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                  <text>10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Mar. 6, 1978

__s_____ ~

l~-- ---A---r-e--a--D--e--a-t_h
I

1

OLLIE SPENCER
Mrs. Ollie Spencer,
Columbus, formerly of Meigs
County , dit&gt;d Saturday in a

Col umbus hospital.
Mrs. Spencer was born in

Roane County, W. Va .,
daughter of the late Amba
and Angenetta Sargent . She
was preceded in death by
several brothers and sisters,
her husband, Seldon, and a
da ughter,
Mrs.
Elsi
Stephenson.
Surviving are

SOilS,

Selva,

Silas, Otia and Cecil Spencer ;

a dau ghter , Mrs. Ruby
Horsnyder;

two

sisters,

Louisa Webb and Mary
She ppard, and seve ral
grand children and great·
grandchildren .
Funeral services will be
held at 9:30a.m. Tuesday al
the Schoedinger Funeral
Home, 2741 Cleveland Ave.,
Columbus. The body will be
brought to the L&lt;'lart Falls
Ce111etery in Meigs County

fo r buri al at 2:30 p.m .
Tuesday.
DORA O'BRIEN
Mrs. Dora O'Brien, 93,
Irving, Texas, a former
Meigs County resident, di ed
Sunday at the home of her
daughter in Irving . She was
burn in Meigs County , the

daughter of the late Frank
and Marne Curtis Blackw ell.
She was also preceded by her
husba nd , Ed ward, and two
sisters, Mrs. Nora Taylo r and
Mrs. Ada Grimes.
The O'Bricns operated a
farm in Burlingham for many

years.
•
Survivors include two sons,

George, Maybroo k, Texas,
and Dale pf Vicksbur.g,
Mississippi; two daughters,
Mrs. Pea rl Glover of Irving,
'i'(.• xa s,

with

whom

she

resided for several years, and

Mrs. Robert (Jean) Moore of
Florida ; eight grandchildren
and II great grandchildren .
Funeral services will be
Wednesday at I p. m. at the
Hughes Funeral Home in
Athens with the Rev. Fred
Shaw offi ciating. Burial will
be In the Burlingham
Cemetery. Friends may call
on Wednesday until the time
of service.

Hospital News
Veteraaa Memorial Hospllal
Saturday Admissions Benny Spears, Syracuse.
Saturday Discharges Connie
Manley, John
Schneider, Ella Stewart,
Barbara Whaley, Jerry Cline.
Sunday Admissions - Leah
Ord. Syracuse; Minnie
Bengel, Pomeroy ; Ted
Hatfield, Jr. , Deller; Ralph
Hall, Pomeroy; Lillian
Roush,, Middleport.
Sunday [)ischarges Myrtle Fitch, Roy Jones, Otis
Knight, Margaret Gloeckner.

Holzer Medical Center
!Discharges Marcb3)
Robert Armentrout,
Ronald Bails, Bette Baldwin,
John Boggess, Melba Boggs,
Bob Morris, principal of the lnel Bugg, James Bush ,
Pomeroy and Middleport Victor Cales, Magdalene
Elementary Schools, . will be Cannichael, Dorothy Clark,
speaking at the annual Mitzi Dean, Ella Eads, Vesta
birthday party of Drew Hufford , Dollie Jividen,
Webster Post 39, American Maude Kelley, Edward
Legion , at 7 p.m. Tuesday . Klodowski Sr. , Clara I.Joyd,
Refreshments will be Helen McCain, Sam Me·
served at 7 with the program Carty, Edward McNabb ,
to follow. Plans for the new Holly Miller, Ellen Moss,
post home will be displayed. Garnett Pickens, Robin
Armand Turley will be on Proffitt, Charles Rowland,
hand to present organ music. Maxwell Runyon, Claudia
The party is open to legion Rutherford, James See,
members and the auxiliary Brady Sheets. Freda Smith,
Theresa · Staley, Wanda
and their families.

Morris named
guest speaker

Taylor, Green Vance.

(Births, March 3)
Mr. and Mrs. William
Russell, a daughter, New
Haven . Mr. and Mrs. Zat
Salmons, a daughter.
Gallipolis. Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Thivener, a daughter,
Gallipolis.
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Cin·
1Discharges, March 4)
cin nati Gas &amp; Electric Co.
Fred
Allen s worth,
officials said today they
believe they can get through Kalherine Austin, Auswell
this week without mandatory Barnell, Floyd Bennett, Mrs.
Gerald Boggs and daughter,
electric curtailments.
The utility's 500 largest . Arthur Brooks, Virginia
commercial and industrial Caldwell, Mrs. Rodaey Cook
customers would be cutback and son, Ennal Cremeans,
25 per cent if CG&amp;E's coal David Diddle, Bert Fayne,
supplies drop to tbe 4!klay Jerri Hawley, Jerry Herd·
man, Della Norton, Mary
level.
CG&amp;E today had a 42-day PhilHp s, Elvarie Rose ,
supply, which was e.pected Garnet Russell, Elsie
to stay at that level several Shaffer, Catherine Shifflet,
days despite the United Mine Glenna Taylor, G~neva
Workers union strike. Tbe Vance, Floyd Wallace Sr.,
utility is able to purchase Zola Wickline, Carl Williams.
(Discharges, March 5)
non ~UMW coal, oil and
Ronda
Cheatwood, Effie
outside power.
Conley, Mrs. Ernie Gardaer
and daughter, Shirley
Graham,
Ruth
Holt,
LAWRENCEVILLE, Ga.
Paulmenia Hutchinson,
I UPI) - Larry Flynt,
Joyce Kiser, Betty K()ehler,
publisher of controversial
Kathleen Moody , William
Hustler magazine, was
Ramey Jr., Linda Riffle,
shot today in this Georgia
Mrs. Leland Selbe and
city where he Is on trial for
daui(hter, Rutb Smith, John
obscenity.
Voyrs, David Ward.
Flynt was ·reportedly hit
(Births, March 5)
In the abdomen wllh shots
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Ed"
from a passing car. His
wards, a daughter, Clifton.
condition was not known.
Mr . and Mrs. Timothy
Witnesses said the shots
Ousley, a daughter, Wellston.
ca me from a p~sslng car as
Mr . and Mrs. Charles Fix:ley,
he lefl a cafeteria near the
a son, Jackson.

Cincinnati
firm can get
through week

Gwlnnett County court·
house.

BAI&lt;ER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

HEADQUARTERS FOR

''FRIGIDAIRE" QUALITY
HOME APPLIANCES

Pleasant Valley Hospital
DISCHARGED - William
Chapman; Henderson; Olive
Meadows, Glenwood; Alice
Gaskins, Point Pleasant ;
Harry McDermitt, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Archie
Pierce, Middleport; Ben·
·jamin Fields, Hartford; Mrs.
Garland Bostic, Gallipolis
Ferry; George Vaughn, Point
Pleasant; Harry Lucas, Point
P!easaql; John Oshel, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Roland
Smith, Middleport; James
Pierce,· Point Pleasant;

Wahama Almost Upset
Red Devils In Finale
to the team In lqnlghls sectional tourney
opener.
II was almost artotber maJor Lillewise Miller Is In the same
upset Saturday night but boat for the Red Devils.
Coach Homer Preece's To make matters wone
Wahama While Falcon's Wahama alao lost the services
dropped a tough 73-M decision of Its leading rebounder, Greg
to \be visiting Ravenswood Blessing who InJured his
Red Devils of Coach Jack ankle with 54 seconds to play
Wiseman.
and had to be treansported
The contest was the regular t~ the hoapltal by the
season finale for botb schools emergency squad. His ser·
as sectional tourneys begin vices apparently will also be
this week In West Virginia lost lor tonight's contest.
cage circles.
AvaU.ble statistics for tile
In fact, tile White Falcons game show Ravenswoods
enter into post season play Mark Stanley as the leading
tonight as they engage In scorer wltb 34 points on 15
Class "AA" Region One field goals and 4 of 6 free
Section Four action by taking throws.
.
on Spencer Yellow Jackets
Joe Fields and Mark Hllton
at Spencer In a 7:30 p.m. also connected In double
contelll. Delalls of the White flgllres for the Red Devils witb
Fal.On..Spencer match-up can 14 and II markers respec·
be found elsewhere in the lively.
today's Register.
Wahama placed five men in
Getting back to Saturday twin digits with a well·
night cllmall9battle, Wahama balanced scoring attack. Rick
f~ll behind early as tile .~d BIJZUll'd topped tile locals with
Devils scored the games first 14 foll9wed by Rick Barnltz
eight points of tile game with 13, Phil Hobbs with 12,
before the Falcons Rick Greg Blessing with 10 .and
Buuard dropped in a free Kelvin Honaker wltb 10.
tbrow to make 11 8-1.
Shooting percentages for
Ravenswood went on to Wahama show a 40 percent
~utscore the locals by a 211-11 '!lark from the floor and a 55
margin in tile opening cantO perceQI average at th'e line.
but the While Falcons cut the The White Falcons committed
lead to six at 3:1-28 at half.
18 turnovers and had four
WatWna put' together a steals along with U total
moat productive tblrd stanza rebounds. Blessing's H was
in which they outscored the lops for Wahama.
visitors 25-18 to take a 51-511
In tile Junior varsity con·
advantage going into tile final test, tile Little Devils handed
eight minutes of play.
Wahama its sixth defeat
II was Greg Blessings• against 10 wins with a ~
bucket that knotted tile score ·victory.
at 32-32 for first lime In the
Craig Easter, Ron Pannell,
game. Phil Hobbs, Rick . Mike Brown and SteveVarner
Buzzard and Rick Barnltz paced tile winners witb 18,12,
paced the local attack in the - - - - - - - - . quarter witb 8, 6 and 5 points,
THURSDAY DINNER
respectively.
The Women.'s Aglow
Ravenswood seemingly
blew tile White Falcons hopes Fellowship will meet Thurs·
of another upset win In tile day at the Meigs Inn for a 7
early minutes of tile final p.m . dinner. Reservations
canto when they built a may be made by calling 992·
5845.
commanding 69-0Slead bui the
Bend Area cagers staged a
last ditch rally that saw them
t.
outscore \he Jackson Coun·
tians 13-ol ·but time ran out
giving Ravenswood a 73-68
trlwnph.
Tragedy struck tile White
Falcons late In tile game on
two separate occasions.
Rick Buzzard, Falcon senior
. guard, was eJected from the
game when he was Involved in
a fracas with Ravenswood's
Scott Miller,. The 5'5 threesport star will probably be lost Ohio will be in Washington,
D. C. March 13·15 to talk with
Ohio congressmen and meet
with government officials.
Christina Hall, Southside; Maida Mora, Meigs County
Sherry Hall, Southside; Fred Farm Bureau president, will
Harmon, Point Pleasant;
Michael Anderson, Point
to represent this
Pleasant; Mrs. Paul Harmon, New Haven; Raymond
Hoffman, Point Pleasant;
William Browning,
for corn and wheat,
Gallipolis; · John Rogers, program
n at i o n a! b a r g a in i n g
Point Pleasant; Enoch legislation for agriculture,
Marcum, Kenova, W. Va.;
James Johnson, Middleport.
BY GARY ci.ARK

Mora

attend
••
session

pr~~~~~~is f~%mthr~::oau~
~.~.tending

Life styl~s change, costs of living escalate,
children seem to rush through lnlancy,
into adolescence at a galloping
run. Parents who anticipate ris·
ing college costs begin edu·
catlonal savings plans witti
Farmers Bank at an early
date. Let us help you arrange an
interest-accruing savings ac·
count that will grow with
your chi ldren, and be
ready for college
when they are..

POMEROY, OHIO
'40,000 Maximum Insurance For Each Deposrtor ·
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

I!

l'

killed in a 011e-&lt;:ar accident 011
Ohio !40 in Scioto County, •
Lebanon :
Brian
R.
Murphy, !6, Lebanon,
pedestrian killed by a hit-and·
· run motorist on Ohio 48 in
Warren County.
Saturday
Hamilton: Jeanne M.
Smith. 58, Cincinnati killed
in a one-car accident on
Interstate 75 in Butler
County.
Ravenna : Ronald M.
Watson, 20, Ravenna, killed·
in a one-car accident on a
Portage ~ounty road .
Sunday
Antwerp: William Kale, 45,
Hicksville, killed when his
auoomobUe ran headon into
two parked ears on Ohio 49 in
Paulding County.

Good Luck Eastern girls zn Class A District

Concerned about !he basic
deterioration of the family
unit and convinced that a
certain amount of weekly
family time together can
effectively counter the trend,
!he Meigs • Gallia • Mason
Association of Life Un·
· derwriters has undertaken a
FamilyTime proJect during
Life Insurance Week, March
f&gt;-!1 . •

·

•

. Durin~ thl~ week, L1fe
Undei'WI'Iters 10 tile Me1gs •
GaU18 • Mason area will
explain the concept of
FamilyTime to local and
civic groups using a booklet,
FamilyTime - A Rev·
olutionary Old Idea.
The)leautiiuily illustrated
booklet underscores the
conviction that the family Is
an indispensable component
in ·personal and group
development. II ldentifi~·s
specific functions, topics,
activities and events that can
foster .famlly communication
and bring families closer
togetber.
It is divided into three parts
11
Share Times/' "Activi~y
Times" and "Outing Times.''
"Share Times" uses exer•
cises to introduce children to
fundamentals · about which
lhey need to know ~ for
example, how to write a
check, table manners,
emergencies, etc. .''Activity
Times'' recommerids various
family acti vltles. " Outing
Times" invites families to
share activities outside the
borne.
A final portion of the
booklet is devoted to parents'
needs and concerns. Brief
ideas are expanded to speak
to common struggles among
parents.
Copies of FamilyTime - A
Revolutionary Old Idea can
be obtained from members of
the Meigs • Gallia •. Mason
Association" of Life Un·
derwrilers or by sending $1.25
to the Ohio Association of Life
Underwriters, 21 East State
Street, No. 730, Colwnbus,
Ohio, 43215.

'Crisis Watch'
tionwid:!'t!:.~~~!.~':!:;!~kers

Ill!

A
glance
at the na overwbeimingly rejected a contract proposal
Unionby
:. the soft coal
UMW
members
industry in balloting during th.e weeke!ld.
'
•
.
UMW Ohio Vole
Ohio's UMW members rejected the contract by a vote of four-t&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;ne.

~;::lopsided

Ill\

:::
UMW District 6 President John g:'k
vote has brought tbe union
} membership closer tban It has been in years.
:·:·
)
Federal Reaction
::::
President Cart&lt;'r Is eipected to announce today what steps be will take to get the
.... miners back oo work and is expected to invoke the Taft-Hartley law.
.

:~:~

,:::

:.,•:.: .'!:···

Gov. James A. Rhodes has

sajdtt~;~~0~1il he sees wbat tile president does

.•,·

::;:

=:·.:'.

i
:..··· ·
...
• .....
···'

~?

&lt;·:

::::

.:.:
::::
::::
::::
:,::
:. •.•:..
)

before he Institutes a plan ofactlon oo keep Ohio's coal-stai'VI)d electric utilities running. · .·'..

::Wre:.m~:::n ~!~:k

'1:..·''.1·'.

UMW members say they
under provisions of tile Taft.
Hart;ey law unless President Carter also nationalizes the coal industry.

..

:'!h~:~~w~ic~h7f ~~::e"d ~·~

Save for the Day .

~iuw~:~ro~eea7n~~·~l·":.·

Uoiled Presslnten18tlonal
At least sev.en people were
killed in weekend traffic
accidents around the state,
an Ohio Highway Patrol
spokeswoman said ooday.
The only multiple-fatality
mishap occurred Friday
night. Roger F . McGlone and
David Belcher, both 19 of
South Webster, died in a one·
auto!llobile accident on Ohio
140 In Scioto County.
The state's non holiday
weekend roadway death
count runs from 6 p.m.
Fridays until midnight
Sundays.
· Friday Night
Warren :
Joseph
t: .
Williams, · 16, Blanchester,
killed iii one-:ear accident on
Ohio 28 in Warren County.
Portsmouth: Roger F.
McGlone and David Belcber,
both 19 of South Webster.

~Y~Ei!~~~Ii:~~~~;:
)
pa

presidents wm make the trip
which is an annual event
sponsored by the Ohio Fann
B_ureau Federation (OFBF).
According to Wallace
Hirschfeld, OFBF president,
" The presidents will be
making every effort possible
to convey the farmer's
message to the lawmakers.
Some farmers in Ohio have
made it through a pretty
rough year and they (the
presidents) will be trying to
make the future brighter for
agriculture producers.''
In addition to meeting with
congressmen at a breakfast
session on March 15, the
OFBF delegation will meet
with U. S. Secretary of
Agriculture Bob Bergland;
Barbara Bloom, deputy
administrator, EPA; John
·Gilligan, administrator of
AID (Agency for In·
ternational Development);
Jim Starkey, Agricultur'l
Specialist with the Office of
Trade Negotiations; Lynn
Daft, While House advisor on
agriculture, and Dr. Van
Howling, chief veterinarian,
Food and Drug Ad·
ministration.
Also planned for the trip Is
a breakfast session with
Ohio's Senators John Glenn
and Howard M'etzenbawn.
" Presidents
will
be
prepared to gather specific
information from each of·
fici•' they meet. This fact
finding mission is elrtremely
valuable to lbe organization
and its members," ·s aid
Hirschfeld.
·

Score by Quarters:
1 2 3 4 Tot
Wahama
11 15 ~ 17-M
Ravenswood 20 12 !8 23-73
Olflcla!J.Burton Hickman and
Ray Redman
Preliminary Game:
Wahama (liS) Richards 7+
18; Weaver 1-2-14; Rou.tlt 4-814 ; Rawlings :1-l-6; Sayre 0.:1Z; Smith !4-2; Totals 211-!5-65.
•
RAVENSWOOD (63) Easter...
6-11; Pannell $-2-12; Brown 35-11; Varner 4·:1-10; Elkins 3-1·
7; Watson I·U; Totals 22-1963. ·
Score by Quarters:
I 2 3 4 Tot
Wa.
10 10 17 lw:l
Ravens.
21 9 16 17~
Officials: Ray Redman and
Burton· Hickman
Total 'Fouls: WahJma 22 •
Ravenswood 18

Seven die in traffic

0

:if~~:::~~::l:ra~~:::::;

a

11 and 10 points, reopectlvely.
WahJma placed three men
in double figures with Gary
Richards II the high, while
VInce Wea•er and Tim Roush·
chipPed in with H each.
WAHAMA (18)
FG FT PF TP
Buuard
6 U 2 14
Bamltz
4 $-7 o 13
Hobba
6 0.1 2 12
Bl ssing
5 0.2 3 10
e
Honaker
4 2·2 3 10
Barnltz
2 2-3 0 6
Weaver
I 1·2 0 3
TOl'ALS
28 12·22 10 88
RAVENSWOOD (7S)
FG FT PF TP
Stanley
15 ~ 4 34
Fields
7 0.1 2 14
Hilton
5 1·1 3 11
2~ 2 4
Fleming
Miller
I :Z..2 4 4
I ~3 2
Hardy
1~ 1 2
Pannell
I ~ 0 2
Fowler
33 7·10 19 73
TOl'ALS

•

Undenvriters
undertake
project

Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio

E~~c ~c:;s It will ask tile Public Utilities

:'::

r

::,,,,: : :,.: :f:::,:.,::,.,::::::l::,,::,::::.,.::::;:,::::,::::,:::::,,.:.::::::::::,".•
p·

·r e·SI"dent. •

(Continued tnm .... 1)
into production!•
.
. Frank Moore, Carter's .
chief lobbyist, said "I don't
think we're going 00 have to
ask for new leglslatlon,"
indicating at least 1!\e first
step would be Tafi-Hartley.
Eltber seizure or enforced
mediation would require coogresal011al action.
Industry sources said the
executive council of the
Bituminous Coal Operators
Association was meeting
today in Washington to decide
what to do now that the
contract is rejected and the
president is ready to act.
·Energy Secretary James
Schlesinger said Sunday, "H
we cannot get a national
agreement I believe tbal we
will have regional or
company by .company
bargaining tbat will get lbe
miners back to work."
But most officials feared
·the angry and divided UMW
would
force
new
confrontations.
They began voting Friday,
28 years to the day after
Harry Truman ordered
federalselzureoftbenalion's
coal mines in a similar
standoff. Tbe actual seizure
In tbat · case, however, was
averted.
---------Thomas Jefferson, third
U.S. president, was the son of
a civil engineer of Welsh
descent.

PRACTICAL
HOME
CHARMER
Ev.wyday preuy

dusler. Ruy several
of the many pastel
Aha des.

LINGERIE DE
2ND FLOOR

•

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, March 7, 1978

at

Commissioners approv
s~~ond nt1rsing home
Meigs County, which has
been without nursing home
facilities for Us residents,
may have two IOO·bed
facilities in the near future,
according to plans finalized
last night by Meigs County
Commissioners.
Earlier the commissioners
had given the green light to a
100 bed facility in Middleport.
Last night, all three
commissioners, Henry Wells,
Rich Jones and James Roush
voiced their approval of a
second facility and necessary
paperwork involved is ex~
pected to be worked out in the
next couple of weeks.
Meeting with lbe com·
missioners were Prosecuting
Attorney Rick Crow and
County Auditor Howard
Frank along with Bruce
Pinkney,
representing
Ameritel, builder of the tOO
bed facility; Jerry Peterson,
a bond counselor of Peterson
and Young, and Charles
Roberts, a bond underwriter
with Hereth, Orr and Jones .
During the meetirig, of·
ficials reviewed paperwork
involved in the project. It was
reported 71 documents must
be completed before the
closing of the agreement be·
tween the commissioners and
Ameritel can be completed.
. Pinkney, Peterson and
Roberts indicated practically
all of the necessary

documents are finished and
should be in the hands of th~
county commissioners for
review by the .latter part of
this week.
The 100-bed facility , if
constructed, would be buill
on eight acres known as " The
Genheimer property"localed
on former Slate Route 33.
Questions raised at the
session Monday night in·
eluded an audited financial
statement on Ameritel
operations for t977, stressing
the point that Meigs County is
not to have liability on the
proJect should it not be
successful.
Peterson indicated there is
no concern about the
financial statements.
The point was brought out
by . commissioners that
Amerilel has signed a
general contractor to do the
building.
·
Commissioner Jones said
signing a contractor was in
violation of an earlier
agreement with Anlerjtel in
which it was stated local
contractors would be given
an opportunity to bid on the
$1.6 million proJect.
Pinkney reported · the
contract was awarded so the
necessa ry paperwOrk could
progress.
He said, however, that
Amerilel feels the contract
figure is high and can get out

of it for $4,000.
He assured commissioners .
that local contractors will be
given an opportunity to bid on
the general contract before
construction ever gets underway.
P;i.kney ·outlined a list of a
number of nursing home
facilities which Ameritel has
and indicated that they are 95
to 98 capacity filled on a year·
round basis.
The local facility would be
built through Ameritel under
a group known as the
Pomeroy Health Care Corp.,

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 28, No. 227

''

~ • .t .. -·· - · · -

.f

its officers also being officers
in Ameritel.
None of the officers are
related to the general coo·
tractor already signed.
Bonds to be sold on the
project are printed and will
be sold to a variety of in·
dividuals, Peterson said. It
was learned that Amerilel
could not back out of the
project because another
facility is to be constructed in
Middleport.
The stale has indicated that
Meigs County needs 207 beds
for nursing home facilities.

Gas and
water
.
hikes sought
'

en tine

..

.
•

'

·~·

.

,. .

