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8-The Daily Sentinel, M id~leport- Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Jan. 30, ]978

Tests avoided in .A-checks
•

WASIDNGTON (UP! ) The goverMlent's failure to
keep track or tllousands or
soldiers who were exposed to
atomic radiation may have
resulted from an ·effort to
avoid possible legal action,
says
a
congressional
investigator.

The allegation was raised
Sunday by Rep. Paul Rogers ,
D-Fia., chairman of a House
health subcommittee which
conducted hearings last week
into a possible link between
atomic bomb blasts and leukemia incidences in some
soldiers

who (" were

on

maneuvers at Nevada test
sites.
A second round of hearings
will begin Feb. 8.
An estimated 174,000
soldiers have been exposed to
nuclear radiation since 1946,
according to information
from
the
)/eterans
CHESHIRE - ~·ive em· Administration. The Center
ployees of the Gen. James M. Cor Disease Control says eight
Gavin Plant have received soldiers who took part in the
cash awards for their con~ 1957 "Operation Smoky"
tributions in the " Operations blast at Camp Desert Rock.
Improvement" program of
the American Electric Power
System.
The five men are Ralph 1..
Matthews, Pomeroy: Marvin (Continued from page I)
L. Baird, Gallipolis; Donald related problems along the
W. Lucas, Gallipolis; George hard-hit Qhio Valley.
C. Randolph, New Haven,
The National Weather Serand Charles E. Couk , New vice's Ohio River Forecast
Haven. Cook is presently Center in Cincinnati said· the
working at Appala chian crest of the Ohio would reach
Power's Sporn Plant in New Louisville by Tuesday and
Haven.
Evansville, Ind., more than a
Cash awards are given to day later.
employees by American
"We don 't anticipate any
Electric Power for ideas serious flooding from the
which improve safety, im- crest as it moves downriver,''
prove operating conditions, said Tom McPhillips, acting
or reduce operating ex- hydrologist in charge of the
penses. These innovations River ~'orecast Center.
often result in financial
With
no
sibnifi ca nt
savings being passed on to warming trend ex pected ,
the consumer. These id~as McPhillips said ke along the
are published in a system- length of the river would
wide ma gazlnc so other thicken and join together to
facilities in the system can Corm larger, potentially mnre
benefit fr om them. The hazardous chunks ,
awards were presented to the
When a thaw does occur,
recipients by J. W. Lizon, there will be a cha nce of more
Gavin Plant Manager.
substa nt ial fl oo ding and
-It was also noted by Mr. damage from ice floes in lowLizon that Gavin Plant has lying areas along the Ohio,
had more ideas published tile river forecaster noted.
than any other plant" in the But no thaw is expected for at
system ror two consecuti ve least the next several days,
years.
he added:

Gavin men

are rewarded

for suggestions

Markland .

Nev . · have
developed
leukemia.
"I am amazed at t!Je lack of
concern evidenced by the
Department or Defense and
Department or Energy on
Collo)"Up llludles or American
citizens exposed to radiation
from nuclear tests conducted
by tile goverMlent," Rogers
said in an interview.

"There has been an almost
studied effnrt to avoid it
because of tile possibility or
liability to t!Jose whn were
damaged," ·Rogers said.
Army witnesses told the

LONG BEACH, CaliC.
(UPI) - Two American
students taking part in a
survival course drowned and
a tllird student was lost and
preswned dead in rongh seas
t!Jat swamped tlleir kayaks
off the coast or Mexico.
Two
victims
were
identified as Tim Breidegam,
21, of Kutztown, Pa ., a

student at Moravian College
in Bethlehem, Pa . ; and
Br enda

Herman ,

19 ,

Cincinnati, a student at Bennington College in Vermont.
Their bodies washed ashore
Saturday at Isla Del Carmen
in t!J e GuU of California,
about 750 miles soutlleast of
San Diego and off t!Je east
coast of ·Baja California.
A U.S. Coast Guard
!Jelicopter , priva te planes
and surface craft searched
unsuccessfully Sunday Cor
David Scnwimmer, 18,
Raleigh, N.C., a student at
Duke University.
The search wa s to reswne
today.
The three were among a

:

N. W. COMPTON. O.D. .1
I
1

L--------------------------------~·

associate director, said the

students left in two groups
Tuesday from a P.,int north of
Punta Pulpito, Mexico. He
said Breidegam's kayak
capsized in windy weather

about 3~ miles north of
Loreto.
"As we Wlderstand it from
t!Je Meldcan fishermen, they
were hit tiy a sudden extreme
wind, maybe a squall, as t!Jey
were going aroWid · Punta

SOME OF THE MANY ITEMS
11

SALE PRICED" .

OAK ROCKERS •••••• '22
CHAIRS................~ 10 00

00

STOOLS
24".•.'9.50

18"•.•SS.75 ·
30"...'9.75

effecta.

Rogers complained the
govefMlent has spent much
more money on studying
effects of radiation on
Japanese victims, than it has
on Americans.

"What was t!Je purpose of
putting troops In atomic
areas? ': he asked . " It looks
like more of a public relations
th . ..
mg .

Suniival test
does opposite

of 19 students in the
,---------~----~---------------~--~ group
kayak training portion of a
three-week survival course
OPTOMETRIST ·
offered by the Southwest
I OFFICE HOURS: 9: 30 to 12,2 to 5 (CLOSE
Outward BoWid School or
AT NOON ON THURS .) - EAST COURT 1 Sarita Fe, N.M.
.
I
ST., POMEROY.
.
.
'John Rhoades, school

I

subcommittee although
radiation readings were
taken on many of th.,.., who
were exposed. vlrtualfy no
effort has been made since
then to check Cor long-term

Pulpito," Rhoades said . "A

number of t!Je boats capsized

NOW OPEN

GINO'S
OF MASON
PHONE 773-5536

Veteraos Memorial H08ptlal
Saturday Admissi ons Karen Baity , Pomeroy ;
Russell Flagg, Minersville.
Saturday Discharges J oyce · Quillen , Gertrude
Woods, Florence J . Johnson,
Esther Adkins, Carolyn
Gihnore, Mary Laudennilt,
Clyde· Henderson, Mina
Givens.
Sunday Admissions Florence Horton, Mid dlePort; Virginia Grinstead.
Mason; Esta David, Mid·
dleport; Gladys Rumlield ,
Pomeroy ;
Roy Jon es,
Racine : Clara Joseph ,
Minersville ; J ohn Hite,
Middleport ; Dale Proffitt,
Racine.
Sunday Discharges
Linda Watson.

.

.

Teets, Leon ; Mrs. Leroy
I
Mayes, Hender son ; Mrs. I
Wilbert Porter , Point
STANLEY SWAIN
ANNA MAYO
Stanley W. Swain, 84, a
Anna Maye Mayo, 61 , •
Pleasant ; Carl Janey ,
resident of Crown City, died resident of Rl. 1, Bidwell.
Gallipolis ; Mrs. James at
his son' s home at 2: 30p.m . died in Un iversity Hospital
Woo mer and son , !)oint Saturday , He had been In Saturday evening .
Pleasant ; Candy Neal, fall ing health for the past two
She was the wife of Gilbert
Mayo.
Henderson ; JoaM Chandler, years ,
Born Sept . 4, 1893 , at
Funeral arrang~ments will
West Columbia ; Tammy Mercerv
ille, he was the san ot be announced by McCoy.
B~us, Point Plcsant; Barthe late Ell5worth S. a,d · IN:Jore Funeral H6me.
bara Johnson, New Haven; Katie Fi5her Swain . He was a
Robert Johnson, Mason; Mrs. retired tarmer.
Survivors Include his wife,
James Anderson , Clifton; Bessie
Swa in, whom he
Donald Wood, New Haven ; marriedDillon
on June 23, 1915; ·
(Continued from page I)
Mrs. John Michael and son,
se~Jen
chi ldren,
Mrs .
Miller ,
Gollt . needed
Pomeroy; Alpha Woodall, Aldean
to
replenish
pol ls; Orman, Lakeland , retirement funds of public
Point Pleasant; Mrs. George Fla
.;
Mr s.
Raymond
Roush , Mason; Mrs. Forrest ( Wanda) Scarborough, employes.
Long and daugbter, Point Lakeland , Fla .;
Verland,
"Both tile foreign and the
Pleasant ; Mrs. Jeffrey Crown City ; Mrs. William state and local sectors are
(Naomi) Gooderham , Crown
Holstein, Point Pleasant ; City
currently wilhdrawin&amp; much
and Mrs . Maurice
Mrs. John Bryant, Gallipolis ; (Nelda) Sm ith, Crown City. more (rom the . spending
Kerry
Peters, · Point Two chi ldren precede&lt;:! him in stream than they are
Pleasant; Gary Ellis, Point death .
returning to It," tile report
At·so surv i ving are six
Pleasant; Delta Rollins, sisters
said.
and a brother : Mrs.
Po.int Pleasa nt ; Harry Lucy Start. Mrs . Ruby
The report held out hope for
Nibert , Point Pleasant; Sebr iel and Mrs . Harman a balanced budget for 1981
Daisy Hickle, Hartfnrd; Roy (Ricleyl . Vance, all of and raised the possibility that
Woomer Jr .. Point Pleasant; Columbu$ ; Mrs . ~~~ l ie taxes might have to be be
(Mildred) Smith, Crown reduced again within a year
Edwi n Fielder, Gallipolis Ci
ty ;
Mrs .
Charwood
Ferry; Gilbert Clark, Leon ; (Margaret) Puckett , Crown or two after enactment of tile
Jamel!l Watson, Henderson . City; Mrs. Tom (Gladys)
$25 billlon tax cut sent to
Births - A son to Mr. and Moore, Cov ina, Calif., and Congtess 10 days ago.
Swain of Columbus .
Mrs. George Mulinex, Letart. Charles
There is no reason to
Two brothers preceded him
believe
t!Je recovery from tile
In death . Nineteen grandchildren and 20 great - worst recession in 40 years
grandchildren also sur vive. cannot be sustained by a tax
Mr. Swai n was a member
cut, the report said. Demand
of Crown Ci ty Wesleyan
for
goods from factories to
Church where fu neral ser vices will be held at 1 p.m . consumers was strong in late
Tuesday with 1he Rev. Fred 1977 and should continue solid
Shockley and Rev. Dan leroy
through the montlls ahead.
officiat ing . Burial ~!fill follow
Construction and purchase
in Crown' Cit y Cemetery .
new
homes
and
F,riends may ca ll · at the of
Willis Funeral Home today
apartrnent.s has been the
from 2-4 and ~ - 9 p.m.
primary . source of the .
PAIIbeMers tJill be Jim
economic recovery so far , but
SWain, Ke ith swain, Scott
POINT PLEASANI
th e housing boom has
Swain , Rick Swain , David
A towboat with a punctured Swain , Mark Swain, Mi tchell reached a peak.
. hull , and pushing thre e Swa in , Larry Miller and
The report also said
barges, sank on the Kanawha Ronnie Delaney .
interest rates tllat increased
River above the U.S. Coast
in early January will
MRS. GEORGE KEITH
Guard Station late Saturday
Mrs . Georqe (Pet) Keith,
probably not turn down again
Grove City, died at 3 p. m . for tile rest or tile year.
evening.
in Columbus. She was
The boat, the Goldie Sunday
a fo rmer resident of Kerr in
Chaplin , owned by the Gallia County.
NOW YOU KNOW
Chaplin Towing Co., Sardis,
She was preceded in death
The
!8th-ce ntury Italian
0. and captained by Marlin by her husband , George, and Cardinal Mezzofanti spoke or
Chaplin, apparently sank as a a son, Kenneth, and two - underst ood 1861anguages and
Glenna and
result of a puncture it suf- daughters,
Peggy.
dialects - yet he never left
fered when struck by th e
She is survived t;y the Italy· in his entire life.
Agnes May at the· Racine following daughter s, Alma ,
Locks and Dams earlier jn Maxine, Virginia, Annabelle
and Madeline . One brother,
ASK TOWED
the day , according to one' Od
Parson, Gallipolis, sur-

Save for tl1e Day
Your Baby becomes
a Big Wheel on Campus

ROll

Citizens Band
Transceiver

· c harged with passing at an

POMEROY, OHIO
L

•

Au$ twr

40,000 Maximum Insurance For Each Deposrtor
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

1

I

·~~'''*'~'&gt;l=:o.~=&gt;l=:o.~'&lt;&gt;'::::S·~=''''*~""'.~"'-;'~~,~,::::.~~""~"'~~=:~~..,.~~

Wews . • . zn BrzefsJ
;:i

'

News .• in Briefs

mm.nnum

intersection following an
accident at 11 ; 15 p. m.
Saturday on U. S. 3~ at the
junction of SR 325. Springer

Solid State

Integrated Circuits

went to pass as an auto

operated by Melinda K.
Humphreys , 19, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, made a left turn.
There was minor damage.
The third acc ident occurred at 4:40 p. m. Sunday
on Pyles Rd., five and fourth
tenths miles west of SR 77~.
Troopers said vehicles driven
by Ehner R. Wilson, 36,
Scottown, and Donald R.
Cochran, 27, Patriot , collided
in a curve. Moderate damage
resulted; no charge was Ciled.
MeCOV DIES
FORT HUACHUCA, Ariz.
(UPI) - Cowboy star Tim
McCoy,
whose career
spanned the Wild West Shows,
silent movies and talkies,
died Sunday at Raymond W.
Bliss Anny Hospital.
HILO TEMPS
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
highest temperature reported
Sunday to the National
Weather Service, excluding
. Ala ,::a and HawaU, was 80
degrees at GUa Bend, Ariz.
Today's low was 25 degrees
belo':' zero at Cutbank, Mont.

,.

•
•
•
•
•
•

40-Channet Mobile Tw~Way Radio
Digital Channel Readout
Display Dimmer Contro!
Phase-Lock Loop (PLL) Circuit
Switchabte AN L
'.
Local/Distance Switch

•,

REG. 1179.95

SALE '125 95

SAVE '5400

Elberfelds In· .Pomeroy
,.

'

• 'J1

said the state tab lor snow reimbursement for snow
removal and rescue missions removal.
"The economic loss to the
is approaching $15 million
state
is catastrophic ,"
and may go to 125 million.
The governor wrote Carter Rhodes told tile president,
tllrough Robert E. Connor , adding tile stOf!ll caused
regional director of the more Ulan 30 deaths and
Federal Disaster Assistance W119ld financial tosses.
Administration in Chicago. - "The widespread shutdown
He had originally requested a or industries and the loss of
disaster declaration the day income for hourly workers
of the blizzard last Thursday, will cause a significant
had
additional har~ip Cor families," said
but
t!Je governor. "Nearly 100
information to convey .
The governor asked Connor percent of all hourly workers
in a separate letter tD aUow lost a minimum or two days
local government.&gt;; five more pay."
The governor said damage
days to apply for federal
to roads and bridges cannnt

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, January 3i, 1978

Kanawha

Mishaps at

.

OOLUMBUS (UPI )- Gov.
James A. Rhodes, citing
escalating recovery cosiS
from last week's blimard, has
once again asked President
Carter to declare Ohio a
disaster area so the state can
receive federal financial
assistance.
At the same time , state
officials report continued im·
provement in clearing roads
and
restoring
power
t!Jroughout Ohio.
Rhodes said late Monday
tlla!' agricultural loses are
now pegged at $64 million . He

Towboat
sinks in

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Fat'ttters Bank

By LEE LEONARD

UPI Stateb0111e Reporter

Economy

Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Jan. 27
Christopher Boyer, Wilma
Cox, Lois CundiCC, David
Drummond, Breda George,
and the others grouped Victori a Lark, William
aroW!d them to go through Lawson, Pauline Little,
tile capsizing procedures they Sandra McCoy, Earl Mills,
were trained ln."
Mrs . William Morgan ,and
The coast guard said winds daughter, Thelma Plants,
between 25 and 30 knots and Betty Rag land, Cat herine
15-foot seas made the rescue Shifflet, Pamela Skeans,
difficult and two of the Lowell Strickland, Mrs.
kayaks separated. Miss Ricky Pennant and son,
Herman , Breidegam and James Wa'lker, Laronda
Schwinuner were swept tD Wallingford, Ralph Willet.
tile sea.
Births Jan. 27
The six remaining students
Mr. and Mrs . Charl es
went for belp. The others Denney, a son, Gallipolis;
returned safely.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Jividen,
Word of the accident did not a son, Buffalo, W. Va .; Mr.
reach the school until and Mrs. Gary Smith, · a
Thursday
and .
local daughter, Pomeroy; Mr. and
fishermen and civilian Mrs. Bill Starkey, a son,
aircraft helped in the search. Wellston.
The bodies of Miss Herman
Discharges Jan. 28
and Breidegam were to be
Delores Collins, David Cox,
returned to tile United States. Mrs. Randy Crawford and
daughter, Helen Dempsey,
International
Katherine Dobbins, Iva n
Hockey Leigue
United Pres!o ~lnlernatianal
Grover, Christie Halley, Mrs.
North
wltpts. gfga John Jagers and son, Joseph
Saginaw 27 14 6 60 223 156 Karschnik, Sandra Kin g,
Port Huron
Charlotte Little, Tiffney
20 14 ~ 49 162 155
Lockhart, James Malon e,
Fl.i nl
21 19 5 47 202 213
Royal Martin, June Mille~,
Muskegon
Brenda Meyers, Nellie
, 15 23 a sa 160 11a
Kalamazoo
Roberts, Charles Straight,
13 21 10 37 163 116 Mrs. Richard Wamsley and
Marriage 'licenses were
South
vives .
son, Mabel Wells, Carroll · source.
issued
to James Bryan
·w I t pis. gl ga
The body is at the Miller
The Agnes May reportedly
Williams, Jean Willis,
Fl. Wa yne
Pomeroy, and
Hawthorne,l9,
Funeral
Home
in
Grove
City
19 13 12 50 161 155
Thomas Withers, Marjorie was clearing tee away from w here services will be held at Karen Ann Riggs , 19,
the Lock arftl Dams area 10 a. m. Wednesday. GraveMilwaukee
Wood, Linda Young.
16 17 12 44 1A2 155
when the collision occurred. side services will be Rutland ; Melvin Ray Duff,
Births Jan. 28
Toledo 15 17 10 40 158 155
The boat sank at ap· held at 2 p . .m. Wednesday in 29, Rt. I, D~xter and Jenny
Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Grand Rapids
Lou Thabet, 20, Rt. I, Dexter.
proximately
10:30 p.m. while Vi nton M emor ia l PArk.
14 22 a 36 149 119 Chandler,
a daught er ,
it
was
being
refueled
by
City
Saturday's Results
Wellston.
Fl int at Fort Wayne, ppd ..
Ice &amp; Fuel, according to the
Discharges Jan . 29
snow
source.
Sharon Bailey, Eugene
(Continued from page I)
Pori ~uron at Muskegon,
Apparently, it was the
ppd., snow
Buckley, Karen Chattin, Joey
school teachers ended a three-day strike Sunday by accepting
Toledo at Saginaw , ppd.,
Clark, Ciifford Eckard , weight of the fuel and the ice a contract offer. Budd Malchus, president of the North
snow
which caused the boat to sink
· Olmsted Education Association, said the contract gave
Mi lw aukee at Kalamazoo , Margaret Gentry, Alma
Marinl, Mrs. Terry Plants within a short time . It teachers a 12 percent raise retr.oactive to Jan. I plus increases
ppd.,. snow
·
report edly went down in 10
Sunday's Results
and duaghter .
minutes and the only thing in supplementary, summer school and night pay.
Port Huron 7, Flint 4
Births Jan. 29
The system's 360 teachers had t!Je lowest base pay- $8,775
Saginaw 10, Kalamazoo 4
Mr. and Mrs. John Barney, remaining above the water - in !he Cleveland area before the new coptract. They did not
Fort Wayne at Grand
a son, Pt. Pleasant; MT. and today is a. radio anienna.
Rapids, ppd., snow
Seven men were on the boat receive a raise in 1977. A t!Jree.lJour Saturday negotiating
Milwaukee at Toledo, ppd., Mrs. Allan Cunningham, a
session led to a tentative agreement. The system's 7,400
snow
son, Racine; Mr. and Mrs. when it sank. But all students missed two days of classes during tile walkout, not
MondaY's Games
Albert Sawyer, a son, Oak reportedly climbed to safety because of the teachers' strike, but because of the blizzard. ·
No games scheduled
by jumping onto the City Ice
Hill.
- Tuesday's Game
&amp;
Fuel Cuelboat.
IHL All -Star Game at
ASSISTANT SECRETARY OF STATE ALFRED
According to a spokesman
Toledo
Pleasant Valley Hospltnl
AIITHERTON
TODAY wound up his efforts in Israel to reach a
from G &amp; C Towing, none of
Discharged - Clayton the three barges, which w~re breakthrough compromise on the Palestinian issue to aUow
ca rrying salt brine, sa nk . The resumption of the Egyptian-Israeli political round of Middle
BOSTON
(UPI )
.
tow was heading towards East peace talks.
Linesman Bob Hodges
Israel
already
has
said
it will resume military talks with
Charleston.
suffered severed tendons in
the
Cairo
govefMlent
and
Egyptian
President Sadat wlll visit
This is the second boat that
his left hand Sunday,
tile
United
States
for
talks
wit!J'
President
Carter to discuss the
0
•
the Chaplin Towing Co. has
breaking up a fight during a
.latest
peace
efforts.
At!Jerton
was
to
depart
later in tbe day for
lost in this area recently.
National Hockey League
Cairo
for
a
meeting
Tuesday
witll
Egyptian
Foreign Minister
Fire
destroyed
Th e
game between the Boston
Mohammed
Kamel
that
a
U.
S.
spokesman
described as a
No one was injured 'in three Producer last year on the
Bruins and Pittsburgh
"long
and
detailed
discussion"
intended
tD
reactivate tbe
traffic ac c id ents report ed Ohio River oear the Ar·
Penguins.
political
talks,
broken
off
Jan.
18.
over the weekend by the · ,buckle-Leon.area.
Gallia-Meigs Post State ;.,._ _ _.;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~----~
Highway Patrol.
The first occurred at 9: Ia a.
m . Saturday on Alice Rd . six
miles west of SR 160 where
vehicles collided driven by
Lynn Johnson , address not
listed, and Joe C. McCarley,
42, Ewington. There was
moderate damage. No
charges were filed.
Eugene W. Springer, 43,
Fort · Wayne, Ind., was

Life siyles change, costs of living escalate,
children seem to rush through infancy
into adolescence at a galloping
run . Parents who anticipate rising college costs begin edu·
calional savings plans with
Farmefs Bank at an early
date. Let us help you arrange an
interest-accruing savings account that will grow with
your children, and be
ready for college
when they are.

Rhodes makes another appeal

HOSPITAL NEWS ---------------------------,
: Area Deaths I
I

II
I

RICHFIELD, MINN . - ATINY 11-YEAR.QLD girl, who
was not identified, was abducted Saturday night and after
being sexuaUy molested in a garage was put m the trunk of a
1970 Ford. She spent more than IOhours in t!Je car and suffered
frostbite in her fingers and toes in subzero temperatures.
The girl, an avid Jan of Nancy Drew mysteries, WJscrewed
(Continued -on page 10)

but n are
e~pe c ted to be beyond
anything In the past
e~perience of the state."
Rhodes asked for the
disaster declaration "in view
of tile damages and losses
suffered by Individuals,
families and businesses
throughout the entire state
and because of the great
financial burdenS imposed
upon all public entities."
He thanked Carter Cor
declaring a " state or
emergency" which enabled
the federal govenunent to
send snow removal personnel

leases are ·postponed
By KEN CAFARELL .
court as intervenors in tbe
BOSTON (UP!)- Interior case, were not expected to
Secretary Cecil Andrus has continue with the appeal.
postponed indefinitely·
Andrus decided to cancel
today's planned sale of oil tile sale "primarily becaUBe
and gas exploration leases on of the short time factor"
more than 700,000 acres of between the start of any
rich seabottom off the New SupreJ)le Court hearing and
England coast.
t!Je scheduled sale.
Andrus' action came . The state and an
Monday night, jost hours environmental group filed
after a federal appeals CO)ll"t suit earlier this month ,
judge had upbeld a lower seeking to postpone tile .sale
court's nrder delaying the · because adequate envrronsale untU Congress- tmple- ' mental safeguards did not
ments safeguards to protect exist.·
the fishing industry from
In granting the injWictlon
possible hazards related to sought liy the state of Massaoffshore drllllng In the . chusetts and a number of
Georges Bank area.
environmental groups, Judge
A spokesman for the Miltthew Garrity ruled Saturlnterior Department in day t!Jat Andrus and been
Washington said Andrus will "arbitrary and capricious" in
not appeal the Boston court going ahead wit!J the lease
ruling to t!Je U.S. Supreme sales witllout awaiting action
· Court.
The
federal by Congress on proposed
government and II oil amendments to the Outer
companies had been expected Continental Shelf Lands
to Iring the appeal to the !Ugh Act.
Judge Levin Campbell of
court before 9:30a.m. today,
the time set for bids oil the . the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of
leases.
Appeals Monday night
Th e
de par t m e n I refused to grant a hurriedly
spokesman; Andy Newman, prepared motion for a stay
said Andrus' decision means filed by the federal
tile sale "Is off Indefinitely." government and the oil
The oil companies and the companies, but be did not
New England Counctl, which rule on Garrity's findings.
both were recognized by the

and equipment to Ohio.
Dav id L. Weir, state
director of transportation ,
said Monday aU interstate
highways were open except 1475 in Toledo.
"But there are still icy
P.R l.ches and some drifting ,"
Weir warned, repeating his
plea tha t Ohioans limit
themselves to essential
travel.
C. Luther· Heckman, chairman of the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohlo, ssid the
only remaining electrical
outages are 100 residences in
tile Toledo Edison service
area.

Weir said only Lucas and
Williams CO W1ties still had a
majority of roads d osed . He
said about 85 roads were
closed in Ohiu because of
snow and 13 because of high
water.
Weir said lighting was shut
down on the stat e and .
interstate highway systems
in thtColumbus and Southern
Ohio and Monongahela

wrote.
He added that local government oCCicials have CoWld it
dirricult to reach contractors
on SWiday to hire tllem for
snow removal.
'' As a result , tills available
time period of Jan. 'll to
midnight Jan. 31 has, in
effect , b&lt;.'en reduced to two
&lt;lays - far shorter Ulan the
spe cifi ed
fiv e
days .
Accordin gly, I urgently
rLoquest thallhe. eligible time
for executing contracts Cor
etner~ enry snow removal be
ex tend ed five additional

state director or highway
Slj(ety, urged people going to
work to travel in car pools
where possible tD reduce the
flow of rush hour traffic.
Rhodes said t!Je original
fiveday perio d Cor lora 1
goverrunents to apply Cor
federal snow removul aid
expires at midnight tonight.

