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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 "

�3- Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb. 1,1978

:;:':~~~=,~.~;.:~~~:;.: ~~~,, ,

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb. 1,1978

TV •••in Review
By JOAN HANAUER
UPI Televislun Writer

NEW YORK (UP!) - The cab ride that Eva Marie Saint
takes in tile teleplay "Taxi !" lasts about as long as a real-hfe
ride from mid-Manhattan t&lt;&gt; Kennedy International Airport if you deduct conunercial time.
The concept is one of those setups tilat t;,levision handles
particularly well because tllere are only two charact;,rs Miss Saint as passenger and Martin Sheen as driver - and
they spend tilei r time inside a taxi delayed by traffic in what
could be descrihed as a drama of the mundane .
"Taxi! " is the I21th Halinnark Hall of fame production, to
be shown.on NBC Feb. 2,11).11 p.m., Eastern'time.
'"There's just the two of us, '' Miss-Saint said m an Interview,
her tawny hair and suntanned face blending mcely with the
browns she wore.
·
"The script deals wtth tlle inDuence I have on him and the
influence he has on me during this moment in time. The things
1 say t&lt;&gt; him changes his life."
It sounds simpler than it is.
''It 's a terrific challenge to an actor, " she added. 41 Martin as
the driver was in front of me , I just saw the back of him. It
made me realize how much we use other actors ."
Miss Saint had to manage with the rear view mi,rror until the
taxi in the story hit a traffic jam and Sheen could turn around.
Sheen, of course, was in the same position - watching his
passenger only in the mirror until traffic intervened.
If "Taxi!" is tlle world In microcosm, "World" is a PBS
effort to see the big picture of foreign events, not the simplistic
view usually presented. The basis for the IJ.part series Is
revealed in the first segment, "The Clouded Window ," presld·
ed over by former CBS correspondent Daniel Schorr and going
&lt;lut m PBS Feb. 2 (check local listings ).
Schorr tells his audience that for many Americans television
'" their primary news source, and explains why it is a ·" clouded
window ," concentrating on the visual, the photographically
exciting. And it shares with the print news sources the
impossibility of perfect objectivity.
Incidentally, John Chancellor and NBC News are used to
illustrated Schorr's points, ABC News gets slight mention but
CBS -forget it .
The top network t;,levision programs for the week ending
Jan . 29, according to the A.C. Nielsen Co .. were:
1: "Happy Days; 2: "Laverne &amp; Shirley;" 3: "Charlie's
11

Ange1s;' ' 4: ' Love Boat;" 5: ''Uttle House on the Prairie i" 6:
1

(tie) "The Dark Sceret of Harvest Home" (Part II) and
:,Fantasy Island;" 8: "The Dark Secret of Harvest Home
(Part I); 9: "Barnaby Jones; " 10: (3-way tie) "Quincy,"
''Starsky and Hutch," and "Eight Is Enough."

Decline and fall
of Roman loopholes
By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UPI) - At

his new s conferen ce this
week President Carter again
linked tax cuts with tax
reform. One proposed reform
would reduce deductions for
business entertainment

expenses by 50 percent.
This attack on the so-&lt;:alled
three ~martmt
lunch ha s

caused great consterna tion
among businessmen, who
insist entertainment is a vital
part of commerce, and
among restauranteurs, who
depend on expense account
patrons for mu&lt;,: h of their
trade .
Also takm g a strong stand
against the cutback are the
people who a re guests at
affairs that are written off as
bustness expenses.
Bernie Flackhorn, director
or the National Society of
Freeloaders, estimates that a
50 percent cut in business
entertainment deductions
would cause a corresponding
decline
m
bus iness
en tertamment
invitatlOns.
" A retrenchment of that
mag nitude could result in
genuine hardships," he said.
''I'm not suggesting we would
actually go to bed hungry but
l do foresee some of us
occasionally being forced to
dine Dutch treat. "
I patted him on the
sho uld e r co ns olin g ly.
''There's nothing mo re
pitiable than a checksplitting
freeloader, '' I said.
"It's more than a matter of
bread and butter, or o! gin
and vennouth," Flackhorn
continued . "This strikes at
the very heart of western
'civilization as we have known
it.
"If you read your Gibbon
closely you will find that the
fall of the Roman Empire
was preceded by decline in
tax breaks for business
entertainmen L''
I said, "There must have
been a lot in his book that I
m1ssed."
"!llaybe I can refresh your
memory," Flackhorn said.
11
Large Roman firms such as
Ye Ol~e Toga Shoppe used to
entertain customers at
gladiator matches in the
Colosseum and chariot races
at the Circus Maximus.
"The whole thing was tax
deductible, but it was in the
public interest.
"For one thing, it helped
keep unemployed gladlawrs
and chariot drivers off the
streets. Beyond 't hat, it'
ge nerated extra sales, which
increased revenues from the
toga tax.
:·The Roman government
used these funds lo finance
public spectacles, which kept
poor citizens happy. As the
poet Juvenal pointed out, the
t mpire thrived on 'panem et
(':rcenses'
(bread and
~reuses). It was truly the
golden age of freeloading.
" Unfortunately, the
reforms
instituted
by
Constantine
the First

a

tncluded a cutback in
business entertainment
deductions. Thereafter, trade
slumped, prices rose and the
ctties began to deteriorate .
"Gibbon traces t_he ebbing
of th e empire to the
regression of freeloading."
I said, 'Are you saying the
same thing could happen
1

here?,

Flackhorn shrugged his
shoulders philosophically.
''Sic transit gloria gratis,'' he
sigh en

peopletalk

One idea at a time key to seminar success
By LeROY POPE
UPI Business Writer
NEW YORK (U PI)
There are more Ulan 800
' seminars held eflCh month ; a
lot of them are pure waste,
says a consultant whose firm
stages 15 to 100 seminars a
year.
John Palmer of Palmer
Paulson West, San Rafael,
Calif., says conducting seminars is a profitable business
for about ten national
companies and hundreds of
little firms . It's also
prolitable for hotels and for a
few speciali1.M rPSOrt inns

that can host as many as
eight
se minar s
simultaneously.
Most of the seminars are
business oriented, devoted to
sales ancj management problems. Many are scientific or .
technological and most of
these ~re conducted by
universl\ies and scientific
societies.
Business seminars made
the headlines in a big way a
few years back wlien closed
circuit
television and
computerized
cominunications
first
began
to be used in them.
'

'

•

M

•

"This esoteric hardware you will not succeed with any.
still is used but it can defeat
" But those who cooduct
tile goal of the seminar by seminars go right-on hurling
·distracting attention from the up to 30 Ideas in a single day 's
real purpose - human meeting; it's ludicrous,"
interaction," Palmer said. Palmer said.
·
Most businesssemiru)rs fail
He said he insists ''the big
because they are too big, he · bosses of the company stay
said . "My firm long ago away when I conduct a sales
decided 1hat 25 is aboul the or management seminar for
largest numher of persons a corporation. People just are
that can work together afraid to communicate freely
effectively in a seminar."
in the presence of the big
He said the conductor of a bosses; that's fundamental
seminar should remember human nature."
one of Benjamin Franklin's
Painner said half the semimaxims : if you try to impart nars his firm conducts deal
one idea you may succeed; if with sales, the rest with
you try to give three at once man~gement and training
~ for 'the most part.

Lobby groups study
. plans
IL
h
l
fi
•
O
on .nro sc oo · nancrng,
o

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS ( UPII
Pressure groups - the .kind
that can make or break
public education and tax law
- arc not yet ready to bite on
a comprehemive plan to shift
Ule financial base of Ohio's
schools from real estate to
income taxes .
But they are keenly aware
of the plan advanced by state
Rep . John E. Johnson, !).
Orrville, and will soon be
trying to mold it to their own
interests.
Most lobby groups directly
concerned with the plan are
still studying its implications
and wip not take a position on
It for awhile.
"It's got some prospect,"
said John C. Mahaney of the
Ohio Council of Retail Merchants of the plan proposed
as a cure for the state's
school financing woes.
"The concept is not
opposed by the council," said
Mahaney,
whose
organization joined forces in
1912 with organized labor ,
Ohio school teachers and
other pressure groups to
crush an effort to repeal the
state income tax by a 2·1 vote
of the people.
As with most other
lobbytsts contacted about the
Johnson plan, Mahaney had a
con dition for support. He
wants the tangible personal
prope rty tax on business
eliminated in the Ohio
Constitution, not just by law.
Johnson's complex plan
calls for a variety of
constitutional changes, which

By KENNETH R. CLARK
United Preoallltenotlonal
HIGH ROlLER: BIUy Graham isn't in Las Vegas, Nev., to
brand tlle gambling citadel as a Sodom of sin- he says it's "a
nice place to live." The evange~t is staging a five-day
Christian crusade, but says he'll concentrate on "the true
picture of Las Vegas" - not just its casinos. Says Graham,
"Probably the greatest cent;,&lt; of gambling in the United States
is Wall Street. I would not condemn WaD Street and I did not
come here to condemn gambling." But with a cautionary note
he adds, " Neither am I here to uphold it."

PICKING UP PIECES : Comella W1llacecame hack to the
Alabama statehouse in Montgomery Monday night- but only
to piek up a few items left in the wreckage of her marriage to
Guv. George c. Wallace. The governor met her, for the first
time since their Jan. 4 divorce. She left with a clock, a picture
and a punchboWl set - aU part of an a~y settlement that
included a oo~inne lump swn of $75,000.

acl~t~~!':~i~~fo!
seminar, rules he said

DOLLY DELAYED: The opening performance of "Hello,
Dolly!"- costarring Carol Chonntng and Eddie Brackea at
the Long Beacb, Calif., Cmvention Center - was delayed
Tuesday night because of scenery problems. They took
another night to rehearse the show aboard the former l1m1ry
liner Queen Mary, now a floating hotel. Center spokesman
Paul Bessler says refunds were given to the sold-out show
which opens today.

widely ignored:

prelz;;~~r::~~~~;r::

would have to be approved by we've got to find something ment on a goal for the
other tllan property taxes to meeting on the part of those
the voters, including a · new
pay for our schools."
who are to attend.
ceiling on unvoted real estate
Here's how other lobby
- The person who is to
taxes and the establishment
groups feel :
conduct the seminar must be
of a basic education fund witll
QUOTE OF mE DAY: Former Secretary of State Dean
OHIO MUNICIPAL quite
articulate
and
revenues earmarked from
Rusk,
in a speeeh to the graduating class at tile University of
;
.LEAGUE
Has
"serious
somewhat
A'Otertaining
in
his
personal and corporate
Southern
California in Los Angeles in which he said students
questions"
about
the
plan:
manner.
income taxes.
should
be
grateful to members of the past generation: "We
fears
repeal
of
tangible
Rememher
that
tllose
atThere are also tax
have
gone
to special pains to save some interesting problems
personal
properly
tax,
which
tending
the
seminar
must
r ec la ssificat ions a nd
for
you
to
solve."
IS
collected
by
local
react
to
each
other
as
well
as
reductions to be used as
governments,
coupled
with
to
the
leader
if
anything
is
to
"trade-offs" for businesses,
GUMPSES: San Franoisco Mayor George Moscone took the
utilities and industries hit fewer voted real estate tax be accomplished.
tiller
Tuesday at the Wlveilin~ of a new streamlined trolley
levies,
could
hurt
municipali-Whl)e
the
presence
of
top
harder by the tax changes in
ties.
management
is
not
desirable,
proposed
for use next year - but porlsts are' assured they
other areas.
won't
replace
the city's famed cable cars ... Stephanie MUIB
OHIO
AFL-CIO
_
State's
the
company
must
send
good
Mahaney complains that
and
Michael
Jackson
of "The WiJ:" will be honored as black
largest
labor
organization
is
people
to
tile
seminar
not
just
the corporate income tax for
performers
of
the
year
at the 38th alUlual Beaux Arts baU of the
concerned
that
.
higher
1.
second
or
third
raters
who
education would be put in the
personal
incometr
~
•.
:tax
·r•:.
are
s~ml
be~use·
they
can
Jllational
Urban
League
Guild in New York ... Muha,mttuld All
Constitution, but the repeal of
88ys
Playgirl
magazine
·•held &lt;hinn ~P ·to rldicul~ ' ,.1;\en it
liabilities
for
working
people
best
be
spared
from
regular
the
tangible
personal
pobHshed
a
rwde
likeness
ol him-In its F'ebtuafy issue; 'and he's
property tax: on inventories might offset declining real work.
sning
for
$4
million
...
The
singing duo of Richard and Karen
-The
professional
estate
taxes
;
may
,never
take
and equipment could he reCarpenter
own
two
apartment
houses in Downey, Calif. -one
a
position.
conductor
must
realize
he
established by the the
called
"Close
to
You"
Apartments
and the other, "Only Just
OHIO
CHAMBER
OF
will
have
to
overcome
an
Legislature.
COMMERCE - May be initial
hostility
and Begun" Apartments - in honor of their hit songs ... Warren
1 'Unless that P-rovision is
changed," we will' OJ&gt;POSf It," unable to arrive at unified skepticism on the part Qf . Beatty, Jack Nicholll&lt;)o, Lucille BaD, Cher !lono' Allman and
warned Mahaney. "Whatever p'osition. Small businesses many of tilose attending. He Hoben DeNiro were among celebrities attending Uly Tomlln's
we
do,
we'Jl
do with little inventory and · must do a lot of research on opening night charity performance of her one-woman show
enthusiastically. We never do equipment would not get the people who are attending. Tuesday night in Hollywood ....
benefit of personal property He should arrive a day early
anything halfheartedly::
tax
repeal, would have to pay and spe~d~ much time as he
The Ohio Educatlun
income
taxes.
can soctalizmg w1th people to seminar must be sustained by years ahead to teach people
Association, representing
OHIO
SCHOOL
BOARDS
melt the ice of hostility and a continuing effort afterward. bow to put into action the
&amp;;rOOO school teachers, has
ASSOCIATION
Reserving
suspicion.
4
taken no position and might
' The
seminar
must Ideas tllat were present and
official
judgment
on
the
plan~
.
Finally
and
most
produce something articulate accepted at the seminar," he
not until its l'l!ay meeting, if
but . officials feel school unportant, whatever 1s and worthwhile in print that said. "Otherwise the whole
then.
·
appropriations
should be up accomplished during the can be used in the months and thing is just a waste."
The OEA .complains· that
earmarking revenues for to the Legislature, not locked
education in the Constitution into the Constitution.
does not allow for growth to For Thursday, Feb. 2, 1978
meet school needs. Under the
current
system.
the
Legislature can spend more
for education at least every
Bernice Bede Osol
two years.
"We don't feel very firm on
Feb. z, 1978
revenue growth," said John This coming year you may
H. Hall of tlfe OEA, adding 1estabi&lt;sh a relai&lt;Onship or a
that schools closed because commerctal connection constd·
property ta·xes were not erably dtstant from where you
11
d
d
res tde
The arrangement
a owe to expan ·
should prove quite advanla·
"I think it's good," said geous
Paul Taylor of the Buckeye AQUARIUS (Jan.2&amp;-Feb.l91
Associa tion
of
School Partial blame for a sttuatlon that
AdmmistratOrs. " It's a you 're not responsible for may
responsible way of dealing be heaped upon you today
Hang loose . The real cu lprtl will
wtth the schoo] fmancing later be e:~~posed Havmg trou·
problem. It gives a bigger ble selecl&lt;ng a career? Send
guarantee, and that's what for your copy of Astro·Graph
our people h~ve been crying Letter by matting 50 cents for
about.''
each and a long, self. Taylor noted, however, that addressed , stamped envelope
to Astro-Graph , P.O Box 489, '
few voters will want to Radio City Stat1on, NY. 10019.
impose real estate t~;~.:e':f .. Be sure · to specify your birth
above the minimwn. "It's s1gn.
going to be a leveler," he PISCES (Feb. 2&amp;-March 20)
said. "You'f'e not going to Appearances can be. decel\ling
h
· · ·
,
today, partiCU larly 1n matters
,.
a_ve compet1t10n .. Yo.u r~ ~., affecting your career or status.
gomg to ~a.Ye mediocrity,
Where you m1ght feel you 're
·"". ... .
The Ohio· Manufacturers the loser, the opposite will be.' '
Association feels the best true.
feature of Johnson's plan is ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19)
&lt;- •
the .repeal of the personal P.lace friendship sever:1-1
.
n
notches
above
your
matenal
- \.~ - · ~ .Qc!W.#I
• • • •u
-l':'
- •
property lax~ bu.t. lS m~st mterests today . Forego what's
A fir;~ at the Ohio Power Co:llfPi1dy:':O'ffl&amp;l burl!in!J;; iR
appreheqstve
about m1tforvouifyouhavetomake
assessing industrial and a choice
' " ·~· ·'.:;
Pomeroy has =resulted in the 'temporary
commercial real estate at 100 · TAURUS (April ZG-Moy '20) "
office. ·, ..
· ·
··
instead of 35 percentof true Compl1cauons due to opposing
value for tax purposes.
ideas could arise m a 101nt .
venture today They can Pe
"
OUr people ~ear that the easily rectified by each keep- '
.... --·--·---~-s~e thmg IS gomg to happen
ing in m~nd the common g~&amp;l .'"''
r 1•
Wlth real propertY that hap- GEMINI (May Zl·Julie --20)
pened with personal property There is a pOSSibility that an
'untlnurther notice the Farmers Bank at 221
- nobody 'Pays except agreement you:ve recently
business and industry," said ~ad~ IS a btt lop~1ded . Renego·
OMA hate 1ttoday wh1le you st1ll can
Doug1as Trat·1 of ••
West Second Street In Pomeroy will accept
1.ue
, make adjustments
adding that his association CANCER (June 21-July 22)
"'y
••
may be unable Ill take any " Your pa!lence tends to be a
payments of customers electric bills.
unified public position on the mite_ short tod~y with Inter·
Johnson plan.
med1anes . You U accomplish
The Ohio Farmers Union your }ims easier if_ assertive·
ness 1s tempered with tact
has endorsed_ the Johnson LEO (July Z3-Aug.2Z ) Today
plan because It reduces the on 1ssues that really count
real estate tax burden on · you'll be in harmony with the
· The. Ohio Power Company will tempqrarlly
agriculture. ·
•· on.e yoq love lnconsequeriUal
"We' re very suppo..tive of matters are the problem~pro-;
~
·
'"'·
vo)l;ers
the overall p&gt;ncept," added VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepi.Z21 Even
open an office at their service building off
C. William Swank of the Ohio though you'tt spread your
Farm Bureau Federation. forces thin today it w1ll be
"We've said for years t,qat rather remarkable what you are
, .'
atile to accomplish . Your urge
.,.Spring Avenue ·at the rear of .F.ulton-Thompson
r:-:-'rH-E-O.-I-LY_S.:.E~NT
-4-IN.;.i!-u~--, to ser\'e'Makes this posSibl~ ·, 1
' -\
~
\
DEVOTED TO THE
. LIBRA " (Sept.23·0ct. 23)
INTERFSI'OF
\Yithin your sphere of influTractor Sales In Pomeroy.
MEIGs-MASON AREA
ence, you demonstrate unique
CHESTeR L. TAJtiNEHIU
managerial skills today In an
ROBE~e:.-o~Ft.rCH
area where another calls the
ctt~ EdUor
shots -;ou're ineffective.
.
Published ~lly e:zcepl S.turda)'
SCORI!lO~ fOct. %t-~ov~zz~ .. ~ - 'il&lt;~ ...
,
'
b)' The Oh10 , Valley PubUshiny
~ersons pertinent to yourr1m-" "'ComJM&amp;nY·MuiUmedia, Inc.,
111
mediat.e""needs you'lllreat with . . . ,
Riqilests for service and payment of electric
Court St., .Pomeroy, Ohio 45789.
DusmeSJJ Office Phone 992. 2156
great consideration today .
·Editorial Phone9!12-21$7
Those deemed less important
\
Second cllls.s postage paid at
may not be catered to.

ATTENTION

OHIO POWER

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
cholesterol in the intestine
and prevent its absorption.
You don't metabolize any
sig nificant amo unt of
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB- When cholesterol.
No, there is nothing m egg
cholesterol ts ingested (as in
U1e case of eggs l I unders· white that will counteract
tand that It untlergoes cholesterol from any source.
Some peonle have suggested
change~ in the metabolic process. Therefore, what enters tllat the lecithin in eggs will
the blood stream is no longer help but it is the lecithin that
cholesterol. but various other IS broken down by digestive
action before it is absorbed.
organic cownpouJlds.
How can 11 be said, then, The only lecithin that counts
that the ingestion -of is in your blood stream and
cholesterol mcrectses the that is manufactured by your
level or cholesterol in the liver. The lecithin in your
blood stream•does not come
blood'
from
what you eat or any pill
I have also read that there
you swallow.
IS a substance in the albwnin
I am sending you The
of eggs that counteracts the
adverse effects of cholesterol Health Letter number 1·3,
Preventing
in the yolks. Is there any Diet :
Athrosclerosis, as I presume
truth in this.
DEAR READER- It IS ab- you are interested in prevensolutely untrue that tlle ting those fatty cholesterol
cholesterol you ingest in any deposits that cause heart at·
food is altered by the tacks and strokes and
metabolic process so 11 is not premature senility. Others
cholesterol when it is absorb- who want this issue can send
ed. The source of that kind of 50 cents with a long, stamped,
mformation is totally se~·addressed envelope for it
unreliable and you should not to me in care of tllis
trust any information regar- newspaper, P.O. Box 1551,
ding nutrition or health you Radio City Station, New
get from where ever that York, NY 10019. •
This issue discusses the
source is.
..
The cholesterol produced basic general principles of
by your body , chiefly m the what you should eat to preliver, is passed into the small vent vascular disease. You
intestine with the bile. Here it may be interested to know
is mixed with the cholesterol that the world's scientists
in your food . Cholesterol is generally agree about tllis.
absorbed directly into the Dr. Kaare Reidar Norum,
blood stream from this com- Chairman of the Nutrition
bined pool of cholesterol in Research Imtitute, Universi·
your small intestine. It ty of Oslo, Norway , did a
doesn 't make any difference world survey of scientists
whether the cholesterol is working in this area a1 .d
from the bile or from · your found that 99percent behevet1
food. Your intestinal wall there is a connection between
diet and heart disease; 98.9
doesn't know the difference.
The amount produced by percent helieved there is a
the liver varies in response to 'connection between the blood
your blood level, but that is cholesterol and heart disease.
The scientists agreed that
an entirely different matter.
Cholesterol is relatively in- the diet should be low enough
ert and is recycled again ano tin ca lories to prevent obesity,
low in fat and low in
again through the formatior.
cholesterol.
Such world opi·
of bile, which drains.into the
intestine and its reabsorp- nion gets away from narrow
tion. That is why one method coounercial interests that
might occur within a single
ol treating high cholesterol
nation.
levels is to ingest substances
that 'will combine wtth the

Cholesterol
does n't change

'·

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•

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~re

ASTRO•GRAPH

problema wit•
m1ll
delivery due to lui week's
bllizord, tbe UPI Bolrd of
Coach.. girll' IDd · boys'
baoketball rattnga will be
delayed oue day tbls week.
Tbe glrla' poll wUI move for
Tbursdly and tbe boya' poll
for Friday.

COMPANY

closingof 'file

·'

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•

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Pumero)·, Ohlo.

SAGITTARIUS

(Nev.Z3-

NIIliQnt~l advertJS~ represen- , Dec.21) Ec.onomlc aonditions
UI\Jve Ward • Griffith Company
Inc .. Bottinelli and Galliigher Ow.: are both .~r'omlsing atld
757 Thlrd Ave .• Ne"'' vark N v. lematic~Odily , You S.hould, be
10011.
'
abl~ to ~pot possible gains, but
Subscr1ptiun rut.es . Delivered by rak1ng them tn is something
currier where ava illlbJr 75 cents per
t
8 se.
week . By Motor Route when! canier
'

,rtt,tt-

.lffrvk-e not 1vailab&amp;e, One month

13.2$. By mau m Ohio and w. Va.:
c-w Year, J22.00; Six months
$11 50; Three months, 't7 .oo;'
Elsewhere 't?S.oo y~r: Six months
$13.50: Three months, $?.so. ,
Sub!ll.ltlpUon prit:e u1cludes Sunday
Timt!s-Senl.lnel

CAPRICORN (Dec.H-Jan.lt)

Your opposition may employ
~tased ttt.~!i~s today In ordeftO
1mpede yOt~~r progreaa. Their
effqrts Will be thwarted by y9ui
loyal allies.
jNEWSPAPEA ENT.EAPRISE ASSN )~

..

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••

6%%

On Certificates
Of Deposit
1,000 Minimum
1 Yr. Term

..

