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                  <text>II-The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Monday, Feb. 6. 1978

Athletes. • .

Nine. • •

(Continued from page I)
Gilkey
AII-SEOAL
quarterback :- Lennie
Van Meter

(Continued from page 1)

AII.SEOAL , scored 100 ooints.
222 yards in 1 game ; Mike
Ba(r - A!I ·SEOA L tackle,
led team in ta ckl es , All
Southeastern Ohio ; Clarence

" Tiny'' Wi lliams - All
·SEOAL ; Dennis Boggs All
SEOAL. 28 points in one
game, 116 points in one
season . 5.8 yards a11erage per
carry in one season ; Terry
Qua lis - AII ·SEOAL.
BASKETBALL All ·
SEOAL. 226 career quarter s
played , 16 free throws made
in one game, 210 ca reer free
throws made, 58 career
games played, 302 ca reer
field goa ls made, 304 career
free throws .attempted , 814
career point s scored. 791
career field goa l attempts, 26
consec ut ive tree throws
made ; M.lck Oa11enport AII -SEOAL 2 times . 33 poin ts
ln one game. J.SO points in one
season,1 17611fie1dtd go~ls indo~c
game, 4 e goa s rna e 1n
one season.
BASEBALL - Rick Van
Matre - 2 years varsity
leading
pil che r ; Mike
Nessel road - All SEOAL 2
years, led club ln hitt ing; Jeff
McKi nney - AII -SE OAL .
winn ing pitcher through
Sectional , District, Reg ional
tournaments : lost 1·0 In State
Tournament ; Br ian Hamilton
- AII ·SEOAL tirst ba seman 2
years , hit over .400 one .vear .
GOLF - Bill Hackett .Meda list 13 tim es in 1967-68 .
WR~STLING
.,...... Mi ckey
Ly~s State to urna ment
entrant three limes ; Fra nklin
Rizer - Most Ma ruader wins
and points scored.

killed when strm:k by a
vehicle as he walked on OhiO
Route 7 in Wellsvi lle.
Painesville : Richard D.
Hayer, 17. Painesville, killed
in a collision on U. S. 20 in
Lake County.
Ak ron~ Richard B: Hyman ,
34, Akron, killed wh en he lust
contrul uf Ius car on !·77, the
'-'as lank ruptured and the car
b

was engu lfed in flames,
,
Sunday
Warren : Duane E. Bennett,
39, Warren , kiUed in a one-car
h f
crash on Ohio 45 nort 0
Warren. Poli ce .say he was
speeding .
Warr en : James n. Wright ,
Wh eatlaud , Pa ., a
pedestrian kmed in a two·car
accident on [..8().
Lisbon: Lee A. Ball, 19,
Hanoverton, killed in a two·
ca r accident on U. S. 30 tn
Col umbiana County .

5 1,

SUBSIDY MADE

State Audito r Thomas E.
Ferguson reported that his
ufrice released $87,1 89.18 in
January criminal cost su bsidy program payments to 62
countiCs. Mei "S Co unty 's
t&gt;
payment was $671. 09 .
TRACK - Joh n Ritt:hh.a rt .
- 433~ points in 1968, dash
records .

nee ln

any roo111

FL~xs~rEEL:
fiN'S U PtiOU{J''fJ)\ED PU,A.NJ1'l1HE:

FINE FURNITURE
AT SPECIAL SALE PRICES

:-, ----A
___r_e_a__D
___ea_t_h__s_____ ! Weather blamed
h
h
bill
or Ig
s
1

1

ELDA H. CARSEY
Elda H. Carsey . 65, was
found dead at hts Route 4
Pomeroy . residen ce Sunday

I
death . Children born to this
union were Lamar Whitaker,
Columbus, and Mrs . Leslie
&lt;Mae) Mathies, Alexander,

attemoon .

Va . One son . Odell, preceded

Mr . Carsey died of natural
causes and had been dead for
ap pro~t l mately 24 hours
be1ore hlsbodywas fou nd . He
was a ,-et ired carpenter and
was a member of the
Ha rri sonvi lle Presby terian
Ch urch.
Mr . Carsey was born June·
25. 19 12 at Pratts Fork, a son
of the tate Char les and
Mahalia King Carsey . On
Ju ne 22, J93.S, he was married
to Dora Anest ine Cain who
preceded him In death on
Dec. 10, 1975.
Surviving are· a daughter.
Mrs , Charles (Con nie )
Chapma n. Route4, Pomeroy ;
two grandsons. Lance and
Monte Chapman, Roufe 4,
(PJomker ovc; twobrothRers,1Tho3r
a e 1 a rsey , au e ,
Pomeroy , and Joseph, of
Albany ; two sisters, Mrs.
Beryl Wyatt and .Mrs. Katie
Knicely, both of Dayton, and
se11eral nieces, nephews and
cousi ns.
Funeral ser11ices will be .
held at 1 p. m. Wednesday at
the Walker Funeral Home in
Rutland with the Rev . Dwight
Zavl tz offic iating . Burial will
be in the Wells Cemetery.
Friends may call a t the
funeral home any time after
10 a . m Tuesdav . The family
wi ll rece ive friend s at the
fu nera l home from 2 to 4 and 7
to 9 p. m. Tuesday .

her in death . Three chlldren
died in infancy ,
Her second marr-iage was
to Taulby Owens. Children
surviving are: Mrs. Virgin ia
CoOk, Gall ipolis ; Joh'n
Owens, Pa triot : Robert K.
Owens , ludlow Falls, Ohio
and Jack ONens, Gall ipolis.
One broth~r survive~ .
Frank M.oore, Ale~tander , Va .
Two brothers and one sister
preceded he r in dea th.
Seventeen grandchildren and
one great.grandchild survive.
Funeral services will be
held at Sa lem Baptist Church
on Tuesday at 2 p.m. with
Rev . George Hall offic iating .
Buria l Will be in Salem
Cemetery.
w:;.i~7~~ FuaXerac?t~oa,;,et:~
Monday from 2.4and 7·9 p.m.

CLYDE .\LEXANDER

Clyde E. Alexander, 77, a
r ~si d ent of Vinton, died in
Holze r Medi ca l Cen ter
Sa turda y eveni ng .
He was born Ma rch 12,
1900, in Vinton, son of the late
Lewis and Ru ie Russell
Atexet nder.
He married Nita- Qui ck ie in
1922 in Pomeroy. She sur.
vives, a long With two
daughters : Mr s. Vid or
(Dorothy) Ciance tta ,
Steubenvil le and Mr s. Tom
(June) Davis. Columbus.
Three grandchildren survive.
Two sisters and two brothers
preceded him in deat h.
Mr . Alexander was a
membe r of the Vinton
Masoni c Lodge, F&amp;AM No .
131, and former owner of the
Alexander Garage and
Chevrolet Sales in Vin ton.
He was refired district
manager for the agency of
Investors Dive rsifie d Ser .
vices in Vin ton .
Funeral ser11ices will be
he ld 1 p.m. Tuesday at the
McCoy.Moor e Funeral Home
wit h Rev . Jerry · N ~ al of.
f i ci~ti ng . Burial will be in
·Vinton Memdrl"ifl Park .
Friends mc;.y ca ll at the
funeral hOme betw~n 2·4 and
7-9 p.m. Monday .
LOLA OWENS

Lo la M . Owe ns, 68 , a
resident of Rt . 1. Patf1ot, died
Saturday in Holzer Medical
. Center.
She was born in Pi k.e
Coun ty , Ky. on Jan . 10, 1910,
daughter of the late Hi liard J .
and Nancy B. Moore.
She was twice married . Her
fir st husband , Thurman
Whitaker , preceded her in

STELLA DARNELL

Mrs . Stella G. Darnell . 92,
of 191 Mulbery Ave ., died
Monday at Holzer Me&lt;l.ical
Cen ter .
She was a daughter of the
late John and Saman tha
Rider Gould . She was also
preceded in death by her
husband, Samuel , thr ~e
daughters, Gert.rude Elnora
Darnell and Ruth Glass; a
son, Ora ; il sis ter and three
brothers.
Surviving
are
two
dauQhters, Mrs. Will iam P.
(Willa) Cal11o a nd Mr s.
James !Margie) Aldridge,
both of Columbus; two sons,
Her sc hel of Springfield ; Paul
of Pomeroy ; a sister. Cora
Scott of Grove City ; six
grandchildren ; seven greatgrandchildren and fl11e great
- great . grandchildren .
Mrs . Darnell was a
mem ber of the Pomer-oy
Church of the Naiarene and a
charter member of The
Plains Church of the
Naza rene .
Funeral serv ices will be I
p.m. Wednesday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev .
Clyde Henderson offi ci ating .
Burial will be in West Union
Cemetery. Friends may call
at the tuner a I home from 2 till
4 and 7 till 9 Tuesday .
NELLE ·sHAW

Miss Nelle Shaw, 77, died at
8 p.m. Sunday at Pleasant
Valley Hospi1al. Her death
was ur1;expected . Her home
was 454 Third
Ave ..
Gali lpol is.
She had retired as a
teacher In the Columbus
Publi c Sc hoo ls ( Barrett
Junior High School) but was
acli11efy hi charge of the arttherapy program at the
Gallipolis State lnstitu.te until
her death .
Born in May of 1900, she
was the last of the family of
Lewis and Helen Kerns Shaw.
Preced ing her in death were
three sisters and four
bro1hers. 5urviving are three
nieces and th ree nephews.
Miss Shaw receiveP her
bachelor 's degree from Oh io
State Un iversity and her
master 's degree from Ohio
Universitr .
Funera services will ·be
held at 1 p.m. Wednesday at
the McCoy . Wetherholt ·
Moore Funeral Home , ·the
Rev . James · V. Fraz ier of·
fiCiaHng , and burial wilt be in
N\ound Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call 7-9 p.m.
Tuesc;lay ,

Velerau MemoriAl K..plt.J Esther Thomas, Clara
Turner, William Warner,
Saturday Admissions •
•
Gwen Folmer. Pomeroy; Leora Wright.
( Blrlbl, Feb. 4)
Edna Russell, Rutland; Betty
Mr.
and Mrs . Richard
Area residents who are lowest comfortable level, but Spaun, Racine; Walter Armstrong, a son, Jacbon .
Robinson, Rutland.
wondering why current home ,., higher than 68 degrees.
Mr. and Mrs. Jackie Berry, a
Saturday Discharges heating bills show a marked
"For every degree that a Ruth Dye, Charles Werry, daughter, Patriot; Mr. and
increase over last month home thermostat is set below
Rick Lunsford, Clyde Sayre Mrs. Timothy Betz, a son,
need look only to recent 70, fuel use is reduced about
II,
Stacie Woolard, Oscar Gallipolis. Mr. and Mrs. Paul
weather statistics to find the three per cent and the lower
Imboden, Anna Hartenbaeh, Myers, a son, Gillllpolla. Mr.
answer.
the consumption, the more
and Mrs. Ron Peters, a
J . M. Koebel. area money the customer saves in Clarence Murray, Evelyn daughter, Proctorvllle.
Murray.
John
Hite,
Mona
manager for Columbia Gas of his home heating biiis, ;;
DIKbaJ1et, Feb. 5)
Neal, Alonna Cleland, Ada
Ohio, points out that weather Koebel said.
Luther Brown, Mrs.
Warner, Marvin · Randolph,
across the state in January
Sharon Warner , Mary William Buttrick, and
averaged 24 per~enl colder
Lavender, Timothy Deem, daughter, Robert Christian,
than for the month of
Janet Jenkins, Howard Mrs . David Dobbins and
December.
daughter , Cecil Elliott,
Phillips.
" The colder the weather
\lfarguerlte Gilmore, Mrs. .
Sunday Admissions The Pomeroy Emergency Mildred Arnold, Pomeroy; Benjamin Hash and son ,
outside, the harder heating
systems must work to keep Squad was. busy with calls Frances Martin, Pomeroy; Wanda Jones, Paul Martin, ·
homes comfortable a nd the Sunday.
Mary Morris, Pomeroy i Mrs. Charles May and son,
more fuel they require, " the
·At 11 :59 a .m., th e squa d Helen Carpenter, Mid- Helen Morning, Thomas
manager said. "Since last went to the St. Paul Lutheran dleport ; John Smith, Tuppers Neal, Esther Nibert, Mrs.
month's heating bills covered Church where Mrs. M,ary Plains ; Robert Knotts , Charles Patton and son .
a period when the weather Morris had become ill. She Vinton; Raymond Ridgway,
Blrtb
was warme[ while this was ta.ken to Veterans Cam br I dg-..;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Donald Slone,
Cloyd
month's bills are for a period Memorial Hospital wher~:oshe Brookover, Rutland ; Virginia a son, Crown City.
that was much colder, this was admitted.
Pierce. Middleport ; Gina
month's
heating
bills
At 8:2!1 p.m., the squad Pellegrino, Long Bottom ;
naturally will be higher than went to the Ray Little Charles McCloud, Midlast month 's.
residence on Route 143 where dleport .
" While none of us can do a person had fallen. No transSunday Discharges anything to change the portation was required .
Sharon Pierce, Robert HathAt 8:58 p.m., th e squa d bum.
weather, we can do
something to help hold down went to the Paul Darnell
Elvin E. Thom(lSol), 55,
Holzer Medical Center
our home heating costs by home on MulberrY Ave., and
Rutland, was injured In an
(Discharges, Feb. 3)
reducing energy consumption transported Darnell to Holzer
' Roberta Adams, Mrs . accident at 11 : 15 p. m.
through good conservation Medical Center.
practices," t he manager
AI 11 :14 p.m., the squad Roger Atkins and son, Saturday on SR 124 in '
said.
· went to E. Main St. for Mrs. Candice Brothers, Lucy Rutland.
The Gallia-Meigs Post
He urged all customers to Lunsford who was taken to Carpenter, JoaMe Conkle,
State
Highway patrol said
Harry
Crabtree,
Christopher
keep their thermostats at the Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Davis, Paul Goddard, Steven Edwin K. Cleland, 24, Mid,
Hammond, ,. Unda Humph· dleport,lost control of his car
reys, Eli ·Lambert, Mrs . whleh slid off the roadway
Frank Martin and son, hitting Thompson's vehicle.
Samantha McKinney, The Cleland car then over(Continued from page I)
Yovonne Miller, ROy Newell, turned.
Davis was one of a feJ workers going to the station where Billy Patrick, Ricky Porter,
Cleland was charged with
cSupervisory personnel were working after tlle International Mrs. David Ritenour and reckless operation. There
Brotherhood of Electrical Workers refused to cross a UMW daughter. Lani Rossiter, was heavy damage.
picket line after . striking mln~rs got angry that 39 train Bertie .Shafer, Jerry Shaffer,
Another Saturday mishap
carloads of non-union coal was shipped In Friday night.
Rebecca Shirley, Bobby occurred· at 4 p. m. on Bob
Supervisory personnel continued to man the plant today.
Slone, Ola St. Claire, Helen McCormick Rd. four tenths of
Striking miners also halted coal deliveries during the Taylor, Freda Walker, a mile south of SR 160.
weekend at C&amp;SOE 's Picway station south of Colwnbus . Geneva Waugh, Miller
The patrol said an auto
"Sheriff's deputies · ih Hocking and Franklin counties also Whealdon, Oakley Willett, driven by Robert E. Shaw, 19,reported truckloads of coal was dwnped.
Andrea Williams.
Gallipolis, struck the rear
Akron Mayor John Ballard said Sunday afternoon he would
(Birtbs, Feb. 3)
end of, a vehicle driven by
. ask all city buildings to cut down on electric usage and that he
Mr.and Mrs. Keith ~·Itch, a Florence J . Howard, 50,
would ask representatives of the sign industry and businesses son, Portland. Mr. and M~$ ­ Mason. There was minor
to see what they could do.
Jack Nelson, a son, Pedro. damage.
(Discharges, Feb. 4)
A final accident occurred at
Donald Barreti, Martha 4:06 p. m. Sunday on Ml1l
Bevans, Forrest Clark, Elva Creek Rd. one and seven
DATE CHANGED
SEEK LICENSE
Corbin,
Henry Elliott, Mary tenths miles north of
· A reg~lar meeting of the
A marriage license was
Grant,
Evelyn Gruser, Gallipolis where a vehicle
Eastern Local Schoo) Board
-~ssued to Mason Randall
Christie
Halley; James driven by Randy J. KitchWood, 22, Rutland, and Robin has been changed to 8 p.m . Halley, Frank Johnson, field, 31, Bidwell, sideLynn Rathburn, 17, Rutland . Wednesday in the high ·.school Wanda Malone, Dorothy swiped a vehicle opercafeteria.'
.McMillian, Terry McNelly, ated by James D. Taylor, 32, '
END MARRIAGES
HEREFEB. 8
was
Genevieve Price, Ernest Gallipolis. ' There
Glenn E. Enslen, Jr. and
On Febru ary
8, a RobinB&lt;ln , Marie Saunders, moderate damage. · No one
Janice R. Enslen, Mid- representative from Donna Smith, Donna Stobart, was injured or cited.
dleport , has fil ed for Congressman "Clarence E ."
dissolution of marriage in Miller's office will conduct an
Meigs County Common Pleas Open ·Door session from 10
Court.
' a.m.-12 noon in the Court(Continued from page 1) ·
Minnie Wise, Langsville, house In Pomeroy.
seven children.
filed suit for divorce aga_inst
If anyone has any questio.ns
The woman, described as In her early 40s with a bruised,
Wesley Wise, Middleport , concerning the Federal
bandaged
fal'l, walked Into a dress store Friday on the
Rhonda Jean Wilson , was Government, please stop by
preumse of shopping. After chatting with two employees, she
granted · a .divorce from to discuss them with the i&gt;ulled a handgun from her purse and aMounced a hOldup.
·
Thomas Edward Wilson.
representative.

.

l!!J

I

''

a

Q ~
$\U

Farmers Bank
POMEROY, OHIO ,
'40,000 Ma.m1um Insurance for EacH Depositor
. Member Federal Deposrt Insurance CotporatiDn

counted. And it could be a no
vote.
Sen. John Glenn, IJ.{)hio,
called on President Carter
late Monday to bring both
sid!lsln the coal dispute to the
Wblte House if the tentative
settlement is rejected by the
union bargaining council thai
meets today to consider it.
He said, " In the event the
coal strike is not settled In the
next few days, the situation In
Ohio will be critical. It's
already very grave."
Monday, about 200 striking
miners gathered around the
Puskarich Mine Co. In Sherrodsville, Carroll C~unty ,

cutback by industries, many
more layoffs will result . H.O.
Canfield, Inc . in London
which employs 185 said it
may also have to lay off.
"We see no way to avoid
cutbacks," Dave Altemuehle ,
a spokesman for Cincinnati
Gas &amp; Electric said earlier
Monday. "Although things
look encouraging It would be
foolt.ll to do anything until it
is ratified. And that may not
be easy."
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric
Co . .-..:elves a large portion of
its coal from barges that
must plow through the icedo,k!f' ~"~ flhi n Rivp.- r, ... tl-.nr

heckling employees, two of
whom were seen carrying
rifles, and breaking two
windows at tile plant.
ult makes no damn
difference," said one of the
miners about tile tentative
settlement, "We have to vote
on it yet.'' "·
The Pure• Corp. In Londoo
laid off 30 of its 330 workers
Mooday, citing a 25 percent
mandatory cutback in
electrical usuage by Ohio
Edison. Plant manager
Charles Lane said that if Ohio
Ed supplies, now at the 46day level drop below 30 days,
necessitating a 50 percent

compliCJIIing the problem of
electric shortages brought on
by· the coal strike.
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Electric Co. said it would
reassess its po:sition on
mandatory cutbacks of power
and when they would start .
C&amp;SOE said it would cootinue
to attempt to obtain nonunion coa l to keep its
generating units operating .
Some coal was delivered
Friday at its plant .J!l
Coshocton County but
shipments were stopped, at
least temporarily, because of
tile presence of UMW pickets.
" We ' r~ rPf'f'h•i ... O" o.::"'"""'" 'lnd

•

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, February 7, 1978

One hurt

a1

attempung to receive some
more,'' said Bob Jones, a
spokesman for C&amp;SOE. "We
haven't recelved any m(H'"e at
Coshocton. We had that one
load In there . But we 're not
going to say we're not going
to receive any coal at that
unit .11
The Coshocton County sheriff's office said between 200
and 250 UMW pickets were at
tile generating station's gates
Mooday .
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
also said electric bills would
be higher In March.
1
' Due to the coal str ike and

diminishing stockpiles of
coal, Colwnbus &amp; Southern
bas used mcc-e expensive oil
and puchased power to
provide electric service.
" For this reason , even
though you may have
conserved electric energy.
the fuel charge portion of
your bill may be higher," the
company S!lid In _a notic-e to
customers.
Bill Cray, Wilkesville,
p-esident or UMW IJJCal 1957
In Vinton County, said he
doubted whether the \lt&gt;1W
membership, at least the
members of his local, would

en tine

accept any agreement with
the coal operators that would
allow miners to be fined fot·
participating in wildeot
strikes , even if Lhe ('Uili
t'Ompanies were also fined .
"1 would be against it

personally and 1 think the
majcc-ity would,'' sllid Cruy .
" It would end up wiU1 the
rank and file always geltinH
fined. Arbitrators usually
rule against the union and
they would In this."
Cray said he and mo'i
members of his local Hrc
prep~~red to •1ay on strikt• lor
at
least another twn
months.

Fi£tren Cents
Vol. 2K, No. 2111

in three
accidents

By Ulllled Pressloteroatlooal

SAN QUENTIN, CAIJF. - L. EWING SOOTT, an 81-yearold prison inmate who has refused parole during his two
decades behind bars, said Monday the first thing he will do
when he gets out In March is divorce the wife he was accused of
murdering.
Scott, a Los Angeles businessman, has steadfastly
maintained his Innocence In the death of his wife, Evelyn,
whose body was never found. He refused parole In the past
because be said it amounted to an admission of guilt. However,
tile Community Release Board this year voted to give him a
discharge anyway, no strings attached.
,..

Conserve eleGtricity. • •

·News •• iii Briefs

ELBERFELDS ·1N POMEROY
RCA .

DOUBLE SAVINGS SALE

..

ADCAID
Stale Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson's office announced
today the February, 1978,
distribution of $34,554,934 in
Aid to Dependent Children to
504,638 recipients In Ohio's 88
counties .
Meigs County received
$&amp;4,346 for 1,040 recipients.

Ualted Preill International
Announcement 1n
Washington of a tentative
settlement of the 63-day-&lt;&gt;ld
coal strike did not stop news
In Ohio of cutbacks by
utiUtles nearly depleted of
coal, layoffs by Industries
facing power rationing and
mounting tension over
transport of non-union coal.
still-picketing miners and
still-worried utility
executives reminded that it
will take about 10 days after
rank and file United Mine
Workers members see the ·
pact before their votes can be

POmeroy Squad
b usy Sunday

GUY SHRIDER

Three county posts are "up
for grabs" in the November
General Election.
The Meigs County Board of
Elections reports petitions
for the June primary election
· must be filed with the board
before 4 p. m. March 23. The
three posts Include one seal
on the board of ·county
commissioners now held by
Henry . Wells : the county
probate court judgeship, now
held by Manning Webster,
and the auditor's post, now
held by Howard E. Frank.
The county court judgeship
will be filled in 1978, but
petitions do not have to be
filed for the position until
August.
Residents were reminded
tod.ay they must be registered
voters, if they sign any
petitions of candidacy. If not
registered,
their signature
.It' s ~atura l to feel guilty about puff ing off a planned savings
will
be
Invalid.
program . Buf fh e hardesf part is beginning . We understand how ,
In order to vote in the June
pressure ca n bu ild up when you're the one res ponsible for your
primary elections, residents
fam ily 's fin.ancial security . Regardless of yo ur income or goal ,
must be registered no later
Farmers Bank has a savings plan to help relieve t he tension. See us.
!loan May 6.
You ' ll sleep better .

Settlement will not end cutbacks

~

ZANESVILLE - Guy V.
Shri der , 92, Rt. I, Glenford,
the father of Miam i
University Athlet ic Director
and former GAHS coach
Rirh.rtrd G. Shrider, died
Sunday at Good Samaritan
Hospi1al. Services wi II be
·held Wednesday in Glenford .

3
posts
up for
grabs

HOSPITAL NEWS

VISIT ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE AND SEE THE
GREAT SAVINGS I~ STORE FOR YOU!

_,.

Reteelve A Bonus Check, Direct From RCA, On Selected Portable

PORTLAND, ORE. -CLEO, THE oldest female lion at
the Washington Park Zoo, was found dead In her moat
Monday, apparently killed by one of the four other lions In tbu
compound, a zoo spokeSilllln said.
"There was no sign of blood," said Paige Powell, but
"there were marks or. her neck and she had been chewed on In
other areas."

'

.

i
·'

AIR FORCE ACADEMY COLO . - AN AIR Force
Academy spokesman has refused to call an outbreak of flu at
the mllltary school an epidemic although almost 25 percent of
tile 4,300 cadets were bedridden and two cases of A-U.S.S.R.
bave been conflmled.
"Approximately 1,000 ~f the cadets visited the .hospital
Monday and are c.onflned. We are not calling it an epidemic,
we are calling It an outbreak of a flu-like illness," said Cap!.
Tom Boyd.
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT CARTER has signed into
law a bill forblddlng use of children under 16 In pornographic
rllaterial and outlawing the interstate transportation and sale
of such material.
The Protection of Children Against Sexual Exploitation
Ad of 1971, signed Monday, amends the criminal code and the
M8liD Act, which forbids taking anyone under the age of 18
across state tines for prostitution.