Power service areas because

or coal shortages.
He ordered a reduction in

t!Je speed limi&lt; on those roads
from ~ to 50 ~ph at night .
Robert M. Chiaramonte,

" Be cause of storm..c:ausod
commu~icalion

failures, and
because many local officials
were actively engaged in
directing rescue operations
and snow removal , it has

been impossible to reach all

clays.' '

concerned persons even as of
thi s date'" th r ''f'l\'~ rn o r

•

ent1ne

at

Fifteen Cents
Vo. 2K, No. lll2

Pla.IlDing group seeks

.

reconstruction changes

Arch Stage! of the Farm
Blakeslee was reemployed Home Administration, as
as executive director. It was well as other members of the
agreed to hold meetings of commission, commented the
the enti.re commission on the nursing home has been a
fourth Monday each quarter. . subject of discussion Cor some
· The .executiv~ CO!pmittee will
be called into session tb four
yea has
rs. however,
no
facility
been built.
handle any work needed to be Members felt' the facility
don e between the entir e could be a rea lity if the
orga nizational sessions.
. county or a subdivision had
Blakeslee annoW!ced Mrs.
.
with a plan usmg
Eleanor Thomas, executive proceeded
'I bl FHA f d
un
dl·rector of the Meigs County a vat ak e1
rt ds. k ,·s
Bla es ee
repo
Counc'.l on Aga·ng, has advised
·
b et h wor
hl·m that the Ohio Council on progressmg
· • · d y t · e1 com·
s1te
s '" us riD
Agl.ng, has granted the Meigs misswn
'tt
Bl
k
1
or
the
County Councl.1 money to comm1 ee. f ha es ee · ·
handle emergencies created president o t e comm1sswn
d
by the snow and ice to (John son) were empowere
v•·ng
residents over ~0 years of to act upon appro
,
clearing house items Cor_the
age.
proj ects in Ohio that
Blakeslee also displayed many bel
th
mmlssion
.
the Ca pl.ta· I ,·mprove ment s come h ore e co
report c.ompiled during the throug out a year.
past year. He stressed that it
Blakeslee recommended
dd'
tl 1
be rs to the
must be kept updated. He a 1 ona mem
b
k'
also spo ke on se wao e commission Y rna mg ·ex·
c
r·
·
t t' s voting
development work underway of ICloherepreHsen a •ve
memd drs . eb a 1soh recom1·n Raci ne and Syracuse
be
.
llages.
Attorney
Frank
W.
men 'I
e d a t roch ure the
Vl
Porter is keeping the officials compl e
do Is ow the
of the two towns advised on P~ogress than Pd an s ~1
19 8
steps {o keep plans moving. grou
Bl pkat 1 e en rto d that· the
A dt'scusslon was held on
a Ses eet repo
'd ·e g pr ject
the construction of a nursing Page tree wa emn
home .in Meigs County. Two . in Middleport appearsbeto b~
A
perml.ts are active but one of moving
dd ' · ahead.
1
h nwn
t g ap·rhso
thoseexpiresFeb. IO, Blakes- "' ltlona
P 0 0 f
•
· to contact two· how
ever as now
be
lee agreed
required,
a
partwillof the
companies interested in
construction of a .nursing planning being done by
home in the county.
Jennings and Associates.

1

°

Light snow hits battered
·Midwestern States again
United Press International
Light snow hit the blizzardbattered Midwest today,
freezing drizzle
made
Southern streets messy and
frosty :emperatures dipped
well into Florida's citrus belt.
Still digging out from the
killer blizzard tllat paralyzed
tile nation's midsection last
week, residents of lilinois and
Michigan awoke to a fluffy
new blanket of snow.
Traveler's advisories were

Sale of olllcllld gas

assessed

•

e

ByUnltedPresslntematlonat
'
CYNTHIANA, KY.- A YOUNG CYNTHIANA, Ky., girl
was in critical condition after sustailjing burns ove r 50 percent
The Meigs County Planning
of her body in an electrical heater accident.
Commission Monday decided
Sonja Arut Stanley, 6, dau!lht~r or. Mr. and Mrs. Wayne to send a letter to Governor
Stanley was hospitalized In Cincmnat• General Hospital. .
Jam~ A. Rhodes requesting
~lhlana firemen said t!Je family had installed ele~trlC that Route 7 be re·
beaters when their fuel oil gave out and were unable to constructed from Five Points
replenish il because of the snow.
to the new Ravenswood
Police said the girl's rughtgown caughtfireafte~ a younger Bridge.
The decision requestihg the
sister apparently pushed tissue paper into an electric heater m
••
ba'•
"'e u.room.
·new road be PJaced on the
planning stage came upon the
WARREN OHIO - THE 100 TEACHERS in Brookfield recommendation of C. E.
Township weni back on strike today, despite a c?urt order t!Jat Blakeslee, executive director
tlley remain in t!Je classrooms.
.
for the commission .
The teachers, mempers of the Brookflelc) Educatwn
Later Fred W. Crow
Association, voted Monday night lo reswne a work stoppage
suggested
a committee be
· tllat began two weeks ago and ended last Friday.
formed to meet with
Governors Rh odes and
BELLFLOwER, CAUF. - THINGS MAY GO BETTER Rockefeller to push for a new
with Coca-Cola, but not on tile free~ay.
.
.
to th~ new bridge.
The California High.way patrol sa•d the dumpmg deVJce on highway
Crow, in his capacity of
a truck apparently broke and spilled a load of Co~ .Cola syrup president of the Pomeroy
on the Artesia Freeway Monday, blockmg trafftc for more Chamber of Commerce has
. Ulan two hours between Bellflower Boulevard and the Long
sent letters to village officials
Beach Freeway.
and organizations seeking the
formation of that committee.
CLEVELAND - A MAN SEVERELY in]'ured by a train
During ye,s t erday's
after admittedly drinkin g has filed a $3 million damages suit meeting · officers were
against the city ofCI eve Iand, I'ts po1·1ce depar tmenl ' and some reelected. They are Thereon
·
Johnson, president ; Orion
individual police.
The suit fUedon behalf of Clemon A. Tincher, 23, conceded Roush, first vice president;
he was drWik and disorderly at il west side party March 9,l977 Henry Wells , second vice
when poI.tee took h'lin awa·Y ·m ha ndcuffs · Rather than jailmg president ; Edison Ba ker,
him, it charges, they d rove h.un t o the Flats area near
.
secretary; George Collins,
downtown and left him to fend Cor himself, and later that mght treasurer.
be was struck by the Cnnrail train.
Serving on the executive
·
... "'
, ... committee. wi.ll be E . F.
ATLAN.TA - .A GLITTERING SEGMENT vF Atlanta s . Robm
' son, a past president,
history went up in flames Mnnday .
and Clarence Andrews,
Fire destroyed Loew's Grand Theater, where Rhett Butler Eleanor Thomas and H. E.
abandoned Scarlett O'Hara for the first time in the 1939 (Pete) Shields.
premiere of "Gone With The Wind." The fire, which started on
the lop floors of the seven-story Loew 's building in th~ crowded
downtown part of the city, spread clouds of b1llowmg black
smoke across tile skyline .
· PITTSBURGH - TWELVE STEELMAKERS AND a steel
industry trade association have filed spit in U. S. District Court
in an effort to force the federal Environmental Protection
Agency to revise and update air pollution criteria.
The suit sought to compel the EPA administrator to revise
and reissue before Jan. i, 1979, the Air Quality Criteria for
Particulate Matter, a spokesman Cor the trade association, tbe
American Iron and Steel institute, said Monday.

be

shovels. I've startea seUing a
lot or dust pans."
In Micrugan, the Army
Corps of Engineers said there

were 4~.000 miles of snow·
clogged roada that probably
will not be cleared for
another 19 days - even ·if

Utere is no ·more snow. At
ension
least
50 school districts were
Susp
· still closed.
bridge is
EXTENDED FORECAST
hit by ice Saturday,
Thursday through
IDOStly fair

CINCINNATI (UP!) - An
Ohio River ice floe rammed a
boat and caused another boat
to crash into a pier of the
suspension bridge - . a Civil
War era architectural
masterpiece that served as a
prototype for tile famous
Brooklyn Bridge - closing it
for a short period Monday .
The bridge, which Jinks
Covington,
Ky .,
and
Cincinnati, was closed to
morning rus~ hour traffic at 6
a.m., examined for damage
and reopened at 8 a.m ,
Officials said t!Je collision
did little damage - knocking
out only a small piece of
concrete from the pier.
A big Ice floe - described ·
by the Coi!SI Guard as about
200 feet long, 20 feet wide and
four feet t!Jick - rammed the
no ·more this year.
"Showboat Majestic" in
" The last time I had Monday 's pre-dawn hours .
anytlling in here wi,th a
The Majestic and two other
handle was Friday at noon /' party boat.. attached to ber
said the owner of a North Side came loose from their
hardware store. "Now.? No mooting and were swept a
snow shovels. No coAl short distance downstream,
witll one of the party boats
hitting Ute bridge pier.
B&amp;EPROBED
A tow boat finaUy corraled
Meigs County Sheriff the runaway boat.s and they
James J. Proffitt reports that · were tied off at nearby
deputies investigated . a downstream docks at
breaking and entering Ludlow, Ky .
Sunday evening at the Joe
The Showboat is owned by
Nelson residence located on · the city of Cincinnati and is
SR 689 near the Vinton-Meigs used by t!Je University of
County line. The house was Cincinnati
for
stage
entered through the rear productions in tile summer.
door. Several items were The other two boaiB are
reported stolen.
privately owned a~d are
The incident Is under in· rented out to groups Cor
vestigation.
parties.

posted t!Jrough the Great
Lakes region and Middle
Mississippi Valley . The
predictions were. for 1·2
inches or less - relatively
mild compared to last week'$
travails but enough to further
hamper cleanup operations.
Officials tllroughout JUinois
reported a shortage of rock
salt to melt snow and ice on
streets and highways. ·Cook
County was out completely
and Chicago's supplies were
running perilously low.
Several salt-laden barges
were reported slowly plowing
north through tile Ice floes on
tile Mississippi River .
Many Chica go store ~
reported they were sold out of ·
snow blowers and even snow
shovels IIJld expected to get

'

through lhe period, with
highs in tbe upper teens or
low 20s Thursday and
warming to the 20. or low
30s by Saturday. Lows will
range from zero to 10 above
zero Thursday and FrtdJ!y
and five to 15 Saturday.

Parking still
big premiwn
Parking remains at a
premiwn in Pomeroy where
two parking lots along the
Ohio River are still covered
with large pieces of ice left by
the weekend's high water .
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews said that walls of
the parking )ots, unusable at
t!Jis time, will be inspected by
tile U. S. Corps of Engineers
to determine if they are safe.
IC found in good condition,
heavy equipment will be
secured tllrough a contractor
to move t!Je ice from the two
lots, t!Je mayor said.

SCHOOLS OPEN
Schools in ·Eastern and
Southern Local Districts in
Meigs County were ·open
today as was MaBOn . CoWIIY
Schools.
Meigs Local School District
remained closed. Buses in the
·Eastern and Southern
District were traveling the
main highways only.

IN FREEZING wEATHER, Pomeroy firemen bottled a fi re ut the office of The Ohio
Power Co on Mulberry Ave., at 4·:52 a.m. this morning . The Pomeroy Dcpartrn cnl was
assisted JJj: the Miqdlepnrt Fire Department. A maj_or fire was ave rted thanks to the Ctre
departments and the waking of an employe of the Ewmg Funeral Horne.

Quick action averts

maj~r ~~~~~~r Th~~~c~

An alert citizen and quick
action
by
Pomeroy's
volunteer fire department
averted a major fire t!Jis
morning in Pomeroy's
bqsiness section.
Kyle Allen, Ewing fun eral
home employe who resides in
an apartment over the
funeral home was awakened
by heavy smoke about 4:50
a.m. Tuesday. He called the
Pomeroy Fire Department.
Middleport's fire fighters
were called to assist minutes

later.
The fire wa s found in the
Ohio Power Co. offices on
Mulberry Ave ., near the rear
of that structure.
At one time, flames shot up
. tile side of the adjoining

fir emen quickly brought the
blaze under control. It was
believed the blaze was caused
by a wiring defect near the
ceiling. .
The power company offices
received heavy water and
smoke damages . The
quarters wiU need extensive
cleamJP and repair .
Meantime, pffice staffers
were moved to another
building used by the company
in the Naylors RWI area of
Pomeroy. ·Other temporary
quarters may be sought later .
The funeral home and the
state liquor store, located
next ·door to the power
co mpany offices received
smoke damage·

com pany
buildlng is owned by Mrs.
Beulah Ewmg of Pomeroy . It
has been occupied by the
compa ny Cor many years.
The building was the nrst
constructed by Mrs. Ewmg
and her husband, Henry • who
through
the
years,
co nstructed a number ?(
buildings 111 Pomeroy and m
other area towns. .
Fire in July,\927, Wiped out
U1 ~ business are.• in the sam,e
location as thiS rnormng s
1ire.
Businessmen in area of
today's (ire w~re notified
immediately in case the bt~ze
got out of contr,ol and rnuvmg
. would be reqwred.

Power cutbacks ordered
at three atomic plants
By EDWARD K . DeLONG
WASHINGTON (UP!) Energy olllcials say a major
power cut,back at t!Jree plants
producing atomic fuel soon
enough
will · . provide
electricity to meet tile needs
or almost 2 million people and
help prevent a new winter
energy crisis.

President Carter order,fd
tile temporary reduction in
electrical demand at the
uraniwn enrichment plan\S
to ease the ·double pinch of
coal shortages caused by a
national mine strike and of
fuel shortages caused by the
Midwest blizzard.
A . spokesmah
said
electricity normally used by
tile energyhungry plants in
Oak' Ridge, Tenn.; Paducah,
Ky ., . and Portsmoutll, Ohio,
can be shifted to areas where
tile need is greatest.
Carter nrdered the enrich-

ment plant cutback during a
Cabinet meeting Monday
mOrning and announced it in
a
presiden tial
news.
conference a few hours later .

He gave few details, but
described it as.a way to help
ward off a fuel crisis without
invoking tile TaftHartley Act
to force miners back into the
mfnes.

1

Energy Department
sources later said they were
preparing tD cut total power
demand by about 40 percent
at . the- three plants, which
prbduce enriched uranium
Cor atomic reactor. fuel. They
said it was too early to tell
when the reduction · would
take place.
All three plants use t!Je socalled "gaseous diffusion "
'process, in which uranium
gas is forced through poi.lrous
membranes to separate the
scarce U-235 isotope needed
'\,

in reactor fuel from tile more
abundant U-2.18 isotope. .
An energy spokesm~ n said
operation of the plants under
normal conditions consumes

vast amoWits of electricity a total 5,000 megawatts, or

enough to serve the needs of
4.4 million people. Much of
tile energy generated by coalnuclea r
and
fired,
hydroelectric power plants of
th e
Tennessee
Valley
Authority is used by tile tllree
installations.
Department sources said
tile contemplated 40 percent
reduction in demand at the .
enrichment plant.. .would in '
effect give TV Aan extra 2,000
megawatts of electricity enough for t!Je normal power
needs of I. 74 million people or
more - to transfer to areas
hit by fuel shortages caused
by the coal strike and the
blizzard.
I

r"

�3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday, Jan. 31. 1978
2 _ TIM! Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesday, Jan 31. 1978

peopletalk
By KENNETH R. CLARK
United PresslnternaUonal
DEAN'S DEBUT: For Watergate figure John Dean, it's just
one new career after another, and he made has debut Monday
rn the latest one - behand a microphone in Los Angeles. Dean
-once adviser to Richard Nixon - IS a nationally syndicated
broadcast commentator now His announced topiCS range
from Ugandan President Idl Amtn and ex;adical actmst
Jerry Rubin to terrorism and "sex and booze m Washington,
D C." Dean's backers say more tban 40 radio stations have
signed up for the three.mrnute1 lwace-a-&lt;iay show.
HI TO THE JUDGE : In !970, U.S. DIStract Judge Julius
ordered Black Pantiler leader Bobby Seale boWld
and gagged durang the traal of the "Chicago Eight 1' - later to
become tile "ChiCago Seven" when charges of ancating
vwlence at the 1968 Democratic convention were dropped
against Seale. The one-tame radacal was back in Chicago
Monday - to promote a $200 balllon economiC development
program for the poor - but he isn 't so malitant now and he
didn't stop m.to see Hoffman . Says Seale of has old judicial
H&lt;~ffman

antagonist , " Tell him 1 sa~d hi

H

MOSHE'S TREASURE: Chip Carter got a tour of a private
museum Monday an Tel Aviv, Israel , where he and Wile,
Carun, are v1s1tang as two of 425 Ameracan ''Friendship Force''
ambassadors Has guide and proud archaelogacal collector Israeli Fureign Minister Mushe Dayan who entertained the
Carters at his home
DEEP SIX: Tallahassee, Fla , stWJtman Bill White attended
has own burial Sunday tn New Bedford, Mass., but be only
expects to stay 10 his grave for 219 days That's what it wall
take to break the exiSIIOg record for betng buraed alive - but
his six-foot-long, SIX-foot-&lt;ieep abode doesn't contain a rW!o()(the-mall coffin It's equipped with citazen's band radio,
telephone hoes, ventilatiOn pipe and closed carcuit television.
QUOTE OF THE DAY: A Ch acago hardware dealer on the
unprecedented demand for snow shovels m the aftermath of
tile bhzzard that burled the caty last week· "The last time I bad
anything in here w1th a handle was Fnday at noon ... I've
sta rted selling a lot of dust pans "
GLIMPSES: Llza Mlnnelll; bouncmg backJrom a bout with
flu that closed her Broadway show "The Act" for two weeks
and cos\ her backers a bundle, reopened Monday night to a
packed house
Televiswn's popular "Muppet Show" has
sagned Elton John, Bob Hope, Julie Andrews and Peter Sellers
to appear soon as guest stars to !h'l.puppet cast ... Ray Kroc,
founder of McDonald's hamburger chain and owner of the San
Daego Padres baseball team, has been named Outstanding
Entrepreneur of the Year by the University of Southern
Cahfornia ...

Ohio coal sup·p lies are dwindling -

TV •.•in Review

BY JOAN HANAUER
UPI Television Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) - Only a marvelously persuasive
actress could make her audaence believe in a 40-year"'ld divorced teacher mother of two daughters, who starts out
joggmg and be~omes obsessed with rurunng in the 26-mile
Bosl!)n Marathon.
"""
Joanne Woodward' performs just such an acting feat an an
amusingly touching tale lltled "See How She Runs," to be
broadcast on CBS Feb . l, 9-11 p.m., Eastern tune .
NQI only that, she can move the audienc.. to tears with her
plight.
She is cast as Betty Quinn, a cheerfully matter"'f-lact
woman who has a very bad day , topped off woon she gets on
the scale and sees she is gauW!g weaght. St.! decides to take up
JOgging - and II\ the process not only runs away from the
mexorable and depressmg sameness of her tile but also toward
a new self~mage, new seH-conhdence and tile hehef that she
can do anything.
Her father , Barnard Hughes, is a grouchy artist confmed to a
wheelchall' who paints scenes from his televiswn screen -the
" Hollywood Squares" one day, the "Dinah Shore Sbow" the
next
When she isn't tugging painting supplies and grocenes to
hinn, she is carmg for her two daughters (one of whom, Jan~y,
IS played by Ussy Newman, real hfe daughter of Mass
Woodward and Paul Newman), or teaching in a Boston school
where she has been lotling lor 17 years.
Her ex-husband, who takes the girls out for diMer on
Tuesdays, as chronically behmd 10 hiS chald support payments,
in part because he is paying orthodontiSt balls for has yoWJg
miStress. No, she isn't that young .
Miss Woodward's joggmg becomes increasingly unporllmt
to her - she even risks the dark streets of Boston to rWI at
rugh\. At first illS to lose weight, but slowly tiM! idea forms to
rWI m the marathon, a gruelmg expenence that she is
determined to try because In the marathon "nobody can stop
me, nobody can do 1t for me."

Her daughters become increasmgly restave and complain
that she lsn 't tilere when they return from school. Janey
whines that her mother never asks any more what kind of day
she had.
And her mother realizes that neither child has ever expressed concern about the kind of day the II' mother had.
The supporting cast all perform well, 10cluding Ussy as the
sulky older daughter, Marf Beth MaMing as the more delicate
yoWJger child and John Considme as thear father, who
eventually hopes for, but doubts the possiballty of, a
reconciliation. (Has mistress moved out after her teeth were
straightened.)
But at as Mass Woodward who carraes the show and the
conviction that it is really important for ,her to rWI the
marathon, as il the strengthened muscle of her body adds
power to her wall and her character.

REVIEWING ASSIGNMENTS-Mason Fire Chief
Ross Roush reviews several assignments his squad ts
about to do. Since the begmning of the year, the Mason
squad has fought not only fires but cleared roads, brought
fuel and medicines to people and delivered water to

Pleasant Valley Hospital Pictured on the bottom, left to
right, Mike Sayre, Grant Hysell, Assistant Chief Carl
Johnson, Ron Lavender, Mark Gilkey and Greg Roush.
Top, Chris Dingus, Harold Newell, Eddie Johnson and
Homer Newell.

By JOHN T. KADY
\Jili\ed Press lutemattoaal
While the !now from last
week's blizzard slowly melts
away, another more vital
product of nature - coal also dwindles in supply m
Ohio.
Ohaoans will he glad to see
!he snow go, but as the state's
utilities eat up their coal
reserves - at the rate of
95,000 tons a day - concern
grows.
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Electric Co. says its stockpile
is now at "an alanrungly low
level" and Monday imposed a
five percent cutback in
voltage.
Both Colwnbus &amp; Southern
Ohio, which serves aU or
parts of 25 COW!tles 111 central
Ohio , and Ohio Edison ,
headquartered m Akron Wltil
about 700,000 customers,
began Inhouse conservation

measW"es.

and Ohio Edison both have
reached Ute SG-day supply
mark and began instituting
contingency plans filed .witil
the
Public
Utilities
Commjssion of Ohio.
Gen&lt;ll:aUy, the first step 111
the p1an is conservation
within the utility itself.
However ,

&amp;

Columbus

Soutt.!rn Ohio Electric has
also been hampered by wet
and frozen coal so it mstituted
tile voltage cutback and also
called on all cu'ilomers to cut
the use of electrlcty by 25
percent.
Cincmnati Gas &amp; Electric,
which has 550,000 customers
in southwestern Ohio , is
expected to go to the first step
of iIs eonhngency plan
sometime this week.
Other utilities will follow
suit over tiM! next several
weeks 1f the nationwide strake
by tile United Mme Workers

Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio

Uruon, already the longest
UMW strike in history, is not
ended.
Over 95 percent of tiM!
state's electric power 1s
produced by coal and tiM!
conservation programs
ultimately could end in
rollmg blackouts lasting from
two to four hours.
"Since the nationwide coat
strike began, our company
has not been able to obtain a
slgnifacant amoWII of coal,'-'
said Colwnbus &amp; Southern
Ohio Electric. "As a result,
our 100 plus day coat supply
has
dwindled to
an
alarmmgly low level.
11
For this reason we must
ask residential customers to
begm emergency cutbacks m
their use of electrical
appliances and equipment to
belp extend the supply of coal
that we have,'' the utility
S&amp;d.
"For several· weeks our

commercial and industrial
customers
have
been
voluntarily reducing electrial
usage wherever posSible,"
said the utility. "Now, since
tile Situation is worsening, it
is time for even stronger
conservation measures to be
practiced by businesses and
residential 01stomers alike."
Negotiations between tiM!
UMW and lh~ soft coal
industry b~oke off again in
Washington SW!day and liM! •
on-agam - off-again talks
have left some Wlton offtcaals
puzzled.
"I don't know what the hell
is gomg on/' sa1d John
Guzek, president of UMW
District 6 which
is
headquartered m Bellaire.
"ThiS tilmg is very confusmg.
It seems to me they have a
personality conflict going on
over there.
"II will get resolved af they
just quit that fooling around,"

Livestock
COLUMBUS

( UPI)

Monday's Oh1o l 1vestock
auctions report :
Compared w•th last week,
slaughter steers and heifers
$1 h1gher. slaughter cows and
bulls steady
Slaughter steers cho•ce 2-J
925·t250 lbs 43 75 46.40: good
and low cho•ce 2 3 875 -1120

lbs 4t 43: good 2 3 1000 t330
lbs 38 60·41 , standard 2·3 925
1310 lbs 34 50·38 50, low
sta ndard 2 3 9t5·1100 lbs

31 50 3J 85 Slaughter hetfers
h1gh good and cho1ce 2 3 850-

tOlO lbs 38 50·40; good 2·3 850
10251bs. 35.75 38.50 Slaughter

cows utd1ty and commercial

2 4 875 1600 lbs

29 .25 34

Cutter 1-2 815 -1320 lbs

28 50·

30 Canner 930 1250 lbs 26.26
28 50

Slaughter

bulls

l 's

1450 2205 lbs 38 50 40.75 : 2's
1330 t705 lbs 37 50 38 75

Vealers prtme 180 200 lbs
76-80 . cho 1ce and prtme 120·

140 lbs 50-65: choice 180 215
lbs 60 68 . 95.130 lbs 34 50.
good and choice

as 115 lbs

2.4

34 , good 160·240 lbs 46·59 , 60·
100 lbs 12 2.11

Salvation Army helping distressed
Salvataon Army centers
throughout Ohio and Kentucky have taken thear place
with other orgamzahons m
providing assistance to
famahes vactuntzed by the
worst

blizzard

1n

Ollio

hastory. Salvation Army
Corps-commumty Centers
are provading food, shelter,
and transportation
to
stranded individuals and
groups.
In spate of losmg electncal

power for one day, the Fmdlay , Ohao, Salvation Army
Center contmued its efforts to
relieve commumty distress m
partnership with the National
Guard. Salvataon Army
shelters In both CmctMall
and Columbus were filled
wath cold and stranded
people.
Salvation Army officers in
Uma had to leave \hear home
by snow mobile In order to
reach the Army's facahty

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

Shots solw
B-12 problem
By l..awrence Lamb, M.D.

