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10 _The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Feb . 28~
· r;;'1~9~
78l\&lt;IIII~W!'JOM.MIII!liJJili

News •• in Briefs

(Continued !rml pap 1)
wielding machetes.
About 100 National Guardsmen attacked Managua's
Autonomous UniverSity after students threw stones over the
school's 'wall at the troops and chanted curses against
President Anastasio Somoza.
AKRON, OHIO - WHILE AKRON COUNCIL today was
scheduled a vote on a controversial abortion ordinance, a
doctor said Its passage would put the city in direct violation of
Ohio law.
''Our attitude on this ordinance Is that actually the city Is
trying to write an &lt;rdlnance whith usurps the power of the
state in the governing of medicine," Dr. Manley Ford,
)l'esldent of the Sununlt County Medical Society, said. Manley,
speaking on behall of the society, said the ordinance would put
the city U1 violation of state law.

First ...
(Continued lrom Pll' 1)
with Columbia Gas of Ohio
Counc il President Marvin
Kelly rev1ewed meet in g of
the council committee with
John Koebel of the gas
company on the new con·
tract. Kelly sa1d th e
minimum charge would be
raised to $4.88 the first year
and $5.28 the second year He
said he really does not objel1
to this because at the present
costs, even a pilot light wo uld
cost more than the minimum
charges.
However, he said the objection IS that residents who
have gas turned off in their
homes or places of busmess
would have to pay th e
mmimum for the number uf
months it was t urned off in '
order to get gas t.umed on

a

From The
Amish

Counlty
•Trail Bologna
• Lim burger cheese
• Colby cheese
• &lt;;wiss Cheese

(Regular or Salt Free)

Simon's Markel
and
Carty.Out

again . That would be costly to
the customer, he said.
The matter was tabled
when 11 was reported that
Koebel will appear before
council to discuss the new
contract at the next meeting
Mayor Hoffman said the
village now has two pollee
off1cers workmg from 8 p.m.
to 4 a m., w1th the new offl eer bemg provided through
the CETA program . Council,
at 1ts last meeting, had expressed the need lor an additiona l officer durmg the
designated hours.
Upon t he recommendation
of the mayor, it was also
agreed to increase the pay of
the extra clerical help and the
extra dispatcher by 10 cents
an· hour. These extr a employes received no benefit ~
thiS year even though they
work in the neighborhood of
30 hours a month.
Att end ing th e meetin g
beSides offiCials were three
street department workers
who wanted to observe the
meetin g, Pa ul McDan iel,
Dav1d E. Ross and Lawrence
R W1ll .

ACTIONS FILED
In Meigs County Common
Pleas Co urt Monday, Usa
P1erce, Rt. I , Middleport and
Mark P ierce, same address,
fil ed for d1ssolut 10n of
rn arnage.

Pomero , 0 .

,--F'eb1ruary Sale

FLEX STEEL
The quality furniture
that looks like it .

TUESDAY
ANNUAL INSPECTION ,
Pomeroy Chapter 80, Royal
Arch Ma so ns, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday ; work in Past
Ma.ter Degree.
MEIGS LOCAL CHAPTER
17 of Ohio Association of
Publi c Schoo l Em ployees
Tuesday 7:30p.m. at Rutland
Amer~ can Legion Ha il on SR
124. Robert LeClam, field
representative, Will be
present . Members urged to
attend
METHOD IST Men Tuesday at 7:30 p.m at Forest
· Run Umted
Methodi st
Church The Rev . Paul Yeun,
pastor of Alb any Umt ed
Methodist Ch urch, speaker.
SHADE RLVE R Lodge 453
F&amp;AM, Chester , Tuesday
7:30p.m. Work In EA degree.
Ail master masons are in·
v1ted.
AMERICAN LEGION Auxlllary, Racine Post &amp;02, at the
hall, 7:30p.m. Tuesday.
AMERICAN Leg;oo Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post 39,
Pomeroy, 7:30 at the hail .
Pro g r Hm t o be o n
1\m e r J c a nl s m .
AMERICAN AssociaTion
of Un ive rs ity Wom e n ,
Middleport-Pomeroy Area
Branch, 7:30 Tuesday evening at the home of Jeanne
Bowen, Syracuse. "Redes•gnmg the Goal of Education"
w1il be the program topic
prese nted by Sha r on
Johnson, Gallipolis, educa·
lion cha irma n for the Ohio
Div1si on,AAUW . Mrs. Jea nne
Bowen, Mrs. J ean Alkire,
Mrs Ma ur~ ta' Miller, a nd
Christine Garst, hostesses .
MIDDLEPORT Chamber
of Commerce, 7:30 thi s
evening at Citizens National
Bank.
--WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Litera ry
Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday at
the home of Mrs. Dwight
Wallace. Mrs . Nan Moore to
revie w '' A Book of Common

J. E. Paulus, Ashtabula,
fil ed for support under the
Reciprocal- Agreement Act Prayer "
against
Willia m
M
Baumgardner, Pomeroy.
FREE CE RVI CAL cancer
Dav1s · Sey ler Sales , cHnic, Wednesday afternoon,
Pomeroy, filed for recjss•on at Heath United Methodist
of co ntract and judg{Tlent Church for f.!ei gs a r ea
aga inst Wmdcraft M&amp;M INc.. women, for appointment ca ll
Toledo.
992-7531 d,ays and 992-5832

and Suites.
SALE PRICED!

OTHER SURVIVORS
Addthona l survtvo r s of
Everett Connolly, 75, Rt. 2,
Racine, who d1ed Sunday are
four sisters, Lethe McCa in,
Ellen Wells, beth of Long
Bottom; Ermaiene Johnson,
Reedsville and Ma rtha
.Marks, Belpre; two brothers,
William Connolly, Reedaville
and Joe Connolly of Tuppers
Plains. _

IT'S NO ACCIDENT

Work crews frustrated

Social mUSICianS
• •
•
Calendar supenor

cvenmgs and weekends.

Sofas · Chairs

Five KC

THURSDAY
EVANGEIJNE
CHAPTER, Order of Eastern
Star, bean dinner, 6 p.m.
Thursday to honor members
of Middleport Masonic Lodge
363, F&amp;AM, and WIVes. Film :
' 'Our Precious Heritage" to
be shown; business meeting
at 7:30
FRIDAY
WESTE RN Square Dance
with John Hendren, national
ca ller, sponso red by t he
Belles and Beaus Club at
Royal Oak Park recrea tion
buildmg, 8 to II p.m Fnday.
Host club to take refresh·
ment s All area western
square dance club members

Charles Wills, instrumental
band Instructor at Kyger
Creek High School, has announced the results of his
stu&lt;lents In the District XVII
Solo and Ensemble contest
held over the weekend at Ohio
University.
Resu lts were:
Su penor ( I ) ratingsTarissa Harless, piano solo;
Sherry Harrison, Deb bie
Stover, Theresa Thompson
and Kim Reynolds, clarinet
quartet.
Receiving Excellent (II)
ratings were : Teresa
Hammond, flute solo; Sherry
Ha rrison, cla rinet solo;
Dav 1d Cra bt ree, trum pet
solo; AI Thompson, baritone
horn solo; Debbie Wamsley,
Danelle Clay, Woody Bur·
nett , J eff White and David
Crabtree ,' percussio n en·
semble.
Piano a ccompaniments
were played by Mane Janko
and Todd Thomas.

RUMMAGE SALE
There will be a rummage
sale of clothing and other
itema Friday and Saturday,
March 3 and 4 in the
basement at the Middleport
Masonic Temple sponsored
by the Evangelme Chapter.

by The Public Utilities

January 16, 1978,

t he

Company hereby apprises

the public ol the state of
electric supply In Its
serVIce a rea ,

Comm ission of Ohio on

ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY FACILITIES
The Company's electric

SO MANY ARE DRIVING NEW CARS
WITHOUT WRECKING THEIR BUDGETS
How do they d o it ? With on e of our
low-cost a uto loans, of course ! Eve n
th e most " accidenl·prone" budge twatch e rs can find a payment pla n
tha t d oesn't sp ell di sa s t~r! See u s !

WALK-UP TELLER WINDOW AND
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
FRI. EVENINGS To 1 P.M.

"THE
FRIENDLY BANK "

power supply raclllttes - kilowatt
nuclear
Includ ing power generating generating
untt
at
plants, ma jor transm ission Bridgman, Michigan .
tac ll tl les and
Inter· During the peak load
c onnections
with period of the next winter
ne ighboring electr4c utility ( 1978-79), Jreserves are
systems - are adequate to projected
to
be
provide rel iable electric appro•lmately 22 percent.
service to Its customers.
Currently, generating·
capacity reserves on the
American Eledrlc Power

tAEP) System, of which
Ohio Power Compllny Is a
part, are approximately 23
percent of peak load. These
reserves are expected to
Increase to about 24
percent during the forthcom ing summer, following

adequate
to , provide
reliable electric service fo
the Company's customers,

the ability of the Company
to satisfy the full electric
energy requirements of Its
supplies

of

fuel

principally coat - af the
power generating plants of
the AEP System . As a
direct result of the ongoing
strike by the Untied Mine
Workers,
whi ch
was
wmmenced December 6,

Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corp01alion

By
United
Press
International
A winter storm spread
today from the Gulf of Mexcio
through the Mi ss issippi
va lley, dashing hopes for an
early end to the recordbreaking winter of 1978.
Freezing rain and snow

Generating . capacity
reserves are required In
order to meet unexpected
lncr~sesln system load, fo
provide for an effecflve
program of preventive
maintenance of generating

facilities and to allow for
random shutdowns and

t977, coal supplies at
Individual power
generating plants have

been depleted . As or
February 24, 1978, the AE P

System coal supply was

have

been

notified as to the required
reductions In their
consumption .
.

ener~y

·

Following settlement of
the eoat strike , the
Company expeets to
replenish coal supplies at
the AEP System's power
generating stations and to
be able to again supply the
full
electric energy
requleements
cusfory'lers.

of

Its

caUed impact aid program of
subsidies for school systems
with large numbers of
children of federal workers.
One
change
would
eliminate payme nts lor
children whose parents are
employed on federal property
outside the county in which
the school district is located.
The administration also
asked Congress to clarify the
requirement for equitable
services to children in private
• schools by providing that
expenditures for such
children should be equal to
expenditures f~r J;&gt;Ublic
school children With similar
needs.
Other proposed changes 111
education law were to be
outlined todsy at the White
House and
later In
congressional testimony.
Carter
seeks
major
changes in the $2.1 billion •
package of subsidies for
improving the reading, math
and other learning skUis of
needy school children,
according to a summary
prepared by the Department
of Health, Education and
Welfare.
This aid, provided under
Title I of the landmark
Elementary and Secondary
Education Act of 1965,
represents the largest federal
program of aid to schools.
Among the changes, Carter
proposes a new grant
incentive plan to encourage
states to set up their own socalled compensatory
education programs. States
would get one federal dollar
for each two dollars of their
own money spent on
classroom
enrichment
courses lor poor children.

.
'
as U. S. attorney lor southern

Ohio.
Senate confirmation is
expected in about a month lor
Cissell, 36, who has been a
CinciMati lawyer the past
decade.

(Juv•nlle Lflvfll T•rm Changing to
Whole Wt Polley)

•
$35 00 a year provldfll 110,000 term lnaur·
ance to age 23. The coverage men ct'lanon
to permanent ln1ur1nce lor the 11me amount
with the payment of higher, yet a!IU attractive
premluma . Guaranteed lnaurablll~ with
opllont to purch ... addlllonel ponman-j
ent protection means thit pte n can be
lhe foundallon of a llle·iong program
of life meurance.

DAVIS INSURANCE AGENCY
C..urt St.

PHONE 992-6677

Pomeroy, Ohto

entinC

Fiftet•n Cent s
Vo l. 2~ . No . 223

EXTEN DED t'OR ECAST
Friday through Sunday,
a r hanee of sno"'' fl urries

Friday and Suturday and
la ir Sund ay . Contin ued
rold, with highs in the
upper 20s or the 30s and
lows in the teens.

Weather
Clea ring and cold tomght,
With lows tn the teens. Mostly
sunny and becoming windy
Thursday, w1th lughs 111 the,
nud ur upper JOs

ta blecloths and a
g lass a t one Silting

.'
I

•

'I

.. . •.'t '• '

Short dress with

panties

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
0

. l

broken

FORMER TEACHERS a ttending the awards banquet
Tuesday night at the Me1gs Inn honoring former students.

George Massar and Dtek Cmnpl&gt;f•ll were fron t 1-r , M1\rion

Ebersbach, Wheeler Drake and Carl lluusc ; lluck, Bub
Roberts and Aa ron Zahi.

'

Massar, Campbell honorees
Geor ge Massar Hnd Otck
Cmn p bcll wc t'c avnu d cd
certificates uf dist hwttun Ht
an awards banqurt h('ld at
the Mctgs Inn Tut•stla y ni ~ ht
It wa s spo nsored by the
Pol llc r oy
f'hH tli i.H'J'
of

TiiESE MEIGS COUNTY deputies of the sheriff's department helped in a raid of a
Scipio Township farm Tuesday when some $60,000 worth of mariJuana was confiscated
From the left are Sam Shain, Mike Mullen, Lou Osborne, Gary Wolfe, Randy Forbes, Ron
Hollon, Dana Aldridge and Mike Zirkle.

Four arrested after raid
A Scipio Township farmer
' &amp;nd his three son s are bemg
held in the Meigs County Ja1l
on drug r elated cha rges
followmg a raid Tuesday
afternoon resultmg m eonflscation of $60,000 worth of
marijuana
Shenff James Proffitt sa1d
today the m a r~jua na wa s
se1zed by use of a search
wan-ant on a farm m the

Harnsonv11le area .

Booked were Charles
But cher , 62; Ro be rt
Butcher , 19; Ra nda 11
Butcher, 22 and Ronald
Butcher, 25 , ail of Rt.

L.

D.
L.

D.
4,

Pon1eroy .
Sher~ff

de puti es

Pomeroy and his
reco ver ed

a p-

proximate ly 98 pounds of
ma nJ ua na , som e a lready

cured and

~ rapped

in trash

§§ .......VVY'o-..................-.....-..-................ .. . ...:-,.... . ....-. ................ ........v ............... ...-............

::::..~'~''o'lo,'lo'&amp;""'Y•'••''"'-..._......._.._'Q.~•;-:•,&gt;;.X~•;-,•,•,•,•,•,•,•,•,•,..•,•,•,•,•-:•'o"o..'•''•'•'•'o'o!t.:.,_-.•.:._'o_o,._..._.._..._..._'o!
~

~News. • . in Brief.J
i

Commerce

Massm , an altu1ney, Js
prese ntl y pr rs tdcn ! and
d1rcdo r of th e Shltl'
1\utonwbt lc Mutua l In-

ha gs, trash cans and baggies.
It was estimated the "grass "
has a street value of $60,000.
Part1cipat1ng U1 the ra1d
w1th Me1gs Co unty Sheriff
Proff1tt were depuhes Gary
Wolfe, Michael Zirkle, Ron
Hollon, Randy Forbes, Dana
Aldridge, Lou Osborne, Sam
Sham , Keit h Woods, Andy
Lyles, M1k e Mullens and Ph1l
McKmney.
Butcher and h1s sons arc
expected to have the1r 1mllal

surance Cu , Odu 111 bus.
Ca mpbell IS cthl ol uf the

Cltizen s-J oufll,-11 Massar 1s a
native or Meigs Cuunty ,md ~
gradua te nf Pomeroy lh ~ h

Schoo l a nd

Bv Unlted Press International
WASHJNGTON - SOUTH KOREAN nee merchant
Tongsun Park's testimony held no surprises as, under tight
security and Leon Javorski prodding, he began telling the
House Ethics Committee about some of his payments to
congressmen. Park evidently st11l demes gmng br1bes to help
South Korea's government.
Several committee members agreed that Park, who was
reswning his secret testrmony today, had no great reve lations
at his first appearance Tuesday despite his pledge to try to
"clear the air."
ZURICH, SWITZERLAND - THE DOLLAR TODAY
plummeted to an all-time low against the SWISS franc and fell
sharply against the Japanese yen, renecting a growing sense
of crisis surrounding the sagging American currency. "There
simply is no confidence either In the dollar or in Washington's
assertions that it will act forcefully to support the dollar," a
leading Zurich dealer sa1d.
The dollar opened on the Zurich exchange at 1.8130 Swiss
francs, down overnight from the Tuesday close of 1.8430.
Within the first 10 minutes of trading, it collapsed to a buying
rate oll.7725 Swiss francs, a new low.
ORLANDO, FLA. - LOOKING LIKE ELVIS PRESLEY
in never having to feel sorry, according to Dennis Wlae , who
went to considerable lengths to achieve that state. Wise said he
first got the idea from a movie.
"The idea of plastic surgery came when I was 14 or 15 after
I had seen it on a science fiction movie, " he said. "I thought it
would be great to look like Elv1s Presley." And after such
surgery, Wise bears a fair resemblance to his late idol, though
one makeup man said it still took a lot of work.

MEDINA, OHIO - A HAND-WRITTEN statement by a
man charged with clubbing his parents and brothers to death ,
then setting fire to their house, has been admitted as evidence
In the murder trial of a former Miami (Ohio) Umversity
freshman.
The statement of Michael Swihart, 19, Brunswick, describes
the killings, police Tuesday told a three-judge panel hearing
the case. "I hlthimand he fell down . My mother screamed and
came forward. I kept SWinging." It's part of Swihart's account
of what happened last Oct. 23 when he allegedly killed his
father, Donald, his mother, Sue, and brothers, Br1an, 16, and
Russell, 9, police said.
AKRON, OlfiO - AN ABORTION CONTROL law
requiring doctors to use techniques most likely to preserve the
life and health of an unborn child h'as been passed by Akron
City Council.
,
The council, following an often . emotional, one • hour
debate, passed the ordinance by a 7~ vote Tuesday. The
ordinance mandates that alter the abortion all available
methods and techniques must be used to keep the child alive,
and a second physician must be present to assist in preserving
the child's life.
TEL AVIV, ISRAEL - A POWERFUL bomb today
destroyed a one..9tory home, killing an elderly Israeli couple
and wounding three other persons, police said.
They said the lour'flOund bemb killed an 00-year-old man
and his 76-year-old wife as they slept in their suburban Ramal
Gan home. Three others were wounded, two of them seriously.
LOS ANGELES - RAYMOND J. FERRITTO an ex
convict from Erie, Pa., described by police as "a real Mafia hit
man," was charged Tuesday with murder Ill the slaying more
than eight years ,ago of Julius Antbony Petro, a reputed Cleveland\safecracker.
{'

C am p b ~ ll

at·

tended Pon1e1oy lli t;h Sd mo l
Massa r scud , " This 1s a
hem1 we:trn llng a ffc nr " He
attribu ted his s ut'ccss to Ius
parents, and the people tha i
pulled him a l un ~. lie added
" l have been ver y lueky "
Mass ar cr cd 1t &lt;:d h1s

court a ppearance so rnetrme

Wednesday afternoon.

and his scuul leuder,
Carl House. II Js 1alk was
f1lll&gt;d with hurnor "as he to ld
ta bles of his cx pen enccs at
Ohm St ate where Fred Crow
played footllall
Ma ss ar mtro du ce cl Il ls
co usin Ste lla Klocs ~md s puke
uf the late Th o m&lt;~ s Hennessy
lie ended by add 111g tha t 1t
was a " grand and generpus
cvenmg."
Cam pbell spoke on th e
thin gs he lik ed abo ut
Pomeroy. He ;1ated that he
spent a great dea l uf t1m c 111
the Pomeroy Libr·ary rcadmg
all the books he could gel his
hands on wh1ch helped shape
his future.
He s poke ,,f the fine
teachers he had and the late
Marga ret Cha pn wn fur hi s
knowledge or Latin He added
that he deplores the fact that
th ey don't teach La t m
anymo re
Campbell also pa1d tnbute
to House as a hnc scout
lea der . " I was an Eagle Scuut
and so was my son" Ca mpbell observed.
" l grew up here dur1ng the
depres sion a nd cu llectcd
tea ch ~ r s

-~

WASHINGTON - THANKS IN PART TO the efforts of a
Columbus, Ohio, optometrist, the U. S. Food and Orug
Administration sa1d Tuesday that sodium valproate has been
approved for sale as a prescriptiOn drug to treat epilepsy.
The drug, which could be ready for use m a month, has
been tested at Children's Hospital m Columbus lor the past
year. The FDA Tu'Xday credited Dr. Bernard Abrams with
helping bring attention to the drug.,

Pajamas in soft
cotton terry

Pretty print dress in
soft cotton . Toddlers
sizes.

at

• I

·.

CELINA's
YOUTH MASTER

estimated to be sulftclent

customers

Envoy carrying
new peace talks

Ufe Insurance for the growing
years that provides adult
protection, too

generating units.

the Company's Copoelfy
ond E1111rgy Emorgency
Control Progrom Is being
applied and the Company's

By CRAIG A. PALMER
children in private schools
WASHINGTON (UPI )
get their la ir sha re of
President Carter said today government subsidies.
he wants to concentra te
In a message to Congress
federal fund s for needy the president also announced
school children on the poorest proposals for changmg and
students and make sure that reducmg the $BOO million so-

•

NOW YOU KNOW
A Roman glutton named
Arpoeras once dcvuured four

BABY

loading curtailments or

for forty days of operation.
In order to conserve fuel ,

e

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Wednesday, March ) . 1978

for needy children

By
Uniled
Press on a declaration of principles
International
lor a peace settlement, said
An American env oy is Beg in ga ve him " some
carrying new Israeli peace concrete suggestions which I
proposals to Cairo today but will be taking hack with me to
both Egyptian and Israeli Egypt."
But Dayan said the indirect
officials say the U.S. shuttle
effort is stalled on the talks have so for produced
stubborn issues facing the little pro gress "lor one
Middle East.
reason only- because Egypt
Assistant Secreta ry of doesn 't want to agree on a
State Alfred Atherton met separate settlement, a
Israeli Prime Minister separate peace or even
Menachem Begm Monday separate negotiations."
and was carrying the latest
He said Atherton's mission
Israeli proposals to t he has been fo..-ng on the
Egyptian government.
Palestinian question instead
But Fore1gn M1mster of differences between Egypt
Moshe Dayan ac'CUsed the and
Israel such
as
Egyptians of hampering settlements and the location
negotiations and sa id of armies in peacetime.
Atherton ' s ne go ti a t ing
"This is against our will
strategy " is against our and requests and suggestions
will."
and ' declarations, " Dayan
Egypt in turn said Israel's said.
policy
of
expa nding
Despite that, Begin said,
settlements in occupied Arab "There Is reason to assume
lands was threatening the • the negotiations will go on.
indirect talks. A prominent We hope for the best. Let us
Egyptian columnist branded be optimistiC."
the Jew1sh state's · policy
In Cairo, Egyptian Foreign
"national madness."
Minister Mohammed Kamel
Syria, a hardline opponent said Israel's policy decision
of Egyptian President Anwar Sunday
to
expand
Sadat' s peace lntitlalive, settlements in occupied Arab
snubbed Atherton and instead lands was ''contrary to the
sent its top military man to success of Atherton's
Moscow to seek mcreased rrussion .
Soviet military aid.
Atherton , who is tr)'ing to
get israel and Egypt tJ"agree
storm."
NOMINATED
CINCINNATI (UPI) - City
Grants given Mason projects
council member James C.
Cissell
was nominated
C HARL E STON
Gra nts will ena ble the Monday by President Carter
Govern or Ro&lt;:J&lt;eleller an· Mason Police Department to
nounced today the release of purchase a "speedalyzer" to succeed William Milligan
$1,250 1n federal matching wh1ch is considered prima
funds to the Town of \'&lt;fason facie evidence of speeding in
for use 1n traffic control West V1rgmia courts and the
THINGS
programs and $1,4~ to the sheriff to
have
the
Mason County Sheriff's breathalyzer to mcrease DWI
FOR
Department to purchase a convictions.
model 1000 breathalyzer.
The Governor explamed
Total funds of $2,500 have that there has been an in·
been made available through crease in trall1c flow because
the Cruninal JustiCe and of construction of a power
Highway Safety Division of plant in the Mason area. The
the Governor 's Office of new eqmpment win decrease
Economic and Community speed violations.
Development fo r traffic
control.

ELECTRIC ENERGY SUPPLY
Allhoug h power supply
fa cilities are judged to be

eustomers Is alfected by
the avallabltlty of adequate

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

completion ot a 1,100,000

area.
Crews worked in a snowfall
Mondsy night, trying to get
cranes an d bull dozers in
posiiion to move the tank car,
one of 25 that derailed from
an Illinois Central Gu lf
·freight SUnday.
" They can't get it up
because the ground Is too
soft," said Gibson County
sheriff's deputy Bob Moore.
Cleanup crews also were
working 80 miles east of
Cades, at Waverly, Tenn.,
where 12 persons were killed
and more than 50 others
injured irl the explosion of a
derruled propane gas tanker
from a Louisville &amp; Nashville
freight Friday.
Some 1,200 Waver ly

residents returned to their industry for some time."
Bul Prime F . Osborn,
homes Sunday and helped in
the cleanup work Monday. president of Seaboard Coast
Tennessee Gov. Ray Line Industries, said in
Blanton met in Washington Jacksonville, Fla., ''These
Monday with TransportatlOI) accidents happen. We have
Secretary Brock Adams and rigid standards for the
called for the nationalization movement of haza rdous
of the naUon's "decrepit" materials. There Ia no way to
prevent them completely .
railroads.
"The sad fact is that in the The re will a lways be
sta te of Tennessee we are derailments."
The derailment of 43 cars of
averaging lour derailments a
the IOI~ar Atlanta and St.
week," Blanton said.
Adams said he did not Andrews Bay Railroad
support nationalization, but freight Sl!llday was the 36th
rathe r is pushing a series of train wreck in the Florids
proposals for more federal panhandle in the past 212
r ai lroa d Inspe c t o r s, years.
increased federal sutllidies to
The chlorine gas from the
railroads a nd stricter ruptured tanker rode the
standards for rail shipment of wind through the town of
hazardous materials. •
Youngstown , 22 miles
The president of one of the northeast of . .Panama City,
nation's largest railroad sys- forcing thousands to Dee lor
tems said the accidents will safety. Eight persol)s, many
throw "a cloud over our of them motorists , died.

Good Luck Southern in district tourney

An. h
ot er Carter wants funds
storm

reached from Louisiana and
Texas into central Illinois,
where w1thin an hour of the
DATE CHANGED
start of the snowfall , an mch
The Mei!!B High School
Mu s i c D e partm e nt ' s was recorded in Springfield.
Highways iced by sleet,
presentation of the Broadway
freezing
rain and snow made
11
musical,
Music Man "
tra
vel
tr e a c herous
originally set for March 10
throughout
the
middle of the
and 11 has been postponed to
Mississippi
valley
into the
March 31 and April I, Mrs.
lower
Ohio
basin.
Paige Hwrt, vocal music
The Na tional Weather
supervisor, announced .
Service posted l(aveler s
adv1sones for most of the
Midwest, warned of heavy
DANCE SET
snows for Mi ssouri and
The Bell es and Beaus southern and central IUinms,
Western Square Dance Club and predicted up to 4 mches
will sponsor a dance Friday of new snow for a coal·
night from 8 to II p.m at starved
Indiana
still
Royal Oak Park recreation recovermg fr om the worst
buildmg. J ohn Hendren will blizzard in its history .
be the caller . All area
The NWS said the eastward
western square dance clubs moving storm would bring
are invited. Members of the snow into the mid-Atlantic
host club are to take refresh· states
by
W e dn e~d a y
ments.
morning . ,
The Midwest was not the
PAIR FINED
only part of the country
Pomeroy Mayor Claren ce where hopes for an easy end
Andrews Monday fin ed to the disastrous winter of '78,
Wa nda Patterson, Pomeroy, kindled by a warmmg trend
and Ali ce Wagn er , Mid- during the weekend, were
dleport, $200 and co sts each doused by rain and poor
for petty larceny.
weather. ·
Local flooding in southern
developed alte,r
Arizona
HOSPITALIZED
Charles Smith, Pomeroy, 1s heavy rains, and the Pacific
a patient at the Holzer coast - drenched one week
and dry the next - braced lor
Medical Center
a possible heavy "rainstorm
approaching from the Pacific
InVIted;
ocean .
Heavy rains Monday in
WORLD Day of Prayer,
1:30 p.m. Friday at the Southern California were acPomeroy First Baptist companied by mild enough
for
Church sponsored by Church temp e ratures
Women United of Me1gs metereologists to call the
County.
precipitation a " spring

PUBLIC NOTICE
FROM OHIO POWER COMPANY
Pursuant
to
the
Company' s C1pacity 1nd
Energy
Emergency
Control Progr1m approved

By O'NEIL HENDRICK
United Press International
Work
crews
were
frustrated Mondsy in efforts
to neutralize deadly chlorine
gas leaking from a derailed
railroad tanker in the Florida
panhandle and to move an
overturned tanker spilling
noxious lye fumes in West
Tennessee.
The
problem
at
9Voung.stown, F la ., where
eight persons have been
killed by a greenish-yellow
death cloud of chlorine gas,
was a lack of the right
equipment.
"It's the old 'for lack of a
nail' story," said cleanup
supervisor Don Tullis, whose
crew waited while the equipmen t was rushed from
Virden, Ill ., hopefully for use
today.
At Cades, Tenn ., soggy
ground hindered efforts to

right a lanker containing
sod1um hydroxide , whose
possibly dange rous fumes
prompted the evacuation of
around 150 persons in the

Material
purchases
reviewed
Ted Warner , superm·
tendent a nd Dave Spencer,
off1ce manager of the Me~gs
County H1ghway Department
met with the board of commi ss ion e r s Tuesda y mght
d1scussmg the purchase of
aggreg ate and bltummous
'maten als for 1978
The
co mmi SS ion er s
grant ed authorization for the
hi ghway departm ent to
advertise for bids.
The board rev1ewed b1ds
[or a tandem dump truck and
a p1ckup for the highway
department. Again bids were
tabled for additwnal study.
Cha rles Pyles, mayor of
Ra cin e was a ppomt ed to
serve on the Southeastern

Ohi o Emergency Medica l
Services Board, SEOEMS.
Bob Ba1ley, Meigs County
E MS coordinator , met with
the commissioners to discuss

the progress of the new
emergency medical services.
Bailey sa1d the new system is
working well, with only mmor
problems m Implem entation
and budgets.

