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·--12 - The DaUy Sentinel, Middlllport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Jan . 11 . 1978

Non-union miner killed by pistol

Whistle
· (ConUnued !run ll&amp;lt 1)
has' existed in the past few
days.
" I ~ is easy to be critical if
you do not Ita ve the
responsibility of providing
adequate electric service as ..

we do," Heller said.
;! Without adequate reserve
capa city, " Heller stated,
" many of our customers

would have been without
electririty yesterday. There
. would have been no choice ."

He praised Ohio Power
customers for helping the
co mpany overcome the

problems of yesterday.

operatloo which has been the
Ualted PressiDttruaUoDIII
A 25-year-old non-union frequent target of striking
miner was accidentally shot United Mine Workers pickets.
and· killed in western The truck was on mine
Kentucky early today when a property at the time of the
.:lkaliber pistol discharged accidental llhoollng.
.after falling off the
Hibbs ' death was the
dallhboard of a pickup truck second in the natloowide ·
\In : ~hich he and another UMW strike that began Dec. 6
I!Uner were riding.
and now affects 188,000
Webster County authorities members in 22 states. A
ruled the death of Anford hearing is expecied this week
· Hibbs, Providence, Ky., ac- for mine. security guard
cidental.
Ralph Anderson, so, Prater
Both Hibbs and John C. Creek, Ky., charged in last
Ronemous,
27,
were Friday's fatal &amp;booting of
employees of the Pyro Mining Mack Lewis, 65, a retired
Co., in Sturgis, a non-union Floyd County miner.

-Elsewher.e, coal suppliers
In southwest Indiana were
reluctlint to sell stockpiled
coal out of fear of reprisals by
striker$, while miners and
coal operators awaited word
whether negotiations would
resume in the slx-week-&lt;&gt;ld
coal strike.
UMW and Bitwninous Coal
Operators
Association
representalives met In
Washington Tuesday, but
chief federal mediator Wayne
Horvitz said there was oo
· indication whether the 11-day
stalemate in negotiations had
ended.

Indiana retailers were
reluctant to seD the supplies
in their coal yards because
they feared violent reprisals
by striking mlnet"S. But
gubernatorial aide Wllllam
Watt said the , needs of the
people o~twelgh the threats;

Billing change
approved by
il

~-----A;~;-n~;~h~---- ~
1

1

ESTA CARTER
Esta Mildred Marie McCall
-Qlrter, 81, a resident of Rt . 2,
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. -A Gallipolis. died In Holzer
change in the billing · system Medical Center around 6:15
formunicipalfeeslor peraons ~.m. Tuesday . She nod-been
til a short lime.
who reside In trailer park! In
She was born M.arcn 3, 1$96.
New Haven was approved " In Gallia County, daughter of
during the Tuesday evening the late James and Luclnd&amp;
"If we can get our hands oo meeting ofthe Town CouncU. Clementine Folden McC..II.
coal and people need it, they
Council voted to blll
She married Virgil Blaine
are going to get it," Watt
C..rtor. He preceded , ner In
said.
monthly all residents of death on Fob. ~. 1972. ,
West Penn Power Co. in trailer parks in New Haven
-Four daughters and one son
for a municipal fee. The fee survive : Mrs . Raymqnd
Penns y Ivan I a and provides residents with (Catherine)
McCarty,
Monoog;~hela Power Co. in .
ba
. k
d
.
Oceola,
Ohio
;
·Mrs.
West Virginia said they may gar ge plc _up an po1lee Otna
(Bonnie)
Crehave to tum to emergency proteciion. Originally, only meen,s , Northup ; Mrs .
for
coal one blll from the town · was ' Homer (For,e) Rasmusson,
measures
•·rvati
"
on
if
the
strl
' ke sent
Brighton, Harrison,
Men.; Mrs.Patrlo
Lynes,
. . to each traDe~ park. The (Janis)
con .,..;;
doesn't end soon. Coal gener- blllmg for the water meters Star Route, Gallipolis, and
ates 95 percent of their will remain the same.
Ted Blaine Carter, Col urnAlso discussed by council bus. Thirteen grand and tO
electricity.
was the financial statement great.grondcnlldren survive.
HWe are "fmding Ulat total
Two sor,s, three brothers
electricity consumption is at and expenditure chart for and one sister preceded her In
higher levels than anticipated 1977.
deMatrhs.. ~-rter was a member
"th the res ultant a 1arm1ng
A building permit was olthe Gall
'-" ipolis First Baptist
wt
---•
..
granted
to
Dixie
Blevins
and
r educ tioo of our coal """"'•
.
ill be bo
Church.
a West Penn spokesmansatd.
new snow t~res w . . ught
Funeral services. wilt be
"If the strike is oot seUled for the pollee crlllser.
held p.m. Saturday. at Willis
.
Funeral Home w1th ,Rev.
soon, we are all gomg to be in
Joseph Godwin officiating.
an emergency situation and
Bur ia l will follow in Mound
must take action to deal with
Hill Cemetery. Friends may

tOWD COUDC

p olice
. • mad'e

it. ..

21 arrests

CLASSES CANCELLED
Baton classes of Mrs. Judy
Riggs at Royal Oak Park, this
ev,ening have been canCelled.

I
CLOSEOUT

Twenty-one arrests were
made by the Middleport
Police Department during
December, according to l he
report of Police Chief J . J.
Cremeans.
·Of the total arrests, five
were charged with driving
while intoxicated; four for
speeding and three . for
disorderly manner. There
was one · arrest each for
falling to have vehicle under
control; failure to yield the
right of way; hit-skip ;
assured clear distance and
assault and hattery. Three
cases were dismissed. The
police crui$er · was driven
3,276 miles during the month
and parking meter collec·
tions totaled $462.50.

ALARM FAKED
The Pomeroy Fire
Department received a
false alarm call to Ill~
Route 7 by-pass about 9:10
p.m. Tuesday. A truck was
reported on fire at tbe
St::ene. However, tllere was

no vehicle lll !be loeatton
wheb. firemen arrived.
Four minutes later the
Middleport Fire Dept.
received a similar call with
the same , result.

JOHNSON-AMERICAN MADE

40 CHANNEL MOBILE
CB WITH DIGITAL
•AUTOMATIC NOISE LIMITER
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•LOCAL/EXTENDED/ NORMAL
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•

call at the funeral home from
7 until 9 p.m . Fric:tay.

Pallbearers will be Jay

Harrison, Jim Harrison, Jeff

Harrison, James Baird, John
Born and Greg Baird.

MOTHER SURVIVES
Roy M. Reuter, 57,
Pomeroy, who · died Monday
at Veterans Memorial
Hospital, is survived by his
mother, Mrs. Nora Tigner
Reuter in addition to other
survivors listed earlier. Mrs.
Reuter is confined to a
nursing home. Mr. Reuter
was the son of the tate Val
Reuter.

OTTO H. JOKNSON
Otto H. Johnson, 73.. of
Middleport, died Tuesday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The son of the late Thomas
J . and Vlrolnla Belle
Rayburn Johnson, he was

also preceded In death by a

sister, Mn . A. J. Reuter, and

a

half ~slster.

rws. Daniel

King . He was a veter,n of

WW II .

Survivors
ioclude
brother, Harley T .,

SALE '79

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•CARRY CASE INCLUDED

Fr iday at 11 a.m. at Ewing
Chapel. Burllll will he In

Beech

Grove

Ce,etery. '

Friends may call i!!Jf the
funeral home after 1 p.m .
Thursday. •
'

Aid unit goes
.,
out
2 runs •'•

The Middleport E-R squad ;
was called to the Zuspan •
Hollow Road In the Cheshire :
area at 1:16 p.m. Tuesday for ,
Kenoeth Mohler, III, who was ,;
ill. He was taken to Holzer •
Medical Center.
At 5:29 p.m., the squad ·
went to Silver Run for Vicie ~
WUliams who was taken tQ •
Veterans Memorial Hospital. ·.
At 9:44 p.m., the fire '
department received a false ~
alann to lhe Route 7 by-pass ~
where a truck was reporteQ :
on lire. HQwever, no vehicle •
was at the scene.
:
••
•'
•
SCHOOl.'! CLOSED
•
Meigs County schools :
remained closed today for the
third straight day due to •
dangeroua . road conditions •
and .extreme cold.
~
r

March of .Dimes is for
children·of tomorrow

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THREE ASSISTED
Three persons were transported to area hospitals
Getting off tO a good stari is important in everything._
Tuesday by Mason and New
Especially in life.
.'
Haven.E-R units. The Mason
But each year thousands of American Infants are born too ·
unit took Lucy Harrison,
soon, too small, or critically ill.
Clifton, to Holzer Medical
Many of these infants do not survive. Some ~o but It is a
Center. Taken by the Valley struggle.
Very often they have problems with breathing, heart
Squad was Thel!na Dean, · Veterans Memorial Hospital
acUon,and control oftemperatureand blood sugar. In order to ;,
Milton, to St. Mary's
Admitted - Carl Moodls- make it, they need prolQnged hospital care from speciallyHospital,lluntington, and the paugh, Middleport; Stephen trained medical teams using sophisticated equipment.
.
New Haven Squad trans- Triplett, Portland; Keith
Everyone is pulling for these babies - plirents, relatives;
ported Hazel Capehart, New Adkins, Pomeroy; Melinda
friends. The March of Dimes is pu11Jng lor them too.
Haven, to the Pinecrest Care Carson, Pomeroy; Alberta and The
voluntary health agency aims to protect the unboro
Laudermllt, Pomeroy; Jason and the newborn.
Center, Gallipolis.
Powell, Racine.
They support nwnerous·:nedical services, research, public
Discharged - Esta David,
TWO DRAW FINES
health
education, and community service programs
Walburn, Brenda
Two defendants were fined Marjorie
throughout
the nation. To sponsor these programs they need
Roush, Lawrence Wolfe ,
and a third forfeited his bond Thomas McKay, Sr., Danielle your help.
In · the coilrt of Middleport McNeil, Clara Phillips, Viele
The annual MeiJs county March of Dimes Motheni March
·Mayor Fred · Hoffman Williams, Luz Jacobs, Stevep Is JaiiWiry 15 and 11. Funds raised from II will be used to
Tuesday night. Fined were
· conliDue the bailie agilaal blrlb defects.
Kenneth D. Mohler, 39, Cremeans, Terri Walker,
In giving to the March of Dimes, one is giving to the
Middleport, $200 and costs Robert Burton, Nara Hart- chUdren of tomorrow.
and three days in jail, driving man.
while intoxicated, and
Holler Medical Center
Richard M. Tipton, 25,
(Discbarges,Jaa.IO)
Gallipolis, $25 and costs for
Glen Bishop, Brian Blair,
reckless operation. Forfeiting a f25 bond was Robert Leslee Broadwater, Andrew
L. Elkins, 19, Middleport, for Cogis, Jermlah Danford,
Frances Dean, James
left of center.
Fairchild, Kathleen Fetters,
Bobby Henry, Virginia Hill,
Blanche Lemon, Edward
BONDS FORFEITED
Five defendants forfeited Lollico, . William McCreedy,
bonds in the court of Pomeroy Enda Payne, John Peters,
Marie
Mayor Clarence Andrews Carolyn Pratt,
Pulliam,
Eleanor
Sayre,
Tuesday night. They were
Richard White, $25, and Ruby Wendy S,mith, Ida Teets,
Thomas, both of Albany, $25, Freda Walker, Irta Whittingon speeding charges; Deaver ton, Douglas Williams.
(Births, Jan. 10)
Penon, Long Bottom, $50,
Mr. and Mrs. Alvis Pollard,
left of center and Gary Hart,
Racine, $59, same charge, a daughter, Galllpolill. Mr.
and Terry Qualls, Pomeroy, and Mrs. Daniel Polcyn, a
son, Gallipolis. Mr. and Mts.
$36, speeding.
Wayne Bafnette, a son,
Racine. Mr. and Mrs. James
Chrislin,
a
daughter,
PRAYER DAY SET
Ther~ will be a county wide Jackson. Mr. and Mrs.
prayer meeting Sunday Jan. Jimmie Hale, a son, Oak Hill.
15 at the Pomeroy Wesleyan Mr. and Mrs. Michael Little,
Holiness Church, at 2 p.m. a daughter, VlDton. Mr. and
Glen Bissell will be the Mrs. Robert Corvin, a son,
Wellston.
prayer leader.

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COLUMBUS - The Ohio Department of Natural next tD their active operations, to colll-ahare with priYBte '
Reaources (ODNR) Wedneeday IIIIIOlii1Ced that the Board on landowners for projects, and to reclaim publicly-owned lands.
Ulrecialmed Strip Mined Lands hUIPIJI"Owrl th7,310 In funds
Monies fnm the unreclaimed lands {jmd can be used on
!01 three reclamatioo projecta on abandoned strip mine ~teo In land mined, lilt not reclaimed prior Ill the passage of the 1972
Melp, Lawrence and Belmont counties.
Ohio Strip Mine Law.
•
·
The Board is ccxnpoeed of flllll' technical experts the auet
• "'lbe Department of Natural Reaourcea has made Ibis new
of ODNR'a Dlvlalon of Reclaination and four members of the program a priority program," said ODNR.Director Robert W.
aJio Galeral Alaembly. LegillaUve members include State Teater. "We are anzious Ill help communities correct ezlstlng
Repraentatives Arthur Bowers, ci Steubenville and Res problema and to develop plans to reduce erOIIon, water
Kieffer, of Zanesville, and State Senators Kinsey Milleson of pollutloo, landslides and Ooodlng caused by the abandoned
Freeport and Samuel Speck, of New Concord.
·
lands."
The three projects are the first unreclaimed mine sites to
The three projects approved for funding by tbe Board
be approved for funding since the Governor signed the mined were:
land reclamation bill into law Aug. s, urn.
-Eighty.fli:l acreas of state&lt;&gt;wned land In Meigs County,
The new law, which became effective Nov. 4, is designed to •· -&amp;lpio Townlhip. 'lbe reclamation plan calls for elbnination of
encourage strip mine operators to reclaim abandooed sites severe oedbnentation and erosion problems both on the site
and downB(ream in the west branch of the Shnrle River nnd Its

on

JANUARY SALE

ARCHER®ANTEIINAS
AND ACCESSORIES

,

a ..
of '

Pomeroy. and several nieces
and nephews .
·
·
. Funeral services will be

·- Hospital News

95

~

Scipio reclamation proJect approved

-ASSORTED PATIERNS
' -IDEAl.. FOR.BAntROOMS-KITCHENS

ll29

SPEAKERS

At ,The WlrlhoUse on Methanic St.

Elberfelds In P.omeroy •

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
1bunday, January 1~. 1978

•

)
direcUy benefit from a cost-llharing projeci approved for the
The work will consist of grading the outslopes ; reaolllng area. The pian calls for redireciing acid mine dt'ainage,,whlch
the affected areto to achieve good vegetative cover; and iseffecUng homes ani) city streets. The deep mine seepage will
coo trolling drainage through the UJe of diversion channels and "!' dlrected from the r"'idontial area Into a nearby stream.
cootrol basins. Funds apptowcl totaUed f438,000.
Studl"' show this will oot adversely effect the stream. Funding
- Approximately eight acres of land owned by Symmes for the project wiD be &amp;bared by the City of Martins Ferry, the
Valley Local School District In Lawrence County, Mason Appalachian Regional Commission and ODNR. Funds
Township. Toxic spoU material Is contributing to severe approved totaDed $200,000.
sedimentation iod erosion problems oo the school playground
Funds for reclaiming public or private unreclalmed land
and cauilng acid water discharge In a nearby stream. The are generated by a state severance tax on mines. The Mined.
project will Include regrading the spell material to dlrect Land Rechlmation Program will receive apprOllimately t3
drainage to a central point; installing a structure to conduct · million of this money aunually .
the water to a stable outlet; and placing 12 inches of topsoil
Those \nterested in ODNR's Mined Lane! Reclamation
over the eight acres. Funds approved totalled $59,310.
Program can contact the Dlvisioo of Reclamation, Ohio
-Abandoned Iandin Martins Ferry, Belmont Township, Department · of Natural Resources, Fountain Square,
which isca usingdrainageproblemsfor 25 homes. The city will Colwnbus 43221 or JX!one (614 ) 466-4850.
tribUtaries.

at y

e

entine

Fllteen Cents
Vol. 2H, No. IH9

Meigs mine running .
for needed home coal
Uoiltd Press International
Residents ui some areas of
southeastern Ohio who heat
their bonies · with coal are
beginning to run out but
striking United Mine Wdrkers
union members say they are
willing to help.
"We're not out to stop coal
moving for residenliDl use,"
said Frank Schultz; recording
secretary for UMW local1886
in Athens.
"H they need house_coal
anywhere from two to four
tons, the United Mine
Workers are willing to let
people have this house coal,
and
any one of us will help KIM BATEY
KIMBERLY TAYLOR
them out," said Schultz.
· " If we have to we'll lead
them, or we'll give them a
note which will probably get ·
' Two Meigs County girls will be among 28 senior high
Last year's winner, Joann Bayus of Youngstown, the them through," l)e said.
school girls going to Mount Vernon Saturday to begin a week of · Mahoning County entry, will crown the new winner following.
James Trout, Athens, a
practice leading up to the 17th Ohio Junior Miss Pageant on !be Jan . 21 competition. Miss Taylor and Miss Batey were striking miner at the
Jan. 26-21 In tbe Knox County Memorial Theater.
winners of the local pageant staged In Middleport isst Southern Ohio Coal Co.
They are Kimberly Taylor, daughter of ,Mr. and Mrs. November.
Racoon No. 3 mine In Mei~s
Robert Beegle, Racine, and JQm Batey, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Andrew Batey·, ·Chester. .,
.
'!be stat&lt; pageant, sponsored by the Mounl Vernon
Jaycees and Ohio Junior Miss Incorporated, highlights
scholastic achievement, poise and appearllll(e, youth fitness
as well as creative and perfonnlng arts. A judges' Interview
covering contributions to the girls' community and family also
enters lnll&gt; pageant judging.
, ·
Meigs County Sheriff have been filed in tbe Meigs occurred last Thursday
'lbe week of actlYity leading up to the pageanilncludes a James J . Proffitt said today County Juvenile Court.
morning, has been located
reception with citizens of the community, luncheons with three his department has apand
the driver has been cited
Arrested and charged with
service clubs and dozens of hours of practice. Each contestant prehended three adults and petty theft and contribuUng to the Meigs County Court
will opend the w_eek with host families provided by the Mount two juveniles for theft of sleds to delinquency of a minor charged with hit-skip.
Vernon Jaycees.
He was Gary M. Smith, 107
in Racine and Syracuse were :
Tuesday evening.
Kenneth Ryan Wilt, 18, Park Street, Middleport; who
was driving his 1971 Ford
About 9:05 Tuesday Minersville.
"'M~~I'Miflllll~:,;,l}-"&gt;.
~~·~&lt;~«W&lt;•·n•· ._.... , •
, .. e., . _
.,
-.~:o~:o»-"X•:-.~....x..
~
evening, Raclnt! Marshal
Wesley Allan Barnett, 20, Pinto east on SR 248 and lost
control and went off the
Alfred Lyons learned that Pomeroy.
several persons had just
Bruce Hawley, 24, Mid- roadway damaging the
mailbox and newspaper tube.
taken a sled from a dleport.
He left the scene without
residence.
Upon
ehecking
The
adults
are
being
held
In
By Uolted Preas lattruational
Lyons
was
given
the
contacting
the owner.
WNDON -A PLAGUE OF ECONOMIC WOES sent the description and partial the Meigs County JaU in lieu
Tuesday
evening at 6:45
of bond (total $431) and are to
sickly dollsr piunging further on confused European markets
WilHam
J
.
King, 30, Rt. 4,
license
nwnher
of
the
wanted
have hearings In Racine
today and some dealers·said the worst was yet to come.
Pomeroy,
backed
his auto
vehicle.
He
immediately
VIllage
Mayor
's
·
Court
Gold, already at its higbest rates since May 1975, jwnped
radioed the Information to the Thursday evening an.d in into a parked car owoed by
further.
Jack Ward, Rt. 2, Pomeroy.
"Trading Is confused and It's difficult to estabtish a settled sheriff's office. Lyons also · Syracuse Mayor's Court on There
was slight damage to
learned
that
the
vehicle
Monday,
January
16.
trading level," said Loodon dealer. "Unless the central.banks
both
vehicles.
The accident
headed
toward
Pomeroy.
They
signed
stateme~ts
move In later to help the dollar it will begin to take a knocking
occurred
Deputy
Randall
on·the
parking lot of
Sheriffs
admitting
stealing
the
sleds
again on money markets/•
Jack
Ward's
Night Club. ·
Carpenter,
on
patrol,
in
both
villages.
They
were
Dealers in Frankfurt, London and elsewhere were
There
were
no
citations
and
astooilthed at Treasury Secretary Michael Blwnenthal's proceeded toward Racine and enroute to the old ballpark on
no
injuries.
statement In Wallhington Wednesday that last week's decision at Minersville observed the Minersville Hill to go sledWednesday afternoon
to prop up !be dollar had accomplished its goal. Another blow wanted vehicle .turning onto ding when stopped by Deputy
Minersville
Hill:
He
stopped
around
4 on SR. 681, twoC~rpenter .
was dealt by a renewed hint from Saudi Arabia ..,.. the world's
tenths
of
a mile west of
the
vehicle
and
took
the.
five
The light green car wanted
biggest oil exporter nation -that It might switch from dollars
Darwin,
Peggy
T. Wandling,
persons
into
custody.
for
lhe
hit-skip
of
the
mailbox
and peg oU prices to a basket of currencies.
The
juveniles ·from and newspaper tube at the 32, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, westTOKYO - U.S. ENVOY ROBERT STRAUSS met today Pomeroy were released to Herald Osborne residence on bound, struck ice and lost
with a top Japanese official to work out a truce In the their parents, but charges SR 248 east of Chester which control of her 1976 Chevrolet
which went off the road on the
worlll!lllng American-Japanese trade war and sources close to
right and went over and
the talks said he insisted Tokyo must do more to help resolve .
embankment, rolling over
two 'times bul landing on its
the
PQ
wheels.
fair tD "Yankee traders" or face stiff retallation from
. , 'r . . • a
• .~
There were no illjuri·es to .
Con~~. President Carter's special trade representative, Middleport wat e·r hours. Complicating the work passengers in the auto, Penny
conferred for an bour with Minister for External Economic · Department employes were was the fact that a com- Wandling_, 12, Julley A.
Affairs Nobuhlko Uahiba. Officiala who briefed Japanese working isle this morning pressor being used froze and Wandling , 8, and Hazel
reporters afterward quoted !be American as saying: "In order repairing a main water line would not operate for a time. Smith, Rt. 4, 'Pomeroy,
to check the rtae of trade protectionism In the United States, I at the inlersecilon of Rutland·
The exact number of
want to see Japan c001e up with a stronger position."
and North Second sts.
residents . without water
Residents of the upper part service was not known at the
COl.UMBUS - THE omo SENATE unanimously paSIM!d of town were without water office of the water depar!andsent to the House Wednesday legislation to join Ohio with since the break In tbe main .!llen\. However, residents
CWSED MONDAY
13 either states in the laterlllate Mining CompiiCt.
line which was discovered ' were advised thai they could
The Gallia-Melgs ComThe seven-year old coinpsct ..,...,s as a forum for the Wednesday
morning . takecontalnerstovlllagehall munity Action Agency offices
"exchange of Information relaUng to surface mining of coal Workers were OJi the job most . and pick up water there, The will be closed Monday in
and other mlnerala," said Sen. Sam Speck, R-New Concord, of last night. One by Thur- repair to the Une was es- observance of the tate Mart in.
llpiiQIOr of the bill.
··'
sday morning had had only peeled to be completed by Luther King's birthday.
Ohio's representation would be coordlnatet;l by the Ohio one hQur's rest In over 24 ~ early this afternoon.
Mining Council, which would be fonned through the expilnsiOn
of the current Oh!o Reclamation Board of Review. ·

destroyed by an explosion

County, said strikers are the facUlty is dowo to 150 Ions
letting one non-union mlne and gets lower every day.
"They come in here using
stay open !o supply
everything
from pickup
residential customers.
trucks
to
the
beck
end of their
"It's a non-union outfit, b~t
cars
getting
coal,"
he said.
they're letting them work so
"But
there's
a
lot
of
people
these people won't be cMd in
that
are
out
of
coaL
We' ve
thelr homes," said Trout.
Dick Schloss, a worker at been trying to do what we can
Mason 's
Coal
Co., · do for them." ·
C.R. Mason, the owner,
Haydenville , Ho c king
says,
however, he is having
County,
a
non-union
trouble
with striking UMW
operatioo, said the supply at
workers. His scales were

lust month .
"1'hat don't scnn~ nubody ,"
Mason said. " It might kiii
somebody, bui It don't score
us. We don't bluff."
M=n said he _buys from
·non-union mines ond has
other coal uvuiiubie that is
not ut hi s Haydenville
facili ty.
"It's hard to find a truck
driver to haul it," ·he said.
wThe truckers arc scared ."

Meigs guls go Saturday to prepare for Jr. Miss pageant

I ..

Sledding party jailed

News. • •in Brief~

:"~wardKenoedy, alsoinTokyo,wamedJapantobe

WASHiNGroN- CUBAN PREMIER FIDEL Castro's
younger brother Raul hal flown secretly to Ethiopia to plan an
· ORaden counteroffense that Ia expected lo U8e Cuban combat
troops, government IOUt"Cel said today.
OUng JnteWgence hljiOi ts, (he IIOUfCI!8 said the younger
Culro reached the Ethiopian captal of Addll Ababa late last
week under 111ch tlabt precaution8 that be did not disembark
!run his plane until It 'ria in&amp;lde a closed llanpr.
The iourcu said Culro, who carrlea the titlea of !In!
Cuban vice pnlldenl and armed forte~~ minl.lller, waa believed
to~ ovwaoe1n1 the plm1nlns for a COWlterof!enae, which will
-llrp numben of Cubans reclintly arrived In the country aa
ambat forces against Somalian lr®PI oc:cupylng the Ogaden
.
.
regia!.
About .2,000 Cubanl, 1110111 ol them combat aolclers, are
now tpnated 110 be In Etblopla, acccrdlte ID the IOIII'Ce.l. The
llcli'8 COIJIPII"'1 wllb lllOCnbmlln the cuuntry last month.•

\

Re,naz·

p ...nssed

County's budget approved
''!;

'lb~ M~igs County Budget
Commission Tuesday approprtated $2,678,884.31 to the
Meigs County Commlsaloners
fvr the fiscal year beginning
Jan. 1, Ibis year. ·
,
The budget commission is
composed of County Auditor
Howard Frank, County
Treasurer George Collins and
PrOI!eCUtor Rick Crow.
Included In the ap- proprlalions are : general
fund, . ttoa,ooo; dog and

kennel fund, $8,720.38; public ·· school, $2Sl,810:2a; and
health
(tuberculosis), emergency service, $ll0,000;
$71,319.80; food service, juvenile probation, $1.~ ;
$241.51; public asaiatance, CETA special, $11,394.&amp;2 ;
$161,397 .58; community · P.W.E., $12,160.16; CETA II
mental health and retar- program, $19,150.07; CETA
dation, $43,11M.61; real estate VI, $27,323.86; E.D.A.,
asseasmetit fund, $39,040 ; $711,676.96; federal revenue
motor vehicle and gasoUne· sharing, $95,686.10.
.
II~ lund, $812,244; aoU
The commissioners will
and water conservation now decide the breakdoWn of
special lund, $2,1113.01; bon!~ expenditures In the various
retirement, Veterans funds .
Hospital, fl3,350.38 ~ M. R. '•

DERBY WINNER - Charles Richard Blake, II, and his parenl.'l, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
R. Blake, Hysell Run Road, are the wimers of The Daily Sentinel's 1978 &amp;by Derby.

Baby Derby family h~_s
head start on goodies
'

charles Richard "slake II is from the Heritage House, arrangement from Dudley's,
the · wimer of The DaUy Middleport; a case of Ca i!Jled Middleport.
from
Kroger's,
A$10 savings account from
Sentinel's 1978 Baby Derby. milk
Being the first baby of the Pomeroy; a package of the Pomeroy National Bank,
new year, Charles, the son of diapers from Stifner's Stores, Pomeroy ; a.case of baby food
Pomeroy;
two from the Mark · V Super
Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. In c.,
Blake, Hysell Run Road, will toboggans and two caS.s of Market,-Middleport; a brown
receive a nwnber of gifts as Royal Crown from the Royal bear
from
Moore's,
will his parents from Bend Crown Bottling · Co., Mid- Pomeroy; a meal for the
area merchants who each dleport ; a baby planter from mother at Crow's Steak
year sponsor the baby derby. Francis Florist, Pomeroy: a House, Pomeroy; $5 credit on
Charles Richard was born baby bunting from Land- anything ordered from the
Wednesday, Jan. 4, at 1:53 mark, Pomeroy; a three- catalog from th e Sears Store,
a.m. at Pleasant Valley piece feeder set from K. and Pomeroy; a $10 savings
C. Jewelers, Pomeroy; a $10 account from the Citizens
Hospital.
Grandparents of the savin~ account from the National Iiank, Middleport; a ·
county's first baby ofthe new Racine Home National Bank, . palr of baby shoes from
year - and the first child of Racine; a $3 gift certificate Hartley's Shoes, Pomeroy;
his parents - are Mr. and from the Fabric Shop, three boxes of Pam'pers from
Mrs. Guy Hysell; Hysell Run Pomeroy; three boxes of Village Pharmacy, Mid·
Road, and Mrs. William Pampers from the Racine dlepoi't; 10 gallons of gasoline
Blake, Clifton, W. Va. Great- Food Market, Racine; a baby from Welker's Ashland
grandparents are Mr. and planter from . the Pomeroy Station, Phmeroy; a two
Mrs. Denver Hysell, Route I, Flower Shop, Pomeroy; a piece baby set from
Pomeroy, and Mrs. Gladys palr of bedroom slippers Goessler's Jewelry Store,
from Marguerite 's Shoes, Pomeroy; a meal for the
Bowers of Guysville.
Here's what the new baby Pomeroy; three boxes of parents at The Meigll Inn, .
and his parents will receive Pampers from - Swisher- Pomeroy; a $5 gift certificate
from Bend area merchants : Lohse Phannacy, Pom~roy; from the Kiddie Shhppe,
two cases of baby food from a case of boby food lrom Twin Pomeroy; a crib toy from
Waid Cross and Sons, Cities Gatewoy Supermarket, Western Auto., Middleport; a
Racine; a $5 gift certificate Middleport; ·a cut flower $10 gift ce rtific ate from
Powell's
Super
Valu,
Pomeroy; a free meal to the
parents from the Country
Cousins Cooks hoppe ,. Pomeroy, and a $10 gift
certificate from Elberfelds
Department Store, J?omeroy.
Gary
Dill,
Chester 'treasurer.
Township Trustee, was
The eleciion of officers was
electedpresldentoftheMelgs . I'Onducted by Rick Crow.
County Association of Howard Frank, Meigs County
Winter storm watch "in
Township Trustees and auditor , spoke on topics effeci tonight and Friday. '
Clerks at a recent meeting at related to local goverrunenl Snow accumulating about
Rock Springs Grange HaD. , and conducted a question ond two inches by this evening.
R. G. (Bob) Pickett, a answer period.
Snow mixed with sleet or
~dford Towns'h1p trustee
Jim Allen of Southeastern freezing . rain, tonight and
was elected vice president. Equipment Co., Gallipolis, friday . Low tonight In the
lower 20s. Highs Friday
and Gloria Huttoo, Columbia provided refreshments.
Township ~rk, secretarybetween 25·,tnd 30.
1

.Gary Dill named president
of Meig$ ·t rustees, clerks Assn.