(

' ~1

I

}

reading and voted "no" on
approval of the first reading.
The first reading passed,
however, 5 to I.
Meeting with council was
coun· John Koebel of the Columbia
climan, who ·has
opo Gas Company presenting a
posed to the proposed rate counter proposal on a gas
increase stated he was not in · rate increase . The first
favor unless the water was proposal, turned down by
near the Meigs Senior Citizens Center , It uppear• that tile
MEIGS RESIDENTS worry ing about the erosion
improved and 10 percent of council, proposed 2.4 percent
huge pieces of ice as they broke up have taken a part of tile
caused by !be Ohio River may have additional cause to
the revenue from the waier the first year and 7.5 percent
river bank with them.
worry because of lbe ice along tile river . At this section
be put in escrow.
the second year.
Wehrung, in a letter to this
The new proposal is 2.4
newspaper
last
week,
asked
percent
the first rear and 5.0
·~:~::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:~;::;;::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::~:::~:~:::::!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::~:~
residents to attend Monday's the second year.
meeting to express their
William Young, utility ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;.;:;.: .;::.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:~:·:·: .;:;.;.
views. There were II chainnan, said he felt the •· EXTENDED FORECAST
:::·
'
~~ residents in attendance.
proposal was a good one, but
Thursday through
Wehrung
explained
he
did
·added
that
he
wanted
the
Saturday,
fair Thursday
By United Press!DteruatiOIUII
not'
want
to
default
on
bonds
minimum
rate
$4
the
first
·and
a
chance
of showers
COLUMBUS- THE STATE Controlling Board Monday
·
that
are
due:
He
also
said
he
year
and
$4.35
the
second
late
Friday
and
Saturday.
~ down' Central State University's request to spend
wsa
not
against
a
42.9
percent
year,
which
would
be
a
70
Highs
·will
be
In
the
40s or
$310,000 to replace Its president's home destroyed by tile April
1
increase
i£
something
was
cent
increase
over
the
twolow
50s
and
lows
wm
range
1974 tornadnes which ripped tbrough soutbwestern Ohio.
going
to'
be
done
to
improve
year
period.
For
15,000
cubic
from
the
upper
20s
to
the
Board members said tile proposed 3, 766-square fool, nine·
the
water
system:
feel
of
gas
the
present
rate
Is
mid ios.
room, home was too expansive for tile 2,000-sludent university
Wehrung also said officials $43.83, the increase the :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::-:;:::;:::::::::::::;:::::
at Wilberforce. Plans submitted by the Ohio Board of Regents
United Press International
coal that moved througn Ohio Sulfur Coa l Co. In Pike
indicated the home would have three bedrooms and three are looking ahead for a water first year for 15,000 cubic feet
The
Ohio
Highway
Patrol
without escorts.
County, which has urmed Its
batlls, a sitting room, a study wltb a fireplace, an ei&lt;panded treatment plant so he wants would be $44.39 and for the
SATURDAY
CUSSES
said
today
non-union
coal
However , one non-union emp loyes, says President
to
set
aside
money
for
it.
second
year
it
would
be
$46.61
l!ltchen, a $1,200 music-intercom system and large living and
A full day of classes will be shipments have been moving operator says independent Carter's decision to invoke
Wehrung indicated he for $15,000 cubic feet.
dining rooms suitable for large parties:
held
In the Meigs local freely in tile Buckeye State owners •1lll have to prolel1 the :ruft..Hartley Act will not
would vote for a 35 percent
Koebel agreed to change
School
District Saturday as and said it escorted 254 truck themselves · and said he
NEW ORLEANS - THE 5TH U. S. Circuit Court of increase, enabling the Board the minimum charge. Council the district begins making up loads Monday and ear ly knows of at least six protect non~union (.'(lffiiJHnies
aguinsl roving pickets.
'
of
Public
Affairs
to
meet
its
then
gave
the
ordinance
its
Appeals has ordere,d tbe release of 8 Texas man sentenced to
tilne lost this school year due today.
opera !Drs wbo have booby·
"We still have w protect
bond
indebtedness.
first
reading.
life in prison for bilking his victims of $230.
to weather and a teachers'
The patrol said there were trapped their property.
ourselves,"
said Corn. " He
It
was
pointed
out
that
if
tile
Koebel
will
take
the
The appeals coort Monday ruled a Teias habitual criminal
strike.
"many more" truck loads of
Rex Corn, an official of low (Carter ) has called on gover·
village
did
not
meet
its
minimum
change
back
to
his
statute imposed cruel and unusual punishment on William
nors to provide protecUon but
James Runimel and ordered his release from tile Texas State obligation, the bonding C01J1pany, hoping it will Executixe .e ditor of Sentinel, Tin1es-Sentinel
it
was not spelled out what
company
could
take
over
tile
approve
the
·
change.
If
so.
Penitentiary.
water system.
council will give the or·
kind or to what extent. I was
hoping he would request
The residents attending dinance Its other two
CLEVELAND-COLUMBIAGASOFOIDO,whlchserves
federal
troops be called up
complained
about
the
poor
readings
necessary
for
parts of nortbeastern Ohio, including Parma and Avon Lake,
and
placed
on a 24-hour guard
has avoided natural gas cutbacks to its industrial customers quality of the water and passage.
on
coal
facilities.
However,
asked
for
some
figures
on
tile
Mayor
Andrews
said
since last March I by making an emergency purchase of
until
(Gov.
James
A.)
Rhodes
water
company.
Pomeroy
will
not
benefit
natural gas.
acts we are no better off than
There are 1,200 water under the Federal Disaster
we were.
CLEVELAND -A FEDERAL JtioGE has granted tbe customers, all with meters relief for 75 percent reim·
'" It does open tile.door to M
the
group
was
told.
They
bursemenl
of
funds
spent
on
Firestone Tire &amp; Rubber Co. a temporary restraining order
Rbodes
follow what Indiana
played
with
dance
orchestras
.
were
alao
informed
that
tile
snow
remova
l.
President
Chester
L.
(Chet)
Tan·
After."
· ' preventing \be federal goverrunenl from relessing a survey 011
particularely
the
"
Klein
has
been
.doing," saJd Corn.
water
company
is
pumping
13
Carter
set
the
dates
for
the
Surviving
are
his
wife,
nehlll,
63,
South
Fourth
Ave.,
steel-belted radisl tires used on new cars. Judge John M.
Cats."
As
a
spare
time
acIndiana
National
Guardsmen
million
gallons
of
water
a
disaster
area
from
Jan.
27
to
Middleport,
a
Meigs
County
Carol
J
.
Bachtel
Tannehill
;
Manos granted the order Monday and set a full hearing on the
have
tivity,
he
operated
the
been
escorting
coal
month,
but
only
six
million
is
Jim.
31.
Pomeroy's
occurred
newspaper
nian
for
more
two
sons
,
C.
Murk
of
motion for March 17.
trucks
in
that
state.
·
Culligan
Soft
Water
Service.
Pomeroy and John V. of
than 30 years and executive
The llremaker Charges tbat tile survey undertaken last ' going through the meters. No earlier than that period.
"The
thing
that
ls
·scarlng
A
graduate
of
the
Mayor Andrews said he is editor of The Daily Sentinel
Cincinnati; a daughter, Mrs.
year Is "Wegal, biased and unfair." Portions of tile report, one could ••plain where the
highly critical of some Firestone products, were leaked oo tbe balance of the water is going · writing to Governor James and Sunday Times..Sentlnel University of Washington at Carl Lee (Janice) Peterson, me is th.al many Independent
unless there are many leaks. Rhodes, our congressman died early Tuesday morning Seattle, Mr. Tannehill was a COlumbus; two brothers, operaoors, especially those
news media !sst week.
It was also reported that and senators to see if help can at Holzer Medical Center. He member of the Heath United Eugene
and Sherman, who have experienced
Methodist
Church
in
Mid·
Oregon
;
a
sister,
Mrs. Shirley violence in the past, have
one-half
the
customers
are
be
provided.
had
been
in
failing
health
for
CLEVELAND - · THE OHIO PUBUC Welfare
minimum
users.
The
total
Pomeroy
spent
$44,000
on
dleport
where
he
was
a
choir
a
little
over
a
month.
Robinson,
Oswego,
Ore., four taken ste(JB to protect their
Department may have been bilked out of more than $250,000 in
He
was
a
member
member.
indebtedness
against
the
snow
removal,
including
grandchildren
and
his property ,'' Corn warned.
..
Born
Jan.
18,
19!5,
in
Medicaid payments, according to tile FBI, which said it is
"i personally know of six
of
the
Middleport
·
Pomeroy
water
system
is
$1175,000
not
village
·la\Jor
and
damages
Kansas,.
a
son
of
the.late
Mr.
mother·in·law,
Mrs.
Juanita
investigating dauble billing, fraudulent billing for tests never
1
mine
operators who have
that occurred.
and Mrs. Vernon Tannehill, Rotary . Club serving as Bachtel.
administered to patients and kickbacks tq pbyslclans for including interest. ·
placed
dynamite along tbe
. Most of the residents
"Meigs County is left out "Chet" as he was· af· program chairman.
Funeral services will be
ordering unnecessary lab work.
of tbelr property,"
perimeter
Over
his
long
newspaper
complained
about
damage
again
when
It
comes
to
stale
fectionately
known
by
his
held
at2
p.m.
Thursday
at
the
Allegations by the FBI were made Monday In a search
said
Corn.
"H officials don't
career,
Mr.
Tannehill
wrote
Rawlings-Coats
Funeral
done
to
appliances
by
the
new
and
federal
aid,"
.
Mayor
friends
and
co-workers,
came
warrant affidavit used to confiscate two truckloads of records
act
decisively
to prevent a
and
edited
thousands
upon
to
Meigs
County
after
the
end
Home
with
the
Rev.
Robert
water.
One
man
suggested
Andrews
stated.
from the Northern Ohio Medical Laboratory, Inc., Euclid, and
confrontation,
tbere
could be
Bumgarner
officiating.
thousands
of
newspaper
Pall·
going
deeper
with
the
well,
He
urged
those
attending
to
.
of
World
War
II.
He
had
the ArUngton Medical and Surgical Services clinic, Akron.
bearers will be his newspaper severe loss of life."
and another ssid a water write to . their represen· served as an officer in the U. stories.
S. Anny.
Even so, he found time to associatt'S iJJcluding Richard
tatives.
CLEVELAND- CUYAHOGA COUNTY Common Pleas softener would help.
pen
personalized columns, S. Owen, Larry Boyer, Dale
Wehrung
and
Mayor
An·
The
mayor
suggested
an
Mr.
Tannehill
had
no
prior
Judge Nonnan A. Filers! says jury selection In !he bribery
LIGHT DAMAGES
trill! of a pollee sergeant and collrt bailiff will get under way as· dr.ews said they inherited tile explanation be given as to · experience In newspaper his latest being "The Day Rothgeb, Hobart Wilson, Jr.,
The
Pomeroy
Fire
Robert Wingell and Bob
soon as he disposes of defense motions aimed at su(ipressing water system and are stuck why Meigs County can't get work, but what he lacked in
Department
was
called
to
with the operation and ex· assistance when the county experience he made up for in
Hoeflich.
some testina011y and evidence.
.
Mechanic
St.,
at
4:40
p.m.
pense.
had
as
much
snow
as
tile
Honorary
pallbearers
will
hard work. He was known to
Tbe motions were made Monday in the trial of Cleveland
One person suggested an northern part of the state.
his friends and co-workers for
be J . Sherman Porter, James Monday where a sanitation
Pollee Sgt. Richard Moritz; 43, a supervisor in the accident
Danner,
Fred Hollman, Bob packer truck was on fire .
engineer
be
contacted.
Council
also
suggested
14
his
dedication
and
hard
work
investigation unit, and Cleveland Municipal Court ballllf
Wehrung
explained
that
Ibis
.
new
parking
meters
are
·
in
tile
newspaper
field.
He
Roberts,
Lee W. McComas, Damages were light.
Emanuel Porter, 46, ballllf to Municipal Judge Theodore
frequently
became
involved
had
been
done
and
he
was
needed.
Fred
W.
Crow,
John Will, Ben
WUIIams.
SQUAD RUN
supposed to·be at the meeting
lou Osborne presented the in community projects
Philson and Dean Circle, all
The
Mi'ddleport
CQst of new Rockwell water through his newspaper en·
long·time friends and news·
CINCINNATI - PROPOSED FEDERAL legislation to but did not appear.
Emergency Squad was called
Wehrung added "Evidently meters: a 250 would cost deavors.
paper associates.
give a $500 tal credit to people patronizing private schools
\be engineer Is not going to $35.75 each; 250 • 500, $35; 50Q..
Through the years, he was
Friends may call at the to Cole St., in lower Pomeroy
would only hurt education, complaina Rev. Jesse Jackson.
funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 at 6:32a.m. Tuesday for Sam
Jackson, director of tbe Chicag&lt;Hlased People United to come back with a workable 750, $34.~. 750-1,000, $33; with an avid sports fan and in
a $3.50 trade·in on old bronze earlier years worked with the
lo9 p.m. Wedaesday and until Fry who was Ill. He was taken
Save Hwnanlty (PUSH), sal~ Monday that such a program solution."
It was pointed oct there are and $150 for a klllo check tile Little League basebali'teams.
lime of services on Thursday. to Holzer Medical Center.
would "bankrupt urban education, continuing the pattern of
He
was
adept
in
all
phases
of
Burial will be in Riverview
polarization and hostlllty which makes our culture da,ngerous two new members on the meters.
NEW HOURS
Board of Public Affairs. Both
The meeting ·was opened new!IJlllper business having
Cemetery.
and unlivable."
.
CHESTER ~ Postmaster
are competent men and are with prayer by tbe Rev. learned the mechanical
Opal Eichinger has an·
CLEVELAND HEIGHTS - ABOUT 200 CITY resident&amp; trying to work out a solution. William Mlddleswarth. At· aspects when he first came to
nounced new hours for the
The new rates for the water tending were Mayor An· · Pomeroy when The Sentinel
attended Monday night's city council meeting to urge
post office in Chester. The
lawmakers oot to enact an abortion control ordinance similar . will increase tile minimum drews, Dr. Harold Brown, was In the process of
window
will be open from
Periods
of
rain
or
snow
rate from $4.20 to $6 and the Jim Neutzling, Larry Powell, becoming a daily newspaper.
to one approved last week by Akron council.
8:30
a.m.
until 12 noon and
tonight
and
Wednesday,
with
Versatile, Mr. Tanoehlll
Young
and
Council last month was· preaented with petitions bearing proposed turn on and off fee Wehrung,
from
I
to
4:30
p.m. Monday
lows
tonight
in
the
upper
20s
Osborne, councilmen, Jane alao played a trombone and,
4,000 olgnatures of resldenla asking tbal the local abortion to SIO.
through
Friday
and from 8
or
lower
30s
a.
n
d
highs
lrequently
during
his
earlier
ordinance be amended to place mere reotrlctlons on abortion . Wehrung voted "no" on Walton, clerk and Chief Jerl
a,m.
to
I
a.m.
on
Saturday.
Wednesday
in
the
upper
30s.
C.
L.
TANNEHILL
years
in
Meigs
County,
he
giving the ordinance tile first WebSter . .
cl.lnl•
Operations, as sougbt by anti,aborllon advocates
;
'
l't
II
!
"'

I!News. . •in

Briefs\~!

Non-union coal
has been ntoving

C. L. ( Chet) Tannehill~
63, claimed early today

Weather

�r-----------,

3- The Da,ily Sentinel, Mtddleport-P&lt;moroy, 0 ., Tllesday, March 7, 1171
2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, March 7, 1978

--•

One more step and it's the year, .. m !ott hol'lll
"Phase Three," in Kansas
wltb defending District H
City, Mo., lor Coach Art
champion Ceutrat Stale at
Lanham's Rio Grande
Lyne Center Weduesday
College Redmen .
night at.8 o'clott.
Monday night, before a
Central Stale, 15-10, upset
near-capaci ty crowd. the De!lance, 89-M, in Monday's
Redmen
elim i nated other semifinal contest at
Wilmington'S Quakers, 8HI, Defiance. Defiance bowed oilt
in semifinal action or the 1978 with a 19-8 season record.
District 22 NA!A Tournament
It was a team victory for
at
Lyne
Center. the Redmen Monday night as
Rio Grande, now 21-7 on Coach Lanham's crew led aU
the way in posting their 14th

consecutive home court

...

triumph this winter.
Sophomore Greg James led
Rio's scorers with 24 points.
He controlled both boards
with 21 rebounds . Dan
Purcell pumped in 18
markers.
Vince Phelps came of! the
bench , chipping In with six
assists and nine points. Mark
Swain popped in 13 points and
had live assists lor the

•
••
••

~

.

BOYS RESERVE BASKETBALL - Kneeling I to r,
Joe Boyles, David Brown , Mike Hayman, Keith Wolfe,
Manager Bryce Buckley, Gene Cole, Ray Werry, Brett
Brian Bissell, Dan Spencer, Jell Goebe l, Don ,Eynon,
Coach Duan e Wolfe , Manager Bruce Wolfe,,•ifl •&lt;1 '!i ··!IH Matthews, Ken Chapman. Standing, 1 to r, Greg Wigal,
,J i'r•Jl ~~,;H 'J'J9t2 J:t l'limd.

1977-78 EASTERN VARSITY BASKETBALL TEAM
- Left to right, Manager Bryce Buc·klcy, Asst. Coach, J oe
Mitchem, Ed Chevalier, Randy Browning, Rusty Wigal,

•'

""...

Mark Norton, Leonard Myers, Joe Bowers, Bob
Barriliger, Rick Long, Coach Joe Mitchem.

••••

..

winners while Gil Price

..-

tallied 15 points, picked off 14
rebounds and was credited
with !ive .assists despite beln~
double and triple teamed by
the Quaker~.
Skipper Johosoa and Dan
Blse each had lour point.

--.
*•

••
••

..•

Eastern high

•

--..
ft

•
•
'

~

•

••

-.-...
-,...,.

cage teams

•

.•EAGLE VARSITY CHEERLEADERS - Left to· right, Betsy Riffle, Mary Mora,
Captain ; Brenda Frecker, Brenda Boyles, Karen Probert.

Standing 1to r, Coach Susan Thompson, Laurie Matthews,
Becky Windon, Kaleen Millhone, Teresa Hannum, Lita
Young , Brenda Riffle, Denise White, ma nager.

n Miami can get by the
By GENE CAUUI!;,S
UPI Sports Writer
mighty Warr!ors, the next
Now that Miami has locked stop lor the Redskins woold
up the Mid-American Confer- be the Mideast Regional in
ence basketball title, Coach Dayton where they woold
Darren Hedric can get a meet the winner of the first
couple o! good night's sleep. round game between No. 1
rated Kentucky and Florida
But, it won't last.
Miami, which earned tbe State. Sleep tight, Darrell.
"The only thing I was
MAC's NCAA · Tournament
berth with its 84~7 win over working on was winning the
Eastern Michigan Monday (MAC) championship," said
night, steps right from the Hedric after his team's
frying pan into the fire with rather easy win Monday
defending national champioo night. "I did not look to the
Marquette Hedric's next NCAA Tournament. I'm ·
headache.
tickled to death that we won it
The Redskins earned tbe outright.! dido't want to go in
right to take on the third- to the playoff situation ,"
ranked Warriors Saturday at . Had Miami lost to Eastern,
the Indianapolis Market it would have thrown the MidCourt St.
Square Arena in a first round Am race into a three-way tie ,
Pomeroy, 0.
NCAA game.
among the Redskins, Toledo
,and Central Michigan, which
------------~------1 beat
Bowling Green 82-77 in
overtime Monday night, and
forced a two-day; three-team
playoff for the tourtlament
berth.
· Veterans Archie Aldridge

GOESSLER'S
JEWELRY
STORE

..

SECURITY

·•

•

-

'

•,

EIGHTH GRADE BASKETBALL TEAM- Kneeling
1 tor, Robbie Smith, Charles Ritchie, Rodoey Spurlock,
Greg Cole, C. J . Morlan , Roger Gaul, Scott Van Meter,

Tracy Hein, manager. Standing 1 to r, Don Spurlock,
manager; Ed Riffe, Mike Bissell, David Woll, Tim Dill,
John Riebel, Charles Massar, Coach Archie Rose.

l!lld Randy Ayers took charge
of things lor Miami Mooday
night, combining for 45 points
to lead tbe way .
Led by Aldridge, the
game's high scorer with 24
points, and Ayers, who bad
21, Miami bolted oot to a 33-16
lead and never was seriously
threatened, holding a 40-26
margin at intermission.
The Miami lead reached 22
points on three occasions in
the !ina! 20 minutes, before
Hedric pulled his starters.
Eastern'made a final run at
the Redskins, trimming the
margin to 10 points with just
under three minutes le!t. But
Hedrlc rushed his starters
back into the game and they
quickly restored order. .
.
"We didn't have to tell
them the importance of the
game," Hedric replied when
asked if his team was up for
the game. "This is the only
kind or championship you
should have, when you win it
outright." ·

I

EUttr n Contert nct

the same alt er Sk ipper
Johnson 's "dunk" with 10:27
remaining . That made it 69-

56.

l.ilbens ltaUonal ....

rti
' o:- l ·I

We're the bank you can count
on for all your financial needs.
Our experienced staff can help
you plan for present and future
security foryou and yourfamilv.

•. f.

SEVENTH. GRADE BASKET BA LL TEAM Kneeling I to r, Keith Bentz, Scoll Justis, Tom Pullins,
Mike Cullins, Mike Connolly, Mark Gaddis, Roger Bissen,
Mark Riddle, Bill McClure. Standing l lo r. C&lt;&gt;ach Dermis

Eichinger, Rodney Tripp, Jim Bauman,.Mark Rite, Marll
Halter, John Davis, David Gaul, Bt'ia n Welt;· Mike •·
Whitlatch, Jim Carter, Jerry Larkins, U,onard Koenig . ·
:.:.:::~ ::::;::;::::::::;:::: .;::::. :::.:.;.:::. ::; .; :;.:. :::':. :.:. :.:':; :.:.:

Eastern .gals to take
on Portsmouth East 5
,,

The Eastern girls cage Vida Weber, a Junior, will be
tea m, Sectional champs, will the guards. Both had strong
trave l
to
Chillicot he games in the team's 42-401win
lomorro w nigh t to open play over Southern in the Sectional
in Distrit1 competition . The finals luol Seturday.
Heck} Wi ndon, another
opponent will be a strong
Portsmouth East club that ~"' ·' ·Hl l.Jf• at the center
had len points in
boasts an 18 1 record a11d a p
the
wm
and
controlled the
See'· nal championship.
s.
Lila
Young a nd
board
\ :a, ... time is 6:30 at
Kal een Milhoan,
both
· ( Nllicothe High School.
The sta rting five for . sophomores, will be .the other
Bastern will be as foliows: t wo starters.
The Portsmouth cl ub
,.. ,rn Batey. a ·senior, and
boasts an 87 percent win

••

.

£

average over the past three
yea rs, but has a nucleus o!
underclassmen. J unior Liz
Deemer was all-league and
averaged 21 -po ints per game
this past season. Sophomore
Fra n ci s
Montg omery
ave raged I! poi nts per
cont est while. so phomore
Candy Miller was the team's
center and leading rebounder. One weakness o! that
team might be their lack or
height . Their tallest player
stands at !i'9".

;.\ J?ean Hawk
'{'
·'" .' ph'iJtos
::;:
-....
.
'

. ,. •:, .·
.'•'•'.
,:,:

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

LOUISVILLE , Ky. (UP!)
The Univer sity o!
Louisville fil ed a $200,1100
damage suit in Jefferson
Circuit Cou rt Monday against
the University of Nevada-Las
Vegas.
The sc hool sued ·arter
UNLV inlormed the school
last week it would not play
the Cardinals Monday night
as scheduled . The suit seeks
the damages, noting that the
game at Freedom Hall was a
sellout a nd was to be shown
on local television .