Progress
• • •
IS tOpiC
Edison Baker rev re wed

progress on the constructiOn
of a nursing home in Middleport at Tuesday's Mid·
dleport Chamber of Com·
merce meeting .
Accordmg to plans, the

nursin g home
besides
providing a local facility long
been needed in Meigs County,
would emp)oy some 55 to 80
people witH a $700,000 annual
payroll. Excellent progress is
being made towards con·
strudion plans.
Th e chamber agreed to
hold future meetings at the
Meigs Inn at 6:30p.m. on the
fourth Tuesday of each month
w1th a dinner session for
members and their spouses.
A discussion was held on
holding a sidewalk sale in
April and plans will be
fmalized at the March
meet mg .
George Ingels, president,
was m charge of the meeting:

RETIRED - George Hobstetter, Pomeroy, vice
president of the Pomeroy National Bank, retired Tuesday
Hobstetter began h1s duties with the bank in 1934 as a
bookkeeper. He served in the second World War for 43
months as a Master Sgt. in the Army Air Force . Following
the war he returned to the bank. In November 1948 he
went to the Peoples Bank at Nelsonville as cashier where
he stayed 14 months. He returned to Pomeroy m March,
1950where he operated the General Insurance Agency for
10 years. He returned to the Pomeroy National Bank in
1961 as VICe president. His wife is the former Maxine
Ebershach who is a registered nurse and Utilization
Rev•ew.{;oord~nator at Veterans Memorial Hospital. They
have two daughters, Pamela O'Laughhn, Athens, and
Mrs. John (Betty Jean) Krawsczyn, Mmersville. They
also have two grandsons. Hobsteller will devote hiS time
to h1s business, Hobstetter Realty.

Bill will make
benefits easier
WASHINGTON IUPI ) President Ca rter toda y
s1gned leg1siatwn makmg it
easier for the nation's coal
mmers to cl aim black lung
benef1ts and to reapply 1f
benef1ts had been demed.
The law. cases eligibility

w1th be nefits, on ce rt a in
reapplications, pa1d from t he
da te ur the ongmal demed
application
The Wh1te House was ex·
peeled to announce today that
Ca rter Will Oy to Savannah,
Ga , March 17, to take part in
reqUirements and procedures St. Patrick's Da y ceremorues
for miners or their suvtvors and then spend the weekend
to c la im beneflt s for at his fa vorite vacatum spot ,
pneumoconiOsis - commonly Musg rove Plantation on St.
called ' black lung" - a Stmuns Island, Ga.
The Carters were expected
debilitating disease of the
lungs brought on by long- to rema m Ill Washington uver
term exposure to coal dust th e Easter holida ys to
The president Signed the prepa re for the week·long
m easure 1nto la w a m1d Latin
Am erican-Afr ica n
continum g admini stration swing that begms March 28.
efforts to convince the 160,000
st r~kmg Umted Mme Workers
ln ra t1f y a
tentative
agreement promrsing an end
DWI CONVICTION
to the nearly three-month
J ames Kr1tschmer, New
long coal walkout.
A separat e financing Haven, was fined $350 and
measure was passed earlier costs and given a three-day
th1 s year to tax co al ja il sentence when he was
production to pay for the convicted of dnving while
benefits. The lax would int oxica ted in a h ear~ n g
amount to 50 cents per ton befor e Pomeroy Ma yor
from underground mines and Clarence Andrews Tuesday
25 cents per ton on coal from night.
F orfeiting a $30 a p·
surface mines
The new law broadens the pearance bond in the coutt
defmttion of " miner ' ' to in· · was Billy Painter, Bidwell,
elude workers m and around $30, posted on speed ing
a coal mine or preparation char ges.
facility, in miniflg or
preparation or transportation
of coal, and even construction
SQUAD CALLED
workers exposed to coal dust.
The
Pomeroy Emergency
And 11 accepts affidavits for
eligibility or surv1vors of a Squad was called to the
mmer who died even when Darwm area at 11 52 a. m.
the re is no conclus1v e · Tuesday for Herb Gilkey,
medica. l . that he had who was taken to Vetera ns
Memorial Hospital. He was
black
application ~
adlllitted
there.
for benei s.l e expedited

•

cli st ir wt 1011 by

Fred l'l'uw ,
Pom ero y Atl urn cy u nd
pi eshlcnt of t he Pu n JCI't lY
l l J&lt;uulR'I of Cummt.'ITC .
(' row . 111 In s rema rh .

! haukcd

&lt;~II

those uttcnd mg

t·~pl amcd the
d i! JI ICI \\t iS part

H tld

progralll

ur

nwmcl.s
nf lh t•
the d w!llbcr· lo

ms!Jtlltt• !JI Ilil• 111 our L'illl lnl iiiHty IJc fH.Idt~ d, " \,hCI'C oil('
pn 1ud pcu l)h • In M L• Jgs

( :uunt \ ''

has di.,.tingmslwll hi111 self in
l11s pl41fcssion and lcadt•r in
Ins Cull lii\ UIIi l \'
~I I ulllt.' II IS41 Solld !hal l 'O III C
Spnug , t '1·ow W11 11ld t..e u! ·
lt• n ng " krll'c iii'I'p" as llt' is
tht• lng}.!cst (' I'Mik e r nf llll'm
,dl. {'row 11-1 thc ruaslt•r 111 111tl

uf !Ia• f1og JUIIlp held cttl'h
\ l' i ll

.1! t il l' lhg B1•nd Hcga tla

~ ti' U il lc

1111r odutetl Mr s

( 'ro w Sd ld , ' Ther e IS one · ( 'arnpbt·ll , Mrs Massa r , Mrs .
I II UJtlr

me

thlll j.{, and If God g1vcs
Pm ucwy Sc111m

b~t.:ut h .

llq..; h will be rcsturcd wllhout
fcdc1al l l tHI I CV if we ha vt• to
do 1t oursel ves " Tha t
brough! (qJpla u1'ie.
ln mtroducing the two n 1cn,
Cro w !:i&lt;Ud , " Th ey wc 1c

lemll'I'S of tllelr classes Hnd
had ~ u 1 1 C f1 0 11 1 her c and r tmdc
themselves J.H't i Ud It I S H
grcc1t pleasun· to know they

