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                  <text>0-3- The Sunday Times-sentinel, Sunday, Jan . 8, 1978

Stocks slide way doWll
w. SLUSSER
UP! Business Writer
. NEW YORK (UP! ) Stocks kicked off their 1m
campaign in disastrous
fashion · this week, suffering
their worst loss in two years
as the dollar fell to record
lows on foreign • •changes
despite g o v e rnment
intervention.
The Dow Jones industrial
average, a 1.30iJoint winner
last week, plunged 37 .68
points to 793.49, the lo~'!.§t
level since it closed at 7114.16
on Oct. 1, 1975. It was the
worst weekly setback since
theDowfell41.87points in the
period ended Dec. 5, 197~.
The closely wat ched
average now has lost more
than half of the 437i&gt;Oint
recovery it made from its
Dec. 6, 1974 recession low of
5n.60toitspeak of 1,014.79 on
Sept. 21 , 1976.
Brokers said the Dow 's
slide this week could portend
a grim year for the market
and the economy as did the
21.52-po inl decline in the first
week of 1977. Many analysts
have predicted the Dow will
fall to the 750 area early this
year because of uncertainties
surr oundin g the Carter
administration and the
economy.
The New York Stock Exchange common stock index
fell1.86 to 50.64 and Standard
&amp; Poor's soo.stock index,
conta ining some over-thecounter issues, dropped 3.48

11y F1lANK

...•

to 91.62.
Declines routed advances,
1,475 to 370, among the 2,073
issues crossing the composite
tape .
Big Board volume for the
four -day week totaled
!1.1,540,130 shares, compared
with B3,604,9a.j last week (also
a four-day week ) and
114,680,650 traded during the
same week a year ago. The
market was closed Monday
for the New ·Year's holiday.
Composite volume of NYSE
Issues listed on all U.S.
exchanges and over the
counter totaled 104,463,640
sl1ares, compared with
96,110,976last week.
The market tumult is likely
to continue next week in light
of the Federal Reserve
Board's decision late Friday
to raise its discount rate a
half point to 6.5 percent
because of disorder in
1n tern at ion a I mo n ey
markets.
E a r 1i e r
F r ida y ,
irendsetting Citibank Friday
boosted its prime lending rate
a quarterpoint to 8 percen~.
the highest level since
October 1975. It was the fi rst
prime hike in three months.
The Fed's discount rate
move, which analysts said
confirmed Wall Street's fears
th at mteresl rates were
headed higher, is likely to
prompt other banks to raise
their prime niles next week.
Much of this week's selling
refiec1ed trader skepticism

•

•
•
•
•
•
always •
h th e
•

were ,slightly higher than a

•
•
•
•
•

yea r ago,
the No . 1
•Ish over all
au tom ak er •S S1uga
performance the past two
months has caused concern .

•
'
ea 1

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

!I

••
••
••
••
••
••
••

that Fed and Treadsolulary
actions to support the
r
on foreign exchanges would
do much good because the
United States has done
virtually nothing to curb its
oil imports.
The oil imports hav~
caused a huge trade deficit by
drawing dollars out of the
United States and creating a
dollar
surplus
in
international markets. The
U.S. 1977 trade deficit was
about $27 bllllon.
President Carter's recent
nomination of G. 1William
Miller to replace Arthur F.
Burns as the Fed chairman
also caused concern among
investors. "Burns is the only
man in Washington business
and foreign bankers trust,
and now Carter is getting rid
of him," said Monte Gordon,
vice president of Dreyfus
Corp.
.
Higher interest rates WI11
exacerbate investor concern
the economy may be slowing
down. Their fears have been
kindled by a two-month
slowdown In automobile
sales.
. The government a week
ago reported ils index of
leading economic indicators
fell for the first time in five
months. Factory orders
dropped 0.4 percent, the first
decline since a 2.6 percent
slide in July. Construction
spending rose only 0.1
percent.
· American j'dedicorp was
the most active NYSE-listed
issue, up 1% to 22% on
1,400,000 shares. TWA's
Hilton International unit,
which is trying to lake over
American Medicorp, has filed
suit to block a bid by
Hwnana.
Blue&lt;hip Exxon, a Dow
average component, was the
second most active issue, off
21'.to45%on 1,171,310shares.
General Motors, another
bluechip Dow component,
was the third most active
issue, faUing ...;m to 59% on
1,066,000 shares. Although
M 1 De
be sal

nSta l Ill•
~&gt;A

ct::'
&lt;. -

•:

•
•
Today •
8

Willis T. (eadingham
Realtor

INGR-EDIENTS FOR INVESTMENT
va lu e s

Ho~;~s 1 ng pri ces have gone
up steeply stn ce the m id60s for two bas te reasons.
Fi r st . t he shor taQe of new
savi ngs made it difficult to
finance private h6ustng.
and the number of new
housing un its built each

ha ve

1ncreased faster t an
e
•
cost of llyinQ. Th us. it is an
•
excellen t inflation hedge.
So here. are th e ready •
•
made ingredients for a
•
good investmen1. We all
•
need housing of some ki nd .
e
f r below that and accord i ng to the
Year was a
t
th e pr•'ce of
• what it should have been . expe_r 5 •
• Since there is a steady housmg wil l con t mue to go
• growth '" populat ion , t he . evehn
hrgher, t thoug•hs
•
n
our
•
per
aps.
no
0
s pressure
• put
housing
reserves an d dra m at ica lly as In the past

e
•

0

's

ate-

cern

r

es

Du P t Do
t
on ,a
w componen,
plun•ed
8"•
tto 111 ~ • The
o
'7 1

e chemlcal giant formally
e complained to the Treasury
e Department that Japan was
e sellingnylonbelowcost in the

e prices rise .
tew years.
• United States and damaging
e Second , there have been If there is anything we • the industry.
e inflationar y increases in can do to help you in the e On the brighter side, Budd
e the labor and mater ials field of real estate please • Co. climbed 6% to 30'1s after

e
e
e
ee

costs that go inlo bu ilding a
hous e. In most
urban
I
t·
areas, land va ues con mue
to go up each year' too .
H is tor i cally , r eal estate

ll'

phon~ or drop
E:~
LEADINGHAM
dA
ESTATE 512 Secon
ve.,

Gallipoli~. Phone 446-7699 .
We're here to help!

~ • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • e • e e• • • •

e
•e

J•

the company revealed it has
been
contacted
by
representatives of a comp:any
interested in acquiring Budd.
The interested party was not

DOC
SMITH'S

Stassen would
pay plenty
for information

Meeting announced on

BRUSSELS , Belclum
(UPI} - Robert Strauss,
Pnoklenl Carter's special
trade • egotlator; was
ready to give atmo1t
aaythlng Friday fo r
dlredlona to lbe men's
room hi the Brussels Royal
Palace. ,
"I am lstiU looking bot I
bavea't
made
any
progress," said the former
Democratic national
chalnnaa., as be waadered
through elaborate balls and
pasaaceways • .
"I have just bargained
oft steel and tntUes and I
am ready to add coffee U
they help me." Someone
filially pointed the way
hefort Strauss wrecked the
u.s. lullaoce of· payments.

Seegar accepts
Robeson award

Schools&lt;closed,
roads dangerous

how to prevent crime.
GALI.IPGLIS - Do you Service, is open to all citizens
ever wonder what you might of the county witbout regard
do to protect yourself. your to race, color, sex or national
family. and your property origin. So - if you really
from theft , vandalism or want to get some new Ideas
assault ? The Gallia County for preventing crime, try to
Cooperative Extension attend the meeting on
Service is offering everyone a January 11, and you might
chance to learn about "Crime bring a friend or neighbor
with you.
Prevention."
On January 11 at 1 p.m.
Cla ir W. Young , Ohio Bia
Co operative Extensi on
-e
Leader, Safety will present a
program at th e P.C. A.
'
building, on upper Route 7. on
the subject of "Cr im ~
CLEVELAND (UPI) Prevention."
l
The Cleveland Board of
This meeting, like all Education mailed its payroll
programs
from
the checks Friday with exCo operative Extension traordinary funding provided
by big business to ball the
system out of a financial
crisis.
.
Stopped
by
a
federal
judge
Showers throughout the
day, turning colder by from transferring funds to Its
tonight . Clearing tonight but payroll acco unt, the bo~rd
colder. Highs today in the 50s. faced the propect of a strike
U&gt;ws tonight in the 30s. by unpaid teachers. But
Probability of precipitation Vincent Campanella,
80 pet . today, 40 pet. tonight, Cuyahoga County a uditor, got
private utilities and cor10 pet. Monday.
porations to pay their real
estateiaxes two wlieks early.
The $10.8 million collected
from the Cleveland Electric
Illuminating Co., Ohio Bell
DELEGATION MET
Telephone Co., East Ohio Gas.
HONG . KONG (UPI)
. Vice-Premier Teng Hsiao· Co., Republic Steel Corp.,
ping today talked with a Standard Oil of Ohio (Sohio),
viSiting U. S. congressiona l the May Co., the Higbee Co.
delegation headed by Sen. and WJKW Television ln·
Alan Cranston, D-Calif., and eluded $4.2 million for the
Rep. Charles Whalen, R· school system.
'Ohio.

Dear Sir :
I'm a UMWA miner's wife. As everyone knows we're on
strike again. Looa or mC&lt;ime, humillatloo of standing in rood
stampllnes, and a poor Christmas is ourpllghtagain.
But rve'bef!ll t.hroilgh it before, and I'D go through It again
for the UMWA.
People doo't realize what a fine union it is, and what life
for the miner and their falnily was like before the union.
These strikes may be set backs, but what they gain is
worth it.
.
The mines are as safe as )MIOSlble for our husbands to work
in. If accidents in the mine didn't kill the miner before, black
lung did. At least now there's liope for the young man
beginning his life as a miner. ·
So the BCOA, politicians, or anyone else will never break
our union. The union migl!t he low on funds, but it began
without funds and it will buDd aod keep building unW It's
better than ever.
The reason for tblsis our pride and faith In the "UMWA."
- A proud, Coal Miner's Wife. Name and address withheld on
request.

bnsiness
helps ·Oeveland

Weather

NEW YORK (UP!)- Folk
singer Pete Seeger has
received the 1977 Pau l
Robeson award from the ,
Actor's Equity Association.
The award , first given to
Robeson himself in 1974, was
presented by association
President Theodore Bike! to
Seeger for the 58-year-old
singer's contribution to the
performing aru and his
concern for human rights.
In accepting the award,
Seeger said it was appropriate to sing an African
and a Russian folk song, two
forms of music which he said
deeply touched Robeson . He
COSMOS LAUNCHED
then invited the audience to
MOSCOW (UPI) - The
join in and clap to the beat of Soviet Union has launched a
the music as he played on his Cosmos satellite to "carry on · AMEUA, Ohio (UPI )
banjo, which bore the in· t he explorattan ot outer American Home Exchange
scription : "This machine space, fl the official Tass news Co. has anno unced tha\
surrounds hate and forces it agency reported today. It construction will begin within
to surrender.''
said the equipment aboard 30 days on an $11 million
Cosmos-974 was functionally apartment pro ject in Cler·
normally.
mont County .
identified.
The 53-acre, 600-unit
Gold mining
issues,
development
will include 50
generally used as ·a hedge
buildings
housing
12 families
against the dollar a nd
each.
It
will
he
located
on
inflation, surged most of the
FLIGHTS STOPPED
Ohio
132,
six
miles
from
the
week. Dome Mines rose 6'111 to
FLORENCE, Ky. (UPI) site of a planned $500 miUion
70, Campbell Red Lake 2'1• to Heavy
fog
continu ed Ford
plant.
Charles
37'111, Homestake Mining 2'1• disruption of operations at
Baverman,
president
of
to 39'1, and ASA Ltd. lo/• to the Greater Ci ncinna ti
American
Home
Exchange,
21 '111.
Airport Sat urday, forci ng
On the American Stock cancellation of most flights said the project will take
Exchange, the market val4e · out of the facility since early about two years to complete.
index plunged 4.84 to 123.05. Fnday afternoon .
Declines routed advances,
'
566 to 285, among the 1,075
issues traded .
Volume for the four-d;ly
week tntaled 9,807,515 shares,
Russia
.
compared with 13,393,580 last
Slavic
tribes
bega n
week and 1~ ,339,960 during migrating into Russia from
the same week a year ago. the West in the 5th century
Giant Yellowknife Mines, a A.D. The first Russian state,
gold mining issue, was the founded by Scandinavian
most active issue, up l:Y" to chleftans, was established in
,11 ¥• on 333,200 shares. The the 9th century, centering in
stock benefited from the slide Novgorod and Kiev . In the
of the dollar sind the rise of 13th century, Mongol tribes
bullion on foreign exchanges. overran the co untry. It
WainocoOil was second, off recovered under the grand
1'. to 14'11 on 293,800 shares. duk es and princes of Moscow,
Houston 011 &amp; Minerals was
and by 1480 freed itself from
third, off 1'. to 31 on 264,600 the Mongols.
shares.

Radio block contract given

Project starts
in Oennont

!

·

I

301 V-8 engine
Automatic trans.
Power steering
Power brakes
Tinted glass

• Air condltlontng.
• Wlllt•w•ll bdlals
• Sport ·mtrrows

• Dtluu wiiHI covers
• R•ll'o

•ccom. Pki·

!

Area Deaths

IMA E. METZLER
GALLIPOLIS - lma E .
Metzler, 79, of Springfiel d,
Ohl~, died In .Community
Hospital at Springfield, Jan .
6. She was born In Gallipolis,
Jan. 15, 1898, the daughter of
Sherman and Belmont
Burnette Haskins . A retired
cousin, Wanda Niday, of
Springfield, with whom she
resided, and !event! nieces

and nephews .
The body was taken to th e
.Richards Memorial Home,
Springfield, where ser vices
will be held at 10 a . m .
Monday. 1 with burial at
Fairmont
Cemetery ,
Jackson. Gra1o1eside services
will be held at the Cemetery

Funeral Home on Sunday
from 7 until 9 p. m.
The body wil l lie in state at
the church one hour prior to
lhe ser vices.

BESSIE OLIVER
MIDDLEPORT - Mrs.
Bessie Oliver, South 5th
Avenue,
morning

died

at

Saturday

Veterans

Memorial
Hospital
In
Pomeroy. She was 79.
Born Apri I 9, 1898, In
I
· Harlan County, Ky ., she was
GILBERTA BUSH NEAL
the daughter of the .late Nick
GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. J. and Lettie McCarty Combs.
Howard (Gil berta) Neal, a She was also preceded in
resident of 85 State St ., death by her husband, James

at 2 p. m.

Monday ; Jan. 9th thru Saturday. Jan. 14th

ALL BEEF
HOTDOGS
GERMAN DOG,
(Kraut Dog)
Reg . 60c

SPECIAL

PRICE
Foollong German Dog

Reg . 9Sc

SPECIAL

PRICE

This special is offered to acquaint you with the
goodness of our Government inspected wieners
and our homemade saute.
No limit to quantity of purchase. Offer good for
Drive· ln or tarry-Out Service Only.

COLUMBUS (UPI)- Gov.
James A. Rhodes Friday
appointed George J . Arnold,
Columbus, to a four-year
term on the Oho Tran..
portation Research Board.
Arnold, an attorney and
former chief r eal estate
counsel for the City of

Columbus, succeeds Paul F.
Ward , Columbus, wbose term
expired Nov. 16.

TWO ESCAPE
LONDON, Ohio (UP!)
Two inmates serving time for
burglary convictions escaped
late Frlday night from the
Madison
County
Jail.
WOMAN KH.LED
Authorities said Saturday
COLUMBUS (UP!) - A
Mitchell Fox, 21, and Ben·
woman was killed and a man
jamin Frank Long, 30, were
injured Saturday morning In
being sought In Madison and
a fire at a southeast reslden~e
Frllnklin
counties.
that did about $6,000 damage.
Dorothy Washington, 40, was
killed in the blaze and
NOW YOU KNOW
homeQwner Robert Steele
Camels originated on the
was rushed to Mercy Hospital North American continent
with first degree burns.
about 40 million years ago.

Gallipolis, died at 6: 30a . m .
Saturday in Holzer Medical
Center follow ing a brief
Illness. She was as .
Mrs. Nea l was born on Ja n.
28, 1892, In Proctorvil le, Oh io.

daughter of the late Gilbert
and Llnnie Ricketts ·Bush.
She was the widow of J.
Howard Neal, who owned and
operated Neal 's Drug Store a1
the corner of Second Ave. and

Monroe Oliver, in 1947; one

son , a daughter , three
brothers, and two sisters.
Surviv ing

are

her

daughters, Mrs. Oral (Jessie)
Bowen, Gosken , Ind.; Mrs.
Arthur (Nonn le) Miller ,
Rutland ; Mrs . Lawrence
(1\&lt;\ane) Belher, Ypsilanti,
MicHigan, and Mrs. Merlin
• (Ber ie Jean_) .Y.artln, Metway, Ohio; f1 ve sons, Calvin,
Nitro, W. Va. ; Naman J .,
Cleveland ; Grover. Mid ·
dleport : James. Stu rg is,

death.

Mrs. Ann Miller Wh ite, a
niece rt~~red In the Nea l
home, also survives .
Mrs . Neal was a member of
the Presbyterian Church and
was a past elder of the
church . Stl e was also a
member of the Thursday
Club.
Funeral services will be

All roads hazardous

(

By United Press InteriUIUonal
TOKYO - JAPANESE AND U. S. negotiators today
resumed talks to head off a trade war between their nations
. amid signs thetwo·couniries would agree on a iruce by the end
of the week. Enlargement of the market in Japan for Ameri"!'n
farm products, computers aod photo .film were among tJje
issues still to be settled, Japanese government sources said.
A three-manU. S. negotiating team headed by Alari Wolff,
President Carter's deputy special !rade reprtsentative, began
working -level talks today with officials of Japanese governmentministriesconcemedwithfinance and foreign trade . The
talks are supposed to lead to an agreement to be signed by
Wolff's boss, special trade representativ~ Robert Strauss,-who
is due In Tokyo Wednesday,

' Sunday's four inch snowfall
following a heavy rain has
left Gallia and Meigs County
highways snow cov ered ,
.slippery and dangerous.
All major and secondary
highways, along with county
and township roads, were in
poor driving conditions this
morning according to the
state highway patrol.
One highway, SR 143 In

Meigs County, was closed due operated by Roderick Gor·
don, 48, Gallipolis. There was
to high water.
Four traffic accidents were minor damage. No charges
investigaied by the Gallla· were filed .
Minor damages res ulted in
Meigs Post State Highway
&amp;J1 accident at 7:45 p.m. on
Patrol over the weekend.
The first occurred al 2:58 the Fairfield · Centenary Rd.
p.m.· Saturday on Bob Me· on~ and five tenths miles
Cormick Rd. north of SR 588. north of SR 141.
An auto driven by Kenneth M.
The patrol said Charles J .
Kiskis, 18, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, Woodall, 24, Gallipolis, was
struck a vehicle turning left driving so uth when the left
front wheel on his car struck
a deep hole.
Josephine L. Elliott, 59, Rt.
3, Gallipolis, was cited to
Municipal Court for failure to
Mrs. Dallas Hill announced stop within the assured clear
today that the Christian Book distance following an ac· party at the Apple Grove cident at 6:23 p.m. on US 35,
United Methodist Church has eight tenths of a mile west of
been cancelled until a later SR 160. The Elllott car struck
date due to weather con· a vehicle driven by Curtis C.
ditions.
Elliott, 17, Rt. I, Northup.
Kimberly E. Painter,' 21 ,
A marriage license was Gallipolis, was charged with
issued to Danny Ray Russell, improper
reg istration
22, Middleport, and Leah following an accident on US
Jane VanMeter, 18, Mid· 35, one and four tenths miles
dleport.
east of SR 160. Officers said
the Painter car turning east
Lonnie LeMaster will Was struck in the rear by a
undergo surgery today at vehicle operated by William
Children's Hospital, J. Cargo, 80, Rt. 2, Crown ·
ColumQus. His room number City. There was moderate
is 3007.
damage.

Notices, local.briefs

Aid writ called

3 times Sunday

GET GREAT
SAVINGS ON
BEAUTIFUL
FURNITURE
FOR YOUR

Weather

Living Rooms

.Tax laws favor fast gro,w ing utilities

Dining Rooms
Bedrooms
Recliners
Pianos
Rockers
Tables

Income tax is charged to
customers and isn't paid

Co

• •

meet on bw ...et

=~:~r~~:!;: ::!t~ A~i~~::~:s~::~ utillti~:~::~s:J~:~~:y~~::~:: ~:!
!::'.:,!,.'.i.

grandch ild~en .

. Services wil l he Monday at
10 a . m . at 1he Rawl ingsCoats Funeral Home with tt'le
·Rev. Lloyd D. Grim m officiat i n~. Burial will be In the
Old F1elds Cemete ry at
' Honeywell, Ky . Friends may
call a t the funeral home
Sunday from 2tlll4 and 7 till 9
p. m

MONDAY, JANUARY 9, 1978

POM EROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO·

roads are covered with Ice "extremely hazardous .
and, snow with drifts of three
" We've had so many acd ·
to four feet reported in dents we have stopped coun·
Fairfield County.
ting, " said Bolen . "We've
"It's lousy , in fa ct It's super gotten to the pob1t where if
lousy," is the way Roy Reed, there is just property damage
a dispatcher with the canton and ~ the vehicle is - stiil
city poilce department drivable we tell the drivers
described conditions in that just to exchange Information
area. "All the roads are in and then com~ in later and
pretty bad shape except the file an accident report ."
ones the snow plows have
RoadS in Scioto Counly In
been able to gel to ."
southern Ohio were also de"Wehave between four and scribed as " terrible " by
six inches of snow here, " id deputy sheriff Joe Snook.
Delaware County
eri"ff"'s~-.;. •• me ''of the roads are
dispatcher Ted atheny . closed and the others are ley
"The roads are just t.e'iTibJe . and snow covered.' ' said
Ohio 23 north of the city has Snook.
11
been descriQed a~~a sheet of
Very bud," is the wuy
ice. The COWlty roads are • Belmont County sheriff's
almost impassible with the deputy
Albert
Va sek
drifting .
We
are described roads in eastern
recommending that nobody Ohio. "There are a lot of
iravel unless it is absolutely dr~ts and the roads are in
neeessary ."
very bad shape. We are
Jim Bolen, a Ji'ranklin advising everybody. not ·to
County deputy sheriff, said travel unless it is absolutely
all roods in the county are necessary."
The Montgomery County
sheriff's office in Dayton
reported roads In that area
were also 11 very hazardous"
and motorists were urged to
stay off U1e highwuys.
Hundreds of schools In
almost ali areas of the staw
were closed by the heavy
snows and icy
roa d
conditions.
_
The
Weather
Service
said
PRICE FIFTEEN dNTS

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

*!

It

northeastern counties near
l.ake Erie from Cleveland
eastward are under a heavy
snow warning with gusty
wlmls expec ted to cause

widespread blowing and
drifting of snow tnday .
.Localiy heavy snow squalls
are e&lt;pected In
the
northeastern snQw belt.
Additional snow·arnounts in
excess of six lnches are
expected while the remainder
of Ohio is expected to receive
one .to two Inches .of
additional snow by tonight.
The major winter storm is
centered in eastern New
York today
and
wlll
move
to
near
Quebec City ((might. There Is
a ridKe o( high pressure from
eastern Texas to northwest
Canadu . Stru n~ nlJrtherly
wind~ between these two
systems
will
drive
tetnperntures to around zero
in Ohio tonight with only
minimal
improvem e nt
Tuesday .
'I11C extended ouUook for
Wednesday U~rough Friday
ca lls foi' fair weather
Wednesday , with a chance of
snow Thursday and Friday.
Highs will be in the upper
teens and low 2&amp; Wc'&lt;lnesday ,
WurminK lo U1e upper ~ i:t.nd
3~ 'llmrsday and Friday .
Lows wiil be near zero early
Wednesday a nd in the upper
teens and 20s early Friday .

:;::::·::·:::::::;:;:::·:::·:::::·:::·:::::::::::·::·::·:::·:::::··::::::::::

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Wednes.day through
Friday,' fair Wednesday,
chanoe of soow Thursday
an~ Friday. Highs will be
In the upper teens and low
20s Wcdoesday, warming
to the upper 20s and 30s
Thursday and Friday .
Lows will be near zero
early Wedoesday aud In the
upper teens and %0s early
Friday.