Gffil.S JUNIOR IDGH BAS.KETBXtL TEAM ::... ,
Kneeling 1 ~ r, Kathy Ritot¥e, Lisa Collins, Rhonda
Riebel, Renee Riebel, Kelli Headley, Alls&lt;ln Cauthorn, ·
By Greg BaUey
Many lamlUes at this time of year are wrapped up
in basketball, and such Is the case of the Etclilnger ·
.!amUy of Chester. Charles, a graduate of Eaotern High
and oon or Opal Elchlnr!er, is a..totaot coach at
Columbus MIHUn. The Mlffiio team Is 23-4 on the year
and wtll be playing in the Regional Tournament at
AtheM this Friday. This Is the second straight year
Mt!flin has advanced to the Regiona1s.
, Another Eichinger son, Dennis, Is In his first year
o! coaching and his Eutern High Seventh Grade Is
playlnr! In their toiU'IIIIIIeat in the finals at Racine
tonight.
Mrs. Eichinger's daughter Is a member of tbe
Eastern girls team that won the seellonal at Trimble
Saturday and will be going to Chi!Ucolbe Wednesday
for the District.

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

two decades with sevea
titles In %0 years .
On Jan. 4, Rio dropped a
72-jj2 non-league contest to

the Marauders at Central
State.
In that game, James Lewis
tallied 19 points, Bennie
Fowler 13, Steve Bayless 12,
James Morrow nine and

Alvin Javis eight.
The Marauders picked oil
47 rebounds, 12 by Javls, and
won it at the foul line, camting
18 or 26 charity losses .
But that was more than two
months ago. The Redmen are
determined to get revenge
Wednesday and earn their
first trip to Kansas City., Mo .
and the national finals since
th~ 1953-54 campaign.
Prior to Monday's contest,
.Cedarville's Dr. Don Callan,
on behall or the Mid-Ohio
Conference and District 22,
presented plaques to Greg
James, who reeently made
honorable mention AllDistrict 22 and !irs\ team AllMOC; Gil Price, MOC and
District 22 " Player-of-theYear";
Tim
Wilson ,
Wilmington, top rebounder in
Distrit1 22 .and Rio Grande
Co~ch Art Lanham, who was
named Mid-Ohio Conference
"Coach-of-the- Year."
Box SCore:

WILMIN.GTON 1811
O' Dell 4-2-10; Howard 0-0-0;
Piehuta 5·0-10 ; Henry l -2-4;

Wilson 11 -4-26; Bibbs 3-0-8;
Tucker 3-1 -7; ~nche 8-2·18.
TOTALS ll-11-81.
RIO GRANDE 1871 Phelps 2-5-9; Royse 0-0-0;
Swain 5-3-13; Purcell 9-0-18 ;
Price 7-1· 15 ; James 12-0·24;
Johnson 2-0-4; Blse 2·0·4.

TOTALS 39-9-87.
Halflline score
Wllmlnglon 36.'

~

Rio 39

statistician.' Standing I tor, Darlene Barton, statistician;
Cassie Sheets, Wendy Elkins, Becky Ambrose, Patti
Edwards, Sarah Goebel. Team is coaclied by Miss Pam
Douthitt .

"THE
FRIENDLY BANK"

Cage standings
ALL GAMES
TEAM
WL P
Chesapeake lB 3 1339
Logon
15 3 1140
Court House , 16 7 1572
Portsmou1h-x 15 7 1426

South Point 14
Pt. Pleasant-x
13
Waverly
13
Ironton .
11
Atnens
9
;

6 1375

6 1170
6 1152
9 1232
10 1207

Fairland
9 10 1035 ·1021
OP Ravenswood-• 9 10 1173 1166
982 Golllpolls
9 11 1177 1U7
947 Wellston
6 13 1287 1381
1282 Meigs
3 16 1103 U13
1286 Jackson
3 16 994 1211
1205
)( - Still In tournament.
Saturday's results:
1088 Portsmou!ll 56 Court HoUH 54
1030 (ol)
'
1133 Ravenswood 73 Wahema 61
1226

l

•

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal

Insurance

..

16 32 40' S6

·
R eserves 'tnp

P hil a

W. L- Pet.
43 20 .683

N!W Yor k
Boston
Buflalo
N &amp;w Jrse- y

34
24
21
10

Gl

29 .540 9
37 .393 18
dl .339 2111
.t8 .250 27 1 ?

W. L. Pet. Gl
Portland
52 11 .82S
Phoenix
39 25 ,609 131 '2
~05 Ang
34 29 .540 18
Seattle
34 30 .53 1 181 '2
Golden Sf .
29 34 .460 13
Mondlly' s Re&amp;ult
Kansas Cilv 98 , Indiana 88
Tuesd11y ' s Games
Houston at New 'Y or k
Detr oit &amp;I Atla nta
Portland at New Drlelln s
New Jerse y .!I f San An tonio
Phoen i x at Den ver
Wednesday's Games
New Orl ean s a f Buffalo
Atlanta at Phi ladelphia
New Jersey at Kansa s Ci t y
New Yor k at M IIW I'IUkee
Portland a t Hovslon
Sealtle at S.!!ln An ton io
Cleveland at Gol den St.

HERE ARE JUNIOR HI GH CHEERLEADERS AT

NHL Standings
EASTERN - Kneeling 1 to r, Andrea Batey and Pum
Bv United Press International
Campbell conferenc e
Murphy. Standing, Beth Wilson; Jan Smith, not present.
Patrick Division
W. L . T . Pts .
NY Islander s
39 14 12
90
Ph ltadelph l
36 17 11
8J
Atlan ta
24 24 17
OS
NY Rl'lngers
11 31· 11
55
Smythe Dlvislo.n
W. L. T . PIS .
Ch ic ago
25 21 17
Van couver
17 33 14
48
44
Col orado
13 33 18
8 u k elbi111
Bv Un ited Press International
St. Louis
15 39 10
40
Bos ton - Reuliva t M tor
Monday
M innesole
14 43 6
34
Wllrd Curlls ROW(/ ,
Baseball
Wales conference
College
D et r oit Obta ined ri 9hl
Norris Divisi on
Bll bso n - E . Wlll i(tm OISClJl
W. L. T. PIS . Ha nded pi tch er Jock B illing ha m
r esigned a s ll lh!CII c nrrector
x .Montreat
46 9 9 10 1 fro m Ci n cinn a ti tor cu tflcl der
Joh n Va lle and p i tcher George an d basket ball conch .
L os Ange les
25 26 11
Fordhll m
Nil med Tom
Coppuz zel lo .
Detroit
25 29 9
Renewed the Penders o t Co lumtJI;, lwn d
M on tr eal Pittsburgh
20 26 17
57
Wash ington
12 40 12
30 con tra cts 01 ou !t lelders And r e IJaske tba ll coach.
West en , Kcn lucky
N !w 1ed
Daw son and Wa rnm Cr oma rl ie.
Adams Division
Cleve land ,___ R lg ht ha rideO Gene K e~ d y f r om th e Un lvrrSI
W LT. PIS .
Arkan sas
&lt;"'S · hea d
Jim Bibby was decl ared ry of
Bos ton
41 13 8
90 apJtchcr
basket ball coac h.
fr ee agen t.
Buffal o
JB 13 14
90
socce r
Ba lt imor e _._ Ren ew ed t he
Toront o
36 11 i O
82
Wash ing ton
Slgnecl mi d
pi tcher !
Tony
19 38 9
47 con lracts o f
Cle11e1and
· Chevez, Denn is M er tl n cz and llc td cr M ik e e atd c, who p ta vcct
• -clinched division title
Scd tt M cG r egor, irifl t:: lder s Kl ko last season wiln Ro ch esl er , to 1:1
Mondav's Rel!lult
Garcio and Rich Dauer and one yea r co nt ri'I CI a11d .1 1so
Buffalo 2. Montreel 1
si gned m ldtlcider s Carmine
O!J if lelder Larr y HMIOW.
Tuesday's Games
Pit tsbu r gh
Ou lf ielders M ll r c antordo ol Canada and
vancouver at NY Islanders
·Oma r
Mor eno and M iguel M anu tJ I , Roa Qf Ar gen iiM on
Atlanta M Philadelphi a
one m ont h t rial!!.
Oi!one ret urned sig ned con
St . Lou is at Boston
trac ts.
Hockey
Wednesday ' s Games
De tr oit Re call ed Derek
Football
Cleveland .al NY Rang e r ~
Toron to ~ CF U
,...
Signed , Sandc r ~o 11 and Jotm ' Hllworth
NY Islanders at St . L ou is
runn ing bac k Terr y M etca lf , tro111 the Kc111SitS Ci t y f or m
Vancouver at Allent i!l
Who pl ayed out h is opt ion witt1 cl ub .
Washington at Montreat
Sf. LO uis 01 th e N FL .
Colorado at Pittsbur gh
Signcct trCe
Wash i ng ton
Los Ang e les a t r ·o ronto
.1 yen t d et ensivc linem en R011
Chi cago at M l nne s o t~
Sulh1 hint
Prui tt and Stan Va r nt'r

"

""

Play resumes
•
zn cage tourney
Two teams from 1the sixth
grade won berths in the finals
p!
the
Meigs
Local
Elementary cage tournament
last night. Rutland will meet
Bradbory on Thursday at
7:30 lor the championship.
Last night, Rutland bea t
Harrisonville 41-12 and
Bradbury downed Salisbury

and Shad Will iams 1,
Harrisonvill e; Paul Ri ggs
and Eugene Phillips fou r
each, and Mike Cline and
Ma rty Cline two each.
Bradbury was led. by Chris
Burdette and Dave Foltrod
with 12 each. Jim Farley had

34-2!1.

Aeiker each hud two.

Scorers fOr Rutland were :
David Barr 14, Eddie Bishop
12, Shawn Eads 8, Mike
Willord 4, day Whittington 2,

Salisbury: Jay Evans 19,
Randy Carl 6, Jac k Howct\ 2,
and Paula Swind ell a nd
BaiTy O'Brien each I.
Tonight in the fourth and
filth grades, Pomeroy Wright
goes against Pomeroy Korn
at 6:30 and then Bradbury
again st
Cassell
goes
Salisbury at 7:30. The winners advance to the final s on
Thursday at 6:30. All ga mes
are played at the Meigs
Junior High .

College Buketball Results
By United Press International
east
Owing 83, SI.Jno Fshr 74
St . Thos 94, Bloomfld 68
South
Aubu r n 107 , Tenn . 94
Florida 86 , Georg ia 68
Kentucky 79, Vandy 68
LSU 103, Alabama 85
Miss . 61, Miss . St . 60

CentMich:11:.~e~{ng Grn 77

cheered him in '73 and '74
began to lustily boo him.
Billingham, one of the most
likeable ballplayers around,
was hurt deeply by the fans'
rejection . .
Detroit fans may give him
another chance, but II' rst· he
must prove himsel! in spring
training to the Tig~rs 1
offlcials.

DISTRIBUTORSHIP

The M~lgs Girls' Reserve
Basketball Team of Coach
Glenna Sprague cloaed out
the season with a 20-15 victory over Gallipolis.
April King was leading
scorer with 14 and Debbie
Woodyard was leading
rebounder with 15. Andrea 1
Riggs had 6 assists, U I
rebounds and two points; I
Sara Diddle had four points I
and eight rebowuls and Shari I
Drehel had seven rebounds I
I
and three lllllsts.
The Meigs team overall I
reeord Is !J-.5.

four whil e Jenny Mcudows,

Andy la nna rclli , and John

Su tin is Hno in its pl ace but
the offi ce isn' t it. Kcc r)

dothcs IRilorcd uml i.Ju s rn Css~

lik e th er e.

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GMAC FINANCING
99'2 -Sl42

Pomeroy

Ope'! Evenings 'til6: oo

Til s p.m. Sal.

Chi St. 81. Ol i vet Naz 67
E . Ill. 79 , Ind . St. 67
Grnd Val 62, Hillsdle 56
Miami 0 . 84, E. Mich. 67
Notre De me 83, Loyola 68
Quincy 84, St . Xavier 69
St. JoS 93, 'N . Ky . 87
St. JM 92, Gusta¥US 66 •
Southwest
Mdwstn 103, Way lndBapt. 100
West
cent wash . 76, E . Wash . 59
Whiffler 77 , Biola Coli . 61