hav&lt;• gone out Hnd llonc
IJ r J IImntl ~ "
J oe Str·u!Jie, who :;cr·vcd

~~~
HS

1I13SlCI of CCI CIII OIU CS, Ill
mtrndu t mg Crow stated the
di nner wo uld 1111! lmvc bt• Prl

,,r

Uu t h Ma ss llr , m ot her
Ma ss a r, .Ju dge
M.u 1n 111~ Wc hstl!l , .l udgc
.luh1 1 (' Bll c'uu , C c urgc
ll t~ b s l i.'t t c r
fi nd Mnxine
(;t 'O I J.!.t!

C: r1 ffi t h, I' C J JfC S t~ nlin g the

NHllouHI B11 11k and
t c ai'IJc r s,
Bob
ll Pbcrt s, Wh cc l(•r ll ru ke ,
( ' o~ rt ll nus t•, Au l u tl Znh l,
M,1n un Ebcrs bcach Hncl l.cc
Mt·(:111lliiS
Pn 1vuhrw, (•ntcrtuhu rlcnl
was Stun Jtuml.t!:iiH'It with
vuL'MI
numl&lt; ers
ac·
l'o rHpanying hi msr lf un tile
1\&lt; 11\ CI I&lt;Y
I C f lr e tl

)..( 1111 &lt;11

He;lvy rains,
hail, winds hit
By ANDII EW VEMMA
United Prt·ss International
C:a le force WllldS, haJ J Ullli

hcHvy

J'HIIl s
p(JU nd ed
S4,uthcrn C.IIJfornJa tod(ly ,
touch i n ~ off fla sh .noods and
m udsl rdcs 111 a rea s s till
I'CC(I vcrrng fmm disast r ous

n uns less lha11 a munth Hgo
Th e Nati ona l Wea !he r

Ser vu.:e wa rn ctl the region to
expect sevc r·c thu nde r·
storms, wmds cxceedm,r.;: 45
mph, WBV C!:i or 6 lO 8 f CC! ,
puss1bly large hml and rain of
4 to 6 rnchcs
" If you ·hvc Ill an ar ea
s ubject to fl(&gt;odmg or m udslides and heavy ram 1s ob~
ashes on Lincoln H11l to ma ke served, take a ction to move to •
money" Ca mpbell added " I a sH!e pl.al'e Jm m etliHtely . Do
am
proud
of
my not wml ifor a wanning ur
backgr ound."
actual n8oding," a weather
Campbell mtroduced Greg serv1ce statement wa rned.
Becker, a earn er for the
Hcs1de nt s of seve ral
Cit1zens·J ournal m Pomeroy r a nyons e vacuated · t he ir
a nd Mi ddl eport. He also homes Tuesda y mght, either
spoke of the impact the vo luntarily or under orde rs
church had on his life He from the I.()s Ange les Pnlwe

all end eq t he Federated
Churc h, no w th e 'l'l llll ly
Church.
The two m en were
prese nted certifica tes of

Jk.ISSJ!Jit' 1f 11 had uut l.H·cn for
1hc l'ffm1 s of F1 t•d r' rc1 w who

Depa rtment
An Hlert was 1ssued for the
B1 g Tujungtt Ca nyon, 50 miles
north of I AJS Angeles . TII irtcen persons d1ed when a 20-

fout wall of Wi ller swept
thruugh tile t.:ll nyon till F'cb.
10.
Hcsidcnl s uf Lhe Sunland-

TUJUCIIHt :area, which burc the
hrunt uf the Feb !1-10 slnrm,
r)ll cd !; rt ndbn gs Ill front uf
therr homes well before Uw
slurrn hit Hccent rum s,
L'om bmcd with a 1'175 brush
fn c, left the arc" w1th little
watershed

" With no wate1shed left , if
the n1ins r urnes ha rd and
heavy, we 're rn trouble," C1ty
C(lunc1lman Bob Ronka sa id

Mudslides blocked pa1ts uf
the Pacif ic Coast H1ghway in
the Ma\J bu a rea and s~ v e ra l
cunyon roads in the SunlHnd
a rea . The so uth bound Junes uf
lntcr stnte 5, the major north·
so uth ru ute, wc1c cl osed neu r

r;ra pevme, but th e north·
bouud lanes were kept open
Sheriff's offi cers 1n the San
Ferna ndo Vall ey kept a wary
eye on the Pa co tma Dam,

brun ming with water from

the early

~'e bruary

rains.

Onl y a few munths ago,
most of Ca lifornia was suf-

fc rmg from a prolonged
drought

"

MEN 0~ DISTINCTION AWARDS were presented to George Massar, left, and Dick
Campbell, r1ght, by Fred Crow, center, at a dinner held at the Meigs Inn sponsored by the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce Tuesday night. There were 82 persons in attendance.
•

~

il

~

'.

�3
2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , March I, 1978

Falcons lose,

45-~3

' canto to quickly take a
seemingly comfortable lead.
But Wahama wasn't llnlshed
Randy Linvill e's 12 fool
jumper with jusl one second to yet. The visitors held a 0-35
play, gave the visiting Buffalo lead with just 2:55 io play
Blsons a narrow !5-43 victory when Blessing, Honaker and
over the W&amp;hama White Rick Buzzard connected to
Falcons and offset a heroic suddenly put the White
performance by the locals' Falcons on top by one at 4l..j(J
with just 33 seconds left.
Greg Blessing.
With Wahama in possession,
Linville's bucket spoiled a
the
ball was knocked out of
fourt!Hjuarter rally staged by
bounds
on tl!e White Falcon
the Whit e Fal co ns and
of
the
court by Buffalo but
end
dropped their season record to
on
the
ensuing
in bounds play,
7-12 with one regular season
Noffsinger
stole
the pass and
contest remaining on the 1977raced
the
length
of
the court tO
78 schedule. The Ravenswood
Red Devils cap off the current put the Bisons back in front,
42-41.
regular sea s on on Friday
Wahama missed on their
when they visit M&amp;Son.
next
field goal try and Phil
Buffalo, with the triumph,
Hobbs
fouled Buffalo's Jim
sa w their slate even up at 9-9
on the year and marked their Whittington in an attempt to
second victory this season secure the reboWld.
Whittington made one of two
over the Bend Area Cagers.
charity
tosses and Wahama's
The Blsons downed Wahama
Blessing
was fouled with 16
7&gt;-59 ba ck on January 24 in
seconds
left.
The 6'0 senior
Buffalo .
calmly
sank
two
consecutive
In last nights encounter, the
free
throws
to
knot
the score
White Falcons jumped out to a
43-43.
at
qllick li-2 advantage behind
Kelvin Honaker and Greg
Blessing but eight consecutive
Bison points quickly erased
the lead. Honaker's sixth point
Tuesday 's
of the quarter gave Wahama a
Boys High School
11).10 tie alter eight minutes.
Basketball Results
Buffalo moved In front by
Unit~d Press International
. Class AAA
si.x dtlfinl!( the early moments
( At Bo'wling Green)
of the second canto and Find lay 71 Lex i'ngton 62
managed to hold that ad-.
(AI Eastlake North)
vantage throughout the stanza Cle St J oseph 69 Wes t Geauga
53 .
behind their 6-2 All-State
(AI Toledo)
candidate Chuck Noffsinger. Tol Sco tt 69 Tal Sf John 50
The senior center scored 10 of
Class AA
his teams 14 second period
(AI Columbu s)
points to put the Bisons out in Col M i ffl in 82 Col Mohawk 70
Mar ion Elgin 58 Johnstown
front 24-19 at intermission.
Greg BIOMing, who scored North r idge 41
(A t Sa lem)
almot hall of Wahama's 19 Youngs Rayen 48 Petersburg
first hall points, continued to Spr i ngfield J'il
.
lead the locals during the third Ea st Cant on 72 Li sbon
58
quarter as the White Falcons Beaver
(AI Chagrin Falls)
fought back to regain the lead C.l e Cath edral Latin 76
31-30 with just eight minutes to Ch agrin Fall s 50
(At Etvria)
play.
E ly ri a Ca th oli c 68 F irelands
Buffalo outscored the Bend 52
Area quintet 8-2 in the final
BY GARY CLARK

Buffalo elected to go lor the
last shot and everyone knew
that Noffsinger would be the
man to take it but the locals
botUed the blgman up forcing
Linvllle to take an off balance
attempt at the buzzer which
unfortWlately, for Wahama
ripped the Neta giving Buffalo
a 4[&gt;.43 win.
1'eam stalls tics show
Wahama with a poor 31 percent shooting night from ·the
floor on 18 of 57 tries. At the
foul line, the locals were
considerably warmer with a
70 percent showing on 7 of 10
shots.
Buffalo hit on 21 of 60 attempts from the floor lor a
dismal 35 percent and canned
60 percent (3 of 5) from the
Charity STripe.
The visiting Blsons won the
rebounding contest 38-30 but
committed 15 turnovers to
Wahamas' 13.
Individually, Chuck Noff·
singer came away with top
scoring and rebounding
honors with 26 points on 12 of

Tournament scores

Class A

(AI Chilflcolhe I
Ro ss Southeas l em 37 Fran k f ort· Adena 36
(At Steuben vi ll e)
79
Brilliant
Bea llsville
Bu ckeye Nor th 67
Shadyside 72 WOods f ield 62
(At Canton)
La Grange Keystone 71 Ber l i n
Wes tern Rsv 59
South i ngton 75 Ashtabu la St
John 45

INTEREST
. On Certificates
Of Deposit
s1,000 Minimum
1 Yr. Term

Tuesday's
Girls Hig h School
Baske tball Result s
Un ited Press lnt'ernational

Class AAA

(AI Perry )
Greens burg 48 Allianc e 21
Can t on M c Kinley 65 Wooster

47
I At Hi ltiar-d)
Groveport 37 Weslerville N 35
Upp er Arlingto n 5 1 Co l
Brookhav en 36
Grove City 49 Reynoldsburg

Nine t y day
in t erest
pena lt y i f withdrawn
be fore mat ur ity date .

Meigs .Co. Branch

32

1At Rey noldsburg )
Wes ter vi ll e S 36 Col MarionFra nkl in 21
Wh i teh all 53 Col Whetstone 51
Friinkl ifl Hts 71 Col Sou th 32
(A t Co lumbus)
Col W.al nu t
Ridg e
83
Ga llow ay Wes iland 38
Col Northl and 41 New ark :3.4
(At Wester-ville)
Ga ha nna 59 H ill iard 41
......
Del aw are n Columbus Wes t
47
.
Mt Vern on 48 Col Linden J6

~
.~WSI!
Th e Ath ens County

S ih' in g s &amp; La on Co.
196 Second St .

Pom ero y , Ohio

(AI Shelby)

Gal ion dO Sandu sk y 2d

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

Senco • Oren • or
U.S. Fiber Insulation

ga m e, South ern touk the

(AI Hubbard)

Hubbard 62 Youngs Chan ey

31

Struth er s 64 Ni les Mc Kinl ey

"

Cla ss AA
{At Pembervill e)
Pembe rville Eastwood 63
Bloomda le 31
Kansas Lakota 52 Fostor ia 25
(At Avon lake)
Avon b6 Lorain Catholi c 11
Columb iana j3 Br ooklyn 28
(A t Union Local )
Ma r lins Fe r.ry 6.4 Cadi z 17
Toront o 54 Hanniba l Ri ver 53
(At Canfield)
Mathews 34 Young s East 32
Waterloo 3Y M inerva 25
(A t Bucyrus)
Ontar io 60 Wynf ord '16
Buc yru s
55
M ansfi e ld
Ma labar 43
Class A
(AI Parkway)
Wes t M.1.1 skingum 41 Fort
Fry e 29
(At Bluftton l
Ha r din Northern 38 B/ uflton
24
Col umbus Grove 50 Rive rdal e

43
(At Glouster)
Cr ook svl il e 34 Miller 24
Eastern Meig s .41 Trimble 18
( At Athen s )
N ew Le )( ing ton 46 Al e~~:. ander
4:, (ot)
Sheridan 60 Warren Loca l 43
(AtCheshirel
North Ca llid 46 Soulhw'· ste.rn
c;;atpa 19
Kyger Creek 54 Sy mes
Va ll ey 40
{ At Bellefontaine)
Sidney Lehman 48 Springf ield
Southea stern J7 '
·
Russia 4.4 Anna 41
( At Cardington)
Dan v ille 5~ Licking t'i eights

e

37

Gali on Northmor -47 Marion
Ca lh .42 .
, !At Lancaster)
Dan v il le 56 Licking Heigh ts

37
Gali on Northm or 47 Marion
Ca lh 42
(At Lanca ster)
Lanca ster Fisher 78 Liberty
Union 36
(At Buckeye Central)
Plymo uth
55
Col on el
Crawfor d 42
Man sfield
Ch r ist i an
44
Crestline 40
Regular Season
Arc anum 53 Ansonia 39
Col Har tley 57 cOt East 48
Col Watter son 67 Col Wehrle

40
Lancas ter

49

22 field goat. and 2 of 2· fre e
throws. He also hauled in 15
rebounds lor game high
honors in that department.
Randy Linville also scored
in twin figures wlthiO markers
on five field goals which In·
elud ed his game winning
bucket.
Greg Blessing stole the show
for Wahama with a season
high 19 points on 7 of 13 from
the floor and a perfect 5 of 5
from the line. The senior
forward at.o led the locals in
rebounding with 10.
Wahama broke away in the
final quatter from a stubborn
Buffalo quintet to capture the
junior varsity tilt by a .6647.
Four Little Falcon players
hit In double figures with
Vince Weavers 16 markers
leading the way followed by
Chuck Stanley with 13, Tim
Roush with 12, and Todd
Rawlings with II.
For Buffalo, Brian Clen·
denin notched 14, BUI Boggess
12 and Chip Bayle"" added 10.
The Utile Falcons record Is
now 11-li on the year and they
will finish out thetr season
Frida~ night at home against
Ravenswood.
WAIIAMA (43 )
FG.FT .PF.TP
Blessing
7-13 5-li 3 19
Honaker
3-10 2-2 3 8
BU%Zard
4·15 0-3 0 8
3-11 041 0 6
Barnltz
Hobbs
1-li 041 4 2
Barnltz
1).3 041 0 0
ToTALS
18-57 7-10 10 43
BUFFALO (45 )
Noffsinger
12-22 2·2 3 26
Linville
5-14 041 3 10
' Mays
2-4 1).1 0 4
Little
2.a o.a 1 4
Reed
0-4 041 2 0
Whittington
0-4 1-2 I I
TOTALS
2HIO 3.0 13 45
Score by Quarters:
, 1234Tot
Wahama
10 9 12 12-43
Buffalo
10 14 6 15-45
Officials • Raymond Cundiff'
and Burton Hickman
Reserve Game :
Score By Quarters:
I 2 3 ! Tot
Wahama
16 19 9 22-86
Buffalo ·
12 18 4 13-47

INTt:RF.STOF
MEIGS·MA SON AREA

CUF.STER 1•. TANNt:ll/1.1.
E:u:t·. E:d.
RORERT IIOF.FI.ICII
l'il)' Editur
Published d:trly e x L·~t Sil turday
IJy Th~· Ohw V&lt;t ll cy l'ul&gt;lt:dung
Cum].i&lt;IIIY·Mulluncdm. Im·.,
1!1
Court St ., Punwruy , OluO 45709
OHt ~ c

Pla m~

9!12· 2156.

F.dttunul P hvm! 99:!-2 l'J7.

PER BAG

~ l' l i lld

dU.'iS

·Pumcru)', Olnu.

I )O.'i \.&lt;i~ C

p;.iitJ

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N~ tu • rrul Hd\'crl tsill!! I'Cili'Cscn·
\.!l l rvt- WHrd • Gr!lfitli (:Uill!'&lt;lll Y.
htl' ., ·IMttrrl'llr and Galla~li c r ·Div.,
1~7

Thi rd Ave .. New \'vrk , N.Y.
1001 1.
SuUtil·l'lplt un nllc1'1 : I.N hvc rL't l l.ly
c~n rc r whl't ~

ava dublt• 7~ I'CilLS j)l:r
W t!~' k . By Mvtur Houlc _~· lw rt,! carrlt!l'
st •r ·~in· ii!rt uvlll lublt . Otil' munlh.

MACHINE
RENTAL
'25

00

S:.l.2a. Ejy mcul Ill Oluu &lt;tlld W, VH ..
Olrt· Y1:11r, $12.00 :' 'Six rnunths.
S\ 1.50 ;

PER DAY

T hH: c

m onth s,

$7.00 ;

Elscwlu:r·e $26.00 yrar: Si~
SI J .50: Thri.'c nwnllr s,

tn (.l llliL~
F - ~D .

Sul&gt;Sl'l'lp\tu n pf'i•·c url'l mlt·s SutKilly

Tuncs.&amp;nlmrl .

TOURNAMENT TO START
Southern Junior High will
spons or a seventh grade
basketball tournament for
the third year starting Jh is
Wed nesday ni ght. The
Eastern Eagles tak e on the
Shade Panthers at 5: 30, while
the Southern Tornadoes take·
on the Waterloo Rockets at
7:00. On Friday night the
losers from Wednesday play
at5 :30 for third place, and the
championship game will take
place at 7:00. Th ~ admission
price iS 50 cents for st udents
and 75 cents for adults.

R·VAtUE COMPARISON CHART

0

II

R-value

1
I I I

I

2
I I I I

I

4

3
I I I I

I

I I I I

I

SON SALE.

U.S. FIBER

City Ice &amp; Fuel Co.
224 1st &lt;:free!

P'oint Pleasant

'-----~(3~~~)!~2~· ~~--~.-~=--'
~
I

Spring's just around the
corner now is the
time to haye those
mowers and tillers
repaired.

Kelly- Winebrenn er , a 6'0 "
sen inr for wa rd , is avera ging

ln double fi gures and often
docs wclf nn the buards.
Juni or Tina . Brinager will be
ut the oth er forward post , and
the one-two {'OITibination of
th ese two d o uble fi g ure

a 6'1' ' senior. The other
forward is Preece at 6'2"
while the other guard is Boyle
at 6'1' '. The Lions will have a
definit e height advantage .
Whatever the outcome, any
caravan from Meigs County
will have a lithe excitement it
can stand if they travel to
Chillicoth e for the first round
action on Thursday.

~

MATCH UP •
SOUTHERN
Player
Pos Ht. Yr.
Kelly Winebrenner F 6-0 12
Tim Br inager
F 6-0 11

Perry Hill
RichardTeaford

•

C 6·0 12

5-11 12

G

John Sayre
G 5-9 12
FAIRFIELD
Player

Pos . Ht. Yr.

Preece

•

F 6·2 12

Morris
Turner

F

c

6· 1 12

Turner

G
G

6··1

~oy l e

6· 4

12
12
5· 11 II

.~ ~-

SCOIT SOUDER

-

•

'

DWIGHT IIlLI.

JOHN SAYRE

11Avt~

.l
BEGIN TOURNEY PLAY THURSDAY - Pictured
above are members of the Southern Tornado girls
basketball squad, coached by Connee Williams. Thegirls
enter C1ass A Sectional competition at Trimble on Thurs.
day night. With a record of ~2 . 7-2 inside the SVAC Southern is top-seeded and favored to go to the District' for the
second year in a row . Southern had its 52 game regular

.,.,

The winners of those two
games meet March 8 at the
site or the team with the best
record with the winner of that
game ·earnlng a berth in the
NAJA national tournament,
March 13~ 18 at K3nsas City,

Girls cage ratings ·
COL U.MBUS ( UPI) - The
fina l 1978 United Press In·
ternafionaf Ohio High School
Board of Coaches ' girls
basketba ll rating s wi th fi r st p lace vot es and won -lo st
re cords in paren the ses :
Cla ss AAA
Tea m
Points
1. Springfield N. 18 ( l B·Ol 207
2. Eastlak e N . 3 ( 18·0)
152
3. Kettering Fairmont
Wesl ( 16· 11
98
4. Bay VIllage 115· 21
95
5 . Middletown (16 · '1 )
92
6. Sylvania Norlhv iew (16 ··
1)

Tea m
Points
1. Delphos St. J Ohns 5 ( 17 ·
01
120
2. Co . Hartley ( 15-1)
92
3. 0 :-esden Tri .Vat. 1 ( 18·0 ) 82
4. Campbel l M em . 3 ( 17·1) 80
5. Ontario 1 ( 15. 1)
65
6. Chargri n Falls ( 16-0)
60
7. South floint 3 (16·0)
57
8. Perrvsburg 1 ( 17-1)
42
9. Beaver LOcal ( 14·2)
23
10. Chardon ( 14-3)
21
Ot hers with ten or more
points : St. Cla ir svil le, Clyde,
Columbus Hamilton Town .
ship and Well ing ton.

70

7. Co. Watterson ( 12·11
63
Class A
B. St ru t hers (17 . J)
44 Team
Points
9. Fairfield ( 16-1)
41
1. LakeSid e Danbu r y 11 ( 18·
10. Co. Walnut Ridge (13.3) 40 01
'
169
Oth ers with 10 or more 2. Arcanum 2 ( lJ.Ol
·. 119
points : Ga han na Lincoln, 3. Buckeye Trall 2 16.0)
107
Cleveland Lincoln West , 4. Ada 1 (14 · 21
105
Cincinnat i Mother of M ercy, 5. Hunting ton (18 -0)
98
Delaware
(1),
Canton 6. CardingtonMcKinley, Cuyahoga Fa ll s,
88
Uncolf1 (16-2)
Ash l and . El y ria, Tol edo 7. Minsterl (1 5-ll
79
Libbey , Cincinnat i Hughes , 8. Lancaster Fisher 1 ( 15-2) 73
Cinc i nnat i Oak Hil ls and · 9. Frankfort Adena ( 13· ?1 48 .
Tol edo Cent r a l Catholi c.
10. Edgerton 11 15·21
4i
Other s with ten or more
Cla ss AA
points :
Rocky
Ri ve'r
Luthera n West, East Canton,
Sali nev ill e Southern, Fort
Loramie, Miam i Eas t ( 1),
TOURNEY SCHEDULED
Holgate and Riverdale.

The Class AA District
Wrestling Tournament will
be held this Friday and
S~turday al Alhens High
School with 12 teams com·
peling .
Teams will be: Belpre,
Che sapeake,
Greenfield
McClain , Hillsboro, Ironton,
Minford, New Lexington,
Proctorvill e Fairland, South
Point. Thornville Sheridan,
Vincent Warren , and Mf"i gs.

Eastern girls .
win in tourney
Eastern' s g irl s defeated
Trimble, 41-18 , in Class A
Sectional ro·umament play at
Trimble Tuesday evening.
Winden led the winners
with 14 points.

_.J;-....

.,

District 22 NAJA
pairings announce,d .
FiNDLAY ; Ohio IUPI) Rio Grande hosts Wilmingt on
and Central · State plays at
Dcfianl'e in the first round of
the NAIA District 22
basketb a ll tournam e nt
Monday night .

FINDLEY

Front,
John Sayre. Richard Teaford; second row, Steve Baker, Perry ·Hill, Kelly Winebrenner, Dwlghllllll, Scull Souder, Jim ll'llrlen, Tim Brhmger,
Dave Findley, Donnie Dudding.

season win streak broken this year. Pictured are: front
row, left to right,, Tammy Smith, Della Johnson, Sonja
Hill, Jody Grueser, Julie Thoren, Becky Crow, Cheryl
Roseberry; back: Coach Williams, Paula Barnett, mgr.,
Becky Rhodes, Jean Rlchhari , Jaye Ord, Carla TeafOrd,
BoMie Boso, Teresa Holstein, Mary-Beth Slavin, mgr.

CANYON, Te.as (UPI) The contract of West Texas
State basketball coach Ron
Ekker will not be r,enewed,
Athleiic Director Dick Dietl
announced Tuesday .
Ekker , whose two-year
contract
·. expires Aug . 31,
Mo.
finished
hi s fifth seaso n
Rio Grande will take a 2(}..7 ·
Monday
night
with a 90-71
record into its Monday ni ght
loss
to
Indiana
State that
game against Wilmington , 15eliminated
the
Buffs
from the
11 , while Centnil State is 14-10
MisSouri
Valley
c0nfer~n
ce
and Defiance 18-7.
tournament.
Rio Grande qualified for
West Texas State finished
the playoff by winning the
the
season with a n 8-19
Mid-Q.hi o Conference
record.
t o urn ~me n t; Defiance by
tying for the HoosierBuckeye
Conference
title
with
Hanover (Ind .); Central
State by being · the top
ind ependent in the district;
and Wilmington by having
the best record ~mong the
remaining teams.
·

~

STEVE BAKER

RICHARD TEAFORD

PERRY HILL

TIM BRINAGER

Tri-County
Sport

Tu esdar's Sports Transactions.
By Un ited Press International
Baseb·an
Cincinnat i Invited left
hander A I Downing to train ing
camp
'
Montreal - Signed pi tcher
Larry Landreth .
Pittsburgh - Signed pitcher
Tim Jones ,
Texas - Traded outfield er
Willie Horton and l eft .h'anded
pit ch er David Clyde to Cleve .
land tor r ight .handed relief
pit cher
Tom
BusKey
snd
outfielder John Lowenstein .
College
Br own Gerry Alaimo
r es igned as head basketba ll
coach .
E~ansvi ll e Named Dick
Wa lters as. head basketball
coach .
Pro' F oofba t 1
Chicago Hired James
" Buddy" Ryan as defensive
coordinator .
Hockey
lndicnapclls (WHA) - Ac ·
quired lett winger Char les .
Con stantin from the Quebec
Nordiques for fu ture considera .
l ions ; released Ray Adduono .
Toronto - Retu rned defense .
m an Randy Carlyle to Dall as of
th e Centra l Hockey League'.
Soccer
Philadelphia (N A S LJ
Signed def ender Ray Schneltgo .
ecke, the cl ub's second r ound
draft choice .

Shop

Kelly Winebrenner grabs a rcboWld . Richard
. Teaford foolls oo.

• Fishing Tackle ·
and Rods
and Reels
' Guns and
Reloading
• Ball Gloves
Camping
Equipment
e Archery
• Indoor Games
• We
have Gift
Certificates ·

Richard Teaford baskets un a shurt Jumper.
I I
Tim Brinager and Scott Souder battles hard for the
rebound.

601 Main St.

JOHN SAYRE

Pt. Pleasant , W.Va .

·(ot.-

AC:r os5"irom Courthouse

PHONE

'

675-2988

•'
•
••'

Open Sunday 1- p .m._-6 p.m.

fl\bnday thru Saturday
9a .m . to8 .

.

SMITH NELSON MOTORS
POMEROY, OHIO
PH. 992·2174

Dwight Hill fur 2 on a driving layup.
Kelly Winebrenner, Scott Souder and Tim
Brinager awai! the defense rebouna.

Mid Week Specials!
'75 Buick.LeSabre ........ r';u:~~ $3495
1974 .Buick Ele. 225 ......~ ...... :.$340()

,j
Perry Hill snags rebound durlog Sectional

DAVE FINDLEY

Cl!amplonship game.
STEVE BAKER

Wu SU9.5.

WIN AT·.CHILLICOTHE·
RACINE HOME NATIONAL BANK

Wag4n , nice famllv car . Was S1595 .

WILKINSON SMALl ENGINE SALES &amp; SERVICE
~~ust )f . _ __ _ - · Middleport, 0 .
--

Althou ~h ever y member uf
the squ ad has got a sw rt ln g
nod sometime durin g the
scaSl 111, Thursday's starters
wi ll be probably as fnlluws.

Another threat is a forward
by the name of Morris who is

1971
Olds Vista .. .'...................
!1095
Wagon , nice 71 model. Wa1 Sl395 .
'
·
f.. 1971 Buick Skylark ...................$1095

Mowers and Tillers
Both ·New &amp; Used

These valu'es ore for one inch ol loose ·fill insulation .

·'

In l~ st week 's win, So uthern
shut 56 per cent and if they
can d t1 that Th ur sday , HOY
t eam wuuld have a tough
t imc with them.
.

With a 70&lt;l6 win over Peebles.
The Lion s run a controlled
uffense with one guard out
front directin g the plays. On
defense they play both a mantO-man and a zone. and often
will utilize a zone press.
Th e Lion s usually throw a
balanced attack against their
·i, pponents with all · their
start ers Gapable of scoring in
double figures , mueh like
Southern. Li sting four
starters over the six foot
mark, they have some good
offensiv e rebounding.
The l.ions' big threat comes
in the form of a brother team .
The Turn er brotherS·· transferred from Ea st Clinton
where the elder was picked
for the All State team. He's a
senior standing at 6'4" and
playing at center . The other
is a 5'11" junior guard .

4 Dr. ~T, has everything.

BOLENS

ROCK WOOL
FIBER GLASS

time. Pl ay making letterman
John Say re will call the
signa ls for the clul&gt;. and at
5'9" an d with his qu ick hands,
his defensive abilit y needs no
mu re proving than his reco rd.
Seniur Perry Hill will get the
:,t m1 i ng nud a t center. HHI
:,1 ands an eve n 6'0,.' and had
&lt;HI outstomd ing ~a mc lc.1st
Saturde~ y as he came oH the
bench tu score 12 import ant
p&lt;Jints.
Others on the squad who
will pru bably see act ion in th e
·fast-paced cont est are Stev e
Baker, Scott Souder, Dave
Findley, Dwight Hill, Jim
O' Bri en, Dave Fo rem an.
Jack Duffy , and Ed Roush.
The !.ions of Fairfield boast
a 20-2 record and pulled a
mild upset last week when
they captured their sectional

crown by blowing pa st
scurers is hard to beat.
Hannan Trace, BO-fi2.
Ri cha rd Teaford, a 5' 11 "
Noted for their qui ckness
tmd depth , South ern ha s wun guard, has had periods this
many ~ a mes in the late scasun or uncanny accura cy
as he's ripped th ~ cords for
~1 a ges by wear ing down their
upponent s. Always runn ing
Clnd 11ften press ing . th e

THF.IMILY St: NTINF:L
ll F.VIITF.O TOT HE

R usm~s.~

dcJU ble fi gures most of the

uve r nwny of thei r oppon ent s.

Turn aducs pl&lt;l}' th e whole

Bel levue 44 Vermi lion 39
!At Dayton-)
Kel Fa i rmo nt W 39 Cen
ter vi l le 26
Day
Wilb ur Wr ig ht 34
Mic1mis burg 32
( A1 Wright State)
Spri ngfield N 57 P iqua 23
Tecu m seh 32 Xenia 29

Ci rc lev ille 54

layoff s due tu the seve re
wi nter . Last Satun.lay ir1 the
Se ct ion a I {' h;unpi u nship

squa d etml ha s that a dva ntage

March I 1978

·WIN
WITH THE TORNADOES
A WINNER DOESN'T KNOW
HOW TO LOSE

Southern to play /!'airfield
Leesburg in ,district meet
Ry Greg Bailry
Fur t he sccund year ln a
ruw, the SVA C' Champi un
Suuth cr11 Tui' !Htd ocs will
represe nt '"'" the area in the
Di stri cl basketba ll tournament at Chill icothe lli gh
Sc:h11ul. Thursda y the Tornadoes of Coach Carl Wolfe
will battle the Fairfield Lees·
burg Tigers at 7:30 p.m.
The Tnrnad oes stand Hl 15-4
un t he year and have been
~~ laying stronger ruundball in
rcl't!nl weeks after tho lung

0.

Don't forget you owe it to yourself to check
with us before you buy any car, New or
Used. We can save you money. We are The
Friendly Dealer. See or call one of these
Friendly Salesmen. J. D. Story, Ray
Douglas or Bill Nelson.

L-~
,_----------~-------J)
'

•

•'

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, March I, 1978

Mrs. Malhotra lectures
about Indian culture
•

Madhu Ma lhotr a of
Pom.eroy, a native uf India ,
was

guest speaker

meeting

of

al

il

t\lpha

the

Omicron Chapte r uf l)c)t(J

K&lt;Jpp&lt;J Gamma Intcrnc•ti untt l

Socwty held Saturday at the
M~i gs Inn. ·

Introduced

by

Hcbccca

Tate. chaimuw uf prufc~­
sional aff&lt;llr!i, the !i pcak~ r

noted that she had

til'c"ll

States United fur six

in the
ycf:ll':i,

tha t her husbanU is a teacher
&lt;tl Wahama High St..:hool, ami
that they hm:c a yuu11g
daughter . She

eurrc ntly

works as a librarian at ttu:
Pomeroy Library a nd is etlsu
a substitute leather in the

J•ulJiie schools ht-rc. She hold&lt;;
a

mas tcr':s

dc~rcc

111

p;;ycho logy,
Attired in her !Uitiv\.' drc~s.

Mrs . Malhot ra

di spl ayed

ma ny hu nduwdc arlll:les
from I ndi&lt;J a lung with several

saris including her cn)..(agc·
ment and weddi11 g t~tlirc. She
demonstrated. the proper way
to drape the s&lt;:~ri on anQther
guest. Susan Flcshma11 ,
librarian ot the Pomeroy
l.ihr&lt;Jry.

· Mrs . Malhotra c.:umpa rctl
utlucatiun in India to tha t in
the United States. She :~w id
that the t:hi ldren in IndiH arc

expected tu meet tht! high
sWru.lcmJs cstablishet.l by the
sc.:huul and that they have tt
scnuu:; dt.H.ii rc to learn.
~tudents fuh&gt; i~h their uwn
textbooks and _supplies and
take cxcellcnl care of thc111.