DEAR DR. LMlB- I am71
years old My doctor tells me
I ht:Jve permc1ous anem ia and
that my stomach does not
produce enough folic acid to
digest my fond . So I have to
have a B-12 m]ectaon every
other week . I would like to
know if It is necessary to have
" B-12mJecllon
Why wouldn 't at do JUS! aS
much good to take B-12 or
!ohc acad tablets orally ' My
dodur tells me f have to have
the shots the rest of my hfe
Also, what IS B-12, IS 1! a
valmnm' My blood count IS
okay now. It's up to where 11
as supposed to be
!)EAR READER - You
shouldn't cntlctze success
and at sounds hke your doctor
has solved your problem.
Yes, B-12 as a vatamm It IS
absorbed from your small intestme mto your blood stream
wtth the help or' a substance
th e normal stomach
manufactures called ·' intrmslc factor. " If you don't have
the mtrmsac !actor the B-12
cannot be absorbed mto your
blond stream and you do no t
get the benefat of at.
Your doctor ls telhng you
that you do not have any m-

trmSIC factor from your
stomach . Thai means that tf
you take B-12 tablets they stall
can'I be absorbd The only
way to get the B-12 mto your
body IS hy inJecting it
Fohc acad w1ll help correct
an anemaa but B-12 defacaencies can cause permanent

damage to the spmal C•&gt;rd
that foliC acad doesn't prevent. That IS why folic acid is
not an adequate substitute for
B-12. To gave' you more informatiOn on your problem I
am sendmg you The Health
Letter number 4-&lt;i, Vttamin
B-12, Folic Actd, Pernicious
Anemia. Others who want
this ISSUe can send 50 cents
with a long, stamped, selfaddressed envelope for it to
me in care of this newspat}dr,

•

'

P 0 Box !&gt;51, Radao Caty Stataon , New York, NY 10019.
DEAR DR. LAMB- I am 71
years old, 5-feet-9 and weagh
160 pounds My problem as leg
cramps. My, legs stay cold
and nwnb from the knees
down. My two doctors don't
seem concerned, but tt's a
problem I take Bendryl and
quamne, but they don't.reheve
at. They do he!~ some
I have '' heavy t:alcifu.:atmn

m the lower half of the abo
domma l aorta and relat1ve

dilatation of this segment for
a dastance of siX mches above
the

'~ btfncalwn"

accordmg

to the doctor's report and
"borderline aneurysm.''

Do you have any suggesllmJ , med~eatwn or doctor

that could relieve th1s cond atwn 7

DEAR READER - The
quotatiOn from the doctor's
report mdacates that your leg
cramps and cold feet are
probably caus~d by poor carculataon - the obstructwn to
the blood flow to your legs.

where an evacuation center
was
establiShed.
The
Salvation Army housed 50
fanuhes from a trailer camp
who were removed by the

National Guard. Food
deli venes were made In
cooperation wath REACTCB9
The Salvation Army Adult
Reba bahtatlon Center in
Cincmnah received overflow
guests from the Army's
Emergency Home located
downtown , as one hundred
people were kept warm by
&amp;ilvatwn Army blankets at
the Greater Cincinn ati
Airport.
Salvation Army personnel
In Athens worked with the
Sheriff's Office and REACTCB9 to supply food to people
isolated in four nearby towns.
The Salvation Army in
Athens Is being used as a
shelter for those needing such
fa cilities. Medical
prescriptions are being
delivered to isolated homes.
Although The Salvataon
Army !acihty an Bucyrus,
Ohio, was not equipped to
house and feed large numbers of needy persons, a local
Fire Department stataon
served as the sate where the
Army made food available.
In Lexmgton, Ky., an area
especaal!y hard-hat, The
Salvataon Army and REACTCB9 delivered food orders to
over two hundred isolated
mdivaduals . In Frankfort,
Kentucky, fifteen stranded
motori&gt;;ts were housed at the
local Salvation Army and
food orders were dehvered to
senior citizens.
In Paqua, -The SalvatiOn
Army used ats own large bus
to transport those boggeddown m snow and 1ce

Hogs barrows 1 00 lower,
sows 75-1 lo wer, feeder p1gs

lor !anuhes havang to use a
comm unity shelter over~
mght. The Salvation Army an
Lancaster, Ohio, made food
and medacal deliveries to
fanuhes who could not fend
for themselves.
In Chillicothe, the Army is
workrng wath' the Haghway
Patrol
in
rendering
assiStance to stranded
motorists Shelter and food
orders are also being
provaded.
Because Portsmouth is
located on the Ohao Raver, t he
area is suscephble to severe

flooding The Salva.taon Army
ts prov1dmg shelter to SIX
families drtven from t heir
homes by rtsmg water. Once

the ice 'ilarts meltmg, the
sttuataon could become
crt tical.
In communities without a
Salvataon Army bu1ldmg,
Salvataon
Army
loca l
volunteers dad everything in
!hear power to extend the
hand of Army servace. In New
Richmond, the local servace
unit chairman, Joseph Kelly,
established a Salvataon Anny
emergency shelter m t~e
local Presbyteraan Church
and 1s coordtnattng area
relief activities.
An evacuation center to

receive stranded people has
been set-up by the Sheraff and
The Salvauon Army Servace
Umt m New Balhmore, Oh1o

Field Representative Bill
Wtlhams has been actively
mvolved in delivering food to

those m need an the Nacholasvtlle, Ky. area.
Should famaties need
emergency assistance of any
ktnd, they should call their
nearest Sa lvation Army
Corps- Commumty Center or
Service Umt.

Blankets were also prcvld:!d

Tius as a mechamcal defect.

You'll get some relief from
your medacanes,"but the basac
problem wall still be there .
I note you live m Alabama.

They'll Do It Every Time

M:JT ONN A BORROWER.
BUT f./NHANO'I ANCJ
IIELPJ.ESS
You have an outstandmg cardaovascular un1t at the ~o=;,..-----.9!!!
Umversaty of Alabama, and
GOOD BUPP~

you shou ld ask your doctors
tb refer you there for a complete evaluatwn. I! you have
a localized obstruction and
the arteraes below the
obstruction are open you mccy
be able to have a bypass
operation. A graft would be
put in to route the blood
aroWld tiM! obstruction to the
open artenes further down tn
yourthagh.
The . catch IS that those
lower arteries must be open
enough to carry the blood
flow from Ute detour. If !hey
are badly obstructed then
puttmg m a graft nught not be
useful at all. In any case, a
complete evaluation of the
posSibility of surgery IS n
order before decading what
you can do about your leg
cramps .

•

CAA I BORROW
't'OUR · ·~CTRC
~NT SCI?APER·
AND l'.lLl- '101.1
COMe 0/ER ANP /41b----'"-

LAST TIME ANG.E

BORROWED OUR
SAW, BUT FOOS
CUT DOWN THE
TRI'E ..

46.25, US 1 3 205 245 1bs 45.20·
46 Sows US t 3 365 525 lbs
38 35 39 . Feeder p1gs US 1-3
JQ. 4() lbs 20·24 50. lot US t·3 75
lbs 33
Sheep Slaughter lambs 4·6
htgher. Choice and prt me
slaughter lambs 70 -90 lbs

wooled 59 62.

Market Report
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
Market Report
Praces taken from the
auctwn of Saturday, Jan 28,
1978.
Trends Cattle run light,
cows, feeder cattle and veal
calves steady
Total head . 227
Cattle
Feeder Steers: (goodchoace 1 250 to 300 lbs. 36 5042; 300 to 400 lbs. 36.50-42.50;
400 to 500 lbs. 35 50-41 25; 500
to 600 tbs. 35-40; 600 to 700 lbs.
33-39 25; 700 and over 32-40.
Feeder Healers: (goodchoice) 250 to 300 lbs. 2732 50; 300 to 400 lbs. 28-35; 400
to 500 tbs. 28-35; 500 to 600 lbs.
Z1 50-32.25; 600 to 700 lbs. 2631; 700 and over 25-29 50
Feeder Bulls: (goodchotce) 250 to 300 lbs. 35-40;
300 to 400 lbs. 34.50-40.50, 400
to 500 'tbs 34-38.75; 500 to 600
lbs. 31.50-38 35, 600 to 700 lbs.
30-36.25; 700 and over 27-33.
Slaughter Bulls (over 1,000
lbs.) 29 50-36.60.
Slaughter Cows· Utilities
27-33.70, CaMer-cutters 2428.60.
Veals: Choice and prime
70-75;
Standards
and
medaums 52 S!HIO
Baby Calves (by the head)
5-39.
Hogs
Hogs : (No. I, BarrowsGilts, 200-230 lbs ) 44.50-46.50.
Butcher Sows 37-40.10.
Butcher Boars 25-28.50.
Pigs (by the head) 12.50-30

Meigs
Property
Transfers ,

Debra Lynn Conley to
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohto
Elec. Co., Ease., Olive.
Guy R. Sargent to
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohao
Elec. Co., Ease., Salisbury
E.
Johnson,
Harley
Kathryn S. Johnson to
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohao
Go·oo'\1 Elec. Co., Ease., Salisbury.
George E. Holman, Ruth D.
llolman to George Rodney
Holman, Peggy Sue Holman,
Parcels, Sutton.
Martha E. Rose to Anna
Jean
Rose · Phipers,

IDPO IT?

'

·-

.... ,,.... .,., ,.. ..,. ...... ....., ...
~

JOINING FORCES-While the Mason and New Haven VolWJteer Fire Departments
were hauling water to Pleasant Valley Hospital last week, the Middleport Fire Department
was on stand by in ease an emergency situation would arise in the Bend Area. On Thursday
such a Situation arose and all three departments battled two fires in the Letart area. Pictured, left to right going over reports on the fires, are Pete Kloes and Lt. Kevil1 Dailey, both
of the Middleport Fire Department and Chief Ross Roush of the Mason Fire Department.

steady to 4 higher Barrows
and gilts lot US 1 2 227 lbs

Frank Weaver, Nancy Lee
II~=~~~~=~~ Weaver,
Michael L. Conley

SHOW ME HOW

Police car

Job Of Mason Firemen Does
Not Stop At Fighting Blazes
More and more, flre
departments in Mason CoWJty
are flndmg that they are go1ng
beyond fire protection to other
tasks which are assurmg tile
security and well-being of
residents here.
This has become more
evident smce the begmning of
the year as the COWI\y has
faced one crisis after another,
including heavy snowfalls,
blizzards, rains, flash floods
and chemical spills resulting
in contaminated water.
• "Since the snowstorm hit at
the begmning of the month, we
have been helping people by
getting fuel and medicine to

approximately 35 trips since
the year began to bring fuel to
homes that have run out of It
and medlcmes to people who
are stranded in their homes.
Besides Utis service, tl)e
department during the most
critical Urnes of this winter
storm period, operates aroWld
the clock using two road
graders to keep road surfaces
clear.
"Our objective in domg this
is to provide maximum rescue
and fire protection to the
people In Ute area," Roush
says. He speculates that his
department hos devoted 120
volunteered manhours in
them," says Ross Roush, chief performining this task.
of the Mason VolWlteer Fire
Interdependence among the
Department.
various rescue, fire and pollee
The 34-rnan Wlit has made department in Mason County

.-:::-:.·:-:~~:::~~&lt;$-:=ii-.?::o •• •:m~·

I Social
i Calendar
li:

~

WEDN ESDAY
POMEROY Chamber of
Commerce Wednesday at
noon at Meags Inn. Boyd Ruth
speaker
LADIES
AUXILIARY,
Middleport Fire Department,
Wednesday, 7:30p.m at the
fire slalton. Hostesses will be
Betty Ohhnger, Helen Byer,
Pauline Greathouse, and Bermce Durst.

TIIURSDAY
EV ANGEUNE CHAPTER
172, Order of the Eastern
Star, 7:30 Thursday mght
at.the Maddleport Masomc
Temple.

Rev. and Mrs. Cart Hacks
spent a recent evening w1th
Mr and Mrs. Robert Lee and
!am1ly.
Mr. and Mrs· George
Circle, Mr. and Mrs. James
. Carcle of New Haven, W.Va.
spent Sunday with Mrs Mary
Ctrcle 1n honor of her barthday
Mr. an&lt;l Mrs Glen Tuttle
and son, Cathy Johnson and
family of Eagle Ridge, Rocky
Patzer of Bashan, Mrs Unda
Patterson and sons of Spiller,
Mrs. Carry Carcle, sons, Jack
Follrod, aaughter Kim, local,
were at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Douglas Carcle and
Florence on Sunday.
Mr and Mrs. Hayman

has been a central theme
resu'tlng in tile last couple of
weo&lt;s.
} ,. , example, both the
Ma:,c n and New Haven fire
departments were trucking
water to Pleasant Valley
Hospital, 24 hours a day since
Monday, which allowed that
medical facility to operate 111 a
near nonnal capacity, while
the city water system had
been turned off as a result of a
chemical spill last Monday.
Not only has this benefited
Ute hospital and Ute ptltlents in
It, but according to ROII8h, it
freed the Point Pleasant
VoiWJteer Fire Department to
concentrate Its fullest efforts
to protect the Pomt Pleasant
community from possible
fires and to do other tasks of
providing water for public
conswnptlon.
Cooperation between
departments became even
more evident Thursday
morning when the Mason,
New Haven and Middleport,
0 fire departments joined
together and battled two
blazes In the Letart area.
Ross, who hos headed Ute
Mason unit now for four years,
Is also the field coordinator for
the Mason CoWlty Emergency
Services.
Rlcbard Roush, director of
this agency, has heaped
praises onto Roush for the fine
effort he· has put forth In
Mason CoWJty coordinating
the emergency services
during the recent water crisis
111 Point Pleasant.

THE DAILY SENTINEl.
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEK~TOF

Barnitz o[ Pomeroy were at

MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTB R L. TANNEHILL
' ElM" Ed
ROBERT HOEFUCH
Cltr,Edltor

tile home of Eunie Brinker on
Saturday.

IN HOSPITAL
Nellie Eblin, Pomeroy, a
resident of Pinecrest Care
COFCTOMEET
Center, Gall1pohs, as a patient
The Pomeroy Chamber of
at Holzer Medioal Center
Commerce wall meet WedHer room number as 409. Mrs. ' nesday at noon at the Meags
Eblin suffered a stroke but as Inn. Boyd Ruth 1wiU be the
now improving
guest speaker. He will speak
on the Shade River
reclamation project.
CLINIC PLANNED
There wall be a cancer
ctamc at the lyhddleport
SLAVE DAY
Methodi'il Churc!i Feb 8 and
Catholic Youth Group Slave
Rosemary Rose Keller, IS, afternoon sessaons only. · Day Saturday, Feb. 11, 11
a m.-5 p.m. $1 an hour.
Roger Lewis Rose, Don Anyone wishing an appoint\Iague! Rose, 7 acres, ment are to call daily, 992If you want to rent a slave
7431, evenings, 992-5832.
::hester.
call 423-3192.
I

Pubhshed dally exL-ept Saturday
by The Ohio VaUey Publishihg

Company-Mult1medw, Inc.,
111
Court St , Pomeroy, Ohio 157~.
Busmess Off1ce Phone 992- 2158.
Ed• tonal Phone 99'1-2157
Second class postage pa1d at

1

Pomeroy, Ohio.
National lldvertislnM; represen·
tative Ward • Grllfith Company,
Inc , BotUnelll aOO Gallagher Dlv.,
:~fl7 Third Ave, New York, N.Y.

PORTRAIT PRESENTED - During ceremonies
earlier tills month in tile Educational Building,
Charleston, a portraat of the late Miss Mabel Frances
Gibbons, tile first woman principal of a junior high school

m West Vargtnia, was placed m Ute W.Va. Science and
Cultural Center. Standmg aroWJd the portrait left to raght
are Mary VanHorn, Point Pleasant, guest , Harry
Brawley, ltodney pyles and Daniel Taylor, state
superintendent of schools.

Portrait of former Mason educator
•
pl~ced m
A portraat of a former
Mason CoWlty educator and
the first woman prmcapal of a
junior higlt school In West
Varginaa, the late Mabel
Frances Gibbons, has been
placed 10 the West Virginia
THIS WEEK'S SPECIA~

USED CARS

Special!

76 CADIUAC
DEVILLE CPE.

W. Va. Cultural Center
Science and Cultural Center,
Charleston.
She served as principal of
the Thomas Jefferson Junior
High School, Charleston
MISs Gibbons was a leader an
the jWlior high school field
and was cited for her excellent work as an educator
throughout the Umted States
Miss Gabbons was born 10
Charleston, Jan. 16, 1872, a
daughter of the late J A. and
Mary Hibbard Gibbons. At an
early age she moved to Poant
Pleasant, with her parents,
where her father edated a
newspaper and later served
as a judge
She attended school In
Point Pleasant and was a
member of the first

Dark brown wlth tan roof,

full

power, air, leather,
interior, AM-F M-stereo
1ape, new t~res , 48,000

mil es.

'6300
Karr &amp;VanZandt
You'll

~ike

Our Quality

Way of Doing Business
GMAC FINANCING
992-5342

Pomeroy

Open Evenings'til6;00

Til 5 p.m. Sal.

NOW OPEN

GINO'S
OF MASON
PHONE 773-5536

"The new
tax fonns.

A gOOd reason to
let us help with
your~es."

graduating class at Point
Pleasant Htgh School She
graduated from Columbaa
University and received a
master's degree from New
York University.
During the time she was
study10g at the higher
.education institutions , she

was teach10g 10 Charleston
schools. Mtss Gabbons was
employed by the Kanawha
CoWIIY School System for
about 40 years. She served as
prtncipal of the Thomas
Jefferson Jumor High School
for 23 years before retiring 10
1942.
Miss Gibbons was an
honorary member of the
W Va. State Education
Association
and
the
American Association of
University Women. She was
at one time recognized for her
activities in the field of
education an a book by
Thomas Briggs of Colwnbia
University.
Along with her sa'iler, Mass
Grace Gibbons, also a retired
teacher, she resided at 914
Main St., Point Pleasant,
followmg retirement. She
died on March 23, 1951, after
havang been 10 falling health
for a nwnber of years. She
was buried in Lone Oak
Cemetery.
The portrait of Mass Gabbans was presented to
Rodney Pyles, director of
Archives and Hastory at the
W.Va. Sctence and Cultural
Center, by Harry M.
Brawley, Charleston .
Brawley is a retired educator
and former
executive
director of the W. Va
Educational
Broadcast10g
Authoraty. The portrait came
into Brawley's possession
following the 1977 closing of
the Thomas Jefferson Junior
High School. Miss Gibbons
orgaruzed the junior high in

1915
The pacture will now
become a permanent part of
the collectaons of the State of
West Vargima
Mrs. Mary VanHorn, Point
Pleasant, was wv1ted to

attend the ceremonies held m
Charleston on Jan . 18. Mrs.
VanHorn who was a fnend
and neighbor of Mtss Gibbons
and furnished the research
mformation. Among other
guests at the ceremony was
State
Dame!
Taylor,
Supermtendent of Schools.

he said . "Somebody should
make tilem sit down and
neeollate. There's just too
much hanky, panking gomg
on over tilere. This whole
thtng IS strange ."
Gov . James A. Rhodes has
asked President Carter to
Intervene In the stalled talks,
but at a news conference
Monday Carter said he has no
immediate Intentions of
ordering the miners back to
work.

Coolville;

Corina Farmer,

wheels ."

Proxmire, who give~ his
award
to
government
projects he
conSiders
ridiculous wastes of money,
said the Law Enforcement
Assistance Admlntstration
project cost $2 million before

By Marion C. Crawford
Meigs Collllty Humane Society
Delayed bY the otonn
POMEROY - I'vebeen wanting to tell you about a Christmas card I received from a local fanuly . Today I'll find tiM!
space to tell you by starting with it.
First of all, the card had a picture of a DachshWld on tiM!
front. Any picture of an animal gets my attention fast. On tiM!
backside was a note that went like thiS . "HI, Here's my sad
doggie story.Our Dachshund Bee Bee lived to be' !6 It took me
a year to find her duplicate, Betsy After two vacations awny
from her, she has moved in with our neaghbors and visits us
about 20 minutes every three or four days They are our dogsitters and have "alienated her affection." H we knew any
good laWYers we'd bring suit agalllSt tt.!m (our neighbors ).
Any suggestions on how we can wm her back' I love your
newspaper column." Signed, Betty F.
In order to see the humor in this note I must tell you that
tile card was from the Berme Fultz family (he's a Maddleport
attorney) and the note'was written by his wife, Betty.
Answer . An Ann Landers I'm not, Betty, and anyway it's
too late for any suggestimis to your problem. We, several years
ago, spent a fortune on a travel lraaler and portable keMel so
lila! we could take our pets with us on all vacattons, rather
than to risk losing them. My sympathy lo the Fultz family, but
it sounds as Utough Betsy has the best of two worlds!
Next story: Got a call from a Ruth Francis of Pomeroy
last Tuesday, with a sad story for real. Her cute white and
black cat, Whunpey, had its right front paw amputated that
day after having spent 6 to 8 hours held in a leg hold trap She
called Andy Lyle, tile game warden, because he and his
followers have been stating for a long time that leg hold traps
"don't hurt" ... (thts 1s the same gentle trap - type - that
caused the death of a cat last week). He expressed sorrow over
tile incident, stating that he could understand how people
become emotional when they have this happen to a pet, but 1M!
stated lliat the trap was a necessity.
Yes, sir, they are ..a necessity, as tong as men profit
ftnancially and women wear furs, the trap 1s a necessity So we
wUI continue to have our domestic animals maimed and we
will contmue to hear about tt. So be it.
Next· Our story started on Friday of last week when our
road agent got a call from Karen pyles of Racine asking for
any suggestions she might have for getting a cat out of a
telephone pole. The day before a 'tom cal had chased a httle
girl cat up tile pole and she'd been tt.!re over 24 hours. Debbae,
humane agent, called several places ask10g for assistance lor
tile young woman; the shertff's office, Ohio Power (there were
power lines just below where tile cat perched), Ute Telephone
Company and the Fire Departments at Racine, and Pomeroy
The latter department recepllonist said "we don't save
animals, we just save people." I'll bet the firemen wall be
interested in that bat of news. They have helped many times
throughout the world in getting pets out of very odd locations,
and pet owners love them because of it. Sorry, lady, you didn 't
change anyone's mind about our firemen . We do have thoughts
about you though, ahum.
Anyway, the boy who owned tile cat finally got desperate
and started up the pole himseH, whereby a kind gentleman
stopped him, went and got a climber's hell and climbed the
pole hinnself and brought the cat back to a much relieved and
happy youth.
You know, Meigs CoWlty not havmg a decent animal
shelter and having the only Hwnane Society wtthin many
rrules, means that we get and hear about all the problems of
West Varg1n1a (the Mason area), GaUia, Vinton and other close
by coWJties. Thank goodness we have people in each of these
locations who "sort of help out."
There is a woman in Ewmg\on, Gallia CoWIIY, for
instance, Mrs. George (Diane) Johnson, who has three

Two law actions
filed in court

beck, Robert Wh1te, James
Wilson, Thomas Wilson.
(Births Jan. 30)
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Atkms,
a son, Middleport; Mr. and
Mrs. Ronnie HaD, a daughter,
Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Prater, a son, Hamden; Mr.
and Mrs. David Ridenour, a
daughter, Gallipolis.

A suit for partation of real
estate and another for money
have been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
PaulSunon, Pomeroy, filed
suit lor partition of real
estate agamst Pearl Taggart,
Ft. Pterce, Fla., et a!.
The Pomeroy National
Bank faled su1t in the amount
of $2,553.31 against Randy B.
Ebersbach, Minersville.

Cheshtre; John Carpenter,
Middleport; Robert Hayden,
Pomeroy; Pauline Stewart,
Mason; Clarence Murray,
Middleport; Sharon Warner,
Pomeroy; Mona Neal,
Middleport; Juntor Hill, Long
MEETING SET
Bottom; Jack Gmtiler II,
The Chester Township
PLEASANTVALLEY
Chesler; Oscar lmbo4en,
Minersville; Rach Long,
Discharged
Mrs. Trustees wall meet WedPomeroy; Barbara Davis, - Garland Mayes, Gallipolis nesday, Feb. I, at 7 p.m. at
New Haven; Floyd Rhodes, Ferry; Clarence King, the town hall to make amual
Middleport.
Redhouse; Anna Kay, New appropraatton of funds.
Discharged - Virginia Haven; Machael Gordon,
Smith, Eunice Halsey, Kate Letart; James Roach, Point
Jarrell, Lydia HyseD, Robert Pleasant; Mrs. Kenneth
MEET THURSDAY
Sigman, Joseph Wilson , Keeler, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Letart Township Trastees
Virginia GrL~s\ead .
Elsie Lewis, Point Pleasant; will meet Thursday , Feb. 2,
Myrtle White, Mason; Guy at 7 p.m at the home of
Cole,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Darrell Morris, clerk.
Holzer Medical Center
Robert
Claflin, New Haven;
CLASSES OFF
(Disebarges Jan. 30)
Mrs.
Robert
Peoples,
Leon;
Harry Aeschbacher, Helen Howard Stewart, GaUlpolis; •., Baton and gymnastl~s
Anderson, James Bauglunan, Mrs .
James
Hopson, cla*sofGioraa WaU~ce w11l
Michael Bentz, Cynthia
Southside; Mrs. Andrew not he held this evemng
Colby, Albert Cooper Jr., Click, Cottagevalle; Mrs.
Mrs. Wallace is changing
Floyd Craft, David Dailey, Orville Williamson
her classes In Pomeroy from
Julian Fannm, Diane Fradd, Southside
' Tuesday to
Saturday
Gladys Green, Beulah
Birth _:A daughter to Mr. Students will be notified bfr
Knapp, Harry Neff, Ansel
and Mrs Timothy Saunders mail of their class time.
Phillips, Mrs. Gary Srn1th · Apple Grove.
' any student Is not notified by
and dauRitter, Eric SteinmaD they are to call 992-7328.

.·..

At H&amp;R Block, we understand these new
forms, we know the laws. We'll do everything we can to save you money. And that's
Reason No. 1why you should let H&amp;R Block
do your tax,....e.s."!'!!"""!!!!~~~~

'10000

TRADE-IN

On All Uving Room Suites

H&amp;R BLOCit

MASON FURNITURE

Subscttl)tJou rates Delivered by

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

618 E. M.AIN ST~ POMEROY, OHIO

Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat.-

Mek By Motor Route where carrier
service not available, One month
$3 2$ By mall ln Ohio and W Va'
One Year, $22110, Six months'
$11.50; Three months '7 00'
Elsewhere f26 00 year; Sb monthi:
SlUO: Three mQnthl, $7.50. I
Subscnption pnce Includes Su.ndly
Times-Sentinel.

10017

ce~rner

•

w 111re avallub~ 75 cenl.'l per

·8:30 til 5:00 Thursday Til 12 Noon

-FR-IDAY UNTIL 8 PM

• Open9 : 001o6:00 Weekdays.
9:00 to 5:00 Saturday

Phone 9'12·3795
No Appointment Nocessary

773-5592

••

honored

il was ended.
"Wbat we have here l~ an
idea which originally might
have had some merit. But the
car was so loaded down with
one gold11lated item aft~r
another that ulllmately it
became a Golden Fleece,'' he
said.
The car would have
proVIded a policeman with
computer tenntnals with eye·
level readouts and "votcedigatal transcetvers."
11
The cur ended up as un

earthbound spaceship on
wheels," Proxmlre said.
" Thas experimental car
would make James Bond
Jtreen wlth envy It should
leave tile taxpayers purple
With

rage."

LEAA, in retort, called
Pronnire ''feckless" for hi.!
criticism and said his award
was "an exercise in futility"
because the program ended
10 months earher.

