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                  <text>Pneumonia vaccine to

Bauer to head council.
Prnfessiun:J I education has

serve.

professional education staff
n! Rio Grande College and
Community College (RGCCC).
The council , required by
the
State
Board
of
Department of Education,
will advise tile college on the
design,
approval
and
of

prugram .

attended the !irsl session and )oJig hcen unc (,f Hio Grande's
the council is looking fur JllfiSt significa nt programs.
others whn might want to
Bauer sa id thatlhe task o!

(urmed to work with the

eva luati on

tea c her

education. lt will assist in
deve loping the program by
examining various policies
and
pro ce dures
f or
professional education used

by Rio Grande.
The advisory C&lt;luncil is
composed by representatives
fr om se ve ral community
groups including Rio Grande
students, county and city
school district personnel and
inlen&gt;sle(l citizens.
Kay Michael, Bidwell Porter Elementary School
math teacher , was elected

preparing

vice
pres ident;
Jo ~n
Wickham, treasurer ; Kirk
Chevalier, secretary , and

Russell Well , assistant
setretary. The line officers
are Ro ss Cleland, chief ;
Harold Newell, assistant
chief; Roy Christy, assistant
chief, and Larry Cleland,

captain.

Hospital Notes

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Kimberly
Klei n, Minersville; George
Hackett , Sr ., Middleport;
Orville All en, Pomeroy ;
Daniel Hill, Pomeroy .
Di sc ha rg ed Minnie
Dengal, Mary King, Ben·
jamin Neutzling , Laura
Watson, Ruth Wolle.
PLEASANT VALLEY
DISCHARGES - Nancy
Bowen 1 Ashton ; Mrs . Vincent

1978 BUICK
LESABRE

'5995

$5795

Price
Includes
the
Following:
• a01 engine
• Air conditioning
• 'Tinted windshield
• AM- FM radio
.
• Deluxe wheel covers
• Remote mirror
• Bodyside mouldings
• White-wall radial tires
• Carpet savers
• And many more· extras

• 301 V -8 engine
• Automatic trans.
• Power steering
• Power brakes
• Tinted glass
• Air conditioning
• White-wall Radials
• Sport mirrors
• Deluxe wheel .covers
• Radio accom. pkg.

..

pr ofe ss ional

Dr. Sam S. SMith, director teachers was important and
or academic a ffairs for RGC- the advisory council could
CC, told the council that it
have impact on controlling
could be of great assistance and insuring the qua lity l.)f
in advising the college abnul teachers by advis ing Rio
areas of growth and strength Grande's education program .
Th e next meeting of the
council
is se t for Tuesday,
Fire department
Aprilt? :30 p.m., in the RGCCC
ca fete ri&lt;L
More
officers named
information about the council
CHESTER - Offi cers ha~e is available !rom H. Paul
been named by the Chest er Lloyd, assistant professor of
Fire Department.
educotiun and de partment
The administrative officers l'ha irperso n.
are Bruce My ers, Sr ..
president ; Hobart . Newell ,

sec-retary of the group at it s

1978 PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX

become available here

fnr lhe fu ture in the teCAcher

initial mcetin~. February 28. ed ucatinn
Eighteen representatives

RIO GRANDE - Paul
Bauer, curriculum director
for Gallipolis City SchQOis,
has been named chairperson
nf a new advisory council

Laudermilt, Mason; Mrs.
Ernest Leport, Henderson;
Mrs. Earl Hammond and son,
Patrol!;
Mrs.
Brycle
Donohew, Evans; Gretchen
Kenny, Milton; Bert Rodgers,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Charles
Cornell, Glenwood; Merle
Clark, Vinton; Ernestine
Jones, New Haven ; Matthew
Burns, Bidwell; Mrs. John
Jackson, Southside; Franklin
Collins, Ashton; Mrs. Herbert
King, Letart; Mrs. Margaret
McComas, Ashton; Tanya
Kelly, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Jack Smith, Letart; Jeanetta
Roush, Mason; Max Meredith,
Radford, Va. ; Joseph Jones,
Point Pleasant; Merch Rife,
Gallipolis . .
CANCELLED
POMEROY - Ameeting of
Chapter
53,
Disabled
American Veterans ,
scheduled for Tuesday night
has been cancelled, chapter
officers repm1 .

SGT. BAHR

Tpr. Bahr
promoted

by patrol
COLUMBUS - Col. Adam
G. Reiss, Ohio State Highway
Patrol superintendent, · announced the promotion of
Tpr. Roger L. Bahr to the
rank of Sergeant.
Sgt. Bahr has been
assigned to the Wilmington
Post as an assistant com·
mander. He leaves the
Chillicothe Post where he has
been statoned slnce. joining
the Highway Patrol in 1971.
During his career Sgt. Bahr
has had specialized law
enforcement training in
management and super~
vision. He was selected by

fellow officers as Trooper of
the Year in ChiUicothe in
1974. A native of Reedsville in
Meigs County, he graduated
from Eastern High School.
Sgt. Bahr and his wife,
Mary, have two children,
Roger, 12, and Kelly, 10.

POMEROY - The new Biologics of the U. S. Food
pOeumococca l pneumonia and Drug Administration.
A number of states have
vaccine, " Pneumovax " is
already
approved use of the
now available through Meigs
vaccine
under
their Medicaid
County physicians.
The vaccine, developed by programs.
The new vaccine was cited
Merck Sharp and Dolune, has
been shown 90 percent ef- by the American Medical
fective immunizing against Association in an end-of-thethe 14 types of pneumococcal year review as 11 perhaps the
bacteria that cause more most important medical
than 80 percent of all development of the year
pneumococcal disease in the 1977."
l' Pneumovax'' is recQm·
United States.
The company is now mended for all people two
shipping about 700,000 doses years of age or older who are
high
risk
from
or "Pneumovax" to fill or~ · at
ders. NearJy one million pneumococcal pneumonia.
additional doses are apected These include : people with
to become available by ·the chronic heart, lung , and
end of next week, following kidney diseases, diabetes ,
certification by the Bureau ot and metabolic disorders;
people in chronic care
facilities ; people convalescing from severe
disease ; and people 50 years
of age or older.
-The side effects reported In
the clinical trials were
generally mild. Reddening of
the skin and soreness in the
area of the Injection occur
CQmmonly, but usually don't
last more than 48 hours. Low. grade !ever (less than 100.9
POMEROY - The Meigs degrees F.) occurs ocCounty Sheriff 's Depariment casionally and is usually
investigated a two-car limited to the 24 hours
accident Thursday at 5:15 following vaccination.
p.m. on township r.oad 113 in
The vaccine was licensed
Chester Township.
by the Bureau of Biologics in
According to tile report o! late November. Since then,
Sheriff James Proffitt, Bruce production lots of the vaccine
Bissell, 22, Rt. I, Long have been undergoing exBottom, and Esler L. Pitzer, tensive testing to assure that
42, Rt. 1, Long Bottom, were all criteria . for potency and
traveling
in
opposite puritY have been met.

No UMW members reported to work at union mines in Ohio
DD.l..ES BOTI'OM, Ohio (UP!) - Thousands of Ohio United
Mine Workers Union members today defied a presidential lnday although most were instructed to do so by local
order to return to work and tile goverrunent apparently will presiidents as ordered by a federal judge in compliance with
take no action against tile Individual miners under tile Taft- tile Taft-Hartley law.
Hartley Act.
Meanwhile, local leaders in District 6, which has 16,000
"The court order was fairly explicit in saying that that members 'in Ohio and tile nortbern Panhandle of West
nothing shall be construed to require an individual employee to Virginia, met ln Dllles Bottom today to discuss what the next
render labor or service without his consent," said Dan Brown, move would be, especially on the part of tile government.
assistant U.S. attorney for the southerq Distirct of Ohio.
"We compiled with tile order, posted schedules and hoped
"What it means is there is an amendment to tile Constitution for the best and nobody showed up," said Dave Baker•..!I
prohibiting lnvountary servitude," said Brown. "What the spokesman for the Southern Ohio Coal Co. which has three
restraining order is really directed at is any C&lt;lncerted action mines In Meigs and Vinton County.:
on any of the defendants persuading, coercing the miners not
"We have 14 mines in our association and notxxly went to
to go back to work."
work," said Leonard Pnakovich, president of the Ohio Cpal
Brown said he felt local presidents were "adhering In the Associatioon. "It looks like total defiance."
letter of the law if not the spirit" when they followed
Spokesmen for the North American Coal Co., Consolidation
instructions in the restraining order and told their members to Coal Co. and Peabody Coal Co. also said all their mines were
return to work.
.
open but nobody reported for work.
" But make no mistake, the goverrunent Is very disheartened
Some local officials said they would meet with their
that the minersdidn 't show up to work this morning. We really membership today or tonight.
think that most of tile miners are patrotic citizens and are
Ed Bell, Martins Ferry, Ohio, president of Local 1110 of the
doing what in their best judgement and conscience is tile best Consolidation Coal Co. mine In Moundsville, W.Va., directly
thing," said Brown. "We respect that, but we wish they would a~ross tile river from Dllles Bottom, said he would meet with
go back to work."
his 800 members tonight.

Deputies

check two
accidents

direction.

Due to icy and muddy road
conditions, the two cars

collided. Both drivers
attempted to miss each other,
but in doing so lost control of
their vehicles.
Mrs . Pitzer sustained
minor injuries and was

Release to

Begin was meeting his .
Cabinet and then addressing
Begin summoned his cabinet the Knesset six hours later.
Thirty-seven people died
and the Israeli parliament
into emergency sessions and 85 others were wounded
today to condemn the worst Saturday along the coastal
Arab terrorist attack in Tel Aviv-tG-Hai!a highway .
Israel's history, which killed Nine of tile 11 seaborne
37 persons, including an guerrillas died and two were
captured following a fierce
American woman.
Avisibly shaken Begin told shootout. Two of the
reporters Sunday Israel terrorists were women.
Troops carried out a 29would "eliminate" the
constant threat of Arab hour manhunt for three
terrorism, prompting raiders originally thought In
speculation a retaliatorY. raid hav~ escaped. But a · later
· body count showed that they
might be .in tile offing.
JERUSALEM (UP!) -

Prime Minister Menachem

doctors and

pharmacists begegan after
enough lots for distribution
passed the necessary tests.
ARTIST '1'0 APPEAR
The Cheshire-Kyger PTA
would like to a!Ulounce the
special meeting on Tuesday
March 14, 7:30p.m. of chalk
artist, Rev . Ly!Ul Lahaie,
pastor of Faith Baptist
Church near Rio Grande. He
will draw an Easter scene
while everyone enjoys the
piano artistry o! Miss Sharon

treated later. There wa s
moderate property damage.
No citations were issued.
Friday at 6:16 a .rn . on SR
124 a deer was killed -when it
ran into the path o! a car
driven by Terry Proffitt. 'l/,
Rt. 1, Portland. There was
heavy damage to tile vehicle. Lahaie. Everyone is welcome
There were no injuries.
In attend.

SAYS:

Super intermediate finished in
classic black w i th white bucket seats
and white landau top . Equipment
includes Hit wheel . cruise con trol.
console , AM radio with 8 tra ck
stereo and chrom plated wheels.
On ly 3.289 miles .
I
warranty .

STOP EVERYTHING! Now's the time to save at the P

Sllerif! yard. Tile man told him he

Meigs County
JameS J. Proffitt · reports arj
18-,year old Middleport man
has bllen . jailed on several
charges foll owing an incident
that occurred at 10 p.m.
Saturday at Long Bottom.
George F. Carter, 274 N.
2nd., Middleprt, is being held
in the Meigs County Jail on
charges of driving while under the influence, reckless

NOVA 4 DR
F ini shed i n glacie r blue wi th
con trast ing cloth Interior. Th is 8,929
mile. automobile has the econom ical
6-cylinder eng in e. automatic transmission , power steeri ng and radial
tires with Rallye wheels.

Bea ut ifu l white exter ior with
matching vinyl bucket seats . AMFM radio. ra ctory air, ti lt wheel , and
radial tires . This car deserves your
close Inspection . Extra clean .

'5795

77 CHEVROLET MALIBU

Buckskin fin!sh with rnatchin·g v inyl
inter ior. This 2 dr . hardtop Is
equipped with air conditioning ,,
power steering and power brakes.
General Motors factory official's
automobile.

1977 MONTE CARLO
Extra sharp Flrethorn metallic
paint, viny l bucket seats, conso le,
cruise control, lilt wheel , Rallye
wheels, rear defroster . Only 15,74 1
miles.

5795
1975 ELECTRA LIMITED
2 DR

~ed

-

Power windows &amp; sea" t,
AM-FM stereo, tilt wheel, cruise
controL 60-40 seats. new rad ial tires.

1976 VEGA HATCHBACK

4 DR
arctic white

Finished in
with a
saddle vinyl root Crushed velour
cloth seats compllment the tilt
wheel, factory air, and AM-FMtape . Local school eKecuthte's trade.

1

Your Heart Bra
sale

I

1975 BUICK CENTURY
CUSTOM 2 DR
Red with wh ite v inyl top, AM-FM-8
1rack , chrome wheels, radial tires.
One owner.

Fa ct ory air, power steering , 4 speed.

Showroom cond ition . 11.6 16 miles .

'2695
197l VOLKSWAGEN

BEATtE
Real economy, extra clean. Local
owner .

J

SAII'E $1.00 on undercup support panel bras

SMITH
1911 EASTERN AVE.
BANK FINANCING
,.

446-2282

GALLIPOLIS
GMAC FINANCING.

'

# 655 Seamless Tricot Fiberfill feg. $7.95
now only $6.95 (also in beige)

627 Tnc ot Cup reg . $7 .50' now only $6.50'
629 Tricot Fiberfill reg . $ 7 .95 now only 6 •95
120 Lace reg . $?.SO' now only 6

# 665 SeamlessTricot Fully Padded reg . $7.95

122 Lace Fiberfill reg . $7 .95 now only $6.95
752 Lace with underwires reg . $8.50'
on ly $7.50'
754 Tricot with underwires reg. $8.50'
on ly $7.50'

SAVE $2.00 on
# 649 Undercup Support Panel Tricot Cups
Longline reg . $11.95 now only $9.95
# 669 Undercup Support Panel Fiberfill Cups
Longline reg . $12.95 now only $10.95

s :so·

s

now only $6.95 (also in beige)

•s,~vt::.$1 .00on

SAVE$1.00whenyou buy 2
.
73 Stretch with Lace Fiberlill Cups reg . $6.95
#35 Cotton Bandeau reg . 2/$9.oo'nowonly2/$B.OO•
now on ly $5.95
# 173 Stretch with Cotton Lace Cups reg . $6.50' SAVE $1.50 when you buy 2
#961 Sofl Sider Fiberlill reg . 2/$11.90
now only $5.50'
685 Seamless Tr icot reg . $7 .50' now only $6.50 nowonly2/$10.40
.
,
in beige)
#966Sofl Sider Tricot reg . 2/$9.90nowonly,.,~~·~•u

OPEN EVERY WEEK DAY 9:30 TO 5 P.M.

not be injured if they trlt;.'tt to return to W!)rk .
"There's no way I can guartmtee thnt, " he rt·pHed .

en tine

Fift e ••n ('~uts
\'ul. 2S, No . 231

had

President Carler today

man requested to see Ho)ter's

driver's license. Holter
refused to give it to him
saying he first WHnled to sec
his badge or identificati on.
After talking a short tlme,
the driver of the bla ck car ad·

vised he would follow Holter
sheriff's office.

When he backed his cHr
back, Mr. Holler proceeded
on. As they neared lhtJ ·
Chester Wells residence thev
noticed Car was coming

uP

behind them at a high rate of
speed. The vehicle passed on
the curve and double yellow
line. As II passed they obtained the description and
license number. Just as the
vehicle got back in the west
bound lane , the driver lust
cuiltrol and his vehicle went
off the roadway on the right
and sturck an icebank and

ori

FRIDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 5 P.M.

PROVIDENCE, R. I.-GOV. J. JOSEPHGARRAHYsays
Rhode Island is ''very well-prepared'' for a strike today by half
the state's goverrunent employees.
Negotiations between the state and Council H of the
American Federation of State, County and Municipal
Employees collapsed late Saturday night, with the union
reJecting Garrah;y's plea to accept his final offer.

ELBERFELDS IN .POMEROY
'OCUP
"

outrage to understand that a
Palestinian state would be a
mortal danger to our nation
and our people," Begin
said. .
He
condemned
the
Palestine
Liberation
Organization lor the attack the PLO took responsiblity
lor it - and lashed out at tbe
Soviet Union for arming the
guerrillas.

. extended \he , ener~y
emergency In Ohio lor 30
days because of supply

deputy sheriff and that he had
been looking lor a ca r. The

a

carnage.
' 'There was no need of this

Extended
WASHINGTON (UPI)-

to his residence and from

wife

Visibly shaken, his speech
halting, Begin told newsmen
at his heavily guarded
Jerusalem office Israel
" shall not forget" the

Emer~ency

there they would contact the

his

ANN ARBOR, MICH. - THE CITIZENS' GROUP that
succeaafully stopped the use .of baboons in an auto crash
reeearch project says It has no plans to rescue the animals
from a new kind of death in another University of Michigan
laboratory.
SII baboons were spared feb. 2 when tile school's Highway
Safety IUlseal'ch Institute agreed to stop using them in crash
study. But now the university's physiology department wants
to use them In a study of hypertension.

WOMEN'S LINGERIE DEPARTMENT • 2ND FLOOR

:·

members Sunday at tile grade sehool.
"I told them to go back to work ," said Hoffman. "They just
looked at me. l obeyed the law."
"You'd be a goddllmned foo l In follow that order," said on&lt;'
miner following the closed meeting.
Belmont Coun ty Deputy Sheriff' Kenneth Clark said th••re
had been no violence in the county.
"But if we've got people sayinK U1ere will be trouble, then•
probably wUI be," said Clark. " We will just sit back and ke•'l'
our eyes and ears open."
Roy Howard, president of Local 1340 In New J.e:dng ton, met
with many of hls BOO members Sunduy, und accurately
predicted that his men would not return to work .
14
1 cUd my duty ," he said, "a nd now the men will do what they
til ink is right. "
Members of UMW Locul 2262 met ut the dist rict
headquarters Sunday night and luughed and hissed when locul
president Ke!Dleth Conaway read the back-t&lt;&gt;-work order.
Conaway said he came to the meeting in a friend's car
because threats had been made against him if he Cllllle to II~&lt;•
meeting. One miner Hsked if ConawHy {'ould assure they would

;:;:;:;:::;:::::::;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;

mud.
. By United Presli JntemaUonal
Holter contirmed on a short
WASWNGTON ~THE FEDERAL TRADE Commission distance then stopped ~~ a
announced roday It has settled a price-fixing complaint under residence and cH II,-d the
which tile Levi Stratl99 company has agreed not to try to S~eriff's Offic-e.
control tile retail price of its jeans and other gannents.
·
When ' dePutfes arrived ,
The company, which claims w be the .world's largest they found Ca!1er sitting in
. apparel manufacturer, was accused by tile FTC nearly two . U1e 1977 Lincoln attempting to
years ago of telling its 15,000 dealers in this C&lt;luntry what to get the vehicle of! the
charge for jeans and other clothing. In addition it was accused snowbank and out of the mud.
of requiring retailers to carry other I.A!vi's products in The vehicle was "smoking"
exchange for Uie tight to sell the popular denim jeans.
because it had apparently
overheated. He was taken to
CLEVELAND - SOME 300 PERSONS, mostly from the Pomeroy Police Station
fundamentalist churches, demonstrated Sunday in support of for a breath test ami then
suburban Cleveland couple who refuse to enroll their children · transported to the CountY
In a lltate-chartered school The rally was called to protest an Jail. After being linger11th District Ohio Court of Appeals ruling that Thomas and printed and photographed,
.Martha Uppltt I11USt enroll their two daughters in a state· Carter ran from the office
approved school.
.
.
.
while being taken to the cell.
The Uppitt girls are In temporary custody of Cuyahoga
While running, he !ell down
CoUnty, at a local children's borne. The demonstration was the flight of stairs that led to
held outside the h«ne.
the sidcwHlk. CHrter 11iiUICii

t's here- the sale for every woman who wants a better figure.

'1395

BUICK
PONTIAC

Jr

Apn l 8. 19?8)

sense of deep personal shock
and moral outrage."