Weather

�3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleporl-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Jan. 12, 1978

·Slrikt';cti~ty:··~~al negotiations chilled down to standStill
United Preu International

The cold weather kept
strike activity to a minimum
in \he Appalachian coalfields
again today, while 3
sta lemate in Washington
negotiations continued to
keep representatives of the
· United Mine Workers and
Bituminous Coal Operators
Association away from the
· bargaining table.
Temperatures hovering

aroW1d zero in many coal
re gions Wednesday kept
miners away from the picket
lines,
althou~h
some

gathered around oil drums
being used as makeshift
outdoor stoves. The silence
was marred, however, by the
death
Anford Hibbs of
Providence, Ky ., in a freak
accident.
Hibbs, who was the second
fatality in the coalfields since ·
the strike began Dec. 6, was
killed when a .38-caliber
pistol slipped - from the
, dashboard of a pickup truck
in which he and John C.
Ronemus. 27, of Sturgis, were
riding . The pistol fired a
bullet into Hibbs' head.

or

Mack Lewis, S5, · of
Stanville, Ky ., a retired UMW
coal miner , was shot and
killed last Friday at a
crossroads picket station.
, In llllnols, striking miners
said Wednesday they would
not picket coal being moved
from .mine stpckpiles lor
delivery to
hospitals,
chl,li'ches, schools or mU'sing

homes. District 12 President
Kenneth Dawes said that with
the cold wave. his district has

been notified that several of
the
facilities
were
experie ncing shortages of
fuel.
He said the · action was
approved by the District ll
ExecuUve Board .
Dawes said the board also
has sc heduled around-the-·
clock pickeling ol the nonun ion Cook coal loading
terminal at Metropolis. But
he said the picketing will
comply with provisions of a

reoucuon
and
some
PHILADELPHIA (UP!) Residents of West Virginia, curtailment of service to
Ohio and Indiana would those states.
"Those people who criticize
probably be freezing in the
dark if it wasn't lor a pool ol electric utilities for building
11
utility
companies
providing
record
amounts of
E. Lamb, M.D.
emergency power to those
states, . according to a
spokes man for a power
pool.
Ron Harper, of the
Pennsylvania-New J ersey·
tt!I'Csted in you often has a Maryland
Interconnection,
remarkable effect. The pa· said Wednesday the pool
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Utno
tlcnt, ln t hinking rncdu:im:! s furnished up to 6.2 million Senate
President
Pro
:&lt;rc helpful, may really be kilowa tts of emergency Tempore Oliver Ocasek, 0havi n g psyd10lo~:: 1 ca l powe r . on. Tues d ~y . .to Akron , said Wednesday he
• e- comparues m West Vl.l'gmm,
n :.spUJ ISI'.
would announce his decision
To g 1vc you mforrnation on Ohio, Indiana . He said the on whether to run for the
whut we rea lly know about pool was sc heduled to provide Demo c rati c
Party
agmg I am scndmg you The up to 6.1 million kilow"tts nomination for governor on
Wednesday .
He&lt;:~llll l.cltcr nwnbcr 1·7,
Harper said frozen coal Jan. 26.
Pei'petuol Youth, Aging.
Ocasek-told reporters he
Ot hers who ant this in£onna- piles and peak winter had not made up his mind,
tion can send 50 cents with a dema nds brou~ht voltage but that "whether I run or
long. st amped, self ·
don't run is a matter of
addressed envelope for it to
money."
rnc 1n ct1 re of this newspaper,
Ocasek had intended to
1'.0. Box 1551, Radio City Staannounce his decision Jan . 19,
tion. New York, NY 10019.
but said he had not yet been
DEAH DH. LAMB - My
able to "touch base with
daughter ts a tcc11agcr , and
several people.' '
when she Is home she wat·
Ocasek, admitting he was
ehcs TV 10 hours a day. I
not a good fund raiser, said.
ha ve Luld her she Will be
his campaign treasury now
wearing: glasses very son If
totaled about $50,000, but that
she does not turn off the TV,
it would take about $500,000 to
but she does not believe me.
Vird Smit h, dec. to make a credible effort toward
Her b1g excuse lS she wat- Eliza beth Smith, George capturing the nomination.
ches it from a dtstam:e so it Leona rd
Smith,
Mae
will not ha1m her. Ple"se tell Icenhower, Harry J . Smith,
me does watching so much Aff. for trans., Olive"
TV h"nn her eyes '1 Does the
George . Leonard Smith to
distance from which she w"l· George Coll in·s, Nancy
ches matter ? How long Collins, 4 acres, Olive.
should she watch TV?
Eli zabeth Brooks , Pau'l
DEAH READER - The TV Brooks to George Collins,
will not hurt her eyes. If Nancy Collins , 4 acres, Olive.
children iilsisl Qn sitting close
' The Economic and
Harr y Jumor Smith to
to the TV set you might George Colli ns, Nancy
Financial Outlook for 1976"
suspect they are nea rsighted ColUns, 4 acres, Olive.
will be the topic for the
and need a n eye eKarnina tion.
Mae B. Icenhower to January t9, 1978, meeting of
The problem w1th too much George Collins, Nancy
the Central Ohio Vailey In·
TV is not that it will hurt the Collins, 4 acres, Olive.
dustrial Council, to be held in
eyes but wl1al sittmg mactive
Graham Packing Co. , Inc.
Huntington.
so long does to the rest of the to Michael R. Harris, 160
Th omas Rideout, se nior
. body. There are studies that acres, Wt 1165, 17 ac res,
vice president of the
show that inactivity from Olive.
Financlal. Institutions
watching TV leads to loss of
Department of the Wachovia
muscle strength, and symp- . - - - - - - - - - - - ; . Bank and Trust Company of
toms of fati_gue. Such people
Winston.Sa!em , N.C. , will be
THE DAILY SENTIN EL
become w~t doctors call
DEVOTED TO THE
the speaker.
INTEREST OF
deconditioned , so mewhat
The meetmg will be held in
Pi-IEIGSMASON AREA
similar to a person who lies in
CHESTER 1.. TANNEHill
the conference lobby area of
Exec. Ed.
,
bed all the time.
the Holiday Inn Downtown in
ROBE RT HOEFLICH
I think the an~wer to how
Huntington. A social hour is
Cll.y Editor
P ub ll~ ht.'tl Wuly ~ce pt Sulurday
much TV she can watch is the
scheduled
at 6 p. m. with
by T~e Oh1d V11 U ~)I Pu bli5hing
~oun t of tune that is left
dinner
at
7
p.m.
COI: npl!Oy·Mullum~tha, lm:..
111
after a good amount of
Court St. , Pomemy, Ohw ~769
Mr. R1deout's dtscussion of
13uslnes! Office Ph on~ 992· 2156.
phy~ica l aQti vJty everyday
the outlook for the New Year
&amp;hloriu l Phone.992·2 157.
cmd some involvement with
St.'i:onr.l cla ss postaMe paid Itt
should be of a challenging
Ponm~· , Ohto.
other people her own age,
nature,
and should stir
Notwnal a dvertiSln~ repreStrrJo
plu s accomplishing her
considerable discussion.
tativt! Wurd - Griffith Company,
lrw., Bolt!nelli a nd Ga llagher Di~ .•
school work in good order. In
This speaker, a graduate of
757 Third Ave .• New York . N.Y.
other words, there is not a set
!0017
number of hours but she
ra tes: Delivered by
I
cen!S per
should be encouraged to
TRUSTEES TO MEET
carrier
develop more ~lanced, good
The Bedford Township
month ,
;J.25 By nuul in
· and W Va ..
he"lThy life style that helps
Trustees will meet in special
One Year. $22.00, Six mOrJths ,
her to develo her body a nd
session Tuesday at 6:30 p.m.
$11.50, Thret: mont hs, $7.00 ,
Elsewhere &amp;26 00 )'~ar : Stx months
her mind nonnall y.
at the home of the clerk,
$\J SO: Three mo nlh.s, $7.50
Helen Swartz. Purpose of the
Sub!ltTiplion price lnchides Sunday
TuneS.St!nllnel.
meeting is to complete the
1978 budget.

Hydergmc ;md what 1t 1:; :;u pposed to llo fur agmg per·
sons'! Any Ill effects '!

DE AR READER afraid

there is no

I' m
good

evidence that the medJcme IS
really effective. There are

some short-tenn studies to
suggest t11"t it may be helpful
i11 dt
• rea.sing c.:onfu.swn 1i11
whic case it shou ld be used
at a ages if my observations
are on targe t ), mooddepression and unsodabihty
- all allributed to old "ge.
Fortunately there arc no
important side effects , a nd
the few thai howe been noted
would ha ve a lready bot hered
you if you were gong to have
any problem t.ctkmg the

medication.
Therefore, I don 't see any
· reuson you can't have a re rill,
but considering the lack of
demonstra ted effectivene.ss
of the medicine •nd because
the symptoms the medicine is
used to tre"t " ' c often of
obscure origin - not just old
"ge - ! think you really
should sec a doctor. You need
a doctor who 1s familiar with
husband 's ~md · your
medici::tl status. It IS a bad
thing to start luokmg for a
doctor when you have em
emergency.
.

you r

One of the difficu lties m
ev" lu"l!ng medicines that
"re supposed to help in aging
is that any program th" t in·
volves the patient or gets him
"clive again will often benefit
him. Just having someone in-

NOW OPEN

GINO'S
OF MASON
PHONE 773-553fr ·

..

15/32 inch tread depth
Tread molded to receive
metal traction st.!'"''

•••

Wide, open two wgoye
tread design
'

proven wrong again," Harper
said. "Utility customers in
West Virginia, Ohio and
Indiana would be freezin~ in

debating
over candidacy

Meigs
Property
Transfers

Lt. Goy . Richard Celeste

has already annoWlced his
candidacy
for
the
nomination.
"I've asked myself if I want
to be governor. The answer is
'yes.' I've asked myself if I
am competent to be
governor . And the answer is
'yes.' I've asked myself il I
think I can be elected
governor . And that is what I
am debating now."
Ocasek said he had had
many discussions with
Attorney General William J.
Brown,
who
is
also
considering the , possiblity of
running for the Democratic
nomintion for governor, and
House Speaker Vernal G.
Riffe , Jr ., D-New Boston.
Dcasek said he and Riffe
had decided not to run
against each other.

Speaker named
for COVIC meet
'

1

Low~- Prices

IS NOT AHIGHWAY GAME

• 4 polyester cord plies

too many power plants are

O~asek

Look for a doctor now
- Ry Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DH. LAMB - My
husband "nd ! "'" both 64 .
und our doctor, who retired a
yea r a go, presc rib ed
Hydergme [or us. I sl!ll have
some and can also get refi lls .
Will you p l c~e tell us about

funds . ARH spokesman Rex
Bailey said the hospit&amp;ls' lo•
of UMW revenue from thj!
unioo's health lund amolll)teil
to approximately $850,000 per
mooth from July through
November 19'17.
District 12 UMW
President Kenneth Dawes
~d Wednesday that striking
UMW members in !llinois
would not picket coal being
moved from mine stockpiles
for delivery to hospitals ,

•

Emergency power provided by pool

HEALTH
Lawrence

te mporar y Injunctio n
limiting \he number of UMW
pickets U.. seven at each
entrance to Ule terminal.
. In other developments:
- Appalachian Regional
Hospitals in KentuckY, West
Virginia and VIrginia are
operating on a ·mooth~o·
mooth ~sis, desp(ie grants
totaling $1.95 million since
October, because of the cutoff
of United Mine Workers of
America
hospitaliuUon

Washington
and
Lee
Univers1ty, joined the bank in
1963 and his entire career at
Wachovia has been spent in
the Bond and Investment
Department. In 1973 he was
elected senior vice president
of the liank.
He has served as the

economic spokesman for the
bank on numerous occasions.
Non-members are welcome
to attend. Reservations may
be made by calling Robert
Smith · Huntington Area
Olamber of Commerce.

the dark or furloughed fiom
plants and offices without
PJM ald."
Harper said that even
though
selling
more
emergency power than ever
before, the !inns in the pool
have been able to meet all the
needs or its 21 million
customers.
Harper said the emergency
supply is being provided
despite the !act that several
large generators in the f'JM
area are out of service for
annual maintenance. He said
others have been forced out
by equipment failures and
cold weather conditions.
"These people might have
something to say to those
critics who charge that we
have
excess
reserve
capacity,'' he said.

Service held
for Mr. Thle
Funeral services for Clark
Ihle who died New Year's
Eve at Holzer Medical Center
were held at I p.m. on Jan. 3
at Ewing Funeral Home.
The Rev . Florence Smith
and the Rev. Robert
Bumgarner officiated.
Organist was Mrs. Marjorie
Grimm and singers were
Sharon and D1ane !hie. Burial
was in Gilmore Cemetery.
Attending from out ol town
were Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Relyea , Flint Mich ., Mr. and
Mrs: Harold Heilman and
Norman
Heilman, W.
Liberty, Ohio.

COMPLETES COURSE
RACINE - Marine Private
Joseph W. Holman , son or Mr.
and Mrs. Earl Holman ol
Route 1, Racine, h~s com·
pleted the infantry combat
training course at the Marine
Corps Base, Camp Pendleton,
Calif. A 1977 graduate of
Southern Local High School,
he joined the Marine Corps m
July, 1977.

$34
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..

By MILTON IUCIIMAN

UP! Spona Bdlter

By KENNE'I11 R. CLARK
Ualted Preoolntenllltioaal
CARRYING ON: Natbaolel Crolby is only 16, but he's
taking on a man's job to honor the memory of his famous
father. He'll be the sponsor U.ls week of the Bing Crosy Pro·
Am golf tournament. to be played on thi'ee caUfornia courses
-Pebble Beach, Spyglass Hill and Cypress Point. Says he, "!
don't think we ever coosidered calling off tile toornlllllent.
While Dad never talked about specifies ... I knew what it meant
to him." Bing died in October while playing golf in Spain.
TilE SHEIK lJVES: Rita Hayworth and Glem Ford have
been chosen lor the 19'17 Rudolpb Valent!Do Prize, given

annually by the U.N. InternaUonal Children's Emergency
Fund. They'll receive their tropbies at a benefit ceremony Jan.
21 in Bari, Italy - and leave hand prints in cement slabs at
Valentino's statue in nearby Castellaneta - the silent film
idol.'s hometown. Previous winners: Ellzabeth,TIIylor. and
Richard Burtoll, Sophia IA&gt;ren and AnlboDY Qulan, JeaDDe
Moreau and Alain Deloa, Uza MlnDe1ll and MarceUo
Mastrollllllli and Gloria SwBDJOD and James Mason.
'
HANGING UP TilE STARS: The Pentagon says Air Force
Gen. Daalel "Chapple" James will retire Feb. 1 for medical
reasons. Jamea, the only black ever to reach four-otar rank in
the U.S. milltary, is a highly decorated fjghter pilot of the
Vietnam War, but last September he developed heart
problems. He would have completed 35 ~ars of mUltary
service this summer. He'll retire on a yearly pension of $42,000,
and an Air Force spokesman says if he's granted a disability,
half of that will be tax-free.

---

QUOTE OF TilE DAY : White House press secretary Jody
Powell on HEW Secretary Jooepb CaWaDO'I anti-61Jloking
crusade t "We are all aware of the possible dangers of
cigarettes, alcobol ... and a number of other pleasurable
things."

GlJMPSES: The husband-wife team of Cbarles Brollllon
and J!ll Ireland will emcee the Golden Globe awarda,
presented by tile Hollywood Foreign Press Association, Jan. 28
... The 1,694th star in Hollywood's "Walk of Fame" sidewalk
wlli be dedicated to singer~poser Nell Sedalia next week ...
The New York chapter of the Daughters of the American
Revolulioo have named "The Muppet Show" - with creators
and distributors Jim Henson, David Luer, Nell Derrough and
Abe MandeR - for Ule group's folirth ·Television A\vard of
Merit...
·

ar

, ANIMAL SHELTERS
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Legislation setting minimum
standards and state licensing
requirements for animal
shelters and pounds was
scheduled for a floor 'vote in
the House Wednesday .
But the chief spoosor, Rep.
Michael P . Stinziano, DColurnbus, changed his mind
at Ule last minute and had the
measure re-referred to the
Finance Committee for
further evaluation ~~ its
financial impact.

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~

General Assembly to get his
proposal through this session.
"I thought it went well,'
said Johoson, adding that
'~ the questions raised by
committee members were
objective and not designed to
nail my hide to the wall."
His plan includes establish·
ment of a fund to be used
solely for primary . and
secondary education,
financed more by Individual
and corporate income taxes
than by real estate taxea.
This would have to be
approved by the voters
through a constitutional
amendment; which Johnson
said could reach Ule ~llot by
November if the Legislature
decides a change is needed.
Johnson said his pian would
reduce the burden on
individual ,property
taxpayers while r aising the
level of support!or educatioo.
Some of his colleagues
objected to what they called
8n " increase in taxes."
"There are a lot of
constructive things in there,"
said Rep. John A. Galbraith,
R·Mautnee, a member of the
Ways lind Means Conunittee.
"But what the bill really
represents is an increase in
taxes."
think it's worth ex·
1

·:r

amining,"
continued
Galbraith, R·Maumee; "but I
don't think the Legislature is
ready to change the tax
structure and I don't believe
the people are, either."
'
"It's a serious enough
proposal so it should get a lot
of hearings and a ,, lot of
work," agreed Rep. W.
Bennett Rose, R·Lima,
ranking minority member of
the Finance Committee.
But Rose objected to earmarking revenues for
primary and secondary
educatioo. School money now
comes out of the general
revenue fund. He also said
Johnson's proposed personal
income tax rates would hit
low-income families hardest.
The most enthusiastic
support was offered b~ Rep.
Dennis E. Eckart, D-Euelid,
who called ~ohnson's
proposal "comprehensive
and thorough ."
Eckart said the voters
should set a chance to
approve the constitutional
amendment in November,
"so the
gubern~torial
candidates will be forced to
go on record and give it the
attention it •deserves."
Both chambers •~e in
recess unlil;nell Tuesdar-

MORE
FOR
CARPET

ClUCAGo (UP!) - Illinois
can prove this week whether
it's "for real" in the Big Ten
basket~ll race.
The Iilini, an upset victor
Saturday over Indiana, can
become a title challenger by
winning Thursday at home
against Michigan State andSaturday
against
or
Michigan. The Spartans and
Wolverinea share the league
lead with Purdue. ail wltJJ 2-0
records.
Coach Lou Henson, · who
1 said 11We played very well" in

!

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Illini about to
show metal

WHY
'PAY

I

particularly in an election
By LEE LEONARD
year.
UP! Statehouse Reporter
Both tile House and Senate
COLUMBUS (UP!) - A
new plan to dramatically ajourned for th~ weekend
alter the state's taxation and after brief floor sessions.
school financing structures . Several committee meetings
were canceled, provoking
~s been unveiled in the Ohio
open grwnbling from a lew
General Assembly.
The complex proposal, members who had fought
sponsored by Rep. John E. through snow to get to the
Johnson, D.Qrrville, received Statehouse only to discover
its first public presentation the work week was finished.
Johnson said he was enWednesday and drew a high
level ' of interest from all couraged by initial response
to his education-tax package,
quarters.
However, many lawmakers which he presented to the
were skeptical that the House Ways and Means Com·
wholesale changes rn!ttee.
recommended by Johnson · But he acknow!eilged it will
could be sold to the public, take a concerted effort in the

Bobcats in
,b ig victory

NEW-YORK (UPI) - Come Super Bowl Sunday and DaMy
White will he all pumped up, an primed and ready but with no
United Pre•• lntei'DJitlonal
place to go.
Things are starting to turn
Danny White has been ready now for two years, ready to the right direction lor Ohio
take over the regular quarter~ck's job and show everyone he University and Coach Dale
can really run the DaUas Cowboys, but they aren't quite ready Bandy.
for him. Not. with someooe like Roger Stauhach sUU around.
The Bobcats, struggling
The, lanky, clean-cut, :!f&gt;.yearold White uildoubtedly will get early in the season, ran their
in aome playing time against the Denver Broncoo because in season's re~ord to 8-4
additioo to being the Cowboys' backup quarterback, he's also Wednesday night with a 68-$
their regular punter. That isn't what he came lor, though. He victory over Marshall.
"We played an excellent
came to play, to lead the Cowboys as their flrst':'llring
quarterback, and _there's little or no chance of liis ever doing basketball game," said
that as long as Staubach is on the scene.
Bandy. "I think we are
Staubach, wl\o is 35 and has been with Dallas nine years, can improving. I thought lt was
understand White's extreme eagerness to play . He our best defensive ga'!'e and
understands it so well, he often talks to the Cowboys' second our balanced scoring IS V.:hY
, ,year man about It, explaining that he knows how it must feel to we are. a bet!~' offenSive
be25andhavetostandonthesidelineaandwait.
· team thiS year.
.
Roger spoke with me about It a week ago," says the Arizona·
Steve Skaggs scored 10 21
oorn White, a sensitive, intelligent sort. He said: "Be patient. po10ts to lead a balanced OU
Don't be too anxious to be tbrown in there that quickly because attack, as the Bobcats took
so many quarterbacks are pushed into a starling situation the lead for good .on a jumper
when they're not ready, and you don't want that."
by fresl)man Jun Zalenka
"I appreciate what he's trying to tell me and 1 know he's late in the first half.
doing ltformy own good, but I still want to play. Roger says he
Marshall, paced by Carlos
wasn't a starter until he was 28 years old. He has been a starter Gibson Wltb 19. pomts and
now for seven years and he's in a tough situation. He doesn't Hru:Jey Major with 18, ne~r
want to tell me to stay hack, because you just don 't tell ·your led 10 the second half, trailmg
COJhpetltor to hack off. On the other hand, he doesn't want me by a many as t4 late m the
to get edgy. He says to me, 'If you can just wait awhile and · game.
then start for seven or eight years, believe me, thats an you
Bandy, however • had a
can handle."'
very simple answer for ·the
The way Tom ·Landry coaches the Cowboys, he never )lulls ~?"a~s· improvement.
Stauhach until he feels the game is absolutely wrapped up and
. We _re a lot better t,~ent­
heing tile conservative he is, Landry seldom feels that way WJsethisyearthan last , said
until the game is actually over.
. Bandy·
That being the case, White has gotten into only three games
Marshall ,Coa~h Stu Aber·
this season at quarterback, and always when the game already deen, who saw hls team fall to
had been deCided, and there have been reports that he's so 6-~. on the year, felt poor
unhappy about the situation, he want's to he traded.
shooting cost h1S team the
"I think that has come to be misunderstood," White says. w~. .
"I'm not unhappy. I used to dream of playing for the Dallas .
_Neither te~ had •,good
Cowboys. I used to dream of playing in the Super Bowl, too, efficiency ~e l1rst half, S~ld
but....''
Aberdeen. You have to g1ve
Danny White breaks off what be is a saying at Ibis point and cr~11 to their defense, so'!'•·
thinksabouthowhewishestofinlshthesentence.
thlllg kept us from shootmg
"But there's one way it could be better," he finally says, that way . They ar~. a very
"and what would be if I were the starting quarterback.''
well coached team. . .
"It's exlremely tough not playing," he goes on. "The
At Day19n, . Irv G1ddings
toughest part ls preparing all week and then, after the game ls scored 21 po10ts and Jack
played, coming into the locker room and feeling empty. Even Zimmerman 16 to , P?ce the
so, there's no place in the league I'd rather be than right F1rer~ to a 7US WIO over
hi h led ~ 1
here .... I can't get mad at Coach Landry, he wants to win. And M:f"'~
Ican'tgetmadeatRoger,hewantstoplay."
n, w c
a
Staubach has told White he'd like to play 10 years, which halftune, took the lead for
ordinarly would mean one more, but you know how those g?"d on a . jumper by
things can sometimes turn out. A year from now Staubach, Zurunerman wlth 16 :30 left m
who got a late start with Dallas because he put in four years in the contest.
. .
the Navy after attending the U.S. Naval Academy, might
Dayton, now 1().4, bUilt 1ts
decide 00 hasn't had enough yet.
.
m?rgm to 59-50 w1th 8
"Somewhere down the road, sometime in the next two years. miOutes to go and led by from
· I'm going to have to make a decision," say• White, who was 7 to 9 pomts the rest of the
the starting quarterback for Memphis of the old World way.
Miami, playing without
Football League fer two seasons. "All my life l;ye been a
starting quarterback and if I'm not playing here Jn two years, starter Bernard Newman,
declared scholastically
I'm going.to have to gosomeplacewherelcan play."
Meanwhile, DaMy White continues to punt for tile Cowboys ineligible earlier in the day •
andtopaeethesidelineswhenhelsn'tdoingthat.
was led by Archie Aldridge
"I try to stay ready in (lise," he says. "I'm not going to sit wl:~ 24 ~~~~ Am e r 1 c a n
down on the edge of the bench and pout. I don't think I'm
impatient. The word I'd use is "anxioas" I think if I were Conference action , Kent
State, playing its first game
impatient, I'd be gooe before this ."

peopletalk

ROBBERY CHARGE
COLUMBUS (UP!)
James Sylvester Spnllel, 29,
Columbus, was to . appear
before U.S. Magistrate Mark
R. Abel today on a charge of
bank robbery in connection
with the Dee. 28 holdup of an
Ohio National Bank.
Spruiel was arrested
Wednesday' by Columbus
police and FBI agents at his
1
residence.
He spent the night in the
Franklin County jail.

'

Sport Parade

churches, schools or nursing tile UMW strike were under
homes. He said District 12 Joogstanding orders to Umlt
has received several requests U.eir· work to protecting
during the recent cyld wave property, trying to avoid
and added that preventing violenee and enforce oourt
tile movement or coal to sucb orders. Brandenburgh said
lacilities would not help the . state police omclals have
UMW win a "just coolract." been in frequent contact with
- Kentucky State Police leaders or Ule UMW and the
Commissioner Ken Branden- mine aperatora in order to
burgh Wednesday said all help avoid violence.
state police palrols related to

Proposed tax plan draws attention

'\

72

Today',·

beating Indiana, won't
hazard a guess on the !Wni
chances for success against
the two impending rivals.
Michigan State has the best
record amorig conference

teams, 10-1.
" We'll find out whether
we're for real this wet:k/'

Henson said.
Other Thursday ·games
match Indiana at Minnesota,
Ohio State at Northwestern,
Purdue at Wisconsin and
Michigan at Iowa. Saturday
America's No. 1
contests pit Indiana at
Home Carpet
. . - - - - - - - -. . Wisconsin, Ohio State at
Cleaning
Minnesota, Purdue at Iowa
System
and Michigan State at
Northwestern.
Michigan and Purdue
sl!ould be tested along wltb
Michigan State since ootb
..
PERHOUR
play at Iowa and the
. (oHOIJI&lt;-1
Hawkeyea, always hard to
heat at borne, have an (1.3
record as well as one of the
two road wins in 10

---,--00___
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conference games so ·far.
~~n 's extremely important
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ __. to win at home," Purdue's

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Fred Schaus said . " The
winner of the league wlll win
eight or nine times at home,
I'll bet."
Even in ·two games,
freshmen have shown signs
the conference contenders
will have talent from

newcOD)ers.
I

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un4er acting coach Mike
Boyd, snapped a seven-game
losing streak with a 57-53 win
over Western Michigan.
• Sophomore Mark Dudley
had !8 points lor Kent State,
while Burrell McGhee added
17. Herman Randle led
Western Michigan with 14,
while Dave Carnegie and
Mar~ Throop finished with 12
an 10, respectively.
Boyd replaced Rex Hugbes
who was fired Mooday.
ln other games it was
Eastern IDlnois 76, Akron 75;
St. Francis (Pa . ) 77,
Cleve Ia nd
State
71 ;
Muskingum 62, Otterbein 00;
Mt. Union 78, Ohio North·
ern 67; Baldwin-Walla ce
80, Heidelberg 75; Wooster 93,
Kenyon 80; Wilmington 77,
Bluffton 76; John Carroll 77,
Hiram 59; Wittenberg 55,
Marietta 48; Rio Grande 86,
Walsh 77; Defiance 71,
Findlay 61; Thiel (Pa.) 64,
Case Western 56; Dyke 91, '
Spring Arbor (Mich.) 81 ;
Ur~na 61, Ohio Dominican
56; and Biscayne (Fla.) 66,
Tiffin 50.