HOOVES. • .and . • •PAWS

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Lucy Spencer,
Syracuse; Catherine Roach,
Middleport ; Jason Fortney,

WASHINGTON (UPI )
Sen. William Pro.xnure, 0Was., gave his Golden Fleece
of the Month award today to a
police car so loaded witil
gadgets it "ended up as an
earthbound spaceshap on

•

IS

Herman Grate
Mason. W. Va -

chtldren, two pets and a husband to take care of, but she also
managed to find the time to luke in every stray and unwanted
dog that comes along and gets on the phone until she finds good
homes for them You know, af more people would do as Diane
does, there wouldn 't be the need for so nmny of "" to get so
anvolved in one place, there wouldn 't be Ute ne;!d to euthanlze
So many unwanted pets, etc
...
Daane's oldest daughter Torma helps her out, and we of the
Hwnane Society want tu U1unk lht.:m n ght here and now for
havmg such great and bag hearts .
Speaking of taking In homeless anarnats · relnember the
dog I referred to as "Blackae" last week I still h~ve hitn. Not
Uta! people haven 't called and wanted to help us aaxl the poor
dog out, but well , folks, we are lookmg for a very special home
for tillS particular dog .
As I told you before, he has boen shuffled from one home to
another and is begmning to show signs of at ; his eyes would klll
you If you saw them. People who called wanlc'tl him ; but for
instance, one great woman lived In a trailer and too close to a
main road so we were both afraad to bring him there ~Anoll!llr
mce woman called from Mason who has three children nnd
who lives in a congested area not far from a mam road too . He
loves to rWI outsade a couple of tames a day, so I was nfrald
Another nice young man ca lled, but he has several dogs
already and I know, you think I'm being too fuMy , but you see
I know Utls dog and he needs someone who will give him a lot of
tender loving care and aiM have Ute spuce to allow him to run
occasionally.
How about u couple uf women alone who would llkt1' 11 good
watchdog and companion who is a real gentleman He only
barks when someone strange t'Omes to the door, that's great
He mostly lies quietly on th e floor and sleeps, except when I'm
cooking and 1 do believe he's a chow hound, 'cause he keeps
coming over to me and tapping me on Ute back of the leg with
his paw and whines at me, and they soy animnlo; cnn't
commumcate!

I get the message loud nrxl clenr
Call me though, af you are the type l described above and I
gnarantee you a real mce dog, biRck watha little white on has
chest, bobbed tall, long ears; looks like spaniel and retriever,
about 16" high and weaghs about 30 pounds ( !1112-7680 if no
answer, call 992-5427 or 742-3162).
Does anyone have a Coondog puppy that needs a good
home' We got a cull !rom a gentleman who wants one for a
crippled boy whose birUaday Is coming up in Februury If so,
please call us. ~
We have some beuutiful Clll• und kattens avuilable thas
week lor adoption, folks. One, a gray and white one as our
particular favorite at tile moment as at just got out of the
vetermnary hospital after havmg part of a foot removed The
Hwnnne Socaely paid the ball and tilas beauty IS ready to go to a
good home now We also have beautiful _calkos and moot
recently a gray and white striped cat wath bag green eyes that
is a real beauty. If mtelested please call our road agent,
Debbie Estep at 742-3162
Other anamals available FREE to a gond home ure as
follows .
Labrador, black wath white chest, medium, mule, young.
949-2607.
German Sepherd, Collie, fema le, 2of them, 3 mos. old. 7422949.
Beagle type , sma ll , male, 8 months old, black and tan. 7422949.
Sbepherd.Colhe, female , pup, 6 mos. old, nice dog, good
with children. 742-3162
Enghsh Setter-Shepherd, male, 2 yrs. 3118-8334.
German SIM!pherd type puppies, all colors, few weeks old.
742-2334.
Setter.shepherd.COIIie type, 1 yr. old and 5 puppae's, 7
weeks old. 245-5804.
Coonhoung, male young; mce dog. 992-3446
Mixed breed, male, wath long ears, med. size short hair,
nice disposition, quiet, while with red markings, needs home
badly. 742-3162.
Beagle, puppy, 8 weeks old, mule 992-3253.
Sbepherd-Beegle, puppies, 4 mos. old, male and female.
256-6537.
Bassett-Terrier puppies 6 weeks old , adorable 742-2088.
German Sbepherd.Oollie puppy, female, 3 mos . old 7422949.
Terraer type, male, 6 mos. old, med1um, cute with nace
disposalton. 742-2949.

Caution
You Could Be In
For A Big Loss!
Is your present policy adequate?
If inlqesn't include substantial
theft coverage , .. you could be
inviting more trouble than you
realize! See us for an update.
Don't wait, ..

Call Today

Downing Childs
Insurance Agency, Inc.

�4 _The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Tuesday , Jan . 3t. 1978

Waggoner to speak .
at area church

Sermons From Science to
preview at Gallipolis Christian

Fred Waggoner of the
Kentucky Christian College
staff will be holding a revival
at the Gallipolis Christian
Church starting this Sunday,
Feb. 5, through the 10, at
10 :3S a. m. Sunday morning
and 7 p. m. each evening.
He is a graduate of Kentucky Christian College and
served cts a minister to the
congregation at Corbin, Ky.
for 10 years, Central Portsmouth Christian Church
three years and had many
other diversified ministr-ies
during that time. He was
instrumental in establishing
of three new congregations.
He also served as President
of KYOWVA Evangelistic
Association during 1976. He
has held revivals and
seminars throughout the
United States. He is presently
the Director of Christian

' astonlshmg
.
Man's
senses
are the subject ol "Windows
of the Soul" one of the series
ol
SERMONS
FROM
SCIENCE films produced br
Moody Institute ol Science.
This film will be presented by
the Gallipolis Christian
Church
Wednesday ,
February I at 7 p.m. This is a
half· hour presentation,
followed by a half hour
question and answer period
for those who migb.t have
questions about the film. The
public is invited.
The topsy-turvy world as
seen by our eyes is demonstrated by Dr. Irwin Moon,

nroducer, as he wears a known technique perfected at
special pair of inverting Moody Institute of Science
spectacles . These glasses which actually makes odors
make everything appear visible. In this way it is
upside down and in reverse. possible to " see" the smell of
Alter some days the brain a rose.
" As all previous producadjusts to the situation and
tions
in this series, 'Windows
everything again appears
of
the
Soul' uses science as a
right side up. To show his
means
of illustrating and
mastery of his handicap Dr.
driving
home a basic
Moon was able to drive a
motorcycle and fly a plane. spiritual truth," said Dr.
Featured demonstrations Irwin Moon, producer. "This
of ultrasoni cs, the miw film is directed especia lly to
science of silent sound ls this space age generation ·and
manifested as it makes is designed to strike at the
material objects float in mid- very routs of man-made
religions.' '
air.
Denny Coburn is minister
The film also shows a Utt.le
and Jack Perry is associate·
minister . For more in$:::::::::::::::.-::=!~:::::;:.-:c;:::::::~ru~:~*::~::::::::::::::.::::!$$:::::::::::::::;:::~-::;.~:;:;:o:;:::::::::-:~~~ formation call 446-1863, 44673t8 or 446-3179.

~~

· Generation Rap

i~

By Helen and Sue Bottel

~
·-··

DR. IRWIN MOON

!!

POLLY·s POINTERS

Services at
Kentucky
Christian College, Grayson,
Ky.
His style of delivering his
sermons is one ol simplicity
and yet unique in purpose and
understanding.
The public is warmly
welcomed to all services.
There will be a nursery
provided. Denny Coburn,
minister, Jack Perry ,
Associate Minister. For more
'information call 446-!863, 4467318, 446-3179.

-

Polly Cramer

Burned plastic
on quilt

'

J

FRED WAGGONER

---··-

~~ Women work harder than men
B

. NOFUTUREINTHISMATCH
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I'm 18, my boyfriend 20. We've making plans to live
together, but I'm afraid he'll quit his job.
He's been drinking a lot lately and sometimes doesn't come
home all night. Yesterday he was supposed to pick me up at 6
p.m. for dinner; it's now noon next day and he still hasn 't
shQwn.

When I complain he calls me a you-know-what. If I get mad
it wiU only draw us farther apart. What should I do? -C.N.
DEARC.:
.
Get mad! -HELEN AND SUE
RAP:

I'm 14. Every lime I go to kiss a boy (I've done it twice ), I get
very nervous. I watch TV and they do it differently. Should I
take lessons from the TV set?- NERVOUS
DEARN:
Stay with the kind of kisses Archie gives Edith. They're
safer at age !4.- HELEN
NERVOUS:
And doo't worry about technique. A beginner's kiss means
just as milch to a 14-year-old guy- who is probably as nervous
as you are. -SUE
RAP:

S- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Jan. 31, 1978

It's official - women do

Could it be that women are
just more conscientious I It
job and in the home, ac- · seems likely . The study concording to a new study con- dudes thO:tt the.average smgle
duded by the University of woman spends 218 minutes a
Michigan.
week cleaning her home
Working wumen spend an while her male counterpart
avemge uf 35 minutes a day spends only 5l. minutes reC:~r­
relaxing on coffee breaks, as rangi ng his dust .
compared to 52 minutes for
men. At home, the ga p is
wider : working wives toil 25
DAUGHTER BORN
hours a week on routine
Mr. and Mrs. Danny Smith,
chores like cooking and So·uth Point. are ann~unei ng
cleaning; their husbands put the birth of a daughter,
in only 10 hours, reports an Amanda Marie. The baby
article in Family Circle.
weighed eig ht pounds. five
ounces. Mr. and Mrs. Theo
Kasper of Roseville, Ill. are
the maternal grandparents.
and Mr . and Mrs. Albert
Smith of Pomeroy, the paterCLUB CANCELLS
Regul&lt;:~r rm'Cting
.
uf the nal grandparents . Mr. an~
Chester Garden Club to be Mrs . Robert Arnold of
held Wednesday night has Minersvi lle are the foster
grandparents.
been cance l~ed.

work harder than men on the

ONE OF·THE MANY ITEMS

'

.

llt~

"SALE PRICED" ·
SAMSONITE

Consult With ·Us

BRIDGE
SETS

We're dedicated to your health!
Feel free to ask us anything . . .
we'll be happy to help you how ever we can. We put our years of
experience to serving you better.

TABLE &amp; 4 CHAIRS·

DUITON DRUG CO.
N. 2nd Ave .

harden.
Could your mother make a
new piece of the applique and.
POLLY'S PROBLEM
carefully blind slileh · il in
DEAR POLLY -- My place to co~er the marred
mother had a new handmade portion ? After this has· been
patterned quilt stored in a done the quilting stitches
black garbage bag in the c-ould Ill;.. put in to follow the
closet. While searching for lines of those there before.
something else she pushed TI1is may seem a bit far fetchthe, bag against a hot light c'&lt;l but often desJl&lt;!rate situa·
bulb which burned the black tions require desperCI.te
plastic onto the quilt. This left
measures. - POLLY.
a three-inch circ le of burnedDEAR POLLY - I suggest
'"' plastic slightly scorched that Mrs. J .T. use denture
around the edges . .She took cleanser tablets to remove
the quilt to the dry cleaners the hard water residue f1·om
and they used some sort of her antique china pitcher.
strong alcohol solution but it Dissolve one or two tablets in
did not remove the plastic. very hot wC~.ter C:tnd leave in
Does anyone have any ideas the pitcher overnight. Repeat
about removing this ?- DEB
if necessary. - OLGA.
DEAR DEB- If the cleaner
DEAR POLLY - and Mrs.
could not remove this spot I ' J .T. - I have had excellent
think any remedy is ques- results removing the hard
tionable. However you ·could water crust from glass vases
try the remedy for , plastic by letting a solution of water
glue spots: soak in hot white and toild bowl crystal• soak
vinegar for about 15 minutes. in them overnight. Leave
Test for effect on fabric and them longer if necessa ry . I
colors andtry to keep very think it should ~ork in a china
hot. I erse only the stain. pitcher, too. but you shoqld be
Some plastic glue sta ins can- careful to test the effect of the
not he removed after they crystals on the china. Be sure
that this solution is emptied
into the toilet bowl and not in·
to the sink or w&lt;:~sh basin . RUTH H.
DEAR POLLY- After buying new gannent with buttons on it I touch the button
threads with clear nail polish
and theystayon longer.
Leftover yarn is great to
use for tying gift packages.
Braid
severa l strands
together, knot so ends are left
and fluff them out to make litUe tassels. Comic sheets .are

NOW OPEN

a

GINO~S

OF MASON

PHONE 773-5536

ministry as evangelistOn the
islands of Hokkaido and
Kyushu and in pioneering the
Miya~ki work. He_served in
Toky o- dunng hiS mltlal
period of language study.
The service will be condueled by Rev . Rhoden and
will include presentation of
slides and display ol curios.
The public is invited to attend.

·p re -regt'st$'/ltt'on·
I U

:

a.ed·

chan~6 •

at Rio Grande
RIO GRANBE - The snow
and cold weather have forced
Rio Grande College and
Community College to
change the dates of preregistration for sp rin g
quarter ·classes and the
beginning of spring quarter.
Pre-registration will be
held in Community Hall on
the Rio campus this Friday,

Feb . 3, 9 a.m.-1 p.m., and 6-9
p:m. Class schedules are
available from the academic
dean's office in Allen Hall.
Classes for spring quarter
will begin Tuesday, March 14,
one week later than originally
scheduled. Final registration
will be held Monday, March
13.
College officiais also announced that cpmmencement
ex~rcises will also be · postponed one week to Sunday.
May 28.

great for wrapping gills for
kids. They are colorful and
then ente rtaining; the
children invariably settle
FORUM ·cANCELLED
down to read them. Pretty
The
Parent-Teacher
festive paper tablecloths are
great to usc for wrapping Forum of Meigs Junior High
those large hanl-lo·wrap School scheduled to he held
Tuesday night has been
packages.- KAREN
Polly will send you one of cancelled. Next meeting will
her signetl thank-you · he on Feb. 28 at the Junior
newspaper .coupon clippers if High School with Carl Hysell
she uses your favorite to talk on 'juvenile problems
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in as they relate to the school inher col umn. Write POLLY 'S cluding s uch things as delin·
PO!Nf'ERS in care of this quency , shoplifting and .
drugs.
newspaper.

So you thought " Star
Wa rs'' was just old ·
rashioned, guud, dean fun ,
huh I Fun. if you happen to be
a sadomasochist, suggest the
folks at Behavior Today.
Ever sirice the publication
of "From Hitler to CH!i~ari."
shortly . after the Sec-ond
Wurh.l War, moviegoers have
~t!n mad~ aware
th(tl
•.. entertainment" is a verv
seriou~ business. Studies .;r
U1e French and German
cinema of the '20s concluded
that entertairunenl serves to
express group w1conscious
fantasies that arc often
denied .and suprt!ssed at" the
mdividual level.
· That doesn 't sound particularly earth-shattering,
but the magazine has drawn
the conclusion out to the
galaxies ol "Star Wars:"
TI1ey say the film's intense