~en

and

fNews. ·• . in Brief~

(Sa le ends

-senseless'' and expressing " a

Pomeroy, whu reported he

~~~~~'&lt;:~~~~"*~:S:~~~;;:;$&lt;:',&lt;:':':;;;~;;;:,:;:;~~"!;:::,..~~""'"'~~~~

'5995
PONTIAC GRAND PRIX

'4495

the vehicle.
As deputies responded to
the ca ll-, the department
received .another complaint
!rom David Holter, RD

traveling west on SR 248 just
outside of Long Bottom when
arrest after he attempted to a ca r came up behind them
escape while being booked at flashing headligllts and its 4way flashers. Holzer said he
the c-ounty jail.
According to the report, the pulled over and that the car
Meigs County Sheriff's O(!ice then parked al afi a~gle in
·was notified at 10:02 p.n\. by front of the Huller car.
The driver uf the car came
Chesler Wells, Long Bottom,
back
and advised he w.as a
(Olive Township Trustee)
that a car had run into llis

Red wiih white vinyl top, 6,085 mi les,
AM · FM Rally e whee ls, showroom
clean.

A 2 dr: H. T . Specialty hardtop from
Pontiac finished In Glacier blue with
Equipment
matching vinyl Inter ior. _
includes air conditioning, AM-FM 8
track stereo radio and Rallye I I
wheels . NeW Grand Pri x trade.

was a deputy sheriff and that
he had beeil in hut pursuit of a
car. Wells gd.ve 01e desci"ip-tion d.nd license ilwnber of

operation, impersonating a
peace officer, and resisting

1977 MONTE CARLO

1977 GRAND PRIX

died along with 25 of the
Israeli victims In a blazing
bus.
Defense Minister Ezer
Weizman cut short his trip in
tile United States to attend
the cabinet sessioo . Begin
and Foreign Minister Moshe
Dayan postponed their
departure for crucial talks
with President Carter in
Washington until next ·week.
Carter sent a message to
Begin calling · tile terrorist
Jl\tack
"cowardly
and

Multiple charges are
filed after ·incident

PRICES SlASHED - THESE CARS MUST GO!
DOC

back. "
"I did what I had to do, bull can 'tlead them by tile hand,"
McCloy said later. "They will make up their own minds."
One miner, a Vietnam veteran, said, ' 'I 'd feel safer ba ck in
Saigon than in a coal field lnnight."

Bob Hoffman , sresident o! Local ~97 w1th 500 members at
North American No. 1 mine at Powhatan Point, met with his

Beginsummons cabinet

BONNEVILLES • FIREBIRDS • PHOENIX • REGALS
SKYLARKS- RIVIERAS ·CENTURY WAGONS

WE HAVE THE lARGEST INVENTORY OF CLEAN lATE
MODEL USEO CARS IN SOUTHERN OHIO - MOST CARRY
A100% WARRANTY ON THE POWER-TRAIN. SEE BOB
BRICKLES, HARlAND WOOD, GENE JOHNSON OR GREG
SMITH FOR A REAL GOOD DEAL!

several members left early, shouting , " Hell, no, we won 't go

at y

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, March 13, 1978

I

The underside of a starfish
is pocked with hundreds of
tiny feet-like suction cups.
The cups are strong enough to
withstand a pull o! more than
100 pounds !or a short time.

•

"But l don't look for any of tile coal mlners to make a move
hack unless a controct comes back that can be ratified," said
Bell.
"I'm sure tile goverrunent is going to hold someone responsible," sald Jim McCloy, president of Local 1323 in Coshocton
County Sunday afler he read tile back-to-work order to his
members.
" I respect my presldentandmy C&lt;luntry," said Joe Taylor, a
Locall323 official. "But, we're not slaves and we're not going
back to wor~ without a decent contract. " '
The Buckeye Sheriffs Association had gathered deputies
from all over Ohio to assist .state highway troopers, who were
headquartered at Salt Fork State Lodge near cambridge, In
case of violence ,
At the Coshocton meeting about l50ofthe 350 union members
who work at the Peabody Coal Co. mine gathered to hear
McCloy read part of tile injunction .
The miners remained quiet throughout tile meeting, but

his head d.nd face, suf-

ferin~ severe abrasions.

The Pomeroy Emergency ·
Squad was called and transwrted him to the Veterans
Memorial Hospital for treatment. He was later returned
to the County JHil. Carter is
slated fur hearings later in
the · week in Meigs County

Court.
Meigs County Sheriff
James J. Proffitt advises that
it is the policy of the Sheriff's
Department that deputy
sheriffs stop motorists only
when a deputy is in uniform
and in marked cruiser. ''Tl
will be only un very rare oc'casions that a deputy in plain

a

&lt;X&gt;LUMBUS - TEACHERS IN suburban Westerville
were tO retui'n wthe c1asarooma today following an agreement clothes or in an urunarked car
t11 a new contract Sw\day 'designed to end a 12-day old strike.
will stop an ordinary
The Westerville Education Association, which represents motori s t. ' 1 commented
_Sheriff James J . Proffitt.
~
(Cantinued on pqe 8)
_.,

shortages throughqut the
state, a move that
temporarily lilts air

qualitY standards.
It allows the use of
eertaln grades of coal
normally prohibited by
environmental standards.
The initio) energy
emergency was declared In
February.
·
-:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::

E·R answers
three calls
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad answered three ealls
on ·Sunday.
At 12:46 a. m., George
carter was taken from the
Meigs jail where he had
fallen down a flight of steps to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 12:38 p.m. Alma Young,
who had fallen, was laken
from her home on Golf
Course Hill to Veterans
Memorial Hospital and at
11:07 p. m. Charles Bailey,
Pomeroy, was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
for treatment of injuries
received in an accident on
East Main St.
Cars driven by Bailey and
David Goodwfrl, Pomeroy 1

had collided. A report on tile
accident was not complete
this morning.

Weather
Rain, possibly heavy at
times,

windy

and

mild

Tuesday, with highs in tile
upper 40s. Probability· of
precipitation 10 percent
today, 70 percent tonight, 80
percent Tuesday.
WASinNG'I'ON (UP!)Hoping for a major breakthrough In aegollatiooa,
the soft coal lllcluslry bas
olfered beallb care
concessions to striking
miners in exclumge for a
controvenllll production
lnceallve clause, sourees
said wday.
Heallb costs have been
one ,ol the bigcelll la11e1 In
the
18-day
walkout.
Sources cloe to both the
United Mine Worlt:ert
union and the Bitumlnotll
Coal
Operatora
Asooclatlon indicated lbe
trade-&lt;Jff wao onder
oerlo• cooaidtntlon •
necotlatlooa contlllaed oa
a less lban
bull.

fall-c&lt;'\'•

"FOR (i&lt;)D AND COUNTRY" award was recently
presented In David Lawson, a member of Syracuse Scout
Troop 242. The emblem is not to be regarded as an award
which tile Scout has earned, but as a token given in
recognition of his understanding of the teachings of the
Protestant Church, his faithfulness in worshipping his
Lord and Savior, his boldness In witnessing to his faith,

Fire loss
is $7,000
CHESTER - Losses were
estimated at $7,000 In a fire
which hit th'e two-story frame
home of the Jack Ginther
family in Chester late
Saturday night.
Chester Fire Chief Ross
Cleland said the fire started
around a stove flue and
spread to tile roof of the
home. Most of tile family 's
belongings were saved.
A Middleport truck with air
packs was on hand to assist
the Chester firemen.

and his willingness to render service to his church, his
community and his fello"'mcn. Pictun:d I1rc; left to right,
George Holman , scoutmaster, David , a nd Hcv. Dwight
Zavitz who made the presentati on. Special guests at Uw
award presentation were David 's mother , Mr-S. Janice
Lawson, Mr. and Mrs. .James Tcnford, gra ndparents,

Earl Pickens, Corey McPhnil lind Tony S;ilser, scouls,
and Hugh mcPhail.

Coalfields are
idle, peaceful
Uilited Press lnternutlonBI
Thousands of coal miners

elf ~ct but it was apparent
that miners were in no mood
to go back into tile pits.
At Dilles Bottnm, Ohio, one
local official claimed "We re

in Ohio and West Virginia
defied a Tall-Hartley
injunction l&lt;l return In work
lnday. Early reports !rom the not slaves '' and sald the
field Indicated tile coalfields miners would nQl return to
work until they get a "docent
were peaceful.
contract."
· Not all o! tile locals in Ohio,
President carter orderl!d
West Virginia and other
states affected have received tile men back to work at
the court orders necessary midnight Sunday. '!be local
for the injunctiqn to go into officials who received O&gt;Ht
1

0

Two injured in 10 wrecks
Two persons were injured
in 10 traffic accidents in-

vestigated over the weekend
by the Gallia-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol.
The first injury accident
occurred at 3:45 p.m .
Saturday on CH 34, north of
SR 124 in Meigs County where
Richard H. McKee, 44, Portland, going south, lost control
of his car when the vehicle
encountered st~ering

problems. The vehicle ran o!!
the roadway striking a tree
then overturned. There was
moderate damage.
McKee had minor injuries
but was not immediately
treated.
John Rees, 27: Gallipolis,
was token to the Holzer
Medical Center by the Gallia
County
Volunteer
Emergency Squad lor
treatment of injuries suffered
in an accident at 8:30 p.m.
Sunday ·on SR 218.
State troopers said Rees'
' car gol~g north, ran off the
left side of the highway hittin·g a mailbox, ditch and
road sign. It then hit a house
owned by Russell Taylor of
Rt, 2, Gallipolis. There was
heavy damage to the car and
minor damage to the house. ·
Edward D. Merry, 24,
Bidwell, was ·C!harged with

DWI following an accident at
6:45 p.m. Sun~ay on US 35 at
the Bidwell-Rodney Rd .
Officers said the Merry car
struck the rear end of an auto
driven by Donna K. Stewart,
23, Patriot. There was

A deer was killed Saturday
evening irl an acc ident on SH

7. The animal ran into the
path of a ca r driven by
Michael L. Russell, 22,
Gallipolis.

, A single car accident ocmoderate damage .
curred at 7:30p.m. Saturday
A hit-s kip acci dent oc- on the Rio-Centerpoint Rd .
curred at 10 a.m. Sunday ori . west of SR 325 where.Timothy

Railroad St. in Bidwell where
an unknown vehicle struck a
parked car owned by Ruby
M. Jones, 57, Bidwell. There
was moderate damage.
''
Slippery roads were
blamed for a · single car
mishap at 8:50 a.m. Sunday
on SR 143, west of SR 7 in
Meigs County. The patrol
said Barbara L. McDennott,
20, West Columbia, lost

C&lt;lntrol of her car on \he wet
roadway. Her vehicle ran off
road Into the creek.
No charges were filed as
tile result of a single car
accident at 3:20a.m. Sunday
on SR 141 in Gallia County.
According In a report .filed
with the OSP, Thomas E.
Turner, 37, Logan, IV. V ~.
going west, lo&gt;1 control of his
car which ran off tile right
side of the highway hitting an
embankment. The car then
flipped over onto its side.
There
was
moderate
damage . ,~. .

'l'ufl-Hartley tirder rehtyed lt
members at meetings

.. to UH.! ir

Sa turday and Sunday.
Aspot check o! a number of
mining cente rs In Ohio
sho wed. that no mine1·s
(Continued on page 8)

Area
•
mznes
idle

A spokesman for the
Southern Ohin Coa l ComW. Condee, 16, Gallipolis, lost pany, owners of th e three
control of. his ca r alter deep-shalt mining operations
dropping a cigarette. His in the · Meigs County area,
vehicle ran off the roadway said today no union miners
through a fence. No citation repo rtc~ to work at midnight
Sunday or fur the 8 a.m. shift .
was issued.
John R: Sheets, 31 ,
Th e
coat
co mpany
GalliPolis, was charged with Saturday annou nced work
improper backing following schedules lor a back to work
an accident at 11 :45 a.m. request under a temporary
Saturday at the intersection restraining order issued
o! Buck Ridge Rd . and under the Taft-Hartley Act
Magnoiia Dr. Officers said March 9. Along with the
Sheets' ca r backed from a schedules, the company said
parking lot striking a vehicle an mines were open and
driven by Daniel S. Thomas, available for work .
17, Gallipolis, There was
It was the second time In
minor damage .
the last four days, back to
A final accident occurred at . wor k r_eq uest has be ~ n
11 :30 a.m. Saturday on SR 7, ignored.
On Friday, the company
north of milepost 29.

a

Arcording to t he patrol, an

auto driven by Robert G.
Adams, 40, Athens, attempted to pass just as a car
driven by VIrgil J. Carr, 45,
Ri. 2, Patriot, started to
make a left turn. There was
minor da'mage. ~

n ppe~1 h•d

·fo r its union em ·

to J'Cport to work, out
that order was Ignored.
The three Meigs Mines
have 1,570 union employees,
all members of unions affiliated with the United Mine
Workers ri America. il&gt;
jli&lt;,_I'CC.

�:1-The Daily Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Monday , Mar 13, 1978
2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 • M~y. Mar 13, 1978

Order of DeMolay founded in 1919
The Order of DeMolay, an
tnternattonal
youth
organtzatlon that offers
teenage boys the training and
gutdance they need to
become better clbzens, was
founded m 1919 as the result
of a young soc1a1 worker's
desire to provide fatllerly
advtce and counsel lor a boy
whose lather had been killed
m a huntmg acctdent
The youth, Louts Lower.
went to FrankS Land, the 28year-old father and alter
frequent talks with Lower, he
realized that the boy's
predtcment was not confined
to htm alone, but extended to
countless other boys whetller
they had fatllers or not It
pomted out a need for a new
youth orgamzatlon - one that
would provide the proper
trammg and guidance to
better cttizenshtp that no
other boys• group offered
Land told Lower he would

belp fonn a new boys' club none of !hem appealed
and for him to bring some of espectally to the boys Then
his high school friends and one of the youths suggested
that since they were meetmg
they would get organized
And ao it was In February, In a Masomc Temple that
1919, LoulaLowerandeight of some of thei historic ltgures
his friends met In the Scottish connected w1th Masonry
Rite Temple with Frank S should be recounted
Land for the purpose of
It was then lhat Frank
forming a new boy s' Land menlloned the name of
organization Utile did any of Jacques DeMolay The name
them dream, least of aU hnmedtately captured each
Frank Land, that In Just a few of the ntne young minds
years the movement would be When they heard how, as the
active ln several countries last Grand Master of the
and territories outside lhe Knights Templar he dted as
United States and would have a martyr to loyalty and
a membership of over one toleralton, they unanimously
agreed that DeMolay was
hundred thouaand boys
The Idea of a club that thetr chmce of names
would be both educat1011al
Land advised them not to
and msplratlonal was well act m haste, to thtnk the
received by aU nine The names over and dec1de for
question was raised as to sure at the next meeting On
what to ca II this new March 18, 1919, the nme
organization Frank Land youths along with twenty four
began reciting many of the of their frtends, met agam m
famous names In hi!Jiory, but the Masomc Temple and

I

I

Annual banquet
slated March 25

@

HEALTH
Lawrence E Lamb, M.D.

DEAR DR LAMB- Why ts
tt that most doctors wtll
prcscrtbe Lanoxm or dtgttahs
and not tell the pabent to
make sure he takes tl every
smgle day' Also that they
should drmk a couple of
glasses of orange JUice or eat
a banana a day for

potasstum' Too many people
take ptlls for granted and if
they start to feel good they
qutt takmg the medicme
I read m one of your col-

wnns that if you take d1gtlahs
many fonn you should never,
never, never stop t.akmg 1t

unless your doctor says so If
you stopped takmg tt what
would happen to you'
DEAR READER - Most
people who take Lanoxm or
other digttalts preparaltons
take them because they have
heart latiure A small
number take them to control
heart trregulanttes
Heart !allure causes flwd
to collect m your lungs mterfermg with breathmg
When tlle rtght heart IS also
mvolved you have swellmg of
Ute feet, ankles, abdomen and
ltver
The dtgttalts
strengthens the heart muscle
and enables the heart to
pump enough blood to correct
Ute heart !allure This works
fme as long as you take tl As
soon as you stop tl,tf you really had heart fatlure from permanent heart damage to
begin wtth, the heart's pumP"
mg action gets weak"'r and

Ute flutd starts accumulating
a gam
And while you say most
doctors don 't tell their pattents to take thetr medicmes
I can't verify your statement
Of course some tdeahsltc doctors are pretty natve and
think thetr good paltents are
gmng to follow thetr mstrucbons to tlle letter It wouldn't
occur to these- doctors that
after paymg to see tlle doctor
and gettmg his advtce, then
paymg for medicme, tllat the
p;Jitent. would stop 'ollowtng

his mstrucltons by sloppmg
themedlcme

Alter a lew years of gettmg
to know human habtts such
doctors reali2e tlle error of
their ways You are absolutely rtght that people often tend
to stop takmg medicme as
soon as they feel better rather
than as long us the doctor told
them to take tl
Yes, some frwt Jutce or a
banana helps keep your
potassium level up, and this
helps prevent some
undestra ble stde effects of
dtgtlulis medtctnes that
sometimes

occur

People

wtlh heart problems and high
blood pressure usually do better to luntt thetr sodium salt
and matntatn adequate
potassium intake It ts even a
good tdea for aU of us, most
people eat too much salt To
gtve you more lnfonnatton on
this I am sending you The
Health Letter number 10-12,
Salt Your Vttal Sodium and
Potasstum Balance Otllers
who want lhis mformation
can send 50 cents wtth a long,
stamped, self-addressed
envelope for tt to me m care
of this newspaper, P 0 Box
326, San Antoruo, TX 78292
DEAR DR LAMB - My
tllree teenage children have a
hi-lt which they play wtth the
volume very high In fact, it
IS deafemng I claun that it
wtll damage thetr hearing tf
tlley continue to listen to tl
witll the volume so high
My own peace of mind Ia affected by the notse but my
mam concern IS the1possible
damage to thetr hearmg
Would you please corrunent]
DEAR READER- You are
nght It IS deaferung Studies
have been done, particularly
on loud rock music, and continued exposure will lead to
hearmg damage
Notse damage ts a real
thing and the kind of notse
doesn't make any difference
- whether tt IS mustC, gunftre, engines or anytlllng else
The loudness and range of the
sound involved ts what
damages the ears

•

exclusive organtzabon , but 1f

tt was to be good lor one boy tt
must be good lor all ehgtble
boys and ~o become btg, we
must be btg A new vote was
taken and no membership
luntts were set
Frank Land's speech
recetved tn St Louts when he
was twelve, for ten years' seemed to act as a go ahead
perfect Sunday school at· stgnal,lor In less than a year
tendance The remaining the Mother Chapter of
ortgtnal ntne members DeMolay m Kansas Ctty grew
followed Lower m taking the to a mem~rshtp ol 3 000
In the trad1llon of the
obltgatton
At the next regular meetmg Knights Templar, ritual was
a proposal wsa brought up to become a fundamental
that could have brought death curnerstone of DeMolay In
to the future greatn ess of the November, 1919, Frank
movement One of the Marshall, a leadmg Mason
members proposed that the and edttortal wrtter for the
membershtp be lumted to Kansas Ct!Y Journal was
sevenly-ftve boys All the asked to write a ritual
It is one that follows the
other boys seemed to be m
precepts of Freemasony It
..~... ..... ::: *~~S$:~-ii!Cb'IU.&lt;I:C.'II&lt;ICI'll::,;:;F);~,
revolves about the DeMolay
altar on whtch rests the Holy
Btble, and at whtch a
1,· DeMolay obhgates htmsell to

Helen Help
i~ U s. • • By Helen Hottel ~

COLUMBUS
Ohto of the club
The totals represent the
musk1e ltshennen will gather
Ill Columbus on Saturday, largest number of muskie
March 25, for the 16th annual ever reported caught ln Ohio
meetmg and bsnquet of the m one year
Winner of the H E (Pooch)
Ohto Huskle Muskie Club
Homer LeBlanc of Lake St Curry Memorial Trophy for
Clatr, Mtch , wtll be guest 1977 is Thomas Puskar of
speaker for th1s year's Warren in Trumbull County
banquet whtch wtll start at 5 The trophy goes to the angler
p m at the lmpertai House catching the largest muokie
m the state eash year
North
LeBlanc is a renowned Puskar's muakie was caught
29,
1977,
at
muskte ftshennan and in· March
vented several of today's Pymatunlng Lake, Ashtabula
most popular muskie lures County It measured 47 In·
Last year was a banner ches and weighed 46 pounds
"Mr Muskle" for 1977 will
year for muskie ftshlng In the
be
announced the night of the
state accordmg to the
banquet
This award is given
Dtvtslon of Wtldllfe of the
Oh10 Department of Natural annually to the muskte
ftsherman who best exemReso urc"es (ODNR)
The Dtvtston of Wildlife plifies sportsmanship and has
reports 55 anglers qualifted to a smcere dedtcatlon to tlle
become regular members of sport of muskie fishtng
The banquet Ls open to the
the club m 1977 Those 55
publlc
at a co!JI of $11a person
persons caught 63 muskies
Reservations
must be made
measurmg at least 40 mches
by
March
20
by sending a
and wetghtng a mtntmum of
check or money order made
20 pounds
Another 441 anglers who payable to the Ohio Huskie
Pat
caught a muskte measuring Muskte Club to
Messmer,
4088
Owsley
St ,
at least :10 inches will become
Columbus
43207
honorable mentton members

Obeying the
doctor's orders

O'"bJ~. A'}'-;:-· •• ::.

agreement
Then Frank Land got up
and potnted out how selftsh
they were bemg He satd that
DeMolay should not be an

formally orgamzed the Order
of DeMolay
It was not unul some
twenty years later than
Frank Ladd realized that thts
March 18 was the an
mversary date ol the death of
Jacq~es DeMolay m 1314
At the next meetmg , Louts
Lower was the f1r;'1 to take
the DeMolay obhgatlon on a
B1ble that Frank Land had

APHRODISIACS ALL IN THE MIND•
DEAR HELEN
What's the scoop on gmseng, lectthin, and the newest, the
bsrk of the yohunbe tree, bemg aphrodisiacs' Do these things
and otllers such as oysters, asparagus, pumpkin seeds, etc
really turn you on • -HOPEFUL
DEAR HOPEFUL
There s no sctenllltc proof of any
aphrodistac, tllough if you believe certam foods, powders,
vitamins, etc rev up your sex dnve they'll probably do tt for
you Such IS the power of tlle nund
Ginseng, wtdely soldmhealth food stores, has been touted as
an aphrnstdiac for 5,000 years, posstbly because the root has a
sexual shape High-protem foods and such rmnerals as tron,
zinc, phosphorus and lectthln are constdered helpful, but probably because tlley bwld strengtll and (if not overdone) keep
the body healtlly Yohimbme, made from tlle bark of the
yohunbe tree, has been around for a long tune and ts chancy It
dllates blood vessels of the genital area and "heats you up,''
but, according to Dr Norman Farnsworth, head of the phar
macology department, Umverstty olllhnms tl also lowers the
blood pressure and makes you too weak to do anythmg

Racine Social Events
By Mrs Francis Moms
Group singmg of "The
Light of the World is Jesus •
opened the meeting of the
Booster Sunday School class
at the home of Grella Sun!&gt;'
son With Helen Simpson ,

hostess
Mrs Marjorte
Grimm presided m the a bsence of Helen Slack Prayer
was offered by Mrs Wanda
Powell After a busmess
session,

Mrs

Grimm

grandmother
Mrs Marcis Ann Wells of
Washmgton Court House
spent an eventng wtth Mr

and Mrs Roy Rtffle
Mr and Mrs Brtan Sunpson and Darm and Lisa and
frtend, Gar Phthps of
Baltunore spent a recent
Saturday night wtth Mr and
Mrs Ralph Badgley
Mr and Mrs Wtlltam
Mttchell of Columbus were

presented a program using as weekend guests of Mrs
a topic 0 God's Glorious Bertha Robmson
Ltght"
Scrtpture was
Sunday dinner guests of
Matthew 5 1-18 Prayer was Mr and Mrs Jack Sargent
by Grella Simpsop Readmgs were Mr and Mrs Pete
by members mcluded ' It Shields, Mrs
Marlene
Takes Courage" , "Travelmg Fisher, Amy Larry and
on My Knees", "Un- frtend, Mtss Roush of
ratloned", 11 No Tune for Charleston, Mr and Mrs
Him",
u sure
Hope", Plulhp Radford, Stepheme
Vegetable Soup", "Not Me, and frtend , R1ck Johnson, Mr
lA:Jrd", "The SouJ of Man", and Mrs Wtlliam Mttchell
"He Is Everywhere" HTry and Mrs Bertha Robinson
Giving Yourself • Mrs
Mrs Focte Hayman and
Grimm closed tlle program Mrs Mabel Shields spent
with prayer Durtng a Sunday afternoon wtth Mrs
fellowship hour Helen Sun!&gt;' Bertha Ro bmson
son served refreslunents
Mr and Mrs Brtce Sayre,
Relatives from out of town Brian and Bethany of
here lor tlle funeral of Mrs Jackson, Mr and Mrs Dave
Frankie Neigler Included Mr Sayre of Antiqwty, and Mr
and Mrs Clyde Cross and and Mrs Danny Sayre, local,
Ray and Mr and Mrs John spent Sunday wtlh Mr and
Nichols of Col umbos, Mr and Mrs Herbert Sayre
Mrs Phillp Mlller, NorthMrs Walter Wells of
up, Mr and Mrs Robert Washmgton Court House
Palmer of Seymour Johnson spent several days with her
Air Force Base, Goldsboro, parents, Mr and Mrs Harry
N C They were all guests of CUrtiS
Mr and Mrs George Neigler
Mrs Jane Cleland visited
Mr and Mrs
Gene Mrs Lois Ebersbach at
Lawrence are parents of a Chester recently
daughter born March 3, 1978
Mrs Margaret Houdashelt
at Camp Campbell, Ky spent Sunday wtlh Mr and
Grlllldparents are Mr and Mrs Milton Houdashelt at
Mrs Paul Lawrence and Mr GallipoliS
and Mrs Herbert Roland
Mr and Mrs EdiSOn Brace
Mrs Gaynell Clark iaa great- visited Mrs James Brace

serve God , his country, and
fellow man, to uphold the
pubhc schools, to slander no

one, and to exerctse tolerance

words

1t

Ill·

one

govern the movement, With

remam s

practtcally unchanged toduy
IIts so well wrttten that many
tenn at even more effective
and more tmpress ave as It
grows older

Helped by such an
sptrat10nal tnLtlation -

"htch mcludes a dramattc
portrayal of the trtal of
Jacques DeMolay - the
youth movement ptcked up
momentum like a snowball
runnmg downhtll
In the fall of 1920, an
m1t1ation team from Kansas

Ctty

went

to

easy, tt was a dream come

true lor Frank Land
Stnce sponsorship of
DeMolay chapters was to be
restncted
to Masomc
orgaruzattons or mdivtdual
Masons (although ehgtbiltty
lor DeMolay membership ts
not tted tn wtth Masonry ), a
Grand Council of the natton's
leadmg Masons was set up to

the opllllons ol others
The rttuai has been termed
ageless Except lor a very

Ill

few

By 1921 tt became apparent
to Frank Land that he was
gomg to have to devote full
tune to thts protege of his or
step down The dectsion was

Omaha

Nebraska, to mstall a chapter
there And soon ClUes and

towns all over the country
were clamormg for a
chapter, for the good work
and lame of DeMolay had

Frank Ladd as the full thne
director.

Members of the Kansas
Ctty chapter traveled all over
the co untry tnstallmg new
chapters Wtthtn ten years
there were over 1,200
chapters all over the world,
and over 100 000 acttve
DeMoiays The number of
chapters today totals over
2 500 and the acttve mem·
bersh1p ts more than 160,000
DeMoiay had some rough

become Widespread

Stiversville News Notes
Mr and Mrs 1-&lt;Juts DeLuz
were busmess ca llers

1n

Galltpohs a recent Monday
a fternoon

Mr and Mrs Dale Lawson
and lamtly vtstted Mr and
Mrs

Raymond Kerns on

w0 }£pen

7\ T
7\ T
1 ~eWS 1 ~0

t

eS

Mr and Mrs Carl McElroy
of Columbus were recent
vtsttors of Mr and Mrs Paul

McElroy
Mr

and

Mrs

Ronald

Russell, Mandy and Mtchael
of Ractne were Sunday
eventng vtsttors of Mr and
Mrs Robert Russell
Mr and Mrs Doyle Knapp
Other so-called aphrosuliacs are even more dangerous
and
famtiy and Mrs
Botspamsh fly , made from crushed brtght green blister
Lena
Knapp were Sun
beetles, ts a gemto-urmary tmtant that can ktll, even if taken
day
v1s1tors
of Mr a nd Mrs
m small quanttties Powdered rhinoceros horns may not hurt
Charley
Smtih
you, but a dose w011't turn you mto a ttger etther, unless you
Lena Knapp of Langsvtlle
have a powerfultmagtnatton
was
Tuesday overmght guest
lt's been satd the bratn IS tlle most hnportant sex organ So if
of
Mr
and Mrs Doyle Knapp
you eat asparagus, celery, egg yokes, shell ftsh, omons
Mr Earl Russell and
smothered m hot pepper and gmger abnost anythmg and
you're truly sold on thetr erotic value - they may come up to Bertha Russell spent a few
days vtsttmg Mrs Earl
your sexpectatwns But don't count on tl - H
Russell of Kentucky
Mrs Paul Pterce, Randy
DEAR HELEN
and
Scott, of Mason were
About the brother-siSter mamage that turned out so
VISitors of Geneva
Saturday
beautifully I'm a Btble teacher so I can't avmd the fact that
Adam's and Eve's sons and daughters started us all How do Sh urn ate and Mr and Mrs