They must al:;o pay H fcc fur
(rans.purl.utiun aml schooli ng
beyond tile eighth grctdc. If
one suiJj cd is f~ilcd. the en·
tin.~ c.:uurse uf study must be
n.•pca tell on the secunda ry
leve L
She sa id that discipline is
nut a prubl ~;m in schools of India . Children develop guud
study h&lt;-1hits and hold high
rcs pcd fo r the tcat:hers. Mrs.
M&lt;-ilhutrH sl&lt;:tll&gt;d that career
uJ&gt;purt unitieli are l_imill'&lt;.l in
l m.li&lt;:~ Llue tu ttlc many young
pt:~1p l c ea rni hg e1
higher
cduL·ution. Mllldle im:umc
f;;~mil i es arc finan&lt;:ially ct ble
tw cullt•gc cd ucate their
d1iltl rc u du e t o the
rcasultil ble tuition fecs_ ~.: harg·
ell by the colleges and
children ~ rc expected by the
J&gt;C.tl'CJlt ~ to t: huusc H profe ssion . She slated that doctorate deg rees e:tr~ often
essenl ti.:l l in ftnding a good
po.sitiun.
F'o lluwi n~
the luncheon
hostel! by Olive Pate, Anna
'Elizabeth Tul'fler, Mttxine

Whitehead, Wykle Whitley
and Avic~ F'recker, a recurdin~ of twu movements (rum
H Schumann Sonata
with
Missn&lt;:t Sprague at the phmo
wa s presented by her mother,
Emily Sprague. Tl&gt;e &gt;'eco&gt;·iling was made during Miss
Sprague 's graduate recital ctl
Ohio University, Athens.
M;;~xin e Philson presided at
the IJusiness meeting. Ndlie
Parker , s~c retary, read the
reports of the e xe~.:utivt!
meetings and the regula&gt;·
December meeting. Mrs.
. Philson announced that new
uffkcrs will be elected at the
March meeting and installed
at the April meeting. The
M&lt;:trch ml!eting will be a joint
mee ting of th e thr ee
chapters, Beta Alphu Delta
Epsilon, and Alpha Omicron
at the Holiday Inn, Ga llipolis,
Ma&gt;'ch IL
Meigs County tc:;.~he rs at
the meeting were Ethel Chapman, Betsy Hurky, Nan
Moure , Mrs. Parker, Mrs.
Phi lson, Mary Virgin ia
RiebeL fay Sauer, Emily
Sprague , Mi,;s Tate, Anna
Turner, Ann Webster, Max·
inc Wh itehead, Wyc kle
Whitley, Roberta Wilsun,
Do rothy Woodard, Mildred
Hawley, and Geneva Nolan.

Dl's CANDY
EASTER CANDY
CLASSES Still $5.00
Learn hollow molding
and filled e ggs .
What you m ake you t ake
home.

Phone 446-7903

POLLY"$ POINTERS
Polly Cramer

Salt ruin e d
he r boot s
DEAH POLLY -- 'My
bcuutiful leat her luJuUJ were

l'Ui&gt;&gt;ed last yea r due tu the
sa lt that had been thrown un
the snow. The feet became
cracked a nd' dry. I wu nd~r if
there is somi:thing r ~.:an do to
1;esture them to their natura l
suppleness and to pruted
them from this winter's
onslaught. Is it lou late' CHR IS
DEAR CHRIS - Arc yo•
sure your bouts a re leather
and nut vinyl? Sometimes it
is very hard tu distinguish between the two. Dampen· a
small spot and if there is a
fai nt odor they are leather.
Preswni ng they are leather,
dip a flannel doth mmilk und
rub in sue:tp to dean them.
Rub ' and then wipe awa y
anything left with a clean soft
cluth. Next use a leather conditioning dressing that ,you
might buy at a shoe rePair
.shop. Full ow Uirectiom; fur its
use . Saddle soap is good lu
use on leather. You will have
to use a conditioner to soften
the leather but-the cracks
may be there to stay .
-POLLI'

H;i;:"'H~i~-, Easter bazaar slated for March ;

US

~

•

STORY OF AN 'UNWANTED' CHILD
DEAR HELEN :
··Thirty-six and Single" asked about havi ng a child . Thanks
for suggestinK a bi-racial or handicapped youngster. She may
be cheered by our story :
A single woman in our family adopted one of those " unwanted" babies some years ago. A little child did indeed lead
us : I can't tell yuu what a blessing she has been to us and the•
entire c.:ommunitf.
We are a white family it an abnost totally White
neighborhood, leaning tuward the bigoted side. Let's say our
neighbors would definitely not welcome blacks with upen
anns, though they wouldn 't be ubllSive.
When a dark baby appeared at our home, we sensed a certain coolne,;s toward the entire family . At the same time,
others in the area showed greater warmth and friendliness.
While no one said a word out loud, it was apparent the
neighborhood was taking sides.
This climate remained about the same until Tina, our young
adopted relative, was old ·enough to be outdoors with other
youngsters, The kids, no matter who their parents, accepted
our child wholeheartedly as just one more playmate. When
they were taken to the pa rk, all the kids went. They swooped
around, learning as all kids do what houses they could troop into for goodies and drinks of water. Some of the families who
had shown us a cool fronl were of this type and it wasn'I long
hefore they forgo\ our little girl was another color.
Because they had come to love Ti na, they began speaking
out for fa irness to all races and colors. It became evident that
in defending the right.s of our neighborhood dark child, t hey
were defending all "different" children, at school and
everywhere.
I found too that l had once harbored buried prejudice, but
now I was truly free of it.
It would not be true to say our niece was totally unaware of
her differentness and she walked away entirely unscathed. But
right from the start she had a more liberal understanding of
the common nature of people than most of us ever had . I'm
quite sure also that she is una ware of the great changes (for
the better ) her presence made in many of us. She has brought
u.s many riches.
If "36" finds such a child as Ti na , she'll soon see what a lot of
nonsense tbat ',unwanted" label is. - AUNTIE TO A
WELCOME NIECE
DEAR AUNT:
Your Jetter leaves a wann glow. It's a lovely tribute to Tina,
and to all of you' - H.

Store HOurs

Mon . thru Thurs. &amp; S..l.
9 a.m.-8 p .m. Fri.
Closed Sundar

GET THE SECOND
GALLON FOR ONLY

1200 Colors To Choose From
Watch the rope-wrap wedge and laced strap's draw
aoblause with your sunny spor tsgear!

.I--

UPIIporll UJiar

Miss Mae Weber of Rutland, left, and Kay Sayre,
crafts director at the Senior Citizens Center, dipped
cherry nut eggs into mllk chocolate in preparaUon for
decoralfug them at a Friday work session ,

Frank Newsome of Five Ronnie a nd Louise Dalton,
Points was honored Saturday Rooald and Anna Lou Brown- .
evening with a surprise party ing, Kim Browning, Patty
in celebration of his 31st birth- Warner, Dale Browning,
day. The pa rly was given by Cheryl Kennedy, Rufus and
Frank a nd Leona Mills, Ben Josie Browning, Ralph and and Chris Spears, Bob and Sheila Shane, Bria n Bailey,
Ca th y Woo d , Au s ton Melanie Bailey, Jennifer Cross , Terry Ne wso(lle,
Newsome and Sandy Keney.
Others attending the. party Rodney Newsome, and Jo
were Randall ~nd Shirley Ann Newsome.
Music was presented by
Gibbs, Pat and Cindy Aeiker,
Roger and Sharon Bailey, "The Couzins 11 , a group comRandy and Phyllis Cross, posed of Ronald, Kim and ·
Olin a nd Pearl Knapp, Rufus Browning.
Leona rd anll M r~rv Rnnsh,

Mission seroice held
The February World Missions Service was held
Wednesday evening at the
Middleport
United
Pentecostal Church under the
direction of Mrs. Louise London, Syracuse, director of
wurld missions of the local
church.
•
The service opened with
de votiona l singing and
prayer led by David Acree.
The treasurerls report was
given by Mr&amp;. London in the
absence of Mrs. Ma&gt;tine
Varian and the minutes were
read by Mrs. Carolyn Van
Meter' Mrs. Londun read to
the . congregation a letter
frum the Rev. and Mrs. Larry

New Spring Shoes
Arriving Daily

,;;::~:;.;,_,

RODERICK NEWSOME
HAVING A PARTY The birthdays of Terry
Newsome , eight, and
Roderick Nf WSnme, four,
were celebrated witb a.par·
ty Sunday at their Five

I
~----------------~~--~~~~~~--~

hom e .

Their

DAY OBSERVED
Mrs. Gumer Lewis who
resides with . Mr, and Mrs.
Gregory Bailey, Route I,
Reedsville, observes her 90th
birthday today, March I.
Tuesday night Mr. and Mrs.
Ben Philson, Mr. and Mrs.
Rush ~hilson and children,
Erich a nd Sarah, visited Mrs.
Lewis for a celebration of the
occasion. A birthday cake
was served. Mrs. Lewi:; is the
rn ~ther of Mrs. Philson.·

parents, Frank and JoAnn
Newsome, entertained with
a Sesame Street cake and

ice crea m. Attending and
presenting gifts to the
children were Terri, Patti
and Monty Woud, Gina and
Rhonda Gibbs , Penny
Aeiker, Kyle DaVis, Janet
Werry, Melanie Mankin,
Shannon and Br e tt
Newsome, .Jennifer Cross,
LA..-e and Alesha Keney,
Brian, Brenda and Melanie

Bailey, Bob and ,cathy
Wuod , Randy and Phyills
Cross, Ben and Chris
Spears, Auston Newsome,
Sandy Keney, Shirley and
Randall Gibbs, Pal and
Cindy Aeiker, Frank aod
Leona Mills, Bob and Lela
Redfern, Tom and Linda
Perry and children, and
Lowell Perry.

DATE CHANGED
The Meigs County REACT
t eam meeting has been
changed from March 3 to
March 4 at the Rock Springs
Grange Hall at 7 p.m. All
members are urged to attend.

BAKE SALES
There will be a bake sale at
Racine Home National Bank
and Syrac~se Fire Station
· Saturday, March 4 at 9 a.m.
FRIDAY
POMONA GRANGE, 7:30 sponsored by Racine KinFriday night at the Rock Spr- dergarten mothers. to raise
ings Grange Hall. Rock Spr- money for air c;onditidning at
the schooL
ings to be host.

Unit ed or Me igs

10
Count

$ 39
CUBE STEAK..... ,.......... _..........:.--·
.

PHE B E' STOP!;,
March I thru Much 4
Right Re::;erved To Limit Quantities

We Gladly Accept Fed. Food Stamps
Monday thru Friday

9:00tit7 :00
Salurday 9: 00·9:00
, CLOSED

. ·

·
BRAUNSCHWEIGER
.............. .. 79e
wiENHERS....................................~ 149
49
SLICED JOWL .......... :...... ?. . ~--~ 1
39
SAUSAGAE...................... .'........;.....~ 1
~:

'

3 lb.

IDAHO POTAtoES .

10 lb,
Bag

LB

3

I

Robin Hood
All Purpose

~

BUTIERMILK

sge

BLUE BONNET

FLOUR
5 lb.

bag

MELLOW ROAST

(Quarters)

INstANT almE

lb.

49e

.
'
·

good.''

'

1

2 lb.
box

69e.

FACIAL nSSUES
200 Count

sge
CHATHAM CHUNX

Fridoy Night Ltdies
Stondlngs 2-24-78

Team

Bill's Quality Body Shop
Pt. - Mason Glass
Kapple's Pennzolt
VIsta no. 3

BOWLING
Friday Night U.dies
End of First Half ·
12,30-77
Team

Pis.
90

Glass

Parker's A-1Service

79
75
70

~~ t(apple's Pen!'lzol
"~ Pt. Pleasant·Mason Glass

22
20
16

'· Parker'sA-1 Service
12
'' Landmark
2
High Games and High
~ Series - 1-6, Pearl Russell
'· 159-427 ; Ellamay Norton 159, 717 1 Dottle Nelson 155-.193.
, 2-3, Donna Davis 156-354 ;
.:, Dottle Nelson 15H03 ; Et~. Iemay Norton 1o49-.07.
· 2·10, Ellamay Norton '196&lt;4621 Pauline Fields 186-4511
: Dollie Nelson 143; Pearl
' Russell 3'10.
Frldlr Night Ladles
:
Stondlngs2-t7-71
'•·· Turn .
I'll ·
1 em·· Quality aoctr shop 30
2-4

: VIsta Nci.J
·
24
Pt. Pleasant-MaiOII Glass 22

jar

bag

l

Nelson 148 ; Lorie fv'\oore loll.
High series - E. Norton

.07; D. Nelson 418 ; Pauline
Fields 384,
'

Landmark
Vista No. 3 .
59
Bill's Quality Body Shop 58
INDIANAPOUS (UPI) High Games and High
State star Larry Bird
Indiana
SeriK:
Dottle ·Nelson 178 · ~~7 ; bas just about been written
Pearl Russell t83·&lt;4.47 ; Donna off by the Indiana Pacers,
Davis 132-316 ; Elsie Jones
'152·3A51 Lorle Moore 145·3a9 1 who boped to make him their
· Oebble Engle 165·3a9 1 Et- to~ choice in this year's
' Iamay Norton 19ol-&lt;467 1 Betty National Basketball
Humphrey 135-334; Barbara
· Pratt 182· -443 ; Margaret Association draft.
"We're about ready to
: Parker U4-360 ; Linda Shultz
lllllfk
Larry Bird off our list,''
' 157-419.
admitted Pacers' general
Fridly Night· Ladles
manager and coach Bobby
Standlngus of
Leonard.
"He ~as said he is
t
2-10-78
&gt;Team
Pts. going to stay In school/' .
·.~ Bill's Quality Bodr shop
24

1

25 lb.

36
28
26

Norton 160 and U2 ; Dottle

Pleasant -Mason

. Kapple's Pennzol

!

Parker'sA-1 Service

18

'

I

lnternoflonol
· Hockey Leogue
United Prtn International
North
W L T Pt1. GF GA
Sag inaw 32 20 9 73 291 220
PI. Huron 27 22 10 64 ~7 233
Kal~ma , 25. 23 13 63 2&lt;46 225
Flint
27 25 7 61 277 286
Musk.
20 31 9 49 208 226
South
W L T Pts, GF OA
Ft. Wayne2B 17 13 69 220 219
Toledo 21 23 13 55 m 231
Mllwauk, 18 26 1~ 50 182 207
Grand Rapid&amp;.
19 30 8 '"' 205 23'1
Tutldey'i Rt1ults
Kalamazoo 6, Muskegon 4
Flint s, Saginaw 5 (tie)

• Larclmark
A
Wednesd•y's O.me
High Games - Ellamay
Nortor&gt; 1101 Donna Davis 151 1 Pori Huron at Grand Rapids
. Thursd•r's G1mes
PHrl Runetl 1.0.
High S.rltl - Ellamay No games schedured

,,),

,·

homP games

thi s

year

season.

the second haiL Xavier,
which finished the season at
13-14, wa s led by Keith
Walker with 15 and Gary
Massa with 11.
Host Cleveland State got a
Iota! of 68 points from Frank
Edwards, Greg Cobb and
Robert Carman ln its season
fina1e victory over Akron .
CSU, in winning its fifth
consecutive game and its
sixth in th e last seven
outings, finis!&gt;ed the season
at 12-13, while the Zips
completed the campaign at !l18.
The 12 victories equals the
Vikings' second high est
season win margin. The most

I

emerged a 79-70 winner when
the Redsklns and Rockets
tangled earlier this season at
Toledo.
In Ohio college basketba II
action Tuesday night, Dayton
walloped Xavier !1().62 and
Cleve land State whipped
Akron 9t-75.
At Dayton, Erv Giddings
poured in 23 points and J im
Paxson added 17 as tbe
University of Dayton breezed
to v·ictory over Xavier .
Dayton, now tHI, jumped
uut to a 48-3!i halftime lead
and pulled further away in

1

GET READY FOR SPRING
M e igs Tire
Center Now
Has A Good

Selection of
Any Size

Downing tries out for Reds
Sparky Anderson said of
Downing's chances of making
Cincy's bullpen staff. " All I
know is I'm lookmg for a guy
who can get a lefthanded
hitter out. All he's got 1o do is
show me he can." ·
Downing's best season was
in 1971 when he went 20-9 for
the Dodgers.
" I know that surprised
everyoneatthetrnne,because
nobody thought I had a
fastball left," said Downing.

Edwards had 25 points,
Cobb finished with 22.
Carman with 21 and Ron
Harris with 12 as the Vikings
shot 58.6 percent from the
floor .

Recapped Tires.

" I hadn't done much in 1970
when I divided the season
between Milwaukee and
Oakland: But a~tually, I was
a hetter pitcher when I went
1o ll&gt;e Dodgers, ~ven though I
didn't throw as hard as J ooce
did ,
"It makes a big difference
when you've got a good
defense hehind you. That's
what I had there and that 's
what they've (the Reda) got
here . ~~

Save Your Snow
Tires. Buy
Today .

MEIGS TIRE CENTER
John F. F uJh, Mg r .
992 -2109

"

.REG. 13.95

JUST RECEIVED TRUCKLOAD

INSULATION

Pts.

26
Parker.'s A1 Service
26
Landmark
8
High games - Ettamay

!(apple's Pennzoll

Pt.

tonight

goal shooting mark.
Miami, unbeaten in 10

Tife Zips were paced by
John Britton with 36 po&gt;niS,
while Regjlie HaMuh also
netted 12 for U•e losers.
games,
In
other
Youngstown State topped
AShland Sli-51 and Central
State edged Cedarville 69~.

ls 13, set during the 1974-75

·

Norton ..38; · Pearl Russell
.418 ; Donna Davis 410.

~

8oz.

Archie Aldridge needs just
United Preuloternatlonal
19
points to become Miami's
, A possible Mid-American
Conference basketball cham- career scoring leader. The &amp;.5
piOI)Ship, a bid to the NCAA senior forward has a threetournament and a career year total of 1,3&amp;'1 points.
scoring record are up lor Wayne Embry c•rrently
hoh\5 the record of 1,401
grabs tonight when Miami
points scored from 195S-S8.
bosts Toledo,
Aldridge already has
With less than a week of the
established
a career record
se1,son remaining, Miami .
for
most
field
goals with 558,
lea'Us Toledo by just a baH
game. The Redsklns are 10-3 surpassing the mark of 545
In the MAC and 16-7 overall, held by Phil Lumpkin ( 1971while the Rockets are 10-4 74) ,
Aldridge, ranked first in
. and 20-5.
the
MAC and eightl] in the
Following tonight's game,
nation
with a field goal
Miami travels to Ball State
,
percentage
this season of
lor a Saturday encounter and
also
is
certain
to break
.618,
returns home to host Eastern
Chuck
Goodyear's
.511
field
Michigan Monday in a
makeup game. Alter tonight,
Toledo has only one more
game - at home Saturday
against Central Michiga n.
Central Michigan, now 9-1, ·
CINC INNATI (.UP! ) and Bowling Green, lh'i, also
Vetera
n lelthanded pitcher AI
could fig ure In the title
Downing
is trying to hecome
picture. The Chippewas play
at Ohio University tonight a Cincinnati Red.
Downing , 36, who ·compiled
and at Toledo Saturday
a
123-107 record in 17 major
before hosting Bowling Green
league
se asons but was
Monday , The Falcons host
released
last J uly by the Los
Kent State tonight and travel
Angeles
Dodgers, was In a
to
Eastern
Michiga n
Cincinnati
uniform Tuesday
Saturday and Central
for
workouts
on a " trial
Michigan Monday.
The MAC champion basis" at the Reds' spring
receives an automatic bid lo training camp in Tampa, Fla.
"I always thought he could
the NCAA Mideast Regional
pitc
h
Reds ' manai!Pr
at Indianapolis March I I.

Weaver doesn't take bows too often. He rates one, though, for
staying with Mike Flanagan, the 2&amp;-year-old left-bander from
Manchester, N,H,, who was !knd-$ with the'Orioles In 1976 and
Insisted on a live-year contract last spring.
·
· "How good Is this guy?" Peiers asked Weaver before signing
Flanagan,
·
·
"I think he can become another (Mickey) Lotich," answered
lhe Orioles' manager_
By June 26, Flanag.an's recqrd was U, leading Weaver to
meet with his coaches.
"Were we wrong on this guy?" he asked them.
They all ssid no, and they were right because Flanagan won
13 of his Iaiii IS decisions to wind up a IS-game winner and
cunpensate lor the loss of Wayne Garland, who had gone over
to Cleveland lor more than f.! million as a free agent.
"I'm not bringing this up as sour grapes because Garland
pitChed good ball lor the Indians," said Weaver. "BQt he did
lose 19 games for them. We feel we saved the money ."

~t.'Vista No: 3

PUFF

79e

MARGARINE

'

HONOR RQLL
John Lisle, principal, has
announced the third six
weeks grading period honor
roll for the Salisbury ;
Elementary SchooL Making a
grade of " B" or above in all ·
the&gt;r subjects to be named ''
were:
;
First grade - Mary But· '
cher , Melodi Carl, Tracl :
Casto, Billy Gilkey, Marc •
Co rsi, Kathy Hess , Nick King, Dollie Musser, Joan .
Simpson , Jody Taylor, '
Michelle Taylor.
Second - David Beegle, :.
Billy Brothers, Michele ;
Folmer, Sue Fry, Charlotte '
Hart , Audra Houdasheit, ·
Artie Hunnel, Kevin Donald ·
King, . Kevin ' Victor King, :
Sharmon Slavin Angie Sloan,
Tamara Vance.
Third - Lin Chase, April ·
Clark, Alethla Collins, Michl
King, Phillip King, SaUy '
Radford, Brenda Sinclair,
Jeff Smith, Cathy Stotts.
,
Fourth - Rose Barnhouse, ;
Jodi Harr ison, Barbara
Hatfield, Scott pullins, Anita .,
Smith, David Warth.
·1
Fifth - Ruth Fry, Cynthia ;
HaZelton Charlotte Lyons, -"
Teresa Pratt, Sandra Hoyt, ;
Sixth - Rhonda Jeffers, ·
Mike Kennedy, Angie Pratt,
Craig Sinclair, Paul Swindell.

PANCAKE MIX

$100

'

'•

ORANGE DRINK

Valley Bell

¥2 gal.

1

AUNT JEMIMA
COMPLETE

32pz,
Bottle

y

1

Wagners

BESPAK

TRASH BAGS

Blake
nlissioriaries in
Libel'ia. A song "He Was
There All the Time" w,as
presented by Thomas Kelly,
accompanied by Mrs. Edith
Zirkle on the organ.
The service was turned
uver to the Rev, William Knittel who talked on "The
Ministry of Intercession" using scripture from Genesis 18
and Ezekiel 16. Prayer coneluded the service.

h6sts~ · Toledo

MIAMl lUPI)- Jhn Palmer ill built along the general Jines
lets up,
especially on Earl Weaver, who always bites right back.
"Y'"' g01Ul8 become complacent now that you've got a new
lbfe&amp;-year contract?" Palmer needled his boss five minutes
olter checking Into the Ballim.ore CBIJIP·
·,Weaver never oo much as betted an eye.
.
~'Certainly not," he deadparmed. "I'm not gonna make those
two miltakes I made Iaiii year.''
·
That lllopped Palmer, but ooly lor a second.
"You forgot one," he said, anti they both laughed .
Pahner and Weaver go back and forth at each other Uke that
till the Ume . They've been doing it oow for nearly 10 years and
If either stopped, the other one probably would brood about It.
They doo't go out water skiing together ·and you wouldn't
exactly call them booom buddies, but underneath all the give
and take there's not only a genlline mutual affection but a
sincere mutual respect as well,
, Palmer reatllly recognizes the fact that Weaver may be the
belli manager in the majors, having won three pennants, five
dlvlllon !lUes and one world championship since taking over
the Orioles nlne-and~-half 'years ago, and Weaver feels
Palmer is the hell! pitcher In baseball and will show you his
rtCQrd to prove It.
· Nobody can downgrade Palmer to Weaver and tl&gt;e same
thing goes the other way around,
During the course of the season, Weaver hollers from the
bench oo much, he frequenUy comes up hoarse, Right now,
he's In good voice. spring training is young yet. Give him a
little time'
Weaver Ia always thinking about something,
When Palmer told him he had forgotten one· of the mistakes
be made last year, he was kidding him, and Weaver realized it,
but he still lried to figure out which one Palmer had in mind .
"I made a lot of mistakes,' ' he salll, lighting a clgaret.at his
desk following an Oriole workout . He began thinking of a lew.
"I walked someone to get at (Lilrry) Hisle and then brollght
in (Scott) McGregor, a lellhander, to pitch to a righthander,"
he recalled, "Boy, was that a mistake."
,
Weaver got up from his desk and walked over to the
frigidaire the Orioles keep In the room wbere he and his
coaches dress. He got a can of beer and snapped off the cap.
. Sitting down again, Weaver talked about last year and how
Ids nooame Orioles startled everyone by the remarkable bid
they made lor the pennant, wllming 97 games, only three Jess
lhan the world champion Yankees.
"I'd Uke things to go as smooth as they did last year, and win
five m«e,'' he said~
, "The day alter we were ellininated last year, I rold the
players in Bostm that the way they played was going ro get me
recognition, and I got more than I deserved . They did the job.
They made it easy. I wasn't the one who bit Gaylord Perry,
Nolan Ryan or Bert Blyleven, they did, II they hadn't ~one it, I
would've looked Uke a dummy."
What was most gratlfylrig to him, Weaver said, was the way
ihe baseball judgement of general manager Hank Peters, his
coaches and hlmseH was vindicated by what the Orioles did
last season.
"Hank got the 4ll players on the roster and my coaches and I
oat down and picked out the best 25 that we felt could compete
In the American League," he said. "Nobody believed it, but
alter 111 wins, we saUsfled our feelings as far as our baseball
judgement was coocerned. Again, the players had ro do It on
the field, and tbe fact thatlheydidcan' t help but make you feel

ol a whippet, but be's more Uke a bulldog, H~ never

TERRY NEWSOME

THURSDAY
EVANGEUNE
CHAPTER, Order of Eastern
Star, bean dinner, 6 p.m .
Thursday to honor members
of Middleport Masonic Lodge
363, F&amp;AM, a nd wives. Film :
~tour J;lretious Heritag e~~ to
he shown; business meeting
at 7:30.
FRIDAY
WESTERN Square Dance
with John Hendren, national
ca ller, spon sore d by th e
Belles and Beaus Club at
Royal Oak Park recreation
building, 8 to II p.m. Friday .
Host club to take refreshmen t:~. All area west ern
square dance club members
invited.
WORLD Day of Prayer,
1:30 p.m. Friday at the
Pomeroy F irst Baptist
Church sponsored by Church

_________""'
ISOTONER GLOVES
Women
NOW IN STOCK I
1Co unty.

•y~4»

11 IIIILTON IUQIMAN

Social·
Calendar

9a .m .• 5 p.m.

•

Sport Parade

Surprise birthday party held

Puints

Miami

&gt;

1

DEAR POLLY -- My Pet
Peeve is with the strea lled &lt;
adhesive tape that does not
adhere for any length or time.
I buy a We ll-known brand that
U.s~d to be tj iJ right but Lluring
the last year or su I hav.e
WEDNESDAY
fo~nlllt scarcd y sticks at all.
MIDDLEPO RT Litera ry
- MHS.V.A.V.
Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday at
DEAR POLLY - I find thai the horne of Mrs. Dwight
head lettuce keeps better if Wallace. Mrs. Nan Moore to
first wrappeil in paper tuwel-· review ··A Book of Corrunon
i~1 g e~ nll then placed in a
Prayer."
plastic bag · until needed,
FREE CERVICAL cancer
Le aves can be tui·n off as
needed or a portion chopped cHnic, Wednesday afternoon,
at Heath United Methodist
• fm· sa lad and the remainder
re-wrapped and returned to Church for Meigs area
women; for appointment call
t he plas ti c bag.
992-7531 days and 992-5832
MHS.M.O.H.
evenings and weekends.

.

Today'•

;

1

DEAR HELEN :
I have a weight problem and want to reduce. But I'm turned
off by all these advertisements showing gorgeous, thin women
touting reducing aids. When they demonstrate exercises, the
models are so slim and graceful they make me sick. Why don't
they depict' heavy people exercising, so we could relate to
them' Those ''skinhys" are enough to make you give up before
you start! C.S.
·
DEAH C.:
You've made'a good point. - H.

. "Middle of Upper Block. Pomeroy, 0!'

BUY .1 GALLON OF INTERIOR FLAT OR
SEMI-GLOOS CHARM TWINS PAINT AT
RETAIL PRICE

~

•

HARTLEY'S SHOES, INC.
BUY NOW &amp; SAVE!

~
~

By Helen Bottel
•

Decorated chocolate eggs
are being made by the dozen
at the Senior Citizens Center
for the ann~al Easter bataar,
Scheduled for March 21, 22
and 23, the bazaar will
feature the de&lt;:orated eggs in
three flavors - cherry nut,
fruit, and maple nut - at a
price anyone l."dll affurd 10
t:l:!llls 1 25 cents, and $1.25.
Kay Sayre, crafts director
at the Center, works with the
.senior citizenS who are making and decorating the eggs.
Proceeds from lhc S&lt;de will
go into the fUnd fur local
sh~rc uf the monies needed to
uperate the Center.
The recipe used fur the
chocolate eggs, in case you'd
like tu try your own calls for
two pounds of confectioners
suga r, une-hall pound of butter one tablespoon vanill&lt;:t,
unc t.ableS(.KJUil cherry juice,
&lt;:J six uunce jar of cherries,
chopped, one cup nuts , and
one- cup coconut.
Mix together and mold Into
egg shapes. Dip in melted
chocolate. Allow to dry and
then decorate.

I- The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-!'qneroy, 0., Wednellday, March I, 1978

"BUY NOW WHILE WE HAVE IT IN STOCK"