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service building or by calling 992-3786.

NOW OPEN

-· 41

GINO'S

-eJY

The Athe ns county
Savings &amp; Loan Co .

OF MASON

296 Second St .

Pomeroy, Ohio

Rocky River 52 Fairview 39
Sebring ~8 Southern Local 44
Shady$ide 92 St. Clalr$vllle 49

Shenahdoah' 61 Guernsey
C-,ltl 57
Sheridan 52 New Leldngton 50
Solon .&lt;48 Twinsburg 35
South Point 62 Coal Grove 59

•
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Southington 85 Grand Valley
43

.
insulation

Tri-Valley 62 Maysville 51
Trimble 77 Waterford 51

u,s~ -=•~~

••
•
••

•

Tuscarawas

Central

Wadsworth 70 Strongsville 59
Warren 73,Willlam~fow:n (W.
Va.) 65
Warren Local 73 Williamstown IW. Va.) 65
Warrensville 53 Gilmour
Academy 45
·

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Waterloo 84 Rootstown 64

PER BAG

MACHINE
RENTAL
'250o PER DAY
R·VALUE COMPARISON CHART
R·value'

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0

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1
I I I I

I

2
I I I I

I

3
I I I I

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4
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U.S. FIBER
ROCK WOOL
FIBER GLASS

City Ice &amp; Fuel Co.
~lreel

The loss dropped GAHS to
4-5 in league play and 5-7 in
all games as Coach Osborne's
cagers prepare to host
Wellston on Friday night and
then get another shot at
Waverly on Saturday night.
Wellston dealt Gallipolis a
61.02 loss in December while
Waverly slipped past the Blue
Devils 51-18 last Saturday.

beginning of tlle game and
tlley just didn't fall. We then
didn't react to their press, got
behind, 11~. and tried to
catch up too fast."
Villanova
leads
Providence, 12-11, in their
career series but had lost the
previous six meetings.
"It's the ftrst time we've
beaten Providence during the
rour years I've been at
Villanova," said Coach Rollie
Massimino. "We ran very
well in the game - it was a
great win for us."
Keith Herron led the
Wildcats with 25 points,
Including five in the
unanswered early spree. The
Friars rallied, however, and
pulled to within four points, at
BUS, with 3:58 to play.
But four straight Villanova
points iced the game for the
Wildeats .
"Our defense brought us
back in tile second half to
where we had it down w
four," said Gavitt. "But tt's a
credit to Villanova the way
tlley beat us and the way they
handled us late in the game.
·"This is by far thei.r best
Villanova team since tlley
had their great onea of the
early '70s."
In other major games, Holy
Cross defeated Brown, 91-70,
North Carolina State topped
Clemson, 1:Hl9, Old Dominion
battered East Carolina, 11281 and Portland State
whipped Seattle Pacific, 97·
70,
behind
Freeman
Williams' 36 points.

Watkins
Memorial
82
Lakewood 76
Welltngtor 59 Clearvlew 53
Wellsville 66 Steubenville
Central 64
West Branch 51 East
Palestine 50
PANTHERS ROMP .
West Holmes S7 Fairless 55
Chesapeake bombed
Westlake 90 Avon Lake 58
Wyoming 55 Reading 46
Symmes
Valley
92·45
Yellow Springs 61 Springfield Tuesday night with the help
Cath 58
Youngs Mooney 63 Struthers of 24 points from D. L. McWhorter and 17 from Ray
58
Youngs Rayen 59 Youngs Boster.
East 47
Lee Hill added 10 points for
'Youngs South •68 Youngs
the
Panthers, who ·raised
Noo-th 67
Young$ Ur$utlne 55 . B~&gt;ard­ their recorda to 6-1 with the
man SO
victory.

Point Pleasant
(304) 675-2460

R8 TP

4- IJ
J -4
5
2 11
7-14
4-7
18
0-4 0-0 2 4 0

s

..

3-10 2-4-' 7
4
8
J.72-3 2 l 8

Stake
Elkins
Andrews
Hawley
Coals
Kennedy
.: Btaettnar
Snowden
TOTALS

0·2

0-0

0

I

0

line, COIUlecling on just 12 of
4-9 0-0 3 5 8
21. Greg Becker led the
1-4
0-l
I
0
2
Marauders with his 18 points
2-80-0 0 1 4
0-l
0·0
0
I
0
while co-captain Ch uck
0-0
t -2
I
0
I
Follrod chipped in witll 11.
0-0 0-0 0 2 0
Three players hit for eight
24-72 .. 12-21 .. 26.' .26... 60
points.
·
ATHENS
BULLDOGS
(11)
· Meigs plays at Jackson
FG-A FT-A PF RB TP
PLAYER
tonight and then travels to S.ntley
10-lB
7-3 4
I 22
Waverly Friday. Saturday Wallace
9-15 0-0
2
1
l8
the Ironton Tigers come to Matthews
4-5
6-7 11
J
H
Morrison Gymnasium.
1-2
1-1
2
1
J
Halter
1-5
0-0
10
2
2
Chonko
1-3
0-0
0
2
2
Black
0-0 0·0 &gt; 2 0
Edwards
12
0-0
6
2
2
• Topping
0-0
0-0
3
•
0
Smathers
Dailey
0-1 1-2
I
0
GALLIPOLIS BLUE DEVILS (47)
0-1 4 8
3
I
4
Brun lg
PLAYER- POS.
FG-A FT-A PF· RB TO TP Smith
5
1-3
3·5
7
I
Mark Smith, t
6-13 2-2
3
5
3 14 Hart
3-3
2-4
8
8
8
Mat!Sterrelt, f.
0-2
2· 2
l
•
2
2 TOTALS
JI~ S8
" ·ll 58
22 11
Brad Abels, c.
J . to 4-6
4
6
2
10
Score by quarters :
Terry Wall, g.
4-14 5-6
J
6
I
I)
10 9 &gt;9 n
60
Meigs
Jimmy Harris, g.
. 3· 12 0-2
4
1
4
6 Athens
)9 17 22 23 81
Jefflanham.f.
1-3
0·0
4
2
2
2
Bitt Arm$trong, g.
0-0 O·l
1 0
0
0
Rick Oaltey. g .
0-0 0-0
0 0
I
0
TOTALS
l1 -S4 ll-19 20 24 lS 47
IRONTON TIGERS ll91
PLAYER- Pus.
FG-A FT-A PF RB TO TP
Dick James, f .
J -6
S-6
5
8
Tim Hodges. f.
2-4
0-0
1
0
Joe Fletcher, c.
2
18
7· 10 •·6
6
Oavld.Lutz, g.
2-5
S-9
1
5
9
Keith Harvey, g.
0-3 0-0
1
Juan Thomas, g .
1
1·2 0-0
0
Bobby Williams, g.
4-5 0-0
4
3
8
J
• Fishing Tackle
Robin Fltzpatrtck, c.
2-J
0-1 J
2
J
and Rods
Brlan Beckett. f .
1-1
1-2
0
0
I
J
The Athens J:SuUpups used a
and Reels
Mark Erwin , g.
0-0
0-0
0
0
·o 0 23 point second peiiod
• Guns and
Jeff Linn. t.
1
0-0
0-0
0
I
0
TOTALS
22-39 15-l4 17
23 21 59 enroute to a 60-11 win over
Reloading
visiting Meigs last night .
Score b-; quarters :
•
Ball Gloves
GAHS Blue Oevlls
10 16 10 11
47 Earlier this season Meigs
Camping
Ironton Tigers
10 IS 18 16
59
took the Bullpups into
Equipment
overtime hefore boWing.
• Archery
Athen• went ahea d 14-9 at
• Indoor Games
the end of the first period and
•We
have Gift
by halftime were leading 3721. A 3l·point performance by
Certificates
center RoSs was just too
much for the Meigs Countians
601 Main St .
to counter. Burson also hit
PI. Pleasant. W. Va .
double figures for the winners
with 10. Athens hit 48 percent
Boys
77 (Of)
VISA '
Ohio High School
Indian Valley S 63 Lakeland . from the field and sank 18 of
Basketball Results
23
2\l charity tosses.
Akr Firestone 71 Cuyahoga Ironton 59 Gallipolis A7
Across frqm Courthouse
Meigs was led by Chns
Faits 69 (of)
Kent Roosevelt 71 Stow 67
Yeauger's
11
markers
while
PHONE
Akr Hoban 84 Bedford Chane! Kirtland A5 Richmond Hts 42
57
Lemon.Monroe 81 Edgewood Britt Dodson hit for eight.
675-2988
Alexander
64
Federa l 61
Meigs hit on just 15 of 45 from
Open Sunday I· p.m.·6 p m .
Hocking 54
Lockland 64 Little Miami 63 the field for 33 percent. They
Monday thru Saturday
Amher$1 65 Oberlin 64
Louisville Aquinas 80 Parma sank II of 24 free throws.
·9a .m. lo8p m.
Ashtabula Harboo-· 64 Ash Padua 71
Edgewood 52
Lockland 64 Little Miami 63
Ashtabula Sf John 55 Madtson Louisville Aquinas 80 Parma
47
Padua 71
Ashtabula 61 Geneva 52
Lyndhurst Brush 52 Mentor
Aurora 92 Crestwood 59
51
Avon 77 Columbia 72
Manchester 63 Akron KenBaptist Christ 73 Garfield Hts more 60
Trinity 66
Maple His 43 Willoughby S 38
Barberton 74 East Liverpool
Mayfield 51 Easttoke North
73
42
Barbo.ursville (W . Va) 71 McDonald 46 Columbiana 44
Portsmouth 65
Miamisburg 69 Day Belmont
Barnesville 71 Union Local 66 49
Bay 58 Olmsted Falls 50
Midvlew 53 Brookside 49
Beachwood 60 Cle Hts lufh E Minerva 60 Northwest 52
47
Mt Healfhy 73 Colerain 66
Belpre 72 Fort Frye 53
New Boston 74 Portsmouth
Berea Midpark 68 Berea 40 w. 58
Berkshire 80 Hawken School Newark 40 . Zanesville 35
54
Newton Falls 70 Mathews 61
Berlin Center W Rsv 39 North Olmsted 63 Medina 49
Sprlngfld Let 37
Norlh ·Ridgeville 98 Ver
MASON, W.VA .
Brecksville 73 Parma Valley mil lon 50
...
Forge 56
Norton 73 Highland 6i
Bridgeport n Bellaire St Ohio Deaf 66 Xenia 48
OPEN
Johns 71 (of)
Perry 70 Fairport 52
Mon., Thurs. &amp; Sat.
Bristol 76 Ledgemont 57
Poland 57 Beaver Local 56
Brooklyn 63 North Royalton Ravenna 6:? Akron Spring .
8:00-5: 30 Friidav.
62
field 55
Brunnerdale 85 Carrollton St River-94 Woodsfield 71
John 37
Brunswick 80 Cle Central
Cath 61
.
Buckeye North 98 Cadiz 70 •
Cambridge
52
New
Philadelphia 46
Canton S S5 North Canton 52
Carlisle 57 Valley View 53
Chagrin Falls 70 Cuyahoga
His 60
Chardon 55 Orange 53
Cin Aiken 72 Western Hills 67
Cln LaSalle 71 Cln Sf Xavier

GAHS-Imnton box.

•

Bullpups

~ '~

top Mejgs

~ ~

team 60-41

•

Tuesday's high
school scores

HARDWARE
HEADQUARTERS
SHOP: .

PICKEN.S HARDWARE

ACE
HARDWARE

62

Cln Ook Hills 77 Norwood 52
Cln Withrow 82 Cln Woodward 75
Cle East 57 Cle John Adms 55
Cle Glenville 51 Cle East Tech
46
.
Cle Kennedy 62 Cle John Hay

lh e

33

"Ace iS lhf' pl;u.'t' with
Hardw.ui' M.'ln ·®

Helpful

&amp;~L

Cle Lalln 96 Cle Benedictine

72

50-ft. Powr-Center

Cte Lincoln W 73 Cle Max
Hayes 64
Cte St Joseph 102 Cte
Collinwood 67
Cle West Tech 68 Cie Rhodes

EXTENSION

55

Clinton Massie 83 Blan chester 61
Col Brookhaven 83 Col
Central 49
Col' Hartley 71 Col Wehrle 59
Col Linden 60 Col East 56
Cot Marion -Franklin 69 Col
Ridge 66
Col Mifflin 69 Col Eastmoor

CORD-

S6

Col Northland 68 Independence 59
Col Ready 60 Col Centennlol

562 )
( 31478

S6

Cot South 68 Col MohaWk 12
Col St. Charles 73 Col DeSales
59

Col West 65 Col Briggs 52 ·
Conotton Valley 54 Indlan
Valley N 50
Crestview 67 Stanton 57
Crooksv lite 42 New ConcordGlenn 33
Cuyahoga Val Christ 78 Cie
Heritage 56
Day Kiser 73 Ooy O..kwood 69
Dixie 78 Twin Volley N 56
Edgerton 85 Hicksville 69
Elyria 69 Sandusky 67
Euclid 63 Bedfoo-d SA
Fairless 67 West Hoi(Ties 55
Franklin 106 W Carrollton A8
Fronller 87 Sf Marys IW. Va .I

..

Gahanna 62 Worthington 59

These valueS are fOt one inch of loose·fill inSulation.

224 1st

24-23.

MEIGS MARAUDERS 160)
FG-A FT-A PF

Young

&lt;a roms while Chonko h1d 10.
The Bulldogs of Coach Fred
Gibson were hot from the
field , hitting for 53 percent of
!heir shots (31 of 58.) They
sank 19 of 31 free throws.
Meigs couldn't seem to find
the range from the field,
hitting for just 33 percent
with 24 of 72 shots finding
tlleir mark . They didn't fare
much better from the foul

55

••

•
••

67

Jewett.Sclo 45 · • ·
Tuslaw 61 Sandy Valley 4i
United t:ocol 71 Lisbon 65
Upper Arlington 66 Groveport
59
Urichsvllle Claymont 70
Carrollton 46

0

The flnall6 minutes wao a
combination of a tough
Ironton defense and the
scoring of Fletcher and
James as the Tigers took a t336 lead.
Coach Bell's cagers
clamped a lid on Smith
throughout the second half,
holding him t_o just one field
goal. But this effort released
senior guard Terry Wall, who
had been denied the ball most
of the first half, and Wall
responded with nine points in
the second half with big Brad
Abels adding four more.
Ahels and Wall each snared
six rebounds as GAHS topped
the Tige.rs in that department

Providence
streak ends

•"•

'

bms c~~ also be !"ada at the Spring Avenue

almoot even , although both
away early.
benches sow lots of action.
The first quarter read 19-10 Meigs dropped to 2-10 overall
ir) favor of Athens although and 1-.! within tlle SEOAL.
the Marauders were staying
Bentley paced the Bulldog
within reach. But a cold scorers with 22 points while
second period saw Meigs net WaUace and Matthews had II
just nine points while the and 14, respectively. Athens
hosts were netting 17 for a dominated the boards by
commanding 36-19lead at the collecting 58 rebounds
haU.
compared to 26 for Meigs.
The second half was played Matthews bad 11 of those

BY ODIE O'DONNELL
GAHS dating back to 1976
Sparked by the fine all· with two of their four vic·
around p)ay of Joe Fletcher, tories this season comilig at
a 6·2 sophomore, Coach the expense of Gallipolis.
Buddy Bell's Ironton Tigers Ironton is now 4-1 in SEOAL
cruised by the visiting GAHS competition and u in au
Blue Devils Tuesday night by games.
a 59-11 score.
Coach Jinn Osborne's Blue
Fletcher, who scored just Devils appeared lethargic
four points in the first half, following a tremendous effort
simply owned the back door at Waverly Saturday night.
·to ' the Tiger ' backet in the
The Devils hit only 11 of.5t
second , half as he darted attempts for a lowly 31.5 pet.
tinder the board to take an average while Ironton
"Alley Oop' feed pass from a swished 22 of 39 for a scorga~es.
teammate and drop it in.
ching 57 pet.
Htgh sc~rers for St.
He finished the evening
Junior Forward Mark
Francts, wlJI!'h . ~t only 32 with seven of 10 attempts and Smith turned in a super effort
percent from ther!ield, werf!. added four ··at the charity as he scored 14 points and
Charles ,Ka.te~J' a,n&lt;\, ,Niplt stripe for a game high 18 picked off five rebounds.
Leasure wtth 16, pomts points.
Smith raised many e.r.ebrows
The victory was the sixth just as the first period ended
apiece.
Meanwhile at Berea, consecutive by Ironton over when he sidearmed a 35-foot
Freslunan forward Dennis
jump shot that dropped
Wynn scored a'career-lligh 24 .' - - - - - - - , - - - - through to deadlock the score
points to pace Ba·ldwin- northern division witll a IHl at 11).10.
Wallace to its lOth straight record, while sporting a 12-4 · Smith scored eight of the
victory - a 69-63 Ohio mark overall this season. The GAHS second quarter points
Athletic Conference win over Yeomen dropped to 8·8 as the Devils held Fletcher
overall and to 3-4 . in and Dick James scoreless to
Oberlin.
The
Yellow
Jackets conference play.
take a 2&amp;-25 halftime lead.
Oherlin had held the lead
continue their first place
stronghold In the OAC's until with 8: 14left WylUl hit a
short hank shot to put BW
. ahead for good, 56-M.
Freshman guard Jerry
PresUer also chipped in with
20 points for the winners and
teammate Ron Myers added
14 points and 10 rebounds as
BW dominated the boards, 4f&gt;.
29, with the Yellow Jackets'
Chris Plummer pulllng down
INTEREST
United Pressinlemational
17- a career high.
Villanova
upset Providence
Oberlin's Harry Thomas,
the OAC's leading scorer, had College's tempo early and
a game-high 21 points and ended up shattering the
Tony Thomas added 10 Friars' 241!ame home court
winning streak.'
markers for the losers.
The Wildcats jumped to an
1
In otber games Tuesday
11~
lead and never trailed
night,
Mount
Vernon
Tuesday
night in dwnping
Nazarene whipped Urbana
Providence,
73-66, at the
86-81 and Mercyhurst (Pa.)
Providence
Civic
Center,
Ninety day 1nterest penalty
l&lt;lpped Central State 71.09.
where tile Friars have lost
if
w•thdrawn
before
maturity date .
just six tinnes in 95 games .
"The key thing was they
got us out of our tempo early
and got us into theirs," said
Friars' Coach Dave Gavitt .
"We had sill good shots at the

••
•

.~

...

United Press International
Burrell McGhee did it
again Tuesday night. ·
The wwering Kent Stat&lt;!
center poured in 36 points Ill
lead the host Golden Flashes
to a 7~ victory over St.
Francis (Pa.) .
EYen thoUgh tile Golden
Flashes have won only four
games in 11 starts this
season, McGhee has Wju;&gt;Uy
been at the top of the scoring
column after each game.
Tuesday's night 36-jloint
output was the highest of his
career.
•
KentStateJil!llpedj)UUoan ·
early lead.antl. !liWef•gave. it,
up as they sent St. Francis
down to its sillth loss in 16

in doubt as the host puUed

Ironton stops
GAHS, 59 to 47

Meigs Co. Branch

.

4,..

By Grec BaOey .
The Meigs Marauders,
after another week-long
· layoff due w the weatller,
went to Athens last night and
again had a cold hand as they
fell to the host Bulldogs 81~.
Eleven men broke into the
scoring column for the
winners while only two team
members didn't hit the nets.
The game was really never

Golden
Flashes
triumph

-

~

Athen. s trips Me.igs, 81-60

PLAYER
Follrod
Seeker
Stanley

' Garrettsville .52 Streetsboro

Girard 77 Niles 72
Grandview 52 Dublin 43
Green 47 Revere 4S
Hamlltoo Twp. 62 PickerIngton 61
Harrison 47 Flnneytown 43
Heath 68 Northridge 66
Hiland 66 Ridgewood 61
Howland
59
Campbell
Memorial 56
Hubbard 79 Austintown Fitch

• Bright orange
for high
visibility.
• 3wire
grounded.
• 3 grounded
Powr-Center
outlets.

Ace Reg .

$924

�• ---..,~ Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , Feb. I,I97B

Southern humbles
Eastern, 74 to 47
By Greg Bailey
Placing every player in the
scorin.g
column ,
ho st
Southern continued its jinx
playing without \he services
of starting guard Jeff Goebel. •
look an early lead , but
midway through the first
period the Tornadoes of
Coach Carl Wolfe caught up
and never relinquished the
lead.
Brian Bissell and Mike
Hayman put the Eagles in
fron\4-0 with 6 :40 on the clock
before Southern's Kelly
Winebrenner put his team on
\he board with a short
jumper. Dari Spencer then
, made it 6-2 with two free
throws, but then a field goal
by Richard Teaford and two
by John Sayre gave the host s
first lead, 8-6, with 4: 11
remain ing in the period.
Eastern didn't roll over and
countered with a bucket by
DaMy Spencer to knot it at
eight-aU . But then the hosts
reeled orr eight unanswered
SCOTT Souder (34) fires jumper over outstretched
points and they were on their
hand of Eastern 's Don Eynon (.45) during SVAC tilt
way .
Tuesday night. Southern won , 74-47.
Eastern was stHI in the
game at the end of the first
period with the score reading
'
'I'"
21-14 . The game was still
·
within reach of the Eagles
even at the half, 36-21, but a
hot third period for Southern
NBA Standings
Atlanta a t Indi ana
u ~~
and a cold one for the visitors By United
Press International
De tro i t at Kansas City
Proving the relationship of Hunnicutt were two local · made the score read 56-21 apd
Eastert;~ Conference
New York at San Antortio
Atlanfic Civislon
Milwaukee at Golden St.
success in athletics to success men. Bob Ashley, now a the game was over.
W. L
Pet. GB
N H L Sta ndin gs
in life, a recent article by the coach in GaUia Co unty, was
Four Tornadoes hit double P hita
32 14 .696
By United Pr ess tn1erna1ional
2'6 23 .531
71 ~
Charleston Sunday Gazette· _ remembered by HuMicutt as ·figures with Winebrenner's 15 N ~ w York
. Campbell Conferen ce
Bv ft al o
16 29 .356 151 ~
Patrick Division
Mail pointed to the 195&gt;·56 a determined individual who leading the way. TilT\ Boston
15 30 .331 w,,.
I
W. L . T~ Pts .
Marshall University basket- overcarp.e several personal Bripager and Sayre each had N ew Jer sey
9 JO 18&lt;1 ~ 4 1 J
NY ISla nder s
, 29 11 6 66
Centr'
a
t
Div
isio-n
ball team. The Thundering obstacles to attend college. 14 while senior Teaford
Pfl l lad el phi a
2~ 11 9
65
W. L
Pet. GB Alla (]ta
20 19 II 51
Herd won the MAC tille that Ashley hailed from Mid- tossed in 10. Southern ·won ihe 5an An toni
30 18 .615 NY Ranger s
16 24 9 41
26 2'1 .553 31 ~
winter, the only Marshall dleport where he was an battle of \he boards, gar- Wshngtn
s·tnyt he Division
New Or Ins
25 24 .510 51 ~
W. L. T . Pis.
team to do so.
outstanding athlete.
DI!!ring 47 caroms. Junior Jim Clcyc lnd
22 24 .47B
7
Chi cago
19 17 12 50
23 27 .460 B
Joe
Hunnicu\1
of
Charley Slack, a Pomeroy O'Brien led in \hal depart· Atlanta
Vancouver.
14 22 12 40
16
J
1
.
340
131
Houston
1
Col orado
11 25 11 33
Charleston, a member of the grad 1 was the other local boy men\ with 10. The SVAC
Western Conference
Sl Lou is
11 31 6 28
team, delivered the eulogy at on the team. Slack is now a leaders hi t a .cool 37 percent
Midwest Division
Minnesota
11 32 5 27
.
W
.
L
Pet.
GB
the funeral of teammate Cebe vice president of Motorwheel from the floor, nelling 30 of 81
Wales conference
Den ve r
3 1 17 .646
Norris Division
Price. A team picture in- Corporation. a division of shots. They canned 14 of 21 Chicago
'17 n .551
4' 7
W. L. T. Pts .
Milw
26
25
.
510
6
spired.Hunnicutt to comment Goodyear Tire and Rubber free throws, and had 21
Montreat
JS
7 6 76
De troit
22 , 25 .468 81 ~ Lo s Angeles
21 18 9 51
on the· success of the team's Company, and lives in East · steals.
Indiana
19 28 404 11 11 Pill sbu rgh
16 22 11 ·43
members.
ty
16 34 .J2Q 16
La nsing, Michigan. He still
Detroit
17 22 7 41
The Eagles' Dan Spencer Kanss C Pac:ific
Divi
sion
·
Wash ing ton
9 30 11 29
Among those pointed out by holds a national rebounding took scoring honors for the
W. L
Pet. GB
Adams Division
record.
Portland
I
39
8
.830
night with his 18 markers
W. L. T . PIS.
Phoenix
33 15 .68B 61 :1
Bos ton
II 31 H
6 68
while Brian Bissell hit for Sea ttle
27 22 551 tJ
.Bu ff alo
.; 26 •. 10 12 64
Golden
St
2
4
25
.490
16
eight. The Eagles hit fo r only
~T oronto
26 15 ·7 59
s':"' , 23 25 .479 J61••
Cl eveland
17 30 4 38
' 18 of 67 fro!!) the floor for just Los Angel
Tuesday's ·Results
Tuesday 's Resulls,
27 percent while connecting
Bos ton 1.0 4, Indiana 94
Atl an ta f, MinneSOia 4
Den ver 119 , New York 115
on 11 of 16 charity tosses .
Pillsburgh S, Detrolt 3
Los Ang 116, Cleveland 107
Montreal 5, Colorado 3
T~ey . had 26 rebounds ,
New Orlean s 114, Buffalo 95
Van co!i_y er 4, Washington 2
Ph oen i)( 1,12, Kans Ci ty 102
Spencer getting seven.
Wednesday 's Games
Chicago 106, Alia 103, ot
...
NY lslndr s at NY Rangers
The Southefn-· reserves
San Antog1o U9, Wash 109&gt; Pi ·
· M innesotp at Pittsb u rgh
Gol den St , 103, -N ew Je rs~y 92'
.broke away after a light first
Detroit at Cl eveland
136, Milwaukee 116
BuffalO qt Toronto
· hall for a 47-39 win. II was 21- Portland
Wednesday 's Games
·,,
Philadelphia at Ch i cago
211 at the hall, but the hosts
Los Ang!!les at s"oston
Boston at St. Louis
Denver ai ·Philade lphia
aUo.wed Eastern only two
washington at LOs Angeles
PhOenix a~ Detr oit
Thursday's Games
polllts in the third period to
Chi c ago at New Orteam
NY Is land er s at A t lanta
build up a comfortable lead. New )ers~y at Houston
Colorado at PhiladetPti ia
' s Ga m es
Bos ton at Buffa lo •
Jack Duffy )ed the winners WashThursday
lng1Jin at Clevelam:J
Montrl;\'al at Van couver
with 18 while Dave Foreman
Decorative , Useful and . E~ ... y-to- lnstall Anywl, ere.
had a . Mark Norton and
CONnNUES DUE TO
1!rttt-Matthews each had 12
THE !iAD WEATHER.
lor the visitors.
tdriat for de"n s ·and
MANY ITEMS
&amp;:1 'scOre:
11a ca tion
homes ,

Conrad Dobler and wid e receiv .

