aprill5in order to be counted
RBis 440 average) R1cH in the district statistical
Harless (22 67 20 runs leaders form which will be
scored 20 RBis 328) and sent out to area newspapers
l

•

NEW YORK (UPI)- The funniest of the !Ibn chps on Carol
Burnett s farewell ·~tare the ones that never before got on
the rur
The !mal Burnell show at least lor a while IS A Special
Everung With Carol Burnett to appear on CBS March 29 S-10
p m Eastern time
The special offers highlights of the variety programs II
years on the air mcludmg Burnett giving her Tsrzan yell over
the decade - With one last yodel for 1978 lopping 11 off
Naturally I is full of film clips depicting the most memorable
moments of Burnett With Harvey Konnan Tim Conway V1ck1
Lawrence and a parade of d1stmgwshed guests some of tbem
domg very und1grufied things
But best of all are the outUikes The Burnett show was
always Ulped before a hve aud1ence but to allow for human
error each show was taped twice and the best verswn of each
segment used on the rur
The material that wasn I used are the out-takes with
performers breaking up breakmg down and generally acting
up Harvey Konnan and his battle w1th a converhble sofa for
instance or Burnett s reaction the f1rsl time she saw Konnan
in the most formidable drag out11t this s1de of Cpl Klinger
One section of the program 1s devoted to Carol smgmg duels
with her guests rangmg from Ill Never Fall 111 Love Agam
sung with Ella Fitzgerald to a rendition of As Time Goes By
With Burt Reynolds that s hilarious even the second time
around
There s a delightful smppet when Bmg Crosby and Bob Hope
meet (talk about nostalgia) and other amusmg b1ts and p1eces
over the years - mcludmg the way Carol Burnett has changed
from a very young and quite homely g1rl to a not very much
older but much more attractive woman
There also IS some new material mcludmg a touchmg and
furm y segment m which Eumce goes to a psychiatriSt and
Mama SJts m
The show ends With Carol as charwoman makmg a graceful
farewell and explalfllflg 11 was tune to move on tha t Now s
the tune to put 11 to bed and go on to other thmgs
Change IS growih she adds
The overnight ratings on the ltrst segment of CBS On The
Air

the networks week long 50th anmversary celebration

didn t exactly smg Happy Birthday
Accord ng to the March 26 overn~ght N1elsen f1gures lor New
York Los Angeles and Chicago CBS won m New York w1th a
41 percent share of the audience vs 32 for ABC and 22 for
NBC The bad news came from Los Angeles and Ch1cago
where ABC registered a 39 and 37 perc-ent share respectively
CBS scored 34 and 33 whtle NBC was way down with a 23 and
24 share

Special
Ode to Editor Tannehill
tours
available
COLUMBUS - Ohioans
can learn more about nature
conservation and the sprmg
time actlvilles of a rural Ohio
farm by partiCipating 111
special group tours at h1stonc
Malabar Fann State Park
near Mansfield
The tours are bemg
sponsored by the Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources (ODNR) DIVISion
of Parks and Recreation
without charge on a reser
vatton-Qnly basiS seven days

a week throughout the sprmg
months
Interested groups may
select a top1c they would like
to learn more about such as

smltypes Wlldhle and wood
land management fanmng
conservahon practices
antique farm equipment
pioneer crafts w ldflowers or
nature hikes

Conducted by naturalists
from ODNR the tours will
focus on the groups theme
and will nclude discuss ons
as well as demonstrat ons
Groups mterested 1n

VISI Img Malabar Fann State
Park but who do )IOI want to
part1c1pate in the spec1al
tours

may reserve the

Outdoor EducatiOn Center at
the park The center whtch
accommodates 50 persons 1s
ava table to groups who wish
to conduct their own learmng
sess10ns n a natural settmg
Limited ptcn c faciliti es are
ava ilable at Malabar Farm
and nearby Mohtcan State

Park
In add1llon to the spec1al
Frank M SJmth Jr bils been named acting president of CBS
group
tours visitors may
Sports diVISIOn effec'bve urunedl8tely ref&gt;illllmg Robert
Wussler who reSJgned effective Apnl 15 anlf IS now on lour the B1~ House home of
the late LouiS Bromfield the
vacatlon
Pulitzer Prt ze w nnm g
a uth or and well kn own
conservatiOnist

These enzymes are used to

help break down car
bohydrates fats ammo ac1ds
from protem and alcohol The
energy comes from the food
and the v1tanuns merely help
to I berate 1! so 11 can he used
So 1f you are gammg we ght
you are e1ther eatmg too
much food or you are not as
act ve as you should be- or if
you are past the muscle

growih years and gettmg
older} au may be losmg mus
cle mass from maciiVIIy
which eventually leads to a
greater tendency to gel fat
Keep both feet on the
ground and you II go

UROVE CITY Ohio (UPI)
- Warr1er s M1ssile beat
Mel s G1rls by four lengths
Monday to Win the featured
$8 000 allowance race at
Beulah Raceway
The horse covered the f1ve
furlongs tn I 00 I~ to pay
$6 60 $3 80 and $4 40 May
Tr1cks came m third
An S-3 daily double of
Br ght at N1ght and
Conquestador

returned

$414 60 aod a I 9 7 tnfecta
combination of Forced Issue

Sir M J and R Scott pa1d
$438 30 to 95 ticket holders
The 4 403 fan s bet
$464 773

1 owhere

The mter10r of the B1g
House

s furmshed

1n

a

predommantly French style
w1th on gmal pamtmgs and
antiques

A

cr1mson

carpeted floatmg double
sta~rcase IS m the main hall
and m the hving room a
mammoth mirrored wall
spangled at !he top with 48
g1lted stars and a g1ant
golden eagle
Cost of the tours of the Big
House IS $1 25 lor adults and
50 cents for youths age L8 and
under
V Sllors who WISh to tour
the B1g House do not have to
not fy the park in advance
Malabar Farm IS In
Ri chland
County
ap

BY GOLDIE CLENDENIN

ooon that Tannehlll died that

Ode to Mr ! Ed I TaJlllehlll

morning I could not believe I
had heard right I !bought of
how womed he was when his
son was Jn Japan (or
wherever ) for the tennis
match and hadn t played for
a time
I could sympathize with
him I tbought - when my
only son was 17 and with the
paratroopers in Tokyo the
news womed me It was after
WW II but crazy things were
gomg on then However they
both returned safely
In my scrapbook are notes
he sent when returning
something like Lisagor s
poem The Year That Was
- because he needed the
Chicago
Author s a nd
Dally s consent and signed
them Tannehill (Ed )
So !think of him as Mr Ed
and addressed him so Once
he wrote that I might do well
in journalism and we d talk
about that and the Portland
St1versv!Ue baseball players
- I knew them all
Returning home one day a
note on the door said - I
mqu1red where you lived at
Durst s store of a clerk I II
get the Honda headed this
way agam
Later a note said we ve
missed you agam I never
knew if someone was With
him or he meant the Honda
I have many friends and
pen pals I met through the
Sentmel also acquaintances
I ve renewed - Hilda Wash
burn I worked wtth at Holzer
Hospital 111 early 40s - from

PORTLAND Ohio - Tlo
not for us to questiOn why Some folk live on while
dhers die
But yet at times we ask 11
over and over again Why?
Why him (or her) why now
when there s so much to live
for' (Just to ourselves we
ask) - to no one m par
llcular
The only answer seems to

be It was tune to go
I
never met Chester A Tan
nehill - yet I felt like I knew
him and that I ve lost a
friend
It s an unusual sort of
feeling like I felt at the
passmg of Don Albin and
J ohnny Jones of the
Col umbus DISpatch
Johnny was a rovmg reporter
and Don the wheelch81r
QJ]ummst
On New Year s Day m 1970
(my first Christmas after my
husband d1ed) I cop1ed and
sent to the Sentmel a poem
They re Onl y a Prayer
Away
The children and grands
were home for Christmas but
had returned home to
Columbus I was m1ssmg
them and feeling sorry for
myself
That Is the first of my
clippings in a Scrap Book full
of Items from the Sentinel
I never kidded myself mlo the
hehef that anythmg I wrote
was of much unportance
But I thought of Mr Ed as
a mce person humormg an
old Sen10r Cl(lzen who
scribbled

some

remem

Lea gue holds 1ts a nnual

basketball banquet at the
Logan H1gh School cafeteria
Fred
Jacoby
com
miSsiOner of the Mtd
American Conference and a
Logan nallve w1ll be the
speaker for the 6 30 p m
banquet Tickets are $3 each
Headmg the hst qf honorees
at the banquet w1ll he Logan
H1gh School Coach Scott F1tz
gerald named as Coach of
the Year and Waverly s J oe
Davena p1cked as the Most
Valuable Player (both from
the boys league J and Ironton
Coach DorLS Harmon and
Logan s Cmdy Jamis on
selected as Coach of the Year
and MVP respectively 111 the
girls league
Also to be honored at the
banquet Will be Joe Fletcher
of Ironton named today as
the wmner of this year s free
throw shootmg award
Fletcher led the league m
that department With a 756
percentage h1tt111g 34 of 45 in
league play To be ehg1ble for
the award a player must
have attempted at least three
free throws per league game
played by h1s team
The boys all league team
was selected by members of
th e Southeastern OhiO
Athletic League Sports

School and a 1948 graduate of
Oh10 State UmverSIIy
He served as football
basketball and baseball
coach at Bremen then served
as football coach at
Washmgton Court House for
one season and Madison West
H1gh School 111 Wisconsm for
I ve years He had a 10 year
football coachmg record of
63 13 at the three schools
Including perfect records 111
his one year at Washmgton
Court House and his fmal
year at the WISconsm school
He served as a football
aststant at Wtsconsm then
served as the ftrst com
mtsstoner of the rune team
Wtsconsm State Umvers1ty
Conference for ftve years

F tzgerald JUst completed
his stxth season as head

basketball coach at Logan
comp1hng an 116-43 record He
1s a graduate of Athens H1gh
School where he starred 111
basketball and was selected
as the Most Valuable Player
m the SEOAL hts semor year
He played collegl8te basket
ball at Flonda Southern
UmverSity He becomes the
ftrst person ever to be named
as the league s MVP and then
he named Coach of the Year
Th1s year s Logan team
f1n1shed the season w1th a 15-3
overall record and a 13 I
mark 111 league play They
ntE DAILY SENTlNEL
OEVOTED TO THE

INTF..REST OF
ME IGS-MASON AREA
ROBERTHQEFLICH

wnters and Broadcasters

Assocrallon wh1le members
of the g1rls all league team
were p1cked by the league
coaches
Logan won this year s boys
basketball championship marking the f1rst cage Iitle
for the school in 27 years
Ironton reigned as g1rls
basketball champion This
marked the first year for
girls basketball as a league
sport m the SEOAL
Jacoby only the third
person to serve as com
m1ss1oner of the MAC has
been m his present pos1hon
SIX years
He IS a 1945
graduate of Logan H1gh

CllyF.dlw

PuWished dally except Saturday
by The Oh o Valley Publishing
Company Mu lmedLa Inc
11
Court St Pomeroy Ohlo 45769
BWJUles:t 0 r e Phone 992- 2 56

Edi to l.a l Phone 992 2 57
Setond
IllS!! poslajj:e pa d at

Po neroy Oh o
National Ydvertl.!llng

tatllle We~rd

represe..-

Griff th Company
loc Bo tineW 11nd G&lt;~llaKher 0 v

~7 Third Ave New York N y
0017
S u ~ pt on rutes De vered by

carr r where avylJabJe 75 ~ni.S pe
Wetk By Mo or Ro ute When! w r er
lierv t not IIYil lable One mon h
$3 2S By na I n Oh o and W Va

filt Yeil $22 00 SUI month!l
$11 501 Three monthl S1 00
Ebewnere $26 00 year S x tlon ru
I 3 :&gt;O

Three

Subsc tphun pr

Times--sen u el

nonth.ll
'(!

In lutlcs

$7 50

SuncWI)

were edged 45-14 by Miami
Trace m the Class AAA
sect10nal tournament with
M1am1 Trace gomg on to be
one of the four Class AAA
teams to Cl&gt;mpete m the state
tournament The Panthers
were defeated 63~3 by the
eventual state champion
Kettenng Alter m the state
semtfmals

Davena a 6 4 sen or
earned the MVP honors as he
led the T gers to a second
place tte w1th Ironton In h s
third year as a starter for
Waverly Davena took on
add ed
r es ponstb ht1es
because of m]ur1es to the

team particularly those
wh1ch Sldelmed IHI jun1or
center Robert Holstnger lor
much of the year
Hannon IS in her fifth
season as coach of the Ironton
g1rls basketball team The
Ironton squad won tllis year s
g1rls Utle m the SEOAL as
part of an overall record of
20-1 ( 11 I 111 the league) The
Tigers advanced to the fmals
of the reg10nal at Dayton
before bemg elunmated by a
36-33 setback at the hands of
Sprmgboro The gtrls state
tournament IS scheduled thiS
weekend m Colwnbus
Januson was one of the
leadmg scorers m the g1rls
league this year and hit
about 45 percent from the
f1eld and 70 percent from the
!tee throw line A 5-7 sen1or
she had a 17 2 scoring
average

Members of the boys all
league team to be honored
are
First Team- Terry Wall of
Gallipolis D1ck James of
Ironton Scott Gasser of
Logan Joe Davena of
Waverly and John Royster of
Wellston Se&lt;:ond Team Mark Wallace of Athens
Rich Harless of Jackson
Dave Lehman of Logan
Kenny Young 9! Me1gs and
John Martm of Wellston
Honorable Mention - Bob
Topping of Athens Jeff
Brown of Gallipolis Joe
Fletcher of Ironton Dave
Evan&amp; of Jackson
h

Jay

crown

Vermont She takea GaWa
paper and my
Holzer
Hospital Days
was In
Sunday Times Sentinel She
wrote me from Claremont N
H ,. now Mrs Henry Welch
Myrtle Evans a1Jo H H
employee is now Mrs Cecil
Mink Northup Mrs Mabel
Brown of Gallipolis I ve met
ooce - I helped her some in
ber family tree search Her
great uncle was missionary
(South Sea Islands) in the
Reorganized Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter Day Saints
of which I am a member and
at that time was pobllcity
agent for Racine-Portland
Branch here
Miss Catherine Grueser
Pomeroy lo another pen pal
Donna Williams of
Outreach
at
Senior
CitlzenCenter went with me
to VIsit her once
I bope someone With the
talent will write a song about
old ball players and dedicate
1ttoMr Ed Somethlngonthe
order of Old Cowboys in the
Sky etc
Of ones he knew well Hubert Pr1ce and Geo Deem
are borne bound now Bob
(W1ck) Durst sold hlo store
here at Stlversville and hiS
brother Ruda (and my
brother m law ) had a stroke
three weeks ago and IS still at
Holzer s
Would that I could say
thanks again Mr Ed My
sympathy to the wife and
family of this man who has
such good friends among his
co workers

"

proxunately

ten

UP! Sportl Editor
_ VERO BEACH Fla (UPI)- II seems only yesterday Walt
Alston was descr1bmg Don Sutton as the baby of the Los
Angeles Dodgers p1tchmg SU.ff It wasn t yesterday 11 was 12
years ago and now they recalling him the dean
In a few more days Sutton will he 33 no longer a kid and
altbough he feels he still has a lot of pitches left 111 hun he can
foresee that day when 11 will be all over lor hun
Nobody will have to bother showmg him the door he says
He U lmow when 1! s tune to go
I won t become a baseball prost1tute I mean a guy who
stays around as long as he can p1ck up a check 1lBYS the
Dodgers No I 'money pitcher who has never been beaten in
World Ser1es playoff or AIIStar competition
Baseball does not constitute my whole life When I have to
retire It won t be like someone s cutting my heart out When
the day comes that I have to hang it up I Uhave someplace to
go someplace that will provide me wtlh two things - secur1ty
lor my family and personal satisfaction for myself
Sutton has been preparmg for that day by domg televiSion
and radio work tbe last few years ThiS past wmter he worked
111 every phase of news production for NBC s affiliate m Los
Angeles
Sutton has won 190 games for the Dodgers smce he f1rst
JOined them as a skmny 165-pound kid m 1966 Only Don
Drysdale ever won more games for the club meanmg Sutton s
VICtory total exceeds tbose of such former Dodger sttckouts as
Sandy Koufax Johnny Podres and Burleigh Gr1mes
He s m excellent phySJcal shape With a stomach as (lat as a
washboard and looks as if he could keep p1tchmg forever You
ask hun how long he thmks he can keep gomg and Sutton thinks
about 1!
As long as 11 1sn t a drag to come out here and do 11 and as
long as I can perform up to the sUindards I set for myself he

peopletalk

2784

Braghn of Logan Greg
Becker of Me1gs Robert
Holsmger ot Waverly and
Ray Gilliland of Wellston
Members of the g1rls all
league team to be honored
are

answers

Sutton s general approach to pitching is baSic He s no
dummy by any means but he doesn t believe you have to be
another Einstem out there on the pitcher s mouod to wm ball

GLIMPSES Bob Fosse s Dancin opened Monday night
on Broadway starnng Ann ReiDkiDg and Vicki Frede-rleu
and the dean of all the hoofers - Gene KellY - was m the
audience With 13-year-old daughter Bridget A basketball
that sa1led Into the stands at a game between the Los Angeles
Ftrst Team
Llsa Lakers and the Seattle S&lt;XIICS was caught by actor Jack
Shoemaker of Waverly Tma Nicholson who took a shot at the basket himself from his front
N1hert of Gallipolis Beth R1st row seat but rmssed Jimmie Walker-the Dy-11ormte kid
of Ironton Kun Conley of of Good Ttmes - will tape a show wtth Suaan Anton and Mel
Jackson Cmdy Januson of '1111is Fnday and do an Osmond Brothers TV spec111l on
Logan and V1cky Epple of Saturday With fellqw guest sUirs Bob Hope and Crystal Gale
Vlcld Carr says at New Yorks Iperbole restaurant that ex
Me gs Se cond Team husband Dan MOS81S a great manager -but not for an ex wife
Jayna R1ggs of Ir onton
The Los Angeles YWCA will present
Becky Kuhn of Logan Glenda - so she f~red hun
Brqwn of Me1gs Cheryl. actress Marlo Tbomas With its Woman of the Year award
Thursday
Fa1rch1ld of Waverly
Jeanette Vmson of Ironton
and Gmny Young of
Galhpolts
Honorable
BASEBALL MEETUNG
ordered and are to be shipped
Mention - Nancy Jenkms of
The Racme Baseball soon Money making projects
Ironton Tracy Burdette of Assoctalton will meet Thurs- w1ll be discussed
Me1gs Jam1e Mara of Logan
day March 30 at 7 30 p m at
All those persons mterested
Donna Brandt of Jackson
the Racine Elementary 111 helpmg With the summer
Cathy Damels of Gallipolis School
programs are asked to at
Lyd1a Lavelle of Athens and
It was reported that new tend
Kun Kmght of Waverly
pony league suits have been

Everyone can participate
Everyone can participate regular check ups a doctor
by taking steps to guard may use any of a number of
against cancer says S
tests - the dl6ltal exam
Michael public information proclo or guaiac lest for
invisible blood in the stool
cha~rman of the Me1gs
Cancer Umt More than half Now there is a home kit lor
of all cancer cases and gua11c testmg
LUNG CANCER The
cancer deaths mvolve can
biggest cancer killer of men
cers of the breast colon
rectwn lung uterus skin and a site wbere cancer can
be prevented far more eaally
and oral region
Cigarette
BREAST CANCER It s than cured
smoking
lo
the
major
cause
the leading cancer killer of
American women Practicing and the MCU offers a variety
breast
self examlnat1on of aids for quitting such as
(BSE) every month can be a special clinics and se!f.Jielp
g1ant step toward early kits
UTERINE CANCER
detection and effective
treatment At regular check Getting a regular Pap test is
ups a physician may per- the most effective method of
form mammograms
a detecting cervical cancer in
proven X ray technique lor an early and curable stage
discovermg breast cancer m Women at or after the
menopause are at a higher
1ts earliest s t g
COLON RE
M CAN risk of developing en
CER It s the site where dometrtal cancer - cancer of
cancer strikes most often in the body of the uterus Abthis country e~cept for normal bleeding ia the main
common rlrl 1 cancer During warning signal for en
dometrial cancer and tlliue
~

sampling Is the best method
for detection for those at high
risk
SKIN CANCER It s the
most widespread can
ce~
and
fortunate
ly one of the most
curable Common varteties
are largely preventable by
avoiding overuposure to the
sun Regular self inlpectlon
for skin irregularities can
help spot not only conunon
cancers but also tbe more
serlolll forms of melanoma
ORAL CANCER Heavy
smoking and drinking can
raise a person s risk of oral
cancer It ia a site that is
easily inlpected by a doctor
or dentist and a regular
check-up 1o everyone s belt
proteetlon
Pamphlets and other
Information materiala on an
theN lites are avaUable free
of charge at our Aal office
says Michael It is located at
330 E Main St Pomeroy,
Ohio