STYLE BOARD
WHITE WITH GOLD LACE

NO. 2

GREAT FOR KITCHEN OR BATH

PRE.CUT
STUDS

SPECIAL
PLAIN WHIT£
NO.2

.,7.

2"x4"x10'

CEILING TILES

16e

SQ. FT.

2"x4"x12''"

•208

SPRING OAK
PANEUNG
Mill
$299
Second

Sheet

MED.-TONE

LAUAN

HOGG &amp;ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.

PANELING
$379

. ~heel

'

773-5554

MASON, W. VA.

•

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , March I, 11178

Golden Buckeye Card· now two years old
POMEROY - The month . program has been in dUzens renters, agencies.
existence in the stale of Ohio. community centers. and
uf March, 1 978~ will mark a
Bob Richmond, the area volunt..,rs who have worked
twu year period that the
Golden
Buckeye Card diret·tnr for Athens, Meigs, and still are diligently
Hoc kin g. Perry. Noble, working through this w1nter's
Mon roe,
Mor ga n
and hardships, to make sure the
Washingtun Counties. says elderly are being taken care
that there are over 600,000 uf in every aspect possible.
persons. 6!i years of age or Many merchants have to be
older. who now have the C11mplimented for their
tremendous efforts in aiding
Golden Buckeye Ca rd .
Over 20,000 merchants in the senior citilens.
Any merchant who is inthe ·state of Ohio now honor
terested
in joining the Golden
the holder of the cards with
Card program can
Buckeye
discuunts.
ca
ll
BQb
Richmond at 592The Golden Buckeye Card
2769,
or
wrilelo
him at' AMH
program , is one that helps
persuns who are on fixed &amp; MRC, 437 Ri chland Ave.,
inco mes, to be able to pur· Athens 45101 for full details nf
chase goods and products at a the program .
Listed are the merchants in
discount. so that they can
Meigs
co unty in the Golden
~1retch their money for exBuckeye
Card program . The
penditures. To qualify fur a
and the
hours
honored
Golden Buckeye Ca rd, a
discounts
given
vary
at eaCh
person must be 65 years of
place of business.
a~e or nlder, and must show
"Be sure to check with each
proof u£ his birth date .
A breattuakmg auay of
merchant
before making a
To
sign
up
forthe
card
In
Keep sake s most enchant1ng
purchase,
and
present your
dra mond engagemen t rtng
IJomeroy, there are sites a t
Gulden
Buckeye
Card before
style s
duets , trw s a11 d
the
Pomeroy
Senior
soht a1res to dehght you
the
purchase
is
· rung up,,·.
Citizens Center, E. Main
and every en~agcrncnt diaRiC'hmond
advises.
Any
St. Middl eport - Dutmond IS guaranteed pe1 fe et
pe
rscm
holding
a
Go
lden
ton Drug Co., N. 2nd
Buckeye Card who wants a
Ave. ; County Welfare
list
of the merc hants
· Offire; Tuppers Plains honoring the Golden Buckeye
Tuppers Plains Hard"·are
Ca rd in the eight counties
Route 7; Rolland mentioned, can write to Bob
Rut_lund Senior Citizens
Richmond, AMH &amp; MRG, 437.
Center; Ra•·hte - RaeJoe
Richland Ave ., Athens 45101
Carpet Slore.
and
request a directory .
A special thank you comes
Mark
down your 1.0. number
from Bob Richmond and the
21l E . MAIN • POMEROY
with
ynur
request, and send a
Ohio Com mission on Aging,
self
addressed,
stamped
"'nv•tr....,,,oo ... ,utooa
, .••• ~o~ .. , ,~., to the n utrition sites, senior

Keepsake

~&lt;:StP

'Q'Jetrel1ti"S

- -- - - --

envelupe.
Bub

Hichuwnd

wt,u ld

sincerely appreciate yo ur

telling people in the 6!i years
11f age (rf older category,
especially those who live in
the country or on fanns, to be
sure and sign up as ·socm as

possible f(,r their catd .
POMEROY
Chapman Shoes, 10 per cent ; Simon 's Market, 10 ;
Elberfelds. 10 ; Fabric Sho p,
10 ; D&amp;M Applian ce, 10 ;
Da iry Valley. 10 ; Midway
Market, 5; Tropic-a l Swap
Shop, 10; Ebersbach Hard .
ward Co.. 10 percent on
Friday : Meigs Auto Parts , 10
percent or more ; Melgs Tire
Center. Inc.. 10 percent or
more ,· Margueri te Shoes, 10
percent except sale items:
New York Clothing 1-/ouse , 10
percent eKce pl sale item s;
Senior Cit i zens Center Craft
Shop , 10 percen t:' Smith -

. Nelson Inc.. 10 percent on
parts and labor; J&amp;R Sports
Shop, 10 percent on clo th ing ;
Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto, Inc .,
varied, except sale items ;

Francis Florist , 10 percent on

cash and carry purchases:
Kapple Pennzo11 . 10 percent
on labor , p~rts and a c ·

cesso r les ;

Shirley

Kay 's

Beauty Salon , 10 percent on
. Tuesday and Wedn esday :
Welker 's Ashland , 10 percent
on parts , l a bor and a c
cessori es; Pumeroy Bowling
Lanes , 3 games for Sl.25 open
bowling
Sunday -Friday ;
Modern Suppl{. , 10 percent
e.x cept feed, er t ilizer, fen cing, lawn mowers. and lawn
mower e(lu ipment; Pomeroy
Cement Block Co., 10 percent
except sa le Items, la bor ,
lr ~rk
charges, .and ready
m1xed concrete; Kiddie
Shoppe, 10 percent except
sale items .

MIDDLEPORT

' guarantee
Wholl
you a

averS GEdge?

Bahr Clothiers .. 10 percent ;
~ewing Center , 10; Mid ·
dleporfCClb · Co ,, 10; Dudley
F!orist, 10 ; Dutton Drug Co .,
12 ; McClure's Dairy Isle, 10 ;
V~l l age Gun Shoppe
10 ;
VIllage
Pharrnacy ,
10 ;
Gi lli an ' s, 10 ; Et Cetera
Boutique, 10 ; Jack 's Dairy
Bar &amp; Restauran t, 10 ;
Mid dlepor t Department
Store , 10 ; A ll Weather
Hardwa r e/ 10 per Cen t except
sale items ; Foreman &amp;
Abbott. 10 percent except sa le
items ; Her i tage House. 10
percent eJo:cepl sa le item s;
Dale F . Ell is Service Station,
10 percent on parts and labor ;
Fre11ch's Su noco, 10 per cent

Water torture

SYRACUSE
Dorothy's Beauty Salon , 10
percent Tuesday and .Wed ·
nesday ;
Lave nder Con struction, 10 percent on
Materi als only .

RAC(NE

GmLS ALL LEAGUE honors were won by these three.Meigs players during Swlday's
SEOAL coaches meeting In Jackson . Lefl to right are Tracy Burdette, honorable mention;
Glenda Brown, second team and Vicky Epple, first team.

Meeting set
Middleport Masonlc Lodge

TUPPERS PLAINS

Tuppers Plains Hardware,
10 percent ; KG Shake
Shoppe. 10 ; Polly's Vil lage
Ceramics, 10 .

363, F&amp;AM, will host the 12th

Masonic

Aladdin Templ e Shrine,
Columbus,
Under
the

direction of Ed J. Braith·
waite, will confer the Master
Mason Degree on a candidate
from this district. There are
approximately 5{) men in lhis
unit a nd they are well known

GASO t.INE TAXES
February gasoline excise

in Ohio for their ritualistic

tax checks totaling $9,872,380.

'work .

were diStributed by the office •

villages include: Middleport,
$2,160: Pomeroy, $2,3 01 ;
Racine. $600; Rutland , $531;
Syracuse. $701, a total of

$6,293.

•

OPENING THRUSDA Y
lOCATED ON COUNTY ROAD 32

Miles from Memory Gardens
- SJOP IN SOON-

ri tua l

11 , beginn ing at 12 noon .
The Past Masters Unit of

CHESTER

$35 ,000.
Amnunts receivedby Meigs

District

meeting on Saturday, March

Ri denour 's TV &amp; Ap plian.·ce, 5 percent e&gt;&lt;cept sa le
i tems; Tri .(ounly Com Q"~unity Conce rt. 50 percen t ;
Fork ed Run Sta te Park ,
di scount on Comping .

nf State Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson to Ohio counties,
townshi ps,
cities
and
villages.
Each cou nty received

The second section of this

degtee will begin al l :30
p.m.
At5:15p.m.adinnerwillbe

served by Evangeline
Chapter, Order of Eastern
Star. 'at $3 per plate. Dinner
reserva tio~s must be in by
March 6 to James Clatwort hy. 130 High St., Middleport, Ohio 45160. All
Master Masons are invited.

· Veteraos Memorial Hospital
Admitted - James Roush,
Dexter; Kimali Hysell,
Rutland; Victoria Cundiff,
Syracuse; John Schneider,
Pomeroy ; Julie Richards.
Pomeroy; Herbert Gilkey,
Shade;
Terry
Hayes,
Pomeroy; Connie Manley,
Middleport; Goldie Wolfe,
Long Bottom.
Lucy
Discharged
Spe nCe r , Debra Ha ger ,
Grover Klein .

. ALLSEOAL - Kenny Young, left, was recenUy
named All.SEOAL (second team) and Greg Becker was
honorable mention all-league.
Pleasao' VaUey Hospital
DISCHARGED - Mrs.
Roger Hal,l, Point Pleasant ;
Curtis Ward, Pomeroy; Leon
Queen, Crown City; Sybil
Allison, Mason; Mrs. Carl
Rairden, Hartford ; John
Craig, Bulfalo; Lige MiUer,
Bidwell; Mrs. Raymond
Grinstead, Mason; . Harley
Bums, Point Pleasanl ; John
McDaniel, Clifton; ~rs. Ted
Steven s , Point Pleasant;
Tina Roush, West Virginia.;
Je£frey Cox, Gallipolis;
Kenneth Smith, Coolville.
.BIRTHS ,.- A daughter to
Mr. and Mrs. jtoland Smith.
Middleport.

SESSION SET
_The Meigs Association for
Retarded Citizens is having a
bike-hike planning session at
. 1 this evening a t the offices of

FRENCH
CITY DUTCH LOAF••••••••••••L.B~. s1.29
6 to B lb. average
FRENCH CITY SMOKED CALLIE HAMS.L.~: 79'
CUT UP FROZEN FRYERS •••••••••••••••••:~ff. 59'
HOME MADE HAM SALAD.~ •••• ~ ••••••••• ~~;.99'

2·YI!Ail
CEliTl- • -"l '

,,,... fl~af\¢J'

''"',.. 11,Getl oa

6·YUR
CliRTIFICA1'f &gt;':

' Y:% '
.7J
....,._.......,., .

1-lb. BLUE BONNET
e
MARGARINE .. :~:~ ........ 59
OHIO COLBY
LoNGHORN Chunk lb.
CHEESE .............. Sl. lb.

•Mial.I111 $J,IIIL*

$1.49

A FULL
SERVICE

$1.59

ROME BEAUTY .
e
. APPLES .......~--~~---~-~~-- 79
10 lb. IDAHO
BAKING
. $}Z9
POTATOES--....... -~~-~ .. .

BANI~

WHEATIES •••••.•.·•.•••••••••••.••••••••••••••••. 69'
Orange &amp; Grape
2/79'
DRINKS•••••••••••••••••••••••••••
WAGNER
32 oz. Aunt Jemima Buckwheat
PANCAKE MIX ••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ •• ~:••• 87'
24 oz. AUNT ,JEMIMA
,
PANCAKE SYRUP. ••••••••••••••••••••••
~'!:~!e. st19
'
• S lb. All Purpose
ROBIN .HOOD FLOUR ••••••••••••••••••••• ~:~•• 89'
18'12 oz. DUNCAN HIENZ Regular
CAKE MIXES ......................................79*
GalGOLDEN ISLE BLEACH •••••••••••••••••••••••• 69'
28 oz.
HUNTS TOMATOES. ••••••••••••••••••••••••:::.,73e
3 oz.
INSTANT NESTEA •••••••••••••••••••••••• !::. $1J9
32 Ot-

The Ohio Valle~ Bank has a maximum
interest rate savings plan to fit your needs.
So when you think savings, think Ohio
Valley Bank savings and stop in to di8cuss
t he benefits of all our savings plans. You'll
find out why we guarantee a saver's edge
with maximum rates and a plan to fit your
n~eds.

wA

OhioValley Bank
G al l•'p o l• s Oh •o

M""'tw&lt;I"OIC

The Leading Savings Plans Are AI The Leading Savings Bank

•

lnternations I Academy of Beauty. G1bb says blue-eyed, 6-fool ,
Arizona-born actress L)'llda Carltr. who plays Wonder Woman
on television, "epitomizes the woman of today ... typifying the
vibrant feminine spirit ol the 1910s, combining beauty and
Intelligence with charismatic ch~~rrn . " She'll get her "Helen of
Troy" statuette nelrt month in Hollywood.
SHORT~HANGED : Maryland's attorney general says the
First Amendment to the Constitution "empowers musclemen
to kick verbal sand in the faces of the short"- and with that,
he ruled out a bill to ban RaDdy Newman's salirlcal song
"Short People" from the state's airwaves. Says Fraocis
Burch, " The long and short of il is that we feel that the 'Short
People' bill cannot measure up to constitutional scrutiny ." The
bill, introduced by state delegate Isaiah Diltuo - a ~oot-5
lawmaker who finds the song offensive - would have prohibited radio stations from playing tbe song on pain of a $500 fine .
QUOTE OF THE DAY : Oklahoma State Rep . Jerry
Steward, in helping defeat a billlhal would have required a
man lo i_nform a woman of the dangers Of pregnancy and
obtain her written tonsenl before having intercourse : "The
social condition under whkh intercourse routinely occurs does
ool lend itself to someone takilll! out two pieces of paper and
carbon paper and writing out this information."
GUMPSF.'l : Andy Warhol , who now owns Interview
magazine, tltrew a party al New York's Cafe Reginette
Tuesday night for his new covergirl - Margaret Trudeou ...
Sophie Zybowsld and Edward Vlllella of the New York City
Ballet staged a special "Dance of the Athlete" Tuesday to
inaugurate Eastman Kodak's "Kodel CUp" tennis tournament
... Tiny Tim tiptoed through the Copacabana Tuesday night,
opening his New York concert with, of course, a bouquet of
tulips ... The Long Beach, Calif .. Convention Center's theater
will be inaugurated March 12 with a tribute to playwright Nell
Simon, and among performers already signed up are AnD·
Margret, Jack Klugmao, Paul Williams, Jack Albertson, Ruth
IlUzzi and Carl Reiner, ..

peopletalk

Karen Blaker Ph.D.

RUTLANO

Linda 's Lady Fair Beauty
Sa lon , 10 percent ; Racine
Carpet Shop, 10 ; Racine
Department
Store,
10 ;
Ridenours TV &amp; Appliance , s
percent except sale items ;
Roseberry
Pennzoll , 10
percent on l abor , parts, and
accessories; V is ta Service
Center , 5 percent on labor ,
parts and accessories .

n.. DIIUy Senllnol, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, March 1. 1978

CHOICES

Rutland Furn i ture Co., 10
p.ercent on furn it ur e only .

MARY'S YARN &amp; NEEDLECRAFT

3'12

7-

ewcept ga!.DIIne. on cash
pur ch&lt;~ses ; Ingels Furniture
Store, 10 percen t eJCcept sale
Items ; Spencer's Market , 5
percent on meal purchases
over $2 ; Dan Thompson Ford,
Inc ., 10 percent on labor and
parts ; Kay's Beauty S~lon , 10
percent Monday· Wednesday ;
M iddleport Book Store. 10
percent on purchases over $5
excep t sale item s; Tom Rue
Motors, 10 percent on carts,
labor and accessories ; Twin
Ci ty Gateway Markel , No
m i nimum
pu r c hase
r eq ui r emen t
or
coup on
needed for sale items ; H&amp;R
Firestone Dea ler Store, 10
percent on ti res book price, s
percent on large appliances
and TVs book price, IS per .
cent on most home and auto
su pplies, except sale items.

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges Feb. 28)
Da res :o\ rnold, James
Beaver, Phyllis Bright,
Ma rl e~e Ca rdwell, Heidi
Carruthers, Ella Cox, Nelson
Dunlap, David R. Evans,
Timoth y Harvey , Virginia
Hill, Mrs. Michael Justus and
daught er , K~thryn King ,
Velma Leitch, Charles
Marlin, Douglas Ma rtin,
Royal Martin , Mrs. Randy ,
McGuire and daughter, Mrs.
Paul McWilliams and son,
Wilma Moore, David Mora,

Mildred Osborne, Mrs. Shan
Paulk and daughter, Charles
Prunty, Anthony Remy, Vicki
Rousll , Mrs. Thomas Simi&gt;. son and son, Anderson
Spaulding, Amanda Vititoe.

Cleland Realty, E. Main St.,
Pomeroy. Anyone interested

in helping is invited to attend.

TV•• .in Review
By JOAN HANAUER
UP! Televlsloo Writer

NEW YORK (UPI)- Da~c~ has been on television from
the beginning of tube time -back in the days when packages
of Lucky Strikes trled vaUantly to keep step with each other In
quaintly amateurish commercials.
But there seldom has been as much fancy footwork seen in
one hour as In the Ben Vereen special ABC airs March 2, 10-11
p.m., Eastern time .
Fonnally titled "The Sentry Collection Presents Ben
Vereen .....- His Roots," the .show opens with Vefeen in mOOern
dress singing "Cockeyed Optimist" from "South Pacifi~"
. while thanks to the magic of television Chicken George plays
the harmonica. For those few who did not see "Roots "
Chicken George was the character Vereen creal~
dramatically. He is joined at the end by Louis Gossett Jr., as
Fiddler.
.
That's the end of sam.eone else's 11 Roots," ho.~ever, as
Vereen switches to a song and dance number about and with
some city kids called, ''On the Street," recalling his Brooklyn
youth.
.
As he reminisces with a very small, very cute child, he
goes hack to his clays studying dance, in which he and Cheryl
Ladd, Charlie's newest Angel, combine for "See You
Tomorrow in Class." Miss Ladd does weU as a dancer, less so
as a singer, and looks absolutely smashing In rehearsal
clothes.
The best number In the show features Vereen and Gossett
as two aging men visiting the debris of the about-lo-be
demolished Starland Ballroom, where the big bands of the
1903 played while zoot-suited studs and their boogie woogie
girl friends dsnced. .·
·
The scene fades Into the splendor of the past, with Gossett as
a bandleader and Vereen dancing with Debbie Allen who
made such a hit on the llmlted series ''Three Girls Three "
Miaa Allen is a superb dancer and she and Vereen do a Jltte'r- ·
bug number that's a beaut.
.
There was good news in the Nielsen numbers this week for
NBC, which finished second behind ABC and left CBS In the
cellar, and also for the television audience that nightly allows
hope to triumph over experience in searching for quaUty
television.
·
One of the reasons for NBC's relative . success was the
strong showing of the second and third episodes of lts ''The
Awakening Land" three-part miniseries.
'
. The first episode, COWlted in the previous week's ratings
ranked a mediocre 32, with only a 28 percent share of t~
audience. This week in a comeback the final episode tled with
"Allin the Family" for lOth place and captured a 38 share
while the middle episode came In 14th and earned a 35 share'
The top ne~work television programs for the week endJnti
Feb. 26, according to the A. C. N1elsen Co., were :
· 1: "Laverne &amp;Shirley;" 2: ~~Happy Days;;' 3: 11Three's
Company;" 4: "Charlle's ·Angels;" 5: "Eight Is Enough·" &amp;•
"Utile House on lhe Pralrle;" 1: Grammy Awards; 8: ,;Ll~
and Let Die" (ABC Sunday movie); 9: "How the West Was
Won;" IO: (tie) "Awakening Land" part 3 and "Allin lhe
Family.''

DEAR DR. BLAKER - I
can't swim. I never learned
as a child and now - at 40 - I
have no desire to try.
, But it bothers my husband.
He tells me to be a good sport
~ take some lessons. He
also thinks I would be' safer less likely to drown - if I
knew how to swim. I can't
argue with his reasoning but then I never can because
he is always SQ logical. JokIngly, I call him "Mr. Right. "
He .is pressuring me to start
lessons at the YWCA so I will
be ready by summer. He's
ll1so reading about some new
lechnique guarenteed to !urn
even the most reluctant nonIWimnwr into a champion.
This has been going on for
years. Why does he continue
to torture me like this?
DEAR READER - Why?
Because you let him. If you do
not want to learn to swim, say
so.
His argwnents make little
sense anyway. His demand
for you to be a "good sport"
is a not very subtle ploy to
have you do something he
thinks -you should do.
Recognize il for what it is.
The "swim your way to
safety" argument is also based on · questionable logic.
Donald ("How to Cure
Yourself of Positive ThinkIng") Smith points out that
you are less likely to drown if
you do not know how (oswim .
Why• Because people who
-cannot swim do not go in the
water.

Once you realize your bus·
band's argwnents hold little
water, so to speak, you will

By KENNETH R. CLARK
UDited Presslnteraallooal
ELVIS LIVES ... : Dennis Wise doesn'llook like Dennis Wise
any more. He looks like the late Elvis P.-.sley, and that's just
as well, because he went to a lot of trouble lo gel there. Wise a Presley fan since childhood - recently underwent plastic
silrgery to become his idol's double. He unveiled the new face
Tuesday in Orlando, Fla., and reporters generally agree he's a
ringer for Presley in the impersonation act he'll take on the
road. Snys Wise, "A lot of people have been malting a lot of
mopey off Elvis Presley since he died. Everybody has been
laking and nobody has been giving." He'll be giving - says his
proceeds will go for a Presley musewn.
... AND SO DOF.'l GABL,E : His name is James W. Frisbie.
but to thousands of startled strangers, he's Clark Gable, alive
and well and living in Petaluma, Calif. Frisbie says the
awesome resemblance stops crowds, brings requests for
autographs and even confuses people who knew the screen idol
who died in 1969. Frisbie doesn't object- says "It picks me up
and makes me feel good ... I£ I didn'llook like Gable, there are
a lot of people I wouldn't have met." Like the manager and
talent agency people he's hired to get him a few TV
commercials and interviews - anything, in short, that "would
not be demeaning to Gable or myself."
WUNDERBAR: Who's the most beautiful woman in the
world? Wonder Woman, that's who . At least that 's the opinion
of Britisll fashion designer Bill Glbb, president of London's

intirnidalt.&gt;fJ. 1uu
can then decide whether you
may really want to learn to
swim.
Are you hoping that some
day he will convin(.'e you to
lry? Otherwise, why haven't
you put a slop to his " en-

not be so

couragement?' '

It is possible that, even
though you have decided not
to learn .to swim, you enjoy
the attention you gel by refusing to try. If this is the case,
relax. You have things well in
hand.
,
J udglng from your letter,
however, it Is more likely that
you fear clearing up this
situation once and for all .
Are you afraid of the repercussions if he learned the
truth? Is he always right even abo ut deCisions directly
concerning your life? Can one

person know what is best for
anuther?
It may be too late for you to
learn to swim, but it is
definitely not too late to start
thinking for yourself.
Begin by outlining the differences between you and
your husband. If you find you
have everything in conunon,
beoin again, for you have pr~

IAI
CHECK
OUR

lh

OFF
ON All SINGER MACHINES

PRICE
TABLE

Now FE
thru!:I.Salurday
25th Terms
Easy Financing

~

THE FABRIC SHOP
Second St.

Pomeroy, 0.

AOVEATISEO ITEM POLI CY
illdl fA . _ ..........., ~- • feQU•iKI IO be rMIUV
........ for ... in -.::tl tl.ri&gt;Q"" Stall. ..CtOI ts
111C11fk.11w ~ irt itlil Jd, II ""'do run cut ol 1n 10v.,
-...; !Mm, -

... of'!•

"f(!V

ViJ\If ChO!CI Oil ~ompaor1bl"

'-", """'
*" M'lllllllle. rtftleiif'IO
tiM ..me .. ...,11• o• 1 ' ' '"
wtlocl\ will
111 ""rct..MtM
~

•

"'

~V'I"

~.,.,lied &gt;te&lt;n

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CO . ITIM$ AND 'litiS GOOD
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I tTl IN

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!OOIAUil

$ 49
Vac Pak
Kroger Coffee

•

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

Milk intolerance'1

SEWING MACHINE

YOU CAN DEPEND ON KROGER

ba bly bee n bra inwashed
I another not so subtle kind of
social co ntr ol whic h
sometimes has involved
water).
Your relationship with your
hushand should have room
enough for two.
Write to Dr. Blaker in care
of this newspaper, P.O. Box
489, Radio City Station, New
York, N.Y. 10019. Volwne of
mail .prohibits personal
replies, but queslions of
general interest will be
discussed in future colwnns.

HEALTH

SINGER

tumor at the Ve()' end Of my
. rectwn and they took it out
and now I feel just great.

DEAR DR. LAMB -I'm a They said the twnOr was
12-year-old woman and have malignant so cOuld yo u
hod chronic bowel disorder please help me?
DEAR READER - You
for years. I do not take laxatives either and have used a hove already been helped and
pss.of wann water before you should be very thankful
meals fur years wilh success that you had a regular
but lately nothing seems to checkup. It probably savc'&lt;i
your life.
help.
Cancer of the colon omd rec·
My diet is nicely balan&lt;M!d
with ruughage, since I like all 'twn together is the second
food . and can · lolerate most common cause of
aoythirig. In your column you ca ncer deatliS in both males
mentioned that as many as 50 and females. I£ they are
million Americans cannot detected early they can be
tolerate milk. I have usually completely cured.
The earlier the detection
used about a pint a day. I
the
less likely you are to have
especially like it but if this
any
symptoms at all. That is
(.'Ontributes to the condition I
will quit. Now I suppose that why the examination is so im·
older people especially need portant. A simple finger exmilk and am reluctant to drop aminatlon of the rectwn wiU
reach a large number of these
it (.'Om)iletely.
When my bowels have not cance.rs in the early stages . ...
I pres ume from your
moved for several clays, I
remarks
that your cancer
have severe backache and
was
found
early enough that
pain across the lower abdomen with considerable the removal was complete
and the chances of a complete
bloat. Any suggestions?
DEAR READER- You can cure are outstanding. You
test the effects of eliminating should follow exacUy what
all dairy products by stopping your doctors recommend_for
milk, cheese and stop eating your own particular case.
Cancers of the rectwn can
anything made with milk. If
be
associated with bleeding
this relieves your problem
you are on to something. so any rectal bleeding is an
Otherwise you might as well indication for an examinaforget lt and drink all the tion' Any Wlexplalned change
in bowel habit such as loose
milk you like.
•' Yes, older people need stools or conStipation when a
plenty of milk for calcium person hasprevious1y not had
and . I usually recommend these problems ca n also be a
the fortified skim rriilk or the symptom of a twnor of the
fortified low fat-milk to avoid colon.
an excessively high intake of
saturated fal. It helps you
maintain strong bones in
later life.
Portland, Ore., chartered
Milk Intolerance usually
In
18iil, was named after
causes painful spasms and il
Me., rather than
Porlland,
may rause diarrhea. Simple
Boston,
Mass.,
on a flip of
constipation is less likely to
be caused 'by milk in· coln between I wo of Its
tolerance. I am sending you original 821 citizens.
The Health Letter number
1-2, Milk Products: Good and
Bad to give you more complete lnfonnation. Others
who want this infonnatinn .
Refrigerators
can send 50 cents with a long,
lllmped, self-addre&amp;~ed .
IIIYe!IJI)e 1iir lno me In care
li this newspaper, P.O. Box
• Dishwashers
1161, Radio City Station, New
eWasheJS
Yarll, NY 10019.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am
• Dlyers
writing to find out more about
cancer of the reclwn. I went
to lhe doctor for a checkup
Sale
and when they got through
checking they said I .had
cancer of the rectwn. But I
wasn't sick or anything. I
would like to know what kind
of s)'IIIPioms to look for and
how lt works ahd '!hal, to do
.about it. They said I had a

88
09

PINT RETURNABlE BOrTLES

Coca Cola,
Tab or
Fresca ........ .

Boneless
Bottom
Round Steak ...... ..
Whole suc1o . : . 1a. , .
Smoked
Picnics
Frozen
Young
Turkeys ....... .. .
U.S.D.A . INSPECTED, ANY SIZE

Pak

PlUS Dlf'OIIT

AVAIL•

e

· •Ranges

Top Quality of
Prices

I

·I•
:

!$499

~
II

TMUI CGSJ
CUflUCOUP'OIIS I

I
I

·I

:i

LIM!f ONI: COUPON PU fAMilY

~I

----1Jt-.fKMJIIIIUMCI4 llrl

' ' ·•

Of

.

..crrtiii'NCIIU 11m a aKA~. lUll

.