Cards wanting
lst round pick
for Coryell
ST. LOUIS (UP!) - A litst·
round draft choice is all that
is keeping St. Louis Cardinal
Coach Don Coryell from
going to the Los An~eles
Rams.
But, Coryell a nd Rams'
owner Carroll Rosenbloom
say that is too high a price to
pay.
"1 just can't imaglne them
giving up a fir&gt;i·round draft
choice/' Coryell said Wednesday . " It's been done
before, but only as a penalty
for tampering. If I were
them, there's no way I'd give
up a fir st- round draft
choice."
Beca use Coryell was
unhappy with his job m St.
Louis, Cardinal owner Bill
Bidwill said he contacted the
Rams Dec , 2:1 and asked if
they would be interested in
obtaining Coryell.
"I Indicated compensation
was involved," Bidwill said.
" It would not be in the best
interests of .the St. Louis
franchise to allow the head
coach to walk away in the
middle of his contract to
another NFL team without
compens~tion ."

~---P~---~ Nation
AIELlo
!Standings\ ByUP!GREG
Spons Writer
l

I

NEW ORLEANS CUP!) Dallas
Coach Tom Landry
By United Pren tnterniltional
Eastern Conterence
remembers well wnen the
Atlantic Division
w. l Pet. GB Cowboys ca ptured the
nation•s
imagination
Phila
26 11 .103
Ne w York
27 11 .U-4 5
precisely ·the same way the
Bvftalo ·
'" '21 •oo 11
Denver Broncos are doing It
Boston
11 '25 .3'2-4 1•
New Jersev
9 30 . i2J I 18
now.
Central Division
Both Landry and Denver
W l
Pd. GB
Wshngtn
23 15 . ~s
Coach Red Miller agree all
San Antoni
27 17 564
Jl J the excitement created by the
Clevelnd
19 18 .51• 31 ~
Broncos' rise this season
Atlanta
19 21 .41 5 5
New Or in ~
16 24 .400 8
should enable them to handle
Houston
u 24 368 '9
the pressure rapidly building
Western Conh:rence
Midwest Division
for Sw1dajl'~ Super Bowl.
W. L Pet . GB
"Denver has caught the
Den'ller
'15 13 658
,Y. IIw
'23 20 .535 41 J fancy of people a round abe
thic'ago
21 19 .515 5
co untry ," La ndry satd
Detroit
17 71 ..447 8
Wednesday · before. the
Indiana
16 20 .444 8
Kanss Cty
14 26 .350 12
Cowboys'
second workout ~
Pacific Division
New
Orleans
. ''The Rrnncos
W. L Pet. GB
N 8A SfanctlnliJS

Portland
32 5 .865
Phoen i K
25 14 .641 8
Sea tt le
21 70 .512 13
Golden St
18 21 462 15
Los Angel s
f7 23 .475 161 ?
. Wednesday ' s Result s
Bos ton 9 1, Houston 88
Seattle 106. Oetro1l 100
Afla 100, washington 95
Phoenix 142, New Ortns 99
San An tonio 130, Mltw 106
Golden St . 103, New Jrsy 97
Kan C 1ly 102, LOS Ang 94
· Thursd.-y ' s Gam es
Derwer at Houston
Indiana at Buffalo
Friday ' s Games
De tro it at Phoen q"'
Cleveland at Seattle
Milwaukee 1111 Chicago
New Jers ey lit Boston
Kansas City at lnd •ana
Port land at Washington
Sa n An toni o at Atlanta
Buffalo at Philadelphia
• New York st Golden St

WHA Standings

By Un•ted Press International
.~New Eng la nd

Winnipeg

Queb ec

· Edmonton
Birmi ngh am
Houston
Cin cin nat 1
Ind ianapoli S

W. L T . Pis .
~5 11 3 53
:l4 12 1 49
19 14 '1 40
18 17 1 37

16 21 2
15 19 J
15 22 2
13 73 4

Wednesday 's Results

34
33
32
30

Edmonton 2, Cmcinnat• 0
Ind ianapolis 2, Quebec 1
Win nepeg I I , Birmingham 2
Thundily ' s Gam es
( No games scheduled)
Friday 's Games
Wl nn1peg at Houston
Edmon ton at New Eng land

lnternationat' ,
Hockey League f
· United Press International
North
W L T Pis GF GA
Sag i na w 23 13 4 50 190 132

Fli nt

19 1&lt; &lt; 42 171 172

Pf. Hu r;Cln 16 12

8 40 127 122

Musk.
12 21 6 30 130 152
Kalama . 10 18 8 28 127 140
South

W L T Pts. GF GA

Ft . Wayne17 10 11 45 140 129

Milwau

14 15 10 38 119 133

Tol edo 14 14 9 37 141 IJJ
Grnd . Rapids
II 19 6 28 112 146

Wednesday's Results
Milwaukee 5, Ttlledo 3
For1 Wayne 4, Muskegtln 2
Thursday's Game
Flint at Milwaukee
Friday's Games
Fort Wayne at Flint
Saginaw at Muskegon
Toledo at Port Huron
Grand Rapids at Ka lamazoo

Redmen trip
Walsh, 86-77
Rio Grande placed six men
in double figures as Coach
Art Lanham's REdmen
turned back ho~ Walsh, 8677, in a Mid·Ohio Conference
cage game in North Canton
Wednesday nig~t .
The victory left Rio Grande
in undisputed first place witJJ
a 4-ll mark. The Redmen are
!1-1 on the year.
Coach Mark LaMoreaux's
Cavs dropped to 3·13 overall
and 1-4 inside the conference.
Rio Grande grabbed an
early lead and was on top 3tJ..
33 during the ·halftime in·
termission.

Rio pulled away to. a 12
point 3.dvantage on three or
four occasions in the second
half but Walsh kept coming
back to pull within one or two
m~rkers before the Redmen
put it away during the final
two minutes of action.
Gil Price led Rio's attack
with 16 points. Mark Swaui
and Dan Purcell each tossed
In 15. Vince Phelps came off
the bench in the second half to
chip in with eight assists and
14 points. Don Gibson and
Greg James added 10 for
the wlMers.
Rio Grande hit 59 percent ol
its shots from the field,
sinking 35 of 59. From the foul
line, Rio hit 16 of 21 charity

in Broncomania

shots for 76 percent.
The Redmen picked off 41
rebounds, 18 by Greg James.
Price had nine caroms. The
Redmen had 19 turnovers.
Lonnie Moore paced the
winners with 2.1 points. Mark
Kounouzve!is had 15 and
Steve Pridemore 14.
The Cavs hit 33 of 85 field
goal attempts for 38 percent.
The losers were II of 17 atthe
foul line for 63 percent.
Walsh had 46 rebounds, 14
by Pridemore. The Cavs had
18 turnovers.
Rio Grande will host Mt.
Vernon Nazarene in a MidOhio Conference clash at
Lyne . Center on Saturday,
beginning at 7:30 p. m.
weather permitting. Here's Wednesday's box:
RIO GRANDE (86) Pri ce, 8-0-16 ; James, 5·0·10;

Swain, 6-3-15; Gibson , 3·4-10;
Johnson, 0·0-0; Purcell, 5-5IS ; Phelps , 6 ·2-14; Bise , 2-2·6:

Fitzpatrick, o.o.o. TOTALS
35-16-86.
WflLSH (771 - Ungash lck,
1-0-2; O'Harney , 3·2·8;
Luther, 3-0·6 ; Pridemore, 5·4·
14; Sabulski, 2-0 -4; Moore, 11 .
1· 23 ;
Feefl er ,
1·3 -15 ;
Kounouzvell s,
7 · 1-1 5 .

Knox has goal
•
at Buffalo: WID
ORCHARD PARK, N.Y.
(UP! ) - New Buffalo Bills
Coach Chuck Koox has his
prtorities set - ·assemble a
coaching staff and win .
Knox:, who led the Los
Angeles Rams to five
Western Division titles ln the
National Footbal l
Conference, was named
coach of the slumping Btlls
Wednesday. He succeeds Jim
Ringo, who was fired at the
end of the 1977 season. and
takes over a team that was :;.
23 over two seasons under two
different head coaches.
"The top priority I have is
to assemble the best coaching
staff possible," Knox said in
Los Angeles. "! knlll" this, It's
not going to be easy in
Buffalo. I'm going to have to
go in there and work harder
than we've ever worked."
Bills owner J,!alph Wilson
Jr . has conlidedce that Knox
is \he man to do the job. He
said_Knox "has experienced
nothing but success with the
Los Angelea franchise and we
know he is just the man to
restore the Buffalo Bills to a
position of prominence in
professional football."
Wil son said Knox was
released from lhe remaining
years of his Los Angeles
contract and signed laie
Tuesday night to a new multiyear agreement with Buffalo.
"We
are
positively
delighted to land a man of ·
Chuck Knox's st ature as the
new head.coach of the Bills,"
Wilson added.
Knox said his title with the
Bills was "vice-president in
charge
of
football
oper"tions." One published
report said Knox signed a sixyear contract for $200,000 a
year.
"My title is vice-president
in charge of foo tball

WHEN IT WAS OFF

·1977 Pontiac

1974 MercuiJ

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E~~:tra

s harp,

bl~ck

Comet
wi th

red lop &amp; Interior .

Schlichter
will name
his school
WASHINGTON COURT
HOUSE, Ohio (UPI) - Art
Schlichter, possibly the most
sought after high school
quarterback prospect in the
nation, was to announce
today where he. will attend
college.
Th e
6·3,
188-pound
Schlichter, who led Miami
Trace High School to a 2!J.O..I
record during his three years
at its regular quarterback,
had narrowed his choice
down to Penn State and Ohio
State. He was to make the
announcement ~~ a 10 a .m.
news conference at the high
school.
Schlichter, the 1977 United
Press International Ohio
Class AAA back of the year,
was called "the best high
school quarterback I've ever.
seen," by ooe v~teran college

The
perfec t
family
a uh&gt;!Tl ob !le, auto . , A .C .•

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Auto ., A. C., P 5., P.B., V·

The most popular car
America's his lory .

•1995

•2695

Stop by to see one of these courteous
salesmen : John Sang, Doug Lease or Jim

Walker. ·

195 Upper River Road
Gallipolis, Ohio
446-9800

CLOSED
MONDAY, JANUARY 16th
In ObseMnce Of
'

MARTIN WTHER KING DAY

recruiter.

Schlichter had originally
included Michigan and
Tennessee in his list of
TOTALS 33-11 -77.
prospective schools. He
Halftime score : Rio 38
Wal sh 33.
Visited Penn State several
weeks ago , had his official
. visit t~ Ohio f tate the past
weekend and "'lecided that
was enough.
"He's the reason we were
so explosive," said Miami
I'd switch the ignition off but Trace coach Fred Zechman,
the· eng1ne wouldn ' t stop . whose Panthers averaged
60.6 points per game in rolling
In stead tf sputtered, rocked
and
coughe d .
TheM
I to a 1~ record the past
disco ver ed WYNN ' S SPIT· season. "Without a doubt he's
Fl RE . Now m y troubles are a game breaker.' '
over •." writes a happy user . 1 Schlichter,
who was
Ye s, engin e " a ft er run "
wooed
by both
personally
caused by heavy carbon build.
Woody
Hayes
·of
Ohio
State
Pe · no t
only
up
ca n
and Joe Paterno ol Penn
exaspera ting , but downn ght
State, completed 108 of 190
dangerous m echanically . So
pass attempts his senior year
be k. lnd to your car and
yourse l f. Add a can' of 1 for 1,794 yards and 21
WYNN 'S SPIT-F&lt;RE to your touchdowns. He also ran for
gas tank loda y,'Now avatlable
539 yards in 74 carries for a
at all HECK 'S.
7.3 average per try .
'

"MY ENGINE RAN

are unique and have gone after 17 years wltho~ .
through
Ule
kind of reaching the piayo!ls. The
excitement that comes to a city of Denver erupted in a
city ooly ooce. It happened to frenzy
called
us In 1966 w~~n we had our ••Broncomanla" and UJe rest
first winning season and of the counlry took quick
played for our first NFL. oottce.
chan1plonshlp.
"Our team has been in
"T~e American people 'training for this type or
sentimentally are for the Ullll!l," Miller said ahout the
underdogs. We were the distractions of the Super
underdogs for a long time and Bowl buildup. "This has been
naturally we picked up a lot happening to us all season. I
of followers. That changes, think our team will play up to
though."
its capabillUes oo Sunday, I
The Cowboys have been on think we Cjln still get the
top a long time now - 12 concentrat1011 we need in
playoffs in the last 13 years,
or all the excitement."
12
. .
four
Super
Cowboys' role as fiveiJOinl
appearances. The Broncos fav orites could be a
ooly came ol age this season disadvantage.
"! think that puts more
pressure on us," he said.
· ''They
lee! like the
underdogs, just like they did
Pittsburgh
in
against
Oakland. I hope it doesn't
turn out the same ."
Landry admitted he doesn't
have the same coofldence he
operations," Knox said, had before the Co wboys heat
"which means that I'll ~ve Miami, 2~. In Super Bowl
the respoosibillty for-· the XI .
coaching, the drafting and
"This is a different situation," he said. "Then ! knew
the trading .
"That responsiblUty also our whole team was so
means Ilia t you work hand in experienced and had shared
ha nd with the other people our
earlier
losin g
that are responsible for tbeir disappointments. Miami then
separate departments, " was an up-and-coming team.
not llke they would be tn a few
Knox added.
Knox, 45, said be was years. I think this Is a tossup.
looking forward to returning We are capable of playing
e'xcellent football but I'm not
tO the East.
" My family and I are from guaranteeing it."
the East, we're from
Denver quarterback Craig
(Sewickley) Pennsylvania," Morton took part in all
he explained. "It's about a offensive drUls Wednesday
three·hour drive from Buffalo and seemed to be working
and we're look ing forward to without much dis comfort.
coming back there and ac- Miller said Morton's bruised
cepting the challenge.''
hlp is "progressing well.' '

A Home Bank
For

Meigs County
People

RAC.I'NE
HOME NATIONAL

BANK
OHIO

In

�•

4- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Jan.l2. 1978

Sloan is Juvenile pair
pleased caught, charged
at NCS'

Girls warned of grid dangers
CINCINNATI (UPI l - ''I
have a daughter ,'' said Gerry
Faust, one of the nation's
•emier high school football
coaches, ~&lt;a nd · I sure don't
want her playing footbaU."
Faust, coach of Ohio state
champion Cincinnati Moeller
and regarded as ooe of the
best prep meniAJrs In the
country, today led a barrage
of negative reaction from
sports officials to a federal
judge's order'that high school
giJ:Is must he permitted to
play alongside boys in
contact spOrts like football
and basketball.
"J thlnk everyone has equal
rights, but some kind of a line

her high school girls' Howe. ''There Is a difference judge has ruled," he added,
basketbaU team, also said he between Klrls and boys, thank " but while it may be legaUy
correct, as far as real life is
•
•
wouldn't pertnit his daughter God .~'
Two ' t4-year-old juveniles Johnson, 14, McArthur, at·
The stroog reaction came coocerned, I think it's make
to play high school football
were arrested by the Gallia· tempted to turn off SR 160
In the wake of U.S. District believe.
alongside beys.
Meigs Post State Highway when the car he was drivinl!
"I've never seen a woman
" I've played some football Court Judge Carl Rubin's
Patrol and Gallia County slid into a vehicle operated by
By FRED UEF
and it'sa rough. violent sport decision in Dayton this week yet who is going to stand up to
sheriff's department ending a Paul ·D. Swain, 23, Point
that punishes your body," that current bans on the physical pounding that
UPI Sports Writer
Coach Norm Sloan had a loot chase Wednesday after Pleasant.
said Robertson, now a coeducational high school football requires. But maybe
Following the collision,
Ci.nclnnati businessman. ..1 teams in cmtact sports are the judge ~s aware of some turnover of players that left an accident on SR 160 at Kerr.
The
patrol
said
Randall
J
.
·
don't think it's going to work unconstitutional. ·
prospect out there."
him with 10 new players on
for girls. The body chemistry • Rubin said such hans may
Thacker has a ~ique ~r- his roster this season and
is totally different at certain even be keeping some girl spective ~om Which to VIeW some people were picking
lr
_somewhere from becoming the JUdge:s ruling. He was • - ~ Not'th carolina State for last .:JC • ~-"""""
11ees for boys ami gi!'.b.
"I'm all for girls having the greatest quarterback in star play~r on t~ University place in the Atlantic Coast
opportunity to play sports, pro footba ll histpry.
of CI DCI OOati s national Coolerence
" I don't even think a championship basketball
and I might even consider
Wednesd.ay night , State '
letting my daughter play on a federal judge could be so team of ·the early 1961E and heat Maryland ~ for Its
'
ATHENS - Senator Julian defined as a pOiitics of
.
'
'
beys' basketball team, but I foolish to say that," chuckled now coaches the school 's
Bond, a member of the change, an outgrowth of the
Brown, who quarterbacked in &lt; women's basketball team. 1Ith VIctory of the ~son.
draw the line at football ."
"So
I think sh ld
Slo311, whose team IS now Georgia State Legislature, civil rights movement of the
Head-shaking came from college and became a lawyer
me spor1s
ou
ll·l and 2--1 in conference will speak at Ohio University 1960s.
the
professional
and before helping organize the he sexually mixed - horse play, is getting a little tired of
"We are changing the color
collegiate ranks, as weU as Bengals' pro football team . racmg ,
tennis,
polo, providing explanations for Sunday, Jan. 15, in com· of Southern politics," Bond
memoration of the birthdate
" I don't doubt that the law volleyba ll, '!"'yb~ baseball from high school &lt;-oaches.
his club's success.
of
the late Dr. Martin Luther has said. " If epough Blacks
" It 's amusing," laughed actually requires what the bu! I doo t thmk enough
"Ever since we won our King.
are elected at the grassroots
Cincinnati Bengals assistant
women ha~e the streng~ first game, I've been getting
Bond 's talk, entitled level, it's bound to have a
general manager Mike
~d endur ~ to compe.
the same question: 'Are you
"What's NeJ~,:t?/' will be major impact on politics at
Brown. " If the law says thai,
w1th or agamst .~oys ~n surprised ?" ' he sa!d ... 1
. in . Memorial the top. If the South is to be
then the law is a iitUe bit
Co ll ~ge Baske1ball lh$ulh
co ntact
s ports ,
sa1d continue to say, 'No. I'm not given
Auditorium at 4 p.m., with a freed politically, 'it will have
By United Press Inte rnational
silly.1'
Thacker.
'sed b t 1 think
•
East
we ~ public reception immediately to he remade from the school·
" A few women could do it surpn ' u
"It's a bad thing," moaned
Blmsbg 96, Muhlnbg 89
board up.u
~orne together as a team a
Mlln 86, Wash&amp; Jeff 68
-one of my players last year little quicker than I thought following in Baker Center,' When Bond was elected to
Tom Thacker, who coaches a Crngie
Oetroil 84, 1ona 79
Room 204.
could beat some men in one- we "Would u'
women's college basketball
Frmnghm St . 82, Slflk 77
Bond, now 37, is one of the· the Georgia House of
on-one.
But
most
women
Ch
k
.,
·
"
H
Frank&amp;Marsh
73
,
Ellztwn
63
team. "A few women would
1
creators of what has been Representatives in 1965,
56, Navy 53
couldn't do it.! think the best
. ares
aw .ere
be able to compete alongside · Georgetown
Holy Cross 97 •.Assmptn 90
course to follow is to give . Whitney led the way with 18 ca Ued the " new politics," there were fewer than 100
men , but the great majority
Hobart 87 , RIT 17
Black elected officials in the
women's sports the same pomts and Tony Warren
Hunter 80. M. Evers 76
couldn't"
facilities and financial added 17 as the Wolfpack but I'm not sure I'm ready South. Today there are over
Ku lztw n 86, W. €hester 16
"Tackle football is no place
Lafayelle 76. American 64
support as men and let them relied on a tight zone defense mentally. Maybe I can put it 2,000. Bond is credited with
LaSalle 80, Dr exe l79
for gir ls ," de&lt;:lared high
c 0 m p e t e a m 0 n g to hold off Maryland.
together this week and win. I playing a major role in this
Leb . Val 59, Millrsvl 49
schoo l football coac h Frank
Loy&lt;Jia Md . 57, Maris! 43
change through his own ef·
themselves."
Freshm~n Greg Manning hope I can."
Florist Since 1957
Moravian 9'1, Drew 65
forts and those of the many ·
Figured
Howe,
the
football
had
a
high
_
2
0
points
for
Wadkins,
younger
brother
Niagara 91, Sien a 83
Pl. Park 91, LaRoche 65
coach at Colwnbus Northland Maryland, which dropped to of PGA champ and World organizations he supports. He
Prov 76, St. Jos. Pa ..,69
High School, "The judge is 94 overall and 0.3lll the ACC. Series winner Lanny, has to is currently _president of the
Qunnipc 67, CenJ Conn . 65
way out of line. He ~oesri 't
In other games mvolvmg beat a top field to win 'the Southern Poverty Law Center
Sc rd Hrt 75, c.w . Post 13
St. Bonny 70, Wis .. Mil 68
understand
that
the top teams, No. 9 Syracuse Phoenix. Nineteen of last and board chairperson of the
St . Fran NY 58, Adlphi 56
physiology
of
girls
doesn't
defeated Penn State, 83-77, year's top 20 winners are here Southern Election Fund.
St . John 's 97 ; Fordham 56
FLORIST
s _ Conn 79, Am Inti 69
His speech is sponsored by
equip them to play football No. 10 Kansas topped as well as half a dozen other
Ssquehnna sa, Jnia ta 56
with boy.s.
Oklahoma State, 69-57, winners of five or more the Center for Afro-American
Syracuse 83, Penn St . 77
sna pping a ni ne~game losing
PH. 992-2644
Studies and the Kennedy
Temp le 81, Pitt 74
"I would he wrong to take Georgetown edged Navy, 56- events over the years.
streak . More importantly ,
Upsa la 69, Bu ck nell 65
the chance of letting a girl 53, Holy Cross downed
Jerry Pate is the defending Lecture Series and is open to
Vil lanova 71. Mass. 64
Lacey played 3!i minutes 352 E. Ma In, Pomeroy
play," he said. "ldoo~think Assumption , 97-9~, champion and probably has the public without Charge.
Va . 71. Delaware 59
l
Your FTD Florist ·
which didn 't happen under
Widner 86, Havrfrd AJ
I'd have a leg IAJ stand on if ProVIdence beat St. Joseph s as good a chance as anyone to
.__.._.._._._.._.,--1
South
Johnson .
(she) got hurt. Her parents (Pa.), 7-, and Nebraska win the event again in a field
Ave rtt 69, Grnsboro 68
"Sam felt he should be
Biscayne 66, Tiff in 50
. could sue me."
lost to Colorado,_ 73-64.
that includes Tom Watson,
more of an assist man," said
Duk e 107 , Clemson 85
Other high school football
Els,ewhere, It was St. the 1977 PGA Player of the
Ferrum
64
,
Surr
ey
51
Staverman, who picked up
Fla. Sthrn 81. Armstrng 74
coaches echoed similar reac- Johns 97, Fordham 56, Year and winner last week at
his first NBA 'Coa ching
Fta Sf BS. F . Dcknsn 43
tions to the possibility of girl Temple 81, ~Ittsburgh 74 (2 Tucson, Lee Trevino, Lanny
F la Tech 106, W.NewEng 79
victory . "When he got the
Ga . 68, Georgia Tech 64
football
players, ooe even ots):
Vlll?nova ~ . n, Wadkins, Hale Irvin, Ben
ball, he was always looking to
Ja~~:nv l A la . 99, Shrt r 88
complaining,
"I
don't
think
Massachusetts,
V~rgmia 71,
Crenshaw, Tom Weiskopf,
Ky . Sl , 107, Chi Sf. 92
pass it off. We. told him to
Come In and look over our
.the boys would treat her like Delaware 59; Duke ,107, Gene Litiler, Ray Floyd and
LaGrn
ge
79, Ga . Sthw str'n 62
shool more, to ta ke hi s
Lenoir .Rhyne 45, Eton 37
Clemson 85; · Georgia 68, Johnny Miller.
a lady ..
sale table. SHOES FOR THE
jumper from the top of the
Mi lligan 66, Mars Hill 51
·
'Georgia Tech 64; VIrginia
Arnold Pabner, a threeMo r ehous~ B~. Fis k 78
key .. He's a good shooter.''
Tech 99, West VIrginia 88; time Phoenix champ, is
M . Harv ey 50, Pikev l 64
WHOLE FAMILY,
N. C. St. so, Maryland 82
Iowa State 82, Kansas State rnakin g h'lS 1978
d b t dh
Sports Transactions
_ e u an e
North Ga . 70, Ga. Coli 48
By UnHed Preu tntern•tlonal 77; Oklahoma 73 , Missouri 70
played well in the prO-am,
Pfei ff er 90, Fla. Tech 84
Rchmnd 82, Old Dom 81
Wednesday
(ot), and Air Force 77, San . shooting an even-par 71.
So . Car. 75, Fairt·ield 69
Foolball
Diego 62.
1 a
S.C St . H , ( harl ston 76
Detroit - Signed Monte Clark
Palmer says he might Pay
Trn sv tvn ia 100, Union n
to a fi11e -vear contr act es head
little more this year than last,
VCU 64 , Jam es Madison Stl
coach .
'
4. Warsaw Ri v. Vw . (5-1) 53
Va . Tech 99, w. va .· 88
Bu ffalo - ,Sig ned Chuck Knox
when he was in 20 events.
5. Campbell Mom . 12 6-01 50

10:-n Bond will s........ Sunday
on 'What's Next?' at Ohio

has to be drawn, '' said Faust .

"I think there are plenty of
sports my daughter is suited
for besides football."
Asked if he thought girls
who wanted to play football
alongside boys should he
allowed to, Faust said, "!
really don't know . I don 't
know things like if the female
bone struc::;t ure is different
from males. ·~'hings 'tike that
have to be taken into
consideration beca use in
football, there 's contact,
often intense con tact, on
everY, play ."
Former basketball great
Oscar Robertson , whose
daughter Shana is a star on

Johnson and his companion,
14-year-old
Dean
A.
Crawford, Columbus, fled on
foot. During the pair l's ~··
investigation, lt was learned
that the car bad been stolen
Monday night In McArthur.
The boys were apprehended
two hours · later in the
Evergreen area.
They were taken to the
Gallia County Jail after
charges of hit-skip and auto
theft were filed.
James D. Rife, 19,
ateshire, escaped injury in a
traffic accident during
a
1
chase on Gravel Hi11 Rd. by
Cheshire Marshal Ron
Lemley. .
According to the report,
Marshal. Lemley attempted
to stop Rife's car in Cheshire.
Rife attempted to flee when
Lemley gave chase.
II ended on the icy, snow
covered county road when
Rife lost control, sliii off the
left side of the road over an
embankment opposite Gravel
Hill Cemetery. ·
Rife was charged wjth
reckless operation and
fleeing a police officer. He
will appear before Cheshire
Mayor Scotty Lucas.
A single car mishap oc·
curredat 9:12a.m. on SR 160,
one mile north of US 35. The
patrol said Susan C. Turner,
U, Kerr, lost control of her
car on the icy highway. Her
car struck an embankment.

u

office man - was named his

replacement , it meant good
· things for the center Sam
La cey, who ha s been

spending a lot of time on the
bench.
Wednesday night Lacey
scored a season-high 20 points
as the Kings beat the Los
Angyles !akers , . 102-94 .

M~;~·~~;;;o, Thfu; ~~ming' .ton-iuht Sinai. Schools
~ter
--e·~.-- sn~ m
ulllled"Preu
ln
sot
M1•deaSt.

utenaaUoaal
A vicloua eomblnatlon of
IIIIOW, sleet and lee barreled
· out of the Southwell today, ·
threatening IAl pour a new
00111 of winter as for east as
tile Carollnaa and as far north
as Michigan. _
Tho mlllllon of a mid frost

January
Clearance

SAVE!
.'1.00
PER YARD
ON

~~;~::~ouc;l

Lacey ·reacts
to new coach
By FRED LIEF
UPI Sports Writer
When Phil Johnson was
axed as coach this past week
and Larry Staverman - a
Kansas City Kings' fron t

.

GOING ON NOW

12

WHITE
SEWING MACHINES
SALE PRICED
THE SEWING
CENTER
On lilt Tin Middleport

Wtth-moilt Gulf of Me,n co air
sent a roaring blast of
thunderstorms across the
Plains and Mi•s!•sippi Valley
and threatened to hit the
Great Lakes region by
tonlilbt:
The stol'lil hit lwdest In
Arkansas, where aU roada
were llated as hazardous.
Mount Ida, Ark., reported
more than 5 Inches of IIIOW
and $leet and more was
expected today.
At Hope, Ark., the weight of
!lleet and· Ice crushed seven
poultry houses containing
more than · 100,000 chiCkens.
"We may have trouble
getting equipment in," said
Uoyd Hendrix, an official
with Corn Belt of Arkansas.
He said farmers Ukely would
discover dozens of other
cave-ins today.
" This could · run into
millions of dollars of damage
in a hurry. It could create a
disaster a.r ea for us,"
Hendrix said. Chickens are
the area's biggest business,
with yearly production of 30
mUlion to 40 million.
The storm sealed northern
Texas under a sheet of ice
and caused so many
accidents that Fort Worth ran
out of ambulances. A chain
reaction caused a 14-car
pileup on a Dallas freeway
and at least one fatality was
blamed oo icy roads.
' "I'd like to get out there to
help the people, but I'd lose
·my job," said William
Perkins, a clerk · at a selfservice station on busy
Stemmons Freeway. "This is
the worst weather we '~ had.
It's all white outside. It's
Sleeting real hard."
Travel advisories were
posted from northern Texas
to Tennessee and from

COLUMBUS IUP II - The

CLASS AAA
Tea m

Points
93.
66

I . Spr .. N orth (86·0 )
2. Middletown ( 1 a.o)
62
3. Co l. Wal. Ridge 13-1)
55
4. Co t. Watt erson ( JJ. J)
5, Ketlertng Fmt W . (7 .0) &lt;8
6 {tiel
Ci ncy Mother of
M ercy .