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

GAHS,. 20 to 15

Sports transactions

•

ace o!the stair who had !allen w~ helped work out th~ deal,
to
1 tbe bottom o! the srudrecentlythatDetrOitwas
~e.ar '1.
lookmg for a 11 veteran
roster m 1977, barely starter."
managed a laugh and agreed,
Billingham is certainly a
"That's a good question."
veteran
Tod~y, Billingham f~lly
He's ·beginning his 18th
had_his answer - Detrott.
season in pro ball, counting
Bdlingbam, 35, was traded seven in the minor leagues.
Monday by the Reds to the
FinaUy making it to the
J:&gt;t:trott Tigers for a couple of majors in 1968 with Los
mmor leaguers - pltcher Angeles as a reliever
~rge Cappuzzello and out- Billingham was traded, tm:
fielder John V~le.
, .
next season to Houston,
. Havlnglosthisstarters]ob where he was turned into a
•n Cincy last year and starter
relegated to the bullpen,
Billu;gham came to Cincy
Billin~ might hove a shm alter the 1971 season as part
at a starting ass1gnment m of 811 earthshaking trade _
De~01t. ,
.
the Reds getting Joe Morgan,
Tigers scout Jack Tighe, Cesar
Geronimo,
Ed
Armbrister, Denis Menke
and Billingham in exchange
lor Lee May, Tommy Helms
\ and Jimmy Stewart.
Billingham's best season in
baseball came in 1973 when
he started 40 gamea, went 1910 and had a 3.04 earned run
average . Even though
II foul shots and 25 of 60 field Billingham went 19-11 in 1974 '
be started slipping a little
goal attempts for 42 percent. that year - his ERA going up
Meigs hit 7 or II foul tries to 3.95.
and canned 32 of 81 shots
His record lowered and· hls
from the floor for 39 percent. ERA climbed in each o! the
MeigS meets Waverly in next three seasons - lfl-10
Distrjct play Thursday.
and 4.11 in 197~,12-10 and 4.32
Box score:
in 1978 and 111-10 and 5.22 in
MEIGS (711 - Brown 8-1- 1977.
17; Burdette 1-0-2; Epple 11-3Managing to complete only
25; Vaughah 9-0-18; Wilson 2- th
1 th 23
he
0-4; Chapmon 1-2-4; Bartrum
ree 0
e
games
O-t-1. Totals 32-7-71. .
started
last
season,
Gallipolis (561- Nibert 6-0- Billingham was banished to
12; Daniels 6-0-12; Young 2-0- :- the bullpen and made 13
4; Abels 1-0-2; Groves 6-4·16; appearances in relie! But he
Nelhm 1-0-2; Fraser 3-2-8.
. . •
·
Totals 25-&lt;i-56.
kept giVIng up runs and got no
By Quarters&gt;
saves.
~~~·
19 33 51 71 . Fans who had wildly ·
A S

Atlantic Dlvls iGn

Rio went Into a semi-stall
Central D!vi slon
during the !ina! live minutes
W. L. Pet. GB
San Anton
39 U .619
o! act ion enroute to its 21 st Wash
3; 29 . 540 s
victory of the campaign.
Cle vl111 nd
31 ll ,484 81'1
31 34 .477 9
Central State is the team NAtelanta
w Ortuns 31 35 ..t 70 91 i
which kept Rio !rom ad- Houston
:i'ol 41 .369 I ~
Western Conltrenc: e
vancing to Kansas City last
M idwest Division
winter, upsetting the Redmen .
W. L. Pc:t . GB
82-64 in semi-final play at " Denver
oiO 24 .625
ilw
JJ Jl .516 7
Lyn e
C enter . M
Chicago
JJ 32 .508 71'1
lu facti the Marauders
DetrQil
30 33 .476 91 2
Kan City
15 39 391 IS
have dominated District Z!
In diana
23 41 .359 17
post-season pl~y the past
Pacific D il.d t lon

Angels, ·71 to 56
... BEGINS · AT

I

'
NBA Standing s
lwo Unitt'd Prus International

Meigs gals whip
The Meigs girls basketball
team capped of! a succesa!ul
season last night when they
downed visiting Gallipolis 7156 in an SEOAL contest. That
11!\ the gals of coach Joy
Beniley finish at lU with a
Sectiooal champlonahlp and a
trip to the District at Waverly
Thursday.
Showing Improved
teamwork, Meigs got a
· balanced scoring attack by
placing three girls In double
figures. Vicky Epple led all
scorers with 25 points whlle
Pat Vaughan ll!ld Glenda
Brown had 18 and 17,
respectively. Brown cleared
the boards with 16 rebounds
of her team's 47 while Terri
. Wilson had 13. Meigs
outrebounded Gallipolis 4729. Vaughan was also praise&lt;!
by Coach Bentley for playing
an outstanding game, along
with Epple.
Meigs had tbe lead most of
the way, leading 19-16 at the
first quarter and 33-32 at the
hall. But In the third ~riod
the hoss really· broke away
~nd buUt up a comfortable
lead that allowed the bench to
play most of the fourth
quarter.
Gallipolis was led by Janet
Groves who tallted 16
, marlters while Tina Nibert
and Karen Daniels each had ·
12 points. The visitors hit 6 of

I

,

BiHingham is traded .,
By RICK VAN SANT
CINCINNATI (UP!) - It
was the _last day of the
disa~pomtmg 1977season and
Cincmnat1 Reds pitcher Jack
Billingham was trying to
tighten thmgs up :-&gt;me.
He poked a tittle goodnatured. fun . at a close
s~rtswr1~r fneod.
Wbere d you get those
~oes?" laughed Billingham.
I bet tho~ were ruce - 20
years ago.
.
The sportswnter had ·a
bittersweet comeback.
, "Say Jack," lH; grinn~.
wbere do you th~, you re
gonn~ be next year.
.
Billingham, the one-tune

JV CHEERLEADERS - L to r., Lori Longcnetle, Dawn Sorden, Beth Headley, capta in; Sherrie Starcher;

Angel Blake.

the clock. l)an Purcell's short
jumper at the 18:35·marlt put
the Redmen ahead to stay.
It was tied at lkU with
13 :19 left in the first ball.
Wilmington trailed by one, 1&amp;15, with 8:37 left and 22-21,
with 5:50 sbowing on the
clock.
Rio broke It open during the
next two minutes on goals by
Price , Phelps, Bise and
Phelpa lor a i!G-21 advantage
at
the
3:57
mark .
The Redmeo were up by
ten, 39-zt, at the l :OZ mark
before Cbrto Tucker poured
to live quick polnto and
WUsoo two to reduce Rio's
lead to three, 39-31, Just
before the halftime In·
terml88loa.
The Quakers cut Rio's lead
to one agabl, 39-38, but goats
by James and Purcell got the
Redmen rolling in the second
hall.
Two steals by Swain gave
Rio a 51-42 advantage at lbe
16:31 mark and when Purcell
led Swain with a beautiful
pass for a layup at the 11:11
mark, Rio was on top by 15
points, 67-52.
The Quakers were never

Miami MAC champion

•

boys and girls

aDd Dille Roy..,, the etr;blh
Rio plllyer to - acttoa,
did aaether 1ood job or
1ett1nc the baD lulde to the
big mea.
Rio Grande connected on 39
of 77 field goal attempts for
50.6 percent. The Redmen
were nine ol13 at the !oulline
for 69,2 percent. Rio picked
of! 37 rebounds and had 16
turnovers.
Wilmington, a member of
the tough Hoosier-Buckeye
League, was paced by big
Tom Wilson who scored 26
points and picked of! 19
rebounds.
Chuck Menche chipped In
with 18 points. Kev O'Dell and
Mike Plehuta each added 10
markers lor the losers.
Coach John Ferguson 's
Quakers connected on 35 or 73
field goal attempts lor 45.2
percent. The visitors were 11
or 17 at the foul line lor 64.7
percent. Wilmington picked
of! 39 rebounds and had 24
turnovers.
After Mark Swain's jumper
put Rio on top 2-0 at the !9:38
mark, the Quakers tied it up
at 2-all on Piehuta's long
jumper with !8 :!i9 showing on
•

~

VARSITY GIRLS BASKETBAU. - Knee'ting 1 tor ,
Jeannie McClur e. Te rry Sorden, La ura EiclUnger, Kim
Batey, Vida Weber, Renee Trussell, Pebbles Blake.

: Pro :
:Standings I

Rio one step from national finals
after 87-81 victory over Quakers

WILL NOT INTERFERE WITH PRESENT
EMPLOYME.NT
NO SELLING REQUIR-ED
We .rtstlectlng distributors for ••• , moving products
In Pomeroy, MiddlepOrt and surrounding counties.
Thtst product• pobllclzod In newspapors, TV,
Inagozlnes, etc.
.
Twenty yur old company will ptoct produc!s In
grocery, dtplrlmlllll, drug 1toru, ,.,... :norkots, gift
lhops, etc. Distributor will ltrvlcett\tse rotoll outlets
monthly, requiring IPPtoXImatoly 20 hours IPirt limo
psr month. CPA
$99 11111 up possible profit por
doy. Figure tltt Income you c!Hirt per month. Each
location requires 1200 invtttmtnt. You may h1ve 2S, 1~
or 35 locotlons. COmpany stcurtslocatlons and Installs
products for you. .
·
Tills ill bonoftdo-rond If you ore not 1lncere about
owning your own builnoss, or do not mHt tltt obove
financll requlrtmtl1ts, let's not waste tach oth•r's
limo.
FOR PERSONAL CONFIDENTIAL INTERVIEW,

'

r"*"

CALL

Mr. Ruu COitlll, Porktnburg, 304-422-5401 Todoy thru
Wodntsdoy-9 a.m. to 9 p,m., S.E.I., CUMMING, GA.

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•

�4- The Daily Semmel, Middleport-P ..neray, i ) . 'l't: &lt;·';(lay. ~t,.,ch 7. 1978

5- The OaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pameroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Mardl7, 1977

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RAP :
Your advice, "II you have doubts, don't" is good. Young
women (or men ) shouldn't be pressured into sex by their dates
or friends' talk, or anything but their own desires a nd beliels.
Now to the qu~stion, " [)Q you regret having had premarital
sex?" No,+&lt;len't.l l'm a 2$-year-&lt;~ld teacher, happily married
lor three years.
The thought of regret over past experiences never crosses
my mind -or my husband's. I lived with him a year before the
wedding because n.either of us felt ready to marry anyone at
the time.
I come !rom a conservative midwestern family. Although
my parents and I are close, thoughts of " letting them down "
are ridiculous. I was raised to think for myself, which doesn't
always include pleasing my mother, lather, husband, or
anyone else. My decisi.on was my own, and r•m glad l made it. WHAT'S THE BIG DEAL?
P.S. HoW does the vote, for and against, now stand'?
DEARWTBD :
.
Lately the ltWe don't regret our premarital sex" crowd has
lorged a head. The vote now stands, one-third regretlul, twolhirds, not.- HELEN AND SUE
RAP:
Seems that men who played around most are those who
never lei their wives forget t hey "!ell" before the wedding
night. When the day comes that !lien regret losing their virgini1
ty pre-marriage, I'll consider regret too.- EQUAL
EDNA E. EDNA:
That day isn't just around tbe bend, believe us ! - HELEN
AND SUE

so·dal

.·..-.·.....~~..... ~.. R

r·:-~

COLGATE
REGULAR ~

$1 .29Va lua
f'.I.P. Price ...

j ..

n::

?:::

INSTANT SHAVl

1OCalend~r
?:

11 oz .

·59¢

TI.IESDAY
POMEROY CHAPTER 186,
O.E.S., reuglar meeting, 7:45
at the Masonic Temple. Last
month for members to pay
dues.
XI GAMMA MU Chapter ol
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will
meet at 7: 30 p .m~ Tuesday a t
the home ol Mrs. Doris Ewing. Co-hostesses will be Mrs.
Ruth Riffle and Mrs. Susan
Oliver. Mrs. Janet Peavely
will present the cultural
report.
CHESTER COUNCIL 323,
Df:lughters of America, 7:30
Tuesday .at the ha ll. GOtJti vf
the O!'der committee lu have
a :lilent C£ ut:lion.
ANN UAL BIRT HDAY
party ol Drew Webster Post
39, Amer ican Legi(m, 7 t his
evening at post home ror
mem bers and auxilia ry

March Into Spring

OIL
OF OLAY
4 oz.

~j:;_-;.·~= ....$~9
CLOROX
BLEACH
64 oz .

OLD SPICE
STICK DEOD.
2.5oz.

'-~ ~~i-~. ~~=. .98¢
RAGU

garden club meet

WHEN IS PARENTS' JOB DONE?
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
Our 2(}-year-&lt;~ld son has always been a good kid. He has a job
in a service station lhatonly pays mlnimwn wages, so he's living at home. He's shy but had few problems until be got involved with a 14-yea r-old whose mother thinks it's okay. She lets
her daughter stay out till 2 a.m. on weekends. Our son bought
her a $7~ car coat. and now he's bought a $300 tape deck. The
worst part is he forged his dad's name on the contract as c&lt;r
signer ; and he's reneged on paying for ,his car which his Dad
signed for. Instead ol paying his debts, he buys this girl
jewelry, etc. How can we show him how wrong she is lor him?MOM
·
DEAR MOM :
Why don 't you stop treating your son like a child? He's 20,
has a lull-time job, is able (!hough barely on mlnimwn wages)
to be out on his own.
Let him take responsibility lor his debts and his girl lriend,
and il he can't manage, then teU him he'll sufler tbe consequences, withoul parental rescue. We lhink he' Dgrow up when
he realizes he must, because, as you say, he's "always been a
good kid. "- HELEN AND SUE

ADOLPH'S
·DAIRY VALlEY

members and their lamllies.
Spea ker, Bob Morris; organ
musicby Armand Turley and
relreshments.
WEDNESDAY
REGULAR
MEETING
Pomeroy Chapter 80, RAM,
7:30 p.m. at temple; reg ular
meeting of Bosworth Council
46, R&amp;SM, 8 : 1~ p.m.
JUNIOR American Legion
Auxiliary, Drew-Webste r
Post 39, Pomeroy, wiU meet
at the nome or Mrs. Harry
Davis Wednesday at 3:30
p.m.
· MIDDLEPORT Amateur '
Gardeners, 8 p.m. Wednesday at the home ol Mrs. Eddie Burkett with Mrs. Grace
Pratt, co-hostess.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY-MIDD LEPORT Lions club, Wednesday
noon at the Meigs Inn.
TIIURSDA y
ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
Thursday, 7: 30 p.m. at the
hall.
. GIRL SCOUT Workshop, .
training for troop camping, 10
a.m. to 2 p.m. a t the. Colwnb
d s th n Oh El
us an ou er
'" ecInc Co. soctal .&lt;oom. Ta ke a

"Growing Orchids Indoors" was the program topic
uf Mrs. Jaml!s Dit!hl at a
meeting ol the Bend 0' The
River Garden Club hosted by
her at her Pomeroy home
Monday night.
Mrs. Diehl explained that
orchids can be raised from
seeds but that it'lakes from
five to seven years fur them
to produce. She said the best
way is to purchase plants
frum a greenhouse. She scdd
that orchids are sometimes
called the " ugly duckling or
botonical flowers ." In the
lropics they cling and grow
on tree bark.
When stal"!ing new plants
she said they should be kept
well watered with high
humidity and 14 to 16 hours or
light but no direct sunlight.
She noted that there are more
than several thousand
species of orchids and thai
nwnerous people are finding
u challenge in trying to grow
orchids.
Mrs. Andrew Cross presid·
ed at .the meeting with Mrs.
Gretta Simpson giving dewlions .. She read scripture and
then the article "Tulips of
Trust'' which eompa red the
tulip to life noting that the
beautilul bloom gone after
tile spring m u~1 be cared for
so that it will again become
strong a nd bea utiful in
another year. Sbe sa id that
when we nourish our minds
and bodies, we, too, may have
the "tulip or trust" in our
hearts sending pleasure and
happiness to others.
For roll call members named ihe maiden name of a
president's wife. There was a
short di~cussion on ecology as
to the eflects of the snow.
There were hint::; on cari ng
lor shrubbery and the lawn
and avoiding lhe danger of
the salt used on the snow. It
was pointed out that much

sack lunch, notebook and
salety-wise book. Service unit
meeting will be ·held in conjunction with the training session. Ail leaders urged to attend.
w0 MEN 's AG L 0 w
F ellowship Thursday ~~
Meigs Inn. Dinner at 1 p.m.
Reservations may be made
by caUing 992-li84~ .
FRIDAY
DANCE Friday 9 to 12 in
archery building · at Roya l
Oak Park, Sponsored by Ohio
Eta Phi Chapter•· or Beta
Sigma Phi. Admission $2.50
per pe rson. Re lreshments
will be sold. Ever yone
welcome.
·
POMONA GRANGE 8
p. m. F riday at the Rock Springs hall. Rock SP,rings
Gra nge to be host.
RETURN Jonathan Meigs
Ch apter, Daughters 0 f the
Am" ric a n
Revol utio n,
Cha rter Day luncheon, I p.m.
Fn'day a t Tn·m·1Y Churc h·
·
Good CI.t.tzens h"lp awar d wm·11 be.
t H t
ner wt
a gues · os esses
'II be M H ld s
t
wt
rs.
am
argen
· •
Mrs. R1.char d Henderson,
Mrs., P ear I Mora and Mrs.
· 1Th
Dame
O!IU!.S ·
MEETING SET
Mary Shrine 37, Order ol
th e White Shrine ol
Jerusalem will elect officers
lor the year at a meeting to be
held at 8 p.m. Friday at the
Pomeroy Masonio Temple.
All reports must be in at the
Friday meeting.

good comes from the snow,

Mrs. Esther West gave the
club poem and Mrs. Ruth
Barnitz, the dub prayer.
Mrs. Wilson Carpenter
rec&lt;ived lhe traveling gilt.
Mrs. Diehl was awarded a
ribbon lor her red and white

59¢
••

STYLE

HAIR SPRAY
Super -

13 oz.

~~i.~.~!!:.... 79¢
TONI112
112 PERM.
R og~ la r

F.l.~- ~~~= .... $199

Holzer Medical Cuter
t D!Jcbar1e• Marcb&amp;)
Hattie Adams , Virginia
Bowman, Enna Canter, Joan
Dill, William Doherty, Jr.,
Michael Doyle Jr ., Walter
Frazee, Worney Perkins,
Mrs. William Russell and
daughter, Deborah Thivener,
Jessie West .
t Births March 61
Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Bricker, a daughter, Athens ;
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Garber, a
son, Vinton; Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Myers, a daughter,
Bidwell; Mr. and Mrs.
Marshall Wolfe, a daughter,
GaU!polls.

FINDING MADE
According to State Auditor
Thomas E. Ferguson , a
linding has been liled against
the Meigs Co(Ulty Engineer's
ollice.
It was one of several
governmental units having
lindings as a result of audit
reports completed last !all .
Copies of the audit reports
are mailed to ollicials or the
un it or government concerned live days prior to the
release date.

WHAT PRICE
FARM INSURANCE?
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Russell

We will draw up a policy that will cove r
replacement costs at toclay's prices should a
tragedy strike !

_Davis

ln~urance

Agency

. "Across from the Court House"
Pomeroy, Ohio

Polly Cramer
~=..___;::...:__:_

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Spots on

her rocker· .

DEAR POLLY _ 1 have a
heavy black Colonial rocker
that has milk spots on it. 1
wish someone would tell me
how to remove them. CATHERINE
DE AR CATHERI NE Milk can tilten have the same
eflect as a mild paint
remover. It should be wiped
of! as soon ~s possible. Try
cleaning it off with a liquid
kitchen wax. If stains remain
rqb on a bit of silver polish,
wipe olf with damp cloth and
then polish or wax as usual. POLLY
DEAR POLLY - When
changing baby's diaper I use
baby oil on cotton balls or
facia l !issue instead of a
rough wet washcloth. This is
especially good. when baby
has to be changed often; it
keeps the little one's skin
lrom becoming so chapped.JOANNE
DEAR POLLY - I live in
Colorado where we have had
a drought. Our water bills are
very high. Ma ny people are
even using pebbles and stones
instead of grass. We ligure
our washer uses just over 26
gallons ol water for lhf: wash

NEWSPAPER
CARRIER
WANTED

t yc•e d liU Llle same a!)1ount
lor rinsing. I hated to see this
water just go down the drain,
so I put a small hose into the
drain 'hose and a laslen.ed it
with a clamp. I attached the
garden hose to the other end
and used this water to
sprinkle the lawn twice a
week when I did~he laundry.
The short hose was' put
through a partly opened window; in a week's time over a
hundred gallons of. waterwas
"recycled."- CECI LIA
DEAR POLLY -- My
lreezer quit while we were on
vacation and, or course, the
lood spoiled. We came home
to a terrible odor. I washed
the inside well with wa rm
water and baking soda, rinsed and dried 1·1. Next 1
ctwnpled newspaper and put
enough m· the unl·l to loosely
liU it. It was left closed lor a
few days and our problem
was solved. -GERTRUDE
DEAR POLLY - l always
en]·oy the lunnies and carloons in the newspaper and
clip out all the cute ones.
When I wrile a letter to a
lriend I select one that I lhillk
that particular person will enjoy and enclose it in the letter. They aU seem to enj oy
getting these. I receive
pleasure !rom doing it. I
always end a letter with "God
Bless a nd Keep Smiling" and
that goes lor you, too. ELSIE
Thanks, Elsie.
Polly will send you one or
her sig ned tha nk -yo u
newspaper coupon clippers if
she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve, or Problem
in her column. Write POLLY'S POINTE in care ol this
newspaper.

THE DAILY SENTINEL
BETWEEN
8 AM and 5 PM

'1

16 Ol JAR

•·129

BOLOGNA.
LB.

HOME MADE

ALL MEAT

HAM SALAD

WIENERS

79$

LB.

TOILET
TISSUE

CHESTER L. TANNEHIU.
EJ.ec!, Ed.

ROB ERT HOEFUCH
City Editor

dai ly eXcept &amp;durday
by The Oh!o Valley PublishiriH
Company·Multlm\tdia, Inc.,
Ill
Court Sl., Pomeroy, Oltio ~769 .
Busmes.s Offi1..'e Phone. !J92.:' 2156.
Editorial Phone !192-2157.
•
Second class postage paid al

HOMO
MILK

grandmother

Mah•n1al

is

Mhu1it·

t:urml, PurUu nd .

Headquarters For
Admiral Quality
Color TV's. See Us:
BAI&lt;ER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

19

99 c

LB ..

DR.
PEPPER

24 OZ. CTN.

79~

8-16 Ol

89~

BOTTlES

HOT.COCOA MIX
WITH MARSHMALLOWS

S119

12 CT.

$119

BUNS

BREAD

BARBECUE OR HOTDOG
6

ONlY

RC or
DrET RITE CO

HOLSUM

•1 00

89~

THURSDAY
CARNATION

HOT COCOA
-, MIX

Pomeroy,Ohlo.

grcat - ~n· nl ·

a

COTTAGE
CHEESE

1h Gallon .

CARNATION

.LOAVES

is

gra ndmu lhcc .

MINUTE
STEAKS

\

3

Alit:t• Fitch, Long Uulturn,

BROUGHTON

BROUGHTON

$119

12 CT.

JASON f'ITCU
BIRTH ANNOUNCED Mr, and Mrs. Kl'!th Fih'h,
Portland, urc nu1umndng
lhe birth ol their fin;t dtlld,
Jason Keith, F&lt;•b. 3 at tht·
Holzer Medil~al Ct·ntt•r. lit•
weighed seven pnuncls, fh't'
ounc~s and wus 20 iiH'hes

.~

ALL FLAVORS

1h Gal:

Pomeroy.

' NO WASTE

69~

SUPERIORS

ICE
CREAM

•

ALL MEAT

59~

CHOCOLATE
DRINK

~ r~at -gra ndm other,
Evelyn
l .o~:~ndcr s . 104 Uninn Ave .,

SUPERIORS

BACON ENDS

BROUGHTON

COFFEE MATE

NOW AVAILABI..F.
symptomless carrier of this
According
to
Ohio
gene. Current research Department ol Natural
lunded by the Cystic Fibrosis Resources water craft
Fou ndation is seeking a registration lor boats and
practical test to identify these motors ft1r 1978 are now
carriers, as well as a cure for · available at Davis Insurance
C-F and better methods or Agency, 114 Court Street,
treatment for all lung- across from the Cou'rthouse
. damaging diseases.
in Pomeroy.
Beca use of improved
treaiment developed through
SQUAD CALLED
resean;h, many C-F patients
The Syrac use ER Squad
are now living into their teens was called Saturday at 6 p.m.
and young adulthood. This lor Benny Spears, Syracuse.
same treatme nt is 3lso who was taken to Vetera ns
benefiting and often curing Memorial Hospital.
children sullering !rom other
lung-damag ing diseases.
Even with this progress, t he grows larger, and with It the
need or millions of children need for more vol unteers and
who str ugg le to brea the more funds.

Herman Grate
Mason , W. Va .

VALLEY BEU

~

is

carry the recessive gene for
C-F. l1 is believed that one in
twenty persons, or a total or
ten mUlion Americans, is a

Ronnie.

SLICED

LB,

$~~9

C-F

inherited when both parents

and Melinda Demosky,
Shelia Felly, Mr. and Mrs.
Ti m Demosky, and Mr. a nd
Mrs. Earl Deuny, Jr .. and

~

GAL

incurab le.

BABY BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Smith. Pomeroy, announee
the birth or a daughter.
Kimberly Sue, t' eb. 22 at
Holzer Medical Center. The
infant weighed five pounds
and eight ounces. Grandpa rents ure Mr. and Mrs.
l.ewi s J . Smith, Rt. 2,
Pnrncroy and Wanda Adams,
1().4 Union Ave., Pomeroy,

MAKE I..IST
Two
Ma son
County
students have been named to
the first semester Dean's List