tllose who say mcest ts a sm m the eyes of God explam that Larry Johnson and lamtly
away' -READER
DEAR READER
Golden Bear is
A necessary "evtl • perhaps' W1th only one game m town
our ongmal ancestors didn't have much chotce on the go one stroke short
forth and multtply"lront - H
DEAR HELEN
In no way do I wish to take ISSue wtth the brother-stster
match mentioned m your colwnn, but to clear up a statement
made by an answermg correspondent Sarah was, m fact,
Abraham's hall-stster as well as his wtfe He says m Gen
:Ill 12 'She IS the daughter of my fatller, but not the daughter
of my mother, and she became my wtfe •
(Your wrtter clauned they weren't brother and SISler
Abraham only satd this to protect Sarah from hann ) -D M

be a better son and man to

honor hiS parents to loYe and

MIAMI (UP!) - It was
ahnost Inverrary ali over
agam, nght down to J ack
Ntcklaus' mne·hole scores

But this tune tt was Tom
Wetskopf who was Ill the way,
and the Golden Bear came up
one shot short
WeiSkopf fired 67~ m the
36-hole flntsh ol the rammterrupted Dora! Eastern
Open Sunday for a 16-underpar Z12, one stroke better
than Ntcklaus, who was 72-&amp;
for the day
TilE DAILY SENTINEL
DEVOTED TO TilE

INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON ARE.\
CHFSI'ER L TANNEHllJ.
.,... Ed
ROBERT HOEFUCH

Cltf EcUtor
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and children at Crown City
Sunday
Mr and Mrs Unley Hart
took hts father, Earl Hart to
St Cloud, Fla , where he will
remam til April I They went
to Lake Wales and visited Mr
and Mrs John Fisher and to
Moore Haven to visit Mr and
Mrs Dale Hill and at
Okeechobee visited Mrs
Flourme Roush and hiS
father, Henry Roush, who
had been in Flonda six weeks
accompanied them back
home
BtU McKenzie and sons,
Phil and Jeff, of Galltpohs
spent Saturday afternoon
wttll Mr and Mrs Roy RifRe
Mr and Mrs Martin
Wilcoxen spent Sunday wttll
Mr and Mrs Rock Young Ill
Columbus ~

Friduy evening
Mr a nd Mrs Thomas
B~rch , Waterford Mrs Elva
Daile), Syracuse and Mr
and Mrs W S Long, local
were recent guests of Chnt
B~rch

and duughter Leota
Mr and Mrs Mtke Evans
and farmly spent Sunday
evemng wtth Mr and Mrs
Don Hunnel and Mrs Bernice
Evans at Pomeroy

Mr and Mrs Jack Talbott,
Steubenville vtStted Mr and
Mrs Dan Talbott and fa!Tllly
on Sunday afternoon
Mr a nd Mrs Blame
Dailey, Success Rd , called
on Mr and Mrs Ketth Fttch
and son at Portland recently
Mr and Mrs Larry Fowler
and famtly Liberty, W Va
were callers at the home of

Mr and Mrs BtU Bryant,
Debra and Davtd, last week
Ruda Durst was trans
ported to Holzer Med1cal
Center on Wednesday a!
ternoon b) the Emergency
Squad alter sulfenng a stroke

--------1
I
at hts home

I

I
I
I

Social I
Calendar

I

TUESDAY
REGULAR MEETING
Racine Masomc Lodge 461
F&amp;AM wtth f1lm 'Our
Precious Herttage ' to be
shown all Master Masons
mvtted

WINDING TRAIL Garden
Club, 7 30 p m Tuesday at
the Metgs Musewn wtlh Mrs
Altce Thompson hostess For
roll call members are to take
a cuttmg from a hangmg
basket Mrs Ruth Moore wtll
have the program on hi:!,ngmg

basket plants and the arbe

rangement toptc will
'Forest Preserve "

MEIGS COUNTY Pomona
Jumor Grange, 7 p m Tuesday at the Rock Spnngs
Grange hall Plans for contests, degree work, and
makeup meetmgs wtU he
made The Charter wtU also
be presented Members are
Wlked to noltly the matron, if
they cannot attend
SYRACUSE PTO Tuesday
7 30 p m at school
HARRISONVILLE OES 255
Tuesday 8 p m Practtce for
lntbalton
POMEROY Chamber of
Commerce Tuesday at noon
at Metgs Inn Bill Quickel,
secretary treasurer of MetgsGallta - Mason Assoctation of
Ltfe Underwnters, guest
speaker

years durmg the depression,

once agam The organtzatlon
celebrated tts 5oth An·
mversary In 1969, and now
looks bsck upon the mdlatlon
of nearly three mtliiOJI boys
Semor DeMolays are
frequently
found
In
promment posthons In the
government, the mthtary and
busmess

DeMolay has been the
springboard for many a man
that has gamed fame and
fortune There have been U
S Senators, Congressmen,

generals, governors, and
co untless others have
clunbed the ladder of success
as mm1sters, writers, movie
stars and busmess leaders
The orgamzat10n has also
become well known for Its
chartlable service projects,
citizenship trammg , and
healthy soctal act!Vllles The
Order of DeMolay has
genumely assured ttself a
posthon of hlstortc lmmortahty through tts work In
behalf of tratntng better
leaders to assure the world of
a better tomorrow

but soon butlt up tis strength

Meigs

Property

Local Bowling
Fnday Ntghl Ladles
S1andtngs 3 3 78

Transfers
Wtillam
W
Stover,
Ebzabeth M Stover to Harold
E Hood, Carol Ann Hood , 50
acres 100 acre lot, Letart

Glenn E Enslen Jr, Janice
R Burner to Gregory M
Gatrell, Barbsra S Gatrell,
Lot 148, Palmers 2nd,
Mtddleport
Carl C Caltnder, Nancy L
Caltrtder, to Monongahela
Power Co , Ease , Ohve
Vargm1a Blosser, Ira V

Blosser to

Team
Pis
Bill s Quatlty Body Shop
38
Kapple s Pennzol l
32
Mason Glass
30
Parker s A 1 Serv1ce
30
V1sta No 3
36
Landmark
12
H1gh game Ettamay
Norton 184 Dottle Nelson
155 Barbara Pratt 152
High senes - E Norton
450 D Nelson 414 Pearl
Russell 377
Team h1gh game
Parker s A 1 Serv1ce 362
Landmark 360 VIsta No 3
359 Team high series Landma rk 1014 Kapple,s
Pennzoll 1007 P1 Mason
pt

Glass 988

Monongahela

Genevteve J ohnson, Donald

E Johnson , Ida Johnson to
Monongahela Power Co
Ease, Ohve

Robert Schaer, Terese
Schaer to Monongahela
Power Co , Ease , Olive
Earl L Faudree, Thehna
Faudree to Monongahela
Power Co , Ease , Oltve
Landon
W
Smtih,
Catllerme Smtih to Gary L
Gtbson, Wanda Sue Gtbson 1
Parcels, Sc1p1o

Wanda Sue Gtbson to Gary
L Gtbson, Parcels, Sctpto
Archte E Lee, June P Lee

Pulhns, Aff for trans ,
Saltsbury
Donald Sayre, Betty Sayre,
Gerald Pullms, Ca thy
Pullms James Pullms Crys

tal Pullms to Besste Pullins,
Parcels, Sahsbury
Besste Pullms to Gerald
Pullms Clara K Pullins,
I 493 acres, 878 acre
Pomeroy
Rtchard A Penntngton ,
Georgiana Pennmgton to
Monte T Ford, 8 421 acres,

Obve
Della Rapp Ftsher to
Michael L Ftsher 23 acres,

35'\4 acres, Columbta
Nonna A Lee to Ronald H
Browmng, Parcels, Sctpto
Rtehard S Cole Esther A
Cole to Wtlham F Asbeck,
Jr Patricta A Asbeek,
Parcels, Bedford

to Clarence E Htll, Frances
Conrad Ohlinger, Eltzabeth
S Htll 168 acre, Syracuse - Ohlmger to Adums Drtlllng
Sutton
Co , Meter stte agree , Metgs
Sandra A Keney to Davtd
Conrad Ohlmger, Elizabeth
Lawrence Grate, Karen Sue Ohlmger to Adams Drtllmg
Grate, Lots 20-22, Baum's Co , Meter Stte Agree ,
Chester
Salisbury
Ronald L Gotthardt, Ruth
J B O'Brien, Roberta
Gotthardt, Roger Morgan to O'Brien to Roger Adams dbs
Gladys J Morgan , Lot, Adams Drillmg Co Rtght Df
Pomeroy
Way, Rutland
Gladys J Morgan to Alan
Olga Thetss, Nonna Theiss
Bradshaw, Trus Pt Lot 163, to A P Drtllmg Co , Rtght of
Pomeroy
Way, Lebanon
Theodore Pullms, dec to
Clarence Proffitl, Myrtle
Besste Pullms, Betty Sayre, Profitt! to Roger Adams,
Gerald Pulhns, James Rtght of Way, Lebanon

Team
Grande Cafe
Mitchell Painting
Quality Print Shop
Team 5

w

AD
39
36
17

L

8
9
12
31

George s Open Air Garage
12 36

team which fmtshed 17-3last
year and was the S V A C
champion wtth a 11 1 record,

has begun practtce wtth !8
boys Soutllern has a nucleus
of stx starters bsck from last
year to try for another
S VA C crown
Returning are Seniors John
Mark Sayre (2B,P), Kelly
Wmebrenner (SS ), Mtke
Huddleston (2B,P) Richard
Teaford (CF), Mark Forbes
(C), and Steve Htll (OF) Htli
however, IS recovering from

a broken leg Herb Ervm
(OF), a semor, IS expected to
earn a startmg berth thts
year also
Stx Jumors, some of which
saw a lot of action last year
wtll fill the remammg spots
These tumor hopefuls are
Dwtght Htll (OF), Ttm
Brmegar (IB,C), John West
(3B,OF), Jtm O'Brten
(P ,IB,OF) , Jim Powell
(P,OF) and Seth Htll (OF)
Four Sophomores round out
the team
Jack Duffy
(0F,111) , Jonathan Rees
(In!), John Pape (lnf), and
Mtke Nance (lnf C)
Ftve strong semors who
graduates last year were
Greg Cundtff, Scott Wolfe
Steve Hendrtcks, Enc
Dunmng, and Doug Warden
all of whom wtll be mtssed
Hendrtcks batted over 300
Cundtff had 21 hits and set a
new school record with 30

walks, whtle Wolfe had 24 htts
and htl over 350 Dunnmg led
the team m htttmg average
and Warden was noted for hts
base stealmg
Pitchm~ should be a strong

Alter, 22·1, m the otller AAA
game at 6 p.m Frtday
The Class AA p8ll'mgs fmd

Portsmouth, 17-7, gomg
agamst Ottawa-Glandorf IS.
6, at II am Frtday and
Cincinnati Reading, 22-3

playing defendingc hampton
Cleveland Cathedral Latm at
2 :10 p m Friday
IVS, whtch mtssed last
year's trtp to Columbus after
ftve Ill a row, beat Leesburg
Fairfield 56-49 Saturday mght
at Martella, commg from II
pomts behmd in the second
quarter
behind Larry
Huggms who scored 16 of hiS
22 pomts m the second half
Coach Joe Stegferth's Central Hower club making 1ts
filth tnp to the serm fmals
srnce 1965, earned 1ts way mto
the serm-finals wtth a 75-&amp;&gt;

wm over etghth-ranked game which was delayed an
Canton Tunken The Eagles, holD' and half by a leaky Sta!A!
paced by Reggte Wilkson 's 21 Fatrgrounds Cobseum roof
Latin earned the nght to
pomts, scored etght stratght
defend
lt.. AA It tie w1th a soltd
pomts to go ahead 14-12 and
81-li9
wm
over Brookfteld ,
led the rest of the way
Alter and Scott botll posted while m other AA games,
rather easy fmals Vtctortes, Reading beat l..t cklng Valley
Alter rollmg over Cmcinnal t 70-&amp;8 and Portsmouth burted
Wtthrow 74-59 behmd DOll Bell&amp;re 7~
Ottovtlie beat Marton Loca l
Meineke's 16 pomts while
Scott dtsposed of East 57-48, St Peter's downed
Southmgton Chalke r 63-54
Cleveland Shaw 67-:il
Mtamt Trace needed two and Bethel stopped Columbus
overllmes to ehnunate Ready 54-:iO m the other Class
forme r champ Columbus A regiOnal fma ls
Walnut Rtdge, 68-63, Ill a

Indiana, Duke in close wins
By MARK FRIEDMAN
UPI Spurts Writer
Some say a touch of gra) ts
becommg but Indiana Coach
Bobby Kmght and Duke s Bill
Foster are gomg to have a
whole head full tf thetr
respect! ve

squads

dQn 't

stratghten out thetr act
" I've always trted to be
obJecttve about the game of
basketball," Kmght satd
afrer upstart Furman threw a
scare mto the Roosters

Sunday before droppmg a 6362 verdtct at Charlotte, N C
Furman was the team that
deserved to wm thts

basketball game "
Furman, the Southern
Conference champ, trailed by
13 wtth 13 26 to play, but the
Paladins went on an 18-&lt;i tear

over the next eJght mmutes to

ston

draw wtthm 52-:il
Wtth
two
seco nds
rematntng AI Dante! ftred m
a 26 foot shot to bnng
Furman w1thm a pomt a gam
63 62 When Indiana was
ca lled lor an mbounds
vtolatwn
the Paladms
recetved the ball at m1dcourt
but were out of timcouts
Rodney Arnolds harned
35-foot attempt at the buzzer
however, fell well short of the
basket
In the other half of the
Eastern
re g tonal
doubleheader, Duke had
stmtlar problems wtth
surprtstng Rhode Island
before grabbtng a 63-62 dec1

We played too tentatively
and not really as well as we

State tourney
• •
paznngs.
'

.

COL UMBU S

IUPII

Patnngs l or the 56t h Boys
Sta te H1gh School Basketba ll
Tourna ment next weekend at
St John A rena
C~ASSAAA

pomt wtth the Tornadoes
agam th1s season They have

two of thetr startmg hurlers
hack, and tf O'Brten and
Powell come through to go
wtth Sayre and Huddleston ,
then the SV AC Champs
should be sohd Wmebrenner
can also toss the ball well at
tunes
Htttmg ts not a btg questton
mark but the team did lose
ftve strong
bats
by
graduallon If the younger
players come through wtlh
some btg sttcks, then Coach
Htlton 'Btg Fooz" Wolfe and
hts team might capture thetr
second straight crown
Here 's the schedule
Southern Schedule
March
30
Federa l
Hock 1ng Home
Aprtl 3 Hannan W Va
Home
April 4
Kyg er Creek
Home
April 5 Miller Away .
Apn I 10 Wahama Home
Apnl 11 Alexander Away
Apnl 13 Hanna n Trace
Home
Apnl 14 Hannan W Va
Away
Apnl 17 Wahama Away
April 18 Kyger Creek
Away
Apnl 21 Southwestern
Away
Apnl 24 M1l ler , Home
Apnl 25 Eastern Home
Apn I 27 Federa l Hock lng
Away
May 1 North Gall Ia Hom e
May 2 Ale~e ander Hom e
May 4 Hannan Trace
Away
fiAay 5 Symmes Valley
Away
May 8
Southwes tern
Home
May 10 Symmes Valley
Home
May 11
North Gall1a
Away
May 16 Eastern Away

M1am1 Trace ( 22 2) vs
Kettenng Alter ~ 22 1) 6 p m
Fnday
Akron Central Hower (23
01 vs Tol edo Scolt 123 1) 9 30
p m Frida-y
Fmals 7 30 p m Sat ur
day

could have, sa1d Foster

Ne1U1er club led by more
than ftve pomts, but Blue
Devtis • center Mtke Gmmskt
"ho ftmshed wtth 25 pomts
hit a patr of free throws wtth
17 seconds ielt to wtn tt lor
Duke
In the Mtdwest reg10nals
Notre Dame beat Houston

100-77 and Lomsv1lle dumped
St

Johns, 76 68,

451 Connoe Dodson 450
High team game - Mit
chelt Painting 725 Quality
Print Shqp n.o, 111
High team senes - Quality

Print $hop 2069
Mitchell
Pointing 2059 Grande Cale
1978

DEPEND
ON DEKALB
Ill•• ... - - - " ' " ' r....,.....

GERALD ROOD &amp;SON
304-882-3144

m a

doubleheader at Tulsa, Okla
whtie Utah topped Missouri
86-19 tn double overttme and
DePaul mpped Cretghton, 8078 at Wttchita, Ka n
In the other opemng-round
East
regtonals
at
Pluladelphta Penn handled
St Bonaventure, 92-83 , and
Vtllanova stopped LaSalle
103-97
Notre Dame, w1th center

Btil l..atmbeer controllmg the
boards and guard Duck Wti
liams hittmg from outstde
cr ush e d Southwe s t
Co nfer e nce c ha mpt on
Houston In the ftrst game of

Portsmouth (17 7) vs 01
taw a Glandorf ( 18 6) 11 a m
Fnday
Cn'lc1nnat1 Readmg (22 31
vs Cleveland Cathedral L.:ahn
120 3) 2 30 p m Frida y
F1na ls J p m Saturda y

CLASS A
Mansf 1eid St Peters (25 1)
vs Gnadenhutten lndtan
Valley South 122 1) 6 p m
Thursday
Bethel (21 3) vs Ottov il le
123 31 9 30 p m Thu rsday
F1na l s
11 30
a
m
Saturday

Reds rally for
second victory

watched
John Mtlner and Phtl
Garner each smgled home a
run and Ed Ott agamst Reds
righthander Paul Moskau m
the openmg mmutes

TAMPA, Fla (UPI )- The
Reds showed

constderable early spnng
trauung season promtse by
openmg the Grape Frutt
League season wtth wins over
the Pittsburgh Ptrates
Saturday and Sunday
The Reds bhtzed tlle
Ptrates 9-4 Saturday m
Bradenton, but had to rally
from a 4-0 deftctt to get a 6-5
wm the nexl day at Tampa
Pilcher Mike Lorn's twonm homer wtth one out m the
mnth mning off rookte
rtghthander Ttm Jones
dectded the second vtctory,
where Pttlsburgh had taken a
four-run lead In the openmg
frame as 6,825 basebsU fans

hiCh shot 58 5
percent m the fir st half took
LOU ISVIlle

\\

a 39 34 lead at halft1me then
outscored St J ohn s 18-4
early m tile second ha il to
grab a 55 -38 lea d The
Redm en dosed to 64-60 wtth a
flurr y ol George Johnson
buckets but the Ca rds usmg
stra.J. gh t £t ee throws from
Gnfftth put the ga me ,t\\rJ V
Cente1 Buster Matheney lul
for 10 of Ins emee1-lngh m
pomts m the second overtame
to g1ve Utah a wm over

SIX

MISSOUri

In the second half of the
do u bleh ead e r se ve nth
ra nk ed DePaul s urvl&gt; ed
upset-mmded Cretghton 8078 on the strength of W1lham
D1se's twofree throws w1th 31
seconds 1 ematrun~

&amp;ys results
Un1ted Press Interna tion al
Sa turda-y 's Reg1onal
Tournam ent Results

CLASS AAA

At Ca nton
A kr on Centra l Hower 75
By Un1ted Press Internatio nal Canton T1mk en 65
Thursday Mar ch 16
At Dayton
All time s EST
Ket t enng Alt er 74 Cm
M1dea5t Reg1onat
W1lhr ow 59
AI Cayton Ohto
At Kent
M c h 1gan State
(?4 4) \ S
61
Ea s t
We stern Kentucky ( 16 13 ~ at Toled o Scott
Cl eve land Sha w 51
7 06 p m
M am OhiO ( 19 8) vs Ken
At Columbus
tucky ('l6ll at 9 36 p m
M•am• Tretce 68 Walnut
w es t Reg1 on
R dge 63 (2 ot)
AI Albuquerque N M
CLASS AA
UCLA (24 21 vs Arkan sas
At Davton
(29 3 ) at 9 06 p m
San Franc1sco (23 51 vs C1n Read tng 70 Ne wark
Full erton State (22 BJ M 11 36 Li ck ng Valley 58
pm
At Canton
Cleveland
La t m 81 Brook f ield
Eas t and M1dwest r eg 1onals
w 11 be he ld Fr day Marcil 17 69
At Bowling Green
The t1m es w II be an nounced
Monday
Ottawa Gland orf 63 El y r a
Ca th ol 1c 57
At Athens
Port smou th 75 Bell a1re 53

CLASS AA

Ctncmnati

th e
do ubl e h ea d e r
1-&lt;Jutsvlile s Da rrell Griffith
htt etghl pomts 111 a row and
scored 25 01 er• ll to help the
Cardm als hold off lhe
Redmcn

NCAA pairings

Cmcmnab talhed tw ace

m the third and !ted tt up on
runs m the f1fth and SIXth
mnmgs, the last score comang
on Cesar Geronuno's four-

bagger
Rookte pmchhitter Harry
Safenght smgled home Dale
Berra to put the Pirates
ahead :i-4 m tlle etghth,
settmg tlle stage for Lum's
winning game homer
Doug Batr, the last of four
Reds pttchers, was credited
with the vtctory

FOR MIDDLEPORT AREA

team named
COLUMBUS IUPI) 1978
United
Press

The
In

tern~llonal

Class AAA all
Oh10 Basketball Team (with
h~ ght
grade ~nd scormg
average!

FIRST TEAM

Ow•ght Anderson

Day ton
Roth 6 3 Sr 311 1
Clark Kellogg Cleveland
Sl Joseph 6 8 Jr 28 0
Ktrk lehman De f ia nce 6

0 Sr

29 4

Art Schlichter
Trace 6 3 Sr 19 2
Marcus Newbern
Scott 6 '1 Sr 23 J

M l e.m l
Toled o

SECOND TEAM
Pete Abuls Cambndge 6
6 Sr 26 0
Roy Humphre)l
Akron
Central Hower 6 4 Sr 17 2
LaSalle Thomps on C1n
c• nn._'l t. W1lhrow 6 9 Jr 11 0
Doug Fer guson Columbus
Lmden McK 1nley 6 1 Sr

CLASS A
At Bow hng Green
O tt ov i l l e 57 M a n a St e1n
Marion 48
At Canton
Mansf el d Sf Pe ter s 63
Sou thmgton Cha lker 5.4
At Manetta
Gnadenhutt en lnd1an Vall ey

s 56

Leesburg Fa1rf1eld 49
At Dayton
Bethel 54 Columbus Ready 50

/]iris results
Umted Press International
Saturday s D1 stnct
Tournament Resu Its

CLASS AAA
At Columbus
Co l Watterson 69 Col Walnut

R•dge 56
Col East 47 Delawa r e 43
At Masstllon Perry
Massillon Jackson 48 Canton
McK1nl e';' 36
At Dayton
Kettenng Fa1rmont W 48
Ke1tenng Fa 1rmont E 38

CLASSAA

A •ken 6 2 Sr

Cmc.mnat

27 0

THIRD T EAM

Lee Sve te Lor am Sr

Sr

63

25 0

Bn an Pru 11t Steubenvi lle
6 3 Sr 24 5
M ike R(;ncherl Cellnrt 6 8
l
Jr
Pe te Brogdon
Warren
Hardtng , 6 I Sr ?3 9
Cl II K1rchner Euclid 6 9
Sr 20 5

n

SPECIAL MENTION
D• n Bockhorn Keller •ng
Alter Lr•nce Ba tes Akron
Cen tr a l HawN
Tyrone
Cr aw for d Ea st Cleve l and
Shaw Ca l Cage Sandusky
Te d Dugg1ns
Cln cl nn;t l l
Tyrone EvAn s
LaSa l le
Cleveland John Ada m s
Dav1d
Gr eer
Can ton
M cK n ley
Ken Jackson
Canton Timken Dan LH~ d
Ik e New Pht lade lph•a Don
M e1neke K ett en ng A ll er
To m M ar qu ett e As hl a nd
Jny Twy fna n Cl nc:innah 51
Xav 1er

HONORABLE MENTION

Bruce Alexn nder
Ak ron
Nor lh B1il An derson Eas t
Cl eve a nd
Shaw
Greg
Berl acher Toledo St Johns
Chad
Bent z
Cl evelan d
He1g ht s
Dave
Ben ton
Asht abul a
Pa ul
Cross
F air born Bak er Apa ri c io
Curry Cleve land Kennedy
Pe te Carr It o Wa lsh Jesu1 t
Fred Ca r son Spnng lt c l d
Nor lh
George
Car l er
Mi dd letown
John Cern el ch Eas t la k e
Nor t h
Je r ry
Doe r Oe r
C.nc1nnat1 La Sa ll e Terr y
Dllard
Col um bu s Eas t
Bo
Gree n
Ja m es
Cleve land Eas t Tech Sco tt
Grevey Hamilton Taft Er c
Gosche T ffm Co lumb •an
Tom HoiLapt el Greenv il le
Ed Hill Chil l ico the
Tam
Hd i Ash tabu la Ken Hol mes
Toledo Scott John Haber
f1el d W!nl ersv tll e
Car l J a cob s Cl eve l a nd
John Ada ms Lar r y John s
Co l umbu s
Nor\11
Mlk. e
Kan lesk i
Ber ea Mt dpar k
8111 Keesey Gal mn
En c
Love Dayl on Colonel Wh1to
Sean M cNally Cleve land St
lgn a lt us
Ja y M c Hugh
Geneva
Do ug
0 Nei ll
Le}l. lngton
Jonn Pa )(s on
K e tt e r~ng
A ll er
Br1an
Rowan Toled o St Fra ncts
En c Sater Xa n•a
Dave Stl lanpaa Con neaut
M 1ke Sweeney, Clevel and St
tgn a lt us
M 1ke
S a ~e lon
Columbu s Frank lin Heu::Jh1s
Joe Stacey T tft ln Calu m
b1a n Terry Teachout Wes t
M1k e Underm a n
Geauga
E l yna
Tony
Wllh1f e
Pr1n ce ton
Steve
Wall
Cmc1nna t1 Sl Xaver Joe
We b er
M a r• e tia
Ca r l
Weaver Ga lloway Wes tl a nd
Regg 1e W1lk son
A kr on
Cen t ral Howe r and Ga r y
W1l 1ams W llmmqton
Pl aye r of lh e year
Ow 1g ht And er son Dayt on
Rot h
Coach of the year Joe
S1eg t erth Akr on Ce nlral
Hower

A 1HENS Oluu I UPI ) Oh1 o Umver s tt y grad uate

student lltll Haviland becmne
only the sec.:ond two·tnne
wmner of the Alhen!$

Mara thon by wmmng the )llh

,.,j

•• 20 ..,

NcwYod.

Jo 11
14 311'

Bost~,

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9
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Mot)day s
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Detrot l :~ t 1\oo.,ton
~A 1 An to" 0 II l\1 II 110
t o 1\nq.-.! e-.. ~~ N ('W Y or
Houston il l C lf vr?ll'lnd
c~l Wil~hu

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MIIWL\Ukf'C

Gold• n "&gt; I lh.: a t C h1 c~q(l
Nrw Or!~ :~n5 &lt;H Portl&lt;~mi

TEAM ClEAN.

your own carpots
At do 1t youPselfpPtcBs)
lf\11 OUR RI NSENIJA C tl I nmw
co p11c1 ClUJ et clu mn11 m ttll 1e
th11t I l h dut yt~n tii iU I U!!i du n:&lt;;
IIIII Of

t: ~l p ets

fi nd

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job p1ot ess unaI t i ! IIIIBi li

tl lo

char !II u11 11 "'hund1elf

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conn u v u ~~ lu tie
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7o '2 4 11

Pts
69
18 35 15
51
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441

Cnlc apo

V~ntov vcr

Colorllda
~ ~ Lov s
M nncsolit

15 41 11 ..&amp;1
14 44 1
35
w~tes ConterePce
Norrl\ DIVIS lOll
W L T Pts
)o, Montrt-al
49
9 9
107
Los AnQeles
16 78 13
65'
Dt' tr o t
76 ?V I I
63
P llsburQh
71 78 II
59
Wll s h •HJI(In

Bo\101

17

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W l T

43 14 9

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95

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47

Safmd&lt;'!y s R u~ulh
n o Boston ?
NY l~ l.,nda-. 4 llull"lo 7
Mo111n ,11 ~ 1 as A metes 3
II IIKOVvl'r 3 P ll 'lburqh I
D• tro I~ Colo rttdo 4
1or onto l Cl('vt&gt; r~no ;
P hll1rl£'1pl1

fi.Ji i.H IIl 4 Ch (O liO 1

Mlnn 1 S! LOUIS l tlr
Sunda o; s R es ulh
\. lf1 (0V\Ilr 4 O ~ lr0 1 1 4 II\.'
NY I{ 11QH'3 II Wil-.hiiUJIOn '}
Phl!&lt;nlul ph d 6 OIOrdciO 1
t oron to 1 P Jl -.ll WCih I
flo~ to,,

9 Los ll.nq• I( ... 1

5 Ch ClUIO '}
Mond a y s G.1m c

1\tiii.JIO

Prevention is the
best policy. . .
FOR CURBING
CRIME LOSSES
You cttt n help cu t dow n on
crime losses
losses tha t
dire c tl y
a ff ec t
you
wheth er t hey happen to you
or not
Take t he cri m e of arson
pa yin g
an
You re
Increasi ng l y heavy subs idy
l o1 d el 1ber 1l y sei tir es
th ro ug h you r In su r a nce
pre m ium s
cos ts
ar e
a tl ec ted by
b urg t ane ~
robb~r l e s and
ca r 1hett s
plus the
count less CB rad ios and
bicyc le s th at lurn up
m 1ssl ng

tie

~ .,

.liSE VIC

W l

J1 u 17
Ph ld~elpht
39 11 11
AlhiOI /.\
76 ?) 11
NY Rnn &lt;J('r~
'14 31 \1
Smyft\l' 01\ •slo n
NY

Insu ra n ce
ad verse l y

ll •
t

r

P r~u

Mulln ;:tl fl l M lnmsolft

S UH &lt;1\ NJ)
Tuf!'Sday !I Ga nH ..

q~Hll tcS

Pt1(WI11X i'll

St and1ng5
l!'lternat onal
Cam pbell Conteren(f!
Pa t r Ck DIVIS IOf\
N ti L

IJV UfHfed

I"

'

Rent lor only
i) per

$}

hour

SAYRE
HARDWARE
882-2525
126 MAIN

CK!e th ng you ca n do Is to
supp orl
p rogr ,am s
pr ovld1 ng st l fl er pe11all les
l or
wr ongdo ers
a nd
proposA ls for st re ngthened
crim e mv es t lgi:'tlion etfort s
You can ~:~t so make lt
Iaugher for cr ooks Use
good strong loc ks M ar k
p ossc~sl on s
wi th y o ur
socia l secu rit y number
Our
agen c y
pro v ides
linan c a\ pr o tec11on and
servlc;e when r:rlme lone'$
occ ur
bul many can be
prevented That s why we
say - prevent ion Is the
best policy

DALE C. WARNER
INS.
7143

NEW HAVEN,
W.VA.

9~2

102 W Ma1n

Pomeroy

A Public Se• v ce oll tus Newspaper &amp; Tha Adver hs ng OOJillCII

~

• 0

~I I\

are•

annual runm ng of the 26-tmle
383 ; ard C\ Cnt Sunday m a

gond time of 2 28 19 I desptte
ramy weather
The first woman lo cross
the lane \\a s Maureen Keller
or Bet hel Park , Pa , tn

At Kalida
Delphos St Joh n 65 L 1ma
Bath 35
l 11 48 A reco rd fteld of 143
At Gahanna
1 unnc rs started, wtth a
Col Ha rt ley 50 Bloom Ca rroll
record 123 ltmshmg
17
N orth Uni on 19 Wa t kins , _ _ _ __
M emor 1a l 27
•

At New Concord

R idgewood 43 Rtver V1ew 42
Tro Val ley
70
West
Muskmgum 34

AI Dayton
Spnngboro 79 Va lley V1ew 41

CLASS A

At New Contord
Buckeye Trail 62 Fr ontter 36
At Dayton
Arcanum 51 Cedarv lie 25

At,j..oma
Ada 62 M1nster 44
At P1ckermgton
Fa1rbanks 47 Lan c aster
F1sher 45

Mike SWiger

'II-----992 7155
149 S Thtrd St .
Mtddleport 0

"See me for car, home,
hfe, health and busiDess
insurance!'

..

PHONE

992-2156

High Individual game Ann Grover 179
Chris
Bowers 178 Hazel Lewis 172
High Individual series Chris Bowers 458
Barb
Whittington and Ann Grover

All-Ohio

Bobby Aushn

WANTED
DEKALB hybrids are a wise Investment when It
comes to growing a top corn crop You need to
start with the built-In yle1d potential that
DEKALB hybrids offer And, when you plant
DEKALB, you have the bred-In qualities that
make growing corn a little easier.
Order yours today

Oass AAA

21 0

NEWSPAPER
CARRIER

Local Bowling
Morch 3, 1978
Mason Bowlmg Lanes
Slandangs

lostng 83-57 to OttawaGlandorf m the finals of tlle
Bowling Green Regional
The otller Class A game
Thursday night finds Tipp
Cily Bethel, 21-3, going
against Ottoville, 23.3, while
Washmgton Court House
Miamt Trace, 22-2, meets
second-ranked Kettermg

Southern has
6 starters back
Southern's vars1ty baseball

THURSDAY
GRACE
EPISCOPAL
CHURCH, Thursday luncheon at home of Mrs A R
Kmght, 12 30 p m

The Odd Bait League

COLUMBUS (UP!)
Things are back to normal for
tllla year's state basketball
tournament Charlie and tlle
Rebels have returned
For those who don't know
wbo Charlie and tlle Rebels
are , it 's Coach Charlte
Huggins and the lndtan
Valley Soutll Rebels, back m
the final folD' of the Class A
tournament after a year's
absence
IVS, the No I team m the
UP! Board of Coaches Class
A ratings, brushed off
Leesburg-Fairfield 56 49
Saturday mght at Martetla to
earn tis SIXth trtp to tlle semt
finals m tlle last seven years
One otller No 1 team,
Akron Centrai-Hower, made
tt to St John Arena, but tl
lS!l't gomg to be easy for
etther the Eagles or the
Rebels
IVS puts tts top ratmg and
22-1 record on the !me m the
tournament's openmg game
at 6 p m Thursday mght
agamst No 3 Mansfield St
Peter's, :!f&gt;-1
Central-Hower, the state's
only remamtng unbeaten
team at 23-0, winds up semifinal action at 9 30 p m
Friday when It tackles ftfthranked Toledo Scott Scott
has run off 23 stratght wms
SlDCe losing tis openmg game
of the season to Toledo st
Johns
Elyrta Cathohc, the No I
team Class AA, didn't qutte
make 11 to tlle !mal four,

By Greg Dalley

Power Co , Ease I Ohve

John M Kmg, Sandra P
Kmg to Monongahela Power
Co , Ease I Ollve
Melvm J Adams, Mary F
Adams to Monongahela
Power Co , Ease , Ollve
Robert
C.- Johnson,

Portsmouth, Miami Trace
advance to state tourney

Pro Standings
N 8 A Sl andtngs
l y Un1ted Preu lnternifiOtHI!I
..t:
E•s tern Co nf ere-nce
W!
AtlantiC 0 1) ISIOn
W l Pet
G8

THE DAILY SENTINEL
BETWEEN
8 AM and 5 PM

Red Cross

isco~ng

. on you.

•

�,-----,

•

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Mar. 13, 1978

1 Social
1 Calendar

"It's . time

consuming,

!"~~7~~·~~:r.:~ 'Z':'k~s~m:e7~:
:'~ eounirrGJ:~ ~~t f~:8~=~. Pat has

::

been the direc!Dr for the Big Bend
Service Unit of the Black Diamond Girl
Scout Council. While her job includes
being the liaison between the
Charleston office of the Black Diamond
Council and the 15 local girl scout
troops, it involves much more.
Pat has the responsibility of
making the scout program really
appealing - appealing enough that
adults will want to volunteer for the

J

:.i:

'.:,~:, :

.':'

r:::
:::•

)

_!._!

J..
_: •_,,•.::,.

?

:;:;
-:-:
_: ::

0

~-~~~~~·

and 20 will want to become members.
;:::
As for the scout program, Pat
:·:· describes it as being "an informal,
:;:: educational program, developed
:;:: · around the interests and needs of
:.:· girls." Carried out in groups with adult
~.:! leadership, the prescribed program,
Pat says, "inspires girls tD llle highest
;:;: ideals of character, conduct, patriotism
\~~\ and. service."

: ~::~~iF~r~~ ~~ztf~e=1~~~~~:
.~~- ~

.~_', ,~ :_
·_,;·_:
·.·
·:·:

:,·.•,.:

:;::
:;:;

:~:~-~-:[
;:::
::::
)
..
:(
::::

this end, Pat has developed with the
M · c t J · F · Board a
elgs ounf y reunplaortri.Cl·paalfti.on
program o mo
·
· 1
Whil e the glf
scouts h ave exh'bited
'
•• f ·
ll ale for several
t
a ~oue arr on 11a smak sc·
years, 1978 wi mar I he fir st year th at
(

h 'b' t

d

·