1&lt;-1I

6. IIie l Gahanna

llncotn

"32

(6 .0)

8. Fa irlield {7 -1)
9. (t iel

Cincinnati

25
Hughes (6- ll
9 . { t ie) Sylv·ania
North view (6·0)
25
Others wit h 10 or more
poin t.s :
Delawa r e,
Bay
Village , Eastlake Nor th,
Tol edo Centra l Ca th o l ic,
Cincinnati Oak Hi ll s, : Kef.
A ll ~r.

te ri ng

Fairmont

East

Points
Team
100
1. Arcanum (6 2-0l
2. Lancaster Fisher
77
Catholic (2 6-0J
67
3. Ada II 6-1 I
4. Mansfield St. Peter 's
126-01
61.
5. Rocky River Lutheran
West {"2 -1)

CLASS AA
Team

Delphos St. Joh ns

Points
(7

105

6·01

2. Dresden Tri -Va lley

(7 601

6&lt;

58

6 . Frankfort Adena (5-ll
45
7. Minster (6 · 0
44
8. Lakesi de Da·n bury (1 4·

0)

9. New~Riegel (B-ll

Ke t tering

and Akron Sf .

Vincent · St. Ma ry .
l.

6. Ontario ( 1 4-0l
43
7 . Col. Hartley· (6-0)
32
B. Chardon (6 -0)
23
9. Avon ( 12·0)
21
lO . ferrysbu r g (5.-ll
. 17
Ot her s wi th let) or more
points :. Upper Sa nd usky,
Spririgl ield ·
N ortliw~s tern ,
Chagrin Fa its, Leavi tfsburg
Labrae, Aki'"on ··Hoban. Lima
Ba th, Ar c hbold, Oregon
Cardina l Stri t ch and M ill b Ury
Lake.
CLASS A

&lt;0

39

10. auck.eye Tra il {13-0J
31
Others with ten or more
points : Hunting ton , Smi th .
vi lle ( 1) , Hill top , Dalton ,
Ru ss ia. Sa l ineville SOuthern,
South
Webste r .· Bloom,
Ca rding ton- Lincoln, East
Canton (l) and Holga te (1).

W. Ky , 96, Jaxnvl 94
Midwest
Bldwn .W tlce 80, Hd lbrg 75
B'a tl St. 69 , Vlpraiso 64
Butler 58. St . Jos 56
Calvin 74. AQuinas 67
Cen t Mit::h . 102, Bflo 73
Day ton 73. Miami 66
Dyke 9 1, Sp rn g A rbr 81
Ill. St . 79, No. Il l. 67
I Owa Sl. 82, Kan.SI 71
J . Carro ll 77, Hir am 59
Klmcnoo 80, lrid .· Prdue 66
Kent S1. 57, W. Mich . 53
Marion 7'1, I U-East 65
Mt . Union 78, 0 . Nrthrn 67
Msk.ngm 62 , Otterbein 60
Nrl hws trn Ia . 103, Mdlnd 91
Ohio u . 68, Marsha ll 56
Ol iv tt e 98, Concrdia 81
Ros~ - Himr 68, Earlha m 58
St. Fra n Pa 77, Cle_.St . 11
Urbna 61 , 0 . Dominit:an 56
Wabash BB, Hope Mien . 69
· Wm . Penn 69 , Ia . Wslyn d8
Wilm 77 , Bluffton 76
Southwest
Kan . 69, Okla . St. 57
OKla . 73, Missouri 70
Pan Am 10 1. Texas A&amp;. l 78

to a multi -vear contract

head coach.

Hockey

PhOadelphla

IN As u

west

waSh ..91, Sea tf l P ac 79

Colorado 73. Nebrask.a 64
Hwaii · Hilo 101. Gr ce Co\ I 84
Pmon a -P.t2r 52, Occ;i d entat 51
Pugst Snd 109. E . Mont . 80
Red la nds 76, LaVern e 72 .
.Whittier 85, -Ctrmnt -Mdd 61

lO WID

it aJl

at Phoemx" '

NOW OPEN

HUSH PUPPIES WARM

GINO'S
OF MASON

· UNED BOOTS

PHOENIX, Ariz. -(UPI) -

- Last Sunday, Bobby Wadkins

S1gned m1df u~lder Jonnn,v Giles
! rom Irel an d.
-..,

At h inAction 120, Sac.toSt . 6d
Ce~;~ t

•

New
York
Islanders
Acquired defenseman Darcy
Regier
from
Cleveland
in
com pl etion o~ :c"ci~rlli!r trade .

25% OFF

wadkitls ready

as

was in position to win hlsfirst

tournament, the Tucson
Open, but he evidently wasn't
ready.
This week in the Phoenix
Open, which starts today,
Girls
Ohio High School
Wadkins may finally win .
Embarking on his fourth
Basketball
United Press International
year on the tour, he spot a 5Wednesday's Result
54 under-par 86 Wednesday in
Sy lvania
Northview
the pro-am for the best round
Oregon Clay 36
of the day. The fact he did it
on a wet course and in
Ohio H~:~·Schoot
unusually cold ·weather was
Basketball
even more impressive.
United Press lniernation~l
"Maybe I Wasn't ready to
Wed·nesday~s Results
'
win in· Tucson,'' Wadkins ·
Col Ready 72 Col West 56
d • 1 h ld h
't
Col Centennial 70 · Col St
sai . ' s au
ave won 1'
Charles 57.
though, because I played so
well in the last two rounds.
I'm physically ready to win

SAVING$ FROM

THE Middleport.
SHOE0. BOX

ACE
HARDWARE

.. United Press IotemaUonal
Two of Ohio's major
electric utilities restored full
service Wednesday and two
more ivere espected to do the
same today as temperatures
rose in the Buckeye State .
But more snow Is on the way
and could turn into a
" dangerous
Five Ohio stonn."
utilities earlier

this week cut back oo power
'because their coal stockpiles
were frozen and fresh
supplies of coal were stopped
bY the United Mine Workers

%
%

Toledo
Edison
and
Cleveland Electric
Illuminating restored full
power late WedneS!Iay and
Ohio Power had reswned
normal &lt;operations by late
Tuesday night.
Dayton Power &amp; Light Co.
and Colwnbus &amp; Southern
Ohio Electric Co. today still
had five percent power
reductions in effect but were
to look at the situation again
later In the day .
The National Weather
. Service imposed a winter
storm watch for atreme
ilouthern Ohio for tonight and

.heritage house
OF SHOES
Open Monday thru Thursday &amp; saturday
9:30to5:00
·
.Friday 9:30 to 8:00
N. 2NDAVE.
.
MIDDLEPORT,O.

3. Pembe r ville Eastwood (J.
01
60
" Au is the place with
the Helpful Hardware Man"®

'

NUW IMPROVED! INSTANT

PULLSTRAP ADJUSTMENT!

_____

ACE

for INDOORS

,.AT&amp;NTKD
No f1tt1n~
Rtquntd

__..;;..:;_

"Clean Sweep"

VAN YL-ITE lATE X IN TERI0R
PAINT
By
.

Von_ntiofttL
vvw

~

•a•s
.•

,E. Main

.

Friendly Serviu

Open Nightstill9

PH. 99l-29SS
Pomerov. o.

Ebersbach Hardware
,

"EVE~'(THING

1 OW.MAIN

Made of
genuine
broom
corn

IN HARDWARE"

••

POMEROY

• .Tough fibres
resist breakage
and shedding.

resumed today but gave

110

oth er d eta ils.

At the Wednesday meeting,
Egyptian War Minister Geil.
Mohanuned Gamassy said
the settlements, built alter
Israel captured the Sinai In
the 1967 war, violated
Egyptian sovereignty and
must be liquidated.
Israeli
Defense
Minister Ezer Wei7m&amp;n said
But

they ilhould be maintained as

part of a peace agreement

She wlls born Nov. 24, 1893

ln .Syracuse, lhe daughter of
the la te Samuel Quillen and
Moille Quillen London , She
wos preceded in death by her
husband, George, in 1962, and
by three sons , Arthur' ,
Howard ond Donald Hood ; •
brother, Joseph London, and
a sister, iva Roush .
$he is survived by six

daughiers anc;j four sons.
Genev le. Demoskey, George
Hood , Jr .• and Eula Mae

Haggy Odega rd. o! Pomeroy,
and Ollie W lntf"r~ Fv~'&gt;lyn

open

boundaries between the two
countries.
The standoff was the worst
setback to peace moves since
Egyptian President Aiiwar
Sadat and Israeli Prime
Minister Menahem Begin
failed to resolve their
differences on the Palestinian
question at their summit in
advil;Ories aud statements lsmailia on Chrl;rtmas Day .
will be made during the day
and Ohioans should keep
alert as this may become a
EXECUTIVE RETIRES
dangerous stonn to a large
MARION - Theodore S.
part of Ohio."
Lauver, who has managed
Meanwhile, the Jupiter, a
General Telephone Co. of
384-foot oil tanker became
Ohio's funds and corporate
stuck in ice in Lake Erie
records for two decades,
Wednesday night and the
today
announced
his
Coast Guard polar class
retirement after 39 years of
icebreaker Northwlnd was servlce. Lauver, 60, has been
sent to free the vessel. The
secretary-treasurer of the
tanker was hound for Lorain
Marion-based company since
after a stop in Erie, Pa . .
1958. His retirement starts
The Red Crosa in Cleveland March I. A successor is to he
said it had to cancel 10 blood named soon.
collections and ration blood to
71 northern Ohio hospitals
during the storm. Special
CALL ANSWERED
blood donation locations have
The Middleport E·R Squad
been set up and will operate answered a call to 359 Pearl
oo el&lt;II:flded schedules.
St. at 1:19 p.m. Wednesday
University hospitals in for Hattie Wilt who was taken
Cleveland had planned to to Holzer Medical Center. At
cancel all elective surgery 4:3-1 p.m., the · squad took
today but took blood Jeffrey Miller, from 559
dona tlons from its .4 ,800 Broadway, where he had
employees instead IAJ' keep fallen to Veterans Memorial
·
operating.
Hospital.

Vehicles damaged
AUXILIARY TO MEET
The auxiliary of the
Rutland Fire Department
will meet Jan. 17 at 7 p.m.
Guest speaker will he Carl
Hysell,
juvenile
and
probation officer. Members
are urged to attend and bring
a guest.

DANCE SET
There \viii be a dance at
Southe'rn High SchoQl .Friday
night following the basketball
game. Music will be provided
by Jack O'Shea of WKEE .
Admission is $1.25. The event
is being sponsored - by the
senior class.

while shoveling snow at his
home Wednesday night ,
pollee said.
SHOVEUNG VICI'IM'
He was dead on arrival at
PARMA, Ohio (UPI)
Michael J . . Gifford, 69, . Parma Community General
Parma, collapsed and died Hospital. '

I

several years.

settle~

I .

JANUARY

NOW IN PROGRESS
SAVINGS FROM

%

IM EVERY DEPARTMENT'

ME GS PLAZA
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

:OFF

'

JANUARY
CLEARANCE
$
SALE
.CONTINUES

$

•SHOES •BOOTS
•PURSES

LADIES AND MEN'S

Custom Hairstyling
TUESDAY lHRU SATURDAY
9AM.T05PM

TO
12915

Hospital News

on Buckeyes ·

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sportswriter
. WASHINGTON COURT
HOUSE, Ohio (UP!) Miami Trace quarierback
Art Schlichter, one of the
most sought after high school
players in the · nation,
announced today he would
attend Ohio State University
to "play football and
basketbaU."
The 6-foot-3, 188-pound
Schlichter, who led the Panthers to a 29-ll-1 three-year
record, Including a ·10-0 mark
his. senior year, said he
picked Ohio State 9ver Penn
State , his second choice
because of " the location" and
because ''I have been most
impressed with Coach' Woody
Hayes and coach George
ataump of Ohio ~tate.
" I also have been equally
impressed with Coach Eldon
Miller , his basketball
program and wt\h the quaHty
of Ohio State University in
general. I have decided IAJ
make a commitment to Ohio
State IAJ play football and
baske!ball
lqr
these
reasons," ~e said.
..
Schlichter, who will face
the chaUenge of two-year
starting quarterback Rod
Gerald for the Buckeye
quarterback job next season,
sa id he had not been
promised
a
starting
position.
"Coach Hayes and Coach.
Chaump have assured me
that I would he given a fair
and equal opportunity with
the returning quarterback to
earn a position on next year's
squad,:' he said. "! have the
greatest admiration and
respect lor the athletic ablilty
of Rod Gerald and the other
qUarterbacks at Ohio State. I
am eagerly looking forward
to joining 'them next year."
Schlichter, the 1977 United
Press International Ohio
Class AAA back of the year,
was called "th~ best high
school quarterback I've ever
seen," by one veteran college
recruiter.
Schlichter had originally
included , Michigan and

•GIRLS COATS, JACKETS.
· •LADIES' COATS. DRESSES
AND COORQIIIATEO
SPORTSWEAR, BUDUSES,
,COATS &amp; SLEEPWEAR

I

Blue chip Schlichter

•MEN'S SWEATERS
•MEN'S &amp;' BOYS' JACKETS

. MANY ITEMS

Sturdy, attractive
construction.

SUPER · tOR

VALUES THROUGHOUT. THE STORE

HATS &amp;UDNG DRESSES

4-strand stitching.

WASHABILITY - tlir\ and
finger ~rints wash off
~ully
beca use the new
V•nvl · lte has unsurpusea
water resistan ce.

PRESCNIPTIONS

for

GALlON

NEW
IMPROVED
VA.N'YL -IT E- an
out .
standing la te x pail'lf made w lfh a new Ac::rylic ·
Vif\YI . Latex
POly mer .
ADAPTABLE for ali
types or lnterior walls and
. ceilings-ECONOMICA-L
-one c::oa t tovers most
surfaces , use ta.p .water tor ·
thinning [;ASY TO
APPLY - by brush, roller ,
or
sp r'a_y
OR I E·S
RAPI.Ol'l' In thirty
minutes leaving no un .
pleasant Odor CLEAN
EASILY - wash e·Qv"ip .
mtnf in wa rm, sOapy water

Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph .
Charles RiHie, R. Ph.
Ronald Hanning, R. Ph
Mon . thru Sat. 8:00 a .m. to' p.m.
Sunday lO:JOto 12:30and5to9 p .J1".

CORN .
BROOM

Ar ea Death s

Two
vehicles
were
damaged and one driver ~as
cited as the result of an acFri:\•eatlier Service said cident in Middleport.on North
snow will spread into Second Ave. at 9·10 p.m.
th est Obi toda
d . Wednesday.
~:c: the ~orthe~st:"rn · Pollee said a, truck driven
corner of the state by tonight. by Jerry D. Owens, Syracuse,
Snowfall today Is expected IAJ had stopped at the locatio": of
be light with one IAl two inches a break lll the water !me
expected. ·
where.
wo~kers
were
However, freezing rain and rep~1rmg ~ line. A :""'ond
sleet may begin in the vehicle dnven by Br1an E.
extreme . south tonight and Johnson, Middleport, stopped
cause hazardous driving behmd \be Owens truck .
Police said Owens backed his
conditi ns ·
"Th." ~ovement of the truck into the .front of the
storm areas to the northeast Johnson vehicle. There were
is not yet clear " the weather medium damages to the car
Service sahi. "Further and minor fo_ the tru_ck.
Owens was ctted for liTI·
proper backing.

tJAnUARY ClEARAnCE

others ran iote, Dwight
Goins·,
a dminlstrative
assistant, reported . The
district has 21 buses.
In the Southern District, all
of the buses ran but some
were unable to make their .
entire routes. In the Eastern
District some of the buses
would not run, others were
I not able to make thoir entire
routes due to road conditions
I and others were running late.
Meantime, administrators
1 were keeping a watchful eye
Asbury, Mollie Ann Rose,
John Eerl Hood. Wanda on the weather because of
Woo ldridge , Robert Hood, another predicted snow
and Kenneth Hood ; Ihr.. storm.
sisters. Lola Butcher , Ann~
$tlllwagner and Marv Ellen
Dye, New Haven ; two
brothers, Fred Qu il len and
Herman London, Syracuse ;
48 grandchildren, ,,. great ·
Veteraos Memorial Hoopllll
grandc h l tdren, two great Admitted - Jane A,
greaf .grondchiidren ond
several nieces ond nephews . Johnson, Pome_roy; Joseph
She was a member of the Quivey, Pomeroy; Larry
Rock Bronch Church of God, Gilland,
New
Haven:
Nitro.
Funeral services will be Virginia TYler, Gallipolis:
conducted Friday at 2 p.m. o! V~rginla Undrnan, Pomeroy;
!~e Rock Bronch Church of J effrey •Miller, Middleport;
God. Friends may co il ot the Richard White, Middlepori :
Gaten Funeral Home today
from .t. to 9 p .m . The body wi ll Paul Johnson, Mason;
lie In slate at the church one Randall Werry, Racine.
hour prior to the services.
Discharged Denzel
Boggess, Ruby Cooper,
Samuel Long, Mary Hood ,
Mary McCallister , Harry
Hayman, Jessie Young,
William Miller, Sr., Lawson
Beha, Kenneth Imboden,
Dorothy Miller, Thomus
Marcinko,_Kathryn Metzger,
Gwlnnle White.
Tennessee tn his list of
prospective schools. He
HolzeT Medical Center
visited Penn State several
Discharges Jan. II
weeks ago, had his official
Bonnie
Asbury, Loretta
visit to Ohio State the past
Atkins,
Patricia
Baird, Jean
weekend and decided that
Barr,
Joanne
Byers,
l..anna
was enough.
Campbell
,
Charles
Claytor,
uHe's the reason we were
so explosive," said Miami Jackson Cochran, Mrs.
Trace Coach Fred Zechman, Robert Corbin and son,
whose Panthers averaged Ronna Davis, Nora Dixon,
60.8 points per game in rolling Mrs. Randall Evans and son,
w an unbllSten season last , Albert Finley, Deboroh
fall . "Without a doubt he's a Garrison, Eula Hale, Mrs.
Charles Haner and dau!lhter,
game breaker.''
Schlichter , personally Albert Hawk, George Holley, " -"
wooed by both Hayes and Joe Mildred Humphreys, Evelyn
Paterno of Penn State, Jeffers, Wayne Jividen ,
completed 108 of )90 passes Frank Johnston, William
his senior year for 1,794 yards Kight, Claudia Nichols,
and 21 touchdowns . He also Hom er Rees, Elizabeth
ran lor 539 yards In 74 carries Roberts, Shelby Roberts,
VIrgil Roberts Sr. , Mrs.
for a 7.3 aver~ge per try.
Bryce Sayre and daughter,
Everett Sharp, John. Stanley,
Sara Yeagley.
ROOFFAU.
·_ Births Jan. Jl
CLEVELAND (UPI) Mr . and Mrs. David Kerns,
Claudia
James,
10,- a daughter, Bidwell.
Cleveland, died Wednesday
night at St. Luke's Hospital
from multiple Injuries
PLEASANT VALLEY
suffered earlier in the night
DISCHARGED - Aaron
when she is S$1d to have Barnette , Roberts burs;
fallen from the roof of her Ronde!
Given,
Point
family's . East Side home, Pleasant ; Mrs. Junior
police said.
Tucker, Grimms Landing ;
The dead girl's lather told Minnie Burdette, Point
investigators he was about to Pleasant ; Mrs. James
discipline his _dliughte( when Ashton, Point_ Pleasant :
she ran to the third floor and Marvin Bennett, Mt. Gay;
climbed out If window onto Richard Danbury, New
the roof and fell .
Haven: Henry Chapman,
Miss James was admitted · Lesase; Audrey Lee, Point
to the hospital at 7:28 p.m. Pleasant; Wlliiam Runion,
and died at 7:55 p.m.
Arbuckle.
CML UABILITY
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Ohio. Senate passed and returned to the . House
HILOTEMPS
Wednesday legislation to
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
extend parents' civil liability highest tempe-rature reported
for their minor chUdren's Wednesday to the National
unlawful acts to all crimes Weather Service, e•cluding
involving "theft offenses." Alaska and Hawaii, was 68
The Senate, by a 22-5 vole, degrees at Bakersfield,
alao increased from $2,000 to Calif., and BrownBville, '
$3,000 the amount for which Texas. Today's low was 14
parents' can be sued by degrees below zero at Inpersons who experience ternational Falls, Minn., and
property losses in connection Hibbing, Mont.
with "theft offenses."
nearly normal.
the Meigs Local Dillrlct
three buses were unable to
run at aU. The brakes were
frozen on two of the vehicles
and one would not start. Five,
buses could not ,m,tke all of
their routes because of Icy
road conditions ond two

r------------.--------------

Power crunch
eased in Ohio

strike.

NOW _IN PROGRESS

Meigs County schools
opened today for the first
time this week.
Attefldance in the Meigs
Local
District and the
By W.G. KIROL06
Eastern
District
wos
CAIRO, Egypt (UPI )
The top military men of reported as " fair" while in
Egypt and Israel today the Southern District at·
resumed their talks on tendance was at 90 percent,
Israel's withdrawal from !be
Sinal Peninsula, which has
become a mlljor snag In I
Middle East peace efforts. I
The 16-man joint military . I
MRS. GEORGE HOOD
committee, which began
Wednes da y,
Mrs . George 1Winnie!
t a 1k s
immediately ran into sharp Hood. 84, Nitro, W. Va..
disagreement on the future of formerly of Syracuse, died
Jewish settlements in the
Tuesday evening at the home
of her d~utghter , Mrs. Ralph
occupied Sinai Peninsula . Evelyn Asbury . Mrs. Hood
Officials said the talks had been in foiling heai!h

guaranteeing

-------"'
!
""---·
JANUARY

TO

PHONE 77"5536
~

kilowatts.
"We're runnlnl! e~rYihlng
for today from Alab!una to
we've
as bard as we can,"
North Carolina. and from
John Van Mol of the TVA
Kentucky north to Illinois,
Information office said
Indiana, Ohio arid lower Mi·
Wednesday.
He
said
chigan.
.
.
problems with frozen coal are
The frigid blast that sent
critical, because the miners'
temperatures plunging below
strike has ·reduced coal
zero In the Nortbeast abated
shipments grea~y .
today,"but demand for power
Warmer temperatures
remained high and many
came too late for a pair of
utilities continued their cutelderly Missouri men. Their
backs in output.
bodies
were . found
LoW temperatures reached Wedriesday in a farmhouse
·a relatively warm 19 at
near the Mississippi River
Buffalo, N.Y., 22 at Atlanta,
IAJwn of atarleston. They
Ga., and 12 at aticago today.
apparently froze to death last
A low of 52 at Miami
week in the house, which was
appeared to mark the end of
heated only by a coal stove.
-the freeze that damaged
-F-urther warming could
some vegetables but left the
cause flooding in the North,
citrus crop unscathed.
where ice jams were
The slight warming trend
preventing floodwaters from
brought little help for utilities
rampaging downstreeJn.
plagued by dwindling natural
Ice jams were holding back
gas reserves and fro~en
floodwaters in south central
stockpiles of coal. Voltage
Maine, where more than 130
cutbacks forced several Ohio
residents were forced from
industries to lay off workers
their homes near the Androsand cl,ll production. Buckeye , coggin and Kennebec rivers.
Steel in Columbus laid off 550 A tO-mile jam on the
workers Wednesday.
· Muskegon River In Michigan
The Tennessee Valley Au- forced the evacustion of a
thority reported another dozen
families
and
record demand - 21.9 million
threatened flash flooding .

r-"'!!!~~~!".'!'!.0.....

Girls .cage ratings
first 1978 United Press 1(1 ternational Ohio Hi gh School
Board of Co'aclles' girl s
bas·ketba ll ratings with nrst .
place votes alld won ·los t
recurds In parentheses :

Kansas to llllnola.
storm watches were islued

--eopen

ON ANE WEARING APPARELL FOR
MEN &amp;WOM

Also Wed. aJ:!d _Thurs. Evening "
See Kay ProHitt, .Sandy Miller.
Also Debbie Holsinger. our new beautician.
Phone: 992-7606 For AoDointment

atATEAU BEAUTY.

�\
•
' I

&amp;-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Jan.' 12, 1978

Parkers entertain with dinner
Mr. and Mrs. Wilber
Parker entertained the Pearl
Parker families at their an·
nual Christmas holiday din·
ner. The house was decorated
with a nativity scene, a
lighted tree, and colored
lights.
The dining table was
covered with a white cloth
overlaid with red netting and
centered with twin white
Christmas decorat e d
styrofoam archways.
A- basket dinner . was enjoyed at noon by Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Parker, Bobby and
Kelli, Marietta; Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Parker, Rutland; Mr.
and Mrs.· Howard Parker,

April and Aaron, Long Bottom, Route I, and Mr. and
Mrs. Edward Parker, Columbus, who remained overnight
and on Monday for a longer
visit.
The Wilber Parkers received telephone calls during the
holiday season from their two
other children, Mrs.

Joe

(Martha ) Poole, Conroe;
Texas, and Eric Parker,
Tigard, Oregon.

Mrs. Humphrey
hostess for
church ladies
REEDSVILLE - Ladies of
the Reedsville U.M.W. met
with Mrs. Vivian Humphrey
for their January meeting,
opening with a devotional
"Starting
a
reading,
Christian New Year" read by.
program leader Mrs. Sandy
Cowdery. Devotions were

closed with The

Lord's

Prayer in unison.
The business session was

conducted by the president,
Mrs. Humphrey. Dues !or the
year were paid as were bills
for Christma s expenses .

Thank you's were received
lor the Christmas baskets
delivere&lt;J, .. Mrs.•. " Marlene
Putman reported on the
group's visit to the county·
home. Gifts were presented
to each resident of the home
and also · a fruit basket ,
ol
United
' Profiles
Methodist Women were given
and a nominating committee
was appointed for next year
ol Mrs. Ullian Pickens, Mrs.
Mamie Buckley and Mrs.
Nell Wilson. A get-well card
was signed [or a member in

hospital and 14 shut'in calls
were reported.
Refreshments .were .se.rved
to Mrs. Putman, a guest;
Mrs. Sandy Cowdery, Mrs.
Mamie Buckley, and Mrs.
Liliian Plc.kens. Door pl"izes
were awarded to Mrs. Put·

man and Mrs. Cowdery, The
next meeting is to be with
Mrs. Pat Martin: - Mrs. L.
Balderson.

Receives word
Relatives here have receiv-

ed word ol the recent death of
Delmar Chittenden of Toledo,
a folmer Racine reside'nt.
Born at Racine in 1897 he was
the grandson of Mrs, Erma
Roush Cir cle, chart er
member ol the Roush family
· of America.
He is survived by his wife,

two children and several
grandchildren. He was an active member ol the United
Methodist Church. Among
the local cousins are Mrs.
Wilbur Theobald, the Mary
Circle family at Carmel, Ed·
son Roush, Mrs. Robert
Warner, Mrs. Hanson Holter,
Mrs. ·Fay Dunlevy, the Ihie
familY of Nease Settlement.
Funeral services and burial
took place in Toledo.

MEETING CHANGED
La Leche League will meet
on Jan. 16 at 7:30 p, m. at the
home ol Mary Hendrich. The
meeting planned lor Jan. 12
has been cancelled.

Polly Cramer

Grease on polyester
common succulent that many
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I do hope grow in a pot on the kitchen
some reader can tell me how window sill and 'when a slight
to remove car grease !rom burn occurs while cooking a
pennanent press polyester · piece can be cut off, rubbed
on the bum and the juice
~nts by just using ordinary
household products. I tried a removes the sting and is supposed to eliminate danger of
degreaser, baking soda,
scars.
This may or may not
vinegar and hair spray but
be an . "old wives' tale." the stain is still there.POLLY.
FRAN.
DEAR POLLY - To peel a
DEAR FRAN - I am sure
we will be hearing from t'OConul drain out the milk,
readers who are always place the nut in the oven until
generous about sharing tbeir hot to the. touch. Remove and
tap all over with a hammer
discoveries, but meanwhile
giving
particular attention to
you might try rubbing
the
ends.
Give it one hard
petroleum jelly on the stain to
soften it and then sponge with knock and the shell will crack
cleaning lluid, Synthetic open. Lift shell of!, peel
fabrics retain oily spots. brown skin and cool before
Often applying a laundry pre- grating -or grinding the
treat spray will do the job but "meal''. - MRS. W.A.S.
DEAR POLLY - Instead
after washing such spots are
of putting cold baby lotion on
always harder to remove.
They should be removed as my baby after giving him a
soon as possible as the longer ooth I heut it by placing the
hot\le in the wash basin filled
they remain the harder they
with hot waer. By the time I
aretogetout.- POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - I am . am ready to use it the lotion is
answering the reader (age just wram enough. - SUSAN.
over 40 ) who wl:lnts to remove
DEAR POLLY - H you
Prown spots on hef hal)ds. oong your cooking pans and
Just.slice a leal of an aloe . skillets and there is one with
vera plant to expose the li- a hole in the handle that does
quid and rub over such spots not fit on the hook slip a
and that is supposed to do the length ol key cooin through
trick. Will Geer, who plays the hole and hang by the
the grandfather of the chain. - HELEN.
Waltons, was on the Carson
Polly will send you one of ·
show one evening and he her signed thank-you
highly recommended this news~ per coupon clippers if
plant lor brown age spots. she uses your favorite
AlJCE.
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
DEAR READERS - I have her column. Write POLLY'S
been advised by a gardening POINTERS in care of this
expert that the aloe vera is a newspaper.