at Parkersburg Community
College. Teresa 1... Prollitt ol
lung. Pulcrrutl ~rund·
Mason is enrolled in
purents arc Mr. and Mrs.
Executive
Secretarial . Charles (G us I Flh·h.
Science, and ·J ose ph L.
Portland, and ~rt•ut~
Seurls, West Virginia State
grandparents urt• Mr. and
Police, Pt. Pleasant, is in the
Mrs. Ca~l Filt h, 1..&lt;111~ !lot·
Law Enforcement Program.
tom, and Mrs. Adu Van
Meter, Pttrtlund. Mrs.

with Cystic Fibrosis, which is

stlll

, -FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

FRESH LEAN

'129

The Bike-A-Thon campaign

will be held during the month
or April. II you are asked to
sponsor a rider or work with
your local chairman, we hope
you will be as generous as
possible.
Approximatel y one ol
every 1,500 babies is born

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

LB.

GROUND ·
ROUN·D

brQnchiectasis.

Rowe and Jennifer, Donna
and Becky Rowe, David

FAVORITE

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OJo'
MEIGS-MASON AREA

Publis~ed

992-2156

LB.

OFFICERS ELECTED
Election or ollicers was
planned when the Meigs
County 4-H Pleasure Riders
met at the home of Julie
Elberfeld. New books were
distributed and the election
planned lor March. At the
March meeting the group will
utso discuss the possibilities
or a new horse barn on the
fairgrounds,

Cystic Fibrosis, severe ast hma chronic bronchitis, and

Mon~

19

THE DAILY SENTINEL

FOR MIDDLEPORT AREA

PHONE

GROUND
CHUCK

RYAN ROWE
TURNS ONE - Ryan
Keith Rowe, sun of Mr. and
Mrs. Jay Rowe, l'elebrated
his lirsl birthday on Feb. 24
al his home. A Mickey
Mouse theme was carried
tOJL Allendiug the party
and presenting gilts to
Ryan were his parents and
his grandparenLs, Mr. and
Mrs. William Demosky and
Mrs Virginia Rowe j great~
grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Edward Demosky;
and Mr. and Mrs. Jerry

MASON FURNITURE

FR,ESH LEAN

POLLY"$ POINTERS

Mrs. Donald M. Rousll has
been
named Hartford
Chairman ol the Breath or
Spring Bike-A-Thon to light
children's lung-damaging
diseases, according to Jay
Crouse , president of the
Cystic Fibrosis Foundation .
Mrs. Roush will lead local
volunteers in organizing a
Bike-A-Thon in Hartford to
raise funds to support
researeh and care programs
lor children arrected by lungdamaging diseases lik e

On All living Room Suites

773-5592

CONTEST SET
The aMual sewing contest
will be held when Star
Grange 778 meets at the hall
on April l. The contest is
announced now to' give
mern~rs time to get patterns
and prepare lor the event.

Mrs. Dun Roush
named cha.irma.tl

••••
'10000 ·TRADE-IN

Call 992-6677 and Find Out

Weddint: vowS . were ex- Mrs. Charles Van Meter and
changedonJan.7 at 6:30 p.m. family, Mr. and Mrs. Milford
at the home ol Mr. and Mrs. Frederick, Sr., Mr. and Mrs.
Donald L. Moore, Route 2, Milford Frederick, Jr., Mr.
Pomeroy by her son, Daniel and Mrs. Kenneth Rizer, St.
Ray Russell, and J ane Van and son, Mr. and Mrs. John
M"ter, daughter ol Mr. and Moore and family, Mr. and
Mrs . Marion Van Meter, Mid- Mrs. Ted Ward and daughter,
illeport.
Mr. a nd Mrs. Don Moore, Mr.
The Rev. James W. Broom and Mrs. Mickel Shields and
o[ficiated at the ceremony. sons, Deb bie Osbo rn e~
Ma id . ol honor was Miss Melanie SimmoQs, Harold
ta r oly n Charles
of . Russell , Jerry Halley, Gary
Minersville, and best man Gwatlney, Marilee McDade,
was Dean Pullins, Pomeroy Todd l..athey .
Route2.
A tiered wedding cake and
Guests at the wedding were other refreshments were
Mr. a nd· Mrs. Kenneih served following lhe wedding.
Wheeler and son, Mr. and

15.5 oz .
98' Valu o

STARTS MARCH It
The real estate principles
and practices course being
ollered to Meigs residents by
the continuing education
departmenl or Rio Grande
College wiU be held at the
Meigs Junior High School.
The class will held !rom 7 to
10 p.m. lor 10 weeks with the
opening class on March 14.
Total cost is $39 not
counting books. Instructor
will be Hank Cleland. Anyone
wishing inlormaton should
call 992-2259.

Miss Van Meter weds

Meatless Spaghetti Sauce

F.I.P. P rice." ...

arrangement of poinsettias
with white branches.
Refreshments w~re served
by Mrs. Diehl. Next meeting
will be with Mrs. Cross and
Mrs. Eileen Buck will present
lhe program on planting a
t-ompanion ~arden .

PARTY HELD
A surprise birthday party
was given Saturday evening
by Cheryl and Robin Wilson
and Melissa Yonker honoring
Dan Shane on his 68th birthday. Ice cream, cake and
punch were served to Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Browning and
son, Kim and his friend, Patty Warner, Dale Browning
and Cheryl Kennedy , Cheryl
Wilson and John West, Hobin
Wilson, Melissa Ym1ker, Edna Greene, Ellen Greene,
Berta Greene, Mindie Morris,
and Jamie Wolfe.

8- 16 oz.
BOtn.ES

99~

P~k

National odvertlsing represen-

tative Ward • Grifrith Cumpany
Inc., BotlinelU and Gallagher Dlv.;

4 ROLL PK.

~7

Third Ave., New York, N.Y.
10017.
Subscription mles: Delivered by
carrier where ~~ovaila ble 75 cents per

week. By Motor Route where carrier

service not ava ilable, One month,
13.25. By mail Ul Ohio and W. Va.,
~

79~

Year, $22.00; Six monLIIII,

f lUCI ; Three monthS , $7.00;
Elsewhere $26.00 year: St.. month3
$13.50; Three months , $7.SO.
Subs&lt;.Tiption price includes Sunday

Times-Sentinel.

-.

FRISKIE DOG FOOD ·

SCOT LAD

SALTINES
, 1 LB. BOX

BEEF OR
BEEF and EGG
DINNERS ,
14~

Ol

CAN

3

.,00

SUPEr MARKET - OPEN DAILY t 10 10 P.M.
SUNDAY 10 10 10

We Accept Federal Food Stamps-We ReseJW The Right To Lmil

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, March 7, 1978
~--------------------------------,

Oil minister
seeks increase
KUWAJT (UP!) - Angered
by the continued decline of
the U.S. dollar, Oil Minister
Sheikh Ali Khalifa al-Sabah
called today for a substantial
increase in oil prices to
compensate Kuwait fo r its
losses.
He said Kuwait's daily
losses beca use of the decline
were not a mere $1 miUion as
mentioned earlier by state

minister Abdel Aziz Hussein .
"The $1 million a day loss
wKuwait is unfortunately far
below the mark - it is much
more than that," Sheikh Ali
I&lt;Jld the newsJ)&lt;Ipcr Arab
Times.
"Oil prices should be incr eased substantially in
order to compensate for our
: losses or revenue resu lting
: [rom lhe dollar's decline,' ~ he
said .

Oil

ministr y

'Crisis Watch'

By United Press lnlel'l!llllooal
Aglance at the nationwide strike by the United Mine Workers Union:
Federal Action
Alter UMW members overwhelmingly' rejected~ contuct proposal by the soft coal
industry in balloting during the weekend, Presi&lt;lenl Carter Monday invoked the TaftHartley Law wtry to lorce miners back to work .

sources

estimated Kuwait was losing
about $400 million per year as
a resull of the American
currency's slippage.
Kuwait, like a number of
other Arab members of the
Organization of Petroleum

State Action
Gov . James A. Rhodes announced a four-part plan to keep electricity flowing
major industries, schools a nd homes:
--Calling on the PUCO to limit all mandatory electrical cutbacks w25percent.
--Calling on tile PUCO wmandate power and coul sharing between utilities.
- A statewide conservation prOgram.
- Weekly notification by utilities of the cost of tile strike in terms of coal.

Exporting Countries ha ve

voiced concern ove r the
dollars's decline, and some
. have gone as far as ca lling for
a substitute ('Urrency to be
the futu re ya rdstick in
ca lc'Ulating oil prices.
~·There is onl y one way of
recovering this Loss and that
is by increasing oil prices
substan tia ll y," Sheikh Ali
said.
He said the dropping dollar
was also affec ting th e

Conservation Program
Gov. Rhodes will bold a 9 a.m. TUesday news conference to elaborate on a sta rewide
conservation program that will include further electricity cutbacks a t stare facilities
and frequent appraisings ol tile energy situation to the media.
UMW reaction
District 6 members will meet Tuesday w decide whether they will obey the Ta llHartley injunction . But district ofliclals and Local representatives say the miners will
probably refuse wreturn unless Carter also nationalized the coal industry.

Kuwai ti dina r " and thls
balance must be restored ."

UWlty coal supplies

Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric U
Cleveland Electric Illwninating 44
Ollumbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric 33
Dayk&gt;n Puwer and Ught ~
Monogabela 21
Ohio Edison 35.4
Ohio Power 40
Toledo Edison 5().:i5

NOT CUTTING TI-E MUSTARD?

Governor begins
voluntary plan

Teeth
Perk up yo ur sales
.. ' by placing an ad in
our newspaper! Yo u'l l
cut in on a bigger slice
of profits becaus(;! we spread
your advertising message to
our entire circ ulation 1 Cal l.

The Daily Sentinel
992-2156

w

businesses and orga nized
labor. However , he stopped
short of asking for curtailed
business ho urs.

--Publication of the cost of
the co aJ str ike in terms of
outside coal and power purchases . . " The consumers of
Ohio a re entitled to know how
much this strike is costing

coal strike to its conswners.
"CRISIS WATCH"
"Our foremqst objective in
By LEE LEONARD
this strike situat ion has been ihem, '' he said .
UPI Statehouse Reporter
CO LUMBUS (UP!) - Gov . and will be to avoid massive
"By taking these steps,
James A. Rhodes has begun a unemploymen t, widespread Ohioans work ing toge ther
tentative, ma inly vohmtary, school
cl osings
a nd can delay by days or even
four-point pla n to stretch interr uption of electr ic weeks the necessity for more
Ohio' s d im inis hi ng c oa l service to Ohi o homes and severe curtailmen ts ," sa id
reso urc es while kee pin g hum3n needs customers," the g overnor. ~"This effort
factor ieS, bu sines ses a n d Rhodes t old a news will give the president and
schools open.
conference.
the federa l government
He s peci ri ca ll y avoided additional lime to find a
Rhodes announced the pla n
la te Monday, a bout four calling for reduced business permanent solution to the
hours after President c8rter hours as a means of savi ng coal s trike, which can only
had invoked the Taft-Hartley electricity, and said use of the come th rough a negotiated
Act against striking ·coa l Oh io National Guar d to settlement."
miners, an action already safegua rd coal deliverfes is
Rhodes said the decision to
viewed as in vain as fa r as not necessa ry .
limit 5 0 percent curtailments
getti ng them back to work .
Whil e e m ph as iz in g lQ 25 percent was made in
Keystones of Rhodes' plan volWitary conservation, the concert
with
PUCO
are 25 instead of 50 percent gove rnor sa id sterner Chairman C.
Luther
elec trica I curta il men ts to measures are not neceSsa ry Heckm a n, who said the
Large users by utilities with :10 because coa l deliveries are · order s will come dow n
days' supply of coal or Less, extending utilities' supplies Tuesday or Wednesday.
a nd pow er ·s ha ri h g a mo ng and the state is #ieeking
" I believed we could get by
Ohi o utilities. in diffe rent outside power sources.
w1th less than 50 percent
said Ohio 's curtailment," said Heckman,
'Rhodes
geographic areas.
The governor also ca lled economy is "seriously e.p laining ' t ha t power for re new ed efforts at • threa tened " by failure of the shar ing directives are in the
electrical conserva tion and ' Unit ed Mi ne Workers to works
and
a dditiona l
requested the Public Utilities ratify a natio nw ide c oa l · pu r c ha ses
a re
be i n ~
Comm iSsion of Ohio to direct contract, and that the effect arranged.
utilities to pubLish each week of the presidents's backto.
The govern or said 50
the cost of the nationwidl! work order will not be known per cent curtailmenls could
until ·Wednesday .
put up to 1.5 m ilion Ohioans
He said the state will out of work.
11
Coope rate with the president
The re would be further
in any way possible."
closing of corrunercia l esta·
nwe must do whateve r we blishments, school s and
can to preven t Ohio workers smaller businesses,'' he said.
and thei r families from
Rhodes sa id the Ohio
suffering the lack of income ·National Guard "will monitor
and other hardship 1 " said the situation" but its use in
Rhodes.
protecting coal deliveries is
He ca lled for :
just an option.
--The PUCO to Limit any
"The Highway Patrol is
mandator y curtailments of doing such an outstanding job
elec tricity to 25 percent for I do not believe it is necessary
" as lon g as possible ." at 'this time to have a n
Several electric companies alternative method of moving
'had planned to cut back by 50 ccml ," said Rhodes .
percent to large users within
" C alling out the gua rd
a week to conserve coal wou l d pro voke a direct
stockpiles.
confron tation." sa id the
--The PUCO to require all gove rnor. " It would cut
utilities to share power or . deliveries by 75 percent." He
coal between their service said 400 to 500 troopers are
areas . " We must not have escorting coal deliveries.
workers laid off in one part of
Ohio while thee is adequate
gene r ating capac ity in
Th e first
telephone
another part of the state," he
was
directory
in
t
he
world
said.
1878,
published
F
eb.
21,
~A sta tewide conservation
c amp aig n in v ol vi n g listing the 50 subscribers to
res id e ntial consu me r s , the New Ha ven, Conn.,
Telephone Co.
·

Wahama is eliminated
BY GARY CLARJt
scoring by Mark Taylor with
The Wahama White Falcon basketball aeason came to an 19, Cral&amp; HoU.!Ion with 13 and
end Monday nl&amp;ht when the Spencer Yellow Jackets ou.sted Ron Stagg with 10.
the locals from the Class AA Region One Secllon Four
Wahama was led in scoring
,
by Rick Barnltz with 18
Tourney with a 67-69 win.
Wahama was forced to play the contest without two of its markers foUowed by brother
starters in seniors Greg Blesaing and Rick Buzzard. Both Bob with 17 with sophomore
players carry a double llgure scoring average but un- forwa rd Vince Weaver netted
fortunate circumstances forced C011ch Homer Preece to tum 12 tallies In hill first starting
to his -Inexperienced bench.
assignment filLing Ln lor the
miS8ing Rick Buzzard.
While Buzzard didn't even lead after scoring nine . In the rebounding departsuit up bf(:ause of a WVSSAC unanswered points.
ment Wahama was paced by
ruling the 6-1 Blessing hob- The Bend a r ea . quintet Kelvin Honaker with 10 while
bled ink&gt; his uniform with a managed to cut the eight-pain! Charley zuspan and Bo~
bad ankle . The senior forward bulge Ln half by the quarters Barnitz hauled in eight apiece
did start the game but retired end and lound themselves loUowed by Vince Weaver and
quickly due to the
ex- down by four at 4~1 with Phil Hobbs who nqtched 7
eight minutes to play.
rebounds eacb.
crutlating pain.
Spencer was led by Mark
The White Falcons wlnd up CosUy turnovers began to
tile 1977-78 campaign with a 7- take Its toll on the White Taylor who took game high
14 season record with seven Falcons in the final minutes as ho r with
11
seniors playing their final Spencer's extended Its lead to
~~ll~wing th~ contest Lt waa
game as White Falcon cagers. 55-45 with just 4:35 1eft to play. lea r ned tha t two White
The White Falcons kept Falcons will be selected on the
Bob
Barnit.z,
Kelvin
Honaker, Phil Hobbs, Greg battling back but couldn 't all-tournament team and tllat
Blessing, Tim Rawlings, qolte catch up as lime began would be Rick Bamltz and
Charli e Zus pan and Rl~k . 1&lt;J run out and as a result were Kelvin Honaker. Both players
gR~d~io~h!~ ~e lf~a.~ forced to foul to try and get were presented with a trophy
f
th lr
otstandlng
back Into contention. .
season rolls around.
After hitting on just one ol or
e
In last night's Region One five free throws in the first achievements during the
Section Four game the White half, the Yellow Jackets lound game.
Falcons built a quick 6-2 lead the range and managed l&lt;l Spencer w,tU now advance to
but suddenly went cold as stay In front by a comfortable the sectional finals against
Spencer outscored the Bend margin except for a brief once beaten Clay Co. on
Area team 12-3 during the moment with 33 seconds to Friday night In Clay.
remainder of the opening play when Wahama got back
WAHAMA (59 )
stanza to claim a 14-9 ad- to within three at 62..S9. But the
FG Ff PF TP
vantage after eight minutes ol Roane Countians converted on Player
Rick
Bamltz
·
9-19
0-1 4 18
play .
their lree throw attempts to
f&gt;.ll 7-9 3 17
B. Barnltz
The Yellow J ackela, now 6- take a 67-69 victory.
12 on the year, increased their
Team statistics for Wahama Vince Weaver tl-16 ().l) I 12
lead to 21·11 before the locals show a 37 percent mark from K. Honaker 2-10 1-2 5 5
2-6 ().l) 5 4
broke loose to score 11 ol the the floor (25 of 67) and a 64 Phil Hobbs
qua rters flnal13 points to take percent showing at the Une on Charlie Zuspan I-S ().l) 2 2
().l) 1-2 I
I
.a 25·23 advantage at In- 9 of lhttempts. They hauled G. Bless)ng
termisslon.
in 44 rebounds and committed
Totals
25-67 9-14 21 59
Rick Bamltz, the Falcons 17 turnovers slx of which came
SPENCER
(1'7 )
leading scorer, failed to score Ln th.a t Important fourth
Player
FG Ff PF TP
throughout the initial period quarter.
7-12 7-6 3 21
Spencer shot 42 percent Jeff Boggs
and for the most part ol the
Mark
Taylor
11-11
3-6 0 19
second but caught fire with from the floor (24 of 56 ) and a
four consecutive baskets in respectable 63 percent !rom
3-10 7-12 3 13
the final! :PO of the half to give the charity stripe. The Yellow C. Houston
Ron
Stagg
5-12
().l) 2 10
Wahama a narrow 25-23 lead. Jackets claimed 36 rebounds
•1-3
().l) 0
B.
Barker
2
·The contest see-sawed back and turned the ball over on 18
().7
1•2
N.
Craig
3
I
and forth in the early going occasions..
.
0-1
().l)
J
.
Plckens
0
2
following the brief · inIndividually, ·Jeff Boggs
Totals
termisslon with the score took ·game high scoring
24..(;6 19-30 12 67
being tied on flve separate honors with 21 points on 7 ol 12
occasions but the Yellow field goals and 7 ol 8 free
Jackets spurted out to a 41-33 throws. He was followed In Wahania
9 161618-59
Spencer
14 92222 · 67

peopletalk
By KENNETH R.CLARK
United Press International
IDOL ON TRIAL: The.Rolling Swnes' lead gUitarist goes
on trial Oct. 23 in Toronw, on charges of posseSsion heroin with
intent w traffic in the drug, but Keith Richards wasn't in lhe
courtroom when the date was set Monday. A prosecuto~ says
he was excused from the hearing "because ol the commotion
that usually accompanies his appearance here." II convicted
the founder of the British rock group could face life In prison.

FINALLY- NIGHT MUSIC: The troubled film version of
the Broadway hit, "A Little Night Music," finally found an
audience Mnday night, and the star was there to see it lirst
hand. Elizabeth Taylor watched the premiere of her film made two years ago in Austria but bereft since of a distribuk&gt;r
- from a first-tier box at Uncoln Center's Alice ·Tully Hall in
New York . With her were husband, John Warner, costar Len
Carlou, producer Hal Prince and composer-lyricist Stephen
Sundheim. After the show, she celebrated her 46th birthday a week after the .fact · - with cake at The Gingerman
restaurant.

PORK CHOPS ....... ~.~: ....

We lend a_hand.

PORK CHOPS .. ~.~: ..

H&amp;RBLOC~
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

618 E. MAIN 'ST., POMEROY, OHIO

E. Main St. • !192-2 171
/::1 C\ &lt;1 fiMn(l..\1

:&gt;erVICt' Of
\::&gt;~ CON T I\Ol [)IITA CORJ'(JI\ATION

We find "'""I" lo help.

$·}29

COUNTRY STYLE

SPARE RIBS .....~~·....

$229'

LEAN SLICED

BOILED HAM....... ~~:.. .
F~ENCH

CITY

t 2 oz .

WIENERS .........~~?:.
FRESH
ROPE

79¢

.

$}19

SAUSAGE ...~~-..

PRODUCE
.

Fr e~ h Solid He;~d New

GARDEN FR ES H

GREEN ONIONS

CABBAGE
L B.

RED RADISHES

19e

2/29e

-~--

Ottielals : Nate Crescenzi
and Mike Rogers.
Scorer: Estus Barker
Timer: Gacy Bender
Technical Foul: Pickens.

MARTHA WHIT E

BIX MIX or
FLAP STAX

TV••.in
Review

6

'GOLDEN ISL E

CHEESE SINGLES

By JOAN ilANAUER
UPI Television Writer
NEW YORK (UP! )
Television has perfected a
neat trick - turning a fish
tale ini&lt;J bam on wry.
To see this miracle of

12 oz .

Pkg .

GLAZED DONUTS

modern communications,
tune in CBS March 8, &amp;-9 p.m.,
Eastern time, and watch Jose
Ferrer and Burgess Meredith
in "The Return of Captain

14 oz .

Pkg .

79~

FROZEN-MORTON

Nerno."

MACARONI &amp;
CHEESE

The first mlfacle the show

the return of Captain Nemo

20 oz .
Box

after 100 years in suspended

animation, With the awmpower e d Victorian
submarine Nautilus still
intact, except for some bent
propellers.
It's easier to' believe in the
return of ' •Batman,'' the
WHO HUGHES?: The California Olmptroller's office in spirit of which is alive and
Sacramento has turned up another clutch of "untraceable" well and Uuiving in 11Nemo. "
bank account holders. Among the latest - Candice Bergen,
The real magic Involves the
who ha.s not come back to claim the $284 she left in a Beverly two old pros, who are antagoHills bank 13 years ago, and Jean Peters Hugbes. As the ex- nists in this three-week
wife of tile late billionaire, Howard Hughes, it may be llmiled series that CBS hopes
understandable that she forgot about the account - containing can be turned into a full-time
$38.33.
adventure.
'
.
Ferrer Is Captain Nemo,
GLIMPSES : Jose Feliciano - the blind guitarist-singer accidentally revived from
with 32 gold albums l&lt;l his credit - Is divorcing J811118 Merlyn suspended animation by a
Feliciano, his wife of II years, on grounds of ''irreconcilable pair of Navy Intelligence
differences" ... Walter Maltbau, who won his own Oscar lor frogmen. This happens at a
"The Fortune Cookie" in 1966 will be on stage to hand one out · time when Burgess Meredith
' to somebody AprilS, his seventh Academy Award appearance as Prof. Waldo CUMingham
has threatened w destroy
Washington, D.c.,. unless the
Marvin L. Goldberger ol Princeton, one ol the nation's top president of the United States
theoretical physicists, has been named president of Cal tech Ln gives hlm $1 billion ..
Pasa&lt;jena, Calif., succeeding Harold Brown who resigned w
Meredith as Cunningham, ~
become secretary of defense ... Tbe new Miss Pennsylvania is somehow malevolent in a
22-yearo&lt;&gt;ld Sandy Dell, of Latrobe, and she'll repl'e!Tent her · shape!.,. gray cardigan and
state at tile Miss USA Pageant next mooth In Charleston, S. C open-necked shirt with tie
askew, wants to conquer the
world. He never ezplains

99~

FROZEN-EV E R F RESH

BLUNT POINT: Britain's Princess Anne learned it the · tries to pull off fails - that's