. '

WASHINGTON -A NEW VACCINE against pneumonia iS
now being distributed, with the first public vaccinations to take
place Wednesday, the drug company which made the medicine
1sllid Monday.
The vaccine, described as the first of its kind when it was
approved by the Food and Drug Administration last fall, is
called ~·Pneutnovax.''
Merck, Sharp and Dohme Inc. of West Point, Pa., said
700,000 doses of the vaccine are being shipped to fiU order by
doctors and druggists, and an additional I million doses are
expected to be available by the end of next week. ·
NASHUA, N.H . .:... ROBERT AND KARIN LAMON sat In
jaU today rather than let their IS.year-&lt;&gt;id daughter attend
schools were sex education is ta\!Sht. "If protecting our
daughter's moral values Is a crime, then we are guilty," Mrs.
LaMon said In a three-page statement distributed to repocters
Monday as she and her husband were taken to the Hillsborough
County Jall.
The LaMons were found guilty of contempt of ·court for
refusing to comply with state District Court Judge Aaron
Harkaway's Jan. 10 order to produce their daughter so he
could determine if she is a truant.
WASH!NGTON - SOVIET BUYERS have ordered
another 150,000 metric tons of American wheat, the
Agriculture Department announced Monday.
The sale, amounting to 5.5 million bushels, brought total
(Continued on page 10)

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·

25" diagonal

ELBERFELDS.IN POMEROY

NEW 4-11 AGENT- Mrs. Dlana 'Eberts, a native of
VInton Courlty, and graduate of Ohio University, has ·
a.s8UIIIed duties as Meigs County 4-H agent. She is a
fonner home economics teacher In Vinton County
Schools.
I

1\

Bill Young, a member of
Pomeroy Council, told fellow
councilmen Monday night
4
' The
power scare is not
over." Young had just attended an earlier meeting at
the Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric company in
Columbus.
Young reported Columbus
and Southern Ohio and Ohio
Power have a 50 day supply of
coal. How long this stockpile
lasts depends on W!!ather
conditions, Young noted .
Young said when the coal
strike is settled and miners
return to work, it will take
three weeks before coal
would reach power plants.
Because of his report and
since street lights have been
turned off in Pomeroy,
council agreed to impose a 10
p.m. curfew for all persons in
order to assist the pollee
department in patrolling
village streets. The curfew
will remain in effect' until the
energ'y crisis i~ over.
· John Koebel of Columbia
Gas of Ohio met with council
concerning the expiration of
the· gas company•s contract
March 6. He presented an
ordinance that would incre.ase rates two and one-half
percent the first year and
seven and one-half the second
year.
The new contract is for a
two-year period. It would

mean a 65 cent increase the
first year and $4.29 the second
year.
The minimum now is $3.65
under the new contract the
first year it would be $4.68
increasing the second year to

$5.06.
The proposal was turned
over to the utility committee
composed of Bill Young ,
chairman, Larry Wehrung
apd Jim Neutzling for study
and recommendations.
Also' meeting with council
were Fred Boger and Mark
Vogt of the engineering finn
of Burgess and Niple. They
were asked what could be
done to improve the hard
water problem in Pomeroy.
They suggested a test well
be made if a loca tinn rr-uld be

found in Syracuse. If would
cost approximately $3,000 or
a treatment · plant could be
built at a cost of $350,000.
It was reported the deeper
a well is, the harder the water
gets, but if you don 't go down
deep enough water would
contain a high amount of
nitrate which is harmful.
Boger is to get cost figures
and maps for council and
report back to them.
Others meeting with
council ,were members ol the
Board of Public Affairs, E. F.
Robinson, Harry Davis and
Dale Smith.
A proposal was submi.tted
to Increase water and sewage
rates. There were · three.
proposa ls a 30 twrrent in·

crease, 35 percent mcreuse or
~ 40 percent increase, all on
water alone. Robinson said
additional revenue will have
to be received in order to
meet the debt service for the
yea r.
Larry Wehrung said that he
could not see asking for an
increase with the type of
water being offered to th e
residents of Pomeroy.
Lou Osborne, ~;:quncilman,
sa id that it was Imperative
that council have the money
to meet the Indebtedness.
Council took no action, but
agreed to make a declsion
wjthin a week or so. Co un·
cilman Jim "Neutzling asked
about
parkir1 g meters
missing in certain sections of

the town. He wus Informed
that this was the result uf
va ndalism . No new meters
are available to replace the
unes that are missing .
Neutzling also discussed
the dangerous hole in the
streei at the foot of Breezy
Heights. He was tnld It was
caused from water drainnge.
The question seems· tu be,
who is really. responslble for
repairin g the area . N o
decision was made.
Brown told council that
they possibly had a fairly
good chance to secure a gronl
for a comprehensi ve phm
throu~h
Bu ckeye . Hill s
Hoc king Valley Reg iona l
Development.
Brown also reviewed some

ordinances that should h•·
changed and incrcusc fim::-;
on

fleeing

un

offict•r .

n1ltrijnuna, resistin~ UITt':il
and intox.ication.
Mayor Claren&lt;:e Ancl rt· w~
read a letter from tht• Ohio
Anny National Guard whkh
ex pressed gratitude in the
way that members Wl' 1'4
treated while In Pomeroy. II
stated ''We deeply UIJIH't:dH it•
the manner in whkh you
provided food and lm1Ailll4 fo r
the truops."
The letter also btntt.'ll lh til
1

severa l members

or

tl w

guard remarked about the
!-fpirit of cooperntlun I hey
received from t he citi7.t'IIS of
PomercJy .
The Mayor's re(mrl rur llw
month o( December )!)77 in
the amount of $1.•1tJ4j.50 wm;
read and accepted.
Mayor Andrews ahw
reported he h~d I'CCcived u
letter from the M ci~s Loi 'H l
settlement.
Board of Edu cutio11 tp; The-three-year agreement tendinK thanks fur tli 'IHiilll~
·was arumunced at a news the parking area nt Pumcruy
conference by ofllclals of the Elementary.
Federal Mediation and
The rneeUilg wal:l opened by
Conciliation Service and the
prayer by the Hev . Wllllmu
UMW . BCOA President Middlesworth.
Joseph Brennan and other
Attending were Mnyur
industry officials, who were Andrews, Young, Wchruu/--: ,
present In the building, did Brown, Neutzllng n11d
not participate.
Osborne, councllmc·n, Jarr&lt;'
Labor Secretary Rny Mar- Walton , clerk , Chief J ed
shall was pleased at the Webster, Tom Werry 111111
breakthrough, saying th e . Donnie Ward.
. strike " has meant great
suffering for UMW members
and their families '' and " has
brought
the
country
perilously
close
to
widespread coal 'shortage·s ln
the midst of a seve-re wlnter. '' ,
Marshall urged both union
and management councils to
approve the agree ment,
calling It a "fair contract, · CHARLESTON , W.V u.
genuinely good for both ( UPI ) - Just as officials uf
parties."
the United Mine Workers
Horvitz
praised were aMounclng a tentative
Rockefeller for his efforts in c ontract
settlement,
endlng the deadlock, and the members of UMW District 17
governor, In tum, said he were unveiling on agn.oement
. hoped the agreement would to allow striking miQer.s t.u
meet tile human needs of the borrow up to $500 to tide them
miners.
over.
Union officials said .lt could
Officials of the Cha rlestontake 10 days or more before based district, the largest in
the full membership decides tile union, said the agreement
whether to accept the tenns. with the UMW Federal Credit
H ratified, some mines may Union allows eligible striking
need additional time to get miners to borrow up to $500
operations back to normal from· the credit union ,
again.
beginning Thursday.
Miner
Gerry
Vance
Miners who had good credit
reflected a hope thai· the long ratings before the strike
strike might soon end.
began Dec . 6 can apply mnl
"I'll be glad to get back to officials say the miners do not
work, lf it's a good contract," have to be members of the
Vance said. "It will be a credit union.
whole lot better for everyone
Officials said they hope lo
concerned.' '
issue checks within 48 hours
after loans are approved .

UMW. Council checks contract.
·

goes to the Wlion 's 160,000 the contract. The ·current
By DREW VON BER(JEN
WASHINGToN (UPI) rank and file members for average wage is $7.80.
The United Mine Workers ratification.
Other provisions included a
bargaining council, which
A special council of the guaranteed health benefits
has
rejected
similar Bituminous Coal Operators program for all active and
agreements in the past, was Association also must ratify retired miners and their
deciding today whetber to tile pact.
families, and restoration and
accept a tentative settlement
UMW President Arnold improvement of pension
to end tile record strike Miller called the tentative . benefils, Miller said.
·
against the soft coal industry. ·settlement "by far the best
The 64-day walkout has
The agreement, reached agreement negOtiated in any .caused coal stockpiles to
Monday and announced at a major industry in the past dwindle to critical levels in
'
.
news conference by chief two years."
some areas .-President Carter
federal mediator Wayne HorHe said the agreement Intervened last Friday,
vitz, must be approved by the included a wage increase of asking
negotiators
to
39-member council before it $2.35 per hour over the life of continue efforts for a

New 4-H
Hillside strangler·
agent
named offers to surrender
Meigs County has il new
extension service agent in
home economics. She ls Mrs,
Diana Eberts. Mrs. Eberts is
the first home economics
agent the Meigs Extension
Service has bad since the
resignation of Marta Gilkey
two years ago.
A graduate of Vinton
County High School in 1971,
Mrs. Eberts received her
baehelor of science degree in
home economics education In
1974 from Ohio University.
She received her master's
degree in home economics
education
from
that
university In 1976.
For the past two and onehalf years, Mrs. Eberts has
been
teaching
home
economics at the Vinton
County Junior High School.
In her new post Mrs. Eberts
expects to be active iP the 4-H •
field since she was a 4-H club
member for 10 years and
credits that club WOGk with
her decision to enter extension work. She also hopes
to see the homemaker clubs,
which were formerly active
in the county, revived as
locations where women can
ex:change new ideas and
information.
. In the 4-H field she hopes to
develop more membership
and 11\ore'leadership.
·
Mrs. Eberts Is · looking
forward to meeting Meigs
Countian8 and Is anxious to
know their interests so that
decisions can be made on
programs the extension
service wUI sponsor.
Mrs. Eberts and her
husband, James, who is a
certified public accountant
and operates a business office
in Wellston, are both natives
of .:Vinton County. They are
currently living In McArthur,
but expect to move into the ·
Albany area In the near
future. Mrs. Eberts can be
reaehed at the Meigs County
Eztenslon Office, 992-3895.

strangled In a distinctive
LOS ANGEI.F..S (UPI)- A and their safety." .
manner and tlleir nude bodies
The
strangler
is
the
target
man claiming to be the
dumped
in the hilly
of
a
93-&lt;lfficer
task
force
that
Hillside Strangler, rape killer
residential
area o( the
has
mounted
one
of
the
of 12 girls and women, has
offered to surre.nder, with an biggest manhunls In tile Los northeastern Los Angeles and
accomplice, to Mayor Tom Angeles areas since the Glendale aoea .
search for tile Sharon Tate
Bradley .declined to say
Bradley.
why he considered tbe letter
The mayor Issued a public . murderers in 1969.
The strangler - or stran- genuine, not the work of a
appeal to the strangler
glers,
based on several crank, but it was reported it
Monday ' to continue lhe
reports
of two men - is had been e~amined by
communication, assuring
sought
for
the killings of 12 Investigators of the Strangler
him he would be safe if he
girls
and
women between Task Force, which approved
gave up "to me, here in my
Sept. 9 and Dec . 14. Tbe Ule mayor's announcement.
office."
The writer indicated he
Bradley said the man wrote victims ranged In age from 14
him, saying "he is the to 28, but most were would forward a "certain
after receiving
Hillside Strangler and that he attractive young women in item"
assurances
of his safety,
their
late
leellS
or
early
20s.
wanted to turn himself and a
Bradley
said.
Bradley would
Several
were
prostitutes
9r
friend ,in to the mayor's
not
elaborate,
but it was
otherwise
connected
to
the
office, but that he was
concerned that It be only the . seamy Hollywood "street apparently something only
the true strangler could
mayor's office, Instead of the scene."
Most
were
sexually . possess, proof of his identity.
police department, because
of some fear for their lives molested and all were
.

'

Loans
are offered
to strikers

One injured
in accident

'

FALCONS MAKE ALL-STATE BAND - Five
members of the Wahama White Falcon Marching Ba"'
were recently named to the 1978 West Virginia All-State
Band. Pictured In front,lefllc right, are Clarinetist Mary

McFarland, FluUst Jennie James, Trumpeter Debbie
Starr and Bassist Todd Tucker. Back row: Aaslstant Band
Director Mike Harbour and Band Director Charles Yeago.
Absent is Mark Goodnite, who plays tbe French Horn. ·

Two cars were heavily
damaged, one person injured
and one driver cited to court
as tbe result of an accident un
Coal St. at 12 : II p.m. Monday .
Police said a car driven by
Susan Altherr, Ja ckson,
traveling west on Coal St.,
failed to stop at a stop sign at
the intersection of 'cool and
North Third and struck a car
operated
by
Connie
Scholderer,
Route
2,
Pomeroy.
Mrs .
Ernes -tine
Moodlspaugh, a passenger In
tbe Scholderer car, received
cuts, bruises and a back
Injury. She was. taken lo
Veterans Memorial Hospital
by
the
Middleporl
Emergency Squad.
Altherr was cited to aPP&lt;ar
before Mayor Fred Hoffman
on a charge of failing to stop
at a stop sign.

'·'

'

�•
3- The Daily Sentinel . Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday , Feb . 1. 1979
2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Feb. 7, 1978
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French City
i: vignettes. • •

i.l!

(Seconf oftwoparts)
By Tom So11nders
My next move was

another part of Long Island,
from whence I took passage
in a vessel bound to New
London. I landed about ll
o'clock at night, and for lear
__ oL~ing taken up again as
deserter by the soldiers nl
Fori Trumbull ms4~ !!!! ~~
of my way off, and was quite
out of their reach before
morning. I stayed two or
three weeks at Mr. Harris's,
about 15 miles from New
London, and then travelled fo
Hudson in New York State,
begging on my way, after my
little money was gone. From
thence l went to Catskill, and
was employed about three
months in the shad fishery .
At Catskill, I fell in with one
church, as hardened and
desperate as myself. We
formed an acquaintance with
each other, and travelled
together to a place near the

:·:t

\\

born , to give the alarm in
case of danger. while I should
enter the store. I easily
forced the window. and en·
tered. I took about four
hundred dollars ip money, a
little clothing, and some other
goods.
W.e t hen hastened with our
booty to HudsOn, where we
took passage in a packet for
New York. From New York
we
pro ceeded
to
Philadelphia, where we lost

doubt Dowell and the woman
were in a sound sleep. Now

months when I was tried, and
found guilty. The nut court I

was my time. I crept softly in,

was sentenced to suffer

and gave no alarm . Just light death.
enough enlered the place to
Since my confinement, I
show me my object. have been dreadfully har·
Everything fav ored my dened and Insensible to my
design . The dreadful weapon condition. The Rev'd. Mr.
was raised, and with the Gould has constantly visited
strength of both my hands, me. am! strove. by prayer
fell upon his head .
and exhortation. to brin• m•
There was no nee4 to to a just sense of my ruined
repeat the blow. The work condition, and to Tead me to
was done. He gave no sign of · Jesus Christ as my only hope .
. life. But to · make myself Others have also shown a
perfectly sure, I repeated the concern for my soul. I hope
blow. The woman, alarmed at this kindness may be blessed
the noise. leaped out of bed in to me for my eternal good. I
terror ~

ca lling , " Master !
Master!" 11 Vourmaster can't

ahve also received from
several benevolent persons

hear you ," said I; and sprang
towards her with my In·
strument of death. She seized
the club with one hand, but
received several blows with
each other. We spent our my first . Finding me too
money wherever we came in strong for her. she let go her
drinking, ca rousing, and boldandfledoutatthedoor. f
every other species of vice. I pursued; and was within one
set out for Pittsburgh, spring of seizing her, when a
keeping company with the bush, which she had bent in
wagoners, and sometimes her fli ght, flew back and
assisting them. Arriving at struck me in the eyes, and
that place in the night , I was blinded me till she escaped.
Thus was I providentially
taken up by the watch, but
saved from the act. though
dismissed in the morning .
I then went down the river, not from the guilt, of mur-

many of those little comforts
which are so acceptable to
persons in a state of con·
linemen\. For all those favors
·t sincerely thank them, and
hope they will receive
hereafter a full reward.
And now, reader, I bid you
farewell - warning all, and
especially the young , against
the beginnings of vice - bad
company - sabbath breaking
- profane swearing - petty
pilferin g cr uelty to
animals and all those things
that tend to harden the heart ,
and lead to the greatest

and at Mount Pleasant, went

into a public house, and drank
whiskey and cider to excess;
city of New York . Here we after which I entered another
went into a store to buy some house, the family beirig asmall articles and the bed. took several articles of
storekeeper susj •cting our wearing apparel, and left the
money to be bad, I flew into a place. As soon as the loss
violent passion, snatch•d the be came known , I was
watch from his pocket and suspected, and being pur·.
stamped It under my feet. sued, was !liken ahout fifteen
Church then seized a scythe miles off. I was carried back,
and drove him out the door. and confessed the Ia!;!, but
We then locked ourselves . pleaded intoxication as niy
in; and in spite of the danger excuse - one crime in excuse
which threatened us, ate and for another!
drank our fill of the good
'They chose to dismiss me
things we found. By this time, on my giving up the clothes.
a number of people had except a pair of drawers I had
assemqled in the chamber put on , and which ttiey did not

dering five more human
beings ; for it was my in-

crimes and final ruin.
James Lane

tent10n to have sacrificed the
James Lane was hanged at
whole family, and then set four o'clock September 9,
lire to the house and consume 1817. This event took place on
the bodies, to conceal my the northeast comer of Pine
crime. I returned to search and Third Ave. Joseph
the house for money, but Vanden sprung the trap. A

Berry's World
HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

As11iri.l a£ter
a struke
DEAR DR. LAMB - I had a
stroke the first week in
September. The doctor said it
was a blood clot in the brain.
It temporarily paralyzed the
left side.
I got over the paralysis, but
my balance is not good. The
doctor told me to take three
aspirin a day. Is this bannful
li~ht

tome?

I have lots of nose bleeds
and have heard aspirin can

cause nose bleeds. Do you
think it does? What do you
recommend to prevent blood
clots?
DEAR- READER - You
must tell yo ur doctor at once
about your tendency to have
nose bleeds. Aspirin ts used In
trr&gt;ting strokes and after
heart attacks because of its
action in preventing normftl

blood

clottin~.

Aspirm in
moderate amounts can prolong normal clotting time.
The precautions in using
aspirin are about the same as
those we have followed in the
past for using other anticlotting medicines. I mi~ht add
here that the effectiveness of
aspinn m preventing strokes
and heart attacks is still
under study and a final
answer
concerning
its
usefulness versus any harm it

found none ; for it since ap--

fife and a tenor drwn were

pears he had left it with Mr . .
Ryan. I then went and lay
down at the back side of the
bouse, till Mr. Ryan and
others. alarmed by the
woman, came in. I remained

present. The spectators later
cut the rope to bits for
souveniers.
Rev. W. R. Gould the first
pastor of the Presbyterian
Church held a two hour

might cause has not beeq

there till they departed, and

sermon over the remams of

reached. Medicmes that are

you The Health L&lt;tter
number 8-8, Aspirin and
Related Medicines. Others
who want this issue can send
50 c-ents with a long, stamped,
self-addressed envelope for it
to me in care of this
newspaper, P.O. Box 1551,
Radio City Station, New
York, NY 10019.
DEAR DR. LAMB Regarding your. colwnn on
zinc tablets, only one druggist
out of s1x that I questioned
said he knew where to get
zinc sulfate. He tried , but the
smallest he could obtain were
220 milligrams and he would
duse tbat large.
He also said zinc sulfate is
used as an emetic. Is that so'
Will they make you vomit'
DEAR .READER - You
have had a problem. If your
pharmacist will simply consult the latest edition of the
Physician 's Desk Reference
(PDR 1977) he will find that
zinc sulfate tablets containing 66 miligrams of zinc
sulfate are manufa ctured by
Mericon Industries of Peoria,
Illinms, and that 1t is a non-

'·

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0

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•

Mikt• n nrr. foHtbatl.

•

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•

_,

••

.- - ....'

~

() 1976byNEA Inc

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0

MARY and Jim Boggs, representing the late Dennis
Boggs, football.

'

~

peopletalk

By Greg BoDey
The Eastern Eagle cage
team, besieged by illness,
went to Federal Hocking last
night and came home victims
of a 93-49loss as the Lancers'

Ronnie Russell set a school
scoring record as he poured
in 34 points on sixteen goals
and two free throws.
Eastern's starting
playmaker guard J eff Goebel
was down with a bout of the
Ou and Dave Brown and
Rusty Wigal, both start ers,

...
"' '

f tate ,

0 8

were limited as they were

'"

trying to play although they
too were fighting the "bug."
Dan Spencer and Don Eynon
were the only two healthy
starters and they gave a good
account of themselves.
Both hoys hit double figures
with Spence·r getting 18

·

DIDN'T DAN C E ALL NIGHT: The torch- or rather the
rose -was passed Monday night from Margan Heming-way
to Farrah Fawcett-Majors, who now becomes !he chief
celebrity promoting Faberge cosmetics. It had to be fun for
Farrah. ln addition to being 'feted at New York's chic Studio 54,
where 600 partygoers showed up to dance to disco music despite the strangling !inow - she's getting $2 million to
endorse a line of Faherge hair products. And last - but
certainly not least - she got to dance, if only briefly, with Cary
Grant, a Faberge director.

"
,,_ , .

....

markers while Eynon netted

"'

.

~ """'

"

Gen. Yekoutlee Adam, deputy commander of the Israeli
Defense Forces, left his briefcase in a restaurant in Son Diego
Saturday night, and police say when it was found 12 hours later
in a parking garage several blocks away, its papers strewn
about. and thieves had made off with $2,300, a calculator and

.....

'"'" I

..

Yekoutiee's passport.!

"'

VOTE OF NO CONFIDEN-CE: Egyptian President Anwar
Sadat has scored a few diploma tic points since he began his
peace overtures with Israel. . But David M. Blumberg,
president of B'nai Brith lnternational - the world's largest
Jewish group - cautions that the American Jews who have
been meeting this week with Sadat about the Middle East ''do
not represent the voice of the American Jewish community."
Blwnberg told a B'nai B'ritl\ convention in Kissllnee, Fla.,
Monday !hat Sadat is trying to ''use" U.S . Jews to pressure
Israel into a peace settlement. This, he says, "caJUlot and will
not be tolerated."

t

'•

12 points. Both were credited
by Coach Duane Wolfe with
playing a fine game.
Right from the start , it was
evident that the subpar
Eagles were about to become
victims of the taller Lancers.
At the first period buzzer, the
hosts led 24-7 and were in
control. Besides Kussell, two
other Lancers hit double

THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL

''
'•

''

••

USED CARS

\

GLIMPSES : Retired quarterback Joe Namath will star in a
pilot for a new NBC·TV series, "The Waverly Wonders, " in
which Joe Willie will play the coach of a lousy high school
basketball team ... Carol Barnett announced Monday lhls will
be the last season for her CBS·TV variety show, which has
been getting disappoin.ting ratings ... Former Attorney
General John MltcheU, doing time for Watergate offenses, was
released Monday from ·a Washington hospital after surgery on
a ballooned artery, but will be back within a few months for
insertion of an artificial hlp ... Artbur Krlm and four otber
movie executives who recently resigned from United Artists
are forming an as-yet unnamed film company, with an Initial
outlay of $90 million ....

•

I

•' '

.

-.

Special!

76 CADILLAC ·
DEVILLE CPE.
Dark brawn with tan roof,
full power, air, leather
Interior , AM- FM -stereo
tape . new tires , 48,000

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· You'll Like Our Quality
Way of Doing Business

TV. ••in Review

'

NEW.YORK (UP!) - The docu-drama strikes again, this
time recapping the terrible events of November 1963, in which
John F. KeiUledy was assassinated and Lee Harvey Oswald
was killed by Jack Ruby, owner of some sleazy nighlclubs.
It takes three hours to retell in minute detail the events in
· Dallas o!Nov. 21-23, and for those who want to be reminded or ·
those who were too yoimg to remember, it all comes to semi·
life on CBS Feb. 8, 11-11 p.m. Eastern time, In "Ruby arid
Oswald."
.
Why it was retold Is hard to Imagine. Lest we forget? Not
likely. Surely It won't slip the mind of anyone who was of
television news viewing age in 1963. Almost everyone can tell
you exactly what he or she was doing when they first heard
that Kennedy was shot, just Uke those of an earlier era can say
precisely where !hey were when they learned of Pearl Harbor,
or how they heard that Franklin D. Roosevelt WIIIJ dead . ·
The story sticks meticulously to the known facts, neither
giving support to conspiracy addicts nor cutting the ground
from beneath their theories.
· At the crucial moment, as the motorcade enters Dealey
Plaza in D!&gt;llas, proceeding past the Texas Book Depository,
the viewer sees Inside the top floor of the building, where be
knows there is an open window. But a high stack of cartons
hides whoever might be at the window, with or withoot a rifle.
The script shows the shooting of Patrolman J.D. Tippitt, and
althoagh it Is viewed from a distance there Is little doobt the
culprit Is Oswald.
•'
Oswald remains as much an enigma In this versloo as ever.
Ruby is the locus of the drama, however - overweight, confused, trigger-tempered, emotionally unatable.
Tectmlcally, the film Is carelully executed, with black and
white newsreel cUps of President and Mrs. Kemedy
interspersed with fnll-color dramatized happenings of Oswald
and Ruby.
·
Perhaps that Is port of the dil!lculty with Ibis exercise in
things past - the vl~er's emotions are tied up In those
newsreel shot and not bouild to the characters who should be
central w the story.
Michael Lerner paints a pathetic picture as Ruby, kind to his
sister, his dogs (he even calls his favorite "little wife" at one
point) and the girlswholllrlltlhelr stuff in his cabarets. Ruby's
emotional center is shattered by the aaoassinatlon of "our
beloved President Kennedy."
As Oswald, Frederic Forrest does as weD as can be expec:ted
p6r1raying a cipher, a man whose secrets Ruby's bullet kept
concealed.
"Ruby and Oswald" ralaes no questions about the all8a.,.•a·
lion and the events thatlollowed, except perhapalhe one about
why the television movie was made.
I

.
·-

GMAC FINANCING
992-5342

~m eroy

Open Evenings 'til6 :00
Tll5 p.m. Sal.

figures . Dillinger netted 14
points and Hornsby added 13.
Eastern came back with a
strong second period , but it

wasn't enough . On the ni ght ,
the Eagles hit just 16 of 69
shots for a very cool 23
percent. They made good on
17 of 30 free throws . The taller
Lancers pulled in most of the
r ebounds

with

~

Ea stern

getting 23 ca roms. The hosts

cashed in on 9 of 121oul shots.
The Eagle Reserves fell 50-

lost six contests by five points

39, but no other sta ts were

Eastern !49) - Spencer 6-618, Don Eynon 3-6-12, B.issel!
3·0-6, Wigal 1-0·2, Browmng 02-2, Boyles 1-1-3, Brown 2-2-6.
Totals 16- 17 -49 .

available .

Eastern plays a total of five
games this week, their next

be1ng tonight when they. go to
Wat erford. They have
Wednesday night off before
playing three· in a row. This
season , the Eagles have won

just one ga me, but they have

or less.

Federal Hocking {93) -

Ronnie

Russell 16 ·2· 34,
Childw ell 3-0-6, Bowers 3·2-8,
Dillinger 6·2-14 , Hart 4·0-8 ,
Ho rnsby 5·3-18 , Ridenour 1-0 2, Conrad 2·0·4, Wilson 1-0"2.
Totals 42 ·9-93 .
Score by quarters :
Eastern
17 19 10 13- 49
Fed .. Hock . 24 18 20 31 - 93

LOS ANGELES (UPI) Walter O'Malley, chairman
of the board of the Los
Angeles ·Dodgers, will be
bospitalized lor about two
weeks following abdominal
surgery at the Mayo Clinic in
Rochester, Minn ., a club
spokesman said Friday.

·-·...
..

A first " Parents' Night"

.,•
·'•

the

inductees

or

( Tin y ~

C lart'R(' C

Williams, footba ll.

Tt•rry (;lunlls.

f1mtlmll .

Gilkey, football , and Lennie Van Meter. footbalL The hall of
fame project is being carried out by the Meigs Athletic
Boosters of which Charles Hamilton is president.

Meigs girls
•
wtn, 61-46

the girls of Coach Joy Bentley
hit 26 of 78 fi eld attempts for
33 percent and canned just 9
of 20 free throws.
Alexander was led by
Saylor who had 15 points
while Ughtfritz netted II.
The hosts outdid the visitors
at the foul line, hitting 16 of
31. They shot only 23 percent"

two

games,

59 -46

over

Waterloo and 65-55 over
Shade. In the Waterloo
contest, Richard Wolfe of the
winners netted 23 big points
while Kent Wolfe tossed in 18.
Other scorers for Southern
were Tom Roseberry, Jay
Recs, and C. T. Chapman
each with four, and Robert ·

Brown, Alan Pape, and Scott
Frederick each with two.
Waterloo was led by Mike
Riley with l4 ·and David
Sh~oles and Gary Jolley with
13 each.
In the Shade C(lntest, R.
Wolfe again led the Meigs
Countians as he' poured 31
points through the hoop . ·K.
Wolfe this time had ten.
Others
scoring
were :
Chapman, six, Pape and
Brown, five , Rees " and
Roseberry, four .
· For the los ers, Wayne
Cremeans had a big .30 points
while Donald Lee hit double
figures with 11. Sam
Thompson and Jeff Skinner
had four each while Roger
Sellers had one.

rebounds' for the winners as

Eastelll graders
play three tilts

from the floor. hitting I&gt; of 66.
The Alexander r eserves

romped over Meigs 28-14
after the vis itors ha d a
freezing second period. In
that second 'canto. Mei gs got

just one point while the hosts
were building up a 14-4

halftime lead.
Alexander's Llewllyn had

round out the scoring.
The winners were led by

Beegle with I&gt; points while
si&lt;.
Cummins
added
Southern ~ot off to a slow
start, but after that, they
were in control of the contest .
At Belpre Monday night,
the hosts romped to a o5-5
win . Well was ill and could
sorely felt. Scoring for the
locals were Whitlatch and
Scott Justice with two points
each while Gaddis added one.
Next game is Wednesday
when H&amp;nnan Trace visitS.

Bill Hackett,

~otf.

French added eight. The
winners hit on 14 of 41 field
attempts for 34 percent and
didn't connect on five foul
shots .

Meigs was led by Drchel
and Riggs who had six points
each. Drehel led ,in the
rebound departm ent w1th
mne. Next Meigs game is
tonight when Vmton comes to

town . Zirkle had the other two
Meigs po1nts.
Meigs Gi r ls - Burdette 1·02, Epple 18·2 38, Vaughan 1-35, Wilson 1·0-2, Howard 0-2-2,
T. Ash J -0·6, Chapman 1 2-4,
S. Ash 1·0·2 Totals 26-9·6L
Ale xander-- Saylor S-7-15.
Clark 1·4-6, Skinner l -0-2,
Llghtfritz 5-1·11 . Young Q.J .J,
Dean 3-1-7. Totals 15· 16-46.
A.
12203046
M
1026 4.461

Score bv Quarters :
A.
12203046
lA.