Flynt would
pay $1 million
for facts of
assassination

DALLAS (UP!) - Hustler
magazine publisher Larry
who
rece ntl y
Flynt,
announced his conversion to
religion, bought full-page
advertisements in 10 Sunday
newspapers offJlfing a $1
mlilion
reward
for
information about a possible
COLUMBUS - A MAN WHOM OFFICIALS SAID had
conspiracy behind the
been planning to kill himself aod his estranged wife for two
assassination of President
the Middleport E·R ' Squad
months went through with his plans SWlday afternoon.
John F. Kennedy.
Franklin County $eriff's deputies said RobertS. Nice, 49, was called to 338 Williams St.
"This may he o~r last
Mt. Sterling, shot his estJ:anged wife Dora, 38, then turned the at 8:18 a.m. Sunday to the
chance
to uncove r the truth
gun on himSelf. Their bodies were discovered by Mrs. Nice 's Rockford Spurlock residence
behind President KeMedy's
from
where
a
patient
was
children by a previous marriage wbo were upstairs in the twoassissination in Dallas," said
story horne when they heard the $llots. Sheriff's deputies said a taken to Holzer Medical
F1ynt in the ad appearing in
tw~ge letter found in Nice's wallet explained he planned the Center; ai 12:51 p.m., to
the Dallas Morning News.
killings for two months. They said the letter gave no specific Laurel Cliff for Jessica
"I
am
personally
HILO
TEMPS
Covert, 15 montha old, taken
reason for the shootings 'other than domestic problems.
guaranteeing
a
$1 million
NEW
YORK
(UP!)
~
The
Snow
today
accumulating
The couple, married about two years ago, separated in to Holzer Medical Center; at
reward
for
information
highest
temperature
reported
to
about
three
inches.
ConJuly. Mrs. Nice had three children by a previous marriage and '8:55 p.m., the fire depart· Sunday to the National
tinued cold tonight, low to leading to the arrest and
ment was called to Bradbury
had an eight-month-old son by Nice.
Weather
Service,
excluding
under 10 above. Wind and conviction of anyone involved
where a car was reported on
Alaska and Hawaii, was 80 . drifting snow
tonight, in the planning or execution
fire
but
it
was
a
power
pole
MEMPI --, :ENN. - ,SOME 4,500 FANS marked the 43rd
on
Tuesday . of President Kennedy's
anniversary of Elvis Presley's birth Sunday, ignoring plunging burning instead. Firemen degrees at Naples, and Vero clearing
murder , or for information
Beach,
Fla.
Today's
low
was
Pro~bllity of precipitation
temperatures and biting winds to visit the famed entertainer's stood by until power company
workers arrived to repair the 'lf desrees below zero at 80 pet. tonight, 40 pet. which makes it pussible for
simple grave at his Gr~celand mansion estate.
the iruth to come out."
International FaDs, Minn.
Tuesday morning.
peoblem.
(Continued on page 10)
Last month 1 Flynt bought
$200,000 worth of full'{lage
ads in newspapers to
announce a vigil to pray for .
world peace, for an end ,\0
· hunger and for cancer ~
WASIUNGTON (UP!) bill," it said.
On overCharges for taxes,
Federal Ia~ law allows a other companies in the top 10 ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::&lt;::::.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;· stricken ·Mlnnesota Sen.
By taking· advantage of tax
Hubert Humphrey.
hreaks, major U.S. power utility' to charge customers included Duke Power Co.
Last November, Flynt told
companies
paid
the for federal taxes as though $126,192,143; Florida Power
reporters he had been
government only $374 million the company received no tu and Light Co. $125,603,101 ;
converted to ·Christianity by
of the $2.45 billion they break. "Thus utilities can Philadelphia Electric Co.
Ruth Carter Stapleton,
collected from cuslnmers for charge their customers for $85,011,446; Consolidated
President Carter's evangelist
federal income taxes in 1976, millions of dollars in taxes Edison of New York
COLUMBUS (UPI) - A study by the Environmental
sister. He said he would
an environmental group says. which are never actually paid $83,179,921; Georgia Power
Action Foundation in Washington indicates that Ohio's
redirect his two magazines Environmental Action to the gov.ernm~nt," the Co. $80,081,404 ; Carolina
seven major private electric utilities charged their
Hustler ·and Chic - from
Foundation, a private report said. .
Power
&amp;
Light Co .
customers for ~.6 million in 1976 for federal income
nudity to religion.
watchdog group, said Sunday
taxes. that they haven't paid to the government.
The utlllties say their. $79,846,285; Public Service
its report '!"8S based on unpaid lUes eventuaU!y will Electric and Gas co.
The national study of the U.S.'s 100 largest private
figures supplied by the be paid when their tax credits $69,942,835; Northerh States
el~ric companies was broken down by Ohioans for
Federal Energy Regulatory run out, but the foundation Power Co. $56,037,255; and • ;::; Utility Reform who found that Ohio utilities
Commission
and
the · claimed that "as long as a Florida
Power •Corp. .:.!.:.: overcharged their cuslnmers $21.9 million for lazes in
1975.
Environmental Protection utility continues to grow, it.... $50 m,614.
'
····
The Ohio grliup said the worst 1976 offender was the
can can postpone indefinitely
. Agency.·
The Pomeroy E·R Squad
The report, covering · the the payment of Its taxes by
Ohio Edison Co., which reaped $29.4 million in federal
made four runs Saturday
nation's 10 largest utilities, collecting larger and larger
t
tax overcharges.
•
oight and Sunday:
·mnnssiOJL 0
Don Krill, legislative director of Ohioans for Utility
said Commonwealth Edison new tax breaks."
At 10:38 p.m. Saturday, to
The ·report also charged
Reform said the wipald tax charges result from ;,. Rock St. for Mrs. Charles
of Chicago led the top 100 in
1a:1: overcharges by billing that
utllltles . boosted
accounting methods and' taz breaks that ulllitles are !,',,:,:.: Werry, taken 1o Veterar.•
~·
permiUed w\der federal law.
,
, customers $188 million In electrical bills by an
Memorial Hoapital; at 3:511
Howard E. Frank, Meigs
Other findings o! the study·.. it relates to Ohio were :
:::: a.m. Sunday, PhyUis Stone,
taxes while paying only $11 eatimated $'100 mUJion in 1976
millioo.
E. Second St., taken to
The foundation said the
Veterans ·Memorial Hospital,
discrepancy between income
later to Holzer Medical
ta&gt;:es bllled to cuatomers and · Edison pay the highest rates Commission Tuesday at 1 . Karl Rudolph is the ninth highest paid utility executive · -:!:' Center; at 1:38 p.m., Sunday
actually paid the Internal ' in the co~mtry 8 78 cenls per p.m. in the auditor's office at .. in the nation. He earned $162,000 in 1976.
to the Ewing Funeral Home
:.:':.;':.!':.!':
i!i!
-Ohio Edison Co. and Consolidated Edison Co. of
Revenue Service result from kilow$1t hour,'a~d that Com· the courthouse.
for Emma Searles, who
On the agenda will be a :::[ New York lead the nation ln air pollution violations for .... became W there, taken to
accelerated depreciation and monwealth Edison of Chicago
Investment la:l: credit.'
charsed its customers the proposal for the spending of :::: utllilles.
·
·
.: ...: , :, Holzer Medical Center, and
"Both of theoe tu breaks most ln " phantom tax monies for the operation of :.:'.!
-U&gt;lurnbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co. has the , at 5:57 p.m., to Beech St. for
highest restdential electric rates in Ohio and is 25th '·l Ror Reute~, taken to
are linked to ~. so collections," more than $156 the county sovemment lor
highest of the 100 largest electric companies.
!::: Veterans Memorial llolpital
the falter 1 utility grows, the million, for the third year in a 1978 and a review of the
'miiif II can save on Its tax row.
.~
receipts and balances.
\h::&lt;=::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::iJt.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::&lt;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::)i where he w.(lo adinitted.

·. Locust St . for many years.
Mr . Neal greceded tler in
death In 1956.
She Is survived by one son, Mich ., and Carlos, College
Or. Lincoln Neal, El Paso, Par~. Md .; one sister, Mrs.
Texas .' One son. James. Lou (Verna) Harper In
preceded her In death In 1968. Mi chi gan ; one brothef
Three Qrandchlldren survive. Ellge Combs. Alger, Ohio; 36
Two sisters preceded her In grandchildren and 26 ~;~real1

VOL. XXVIII. NO. 186

BANGKOK, THAILAND-· VIETNAMESE INVADERS
have destroyed nearly a third of Cambodia's army in the
RACINE - Christmas
border war between the two communist neighbors and have trees will be picked up in the
captured Chinese advisers, intelligence sources said todaJI. , village of Raciqe on Tuesday
"The Cambodians have been very badly chewed up, but if placed on the curbs.
they just keep bringing up fresh troops," a diplomatic source
said. Intelligence officials estimated today that before the
The Pomeroy PTA meeting
fighting began, Cambndia had about 25,000 of Its 80,000&lt;nan plaMed for tonight has been
armed forces - nearly a third - stationed along the eastern cancelled.
front.
"That's just .about all gone now," one source said. But he
added the Cambodians now are drawing on other units and
sending them to the Vietnamese front.

conducted on Monday at 2 p .
m. a t the Fjrst Unlt,ed
Presbyter ian Chu rch w 1th
Rev. Frank and Rev . Tura
Hayes officiating . Burial wlll
be in Mound Hill Cemetery.
Friends ma v call at the
McCoy-Wetherholt · f.Aoore

temperatures dlpped to 10 and below In the county,
Schools of the Meigs Local, Southern ~nd East~ ~al
Districts were closed Monday markmg the f1rst hme
during the current year that all three districts had been
closed on the same day due to weather. Mnre snow and
told temperatures are predicted today.

....
George Arnold gets hoard job

HOME.

I

,.

school teacher of Gallla
County, she Is ·Survived by a

Special of the Week

for the U. S. Air t 'orce.
The sets are designed to
detect and record variations
in the sun's energy emissions,
the firm aMounced Friday in
a prepared
statement.
•

ELBERFELDS

-------- -~----------------- 1

•
•
•
•
•

CINCINNATI (UP!)- The
U. S. Air Force has awarded
the Cincinnati Electronics
Corp. a $2 million contract to
produce and install radio
interference measuring sets

•

MEIGS COUNTY, WHICH HAS FARED WElL so far
this winter, was struck hard by cold weather and snow
overnight Sunday. Above are two of many vehicles piled
high with snow overnight. Rain preceding the snowfa)l of
some four inches made roads slippery as the

Uoitell p,....slnleriUIUunal
Heavy snow which followed
a steady' rain and was piled
into drifts by winds gusting
. up to 35 miles an hour today
forced the closing of
huijdreds
of
schools,
shutdown numerous county
roads and made drivmg
hazardous throughout Ohio.
The National Weather
Service said Ohio is " reeling
from the backlash of a major
winter storm'' and said there
is little hope for improvement
during the next 12 to 24 hours.
Chardon in northern Ohio
measured 14 inches of new
snow while six to eight inches
of snow fell in the AkronCanton area and four to six
inches was reported in
ceniral Ohio' with mnst of the
rest of the state reporting two
to lour inches of snow.
The sheriffs of Franklin,
Fairfield, Delaware, Union,
Madison, Licking and .
Plckaway counties said a U

More strife.
predicted
United Prcss lnternatlonul
The Umted Mine Workers
strike reached the end of its
fifth week today with its first
coalfield death and the single
worst outbrMak of Vlolenl.'C
since the walkout by 188,000
miners bega n Dec. 6.
Funeral services for Mack
Lewis, 65, a UMW member
from Stanville, Ky .. who was
shot at leas t five times
Friday near a picket station,
were scheduled today at Ivel,
Ky.
The retired minerfs d eath
was the first of the walkout,
but UMW President Arnold
Miller warned it may not be
the last unless agreement oo
a new cmtract is reached
soon with the Bituminous
Coal Operators Association.
State police patrolled coal
operations in two Indiana
conununities after a weekend
outbreak of violence resulted
in· nearly 200 arrests and
caused $1.3 million worth of
damage .
lridiana slate police said
194 persons, believed to be
UMW members. · were
arrested Saturday night when
about 500 persons stormed
the non-UMW Rockport Dock
Co. at Rockport, Ind., on the
Ohio River, shooting and
setting off explosions that
resulted In $800,000 damage .
All 194 arrested we re
charged with criminal
co ntempt of court for
violating a restraining order .
Some also were charged .with
disorderly conduct and about
a half dozen were accused of
possessi ng concealed

weaponij. Arraignments were
·scheduled today.
In Boonville, Ind .; a
firebomb wa s be li eved
responsible for u Sa turday
night blaze that ca used
$500,000 to two non-U MW
c oa l -ha ulin g tru c k
companies. No suspects were'
arrested in that Incident.
Kentucky state police
arrested and jailed a mine
secu rity guard, Ralph
Anderson , sof of Prater
Creek, Ky., in Lewis' death .
During the weekend , family
and fri ends paid their lal!t
respects to Lewis.
" This senseless act of vio·
lence is further evldence uf
the need for the coa l
operators · to return to the
ba r ga ining table in a
meaningful effort," Miller
said.
There we re Indications
talks between the UMW and
BCOA, which broke off Dec.
30, ma y resume this week in
Washington .
In other weekend develop·
ments:

- Federal agents in West
Virginia arrested fiv e
miners, including" two UMW
local officers, on conspiracy
churges in the dynamiting of
railroad tracks heavily used
for haulin g coa l near
Bluefield, W.Va., la st
Tuesday night.
- New Jersey Energy
Com mi ss ioner Joe i R.
Jacobson warn ed that a
prolonged coal strike would
. affect utility stockpiles and
lead to sharp reduction in the
use of coa l.

Light green car-

hit mail boxes
Wanted for questioning :
the driver of a light green
vehicle, make and model
Wlknown, with glass damage
and a hubcap mjssing.
That's who Meigs County
sheriff's deputies would like
to locate because that's how
Harold R. .Osborne, Rt. I,
Long Bottom, saw the color of
a car that ran off or skidded
off SR 248 to the left traveling
east,
knocking
down
Osborne's mali box and new..
paper t~be . There was a lot of
glass and a hubcap. lelt
around
the
damaged
property. Anyone seeing a
light green vehicle with glass
damage and missing h~bcap
is requested to contact the
Shertfrs office.
!laiTy Pickens, Jr., Racine,
reported Saturday he parked
a vehicle near Wolfe's Body
Shop for repair !4.nd that

sometime during the past
week the battery had been
removed .
Claude Douglas Evln, RD,
Pomeroy, who has a logging
operatioq on Welshtown Hill
at Minersville, reported that
sometime
during · the
weekend a number of tools
were stolen from where he
was working on his dozer.
This accident also is under
investigation.

ZIONtST DIES ~
NEW YORK (UP!) - Rooe ~
Halprin, a longtime Zionist
leade~ and former president
of the Jewish women's
volunteer orsanizatlon
Hadaaaah, died Sunday at
Mount Sinai Hospital. She
was 82.
"'
-4

�,

.
"

~

Iran's Pahlavi ·meeting with Sadat today
El)'pllaa neJOIIIIOfl sit
down t.ocetber In Cairo to
W«k out the termt of an
Israeli pullout fnmllle lJIIIII.
taraeii·EIYPtlan talks "on
political l.. uea atart In
Jeruaall!lll Jan. 11.
Diplomatic sources , In
Cairo said the Esyptianla'aell quarrel over tha Sinal
aettlementa was the WOI'II
111118 to hit tht current peaet
efforta since the Ouillnw

Day IIWIIIIit between Sadat
ud Begin ended In deadlock
over lhe future of the
Palatlnianl.
·
'!be la'aell cabinet voted to
expand
the
cl viUan
population• of Israeli
aettlemenfl In the R.afiah
Salient weal of the Gaza Steip .
ud along the coast of the
Gulf of Aqaba. Begin has
proposed retaining an Israeli
presence In these strategic

Farm~rs

its ct11ditions.
'"lbe civilian settlements
will remain In place,
defended by an Israeli
defensive force," Begin said.
Sadat made his remarks in
the &amp;!dan apparently without
the knowledge of the Israeli
cabinet action or Begin's
comments.
In the first direct Egyptlan
reaction , Egyptian Vice
President Hosni Mobarak
said Israel's detennination to

areas while returning the rest
of the Sinai to Egypt.
The Israeli cabinet also
voted down propbsals froin
Agriculture Minister Ariel
9\arm to set up as many as
25 new settlements in the
Sinai.
. . Begin warned after the
cabinet meeting that Israel
would wilhdraw Its proposals
to give up cootrol aver nearly
all the Sinai if Egypt rejects

vow 'to

UaltcdPreu IDierulltUI
les• than the cost of
Strildng farmers plan to production. He said many
buy their own grain to drive r.lirmen decided to plow their
up market prlcea while llelda under and instead purWormed liOW'COI lly the chaee the grain from the
Carter
admlnlatratlon marketa at the going price.
propo- to atcengthen crop
"Thing Is, they don't have
prices by attempting to enoiJ8h grain to cover the
expand foreign aalel.
lncreaaed demand and you
A congrlllllonal eoutce In can bet the price Is going to
Wultlngton uld President rile when we all demand
Carter'a bud8et propoaala for . delivery," he said . "The
the llacal year beClnninC Ott. boards aay they have a lot ol
I will Include a 44 perce'nt new cuatomers suddenly and
boost In federal fundi . for are getting worried."
Kerr uld the resulting ·
overaeas farm market
development·programa.
demand and lack of supply
That would amount to t8 will force grain prices up
mUUon more than this filcal unUj they hit 100 percent
year'a federal contrlbuUon ol . · parity, or the amount it costs
about $13.8 rnWlon to · the · farmers to grow the crops.
"And then it will be
cooperative ~ovemment•
lndllltry program.
worthwhile to grow again,
Farm strike organizer Loo inatead of harvesting this
Kerr,
at
American paper crop," he said. "You
Agriculture headquarter• In can't even break even now
Springfield, Colo., said when It costs you more than
farmers can buy their crops $5 to grow a buahel and they
through the CMcago and will only pay you $2.45or so ."
Kanaaa City trade boards lor
Livestock
sales
in

~uy

southwestern Michigan could·
slow to a halt tnday if striking
farmers carry out their plan
to block lour exchanges.in the
area . Farmers planned the
acUon In anger at Gov.
William Milliken's failure . to
meet with federal ollicials iJn
farm issues.
' The.threatened shutdown of
four livestock markets led to
a drop in hog prices as
producers rushed to get their
animals to market.
In .Texas, organizers said
meetings ,were planned today
in the lower Rio Grande
Valley to spread the
movement into South Texas
where farmers in the
vegetable-citrus growing

An angry and disappointed
Mobarak late Sunday telephoned U.S. Ambassador
Hermann F . Eilts to request a
copy of Begin's statements on
the settlements issue. The
text will be relayed through
the American Embassy in Tel

·' .

""
.•

-

·

u

•

"'"

valley have ignored the market development staff
and broaden its credit
movement.
Rep . Robert Krueger, !). authorities.
Farmers from 41 states will
Texas, met with striking
Sunday
and travel to Washington Jan. 18
farmers
announced he would be to meet with their 'respective
willing to reconsider targel senators and representatives
prices and loan · support to explain the need for 100
prices contained in the 1977 percent parity. A meeUng
was also scheduled !or Jan. 16
farm biD.
South Carolina farmers In Kansas City between
Agriculture
said they would picket food American
warehouses and distribution leaders and the Senate
centers in Columbia to keep Agriculture Committee.
Colorado and Kansas
pressure on President Carter
farmers
have pledged to
and Congress.
Several House members al· begin plowing under 10
ready have put aides to work percent of their crops each
on preliminary drafts of week after Jan. 17until parity
legislation to the Agriculture · reaches 100 percent.
Department 's overseas

•• ' ;J

...-,.
.
..

...

DR. AND MRS. PRITCIIE'IT

Outreach co:uple .
coming Thursday "'

'

.

,.,

Dr. and Mrs. William H1 Pritchett of Fairmont, W. Va.,
.,
will speak at a meeting of the Pomeroy Women's Aglow
•
Fell\),wship at 7p.m. Thursday at the Meigs Inn.
"'
Dr. Pritchett, professor of Biology at Fairmont State
College, and his wife, Joyce, a well-known Bible teacher In
northern West Virginia, operate the Jesus Outreach Christian
center, Inc., In their home . Theirs is a non-denominaUonal
'"
teaching, counselling and prayer and praise center serving
people in and outside West Virginia.
The PritchettS have experienced unusual events In their
lives
since they came into this ministry over four years ago.
as 25 new ones as proposed by Jan. 16 in Jerusalem.
They
with others at. the Outreach, are available lor coulselling
.""'
Agriculture Minister Ariel
Begin warned after the m .almost any personal area, but deal predominately with
Sharon.
cabinet meeting that Israel
.
Begin has pledged that . as would withdraw its proposals marriage and family related problems.
The
Pritchetts
have
appeared
on
the Christian
part of a comprehensive to give up control over nearly
Middle East settlement that all the Sinai if Egypt rejects Broadcasting Network's popular "700 Club" and serve as
Israel would return the Sinai, its conditions. ''The civilian counselors ·for CBN's Pittsburgh and Clarksburg, W. Va.
which it captured from Egypt settlements will remain In staUons. They have two young children, and are members of
in 1967. But the question of place, defended by an Israeli the First Presbyterian Church in Fairmont, of which Dr.
Israeli settlements· in recent defensive force," Begin said. Pritchett is a:n elder.
Mrs. Pritchett has been Minister of Music in churches in
days has cOmplicated the
The Cabinet vote amoun!ed
North
Carolina and Virginia prior to the family 's mdve to We.St
matter.
to a repeat endorsement of
Virginia.
She was in Christian Science prior to making a
Sadat, on a two-day visit to Begin's peace proposals to
commitment
to the Lord and being filled with His Spirit in 1972.
Sudan, told a
news give up cimb'ol over the
.
.
Dr.
Pritchett
has been a leader among the faculty at
conference in Khartoum territory while maintaining
Fal1'Illoot
State
and
IS now president of the Fairmont Chapter
an Israeli presence In the
&amp;ln~y. "We shall not agree
of
the
Full
Gospel
Business
Men's Fellowship.
·
to the presence of any Israeli· Rafiah Salient west of the
"'
ReservaUons are In be made no later ·than Tuesday by
soldier or ci vi! ian after a Gaza Strip and along the
calling
Gallipolis,
446-0946;
Pomeroy,
992-5845;
Racine
949-2325
comprehensive agreement is coast of the GuH of Aqaba.
or 949-2723 or MasoQ , 773-5768.
signed.''
' Egyptian and Israeli
negotiatOrs, grappling with
the Sinai problem and other
military questions, wili meet
Wednesday in Cairo. A
Two-foot sections of each
political committee will meet
BLUEFIELD,
W.Va ; heavily used for coal hauling.
on the N&amp;W mainline
track
UMW Local 5954 President
( UPJ) - Five southern West
between
Bluefield and
Virginia
coal
miners, Frankie Adams and Vice
Oakvale
were
blown up about
including two United Mine President Danny Surface
a
half
hour
before the
Workers local officers, face were apprehended by federal
scheduied
passing
of .the
Saturday
and
preliminary hearings Jan. 17 agents
Amtrak
passenger
train
late
transferred
from
Mercer
on charges of co~spiracy in
last
Tuesday
night.
·
·
County
to
the
Raleigh
County
the dynamiting of Norfolk &amp;
A red light !lashed at
·
Western Railway tracks Jail at Beckley.
Narrows,
Va ., signifying
Also charged in the
agreemertt, : Park Is not
interruption
of continuity on
conspiracy were Darrell
required to testify before
STORES TO CLOSE
the
tracks
and
warning rail
Congress, an agreement
COLUMBUS - Director Carver of Sandlick and
•
employees
of
impending
which brought vigorous reac- Clifford E. Reich of the Ohio James Fagg and James
•
danger,
according
to
agents
·
•
Blevins
of
Montcabn,
all
of
tion and opposition from
Dep.artment of ·Liquor
•
of the Alcohol, Tobacco and
•
some congressmen.
Control aMounced today that Mercer County.
•
Officials said Fagg, Blevins Firearms Division of the U.S.
Park, 41, a millionaire rice all state liquor stores,
•"•
buyer, is under indictment in agencies and departmental and Carver were paid a total Treasury Department.
"We feel certain some
Washington on charges of . offices will be closed Monday, of $200 for placing the
·
fatalities
and some injuries
••
conspiracy, serving as a Jan. 16, 1978 In observance of dynamite bombs on the track
would
have
occurred," said
•
foreiil!l agent and bribing Martin Luther King's Birth- at Ada and exploding them
•
U. S. o!!icials.
day, a legal holiday for state with the intent to derail, resident agent-in'&lt;!harge
•
Gantenbein
at
•
disable and wreck the train Jerry
employees.
••
used in interstate commerce. Bluefield if the passenger
The warrants stated that train had reached the
••
Surface paid. lor the battery . dynamited section.
•
The dynamiting of the railused to detonate the
road
tracks was the first
dYnamite bombs . .
apparent
act of sabotage in
The federal agents said the
deep
southern
West Virginia
charges were based on stateBy KENNETH R. CLARK
ments and admissions of related to the UMW strike
United PreSs Interuatlonal
several defendants, and on agajnst the Bituminous Coal
ROOM SERVICE: New York City's new mayor says the other evidence and reports. Operators Association.
state,ly mansion he won in November balloting reminds him of
a hotel - so he'll go &lt;11 living in his Greenwich Village
apartment. Edward Kocb says he'll use Gracie Mansion -the
official residence of New York chief executives -for formal
functions, but he won't move in; Says Koch "Gracie Mansion
is nice; but it's like a hotel. I rattle around th~re."