hard way Monday night: Women's libbers are not long-&lt;;uited the one where tlley try to
where a sense of humor Is concerned. Queen Elizabeth's only make tile viewer beUeve in

daughter turned out for a charity event in Cambridge,
England, where the I&lt;Jpic was a spoof debate titled "A
Woman's Place is in the Harem" - but like an ancestor of
Anne's, the crowd outside was not amusei:l. Protesting the
. "Sexist" debate; they jeered and jostled and shoved her. Says
a woman demonstrator, "The motion of the debate was an
insult to all women and we didn 't mind if we insulted the
princess to make our point ."

~~9~~- 99~

COUPON

COUPON

COUPON

I

MAXWELL HOUSE

CLING FREE

COFFEE

Fabric Softener Sheets

2 lB. CAN

All GRINDS

NO. 125

SAVE 65e

24 CT. BOX

.WITH THIS COUPON
March 11, 1978
GATEWAY

99¢

· C9upon Expires March 11,19111
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

NO. 155

NO. 105

5 lB. BAG

W/C

16

oz.

89¢

W/C

COUPON

COUPON

PILLSBURY

PILLSBURY COMPLETE

HOT ROLL MIX

PANCAKE MIX

NO. 105
W/C

9 oz.

W/C

C9upon Expires March 11 , 1978
iWIN CITY GATEWAY

PILLSBURY

CANNED FROSTING

69¢

NO. 105 ·

Coup9n Expires March 11,1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

COUPON

PILLSBURY FLOUR

69¢

6 OZ. CAN

- -~-

VANISH SOLID

EN DUST
NO. 205

W/C

COUPON ·

59~

13l/4 OZ. BOX

·49¢

,,
I

W/C

I
I

59¢

NO. 205

2 LB. BOX

W/C

Coupon Expires March J1, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

why ,

When you 're m8k ing an addition (of any kind), or need money for any good
reason, talk to us at The City Loan Company. When major projects require
larger amounts. we elm arr~ nge a Homeowner Lm\n quickl y and with
consideration.

l~ o

$}69

THIN CUT

~

•

$}59

CEN T ER CUT

Open 9:00 to 6 t00 Weelcdavs.

,, oo to 5:00 5aturdoy
Phone 992-3795

No

Nece sserv

I

Nemo Is aided by his two
zombil&gt;like frogmen, while
Cunningham has as his aides
.a group of robota that look
like giant sliver frogs , The
chief
frog
gets
his
mechanical eff~ with an
muzzy echoing voice tllat
sounds Uke it comes from a
well. Nemo's sidekicks suffer
from ordinary human
mechanical. acling.
Nemo Indulges in the
egoUatical formality of the
VIctorian superman, which
Ferrer brings off as almost
believable. high camp.
I

. ' &lt;...

PILLSBURY

JERGENS

·FUDGE BROWNIE MIX
NO. 155

22 OZ. BOX
C9'UP~•n

89¢

LOTION SOAP

'

W/C

Expires March 11, 1978
N CITY GATEWAY

&amp;::~99¢ W/C
Coupon Expires March 11, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

'

ll PTON TEA BAGS

MARGARINE

NO. 355

100 CT. BOX

CHIFFON SOFT STICK

W/C

Coupon Expires M;~rch 11, 1!178
TWIN CI T Y GATEWAY

2 89¢
1-LB.

PKGS.

W/C

Coupon Expires March 11 , 1978
TWIN CITY
Y

-

�&amp;- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport.Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, March 7, 1978

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

llol,.,

FUNNY sus/NEss

6IR ... IOC()LD YaJ MIND

•

1~

! l.biys

Wurth! or Under
c..l1
Cholrg"
1.00
1.~
1.90

ll!l&amp;yll

225

,......

ldloy

JJ5

300

6 dii )'S

EMl'h won.J \1\'er tilt' minimwn 15
words ut 4 l't!ntl per word ~r W.y.
Ac.b rwmutjj u~r Uwn tU!l$t!l"U1iYI!
liilys will bt! ctulrgOO at I~ 1 dOIY

"""In nu!mory, C.ml uf Thwnb .11.1"111
OUituary : e l'tmlli pt:r wUrd , $3 00
minimwn. COL'!h U1 &lt;tdvant:l!.
Mubtk Hum!! !lllldi tttw.l i'ttrd Silles
1:1r~ &lt;tCt't'ptt'tl ouly w•th cash With
urdl!r 25 e~n t d~rge for &lt;tt.il!L'Mrry·

tuij Bux Numlltr In Clltl! uf

Tl~ Stn·

unel.
Publl:lht~ r resem.-s the ri..:ht
t'dll or rejl!t"'. IUl )' ads d L't'H'K..-'1.1 ol&gt;-

The
to

;.:t·tiooal Tht- Publ iSher wllluotllt'
rt'!SjXHUUbh: fur m ure than one mt·or·

rl!li. insertion.
Phone 992-21 fl6

I

\

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

For Wednesday , March 8
WIL L CARt: for the elder ly
horne . Phone992-73 1.4 .

AT I EN l iON

MARE

1n

our

DO

odd

jobs.

Phone

985 -3981 .

(;ampingEqm~ent". ~ ~
SI AR CRAFT FA LL Sole . Minimotors , 20 and 22 ' TraVel
1railers , 18 s· $3 .799. 25 ' 1'
Bu11khou se $4 875 . ~o l d - down ,
$1 700 up We sell sennce and
quoli!y . Open Sundoyr. . Camp
Conley Stor" of t Soles Rt 62
N of Pt . Plea sant .

HOMESITES lor sole . I acre and
up Middlepor t. near Rut land .
Call q92. 7481
NEW 3 bedroom house , 2 bath s,
all elec. I acre M1ddlepor t
tlose to Rutla nd Phon e 992
7481

Mo,d•Y
Noon unS... lurtlcly

Bernice Bede Osol

Owners :.

AQHA ~i!ud sennce. Introdu Cing
to Sou th ern Oh1o. Cor toka . sor
re iI son of Oroe. Br eed fo1 col·
or . conformation and dispOS I·
11011 Ph one 698 -824 1 evenmgs
or wri re lor br ee ding con)roc t
Belle Echo Quar ter Horses.
40725 SR b9') Pomeroy , Ohio
45769.
WILL

ASTROeGRAPH

Tuesday
thru F'ritlay

rirJJI!JfJ

t/1~

ITJnrrvlli~m11

•r M
d11 y lJI!(urt' pubhe&lt;tllou
Sw11Jay
4P M.

March B. 197B

FrtdliY aflcmoon

Th e realization that you don 't
nav~ to take a back seat to
anyone in your sphere o f influence will be brought home to
yo u tn the yea r ahead , Thi S
cou ld be your comrng of age ,
literally or figuralively

PISCES (Feb .11J.March ZO) The
people you 're workmg with
expec t you to follow through it
you say you'll do some thmg .
Don ' t be afra td bo try new
methods tf you ' re sure they ' ll
work . Fmd oul more abou t
yourself by sending lor your
copy of Astro--Graph Letter.
Mail SO ce nts lor each and a
long . se lf-addressed s tamped
envelope to Ast ra-Graph P 0 .
Box 489, Radio City Station .

PUBLI C NOTICE
NOTICE TO BITUMINOU S
VENDORS :
Se, led bids W1l! be received
by the Boerd of Coun t y
Com miSS tone rs of Meigs
Coun ty, Ohto at the office of
the County Commiss ioners ,
located tn th e Court House , in
the Vi liege ot Pom eroy , Ohio ,
45769 until 4 00 P M , on the
21st day of March , 19 78, and
the b1ds wIll be opened a I 7 · 00
P .M . on the 21st day of Ma rch
1978, tor the furntshi ng of
bi tUm inous ma t ertats for the
Meigs
Cou nty
Highway
Department.
Estimated quantities of
liqu i d asp halt r equired,
approxrmately
soo , ooo
ga l lons

BID

SPECIFICATIONS

N Y.I0019 Be su re to speclly SUBMITTED AS FOLLOWS '

B id price per ga llon , f.o .b.
vendors plan t , a nd the pr ice
gallon delivered to
may rece1ve information from vendors portable tank to any
an unusual source today . It will location within the county ,
designated by the County
be grven with th e expec tat1on Engineer , for the various
that you won ' t pa ss 11 on gra d es
of
bi t umino us
mate r ials whic h may be
DISTRIBU TOR SH IP
Respec t that condi tion
Will na t intedere wi th presen t TAURUS (Aprii10-May ZO) A pal r equi r ed by th e Me1gs co unty
employment. No sell ing re- co uld make overtu res to you HigMway Depar tm en t, wh1ch
qutred . Twen ty year old com· regard ing an innovat tve 1dea 11 shall con form to the pertinent
Sta te of Ohio , D epar tm ent of
pony See our ad on the Span s
ha s poss1biltt1es , but don 't get the H tg hw ay Construction
Page . l ~d-c:
or_
y '-~
and Materia l Spe ci f ications
invo lved if yo u .have strong
W 1t h
respect
to
the
negative v1bes .
a fore sa td es ti mated quan ·
. GEMINI (May 21·June 20) t l1 i e~ . the vendors Sha ll un
The re ' s a good c hance you can derstand that no guaran tee is
given to the actua I quantit ies
THE ALMANAC
tu rn a profil 1! you don ' t Jeop- of bituminous materia ls to be
United Press International ardi Ze your tm a'ge 1n th e pro- f ur n is hed. but eac h suc f u l ven dor sha ll be
Today is Tuesday, March 7, cess . Your opportunities po s- cess
r eq_u ired to furnish all or a ny
sess
a
different
qual
1
ty
today
.
tile 66th day of 1978 wii!I 299 to
part of the Meigs county
CANCER (June Z1·July 22) H ighway D e part ments'
follow.
Don't fear doing things In a actual require m ents , as
The moon is approaching manner you haven ' t tried ordered during t h e 1978
season
its new phase.
before . Just a sl1ght modificaPrices on th 1S bid sha ll be In
There are no morning
tion can maKe a world o f effe ct from Apri l 1. 1978 to
Ap ril 1, 1979
stars.
differe nce ,
On th e env elope containing
The evening stars are Mer- LEO (July 23·Aug.21) ll"s a each
bid. the name and ad ·
seller's
game
today
,
so
stay
·
cury, Mars, Venus, Jupiter
dress of th e vendor m us! be
away from the marketplace if Sh own .
p l ainly
marked
and Saturn.
"B itUm inOUS B1dS "
Those born on this date are you can You ' re what the sharProposals
are
to
be
pl es call ' an easy mark . "
returned on bi d forms sup .
under the sign of Pisces.
VIRGO (Aug.23· Sept.11) In the
by !he vendor , and will
Noted American botanist press of o n rushing eve nts plied
be opened on the date and
Luther Burbank was born today , you ca n tare we ll so long place speci f ied above .
Th e Meigs County Com
March 7, 1849.
as you ' re not vaccil lating . Yo u m lsstoners reserve the r1ght
On this day in history: ~
won 't be overcome if yo u per- to accept or re ject any or a ll
bids . or any pa r t ther eof
In 1932, in the depths of the se11ere

Depression, an estimated
3,000 men rioted at the
Detroit plant of the Ford
Motor Co. Four were killed.
In 1936, Adolf Hitler
ordered his Nazi troops into
the Rhineland, violating the
Versailles treaty.
In 1945, the u.s. lsi Army
crossed the Rhine at
Remagen,

Germany,

as

yo ur bir th sig n

ARIES (March 11-Aprll 19) You per

LIBRA (Sop1.2l·Oc1.23) Today
you must keep yo ur mind o n
what you' re doing bu sinessWISe or professionally N ew
and diffe re nt approaches pay
ott only if yo u can co ncen trate

SCORPIO (0c1.14-Nov.11) The
people you hobnob with socia ll y can he lp yo u attarn an
Impo rta nt goal today . You
shoU ld not, howe\ler, let down
your hair too soon or too far

World War II in Europe
moved into its closing weeks.
Total Allied victory - V-E
Day - clime May 8.
IIi 1969, two of the three
AJiouo 9 astronauts new their
lunar mOdule around the
main spacecraft, then linked
the two lllgether again.
A thought for the day:
American ·author Ambrose

Bierce said, Marriage ... a
11

community coosisting of a
master, a mistress and two

slaves, making it two in

all."

SAG ITIARIUS (Nov.13-Dec.Z1)
So methm g you 've wanted com·
pleted is well on 1ts way today,
1f you ' ll re main paltent You 've
wai ted thiS long , so don ' t spoil
it.

CAPRICORN

(Dec.1Z·Jan .19)

An •mag1oatr ve fuend today will
help you resolve a matter
yo u 've been stewing over .
However , don ' t accept every lhing he says Without f1rst
checking .

AQUARIUS (Jon .!O· Feb .19)
Though yo u fee t like you can' t
lose today , ta ke only calculated
risks . You can real ize a small
gain If you don ' t go ~oo far out
on the finan cia l lim b .
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

Mary Hobsl e tter, Cl erk
Meigs Cou n t y Board
of commiss ioners
!3 ) 7, u , 2tc

PUBLIC NOTICE

NOTICE TO AGGREGATE
VENDORS ,

IN MEMORY ol Alto Benh , who
poued away March 7, 1977:
Her life 15 a beou t1ful memory,
Her absence a silen t grie f,
She sleeps , 1n God's ~ utiful
gorden .
In lh4!1 sunshine of perlect peace
Husband, Fl o ~d 8enh

SKATE A WAY announce s ""'
mlo'ersory Pa rty Sot. March
18th Races. p1~ ~es , bolloons .
Free t&lt;e cream Wi ll be closed
Wed ., March 8th through Mo, &lt;h
16th. Reopen Fr1day March
17th.

THE FAMILY of Wi ck Wyo ll e.. .
tend s Its deep oppr ectol1on for
lhe
lhoughlulness of our
. fnend&amp; and neighbors . Spec1ol
l hopiu go to the M iddleport
Emerge ncy Squad . the po ll
bearers . the Rut land American
Leg1on Post , and the Rev .
John_ny Br yan!
I WI SH Ia e .. lend my sincer e
rhoMs a~ o.ppt&amp;~r!1.~1ar, the

::~: f!t~rd4t;t1

THE RACINE Gun Club Gun Shoot
every Sunday afternoon. Foetory choke guns only Assorted
meats
--

Check our
prices on

low, low

FERTILIZER, NITROGEN, ·
POTASH, FERT.().PELS
&amp; BLEND

Phont II ike Youn1

AI

992·2206 or992-7630
'1111 lriJiNIDn
llot IIOtiMill""

Roofing
Remodeling
Room AdditiOOs
Garages ·

-~-

Pel!l fu.-F.Je

..

=- -----=

HOOF HOLLOW Horses Buy , se ll
!rode or tra in New and used
soddfes. Ru th Reeves , Albany
(b 14) b98 3290
RISING STAR Kennel , Boar ding.
Ind oor and outdoor runs
GrOmmng all breeds . Clean
son 1tor y fa ciliti eS
Chesh11e
Phon e (bl4 ) 367 -0292.
~------

Phone 99".1-2181

INCOME TAX Ser111 ces Federal
and stole To.:es . Wa llace
Russell . Bradbury . 992 7228.
SHOOTING MATCH Forked Run
!'tportsman Club every Sunday
of te rnoon , Factory choke guns

--~o-n ly,".-~~

Pomeroy Landmark

'9,.

-Jack W. Car .. y, Mgr.
....
Phone 992-2181
ORANGE TOWNSHIP Volun teer
F~re Dept . Tuppers Ploms wil l
sponsor o cbn !o~gnme nt sole
Apri l 15th at the F1re Ho use.
A nyone hovmg onyth1ng to c6n·
sign contact one of th e follow·
ing fir emen .
C liff ord
l o n ge n e t te
614·667 -3890, Robert Tr ipp
Char les Carr , Gor don Cold wel l.
DAIRY

DISPERSAl Sale at
Fa~rp l one
l ivesto ck Sole ,
Foirpl ane , West VA. Just off Rt.
21 and 177 41 heod Holstein
D01ry collie , 30 cows . several
fresh cows now' more to
freshen by sole dote
11
Heifers , 3 bred, 8 open . March
9 I 30pm

1'~67

VW BUG . Good work car,
5275 . Co lt 992 -5732 .

1964 RAM BlER WAGON . 6 cyf ., 3
speed trans , engine' new ly
overhault:td ond body 1n lo1r

: o~d~ 9~~8:::5_:-3:::8:c
1Bc_~-1977 DODGE CUSTOM 100 p1ck.up
16.000 ' octuoi miles . Shmn 's
Tracto r Soles leon WV Phone

----

1967 VOLK SWAGON BEETLE h cellent work cor. Call949 2333.

-- - -

1968 CHEVELLE Phone 992 -50 19

1.-- tM .......
. . . . . . . Dr

eo~.

..

the

......

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

ECONOMY TRACTOR w1th all ol·
lochme nts L1ke new. ask ing

APPUANCE
SERVICE
We have enlarged our
servlce department and
will service Hotpoint and
~ other brands.

Pomeroy Landmark

9,. .Jack ·w. Carsey, Mgr.
M.
Phone 992-2181
.

1976 CAMARO Good condit1on .
Coll992 6084
JSED TRA CTORS · 47 Ford N 53
Cas~ Vac. 59 MF 35 Otesel. 6--t
John Deere 1010 Gas, 71 MF
165 D1esel. 7.4 MF 135 Diesel . 75
MF 1135 Diesel wit h cob and
WAN T TO r en t 2 bedroom house
ai r, 77 MF 285 D1esel Used Imin the cou ntry for 1he summer.
pl ements - MF 110 ,Monure
Spreader, Allied front end
~-o~ ~-u..
so_n_~~- 581 3 ' - - - loader , Freemon front end
load er . Do\lis front end loader ,
Case 220 Hoy Bal er, MF 10 Hoy
Baler . Matthews Rotory Sylhe,
J AND 4 RM . furni shed and un MF 20 Hoy Rake. Ford Hoy
furnished opt s Ph one 992Rake , MF42Mower.
5434 .
Shinn s Tractor Sq !es , l eon WV .
Phone (304) .t58 1630.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork.
Route 33 . north of Pomeroy . CORN $2 a bu Col i 985 -3537 or
Lorge lots. Coll 992 -7479 .
985-4131 .
12 x 60 MOBILE HOME near Dex - 1969 CHEVROLET DUMP Tr uck
ter . Phone 992-5858.
w1th air cheater. 992-5541.
FOUR ROOMS and both upstairs
opt . 1n Pomeroy Wnle Bo-.:
729 C. co The Deily Sent mel
Pomeroy , OH .

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?

.TWO BEDROOM apartment . Coli
before 8 om 992 -2288 . '

Let Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; conditiori your:
water with Co-op water

Model ue-svr •.
Now Only

279.95

.

Pomeroy Landmark

J•ctc w . ursey; Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

.

'976 CHEVROLET s;. ton pickup
low mileage. Good t:ondltion . 4
speed , 350 engine- heo vy duly
brakes. $3750 , Re edslo'ille .
• 614-378-63 11 after 6 pm.

B &amp; S MOBILE HOMES Pt. Plea·

12FT . AlUM INUM boot and 7 1/ ,
horse motor lor sole . Like new
Contac t Riel-lo rd Taylor. 587
Main St. , Middleport. 99'1· 6025.

sonl , W . Yo beside Heck's.
1973 Broodmore 14 x 64 2 MODEL 12 Winchester shotgun 28
bedroom
in lulL Good condition . $300.
1973 Dorian 14 x 60 2 bedroom
Phon'e 742-2359.
1972 Vktorron 14 x 67 3 bedroom ,
Phone
USED UN ICO Ory er
2 both
992
3&lt;30.
1972 Coven try 12 x 65 3 bedroom
1969 Statesman 12 x 60 2 1973 CHEVRO LET PICKUP Truck .
Low mileage . One owner. For
bedroom .
details, Co l1 992-2974 .
REDUCE SAFE 8 fast wi th GoBese
Tablets &amp; E-Vap " wate r ptlts " KING SIZE round bed complete.
Reel velvet head board and bed
Nelson D~u.,g'· -'---~­
sreod. $299. lngel's Furniture.
NICE PIGS for sal e. Colt after S,
992 -2635 .

P1tlos ,

Sldowolks,
New
Construction
Remodeling.

...

ln_Tht

9:00 til 9:o0 Mon.-Frldoy
9:00 tiii:OO Soturdlly
12: DO til I : DO Sundoy
2-1-tfc

Routn
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Estlmatw• by Appointment
Phone 992-7119
2·24-tfc

CARTER

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

Resldentlol

TSI&lt;, T5K: HOW

ANP SHE"D MilKE

A~OUT DI~NER
F~VINS

UP FROM
WA$HIN"TDN!

50/IIIE LUCKY MANl

•

Socle1y 15.

\1\1\ff.'\fi fii}\1 W THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
1.9 ~'-!..)~~ . Qy Henn Arnold and Bob Lee

~

'

Unscramble these four Jumbles ,
one lener to each SQuare. to lorm
tour ordtnary words

Chester, Ohio
10·30-c .

~IT'I-»6

I

IIJA.!NE~'i

iWIJlliiW.Jbf!

THE PHOTO PLACE

Gambll a.
12 .3C)-Ryan·s Hope 6. 13; Bob Braun 4; Gong Show 15;

Cellulose Fiber

tI

7HRf&gt;DI;f.i&lt;-.

N ews 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Wom en

Only 15.
1:3o-Oays ot Our Lives 3.&lt;.15; As The World Tur ns
8. 10; 1:OD-One Li te to Live 6, 13.
1:3o-Doctors 3.&lt;,15; Gu iding Ligh t B. IO; 3.ooAnolher World 3.•. 15; General Hospita l 6. 13; Lilias,
Yoga &amp; You 20.
3:Jo-AIIIn The Family B. 10; Ohio Journal20 .
4·DO-Mis1er Carloon 3; Edge ot Night 13. My Three

1

Wtddinp
Porln~ils

-Sovo Fuel &amp; Money- .

1-HYSERR I

r)

PIISporls
Anninrslrin

lAVENDER .
CONsTRucTION
SyracuM,

Special Occ.~liofts

Ohio

Freo Estlmllts
Phont19"J·3993
3-3-tfc

WATER WELl Drilling Also oil and
gas we ll work . Heaton Drdimg
Co.. Do'Vtd S. Heaton . Rt. 3,
Pomeroy , Oh1o . Phone
985 -43!15.
TURLEY 'S WRECKER Ser\lice.
Reci ne, Oh1o Day or night.

949-2657.
ARNOLD PRIDDY and Dick Sm1th
auto repo ~r. Overhaul motors.
Call
992·7769 . 916 locust
Street . Middleport .

COUNTRY farmland w ith seclud·
ed woods , water and good ac·
cess in Monroe County . W. Yo .
$1 ,000 down, call (304) 772-

3102 or (304) 772-3227

Commerc1ol pr operty appro .. . 17
acres. level land, located ot
Tuppers Plotns ori Ohio, Route
7 Phone (614) 667 -6304 .
VA-FHA , 30 yr. financing , also
refinanc in9. Ireland Mortgage,
77 E. State, Athens , phone (614 )
592 -3051 .
JUST COMPLETED new house in
· Mtddleporl . For more informot ~on call 992-2238 or 992-5304
TWO STORY frame house, 6
rooms ond bath, cellar out bu•ld•ngs , 4 ceres land, ot edge
of Rutla nd . Complete trailer
hook -up also . :2 bonk s opprois·
ed property at $15,500 Phone

992-7094.
MOBILE HOME w1th.e)(pondo on 3
acres , Drilled well. Septtc
tank s Immediate possession.
742-3074.
NICE HOME m rura l area with 26
acres, New aluminum siding,
comp le tely ins ula te d and
remodeled tnstde. Storm w indows . l ar ge carpeted living
room and both . Ca ll985- 4111 or

992·5621.
APPROX. ONE A . riverfront in
Syracuse. Pol"tially remodeled
house and trailer hookup .

2-16·1 mo.

•
••

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers , toasters. iron s. all
small appliances. lawn mower,
next to State Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone (6 1-4) 9853825.

YfAH! AND THEN
THE COPS HAULED
ALL 1!1DSE LITTLE / • ·"~T
IJUMS AWAY"

'~:

BRADFORD, Auct1on eer , Com·
plete Service. Ph one 9-49· 2,.87
or 949 -2000. Roc tne. Oh1o , Cr t!I
Bradfor d.

SEWING MACHINE Repairs , set·
vice , oil makes, 992-2284 . The
Fobr~c
Shop, Pome'r oy .
Aut hori zed Singer So les and
Service. We sharpen Scissors.
EXCAVATING. dozer. loader and
backhoe work , dump trucks
and to boys for hire; wil l haul
f ill dirt, to soil, limes toni and
gro vel. .Call Bob or Roger Jef·
fers, day phone 992 -7089, night
phone 992-3525 o~ 992 · 5232.

Prlntanswerllere :
Ye slerday s

•
"

••

.,
"''
"';'

,.
[!:~~~~~;;:;]
•

You know
how t' qit
t: Zeb's
sti li ?

I think th'
Smith babll hact
it las' week!

likelw 1

Seem
Zeb jes' appoint
hisself its
manaqer!

BATHROOMS AND Kitchen1
remodeled , ce ram ic tile , plum·
bing, corpentry, and general
maintenance. 13 years exper ience. 992-3685.
PULLIN S EXCAVATING. Complete
Service . Phone 992-2478.
WINTER GET to your house? let us
mak e necessary. repairs. AI
Tromm Construction . 742-2328 ,

Jumble s CHIDE DO WNY TACKLE HARDLY
Answer When does a bell sound loud and cle8r ?-

5:3C)-News 6; Elec Co. 20.33; Mary Tyler Moore 10;
Hogan 's Heroes 15 .
6 : 0G- New~ 3,4,8, 10, 13,15,·

7·oo-Cross -W itsJ ; Cr oss -Wits4 : Liars C lub6; Sha N a

Na 8; Copilot Beo133; 1-{ews 10; To Tel l The Tru1h
13 ; Gilligan ' s Is 15 ; Charac t eristics of Learning

Disabilit ies 20
7:15- Marsholl u . Repor1 33 .

your nane, addreu, zip code and make check• Pt!VIble to N•••Pi1+bo&lt;Aut.

7 : Jo-Funny Far m 3; Sha N a Na 4; Wh~n H avoc Sruck
6; fll mlly Feu d 8; M ac N eil -Lehrer Report 20,33 ;

~~-w~

"The Judge 10; In Search of 13; Wild Klnqdom 15
! :DO-Circus Hlghllgh1s 3,4,15; Thai Second Th ing on

by THOMAS JOSEPH
3 Bnstle
ACROSS
4 Sunder
I Compass
Sin a terreading
rible way
5 Mufne
~ Wellington.
II Corner
to Napoleon
12 Senseless
13 - diurna
7 Dolt
8 1964 Henry
14 Dwell
Fonda film
15 New York
9 Becharmed
river
10 Less af17 Took
comma nd
fluent
16 Apollo's
18 District of
mother
England
20 Swiss city
19 Capuchin
21 Still a
monkey
minor
20 Robust
23 Solicitude
22 You : Ger.
24 · •J Pagli·
acci'' hero
25 Cookie
26 Curt
27 Loathed
28 Full of : suff.
29- and Fo~
30 Medii. island: abbr .
31 Derisive;
mocking
35 Caught
37 Irish

ABC 6, 13; Return at Cap t ain Nemo 8, 10; N ova 20,33.

9:DO-B iack Sheep Squadron 3.4. 15; Char lie' s Angels
6, 13 ; Movie '"Mahogany•• B.10
9 . 30- Great Performances 20 , 33 ; 10 . DO- Po l lee
Woman 3,4, 15, Stsrsky &amp; Hutch 6, 13.

10 :3o-News 20; Book Bea113.
11 :Oo-News 3. 4,6,8.10.13. 15, Di ck Cavet1 20 ; Lili as .
Yoga &amp; You 33.

11 · Jo-Johnny Carson 3,4 ,15, Pollee Story 6, 13; HaWa ii
Fl11e -O 8; ABC News 33 ; Movie fi WI1hout Reser ·
vatlons " 10

12 :DO-Janakl 33. 12:4C)-Myslery ol the Week 6, 13;

Yesterday's

.

23 Hipster
24 Forded
25 Texas city
Zl Toughen
~ 9 Blockade
32 Back of
neck

Kojak 8; 1 ~Tom or r ow 3,4, 2 : to- N ews 13.

Answer

J3 Shah's

country .
34 Colombian
city
36 Beat the 38 Actor
Beatly

Movie Channel 4 5 &amp; 7 P.M. - On The Old Spanish Tra il (Gt
9 &amp; 11 P.M.-Carrie I Rl

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

=+-+--+-+-+---j3 NT proves best call
NORTH Jn-A
• 10 5

'A
+

'

'·

• 8 74 2
'QIU8 6
K J

+
• 10 9 4

..,.'

MI"ED

•

UP liND GONfluS!:D,
fOS
.l"s-P

ICe,..,..

•'
&lt;
••

VERY 171FFICULT