•

My mtnd IS made up a bout rail ed for four runs to befit
United PreS9 lnteroallooal
The Minnesota Twins wbo my future Carew sa1d I m U C I'Wlii S
In
other
exhtbll1on
recently lost
All-5tar gmng to pluy as well as I can
1979 I 1 games
outfielders Lyman Bostock thiS year and
Jun R1ce adJustmg to hiS
and Larry Hisle to the go ng to try to help thiS lean
lucratiVe free-agent market wm every poss ble game I rn new contac t lenses htt a
have now been tnformed gong to keep my mouth shut thrcerun homer and smgled
baseball s best h1tter pi!Uis to and do my JOb And then home anotl er run to lead
alter the 1979 season I II Boston over Toronto 9-4
!&lt;Ike the same route
Jack Kueck Eddie Bane and
Battmg champiOn Rod leave
After aU
Carew s 1 1 Clay
Carroll
hmll ed
Carew so upset about the
I II only be 34 ) ears ol d Cinch all lo th1 ce Juts to
progress of his contract talks
spa rk Clue tgo over the Rt&lt;is
With Twms President Calvm then
Desp1te the contr ac.:t 2.-1 before 5 721 f ms the
Gnff1th he nearly left camp
srud Monday he wtll play out diffteullles Carew SU.rted at largest crowd ever to see a
his option and leave the farst base Monda} and di ove game in Sarasota Fla John
Ill a run w lh a smgle m tl e Tamargo s two-run smgle m
Twms
Currently m the second fifth mnmg of M nncsola s 9~ the top of the 1111 lifted St
LouiS over Dotr01t 7.!0 AIM
year of a three year contract loss to the Houston Astros
Carew wants a long-tenn Joe Ferguson and ferry Puhl run double m the sixth mn1ng
pact of seven or e1ght years belted so lo homers and by Mike lv1e and a two..-un
so he can fimsh hts career m Dennis Wallmg added a two tr pie m the e1ghth by Jack
Minnesota but Griffith has run shot all n the eighth Cl ark lifted San Franclst'O
mnmg when tl e Astros over the Cubs 5 2
fony
refused to g1ve 111

Armas and rookie Taylor
Duncnn ea&lt;h slammed two
run homers m OttkiWid s 9-3
'"n over Milwaukee
Veteran W llle Horton s two
doubles and four RBI during
an mght-run second mning
carried Cleveland past
Cl hlornia 11-6 San Diego s
Dave W nf~e ld belled a home
run and double 11nd Bob Davis
tdded a p nr of d ubles to
dr ve n tlu t.&gt;e run s each tn
San D1e8o s 12 3 VICtory over
Seattle Craig Swun IJ&lt;JCIUne
the first New York Mets
p tchcr to go six lnmngs
allowmg lour Ills and no runs
to help the MeL' heat Atlanta
3-2 and Cliff Johnson drove
111 six runs w1th a threc..-un
homer and two sir gles to lead
the Yankees over Atlanta II

Meigs' Vicky ~Epple is
Second Team All-Ohio

Watch For Our
Grand Opemng
Celebrabon Sale

He was asked to explam

Garr1ck Hu head mstructor of the Asian Martial Arts
Studio 111 Michigan who Will demonstrate Okinawan
Shorin Ryu Karate at the Commuruty MenUII Health
Center on Fnday mght

why Deb Elwer one of h s
tr10 of stars m1ght have the
edge on th e other two Sue
Youngpeter

and

Jeanne

Arnzen
Elwer

]umor

Tournament last year and

averaged 2J) I pomts per
game the past season
Ball
also a sen or
averaged 25 9 pomls per
game the past season pac ng
South Pomt to an unbeaten 1&amp;0 record lor Coach J an
Keatley
Named to the second team
111 addition to Youngpeter
were VIcky Epple of Me gs
Betty Jackson of Fosto 1
Amy Prichard of Lin a Bath
a nd Lon W !hams of
Cortland LakeVIew Pr cha d

"

"'

...

lnd ana

2946

387

a

31 2 scormg average
Pallay a first team
selectton as a JUni or
averaged 18 pomts per gan1e
and also will he m th s
weekend s SUite Tournament
as her team takes on Navarre
Fa1rless on Fr day
Brunmg who was a th rd
team chmce as a JUn or led
Eastwood to the State

forward for the undefeated
games
and No I ranked Blue Jays
The longer you play the more you realize 1! s better to keep
was voted the player ol the
11 simple as stmple as possible he explams The one facet of
year in ballotmg bY coaches
the game I m concerned w1th is makmg 1! tough on opposmg
from around the state while
hitters You don t necessarily have to be a geruus to do that
Youngpeter and Arnzen were
Last fall Sutton beat the Philhes m the playoffs and then the
second and th1rd team
Yankees 111 the fifth game of the World Ser1es He has a !ibn of
selections respectively on
the Ser1es at home but didn I study 11 all winter to see where
the UPI g1rls all.Qhlo team
the Dodgers went wrong with Regg1e Jackson
It s hard to smgle one out
experience m the mart18l
Garrtck Hu head tn
You gotta credit the guy he says in connection With the structor of the Asl~n Martial arts Mr Hu has also won the over the others srud YoU
three home runs Jackson hit In the last game to bury the Arts Studio Ann Artior 3rd degree black belt m
but Deb s shootmg accuracy
Dodgers Every time he got one he hit it The Yankees are a Michigan and Alvm Lake Japanese Doshmkan Karate puts her a little above the
ball club loaded with talent but tbe keys to me 111 the ser1es Patriot w1ll demonstrate and the 2nd degree black belt rest I II tell you though
were the games (Ron) Gwdry and (Mike) Torrez pitched You Okmawan Shorin Ryu Karate 111 Korean Tae Kwon Do He they re all someth'lng
Elwer along With Amy
kind of expected the other guys to do the Job but that s an 111 the multipurpose room of also holds brown belts 111 both
added plus when you get the kmd of performances the Yankees the Community Mental Judo and Aikido
Tucker of Sprmgboro Amy
got from Gwdry and Torrez
Hu 1s a research "assoctate Pallay of Colwnbus Bishop
Health Center Gallipolis
That s ancient history though Nobody here has brought up Fnday March 31 at 7 30 p m at the Umverslty of Michigan Hartley Carol Brunmg of
the ser1es thiS sprmg There s nothmg you can do to change 11
Shorin Ryu IS a classiCal H1ghway Safety Research Pemberville Eastwood and
The only time I ran the series film I liave at home IS when my system of karate Its roots Institute and works as a Kathy Ball of South Pomt
8-year-old son Daron had a couple of his fnends over wbo can he traced hack over 500 consultant m physical were named to the aii.Qhio
wanted to see 11
years to China Lake ex management at vartous first team
They take the game very
Watchmg Sutton get m hiS work at the Dodgers camp this plamed that Shorin is both an psych1atr1c mst1tutes
sprmg you wouldn t take him for the dean because he doesn t effectiVe method of self
Lake holds the f1rst degree senously and they wo rk
Voll sa1d of hiS
go around actmg hke one except when he walks out there to the defense and a disc1phned art teaching black belt (Shodan hard
players
that s why they re
mound
Ho) 111 Shortn Ryu and IS
form
good
They
make the coach
Starlmg hiS 13th season with the club he has almost as much
Accordmg to Lake the teaching an Introductory
look
good
enthusiasm as Manager Tommy Lasorda only he doesn t student
develops
se lf course in Shorin Rhu through
Elwer was a 55 percent
bubble as much Where a good many veterans look upon spring awareness self control the Continuing Education
training as pure drudgery or even some kind of six week regard lor others an ap- Department of R1o Grande shooter from the f1eld and IS
ordeal Sutton doesn t
preciation of hiStory an College and Community averagmg 16 7 pomts per
I m more eager to get to the ballpark than at anytime in the understanding
of
the College Classes will be held game gomg mto Fnday
AA
State
last 10 years he says Sprmg training IS 11111 One of the meaning underlying the art at the Commuruty Mental afternoon s
semtftnal
reasons 11 IS fun Is because the secur1ty and well-bemg of a as well a$ phySical strength Health Center on Monday and Tournament
contest against Sprmgboro
Iotta people are not on the line I love sprmg trammg I love the and coordination
Thursdays 5 30 7 p m
and
Tucker Youngpeter and
work the SWI the sweat and everything else about1t
The demonstration w11i hegmn1ng Apr I 3
Arnzen
are both averagmg
Lake has studied With Hu
include basic principles of
14
3
Shrm Ryu kala (forms ) two for three and a half years HIS
Deb IS well hked by her
Pac: fie o v s on
NBA Stand ngs
person techniques and mart1al arts background
w L Pel GB classiCal
teammates
and h1ghly
By United Pren lnlerni'tlonal
tratnlng
in
weapons Shorm mcludes
x Po tlnd
55 9 743
Eastern Conference
of
in
her
school and
thought
45
30
Phoen
x
600
A1k1do and
Atlantic Div s on
10 ' Ryu w1U be compared and Doshmkan
Seat
te
42
32
13
commumty
Vol!
sa1d She
568
w L Pet GB
contrasted wtth other mart1al Hung-Car S1l Lum Gung Fu ls a g~rl who makes 11 a real
Los Ang
33 554 u
52 21 712
X Phi 8
37 37 500 18
Lake IS director of research
arts systems
37 37 500 5 1&gt; Go den St
New York
x clinched dlvls on IItle
Boston
29 43 403 22 '
and
evaluation at the Com pleasure to be coaching
The demonstration IS open
Monday s Result
26 47 356 26
Voll who is m his e1ghth
Buffalo
Cleve and 98 Go den St OS
to the pubhc for $1 admiSSIOn mumty Mental Health year as St John s athletic
22 54 289
New Jrsey
3
"
Tuesday s Games
Central D vision
Center and 1s completing the
at the door
Detro tat Buffalo
w L Pet GB
Ph D m Cl1mcal Psychology director and th1rd as g1rls
Hu
holds
a
4th
degree
black
Denve at New York
46 27 630
San Anton
basketball coach says hiS
Los Angeles at Atlanta
40 34 541 6 /o
belt mShorm Ryu Karate He at the Umvers1ty of trio of stars have as much
WliSh
Sea tt e a C eveland
36 38 486 0 '
C evland
has studied directly under MIChigan
Kansas c tv at Ch cago
36 AO
New Orlns
Golden St at San Anton o
Prospective students in Uilent as any g1rls 111 the state
loth degree Grand Master
35 40 467 2
Atlanta
of Oh1o I don t think you can
Boston at Port and
25 50 333 22
Houston
EiJo Shimabaku of Okinawa terested m studying Shonn find any better
Wednesd•y s Games
Western Conference
Kansas C tv at Washing on
and Herbert Wong 6th Ryu through the Continumg
Midweat Division
Tucker a 6 foot semor
w L Pet GB Seattle at Detro t
degree black belt and the Education Program at R1o scormg machme led Sprmg
San
Antonio
at
nd
ana
43
30
589
Denver
highest ranked student of Grande College should boro to a perfect regular
Buffa oat Ph Melph a
40 35 533 4
Mw
Golden
State
at
Houston
487
37
39
Ch cago
Shorm Ryu In the United contact Bernard Murphy at season and into the
79 '
Los Angeles at New Or eans
JA 39
Detroit
States Dunng his 12 years of 241Ki353
Boston at Denver
Kan City
29 45 392 4 '
tournament semifmals With a
Port and a Phoen x

slated Friday night

•

was Eddie Suttons mtrlca te strategy lor Arkansas
Get the ball to Ron he sa1d With a sm le and lei hml
shoot 11 It s called the Brewer spec1al
And special 11 was with Ron Bre.,. er s last shot lor the
Rawrhacks fall nu in at the buzzer to g1ve Arkansas a 71~9
'"' tory for th rd place m the tournament
Brewer who scored 20 pomts to complement temnn ute
Marvm Dolph s • 1 took 11 all in stride After all he s done it lots
of tunes bel ore
over Notre Dame The v1ctory en~bled the Razorbacks to
Ho\\ man) ttmcs ?
f1msh the year at 32-3 - the best record ever b) a Southwest
I ve lo&gt;t count he told reporters after the game
Conference team
lnsh Coach D1gger Phelps - whose team was led by Dave
Bnllon s 15 po nts - called Brewer s basket a m1lhondollar
ST L.OUIS ( UPI ) - The best Ia d pia IS of basketba ll
sJ ot
coaches sometimes go JUSL nght
He k1dd•&lt;i about tus second d ose loss rn three days saymg
W1th the score 6~9 and Notre Dame callmg tuue out with tO about Sutlon We hud an agreement before the gan1e thutlf
seronds to go m Monday night s NCAA conso lallm ga ne wh tt we .. en! nto O\ erllme we d both walk out TI1ey leln e do&gt;1n

By GENE CADDES
UP! Sports Writer
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Del
phos St John s Coach Fran
Voll was on the spot

Karate demonstration

CHAW CHAMPS It was a rmghty spit-off out at Calico Ghost
Town 111 the MoJave desert near Barstow Calif and three
Californians emerged as champs J11111es Deffenbaugh of San
Bernardino won the distance trophy in the Old Miners
Tobacco Chewmg and Sp1tlir]g Competition With a qw&lt;kbot
of 281eet 10 mches The accuracy trophy went to Jack Stormo
of Yermo whose average shot at a spittoon 15 feet away hit
tov,mchesout The 'Chaw Load championship was taken by
Rlehard Farmer of Oakdale He managed to get more than
five plugs of tobacco -about! 5 cups -111 his mouth before he
got too s1ck to continue

Banks sophomore M1ke Gmmski and JUruor Sparnarkel - but
they were oot enough to offset the play of G1vens Banks who
rece1ved two threats on his hie prior to the gan1e scored 22
pomts Spanarkel added 21 and Gnunski 20
B;ls1cally we rea young team sa1d Spanarkel We II be
hack Maybe 1! we g ve that extra f \ e percent next year we II
be where Kentucky IS at
In the consolation game cool guard Ron 'ilrewer sank a 25foot JUmp shot at the buzzer to g1ve Arkansas a 71~9 VICtor)

Carew may leave Twins
By MILTON RICHMAN

miles

To arrange a spectal tour

want us to come hereto have fun Tbeywant us to wm
Hall saved hlo b1ggest postgame hug for semor forward Jack
Goose G1vens a Lellllgton Ky nauve who played the best
game of hls career 111 hlo finale as a WUdcat Givens scored 41
pomts and grabbed eight rebounds en route to tournament
Most Valuable Player honors
The 41 pomts were e~ght more than Givens had ever scored
in a smgle game for Kentucky
G1vens beat us m every conceivable way said Duke
Coach Bill Foster I don t think anybody scored that many
pomts on us all year He just had a fantastic game
My teammates were g1vmg me the ball G1vens sa1d
Without that I couldn t have done anythmg I had a hot
hand
Rick Robey was the only other Wildcat to reach double
figures
Duke once agam rehed on tts b1g three - fre~hmAn F!mrene

Sport Parade

OSCAR S COUNTRY COUSIN The Academy of Country
southeast of Mansfield Take
Music
g1ves 1\s annual awards m Los Angeles April Tl Up for
Pleasant Valley Road off
entertamer
of the year are Dolly Parton Loretta L)'llll Roy
State Route 603 to Bromfield
Clark
KeDDy
Rogen and Mel TUU. Nommated for smgle..,f
Road Follow Bromf1eld
the
year
honors
are Unda Roollladl Crystal Gale Keany
Road to the farm s mam
Rogers Waylon Jen-olngs and Debby Boone
entrance
contact the Malabar Fann
State Park office Route 1
Lucas 44843 phone (419) 892

By RICK GOSSELIN
UPI Sporu Wrtter
Sl' LOUIS (UP!)- With My Old Kentucky Home barely
heard above the roar of the lbous.ands of Wildcat fans wbo
made the 25(kmie trek to St Lows lor the NCAA champ1onsh1p
game normally unemotional Coach Joe B Hall became
emotional
Hall approached each of his 14 players at center court
hugged them one-by-one and ll8ld to each You know I love
you Kentucky had just captured Its fifth NCAA cham
p10nsh1p - the first 111 Hall s SIX year tenure - With a 94-88
VIctory Monday mght over Duke
The show of emotion by Hall shed the wrapper of restraint in
which the Kentucky coach had packaged the 1977 78 season
The time to celebrate had fmally arnved
We d1dn t celebrate thls year for a P)lt'POSe Hall
explamed We take our basketball seriously at Kentucky The
people the fans won t let me take It lightly Thev wouldn I

Today's

brances from the past down on yellow tablet paper
because 1t ts easy on the yes
I was more sure of this as
the years went by Last
wmter was bad for most of us By KENNETH R CLARK
and because of my health I United Press Intemational
reSigned from tbe Council on
DOWN BUT Nl1r OUT The Duke admits he s been SlCk as
Agmg m ssed more church a dog smce last Thanksgmng - but it s not cancer John
serv1ces than I had m years Wayne alternatmg between home and hospital in Newport
Church hterature and other Beach Calif Monday scotched rwnors of a return of the
reading helped to pass the nemesiS that cost hun a lung in 1964 Says he I am short of
time with Cassette tapes TV wmdand coughing But there IS no cancer - no sign of cancer
and radio along with cards Christ I beat cancer I4 years ago He says he s sorry he had
and p1ctures and just to miss an appearance wtth John Connally at a cattlemen s
memories of the past
convention 111 Texas but I f1rst got Sick With the flu last
When I heard on radio at Thanksg!Vmg and then I got tronchial pneumonia and fmally I
JUst had to get mlo bed

Logan to host SEOAL fete Thursday
ATHENS - Allleaguers
from both boys and g rls
basketball will be honored
Thursday
when
the
Southeastern Oh10 Athletic

l- The Dtlily Sentinel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Tuesday March 28 1978

5 10

and Youngpeter are JU ruor s
the other three are se ruors
Jumors D ane Baker of
War sa w River V ew and
Penann Powell of Martms
Ferry JOined Arnze 1 anotl er
]Uruor on the tll rd tea u
which a lso mcluded se ruors

Juhe Hay of West Jefferson
and Val Wh1sler of Ontar o
CO LUM BUS UP I - The
978
Un t ed
P ess
n
te na t ana Class AA G t 5
a ll Oh o Basketba l
ea m
( w t h he ght
g ade a nd
scor ng average n paren
th eses l
F rst Team
Caro
Brun ng
Pe m
bervl le Eastwood 58 S
20 I
Ka thy Ba South Po n 5
8 Sr 259
Deb Elmer Delphos S
John s 5 0 J
16 7
Amy Pa l ay Co l umbu s
Hart ey 5 5 Sr
80
Amy Tucker Spr ngbo o 6
0 Sr 31 2
Second Team
V1ckv Ep ple Me1gs $ 8
Sr 25 0
Bet y Jac kson Fos.for a 5
B Sr 29 9
Amy P cha d L ma Ba h
50 J
252
Lor W I ams Co t and
Lakev ew 5 8 Sr 17 0
Sua Youngpete
De phos
St John s 5 7 J
43
Th rd Team
Jeanne Arnzen Delphos St
John s 5 0 Jr 1A 3
0 ane Baker
War saw
R ver V ew 59 Jr 18 0
Jute Hay West Jefferso n
5 8 Sr 32 0
Per ann Powel
Mart ns
Ferrr
5 J
22 3
Va Wh sle
On a o 58

s

s

20
Spec a l Menl on
Ka hy Am an C yd e L sa
Can panel
Beave
Loca
Amy Coo cy Oregon Ca
d na Sl cl
Oa Ia Dutro
0 es den T
Va ey L sa
Ku sz m il I
Leav lt sburg
LaB ae
Ma y Be h K r
ct ak Ca n pbe I M em o a
Debb e La pple S
Ca s
v e
Nan cl
W
Columbu Ha ey
Honorab le Ment on
Ke
Aman Clyde Ga
Back nge
Cl agr n Fa i s
Ke y 8 ce Wa saw R ve
V ew Tonya Co bel Can p
l;le Vernor at /1.\ar y Cowel l
On a r o
Ka thy
Co l ez
S eubenv e Ca lha c Ke y
Ches ma
Champ on
Km
S
Clillr sv I e
Jom yan
C ndy 0 Domen co Steuben
v I e Ca ho c Mo l y F ynn
Spr ngbo o Tamm y Gr een
Tho r}v h~ Sher da n Laur a
G o ho use
De ph os S
ohn s
Jacc
G a sse
Co umbus Ha m I on Town
sh p Debb e Ga r v n Cor
and La..kev ew
An ta John son Ca rnpbe
M emo r a t
Ju e P ank
Co umbu s Ha ey Su san
Pokelsek Ashtabula Ha bor
She ry Pe o New on Fa s
Be th R st I onion
Li sa
Pe ry sburg
Rothsch d
Ca hy Rupp 1\rchbo d T na
Rog e s
Leva lt sb ur g
La Bra e L1 sa Shoe maker
Waver l y Dan e Swearingen
Ma t ns
Fe y
Karen
51 k e
To ont o
V ck
Wa ker On ar o
Pta yer of the year - Deb
E we r De phos 5 John s

7

Deta1ls'"
Thursday s Paper

ElliOtt Appliance II
220 East Mam
992 -1113

THIS WEEKS SPECIAL

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PROTECTION FOR YOUR PROPERTY!
PROTECTION FOR YOUR FAMILY!