By United Press Internat ional

er Ike Harr i s to •New Orlea ns

T~r,~esdn
Bu~ e tball

tor guard Terry Stievt and
defensive end Bob Poltc.ro
Tennis
Mclain to Philadelphia tor a
Los Angeles ( WTT l - S1gnea
Third round draft pick in 1978
and cash.
Chr is Evert
New Jersey Acquired
f orw ard
WI! son
Wash ington
fro m Ph iladelph i a for future
draff choices ,
Houston -· React ivated M ike
Tuesdav •s
Newlin and placed roo k ie· Larry
Mo ffe tt on the injury lis t.
Ohio College
BUffalo -

Traded ouard Teet

Traded

guard

Ap~lications
for ap·
prentu:eshlps with artisans
and craftsmen at the 1978
Mountain State Art and Craft

St 69

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IF YOU Llt&lt;E
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SERVICE

on your savings?

,
.
. .•
x-Pomeroy
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zddlennrt
E

_ · Pro Standings

players are remem b ered

, ,,

..... ..

1

·NOW OPEN

th e Franklin is a
fir ep l ace wit h th e
· do ors Op en , an
energy
$av ing
wood heater w i t h
th e d oo rs cl osed .
You
can
even
cook on if wilh th e ·
5w ing -oiJI beanpol
and grill
ac
cesso r ies'r
Th e
f i re
i"S
easily
c ontrolt ""e~d · wit'h a
d am p e r -~ on
the
flue vent- tor the
enjoymen't"· of a
roaring ' fir e or
modeslly glowing·

Southern (74) - Teaford , 50- 10 ; W in e br enner, 5 -5 - 15 ;
Brlrla~er , 5-4- 14; Sayre, 6-21•: Hill , 1-0-2; Baker, 2-0-4 ;
O'Brien, 2·2-6; Hill. 2-0-4 ;
Findley, 1- l -3; Souder, 1-0-2.

Totals 30-14·74.

Eastern (47) - Goebel, 0-0-

··:

Slop In Soon

Gll.LIAN 'S
FASHION CENTER

2·B; Brown . 1-1-3; Wig al, 2-15; Hayman, 1-0-2; Boyles, J.Q.
2: Wo fe , 0-3-3 ; Browni ng, 1-02: Eynon, 2-0-4; Cheva lier, Q.
0-0. Totals 18-11 -47.
Score by quarters:
South . ·
21 15 20 18- 74

Eastern

14

T.V.'s the Same Day
~

INGLES FURNITURE
N. 2ND ST.

J

WE'VE
GOT'EM!
PRICED
RIGHT!

no matter what-you're looking
for in savings or investment
certificates...

STUD
SPECIAL

GOLDEN PASSBOOK

3-MONTH CERTIFICATE

5- t.?., s~.~.~%

s~~,%

. 5~~,%

~lE U!

I
• Compoun'lled Otily !

NO. 2

• Payablll Ouarlerry • Minimum

PRE.CUT STUDS

AATE

~ATE

TUNA

61!, oz .
Can

l

-!_umbo
'-=.oil

,

'

$119

LEAN TENDER
'

79'

,,
''

UCK ROAST

Ma rt~a White

1:.8,

JACKSON OR OLD FASHION

A
'·

•

•

• I.

'

SELf RISING

FLOUR
25 lb. $299

00

Cans$

PEANUT BUTTER
32

oz.

$}59

iMome ... paid on on1, twq, 1~1111 ,
certifica tes. Interest pay·

w1th race amount ot

$~.000 . 00 01"

mort.

Federal Regulal ions requ ire a substantial
penally for premalure withdrawal ol ctrt lfl·
care tunds .

Why settle for less than the best?
When it comes to your savings, you
want a fair return; the highest legally possible, with a guarantee of
safety for your funds, and accessibility to t hese funds

$ 29

$
BAKING POTATOES.~.~-·
10 lb. IDAHO

_

.

R ing

her greal ring

on reasonable notice of withdrawal.
This is exactly what Ohio · Valley
Bank wants and -promises their depositors·. No wonder savin~s deposits continue to be at an
all-time high.

GW~

Will!

..

ROYAL CROWN COLA
8 PAk
16
oz.

}
9 llrt
. ~ - p·_~q
~ ~.
·· ·.1-:t:
1
SLICED CHEESE.~t~~:.. J
, "fbY«i
PARKAY MARGARINE 69' YELLOW ONIONS .. ~~~ ..49
KRAFT AMERICAN

6 oz. MINUTE MAID PINK LE-MONADE
32

oz.

SALAD DRESSING ..........................~::. gge
(with Sc

',-,',(!;;

~

/t,'"'

"

•

~

&lt;

offl. ~ ,::: :t--y4 Roll 89~

CHARM IN TISSUE ......................... :\ ••••.
5

oz. ARMOUR

,

VIENNA SAUSAGE ···············~'· · if~ ····
(With 3c offl

17

, ;

,

2/75e

PEPPERONI PIZZA.......................~~~. $1.13
10'1•

oz. CAMPBELLS
•

$}09

,.

OhioValley Bank
Gal iipQi is, Oh iq

..

Mombtr ,DlC

, The leading savings' plans are at the leading savings bank.

14

.lo.

,

•

oz. '

three tw rn stars . •

'13()00

oz, SEASIDE

· · ·• ·

BUrrER BEANS ..................~~ :.... ~:•• 2169~
isv. oz.

Mother s lo11e 15 e10:.pre ss ed

by lhe genurne dtamond ,
her children by· the glow~n,q
b 1rl h star s 111 colws tha i
matcti the 1J1rth monlh ot
eB~h Child
Beaul1lul slyles w•ll1 sl ars

HUNTS CATSUP. ••••••••••••••.•••••••••••• ~1~': •• 49~
15

lu ll cur
01amond.

ot. Chef- Boy-Ar· Dee

CHICKEN &amp; STARS SOUP. •••••• ;.-•• ~ •••••• 2/57c

SALAD
DRESSING

·~'"
- .. ,

12

J-Ib . Bag

Jar

Plus tu and deposti.

'

By Pc.'La:$1 09 SlicedLB $1 19
CASING 801L '0GNA·•·•••••••••
•
•••••••••~ . •
oz.
oz.
FRENCH CITY PKG. WIENERS•••••• ~ •.-!'~~~. 99'
HOME
MADE
HAM
SALAD
...............
!~·. 994
Cut Up
FROZEN FRYERS•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~b~. 59'

si~ ~ear

Priz l!

*14~ .
Bag

Holsum

WESSON
OIL

CLOSED

s lb.

4
--=--

694~J~__;,.·

'"'::--t ,.-.IJJBIJI~

20

Prices Effective Thru Sat., Feb. 4th

will be held Ash Wednesday,
Feb. 8, at 7:45 a.m. in the
chur ch dining room. A
program will be held
following the breakfast.
Women of other ch urches in
the area have been Invited to
attend . Reservations are to
be _made .with Mrs. \'hillip
Meinhart , !1!12-i:J8:l by Monday .
'

ab le monlhl~ if 'you desire an certlllcaltl

you'll find it at

79~

(';;E~oro~E~ CSOAMUPPBELL

JOWL BACoN

F.
Feb. 1 thru Feb. 4Ri~ht Reserved To Limit Ouantiti~es
We Gladly Accept Fed. Food Stamps
Monday thru Fri~ay
9:00tll7:00
Saturday 9:00-9: 00

• Ptylblt Quarti!rly • Minimum $1,000.00

And in addition to all this ... mt!llhly or

Quar r e rl ~

lou r, or

OhioValley Bank

WW"

· · Mt: Hf ' STOP

t Ptyaltll Dutrltrly • Ml11l••• 11,DOO.IMI .

$1 ,opo.oo

7 !.::~,%

7}:!,%

~ak 794

M l n tmt~m

&amp;· YEAR CERTIFICATE

4-YEAR CERTIFICATE

TOILET TISSUES

10 lb.
Bag

• Ptytble Qulrl ertv •

• PIYIIIIt Qllatitrly • Mlni mYm $1 ,000.00

CHARM IN

5th &amp; Pearl

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT STORE

12

6~~,%

6 ~NN~L

~ATE

Hogg &amp; Zuspan Materials Co.

IDAHO

. %

6 ~l

SLIC.E!l ; ' ' '

BREAKF AS1' SE:T
1ltc annual Lenten DreBkfast sponsored by the women
or Trinity Church, Pomeroy I

1

• Pay1biB QU~rtarly • Minimum S1.000.00

Middleport

PHONE 773-5536

Phone 742-2100

3-YEAR CERTIFICATE

2-YEAR CERTIFICATE

1-YEAR CERTIFICATE

RATI'

In

GINO'S
OF MASON

• flyable O.uttltrl';' • Mlnlmlnl t1 ,1011.00

$ 1 , 00~ . 00

yo u. Na me withheld on
Mrs. Ralph Rottgen entertained with a spaghetti dinner at
reque81 ·
her home recently in New Haven. Those present were Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Roush and Dustin, New Haven ; Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Marcinko, Donnie and Kelly, Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
CARD ANNOUNCED
John Russell, Tina and Melissa, Bidwell , 0 .; Mrs. Bert]Brd
CLEVELAND (UP I)
Hoffman, Connie, Debbie and Brooke and Ralph ~otlgen .
The Cleveland Browns anMr. and Mrs. Bill Lieving and family went to Logan, W.
nounced Tuesday two 1978 Va. to visit Uteir daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Denn is
pre-season home games (Cindy) Guess and new grandson, J ason DeMis. Mrs. Lieving
both Monday ni ght e n- and daughter, Bonnie, remained for a longer visit while Mr .
counters - against the New Lleving, Vickie, and Valerie returned home.
York Giants Aug. 7 and
Mr. Leo Clark has returned home from Hol•er Medical
against the Detroit Lions Center where he was treated (or acute bronchitis .
Aug . 21.

~~

S ECIAL

OnTheT

POTATOES
GRAPEFRUIT

PASSBOOK SAVINGS

UTE

coats .

7 6 2Q-47

. By

NOW OPEN

,

0; Spencer, 7-4- 18 ; Bissell, J .

OFF

We Will Service All Zenith

PHONE 773-5536

FRANKUM- FIREPLACES

30%ro
50%'

Call Us In the AM and

GINO'S
OF MASON

somebody oft .
This month we have been
trying to consolidate some of
our bills so we could get our
heads back above water and
Alma MarshaU
the committee rejected us
again. We don't know what '&lt;
we are going to do next. We
really got behind this month
MASON - Mayor F(ed Taylor has expressed appreciation
since we had to come up will&gt; tq, 1111 Mason Volunteer Fire Department lor so much
house insurance, house ta.e~, aiiillilanoe they gave in the recent crisis when many, many
and also car insurance.
strtetawere impassable in Mason, Clifton and West Colwnbla.
We had to borrow a carlo
Muon'~ Fire Chief, Ross Roush and others sometimes
lise to go back and forth to worked 2t hours, helping people, cleaning streets, starting
work and we have had it for &lt;!Irs, shoveling driveways, hauling people food, scrapping
about three months now since county roads, and I know there are many other acts of kind·
we had to park ours. We don't 11"8. ~~~~~have not been mentioned . According to the people I
have any more money to ti1ked til !hey have done an outstanding job, and accordi,ng to a
repair ours again . We had it ril fiiformed source the ·only way yoo the clU•ens can show
in the shop three times before your appreciation is by giving to the Mason Volunteer Fire
we parked it and we can't Department.
6263.
In addlUon to \he Fire Chief Roush, t11e oflicers included
turn it in for a new one.
We had to get our furnace vice president, Jin• lJLvender ; secretary, Harold Norton;
~-------------1
fixed this month. We missed • tr011surer, Ruger Hysell; captains, Eddie Johnson and Jim
1 LETTERS to 1 work because of the snow and· I,A~er; second lieutenants, Charlie Sayre and Chris
I
I we have been doing wilhoul a Dllli!Uss; Department Chief, Robert Johnson and Assistant
I
EDITOR
I water pump because we Chief, Carl Johnson . Mason Volunteer Firemen \hal serve
I
I didn't have money to gel a the communities of Mason, Clifton and West Columbia include,
I would like to express new one that we were plan- i)t ..ddltion to those mentioned, fumdy Lavender, Howard
my views on \he local lending ning to get when we goUhls ~lck Carson, Denver Blake, GeorRe VanMatre. Carl
loan.
Johnson, Brian Kearns, Chalky McDa niel, Marty
institutions.
But now that we have
Donald Johnson, Roger Wood, John Ross , Jr., Jeff
My hwiband and I have
tried over the years to get been rejected again, we will Miller, Paul Johnson, Rodney Rotlgen, John Pearson, Homer
loans from just about every have to conllnue to hau l Newell, Raymond Reynolds and Eddie Casto .
The eight Junior Firemen include Ronnie l..avender , Greg
place possible but since ·we water in milk jugs and use
someone
else's
car.
Rouih,
Mike Sayre, Grant Hysell, Travis Gray, Mark Gilkey.
aren't rich or politically
It
really
would
be
nice
to
'{9'lll
Kebler
and Estel Lavender.
influential we are rejected.
·~
'
.
Over the years we have have a loan officer help you ''., MASON -Three from this area attended
the Mid-Winter
on three different occasions out just because roo are
had to get two loans when we hard· working and honest Conference for Municipal League at the Hearl of Town Motor
have needed to trade in our when he can see you really Inn In Charleston on January ·15. 16 and 17 in Charleston.
used car for another orie need a little help and It's lor a Among them were Mason 's Mayor Fred Taylor. Pl. Pleasant's
making it impossible to save good cause and not for Mayor John Musgrave, and Clerk, Patty Burdette.
The group met with Governor Jay Rockefeller and House _
a ny money so when we need something wasteful.
I'm
sure
there
arc
others
of
Delegates
Dave O'Neal and Robert Hatlleld.
something we have to charge
who
feel
the
same
way
we
do
.
Mrs.
Fred
Taylor visited Mrs. Freda Millon at Elkview,
it which puis us farther and
1
know
this
won't
help
us
get
W.Va.
and
with
her parents, Mr . and Mrs. Dayton Feilds,
farther in debt to keep our
our
bills
paid
but
it
helps
to
Clendenin,
W.Va.
while her husband a\lended \he meeting.
home running and our four
gel
it
off
my
chest
and
tell
Masoil
and Area Personals
children clothed.
someone
about
it.
Mrs.
Blanche
Tucker,
age H:i, was taken to the Pleasant
We have been turned
Whatever
happened
to
Valley
,
l,lospital'
on
Sunday
morning when she reportedly
down when we have tried to
the
days
when
you
could
get
sll!lei-ed
a
hear\
attack.
On
Mondaphe
had improved .
get cars, tractors, homes,
p
just
because
the
banker
Mr.
and
Mrs.
La
ndon
Smith
entertained
with a trout
hel
mortgages and we even tried
knew
you
were
honest
a
nd
not
dinner
recently
at
their
home.
Their
guests
included
Mr . and
to_buy us a small store. We
a
crook
or
pill
pusher.
am
Mrs.
Cecil
~milh
,
Mr
.
and
Mrs.
Fred
Tripp.
1
were rejected .
. Mrs. Wilma Blake, Cllflon, VIsited a lew days reccnlly
It puts you in mind of the sure the people in the comdown
people
,
Wllh
her son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bla ke
mittees
that
turn
movie last Sunday night
haven't
needed
money
very
and
baby
at Pomeroy·
.
••standing TaU" where a hard
hadl
or
\he
would
think
.
Misses
Ivy
and
U:sste
Slee.lh of Charleston, former
working family tried to hold
on to thei r home while aboJt it a miie more. The reSidents of Mason ~reVISiting the~r sister a.nd brothcr-m-law,
another tried to take it away. only help those get m0 n/y Mr. and Mrs.-Granvtlle Harrison . Mrs. Harr1son is a patient at
. • Holzer Medical Center.
It doesn 'I pay to be that have money or those that
Mr. Frank McDermitt is recuperating !rom pneumonia at
honest, the only way to gel
anyone to help you is if you ~~=:t;~:le"!~~r:~:·a~t~~~: the home of his son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. J ohn
t'
.U
McDermitt, U:tart.
have money or if you rip k. d I
th~s.~ s~re~~~~~~n~~av~e: '
Mrs. Harry Hoffman is recuperating at the Holzer Medi cal
few pangs of guilt . _ Thank ~~r where she underwent surgery on Wednesday. Her room

basketry.
bobbin lace 'men during this aMual livemaking, jewelry craftlng, day event. They also take
drawing, ballklnc and part in series of educational
painting while glinln1 • 'art and craft programs each
deeper appreciation of Will evening, during which films
Virginia's culture( _heritage. • and talks on design are
1.pprentlces work under the presented.
The Apprenticeship
guidance or master craftsCommittee of the Mountain
State Art and Craft Fair
oversees the selection and
supervision of the ap·
prentices and the program.
Applies lions and further
lnlonnatlon may be obtained
by writing: Apprenticeship
Program, Mountain State Art
and Craft Fair, Cedar Lakes,
Ripley, W. Va . 25271, or by
phoning Tim Pyles, (304) 372-

Ddll pay you the

United Press International
Kent St 74 St Francis { Pa) 63
Ba ldwi n-Walla ce 69 Oberlin
6J
Mt Ve rn on Nazare ne 86
Urbana 81
Mercyhurs t (Pa l 77 Centra l

Girls
Ohio High School
Basketba II Results
United Press lnternationa I
Bucyrus 63 Willard 16

be West Virginia residents, al
lAQ ieast It yea~s of age and
"l:'&lt;:l' possess a destre to learn the
skills ·or · making heritage
Fair, June 30 through July 4, t·rafts.
Las\ year, 25 West
a~e being accepted until
Virginians
learned spinning,
March 15, 1978.
weaving,
vegetable
dyeing,
Apprentice applicants must

Mason Area News No

Basketball Results

Football
St. L ouis -

over rival Eastern last night
by a 74-47 count. Eastern,

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy . 0 ., Wednesday, Feb. I, 1978

Sports transactions

tor 1 to 6 c h1ldren - or
grand children . Come in and
see lhe radiant color s ol all
12 b1rtl1 star s
-I! IIMQI on I [j 1&lt;•••1 whole .,; y• IIO• 9\)ld
Enll•!lt(IIO

t"'• dtll~

~C!'

DEL MONTE

.

Ill I . MAl" · ~OMIIIIOY

'

'

.,

..

.,

'

�r Helen Help

6 - The DaUy Seotlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb. 1,1978

n

. ., Has second birthday party

TREVOR DYE

I·

~

Trevor P. Dye, son ol Mr. Kalhi Smith, Rodney Leach
and Mrs. Robert Dye, II, and Rick Rhoades, ParlierMason, celebrated his second sburg.
birthday at his home, January
Rev. and Mrs. G. A.
Mtuer, Emporium, Pa. and
IS.
Trevor was honored wlth a Wesley Dye, "T.P"'s brother.
birthday supper. A Mickey
Trevor 's paternal grand~
Mouse theme was used and parenll are Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Trevor was presented with a Dye, New Haven, and hls
Mickey Mouse cake, baked by malemal grandparenu are
Mrs. Ruth Pickens of New Mr. and Mrs. Curtis B. Smith,
Haven.
Parkersburg.
Those attending the party
His great grandparenlll are
were Mr. and Mrs. Bob Dye, Mr. and Mrs. Wllllam Dye,
New Haven, Rick Dye, and New Haven; Mr. and Mrs.
Linda Lou Dye, New Haven; Robison Smith and Mr. and
•-Eionald and Joyce Dye, Mrs . Tilden
McClung,
Broad Run ; Terri Proffitt, Parkersburg.
Mason; Scott Brewer, Polnt
Those sending gifts and
unable to attend were Donna
Pleasant.
Mr. and Mrs. WUliam Dye, Rossman, Alexandria, Va.,
New Haven ; Valor! Smilh, and Mr. and Mrs. Curtis B.
Smith, Parkersburg.

~;

···&lt;

f.·
.-:

Us . . .

By Helen Bottel

CHOICES

iil{

THISTWIN 'S GOTTHE TONY
DEAR HELEN :
I got engaged to Tony in June. Then my twin sister (as
usual ) showed up. She's unhappily married had just broken
up with her latest lover, so she spent most ~f her time at my
house- chasing Tony.
He lost his aP.artment ; she suggested he move in with her.
Next !found them sleeping together. Tony says il's a sex need,
he loves only me and for us to go ahead with our wedding
plans.
But he can't even telephone me for fea r she'll find out. He
says "give him lime!" (It's been four months !)
My sister gloats. She's never forgiven me lor our chlldhood;
says I used to lake away her baby bottle 30 years ago and now
it's )Jer turn.
I've always tried to help her out of her scrapes, partly
because she makes me feel guilty. Should 1 cave in again and
.
'
keep on - WAIT!NG?
DEAR WAITING :
Don 't wait any longer for that long-overdue confrontation?
Tell your so-called fiance he musl make a choice right now or
this hyin wllldwnpthe Tony - permanently. -H.
'

%PRICE
WINTER SALE
NOW IN PROGRESS
No Refunds - No Exchanges
PhonP 1-304-882-3312
OPEN DAILY
9 : 00-5:00
Shop Friday till 7:00
VIS4 '

Karen Blaker PhD.

Block pride

log your secretary.
DEAR DR. BLAKER - A
friend of m1.. had a job iDlerview IIIII week. Tbe employer

By Karen Blaker, Ph.D.
DEAR DR. BLAKER - I
am a black mother trying to

commeated

raise my children to be proud
of their heritage. Do you have
any Ideas that mlgbt help

p.m. at the "new home " of

BOOT

ber

four

children and questioned
wllether •be could manage a
full-time applied unleu she
cwld handle the commitment. Sbe tbougbt II a "sex-

me?