lHE·WISEMAN REAL ESTATE AGENCY

I

TDRAIBE

ME, HON

.'

CID8E )'t)UR. EYES AND GOW BLEEP,
TIMMY. YDUR. DAIIDY$ MCK NON AND

EVERYTHING'8 GOING
TO BEALL RlelfT/

'

Evenings Ca11441·3796 or 446-7181

.r'
I

n good cond ition. Also 2 mobile home space. with
septic tank. Good rentellncomo.· Near (unction ot Rt 7
on Rt. 124.
·

f

'

'

MOBILE HOME with expondo on 3
ceres . Drill well. Septic tonk .
Immediate
posseuion .

7&lt;2-307&lt; .

HEAL THY YOUNG pigs for sole .
949·2774 . otte r 5 p .m .
COAL, LIMESTONE, sand, grovel . ·FOR SALE by owner: New house
calcium chloride. fertilizer , dog
with 3000 sq . ft. living space
food, and oil types of solt , h and opprox . 12 ceres of land 8
cels!or Soh Works , Inc., E. Main
rooms, 2 baths, 2 cor garage,
St .. Pomeroy. 992·3891.
kitchen ho• buill in appliances
such as island cook top stove,
EARLY AMERICAN livi ng room
trash ~ompoctor , Tappan oven,
suite ond love seat . Both 3
dishwasher, ice mochtne and a
months old. Also stereo . Con
Nutone Focftl Center. Phone
be seen 1 mile ou t 143 or cell
9&lt;9-2501 .
992-5780.

2 Curve

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR

one of the first two

Ia

LONGFELLOW

, One leper si,rhply" st a1l~s for another In this sample A is
u Sed for the three L's, X ·f o r the t wo O' s, t•tc Smglc letters,
apos trophes, the l eng th and f ormat i On of l he wo rds are all

North

East So uth

23NT
.

Pas.&lt;;

••

Pa ss

Pa ss

1.

I'VE SEEN THINKING
'(OUR

\

)

'

.•

.

COUNTRY LIVfN' .=_ Very nice 3 bedr oOm

-J

homt on 28

acres with fruit trees, strawberries, free water &amp;

ga1 ,

Tho t 1h sto'-y home has alum. tldtnv. living room
, family room, 01!-ln kitchen, dining arM &amp; IN!th. Smeti
IN!sement with excellent storage. Small IN!rn wtth
workshop end a good garden spot. $.15,600.

'

OH,SURE! 'f'ou'D LOVE TO

55E ME WEARING GLA5SES

WOULDN'T YOU, MARCIE?'

Pass 2 NT

Pass

Opening lead : • 2

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
North and South did all the
CRYPTOQUOTES
biddipg 10 this hand from the
continent-wide charity
LMUH
EP HM
w CQV QT Q T H W fall
game. When Nort!J played in
EWB
QM· diamonds he m a de four odd
QXG
LI
TFXB
JWTH
if East cashed his top spades
and
five odd if East cashed
QX
MWC CLE
J Q M T,
UWM one spade and shifted to
another suit. Since m ost de~
WVWQM . fenders did cash their
V H X
L F X
s~ades those who bid the
SLGHRP SLFYHCX
diamond game were. down
Yesterday's Cryptoquote : THE DETERMINATION OF LIFE one for bad scores.
INSURANCE SALESMEN TO SUCCEED HAS MADE LIFE
The bidding in the box was
the most popular around t he
PREITY SOFT FOR WIOOWS.-WILLIAM FEATHER
country . South 's heart bid
1i ·• 19'78 King ~' ea~u res Sy ndiral~ . lnt:
usually stopped the heart
BARNEY

PAW HOME
FROM HIS
THREE -D
FISH IN'

TRIP

~1'1!

UNLESS I
MISS MY

GUESS, HE'LL
BE HONGRY
AS A- --

he had

r emem -

rounds of

the s uit . If he had forgotten
to make t111s play he would
not be able to get bac k to his
hand Lo cash the king of
hearts.

Pass

Pass

He would play ace a nd
another . West would luke his
king, cash the last s pad e und
lead a hea rt.
AI this point South would
t a k e the rest of the tricks ,

K 9 54
+
A B73
• 65

West

Pa ss

diamonds .

bered to play the nine or 10
of diamonds from dummy on

Vulnerable: Both
Deater: West

I Greek
letter

YONDER COMES

-

+4 2

. Q73 .

played by the de lensc South
would get in u nd go a lter

provided

.

FIREWOOD, spltt and deli vered .
S&lt;tS o cord or $35 o truckl oad.
All hardwood
843-2933 or

• •J 7 3 2

lead which would beat a
notrump ga m e . With ~pades

SOUTH
• QJ 6

h1nts Each day the code INte rs are different

'

• A K 93

'

DOWN

'·

Q tO 9 6 5
.AK .J 8 2
EAST

WEST

profound
42 Oklahoma
city

'

'0;

ABC News 6 ; Zoom

6:3o-NBC News 3.4. 15; ABC News 13; Carol
Burnet1 &amp; Friends&amp; ; CBS NeWs 8,1 0; Over Easy 20.

r-------~------------------------,41Berome

CALL

·~ACRES - Reduced to Sl8,oo0. ln~iudes a small house

II

39 Hire
40 Boundary

UNHOLSTERY .

AT 446-3643

KI XJr I X]

Islands

Refi n ishi ng ,
reupho lster,- ,
re buildtng. Beautiful selection
of materials and vtnyls . FrH
es t1mate. Tel . 742· 2852. Loco·
lion Solem Cen ter.

IN GALLIPOLIS

Heroes 10 ; Af1erschool Special 13; Petticoat 15.

(Answers tomorrow)

"GAINST "EM, .,
NOTHIN ' "TO IT···

~..,

HOWERY AND MARTIN
co veti ng, _ septi c systems ,
dozer, backh oe, dump truck ,
limestone. gravel. blacktop
poving , Rt. U3 . Phone 1 (61-4)
698 -7331 .

REDUCEO TO $25,000-2 story stone trame on .large
lol In Middleport. Has formal entrance &amp; dining 2
large bedrooms, living room with tlreplace &amp; eai-tn
kitchen. Central gas heat &amp; garage.

I

.5 oo-H ere Come The Brides 3; Star Trek 4: Gun smoke
8; Mister Rogers' Nelqhborhood 20.33; Hogan·s

Npw arrange the ctrcled letters to
torm the s u rpns~ answer . as sug·
gesled by the above cartoon

Jumble Book No 10. wtlh ltlt 111111110 f)liZZIM . II IVIIIIble for $1 .35 poet•
paid fi'Om Jumble, Clo thla nthllpaper, 81»: 34, NorNood, N.J . 01848. lnr:l"'*

742 ~ 234 8 .

MUST SEll NO~/ 2 story home In Middleport near
churches, shopping etc. The owner has to .. 11 this home
Immediately. Features 3 bedrooms, large family .
room, eat-In kitchen and dining, cellar &amp; garage with 3
room apt. Will sell lo first r..,sonable offer.

[J

tJ

Gll llgan "s Is. 8; Sesame St. 20.33 ; Gomer Pyle .
USMC 10.
4:30--Ll tlle Rascals 3,1S; Gllllgan "s Is. &lt;; Brady
Bunch 8,10; Mary Jyler Moore 13.

WHEN IT"S ""TOLLED""

WILL do roofing , construction,
plumbing and healing. No job
too •Iorge or too small. Phone

NEIGLER'S FOR bu ilding hou ses.
Coll949-2508 for house designs
and es timates Guy H. Neigler ,
Racine.

TO L.OOK
FOR Wit..[/ L.IFE
IN IHE eli&amp; CIIV.

YEAH? OH. TH '

EXCAVATING , dozer, backhoe
and d1tcher Charles R. 'Hot· -;:
f 1eld. Ba ck Hoe Service, -u.~
Rutland , Ohio. Phone 742-2008. ~-

MAGG!ES

IBOGTLE

Sons 4; For Richer, For Poorer 15; M erv Griffin 6,

WHE::I~E

1

JUDGE WILL WAN"T
YOU TO "PE'AR

REMODEliNG . Plumbing, heating ...
ond all types of general repair . .....
Work gua ranteed 20 yeers experience. Phone992·2409.

992·3618.
THREE BEDROOM w1lh bath 5 96
acres fully carpeted, 1ust
remode-led , all electric, dug
cellar olf kttchen . 4 outbuildings m Meigs Mine area.
992·3993.

ORPHAN ANNIE-ONE FOR Al,t..;_AU. FOR ONE

n

Search for Tomo r row 8, 10,· E lec . Co.

1:DO-For R lcher. For Poorer 3; All My Children 6, 13 ;

I ZENOO
rJ

~ PA.~!a-

FIREWOOD. $25 o pickup lood.

992-6295.

12 :0()-News Center 3;. 12 :00-News Cen ter 3: $20,000
Pyram id 13; New5 -4.6,10 : To Say The Least JS; ·

I

~

Blown Into Walls
and Attics

Report 3; 6:So-Good Morning, West VIrginia 13;
6 :55-Chuc k While Reports 10; News 13.
7·DO-Today 3.• .15; Good Morning Ameri ca 6. 13; CBS
News B; Bullwlnkle 10.
7:30-Schoolles 10; 8:DO-Cap1. Kongaroo 8. 10; Sesame
St. 33
9:DO-Merv Gr11tln 3; Phil Oonehuo 4, 13. 15; Edge ot
Nlgh1 6; Family Altair 8; Ma1ch Game 10.
9:3o-Emergency One 6; Andy Grlltllh B; Fomlly
Atlalr 10.
tO :DO-Santord &amp; Son 3.&lt;, 15; Tatllelales B; Joker"s Wild
tO; No1 For Women Only 13.
I0 :3o-Hollywood Squares 3.•. 15; Andy Grlltllh 6;
Price Is Right 8,10. Ri ck FoucheuK 13.
11 :DO-Wheel ol Fortune 3.•. 15; Elec . Co. 20.
11 :3o-Knockout 3,15. Family Feud 6. 13; Partridge
Fami ly ~ ; love ol Lite 8. 10; Sesame St 20,33;
11 : 55-CBS News B; Loving Free 10.

B:oo-Chuck Barris 3,, . 15; Happv• Do ys 6 . 13 ; CBS
Reports B, 10; Evening at Pops 20,33.

.~

Jack's Septic
Tank Senice.

Blowo Insulation

6.DO-News 3,4,8,10.13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20 .
6:3o-NBC News3 .• • IS; ABC New• 13; Carol Burnell &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News B.10; Over Ea•y 20 .
7 : DO-Cross.Wits 3,4; Liars Club 6; Pop Goes The
Country 8; Capl1ol Beal 33; News 10; To Tell The
Truth 13; Gilligan•• Is. tS; French Chet 20.
7:1S- Big Green Magazine 33; · 7 :3o-Hollywood
Sqvares 3.•; Len Go To The Races B;; Candid Camera 6;MacNell-lehrer Report 20.33; Price
Is ~lght tO; Tha1"s Hollywood 13; Television Honor

..'

9&lt;9-2857 .
9&lt;9-2129.

MI~LIONS!

GOOD~E55. YES •• DAFFODIL
DOI!lMJ5 WOULD CERTAINLY
liE QUITE A CATCH FO~

ME AND
CARO~l M&lt;KEE"S
WI T ~

ond

'

6 : 2s-chrtstopher Closeup 10; 6 . 3o- News Con fer ence
4 ; News 6 i Sunrise Semester 8; 6 :45:-Mornlng

Hogan's Heroes 15.

~98S.3106

SALES AND SERVICE
11·9-tfc

WEONESDIIY, MARCH l , 1971
5:45-Farm Repor1 13; 5:50-PTL Club 13; 5:55Sunrlse Semes1er 10; 6.DO-PTL Club 15.

5 3C)-News 6; Elec Co. 1Q.33; Mary Tyler Moore 10;

Anydoy, anytime.

Box)

5 &amp; 9 P.M. - Airport "77 (PGi
7 &amp; 11 P .M.-Gumboil Rally iPG I

Heroes 10; Emergency One 13,· Petticoat lS.

commercial.
Coli for
estimate, 24 hour urvice.

3DO Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Pomeroy 9924212
or 992-6263
l A.M. to 4:30P.M.

Movie Ch1nnel 4 -

B; MISter Rogers' Neighborhood 20.33; Hogan•s

General Contracting

Open

" Treasure of San Gennaro" 10.

12 :DO-Janakl 33; 12 ·•o-Kolak 8: 1:DO-Tomorrow
3,• ; 1: Io-News 13

S:QO-Here Come The Br ldesJ; Star Trtk 4; Gunsmoke

DAVID &amp;RICKLES

MEIGS PLAZA
Middleport, Ohio

Let us test your wa~er Free

On M ll;l-c~ .2• . ~l, , ~ n lh~

then caUed the Province bell,
was cast in London to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.

Rad lator .c:::::::!:::::
Service TnHir
llllml
er h...._.,

CONN TR UMPET wtt h case. Very
good co ndition; used very l1 1tle.
$ 175 992-5768

_( J04 ~58 · 1 ::
630
o:.:...-

If you want the
lowest prices on
Baler Twine now's
the time to buy.
Call us today.

Work GuarAnteed
2-10-lfc

RUGS. WALL
Hcmgings ond
afgan s. Nice for Christmas
Reasonable. Coli 992-2214 .

9,._ Jack W. Cars~y. Mgr.

CLEARANCE SALE beg1n s Mon.
Fe b 13 ot Sew -N Sew Oullel ,
Main Stree t, Ra cin e
A ll
poly ester double kn1t s reduced
40 % and 50% Thread big spool
,5 for $1

742-2321
Free Estimates

S2250 . Phone (614) 698·3290

Pomeroy Landmark
....

AI Tromm
Construction

EXPERIENCED

-

loco~t~

••"3•'-. o.

Carpet• UpholStery

Kitchen Cabinets, Roetlng,

Concrttt

ACE HARI:MARE

Carpeting

..

-

BE
SUBMITTED
AS Met g~Coun ty1 Pt'otJ te .Cour1 ,
FOLlOWS :
Case No . 22,329, •(J onnte K ay
B id pr ice per t on , 1 o.b. Ch~pman, Route 4, Pom!roy ,
loaded at 11 endors plant for . Ohto 45769 was appotnted
the various kind and si ze of
Executr !,; of the estate of
aggregates that mav be
E lda H . Ca_rs ey, deceas~d ,
reQuired , which will c onfor rt]
late of Sc 1pr o Townsh tp .
Meigs co unty, Ohio
to t he pertment State of Ohio,
Department ot High ways
, ~anning 0 . Webster
Cons1ruc t ion ana Ma teria ls
Probate Judge .
Spe ctflc&amp;tions, excepting pea
Clerk
or shot gralo'ei, which is an
ung raded material .
(3 ) 7. 14. 21. Jtc
W i th
respect
to
t he
PROBATE COURT OF
aforesaid estim ated quan MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
tities. the vendors shZI II un
ESTATE
OF
ARTHUR
derstand that no guarantee Is
GIBSON , SR ., DECEASED
g iven to the act ual quantlf res
Case No. 22334
or aggregates to be fur NOTICE OF
nished , but each vendor shel l
APPOINTMENT
be required to fur.nlsh any
' OF FIDUCIARY ·
part
of
lhe
ac tua l
on March 3, 1978, In the
requirements , as ordered
Meigs County .Probate Cour t ,
dur ing the year 1978.
Case No . '22334, Arthur C.
Prices on th is bid shall be In
Gi bson, Jr , and An na Lee
effec t from April I , 1978 to
Gibson. Route 2, Albanv , Ohio
April 1, 1979,
.t.5110 were appointed Co On the en velope Containing
Admin is trators of th e estate
each bid, th e name and ad of Arthur
Gibson, Sr . ,
dress of the vendor must be
deceased , late Of Route 2,
shown and p lainly m arked
Albany , Ohio 45710.
.
" Agqregete B ids"
Mann ing 0 . Webster
Proposals
are
to
be
Probate Judge
returne d on bid forms sup .
Clerk
plied by the vendor , and w il l
be open ed on the date and . (3) 7, 14, 21, 3tc
pla ce speci f ied abov ~ .
The Meigs Count y Com missi on ers, reserve the right
lo accept or reject any or a ll
'
bids, or any part thereof.
The original Liberty bell,

(3) 7, 14, 2tc

Young's

NO ITEM TOO Lorge or too small.
Will buy I piece o r complete
household. New . used . or ant i
ques Mar lins Fu1n1tureo, 20 N
7nd 51 , M 1ddleport Phone
992 0370

FIDU friAY,"f .

Mary Hob st etter,
Clerk
Board of Meigs
Cou nty Commissioners

Stum Extraction

OLD FURN ITURE, rce baKes . brass
bed s, 1ron beds , el c. , cornplele
h ouse h old~ Wr ite M D M1ller.
Rt. 4. Pomeroy, Ohio or call
992·7760.

IF YOU hove o service to offer
w ont to buy 0 1 sell somethmg,
ae look 1ng for work
or
w hatever .. you 'll get results
foster w1th a Sent1nel Wont Ad
Call 992 -2156.

WALLPAPER.
PAINT &amp; SUPPLIES

Stlperlaf

WOOD
Pol es .mole
-.veterwns Mem";; 10 t H!; it~. ""''diame1er 10 ' on largest end , SB
Spe&lt;iol lhonlo.s 10 the PMid per len . Bundled slob; S6 per
dleport Emergency Squad an d
ton . Oel1vered to Ohto Po llet
the dO&lt;tors and nurses at !he
Co., Rt. 2, Pomero y 992 ·~689 .
hosp1ta l All ac ts of k1nQness SCASH S lor junk car s Frye's
were greo1ly appreciated .
Tru ck and Aul a P01t s. Wrecker
Groce Cro w E1 ch
Serv1 ce T1re sale and Repotr
Rutland . 742-208 1 o r Pennz o1l ,
742-95 75
THE RACINE Volunteer F1n'
Deportment w ill sponsor a gun
shoot every Saturday ot 6 pm at
theu budding 111 Boshon Foe
lory choke gun s onl y.

TUESQAY , MARCH7, 1971
3:DO-Ano1her World 3 .~. 15; General Hospl1al o,13;
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
3:30-AIIIn "The Family B.1 0; Consumer Survival K11
20.
4:DO-Speclal Treal 3•• . H ; Edge ot Nlgh1 13; Merv
Grllfln 6; Gilligan' s Is. B; Sesame S. 20.33; Gom~r
Pyle. USMC 10.
&lt;:3o-Brady Bunch B. 10; Mary Tyler Moore 13.

'------------------------------------1

t:Jri ' CHI P

Sea led bids will be r eceived
by the Board of County
Commissio n ers, of Meigs
Coun ty , Ohio, at the office Of
th e County Com missioner s,
located 1n the Court House , in
th e Vil lage of Pom er oy, Ohio
-45769 un til 4: 00 P.M . on the
21st da y of Ma rc h , 1978 and
the b 1dS w tll be opened at 6·30
P M
on the 21st day of
March, 19 78, for th e fur
PROBATE COURT OF
nish ing of all kinds and sizes
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
of aggreg,te that may be ESTATE
OF
ELDA H .
r eq u ired by the Meigs County CARSEY, DECEASED
Highwa y Department
Est imated qu anttt ies of all
Case No . 2232t
NOTICE OF
aggr.egate requ 1r ed , ap APPOINTMENT
"
prO XIm ately 30,000 tons .
',
O,f .
1
1

BID SPECIFICATIONS TO

Business Services

IN i.OVING memory of Purley
Thomas Kerr who passed owoy \\'anted fu Buy
March 7, 1975;
He 1s gone from us but the many liMBER , Pomer oy Forest Pro·
duels Top pr1£e lor standing
memories ol him s'tilllinger on .
sowt imbet , Col i 99~ - 5965 or
Greatly missed by his w1fe
Ken t Ha nby , 1-446 -8570
Altona and sons , Paul an d
Hot oce and daughter Kathryn COINS CURRENCY , tokun s, old
· M ora . grondch1ldrel"l and greol
pockel watches and cho1 ns .
grandchildren ,
s1!..-er and gold . We need 1964
and olde1 stl ver coi ns. Buy , sell ,
or trade' Coli Roger Wamsley ,
7A2 2J31.

,.....

TELEVISION
VIEWING

..

hi Memory'

WANT AD
CHARGES

Wto.ITING FOR YOOR.
TABLE AT lRE ~?

9:011-Movle " Sybil" Par1 2 . 3.o. I5; Movie " lasl ot lhe
Good Buys" B. IO.
9:3o-ThrM's Company 6.13; A Mal1er of Sire JJ; Ole~
Cavell 20.
tO : DO-Having Babies 6, 13; News 20; t0:3C)-Aibert
Paley : Me1elsml1h 33; Mon1y Pylhon"s Fllylng
Ci rcus 20. ·
11 :DO-News 3.•.6.8. 10,13, 15; Dick Cavel1 20; Over
Eosy 33.
11 :3C)-Johnny Carson 3.• ,15; Movie ""Siar Spangled
Girl" 6. 13; Columbo B; ABC News 33; Movie

£&lt;:1!! 001~ ~11~
to

A Montana
know our

with:

.,

reader

wnnts
opening bid

• AK.J lO xxx Jn ·B

•

~X

X X

sides vulnerable.
We simply open one .spade,
but don 't cons ider u fourwith both

spade opening a bad bid .
!NEWSI'A1'E H F.NTEHPHISF: ASSN)

(Do you haYe a ques tfon for
(he experts? Write "As /( the
Experts , " care of this newspaper IndiVIdUal question s
be answered If accompanied
by stamped, sell-addressed
envelopes The most mterest·
ing ques tions Will' be used m
thiS column and will rece ive
copies of JACOBY MODERN !

wm

�10 - Tile Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. TuesdaY., March 7, 1978
Resources some years a~o .
The Commission was rnade
up of many heart specialists
an&lt;l scienllsts throughout the
country.
It was recommended that
saturale!l fats should be
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.:
limited to 10 percent of total
calorie cuntiumption and that
One driver was charged in
the cholesterol intake should four trafllc accidents in·
The
committee
recombe limited to less than 300
An aid tn our
mended an increase in c~r~ milligrams a !lay, both also vestigaled Monday · by the
t•atin~r habit!'
bohydrate consumption to re01runended by the Commis- Gatlia-Meigs State Highway
Patrol.
account fur :;:; to 6:i per cent of sion .
The first occurred at 8:30
DEAR DR. LA MB - I calorie intak e. That's fine if il
They recommended a a.m.
on· Fourth Ave . in
would like your opinion on the means t!ating more fresh reducliun of salt intake,
Reedsville
where an Eastern
Senate Nutrition commith..&gt;e fruil' and vegetables and less which has been criticized
weal
bus
driven
by Sandra
on Dietary Goals for the reliance on fatty foods or because 80 percent of the
L.
Cowdery,
31,
Reedsville,
United States. I have seen some protein foods that,olten population do nul have any
that it has been criticized by contain more fat than pro- medical p'wblerns that backed into a car owned by
the Am erica n Medical tein. They also recmrunended originate from an excess salt James L. Cowdery , Reedsa rt.'tluctiun in sugar intake by inlllke. However, many pe~ ville. There was slight
~oc iation and some hea 1·t
specialisl' as well as 1he about 40 per cen1 wl1ich has pie with high .blood pressure damage to the car. No
meat industry a nd the egg in· l&gt;L.ocn cited as em inconsisten· do better on salt restriction charges were filed.
Richard H. Fischer, 64, Rt .
!lustry. Why would the com- ey since sugar is a car- and the elevalL'&lt;l pressure
l,
Bidwell, was charged with
mittee make sueh recommen- bohydrate: It really isn't in· may indeed be the result of
improper
backing following
dations if so many people arc consiStent sim:e aS I just exccsslve sctll use. While
an
accident
at 4:45 p.m.
rwted ther·e are a lot of car· many do not have this pr&lt;r
aga inst them'!
Monday
on
TR
46 at the
bohydrate
foods
other
than
DEAR READER - While I
blem the nwnber who do is
junction
to
CR
30
in Gallia
sugar
speeifieially
the
fruit
am not in total Gtg r~cmcnt
sufficiently great lQ warrant
with all the provh;iuns, it i.s a and vegetable group and the a conservative approach. Count y.
The patrol said Fischer's
good step forward in telling cere~:~\ group as well as the You may nut know if lots of
car
backed into a vehicle
the public what should be cal'bohydratcs in milk. So sa lt will hann you until it
operated
by. Serene Hill, 18,
done about American eating that complaint is really nit already has. That is a little
Gallipolis.
There
was
habits. Jncidentally it is not picking.
late.
moderate
damage.
They
I'
C
C
&lt;)mlllended
reducall thHt different from recomIt 1s sa ill that lhe AMA comA t wO-ear accident ocmendati ons for some of lhl..' ing the fat commmption from plained about these recomcurred
at 7 p.m. on Georges
ove
t·
40
pcrt:cnt
in
the
Scandina vian countries. The
mendations bec~wse other
Creek
Rd., one and nine
American
diet
to
around
30
commiltec listened to a lot of
risk factors, which inclu!led
tenths
miles
west of SR 7
percent,
a
figure
nul
much
diversi£ied opinions and i:l fler
high blond pressure and high
having done so felt these were different than rccorrunended cholesterol, arc important. where an auto driven by
the valid conce pts thai by the ln\er Soc iety Conunis· Indeed they are, but obesity Vest a G. Ham, 57, Cheshire,
sion for Heat·t Disease is a major factor in !leveloJ&gt;- struck a vehicle driven by
ernerged.
ing both high blood pressure Lyle C. Shillington, 27,
and high cholesterol. This Gallipolis. The accident
leads to still another com- occurred at a hillcrest.
An owl was involved in an
plaint: that the report l&lt;iiled
accident
at 10 :25 p.m. on US
to stress weight control and it
35
at
milepost
9. The. owl fiew
should have. Bul, by reducing
into
the
windshi
eJd on a
fat inlakt! and sugar intake
vehicle
operated
by Robert
the resulting calori e intake
M.
Green,
26,
Bellview,
Mich.
reduction would go a long
How do insurance companies guard against a financial
way in helping prevent obesicrisis?
ty in most people's diet. So in
Insurance compa ni es are a highly regulated industry .
general! think the criticisms Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitled - Laura Watoon,
These regulations. many self.lmposed, are to
are mostly nit picking from
Racine
; Dora Hysell, Long
saf eguard against any possible catastroph ic financial
special interest groups.
cr lsls. The various states requi re a super vised
Bottom
; Linda Martin ,
J Hm sending you The
investment por t folio which states where and how the
Health Leiter nwnber 1-3, Middleport ; Scarlett Lyons,
companies are Investing their money . Insura nce
Diel,
Pr even tin g Letart, W. Va .; Samuel
companies must keep reserves and a var iet y of
surpl uses. To insvre a sou nd margin of safety, most
Atherosclerosis, which is bHs· Rairden, Long Bottom:
companies reserve a portion of their surplus to cover
ed on the Inter Society Com- Nellie ·Lemley, Portland.
Disc harged
Cloyd
possible investmen t or mortality losses and any type of
r~ssiun 's reconunendations,
operating &lt;onflngency Which might arise. Such funds
BroOkoVer,·
Nettie
Hemsley,
for your infonnation. LAMB .
a~r listed in the company ' s Unancial statement as
3-7 PG4 Others who would James LeMaster, Phylljs Van
" con ting ency reserves." A portion of t he co nt ingen cy
like this issue can send 50 lmwagen, Frances Howery.
reserves must be in liqu id or near liquid assets.
cenll with a long, stamped ,
self-addressed envelope for it
Moisten not
to me in care of this
Never moisten eye shadow
newspaper, P.O. Box 1551, or brushes with your own
The Insurance Store
Radio City Station, New saliva. That's a possible way
Pomeroy, 0 .
714 E . Main
992-S 130
York, NY 10019.
to give yourself an infection.

Driver is Striking farmers aid miners
miners who have been on