-

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Hard line taken by Begin

Carter to preserve dollar

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Five miners face ·charges

Probe team lands
in South .Korea

HEALTH

X

The
and

Oepreulon: The Upa
Downt1 of Life. Readers who
want this laaue can send 50
cents for 11 to the 11an1e address.
·
Your live yean without
convul.llons Ia an ewamnle
-·.,. of
~udy the brain have lmprov- how weD coritrolled allacks
ed, more cases of acquired can be wilh the proper uae o1
epilepsy have been found. modern
medicines.
Anyone can become an Sometlmealtdoestalteaiii!IK
epileptic. A major cause for time t,o find the right coin·acquired epilepsy is brain In- bination rX medldnie, lliit
jury. The injury can come almoat aU cues can be
from trauma or from an 11- Jllllllled to tht pOint that
~·ell as you· ..,...,.
~--'be ""''~•
--·'-'
..-e rare or ·noninesa ••
that can cauSe damage to alstant. '!be medl~: adbrain cells. The damage ana vancea.hii'Ve llllde II pofalble
ip the potential focus Uiat for moat people with epUepay
-R'•tely 11uuuaa
----•
trigg ers the attacks. In- to lead 1 \o-Wl...,....
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brain damage from t~ general public concerning
,,... rather ---••-···.
wue
\.:wumurN~RM~~~:
stroke.
You may ,be greatly sur- If you lei depa ed abOut
prised to learn that Dr. baviDI epllepay juat
Richard Masland; executive leiDelllber, that many ol the
•'ld'
dlrector . for "'" Nail_. WOI' I fli'elltl were epil~
COmmisaim for the r;ontrol of UCI, lncllldll!l Jallua caEpil. and Jill', Conae- andAiuandilrlheGreat.
tensionanddepression?
DEAR READER - Epil~
syismoreconunonthanmost
people realize. Thereare two .
general categories, acquired
epilepsy and idiopathic
(cause unknown). Aa ways to

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Aviv.

sca~al~tement

peopletalk

NOW OPEN

-.

..

')
PHONE 77.,.5536

....

'a

nors said, appraising himself

rather than merely bragging .
"H 1 lost out there today, I'd
· still have played a great
match. This is the best tennis
1 have played."
That 's it. eonr£rs wants it
now. He wanted this victory,
not only for the $100 000 first
prize but for th'e deep
satisfaction of being back on
tnp.
Regardless of who is
nwnber one for the year, the
week or the moment,
Connors, Borg, Vilas and the
five other fine players at the
Masters
gave
tennis
something signficant during
··
the past week.
"It was a great, great
success,' ' said Garden President Mike Burke. "I hope the
Masters makes the Garden
' itspermanenthome.Thefans
saw the highestlevel of tennis
in the world."
,.

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--·

demolition derby of tennis
matching the top eight
players in the world for five
stra,ight days. Connors routed
. Eddie Dibbs to open the
tournament ,
lost
a
magnificent three-set thriller
.to Vilas, blasted Msnuel
Oranles and outhattled Brian
Gottfried before stopping
Borg.
" I played a great match
against Vilas and lost,'' Con-

_____,

._

calls for

1101.:C'1ior:n..cu
011

NEW YORK (UPl) Jimmy Connors had. every
rtght to crow, shout to the
world "I'm No. I" and take to
task all . those · who had
doubted hun.
But Connors ~as mellowed
or matured a btl at 25, and
when given the chance to
twist the kmfe after hiS
s~ectacular 6-4 •. 1-6 , 6-4
trmmph over BJorn Borg
Sunday m the $400,000
M a s .t e r. s
t en n i s
champ10nsh1p, he backed off.
"This tourna~ent did~'t
settle anythmg, he sa1d.
"We're gonna have to play 11
again because (Guillermo)
Vilas beat me, Borg beat him
and I beat Borg."
After losmg to Borg at
Wimbledon and Vil¥s at the
U.S. Open, Connors came
back with a vengeance in the
Masters - a round-robin

win first

and six of eight free throws. tWAHAMA (18 )
FG ... Ff.... PF . ... TP
He was followed by. Danny RlckBuuard
~9
5 15
~12
Spencer with 12 while Brian Greg Blessing
14
4-9
4
!1-17
B!Jsel and Dave Brown netted Phil Hobbs
().l)
3
8
l-11
10 points each.
TAMPA, Fla. (UP! ) - An
7
3-7
1-3
2
Kelvin Honaker
Eastern
outshot
and Todd Rawlings
American team of college all- •
7
3-3
4
2~
' stars passed almost at ,will , ,
outrebounded the White Rick Barn!U
2
6
2-13 2-5
against a Canadian all" tar '
Falcons but committed 30 Charlie Zuspan
'1'4 '.H , 2/ 17·••
squad
in the · first Can-Am .
costly turnovers
while Bob5arnll1
4
2·7 ·o.o •. 2
Bowl,
but
the br~akdown in
Wabama loalthe ball on just Tim Rawlings
().l)
0.0
0
0
the
Canadian
passing game
14 occasions which spelled the Vince Weaver
().2
0
0.0
I
made
the
ultimate
difference . "
difference.
24-78 2().36 25
68
TOTALS
The Americans w&lt;KI the .
From the floor the Eagles
fir st In ternationa l college
hit on ~ of 53 attempts for 43 EASTERN (13)
ma tch be tween the two
percent. AI the free throw line Jeff Goebel
(HI
7-15
20
.5
countries, 'lJ..7, Sunday, In a
the Meigs Countlans hit on 63 Dan Spencer
12
!1-11
2-5
I
rain-drenched game settled
percent by converting 17 of '!/ Brian Bissell_
3
10
u
2-3
by i wo touchdowns scored on
tries .
3-9
4-5
5 10
Dave Brown
pass interceptions.
Wahama shot a dismal 31 DanEnyon
6
2-3
3
2-4
Quarterbacks .Mark Miller
percent (24 of 78) from the Rusty Wigal
4
2~
0.1
5
of Bowling Greefl\ named the
field and a flimsy 55 percent Randy Browning
1
0.2
1-2 0
Ame rican team's most 'l • 1
(20 of 36) from the charity Joe Boyles
().l)
vu luable player, and Bruce ,•
0.0
2
0
stripe .
().l)
Threadgill of ~l ss i ss lppl
0
5
0.0
.Keith Wolfe
Eastern won the rebounding TOTALS
State workto(l two qi\Hrters
63
23-53 17-27 29
' '
"
contest by hauling in 42 errent
'euch, completing 31 of 47
shots to 41 lor the While ScorebyQll8rters :
pusses
for
342
y
arda.
Tot
4
1 2 3
•
Falcons.
But they were unable to get
Eastern
18
17
16
12 63
The Eagle's Danny Spencer Wahama
U
1
e
ball into U1e end zone for a
68
26
12
16
14
was the games lnp rebounder Officials: Ray Redman and Raymond Cundiff
touchdown.
lnstt•ad, the Americans set·
with 17.whlle Wahama's Greg RESERVE GAME
Ut~l
lor a pair of field goals by
Blessing and Charley Zuspan WAHAMA(70)
FG .... FT ... .TP
Richmond's
Bruce Allen, two
hauled In n and 10 respec- Kreig Sayre
8
2-3
18
points
by
punter Mik e
.,
tively.
9
().2
18
Tim Roush
.j•
,
Deut..ch
of
Colorado
State on
In the preliminary game the Gary Richards
4
().l)
8
'
one-point
rouge
plays
Little Falcons upped the Fred Smith
•
4
().1
8
scored
under
modifie
d
•
record to 3-1 on the year with Vince Weaver
•• '•
•
2 2-4
fi
Co!Uldian
football
rules
when
I
a 7().40 win over the Baby Brlijn Dingey
2 0.0
4
the Canadians failed to run
Eagles.
0
4-4
4
Don Russell
•
pun~ out of the end zone ''.
Kreig Sayre and Tim Roush Jeff Arnold
I
0.0
2
nnd
pass interception touc h·
shared the games tQp scoring Chuck Stanley
BRENT ARNOLD , A SENlO Ha1 Meigs High School,
1
().!
2
down runs of 44 yards by
was r ecently ruuned to U1c 1977 H unti n ~t on NewspaperS
honors with 18 pointa each .to TOTALS
31
11-15
70
llrcrutrd Wilson of Vanderbilt
All..Ohio Footba ll ream. Or·ent , a dcfc n~ i v c tackle, was
lead the Falcon Reserves.
IUld 10 yards by Ben Zllmblasi
also honored on the AMil':llAL squad , The svn nf Mr . nnd
Eastern was paced by EASTERN ( 4&amp;)
&lt;&gt;I GI)Orgta.
Mrs. Slad e Arn old of Miucrsvilh:, he :-~ta nd s li'2" and
Leonard Myers with nine Leonard Myers
Cnnadu's lone score carne
2 5-10
9
weighs 195 po unrl~ .
·
while Bob Barringer chipped Bob Barringer
with about three minutes to
4 0.2
8
In with eight markers.
play when Bruce Wilkins of
RayWerry
3 0.1
6
Bishop's scnred on a one-yard
Gene Cole
2
2-4
6
plunge. Joe Poplawski of
Brei Matthews
2 1·2
5
Alberta kicked the edra
Greg Wigal
1 1·2
4
point.
Rick Long
1 0-1
2
The Ca!Uldian defense gave
Joe Bowen
0
1·3
1
up
427 yards to the
Mark Norton
0 0.0 . o
Americans,
but linebacker
o ().l) o
Indeed they did. Connors Ken Chapman
Coach Arl 1"'n harn 's Rio Gmmic College· Redmen took John Priestner of Western
and Vilas, playing for pride, TOTALS
15
10.25
40
over undisputed first place in the Mid.Qhio 'Conferonce cage Ontucio led staunch endreached new heights of tennis Score by Quarters:
I 2 3 4 Total standings Saturday night Uy turnin ~J ba(:k visiti ng Malone, 85- wne defense 8. Priestner was
artistry in their thre~our Eastern "B"
7 15 9 9 40
Bl, before the largest home crowd of the seusou ut I.ync Center . na med most valuable player
duel last week. Connors and Wahama "B"
22 17 17 14 70
Now 8-4 overall a nd :t-O inside Lhc confe re nce~ Hio Grande for Canada :
·
Borg renewed a great rivalry Officials - Burton Hickman and Greg Bailey
was to host Ohio Dominica n's Pantnet·s in another MOC
The Canadians were hurt
with savage desire and
encounter , starting at 7:30 this evening , but the garne has been by turnovers on the ·muddy
crackled the air with the
postponed , due to snow, and has been reset for 2:30p. m. on fi eld , having fiv e passes
electricity
of
their
Sunday
, Feb. 12.
interceplL'&lt;I, losing theif only
performance in the final set .
Alter a slow start Saturda y, the ftt'llmen fo rged ahead lor fumbl e and giving up the ball
"The type of tennis seen
'tile first time, ~ ;on a long jumper from L11e corner by Greg on downs at the Americttn
here this week is incredible,''
James with 16 :01 left in the fir st half.
seven-yard line with tess than
Connors said. "! don't think
Behind the play of Skipper John~on , Mark Swain and Gil one minute to go . The
you'll see any better tennis
Price, the Redmen built up • · l3iJoinl. advantage, 37-24, with An&gt;cricons were intcrccplt'&lt;l
than this."
4:09 remaining in lhe first half.
once a nd lost one ollheir two
Coach Phil Hoskins' Pionecrs ·stonned back behind Rick fumbles.
'
N-BA Standings
Meniefi eld, Mark ·Som mers and' Darrell Marshall to reduce
.A sparse crowd of 11,328
By United Press International
Eastern Conference
Rio's lead to three, 40.37, just before the ha lftime intermission . was . reportod at kickoff for
AtlaJltic Division ·
Goals by Men1efieid ancl Tom Vola rich gave Malone a 41-40 uw ga me, successor to' the old
W. L Pet. GB
the game's top scor~r was
By GENE CADDES
Phlla
.
25 11 .694
advan~ge
dunn~ the first llllllute of play m the second half.
Lions American Bowl but
· Iowa .suard Ronnie. _Lester ,
UPI Sparts Writer
New York
22 16 . . 579 4
.
R
)O
s
Don
Gt"':on
and
Ma
rk
Swa
'"
htt
two
qu1ck
goals
I~
..
,
mvst left by halfthne. ' Only
Buffalo
14 21 .400 JO lh
who had 20 of his 31 points in
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Boston
11 25 .306 14
put
lhe
Re~men
~c
k
on
toil.
44
~
1
'
·
.
•
,
about
500 ;·fans braved it
Don 'I try to 1&gt;!11 Ohio State the second half when the
New Jersey
9 29 .237 J7
Sommer
s
chunty
loss
wi
th
15:51
showing
on
the
u\rbugh
the rain to' the enct
Mark
Central Division ·
Eldon Miller about the Hawks· pulled away.
clock
knotted
U1c
count
at
48-48.
·
·'
·
·
·
·
w. L Pet. GB Coach
"Ohio Sta~e is an excelJent
home court advantage. His
Wshngtn
22 14 .611
Rio .pr.and e. countered with 12 straight ~ifllS .on goals by
Sen Antoni
21 11 .553 2
Buckeyes had it Saturday young team, " said Iowa Greg Jmnes, Da n PW"cc il , Vincent Phelps a nd Gil.frice. All of
SEEK SUCCESSOR
Clevelnd
19 18 .514 Jlfl
night and nearly got whistled Coach Lute Olson. But, being a sudden , it was 60-48, Hio, with 12 :50 left in the contest.
Atlanta
18 21 .462 5112
CHAPEL
HILL, N .C.
freshmen,
'they
will
be
up
and
out of St. John Arena.
New Orlns
16 22 .421 7
The
Pioneers,
now
6·7
overall
and
4-1
in
conference
play,
(
UPI
)
University
of North
14 22 .389 a
Houston
"I thought it got away when , down. The .fans will have to · stayed within fi"ve to nine points during the next five minutes
Western Conference
Carolina
officials
hope a
we were called for 34 realize that they'll play better before making thei r last comeba ck bid durin~ the final seven
Midwest Oivi5ion
search
committee
will
move
w. L Pet. GB personal fouls," said a Ugh\· some night' than others. They
minutes
of
play
.
,
quickly
in
finding
a
successor
Den\ler
2-4 13 .649
lipped Miller after Iowa had wiD be a great team."
Mll w
22 19 .537 4
Malone, behind Volarich, Bart Jordan, Marshall and Mike to football Coach Bill Dooley .
Both teams played without
handed the Buckeyes an 87-75
·Chicago
20 19 .513 s
Waters, hegan pec king away at Hw's lead a nd !i!Ullly, with
"We hope to name our new
Detroit
17 20 .459 7
key
performers,
Iowa
losing
Big Ten loss. "The difference
Indiana
16 19 .457 7
4:2liefl
,
knotted
the
coun
t
a
t
78-ail
01
1
a
lUp-in
by
Waters
.
coach
as soon as possible so
was at the foul line. They shot both starting forward
Kanss Cty
13 25 342 1l lf1
Rio
fans
bega
h
swea
ling
when
Sommers
canned
tw
o
Wt!
can
preserve the
Pacific Division
42 free throws and we shot 20. William Mayfield and sub
chanty
tosses
with
3:24left
to
give
the
Pioneers
an
80-78
lead
.
W L Pet. GB
of
our line football
cnnllnuity
That's the story of the' forward Vince Brookins with,
Portland
31 5 .861
The
momentum
chunged
quickl
y
as
H.io's
Don
r:ibson
sank
pr
o
~r
a
m,
"
Chan celhir
wrist injuries, while Ohio
Phoenix
24 14 .632 8
game."
.
J&lt;
.crebee
Taylur
.!:laid, ·after
two
free
thrnws
with
3:M·
Ieft
.
SeatTle
20 20 .500 13
Miller refrained from State freshman guard Carter
Golden St.
11 21 .447 15
·
Gil
Price,
back
in
action
for
the
first
time
in
l1
days
appointing
the
search
criticizing officials Jim Baln, Scott, who has started eight
Los ~ngels
17 21 .447 15
following.
an
injury
in
the
Marietta
Shrine
tournament
,
committee
Sunday
afternoon
.
Saturday's Res.ults
of
10
games,
sat
out
the
George Salomon and GObert
worked
loose
for
a
layup
at
the
2:24
mark,
a
nd
that
proved
to
Phoeni,.: 107, Buffalo 97
contest
with
an
ankle
sprain
.
Haggart . .. You realize," he
San Antnio 109, Cle 107, ot
The Buckeyes now take to be the game's winning bucke t.
. New York 100, Kan City 93
said, "In our league we are
During the final two minutes, Malone's Jordan missed a
Atlanta 106, Houston 83
not allowed to talk about the road for three games
Portland 109, Detroit 105
free
throw, with Greg James coming down with a key rebound .
returning
to
officials. So, we'll have to before
Sundily's Results
wssed in two with l :01le!t and Water's free throw with
James
Wash 99, New Jersey 98 ·
~'friendly" . St. John Arena .take another approach."
Ph ila 94, Boston 91
·
42
seconds
left completed the game's scoring.
Aside from the fouls, Miller Their first stop is Thursday
oen&lt;Jer 109, Chica~o 104
Rio
Grande
placed four players in double ligures, led by
Ind iana 104, Los A'n g 103
felt both teams played well. night at Northwestern,
Price's
19
points.
James added 14, Swain 13 a nd Vince Phelps
Portlnd 122, New Orlns 100
"I thought our people followed by a Saturday date
seattle 99, Golden State 91
10.
Rio
had
43
rebounds
and 21 turnovers.
Mi lwaukee 133, Kan City 123
played a fine game," he said, at Minnesota and the
Monday's Games
Greg
James
picked
of!
14 caroms for Rio Grande. Gil Price
"and Iowa did too. Despite following Thursday against
You c ~n help cut down on
(No games scheduled)
and
Skipper
Johnson
each
had
nine and J ohnson, in one of his
their 87 points, I was not Bobby/,Knight's Indiana Hoocr i me losses .. losses that
d i r ec tly
a ffe ct
you ,
unhappy with our defense, siers, a team which beat Iowa \Jest efforts ever , blockl'&lt;l at least three Pioneer shots.
. Vin ce Phelps, in on e of his best games of the year picked
whether they happen to you
except with the fouls."
69-01.
or not .
·
up eight assists for th\' Hedmen.
' .
Herb
Williams,
the
Mike Swiger
Rio
hit
35
of
76
field
goal
atl&gt;!mpts
for
46
percent.
The
Buckeyes' 6-11 freshman
Tak. e th e crime of arson .
992·7155
Redmen were 15 ol 25 at the fpulline lor GO percent. Malone hit
center,
played perhaps his
You ' re
paying
an
1495. Third
32o! 52 field goal attempts for 61 percent. The losers were 17 of
best overaU game, scoring 20
Increasi ngly hea vy subsidy
Middleport,
26 at the foul line for 65 percent.
for dellbertly . set f lr~~
points, grabbing 17 rebounds
The losers picked off 44 rebounds aod had 29 costly
through your Insurance
and blocking eight Hawkeye
premi um s.
turnovers.
'1. ,
shots.
·
. Four players, two on each team, fouled out. Rio lost Dan
tae
"Herb had an outstanding
are .
Insuran c e
c osts
Btse
and Gil Price via personals. Malone lost Tom Volarich
,.--......,;· .
.
game," Miller said of his
by
adversely affected
and Darnell Marshall.
"'" '"" Like agood ~bar. talented pivot man, "maybe
burglaries, robberies and
Saturday's box score:
car thef)• ... plus lhe
Slate Farnus there. his best all year."
countless ~.C B radios and
RIO GRANDE REDI'.IEN (85 ) - Bise, i-4-6· Fitzpatrick
,,.,., .. ,.,,
s ~te f"111 L•te lnwrtr~ee ~"Y
Kelvin Ransey matched
up
b i cy ~ les that turn
•
Home O~·~e. llloomrogut Hlo!lOII Willlams' with 20 Points, but
0-2-2; Gibslin, 3-3-9 ; James , 7-0-14 · Johnson 3-2-8.' Niday 0-0-0:
m issing . ·
Phelps, 4-2-10; Price, 9-1-19; Purcell,
Swain '6-t-13~
TOTAI1l 35-15-85.
·
'
MALONE
piONEERS
t81)
Martin,
0-0-0;
J
ordan
, 7-1·
One thing you can do Is to
upper &amp; .lower
programs
15; Sammers, 2-0-10; Laussenberger, 0-0-0 · Volarich 6-2-14 · - 1 ~upport
provid ing st iffer penalties
Menlefield, 11-1-17; Marshall , 6'4-16; Waters, i.3-i;Holl~way\ 1~
' for
wrongdoers
and
0.2, T01' ALS 32-17-81.
.
proposals for strengthened
HALFI'IME SCORE - Rlo 40 Malone 37 .
crime lrivestlgation e!forts .

again is No. 1

SUNDAE,
MONDAE

-

Local

Co~nors

GINO'S
OF MASON

POTATO PEDDLER: U Boston Red Sox superstar Carl
Yazstrzellltlkl is as good at tm5hing potatoes as he is at hitting
a baseball! Maine fanners ~ould have a banner year. Reyuald
Souci, chamnan of the'Mame Potato Commission in Caribou
says "Yaz" wiD film a JO.second Tv commercial this week
extolling the state's potatoes. Maine Gov. James B. Longley
already ~as gone on the tube on beliiH of the spud crop, using
the tag line, "come up to the taste of Maine potatoes. Just tell
them the governor sent you."
·