5

Seaver has sore hack, Reds lose
SARAOOTA Fla (UP!) Jack Kucelt Eddie Bane and
Clay Carroll l1miled the
Cincinnati Reds to tbree hits
Monday mcluding a home
run by George Foster to lead
the Chicago White Sox to a 2.-1
emibitlon victory before
5 721 fans
It was the largest crowd
ever to see a Sarasota game
Reda pltcller Tom Seaver

a three-time Cy Young award
winner left the game after
one inning when his lower
back stiffened 111 the 57
degree windy weather
I just couldn t get loose
be 1lBid The Injury Is not
believed serious
The Sox scored off Seaver
m the first innlng when Jorge
Orta doubled and Lamar
JohnBOn singled

Foster s homer came in the
fourth off Kucek oce of only
two hits off Kucek m six
innings Bane went two
hitless ummgs and Carroll
finished up with a hit and
walk in one mrung
The winning O.icago run
came across in the sixth on a
double by Chet Lemon and
single by Bill Nahorodny
l.emon has hit safely in all14

of h1s sprmg games and 11
ballmg 513
The Sox returned pitchers
Ken Frailing and Quency
Hill mf1elders John Flannery
and Regg1e Sand..-s and
outfielder Cleo &amp;nith to their
Iowa farm club They still
have 46 players in camp The
Sox alBO sagned Bruce Oaf
Canton as a playerpitchlng
coach with Iowa

Don t be the v1ct1m of a burg lary and
lose ali of your valuables W e have
several msurance packages to cover
both home owners and home or apart
ment renters You can be covered for
loss of personal property such as
1eweiry qr cameras and for damage to
your home 1n the event of f1re or other
d1saster s
F hON

992 2342

DOWN lNG-CHlLDS
INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.
Middleport 0

I .

�•
•

5 _The DaUy Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, March 28, 1978

4_The Daily Sentinel; Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, March 28, 1978

Lt. Gen. Hartinger to be mastef
~ 0'j{ceremonies at alumni banquet

lr,,&lt;,,,,,,,,,,G;:;;~;;~;-:R;;,,,~,~;~~~

~

By Helen and Sue Bottel

ELDERLY AUNTBRlBESFRIENDSHIP
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I've got a 7&gt;-year-old great-aunt who drives the whole family
up the wall, She never married, so we're her closest relatives.
Every few months she changes her will, so ooe of us is "out"
and whoever's her present favorite gets most of her money
(whichisquitealot).
. You can see the problems. She's buttered up a lot, which she
' loves, bulthe butter-uppers sure aren't popular with the rest of
the family . And even if I hate the idea, I can't help but com·
pete.
·
·
She's a sharp tittle lady. I'd like her quite a lot ill didn'tleel
forced to perform, and sneaky when I do. Any solution? -IN A
HEIRY SITUATION
DEAR IN : Why doesU:t the family level with your great-aunt?
Tell her how this heir-pulling hurts an otherwise good relation· ship· and it isn't necessary as you'd all like her even if she
were broke. Then, make a non-&lt;!ompetition pact among you·
and hope Auntie is sharp enough to spot the one or two who
stoop to dishonest kowtowing.· HELEN
IN :
She must be pretty insecure or she wouldn't use her money
as a bribe lor friendshi p. Or maybe she just likes to pull strings
and watch family members dance her tune .
Whatever, stop pe"rforming and act natural. Let's hope the
others follow your lead.· SUE

RAP :
Whenever I go on a trip with my parents, this girlfriend expects me to bring her something (like silver earrings from
Mellico) . l always have.
Last Chrisbnas she went to Hawaii. She came home loaded
. with island jewelry, but I didn't even get a shell necklace.
We're planning a trip to Ireland and she's already hinting
about Irish lace. Should I waste time shopping for something
special for her.? - ZOE
DEAR ZOE:
NO! ·HELEN AND SUE
DEAR RAp:
Dad's friend used to smoke a lot. He'd leave cigarettes burning in ash trays when he wasn't blowing smoke in people's
faces .
· Then he quit smoking. Now he won't let anyone with a
cigarette come close and he's a lways complaining of that "dir·
ty habit." I don't smoke, but I feel sorry for the peeple he puts
down . If anyone had done it to him when he was on three packs
a day, he 'd hav.e cussed them out good. Should I tell him what I
think? ·ALL CHOKED UP
ACU:
Let your Dad do the telling. And ignore what you can't
change: The most avid reformers are those who have
themselves recently . reformed. It gill's with the territory. •
HELEN AND SUE

IN THE HOSPITAL
Sherri e Marshall, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs . Charles Marshall, Hemlock Grove, is iittensive care at Children's
Ho&gt;pita l, Columbus. Sherr ie,
a cystic fibrosis victim,
would appreciate cards.

r·---·---..- ·1

I

~ciai

I

1 Calendar 1
TUESDAY
MEIGS · AREA Holiness
Assn. rally at Rutland
Co mmunity Ch ur c h ,
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. with the
Rev. Dale Baas, pastor of the

GOESSLER'S

JEWELRY
STORE
Court St. ·
Pomeroy.~

Syracuse Church of tlie
Nazarene, speaking ; public
invited.
PAST
MATRONS ,
Ppmeroy Chapter 186, DES,
Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at home of
Mrs. Sylvia M_idkilf.
POMEROY Chamber of
Commerce Tuesday at noon
at Meigs Inn.
.
AMERICAN LEGION Aux·
iliary , Drew Webster Post 39,
7:30 Tuesday at the hall. Pm·
grams to include Mrs. Pearl
Knapp on foreign relations
with ·Anna Wiles, Mrs. Iva
Powell on community service, and Mrs. Mary Martin
on energy.
MEIGS JUNIOR HIGH
SCHOOL parent teacher
forum, 7:30· Tuesday in the
junior high school cafeteria.
Nominating corrunittee will
be appointed. Carl Hysell will
speak on juvenile problems in
relationship to the school.
There will be a question and
answer period and parents,
particularly of students to
enter the school next fall, are
urged to attend.
MI .DDLEPORTPOMEROY AREA BRANCH,
AAUW, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at
the
Pomeroy Library.
Hostesses, Dorothy Oliver,
Rosalie Story, Joan Culp, and
Margaret Ella Lewis.

FORA
SOLID
FUTURE?
.Then your search is over.
Because the United Slates
Air Force. can offer you an
excellent salary along f.Vi.th a
choice of jobs ... the opportunity lo work toward a
two·year associate de!J1le throu~ the Community Col·
lege of the Air Fore. . , . training at some of the fines t
technical schools in the nation ... valuable on-the-job
experience .. . worldv.ide assignments ... 30 days of
paid vacation a ·year ... mediea1 care . . . dental care
.. and much more .
h's one 'of the fine st Opportunities in the nation . Call
today. For information, contact

S.Sgt. Vernon J.legel

USAF Recruilina Office
221 N. Columbus Road
Athens, Ohio 45701
Ph. l614l592-4592

Lt. Gen. James V. Harlinger will be master of
ceremonies for the 104th Middleport High School alumni
banquet to be held on Friday,
May 26, at the Middleport
Elementary School.
A graduate of 1943, Gen.
Hartinger entered the U. s.
Army that same year and
following · World War 11
enrolled at the U. S. Military
Academy at West Point.
Upon graduation in 1949, he
received a commission as second lieutenantfrom the U.S.
Air Force along with his
bachelor of science degree.
He was a jet fighter in Germany and Korea in 19!i2, in
19!i3 returned to Williams Air
Force Base in Ainona, and in
19!i4 tra nsferred to Stewart
Air Fo.rce Base in New York .
After that he attended the Air
University Squadron Of·
fleers ' School at Marshall Air
Force Base in Alabama.
In 1958 he began a four year
tour of duty in the Air
Defense Interceptor Branch
of the Directorate of Requirements, Washington, D.
C. He enrolled at George
Washington University and
received his master's degree
in business administration in
1963. After that he was
assigned to the Hickma n Air
Force Base, Hawaii , in the
Directorate of Plans Head·
quarters, Pacific Air Force.
He graduated from the In·
dustrial College of the Anned
Forces at Fort McNair,
Washington , D. C. a nd
thereafter received P hantom
Replacement Training for the
43rd Tac tical Figh ter
Squadron of Mac Dill Air
Force Base in Florida.
From Dec. 1966 to Dec.
1967, he was assigned ; as
director of the Command
Cen t e r
Headquarters ,
Seventh Air Force, at Tan
&amp;m Nhut Air Field, Republic
of Vietnam during which time
he completed more than 100
aerial combat missions .
·
In 1968 he was made the
craft test director of the Tactical Fighter Weapons Center

at Nellis Air Force Base in
Nevada, and after that
assumed corrunand of the
lamed Lion Tigers OrganiZII·
lion of the 23rd Tactical
Fighter Wing at McConnell
Air Force.Base, Kansas.
In 1970 he became deputy
chief of staff for plans at the
North American .Air Defense
Commlmd at ENT Air Force
Base, Colorado. He moved to
Maxwell Air Force Base in
Alabama in 1973 as the Air
War College Commondant
and Vice Commander, Air
University.
In 1975, General Hartinger
assumed corrunand of the
Tactical Air Command, Ninth
Air Force, with headquarters
at Shaw Air Force Base in
South .Carolina. His military
decorations and awards inelude the distinguished ser·
vice legion of merit medal
with one oak leaf cluster,
distinguished flying cross, air
medal with eight oak leaf
clusters, andthe Air Force
eommendations medal and
combat readiness medal.
Gen. Hartinger was married to the former Susan
Allensworth and has three
children, J immer, Kristin .
and Mike. He was promoted
to the grade of Lt. Gen. on Ju·

ly I, 1975. He was recently
honored at a civic testimonial
dinner at Plattsburgh Air
Force Base in New York .
The alumni banquet will be
served by Evangeline
Chapter, Order of the
Eastern Star, at 6:30 p.m .
and will consist of a baked
steak dinner. There will be
entertainment following the
banquet. A dance will be held
from 9 p.m. to I a.m. in the
Meigs Junior High School
building with music by the
Gary Stewart Quartet.
Letter~ will be sent .toalumni in the next few weeks and
the officers are now trying to
update the address lists.
Donations are being taken un
a side of bee( to help -with the
expenses of the banquet. Gail
Hovatter is decorating
chairperson of the committee'
which will carry out the
theme,
" Homecoming.' '.
Those interested in assisting
her are asked to call.
Applications are now being
accepted for the Susan G.
Park cholarsnips. Students
who live in Middleport at the
time of graduation and-&lt;Jr
who started in the Middleport
school system, or whose
parent or parents were a

graduate of Middleport High
School are eligible for the
scholarships. Trustees are
Mrs. Mildred Bailey, Mrs.
l-ois McElhinney, and Mrs.
Nan Moore.
This year's Alumni
Association officers have
voted to name L. W. McComas an honorary member
of the Middleport High School
Alumni Association. The action was taken in appreciation for his "faithful attendance and.helpful cooperation to the organization,
although not a graduate, and
his help in making each
year's meeting a success."
At a recent al umni
meeting, it wa~ voted to allow
any person who attended
Middleport High School
before consolidation and
graduated from Meigs High
School, to become a member
of the Middleport . Alunmi
Association.
Reservations are to be
made with Mrs. Ruby
Vaughan, treasurer, South
Third, Middleport. Other officers are Iva Stewart Sisson,
president ; Nancy Haddox
MorriS, vice president; and
Barbara Stiles Fry,
secretary.

.I

..

.

'

REVIVAL SET
A revival at the Chester
Church of the Nazarene at
7:30 each evening will con·
tinue
through
Sunday
evening, the Rev . Herbert
Grate, pastor . announces .
The public is invited.

To Observe ADDiversary
In observance of its 106th
aMiversary, the Pomeroy
National Bank will be serving
cake and coffee to customers
Friday and Saturday .

"If you use
the short
fonn, 'w~ do it
for less."

Lt. Gen. James Hartinger

.If you qualify for the short fonn , we charge

POLLY'S POINTERS

a very low price. The simpler the return, the
less we charge. That's Reason No. 2 why
you should let us do your taxes.

Polly Cramer

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

618 E. MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO·

r

Open 9:00 to 6 ~00 Weekdays
9 : 00to5:00 Saturday
Phone 992-3795

'

~!Jorge

Easter can.tata sung at
A
.l.
. . UXt taf11
rauvUr11 C''-ourch 0if C''-ortst

RIO GRANDE - There
were six of them, ranging in
age from 18-43. The class was
called
"English
Com·
position ." It could have been
a frightening experience,
especially for two ol the
students who hadn't been in
college for a long time.
But, by the time it was
over, Sandy Mills' class at
Rio Grande College and
Community College (RGC·
CC) discovered they had been
involved in an "academic
smorgasbord" and that
writing compositions could
even be fun .
"Our course Was a
smorgasbord of learning, not
only academically , but
personally," one of the
students said.
"I had them write essays
on what it meant to be young,
to be old, to be a man and to
be a woman," Mrs. Mills
explained.
Beth Fuller, the youngest
student in the clasS, wrote
about the insights she gained
while working with retired

FRESH &amp; LEAN

citizens. Tim Saunders wrote
about the pressures young
people face .
"This afforded our older
classmates an insight Into the
problems they may have
forgotten while .deliiling
difficulties · they never
countered," one student
commented.
The class also had to write
essays about how to do
something
and
then
demonstrate tt to the class.
Rhonda Tripp, a student who
ls also secretary for the
Bureau
of
Vocational
Rehabilitation created an
essay on the a'rt of macrame
and then showed the class
how anyone could make
projects using only one
macrame knot .
Another student, Mike Roe,
wrote about cardiopuimon·

. 5 lB. OR MORE.

( FOODS '
~

e

Western Reserve Mutual
Casualty Company

Lightning Rod Mutual
Insurance Company

~~
b~Es;;.
0~~
a:/ DAULt "?

79¢

SUPERIORS
ALL MEAT

DAVIS INSURANCE
"ACROSS FROM COURTHOUSE IN POMEROY"

NO WASTE

. .
. GROUND BEEF... ................ ~.~:. 89 WIENERS .............
~~·.
FRESH &amp; LEAN
$}lg
SUPERIORS
GROUND CHUCK. ........... ~~·...
FRESH &amp;LEAN
.
$ 29
DROUND.... ~.~: .. I BOLOGNA ........... ~~·. 79~

BUCKET
STEAK
LB.

VALLEY BELL

1% LDWFAT MILK ·
GALLON

BUnERMILK

$}29·

¥z GALLON

69~

FAVORITE

t0 meet

BREAD

·.4

LOAVES

$100
DR.

HI·DRI

PAPER TOWELS •.•.•.•.•.......•......•.•..••..~~~~~~.~L_L•. 49e

PEPPER

PREMIUM

59e
CRACKERS
.•.
~
.•.....•...••••...............•.•...
SALTINE
.
· .
100 CT. BOX 9·9e
LINERS
TRASH CAN

8-16 oz.
bottles

LB. BOX .

GLAD

8

····~·····~···························~·

AFTER 5 P.M. ANO
ALL OAY SUNDAY
STORE HOURS
MON. THRU SAT.
9 AM TO 10 PM
SUNDAY

lHURSDAY ONLY

RC or DIET RITE
8-16 oz.
bottles

Bridal shower
hosted recently

IIIVR·II!IOIRB

announce .

h~~

DAIRY VALLEY

·

kh

0,.. J 011
r

ADOLPH'S

Friday and

essay about how the advantages and surprises of
country living exceeded the
disadvantages .
Another part-time student,
Brittin&amp; . Green, wrote one
composition _about the
pressures ol bemg a woman
in today's SQciety.
"In addition to those
essays, the students wrote
definition compositions in
which they had to define a '
term
like
love
or
m?therhood, " Mrs . Mills
sa1d.
.
At the end of the 11 week
evening class the students
told their instructor to get
Six Rio Grande College and Conununity College students sh!lre their CXJl"riences as
something in the press about
part
of Sandy Mills' English composition class. I. to r , Bcty Fuller, Tim Suunders, Dorothy
their course. They _said they
Howe,
Rhonda Tripp, Brittina Green, Mike Roe. '
wanted to Share their posltlve
experience.
" We hope others would thering their education," the
become interested tn fur- students said.

ary resuscitation and then " "
demonstrated the ~r~cess.
Roe IS an X-Ray techniCian at
I I
Holzer Medical Center.
Dorothy Howe, a part-time
"How to Grow a Church ticipants will gain tools from
student and mother of two
School" is the theme chosen evaluatin g the present
children, wrote a descriptive
for a workshop to be held church school and find out
April 10 and 17. The sessions about a ch urch teachers
will be held at First United fellowship .
On April 17 the workshop
Methodist Church in Athens
will
stress evaluati~n. goa l
from 7:30 to 9 p.m. each
·
selling,
and planning for each
evening. It is designed for
church school leaders in- team .
A i-esource center will be
cluding the pastor, church
school superintendent, and open both eveni n~-t s from 7 to
education chairperson from 9:30 p.m. with helps for
school
adeach churc)l . At least iwo ch urch
mlnistr~:~l.
ors
,
tca
c:
her
persons from each church
Should attend. Others may be training resources and t e~m.
buildin g: resources . For
a part of the group from their
further
information t'ontact
church .
your local United Methodist
Included
in
the
session
for
a .m. til li : D\.1 p. m.
pa•tor or the Athens D1str1ct
April 10 will be a definition of
10 til 12:00 p.m.
Office, 17 Johnson Ho"d, The ;
responsibilities
for
church
Saturday.
Plains, Ohio .
school leaders. Also par·
Pomeroy Bend Bridge

~
See Us at the

on or rol'l

D""nma a.;ven at churrh

Vi

Hrs.: 10:00
Sun.-Thurs.