10 78 44 61

Tu y l or ,

Mik e

rep rese ntin g
•"runkllu
Rize r, \\'hom he c·oa c hcd.

I" e n too

l)n, ehn ll.

have appeared after hls

name: Ali-SEOAL, 226 career
quart ers pl~yed. 16 fr ee
throws made in one game , 210
career free throws made. 58
ca reer games played, 302
career field goals made, 304
career fr ee throws at·
tempted, 814 career points
scored , 791 ca reer field goa l
attempts, 26 consecutive free

throws made.

CLEVELAND ( UPI ) Outfielder Ri ck Ma nning
Monday signed a five-year
contract with the Cleveland
ln~ian s,
although club
officials did not deny !here
was the possibility Manning
would be traded .

Jell McKinney, baseball.

JACKSON (62) - Harless 7·
S-19 , Forsytn 1 2·.4 : Darsey 6·
4· 16 ; D Evans 5-2· 12; Conger
5·1· 11; TOTALS 24.14 ·62 .

WELLSTON !731 - Mart in

3-2-8 ;
Will iam s
5· 1· 11 ;
Gilliland 7-0-14 ; Roys1er 9-2·
20 ;
M ontgomery
2-2·6 :
Norman 2-5-9; Swonger 2·3·7 .
TOTALS 29 -15 ·73.

Score by quarters :

Ja ckson

Wellston

1.4 18 15 15- 62
12 13 20 28- 73

Reser'ltle score 56 Jackson 36

618 E. MAIN ST. POMEROY, OHIO
Open 9:00to6 :00 Wetkdoys.
Phone m .3795

Mike . o ·avenport,
basketball.

Wellston 73
Jackson 62

THE INCOME TAX PEOPlE

No Appointment Necessarv

Ncss c lro rul,

NAME OMITTED
In the Hall of Fame story in
Monday 's paper, the name of
Jeff Tyo was erroneously
omitted allhough his sports
history did appear . Here is
the information that should

llliiiiiiH&amp;~R~B~~~O""'!!!!C~It

9: ooto 5:0o Saturday

' Mkkey t.yons , wrt•!illhag.

ten for scoring honors while

The East ern Seventh Grade

played three games recently.
Last Thursday they downed
visiting Federal Hocking 2621 behind the shooting of
Brian Well who poured in 20
of the 26 poin_ts . Other scorers
for Eastern were Mark
Holter with lour and Brian
Collins with two.
On Saturday they played
host to Soulhern on the high
school gym floor and fell34·22
to the cross--co unty riVals.
.Well tossed in 16 points this
time while Mike Whitlatch,
Mark Gaddis , and Mike
Connelly each added two to

not play , and his absence was

At H&amp;R Block, we Wlderstand these new
forms, we know the laws. We11 do every·
thirtg we can to save you money. And that's
Reason No.1why you should let H&amp;R Block
do ymrr taxes.

..

the ir
representatives. Not pictured are Jotm Rithhart. track ; 1\od

The Southern Eighth Grade
hasketball team recently won

would not lose everything you owned if
you carried a policy insuring you against
fire , flood and other natural disasters.
Find out today about our policies to in·
sure your home or income property. '

o.

of

Southern wins
two more tilts

If your home burned to the ground, you

Middleport,

some

foul route, and one gal was

let us help with
your taxes."

pawning Childs
Insurance Agency, Inc.

are

sick. No other Marauder hit
double figures . Chapman
hauled in a whopping 16

A"g&lt;M)d reason to
MAKE SURE YOU'RE COVERED.

Pictured

will be held on Thursday
night at Eastern when
Parents of basketball
players will be honored
before tbe game with
BY GREG BAILEY
Southwestern. The coaohes
The Meigs Girls cagers
believe that tbe parents picked up another win last
deserve special recognition . night. this time a t the exlor the time and energy pense of host Alexander, 61that they must put forlh for 46. Semor Vicky Epple set a
their ohlld to participate in Meigs High Girls scoring
a basket~all program.
record as she ripped the nets
for 38 points aimost singlehandedly downing the
Spartans.
Three Meigs girl s, in·
eluding Epple, exited via the

"The new
tax fonns.

'•

Seventeen former Meigs High School athletes were
inducted mto the school 's athletic hall of fame Saturday night.
The first 17 inductees come from six sports. Athletes not
inducted this year are still eligible for other years. Eac h of the
inductees received an attractiVe hall of fame trophy a nd their
photographs will be featured in a display area to be established
at the school.

·::::;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::·:·:·:::::::::·:::-:·:::::::·:::::·:::::::·::::::::::·:: :::::::·:;:;:; :~:·.~·~0 :.::::::::;:;.;: ·:::::::::::::·:··:::

By Greg Bailey
The big news of !he recent weeks is the Hunter Safety
Program being instituted by the Department of Natural
Resources. With the development of the proposed lice nse
increase, hunters are going to be required to have a safe
hunter certificate, somelhing already instituted in 34 other
states. This is not a law yet, but it's going to come, and
probably this year.
Right now the Department is going to have to have some
instructors so that our youth and those wbo will he required to
have one of these certificates will have an instructor available
to them. So the department is offering a Hunter Safety
lnstructor Course three times in the near future . The first
course wm be on March I from 7·9 p.m. The second course will
be on March 2 at !he same time . The third course will he on
March 4 from 2-4 p.m. All the courses will be held at the
Division of Wildlife's Headquarters in Athens.
There is one note of urgency . Registration must be in by
February 15. To register"all you have to do is contact Game
Protector Andy Lyles at 9115-3947. There is no charge lor the
class. The goal of !his division program is whave at least one
licensed inslructor from every sportsman's club and a~ least
one instructor available In every school. Anyone that works a
lot with youth should also pick u.P on this, such as "boy scout or
girl scout leaders, etc .
• Now belor.e some of you old-timers get into an uproar,
here's how some of the other states work this program so that
you might not have to take a course after aU these years . O~e
way is to make it mandatory only for !hose under a certam
a~e. and another way is to exempt t hose people who held a
valid hunting license last year. Whatever the_ sbght
inconvenience it"might be to you, it has been proven time and
time again that a mandalllry hunter safety program is a
benefit !hat saves lives, injuries, property damage, and bad .
feelings with•landowners and hunters. It's a well-worthwhile
law, but don'tforget, it's not a law yet, but it would be a good
one.
,
·
Two more notes. Don 'I forget !he Fur Sale to be held on
February 11 at the Morgan County Fairgroun.ds at
McConnellsville . Sponsored by the Southeastern Ohio Fur
Takers, the sale will bring you much more money if you've
taken proper care of your fnr. All it wiD cost you Is the price of
membership into the organization ($3.001 and a small
commission charge.
Keep tuned in. House Bill 1034 has now been introdnced into
the General Assembly. Incase you didn't know, this Is the bill
to· return the dove to a gamebird status. If you support this
conservation idea, write your congressman and let him know .

-..,......

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Pictured here: Meigs
Hall of Fame inductees

Den Talk

-·----

I

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MR. and Mrs. Lee Tyo, represe nting their son. Jeff
Tyo. basketball .
•

MR. and Mrs. Norm Van Matre, representing !heir
son, Rick Van Matre, baseba ll.

Lancers wallop Eagles

" RUN FOR IT! THE FOOD PROCESSOR HAS
GONE BERSERK! "

By United Press luternatlonal
.
prescription Item.
Yes, zinc sulfate is an
BACKONTIIEJOB: Former Budget Dlreetor Bert Laace IS
emetic if you take a big dose . ba ck at work again - now as a television commentator for
The PDR source I mentioned Atlanta'sWXIA·TV. Lance began the new career Monday with
sates that If you take mne 220 a 1'h-minute commentary calling for an immediate tax cut.
11lllhgram capsules together . President carter, Lance's longtime friend, had rio comment on
It will make you vollUt. The Lance's opinion, but he did send the fledgling journalist a
usual afm~t '; 0 ~t"nded, telegram saying, "Rosalynn and I know you wW be a huge
one 0
e . l1ll lgram success." White House aides Jody Powell and HamUton
tablets a day With ~eals or Jordan sent their own wire, which Jibed: "You can't miss ···
more frequently If a zmc deli- now !hat Waltercroakite has moved over wbecome secretary

...

'

q

"

need a prescr1pt1on for any

heard all "that passed within. Lane. The funeral was held in effective in preventmg clotDurin g the time I lay the old co urt house in the city ting cannot be used or must ciency IS present, IS far, far
be used with extreme caution bel o w the emeti c dose.
concealed, watchmg for an square.
in
people who have a tenden- Frankly, I am astonished that
opportunity to return to the
cy
to bleed from anywhere, you have so II)UCh trouble
house
for
plunder.
a
voice
over our heads, and making discover. From hence I went
since the PDR is a standard
the nose, the stomach, or the
their way down the trap door to Marietta, worked a day passed through my head ,
kidney as examples. And it IS reference text.
to take us. Hardened, In· there, and then proceeded which appeared to me as loud
Ohio Valley Livestock
I do think that anyone who
wise to avoid taking even one
as any clap of thunder f had
sensible , and enraged with down the river.
Market Report
has
symptoms that leads him
liquor and passion as we then
Between Marietta and ever heard ; JJnd with that my .. Prices taken from the aspirin for at least a week
to
think
he should take zinc
were, it would have been no Gallipolis, I lodged one night whole force forsook me, so auction of Stlturday, Feb. 4, before any surgery or a
should
see
a physician . As I
1978.
delivery
.
wonder if we had put £ire to at a public house. on one side that I doubed whether I
Trends . Feeders. active ;
have
menhoned
before,
To
give
you
more
informa·some barrels of powder of the chimney comer 1 and should be ever able to rise Cows, weak to lower ; Veals,
senous
illnesses
are
tion on aspirin and medicathere. This we might easily on e WNlis, a black man, 6n from that spo~ . The Ioree of steady ; Hogs, steady.
sometimes
the
cause
of
defiTotal head: 1,09 1
tiOns that you might buy
have done; but either did not the other. Knowing him to the sound after some time
ciencies
that
lead
to
loss
of
CaHie
without a prescription that
think of it at the time. or were bave a five dollar bill, I was subsided; and my strength
F eeder Steers (Good taste
or
smell
and
these
need
prevented by some other prevented from oplitting his gradually returned, until I choice) 250 to 300 lbs . 36 .50· contain aspirin f am sending
attention .
circumstance. I thank God head with the slice, that I was enabled to rise to my 4&lt;.50: 300 to 400 lbs. 35·44: 400
for preventing this dreadful might get it, only lrQm the feet ; when I made all the to 500 lbs. 35.50· 43.75 : 500 to
crime; for preserving my life number of people in the haste in my power from this 600 lbs. 34·42 .50: 600 to 700 lbs.
NO MERGER
The Almanac
32·41 .SO ; 700 a nd o ver 28.50and" the lives of so many house. My malicious wish scene of my guilt. The noise I 38.75.
SHAKER HEIGHTS, Ohio United Press International
people as would have been was so strongly marked in had heard terminated in that
Feeder h e ifers (good ·
(UP!) - A proposed merger
Today is Tueeday, Feb. 7,
of !he upper grades of Laurel
thus destroyed, and giving my countenance, that, as he' of the tolling of a bell, and choice) 250 t o 300 lbs . 2t.-J4 ,
to 400 lbs. 26 .50·35 . 400 to and Hathaway Brown girls' the 38th day of 1978 with 327 to
me a space lor repentence. has smce said, he shuddered continues to alarm me every 300
SOO"Ibs.
27· 33 .50 . 500 to 600 lbs.
After a trifling resistance, at a glance he caught of me 'night about the same hour I 25.50-32.75 ; 600 to 700 lbs. 26· schools with the all-male follow.
The moon is new .
we were overpowered, looking at him, though I still committed the murder.
33 ; 700 and over 2.4 .50-31 .50.
University School has been
The morning stars are
Feeder Bulls (Good -choice )
Under this fearful imsecured and sent to the jail in lay upon the hearth.
called off, It was revealed M
d Saturn
250 to 300 lbs. 36· 41: 300 to 400
ercury an .
.
New York City, where we lay
ln a store in Gallipolis, I pression , I went into the lbs. 35 .50-40 : 400 to 500 lbs. 36· Monday.
of
the
girls
'
"
The
eve.nmg
stars
are
Trustees
three months; then we were first met with Dowell, woods. and travelled that 42: 500 to 600 lbs. 34·40: 600 to
schools
in
Shaker
Heights
Venus,
Juptter
an~
Nars.
_
tried, tonvicted, and sen- removing. from Virginia, for night to withm two miles of 700 lbs. 32 .50-40 .2? : 700 and
ha
!Ted
th
U
.
"t
Those
born
on
thts
date
are
over
28
.50-40.
Gallipolis;
keeping
out
of
the
·
tenced to three years labour whose murder I am so justly
ve no 1 1
e mversl Y Wlder the sign on Aquarius.
Slaughter bulls (over 1,000
. in the penitentiary. Under condemned to suffer death. road , for fear of being lbs.l
School
Board
they
no longer
.
' list s· · 1 ir
25.50·35.25 .
.
are interested in merging or
~erlcan nove
me a
this restrain, and never The next morning, I went to disC(l vered. I lay down on the
Slaughter Cows Utilities
7
heated with liquor, we ap- his house, or shed, about six ground and got some sleep; 21 50-32 .50; Canner-Cutters any other form of coordinate Lewts was born Feb · '
1885
plied ourselves steadily to our miles from Gallipolis, on my · and spent the next day in the 15·25 .50 ;
0n· th"tsaymio
d · h"st ry ·.
education .
which
. would
t•·
: Cho1ce and Prime
l
t
h
work, and were soon able to way to Chillicothe, entered, woods. In the evening, alter 65 Veals
ln 1926, the average pay for
-85 ;
Standards
and mvo ve eu- movmg ou . w
do more !han our stated day's sat down and talked in a all had gone to rest, I went Medi ums 45-53 .50.
the US campus m Hunting . common labor in the United
Baby Calves (by the head)
friendly manner with him into Gallipolis, took up a bee
work.
Valley .
States was 54 cents an hour.
In other respects also we and a female slave, his house- hive. and got some of the 10· 45 .
ln 1956, Aulherine Lucy, the
Hogs
conducted ourselves so well, keeper. I then walked on to boney.
Hogs { No. l, Barrows-Gilts,
fu-st Negro admitted to the
THE DAILY SENTINEL
Then going to the river I 200· 230 lbs.) 44.50·45 .70.
that interest was made for Mr. Ryan's, about a quarter
DEVOTED TO THE
University of Alabama, was
Butcher Saws 38.50-45.50.
INTEREST OF
us; and we were released of a mile from Dowell's, took a flat and crossed to. the
expelled on the grounds she
MEIGs-MASON
AREA
Butcher Boars 25.50-30.
before the end of our term of where the latter soon came in Virginia side. I wandered
CIIESTBRL. TANNEHllL
accused school officials on
Pig
s
l·by
the
head)
9·27.50.
three years. We each had a lit to buy some meat. We were down the river about twelve
Ex~ . Ed.
conspiring in riots that
ROBERT HOEFLICH
of sickness soon after our both asked to breakfast, and miles, and arrived at the
accompanied her courtCllf.EdJtor
confinement; but received accepted the Invitation.
bo..,e df Mr. McGuire, just at
Publis hed dal ly except Saturiiay
ordered enrollment.
by The Ohio VaUey Publishing
very good attendance, and
When Dowell had paid for night, and asked the woman
ln 1973, the U.S. Senate
Company-Mullimed.la, Inc.,
Ill
after our recovery enjoyed the meat, I perceived that he for something to eat. She told
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohlo 4$769.
voted to set up a sevenBusiness Office Phone 992- 2156
excellent health - the con- had about forty dollars left. me if I would wait a little
member committee to
Editort.al Phone99'.l-2157.
sequence of the regularity To possess myself of this, I while, supper would be ready.
Second Cia.s!l postage )MUd at
investigate the Watergate
Pomeroy , Ohio
and sobriety enforced by the resolved t0 commit the horrid I staid, though with some
'.
break-in of Democratic
National advertisln~ repre.sen·
rules of the Institution. I can crime of murder, and this on lear. ahout half an hour, till TRAIN DERAU.MENT
National Headquarters.
tative Ward - Griffith Company,
BROOK PARK, Ohio (UPI)
truly say, the time spent a man who had never done her husband CIIII\e in with
Inc., Bottinelli and Galla gher DIV.,
ln 197'1, Peking .announced
757 Third Ave., New York , N.Y.
there was the happiest of my me any injury, whose house I several others. He had been - Clean-up operations con·
the
appoiniment of deputy
10017.
life. It may easily be had entered an hour or two out in pursuit of me. She used tinued late Monday where 10
Sub5criptioo rates. Delivered by ' premier Hua Kuo-feng to be
L'ilrTlt!r where Bva lla~ 75 cents per
believed, when it is con- before as a friend, and been this artifice to detain me, to 15 cars of a Cbessie System
acting premier of China .
week By Motor Route where earner
sidered how great a part of treated as such, and with having had a description of freight train derailed earlier
serv1ce not available, One month,
my time has been spent flying whom I had just partaken at my person from the hand- in the day between Snow and
S:J.25.. By mall in Ohio and W. Va.,
A thought for. the day :
One Year, $22.00; Six months,
from the face of man, for I the table of the bounties of bills circulated. They im- Holland Roads.
English
novelist Charles
$1 1.50; Three months, $7.00 ;
Police said the cause of the
had made man my enemy; providence; and not only on mediately seized and secured
Elsewhere $26.00 ye~u , SLX monlhs
Dickens
wrote in David
u:t.50; Three months, S7 .50. 1
and suffering hunger. thirst, him, but on the woman also, me, and brought me to the derailment had not been
"Let sleeping
Copperfield,
Sub.scnpUon price mdudes SUnday
cold, and nakedness, the just · and her four children, and place of my present con- determined ~nd no Injuries
Tnnes.Sentinel.
dogs
lie;
who
wants
to rouse
reward of my evil deeds.
then set lire to the house.
finement. Here I lay three were reported .
'em?"
But such deep rooted habit
Astonishing and incredible
as ours are not to be cured by wickedne~s 1 Six human
a few years of confinement. beings were to be sent to their
Nothing but the Devine final account, in a sudden and
Power can accomplish this; awful manner, and perhaps
tho' he may make use of unprepared and for what?
confinement, or any other That I might have a few
means he pleases, to effect it. dollars to throw away, or
No sooner were we at liberty, worse than throw away, as I
than we betook ourselves to had done with aU my former
ouroldcourse o!lile. We went ill gotten money! I can plead
to Albany , in search of op- no excuse. I :was able to work,
portunities for plunder, and and not ashamed to beg, till I
soon pitched upon a store could lind employment. Shall
suitable for our purpose ; but I say I was urged on by the
before we began our devil? No doubt I was; but his
operations, we made our- temptation could t&gt;ave been
selves acquainted with the of no avail, if I had not lent a
situation of things within, by willing ear to him. I had
entering it several times never resisted him. I was
under pretense of buying completely his slave! Just , I
~~~
~'~~iF
·
small articles. We were now repeat it, is the sentence of
i. ~·,
.
.,.,
ready to ·begin our wJrk of death pronounced against
darkness.
me!
Church procured a bottle of
But I hasten to finish the
aqua.fastis, which I applied frightful story. Dowell
to one of the iron window returned home, and I wallted
bars, carefully covering the on, intending to return, and at
mark of . it with mud,. I midnight commit the hellish
repeated this several times, deed. About thtee miles from
till the bar was so weak as to Mr. Ryan's, I entered a house
·be easily broken. All this not inhabited, and the first
time, It must be observed, object that caul!ht my eye
Church and I took care never was a stout club, with a knot
lobe seen together. Two such on the end, just fit lor my
countenances would ahve purpose. I took It, and went
raised suspicion . Having back to Dowell's; and con·
made all ready, Church was cealed myself till all was still
" You're right , this iceberg did come down the Mississippi from Ohio."
stationed at a distance wilh a within the house, and I had no

•

..

•

'

l' •

baseball.

992-2342

•

I

,

Well ston

PI'ITSBURGH (UPI) Services will be held Tuesday
lor John Dent, a gold
medal L~t in the 50,001)-meter
' llcr lin
Olympics.

�• -The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuaday, Feb. 7, 197!
i. . T '"

J.J.C,:

:

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nn"'

0

UddLJX:;:i:O:~X

'

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue BoueJ
'

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POLLY·s POINTERS
Polly Cramer

·

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,

&amp;~~----

Sherri Marshall
honored on birthday

Social
Calendar

_

HER MOM USFS ABASEBALL BAT
Sherr! Marshall, daughter ing presented to the winner-; .
~· ~
. ~--------------~---DEAR HElEN AND SUE :
ol Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mar- NumHous gifts were
using it regular size one un a shall ol near Hemlock Grove,
My mother goes wild for no reason. Uke the other llftemoon St~;Je/ wool rids
king
size bed and It works a cystic fibrosis chihJ, was presented to Sherri by the
I went to my friend'S howe with her perml.ssion. When I Bot
guests along with one from
beautifully.
home she accused me of Slleaking out and went to worll on me skillet of rust
twnored with a party on her Unit 39, American Legion
I have a bit more to add to lJth birthday Sunday.
with a baseball bat. I had to wear long aleeveo ...a pant.a to
By Polly Cramer
Auxiliary, and the jtinior unit
the
Pointer about drying
hide the bruises.
POlLY'S PROBLEM
Held at the American uf the Auxiliary.
She brags that ~ I don't mind right now she'D pick up the
DEAR POLLY - I left my oneself with a; squeezed out Legion hall in Pomeroy, par·
Served at the party were
closest heavy obj\!Ct and I'll get crushed with it. So far I've favorite cast iron skillet in wash cloth. Add a few drops ty was hosted by Pam sandwiches , punch, nutcups
dodged three ash trays, two flashlights, a knick-back ahtlf the water too long and now of baby oil to it. Start with Powers. jWlior children and filled with heart candy and
and have been hit by the broom, her fists, and a lot of boob.
the frying area is rusted in your driest areas of skin such youth chairman, and her ~ke . Pam Powers presiceo
I'm not bad, but when I ask to talk things over, lhe uya all spots. I have not been able to as anns, legs, neck and then mother, Mrs. Frank Powers, at tne punch bowl.
teens are alike· nogood - and I don'tdeserve hert!mt.
remove this MISt so please tell body and you'll find very lit· children and youth chainnan
Attending were Mr. and
I can't light back: she's my mother. What do you IIIQut? me if you have a '' cure." - tie towel drying will be need- for the AmeriCan Legion Aux· ·Mrs. Charles Marshall, Pam
ed. I have my oil treaiment mary, Drew Webster Post 39. Powers. Michaella Jones,
NON-VIOLENT
,
' JANE.
DEAR NON :
- DEAR JANE - Those rust this way but no slippery tub Sherri is the "adopted" han- &amp;Indy Marshall. Tarruny
Your mother needs help. She can get it via group~~ such as spots should come off with as when I put oil in the water. dicapped child ol the junior Cooper, Kelly Cooper, Paula
M.E.S.S. (Mothers Emergency Stress Service) or Patents scouring powder and steel Spray on a bit of cologne and unit of the Auxiliary
Klues, Denise Marshall, JimAnonymous (toll-free nwnher 800-42l.m53 ), However, she Wool. AI ways thoroughly dry you will have had a luxury
For the party the hall was mer Soulsby, Cindy Soulsby,
must firSt he persuaded she has a problem: EvldenUy she after washing. I find slipping bath. -LEOTA.
decorated with blue and gold Nata lie Lambert, Robin
DEAR POU..Y - When us- streamers and baUoons. The Campbell, Carla DeMoss,
doesn't think that attacking her daughter with a bueba1l bat a just washed iron Skillet in a
and other heavy objects is child abuse, punishable by !low.
still warm oven is sure way to ing homemade lye soap in my table was covered with a blue Dixie Eblin, Jay Evans, J udy
· Talk to an adult you can trust. Perhaps he or aht will make be sure it is· really dry . If a wastting machine I had trou- and while cloth. and centered Radford, Sally Radford,
this woman Wlderstand the dangers of her temper. ll not, then cast iron skillet is to he stored ble with the pieces or soap with a cake decorated in the Krista! Sisson, Barry Mar·
she should be reported to authorities, for her own good as well for a length of time cOal with sticking to the clothes, going Elvis Presley theme with shall, Angie Hatfield, Carrie
as yours.· HELEN AND SUE
unsalted · fat to prevent through the wringer or mak- replicas or a crown, a record , Bates, Cheryl and Mike Keh·
ing holes in the clothes. To ~ guitar and notes. It was in· nedy, Mrs. Grace Pratt, Mrs.
rusting. -POLLY .
1
RAP:
DEAR POLLY - All sorts prevent this 1 made a draw scribed "Happy Birthday, Veda Davis, Mrs. Marjorie
I have heard girls complain , "Guys just want my body." AU of wrappings are so expen- string bag from a scrap or Sherri."
Goett, Mrs. Ruth Powers,
I can say is, "If you can't say 'no,' you don't belong in the sive so when I buy cheese that material and put the soap
Games were played during Mrs. Gemma Casd, Mrs. Ida
game." Maybe these girls ask for the passes they get. I has each slice wrapped in- pieces in it so I have no more the afternoon with prizes be- Counts and Kerri Counts.
classify females into five types:
di vidually I save these waxed trouble . I also made such a
I. The stuck-ups. They think they're God's gift to men, and squares, wipe them off with a bag (many use nylon net lor
won' t even talk to you unless you're a big shot.
damp cloth, fold, cut in hall this) to hold scraps of bath
2. Quiet and hopeful girls. They wait for guys to make the and · place between ham- soCI.p and it has a cord lung
moves, and sometimes they go unnoticed. But they're very lov· burger patties I am goi ng to enough lor it to hang on the
ing if given the chance.
freeze. They ean also be fixt ures down into 'the water.
3. Good timers. They're on the move and also very loving. washed in hot soap suds, -MID.
Polly will send you one of
Won't stay with one guy; always looking for someone better. If dried and used again as they
her
sig ned thank·you
you're serious, forget h.,r.
are very durable. - MRS.
newspaper eoupon clippers if
4. Teasers. Sometinnes they're so inexperienced they gel into A.S.
Has a ne w· operator, DelnrJs
heavy situations where they get scared and run. Others lead
DEAR POLLY - When you she uses your favori te
Shepard,
stlirllog Wednesday,
guys on then drop them. Not recommended.
have a pair of ruined hose cut Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
8th. Come In aod get
February
5. Sluts. Not bad if you want a one-night stand, without much off about three inches or the her colwnn . Write POLLY'S
a
new
look.
All perms on
POINTERS
in
care
of
this
standing.
toe section ard spread this
special.
If there's another type, let me know. • CO!JJOOE MAN over your, toes before putting newspaper. ·
WHO'S BEEN AROUND
on good hose. You will find
1
25.00 PERMS FOR ... .. .. '22.50
DEAR COlLEGE MAN: .
your toena ils will not cut
SEEN VISITING
If y0u'd get around a little more, you might understand through yout hose m~ar ly so
Mr. and Mrs. Asa and
120.00 PERMS FOR ·...... } 18.50
women can't be stereotyped.- HELEN ·
quickly.
chi ldren, Nikki and Jeff, ofWhen the mattress and box Bradbury Circleville spent
Open Monday thru Saturday. Call Diana, Deloris
C.M.:
springs will not stay evenly the weekend hei'e visiting rus
or Janet ·at 773-stOI.
... And you'd meet a lot rnore interesting women. How would on the bed put a thin piece or pa ren ls, Mr. and Mrs .
you like it if a girl, without giving you a chance, pegged you in foam, such as a mattress pro- Cha rles Bradbury, Midone.of the four categories labeled " undesirable"? ·SUE
tector, between them. I am dleport.

I

GIVE
The
.You'D feel good
getting one.
You'l feel good
giving one.

The Speldet Dig ital Watch Is an
extratpeela l t~ltt

flat a gift

Beeau.. 1t'1 not

of time, II 'I 1n elegant
gift of - I - ) IOO.
.

I

Thtte art 2 W\Jmtn't LCO 't, with
lhll tim. alwlyw ahowlng. Both ate
1 unique blend of dttbte }ewelry
and IOphlt11CatM Metronlct.
The Sptldat Digital Watch. lln't It
UmeyoutOOk a look alone?

GOESSLER'S
JEWELRY
STORE

ROCK SPRINGS Grange,

Court St.

Pomeroy

·~
..

Subject to cancellation in the
event ol inclement weather.

SHERR! MARSHAlL

~

.
..
-~'

'

.

BREAKFAST SET
women ol other churches in
The annua l Lenten the area have been invited to
breakfast at Trinity Church attend. There will be a prowill be held at 7:45 a.m. gram following the breakfast.
Wednesay mqrning. The Those planning to attend are
breakfast will be served by asked to contact Mrs. Phillip
the women ol the church and .• Meinhart, 992·2383.

.

WE HAVE SOMETHING NEW FOR YOU
•

(

FRESH WHOLE BARBECUED CHICKEN
AND BARBECUED SPARERIBS

!RVR·II!IOIR'.B

\

i

DONE RIGHT HERE IN THE STORE.

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE

TRY ONE -

YOU'LL LIKE Ill

We are building a metal workshop i.n our ba ckyard .
Will my hazard policy cover damage to the work shop?
Both t he standard Fire Policy and tt-le Homeowner's
Pol icy will cover loss to the workshop. The coverage
ava ilabl e would be for the same per ils (fire, win d.

BONELESS