Class meets for dinner
The Eagles Class of the
Asbury United Methodist
Church enjoyed a Christmas
dinner recently at the home
ol Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Winebrenner. The dinner was
sent to Robert Flanagan and
Karl and· Opal Kloes who
were ill.
Attending were the Rev.
and Mrs. Harvey Koch, Mr.
·and Mrs. Millard Van Meter,

Emmogene Holstein, Elma
Louks, Martha Moore, Ruth
Crouch, Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Moore, Mr. and Mrs. Carroll
Norris and the hosts.

Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Rizer,

Force Base, are announcing

Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Teaford,
Betty and Dick Ash, Donna
and Bob Smith, Mr. and Mrs.
Don
Usle, Mrs. Beulah
Ward, Miss Marcia Karr,

the birth of an eight pound,
six ounce daughter', Cathryn
Marie, on Dec. 28 at Mt.
Carmel Hospital, Columbus.
Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Norman Wood,
Pomeroy, Route 4, and Mr.
and MI'S. Pong Hyon Pack,
Seoul, · Korea. Greatgrandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Weber Wood, Route 4,
Pomeroy and Mrs. · Goldie
Lynch, Athens, Mr. ,and Mrs.
Wood have another daughter,
Carrie Ann, two.

nounces admission auditions

will be . held at the Conservatory on January 20 and
21 and February 3 and 4.
January 20 and February 3
auditions will be for piano
only. For . information and
appointment please contact
the Office ol Admissions and
· Academic Services, Room
106 Emery Hall, CollegeConservatory of Music,·•
Universfty of Cincinnati,
Cincinnati, Ohio 45221. Phone
(513) 47:Hl638.
DINNER ENJOYED
Mr. and.Mrs, Roger E. HiU,
Scotty and Heather, Racine,
entertained with a turkey dinner at their home on
Christmas . Day. Attending
were Mr. and Mrs: Jerry A.
Powell ·and Mr. and Mrs.
Austin Wolle and Jerry and
Aimee, Joining the group in
the evening was Mrs. Inez
Hill. The highlight ol the
evening was tbe sixth birthday celebration of Scotty Hill.

JANUARY
CLEARANCE SALE
20,. • 30% • 40"-A OFF
ALL THIS WEEK

No Refunds- No Exchanges ·
Phone 1-304-882-3312
•"
OPENDAI~Y

Shop

i:

POLLY"$ POINTERS

AUDITIONS SLATED
The University of Cincinnati Col.lege - Conservatory of Music an·

9:.00-5 :00
till 7:00

'
M
'
- Gener~tion ·R~pv ·.··&lt;·.l · rs. Martin attends national conference

• ·.r»

.~~:;::::-'HIWH~

Theme for the 1978
Mrs. Osby" A. Martin of , and Youth being held this
American
Legion and
By Jlelen ·and Sue Bottel
&gt;S Pomery-, the national weekatChicopee,MaSll.
Legion
,Auziliary
American
"' children and youth chairman
Children and youth leaders
children
and
youth
program
for Eight and Forty, is among ol The American Legion, the
is
"
Making
the
pieces
Fit 111E PROBLEMS OF POPULARfrY
those attending the American Awtiliary, and the Eight and
Accept
the
Challenge."
The
RAP:
Legion, the American LegiQII Forty from six New England
Eight
and
Forty
't'hich
della
Girls don't like me because ooys do. I'm not 'specially ·Awtiliary, and the Eight and states are meeting to discuSll
pretty, and I can't help it if I'm "developed." I don't chase Forty's annual New England program plans for the 1978 primarily with respiratory
guys, but they flock arowld me. Sure, they're fun to talk to . Is Area Conference on Children program year and to work on diseases has as its theme
that any reason girls should start rumors I've had abortions? I
problems affecting the "Gathering Jewels for Julia's
don't even date - just goof around at the rink, etc. I'd really
children and youth ol their Children."
Specific areas of interest to
Uke to have girl friends .
respective conununities.
be
considered at the coo• What am I doing wrong. Rap? -SEVENTH GRADER
terence
include alcohol and
DEAR SEVENTH :
youth,
immunization,
child
Your biggest problem is: you're a seventh grader with the
WILL BE SPEAKER
abuse
and
neglect,
and
m;lie-attra,ctiqg qualities of a lOth grader; naturally other
Mrs. Opal Grueser, direc·
education
and
scholarships.
girls are jlialous. (And we'll bet you can 't help gloating a bit,
tor of children's services with
Purpose of the conference
especially when they say me.an things ab&lt;lut you .)
the Meigs County Health
is
directed toward implemen· Try sharing. When boys flock around, calla few girls over
Department, will be the
THURSDAY
to join the fun . Be as outgoing with girls as you are with boys speaker at !be Tuesday _night ting the 1978 children and ·
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, meeting of the Salisbury PI'O yput)l programs at the comeven if you must work harder at it. Prove you're not purposely
7:30
Thursday at the hall. at the school, 7:30p.m. Mrs. munity level.
hogging the guys and you'll soon have friends olb&lt;lth sexes,
Mrs. Martin is a member ol
Meeting
is subject to can· Grueser will discuss various
After aU, what female wouldn'.t like to learn from you, if you'd
Meigs
County Salon 710, Eight
cellation
by
bad
weather.
give her the chance? - HELEN AND SUE
services which are available
and
Forty.
PRECEPTOR BETA Beta to children of the county.
NOTE FROM SUE : And cheer up : things will be better in high Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
school - or maybe worse, because you'll have lots more Sorority, 7:30p. m. Thursday
competition then .
at home ol Mary Pickens;
members to take i.tem_s fora
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
country store .
Here's another answer to "Wants To Know" who asked if
LET US BE YOUR
FRIDAY
girls and women regretted having lost their virginity before
RETURN . JONATHAN
PERSONAL
marriage.
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of
There are times when I regret having premarital sex (I'm
PHARMACIST
stiU single). Part ol it is in knowing I let my mother down, but the American Revolution
Friday I :JO p.m. Episcopal
mostly it's because the man I chose was the wrong one. I let
Parish House. Paper on
my peer group "Ioree" me into it because to teens being a
virgin is just as bad as having sex before marriage is to Colonial Foods by 'Mrs.
Thereon Johnson. Hostess
parents.
Mrs. Dale Dutton, Mrs.
And yet, I !eel stronger, older and much wiser because ol
Arthur Skinner, Mrs. J.
my past. I think I can make a better ctecision now. - NOT
Edward Foster and Mrs.
ENTIRELY REGRETFUL
Mark Grueser, Jr.
DEAR RAP :
MARY SHRINE 37, Order
Yes, I regret premarital sex : my bosband never lets me
forget that il I was "easy" with him, I probably did it with a lot of the White Shrine of
Jerusalem, Friday night at
of other fellows too. I didn't. - BL~ED
the Pomeroy Masonic Tem·
READERS ALL:
It's•still almost a tie vote, with those who don't regret pie.
premarital sex leading by a very narrow margin . - HELEN
SUNDAY
AND SUE
COUNTY WIDE prayer
meeting Sunday at Wesleyan
RAP:
Holiness Church, Pomeroy 2
The first guy I dated (atl4 ) didn't get anywhere with me , p.m. Glen Bissell, ~rayer
So I lost him. The second guy got quite a .lot, but not leader.
everything. I lost him too, plus a lot of my self,respect, but I
TUESDAY
figured it was expected. Now I've got another guy and he says
SAUSBURY
PTO, 7:30'
petting is kid stuff.
p.m.
Tuesday
at
the school.
I didn't keep the first by .being_good, the second by being
Your pharmacist plays an
Mrs.
Opal
Grueser
of tbe ·
not quite good, S&lt;l what should I do to keep the third? - E.E.
Meigs
County
Health
DepartDEAR E.:
important part in your life and
Don't sell your body for the status of having a boy friend! ment to he the speaker.
community. His ski lls are apFind a guy who respects your feelings. They're still around,
you know.- HELEN AND SUE.
plied to help you and your

Social
Calendar

Concert series to
present five specials.
ATHENS, Ohio- The Ohio
1978 Scholarship Concert
Series

will

include

TOYS COLLECTED
The Women's Auxiliary ol
Veterans Memorial Hospital
reports that nwnerous toys
for boys and girls confined to
the hospital have been contributed by various organizations and indi~iluals of the
community, Collecting' toys
for hospltali2ed children is
one of the projects ol the .
Women's Auxiliary and the
organization extends thanks
to aU who have contributed.

On March 10 in Memorial
Auditorium at 8:30 p.m. the

concerts by lacuUy and

Ohio University Chorus the
Ohio Singers, an m:chestra of
students, faculty and townspeople, and faculty and guest
soloists
will
perform
Mozart's "Req uiem" and
Aaron Copland's "In the
, Beginning" under the

students.

All proceeds !rom ihe
series are used to provide
financial aid to out'!land ing
students. Funds raised in the
preceding four series have
supported 10 students who

NOW OPEN

family live hetter and longer.
Call us for all your pharmaceu-

GINO'S

tical needs • •

.

This year's schedule opens
on Jan. 20 at 8:30 p.m. in
Recital Hall with a concert by
the Baroque Trio, a faculty
group. Members are Kenneth
Andrews, flute; Howard
Beebe, violin: and Clyde

PHONE

773-553«.

Middleport, 0.

122 N. 2nd Ave .
992-3106

harpsi chord;

Music's annual student
so loist com petition . will
perform at 8:30 p.m. in
Memorial Auditofium with

Leighton Conkling, violoncello ; and Nancy Beebe,
mezzo-soprano.
On March 1 in Recital Hall
at8:30 p.m.the Athenian Trio
will present an evening of

the Ohio University Sym'
phony Orchestra directed by
John Ferritto.
Patron tickets for the series
are $10. Student tickets are
$3. Single adm ission tickets

chamber music. Ensemble
members
are
Beebe,

for each concert will be
available from the Memorial

MEETING CANCELLED
A meeting ol the Meigs

Auditorium Box Office at $3
lor regular admission and $1
for students.
To order series tickets by
mail, send a check payable to
the School of Music
Scholarship Fund · to Dr.

Thompson,

double

baSs.

Assisting will be Eugene

County

Humane

Society

scheduled lor tDnight has
been cancelled due to the
weather.

ClYd~ Thompson,

director,

School oi Music, Ohio
University , Athens, Ohio
45701 :

WANT~D

-LOW GRADE LOGS
6'' th ru '6"
'.
•
LENGTtt. •••••••••.•••••• 6'4", 7'8"~8'6", 11' and 12'6"
PAY BY MEASUREMENT OR WEIGHT
SllO.OO Per lltousand Ft. or $12.00 Per Ton
'

SIZE ·• ••• •• • ••• • • • • ••• ••• • • • • • •. •• • •• ••

JACKSON PALLET CO.
2· Miles West ot Wilk..vitle i.n St. Rt , 124

CALL669·4134 BEFORE MAKING DELIVERY

P IIIIJtiflt,

ARTHUR GI!:NHEIMER ,
Rtildence Unknown
•

'lbat 'I when the atllllal Mothers March against birth
defects takes place. Sponsored by the March of Dimes, the
march is a neighbor-to-neighbor fund ralalng campaign.
' 'The March ol Dimes channels money into numerous
programs throughout the country," says Susan Fleshman,
Mothers March chalrw001an. "Some provide Intensive care
for critically ill newborn&amp; or special medical attention for
·
pregnant women who have compllcalloos.
"Other March of Dimes funds support research, public
bealth education, and , community service programs," she
adds, "AU of them are aimed at protecting the unb&lt;lrn and tbe

" Et 11.,
.
Defendants .
CISt No . 16,69S

NOTICE

SERVICE BY

PUBLICATION

Arthur Genhei mer . whose
11 placeot res i dence Is unknown
and whose last address is

·• un.known and the unknown

· he irs . devisees. legatees .

~,t'listr i bu h!'·es , ~dmlnistrators •
.. and executors , if any, of
' " Arthur genl'le!mer , deceased ,

whose names and . places of

newborn."

rnidence are unknown and
with
reasonable
d i l igence be ascertained ;
Wi l liam
Schm i dt. whose
.. J)laceof residence Is unknown
•• and whose last address is
unknown and ttle unknown

Funds raised during the Mothers March will help support
college scholarships that the Meigs county chapter gives to
students In the beallh care fields. They will also go towards
educating mothers-W-Ile aoo to medical research at the
national level.
Remember when January 15th and 16th come that ·no one
is inunune to birth defects. They can strike anyone - a
relative, friend, or neighbor.
Welcome the marching mother who comes to your door in
Pomeroy, Middleport, Syracuse, Bradbury, Tuppers Plains,
Chester, Rutland and Racine . Help -the March of Dimes. You
may be helping someone you care about.
'

'.) c.l'flnot

heirs , devIsees, legatees ,

: d lstr ibutees ,

admin i !Urators
if any , of
··Wil li am Schmidt, deceased ,

. and executors ,

whose names and places ot
resldenc.e are unknown and
cannot with reason.!lble
r d i ligence be ascertained ; H .
1,. F . Schmidt , whose pla ce of
: residence is unknown and
whose last
address
Is
1- unknown
and the un)&lt;nown
heirs. devisees. legatees,
distributees , administrators
and executors, if any, of .H . F .
Sch.midt , deceased, whose
names
and
places
of
res idenr::e are unknown and
cannot
with
reasonable
dillgenr::e be ascerta ined ; C.
1. Schm idt , whOse place of
res idence is unknown and
whose
last
address
is
unknown and the unknown
1
heirs , devisees , legatees ,
distributees, administrators
and e"'ecutors, if afw. of C. I .
Schmidt , deceased , whose
names
and
p l ac~s
of
res idence ar·e unknown and
cannot
with reasonable
dil igen.c e ·b e ascertained ;
Asta
Schmidt Gehman,
whose place of reside~ce !s
unknown and whose l ast
address is uriknbwn and the
unknown he i rs, dev i sees,
legalees, d i str i butees, ad ministrators and e)(ecutors, it
any, of Ash Schmidt Geh man , deceased. Whose named
and places of residence are
unknown and r::an not with
reasonable dil i gence be
ascertained ; Miranda Sch ·
m i dt,
whose
p l ace
of
residence is unknown a·nd
whose
last
address
ls
unknown , and the unknown
heirs , dev i sees , legatees ,
dis tributees , administrators
e~nd executors, if any, of
Miranda Schmidt, deceased.
whose names arid places of
residence are 1,1nk nown and
with r-easonable:&gt;
• cann ot
diligence be ascerfained;
Anne~ · Schmidt Weckman.
wrose place Of res i dence iS
u nknown and whose la st
address is unknown, and the
unknown heii·s, devisees,
legalees , d ist ribut ees, ad m inislrators and executors, if
a ny , Of Anna Schmidt Wer::k ·

:

:

Farmers blocked
By
United
Preu
International
A judge in Cass County has
issued permanent injWJctions
barring striking farmers
!rom attempting to close
down \Wo important livestock
markets In southwest
Michigan.
Acting at the request of an
attorney representing both
markets, Circuli Judge
James E. Hoff late
Wednesday signed orders
requiring picketers to
refrain from blocking
entrance and exit points,
Hoff's injunctions apply to
the Michigan Livestock
Exchange near Vandalia and
.the Heinold Hog Market near
Jones. Both markets were
forced to close Wednesday
when farmers driving
tractors, trucks and other
· farm .equipment blocked entrances.
The livestock exchange

1

, , For Friday, Jau. 13, 1978
1

man, deceased. whose names
and places of res idence are
unknown and r::annotwifh
reasonable diligence be
~· ascertained
are
hereby
notif ied that plaintiffs have
brought th i s ar::tion naming
each of you as one of the
defendants in the above
named court by filing th eir
petition o n January l oth .
197
of the petition i's
that the defendants be

,;.: ASTRO•GRAPH "'
,

., . Bern1ce
• Bede Osol
.

.·.a·
'

\YJI-;'\1

mf1_

\Jl!J~U

'

d]rlllJ

fi1Rr-X)fl.
~Uu uW I l.!J '

:

~

ALL SHEnS ARE 4'X8' ~

Red Oak...... ······················· ••·············REG.4.95

DleriJ Tone ........... ~ .......................... . REG.5.95
Mountain .Hickory ....•........... ~ .... :........ . REG.'7.49
Mountain Butter................................. . REG. 7.49
Brady Birch ................·........................ REG. 8.48
Acrytuff Walnut ................................... REG.8.59
Gatehouse Antique ..... :...............,........ REG. 7.95

SALE4.25
SALE 5.25
SALE6A9

SALE 6A9
SALE6.95
SALE 6.95
SALE6.95
Seafoam Whfte ...............................~.... REG. 8.99 SALE 7.59
Blu~ Mist .. ,.... :................... ~ ............... REG. 8.99 · SALE7.59
EasUand Pecan .................................. REG. 8.99 SALE7.59
Natu11l Birch %'~ ................... ~.-· .. ···.... REG: 9.95 SAU8.95 .
Crestline Pecan %.'~ ............................ REG:to.so SALE.8.95
Spice Birch "A"................................... REG.l0,75 SALE9.25
Watchtower Elm W!........................... REG.l1.95 SALE9.85
n_.J..... p· 11 rr
·
-~ 108 74 ••.•••• ~·························· REG.12JO SALE 9.89
'Silhouette Bin;h W~......... ~ ......... :........ REG.ll.95 SALE10.19
Bridgeport Harbour %'!........................ REG.l4.95 SALE12.65
Gasli&amp;ht Red Brick %'~ ........................ REG.l7.95 SALE 14.95
Tsuga Sierra 7/16'~ ...... ;...................... REG.15.95 SALE 12A5
BATHROOM
GOLD LACE Reg. $10.50 ......... ,.,,,, ••'8,69
AVOCADO FLORENTINE Reg. $11.84 '9.69

923 S..3RD AVE.
•• ... •
~

OPEN:

Jan. 13, 1978

lady Luck may lake a reason .
~,.
ably active role where. your
·
d th ·
career ts con cerne
I S com._ ing year . Be ready to move with
-.alacrity if a big break develops .
~CAPRICORN !Dec. 22-Jan.
: . 19) In order to get assistanls IQ
"'" lighten you r labors today you
., mighl make lavish promises or
: pay more lor lheir servic es
~ than they are worth . Like to find
"'
• 1 out more of what lies ahea.d lo r
.
~ you ? Send fo r your copy of
:; Astra-Graph letter by mailing
.., 50 cen ts for each and a long ,
• self-addressed, stamped enve~- lope tp *-stro-Graph1 P.O. 8 0"'
t'fll 489, Radio City Station, N.Y.
"',. 10019. Berl sure to specify your

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

992·2709 OR 992-6611

7to 5 Mon. thru

'

Fri. - 7 to 3 SaturdaJ

,

10o1-

birlh slg ·

·

t'

You 're c lever at turning

._. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)

a profit

~ in certain situa tions today , but

: in other areas you may let
.._., valuable opportunities slip
w through your fiilgers .

• RJSCFJ; (Feb. 26-Mareh 2.0)
..
•·
:
.in
•

:,!

lnltuential friends will be willing
to pul~ strings for you today ,
but perhaps not to the extent
you may wishfully want to
belle..-~ . 1
.

,~ ARIES ·(March 21-Aprll '?9)
~ Switchinn obJ·ectives in s.earch
11

-

o! .greener pasture.s Will not.
.., o'niY get you olfcourse today , it
::: could· also cause you to lose
~ that wl')lch Was once in you r
: tl'ands .
1(-;j

1!""

TAURUS (April 26-May 20)

·bl

d d

., GEMINI CMay 21-June 20) Do
not attempt to wrest control of
amatterlromthehandsofone
• who is better equipped to man: age if •than you are. It will be
-. inviting trouble .

•
:

"

I 2

.,.. CANCER (June 2l..Ju Y 2) In
• sltuallons where you exe rcis e
~~ patience the resu lts will be all
:- you tlope lor. Where you are
19..-impulsive. the results will be
~. less desirable.

•

LEO (.iuly 23-Aug. 22) Take

car·e · today not to oversell or
talk ,yourself out of something
• that lou already have~ sewed
•
,; up. ay litt le, but do a lot of
., liStening.

*"
t

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Of"

;..-...- timism is admirable, but today
~ YQU,. enthusiasm might be lg., 't d b f Is ho s Th 1 t
• me
'I a e pe ·
e e·
liw down could be resounding
t., LIBRA (Sept. za..&lt;kt. %3} Dele., gatm g work ts a P,recanous
a procedure today. The person
• you pass It on to may ,wind up
;' stalling your entire production
line .
' -

J::

i

., oughly first
.
• • SAGITI'ARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec,
111 ZU Treating your family reC sponsibilities lightly is a defl~
Tt

-: ·nite no-no .today. hey should
• take precedence over all other
matter$.
'

=

-

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRiSE ASSN .I

Goods wholesale up in. December
WASIUNGTON (UP! ) Whol esal e prices rose a
substantial 0.7 perctnt In
December, ending t9n with a
6.6 percent annual rate of
inflation. the Labor Depar\·
ment reported today.
Higher food prices were
blamed for most of the
December . increase, which

was nearly double a 0.4
SKITINGSUN
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio House unanimously approved Wednesday and sent
to the Senate a bill
establishing procedures for
winding up the affairs ol any
state agency terminating its
,
operations.
The chief sponsor, Rep.
Myrl H. Shoemaker, DBourneville, said that
although the state is working
on "sunset" provisions to
phase out' useless agencies,
no procedures have ever been

established for dealing willi
employees, unpai~ bills and
Wlspent funds.
COMMEMORATIVE STAMP
COLUMBUS (UP!') - The
Ohio Senate unanimously
adopted
a
resolution
Wednesday asking the
Postmaster General to issue
an commemorative stainp
this year in honor of Ohio's
!75th aMiversary as a state.
The aMiversary is a "time
lor aU Ohioans to pause and
reflect on our state's glorious
past and promising future as

percent rise in November.

The rel'!'rt - a harbinger ol t.;-).3 percent at tbe end ol
trends in the retail onarkcC - 1976 . Adm in is tr a t io n
was based on a ne w F inished econom ists predict a 6 per·
Goo ds Price Index, not the cent annual inflation rate will
old Wh!lesa le Price Index. prevail for consvmers over
The old index roSI' 0.5 per- 'the next lew years.
Food 'prices rose 1.5 per·
L'ent, but Bureau ol Labor
ofri rials claim the new one is cent in December, the biggest
more acc ura t£'.
1'eh 6.6 percent ann ual
increase in wholesale prkes ·
over the last yeilr compares

I
II

JANUARY SALE
AM-FM Stereo Rece iver w -turnfable &amp; 8·

129

$36

'88
129

.

A Pa1r ·

SALE

:;~107

.Yo11 Won't Want To Miss
1J3
OFF

•

•

1/2

On All Sportswear

$98
168
$98

SPEAKERS

~~

$218

fraclc play .record , w -speak e r s.
REG. $259 .9! "· •• " ......... ", •••• • ,NOW
" AM- FM Stereo Receiver w -B track Play .
Record .
REG. S129.95 " .", . , , , • •• , .• , , • • , NOW
AM. FM Stereo ReceiVer w -Speakers .
REG. S89 .95.,.,,, .• ,.., , .. . ........ NOW
AM-FM Stereo Receiver w -Speakers
REG'. S119 .95 •••••••••••••••• ••• •••••• NOW
AM-FM Stereo Receiver w .Tunnel Reflex
Speakers.
1
REG . $179 .95····~··••••••••••••••••• • NOW
8 Track ,Tape Deck
REG . $42 .95 .. ... ,,, , , •• ,,,,,, •• ,.,,NOW
a· Track Play. Record Deck
REG . S99 .9s • • ••••• , .... . ............ . NOW
AM-FM Stereo Receiver .&amp; track play , W·
speakers.
1
REG . 5179 .95··•· •••••••••• •••• •• • ••• • NOW
Stereo Turntable w .speaker s.
REG . S139.95 ••••••••• • • • •. • • • • • •••• •• NOW

increase in six months. The
incr ea se wa s blamed on
higher pork, fish, dairy and
egg prices. Fresh fru it and
colle'e prices dedlned. These
changes l!&lt;)On will be showing
up in groceries.

'

MODULAR STEREO UNITS

$98
$32
• , •••••••••••••• , ••••••

Includes
·--·

• Winter Coats &amp; Jackets

• Jeans

•Dresses
eTops
• Nightwea1
PLUS: MUCH MORE!
Hours
9: 30-5, M-Th .-Sat .
9: 30.8, Fri.

KIDDIE SHOPPE
Near Stiffler's in Pomeroy
. 2nd Street
992 -3586
Pomeroy , 0.

le_lha

Livestock .
report. • •

I

~he obj e~t

WE BOUGHT OUT THE
ENTIRE FACTORY STOCK
TO BRING YOU THIS ·
OUTSTANDING BARGAIN

E.F. JOHNSON
MESSENGER 4125
PRICE PEA JOHNSON
BULLETIN NO, 5075
(10/17177,

SALE

CONTINUES
Chapman's
Annual Clearance

oo·

Sale Continues

West~ideofs.aldStreet,tothe

place of beginning, co n ·
ta in.t ng 22 .100 acres .
Reference Deed : Vol. 269,
Page 27 Deed Records, Meigs
You are required to answer
the P~tltion within twenty.
eight days after the last
publication of this notlr::e,
which will be published one~
each week for six successi ve
weeks~
and
the
la st
publication will be made on
February 14th . 1978 . .
In case. of vour fa11ure -to
answer or otherwise respon_d

ludom. ent by default will be
rendered aoalnst you for the
relief demanded In the

.a.

•'·

I

Larry E. Spencer
Clerk of Court of
Common Pleas,
Meigs county,
Ohio .·

til 12. 19, 26(2) l. '· 1~. 61

'

.

E. F. Johnson 's USA-made 40-channel Messenger'
4125 has exclusive single·chip PLL frequency synthesizer plu's "voice tailored" audiO circuitry for
clean sound, e lectronic speech compresSion fo ~ .
improved transmit range, ANL. variable squelch

21-4128

negative ground for use in any vehicle. With power
connector, rnounting bracket and hardware. A

Radio Shack bargain!

DRESS AND
·SPORT SHOES

· CHARGE IT (MOST STORES)

JOHNSON CB CLOSEOUT AVAILABLE AT STORES BELOW AND PARTICIPATING DEALERS

SILVER BRIDGE ~ PLAZA

WITH MATCHING

1

pelil/on .

CLOSEOUT PRICE!

FEATURES "POWER BAR" METER
AND LED CHANNEL INDICATOR

and ruby red LED chanr:1el readout. Positive or

County , Oh;o .

to SCORPIO (Ocj . :U-Nov. 22) It' , •• perm llted by Ihe Oo•o
It will proVe unWisB today ·{o bet .· Rules of Clvl.l Procedure
"' 1
•
·
.
wlthln the time st&amp;ted,
nthe blmdondeals or people
!hat you know · little about.
Better• you Investigate thor:

EXTENDED FORECAST
S.larday
through
Moodily, cold aad a ehaoee
of snow Saturday ond
Sutlday a ad lair Moaday,
Hltbl will "'"'" from the
upper teen• to tho Ztt.
Low• will he In the teens
Saturday and from 1ero to
10 above tero Sunday and
Monday.

was able to reopen by late
afternoon, but officials said
sales were only aoout onethird normal volwne. The hog
market stayed closed tbe
entire day.
Farmers also attempted to
disrupt another Michigan
Uvestock Exchange yard in an industrial , agricultural
nearby Einmet Township, .and business leader of the
but State Police and sheriffs nation/' r~d the resolution
deputiesordered picketers to offered by Sen. Robert D.
dear the entrance · and the Freeman, D-Canton.
yard remained open. Officers
stayed at the yard throughout
the day to en{orce their order.
Despite the increasing
bitterness ol the protest, no
violence was reported at any
of the sites.