CENTRAL CITY, Ky . handed out to members of March 14, saying the miners strike lor the past three
charged
(UP!) - Striking farmers families of striking miners. join Ianners' attempts to
months.
promised striking miners in
Police Chief Keith Nunley achieve 100 percent panty.
one point, farmers threw
Other miners expressed outAt several
Kentucky that they said the Iota! -size of tile
in accident western
whole chickens
had just begin to aid their crowd including county sentiments of thanks or into the large crowd at the

HEALTH

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE SERVICE

efforts to weather the effects
of the longest coal strike in
the nation's history .
'' This is not a one time
thing . As long as the miners
ar.e out on strike, we'll do
whatever we can to support
them," said Wayne Kryts, a
Puxico, Mo ., Iarmer.
A crowd of at leas( 6,000
peroons consisting of striking
United Mine Workers and
farmers from 14 states gath·
ered at a rally in Central City
Monday as four truckloads of
food was handed ou t to
western Kentucky miners .
A convoy of 32 cars, trucks
and tractor-trailer trucks
draped with American flags
arrived in the Mu.blenherg
County town late Sunday
night , and at the Monday
morning rally, the food was

residents might have been as
high as 12,000 at the rally in
the city of only around 5,500.
Au thorlties said word of the
rally plus the warmest
temperatures in nearly three
months helped swell the size
of the crowd.
"We realize a lot of you
used to be farmers," 8aid
Alvin Jenkins, one of the
founders of the American
Agriculture Movement from
Colorado. "You were driven
off your lanns and had to go
into the mines to support your
farms ...
James Hawkins, vice presi~
dent of UMW local 23,
thanked the farmers for tbeir
efforts . ·He said UMW
members would reciprocate
by joining in a planned
tractorcade to Washinston on

Union leader believes
some miners will work
DREW VON BERGEN
WASHINGTON (UP!) United Mine
Workers
President Arnold Miller said
today some striking mlners
will go back to work under a
Taft-Hartley injunction. But
resistance can be expected
and violence "is always a
possibility," he said.
~bor Secretary Ray Marshall ·said today the
government does not expect a
lot of violence in President
Carter's attempt to end a
record 92-day strike which
has caused power shortages
and thousands of layoffs.
Carter Monday invoked the
Tall-Hartley
law
and
appointed a thr~ember
board of inquiry. He aloo
ordered
the
Justice
Department to seek a federal
injunction ordering 160,000
striking miners back to.work.
Many miners have said
they would ignore such an
order.
"! know that oome of our
members would go back to
comply with the law - not
because they want to or like
to- but because they are law
By

Good Luck
Eastern Girls
Against Portsmouth
East

abiding citizens," said Miller.
Asked about the possibility
of violent clashes hetween
pickets and miners who
return to work, he said:
"It's always a possibility
when you invoke the Taft·
Hartley law. You always can
expect resistance. I don't
think anyone can accurately
predict just exactly what will
happen,
Miller aloo said Carier's
attempts to push for UMW
settlements with individual
mines could destroy the

sympathy with the farmers'
strike.
Doug Oldham, a UMW
member from Madisonville,
said the farmers' caravan
was an encouraging sign for
the striking mil)ers.
.
"I think we are all tn
support of the agriculture
strike
and w'e really
'
appreciate
what you are
doing," Oldham said.
Nora Lee ' whose husband
..
works the mines m
Madisonville , said the
farmers ' efforts was a "nice"
gesture.
"This will defintely help
my food budget," said Mrs.
Lee who took several pounds
of potat&lt;Jes and flour.with her.
The speechmaking was
held to a minimum as the
major focus wa s the
distribution of the caseloads
of hamburger, chickens , pork
chops, 20 pound sacks of
potatoes, 10 pound sacks of
fl our and cheeses, and
assorted vegetables to the

mudslickened fairgrounds.
Tommy Kersey, a Georgia
fanner whO joined in the
caravan , passed out peanuts
to oome of the rruners. He told
the crowd that he was doing
oo in recognition of President
Carter that "peanut farmer
from Plains, Ala., We're not
going to admit he's from
Georgia .' '
"Farmers are going broke,
every one is in the same
situation," said Kersey who
brought 140 hogs and 14 cows
from his Georgi~ !ann. " U
the miners rleed anything,
we'd rather give it to them ."
While the food was being
hand ed out, annoucement
came of President Carter~s
decision t&lt;J invoke tbe Taft
Hartley Act to try to Ioree the
miners tiack to their jobs.
"I don't believe we'll evet ·
go ba ck," Oldham said,
predicting "trouble" if food
stamp benefits were denied to
the miners.

ELBERFELDS
NEW SELECTION

KNIT SHIRTS
Solid c:olors · styles. An
excellent selection short
sleeves and tank shirts ·
crew necks and collared
{ 14 · 1 4 1!&gt;),

medium (1-5 -15 112 ), large
(16-16'12 ), extra large 07·
17 1hL
Stop in right away
select what you need.

Men's and Boys

Department, 1st Floor

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

At The District
Tournament In
Chillicothe, March 8th.
At 6:30

S.,cky Windon • Sr,

l. 'Chet'

't~

--30--

Jeannie McCiure-Soph. ·

By Dale Rothceb, Jr.
His typewriter is silent, his desk is filled with old papers
and his chair is vacant, but the memory of this outstanding
journalist will Uve on and on.
Even though the shock of teaming that an associate
friend and advisor ha~ died is still present, I feel II is ari
appropriate time to pay tribute to our departed coQeague.
Respect Is an intangible human trait that we all long to
receive, yet for some, it ~omes an Illusive. dream. But for
Chet Tannehill, the word respe~;t would lit his strong, self·
willed character. We fellows . in his editorial
department, came to know, respecl and appreciate this
dedicated journalist. Yet, In my own case, getting to know Chet
wasn't really very easy.
I can remember being a young , naive kid fresh out of high
IIChool getting my first chance at a news reoortillll iob. My fu-st
interview was with Chet. He gave me my first big O)lP.Ortunity
in journalism. But, being young and aggressive without any
(Continued on page 10)

By United Press International
·
COLUMBUS - THERE WAS A "SIT-IN" Tuesday
afternoon In Gov. James .A. !Utodes' outer office conducted by
Rita Warren; who wants the Ohio Senate to pass a bill
reqniring prayer at the start of each public school day.
Mrs. Warren had vowed t&lt;J stay In Rhodes' reception room
and be arrested when the building closed, but decided to leave
and continue her vigil in front of Rhodes' Upper Arlil)gton
home.

WASHINGTON- REP, WILLIAM HARSHA, R.Ohio, will
seek a loth consecutive term from Ohio's Sixth Congressional
District . Harsha, now in his 18th year in the House, is the
ranking Republican on the Public Works and Tra111portation
Conuniltee.
.
.. The veteran congr~an said Tuesday he expects to Pl~Bh
lor the continued CCilnomic and industrial development in his
oouthern Ohio district.

CLARENCE SCHMUCKER,' commander, received
the traveling trophy as "Outstanding Legionnaire of the
Year" Tuesday night when l~e annual birthday party of
Drew Webster ·Post 39, American Legion, was held at the
post how'r Making the presentation Is Bruce Cleland ,
right, who was last year's winner.

CANCELLED
Baton classes of Judy
Riggs held at Roya l Oak Park
have been ca ncelled until
AprilS. Classes scheduled for
this evening have also been
cancelled.

COLUMBIA, S.C.- BABY GRACE, A newborn girl found
squalling on top of a freshly dug grave in a local cemetery, is
doing well.
Hospital authorities- who named the child Grace because
she was found "by the grace of God" -said the ·5-pound, 9~·
ounce Intant was being kept in isolation while llocial workers
tried to find her mother, Authorities said, however, they would
take legal action to try to prevent the parents from regalldng
cu.stody e.ven If they are located.

Teresa Hannun - Stlph.

WASHINGTON -TilE NATTON'S SCHOOlS, often justly
accusecJ of reluctance to play a role in dealing with child abuse,
are beglmlng to recognize and report cruelty against children,
according to a survey taken for the U. S. Children's Bureau.
The report said 36 states require . edu""'""' to report
SUI]lCCted child abuse and neglect. '"'ue Increased
]IBI'Iiclpatlon of schools in child protection programs Is long
overdue;" it said.

THIS AD SPONSORED BY:

. \\f;

· LODGE MEETING
A regular meeting of
Racine Lodge 461, F&amp;AM wUI
be held on Tuesday, March
14, at 7:30p.m. A film, "Our
Precious Heritage" will be
shown. All Maater Masons
are invited.

'

''

SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad answered a call to
Meigs High School at I :57
p.m. Tuesday lor James
Morton, w.bo had cheat bums.
He was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

BOOSTERS MEET
The Eastern Athletic
Boosters will meet Thursday
at the high school at 7:30p.m.
Plans will be made for the
spring banquet.

r'

EVERYONE ENJOYED the organ selections of
Armand Turley at the Tuesday night birthday observance
of Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion, and
especially the young people on hand . Pictured with Turley
are from the left, Paula Kloes, president of the Eighth

Districl Junior Auxiliary; Pam Powers, vice president of
the Department of Ohio Junior Auxiliary ,. and Rhonda
Reuter, who is the auxiliary 's Girls State representative
.this year.

President Carter .opens ·hearings

COLUMBUS - GOV. JAMES A. RHODES wants the
Public UtilitieS Cominission of Ohio to "take every action
possible to stimulate production of Ohio's natural gas."
United Press International
In a letter Tuesday to Pl/00 Chairman C. Luther
The Carter administration
Heckman, Rhodes said, "Each of Ohio's major utilities mu.st . - rejecting demands that it
be encouraged to aggressively drill for Ohio natural gas." .
seize coal mines - to.day
opens mandatory !act-finding
WASHINGTON - FEDERAL LEGISLATION to provide hearings as a prelude to an
fanners and others with interim relief in the wake of chemical injunction ordering miners to
contamination disasters ia urgently needed, Sen. ,Robert P. end their 93-day-&lt;lld strike.
Griffin, R-Mich., told a House subconunillee 'Nesday.
The prospect of success of
Griffin said Michigan's own disastrous PBB the . back-to-work order for
contamination outbreak, and similar occurrences in many 160,000 UMW mine.rs appears
other states, demonstrate the "pressing need" for speedy bleak. Many miners say they
approval of his Toxic Substances Injury Assistance Act.
won't ubey the order unless
President Carter aloo setzes
BEREA, OHIO - THE ·woRST BUZZARD ever to hit the mines.
Ohio cost the Ohio Turnpike Conunission more than $530,000,
There wer e scattered
executive director Allan V. Johnson said today "The total cost reports of violence and
to the commlssion for the period when the entire turnpike was stories of booby-trapping by
closed more than a day, and portions lor more than three days, coal operators.
exceeded $530,000," he said·.
Most miners said they
"Leading the list of expenses are extraordinary employ~ would return to the pits if the
wage and salary costs which amounted to over $220,000 and government would also seize
private contractor expenses were $44,000. Lost revenue from the min es
action
passenger car and commercial vehicle tolls and other sources demanded by officials in
totaled $217,000."
Vennonl and New Hampshire. But Carter rejected
LOtnSVll.LE, KY. ~ A U. S. DISTRICT Court jury that option .
TuesdaY returned · guilty verdicts against two men in
A White House statement
connection with a scheme to defraud federally insured banks said there is "a heliel and a
in Kentucky, Ohio and West Virginia.
presumption on the part of
John Kaye, 72, of Parkersburg, W. Va., formerly of the government that people
Marietta, Ohio, and John B. Calandreua, 42, of Boston, Mass.,
also were convicted on charges of making misrepresentations
to a bank in Louisville in an effort to obtain a loan of $5.5
million to purchase coal rights and transmitting in foreign
conunerce a wire communica lion in a scheme to defraud
banks.

NASHVll.LE ,' TENN.-A 44-year-&lt;~ld truck dflver
from Ohio has become the 13th person to die of injuries
suffered in the explosion of a derailed pr'?P&amp;ne gas tanker at
Waverly Feb. 24.
Charles Ewing, 44, of North Bend, Ohio, died MQ!lday
night. He had been in critical condition at St. Thomas Hospital
in Nashville with rums over much of his body since the 20,000gallon tank car exploded.

Coach Susan Tbompoon lnslmta girls durllle a
timeout.

''

Vol 28. No. 228

i\l

COLUMBUS -THE OHIO SENATE will vote today on
House'fliiSSed legislation repealing the · state's motorcycle
helmet law. The bUI, sponsored by Rep. Terry M. Tranter, DCinoinnati, has been pending before the Senate Rules
Committee since July. It cleared the House 69-23 on June 29.
The bill would allow motorcycle operators with atleast one
year of experience to ride without a helmet. "Novice" riders
and any motorcycle operator under ·18, however, would still
have to wear the safely gear.

GOOd defeDBe ~y the Eastern girls makes scortuc
difficult.

Kaleen Millhone • Sopb.

Fifteen Cents

Tannehill \

Fairhoard ·

Eastern's Becky Windon tries to lind an open shot.

en tine

at

;:;:::::::::::::::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;;:;.;.;.;:;.;.;:;.;.;.;.;!;.;:;.;:::;:;.;.:;:::::·:::::::·:::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::;:·:·:::·:::·:::·:·:·:·:·&gt;.:;;;
:~
·~

·=··

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE

SMall

Wednesday , March 8, 1978

l 1News. • •in Brief~

SEE OUR

styles.

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

·::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::."R"-:::;::::~::::::::::::::;:;;;:;.;::·:i:~:::~·=~:::::~:::::~:::::::~::::!!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;.':::::::::~

Wlion.
"We would resist," said
Miller . "We know the history
- when you go to individual
bargaining then the union is
in serious jeopardy.1 '
"We don't really expect a
lot of violence to take place,"
Marshall said in another
interview this morning.
Carter warned Monday
that the adn)inistratlon would
not tolerate violence.
Miller was interviewed on
the CBS Morning News and
Marshall was questioned on
ABCs GOOd Morning America
program.

Good luck Meigs in district cage tourney

•

outlines

new plans
The Meigs County Fairboard
Monday
night
discussed plans for several
new projects. .
Among the new projecls is
a draft · horse show to be
staged in conjunction with the
Meigs County Fair which will
be held Aug. 15·19.
Horses in the category, a
brand new event for the
Meigs Fair, will he housed in
a tent near the horse barns
and will be on e&lt;hi bit
throughout the fair . The
committee In charge will he
Gerald Douglas, C. · W.
Hender.son-and Hugh Custer.
The board also planned
construction of a neW swine
bam to be located ·between
the show ring and the sheep
bam.
John Rose and Benny
Slawter were named to the
committee to oversee the
construction of that facility.
an Smith met with the
board and outlined plans lor
staging a garden tractor
pulling contest at the August
fair. This will replace the
annual tractor pulling contest, but the sam~ prizes will
he offer.ed.
Rules will be modified to
coincide with the types of
1ractors'to be used.
Wallace Bradford,
president, was in charge of
the meeting .

will obey the law."
· County , Ky. " II officials don 't
Nevertheless, some coal .act decisively to prevent a
operators were making confrontation, there could be
preparations - just in case. a sever e loss of life."
" I personally know of six
In West Virginia, a cascade
mine operators who have
of rocks and at least one
placed dynamite along the bullet fl ew at a non·union
perimeter of th el r property,'' mine where about 40 UMW
said Rex Co rn , an official al pickets, armed with clubs
Low Su lfur Coal Co., in Pike and rifles, a11acked a train

being loaded with coa l. They
fled at arrival of state police

and no arrests were made.
In Rockport, Ky ., local
volunteer lire departments largely staffed by striking
miners - rcfu~ed to respond
when fire broke out in 7,000 to
10,000 Ions of coa l heing
shipped on a barge from

anuther non -union coal
e1 mpany.
'llle state fir e marshal's
office was asked to in ·
vestigate the possi bility of
strlke~connecte d arson .
Sen. Robert Stafford, R-Vt.,

" If the majority of .mlnt'fs
flout 1he court and the laws of
land, I think seizure would be
the next appropriate step,"
Stafford said. Durkin put 11
more blunlly , cullin g on
Ca rt er to "st op fiddling

joined Rep. J11mes Jef£ords,

aro und and sehr,e the coal
mine9,"

R-Vt., and Sen. John Durkin,
D-N.H., in calling for seizure.

"The men believe they will
get a better shuke under

sclwre," Ohio UMW district
ufflcial Bill Lamb said .
. "The men would rather
wurk for the g:overnmcn ~
hoping thtH the government
Morris ' neighbor s ln. a would lind out and let people
By RICHARD BEENE
a tip from local officers, told ~rresling officers, "It 's
LAWRENCEVILLE, Ga. picked up Teddy Morris, of aU a mistake." She said middle -c lass Norf olk knuw just how much money
(UP! ) - A 20-year-&lt;&gt;ld man, Norfolk, in ·a tavern Tuesday Morris may have made police neighborhood said they these Coal operators arc
described as quiet and polite , night on a fugitive warrant. suspicious by making calls I&lt;&gt; "never had any problem with making," he added.
him." They said he lived with
has been arrested in Norlolk, He offered no resistance and Lawrenceville.
The miners were not
his parents until about a year without support.
Authorities
said
the
Va., in the shooting of Hustler was held without bond
magazine owner Larry Flynt pending a court appearance fugitive warrant states ago when they moved out of
The United Auto Workers
Morris is wanted in Georgia the split-level house. Morris · Tuesday donated $2 million to
and his attorney on a Law- in Norfolk today .
Witnesses said Morris' girl· lor aggravated assault with worked occasionally for his the UMW, and ea rlier,
rCllcevUle street. '
father, who is In the home sy mpath e ti c farm e rs ,
Police in Norfolk, acting on friend, who was with him, intent to kill .
insulation business.
engaged In their own !ann
Flynt and his local strik e movem ent, shipped
attorney, Gene Reeves, 47, meat, produce and Cllnried .
were critically wounded
Shade, 8:28a.m.. 3::i3 p.m., Monday during a lunch break guods to striking miners In
ATHENS - Effective p.m.
Kentucky .
Darwin, 7:27a.m., 3 p.m., 5:38p.m. ·
Monday, March 12, the
in Flynt's trial on o bsce~lty
The miners will need all the
·
Pratts Fork, 8:32 a. m., 3:57 charges stenuning from the
following revised schedul e 4:47p.m.
financial
help they can get II
Burlington, 7:30a.m., 3:03 p.m., 5:42p.m.
will take effect lor the Apdistribution of his sexually- they defy a Tuft-Hartley
Burlington, 8:35 a. m., 4 explicit magazine. A mistrial
palachian Oh io Regional p.m .. 4:50p.m.
injunction. Refusal to work
Pratls Fork, 7:34a.m., 3:07 p.m., 5:45p.m.
Transit Association (AOR·
was declared.
threatens
loss of the federal
Darwin, 8:37 a.m., 4:02
TA ) Pomeroy-Athen s Route. p.m., 4:54p.m.
Doctors said Reeves was in food stamps on which many
Shade,
7:39a.m.,
3:12p.m.,
p.m., 5:47 p.m.
Pomeroy to Athens
satisfactory condlllon and
Rock Springs (via old Flynt, 35, wbo underwent slx have lived s_ince the strike
Middleport (Corner of Mill 4:59p.m.
Athens (Co urt St. Bus Route 33), 4:10 p.m. , 5:55 hours of surgery for stomach began.
and 2nd) 7 a.m., 2:30 p.m.
Stop),
8 a.m., 3:30p.m., 5:17 p.m.
Pomeroy (Blue. &amp; Gray
wounds,
was
getting
p.m.
Pomeroy, 8:45 a.m., 4:22 "progressively better."
Restaurant ), 7:10a.m., 2:40
Athens to Pomeroy
p.m., 6:10p.m.
p.m., 4:30p.m.
Andrew Jaffe, a family
Athens
(Court
St.
Bus
Middleport , 4:27 p.m., 6:1:i spokesrrian, said early this
Rock Springs (via old
Route 33), 7:20 a.m., 2:52 S\op), 8:10 a.m., 3:35 p.m., p.m.
morning that Flynt "Is
5:20p.m.
sleeping peacefully and his
condition is stable and
-,
continuing to improve. ''
Doctors promised to reve~l
today whether the :Ja-year-&lt;Jid
"born again" Christian and
Clarence McDon'ald was
sex magazine enterpreneur able to save his own home In
was paralyzed by the two Salem Township Saturday
shots that pierced his evening. The house, even
stomach.
though occupied, Is still under
Hospital authorities and construction and there was
Flynt's own aldes refused to still scaffolding around it.
respond directly to . rwnors
Using scaffolding Me·
that the millionaire publisher Donald was able to throw
was paralyzed. However, buckets of water to exthey !laid Dr. Taber Begherl, tinguish a blaze which
the surgeon who spent slx developed around a flue
hours in two separate before the Pomeroy Fire
sessions operating on Flynt, Department arrived .
would discuss that with Damages were set at $2,000
newsmen today . They said Fire Chief · Charles Legar
Bagheri would also explain reported.
why .be left a bullet in Flynt's
abdomen.
Gwinnett County police
chief John Crunkleton
PROBE VANDALISM
Tuesday released composite
The Pomeroy , Pollee
sketches of a white man and Department was this morwoman, both believed to be In ning Investigating vandalism
their early 30s, jVho he sald at the Meigs Tire Center on
are wanted only as witnesses. E. Main St. over night.
He said the man, with
A large window was broken
medl1110-length light hair and oul of the business plus
moustache, was last seen several smaller ones in an
BOB MORRI.S, left, principal of the Pomeroy and Mlddl~jx,rt Elementary Schools, used
wearing a tan leather jacket. overhead door.
" Happy Birthday, American Legion" as hb topic Tuesday evening when he was gnest
The
woman, standing about So
A spray can of red paint
speaker at Dre\v Webster post annual birthday observance. With him are Mrs. Grace Prall,
leet-4
Inches tall and was apparently used on the
president of the post auxiliary, and a Clarence Schmucker, )lO!lt conunander. During the
weighing about 170 pounds, large door and tne panes of
evening Mrs. Pratt on behalf of tile auxiliary presented a cheek to the post. The party was
Continued on page 14
glass and on a larger window.
open to post and-auxiliary members and their families.

Suspect .c harged in shooting

AORTA has revised schedule

Man saves
home in
Salem Twp.

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