~~~:::~:e%
in°~~ ~:i:~t C~~~~~~~
1
book Th
1 with

MAKING BIRD FEEDERS has been a popular
activity for Brownie Scouts this winter. Using detergent
and fabric softener bottles, wire hangers and twigs, each
of the 19 girls of this Syracuse Troop 1120 constructed a
bird feeder . The Brownies earn a Brownie Badge for craft

work . Pictured as they work on bird feeders at the home of
Mrs. Carol Jean Adams, one of the leaders, are, left to
right, Heidi Cobb, Mrs. Pat Philson, leader, Mary
Baldwin, Jane Jett, Lois Davidson, ~ Darla Lambert.
Assistant leaders are Diane Davidson and Nancy
Neutzling.

·:,_,. :•_Girl Scouts mark 66th anniversary

PAT THOMA
to attend training sessions on camping,
badge work, first aid and outdoor skills.
Pat is one of several qualified scout
trainers in the county and on occasion
conducts the local training sessions.

Encouraging girls to be ac·-:; live doers rather than passi ve
:-.
·::: observers is the progra1}
f th G. 1 s ts
·:::
··· "Oa 1 o
e 1r cou · o
,__· ._:,·_:_:.·_' oAmerica which this week

prog~a~: var~~~~~~;~~~~~~f~~

observe their 66th annivci"·

. :_:,'_:,,' . sary.
Girl Scout Week, March
~--. ~ -· prem lJ!ll
. e ca eigi ober es
Day, day camp, parade participation, :;:; 12-18, is set aside not only for
several classes in t:!ach wi
on arts
lri·ps out-of-town, such as to the Center ·.·.
) the scouts to ce lebrate the ir
) and crafts, domestics of the horn~
of Science and Industry in Columbus beginning, but to create a
:;:; including sewing :~d cooking! •;
Pat takes the role of an on-the-scene ::_\_· public awareness of pro:;:: nature or out-o - oor proJeC s.
advisor to another vo lunteer serving as
urams geared to te.ach
-:·: "Exhibiting at the fair exposes a lot o1
director,
::0: "
::::
1 t
t'
d
h t the
.. citizens hi p, conse r vatio n,
:::: peop e o scou mg an .w a ·
• She's convinced that "scouting can
~:~~ emU community resp,,nsi bili,:-: ' program offers," Pat exp 1runs.
make the difference" in a young girl 's ·-:·
::;;
A firm believer that " I·f you ' re
life. Being a part, however small, of :::: t)·
·:;_·:;_ going to do it, do it right," Pat
Meigs County's more than
developing worthwhile va lues is
\
.
··
300
gi rl seouts and volunteer
'.:_,':,_, encourages ali of her vo lunteer iea d ers
important to Pat.
,_._,_:.
leaders join three million
:::::···=· =:.:: ·=·=· ·=·:-::: :=:-.-:·::,:: ::::: :=:·: ::::: :·:::: ::::::: ·:···::· .· •:.: :::-..:: :-.•:.:-. :: :: :.:_:: :_:: ::: :..;::: ..:. :,._._:_:;.::,::.::::.:..•:_:: ::.:::.:.::.::.:.::.::.:: .. :.::.:: ::::::::::::::: scouts in the United Sta te.s in
Gitmt clam in th e Pacific
.Jmnes VI of Scotland (! of the Girl Scout Week celebraThe United States, with 6
(keGtn ran measu re rnurc percent of the worid"s pupuht · England) was the first tion.
Started in this m untry by
thc1r1 three feet lung and tiun, cun.s wn es cJIJout one- sovereign uf the House of
Juliette
Gor·don Low, girl
weig h up to 600 pounds.
third of the world 's energy·•
Stuart to rule England .
:.i..

MONDAY
BETHEL 62, International
· Order of Job's Daughters,
7:30 p.m. Monday a\ the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Initiation to be held.
• MEIGS CHAPTER, Order
of DeMoiay, special meeting
7:30 Monday ni~h\. Initiation,
senior Demolay Night, and
Masonic sponsorship ni~ht to
be observed. Ali active
DeMolay members, master
masons, senior DeMolays,
and interested parents invited to attend.
UNITED
Methodist
Women, Heath Church, Middleport, 7:30 Monday night at
the church. Mrs. Genevee
Chesher to have the devotions, · Mrs. Frances Brewington, the program. The officers will be hostesses.
WEDNESDAY
FREE CERVICAL cancer
clinic for Meigs are~ women
Wednesday at Heath United
Methodist Church, Middleport. For appointment caU
992-7531 daily or 99~2 on
weekends or in evening.
SATURDAY
ME IGS COUNTY Retired
Teachers Association, 12 :30
luncheon at the Meigs Inn.
Ralph Wa lker, Loga n,
president of Ohio Retired

r

- r~RoSs....._j
I ""
:

OO.IT-YOURSElf
\.. HARDWARE HEADQUARTERS
For all your do-it-yourself
Home Improvement Supplies
see Cross Har~ware

H.
A
:R
D

w
A.

R

E

"

Kick-off the annual Meigs · 011 March I, a day set aside by
County Canl'Cr Crusade Will the Cancer ~roup f11r nut
nuyalty fur tht• Juniol"
be held Thursday at 7:30p.m. smoking.
Amerit..·cm l.egiun AUJuilar)'
m the East-West Dining
of Drew Webste1· P"'1 :19.
Room at Veterans Memorial
· Pomeroy, ' wa:~ selected al a
Hospital.
meeting held rec-ently by the
Each member of the exWomen
ecutive committee is a.sked to
Women will C'&gt;lllinue to ac- jw1iurs C:Al the home of their
take a dessert for the refresh- count for most of this coun- cnlv1sor. Mr~. Harry Davts.
MicH Jones was ~lel'tl"lll.it­
ment hour. A film will be try's new worken; during the
shown and the respon- nex.t decade, according to tie Mt.s Poppy; Jennife1·
sibilities of area chairpersons The Conference Board . Cross, Little Mis. Puppy
will be outlined during the Women accounted for 60 per- P1·inc·ess; Rhonda Heuter,
meeting .
L"nt of the jwnp in !be U.S. Jumor MIS&gt;; Poppy. ~nd
Sharon Michael, public in- work force during the last 10 Silel't'l Mar·sha.ll , Juniur Popformation chairman -for the yeCtrs and will comprise an JJY Princess.
Also el~ctetl during Ute
local chapter, reports that 150 even larger share between
lt\ccting wer·c the delegates tit
persons pledged not to smoke now and 1980.

Pl&lt;iiiS " 'l'fl' dlst'U~St'll
lllg 1hc llll•t.•tm~ fur

that Mt~!\
Pmu· r~ lrall pn;Sl·lltt·d l11 tl w

It wa;

tlurth~·

fl tglt St·htHII C'tlllllst•lvr!\
tlw lJ&lt;.,k, ·· Nt·l't a L1ft .·· II
was notL•d th;t\ dunfillull~ lwd
l.x.•t..•n sclll In ('i\HE fur Pi.'I'U .
the Mardi uf l)unt..•,; ami I ht.·
M~·tgs

J·:•J.:Ilth I hslnt·t jmuur cof:·
ft•n•m•t• In bt• hdd ill Pouu•r·m
tJil Apnl 15. t\ dunHIIHil "'"~
IIH.Idl' lu
lht• lllU S t' Uil:ll'
di!;troph~ fund. IICIIIUIIiJI pn ...
it.1.'1 of tilt' '/\JIIl'I'H 'itll l.q.! l l ll\

lttl' S CIII OI' Ullll 011 Mill'l'h

wcighcd eight puuntls. nine

Si.' llt

OUIIL'CS.

tnatcrial .

pl'tlgf'alll

Mr. ami Mrs . Earl P. Cross,
are the maternal
Annie Wiles, Robin Camp· grC~ildparcnts and Mr. and
bell, Sherri Marshall. Samh Mrs. Clifford Hoiter.Hadne
Wells, and Barbara Wells will arc the m~::~tcrmrl gr eHIbe delegates. Elected ~Iter­ grandparcnts .
Paternal
miles wen• JjSCi Wells. Jen- gr·andparcnts are Mr. and
nih~r Couch. Robin Lehew, Ml's. Char les R. Hetnis,
Tracey Jeffers . Laura 0111- PortlamJ, am1 the palcrnal
ingcr, and Tanuny Ginther. grc(Jt-g r·anLipal't'llL!:i are M r·s.
The unit endorsed Lon Wood Eiilabeih Cleek. Hacine. and
for p1·esident of the Eight h . Mr~ . Hclcrl Harr·is, Pmt larJd.
~ Masun,

I

R· value

I I I I

II

I I I

I

I I I I

I

SEED POTATOES

Na za r ene

Chu rc h es

in

Laura and Ham ilton, Ohio,
before
goi ng
into
evangelism full time. He

MEDIUM EGGS

lormer Wes tern Ohio
District. Th e Rev. Herbert
G ra te, pas tor, invites the

I

public to the r ev ival ser-

U.S. FIBER
ROCK WOOL
FISER GLASS

Canadian K~ys lone
Or iginally ·called the Hed

~me inch of loose-fill insulatio n .

Point Pleasant

224 1st Street

River Colony and purchased

VAUGHAN'S
CARDINAL

City Ice &amp;Fuel Co.

CAMP STYLE or indoor cookti\g is always popular with girl scouts. These girls of
Salisbury Troop 1100 gathered at llle home of Mrs. James Fry recenUy for tips on preparing
nutritious meals, an activity which will qualify them for the cooking badge. In the group
were Teresa Marie Pratt, Angela Pratt, Ruth Ann Fry, Kim Eblin, Sandy Hoyt and Patty
Par ker, assistant leader. Lupe Stegall and Margaret Parker are the troop leaders.

from the Hudson's Bay Cu. in
1870, Ma nitoiJa is called the

Sl't.'

how

Ope n Mon . th r u Sat .
9: 00to 5: 00
Middleport

~ dc~ n in t'huught,

Tht•n• "l'l' fu ur bust·s r1uw in
upt•ntlinrl lht\I U~h ,tut tl11'
t·uunty . Anyunt..' 111 rlt'etl or
tn lll.'ij)4.11'tathlll rs askt•d

Wnrkin~ in tilt' hum;L·~h~
carl\'a~ for t'HIItl'i bu-

' an

i:tfCGI

Q(

Fea tur in g sol id-state ·
cuit ry, Prec i sion Ve r n i er ·
T unirp~ , Target Tunin g indicator (shows p,roper radio
station l'un ing). ll lurni nated
Dia l Sc~ l e, AFC and RF
Stage on FM and built-in
antennas. Si mul ated wood
Ca binet. qrained Wa ln ut
color .

word and

i;;:;~~--...

Elt11.~~

tiuns wl'rc mt.'rnbcrs of the

O.ollie lla )"t'S, ll11lln• Muwt'l") .

Middleport club and
vvllmtccrs, im·hulin~ Bct·ky
Fry, Mildred Hawil'y. J•: dllli
Wood, NHn

I Jnda

Moore , Tt•ITi

W&lt;tlkcr. Janel and Sheila
Horky. lleli nda Hllll Etlie
S~obart. Gt·nunct Cusci, LintiM

Vift•. Alwildu Wt:r·nt·r·, and

r······-·········--·--------------,
N~

1

I
f

WHERE:
WHO:
Robe rt Hutchins on , Chemical Specialist, will be he r e to gi v e t he
latest information on all chemicals, seed corn &amp; fertil irer.
We are inviting a ll of the farmers in the Meig s, Ma son a ~d Ga ll ia
County Area , all Vo-Ag students, and anyone e lse lhat is int erested
in attendina.
Refr eshments - Door Prires - Information .

POMEROY LANDMARK

JACK W. CARS EY, MGR.
Drive A Little and Save A Lot-Free Delivery within 75 Miles-

25 1,000 :;quare

Ye s! We Service At Your Local Hotpo lnt Dea ler.
Store Hours: 8: 30 to 5 : 3~Mill Closes at 5: 00 P.M.-Serving Mei g S,
&lt;nllla &amp; Mason Counties.

miles and a popu lation of just
Over one mi llion.

FLORIDA

ORANGES ·

CORN

BEEF

ardinal

LB.

'1

' s LB.

29

BAG

Bread, milk, wieners, bacon, RC, Coke, 7-Up,
Many more items given away

~

day.

FLORIDA

CABBAGE

&amp; PEARL STREETS
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

GRAPEFRUIT
s Lb .
Bag

the

nam~

goes

on'll ·

INGELS
FURNITURE

At their, weekly meetings
the sco1,1 t troops work in art
.and crafts, visit nursing
. homes ' and hospitals, help
·make the community more

EVERY DAY
Racine, 0.
PH~BE '

STor&gt; .Thursday, Ma·r. 9 thru Ma r. 16
Right R ~served 1"9 Li mit Quantities

We Gladly_Accept Fed. Food Stamps
Monday thru.Friday

9:00til7 :00

~alurday 9:00-9:00

CLOSED

AT
4 P.M.

attractive through cleanup
work, prac t ice safe ty
measures and first a id, and
learn about nature and co~­
~rvation .

Scouting gives the opportunity for girls to broaden
their scope of interests, to
ga in perception of the nature
of things in the worl~ today,
and to examine the potential
iinpact which they, as adults,
can have on tomorrow's
world.
The Empire State Builmng
has a maximum sway of 2.97
inches, recorded in 1936.

POTATOES

. Hl·C
DRillS

PILLSBURY
FLOUR

...
Lll.

106 N. 2nd Ave .
Middleport, Ohio

1-Lb.

79

20 LB. .
BAG

RCH
PURE. VEGETABLE

PET

9;

limit one wilh coupon

·. fRUIT

FROZEN FOOD
BANQUET

Assorted Varieties

RSTWIN Pops
11-oz.
Pkg.

WHITE or ASST.
SOFT PRINlS

!lll.L" FIAVO_R_S

THIOOM
TISSUE

S9'
"'''

1-Lb.