~~~~~.........~~.129
~~~~:..~. . .!!,! }39
~~E~C:.. . . . . ~:.9 g~

stor m, etc .) as insured on t he descr ibed dwellln g.(your'
hom e). Ead'l pol icy lim its the a mount of covera ge to 10

per cent .of the am ount In sured on the d welling. Th is
extension of coverage wi ll not app ly if t he workshop i s
designed for uSe in a com mer cia I or ma nufacfu r lng
operat ion . It is onl y insured If its use is solel y per sonal .
If yo u need more coverage tha n Is provided by the
automatic 10 per cent extension available with the
standard Fire Pol iCy or Homeowner 's Polley,
additi ona l amounts of coverag e can be.added to ei ther

BONELESS

type pol icy.

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE -SERVICE ·
214 E. Main

TtJi! Insurance Store
992 -S 130

Pomer::oy, 0 .

Mt/.at~~witf.,a~~-

GOLDEN ISLE

Vc\Jentine Love Unes
·

· ASpecial Feature of The Daily Sentinel on V*'line's Day

FRUIT
COCKTAiL
BARTLETT 29 oz.
PEARS •••••••~~ •••

8-16 oz.

.

COLA ...... ~~~..

~

~LL

STAR

19

1% .FORTIFIED

,.

GOLDEN ISLE

DAIRY SPECIAL
TROPICANA

MILK........~~~~~.

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

'h ~lion gg~

GRAPEFRUIT JUICE .. .'....~!.. :.. .

TROPIC Ill
~

MACARONI
7114 oz.
boxes
&amp;CHEESE
'DINNERS •••·........ .........~ ••-.'

5

~

PRODUCE SPECIALS

GOLDEN ISLE HALVES OR SLICED

GOLDEN ISLE

TOMATO 3 ~;L~
CATSUP...... .'... ~ ...........

SAY "I LOVE YOU" WITH A
$1.00 SENTINEL VALENTINE AD.
(Umit 16 Words-Sizes Illustrated Below)

Social
Calendar

~~f".&lt;?i!ill)

·. ~~~·\.)

'nJESDAY
POMEROY CHAMBER
Tuesday at noon 11 the Meigs
IM. Shirley !Awll, Welcome
WagQn field m1111pr, will be
speaker.

FREE CERVICAL c:ucer
clinic at Heath . United
Methodiat Church Wed·
nesday lift...-; for appointment call ftl·7131 ,
daytime; ~Jnp, ln-N32.

PRICES GOOD TMRU SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 11TH.
WE ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS.
NO DEALERS PLEASE.
OPEN MON.-SAT. 9 am - 9 PM
OPEN SUNDAY 9 AM · 6 PM

~

project of sellinll llChl bulbs
was completed. The troop
raised about PtiO throlllh the
project. PriJN wert Clven to ·
the best sales penona with
Terry Snowden and Mike
Ha'Uield vylns lor lint,
winning knlveo, and ~eCC~nd
place winner, Danny Davis,
also received a knife. Money
from the project will be"'laed
to buy equipment lor a trip to
Kings Island.
David Barr wu awarded
his second clall and ph)'llcal
fitness sktll award. It wu
also aMoWlced thai a fatherson campout wW be held later
thIs month at Camp
Klashuta.
Adult Jeadel'l aUondlnc the
meeting were Bob Arms,
Larry Edwardl, Jeff Couch,
Dan Will, Don Thomu and
Hank Cleland. AU boys between 11 and 15 are lilvlted to
Join the ti-oop. The n..t
meeting will be held at 7:30
p.m. Wednesday at the Senior
Citizens Center In Pomeroy.

SUTTON TOWNSHIP
Trustees regular mewtq, 8
p.m. Tuesday at Sfl'*cuse
Munldpal Bllildln&amp;
SOUTHERN JUNIOR Hilh
Athletic Boostll'l, 7::10 p.m.
Tuesday at junior high ·
buUdJn«; pl1111lor lllnquet to
be made; aU parenlllllked to
atiend.
- XI GAMMA -MU Olapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30'
Tuesday night at the Columbia Gas Co. office.' Annie
Chapman and Matllyn
Anderson to have the cultural
report, Becky Allder•• and
Karen Goins to be Wn•es.
There will be 1 l'ldpe auction.
POMEROY CHAPTER 116,
O.E .S., N5 Tuaday nllhl at
the Pomeroy Maaonlc
Temple.
WEDNEBDAY
POMEROY
MID·
DLEPORT Liona Club,
Wed"'sday noon, at the
Meip Inn. Allllonl lil'fled to
attend.

•

7:30 Thursday at the hall.

=!!~

SP€1D€L
DigHal Watch

•

traveler,
as
speaker.
Reservations ror dinner
meeting by calling 992-5845,
949-2325 or 949-2723, Meigs
County; 446-0946, Gallipolis;
773-5768, Mason County.

,

Plans for the observance of
Scout month were made
when Pomeroy Boy Scout
Troop 249 met recently at the
Senior Citizens Center in
Pomeroy.
Scouts will prepare a
scrapbook and a window
display. Gary EUis of the
Pomeroy Emergency Squad
conilucted a class on first aid
for the troop.
It was report~ that a

· Sentinel,

' TIIURSDAY
POMEROY CHAPTER
Women 's AglowFellowship, 7
p.m. Thursday at Meigs IM
with Gisela Steven.s, world

JANET'S
HAIR-GOROUND

Scouts plan activities

5-The

To My Wife, Ann ...

To Mom and Dad ...

Aff er 14 wond erf u l
year s of m arriage, I'm
still head.over -heels in
love w ith ydu!
Walter Z.

We cou ldh' t ha ve' picked
a nicer pai r of parents i n
ihe world ! Ha ve a
Happy Valentine' s Day !
Mike and Sue

&lt;""")

COUPON

HEFTY

NO. 255
15 ct. pkg. .

I
I
,I

~~

.lI

WRITE YOUR MESSAGE BELOW AND BRING IT
OR MAIL IT WITH s1.00 BY FEBRUARY 11TH TO THE
DAILY SENTINEL, P. 0. BOX 729, POMEROY, 0.
16 WORDS Sl,OQ.-CASH WITH ORDER

1.
5.

9.
1 13.

2.
6.
10.
14.

3. ·
7.
11.
15.

$}59

NO. 305

W/C

lb. can

'

18 oz. box

W/C

Coupon Expires Feb. 11, 1978

Coupon Expires Feb. 11 , 1978

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

8·---~-

12. _ _ __
16. _ __ _

35/8 oz.

boxes

89~

I

NO. 105
W/C

Coupon Expires Fe b. 11 , 1978

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

TWIN CITY GA EWAY

W/C

W/C ·

CARESS

NO. 105 . . 59~
12 oz. can .

'\

BATH SOAP

I,

'

32 OZ. BOTILE

89~

NO. 155
W/C

.2 59¢
·

BARS

.

W/C

Coupon Expires Feb. 11, 1978

TWIN CITY
COUPON

I

BANQUET SUPPERS
Chicken &amp; Dumplings, Salisb!IIJ Steak,
Turkey, Beef 'stew, Macaroni-Cheese

ORANGE PLUS

TWIN CITY•GATEWAY

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

'·

·~

COUPO N

· coupon Expires Feb, 11,1978

Coupon Expires Feb. 11, 1978

•

79¢

NO. 205

BIRDSEYE

MARGARINE QUARTERS

49$

33 oz. bottle

~

BLUE BONNn

pkg.

COUPON

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

COUPON

l~b.

NO. 155
28 oz. jar

Coupon Expires Feb. 11 , 1978

Coupon Expires Feb. 11. 1978

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

THE DAILY SENTINEL

PEANUT BUTTER

DISH DETERGENT

FABRIC SOFTENER

Coupon Expires Feb. 11, 1978

1...·----------....o....o--~------~--------------·--·-·-·--·--·--·-·--~--·J
PHONE 992·2156

SKIPPY

LUX

INSTANT PUDDING

4

W/C

COUPON

COUPON

JELLO

NO. 155

,

89~

NO. 155

COUPON

4. --- - -

-

SUPER SUGAR CRISP

SUPER TRASH.BAGS

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

I
I
II
II

COUPON

W/C

2~b. pkg.

COUPON

RITZ CRACKERS
12 oz. box

gg·~

LIMIT TMREE

69¢

W/O

Coupon Expires Feb. 11, 1978

· TWIN CITY

'

TEWAY

Y

Coupon Exp ires Feb. 11,1978

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

.,

W/C

�s- The Daily Sentinel,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Feb. 7,1978
:::
~

"

WildcatsthumpAuburn

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sporla Edltor

Conference record to ~I and
United PresslnternaUonal
Kentucky's
college their overall mark to 17-1.
Lee, who scored Z5 points to
basketball rivals are only
ball-kidding when they say Ulke up the slack for the
playing the Wildcats is starters, helped break open
similar to playing a Na Uonal the game when Kentucky
Basketball AssociaUon learn. scored 10 straight points at
What they mean is that the start of the second half.
Kentucky has so many out- Kentucky, looking either
that sluggisll or overconfident, led
sta!lding players
stopping - or holding ill by only 4:&gt;-40 at hal!Ume
check - Kyle Macy or even against a team playing less
one or the other four starters than .500-baU this season.
Jack Givens scored 22
may not be enough, And the
nation's topranked college points and Nick Robey had 20
!£am can always throw a for Kentucky while Mike
James Lee at their rivals Mitchell has 26 for Auburn.
when the going is rough for
Georgetown snapped a twogame losing streak with a nthe game-t011ame stars.
That' s what happened 55 win over Stonehill College
Massa c husetts .
Monday night when Auburn of
held Macy to 17 points, but Georgetown had only a 27-23
the Wildcats cruised to a 104- lead at tlie half and a 34-33
81 victory, anyway, running edge with 15 minutes left
their Southeastern when the Ho~as pulled away.

NEW YORK (UP! ) - JeanGuy Talbot, the first-year coach
of the New York Rangers, has a reputation for being calm and
patient, capable of making the best of any situation because he
has been in professional hockey 25 year~ and has seen the puck
take a lot of crazy bounces.
Right now, he 's having a little trouble living up to his
reputation, ttmugb._ , .
.
.
He's still patient but you wouldn't exactly call him ca lm.
How can he possibly be with the Rangers wallowing aroWJd
in last place in their division, showing only one victory in their
last eight games and his job no more swble than the price of
frozen orange juice at your neighborhood supermarket?
A week or sa. ago, Sonny Werblin, the new head man at
Madison Square Garden, Bill Jennings , the Rangers' president ~ aml John Ferguson, the team's general manager, met to
discuss the Rangers' situaUon. They aU agreed it wasn 't good .
Talbnt is Ferguson 's man , the one he hand-picked to replace
him as coach this season, and the Rangers' GM spoke up in his
behalf during the meeting with Werblin and Jennings.
Ferguson feels Talbot has been taking a lot of undue criticism
from the.press in New York and that he isn 't actually wblame
for the !£am's lowly estate at the moment.
Ferguson is an old l£ammal£ of Talbot's, both having played
together with the Montreal Canadiens during the '60s . So far ,
Ferguson has been allowed to have complet£ say about who the
Rangers' coach should be, but there are signs all this could
UoltedPressloternatlonal
change rather suddenly.
If you counted the Bowling
Werblln has committed himself to making the Rangers . Green Falcons out of the Midwirmers.
Ameri ca n Conference
He attended the last game they played with Colorado Sunday basketball race a couple of
night at the Garden , the only game they won in their last eight weeks ago, you· better look
starts, and had they lost that game, even Ferguson wouldn't aga in.
have been able to save Talbnt 's job any longer.
The Falcons, ll-2 in league
Werblln isn't a hatchet man ; he's a man of action, the kind play just two weeks ago, won
wbn goes out and gets whoever he feels it takes to turn a loser their fourth straight contest
into a winner .
Monday night - a 68-66
All the most highly regarded coaches in the NHL are decision over Ohio University
gainfully employed at the moment and it would be extremely -to move into third place iri
difficult, if not impossible, to get any of them for the Rangers, the MAC standings with a 5-3
ool never sell Sonny Werblin short.
mark.
It wouldn't surprise me at all if at the end of this season ,
The BG winning streak is
Werblin did everything he could to bring in someone like AI its longest since the 1974-75
Arbour of the New York Islanders or Fred Shero of the season.
Plliladelphia Flyers to ooach the Rangers . With Sonny
"I'm a very happy coach,"
Werblin, nothing is impossible. He might even go after Scotty said BG 's John Weinert. " We
Bowman of the Canadiens - and wind up getting him, too. have t4 kids who really
That's the kind of operator Werblin is. I can easily picl\lre him believe in themselves."
saying to.Fergoson, "go get me the best man there is in hockey
Rosie Barnes and Ron
and don't let money stand in your way." Werblin acts while Hammye combined for 38
others merely sit around and mull it over.
points Moinday night to pace
Meanwhile, Talbot 's job with the Rangers shapes up as one the Falcon victory at Bowling
of those day-to-day propositions and he tries not to pay too Green.
'
much attention to the stories, which say his job is hanging by a
Barnes hit a career high
thread.
with 19 points and also· made
"Who would be happy to see that kind of thing in the paper?" five assists, while Hanuitye
he says. " You have to live with It , though. To me, hockey is a poured in another 19 points
good life. I wouldn't change it for anything. SomeUmes it's and grabbed 10 rebounds .
tough on the family, though."
George Marshall aided in the
Jean Guy-Talbot left his home in Cap de Ia Madeleirie, Falcon effort with 11 points
QJebec, to play hockey when he was still a kid . He broke in and 12 rebounds.
with Three Rivers when he was only 16 and he played in the
"We came into the game
same junior league with Jean Betiveau, Bernie Geoffrion and knowing we liad to stop
Dickie Moore. Coaching the Rangers has been his biggest plum Hammye, but we didn't
so far and he doesn'twant to lose it.
succeed," said OU Coach
"Let's face It , I like it very, very much," he says about the Dale Bandy.
'
job. "The greatest saUsfacUon I get is every time we win a
"It was a good win for
game. I want to see the team win so much .... "
them, " he said. "They took
some things away from us
offensively and they played
very intelligently."
Colleve Basketball Results
Midwe s. l
By United Prns International
The Falcons pulled off the
An drsn 82, Ear lhm 60
Ent
Augsbg 83, 51. Jno . 73
win despite the strong
CrngJe.MIIn 75, Cse w stn 70
Bo!!ll St , 88, Kent St . 6.4
shooti ng of OU's leading
Cath u . 89, Boston u . 79
Bwlng Grn 68 , Oli iq U. 66
, Geotown 77 Stonehill 55
Ferris 65 , N . Mich . 6-4
forward • Jim Joyce Who
Geo . Wash 96, Stet son 73
_,.
Heidlbg 78. Woosrr 69
scored
24 points and Steve
St. Fran 71 , Siena 63
\~
I ll. St . ·84 , 0 . Rbrfs 71
St . Vince 82, Cal. Pa . 73
L O}IOia 75 , W . Mi c h . 61
Scaggs who chipped in with
W&amp;J sti, Grove City SJ
0 . Wslyn 68, Muskngm 67
18.
South
Otterbn BS, Mar iefta 66
Appy St . 81, F urman 74
Bowling Green now has a 7T ri -State 61, Grace 56
Berry 86, Ga. Coli 81
Urbana 76, Malone 71
11
record overall, while OU is
Cu mbrl ne1 11 6, Union 105
Wavne 68 , NorThwood 60
lll-8, 3-5 in the MAC.
·oevidson 88 , Citadel 81
SDlithwesl
E . Car. 13 , Chtnooga 72
E . T e'll 51 106, Anglo St. 80
At Muncie, Ind., Monday
E . Tenn . 69, A . Peav 6~
H . Payn e 19, Ab Chr is 62
night,
Ball State thumped
E . Ky . 78 , W. Ky . 74
Langston 93, Te-.. Co li 92
Fla . 51. 95. MmphS St . 89
McMurry 78, Austi n 15
Kent State 88-64 in another
Ga . 57, MISS ISSippi 56
N .M , St . 83, lnd , St . 82
MAC contest.
·
Ky . Wslyn 86, SIU ·Edsvl 81
N . Te11 St. 101 , Cntnary 96
Kentucky 104, Auburn 81
Junior Center Randy
NW Ok,a . 62, Cameron 58
Ll11mar 65, La . Tech 48
Ok . Chris 72 , Ark ,.LR 64
Boarden scored a career high
Lncln Mem . 105, King 83
SW Tex St. 95, S. F . Austn 74
Lib Bapt 88, St. Pau l's 54
24 points. and grabbed 18
Te xas A&amp;l 83, S. Hous St . 80
LSU 101, Tennessee 86
Tulsa 48, Drake 47
rebounds as the Cardinals led
McNeese St. 91 . sw La . 83
W . N .M . 82, ~ Ia Fe Coli 61
from start to finish.
Mid Tenn. 37 , Morehed 36
West

Craig Shelton scoced 19 of his
game-high 24 points in the
second
half
to · lead
Georgetown's surge.
In other games, Georgia
nipped Mississippi, 57-56,
Vanderbilt scored a 5!1-57
triumph over Florida,
Lo uisiana State topped
Te nnessee, 101-86, a nd
Florida State whipped
M&lt;!mphis State, gs.ag_
Lavon Merce hit a layup
with four seconds remaining
giving Georgia its win over
Mississippi, soph guard
Tommy~ Springer tallied two
free throws with three
seconds left in the second
overtime lifting Vanderbilt to
its win l.SU won easily with
Kenny Higggs scoring 23
points and Harry Davis' 23
points led Florida State to its
victory.

Malone upset

7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Feb. 7,197&amp;

Senior Citizens' scenes
Gelusil Liquid

LOMA
Water Pail

12 oz.

11 Ots.

~~i~.-:.~: ... $149

$1.89Value
F.I.P. Price •• ,

99¢

Dow
Oven Cleaner
16oz.

~~i.~.':."~: ... $109

Falcons edge OU J68

Nwbrry 81 , USC -Sptnbg 69
UNC -.;,shvl Bol, Woffrd 15
NELa . S7, NW La . 56
Roanoke 64 , Bluefld 63
Vandy 59, Florida 57
W. Car. Sol, Marshll 52

n

Grade school results

' E1ghth
. Grade
The Eastern
played three games recently,
winning one and losing two .
Lalli Thursday they played a
good floor game and lost a
nip-and-tuck contest to
vlsit~g Federal Hocking 4443. A poor night at the foul
line proved to be the deciding
factor for the locals.
Eastern hlid fallen behind
30-22 by halftime, but in the
aecond half they came out
olonning and outscored their
opponents in the last two
quarters, but still fell one
point short. Tim Dill led
Eastern with his 15 points
wblle Greg Cole added seven.
Glass tossed in 20 for the
winners.
E
1111912
FH
141668
But on Saturday, ('A&gt;ach
Arch Rose's Eagles won a big
one from rival Southern at
the Eastern High Gym in a
convincing fashion, 46 -34 .
Eutern had a taller telim
and used some pressure
defense to down the boys
from cross county. Cole led

aU ~Corers with 13.
Eastern waa in control all
lhe way as they led lo-5 at the
first period buzzer, outscored
Southern 7.V in the second
period, and then padded their
lead by netting 17 big points
in the third period to coast in

Boarden ' s

E Ore. 69. Wrnr Pai: 61

Hwaii-Hio 95 , Alska -Anch 77
Montana 88, A 1A 87
..,_
Pac Lulh 99, Whtwrth 86
Portland 77 , Hawaii 6.4
St. Mrtns 68, Cent Wsh 59
Utah St , 93, Mont . St .

for the win.
Mike Russell and Dill also
hit double figures for the
winners with 12 points apiece.
Richard Wolfe had eleven for
the losers while Kent Wolfe
added ten.
s
561013
E
10 7 17 12
On Monday Eastern
travelled to Belpre anf fell5235to the hosts. East~ni led 1715 at the half, but the pressing
defense of Belpre wore down
the visitors in the last half to
allow the winners to breeze in
for the win.
Dill had 15 for Eastern
while Cole added nine . Reed
led the winners with l9. Next
Eastern game is Wednesday

when Hannan Trace comes
in.

performance .

helped offset the 30-point
effort KSU's Burrell McGhee.
After a 2-iiU lie, Ball State
raced ahead to as much as a

14-point lead in the first half, .
then grabbed a 22-point lead
·with 15 minutes left in the
second half. The Cardinals
sent in subs, and Kent State
closed to nine, but Ball State
scored eight unanswered
points to pull the game out.
Hall State is now 8-0 overall
and 4-:i in the MAC while Kent
State is 5-14 and in Ohio
Athletic Conference action,

Heidelberg surprised
Woostrr 78-09, Ohio Wesleyan
upset Muskingum 68-67 and
Otterbein dumped Marietta
85-66.
At Tiffin, Chris Reichert
scored 22 points and Scott
Patterson added 20 as Heideiberg handed Wooster its
second loss in OC play.
Heidelberg jumped out to a
34-29 halftime lead and held
on for its ninth win against 10
losses overall and fourth
victory against a like number
of losses in the loop.
Wayne Allison pumped in 13
points for Wooster, now 14-4
overall and 6-2 in the conference .
Don Brough dumped in 30
points as host Otterbein
breezed past Marietta for its
sixth victory against three
losses in the OAC.
Otterbein took a 2!-20 lead
on Ed William's tip-in with
7:16 left in t he first half, and

NI:W YORK

Uni I
Board

The
lntern&amp;tional
CoacheS
co llege

e d Press
of

(UPI)

' be s k etbl"ll rat ings w ith won -lost

through games of
Sunday, Feb. S, and number of
first -place votes In parentheses :
records

Te"am

1. Kentucky (37) {16-1 J
2. Marquette {1) {11 -2)
3. Arkansas (1 ) &lt;21 - l l
4. UCLA ( II ( 16·21
s. Notre Dame ( 16-Jl
6. Kansas (18 -JJ
7. North Carolina (18-Al
8. New Mexico· ( 1J (17 -21

Louisville 114-3)
to . Michig an St . 06-Jl
11 . DePaul (18-2 )

9.

Points
406
327

'1.77

2'8
225
148
138
125

100

n

30
12, Te~~oas (18 -3)
26
13. Purdue C13 -6J
21
14. Florida St . 116-31
. 18
15. Georgetown (1S:4 )
11
16. (tiel WakeForst ( 13-S)
10
16. (tie) Detroit (17-1)
10
18, Nebraska (18 -J)
9
19 . Virgin ia {1S-3l
a
20 . San Francisco 07 -4)
7
· Note : Bv agreement with the
American Basketball Coaches

TliiSTLEDOWN
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
(UP!) - ThistledoWII Race
Track will not open its 1978
thoroughbred racing season
March 3 as scheduled, it was
reported Monday.
Track general manager
Assoc iatiOn , teams on probation
George Jones, according to by
the NCAA are Inelig ible for
The Cleveland Press, has top 20 and .national char'npion consldtrat ton by the UPI
sent a letter to the Ohio ship
Board of Coaches . Those teams
Racing Commlssion in cu rrently on probation for 1977"
Columbus requesting a delay 6re: C ~ n t e nary, Clemson,
Hawaii, Minnesota, Nevada ·LU
in opening the track.
Vegas, Western Carolfna .

.,

which he· could not be traded
- Oak'! and, Detroit, San
Francisco, Montreal,
Houston
and
Atlanta.
However, Paul pointed out
those l£rrns could be changed
if Manning agreed.
"!want to point out we've
Ullked with every club about
possible deals," Paul said.

"There ls no bearing down on
any particular deal. To make
a big deal you've got to give
up something big. ·
"We will make the first one
that looks really good to us,"
said Paul. ''We're not going
to hold off a deal in
expectation of making
another. That way you make
no deals."
Seghi sail\ Tribe officials
had not talked Monday with
Texas owner Brad Corbett,
who had been reported
interested in obtaining
Manning and relief pitcher
Jim Kern.
Keating has charged the
Indians with breaching Manning's contract when Seghi
offered a larger-than...Uowed
cut for this season.

Through rain and hail, ice
and snow, thick or thin. We're
not talking about mailmen
this time, we are commending the Retired Senior
Volunteers who have faithfully delivered hot lunches
during our recent bad
weather for the homedelivered meal program
funded through COAD.
These ind i.viguals
Maurice .Lou, Early Roush,
_J_erome _and Arrn Cook,
Kennlt, Gene and Dayton
McElro y, Willi am Quivey
and Blythe Theiss are an
example or the caring senior
citizens in Meigs County.
If the warming tre~d
continues, next week's activities here at the Center will
be back on tbeir regular
schedules. It would be a good
idea to call the Center at 9927886 and check to be sure. ·
The February newsletter
will be ppblished later this
month. You will be receiving
one in the mail in a couple of
weeks.
On Thursday, February 9
beginning at 11 A.M., Charles
Williamson of the Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric

J&amp;J

'100

Stimudents

Company will be at the
Center to speak on the energy
crises. If you have compl8ints or suggestions for
Columbus ~nd Southern, this
is your chance to be heard.
The Meigs County Council on
Aging extends their thanks to
the Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Company, the
Columbia Gas Company, and
Genera l Telephone Company
for providing speakers for the
Center.
Those or you tbat applied
for the fuel adjustment
recently have or will receive
a second form which asks you
to certify that you have spent
$87.50 on fuel by a certain
date.
Howard Frank, Auditor,
states that when you receive
this form, put the day's date
on it, sign your qame and
address and return the form
to fhe 'l'ax l;ommission Offi ce. If you have questions
about this form, you may call
the Auditor's Office at 9922698 or the Information &amp;
Referral Office at the Senior
Citizens Center at 992-7311.
For those of you without a
driver 's license,

00

an

iden·

COAD Senior Nutr i tion
Program Menu for February
6fh through February 10,
1978 .
MONDAY
Baked

Spaghetti.

tossed

sa lad .

pineapple

slices ,

sugar

cookies (2).

Butter . Italian

bread, milk .
TUESDAY - Braised Beef
with
Gravy,
mashed
potatoes, buttered peas and
carro ts , apricots , bread .
butter, milk ,

WEDN ESDAY - Liver and
Onions, AuGra.tin potatoes,

buttered green beans, apple

crisp, rOIL butter, mill&lt; .
THURSDAY - Sal,.bvry
Steak , baked potato, pea ch

sala d. buttered beets, rice
pvdding with raisins, bread,
butter , m ilk.

FRIDAY - Chicken sa lad
sa ndwi ch, potato ch ips,
brussel sprou t s, choco late
cake with icing , milk.
Co ffee, tea . buttermilk and
jui ce served daily .

TRADE-IN

On All Living Room Suites

25s

MASON FURNITURE

--

..-

, _"(!

Packettes 50s

94' Value

F.I.P. Price-..

weekend here visiting her

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

. .,.- Sucaryl
. . ...

·~::~-;;

,-a;,~ ..
~ I. _r-!'-·

HERE VIS,ITING
Mrs. Patrida Circle and
children, Marianne tmd
Mark, Colwnbus, spent the

Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sal·8:30 til 5:00 Thursday Til 12 Noon

'

-r~SUCAI\"'l

29

¢

· Herman Grate
Mason, W. Va .

773-5592

•-

.

-

·-· .

parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. E.
Blakeslee, and Mrs. Mary
Circle, Racine.

--- -• -•

-~--

PA RTY HELD
The birthday of Chesler
Knight of PomeroY was
celebrated Saturday. Joining
Mr. and Mrs. Kni ght fur din-

Ch_ildhood
Childhood Ins . Sent eal
"One or 1he newest and
most succt!lisful baHles
against l'ancer is giying
stricken youngsters years or
exira life and helping lhem
cope with the disease ," says
S. Michael, pubh&lt;· informaUon chairman of the
Meigs Unit of the American
Cancer Society .
" ACS resean:h tunas nave
helped develop childhood
ca ncer intu a new medical
specialty," she adds .
In 1976, the Soricly
awarded 140 research graniS,
tot aling 18 .6 million . , (n
scient ists workht,:.t in this

~

ill.

ner were thtdr son and
d;mg hter-in-law, Mr . and
Mrs. Dick Knight, Bellaire,
and Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Matlack . Mr. and Mrs. Jen•y
Swartz and ' Toby and Mrs .
Dorothy Young, Middleport ,
came during tllC evening fur

commg
.

:::::::::;:::~::::.~=*::--:.'#.::*·~)lJIIllll&amp;'Cilll§

':I::I

Events
Fltlll!\ Y

RETUHN Jouatl1an Meigs
Cha pt er. [) .A. H. , meeting
1::W p.m. Friday at Grace
EpQScopal Purish House,
il'e c:rcam and cake. A
decorated ice &lt;.:ream cake Pomeroy with Smithsonian
was brought to the hunured · £ilm , "Por trait • of lhe
guests

by

his

son

and

President s" &lt;1nd a silent

daughter-in-law.

a uction to be featurrd .
li ostesse s, Mrs. Dwig ht.
Milhoan, Mrs . Thom as

ARCADIA, Calif . (UP!) The 1978 George Woo lf
Memorial Jockey Award symbol of riding excellence
at Santa Anita Park - has
bee n awarded to leading
jockey Darrel McHargue:
In public voting that
concluded Sunday, the 23year-old Oklahoman
ou tpolled youngster Steve
Cauthen, his closest rival, by
more than lwo-lo-one margin .
Other nominees were Chris
McCarron, Jorge Tejeira and
Ron Turcotte.

Ewing, Mrs. John Hose and
Mrs. Gerald Powell.

~;1ncer

Sellards ·n amed

field .
"Now the ACS has embarked on a broad prog ram of
physical and psy chulu~icai
support for young cancer
patients and their families ."
Michael says.
Included are information
and referral scn •ic•cs, somt•
ri nandal su pport, transportation to medical centers,
and a program of r('('ruttin~:t
donors of blood - nftcn used
in trC'atlng children with
cancer .
Cancer strikes many mort~
adu ll s than t•hildren . Yt•t
cancer kills more children
bctwr~n the ages of 3 und 14
·than ;my other diSease . The
brain, kidneys and other vital
organs frcqu eutly are tHrgets
nf childh ood cum::er.

• •
to new position
POINT .PLEASANT
James I... Farley, F.xecutive

Direcl or of Plcasanl Valley
Hospital, toduy unnoun('ed
the appoilllment of Michael
G . Sellards as Assistant
Executive Director to be in
charge of tht• 1ww I leusant
Valley Hospi tal Extended
Care Facility .
l.n this new pusition,
Sella.rds will have respunsibi!i!ies for (he &lt;ln y-to~lny
operation of the rucilit)' Hml
will report to Fnrlcy wlw . is
the Exet'utivt• IJin•dor uml
responsible to the.' Bourd of
Trustees fur both lhc hospita l
" Nut lom~ ngo, mo~1 young ~md the new mud\•rn 100 brd
c~mce r patients died in a
Wlil. Sellards nuw becomes
matter of mtmths. " Miclmcl Assistant Ext•cutivc Dil't.'t'tm·
says. Today, 50 percent of tht~ un the same l('VCI as Mr . Gary
children wi!h the most Park whose rcspunsillilitil'S
com mon form nf leukemia are with Uu~ hospital.
(acute lymphocytic) live fi ve
Sellards is ~~ 1111tivr of
yea rs or '"tnorc, when J;h1l'll Huntlngtu11. Wt•st. Vir~in i11
uptimum treatment. A ;md wns cdUl'Hic!l at Mnrnumber of them have passed Shu ll University . BcfLJrt'
the lO·ycar murk, achieving joining the Pleasunt VFIII('y
what many physi(•i;!ns l-lospih11 tuff us Busirwss
consider a cure.
'' Advnnccs
in
chcnwthcrapy
&lt;llld
radia tiun
therapy have tlnn.e mut.:h tu
bring about thi.s dr&lt;JmHt ic
i11 11Jruve rncnt,"
Midmel

8! 15 p.m.

CANCER CLIN IC Wednesday,
Middl ep ort
Methodist Church. Afternoon
sessions on l y . Anyone
wishing to make an appointment are to call 992-753 1
da ily or 992-5832 evenings.

Huntingt on

ll uSJ1ltnl

Supl'r\'isnr ami ·lu .:;u rnncl• '
Manu~rr .
'
Since fOtHin ~ tu Poinr
Plrasnnt, St'l lunls has IJ\•('n

llt'tive

loru l
u 1· ~an izat h• ns .
litIHCIUber or tla•
1-'\(•nsn nt HolUi'Y l 'lnh,
pnst

i11

St..'LTt' llll'\

lllli\'t"~ l" ~i ty

NHJ- Standings
By United Press International
Campbell Conference
P11trick Division
W. L. T. Pts.
NY Islanders
32 11 8 72
Ph il adelphia
30 12 10 70
Atlanta
20 20 12 52
NY Ranoers
17 25 10 44·
Smythe Division'
W. L. T. Pts.
Chicago
21 17 12 54
Vancouver
14 23 1J 41
Colorado
11 27 12 34
St. Louis
11 33 7 29
Minnesota
11 J.ct 5 27
Wales Conference
Norris Division
W. L. T. Pts. ·
Montr eal ·
35 7 8 78
Los Angeles
22 18 10 54
Pittsburgh
17 23 11 45
Oetrolt
18 23 B .4.4
Wa!.hington
9 33 11 29
Adar'ns Division
W. L . T . Pts.
Boston

33 12 7
Buffalo
29 10 13
Toronto
76 15 10
Cleveland
18 J l s
Monday's Result
Phlla 2, St. Louis 0
. Tuesday's Games
Minn at NY Islanders
Pitt1burgh at Colorado
Detroit at Los Angeles
Atlanta at Vancouver
Wtdntsdly's Gimes
Minnesota at NY R:o!lngers
St . Louis at Toronto
Buffl!Jo o!lt Cleveland
NY. lslenders at Chicago

73
71
62
oil

ST. LOUIS (UP!)
Defenseman Len Fr!g was
sent Monday by the St. Louis
Blues to their Salt Lake City'
fann team in \he Central
Hockey League.
Frig was acquired by the
Blues from the Cleveland
Bar;ons last August and had
one goal and three assists
with 45 penalty minutes In 30
games this season.

-

FRESH &amp; LEAN

GROUND .

Oil Of Olay

ruunt)'

n 1HI pn st

tl. lllllllli'

l 'lunni.J\'1'

of

('mn-:

lllUI'I 'C .

St'\lanll'i. hi s wtfP Ht•lty. :
and thl'ir sun HolJt' r! , Hl\l ' urw ·
and a hulf. li \•t• on ( 'lwm llt' r

Drive in Point l'ku:-a nt ·Hnd 1'
Hti\'IUI .SHtTt• cl llt•i u I {';t tlu dil'
( 'hllrl'h Wht•n • hL• IS llfi:H IIist.

(Ji

Beea use of the relat ive
rarity of childhood cancer, it
is dealt with must cffedively
in lar~e ca nter cent ers ,
where more cases ca n be

· observed and experience
ga ined by phy sicians. 'l'hl'
nearest center fur ~·oung
ca ncer patients in Md~s is
Ohio Sta t e Univ e r sit y in
Columbus. Ohio. If yu u 11 ccd

any as sistance co ntact 1he
Meigs Cancer Snciet y !J!I2, 7531.

PHONE 992-5120

Davis Insurance Ageney
Across from the Cour t HQu se in Pomeroy
B1ll Qui ckel, Roy Shepherd, Jeannie Starc her
A Notary Service &amp; Com plete Bonding Service

---

•

$1 .50Value
F.I.P.Prlce •.•

SUPERIORS
ALL MEAT

79¢,

ALLMEAT

BUCKET
STEAK

.

WIENERS.......~~-

79~

Bag Of 26 Asst.

·79¢

F.I.P. Price...

'" "