DEAR READER- Yea!'l
ago, when I was a student at
the UCLA Medical Center, I
met a youag medical _,.,.t.
dent, Alvin Poussaint, who is
today a prollliDent black
psythlatrlst. He told me the
best way to lnsllll pride ill
black chUdreo Is io provide
them wllh a good home- not
to devise special (and seemlntlly artificial) activities
designed to buDd "racial
pride." He's the expert.
DEAR DR. BLAKER -Six
nwntbs ago l had an affair
with my secretary. I told my
wile about it right after It was
over. Sbe seemed to accept It
until she discovered !had not
fired tbe girl. She got upset
all over agaill and now Is
threateolog to leave me.
I tblok her jealousy Is
stupid, particularly when

POLLY"S POINTERS

the square dancers which is
the Jackson Production
Credit Building at 228 Upper
River Road, State Route 7,
Gallipolis.
Homemade pies will be
made by the ladies of the
French City Swingers and
will be auctioned off by club

llisul ated com fort
for hunt i ng a nd
fishing .

ist"

question and - even

though sbe liked the job offer

Sticky
pillowcase story
By Polly Cramer
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY- I bought a

Gene Evans.
Each year club members
look forward to sharing a
homemade pie and a square .
dance with area dancers.

fRED WING I·~~

of yellow paper glued above
one hem. l put liquid soap on
. the glue that was left and rub• bed il . in with a vegetable
btush but il is stiU very
slicky.
I do.hope you have an
Black Decree
wiU help me remove
idea
that
Gondolas once glided along
this.LILA
the canals of Venice in
DEAR LILA - Did you try
colorful trappings as nobles
dry
cleaning fluid ? Perhaps
vied In display. Bul edicts in
hot
white vineqar might
1562 and later decreed:
work.
If other readers have
"Henceforth one color for
encountered
this problem I do
all," and lo this day lhe craft ·
hope
this
will
lell us what
cruise unadorned, hulls
did.POLLY
they
painted black.
DEAR POLLY - One

Complete Select-ion of Red Wing Shoes
HARTLEY'S SHOES, INC.
Store Hours

"Middleof
Mon . thru Thurs. &amp; .sat. Upper Blocku
9a.m.-8p.m. Fro .
p·
O

pair of pillowcases to embroider arid there was a piece .

ta .m.,sp,m.

VIS4'

orne roy, .

reader wrote that even the
dry cleaner would not dean
her stuffed "pets." I have a
lovely while fluffy stuffed kitlen and tried cleaning it
many ways bul everything
failed until l used cornmeal
that I had soaked in gasoline.
1 rubbed this into the fluffy
material 1
shook it out ·
thoroughly and the killen
looks like new. I aired it out of
doors until all lhe gas fumes
cleared away.- GLADYS
DEAR READERS - Do
handle the gasoline carefully
and away from cigarettes,
pilot lights, children, etc.
-POLLY
DEARPOLLY-Thosewho
wear pantyhose with panties

~~:~~~·:~~~le:~oer~ ~~~~

event

DRESS SHOES
GROUP
GROUP

LADIES

FASHION BOOTS

Stop In
And See

__....

'5.00

17;99
,__

30%

OFF

PURSES

REG. PRICE

30%

1 Group

PHONE

Women's &amp; Children's

SHOES
13.00 PAIR
2 PAIRS

FOR

OFF

OR

REGULAR

$500

GROUP

PRICE

Shirred Fabrics

GROUP

MEN'S DINGO

MEN'S .WEYENBURG

&amp; ACME BOOTS

DRESS SHOES

I

$199

?AIR

•soo

MIR

MARGUERITE'S SHOES
BETTY OHLINGER
POMEROY, OHIO

·.

*

fine," said a hospital official.
Said Truly's brother, Don,
45, who had been searching
!or James since last
Thursday, "I have to admit I
was surprised we found him
alive. I was prepared tn
identify a body."
Truly, asked what he did
lor six days in the
snowcovered cab, said, "I did
a tot of thinking."
Some of that "thinking,"
rel ated
brother
Don ,
concerned some unheeded
advice.
"I'd always tnld him tn
drive Interstate-71 on that
run, not route 13," sait! Don.
"l told him if you ever got in
snow trouble it'd be a lot
better to he on 71 than 13.
"Today," added Don, "he

a greed he should have
listened to me."

sprinkled mostly light low pressure area feU from
snowfall on states just east of
the Rockies today and headed
farther east toward slates
still trying to shake off the
effects of last week's
blizzard.
Snow reached from eastern
Mnntana

Qu~I,J

John F . .F,ultz, Manager
Phone 992-2107
Ohio

$100,000 suit
filed Tuesday
-·

.J

E il een Swa n, Sy r ac use,
fil ed suit. in Meigs C&lt;J unly
Common Pleas Co urt in the
amount of $100,000 against
Helen R. F'a rm er, ad-

minist ratrix of the estate of
James Fanner, deceased,
Middleport .
The suit Is lor alleged injuries Miss Swan suffered in
an accident on Sept. 4, 1977.
She was a passenger in a ra r
driven by J a mes Fanner.
A suit for partitio n of real

estate has been filed by
William M. Pooler, Rt . 2,

-· ·

-

s::.r~

l

6 month 1~
.
OFF
Ssze 14
·
---· .... _.._..._._..__
SELECTED
BOYS PANTS

t~ru

1~ Off

2

G
I RLS WEAR
lL

lL OFF

JS.t!J-ACK~
400/ 0

Bel~&amp;

-COA·
....

1;. hJ

!I

SNOW SUITS

NOW OPEN

· · -A-Special Feature of .The Daily Sentinel on Valentine's Day ·

• -w

!

&amp; TOPS

lL

GIRLS JUMP SUITS
AND
LONG DRESSES

lL
7~::s 72 OFF

lh

h-------t------- ~·
1
DRESSES

1 .
1

SELECTE-D. -

s·
0. szes
14

I

~3 OFF

Sizes
7-14.

,~~Y.r/
r"l.it:~~g~h~r ~te ~::1! --:--G-I'rls-COrd-u'."roy--·. ~-ID04 N'T tn tie in a knot for the top (or l
~

.

SUM
lL

72

JEANS
OfF

_

·

.........

MISS .
JH IS Ill

9:3o,

:"~:~s·:.:-

L.1! 9:308, Frs.

'

W.• ....

Size
2-8

l
I
I

l

.

I

I
I
I
I
.II

J.A3 Off
1L

'

'

' Feb. 2 thru 4

. .SH()PPE --~1
•w

Po,meroy, o.

I ............

.

••

·

I

was

in

~ood

amaz i ngl y
c onsidcr i n~

heal th ,

his

ordeal, but weak.
11

t prayed uml I hnpl'd I

would come uut uf it," Truly
suid. " Ali i could do wns w;Jit
und wait. "

MASON
773-5536

but not much. We just never
nntil'ipated 1111 yt hing th is
bud."
This wce k, 1nilk und bllktWY
pruducts ha d been in short
suptlly ut so me Kroge r
stores, but the stocks of such
food should be 1»1ck. wnorm11l
lj&gt;day, Crague added.
A spokesm a n for Bi~ Bcnr
$uperiTUlrkets in ColumbuS
su ld

puni c

lm yl.nH

h ml

reduced stocks a t SO Int.' stot·cs
uround the state. But
g~ nerally , Big Bear stor es
had not expc.ricnct:d se•·ious
shortages, he addc,l.
In Tiffin,
partkulurly
hardwhit urea, the munagc r nf
a Kroger store suid Tuesday
·the marke t·had just receiv ed
it's first fresh supplies of food
in several days. "We've been

a

out of bread, ·milk aml e~gs.
But our situation is a lot
better now .''

Panic buying on Monday
and Tuesdity was reported by
supermarkeL"i all o.vcr Ohio ,
as residenl!l siocked up in the
event . of an oth er win tcr
storm . But most sto re
officials reported the massive
purchases were tapering off ·
and that they were Hble to
cope with the problem .

FrosHree
Refrigerator-Freezer wit
7-Day Fresh Meal Keeper

-~.·~'

.

0 ~r~ez~~~~~Wtionall
'
0 Two Ireeze r d oor shel ves
0 Ice compartmentwilh 2
I

$1.00 BY FEBRUARY 11TH TO THE
DAILY SENTINEL, P. 0. BOX 729, POMEROY, 0.
16 WORDS $1.00-CASH WITH ORDER

OR MAIL IT WITH

·' ·

1. .
·•
2. _---;.-:....:...-_;__ 3, _ _ _ __ 4. _ __ _
5, _ __ _ 6, _ _ _ __ 7. _ _ _ __ 8. ~--~I 9. _ __ _ 10. _ _ __ 11, _ _ __ 12. _ _ __
I,
1
14._-;---_- - 15.--~- 16._ _____c_~._ 13.
.... ____________________________
.____,____

*-""&lt;':j- -· .

1

~
~·~.,:
·

D

· "''li .,__.•.,f

______;~~J:~·~
I
I '' ...

.~
~~
............~

·

Model RT 2111 ·

·•·

(~)
Y

0 Spl it can tileve red
adju stabl e s helves
REG . $669.95
0 Ad juslabl e fres h slorage
pa n
PRICE
0 7-Day Fresh Meal-Kee pe r
0 La rge vegetabl e cris pe r
0 Buller and cheese se rve rs
0 Re movabl e egg server
0 Adjuslable door shelves
0 Aut omatic interi o r l ights
Stop in .and look over our
0 Magnetic door gaske ts
complete
line
of
0 Full length Woodgrain
Westinghouse ADDiiances.
handles
.
Slim-Wall des ig n- foam

SALE

$49995

~~

.~

insulation
Separate temperat ure
c ontrols

PHONE 992·2156

Adju stable glide- out roll ers

THE .DAilY SENTINEL

1

II

,.

M

QUICk-release trays
0 Ice c ube serv e r

_:____.....,..,..~--

..

',' ..,._

~ v.:~

Model RT2t77
0 Co mpl etely Frosi-Free
0 Equipped fo r Aulomatic

WRITE YOUR MESSAGE BELOW AND BRING IT

'•'
•

Gpod

bliztard struck w n~ rcscut.'&lt;l
alive 'I'Ilesday . Doctors said
Ja mes Truly, 42, Clcvc lun&lt;i,

Wesllnghouse
2o.8 cu. Ft Capacity

We couldn' t have picked
a nicer pair of parent~ in
the world! Have a
Happy Valentine ' s Day!
Mike and Sue
·

________________

OfF

Thurs., ·Fri., Sal,

"

.... .

-

To Mom and Dad ...

'
~----·--------~---~---------------------------------,

.

Pri~

Ne"r Slil!ler's in Pomeroy
2J!!I~~!.-~----· ... _ _ 9~.3~~·-·- ..-

'

OFF

72

Mnnsfi eld, Ohio , when lht.1

'

'Aiter 14• wonderful
years of 'm arriage, I'm
stll I head·over ·heets in
love w ith you!
Walter Z.