•••• • •••••••••r•••,.-••-• • . -

I

•
I
I

.. . • .

:.-·;tfi-·5
:

3

fANCV WASHlNGT

Red
Delicious
Apples .....

JUMBO
88 SIZE
LB . 59 '

LOWFAT

MILK
gal. paper crtn.

Stokely
Fruit
17
Cocktail ..... c~~:·
SliCED OR 11Al VES

Yellow Cling2
Stokely 11 .•z.
Peaches cana

C

- ••. •

•:

..

·lb.

Bag

till! I Ill WI IN

~~DiU~ 131 SIZE

Stokely 17
Corn .......... .
Krog_er
Grade A
Large Eggs

Kroger
Cottage 24-az.
Cheese ... ctn.

I
mnus YDU 10 I
DIU 011 AU Of I

Can

I ·. C1J.aR..
I .. -

$139

I

I"

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPOII

88
WHOLE KERNEL OR
CREAM STYLE

OIU l l S4
,IIICUS£ "

li.IT 1 Cll WITH CIMIPOR liD $1 .50 ADD(TIONAt PURCHISI
IElttUIIRG THIS IIIMI

••

Clover Valley
Ice Cream

Country
Canned Ham

c~
-.

a

MARCH SALE
-;..FRIGIDAIRE

what you get in the lroge.; Meat Department . Want a
cut not found in our meat ca&amp;e•? Wont a que1tion about meat · a~ ­
IW·tred . Want to know the week~ I beat meat values? WOnt to know 'If
much mHt it tall11 to nnt how man1 ? Our meat people will .4
you -- or fin• the answers--if you want them to , because rou "\
on
For Tht lest Of lve~cvthina .

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHO(CE

P1llsbury
Flour

" I

'

I
I
0!! 1110

II

"'ICHASI

unnus YO~ ro 1
0111 OIIU

I

I
'---.-./ I
01 THill COli

CUTIU COIIPOIIS

I
I

--~J

�B-:j;;;nnffi~~d&amp;eport.P&lt;miti:iM&amp;y,MarchWant
DECEMBER J1,19U
Cuh Rtconcllilfion
Total Fund Balances.
Dec . 31 . 1977
S.529 .• J2 7•
Oepos•torv Balances :
Citizens Nat ton al Bank ,
Middle-port, Oh io 34,035 .02
F i rst Nat ional Ban~ ,
Ctncl nnat t, Oh io
2, 4.U .61
Prov tdent Bank,
Ctnci nf1at i. Ohio
11.280 30
Ci ttzens Nati onal Bank ,
M tddleport. Oh•o 4'2 , 238 J7
Total Ot"pO~IIOry
116 ,998 30
Bala nces
Invest ments ·
Treasury Bonds &amp;
No tes
20-4 . 185. 16
Cerf •fi cates ot
oep oslf
246,000.00
Total Inves tment s .r~50 , 18S 16
Total Trea su ry
Balance
537, 18046
Outstandmg Checks Dec
Jl. 1977 ( Dedu ct)
7,75012

Tol al

Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

1 ~ Wurdi ur Under
Cuh

...,..,
1.10

6day5

E,.\il wunl ov~ the mlnbnwn 1~
words ill t c.~nl.l per wunl pt"r Wiy
AWl rwuttqg littwr W.n t'OR!M!t'UlJVe

dly.!i Wlll bt! t.'hlrKed Ill the I d11y
"~
Jn nwmury , Cllrd uf Ttulrlka 11md
ot)ltlljlry . &amp; l~ nl.ll ~r ..oro. 13.00
1rununum Ci&amp;Slt ut adV1llli.'t'
Mol111l' Hom~ !Nik!s 11nd Y11rd Ak~
arr llll~lo'(l!d only With caih with
order 2:; l'i!nt t.'IWirKl' lvr 1:1WI cllrrying &amp;M Numllt'r In t.'llre of 'l'ht! ~It­
t mel

Bala nce, Ore

The Publbher re!M!rvu tht rlijhl
t.u a!Jl ur rt'jt'l1
•ds tll!t'rned otr
Jt'dHKiil, Tlw Pub I.Sher will nul ~
n.o:;poll.'iiblt· rur uWJrc Uum mtc mcur·

amr

31 , 1977
529 , 432 74
Fun ds (C ash &amp;
I n vestmen t s In Hands
of Trustee(sJ Mortgage
1 ect msertum.
Re11enue D ebt Service
Phorll&gt;!l'it~ 21&amp;6
&amp; Debt Serv ice
Reser\/ e)
2U,910 07
Summary ot
Fund Tranuction•
Balanc:e Jan . 1, 1917
General Fund
3~,&lt;139 5'2
Wale r works Fu nd 13, 651 48
Sewage D i sp Fd .
(Water Pol! c ont )
36,4&lt;13 v
St r ee t const M ~ R
2,576 64
Fund
1.007 '29
Cemetery Fu nd
Swimm 1ng Pool
Fund
3.71&lt;1 31
Deb t Serv Funds
221 ,53610
Feoeral Rev en ue
Tuesday
Sh ar ing
10 ,0 11~ 16
~h ru 1-' ridity
Anli Recess• on Fund
672 00
&lt;PM
F1re Equ•pm ent
110 1 60
the \iMy ~fur~ ptibllllltlun
P la nnmg CommiSSIOn
75 90
San •tary sewer
Swu.l!ly
133,7 65 09
E scrow
IPM
458,742 36
Tot al
f11do11 y af~rnuun
Trust and ,Agency
Fu nds
45,71 1 1!9
Grand To! a I
.50&lt;1,&lt;154 25
R ece•pts- Revenue
Gen eral Fund
109 ,798 01
Waler Works Fu nd 87,051_,_ 89
POMEROY Moores Store After
Sewage 01sp . Fd
30 years of successful bu smess
(Water Poll Cont 1
50, 231 4~
we are selling thrs general
She et Cons! M &amp; R
hardware
automotive sfO!Ii!
44, 1117 04
Fund
Pn ced at in11~ntory Contacl
7,244 46
Cemetery Fund
Sommerv •lle Reo l btofe, phone
Swimming Pool
1·304·b75·3030 , PI Pleosont
10.004.88
Fund
15, 616 96
D ebt Serv Funds
Fire EQuipment
3.425 00
Sa ni ta ry sewer
Escrow
8. 160 00
Toto~~ I
335, 714 62 1Ox SO 2 bedroo m mobile home for
sole $3000 742 2215 offer 5
Grant Total
335,719 62
Rece•pts- Non . Revenue
pm
General Fund
945 38
MOBilE
HOME w 1th expando on 3
Water Works Fund
462 00
acres Drrlt well Septi c tonk
Sewage Oisp . Fd
(Water Poll Cont.l 6.179 .00
l mmed1'ote
po ss e ssio n
Street Const M &amp; R
742·3074
9,771 IS
Fund
Cemetery Fund
3.250 00
Swimming Pool
10, 160 00
Fund
62,509 16
Debt Serv Fu nds
Federal Revenue
Shanng
15,988 00
Ant1 ReceSSIOn
Fund
1,391 oo
FIre Equ 1pmen t
2,558 70
Plann•ng comm•ss•on 300,00
Total
113,5 14 39
Trust and Agency
Funds
6,052 .58
Grand Tot al
119,566 97
Total Receipts
General Fund
110,743 39
Water Works Fund 87,5 13 89
Sewage D1sp Fd
( Water Po l l Coni I
56, 41044
Street Cons! M &amp; R
Fund
53, 958 19
Cemetery Fund
10,494 40 '--"'==:-;'-='-;'=-;;-::Swlmm 1ng Pool
"Did you buzz?"
Fund
20, 164 1111
Deb t Ser'o' Funds
78.126 12
Federal Re&gt;Jenue
Shar ing
15.988 00
Ani • Recess•on Fund 1,39 1 00
Fire Equ ipment
5.983 70
Plann1ng Comm •sslon 300 00
Grand Toto~~ I
529,432 74
San1 tary sewer
Sc:h~&amp;dule of Tot• I
8,
160
00
Escrow
lndebtednen449,234 01
Total
Oebf R ttl rem ent
Trust and Agency
Funds
Funds
6,052 ,58
Oyhtand1ng Jan. 1.
Grand Tota l
455 ,286 59
1977 Pr.n . Only
Total Disbursements
Sewer Sys t. MR
General Fu.nd
1011,837 48
300,775 00
Bonds
Wate r Work..s Fund 90,270 .72
Waterwor~s MR
Sew&amp;ge D•SP Fd
390,000 00
Bonds
(Wa ter Pol l Conf.)
Recrution GO
63,635 CO
3,000 00
Bonds
Stree t Canst M &amp; R
Other General Bonds
Fund
48,182.89
40,000 00
Ceme tery Fund
10, 6811 45
Total "
733,715 oo
Swimm •ng Pool Fund
Redeemed During Yr
21.34 1 19
Prln . Only
Debt Serv Funds
61 .390 93 Sewer Snt. MR
Fede ral R e\len ue
5,000 00
80fldS
Sh armg
16,&lt;1&lt;17 69
Waterworks MR
Ant• ReceSSIOn Fund 1, 044 42
10,000 00
Bonds
Fire Equ 1pment
5,854 12
Recreation GO
Plann1ng Comm•sslon 276 41
Bonds
31000 00
Total
4').7 ,969 30
Olher General Bonds 5,000.00
Tr ust and Agency
Total
23 ,000 00
Funds
2,3311110
Outstanding Dec . 31 ,
Grand Total
430,308 . 10
1977 Prln. Onlv
Personal Servic:e
Sewer Sysf MR
General Fund
46,050.41
Bonds
295.775.00
water Works Fund 24 ,1 69 95
Waterworks MR
Sewa ge 0 1SP Fd
Bonds
380,000 00
(Wa ter Po l l Cont 11.95109
Other Gener&amp;l Bol"!dS
Street Const ' M &amp; R
35,000 00
F und
9,381 53
Total
710.775 oo
Cemetery Fund
7,658 63
Debt Retirement Funds
Sw•mm 1ng Pool Fund 4,159 41
12·31-77
Fire Equ1pment
750 00
Cash- ln&gt;Jestmts.
Total
110.121 .02
Sewer Syst MR
Grand Total
110,111.02
Bonds
43 .278 10
Operation &amp; M•int.
Waterworks MR
General Fund
39,702.84
171 ,631 91
Bonds
Water works Fund
28,136 77
Recreation GO
Sewage Oisp Fd
Bonds
20,062 33
(Water Poll Cont ) 8, 157 06
Other Generel Bonds 3,298 89
Street Cons! M &amp; R
Total
r
238 ,271 29
29,597 112
'Fund
Memor•nda D•t•
Ceme.tery Fund
3,029 .82
Assessed Valuet•on
Sw 1mming Pool Fund 4,281 ,43
1977
8,980,697 00
Debt Serv Funds
109 45
Tax Levy
Federal Revenue
Inside 10 Mill
Shar ing
5,544 69
Limitation
1 and 7 Tenths
Anti Recession Fund 1,044 42
Outside 10 M i ll
Fire EQuipment
5,104 .12
Lim itatlon
3 and 5 tenths
P'lanning Commission
276 ~ 1
Mrddleport , Ohio February
Total
124,98.4 Ill
8,
1 978
Grand Tota l
124,984 .83
I
hereby ce rtify
the
Capital Improvements
torego•no to be correct
Waler Wor ks Fund
1,394.00
Gene Grate
Sewage D1sp Fd
VIllage Clerk ·
I Water Poll Cont. )
Treasurer
13,166 85
St reet Const M &amp; R:
Date - February 18 , 1978
Fund
9,20354
Swlmm• ng Pool Fund
(3) l , ltc
12,900.35
Federa l Revenue
Sha r mg
10,903.00
Total
47,56774
47.567 .7.4
Grcand Total
NOTICE OF
Nan-Gove-rnmental
PUBLIC SALE
General Fund
23,084 .23
TO WHOM I T MAY CON
Wat er Works Fund 36,570 00 CERN ·
Sewage D 1sp, Fd
Not i ce I$ hereby given that
!Water P'ol l Cont)
on March 16, 1978, &amp;t 10 .00
24,360.00
A .M a public sa le witt be held
Debt Serv Funds
at P 0 . Bu 59l Pomeroy,
61 ,281
Total
145,295.71
Ohio 45169 ro sell for cash the
Trust and Agency
follow ing co l latera l, to w 1t
1973 GMC Gremlin S No .
Funds
2,338 .80
Grand Total
147,634 .51
A3Ao465E257627,
said
B•tance Dec . 31, l977
collatera I being held to
General Fund
36,345 43
secure an obligation arising
water works Fund
10,804 6.5
under a ret81l tnsto~~lment
Sewage Olsp . Fd
(u le contract) 1925 85784
(Water Poll Cont. )
held by General Motors
29,218.71 Acceptance Corporation as
Street Const M &amp; R:
secured po~~rty , Said public
Fund
8,351 .9.4
sa le is to be conducted o~~c
Cemetery Fund
813 24
cording to the laws of the
Swimming Pool Fund 2,598. 00
State of Ohio . Generel Motors
Debt Serv Funds ' 238,271.29
Acceptance
Corporation
Feder&amp;! Revenue
reserves the right to bid at
Sharing
9,629 .47
this sale
Ant 1 Recession Fund 1,018.58 · The coll.,teral 1s presently
Fire EQuipment
931.18
stored and mey be seen at P
Plann.ng commission
99 49
0 Bo)( 591, Pomerov, Ohio
Sen ftarv Sewer
45769
Escrow
1Al,925 09
GENERAL MOTORS
Tot" I
480.007 .07
ACCEP'TANCE
Trust and Agenn
CORPORATION
Funds
49.&lt;25 67 (31 1. ltc

NOTICE

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADIJNES

LAFF. f .. DAY

Aa ·

IN LOVING memory of our deqr
mo ther , Amanda Kaspo1 , who
possed owov four ~eo rs ogo lo·
day .
If dovsn 1 molter where we go or
whot we do
There 1s a!wOyli some l•llle th1ng
to th 1n" ol -,. ou ..
Your lo(e and vo•ce ore fresh 111
~ ind

We never shall forge t no molter
wha t the II mil!
Sadly lfHUed by yovr dovgh1ers
M•ldred Arnold and Lu( re!lo
Sm •th
IN LOV ING memory of our dear
Dodi jomes S ~ood who
paned away 28 yeors ago
January 18 , 1950 on·d (Iorence
Clork 10 years ago February 28

19b8
OUI 1houghts w11h you wluu ever
we go
We m1ss you so much on ly the
Good Lord knows
Sadly m1ned by Ch1ldren and
Grnadchildr v n.

THE RACINE Volun teer Flr e
Deportmen t wdl sponsor o gun
shoo I e11e ry Sa turday at b pm ol
the•r burld mg 1n Bo shon Foe
lory cho lo.e gun!!. only
1HE RACINE Gun Club Gun Shoo t
evfH'/ Sunday ol ler noon Foe
tory choke guns only As sorted
meat s
CLEARAN CE SAlE begm s Mon
Feb 13 at Sew N Sew Outhtt
Main Streer , Roc•ne
All
polyesJer double kn•ts reduced
40". end 50° • Threod b19 ,;pool
5 for S1

If you want the
lowest prices on
Baler Twine now's ·
the time to buy.
Call us today.
"'"'-Jock W. C.nay,Mgr.

llil

Phone 992· 2181

IN COME TA X Serv~ees Federal
Wallace
and slate Tax es
Russe ll Bradbury 992 7228
--------~

POMEROY TWIN C•ty Cob Opens
8 om , clo ses b pm 992 3290

--- -- - - ,.....
SHOOTING MATCH Forked
-

Run
Sporlsmon Club every Su nday
afternoon Factory choke guns
only ____ ~~-_

COON HUNTERS mee lmg at club
house on Snowball H1ll Fn
Mar~ ,.:t~ ~Re~!_shme~~
COMBINED BAitl. Sole ot Rocme
Bonk and Syracuse f1re St ot1an
So t Morch 4 9 om Sponsored
Rocme
t&lt;.mdergorde n
by
mothers to r(llse money for orr
__ 5_?~d~~i~~ :c ~ool _
THE MARCH AAA Ori\ler s Edu co
t1o n Clo ss will begm Tuesday
March 7 th For mlormot•on coli
Ben Slawter at 742·2170 from

- ~~ toBOOp~---

Check nur low. low
prices on

FERTILIZER, NITROGEN, .
POTASH, FERY.O·PELS
&amp; BLEND
Pomeroy Landmark

9a

_Jock W. c.r.. y, Mgr.
...
Phone m -2111

fOUND WHITE and bla ck do w1th
brown spots S~togl e hound
Recine area . 949 2678
LOST I mole blo ck and whde
hound Syracuse · Mlnersv1lle
\11ci n1ty 992 535~ ----.-'- _..,. __

NEED BABV'SITTER for 7 year old •n
M1ddleport oreo 992 ·b011 alter

3 _m
________ - - -

TbeAimanac
United Press international
Today is Wednesday March
I, the 60th day of 1978 with 305
to follow .
The moon Is is approaching
Its last quarter.
There is no morning star.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter
and Saturn.
Those born oo this day are
under the sign of Pisces.
American singer..,ctress
Dinah Shore was born on
March I, 1920.
On this day m history :
In 1781, the American colo·
nies adopted the Articles of
Confederation, paving the
way for a federal union.
In 1803, Ohio became the
17th state of the Union .
In 1932, famed flyer
Charles Lindbergh's 20month-old son was kidnaped.
The boy's body was found
May
12, and
Bruno
Hauptm81Ul wos electrocuted
for the kldnap.miU'der m
1936.
In 1954, five coogressnen
were wounded whtn Puerto
Rican nationalists began
firing from the gallery of the
U. S. House of Representatives.
A thought for the day:
American writer Henry Tho'reau
said.
"It
is
characteristic of wisdom not
to do desperate things."

RUMMAGE SALE Clo lhmg ond
IT11S Fr1 &amp; Sot , Ma rc h 3rd and
Bo s~me nt
M1ddlepor t
4th
MasoniC Templ e by Evangli!lme
Chapter

soften &amp; cond1t1on your
water wtth Co-op water

S&lt;&gt;flener. Model UC·SIII,
Now Onl1 .2 79,95
Let us test 'f. OUr water FrP'J

Landmark

HOOF HOllOW Horses , Buy se ll
lrode or 1r01n New and used
saddles Rllth R ee\1~ Alban y
(614 ) b98 3290

Business Services
THE PHOTO PLACE

Young's

Anniverurits
Speci.ll Occasions

11 6 t

General Contracting
Route 2
Pomer,oy, Ohio 45769
Estimates by Appointment
Phone 992·7119

~

MOBILE HOME with expondo on 3
acres
Dn lled well
Scpt1c
tonks lmmed1ote possess10n
742 3074

Tv~!~~~~D I]
992-3325 - - REAL TO
216 E. Second Street
GOOD GARDEN
4

bedrooms, 1•12 stor ies, with
all city utll tties Nat gas,
F A furnace . 3 lots.
RT. 124 - 3 bedr oom frame
home w1th bath, nat gas
heat , city water and

garage
NEW USTING -

1968 VW OlJIOmOt &lt;C Sl!clo. sh1ft
Fo~r
cond•llon engme rvns
good $425 247 ·3791

103

1974 APOLlO 2 dr Low m1leoge
A C P S P 8 8 track tope
Ve ry good cond1t10n Contoct
Peggy G •ro lami 132 Butternut ,
Pomeroy Oh10 (Me1gs H1gh
WILL CARE for the elderly m our
Sen•or)
home Phone 992 7314
1969 Dart GTS 340, oulomo tiC
ENTION MARE
Ow n ers
S700 Phone 9tn·7196 ai le• A TT
AQHA stud serv 1ce, lntroducmg

1972 PINTO STA110N Wagon
Aulomolu:: 28 000 mdes Rodtal
11res
EHe ll ent con d•t•on
949 2880
1975 GRANADA V 8 outomotr c
power steenng
AM rod10
power brakes orr cond1t1ong
Exc ellent condillon
$2 900
Phone 992 3886

WILL DO rug weov•ng $2 per
~o r d Mrs Junm•e (Mary) l&lt;.1ng
CR 32 opprmc I ', miles from
Me1gs M emor.al Gardens No
phon..':_
WILL DO
985 3981

odd

jobs

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Po'"
Rou te 33 north of Porneroy
Lor~!'? '~ Call 992 ·7479

COLOR TV Various household
Rellsonable
Call
1tem s

.~2. 6362
-- -··--

--·----

Fancy

master bedroom, 3 others,
plenty of closets, nat gas
F.A . furn a ce and city
water on 3 lots .

NICE OLDER HOME

Has J bedrooms, large
storages and closets Full
basement, 2 porches, and
garage
•
40 ACRES Excellent
hunting land Good site for
country tlome wl th 8 acres
nearly level
COUNTRY - 3 bedroom
modern home w1th family
room , wood burner, car
port and 2 lots

HEL -EN L TEAFORD
GORDON B. TEAFORD
SUE P. MURPHY

Phone

THREE MOBilE homes on 5 acres
All cleared fe('1ced &amp; m gross 4
m1les from Arcad1o and 55
m1fes from Fori Myers Flor~da
742 3156
-~--

TWO STORY !rome house b
roams and both , cellar out·
bu1ldmg s 4 ocres la nd ot edge
of Rutland Com ple te trorler
hook up olso 2 bonks oppro1s·
ed proper ty ot $15 ,500 Phone
992 7094
I

Box3

985

----

-~---

14 BUILDING lOTS a ll surveyed
w 11h acc:es$ to water ond
sew oge Lots ,w1ll range from
50 x 154 to 56 x 221 Out of
h1gh woter ond w1thm wolk1ng
d1sfonce ol lown . Pnced at only
$4500 fo r oil 14 lots Plenty of
room lor 2, 3 or 4 lomd1es. fo
budd Buy together and sove
qq2.2529
BUSINESS 0
s"u"IL::
O-:IN
-:G
; -c
lo-,-a-te-d; -o-n
lots 102 103 and 104 w1fh 114'
frontage on Mo•n St
rn
Pomeroy Bu•ld1ng 1s cement
block w1th wood !rome 2nd
story Has beauf1ful oil furnish·
ed opportment overhead. Free
porkrng Close to shoppmg
plato Busmes s downstairs for
sole separately lnqu1re at 605
W Mo•n St Pomeroy. Ohio
from noon Ia 6 pm only or coil
YV2·578b or 992 ·2529

4335

Serv1ce
TURLEY 'S WRECKER
Rocme, Oh1o. Day or n1ght
949 2657
INTERIOR PAINTING and drywall
fm• shmg Call Doyle Knopp ,
992 7789
TEAFORD GOLF Clubs buffed for
$prmg

HOME SITES for sole I acre and
up M•ddleport , near Rutland
,Co ll 992 7481.
NEW 3 bedroom house , 2 baths,
all elec , 1 ocre , M•ddleport
dose to Rutland . Phone 992·
7481 .

COuNTRY lar~a~d

~-;-;h ;;~
ond good ol:

ed woods , water
cess m Monroe County W Vo
Sl.CIC() down, c:o U (304 ) 772
3102 or (304) 772·3227

Commerc•ol property opprox 17
acres level land located at
Tuppers Plo1ns on Oh1 o Route
7 Phone (614 ) 667 6304
VA FHA 30 yr hnoncmg IJiso
relinoncmg Ireland Mortgage ,
77 E State Athens phone (614}
592-3051 .
JUST COMPlETED new house '"
Middleport For more mtorma·
11on ca11992 2238 or 992·5304 .
TWO ACRES · All bm"
3
bedrooms 2 ba ths Iorge k1l·
ch en , d1nmg and lom•ly room , 2
firepla ces 2 cor garage ut d1ty
room All fenc:ed W1ll cons1der
!rode . Locoted tn Moson WV
Call Somerv•lle Real Es tate
(304
flj).;UI:ln ~cia~ ,; I ur

671-:H:H II

storage bldg. Level lot .
$8,000.00.
r!EW LISTING
1974

,,·nm,e~o~l

George S. Hobstatter Jr.,
Broker
10H'&gt; Sycomore St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

PHONE 992-6333
OHice Hours : 9a.m. tos
Close
Thursdays
Saturdays at noon.

and

THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL
-

197_. Spring manor, 12' x

60' , located on level lot,
mobile home 150 x 165', all

k ttchen, all furniture,
ao:;:re . Ask for details.

electric, with new woodburning stave. All furniture

1

JUST LOOK - 3'1' acres,
barn, business room , 2
bedroom home, recently
renovated, ba.th, basement,
forced a ir heat. 511,500.00.

OLD -1/ery nice

type, 3·4 bedrooms,

balh, utility, FREE GAS
HEAT, carport , storage,
small barn, about 2 acres.

$32,000.00.

.

r!EW LISTING- Close In,
lots of remodeling, new
siding, carpetin g , some

paneling, 3 bedrooms.
bath, forced air furnace .
N1ce
for
the
money

$15,000.00.

3 YEARS OLD- Beautiful
ranch
type ,
moder(l
equipped
k!tchEm,
3
bedrooms, 2 baths, electric

B.B. heat, formal dining
R.,

1

acre

ground.

$37,300.00.

LET US SELL YOUR
PROPERTY.
HEr!RY E. CLELAND
REALTOR

:.;_i;,~;~~~i~
H2·6191

m
a Elt.LTOR

I ~I:KOH ·+·~~
-

Included . Going lost at
$11,000. Know" ullle Keith
Miller properly, Arbaugh
addition (Tuppers Plains,
Ohio) .
A 1976 FUQUA, 24' X 56'
double wide, mobile home,
located on 100' x 200' corner

lot, all electric, 2 baths, 3
bedrooms, Including all
furniture, known as the

Rolph Brooks property ,
Arbaugh oddlllon, Tuppers
Plains. Oh lo. A good buy
for $21,000.
We have 3 bedroom home,

nice, with 2 aerH ground
near Tuppers Plains, Ohla

p~

~J

992·2174

BRAOFORO Auc.t•oneer . Com·
plete Serv•ce. P_Q,one q49·2487
or 949.2000 RoCtf'le, Oh10, Cntt
Brodlord

RlGHT··· NO
' DUES -. lOU
JUST GET Tl-115
SPECIAL
WHIST LE ··

..

..

SURE IHEM,WHEN

THOSE. ~CLI PP f R'
HOODLUMS SHOW
UP..

I "lOOT ll ·

Also new 3 bedroom home,
Subdivision,

Five

Pol"''· selling for $39,500,
Choryt Lemler
Asooclale
Home Phone 742·200l
Hlltan WO"-• Sr.
Auoclato
Home Pl\OIIL94'·2519
)

Lilias, Yogo a. You 20.
3· 3()-AII In The F amlly 8.10; You Bel Your Lite ~0
'oo-Mister Cartoon 3. Edge of Nlghl 13, My Three

HOWERY AND MARTIN
h ·
cavohng , . sephc J.ystems,
dozer boc kho~ . dump truck.
limestone
gravel. blac"tap
povmg Rf. 143 Phone I (61-4)
b9B·7331.
BATHROOMS AND K•tch&amp;ns
remodeled , ceram •c tile , plum·
b1ng ca r pent ry, and general
13 yeors ex·
momtenance
penence 992·3685

"

.,.'"

'
'

...''

••

'
•
•

WINTER GET to your house? Let us
ma"e necessary reporr5 AI
Tromm Cons tr uction 7•2·2328
MAGGIES
UN~OLSTER'(
Rehn•sh•hg ,
reupholstery,
rebu1ldlng Beautiful selection
of molenols and vrnyls Free
estimate Tel 742·2852 Loco·
t10n Solem Center

SAVE ALOT
All carpet lnstalltd wtth
padding

It

no charge.

Expert lnstollotlon.

Rubber Back Carpet

~
~

HAVI! "'"oLP ~ ,
NO'!" '!1"0 DO
"

lli'HRT.

l

•
~

,J

•

33
11 JQ--Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Women 's Sport s Specia l
6, 13; ; Movie "The Terminal M an" u, A:BC News
JJ. M ovie " Trapeze" 10
Yesterday's Answer

19 Arab land
22 Operatic
delight
23 Esprit de
corps
24 Having no
set lunit
25 Solicitude
27 Tree
29 Watered
fabri c

BRIDGE

l · l· A

f

K 82

+A 10 7
WEST
EAST
+J, I0983
+A4
¥ 6

wK J

fi0 54J

t

+54 3

+Q862

AQJ97

SOUTH

+Q62

W AQ987 2
• 6

+ KJ9

Vulnerable:
South. Dealer : South.
Weal

North East

Pass

3•
Pass

Pass

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It:
A X V D I. B A A X R

I, 0 N G F E I. J, 0 W

One letter simply ~tan.ds for nnother

In th1s samp le A t1

~.

WINNIE , WHY 170
MEN LIKE. RON
ALWAYIJ HAVE
TO GET HURT?

CONTACTEO

.

YET?

RB

IBZVP

KV

CIP

IYO.~

AKR

OBRPN

RKCP

SB

KV

NBQ

DKVC

XPC

ABUUYPZ

Veslerday's Cryploquole: THERE IS NO FUTURE IN ANY
JOB, THE FUTURE LIES IN TilE MAN WHO HOLDS THE
JOB - DR. CHARLES CRANE
.
(t )

1!17H K1nR' t'"1lure~ !oiynd1t~~t•• In(

BARNEY

AU CONTRA1RE!

JUST A LITTLE FRENCI-1
TKER~SIR, TO

KEEP

I{OU uN 'lOUR TOE5...

BR

(SNIF-SNIF) MAW FELL
OUT OFTH' HAYLOFT
AN' LANDED ON OUR
PORE OL' MULE

If

Pass
Pass

Opening lead : • 3.

just three t ric k s
Now South was ready to
attack clubs He led to
two 1n

dummy and finesse d the 10.

Not as bad a play as the
but just as much a

others,
loser

East took his queen of
clubs, cashed the kmg of
hearts and got out with a
third diamond
South was ready to go
· after the fourth suit a nd
committed the final and
worst misplay of the hand.
H1.s only chance to avotd the
loss of two spade tricks
would be to fmd East with
ace and one .spade. In that
case he could enter dummy,
lead a spade toward his
queen, l ead back a second

!!pade from his own hand
duck in dummy and watch

East play his ace.
By Oswald Jacoby
This is a normal last reand Alan Santag
Bidding Is 80 percent of sort play that works fairly
bridge - card play the other often and would have
worked this time. But It was
20.
South bid properly to the not South's. He led the first
correct contract of four spade toward dummy's k1ng
hearts, but his play of the and lost I wo spade tricks In
dummy might well qualify addition to the three tricks
for Inclusion In the Gulnness already gone, to wind up
Book of Records. He man- down two at a hand where he
aged to misplay each one of might easily have scored an
overtrick
the four s uits.
At trick one he played lNEWSJ&gt;Ar•f; H ENT E UPIUSE ASSN )
dummy's king of diamonds
after East opened the bid!For a copy of JACOBY MOOding m that suit. This al· ERN, send S' to. " Win at
lowed East to make a ·safe Bridge, " care of this newspa·
diamond return at trick two. per, P 0 Box 489, Radio Clry
South ruffed and planked Station, New York , N Y 10019.)

LAWSV !! NOPE-- SHE'S
WUZ SHE

down Iu s nee of hearts. He
should have cntcret.l dummy
In order to finesse against'
the kin g. Mtsplay number

¥10543

is

Sontag

Four wrongs set new record

('RVPTOQUOTES

BIJT WIIATABOI/T
MY WIFE? HAS,
SII.EBEEN

SENBITIVE, DECENT

I{ES, SIR, MR.PRINCIPAL ...
MI.( TEACHER SENT ME
TO SEE l(OU BECAUSE
I'VE 6EEN FALLING ASLEEP
IN CLASS AGAIN

12·0o-Jana kl 33
1.oo--Tomorrow 3,4 , News 13
Movie Channel 4 S &amp; 7 PM - Gumboil Ra lly
9&amp; 11 PM - Carrie (R~

30 Sixth
lPG)
or
common
31 Glance Release Wednesday , March 1
shyly
36 Morse
Code
signal
Oswald Jacoby and Alan
37 Asa Gray
was one ·
abbr.

lhrec L
X f or I he two O's, C'tt· Single t ellers
the length and fonnntton of the words are ali
htnts Ea ch day the rode lcllcrs arc d1fferent

Buy whtrt you can come In
and Ht what you're 11Hing
- Good ••lectlons - Fully
stocktel.

Rut lind

World 10.33

+K 75

L--------------------------.L.--------------------~-·-1_;.;, apostrophes,
u~eil f or the

Fblring In Stock

742·2211

8, Mister Ragers' N e ighborhood 20,33, Hogtm' s
Heroes 10. Emergency One 13. Pe tticoat 15.
5 30-News 6 ; E lelec. Co. 20,33, Mary Tyler Moor\ 10,
Hogan' s Heroes 15
6 oo-News 3,4,8, 10, 13,15; ABC News 6, Zoom 20
6 JG-N BC News 3.4,15 , ABC News IJ , Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6; CBS New s 8, 10 ; Over Easy 20
7 oo-C,-oss·Wits 3,4, l iars Club 6, Gong Show 8.
Capitol Beat 33 ; News 10, To Tell The Trulh 13 .
Gilligan ' s Is 15 , Hoc king Valley bluegra ss 70
7· IS-Marshall U Report 33; 1 JO- Holly'Wood Squ11res
3,4; $100,000 Name Thai Tune 6; Tattletales 8,
Mac Neil Lehrer Report 20,33 . Tha l ' s Hollywood 10,
Nashville On The Road 13, T e le\llslon Honor

&lt;

V"IR~

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

8, .10. Mary Ty ler Moore 13.
5 00--Here Come The Bride s 3, Sta r Trek 4, G un smoke

9 3D-Carter Country 6, 13
10 OQ-Ciass of '65 3.4, \S; Ben Vereen 6.13 . Barnaby
Jones 8,1 0, Anna Karenlna 33 , News 20
10.3Q-Lock . S1ock &amp; Barrel 20.
11 00--News 34,8, 10113, 15 ; D ic k Cavett 10: Over Easy

r1ver

~

....

DOWN
I Soviet lake
2 Of sound
3 Florida's
nickname
1 Summer .
Fr
5 Cellblock
subject
6 Foe
7 A B. A
member ·
a bbr
8 Hellman
play,
w1th "The"
9 Leadmg
lady
12 Repaired
16 Three, to
card
players

•

•4.ai :'~:d.

Call 742-2211
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

USMC 10
.4 30--LittleRascalsJ, IS; G i lligan's I s 4 , Brady Bun ch

8 DO--Chips 3, 4,15, Welcom e Back, Kotter 6, 13 ,
Waltons 8,10, Once Upon A Class ic 10.33
8 30-Flsh 6, 13; Original s 70, Ala ska 011 Ameri ca's
Pipe Dream ? 33
9 OQ-James at
16, 3, 4; Barney Miller 6, 13: Ne w
Zealand for the Fun Of It 15 , HZ~wall Flve.O 8,10 .

40 Advise
k
aga1nst
I II Migration

As Low As

9'x12'

I I I I I I Jt I 1 XJ"

Jumble s TRAIT QUAKE DEADLY FILLET
Answet Th1s mdeed sounds hke a welfd lake · " EERIE''

ACROSS
I African fox
HE'D STICK OUR HEADS
5 Turn
NTO A NOOSE? WH.IIiT'S
Informer sl.
WRONG WITH HIM? HAS
HIS BRAIN COME
10 Debacle
LOOSE?
11 Patnot1c
song
13 British
princess
14 Go on
pensiOn
15 Fieur-de16 Author
Tryon
17 Cambodia's
- Nol
18 Cliff
Robertson
film
20 Performed
21 - fixe
22 British
composer
23 Kind of he It
25 Confession
of faith
26 Candid
27 Biblical
brother
28 Matter : law
29 Swamp
31 Emmet
•..
P.-.
32 Mining
l~~~V~~~~::;!:;:illo~~
"
tlt71.;,CI'l~-:'.!
bonanza
'
.,._.
33 In the
know
FRANK &amp; ERNIE
35 Antenna
----------------~---~~~-:;~;;;:;;;fF;;;:;1-:~------ part
37 Carpus or
talus
0
~ 38 Whole
• 39 English
SIIOULt&gt;

vo-.,