IN TilE NECK: Frank Lang ella, star of the Broadway show
"Dracula,'' poised his fangs over the neck of Mrs. Josb Logan
~rk to be questioned in &amp;lnday night at the Martin Beck Theater when she and her
Seoul by U.S. and Korean husband visited him backstage.' For Mrs. Logan, II was a
Cbarlie, after a mpnber of encounteN, finally mei a
officials and testily In
homble
end. Before be was able to escape Into the water but
criminal cases involving nostalgic rubble. Bela Lugosl bit her there back in 19'!1 when •this time the pond was frozen.
I
as Nedda Harrigan, she .played Mlsa Wellli, the vampire·~
Americans
allegedly
inCharlie
was
more
ihan
a
duck.
He
was
a
part
of
many
volved In the scandal under vicUtn.
· .
·
·
people. Many pictures had been taken of him. He dropped into
.-~=-------. promise of immunity.
\
mEDAR.YSIINTINEL
the
SHOW BIZ LAURELS ... : Comedienne Totle Fields, un- our life ?UI of the ~where It seems. He showed up one day
D~J;IE
Accordin~ to
daunted by a series of physical setbacks has been named floundermg·around m a sn\all puddle of water in the drive-way
MEJG&amp;.MAIONAIIEA
Bowl~.;.
"Entertainer of the Year" by the Americ~ Guild of Variety I;.le was given a h&lt;me In our pond and there he was a joy
. CHESTEJU. TANNEHW.
~ Artists in Las Vegas, Ney. Other AGVA winners: Steve many people, especially children.
Tenants
enjoyed
watching
Charlie
and his mate waddle
Pomeroy Bowling Lines
MartiD, comedy star; EDgeIbert Hwoperdlack, male singing \
down
the
drive-way
of
the
park
past
a
number
of traDers to the
Cfly.......,
Tri,Counly League ·
star; Barbra Strelsand, female singing star: Shirley
11
patio
of
Mrs.
Coleman's
trailer
twice
a
day,
to
get the shelled
~~: v,':.~I'll-~,
n.c. 21. lf77
Ma!!Lalile, song ud dance; Domly and Marte Olmoad,.vocal
•
Standings
corn
that
she
provided
lor
them.
He
was
more
than
a duck ·he
[-Multlmedlo, Inc., 11 · Team
PI
team; Sblelda and Yal'IIOU, novelty act; DoUy Partoa, countcy
was
Charlie
with
love,
from
many
people.
To
Mts.
Colem.;,,
a
:;:'._ · ":"~0':,. ';.':: Cline's Cons!. Co.
star, and Fred the Bird, animal act. Aspecial ' 'Golden Award"
widow lady, he was a great part o!herday.
Edltorio1P....,IIIW117.
Eagles Club
6 .goes to MOton Berle foc "outstanding enterlainment ... ·over a
clou - • pold ot
Pomeroy Cement Blk. Co. 6 lmg period Of years."
lloo Eblin, a tenant for a while in our park, had
-.ohio.
Columbia
National
Life
2
compassion
for Charlie. He saw he was alone and went out and
Nt~Uon.l .tvertiiUW; repre.enH &amp; R F !res tone
2
found
a
mate
for him. Hls mate survived the ordeal with the
loll"
Wotd • and
Grttfttli
C&lt;mpony
o GUMPSE8: Vladimir Horo-witz celebrated a career' of half
Ini
.. BolflntW
GoU.aher
Dtv.' Bill's BodY Sh op
dags,
only
by
the intervention of a tenant.
7$7 ~d AVe.. New York, N.v:
.tjlgh, Individual game - · a century Sunday, performing with the New York Philharmon111011.
·
Henry Clatworthy 220; )c at carnegie HaU ... Tile Trib - New York's newest dally
. Stray dogs running 'loose in our COJJUJIUnlties are a public
Sllllocrlotian ,.,_, Dollverod b)' · Harold Blackston, Dave
nuisance and a health hazard.' Many wrecks are caused and
corrltr wher.. •olloble 75 centlper Peterson 201 ; Kenny Payne newapaper -hit the streets in true Big Apple lallhion &amp;lnday, children bitten by them. Few people, with today's food prices,
weB. B)'MoLorRoultWherecaiTier
198.
'
with a party including guests Judy CoiiiDI7 novelists Kurt
;z~,~irb:"'~;!:::f~;
High series - Heory Vuanegut and Normaa Mailer and Broadway producer Joaepb are able to keep and feed threeorfourdngs. Their solution Is to
~ Year -=.IIO; Six ...,tha, }l•~or,t~y 564H; A.dL. Pkhelps ~PP ... The rebirth of New York City's Cotlon Club - a let them run loose and be a curse upon society.
.111.10; Threo monlbo; 17.00;
r.
• arry en ric '521. Harlem bistro famoua in prohlbltinn days - 'Is slated for Jan.
This would be .a good idea In which tO 11\art and clean up
EIH......,IIUII
Six montbo
Team high game Meigs
County. Brio!! the full penalty ol the law down upon
111.10; Tbr" m,.tho, 11.10. ·Pomeroy Cement Block Co. 13, with Cab cauoway, Billy Taylor, Damita Jo. Sister Sledft
these
Irresponsible
citizens. - Vic Brown, Brown's Trailer
prtce ....,.,
957.
and Jack Hammer the featured stars ... Bem1Y Goodman will
nm..BontinOL
•
I · Team high serles- Eagles be inconceliatCarnegleHallon Jan.l7.. ..
~~,
· ~
Club 2491.

night from Palm Springs,
Calli. ud a round of Ialka
with Sen. Henry Jackson,!).
Wash., one of the key
congret~~lonal negoUatnrs on
tbe ener.gy bill and natural
gas prlcmg.

pull out in front by seveh at the
baH.
.
Jeff Goebel, junior. hack·
Todd Rawlings, 5'9" junior
guard, scored five points In court ace, kept Eastern out In
the final minute to lead the front throughout the third
Wahama White Falcons past canto with some flashy
the visiting Eastern Eagles In twisting and turning layups
a come-from-behind 6U3 win. and after three qlllrten of
The victory avenges an action the visitors held a
· earlier 7~ ddeat which the comfortable 51-42 lead.
Wahama had their work cut
Eagles of Coach Duane Wolfe
out
for them in the final eight
pinned on the White Falcons
minutes
and they wasted little
earlier In
the week at
Eastern. Wahama's season time in slicing Into the' Eagle
slate moved to 3-2 on the year advantage. Rick Buzzard,with the triumph while Greg . Blessing and Tim
Eastern saw Its record Rawlings all connected to pull
the White Falcons to within
dwindle to I.S.
five
]lefore Buzzard found the
Bath team~ 'return to action
range
once again to make it
on Tuesday with the White
51-48.
Falcons entertaining Spencer
and ~astern trav~Upg Jo. After an exchange of
buckets Wahama scored five
Watefford. ,
During the first half, 'the straight points to take the lead
contest was tied on four dlf· for the first time since early In
lerent occasions at 2·2, 12-12, the opening quarter . Phil
23--23 and 25-25 before Eastern Hobbs bucket made II ~
moved out to a 35-28 lead at with 3:32 left to play.
Once again each team
Intermission.
The White Falcons started traded basket.s back and foi'lh
• - off like a blazing inferno by until .ll came down to the final
jumping out to a quick 12-2 minute when Rawlings scored
lead but suddenly someone live successive points to move
told the visiting Eagles that , the locals out in front at 116-M
they were supposed to be and insure the win seconds
playing a basketball l(llme and later at 68-li3.
Wahama · was paced in
as a result the .Eastern squad
scoring
by Rick Buzzard and
caught fire and turned ihe
tables by scoring 16 con- Greg Blessing with 15 and 14
secuUve unanswered points to points respectively.
hold an 111-12 first quarter
The Eagles placed four men
advantage.
in
double figures with Jell
Wahama managed to get
Goebel
taking game high
untracked during the early
scoring
honors with 20
minutes of tbe second period
markers
on
seven field goals
to pull even at 25-25 but the
Eagles put on another burst to
BY GARY CLARK

espand and strengthen its
settlements In the Sinai
Peninsula showed Begin was
"not marciting along the road

own gram crop

TEL AVIV, Israel (UPI) Prime Minister Menahem
Begin says Israel has no
intention of dismantling its
settlements in the occupied
Sinai Peninsula - flatly con·
tradicting Egypt's demand
that they be disbanded.
Responding to comments
by Egypt's President Anwar
Press secretary Jody Sadat, Begin said SUnday,
very difficult to aee llnal
lly Laureate McQulllaa
Powell
said the issue "was "with friendship and respect
- WASHINGTON · (UPl) , ~ ilc\lon on energy In Congreis raised in every European I suggest that Israel and
With the administration bef...e March.
Carter told ·Schlesinger .. capital and It waso always in Egypt agree \j) leave the
ct11ce&lt;!lng It will be difficult
about
his diiCUIIlons with connection with their concern monopoly ·on burning cities to
to pass an energy biD qilickly;
about the decline of the Nero, emperor of Rome."
President Carter told world various world leaderi on his American dollar."
"Israelis don't burn settleaders he would Impose his recent aeve!Wlatlon trip.'
"They
understand,
even
if
.
lements,
they build and ·
"They eapreued their conown re911'1ctlons if needed to
people.
In
thlil
country
appear
·
maintain
them,"
he told a
keep the U.S. energy demand cerns with the value of the .not to understand, tha 1 the political. meeting.
from deab'oying the dollar. dollar and a!IO that our ·decline in the value of the
He spoke after the Cabinet
Energy Secretary James excessive energy Imports American dollar is directly voted to enlarge the civilian
the
main
problem,"
the
was
Schlesinger, who departs
related to our inabillity, so population and expand the
today lor the Middle East, president told Schlesinger far, to get control of our working land of existing
met with Carter Sunday and while reporters were present energy appetites," Powell settlements in the Sinai
said afterward it would be In the Oval Office.
said.
instead of building as many
sChlesinger said afterward
Carter told the leaders .1\e
believed an energy bill would
.
. .
he enacted by Congress and
signed by the president.
''If for some reason or
other, they were unable to put
together that package, of
lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
course he wllllid take actions
SEOUL, South Korea
that he now has the authority (UPI) - A five-member U.S.
'I
d
t
t k "
Justice Department team has
quences eatlmates that 20,000 o taa e,said the energy arrived in Seoul to question
E l epsy.an
new cases of epllepay oi:bu' secre ry
·
South Korean businessman
epressJOD
each year because of
He sidestepped questions Tongsun Park, wh·o is
By Lawrence LamL, M.D.
automobileaccldents.
about what actions Carter
DEAR DR. LAMB- I want to
The Commlaaion Is ree&lt;m- could take. Such measures as accused of .influence buying
00
find out if you can tell me if mending to the president and gasoline rationing and a
Caplin! Hill.
an illness during the first congress that the ~ mile an sharp lifting of Import fees to
Assistant Attorney General
Benjamin Civiletti said his
year of my life (68years ago) hour speed tlliut be vigorous- discourage consumpUon are
bas anything to do with the il· ly enforced. This observation considered posslblllti.es.
teamtwo
plans
to stay
in Korea
for
weeks.
Three
more
Schl
!ness I have been haVIng for alone should remind
eolngersaldtheforelgn
officials are
arriving
25 years.
everyone that he or she CJb Iea ders
were
'.'quite
Wednesday.
. I had meningitis, Si. Vltus become an epileptic in the reaaaured" by Carter's
. "First of all, I would like In
Dance and partial paralysis future If I stroke, automobile 814\ementa.
of my left side with convul- accident or ltlneu of any type
Schleolnger said tlie foreign offer my appreciation to
sions. For two weeks doctors causes brain damage. Thai Is leaders
were
"quite· representatives of bpth sides
thought 1 would not live, but why 1 have used the Utle, reassured" by carter's lor their positive efforts
which went into arriving at a
after the fourth week they Epilepsy: 'lou Can Have 11 statements.
Too for the Health Letter
Ltist week, the adminlstra- ._tistactory and sound agreesaid I would.
More than 25 years ago, 1 number IN. 1 am sending proves Its foreign trade mlmt (on Park) between our
began having epileptic at- this laaue to you. others who deficit, which is due two governments,'' Civiletli
tacks, having to be hospitallz- want this Issue can send 50 primarily to the large amount said on arrival.
ed several times. My mind cents with 1 1-•. atamped, of oil America Imports.
Civiletti said a large share
-...
Whe
ked to
·
of the credit lor arriving at
still stays .torn up but I have aelf-addreaaed env•lope to
n aa
appraiSe the
not bad a seizure in over five me for 11 in ca~ of tbli outlook for an energy bill, the agreement should go to
Schle lng
ckno led ed the
.south
Korean
w g
government, which he said
years. I am taking the newaplper, P.O.~ 328, '*n that ~. er a
as we look at the
medicine that was prescribed Antonio, TX'I8292.
for me and was told I would
Coping with your UlliU congressional calendar and showed a "very constructive
always have to take it..
and medlcationa may be lac- the,81epa that will have to be and responsible attitude" in
take in th
ks he d · · the negotiations.
·
I get very despondent at ton In your depreaalons. '
n
e wee a a ... II
The American officials'
times. I get things on my However, many people have Ia very difficult to see final
mind that ought not to be depressions or feel deprelsed acuon by the Congress before vlsit was made possible by a
there and cannot get rid of who do not have epllepay the end of February or the South Kprean·U.S. statement
calling for Park to return to
them, and get very nervous. either. To give yoa 1 better beginning of March."
~ Can tliiSe-clejlfesae&lt;HtiOi@ltr-un&lt;ierstandlng of dept'I!Siiona
Hls evaluation, less the United Sillies to testify
come fr&lt;m theillnesa I had 'and what to do about them 1 optimistic than the olliclal before criminal courts trying
when 1 was young? Can 1ever am a11o sending you
White House stance, came cases resulting from the
hope to be relieved fr&lt;m this Health Lotter nwnber ._iD following his return Saturday Korean · influence buying

1

Americans

- Falcons sink Eastern 68-63

2- 'The DjlilySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O.,Monday,Jan. 9, 197b .

Ualtcd Preu Jatel'lllllolllll
Shah Mohammed Rna
Pahlavl of Iran arrived in
Aswan, Egypt, today r... Ialka
with President Anwar Sadat
on the Eg)'Jltlan leader's
Middle East peace initiative.
That shah's visit beCan as
Sadat and hraeli Prime
Mlntster Menahem Begin
· appearecllocked In a dispute '
over Jewiah aettlementa In
the Sinal Peninsuls just two
days before the schedUled
start of new peace talka.
Sadat and the shah
embraced and kissed when
the monarch stepped down
from his' plane at Aawan,
where Sadat has been stay!pg
since the New Year.
EgypUan officials said the
shah and Sadat will compare
notes on their Middle East
consultaUons last week with
President Carter in Tehran
and Aswan respecUvely .
carter visited Tehran Dec.
31.Jan1,I on a aia.fliiUon tour .
He and the shah bad tallul
with Jordan's King Huuein
who was visiting Iran at the
same time. Carter stopped In
Aswan lor 110 minutes Jan. 4
on his way from Saudi Arabia
to France and ~ with
Sadat.
The officials said they knew
of no plan lor the shah and
Sadat to be joined In Aawan
by Hussein and Moroccan
King Hassan as some Iranian
ne~per_s . reported.
Sadat returned to Aawan
for. talks today with the shah
of Iran on breaking the
Egyptian-Israeli deadlock.
The hard lines were drawn
by Begin and Sadat three
days before Israeli and

3--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 .. Monday, Jan. 9, 1978

1-300-282-6410

Our
agency
provides
finan ci al protection . and

SAYRE
HARDWARE

serviCe; when crime losses

'

·•

882·2525
126 MAIN

occur ... but many can ·ll£!
preVented . That's why~We
say - prevention ls-,fhe
best pot Ic y .
· ··
·

'

DAlf. C. WARNER

.:

NEW HAVEN,

.

,,~~

"

• .,}~2 -!l t.· 1: '
. . . ..,Pomeroy
102 W . ma')n

W.VA.

..

.

6•

Q

�'

•

•

5-TheDailySentlnel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Monday, Jan 9, !978

&lt;1-The DatlySentinel, Mtddleport·PomerQ)', 0 , Monday, Jan 9,1978

Mi,chigan
• CHHlAGO IUPI J - Mt·
ch1gan 's
Wolvermes
"amazed '' thetr own coach.
J ohnny Orr , and pr oved
agamst Mtn neso ta that
Mtchtgan sun rates as a top
contl!nder w defend Its Btg
Te n
ba s k e tbal l
' hamptonshtp
The Wol vermes downed the
Gophers, rated a leading
conference challenger , 69-65
on national televt510n to garn
a share of the B1g Ten lead
wtth Pu rdue and M1chtgan
State
It
was
a
great
performance by our ktds,"
satd Orr, who spent most of
the week pr eceedmg the
~ame m bed wtth a the flu "I
was amazed at the way we
p!a1ed We did everything
We had to do a lot of
different things, and they
worked It wa s a super
effort •
Another freshman stood out
In th e game, guard Mtke
4

o~tlasts
.

Gophers

' '•
MtGee, recruited from ron test i.tth a &amp;-4 record, and Coach Fred Schaus praised
Omaha by Orr on a special fated a team unbeaten at freshman Drake MorriS fnr
tnp last spr~ McGee led home wtth a ltl-1 record and furnislnng the vtctory spark
'MorriS got us fired up and
the sconng w1th 'll pomts and rated the "surprtse " team m
runnmg," Schaus satd "I
wm praiSe as a great shooter • the B1g Ten
from Mtnnesota coach JIID
Further the Hoosters unt1l was pleased he had that kind
Dlltcher .
last year were v~rtually of game because he hots that
llhnots and Iowa both unbeatable at home, wmrung kind of talent The itrst half
turned m• road vtt tortes to !i6 of S8 games Last year they kind of had us playmg
step mto darkhorse roles m lndtana won five of 13 at ' the1r game, partly because of
the conference chase The home and were unbeaten m the zone, but we made a
Dltm edged Indiana 65-64 m ftve prevtous home games couple of adJustments at the
half "
"hat !lhnms Coach Lou thts season
Mtchtgan I'Jate gut 18
Henson called ·one of our
Dlmo1s tgnored the home
pomts
from star freshman
great ball games," and Iowa court advantage , leadmg by
John);on to bOOst t!s
Earvm
downed Ohio State g7.75 as as many as 12 pomts before
record
for
tile season to III-I ,
sophomore guard Ronme lndtana rallted Rtch Adams
[l)Ster netted 31 potnts
starred for the wmners wtth best m the Btg Ten But
The wtns left the Dim• and 21 pomts, and Henson satd he Coach Jud Heathcote satd the
Hawkeyes tted wttil the Buck- "played by far the best game game was not "a classiC "
"We tned to get ourselves
eyes and HooSlers at J.1 a
he has played for us He dtd
gomg
by pressmg 10 the f1rsl
game behind front run~ng everything - protect the
half,"
Heathcote srud, "but
Purdue , Mtchtgan and mtddle, block shots, and he
we
couidn
't hit on a few fast
Mtchtgan State Wtsconsm
did the JOb when the ball
Our defense
break
passes
Northwestern and MIIUleso.,; game got its toughest "
were wmless for two starts
Purdue had four players m kept us 10 there, and
Ullnots ' wm ranked as the double flflllres, led by Walter W1 sconsm wasn't that strong
btggest upset The llhm
Jordan wt\h 20m an 87-62 wm offenSively At least 11 " as a
headed tnto the HooSier
over Northwestern But vtclory ' '

Toledq wins ninth straight
United Press International
Bowling Green Coach John
Wemert may not have a
11 Super team " th1s year , but
he believes he knows one
"hen he sec'S 11
The Falcons, who have now
lost etght stratght games,
gave 1\ their best shot
Saturday mght at home
agams l backyard rtval
.foledo but 11 JUSt wasn 't
enough
The Rockets, trailmg 33-:1£
at halftime, carne on m the
fmal 20 mmutes for a 61-58
\'lct.nry , keepmg them m the
thtck of the young Mtd·
Amertcan Conference Ull e
chase
The vtctory was the mnlh m
a row for Toledo, which IS 12-2
ov erall and 2-1m th• MAC,
one game behind unbeaten
Northern llltno!S (3-j) ), wh tch
edged Eastern Mtchtgan 78-77
on, Saturda)
Toledo " a super team
and deservtng of 1ts 12-2

record," said Wemert "They
1the Rockets) made believers
ou~ of me, because I thought
we played really well"
Toledo Coach Bob Ntchols
didn 't completely agree wttil
Wemert, although he liked hiS
team's second half effort
"T he dt!feren ce 1n the
~arne was that we played
wtth m~re mte nstty m the
second half," said Ntchols
"But 1t was not one of our best
games"
Ted Wtlhams' 16 pomts led
the Rockets , whose 12·2
record IS Ule1r best start smce
the 1971·72 season
Bowling Green, now 2-9
overall and tl-2 tn the MAC,
was paced by freshman Joe
Fame w1th 16 pomts and
Duane Gray had 15
In other MAC games,
C~ ntral Mtch tga n burted
Kent State 93-61, Ohto
Umverstly downCllllall State
75-71, and Western Mtchtgan
surprised Mtam\ 79-69

Juntor Herman Randle
scored a career htgh 27 pomts
to pace Weste&lt;n to 1ts upset
VIctory over M1am1 The wLn
snapped a !our15ame losmg
streak lor the Broncos and
upped thetr record to 4-&lt;l
overall and 1·1 tn the
conference Mtami fell to 7-4
overall and 2-1 m the MAC
Mtamt 's Archte Aldndge
matched Randle s 27 pomts
while guard John Shoemaker
scored m H for the Redskms
At Athens, Tun Joyce and
Bucky Walden scored 17
pomts each to pace OU over
Ball State
The Bobcats led all the
way, except for a bne! 41-40
Card ma l lead mtdway
through the seco nd half
OU,
however,
qutc kly
regrabbod the lead at
42-41 on a Joyce jumper from
tile wp of the key and held Its
biggest margm of the game
at 67-58 wtth 2 20 to play
Val Brac-ey's 19 pomts and

01ght rebounds sparked
Central Michtgan to vtctory
The Chtppewas streaked to
a 1~ lead seven mmutes mto
the game and were never
behind Kent State fell to 1·10
overall and tl-2 m the leag ue
Burrell McGhee of Kent
State led all scorers wtth 20
pomts
At Cmcmnatl, t he nation 's
second longest home wmrung
streak came to an end wllh
Loutsvllle's 7S.75 wm over the
Uruvers1ty of CmclJUlatl
A Rtck Wtlson to Darrell
Grifftth alley-&lt;&gt;op bucket and
two W1lson free throws with
less than 20 seconds
rema mmg gave the nmth·
ranked Cardmals the come from-behmd tnumph before
17,038
at
Rtver!ront
Coliseum
Loutsville held a 40.39 half·
time edge but fell behmd by
as many as SIX Rotnts oo the
scormg of forward Pat Cum·
mmgs, who had 2l, and 6-11

69~65

SpotJ_Parade
By MlLTON RICHMAN
UP! Spor\1 Ed1tor

now and Ray May came up with the tdea that the members of
the defensive urut could gam strength from each other by
)OIIIUig hands in the huddle. It wasn't a phony tiling; It was
spontaneous and I dldn'tsee anything at aU wroogwlth lt."
One year later, John Ralston left even though he bad just
fmislred gutding the BroncCl!i to a 9..1 record for their best
season In hist&lt;ry unW thiS past ooe.
He didn, leave by choice He left partially because he was
pushed and parUaUy because some of those he had put his trust
m did a b1t of a turmel Job on him
11
''I've never qwt anything I.R my life," says Ralston 1 carne
to Denver wtth the Idea of spendmg 10 years on the job and
bulldmg the best organization m sports, but I came up short "
If Ralston feels any resentment over tile ctrcwnstances
surrounding hiS departure from tile Broncos, 1\ certainly
doesn't show He speaks glowingly about the Bronco players
and about Red Miller, who replaced him as head coach.
"Next to the Bronco owners, Gerry and Alhm Phipps, I'm
the btggest Denver fan there is," he cla!IDS, and it doesn't
sowxl like somethmg he rehearsed.
" I had a vehicle wtthout a drtver," says Ralston, talking
about the quarterback situation with the Broncos when he had
them
"Cfa tg Morton fits in beautifully now We dtdn't have anyone
like him, but I still constder the tune I spent wtth Denver a
wonderful expenence "
In 1973, hts second year, Ralston was named AFC Coach of
tile Year alter tile Broncos posted a 7+2 record following a 5-9
log the season before Since Ieavmg the Brof1COS, he has never
attended a smgle one of thetr games altllough he has seen
every ooe they've played et\her on teleVISion or by looking at
the game fihns.
Ralston has had several offers to coach again at the college
level but has turned down aUof them because he'd Itke another
chance to coach m the pro ranks During the :;eason just
completed, he dtd conSlderable scouting for a number of NFL
teams
Talking about MtUer the other day, a Denver player called
him "one m a million" and satd "I'd go out and die for that
man "
One Bronco satd the same tiJmg about John Ralston a couple
of years ago Would you believe 1\ was the saJ!l!illayer?