Ara you a member of
the do-it-yourself s et 1
If •o, welcome to the
local headquarters for
your building and r~­
modeling needs .
J1re Friendly One/

~"

BORDENS

•

&gt;

U m l l oM •I I ~

one

KRAFT

VEET
Lb.

Loaf

~,79

Limit One With
$10 .00 Purchase

PEPSI

•

COLA
M•

Carton

~~

DOVE

$129

DAIRY VALUES

Ct.

'"'""' POMEROY
CEMENT BLOCK
..
.

co.

The Department Store of Building Since 1915
992·5500 or 992·5100

CARDINU

BROWN I
SERVE ROLLS
12·Ct.
Pt&lt;g . .

491

ORIOI DOUILE. STUFf or

IAIISCO OlEOS'
11·"·99'

...

,

or.$}

16
Cans

Pkg.

ICE CREAM... . . ..................... ~.~~"8 9c
CARDINAL

3

LIQUID

24-Ct.

HALF &amp; HALF ........c:::. 491

e

EVAPORATED 314 or .
MILK................... Cans

s

YOU'LL FIND
ALL AT THE
FRIENDLY
ONE/

99e

OHIO GROWN
ALL PURPOSE

7£Nim
The quality
.- ,
goes in before

scouting.

DRAWING

gg~

(Pink or White)

Council with hea dquarters in
Charleston, W.Va.
Mrs. Pal Thoma of
Pomeroy is the service unit
director and coordinates i-he
nwnerOus individual troop
and group activities carried
out. to better prepare girls
between seven and 20 to live
in today's society
Visits to the Center of
Science and Industry in Colum bus offered each year, International Thinking Day
programs and a week of day
camping at Camp Kiashuta
near Chester gives program
versatility to aU levels of

Register every day - several winners each day.

~

OPYOMETRIST

OFFIC E HOURS : 9:30 to 12, 2 to 5 I CLOSE
AT NOON ON THUR S.l ·- E AST COUR T
ST., POM E ROY .

Grace Epi scopal Parish House. East Main St reet , Pom e roy , Oh io
(beside Old Pomeroy Jr . Hiah School)

VAUGHAN'S

$44!15

VOLUNTEER adult leaders give hours and hours of their time not only in meeling with
the girlscouts each week butin preparing for making that time worthwhile. Thursday these
women .met with Mrs. Dee Lawrence, fiel.d director of the Black Diamond Girl Scout
Council, seated left at the table, for a troop camping workshop. At the workshop held in the
Colwnbus and Southern Ohio Co. social room were from the left seated at the table, Mrs.
Lawrence, Becky Mankin, &lt;l!ester Troop 1049leader and day camp director; Pat Thoma,
service unit direc!Dr; Shirley Wilson, Rutland 1293 leader; also seated, Patty Woodyard
Chester Troop 1049, left, and Shirley Cogar, Syracuse Junior Troop 1204; and standing, left
tD right, Shirley Gibbs, Chester Brownies 1061 ; Carolyn Reeves, assistant leader Pomeroy
Juniors 1276 and sustaining membership drive chairman ; Pat Hysell, Rutland Junior Troop
1292; Pat Philson, Syracuse Brownies 1120; Esther Sc~a gg , Harrisonville Juniors 1155, and
Merle Johnson, cadette consultant and trainer. The Girl Scout sustaining membership drive
is being held in conjunction with the observance of G irl . ~cout Week·.

EVERYDAY
GIVEAWAY

~

W. COMPTON. O.D.

i n-the~

Specials thru March 16.

MHrjot' l t'

J)Htl llfl l)(IVIdStlll .

ro und ...
CIRCLE OF SOUND®

Phebe's Excellent Food

1i iiJibt•rt,

WHlburn. Tnuu t :l1Jl1s. l ' atTH ·
Kt•rn wtly, Wtl!lla Sargt•nt , Er
rw .Jesse, Mtrrty Kruwsvi':)1 n,
Pal L'an:illll ,.Ntlnt H1q·. Bt•lt ,\

lt"s like a
co ncert-

; Take advantage of all

Marjlll'lt' (;,,t•ll ,
Wilson, lkrrut'l' Dur:-;t ,

St o ~art.

house

Thur sday , Marc h 16, 1978--7:30 P. M.

~ll

The . Meigs, Co unty '"Big
Bend " Scrv i ~c unit is a part of
the Black Diamond Girl Scout

HELP PHEBE
CELEBRATE
9th ANN
SALE

ttt

telt•plumc 992-2502 or 9!12-:1507

11lHilY 1\t' W j}t'!'S(ItlS

FARM FRESH PRODUCE

deed.

992-3831

tltt• l'tlllll's t IS

, -....~_ __ , _....,,

cmd a sister to other scouts, to
be courteous. to be a friend to
ani mals, to obey orders, to be
cheerful, to be thrifty, and to

CROSS HARDWARE

ts a Sturtl:n

WHEN:

to be trustworthy, to be loyal,
to be useful and to help
others, to be a friend to

E.a ~lt·r

~

•

L-·--·--·-·-··-------.-..··-----·-··
lfZ1;i~l=l ;1, :Ia~~ I tlf!l !1~1 ~ j i l~t!J

~ ·keystone'' prnvhu.:e because
it links .ca~ tc rn and wcstcm
Canada. The ut ust eaoter ly of
the Prairie pruvince:l , it has

MIDDLEPORT OHIO

(304) 675-2460

Th~ ltllt.' uf

As

bt'fun• t ht• mntt•s t l'ntl'\, Ih~ ·
aUt•nthtlll'l' ~ll&lt;ll f l ll' Ectsh:r
Sunliuy has bct·n .:w l ''l :mo.
Ea.'i lt'l' ntul'lllllg tlwn· ~~diiH ·
sunns~ st·n·rn·s 111 wtud1 llw
publil' is invrlt•d .

"Fisht!t'S uf Men" &lt;md Ot•gan
FdJ. 26 etnll w1ll runt inut.•
tlll'lmgh Apr·ilt.
Tlh.' " fisher·.... vf nwu" an• v
d1vhll'd inlu six tt•flms witll
cat·h team being nmllt.'d aftt·r
a fts h. Objcl'l 11-i fur t..'i.H'h tu

was ordained an elder In

vices.

These values are ~for

Nl' I'VI t..'l'

the dcnumJnatl on at serv ices conducted In the

4

I I I I

L' OilllllUilitv

A total of $637.22 wa s colREV. RICHARDJAYMES
.
lcdcd
in the hcarl fund drive
REVIVAL SET - The
in Millllleport eumlul'lt!d Uy
Rev. Richard W. Jaymes,
-an elder In the Church of the Middleport Business and
Prufc::;tiiunul Wuuwn's Cl ul&gt;
the Naza rene, will speak a t
headed by M1·s. Grace Pratt,
rev ival sen-Ices to be held
March 14-16, 7:30 each dvic chairme:tn .
evening, at the Chesler
Church of the Nazartne.
Surprise Island
Born iu Shirleysburg, Pa.,
Kuvachi. a ~u bmarine
th e Rev . Mr. Jay mes vult'anu in the Britis h
served in the Air Force Solomon Islands of the South
during World War 11. He Pacific, WHS firtil uiJ:;erved in
eruption by an &lt;:!ir·linc pilot in
earned a bach e l or or
theology degree from
October, 1969. What began as
Olive t Nazarene Co llege, a bubbling discoloration of
Kankakee, 111., graduating sea water oventuaHy tumcd
into a new isla nd.
In 1950. He was pastor of

Now

3

l'Wl lJc l.)l'uught utlu till' Sun ·
d;w S4.: h uul tlunn,.; th4.• M~
wt.:rk JX.'I' tutl uf I he &lt;'tlltl t'!-il.

A Suru.ht)' Schuul l'unt~st rs
111 pru~ress at till" Middleport
U111 tc'&lt;l Pen tecosta I (;(I urr ll

Total in on collection drive

R-VALUE COMPARISON CHART

2

28

with Mrs. Pl'al'l Km1pp arul
Amue W1lc!'i tu pn•st•rrt tilt. •

dng the birth of a sun.

I

Atliell&gt; Mt•ntal llc&lt;tllh Center
.a11t1 abo tht· An••rdw Nursin~ , wrdt•r tht• llin•etum uf Mrs .
Huuw . Mrs . Da\'IS ttlld Mrs. Unlht Klllltd , Sunday StiiiMJI
t;t•uuna ('a1jL't w1ll v1sit both prurlwtiurtal dan·l·lur.

fei'Cnccs. PHula Kl ot~s i:ttlll

MACHINE
RENTAL
'2500 PER DAY
1

i.IJm I I} ftll' lhl• \ 't..'kl'illlS at lht•

ple:tt:e s.
The jUilltll"~ wtiJ UU.'Cl Wtlh

SON BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Jeffn•y C.
Hi:lrris, Portlarrtl, arl' l:lttrruurr-

Available

0

Jlt.•cirt Futttl.
f&lt;.: asll'l' t•anls Wt..'rt' Sl~llt.'t)
for Sht' l'l'l Mar:-.hall. Dur·othy,
Lt·tfiH.·lt ami B1ll Hu\'uak.
E&lt;J SlL'I' rm Il l'S Wl'rl' nuult• for

on fon.•ign rt..'lalluns
ami Mrs. 1va PU\wll t&lt;1 ~n·~

PER BAG

the guest speaker. Reservations lobe made with Mrs.
Patrick Lochary, by Thurs:
day.

rt.'I)IH'Il'd

Sunday School ·:
contest begins :

::!!

Charles Jeffrey , un March I
the jwliur aux.iliary t..:on- at the O'Bielll'SS HuspitaJ. He

Pam Powers will servl' &lt;.IS
delcgates at large , while
Rhonda Reuter·, l.uri Wuutl,

Senco - Oren - or
U.S. Fiber Insulation

Auxt lJal'\

I&gt;t:,lnct .

:::;:::::~:;;~:·:::::·=~=~·:·:·:·:::·:::::·:::-:::·::::::::~·=·:-:·:·:·:·:·::::: :-:.:·:·:·::::: :::~:::::&lt;::;:;:::::::::::;:::::::::::::;::::::::::::·::::::

The li:i wS call fur gir l scouts

• Housewa res
•Wallpaper
• Paint$
• Elec tr ica l Supplies
• Plu m bing Suflplies

71 N. 2nd Ave.

Ro alt elected by auxiliary
ry ry

eancer crusade meeting held.

Teachers Associatio n, wUl be

scuuling was patterned after

the girl guide pr-ograms in
England and Scotland. The
fi rst troop meeting was held
in Se~vanna h , Ga. on March
12, i912;.with 12giris present.
Provldmg the basis fo1·
sco uting is the promise:
'· On my honor, I will try: to
do my duty to God and my
country; to help other people
al ali times; to obey the Girl
Scout laws."

~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Mar. 13, 1978

COIIIIOI&gt;

.......

Ofll' .....1111

$1

I

�'·

·isio':-';~~.~;·~:;~;,:·"·'"' Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash
cau

22,191

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMINT

Cau No . 22.291, Calvin
Ol iver , 100 01H1nd Or .,
Nitro , W. VI . 25143 WIS ap .

po in ted

E~tecutor

of th•
est•te of leU It Ollvtr .
deceased . late of Middleport ,
OhiO .
Mann inO 0 Webster
Probote- Judge
(2) 21 ( ) ) 6, 13, liC

March 14, 1978
There s a benefiCent aspect 1n
your tman ces th is co ming year .
You shou ld be able to buy
some o! the thing s you 've
want ed. but tel l you cou ld n' t

a!l¢ rd

PISCES (feb. ZO-March ZOI

·:•

.·.
•

•

:.;
'

FINANCIAL REPORT
OF TOWNSHIPS
For Fisul YeJtr Ending
Dtctmber 11,1977
lebanon Townshrp
Meigs county
Porttud , Ohio
Jan . 31.1971
certify tt1e- follow i ng
repor t t o be correct .
Clarence lawrencl;!
Townsl'1 1p Clerk
Tel NO . (6U ) 84.3 2815
Summary ot Cuh
Balances, Rtcerpts
And II ptnditures
Balance Jan . 1, 1977
General Fund
S 5, 168.89
Motor Veht c le ,L icense
TalC Fu11d
1, 4.21 .26
Gasoline TalC Fund
1, 800 16
Cemetery Fund
54. 25
Federa l ,Revenue Shar i ng
Fund
66 .A5
A n ti Re ces sion
12.11 00
Tota ls
8,635,01
Total Rece1pts
General Fund
12, 443 43
Motor Veh icle License
Tax· Fund
8,666 91
Gasoli ne Tax Fund 16, 200.00
Ceme tery Fund
2, 685 94
Federal Revenue Shar i ng
F und
2, 790 00
Anti Recession
168 .00
Totals
42, 954 29
Total Receipts &amp; Balances
Genera l F und
11 , 612 32
Motor Vehrcle license
Tax Fund
10 ,083 18
Gasoline Tax Fund 18 ,000. 16
Cemetery Fund
2,740. 19
Federa l Revenue Shar rng
Fund
'2 .856.45
Anti -Recession
292 .00 .
Totals
51 ,589 .30
E 11 j:)enditures
11 ,477 .99
Gener al Fund
Motor Vehic l e License
Tax Fund
5,454 . 14
Gasolme Ta)( Fund 14 , 147 10
Cemetery Fund
2, 537 .99
Federa l Revenue Sl1ar i ng
Fund
1,700.00
Totals
35 ,317 . 22
Balanc e Dec . Jl, 1917
Genera l ~und
6, 134.33
Motor Ve h rc le License
Tax F und
4,634 .04
Gasoline Tax Fund
3, 853 06
Cemetery Fund
202 20
Federa l Revenue Shartng
Fund
1, 156 45
A nfi -Re ces sro n
292 00
Total
16,272 08
Cash Balan ce, Receipts
And Expenditures
By Fund
G enera l Fund
Balance, Ja n . 1.1977 5, 168.89
Receipts
Gen era l Property Ta x Real Es t ate and
Trai ler (Grossl
3,795.42
Ta ng rb le Personal Property
Ta~ (Gross}
45 .99
Esta te Tax (Gress )
2,094 47
local Gover nment and
St a te In com e Ta x
3,027 .97
C[garette l i cense Fees
75 .00
and Fines &lt;Gross)
Ad justments and
"'
Refunds
45 .00
Other
3,359 .58
12,443.43
Tot a l Receipts .
Total Begi nn i ng Balance
Pl us Rece ipts
17 ,612 32
Expenditures
Total Expendi tu res
- Adm i nistrat iv e 10 , 11 5.22
- Town Ha ll s, Memor1&amp;1
Buildings a nd Grou nds
89 17
- Fire Pr otec t ion
750 .00
- cern et er les
523 60
Grand Total E)l.p . Genera l Fu nd
11 ,477 .99
Sal ,Oec . 3L 1977
6, 134 .33
Total E)(p . Plus Bal ,
Dec . Jl, 1977
17,6 12.32
Motor Vehicle Ucense
Tax Fund
Balance , J a n 1, 1977 1,42 1 26
Receipts
Molar Vehicle license
Ta)(
8,666.92
Total Receipts
8,666.92
To tal Be~nnning Balance
Plus Receipts
10,088. 18
E x penditures
Total E)l. penditure s
- Misce llan eo us
1,800.89
- Ma intenance
3,653 25
Grand Tot al Exp . Motor Vehicle License
Tax Fund'
5, 454 u Bal., Dec . 3l. 19 77
4,634 04
Tot a l E)( p . Plus Ba l,
Dec. 31 , 1977
10.088 18
Gasoline Tu Fund
Balance , Jan l , 1977 1, 800 16
Receipts
Gasolin e TalC
14 , 200 00
Other
2.000.00
Total Receipts
16,200 00
Total Beginn in g Ba la nce
Plus Receipts
18,000 16
Expenditures
Tot a l Expend i tures
- M tsce llaneous
4,956 71
9, 190.39
- Maintenance
Grand Total EKP Gasoli ne Ta)l. Fund
14,147 10
Bal. , Dec . 3 1, 1977
3,853.06
Total EJCp Plus Ba l,
Dec . 31, 1977
18 ,000.16
Cemetery Fund
Bal ., Hn . 1, 1977
54 .25
Receipts
Genera l Property TalC
Real Estate and
Trailer (Gross )
2,530.28
Tangib le Personal Property
Tax {G r oss)
30.66
Other
125.00
Total Recetpts
2,685 94
Total B eginning Balance
Plus Receipts
2,140 19
E xpe nditures
Sa l ar~es
7,477 .30
Improvement of
Sites
104.69
Tool s and Equipment
6.00
Total Exp
7,537 99
Bal ., Dec . 31, 1971
207 70 '
Tot o l Exp , P lus Bal. ,
Dec . 31 , 1911
7,740. 19
Federal Rnenue Sh•rlng
Fund
Ba 1., Jan . l, 1977
66.-45
Receipts
Gran ts - Federal
2,790.00
Total Receipts
7,790.00
Total Beginning Balance
Plus Receipts
·
2,856.45
E x penditures
Malnt. and Operation
E qu ipment
1,700.00
Tot a l Ex~ .
1,700.00
Ba l., Dec. 31, 19 77
1,156.45
T ota l Exp , Plus Bal. ,
Dec . 31, 1977
2,856.45
Ant i- Rece u ion
1'2&lt;1 .00
~'!..!:·Jan . 1. 1977

Don 't pa y th e shc ke1 pn ce il
you 're shopping lor an article
lor the home today With a li llie
sp1nted ba rga1mng . you co uld
pr obably lo wer 1t. Fi nd ou t 10
wh om you ' re rom an ti ca lly
sulled by sen d ing lor you r copy
of A st ra-Graph Leite r Mall 50
ce nts fo r eac h and a long , se lf·
addressed , sta mpe d envelope
to Astra-Graph , P 0 Box 489 ,
Rad10 C1ty Stahon . NY . 10019,
Be sUi e to spec i fy b1rth s1gn

e

ARIES (March 21-Aprl\ 191 You
have all the r1ghl words today ,
but no one co uld ca l! you glib .
Ot hers kno w that whcit you say
comes from the boltom of you r
heart

TAURUS (April

ZO-May

201

Someon e may seem to be
pok1ng hi s no se in to your attau s today , out don 't be und uly
alarmed . He may poin t ou t
ga inf ul avenues you ve
ignored

GEMINI (May 21-June ZOI Take
a few e )(lra pams with your
at11 re today Yo u co uld meet
someone of the opposite sex
you 'll really want to impre ss

CANCE R IJune 21-July 2ZI
You 're a real booster fod ay .
Everything you do seems to be
desi gned to promote pals with·
out call tng attention to yoursel L

LEO (July Z3-Aug. 221 When
you enter a place , you seem to
buoy up the spiri t s 0 f eve ry body in the room today You
don ' t do 11 con sciously Nevertheless , it happens

VIRGO (Aug. Z3·Sepl 221 Set
your sig hl s high 1n business
today Keep In m1nd th at you 're
1n conlro l. As long as you
believe it. you ' ll BE in contro l

LIBRA (Sepl. Z3-0cl. Z31 Your
main concern today is to see
that eve ryone is trea ted fa i rly .
You II go ou t of your way to
make su re 11 happens This Is
to your benefit .

SCORPIO (Ocl . 24-Nov. 2ZI An
arrangement w!lh ~not her may
be very profitable for yo u
today, even thoug h yo u have a
mtnor ro le Some type o f b usiness rs mvolved

SAGIITARIUS (Nov . 23·Dec.
21} Often people make an acquaintance on ju st a fleeting
impre ssion . Today you may
mee t someon e new and ga1n a
staunch ally, o r even s tarl ~
buddmg roman ce .

CAPRICORN (Dec. Z2·Jan. 191
If you have the u rge today to do
some t h m g ar ti s tr c ar ound
home . d1g !' ~ght in The end
re s ult s will rea ll y be ve ry pleas-

lllg .

AQUARIUS (Jan. ZO-feb. 191 In
any ten se situa ti on today you
ca n keep a sti ff uppe r l1 p Your
co mposure may fa lter a btl
1nwardly, Put th ose around you
would never know it

,.•

..•'

'..

..

.;
'•

IN TME
COMMON PLEAS COURT ,
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF TH E
SETTl,.EMENT
OF
AC COU NTS ,
PROBATE
COURT , MEIGS CO UNTY ,
OH IO
Accounts and vouchers of
the
l ol towmg
n amed
flduciarres have been tiled in
the Pr obate Court, Meigs
County , Ohro , lor ap"prova t •
and set tle ment
CASE ' NO . 21517 F t rst
Current Account of Marion F
Ebersbach . Trus t ee o f the
Tru st u nd er Wi ll of Marion
Jean Warn er . Deceased .
·CASE NO 2199 6 Frnal and
Ors tr ibu t rve
Account of
Bernard
V.
Fultz , Ad ·
mi n rstratcr ot the Es t ate of
Elizabeth Byer J ackson,
Deceased .
CASE NO . I JA97A F ifteenth
Accoun t of The Huntington
Nat1ona1 Bank of Co l u mbus ,
Trustee of t he Trust c:; r eated
under t he Last Will ~nd
Testament of A l bert 0 .
Ebersbach , Decease d
CASE NO . 19105 Second
Annual Account of l ouis B .
vaughan, Guardian o f · the
Es ta te of Wi ll1am Reeves . an
incompetent person .
CASE NO . 2206 1 Fina l and
Oistr1but1ve
Accou n t o f
Marvin Morri s, E~ecutor of
the Estate . of Vivia n E
Johnson , Deceased .
Unless eJCcep tlo ns arc filed
thereto , said acc:;ounts Will be
tor he-a r ing before said Cour t
on the Ill h . day of April, 1918,
at which time said acco unts
wi ll be considered and co n ·
trnued from d ay to day unti l
f i nally d 1sposeCJ of .
Any person in t ere sted mav
tile w n tten e)(ceptions to said
accounts or to matters
pertaining to the eJCecu t ron of
the trust, not less than f 1ve
d&lt;Jys prior to t11 e date set fo r
hea r ing ,
WebSter
JUDGE
Common Pleas Court,
Proba te D i vision ,
Meigs Co unty , Oh io
Mannin~

:·

(3 ) lJ , He

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY,OHIO
ESTATE OF W i ll iam C
Mldd leswa r t.
DECEASED
Cue No . '22310, Docket 12,
Page 45.
NOTICE OF

..

t:amping t;quipJ~Knt

WANT AD
CHARGES

OF FIDUCIARY
On t::ebruary 21. 1971, In ttlt
Melg5 COunty Probatl' Court,

..
•

15 W ur~ ur Urltlt&gt;t

C11sh

(.1 wrK~

""''

100

I.ZS

I Wtys

'"'

1.90

100

2 !.lolyac

'"

I !II

JtWys

3 75

I

•

•

'

'

•
'.

FALL ~olc&gt;
Mrtu
~trntot\
'}() oll(l 'J'J
ltoVt&gt;l
l·~ulur:. ll:t ~ S3 1941 '1'.&gt; I
Bu• rk h(luw \4 1:11~ ~old dow1•
~ 1 "/00 II IJ Wr• sell ,;e1vur• """
ql.lO loty Qpon !trHodoy ~ l(urop
(ooduy )!Oil tOll ~ofo•o, ftl 01
N of l' t 1-' h~o\(1011

F.:...t:h wvrd over Ult' mmUnwn 15

\liurd5 Ill 4 c~niS JM!t wurd pt't W6y
vll~r Ulil ntovnlit"cullv~
be l'lwrl(~ wt tlw I day

Alb: rwmu1!(
dM y~;
tll~ .

wUI

Jn mernvry, Comt of TIWink.s and
OIJilUIH'Y: 6 Ct:lli.S ~r wm·d, $3.00
ma.ni.J num C11sh 111 lldv ii JK: ~
Motuk Homt' liillt'S Mlli.l 'iwrd !ll:llt!s
;,n e a~o~e pled only wlth l"ll!ih with

\ani Salt·
If. YOU hovv o !ot.' t vtte to (&gt;Il L• •
wort! to bu y Or '&gt;tfll ,om(' lhrnq
oe loo k ln9 for wo •k
o•
whotOvel
yOl.lll gt•l&gt;r&gt;~u l t ...
lo.,tet wdh a ~enlll l£&gt;1 Won t Ad
(oiiW'J ")1~0

to 1!1lil vr rc/trliiiiY lltb dtemt-tl 00..
Jt!CliUillill. TIC PuiJICjhU Wlll llat be
n:sponsiblt! for 11'101 e than Ulll' UllUI"·
l't!t.1 lJ I~ rtlun .

l,hunc 99'l·2 156

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
M._., u;~Y
Noon un Satul'llll)'

Tuc.'id!Jy
lluu f'1id11y
4PM

lik'dily bdvn: pubht illtolt
Suntlct)'
4P.M.
J&lt;"rul ;~y ilftcrnoon

Wanted tu lluy
11MBUt

1-'oonoJ r oy ~ O H~~ I f'r o
du~l!&gt;
l op prr ce lot ~ IOJ &gt;du 1 q
:.Owlunbe&gt;t Coli 99'/ 596 ~ n o
KoJ nl Hanby I 446 tl570

COIN !:, CUI-!Hi:N(V l o kon ~ ol d
poc-k e r wo lchc., ond r h o rn~
stl ve t ond gu ld We need I 9b4
011d o fdm ~ ti Ye l ca ulS Buy '.ell
01 11 od e Coli f.toge1 Wormle y
74'} 23jl

OW FURNII UH~ ICC b o • e~ bra 'o~
bC" d'&gt; rt or r bed-. t&gt;l c c.o rnplc1 e
hou!.b'fro ld ~ Wr11 e M D Millet
Rt 4 Putnt:IO Y Ohl (J ur lO ll
99'1 776(J
NO lli:M 100 Lorge or lao smoll
w.l l bl.ly I pr Q(\i! o o !OIItpiQ\1)
h o u ~e ho ld Nllw l.lMnl o• onl,
qvc!. Moo lto1., ~u r nrl u•'-' 'JU N
'lnd St , Moddleporl
Phone
99'} 637U
WOOD
1-' o l e~
m o)(
chan1e1er 10 011 lor gf!'&gt;l end S£1
P"' lor • Bundlerl slob So pe t
ton Oel1 ver ~ d to Oh rn Poll e t
Co HI 7 1-'omm oy 991 1bl:!9

IN LOVING m~m or~ ol o u1 de01
husbo11d o11d lo lhe1 , Mw .,. n1
(Bob) Co&gt;&lt; , who dted Otl t:! yt~ot
ago today Motd-t 11 1977
W11h 1!:&gt; 01 dtmmed eyes we :.ow
r ou go
You 1e go ne bul nollotgo tlen
Bur God kn ew h e~! lot he look
you to1es t
No w ~ ou II ho" t&gt; 110 m or~ pa on and
SO li OW

Ltfe t!. beou trf ul when 11 s rn bl oom
God help s us cope wrth o w pto
blem s
Wh en we have known com! or! 111
OI.H so rr ow
We lOniO l t:! on olher lom or t o w
Sadly misse d by wrl e Nellte
!.hll dten, grandchrldr en an(!
g t eol gr ond child1 en

SCASHS lo t 1urrk em s h yn:.
lruck and Aula 1-' o r t ~ Wr(Hk er
~e rvr c.c l u e sole an d Rep o11
l&lt;ullolld ~ 4'} 2Uti l 01 Pctltlt otl
l41957S.
WANHD TO buy Good u ~e d
b aby lvtrHIUHI Coil ~'n :&gt;J:t6

~·or Rt&gt;nl
3 AND 4 riM

lu f nl"&gt;hed
54)4

lw r11 ~ h e d and un
oph
Ph one 992

CO UNTRY MOB il ~ Homt&gt; Pmk
1-! Cl ule JJ llO IIh ot 1-'0 tnei Oy.
Lor ge Ia rs Coli 992 7479
l 'l

~ 60

MOBitt: HOME neo1 Del! ler Phone 992 585tl .