Nn Appointment Necessary

Joint sunrise service held:
E~~:r/.:'u~~n~~N~wshipsofthe

A raUlAemtc smorgasbord
is fun for students

H&amp;R BLOCit

Making use

nearly empty turn it upside
down (be sure the cap is on
of bacon fat
tightly) and stand it in a jar.
DEAR POLLY - I would The catsup will shift to the top
~'F 1f '
like to know what to do -with and there is no need to shake
'
the excess grease from frying it out.
hamburgers and bacon. I
1 polish my cut glass by diphave been putting it in old ping it in a container of water
'
pickle jars but most of the that has had the juice of a
time I waste a good jar on a lemon added. Dry and polish
small amount of grease. - with a soft cloth.
DONN AM
1 keep salt, pepper and
DEAR DONNA- Yours is a flour mixed together in a
question that prObably every glass jar so it is.ready for
cook has a different answer coating chicken or chops. The
for. I save bacon fat and use it meat pieces are put in a bag
for frying eggs, seasoning and this mixture added. A
vegetables like green bean~ shake or two of the bag and
and turnips, etc. But I throw . the pieces "re coated. (Polaway the fat left from frying ly 's note ~I keep what is left
hamburgers. A coffee can in the bag to use lor thicken·
with a plastic tid is good for ing the gravy.) - W.B.
holding it. When the can is
DEAR POLLY- We have
lull of hardened grease I just lost a loved one. We have
throw it into the garbage. My the cards from Dowers that
saved bacon fat is kept in a we do not have addresses for.
covered container in the I would like to suggest that
refrigerator. I am s ure many each person sending flowers
of the readers will be sending for a funeral or even as a gift
TUESDAY
us different ideas about this. should ask the Horist to put
MIDDLEPORT Chamber
FIVE GENERATIONS- The live generations of the falnily of Mr~. Alice M. Fitch, 90,
-POLLY
one's full name and address
of Comme r ce, 6:30 this Long Bottom, pictlll'ed with her great-great-grandson, Billy Joe. Murphy, two and one-haH
DEAR POLLY - · 1 place a on the back of the card. evening at Meigs Inn.
year old son of Mrs. Ricky (Connie) Murphy ,seated on the left, his grandmother , Mrs. Billy
piece of hea vy cardboard in· MRS.A.K.S.
MEIGS LOCAL Chapter 17, Carole Dailey and his great-grandfather, Oscar Fitch.
side a terry cloth towel,
DEAR POLLY - Did you
OAPSE, 7:30 this evening at
envelope style, and keep this know that after using a tea
Meigs Junior High School in
inside my back door. I put bqg only once you can put it in
Middleport,
wet shoos on it when coming the refrigerator in a plastic
MIDDLEPORT Chamber
in from the garden. When the · bowl and reuse it even more
of Commerce Tuesday, 6:30
towel is soiled it is taken off than once? Cert;linly saves on
p.m. at Meigs Inn .
The Syracuse Cluster of Attendance at the Asbury 127. Mary Roc.helle Jenkins, and washed and put back in tea bags and keeping it in the
POMEROY LODGE 164
the same place.
refrigerator keeps it from
F&amp;AM Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. United Methodist Churches Church worship service was daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roy
When
the
.
catsup
bottle
is
getting
that acid taste. Jenkins was baptised.
Work in master mason· joined for a sunrise service at
MRS.F.G.B.
degree. All master masons the Asbury Church at 6 a.m.
,
invited.
.
WEiiNESDA Y
MIDDLEPORT Literary churches had
of theB ,_Jz.
Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday at program. Soma Ash a nd
J
J
the home of Mrs. James Teresa Holstem were the
and Rouer Hubbard
·
An organizational meeting projects they offer.
Titus, Rutland. Mrs. Ben UShers.
b
•
An Easter cantata was Glenn Evans, Don Raley, and f th M · C t H alth
1n order to ra•se
· 1 ds' f
Desi Jeffers.
or e e•gs oun Y e
un
or
Philson tp review. "My Name lighted the tandles. There
was an Easter prayer by Earl presented by the choirs of the
Department's new women's the new group, a yard and
is Asher Lev." .
Bradbury Church of. Christ
Theprelude by Mrs. Wilco~ auxiliarv,. gr0 up has ·been bak e sa1e· th'Is sprmg,
·
a
. WILDWOOD Garden Club, Pickens , and readings, " The sunday evening
was
"The
Holy
City."
Songs,
h
d
1
d
f
7
Wed
f
•
k
t
thi
Betraya
l"
by
J
o
Bob
·
sc
e
u
e
or
p.m.
·
armers
mar
e
s
·sum·
8 p.m. Wednesday at the
Rodney Bailey and Kevin ~~~sr.;~:~. ~e."~~::~ nesday, April5, at the heillth mer aijQ a bazaar in the fall
home of Mrs. Vernon Nease Hemsley, " The Crucifixion"
by Tonia Ash·, " The Resur- King were narrators and
. . department offices, But· are tentatively planned.
· with Mrs. Dwight Milhoan as
Ma ryln Wilcox was ac- Mark included " Man of Sor· t ernut Ave., pomeroy.
A nyone m
· t eres1e d m
·
.on"
by
Mary
Beth
rectl
co-hostess.
companist
for
the
presenta·
rows",
"'Tis
Midnight
on
1'h
·
ill
be
w
A
M
·
·
·
ed
Slavin, a nd "Resolutions" by
e new group w
. . . 1s mv•t to call the
DON
GENHEIMER, Ri'ck Baker. Songs included lion. Takinub part were Paula Olive's Brow", " I Find No known as W·AM
· · • which will he alth depa rt ment a t 99"""•723
missionary to South Africa, " It's l·n Your Ha nds" by R~ Haynes, adult choir director, Fault in Him", " Three Rusty st an d for women 's Auxiliary or 99"7160
q
or may ca ll th e
uBeverlyWilcox,Ruth Carsey, Nails", " If That Isn't Love'\ for Me1gs
·
County Hea lth coor di nator of the new group,
speaking at 7 p.m . Wed· seann Jenkins, " Alone" by
nesday at Mt. Union Church
. Th R
H
Rita Bailey, Thalia Raley, "It Was For You", and He's Department.
. Sharon Roseberry, at 992-7544
th e c hmr.'
e ev. arvey Cathy Hess, Sherrie Bar- Alive." The invitation selecThe basl·c functl'on' of the
near Carpenter.
Koch had the message for the
any time after 6 p.m.
nhart, Kathy· Johnson, youth lion was " He Looks Beyond new group WI'11 be t o a 1·d the
. POMEROY Chamber of Servl·ce.
choir director, Anna Shuler, My Faults."
M
county H ea lth U ·
Commerce Wednesday 7: 30
A breakfast was served in
eigs
p.m. at Meigs Inn . Plans for the social room of the church
Department in extending 11
f,
Regatt~ .
with approximately 120 attenfinancial aid to person&amp; of
ding iriunediately following
f · U.
6 tv
Meigs County who may need
RACINE - The Racine
THURSDAY
·
d
a
one-time prescription, a lab Elementary School honor roll
the
sunrise
service.
Special
RA C IN E
Baseball
"Even Unto Death", a Easter bunnies. Ham an
t es t or var~ous
·
other for the fourth six weeks
Association Thursday, 7: 30 gu ests were members of the drama by Jeffer L. Sheler, eg"s, biscuits and_J·e. I1y, cof·
·t
·
w
A
M.
les.
. . . als o grading peri·od has been
p.m. at Racine Elementary Ohio Valley Commandty 24 of was presented at the sunrise feeb and orange JUICe were hnecess1
t
b
able
t o Purchase
opes o e
at)!lOUOCed.
School. Money making Pomeroy . The tables were
decorated in the Easter motif service of the Middleport served by Kathryn Metzger' small equipment the health
Making a grade of "B" or
projects to be discussed. AU for the breakfast hosted by First Baptist Church Easter Corrine Ambrose, Mrs. Nor- departme nt may need.
above
!n all their subjects to
interested _persons urged to
mornl.ng ·
·
man Van Matre, and Sue lm· Hopef u11y, ·r
gh area
Syracuse
and
Asb··
"'·
1
enou
the
be
named
to the roll were:
attend.
wY
Roles in the drama were boden ·
· th e
Ch urches. The United
women t a k e pa rt m
Grade one - Tracy Beegle,
w·A·M· would Shawn Diddle, Chris J ewell, ·
PR.ECE PTOR BETA Methodist Women had charge taken by Dan Riggs as
group,
Joseph;
Edna
Wilson,
Mard
·
t
es1gna e one mem ber per Melanie VanMeter.
BET A CHAPT ER, Beta of planning the breakfast of
tha
·,
Marc
Fultz,
Michael·,
month to assl'st the health
Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:45p.m. orange juice, ham, scramblGrade two Angle
ed eggs and breakfast rolls. Kathy Riggs, Judus ; Dan
department with various Bo ~tick , Annett Cardone,
Thursday a t the Meigs Inn.
White, Nic.odemus; Lori
Patrece Circle, Tammy
Kloes, Anna; Nadine Barton,
Holter, Dencil Hudson, Paula
MEET THURSDAY
Mary Magdaline; a nd
Justis,
Wayne Parsons, Tina
The Southern Hills District
Dreama Hudson, Salome.
Sloter,
Joy Stobart, Jon
Organist. was Dorothy An- Ohio Nurses' assn. will meet
Tuttle.
at 7:30p.m. Thursday at the
thony.
Grade three - Michael
Brenda Taylor, bride-elect
The drama was-presented Jackson Pike office of the
Deem,
Damon Fisher, Leg ina
of
Jay
Hill,
was
nonored
with
Ohio
Valley
Ba,nk.
in full costlune in four scenes .
REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE
Hart,
Heather
Hobbs, Becky
Friday
evena
bridal
shower
Eleanor
Strarlg,
R.
N.,
will
For the breakfast following
Matthew
Jewell,
Hudson,
at
the
Wright
St.
home
of
ing
on
the
topic,
"Care
of
speak
the service, the tables were
Our business has only been incorporated during the
Mrs. Ann Rupe. Mrs. Linda Debbie Murphy, Lisa Pape,
decorated with ceramic the Burn Patient. "
last two ve~rs. Growth has been very satisfactory. We
Faulk was co-hostess for the Richard Parsons, Bill
have been talking about "key man" insurance. Could
shower which carried out a Proffitt, Rachel Reiber,
.you shed some tight on the subject?
blue and yellow color Diana Simpson, Tammy
Theiss, Tamy Wolfe, Wendy
scheme.
It Is good business for a prudent corPQratlon to Insure
Wolfe.
·
·
Games
w~re
played
with
against the loss of Its most valuable assets, the service
Grade
four
Lori
Adains,
prizes
being
won
by
Jyl
of Its key men. Three methods of approximating a key
Zerkle, Louise Thompson, W~nda Adkins, Dixie Dugan,
man's value are : by his contribution to earnings, by
Peggy Thompsn, Carolyn Mandy Hill, Melissa lhle,
the salary test, and by mesurlng the productive
difference ... the difference between the key man and ·
O'Brien, and Jane White. Lisa Parsons, Kelly· Rizer,
his repl~cement . Using these methods. the corporation
Cake and purtch were served. Kenda Rizer, Robin Savage,
can determine Its potential financial loss. This can be
Favors were made of gum- Becky VanMeter.
done w ith a life InSurance pOlicy owned and purchased
Grave five - LOIS IHLE,
drops.
by the corporation on the life of each key man. TheSimpson, Alan Crisp,
Lori
Others
attending
the
&amp;
corporation pays the premiums and Is the beneficiary.
shower were Leona Smith, Sandy Deem, Sandy Harden,
Helen Johnson,
Peggy · Debra Holter .
Grade six - James BUlb,
Taylor, Debbie Glaze, Sberry
Johnson,
Vera Roberts, Kevin Curfman, Chris Hobba,
· Herman Grate
Kathy Johnson, Nancy HiU, Linda Proffitt, Laren Wolf•
The tnsuronce Store 1
Mason. W.Va.
773-5592
Debbie Maples, and Nina Tony Wolfe.
214
E.
Main
;
92-5130
Pomeroy,
0
.
.;;.;.,.;;.;;.;;;.;.;.;.
...;.~.;-All caps denotes au· A's.
Cununings.

'

YOUTH REVIVAL
SYRACUSE
The
Syracuse .Church of. the
'NB!IIrene will be conducting
a special youth revival
Friday, Saturday and Sun·
day. The guest speaker will
be the Rev . Steve. Sullivan
who is a junior at the Mount
Vernon Nazarene College,
Mt. Vernon.
The Rev . Mr. Sullivan's
father is the pastor of the
Portsmouth First Church of
the Nazarene.
Services will be at 7 each
evening and at 10:45 a.m.
Sunday. The public is invited.

•

99~

7-UP

PEPSI

3 ·s1
QUARTS

••••

'10000 TRADE-IN
On All Uving Room Suites

MASON FURNITURE

Mon., Tues., Wed. Sat.·8:30 til 5:00 Thursday Til 12 Noon

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE SERVICE.

...

___

- -

. SUPER MARKET- OPEN DAlLY 9 10 10 P.M.
SUNDAY 10 10 10

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

We Accept Federal Food Stamps-We Reserve The. Riaftt To ·lmit

--•

BANANA .........~~;~.1
•

00

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, (j , TUeoday, March :18, 1978

Answer line

WANT AD
CHARGES

American Cancer Society

marrow which produces
blood cells that are required
for active lmmuntty to infection . By giving patients
A ctgarette smoker asks : blood
c o mponents,
"What are the anti-ctgarette physicians prolong the time
pros rams in other coun· that helpful cancer therapy
can be given witbout making
trles'"
ANSWERiine: The health the patient susceptible to
dangers of ctgarette smokmg infection. Blood from healthY
are a global problem and donors is needed because it Is
many natiOns today are aU1ed the sa!est to use. If you would
In research and antl-smQking
hke to knnw more about the
acttvttaes. To gain Ulslght mto cancer pattent's blood needs
lhts worldwide effort ask and want to help, please
your local American Cancer contact your local ACS Untt .
Soctety Untt for a free copy of
A htgh school student asks :

A
regular
feature,
prepared by the Amertcan
Cancer Society, to help save
your life from cancer.

a new ACS journ al, " World

" When

begm""

A

factory

ANSWERhne · The search

constder modern scientific
cancer research began ,fter

the Second World War when
volunteers o f the American
largest sum ever available

until then for cancer control
and research. In the lollowong
years, the amount that both
ACS and the Federal Government spend to support cancer
research has grown to $900
mollton a year .
II you have any questons or
would like more mfonnatlon
or anythmg dtscussed call
992-7531 or come to our Meigs
County o!ftce at the Sentor

patients have very special

reqUlrements for different
components o! whole blood.
These component s ca n help

whtch ts

cruCial when you consider
that 35 per cen t of leukemia
pat1ents d1e of mfectwn not of
leukemia Also, the proper
LlSe
blood components can
save a great number of
ca ncer patients from dymg of
hemorrhage . Many fonns of
cancer therupy s uppress the
norm a l fun c tion o f bone

or

-

WednesdAy , March 29

ASTRO·GRAPH
\VJ

U~l!Jlt

I' lA i]/l,JI
tJUIJ Wl!_ljl\'/
\.!JU

l

March 29, 1978
The reahLal tOII o f a d ream may
co me thi S yea1 w tw n yo u team
up w1th someo ne wh o w111
ser11e as a grea t sOu rce o1
str e n!]t h to yo u Th e arra nge
men t whl be a ve r y hap py one
ARIES (March 21-Apnl 19) Yo ur
mtut!J v.e leel tn g5 w tll se rve as
rel•ab te gUt de l•n es 111 all yo ur
dea l•n gs toctay Be sure to be
th e dec•s1on ma ker •' 11noo tved
wtth ano th er Ftnd ou t rn o re
about yo ursel f by se ndm g lor
your cop y o r As tr o -Gr aph Le t
ter Matl 50 cents tar eac h and a
long sel l -addre :;;~e d stam ped
enve lope to A str a-Gr aph P Q
Bb x 469 Rad •o CJty Stat •o n,
NY 10019 Be sure to spee dy
birth 'tqn

TAUR US (Aprol 20-May

20)

Th e t e , ., opp o r'l untty tor yo u
to acq u11 0 wh at you wa nt tod ay
thr ough a source you seld om
use . Th1 s perso n nas he lpe d
you o ut befor e
GEMINI (May 21-Jun e 20) Eval·
llalto ns yo u mak e today per tatnlng to peopl e and sttuaii Qn s
ar e qu1 te accu rate Yo u re able
to see thmg s w •ltl o ut k•d dm g
your self or o the r s
CANCER (Jl.lne 21-July 22) Yo u
have a spec 1at k nack tod ay for
changrn g so me lhtng lnvolvt ng
your work mt o a silualio n rn or e
fun cti on al and appe a ltng
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) lm•ta t10 n
1s probably the SlflC eres t lorm
of fl a tte ry Toda y you may team
that se 11e rat o f y our fn ends are
follo wm g an e )l,am pte that you

set
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sept

22) A

dream may co m e tru e lor you
toda y when yo u acq u1re an
tl em lor th e h ome th a t yo u
prcvt ous ty tho ught wa s 1m pas
Sible fo r you to o btai n
LIBRA (Sept . 23-0c:t. 23) You re
qutl e percep liYe today graspmg the esse nce o f thmg s rw t
eas tty reco gnt zed by o tt1 ers
Speak up an d contnbu te yo ur
tdeas

SCORPIO (Oct

24-Nov. 22)

Yo u re adept a t wo rkmg th ings
out today so that !h e ultimate
resu lts wi ll prove prOfitabl e lo
you and those less lo rtunate

SAGITTARIUS (Nov

23-Dec

Z1) Sotvmg your problem s today come s a lot ea ste r than
your v1v1d tmag1natton has tell
you to believe Me et things
head o n

CAPRICORN (Dec. ZZ-Jan. 19)
Cam o uflaged ploys w!l l notes
cape your pene tratiOn today
Secret s may be dtscovered that
you can use to further your
alms wtlhou t hurling anyone

AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Feb 19)
Soclalt ztng IS always good l or
you bu lloday th •s IS espectalty
tru e Vou have deep feeltngs
lor othe rs and they need to be
expressed

PISCES (Feb . 20·March ZO) Fulft Hmen t of you r a1ms and goals
take precedence over o the r
lh1ngs tod ay However. you
should do no th tn g at the ex pense of your highest Ideals
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN J

r$ Wut(l-iurUmk r
f il~ h

l oti

...""

'""'

:!Uayb
J tbly~

""

6tlnti

F.&lt;~ d1 11 urd U\11.'1 u_. mlnlmwu 15
w01 ds lli ~ l't'tllli per wurU per tlily

AWl rwmm.c uO ~r tlwll 1.'UII$t'(;Ullve
tblyti w.1 11 bto d~~o~ r )ttd Ill lht' I tJw y
raW
In IUt'lllur y, C11n.l u( Tlumb 11111.1
Ob1hlar)' 6 u•nts pt"r wurll, SJ 00
IIIUIUilUIII' Ca.sh Ul ll d l/1111~ II
Mulxlt' Hurne :oall'ti 1111'.! V11rtllill leH
t t'plt'd un!y with ush with
urll ~ r ~ t't!llt ~ ball!t' fur •dti Ulr)'UII( Bux Numlkr Jtil: llrl' uf Tl~ &amp;on-

lin' Il l

lUll L

The Pullttshcr rcsc rv~ lilt! nto:hl
tu t1ht u1 ll')l'd lUI) ad~ d~1nrtl ubJt'llhlllltl f!.\1.' Pullh~ l k'r w111 not IJt'
re~pous 11Jie fur IIIUil' l! ~&lt;tu um: UM:urrt!ll mscruun
PhUfWgg'J-:.! I:i6

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISlNG
DEADUNES

Cancer Society raised the

writes : "There is a blood
drive in my commumty for
ca ncer patients. Why do they
need blood" 11
ANSWERltn e :
Cancer

ftght tnfectoon

d1d ca ncer research

for answers to questions
about cause and treatment of
cancer h as been gomg on
smce ancient times. What we

su perv tsor

\

Want Ads .T urn Unwanted Items Into Cash

CANCER

Smokmg &amp; Health " One of
the mo~t mterestmg items m
a recent issue described
trends m Great Britain which
has one of the world's htghest
lung ca ncer death rate
among both men and women.
Brttish health educators ar e
becoming more optlmtstic
because the number of
quitters conttn ues to rise,
cigarette sa les :~re droppong,
tar yield of the majonty of
brand s smoked there is
dropping, and smokers are
swttchmg to low tar
cigarettes.

I

M uncl&lt;~Y

Noon un Sl! IUrday
I Ul'sdil)

tllru fo"ru.lay
4P M

tile day IJdu r~ p~ilill&lt;lllon
Sunduy
~PM

t lltlCI) llfltlii()OII

THf RACINE Volu ntee1
f1re
Deportm en t wt ll spon~or o gun
\ hoo t every Soturdoy ot b pm at
lheu bu•ld1ng '" 6oshon Foe
IO 'Y choke guns only.