~; Community
8
\f Corner
~~~:~ne
·:-:

:·:·

.' •

.

Hour fine feathered friendure faring well, and they seem
to be it 's all because people are wliUng to wade through the
snow'to scatter feed and fill their feeders . And we're finding
" that watching the birda far surpasses any inconvenience or
expense.
From Virginia Duckworth of Middleport comes a recipe
for bird goodies. She uses any fat she has around - from the
deep fat fryer, bacoo drippings, suet melted down - mixed It
with corn meal and then adds wild bird seed or sunflower seed.
She then puts the mixture into muffin pans lets It freeze, and
then served to the birds as they need it.

There's no end to the people~elping-people stories we
hear .
Saturday night - and was it cold - the Dana Covert
family ran out of fuel oil for their furnace, the only source of
heat in the home . The Klein boys, Paul and Gene, were able to
get to the Covert home with 50 gallons of oil, enough to tide
them over untll a large load can gelln there . Dana, not well for
""metl!ne. and his wile , Pilla, just don't know what they wou!d
do Without Paul and Gene who have not only been helpful m
handling their healing problems but have also brought in food
for the family numerous times.
)
And Monday, Gene was at the Coverts' rural home cutting
wood for an older couple near Langsville who need it to keep
their home warm .
·
Then out on Route 7, there's Dale Kautz. Dale, we're told,
has been up and oown Route' 7, giving a helping hand to
neighbors stuck in the snow and cleaning our driveways.
Out oo Middleport, Route I. lt 's the Wamsleys who have
been the good samaritans of the community . They 've boon nul
with their equipment helping others as they struggle with
snowdrifts and slippery roads .
And, of course, these are but a few of the many who have
given a helping hand.

Darth Vader
Shocking, you say'! 1.1sten on.
'" Since the Hgure o£ Vader
brilliantly synthesizes
elements from the Nazi
movement, Japane s e
samurai tradition , ami the
F'ra11kenslein myth, it cC:tn
also be seen as a signiflcant
jundion between the twin
fascinations with Hitler and
the occult that are such conspicuous cultural landmarks
of the present moment."

focus on the figure of OC:trth

Vader - whom ·une Behavior
Today sourc-e has described
as " an overgrown aqualung
Hiuunler" - can be seen as
the most pivotal expression to
date of the rise of
sadomasochistic rantasizing.

OES CANCELI.S
SON BORN
The
Order of Eastern Star
Mr. and Mrs. Jack D. Smith
School
of Instruciion schedulof New Martinsville, W. Va.
e-d
for
Feb.
2 at the Fort Fry
are announcing th~ birth of
High
School
in Beverly has
their first child, a son, Joshua
been
postponed.
The new date
Denning. The infant was born
will
be
announced
later .
on Saturday, Jan . 28 at the
Ohio Valley General Hospital
in Wheeling. He weighed
THANKS OFFERED
eight pounds, one ounce.
Mr. and Mrs. Willard Durst
Grandparents are Mr. and extend their thanks to Guy
Mrs .
Fred
Nease , Hysell, Frank Casto, and
Minersville, and Mr. and members of REACT for t heir
Mrs. 0. H. Smith, St uart, Fla. assistance In getting oil to
Mr. and Mrs. U. S. Nease of hard-to-reach customers
Minersville a re grea t- during the recent bad
grandparenL&lt;i.
weather.

BABY BORN
Mr . and Mrs . Randy
Crawford. t he former
Demaris Ash, Route 3,
Pomeroy, a re announcing the
birth of their first chlld, a
daughter, Jan. 24, at the
Holzer Medical Center. The
infant weighed seve n pounds,
10 ounces and was 21 inches
long. She has been named
Shauna Renee. Ma ternal

grandpa1·ents urc Mr . .and
Mrs. !Uchurd Ash, Syracuse.
Maternal great-gnmdparcnb
are Mrs. The lma Buwlcy,
Mine1·sville, and Pearl Ash,
Pomeroy . Paternal grand·
parents arc Mr. and M1·s. R.uy
Crawford, New Huvcn, W.
V.u-~ and the patemal ~rcat ·
grundpHr'ents arc M~dta
Gcl'ard. mu.t Kathryn Byers,

both of PorLo;mouth.

Middle port, Q.

.

We have frie nds who lithe more than 10 percent to their
church. Sometimes· their kids don't have winter clothes
because they "can't afford them."
They didn 't go in with the rest of us to f!x Christmas baskets ·
for poor people. In fact, they don't even donate to charity or tip
the paperboy.
Their church is brand·new, sliper-colos~l. and cosi a mint.
That's why e~eryone is pushed to tithe - the congregation has
to pay for the building and upkeep. Is this really Christianity? ·
DOUBTFUL
·
DEAR DOUBTFUL:
Tithing is a way of life for some, and who are we to say them
nay? (Though I must agree with you, " D.," helping pay for a
super-colossal church doesn't exactly give the payee a s traight
shot at heaven.)- HELEN

Y'l....l. ..

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Engagement announced
University , is employed with
Simmons Display-Exhibits,
Beach, Fla. are announcing Inc.
The wedding will be an
the engagement a nd approaching marriage of their event of June 10.
daughter, Susan B. Pittenger,
700 E. Curry Rd. , Tempe,
Arizona , to Randall C.
Phillips, 5101 S. Mill Ave. ,
Tempe, son of Roger C.
Phillips, Scottsdale, Arizona,
former Meigs County resident.
The brid...,lecl is employed ·
with Prudential Insurance
Co. She is a graduate of Coronado High School and is ac·
live in ACE.• Choraliers and
Theater Arts. Her fiance, a
1970 graduate of Coronado
High School and a 1970
graduate of Atizona State

MORTON HOUSE

ZESTA

DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I'm·l6 and very frustrated about the American job situation
for teens. I've been trying to find work but all I get is, "You
must be 18. " How can we non-adults get part-lime work?- V.F.
DEARY.:
Try indeflendent supermarkets; small service stations;
local b~inesses (cha in operations usually have rigid rules.on
age); .fast food stands; resta11rant.s ... and k eep sending out ap- .
plications, neatly typed, with your qualifications listed.
Also, get the word around among adult friends who may
hear of openings you've missed.
o
Many employers hire 16-year-olds. Don't give up after the
first few turn-downs.- HELEN AND SUE

•I

From Hitler to Vader

Missionary ~o
speak on japan life
The Rev . and Mrs. Maurice
M. Rhoden missionaries to
Japan will' hold services at
the s;racuse Church of the .
Nazarene Friday, Feb. 3 at 7
p.m.
The couple have spent 16
years in Japan . This is their
fourth furlough .
The Rev. Rhoden has a
wide exposure to the
Japanese culture throu~h his

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6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Jan. 31, 1918

·Penn paces OSU win over Illinois
By
United
Press
lnternalional
The smallest player in ttie
Big Ten made his presence
known Monday night.
Five-foot-9 freshman Todd
Penn sparked Ohio State to
an 87...S4 victory over IUinois .

Penn and frlshman center
Herb Williams rombined tQ
sink four crucial free throws
in thi! fin;Jl two minutes .
Pen n
gave
Illinois
problems throughout the
contest, penetratin g for
layups and passing off for
easy buckets as the Buckeyes
. used their four corners
offense.
"That 's kind of my game,
penetrate and pass off, " said
PeM. "They were sagg ing on
Herbie and I penetrated and

dumped off t.o the forwards .
At other times they didn 't
come out to get me and I took
the shot."
Perm's four Free throws in
the last minutes off the game
also helped Ohio State to its
fourth conference victory.
, Although he had missed his
(irst two attempts in a oneandone situation, Ohio State
Coach Eldon Miller refused to
replace Penn.
"I told him he was playing
so hard and so well that I
wasn't going to take him out.
I just told him t.o take his time
and concentrate ," Miller
said.

...

Alter that, Penn C&lt;Jnneeted
on lour free thrQws. He
admitted later that he was
nervous in shooti ng

frP~

throws and that his right defensl~e effort ," The Cincinnati downed Tulane 70.
thwnb, *hich he hurt· in Buckeyes lead 7~9 with just 63 in Metro Conference
practice, is still not healed . under three minutes to play, action ; Miami blasted
But he said he . wasn't but illinois fought back on the Northern Dlinois 72-56 in the
thinking about the thumb.
Shooting of Rob Judson, who Mid-American Conference ;
" The
thumb wasn't SC&lt;Jred 10 points to help the and Wittenberg whipped
bothering m'e . I wasn't Dlini pulled within two points Denison 81..&gt;1 in the Ohio
thinking about anything at ~2 with 2S seconds to Conference.
except those free throws," play.
Even tho ugh the Bearcats
Penn said.
But then Penn, Kelvin evened their •ecord at 4-4 in
"Their small people just Ransey and Williams each hit · the league and upJlCII it to I Hi
ate us alive," said IUinois a free throw to clinch the win . overall, Coach Gale Catlett
Coach Lou Hanson. "I don't
Williams lead Ohio State was anything but pleased
think we should have been on scoring with 14 and Ken Page with his team's performance
the same lloor tonight.
had II for .!he Buckeyes, in the game· at Cincinnati .
"Ohio State beat us in while Illinois' high scorer wa s
"This was lil~ worst game
every phase of the game. We. Audie Matthews, who hit for in my six years of coaching
didn 't have a man except Rob 21. Judaon dwnped in 14 here," said a fuming.Catlett .
11
Judson who was playing the points for the Dlini.
We're goi ng backwards not
way we have played. Our
Both teams now stand 4-4 in forwards.
··
guards and forwards just the Big Ten race.
"We'' re not tough people,"
didn 't do the job. And we · Elsewhere Monday night. he continued. " I'd lilie to find
didn't have a reallv ~on~
five players on this team who

r------------,
:I
Pro
:I
:standings !
o

NHL Standings
By United Press International
Cilmpbell Conference
Patrick Division
W. L. T . Pt s.
NY Isla nder s
19 11 8 66
Phl tM elph i a
28 11 9 65
Atla nta
19 19 11
.rt9
NY Rangers
16 24 9. 41
Smythe Division
.._

WHA Standings
By United Press International
W. L. T . PI$.
New England • · 29 16• 4 62
Winnipeg
27 18 2 56
Houslon
23 20 J
49
Quebec
n 19 2 48

THE HARLEM All Stars will battle Southern's Alwnni Thursday, at 8 p.m. at Southern
· High School. Athnission is $2 for ad ults and.·$1.50 students. The tilt Is sponsored.by the Southern High School Athletic Dept.
·
M idwes t
Al bion 77 , Adr ian 63
Cr gh ln 84 , N .M . ,SI 70
Gr nd Va l 68, N. Mich . 59
Hllsdle 75, Wayne Sl 44
Ind . 71, Mich igan St, 66
Li ncoln 76 , NW. Mo . 66
Loyola 79 , Ind . 51 7fJ
Marym l 72, Ok.la B·ap t 62
Norl hwd 58, Oakland 55
Otiio SL 87 , Ill. 84
Purdue 80 , Mich igan 65
s·w Mo . 79 , SE Mo , 72
Southwes t .
Austin 70, M cMr r y 56
BishOp 98 , Lang ston 91
la rnar 95, UT ArlinQion Bl
Mdwstrn 68, Phi lips 57
NW Okt~ . 71, Okla . Chris 70
Oral Robert s 56 , T uts·a Sd
SMU 76 , R ic e 7J
.
SW T.eK 86, Sam Hous 81
S.F.Ausl in 9.5. Tt' X A&amp; I 7'l
TC&gt;i as 73 , Houston 77
Te MaS A&amp;M 58 , Bayh= 56
Te• Sthrn 55 , Grmblng 50
Te•as T.ec h 58 , TCU 55

West
Alska Fbks 66 . Lws&amp;Cirk 65
· Chaminadl 84, Hilo 79
Nev -Reno 9.1 , Sacto St . 58
Wstmnst r 103, Col. Mncs 79

Monday's

Girls
Ohio High School

Ohio Co liege

Basketb(lll Results
Unit~d Press lnter.n ational

Berl i n Wes tern
Rsv 57
Jackson -Milton 35
Carnpbe ll 5&lt;~ Filch 50
Cuyahoga· Fall s 47 Field JB .
Girard 43 Lordstown 40
Libert y 57 Howland 41
Lowellv i lle 47 Sou th Range 34
Spring f ie ld Local JJ Poland

32

.

Str u ther s 64 Youngs Ursuli ne

22

Sout h Poi nt 95 Oa k HI!! 39
. SP.orts Transactions
By Untted Press lnterr,a1ional
Monday
Baseball
Bos ton ~ Traded infielder
Sieve Dillard to th e Oet'roit
Ti ger s l or m inor lea gue pil cn crs M ike Burns and Fr ank
Harr is.
Detroi t - Sold second base Tile Fuentes to the
·man
Montreal E)Cpos .

Basketball Results
United Press I nternationa I
Ohio St 87 Illinois 84
Cincinnati 70 Tulane 63
M iami 72 northern Illinois 56
Wittenberg 84 Denison 57
Ash land 82 Akron 80
Wrigh t St 60 Youngstown St
5~

Defiance 97 T(ly lor (lndl 96
Carnegl e-Me!lon (Pal sa
Hiram 55
Marietta at Otterbein , ppd
Wilm i ngton
at
Kentucky , ppd

Eastern

NEW ORLEANS (UP!) Hank Stram, the fifth head
coach of the Saints who wa~
fired after two· poor seasons,
said Monday the dismissal
had' caught him unprepared .

players hit double figures for
the Highlanders.
Junior guard Gene Layton
led the way with 21 points.
Jaime J ordan canned 15
points, Mark Carter had 13,
Ron Jack!!On 11 and Monty
Blanton, 10.
Junior forward Vdh Taylor
Jed the · Bobcats with 20
points, on seven baskets and
six charity tosses . Fred
Helms, 6-4 senior, had 17
points, J ohn Westfall, 5-8
sophomore, 14 and Jon
Thompson, 13. .
Kyger Creek hit 25 of 60
floor attempts for 42 percent
and 21 of 41 at the foul line.
Southwestern conneCted on 28

••

win

over conference rival

Denison.
Wittenberg led 38-26 at the
half and Denison never got
closer than 10 points during

the second half.
Also in double figures for
Wittenberg were Brian Agler
and Mike Vannette who
scored 10 points apiece.
Denison, now 3-11 and 1-6,
was paced by Mike Barnes
and Ted Labay, who hit for 10
points apieee.
In other games Mooday
night, Ashland nipped Akron,
82-80; Wright State edged
Youngstown State, 60..&gt;9 ;
Defiance squeezed by Taylor
(Ind.) 97-96; and carnegieMellon (Pa. ) defeated
Hiram, 58-55. Two other
games set for Monday were
postponed because of the
weather - Marietta at
Otterbein and Wlhnington at
Eastern Kentucky.

•
•
•
•
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:
•

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••

;

•

•

'
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•

Prices Good Thru
Saturday, February 4th
We· Accept
Federal·. Food Stamps
No Dealers Please
Open Mon. thru Sat•
9 am to 9 pm
Open Sunday
9 am to 6 pm

of 71 attempts for 39 pet. and
Southwestern has
2S of 41 at the foul stripe.
scheduled Symmes VaDey
.LaiTy carter topped the Friday and Eastern SaturHighlander rebounding with. day .
16. Helms and Thompson
Kyger Creek will play at
paced KC.
Eastern Thursday and host
Southwestern's reserve · Hannan Trace ·Friday.
team won 48-37 behind
Box Score
Sherman Potter's 12 points.
Kyger Creek 1711 - Taylor
Bruce Gilmore had 13 in a 7-6·20; Smith 1-5·7; Helms 8-1·
17; Thompson 6·1-13 ; Westfall
losing effort.
J -B-14 ; Totals 25-21-71.
Kyger Creek was scheduled
Southwestern (81) - Baker
to play at Buffalo, W. Va.this 1·1·3; Jordan 6·3-15 ; Blanton
evening while Southwestern 2-6-10 ; Carter 3-2-8; Layton 8was to play host to Oak Hill. 5·21 ; M. Carter 6·1·13;
Jackson 2-7· 11 . Totals 28-25Both schools were out today 81.
due to weather conditions. It
By Quarters :
is assumed~hat those games Kyger Creek 11 16 20 22- 71
S. Western
22 ·16 19 24-81
will he off the schedule.

Northfield results

Howsam 'shocked' at
Kuhn's decislon

CINCINNATI (UPI) - Cin- -had overturned the trade ·
cinnati Reds President Bob sending pitcher Vida Blue
Howsam says he was "shock- from the Oakland A's to the
Edmonton
23 72 1 47
Birm ingha ni
21 2'3 2 44 ed" to learn that Baseball
Reds.
Ci ncinnali
19 ' 27 2 40
Kuhn said Monday the
Indianapoli s
14 28 4 32 Commissioner Bowie Kuhn
Monday ~s Result
trade, in which the-Reds were
Ci nci 4, Indianapolis 3
to send minor leauger Dav.e
TuesdaY's Games
Colt'ege Basketball Resul1s
Houston at Birm ingham
Revering and $1.75 million to
By United Press lntern•tional
Edmonton at lndpls
the A's, was not in the best
East
Winnipeg at Quebec
interest of haseball .
Albright 71, Wilkes 61
Wednesday's Garrles ·
Brdgprt 82, N.H. Coli 63
lndpl s at Cincinnat i
"I don't think that baseball
Brandeis BJ, AIC 79
Edmonton at New Eng land
intended the Commissioner to
Bu cknell 71, Dckn sn 61
Clhdrl 8~ , Bklyri Pol y 55
decide which teams would be
Cal. Pa . 82, Shppnsbg 5B
allowed to win pennants and
Clario·
n
79
,
Ed
inboro
68
International Hockey
Cheyney 64, Mr!nsfield d6
how often," Howsam said.
League
Duqu.esne 63. s. Car . 61
"I don 'I think baseball
United Press lnterna1iona I
Fairfld 89, Boston U 83
North
Ithaca 75', Hobart 69
intended to give the CommisW L T Pts GF GA . J . Hpkns 56. Eliztwn 52
sioner, a man who has never
Mntc lr St . 84, Pace 82
Sagi naw 27 14 6 60 223 156
been involved in operating a
Phila
Te)C'
73,
Trntn
70
Pt. Huron 20 1.4 9 49 162 155
St. Bonny 90, St. Fran 72
team, making a trade, or
Flint
21 19 5 47 202 213
St. Jnb 79 , Dav idsn 67
Musk .
15 23 8 38 160 178
otherwise directing a
St .' Vi nce 72. Frstbg 67
Kalma . 13 21 10 37 163 176
Stony Brk 88, Pr~tt SQ
baseball organization, the
South
Tr in ily 77 , WStyn 65
power
to judge baseball
W
.Va.
78,
Penri
St
.
68
W L T Pts GF GA
the effect a trade
talent
or
W
.
Chstr
78
,
Mllrsv
l
75
Ft, Wayne19 13 12 50 161 155
South
Milwau . 16 17 12 44 142 155
would
have
on a team's
Aubu rn ~5 . Miss . St . 14
Toledo 15 17 io 40 158 155
fortune.
Florida '84, Alabama 7j
Grnd . Rpd .
Ga . Coli 78, Piedmnt 77
"I am going to ask the
14 22 8 36 149 179
s.
G~ . Sthrn 84, Samtrd 77
haseball
owners and general
Monday's Results
Kentucky 90, Geo~g i a 73
No gar:nes scheduled
LaGrnge 44, N. Ga . 32
managers ·to review the tranlyla -Md . 68, Rndlph -Mcn 57
Tuesday's Game
script in this case and see if
Mr shll 115 . Tenn .-ChaH 91
IHL Al l· Star Game at Toledo
Iiley are not as shocked as I
Mllgn
11
5,
Cinch
Va
l
9-4
Wednesday's Games
M . Brown 84, Ala . A&amp;M Bl
am
by the decision and by the
· Milwaukee at Fort WaYne
Nwbrry 8B . Chrlstn 59
Sagi naw at Toledo
con
trol
of
baseball's
N. Ala . 51 , Te nn -Mrtn 55
Port Huron at Grand Rapids
No. Car. 73, Mercer 70
ope ratiort
which
the

Commissioner says he has.
" ...In •effect (the Commissioner) would have the abiliiy
to dictate where a team can
end up in the standings. I
predict that public confidence
, in the integrity of the game
will be destroyed," Howsam
said.
Howsam said Kuhn's
decision "seems to say that
the Reds can't strenghten
themselves or they will be too
strong foc their division ."
Kuhn suggested that the·
Reds and A's sit down again
and discuss adding players to
tlie deal,.but Howsam said he
had earlier proposed this but
Kuhn did not respond to the
suggestion.
Howsam said the club was
considering taking court
action, but bas not reached a
decision .

NORTHFIELD, Ohio
(UPI)- Lady Quick grabbed
the lead at the halfway mark
and held off f~vored Boo
Sheen E In the stretch
Monday night to win the
featured $1,900 ninth race at
Northfield Park.
The'winner, driven by Bill ·
Leary, covered the mile in
2:II 3-5 and returned $5.60,
$3.20 and $2.20. Boo Sheen E,
which finished II'• lengths
back, paid $3.20 aud $2.20,
while the show horse, Gad,
kicked back $2.20.
Lovely Chris a-uised to a
five-length victory in the first
race, kicking off a big triple
combination of 9-5·8 that
returned $1,2113.70. Ellacott
Alan was second. and Sugar
Master finished third.

as to what portion, il any, of
the $1.75 million would be
used for the acquisition of
replacement
talent ....He'
testified that he did not know
if any portion of the $1.75
million would be available for
the purchase of replaceme nt
talent. ,. ,
Kuhn 's decision was his
second in 19 months blocking
an attempted Finley sale of
Blue, the former Cy YoWlg
Award winner and one of
baseball 's premier pitchers.
On June 18, 1976 the
C&lt;Jmmissioner voided a deal
sending Blue to the New York
Yankees for $l.!i and a
separate deal which sent
reliever Rollie Fingers and
outfielder Joe Rudi to the
Boston Red Sox for $1 million
each.
After losing a $3.5 million
suit against Kuhn in federal
court, Finley tried selling
Blue again on Dec. 9 at the
winter baseball meetings in
HawaiJ,by dealing the threetime 20-game winner to
Cincinnati.
Most of the principals
emer~ing last week from two

-·
more savings
FRESH CHICKEN PARTS

S.C . St . til, Baptist 48
Tenn . Tech 81, Vlpr iso 73
UNC-Wir:n 82, E . Tenn . 78
Vandv 56, Tennessee 55
Va . 81, N.C. Central BO
Va . Tech 87, Syracuse 71
Wash&amp;Lee 78, Lvnchbg 74
W.Va . Tech 73, Btvefld 69

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days of hearings at Kuhn's
office expressed optimism
the deal would he approved .
Finley's
lawyer , Nell
Papiano, said ihe testimony
was overwhelmingly in favor
of the trade.
·
Now the 28-year old Blue,
whose likeness already
appears on the Reds' 1978
press guide, wUI be returned
t.o Oaklarlct.
Finley's appeal of Kuhn's
action 19 months ago voiding
the sale of Blue, Fingers. and
Rudi is scheduled to be heard
in the U.S. Court of Appeals
lor the · Seventh Circuit In
Chicago the week of Feb. 21,
The decision to nullify that
deal, the strongest and most
cootroversial 'act Kuhn has
made in nine years as
commissioner, was upheld
last March 17 in Chicago by
U.S. District Court Judge
Frank J. McGarr.
In Finley's suit against the
commlssioner, McGarr ruled
that canceling player sales
fell within the broad
authority given Kuhn by the
basebaD owners to act "in the
hest interests" of the game.

BACKS &amp; NECKS

.MADE FRESH DAILY

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to see if they cannot find
some way to structure a deal
which will not present the
concerns which I see in the
pre se ntly · proposed
assignment.''
In his decision, Kuhr! said
approving the deal would not
have been fair tq other clubs
which were discouraged by
his previous decisions from
offering large amounts of
cash lor Blue and other top
players. Kuhn added the
large swns going to frte
agents was no reason for him
to ignore oases involving
large cash deals over which
he believes he retains control.
Kuhn also said it was unfair
for Oakland to try to solve its
iiriancial problems at the
expense of , baseball's
competitive balance.
"The record before me
provides no basis for concluding that the $1.75 million in
cash to be received by
Oakland for Vida Blue would
in fact be spent on
replacement "talent," Kuhn
said . " Mr. Finley testified
that he could pol make ·any
representations wha isoever

••

" . i . ')\11';

Another long battle prediiYted
By GREG AIELLO
the commissioner to decide at his Chicago office, left no
.UPI Sports Writer
which teams wou ld be doubt what his · course of
NEW YORK ( UPI J
allowed to win pennants and action would be .
Baseball can look forward to how often ."
"This is the first I heard of
another lengthy round of
"I don't think basebali it," said Finley, "but it
co urt battles following intended to give the commisCommis."iioner Bowie Kuhn's sioner, a man who has never doesn't surprise me. I'm not
disapproval Monday of the been involved in operating a· saying what I'm going to do
sale of pitcher Vida Blue to team, making a tfade, or until I consult my attorney.
the Cincinnati Reds for $1.75 otherwise directing . a But I'll tell you this - I'll he
million and minor league first baseball organization , the In court. Certa inly l'U he in
court; ''
baseman Dave Reve(in g.
power to · judge baseball
Kuhn urged both teams to
After issuing a 15-page ta lent or the effect a trade
·
try
to rearrange the deal to
statement blocking the Dec. 9 , would ha ve on a team's i{lclude
more players and less
trade as "notbeing In the best fortune," Howsam continued.
money. In his decision, he
interests of ba seba II " "I am going to ask the cited a pair of deals made last
hecause of it would have an haseball owners and general year - pitcher Ken Brett
"adverse
effect
on managers tQ review 'the tran· going from the Chicago White
competitive halance," Kuhn ' script in this case and see if Sox to California ant?·
said : " I don 't know if we're Iiley are not as shocked as I Shortstop Bucky Dent from
going to wind up in court. I ve am by the de~ision and by the the White Sox to the New
certainly heard things ti1at control
of
baseball's York Yankees - in which the
lead me to believe the operation
which
the clubs restructured their
possibility is there . I hope commissioner says he has." transactions in that way.good sense will prevail and
" In
efFect ,
the
"1 am passing only upon
they will work out something. commissioner would have the the proposed assignment,"
"The Reds"bave expressed ability to dictate where a Kuhn said in the statement.
the view they would have to team ca n end up in the "I am not saying that I will
consider what action Iiley standings, " he concluded . "[ disapprove an assignment of
would take. I don 't know predict that public C&lt;Jnfidence mue
under . all
cir- .
exactly what that means ." In the -integrity of the game cumstances.
Quite
the
ilob Howsam, president of will be destroyed."
contrary, I urge the Oakland
the Reds, said in a prepared
Finley, however, when in- and Cincinnati clubs to
statement that he didn 't formed of thed~cision by UPI review the situation carefully
"think that basehaU intended

Miami took an early 14-ll
lead, but Northern, led by
Paul Dawkins with 14 points
and ShaWl Thrower with 13,
roared back to take a 32-26
halftime lead.
But Miami, now 11.0 overall
and 6-1 in the MAC, reeled off '
14 unanswered points early in
the second half to take the
lead for good. Northern
dropped to 6-11 overall and 4-4
in the conference.
Meanwhile, Wittenberg got
21 points from 6-2 freshman
guard Tyrone Curtis as the
Tigers upped their OC record
to 5-2 and II-&gt; overall with a

Southwestern drops
Kyger Creek, 81-71

Senior forward Mark
·Carter came off th~ bench to
Chic ago
~9 Ll1 ~2 ~'to can 10 points in the final
Vanco uver
13 22 17 38 period to carry the host
Color" ado
l1 74 11 33 Southwestern Highlanders to
St. Louis
11 31 6 28
an 61-11 SV AC win over
Minneso t a
11 31 5 'J1
Wales Conference
Kyger Creek Monday night.
Norris Division
It was the Highlanders'
W. L . T- Pts.
Montreal
34
7 6 74 seco nd
straight victory
Los Angeles
21 18 9 5 1 pushing their overall season
Pitt sburg h
15. 21 11 .1 1
Detroit
17 71 7 41 mark to !Hl, 4-4 in the SV AC.
Wash ington
9 29 11 29 Kyger Creek lost its ninth
Adams Division
W . L. T . Pts. stra ight without a win .
Boston
3 1 11 6 68
Coach Wayne Bergdoll's
Buffal o
76 10 12 64
Toron to
76 15 7 59 Highlanders jumped.into a 22Cleveland
17 30 4 J8 11 first period advantage "nd
Monday's Result
were not seriously threatened
Buffalo 3, NY ts lande·r s 2
until . midway in the fourth
Tuesday's Garnes
Minnesota at Atlanta
period when t he Bobcats cut
Montreal at ColoradO
the lead to five points. Five
Pittsb urgh at Detroit
Washing ton at Van cou\ler
Wednesday 's Games
NY lslndrs at NY Rang er s
Minnesota at Pittsburgh
Detroit at Clev eland
.. Buffalo at Toronto
Plliladelphi&amp; at Ch icago
Boston at St . Loui s
Wa shington at Los Ang

want to Win lor the university
and not for themselves ... "
The Bearcats had trouble
finding the hoop.for parts of
lile game and during · one
stretch they missed 19
con sec uti ve field goal
attempts.
After Tulane, now 0.7 in the
league and 3-16 overall, drew
within one point, 41-41, with
eight minutes remaining
Ci ncinnati reeled off 17
straight points to seal the
victory.
Steve Collier came off the
bench to pace the Bearcat
attack with 17 points.
At Oxford, Senior Archie
Aldridge dumJlCII in 19 points
and Rick Goins added 14 as
Miami came from behind to
defeat Northern lllinois.

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�9 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy 0 . Tuesday, Jan. 31, 1976
TRACY
' '

8 -The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Jan . 31, 1978

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items IJ!,to Cas~

Meigs frosh
lose, 45-28
The Meigs Freshman
cagers played host to Athens
last night, and the long, cold
layofl showed as the locals
fell 45-28 . Meigs managed
only five points the first hall,
three in the first period and
two in the second, but then
found the range to outplay the
VISitors in the second half. ·
But the damage had already
been done.
Dave Kennedy ted the
Marauders of Coach Mike
Wilfong with ten points. Oth~r
scorers for Meigs were John
Staats with six, Rob Davis
with four , and Chris Judge,
Tony Scott, and Kevin Smith
with two each. The next
scheduled game for Meigs is
in the tou rnament at Warren
on Feb. 4, but some makeup
games may be scheduled between now and then.

Riggs led the
scorers with 15.

..NOW OPEN ..

,..~

WANT AD
CHARGES

,..,
tdiys
3d¥ys
6daya

•

1$ Wun.b or UO!Wr
c..h
Ctlll.rKt'
100
1.10
1.10
3.00
3,75

'-"'

'·"

dilys wiU be

""'·

("Ot\5I!ICUtlYl'
r.:illlrt~~ t~t the I d11y

In memory, Card of Thlnklland
ObituKry : 6 l't!nlS per •!&gt;f'd, JJ 00

PHONE 773-5536

rrmimwn. Cw1h i.n &lt;~dvance .

MoWle H(lll'lt .ales 1111d V11rd SMie!i

art! Yccept.ed only with cllsh With
order . '1!1 cent clulr~e ror MdJ r•rry·
U111 Bux Nwnber In Cttre of The Sf?n·
tinel.

The Publisher rest"rves the rigln
to l'dll or reject 11ny adS lkell)t!d 00.
)t'CiiUilllll. The Publitiher wiU nut ~
respoMible rur J1'Wll'e ltwn one tn ror·
r~1 insertion.

Athens

NOTICE

For W&lt;daesdoy, Feb. 1, 1978

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

~~I!JIJ

W

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
Mundll)'
Noon an Sillurdu.)'

Tuesday
thru Fridw.y

4P.M.
the dlly before publication
Sunday
4 p M..

FridHy Hft~rnuon

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sporta Editor

THE RA CINE VolurHeer fire
Deportment will spansot a gun
sl1ool every Saturday 01 b pm ot
thelf bulidmg m 8a•hon. Foe·
tor y ckoke gum. on ly .

NEW YORK (UP! ) - Slouched down in the back seat of the
car, both hands thrust deep into the pockets of his navy blue ·
pea jacket, the world's champion indoor pole vau lter was
fighting to keep his eyes ope~. He was winning the ligh_t buf not
by much.
·
Heavy~idded Mike Tully looked as if he h~dn 't slept all
night, and he hadn't.
The lanky, 21-year-&lt;!ld Californian had competed in the
Millrose Games at Madison Square Garden last Friday night ,

APPUANCE

jumping 18-feet, l-inch to wln his event, a nd then had hopped
on a jet for Montreal . When he got there , he boarded a bus for

Ottawa.
On Saturday night, he had participated in the Ottawa Citizen
Indoor Games, which ended late. Because he had to catch an
early plane to New York, Tully stayed up all night.
"One of the girl high jumpers, Debbie Brill, was so tired , she
didn't want to get up," Tully says. "We still hadn 't seen her
when we got to New York Sunday morning, but Tom Jennings,
the-team managar , stayed behind to make sure she was okay. "
Tully went to Los Angeles later on Sunday for the 1-&lt;&gt;s
Angeles Times Indoor Games Friday night . He won't have
much time after that because he has to take oil again ·for New
York where he's entered in the U.S. Olympic Invitational the
following night in a meet sponsored by Vitalis and due to be
telecast nationally starting at Jl:30 pm EST.
.
This type schedule is a routine one for Tully. It works the
devil on his constitution sometimes, but he's young, strong and
healthy so he can take it.
" I e njoy pole vaulting ,'~ he says. " It's exciting. What I like
about it Is that it's an individualist sport and you don't have to
have a coach hounding you to do this and do that aU the time .
When I was a kid and played Pop Warner football, I found out
coaches would yeU at you for no good reason . They'd holler at
you and punish you for silly stuff. Uke If you didn't throw a
block right, you had tD run two extra laps. It just didn't seem
right to me . Why do coaches have lo punish you? Why do they
have to embarrass you'? My mother and father never did that
tD me, and I didn 't like it when a coach did.''·
So for one year, between the lOth and lith grades in school,
young Mike Tully declared a moratorium on all sports by
taking part in none of them .
A year later when he was 16, he decided to try pole vaulting
and now five years later he's a world champion, fiaving set the

indoor record three weeka ago at 1-&lt;&gt;ng Beach, Calif., with a
jump of 16 feet, ~ inches. Considered the best at his specialty
right now, Tully has finished first in four of his last six meets
and second in another. The only time he didn't do well was in
tlttawa where he missed after clearing 17 feet even.
Tully, a psychology major at UCLA, says his ambition is to
keep improving a nd break the outdoor record of 16 feet, 8¥•
inches held now by DiiY.i LRoberts.
" The best I've done ~ 18-4lf.t outdoors, 1 ' he says, "but I know
I can do better than that. You can't put limits on people,
especially in an event like the pole vault."
For some reason he can't explain , Tully has always been
fascinated by high places. He had never parachuted out of an
airplane in his life before but when an opportunity came along
two months ago at Lake Paris outside Los Angeles , he was the
first in line.
" You're crazy," his father told him.

have enlarged our
service department and
will service Hotpoint and
other brands.

Pomeroy Landmark

9-.

eil.

You are good at figuring th ingS:
out today , so try to stave o ff
any o u ts id e influe nceS.
Leng th y discuss ions Will only
serve to co nfu s~ yo u.

GEMINI IMay 21-July 20) Duality is one of yo u r traits and it
may be a lortunate one today .
You could be able to bnng 1n
money for yourse lf as well as
those you care enough tor to
adviSe .

CASH paid lor all makes and
models of mobile homes
Ph~ne area code 6 14· 4'23·9531 .
TIMBER . Pomeroy Forest Pr o·
ducts. Top price lor slondmg
sawl imber. Colt 992 596S or
·- ~':.~nby , 1·446 8~ ·--·­
COIN S, CURREN CY, tokens, old
pock el wa tches and cha ms,
silver and gold . W~ need I C,l64
and o lder s1 lver co •n s. Buy , sell ,
or trade Coli Roger Wamsley
742·2331.
'

F'URNITURE. 1Ce boxes , brass
CANCER !June 21-July 22) OLD
beds . iron bed s. etc, comple 1e
The role of the middleman is a
households . Write M . D. Miller .
starring one for you today
Rt 4, Pomeroy , Oh1o or call
You 're good at arbilraling ,
(,1(,12 .7]60
negoti ating , peacemaking, o r
NO IT(M TOO Lorge or too small.
fa cilitatmg .
Will buy I p1ece or co mplete
LEO (July -23-Aug.22) There
household. New . used . or on II·
are two ways to accompliSh a
ques. Ma rtin's Furn_ilure. 20 N.
home 1m provement or serv1ce
2nd St. , Middleport. Pkone
you 've con templating Today
9&lt;?2 ·6370.
yoU ca n be happy in ' knowing
C HJ PWQQO.·--P~ I es
ei th e r is acceptable . .
diameter 10' on lorges l end.
VIRGO iAug.23-8epl.22) As
per ton . Bundled slob , $6 per
lo ng as you're bu sy today.
lon . Oel• vered to Ohio Pollet
you 'll be happ y . If the ac t1on
Co~ 2, Ponle_r:.o_y . qq3·2689 .
slows down you could become
a litt le melanc holy or e11e n WAN T TO BU'f' , House or mobile
depressed and tetharg1c
home 111 counlry . wi th some
acreage . on land contracl. Can
LIBRA (Sept . 23-0 c l.23)
p ay
down
paymen t if
Finances , career o r household
reasonable. Only interested
matte rs you dlspatct1 wiln ease
people need to moil inlormo·
today . Oddly eno ugh . you
11on lo PO Box C,l, l angsville ,
coul d be lacking in managmen t
OH45741
ot yO\H social li fe .

-; a-;.

sa

SCORPIO 10ci.24-Nov.22) Th e
ideas you have will be bold.
original and c te11e r today. It' s
really ou t of character. but yo u
may be too ti mid to tr y them
out .

·

SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23 Dec .2 1~

Being generous , you

may accumulate some guilt
becau se today others do thi ngs
tor you an d you can 't re ci proca te. Don' t fret , your ct1ance
will come.

CAPRICORN Wec.22-Joo.l91
It' s not a good day to mix
bu s1ness with plea sure. If a

HEATING INC.
300 Moin Sl.
Pomoroy, Ohlo
Pom•rov 992·6212

or992-4263
IA.M. Io4 :30P.M.
SALES AND SERVICE
If YOU have a service Ia olfer .
-wont to buy or sell serne1k1ng,
oe looking for work . . . or
whol ever .. vou 'lt get resu lts
loshn with a Sentj nul Wan I Ad .
Ce ll 991-2156.

SERVICE
We

SIL VE R DOllARS and co ins
dollar po1d . Coll74 2·23 16.

HOOF HOLL OW Hor!oes , Buy , sell
trade or train , New Qlld used
sadd les. Ruth Reeves , Alba ny
(614 ) 6Q8·32W.
MEIGS COU NT Y HUIT"'one Soclety ,
Coreline and adopt1on Sendee
9&lt;j2.7080 742·3162 9&lt;?2 5427.

AKC REGIS TERED OobEHmon
pups . Hove heo l lk cer l ilirote. 7
wks. old SIOO each . 843·3053
REGI STERED BLU ETICK
mo . old . ( 328 .

pups . b

.

. American

entertainers

"-=·
3 AND 4 RM. furn ished ond un ·
l urt'11shed opts . Phone (,192·
5434 .

-

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~

-

COUNT RY MOBilE Home Pork
Route 33 . nor th of Pomeroy.
Large lois Coll 9(,l').J479.
-

Burger injured
in fall on ice

Jackson High School
hasketball Coach AI Burger,
oW, is a patient at Holzer
Medical Center following a
fall Sunday in which he
11
You only live once," Tully answered . " Jumping out of a suffered a fractured left hip.
plane seedJs tike fun."
Burger is in Room 322 at
Tully did it, _parachuting from 3,000 feet pp.
. Holzer Medical Center.
"What a thrill," he says of the e:q&gt;erience. "I had a blast."
Blond, six-loot-three and 195 pounds, Mike Tully looks
somewhat like Peter Frampton , the rook singer. And some
influential people already are talking to him about a possible
acting career.

"Sooner or later, I won't be able to pole vault anymore," he
says, "and when that day comes, I'd like to find something UNION , N.J . (UPl) something that'll spark me enough to get out of bed. Maybe it'll Three leading New Jersey
he acting, who knows? I think I'd like to take a crack at that." .Democrats - Rep. James
Howard,
sta te
Assemblyw oman Greta
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (UP!) Kiernan and former New
WASffiNGTON (UP!)
- Guard Ernie DiGregorio, Brunswick Mayor Aldrage
The Washington Bullets who bas been on the injured Cooper Jr. - have agreed to
announced Monday guard list since Dec. 29, has been serve on the Vlacancies
Olarles Johnson , brought in released, the 1-&lt;&gt;s Angeles committee · for former New
on a Ilklay trial basis, has Lakers annount"ed Monday. York Knlcks forward Bill
been signed to a multi-year
Mter the Lakers put him on Bradley, who is seeking the
contract, because of his fine the injured list with an Democratic nomination for
performance
and
the announced a c ute case of the U.S.,Senate seat held by
uncertainty of guard Phil bro nc hitis, DiGregorio Clifford Case, R-N.J.
Chenier's condition. ·
The panel would designate
returned to his Providence,
Bullets physician Dr. Stan R.I., home and never a. replacement If Bradley is
Lavine said Monday there Is returned to LoS Angeles. The unable for any reason to
a 50 per cent chance Chenier Lakers, with their latest fulfDI his legal requirements
will have tD undergo surgery player move, got down to the . and responsibilities of
for a back problem.
·
league's lli&gt;layer team limit. candidacy.

Cantor in 1892 and Moore in
1915.
On this day in history:
. In 1950, President Harry
Truman said he had ordered
development of the hydrOgen
(thennonuclear) bomb.
In 195ll, Explorer I, the first
U.S . earth satellite, was
launched from the Cape
Canaveral missile test
center.
In 1061, Ham, a male
chimpanzee, was rocketed
into space in test of the
Project Mercury capsule
later to carry an American
astronaut into orbit.
In 1971, with three
!!Stronauts aboard, the Apollo
14 spacecraft blasted off for
the moon .

Cellulose filler

CA T, FEMALE . Longhoired , dog.
Lobrodor type . Both very
friendly
lovttable . Nice ·
looking pets. 9.49-2607.
.. - - - .... -~-

and Attics

- save Fuel &amp; Money-

.·

water with Co-op water
softener,

Model

Now Only

•279,95

UC.- SVI,

let us test your water Free

Pomeroy Landmark
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
992 -7181

HA Y FOR sole Timothy , alf ol fa
and clover . 94(,1·2 102
INCH Admiral color TV.
949,2:.::
09'-.1'0._ _ _ _ _ _ _
PONY HARNESS l or sale . PH .
9Q2.SSIQ
4 L78 15 B F. Goodrich whi le let-

tered radials mounted on !el of
Appli ance Cragers I S x a. Will
~il51ug GMpickup. 742·3154

\%8 DODG E '!. ton truck . V·8
eng ine , radio, hea ler , good
ti res Price $750 Call 94(,1·2589 ,
HihonWolle

T~~!~~~rn REALTOR

2" E. Second

Street

RIVER FRONT -

3 lots

and 7 room house. Bath,
nat . gas furnace ,. c:lty
water , and
e)( cellent
garden .
Wan t
only
SIMOO.OO.

CORNER LOT - On State
road. 3 bedrooms, bath ,
nat . gas furnace • . cfty

water, and garage . Need

$15.500.
IN THE COUNTRY -

5

room frame horne. Cistern,
bath , fireplace, and almost
an acre of land. Asking

GOOD OLD HOME - Has
3 bedrooms with large
closets and storages. 1'12
batt'ls. nat. gas furnace •.
city water and garage.

$27,500.
40 ACRES - Small barn,
spring and dug well. Good
house site and nice hun.tlng
land.

45 ACRES - L.C. water,
electric, and septic tank .
Will take a quick offer of
$10,000.
'BUY REAL ESTATE , IT' S
A KEY TO YOUR
SECURITY
AND
WEALTij.
Helen L. T..tord
Gorden B. Teolord
Suo P. Murphy
Rea"or Associllfts

8; Mister Rogers Neighborhood 20,33 ; Hogan's
Heroes 10; Emergenc;y One! 13: M y Thr~ Sons 1S.
S: 30-News 6 ; Etec . Co. 20,33; Hogan's Heroes 15,
6:0Cl-News 3,4,1.10.13.15: ABC News 6; Zoom 20:

CHEMICALS

We Strip P•int . V•rnishtl

etc.

Professional Service , 39
yrs . exp~rl~nce . Free
pickup
estim~s ,
&amp;
del i
rv
service .
Residential &amp; Commercial.

Fre• Estimates
Phone 992. 3993
1· 18· 1 mo.

Tr~State UpholsleiJ
Shop