COLUMBUS (UP I) - Wed ·
nesday's Ohio livestock auc tions.
.
·
Slaughter steers : choice and
pr ime 2·4 900· 1,375 lbs 43-45.85,
few 46: .a6.75; choice 2·3 900·1.250
·lbs 41 .50-44.85 ; good and choice
2·3 850-1,400 tbs 40-42.75 ; good 2·
3 BOO · 1,300 1bs 35.15·40.50;
standard and good 2-3 1.100·
1.300 lbs 36-37 .50 ;
req ui red to Sel up lhei r
Slaughter heifers : high choice
allege~ estate Or intereSf in.
and prime '2 ·3 95P·l,l10 lbs 43·
.the hereinafter descr i bed
45.90; choice and prime 2-4 875·
property or be forever barred
1,·150 lbs 40 .43.25; indvldual
lrom asserlin? the same, and
45.10;. choice 2-3 825 -1, 150 lbs 37
that plaintiffs ti tl e be forever
40.25; good 2·3 800·1,075 lbs
qu_ieted as against any claim,
33.50 -38 .25
estate or interest of the de·
Slaughter cows: utility and
fendaniS and lor such other
commerc i al "2·4 875 -1,700 lbS
relief, legal or equitable as
24.75-31.25 high dressing 32.50·
may be found to be proper
34.50; cu tter 1·2 800·1 ,300 lbs
and necessary to afford
2.2 .50-29; c"nner 1-2 700 -900 lbs
p l a intiffs f ull relief. with
21.50-21 .85 .
judgment for costs h erein'
Slaug hter bulls : 1's 1,260·1,440
t hat S"aid real estate is
descr i bl!d as&gt; -follow S : ~~
lbs 35 .35·37.50 ; 2'S 1,150-1.730 lbs
The follow ing rea l estate
3'-'5·33.60.
vealers: choice and pr ime
si tuated i n the County of
200-250 tbs ranged from 46·77;
Meigs 1 State of Ohio, and in
125.135 lbs 31 -35; choice 175 -275
the V i llage of Pomeroy, to.
ibs 38-58; 80-120 tbs 15·28; good
wit :
145-270 lbs 36.50·38; 95 -130 l"s
TRACT ONE : Fraction 17,
31.50-34.50; 75.95 1bs 10-'22: ·,
Town 2, Range 13, bounded
Feeder cattle: chOice and
and desCribe d as toltows :
prime 310-485 lbs 35 ·39; 500-660
Beginning 310 1-3 feet North
lbs 34.75-39; good 310·490 lbS
of the corner of the Fac tory ,
30.50-35; 525 -800 lbs 31 -35
formerly known as the Probst
H·eifers choke ~nd prime 340 F·urniture Fac tor y, on Sug.;~r
490 lbs 30·35.50; 520 ·170 lbs
Run Street ; thence North 65
29.50-33; gooc;t 355 .740 lbs 25 ·
Oeg . 50' West 18l feet to a
30.60.
stake ; thenr::e . North 25 Oeg .
Hogs: barrows and gilts 1.00
87 2-3 feet to a stake.,· t hence
higher, sows steady, ~ars and
South 59 Oeg . Eas t 175 feet to
a stake; t hence Sou th 22 Deg . feeder pigs not compared.
10' west 66 2·3 feet to the- barrows and gilts u-s 1·3 205 -235
lbs 45.20-45.95 sows U·S 1·3 329·
place of .beg i nning.
640 lbs 36-41 .70; bulk 40 -41.50;
TRACT TWO : In Fraction
lot u.s. l's 692 lbs 33 ; tot u .s.
No . 17 , Town No . 2 and Range
l's 426 lb~ 37.25; boars 246 -885
No . 13.of the Ohio Company's
lbs 29.25; 180-280 lb~ 31 -32.50;
Purchase and bounded and
425·685 lbs 29 .50; feeder pigs
described
as
follows :
U.S . 1-3 30-4.5 lbs 12· 17 .50 per
Beginning 177 feet Northerly
head.
from t he cor ner o f · t he Fa c.
tory , formerly known as the
Sheep:
slaughter lambs
wooled steady to 2.00 lower ,
Probst Furn iture Factory,
shorn 1.00 lower, feeder lambs
on Sugar Run Street; thenr::e
4,75 tower, few choice 88·109,
North 65 ·oeg . 50 minutes
wooled 57.25 -58.25; choice and
West 183 feet to a st~ke;
prime 97 -110 lbs shOrr;l with no
thence North 25 Oeg . EaSt 66
.1-2 pelts 59-61.80; utilitv and
2·3 feet to a stake the corner
good sl&amp;ughter ewes 110-\45 18of a lot now or form erly
owned
by
w ilh'em ina 26; lot choice and fanr::y f~eder
Genhelmer's lot; th .enr::e
lflmbs 85 lbs 60.
south 65 Deg. so• East 181 teet.
to a stake; f hence South 22.
Oeg . 10 minutes West 66 2-3
tee t tO the place of beginning.
EXCEPT lhe following
p~rce l from Tr&lt;!lct Two:
In Fraction 17, Town No . 2
and Range No. 13 of the Ohio
company's Purchase , and
bounded and described as
fOllowS !
BEGINNING
177
1eet
Northerly from the corner of
the Factory, former ly known
as the Probst Furniture
Sem~
Fac tory , on Su.gar Run
street; thence North 65 Deg .
50' west 183 teet ; thence
North 25 Oeg .
Ealiit 4'2.1
fet;!t to a stc.ke; t hence South
720eg \ OO'East182feettothe
West s1de of said Sugar Run
Street ; lhence South 22, Deg .
• 10' West 64 feet alonv the

b1

:Your in'itial plans todaY will be
t.
.. feasl e an
pro ~c lve,
u
: there 'S a possibility that you
• will not ·put them to the test

....

f

.. on your calendar.

C

'

I,

January 15th and 18th are days to remember, Circle them

VI .

~

·:·vALLEY:LUM~ER &amp;SUPPLY CORP.

773-5536

u Mal'¥' J . RUPI tnllf

· «AREN k . RUPE ,
" RI MuiHrry strnt,
"•merov , Ohio.
1

.,

CASH AND CARRY PRICES

OF MASON

remember •
in March of Uime.s

IN THE CO~RTOF

r

'" Mi1"o':'t8:t,m:'6"H1o

•

PANELS

GINO'S

~

'
: ·-

JANUARY

u ays t 0

7-The Dally SenUne~ Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Jan. 12,J9?.8

I

Recital Hall instructor of
voice David Stoffel, bass
baritone, and Ca ndace
Stolle!, pianist, will present a
concert; and on May 14 the
winners of the School of

NOW OPEN

PHONE

DUTTON DRUG CO.

OF MASON

otherwise would have been • direction
of
associate
unable to attend the School of professor of voice Ira Zook.
Music.
On April 3, at 8:30 p.m. in

his mother, lona Brickles,

Bruce and Denise, Pomeroy.
Other weekend visitors of
Mrs. Brickles were Mr. and
Mrs. Wayne Banks and
Stephanie of Gaithersburg,
Md. On Saturday, Mr. and
Mrs. Nonnan Wood and Mr.
and Mts. Steve Stickles
visited at Rickenbacker Air
For~e Base with Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Wood, Carrie
Anne and Cathryn.

Conkling and pianist Richard
Syracuse. ·

five

Wi&lt;;kstrom ,

. HERE VisiTING
Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Brick!&lt;§. ol Gajthersburg,
Md. were weekend visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Wood,
son, Ronnie, Route 4.
Pomeroy. They also visited

..

H&gt;:~.~····· .. ..·..:o}···&lt;·

~

University School of Music's

DAUGHTER BORN
Mr. and. Mrs: Kenneth
Wood, Rlckenbacker Air

: XX

CHAPMAN
SHOES
Next to Elberfelds
I

Mt·

iJI ' II',Ifl~l

( Jj

P~ICE S MAY V ARY

IANOV CORPORATION

'

Pomeroy, 0.
'

"'"

A1

IN DIVIDU AL SIO RES

�' 8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Jan. 12, 1978

Let The Want Ads ·T urn .Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD
CHARGES
I day
2dMya
3day!;
6daya

,

1.00

O..rl't
I 25

1.5(1

uo .

3.00

J.to
2:.7j
3.75

E.cb •ord 011er the m~nimum I~
wtJnil is 4 l~LI pe.- word prr dily.
Ads running other than t.'OOIICtltive
dllys wW be charged at lhf I day

""·
In memory, Qird oC ThluW t1nd
Obituary: 6 cenUJ per word ,
nunimwn. Cuh in ltdva(l('t'.

~ - 00

Mobile Home g)es and Yard ults

11re

lli(.'\.'fpkd

anly with cuh wiLh

urder. ~cent chlilrf!e for ada carryUlll Box Number In Care rl The Sen-

unel.

'

Till! Publisher reserves tht! righl
In

edlt or reltct any ads ~med ob-

jectional The PublbhN will not be

l'tSJ)ORllible for more thin one UlCor·
red lttMrtlon

Phone tn-21 5I

WE WOULD li".e to thonlt oil who
helped tnony way durtng the tl·
lness ond daGth of our beloved
husband. father , and grand
father , Clork ll, le . Or .
Villeneuvo ond nur5es gt
Vetere.,·s Memor ia l Ho5prtol.
Dr. Berldch ond nurses at
Holzer Hosprtol , the Raci11e
Emergency Squad . SOE MS , the
Ewing Funeral Ho.me Re v
Rober! Bumgardner and Mrs
Florence Smith for the ir consol ing words . the organist and
s1ngers for the beourrtul music ,
all wl1o sent flowen , food and
cords , and especially lo r the
proyefl of our many fr iends ,
nerghbon ond relot1ves May
God Bleu Vou AIL
Mn Clark lhle, Mr and Mrs. Jock
Relyea . Mr and Mrs . Charles
_ .!_hie ond Fomr!J'.:... __ _

NOTICE
IN COME TAX Services Federal
and State To•es . Wando Eblin
9'12-2272.

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADI.JNES

-

THE

Volun teer

Fire

siloot thler v Saturday ot 0 pm at
!herr butldrng tn Boshon fo e·
·
tory choke gun&amp; only

Moooay
Noon on Saturday
Tuesd»y
lhru F'rtd.ay

RACIN£

Dero; lment w1ll &amp;ponsor a gvn

1

4P M

lhedlly before pubUcJition

THERACiNE Gun Clu b Gun sn;Ot
every Sunday afte rnoon Foetory choke guns only. Assorted
meoh
WANTED CHR ISTIAN mustCIOns
_!o form a group . Call 949 2870.

SWKI»y
4P M

Frid•y aftem0011

WANTED BASS player to join
es tobltshed counlry-rock bond
as soon &lt;lS poss1ble. Phone
992-2969or 992-7ti18
.

INCOME TAX Servtces Federal
and Sla te Taxes
Wallace
boMer dog.
Russell . Bradbury . 992-1228·.

LOST. ~ ONE mt~le
Solem Cen ter orel) , 992-5872 or
6 1.. -66Q -5749

THE TRUSTEES of Scipio Towns hip
wont to hea r from those who
l OST ABOVE EAstern High School
ore mterested' in h&lt;l vtng the
on Rt . 7 ; sma ll brown pony w1th
Cull Stanley rood open or closgreen holler Ch1ld 's pet Ph
ed to meet wrt h the trustees at
985 3323.
, th e Downmg Town Ha ll Feb 3,
1978ot700
LARGE BLACK coonhound lost in
--~-~
Rock Sprmgs &lt;lrea
PH .
992-3-4 .. 6.

PUBLIC NOTICE
The foll&lt;lw lng statements
app l y to any and al l NPDE S
permits for described ab&lt;lve .
On the basis ot pr~lim inary
staff review· and application
of s tandard s and regu la tions ,
the Director of the Ohio
Environmental
Protec tion
Agency will issue a perm it tor
the d isc har ge sub ject to
cer tain efflu en t co nd rtion s
and special condl,lons . The
draft permit will be Issued as
a t irat actron un less the
Director re vises the draft
after consrcrera li on of the
r eco rd of a pu b ltc mee t rng or
written comments, .or upon
d rs appr0\181 by the Ad ·
mmistrator of the U . S.
Envrron m ental
Prc tectron
Agency Any person may
submit a written statement
withrn th irty days of t11_e date
of the Pub lic Not ice as to why
the Director ~hould re-_.tse
th is permit . If significant
pub lic Int erest rs shown a
public mtoetlng may be. held
on motion o f the Director
prror to fma l rssuance of the
per mit . Following final ac Ir an by the D ire ctor , a ny
aggrieved par ty has the right
to aPpeal to the Environ me ntal Boerd o f Rev iew
Interes ted persons are
rnvited to sub mit written
comments
upon
t he
discharge perm It Comment s
shoul d be submitted in person
or by ma il no later than 30
days after the date of thrs
Pub lic Notice . Del r~er Qr
mall all commen ts lo :
NPD'ES Perm it Section ,
Ohio
Env i ronmental
Protect ron Agency , P . 0 . Box
10419, 36 1 East Broad Street,
Columb us, Ohio 432 16
The OEPA permit number
and P ub lic No t ice numbers
should appear n erd to the
above address on the en
vel o pe and on eac h page of .
any submitted commen ts . All
comments rece ived no lat er
tl:l an 30 days atter the date of
. t ni s P ub lic Not ice shall be
cons rdered
· T he
applr cation,
fact
· sheets, perm it Including
effluent lr mrtations , special
co nd it i on s,
comme nts
rece1ved
ancr
other
docume nt s are ava ilable for
rnspection and may be co p,j.ed
at a c ost of IS ctonts per pige
at the Oh 1o Environmenta l
Protect ion Agen c y at the
address s how n above a ny
time between th e hours of
8:00 a .m. and .ol . 30 p .m .,
Monday through Friday
Copres ot the Pu b lic Notice
are a vai la ble at no cha r ge a t
the same edctre.ss
Malting trsts are ma in
ta ln ed tor persons or groups
who desire to receive Public
Noti ce for all applications m
the state or for certa 1n
geographical a,-eas . Person s
or groups ma y also requf15t
co p)es of ta ct Sheen, ap .
pl ica trans or other docv ments
pe rtain ing to speci fi c ap .
pl ica trans Persons or groups
may have the [,- names put on
suc h a list by mak ing a
written request to the Agency
at the address shown above,
Applicition No : OH 0059561

OEPA Permit No : BOlt+ AD

\

National Pollutilnf Dhcharge
Elimination System ( NP .
DES• Permit Prognm
PUB.L IC NOTICE
NPDES Permit to Dls t htrge
to Statr W1ter1
Oh i o
Envlronmentel
Protection Agency
P . 0 . Box 1049
36 1 East Broad Stree t
Columbus , Ohio .ol3216
6U 466 - 48~1

RESPONSIBLE OLDER lady to live
in a nd co re tar aged lady in
Ru tland . L1ght ho usework and
cook1n9..,..no la undry . More for
home tha n wages
Col i
742-2078
TEX AS OIL COMPAN Y needs
dependable person who con
wo rk without supervisio n in
Pomeroy. Con tact cus tomers.
Age vnimportont bvt motunty
is . We !rom. Write T. E Drclo. ,
Pres . ,
Sou lh western
Petroleum , Ft. Worth , TX
PAR T TIME bookkeeper. Send
resume to· Box 729-E. c-o The
Daily Senhnel . Pomeroy, OH
45709.

•

t 'odiele

TRUCK ORIVEA with mechonkol
experl•nce on form &amp;qt.upment
and also to do some general
lobar. App ly ol Gallipolis Troc :
lor . (61,. ) 440-10..4 .

B I S MOBILE HOMES. Pt. Plea·
sent , W Vo beside Heclt s
1973 Broodmore 141 )l 6-1 2
bedroom
1973 Oor ton 14 ~~: 60 2 bedroom
1972 Vrctorion 141 ~ 67 3 bedroom,
1both
1972 Covenlty 12 " 65 3bedroom
1969 Statesman 12 • 60 2
bedroom .

CASH potd fo r oil mokes and
models of mobile home~ ,
Phone areo code 6 1"·423·9531 .
---··TIMBER. Pomeroy Forest Pro ducts . Top price. for standing
!&gt;ow timber . Call 992-596S or
Kent Ho~y_.__l_.: ""6:.!1~7~ __
COINS , CURRENCY , tokens , old
pocltet watches and chams,
!1lver ond gold We need 196A
ond older silve r coins . Buy . sell .
or rrode' Coli Roger Wamsley .
142 2331 .

----

-

PUBLIC . NOTICE
sea led brd s wi ll be rece j\led
by the Vi llage of M idd leport,
Ohio , Me igs County, at the
1/ltlagto Hell , 237 Race Str eet,
M idd leport, Ohio until 4:00
PM . Janua r y 23, 1918 for the
following equip ment :
1978 Model. "door sedan to
be use d es Police Cru iser
100 amp . heavy duty
alternator
500 amp heavy duty bat .
tery
2 heavy duty spot li ghts ,
ins rde oper ate d
350 cu . rn . va Engine or
equi va lent
Air Condi tion ed
Power Brakes
. P o wer Steering
He avy Duty Sus p ension
Svstem
.,
5 first line tires
AutomaTic
transmission
Color - White
Etectr1c Doo r locks
Delivery made with in s idy
day s from the da te bid Is
accepted
Wit h or W ithout 1916 41 door
Im pa le Chev r ole t trade .in
Th e VIllage reserves the
right to reject any ancr all
bi d $ .

(1

l 5. 12, 2tc

Village of
Mid d lepo rt
Gene Grate ,
Clerk -Treasurer

NO IT EM TOO Lorge or too small .
Wi ll buy I ptece or complete
household . New , used. or onh·
ques Martin s Furn1ture . 20 N
:lnd St
Middlepon. Phone 992 6370
CH IP WOOD . Poles maw .
diameter 10" on lorgesl end , $8
per ton Bvndled slob, $b per
ton Delivered to Oh to Pollet
Co . ~~ l_ P_om~oy 992-7689.
CASH FOR Junk Cars Frye sTruc k
and Auto Wreclter Servtce
Phone 7412-2081 or Pennzoil
Rvtlond 742 ·9575 .
AUTO BODIES and scrap rnetol.
Rider 's Salvage . 992 ·54b8
USED tra ctor with
hydrau lic. 3 pt . h1!ch . 742-3Q74 .

GOOD

SIL VER OOLL"-RS &amp; co1ns . Wtll pay
3 times worth and up Co lt
742-2316

IF YOU have a servrce Ia oller ,
wont to buy or sell some thm g.
ae loolo.rng for wo rk
or
whateve r .. , you'll get results
foster with o Sentinel Wont Ad.
Coll99~ · 2156 .

HOOF HOLLOW Horses . Buy. sell
trade or tra rn New and used
saddleS. Rut ~ Reeves Albany .
• [6 1&lt; ) 698-329p.
MEIGS COU NTY Hu mane Soc1ely~
Co relrne and odoptton Service
992.7080, 742-3 162, 992-5427
A~C

REGISTERED pekingese pup
p1es. Phone {304) SS2·26B3.

RI SINV STA R Kennel. Boardrng
Indoor and outdoor runs
Groomrng all breeds. Clean
son1tary focdtt 1es . Cheshire
Phone (61 4) 367-0292

lARGE ROUND Bole feeders
mode of square tub1ng. $76.
Vermeer Iorge round baler ,
$250. Discoun t unt il Feb 1 S
1978 . Woodmal!tter cobrnet
wood healers thermostat , osh
pan, hinged top for cooking.
brtCk· llned , 5242 Coalrl)_?Ster
some OS above but Shaker
grote •for cool , 5264 Blower lor
ett her, $48 Mer ril l Chose, (614 )
698 3021

Le1 Pomeroy Landmark
s often &amp; condttion your
water with Co-op water
softener. Model UC-SVt,

'279.95

Now Only

Pomeroy Landmark
Jack W. Carsey, Mgf' .
Phone 992·2181

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
We have enlarged our
service department and
will service Hotpoint and
other brands.

Pomeroy Landmark

9. _Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
·- Ail. Phone992-218J

1969 CHEVROLET I MPALA . ~ door
Fine co ndition . SSSO 742·2359 .

--::::=c":~~cc.c"-'.:;_,..c:.="'-- MOV ING · MU ST SELL ltvm g r~om

1972

ARISTOCR,A T TRAVEL
18'
$2 . 200. Coli

3 AND 4 RM furnished ond un
fur nished opts . Phone 992 ·
5434.
COU NTRY MOBILE Home Pork .
Route 33, north of Pomeroy .
Large lo ts Coll992-7479.
Adult s

FOUR: ROOMS ond both upsto~r s
apt. Coll992·5621 o r 992 2205
EFFI CIENCY APARTMENT . Two
men. Complelely lur nrshed .
Phone 992-779 1
THREE BEDR OOM
985 3341.

Ho u se .

THREE BEDROOM !railer for ren t.
No t over 2 children allowed No
peh , One trai ler lot for rent .
742-3122.
-

sutte . 3 pc map le bedrm suite
h
wrt mol!ress ond bOlr sprmgs.
15 tu ft . chest freezer. dinette
set , reff igerotor . bunk beds
~11h new Innerspring ITIO!tre~s .
coffee and end tables . recliner.
ro~ker . Zentth siereo misc .
ch&lt;lrrs , ta bles , chesh, dressers .
mowe r, desk ""'' 'h cho1r, small
appliances . knick · knoclo.s ,
much misc . Call304 ·173·5790 , 8
om to 6 pm or inqvrre ot613 N .
2nd St .. Meson . W vo (Ye llow
house no rth end of Mason on
left going toward Hertf ord.)

We Are Now
Taking New
Customers For

FUEL OIL AND

GAS SERVICE
CALL US
Pomeroy Landmark
·~ ~~aclc W. Carsey, Mgr.

AiL

Phone 992·2181

1969 JEEP COMANOO V -6 , outo
742-2768,
HAY FOR sale, SSS per ton Corn
far so le , S2 per bu. Call after 5
pm . 98S-413 l or 985·3537 .
36' MAGIC CHEF electnc range in
e.11cellent cond1!ron . S60 Phone
992 -2515 .
THREE CHAMBERL AIN stor m
doors , good shape . Phonf)l
9&lt;19-2661 .
1977 CHE V-'~V~S;-;l:;:EP:::S;;I;::E
O ;:-'"
p;1 c;ku- p- :3-;:
50
cu ., 4 bb l. Sharp $5,000. Cal l
992-2912
p

1972 SUPER

BUG VW . Good
~Y~echanicol co nd itron. f'J eeds
body work 992·6 1~ .

NEW OUILT. Tree of Li fe . (6 14)
667-3968 .
COAL , limestone, and ca lcium
'chloride and calcium brine for
dus\ control ond special mixing
sa lt for formers , hce lstor Salt
Wo,rks , Ma in Street , Pomeroy ,
_ Ohio or phone 992· 31391 .
CAMPER ,

S600. Also, horse
troiie~, $450. Phone (614) 6983290.

ECONOMV TRACTOR wiih all ot =
tachmenh . Ltlo.e new , dsking
$2250. Phonol6 14 )698·3290.

----·--RUGS, WALL Hortgrngs

~ --'

ond
ofgans Nice for Chris tma s.
Reasonable Co /1992 -211 4.

1976 FORO F-250 Custo;-i75Q;
141.00 tires - w1nch Only 14,000
rni. Headers CB. Tape dec.k.
Over $3 ,()(X) in e.11t ros . Sttr1ous
calls only after 12 noon·
6'16·1072. $6.800.

FIREWOOD FOR sole . Phone
7" 2·2131 .
HAV FOR sole Timothy , allo llo,
and cloVer Phone 2411·364 4.

,
119••
~... ~"" Stn\cl$

Real .Estate for sale
VA·FHA, 30 yr. financing . Ireland
Mortgoge , 77 E. State, Athens ,
phone (614 ) S92-3051
THREE YEAR old , I ' 1 story , ranch
style home . 4 bedrooms 2 cor
goroge , cement drrvewoy I A .
ground
$33 ,qoo
Pr iva te
owner Seen by oppotn lment
949 2801.

'-'-----..,------,

HAV FOR sole . Round boles PH
8"3-2524 .
';;A
';;:
VE;:-w-o-o~d;-:-bu,-n7; n- g
ONE HEA T;;W
stove I year old w1th stovepipe
and damper . one 6" &lt;:h1mney
ltrt One Craft sman chain sow ,
outomoti(
olier ,
se ll s harpeni ng bor 24 t cu . in .
engine 14" bar Used ._pnce , •
247 3941.
. ~

JOHNIE'S BEAUTY
SALON

SEPTIC 'TANK
. CLEANING
Residential
and
commerciil.
Call for
estimate. 24 hour service.
Anyday. anytime.
Phone 985-3806

Jack's Septic
Tank SeMce

Box 34

Cheste,-, Ohio
10-30. c ,

FREE ESTIMATES

EIGHT ROOM house in Portland .
Both, basement, porch , cool
lurnace. •; , A. lot Method ist
Parsonage . Contact Br uce
McKe lvey 843-3111 , Sh1rley
FIREWOOD , SPLIT
delivered .
JohMon 8.43 ·2105 , or Rut h
s tocked 525 per Iorge pickup
Ebersboch 8"3-3636
lood . 742-2256.

GOOD USED TV s. Color ond
Black ond Wh1te Harnson 's TV ,
276 Sycamore Street , Mtd ·
d!eport . Oh1a 992-2522

NOTICI

AUCTION . FR IDAY 7 pm . New and
used merchond1se at Ohio
River Auctton Me igs Plaza,
M1ddleport , Ohra.

THREE ElV IS records co ll ectors
items . Can bo seen at Clifton .
W , Vo .. ask for Roge_r Klein

HAY FOR SALE Royal Oak Form
985·33&lt;11

STARCRAFT FALL Sole
Mm1
mo tors , 20' ond 22'. TroVe!
Trailer\ , 18' 5" S3.799 25 7
Bunkhou1oe l-41 ,875 Fold -down .
SI 700 up . We sell service a nd
quality . Op~m Sundays . Camp
Conley Starcrolt Soles . Rt 62 .
N of Pt. Pleasant.

ATTENTION MARE Owners .
AQHA stud serv1ce. lntroducmg
to Southern Ohro. (or tolto , sor ·
fe ll s.on of Otoe Bree~ lcr col·
or conformation and disposition ~ Phone 6q8 .8241 ev&amp;nings
or wr ite for breed1ng controcr .
Belle Echo Ouarte' Horses,
40125 SR 697 , Pornero y,· Ohio
45769

------.

Le t us test your water Free

MIXED HAY , squar e ales. CR 30.
Mmersvr ll e . 949-2588 . Vernon
Nea se

:'.:-'7":":.-:=-=-:--0:..:::.=::_:..,=- =

MOBIH HOME 'epolfs . 992 -5858.
PIANO TUNING -lone Don1els . 13
years at s&amp;t"vrce. New phone
number , 992· 2591 .

MIXED breed puppres .
obou1 ' ' 7 ' ~months old Phone
985·3808

1974 GRAN TOR INO V-8 , P S
P 8., A C . good cond111on.
good tires
Earl Cross
949-2568 .
.

FERGUSON 70 lroctor New rear
trre! $1,200. 741 2573 .
1969 DODGE CORONET, 318
motor i375. Coli ~2- 501 1 .

home . Phone 992· 731.a.

HOBSTETTER

REALTY
Geor geS. Hobstetter Jr.,
Broker
101 112 Sycamore St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
PH ONE 992-6333
Office Hours: 9 A.M. to ·•
P,M.
Close
Thur sdays an1
Saturdavs at noon .
NEW
LISTING
3
bedroom, l'h bathS, din ing
area, kitchen ha s built-i n
oven and range, one car
garage, family room . New
tota l electric home on an
acre lot . $41.000.00. Located
on the Ct'ow Sub-division,
near Five Points .
NEW LISTING - 2 yea r
old Fuqua double wide
mobile home, 24')(56' with
por ch in exc.ellent condition
including all furn iture &amp;
appliances . Located on
corr'ter lot. 100'x200' in the
Arbaugh addition , Tup per s
Plains, Ohio, known as the
Ralph Brooks property .
This IS a good buy at
$21.000.00 .
We have need ol listings,
all types, homes, land ,
commercial, etc.
Cheryl Lemley
Associate
Home Phone 742-2003
Hilton Wolfe, Sr.·
Assoctate
HomP Phone 949-2589

FiaantM&amp;W.blt
' llowllllto Walls &amp; Attics

SID III
WINDOWS l DOORS
IEI'IAC.EII!NI
IIIIDOIIS
Willi lUll
SIOINI&gt;SOFFIII

GUIIEIIUWNINGS

LARRY LAVENDER
Sfi'ICtnf, Ohio
Ph. 9!z.J993

ALUMINUM SIDING
SIDING
SOFFIT&amp;CHINGS
GUTTERS&amp; DOWN
SPOUT
Easy
step
by
step
instructions.
SO~IDVINYL

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR.
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 992·332S
NEW
LISTING
-3
bedroo m s, bath , uttlity
building, natural gas, city
water and front porch .
Wanl just $7.500.
MIDDLEPORT
- 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, natural
gas furnace , and city
water . Located nea r t he
business section . Now
$15,000.
RACINE - 4 bedrooms,
bath, city utilities, natural
gas cent ral heating, large
lo t and ext ra building.
Aski ng $28,000.
TUPPERS PLAINS. Breezeway, 150x200 lot, 3
bedroom s,
bath ,
gas
central heating, T"Ttce oak
fl oors and garage . Will
consider reasonable offer .
POMEROY RURAL - 50
acres with m ine ral s, water
and electricity .
NEAR POMEROY - 175
acres with gas well, 8 room
modern ranch house, barn ,
mine,-als, and fru it .
MIDDLE PORT
•
bed,-oom
brick ,
bath,
natural
gas
central
heating, 2 porches and
basement. As k log $23.500.
NEW LISTING - Business
building that can ' be
separa'ted into 3 rentals.
Want a good Investment,
try lhis one. Only $3S,OOO.
Don't be five m inutes late .
BUY
FOR
YOUR
SECURITY.
AN
INVESTMENT IN ONE
OF THE ABOVE, IS
TOMORROW'S SAVINGS.
Helen L. Tulord
C. Bntce To ford
Sue P . Murphy
Re•ltor Associates

etc.
•
· Wood -Metal- Plastics
Antiques &amp; Modern
Upholstering Service
Custom . Professional
Refinishing · Repairing .
Antiques Bought &amp; Sold
Dick Seyler
Phone 992-2798
100 kerr St.
Pomeroy , Ohio
12-30·1 mo.

RACINE
PLANING MIU
992-3978

PWMIIJNG &amp;
HEAnNG INC.

SALES AND SERVICE
11 ·9·1fC

OHIO
HEATING SERVICE
REPAIR &amp; SERVICE.
Furnaces, Heat
Pumps &amp; Auto -Controls.
GA5-()IL- C()AL

Professional Service, 39
vrs . experience . Fret
estimates,
pickup
·a
delivery
service .
Residential &amp; Commercial.

U'ITI E ORPHAN ANNIE

[J I

446·7133---446· 1133

Steam Eat11tticln

Young's .
Carpeting

Yeser
I d ays

SMALL form for sole . 10% down ,
ow ner financed Monroe County , W. Vo . Phone (304) H2·
3102 or {304) 772-3227

Newepll)erbooke.

Phone Mike Young
At

~

992·220&amp; Of 992-7630
"lht Ori~nalo!J
"ollhtlmilllo!J

by THOMAS JOSEPH
123-tmo.

ACROSS

COUNT RY farmland with secluded woods, wa ter and good occess rn Monroe County. W. Vo.
$ 1.000 down , co li (30.ol) 7723102 or (304) 7n-3227.
Commerc1ol property appro~~: . 17
ce res. leve l iond. located ot
Tuppers Plo1ns on Oh ro. Route
7. Phone (614) 66?-630&lt;1.

MAIN

.