$CASH$ lor 1unk ca rs F rye~
I ruck ond Aut o Por ts Wreck e1
Serv•ce Ttre \ ole and Rept'ur
Rut land 7411081 01 Penn zod
142.Q515

Check our low , low
prices on

WHil E CA 51 uon lawn lvrnllu1e
Grope
po llern
Ph one
1·378 6126

PomeiUJ landmark
••-J1ckW Carsey,Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

tail

CLEARANCE SALE begins Mon
Feb 1] ol SewN Sew Outl et
Mom Stre et
Ra c1ne
All
polyester double kn11 ~ reduced
40% and .so•e Thread big spoo l
51orS1
RACINE GUN Club Sunday Apnl
2 w1ll be los! Gun Sho o! until
lur ther no lice

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

9. -JackW. Carsey , Mgr .
Ail Phone 992-2181

Expendlturts
Total EKpendltures -

M•~cellaneous
8, 197 38
Total EKpendltures
7,345 59
BLAO&lt; AND while l emole Boston
- Ma.ntenance
Ci t izens Butld1ng on East Grand To ta l Ex p Temer Ch1ld s petlosl m v1c1n1
G asol ine Ta )l Fund
Mam St.
ly of Shenll s Ofilce ond V D
15,5• 2 97
lnsu 1a nct!
1n
Pomero.,.
Ba i, Oec 3\,1977
1,96491
FLna.llclal R,eoort
Fnghl
ened
of
odulls
wo uld nol
Total Exp Plus Bat ,
Of TOWnShipS
b1te no matter what th e ClrDec 31. 1977
17,507 88
For Fiscal Year Ending
cumslances Generous 1eword
Road and Bridge Fund
December 31, 1977
offered l os13 30 pm Th ursday
Ba lan ce. Jan 1. 1977
(88 59 )
Rutland Township
Rece1p1s
Nome
Mmn1e 992 b23.4 01
Me1gs Cuunty
General Proper ty Tax Rt 1 Middleport , OhiO
985 41 11
Real Estate and
March 17, 1971
Tra1 1er (Grossi
2, 292 00
1 certdy th e to l towlng
Ta ng •b le Persona l Property
report to be correct
Ta x (Gross)
47 0 1
Ed na M SW ICk
2,339 01
Town sht p Clerk Total Receipts
AVON HAVE 4 Mours a doy? J
Tet No 742 2872 Toti'll Begmn1ng Bali'lnce
need 3 people to sell qua hly
Sum muy of Cnh
2,250 42
Pl us Re ce•pts
Expenditures
produ cts m their QWn Tern lory
~alances , Receipts
/fnd Expenditures
Total E x pend1l ures
E •ce l le r~l
ea rn1 ng s
Ca ll
- Miscellaneous
269 68
Ba l ance J1n I , 1977
742 235 4
- Mamtenance
1. 128 71
General Fund
SS6, 193 20
MAN AND w 1fe w11h e~~:pene nc e
Grand Total Exp Motor Veh 1c te L1cense
Road and Brud ge Fund
Ta 'IC Fund
2,070 10
and obil 11y lo serve m o pa mn
1.398 39
Gaso l •ne Tax Fun d
3,307 88
tal an d supervisory copoc1ty lo1
Road and Bndge
Bat , Dec 31,! 917
'' 852 03
a sma ll Ch1ldren s Home
189 59) Total Exp PJvs Bat .
F und
Benelt l$ nego110ble Send rep l)l
1, 146 so
2,250 42
Dec 31 , 1911
Cemetery P: und
to Bo)( 729 W co The Do dy
Cem,tery Fund
38 97
Ftre Proteclion Fd
Oat Jan 1, 1977
1.146 so
Sen l~e l !om.!.".::ll. : ~·o _
Federa l Reve n ue
Rtctlpls
Shar ing F und
J,s8s 18
WAC KENHUT CORPORATION wtll
General Property Tax A.nt 1 Recess •on
be occepllng oppi1COhons and
Real Estate and
Assistance
382 SO
CO•l d ucl1 ng 1n terv1ew s o n
Trailer &lt;Gross)
2,290 00
Total s
16,635 74
March 29th and 30th from B 30
Tangible Persona l Property
Total Ret:e.ph
Tax (Gross)
47 01
om to 5 00 pm 1n Room 103 of
Genera l FI.Jnd
11. 49016
Other
633 41
Motor Vehtcle License
lhe PI Pl eos0r11 Inn l or lull
2,972 48
11 me and por i 11m e ~ecu nty
'fax F tJ nd
10,874 24 Total Rece1pts
Gasolme Tax Fund 14.200 00 Total Begmn1f19 Balan ce
pOSitions m the PI Pleasant
Plus Rece1pt s
4, 11 8 98
Road and Bndge
area
M d1l ory ba ckgro und
Expenditures
Fund
2.339 01
prelerred but nor requ 1red Ap
2, 08 6 10
Cerr.e t ery Fu lid
2,972 48 Sa lari es
pl)l 1n person no phone calls
154 95
F .re Protec t iOn Fd
2,339 01 Tools and Equ1pmen t
plea!oe We ore an Equal Op
108 37
Ceme t ery Fund
2,972 48 Su pp lies
332 30
F1re Protec:;t lon Fd
2,339 01 Repatrs
pa~~~!J~mp lor_e_r __ _
Other E x penses
55 53
Federal Revenue
Total
Exp
2,737
25
Sha nng Fund
6, 723 00
Bat , Dec 31 1977
1,J81 73
Anti Recess 1on
ASSIS tance
529 00 Total E x p Plus Sal
De c 31, 19 77
4,118 98
Totals
51.467 10
TIMBER Pomeroy Forest Pro
Fire Protection Fund
Total Rece1pts 9 bllances
duel!&gt; Top prt ce far !oton dmg
38 97
General Fu nd
17 ,683 56 Bat , Jan 1, 1977
~cwt1mb e r
Coli 992 5965 or
Receipt s
Mol or Veh • ~ l e L1cense
_ Kenl_.!l~ b~46-857~ _
Tax Fu nd
12.944 34 General Property Ta x Real Esta te and
Gaso lm e Tax Fund 17 ,507 aa
COIN S CURRENCY lokens old
Trailer (Gross)
2,292 00
Road and Br idge
pocke t wotches and chams
2,250 42 Tangible Per sonal Property
F und
Sl iver a nd gold We need 1964
fa )( (Gross)
47 01
Ct'!meter y Fund
4.118 18
ond older s1lver coms Buy sell
2,339 01
2,377 98 Total Rece •pts
Fi re Pro tection Fd
To tal Beg1nn1ng Balance
or !rode Coil Roger Wom ~ ley
Fede ral Reven ue
PIUS Rece.pts
2,3 77 98
10,308 18
Shanng Fu nd
742 2331
E xpendltures
An l 1 ReceSSIOn
OLD
FURNITURE 1ce bo)feS bra ss
2,322 45
911 50 Contra cts
ASSISt a nce
beds 1r on bed s elc comp lete
SS 53
To ta ls
66,102 84 Other E xpen ses
Total Exp
2,377 98
Expendlturel
households Wnte M D M1ller
Gener a l F und
10,7 14 33 Total Exp Plus Ba l.
Rl 4 Pom eroy Oh1o or call
_ Dec 31 , 1977
2,377 98
Motor Veh 1c le L•cense
992 7760
Tu: Fund
11 ,524 12
Feder•! Revenue
5hanng Fund
Gasoli ne Ta )C Fund 15,542.97
NO ITEM TOO Lorge or too small
Bat , Jan 1, 1971
3,5 85 18
J;~oad and Bridge
Wtll buy 1 p1ece or complete
Receipts
1,398 39
Fu nd
household New used or ont1
Cemet ery Fund
2,7J7 25 Grants- Federa l
6.723 00
ques Mortm s Furn11ure 20 N
6,7~3 00
2. 377 98 Total R:ecetpts
F.re Prot ec t ion Fd
2nd Sl , Middleport Phone
Total Beginning Balance
Federet J;~evenue
992 6370
Plus Receipts
10,308 18
Sha rin g Fund
9.085 23
Expenditures
Ant 1 ReceSSIOn
CH IP WOOD
Pole s max
Maint. and Operation
Assis tan ce
879 39
d1ome1 er 10' on largest end $8
a, 169 53
To l a ls
54,259 62 Equipment
per 1on Bund led slob S6 per
Other Expenses
915 70
Balance Dec 31. 1977
ton Dellv(!red to Oh1o Pallet
9,085 23
Gene ra l Fu nd
6,969 23 Total Exp
Ba t, Dec 31, 1977
1,222 9S
Motor Veh1cle License
Co lh 2 Pomeroy 992 2689
Ta x Fun d
\,.no 22 Total E x p P tus Oal ,
Gaso line TaK Fund
1,964 91
Dec 31 , 1977
10,308 18
Road and Br idge
Fund
Federal Ant•·Receuion
PUBLIC NOTICE
852 OJ
Assistanu
SHERIFF ' S SALE
1.381 73 Bal ., Jan . 1. 1977
382.50
Cemetery Fun d
Common Pleas Court, Meigs
Federa l J;!e\lenue
Recetpts
County, Ohio, cue No. 10112
529.00
Sha nng Fund
I. 222 95 Other
Al'lfl J;!eceSS IOn
Total Receipts
529 00
Mildred Brooks,
ASSIS tan ce
32 I S Total Beg tnn lng Balance Plus
Plaintiff ,
Tote!
13,843 22 Rece1pts
911 50
Cash Balance, Rece1ph
E 11.pendltures
Pau! BrookS ,
Salar ies
And Expenditures
879 J5
Defendant
By Fund
Total Exp
879 35
In pur su an ce to an ALIA S
General Fund
Bal , Dec 31, 1917
32 IS
EXECUTION ISSued by the
Bala nce, Jan 1, 1977 6,193 20 Total Exp Plus Bat,
Court of Common Pleas ,
Rec11pts
Dec 31, 1977
911.50
Meigs Co unty, Ohio , 1n the
Township Debt - Noles
Genera l Property Ta x above ent1tled act•on, 1 will
Real Estate and
Purpose For Wh 1ch Note
expose for sa le at Pvbli c
Trailer (Gross)
4,965 99
Debt was Cre a ted
Auct ton , at the Me1gs County
Tang tb le Personal Property Grader
H1ghway
Garage,
Rock
Ta x (Gross)
118 08 Ou t standing Jan 1,
Springs, Me igs County, OhiO,
Estate Ta x (G ross)
492 OS
1977
10.500 00 on the 8th day of April, 1978 ,
Redeemed Dur ing Year
Local Go\lernment and
at 10 30 o 'clock AM , the
Sta te Income Tax
2,785 91
1977
3.500 00 fol lowing goods and chattels .
C1gare tt e L1cense Fees
Balance Outstanding
1 - 1949 Ford f&amp;rm tractor
Dec. 21. 1917
7.000.00
37 50
and F ines lGrossl
The said goods and chattels
7 Pet
Oth er
3,090 77 Rate of tnt
tal&lt;.en as the property of Pau l
Tota l R ecelpts
11 ,490 36 Date of Fmel Mat
• 21 79
Brooks to satisfy a judgement
Back Hoe
Total Be9 1nn•ng Ba lan ce
in favor of M ildred Brooks
Plus Rece 1pts
17,683 56 Outstanding Ja n 1,
The said goods and chattel
Expenditures
1977
4,3 33 00
are appraised at S82S 00 and
Redeemed During Year
Total Expenditur~s
canno t be sold t or tess than
- Adm lnistrat •ve 10,7U 33
19 77
2,167 00
two th irds of the appraised
Grand Total Exp
Balance outstanding
value
Gen era l Fund
Dec 21, 1977
2,166 00
10,714 33
Term s of .Sa le
Cash In
Bat , Dec 31, 19 77
6 pet
6,969 23 Ra te of lnt
hand
To ta l E x p Pl vs
Da te or Final Ma t
00.78
James J Proff•ll
eat , Dec Jl,l977 17 ,68 35 6
Sher •ff
(3) 28, ltc
Motor Vehicle License
Meigs Co unty
Tu Fund
Dl 28, ltc
Bala nce, Jan L 1977 2,070 10
Rectlpts
Motor Vehicle License
NOTICE OF
Tax
7,89636
DRAWING JURORS
Other
2,917 88
Ofllce Of Com m lsstoners of
Tot a l Rece1pts
10,874 24
Jurors, Meigs county, Ohio.
Total Beg1nn lng Ba lance
M•rcl'l 24, 1971
Prices Golag Up
Plus Receipts
· 12,944 34
To All Wl'lom It May ConTest tubes cost more,
Expenditures
cern :
Total E xpen diture\.
On Frldav , the 7th day 0~
laboratory equipment costs
- MISCeltane OIJS
2,974 lA
1978, at 10 ·00 o 'clock
more, budgets are tight m April
- Ma.ntenance
8,549.98
AM ., at the otrlce ot the
Grand Total Exp cancer research. The rising
CLERK OF
COMMON
Motor Vehicle License
PLEAS COURTof Meigs
hits
everyone
cost-ol·llving
Ta x Fund
11 ,524 12
County, Ohio , Jurors w ilt be
Ba t., Dec 31, 1977
LdO 22 and everything, including the
~ubl tclv drawn for the May
Total Exp Plus Bat ,
c erm or t he Common F' leas
~cost of cancer research .
Dec 31, 1977
12, 944 34
ourt of said Count y
Please give genefously when
GISOllnt TIX Fund
Ba lanc e, J an 1, 1977 3,307 58
Freeland s Norr 1s
your American Cancer
Recelpts
Laurtn Hufrman
Society
volunteer
calls
during
GasoJJne Ta x
14,200 00
CommISSioners
Teter Re ceipts
14,200 00 tile April educational and
of Jurors
Totaj Beg.nn 1ng Be renee
Plus Re ceipts
{3) 28, 1t c
17.507 88 fund-raising Crusade.

WANl 10 bu y P1gs here tt
Holcomb A lbany 6 14 698 S025
or 9CI'2-2137

.'

'

.

Blown Insulation
Cellulose Fiber

Young's

Blown Into Walls

IF YOU hove a sor 11•ce 1o olfe,
wont to buy or sell somelh1 ng
oe look mg for work
or
who1 e11er
yo u II gel results
fa ster w llh o Sent •nel Won l Ad
Col l 992 21 56
PORCH SA LE Morch 30 and 31 9
lo 4 Men s we mens ond
children s clolhtng , gullor toys
and lo t s of m1sc 11ems F1rs1
house on ng hf posT F•r e Stollon
a18a shon on Twp Rd 149

Ymliii ~ _ ~~": '::::
HOOF HOLLOW Hor ses au.,. , sell
l10de or h om New and used
saddle s Ruth Reev es Albany
(614) 6qa 32qo

Phone m-m3

"TIMIIri&amp;l-

MOORE'S

Garages

-

AI Tromm

Construction
742-2321

Free Estim1tes
Work Guaranteed

pm

1972 FORD L(D Good runnmg
cond tllon S750 Call oller 6
pm 949 2747

STARCRAFT FA LL Sale
M1n1
molar s 20 ond 22 TroVel
Trader s 18 5 $3 799 25 7
Bunkhou se $4 875 Fo ld down
SI 700 up We sell serv1ce and
quoli ly Open Sundays Camp
Conley Stor cra/1 Sa les Rl 62
N ol PI Pl easant
ARISTOCRAT
TRAVEL
1972
Trmlcr 18 sell cont01 ned Ca ll

9'12 3580
1973 FRANKLIN TRAVEl
28
A C
awnmg
rod1o
lope
oth er
Oollos We lker Mason
304 773 5686

Trader
AM FM
e)Ciras
W Va

ROGER HYSELl
GARAGE

~.. miles oH Rt. 7 by-pass on

St. Rt. 143, toward Rutland,
D.
Auto&amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682
3-12-1 mo.

Located In The
MEIGS PLAZA
Middleport, Ohio
I
Open

9: 00 til9 : 00 Mon.- Frtday

9.oottl6,oo Saturday
12 · 00 Hl6·00 Sunday
2·2·11&lt;

-""
-.
·--.-..
---...

'

••
••

&lt;198 Locust Street
Middleport , 0
Phone 992 -309 2

~

LAWN BOY MOWERS

•

Kttchen Cabinets, Roofing,
Concrete
Patios ,
Stdewalks,
New
Construction
&amp;
Remodeling.

....

10 ....

DAVID BRICKLES
General Contracting

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
D

P1l. 99Z·ll74

RUGS , WALL Hang1ngs 1and
ofgons Ntce for Chnstmos
Reasonable Coli 992 2214

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork .
Rou Te 33 north ol Pomeroy
lo!§l=._l~l ~ Coli ~9~7~7~ - __
12 ~&lt; bO MOBILE HOME neor Dex
ter Phone 992 5858

8 8 S MOBILE HOMES Pl Pleo
so nt W Va be stde Heck 's
1973 Braadmore 14 x b4 2
bedroom
1973 Dorton 14 ll 60 2 bedroom
1972 V1ctonon 14 x 67 3 bed room
2 both
1972 Coventry 12 1&lt; 65 3 bedroom
1969 Stat esman 12 x HJ 2
bedroom

NEW 3 bedroom house 2 both~
oil elec 1 ocre Middleport
close 10 Rut la nd Ph one 992
748 1

111

Ra cme

-- ------------SOFTENER?
Let Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; condition your
water wtth Co-op water
softener , Model UC-SVI,

Now Only

'289.95
Let us test your water Free

Pomeroy landmark
. . . _JackW . Carsey,Mgr.
Phone991·2181

Ail

197 1 ARI STOCRAT low lme w 11h
ownmg , ~leeps Si ll 8 h p 3b
nd1ng mower 992-5756
SE YE N ROOMS and botl1 on 2
acres Old Rt 33 Shown by op
po1ntmen1 only ~71513
1975 KAWASAK I 100 l1ke new
Only 425 miles plu s helmet
$450 Phone614 667 3333
FOR SALE Ch1ldren s Western
Bools $695 $139S Bolley sm
~M1d ~eport

197(: HONDA CB 570 2700 mdes
E1 cellenl cond1t+on, some ac
c es~ones

Four 14 x 7 Crag or Mog Moster
Slo t Wheels, good condt!ton
2 new Gb0-14 Super Cha rger
tires Mr Gasket Trocl1on bars
Ross slereo system mcludes
AM-FM stereo rod1o 8·track
lope record p layer ond stand
C.oi19B5-3919 after 7 pm
900 KAWA SAKI ,l1 chopper parts
Amen Sov1or soflo ll !rome and
12 m over tw1sled spn nger
Every thu'lg complete ucept
engm e and drt 11elrom phone
1 667 3856 or 949·2232.
8 H P ndmg tro ctor Electnc
start
Bnggs ond Stratton
engme
Excellent cond thon

Cal1992·33,:66
::::._,---~-

REDUCE SAFE &amp; fo sl w1th GoBese
Tablets &amp; E Vap woter p1 l.s
Nelson Drug
COAL, LIME STONE. sand gro11el
colc1um chlor 1de fert 1~1 zer dog
food and all types of salt Exce ls•or So h Works Inc E Mo1n
St , Pomeroy 992 3891
197.4 DATSUN
992·7453
1977

PICKUP

CHEVY STEPSIDE

$2 100
ptc kup

$4600 992 -=2''"''"2- -- - FORD 8 N Tractor Excel lent
mechon 1co l condition. . New
ttres, r1ms an d p01nt 992 -720 1

GOOD EAR co rn and hoy for sole.
Loc ust posts Model 12 Wmches h~ r sho t gun . 7-42· 2359
HAY FOR sole, Alfalfa , dover ond
T1mothy Also crop ground for
rent or shores Phone 7.42-2566
PING PONG loble, paddles bolls.
and ne t . $35
Charlene
Hoef1 1ch 992-5292.
SEVEN TRUCK toppers 742 -3154

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

Route 2
Pomeroy, Ohto 45769
Estimates by Appotntmenl
Phone992-7119

WELCCW£1V
'5PIN FVR THE=

I'M A HIT
MAN

WHAT!XJ YCU

5YNDID!..TE.

FOR-rHE=

IHEZEWEI

)

)

tRUBENKI

..".

TWO HOME s•tes for so le near
Solem Center Ru ral water
742-2746
FOR SALE 31. acre 8 rooms and
both fr u1 1 ov lbutldmgs plenty
of go rden spoce On sto le road
near church and close to the
mme oreo Plenty of water also
ru ral water Will sell w1th or
wtthovt furnitu re
Phone

742 206;.;,::8======

1976 FORD F-100 300 CID. 8 bed.
Twm swmg-!ock m1rrors . Rod1o. ~~===~=======,
Rear step bumper El'l cellent T
condtllon
After 5
Call
Own Your OWn &amp;usfnnsl
992-578::5":
.
Ar11 Distributor for Rand
1968 350 • HONDA. S250 • Plus
MtNIIIy Maps. No selling .
SuzuJo; i l or parts. S-40 742 2349. t Service prt-tslab llshtd
10 1/, 11. tru ck camper Exc ell ent
ICcounts.
Investments
cond1tion. SIOOO. Don Bell .
S2,7H lo 115,450 secured by
Rocme. Oh 1o 2-47-2022.
inventory 1nd t!qufpment.
Write ,
fnc::1ude name ,
CORNPLANTER 4 row no-till. An
lddrtll, 1elephone •nd
drew Cross
l.lttart FaUs. three
references
to
247 28S2.
Personnel
Director ,
NICE PIGS lor sole. Aher 5 call
NAMCO, 3f21 Montclair
9-49 2857 .
Rd., llrmlngh•m, AI.
NEW
AIR
condifioner
3S2U,orc•lltoll frtel-800·
Westinghouse never been us
~3J-t441.
ed Also o 1970 Volluwo;on 2
dr. Moke me an offer. loth ot
them ore A I lewis Scarbe,
Wes t Point Rd . Hartford WV.
1971 MOBILE HOME 12 x 52. 2
bedrQ(Im , gas heated, central
air. Completely equtpped Excellen t condition 992 -3900 .