NEIGlER S FOR bu1lding Mouses.
Call 949 2508 lor house designs
and est1motes Guy H Neigler,
Rocme

SAVE ON
CARPETING
DRIVE AlimE
&amp;

Now arrange t he circled letters to
form I he surprtse answer , as sug·
gesled by the above cartoon

~'Dby THOMAS JOSEPH

PU LLI NS EXCAVATING Complete
Service Phone 992·2478.
ANY SEWING machme- d;--ea
- ne- d-;od ed &amp; adjusted $5 98 FREE
p1ckup oni:t deltvery Belpre,
Oh1o 1·423-5497

WE:RE !IRED OF
WOI&lt;:K INC:. FOPI:
I .

Soclely IS

EXCAVATING, doier, loader and
backhoe work dump 1rock1
and lo·boys for hlfe wdl tloul
f dl d.rt , to sod , limestone and
gravel Call Bob or Roger Jet.
fe r s, doy phone 992·7089 n1ght
phone 992 3525 or 992· 5232,

WILL do roof1ng co nstruction,
plumbing ond heo1.ng No lob
too large or too smal l Phone
742· 2348

Sons 4. For Rlctler. For Poorer 15. M erv Griffin 6.
Gilligan ' s Is 8, Ses&amp;me St ~0,33 , Gomer Pyle,

IHE HENS WENT ON
THEY

5T~IKE f!JECAU~E

NP~S p aperbooks

SEWING MACHINE Repotrs ser.,..,ce all mokes , 992 2284 The
FabriC
Shop , Pomeroy .
Authomed Stnger Sole!i ond
Scrv1ce 1(&lt;/e sharpen Sc•ssors.

EXCAVATING , dozer backhoe
ond dllcher Charles R Hat·
l•eld , Sock Hoe Serv1ce.
Rutland, Oh10 Phone 742·2008.

Fami ly 4; Sesame St. 70. Nova 33.
11 · 5.5-CBS News 8; Lovi ng Free 10.
1'2 OG-Newscenter J , $20,000 Pyramid IJ ; News 4,6, 10.
To Sav The least 15 ; Gambit 6
12 30-Ryan ' s Hope 6, 13 ; Bob Braun 4 . Gong Show IS,
Search tor Tomorrow 8, 10 ; E lee Co 33

3,4,15 : Guiding Light 8, 10

The latest JUMBLES ere here In JUMBLE BOOK 110 and JUMBLE
BOOK lt11 A~allable ror $1 ,35 EACH postpaid hom Jumble, clo this
newspaper, fJ 0 Bo)( 34. Norw ood, N J 076A8 M1ke checks payable to

ELWOOD SOWERS REPAIR
Sweepers , toasters , 1rons. all
small opp l1onces lawn mowat,
ne~CI to State H•ghwoy Gorog.
on Route 7 Phone (614) 985·
3825
REMODEliNG Plumbrng heoting
ond oil types of general repatr.
W8rlo. guaranteed 20 years ex·
per!ence Phone 992·2409.

I

11 ·3()-Knoc kout 3, 15; F am lly Feud 6,13; Partri dge

J ·oo-Another World 3,4, IS ; General Hospital 6, 13 ;

(Answers tomorrow)

Yeste rd ay s

11 ·0Q-Wheel ol Fortune 3,4.15. Pri ce Is Right 8.10o
Happy Days 6.13

Only 1S

[X)

rr o

1

10,

Jo-Days of Our L i ves 3,4, 15. As The W orld Turns
8,10; 2 :oo-One Life to Live 6,13; 2 · 30- 0Qctor s

I'M FOR

THAl WE
AlL ARE ..

St 33
9 DO-Merv Griffin 3. Phil Donahue 34 , 13. 15. Edge of

~~o

ORPHAN ANNIE-UNITED TH.~E~Y~'L::.L~S:;T:;AN=D=::;;;:---;:::==~ Answer/Jere. "[
1HA1 '5 ti · .. MMD EVER.'(
cnHER MEMBER OO~ES
O N TH ' DOUBLE TO
VROTECl YOLI ·•

Bullw lnkle 10
1 3()-Schoolles 10, 8 DO-Capt Kangaroo 8. 10; Sesame

.. ........ ......

-rTI

on Rt. 7, prlclcl at $32,000.
Craw's

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

~ENFA_~_._~

P.M.

b~~j~~~·~·IS. bath,
14)(65 .equipped
Two

ranch

I'M 1/.{).)IJ/I. KOOU&lt; '{OJR
1!UXK aT! I'M 1/.{).lllf&gt;.

•.

[] I I []

Chester, Ohio
10-30-c 1

3,o4 , 15 : Good Morning Ameri ca 6.13. CBS News 8r

1 00-For Richer , For Poorer 3,- All My Children 6, IJ;
News 8. Young &amp; !he Restles s 10; Not For Women

~LOA CCI -+:&gt;l...,.,._

WATER WELL Onllmg Also o1l and
gas we ll work Heoton Drillmg
Co. Oo vtd S. Heoton , Rf 3,
Pomeroy
O h 1o.
Phone

story home. Features 4
bedrooms, bath, formal
dintng, ut1ltty R. Gara9e &amp;

6 YEARS

,\'6,I.H ~ J\.IST 1'01&lt; Ti1/&gt;.T

coo..

5!&gt;-Chuck White Report• tO, News 13, 7 OQ-Todaay

6

10 oo-sanrord &amp; Son J,4, 1S , MagM .Ine 8. 10. Not For
Women Only 13
10 30-Hollywood Squares 3, 4, IS; Andy Griff i th 6, Ri ck
Foucheuk 13

-.-c=rxJ o

Service
,,.....,
...........
.._,._..,. to the

SI)nrlse Semester 10
. • Black Woman 10, 6 ·30-0 octors pn
Call A; New s 6; Sunrise Semester 8 : 6 4
Morning Report J ; 6 :5()--Good M orning, West
Vlrgln ll'l 13

6 2.5-For You

Goldie Hawn 8, 10; Nova 20.33 .
9·oo-Biack Sheep Squadron 3, 4,1 S; Charlie ' s Angels
6, 13 , Movie " A Death In Canaan " 8, 10; Great
Performances 20.33
lO .oo-Pollce Woman 3,4,15: Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13,

"'"'r."":'1

.

THURSDAY . MARCH2. 1f71
S·4s-Farm Report 1); s· so-PTL Club 13; S·Ss-

Nlght6; Family Affair 8, Match Game tO

I Gl B E:.;;E~l

SALES AND SERVICE
11 -9-tfc

5 a, 9 P.M. - AlrPQrt '77 lPG I
7 &amp; 11 P.M.-Od&lt;! to Billy Joe lPG I

9 .Jo-Emergency One 6. Andy Grllt!th 8. Joker ' s Wi ld

Unscramble these tour Jumbles,
one Iefler to each square 10 form
lou r ordinary words

~ ·

3,o4 ; 1' 1()- Ko l ak 8, 2: IG-News 13.

Wild Kingdom IS .
8•0Q-Grlzzly Adams 3,4.1&lt;: Eight Is Enough 6.13,

1}j1'1}rul JN1} ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
r:!:!) \!:/ ~~ w
by Henn Arnold and Bob Lee.

Tank Selvice

MAIN
POMEROY, 0.
NEW LISTING· - Older 2

l

I\JOW1

Jack's Septir.

REALTY

9.., .Jack W, Carsey, Mgr.
M.. Phone 992·2181

PR08AI!ILY ANOTHER
BIDDER CAl.LINe

Phone 985-3806

HOBSTETTER

Pomeror Landmark

SOl.AR SIJ6R5)1

PROCESS~

~ CI&lt;'£/&gt;.M ~!&gt;.!

Residential
and
commerc1al.
Call for
estlmile, 24 hour service.
Anyday, anytime.

Rea \tor Assoc1ates

we have enlarged our
service department and
wtll service Hotponit and
other brands.

&amp;E A WEPDIN6 RIN6
&amp;·· OH· DEAR! Tt1AT'5

"·~

TANK
CLEANING

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

~-~---

3 AND 4 RM furmshed and un·
furnished opts
Phone 992·
5434

SCipio

FAMILY ROOM -

--------

lo Southern Otuo Corlo"o , sorrel I son of Ot04il Breed for co l
or co r,formohon and drspOSI·
t1on Phone 698·8241 evenmgs
or wnte for breed1ng conrroct
Belle Echo Quarter Horses ,
40225 SR t;.9'). Pomeroy Oh1o
45769

ACRES -

Township
w1th
the
minerals. No buildings
Good hunting land
50 ACRES - 2 good natural
spr ings, sma ll fresh water
stream, all mmera ls and
fenced .

1974 PINTO 2·door b:ce llenl con·
dil lon
Rea son for sell1ng
~oughl b•gger cor 992:,.5 ~

NOTICE DEALER Auchon Sole .
PubliC mv1led now an Fnday at
I p m Truck loads of new mer·
chand1se 1nclud•ng some fu r·
n1l ur~ Sold •n quontrly ol Oh•o
R•ver Aucllon, Me1gs Plaza ,
M iddleport

13 acres

mostly
bottom
land
M 1neral s, dr i lled well, and
2 bedroom residence.

1972 VEGA Good runnmg cond•
11on $200 Colt 992· 5530, alter
6pm

REGULAR
AUCTION
Soles
Tue sdays 7 p m 1 Fr 1doy 7 p m
SoJurday -7 p.m New and used
merc hond •se a1 Oh•o Rl\ler Au ct•on , Me1gs Plaza . Middleport
Oh

IA.M. to4 :30P.M.

L~TS JU~T SAY THE'
DOW t.J PAYME~T WOULD

or 992.,263

2·10-tfc

GROUND AND tra•l er m F1ve
Pomts areo I lO (lCr es w1th
electrrc water ond sewage
12x50 2 bedroom tro•ler fu r·
mshed 1nclvdlng washer and
dryer Awn1ng~ . front and bmk
with storage Harry Deems
Parkersburg 304·422 8941 or

----

PART GERMAN Shepherd ond
port coll •e, femal e , about 3
month~ old 8~3 2933

-...--...---·.....·
-.--.--..·- ·

~EW

Gilligan's Is
15, Characteristics of Learning
Disabilities 20
1 15-Marshall U. Report 33; 1 30-Funny F arm 3.
Sha Na Na 4; When Havoc Struck 6, Family Feud
8; MacNeii -Lel"lrer Report 20 ,33 ; In Search Of 13 ;

Pom.n~y,

Work Guaranteed

TO THE hunter who wonts h1s own
land 20 A uph1ll land with
sto nd•ng 11mber
$b ,500
992 7330

~m~--=:-~~:~-~::::~

tro 1lers, &amp; fo ld downs Che ck
our low wmter prkes. We sell
ser\lke and quolity New on o
used units . Open Sunday
Comp Conley Storcrofl Soles
Rt 62 N Pt Pleosont
'.

::
....

~EPTIC

-~~-

--- ---------STARCRAFT. 20' 22' mln1 motorS

742·2328
Free Estimates

2-24-tfc

COLLIES l AKC Reg , 4 yE&gt;ors old
1 AKC reg 3 yea rs old Ony 4
pups left 843 2753

.

300Moln St.
Otlio
Pomeroy 992.4212

THEY'RE FJI:OM t::O~PANIE!! ALL
OV~JI: TH~ WORLD·· &amp;EGSINS ME:
TO lf!IAAE AAY OWN PRrCE FOR
¥-V

PWMBING &amp;
HEAllNG
INC.
-

AI Tromm
Construction

oo-News 3,4,8, 10, 13, IS : ABC News 6, Zoom 20
6 3G-NBC News3,4.15; AB ~ News 13. Carol Burnet! II.
Friends 6: CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20.
7:oo-Cross-Wifs 3.4. Liars Clu~ 6. Sha Na Na 8:
Capitol Beat 33 : News 10; To Tell The Trulh 13;
6

...

992 7790

-.

STARCRAFT FAll Sale
M1n1 ·
motors, 20 and 22 TraVel
Tro1lers 18 5 $3 799 25 7 ·
Bunk house $4 875 Fold down
$1 ,700 up We sell servrceond
quohty . Open Sundoy s Comp
Conley Storcrolt Sole s, Rt 62,
N of Pt Plcosont

Roofing
Remodelin"
Room Additi&amp;.s
Garages

DAVID BRICKLES

-....

CARTER

Kitchen C•blnels, Roofing,
Concrete
Patios,
Sidewalks,
New
Construction
&amp;
Remodeling.

ACRE 1 • mile off Rt 143 20
ceres near Forest Acres Pork

- -

500

lltllhe lmitllln

m•l

'

~

9:00 tit 9:00 Mon.-Frldoy
9:001116:00 Saturday
12:00 Ill 6:00 Sundoy
2-2·tfC

'11M ~11011111

oo- Tomorrow

Movie Channel 4 -

s .oo--Here Come The Brides
Star Trek_. ; Gunsmoke
8, M ister Ragen'- Neighborhood 20,33, Hogan' s
Heroes 10; Emergency One 13. Petticoat 15.
S·Jo-News 6 , Elec Co. 20,33 , Mar-; Tyler Moore 10;
Hoan' s Heroes 15.

..J

Open

992·2206 ••
or 992-7630

992 3435

RISING STAR Kennel Boordmg
Indoor and outdoor 1un5 SO YBEAN HAY , Lorge round
Groom1ng all breeds Clean
bo les W11i lood on your tr uck
scn 1tory fa cd•t •e s Cheslure
or delwer 992 3336
Phone (614 ) 3b7 0292
ANTIQU E OAK organ 1890 s or
MEIGS COU NTY Humane Soc(ely
ea rly 1900 s E•cept1onol co nd1·
ammo! corelme 011d adop11011
lion and f ully fun cflo nol Call
serv1ce (free on1malsJ 9tn.76BO
992 3381 or 992 2448 alter 5 00
- or evenmgs ond Sundays
Moil
c o M COAL tiMES TONE san d gro\lel
992 -5427
c al e~ um chlonde ler td12er dog
Crowlord Rl
4 Box J2b,
food and all types of Sllh Ex
Pomeroy , Oh1o 457bq ME&gt;mber
cels1or So li Wor ks Inc E Mom
sh1ps ond donollons PO Bo:.:
St , Pomeroy 992 389 1
b82 , Pomero-,. ~ h lo 4 570~ ~

1972 OLDS FOR So)e. Very , ,.~ry
good condd•on
1sl $1 ,()(X)
tokes •I 992 2529

C.rpat• UpnamtiJ
Phone llih rot~nc

Janak! 33 .

3-;

Locatlcl tn The
MEIGS PLAZA
Middleport, Ohio

.... 1,r~..o.

Passports

8, 10; ABC New• 33.
12 :0G-Hawall Flve-0 8; Movie " R.ope ot San d" 10.

WEDNESDAY ,MA RCH 1, 1t71

N:E HARIMARE

Carpeting '

Weddinrs
Portr1ils

You 33
ll : Jo-Johnny Carson 3, o4 , 15, Pollee Story 6,13; News

1

WAU.PAPER.
PAINT &amp; SUPPLIES

Superior
Stum EJiradiol

Fever 33. News 20.
10· Jc.-You Set Vour llle 20; Book Beat 33.
111 ·QO-Newsl .... 6. 13.15; Dick Cavett 20, Lilias. Yoga &amp;

TELEVISION
VIEWING

''

~CONOMV 1~AC10R woth all ol
TIMBEM
Pome,o-,. Fotest Pro·
tachrntmts L•lo.e new askmg
due: !" Top poce ''" stond•ng
$2250 Phone (bl4) b98·31'Xl
sowliimb11H Coli 992·5%5 Of
Ken t Honb'( , 1.4•b ·8570
ltUG~ .
WALL
Hongmgs and
olgon~
N•ce l or Chrrstmos.
COINS CURRE NCY 1olleos . old
Rea son able Cotl992 2214
pocket wa tches and cha1ns .
s•lver and gold We need 19b• B &amp; S M6 Blll: HOMES Pl . flleo '
and older silver (O in S Buy Sllll
son I W Vo hesrdo Hec " s .
or 1rode Call Roger Wamsley 1973 Broodm ore 14 x b4 2
7422331
bedroom
1973 Dor 1on 14 1Cb07bedroom
OLD FURNITURE 1ce bo)(es bross 1972 VrCIOI IOil 14 ~~: 67 3 bedroom,
beds . .ran beds. el c. complete
2 both
,
housel'lol ds Wr ite M 0 M•ller
1971 Covent• y 12 x 65 3 bedroom
Rl 4 Pomeroy Oh1 o 01 coli
1969 Stole smon 12 • bO 2
~2 7700
bedroom
NO ITEM TOO Lllrge 01 too smllll HAY FOR SAU
Wdl buy 1 pu~·ce o• complete
HAY FOR SALE
househol d Ne w , used , or anfl·
985 4748
ques Moll m s Furniture, '10 N
2nd Sf , Middleport Phone RED UCE SAFI:; 8. fast w•th GoBese
Tablets &amp; l:·Vop ..voler p1lls
992·b370
Nelson Drug
'
Pole s mo)(
CHIP WOOD
NICI::
PIGS
lor
sol
e
Call
oiler
5
d•ame te r 10 on largest end, sa
9 49 2857
per ton Bundled slob S6 per
ron Oe!.vered Ia Oh1o Pollel
HAY FOR sole 949 2870
Co . RJ 2 Pomeroy 992 2689
FIREWOOD $25 o pic kup load
GOO D USED H octor
w li h
9492129
hydrouhc 3 pt h1tch . 742 J074
FIREWOOD spl1t and deliven~d
SILVE R DOLLAR S and coms Top
$45 a cord or $35 o tru e" load
dollar pou:f Coll74'1 23 16
All hcudwood. 843 7933 or
992 · ~95
SCASH$ lor 1un" car s Frye"s
Truck ond Aut o Ports . Wrecke•
HEA LTHY YOUNG p1gs for ttole
Servrce . THe sol e ond Repau
949 277 4 after 5 p 1n
Hutland 7~2 2081 of Pemu od
ONE
HOOVER spm wa sher and o
742 9575
Hoove1 mmi dryer I metal~' '
WANT TO BU Y hou~e by owner
chen Wl" 1 po u ol be•ge bowl
Wold pr efer ou l of town loco
11 19 shoes 7 ', N 991. 1537
11011 992 7730
CONDITIONED ORCHA~O gross
and dove1 hoy Al so 8 N Ford
Tr oc: lor l: • celten l cond1110n
- \ ard.:iale. - 992·7201
IF YOU h ove o serviCe to offer ,
wonl lo blfy or sell some 1h.ng
ae lookmg lor wo rk
or
whatever
you 'll get results
Iosier w11 h o Sentinel Wont Ad
Coll992 2f56
Lei Pomeroy Landmark

Pomeroy Landmark

-

t'odialc

Wmted loJJuy

IDO

JdMy

2dliy5
J ilily5

i1f

-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , March 1, 1978
TRA&lt;:Y

JEST A. LEETLE
HURT BAD? SHOOK· UP

�10- The DatlySentinei,Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0, Wednesday, March 1,1978

snwkmJ;l

Alix'rt D1ttes, T~ 1 uperam: e
uf the PumC'roy
Seventh D&lt;t) Ad venti St
Church. sHy s the con~r egauon wtll L1.JI!ect an ofSt•r· ret a r~·

fcrtng !llllOOK thl!mselves tu
support the work
lll(l~az1n e

The

al su

prndu u .• s · The .Suund uf
l.is1t.·n ," a 15-l!dnute weeki)'
t cHhu pr11gram heard on 125

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

ra d111 stations m the Umted

Letltrs of oplolon are welcomed. They should bt
lesa thaa 300 words long (or be subject to reduction by
"the editor) and mllft bt signed with the sign~·• addrt~s. Namel may be withheld upon pubUcatlon.

States W1th 1nurh the same
l'nntrnt &lt;ls the magazme. 1t IS
11\su supplred !11 m11rc than 500
publ ic hi gh schools 1n

However, on requesl, names will be dlscloeed. Letten
' should be In good Iaiit, addressing losuea, not persooaUtles .

l

~t!iSe tt c

ftlflll

d1&gt;1&lt;. uss1un
I 1sten

fur &lt;. lass

featured

Jn·

fpr m.ttlun on these tumnful

substan( es, tnt ervtcws o,uth ·
Hthlctcs a nd nthcr absl l'!lltuus youth , .wd suc1ess
stnnc:-; nf huw yuu ng people

Som etimes things t•ount
'

Dear Ed1tor ·
Somelunes m hfe some Lhmgs mean a ~rcat dea l to some
of us and practtcally nothmg to others
Grandma came to Oh1o from Ind1ana to our place about
1969. At that tune she had beautiful shmy black ruur , a qutck
eye,lovely disposrtton and a pnssy step lmmedtately she took
command of the place a nd all her rela ttves deferred to her
Only a mearungfuj shake of her head was needed and her
daughters and granddaughters somehow got the message All
of our family adored her . Often some one would say, " I see
Grandma out there " Her whole fam1ly " anted to stay near
her and followed her lead in ram or shme
Age creeps up on one mxl Gra ndma was 80 as hwna ns go
Her old legs got st1ff and " e co uld see the pain m her old ,
pleadmg eyes We got her cortisone shots but they were only
temporary relief When she walked her old h1ps cracked ljke
ptstol shots
A dec1s10n had to be made We bmlt a spec1al ramp for
grandma to walk up on and she departed for another place.
Wtth tears, we told the drrver , · tell them not to htt or beat
her " Grandma was our ft~vonte Angus cow. - Gayle Prtce

Express apprel'iation
1 would Just hke to say "Thank you" to Ctndy Ly les lor her
letter of Feb 15, 1978 concermng our Hoofs and Pa ws column
- Mike Kmcatd, RR I, Port land, OhiO

One

Jjfp

is hig prict•

Dear Ed1tor
I read the letters to the ed1tor usually "tth a great deal of
mterest . But m the case of Mr. Btng's letter I was appalled at
the statement that the loss of one hfe was a small prtce to pay
I wonder how sma ll a prtce tl would be If 1t was h1s father,
brother or son thi;lt lost thetr hfe Maybe he should talk to the
family of th1s one hfe that was lost 'lhere 1s no excuse for
vtolence, destructiOn or property and harassmen t
I can thmk of two examples tha t could appl~ First, say
your child asks for an expenstve toy and you were thinktng 11
over . The child gets ttred of wa1ting so goes out and destroys
the same kmd of toy that one of his fnends has What would you
Uunk ? Second , when Metgs was on slrtke, what If th ~y would
have gone to Eastern or Southern and mashed up lhe butldings
and overturned and burned the teachers' cars Would that
have been ng ht'
I would not keep anyone from havmg more or making
more money but, vwlence ts not the means to achieve this We
can not take away the nghts of t:ach IndiVIdual no matter whut
their occupation We all need to remember the Gblden Rule Mary K Rose, Long Bottom, Ohio 45743

From The
Amish

·1

Country
•Trail Bologna
• Limburger cheese
• Colby cheese
• &lt;;wiss Cheese

RUN MAUE
Sunda) at 3 13 p m the
Sy r,ICuse ER Sq uad was
t:t lled fo1 Helen Damcv.uod
who wa s taken to Holze1
Mcd1e.1l Cent er

(Regular or S.alt Free l

CLASSES RESUME
fhe baton classes of Mrs
Judy Rt ~gs, ca ncelled dunng
Fcbrua r}' due to the wco.1ther,
w1U 1csume at 6 tins evemng
.Jt Royal Oak Park

Simon's M~rkel
and

CilrtY-0UI
Pomeroy , 0 .

have uver cume add tctl on
p1 oblem s." says D1ttcs
An urdmg to Franrts
S111H.'r ,
ed tlor
of the
Wa!ihlngton,
n t ag~mnc ,

D

C,

based

tls purpose

1s

tn

promote clc;.m llvmg habits
thdt l•l n be as exciting to
your •~ pcuplc a:s the habJt s

that would dest roy them
Th e Pomeroy Seventh-day
tub.. cnt tst Churc h sponsors
l.t!itCn subscnptwns to loc.1\
htgh school 014c yo uth If you
wou ld hkc to reCC IVC It for
you 1sl' lf m yu u1 sc hool
ltbJat y , contact Burdell
Bl&lt;1ck H11utc 4, Pomeroy.
4571;9 111 phone !)92-7260

Contributing
is charged
Ket th McDaniel, 18, Rt 1,
Middleport, has been charged
w1lh Lllll t ll butm g to tht;
rlehnquency of l wo manors
accord ing to th e Mei gs
County Sherr If' s department
rt wn s report ed I wo
Rutland area youths had run
c~wa y from home and did not
repo rt to school Monday
Me1 gs Co unty Juvemle Of
fin•• Ca rl Hysell v.as cunra&lt;.1ed and sta rted h1s mvesu gutiOn.
Monday
cvcn1n g
duthorttJ es were notJfwd that
·the md1V1duuls were m a ca r
on Ha ppy Hollow Rulland
Mnrshal Bruce Dnv1s was
a:;;ked to ass1st m the apPI chens10n
McDHntel an d th e two
JUVCm les were taken mto
custody then tra nsported to
the Me1gs Count} Jml
While ~h e JUVemles we1e
bc tng questione d by Shenff
Proffitt and J uventle Offi cer
C"rl Hysell , th ey admitted to
brea kmg Into Bertha's
G1occry at Langsv tlle Sunday o-~fte1 non
Deputies 1 ecovered three
cartons of cigarettes and one
part1al box of candy bars
under the brrdge on SR 124 at
l.a ngsv ille
The JUVentles are currently
eonfmed to the Metgs County
J.nl - Juvcmle Sectmn until
they have a detentum hca nn g
late1 today be fore Juvemle
J udge Manmng Webster
4

United Press International
An angry and div1ded UMW
rank and f1le wrangled over
the umon's proposed new
contract w1th the 81t urmnuus
Coal Operators AssocJatton
Tuesday as their strike rmw m 1ls 86th day tightened an economiC noose
on the power-hungry midwest
In West Vtrgmia - where
()ppostlton to the new pad
burned hottest - ranks of the
mwn1plnycd stood a t 67,000. ·
In Indiana, an est1u\:ttcd
40,000 were out of work mcludmg 30,000 UMW
members - and publi c
ullhties in the stricken areas
prepared electrical cutbacks
to schools and mdustrms as
the1r coal supphes dwmdled
W1th the rat•hcat10n vote
lounung uver th e weekend,
UMW drst rr ct offl cta ls
spea rh eaded a $50.000 medta
drrve to sell the contract to
the membersh ip, and for a ll
the sound and fur y m the co al
fu~lds, most of them predicted
approval
" All the average coal
mmer looks at IS the bottom
lin e,' ' sa1d Oht o local
presadent Gene Otler, ' who
opposed th e co nt ract htmself
· It wtll probably pass, but I
am say mg th1 s I don't thmk tt
should "
l''nr all tbe muscle with
wh1rh the st nkmg mmers
slo"d y m e brmgmg utthttes
to thet r knees, however, the
ultima te whlphand rested tn
Washtn gton wtth President
Ca rter' s threat of the Ta ft Hartl ey Act and federal
sctzurc of the manes
Defia nce of Taft-Hartley un d t he stnk1ng mmers
.:1lnw st univer sally have
v.. wed to defy tis back-towork order 1f Invoked - could
brmg savage repnsa ls, both
to the umon and to the mmers
themselves
The UMW co uld be
bankrupted by fmes m such a
stand-&lt; •ff and the sinkers,
Without paychecks since Dec
6, " ould lose their cltgtbthty
for federally substd!ZCd food
st amps
'1f 1t tsn 't rat1fted, sa td
Ilhno1s local off1c1al LeRoy
Bauer, " we are going to
Jeopardize our umon."
Wh1le the debate raged,
lnd1an a pollee hovered
protec ttvely tn the ba ckground as 17 mmers blocked
the tracks at a sw1tchmg yard
and prevented the engmeer
from connectmg to 57 coalladen cars Pnlice sa1d there
were nq \\ capons and no
VIolence and tha t the stnkers
used
"Ja wbonm g"
to
d1ssuade the engmeer
In lndta na, Norfolk &amp;
Western Rtulroad obtmned a
tcmporar} rcstrammg order
barrmg pickets from the
ra1lrnad track s and for biddin g ha rra ssment of
railroad workers
As coal stocks dwmdled,
lndli:ina power companies
Imposed power curtatlments

•Life-Up-Top

•2 Big 8"
Surface units

•Storage diawer

b;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;,

•Harvest Gold Onlyl

$198 "

INGLES FURNITURE
106 N. 2nd Ave.

'

Meigs
Property
Transfers

Strike tightens noose

Magazine fighting problems
I.1sten magazmc. a nMt·
thly Journal wttha Circulation
of 180,000 is drvoh•d to
keeping young [&gt;COllie frum
beconung ensl;nl£~d to h&lt;1b1t s
hkr drink mg. dt ug abu se i.tnd

WOMBN'S WORK
COLUMBUS ( UPI) -State
Sen. Marigene Valiquette , DToledo, Tuesday urged Gov .
or 15 pert'ent tu residential customer's btlls to help pay James A, Rhodes to either
users , 25 percent lor for electnclty now being upgrade the women 's dl vision
of the Bureau of Employment
busmesses and 40 percent for purchased elsewhere
In Ohio, mandatory 25 SerVIces or abolish 1t
schouls
ln a Jetter to the governor,
In West V1rgima , the Public percent electnca l cutbacks
Serv1ee Commtsswn granted were prepared for mdustnal Sen. Valtquette Qbserved that
Monongahela Power Co. the and commerc1al customers smce 1975, no appotnlments
Lester E . Zimmerman,
nght t1 1 add a Sl s urchar~e to as coal stocks neared the 3(). have been made to hll N1oka V, Zimmerman to
day level
vacanctes on the advtsOry Amos Tillis, Ruth Tillis, 22
council to the dtvtslon, and acre, Pomeroy.
that a newletter has been
Gary Mlcheal Smith lo
dropped
Barbara J. Sm1th, Lot 14,
'' If yuu feel the women's
Mrs Patrt cta Holter has the offtce rs by Martha
Middleport
been appomted lu the Bua rd Onver , the I..at sun Con- diVISIOn 1s \mnecessary, I
Larry Curtis, Allee Curtis,
that
you
wtll Mary P1erce lo Doyle N
uf Trustees of the Ohio Valley sultant 'to OVAL frum the hope
recommend 1ts abolition Smales, D1ana R. Smales, 3
Area I .1branes, representmg State l.tbrary
the Pomeroy - Middleport
Ohtu Valley Area Ltbranes rather than permtttmg it to acres, Olive.
Pubhc L1branes. She was IS
fu nded
from
ap- a tr ophy through neg lect,"
Mtchael Hlll, Mtndy H1ll to
mstalled for a two year term propriation s of the Ohto she wrote
Danny L. Thompson , Kimat the February meetmg of General Assem bly and from
. berlee D Thompson, 2.035
the OVAL Board held m federal Library Serv1ces and
acres, Lebanon
Wellston
Construct ion Act funds, both
Nancy S Hamson, Clyde
As a trustee, Mrs Holter adm 1mste red through. the
0 . Harrison to H.S.D. Oil &amp;
w1 1l part tclpate 1n polt cy State Library of OhiO
Gas Co , Rtght of way , 150
The OVAL budget for 1978
dectstuns affectmg the adacres, Rutland.
nuntstratwn of OV AL , a 1s ${;93,974 "htch wtll be used
GETS FUNDS
regional hbrary orgamzat1on to ;1rengthen and extend
Gov. James Rhodes anmade up of eleven pubhc se rvices from local hbrar1es nounced that the Bureau of
hbrar1es m tne so utheastern and at the regJOnal lcvcl The Motor Vehtcles is releasmg
Oh10 co unties Mrs Holter IS funds ;:u e used to purchase the eighth ln~allment of 1977
a res1dent of tile Pomeroy buoks, tu prov1de a 16mm
li cense revenues totaling
area of Me1gs CtJunty and IS a f1 lm and a reference and $3,001 ,348 for dtslrtbulton
member of the Pomeroy - mterllbrary loan serv tce , amo ng county and local
Spring forest ftre season
bookm ob ile governments Me1gs County
Mtddleport Ltbrary Board of cons ult a nt s,
se rv1ce m five counties and to rt&gt;ee1ved $8,968 53
occurs during the months of
Trustees.
March, Aprtl and May ; smce
Al so at the February adntint ster the highly sucthe vegetation 1s not green,
meettng, Mrs Emelyne Ely cess f ul Mall ,- A· Book
the wuids are gusty, and the
Reed was e lected as progra m OVAL ma mtams a
Game protector
ground ts usually dry .
President of th e OVAL Board hea dqu a rt ers uffl ce ln
From March 1through May
of Trustees, Jerry Sheward Wellston and ts governed by
issues warning
31, every person doing open
of Jackson was named VIce- an eleven member Board
Meigs Co unty Game bunung outside a c1ty lim1ts
President and Mrs Carolyn cum pnsed of a represen·
L Kmg, Secretary The Oath tat1ve trustee from each of liS Protector Andy L) les today must have a bummg penmt
1ss u~d a public appeal conas requtred by law The
of Office " as admtmstered to member hbranes.
cermng the confmment of bummg perm1t ts reqUired
dngs.
solely to create awareness of
Lyles said dogs are not f1re hazards and allow burbetng confmed thus resultmg mng under the safest and
I
I m destruction of toe deer most 1deal cond1llons
populatiOn at the rate of two
Open burning ts permitled
the Rawltngs-Coats Funeral or three a day
OTIS D. JOHNSON
only from 6 p m to 6 a m
Oils Dusttn Johnson, 106, Home wtth the Rev Robert
The dog warden has been dunng hre season.
died at 6.30 a.m. Tuesday at Bumgardner offl c tatm g
nnt1hed, bultt 1s not possible
A bummg permtt may be
the home of his daughter, Burlal will be m R1verv1t: w fur him to cover the w1de obtamed from the followmg
Geraldme , m Columbus, Cemetery
terntory quick enough to local fo rest fire warFncnds may call at the correct the situatiOn
where he had restded for 10
dens
years. He was a coal mtner funerc1l home from 2 to 4 and 7
Lyles satd deer are bemg
BEDFORD
TOWNSHIP
and gardener.
to 9 p m. Fnday
ktlled nol parttcularly by Wild
Burson's
Guld
He was born May 9, 1871, tn
dog packs, but by others St""a"tl"o-=n-.
'
Burlingham ,