NEW ORLEANS ( UPI) - Deep down mSJde, John Ralston IS
a little torn , not sure whether to stay away or come on out and
watch the Denver Broncos next SW1day m what could be their
fmest hour
It's easy to understand why he'd hke to be on hand when they
go up agamst the Dallas Cowboys m Super Bowl XII
As the mdiVldual pr!IDarily responSible lor assembling and
moldmg the team , which w1ll be trymg to wm tts firSt
pro!esswnal football world champtonshtp, John Ralston
wouldn't be human tf hedtdn't wtsh to share that expertence m
some way with lhe Bron c~s even though he's no longer wtth
them
'I'm su ll stewmg as to whether I want to go to the game," he
says, laughmg over the phone from Denver where he's
workmg foc Dale Carnegte's School of Self Improvement while
sttll keepmg his hand 10 football
'Dtck Kttc hen, the Broncs' attorney, called and offered me a
couple of Super Bowl tickets , but the team IS domg so well
Without me m the stands, maybe I'd better slay away," says
Ralston, general manager and head coach at Denver from 1972
through 1976, wh en he he was fired after some of hts players
got up a petitiOn demanding hts dismtssal
Ralstoo came to the Broncos strrught from Stanford where
he coached nme years and employed many of tile same
GAMBLE PAYS OFF
coachm g methods he did at StanfOrd
MILWAUKEE (UPI ) _
apparently has gone ""we!!
One of the things he was btg on was the power of posltlve Bill Travers a left-handed he may not stgn that
thinkmg and when the Broncos began holdmg each other's pttcher for 'the Milwaukee guaranteed co ntract but
hands m the huddle m 1973 people started wondermg how far Brewers, srud Sunday mght mstead play out hiS current
Ralston was gomg to go wtth all tilts college rah-rah busmess his recent operation that he contract and become a free
They thought It was hts tdea, but 1t wasn't Linebacker Ray wouldn 't consent to unttl hts agent m 1980
May was the one responstble
con tract was guaranteed
"It's a gamble," srud Tra·
"The defense was strugglmg at the time," says Ralston , "It ' through 1979 was
a ver s " It 's JU St hke the
wasn't anywhere near as successful as the 'Orange Crush' 1s "gamble"
gamble of gomg m (for the
-------~~------------ Now, he says, the Dec. 30 operatton) . But I probably
operation to have a nerve ill will s1~n "
ann . I . I
center Bob Mtller, who had a a row for XaVIer , the flrst his
II me m 11 ye ars the
game-htgh 23 xavter ended a
Musketeers have won hve
10-ga me losmg s treak to
stra tght games
Dayton Saturday mght,
Ntck Daruels led tile xavter
ruppmg the Flyers 58-56 on a
m scormg wtth 25 pomts,
basket by freshman Ga ry
while Steve Sp1very added 14
Massa Wtth two seconds
·
JIID
Paxson scored 20 pcants
remammg
to
lead
Dayton and Terry
Massa 's wmnmg goal came
Ross had 12
after the Musketeers, who
In other Saturday games, lt
had trailed by 12 pomts with
was Io wa 87 Ohto State 75 ,
11 mmutes left m the game
Muskmgum 64 Demson 52,
held the ball for the tmat trom
Walsh 70 Ohio Dommtcan 61,
the 2 19 mark
Name Brand Furniture
The vtctory was tl]e fifth m Wilmington 94 Manchester
(lnd ) 72 , Pomt Park (Pa )73
and Floor Coverings
Dyke 72, Kenyon 81 Urbana
71 ; Martella 103 W &amp; J (Pa. )
• Lane
73, Capttal 57 Ohio Wesleyan
Frigidaire
55, Cedarville 75 Mercy
(N Y ) 71; Central State 65
• Samsonite
Wnght State 57, Youngstown
Coach Larry Staverman , cut Sta te 96 Ste ubenvill e 60 ,
a 24-pomt de!tclt to e~ght m Defia nce 85 Bluffton 82 ,
•Hoover
the !mal penod before Ios1ng Akron 84 Western lliinms 74 ,
to tne Bucks Scott Wedman Ashland 68 Radford (Va ) 67,
and John Kuester each Otterbetn 73 Wittenberg 57,
'T""'I,.....
scored 20 pomts for Kansas Mount Uruon 97 Hetdelberg
City while Bnan Wmters led 86; and Wooster 80 Ohio
the Bucks w1lil 22
Northern 65

JANUARY SALE
For Terrific Buys and
January Savings
Shop Baker Furniture

Celtics lose anoth.e r, 94 to 91
By MARK fRIEDMAN
UP I Spurts Wnter'
As Tom "Saleh" Sanders
strugg led to straighten o ut
hts Celttcs ' woes, Lloyd Free
dtd h1s " Boston Strangler"
lffiltatlon Sunday afternoon rn
front a natwnal television
aud1ence

Free, who repeatedly does
111 the lowly Cell!cs, scored 11
of hiS 20 potnl&lt; m the fourth
quarter to stave off a late
Boston raUy and preserve a
94·91 trwmph f nr the
Pluladelphta 76ers
"It 's only my !:iecond game
as coach, " sa1d Sanders, who
replaced 1om Hemsohn l ast~
week "But I saw some mce
"' s1g:ns out there todav Our

guys ra n very well "
Sanders was parltcularly
pleased after hts Ce lttcs
ra lli ed from an 18-pom t
delic ti , 53-35, w1th 3 12
r em a m1ng 111 the secon d
quarter and closed to w 1thm
one, 74-73 , at the th1rd
quarter 's end
Jo Jo White scored mne
pomts and Curtis Rowe had
seven m the third pertod
while tile Boston defense was
holding Philadelphia to JUSt
16 po mts, temporanly
hushmg a sellout crowd of
1R,276 at the SpectrUm
But Free broke loose m the
final penod and helped the
Stxers open a four-game l ead

College seQ res
Bv Un•ted Preu International
~ East

A IC 97 Arohers t 57
As!o mpfn 83 Cent Conr) 74
Bloomsb g 75 Ci a non 73

Bs n St 81 , we~ lf r eld 67
Conn 60 New Hamp 50
Oct 101. Gelt ysbg eo
Ore~el 90, RtON 17
DuQuesne 54 Penn St 48
Geotwn 72 St John s 61
Hmltn 93 Rbrt s Ws l yn 66
Jun ~ I a 80 Albr tgh l 72
Kurgs 71 LI U 67
M&lt;t rnern F DU 79 (ofl
MIT 71 Kr ng spom1 6J

Mnt cl r St 84 Rma po 80
Penn 7 ~ Dartmouth 51
Pr nce10n 83 Harvard 64
Prov tdence 81 Ca m sliJs 77
Rt hstr 9\ 1\lteg tieny 70
Rulger s 78, Mass 74
Sf Jos Pa 72 , Loy Ia 58
Temple SO, Bucknel l 69
Tutts 81 Spnngt 1el d 76
upsala 79 Wm Patrsn 69
Vttanova 102 Bsn Coli 76
w Md 87, Messtah 67
Wstmn str 86 D1c knsn 54
W1dnr 64 Crng1e M l ln 48
Yal e 70 Clark 66

South
Auburn 74 Vandy 61
Cer)tre 74 Berea 68
ClemSon 79 So Car 5!!
E Car 58 Wm&amp;Mary 56
Fla St 87 Tulane 85
l=urrnan 101 Mar shall 77
Kentuc ky 86, Flonda 67

L SU 96 Gcorgta 78
Navy 70, Md Ba1tCo 60
North Car 76 va 61
N C Char 61 N Ortns 60
No car 51 74 bukc 50
RoanKe 83 Stheastrn 57
Wake For-est 84 Md 75
W Lt b 1061 Dam NY 6'1
Wnstn S&amp;lm 80 Nrfl k 74
Midwes1
Bradley 86 SIU 81
Buena Vtsta Bl Smpsn 66
Bufler 89, lnd Cent 81
Cpll 57 0 wesleyan 55
Cdr'o' l 75, Mrcy NY 71
,
Cen t Ia 82 MOnmouth 81
Cent Mlch 93 Ken t 61
DePau l 93 Loyola 73
DePa(.lw 82 Wabash 73
Detr o1 1 122 Buffalo 81
HII Sdl e 61 Frr ls 51 57
I l imo's 65 Ind iana 64
lnd St.. 79, W Tex Sf 63
Iowa 87 OhtO Sf 75
Kansas 71 MISSOUr i 67
Kenyon 81, Url:)ena 71
LOUtSVI 7U, C1nC1 75
Mr1etta 103, Wash&amp;Jeff 73
MtCh St 74 W1s 63
M1ch Tech 80, M lnn Oul 62
Neb n , Kansas St 63
N M Sf 91. Drake 88

,

No 111 78 E M1ch n
No Mtch 82 Wyne St 74
O hiO U 75 Ball 51 71
Pur'due 87 Nrthwstrn 62
Tledo 61 Bwlng Grn 58
Walsh 70 Oh10 Dom 61
W M•ch 79 Mtam ' 0 69
Xav1er 58 Dayton 56
YmJ s fwn St 96 Sfubnvl 60
Southwest
East Tex 74 Wtle y 70
I.. a mar 58 W1 S Prksde 50
l a Col i 55 IJ T EP 54
M1dwstrn 49 Cent St .46
Okla 71 Okla 51 63
Ok C1t y 98 Te x Arl 87
0 Rbrl s 62 Wchta St 54
RegiS 90, N M Hilntls 71
Rtc e Sl. l3avlor 80
SMU 68 TCU 65
Texas 101 , Texas Tech 86
W N M 72 , Col Mmes 53

west

Adams 51 82. W mnster 79
Btola 58 Azusa Pac 57
BOISe 51 77 , Mont 59

BYU 85 Utah 51 84
Cal Bapl 103 LeTrnE'a \J 87
Gnzga 67 , No Ar 1Z 55
Idaho 51 93 Mont 51 80
Nev Reno 88 51a Clara 76
New Me111 CO 102, UNLV 98
Oregon 74 Stanford 6!
Pac Ore 67 Ida Cotl 62

Pac 1-uth 88 Whtlman 70
PI Loma 82 , Tenn Tmp te 77
Prtlnd U 79 , Pepprdne 69
S 0 St 77, Ariz St 74
S F 111 St Marys 87
5 F St 69 Hywrd Sl 66
so Cal 81 , wash 73
U S Inti 16, Grace 75
Weber St 72, Idaho 63
W Wt'ISh 67 Cent Wsh 64
Wh1lt1er 81 , Redlands 56
••

Sunday's Games
East

Geo Wash 73, Fttt 71
Holy Cron 78 Ar m y 76
John Jay 88, M Evers 74
South
Ala 16, Miss Sf 59
Va Tech 94, St Bonny 89
Midwest
Iowa St a• Colo 64
MICh 69, Mlnn 65
Southwest
Ark 84, Houston 65
West

UCLA 70, Wash St 55

In 17931 the first successful
balloon Dtght m the Uruted'
States was made by Jean
Blanchard
over
Philadelphta.
In 1861, MISSISSIPPI seceded
from the Umon

over the tdle New York
Kntcks 10 the Atlanttc
Conference
In ot her NBA ga mes,
Denver defea ted Ch tcago,
109-104, Indiana edged Los
Argeles, l04-l03 Washmb'lon
mpped New Jer sey, 99-98,
Portland downed New
Orleans, 122-100, Seattle
trunmed Golden State, 99·91,
and Mtlwaukee topped
Kansas Cny, 133-12.1
Nugge ts 109, Bulls 104
Dan Issei seored 20 pomts
and held ex-teammate Artts
Gtlmore to JUSt 21 as Denver
scor ed tis s1xth str atght
v1ctor y Davtd Thompson
fm tshed wtth a gan'te-htgh 23
pomts, and rookte Anthony
Roberts added 18
Pace rs 104, Lakers 103.
Two clutch free throws by
Danny Roundfleld "'th 15
seconds to play preserved the
Pa cers ' vt~to ry over th e
Lakers John Wtlhamson's 24
pomls and Rtcky Sobers' 20
ensured that Indiana never
tratled, but Los Angeles three
times got w1thm one pomt
Bullets 99, Nets 98:
Tom Henderson's 21l-foot
JUmp shot at the buzzer gave
Ute Bullets a thnllmg vtctory
over New Jersey Henderson
grabbed a rebound of a
m1ssed shot by Kevm Porter
wtth f1ve seconds r emauung
and drove the length 'bf the
court for hts shot The Nets
had taken a 9&amp;-97 lead wtth
I 31 to go when Darnell
Hillman converted only one
of three free tilrows
Blazers 122, Jazz 100
Portland, wtth L10 nel
Hollms sconng , 'll pomts,
registered 1ts 39th straight
VlCtory at home With an easy
wm over the Jazz. Maur1ce

Loca s scored 15 of his 17
pomts m a thtrdi)eriOd bhtz
that buned the Jazz
Sonics 99, Waniors 91 :
Marvm Webster scored 17
pomls and grabbed 17
reho· nds and tile Somes held
off " late rally by Golden
State m the fmal mmutes for
th~ vtctory Fred Brown, wttll
16 pomts, a nd Jack Siluna

NOW OPEN

and Denrus Johnson wtth 15
each backed Webste r 's
scormg Rtck Barry led the
Warraors With 20 pomt.s and
Nate Williams scored 14
Bucks 133, Kings 123:
The Kmgs, under new

OF MASON
PHONE 773-5536

rural fire units
COLUMBUS - Grants of
up to $4,000 are available to
upgrade rural flre depart·
ments m Ohio through a
program admirustered by the
Dtvtston of Forestry ol the
Ohio Department ol Natural
Resources (ODNR ).
Thts year the Forestry
DIVISIOn wtll dtst nbute
$'.11,170 to qualifymg com·
murutles from funds made
avatlable to Ohio by the U S
Department of Agnculture.
The federal Rural Develop·
ment Act autilomes up to 50
percent !undmg to upgrade
rural fire departments
servmg commurultes under
10,11011 people or groups of
small commumttes that have
JO med together to serve over
10,000 people
The federal matchtng funds
may be used to purchase
equipment,
to
t ram
flrd lghters, or to pay
miscellaneous costs related
to orgamzmg 1 a new ftre
department
Accordtng to Ernest
Gebhart, Chtef of the Dtvtston
ol Forestry, 149 rural fire
departments m Oh10 have
recetved asststance Slnce the
program was IJUttated 1n
1975 The total mcludes 12
new departments orgamzed
wtth the help of a grant
"It is !IDportant that rural
!tre departments be con·
tinuaUy upgraded m order to
be effective m ftghtmg rural
ftres a~d keepmg losses at a
mtn1mum." Gebhart sa1d

These departments asstst
the Division of Forestry m
prov1dmg ftre protection for

NOW OPEN

GINO'S
OF MASON·
PHONE 773-5536

over 81&gt; mUhon acres of
forest and graSBiand m Ohto
Appllcattons and gutdelines
for applymg for the grants
may be obtamed by wrihng to
the DtvJSton of Forestry, Ohto
Department of Natural
Resources, Fountam Square,
Columbus 43224. Applications
must be returned· to the
DIYiston of Forestry by Feb
15 to qualify for the program
Saturday 's

Ohto College
Basketball Results
Umted Pre ss International
Central M 1chtgan 93 Kent St.
61
Wester M tchtgan 79 M lam l69
Musklngum 64 Demson 52
Walsh 70 Oh10 Domini can 61
Ohio U 75 Ball State 71
Wtlmmgton 94 Manchester
(lnd) 72
Pomt Park (P8) 73 Dyke 12
Iowa 87 Ohio St 75
Kenyon 81 lk"bllna 71
Marietta 103 W &amp; J 731
Capt tal 57 Ohto Wesleyan 55
Cedarv tll e 75 M ercy ( NY) 71
Central' Sf 65 Wnghl St 57
Youngstown St 96 Steuben
v1lle 60
Toled o 61 Bowling Green 58
Deftance BS Bluffton 82
Loutsv!lle 78 Ctncmnatt 75
Akron 84 W lll 1no1s 74
Ashl and 68 Radford (Va) 67
Otterbem 73 Wtttenberg 57
Mount Un1on 97 He1delberg 86
Wooster 80 Ohto Northern 65
Xavter 58 Dayton 56
Baldwin Wallace 95 Oberl tn
84

loti

Wash &amp; Lee Tourney
Sa lt sbury St 76 Case West 72
cha mp

OLGA MARRIED
MOSCOW
(UP I )
Wearmg a wedding gown she
bought m the Umted States,
Olga Korbut , 22, th e
dimmuttve gymnast who " oh
three gold medals and the
hearts of mtlllons at the 1972
Muntch Olymptcs. marrted
l.eomd llorkevtch, 28, the
lead smger of the Sovtet
Uruon's Ieadmg pop mus1c
group Saturday mght
Con ftrmmg tilat she has
gtven up performmg I or good,
Olga satd she would become a
coach - somethmg she
vowed two years ago she
would never do "I dream of
being an actress,'' she satd at
tilat tiiDe

announced
ROCK

SPRINGS

Pnnc1pal James 01ehl has
announced the second SI K
weeks..honor roll at the Metgs
H1gh School
Makmg a grade of " 6" or
above H\ all thetr subjects to
be ltsted on the roll were
~th
Grade Tam my
Adk1ns
Regan
Arnold,
Conme Batley . Joyce Baker,
Richard Baker, Tammy
Blake, Rtchard Brown. Kelly
Brown, B1l l Brown 1ng , Wayne
Capehart , Oavtd Demonsky.
Robert Duckworth, L t nda
Eason , T tna East, Sheila
Fetty , Teresa Fetty, Jerry F1elds James Gheen , Kevtn
Gtbbs, Araka Gra te, Robtn
Harder, Jayne Hoefl tch ,
Floyd Holl iday, Shei la Horky,
Jean Horton , Sherrl Hvsell
Joyce
Janey,
Cheryl
Johnson, Angela Kennedy,
Brian Ktng Lt nda Kovalchik
Robb 1e Landers, Anlta Lee
Terry
Mayes .
Chris
M cKinney , Mary Mtller , Jeff
M oore, e:arol Morr1s, Steve
Ohlinger, Eltzabeth Pernr'i,
Joan Roberts~ - L,.ort Rupe

~ Ange a nclalr Ctndy Smith,

John Staats, Theresa Starr
Tammte Stobart , Camille
S~ndell Ba rba ra Thomas
Ja ne Walker , Darla W1lco x,
Davtd
Wtlkes,
Lt nd a
Will tams, Darla Willi amson
lOth Grade - Soma Ash,
Ton1a Ash Beth Bartrum,
Julie Btron, Dan Carman,
Chns ttn e Ebersbach, Joy
Edwards. James F1sh, Mark
Hood 1 Bruce HyselL J~nell

Kelly, Cttff Kennedy, Robert
~letn, Mane Lega r , Rena

Lefebre, Floyd McClellan ,
Scot t M cK 1nney,
Patty
Parker , Joe Ou1vey , Ka thie
Qulvey Tma Sm ith , Gena
Snowde n, Paul Sturgeon,
Lisa Thomas Larry Tucker,
K1m Warner , Sea n Wd l, Tern
Yeauger
1lth Grade - Jana Burson,
Greg Becker, Joy Beaver
Gary Basham , Ela1ne Barn
hart, Lort Clonch, V1cky
Hysel l. T1na Miller , Beckl
Fry, Jul ie Byer
Tammy
Charl es , Ttna Co l ema n
Dav td Coll1ns, Joyce Cook,
Juan1ta
Corb tt
D1ana
Dav1dson
L 1nden Dunn

Pal ty

DyO',

Bev erly

Fau lkner, Doug Gloyd, Judy
HaJJ
Sar'Jdl
Ham1lton
Beverly
Hoffman ,
R1 ck
Hovatter, Mary John son
Tam m y Johnson , Charles
Kennedy, Kevtn Kmg Julie
Kit chen, Ketl h Krautter,
Ke1 t h
Landers
Mark
Magnotta, James Mornson,
Tod Morrow Vaferte Matson ,
Uretta McKmney , Daleanna
Li4'tl e, Beverly Mcla m, Ltsa

E xperts all across Amenca are predtctmg a maJor
clectnc power shortage in the earl y 1980's
That bemg the case, why are so many of the
people who would be most affected by a power
shortage so seemmgly unconcerned!
We thmk Mark Twatn summanzed the
answer to that m hts lmle statemen t
about the bull
You see. at the power conipany, we're
responsible for supplymg you power
now and 1n the future We have that bull
n ght by the tail
And we know that demand
electriCity 1s mcreasmg faster than
supply.
We also know that It takes 6 to
10 years to build a power plant. at least two
years of whtch are spent in gettmg permtts
and licenses
'
Some people believe that conservation will
bail us out. But the truth Is, even wtth conservation. we
mu~t build more power plants to see us through the years ahead
We need your support and understanding. Because the nme to face up t'() the energy
shoit&lt;l)!\Of the 1980s IS naht nQ\\'
So let's get ti11S bull by
the horn~
Working togethens the only way.

QL! ·
nio PowerComoany

May 4
Veterans
Memortal Hospttal disnlaved
new
nuclear
medtcal
eqUipment.
May 5- Syracuse Vtllage
made plans for opemng Its
new sw1mmmg pool •
May 6 - An ertenstve
heartng testing program was
conducted for Meigs Semor
Ctllzens by an "Impact" umt
May 7-Susan Goebel and
Kevm Lee Barton were
named queen and king of the
Eastern Htgh School semor
prom

MAY
May 1- wsses were set at
$400,000 as the result of a lire
which~estroyed the nearby
New
aven Ben Franklin
Store.
May 2 - Barbara Kmght
began her law practice m
Metgs County Pomeroy
Counctl gave !mal approval
to a $!i permtssive auto
license tax
May 3 - Debbi Buck,
Pomeroy, was named Gtrl ol
the Year for Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter of Beta Stgma Pht
Snronty ·

High school cage scores
Gar away 55 Guernsey Cath 50
Hardin Northern 72 McCom b

Saturday
Untted Press International
Akr S 79 Trtway 62
Alltance 66 Youngs Rayen 60
Amanda Clearcreek 80 Col
Brtggs 59
Antwerp 60 Crestview 30
Bellbrook 65 W Carrollton 56
Ben Logan 54 Northwestern

63

Houston 69 Waynesf ield 58

lnd1an Va llev S 70 Skvvue 59
Kett
Fa irmont
W 79
Northmont 61
lakendge (Mich) 67 Maumee
37

Lima Sr 51 Wapakoneta

45

Cte Bapt Chri st

74

Mans

Marl1ngton 75 Jackson 67
Marysvtlle 40 Buckeye Valley

Yl

Meadowdale 66 Kett Al ler 65
Mla m• Valley 55 Mldd Christ

•

Col E 64 Mount Vernon 59
Cos_!1oc1on 68 Rtdgewood 47
Cuyahoga Falls 70 Kent
Roosevelt 64
Danvil le 79 Centerburg 58
Day Col Wh1te 81 Ltma Cent
Cath 55
Day Jeff 55 Eaton 49
Day Roth 69 Yellow Sprmgs
61
Defiance 65 Bryan 46
Delphos 51 Johns 79 Wauseon
42
E Cle Shaw 84 Cle JF K 78

Eucltd 81 Willoughby S 60

Fa1rborn Baker 71 Day
Stebbins 53
Fa 1rflejd Un1on 65 Greene
v1ew 62
Federa l Hocking 60 Miller 59
Fort Loram1e 74 Mm ster 70

Sherne Osborn e,
Pa y11e
Vtck•
P tckens, Robert Ptckett ,
Ruthanna Pla nts, Danese
Nas h ,

Kimbe rl y

Qua ll s, Stephani e Radford ,
R,honda Reuter, Rtfa Rousey,
Rtck
Pr i dd y,
Ch arles
Sauters ,
Lt sa
Scaggs,
Ama nda Stsson, John Sm 1th ,
John Stout Cra tg SViltck .