POMEROY, 0.
JUST LISTED - Appro x. •
acres w ith love ly newer
home. 3 bedroOms with
walk-i n c losets, 2 modern
baths, kitchen with loads of
cabinets, range &amp; oven,
formal dining room , family
room, 2 yrs. old. $28,000.00.
JUST LISTED - Aboul 4
yrs . old bnck &amp; frame . 1
acre. 3 lovely bedrooms_f
Ph baths, kitchen has 27 ft.
ca binets, · range &amp; oven ,
double gla ss doors to
co ncrete
pat io,
large
garage, porch. S31.900 .00.
YOU WILL ADORE THIS
- Newer 3 bedroom frame ,
modern bath, very ni ce
kitchen,
carpeting ,
paneling, a ll in excellent
con dition, nothing more to
do. JUST $18,500.00.
LOCATED ON OLD RT, 33
- About 19 acres , water
available, overlooks both
old &amp; new Rfs . 33. Mosll y
wooded. ss.ooo.oo.
MIDDLE PORT One
floor plan . 2-3 bed rooms, 2
fif'eplaces, ready t o move
Into.
Lvel
lot ,
g ood
ne ighborhood, has been
remodeled
nicely .
Sl3,000.00.
POMEROY - Basement. 3
bedroom s, carpet ing , one
floor p lan. gas forced a lr
fu J:" na ce. Cal l about th is '
one. Sl8,000.00 .
WE HAVE BUYERS FOR
YOUR
PROP 'E RTY,
ESPECIALLY
NEWER
HOMES . AND FARMS.
LET
OUR
PHOTO
LISTING
SERVICE
WORK FOR YOU&gt;.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
HANK,KATHY&amp;LEONA
CLELAND
ASSOCIATES
992, 22S9·?92-6191·9•2-2S61

EXCAVA TING , dozer ,
and d1tcher Charle s . Hot Back Hoe Servrce.
fie ld
Rutla nd . Ohio. Phone 742-2008 .

BRADFORD. Auctioneer, Com·
plete Service. Phone 949-2487
or 9&lt;19·2000. Racin e. Ohio. Crifl
Bradfor d."'

WILL do roofing . construct1on .
plu mbing and hebting. No jOb
too Iorge or too s mall Phone
. 7&lt;1 2·2348 .

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR SV(eepe rs, toasters , irons, all
small opplicnces. Lawn mower ,
ne)(f to State H1ghwoy Gar-age
on Route 7 . Phone (614) 9B5·
3825.

HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
covo tt ng, sep tiC sys te ms,
dozer , backhoe dump truck.
lrmestone gravel . blacktop
po\ling . Rt 143. Phone 1 (614)
698-7331.

11 Saucy

DOWN
1 Bavarian

2 wds.
5 Desert

How much are
40U qoinq to
charqe me?

BATHROOMS AND Ki lche ns
SEWING MACHINE Repairs . serremodeled, ceramic til e . plum ·
vice, oil mo kes , 992-2264 . The
bing , carpentry. and general
Fol:ir1c Sho p , Pomeroy.
maintenance . 13 years e.11·
Authomed Srnger So les and
perrence . 992-3685.
Serv1ce . We s ha rpen Sc1ssors.
PULLINS EXCAVATING. Co mple te
EXC AVATING , dozer , loader and
Servrce Phone992-7478.
backhoe work ; dump trucks
and lo -boys for hire will haul
NEIG LER"S FOR butlding houses,
flll dirt , to soi l. limestone and
bath rooms, oil kinds of repo tr
gravel.' Call Bob or Roger Jefwork and what ha ... e you Guy
ler s, doy phone 992-7089 night
Nei gler . Racine Ohio Coli
949 -2508 evenmgs.
phone 992·3525 or 992· 5232.

case1

25 Resting
26 Forbid
27 Actress
Grier
281ndeed! :
JF~RANK~~&amp;~E~R~N~I~E~~~~,-\7~~--~~~~7-~~~~------~--------~---------, 31 Guido's
2wds.
,.

4 dr., 11.000 miles by careful owner. Beautiful white
over dark red finish, 30S V-8, automatic, P .S., P . B , air

:

conditioned, spare never used , showroor.n clean. Save.

,...IN!'

we•v!

MANY MI.SSiON~ItS

Red with white vinyl top, ca'refully driven and loaded
with every option Irk. air, tilt wheel, speed and cruise,
ftJII power Company car, never titled.

•• % .Ju5'r' HAp A
TtN1NGI of GulL,.•

1974 Camaro Cpe•••••••$3295
'

1974 Scout 11 ••••••••••• $2895

.

•"

t
l

•

OH.J WINNIE;, IT IS!!! RCX&gt;J'B
Gt:TTING- &amp;ERIOU&amp; . ..
REAL tiEl&lt; IOU&amp; ... AND
1 DON'T QUITE KNOW
HCW lD HANDLE IT I

1974 Chev. 8'••••••••••• $3495

50METIME DURING THE
NIGHT I HAD A .

VIBilOR ... 1:\UT WHAT
KINIJ ?'AND WHERE

1970 Chevrolet .1/z Ton-$1545
Hurly Iii Far AGOOd .Deal

POMEROY' MOTOR CO.
"Your Chevy Dealer"
992·2126

Pomeroy
Open Evenings Until&amp; P.M.

.

.

NO, THANK '{OU, SIR .. ,
tM JUST GOiNG TO LIE
HERE,AND TRq TO READ
"PILGRIM'S PR061&lt;E55 :'

IF THE FALL ON THE
ICE DIDN'T 6iVE '/OU A
CONCUSSION. MARCIE,
Ti-l AT WILL!

•

KI

J 9 7"
+
10932
.r. QJ97
•

Q10864

•

A85

six s psdcs, b
North bid seven direct
North's r easoning was tt
with two aces and four kin
his hand wQuld hove be
t oo stron g for a mere fot
s pa rle ca ll He nce , h e s hot
bidding

+s

•

We don 't know wha t
would hove bid if North Jl
showed his three kings

b1d seven with three king&gt;
lt worked o ut very we
Soulh drew

trumps wi
three leads a nd we nt aft
diamond s. The s ull broke

2, so he got two club d

West

East

Pas.."
Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass

...

,.

Snuth

Pa~

4 NT
5 ~T

Pass

Pa!-~

~

wotk it:

CRVPTOQIIOTES
SNK

J BN D

HPQQ , -

'
r HEAR
TELL
HE TOLD ~ou To TAKE
IT EASY, HUH ? WELL,
THAT MAKES 5EN5E .. CAN
I GET ~OU ANI{Tf.IIN6 ?

II\2· A

+ AK 32

Vulnerable Both , Dea ler.
Nort~, Opening lead Seven
of spades.

UNNE

JBLDV

FCULVB

VPSLRY

C,opr. 1978 Kintc f't&gt;al.,res Syndrcalt'. Jnr.

I

Jump bid shows power

"' AI O J

Yesterday'• Cryploquole: WHEN WE ARE FL.A T' ON OUR
BACKS THERE IS NO WAY TO LOOK BUT UP.-ROGER
BABSON

R.

'

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

+ Q7

One lette r simply st;nds for another. In tim sa mrle A is
used (or the three 1 ."~. X for t hc hHI o·s. l'lc ~i n ~ l c litte rs.
:-tpost rophcs. th e J cn~ th and formation nf l hc ll'nrds :1 rc a ll
h in ts. Ear h d;:ay lhr &lt;'ode lcttrrs nrc di tTer('nt .

ULQQ

'

BRIDGE

SOUTH

32 One : Fr.
33 Munch
35 Worked
hard
Get A-&lt;&gt;ne
treatment
Chronicles
Equitable ·
Breeding
places

LH

13.

r nu rsday, Jan 12

+ J5
.. K864

"

IB ITNOW?

Fleetslde Cheyenne cab, full c hrome tr im , step
bumper , 45&lt;1 engine, automatic power steering &amp;
braKes . rally wheels, air conditioning, color white, real
sharp.

1 ; ~Tomorrow31 .4 ; 1:50-News

FRIDAY, JANUARY U, lt71
! :&lt;5-Farm Repori13:, S .5D-PTL. Club 13; 6 :DO-PTL
Club IS.
6 :25-SOC!eties In Translllon 1O; 6 · 31&gt;-Colvrnt&gt;us
Today • : News 61 6 :•s-Mornlng Reporf l ; 6 : 50Good Morning, West VIrginia 13 : 6 :55-Chuck
White Reporls 10; News 13.
7:oo-Todoy 3,&lt;,15: Good Morn ing America 6.1 3; CBS
News 8; Bullwlnkle 10.
7:»-SchoollesiO; 8 :oo-Capl . Kangaroo 8,10: Sesame
Sl . 33.
•
9 :oo-Merv Grlflln 3; Phil Donohue 4,13,1 5; New
Mickey Mouse Club 6: Family Allalr 8: Mafch
Game 10.
9 :3G-Edge of Nlghl6 ; Andy Grlffllh 8; Famllly Affair
. 10,
lO :OD-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 15; Big Valley 6 ; Tattletales
8; Joker ' s Wild 10; Ml~e Douglalas 13.
10 :31&gt;-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15;; Price Is Rig hi 8,10.
11 :oo-Whee l of Forlune 3, IS; Happy Days 6 . 13;
Mar cus Welby , M.O 4 , Eiec Co . 20 .
11 :30--Kno cko ut 3, 15; Family Feud 6, ll; Love of Life
8, 10; Sesame St . 20,33 .
11 :55-CBS News 8 ; Loving Free 10 ; 12 : 0QNew!!ocenter 3: N ews ,.,6, 10; To Say The least 15 ,•
Divorce Courl 8 : Midday 13.
12:30--Rya n's Hope 6,13, Bob Bn1un 4; Gong Show 15;
Sarch tor Tomorrow 8, 10; E lec . Co . 33 .
l :oo-For R ich er , F or Poorer 3; All My Ch ildre n 6,13 ;
News 8; You nq &amp; the Restless IQ; Not For Women
Only 15.
I :31&gt;-Doys ol Our Lives 3.•• 1!, As The WO!'Id Turns
6, 13; 2 :()()-S20,000 Pyram id 6,13 .
2. 31&gt;-Doclors 3,4,1!; One Llle to Live 6,13; Guiding
Light 8, 10.
3:0G-Another Wor ld 3 ,4,15; Ullas Yoga &amp; You 20;
Ey ew it ness 33.
3: 15--Generol Hosp ital 6,13: 3 :30--AII In The Family
8, 10; Crockett 's VIctory Garde n 20.
4:00--Miste r Cartoon 3; Litt le Rascals -Our Gang &lt;I;
For Ri c her, For Poorer 15; Merv Griffin 6;
Gil ligan's Is . 8. Sesame Sl. 20,33 ; Gomer Py le,
USMC 10; Dlnoh 13 .
4 : 3~My Three Sons 3; Partridge Family •: Brady
Bunch 8, 10; Little Rascals 15.
s .oo-Bonanza 3; My 1)'1ree So ns 4, Gu ns m oke 8;
Mlsler Rogers' Neighbo r hood 20,33 ; Hogan 's
Heroes 10; Emef'gency One 13; My Three Sons IS.
5:31)-Qdd Couple •: News 6; Elec . Co. 20,33; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Hogan 's Heroes IS.
6 :00-News 3,4,8, 10,13,15; ABC New s 6; Zoom 20,33 .
6 .31&gt;-NBC News 3, 4.15 ; ABC News 13; Carol Burnell &amp;
Friends 6; CBS Ne ws 8.1 0; Over Easy 20,33 .
? · GO- New Truth or Cons 3, C ro ss· Wits 4; Liars C tub
6; Muppel ~ho w 8 : New s 10; To Tell The Trulh 13;
G/ltlgan'sls. 15; Almanac 20; Cap ltool Beat 33 .
7 .oo-Porter Wagoner J, Gong Show -4; Sorority · ~2 6;
Pr ice Is Right 8; Mllc Ne ii. Le h,-er Report 20, 33 ;
Family Feud 10; $100,000 Nome Thai Tune 13; Pop
Goes The Country 15.
8 :00--CPO Sharlkey 3, 15, Conny &amp; Marie 6,13 ; hi
Sea,-c h of 4; All Star Comedy Ice Revue- 8,10;
Washington Week In Review 20 ; So The People May
Know 33.
8:»-Rocklord Flies 3.4, 15; Wall Slree l Week 20,33 .
9 :00-Movle "You Can't Steal LDve" 6,13 ; Pe ople's
Command Performance 8, 10; Jacques Llp chlt z 20;
Showdown at the Hoedown 33.
9·30-Hen,-y Kissinger : On The Rec ord 3..4,15.
.
10 :oo-News 20; Fall ol Eagles JJ; 11.QO-News
3,4,6,8, 10,13,1 5; Dick Cavell 20; Lilias, Yoga &amp; You
33 .
11:31&gt;-Johnny Co rson 3,&lt;.1S; Borello 6, 13 : Mas h 8 :
Monty Pylhon' s Flying Circus 33: 12 :01)-Janokl 33
12 05-Mo v le " Don' I Drink lhe Waler" B: 12 : 41&gt;Lohman &amp; Barkley 6; Iron s ide 13 ; 1 : DO-Midnight
Special 3,4,15: Movie " Lost Women" 10.
1 &lt;IG--News 13; 2 : 30-News 3; J :oo-Movle '"The
Jokers" 3: 5:0(),- Big Voll e y 3; 6 ·0il-FB I3; 7 : ()0Bew lt c hed J .

WEST
+ .1 97
' Q 10 6 2

OAILY CRYPTOf!UOTE- Here's how to
AXYDI. BAAXR
Is I. ONGFEI. l,O W

WINNIE

Travel t8p, 258 cu . ln. 6 cyl. engine, auto. 1rans. , like
new tires, radio, 2 wheel drive.

Storsky &amp; Hutch 6,13 ;
A8C News 33,· Movie

"' 5 2 EAST

HZ

-

20.
Dick Ca•ell 20; Over

+ AK864

note

eA'r'ING TOO

1977 Monte carlo...... $6100

Dark reef with matching v in yl roof, V-8, automatic,
P.S., P . B., a ir , spoilers, f'ad lo . Sharp .

Anlwer
29 Pennis·
sion
30 Subsequently
34 Bivouac
need
36 Caesar's
tongue :
abbr.
37 Craval
fabric

Yesterday's
22 Se!lfood
23 Stays
behind
24 Detest
25 Missing
link? :
2 wds.
26 James and
others
28 Affairs of
honor

Diva," e.g.
21 Tum over to '--:r+-t-

BETTER DEALS YET!
1977 Chev. Impala ••••• $5495

I

river

2 Ferber
crosser
classic :
10 Painful
2 wds .
11 Knee slapper : 3 Sports Site
2wds.
4 Still
5 Promising
13 "GWlSmoke's"
one
· Blake
6 One - time ;
14 - Tin Tin
2 wds.
7 India's rainy
15 Caligula 's
season
hail
8 Put up with
16South : 11.
9 Chief
/'-~_,--;: 17 Outstanding
11 Asylum
19 ~gsl.
15 A conti·
nent
jackpot
18
Uttered
20 Frenc~
%1
Curse
river
21 South
African
22 "Casta

:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~12Eggon

REMODELING, Plumbing , heotmg
and all t~pe s of general repair
Work guaranteed 20 years e.IC·
perie nce. Phone992 2~09 .

8' Fleets/de, v.a eng ine , std. trans .. mirrors,
bumper, clean. No rust, radio.

{Answers tomorrow)
ADJUST FORAGE

Tha lataat JiJMBLES are here In JUMBLE BOOK 110 .,d JUMBLE
BOOK 111 . Available tor 11.35 EACH, poatp_ald from Jumble , c/o thla
l'ltWIPIPtr, P.O. Box 34; Norw00d, N.J . 07&amp;48. Mlkl checkl peylbl• to

comment :

NEW 3 bedroom hovse, 2 boths
all elec 1 acre . M1 ddlepo rt
dose to Rullond Phone 992·
748 1

•
ENTI'IY

Answer: TJpthem to keep quiet - TOES

loult l, '""""''D.
~rpet'" UpholsteiJ

Pomert~

I

Jumbles CABLE

1 Britistter's
HOMESITES fo r so le , 1 acre and
up . Mrddleport . near Rut land
Coli q92-7481.

0
''[I IX Jr I I J'
Now arrange the circled len81s to
form the surprise answer, as sug'1 gested by the above cartoon

Ans war here:

PU!2·2174

byHenriArnoldandBobLee

I GOROF .,

Superior

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

l ~THAT ScRAMBLED WORD QAME

IDYPUG I
[) 0

SURPI&lt;I5e~

-UpholsteiJ-

1163-2nd Ave., Gallipolis

Etec ., plumbing ,
carpenter
work ,
painting,
paneling,
any job that needs to
be done around your
home.

12-7-1 mo .

PUl-l&lt; IIJ IT

ID!'A roR A

1

12-18-1 mo.

Home Service

992-5705

9JRPR\Sf;'
~s " H~Xf&lt;EI{

-12:40-Toma6,13:

Unscramble tnese four Jumbles,
one lener to each square1 to form
lour ordlna..,. words.

'{JJ (t(Jf A12!:rr&lt;:'O'\

·w~'S

PHONE
742-2570

"SINCE 1947
12-1 1-l mo.

ftj'}lf~ fi&gt;ft

~ \9 ~~ ~~

Boilers,

WOOD AND WOOL FIBER

Middleport, Ohio
11-9-tfc

PHONE

YOU \..1\L.I..CV

TH E PllEH HERE ,
GENE!lAL .. ;O HOW
ASOUT AN!hiiERINI&gt;
OUR QUI$TION5 f

Tri-State Upholstery
Shop

Located In

MEIGS PLAZA

RACINE , 0 .

INSUlATION
SERVICE

ACE HARIMARE

TEAF&lt;;)RD(H
llfALIOII

CHEMICALS
We Strip Paint - Varnishes ·

THURSDAY. JAN UARY 12, lt71
• : 31&gt;-My Three Sons 3; Parlrldge Family • : Brady
Bunch 8,10; Lillie Rascals ·1s.
5 :00--Bonanza 3: My Three Sons 4; Gvnsmoke I ;
Mlsler Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Hogan's
~eroes 10; Emergency One 13; My Three Sons 15.
S: 3o-&lt;&gt;dd Couple 4: News 6; E lee. Co. 20.33: Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Hogan's Heroes IS.
6 :01)-News 3,4,8,10,13,15 : ABC News 6 ; Zoom 33,20.
6 : JQ-NBC NewsJ ,4, 15; ABC News IJ; Carol, Burnett &amp;
Friends 6: CBS News 8,10: O•er Easy 20,33.
7: oo-Cross .WIIs3.•: LlarsCiub6; Gong Show 8: News
10: To Tell The Truth 13: Gilligan's Is. IS; Hocking
Valley. Bluegrass 20; Book Beal 33.
7 : 3D-Hollywood SqtJares 3,4; $100,000 Name That
Tune6; S25.000 Pyramid 8. MocNeii· Lehrer Reporl
20,33; That's Hollywood 10; Nashville on The Road
13 ; Marly Robbins' Spolllghl 1!.
8 :oo-Chlps 3 .•. 1S; Welcome Back, Kotler 6, 13 ;
Waltons B, lO; Once Upon A Classic 20,33.
8 . ~Fish 6,13; Wodetlouse Playhouse 20; Men of
Bronze 33.
9 · DO-James at 1S - 3,4, 15; Barney Miller 6.13; Hawaii
Flve-0 8,10; Say Br9ther Pays Trlbule lo Websbster Lewis 20 .
.
9 : 3o-Carter Country 6, 13; Portrait of a NtH'se 33 .
IO :oo-Ciass of '6! 3,.,15; Redd Foxx 6: Barnaby Jones
8, 10; I, ClatJdius 33; Focus . Birth Con tro l1 3; NeWs
20.

CARTER
300 Main St.
Pemeroy, Ohio
Pomerov H2-'212
or '1'2 ·62U
8A .M. Io4 : 30 P .M.

10 : 31&gt;-Lock, Stock &amp; Barrel
11 :01)-News 3,4,6.8, 10, 13,1S;
Easy 33 .
11 : 3~Johnny Carson 3,&lt;,15:
Movie "Scarecrow" 8;
"Countdown" 10.
12 :01)-Janakl 33.

TELEVISION
VIEWING

~ THE STRUGGLE AT
THE TV STUDIO CONTINUES

Business Services

Wlll CARE for the elderly 1n our

SMALL

' GOOD GRAS ho~ for sale $1 50
_ _B_e r ~ hone 843 2q()(J

TWO BEDROOM Trorler
only . 992.3324.
- ftUBLJC NOTICE Et ra ln
Perez
whose
residence Is unknown , but
whos e last known address
was 1710 Chester Road ,
Pomeroy , Ohio, will take
notice tha t on the 6th day o f
December , 1917, that Pam el a
M . Perez , P la in tiff, flied her
Co mplaint against h im In the
Common Pteu court of
Me igs County, Oh io, Case No .
16, 6641 , praying for d iv orce
u pon the grounds of gross
neglect of duty and e)(treme
cruelty, tor custody of the two
m inor chi ldren , for al imony
and support, il!lnd Will further
take notice thet th is ca use
ca n be heard at anytime
followlng 1 twenty eight days
from the date of the las.t
publication of thfs notlcto and
tha t tne last pub lic ation wil l
be made on the 19th day of
Jan u ary , 1978 .

BURiiiOUGHS SENSI-MA TIC oc·
counting mochine . Has been
undll'r service contract and in
good condition . Con be seen at
The Oody Sentinel , 111 Court
St__:_Pomeroy , OH. _

OlD FURNITURE . ice boxes. brass
beds . iron beds . e1c .. complete
households . Wr itV M. D. Mill er ,
Rt . 4 , Pomeroy . Ohio or t oll
9'12-)1b0.
•

SALES EXECUTIVE - H1gh ly regarded company hos o career posi· AKC REGISTERED Doberman
lion open tor on e~~:penenced
pups . 843-3053 after S
soles person Requ1res se lt srarter who tan manage AKC DOBERMAN Ptncher pup·
· p1es . 8 wt~eks old . red &amp; rvst
himself and a temrory . Hrgh
Pedigreed' wi th Chomp1on
camm tSS io ns
Lead s
No
Bloodltns Also, ce rtified health
loyof!s . h:pense p&lt;lid tra ining .
cerlif 1co te $150 lrrm yol'r
No inves tmen t. Your fu ture rs
chorce mo le or fema le
now . Colli 800·247:24146.
014 -797 -4SOO

Public Noti ce No . OEF'A 18-01 -003
Oa1e of IS5ue o f Pu blic
~ Notice : January 12, 1918
Larry E Spencer,
Name and Address of
•
Cltork of Courts
Applicant .
Ohio
Power
Me igs County, Ohio.
{1 21 8, 15,22, 29 (I) 5, 17, 19, 7t
Company , 301 Clevel and
Avenue, S. W ., Canton , Ohio
4 .. 701
Name and Address of
Facility where Di scharge
Occur! : OhiO Power Com .
pany, Rac ine Hydroelec tri c
NOTICE OF
Plant, State Route 338,
PUBLIC SALE
Racine , Otlio .
t ice is hereby givton the t
Rece iv ing Wat er: Ohio . on No
January 24, 1978, at 10 ; 00
Riv er .
A .M . a public sale will be held
NOTICE :, This oorllcenlls
at The Citizens Nat iona l
a hydroe lec tric plan and h t!IS
Bank , Midd,teport , Oh10 to sell
1 exist ing dlscnarge point.
for cash
the fo ll owing
Tne current operations of th iS col
la teral to wit :
discharger re!u!t In an
1 1975 Mer c ury Co uga r 2
average effluent flow of
Dr . Ser , No . SA93H5""573
11,520,000 gallons per day ,
The (_i tizens Nil!ltr ona l
Kev parameters to be lim ite d
Ba nlw Middleport. Otl io
In the perm it arto as follows .
reserves the r• gl'lt to b id at
Total Suspen ded Solids .
th is sa te .
(I ) 12,·. 1fc
(1) 12, 13r 15, Jtc

•

Help " 'anted

=m'a aa••.= aD •• a==;-= m• • •

:1 1:1 =~

Tl\ACY

..

15 Words or UndftQ&amp;ah

9-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursday , Jan. 12,1978 •

'lORE NEPHEW
JESS IS L'ARNIN'
KARATE

By Oswald Ja&lt;oby &amp; Alan
Soatag
, In either standard Ameri·
can

or

expert

standard

American North's jump to
four spades shows 19 or 20
points in support of spades
and as such cannot be regarded as·a stop bid.
Experts reline the bid
even further by providing
that It is not made with a

'
singleton.
South's 12 high-ca rd points
Including two aces and the
queen of his partner's suit
looked very good to him and
he Blackwooded with every
lnlention of bidding a slam if
North showed one ace. When
North showed two aces,

South really should have
setlled lor six, but he bid live
notrump lo invite seven.

TELL JESS HE'S
WELCOME TO COME
OVER HERE AN'
PRACTICE ENNV
OI:TIME

ca rds,

trumped o ne heart

durruny and wrapped up t

sla m.

~!!lllr3~:&amp;:J
A

Pennsylvania read

wants to know If w e appro
of the s hort diamond 81
adds j "Whatever that is ?'
We do approve of the u
of a one-diamond openh

with somethi ng like :

+AK'

6 x!\&gt;.

• Qnx
• A.J~

With ·14·hlgh-card poln
you can't afford to pass. Y(
don't want to bid that b&gt;
spade suit so you bid ym
1

minor with high cards in i1
4NF.W.SPA.PF.R

ENTF_;RPR IS ~~

ASSN .

(Do you have. a question f,
the experis? Wr ite " A.sk tt
Experts ". care of rhJS r?ewsp.
per. lnd1vfdua1 ques#ons w
be answered if accompanif.
by stamped, self~addressf.
envelopes. fhe most ;n tere5
ing ques tions wlfl be used
this column and will rece;,
copies of JACOBY MODERN.

�10...:The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomero , 0 ., Thursday, Jan . 12, 1978

Big names smeared by Tofigsun Park

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
MANY MORE CLEARANCE PRICES 1-J_A_N_u_A~R~Y~c~-L~E-::-A~R:""'A~~N~c~
E·lJANum- c"LI.UA"N"ti_ T __
1 39
REG. ' '
YARD

I

OUTING FLANNEL

SAVE 20 ~. ON ANY
SHEET IN STOCKI

I

100% COTION
36 IN. WIDE
MACHIN E WASHABLE
ASSORTED PASTEL COLORS

SALE 89~ YARD

2 REG. '298 ROCK.Q.LOUNGER ... " """ SALE 1223
3 REG. '249 SWIVEL ROCKER ............ . SALE '188

1 1 REG. '295

-

''

lh

PRICE .·
1

I

PRICE

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

JANUARY CLEARANCE

WOMEN'S
SWEATERS

One rac k ol Assorte d Sca rfs in
nyl on, cotton a nd polyest er .

Ca rdiga ns, Pullovers, Vests , Crew Necks,

1
1

SWIVEL ROCKER ............ sALE '229

1 2 REG. '259 SWIVEL ROCKER ............. SALE '199

- Regul ars a nd Longs
- Sizes 38 t hru 46
- So m e ~ool Sty les

I

I

I REG. 49.95.. ..... ..... SALE '32.49 I .

Cii~cf-~~~~-~~~:~:;•

3 REG. '289 ROCK-&lt;HOUNGER .. .. .. .. .. SALE '219
I 2 R[G. '309 ROCK.O-LOUNGER.... .. ..... SALE '229

- LONG SLEEVES
- BUTION FRONT
- SIZES 8 TO 18

SALES 7.76
SALEs 8.46
SALE$ 9.06
SALEs 9.76
SALE 510 .36
SALE $11.06
SALE $11.66

REG. '169 OCCASIONAL CHAIR ............. SALE '99

SALE $6

-SIZES 3 to 7

AS LOW AS

l

!

JANUARY CLEARANCE

LITTLE BOYS
- . GIRLS'
KNIT SHIRTS .' SKIRTS &amp;GAUCHOS
&amp;HOODED SWEAT '
BROKEN SIZES
SHIRTS.
'

l
I
I

SIZES 3 TO 7

lf2 PRICE
__..__.__.._.._._ -•...,..,

.._.._--_..,_.._._.._- .........;_,w

i

1 REG. '169 RECLINER .. ... .... .. .. .... .. . SALE ,1 9

I

JANUARY CLEARANCE

.

JANUARY CLEARANCE ·

bxmoi~NIDR
ELECTRIC RAZOR 11 •ro. :"' w''"'"'········ ·....··SALE '149 I UTrLE BOYS'
I 1 REG. 149 RECLINER ........... ......... SALE '109 JEANS &amp; CORDUROYS
ATES &amp; TOPS

BOYS'

REG. 114.95

KNIT SHIRTS

l

- RECHARGEABLE
~CARRYING CASE W/ MIRROR

- Crew Necks &amp; Coll ared St yles
- Long &amp; Shor t Sleeves
- Sizes 8 to 18

·

·

~ 1 REG., 1189 WALL-A.WAY ..... .... ...... ... SALE -.·141

SPECIALI

$888 _

REG. $3.95.. ....... .. . .. SALE $2 .55
REG. 54,95 .. .. .. .. ...... SALE $3.25
REG. ~5.9s .. .. .. ........ sALE $3.85
REG. s6 ..95 .... ... .... ... sALE s4.55
REG. $7 .95 ........ .. .... SALE$5.15

·

I1 2 REG. '229 WALL-A·WAY.... ...... ...... ... SALE '171

I

l ,.·
!

l

.

·

REGULAR AND SLIM
SIZES3 THRU 7 -

-

. ·s·

40% .

,

Wrangler Sw!)aters, Knit Tops, .
Slacks, Blouses, Blazers &amp; Skirts.