Mercervtlle to Bill and
which are not kept conftned CHESTER TOWNSHIP .:..
Charlolta Bush Johnson-m
ELIZABETH YOUNG
by owners
Ridenour Supply, Chester,
Elizabeth M Young , 84,
the ltrst term of Pres1denl
He asks that owners con- Ralph Trussell, Bashan;
Ulysses S Grant He mamed dted lh1s mornmg at the fme the1r dogs .
COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP Frances Searls, Rutland, tn Medn:al Cente1 of Beaver
This IS the season when Reed Jeffers, Route 2,
July, 1918, and nme chtldren County, Rochester, Pa. Mrs. does are carrying fawn and Albany ; Jean Swett, Route 3,
were born to this umon, seven Young was preceded m dea th when a doe is destroyed so IS Albany ; LEBANON
by her parents, Lawrence the fawn , and thus the deer
of whom survtve.
TOWNSHIP
Clinton
Surv1v1ng are Cecil and Julta Dtll Gtnther, her population IS bemg htt hard
Johnson , Portland.
Johnson, Ctrclevtlle; Dclvm husband, Alfred , tn 1918 and
LETART TOWNSHIP of Nokomis, Fla ; Orville, one daughter, Helen Pullm s
Eula
Wolfe, Route 2, Racine ;.
Patnot; Mrs Tom (Latnce ) In 1953
OLIVE
TOWNSHIP
MAYOR'S COURT
Rtvtard, Chtcago; Mrs
Mrs Young was a ret tred
Forked
Run
State Park,
F1ve defendants were hoed
Robert (Geraldine) Palmer, e mploye of the Beaver
Reedsvtlle,
Shade
River State
Columbus-with whom he Cou nty Horne, and a member and fiv e others forfeited
Forest,
Joppa;
ORANGE
resided , Mrs, John (Audrey ) of the Zton Umted Methodtst bonds m the co urt of MidTOWNSHIP
Dorothy
dleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Fraz1er, Parkersburg; Mrs Church at Rochester
Robinson
,
Alfred
,
Robert
Ernest (Gladys) Darst, ColShe 1s surv1ved by two sons , Tuesday mght.
Trtpp,
CR
46
and
SR 7,
F1ned were Gary A.
umbus Two daughters , Harold E. Young , Rochester,
Norman
Weber,
SR
7,
TuJ&gt;Catherine and Thelma, and W Thomas Young , New Saunders, 24, Cheshire,
pers
Plams;
RUTLAND
speeding,
$16
and
costs
,
preceded hun m death A Bri ghton , one brother ,
half-brother, Dan Bush, at L &amp;wrence Ginther, Dwtght K Sayre, 54, New TOWNSHIP - Rose Carson,
Road;
SALEM
the Pmecrest Nursmg Rochester ; s1ster s, Mrs. Haven , drtvmg while inp L1tus
TOWNSHIP
Harley
Grate,
Beulah Latham , Warr en, toxtcated, $225 and costs and
Center, also sutvtves.
SR
124,
Langsville
;
Eugene
There are 70 grand- Mrs
Mtldred Mengel, three days m Jail ; Mtckey E Holliday , Dexter; SALISchildren,
60
great- Rochester , and Mrs. Martm Maynard, 31, Langsville,
BURY TOWNSHIP - Nathan
grandchildren, 30 great- Voglar, New Bnghton, e1ghl speedmg, $11 and cost s ;
great-grandchildren, and stx grandchildren, 23 great- Harold Sammy Uttle, 41, Biggs, 38960 SR 124,
great-great-great- grandchildren and one great- Middleport. dtsorderly Pomeroy, Howard Dalley, 570
manner, $25 and costs , Harry Grant St , Middleport.
grandchildren.
great-grandchtld.
SCIPIO TOWNSHIP D
Smith, 71 , Middleport,
On Dec 17, 1976, Otts
Local
granddau ghters
Raymond
Colterhill, RFD,
Dustm Johnson helped Gov surv1vmg are Mrs Loi S dtsorderly manner, $25 and
Pomeroy,
Edwin
Oberholzer,
James A Rhodes turn on the Musser, Mrs. Alberta Sm1th costs
Route
2,
Albany
, Myrtle
Forfe1tmg bonds were
Statehouse Christmas tree and Mrs. Anna Searles, all of
Stanley,
Route
2,
Albany,
tights to start the Yuleltde.
Pomeroy, one nephew. Ed- Donald Lovett, 54, Mid- SUTTON TOWNSHIP Funeral servtces wtll be ward Sttles, Mtddleport, one dleport, $50, dtsorderly
held at I p m Fnday at mece, Mrs Julia Norns, marmer , Robert P Meier, Vernon Nease, Nease Set·
32, Mtddleport, $26, speedmg, tlement, Marton Slotter,
Miller's Home for Funerals Racme, and several COU!ilnS
wtlh bunal m the Miles
The body 1s at the Murphy Mona L Neal, Mtddleport, Ractne; Woodrow ZwtlUng,
Cemetery at Rutland
Funeral Home m Rochester ' $25, failing lo have vehtcle Syracuse.
GALLIA
COUNTY,
Off1ciatmg w1ll be lhe Rev The body w1ll be brought to under control; Herman Lee
MORGAN
TOWNSHIP
John Nichols, pastor of the Ewmg Chapel Fnday for Shane, 18, Racme, $25,
Kenneth
Ward,
RFD,
BtdSheltering J esus Arms VISitatiOn at 1 p.m Graveside runnmg a red ltght, and
Church at R10 Grande. Call- servtces wtll be held at Beech Em1ly G. Pnce, Middleport, well
VINTON · COUNTY,
$25, failure to y1eld the r1ght
mg hours w11l be 2-4 and 7-9 Grove Cemetery at 2 p m
WJ[l{ESVILLE
TOWNSHIP
p m. Thursday ot the funeral Frtday
of way.
Dean
Bums,
Wilkesville,
home.

Middleport, 0.

Appointed to board

Fire wardens
are selected

---------------------------,

!

Area Deaths

WILMA A. PARMALEE
W1lma A. Parmelee, 73,
lincoln St , Mtddleport, d1ed
Tuesday evemns at Veterans
Memonal Hosp1lal
Mrs Parmalee was a
cashier w1th the A&amp;P Co. for
35
years
before
her
retuement ih 1970. She was a
member of the Middleport
First Bapttst Church and
Middlep ort Evangeltne
( hapter 172, Order of Eastern
star
She was born June 25, 1904
an Glenwood, W Va., a
daughter of the late Lou Elza
and Luda Vaughan Meadows
She was also preceded m
death by her husband, Byron
F . Parmalee in 1968, a
daughter in mfancy, three
sisters and a brother.
Survtvmg are a daughter,
Mrs. Dallas (Josephtne)
Blevms, Mtddleport; three
s1sters. Mrs. Leo (Agnes )
Chrtsllan, Huntington, W
Va.; Mrs. Willis ( Alva )
Caldwell, Winter Haven,
Fla., Mrs. Susie Duering ,
Greenwich, Conn. ; two
brothers, Wesley Meadows,
Glenwood, W. Va , and Pete
Meadows, Huntington i three
grandchildren,
Dallas
Blevms, Jr., Milp1tar, Calif.;
Donna ioann Blevins,
Pomo&lt;oY and Richard Byron
Blevins, at home.
Funeral services w1ll be
_held at 10·30 a .m. Saturday at

!

ELBERFELD$
WOMEN'S

"JEROLD"

Preso lnternaUonal
Fists flew in Illinois, hot
erupted in West
v~.~~:«~and retired mtners
lit
to set up Utetr own
lines If the proposed
contract between the
and the Bituminous
Operators Assoc1ahon
rahficahon m a
weel,end vote
Washtng\01), Pres1dent

" ed urate ' ' thelr members
wtth bnefmgs and a $40,000
advertising blitz
Other pro-rallficallon
forces took a more dtrect
approach.
In Sprmgfleld, 01 , four
m1ners who had spoken out
agalliSt the contract at a
union meeting were JUmped
and beaten as they left
allegedly by bodvenards of

Carter looked to the prurung
of federal guns he promised
to lire "as early as Mooday''
should the contract be
rejected
'
The coal strike was in lis
87th day today and wtth
acceptance of the new
contract designed to end tl
banging on the will of the
wuon 's rank and ftle, UMW
officers Werlmu:rbw o;:trf\VI" fn

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday,_March 2, 1978

COATS

AI Right
Style 133
r tf1s h
Tan,
Ivory
A l l
weather ,
was.hable poplin
of
cotton
polyester
blend
Double breasted
trench
w1th
epaulets and tie
belt

Be sure to see a If the

combination shirting
Detachable hood.

plaid

IN POMEROY

more than kn(l(•k my eye miners, denied he had
out ••
anythtng to do wtth the
Four men - all ulleged attack .
asSOCiates O[ high-ranking
" Mtner~ live dangerou s
UMW off tc1als - were hves, ·• he saJd '·They speak
arrested and charged with their pu~ce prelt)' fast Fur
batlery They were identified -them to back away rrom
as J ohn Cox, Gerald anytht ng - even_a f1ght - ts
Hawkms, James Poe and not their wa)' ."
Vollte R1shop.
In West Vir~&gt;ima , UMW
Dawes, at the rnceung to offiCia l H~ruld Huyden
sell the C'ontrar t to the predictt.'CI passage of the pad

by a Wider margm Ulan tllat
posted m 1974 "I think it was
57 J)('rcent the last ume," he
srud "f feel like it will bt at
least that or more thiS time. ••
In Ohio, ret1n~d nuners worried about their pension
benefits - burned copies of
the contra&lt;"! and vowed to set
Ufl their own picket lines at
mtm•s if the c.'ontract is
approved

•

enttne

at

Firteen Cents
Vol. 2S, No. 22~

. ' . . . ·.

Carter administration
ready to take action
By DREW VON BERGEN
WASHINGTON (UPI) _
admimstratwn
is
The
prepared to take direct
government action to end the
coal strike - as early as
Monday - if strikmg mmers
reJe~t a tenlat1ve settlement
thiS weekend.
Labor Secretary Ray Marshall said he hoped such
actwn would not
be
necessa ry. He dtd not
disclose what action Pres1dent Carter would take
The prmc!pal optmns are a
se1zure of the mmes, which
would take congressional
action, or a Taft-Hartley Act
back-to-work order whiCh
would require a court
injunctton.

Marshall told a news
co nference Wednesday he
and Carter "w1ll be prepared
tD act immediately (following
the weekend vote ) We will be
prepared to do someUnng as
early as Monday "
Marshall also gave a bleak
assessment of negollallons
resummg betwee n the soft
coal industry and United
Mine Workers union, saymg
chances of that were "very
shght."
"You can never say 'never '
m thts busmess, so you mtght
be able to get it going, but it IS
clear that we gave the
colleclive bargaining process
ooe btg push last week to try
to get the settlement ,"
Marshall srud. "I think 11

would be very dtfficult to get
lhe negol!altons gomg
agam "
The secretary would not
advocate rahf1ca tion, but
noted the miners had won
several cha nges in thct r
cont ra ct 1n c lud1n g
guaranteed penstons funds.
"It's tile1r chmce to make,"
he said. "We will not be
campatgning or encouragmg
rat1fica tion ."
In case the government
dectdes to seek the back -towork order, Marshall sa1d hts
department has r•nmp1led af-

ftdavtts to attest to a nattonal
emergency.
" If we decide \O go, we'll
have the goods," he sa1d,
adding the government assumes mmers w11l obey the
order
11\arshall satd he was tn
con tact w1th the Federal
Medtatwn a nd Conciltahon
Service regarding separate
negotiatiOns for a contract for
14,000
UMW
mme
construction work ers, who
went on strtke the same day
as the mmers.

•

~·;:~ ~e: &lt;:-."'W: . "'~S'~·:&lt;~ ·'·"~'·"·i;:·:mB;i;7;i ~~~~~~~~ s~~t~~gton,
U l~

• • •

'

Jt

EXTENDED FORECAST
Saturday through Sunday, fair through th e
period, with highs In the
teens or lo .. er 20s Saturday
and In the 30s Sunday and
Monda)'. Lows will be in
the- teens or lower 20s

·p 0 m eroy co un cil

~

"

By United Press International
CINCINNATI - THE DEATH TOLL FROM Ills\ May's
Beverly Hills Supper Club fire climbed to 165 Wednesday when
Cincinnati resident Barbara Thornhill , 34, died of burns after
nearly nine months of hospitaliza!lon . Mrs Thorphill suffered
skin and trachea burns in the May 28 blaze and had been kept
alive by a resptrator smce September, accordmg to her
mother, Mrs Claude Nallffian . Five members of Mrs
Thornhill's family died from the Southgate, Ky., mghlclub f1re ,
including her husband, Robert, his sisters, Darlene Thornhtll
Wid Diane Lape, and his stster-rn-law, Carolyn ThornhilL
WASHINGTON - A WOMAN EMPL.OYEE of the
Environmental Protection Agency has been awarded $2,9931n
back pay lind $15,1100 m attorney's fees to settle her claim Of
being denied promotiOns because she spurned the sexual
advm1ces of her boss. At the time of the aUeged harassment,
Paulette Barnes was an administrative assistant al EPA. She
now is a $2\l,IJOO.a-year air traffic controller.
CLEVELAND- NEARLY 90 PERCENT OF the Standard
Oil O&gt;.'s current dealers m western Pennsylvania and Ohio
will be offered new, long-term dealership agreements. Sohio
said Wednesday the agreements would be effective May. 1 Wid
that most of the operators are in service stations Sohio either
plans to close or substantially change in the type of operation.

CLEVELAND- A CONCERT FOR SCHOOL children was
canceled because some of the 2,000 students in attendance
threw paper clips and hrur pms at the Cleveland Orchestra
musicians on stage Resident conductor Matthias Bamert sa1d
the musicians had assembled, but had not yet tWled up when
objects being tossed by the stxth-graders started hitting the
stage Wednesday.
DESMOINES,IOWA-ASTATE LEGISLATOR suggests
Iowa fanners bring batk the old "moonshine" s!llls - this
time to produce cheap fuel for the1r machmery to llde them
over a possible energy criSIS. Cooper Evans, Republican
representative, farmer and engmeer, is not the only person
who believes m Ute 1dea. A proposal to fund an Iowa State
University study IS ready for debate in the House .

•

scssw n Wednesday n1ght
voted 4-2 to mcrease water
rates
Votmg no on the ISSue were
Larry Wehrung and Jtm
Neutzlmg. Wehrung satd he
was not m favor of the raise,
unless the water was tmproved, and 10 percent of the
reven ue from the water be
put in escrow
The rmse wtll mcrease the
rrummum rate from $5.86 to
$6. Residents ln Mmersv1lle
are paymg $6 at the present
time therefore those rates
w11l not be mcreased
Proposed turn on and
turnoff fee will be $5
On a vote by resolutiOn,
Harold Brown seconded by
B11l Young, co un c il
requested the Board of Public
Affatrs submtt a monthly
expenditure sheet.
Council was advtsed by
soltc1tor Fred Crow at the last
mP.etmg to consider raismg
water rates m order to meet
payment
of
mortga ge
revenue bonds,
An addttional $41,917 65 has
to be ratsed for the operatiOn ,
payment of pnnc1pal a nd
interest on the bonds.
The water co mpany IS
presently pumpmg 13 m1lhon
gallons of water a month and
only b11lmg people for s1x
million , therefore los1ng
seven million gallons of water
a month
Due to that, council had
John Ashford, salesman for
Waterworks and Industrtal

at the

mectmg to demonstrate a
water meter It IS felt all
wat~r IS _defm1tely not bemg
metered
Co uncil wtll piace new
meters In a sect10n of the
town to see If this 1rnproves
the readmgs.
Co uncil w11lmeet m regular
sess ton Monday night.
At ten dm g were M:~ yo r
Clarr.nce Andrews, Brown,
Young , Neutzlmg, Wehrung,
Lou Osborne , a nd Larry
Pnwell co uncil members;
Jane Walton, clerk . Dale
Sm1th and Reed Wtll of the
water department
1

SQUAD RUNS
The
Mtddlep o rt
Emergency Squad answered
a ca ll to the LaSalle Hotel at
6.56 p.m Wednesday where
Cloyd Brookover had fallen
down some steps He was
taken to Veterans Memona1
Hospital
AI 10 13 p m. the squad
went to Routes 1 and 143 for
Penny Smith "ho was taken
to Holzer Medtcal Center

Now you know
Some 525 songs and Instrumental p1eces were
wntten about Abraham
Lmcoln, the largest number
ever produced m honor of a
secular tndivtdual

SAN FRANCISOO - PROTEIN MANW ACTURERS will
fight federal government warnings that heavy reliance on
their products in diets can be harmful and possibly fatal , The
Food and Drug Admlmstration, citing more than two dozen
deaths, has warned Ute public to avoid total liquid protein diets
unless they are Wider a doctor's care.
·
WASlUNGTON - TWO PRESIDENTS' DAUGHTERS
married during their WJute House years may have to turn over
to the National Archives wedding gifts received from foreign
governments. Government lawyers are ~udying ~~ legal
ownership of the gifts, says General Services Admimstrator
Jay Solomon, and the dectston ~ould affect gifts received by
Trlcla Nixon O&gt;x arxl Lynda Bird Johnson Robb Exempted
from any deci81on by government lawyers would be Luc1
Johnson Nugent and Julie Nixon Etsenhower.

ISLAMABAD. PAKISI'AN -A WOULD-BE HIJACKER
tried to commandeer a Pakistan International Airlines ,Boeing
747 on a domestic flight today but was overpowered and
critically injured In the esploslon of a hand grenade, officials
said. Three pauengers also were reported Injured. The
ol!lclals said the terrorist, an unidentified Pakistani cillzen,
tried to commandeer the airliner carrying 357 passengers
midway on a lllght from Islamabad to Karachi.

Arrests
close
probe
Meigs Co unty Sheriff
Jam es J
Proflilt and
Rutland Pollee Ch1ef Bruce
Davts sa1d today the January
30 brcaktng and entermg of
Mtller's Grocery at Rutland
has been cleared wtth the
arrest of Kenneth F Mitchell,
24, Langsville, and Mtchael
Pl(rce, 19, Rt I, Mtddl eport
During the January 30th
B&amp;E, varmus food 1tems,
gloves, c1ga rettes, tape
player, headlights, ott, t1re
patchmg, gasohne, to bo~~ans
and buckets " ere stolen.
Some Items have been
recovered Most of th e food
1tems and ctgarettcs had
already been consumed
Both md1viduals are
confmed to the Me1gs County
Jatl and w11l appear before
Me1gs Co unty Court Judge
Robert Buck later thts week.
Mttchell IS also bei ng
charged \Hth the entry of the
M1ller Grocery on January 8
AI that It me pop and gasolme
was taken
afternoon ,
Wednesday
Depultes Dana Aldridge and
Gary Wolfe arrested Paul
Eugene Wolfe, 31, Elizabeth,
W Va. , on charg es of
destructiOn of property and
disorderly conduct followmg
an ashtray throwtng tnc1dent
at the Ftve Pomts Bar &amp;
GrtU. Wolfe Is charged wtth
destroying 10 hollies of
whiskey
He posted bond Wednesday
evening and was released
We dnesday
eventng,
deput1es were lookmg for a
while male dr1vmg a blue
Grand Pnx who gol $8 worth
of gaso line at Evelyn's
Grocery, but pa1d only $1.
The vehtcle headed east on
SR 124 towards SR 7. The
mctdent is und er investigatiOn

SEMINAR SLATED
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Toshthlro Tomabechi, executive
managmg
director · of
Mttsub1shi O&gt;rp, of Tokyo,
will discuss U.S .Japanese
trade relaltons at a trade
semmar March 7, 1t was
announced Tuesday.
Mltsubtshl Corp .. IS the
largest general trading
company in Japan and has
off1ces in 123 clUes worldwide.
The onNiay seminar on
Uruted States-Japan trade ts
sponsored by the Greater
Cincinnati Chamber of O&gt;mmerce,the World Trade Club,
the U.S, Department oil O&gt;mmerce, the Japan External
Trade Organization and the
Sout~ern
Ohio District
Export Council.

WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT CARTER HAS ordered
formation of a secret Army conunando unit to provide the
nation's Hrst full-tune force for combating hljackmgs and
other terrorist acts outside the country, government sources
said today . The force has _peen given the code name "Project
ffiue U~ht" for Its formative stages.

;'&lt;'

other styles Jerold
Khaki, Ivory, Mohca. Washable. •II weather co.ts - ~~
water·repellent poplin of cotton
women's rNdy-to·
polyester blend . Steamer lacket
with front pouch pockets and t..we_•_r_-_:zn_d_noo_r_._ _ ~

help him and then I got
kicked around pretty good."
With Jotner tn the melee
were Rtchard Barlolotli, 30;
his brother, Gary, 26, and
Dav1d H1lton , a local
president
" If we doo't approve the
contract, they're gonna try
and beat us up," srud Hilton
"To get me to vote yes
they' re gonna ha v~ to do a lot

•

J

eMisses
e Half Sizes

AJ&gt;ove Style t36

Kenneth Dawes, one of the
union 's chief negotiawrs
Ron Joiner, 35, sported a
Iwnp over one eye and cuts on
his face as he descnbed the
assau lt to reporters .
" I started gomg to my
room," he said. "Then these
guys JUmped my two buddies
- one who has ~ bad arm
They had h1m down and were
stompmg him I r ,....... ,.h..A " 1 t "

SAC:I\AMENTO, CALIF- - A 27-YEAR-OLD MAN
charged with six murders says his mother slowly poiSOned him
with 110ap for many years Wi\U he slaughtered rabbits and
drank their blood In an attempt to cure himself. Richard Chase
. made the statements in a rambling 1~ge handwritten letter
to MunlclP!'l O&gt;urt Judge carol Miller mwhich he asked for a
....,nd physical examination to detect the effects of aUege&lt;)
poisoning.

ALL WEATHER
• Junior
• Petites

Fists fly, hot words exchanged over new pact

THE REV. WILUAM KN!TrEL, pastor of the
Middleport United Pentecostal Church, is ptctured with
an attractive "Merit Achievement Award" plaque
presented to the Middleport church for having the fasltst
growing &amp;mday School in Ohio lor 1977. The presentation
was made during the three day Sunday school "growth
conference" held at the Christian Apootollc Church In
Newark Attending the conference from the Middleport
church were the Rev. and Mrs, Knittel, Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas KeUy, Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Sauters, Mr. and Mrs,
Michael Zlrllle, Mrs, Allee Priddy, Mrs. t\ffi8nda
Eastman and Mrs. Cynthia Meadows. The Rev, and Mrs.
Knittel attended aU three days of the conference,

RELEASED ON BONOS - Four Rt. 4, Pomeroy men arrested on charges of possession
of manjuana entered no pleas when arratgned Wednesday before Judge Hobert Buck TI"'Y
were released from custody after posting property bonds totaling $85,000 Releasc&gt;d were
Cltarles L . Butcher, 62 ; Robert D Butcher, 19, Randall L Butcher, 22, and Ronald D
Butcher, 25. They are each charged with knowingly possessing a controlled subltance In an
amoWII equal to or exceeding thr~ times the bulk amount as well as being charged with
preparing for shipment and sale of controlled substance, Randall Butcher, 22, hilS an
additional charge of hindering the discovery, apprehension, proscocullon, t"Onvtction or
punishment of another for a crune by destroying or coneeallng phystcal ev1dcnee This
charge resulted when Randall Butcher was attempting to burn marljuaiUIIn the fircplu cc ut
tile res1dence when deputies entered to conduct a search of tlle premises pursuant to a
search warrant tssued by the Me1gs County Court Randall Butcher was placed unde r a
$25,000 bond while the other three had bonds set by Judge Bu ck at $20,000 each Sheriff
James Proffit! is shown above with the $60,000worlh of marijuana conftscated .

Three buses wrecked
Three Galha County loca l
schoo l buses were lnvolved In
trafhc accidents Wednesday
mornmg on slippery roadways throughout the county
Two of the accidents occurred on the ICY, snowco vered
Addison-Bulav11ie
Rd.
The f1rsl occ urred at 7 55 a
m two a nd four lenths mtles
west of SR 7 where an auto
dnven by Ronald E Baker,
25 , R1o Gra nde, a teacher at
Addavtll e
Elem e nt a ry
School, was gomg west on th e
Bulavtlle-Addlson Rd , when
his car shd· on the 1cy
pavement stnkmg the frunl
of a 1976 Dodge bus drrven by
Mary Ruth French, 45 , Rt I.
Galhpolrs
Baker was taken to the
Holzer Medtcal Cen ter by a
passmg motortst for treatment of mtnor InJUries None
of the 41 passengers was
mjured
Baker was c1ted tu
Municipal Cou rt for speed m
excess of road condttwn s.
There
was
moderate
damage
Another Gallla County bus
was mvolved tn an accident
at 9.05 a . m. on the same
road, two and five-tenths
m1les west of SR 7
4

Weather
A wmter storm watch is In
effect for tontght and Friday
Becommg cloudy today, wtth
highs in the upper 20s or
lower 30s. Snow tonight and
Friday, possibly heavy at
tunes Lows tomghl Will be in
the mtd 20s and highs Fnday
w11l be m the mid 30s

BOOSTERS TO MEET
OPEN DOOR SESSION
There
w11l be a meetmg of
On March 8, 1978, a
the
Syra
cuse-MJnersvill e
representative from
Athletic
Boosters
Friday,
Congressman Clarence E.
March
3
at
6:30p.
m.
at the
Miller's office will conduct an
Syracuse
Municipal
Bulldmg.
Open Door session from 10
All parents and anyone
a.m.-12 noon m the O&gt;urtInterested m the surruner
house In Pomeroy.
If anyone has any questtons baseball programs are asked
concerning the Federal to attend.
For additional mformat1on
Government, please stop by
contact
Barry McCoy at 992to dlsciiSs them wtlh the
5082.
representative

The patrol Sl:lld a bus ch iven
by Clara Day, 40, Rt I ,
B1dwell, backed mto an auto
operated by Danny S. VanStckle, 17, nt I. Ga lhpohs
Day was charged with linproper backing None of the
28 pa sse nger~ on the bus was
tnjured
At 7·25 a m., an accident
oceurred on Cmnp Creek Rd
two and one-half mtles so uth
of SR 2.13 whCI e a Ga llta
Local bus drrvcn by .Jesse R.
Chapman , 61, Rt. 2, Pntrtot,
hacked mt o a parked cur
owned by Vernon M. Miller,
21, Ht. 2, Gallipolts Th ere
was m inor damb ge No one
was injured
Ltnda 8 Pnest. 31. Ht
1, Gallipoli s, wo1s charged
w1th dr1 vmg left of th e center
followmg a n acc1dent at 8.:JO
a . m. on the Addlson Bulavtlle Hd. two a nd seventenths mtles west of SR 7
Slate troopers sai d the
Priest car sltd Sideways on
the 1cy pavement strlkmg an
eastbound cHr drtve n by
Tammy L Mollohan , 19, Ht
1, CheShire. Th ere wa s
moderate dama ges
Another accident blamed
on bad road conditions occurred at 7: 45 a m on the
Fatrfteld-Centenary Rd one
and seven-tenths miles north
of SR 141
Offtcers su1 d Holly B
Lmga, 18918, Galhpuhs, lost
contrnl or her car which ran
off the roadway strlk1h g a
tree and fence on property
owned by Donald R.
Warehime.
A single car accident oc·
curredal7 ·30u. m onSR218,
one~ten th of a mile north of
CR 42 where Helen M.
Ptckertng , ~o. Gallipolis,
gomg north, lost control of
her car whtch slid into a
guardrail
Another smgle car acctdent
occurred at 6·40 a m on SR 7
north of lhe Galha-Melgs
County hne where Melvm R
Swisher, 31, RL 1, Middleport, lost control of his car
which slid on the highway
mto a dttch. There was minor
damage.
An acctdent occurred at
5:10 p. m, on US 35, one and
two-tenths llliles west of 325
where an object fell off a

I ruck dr1vcn IJy Ernest E.
Blunkensh1p, 4fi, Frankfort,

.struck a veh1d e owned by
Dale A McCorkle, 31, Rt. 1,
Ouk Htll
A fmal acctdent occurred at
10 p. m. on SR 7, four-tenths
of a m1lc south of the GallmMel gs County ltne where an
unknown veh1cle forced nn
auto dmen by Dr1v1d M
fhnd y, 39, Middleport, off the
roadway The Hindy ca r went
ovc1 a gmu drall mto a y~rd
H1nd y WdS cha rged wllh
DWI

Oassified
employees
striking
ATHENS, Oluo ( UPI) Nonacademic employees at
Ohw Umverstty, mcludlng
campus pollee officers and
cafeteria workers, went on
stn ke today In a c"Ontract
dispute.
The workers, members or
Local 1699 of the Amencan
Federation of State, County
a nd Munc1pal Employees,
voted by a 3-1 margin
Wednesday night tD stage the
walkout after negotiations
w1th the uruvers1 ty lroke
down
Roth stdes had been
negotiating for several
months on a new contract to
reptace the old pact, covering
the umon's approximately 800
members, that ex:ptred last
November.
The diSJlule centered on
health and welfare benefits.
The umon wants the
university to buy Insurance
pollc1es
cove ring
Its
members from the AFSCME .
The current msurance plan is
with a pnvate company.
A umverstty spokeswoman , . J
Peg Black, said
the
Wllversity had of£ered to
provtde new economic
benefits including hearing
and VIsiOn care, unproved
health and Hie insurance
coverage

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