12th Grade - Jeff Arnold,
Rita Bailey, Dale Bing ,
Bever ly
Bts hop , Cat hy
Blaettnar, Rtchard Blevms,
Tracy Burdette, Rex But
cher . Marcta Cale Ma ry
Carswell , Ron ' Casc t, Jeff
Couch
Patr1 c1a
Cors1,
T ammy DeBoa rd , Robert
Delong , Karen DeMoss,
Tony Dill, Marc1 a Dilla rd,
Dora
Doerfer.
Oenn ts
Donohue, T1m Ebersbach,
Sa lly Ervm, Pam Evans,
Barbara Fe tty , Patricia
Fttch Charl es Fal l rod, Becky
Fry , Den 1se Garnes Joe
Garnes VIcky German, Carl
Gheen Jr , Peggy Glrolaml
Charles Hall , Sheila Harman
Thomas Harper, Kelly Hawk
Fa1 th
Herman ,
Marcia
Hol comb, Judy Holl tday, Ttm
Hood, Candace Hooper ,
Laur a
Hoove r ,
Randy
Houdashelt, Kathy Howard,
Rhonda Hudson,
Penny
Hysell Ray Janey, Susan
Kennedy, Kevm Jewell
Helen K1ng , Paula Kloes,
Martha Krawsczyn , Chery l
Le Febre, Sherrt L ushe r ,
Mark M ichael , Jane Mtller,
Sonya M tller, Bonme Morns
Danny Marris, Tam1e Mill
Iron , Robert Nakamoto, John
Nelson, Mark O' Dell, Lance
Oltver, Pam Powers1 L1sa
Prater , Rosa linda Qualls ,
Rilla Rh oades , Randa II

Roa ch, S1ephan•e Rou ght ,

Nlfa
Ru sc he!,
Tammy
Stmms Loree Sisson, Diane
Smtih, Melody Snouffer ,
Rob1n Sn
den , 1;,,nm.or

Soulsby,

Wdhamson , Jennifer
Denms Wol fe , Susan Wrlnnt_
Lori Wyne

Count the Amana quality Features!

nail gallon mtlk containers and tall quart bottles
• LARGE t;;t\PACITY - plenty ot space for a large
FAMtilY
•

• 2 AUTOMATIC COLO CONTROLS- One for the

freezer one lor the refngerator Set one con hoi
mdependent ot the other
• SMOKEV, SEE·THROUGH MEAT
PAN - RemOvable lor easy
cleaning

• STOR MOR ' DOOR SHELVES -

By MARK FRIEDMAN
UPI Spurts Writer
Cincinnati and Nevada-Las
Vegas P,roved to be very
courteous hosts Saturday
rught, llut their guests were
most rude
The Bearcats had their 69'""mgstre•kathome
gamewu••
•
stopped when vtsltmg, ninth·
rated wwsvtlle used Darren
Griffith's electrlfymg, Alley
Oop field goal and Rick
Wilson •s two free' throws to
grab a 7S.75 vtctory.
Later on in tile evening, the
UNLV Rebels lost their ftrst
game of the year agamst 15
nctones and bad a 72-tlame
home court streak snapped
when New Mexico's Marvin
Johnson scored 19 of hts 31
pdints In the second half to
spark a 102-98 upset
"It's just a little something
we practice," said Louisville
Coach Denny Crwn, casually
disrmssing the Importance of
Griffith's basket.
made,
addedcoach Gale

Catlett.
Upstart New MeXICO used a
shrewd game plan by Coach
Norm Ellenberger to snap
UNLV's 12·game streak.

• AMANA WALL TO·WALl OLIDE OUT SHELVES

-four shelves two pf which gl1de out so you can
eastly reach tlems stored at !he back

------------...------------··-----.
1

For l fesh vege tables Removable

tor easy cleantng

LIMITED TIME ONL VI Don t m1ss th1s opportuntty to save on the
Amana Energy Saving Refngerator- and keep e.rJoytng money
savtng year after year COME IN TODAY!

INGEL'S FURNITURE

H
A

R
D

RIPLACIMINT

GUARANTEE!

w

BUY NOWa'

A

AT

R

E

June 8 -

public n.-ccphun in Pomeroy

H

A mock tornado

htl Met gs Cou nty wtlh
emergen cy
umts
and
Veterans Memortal Hospital
staff members carrying out u
practace session
June 9 - Eastern Local
Board of Education members
made plans to put anothe1
operatmg tax levy before

upon her retirement
June :!II - Another mectmg
was held to atr ptublen" of
the proposed Cllfl on coal
erushmA and lomlln~ !nctllty
June Z!l - lt w11s 11nnounecd
that tho Southeastern Ohto
F.mergency Mc'lllrul Set vice
111 Mctgs Co unty wnuhl
l"Ont 1nuc un Its p1 cscnt level
at least lot a whtle longer
June 30 - Pearl Deem. 74 ,
dted 111 tt fire which struck hi s

Carmel hom e
JULY
July l - 1t wu.s um1uunccd
lot the first Ume II1 t\u cc
yea rs an Ohto l' mp\oyment
Servtcc offi ce would be
opened in l'omctoy Cnrl
Dentwn wus mstnllccl as
prestdenl of the Mlclcllcport ·
J'mncroy Hutu ry Clu\&gt;
July 2 - S) rncusc Vdlngc
o!flclllls dug in on plnns r,,.
the .July 4th dedlealum of the
town's swauuum~ puol
July 4 - llutland nnd
H.o c1ne held commumt y
cc lcbrot&amp;
UJIS a nd the t.ond()n
Poo l wos dcdteuted in
elaborat e ce remont cs ut,
Syrucusc
J uly 5 - 1he lempcrutme
lut 100m Pommoy
Ju ly 6 - Andy 1.) le&lt;,
count} ~nmc protector, was
s pea ker
lot som t• 2U
yo ungsters uttendwg tht!
cxpundcd nutrtlion day can1))
at the Middleport Pool
July 7 - l'wo, three und
four-ycar -c1ld:.; took swtm mmg lessons forlhe!l rst lltne
ut the Mtddleport Poo l.
July 9 - 11re shenff's
department mvesugated u
breakmg und cnlenng nt the
Grea t Bend Bethlehem
Church
July 10- Announcemenl was
made of the clostng of the

voters

Jones Boy s Ston•ln Pomc1oy

Jun e 10 - Marvtenc Beegle,
Portland, was recognized for
her rol e as a httle league
coach. Gov James Rhodes
met w1th some 75 commumty
and busmess leaders
the
Metgs Inn to diSCUSS the
pr oblems of the county
Rebecca Kouns and Mary
Kra wsczyn of Metgs CoW11Y
won top awardll at the 54th
annual commencement of the
Holzer Medical Center School
of Nursing.
June 11 - Lori Ann Wood
wa s installed as honored
queen of Bethel 62 , In ·
ternatlonal Order of Job's
Daughters
June 13 - Stx candtdates
announced for the title of Big
Bend Weekend Rega tta
Queen
June 14 - Construction of a
brtdge over the Ohio Rtver at
Ravenswood progressed
June 16 - James Kunath
was shot at his Route l
Langsville home and the
KWJath home was leveled by
hre .
June 17 - Restdents lmed
the streets ol Pomeroy and
Middleport to view the annual
Regatta parade Nte se l
Duvall of Reedsville was

followmg a labor dtspute
July 12 - The Pomeroy
Emergency Squad began •
successful public fund dme
for the purchase
u new
vehtcle
July 13 - Dt James Conde ,
a native, returned to pructicc
medicine m Mmgs County
July 15 - Tax valuation on
farm land h) Metgs County
wus ordered Increased
Middleport 's Nuney Wullacc
wus first place winner tn the
jumor dlv tston of majorettes
at Camp Crescendo
July 17 - Allte and Puu l
Simon ent ertained Pomeroy
Chamb er of Comm erce
members at lhetr Route 7
home
July 18 - A pubh c
m ultiphasic health clime got
underway In Middleport
July 19 - The M01 gs
Co unty Com miSsioners were
adv tsed they had been gtven a
grant of $100,000 for the
lTeatlon of from 15 to 20 new
jobs through the CETA
program
July 20 - Hurry Hewitt, 26.
ht s wife, 1-tnda, 28 and
Marjorie Wyatt, 44 , dted m a
wtld shooting at u Mtddleport
bar

at

t~e

•

.,r

named
new
regatta
22 -were
Railroad
9!•_
e en
~
~ ~_
atJuly
Hobson
closed tracks
off lor
June 16-=11lim15urSffof!ff"'epalr
to dampen the annual frog~
July 25 - William Jewell
jumpmg contest Winners resigned as hea d basebaU
were Jack Ambrose, derby, coach at Southern as dtd Mrs
John Young, senior divisiOn, Lee Lee , vocal music
jumping, and Kimberly teacher Middleport planned
Akers,
jumpingtwirled, the
purchase
a radar
guns
June junior
19 - Batons
July
:1£ - ofThe
sheriff'
boats raced and the hlstortcal department investigated the
soCiety staged a successful shootmg death of Ha lph
11 heritage Sunday'' to wrap
Brewer, near Stiversvtlle
on the Big Bend Regatta
July 'll - Meigs mmes
Weekend
were closed by rovtn g
June 20 - Charles L pickets
Dowler was given a new
July 28 - Resident~ were
three year contract as asked to help control trash
superintendent of the Metgs contalller areas about the
weal School Dtstnct Kellee county .
July 30 - Even Sheriff
Burdette, Paula Elchmger
and June Wamsley received James Proffitt appealed to
the March of Dimes the public for better order
scholarships Dav1d Smith around the tra sh container
resigned from the Eastern areas in the eounty
Local Board. of Education.

r·····-·······----=·-·------------~

CROSS HARDWARE
Open Mon.thru Sat .
9:00to5:DO

7' tl 2nd Ave.

June 21 - The Metgs
County Comml.5sioners approved plans for a new multi·
purpose butldifig
June 22 - Mal')' Mora and
Lester Jeffers were named to
attend leadershiP and
ciu•enshlp programs ut the
National t·li Center m
WashtnRIOn D C
June 23-Southern Board of
Education members asked
for ~ state cash analysts m
case schools would have to be
closed lor lack of funds
June 24 - Six students 111
various health fields arrtVed
lo begin B seven week s!tl)' 1n
Metgs Counl) to get
aequamlL'&lt;i w1th rural hfc and
to curry out health proJects
June !6 - Mrs yuma
Plkk oja ,
bookmobile
supervi,.,r. was honored wtth

reunwn at the Meigs Inn
June 4 - Women who had
'been members of Senior G1rl
&amp;·out Troop 221 u! Middleport
me~ at the home or Mrs
Phy llts Hackett for a reunton
Middleport Htgh SchOol
Alumni held their reunion
wtth Kellee Jo Burdette bcmg
awarded the Susan G Pttrk
Memorial Scholarship and
the Btg Bend Minstrel Assn
prov1dmg entertauunent
June 6 - A pettllon asktng
for a referendum vote on the
»permiSSIVe auto license tax
wa s ftled w1th Pomeroy
Vtllage Counctl
June 7 - Frank W Porter,
Sr, wa s drowned whtl e
flshmg at a farm pond near
Racine Special election s
were held wath Metgs U&gt;col
School Dtstrlct vot ers
renewing a levy arid levies In
the Eastern weal Dlstrtc1
and for the mentally reta1 dcd
being defeated

Durmg a patr of llmeout.. in
the warung mmutek; he told
his players , "Fmd Marvm."
Th wbo 11 1 d 110di
e
s sene •
ng
"oot'
Mar'"n
Johnson
and
""' ..,
"
hittmg him wtth clutch passes
down the stretch for the
shockmg upset Johnson hit
sh
SIX o1s m a row a1 one pmnt
m the second half and miSsed
onlyoneshotafterhalftime to
wind up Wltil 31 points
"When Marvtn gets a hot
ha~d, you better find a way to
get htm the ball, " sa td
Ellenberger
In \ other Saturday action,
topranked Kentucky whipped
Flortda, 86-67, No 2 North
Carolma defeated Vtrgmta,
76-6!, seventh..-anked lndtana
State handled West Texas
State, 79~3. Illmots startled
10th.-anked Indtana , 65-64,
Ka:nsasedgedMissourt, 71 _.,7,
WakeForestupsetMaryland ,
114-75 , Georgetown topped St
John's, 72-61, Providence
dumped Canislus, 8z.72 , and
San
FranCISCO
coasted by ,aSt, _
Mary'
s of Gahforma,
111 7
In Sunday action, third·
ranked Arkansas trounced
Houston 84-65 ftfth.-anked
UCLA drubbed Washmgton
State 70-55 and Holy CroSB
rupped Ar~y 7g.76

hold

• TWO SMOKEY SEE THROUGH

CRISPERS -

~=·~~~·~~:

b'.:'~: War~~~~~~· V.

ThiS Amana Mode l T 16 uses only t08 KWH of
electricity per month wtll'1 the 3·poslllon Energy
Saver Con trol set on LO Tha,t s Energy Savmg
performance th at exceeds the rig id 1979 State of
Cali forn ia Energy Standards

champions returned for

'Cats home
streak stopped

IS

Terr i VIning, Jtll

• AMANA 3·POS1TION ENERGY SAYER
CONTROL -le ts you adj uSt to thP. ,.,. , , " '""
humidity 1n your horne to ,_ch ~ve
~ .
maxtmum energy savmgs And
- [A!] savmg energy sa11es you money

• FREE·O -FROST - freezer and ref ngerator
sections No defrosllng ever
,

May 18 - Paula Etchmger
Mtdd Fenwick 69 Day was named valedictorian and
Ca r l1sle 62
Sandrtt Garnes, sa lutatorian,
New Bremen 66 Saint Henry
of the Meigs Htgh grttduattng
55
Oregon Clay 81 Tol Waite 53 class
Ottawa Glandorf 75 AllenE 4t
May !9 - Scott Wolfe was
Ottov ille 73 Delphos Jeff 52 named va led tctof!a n ttnd
Parkway 74 Ohio City 50
Perry 62 N Canton Hoover 51 Kevm Wtllfurd , salutatorian,
of th e Southern Ht gh
Ports 62 I ron ton 54
Ports ND 58 Ports Clay 44
graduatmg class.
R1 ver Valley 52 Elgin 51
May 20 - Bob Haggerty,
Rocky Rtver 57 Cle Rhodes 55 Mtddleport buSinessman,
Solon 89 Bedford 59
became a $100,000 wmner in
Str ongsville 75 Independence
70
the Ohto Lottery
Tol St Johns 64 Tol Wh•tmer
Ma)' 21 - Metgs bandsmen
43
were honored at the a rmual
Tnmty 68 W Reserve Aca 61
banquet
Upper Sc1oto Va lley 67 Rtdg e
mont 58
May 22 - Carolyn Harper
Urbana 58 Piqua 33
and
Susan Goebel were
Vanda lta SO Gra ham 41
valedtctonan
a nd
sa·
Wal sh Jesu1 t 69 Twinsburg 45
lutatorian, respectively, of
Wa yne Trace 74 Spencervi ll e
4t
the Eastern Htgh School
Waynesv ille 56 Qakwood 52
graduatmg class
Wh ee lersburg 73 Ports W 4e
May 23 - Bill Young
Xenia 73 Oay Cham Ju l 64
recetved a plaque as Metgs
Jaycee of the year Mid·
The Almanac
dleport ofhctais made street
repatr program plans. Those
United Press International
att
end in g a non·smokmg
Today IS Mmiday, Jan 9,
the nmth day of 1978 wtth 306 chmc graduated
May 25 - Anthony Louts
to follow
The moon ts between t\s Cost ello , Radcliff , was
new pbase and ftrst quarter. electrocuted at Metgs Mme
No 2 Francis H Klem for
The mornm g sta r s are
Mercury, Venus, Mars and many )ears a journalist in
the Btg Bend area dted at
Saturn

Velvet
:l~-~~~~--f~~*"'~:~f~!~:~:xp~~t~~i
J~ihi~~-JIO"~Otice
passIt;'
can'ttilestop-

'I

the center m Pomeroy

Veterans Memorial Hospital
May 26 - Dan Thomas II,
Mtddleport fourth grader,
was county Metgs County Sot!
¥nd Water Conservation
DIStrict poster winner
Chesler Erwin. well known
Middleport restdenl, dted
unexpectedly
May 27 - Beverly Wilcox
Debra Ta) lor, Fatth Perrin:
Chervl KennedY. Elame Corsi
and Robin Dewhurst were
named
Meigs
Hi~h
honorartans Paul anll Alhe
Stmon hosted a Pomeroy
restoratiOn luncheon
Ma) 29·30 - Servic-es at
many locations marked the
annual
observ a nee
of
Memortal Day
JUNE
June I - Mrs. Bernice
Carpenter was honored upon
her retirement after 33 years
of teaching
June 2 - The American
Legton Women's Auxiliary of
Dtstrtct 8 held a conven!lnn at
the Mt Moriah Bapust
Church in Mtddleport
June 3 - Ous Lee Queen
wtts1)vercome by fumes from
green hay m a solo at the
Roush Dairy Farm In Sa lem
Center Alll4 members of the
!957 Middleport High School
stale Clpss A baseba ll

Vmmg,

Lor1 Wood

ENERGY SAVING
REFRIGERATOR
THAT WILL
CONTINUE
SAVING YOU
MONEY YEAR
AFTER ENERGY
SAVING YEAR

May 9- A $21,900 grant
was approved for Mtddleport
sewage planmng
May 10 - Attention was
called to four sets of twms
and a set of triplets among
the 17! pupils of the .River·
vtew Elementary School
May 12 - Pam Vaughan,
Pomeroy, became tile first
gtrl from Metgs County to be
awarded
an
athletiC
scholarship at Rto Grande
College-Community College
Edith Stsson became the !lr&gt;1
womanmemberofthe GaUta·
Mctgs Fraternal Order of
Pollee
May 14 - Over 300
Signatures were secured to
place a referendum before
Pomeroy voters on a $5
permtsstve auto license tax
whtch was turned down later
by voters Jem Grate and
Steve Randolph "ere named
the Metgs Ht gh Scmor Prom
royalty
May 16 - Four Metgs
Counllans 100 or older were
VISited by a commttlee io
commemorate Sen tor
CtUzens Week They mcluded
Mary Dtehl, Della Carnahan ,
Laura Bradbury and Robert
Ours
May 17 - Hundreds at·
tended Semor CitiZens Duy at

Yl

Jackte Wagner , Carol Wtlkes,

,4ma,,®

63

61

Elyrta

Mark Venoy, Rtta

Christ

Rosecrans 61
Manon Pleasant 71 Riverda le

Chnst 35
Cl 1nt6n Mass1e 64 Wilmington
63
Coldwater 79 New Knoxv1 ll e
64

47

Ltm.!l Shawnee 64 Bellefon
talne 54
Louisvt lle 65 Glen Qak 62
Mans St Peters 75 Bettsville
37
Zanes

Bethel Local 74 Fa irlawn 59
Bluffton 59 Arlington 50
Botktns 70 West L1berty
Salem 59
Bowl mg Green 66 Lima Bath
58
.Puckeye W 108 Jewett Scto 83
Bu ckeye S76St Clalrsvllle74
(of)
Cadtz 73 Jeff Umon 60
Can Cent Cath 54 Akr Ken
more 52
CanS 59 Ravenna 48
Celina 64 S1dney 45
Cle John Marshall 90 Parma
Padua 68
Cle Holy Nc!!me 67 Lorain
Cath 66 (of)

Randy Tacke tt , Fr edrick
Thom F}s Ni ck i Van Meter ,

FOR THIS

.I

•

honor roll

PLUS MANY MOREl

'

.

Funds offeredAo ~eigs ~h 1977 News Hig~lights in Meigs Count~r

e

lfo fl.'

GINO'S

•

Middleport

992-3831

'•

I

N. W.OPTOMETRIST
COMPTON. 0.0.

OFFICI!!"HOURS: 9: 30 lo 12, 2to 5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT
ST., POMEROY. .

1~

1

1
1

1---------············----·-------~~
I

,

�6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Jan. 9, 1978 '

County grange banquet
- A ·.
Piannedfior pn1

The aMual 1:0unty grange
banquet was tentatively
scheduled lor April 21 when
the Pomona Grange met
Friday night at the Rock
Springs hall with Norman
Wit!, master; pre$iding .
Plans were made to invite .
County
the
Lawrence
deputies to participate in the
program. There will also be
s!)l'aker.
The Pomona Grange has
entered the ritualistic contest
and a practice session was
held preceding the meeting.
The contest will-lie held Feb.
18 in Guernsey County.
Another practice session was
set lor Friday evening at 7:30
at the Hemlock Grove grange
hall.
An appUcation for membership was read and Bar.bars Fry was given the
obligation of the fifth degree
by past master Stanford
Stockton.
Mrs. Elizabeth Jordan
gave a report on the winners
from Ohio in the National
Grange, and Keith Ashley
reported on the new junior
grange.
Mrs . Robert Holliday
resigned as secretary and
Mrs. Fred Goeglein was
elected to fill the unexpired
term. The treasurer's terril of
Mrs. Goeglein will be filled by
Mrs. Lucille
Leifheit.
Secretaries of subordinate
granges were asked to send
their reports to Mrs.
Goeglein, Route 2, Pomeroy.
The
pro gram
was
presented by mem bars of

•

~::::~:.w.:;"""''~'""'~"''~~,,.,;:;,~:;,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,~,~'~"'WI-!.om