~~~~~~i~~~~~1ii"~r~n;~:~1

Antiques BoutJhl &amp;
Dick Seyler

Phone 992-nll
100 Kerr St.

and St. Rt .

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING
Re s idential
and
commercial. Call for
estimate, 24 hour service.
Anyday, anytime.

Change of
Number

Phone
992-7608
Closed Jan. 10
~~

Til t8th, t978

Young's
Carpeting

R'"'t' 3&amp;~= 0.
Carpet Uph tery
Phone Mika Youn1
At

ftjJI}f.\lt fft}1]

~

Pomeroy

to be cherished and large
too. Approx. 1,600 ~q. ft. of
living space, 4 bedrooms, 2
car garage. l acre. 4 yrs.
old, modern and in the
county. $36, 100.

Middleport, Ohio

A STEAL country,

6

acres In the

large garden ,

garage, 2 yr. old double
wide. 515,000.00.
,OYER 3 ACRES - Home
been ·modernized, barn ,

and

business

building .

P.M.
Close Thursdays
Saturdays at noon.

anc.

H11ve 4 Bedroom, ranc.;,
located 3 miles from Rt. 7.

West Shode.
Nice Double Wide 24&lt;56 on
corner lot

In A'r baugh

Addition .

Including

location . 3 bedrooms, bath,

with basement &amp; garage.

ref. Porches .

$11.000.00.
JUST LOOK -

1 acres,

small barn , 6 yr. old home,

3 or

A

bedrooms, FREE

GAS, brick &amp; frame, perma
pane windows , carport .

JUST $32,000.00.
THIS OFFICE STANDS
READY TO SERVE YOU
WHENEVER YOU'RE
BUYING OR S'ELLING A
PROPERTY .
!CALL
TODAY!
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK, KATHY
CLELAND
REALTOR
ASSOCIATES
992-2259,9924191

·

Nice 3 Bedroom bungalow
S32,000. 2 acre of ground .

Tuppers Pl•lns.
New 3 bedroom home with
garage

In

Craw's

Subdivision . S41 ,000.
Nice sm1111 home located in

Darwin, Ohio on St. Rt. 33,
519,900.
Have
Bus I ness,
and '
Investment property in
Pomeroy .

Check with us bRfore you

buy.

CherYl Lemley
Associate

Home PhOne 741-1003
Hill.., Wolle, Sr.
Assoclote
Homo Phone 94t-1519

USMC 10.
A:3D-L IIllo Rascals 3. 15. Gilligan 's Is . 4; Brady Bunch
8, 10; Mary Tyler Moore 13.
S:oo-Here Come The Bride s J ; Star Trek 4; Gun smoke

Now arrange the c1rcled letters -o
form the surprise answer, as 5ug gested by the tboll'e cartoon.

I

{Answe~

Jumbles· AWARD

FISHY

INNATE

tomorrow)

BEFORE

Answer· All the same, you ' ll get wet.if It'• spilled
.
on you - A " DRY'" WINE

.

I ; Mister Rogers ' Neighborhood 20,33 ; Hogan's
Heroes 10; Emergency One 13; M y Three Sons IS.

5:3D-News O; Elec. Co. 20.33 ; Mary Tyler Moore 10;
Hogan's Heroes 15.

O:QO-News 3.4,1, 10, 13, 15; ABC News O; Zoom 20.
6:3D-NBC Nws 3. 4,15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnell &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8,10: Over Easy 20
7:oo-cross-Wits 3; .
Liars Cl ub 6; Sho Na Na 8;
Capitol Beat 33; News 10: To Tell T_he Truth 13;
Gilligan's Is.

Charac fer lstlcs ·of

15;

Learning

Disabllllles 20 .
7: 1s-Marshall U . Report33: 7:3o-F unny Farm J;Sha
Na Na 4; When Havoc Struck 6; Family Feud 8;
MacNeii·Lehrer Report 20,33 ; The Judge 10; In

Search ol 13; Wild Kingdom 15.
8:80-Biack Beauty 3,4,15; E ight Is Enough 6,13;

.·

" '

by THOMAS JOSEPH

A NAMe 1

DOWN
I Familiar
1 Goldie~
wedding word
5 New Mexi·
2 Expiate
can Indian
3 Whistle ·
8 Roman
wetter
emperor
~Sine qua 9 Moor
5 Fabric of
13 Midday
old
U Grow up
15 " Sail - ship &amp;Silly
7 Statute
of state"
10 Powerful
16 Hebrew
whiskey
measure
17 Never : Ger. 11 Elizabeth I
to the
18 Full;
poets
abundant
12 Whirled
20 Split pea
16 Flock
21lreland
19 Garnislunent
22 " Rule

Pl.-.ce HAVE

GASOUNE ALLEY

Thanks for
and house-

Keep it under
f ift4-five 1

Don't watch them out
siqht, Walt 1 ,-l,t~'s~7cJ~~:;?

~·s itti nq

rebuildin~ ·.

Beouhlul selection of material'
ond vinyls. Free estimote . Tel. :
742·2852. Loc ation · Solem '
.
'

20; Love Thy Neighbor 33.
10 :30--Book Beat 33: Wodehouse Ployhouse 20 .
ll :QO-News 3,4,6,8,10.13,15; Di ck Cavell 20: Lilias,
Yoga &amp; You 33.
11 :3D-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Poll ee Slory 6,13: Hawaii
Flve-0 8; ABC News 33; Movie ··sabrlna" 10;
12 :80-Janak l 33.
12 :40--Mystery of the Week 6,13; Kofak 6; i:ooTomorrow 3, 4 ; 2· 11}- New s 13

Yesterday' e Alllwer
Movie Chonnel 4 5 &amp; 9 P.M. - Annie Hall lPG)
2Z Saroyan's
Z9 Stockhoim 7 &amp; 11 P.M.-The Sting lPG)
"My Name
native
Is ·- "
30 Bizarre
23 Muriched
31 Addi24 Betittle
. Uonal
ZS In compar- 31 Rome's Veneto
ison with
27 " Mouse"
37 Clam genus

BRIDGE

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

' Britannia''
composer
Z3 Belief ;

for us,
kicls!

-

Lenz' play spectacular

doctrine
Z5 Step; walk
26 Cut down,
as a tree
Z7 Food fish
I 28 A Gabor
Z9 Beauty par~:::-eo::-::2.~.
lor service
· ·' 32 Intellect
33 Gain
34 Furrow
- - - - - - - - - - , 3S Football
number
37 Wardrobe

The fi nal co utntr.l wu s not

I'T'' S

--

I)OWN.

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

,_
WINNIE
I CANT

GIVE YOU AN
ANBWER. RIGHT

NC!ii(ON . .I-..OT
IUN10HT...

~

l

1\lE OLDIAAN &amp;AID SHII"6
PA&amp;B BY !=ROM TiME 10
TIME. I WONDER ~OW

LONG tLL HAVE TO WAIT
6ERJIZE J!M REOC~ED .

Til
10 7 '

~ON

• Q

'•
.

"

.I2 6 2
i\ 1(1 5 4

WEST
+ A652

'KJ
Q9 3

E.\ST
+ K.ib
, 60 ·
K 10 • 5

•

•

+

+

.19 7 2

K 83

SOU Tir
•
'

9

A~ 111967 5
+ AH

terror

PULLIN S EXCAVATING . Complete:
,.
Service, Phone 992· 2.478.

MACGIES UPHOLSTERY . Refinish,

formances 20,33 .
10:00-Pollce Woman 3, 15; Starskv &amp; Hutch II, 13 ; News

ACROSS

-~

We'll call
everLJ niqht!

9:0Cl-Laugh -ln 3,15; Charlie's Angels 6,13; Col lege
Basketball 4; GE Theater · 8, 10; Great Per-

DOtiS~l$

Al-ARIC ?

NEIGLER.. S FOR bu ilding houtes.• .
ba thr ooms, all kinds of repoll •
we~k and wha t nave yolJ. Gu../ ·
Ne1gler. Raci ne, Ohio . Coli
949·2508 evenings.
, ·~

Llberace 8,10: Nova 20,33 .

- 6Lua.-~

0

revp~ol s t ery .

MIC&gt;HT ENA~LE A
5Kcl.EiON iO KEEP
H 1:!:&gt; HEAD WARM.

JwnblllaQit No . 10, witt tt.. ....,. 110 ~. II ..,...._ tar 11 .36 pall:·
pe6dtrom.lurntM, aaNtun 1 p-, b34. ~. N.J. 01&amp;4e. lnoludt
)'OUr,.,.,., ..:tdrela, ~c:odeandmalclichedcaPIIY'**IDtle;;¢ c+l 11.

38 Ridicule
39 Time long
past
40 Chalice veil
41 Southwest
wind

• Q6

Vulner" bl e: North-Sou lh
Dealer: Soul h.
West

DAILY C RYPTOQUOTE ~ Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One l etter si mply sta nds for another. In this sample A l1
used for t he t hree I.'s, X fur t he two O's, etc. SinglE" letters,
apostrophes, the l ength and form ation or the wprd!l are all
hi nts. Each day t he co de l ett er s are different.
C RYPTOQUOTE~

ORL

GLUGFL

R LIZ

I YUH 0

GFL

BRU

T

I ZL
0 I W L

North

l::attt South

2.
Pass
Pass

'l •
Pa ~

l'a~
Pas.·~

:t'f

0 1&gt;enmg l ea~ : "' 2
By Oswald Jacoby
a11d Alan S011tog

No bridgt! hisLo.-y woul~l be
complete without some mention of the I ,enz-Culbertson

match of 1931-1 9:12 a nd

B I S 0
ORL

ou

"Passing Fancy" th e book
on the history of contrac t
includes thl:l hand pl.uyed by
G L -U • Sidney
Lcnz as one of sev-

ZTDWD . -

er~l hands from th e rnalch .
L~:: nz' opening two-heart

b1d was systemic. lie played

ZU YLZO KZUDO
two bids a1:1 ·s trong, but not
Yes!erday's Cryptoquote: HARD TIMES ARE MADE forcing . Jacoby passed a t
WORSE BY LOW TIUNKING.- ROY L. SMJT)f
three hearts bet·ausc they

furniture and appliances.

$21 ,000.

range &amp;

up.:,

..

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

JUST LOOK $11,500.00 .
OLDER . HOME - Nice
N.G. heat, kitchen with

PLACE ClEANED

Yesterday's

LARRY LAVENDER

.

Sons 4; For Richer For Poorer 15 ; Merv Grltfln 6;
Gilligan ' s Is. 8; Sessme St . 20,33; Gomer Pyle,

1
Answer here: A r I I I I I IX ]

IT'LL TAKE A LI TTL E
TIME TO GET 1H1 5

GOIM'· ro HPtVE
A NEWSSTAND,
To o ... LOTS
O' COMIC
BOOk S-.·

•

n .9.tfc
•
L-------_:__:_~ ..

Syracuse. Ohio
Ph. 99.2-3993

1]

.11 _

MEIGS PLAZA

3825.

Office Hours: 9 A.M. to ·•

Only 15.
1:3D-Days of Our Lives 3, 4, 1S; As The World Turns
8,10; 2 : oo-On ~ Lite to Live 6.13: 2:30--Doclors
3.A,15; Guiding Llghl 8.1 0.
3:3G-A11 In The Family ;,1 0; Ohio Journal 20.
4:0Cl-Mi sler Cartoon 3; Edge of Night 13; My Three

IEKATI~

STARCRAFT FALL Sole.' M ini· BRADFORD. Auctioneer, Com- •
ple te Service. Phone 949-24870 ;
motors . 20· and 22'. TraVe l
or 949·2000. Racine. Ohio, Critt ,
Trailer s, 18' 5" $3,7CW , 25' 7"
,..
Bradford.
Bunkhou se $4 ,875. Fold -down,
SI . 700 up We sell service and ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR - '
qua lity . Open Sundays. Comp
Sweeper!. toaste rs, irons, olt :
Conley Storcrolt Soles , Rt. 62 ,
small oppl 1onces. lown mower; ' .
1)1 . of Pt . Plea sant .
·
nex t to' State Highway Go rag, : ·
on Route 7. Phone (614) 985· •

PHONE992-63l3

fl,lews 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10: Not For Women

"'"""'""-

J:oo-Another World 3,4,15 ; Genereral Hospital 6, 13 ;
Lil ias. Yoga &amp; You 20.

r

I I

·instru(tions.

I~

Braker
107'/:it Sycamore St.
Pomeroy. Ohio

Search for Tomorrow '8,10; Elec . Co. 33.

1:Oil-For Richer. For Poorer 3: All My Chlldren 6.13: ·

I I I

ALUMINUM SIDING
SOLIOVINYL SIDING
SOFFIT &amp; CELINGS
GUTTERS&amp; DOWN
SPOUT
Easy slep by step

1·18-1 mo.

&lt;&gt;eorge S. Hobsiefler Jr ..

Fomlly 4 ; Love of Life 8,10; Sesame Sl. 20,33 ;
11 :5s-CBS News 8; Lov ing FreelO.
12 :0G- Newscenter 3.· $20 100Q Pyramid 13 ; News 4,6, 10:
To Say The ~east 15; Gambi t e.
12:30--Ryon' s Hope 6, 13; Bob Broun 4; Gong Show 15;

'
'·

Storm
Windows &amp; Doors
Replacement
Windows
Aluminum
Siding-Soffill
Gutters-Awnings

992-2174

11 :3()-Knockout 3, 1.5 ; Fam ily Feud 6, 13 ; Partridge

byHenriArnoldandBoblee

SULPH

FREE ESTIMATES

p~

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~~ ®

..,,. ... ,.. ~·-

REMODEliNG Plumbing , heating\
BURRO UGHS SENSI·MATIC , oc·
and a11types of genera! repair.
countin g machi ne. Has been
Work guaranteed '20 years ex·,
under ser11lce con tract and in
good co ndition. Can be seen at HOMESITES for sole, 1 acre and ,.2P:"•".':"
;•::-n:::'"":'.'P::'h::_cn::-e-;9'1
~2::-·2~•::_
0'1:;.__ ,
Th e Doily Sen tin el. 11 1 Cour t
up. Middleport , near Rutland
SEWING MACHINE Repairs Set'· I
St. . Pomeroy. q H.
Coll992·7.481
v•ce , oil makes, /¥i2. 2'J84'. The ;
Fabric
Shop.
Pemeroy .i
BLACK PADDED BAR w i lk NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 ba ths ,'
A uthorized Si nger Soles ond '
woodgrain top and stor age
all elec., I acre . Middlepo rt.
Service . We sharpen Scissors. :
shelves Excellen t condition.
dose to Rutland . Phone 992·
$50. 992·7312.
7481 .
EXCAVATING, dozer. load er and ;
backhoe wo rk , dump trucks
1965 CHEVELLE . 4·dr ., A.C. 283 SMALL fa rm for sole, lOOJ, down,
and lo ·boys for hire: will haul
eng. 2 bbl. . OtJto. Irons . Ex·
owner fmo nced . Monroe Coun·
fill dirt, to soil, limestone and
ce ll ent condition . Tr uck to pper'
ty , W Vo . Pkone (304) 772·
grovel. Coli Bob or Roger Jet.
std 6 II be d, 28 m. high.
3102 or (30 4) 772·3221.
fe rs, doy phone 992·7009, nigh t
742 ·24B5.
COUNTRY farmland with sectud·
phone 992; 3525 or 992· 5232.
ed wood!:., water and good oc·
SELLING OU T due Ia dl health
Smoll grocery stor e and gas
cess in Monroe CotJnly , W. Vo . EXCAVATING , dozer, backhoe
and dl.tcher. Charles R. Hot·
stot1on with stock and equip·
$1 ,000 down, ca ll (304 ) 77'2·
field , Bo ck Hoe Service,
men! . Locat ed al langsville on
3102 or (304) 772·3227.
Rou te 124 . Very good buy . Col t
Rutland , Ohio Phone 742·2008,
Commercial propf;tr ly oppro x. 17
992·581!&gt;8 or 742·90-45.
acres , level fond . located at WILL do roofi ng , consfruclion ,
plumbing and hea ting. No joO
Tuppers Plains on Ohio, Rou te
too Iorge or too sm al l. Phone..
7. Phone {614 ) 667 ·6304 .
742·2348.
I
VA·FHA, 30 yr. fina ncing. Ireland
AND MARTIN E)\·::
Mortgage. 77 E. Stale. A th ens . HOWERY
cova 11ng , sep11c sys tem s.t•
p hone (614 ) 592·3051.
dozer. ba ckhoe, dump truck\ ! :
li mestone. grovel. blacktop, .
paving , Rt. 143. Phone 1 (614 )• ·
6c,:9::.
B·.;_7::.33":1_.,- - - - -- - ' '
~_c
BA THROOMS AND Kitchens:
remodeled , cerom ic li!e, plum···
b ing, car pentry , and general:·
mointef)ance. 13 yeort ex·•·
perience. 992-3685 .
(

MAIN
POMEROY, 0 .
NEW LISTING - A house

l\1AT'S Sll&lt;AI-10~.. ·
Mlt-lf' It;. HOT!

,-------------i':"

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC • .

\.!!}

11 :QO-Wheel of Fortune 3.4,15; Happy Days 6, 13; Elec.
Co. 20.

Unscramble these four Jumbles ,
omt letter to each square. to form
lour ordinary words,

'
2.2]. 1 1110. :

Located In

10-30-c

10; Not For Women Only 13.

10: 30--Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; Andy Grlrnth 6 ;
Price is Right 8, 10; Rick Faucheux 13.

992-2206 01 992-7630

Jack's SeDtic
Tank Service
Chester, Ohio

Center 20,33.

.'
'

.

ACE ·HARIMARE

Box 34

Ph11 Donahue 3,4,15; Family Altair B.
9:3G-Emergency One 6: Andy Grlltllh 8; Family
Altair 10.
IO:oo-Sanford &amp; Son 3.4. 15; Tallletales 8; Joker's Wild

8:30--Laverne &amp; Shir ley 6,13; Shields &amp; Y•rnell 1,10.

~

Phone 915-3106

Pomeroy, Ohio

8: 0D-Capt . Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame S. 33 .
9:0Cl-Merv Grift In J ; Phll Donahue 4; Edge ot Nlgh16;

8:0Cl-Biack Beauty 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6, 13; Celebrity
Challenge of the Se)(es 8,10; Live trom Lincoln

;=·
_;

Superior
Slum Eltraction

''The Ori&amp;inlloi'S
Not Thelmitltots

Report 3.
Morning , West Vlrglnli 13; 6:Ss-t huck
White Reports 10; News 13.
7:0Cl-Todoy 3,4,15; Good Morning America 6,13; CBS
News a: Bullwlnkle 10; 7:31&gt;--Schoolles ·10.
!:~ Good

Honor Societ y l.S.

Pomeroy, Ohio

-

NOTICE

JOHNIE'S BEAUTY
SALON

Burnett &amp; Frlends6; CBS News 8.10: Over Easy 20.

Custom
Refinishing

1163-2nd Ave., Gallipolis
446-7133-446-1133

6:2.s-Chrlstol)her Closeup 10; 6 : 3D-News Con ference
• ; News 6; Sunrl5e Semester 8; 6 : ~s-Mornlng

J :oo-Cross-WIIs 3.•: Uars Club 6 ; Pop Goes The
Country 8; Capllol Beal 33; News 10; To Tell The
Truth 13: Gilligan's Is. 15: French Chef 20; 7:1S..
Big Green Magazine 33.
7: 30--Hollywood Squares 3,4; Let's Go To The Races8 ;
Candid Camera 6 ; MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20.33;
Price Is Right 10; Thal"s Hollywood 13; Telev ision

u

-Upholstery-

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1971
5:4s-Farm Reporl 13; 5 : ~PTL Club 13; 5:»Sunrlse Semester 10: 6:00-PTL Club 15.

6:3D-NBC News 3,4,15: ABC News 13; Corol

Metal-Ploslics

...

LAVENDER
CONSTRUCTION
Syr11cuse, Ohio

- - ---------

$7 ,500.

A thought lor the day: In a
1945 mesliage to Congress on
atomic energy, President
Truman said, "The release 'or
atomic energy constitutes a
new force too revolutionary
\O coosider in the framework
oi old ideas."

Save 3{) pet . to sa pet .
on heating cost
Experien(e and
tu lly i nsured
Free Es t.
Call : 661 ·6479 or 992·1815
1· " ·1 mo .

Blown Insulation

TWO BEDROOM Trailer, real
nice
Aduls only . Brown 's
!r~ il~ Por~-!1~ ·3324 .
HOUSE FOR rent Coli 9Q2.J489 COAL , limestone. and calci um
alter 5 P.ln .
chloride end calciu m brine for
dus t control and special mixing
salt lor formers Excels ior Sal t
Works , Main Stree t, Pomeroy,
9 '-'
l. -~
. Ohio or phone 992· J."BCC
DEALER AUCT ION Public invi ted
ECONOMY
TRA
CTOR
with
ell of·
fkur s Feb 2, I 1 om . All new
tochmenls l•ke new osk •ng
merchan di se sold m quantity ol
$2250 Phone (614) 698·3290.
Jkio : River Auc ti on . M eigs
Plaza. Midd leport Ohio
RUGS . WALL
Hongmgs ~nd
ol gons. N1ce for Ck r1s1mos
PUBliC AUCTION Sole . Fn . 7 pm .
Reasonable Coll992·22 14 .
New and used merchandise at
Ohio Rive r Auction . Meigs
1970 FORD F·250 Custom. 17.50 ~o:
Plaza , M1dd leporl , Ohio .
14 .00 tires · wi nch. Only 14.000
Speci al auction Sol . 7 pm .
mi. Headers. CB. ToP.e deck .
Tru ckloads of new furn it ure
Over $3 ,000 in extras . Serious
ond m•sc. I rom slore doseo vl .
call s only after 12 noon .
6WJ·I 072 $6 , 600:
~·~-~-c-~
B 8 S MOBILE HOMES. Pl . Plea·
sont, W Vo . bes•de Heck s.
1973 Broodmore 14 11 64 2
bedroom
I 973 Dorian 14 x 60 2 bedroom
I 972 Victorian 14 x 67 3 bedroom ,
2 bath
1972 Coventry 12 10; 65 3 bedroom
let Pomeroy Landmark
196(,1 Stat esman 12 x 60 2
soften &amp; condjtion your
bedroom .