~~~~~ . . . . .~~~4 9¢
HlrMMADE .

s"~[)

99¢

......... :.s~.

s

SPONGES

.$1.89~alue

79¢

SLICED

NO WASTE

$129

SUPERIORS

1-LB.

BOLOGNA ...~~~~ .

.

ROUND•••...•.•~~·•.

1 oz.

.

LB.

FIVE DAY PADS
75s
$1 .59 Value

7

NAIL CLIPPER

-

Gem66B

'~.~~~--- 25¢

We Accept Federal Food Stamps-We Reserve The Right To Lmit Qua1ntiti'es-...J

:~j~-':.~~=- .. 99¢

DAIRY SPECIALS

t1.89 Value

HOMO MILK .••••• ~ •••••••••••••'~:~H~~. 79~
lfz GALLON $139
2% LOWFAT MILK ••••••••••••••••••••
VALLEY BEL).
. GALLON '129
CHOCOLATE DRINK •••••••••••••••••••• 09
VALLEY BELL
ICE CREAM •••••••••••••• ~ ••••••~~.~~~~~.~ 1
BROUGHTONS

39

RC or [)I ET RITE

.

8-16 oz. bottles

.

PRODUCE .

BANANAS................... ~~: ..! 1oo
(

\

'

BROUGHTONS

Personna
Double U Razor
F,I.P. Prlc:e...

........ ,..

SUPER MARKET - OPEN DAILY 9 TO 10
SUNDAY 10 TO 10

Gem co
FOOD CHOPPER

'

I

u

Pmdenllal

-

~:~:.~.......~~.119

hurdles, was runner-up with
1,343 points, and diving
standout Cynthia Mclngvale
of Dallas was third with 626.

Is

l'uint
1111d is'·

Assucia!ion Hnd Is ;t dln•t'lur
1
or the Point l'lt'a sn nt H M I I ~H HI

FRESH &amp; LEAN

Naber named

LOS ANGELES (UP!)
The James E. Sullivan
Trophy - symbol of the
nation's outStanding amateur
athlete - has been awarded
to swimming gold medatist
John Naber.
The 22-year-old former
University of S9uthern
California swimmer, who
won four gold llledals and a
silver at the 1976 Olympic
Games in Montreal, easily
won the balloling with 2,050
points. ·
Edwin Moses of Morehouse
College, holder of the world
record in the 400-meter

t'ivil'1

pr·c:d ctent 11 f tlwi g r~ ·np , llr is1'
i1 UJ('m brr of tht• bmml uf.
ttirct•l or~ uf tht' Mu:-;(,u·Hnl lm
('hHJ&gt;tcr uf ttu• MHrs ha\1 '

top athlete

,------------,
:I
Pro :I

i11

lluntinKton fm· st• l'H Yl'AI'S
Whlil' nt C11beli ~Huut i nglon .
he wus Busin('s,.:; Offit't'

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

says.

WEDN ESDAY
POMEROY Chapter 80
RAM Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.
Bosworth Council 46 R&amp;SM

Manuger in 197\ , hr wn ~
assuda tcd ll'llh l'ubell·

•

F.I.P. Price- ..

:Standings\
College ratings

I

held the lead the rest of the
game. Williams got 19 points
and 13 rebounds for Otterbein.
The loss dropped Marietta
to 8-10 overall and 1~7 in the
· OAC.
At New Concord, Les
PeteM{lan hit two free throws
with 22 seconds left as Ohio
W e sleyan
handed
Muskingum its second
straight defeat in the OAC.
OWU's Mike Kinnaird was
the game's leading ·Scorer
with 25 markers.
The Muskies, now 6-2 in the
league, suffered their first
loop loss last Saturday at the
hands of Otterbein.
In other action, Akron
defeated Oakland (Mich.') 7866; Carnegie-Mellon~~::~
Case Western 75-70; 1
bested Malone 76-71;
Virginia State outscored
Cen tral State 71-66; and
Steubenville blasted LaRoche
( ra.) 100-75.

Manning inks
5-year contract
CLEVELAND (UPl) Outfielder Rick Manning,
knowing he may he traded,
has signed a fiv~-year
contract with the Cleveland
.Indians.
,
Manning and his agent, Ed
KeaUng, appeared Monday
with !£am President Ga.be
Paul and General Manager
Pili! Seghi to announce he had '
signed
a
fiveyea'r
" memorandum
of
agreement" _subject to his
passing
a
physical
examination
to
the
satis[action of the club.
Manning missed most of
last season with a fractured
bsck veterbrae but pointed
out he played the last two
weeks of the year and felt
''fine and happy.''
He said he had chosen to
sign with the Indians rather
than play out his contract and
become a free agent.
"There could be trades,"
Manning·said, "but right now
I'm an Indian and I plan to be
here for five years. If I'm
traded, then I'll U.lk about it .
I prefer, to remain in
Cleveland."
He confirmed that the contract stipulated six l£ams to

HAS BIRTHDAY
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wolle
enlertained SWidaY with a ·
party in celebrallon of the
sixth bil'thday of theJr
tification card can now be daughter, Tricia. Gamt-s
purchased at the Bureau of were playt-d wit11 prizes goi11g
Motor Vehicles, Gibbs to Joe Koush and Tracy
Grocery , Mulberry Sl., Bec~le . (t·e cream and h~art
Pomeroy, Ohio.
shaped cupcakes wt•re served
11le cost of this 1.D. card is to Marvin, Andy ami Jenny
$3.50. Be sure to take your Hill, Jan and Tracy Norris,
birth certificate or other Mary and Joy O'Brien,
proof of age.
Aimee Hill, Ailsa Will£ord,
Our numbers to call for Marcy Hill, and Wendy and
assistance, transportation, Megan Wolfe. Sending ~ifts
registering for lunch, or for were CuUJ111t!Y Rou£h, N_ikki
ot her needs are 992-7311, 992- and Jeff Bradbury and Mr.
7886 and 992-7884. Call us, we__ allll.Mrs. Charles !lradburx.
are here to serve you.

PEPSI-COLA
8-16 oz. bottles

'

.

�Among Friends" 6,13; ABC News 33.
8- The Dmly Sent mel, Mtddler&gt;Ort-Pomoroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Feb. 7, 1976

~;;;;:~;~;~"Let' The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items .into Cash
'

Bernice Bede Osol

~'LJJ~JIJ

. l:JtJtMWI~W\'1

WANT AD
CHARGES
l5WunhurUnder

......

C.Sh
100

IW.y
2W.ys

Feb. 8, 1978
You r mate rral pr ospec t s took

rath er c ncouragrng l or th e
coming year O cc a ~ t o nat u ne x ~
pected wrndt atls co uld occ ur to
help tack up yo ur bank bal ance
A(lt Ji\ftUJS (Jom 20· Frh 191
Ril te-1 hrougl'l th e ads o r check
your sho ppmg sour ces. rl you
ha ve the tune to day Yo ur m ·
stmcts lo r spO!Ir ng IJargarn s
ar e unu su ~lly kl:!e n Fmll u ut
more aho ut yo ur self by sc nd rng lo r your co py o f As tro-

Grapn l eller Mail 50 cen ts for
eac h and a ton g , sel l ·
addressed stampe d env e lo pe
to Astr a-Graph , ·P 0 Bo x 489,

Rad ro GUy Stati on N Y 10019
Oe SUf e to spec rl y your buHr

:! till)'!

3.00

6dllyl
Ea~h

wunl over ~ mmun um 1 ~
"ordti Ill i t·~nl.li per word per d;~y
Ad!i n.mn ll)~ u U~ r th:trr {:UII!!et.1lll vc
d.&lt;t y~.: w1ll ~ d\t4ri!ed t~l lhe I day

1-' ISCE.") (Feb 2G-M:.r••h 20)
Berng able to fun c tr o n freel y
and u1depe ndently rs trnpor !ant
tor yo u today Sk rrl assoc1atc5
wt1o could res tru;:t yo ur rn o b1 l1·
ly
AIUF..S (March 21· AJJril 1'1
Yo u re very res p o n s1,.e tod a y
to per so r1s who 1r ul v r1eed yo ur
hel p In o rde r to ard them yo u II
make whatev e r s a c flfiC CS ar c
necessary
TAUI\US (1\Prll 20-M;Jy 201
ft1 e lr1 e ndly v1be s yo u e rnana te
today w11! be pic ked up by all
' yo u e ncounte r Becau se you
tr ea t e ve ry o ne as a fr ie nd lh e
wo rld s e e s you a s i:l p a l
GE MINI iM~ty 2J-Jum· 20) A
gu i.i l yo u ve looK e d upor• as
bemg difficult w uld turn ou t to
be a snap toda y Where th ere
wcr,c obs tac les you ma y r1ow
li nd s te pp 1ng s tones
CANCE R 1June 21-.lu ly 22)
S 1tua t r o n ~ perm11t1ng you to
use the fu ll s cope of your
rmagtna t1 on wrl l prove tt1e most
re wa rdmg today Seek crealt\'e
outle ts
!.EO (Ju ly 2l-Au g .22 ) Follow
your 1nlu1110n today on whom to
contac t tf m need o f a favo r,
e ven if your log1 c dr c tates
o therwise
Your tn stl nc l 1s
mo r e accurate

Vlit GO

( Aug .23-Se pl. 22'
So me on e close to you may
re Qurre com pa ss ionat e han dling today Yo u II not re ach
her thro ugh he r pracHcal rty,
bu t you wrll thro ug h nc r emoti On s
Lllli\A 1Sept.2.H )ct.231 No
o ne has to loo k over your
bhoulde r 1oday to see tl you're
dotng a good JOb Results w1 U
be ev idence o f your "p11de in
yo ur work

SCOUPIO (0ci.24·Nov.22i Today yo u could be 111 love w1 th
love, ahd th at's no1 an bad
Tlle re ' s a mple room •n th iS
world fo r ano ther roman ltc tSI

SAGITTA R IUS

I Nov.23·

Uec.21 1 Do m es tic matters
s hould frave top p n on ty today,
eve n tho ugh other mlerests
w1ll be vy1ng fd r a tt en lt on

CAPRICORN 1Dec.22--Jan.l9)
You r phone IS !tkely to b e busy
today, er lh er w1th p~op l e
you're try mg to reach or those
hop1ng togetln touc h w1 th you
(NFWSP.AI'EH ENTERPRISE ASSN)

Carmel News,
By the Day
Mr . a nd Mrs. Douglas
Circle spent Sunday evening
with Mr and Mrs. Glen Tuttle
of Eagle Ridge.
Leo n Hudson of Scott's
Depot, w_ Va VISi ted Wtlh
Do u glas C trc le on Monday.

IWO I:I EUR OQ M hod"• tl .o:
I uttus h ed S1 4 11~ Q4 'J :J3'l4

u~

Bul NurniJer In Qjn• of The Sen

Ullt!l

The Pubhsher r rserves the right

tu

~It

or rtjccl any a&lt;b •let:m"d vir
jet·Uurwl Tht! PUI.lhsher wLII nut be

rt'SI"JI~tb le (ur more than one tntur
red msertwn

Phone9!.l!-21!16

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
M ond~ y
Noon on &amp;!turday

Tuatlay
Lhrtl Frrda)
4P.M

tht&gt; d1:1y b(ofore publ H.'H\Ion

Sunday
'p M
afternoon

~ mla~·

Racine
Social
Events
By Mrs. Francis Morris
Rev Uo11 Wa lker he ld a
se rv 1ce at the In firma r y
Society attended and served
refreshm ent s

Mr. ~ nd Mrs. E dgar
Bylbertand daugh ter , Kathy,
uf Akrn n were here T uesday,
Jan. 24 to attend the funeral
of their au nt, Mrs Edna

1.11 Hart, !lev Curuungham
Tt ustees. Otts Batley, Blll
Cozart , Dale Roush, J oe
Glenn , Mike lhle: song

Hayman and wer e guests of

Ronnie Salser

Mr and Mrs Critt Bradford
Mrs Sa rah 01d dle retu rned
home from Holze r Me dJcal
Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Billy Cleland,
Jr. of Gal!tpolts visited a
r e cen t eve mn g with h 1s
pa rents, Mr a nd Mrs Btll
Cleland
. Mr . and Mrs. Ke nn eth
Turley, Kenny and Kevm,
spen t Sunday wllh hts
mother, Mrs. , Cla rence
Turley at Galltpo!is
T h e ' a nnu a l
bus in ess
mcet mg of t h e First Ba ptist
Ch urch was held recently.
An nual repo rts were given
and t h e regula r b u s m ess
taken care of. Ch urch and
Sunday School offi cers for
1978 are· church clerk , Dec

Evangelism

B r own , c hu rc h tr eas u rer,
Frances Wilcox en ; ft nanc 1a l
sec r et ary , Lllhan Hayman,
m i SS io n a ry
t r easu r er,

Doroth y Ba dgley; Sunday
sc hoo l s uper int e nden t ,
Ronm e S a lse r ; a ss 1,s t a n t
S unda y school s u pe r intendent , John lhl e; Sunday

GIANT
TOOL AUCTION
IN HE ATED BUILDING '
LOCA TION : Po mt Pleasa nt Na tional Guard Arm o ry , J
mi les no r th o f Point Pleasant on Rt 62.
..

DATE , FRIDAY , FEBRUARY 10, 1978- TIME , 6' 30
P.M.
Sale Ite m s Can Be Inspected One Hour Belore Sale
Ti m e !

AUCT IONEER , KENNETH SWAIN
f. loo r Ja.;k s - A1r Co mpressors - Table Saws
Roll Around Tool Bous
High est Qua li ty , National Adverti sed Na me Brands!
Rockwe ll, Rodac , Fuller , Cummings, Miller Falls.
B ro~n, Ma rflow, Shopmate, Wright , Channel Lock,
Remmpton , McGr a w Edison , Dre mond Loy, Wate r loo,
lng e rso• l Rand , Wen .
'
'

We have the la rg es t 'ielection of all new too ls a nd
accesso ries on w h ee ls .
,
A comple te selecti on of ha nd too ls for the pl um ber,
carpenter , mech a n1c, we lder', elec tr ic ian, trucker
farmer , pai nte r , con tractor , shop own er or seno us fo o i
user In any profeSSIOn . We ha ve 1tall - dri l! bits t o a rr
t oo ls, hacksaw blades fa table saws. pa int brus t~es to
com presso r s, sandpaper t o gri nders, e d en s ion cords
to torc h hoses.
•
All Hand Too ls Carry A livet lm e Gua r ante e
Powe r Tools A Full Factory Warra nty .
Terms of Sale : Cas h or approv ed c heck with proper
I D ,if tax exempt must show nu m ber. Not r esponsible
for cha nges d ue t o str ikes or s hi p ping sc hedules Not
respons1bfe for acc1den ts or pr o ~rt y a ft er so ld

.,.1 l •

' .

•

leader s .

Da n ny

Bro wn ,

Commtttee

Ba tl ey, Cora Lee

P h y lh s

Cununms," Florence Thornton, Non dus Hendr icks ,
Kathryn Htll, Teresa Van
Meter
Mus ic Committee Ltlhan
H ayman, Ma r g te ' Grimm ,

Ba rba ra Gheen. tdar ilyn
Powell , Dolly Wolfe.
Boa rd
of
Chns ttan
Edu cation : Vickie Cummins,
Mary Lou lhle, Linley Hart,
Vtc Brown, Man e Walker,
Cookie Salser
Rto Gra nde Delega tes
Gt etta Stmpson, Ollte Mae
Cozart, Alternate . Mary K
Yost.
Church Flowers Gretta
S tmpson

l:tONO M'f' 1RA CIOH w•t h all at
to d u n en t ~
ltl&lt;. e- ne w o~ km g
s ·n~u 1-' ho tll.' (614 ) 698 :J2%

Camping J.:quipmcnt
) ) ARtWAI:-1

~ole

I Al l

Mti H
itlQ l OI~
20 and 'J1
li OV QJ
l•o•l e · ~
IU ~ $:1 799 15 7
11 &lt;Jn kho v'e $4 87 ~ f. o ld d o..... n
S \ 700 up W e s.oU sc rvtCf' om1
qua lity O pt:HI Sunday s Cmnp
Co n ley ~ rar c •ol1 Sole!. Ht
N ul f' t f' lca :.om

FIREWOOD

Notices
HACI Nl Vo lun lee• fu e&gt;
DepOI In\enl wil l spon,sm o g u n
~hoo t evet ~ Solurdoy ol b pm o t
rhcu butldtng 111 Bo~ho n Fa t
tor y choke guns 011ly

IHE

l HI:: ftACIN~ Gun Club Cun Shoo t
ev m)i ~u ndoy aft e rnoon Fo r
to •y choke gu111o only A s~o rl e d

ANNOUN CIN G THE o pcm mg of
the publ •c o ccou nt •t~g olhce of
Roge•
l uc kQ)Idoo , ltcen ~e d
pubhc occounlott l lot acconlt n y
011d bookkeep•ny ser v•ce1o o nd
p• e pm o h on of federa l and
s tole lox retur ns ol ?9 1 Woii1&lt;JI
St
Mt d dle pofl
O h ro
997 2bb6 Ho u rs by o ppotn t
men I
CLEARANn SALE beg111 s Me n
feb 13 a t Sew N Sew OUtlet
Mat" Stt ee l
Rac111e
All
poly es t\) r doub le l&lt;.nd ~ •e duc e d
40 ~" Oll d so~
1 IH ead b tg spoo l

300 Main 51.

FOR SALE
SAWMILL SLABS
$5.00 A BUNDLE

BA.M. to 4:30P.M.

POMEROY FOREST
PRODUCTS
Ba 1ley Ru n Roa d
P hone 992·5965

8 8. S MOBILE HOMI:.S Pt Pleosonl W Vo bes tdP Heck s
197:1 Br o odrn01 e 14 )( 64 2

bed roo m
19?3 Do r•o n I4 )( 00 2 bcd• oo m
19/1 Vtcto r •on 14 x 67 3 bedroo m
2 both
1912 l o ve n h y I 2 .o: OS 3 bed room
1%9 Stot e- smo rt I 2 .o: 00 2
bedroom

5 fo• St

Ollie Mae

Cozart
Kitchen Committee Ollie
Mae Coza rt. Custod ians:
Ralph and Dorothy Badgley:
Nom inattop Com mittee 1976:
Bill Cozart, Ollie Mae Cozart,
VickieCummms, Martha Lou
Beegle, Ronme Salser .

Stiversville

Mr. and Mrs. M1ke Evans
are p arents of a son, Matt hew

Shane, born Jan. 19 at Holzer
Medica l Center.
Mr s . Max in e Du rst ts
rec u pe r a ting at home arter a
rece n t h os p ita li za ti on a t
Vetera ns Memona1 Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs Thomas

LOST I5 whee l cove• ot th e bo t
torn of l tn co ln Htll nea r the
wat e r l1ne break 2 14 78 Goes
to tn o lched se t Coll99'2 3297 or
992 7063

IOUNO BLACK Ge rm an po t• ce
puppy ma le Between 8 8. r 2
we e ks
o ld
Underneath
Pom e roy
Meson brtdge
Phone 992 7018

Phone 99') 2181
BUR~O U GH S

SENSI MAT IC a c
coun ttng mochme Ha s bee11
under se rv •ce con tra ct an d m
good con dttt on Con be see n at
The- Dorl y Sen lm e l Ill Cour l
St Pomerov OH

l9b5 CHE VElLE 4 d r A C , 283
f!ng 2 bbl auto Iron s /::.
ce llcn t condt !ton Truck Ie ppe r
std 8 lt bed 28 rn htgh
742 2485

TIMBER Pomeroy
ducts Top pru:;o
s.aw tunbe r Ca ll
Ken t Honb )l 1 &lt;l46

-

Fores t Pro
to r s tand 1n g
992 5965 or
8570

-

COINS, CUHRE NCY, lokens , o ld
pocket watches and cho tn s
s tl ver and gold We r1eed 1964
a nd olde r St iver to ms Buy , sell
or rrod c- Call Roger Wams ley
742 2331
OlD FURNITUR E rce bol(e5. brass
beds If On beds , etc , comp lefe
households W1tle M D Mtller ,
Rl 4 f' omeroy Ohto o r coli

Now Onl y ,

Poles
m a~&lt;:
CHIP WOOD
dtomete r 10 01'1 larges t end se
per tan Bund led s lob $6 pe r
ron Dol1vered to Ohto Pollet
Co _Rt . 2_:_P O~«:,!O Y 99_2 3689
Sit VER DOl l ARS and co tn s
do llar potd Co lt 747 2316

Top

Mrs. Min a G ivens has been

Pomeroy Landmark

1977 JEEP CJ 7 $5 000 Call
843 3 155 before 12 00 noon or
ofter b 00 pm
8

STD
TOPPER
742 2-485

CONDITIONED
992 7201

ville,
Mrs.

visi ted
Olive

he r m ot her
Lawson o~

Saturdny.
De bra Brya nt , was a n
overmght guest of Donn ette
Talbott on Sunday.
Mrs. Debbie Smith and son
visited Mr. and Mrs. James
Smith, Jr. and family at
Shron recently.
Mr . a nd Mrs . Melvin
Lawrence and J. J. visited
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
La-;r ence and fam tly at
Po!&gt;tland on Sut.rlny a fternoon.