I

-~ DaUy Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Jan . 9,1978

......-.,

Helen Help
"'t.,,~ -,: Us. • • By Helen Hottel

1
i

i

NOW

CHOICES

avoid visiting. Dyine people
Janet Venoy waa elected were told he had ooly one
suffer most when they want
president
of the Golden Rule year to live. ·Prayer was by
to talk but can't because they
Class
of
the
Pomeroy Church Bill McDaniel.
are protecting other people's
Mrs. Barbara Fields
of
Christ
at
1 meeting held '
feelings .
presided at the meeting with
Tuesday
night
at
the
home
of
'
Admitting her to a hospital
report of funds being given.
seems I'D be a doubtful Mrs. Eileen Bowers.
The
c1aaa extended a vote of
Olhers elected lor the 1971
situation. Today's hospitals
thanks
to Barbara and Ann •
may provide sophisticated year were Evelyn Smith, vice Fields for purchasing gifts
treatment for the sick body, president ; Bill McDaniel, which the class distributed at
but they have little to offer secretary; Holly McArthur, Christma• lime. A thank you
the dying person without hope treasurer ; and · Naomi note waa read from Walter
of cure. Radical medical Ohlinger, flower fund and Pauline KI!\UiedY and
procedures tend only to chainnan.
The meeting opened with a Mrs. Helen Miller, a guest,
alienate the terminally ill
devotional
period conducted extended her thanka for a
from the people and familiar
gift. Ne~ meeting Wtu be
surroundings that are their by Carolyn McDaniel who held at . the home of Mrs.
used Lake 13, 6 through 9 ll8
source of comfort.
her
scripture. She spoke on Frances Eskew, Feb. 7, with
Ground
breaking
Thelma Osborne to have the
ceremonies are scheduled changes which 1 person
devotions.
might
make
in
his
life
If
he
next fall for the first hospital
for the dying in the United
States - Hospice, Inc. in New
Haven, _Conn. Modeled after
St. Christopher' s Hospice
'
outside London, it may be a
great step forward in improving care for the dying.
There are now 50 outpatient
hospices in the United States
that offer counseling and
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. perhaps with the aid of a
Carrying his drink or two- to reminisce,
referral services for the (UPI) dying . If your brother's unobtruaive Ufe style to the -as people like to do, over past
community does not have this
grave, self-made billionaire events
and
departed
kind of center, his local John D. MacArthur ordered friends," MacArthur wrote.
mental health society should there be no funeral service
MacArthur belonged to an
be able to give him the nam~ after his death because of the exclusive and diminishing
of a social worker, nurse, inconvenience it would cause club of billionaires. Ills death
clergyman, psychologist or for frienda, and willed his was not. marked with tlie
psychiatrist who is trained in body to science.
same fanfare as were those of
talking to the dying.
MacArthur, 80, died Friday _ J. Paul Getty• Howard
Some of these "death without regainine conscious-----mfghes and H. L. Hunt, but
therapists" work only with ness from exploratory some !lnancial experts have
the dying individual; others surgery three days ago that called him the wealthiest of
include the family In the revealed terminal cancer of the four.
counseling pro~ess. A few the pancreaa.
._
He began by selling in·
form small groups of patients
His death left IIC)-year-old surance door-to-do.or · in
where the emphasill is on New York City shipping Chicago and bought u11 · a
li vlng with (rather than magnate Daniel K. Ludwig, a small
company called
ORDINANCE N0 . 4U
little-known recluse who Bankers Life and Casualty
'dying from •) terminal
ANNUAL
APPROPRIATION
illnesses.
- . walks to his office every day, Co. for $2,500. He built the
ORDINANCE
Your brother and his ,wife as America's last living firm up and it now has more
POMEROY
A RESOL,.UTIDN to make
·
than $860 million in assets.
can gain much from this kind billionaire.
appropr iations tor Curren t
of
counseling.
It
will
help
"He
died
a
natural
death,
The bllUonaire lived simply
E)(penses a n d o.th er E :-: Debt Serv ice
29,000.00
pendilure s Qf the Villa ge of
them
face
the
present
and
pain-free
and
with
dignity,"
at
hill Colonna~es Hotel near
•
400.00
Pomeroy , State of Oh io . Oth er
what
lies
ahead.
said
aide
Ron
Kairalla,
who
West
Palm Beach. He had
Total
For
A
dmin
istration
during the fis cal y ear end ing
29, 400·.oo
Sewa g e
December 31, 1978 .
.
Write
to
Dr.
Bla~er
In
care
said
MacArthur
had
ordered
silver
hair with a thin
Total For Sl!wer
Se c tion · · 1.
BE
IT
of
!hill
newspaper,
P.
o.
Box
that
'no
extraordinary
musta~he
of the same color;
(Revenue
)
Fund
57
,400
.00
RESOLVED by the Co u n ci l
Se c tion 13, Thlll tMere be
489, RadiO&gt; City Station, New methods be taken to keep him gray eyes and a muchfor the V ill age or Pomero y,
appropriated
fro m
the
Sta t e of Ohio , That , to pr o vide
York, N. Y. 10019. Volume of alive.
creased face . He walked with
G ENERAL
BONO
tor the current e)(penses and
RET
I
REMENT
FUoNO
mail
prohibits
personal
Although
he
asked
for
no
a slight stoop and dressed in
other expenditures of t he sa id
Paym ent of Principa l 7.000 .00
Vi l lage ot Pomer oy du r ing
replies,
but
questions
of
funeral
in
hill
will,
MacArthur
baggy pants and rumpled
Payme.n t of Interest 2 ,887 .50
the
fiscal
yei!'lr
ending
MONDAY
Total
F'
o
r
Genera
l
~id
he
would
not
oppose
a
lihirts.
general
interest
will
be
December 131 ',
1978 , ! he
Polly Cramer
UNITED METHOD.IST discussed In future columns. memorial service in a month
Bond Retirement
following sums be and t hey
MacArthur was friends
Fund
9,aei.5o
are hereby s"N aside and
Women,
Heath United
or two.
, with former President Gerald
ADDITIONAL
FUNDS
appropr tate.d as follows , v i z :
Section 15 . TMat !Mere be
"Such a functioo would Ford, commentator Paul
and even on colors but I Methodist Church, 7:30 p.m.
POLLY.'S PROBLEM
GENERAL
ENJOYS COMPANY
appropr i ated
lrom
the
at
the
Monday
evening
GOVERNMENTAL
present
a reasonable op· Harvey and comedian Bob
suggest
testing
first.
She
bas
DEAR POLLY - Mildew
F ederal Rev-enue Sharing
Holiday activities of Mr.
SERVICES
Annual
prayer
and
church.
FUND
..
(Xlrlunity
and excuse for my Hope. '
never
tried
It
on
man·made
forms
on
the
wall
in
my
MAYOR
Capita l Outlay
3,000 ,00
self-denial service to be con- and Mrs. Ernest Powell relatives and friends to get
Personal Serv ice s
\2 , 400 .00
. Hope said Friday that
fabrics
but
on
the
cotton
bedroom
on
the
north
side
of
26,200.00
Total For M~yor
2,400 .00 Other
ducted by Mrs. Nan Moore. begaq with vis)ts on together for a villit and MacArthur
was· •~ruly an
clothes
It
"has
saved
the
day
the
house
and
I
cannot
get
the
Total
For
Fed
..
Rev
.
CLERK Sharing
29 ,200.00
Program by Mrs. Euvetta Christmas Eve with thelt
original,
a
quiet
man, a wann
many
times."
CLE RK · TR E ASUR E R
wall
completely
clean
of
it.
I
daughters, Mrs. Mary Braley
Sect ion 16 . That there be
Personal Se r \l lces
3,000.00
Bechtleon
"Women
in
World
giant
of
our
society
and a
DEAR POLLY and MARY
have tried charcoal and
appropria tetl from the Fire
and sons, Jackie, Tinuny,
Total For Clerk .
Hunger."
Hostesses
will
he
giant
not
just
in
business
but
Dept.
Fl,JND
ENJOYS GUESTS
cedar chips but nothing ANN- The simplest possible
Clerk -Treasu r er
3,0()0 .00
Kurtis, Sean and Jamie a.nd
FIRE DEPT .
Mrs.
_
Pauline
Horton,
Mrs.
TREASURER
in
his
positive
8J)d
ldeallstie
way to ·remove mildew is to
works. Please help me. Christmaa guests of the
Personal Serv ices
4,000.00
Mrs. 'Marjorie Goett ' and
Personal Ser11ic-es
360 .00
Supp li es and Materials
use plain old buttermilk. Soak Clara Criswell, Mrs. Maxine Robin. On Christmas Day Rev. and Mrs. Odell Manley attitude toward ·Ute.
BETTY.
Total For Treasurer
360 .00
5.000.00
"He eared about , everyone
SOLICITOR the .mildewed article in the Philson, and Mrs. Betty they entertained viith a and son, Stephen, were Mr.
DEAR READERS
3.630.00
Other
LEGAL ADVISOR
Fultz.
he
met, from international
buttermilk
as
long
as
needed,
tetter
Is
typical
of
so
Betty's
To
l
a
l
For
and
Mrs.
Robert
Manley,
Personal Ser\1 ices
2. 500. 00
dinner and attending were
Fire Dept ,
12,630.00
dignitaries
to the man in the
Total For Solic i tor .
which
may
be
from
one
to
24
many
we
~eiNe each week.
POMEROY
PTA,
7:30MonCrystal
and
Tracy.
t!Je Braley family, Mrs.
Total For Additional Pu nd s
L~ga l Advisor
2,500.00
street."
hours
depending
on
the
Mildew
seems
to
be
a
great
day
evening
at
the
school.
FUND
512,630 ~ 00 . ·
Goett, Robin Campbell and
ELECTIONS
TOTAL ALL
problem with so many - Ia severity of the stain. if Fathers Night will he ,observ- . Eric Hart, That evening they
Personal Ser'.lices
1,500 .00
The evening star ilt Jupiter.
APPROPR
IATI
ON
S
Total For E lec tions
1,500 .00 "the bouse Itself and on shadows still remain hang in ed. The progr~m will feature went to the Goett home where
528,-499 .50
Those·
born on this dale are
COUNCIL
Section 17. And the V ill age
clolheo.
· the sun for a day. I have not a panel, " Let's Talk about other guests were Lester
1.440.00
Persona I Sen/Ices
und~
the
sign of Capricorn.
Clerk is hereby aulhorlzed to
Total For Co unci l
1.440.00
found this harmful to any Kids" along with an art Hart. and Eric Hart.
I suggest thai Betty be sure
draw l'lis warrants on the
Richard
Nixon
37th
GENERAL
.
_Village
Tr easu rer
tor bet room 18 us dry us fabric or color and my display by the children.
ADMINISTRATION
president of · the United
payments·
from
any
or
the
Pers·onal Ser11ices
5,500 .00
possible. Extra heal Diay be laundry was saved · more There will be a nursery for
foregoing
appropriat ions
States, was born Jan. 9• 1913
I
I Sl ! Ill ~~~~
•u al insutnl
Supplies and Materials
CANASTA CLUB
required
In her bedroom ior a time's ·than I care to admit children. Fifth grade parents
receiv ing proper' c_er Ill Rllllltill !Uidititrl ;, !illlllll ~ its PIUIIi !llllllmtlll t~
1.300.00 upon
!1M
bttn
as
IOIIOIIrSOII
Dla:mtllr
I.
1911i'
ldmillt4 U ll
The
Pomeroy
Canailla
Club
i cates
and
vouchers
while. If It appears ID the back in the days of "three will serve as greeters. TUESCapital Outlay
2.000.00 tlf
Sil.il6.UI.IXI: 1hbililiu . U0.98UHOO: Sur!ll~s:
therefor, approved by the
held
a
Christmas
dinner
at
Otner
18 .000 .00
D.
l!l6.910.00:
IIQIM.
S6UIU62.00.
~1'1Ch t 11n.
closet leave a small electric baskets of ironing and a DAY
board or officers authorized
~ - 171 . 2'1 . 00: Nil IIH(I, Sl l. &amp;ltol(l
Clpo ttl .
Total
26, 800 .00the
Meigs
Inn
and
afterwards
Q!i.Jtii.OO.
~
by law to appr ove tt1e same,
bulb bumiDg but do be sure it house-full of toddlers.
WINDING TRAIL Garden
Total For General
IN
IIIITllSS
'MfREtf.
I
UW
hlllll'll~
-..~
11J
or an ord'lnance or resolution
Governmenta l
rlll!l'li llld eutd In, SUI 10 be lfli•d II Cdi.IITIM i)llo
Is not near clolbllS or GRACE.
Club, 7:30 Tuesday high! a I went to the hom.e of Lucretia
ol coun_cll to make the ex tlii54fJn
~·
H.~yV
b'JIII.
~all~
oi-!ho.
Services
38 ,000 .00
DEAR POLLY
If . the home of Mrs . . Jackie Smith for a card party. Prizes
penditures ; provided that no
anything tbal could get too
(Sell -IJA)
SECURITY OF
warrants
•
shall
be
clrawn
or
were won by Pat McKnight,
Slit! II l)io. DIPI'!mtPf rl IPISIJIIQ, CllllliCIIt rJ
chil
dren
have
trouble
hot.
After
a
room
Is
,dry
tbe
Roll
call
will
be
Brickies.
P~RSONS AND
pa id f or salaries or wages
~.-o - Th ~1PH . •
nt1r*111 d llllll'n:t
PROPERTY
spots sboutd be rarefully remembering which things "Eradicating Insects on my Elsie Hines, Bernice Riffle
bl ol IJIIo.
llnlhK 11Wi TU'ftUH
except to .persons employed
POLICE DEPARTMENT
.
:
CD.,
al
..
illc
a1 . Qmed i ~ . 1113
by aufhority of and in ac wiped off and then wiped with are in which drawers In their Plants." The program by and Betty Ohlinger. Others
•Persona 1 .Services
65 ,000 .00
D31111i!M •Ill. riiiiMIIII 1~1 !I•• tliPICII:tt 111 111111J i1
cordance with law or or Mildred
were
Nhori!f.
Nil)l
the
c.rrtnl:
11•
tOt~
in (~I Ut ill
attending
Supplies and Materials
a cloth slightly dampened rooms cut pictures of the Mrs .. Marilyq Wisecup will be
. Provided fu rther
:::;•• blniiWII ol l ~~~~.n&gt;U . hs r•..all ardti(l!l i1
35,000.00 dlnancl!
Russell,
·
J(:athryn
bJ Itt llnlll lllttllllnl ~~ I'M Dltn • foiiC~n !l1
that th e l!tppropr lations for
with denatured alcohol. Hope various articles out of an old on "Safer Poison, Sprays and Arnold,
7 .ooo:oo contingencies
Capita l Outlay
iltcl'*"' Jl ltl\· »r1111d -a 11! 1 ~101 65600:
can only be
Elizabeth Well and Vera
2.000.00 expended upon· appeal
li.llbU. IUM9.211.1t~OO: Wid, ilJ9.5'JO:!IUlllti
Other
catalog
and
-then
tape
them
this
helps.
POLLY..
Dusts."
An-angements
topic
of twO ·
IRcol!lt . U . llS . I 3L5Sl oo r'f'ndit uru
Tolal For Pollee
t hirds \IOie of Counci l for
on the fronts of the drawers: is "Looking Forward to a Buchanan. Cookies, candies,
Htr'rm~tiMo. ,. ..,,_1409.~.5 o.oo r..p;,.:
Department
10 9~ 600 . 00
items ot _expense const ituting
punch and coffee were ser·
No
more
rooting
through
the
Brighter
DEAR
POLLY
I
am
Future"
with
Mrs
Tolal For Security of
1ft M~ 'lllt(l((f, I Milt lltnn.d:D Mlcrillll4 "'''
a l egal obligation against th e
- n tiUIId"" tnl tD bt 11t111l111 ~IIIIIM !lli11.
Persons and Property
ved. The house was decorated
answering
Mary
Ann
whose
wrong
drawer
to
find
Pat
Thoma
to
he
the
judge.
village,
and
for
purposes·
IIIII
dly aM 6att. lltlry ~- l!Ap, ~- IJ!IIIIQQ oi (Jlio.
109,600.00 'o ther then those covered b y·
!~II &amp;92)
for the holiday season.
something. ~ UNDA.
son's
T-shirt
is
covered
with
PLANNING COMMISSION
TWIN
CITY
Shrine
Club,
the
other
specific
ap Other
·
2,500.00
DEAR
POLLY
Do
tell
'
mildew spots from haVing
propritltlons herein made .
regular meeting Monday,
Total F or P lanning
Section 18 . This resolu t ion
been in a clothes hamper with M.C. that I clean white fur 7:30 p.m. at the club house.
Commission
2.500.00
.
shal_l take effect at. the
Total For Com-munity
a wet wash cloth. I suggest with French chalk that can be Refreshments of com bread
ear11est
period
allowed
by
Environment
~.500 . 00
law .
·
that abe mis one-half cup of bought in most good drug and beans will be served.
TRANSPORTATION
household bleach, one-half stores. - MRS. J.R.S .
FACILITIES ·
Passed 1-3-78.
nJESDAY
L : .ADLINE FOR PURCHASE OF 1971 00 ·
.
STREET DEPT .
Polly will send you one of
cup
vinegar and a quart of
H . 0 . Brown
MIDDLEPORT
Garden
Personal Services
22 ,500 .00
DOLLARS
(12.00)
PENALTY
IF
LICENSE~
~!J:~~!s~SDJ:~~:RY
20TH,
TWO
Pres ident of Council
water and use this on the her signed thank-you newsSuppl ies and Mater ials
Club, 7:30 Tuesday at -the
0
14,000 .00 Attest : Jan Walton
spots. It has really worked for paper coupon clippers if she Middleport Presbyterian
Clerk
of
Council
8,500 00
Other
CERTIFiCATE
uses your favorite Pointer, Church. The. Rev .Dwight
me. - ALICE.
TWO DOLLARSCI2.001. FOR EACH DOG, MALE
USE NOW. FEES ARE
Total For
Sect ion 5705 .39 , R .C . - " N O
. OR F EMALE.
45 ,000.00 · approprll!ttion
Street Paving
Peeve
or Problem in her Zavitz will show slides. Hallie
Polly's
note
Mary
R.
m eas ur l! shall
Tota l For Street
become effective until there
wrote that she uoes this aame co)umn. Write POLLY'S and Nellie Zerkle will be
Constru ction. Maintenance
couT:TO.:':~ci11&lt;.;~:;• ':Je7:~· Jg~1~ a;d, MEROY.
this form to HOWARD E FRANK,
is filed w ith the llppropritlting
in
care
of
-this
POINTERS
and Repair Fu nd &lt;45 ,000 .00
formula
not
ollly
for
mUdew
OHIO.
.
hostesses.
authori t y by the county
STATE HIGHWAY
newspaper.
but
fnil,
tea
and
coffee
stains
auditor
a
certifi
cate
,hat
the
Personal Service!
2,ooo·.oo
OHIO ETA PHI Sorority at
tota l appropriations from
Other
.
3,000 .00
each fund , taken together
7:30 p.m. at the Columbus
Enclose self.addressed slamped envelope lnd price of license.
TOtal For Sla te
with all ott~er outstanding
H ighwaY Improvem ent
and Southern Electric
appropr iations. do not exceed
FuM
5,000.00
building in Middleport.
such offi .cial estimate or
Male Dog S2.110-Spayed Female 12.110-FemaleS2.~Kennel Ll~~seSlO
PUBLIC HEALTH
11mended officilll estimate .
Cheryl
and
Lynne
Hostesses
SERVICES
When the •ppropriatlon does
The Friendly Nelghbors Ja,net Venoy and Mildred Crow.
CEMETERY OPERATION
not, exc-eed such off i cial
OWNER'S NAME
AND MAINTENANCE
Club
enjoyed a Christmas M-nold._ Gam~s were played
est1mate.
the
county
eudltor
Personal Services
13.000 .00
POMEROY
Chamber
of
shall give such certlflc,1te
dinnet at the Meigs IM and wtth prtzes betng won by Mrs.
SUpplies •nd Materi•ls
upon receiving
ADDR.ESS
2,000.00 forthwith
then went to the home of Mrs. Venoy, Elsie Hines and Pat Commerce noon luncheon
from
the
appro prltlting
500.00 autMorlty a certified copv ot · Eileen Bowers for a party
Other
' Tuesday at, Meigs Inn.
McKnight. Salad, cake Representative of AORTA
Total For c emetery
the appropriation meesu re ."
Operat ion •and
and gift eKchange.
punch and· coffe~
candies,
TOWNSHIP
Ma inte'nence
15 ,.500.00
•
The State of Ohio M~:lgs
· The home was decorated in were served. Others at- Bus system will be speaker:
UTILITY FUND
RACINE Lodge 461 F&amp;AM
County, ss .
Other
23,000 .00
keeping
with
the
season
·
and
. tending ·were Elizabeth Well
I , Jane Walton, Clerk of the
Total For Electric
Sex
Ate
COLOR
gifts were placed beneaiJ, a Eleanor Werry, Judy Werry; Tuesday 7_:30 p. m. Work in
areoci' FHI
vi II age ot Pomeroy . In sa Jd
(light) (Revenue)
EA degree. Dues payable at
decorated
tree.
Prizes
for
the
, F unct
23 ,000.00 . County , and In whose custody
Lucretia Smith and Vera meeting: All master masons
If Ptld
Yr. Mo. M F Blk Whitt Gray Brindlt Tan Brown Yellow Long Short
the Files , Journals and
Section 9. That there be
prettiest packages · went to Buchanan.
Rf!'COrds are requ ired bv the
Know~
~ !pproprlated
from
the
itlvited.
Laws or the State of Ohio to be

a

~TOUR

STORE

Society meets

POLLY·s POINTERS

N'S

AVAILAIILI

Karen Blaker PhD.

~
Columbia, Harrisonville and ~
Racine Granges. Racine
J
HELEN BO'I"I'EL- BY HELEN BOTrEL
By Karen Blaker, Pb.D.
Grange served refreshments,
niE
CART
BEFORE
THE
HORSE?
DEAR
DR. BLAKER - My
and for the March meeting ,
from
the Rock Springs Grange DEARHELEN: Morethananythingelseintheworldfwantto .brother · called
marry and have children . I'm 36 and can't w;tit much longer California because he doesn't
members will be hosts.
know what to do with his wife.
for the latter:
Several men have wanted marriage, but physical contact We thought you might be able
with them would have been nothing more than rape. The men 1 to help us.
really cared for !ell me. If you were my age and faced with my
Thi s is the situation : Ills
choicewoulditbe :
wife is dying of cancer.
"Japan's Living Saint" was
I. A loveless marriage so 1 could have a baby'
Evide~tly she k~ows of her
the program topic of Mrs.
2. An illegitimate baby ?
.•condition and mes virtually
Jean Wright at the Tuesday
3. Acceptance of the heartbreaking fact that I 'll never have a all the time. No one knows
night meeting of the fwnliy ? -36andSINGLE
what to say to her , so
Missionary Society of ·the DEAR36:
everyone - including her
Laurel Cliff Methodist
You've overlooked one choice: , singles may adopt these . doctors - avoids visiting. (In
Church ·held at the home of days, especially if they take "hard to place" children (which fact , the family calls the
Mrs. Ernest Powell.
means older, biracial, or somehow handicapped ). Perhaps you doctors "streakers" because
Mrs. Dorill Shook presided haven't found a man because potential candidstes sense they are in and out of the
at the meeting which opened
mOl"! interested In making a baby than taking a bus- house SO fast. )
with devotions by Mrs. ·Tina - you're
band. Concentrate on adoption first, and perhaps the right
My brother is at his wit's
Jacobs from the 46th Psalm. father will come along . • H.
end and wants to admit his
Mrs. Wanda Eblin read "The
wife to a hospital. I'm not
Forward Look" and there
sure that a hospital would be
was prayer by Mrs. Shook. It · DEAR HELEN:
a good place for her. What do
Please tell C.B. Widow who plays second fiddl~ to a squawk you think?
was reported that a qilllt had
been donated to the Society. that a husband hQIIIe with a mike in hill hand is a lot better than
DEAR READER - First,
Miss Susan Fleshman and ooe at a bar with a drink in hill band.
you should have your brother
My husband and I sit in the den (radio room ) each morning ask his wife why she is
Mrs. Della Curtis served
5 a.m. to 8 a.m. He talks, I listen, sew, read or throw him crying. He might be surfrom
refreshments . Others atWe both enjoy it, but one day, on entering, I got prised by her answer .
comments.
tending were Mrs. Amber
shushed
several
times so he could hear a mutual iltiend.
Lohn and Mrs. Ruby Frick, a
There are many things that
Finally
I
gave
up and went into the living room, made a long- could be upsetting her. She
· guest.
distance call to !hill friend on the air, asked her to put me on might be angry - or terrified
her "phone patch,'' and after talking to_several other people, 1 of the pain. She might feel
s&amp;ld to my husband, "I just wanted to say 'Good morning abandoned - or helpless. Or
SUPPER H'ELD
dear:"'
'
perhaps she .is upset about
The congregation of the
Result: laughter all over the states. My husband tells hill something entirely unrelated
' Laurel Cliff Free Methodist good buddies, " Now, when my wife speaks-! listen!" to her illness.
Church held a New ·Year's
We attend conventions and though I don't understand all the
The point is she might feel
Eve supper and party at the
ham talk, f enjoy the company. We've met so many good
better if someone just asked
Rock Springs Grange Hall. friends via the squawk box.
.
about her feelings rather than
The group enjoyed a potluck
Lady, be thnnkful your man bas a hinne hobby! ·PENNY
talking .about her and plansupper, fellowship and DEAR HELEN:
·
ning for her.
singing with Ste.ve Eblin
My wife told our daughter not to come home for Christmas if
Some of her anxiety may
providing guitar music. she insisted on btinging her live-in partner (male) . He is a
stem
from not being able to
Approximately 75 attended. good sort and they seem content together. But my wife steams
talk openly with anyone. She
about immorality.
. ,.
seems alone - a "treatment
So we spent a lonely Christmas as Dawn wouldn't leave her failure" to the doctors who'
man for the holidays. What would you have done? SEWER MAINTENANCE
rush in and out of the house
.P ersonal Services
10,000.00
LAWRENCE
an~
possibly a harsh
Supplies ahd Mater ials
18,000.00 DEAR LAWRENCE:
reminder oi mortality to the
. rd bave welcomed daughter and partner, accepting their friends and neighbors who
t o tal For Sewer
Maint enance
2B ,000.oo
life
style because the alternate choice -losing her- would hurl
ADMINISTRATION
muchworse.·H.
-SEWAGE

•HAMS

•FRESH
OYSTERS

I

'

I

49

COMPANY?
Any ·Special
Cu~ Of
- M~t You

U. S. NO. 1

.

.

30,000.00

Capital Outlay
~.000 . 00 ·
Other ·
·
13,000.00
To1al For Water
Sys tem Op·erafion 80,000.00
ADMINISTRATION -

WATER

"

Debt Service
87, 282.00
Other
500.00
Total For Administration
- water
87,882.00
Total For Wat4!r
CRevenuel Fund 110,782.00

Jane Walton
Clerk of theVlllege·of
·Pomeroy
Mef$15 County,, Ohio

( 1) 9, 16, 2tc

Caroling activity enjoy¢

. i

"

License must ' be obialned not later lllan Jan. 20, lf71 to avoid a In
·
!hiS d•te penalty willbt $2.00 lor'llngla tag lnd U.OO lor kanntl
~ penalty. A"tr

.r-.:....

J

'

I

·

.

BANANAS ................................... ~-~--

$ ()()

1
APPLES.~~~~-~~~~~-.~~.~--~-~-~~~-~~ oR· - ~~-~-ofge

•
'

'

30 oz.
CHILl IEAIS .. .. .............. , can

1000..