Phm:~e

Cellulosic (wood fiber)
Thermal Insulation

-

fr iend trie s to put you in suc h a Eddie Cantor and Gary
position, steer th e conversaMoore were born on Jan. 31 tion in ano ther direction .
!NEWSPAPER EN TE RPRISE ASSN .)

Movie Chonntl 4 5 &amp; 9 P.M. - Rocky (PG l
1 &amp; 11 P.M. - Nickelodeon IPGl

USMC 10.

r-;::~-~;---;-:-;----,

Corner Union Ave.

24

The Almanar
United
. Press International
Today is Tuesday, Jan. 31,
the 31st day of 1978 with 334 to
follow.
The evening s tars are
Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Aquarius.

l :oo--Tomorrow 3,4 ; 1:20-News 13; l:.cs-Kotak 8.

4:0Cl-Mister Cartoon J : Edge of Night 13; My Three
SonS • • For Richer, for Poorer 1S: Merv Griffin 61
Gilligan' s Is. 8; Sesame Sf . 20,33 : Gomer Pyle.

11 ·9 ·11C

RISING STAR Kennel Boclrding.
Indoor and ou ldoor run !&gt;.
Groom,ng all breeds Clean
~Onii Ory
roc•l• l •es . Chesk•re.
Phone {bl 4) 3b7 ·0292 .

Top

T

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

PWMBING &amp;

Blown Into Walls

Everyone may th ink you· re a
_Jack W. Carsey, Mgr .
big htt lqday except your mate
Phone 992-2111
This will be espectally true tf .
you stay ou t a littl e longer than
you said you would Find out
more about yourself by sendin g for your copy of AstraGraph Letter . Mail 50 cents for LOST: SUN glosses . Pre scr ip tion
grau_n~b~lo cols_. 247·216_?.
eac h and a lo ng , selfadd ressed, stamped enve lope
to Astra-Grap h, P,O. Box 489,
Radio City Sta ti on. N.Y. 10019.
Be sure to spec ily your bir th RE SPONSIBLE OL DER lady 10 live
sign.
in and care lor aged lady m
PISCES 1Feb.20-Maroh 20)
Rut land . L•gh t housework and
Enjoy yoursell il you feel l1ke it
coolo.•ng , no laundry . More for
home l ho n wages . Coli
today , because you· re entitled
742·2078.
to have a good time . Don 't get
out on th e dance floor and then WANTED· AUTO mechanic lorCM
worry abou t the wOfk.
dea lership . Wr•te: Box 743 ,
ARIES !March 21-Aprll 19)
Pomeroy . OH 45769 '
·-·
--Early in the day you have you r

TAURUS !April 21)-May 20)

TUESDAY . JANUARY 31 , tt71

3,15: Gilligan' s Is . •• Brady Bunch
8,1 0; Marv Tyler Moore 13 .
s:oo-Here Come The arlctes3; Star Trek .. ; Gunsmoke

J&amp;L

CARTER

INCOME TAX Services . Federal
and State TooiCes . Wallace
Ruuell , Bro_dbury 992·7228 .
ANNOUNCING the opening of thtt
pubhc ac cou nting oflice ol
Roger lodc e ~doo ,
licensed
public occ.ounlanl for octoun·
t• ng and bookkeeping ser.,.•ces
ond preparation of federal and
state la x returns at 291 Walnut
St., Middleport. Oh, 992·2bM .
Hours by appoin tm ent.

9:3G-Harvey Kormon 6,13; IO:oo-Famlly 6.13:
10 ;30-Diamond Rivers 23.33.
11 :oo-News 3,4,6, 13, 15; DlckCavett :/01 Over Easy 33;
11 :3D-Johnny Carson 3.4.15; Movie "Sisters• • 6,13;
ABC News 33.
.
11 ·40-News 8,10; t2 :0Cl-Movle " Trapped" ! ; Movie
"The Big Sl"p" 10.

.1 : 3D-Little Rascals

THE RACINE Gun Club Gun Shoot
e11ery Sunday afternoon . Foe·
tory choke guns only . Assorted
meats .

You 're going to be mol l'~a te d
more strong ly this co ming year
because you're not only work ing lor yourse lf bu t also lor
those you love. Th1s will make
you a much more capab le
contender .

ac t , tog et her in the busmess
world , so. move while you ' re
extra-sharp. Evening business
sessions may tmd you d Ull.

TELEVISION
VIEWING

POLICE, Ms. .JONES
A FEVV ROUTINE
QUESTIONS.

YOU WEREN'T ON THAT CASE
SAM- VITAMIN FLI NTHEART '
PL.AYEO A MAJOR ROI.E IN
NAILING FLATTOP • .,

•

Business Services

IN COME lA X Ser-nce• , Fedlll'rol
ond Stole fo.:e$ . Wando Eblin.
992 ·2211

[!J~wlli~W\J

AQUARIUS !Jan. 20-Feb.l9)

50 Years ... A Closer Look 3,4,15;
Three's Company 6,13; Movie " Chinatown" 8, 10.

•

Feb. I, 1978

Today's

'

OF MASON

running other Uwn

Phonem-21~

WEST LAFAYETTE , Ind .
1UP! ) - Purdue University
Monday nanied Bob Spoo, a
former Purdue quarterback
and assistant coach at
Wis co ns in, to its foo tball
stafl.
Spoo replaced John Mackovic, recently named head
coach at Wake Forest, and
will be In cha rge of
quarterbacks and recruiting
in the Chicago area, sa id
Coach Jim Young .

GINO'S

'-"

Each wurd vver lht' rnlnunwn l!i
words i.!l i cents per word pef day.
Ads

------~--

9 : ~NBC : The First

'

'

C..o pr. l97B 'Kmg Fer.tures Syndicate, Inc: .

WILL CARE for the elderly in all"r "'
home. Phone 9Q2·7314.
. .:

had a :JO.point part score .

lhc Ucst one in his tory ~tnd a
Llimnond lea d would have
defeated it easily, Uut Cui ·
bcrt~on opene d the deuce o f
clubs.
Th1 s .c;ctvc Lcnz a c ha nce to
uwku the e onlra&lt;:.' l by mean~
llf 11 s pectac ul e~ t·, but nonnul
expert piHy. lie dropped the
qu een of clubs under Eusl's

king to make it possi ble

later on, disciml n loser a nd
score his ninth tnck .
l.en z wa s 57 ul th e time of
the match li nd was kno~n as
lhc g ra nd old rm111 of bridge

sin('c Culbertson was 40, Jo
Culbertson nand Jacoby 28.

~,).!f ~.iH :.&amp;:! 1J Yli~
A New .Je rsey reader asks

if then· ever was a 1·2-:J
system .
The answer

PIANO TUNING·· Lo ne Daniels . t ~
yeors of service. New phl!lir@..,
number, 992 ·2581 .
- ~
ATTENTION MARE Owneis:
AQHA stud service. Introducing
to Southern Ohio. Cor tolo.a , sor. ,
rell san of Otoe. Breed for col·' 1
or, co nformation and dlsposi;;;
hon . Phone 69B·8241 &amp;'oll!lninQS" •
or wrile fo r breeding contract ~-:
Belle Echo Quarter Hor~s ,
4'0225 SR 692, Pomeroy, Ohi~ 1
45769 .
~~

-" ''

1974 SKYLINE 14 x 56. 3 bedroom,!
totCI1 electric. $7500. 992·2019. '

'

WAAL ·- HOW DOllE.

WELL?

DON'T

FORCE

'{OURSELF!

LIKE Mil NEW BATCH
OF CORN-SQUEEZIN'S

I

CALEB?

IS

'' Yes.'' In ..

vented by Sidne y J.enz, s uit

three hh.ls we r(' game forc es
a nd tw o bids just ve ry good
hands amJ not forcing .
Totlay's a 1·ticle shows the
systtml at work .
'N ~: wsi'AP,. : n

t:Nn :H:I'I( tst: ASSN. 1

/Do you have a ques tion lor
/Ire experts ? Wri te ..Ask the
Experts ... care of /his Qewspaper Individual (/u es rions will
be answered If accompanied
b:Y stamped, self-addressed
envelopes. Th e most mterestm{} queshons will IJa used In
lh1s co lumn · and will -receive
copms o f JACOB Y MODERN.)

BARNEY

MOBILE HOME repairs . 992 ·5858 ~'' "

to

finesse clummy' s 10 or clubs

TAKES TH' WORDS
RIGHT OUT OF \{QRE
MOUTH, DON'T IT?

�'

10- The Daily Sent mel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesday. Jan 31, 1978

!.=s:~e

Ice jams posing big problems

planned
WASHINGTON (UP! l
President Carter was
working today on hts ftrestde
chat on the Panama Canal
treaties set for Wednesday
rught, and his huddle wtth
Egypttan President Anwar
Sadat at Camp Dav1d, Md ,
next weekend
White
House
atdes
indtcated the prestdenl wants
to meet Sadal m tbe relaxed
settmg of the mountamtop
retreat where the two leaders
can discuss the direction of
the Israeli-Egyptian peace
talks
Durmg the meeting Carter
also was expected to seek
assurances that Sadat will
not pull any more surpriSes
as he seeks to keep up the
momentum of th e peace
talks.
Tentative plans call for
Carter to meet Sada t at
Andrews Atr Force Base
Frtday afternoon or everung
and for the two leaders and
their wt ves to fly by
helicopter to the hideaway for
the weekend, probably
returning to Washmgton
Sunday afternoon
In advance of his televised
and broadcast fireSide chat
Wednesday, Carter and top
advisers arranged to brtef
representatives of some 50
religious groups to drum up
grass-roots support for the
canal treaties
Meamyhtle a dozen or more
governors from tbe Mtdwest
and West were invtted to the
White House today to assess
the farm sttuatlon and offer
solutions to the growmg

problems

.

NOW OPEN

GINO'S
I
OF MASON
PHONE 773-553b

By JOHN T. KADY
Unlled Press lnternatiooal
Nattonal Guardsmen and
regular Army troops today

continued storm recovery
operauons, mamly m
northwestern Ohto, but tee
jams on the Ohto
Musk1ngum Rwers

and
are

causmg problems m other
areas.
A tw~ile tee jam, 20 feet

New Haven fire
department called
The New Haven Fire
Department was called at
3· 20 a m today to Letart,
near the Un10n Campgro und,
where an auto was bunung
out of control upon arnval
A spokesman stated that a
1972 auto owned and driven by
Norman Laudermtlt, Mason,
' had shd mto a dttch a nd as he
was trymg to gel out of the
ditch, the auto caught on ftre.
The cause uf the ftre IS

unkown. The car was com·
pletely
dest royed
the
spokesman noted. Two trucks
and etght men responded to
the call

tbtck in places, blocked tbe he out dynamttmg ll again
Markland dam on the Ohio today "
rtver south of Cmcinnau.
An tee floe rammed a hoat
The tee jam has trapped 17 and caused another boat to
barges and a tugboat whic~•.
are bein crushed by the
pressW'e of wns of ice
"The tee Is backed up from
one Side of the rtver to the
other,''
sa1d
Chuck
Schumann of the Army Corps
of Engmeers. "But water IS
flowmg underneath the tee
and through the dam gates,
so as a result there's no flood
danger."
An Ice Jam at a dam near
Philo on the Muskmgum
Rtver wtll be dynamited
agam today m hopes of
gettin g the river moving
agam.
The backed up waters
forced the evacuation of
about 50 persons m the Philo
area
"Right now tts one pool to
another wtth some gomg
down and some reaminlng
sta ble," said Musktngum
ROY JONES, JR.
County sheriff's deputy Kevin
Bunting. "There also has
been some floodmg and

damage north of Philo at
Rtverstde arrport . They will

s·lX person S are

MEETING SET

taken to hospital
Stx persons were tran·

sported Monday by rescue
squads m Mason Com1ty

Ta ken by the Potnt
Pleasant Squad were Elsie
Lew1s, Pomt Pleasant, to her
home from Pleasant Valley
Hospttal, Came Luh, Leon,
to her home from Pleasant
Valley Hosptlal , Norma
Rtce, Point Pleasant, to her

Members of the New Haven
Ftre Department wtll hold a
bu smess meeting Wednesday, Feb. I, 7 30 p m at
the ftre station All members
are urged to attend
MEET CANCElLED
A meeting
of the
Mtddleport Ltterary Club
scheduled for Wednesday has
been canceUed Meetings will
resume when the weather
moderates .

home from Pleasant Valley
and Ruth Patterson, Polnl
Pleasant, to Holzer Medtcal
Center and back home
MEETING POSTPONED
The Mason Squad took
The regular monthly
Vtrgmta Grinstead, Musbn, meetmg uf the Tu-EnducWet
fr om Veterans Memorial L&lt;&gt;dge 102, acttve Faternal
Hospttal to Pleasant Valley Order of Pollee has been
Hospita l and the Valley postponed from Thursday,
Squad tran sported James Feb. 2, until Thursday, Feb
Hutchtnson, Mtlton, to Ca bell· 9, weather pertmttiOg
Huntington Hospttal

Jones to head
Ohio Dairy
Association

Roy J ones, Jr , fanner
Metgs County restdenl, and
presently of Frecker's Ice
Cream Co , Columbus, was
today installed as prestdent
of the Ohio Datry Products
Assoc iatiOn 's 61st annual
convention betng held at the
Htlton Inn, Columbus
Jones, who ts the son of Mr
and Mrs. Roy Jones, Sr.,
Nease Settlement. ts married
to the former Eunice Htll,
daughter of Mr and Mrs F;
J . H1ll. Flatwoods Mr and
Mrs Jones have three sons,
Mtke who restdes at Flatwoods ; John of Columbus,
and Jeffrey of Middleport
Conventto'n sesstons
Monday and Tuesday dealt
wtth the problems of the
datry products mdustry. Mr
and Mrs. Jones rest de atiiB2
Circle on the Green, Worthington

REPORT OF CONDITION
Conso!Jdatmg domesttc subSldtanes of the

CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK
of Mtddleport m the swle of Ohto, at the close o! busmess on December 31, 1977 pubitshed m
response to call made by Comptroller of the Currency, under title 12, Umted Swles Code,
Seclton 161
National Bank RegiOn Number 4
Charter number 8441
Swtement of Resources and Llabthltes
1,437,000.00
3,067,000 00

Cash and due from banks
U S Treasury secunttes

Obhga lwns of States and pohllcal
subdiVISions . . . .

..... ..

Federal Reserve stock and corporate stock
Federal funds sold and securtltes purchased
under agreeme nts to resell
.Loa ns, Tol&lt;tl ( ex:clud1ng unea1 ned mcome)
Uss Reserve for posst b1e loan losses .. . .
Loans, Net . .
.. .... . . .....
..
Bank premt ses, furmture and f1xtures, and other

.. '

Real estate owned other than bank premtses
Other assets
TOTAL ASSETS
Demand depostts of tndtvlduals, prtnshps .
,
and corps. .
'.
Tune a ~d savmgs deposits of 1ndtvtduals
prtnshp.s , and co rp~
DeprJStts of Untled Swtes Government
Depostts of States and poltllcal subdtvtstons . . . . . . .
Deposits of cmrunerc~a l banks
Certlfted and offtcers' checks ....
TOTAL DOMESTIC DEPOSITS
Total demand depostls
Total tunc and savmgs depostts
Other ltabtltttes
TOTAL LIABILITIES (excluding suhordinated
notes a nd debentures) ....

Ill

-t...:
-c

Ill

I ll

-...

~c

5!:

0~
Ill ...
u

1---+-

cQ

z

c
III:

0

:i
:i

Ill

...' .

.. ...... .

Cotrunon stock
a No shares authonzed 2,000
b No sharesoutswndmgs 2,000 (par va lue).
Surplus . . . .
.. ..... .
Undtvtded profits..
.........
. ...... .
TOTAL EQUITY CAP ITAL .. . .. .
. ...... ..
TOTAL LIABI!JTIES AND EQUITY CAPITAL

smash mto a pter of the

suspenSion brtdge between
Ky .
and
Covmgton,
Cincinnati, Monday, forcrng

tt to close f&lt;r several hours
The Army Corps of
Engineers reports ll has 550
pteces of equipment involved

in snow recovery operations
throughout Oho at a cost of
nearly $2 million.
Gov. James A Rhodes
again
Monday
asked
PreSident Carter to declare
Ohio a disaster area so more
federal atd could be sought to
I help . in the cleanup and
She was born in Sidwell on further federal aid was
June 23, 1916, daughter of obtained to help prunarily the
George Wallace and the late
northwestern Ohio area.
•
Ada Scr uggs Wallace
Rhodes
pomted
to
She married G1lbert Mayo
In B•dwell 1n 1957 He sur
escalating recovery costs
v lves. along w1fh one from the bllzzard as a factor
daughter, Anna Renee Mayo.
in seeking the increased
Rt , 1, 61dwell
federal
ald .
Six brothers surv1ve Alex
and Henry, Detro1t, Charles,
Rhodes said late Mooday
Aust•n · and George, all of Utat agricultural loses are
Columbus and Leroy, of Kerr
now pegged at $64 million and
Three sisters !urv•ve Mrs
Gertrude Davis, Washington, Satd tl would cost the state fl5
D. C. and Mrs Ada A Lewis,
to $25 million for snow
and Mr s Brenda King, both removal and rescue missions.
of Columbus One sister
"The economic loss to the
preceded her m death
is catastrophic,"
Funeral serv1ces will be state
held 1 p m Saturday at the Rhodes told the prestdenl.
Prov•dence Church Burial
"The wtdespread shutdown of
will be In Prov idence
industrtes
and the loss of
Cemetery
mcome for hourly workers
Fnends may call at the
McCoy Moore Funeral Home
wtll cause a stgnlficant

,--------------------------.-I

:
I

Area Deaths

WILLIAM BARCUS

William Francis Barcus,
42, a res1dent ot Rt
1,
R1veria , Texas, formerly
from Gallla County. was dead
on arnval at 3 50 a m today
at the Holzer Medtcal Center
He hatl JUSt arrived In
Ga llipoliS Monday afternoon
to v1sll h1s lather, Wymond
Barcus. Rt 2. Gallipolis
Funeral arrangements will
be announced
by
the
Cremeens Funeral Home

EDNA HAYMAN

Edna Geneva Hayman, 89,

a former res1de nt of leta rt
Township, d1ed Jan 21 In the
M.asonic Home at Springfield
She was born in Reedy, W
Va . Sept s. 1888. a daughter
of t he late Edgar and
/1/o.argaret Watt s Hylbert She
was a member of the Untted
M.ethod1st Church 1n New
Marshfield where she l1ved
many years She was also
preceded 1n death by her
husband, George W Hayman
m 1963, a s1ster and two
brothers
Surv 1vtng are a s1ster, Mrs
Mabel Hevener, Huntington ,
W Va. 1 two brot hers, John
W Hylbert, TIJcson, Anz,
and Edgar W Hylbert of
Tarpon Springs, Fla , several
n1eces and neph~ws and a
cousm , Beulah L Bradford,
Rac1ne
Graves1de serv1ces were
held at 1 p m last Tuesday m
the Letart Falls Cemetery
with the Rev . Freeland
Norns offtclatlng

CLEO McMANIS

Cleo McMan is, 41, a
resi dent of 537 Hilda Dnve,
Galhpol1s, d1ed at 4 05 p m
Mon day 1n Holzer Med1cal
Center She has been In
fadmg health the past two
and one hall years
A regtstered nune. she was
born Jufy 22. 1936, at Neon,
Ky , daughter of the late
Charles and Magg1e Worden
Taylor
She 1s survived by_ her
husband, Jerry L. McMan1s,
and three c hildren , Jer~ Lynn, JoE lien and Lemoyne,
all at home
Mrs McMan1s graduated
from Neon Fleming Hi gh
School, Neon, Ky In 1955 She
gradua ted from
Holzer
School of Nursing m 1960
She was employed as an
RN at Holzer Med1cal Center
for several years.
She marned Jerry Me
Mams on Aug 12, 1960, 1n
Wellston Surv1v1n~ bes ides
her husband and children are
two brothers and one s•ster,
Mrs Willard (Jewell) Fu lton ,
Wellston , Edwin Taylor ,
Wellston , Victory Taylor,
Sp n ngfi~ld, Ohio
She was a member of the
Gallipolis Chnst1an Ch!Jrch,
Gallipolis Chapter, Eastern
Star, Ga l lipol iS Lioness Club
and the Fa1rv 1ew Spnng
Valley Homemakers Club
Funeral serv1ces will be
hel d 2 p m Wednesda y at t he
Waugh Halley Wood Funeraf
Denny
Home with Re v
Coburn otf1C!at1ng 61Jrlal
-will be 1n Oh1o Valley
Memory Gardens
Fnends may call at the
funera I home after 4 p m
today
Pallbearers
will
be ·
Grorge Nash. Cecil Vinson,
John Weeks, Robert Nelson ,
J•m Williams and WUI1am
Schoonover

l

on Friday evening from 7
unhl 9 p m The body wdl lie
10 sta te at the chu rch one
hour pnor to serv1ces.

MARY LOUISE OSBURN
REEDSVILLE - Mrs

N-.ary Lou 1se Osburn , 73, of
Route l, Reedsville, d•ed
1\1\onday mght at the Falfvlew
Nursmg Home 1n Logan
following an extended Illness
She was born 1n Tunnelton .
w v~ a daughter of the ~~te
Tom and Lavey Morton
Shrout
She was a member of the
Hock1ng Valley Tabernacle
Church, Logan
Surv1vors include four
s1sters, Mrs. May Bak-er,
Lana, Mrs. Beulah Schmidt
1

and Mrs . Grace Adams. both

of New Orleans , Mrs Ella
Coell of Crystal Springs,
Fla ; f1ve brothers, Henry ,
Belpre , Charles, Parkers
burv , Paul and Hal of Crystal
Sprmgs, Jack, Neptune. N.J.
She was preceded 1n death
by her husband, Thomas In
1956 and ~two s1sters
F~Jner al services will be at
1 p.m Thursday at the White
Funeral Home 1n Coolville .
Rev Elden Blake w1ll of
f1c1ate Bur ial will be m
success Cemetery Fnends
may call at the funeral home
any t 1me after noon on
Wednesday .

ODES PARSONS

Odes D Parsons, 86, d•ed at
8 30 am today 1n Holzer
N.edica l Center He was a
Gallipol is realtor M iller 's
Home for Funerals will an
noun ce
other
details
tomorrow Mrs. George ( Pet)
Ke1th, Grove C~ty. a s1ster.
died Sunday m Columbus.

JULIA H. WHITE
Julia H Wh1te. 89. died
Monday evenmg at Lawrence
County General Hospital ,
Ironton
She had been m falling
health for several years She
had res1ded at the Bowman
Nurs1ng Home m Coal Grove
She was born Ju ly 25, 1888,
m Vmton, daughter of the late
William and 1\Aargaret Me
Mllllan Jackson
She marned Frank Lester
While 011 Nov 3, 1907 He
preceded her '"death on June
8, 1972 Her late husband was
a long .tlme employee of the

Gillingham Drug Co

Funeral services will be
held 10· 30 a m Thursday at

SERGEANT PROMOTED
Shaw AFB, S. C., has announced the promotion of
Wayne E. Well to staff
sergeant 111 the U. S Air
Force. Sergeant Well, sorr of
Mr. and Mrs Denver E. Well
of Rt 3, Pomeroy, IS an ad·
mmtstratlve specialist wtth a
wut of the Teact1cal Air
Command. A1971 graduate of
Meigs High School, he has
studied at Ohto Umversity.
His wife, Linda, IS the
daughter of l&lt;&gt;ts Anderson of
14856 Hocktng Road, Logan.
MEDICAL PATIENT
Alpha Cottrtll, Syracuse, is
a methcal patient at Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Hts room
number IS 125 for those who
wish to send cards.

8,992,000 00
. 57,000 00
.... &gt;79,000.00
5,000.00
.. 114,000 00
. 13,055,000 00
3,766,000 00
9,289,000 00
4,000.00

the

The Federal Dtsaster
Assistance Administration
reported Monday that fl.5

per!llllneland equipment had
been contracted for, and said
the amount may double
before the work is finished . ""'
In . addition, the, Army has ~ '
sent 375 troops maruung 75 :
pieces of equipment into the ~
greater Toledo area.
:
•
•
••
•

Nme home based on Okinawa
His umt Is the ground
element of a Marine Am·
phibtous Urut (MAU). A 1\lAU
IS the force-m-readiness for
the U. S Seventh Fleet; on·
caU to proJect combined &amp;lr·
ground forces ashore, tf
requtred.
BLT 1-9 IS scheduled to
conduct training operations
tn the Republic of the
Phi!ipptnes and Japan
Addthonally, he ts scheduled
to parttctpate in the ampht btous trammg exerctse
"Phtbtre:r:" wtth units from
Thailand.
A 1974 graduate of Palomar
College, San Marcos, Callf.,
with an assoc1ate of arts
degree, he jomed the Marine
Corps 10 May 1967.

SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad answered a call at
31:12 a.m. Tuesday in
Pomeroy for Stella DarneD
who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.

News •• in Briefs

(Colltlllued !ram IIIII 1)
several bolts and escaped through a 12-by.U inch hole left
when she removed the taillight Police Satd they're amazed at
her courage and presence of mind. A suspect was expected to
be charged wtth kidnapp10g and criminal sexual miSConduct
today.
NEW YORK - TWO SMAIL bombs early today blew out a
window at Consolidated Edison's headquarters In Manhattan
and slightly damaged a pollee car parked several blocks away ,
pollee reported.
The blasts apparently caused no injuries, but a police
spokesman said a Con Edison repairman, who was workmg in
a manhole near the utility's headquarters, was "shaken up."

Waugh -Ha lley Wood

CLEVELAND - A PICKET,WAS shot to death Monday
night during an argument with security guards oulside the
strike-bound Barger Metal Jl'alrication Co. on St. Clair Ave.,
police reported today
The dead man was Identified as Thomas Moss, 39, of East
Cleveland, a member of !..&lt;&gt;cal 48 of the Upholsterers
International Union.

13,059,000.00

Average for 30 calendar days ending wtth report dale
Cash and due from banks
Fed funds sold and secunties purchased
.. .. ...
under agreements to resell
Totalloans .. .. .
.
. .. .. . ..
Total depostts of JIOO.OOO or more
m domestic offices
Total deposits
TOTAL ASSETS
Swndby letters of credtl (outswndmg as of report date)
Tune certiftcates mdenonunattons of $100,000
or mort• (outstanding as of report date) . . . .. .. . .. .. .. .. ......