28 '

\614)698 3290

RISING STAR Ke nnel Board1ng
Indoor ond outdoor run s
Groommg all breed!. (leon
~on •fo ry
lo ct l•ttes Chest·me
Phone {614 ) 367 · 0~2

BLUETICK pups

I'EG ISTE RED
mo old ('328

ONE YEAR old ~ole
(aU 992 3844

Pe~k ·A

6

Poo

ME IGS CO UNTY Humane Soc1ety
anrmol careltne ofld odop lton
serv tce (tree o n1mols) 992 7660
or evemngs or\d Sundays
992 -5427
Mod
c-o
M
Crawford , fH 4 , Bo.: 326 ,
Pome roy Oh•o 45 709 Membersh•ps and danollons PO Bo x
b82 , Pome r~y Oh•o 45769
REGISTERED BlUE Ttck pups
ma old, (:104) 862 3328. _

b

Wood

HAY

lor

;..-

Geo rge S, Hobstetter Jr.,
Broke r
1071/:.z Sycamore St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

PHONE 992-6333
Off1c e Ho urs : 9A ,M . to ..

P.M.
Clo se
Th urs cl a ys
Saturdays a t noon.

am

N1ce Double W1de 24xS6 on
co rne r lo t 1n Arba u g h
In c luding
Ad di ti o n
furn it ure an d a pp !la nces .

Ntce 3 Bedroom b u ngalo~
w1 th b ase m e n t &amp; g a ra ge,
$32.000 . 2 acre o t grou nd
Tuppe r s Pl at n s.
New 3 bedroo m home w lth
g a rag e
1n'
Cr aw's
Subdi VI Sion . $4 1,000.
Nice s mall home loca ted Jn
Darw in , Ohio on St . Rt . 33,

119,900.

Hav e
Bu s ines s .
a nd
tnvestme n t property In
Pomeroy

NEW

LI STIN G,

1974

Sprrng
Mannor ,
to ta l
T2x60 Mobile
e lectric
Hom e , exce llent condt ti on,
loca ted on 150'x l65' leve l
lot m Arbaug h add it ion ,
Tuppers Pl ai n s , Ohio
K it c h e n
s t ove ,
r efr igerato r , &amp; woo d
s t ove
(new )
b ur n ing
inc lut:led tn sa !e . GoinQ to

sell fa sf al s11 .000.00
Chetk with us befor e you

buy .

Cheryl Lemley
Associate
Home Phone 742-1003
Hilton Wolfe, Sr.
Assoc iat e
Home Phone 949-2589

sioves

..

LITH e DOGGY!

t h•

13

] ,(!()-Today 3,4, IS; .Good Morning America 6, 13, CBS
News 8; Bullwlnkle 10; 7 JI)-Schoolles 10

8 .oo--Capt Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame St. 33
9 ,0G-Merv Griffin 3. Phil Oonl'thue 4, 13, 15: Edge Ot
Night 6; Famlty AHalr: 8; M~t cl't Game 10
9 .30-Emergency One 6. Andy Grlftlth B. Family

Affair 10.
10 GO-Sanford &amp; Son 3,.4, 15, Ta ttletales 8: Not For
Women Only 13 : Joker's Wild 10,
10 30-Hollywood SQuares 3,.t,1S ; Andy Grl ttlth 6;
Price Is Right 8. 10 .• Rick Foucheux 13
II ~Wheel of Fcrtun~ J,A, lS; Happy Day s 6, 13.

ftfi'\l~ ~'il ~ THAT SCRAMBlEDWOAD GAll E

'"
"

fll'

~

\9 ~~ ®

E lee. Co. 20.

byHenn ArnoldandBobLee

11 ·30-Knockoul 3.15, Famlty Feud 6, 13, Partridge
Fam tly .t , love of Life 8, 10; Sesame Sl . 20.33
11 : 55--CBS News 8. Lov lnQ Free 10
l2 ·QO- Newscenter 3; $20,000 Pyramid 13, News 4,6, 10;
To Say The Leo•t IS; Gambit B
12 · 3()--Ryan's Hope6, 13 . Bob Braun,. ~ Gong Sho w 15.
Search tor Tomorrow 8. 10. Eelc Co 33
1 .oo-For Rlcl'ter , For PoorE!r J ; All My Ch11dren 6, 13,
News 8; Young &amp; the Reslless 10 ; Not Fa r Wom er'
On ly 15.
3~0ays at Our Lives 3,4, lS ;; As The Wortd Turns
8, 10; 2 oo-One Lite to Live 6,13 : 2 &lt;JQ--Oodor s

Unscramble these tour Jumbles.
one lener to each square, to tcxm
tour ordmary words

,,•

t

'"'~·

ltetl._t or to t h-e
C:..o.

rve 1t01 N.Onu&gt;R
SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
p~

992·2174

Vl&amp;cc, IF 1 TOW 'iC\J

H!'~H~WIS

()ll(.E;, I'VE' lDLO tOJ

WOJSAI.'£l ~s ... J

AAOf4l l ~ ~

"'\()fiE~ &lt;OJ I£T OJT
Cf- e£0, IT'S F~T­

I I

FIR~!

j

3.3o-All In The Fam ily 8, 10, Ohio Journal 20
4:0G-Mlsler Cartoon 3. Edge of Night 13 ' Mv Th ree

r

I I

FREE ESTIMATES

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

LAVENDER
CONSTRUCTION
Syracuse, Ohio

LARRY LAVENDER
Syracuse, Ohio
Ph. 992-3993

Phone 992-3993
1-1 8-1 m o.

llll rno

3,4, 15; Guiding Ligh t a,10.
J :QO-Another Wor ld 3,4, 15,· General Hospll a l 6, IJ ;
Li llas , Yoga &amp; You 20.

\MEHRAMj

Pom...,

1-18-1 m o.

Gilligan' s Is 8; Sesame Sf 70,33 . Gomer .Py le ,

MAN WHO !iOKT&amp;

LPIMAGE

c rI

5ons.t , For R icher. For Poorer 15, Merv Griffin 6 ,

A PUZ ZLE FOR 'THE

USMC 10.
4 · 3o-Llttl eRascats3,15 . Gi lligan ' s ls. 4 , Brady Bunch
8, 10 , Mary Ty ler Moo r e 13
5 oo- Here Come T he Brides 3, Slar Trek 41 Gunsmoke
8, M is te r R o ger s' Neig hborhood :ZO,JJ; Hogan ' s
Heroes 10; E m ergency One 13 . My Three Sons 15.
s JQ-.- Ne ws 6 , E lec Co 20,33, Mary Tyter Moore 10 ,
Hoga n ' s He r oes 15
6 00- Ne ws 3.4. 8.1 0, 13,15 , ABC News 6 : Zoom '20
6 3G- N BC News 3,4, 15, ABC News 13. Carol Burnett &amp;
F r le n ds 6 . CBS News 8, 10
7 ·0D-Cross-W its 3, ,.4, Liars C lub 6; Sha Na Na 8,
Cap itol Bel'lt 33 : News 10; To Tell The Tru t h 13 ;
Gil liga n's Is 15; Char acteris t ics of Learn ing

OUT LETTER!:&gt;.

I

Now arrange the crrcled letters ,to
form the surpnse a ns wer, as suggested by th e above cartoo n

J .

Print answer llere :

AN

r x r r r x:r J
(Answers tomorrow)

·--

Yesterday 5

SO SHE DOE5i&lt;I'T

•

NEED

PROTEcTION.

EH? BOYS, YOU
KNOW WHAi TO

I

Jumbles AWFUl BANJO RAN CID FRENZY
Answe r Whll1the day foll owing a day off
sometimes is - AN OFF DAY

Olsabl\ 11\es 20 .
7. 15-Ma,.ha\1 U . Report 33

00 .,

7· Jo-Funny Farm J , Sha Na Na 4; When Havo c
Struc k 6 ; Family Fe ud 8; Mac Neil -lehrer Reporl

"
'

~­

.,
=

B~ii&amp;~m~~.;.~.,~~~
"~.~'""
~~i~- '!iiBRADFO
RD AllC I!Oneer, Com -

3 AND 4 RM furntshed end tJn
fur n is hed opts Phone 992985 3849 or
5434
.. -- ---~-~~~
--- ... -REDUC E SAF!: &amp; lost wtf h Go8E-se COUNTRY MO BIL E Home Park
Route 33 north o f Po meroy
Tablets &amp; E Vap wa fer pt ll s
_Lor9e lo is Call 992 7_-4!!!....___ __
Ne lson Drug

_

MIXED HAY f~r- sa le $1- 25 b~ l e
9-49 2000 _Ro_l~ h -~r_us~:~ _
FIREWOOD, SPli T end deltYered
$45 a cord or $35 a truck load
All ha rdwood B43-2933 or
992 6295

--

HO USE FO R rent 992-3469

ElWOOD BOWERS REPA IR Sweepers, loosters , trons a ll
small o ppl1onces l a wn mower ,
nex t to Sfote Htghwoy Garage
on Rout e 7 Phone (614) 985-

5

pm ~~-------TWO TRA ILERS lor ren t 1 lv&lt;oikh
ed , 2 bedroom 1 po rtly
bedroom
22

NIC E PIGS lor sole Colt olte• 5,
949 2857

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
We have enlarg e d our
se rvtce department and
Will service Hotpoint and
other brands.

Pomeroy Landmark

9.a _Jac k W. Carsey, Mgr
....