==,-----

'----------...J

BY OWNER 5 ocres with 9 room HOUSE TRAILER 8 l'l -43 Furmshed,
In good cond•hon. S1800 or best
house FREE GAS, 2 car garage,
offer For more into rmohon,
summer kitchen and bordered
phone 992 -2365.
by 2 creeks, Call985 3827
1964
10 K 55 mobile home wtth
JUST COMPLETED new house 1n
e)fpando 1n co untry on J acres
Mtddleport For more mformobf land. Dril led well S.phc
tion, cal! 992 -2238 or 992 5304
tank. storage bu1ldmg N1 ce
HOUSE FOR soli!! 1n Pomeroy 5
le vel frontage, some woods .
mtnute walk to town and
Plenty of garden space. Fur·
school olum1num sld1ng, storm
nlshed central oir. Ready lor
w1ndows and doors wall to
1mmed1ate
pouess•on.
wall corpet•ng throughout 2 or
$10 ,500 Only rnterested par3 bedrooms
Completely
lies call7-42-3074
remodeled k1tchen with bt.ult ·m
opphanc:es . large both , Iorge
front ond bock porches, fenc.d
yard basement and lots of
storage space Off strHI parkIn~ Shown by appointment on• SMALL MALE dog S In 6 mo old
Port Beagle, port Terrier Very
ly Roger Abbott, 992-611-41 or
friendly qq2, 7663
992 -2377

I

Q:ALL.YIN 6?
WHADD'(U H MEAN?

LIT TL E PA11ENT 5PfAk CN6 L!SH:
IS ~ALLYI NG j;)

r--- - -__.,.

...

Now arrange tho c ~rcled letters lo
form the surpnse answer as suggesled by !he abo11e car1oon

1 l 1 l X]( I l X1

News 8. Bullwlnkle 10.
7 . JC- Schoolles 10 ; 8 00- Capl Kangaroo 8. 10i
Ses,.,me Sf 33 .
9 oo-Merv Griffin 3; Phil Donahue 4. Edge of Night 6,
Phil Donahue 15, Family Attair 8, Match Gam e 10;
Mister Rogers 33
9 31)- Emergency One 1 6, Andy Griffith 8 ; Family

Jumbles PRIME YODEL CONVOY SATIRE
Answer Otdn 't appear concerned about the conact
getup"- OVERSLEPT

Jumble Book No 10 wllh lhl ta1e1t 110 puulet, te t11illlable tor $1 35 pMtpald from J~.mbte, cJo ~t newtpapef, 8011: 34, Norwood. N J 07048 lnctuele
your name, addreaa, zJp oode .00 make~ checb payable tc Nl'lltWP 4*b of&gt;t

~~-"tit'
by THOMAS JOSEPH

1 .JB 7!
Tu1 ,.. ,

ZThrow

ACROSS

ALLEYOOP
'lOUR DAUGHOEI&lt;'S A NICE
Gla , "11JNK, EVEN IF' SHE:
IS A LITT'l.E ON ~· HEFTY

S toE !

11 3Q-Knoc kout 3, 15; Fami ly Feud 6, 13, Petrtc;lge
Fam 1l ly 4. Love ot Life 8, 10, Sesame St 2(],33
11.55-CBS News 8, Lovi ng Free 10
12·0Q-Newscenter 3. S20,000 Pyran'lld 13, News 4,6, 1(],

To Say The Leosl IS. G•mbll 8

12 · JG--Ryan ' s Hope 6.13, Bob Braun 4, Gons;~ Show 15,
Searc h tor Tomorrow 8. 10, Good Old Days ot Radio

33
1 oo-For Richer , For Poorer 31 All My Chi ldren 6. 13,
, You ng &amp; t he Rest less 10, Not tor Wom en Only 15
I Jo-Davs of Our Lives 3,4 , 15, As T he World Turns
8, 10; Television 1984 33
2 QO--One Life to Live 6, 13; 2· 3o- Doctors 3,4, 15,

Guiding Light 8,10. Book Beat 33
3 00-A nother World 3,4, 15, Genera l Hosp lt .!l l 6, 13;

Llllos Voga 3. Vou 20
3 31l-A II In The Family 8,10. Oh io Journal 20
4 oo-Mister Car toon 3; Edge ol Nlghl 13. My Three
Sons4 , For R ic her. For Poorer 15, Merv G riffin 6,

Gllll9an' s Is. 8, Sesame St 20,33 , Gomer Pyle,
USMC 10
4 30- L i tlle Rascal s J,lS G illigan 's I \S 4., Brady
Bunch 8, 10, Mary Tyl er Moore 13.
5 oo-Bona tua 3, Sta r Trek 4, Gunsmoke 8, Mister
Rogers' Nei ghborhood 20.33, Hogan' s Heroes 10,
Emergency Onel 13, Petti coat Junction 15
5 31)-News 6, Elec Cc 20,33 , M ary Tyler M oore 10,
Hogan 's Heroes 15.

6DO-News 3,4,8,10,13,15, ABC News 6. Zoom 20

3 "Hidi Pagliaccio," e.g.
4 U.S. a1r de..HER? 1&gt;1EY'VE
II6 Range
Of the ear
"'!''HELP HI:R
12 Damp and bot fense group
5 Water or
13 Business
air, e .g.
arrangement
of sorts
'Pltclunan
7 Fonnal
15 High note
16 Anned
wear,
Yesterday '11 Aolwer
forces :
for short
zz capuchin 33 Roll or serge
abbr.
I Exclude
monkey
34 Constantly
,.....,;,..;..;,..; 17 Ess
t Climbing
zc Cortode
35 Ta1
follower
plant
Z5 GenesiS
37 MOIISter
18 Channer,
10 Brink
name
38 Judge
Soiltbem
· 14 Dooaler
zt Thrice:
39 Small
style
U Pour fat oo
prefix
whirlpool
28Demented
11 Correct
za Roots;
u 1n medias
Z3 Encounter
211 Allnoy
family tree
Z7 Sunday
Z1 - seq30 Cleanse
U Man's
dinner
takes a qood computer to
~~w~t-ur~~~~~~~T~· ~~ru-c~~~mre~
za Part of
proqram them like that!
I P.unue

,Y,;;~irE~"THOS~~E~~~~~~~;:;;~~~~l

Y!:AH, WELL, SHE$ PLANNING ON KNOCKING OFF
SOME' OF "THAT WI:IGH"T;
GUZt

"

....
"

"

"

''
GASOLINE ALLEY

I just made the last
paljment on the
I

A.W.O.L.

29 Weave
3G Hibernate
31 African
antelope
33- esprit
38 Ibsen

n

.oo---

Heart game gets clubby

WEST

1-1.8-A

¥ 3

r~~~~~~~::--~~::~----------------~~-----------------------------------------------~ment

oK.I 72

.AK .J 7 4

.6 52

MONA, IF "'r''u

TH1Ni&lt; 'PHitf~ fuNNy,

BATHROOMS AND
Kitchens
remodel ed ce rom•c t1 le, plum
bmg carpentry, and general
mamtenonce
13 yeors ex penence . q92 3685

DID ~ HE'It~
or.~! ~tBO&amp;A'

PULLINS EXCAVATING Comp le1e
Ser v1ce Phon e 992 2478

~vf:L.ING

,-..f:

'PH!

'I"RRUIIIDOfr

DAuc..H'f!IZ ?

TURLEY S WRECKER Ser111ce
Rocme Oh1o Coy or n1gh t
949-2657
1

lo

South

wanted to look as
bnlliant a s possible ,

West took his third club
tnck , but dummy's etght of
clubs was n ow establis hed

OH , WINN IE, HOW CAN I
E:VER ']}4ANK YOU FOR
RIGfmN6 1HING513E-

TAKING AL L contracts for mow 1ng
gran lnmmmg, ol ~o plontmg
and nursery wcrlo; Rick Imboden Rut land 742-2 909

1WEENMEAND
11J'TU?