I ,307,000 00

1,145,000.00
6,983,000.00
422.000.00
13,316,000 00
14,669,000 00
65 ,000.00
422 000.00

I, Manmng Kloes, Vtce Prestdenl and Cashier of the above-named bank do hereby
declare that this Report of Condttton ts true and correct to the beSt of my knowledge and
belief.
Manmng Kloes
January 20, 1978
, We, the undersigned directors attest the correctness of thts statement of resources and
liabtllttes We declare that tt has been examined by us, and to the best of our knowledge and
beUef Is true and correct
PaulS Smart
RoseS Reynolds - Directors
Harold E. Hubbard

I

•

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday , February I, 1978
l.r":-.~"&lt;:\.~).~~:::..~:;~:·:&gt;:·~~..:~":0!•!•!·!·~'&gt;:0::."!8·~~:::::::»":::.":&lt;':::!:::~~'&gt;~-.:::::

«

~

JNews • . . in Briefsl
By United Press International
MOSCOW - SOVIET PRESIDENT LEONID Brezhnev,
back 111 public after reported hout with the flu , met today
with Cuban Defense Minister Raul Casiro and diScussed
"international affairs of mlerest to hoth countnes." The
official Tass news agency satd little about the reason for the
meeting.
Castro was last seen 10 Ethtopia, where Cuban techmclons
and speCialists are aidmg the Soviet-backed EthiOpians m
their war with Somilli msurgents.

a

BEIRUT, LEBANON - A HAND GRENADE exploded
•IIJIUd a group of pedestrtans today near tbe downtown Beirut
headquarters of the rlght-wmg Phalangtst Party, killing
several persons. Initial reports said at least three people were
killed and 12 mjured in the blast.
Witnesses satd the explosiOn occurred near the stle of a
similar blast Tuesday, also close to the Phalangtsl off tees. But
there was no lnunedtate mdicahon Utat the attacks were
auned at the heavily guarded party headquarters
LONDON - THE LATE ELVIS PRESLEY has ousted
Joan of Arc as all-tune favonte of vtsttors at Madame
Tussaud's waxworks and that's a btl embarrassing. Tussaud's
doesn't have a model of Presley.
''Over the years we tried hard to gel a stltmg with Presley
and were prepared to go to America to do it," a museum
spokeswoman said. " But we were never g1ven pernuss10n "
ATLANTA- ATTORNEYS FOR the fam1ly of a postman
who died of cancer after U S. Rep Larry McDonald treated
him wtth Laetrile say tbey will prove the congressmanphysician is a " menace "
Testunony hegtns today in the $6 million medtcal
negligence swt !tied agamst McDonald, a urologtsl, and
Doctors Memorial Hospital by the farruly of Btrnungham
postman John L. Scott.

•

A

natural disaster can also
be a financial disaster as
well. Protect yourself against
property loss or do mage with
our oil-in-one policy.

Come see ali our
"lovtng" \lifts for
Valentine s Day,
Tuesday, Feb. 14:
New decorator scented candles.
writing papers,
albums, gift books.
A,beautiful
Hallmark valentine
and a thoughtful
Hallmark gift ...
the perfect way
to say you care.

Get The Facts
PHONE 992·5120

Davis Insurance ,Agency
Across fro"' IM Court House in Pomeroy

Btll Quickel. Roy Shepherd. Junnie Storcher
A Notary Service &amp; Comptele Bonding Service

ELBERFELD$
IN POMEROY

Fair Friday and a chance
of snow Saturday and snow
flurries In oortbeastern
Ohio Sunday. Highs wiD be
between 15 aud 25 Friday
and Saturday and ID the 20s
Sunday. l&lt;&gt;ws will raoge
Irom zero to 10 a buve zero
Friday and 10 to 20
Saturday and Sunday.

•

at

House and taktng personal command over the bogged-down
negotiations as ch1e£ mediator
"If you P.,und the table, holh sides wtll hsten," said Rhodes
''I 58)" brmg them tn (the White House),set them down and say
'Gentlemen, w' are gotng to settle tins &gt;trike "'
OhiO House Mtnonty Leader Charles Kuriess, R-Rowhng
Green, wrote to House Speuker Vernal G. Rtffe, Jr, Tuesday
appealmg for prompt legislaltve adoplton of hiS resolution
askmg the presulenl w invoke the Taft-Hartley Act tn the coal
strtke
The General Assembly is not meeting t!ils week because
many lawmaker'lrhave bc&lt;en unnble to ~et to Columbll!i.
Coal mtners have satd repeatedly they would t~nore u back
to work order under the Taft-Hartley Act. whtch prnvtdes for
an 81.klay •coohng off pertod' durmg contract ne~oltollOns .

United Press International
Gov. James A Rhodes is

Vu. 2~. No. 2o:1

car recall

extension

for

the

northwestern Ohto counties of

Ha ncock , Wood , Wtlhams
and Ottawa
•
Commumt1es m those counties wtll be able to receive 100
percent reunbursemcnt for
snow removal and olber blizzard-related expendtlures for
an mdefirute pertod
But a dtsaster declaratiOn
from Prestdenl Carter would
make all local governments
m Oluo ellgtble for lowtnlerestloans to repatr roads ,
br1dges and public factlthes
damage d by last week' s
blizzard.
Rhodes satd· Tuesday Utat
storm-related OOsmess losses
should be reported w Ute Ohio
Department of Economtc and
Commumly Dev,elopment,
public school losses to the
State Board of Education,
un•verstly losses to the Ohio
Board of Regents and
agr~cultural losses to the
nearest Farmers Home
Admm1stration

(Contlllued on page 10)

THIS IS ONE p1ece of heavy equtpmenl !rum Ute Ben Tom Corp . whtch bega n the chore
of clearmg away Ice on the vtllage parkmg lots along the Oh to River Tuesday aflel'Roon The
high water which rose onto the lots the last of tbe week left masses of tee when till! watet
receded and the parking lots have been out of use stnce that tunc. leavmg hltle I"" kmg
space for workers m establishments of the town let alone sh()ppcrs Mctdumts uf Pomeroy
are paytng the cost of removmg Ute tee.

Union leader hopes strike will end
By JOHN T KADY

United Press International

A Umted Mme Workers
wuon officml smd today " I
hope to Go'd " negottalors m
Washmgton can come up w1th
a new contract to end the nationwide coal strtke because
u 1t has gone on long enough

and now ll IS to the poml
wher e tl IS hurltng
everybody "
John Guzek, president of
UMW Dl slrtct 6 hea dquartered m Bellatre wtlh
16,000 members m eastern
Oluo and the northern

sa1d apparenUy the only
stumbling block lu a settlement of the stnke whiCh
beg(i n Dec 6 are economlt:
1ssues.

wrong tl would be fmcd If an"
t~rblli a tor wa.s mvulved he
would dctm mmc whu shou ld
be ftned "
Guzek sa1d. ho\\ evct. l1&lt;•
did not know 1f the ra nk-andftl e members will a&lt;:ccpl Hny

Ohto's clectnc ulthll es
have been htl hard by the coal
strtke nd at least one, Colum- clause that w11l hnc mmc1s
Panhandle of West V1rgnua, bus &amp; Southern Ohio Eleclrtc w1der any L:om httons
But as rar i:l.s the elct:tJic
Co ' says tt Will have to swrt
rolling blackouts tf the slttke utthtles are concerned , tune
IS runnmg s hm l
doe.s not end w1thm a week
Guzek sa id once lite
" It has gone un long
negotia
tors reach agreement
enoughn
a
nd
now
1t
IS
to
the
The
loans
would
not
be
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Ohio
on
the
contrHct, then the
potnl
where
tl
ts
hurtmg
avaLlable
to
fanners
who
are
Director of Agriculture John
UMW
Bm
gmmng Cuum.: al
everybody,"
Guzek
told
UPI
able
to
secure
credtl
through
Stackhouse satd Tuesday
COilSISllllg
of alJ lhStiid
farmers may be able w normal channels and If the m a telephone mtervtew " It
prc~
Idcnts,
lnle rnatJon&lt;:~l
recover some of the $64 losses do not exceed 20 has hurt the coal mmers for a
Buatd
presidents
a nd the
long
hme
but
now
tt
ts
hurltng
m1l1Ion m agricultural losses percent of estunated income
thrl.le
restdent
offtcers
go
everyone
I
hope
to
God
they
caused by last week's from the damaged category
over
the
agreement
"
get
somelhmg
settled
soon
of
production.
blizzard by gettmg low-cost
" If the language of the con·
Guzek said tt appears 011e
Stackhouse said that If
federal loans
tract
hasn't ben changed too
maJor
stumbling
block
had
ehgtble.
farmers
would
he
Stackhouse satd the losses
much,
then thiS would be
be
en
cleared
by
_the
ehgtble
for
loans
at
3
percent
must have occurred between
done
m
one
day, maybe two,"
negotiators
who
resumed
for
losses
suffered
up
to
Jan. ~ and Feb. 3
satd Guzek who ts on the
$2.\0,000, and 5 percent for talks today in Washmgton
That was a demand by the Bargammg Council '' Then at
losses greater than $500,000.
eoal
compames that rruners goes to the rmnets fm
Appllcatton for emergency
Operators asked
parlic1paltng
tn wtldca l rattftcallon This could take_
loans are to be made through
stnkes
be
fined
and the fme abouliO days "
Ute local collllty ufflce of the
to get pennits
Guzek ts head of another
Farmers
Home money put mlo the UMW
UMW
negot1attng learn whtd t
Health
and
Retirement
Fund.
Adrrunistratwn
All food serv1ce operators
IS
workmg
on a contract wtlh
"The
way
I
understand
tt
Stackhouse
satd
the
should procure thetr 1978 food
licenses at thts ttme, the deadline for loan apphcation now, the clause says both par- construction workers who
County
Health for damages to bwldmgs and ties - the coa l compames belong to the umon a nd conMetgs
Department
announces. eqwpmenlts Aug I, 1978 and and the miners - can be fm- struct such tlungs as tipples
Applicants should know the damage to crop production Is ed dependmg on wh1ch one ts atlhemmcs
Thts contract also cxplretl
to blame ," smd Guzek " You
exact seating capacity of Jan 31, 1979.
Dec
6 but Guzek sees no mahave
to
remember,
some
of
their establishments at the
JOr
problem
wtth commg to
these
wildcat
strtkes
are
time apphcatton IS made.
POSTPONED
caused
by
the
company
and
Apphcabons and llcenses
The Bloodrnobtle scheduled the company 1s at fault.
are avatlable dunng busmess
for
Feb 13 at Pomeroy These compames do some
hours at the health departElementary
has been can- tdtotlc thmgs "
mentofflce, 110 Mechamc St.,
celled.
" If the company is in the
Pomeroy.

Fann loss may he recovered

,uJ agreement ont:c the &lt;.:W Itra ct talk &gt; w1th l it e
BllUlnJIIOUS

Coc~J

1\.SSOl' ll:ltJOII aJ C

Opci d lur s

Scllied

" We h.IVC plat:ll&lt;.'HIIy the
whole ( untt.Jd 111 Iwe other
Ulan the ccmJOilll~ IM c k~• gc

ami we &lt;.:.rui't put otu s
togcthci UJJtllthc thmg ts settled wlllt IJCOA," satd Guzek
'Soon as they

ct~ n

1-(Cl ttn

agr eement then we can put
ou r pHckugc together and

fullo(v

lhcm

nght

111

It

shouldn' t t"t~e too long ''
Huwcvm, Ute c unst1uel10n
cont1 act was not settled as

qutekly three years ago and
construction wm kef s shut
tlown some rnmcs aftm the
lllaJor coal stnkc ended

NO CHARG F:S FILED
No charges were falcd m an
acctdcnl at o 05 p m Tuesday
on Ftfth Ave 1n Kanuuga
The Galha-Meigs Post
Stille Htghway Patrol said
D1ane K. Carsey, 22, Mld·
dleport , lost control of her car
whtch slid on tcc striking a
vehtc!e operated by Terry A.
Homtllon , 38, Galltpolls.
There was m oderute damage
to the Hanulton cur
I

.O hio Power joins plea
for energy reduction

Flooding not immediate worry a~::~e~t"r~~:~~~h:~~.e~~

Weather

Hftct·n Ce nts

FDA denies
Rhodes' plea

EPA orders

mam mgrechent m smog

Rhodes said President Carter should mlervene in the strike
by putttng the miners and the coal operators m the White

en tine

still attempting to have Ohio
declared a federal disaster
area because of last week's
blizzard, r.oads are operung
up to allow the reslockmg of
supermarkets and traffic
may be tied up on the Ohio
nver for two weeks.
The Ohio Nat10nal Guard
still has over 2,000 men 10 the
fte!d and an Ohio Air Na tiona!
DETROIT (UPI) - For the Guard team helped fmd
second time this year, Ford James Truly, 42, Cleveland,
Motor Co. has been ordered who tuJd been buned ahve m
by the Environmental his truck near Mansfield
Protection Agency to reca ll smce Jan 25. He was found
vehi cles wtth suspected alive and well on Tuesday.
defects m pollution control
"111e deadline for applymg
eqwpment.
•
for federal reunbursemenl
Ford satd Tuesday it would for snow removal exptred at
comply wtth the Ia test recall midntghl Tuesday mghl, and
which mvolves &amp;40,000 1975- the
Federal
Dtsaster
and 1976-model Ford Torinos, Asst stance Agency dented
LTDs, Rancheros and Elites Rhodes' plea for an extension
and
Mercury Cougars , for the entire state.
Montegos and Marquts.
Sen John Glenn, D.Qhio,
The EPA Satd It was acttng did, however, announce late
10 the interest of public health Tuesday night tballhe FDAA
m Cltmg the cars for an had granted an mdeftmle
emission control defect tbat
could produce unhealthy
levels of mtrogen oxtde - the

Marv10 Durrung, EPA enKEENE, CALIF - UNITED FARM WORKERS leader forcement admlntstrator,
Cesar Chavez has ended a nationwide boycott of E&amp;J Gallo satd such arr contammat10n
wmes as well as table grapes and lettuce harvested by workers IS especially dangerous for
persons with respiratory
not belonging to his union
Chavez, however, warned Tuesday that the boycott would Illness. Htgh levels of
resume if growers fail to bargain in good faith w1th the UFW . ,rutrogen made can also cause
breathing difficulhes, chest
BURLINGTON, VT. - UNITED STATES 10vo!vement tn pams and bronchitiS m
the Vietnam War was a "shameful national blunder" that chtldren, he satd
Cited was a faulty JOint m
should not be forgotten , says Gen. Wtlliam Westmoreland,
once conunander of U. S. forces m the Southeast Astan the vehicle's exhaust gas
rectrculation system, which
Country.
Westmoreland, who left Vietnam to become Army chief of reduces rutrogen oxides when
staff during the hetghl of the Tet offenstve 10 years ago, they are released mto tbe atr
On Jan 18, the No 2
Tuesday accused anti-war protesters of costmg the nation lives
compiled w1th an
automaker
and time.
earlier EPA order to call
COLUMBUS- CENTRAL OffiO TRANSIT Authority bus back 240,000 cars and light
drivers called a wildcat strike for 4 a m today to protest the trucks wtth faulty emiSSion
awarding of a transportation contract for the handicapped to a control eqUipment.
non-unton company. Members of Transport Workers Umon
TWO FINED
l&lt;&gt;cal203said they would not bother to call m stck.
Two defendants were fmed
The federal government has mandated that transportatiOn
for the handicapped be provided in Columbus When COTA in the court of Mtddleport
Fred
Hoffman
s1gned over the contract for such services to the Untted Trans- Mayor
Tuesday
night.
portation Co. Tuesday, the union drivers called the
Ralph D Thompson, 38,
UIUIUthorlzed strike.
New
Haven, W. Va, was
\
ftned $35 and costs on a
NASHVD.,LE, TENN
STATE HUMAN SERVICES dtsorderly conduct charge,
Corrunissioner Horace Bass Tuesday visited the elderly and Robert Greene, 29, Hartrecluse whose infected feet will be amputated if he orders ford, W. Va., was fmed $200
surgery to save her life - and she was not glad to see him. and costs on a charge of
Bass said doctors do not believe amputation wtll be necessary res1stmg arrest and $3o and
for at least 48 hours. They are administering massive doses of costs on a disorderly manner
antibiotics to check the spread of gangrene
charge.
Mary Carolyn Nortbern, 72, who did not hesitate to tell
judges taking testimony at her hosp1tal bedside Saturday that
ALL ARE OPERATING
she was tired of talking ahout her feel, was not pleased to see
All
three local school
Bass.
dislrtcts in Metgs County
were open today for the first
time mover a week. Southern
FUNDS DJSTRmUTED
and
Eastern
Dtstrtcts
State Audttor Thomas E. resumed classes Tuesday
Ferguson's office reported wtth Meigs !..&lt;&gt;cal begmmng
that $18,638,804.37 m public today. Buses were runmng
assistance and spectal ac- late in some mstances.
11 vlties
payments
for
The
Columbus
and December have been sent to
Sout~ern Ohio Electric Ohio's 88 counttes. Me1gs
Company has ordered street County's portton was $8,740.
li_ghtlng In Pomeroy and
M:tddleport be curtailed Fire damage is
lnunediately.
By ROBERT SANGEORGE
Work has begun on shutting
CINCINNATI (UPI) off street lights in Mid- set at $35,000
Flood waters could rise along
dleport. It requires each light
Damages have been the Ohio Rtver and its
be done separately.
esttmated at $35,000 In trtbutartes if a quick,
Work on the Pomeroy Tuesday's fire at the Ohio dramatic thaw moves mto the
Street ll¥l'ts will begin today. Power Company Buildtng, regton soon, rtver forecaste "s
Several lights will sttll be 118 Mulberry Ave ., in have concluded
HydrologiSts
at
the
burning in both commumttes Pomeroy.
m crucial areas.
Charles Legar, Pomeroy Nattonal Weather Service's
The cutback is in ac· fire chief, said the ftre started • Ohio River Forecast Center
cordance with the plan of in the breaker boxes and aren't malting any defimte
Governor James Rhodes to there was considerable predictions, but they bel)eve
conserve electricity.
damage to the rafters caused the combinatton of a
from the blaze. There was warming trend, large
also considerable water amounts of river ice,
unusually deep snow cover in
damage.
Legar did not know the the Ohio Valley and a steady
Snow beginning tonight and extent of smoke damage to winter ram could bring on
•
ending Thuntday morning. Ewing Funeral Home. The some floodmg.
The possibility Is not an
Lows tonight will be near 10 building Is owned by Mrs.
and highl Thursday will be Beulah Ewing. It was immediate worry, however,
since no substantial thaw Is
between :Ill and 25.
covered by ms~ance
•'

Street lights
are curtailed

100,000 00
900,000.00
. .... .. 313,000 00
.. .. . .. •
. ..... ' 1.3]3,000.00
. .. . . .. . .. .. . . . 14,372,000 00

e

million m snow removal

Funeral Home w1th Rev
A l fred Holley officlatmg
B~Jnal
w1ll be m Vlnlon
Memonal Park
Fnends may call at the
funeral home from 7 until 9
p m on Wednesday

Are You Protected
Against This?

Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric took out another full L'ratg Zimpher
Heckman sa1d utilities had depleted thetr coal stockpiles to
page ad In Columbus area newspapers today to repr1ntaletter
an
ayerage of about 50 days and that even if the strike were
written to President Carter askmg for his help in resolving the
settled,
it would take at least two weeks before utilities began
strike
uu we work together maybe we can convmce Pres1dent receivmg shipments of newi)l-mllled coaL
Most utilities, noted Heckman, had already asked thetr
Carter uf the seriousness of the sltualton," the ad said. "We
customers to conserve electnctty . Rhodes has ordered all state
ur~e you to jo10 us m thts effort by wnun~ the President. too ."
hhodes, at a news conference Tuesday, said electric offtL'OS to cut eleclrtc consumption by 25 percent.
The Clnclrmali Gas &amp; Electric Co., which has 550,000 customutilities would be forced to cut electric generation SO percent in
ers
1n southwest Oblo, Tuesday ISSUed an "urgent request for
about two weeks and because of that, tnduslrtes would be
til
customers
to reduce their use of electricity voluntarily
forced to lay off from 500,000 to 750,000 workers
because
of
the
coal mmers' strike "
"You are looktng at an mdustrtal w~eland ln II!!: Mtdwesl," _
CG&amp;E satd its "dwmdling coal supply will reoch the 5(k)ay
satd Rhodes, again stressing that the only solution to the
impendmg electriC supply problem ts settlement of the Umted level Wednesday, enabhng the company to Implement a fuel
Mine Workers of Amenca strike agamst bttummous coal emergency plan aprovc-d by the PUCO."
Heckman satd, "There IS no questton thattbe state of OhiO ts
operators.
In Washington today were C Luther Heckman, chairman of m Jeopardy We're m a dangerous s1tuat10n. We need a
the Public Utilities Commission of Ohtn and Rhnrl••' • irle settlement to that strike lnunediately "

area.

Lt. Russell deployed
in west Pacific
Martne Ftrst U . Karl R.
Russell, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth N Russell of ROute
2, Racine. has departed for
extended deployment m the
Western Pacific. He ts the
executive officer of Battalion
Landmg Team One Slant

By Utdted Presaloteraatlooal
One of Ohto's largest utllties says there Is a "~chance" it
will have to impose unannounced rolling blackouts beca use of
the nationwide coal strike. Gov . James A. Rhodes sa1d the coal
shortage could result m the layoffs of up to 750,000 persons.
Robert SJSmger, vice president of corporate affairs for
Columbus &amp; Southern OhiO Electric Co • told the Columbus
Citizen.Journalthat there IS a "W.SO chance, no better than
Utat" of unannounced rolling blackouts to the system's
1,340,000 C1151omers, if the strike by the United Mme Workers
Union continues.
'
Sisinger said if the stnke IS not over wtthm a week, there wtll
be a total shutdown of industry m the utihty's service area . He
said tf the strike goes on another month other extreme
measures would have to be taken
"We're not even talking about people livmg at their own
homes," said Sisinger. "Some are gmng to have to move
some place where we c~n heat ori'e butldmg .''

hardship for.familles."
Rhodes Utanked Carter lor
declaring a "state of
emergency" which enabled
Ute federal government to
send snow removal per11011nel
and equipment to Ohio.
David L. Weir, state
director of transportation ,
said Monday aU interstate
highways were open except 1475 in Toledo.
The Public
Utllittes
Commission of Ohio said the
only remainmg electrical
outages were 100 resldmces
111 the Toledo Edison service

METAIRIE, LA. - DONALD T. IIERKES wasn't the
armed man for whom pollee were searching. The plumber,
tools in hand, was merely crawling under a house to repair a
ANNA MAYO
before pollee mistook him for the suspect and shot and
heater
Anna Mae Mayo, 61 , a
killed
him
res •dent of Rt 1, B1dwell,
died m University H,ospital In
Herkes, 25, was shot in the chest Monday by a plainclothes
Columbus Saturday e\lemn~
detective participaling 10 a neighborhood search lor an anned
.-------------------~~ and
man who :OOrrunutesearlier had walked into the Metame Bank
killed off-duty deputy Robert E. Cochran, 32.

104,000.00
24,000.00
... 9.000.00
. 14,372,000.00
3,308,000 00

.....

1----+-

1,943,000 00
21,000 00
750,000.00
7,099,000 00
. 82,000 00
7,017,000.00

assets reprcsentmg bank premises

--+-

UnBnnounced rolling blackouts possibility

expected soon
" ll we were to get substantially warmer temperatures
than we've had lately, the
rtver would response, of
course, " satd Mtchael
Sullivan, a hydrologist with
the center. "But the most
we're expected to get for a
while Is just some moderate
warming, just above the
freezing level "
Sullivan
and
Tom
McPhillips, acting
hydrologist m charge of the
river forecast center, have
noted that many tnbutartes
along the Ohia are jammed
solid w1th Ice, almost to the
river bottom The ' main
stem" of the Ohio ttself has •
hea~y cover10g of 1ce m most
1

,,.

places
In additiOn, the Sllow cover
m areas along the tr1butar1es
and the Ohto is exceptionally
deep , as a result of several
recent snowfalls. "'The snow
cover is a cause for concern,"
Sullivan said. "It's greater
than we've had mmany years
for this lime of the year.
There's a lot of 'water
equivalent' tn 1!."
Should a wann front move
'"and bring steady rain with
tl, tt would melt the snow
cover, break up ice gorges in
)rlbutaries and probably
taise water levels aU over the
valley, Sullivan explained.
- On the other h~nd ,
however, a
' •gradual,
moderate warming trend"
would resolve ,the problem

wtlhoul serious floodtng.
Such a sttualton occurred last
year, when the Ohto and tis
trtbutartes were frozen solid.
"Last year, everything
melted slowly and rucely ,"
Sullivan said.
Vincent Cretnbrink, a
Nahonal Wealher Service
forecaster m Cmcinnall,
noted that a slight warming
trend expected over the
weekend would be just that sl1ght. "We're only talking
about highs in the low 30s and
lows in the low teens.
" You
need
high
temperatures tn the 40s and
lows in Ute upper 20s at night
tn order to produce any
appreciable thaw," Crelnbrink commented.

..

'

nor's appeal to OhiO citizens
to reduce consumption of
electricity, " said C A.
Heller, executtve vtce
president and chief operating
officer of Ohio Power
&lt;;ompany.
He was referring to Gov
James A Rhodes' plea for
~lectrlcal
conservalton,
tssued at a Sunday press
conference in Columbus
"We agree with him that
'the good people of Ohio do
not
deserve • a~oher
catastrophe,"' Heller
ed
"Continuation of wh t 1s
going to be the nation's most
prolonged coal
strike
threatens to disrupt the lives
of all Ohto people in countless
ways, particularly where
they live and at their places
of work."

Heller explatned that the
appeal for curtailment of
usage was Issued to help
delay the need for emergency
steps. If customers pttch In
nowand take whatever power
conservaton measures they
ca n, they wtll make a real
contribution to company
efforts to make dwtndllng
coal stocks last longer, he
S&amp;Ld.
"Our appeal ts not only
dtrec ted to residential
c ustomers but to all
c ustomers tncludtng In·
dustrlal and commercial,"
Heller stressed. "There are
several things all groups of
customers

can do Th ese
m clude lowering electric

heattng thermostats and
water heater settings and
generally reducmg both
indoor and outdoor tightmg
levels "

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          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="49220">
              <text>January 31, 1978</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="856">
      <name>barcus</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="244">
      <name>hayman</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7638">
      <name>hylbert</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="536">
      <name>jackson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1746">
      <name>mayo</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7639">
      <name>mcmanis</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1804">
      <name>osburn</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1059">
      <name>parsons</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7640">
      <name>shrout</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="75">
      <name>taylor</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="8">
      <name>wallace</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="241">
      <name>white</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