Phone 992-2181

~~~~-

...,---,----'1'---·

SMAll fo rm lor sole 101% down
owner lma nced , Menke Co li n:
ly W Vo Phone (304) 772
3 102 or (304 ) 772-3227

BRICK &amp; FRAME RANCH
Age 3 yr s . 1 a c re, 3
b ed room s,
l 'h
bath s,
ca r pet ed , garage , v e ry
priva te. $31,900.00.
HARD TO BELIEVE - 15
roo m s, 3th ba th s. hot w a ter
h ea t , u t il it y, ba s ement,
g arage , wa lk to s h o p . J UST

$16,000.00.
CLOSE IN - 3 y r . old
RANCH TYPE - 1 acre, 2
baths , J bedroom s, fo rma t
din 1ng, eq u ipped k ttchen ,
storms &amp; In s ula tion . Ve ry
p r iva te. $37,300 00

OLDER BUT NICE - Lots
of

remode ling,

eq u lpped

kitchen, 3 bedroom, bafh,
ca rpo rt. · sma ll

s torag e

bldg $17,200 00.
POMEROY - 4 LOTSPh s t o ry fr a m e, good
cond it ion , 3-.4 bedrooms.
bath, ca r peting , porches,
basement. $ 12,000.00.

APPROX . 3 ACRES - Age
2 yrs. Lovely equ ipped
k itcl'ten, 3 bedrooms (wal kin c loset s), 2 baths, formal
dining r oom , fam l ty r oom ,
loads of other fe a t ures .

JUST 528,000.00 '
WANT TO SELL? - Take
tteasy - Jet us do the work .

Our long list of satisfied
customers speaks for itself.

WHEN YOU THINK OF
REALTY, thonk of us,
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK, KATHY&amp; LEONA
CLELAND
Realtor
Assotiates

992-2259, 992-6009
992-6 "'· 992-2568

rn

REAl TOM

tan c1ty

--&lt;

COU NTRY farmland wt! h seclud
ed woods wa te r and good a ccess 111 Monroe County, W. Va
$1 ,000 down co li (304), 77231 O:l or (30-4) 772-3227

HOWE RY AND MA RTI N Ex ·
covo trng, sepl rc sys tems
doler . backhoe , dtJmp tr uck
lrrhes tone , grovel blacktop
po11rng , Rt 1-4 3 Pho ne t {b l-4 )

Com me rCia l prope rl y a pp rox 17
ac res, level land located o t
Tupper s Plo ms on Oh ro, Rou te
7 Phone (614) b67 6304.

, ••

'

'~!~?~~rn

REALTDI{

E. Second Street '
GREAT BUY - 3 bedroom
216

home, bath, natural gas
h e at, city water and near a

store. Only S7.5(!(!.
HANDY - In town , near
s tores , 3 bedrooms. 2 baths,
n a t u ra l ga s furna ce, city

water. Asking jusf $15,000.
ON RT. ll4 - Small village
property , ha s .4 or ·5
bedroom s, ni c e
bath ,
na t u r al
ga s
fu r na ce,
basem ent and large lot.

$28,000.
ON RT . 7 - New brick
busi ne s s build ing with
centra! air and heat 2,900
s q ft offloor s pace 2 large
off ices and large storage.
Leading Creek water . Onty

$35,000
175 ACRES - 8 room ranch
home

w ith

gas

w e ll.

Equ ipped kitchen , gas
for c ed a ir fu r na ce and
mineral s Lots of pasture

land. $65,000.
BRICK - 7 rooms,

4
bedrooms. all c ity utilities,
2 porches .
basement ,
natura l gas F .A. furna ce ,

In Middleport. $23,500.
SYRACUSE - 3 Bedroom
frame home wlfh bath,
b a sement, city water.
natura l ga s F .A. furna c e ,

porch and garage . Over 1
acre la nd wltn
Want $12,500.

garden.

HAS YOUR PROPERTY
INCREASED IN VALUE?
WE . HAVE PEOPLE
WANTING TO BUY. LIST
IT WITH US.
Htl!'J' L. Tuford
Gordin B. Tnlord
Suo P. Murphy
Rultor Assotiates

'&lt;! ..

BATHROOM S AND Ktfche ns
remode led , ceromtc tde p1tJ m
btn g, carpe ntry , ond genera l
mo tntenonce 13 years ex·
perrence 992-36B5
PULLINS EXCAVATING Co mplete
Servrce . Pho ne 992 2-47B.
NEIGLER S FO fil bu 1ldtng houses
bo lhrooms , oil kmds ol repo1r
wor k ond who! ,ha ve you G u y
Ne tg ler, Ro c me, O h1o Co li
949·2508 eve ntngs

•

:.

.
'.

MAC.GI ES UPHOLSTERY Reftn •sh
reu ph o ls tery
re bu tf d m g
Be a ut1f ul se lec tion of mateno l
ond vmyls , Free es t1m ote Tel
Solem
742.2852 , Loco t1 on
Ce nt e r

,' ..
,-

WHtt\1 "'"HE 'I'OoTH
fi'IRY PAYS Off.

'-

10,00 - 700 Club.
Movie Chhanne l Four 5 &amp; 7 P M . - And Th en There We re None (Gl

9 8. 11 P.M.-Carnol Knowledge IR I

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Sweetheart of a contract

•

A K 9

• 10
10 9 U3 2

+

•...

732

1-a--+- t--

So uth won the fu·st t tl c k

wtth the a ce of dubs a111 l
would have do tmcd ~ ix, If
trumps ha d broker\ 2-1 As It
was , he had lo ctr·aw Uu·ct!
.. r o un ds o( trum ps . Tht4l
m ea nt that he could onl y ru H
on e d iam o n d , but South wa s
able t o cope with th&lt;.tl li e
cas he d t he km~ of cl ubs, lct l
to d ummy's ace tlf h earts,
discar ded the fo ur of f' lu b s

• .I 743 2
+ A Q7 5

+ K J962

+J

forSnuth . IJc bid :-;IX ~p,;u lcH

•: AS T

• Q8 6 5

+ (l765

SOUT il
• AKJ954
•

10

•

843

+ A K4
Vulnerab le· East-West
Dea ler So uth
West

Pa ss
Pass

Pass
A X V Q J. B A 1\ X R
LONGFELLOW

North E ast

East cov e r s w1 t h the q uecu ,

So uth

•
6•

South ruffs If East docsn 'I

•

cove r , South di~ca rd s a
mond He t hen ruf£s ht s
d iam o n d w ith d umm y's
trump and is h ome wi th

Pass 4•
Pass 4•
!'ass

Pass Pass P a ss
Opening lead · + J
By

on the king of hea rts. led the
10 of clubs from du mmy If

CRYMOQUOTES
WINNIE

LW J 'E

WELL/

50 LONG r
OLD -TIME!&lt;! ,
A NDGCOD

GCOD LUCK 10 YOU,
IDO. AND IF YOU'IZE
NOT PICKED UP BY A
PASSING &amp;HI~ FEEL
FIZEE 10 COMe BACK I

LUCK 'TO
YOU!

POOR DEVIL ! H E MUST HAVE
BEEN IZEALLY HUIZT T0 '
GIVE UP CIVILIZATION
FOf/.11-IE L IFE OF A

RECLUSE I

IZON &amp;HOJLD BE HEIZE ANY

MINUTE. ~I&amp; GHOULD BET

~E &amp;TAGE FOil. WHAT~
HAVE: 10 E&gt;AY 10 HIM I

I

WR

ll/.

DHBA

!I

''

UVBA

E TAVEHJ C

BARN8Y

ALL ~16HT, TROOPS...

HERE'S WHERE WE I MM~ II
FOR THE NIGHT

l abrador type . Both very
frt en dly
l oveable
Nt ce .
looli.tng pets 949 2607

\

used tt as an e x a mpl e , ex- ·

invitahona l, but not fo rc m g.

E N A 0 , D D South 's four-club bid was a
s la m tr y be1o w ga me .
North ' s four-h ea rt ca ll
DHBA
L W C K · - showe d the a ce of hearts a nd
OWG
E TAVE
i:lenied the ace of di a m onds,
UVT E N V KS WE E
so South signed off at four
Yesterdlly's Cryploquole : IT'S A WISE ClULD THAT spades
TELEVlSION.-LEONARD L. LEVINSON
AI this point '.n tune, North
KNOWS No
who h a d btd hts full values
NGUVJK,

SIX

A P e nn s y1 va ni a reader
wa nts t o know 1£ 1t is pcrrm s ·

at the table The writer, who

U B K E V B A plained the bidding by point·
ENA
mg out that North's jump to
WG T
L W C K three spades was highly

0

dlct ia:-;t
lm;t

Jacoby

One le tter s tm ply stands fo r a n olh cr , In t his .sa m tl1e A i: and Alan Sontag

WT

C.cpr . 1978 K•ns: Futuru Sy nd itate. lnr

'.'

was s h ow ing sccuml r o und
diam on d control
Thus ove rbi d wils C I !O ll l~ h

• '-l 10 H 6

WEST

Is

-

•,

the wr1tc1 pomtcd o u l. Nur th

NORTtl 1. 17 A

Toda y 1S s lam ts easy to btd
used for the three L's. X for t he two 0 s, e t c Smglc le tt er s
apos trophes. the le n gth :tnd fo rm alt ?n o r t h e \\ords nr c al whe n you see a ] I t h e ca r ds . It
ts almos t impossible to b id
h m ts. Eac h d n} th e code )e tt e r s a rc di ffe r e n t

C~T . FEMALE , l onghatred , dog ,

'·

being
31 Eagle's
abode
32 Sultan's
decree
33 Brazilian
port
38 Money
player
39 Exclude

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's h ow to work It:

MO BILE HO ME repa irs 992·5B58

ABANDO NED HOUSE dog , small
yo ung female
Adoptable
_ !escued from cold , 985-388ol

28 Cross out
30 Fowl

Hufllr, z·u GIVe
you A fC.ICIC.IIIC:fe

Will CARE for th e e lde rly m o ur
home Phone 99'2 731 .4

JOB WANTED. Female , 12 H1gh
schoo l graduate 3 years wo rk
of re st home Any decen1 wo rk
o cce~ t ob l e Phone 949-2355

16 Ancient
Syria
19 Not here
Z2 Football
Starr
23 Gather
24 Robert Blake.
role
25 Beseech
Z6 Like Hubbard's cupboard

Answer

rr DOe6N''r

'.

FEB RUARY IS th e mont h fo hove
)lOur up ho ls terrng done before
fh e s pr mg rush Vts tl us fo r "
good selec lron of fa bncs
Reasona ble prtces and good
workmo n s h tp,
So b s
Mo tn Street ,
Up ho lste r y
Roc me In bock of Sew N-Sew '.
Outle t StOre

ATT ENTION MAR E Ow n ers
AQHA sf ud service Introdu ci ng
to Sout he rn Oh10 Ca rloka sor
re ll son of O toe Breed for col
or , con fo rmalton and d1s posi
tton Phone 698·B24T eveni ngs
or wrr te for breedtng conl ract.
Be lte Echo Qvorfer Horses,
40:225 SR 692, Pomero y, Ohta
-45769,

Yesterday &amp;

12 .01&gt;-J an akl 33 ; 12 AO-M ys te ry of t he Wee k ~ ~ 13,
Ka lak 8 .
\
1 co--Tomorrow 3,4, 2: 16-News 13 .
Cable Cha nnel Five 1·00 PM - P a ul Gau dino Fa mil y Fit ness Show
1 30 PM - W a h ll m a Bas ke tba ll

•

group
29 Garfunkel
30 "That Feeling"
34 Magazme
feature:
abbr.
35 Beverage
36 Generation
lFRANK &amp; ERNIE
37 Treeless
r~~~~~==~==;r----~--------~~-------~--------------------------------, 39 tract
Nasty kid
40 Fortune·
teUer's
~
cards
41 Slave girl
in opera
4Z Expiate

TUR LE Y S WR EC KER Se rv1ce
Roc me Oh to Da y or ntghl
949-2657
ANY SEWING mochrn e cleaned,
o1 ted &amp; odtu sted, $5 98 FREE
ptcku p ond delrvery Belpre
Oh1o 1 423 5-497.

10

1

women 's

b98·7331.

I

province

1%Break bread 3 Star m
13 Goat or cat
Cygnus
15 - du
4 Opposite
of WSW
Dtable
18 St. stgn abbr 5 Father's
11 Baseball's
Day gift
McGraw
6 Principle
18 Minnelli
7 Energy unit
film
8 From
20 Wrath
Vlenllane
21 HeU, m
a quote
9 Now
22 Actress
Tuscany
Barbara
14 Press or
23 Direction
clalffi on ship
Z6 Regton of
Hungary
21 Numerous
28 Patriotic

Will do roo lm g , const ru ction
plum bmg ond heo tmg No to b
loo Iorge o r too small Phone
742-23.48

VA -FHA 30 yr lmonc mg al so
ref tnon cmg Ire land Mortgage
77 E Sta te Afhe ns , pho ne [b l4 )

6 8 E ..
MAIN ~POMEROY, 0 .

~, ,

EXCAV ATIN G dozer, load e r a n d
· ·•
backhoE: work dump truc ks '.!1:
en d lo boys lor htre , w1U ha ut .. '(.., ~ •
ftll dtrt to so t1, ltm es fo ne end ~!'
gra 11el Coli Bob or Roge r Je ffers , do )l phone 992 7089, ntgh l
phone 992- 35~r-992 · 5~
EXCAV ATIN G doler backhoe
ond dttcher Charles R Hot
l1eld
Bo ck Hoe Se rYtCe
Rul lond- Oh to Phone 742 2008

NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 bat hs ,
o lt elec 1 ac re M1ddl epor t,
close lo Ru tland Phone 9927-481

film
DOWN
1 Battlefteld
cry
2 Sparush

Love You"
5 Ancient
stone
10 Not odd
11 Afghanis·

SEWING MACHIN E Re pot rs , se r
vtce, all mohs, 991 2284 The
Fabr•c
Shop
Po m eroy
~~
Autho rtzed Stnge r Soles an d ·• ,
•...,.
Servrce We shor.pen SCISSor s

HO MES ITE S lor sole I a cre end
up Mtdd1epu rt, ne ar Rut la nd
Co il 992-74Bl

43 Length of

ACROSS
1 "You - Me

--=:: ~

..

B·OO--G r izzly Adams 3,-4, College Bas ke lbalt 8, 15,
Eight Is Enough 6, \ 3, Nova 20,33. Movie "Ruby &amp;
Oswa ld" 10
9 ·0o--La ugh -ln 3,4 , Charl ie ' s Ange ls t. , n . Grtm l
Perform a n ces 20,33
10 :oo- Pollce Woma n 3, 4, 15 , St arsk y &amp; Hul c h ¢.1:1.
Ce le brit y Co ncerf s 8. T he !s la n der 33 ; News 20
10 JG-Wode~ ouse Play house 20. Book Be a t 33
11 oo-.:--News 3,4,6 ,8,1 0 , 13. 15 ; O tc k Cavell 20 ; U lias
Y og a &amp; Yo u 33
•
11 .31)-J ohnn y Carson 3,4, 15; Po ll ee S lory 6, 13, Hnwoli
Fi ve 0 8; ABC News 33, Movie " Fun 1n Acapu lc u"

by THOMAS JOSEPH

382::5:'-:c-=-:c:-:--:-~

REMODE liNG Plu mb ing , heottng
end aU types of gene ral re pot r
Work guar a nteed 20 years e)(penence Phone 992-2409

20,33. In Search ol 13; Wild Kingdom 15

&amp;1~

1

pl e te Serv tce Phol).e 9-49 2487 ~~~.
or 9-4 9 2000 Roc me Ohto Crttt ""' ·
Brad fo rd
....; •

592 3051 .

REALTY

Chest er, Ohio
10·30-c ,

MUH' OH·ei&lt;:·YE5,
MA'AM! C!IITAIN~'l' !,!;
A·(AHtlol)· &amp;EAUTIFUL.

w

~ · 25-Chrlstopher Closeup 10 ; 0 : 30- News Can
f~ence • ; News 6; Sunrise Semester 8. 6 AsMorning Report J ; 6 •50-Good Mornlng. West
Virginia 13 . 6 :5s--chuck Wh ite R epor ts 10, News

7 · 30-Hollywood Squares3 •.t; Let ' s Go To Th~ Ra ces 8;
Candid Camera 6; MacNeiJ Lehrer Report 20,33 ;
Price Is Right 10; That' s Hollywood 13: Telev tsl on
Honor Society 15.
8 :()()-Just for Laughs 3,.4, 15, Happv Days · 6. 1l,
Celebrity Challenge of the Sel(es 8. 10 , In Performance at Wolf Trap 20.33,,
a·3D-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13, Shields &amp; Y.arne\1 8,10.
9 .oo-Oean Martin 3,4, 15; Three's Company 6, 13,
Movie '' H ustle" 8, 10.
9 :3o--Soap 6; Hollywood Television Theatre 20,33.
Mary Tyler Moore 13
JO ·oo--Famlly 6
11 ~News 3•.4,6,1 3.15; Dick Cavett 20. Over Easy 33 .
11 : 20- News 8. 10, John n y Carson 3,4, 15, Movie " Death

RAYIF

Free Est imates

sole

HOBSTETTER

Truth 13; Gllllg~n ·s Island 15. French Chef 10

..

Paul Gaudtno Fam ily Fltnen Show
700 clu b

.
WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY a, 1971
S.&lt;&gt;-Farm Report 13; 5 51&gt;-PTL Club 13; S 55Sunrise S4!nester 10, 6,oo-PTL Club IS.

7: I,S-Blg Green Magazine 33.

Radiator
Service

''Tht OrtJiftllofS
Not The Im itators

htgh

$21,000

sad dles Ruth Reeves Alba ny

992-2206 or 992-7630

279 •95

Le t us t est you r wat er Fre e

99?· 77b0

Will buy l pu~ce o r co mp le te
household New used or antt
qUE'S ,Martm s Furntturti 20 N
M1dd leporf Phone
2nd St
992 6370

Box34

- Save Fuel &amp; Money-

At

Let Pom e roy Landmark
softe n &amp; condit ion you r
wa te r wtth Co-op water
soften er, Mod e l UC-SVI ,

Ja c k W Cars ey , Mgr.
Phone 992·2181
CASH po• d lor oil rnakes ond
mode ls of mobile homes
Ph o n e oreo co de 614 423-9531

Jack) Septic
Tank Service '

a nd

Cellulose Fiber
Blown Into Walls
and Attics

Young's
Carpeting

HAY FOR SA LE
HAY FO R SAlE
985 4:148

LOS T BLOND ma le pc ktngnesc m
Roc tne ar eo Answers to the
no me Choy Phone 9dl '2646 o r
949 235"1 Rewo1d

RESPONSIBLE OLDER lady lo ltve
111 end cat e lor aged lady m
Ru tla nd l1ght ho~:~sework and
coa k •n g no laundry More lor
h o nH~
than
wages
Col i
742 2078

Phone tBl-3806

fu ll y Ins ure d
Free Esr.
Call : 667 · 6479 or 992-l815
1 16 l m o

Steam Extraction

Phone Mike Young

BLAC K PADDED BAR with
woodg rom lop 011d s torage
-.hl'llles E)( ce ll enl co ndttlon
s~o 99 1 7312

~felp Wanted.

Ce llulo sic (wood fib er )
T he rm a l Ins ulati on

Blown Insulation

Superior

Carpet &amp;UpholslelJ

lOST SMA LL brown nmed b1eed
d og befween ) 5 &amp; 20 lbs In
SugQ r Ru n oreo Answer !&gt; lo
l'ud dl e ~
Loved very much
Call 992 b077 or 991-51 b 1

LOST SMALL fema le lrtsh Sell e r
Po ~ s tbl &lt;f tn heal If an~one has
her or hos seen her please coli
992· 3163 Rewo rd'

Resi d entia l
and
co mmercial
Call tor
estimate, 74 h our service.
Anyd ay, anyt im e .

J,Jck W C.n •,,,,.., Mljr

FOUND MAlE do chsh oun d on Rt
JJ
Free to good home
992 .7401

hove a serv tce to o ffer
Birch of Wa terford and Mr. IF ....YOU
ant to buy or se ll so methmg ,
and Mrs. W. S. Long, local,
oe loa ktng for work
or
were recent ca ll ers at the
who te11er
you II gel res ulh
lo stN wllh a Sen t•nel Wan t Ad
home of Clint Birch and
Ca l199 2 '2 156
daughter, Leota.
Mr. and Mrs Btll Foster,
Middleport, visited Mr. and
' Mrs. Ruda Durst one day
HOOF HOLlOW Horses Buy se ll
recently.
trade or froin New and used

discharged from Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Del ber t Lawson, Min eri·

Open
9 , 00 til 9:00 Mon.- Fnday
9 : oo 1116 : 00 Saturday
12 : 00 t1I6 : 00 Sunda y
2 2 ffc

,lllcl
Htdpllllll 1\pplld/H '"•
Soli• PI I ( I'',

NO ITEM TOO Lorg e or too sma ll

News Notes

MEIGS PLAZA
Middleport, Ohio

Fnt 1\:l Y•ttll
G'·1Wr,1! t I•·( Ill( T V ',,

- ch urch ca rds -

flowe r s:

Located In The

Roule 3 Pome'UJ', 0.

Delores Cleland; Sunday
sch oo l

WALLPAPER.
PAINT &amp; SUPPLIES

POMEROY
LANDMARK

Lost and t 'ound

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

E~~:perie n ce

ACE HARDWARE

1970 FORD F 750 Cu!o lom 17 50 .o:
14 00 lu e-s wmc h O nly 14 ()()()
1111
Header s Cll 1ape deck
Ove r 53 000 111 e •lro Jo , S£Hrous
colt!. only olle• 12 noo n
096 I 071 S6 800

TANK
CLEANING

-., p.m . 10 p m -

The
Country 8; Capitol Beat 33. News 10, To Tell The

•

News 13 .

7 and 11 p m. - The Sflng (pg l
CMnnel Five

and Frlends6; CBS News8 , 10; OverEasy'lO
7 .oo--CrOS$-Wlls 3,4, Liors Club 6; Pop Goes

'

~EPTIC

S..\•e JO pet . to so pet
on hea t •ng cos t

SALES AND SERVI CE ·
11 ·9-tfc

D

LOSl IN long Bof!om Reedsvtlle
ar ea 51 Be rnard dog , o• ou,•d 3
yeo1 5 old Ca ll (614 ) 378 6209
Reword

•

Pomeroy, Ohio
P om eroy 992-6281
or 992·6263

lllfi!'O IS

IN COME lA X Set vtce s Fe de•ol
ond Stole Ta xes
Walla ce
f!u ~se ll Brodbury qq7 7728

. J&amp;L

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

Co li '19/ 21 14

ft ~o ~o nobl o

Business Services

.

CARTER

HUG)
WALL Hall qtn g!o and
r.lgon .. N&gt; ce lo• C hr• -. hn o~

oz

of the U-7 Spy Incident," 8; Movie " Girls\ Girls!
Girls! " 10 .
12 :oo-Janakl Jl. l.CtO-Tomorrow J,.t , 1· 1
Movie Channel
sand 9 p.m. - Annie Hall tpgl

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 7,1971
6,-.NBC News J,4.o5; ABC News 13, Carol Burnett

I WANT lo than k evo•yorl(? lot lO AI lunestonv and toJru.Ji tl
th('u c ord ~ p roy eqo !l o w e•!&gt;
&lt;hi(" odr• 011d (Ole •u• •l b1 11\e lo•
and ~~~• I S du nn g my rece11 t d
du&lt;; t c onttnl and 'i p (l( •ol n lo .o mg
lne~s whtl e I w a ~ o polu;!fll m
'&gt;Oi t lo t l ormA•~ b ct&gt;ls.•o• So lr
Ihe Corndett Clor k H o~p• to l
WtJI k&lt;, Maul !)!tee t- Pomero y
Clmence W Boker,
Ohm or photiC 992 3tl9 1

4~

(2J 6, 7, 'li e

MuiJJie Humt !Hiles aDd Y;ord ~lei
are Hl't'!!pled only With CllSh With
ordtr 2S !.-~n l chargl:' ft11' 11W t arry ·

Charles Wagner of Racine,
Paul Moore.' local, ca lled at -sch oo l secr eta r y, Ba r ba r a
the Do uglas Ctrcle home Gheen; asSIStant Sunday
recently.
sch ool sec r et ary, J a'n e An n
Well, if one needs hel p•just Bill ;
Sunday
schoo l
call on your n eig hbor A great t reasurer, D1a na lhle
b1g tha nk you for Robert See
Deacons· Danny Brown ,
for the use of his equipment R od Grimm, J o hn Ihle, Allen
snd Wayne lrvtn for clea ning C u nn in g h a m ,
Mar tin
the plowed up snow from my Wilcoxen, N1ck lhle, Ron
ma il box so the mail man Sa lser
C?uld get through and other
E mm a
Deaco nesses :
cars could travel the road. Adams, Ollie Mae Cozart,
- Mrs. Dean Brinker Helen Slack, Wanda Po wen:

.

NIU I HAIU:H l4 xb8 71oh Good
.,.. e ll ~l'p l t(. la nk In P01 rlo nd
p ftOil(' ij 4 J ::J1~'}

members o f the M ission a r y

Card uf Thank..~ and
OOtlu11ry 6 ~&gt;ents per wori.J, IJ 00
nun unum Cash 111 ;odvance

b

SIQil

3bl:!dworn
to lal e le&lt;:tnc S l~ 997 7019

19/ 4 ~ K'fliN I:- 141( ~

Sunday afternoon. Several

u~tmory,

TELE VISION
VIEWING

,.

Mobilt· Humes lor Sale Card ol 'llmnks

PUBLIC NOTICE
TIH~ Meq;, s· Co u nty Counctl
on Agi ng, Inc wh o IS a
pr 1vat c nonprot11 corporation
tnt end s to s vbm 11 an ap
pt 1c al ton to r a c ap1lal grant
Under th (! p r o vrs lon o t Secl•on
16 ( b l ( 21 of the Urban Mas s
Trans porta1 10n Ac t ot 1964 a s
a m ended , to prov •dc trans
p o r!atton s ervtce tor th e
e lderly and han d tc apped
w 1thin M c tg s County Th e
gran I a pplt c at •o n w1ll r eque s t
on e ( ll Mod it •ed Schoo l Bu!i
SB 11 0, 11 passeng er
If approved , f1nan ci ng for
th e c apllal grant w1tl be on a
ma tc h in q bllst S wt!h 80
per cent !rom U S Urban
Mass Tran s portaf •On Ad
nllllt Si rai iQfl (UMTA I and 20
per c en t lo ca l ag e nc y tnon
federal) s h ar e There 1S no
s l ate f ln a ncrn g
rn
!h is
pr ogram
It •s prot ec ted t haf 85
eld e rly p e r son s wtl l use th e
se r v •ce five (5) days lor
v.1rrous a c trv rttes mclud1ng
tr ansportaltOn 10 mcd1ca l
sa cr al scrv1c e
t a c tl tiiCS
ag e n ct es , s hopp.ng dtrfncfs .
dnd lor other ne eded ser
v ic es
Th e Me •q s Coun ty Co u nc•l
on Agtng . Inc rn v1ll''&gt; com
m cn ls and or proposals from
all intere s ted publiC. pr1\lale
and para transit ope ra tors
mcludtnq tax1 operators , tor
The
p r O\I•dtng o l t ran s
portat.on serv1ce tor th e
elder l y and handicapped
wtlhrn ou r s erv.ce area
Qperalo r s who are 111
ter es t ed rn ofl er.n g proposal s
to prov•de se rv tce, sho uld
contact E leanor Th omas
Exccuttve Dtr ec tor , Me•gs
Cou nty Cou n c il on Agr ng, In c ,
al Senror (d tze ns Center , Box
7'22 , Pomeroy , OhtO lo ob lam
fu ll deta 11s of th e lyp e of
tran spo rtat ton serll tce that 1S
needed prior to preparing a
p r oposa 1
Wrtlten comme nt s an d or
p ropo sa Is sho uld oe sub
mdled wrl h 1n 30 days to th e
agency at th e a bove uddress
w• th a copy to t he Oh•o
Departmenl
ot
Tra ns
po rlatron , '15 South Fr on t
S ~ r e cl ,
Columbus, Oh10
432 15 . Al len tron
Program
Mane~ger, , Sechon
lb (bl (2)
P royr am

""'In

..., '.

11 :50-Movle "Francis Gary Pcwers : The True Story

and maybe a trifle m o r e
wo uld ha ve quit in real li fe.
Here, h e w e nt p as t ga m e

1

Sibl e to play dtffc rc nt pomt
co u nt limi ts for yo u r opening
n otrump de pending on v nl·

nerabtlity
It certa mly is permrss1 blc
but 99-'Pius per cent of ex-

perts c o n sid er 1t inadvi s·
able
•NI&lt;: WSPA.I~ F It

tN1' 1' HHPIUSI·

ASSN

1

tOo you ha ve a ques tton for
the experts ? Wnte " As k the
Experts. " care of /hiS ne wspaper lnd•v•dual ques f/on s w11i
be answered If accompanied

by stamped self-addressed
envelopes The most tnt erestmg questions wrl! b&amp; used 1n
lhts co lumn a11d will raceiVlJ ,

:-- - - : . , - - - - - - - - -rwlth a five-d.t amon::d;.::.
b':'d:::.. .:.A::s~_c_oP_•,es_
o_lJ_A_c_o_8_Y_M_o_o_E_R"'NO..,I

�'·

- - - - - - - - - - - - -·- - - - - - - - - - - - - - I

10-The Datly Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesday , F'eb 7, 1978

l

Another blizzard hits northeastern states
By ANDREW A. YEMMA
United Press International
Tile Northeast reeled today
from another storm that
struck with blizzard force ,
para lyzmg most acttvtty wtth
up to two feet of snow, high
wmds, high tides and bttter
cold temperatures.

towns

Res1dents

were

cautioned not to leave their
homes
"The e1ty Is like a ghost
town," said pollee dtspatcher
George Epp 111 Atlantic City,
N J "There's VIrtually little
or no movement here' '

At least three

Officials m Connecticut ,

Massachusetts,
Pennsylvama a nd Rhode
Island and 111 New York C1ty
and
Boston
declared
emcrgenctes, closmg schools,
factories, bu si nesses a nd
:nonessential government

brealung potential The 15 5
mches of snow that fell on
New York's Central Park by
late Monday was tbe most
smce 1961.
In tbe upper Mtdwest, battered by what was termed the
Great Bhzzard of 1978 only 10

traffic

deaths, two m Pennsylvania
and one m Massachusetts,

were blamed on the weathe r
The storm was the second
m less than three weeks tn
batter the natton's most
populous regton Though the

days ago,

heavy snows

blanketed parts of Mtchigan
and 1ndtana Though it was
sunny and brtgh! in the
ChJcago's western suburb:!. It

snowed more than I mches In
the Loop 10 miles closer tn
Lake M1c haga n, snarhng

last storm was tlescribed as

traffic m both mornmg and

offtces The Nattonal Guard "historiC" and the worst m a
mobihzed to hght the snow tn decade by the NatiOnal
Pennsylvam a and Rhode Weather SerVIce, the new
system held more recordIsland.
Motonsts were stranded by
the hundreds and power failures blacked out thousands of

evenmg rush hours.
BLizzard warnings were

homes,

1nc1udmg

Southern

New

entire

En~land

Discowtts are
not taxable
Edgar L. Ltndley, Tax
CommissiOner for Ohto sa1d

today benefits recetved by
the elderly and handtcapped
Oh ioa ns as a result of the

Lt feltne Uttltty Dtscount
Program are not subject to

the Ohio persona l mcome tax
In addttlon, the Inte rnal
Revenue Servtce has also

ruled that these beneftts are
not mcludtble in gross mcome
for Federal purposes and

thus not subjeet tu Federal
mcome tax.
Lmdley has ordered the
Income Tax DtvJ sJOn of the
Ohio Department of Taxa tiOn
to expcd1te the proccssmg o (
all 1977 pcrsondl 111Corne tax
1efu ml clauns He IS lakmg
act10n smcc tt IS obvtous that
lhe Ohio mcomc tax refund
checks wt ll be of assista nce to
those unfortunate Ohioans
who have suffered hna nct al
losses durang the recen t

wmler stonn

Colorado

~~
It

)

--~

and
.

The Northeast storm
system extended from
Vlrginta through Vermont,
dumpmg 1 to 2 feet of snow m
most areas and bloWing it
into high drifts.
"I went out the door a few

posted for parts of North
Dakota and Montana and

nunutes ago and 1t was
snowing absolutely stdeways.
Instead of commg dnwn, tt

Ohto Umverstty campus on

Saturday, Feb 16, 6 p m
Ttckets for the show ts $6.50,
and they go on sale Feb 7 at
the Memona1 Auditorium box
also

avmlable

1n

Columbus at the matn CTO
outlet.

stnkes and unpose tmes on

hours before tides flooded the

NAOMI MILLER
REEDSVILLE - Funeral

throwing st at me," sa1d area.
All three of the New York
Rhode
Island
Ctvti
Preparedlless Director Sanfll
J. Amato
Hurncane-force wmds up
to 92mph hampered eii!X"ts Ill
save the foundering , but

empty, Greek otl tanker
Global Hope with 32 crew
members aboard in Salem
Harbor north of Boston Two
boatmen trying to heat tbe
storm were reported lost tn
Long Island Sound
Ttdes up to 3 feet above
normal surged from Massa·
ohusetts to Mame Gov
Mtchael S. Dukakis ordered
the coastal Massachusetts
town of Wmthrop evacuated

services for Mrs. Naom i M .
M1ller , 54, Route 1, ReedS·

area's majur atrports closed
and flights into the area from
southern and western cities
were canceled. Hotels
throughout the East were
fiUed Ill capacity.
The commencement of tbe
blizzard around ooon sent
tens of thoosands of New
York commuters jamming
mto Grand Central Station
"They were putting people
on trains like they run cows in
box cars,~' newspaper vendor
Charlie Smith said. "Thts
whole place was so crowded
you couldn't get Ill between

yllle, who died Sunday at Mt .

Carmel Hospital In Columbus
w1ll be held at 2 p.m Wed ·
nesday at the Cook and Son
Funeral Home, 1631 ParSClns
Ave • Columbus.
_
Mrs M tller IS survl\'ed by
her husband, Raymond , five
sons, Howard, L~rry and
Fred,
Spencer. all
of
Columbus , Raymond Miller,
Columbus . Rodney Miller of
Mansfie ld . two daugkter5,
Tonda Walker and Pamela
Jackson, both of Columbus.
and 14 grandchildren

l'lunal will "" tn the 01&gt;1tz

Cemetery , Columbus Of ·
l l clatlng at services will be
the Rev . Mickael Hunt
Friends may call at tne
funeral home from 7 to 9 tkls
evening

.

Utem."

co nta ms a strong clause
penahung
mmers
" tt

probably will he beaten" tf
and when tt comes up for
rat1f1cation

The contract reportedly
contams a clause whtch
hne
mmers
would
parttctpatmg 1n wildcat

Cray "I don't think the
mtners will buy that penalty
However , some umon clause . I also don't think tbe
offtctais do not feel an men are getttng qu1te tbe
arbttrator would he latr to the wages they are looking for . I
hope they (the Bargommg
mmers.
"The arbitrator always Council) rejects It and then
rules for the company," satd we won't have to worry about
Ken Wagnild, chaU'IIIan of lt.''
the grtevance committee of
Cray satd UMW members
UMW Local 5497 in Powhatan are very aware that the union
Point. "If 11 calls fur a ftne for ts tn a strong bargamtng
the mmer I don 't think 11 will posttion because of dwindlmg
be rattfted . I doubt if t! will coal supphes caused by the
get out of the bargammg longest UMW strtke m the
nation's hisotry
council "
Bill Cray , vtce presulent of
" It would he a shame to
UMW Local 1957 m Vtnton gtve t! up rtght now," sa1d
County, who led a group of Cray "We have worked so
rovmg pickets mto Lawrence hard to get where we are
County Monday to shut down right now "
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
non-umon operations, was
Electrtc Co. satd today !be
even more emphatic.
"I personally don 't thtnk a tentabve agreement does not
person shoUld have hts bread mean ''an urunediate solutiOn
and butter taken away to the dwindhng coal
supplies

Reedsvtlle
Dtscharged - Ertc Hart.
Pomeroy: DalSY Taylor , Vtrgmta Mtchael. Edna
Mtddleport , Flosste Hy sell , Sttles, Mtsll Kmg , Alpha
Rutland , General McCune, Cottrtll
Mtddleport, Jtmmy King,
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Adimtted - Veleeta Rowe,

Mtddleport , Judy Mtiler,
Middleport , Ralph Russell,
Pomeroy , Ella Smtih,
Pomeroy ,

Iva

Stewart,

Mlnersvtlle; All ee Clark,
Mtddl•port, James r,onde,

The formula
is ...

" In

CAP MEETING
The Galha - Meigs Com-

HOSPITAL NEWS

Mmersvtlle ; Loren Hoffman ,
Dext"'r , Wllh e Blam e,

because of a strike," smd

coal companies if they are at
faUlt m the strtkes

•

I

Rocktes

california's Sierras

continued conse rvation of
By JOHN T. KADY
electn
ctty until the strtke lS
United Press International
se
ttled
an d coa l starts
A top Ohio Umted Mtne
movmg
agam
Workers Uruon offtctal satd
John Guzek, prestdent of
today a tentattve agreement
Dtstrtct
6
wtth the soft-coal mdustry UMW
would
" probably"
be headquartered m Bellatre
reJected by UMW members if wtth 16,000 members tn Ohio
It contams a strong clause and the northern Panhandle
which would impose fmes on of West Vtrgmta, and a
member of the UM W
wtldca~strikers
Ohio's cual-burnmg electrtc Bargammg Council, srud he
ut1hties today also urged did not know whether the
Council woUld approve the
pact at a meeltng today m
Washmgton
'' I really don't know ,"
CONCERT PLANNED
Ha rd-drtvmg rock arttsts, Guzek told UPJ. " It would
th e Getl s band, wtll be depend on how 1t ts wr1tten ,,
featured m concert on the But Guzek srud if the contract

a re

I

traveler's warnmgs 111 the

was like somebody was

meeting Is slated for Thursday evemng, February 9, at
7·30 p m. tn the Central Of-

posstble," satd C&amp;SOE
spokesman Bob Jones " It ts
very
Important
that

fice. An Important tlem of

conservation continue until

Barr, Lmda Burns, Andrew

Edwards , Charles Eiilott,
Emmett Halley , Myrtle
Hayner, Garner Hubbard,
Gordon Ma rshall , Aaron

McCa m, Clara McCoy,
Kathleen McWtlllams, John
Meadows, Jane Ratcliff,
Leonard
Rtffle ,
Lisa
Thompson

(Births Feb. 6)
Mr and Mrs Lewts
Chattm, a son, Leon , Mr and

Mrs Paul Douglas, a
daughter, Pt Pleasant; Mr.

McArthur.

busmess w11l be the elecUon
of off1cers

OTHER SURVIVORS
Sur~tvors of Elda' H
Carsey of Route 4, Pomeroy.

notltsted In the ortgmal death

assistant personnel director
at Gavm Plant, spoke to
Mason Extension

Homemakers on Safety when
the homemakers met on

Tuesday at the home of Mrs.
Landon Smtih. Mr. Tucker
was introduced by Mrs. Cecil
Smtih of the Safety Committee.
He satd that !05,000 per.Ons
die each year as a result of

accidents Falls are rated as
a No 1 ktller and followed by
auto acctdents, and fires and

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

"THE

FRIENDLY BANK"

burns. He reported that
gasoline left in an open can be
extremely hazardous. A can
of gasohne undt:r certam

conditions could explode and
carry the same charge as 400
pounds of dynarmte. Fumes
from gasoline could drtft over
to a ptiot light and cause an
exploston He told of many
other causes of death, mcluding polsonmg. He named
poison control centers One ts

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

DEPOSITS INSURED TO

as

much

the company begms to
recetve
regular
shtpments. ' '

coal

A spokesman for Ohio
Edison Co , whtch has less
than 40-day supply of coal
left, satd the utthty was glad
tel

see

the

tentative

riff's office saad "a few"

ptckets were at the Columbus
&amp; Southern Ohio generating
plant
in that county.
MEET THURSDAY
In
Carroll
County, the sheA meeting of Preceptor
riff's
ol!tce
also
srud all was
lleta Beta Chapter of Beta
qUiet
at
the
Puskartch
Mtne
Sigma Pht Sorority will be
Co.
m
Sherrodsv!Ue
where
held at 7• 30 p m Thursday at
about 200 striking miners
the Metgs Inn
gathered Monday .
In other strike related
developments
BOOSTERS TO MEET
-The Purex Co, in London
Metgs Athlettc Boosters
wiU meet Wednesday at the laid off 30 of its 330 workers