AVE 30oz.f(,

1
SAVE
SALE PRICES
·
1
1
1
1
j
. I 4 REG. 298 WALL-A-WAY .................. SALE 223
-------·-----· ,.---~ --- ·- --·-- ·--+----·-------·------~1---·~~-----"·~--~~--~~--.-,--~,--~--·---+-~-----S".T._A_R_,T__"~
' T~~~_._..._.
JANUARY CLE~RANCE

REG. $1
SCATTER RUG
99

.

I 1 REG.
I

I

-~

I
I
I

- WASHABLE
. - REVERSIBLE
- EXPERTLY WOVEN

OR HALF SIZES

SAVE 40

0Z.
f(,

-·----.....
JANUARY .CL.fARANCE

---.---~.,--"---~---~-~------.-.--'

JANI,fARY CLEARANCE

MEN'S SPORT
FLANNEL SHIRTS

POLYEStER
DOUBLE KNITS '

- Cotton and Wool
- Western Sty les, In c lude d
- Sizes 5-M- L-XL

REG. '2.99 TO '3.49 YARD

J

SQLID COLORS AND PRINTS

REG. 7.95 ...... ..... ... SALE '4.79 j
REG. '9.95... ............ SALE '5.99
REG. '13.95:............. SALE '8.39
REG. • '19.95 ........... . SALE '11.99
.
·--~•w-"---··~~..----------~~---1

'

60 INCHES WIDE

Last Week's Ad

-

_.

JANUARY CL.fARANCE

JANUARY ClEARANCE

BEDROOM SUITES

JUNIOR
SWEATERS

All quality name brands like : Riverside,
Lane, Bassett, Burlington House and Brooks.
Reg. $639.00 4 pc . Cedar. ~ ...... .. ... Safe $499.00
Reg . $924.00 4 pc. Walnut &amp; Oak .... Sale $699.00
Reg . $799.00 4 pc. Pecan ... . ... .. . .. Safe $599.00
Reg . 5798.00 4 pc. Pine .............. Sale $599.00
Reg . $729.00 4 pc. Pecan .... .. .. .. .. . Sate $499.00
Reg . $824 .00 .4 pc. Walnut.... .. .. , ... Sale$599.00
[Reg . 51109.004 pc. Walnil1 .......... .. 5ateS899.00
•
· Reg . $998.00 4 pc. Mil'le .. , .. .... ... . Sale $749.00
.
Reg. $952.00 4 pc. Maple . ............ Sale $699.00
_._..._._.._..._~___..,
~
_.._.._

YARD

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

....

Denim . Eng ineer Stripe &amp;
Corduroy ·
Sizes 2-4, 4-6x, 7-14
Not All 51 ze s
REG. S6.oo......... ; .. .. SALE $4.19
REG. sa.oo ............ . SALE $5.59
'REG. SII.OO ............ SALE$7 .69
REG. $14.00 ............ SALE $9.79
REG. $16.00 ..~ ......... SALE $11.19

REG. f4.00 ................ SALE '2.79
REG. '7.00 ................ SALE '4.89
REG. '11.00 ...... .. ...... SALE '7.69
REG. '14.00....... ;....... SALE '9.79
REG.
'19.00.,.... ...... . SALE 113.29
._,_,_,__..,, '""'I

_________ _
_..

GIRLS' JUMPSUITS
&amp;OVERAUS

v -necks . crew necks &amp; cardigans.
4 to 6x and 7 to 14

Save on Children's Snowsuits and Coats ;
Men's Sport Shirts, Boys' Sport Shirts,
Women's Blouses, Living - Room Suites ,
Women's Winter Coats, Children's Sleepwear,
Women's Coordinate 'Sportswear, Metal
Cabinets and many other items throughout
our store .

STOCK OF JUNIOR, MISSY

JANUARY CLEARAN.CE

GIRLS'
SWEATE~S

I

CHOOSE FROM OUR ENTIRE

1

SALE $1 48
....---·-----·----

- ~ ;~:a~~i~lc1n SEfl~e~;,ices irom

AND PANTSUIT SALE

!
.1

JANUARY CL.fARANCf

!

WOMEN'S DRESS

I

319 WALL..,.A-WAY... .............. SALE 239

JANUARY CLEARANCE

I

JANUARY CUARANCf

1

SHORT &amp; LONG SLEEVES

!
I
I
I
I

- MANY STYLES
- SIZES S-M-L

30%0FF

JA-N'u.lri'Y'ci.iARANcE
,\

I

LANE
. CEDAR CHESTS

II REG. 139.95 PINE
IW/PADDED SEAT... .... SALE '99.95
IREG. '179.95 ,MAPLE SALE ' 144.00
1

1

REG. '209.95 CHERRY SALE '168.00

REG. '259.95 MAPLE
' W/PAboEI) SEAT..,..... SALE '199.00
I -....
· -·~---"·------~----------~------~------~~_.......,._....,..._...__..._.
•- __-~-

·-·-·- _____

SHOP
FRIDAY TIL· 8:00_.
.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

~·-·---

'

•

at

questioning room but whether ir was used today was not
known .
.
U.S. Assistant Attorney General Benjamin Civlletti headed
the group of investigators, which included three FBI agents.
Two Korean prosecutors also .helped interrogate the 4Z.yearold millionaire rice dealer.
.American officials had been trying lor 18 months to win
Park 's cooperation in getting to the bottom of the innuencebu)•ing sca ndal on Capitol Hill.
Park , the toentralllgure In the controversy, left Washington
(Of London m th e fall of 1976 to avoid questioning on allegations
that South Korea bribed Amer ican officials to Influence U.S.
policy.

en tine

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 211. No. 190.

Meigs Local operating·shortage expected in · '78
Operatin g funds in th e
Meigs l&lt;lcal School District
will run about $100,000 short
in 1978, according to Charles
Dowler, district s_uperintendent, given to the district
board of education in regular
session Thursday evening in
the Meigs Junior High School.
The boa rd adopt ed a
general lund budget of
$3,356,780 on a temporary
· basis and will adopt a permanent budget by April .
E ven

ope rating

at

incl ude: Administ ration , needs.
The board spent a con·
salaries and wages, $107,501;
in str ucti on, $1 ,993,068 ; siderable amount of tim e
auxiliary agencies, $178,713 ; conferrin g with severa l
operation of school plant, custodians and one secretary
$11 2, 300 ; maint enan ce , at the meeting. The group ,
$18,000 ; special ser vices, employed on a 12-month
$13,000; supplies, $152,014 ; basis, asked for clarification
materials lor maintenance, of a policy on calamity days.
$28,01 5;
equipm e nt In the past, the discussion
replacement , $5,971 ; contract brought out the employes
and opeh ord er se rvice , were allowed the fiv e
$104 ,440 ; fixed charges, calamity days, the same as
$6'13,723; contingency fund, teachers, bus drivers and
no appropriation ; capital cooks.
There were sever a l lines of
outlay, $25; general fund
thinking of the matter by
debt, $10.
Dowler pointed out that the board members:
Carol Pierce said these
budget provides for no new
bu ses although four are employes are hired on a 12needed. There are no funds month basis and he felt they
set up for any other major should be on their jobs on the
•

a

minimum level, the district
will be short by about $100,000
in 1978, Dowler said. The
board tllscussed possibilities
of placing a tax levy before
the voters, but took no action.
The budget appropriations

calamity days.
Mrs. J ennifer Sheets and

Virgil King felt these em·
ployes - whom they com·
mended lor doing a good job
- should have the same
benefit s as the other employes who are not on a 12·

.

I

calamity days, but if they
cannot get to work they are to
phone the superintendent or
administrative assistant.

The boa rd added David
Jen kins to th e substitute
teachers list and accepted
Steven Schneider as a tuition

ll)onth basis; Mr.:; . Sheets said
that she saw no r eason for the
matter to come _lip in the first
place since t hese etnployes in

st udent . The closin g of
schools three days this week
due to weather was approved.
Mildred Bailey , . fa culty
past years have been given · member , was gi ven pe r ~
calamity days and since they mission to attend an FHA
have been good about meeting at Buckeye Hills in
checking their buildings to Nelsonville.
see tha t all was in orde r on
A report on recent vansuch days.
dalism at the high school
After the long discussion, showed losses of $8,040.
the board voted that all 12·
Th e board approved a lease
month employes a re ex· bet ween it and Hershel
pec ted on their iobs on
(Continued on page )0)

Ohio coal supplies critical
ele ctric companies ·over

-

40% OFF.. -+i.. -

1 REG. '198 RECLINER .................... SALE 1(49

Ohio
Friday. January 13, 1978

,

"But 1 wUJ say that there w.ere an awful lot. of people · individual and parlicular relationshill' with Mr . Park " he
.
J
mentioned as having received things of substantial value from said.
Mr. Park," said caputo who Is a member of the House Ethics
, "And today we covered just about the entire spectrum of
Conunittee.
possible collaborators."
·
·
"Members of Congress, members of the Senate...some very
,He said he will report his lindlhgs w the House Ethics
substantial .amounts of money, meaningfUl amounts of Conunlttee. He said some of the information Park gave during
mooey ... There were some who he denied having any relation- first day surprised even the Justice Department probers.
ship with."
"Certainly some of the amounts were quite surprising, and
capuw - who attended both the morning and afternoon the period of time it went on," he said.
grilling sessions -said prosecutors Paul R. Michel and John
caput.&gt; said he .thought an agrt:ement could be worked out
T. Kotelly were pushing the quest ioning at a swift pace .
for Park W return to the United States "to talk to congressional
·"!think this was a survey today. The plan of interrogation is committees, which is absolutely mandatory ," he said.
American officials said the current questioning in Seoul will
to cover roughly the entire spectrum at the outset, and then.go
back and pick up -on a more textual hnqi q ('!'lf"'h fl.'l rt irt~l:lr last ~bout 10 days. There Is a lie detector installed in the

e

Pomeroy·~iddleport,

United Press lntematli&gt;nal
according to contingency
As the nationwide strike by plans filed with the Public
the United Mine Workers Utilities Commission of Ohio.
continues, concern by Ohio 's
" We are watching the

'319

rJANuARYCUARA~C~

4 REG. '269 ROCK.O-LOUNGER ........ ... SALE 1209

. . '-· --------·
JANUARY CUARANCf

- Corduroy, Gaberdine, Cotton &amp;
Polyester
- Sizes 4-6x, 7-14
- Regulars &amp; Slims

40% OFF

1

-·---"---·----·----~"---·---+----JANUARY CLEARANCE

DRESS SLACKS

CARDIGANS &amp; PULLOVERS

' '

!2 REG. 259 ROCK.Q.LOUNGER ........... SALE '1991

00

LimE GIRLS'

l;,n

'

2 REG. '319 ROCK.(J-LOUNGER ........... SALE 1239

BOYS' FLANNEL
PAJAMAS

~ Ch oose doub le kn it or pol y-cotton blend.
·
- Sizes 29 thr u 48

!

1 REG. '209 OCCASIONAL CHAIR ......... SALE 1149

REG. •8.95

i
! '

LITTLE BOYS'
SWEATt ..:s

11 REG. '246 OCCASIONAL CHAIR ........ . SALE '177

1

-· "-·-------·--11
JANUARY CUARANCE

JANUARY CLEARANCE

1

1 REG. '149 PLATFOR!WI 'ROCKER .......... SALE '99

~ REG. '39.95 ............ SALE '25.89

1

~

lI 2 REG. '198 OCCASIONAL
CHAIR .... ..... SALE '149 I
.
. ·
I'
I

SPORT ~coATS

V-nec ks · c rew nec ks - belted .
shawl collars - ves ts ·: ca rdigan s pull ove r s and turt le n·ecks . Sizes I
5-M- L-X L
'

REG . 511 .95 ...........
REG. $12.95 ... .... .. ..
REG. 513.95 .. .. .. .....
REG . 514.95 .... . ......
REG. $15.95 ...........
REG. 516.95 .... .. .... .
REG . $17 .95 .... .......

,_,_.._.,_.,, ,...,

I

MEN'S

MEN'S SWEATERS

DRESS SLACKS

4 kEG. '339 WAU-A.WAY..... .. ........... SALE '254

JANUARY CL.fARAN.CE

JANUARY CLEARANCE

MEN'S

lf2

people."
.
Caput.&gt; said he did not knowhow trUthful Park hod been.

' - S-M-L

REG. '2,00 ................ SALE 99' Coat sweater~lzes 34th r u 48
..
·
1 REG. •z.so ............... sALE '1.25 REG. m.oo .. .... .. .. . sALEs 7.15 ·
1
10 REG. '169 .SWIVEL ROCKER .. .. ........ SALE 119 II REG. ,3.00............... SALE '1.49 REG. m .oo ... ~ .. .. ... SALEs 7.80
REG: $7.95 ...... .. . .. .. SALE$.5.55
REG.$15 .0o .... .. .... . SALES 9.75
REG . m .5o . .... .. .. ... SALE ss.75
5 REG. 12490CCASIONAL CHAIR .. ...... . SALE ,188 1 REG. '3.50 .............. SALE '1.75 REG . s2o.oo .... .... .. . SALE 513.oo
REG .S 16 .5o .. ..... .... sALESILS5
•
I REG ,400
REG.S26 .oo ......... .. SALES16.90
REG . S19 .50 ...... ..... SALES13.65
REG ,
..
..
....
..
.....
SALE
'1.99
REG.S34 .00 ........... SALES22.10
•
•
1
1
298
---------·---·~""'
.
OCCASIONAL CHAIR... .... ... SALE '199 t----------·~--+---··-· -·w·

1------·---· --· ---

JANuAri•

1 Re~.· '309 WALL-A:WAY... .... ............ SALE '231

By J AMES KIM
SEOUL, South Korea (UP!) - Korean millionaire Tongsun
Park today save u.s. investigalors a lot of names of
congressmen and Senalors linked to the Korean payoff
scandal, a congressman who attended the opening questioning
sessions said.
Rep. Bruce caputo. R·N.Y., said he felt "disgrace" at
hearlllf! about the cmduct of ranking American officials at the
interrogation of the 4Z.year-old rice dealer .
"We covered a lot of territory, a lot of names," Capulo said
at the end of the thr~our afternoon session. "And Mr. Park
had answers for all of them - different answers for different

- POLYESTER OR ACETATE

. Large
group
of
assorted
cosmetic s in c luding cologne ,
sprays , · cream
perfumes,
compacts, perfumes and powder .

1 2 REG. '254 WALL-A·WAY.. ................ SALE ,191

- Enfire stock of Van Hueseh, Golden Vee
anCt Ca mpus dress sh irt s
~ Quian n a Nylon Sp lendor Knits, and
Poly -cott on blends.
- Neck Sizes U l ·l lhru 1711, sleeve lengths.·

20% OFF

30~

MEN'S VESTS

COSMETIC
SALE

1 REG. '219 WALL·A-WAY... ............... SALE '164

MEN'S
DRESS SHIRTS

Twin , Full, Queen &amp; King Size . .
Matching Drapes and Shams
reduced 20 Pet also.

SAVE

NO REFUNDS.

,_jANUARY-CLEARA·--N·--C
- E~-"·---r-J-WA_'N_u_A_R_Y-·c-u--A· -iiA"NcE'~-JANu'A-i--y-c·l.-r_A_R_A_N_C_E....

Our complete stock of Occasional
Chairs, Swivel Rockers ,. Recliners,
Rock -0 -Loungers, and Wall -A-Way
Recliners .
I

..._------------+--"··
---·---------......,..··
JANUARY CL.fARANCE
JANUARY CLEARANCE
SAVE 20% ON ANY BEDSPREAD
IN OUR STORE

NO EXCHANGES -

'

20% OFF

BEDSPREAD SALE

ALL SALES FINAL -

I

- Twin , Full. Queen . or King Size.
- Per ca le &amp; Monti cell o
- So lid s, pa s te ls &amp; as s orted
pri nt s .

I

..

I CHAIR SAL-E

SHEET SALE

I '

.

dwindling -coal supplies
mounis.
The Ohio Department of
Energy said Thursday "less
and less" coal 1s moVing in
·Ohio. About 95 percent of
. Ohio 's
electricity
is
generated by burning coal.
"Coal. is still moving in
Ohio but ea':Jl W,~k )ess and
less is movsng, sBJd Dave
Zimmer, deputy director of
the Ohio Department of
Energ,r. " The strike is
becommg more and more
effective in the terms of
shutting
down
the
~ributi~n. ?f coal."
,
The utilihes are droppmg
in terms of supply but nobody
is at the point yet that we
"'.'"sider ~ be ~ucla!," said
Zimmer. But m another 15
days or so we are going to
have some utilities droppmg
below the 50 day supply
point."
..
'
When an electric utility
goes below the 50 day supply
mark, it imposes in-house
con servation methods to cut
down on the use of coal.

...

a 67 day supply on hand.
" We are wa tching" the
situation closely ," said Dave

Peoppelmeir , an Ohio Edison

situation very "closely," said

Zimmer, "I would say we are
concerned. ''
. Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Electric Co. Thursday
became the first Ohio utility
to publicly describe . the
problems that the UMW '
strike is causing.
Columbus &amp; Southern in
· announcing resumptio~ oi
service following a power
cutback due to frozen coal
said the immetllate proble~
(acing electric utilties is the
coal strike.
" While
the
earlier
pretllctions of snow could
cause problems, a larger
concern remains with regard
to the UMW. strike," said
C&amp;SOE spokesman Bob
Jones. "The diminishing coal
supplies and the lack of fresh
coal will result in a
resumption
of
strong
conservation requests if the
strike is prolonged."
Jones said the utility has a
63 day supply on hand and is
not receiving any coal mined
by non-UMW sources.
Ohio Edison Co. said it had

spokesman .
" We
are
receiving some non ·union

S.Q,al but very little from what
it was three weeks ago."
Peoppelinetr said when the
utility 'reaches
50 day
supply it will begin
conservation efforts within
the company.
''At 40 days we \\'ill make
public appea)s to all

a

customers

to

conse rve

electricity through which we
hope to reduce consumption
by 25 percent," he said. "At
30 days we will begin asking
customers
for
further
reductions and suggest addi·
tional action by minimizing

work schedules, the closing of
public buildings and the
elimination of some retail
operations

whereve r

'"W · ~~m~ ·

Kaiser
workers
return

RAVENSWOOD, W. Va. Everybody - except 44 who
were fired - is back to work
at Kaiser Aiumlnum and the
operation is smooth as of
midmorning today.
Wa rren Cooper, mana ger
public affairs ·midwestern

district of the corporation ,
Said that the 44 were fired for
"instigating and
par-tidpating in an illegal strike
wood Works."
L. J . McAdams, works
manager lor the company, is
proceedin~ Immediately to
sue Local 5668 of the United
Steel workers of America in
the U. S. district court lor the
southern district of West
Virginia. Cooper said that a
money figure had not been

~""'·""""~Y

IN~;~&lt;:Y·"':':~,:~i';~n;i;i~
• '· • • · · .,, '

All the utilities have

at Kaiser Aluminum Ravens-

'

''•~ :~·,~~~-·

"! dnn 't think we are
getting to the P,int yet where
s imilar contingency plans we are overJy concerned, "
said Zumbrunn . "But in
with some var iations .
Dua ne · Zumbr unn , . a !lhoiher month is will get tD
spokesman for Ohio Power that point."
Frank
Huda cek,
a
Co., said that utility had a 70
day supply of coal on hand . spokesman fo r Cleveland
Electric. Illuminating, Said
CEI bad a 70 day supply of
coal on hand.
" We have stockpiled a lot of
coal and we are using it,"
Hudacek said.
Aspokesman for Cincinnati
Gas &amp; Electric ·eo. said the
utility had 73 days worth of
coal on tiand and is not
(X)ssible .''

armounced.

By United Preu lnternaUoniil '
A NEW SNOWFALL BLANKETED MUCH OF OillO
overnight and travelers advlsorlt;S were out today for all areas
of the Buckeye State.
All of Ohio's major electric utilities had resumed normal
service by Thur~y following power cutbacks caused by
frozen coal suppUes. The National Weather Service said Ught
111ow fell throughout the night With one to two inches of new
snow reported in most areas.
Roadways which were·still hazardous from the last storm
bad a ne,wcoverof snow early today, the Weather Service said.
CAIRO, EGYPT - ISRAEIJ DEFENSE Minister Ezer
Welzman is returning lo Israel for consultations aimed at
lreaking a negotiating deadlock with Egypt over settlements
in the Sinal Peninsula. WelJ:man was scheduled to Dy back 1o
Jerusalem today for talks with his goverrunent, but he was
leaving behind part of the Israeli team l~d by Maj. Gen.
Avr~ Tamir . ,
The Issue of the settlements as well as the larger question
o( Israel's security needa have proved the most dlf!lcult
problem for a joint 16inan eommlttee, which began talks in
C8iro Wednesday. ilut Weizn!an and Egyptian War Minister
Gen. Mohammed Gamassy both said that despite the deadlock
the two COIDIIries would contin!le their negotiations until a
solution is found .

,

HELENA,MONT. - SEN.lEEMETCALF,O.Mont., wbo
spent 25 years in Congress and long championed conservation
meaaurea, Including the recent liflht to enact slrlp-mlnins
leglllatlc!n, was found dead Thursday in his apatiment. He was

-NEW ·TROOPER _ Lt.
Ernest
Wigglesworth,
commaoder of the GalltaMeigs Post Stale Highway
Patrol bas welcomed a new
addition to hls slafl,
Trooper Robert s. Justus.
Justus, a former resideot
of Columbus had been at
tbe Xeola Post• .He. ;1 , .a
seven year veterao of the
Ohio Highway Patrol.
Justus' wife, Marllyno, Is ·
lrom !be Gallla Couoty
area. They · have two
cblldreo.

Weather

, .
,
.
President Carter said MetcaH's death "stills a voice that
had long spoken up for preserving the great wilderness areas
of lhla CO\Ditry." MetcaU, 66, who ha'd been suffering from · a
heart coildltlon for 110me lime, died In his sleep. His body was
foood Thlll'aday by his 11011, Jerry.

Snow .,flurries and cold
tonight,' lows In the teens.
Windy with . snow again
Saturday, hlgbs In the low
20s.
Probability
of
precipitation 90 perce nt
·today, 80 percent tonight, 70 ·
· percent Saturday.
·

FEDERAL MEDIATORS EXPECTED NEGOTIATIONS
to resume today between the striklnl! United Mine Workers
and the bltuminoua coal Industry following a three-hour
bargalnlq aeu1on Thursday - the lint in n-ly two weelt.t.
Sowcea 1181d UMW Presldel!t· Arnold Miller re-entered the
(Continued on (lilt 10)

CLOSING MONDAY
The Meigs Veterans Service Office, Mulberry Ave.
Pomeroy, will be closed all
day Monday in obaervance of
Martin Luther King Day.

86.

receiving a ny new coal.

The two utilities in the best
sha pe appear to be Toledo
Edison arid Dayton Power &amp;
Light Co.
Roger
Buehrer ,
a
spokesman for Toledo
Edison, said the utility had a
95day supply of coal'oh hand .
" We're coriCern ed of

Two districts
let school out
early Thursday

course," said Buehrer-. "But
we feel that with a three
months supply on hand we
Two of Meigs County's
are in pretty good shape."
thre
e school dist ri cts
Don Speyer; a spokesman
'
dismissed
ea rl y Th ursday
for D~yton Power &amp; Light,
due
to
statewide
snow storm
said D1.'&amp;L had an 86 day of
warnings.
supply' of coal.
South ern Loca I Schools
"We are in pretty decent
shape/ ' said Speyer . "We dismissed about 12: 30 p.m.
have gotten some coal from and schools of the Meigs
mines that are not Local District closed two
· represented by the United hours early. Completing a full
day of classes were schools of
Mine Workers.
"But the supply Is going the Eastern Local District.
down," he said. ' ~The big Officials indicated they were
question mark is how long the unable to learn any accurate
information on whe n t he
strike is going to last."
stonn would hit the county.

District Judge John
Copenhaver
iss ued
a
restraining order Wednesday
which the 3,000 hourly
workers at first ignored .
However , some of the mid·
night shift was back on the
job, and " good lull shifts"
were working today, ac'cording to Cooper.
There are 3,800 employes at
Kaiser's Ravenswood Works,
The
Meigs
Co unty
including salaried people,
Emergency
Medical
Service
who kept pot Unes going
trUstees
continued
in~
during the wildcat strike.
te
rviewing
of
candidates
In its r equest for the
restraining order the com· Wednesday night for the
position of coordinator·of the
~n Y said it will suffer a
2
MCEMS;... ,075 loss each day the
They will meet again
strike continues.
The
walkout
began Friday evening to complete
following a dispute over a the interview sessions and
work assignment order at the conduct other business at the
Pomeroy Fire Station. They
Ravenswood works.
The dispute flared Tuesday will have a special meetlOg
night following an argument later with the board of county
over a work assignment that commissioners to name the
resulted in the thr~ay coordinator.
Duties of the coordinator
suspension of a union com·
mitteeman. Local 5668 , include responsibility for all
President Richard Hovatter finance ofthe five •quads \II
of Middleport had urged the the county, for all vehicles
and equiplllent, training and
striking workers to return to
clerical dulles.
their jobs.
Seven applications were
received for the position
CLUBTOMEE't
which pays between $8,000
The Meigs County Better and $10,000 a year .
Livestock Beef HI Club wlll
hold Its first meeting Thursday evening, Jan. 19 at 7 p.m.
BANKS TO CUJSE
in the Extension ·office.
All banks in Meigs County
Everyone with steer projects wilr be closed Monday In
or wishing to tak~ ·a breeding observance of Martin Luther
project m 1978 is inylted.
King Day.

lnteroiewing
by trustees
is continuing

..

SHOPPERS OUT IN FORCE - Thursday's "warmer" wea ther coupled with a storm
watch brought out grocery shoppers Thursday afternoon and evening. Shopping carL• were
well filled as residents. apparently fear ing a new snow storm, stocked up . This photo was
taken at one of the checkout lanes at the Kroger Store in Pomeroy.

Meantime·, water servlce
Was restored to residents of

upper

Mid dleport

when

repair work lo a ma in line

which bro ke W ~ d nes d ay
morning wa s completed
before noon on Th ursday.

EXTEN DED FOREC AST
S und ay thr o u g h
Tuesday, windy and very
cold, with periods of snow
Hurries ur snow squa ll ~!!
through the period. Also
fr eque nt periods of bloWing

aod drifting snow Sundu y
and Monday. lllghs wilt
range from the upper teens
to the upper 20s and tows
from five to 15.

Zwilling is
president of
fire fighters
SYRAC USE

Troy

Zwlll ing is the new presi dent
uf the Sy ra C'lJSe F ire
Depa rt nient and Oris Hubbard is fire chief of its

emergency squad.
Other officers elected in' the
:;:::::;:::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;
fi re departmen t Thursday
night were Dave Sm ith, vi ce
pres iden t ; Mike Smith,
secretary : Debbie Triplett,
treas urer, and Oris Hubbard.

Harrah is
mayor of
Vandalia

William Harrah, son of Mr .
tmd Mrs. Basil Hurrah of
Ma son , W. Va ., electe d
mayor of Va ndalia , Ohlo, on
Ja nuary '3, is a graduate of

Wahama High School. He has
lived in Vanda lia 18 years an d
was elected by his fellow
OPENINGS REMA,IN
council members to serve as
There are still openings lor mayor for the last two years
a free cervical cancer clinic of a four year tenn on city
for Meigs area women to be council. Vandalia i• a •uburb
held Wednesday all day at · of Dayton.
Heath Unit ed Methodist
Mayor Harrah .resides at ,
Church in Middleport. 933 Pool Ave. with his wife ,
Women wishing ·an appo lnt~ the fo rmer Norma Scholl
men! are to call 992-7531 dsughter of Ottie Scholl of•
during the day or 992-5832 in Pomeroy, and his two
the evenings or weekend.
da ughters, Rebecca and
Brenda . Harrah, who served
three years on Plann ing
OSHIMA SHAKEN
Commissi
o,n befo re bei ng
' 'I'OKYO (UP! ) - A fairly
strong eart hqu ake shOo k elected to council in 1975, is
Oshima Island off Tokyo Bay construction coordinator for
tonight but there were no Brown &amp; Head &amp; Associates,
reports of ca.sualties or Architects of Dayton.
damage, the Meteorological
Agency reported. The agency
said the quake's center was
located near the Island. The
· tremor registered 3 on the
The Righi Rev. Arthur
J a panese scale of 7·.
Anton Dongel, Bishop of West
Missouri, on Dec. 18 ordained
Richard Bradford Elberfeld.
GAME CANCELLED
The Ironton·Melgs basket· Jr .. to the Sacred Order of
ball game planned lor tonight Priests at St . Peters
has been cancelled. An an· Episcopal Church in Kansas
nouncement for a ·make up City, Mo.
Atte ndin g the ce remony
~te will ~ made later.

reporter .

Clyde Triplett was elected
rlre c hi ef, E bcr Pi kcns ,

assistant chi ef, Dave Smith ,
chapaln, and Mike Smith , Lt.
Ralph Lavender was elected
assistant emergency chief,
and Eber P'ickens, captain.
SU ITS •' ILED
As uit to quiet title was fli ed
by Bobby J. Rupe and Karen
K. Rupe, Pomeroy against
Arthur Genheimer, address
unknown. et al in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
H k.
V II
k
oc mg , a ey Ban ;
Ath ens, fil ed a · suit for
$5,~ 2 .88 agamst Charles E.
Stout , Rt. I, Albany, et a!.
HILO TEMPS
NEW YORK (UPI ) - The
highest temperature reported
Thursday to the National
Weather Service, excl uding
Alaska and Hawaii, was 76
degrees at Key West, Fla.
Today's low was 16 degrees
helow zero at Caribou, Maine.

Elberfeld ordained as priest

.~

•

were Mr. and Mrs. !Wbert "w.
Elberfeld, Cincinnati; Mls8
eatherine An n Elberfeld,
Hamilton, Ohio and Mr. and
Mrs. Louis Lackele and Mark
of Gainesville, Ga. Father
Elberfeld is a grandson of the
lat e. Alfred Elberf eld of
Pomeroy.

..

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