I

OOVERALLS

Prices Good
.Thurs., Fri., Sal
Feb. Z t~ru 4

To My Wife, 'Ann

a·o...,v
· .......,s...._.._

A t ru~ k .driver ~a u ~ ht
haulint-: u lo..ali of ~tee) to

~~~·&lt;(]

-G-IRLS JEANS .

DRESSES
'
~ Ss'zes ~ Off
2

·

I

11.1 OFF

all done by then," Bowen told
the
Federal
Disaster
N;si~t ance Administrat ion.

(Umit_:~~_.wor~7"'Sizes ~~~~~ated Below)

~. Qff.. . -- ~~~ff;_~% ~·l I
&amp;

s·

12 OFF

'

·'

Size
2-6x

. "You ~now we cnn 1t J~,Ct it

I

I

r

snow

SAY' '~1 -lOVE YOU" WITH A' '
$1.00 SENTINEL VALENTINE AD.

•

~-jl

Boys &amp; Girls
TODDLER WEAR

j

GIRLS
SLACKS
.JOPS

Sl

Sizes
7-14

..

G : s . __L_G_I_rls!(!Spo_OrtsJW.fea
_•wr '. ,..

CARDIGAN
swrA'JERS
ut

'I_ "G'?I.R,~L-s~SWEATERS

.

and

Searching for the clever way to say "I Love
You?" Our Happy Valentine Ads will be
published· ori February 14, and offer you a truly
unusual way to proclaim your love and best
wishes.

OFF

s_ElhLe-cr·Ffe"o

INFANT WEAR
·
.

normal or near norm a l
s up~lies on hand by today .
"The biggest problem we've
had is getting trucks to our
markets. Some of the side
roads stiU have been

1.--------..1

I

0

rector of merchamlising, said
Kroger markets would have a

OF

PANTS

+TOljzDDLE~.F-RF~--.

United Pre!!~ Internuthmul

Supermarket chalns ncross
Ohio have reported their food
supply situation returning to
normal, as highways and
secondary roads beco me
passable.
Charles Crague, Kroger di-

PHONE

_ _ _.. _ _ ~"'-"--o~ro-----·--&lt;1
BOYS swraTrRS
. TODDI.fR
._
U\llo .
·
Velores &amp; Sweat Shirts
BOYS WEAR

contrac ti n~

removal in order to quaHfy
for a 75 pt•rf'enl ft:dcra l
rei mbu rsement to lo ca l
guvermnents.

Food supply normal

GINO'S

______
1. BiY:EA~
1'
74

Wea ther

impassable in recent W&amp;ys,"

I

Sizes
5-14

Natio nal

the slate is_receiving large
10nowtts of federal help ill
digging out .
Ohio Gov. James A. Rhodes
today still sought a statewide
weather disaster declaratioo
from · President Carter. The
deadline eJtPired at midnight
and Rhodes' plea lor a
statewide extension was
denied, although an indefinite
extei'Sion was granted lor
four northwestern co unties .
lndillJia Gov. Otis Bowen
argue'! with federal officials
for more time to clear his
state's roads . Midday today
was the deadline · for .

he eJtPlalned.
. Crague said ~verstncking
by Kroger s tores in
anticipation of severe winter
weather "helped us a tittle.

valentine Love Unes

Pomeroy, 0.

The

Steel firm
in ·g ood
shape

T~ tltiJt ~AObiRJJiti, wit/, a.pwuOIIIJ!~tit.

Second Sl

•

5;;nnth

south Texas across Louisiana
Into northwestern Florida .

Service pos ted· tr avelers
adv1sories for large ~tions
of the Great Plains. The NWS
predicted up to 4 inches of
snow today in southe rn
Misso u ri , no r theastern
Oklahoma and extreme
northern Arkansas .
The snow was expected to
spread across the Mississippi
Valley to the A)lllalachians by
United Pn•ss lntr ruatlonat
evening,
the NWS sai d.
F.ven t hou~ h Ohio's elt•ctric
storm
watches were
W
inter
ut ilitil'S ·m·e ru nn in~ out of
eoa l. at le~:t st one slt!el fim1 posted in cent ral and
operati ng in Um Buckeye southern Ulinols and in all or
State seems in rt.&gt;latively Indiana and Kentucky.
Crews have not yet cleared
goudshapc.
all
the roads in Michigan ,
" We have"' tw(~mont h supOhio
and Indiana which were
ply of coal ami have been able
blocked
by the blizzard last
to maintain that invento r y
week.
·
since the strike started," SHid
Jim Gilbow, chairman of
Don Hawk, ~ spukcsman for
Armco Steel Cu ., head· the road co mm iss ion in
qu&lt;ll'tl:!re t.l at Middletown. Ohio's Leelanau County, one
" We h1:1ve been buying coal o! the hardest hit areas In last
W!!fk.'s storm, said any new
vu t~ i de Ohio. We !we been
buyi ng in UJC U.S. but it may snowl~ll will he disastrous.
Author iUes in l'y1 ichiga n
be foreign coal."
sairl
Tuesday it will be
Het wk wets uskL'&lt;i why Anllseveral
more days before all
co 1:1 11d other steel companies
of
it
s
s tate roads a re
seem to be well supp)iud with
eoal when the utilities are in passable.
President Carter decla red
so much trouble bCccmse of a
Michiga n a disaster area Jan .
tlwimlling supply.
·' I am j ust going to venture 'J:/, one day after one of the
s nows t o rm s . in
a guess but I think the steel worst
Michigan
history.
A..o: . a r esult.
compun ics and /\rmco knew
that this was going to be one
heck of (I work stuppage as
fa r as the coal fields we re

~ .~

THE FABRIC SHOP

773-553b

a('rM"

Da kota a nd the Central
Plains into Oklah oma . A
com bination of
s now,
freezi ng rain an d s leet
extended eastward from the
Texas Panhandle across
Arka nsas into central

Sweater Ji.nits

SLEEPWEAR

·I
I
ev~~At~pe~Ls7~b.rln!~~ l

.•

him , bu( other than that , he
seems to have sur vived it

snowstorm

I You've Been Snow Bound-And We've Missed You
~
'
ho We're Having A February Sale To Bring You Great
Savings Like These
----·__

~::S~ni-f~~·i:i~l:~E~ I

this part could be stitched
down If one does not like the
knot) . - MRS. C. S.M.
.
DEAR POLLY- When you
have to slip sheer curtains on
to a curtain rod put a small
piece of waxed paper over the
end of the rod and see liow
easy it is to slide the curtain
on.-MRS.J.S.
Polly will send you one of
her signed thank-you
1 newspaper·coopon clippers if
she uses your favorite
POinter, Peeve or Problem in
her column. Write POLLY'S
. "'INTERS in care of this
OC' ''Spaper.

\

CENTER, INC.

For
Formal Wear
Tops
Skins

FEBRUARY

.I!

~~=::~;~~s~v:u~~~~~~

the market and could lind
none that would slay on my
. hair overnight. Finally llried
using lhe top cut from a pair
or kworn
pantyhose. This
wor ed pe rf ect1y a. nd really

,(~-

A Reasonoble Price

!,...._..,;,..:·:-:-:-::-:;:-:::;::·:-:-::i-~-=w=·-=-=-=-=-:-:;-;---~
!

slitch two rows ~f
sti citing
about an eighth o n inch
apart just down
the hose
patt. Then· cut off below this
stiiching, turn .back and
stilch lingerie rubber, leg
size, around the cut edge.
This makes most wearable

spread this wlth my pastry
brush. It washes out easily
and hands and clothes do,
too. - LINDA

- t~

The

MASON

OF

..

grandmother made for us.
Add water, a little at a time,
to flour and stir constantly so
it does nollump. The amount

I'

Another

Pomeroy, against Barbara
wait. "
Pooler, Rt . 3, Pomeroy,
Jane
DAY
TO
BE
MARKED
Finally, late Tuesday_moret
al.
Four
Chaplains'
Sunday
ning, Truly's brother, OOn,
In other cases, Barbara conce rn c~l , " he sa id. " We
led 018 r escue· tt:: am &lt;th~t· • will he observed this Sunday
ha vc experienCed wildcat
Long
w~s granted a· divorce
spotted a radio antenna at St. Paul's Lutheran Church
strikes
off cl nd on fur several
sticking up from the snow and by Drew Webster Post 3~ , from Matthew Long and the years.
American LE!'gion , Allen marria ge of Brend a D.
started digging.
" It gets duwn to the point
"They came beating on the Downie, post chaplain an- Heming a nd Lester D. Haning where stee l cumpitnics make
tnp of the roof and I beat nounces . The annual ob- was dissolvl!d .
plans to enable them to live
back," ·said Truly. " ! servance is paid to the four
what has turned oul to he
with
chaplains who during World
thought, •'rrhank GodY'·:
•
a
chronic
problem ," se:tid
Truly was checked over at War II gave up their life
Hawk . "There is no stee:tdy
Mansfield General Hospital, jackets lo other men and
.source of supply from our
where officia ls said he was in went down with the ship while
U\\' 11 mines so we have to
CALLED
OFF
amazingly · good health, .s till in prayer. Members of
Meigs C&lt;Junty Council of learn to live wsithout it from
the local post will meet in
considering .his ordeal.
PTA'
s meeting has been our own mines and get it from
"He's kind of weak and we front of the church at II a.m. postpuned until March.
an outs ide source."
want to get some fluids in Sunday.

'Also Come 'In and
' - Tires Stu,rffJed
Get Y

for all your
new fashions

GINO'S

My
children (lwo of them preschoolers) use a lot of paste

Ladies' Leather

\

Mtssissippi .
Rain spawned by the same

United Preis toternaltonal

Aloo Spring

pilbo;!~rto;~LL~M~-

LADIES

.
Straight or Rough
Recapped Tires
tAt-

fabric

into strips to use lor stuffing

9:00 A.M.

"I didn't know what day use of me getting out cause it
today was, but I feel great," was 5 a.m . and the snow was
new version of t he popular declared Truly, 42, of Cleve- blowlng so bad ypu couldn't
truck drivers' song, ' 1Six land, who has a )Vile and two see nothing. If I walke«l
around , I'd just get blown
Days on the Road." His children.
Truly had bee n hauling a ·away . I knew I'd be protect.ed
rendition goes, "Six Days in
load of steel from Cleveland from the wind inside.
the Snow.''
"I climbed up in the bunk,
For the past six days, Truly to Mansfield when he got
sat submerged in a snowdrift caught in last Thursday 's put my 'feet in an 6ld curtain
In the cab of his big 18-wheel blizzard on Ohio 13 near the up th~re &lt;md !lad one blanket
tractor-trailer rig, keeping northern - Ohio city of to gel under ."
-~fell asleep awhile and
alive by eating snow from a Mansfield. ·
"The
engine
stopped,"
said
when h~ke up discovered
hat.
Tuesday, he finally was Truly, recalling the ordeal. "I a snowdrift had covered his
rescued. Doctors said he was turned on the CB, but couldn't truck.
reach nobody . There was no
"I couldn't see nothing ," he
in amazingly good beal\h.
said .. " It was all dark ."
Truly then prepared for a
long stay.
"I had a hardhat with me
and I could get the window
down some and scoop up
S&lt;JIT)e snow in the hat. I'd just
~
sit there . and eat snow for
awhile till my mouth wasn't
dry anymore. Then I'd go tn
sleep, but get cold and wake
up and do it again (eat more
snow and sleep).
Now
,M~~gs
"! prayed and I hoped I
would come out of it. All I
Tlre·~eh,ret~
could do was \"Bit and

MANSFIELD, Ohio (UP!}
-Trucker James Truly has a

s~nng

'I

Another storm is headed eastward

Trucker found alive
after six day ordeal

•

E~~:~J~~g:~~~·::~~!~~ ~a~7zoev-s~&amp;~~G-I~RL_s_

STARTS THURSDAY, FEB. 2ND AT

7- The Daily Sentir)el, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday , Feb. I. 1978

..

J:&gt;olly Cramer

t aller and pie auctioneer Bill

...

011

Pie social .
square dance
plans made

HUGGED COUNTRY
R

...

- DOW doesn't waatto late it.
Slse waall mv advice.
DEAR READER - Your
friend .. rlgbt - II Wll I " leX•
Ill" quHIIOII. Have you ever
beard of 1 man wltb 1 large
flllllly bela&amp; aaked a similar
queolloa?
Sbe may fear the questloa
reflects an altitude toward
women ill the company - and
It may. However, I doubt that
is a good enough reason nolto
late lbe job. Sbe probably
will ento,nter oesual
stereotyping wherever sbe
goes.
• Wby not suggest she take
the job aad try to Improve
matters from the " Inside."

The monilors at the
French Art Colony for the
DEAR HELEN:
weekend will be Mrs. Ann ' It's a long, involved story of a family feud, the result being
Raub and Mrs . Mary
that l didn't speak to his family and he woil'tspeakto mine.
Allison for the I till 3 p.m.
We made a pact at Thanksgiving that we'd alleast recognize
duty and Mrs. William
each other's relatives. l kept my bargain : I said '' hello" to my
Woodall and Mrs. Mary
mother-in-Jaw. But my husband hasn't even smiled at my side
Allison for the Isle duty. On
of the family.
Sunday the duty wlli be · Why must men be so stubborn' -JO-JO
shared by Mrs. Harry MUis
DEARJO-JO:
and Mrs. Mary Mossman
Have your family members made any effort to break the
for lbe early hours aod
ice ? Why not ask some of them to smi1e first?
there is no reason for her to
Mrs. A. E. Lee and Mrs.
... Then open up and talk about the feud. It's time you all feel that way. My secretary
Carl Woods for the 3 till 5
started acting adult. - H.
and I get along very well and
p.m. shift.
· I need her help In the office. U
DEAR HELEN:
this Is tbe kind of woman my
I'm disappointed (after reading your wise and witly answers wife reaDy Is, perhaps I
for years ).
should leave her. I need to be
You sided With the hus~nd who won 'tallow his wife to open trusted.
their spare bedroom for battered women. With his Jaok of conDEAR READER - You
cern, somedayshe may be a B.W. herself.
· must choose between your
In New Jersey, some hOmes had to close because dangerous wile and your secretary, But
men located them. A half-empty hospital refused to rent a va- before you opt for your
cant wing to the Morris County Battered Women's Association. secretary - It sounds Uke
Police aren't much help: they place the onus on the B.W. you're moving In that direcWhere can these poor women go if not to private homes? - H.P. tion - remember your wife
DEAR H.:
has every reason to be
Granted, it's a rough problem, but homeowners must suspicious.
The French City Swingers mutually agree to B.W. care. I still stand by my alternate soluU you want to be trusted,
Square Dance Club invites all tion : all-out lund drives for well-protected shelters - within act trustwortby. Alter what
area square dancers to their calling distance of the police.- H.
has happened, !bat means firthird arutual Pie SoCial and
Square Dance.
·
The dance will be held
N(M OPEN
February 4, 1978, from 8-11

Jooki.;
'Ja,hionJ

Closed Sundav

!'A' • b. dd: 6~:-:•:·~~:».:~~.::.:::::::::::::::::o,:::,:•.•~...;;:;:t;~~

7

,

•

sure.
serv1ce

•
•
Nationwide
/

'

�9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb. 1,1978
UICKTRACY

8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb I , 1978
FINANCIAL A EPOAT
OF TOWNSHIPS

Far Flsnl Y~ar Endmg
Dtu·mber 31,1977
Rt. l lan9 nillt, Ohio

Juuuv

1 cerflfy

20, Jt11

the

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash·

Alma E . Sm it h
Towns.h•P Clerk
Tel No . (6U J 742 70'27

Sulftmu·y ot Cash
Balan ce J•m 1. 1971
Fund
S.lS.-491 58

Gener~l

Motor Vehicle License
Tax Fund
4. 172 .7&lt;1
Gasoline Tu Fund
6, 530 11
Federal Revenue Shanng
Fund
18.tl 97
Anh ReCeSSIOn
110.00

26, 589 35

Total Recetpts
General Fund
50 ,.tl57 60
Motor VehiCle L1 cense
Tax Fund
11 , 675 58
Gaso t •ne Taw. Fund 17.388 .32

Federal Revenue Sharing

Ful'\d

'2,478 00

Ant 1 Recenion

149 00

TotalS
83 , 148 50
Total Aece•pt s &amp; Balancu
Ge n era l Fund
65 ,9411 18
Motor Veh ,ct e L icense
Tax Fund
16,848 .32
Gaso l me Tax Fund 23,918.113
Federal Revenue Shar1ng
Fund
2, 762 92
Ant1 Rece ssion
259 00
Totals
109 ,737 85
E lt penditures
Gener al Fl.ln d
54 , \55 25
Motor Veh icle License
Tax Fund
14,445 95
Gas o11ne Tax Fund 20 ,202 ~2
Federa l Revenue Shanng
Fun d
' 2.762 .92
Ant 1-ReceSS10n
208 72
Totals
92 ,275 26
Balance Dec Jl, 1971
Genera l ~und
11.781 56
Motor Vehicle L lcrnse
TaxFu nd
1,90237
Gaso11 ne Tax Fund
J 716 01
Anti ReceSSIOn
50 '28
To ta l
17 .450 22
Cash Balan ce , Rece1pts
And Expen ditures
By Funel
Gen e r~l Fund
Ba l an ce Jan 1, 1977 15 ,49 1 58
Receiph
Genera l Property TaK Rea l Estate and
)3, 628 15
Trad er ( Grossi
Tang1ble Personal
Properly
, 9,716 80
Lo cal Government and
St a t e Income Ta x
2,989 BO
LI Qu or Perm if Fees
126 32
C1garette L1cense Fees
a nd F ines (G ra ssl
131 25
lntan g ta x
3,18 1 12
Fees , Zon i ng , Ceme t ery,
et c
42500
Adjustments and
Refunas
258 45
Ot h er
1 00
To ta l Rece 1pts
50,457 60
Tota l Begmn in g Balan ce
Pl us Re ce1pt s
65 ,949 18
Expend itvres
To ta l EJ~pend1tu r es
- Admlnistrat1¥e 27 ,202 91
To Com b elo w
(2. 100 00)
- Town Hall s ,_ MemOr i a l
Bu ildmgs and Ground s
2,69709
- FI~"e ProtectiOn 21.45835
._ Cemeter 1es
2,706 49
G rand Total E~C.p General F und
54, 155 1'5
Ba l , D ec 31, 1977
11 ,871 56
Tot al E)Cp Pl us Bal ,
Dec 31 , 1977
65 ,9.49 18
Motor V eh1c le license
Tax Fund
Bal , Jan 1, 1971
4. 172 74
Receipts
Motor Veh i Cle L1cense
Ta x
7,675 58
Other (tra nsfer J
5,000 00
Tota l Rece1 pt s
12,675 58
Tota l Beg1nnl ng Balanc e
Plus Rece1pl s
16,,898 32
Eltpendltures
Total Expend itures 3.329 89
M iscel laneous
- Mamt en a nce
11 , 616 06
Grand Total E~C.p Motor Veh•cle L1cense
Ta,.; Fund
14,945 95
Bat . Dec 31 , 1977
1,902 37
Total E J~ p Plu s Bal ,
Dec 31. 1977
16,8 48 32
Gasoline Tax Fund
eat . Jan 1, 1977
6, 53011
Rece1ph
Gaso t me T ax
14,200 00
Oth er
3,188 32
Tota l Rece 1pts
17 .388 32
Total Beg1nn1ng Balan ce
Pl us Rece1pt s
23 , 918 43
Expenditures
Total E x pend it ure s
- M1sce1 1an eous
7,072 38
- Mamt enance
13, 130 04
Gran d Tota l E)(p Gaso l me Tax Fund
10,1 02 4~
Bal. Dec 31. 1977
3,7 16.01
To t a 1 Exp P l us Bat •
Dec 31, 1977
23 ,91 8 43
Federal Revenu e
Shartng FUnd
Bat, Jan l, 1977
284 92
R ecelpts
Gran ts - Federal
2. 4?8 00
To tal Re ce,p t '3
2, 478 00
To tal Beglnn 1ng Balan ce
Plus Rece 1pts
2,7 61 92
Expenditures
Equ. pment
2,612 92
Other E,.;penses
150 00
Total Exp
2,7 62 92
Total EKp Plus Ba l •
Dec 31, 1'977
2,7 62 92
Anti · •hceuion
Bat , Jan I , 1977
110 00
Re ce1pts
Fed Re venue
149 00
Total Re ce, pts
149 00
Total Beg lnn 1ng Balan ce
Plus Receip t s
259 00
Eltpenditures
Sa lar,es
208 7'1
208 12
Total E"'P ·
Bat , Dec 31, 19 77
50 28
Total EKp Pl\.1 5 Bal ,
Dec 31 , 1977
259 00
Township Debt - Note
Pu rpos e For Wh 1ch Not e
Debt Was Created
Not e No J Ga ll on
104 Grader
Outstand ing Ja n L
1977
5,000 00
Redeemed During Year
1977
5,000 00
Rat e of lnt
6 Pet
Tot a l - Recteemf'd
Duri ng Year 1977
5,000.00
( 2) 1, H e

SHERIFF'S SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
IN THE COMMON PLEAS

COURT , MEIGI COUNTY ,

OHIO
CASE NO 16S51
The Athens Countv S•'o'ings &amp;
Loan co ., Pl.11ntiff IJS. Elden
E . St::ack and · Cindtce M
Slack, Defendants
~ In pursuance to an ORDER
0 F SALE In the above en
titled action . 1 w il l offer for
sa le at public auct10n , at the
front steps of the Court House
'" Pomeroy , Oh1o . Meigs
county on Saturday, the 18th
day of February. 1978, at
10 -0 0 o ' c l o c k a
m
t he
following descr i bed rea l
estate, sifu,...te tn t he c ou n ty
of Me igs anct State of OhiO, to

wol
Situa te d In the V11tagf! o f
Syr&amp;cuse, Count y of M e1gs,
and State of Ohio a nd
described as fo l lows :
Be i ng 35 fee t off of the west
S1de of Lot No. n ~n sa•d
V i llage of Syracuse. in the
County of Me1gs, and Sta te of
Oh io.
•
Property a ppra1 sed at
SJOOO, and cann ot be so ld for
less than two.thi rdS of tt1e
appraised value .
Terms O'f Se le
cash In
hand, subfe c t to rea l estate
taxes.
Jtmes J . Proffitt
,
Sheriff
Meigs County, Ohio
(1) 20, 27 12 ) 3. 10 . 17 , 5tc ,

'

"

In Memory

WANT AD
CHARGES

Billollnce5. Rtce•pts
And Expenditures

Totals

TELEVISION
VIEWING

- .·

following

report to be contct

I~ Word&amp; or Under

""'100"
1.10
'"'
,.,

1d;iy
ZdMy1

3days
6day!

Ch.rgc

100
'"

3.15
"'

Eadt ~ord ovl!:r tlw m~nlmum 15
wunilf U 4 l.&lt;en\.!1 per word per day
Ads ruMin!( other thcln c:on~ullv~

dilyM w11l 1M! ctwrl!j:t:d at lht' I dMy

"'"'

In memory, C.Wrd ul1ll41nks Mnd
Oblluary 6 (;enll Pt'i' word , S3 00
mulimwn ·Cash in.advMnL'~

Motnlt! Home &amp;~Its and Yard !1.111~!1
ore H ~i.'t:'plt'd ooly wllh i:allh w1th
order ~ce nt Chli!lle lor ads c•rry .
mg Do• Number In C.rt ul The Senunel.
Tht' PubiU!:her rtellt'rvt::s lhe nght
W edit or re/edany ad.s d« mtd ....._
~tlonal T It' Publisher w1ll noll;
ret~pon.slb lt tor more thkn ~ 11\(;orred lflllertion
Phone9!12-2156

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Mc.mWiy
Noon on &amp;.turd.Ny

Tuesd.a)
lhru Jo' r1day
4P M
tht' day bef()rt&lt; public•bon
SllndJty
4 PM
Frldoy afl.emoon

SMERIFF ' S SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT , MEIGS COUNTY .
OHIO
case No IU12
Belpre F1rst Federal Sav.ngs
&amp; loan Assoc , Pla1nhff

"·

Robert D . Hensl ey and
Sharon L
Men sley , et at.
D efendant s
In pur su an ce o t a n ORDE~
OF SA LE In the a bov e en
flf led acTion , 1 w 111 offer for
sa le at publiC auct1on . a t the
fro nt steps of th e Cou rt House
m Pomer oy , Me1gs Co\.lnty,
Ohio, on Saturday . Feb ruar y
18, 1978 a t 10 . 15 o'c lod A M ,
the followmg des c rt~ ed real
esta t e s1 tu a t e m th e Townshtp
of Olive , County of Me1gs,
State o f Oh 10, to w1t.
Bemg a port1on of Lo t No
:.IS a t George P McCune 's
Seco n d Add1 t1on
t o the
V illa ge of Tuppers Pl a ms, as
t he same 1s recorded in th e
Re cord of Platts of Towns
a nd Villages , m Volume 3.
Pa ge
29,
descrtbed ~s
fol lows : •
B ~g1 nn mg a t the Northw es t
corner of sa1d L ot No . 25 a t a
sfake , th en ce East fo l low,ng
th e Nort h I m e o f sa1d Lot No
25 a dis t an ce o f 148 5 feet to a
s t a k e, thence South a nd
parallel w 1th t he w es t l1n e of
Lot No 25 a d 1sta n ce of 148 5
teet to t h e south l1n e o f sa• d
Lot No 25 at a st ake , th ence
West tol lowmo th e south line
of L ot No . 25 a d is ta nce of
148 5 feet to a stake on th e
west line of Lot No 25 , thence
north f ol low 1ng t he west lme
of L ot No . · 25 a d 1sta rc e of
148 5 feet to the pla ce of
begmn1ng . be tng th e wes t
148 5 fe et o t Lot No 25 .
Referen ce · Vol 204, page
485. Meigs Co unty Deed
Records
Cannot be sold for less than
two t h•rds of th e appra1s ed
value Property appra1 sed al
Sl)(t e en fhau sa nd dollars

($16,000 1

T erms o t Sa le
Cash 1n
h and , subt ect to re al esta te
laH1S

James J Profttft
Shcnff,
M eigs Coontv
( 1 ) 20, 27 (2) 3. 10, 17 , 51 (

NOTICE OF
PUB Lit HEAR lNG
ON PROPOSED
IMPROVEMENTS TO
THE VILLAGE OF
MIDDLEPORT AND
ADJACENT MEIGS
COUNTY AREA
EXISTING SEWERAGE
FACILITIES
NOT IC E is hereby g1ven
that t he V•l lage ot M1d
dleport. Ohio . pursuant to th e
requ,rf!!ments of the Oh10
Env iron men t al
Protection
Agency an d the Un1ted Sta tes
EnvirOnmen t al
Protect ion
Agen c y , Will hO ld a PUBLIC
HEARING on
FEBRUARY 22,1978
AT7 . 00P M
IN THE COUNCIL
CHAMBERS AT
CITY HALL
237 RACE STREET
The purpose of t hiS hear ing
IS tO
Genera lly d1scun th e
content s o f the draft of the
Env i ro n mental Assessment
and F1nancia l In f ormatiOn
per ta• nmg t o t he p roposed
Im prov ements to t he e)Cist mg
wastewBter
treetme n t
l agoons
and
co mb ine d
sewer a ge system m the
M1ddl ep o r1 Me1gs Co unty
Planning Ar ea
Obta 1n comments and
adv1ce 1rom all con ce rned
c lf,zens on the proposed
1mprovements m reference 10
th e1 r f easibility , cost , and
1m pact on thecomm u n1t y and
the environment In general
Generally prov 1de for
and encourage publ ic PaJ
t icl patlon In the plann ing of
publiC fa Cil i ti es
- Meet the requ ir em en ts of
th e United St ates Env1 ron
menta l Prote ction Agency
(Sections 35 925 7 end 8 of
Par t 35 , and Sec tion 6 53 o f
Subpart E of Pa rt 6, Cha pter
1, T ille 40 , US EPA Rul es an d
Regulat•ons J
D raft
COPieS
of
the
Fac llil tes Plan , whiCh In cludes th e proposed 1m
prav e ments . the Env1ron
menta l Assessment, and
financ ial information Will be
available for publi C 1n
spectlon from February I ,