I WO BWROOM aporlment

THE FAMilY ot Mtldred M Bor es
wrshcs ro cKpre ss ou1 op·
precrotron to frrcnds re latr.,.es,
nc rgh bor s. and co w or ker s lo t
rh el r rnany acts o f kindn ess
donoliuns ol llowe•s . lood
cot ds and co ndolences Speool
!honks IO M1ddlepor1 Emetgen .
cy Sqvod , Dr . l elle , nur ses 111
the em€Hgencr room , Ew1ng~
Funeral Horne 011 d tl-, e Rev .
Bobby J Elkrr1 s for h1s consoling
w or ds

THE

RACINE Volu nteer F rr t~
o'ep01trmml wil l sponsor o gvn
shoal every Saturday ot 6 pm ol
the1r bu ddmg m Bo shon. Foe lory choke gvns on lr

TH E RACINE Gun Club Gun Shoo t
e&gt;~e r y Sunday oflen1oon Fa( ·
tory chok e guns onlr Assorted
mea t ~

CLEARAN CE SALE begins Mon
Feb. 13 01 SewN Se w Ou tl et,
Main Sr r ee l
Rac m e
All
polye Ster double kr1rts red uced
40°. and 50° o Thread brg spool
5 for $1
INCOME TAX Servr ces , Fedetol
ond sta te To )(es. Wallace
Rus~till , Bradbury . 992 .7'1'18
SHOOT IN G MATCH Forked Run
Sport $1non Club every Sunday
ofterhoon FociOI)' choke gun5
on ly
TIRED OF caokrng ? Try our
Bucke ts and Barrels o l Chr ck
· N Ou t"
Darry ble Mtd·
dlep01 1
MEIGS COUNTY Humane Socre!y
Eo ~ !er Bezoar and baM£:&gt; sole
Fri and Sot . Mo rc h 17 &amp; 18 or
Thrift Shop acr oss f rom
Pomer o y Post Office .

FOUND · BLACK lea ther key co~e
w11h a lighl msrde c os~ Co n
to ins 4 Meys 2 to Chry sler pro·
duel Found March 7 ar ound
laundry on Se con d St Owner
get in rouch w1th the Pomeroy
Pohce Dept.
lOST EITHER m Middleport or at
H o t~er Ho5pi tol
Br o wn Mey
cor.e 992.3873 .
l OST IN Lmcoln Hili area 10t ter ·
r1er , mo5tly whrte , some
b1own 992 2262

AP1

He n! ol s
en I
o ~~ ~ ~s !o nc c ro les lor Sen•ot
(liJH.&gt;nS Con toe! Vtllage Mona•
Apt s . Mrdd lepo• 1 Q9'] 7787

MOBILE HOME wrth e,;pondo on 3
acres . Dr rlfed well . Septrc lor1k
l mmedrote
p or.seuio n
742 ·3074 .

~·;tm ~'5-;"'

:;:-_,::-'";"::.

AKC MINIATURE Schnau z'ers
Ma l&amp; 9 mo , Female 2 years to
good hom&amp; 30&lt;1· 773-5568 aher

5 pmc.·- - - - -

FON

Hn v£!

hod

o, h vt'
1()

WUIIIll' d

'IQ'}_

and

W(!t.• l. ~

heen
old

AI

99Z.Z206 01 992-7630.

i:(ONOMY TRA Cl OR wrth oil ot to chmen l5 Lik e new. o ~ k111g
S2250 Ph onc (6 l 4) 09B 329{)
RUG S
WAll
Hongmg~
ond
al gon s. ~ ~tl lm Chlt 5!r110S.
RQo)u.,oble Ca ll 992 -1214
B &amp; S MOHil ~ HOMES . P! Plea
son ! W Vo bes1d(;' He ~ !.. s
1973 Broodn)OIC 14 ~ M '}
bed 1oom
\9 l3 0at ron l4 ll602bedroom
\9n Vrctorro11 14 )( bl 3 bed roor11
7 bo th
197 2 Co&gt;~ellll y 12 )( b5 3 bedroon1
1969 St atesman I '2 • bO '}
bedr oo m.

lMI'AlA
t&gt;n q !::.Hcllenl (OIIdrnon
olle1 ~ pm 949 2849

LAVENDER
CONSTRUCTION
Ohio

Scniccs Offered

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

9. -Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
lllil Phone '192· 2181

let, Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; condition your·
water with Co-op watet

soflener, Model UC-SVI ,
Now Only "279.95
Let us test vour water Free

APPUANCE
SERVICE

8 A.M. to4 :30 P.M.
$ALES AND SERVICE

'

.

MODEL 12 W1"chester shotgun 28
1n lrJII. Good con dttion. $300.
Phone 741·2359
USED UNICO
992 -3430

Dryer .

Ph one

KIN G Sl1E round bed co mple te.
Red velve t head board ond bed
sre od S299 lngel s Furo1tur e
992-2635

t

POTASH, FERT~ELS
&amp; BLEND
Pomeroy Landmark

~ 4 81

9'. _Jack W. Carsey, Mgr .
Phone 992- 2181

WILL CARE tor the elderly in ou r
home . Ph one 992 73 14 .

COUN TR Y for mlond wdh secl uded wood 5. wa ter ond good occess rn Monroe Coun lr, W Vo
S1.()()(1 d own coli (304) 1723102 or (304 ) 772·3227
Commerc rol proper ty appro~&lt;: 17
acres . le ... el lond laco ted at
Tuppers Pla ins on Ohro Route
7. Phone (614) 667-6304
VA FHA

30 yr . frnanong . also

•elrnoncmg. Ireland Mortgag e
77 E. State . Athens . phone (6 14 )
592·3051'
TWO STORY fro rn e house 6
rooms and bolh , ce llar . out building~ . 4 ao es land , at edge
of Rutland . Complete tror ler
hoolo. -vp also . 2 bonk s app rais ed properly ol SIS,SOO Phone
992 -7094
THREE BEDROOM w rth both 5 96
acres fullr carpe ted , 1vst
remodeled , all ele clrrc , dug
cellar off krlchen
4. ou lbur ldrngs rn Mergs Mrne oreo
992-3C193

it&lt;'a1 !!;state fur Sal.,
FOR SALE by owner New house
wrth 3000 sq . It l1vir19 space
and app/0)( 12 acres of land. 8
roo ms 2 baths, 2 car ga rage .
lo t chen ho s bvrl ! rn oppl•ance~
suc h as rslond cook lo p stove
tras h c.ompoctor , Iappan o"en
dtshwasher. rce mochrne 011d o
Nutone Food Certler . Phone
94 9 1501

REDUCED TO 525,000 - 2 story stone frame on large
lot in Middleport . Has forma l entrance &amp; dining, 2
large bedroom s, living room wit h fireplace &amp; eat-I n
kitchen . Central gas heat &amp; garage.

DOBBIN S --

BE RETURNoD
LINHARMED · IN
EXCHANGE FOR

NO ~ NOl YOU
DARLI~ G LIT1LE

fHE CO MPLE&lt;TE

8 : 30- Turnabout 33,20; Baby, I ' m Back 10 .
9: 0o--Movle " Death of Her Innocence" 3,4, 15; Movie

.....

10 oo-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 15; Tattletales 8 ; Joker' s Wild
10: Not For Women Only 13.

Service•........ ..,...., ,,. .....lttlo ....
. . .r.tor to tho

""''·

12 ·oo-Newscenter 3; 520,000 Pyramid 13 ; News 4,6, 10;

~mu~~~~o!

,.•

f;.T

'

~

'."

To Say The Least 15; Gambll 8

L-~TMaJ

'(OV~

12 · 30--Ryan ' s Hope 6, 13 ; Bob Braun 4; Gong Show IS;
Search for Tomorrow 8,10; E lec Co . 33.

I!ATI-IIt.h

I :DO-For Richer, For Poorer 3, All My Children 6,13;

SUIT!

News 8; You ng &amp; the Restless 10i Not For Wom en

ILDUIQ

Only 15.
1· 30-Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15; As The World Turns

Phone 985-3806

Jack's Septic
Tank Senice

992·2174

'""'"'

EXCAVATING dozer . backhoe
and dr td~ · ·: Charles R HatServ1ce .
lre ld . Bo ck Hoe
Rutland Ohto Phone 742-2008
' .
.
'
WILL do roofing con5trucli011 .
plumbing ond heotmg. No job
too Iorge or 1oo sm alL Phon e
742 2348

Box3-

HOWERY . AND MARTIN
cavoting , septic
~ystems .
do1er, back hoe dump tru ck .
lnnestone
gro&gt;~el ,
b)oc ktop
po vm g, Rl 1.43 Phone 1 (6 14 )
b98-7331 .
BATHROOMS AND Ktl, hem
remode led. cerom 1c t1le plvm bmg , carpenlry . ond general
13 years e)( ·
marntcnonce
_ge_r•~:_.e _9!_2-3685___ ~ ~- _
PULLINS EXCAVATIN G. Complete
Service Phone qn -2478

1

~4 miles oH Rt. 7 by-:pass on

51 . Rl. 143.toword Rulland,

o.

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682
3-12·1 mo.

LOOK 1REHE ···SEE
BUT I THCXJ6HT
OAT GUy? HIS NAME 'S CoPS WORE
STARR ' .. · HE 15
BLUE UN1t:'ORM5· ·
A

"

"

.•
ALLEYOOP

~-

3 ·13

SAVE ON
CARPETING
DRIVE A LimE
&amp;
SAVE A LOT

zo Adjust
body
16 Poet '~
21 Caught
23 Airway
nver .
~"'" "24 Not him
25 Foundation
26 Reg10n
28 Worsted
maker
31- session
32 Prisoner: st.
33 Winglike b-+--tpart
34 I love : Lat.
35 Curtain or
) ~ fishing

GASOLINE ALLEY

Mij basket!

~top the

belt!

EJCpert installation,

Rubber Back Carpet
Low As

'4•88

sg. yd.

&amp; up

No. 200 - .Wilkes ville area ,
approx. 1 acre, road on 3
sides. Gas furnace , 2 story,
bottom story all carpeted
and
refini shed .
Price

$18,000.
804 W. Main
Pomeroy

992-2291

Buy Where you can cOme in
-Good selections- Fully

stocked.