HAPPENED,

-or-,13-IRDIE

~~~~~~~j~

West

East

South

I+

Puss

Pass

Pass

:o•

EPL

A Neva da reDder wants to

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

Opentng lead . • K
By O&amp;wald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
West opened the kmg of
clubs and s ht!ted to the 10 of

PQJGHKI

LI

JLCH

XPWM

PH

clinch three notrump. He

XPQMZ

TLHGM'X

JFUP

tr mk

Pass

One lelter sim ply stands for another In this sam ple A is
u sed f or t he thre e l 's. X for th e two O's, etc Si ngle l etter s
apostrophes, the length and fo rm ation of the words are all diamonds.
South dtdn 't see any way
hmts. Each day the code letters are different
he could have r ea ched the

PH

I FELT ~E­
&amp;FON5113LE
FOR WHAT

as South ' s loth

Pas s

CRYPTOQUOTES

WILL CARE for the eld erly m our
home Phone 992 73 14

tnc nine of dubs a nd dt srarded the queen or s pade s
lie m 1ght JU st as well have

Uu own the low .sp.adc, but

Vulne rable · Both
Dealer : West

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It :

AND ,.H! Plt'I'RoN~'$

WINTER GET to your ho use? leT us
mak e necess ary repo1r!o AI
Tromm Construction 742-2328.

West won ~md led u sceond
duunond South ruffed , dre w
trumps wtlh two l ea d s, l ed

+A QG
• QJ 108 75-1
• 54

Ilke a

1-fe.t,

He rose

SOU Til

+Q

wounded
toreador
45 Rendezvous 1 ,..+-+-1--+-le Hostile
r.
one
DOWN
I Promontory L-..1-...l.....J-.L....

tt

mon d

•w ns:o

tounst
Embank-

South found

w1 th dummy ' s ace of diam oll d1:i l ed lit e 10 of dubs
;md lli sea r ti ed Ius last dia-

E AST
+ 10 B 4 :1
"• 62

+ K .1 5

40 Ilke a
Heeced

"""'
., a,,.,.,' ......
~

8 00-----G ri zz tv Adams 3,4, 15, Eight ls Enough 6, 13;
Carol Burnett 8, ,0, No ... a 20,33
9 oo-Pilot 3, 4, 15, Ch arlie' s Ange ls 6, IJ , Great Per
torm ances 33, Prevrn &amp; lhe Pltl sbu rgh 20.
10 Oll-Starsky &amp; Hutch 6, 13; CBS On The Air 8,10,
News 20
10 . 30----You Bet Your Life 20.
,
1\ OrJ-N-:!WS 3, 4,6,8, 10,13, 15; D ick Cavett 20; Lili as,
Yoga &amp; You 33 .
II 3o-Johnn y Carson 3,4,15; Poll ee Story 6, 13, Hawaii
FI~Je 0 8, ABC News 33, Mov ie " That Man In
I stanbul " 10
12 oo--Janak l 33, l2 .4o-Myste ry of the Week 6, 13;
Ko tak 8. I
Tomorrow 4, 2 l D-News 13

• A K !J
• A Qh
+ W!18 f

effort

. ,.............

IS

• 9 72

character

~

7 00-Cross Wlls3 ,_., Liars Club 6, Sha Na Na 8, News
10, To Tell T he Truth 13, g Gilligan's Is 15,
Characterit sl lcs of Lea r ning D lsa6111tles 10, atg
Green Magazine 33
7 3o-Funny Farm 3; Sha Na Na 4, When Havoc
Struck 6, Family Feud 8; Mec Neii-Lehrer Report
20,33; The Judge 10, In Sear c h of 13, Wild K lngdom

NOH 'I'll

37 Bard's

WILL do roof1ng, construction ,
plumbmg and healing No tab
too Iorge or loc small Phone
742 2348

QG

was m four

know what a gambling three
notrump ts Some people
think any tome they btd three
notrump they arc gambling,
but thts parttcular btd Is a
conventional three- notr ump

opening based on a long solid
mmor su1t and little else If

doubled, the btdder runs out
to hi S S Uit

hea rts w1th nin e

XLL sure tricks and dtamond and
spade

fmesses easily

JFUP able lor a lOth one.
Could West

avail~ ,..,---~-~

have led away

XPQMZG . - from the king or dtamonds '

Possible, but not a ccrtamty .

SLPWMM ELKIVWMV
DLM
VLHXPH II .Eas t held that red king L:__:::::::_::~;~::LSJ
Yeotenlay'a Crypteqao«e: I HAVE NEVER HEARD OF AN could he a lso hold a black
OLDMANFORGETnNGWHERE HE BURIED IDS MONEY one ? Not a chance. Then Some say it's a srgn of rain to
where could a lOth trick be
MONEY.-CICERO
see ltghtmng bugs flying high.
found '

APPLIANCE

SERVICE

© li'78 Kina Features Syndicate. lnt:

We have enlarged our
service department and
will service Hotpolnl and
other brands.

BARNEY
• ::;:,:t:,-=:·~

LET'S TAKE UP WHAR
WE LEFT OFF 1./ESTIDDY

landmark

9 • .oJack W. Carsev. Mgr
lit Phone992-2181.

ll
7 DO-Todoy 3,4,15; Good .morning Amerlc06, 13, CBS

6 3o-NBC News 3, 4,15, ABCNews13 ; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6,. C B S News 8, 10, Over Easy 20

EXCAVATIN G, dozer boc lo; hoe
ond d1tcher Charles R Hot
f1e ld, Bock Hoe Serv1 ce
Rutla nd, Oh1o Phon e 742 2008

Pome~

- vl rglnla 13: 6' Ss-Chuck White Reports 1(]; News

tomonow)

1 11

" ' ''

HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex
covahng, se pt• c sys tems,
dozer back hoe dvmp truck
l1mestone. gro 11el , blacktoP
,pavmg Rt 1.43 Phone I (614)
698·7331

9

~ .4S;-Mornl ng Report 3, 6 so-Good Morning, w West

10 oo-Santord &amp; Son 3, 4, 15; Tattleta les 8; Joker' s Wild
10, Not For Women Only 13, Elec Co 33
1(] 3G-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; Andy Griffith 6,

~Answers

~··

BRADFORD
Auctioneer Lom
plere Serv1ce Ph one 949 2487
or 949-2000 Rac111e 6h10 Cntr
Brodlord

'

Altair 10. Zoom 33

WHA"T THeY FOUND
WHEN iHE P IL.LOW
FACTOR"\" ElURNED
DOWN .

K] I I

""

•

Club 15; ; 6 2~Chrlstopher Closeup 10

10

I NUD:H [j
I K

I'VE= 60'1'" A
FE;£L..JNC'i' HE15
OOIN~ID WIN A
LOT OF MQ..lEY.

NEWS-· OUR

'.

~ 6 · IJO-PTL

\ 30-News Conference 4, News 6, Sunrise Semester

Co 20

Yes terdays

'

S · 5~

Sunr i se Semester t(]

Foucheux 13.
11 DO-Wheel ot Fortune 3,4, 15, Happ'f Days 6, 13, E lec

Printanswerhere: [

-··-.._--·.-

WED NESDAY , MARCH 29, 1t71
Reporl 13 5.51l-PTL Club 13,

s · •~ F orm

Price Is Righi 8,10, Adoms Chronl&lt;les 33; Ri ck

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

ELWOOD SOWERS REPAIR Sweeper s toasters •rons oil
~ ma l! opphon res lawn mower
next to State 1-t1ghwoy Goroge
COUNTRY farmla nd w11h secludon Rou te 7 Phone (b14) 985
ed woods wa ter and good oc
3825
cess 1n Monroe County W Vo
$1 000 down ca ll (304) 772 REMODELING Plum btng heoltng
3102 or (304) 772-3227
and oil type s of general repo1r
Work guaranteed 20 yeors u Commerc1o l property oppro:x 17
pen enc.e Phone 992 2409
acres , leve l land located ot
Tupper~ Plo 1ns on Oh1o Ro ute SEWING MACHINE Repmrs !oer7 Phone {614) 6b7-6304
IIICe oil make~ 992 2284 Th e
Fobr1 c Shop
Pomeroy
VA FHA 30 yr ftnoncmg. also
Authom ed Smger Sales and
reflnonctng Ireland Mo rtga ge,
Service We sh arpen Sc•nor s
77 E Slote A thens. phone (614)
592 3051
EXCA VATIN G dozer loader ond
1NtCE .HOME m rurcl qreo wtlh 26
backhoe work dump trucks
and Ia boy s fo r rur e Will houl
o:res New alum inum s1d1ng,
Hit d1rl to SOli, l1m estone ond
complete ly msula ted ond
gro vel Cal l Bob or Roger JetStorm wlf1dows
remodeled
fen day ph one 992-7089, n1gh f
Lorge carpeted l1v 1ng room ond
phon e q&lt;n -3525 or 992 5232
bath Co ll985-411 1 or 992 5621
RUSTIC HILLS, SyraCuse . N1ce
three bedroom home , lolol
eleclr1c carpeted w1th carport
and o!f cond•llonmg, Phone
992 53.48

by Henri Arnold and Bob L&amp;e

Unscramble these lour Jumbles,
one leMer lo ea ch square, to form
lour ord1nary words

•
•

2-24tf&lt;

3 AND 4 RM furn1shed ond un
furn1shed op ts Phone 992
543.4

.!!.!!:!JB7__

1}j1jlN} ~11

r!;!J \!!} ~~ ~

OC),61R~

HURRY!
L1m1ted Supply
3 16 1 mo

Service,
,,_,.._

HOMESt TES lor sole 1 acre and
up M1ddlepor1 near Rutland
Co11992-748 1

12 x bO MOBILE HOME
preo Phone 992 5858

7 0()-(ross W1ts 3, 4; Liars Club 6; Pep Goes The
Country 8, News J(] , To Tell The Truth 13,

I HAVE GOOD

-·

NBC N ews 3 4, IS , ABC News 13 : Carol Burne1t &amp;

Fr~ends 6, CB S New s 8. 10, Over East 20 .

Sate Pnceel Now
Thru April 20th

2-161 mo

.... ,Of'

6·00-News 3,4,8 ,10, 13. 15, ABC ews 6, Zoom 20.

OIIN6EROVS CRIMINIU.S:

BOLEN MULCHERS

ECONOMY TRA CTOR w1 th all aT
tochme nt s l1ke new ask1ng
$2250 Ph one (614) 698 3290

- -- ---- ----

OF THE WORLP"S M05r

6 30

6TAR5! II AND

17FT Coochman Camper Sleeps
6 Sell c ont~~~~ 992 ~ ~ _

APT
FOR
renT
Renlo l s
osst!&gt;Sionce rate s for Semor
Ci tiZens Con to ct Vi llage Manor

CROOK5 ·- HEADED 6'/ ONE

OF AMULI'T·· OR IDENTIFICATIOIV
GIMMICK.. CAAAIED ~~~ EVERY
MEM~fi&lt;: OF A CERTAit.J GAIJ6!

BORN LOSER

&amp;

Anniwersaries
Spetill Ocwions

Mister

Emergency One 13, Petticoat Junction 15
5 30---News 6 . Elec Co . 20.33, Mary Tvler Moore 10.
Hogan ' sHeroes IS

I~TERIJATIONAL

""'

WILKINSON

Plssports

ARIN6 OF

I'LL MY I HAVE ... IT'S A SOKT

_, ,

Small Engine
Sales &amp; Service

WALLPAPER.
PAINT &amp; SUPPLIES

ACE HARDWARE

-·--·
~

8A.M.to4 ,30P.M.
IALES AND SERVICE
11 ·9-lfc

Mary Tyler Moore 13

Rogers' t&gt;felghborhaao 20,33, Hogon's Heroes 10,

AT THE FEDE~AL e&gt;UREAU OF
CRIMINAL INVESTII&gt;AT!Ot.J .. ,

300 Matn St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Pomerov 992·62.82
or 992-6263

Weddinp
hrtraits

8. 10;

S:QO-Bonanta 3; Star Trek _. , Gunsmoke 8,

CAPTAIN EASY

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

THE PHOTO PLACE

4 · Jo-Uttle Rascals J, 15, Gllllglln ' s h 4; Brlldy Bunch

"

CARTER
-

Sons4. For Ri cher , For Poorer 15, Gtlllgan's Is 8,

Sesame St. 20,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10

~

10·30·C

Muffler
Brakes
Shocks - Tires
Battery.
Installation Service
Pomeroy, 0.
Ph . 992-2908
3·15-lfc

3 JQ-AII In The Femlly 8, 10, Consumer Sundval Kit
20
• DO-Mooter Cartoon 3, Edge ol Night 13, My Three

.'

Chester, Ohio

UJ-1 mo.

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
AI

2 10-11&lt;

1976 MONTE CAR LO l 1ke new
1tlS1de and out 4 new slee t
belr ed rod1als loaded Cru1st'!
conTrol pow er lock s 01r AM
FM Top e rea r w1ndow defog
ger Phone 949 2480 after 3 30

Bo x J•

1111 TIM loliiiM

Rooting
Remodeling
Room AdditiOns

STAR Kemu;,l Boordmg
Indoor an d outd oor runs
G100101ng oil b reed~ Clean
son11o r y lo cdi hes Chesh1r~
Ph Qne (6 14) 367 0292

1971 FORD TORINO GT $800
992 32 19

992-2206 01992-7&amp;30

3-3-11&lt;

•

Jack's Septic
Tank Selvice

AI

the Father" 6~ 13, Columbo 8; ABC News 33; Movie
" Seconds" IC.
12.oo-Janak l 33, h OO--Tomorrow 4. : 1 05- Kolak 8,
1· H)-- News 13

Gelding light A.. IO
3 00-Another World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6, 13 ;
Lo)l as Yoga &amp; Vou 20

...'

Phone 995-3806

Phone Mlkt Y01n1

Fret Estimates

~ I S ING

1973 El CAMINO Esta te truck
Aul omOri C p S P 8 AM FM
rod1o 01r shock s 742 2320

.!!"•
34 ' - · .o.
woptl• UpiiOISiffJ

2t,'1t7t
2 oo-Qne Life Ill""Live 6.13; 2· 31l-Do&lt;lors 3,A,IS .

•

Resident i al
•nd
commercial.
Call
tor
estimate, 24 hour servic_e,
Anyd1y , a nytlme.

Carpeting

lAVENDER ·
CONSTRUCTION
SyncuH, Ohio

•

-- •''

,SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

Stl ~
.
Slum Extraction

- S.ve Fuel• MoMY-;-

-------------- NEED A WATER

"

•

Business Services and Attics

!'~s~ ~ tddl eport

TELEJ(]SION
VIEWING
TUESDA~RCH

~·

WUited to Buy

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

"

Gllllgon 's Is IS; All tn The Fomlly 8, 10, Rudolf
Serkln M11$ler Muslclen 10.33.
9·»-Soop 6; Mary Tyler Moore 13
10 DO-NBC Reporls 3.4.15, Htvlng Babies 6,13; CBS '
On The Air 8, tO; Spoleto U S A_33. News 20 .
10 3~Biack Perspective On The News 20: 11 DONews 3,, ,6,8, 10, 13,15; Dick CovoiiiO, Over Easy 33.
It .31l-Johnny Corson 3,4,15; Movie "Qulller : Night ot

1

SMALL TYPE Pekmgese mixed '
pup! 8 week$ old, curly toils '
cute 992-7673 .
'

TODAI{ WE SHOULD
REVIEW WHAT lliE "'w"""'
ABOUT FIRST-AID

ALL RIGHT BUT LET'S
SA'{ 'IOU~ MOTHER
COULDN'T HEAR 'lOLl .•.

UH -· WHAR DID
WE LEAVE

\fO'RE A
BALD-FACE
LIAR!!

�.
a- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, March 28, 1978

New construCtion contract awaits approval

Cost of living up 0.6 percent in February
By JAMES HILDRETII
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Soaring food costs boosted
the cost of living by 0.6
percent in February, the
government said today,
confirming that inflation is
escalating at a steady poce.
The February increase which comes to 7.2 percent
when figured on an annual
rate - was not as bad as
January's 0.8 percent rise out .
was still higher than any
other month since last May,
according to the Labor
Department's Consumer
Price Index.
Food, particularly meat

advisers, notably Treasury
Secretary Michael
Blumenthal, to demonstrate
that the administration is
seriaus
about
taming
inflati011 .

program to try to persuade
business and labor to
moderate wage and price
demands . That effort has

as prescriptions and nonprescription drugs and
supplies increased 0.8
percent last month, slightly
been staUed, howev~r, as more than in January.
Carter spent considerable
Cllarges for professional
Carter announced in time 011 other issues such as services also rose 0.8 percent
January a mild anti~nflation the coal strike and the Middle and charges for hospital and
East.
other medical care services
Meanwhile, Carter forces went up 1.3 percent.
have done little to combat
The February rise in tranexpensive new programs like sportation
costs
was
the farm bill on Capitol primarily due to increases for
Hill.
new and used cars, the
The Labor Department department said. New car
said medical care and costs rose 0.7 percent and the
transportation co.sts rose used car index soared 2.1
almost as fast as food costs. percent.
In the medica l sector ,
Gasoline prices declined
and beverages, was the main
prices of commodities such slightly from January.
SAN DIEGO (UP!) - A
culprit in February, rising 1.2
In the housin~ field ,
•
percent in cost, the same Navy jet fighter , describ!ld as
advance as the previous "in trouble" on a landing
(Continued from page 1)
month, the department said. approach, crashed into a
Medical
care
and busy freeway Monday, killing
A union spokesman said the
transportation costs also one crewman and seriously new contract - which still
injllring the pilot.
posted increases.
must win approval of the
But the only consequences union's bargaining council
The department said
grocery costs increased 1.3 to motorists were slight and ratification by the rank
percent, r.estaurant prices injuries to two occupants of a and file - offers construction By MARTIN P. HOUSEMAN
went up 1.0 percent and passing pickup truck, which men an inunediate $1.40 per
CARACAS, Venezuela
alcoholic beverages was destroyed in a rolling hour raise and 30 cents an (UP!) - President Carter's
crash, and damage to a car hour in the second year of the visit to democratic, oil-rich
advanced 0.8 percent.
hit by flying debris.
Beef prices shot up U
pact.
Venezuela today is focusing
The Navy said both
percent, compared with inConstruction workers, the on petroleum prices, the
creases of about 2 percent in crewmen ejected.from the F- people who build the mine Panama Canal treaties and
each of the three proceeding 14 Tomcat at a low level hen it shafts and tunnels for miners, human rights.
months, the department was only about 200feet east of negotiate separately for their
Carter is visiting Venezuela
the runway at Miramar contract, and had not agreed for 22 hequent critic of U.S.
said.
Pork and poultry prices Naval Air Station, and the to a new contract wh~n trade policies and U.S.-based
plowed
across miners approved a new pact multinational companies, but
also -Bhowed large incre8lles plane
in February, 2.6 percent and Interstate 15, scattering Friday.
a J&gt;l'rsonal friend of Carter's
wreckage, and burst into
1.6 percent, respectively.
Their picket lines hobbled a after two previous meetings.
full,scaie return to the pits
In a companion report, the flames .·
Perez, one of only two
"My body is awfully, Monday by the UMW's democratically elected presidepartment said
real
earnings for the nation 's awfully sore, but we were so 160,000 miners, turning dents in South America, also
workers feU 0.2 percent from lucky I just can't get over it," thousands of them away and is a staWlch hwnan rights ad~
January's seasonally said Kai Musurlian, 41 , who costing them a promised $100 vocate, like Carter.
was in the pickup truck with s how·up bonus .in seven
adjUS\ed level.
Spokesmen for both sides
President Carter has been Jim Roder. They escaped states. Most of tile miners say ·:energy policies" will he
were back on the job today high on the agenda, with
under pressure in recent with bruises and cuts.
uwe saw one of the wings ami coal operators said carter urging a continuation
weeks from several of his top
hit the highway. I told Jim w pfoduction should he back to of the petroleum price freeze
speed up, get around it, but normal in less than a month. beyond June of this year.
we knew we were goi,ng to hit
·John
Guzek,
chief
it ... the truck rolled over God negotiator for the UMW, said
knows how many times and he will ask his men to drop
when we stopped we wer~ their picket lines until a
The Pomeroy. Yolunteer pushed up against the center decision Is made on the new
Fire Department will stage a divlder. ''
contract.
They kicked out the truck
pancake supper from 4 to 7
An earlier plea that they
p.m. Saturday at the fire windows, Musurlian said, and stay away from the mines
station on Butternut Ave. ran about 100 yards before and allow returning miners to
Tickets will be $2 for adults stopping to look back at the receive badly needed first- ~
and ~1.25 for children under mass of flaming wreckage. day bonuses was ignored in
COLUMBUS (UP!) U. Wait Laskowski, 25, widely scattered . areas.
12.
Republicans
are conceding
Cleveland,
Ohio,
the
plane's
The menu will include
Constru c tion workers .
only
three
of
the 99 Ohio
pancake, bacon or sa usage radar inte'rcept officer, was reportedly were angry at
House
seats
in
this year's
and coffee or milk. A bake killed. The pilot, U. Brian · miners for going on strike
election,
a
marked
sale will be held in con- Shaw, 25, Garden Grove, Dec. when the construction
·
improvement
over
their
junction with the pancake N.Y., was reported in critiCal contract still had a month to
efforts
in
1976.
supper. Proceeds will go to condition at Balboa Naval run, and for returning before
The GOP organization was
Hospital.
the building fund .
a new construction contract
criticized
two years ago when
could be negotiated.
10
Democratic
incumbents,
"They let us down very mainly in Cleveland
and
!&gt;adly," said West Virginia
Qther urban areas , were
construction local President given free rides.
leonard ''Red" Cox.
(Continued from page 1)
With the expiration last
He threatened massive
work," Miller informed the 34-year-&lt;Jid Fortney. Contacted
week
of the deadline for filing
Monday, the secretary said ~e intended to discuss the matter picketing of Wednesday '&gt; petitions of candidscy, only
midnight shift to remind the House · Speaker Vernal G.
with the UMW chieftain because "he hasn't said a word."
miners of a promise made at
Riffe Jr ., D-New Boston, and
CAPE CANAVERAL, FLA. - THE AIR FORCE has a 1976 Cincinnati convention Democratic Reps. Le&lt;Jnard J .
abandoned the hunt for debris from the twin military to stay off the job until Camera of Lorain and
communications satellites that had to he blown apart when construction workers had a Thomas J. Carney of
new agreement .
they failed w achieve orbit Saturday.
·
Guzek, however , said Boardman were left without
The Triple 7 satellite launch was only eight minutes old
opposition .
when the bOOster began slowing down and the trajectory Monday he thought he could
In additio~, Republicans
deteriorating. The range safety officer punched the destruct persuade his men to retire fielded no party candidate in
from the picket line.
button :
the Eighth District in
"H we get to a tentative Cuyahoga County, but will be
agreement, I think that backing an independent in the
they'll withdraw," Guzek·fall.
said shortly before the
Republicans will be trying
agreement was reached.
to ·cut into tlie 62-37
"We're sort of disappointed Democratic advantage in the
in the construction workers House this year. Absence of
puiling out the coal miners," even a token opponent in a
he said. "Due to the pickets, district spares the incumbent
they were deprived of getting
party's time, manpower and
the $100. I'm ju•t sorry they
money for other contests.
pulled them out at that time." . . House Democrats have
Coal operators said the 111- filed in all but one district day strike did little damage the 64th represented hy Rep.
to the nation.
"All the prophets of gloom W. Bennett Rose, R-Lima.
Six Democratic Hous.e
and doom were shown they
.members are not seeking rewere wrong," said Carl election Utis year, including
Bagge, president of the floe retiring dean of the House
National C&lt;lal Association. - Rl!p. A.G. Lanciooe, D"The fact is that this strike
did not have as drastic an Bellaire. Six Democrats have
filed for Lancione's 99th
effect as U~e oil embargo or
House District seat, including
the gas shortage.
the topheavy favorite, fanner
"OUr plans are to go back
U.S. Rep : Wayne L. HBys of
and resume (production) as Belmont.
quick as we can. I think it
Another seven Republicans
That's what I like about Name Bank.
ought to he back up to normal
are giving up their seats,
in less than a month .''
Every tim e I go on there I get lots of
special attention If I've got a loan
problem. for example . Or a money
management problem . I like being on
the receiving end of the care once in a
whole!

Fighter
crashes
Monday

Tentative •••

Pancake sale
set Saturday

residential rents increased
0.4 J&gt;l'rcent last month and
home ownership costs
climbed 0.7 percent, both less
than in January. Prices of
home furnishing s rose
moderately for the second
straight month .
The only overall decline
was in Ute apparel category,
the department said. Prices
for alltypes of clothing fell 1.0
percent.
Entertainment costs rose
0.7 percent , up from
January's · 0.5 percent rise .
In the volatile food eost
sector, cereal and ba~~ry
products, dairy products,
sugar and sweets, salad and
cooking oils and processed

federal employee wage hikes.
Miller, for one, has urged
Carter to, impose import fees
on foreign oil If Coogress does
not complete acti011 on an
energy program within the
next month.
However. other Carter ad,
visers . such as domestic

fruits and vegetables also
climbed last month .
Prices for eggs were unchanged and prices for fresh
fruits and vegetables, fish
and coffee went down .
Carter and many of his
advisers
now
clearly
recognize that inflation is not
just a large headache but
threatens their overall
growth targets for 1978.
Treasury Secretary
Michael Blumenthal, O!arles
Schultze, Carter's chief
economic adviser
and
Federal Reserve Olairman
G. William Miller have been
urging Ute president to take
some concrete anti.jnflation
steps - such as restraining

---------------------------1
! Area Deaths !
I

BERNICE RANDOLPH
REEDSVILLE - Mrs.
Bernice (Vema) M. Randolph, 69, Route I, Reedsville,
died Monday at the CamdenQark Hospital in Parkersborg following an extended
illness.
Mrs. Randolph was born at
Reedsville, a daughter of the
late David and Sarah Rood.
She wsa .a member of the
Eden United Brethren
CllurCh at Reedsville and the
Women's
Missionary
Association of the church.
A lifelong resident of Meigs
County, Mrs. Randolph is
survived by a son, Russell
Randolph,
Athens;
a
daughter, Mrs. Carl (Roxie)
Ford, Hockingport; three

Oil, human rights, canal
topics of Carter's visit
' Perez has already stated
publicly what his rejoinder
will be: he would favor even a
reduction in oil prices if
parity could be established
between what the developing
nations have to pay for
manufactured goods and
wha( they receive for their
raw materials.
Perez, a leading advocate
of Third World positions,
argued this position at the
,North-South· talks in Paris
last year, which ended will&gt;
no progress on resolvihg the
differences between poor and
rich nations,
Perez praised the Carter
administration for
an
important U.S. concession
during the North-South talks:
agreement to establish a fund
to help stabilize prices of
commodities like copper,

affairs adviser Stuart
Eizenstat, wlll'll that new and
stringent antlinflation efforts
may pose political problems.
Carter
has
delayed
announcing any action at all
until after he returns April 3
from his trip to Africa and
South America.

I

coffee and tin .
But Perez feels it is time for
further concessions from the
industriallzed nations in
quest of the elusive new world
economic order, namely the
pegging of raw products
prices
to
prices
of
manufactured and capital
goods.
Perez also fears the U.S.
Senate will amend the
Panama Canal treaties to
allow for armed Intervention
after l'anama takes contr.oi
of the strategic waterway.
A joint communique
expected Wednesday will
likely focus on human rights,
but he hind the scenes Perez is
almost certain to press
Carter for a firmer stand
against the Nicaraguan
regime
of
strongman
Anastasio Svmoza.

sisters,
Mrs.
Mamie
Buchanan, Tuppers Plains;
Mrs . Martha Buchanan,
Hockingport, and Miss Lucy
Rood, Reedsville; a brother,
Ernest Rood, Reedsville, her
mother-in-law, Mrs. Nettie
Randolph, Tuppers Plains
and three ·grandchildren.
Mrs.
Randolph
was
preceded in death by her
husband, Clyde, in 1972, along
with three daughters, three
brothers and a sister.
Funeral services will be
held at 2 p.m. Thursday at the
White Funeral ;Home in Coolville with the Rev. Roy
Deeter officiating. Burial will
be in Eden Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home any time after I
p.m. Wednesday.

EXTENDED FORECAST
Friday through Sunday,
warm and a ~hance of
showers t,Mit day, with
blgbs rangllfl!'from the mid
60s to lbe mid 70s. Lows
wlU be in the upper 30. or
lower 60s early Friday and
in the upper 60s or lower
50s Saturday a ad Sunday.