Monday because of a 25
high school at 7 30 p.m
percent cutback m electric

recen

Mrs. Stevens

Mrs. Stevens

Activities
resumed

the "A" and 8 ' divlSions of
Smtih the c1rcuit. There wre 1,053 in

hospitalization.

Mrs.
Landon
presented the devottons and
closed wtth the Thought for
the Day.
Mrs. Biliie Jean Dawson
read mmutes of the prevtous
meeting whtch were ap-

proved. Mrs. Lilah zerkie
gave the treasury report
The president &amp;Mounced

that the County Council
meeting will be held on Feb. 7
at 10 a .. at the courihouse
annex. She also announced
that the next meetmg WIU be
held at the home of Mrs.
Malllda Noble.
Mrs Landon Srmth gave
salety tips on what persons
could do when trapped 111 a
snow stonn

At the conciuston refresh·
\he St. Mary' s Hospital,
ments
were served by Mrs
Huntington, and the number
Clara
WtUtams and Mrs.
is 696-2224 and another center
ts the Chlldren's Hospttal, Laurene Lewis to the
Pittsburgh, Pa , no 681-412- following Luther Smith,
Mrs. George Carson, Mrs R.
6669.
C.
Kmg, Mrs. Dorothy
Pamphlets on home safety
Cartwright,
Mrs. Cecil Sm1th,
were distributed
Mrs.
Landon
Smith, Mrs.
Mrs . Laurene Lewis,
William
Z.rkle,
Mrs. Blllle
prestdent, prestded at the
Jean
Dawson
and
Mrs. John
meetmg and thanked the
Marshall.

attendance Sunday afiernoon
to hear the publlc discourse,
" Have Fatth tn The Good
News" .

The speaker, John D.
Busby of Brooklyn, New York
discussed the way of hie of
fatthful men and women of
old, how they looked forward
to our day, to a time in which
the Word of God ls being
ful!Uled He exhorted the
audience to have fatth Ill the
good news, to continue to

EXTENDED FORECAST
Thursday through
Saturday, fair through the
period, wltb highs in the 20s
Thursday aod Friday aad
In tbe 30s Saturday. Lows
wUI he betweea five and 10
Thursday aod Friday aod
in the teen saturday.

(Donna Jean) Payne. Mount
vernon with whom she made

her home . Mrs William
(Belly Jol McCoy, ll&lt;&gt;unt
vernon ;
Mrs
Arthur

(Gertrude) Goss. Lake City,

F Ia , two si sters, Mr-s ·
Charles CLvcllle) cameron
and Mrs Pete I Liddle l

Booth. both ol Columbus; lwo

brothers . Frank Varian ,
Columbus, and Clarence
Vanan, Interlock. Fla., 10
grandchildren and seven
great grandchildren .
Funeral Hrvlces will be

held at 1 p.m Wednesday 81

the Rawlings-Coats Funeral
Home with Mr George Gla1e
offlcllillng Burial will be In
River view
Cemetery .
Friends may call at the
funeral home at emy ti me.

LYDIA WEYERSMILLER

CHARLES WYATT

Charles L
Wyatt, 47,
Maso n, d1ed about 6 p.m
Monday In a truck acc1dent
on the west V1rgmla Turn
p1ke near Beckley He was an
employe of the Ben·Tom
Truckmg Co
He was born Jan 9, 1931 , to
the late Charles K and
Helena N1xon Wyatt, and was
also preceded 1n death by an
mfant daughter H1s blr
thplace wa s McArthur, OhiO
Surv1vors mclude h1s w1fe,
Margaret Hysell Wyatt ,
three sons, Clifford and Terry
of Pomeroy; Bret of Mason.
RECEIVES PROMOTION
three daughters, Helena
The U
Atr Force has Darst of Pomeroy , Dora
promoted Rober! M Rhodes, Rou sh and Jayne Wyatt of
whose parents are Mr. and Mason , a steps1s ter, Patty
Mrs Robert G. Rhodes of R Wyatt of Mason ; two
brothers, W1ll1am and Larry ,
R 3, Racme, Ohto, to the rank both of Ashley, Oh1o, and five
of semor atnnan. Atnnan grandchildren
Ser v1ces w111 be at 3 Thurs
Rhodes Is servmg at Grissom
day afternoon at Ew1ng
AFB, Ind., as an aircraft Chapel,
Pomeroy, w1th bun a I
mamtenance specialist He 1s 10 Rock Spnngs Cemetery
a 1973 graduate of Southern Fnends may call after 2
Wednesday afternoon
Htgh School

main speaker
Gisela Stevens wtll be
speaker for the Pomeroy
Chapter of the Women's
Aglow Fellowshtp meeting 7
p.m Thursday at the Metgs
Inn
Mrs stevens was born and

education tn Europe She met
her husband whtle attendmg
a Lutheran College m
Amertca.
With her husband, Steven,
she has traveled m over 50

nattons durmg missions work
and productiOn misswns
documentary films for use on

America Christian televisiOn
She wiU rev1ew an operative

faith whtch, she says, will not
only take the gospel to aU
nallons of the earth but Will
work datly m the home as

well.
Mrs. Stevens

guest speaker for taking part
Jehovah's witnesses m the
tn the program
Mtddleport
area resume their
A thank you ca td was read
regularly
scheduled ac·
from Mrs George Carson,
llvitles
this
week afler atexpressing apprectatlon for
tending
a
ctrcu1t
assembly in
the flowers whtch she
London,
whtch
meluded
both
recetved from the club durtng
11
1
her

daugh ters: Mrs . Richard

s.

as

agreement reached but
not1ce wclude his step- added, "we're not out of the
mother, Mrs Ora Carsey, woods yet"
Pagetown, and a halfThe state's coal fields were
brother, Roger Carsey of reported quiet today.
Ohio
The Coshocton County she-

Safety is main
topic outlined
MASON - Luther Tucker,

tn gtve up the center rmg."

Columbus &amp; Southern
contmues to ask customers to
conserve

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges Feb. 6)
Douglas Ashley, Maggte

- Former
U.S.
Sen.
Wilham Saxbe , satd the
tentative agreement may not
stgnal an end to the coal
str1ke. He satd the mmers
bad been out for two months
and nobody listened to them
"Now, they've got !be whole
natton going dowlthill and
enJoymg the attention they're
gettmg," Saxhe said. "I feel
they're gomg to he reluctant

lS

the mother

of two daughters, Stefft, 5,
and Knsti, 20 months.

News •• in Briefs
(Continued from page 1)
SoVIet purchases of American wheat and corn combined
during the 1977-78 marketing season to a total of 9.6 million
metrtc tons. This includes 3.6 milUon tons, or 132 million
bushels, of wheat and 6 million tons, or 236 milUon bushelll, of
corn.
WAS!fiNGTON - PRESIDENT CARTER ' Is' asking
Congress to approve $70,000 in back insurance payments for
Antomette Siovik, whose husband was the only U. S.
serVIceman to he executed by an American firing squad in
World War ll.
Pvt. Eddie Siovik was executed in France after twice
runnmg away in combat. Following both incidents, be turned
himseU over to authorities and said his pamc made him flee
under flte.
WASifiNGTON -MURIEL HUMPHREY today laced her
first lull day as a member of the Umted States Senate where
her hnsband, Hubert H. Humphrey, served for almost a
quarter of a century.
Mrs. Humphrey became the only woman m the Senate and
only the 12th in history Monday, when she was sworn into serve
m her late husband's place as U. S. senator from Minnesota
Wltil a special election Is held in November.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

SALE
MEN'S
SHIRTS
Y2PRICE

mamtam the1r confidence,

and to continue to proclaun
the good news of the Kingdom
government just as thetr
brothers are doing around the
earth.
There were 17 bapttzed
Sunday morning . Among
those attendmg from the
Meigs area were Mr. and
Mrs. Albert Troom and
famlly, Mr . and Mrs.
Raymond Fowler, Mr . and
Mrs Edwtn Fowler, Mr. and
Mrs. Steve Wood, Mr. and
Mrs. John Foster, and Mr .
and Mrs. Lane Daniels and
family

Sport Shtrts - Dress Shirts Knit

Shirts

•

Western

Sh1rts Long sleeve styles
- a good seledion of styles

solid

colors

facing critical situation

I

Lydia Weyersm 11ler, 83, Rt
2. PomeroY , died Monday at
her res•dence She was a
Rreeland of Syracuse has
ch arter member of Rock Spr
rece1vecl word of the death of
1ngs Grange
his brother m law, Aulton
She was bOrn Nov 3, 1895,
Wllso'l on Tuesday at
the daughter of Philip and
Melbourne, Fla Se rvice s
Hanna
Hedman
Also
were held there.
preced1ng her i n death were
her husband, Joe , and a
SISter , M agg1e Sm1th
AUDREY SISSON
She IS surv1ved by a son,
Mrs Audrey A Sisson, 64 , Norman Weyersmlller,
Mount Vernon , formerly of Pomeroy , a granddaughter,
Pomeroy. died Monday at 01ana Warner, Columbus,
• R1vers1de Methodi st Hospital and a great granddaughter,
usage by Ohio Edison.
-Sen. John Glenn, O.Ohio, 1n Columbus
Geann1ne warner ,
two
Mrs S1sson was born Feb
brothers, WaiTer and Albert
called on Pres1dent Carter Ill
24, 1913 m lv\elgs County, a He11man, Pomeroy , three
brmg both sides in the coal daughter
of the fate Franklin S1sters, Add1e Hellman ,
dispute to the Whtte House if and Gertrude Lee Varian Fel1c1a Grueser , and
the tentative agreement is She was also preceded in Flor ence Hedman, all of
reJeCted by the Bargatntng death by her husband , Lou iS Pomeroy
Funeral serv1ces W11l be
Council If the strike is not • S1sson, 1n 1968 , and a sister ,
Catherme V1tatoe
held at 1 p m Thursday at
settled m the next few days,
are
three Ewmg Chapel, the Rev Cecil
Surv1vmq
Glenn satd1 " the situation m
W1se off 1clatmg , and bunal
will be 1n Rock Spnngs
Ohio wlU he crttical. It's
cemetery Fn ends may call
already very grave.''
Wedn esday

meantlme 1

mumty Actaon Agency board

and Mrs Lawrence Davtdson, a son, Galhpohs, Mr.
and Mrs Russell Lamer, a
son, Pt Pleasant; Mr and
Mrs . Nelson Seymours, a son,

A loan from Citizens .Nationa I Bank.
That's how I've bought my car, my
boat and fixed up my house. Now
I've got this idea for a wonderful
cure. I'm working on it nights and
Citizens National Bank's lending me
the money for it, too. How much
water, (&gt;eorge?

the

!

AULTON WILSON
SY RACUSE - George

Top niine official feels
contraCt will
be
rejeCted
.

offtce from H da1ly Ttckets

t!!J!PEED OUEENJ

traveler's advtSOries fer mow
and blowmg snow covered !be
PiaiJIS from South Dakota
through
the
Texas
Panhandle. Ram and freezmg
ram were forecast today
through the central Gulf
states. More snow prompted

Area Deaths

I

and

patterns Sizes small 0414112), medium {15-151fd,
large 06-16Vz), extra large
(17 -171/z),

Dress Sh1rt neck stzts 14112
to 17'h Sleeve lengtl'ls 32 to
35.

Men's &amp; Boys' Department-1st Floor

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

By United Presslntel'llatiUIUil
NEW YORK - GOV . HUGH CAREY asked Prestdent
Carter Tuesday for federal disaster relief f..- New York City
and tis suburbs, Citing $35.6 milUon m damages caused by two
massive Bllowsturms so far thls year. Monday's storm belted
the area with up to 25 tncbes of snow, strangling transportatton
systems and shutting down the nation's largest city for two
days.
Fifteen deaths in the tri-otate area were attributed to tbe
storm, including two on Long Island, seven in New Jersey and
six in Connecticut.
.
ROYAL OAK, MICH - LORRAINE JOSWICK says her
$5,000 lottery payoff wlU go for a good"time rather than for
ropall'ing her Sllbutban De!Folt borne that was wrecked tn a
frantic search for the winnmg ticket.
Mrs JosWlck, her husband and two grown chUdren spent
40 days demollshmg thetr house Ill lind tbe rruss1ng ticket. She
forgot where she put it.
BEffitrr, LEBANON - FIERCE FIGHTING wtth
mortars, artillery and heavy machme guns broke out for the
second straight day today between units of the Lebanese army
and Syrian peace-keeping troops in an east Betrut suburb.
Rightist sources said at least one Lebanese soldter was
killed and one was wounded, but no casualty reports were
lmmedlBtely available for the Syrian troops There was no
off1cial explanation for the renewed fighting, whtch followed a
pitched battle TUesday that left up to 18 persons dead and
wouroed 30.
CLEVELAND - THE FBI AND tbe Cleveland Pollee

By JOHN T. KADY
Unltod Presslnttl'llatlonal
A state Department of
Energy offictal satd today if
the

tentative agreement

between strtking coal mmers
and coal operators ts not
rattlted, Ohioans will face an
'' extremely crl tt cal''
sttuatton with ,,mass1ve
cutbacks" m electrtcai

power.
An Ohio United Mme
Workers uruon offtctal who is
a member of the UMW'S 39
member Bargalntng Council
satd he did not know tl the
contract wtlt he approved by

the UMW membership and
said,

"I

even

questton

whether I would approve 1t"
as a member of the
Bargammg Council.
A tentative agreement was

reached Monday by UMW
negotiators and the soft-coal

tndustry tn an attempt to end
the 64-&lt;iay strike that has left
Ohto's

electnc

mtsswners Tuesday mght
received two b1ds for a new

packer truck for the Meigs
County refuse collectiOn

operatton.
Submtttmg bids were John
Gibson Motor C1ty, Athens, tn
the amount of $54,884, and
Truxmore Industries, Rtch·

mond, Va.,

Ill

the amount of

~,995.

The bids were tabled for
additional study and will be
awarded at the next regular
meetmg.
Brooke Sayre, Rt . 2,
Pomeroy,

was hired as

landflU truck dnver at a rate
of $4 per hour to begin Feb.
211
CommissiOners will meet m
spectal session at their offtce
on Fr1day, Feb. 10, 7:30p.m.
to discuss Amentel Enterpnses proposal for a
nursmg home

m

Metgs

CoWlty.
Attending were Henry
Wells, Rtchard Jones and JIIR
Roush, commlSStoners and
Mary Hobstetter, clerk.

that they must obtain a
permit from the department belore any mialog
takes place.
Under tbe state's strip
mine law, surface mine

operators must obtain a
permit from the Divisloa of
Reclamation before mining
sand, gr~vel, shale, day,
Hmestone,
dolomite,

gympsum, sandstone or Jill
dirt.
"Coal
strip
mine
operators are aware of

what's required of them
under the Ohio strip mine
law .•. but some who are

mining the other minerals
evidently are not aware of

the provisions of the newer
surface mine law," said
Charles CaU, chief of the
Divltlion of Reclamation.

Five money
• are
swts
docketed
Five sutts for money and

Pomeroy police
had busy month

one for support have been
ftled in Me1gs County Common Pleas Couri.
Sue Ann Kaufl, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, !Ued suit agamst
Richard J Wltor Burkhamer,

Pomeroy's- Police
Department durtng the Chester, m the amount of
month of December collected $7,183 70 for inJunes, loss of
$961 from the parking meters, wages, and damages as a
accordmg to 'Chief Jed result of an acctdent on May
Webster's report submitted 23, 1977.
to Pomeroy Council Monday
Hogg and Zuspan Connight.
struction Co , Mason fteld sutt
The
department
tn· in the amoWlt of $4,944 s:;
vestigated 22 accidents, agamst D. D. Parsons,
made 23 arrests, tssued 200 Racine ; Racme Home
parkmg tickets and drove National Bank, Racine, fUed
3,801 miles.
suit against Paul D Ables,
The foliowmg arrests were Rt. 2, Racine m the amoWlt of
made,
intozlcatlon
I, $975.97;
Racine Home
disorderly conduct, I; speed, Nattonal Bank, Racme,
4· left of center, 3i assault, 3i
against ~ames Hubbard,•
l;.ving scene of an accident, Syracuse tn the amount of
1; petty larceny, 10.
$1,052.50; Heights Finance
Corp., Woodstock, Ill.,
against Delmar Hawley,
Cheshire In the amount of
$1,743. 76.
Debra
J.
Meadows,
Allegan,
M1ch.,
filed for
Partly cloudy tonight and
support
Wider
the
Rectprocal
ThursdaY, with a low lontght
in the near 10 and highs Agreement Act agamst
R.
Meadows,
Thursday between 20 and 25. Mlcha•I
Pomeroy
.
,,'
\o

Wf'.ather

electrica l power, and the

penple who are going to catch
the brunt of 11 are tn the

mmer s would reJect an
agreement,,, Dave Zinuner.

commercial and industrull
secto r, and that means

depoty director of the Ohio
Department of Energy, told

substanttal unemplo)nlent
"11 they fail to rattly the

UPI

'~ We

have been working

have to be tD cutback every-

have tl they don't ratify tt.
"U the mmers fat! to ratify
tlrn cnntr~r, l'WlluJll say 1t is

members for ratthcahon,

an
extremely
crt1cal
s1tuat1on," said Zmuner. ''I

faded to do so m a seven-hour

thmk the option the state has

•
VOL XXVIII NO. 208

Panhandle of West Vtrglnta,
said Ute l'Ontract has "some

good points and some bad
~

subject to the health , safety
and welfare of the

~ple n

John Guzek, prestdent of
UMW Dtstrtct 6 whtch ts
headquartered in Be iiatre

potnts "
But he

~atd

tht:- B.•rguuu11g

Counctl would probably not
take another look at the
('(llltract w1t1l tht! weekend
11
There was a lot or wordin~
nussmg from the ~ummary of
theiltgrcemcnt they guve us,"

he told UP! Tuesday mght
"Right now, I don' t know tf
the men wuuld approve 1t ur

not becuuse we (the council )
didn 't go over the whole

thtng
"From what I've read, 1
even question tf I would
approve It," srud Gut.ek " It
has some good points, and it
has some bad potnls "
However. he satd a section
contcnnmg a strong clause

ftmng UMW members for
parttctpatlng m wildcat
stnkes cou ld doom the
contrm1
vote.

m a

ratification

Ohto Edtson, wt!h only a 37.
day supply of coal remaining
und whkh scr.ves 700,000
cus tomers mcludin~ over

(Continued on page 12)

en tine

y

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

and has 16,000 members tn
eastern OhtGand the northern

contract, OW" only Optton may
where that tt is reasonable,"
smd Zimmer, ·'except areas

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1978

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ __ _ _ _ _ ___;,_ _ _ _ ___;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

..·:· •,•:• •.•:· :· •, .· .;.

·:·:

•.•

. . ·:· ..

EXTENDED FORECAST
Friday through Sunday,
snow or snow nurrles and

cold during the period, with
highs In the 20s and lows
between flve and 15.

Operators Associ atiOn
· We JUSt want to see whnt
The record nationwide coal Ute pu ckc~ge 1s,'' sm d une
strike went mto its 65th day council member us he left
tnday wtth a spectal Umted
Some members t"u1ve been
Mme Worke r s barga tnm g openly upset ove1 11 d~mse
councti wtthholdtng approval provtdm g hncs aga anst
of a tentative settlement
mmcrs who eng••ge m wtldcl!t

The 39-man barga tntng

Mtddleport Mayor Fr ed
Huffman today requested the
assistance of Mtddleport
restdents and busmesses m
assessmg damage caused by
the heavy snows and cold

weather durtng the month of
January
Go vernor

Rhodes

ha s

requested that Prestdent
Carter declare
d1saster area

OhiO

a

In order that thts request
can be constdered, a list of

actual property damage must
PHILLIP W. KELLY, prestdent of the Kelly
Manufacturmg Co , Middleport, is a new member of the
board of dtreclors of the Pomeroy National Bank

Dtrectors of the Pomeroy

Nattonal Bank at tts annual
meetmg held on Tuesday,
accordmg to Edtson Hob-

In the event -that a
Declaration of Dtsaster m
Ohto would be made by the

attrtbuted to the heavy snow
and cold
Restdents or businesses

new director
Phtlhp W Kelly was
elected to the Board of the

be made available

Pres ident, area r~sidents
would be eltgtble to recetve
ftnanc1al assistance from the
federal government for losses

.Kelly elected

who had damage are asked to
liSt the damages tncurred and

Chatnnan , Dr R El Bo1ce,
Horace Karr, Roger Morgari,
Warren Pickens, and Orton
Roush
Officers r eeleCted were

Edtson Hobstetter.
Prestdent ; John M Gloyd,

Council withholding
contract approval
By DREW VON BERGEN
WASHINGTON (UPI ) -

Residents
assistance
is needed

The suit, believed to be the first maiprac!tce action ever
brought against a doctor for usmg Laetrile, was hled by the
family of John L. Scott, a Btnrungham, Ala., postman who
died of IWlg cancer in 1974. The ~intlffs contend Scott might
bave bad a better chance of recovery if be had more
conventional cancer trea1rnent.

The Meigs County Com-

" We 've rerogmzed from

the hegtnrung that there IS a
htgh posstbtlity that the

all week on thts ib the terms

controversial substance aa a valid treatment for cancer

operators
abstracting
minerals other than coal

and the uhllUes have ts
mass1ve
c utbacks
m

of what sort of options we

ATLANTA - CONGRESSMAN -PHYSICIAN Larry
McDonald, fighting a $6 milUon lawswt by the family of a
cancer patient he treated with Laetrile, insists the

Bids
tabled

Washt nglon

utlhlles

EDINBORO, PA. - OF AN ESTIMATED 54 million
Americans who smoke, many use filter cigarettes wtth the
idea doing so compensates, at least partially, for the harmful
effecta of wh1ch the surgeon general warns on every pa~k Gus
Miller says filters don't. He says they are even more
dangerous than unfiltered cigarettes.
While scientific evidence mounts on both stdes of the
"Does Smoking Cause Cancer?" controversy, statistical data
compiled by MlUer, a mathematician at Edinboro State
College, supports research indtcating smoking shortens lifespan by about 10 years.

.·:: ··:··::: :;· ··. .. ·: •, : ...: ·:
COLUMBUS IUPI) The Ohio Department of
Natural Resources today
reminded Ohio mining

m

starved for coal
However , the
UM W
Bargammg Council, whtch
must approve the agreement
before it ts submttted to UMW

intelligence untt are mvesttgating posstble trafftc case-fixtng
by policemen and mWlicipal court personnel, the Platn Dealer
wd Wednesday Up to 30 policemen and two municipal court
judges were satd to be under investigation. The cases Involved
ranged from vehicular bomtctde to movmg vtolallons.
The FBI, under statutes covering public corruption and
organized crime, ts bemg dtrected m the case by the Justice
Department's strike Force Against OrganiZed Crime

NASHVILLE, TENN . -MARY NORTHERN HAS lost her
appeals court fight to prevent amputation of her gangrenous
feet, but the 72-year-old spinster may change her mind and
consent to the operation anyway.
After the appeal was denied TUesday, Mtss Northern's
lawyer, Carol McCory, sald, "I understand from the doctors
that she's beginning to look at her feet and apprectate the
situation and she may consent."

meeting

Tuesday .

the approXImate cost of
repa1r, along wtth thetr name
and address.
Lists of damages may be

council , wh1ch must vote its
approval before the pact ca n

be sent to the rank-and-file
for ratification, met for more
than seven hours Tuesday m
secret sessiOn at UMW
headquarters, then recessed

mdefnutely
UMW prestdent Arnold
Mtller told reporters after the
meetmg tha l no votes wet e

taken

on

approval

or

rejectlon of the tentative
agreement reached wath tile

soft coal mdustry Monday
" They h ave not voted
e1ther way.'' Miller sa1d
Some council members m-

dtcated as they left th e
meetmg that the um on's
leadenhtp showed them only

a summary of the agreement
wtth the Bttuminous Coal

left at the Mayor's offtce or
matted to 237 Race St. In
order to be ehgtble for

the Pawtucket, Rhode Island
trtple A farm team of the
Boston Red Sox was the guest
speaker at the noon luncheon

Tuesday of the Pomeroy
at the Metgs Inn.
Robertson satd he has been

addt!lon near Chester. They
have three chtldren, Douglas
servtug in the U. S. Navy ; Martlyn Wolfe, asststant
Carolyn, teachmg tn Hattt, cashter , Joseph A. Young ,
and Michael who ts loan offtcer , and Joan May,

Declaration of Disaster IS

traveled all over the country

made by the Prestdent

whtle seemg many ball
games Most of hts ta lk was

associated m business with

associate branch manager at

his father The Kellys moved
to Metgs CoWlty m 1969
Kelly, who served wtth the
U. S Marme Corps 1945-46
and in Korea in 1950-51, ts a
member of the Pomeroy Gun
Club, the Pomeroy Chamber
of Commerce, the Pomeroy Mtddleport Ltons Club,
Pomeroy Masontc Lodge 164
F&amp;AM; Scotttsh Rite and
York Rtte Bodies and Aladdin
Temple Shrine. His hobbtes
are trapshootmg and golf He
is prestdent of the Kelly
Manufacturmg Co tn Mtddleport.
Other dtrectors reelected

the Rutland office .

A porcupme 1s anned w1th

Charleston, W Va , Kelly
attended Moms Harvey
College He and hts wtle,
I..c1s, reside in the Baum

George S Hobstetter, vice
prestdent ; Wilham J Hobstetter, vtce president and
bran c h manager , Maxme
Gnff1th, cashier , Lera Jones,
assistant cash1er, Joan
Wolfe, assistant cashter,

Arthur W Nease, Jr was

reelected branch manager at
the Tuppers Plams Branch
with

Marilyn

Robmson ,

Asststant Branch Manager
Other employees at the
Tuppers Plams Branch are
Mary Grover and Patricia

Chadwell
Other employees at the
Rutland Branch are Ruth
Arm Graham, Sharon Lee
Barr, Georgene Grate and
Teresa Brown . Matn Off1ce
employees
are Emilia

Mtdkiff, James W. Hobstetter, DoriS Snowden, Edith
(Continued on page 12)
were Edtson Hobstetter ,

NOW YOU KNOW
30,000 barbed, hollow qutlls
from above tts eyes to the ttp

of tts tail. Each quill has 211 to
30 tlarbs

representatives,

Hank

final form ," he satd
Nctther the BCOA
Federal

The Southern Local Board
tn

spec1al

session Monday mght,
dtscussed the possibtlity of
1holdmg

classes on Saturday,

When asked who would bf
pttching for the Boston team

An archeological survey is

parti cularly

the

Mtdwest nnd the East
Und er pr essu re from
Prcstdent atrt~r, umon and
mdu stry offlcwls Hnnlly
l'e a chcd an ag reeme nt
pmvldtng ror H :l7 percent pay
hike over the durutlOn of the

co ntract

and

partial

restoratiOn of the mmers'
near-bankrupt pension and

hea lth

fund s

by

coal

Conctliatton Service had any tt wtll take at least 10 more
comment on the \atest days before the rnn'K-and..fHe
can cmnplete u rattficutlon
development.
111e three-year agreement vote.

hurle r named Mtkc Paxton
[rum Memphis, Tcnn He also
added lli a t Torrez was

proba bly the htghest patd
player,

When asked tf the htgh
salanes and long contrads

might destroy a player's
mcenttve he replied that most
athletes ha ve enough pride to

gu out and do thetr best at all
tuhes.

He satd his Job was to
condttion the athletes He Is
the onl} une that works on the

players except doctors "My
ma m job ts IehabthtattOn,"
' R.,herhon stated
He also stated that sa lartcs

\

th1s season , he satd he felt
M1ke Torrez was the best

mtcher followed by a young

snow ana ice covered roads
Other matters reviewed
were finances, maintenance

of buUdmgs durtng the wmter
months, purchasmg a used

recently wrecked, employing

JWute 33 from Darwm to Cleland, and Vtrgtl Teaford "hung up" on a 2.8 mile
Athens has been suspended were the only persons who improvement on State JWute
mdelinttely and archeology appeared durmg the sessiOn 124, known as the RuUand bystudies required tn new held in conjunction wtlh a pass, Henline reported. The
construction apparently are meetmg of the Me1gs CoWltY proJect would cost about
12,330,000 Right of way
holding up htghway progre~&lt;- CommisSIOners.
Henline
said
the
entire
buying Is scheduled for 1960
Thls was the report of
dtstrtct
receives
only
an
and
construction tn 1981.
Burien Henline, planning
average
of
$12
to
$14
million
a
However,
the archeological
engineer of the Ohio
He
year
for
highways.
survey
has
not been comDepartment of Transportallon, Distrtct 10, outhned projects that are pleted and it appears that the
presented at a meetmg in ' included tn the department's project may not go as
ftve year · plan for Meigs scheduled, the engmeer
Pomeroy Tuesday night.
The appearanCI' of Henline County These mclude State stated.
He satd the Ohio Historical
was de&amp;igned to acquaml Route7, about 2.4 mUes from
mterested Meigs County the Fairgrounds area to Five Soctety ts mvolved in the
archeolo'gtcal studies since
residents on the ftve-year Pomts.
An
environmental
Impact
historical
ground and
plan of the Ohio Department
study
Is
helng
made
and
be
involved in
building
can
of Transportation as far as
construction
of
the
It
ve
plans
for
new
highways.
He
Meigs CoWliY is concerned.
A banker, Theodore·' T. mtlhon dollar project ts was unable to say why the
Reed, Jr , and two real estate scheduled for 1981, he stated studies are taking so long.
'~

leve ls,

After approva l by the

directed to a qu estion and
answer period.

tf there wo•.ld be a short

or drtvmg buses over

Atthough some utili ty
compumes stockpiled cuul In
anttctpation of n strrke, the
long wo1lkout hu ~ cu use d
supplies to dwmdlc to craheal

counci l , umon officials expect

a trainer In the mmor leagues

school week due to weather
conditions
sa f~ty

days

the

for eight years and has

school bus for parts to be

Also dtscussed was the

walkout set m 1946, when
mmers WCI C o£f the job 59

a nd

n01

Medtatlon

for must players on the fann

DALE ROBERTSON

Saturday classes discussed
of EducatiOn

rccol'd for 11 nattonwlde UMW

or.erat.m s

C'hamber of Commerce held

placed on a bus that was
a bus driver. The next

Feb. 21 at 7·30 p m m the
htgh school cafetcrta .
Attendmg were Dallas Ht\1,
president, Gene Yost, vtcc
president, Shirley Johnson,
Sue Grueser and Betty

Wagner , board memb ers,
Bobby Ord, supermtendent,
and Lmda Spencer, cler k

regular meetmg wtll be held

SR33 highway job
The contmuatwn o( a new

Miller smd the next eounctl
mecltng probably would not
be held for sevcrn l duys , .md
some counc1l members were
makmg plans lo r eturn home
''Our ba rga mmg counctl
voted to recess until all the
language IS edtled and put m

Dale Robertson, tramer for

posS ible asststance, these

executive vtce prestd ent ;

Mt11er sa td the w11on would
\\ork wtlh the t:ual operator s
to draw up spectft c contruct
la ngua ge th a t would be
presented to the b.u·gu mm g
counctl, and sa1d he wets not
asked to get any substantive
cha nges ut ttus tunc

m Ute soft coal industry,
wtuc h b1 oke the previous

Baseball trainer talks
at chamber luncheon

hsts must be received by
Saturday, Feb II
The mayor stressed that
only those whose damages
are reported by Feb 11 would
be eltgtble for asststanee tf a

stetter, chatrman and
president
Born and educated 1n

str1kes

w.c1s de st~ned to e nd the stnke
of more Uum 16fl,OOO mmcrs

•

IS,

teams range from $800 •
month to $1,600 When asked
who he thought was the most
outstandtng athlete he has
ever

s~n

he replied, ''Dave

Parker of the Pirates "
Robertson reported hitters
arc the best phystcally fit
athletes because they have to
htt a round ball with a round
bat from any angle at 90
mtles an hour . Robertson Is
married to Annette Warner,

da ughter of Mr and Mrs
(Continued on page 12)

suspended

Another proJect is State
Route 124 tn the Bouman's

Burlingham bridge
Henlme reported that tt

reported new Route 33 from
Darwm to Athens scheduled

Run area It would mvolve

was the general consens us

to t1e m with the 1new road

about one-half mtle
roadway
replacing

among htghway people not to
run Route 33 to the Ravenswood brrdge. He pomted out
that an engmeer study of the
slip potenttal of the Ohio
Rtver and what can be done
about It IS needed and
topographical maps for such
a study have been requested
as a ftrst step to such a
project.
Aerial photos have been
requested on the Route 338
projeCt from Route 124 to the

from Pomeroy to Darwin has
been mdefmitely suspended.
There ts nothmg •n present
plans of the department for

of
a

detenoroting culvert Tins 1s

also hung up tn an archeologtcal survey, but is
scheduled to be put up for
sale in 1978.
Also ll'pro]ect up for sale In
1978ls improvement to Route
338 at the new Ravenswood
brtdge and a $6,120,000 as
Ohto's part of the new bndge
Arch eologtcill ~u rve}'i are
also a drag w thiS area,

Henline stated . Henhne
stated that the Page St
project In Mtddieport ts
progressing well and that a
contract has been sold lor the
replacement
of
the
~

eqnstruct1on of a road from

Ftve Points to the new bridge.
Such a road to the brtdge
would cost about $25 miUion
dollars and would be a fourlane htghway leading to a
bndge, which is only to be 32
feet wide, Henlme pointed
out

Hen line recorded a complamt by the county commtsstonero of the lack of
the bridge ls expected to be lighting at the intersection of
completed by the fall of 1980. the Route 7 bypass and Union
The plannmg engmeer Avenue.
Ravenswood br1dge, Henline
satd It was pomted out that

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