WE GAN

Ca11742-2211
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

After Hours C. II
992-7133
C.()NTACT:
Lois Pauley
Branch Manager

ONLY DO w~
ilANt' FIJ\IANC:.&amp;NG,

and see what you're getting

lluToMft,.lc

AN

~ANSffft

FROM YO~ C.HEC:It.ING
ltC:C:OUN,. ,.0 Gulf

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
742·2211

~~~~ANGf
)

llePAIIl SHOP.

Rutland

'
0

•••
&gt;

l

&lt;

•l

•

wiNNIE

AT 446·3643

Evenings C.ll446·3796 or 446-7811
8 ACRES - Reduced to$18.000. Includes a sml!tll house
In good condition. Also 2 mobile home spaces with
septic tenk. Good rerttalincome. Near junction of Rt. 7

on R1 . 124.

GoesTt1eCountry8; News 10: To Te ll The Truth 13;

Gl ll lgon's ls 15; FrenchChef20, Book Beal33 .
7: 30-Holly wood Squ ares 3; Let's Go The Races 8;
Hollywood Squares A; MacNeil -Lehrer Report

20,33; Price Is Righi 10; That"s Hollywood 13; TV
Honor Society 15

8:DO-Chuck Barris 3,4, Happy Days 6,13; Billy ·
Grat1am Cr usad e 15,8: Cousteau Odyssey 20,33;
Roy C lark's Ranch Party '78 10.

a.

Yesterday's Answer

22 Kind or
dance
23 Grassy
ground
25 IncHne
26 Friend to
D' Artagnan
27 Helen
Hunt
Jackson
classic

28 Expressionless
29 She loved
Lancelot
30 "~ Harvest"
32 Greek
island
38 New
Guine•

0

ZZ ZZZ!CHUCK, ll
WHERE ARE '{OU? I
CHUcK :zzzzz : j

COUNTRY LIVIN' - Very nlce.J bedroom home on 28

l

family room, eat-In kllchen, dining area &amp; bath . Smell
basement with excellent storage, Small barn with

workshop and a good garden spol,

$45,~.

'

•I,

11 :3G-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Feather &amp; Fa ther Gang

6,13; McC loud 8; ABC l'lews 33; Movie " Les Girls"
10.
12:QO-Janakl33; 1 · QO--Tom o rrow 4: 1: 1().-.News 13.

Movie Channel • -

5 &amp; 7 P M. -On The Old Spanis h T'aiiiPGI
9 &amp; 11 P .M - Carrie ! RI
Monday, Marc h 13

and Alan

esponse eases bid to game
NORTH

.3-13

• A R7 6
"A 8 7 6

WEST
• QJ ~
• J 92
t AQ6
• J 9s2

t K 10 2
• 83
EAST
• K9 3 2

• 10 4

• 76 s 3
• Q 10 6

-

DAILY C RYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work ll :
AXVDI,BAAXR
is I. 0 N G F I! I. L 0 W
One Jet t er simply st ands f or anoth er. I n thi s sample A is
u sed for th e three I.'s, X for th e t wu 0 '5, ('l{' !';tnglt' l e tt ers.
aposlrophes, t he l ength nnd £orma t ion o f t he wnrd5 are all
hints. Eac h day the code letters arc different.

D I

WAKEUP,
SIR!

THAT'S IT, ISN'T IT?
THAT'S WHY '1'0UFALL
ASLEEP IN CLAS5, ISN'T

IT? THAT'S WHAT THE
IUOCTORlllLO ~OU, ISN'T IT?

BELLE -- IF THAT WAG -TONGUE
FEMALE KETCHES
OUT HERE,
I'LL NEVER GIT

MY CHORES
DOlliE

South has no trouble making ·
his game because the dla·
m ond quee n is locate d where
he want. It to be, but the

game

bid is a good one. "

Os wald : "A one-heart re·
s ponse by North would produce a raise to two hearts by
South. North might dec ide to
pass since his hearts are so

weak.

Also a one-spa de

re-

( normal 40 years
ago I would probably lead to
failure to ever find the heart
suit. Not too ba d a fate since

SOUTH
+ 10 4
"KQ53
• J 94
+ AK74
-L-J........,L.~ I Vulnerable: Both.
Dealer : South.

PRSVJ

Dick Cavetf 20 : Over

Easy 33 .

town
39 Macaw

LAWSV ME!! HERE COMES SAIRV

acres with fruit trees, strawberries, free water &amp; gas.
The l 'h story hOme has alum. siding, living room,

Paino &amp; Amplified Cello 33; News 20.
11 · 0{)-News 3, 4,6,8, 10,13. 1.5 ;

s ponse

three notrump makes also."
Alan: •' This hand Is given

here as a preliminary to

Well

North East

Poaa

1•

Pass

I.

discussion or the problems
involved In bidding balanced- type hands. They
will be discussed furthe r all

Paoa

3•

Pass

4•

w eek . "

r ... Pass Pass

South
I•

Opening lead : • Q.
By Oowald Jacoby

PUVVUO N and Alan 8onta1
Oswald : "'North's one-diamond
response to his part·
Q R
KGGVUBQUROA
WK T I
ner's club opening would be
Q W I Z'
D ·1
0 R Q made by most experts. His
reason for that bid Is that he
Q WI F. can give a jump raise if the
UOBROTIOUIOBIJ
DZ
opener rebids one spade or
one heart, c an pass to a one
AQ. GYKOBUA Jl AKVIA
notrump call and bid two
Saturday's Cryptoquote: I WAS TAUGHT THAT THE WAY notrump if opener goes to
TO PROGRESS IS NEITHER SWIFT NOR EASY.-MARIE two clubs.''
Alan : "Opener does rebid
one beart and the final con·
(!")1 1178 KinK t'ealure• Syndicate, Inc.
tract becomes four hearts,
BARNEY

U IN STOCK
Selection In nia Valiev

8 : J()-La-verne 5t'11f'ley 6, \3 ; 9 : 00-Movle "Big Jake"
3.4. 15,· T h ree's Company 6, 13; Movie "Perf ec t
Gentlemen" 8, 10; Movi e "Hes ter Street" 20k , 33 .
9:30-Soap 6, Mar y Tyler Moore 13.
IO : oo-Havlng Babies 6, 13 ; l O. JD-Rock Sonata lor

BRIDGE

41 City on the
Truckee
42 Imitation
silk
43 Ancient
gold alloy

FKOZ

A SOFA THAT
MAKES A
lED FOR
YOU

Largest

5: 30-N ews 6: Elec Co . 20,33 ; M ary Ty ler M oore 10;
Hogan's H eroe s 15.
6 ;00-N ews 3,4,8, 10, 13, IS; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6 : 31)-N BC News 3,4, 15 , ABC N ews ll i Carol Burnett
&amp; Frlends6: CBS N ews8, 10.- Over Easy 20 .

I .DO-Cross-Wits 3,4; Billy Graham Crusade 6; Pop

~~N~a~t·m1_v'•t&gt;ic,e.g.k,~~~--

FRANK &amp; ERNIE

4 :00--Mi ster Cartoon 3; For Richer. For Poorer 1.S, M y
Three Sons 4; M er v Griffin 6 ; Gilligan ' s I s 8 ;
Sesl!tme St 20,33 ; Gomer Pyle. USMC 10.
4:311--LIIIIe Rascals 3, 15 ; Gil ligan 's Is. 4; Brady Bunch
8., 10; Mary Tyler Moore 13 .
s :oo-H ere Come The Brides 3; Star Trek 4; Gunsmoke
8. Mister Rogers ' Neig hborhood 20,33; Hogan 's
Heroes 10; Emergency One 13; Petti coa t J unctio n

15.

Merriman
i::;;~;!~~:;~~~ 37 Opera's
Toiled

gr and 12' Vinyl
Aooring In Stock

8.10; 2:()()--()ne Lite lo Live 6,13 ; 2:311--Docto"
3,.,15; Guidi ng Llghl 8.10; 3:DO-Anolher World
3.4.15; Generol Hospl1ol6,13; Lilias Yoga 3. You ZO.
3:311--A II In The Family 8,10; Consumer Sur vival Kl l
20.

OFF

ACROSS
DOWN
I Old
I Politician
clothing
or note
, •. t'LL ASK "THOSE "THREE FHLAS I.JP
5
Disgraces
2
Aver
AHEAD! "THEY OUGHTA BE ABLE TO
11 Robt. 3 Stop lllln·
TELL I.JS!
12 Whiskey·
cing words
making
4 Large '
refuse
quantity
13 Neighbor of 5 Showed
Sask .
mercy to
14 Arouse
6 Westerner rs
15 " - Ha ppy"'
greeting
16 Milit.
7 Know supplies: a bbr . glance
11 Girl's name 8 Progresses
!8 In the past
9 Gridiron
19 Ottoman
nWl)ber
:._~!!!.!lc!2.!:i.l~~.:!..!!!!J official
10 Legislative

All carpet installed with
padding at no charge .

,a,

(Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles ROBOT LOUSE FACIAL MODIFY
"
Answer · Wh at the angry astronaut d1d - BLASTED

by THOMAS JOSEPH

·--·~-----

--~

11

~

REMODELING Plu mbmg, heating
and a ll types of genera l repair , "
Work guaranteed 20 years e,; - 1
per~ence Phone 992 -2409.
--~

I

·rn-D-[ l l Xr

NEW - JUST OFF PRESS! JUMBLE BOOK lf1 1 wll h 110 puzl 1eels avail·
ao le for $1 35 postpaid !rom Jumble, c/o this newspaper, PO. Box 34,
Norwood, N J . 01648 Include your name, address, zip code and mal\e
checks payable fa Newspaperbooks

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAI~ Sweepers , toasters iron5, oil "'
sma ll appliances . l awn mower.
ne10:t to Stole Highway Goroge ·•
on Rovle 7 Phone (6 14) 985
3825
•

-----

.
I d ays
S aur

cop ,.

BR A DFORD , Auctioneer , Com ·
plete Ser'o'ICe Phone 949 -2A87
or 949-2000 Racine . Ohro, (fill
~rod_
lo_,d c__________

-

Answer hare .. AN

ORPHAN ANNIE-GUIDED TOUR

ROGER HYSELL
GARAGE

-

Now arrange the cirCled tentHS lo
iorm the surprise answer, as sug gested by the above cartoon

[]

Chester, Onio

10-30-c ,

MAGG IE S
UN H OLSTERY
Reftni sh tn g ,
reupha ls tery .
rebutldrng Beourilul selec tion
of moterro ls ond ... iny ls. Free
eslirnpte Tel. 742 2852 Loc o
!ton Solem Ce nter
Coli 949·2508 ro, house desrgns
and e5 h motes Gu'y H Neigler ,
Rocr ne

YARREa

,,,.•

.

WI NTER GET to you r house? Let us
make nece5sory repoir s AI
Tromm ComtructioCl 742-2328

. --- NEIGLER 'S FOR building houses .

.

lHE WISEM.AN REAL ESTATE AGENCY

FOR SALE: Me11"s used work
1ackets ond ponh , mens work
boots , mille bOOI !i, dres s !iihoes
to• lhe whole fomtl y.
Bodey s, Mrdd iE;!port.

- _

11 311-Knockou1 3, 15; Fomlly Fevd 6, 13; Parlrldge
Family 4; Love of Llle 8.10; Sesame Sl. ZO ; Royal
Heritage 33; 11 :Ss-CB5 News 8; Loving Free 10.

CRVPTOQUOTES

1971 ~. Ford pickup truck Goad
llres and body . Ru ns good Sfte
o! Rutland Furmture Dr coli
742-221 I .

REOI.:JCE SAFE and fosl w• lh
' C.o8ese Toblets &amp; E-Vop woter
_ _p 1 ~s - _Ne_lsan_Diu~

n

K'J

CALL
IN GALLI POLIS

Price Is Right 8.10 ; Rick Faucheux 13.
II · OG--Wheel of Fortune J,A, l.S; Hllppy Days 6,13;.

L.CX:Jr.., '!OJ'R!;;

Re si dential
and
commerciaL
Call fo r
estimate, 24 hour service.
Anyday, anytime.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
~~

I

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

Radiator~

10' 311--Hollywood Squares M .15; Andy Griffith 6;

TREXE

2-10-llc

EXPERIENCED

News 8; Bullwlnkle 10

Sl. 33 .
9.DO-Merv G'lffln 3; Phil Donahue 4.6.13.15; Edge of
Nlghl 6 ; ·Family Affair 8; Malch Game 10,
9.311--Emergency One! 6; Andy G'llf11h 8; Family
Affal' 10 .

Free Estimates
Work Guaranteed

2·16-1 mo

Vl,glnla 13. 6:5s-Chuck While Reporls 10; News
13
I :DO-Todoy M,15; Good Morning Ame,lca 6.13; CBS

Billy Graham Crusade 8; Consumer Survl\1~1 Kit

20,33; Good Times 10,

742-2328
.

Sunrlse Semester 10.
6 :0G-PTL Club 15; 6 : 25--Concern$ &amp; Comments 10;
6 : Jo-Foucus on Columbus A; News 6; Sunrise
Semester 8.
6 : 45-Mornlng Report 3; 6 : 5~Good Morning, West

The Road 15
8:oo-LI111e House On The Prolrle 3,4,15; Lucan 6.13;

DOGGIE ~

CRAIG 3 bond s(Oltner 8 chonnel
w irti cr ystals Jrm Chadwell ,
61&lt;1 -067 -3759 .

REGENCY SCANNER Wt lh crystal~ .
$100. Bryan Horns
Phone
61A -6/J7..-3652 .

Tr!EN li5TEN
C AREFLILLY· -

IAU5HJ' f HURT MY

HE MUST OF CO URSE
5UFFER. THE
CO N5EGUENC55!

TOESDAY , MARCH 14, 1978
s-.s-Fa'm Repod 13; 5:511--PTL Clvb 13; 5:5s-

1 311--Schoolles tO; 8: DO-Cap1 . Kangaroo 8.10; Sesome

992 562 1.

MUST SELL NOWJ 2 story home In Middleport near
c·hurches, shoppln9 etc. The owner has to sell this home
Immediately. Features 3 bedrooms, lerge family
room, eat-in kitchen and dining, cellar~ garage with 3
room a pt. Wi l l sell to f irst reasonable offer.

Ml~5

YOU ~ PET 1\'IL LV 5HOUW YO U ~EI'U5E·-

PI&lt;:O C ES5~

NICE HOM E 1n rural or eo w1 1h 26
acres. New aluminum 5tding .
comp letely insu l oled and
remode led insrde Storm wrn do ws . large 'orpe!cd lrvmg
room ond both . Co li 985 4111 or
TWO STORY 3 bedroom l rome
hou5e. F.A lurnoce, storm win dows . l ireplace In Middleport .
Phone 9~2 - 3457 or 992-5867 .

QUE5Ti0N5,

..

Z-24-tlc

~

NEW 3 bed•oom hou se , 2 ba ths
all alec. , 1 oCt e M iddlepor t
close !a Rutland Phon~ 992

L5T"5 NOT WAS TE
TIME ON F0 0 t.l 5 H

•

Phont992-7119

Speo:ial Occaoioas

EXCAVA TING , dozer . lOader and
backhoe work . dump trucks
and lo -bo)'S for hrre , wrll haul
l rll dtrl , to sod, lrmestone ond
910vel Call Bob or Roger Jel
l ers doy phone 992 -7089 . ntght
phone 992 -35'15 or 992 5232

HOMESITES l or sole 1 acre and
up Middleport , near Rutland
Call 992 7481.

Spolllghl 8; News 10; To Tell The T'vlh 13;
Gilligan's Is. IS ; Daniel Foster , M .D . 20; Know
Your Schools JJ .
7: 3o-Tha t Nashville Music 3: In Seaf'ch ol4; Muppet
Show 6 ; Match Game PM8 ; MacNeil-Lehrer
Report 20.33;
Candid Camerl!t 13 ; Nashville On

AI Tromm
Construction

lUNlEY S WRECKER
Se1vrce
Nocirll'! , Ohio Doy Of mght
949 2657 .

FERTILIZER, NITROGEN,

Frlends6; CBS News 8.10; Ove' Eosy zo.

7 . DO-Cross-Wits 3,4; Liars Club 6 ; Marty Robbins '

Route 2
Pomeroy, Ohio 457"
Estimates by Appointment

Anniwersartes

SEWING MACHINE Repmrs. ser
v1ce oil makes 992 -2284 The
Fob11 c
Sh op
Po mer oy
Au thotrzed Srnger Sol e5 and
Set ,.,,e We shorpen SCt ssot s .

Check our low. low
prices on

6 : 3()-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;

General Contracting

~-

WAil: RWHL Or il lrng Al sooil ond
go~ well work Heaton D•rll rng
Co Dovld S Heaton Rt 3
l' omer o y ,
Oh ro
Ph o n e
985 4335

GOLF CLUB Specrol $5 Bog gnps
cleaned . Sho ft 5. cl ubheods
clea n ed ,
polished
John
leol01d . Cheqe, , Ohio

Hogan's Heroes 15 ,

••
...
DAVID BRICKLES ......

Weddines
Port11its
Passports

33; Movie '"Toke Her, Sht's Mine" 10.
12 :()()...-Jonakl 33; 12 :41)-News 13; 1:DO-Tomorrow
•Movie Ch•nntl 4 5 &amp; 9 P .M. - Akport "77 !PGJ
7 &amp; 11 P ,M - Gumboil Rally (PGI

.6:oo-News 3,4,8,10.13.15 ; ABC News 6; Zoom 20 ,

Roofing
Remodeling
Room Additicils
Garages

11 -9-tfc ,

Pomeroy Landmark

Landmark
. C.rsey; Mgr.
Phone m -2111

300 Main Sl.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Pomeroy 992-6282
or 992.6263

~o l e

12FT ALUM INUM boat ond 7',
horse motor for so le ltk e new
Contocl Richard Tayl or, 587
Morn St .. M 1dd leport 99( W25.

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

Pomeroy Landmark

and delr.,.ered.
$4 5 o c01d er $35 o tr uc-kload
843 2933 Of
A ll hardwood
992 -6295.

CORN $2 a bu Ca ll 985-3531 ot
9854 131 .

Remodeling.

109 Hill Sl

3·3·1fc

CARTER

.

Construction

THE PHOTO PLACE

IIG(J Holflkh

Phone 992-3993

'9a _Jack W. Carsey, Mgr .
IAif
.
. Phone 992 -2. 181

Olck Cavett 20; 0\ler El!tsy 33 .
11 :311--Johnny Ca,.on 3.•. 15; Pollee Slory 6, 13; Movie
" The Private Navy of Sgt. O ' Farrell .. 8; ABC News

5:311--News 6; Elec . Co. Z0.33; Mo'y Tyler Moo'e 10;

New

Sidewalks,

Free Estlm•tes

~pi t t

COAl LIMESTONE sand. grovel
cak oum chlorrde , ler td,l er . dog
food ond oil l)lpe5 of soil bo: cels1or Sal t Works . Inc E Moon
St , Pom eroy . qq2 -3891

Kitchen C•binets, Rootlnv,
Patios,
Concrele

SyrilCUst~

FIREWOOD S25 a ptCkup lo ad
949 2129.

Hi:All HY YOUNG pig~ !01
949 -277.4 . al ter 5 p m

Blown Into Walls
and Attics

(all

We have enlarged our
service department and
wtll servid Hotpolnt and
•other brand s.

10: 00-Gene Kelly : An American In Pasadena 1 110;
Concert Behind Prison Walls 13;
News• 20;
Originals 33.
IO ;JII-Farm Digest 20; .II :oo-News 3,4.6.8.10.1 3,15;

s · oo-HereCome The Brides 3; Star Trek 4; Gunsmokt
8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Hogan ' s
Heroes 10; Emergency One 13; Petticoat 15.

DETAIL5o OF 'tOUil.
SOLAR Et.JERGY

Cellulose Fiber
- Save Fuoll. Money-

Ail

Open
9:001119:00 Mon.-Friday
9:001i 16 :00 Salurday
12:001116 :00 Sunday
2-2 -lfc

Blown Insulation

350

REDUCE SAFE &amp; fa st wrrh GoBese
l oblets 8. ~ Vop water ptlfs'
Nelso n Dn1 g

~IREWOOO

""lht8rili ......
Not TIM lmilllors

1413 fl iNI O I J , &lt;1 ~ pt&gt;L-d b
(C II e rll (O~t drlr on
Sl l~ O
99'1 5533
C HC VIIOL ~1

Located In The
MEIGS PLAZA
Middleport, Ohio

.... ~.~-•.0.

Carpet• UphOIStiiJ
Phone Mih Youna

G ffA NAOA V H ou iOm(Ji or
p ow w ' IPPIIIIQ
AM rod1 0
I)Ow el brnl..l"''&gt; oor lllltdol&lt;onq
~ ~ ceiiP ttt
ltntdt!Jrut
~~ Q()(J
Ph o ~oc 99'J J!ltlo

FO:J

ACE HARDWARE

Carpeting

'11'16

r

lWO
IHOR OOM
horn e
•n
'lyto cvse. o~o.l Aprrl I Nr ce
lo l near ~ c h ool. Ca ll 992 202fl
be tween I and 10 pm

LOST BETWEEN Pomeroy Ber
Franklin and S!tff lers 1hurs
e11ening
Brown
walle t
997 -5637 .

~

Coli

before 8 o1n 9(n .2288

t:ard o f Thanks

Young's

\41~

( HIP

in Memory

Superior

H~ G I~I~f.t~O itO l&lt;l' l pu ppo e~

A K(

WAUPAPER,
PAINT &amp; SUPPLIES

Slum Eitrattion

:

~ ~·~~~

TELEVISION
VIEWING
MONDAY , MARCH 13, 1971

ltl!o,JNC ~ lAW Ko •oo•H·! fSunrdlltQ
lndrx 11
und &lt;•IJIIiollt
tur t&lt;,.
GtmH''"'q p ll h&lt;Pt •d .., Clo •UI!
~w•tiOo ~ lnt•l•l"'"
( ltf' ~ hllt'
f'f., ,,,.. (0 I d ) :Jb7 0'14'1

Auto ~lcs

I lilt;: I

Tht· Publisher tcSt!tVtS the nght

HOOf HOLI OW H o"'(·~ l:iuy '-o.: ll
t10dC' ()I lll.lU &gt; No ,..., nord ""'~fi
'&gt;otidl('' Ru lh w..... . . ,., Alhooy
1614 1OQii :n'IO

" The Loughlng Policeman"' 6; Mash 8.10; Focus On
Affirmative Atllon 13; Adams Chronlcltt ZO;
Shepherd's Pit 33.
9: 3o-One0ay A1 A Tlme8. 10; Makem &amp; Cloncy33.

TRACY

-'"...."

MIN IA 1UfH
AKL
Molr&gt; Q til&lt;• f l'rl•&lt;tl• • ' yl'tu ., lv
qoud lt O illl' ~4 1/'J ~~bli oltt••

ordt'r 2:1 eenl dmrgr fur ads cll.rr')'·
Ul~ Bux Num~r Jrd:&lt;~re uf Th~: Sell'

Receipts
Other
168.00
Total Receipts
r168.00
Tota l Beginn ing Balan ce
Plus Receipts
292 .00
Bala nce, D ecember 31. 1977
17A.00
Total Exp . Plus Bal .
Dec . 31. 1977
292 Oo

l'cts fur Sale

!tlA k C~ M- 1

Free Choice
Youngsters on
Point
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
Roberts in Washington Slate
On March 8, 1978, in the
frequently have dual citizenMeJgs county Probate Co urt ,
Case N o , 2232 0, Pamela
ship. Point Roberts is cut off
Price, Rou1e 1, long Bottom ,
from the mainland by water
Ohio. was arpo_i n ted Ad and its women usually give
ministratrix o t he estate of (3} 13, H e
Wil l iam C . Middleswart,
birth to their babies at a
deceased, late of Portland,
hospital
In Vancouver, B.C.
Ohio.
,,
When the children reach 21
Manning 0 : Vl'•l&gt;'•itr ,. Add to your collect!"o
r· they can choose to be citizens
'
Prold.W-~P
n 0
·
.
' • •4·. · collecbve nouns : A trend of of either the United Slates or
m tJ, 20. 21, Jtc
· poll-takers.
Canada.

•

-Business Services · .-..

OECE~SED

Bernice Bede Osol

-I

Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0., Monday , Mar. 13, 1978

A Dakota reader wants to
know the meaning of the
exp(ession : "He punched
declarer."
II means that a defender
forced declarer to use hla
trumps to ruff and caW.ed
him to lose control or the
hand. II has nothing to do
with physical assault.
( NEWSPAPER ENTERPR ISE ASSN. I
I

(For a copy of JA COBY MODERN, sand Sl lo: " Win of
Bridge, ·• care of thfs news,.par, P.0 . BOK 489, Rldlo City
Station. New York, N. Y. 10019.)

�8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Mar. 13, 1978
HALCEY BURDETTE
r-~------------------------~ Halcey Burdett e, 69. a
resitlent of Rt. 2, Vinton. died
In Winterhaven. Fla. Sunday
I
I morning.
She had been •isiting her
beld Tuesday at 2 p. m. at tbe
NORA RUNION
Linda , ' when she
daughter,
Nora B. Runion, 87, Torch, Wh ite Funeral Home in
became
ill.
Ohio, died Saturday evening Coolville with the Rev. Carl
Funeral arrangements will
at the home of her nlece, Mrs. Gillilian officiating. Burial
be
announced by McCoy Roger (Grace) Clark, Rl. 2, will be In Carthage Cemetery
W
etherholt
- Moore Funeral
Coolville, following an in Guysville. Friends may
Home,
Gallipolis.
call at the funeral home at
extended illness.
Mrs. Runion was born In any time.
WILUAM WOODS
Meigs ColDity, the daughwr
CARL SAMPSON
RACINE
- Wiffiiam E.
of the late Elijah and Lucetta
RUTLAND - Carl L.
Susan Tubbs Willard. In 1947, Sampson, 57, Route 4, Woods, 75, Racine , died
she was preceded 1ft death by Pomeroy, died late Saturday Sunday at the Marietta
her husband, Robert J . afwrnoon at the Veterans Convalescent Center.
Runion . She was also Administration Hospital in
He was a son of the late
preceded by two brothers and Lexington, Ky., rollowing a Harrison and Hariet Woods:
He was also preceded In
three sisters.
brief iliness.
Sle was a member of the
death
by his first wife, Edna
Mr. Sampson was born Oct.
United Brethren Church and 31, 1920 in Kanawha County, Thompson Woods, a sori,
attended Torch Uni ted W. Va., a son of Bessie Price William, two brothers and
Methodist Church. She lived and the late Charles Lewis five sisters.
Surviving are his wife,
In the Coclville area the Sampson .
greater part of her life .
On Sept . 15, 1962, he Alma Markins Woodgerd
She is survived by one step- married in Clifton, W. Va ., Woods; three daughters,
son,
Roy
Runion, Frances V. Anderson who
Gertrude Via and BetParkersburg ; two brothers, survive~.
ty Davis, both of Dayton;
Homer Willard , Pomeroy,
Norma
Oiler, East Liverpool;
Surviving besides his wile
and
Arthur
Willard , are his mother, Mrs. Bessie twQsons, Paul and John, both
fou r
step· Grim Route 4, Pomeroy; t-wo or Dayton; seven step,
Columbus;
grandchildren, 10 step;ireat- sons, Carroll and 11 Tiny" , children, Delores Cleland and
grandchildren and one stcp- both of Marion ; a brother, Betty Sayre, both of Racine;
great'ilreatilrandchild and Jack, Largo, Fla.; two Frances Barnhart,
several nieces and nephews. sisters, Mrs. Wanda June Chauncey; Carol Woodgerd,
Funeral services will be Newhouse and Mrs. Ada Mae Pomeroy; Frank Woodgerd,
Anderson, both of Greenville, Grandview, Idaho; Dale of
, - - - - - - - - - - , S. C. ; two half-brothers, Ashland, Ohio, and Arthur of
LEGAL NOTICE
Senior
M-Sgt . Harold Marietta. Also surviving are
The Public Utili ties Com- Graham of the Rickenbacker 22 grandchildren, four greatmission of Ohio has set fo r Air Force Base in Columbus grandchildren, 22 steppublic hearing Case No . and T-Sgl. Darold Graham of grandchildren, and 29 step77 -37B·EL-FAC Subfile A. Newark, and several nieces, great-granchildren in
to review the operation of
nephews a,nd cousins. He was addition to several nieces and
the fuel Cost Adjustment preceded In death by his nephews .
Funeral services will be
C!ause and the fuel pro· father, a brother and a sister.
held
at I p.m. Wednesday at
cureinent practices and
Mr . Sampson was a veteran
the
Red
Town Free Methodist
poli cies of the Columbus of the U. S. Army having
and Southern Ohio Elec· served in World Warr II anti Church, Rouw 3, Glouster.
tric Company on April
was in the tr ucking business Friends may call at the
Ewing Funeral Home from 7
tO. 1978, at 10:00 A.M.. mo•1 of his life.
E.S .T.,at th e Comm ission's
Funeral services will be to 9 this evening and from 9
offices, 180 East Broad held at 1 p. m. Tuesday at the a.m. to 9 p.m. Tuesday.
Visitation will also be held
Street, Columbus, Ohio. Walker Funeral Home with
at
the Red Town Church from
All interested persons Wi ll
the Rev. Deryl Porter
12
noon Wednesday until time
be given an opportunity
officiating. Burial will be in
to be heard . Further in for·
the Riggs Cemetery. Milit.lity of services,
metion mav be obiained rites will be conducted by the
IDA MAE HOOD
by contacting the Publ ic Eli Denison Post 467,
Ida Mae Hood, 62, of
Util ities Commission of
American Legion, Rutland. Cheshire died suddenly at
Ohio.
Friends may caD at the 5:45 p.m. Sunday at her
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES funeral home at ~ny time . residence . She had been
COMMISSION OF OHIO The family will receive employed at the Gallipolis
by Randall G. Applegate,
friends from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 State Institute as an LPN
Secretary
(licensed practical nurse.
...... this evening.
She was born Oct. 29, 1915,
In Gallia County, and she had
lived in Gallia County all of
11
ber life.She was a member of
the Uttle Kyger Church,
which she attended during
her earlier years . Her

: · Area Deaths

!

1

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

___

FLEXSTEEL"

Buy "Fiexsteel" for Fine

Sofas, Chairs, Love Seats

, BAKER FURNITURE
Middleport, 0.

parents

were

James

Thompson. and the former
Pearlie Hatfield.
She is survived by her
husband, Harold Hood, whom
she married Nov. 2, 1935, .at
Cheshire, and.two daughters
and three SOil!!, Mrs. Guy
(Grace) See, Newark, Ohio;

Anti-consumer
hill step away
The General As.&lt;cmbly is
only a step away from
passin~ onu of the must antirunswncr mcusures it lms
ever cuns!LlereLI, said C. A.
Heller ,

exe&lt;.:u li ve

vice

president of Ohio Power .Com·
p;my . Arn . H.B. 577, passe'()
by the Ohio House ahnost un·
noti ced last July. now rests in
the Senate Rules Conuniltce
waiting tube schedult.'1..1 for ii
floor vole.
If this bill is en~cted , con·
sumers wllllose the freedom
to choose between clectrk
suppliers, Heller said. Sole
testimony in support of H.B.
577 was g iven by the
management uf the ruriil
dcdric cuupcratives which,
while being exempt from
Public Utilities Commission
regu lation of ralt.&gt;s or QUC:Ility
of service, C:lre seeking ~x~
dusivc tcnilor·ics. The bill
would completely eliminate

the Ucncfit to consumers uf
competition between electric
SUI&gt;Plicrs. he emphC:Isizcd.
··one of the uutrageiuus
features of the bill is that it
woulll force some c us tomers
to give up the electric servil-e
the}' presently h&lt;Jve," Heller
sotill. The bu untlarics

proposed in the bill woultl be
set according to tlistance
from distribution lines as of
Jan . I, 1977. Th us, anyone
receiving service since tllf!l
time may he in for a bi g sur·
prise, Heller said , if this bill
po.n;se.s.

Joining Ohio Power in
testifying against the bill
were the present and a
previous chuinnan of the

Lorry Hood, Addison ;
Robert, United States Air
Force,
stationed
at
Valparaiso, Fla .; James,
Gallipolis;
Mrs.
Jeff
(Debbie) Rose, Delaware,
Ohio.
There
are
ten
grandchildren and one greatgralldchild.
Surviving brothers and
sisters are !Wbert Thompson,
Charleston, W. Va.; Mrs.
Audrey Taylor, Joliet, Ill.;
Mrs .
Laura
Rhodes,
Charleston, W. Va.; Mrs.
Mary Mayes, Delaware,
Ohio; Mrs. Allee Lemley,
Fostoria, and Mrs. Lois
Rawlins, Toledo. One brother
preceded her in death .
Funeral services will be
held at I p.m. Wednesday at
the
Waugh-Halley-Wood
Funeral' Home, the Rev.
Chester Lemley officiating,
and burial will be in Gravel
Hill Cemetery, Cheshire. ·
Friends may call 2-4 and 7-9
p.m. Tuesday.

REJECTED

HOSPITAL NEWS

Vetera111 Memorial Hotpltal
Saturday Admissions !Wss Kent, Addison ; Nola
ill'adshaw, Pomeroy; Lona
Public Ullhlic.s Comm&amp;s.siun Boles, Ruthind ; Mary
uf ·Ohio. rc.sitlential l"Oil· Deren berger, Pomeroy; Eva
surners, the Ohio Chamber of !Wbaon, Pomeroy; Thomas
Kirkham, Middleport.
Cununcrcc and many ot hers.
Saturday Discharges In Fcbrmtry, when tin: !.Jill
was !icing reViewed liy the Virgil Saunders, William
Serwte Energy anti Publie Owens, VIola Ritchie, Alice
Utilities Committees, dozens Sca rberry, Goldie Wolfe,
of tdectric COO ilC I"C:ItiVC Donna Eblin, Ullian Roush,
c us tumcr·s in Belmont County Dora Hysell, Ronald Davis.
Sunday Admissions sent the legislatur·e a petition
Beaumont,
oppos ing its 'pttssHgc. The Elizabeth
onl y cu·op customers who Reedsville; Gay Fields,
Lawton
l1ave testified on H.B. 577 Coolville;
Templeton, Jr., Pomeroy;
have opposed it.
He pointed out that the l&gt;ill Alma Young, Pomeroy;
would present an C:Jd· Lester Zimmerman,
Pomeroy ; Erma Wilson,
ministr&lt;Jtive ni~htmarc .sin&lt;.:t
it com pletely igr1ures rm tural Racine .
Sunday Discharges- Viola
boumlmics, such as I"C:Iil~
Moon,
Daniel Hall. Marv E .
roods , rivers, hi lls ami highRoush.
wa ys, which ubvwusly affcd
the economit:s C:lntl timeliness
Hol~er Medical Ceoter
with which an electric supDischarges, March 10
plie r· can establish new .serWoodrow Call Sr., Susan
vice.
" It is incredible ," H:elle r Canter, Lucille Carter,
Homer Chamberlain, Nadine
said , ·'Uwt afte r more than a
dozen witnesses testifietl in Clark, Varroy ClOse, Debra
oppuSi tiun tv this bill , the Dobbins, Lillian Edwards,
Senate eon unittcc f&lt;Jiletl tu Mrs. John Fisher and
consider a single amend· daughwr, Mrs. Dana Garber
and son, Cathy Henry, Carl
ment."

Coalfields
(Continued from gege I)
showed up for work and that
there were no pickets at the
mines.

Some local presidents said
they had not yet received the
order and some have set up
meetings for today .
Ed Bell, Martins Ferry,
president of LocaliiiO of the
Consolidation Coal Co. in