197 8 until F ebruary 15, 1918.
Monday through F nday, be
twee n t he hours of 8 o'c lock
AM and 4 o 'c lock PM at the
Mayor 's offi c e, 237 Race
Street , M iddleport, Otuo
Fred L Hof fman , Mayor
VIllage of Middleport. Oh•o
Jan "18, 75 , Feb . 1, 3tc

•

.

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

l'or &amp;le

Aut!tion

IN lOVING memorv of Grover DEALER AUCTION Publ1 c 1nvtled
Sa lser Sr . who passed away 5
lhur!i Feb 2 II am All new
yeon ogoFebruory I 1q73
merchondtse '&gt;o ld In qoonllly .ot
Deep m our heorts , you w1ll
Ohto Rtver Auct1on
M e1 gs
olwovs stoy
Plo zn M1ddlepor t Oh10
w.te. &lt;: htldcen ond grondch•l dren PUBU C AUCTION Sate Frl 7 pm
EIGHT YEARS ago today Jomes P
New tmd u!ied merch ond1 se or
Sm der po~ sed away Februory
Oh10 R• ver A oc tton
M e•g~
1, 1970 .
.
Pl ato
M •ddleport
Ohto
Gone IS our lo11ftd one, so dee pl~
Spec1 ol ouct1on Sat 7 pm
In ISSed ,
Trudd oods of new lurn,tu•e
lhe gr 1el •S sometiiOIJl&gt; so ha rd Ia ·
and rni~c from !.tore closeou t
bear
But we lo,nbw he IS m good hands
and God tolo.es core
So some glad dov we II all meet t:aruping l&gt;:quipmenl
0901 11
Mm 1
In heove11 s doorway no t so lor SlARCRAF T FAll Sole
mo tors 20 and n
f roVol
owoy
lra lhm. , 18 5 $3 799 25' 7'
Sadly m•ssed by wile . chddren
Bunkhouse S4 ,875 Fold down
grond chil dren and great
Sl 700 up We sell se rv1ce and
grand-daughter
qual1tv Open Sunday'&gt; . Camp
Conley Storcrolt Soles , Rr , 62
N of Pt Pleosont
ofThiiill[s

Can!

WE WISH to e~~;pren our opprUCIO·
110n and t •ncere th ank yo!J to
all the lne11ds who OSS isted us
d!Jnng the loss 6f ou r lather CASH po1d lot all makes and
models of mobde homes
ar1d grandpa ,Raymond Bell , to
Phone orea code 6 14 423 -9531
those who sen l llowers . food
011d sympat h y cords lhe stat! l iMBER
Pomero ,- Fore st Pro
ol the Arcad1a N!Jrsmg Home
ducts Top pnce lor stondmg
The Rev Earl Shuler and the
saw l1mbur , Call 992 -5CJ65 or
staff o l the Ewmg s Funeral
Ken t Hanby , 1 446 8570
Horne
COINS CURREN CY tokens old
The Fam il y of Rovmond Bel l
pocket welches and chams,
s1lver and gold We need 1964
NotiCI!B = and older s1lver cams Bu y, se ll
or t rade Coli Roge r Wamsley ,
INCOME TAX Ser111ces Federal
742·233 1
and Stole foxes ,W ando Eblm
OLD FURNITU RE 1ce boxes bra ss
992 227?.
beds 1ron beds etc , comp lete
THE RACI NE Volun teer Ftr e
hou sehold§ Wr1fe M 0 M1ller ,
Oepa1 Trnenl w dl ~p onso r a gun
Rl 4 Pomer o.,. Oh1o or ca ll
shoot every Sa turday orb pm at
fjq17760
lhetr bu1ld mg m Boshan Foe·
NO ITEM TOO lorge or too small
lor y cholo.e gu ns 011ly
Wdl buy I p1ec e or co mple te
THE RACINE Gun CluP Gun Shoo t
hou sehold New used or an ti
every Sunday all ernoon. Foe
ques Marlin s Furni ture 20 N
lor y choke guns only As so rted
2nd St
Mtddle port
Phone
meah
&lt;il92 6370
IN COME TAX Serv1ces Federal CHIP WOOD . Pole s mol(
and Stat e Toxe~
Wallace
d1ometer 10 on lorgesl end $8
Russe ll Bradbury 992 -7228
per l pn , Bundl ed slo b $6 per

COAl

ltmcstone and colc1um
c hl or~ de and calc1um brme tor
dus t control ond spee~ot m111ing
salt tor formers. hcels1cit Soh
Work\ Mo1n Street Pomerov
Oh10 or phone 9'92 3691

ECONOMV 1R,ACl OR w1th oil at
1ochments l1,lo. e new o~k u)g
52250 Phone 1614 ) 698 3290
RUGS
WALL Hong1ngs ond
olgon s N 1ce l or 0'11 15hnos
Reason able Coll9'il2 221 4
197Q FORD f ·250 Custom 17 50 x.
14 00 11res · wmch Only 14 000
m1 Headers CB 1ope deck .
0\ler $3 ,CXJO m e•tros Ser1ous
calls onl y alter 12 noon
69b- 1072 $() 800

8 &amp; 5 MOBILE HOMES Pt Plea ·
son1 W . Vo bes1de Heck 's
1973 Br oodmore 14 11 64 2
bed"room
1973 Do non 14 )( bO 2 bedroom
1972 Vlct Or!On 14 x o7 3 bedroom
2 both
1972 Covent ry 12 1&lt; 65 3 bedroom
1969 Statesman 12 1&lt; 60 2
bedroom
BURROUGHS SENSI MAliC oc:
cou n!mg moch1ne Has been
under se • v1ce contro c:l and 10
good cond1ffon ( an be seen at
!he Oo1ly Senlmel 11 I Co urt
St Pomeroy OH
BLACK PADDED BAR w1 t h
woodgrain top and storoge
shP.Ives E)Ccellent cond1 t1on
S5D qn 73 12

Let Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; condthon your
wa ter with Co-op water
softener , Model UC-SVI ,

Now Only •

279 ,95

Let us test your water Free

Pomeroy Landmark
Jack W Carsey , Mgr
Phone 992 -2181

~~it:'~""-=WIL L CAR E for t/'le elderly 1n our
home Phone992 7314
_.__
MOBILE HOME rep01rs 992 ~65 8

--

--

.

---

PIANO TUN ING -lone Don1e ls 13
yeors of ser\IICe New phone
number 992 158 I

6

3 AND 4 RM furmshed and un
furmshed op ts Phone 997
5434
CAT , FEMAlE longhoired dog
Bo th very
Labrador t vpe
lr~endty
Loveable . N•ce
loolclng pels 94:;9;2"60
::c:_
7 :..,_~~

COUN TRY MOBilE Home Pork
Route 33 , nor th of Pomer oy
~ge lots Coll992 71179

PUP~IE S

TWO

PART lm h Seiler , por t
We1moroner Coll 992 ·7201

~~
1974 SKYLINE 14 )(56. 3 bedr oom
tota l etect nc, $7500 992 (0 19

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE
TO WHOM IT MAY CON
CE RN
N o t1 ce rs h ereby g1ven tha t
on F eb r uary 7, 1978, at 10 00
AM a public sale w ill be held
at P 0 Bo:. 201 , Ge lllpoli s .
Oh10 to sell tor cash the
tallowmg collatera l , to w1t
1975 Pont1ac S No 2L57R5
~170298, sa 1d colla t era l be in g
he l d to sec u re an obllgallon
arls1ng under a reta11 m
stal ment { sa le contract J 1925
78147 held by General Mo t ors
Acceptance Cor porat to n as
secured party · Sa1d publi C
sal e 1S to b e conducted a c
co rd ing to the law s o f the
State of Oh io General Motors
Acceptance
Corporat1on
reserv es t he rt gh t to b id at
this sale
The co llatera l IS prese1111y
st ored and ma'JI be seen at P
0 Bo11. 101 Gallipolis, 01110 .
G ENERAL M OTO RS
ACCE PTANCE
CORPORATION
(11 1, ltc

The Almanac
.
United Press International
Today is Wednesday, Feb.
I, the 3:md day of 1978 with 3.!
to follow.
The moon is bet:oveen its
last quarter and, new phase.
The morning stars are
Mercury and Saturn.
The evening stars are
Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Aquarius.
American composer Victor
Herbert was born Feb. 1,'
1859.
On this day in history:
In 1790, the U.S. SUpreme
Court convened in New York
City for its first session.

BEDROOM Trotler
reol
r11ce
Aduls on ly
Browns
Tro tler Pork . 992 3324

TRAilER SPACE for rent . Coun try
4 m des from town Rf 7 N
Phon e 6 14-247-191 1.

---------

---

HA Y FOR sale T1mothy, alf alfa
and clover , 949 2102
-~

-~---

PONY HARNE SS for
992 55 10

sole

PH

4 L78 15 8 F Goodrtc h wh1te lettered rod1ols mounted on set of
App l1 ance (rogers 15 ~o: 8 W1ll
~ _!_:!~g_GM~I ckup 742-3154
1968 DODGE ,• ton truclt V-8
engme, rad 1o heater good
11res Pnce $750 Colt 949-258'9,
Hilton Wol fe
1976 FORD VAN 4 Brown St
Moson WV (304) 773 5986

---

-

-

BULL THREE yearl1ngs 5 he1fers.
Also
hoy lor so le. Colt

992-7201 '
1977 JEEP CJ 7

15 000

Call

843 -3 155 before 12-00 noon or
after b OOpm

Sne- 30 pet. to 50 pet .
on "eat1ng cost
E x penence and
fully 1nsure d
Free Est.
Call : 667 6479 or 99 2-3815
1-16 -lmo .

1

- Save Fuel &amp; Money-

LAVENDER
CONSTRUCTION
Ohio
Syro~cuse ,

Free Estimates

r---------------------;~
Professional Service, 39
yrs . experience .
Frtt
esttmates ,
pickup
&amp;
de!Jvery
service .
Restdenlial &amp; Commercial.

CAPTAIN EASY

Tri-State Upholstery
Shop

1-18-1mo.

Liberace

...
•

,.
•

&lt;46-7833-4&lt;6-1833

.....

&lt;1 • o I

Superior
Steam Extraction

Young's
Carpeting

SALON

Corner Union Ave.

and St. Rt .

Route 3 fl'omtrGJ, 0.

Pomeroy, Ohio
Chtmge of
Phone Number

Carpet &amp;Upholstery
Phone Mike Youn1
AI

Phone

992-2206 or 992-7630

992-7608
Closed Jan . 10
Til 18th , 1978

..

8ox34

Chester,

11'fljjNf ~11'

... .

MERIG

·~ ·

111,6-T'~

WH,h..T ~OJR
UiA%1&lt; IS Ht:Ro;
Fat&lt;:. ,M'i ~1&lt;.!

...•
'

'

'

Ohio

'

.•

•

'

••
•;

IUSDABEI

.

""

\NAFELL

'

ALUMINUM SIDING
SOLID VINYL SIDING
SOFFIT &amp; CELINGS
GUTIERS &amp; DOWN
SPOUT
Easy
step
by
step

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

Located In

9.., _Jack W. Carsey, Mgr
·llllil Phone 992 -2181

MEIGS PLAZA
Middleport, Ohio
11 ·9-tfc
~

NEW 3 bedroom house 2 baths.
oil elec , 1 acre , M1ddteport ,
close to Rutland Phone 992 7.481

-

-

~--:--'-c:"~­

SMALL form far sole , 10"1. down ,
owner lmonced Monroe County W Vo Phone (304 ) 7723102 or (304) 772·322 7
·~~-

COUN TRY formk~nd w 1th sec lud ed woods wo ter and good ac cess 111 Monroe Cou nty, W Vo
S 1 000 down co lt (304) 772 3102 or (304) 772 -3227
Commerc10 l proper ty opprox 17
ac res , le¥el land located at
Tuppers Plains on Oh1o Rou te
7 Phone (614 ) 667 6304

T~~!~~~rn
REALTOR
216 E . Second Str.. t
RIVER FRONT -

516,500.00.
CORNER LOT -

On State

road . 3 bedrooms, bath,
nat . gas furnace , city
'flater, and garage Need

$15,500
IN THE COUNTRY -

TURLEY S WRE CKER
Se r11 1Ce
Rocme , Ohto Day or mght
949 2657

room frame home Cistern,
bath. f ire place, and almos t,
an acre of land. Ask i ng

$7,500
'
GOOD OLD HOME -

Has

3 bedroom s with large
closets and storages 1'12
bath s. nat gas furnace.
cfty water and garage.

m.soo.

40 ACRES -

wide. $15, 000 00
OVER 3 ACRES -

Home

been moderni ze d , barn ,
and bu s iness budding .

&lt;S ACRES -

N .G. heat, kttchen w1th
range &amp; ref. Porches .

$11,000 .00
JUST LOOK 2 acres,
smal l barn , 6 yr. old home,

3 or 4 bedrooms. FREE
GAS, brick &amp; fram e, perm a
pane windows, car port _

JUST $32,000.00
THIS OFFICE STANDS
READY TO SERVE YOU
WHENEVER
YOU'RE
BUYING OR SELLING A
PROPERTY .
(CALL
TODAY)
HENRY E. CLELAND
RE;ALTOR
HANK, KATHY
CLELAND
REALTOR
ASSOCIATES
992·2259. \1'12-6191

HOBSTETTER

REALTY
GeorgeS. HobsteHer Jr.,
Braker
1071!2 Sycamore St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

PHONE 992-6333
OHice Hours: 9 A . M . to ,,

P.M.
Close

Thursdays
at noon .

an~

Saturdays

Have 4 Bedroom , ranch,
located 3 m i les from Rt . 7.
West Shade

Nice Oooble Wide 24x56 on
lot

In

Addition .

Arbaugh

Includ i ng

furn iture and appl iances.

$21 ,000.
Nice 3 Bedroom bungalow
with basement &amp; garage.
$32,000. 2 acre of ground.
Tuppers Plains.

New l bedroom home wit~

garage

ln

Craw's

Sobdlvlslon . $41,000

Small barn ,

L.C. water,

Darwin , Ohio on 51 Rt 33,
$1?,900.
Have
Business.
and
ln'Vestment property In
Pomeroy.

electric. and septic tank

Will "take a quick offer of
510,000.
BUY REAL ESTATE, IT'S
A
KEY
TO
YOUR
SECURITY
AND
WEALTH .
Helen L. Ttolord
Gorden B. Teaford
Sue P. Murphy
Realtor Associates

Check with us before you
buy,
Cheryl Lemley

Associate
Home Phone 742-2003
Hilton Wolle, Sr.

Associate
Home

Phone 949·2589

FREE ESTIMATES

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

"
l•

•'
'

LARRY LAVENDER .

[J

•

'

UTTLE ORPHAN ANN IE

Syracuse, Ohio
Ph. 992-3993

SEWING MACHINE Repo1rs ser.
v1ce all make s 992 2284 The
Fobr1c
Shop
Pom eroy
Authonzed Smger Soles ond
ServiCe. We sharpen Sossors ,
EXC AVATING , dozer loader ond
backhoe work dump truck s
and lo boy s fo r h1r e. w1tl houl
fill d1rt to so1l. ltmaslon~t and
grovel Coli Bob or Roger Jef ·
fe rs doy phone ~2 7009, n1ght
phone 992 -3525 or 992 - 5232
EXCAVATING , dozer , backhoe
and d1 lcher Charles R Hotfield
Bo ck Hoe ServiCe ,
Rutland Oh1o Ph one 742·2008
Wi l l do r oofmg construCt ion,
plumbmg and heolmg No job
too Iorge or too small Phone
742 2348
HOWERY
AND MARTIN
sept1c sys t. 1s
covotmg
dozer backhoe du,- ' , _k ,
lime stone
grov.
L'l ... p
pa vmg Rt 143 ft. 'l l• : \OI 4)
698 733 1
BATHROOMS AND Ki tch ens
r emo deled ceram iC file, plum
bmg carpen try and generol
momlenonce. 1:l years ex
perience 992 3685

AUCTION
WEDNESDAY,
FEBRUARY 1ST
At 7 : 00 At The
Hartford Community
Building
Hartford, W.Va.
Plenty of Parking

l«ER E,JUST WAl, HIN?

'fES· I TAI&lt;E n
rH E'f ARE SOM E.
0~ THE "CLII'PERS'
YOU MENliONEO "

CARTER

News B. Loving Free 10
12 oo--N ewscenter 3; $20,000 Pyrllm ld 13:

' _,
•

-·.-..

3, 4,15; Guidi ng Li ght 8, 10
J . oo-Another World 3.•1.15. Genera l Hospital 6, 13.

Lilias. Yoga &amp; You 20
3 . 3o-AII In The F am ily 8,10 , Anllques 20. 4,()0-Mister Cartoon 3; Edge o f Night 13, My Three Son s
4, For Richer , F or Poorer 15, M erv Grlftln 6,
Gilligan's Is 8; Ses~me Sf 20.33 Gomer Pyl e,

I Answer

_. 30-little Rascc" ly ) S'; Gilligan's I s 4 : Brady
Bunch 8, 10 , Mary Tyler M oore 13
5 : QO-Here Come The Bride s 3 ; Slar Tr e k 4; Gun
smoke 8, Mi ster Rogers ' N e ighbOrhood 20,33,
Hogan's Heroes l O, Emergency One 13 ; M y T hree
Sons 15
5 3G-News6 . E lec . Co. 20,33 . Mary Ty ler M oore 10;
Hogan ' s Heroes 15

Now arrange the arcled letters to
tonn the surprrse answer. as suggested by the above cartoon

r I I I I I)

VOCAL

6 oo-News 3,4,8,10.13, 15, ABC News 6. Zoom 20.
6 · 31).-NBC News3,4, 1S; ABC N ew ~ 13; Ca rol Burnell
&amp; F rlends6 . CBS News 8.10. Over Easy 20

(Answers tomorrow )
TEACUP INTAKE

7 : QO-Cross-Wit s 3, 4, Liars C lub 6, Capitol Bea t 33 :
Gong Show 8, N ews 10. To Te ll The Truth 13.
Gl ll lg11n' s I s 1S ,· Hocki ng Vall e y Bluegra ss :?0

Might enable a •keletan to keep hla head
warm - A SKULLCAP

7 15-Mar s hall U
Repo rl 33 ; 7 3~Hollywood
Squares 3,4; $100,000 Name Thai Tune 6, Ta t
tletales 8 : M acN ei l - Lehrer Repor t 20,33, T h a t 's
~ H ol lywood 10. N as hville on lhe Road 13 ; M a-rtY

Robbins ' Spolllghl 15
8 QO-Bta c k Beauty 3,4,15. Waltons 8. 10, Welcom e
Back, Kotter 6, 13; Once Upon A Clas sic 20,33 •
8 3o-Fish 6, 13 ; Originals 20 . Shakers JJ .

6Luwwd'

-

300 Moin St.

8A.M.to&lt; :30P.M.

ACROSS

..."_,
,.,

SALES AND SERVICE
11 -9 l fc

16 Solution
17 Sheep lock
18 Kind of

vine
LL..L.-

GASOUNE ALLEY

t:lr. Show's car

eun-slikea
ctream, Skeezix'

Regular U .9S

SaveS4.88 Sq. Yd.

Five hundred dollars for expenses'
We can -stop at the best motels
and
And a staw in
their quest house
on Balml.J l::lt:,Kn:

Reg. 56.95-not installed
30 roll$ of carpet in stock .
Good selection all on sale.
Installed With padding, no
extra to pay,

1

'

''

Call742-221 I
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

Case"

Rutland

INfEtll~.,-v

.

cOMPLI!X!

•

ElEEN HEI'ZE XllDNG WITil

'

···························~
'
l
'

Wednt·' sclay Feb f

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Play differs at duplicate
till' hand properl y .
The fir st go:~ l m rubber
br1d~c 1s to

NOH Til
• 7 I
• K tl 5
•

•

QJ O H 2

Ktl6 5

•n 2

•s~

t :J

+ .J no

... K (l 10 Y 7 4 ... A 5
SUUT II
• i\ .I ..
' A Q .J 10 7
Q 5'
"' • 2

+

$
~

~
~

;;
I

1

38 Ventilating
39 Song

t;.,..:++~

Nort'h -::asl
Pas..-;
Pa s.•"
4¥

refram

!'ass

South

1•

Pll s.."i

10 Tranquol

UHighway
for Pompey.__,_..___.__..__.__
and

DAILY CRYPTOC}UOTE - Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
is I, ONGFELLOW
O ne letter simply stands f o r a nother In thi s sample A is
u sed f or the t hree L's. X fol' the t wo O's, etc Sin gle lett er s.
apostrophes, the le ngth :md formatmn o f the vl4mls nre all
hmts. E ach day the rode l e tt er s ar e different

BPJVWBX

uo

wo

0 p

XKBJAKBKOO

XKBJAK

uo

play

Ccrtamly there arc diffe r ·

OJYPBX

BPJVWBX

YKUA

Sontag
pl&lt;qers ~cnerally
are diVIded anto two di stmct
groups : tou rnament play ers , who ttunk their form of
br•dge 1duplicate 1 is the ulti·
mate: a nd rubber bdd~e
pla yers, who swea r by the1r
Alan

Br1dgc

type ol

OP

OJYKBXJV

CK OUAKO
Yesterday's Cryptoquole: TilE PEOPLE I WANT TO HEAR
ABOUT ARE THE PEOPLE WHO TAKE RISKS.-ROBERT
FROST

c ontract

West wnn the opclll n~ king
of clubs lead and played the
10 of dub~ at tric k two to
partner's ace. Eas t rt~turncd
a spade
The duplicate player wall
win wath the ace of s pa des,
draw trump a nd hope tu run
the diamond suit, thus scor·
mg em ovcrtnck. This hne of

37 - of Man
8

ences. There a re even differ·
en t ways to play a hand ,
depending on whe ther the
g ame IS rubber bridge or
duplicate The d1agranuned
hand Illustrates t h e point
Four hearts 1s a fme contract . At rubber bridge, it IS
l aydown . At duplic ate, ~ n
cxpe tienccd player wlll

a

proba bly go down, yet both
declarers w1ll have played

play fails o n the dl · ,
agranuncd hund because
f'.:.tuil has four dia monds to
the jack, only a 14 percent

probabollty . So uth has
p layed proper ly ( he has on
86 perce nt chance of s ue·
cess) yet ha:-; ~one down . At
tnck three the 1·ubbcr bridge
pluyer takes few c hances.
He wins with the ace of
spades and plays another
spade , .conceding a tr1ck to
the defense. Howe v e r, now

his contract IS ussu rcd smce
he wtll wtn wha te ve r IS returned

s pa de

and

ruff

•
&lt;{ou USED TO DANCE ,
UP A STORM WHEN I D
B~ING OUT '!'OUR SUPPER

MA'ff3E I SHOULD TAKE
'(OU TO THE VET ..

MA'IBE f{OU NEED A
Si-IOT OR SOMETHING...

"

I'M DANCING!
I'M DANCING!

TABLECLOTH WIF
PURTY FLOWERS
ON IT

last

trumps

To tile rubber bridge play·

c r , it wa s not worthwhile to
jeopa rdize the con tract for
an ove rtrick ; £or· the dupli·

calc player, taking the risk
was JUstlfiCd .
1

NI'W.'WA I'I II L NI I .lti'IUSE ASSN I

(f or a copy of JACOBY MODERN send $1 to · ' 'Wtn at
Bndge ' · care or th ts newspa·
per P 0 Box 489 Radio Ct t)l
Statton . N ew York , N Y 100 '9 J

BARNE:Y

SHUX ... MI./
TABLECLOTH
HAS PURTV
FLOWERS, IUU'"I

his

w1th dummy 's kong of

\..op r 197/l KinK Features Synd!t'ate. Inc:.

I GOT A NEW

t11c con·

the case 1n duplicate , where
the objective is to get the
hJ ~hcst score on cuch ha nd
~vc n if 1L 1 isks lo:Jmg the

.,;AST
•

nwkc

tn.tct Sw.:h hi rant ncccssan ly

A K JU Y ~

" ' ,) fi :1

WES r

CRVPTOQUOTES

..~:

~

Judge's
address
30 De Gaulle's
b1rthplace
31 Lance
33 Church
season
36 By way of
37 Asian
river
27

~,

'tOW cOMe gO"HEfaii\IG
Me Wrr'H "ffYfl

.
...
..

Praying
figure
Z3 "The Vir·
guuan"
character
Z4 Nelson
Eddy
song
ZO Peggy or
Natali•

20

stagecoach
27 D.C.
group:
abbr.
28 S. Mr.

Of
1-tiiVf lMfOtf,.AN,.
f'ROILfMS, "ND

I 00-

9 &amp; 11 PM - Carna l Knowledg e CRl

Answer

Beach
skyliners
3% Hillbilly
matriarch
33 Stripling
o l . .. '
.
34 Sunder
rF~RAN~:K;&amp;~E:R:N~IE:__.__._._.___________r----------------------------------------,~Shore
r
b1rd

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

.

Yesterday's

29Miami

~~

12 . 40- Toma 6 ,1 3.

Tomorrow 3,4; 1 5G-- News 13
Movie Channel 4 5 &amp; 7 P .M . - And Th en There W ere None ( G l

fox

•

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••
::
•
•
•
••
•••
ON FRAME
••
All Styles &amp; Colors
••
20% • 30%
•••
OFF
••
•
.
'
••
• ':
,,'''
OPEN
••
..
'
•
-.:
Monday-Tuesday-Wednesday
••
••
8:00
til
5:00
•••
,.'
Thursday 8 til Noon
,.
••
.
'
Friday Til 5
•
••
•
Closed Satuniay At 5 P.M .
•
•• RUnAND FURNITURE
•'
••
'
• 742-2211
Arnold Grate
Rutland • ,

Gooded
16 Actor
Smith
19 Gift
recipient
10

I don't even mincl 25 Carried
holdinq Poo Pinq1 He out
keeps me warm' u Took the

12 and IS fl. wtdth Carpet ·_
rubber back.
:;

4.88 SQ. YD

camp

Departed
Rattle on

23 "- 's Last

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

~~

1

cell

20 Ind1an
21
"'-' 22

12 00- Janak l 33,

4 Old

15 Golf term

MAGGIES UPHOlSTERY Ref1n1sh ' '
reuph olstery ,
rebutld •n g ~ :
Beoull f ut se lection of motenol ,
and vi nyls Fme esf1mote let .,,.
742-2852 . Loco11 on
So lem,;:~

Rubber Back

-": Bible
note
s Assent
6 Diverge
7 Primate
8 Glower
9 Away from

13 Celebes ox

14Shrimp -

N

Candy Stripe

trophy

II Hood

bat hr oo ms , all kmds ol repa1~--~
work and what have you Guy c.:~
Neigler RaCi ne
Ohto Colt ~ ~
949-2508 evenmgs
...,

10 ; 36-Lock, Stock &amp; Barrel 20, 11 01)-News
3,4,6,8,10 , 13, 15 ; Di c k Ca vett 20, Over Ea sy 33
11 ·30--J ohnny Carson 3,4, 15 ; Mov ie " Th e Carey
Treatment " 8, Star sky &amp; Hutch 6, 13. ABC N ews 33 ,
Movie " To Have and Hav e Not" 10

2 Old Greek
colony
3 "Sharp as a

12 11 Scarface"

~N:;:E;:IG:';l';E-:R::c.5:'-;F:;OO::R~bu-',C,d';'o"ng~h'-o-u-,e-,- .'::

SAVE ON
CARPETING

DOWN
1 Bounty
hunter's

of Newfoundland

1

PULLIN S EXCAVATING . Complete
ServiCe Phone 992-247B

9 co---Celebration at Ford's Theatre 3.&lt;1,l5 i Hawa ii
Flve·O 8,1 0. Barney M iller 6,13 . World 20.33 .
9 31)--Carfer Country 6, 13, 10 00-Hall of Fame
3,4, 15, Baretta 6, 13 , Barnaby Jones 8.10, I,
Ciaudlus 33 ; New s 20

by THOMAS JOSEPH

1 Locality
5 Peninsula

N ews

15 ; Search for Tomorrow 8,10 , Elec Co. 33
l . QO-For Richer . For Poorer J, All My C hllbgz 111
6, 13; News 8. Young &amp; the Restless 10, Not fo'r
Women Only 15
1·Jo-Oays of O ur Lives 3, 4, 15, As The World Turns
8.10; 2 oo-one Li fe to Live 6. 13 , 2: 3o-Ooc tors

N&amp;waplp&amp;rboOk~:_

Pomeroy.Ohto
Pomeroy 992-ti282
or 992-62U

r

Feud 6, 13 ; Sesame 51 20, Nova JJ ; 11 : 55- C BS

byHennArnoldandBobLee

The lale!l JUMBLES ar• h•re In JUMBLE BOOK 110 and JUMBLE
BOOK 111 Avall•ble tor 11 36 EACH, postpaid from Jumble, c/o thll
n ew~ paper, P.O. Boll: 3A NorwOOd, N.J 07648 Mike checkl PIY.tlle to

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

742-2211

Women Only 13
10 . 3D-Hollywood Squares 3 , ~ . 15l Andy Griffith 6;
Ri ck Foucheuxc 13
11 :QO-Wheel ot For tu ne J . ~ . 15: Happy Days 6,13 ,
Price Is R ig ht 8, 10.
ll : Jo-Knockout 3. 15. Partrldg~ Famlly 4. Family

USMC 10 .

Jumbles PLUSH

Yesterday's

Good Morning Ameri ca 6, 13,
Bullwinkle 10

8.

4,6, 10.
12 30-Ryan 's Hope 6, 13, Bob Braun 4 1 Gong Show

Prfntanswerhere :

;=a&lt;"""""--

SWELL "

r----=-=-----,· '
BRADFORD
Auct1o neer. Com
plete Serv1ce Phone 949,2487
or 949 -2000. Roone, Oh1o , Crill
Brodl ord .

BUt 010 '!"OU N011CE
THOSE OlHERS UP

News

7· 31).-Schoolles 10; 8 ·Cl0-Capl. Kangaroo 8, 10;
Sesame St. 33
9 oo--Men" Griffin 3; Ph il Donahue4,l 3, 1S: Edge of
N ight 6. Family A flair 8, Matc h Game 10
9. 3G-Emerg ency One 6; Andv Crlfflth 8: Joker ' s
Wild 10
10 .00-Sanford &amp; Son 3.~ . 15; M agazi ne 8, 10: Not For

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

b
I I _

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE--SHADES OF TOM SAWYER
YEA H! PLEN TY OF NICE KIDS
IN THIS N.EIGH80RHOOD
MOST OF 'EM ARE

J, :

1- 18-1 mo

REMODELIN G Plumbmg heohng
and all types of general repo11
Work guaranteed 20 yeor s ex pene~e Phone 992 -2409

Nice small home located In

spr mg and dug well . Good
house site and n fee hunting
land

Pomeroy

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers , to asters trans , oil
smoll opp hances la wn mower ,
nex:t lo Sto le H1 ghwoy Garag e
on Route 7 Phone (614 1 985 3825

corner

5

Pl\!921114

Husiilesiseivieea-~

3 lots

and 7 room house. Bath,
nat . gas furnace .. city
water ,
and
excellent
garden.
Want
only

'-r•·

~--

JUST LOOK 511 ,500 00
OLDER HOME Nice
locatJon. 3 bedrooms, ..bath,
HOMESITES for sale 1 ocre and
up Middleport neor Rutla nd
Colt 992 748 1

Trudl or •MIIdoa

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

old, modern and 1n the
county _ 5.36, 100