:;:::;:; :;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::;:;~:~:;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:

HOSPITAL
NEWS
(Birth, March26)
Holzer Medical Center

Mr. and Mrs. Edward
(Discharges, March 24)
Hans Bald, Teriey Clagg, Shepherd, a son, Ewington.
(Discharges, March 27)
Debra Oonch, Merle Cole,
Tonya Blair, Mrs. Harold
Mary Deverick, June Dillon,
Charlotte Evans, Bertha Brinker and daughter, PeMy
Hatfield , Clifford Helm, Bush, Hulda Caudill, Paul
Nellie Henderson, Ada Cook, Grace Hughes, Carrie
Hoffman, Evelyn Hughes, Marr, Bernard Myers, Rita
Vickie Johnson, Theodore Pickens, Charles Rawson,
Langhorne, Edward Lillico, Arthur
Reed,
Althea
Bertha Litchfield, Mrs. John Ridenour, Stephen Shields Jr.
(Births, March %7)
Manuel and daughter, Lois
Mr. and "Mrs. Lawrence
Martin, Maxine Maynard,
Edward Michael Sr., Leslie Johnston,&amp; son, Minersville.
Miller, O!arles Moore, Linda Mr. and Mrs. John Waugh, a
Myers, James Napier, Anna daughter, Jackson.
Partlow, Darrell Roberts,
PLEASANT VALLEY
Earl Rottgen, Max Russell,
DISCHARGED -" Ted
. Stoma Saunders, Charlotte
Nance, Glenwood ; Mrs.
Smith, Wendell Thomas,
William Terry, Oak Hill;
Regina Wright.
Charles Kinnaird, ·Apple
(Births, March 24)
Grove; Gregg . Casto, ·point
Mr . and Mrs. Harold Pleasant; Mrs. Richard
Brinker,
a
daughter,
Holley, Point Pleasant ;
including the two top leaders.
Senate Democrats, who
Pomeroy.
Lester
Leonard, · Point
They are House Minority hold a 21-12 advantage, have
(Discharges, March %5)
Pleasant;
Mrs. Dixie McLeader O!arles F. Kurfess of filed a full ~date of candidates
Joann Barlow, Sharon
Bowling Green , who is for the 17 seats up lor election Bentz, Giajlys Byerly, Frank Cauley, Mason; Florence
running for governor, and this year. Republicans are Ueland, Leroy Davis, Mary Kinder, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Miller,
Point
assistant floor leader Rep. not contesting the seats held Deer, Pauline Foster, Karla Harry
Norman A. Murdock of by Democratic Sens. Wolliam Gibbs, Phyllis Harris, Pieasant; Mrs. Linford
Cincinnati, who is running for F. Bowen of Cincinnati and Adrienne Hubbard, Mrs. · Sisson, Southside; Mrs .
H a m i Ito n
Denver ' Rollins,
West
o o u n t y Charles L. Butts of
Hobert Lowe and daughter,
Columbia;
Therili
Randolph
commissioner. ·
Cleveland.
Beatrice May, Allen Ross,
Jr., Racine; Joe Slagle,
Earl Sheets, Le&lt;Jta ' Sheets,
Letten of opiDion are welcomed. They should be 1 Jason Stanley, Wilma Un- Rockwell; N. C.; Mrs. Steven
less Ulan 300words long (or be subject to reduction by 1 derwood, Patricia Van Durbin and son, Point
the editor) aDd must be signed with the signee's ad- I Sickle, John Weeks, Mrs. Pleasant; Mrs. Larry Lanier,
Mrs. Edna
dress. Names may be withheld upon publication. I Thomas Whitehair and son, Southside;
Point
Pleasant;
Mattox,
However, on request, names will be dJsclosed. Letten
Mrs . Loren Wilbur and
George
Lanier,
Southside;
should be in good taste, addressing Issues, nO\ per- I' daughter, Terry Wilcoxen ,
Mrs.
Joe
Paugh,
Point
sonalllies.
1 Michelle Williams , Torres
Pleasant;
Mrs.
Kenneth
\ Williamson.
Kuhgn
and
daughter,
· (Births, March25)
I
Gallipolis;
Mrs.
Franklin
I
Mr . and Mrs. Ronald
Gleason,
Point
Pleasant;
I Clonch, a son, Pomeroy. Mr.
I and Mrs . Allen Lee, a James Baisden Jr., Henderson .
I
I (laughter, Pt. Pleasant.
(Discharges, March 26)
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mary Adkins, Wendy
March 23, 1978 dsted March 13, 1978 and
Mae
ADMITTED
"U.M.W. Leaders to Meet Barker, Josh,u a Bright, Brewer, Racine; Kethel,
Dear .Editor:
I wish to express my thanks Sunday in Dilles Bottom" James Broyles, .E rma Hatfield, Dexter; Wanda
to you for all you have done dated March .17, 1978. Both of Canter, Wanda Marchi, Adams, Pomeroy ; John
for us in giving space for· the these articles were on the top Bessie Merritt, Sherry Duerr, Pomeroy; Enunogene
advertising of our revivals, of Ute front page of "The Myers, Patricia Payne, .Norton, Pomeroy. ·
and other items. I Qppreciate Daily Sentinel". God's name Randall Simmons, Frances
DISCHARGED - Edward
was openly spelled out being Wedge, Jonathan Wilkins , Wood, Veietta Rowe, HBttie
this very much.
taken in vain which is against Erma Wilson, Linda Wooten. Armes.
I would appreciate your
consideration of a request the law of God. We realize
considering news that these articles did not
reaches you where profanity, originate in the local office of
etc. is included. If you would the Daily Sentinel but we are
strike that part out I know protesting such being printed
many would he glad. Thanks in the local newspaper which
so very much for considering we and our children read. We,
this request. May God bless as O!ristians, in a O!ristian
country would like .to ask
·you!!
your cooperation to help us
Sincerely,
keep all smut and profanity
Uoyd D. Grimm, Jr., Pastor
from public view. We like The
Daily Sentinel and Wish it to
March 24, 1978 be a newspaper that we need
not be ashamed for our
Dear Sir:
I am writing concerning the family to read.
We, as a Church body and
news articles entitled "Ohio
Miners Remain Off Job" as a member of the Meigs
Area Holiness Association,
thank you in advance for your
cooperation.
I remain an interested
RESCHEDULED
reader of The Daily Sentinel,
. ' . •,
CHESTER - An Easter
Rev. Dale T. Bass
' '•,
Egg Hunt for children of
Pastor: O!urch of the
Chester only scheduled for
Nazarene, Box86
Sunday but postponed due to
Syracuse, Ohio 45779
the weather, has been
rescheduled for 6:30 p.m.
Wednesday at the Chester
DOES NOT INCLUDE
fire house. The event is
FORE
IGN FILM
HOSPITALIZED
sponsored by the fire
The Pomeroy Emergency
departlhent and its auxiliary.
There will he a gold egg Squad answered a call to
worth $10, A silver egg worth Route 248 near Keno at !1:17
p.m. Tuesday for Kathy
$5, and other prizes.
Spencer, who was having
difficulty breathing. She !l'as
LIPHTS BACK ON
taken to Holzer Medical
The street lights in Center.
Pomeroy and Middleport will
he turned on within the week
according to Wendell Hoover
CLOTHING DAY
of the Columbus and Soutltem
The Salvation Army,
OFFER EXPIRES APRIL 8TH
Ohio Electric Company.
Butternut Ave. , Pomeroy,
Th•
Columbus
and will hold free clothing day
Soutnern Ohio Electric from 10 a.m. untll noon
c.impany Monday reported a Thursday. All area residents
39-day supply of coal and Ute in need of clothing are
return of normal operations. welcome.

Marijq.ana
'
case
goes
to jury
A petit jury went into
deliberation doncludlng a day
and a half trial in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
this morning.
The defendant, Delbert
Fridley, was on trial for
possession for sale of
marijuana valued at approximately $60.
Attorney lot the defendant
w,as Chuck Knight while
Prosecuting Attorney Rick
Crow represented Ute state.
Jurors are Guy Harper,
Dorsel Larkins, William H.
King, Kathy S. Hood, Dorothy
Cray, Mildred Brown, Arthur
Eblin, Robert Tripp, Ray
Pullins, Janice Lawson,
·Grace
Pratt,
Everett
Calaw*y and Iris A. ·Paype,
alternate.

News •• in Briefs

Intensive Care ...

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:::·

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

'

.

Fifti&gt;en Ct•nts

Vol.

~K. No . ~42

•

Quickel reviews plans
.

Plans for the annual Big
Bend Regatta slated June 23,
24 and 25 were outlined at
Tuesday's luncheon meeting
of the Pomeroy O!amber of
Commerce at the Meigs Inn.
Bill Quickel, chairman of
the event, outlined various
plans regarding the Regatta,
but pointed out he would like
everyone's assistance .
Quickel said it was definite
the P. A. Denny excursion
boat would be in Pomeroy on
Friday evening and all day
Saturday for the Regatta. It
will cost the chamber $2,500.
Quickel felt the chamber
rouid make approximately
$2,000 profit by having the

boat here. He suggested rides
for senior cotizens, children ··
and the general public.
Quickel also noted a dance
could he held on the boat.
He also reported Kyle Allen
has tickets to sell for boat
rides, the tickets being
provided by P. A. Denny.
Quickel also observed that
thus far no theme has been
selected. He asked members
wsuggestathemeatthenext
meeting. .
Quickel announced Jim
Frecker will again be
chairman of the parade that
will be held on Friday, June
23. A talent show will be held
on Thursday night June 22.

.

Local organizations or
individuals are being invited
to have concession stands
with Pa ul Simon, voce
pres ident
having
applicatoons. Bill Grueser will
he in charge of the rides and
has
signed
Nolan
Amusements.
The Gallipolis Ski Club will
perform. There will be power
boat races on Sunday. The ·
boats fo r the races will be
launched from the Mason
levee. Bill Mayer will make
signs
advertising
th e
Regatta.
Quickel added he hopes to
expand the parade this year
with more floats and more

trophies.
He also said a sponsor is
needed for the " big wheel"
race for the four and five·
year olds.
Fred Crow, presid ent,
aMounced the chamber now
has 71 members. He introduced Mark McCoy and
Fred Hat well as new
member s, who wiJl be
opening.the Elliott Appliance
Shop at 220 E. Main Street.
They will sell major appiiances and it will also be a
specia lity store providing top
quality service . Dr. Harold
Brown is also a new member
of the chamber.
(Continued on page 16)

Fire department project okeyed . .
A project by the Middleport
fire department possibly
leading to the reduction of
insurance rates for Middleport business houses was
endorsed Tuesday night when
the Middleport . Chamber of
Commerce met at the Meigs
Inn.
On hand to present details
of the program were Wayne
Davis and Kevin Dailey both
fire fighters. They explained
that through the project,
carried out cooperatively between department members
and business owners, each
establishment would be

.I!News. • ..in Brief~\

l

ELBERFELD$

enttne

visited by fire department
representatives. A sketch of
e'ach business buildings
would he made noting layout
of the building, location of
stairways, materials used at
various locations, type of
roofing and other pertinent
· information.
These sketches would he
filed by the department for
use in fighting any fires in the
business section, Davis and
Dailey pointed out.
During the meeting,
· presided over by Edison
Baker in the absence of the
president George Ingels,

plans were made for haVIng a
speaker at the April meeting.
The group also discussed at
length, plans for a sprong
cleanup in the business
section and expressed hope
that · a plan tan be impiemented decreasing the
amount of litter in the village
of Middleport. The chamber
commended the Middleport
village administration and

workers for the JOb beong
done in cleaning up the town
this spring after a hard
winter.
.
Attending the meetong were
Davis, Dailey, Mr . and Mrs .
Edison Baker, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert King, Mr. and Mrs.
Manning Kloes, Mr. and Mrs .
Don Wilson. Mrs . Earl
Davenport, and Mr. and Mrs.
Dick Owen.

.~.

United Presolnternalional
TOKYO - Japanese radicals campaigning to keep
Tokyo's new international airport from opening fire bombed a
nearby hotel today and the government threatened "drastic
measw-es" to curb the violence.
Prime Minister Takeo Fukuda ordered his government to
combat the spreading violence and political sources said _Utis
might include letting pollee carry guns lor the fll'St lime sonce
World War ll.

DERBY TROPHY WINNERS - The top three conle•tanlil in the M.Q -M Scouting
District Pinewood Derby, held Tuesday night al the Nutional Guard Armory nem· Puint
Pleasant, were presented trophies . Pictured in the foregrow od , from left, 11rc llucky
Johnson, Cub Scout Pack 253 of Mason, first place; Trey Casse ll, Puck 245 of Middiet&gt;lrl,
third place and Wyatt Akers, Pack 258 of Point Pleasan!, second pla c~. In the lm ckg~ound
are members of the derby committee, from left. M..C-M Daslncl Commassumer F runk
DiQemente District Cub Chairman Brian Billings and District Cub Commissioner Biii
Wise. The t;ophies were provided by the Point Pleusant Register, The Daily Sentinel nnd
Gallipolis Daily Tribune . In ail, 28 youths parlicipnted . SLoe Page 2 for additional photos.

I!~LO ·F ledges

·:::~=f.'f.~':!-:~"J:.::-:::::~::::~::;:::;;;~~8:8::~::::::::::::::::::~::8:.~::::::~::!!::~::::::::::::=:::::::=:::::::~:::

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

the miners.
But at least one construction unton leader said that wasn't
enough.
.
" We "'ant an increase of at least $1 .80 an hour each year of
·the three-year contract, " said Bryan Monk, of West Frankfort ,
Dl. " And we want a better medical system than tbe coal
miners got."
Construction worker picketing hit hard in illinois, where an
estimated 12, 000 of the state's l$,000 miners were idled.
Scattershot picketing also kept operations at a standstill in
western Kentucky and at several mines in Pennsylvania .
All Ohio mines were back in operation early today, however,
after construction workers lifted picket lines maintained
Monday and Tu!'Sdi•Y at one opeo·ation near Clarington.

•

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, March 29, 1978

GOP conceding only
three seats in '78

a:

The 14,000 UMW members who build mine shafts and other
was ratified or rejected . The plea was ignored by many and it
coal
operation facilities were angry that Ute miners drew fire from Peter Gordy, an Illinois construction local
financially
haltered in their winter-long strike - returned to
president.
"That kind of talk is dividing the miners and the mine the pits before a construction contract could he forged . Their
picket tines denied many of the miners $100 first.Coy show-up
coostruction workers,' ' he said.
_
Joseph Bonello, preSident of the Western Pen.~ylvania Coal bonuses.
"They may be hungry, but we're awful holngry too." said
Operators Association, agreed Utere was a diV!soon, but he
blamed it 011 the pickets.
. Leonard "Red " Cox, who heads a 1,500-member construction
"The construction workers are going to vote on thetr workers local at Marmet, W.Va. "We don 't know yet whether
tentative contraet Sunday, so why keep the miners out now?" we're going to accept this contract,"
The proposed pact is similar to one ratified last Friday by
he asked. "It's foolish for them to go out and pocket now ...
·
the
UMW 's 160,000 miners . It provides construction workers
Mmeone is not using his conunon sense .,. there's going to be
animosity between those trying to work and those out there on with a pay increase of $2.40 an hour over Ute next three yenrs
and gives them the same hea lth benefits as those accepted by
the picket lines."

By DNNB1H R'. CLARJ[
Ualled Pnu llllenlatl.al
A new cootract - this time for UMW mine construction
wockera - lay before the union's bargaininc c:Guncil In
Wubington today, pending c:Guncii approval and a weekend
ratification vote by the la!!t coal field rank and file still on
strike.
In theory, the coal strike was over . But in practice, It was
very much in •vidence Tueaday at mines throughout tbe
Midwest where returning miners refwoed to croaa picket lines
thrown up by construction workers who defied their leaders
and re~ to withdraw.
John Guzek, chief negotiator for the ,UMW, asked his
members to stay off the picket Une until the contrart either

Professor
says plants
'unplanned'

MORGANTOWN,
W.Va.
(UP!) - Taken alone, the
GRE9 BECKER
K.EVIN KING
WASHINGTON - TEN WESTERN STATES are being power plants that abound in
studied hy Ute Air Force as potential sites for an MX · the Ohio River basin
intercontinental ballistic missile system, too Pentagon has probably are harmless.
announced.
.
Collectively, there could be
Governors and cmlgressional delegations from Utah, regional problems, warns
Nevada, Californ,ia, ;vizoria, New Mexico, Texas, Oklahoma, Vincent P. Cardi,_a professor
KanSas, Nebraska and Colorado have been sent letters of law and one of two West
Two Meigs High Schoo l where he serves as president
informing them the Air Force is screen!"g parts ot those s.tates Virginia University faculty
. as posaible sites fo~ the mobile missiles, Pentagon offocials members serving on a 13- juniors - Greg Becker and ol the youth group .
Kevin King - have been
Becker os enrolled in the
said Tuesday.
member study panel.
"After a year of study, selected to · attend Buckeye scientific course at Meigs
in
June High SchooL He plays fool:
HOLLYWOOD -THEY'RE GOING TO MAKE A movie of we're now concerned that, Boys State
representing
Middleport's
liall, basketball and baseball
"Star Trek," with all the actors who were int he original fromaregionalpointofview,
·Post
128,
a
nd r eceive d honorable
Feeney-Bennett
television series.
•
power plants are largely'
mention
on
the
all
Paramount Studios announced Tuesday it will spend fl5 ·unplanned," Cardi said . American Legion.
Becker is the son of Mr. and Southeastern Ohio Athletic
mUiion on the film and has lined up ali the lop stars of the "When they 're studied
television series, including William Shatner to play Capt. . individually, the planning Mr s. Don Becker, Mid- League football and basketJames Kirk and Leonard Nimoy to appear as the emotionless, data may indicate no major dleport, and King is the son of hall teams. He is a member of
· Mr . and Mrs. William King, the varsity M. Club.
pointy-eared Vulcan, Mr. Spock, '
bad effects."
,
Both King and Becker are ·
The new movie will include the set of the UUS Enterprise
Cardi's group is conducting Bradbury.
King
is
vice
president
of
the
honor
students. King holds a
_ after which the American space shuttle was named - is the Ohio River Basin Energy
Meigs
High
junior
class
and
four-point
ave rage a nd
being built on lour different sound stages,
Study to assess Ute
environmental, social and is enrolled in the academic . Becker a 3.5 ..
COLUMBUS - GOY. JAMES A. RHODES announced economic impacts of basin co·urse. He is a member of the Alternates named were
. marching and jazz bands, the Brent Bolin, son of Mr. and
today he has approved spending f7.98 million in federal fllilds power plants.
.
to hire an estimated JO,OOOeconomically disadvantaged youths
Joining WVU are seven music club, and plays in the Mrs. Joe Bolin, Rutland, and
for jobs in 58 counites this summer.
other · universities in six ensemble. He was in the class Otris Veauger, son of Mr.
Administrative Services Director Richard D. Jackson said states. Congress authorized , play. King is a member of the and Mrs. Keith Yeauger, Rt.
young persons will work in parks, libraries, hospitals, local the study, the current phase Bradbury ·Church of O!rist 2, Cheshire.
govenunent offices and state agencies.
of which should be completed
The jobs will pay $2.65 an hour, will start June 5 and end in another two years.
Sept. 22.
·
The group believes that by
the year 2000, the Olilo River
requesting
Meigs
County
Com- mission
MAPUTO, MOZAMffiQUE - BLACK guerrillas of the basin will have one of the missioners Tuesday night assistance and guidance in
Patriotic Front today said they were fighting Rhodesian highest concentrations of agreed to contract the firm of obtaining funding for .a day
government troopa in one of the fiercest battles of the six-year pciwer plants in the world.
Easley, Lee, Vargo and care ~enter.
war againat Prime MiDister Ian Srnlth's white minority
Alluding to one potential Cassady of Marietta as
The commissioners stated
reglnie.
.
..
problem, Cardi said Illinois, architects for the con- they would check into funding
'f11e Patriotic Front said 600 guerrillas from Mozambique Indiana, and Ohio each might struction of a mental possibilities and inform the
had penetrated 40 miles into Rhodesia along the southeast locate five plants in the river retardation training center. group of their findings as
border. A spokesman said their advance was halted only by a area along their · southern
.
In other business com· soon as possible.
borders and Kentucky might missioners accepted the bid
The board approved the
flooded river.
The guerrillas also said they had opened another front on bulld six· or eight at its of Pomeroy Motor Company construction of a bridge on
Rhodeala's northeast border but did not give details of the northern border.
for a tandem dump truck in Rutland Township Road 174
"We
know
that
se"erai
the amount of $27,086 and the (Happy Hollow Road) as
Hf!ting.
times a year, for periods Dan Thompson Ford bid for a ·recommended by the county
WA&amp;HJNGTON- FOOD PRICES MAY RISE 8 percent in averaging two or more weeks 1978 pickup truck at a cost of engineer. Work is to he dorie
1978, up w double· the increase previously expected by the each, prevailing winds $4,69S.
by · force
account as
blowing up the Ohio Valley
government.
Commissioners, after t emergency work at an
Agriculture Department economists have been can
bring
massive receiving petitions from estimated cost of $24,788.
forecasting increases of 4 tO 6 percent, but said Tuesday retail concentrations of pollutants residents of T-174 in Salisbury
Mr . and Mrs. Walter
to the Wheeling-Pittsburgh Township, agreed to change . Green, Salem Township, met
foodpr!Ct!ll will average 6 w8 percent above 1977.
.
RillnrJiood prices conlrtbuted to the Increase in c011sumer area," he said.
· the name of Shotgun Hollow with commissioners
41
prices In February, witlt prices rising U percent for the month
Yet,
for
example, Road to Noble Summit Road. requesting the county replace
-far above the White House inflation target for the year.
planners at Paducah, Ky., or
Mary O'Brien, Becky a bridge culvert on T.:17 off
Evansville, Ind., would have Anderson, Donna Nease and SR 325 .
CARACAS, VENEZUELA - PRESIDENT CARTER little occasion to consider several other working , Comtriissioners stated they
responded today to the Third World clamor for a new that as an effect of siting a mothers met with the com- would have tlie highway
(COnllnued on page 16)
plani near those cities."
superintendent check the

.

Middleport Post names
boy state delegates

By NED TEMKO
BEIRUT, Lehanoo (UP!) .
- The Palestine Liberation
Organization says it woll do
aH it can to assure the
success of the U.N. peacekeeping mission in southern
Lebanon, but it stopped short
of endorsing a cease.fire wifrl
IsraeL
An estima ted 1,000 U.N.
troops ste pped up reconnais·
sance patrols in the region
today and Israel threatened
to take matters "into its own
hands" unless Palestinian
guerrillas hail their rocket
attacks on northern Jewish
towns.
· At the United Nations ,
. Secretary General ·Kurt
Waldheim said PLO leader
Yasser Arafat agreed to a
cease-fire in a meeting with
the commander of the peacekeeping force .
"I am most gmtified by
Mr .
Ararat's
pos lHve
response," Waldheim said.
But the PLO office in Beirut
did not confirm Waldheim 's
announcement and guerriiia
sources said any such assurance probably wwould he
conditional on progress in
removing Israeli troops from
t.Qe region .
Instead, the PW said, said
Arafat conveyed to Maj. Gen.
Emmanuel Erskine Tuesday
his movement's 1 'readiness W
give all necessary facilities to
ensure the success of the U.N.
force'~ task."

suppo.r t

The statement also sulci
Am fat was seeking nrrauge-

ment.s to "guarantee I sr·~~eli
withdrawal from south l.cbn non." Isra eli officials said
such a pullout dependeol ""
U.N. succ.css in purgmg the
area 'of guernlla influence.
In an apparent move for
increHsed U.N . presswc on
the Palestini a ns, Isr aeli

Defense Minister Ezcr
'Wetunan late Monday gave
guerrillas 46 hours to hail
rocket attacks on northern
Israeli settlements .
H the attacks persisted, he

soid, Israel would take
mutters '' into its own hands.''
DeHpite ~he confusion on
whether Atufat hud agreed to
observe 11 ti'Ute , a high U.N.
source in Beirut !Wi d, "The
atmO:iJ&gt;herc and tone of the
Arafut-Erskine
m~etlng
leads us to believe the
Puiestinians will try for the
immediate future to exercise
as mu ch r es traint ~s
possi bie."
" We arc confident the
major fighting is behind us/'
he sajd.

CQmmission employes architects
situation and report back to
the board.
James Jennings told the
commissioners a draft on the
Page Street project will be
completed by. the end of this
week.
It will then be subJTlitted to
the Ohio Department of
Transportation, (ODOT) ,
Mari,tta. ODOT will take 10
days to review the plans then
the county will hold a public
hearing .
Following that hearing, a
final draft will be sent to
ODOT in Columbus and from
there to Washington for final
approval. The project should
be under construction by the ·
end of the year or the first of
next year.
Attending were H~nry
Wells, Richard Jones and Jim
Roush, commissioners and
Mary Hobstetter, clerk.

Linda Eason as Ethel Toflelmier an.d: Raiuly
Marcellus Washburn strike a pose from
dance
number as they rehearse roles for "Music
bein8
presente&lt;l_friday and Saturday ~ighlil at the Meigs Htgh
Sehool Auditorium by the vocal music department. The
dance which also features Sj!veral oUter dancing couples
is done to "Shipoopi" sung by Roach. Curtain time Friday
is 7:30p.m. whUe the curtain time on Saturday is a p.m.
Direction ls hy Mrs. Paige Hunl and Laura Hoover Ill
student director . This marks the first time 'a Broadway
musical has been presented at Meigs High Sehool.

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