Moundsville, W.Va., directly
across the Ohio River, said he
would meet with his 800
member local tonight.
" But I don 'llook for any of
the coal miners ate going to
make a move back unless a
contract comes down that can
get ratified," said Bell.
ln West Virginia miners
igrwred the injunction and
· stayed
home . today,
leaving scatwred pickets to
stand idle in a light drizzle
while sa laried workers
performed routine safety
maintenance in the mi,nes.

Police around the state
reported no Incidents.
So confident that union
miners wouldn't bother to

report for work, few United
Mine Workers pickets were
present at mine entrances
early this morning .

Hicks, Linda Lewis, Paul
Martin, Shawn Nitz, Eison
Richards, Rodney Rickard,
Mary Shelton, Augustus
steele, Beulah Stevens, Mrs.
Marshall
Wolfe
and
daughter,
Brian

Zimmerman.
Births. MarchiO
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Caudill,
a son, McA.rtllur; Mr. and
Mrs. Steven Keller, a
daughter, Jackson;
March DlschargesMarch
II
Mrs. Robert Bricker and
daughter, Mary Carr, Homer
Circle, Juanita Clark,
Heather Clemons, Brett
Cremeens, Mrs. John Dean
and son, Mary Evans, Edith
Hall,
PhyiUs
Harris,
Marcella Harrison, Emma
Herron, Adelia Kuhll!!, Louie
Lee, Deborah Lewis, Bobby
Mathews,
Dorothy
McElfresh, Perry Mitch,
Lena Myers, Chad Nunn,
Shirley Peters, Helen Quivey,
Kevin Smith, Dorothy
Swiaher, Vernle Van Dyke.
.
Births, March II
Mr. and Mrs. Gregory
Briggs, a son, Gallipolis; Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Campbell, a
daughter, Bidwell; Mr. and
Mrs. Bobby Nibert, a
daughter, Gallipolis Ferry.
Dlscharges,March12
Mrs. Tharon Camp and son,
David Davies, Peggy Ellis,
John Hansen, Marguerite
Hoover , Kenna Knotts, Janet
Matthews, Edwin Rauh,
George Roach.
Births. March 12
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen
Hogge, a daughter, Oak lUll.

"All quiet," was reported at
practically all other coal
points- no workers, no
pickets.
.
An exception was the Hare·
Wood mine of Samet.SOlvay
Division of Allied Chemical
Corp., a complex straddling
Fayette and McDowell
Pleasant Valley Hosptlal
counties.
Discharged
- Edward
Nearly 60 pickets halted
Racine;
Donna
foreman John Hornsby at tbe Finley,
foot of a hill leading to tbe Mattox, Point Pleasant;
Jesse Anderson, Vinton;
Harewood facility.
"I was ready to go home," William Cundiff, Point
Hornsby told UP! . "I'm not Pleasant ; Chad Tipton,
going to mess with tbem. Gallipolis; Mrs. Larry
They didn't threaten me or Brumfield, Ashton; David
all)ithlng, but they were going Norville, Gallipolis Ferry;
. to make sure no union men Mrs. James Parsons, Mason;
Arthur Elllngwood, Point
were working_."
Mrs. Russell Lear,
Pleasant;
All day Sunday U.S .
Benilce
Point
Pleasant;
marshals across the nation
Swisher,
Point
Pelasant;
wbere 160,000 striking UMW
coal miners have been William Roush, Hartford;
ordered to ;,nd their 91kiay Carl Murray, Point Pleasant;
walkout, were busy se.rving Audrey Arnold, Pomeroy;
the formal papers mandating Wesley Jones, Henderson;
Mrs.
David
Johnson,
the hack-to·work order.
The union and the coal
operators were to reswne
negotiations In Washington
Tuesday in elf oris to reach a
new contract.

News •• in Briefs
(Continued from Pll' 1)
teachers in the district, and tbe Westerville Boa•·d of
Education, Sunda'y reached agreement on a new pact that was
then ratified by a vote of the teachers.

r-·-·
1

Steve Little, employe of
Midwest Steel Co., lllld a ·
member of Local 1197,
announced today employes at
Midwest Steel Friday night
voted 100 percent to turn
down a tent.litlve agreement
Jllt forth by the company.

MEET WEDNESDAY
A special meeting of
Pomeroy Lodge No. 164
F&amp;AM wlll
be held
Wednesday eveninll at 7:30
p.m. at the Masonic Temple.
PUrpose is the IM\Ill)
inspection. Refreshments
· will be served. All master
masoll!! are Invited to attend.
SQUARE DANCE
There will be a square
dance at the Chester
Firehouse Saturday, March
18 from 8:30 to 11:30. Music
will be provided by the
"String Dusters ."

Proceeds

are going to the 0\ester
Youth Commission.
GET LICENSE
A marriage license was
issued to Myles Randall
Blake, 21, Rt. 1, Reedsville
and Sonia Lee Beaver, 18, Rt.
I, Long Bottom.
SQUAD RUN
The
Middleport
Emergency Squad was called
to the Meigs Inn at 12:44 p. m.
Sunday
for
Lowton
Templeton, who was !.liken to
Veterall!! Memorial Hospit.lil
wbere he was admitted.
·

Parking penalty law fails
An ordinance designed to .
Increase overtime parking
penalties at meters In the
boslnesa section died Monday
night when it failed to pass its
aecond reading at a meeting
of Middleport Village
Council.
The ordinance had been
approved at a first reading
two weeks ago and would
have increased the penalty
from 50 cents to· $1 for tbose
getting tickets at parking
meters, if paid within 24
hours. There was to be
aoolher $1 penalty if the
tickets were not paid within
the 24 hour period.
Last night When the ordinance came up for a second
reading (with approval
needed on three readings
before it went into effect),
council was deadlocked with
a tie vote. Voting for the
ordinance were Councilmen
Charles Mullen, Allen Lee
King and Dewey Horton.
Councilmen disapproving
were William Walters, Carl
Horky and Marvin Kelly. The
vote of Mayor .F red Hoffman
against the measure broke
the tie, defeating it.
Councilman King said
several residents had indicated they believed the
ordinance to increase the

---------- ·-.

ELBERFELD$

I

I
I

fAA 11.Y&amp;AU.
,.

the

measure .

However,

since none are now state

Councilman Horky said he
had already had public
response from business
people after the first reading,
and that business people were
against
the
increased
penalty.
Council also discussed with
James Pierce of Rutland the
revocation of his permit to
hau) logs through the town
rather than travel the bypass. Pierce said he had paid
for the permit and saw no
reason for its revocation. He
stated be spent $16,000 in
Middleport last year and
indicated that he " won 't
spend a dime" in the town if
he cannot haul logs through
the town from Point Pleasant
and Letart, W. Va .
Pierce Said he admitted the

highways.
Council members Indicated
the town cannot afford to
have streets damaged by
heavy through truck traffic
and for that reason stood firm
In oot permitting such traffic,
which is prohibited by village
ordinance.
Pierce indicated he un·
derstood the problem of
council, but he did not feel his
Jog trucks would damage
yillage
streets.
The
discussion brought out that
heavy trucks with business in
the community are permitted
In · town, but that through
heavy vehicles are not.
John Hood, president of the
youth league, and Eddie
Kitchen, active with the

VOL XXVIII

NO. 232

pay more.
Without a permit to haul
through the town, he wlll
have to spend about $20 a day
more on fuel , Pierce stated.
Council, which in January
decided that no permits are to
be issued, stood firm against
heavy through truck traffic in
the town. Council members
pointed out the village

JACKSON, Ohio (UPI) Coal is moving "in Ohio as
"eyes in the sky" and
cruisers on the road see that
coal-ladened trucks reach
their destinations.
The ·eyes in the sky are
State Highway Patrol planes
that provide an overview to
Highway Patrol cruisers that
escort coal convoys as they
go
to their various
destinations in this 10 county
eoal rich section of southei!SI ··
Ohio.
"The airplane has direct
contact with the cruiser
escorting the trucks," said
Capt. R. C. Wilson,
conunander of District 9,
which
encompases
10
counties - Athens, Meigs,
Gallia, Hocking, Vinton ,
Jackson, Lawrence, Ross,
Pikl! and Scioto.
Wilson, a 32-year Patrol
veteran, said patrolmen have
not encotDitered any trouble
while performing escort duty .
Although the patrolmen
have not been bothered, union
miners within the past month
have vandalized several area
independent mines, Including
Tiffany Mine near Logan
where a trailer office was
destroyed and a truck burned
and the Superior River
Mining Co., near Ironton,

:-:.·

lilA

POM EROY·MIDDlEPORT, OHIO

where
roving
miners
overturned two trucks and
tried to burn the office.
"The convoys start moving
as early as 6:30a.m. and stop
generally at dark," Wilson
said."
The captain estimated that
between 40 and-46 patrolmen
were on escort duty Monday.
Wilson
said
many
Independent mines In the 10
county
district
were
0peratiilg, He said the
.number varied daily .
"Some seem to work all the
time, but others work a few
days and then shut down,"
Wilson said. "Then others
begin digging. Right now
many mines are working."
Although patrolmen appear
to be concentrating on
providing protection to coal
trucks, they are not shirking
iheir regular duty.
"Calls from the public
regarding an accident or
about a drunk driver. · get
answered," Wilson said.
"We'll always do that."
The Patrol has six planes in
the sky daily ' providing
added protection to coal
haulers.
The planes providing air
cover are based at Don Seott
Field In Columbus.

811

1

AlA
It 's natural to feel guilty about putting off a planned savings
program . But the hardest · part is beginning . We understand how
pressure can build up .when you're the one res ponsible for your
family's financial security. Regardless of your income or goaL
Farmers Bank has a savings pian to help relieve the tension . See us.
You 'll sleep better .
·

Fartners Bank

COUNTRY WOMAN COllLECTION

liD

We've finallv found it.

~-·

.

bvforewr~
Shirring at the shoulder line can turn an ordinary
dress into a fashion event. Long sleeVed, fuji
skirted, easy belt has all the attributes you could
want in the most romantic look of the year.
Print floral polyester is washable, so you can
always look your freshest.

......

I'OMEH0\', .01110
• , , A

Size 10-20

'40,000 Maximum Insurance for Each Depositor .
·Member federal Oeposrt Insurance Corpo!a{ion
Wt•s l Main Str••l

.

Pmnrroy

~

.

. . in Briefsl

YOUNGSTOWN, O.lfiO -SIAMESE TWINS BOliN nearly
a mooth ago to a Youngstown couple will go borne by the end of
th1ir week, the physician in charge of the case has annoonced.
Dr. WUfred . Dodgson, chief of pediatrics at Tod Babies'
and Ollldren's Hospital said the twin boys of EUas and
Georgeann Rodriquez are gaining weight and generally are
doing wen. Dodgson said surgery will be conaidered to
separate the boyi in four to six months. The twins, Christopher
and Timothy, share a heart and llve.r. Medical experts in
YOUIIIIItown and Pittsburgh have concluded only one baby
could survive a separation.

l

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

second year.

Koebel said the new per·
rentage would still make
Middleport one of the lowest
gas rate communities in the
area.
The minimum rate would

be $4.50 the first year and $5
the second year , Koebel said.
The fuel cost adjustment
clause would still be In effect
in the contract. Koebel
pointed out.
Koebel asked for a first
reading of the ordinance .on
' the new contract. However,
council tabled the measure
until the next meeting.

A letter was read from
George Ingels, president of

the Middleport Chamber of
Commerce, commending the
village lor the manner in
which streets were main- ,
tained, as well as parking
areas, durin g the winter

months.
Council

appro ved

~he

February report of Mayor
Hoffman showing receipts of
$2,191.50 in fines and fees and
$170 in merchant police
collections for a total of
$2,361.50.
'
Clerk·Treasurer
Grate
said
a
ne w
ce nsus
report
has
been
re·

CHESHIRE MayorSeolt Lucas ,left, and Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman, both seutc'&lt;l,
signed proclamations in recognition of DeMolay Week, March 12-19. Lookin;; un from U1e
left are !Wy Shepherd, Advisor of tbe Meigs DeMo lay Chapwr ; Lori Wood who Is both loca l
and district DeMolay Sweetheart, and Jeff Daniels, junior &lt;'Ouncilor of U1e loca llJcMolny
Chapter .

ceived from the Department of Commerce stating

(Continued on page 8)

Visitor finds
•
mme empty

at

By Uolted Presoloteroatlooal
AKRON, OIDO- A SUMMIT OOUNTY Common Pleas
Court judge has tentatively ruled that Timothy R. Papp may
give testimmy from the witness stand under hypnosis, during
his retrial on charges of murdering and raping 9-year-old
Ro:de Ann Keathley in 1973.
Judge James V. Barbuto Monday granted a motion by
COUJ't.appolnted attorneys for Papp that he be hypootlzed
during his testlmmy. It will be the first time in Ohio history
that a criminal defendant is hypootlzed on the witness st.lind in
front of a jury.

.I

However, the company now

will accept a four percent
Increase the first year and a
flve percent increase the

However, co uncil took no

action on the request because
Councilman Mullen said the
bond covered not only the
establishing period, but also
maintenance while the
company operates in Middleport.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY, MARCH 14, 1978

Airplanes help Hijacker gives up in Denver
Patrol escort

~ews.

I
I
I
I

a new two-year

contract with the v!Uage.
Koebel said the first attempt
at a contract indicated the
company wanted a four and
one-haU percent increase the
first year 'and a seven and
one-haU perc.ent increase the
second year.
,

CARPENTEH, Ohio ( UPI )
- The 3()()..foot ride dow n t he

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - elevator shaft to the working

::l

I

dlscuss

sh.Qwing an increase of 11.99
cents per 1,000 cubic feet of
natural gas will be in effect
for Middleport residents as of
the March 31 billing.
A request from Polntvlew
Ca ble Television
was
presented asking a performance bond be dropped.

•

·~:::::-...::.-:::..~":=::~~~~:~:i:;:;:i:~:;~:~~~s:s:::::::::::8::!:...-:::::::::::.'!~:::~:~~::::.':!:--:::::::.~~

IA&amp; .A
V&amp;&amp;Y

recreation commission.
John
Koebel,
loca l
Columbus Gas Co. of Ohio
manager, met with council to

program, met with council
requesting help from the
village in getting ball
diamonds at the community
park in shape.
·
Mayor Hoffman said there
would probably be no difficulty in providing some
· help, but he suggested that
the two men review the
Clerk-Treas urer
Gene
diamonds and list all Grate ·read a letter from
problems which Mayor Columbia Gas that indicated
Hoffman will take up with the the cost adjustment clause

pennit was too cheap and
that he w0 uld be willing to

e

SERVICES CHANGED
MASON ~ Prayer meeting
of !he Mason Assembly of
God has been changed from
Tuesday
morning
to
Wednesday a!~ a.m. ·
Middleport; Daniel Buttrick,
Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs. Steve
McDougle, Parkersburg;
Clarence Vickers, Point
Pleasant; Isabel
McLaughlin, Kanauga; Mrs.
James
McCoy,
Point
Pleasant; Carl Stewart,
Letart; Edna Anderson,
Point Pleasant ; Lucille
Moreland, Point Pleasant;
Mrs. Enunet Ellas, Lakin;
Mrs. Steven Hill, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Mer! Cox and
son, Gallipolis; Mrs. Danny
·Morrow and daughter, Point
Pleasant.
Births - A son io·Mr. and
Mrs. Kevin Shields, Maaon.

receives no help whatsoever
from the slate in the main·
tenance of village streets

fmes was a good one. He
called for public response on

PARIS - FRANCE'S CENTER-RIGHT government
parties, taking their cue from the left.Winll oppoeltlon, inoved
today to Jllt together a uolted front against the militant leftists
for Sunday's cnrcial parliamentary election runoff.
ParisMayorJacqueaChlrac,a former prime m1ntater and
leader of the Gaulllat Rally f(l' the Republic, announced he was
meeting late today with centrist Jean lecanuet, who will
rep..-t other members. of the centerol'lght alllance.

-

CINOO, W. VA.-'-TIIE REV. JOHN YOUNG,a Metbodlst

mlnllter and a coal inlner; wants to talk with Jimmy Carter, a

Baptist and the prealdflnt.
.
Y01q1 aays that he and other 0\rtstlans involved in the
lln&amp;ertng mine lllrllte want to obey the law - In th1ir calle, the
'fatl.&amp;rllay law ~- prealdent Invoked to order striking
mlnen back to tbelr jobo.
.~

'

By DEBORAH . FRAZIER
escaped from the plane in
DENVER ( UPI) - A Cali- Denver, broke his ankle in the
fornia·man who claimed to be, 15-foot leap to tbe runway.
armed with a bomb and dying That was the only injury
of cancer lost his last three during the hijacking.
· hostages aboard a hijacked
The 68 passengers and the
jetliner awaiting refueling other four crew members had
and sur.rendered peacefully been released earlier when
to FBI agents Monday night . . the hijacked jet stopped in
Moments afwr the three Oakland, Calif.
crew members leaped from a
Thomas was taken before a
cockpit window to the runway federal magistrate Mooday
and scrambled to safety, Clay night and ordered held in tbe
Thomas, 30, of San Jose, Denver County Jail on
Calif., walked calmly down $250,000 bond. A prellminary
the passenger stairs of the hearing was scheduled for 9
'united Air Lines 727 to be a.m. Thursday.
arrested by FBI agents. .
The hijacking began
The FBI said the red and Monday afternoon shortly
white vinyl flight bag the afwr the jet took off from San
hijacker claimed held a bomb Francisco on a scheduled·
actually contained books; flight to Seattle.
papers and a lollipop. Agents
The hijacker said he had a
also said they could not bomb and demanded to be
confirm Thomas' statements taken to Cuba. A FAA
that he had throat cancer.
spokesman said the hijacker
Co-pilot Jack Bard, 40, one also told the pilot AI Grout,
of the crew members who

" this is the onJy way out."

The hijacker later changed
his destination to Memphis,
Tenn. When the jet slopped in
" We had no advance notice ·
Oakland for fuel the hijacker
agreed to release the passen-. or the escape," said Ted
gers and m""1 of the flight Rosack, agent ln c ha rge of
tlle Denver FBI office . " We
crew .
.
When the jet__ landed at were negotiating about
Stapleton International refueling the plane and
Airport in Denver for more unloading some of 1 the
fuel FBI agents began luggage when all of a sudden
negotiating with the hijacker Ule crew was able to leave the
over tile jet's radio.
plane."
Several times during the
Thomas, wearing a brown
discussion the hijacker cape over his shirt and pants,
walked slowly down the steps
sounded agitated.
11
·
For Christ sake, what are · to waiting agents.
you trying to do, klll these
''When he came down the
people?" he asked the FBI stairway he appeared to be
agents.
all right. We are having a
And then later he told doctor check him , " said
them : "Look, if you guys are Hosack. "He could be tried
so hot to bust me and you here or in California, but
want my bomb and you want there is a good possibilily he
me to give up all this-, you will be tried in Denver."
can just wait until I get to

District 6 officials
discuss court action
DILLES. BOTTOM, Ohio
(UP!) - Invocation of the
Taft-Hartley law did not
reopen Ohio coal mines
Mmday.
Thousands of Ohio United
Mine
Workers
Union
members
defied
the
presidential order to return to
work and the government
respooded by anootDicing oo
action would be taken against
individual miners wbo refuse
to return to the mines,
according to assitant U.S.
attorney Dan Brown in
Columbus.
Officials from 45 locals In
UMW District 6, which has
16,000 members In Ohio and
the Northern Panhandle of
West Virginia, met at District
headquarters Monday to discuss the government court
action which led to local
presidents telllng their members to return to the mines.
Before tbe meeting st""ted,
Bob Hammoll!!, a United Auto
Workers Union offical from
ToledO, brought a v.an load of
clothes and food and about

Cuha, okay'1"
After about an hour the
three crew members escaped
while the hijacker was in the
passenger section of the jet,

54, he had throat can&lt;;er and

Backwaters

eXecutive board, said local
officials will hold .meetings
every day in an attempt to get
the men back into the mines
but conceded the attempts
would probably be futile .
1
' 1'm not very optimistic,' '
said Lamb. "It's going
against a very strong and
deep roowd tradition among
the coal miners, a tradition of
not obeying Taft-Hartley.
That makes it virtually
Impossible."
Lamb also said a cutoff of
food
stamps to striking
shifts.
"We compUed with the miners would be Ulegal and
order, posted achedules and said UMW lawyers would
boped for the best and nobody fight any cutoff in court.
Lamb read a statement
showed up," said Dave
Baker, a spokesman for the following the meeting which
Southern Ohio Coal Co. which he said would be sent to
has three mines in Meigs and President Carter.
"It is our belief· that the use
Vinton cotDities.
"We have 14 mines in our of the Taft-Hartley law
11880clatlm and nobody went destroys human rtghts," said
to work," said Leonard Lomb. "It is apparent if the
Pnakovich, president of tbe working people ·or this
Ohio Coal Association. "It country are to jrosper and
enjoy the fruits of their labor
looks Uke total defiance."
Bill Lamb, ea~. Ohio, a that . the Taft-Hartley law
member of the UMW natlonrjl must be abolished.

$3,000 In cash to District 6
headquarters for distribution
to striking miners and their
families.
President Carter, in a
related development,
extended
the
energy
emergency in Ohio · for
another 30 days which means
a continued suspension of air
quality standards.
Major coal producers in
Ohio reported an mines were
open but no miners showed up
for either of the first two

Fleming retuined by deputy
Meigs County Common
Pleas Judge John C. Bacon
Friday sent orders to Sheriff
James J. Proffitt to return
John Fleming from Ohio
state Penitentiary's Medical
Center to Meigs County.
Gary Wolfe of the sherl!rs
· department
transported
Fleming back to Meigs
County Monday , Fleming
was released on a $30,000
bond, actual cash posted
$3,000, pending his appeal.

Fleffilng was fo.und guilty
of murder by a jury In
December, 1977 and was
sentenced by Judge Bacon to
25 years to life, for the arsenic poisoning death of
William ' C. Middleswart
on July 4, 1977.
Arrested on Aug. 18, 1977,
along with Fleming was
Freda Middleswart Proffitt,
40, Rt. 1, Portland. Mrs.
.Proffitt is serving 25-year to
life sentence in Marysville
Reformatory for Women.

According to an entry filed
In the Clerk of Courts office
Fleminll has a court appointed attorney, whose fees
are being paid by Meigs .
County for his appeal. '
Meigs County Prosecutor,
Rick Crow, who was contacted by The Dally Sentinel
indicated hiS office and
Sheriff Proffitt opposed
release of Fleming on bond
and the court appointed attorney.

level at Meigs County No. 2
mine ends at a n em pt y

e ntrance {.(J lhc mine - the
same condition thal existed

topside in the co mpany
parking lot.
A ~alk doWn thut corridur
wit h only headl a mps for

Hlurnina tion rev,ea ls" an
empty gray tunnel void of
miners exc-ept ror a few
maintenance

M·ine

Oh io Coal Co.
Since M o nd ;~y midnight
only a few c urious n1incrs
have driven by the COIIIIJRny
lot.

men.

Richard Maynard meanwhile
waits 11Up top " while foremen
and maintenance personnel
prepare the mine ag;lin fur

the third and fourth shifts
since a federal court ordered

striking United Mine Workers
bsck to work at rnltlnight

Oteshire
man hurt
in wreck
A Rt . I , Cheshire man
esCaped serious injury in u
single car accident nl 5:45
a.m . Monday on SH 218, north

The Ga llla-Meigs Post
Stale Highway Patrol S!l id
Danny L. Jones, 21, going
south, lost control of hiHcar
which ran off the right side of
\ he highway, into u ditch.
then overturned.
Rising backwaters were
Jones was , taken to the
creating some problems Holzer Medical Center by a
Tuesday morning in the passing m otorist. His car was

creating

problems

Meigs area . One bus in the

demolished. No citation was

Meigs Local School District
was unable to run its route

issued.
A backing accident oc·
cutted at 10 :25 a .m. on

to run only parts of their

Greenbrier Dr. east of SR 160
where an auto driven by
Officials In the Southern Francine
Shaw,
28,
and . Eastern
districts · Gallipolis, and a tru ck
reported little effect by high operated by Willar d D .
water at this point.
Smith, 46, Bidwell, hocked
Afternoon kindergarten into each other. There was
classes in the Meigs Local minor damage.
District were cancelled a nd
No citation was issued in a
an early dismissal appeared rear end collision all :27 p.m .
possible at all schools this Monday on SR 160.
afternoon due to the rising
The patrol said an auto
waters in some areas.
driven by Loretta Keaton . 25,
Because of the overnight Ewlngton, was stopped for a
rain and thawing snow, the motor vehicle Inspection. Her
Ohio Department of High· · car was struck in the rear by
ways in Meigs County this a vehicle operated by Floy d
morning reported the closing E. Erlt, 80, of Rodney . There
of Routes 681 between U.S. 33 was minor damage.
and 692 west of Darwin, and
A deer was killed in an
between Tuppers Plains and accident at 12 :10 _p.m .
Darwin, !Wuie 124 at Longs- Monday on SR 325. · The
ville was also closed. · 1
animal ran into the path of an
auto driven by Donald W.
Holley, 32, Patriot. ·

routes.

DEADLINE MAY&amp;
CLASSES DISMISSED
Meigs County residents
Meigs Local District
schools were dismissed two must register by May 6 if they
and one-half hours early wish to vote in the June
today due to the rising hack- primary elections.
Residents may register at
water in the district.
the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce office from 9 a.m.
to 4 p.m. on Monday, Tuesday
or Friday, and at the Senior
Citizens Center, the County
MEETS WEDNESDAY
City Council of Beta Sigma Commissioners o ffice, the
Phi Sorority will meet at 7:30 county treasurer's office and
p.m. Wednesday at the Pizza the county board of elections '
office daily.
Shack in Pomeroy.

•

Maynard, huwcver, wnits
in vai n. No onP cmnc to the'
mine -- one of Ohio's bl~gcs(
clecp min~.: opcrulions, one or
lhrt·c iu Mcl gs Coun ty
operated by the Soutl1crn

Huperintendenl

()f SR 553.

and several othe rs were able

M ond&lt;~y .

tiEADS t'AMI'AII:N Dr . ""Rohert n. Huyes ,
prcsldt•nl nf MurKhall
U ul vt•rslly,
ha s been
nnmed pu,·csc tlcr gUts
chalrmon of the Boy Sc•tJUtH
uf America 's curr en t

campaign to ral•e $86t,480
for
Improving
area
Sc:outing ladllll eH. The
campaign wilt run throu~h
April JO . Apprndmn\ely
2,000 voh!nteerN will be
see king pledgeR II••
deductible ) pnyublc uver o
36-month period .

Marines
free 70
persons
By STEPHAN KETELE
ASSEN, Netherlands (UPI)
Dutch Marines today
attac ked

a

government

building and freed about 70
hostages held by Moluccan
extremists without loss of
life,
a
governm en t
spokesman said.
The marines launched their

assault shortly after the passIng of an Sa.m. EST deadline
set . by a Moluccan "suicide
. commando squad" that
threawned to kill hostages
unless authorities met their
demands for an escape plane
for themselves and 21 South
Moluccan colleagues jailed
for previous attacks.
A spokesman said the
troops acted
because
authorities were faced with
"clear evidence" a bloodbath
was about to begin.
A government spokesman
said no lives were lost in the
lightning action. He said
three Moluccan terrorists
were arrested .

One person was seriously
Injured and three slightly
inj ured , the spokesman
added.

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