A STEAL - 6 acres 1n the
country, lar ge garden,
garage , 2 yr. old double

Pomeroy Landmark

!!f!!~,t"-

..'llll•tor to

NEW LISTiNG - A house
to be chertshed and large
too . Approx 1,600 sq ft of
hYing space. 4 bedrooms. 2
car garage, 1 acre. 4 y rs .

SERVICE,~

-EXPERIENCED
Radiator-

CBS

llei tn

''

8r ti · 4s-Mor n lng R e port 3; 6· .50-Good

7 · ~Today 3,4, 15;

0

Ill

BORN LOSER

lO·JO C I

Semester

Morn ing: West VIrginia 13 , 6 . 51-Chuck White
Reports 10; News 13.

Unscramble these lour Jumbles,
one le"er to each square, to lorm
four ordmary words

.._':'·

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1971
5:6---Form Report 13; 5: 50-PTL Club; 5 ' 55--Sunrlse
Semester 10 .
6 :Cl0-PTL Club 15; 6 ' 25-For You Bla~k Woman
10. 6.Jo- Doctors on Call .,. ; News 6; Sunrise

8. 10: Noya 20.33

~ ~ ~~ ®

-.

R t: side n t i a I
1nd
commercial.
Call for
estimate, 24 hour service.
Anyday , anyttme.
Phone 985-3806

lyle~ MOOre LO.

9 OD-Laugh -ln 3, 1S ; Charlie's Angels 6,13 ; Coll~e
• Basketball 41 GE Theate r 8. 10 ; Greal Per.
formances 20.33 .
10 QO---Pollce W oman 3, lS; Starsky &amp; H utch 6,1 J; News
20. Love Thy Ne ighbor 33.
10 ·Jo-Book Bea1 33 ; Wodehouse Playhouse 20
11 oo-News 3.4.6.8.10.13.15 . Dick Cavell 20. Lilias,

.,..) ~ I

1163·2nd Ave., Ga IIi polis

Phone 992-3993

MIZ PO&amp;&amp;IN!Il,,.THI~ IS THE'
OFFICE' OF THE PR1:51P~NT OF
M&lt;KEE 1toiPU5TRif5,,. HE'S
RETIJRNIN6 YOLIR CAL.L. \

•

M ary

6 :Cl0-News 3.• .8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
O.Jo-NBC Nws 3,4,15; ABC News 13, Caro l Burnett &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20.
7 DO-Cross Wits 3. ,
Liars Club 6; Sha Na Na 8,·
Ca pitol Beat 33 ; News 10; To Tell The Trulh 13;
Gllllgan•s Is
15, Characteristics ot Learning
Disabilities 20.
7 15--Marshall U Report 33; 7 3o-Funn,y Farm 3; Sha
Na Na 4t When Ha v oc Struck 6 , Family Feud 8;
Mac Neii . Lehrer Report 20.33 . The Judge 10. In
Search of 13 ; Wi ld Kingdom 15
B;ClO-Biack Beauty 3.• . 15; Eoght Is Enough 6,13.

r - - - - - - , r - - - - - - , ·~ ·
NOTICf
SEPTIC TANK :-:
-~
JOHN IE'S BEAUTY
CLEANING
-.

MAIN
POMEROY, 0 .

· VA FHA 30 yr f man cmg ol so
1965 CHEVELLE 4 dr A C 283
refmon cm g. lrelci'nd Mor tga ge.
eng 7 bbl au to !roM Ex ·
77 E Stole , Athen s, phone (614 )
cellen l co nd1t1on Truck top per'
592·3051
std 8 It bed 28 m h•gh
742 2485
SELLING ' OUT d\.le to 1ll health
Small grocery store ond gas
stot• on w11h stock and equtp
men ! Located at Langsv il le on
Route 124 Ve ry good buy Coli
992 5868 or H2 9045

Cellulosic (wood fiber)
Thermal insulation

ATTE NTI ON MARE Owners
AQHA stud ser v1ce ln troducmg
to Sou th ern Oh1o Cor tok o sor
rell son of Otoe Breed for co l
or, coplonnol 1on and d1 spos1
!1on Phone 698 -8241 911E1nmgs
or wn fe for br eed mg contract.
Belle Ec ho Ouorler Hot ses
40225 SR 692 Pomeroy, Oh1o
45769

--

p ups

Cellulose Fiber
Blown Into Walls
and AHics

JIM KEESEE

rlE HARIMARE

AKC
REGISTERED Doberman
pups Ha vu health cerfdl tafe 7
wks old SlOO eoch 843 3053
REGISTERED BLUETICK
mo o ld ( 378

Blown Insulation

instructions.

----

GROW EARTHWORMS lor prof11
Free Dolo
WORf.A. WORLD
18 10 S Josephme, Den vt:'r , Co t
orodo 80210 or coli Mr Jom es
collect (303} 77 8 102b

S · J~~=~! ~e;:~ ~~ pl .Jl r

"'

I

saddles Ruth Reeves Alban y
(b14 ) 698 3790

------------.--------·

J&amp;L

221JrTHJ

~~

LADIES (OR MEN ) NEEDED FOR
GOOD PAYING 'TEMPORARY
OFFICE-LIKE WORK PLEA SANT , MEIGS COUNTY Humane Soc1e ty ,
NO EX PERIEN CE NECESSARY
Core lme ond adoption Serv1ce
ALSO NEED LADIE S (OR MEN )
997 7b80 742 3162, 9CJ2 5477
WITH CAR FOR LIGHT DEli VERY
WORK APPLY IN PER SON ON · RISINC STAR Kannel Boardmg
Ind oor and outdoor run s
LV (NO PHONE CALLS ) TO
Groom mg oil breeds Cle on
CA RT ERS ROOM
19 MEIGS
son 1tary focd1 t les
Ches h•r e
INN POMEROY 9 to 9 30 AM
MONDAY FEBRUARY 6
Pho~_
w_
(6_
14_
) 367 02
.::.9.:2'--~.,-

Blown Insulation

~romorrow J , ;.; 2· 10--News 13.

Movie Chonnel 4 5 &amp; ? PM - Annie Hoi I i PGl
7 &amp; 11 P .M . -The Sting (PGJ

WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY 1.1971

L----------------~·------------------------------------------_..:

''The Ol'lfiRJtoB
Not The tmhators

ton D ~hvered to Oh1o Po llet
Co , Rt 'J Pomeroy 992 2689

THE FEBRUAR Y AAA Dfl ver s
Edu catiOn Closs wdl begm
Tucsdov Februar y &lt;ith For In - GOOD
USED
tractor wllh
f ormat iOn call Ben Slowter or
hydraul1 ~ 3 pt lulch 7~2 · 3074
742 ·2170 between b 00 and 8 00
WANT TO BltV House or mobde
pm
ho1'1'\e m country w1"th so me
acreage on land conlroct Con
pay
down
payment
d
reasonable
Only mteres ted
l OS T SUN glo sses Prescnp t1on
people need to mo d ml ormo tm n to PO Box 9 l angsvil le.,
gr o und~ b~ol s ~47 - 2lb2
OH-4574 1
"
LOS T ON Gateway Porlc1ng Lot
Rm g keys Fmder please coli SIL VER DOlLARS and cams Top
992 31177 Reword
~o_!!_o ~po1d _colt 7.42 ~~- -~
NORWEGIAN EL-K
'H
- 0::-cUcN::Dc- tosr
ar ound Un1on A ve Block w1th
-=.-...:=:,..:::.._ __
sd ve1 and wh1le Weor mg red l'~
co llar
Answers lo N1kk 1 tF YO U hrwe o serv1 ce to off er
992 2889
wan t to buy or sell so mething
oe lookmg for work.
or
wha tever
you It get resu lts
fas ter Wi th o Sen t mel Wonl A d
Call992 2156
RE SPONSIBLE OtDER lady to l1 ve
in ond co re for oged tody m
Rutland l 1ght hou sework ond P";ldoiSate - - ~ ~
_
cookmg no laundr y More for
h o rn e than wages
Coil HOOF HOLLOW Horses Buy se ll
742-2078
trade or tro •n New and used

Business Services

Yoga &amp; You 33.
11 Jo-Johnny Caroon 3.~.15 ; Pollee Slory 6, I 3; Howall
' Five 0 1. ABC News 33; Movie " Sabrina" 10;
12 •00-JAnAkl 33.
12 : ~Mystory of the Week 6, 13; Kolak 8: 1:oo-

AN' PURTY STRIPES AN'
PURTV POLK'r' DOTS AN'..

�10- The Daily Sent mel. Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Wedll&lt;sday. Feb. I, 1978

(Continued from page I)

"Probably the whole state
will not qualify (for a dtsaster
declaration 1." satd Maj Gen
James C. Clem. adjutant
general of Ohto " When the
whole state ts covered by two
feet of snow, (extensive)
damage ts hard tAl see."
Meanwhile, supermarket
cham s across OhiO have

reported thetr food supply
situation retl.II'ning to normal ,
as highways and secondary
roads become passable
Charles Crague, Kroger director of merchandtsing, sa1d
Kroger markets would have a
normal or

antlctpated anythtn g tht s
b;ld."
A spokesman for Btg Bear
supermarkets m Columbus
satd pamc buymg • had
reduced stocks at some stores
around the stale But
generally, Btg Bear stores
had nol expenenced seriOUS
shortages, he added
In Tifhn, a parucularlv
hard-htt area, the manager of
a Kroger store said Tuesday
the market had just received
tis ftrst fresh supphes of food

Crague sa1d overstockm g

Kroger

in several days "We've been
out or bread, m1lk and eggs

But our s1tuatmn IS a lot
.better now "

near no rma l

supplies on hand by today
" The biggest problem
we've had ts gettmg trucks to
our markets Some of the stde
roads sttll have been
unpassable in recent days,"
he explained
b~·

stores

·Sadat lookm·g

2~£r.::~:J~ev~~~WE~~

FDA.··

m

By W.G. KIROLOS
CAIRO, Egypt (UPI)
Egyptian President Anwar
Sadat IS looking forward to
hts talks w1th President
Carter thts weekend to break
the deadlock between Egypt
and Israel at thetr milttary
talks, which were resuming
today
Sadat, who fli es to
Washmgton this weekend to
meet Ca rter, satd Tuesday
"1t ts tune " Amertca stepped
tn to resolve the maj or
disputes between Egypt and
Israel.
The two Middle East

NEW
MARTINSVILLE,
W Va (UPI) - A pickup
truck has been tentaltvely
blamed by pollee as the
svurl'l' of a hqwd ol&lt;)'gen
explosiOn that turned hve
workmen
mto human
torches, killmg three and
leavmg the others with
mttcal burns
State Police behove the
truck provtded the spark
Tuesday that tgntted the
oxygen when tl escaped from
a ruptured tank at Air
Products, Inc
James H. Luster, 56,
Howard, Oh1o, and Paul
Weber, 31, Euchd, Oh10, both
employees or Dravo Corp., a
construction finn on contract
at the ad)Otntng Mobay
Chem1cal Co complex, and
Benjamm F Rodrtquez, 23,
Moundsville, a Mobay
employee, were killed
Hosp italized m the burn
umt at West Penn Hospital m
Pittsburgh were two other
Mobay workmen, Robert
BarroWS 1
25,
New
Martmsvtlle, and Joseph
Henry , 42, Moundsvtlle
Henry lost both legs m the
accident
Luster, Weber and Barrows
were ms1de the truck m the
plant area when the vehtcle
apparently set off the htghly

roo1~11

FLEXSTEEL

FIN Iii: U~I-IOLtJI'ElREil PURNJTllHE

FINE FURNITURE
AT SPECIAL SALE PRICES

flammable oxygen.
Ftre flashed in the
explosiOn, trapptng the trio
inside the vehtcle and the
other vtctims when they
lunged toward tn a rescue
attempt They were wtthut 75
yards of the ruptured tank
"They were m a dense

Sheep school
dates named

the temporary offtce 1s the
same as the off1 ce on

Mulberry Ave. , h1t by ftre,
992-3786.

Nattonal Bank Regwn Number 4

Stateme nt of Resources and Lmbllitles

Thousands of dollars
$1,828,000 00
10,162,00 00
1,712,00 00
. 2,000 00
. 48,000 00
1,700,000 00
. 10.&gt;92,000 00
50li()() 00
10,542,000 00

I .oans, Net

Bank pt mmses, furniture and fixture s. and

302,000.00
32,000 00
$26,328,000 00

other assets rcpresentmg bank premises
Other assets
TOTAL ASSETS

.-..
ID
~

6,056,000 00
Demand depoSi ts of mdlvtd uals, prtnshps . and corps
Tune and savmgs depositS of mdiViduals,
prtnsl11ps, and corps
15,443,000 00
Depos1ls of Umted States Goverrunent
175,000 00
Deposits of Sl&lt;l tes and pohhci:jJ subdiVIsions
2,332,000 00
Cert ified and offi cers checks
... .. . .... 74,000 00
24,080,000 00
TOTAL DOMESTIC DEPOSITS
Total demand depostts
. 7,221,000 00
Tott:~l tune e~ nd savlntJSdepostts
16,859,000 00
'I'O'I'AL DEPOSIJ'S IN DOMESTIC
AND FOREIG Nm FICES
24,080,000 00
71,000.00
Other habihtJes.
TOTAL LIABII JTIES le&lt;cludmg suburdmated notes and debentures)
$24,1511000.00

...

Common stock
a No shares authonzed 8,000
b No sha res outswndmg 8,000
1par value 1
Surplus
Und1vtded profits
Reserve for con ttngcnc1cs and other capital reserves
TOTAl. EQUITY CAPITAL
.
TOTAL LIABILITIES ANp EQUITY CAPITAL ..

.....

$200,000 00
1,400,000 00
534,000 00
43,000.00
$2,177,000.00
$:G,328,000.00

Avcrag'e for 30 ca lenda1 days endmg w1lh report date

Cash and due from banks
Fed. funds sold and sec unttes purchased
under agreements to resell
Total loans
1
T1me dcpos1ts of$100,000 01 more tn domestiCofrtces
Total depoSits
Total Assets
\

$1,624,000 00

..... .

.. .. .

1,593,000 00
11,127,000.00
. I 1,900,000.00
23,956,000 00
$26,699,000 00

I, Joan Wolfe, Asststanl Cash1er, ol the above-named bank do hereby ,leclare that llus
Report of Condttion ts true and correct to the best of my knowledge and behet
Joan Wolfe
Jan.1ary 23,1976

\'

We, the undersigned d1rectors attest the correctn ~ss of thts statement of resource,s and
liabtliltes. We decla re that tt has b&lt;:en exammed by us, and to the best of our knowledge and
beltef ts true and correct

Edtson Hobstetter
Roger Morgan - Directors
Orwn W Roush

,

J ohn C. RICe, County
Extension
Ag en t,
Agriculture, announces there

wtll be a sheep school held at
the Jackson Area Extenston
Center at 7. 30 p.m on
Wednesdays, February 8, 15
and 22
On February 8, Ohio's new
lamb teleauctton wtll be
explamed by Harold Bull and
Rubert Thurman~ both
directors of M1d-States Lamb
Producers
and Ralph
Grtmshaw, OSU Sheep
Spectalist. Equipment and
housing will be discussed on
the 15th and on the 22nd, a
good discussiOn on managmg
brood ewes and new lambs
wtll be featured by Mr. Grunshaw
Sellmg lambs by telephone,
a rather new concept, was
done by the Mid-States Lamb
Producers thts past fall. Th1s
marketmg method has been
qutte successful in other
parts of the country such as
V1rgm1a, says James C Clay,
Area ExtensiOn Agent,
Ammal Industry for the
Jackson Area
Everyone Int erested in
sheep productton ts tnvtted,
tncludmg 4-H and FF A
members. Sheep projects at
area fa1rs , especially market
lambs, have been quite
popular lately wtth juntor fatr
exhibitors.

m the state of Ohto, at the close of busmess on December 31, 1977 published m response to
ca ll made by Comptroller of the Currency, under tttle 12, United States Code, Sectton 161

Cash and due from banks
U S freas u1 y seeurttles
Obl 1 ~at10ns of States and pol1t1cal subchvlSlons
Other bonds, notes, and debentures
Feuera l Heserve stock and corporate stock
Federa l funds sold and secur1lics purchased
under agreements to resel l
Loa ns, Tota l •exdudmg unearned mcnme).
I .ess Reserv e f01 puss able ](Jan losses.

remamed cordoned off and

Power office
closed today

POMEROY NATIONAL BANK

Charter nwnber 1980

oxygen cloud," noted state
Trooper W.C. McBee. "W.e
know of nothtng else that
could have tgruted 1t at this
bme"
For several hours, the area

1

Consohdatmg domestic subsidtartes of the

..-....-....

Foretgn Mintster
the Sinat Pemnsula but Israel
Utststs on keeping a l!lllitary Mohammed KaJDel , whn met
presence around' 19 Jew1sh dunng the day wtth Assistant
Secretary of State Allred
settlements there.
The semi-official AI Ahram Atherton , praised the
newspaper satd the talks Amertcans for doing " thetr
were a " true test of IsraeJls best with sincerity to reach a
mtenttons. Wtthdrawal to common understandmg "
''This is not easy because
Egypt's mternat10nal borders
there
ar~ btg gaps and
caMot be the subject of
.
dtfferences
" between the
controversy ....
Israeb
and
"U Israel wants both peace Egypttan
and terntory , the mtlttary positions, be satd.
Sadat said the question of
talks as well as other contacts
lor
and consultations wtll reach a self-determ tnatton
dead end, brtngtng the region Palestinians tivmg on tbe
to the brmk of danger," it occupted West Bank of
Jordan and the Gaza Strtp
satd

trafftc was re-routed from the
plant as authortties stood by
and watched grtmly as the
oxygen contmued to leak,
powerless to go near 1t and
check for bod1es
At the rush hour, however,
the leak was stopped, and an
all-dear Signal came.
Due to a ftre at the
"We suspected all day long
Pomeroy ofl1ces of The Ohto
that
someone had been killed
Power Co Tuesday momtng,
m there," Marshall County
the office has been tem- Sheriff Robert Lightner satd
porartly closed.
"But we had to wa1t until the
On a temporary hasts, lhe opporturuty to get m there ."
Farmers Bank at 221 W
When the ftre erupted,
Second St , wtll accept Mobay quickly shut down tts
payment of electric bills A sprawlmg plant and sent tts
temporary office has been 900 employees home
established by the power
company at Its serV ICe
butldmg off Sprmg Ave. , at
the rear of the FultonThompson Tractor Sales
Requests for servtce and
payment of electrtc btlls can
be made at the temporary
office The phone number of

REPORT OF CONDITION

Ill

1

I

Social
Calendar
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Chamber of
Commerce Wednesday at
noon at Metgs Inn. Boyd Ruth
speaker.
LADIES AUXILIARY,
Mtddleport Ftre Department,
Wednesday, 7 30 p m. at the
ftre station Hostesses Will be
Betty Ohhnger, Helen Byer.
Paulme Greathouse, and Ber- ,
n~ce

to talks
was the "real dlfflculty" in
reaching an overall set tlement:
"We do not agree to the
settlements 1ssue," Sadat
S81d. "The whole world does
not agree and President
Carter does not agree."
Sadat said he will raise the
question of Palestinian seUdetermination with Carter.
" We are after permanent
peace, ooce and for all, and
wtthout
solving
the
Palesltnlan quest1on we
cannot have peace," he said.
Atherton brought an Israeli
draft declaration of peace

UMW leader sees settlement near

principles tAl Cairo and dtscussed It wlth Kamel
Tuesday. But AI Abram sa1d
Egypt objected to several
points in the document and
..:ounwould
submtt
terproJ10811ls.
x::y;~-.

~ The Poet's

~o wS~~

said that
people don't have a gizzard'
Something tn me sure lroze
when the good Lord
whipped up this bltuard.
The wmd blew harder and
r--------------------------~
harder and did tt ever
blow!
It ptcked up speed and then tt
I
I
threw at me lots of snow.
It
made drifts htgher than I
0 Parsons d•ed at 7 JO a m
G. B. GILLINGHAM
Tuesday
at
Holzer
Med•cal
could
see
Garland B Gtlhngham, a
Cen ter, where he had been a When I had IAJ go out U1 it I
hcensed praclicmg phar- pat•ent for three weeks
kept asking, " Lord, why
mactst for overs:; years, died
H 1s ,ome and real estate of
me? "
ftee
were
at
512
Second
Ave
,
at 7. 30 p.m. Tuesday at
But I know my prayers He dtd
below the Cttv Bu1tdlng
Holzer Medical Center after tust
He was born July 30, 1891 ,
hear,
an extended tllness.
'" Calhoun County , w va , For today the wind stopped
' G11ly " rece1ved hiS phar- one of ten ch tldren and the
blowing and the roads were
maceutical degree from Ohio last svrv111 tng of M A and
SophrOnia
Stump
Parsons
almost
clear
Northern Umvers1ty , and, m He was sc hooled tn Calhoun
But
don
'I
forget to keep
1973, recetved a cttatton from Cou nty on ly through the
tt will thaw
praying
that
the Ohto Pharmaceutical fourth reade r
•
and
melt
real
slow,
Mr
Parsons
·
worked
tn
Soctety for more than a halft1mber
.
as
a
boy:
he
earned
For
all
the
snciw
and flooding
century servtce.
water, and then he worked m ' waters the btlls we will
The year 1969 was hts 50th the sawm •ll ' He was a ma•l
have to go.
In June, 1968, he sold the · earner around Spencer, w
busmess at Pme St. and Se- Va , and marned Add 1e So keep your fatth m God and
you wtll see,
cond Ave., to Rtchard K•ngsbury , April 4. 1915, and
they ca me to Gal Ita County tn That there are better days
MacKenzie , who last 19 18, sett lmg a1 Ewmgtop
Novemb&lt;:r was elected to the They moved to Vmton and , ah!!ad fo~ bo\h you and me
Written by. Sarah C. Welsh
- 11
Galltpolts Ctty Commtsston fmal ly to Gallipolis
Mrs
Parsons
surv1ves
with
and ts the Comnusston presi- two sons and a daughter
dent However, Mr Gtll- Jabez Parsons of Ktrkland,
mgham continued to work Wash he and hts father
there unltl the autumn of star ted the Gallipolis vault
Company, whtch they sold to VetefB-. Memorial Hospital
1977
the Mart•ns, Dale of Blue
Admitted - Carol Russell,
Garland Gtlltngham and Rtdg e, va, Mrs Robert (Er
Pomeroy;
Joan Sellers,
Dallas Neal went mto a part- ma l Eagle of Vinton , five
Racme;
Jennie
lles,
grandchildren,
and
seven
nership at the same stte,
great
grandchildren
Pomeroy;
Charles
Werry,
where a drug store • bad
In Gallipol•s Mr. Parsons
operated for years before was assoc1ated wtth Cart Pomeroy; Robert Rathburn,
Unlll Mr Neal's death, II was Myers m rea l estate, and also Rutland; Janet Jenkms,
known as Neal &amp; G1lhngham, wtth Wtseman, and Grover Middleport; Mary Lavender,
owned h•s own real estate Syracuse; Eleanor Faulk,
but then tl was Gtllmgham He
bus m ess tor 30 years He was Pomeroy; Ruth Dye, Letart,
Drug from the late '20s or a
memb e r
of
the
early '30s, and MacKenzte Southeastern Ohto Re al W. Va ; Edna Hart,
Estate Association and of the Pomeroy; Robert Mays,
b;ls kept the name.
Bapt1 st Churc h, he was Reedsville; Anna Alley,
Born Dec 1, 1892, to Bert aF~rst
member of Morn1ng Dawn Racme.
and Pearl Ingles Gtlltngham, Lodge Number Seven, F ( A
Discharged - Pauhne
he was a hfelong restdent of M
Maso n•c serv1ces Will be Stewart, Everett Earles,
Galha County H1s parents atfor 0 D Parsons at 7 30 Charles Bush, Karen Batty,
tended Elizabeth Chapel held
th1 s evenmg at Miller's Mrs
Church, and the farruly re- Ke•th's body arnved today Russell Flagg, Dale Proffttt,
Harold Dewhurst, William
quests that contrtbuttons m from Grove City
Pallbearers for Thursday's Ferguson, George Foss,
his memory be made to that
rites will be rea l estate Mabel Swan, Ernest Bamchurch m care of the Rev fmal
Leadmghar'n , hart .
men
Allred Holley, Lower Rtver Russell Wdl1s
wood. John Fuller.
Rd , Galhpohs 45631, m lteu of Ronald Canaday, Merr 111
PLEASANT VALLEY
Car ter, and Jay Sheppard
flowers
Honorary
pa:llbearers
Will be
Discharged
- Mrs. Ricky
He marrted Ruth Ttplon John E Halliday , W1111am P
Sept. 5, 1922, at Granville, Cherri ngton, Oscar Batrd, Casto, Pomt Pleasant,
Marshall Riley, Mason; Paul
and she survtves wtth thetr and Willia m Conley
Roach, Point Pleasant; Gene
son, Jim Gtlltngham, Kansas
Bush, Jackson; Joe HamWILLIAM BARCUS
Ctty, Kans , w1th two grandW1l11am Barcus, .42 , a mack,
Point Pleasant;
children Also considered surresident of Rt. 1, Rlv~rea, Audrey
Pomt
Arnold,
VIVOrs are Jay and Lots Jean
Texas. and a former resident
Pleasant;
William
Shobe,
Smuns, young frtends who of Galtla County, died
Ashland, Ky.; Christopher
were loyal to him durmg thts Tuesday morning
The
body
wa$
taken
to
the
Hill,
Gallipolis; Mrs Carl
!mal tliness and who were at
Turcotte Mortuary In Kmgs. Hood, Mason; Mrs Philip
his stde every day.
'lill ie, Texas Bunal w111 be m
CurtiS, Point Pleasant.
Preceding him m death Texas
Loca I arrangements were
were a brother and a s1ster
He was a member of Mormng u nd er the dlrecl•on of
Holzer Medteal Center
Dawn Lodge Nwnber Seven Cremeens Funeral Home
(Discharges Jan. 31)
F&amp;AM , Elks, Amen can
Mehssa
Breezer, Mrs.
ALLEN NAMED
Legton; and the Grace Umteq
Donald
Chandler
and
LOS ANGELES (UP!) •
Methodist Church.
d~ugp),~r, Madge Clark,
Servtoes wtll be announced George Allen was named W1IIlam Cool, Leo pavidson
coach
of
the
Los
Angeles
head
by the McCoy-WelherholtMichael' Deck, Mrs. Charle~
Moore Funeral Home Hts Rams today.
Denney
and son, Danny
The former Washington
late res1dence was 1000 SeMrs.
Roger Jtviden
Franklin,
Redskins' coach met for
t-o~d Ave., Galltpolis
and
son,
Veronica
Kellogg,
several hours Tuesday night
M~rtle
~elly,
David
Long,
with Rams' owner Carroll
Ell•11
"
j'llc,
C
or)lle,
Mtchael
ODES D. PARSONS
&amp;senbloom and the two were
Double funeral serv1ces
behoved to have reached an McCoy, Barbara , Melvtn,
w1ll be held at 2 p m Thurs
Damse Mitchell, Myrtle
day for Odes Dale Parsons, agree~J~ent between them.
Radek1n,
Ruth Richards
86, GallipOliS, and htS SISter,
Carrie
Smtih,
Mae Syolson:
STAMPS AVAILABLE
Mrs George (Pet) Ke1th ,
Gro'w'e C•ty, at Mtller 's Home
Rockford
Spurlock,
Mrs.
Individuals interested in
for Funerals w •th th e Rev
EIUiy
Statke~.aod
son,
Emma
food stamps should contact
Joseph Godwm and the Rev
the Food Stamp Outreach Swql\, pi.,na Vance, Susan
Alfred Holley off1C1atmg.
Program at the Gallia-Meigs Veith, PauUne Wayne, Donn~
Bunal w1ll be stde by Stde
m V1nton Memonal Park
Community Action Agency Wells, Leon Yoder.
Calling hours Will be 3 5 and
(Birth Jan. 31)
Offtce, ~6-4612 , extenston 72,
7 9 p m today at Mtller's
Mr.
and Mrs. Frank
in
Gallia
County
and
992-5601i
Mrs Ke•th d1ed at 3 p m
Martin, a son, Crown City.
in Meigs County.
sunday ,n Columbu s, and o

Five workmen turned :
into human torches

CLASSES OFF
Baton classes of Mrs. Judy
R1ggs thiS evemng at Royal
Oak Park have been canceltt'&lt;l

legance in any

adversaries, seekmg to end 30
years of confl1ct, opened a
second round of mihtary
ta lks Tuesday and were
meetmg again today but the
same tssues that stalled the
conference on Jan . 13 still
plagued the delegates
"America ts a frtend of
both Egypt and Israel ,"
Sa4at satd at h1s Ntle-&lt;~tde
Barrages residence north of
Catro "It is tune this fnend ,
m whom we have conftdence,
should come m for a final
touch to the whole thing "
Egypt is demanding a completelsraeh withdrawal from

~orward
.1

Durst

THURSDAY
EVANGELINE CHAPTEH
172, Order of the Eastern
Star, 7 30 Thursday night .
at the Mtddleport Masomc
Temple.
LETART FALLS PTO,
Thursday evenmg, 7:30 p.m.
at the school.
SATURDAY
HARRISONVILLE Lodge
411, F. and A.M will hold a
special meeting at 2 p.m
Saturday for work In the
master mason degree
Refreshments wtll be served
at b p m and the regular
meetmg w1ll be held at 7· 311
p m All master masons are
mvited to attend.
_.

Area Deaths

Ulliled Pre111Dieraalioaal
"Settlement of the coal
strike is apparently near,"
says John Guzek , president of
United Mine Workers Distrtct
6 Wednesday, adding that he
has been IAlld to be ready to go
to Wa shington "at any
moment.,.
The UMW struck Dec. 6 and
contract talks m Washmgton
between the UMW and lhe
BJtununous Coal Opera!AJrs of
America
have
been
stalemated ever stnce.
Guzek said Wednesday, "I
have recetved a telegram
tellmg me to be ready w
rome tAl WashlJtl!on at any

!

moment - to De on u.hours
notice Settlement of the coal

stnke ts appurenUy near, or

they wou ldn 't send a
telegram like that "
An mdustry source also told
UP! Wednesday that "the
str1ke will be over wtthm a
week "

Guzek sa1d he was not told
any detatls concern ing a
tentattve agreement, but sa1d
he had been informed earlier
that most major stumbling
blocks had been troned out
Guzek, as pres1dent of Dlstnct 6 with 16,000 members m
OhiO and northPr'l

Wf' ~: 1

Vn

Women's Coats- Junior, missy and half sizes. Leathers
- Car Coats - Long Length Coats , Fur Trimmed Coats
and All Weather Coats .................................... 'h Price
Men's Jackets and Coats - Sizes up to 46, all warmly
lined. Entire stock on saje .. .............................. '/2 Price

of

Gov

By JOHN T. KADY

settlement m the naltonwtde
mmers strike "doesn't mean
a thtng until the coal starts to
move" and said curta llments
are almost a certainty unjess
a settlement ts reached by
Sunday.
IWbert E Stsmger, v1ce
prestdent for corporate
a!fatrs for Columbus &amp;
Southern Ohio Electnc Co.,
wht ch serves 1,340,000

there ' s been no £ederal
action
" We need so me real

I

•

Bardin, an admmtstrator of
the Economtc Regulatory
AdmtntstraUon of the Energy
Department
"The most dtsappomting
part of thts sessaon was when
Bardin was asked about the
progress of the coal
negotta !tons and all he could
say was 'they 're conttnuing '
Tha t's just not enough ,"

leadershtp at the e&lt;ecutive
level - I mean mtervention Heckman sutd.
" We've never been this fa r
tnto J(le mediauon process
through use of the power of down on our suppltes," he
the president's offtce," satd satd, addmg that the last 20
days of supply in a coal
Heckman

•

stockpile often has lost tts
capactty to produce energy
and tS JttiJ&lt;ed w1th dirt and
other debrts.
Hr

characte razed

situataon

m

Ohto

ooly ltmiled energy power to
authome ne1ghbormg utihty
comparues to supply the coal
short area wiUt power.
He said comparues must
agree among themselves on
the terms of sale and pointed
out the customers m those

the

as

··extremely serious' ' and sa1d

that Olher utility offtclals
from Michtgan and lndtana
agreed wtth him .
One Energy Department
offt cia l noted that the
Appalachia Power System
will next week begtn to cut
back on some of tis Industrial
customers
But Jerry Pfeffer noted the
Departn1ent of Energy has

areas genera Uy rec;et ve
power which cos ts the

romparues only one cent per
kilowatt from coal produclton
but those areas might b&lt;:
forced to
f1ve to eig ht
cents per kilowatt for oil
generated m a netghbormg

'"'r.

sta te

R

Gre~orv

Graham of the

Cindnnatl Gas and Electric
Co . Wednesday predicted
"havoc" if the strike f..-ces
ullliltel!i to shut off power .
" I surely tlunk there would
be havoc tf we get to the potnl
where we Catl't produce electrirlty. " he satd '' We are
now in a very senous
.sthmllon w1th dwmdhng coal
~upplies and no prospect of

addttlonal supplies. We can
delny nny havoc by not using
as' tnuch coal as usual, but the
on l}' way havoc can be
J)revcnted for suru IS tn have
the t•ual nc~ottutors l'Ome to a
~ttlement

•

at

enttne

customers m 24 Ohto
co unttes, took Issue With
reports from coal compa rues
and the Umted Mme Workers
un1on that productton could
be
res umed
a lmost
unmediately
Both Consolida tion Coal Co
and North Amencan Coal
Co . two or Ohto's largest coal
supphers, say thetr rnmes
have been ke pt m condilton
durmg the stnke that started
Dec. 6 and productwn could
start up shortly after the
mmers return to 1helr JObs

STREET LIGHTS TURNED OFF - Employes of the
Colwnbus and Southern Ohto Electrtc Power Co were in
Pomeroy Wednesday disconnecting the power to the
street lights. This is one of the steps taken by the electrtc
company to conserve on electricity due to the low stock
p1le of coal Several lights will still be burnmg m both
Middleport and Pomeroy m cructal areas. The cutback ts
m accordance w1th the plan ol Governor James Rhodes to
conserve electrlctty

By United Press International
PARIS - FILM DIRECTOR ROMAN POLANSKI arrtVed
m Pans today after fleemg the Uruted States hours before he
was tAl be sentenced lor unlawful sex with a 13-year-old gtrl
model.
Polanski, 44, arrived in Parts !rom London where he had
stopped ovem1ght
Polanski was to have appeared Wednesday tn Supertor
court in Santa Monica, Cahf , for sentencing Superior court
Judge Laurence Rittenband declined to say what penalty he
dectded lor Polanski, but Deputy Dtstrtct Attorney Roger
Gunsvn satd tt did mvolve tune m )ail. He would not say how
much time .
NASHVILLE, TENN -FOUR PEOPLE dted and three
were injured m a ftre Wednesday mght at a home for the
b;lndicapped and mentally retarded that apparently was
caused by someone smoking m bed, authortttes satd
Metro Ftre Marshal Howard Boyd said local offictals did
not know about the extstence of the home The woman who
operated tl apparently left with other restdents who escaped
the flames . Officials said the house was littered w1th empty
whiskey bottles and beer cans

Reclamatton of a st rtp
mmmg area m Sc1p10
Township for recreational &gt;'~
purposes w1U beg m t hi S
sprtng accordmg to Boyd
Ruth, d1stnct conservattonlst
for the Metgs County Sotl and
Water Conservatlon Service
Thts was disclosed Wednesday at the noon luncheon
of the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce
Boyd explatned that there
are 100 acres m the Pagev1He
area, 86 of the 1110 have been
selected lor reclamation, at a
cost of $5,200 an acre or a
total of $440,000 The property
ts state owned
For every ton of coal that' s
mined, four cents 1s placed m

H1gh Schoo 1 donate funds to
restore the old semor tngh
school butldmg.
He stated a plan ts m the
mfancy stage, that he had
wrttten to some alumnt but
has not gotten any response
as yet He explamed that the
buldmg could be renovated
for use as a VIllage hall With
the auditoriUm bemg used for
vanous events.
Crow sa1d he Muld hke to
get a realtsttc figure on
repatrofthe buildmg. He also
md1cated that industrial art
students at Meigs Htgh could
do some paintmg and help put
m wmdows
Crow stated that 1f federal
funds are used the floor would

board of reclamatiOn

have to be removed and

stnp mme fund 'nus IS where
the proceeds from the project
are dertved Boyd sa1d.
Boyd noted he was m
charge of the reclamation
operation m Metgs County
He also stated that there are
fiVe members on the Metgs
County S01l and Conservation
D1stnct Board
Thereon
Johnson Is a veteran member
havmg served for 20 years
Boyd showed shdes of the
area to be reclaimed. He
commented that a sediment
pond wtll be put m while the
project IS being done He satd
the area that is bemg
proposed 1s on the west
branch of Shade R1ver where
the stream ts now full of sand
There 1s no use to clean the
ditches until the source of the
sand ts corrected
Boyd stated that grass and
trees will be planted m the
area. He would hke to see
local contractors awarded
the b1ds whe n they are
submtlted
In other busmess, Fred
Crow, president, told the
chamber that he would ltketo
see the alumni of Pomeroy

replaced-with a new floor He
satd, " If we have to depend
on federal money the project
IS out."
He suggested that alumni
pledge a certam amount of
money over a three to five
year period BasiCally Crow
added, the structure IS m
good condtlton He did say a
new fumac• would have to be
mstalled.
Crow
commend e d
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews and village counCilmen for a job well done tn
the removal of 1ce and snow
He also stated that money IS

the

1

A spokesman tor Peat:,ody
Coal Co , whtch operates four
mmes for Columbus &amp; Southern, sa1d those mmes have
been mamtained and are
ready tAl go
''We can be puttmg coal out
the day they go back mtu the
mmes," sa1d John Guzek,
prestdent ol UMW Dtstnct 6
headquartered m Bellatre
"There will probably be a
httle dead work to do but that
IS only on the f1rst etght hour
shift Those mmes hCive been
kept up "

Guzek, a member of the
UMW Bargaintng Council
which has to approve the
contra ct for rataf1cahon by
tlle membership arter an
agrecment1s reached by the
negotiati ng teams, stud
Wednesday mght he had b&lt;:en
nottf1ed to be on 24-hour
not1ce to go to Washmgton tn
go over the contra(:l
"Settlement of the coal
str1ke IS appare ntly near ,"
sa1d Guzek
" Settlement , unttl coa l

Fifto•o•n l'"nts

\ 'nl. 2X, No 2111

•

I

present
Attend1ng were Crow,
Walter Gruese r, Vernon
Weber, John Anderson, Dale
Warner, Bill Mayer, Phil
recent dmncr hononng Dr
Ed Lew1s, Paul S1mon , J1m Kelly, Vtrgtl Teaford, C. E
Frecker and others was well Blakeslee, Leo Vaughan, B11l
attended Another dmner 1s Grueser, Ferman Moore,
betng planned for February Hank Cleland, N W CompThe chamber wtll meet m ton, Stan Houdashelt, Jim
regular sessiOn on Tuesday, Frecker, Ted Reed, J ack
Feb 7, at noon at the Metgs Ca rse y, Thereon J ohnson ,
Hol stein,
Inn A represe ntativ e of Emmoge n e
Welcome Wa gon will be secretary, and Ruth.

betng collected to help defray
the cost of removing 1ce and
sno" from the parkmg lot
Cro w also reported that the

Need
bidsThefor
facilities
CO LUMBUS
of two boat rentals and a
weather conditions have once

agam forced the Ohio
Department of Natural
Reso urces (ODNR) to extend
the deadline for subm1ttmg
btds for operatwn of three
boat rental facthttes and two
refreshment concessiOns at
state parks to Frtday, Feb. 3
" We were scheduled to
open the submttted btds
Friday, Jan. 20.'' sa1d Ra lph
Vanzant, Chtef of ODNR's
Dtvtston of Parks a nd
RecreatiOn "However, the
extremely poor wea)her
cond11lons forced the clostng
or all sta te offtces 1n
Columbus resultmg tn the
rescheduling of the deadbne
for submlttmg b1ds "
The btds are for operatton

starts to move, doesn 't mean W-&lt;luy supply ol co11l remalanythtng and that' s ou1· run ~ lie sa id 1t w1ll Uikc 10
days to twc• weeks fur the
proble m ." said S1smgc1
Sasmger smd the Peu bud) UMW mcmberslup tn ~t~tlfy
mmes could produce about any H~l't•c mcnt um_l anothc1
half the coa l needed by some 15 d.nys to gN Ute utility's
or hiS ulihty's UIUtS but the supply Uu1lt up, winch ~: lvcs
Uw t f'mpany a 25-duy supply
rest has to be shipped tn
'We have 90 suppllers and u{ l u.al tO WO I k With
"Wf' dH~ g iHIIJ..( to be Ill n
bear m mtnd, 11ll the supplters
we have supply uther compH - sltu,tl!On ,tt 20 dnys where
mes than us ,md they will ~ blmkouts are stHndur d, " ::~md
demandtng the maxunum S1smge1 " There Will be some
amount of coal the day tho fm·m of eul'laJhm•nllf !l iNnot
mmers go buck to wm k , 1 ' Sl'ttled Uus wc~ k
" It will be nne of two
sa1d Sismgcr
w.'lyscu rtt-nlment or
"To brmg coal productton
bu
smctis
or mdu s try or
back up to normal m a couple
of days Is Impossible People rolhng blackouts I~ n lmost
are_ gomg to t.hmk that as so1J11 ccrt,!ln to happen ·
SISinger
SUI&lt;I
lim
as a settlement 1s 1 em::hed ,
there IS no problem any eurtaJbncnL&lt;;; to busmtoss und
more. That 1s JUSl not so, not mdustry w11l be for alxml 50
11Cit'Cnl or normal opel utmg
so"
capac
ity wluc h he i:hlHI will
SIStnger said he dtd nut
close
11
lot of plunt~
Uunk the statement by Guzek
"Thut mean;; a lot or them
was 'reahstlc
''M1ners, all of Utcm, do not Will cJO SC down bCt'l:IUSC Uu~y
go back that f1rst d &lt;.~y, · he Will rwt be able tu upc1 ulu
sa id
" We don't s tdlt w1th d 50 pcrct•nt hlad," said
rcce1vmg a normal .supply of S1smgc1 " There Isn't u glass
coal the flr st or second or company 1ll the stale, for
third day. lndtvtdual plants Instance, that Cdn llpcrute
a
&gt;O
percent
maybe If Peabody ca n start w1th
curtmbnent
They
w1
ll JUSt
up that wtll help tmmensely "
have
to
shutdown
"
S1smger smd C&amp;SOE has a

Bailey is named
EMS coordinator

beach refres hment (:On·
cesswn at Kiser Lake State
Parkm Champaign County, a
refreshment concesslOn at
Robert C Batley, Rt. 4,
Hockmg Htlls State Park m Pomeroy, wa s appomtcd
Logan County and a boat coo rdin a tor or the Mc1gs
rental at Forked Run State County Emergency Med1ca l
Park m Metgs County
Services by the Metgs Co unty
Bids must be submitted by Commissioners Tu es day
2 p m Friday (Feb 3) to the mght
DIVIsiO n of Parks and
Bailey, a Mer~s Co unt y
Rec r ea tiOn ,
Co ncesswns native, Will assume h1s new
Umt , Ohw Department or duties on Feb 13 The tnrmg
Natural Resources, Fountam of a coordmator ts the fir st
Square, Columbus, 43224
step m establtshmg a new
lndtvtduals who ha ve Meigs County EMS made
already submitted btds, but possible when the l' ittzens of
WISh to change thetr ortgmal Metgs County approved a one
offer, should contact the mill levy last November ..
Dtvlsion of Parks and
The commiSSion ers , 1n
Recrea tion's Concessions hmng Ba1lcy , acted upon the
Unit, telephon e (614 ) 466-3277 recommendatiOn of the Metgs
Co unty EMS board of
trustees.
The commi SS IOners also
appotnted Charles R. Hysell,
RD, Middleport as county dog
a parked pickup truck drtven warden to begin duttes Imby Stanley Jones, Jr. 21, Rt. 1, mediately Anyone wtshtng to
GallipoliS and owned by the contact Hysell may ca ll 992Ga lha
Co unty
Co m- 5310
missioners
A lengthy discussiOn was
Smith's veh1cle shd on the held concerning the excessive
icy pavement into the truck
amo unt of garbage that has
There was mmor damage. ptled up at all bux locatlons
Jones was Cited to MuniCipal durtng the past coupl e of
Court for parking un the weeks, because of Inclement
roadway
weather and continued
mechant cal problem s wtth
the garbage truck
It was decided that
begmmng yesterday, an slimt effort would begm to

Trucker injured Wednesday
A trucker was m]ured m an
accident at 6 39 p m. Wednesday on SH 7 at TR 207 m
Metgs County
The Galha-Metgs Post
State H1ghway Patrol said
John R Bauer, 35, Burwick,
Pa , dnving a sem1 ng lost
control of hts truck whtch ran
off the left side of the road,
)ackkntfed and struck a s1gn

Six more weeks of winter

post. There was moderate
damage Bauer was treated

at the scene by the Mtddieport Emergency Squad
A Gallla Co unty acctdent
occurred at 1.15 p. m on the
Fa~rf1 eld-Centenary Rd. one
m1le so uth of SR &gt;88
The patrol satd a~ auto
drtven by John S Smith, 79,
Galltpohs, attempted to pass

Bad news from p Unxsutawney •
Groundhog Phil sees shadow
•

PUNXSUTAWNEY,Pa. (UP!) -It's true. Punxsutawney
Phtl cheats.
While everyone waited for the world's most famous
groundhog to poke his noSI' from a burrow on Gobbler 's Nob
and make his aMual predictton about the wea.ther, Phil was
waiting out the latest cold sn•p m a clean, warm, well-lighted
cage
Today is Groundhog Day ano Phil scurried out long enough
tu see his shadow. According to led end, that means we'll be hll
with slx more weeks of the cold, ml•erable winter of '78.
II Phil had not seen his shadow, tl would have meant that
spring was just around the corner.

.

·.·· ... ·.. ·.••..... .·· ··: .. ··:·::··· ... ,• •' • •'•

'• '••''

WASHINGTON - AN ATTEMPT TO BLOCK the Navy's
purchaile of 22 light-duty airplanes for more than $20 mtllion
(Continued on Plat 2)

Elberfeld's In Pomeroy

Heckman met for more

Utan three hours wtlh Dav1d

Reclamation project topic

CAIRO, EGYPT - PRESIDENT ANWAR SADAT left
Egypt today for Morocco, the first stop on an e1ght-na1ton tour
that will take hinn to the Umted States for weekend talks with
President Carter on stalled Mtddle East peace efforts.
Assistant U.S. Secretary of State Alfred Atherton wound
up a 12-day mission to Israel and Egypt and left Cairo today for
Washington, where he will amve ahead of Sadat with
Egyptian "Ideas" about a draft declaralton ol peace
principles.

Boys Sizes 8 to 18 Winter Jackets - Denims - cotton
polyester blends and wool plaids. Good selection 'h Price

representatives

James A Rhodes demanded

United Press International
One of Ohw's maJOr
electrtc ublLlles sa1d today a

CARTERSVILLE, GA. - AN ALL-POINTS alert was
tssued today for an Ohio pickup truck containing radioacttve
matenal that was reported stolen Wednesday night from the
parking lot of a northeast Georgm motel Police satd ':he
maroon and white, 1971 three-quarter ton pickup was mounted
with a camper and had an Oh1o ltcense plate, 5G7647
"The rad10active material l-11 ~ot dangerous unless the
cor\tamer ts opened and 11 ts very hard to open," a pollee
spokeswoman smd. Th.re was no offictal word what type of
radioactive matertal was ln the container.

Little Boys Jackets, sizes 2 to 7. Entire stock - lined.
Jackets and Coats ............. : ............................ th Price

of!tctal of one of the state's
major electric uhlittes sa1d
there is· "ltttle hope" that it
can
avoid
supply
c urtailment s wcludtng
rolling blackouts 1f the
natlonwtde str1ke continued
Also
Wednesday ,

that President Carter step in
to the coal negottaUons
· In a meetmg wtth
representatives or some
eastern uttlittes, C. Luther
Heckman, chairman of the
Publtc Uhhties Commisston
of Oh to, said, " we are
runnmg out of coal and

Coal must move, says power chief

l!OLLAND AND WEST GERMANY announced today they
had found poisoned Spanish oranges m addttton to the Irael1
oranies spiked with mercury and eaten by at least ftve
children.
West Gennan authortttes speculated Arab terrorists had
tampered with shipments commg from Spatn, mistaking them
for the Israeli products They satd the ta ulted Spamsh !nut
was found in the Stuttgart area one day after Israeli oranges
injected with mercury- the metal used mstde thermometers
- tttrned up near Frankfurt.

PRICE COAT AND JACKET SALE

coal reserves for electrac
utahhes m Ohto and an

e

Hospital News

1h

agreement so he could
explatn the contract to the
district's members.
The strike has depleted

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, february 2, 197M

.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

gm1a, would go to Washmgton

w be bnefed on any tentative

\'&gt;

•'. •lli!

But Phtl gave,Punxsutawney restdenls a hmt months ago
that the wmterwould be long and hard, or so say his wngue-mcheck followers No more unheated burrow for Phtl
"It 's true that Phil mstalled both he~tmg and ltghtmg th1s
year," Charles Erhard Jr., preSident of the Punl!Sutawney
Groundhog Club and manager of radio statton WPME said
Wednesday
But then , Phil doesn't actually ltve in a burrow It's r
a glass cage m Punxsutawney's c1vic center
According lo legend, Punxsutawney Pltil first emerged
from his burrow on Gobbler's Nob to make a weather
prediction on Feb. %, 1887.
And, they say, only twice m the 91 years prior to today dtd
he fall to see his shadow. That's a lot of nasty wtnters.
Groundhog Day is believed to have origmated centurtes
ago in Europe, where a similar Candlemas Day was observed.
Other towns, such as Quarryville, Pa , and Sun Prairie,
Wts., have been trymg to ~tve Punxsutawney Phtl svme
competitiOn , each community clanmng 1t has "tlle weatherprognosttcatmg groundhog.
Erhard says they're not even good tmltatioos

lean up all areas Eq uip-

nent has been rented and the
\:ommiSSIDners stated that 1t
was thetr hope that all areas
wtll be cleared within one
week.
Donald Moore, Salisbury
Townshtp Trustee, met with
the commissioners and
requested perm1sston for the
trustees to purchase a new

truck to replace the one

recently demolished In an
accident. The commissioners
approved the request . Moore
also offered his asststance m
trying to clean up the garbage areas tn Salisbury
Township
A letter was read from
Fred Crow, Pomeroy atturney and president of the
Pomeroy
Chamber
of
Commerce wfor mw g the
comm iSSioners that
a
comm ttt ee
was
bemg
orgamzed for the purpose of
pursumg construction of a
new highway from U S. 33 to

the new Havenswood b11d~e
Henry Wells, p1 es1dent of the
boa rd was chosen to serve on
thai conumttcc
The next mcetmg w1ll be
hel d un Tuesday, F'ciJ 7,
when rcpresentut1vc:-; of Ohio
De part ment of TransPQrtl:ltiOn w11l he present to
mform oH!clals, plannin g
hod~es , and dt1zcns about
0001
planmng
and
p1ugru mmtng efforts.
Attcndmg were Wells and
H1 ch ard
Jon es,
commiSSioners and Mary llobstetter, clerk

Highway
•

meetmg
planned
MARI ETTA - Glenn A.
Smith , Oh10 Depa1tment of
Tran sportation D1str1ct
Deputy Dtrector for Dt•trtct
10, wtll hold an Informal
public sesston of approXIma tely two hours
duration m Me1gs County on
Tuesuay , February 7 The
meetmg will begm at 6:30 p
m . In th e County

Co'm·

missioners' Off1ce Purpose
ts to tnform offtctals, planmng bodtes and citizens about
ODO'f
plannmg
and
programming elforts and to
rcce1ve

suggestiOns,

questrons and pertment in·
formation relatmg to transportation operating and
construction needs
The results wtll be used in
developmg the annual update
of ODOT's five year Transpor tal ton Improvement
Program (TIP) for Fiscal
Years 1979 through 1983
Public mvolvcmCnt IS a
plannmg and programmmg
requirement for federally
supported projects and the
public Is urged to parttclpate.
lnqutrtes concerning this
meemg may be dtrected to
ODOT Dtstrtct 10, Marietta,
Ohio,45750, telephone 614·3730212, Ext. 278.

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