TOMATO PA5n .......... ,.......3 ~;-::,

Fee4Uolle
BANQUET

sgc

HUNTS

~'"·-~
- FRIED

79'

HUNT I

TOMATO SAUG ..................4 ~:.:;

85'
WESSOI .............. ....................~~~~ 95'
t:OOKljlljQOil

UGU P'UIN, W/MIAT. WIMUtHIIOOM
ot

W/P'IP'P'IRONl

SPAGHETTI SAUCE .................:·~.u 69'

~~~
Can

MAXWELL HOU

COFFEE

.

Reg. , Drip, Elict.

Pert~:

or AOC

AOLO

RIEPUCE LOCiS ........4 ,.';~_ 59'

COMET CLEAIISEI ... •;;-.:

23'

13' Off LUlL

DAWILIQUID DmRG.-n ..........

u ...1, .......t"l.....,.

EGG 'NOODLES

=79•

-

~:~

- ---~

'

22 ·01

con

1-Lb.

$} 00

CLORO X ............. ~ .. !.~~~.

l,_wl•-

u...

---"'!."~.

=~,., 10.01. 39~
lnt.MI lprowt. Pkg.

STRAWBEIIIES3 ~.· 5 1 °0

OIIIIIN VALLEY

~tARDINAL

BORDEN'S

HOMOGENIZED

USE
OUR

Gallon
Carton

$1 1'

CONVENIENT

,.

..""•·... .,.

..

ICE Clla SAIDWICIES

lll

KRAFT CHEESE

Ct.
Pkg.

59

IELIEETI

~

KIESi

9C
;
......

r

•

CARRY·

'

~

H a &amp;'81 'y AWt

OOtO o-

I

IAYEI CIILII.S ASPII. ............":,;~~ 49'
SKID IOU OIIIOIOUIT ........~·~~

.

-

...

~-

'

County Auditor of Melt• County

..

'

FRE$H CELERY.......................~-~~~~--39~
CARROTS~ ..........................2 1-LB. PKGS.451

59~

LIQUID

.

E. Frank

·SLICED
PEPPERONI.. .......... ~p:.&amp;gt

Pound• _

!

Enough
'
to Know
You and
Big
Enough
'
to Serve
, You.

'

Howard

.

•

Small

.

::

gc:
3

.

......._................
....
,.....,1,,

Mrs. Bowers hosts party

i!i~

T-BONE STEAK .. }~;. :.'-189'

,,,

1 :'o"ll

Total For Water
Pumping
· 13,000.00
WATER DISTRIBUTION
Persona l Services
3.5,000 .00
Supplies and Mater ie ls

LB.

SAU DATES JAIUAIY 9. 16, 1971

~~~L ~~u;Hi ~ci~~~~",_CJD~~R ~~~~~:~~LR"r"~~ICATIO: ~r:~KD~1~

.

5 LB.
BAG

••

2

GOLDEN RIPE

'149

20 lB.
BAG

Stop ·In
or Call
and We'D
Cut It
.To Your
satisfaction

Attention Dog Owners

HARRISONVILLE
Olapter, O.E.S. 255, 8 p.m. at
the Temple. •
MEIGS COUNTY Pomona
;:;:
"
t= Junior
Grange, Tuesday, 7
Twenty-five youth and two
Upon their r_etum from
p.m. at the Rock Springs
adults representing the caroling the young people
Middleport
Independent went to the home of their ~Grange Hall.
MEIGS ffiGH School PAT
went youth leader, Mrs. Nancy
Holiness Church
caroling
just
before Manley, where they enjoyed - ~eeting, 7:30 Tuesday at the
· Chrlstmaa to several homes cookies, cupcakes, hot h1gh school with Deputy
Darrell
Slone
In the Mtddleport area. chocolate and candy canes. Sheriff
Special attention was given to Mrs. Margaret McDaniel presenting a program about
drugs. AU parents and the
the sick and shut-ins of the assisted' with the party.
public are invited to attend.
'
community.

OCEAN

GRAPEFRUIT

POTAT'.OES

Desire,

.::z

~::w::::::::::::::::::::::::::: ::::::;::::::::~:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~::::::::::;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::: ;:; :;:; :;:;:;:;:;::::;:::·..

SLICED

BONELESS

.

PHONE 773-5536

13 ,000,00

CHIPPED
CHOPPED HAM .......~s~ • 139
OR MEL
HAM PATTl ES........~ ~~ • 1 29
SIRLOIN STEAK $}39

Pound

99

OF MASON

'Oiher

19'

CHOICE
STEAK

'

NOW OPEN

kept. do hereby certify that
tne foregoing .Annua
Ap proprietlons . Resolution Is
taken and ~oples from tne
origina l ResOlut ion now on
file with said VIllage , that the
foregoing Resolution has
been compared bV me with
t,he said or lglnal and tha t the
same Is a true and ·c orrect
copy thereof.
Witness ' my signature, this
4th day of January 1971.

WE GLADLY ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS

GROCERY CARRY OUT

STEW................................~~. •1
BEEF
PERCH
USDA CHOICE
FILLETS
HAM: RUMP ROAST. ..........................~·-•1
$139'
TOP
ROUND
STEAK
.............
~·-·'1
SALAD
BEEF •
·
LB.
69
CUBE
STEAK
...................
~
...........
~~~
•1
SLICED
·
·
BEEF LIVER ...................................·.......L~~. 59~
TURKEY
.
I USDA CHOICE
SIRLOIN TIP STEAK .OR .ROAST..~:•l 59 DRUMSTICKS
ROUND .................................. ~•. ,,,,
GROUND
EXPECTING

.

WATER
(REVENUE)
FUND
.
WATER PUMPING

.

MADE

·social
Calendar

.

'LOCUST &amp; PEARL STS. ·ON THE CORNER·
MIDDLEPORT
.
.

I

I

I

Billionaire dies
quietly as he -lived

GINO'S

STORE'1HOURS
MOlt. lHRU SAT. 9 AM 10 9 PM
SUNDAY 9 AM 10 9 PM

aJUITRY CURED

_HOME .

LOCATED IN THE MEIGS PLAZA

TOOTHPASTE

VAUGHAN'S

CARDINAL ·
FOOD STORE

-CA.RDIIIIAL

lUIS ........... ~~~ 49c

.
'

w.t. orMIM

11-~­

Tu...
...... CONCPIT,.ATI 01111 .... UOUlOi

PIEU SHAMPOO ................ .:..

89~

'I"
\

'

~

Ill"

�8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Jan. 9, 1978

·Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

WANT AD ·
CHARGES
l~Word.li~nde.r

U5
1.90

2dayl
ldaya
6 cblys

1.25
a.'l$

Ea~ch

word ~.Wer the minimum IS
words ill 4 t."t"nt. per word ptr day.
Ads runnintc olher than consecutlve
diiys will bf clui.llted 111 ~ I day

-

~"'
In me:mory,

Cilrd of Thanka Mod
Obltutry : ' ceni.!J per word, 13.00
mirlirmam. CMsh in advanct".

Mobile Hume salet~and Vaml ules
are aC&lt;'ept.ed only with cnh with
t'ir'der. ~ tent charge for 11da carryUlK IW: Numbtr InCa~ of The Sentmel.
.
The Publlsher rl!serves the right
0011 or re)ect uny ad! det!med ~
jet:Uorwl. The Publisher will not ~
rt'sponsible for more thun ooe incor-

1.o

tl".:t ~ru~ertum.
Phun~992-2156

INCOME TAX Services. Federal
and Stole hues . Wcinda Eblin.
992-22n.
AAA DRIVERS Education Classes
will begin Tuesday. January 10,
For information coll : Ben
Slawter ot 742-2'170 between
6:00and8 OOpm .
-~-.

STRAY DOGS killing ducks and
upsell ing garbage cons on our
propertr' will be shot. Browns
Tra iler Pork .
lHE RACIN E Volunteer Fire
Deportment will sponsor o gun
shoot every Saturday atO prn or
their_ bUII.ding in Boshan. ~~ ­
tory choke g~_ns o2!-L
TH E lltACINE Gun Clvb Gun Shoot
every Sunday afternoon . Foetory cholo;e guns only . Assorted
mea ts .

.. --=-=----'--

U. S. Department of labor
Manpower Administration

FREE JOB TRAINJNG
Young Women and Men Ages 16-21 years in

JOB CORPS
Get pa id while learning. Free food , housing. medical
care. clothing a 'lt OWance and s pending money . JOB
CORPS tra ins mates and females-for job skills such as
Auto .-.Aechanics. Keypunch , Bricklay ing , Nursi ng
Skills. Weld ing , Office .Skills and many more . Must
leave area . If Interested in Improving your future,
visit :

JOB CORP REPRESENTATIV E
Pomeroy City Hall (2nd fl.) 1102nd St.
Tuesday, Jan. iD-9-S
Wednesday, Jan. 11..;__9-3

~-

WANTED: CHRISTIAN mus icians
to I ~ o~oup . (~II 949-2870,

NOTICE
- WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

CASH paid for o il makes and
models of · mobile home s.
Phone area code 614 -423-9531 .
liMBER , Pom~ roy Forest Pro·
ducts. TOp .price fo r standing
sawtimber . Coli 992-5965 or
Kent Hanby , 1-446-8570 .

Mo1idMy
Noon on Saturday
Tuesdlly
thru Jo' riday

---

4 P.M .

CO INS . CURRENCY . token s . old
poc"ket watches and chain s.
sli ver ond gold . We need 1964
and older silver coins . Buy , sell ,
or trade ' Coli Roger Wamsley ,
742-2331.

lhe da.y bt!for~ ~ubUl· 11tion
Sunday
4 P.M.
Friday aftemw1

~

~

;;;;;;;;;;jjjjiiiijjjjji;;;;;:. OLD FURN ITU RE, ice bo-.ces , bran

beds. iron beds , etc ., compl~te
households. Wdte M. D. Miller ,
At . 4 , Pomeroy , Oh io or cot/
992-7760.

FOR SALE

-

NO ITEM TOb lor:g~ Qr.. too small .
Will buy 1 Piece or com plet~
house ho ld . New, used , or Qnt.iques . Merlin 's Furniture . 20 N ,
2nd St.. MiddlepOrt . Phone
992-6370

1976
GRAND PRIX S.J.

Power steering,_ power

brakes, power win~ows , 6040 bench sea t s, /JiM-FM a-

track p'lus .other extras .

Low m i leage , excellent
condition.

____....

.....

PH.

992-3348

l&lt; 'ur l' ut·sday,.Jafi . 10, 19 7~

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

CHIP WOOO . Poles ma~e .
diamete r 10 " on largest end . sa
per ton. Bundled slob. SO per
ton. De livered to Ohio Pgllet
Co .. Rl. 2 . ~meroy . 992 -2689 .
CASH FOR Junk Cars. Frye's Truck
ond Auto Wr ecker S~r...-ice .
Phone 742-2081 or Pennzoil
Rut land 742-9575 .
AUTO BODIES ond scrap m,e_tol.
Rider's Solvoge , 997-5468 .
WANT TO bur': For ports · 420 J.D.
Crawler Dozer . 949-2463.

IF YOU hove o ser..-ice to o ff er .
want to buy or sell somet hing,
oe loo king for work . . . or
what ever ... you'll get re sults
lo!&gt; ter wi th o Sentinel Wont Ad .
Call 992-2156.

SIX FREE mi~eed breed pup s to
good home. Cute puppies 5
weeks old . PH 9B5•42-44 .

Jan . 10, 1!)78
M J. t f' f • c~ lly

th1s c61nuog year
&lt;ill p t&gt;&lt;HS 10 hole! 91 CJ 1 pt Ort\ISC
for you 111c re i\.J rns w1 ll no t
c·o rn e la s I. (:l ui yn u ~ I) O ul rt hdv f'
a so lid l o u n(fdi iOII IJY yedr 'o:;

Pno

( ' i\J"RU'OKN tiJc&lt;· . 22-.Jan .
191 Once ·~n a whil e you hav e to
loose n up an rf plan t a ltiti C
seed rn o ney to unpr e·ss a pros PPC t Tod ay 1s one o f those
limes when 11 cdn be 8 good
1nvestmen 1 F•nd o ul to whorn
yolr rc ro rn an tu: a lly su 11ert hy
.:;encJ my lor yo ur cop y o t As traGraph Le it e r Ma11'50 ce nt s lo r
eo c h and a long . sel lpcldr esse cl . st ampe d en~elope
to As!f o-Granh . P 0 B ox 489 .
R0:10 10 C1ty Sta l1 0n. N '-( 100-19
Be s ure to spee dy you' btrth
S IQ.fl

·,

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE
TO WHOM IT MAY CO NCERN :
Notice is hereby given tha t
on J anuary 26. 1?78, at 10 :00
A.M . a publ ic !jale wilt be held
at P .O. Box 59 1 Pom e roy ,
Ohio 45769 to sel l for c ash fhf'
fo llo w in g col la teral , to wit :
1971 F ord Grand Torino S.
No .
HJOH140'898
said
c ol lateral being he ld 10
secure an obligation ariSing
under a retail inst al me nt
{sale con tr act) 1925 86390
held by General Motors
Accep-t ance Corporation as
secured party . Sa id public
sale is to be condu c ted ac co rd ing, to the taws of the
Stat e of Ohio . Genera l MotorS
AC ce ptance
Cor poration
re5e rves th e right to b id at
this sale .
The co llat e r a l is presently
s tored and m.a y be see n at PO
BaM 591. Pomeroy , Ohio

AQ UARI US Llan . 20.Fe h. 191
So melhlng yo u h_oped to a cco mplt sh today may be s talled 45769 .
at Ihe s tart •ng gat e Onc e o ..-er
GENERA L MOTORS
yO Uf sh oc k . yo u ' ll se e that
ACCEPTA NCE
th e re are se ve ral way s to ge t
CORPORATIO N
(1) 9 . 11c
the s how o n I he road
PIS('f·:S ~ FL•b. 20--M:uch 201 In - - - - - - - - - - - - , - somelhtng thai can be ne fit you
PROBATE COURT OF
car eenv1 se . you rnu s t gua1d
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
agam s t 11pp1n g you r hand
to d ay Ho ld yo ur ace s 1111 you IJ!STATE OF EMMA MAY
kno w they can be used a dvan- ' SHOENBERGER,
DECEASED .
tag eous ly
Case Na. 22275
ARif.:S (March 2 1-April l9 1
NOTICE OF
SOCifl i17C to day and e nJ OY
APPOINTMENT
lnends lor wllat th ey are, bu t
OF FIDUCIARY
s 1des1ep any thtng tn a t smack::.
" On Ja nuary 5, 1978 , in th e
of busmes s It could qutckly
· Meigs Co unty Proba te Court.
s pnng a leak
No . 22275, Henry Wells.
TAURUS I April 20-~ny 201 No Case
R . D 2, Porn eroy , Oh io 45769
one uncjer s t.3hd s your ca ree r was appointed ~xecutor of
asptrati o ns today any · belle r lhe estate of E mma May
than you do Encumbering Shoenberger . deceased , lafe
yoursel f w1th a s soc iates would of Sa lisbu ry Townsh ip , R .D.
2. Pomeroy , Ohitl .
not be a wt s e ·1dea.
GEMINI !May 2I·Juue 201
Manning 0 . Webster
LUbttcate req ues ts of o thers
Probate Judge today wtlh pleasantnes and
Clerk
good will If you hi! t he m with (1) 9. 16 , 23. Jtc
somet tlmg ou r of lhe blue . it's
likely to g~t s·hot down .

CANCER !June 21-.luly 221
Eve,yth•ng must be balanced .
logical and e qual 1n JOin t ven . lures today' If e 1ther party trieS
10 dominate or show greed. th e
wh ole scheme will backfire .
LEO (July 230Aug . 22) Let 110
one p1essure you Ieday to give
a quick yes-or ·no answer .
You ' re not goad at si tuations
where you can't weJgh alternati'.les
VIRGO I Aug . 23-Sepl. 221
Th ere ·s someth ing you ha11e
the equipment and ta len t to
perform today , but you lean
toward refusa l Study it ca reful ly It cou ld be a profitable
move
LIBRA ISepl .. 23-0c l. 231

You ' re clever and proficient at
ma ny lh mgs t od~y . but you tall
short m deals where money is
m11olved Postpon e th ose till
tater.
SCORPIO !Oct. 24-Nov. 221
The Irick today is to get past
your ea rly Impa tience . Once
you accompliSh tha t your efficlericy ral tng soars and what
you want to do will get done .
SAG irfARI US {Nov. 23·Dee.
21) A plan that see med feasible
when· 1ifs t co nc OC ted ma·y not
look so nH ty in th e cold l1g ht of
day . Don 't despair , you'll th ink
o l some th ing better.
INEWSPt\Pf:H F.:NTERPBISE 1\SSN.l
'
.
.

WANTED

I

MEIGS COUNTY Humane Societ}' .
Core line and adoption Service
992-76-80.742.:3 162. 992-5427 .
AKC REGISTERED pekingvse pup- FOUND IN Roclo; Springs oreO: Tall
thin re ddish brown do g .
pies . Phone (304) 8B2-2683 .
Evidence
of ho11ing hod pups
RISING STAR Kennel. Boarding.
·
ret:entiJ~ .,S_oll992 - 271b .
Ind oor ond outdoor ruris
Grooming oil breeds . Clean
sor1i tory facil it ies. Ches hire
Phone {61-4) 367 -0292 .
· .
WAN TED DEALERS: to instal!
sprayed loom insu lotio'n In old
ond new buildings. Tremen ·
dous energy saver . Every home
and building owner con use it.
1972 SUPER BUG VW . Good
We (Ire th e on ly mo nu lacturer
mechanical cond it ion .· Needs
that trains how to ins tall with
body wor lo; , 992-6154 ,
on the Job tr ain ing and by foetory eJ&lt;:perier1ced jnstollers . No
fees of any kind. We ore in teres ted oniJI in selling this
COAl , limes tone , a nd calcium
loam insu lation that we
chloride and cal cium brine lor
monu lacture. Con be opplied
dust con trol and special mixing
all yeor ro und . Write; lrnperio l
salt lor larmers , h:ce- lsior Sol i
Coofings &amp; Chem1cols, 4700
Works , Mo m Street, Pome roy ,
Wluhic kon Ave., Philo. , PA
Ohio or phone 992- 389 1.
19144 . Mr , Worren . (21 5)
B44 -0706.
CAMPE R. $600
Alsn, horse
trailer , $450. Phone (614) 698329(}.

-----

ECONOMY TRACTOR wi th all ot:
tochments. Like new , asking
$2250. Phone (6 14) 69B ·3290.
APPlES. FITZPATRICK Orchards .
State Route . 689 . Phone
Wilkesville , 669-378S .
RUGS . . WA ll Hanging§ ond
a fgon s. Nice for Christmas.
Rea sonabl e. Ca ll 99'1.-221 A.
1976 FO RO F-250 Cus tom . 17 .50 11
14 .00 tires - winch. Only 14.000
mi. Heade rs. C8. Tope deck.
0..-e r $3 ,000 in e-~etr a s . Serious
ca lls only aft e r 12 noo n:
696 1072. $6.800.
...
B &amp; S MOBilE HOMES. Pt . Pleo~ant ,

W . Va , bes id e Heck 's .
Broodmore 14 x 64

1973
2
bedroom
1973 Do rian 14 11 60 2 bedroom
1972 Victorian 14 x 67 3 bedroom,
2 bo th
1972 Coventry 1-2 x 65 3 bedroom
1969 Statesman 12 x 6(]. 2
bedroom .
BURROUGHS SENSI-MA TIC a ccount ing ma.c hin~ . Has been
under service con tract and in
good condition. Con be seen at '
The Doily Sentinel, 11 1 Court
St ., Pomeroy . O H.

JACKSON PALLET CO.
2 Miles Well of Wilkesville on St. Rt. 124
CALL669-47J4 BEFORE MA~ING DELIVERY

•

ENERGY
CRISIS
IS REAL

' Thermo
Foam
insulation cu t s the
home owners heating
&amp; cooling bi ll by as
much as 50 per cent .
As a Thermo. Foam
dealer,· turh
th e
energy crisis into an
oppor tun ity.
V i r I u a I 1. y
a n
untouched
market.
You need not be an
insulation contractor
to run a Thermo
Foam dealer ship. you
are factory trained .
You need $7,500 . For.
more
information ,
cal l Mr . Bell co llect,
404-939-9222.

LARG E ROUND Sole feed ers
m'ade of !.quare tubing , $76.
Vermeer Iorge round bale r,
$250. Discoun t unti l Feb , 15,
197B. Wo odmoste r cobi ne1
WI LL CARE for the e ld e rly in our
wood heqters , thermostat , ·a sh
home. Ph one 992 -7314 .
pan , hinged top lor coo king,
br ic k - lin~d . $242 . Coolmosler
some as above but Shaker
grate for coal. $264 . Blower for
ei ther , $48. Merri ll Chose, (614)
APPLIANCE
'698-3021 '
THREE ElVIS records , collec tors
SERVICE .
items. Con be seen ot Clifton ,
W. Vo ., .askforRogerKlein .
We have enlarged · our
FIREWOOD. SPLIT , de livered ,
stocked. $2 5 per large pickup
lood . 742-2256 .
GOOD USED TV's. Color and
Black ond White . .Ho rfison's TV ,
276 Sycamore Street , Mid dlepor t. Ohio. 992-2522 .
NEW HOLLAN D mow er . 45 1.
Kawasaki 90 motorcycle. Ooo
Arab ian more . CXI2 -7084 .

servic'e departme.nt and
wi.ll service Hotpoint and
other brands.

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?
Let Pomeroy • Landmark
soften , &amp; condition _y our
water with Co-op water
softener, Model UC-SYt,
Now only

•279.95

Let us test your water Free

Landmark
Jock W. Carsey, Mgr.
Ptione 992-2181

. . . . Jack W. Carsey, M
. gr.
Phone 992.2 1a1

Ail

WeAre Now
Taking New
Customers For

FUEL OIL. AND
GAS SERVICE

CALL US
· Pomeroy Landmark

'9. -Jack W. Carsey, Mjjr.
Ail&amp; Phone992-2181
PIANO TU.N IN G- ~ lone Daniels . 13
years of service·. New phone
numbet, 992-2581.

8 N FORO Trac tor. new tires and
rims, excellent mechanical con·
d ition. Also, 1 Holley c:orbureter. I Singer Zig Zog sewing mach ine wit~ button haler.
PH 992-720 1.

sPur,

$25 c:ord.
S30, 992-6302 or

99H222.
ONE 1972 GMC pkkup truck.
Good . running condition . Price
$3?5. Clyde Barnette, 8rlor
Ridge Rd ., longs Yille, OH.
Phone 742·2523 .
1971 CHEVROLET PICKUP ~7 V-8
standard, 52.000 miles. Good
condition . PH 9B5-3934 .
REDUCE SAFE &amp; fast wit h GoBese
Tablets • and E-Vap ''water
pill$', Nelson Drug . ..

~I

FOUR ROOMS and both . Adults
only . No pets . 992· 5908 .
COUNT RY MOBILE Home Pork .
Route 33 . north of Pomeroy .
Lorge lots . Co!l992-7479.

THREE
BEDR OOM992-3090 .

Home Service

Supetior

plumbing !
carp~nter
wor](,
painting,
paneling,
any job that needs to
be done ar.ound your

R.,o.3,P-. O.

~ C.irpet •

home.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

PHONE
992-5705
12-7· 1

JOHNIEtS

Res i d ·entIa I
and
commercial . Call
for
estimate, 24 hoyr service.
Anvday, anvtime.
Phone 9a5-3a06

Corner Union Ave.
and Sl. Rl. 7
Pomeroy, Ohio
· Changeof
IPI,.&gt;neNumber

Jack's Septic
Tank Service
Box 34

Ch,ster , Ohio
10-30-c

pj

.

LATfR, EASV'S SLOW •
DOWN IN FROfoJT OF

•

At

992·2206 or 992-7630

•
.,"'

'1iu OrJ~giool
Nat Jh•lmitltors

'

.

CARTER

SEPTIC TANK
. CLEANING

SALON

Upholstery

Phone Mlb Youn1

mo .

llEAUTY

Closed Jan. 10
Til 18th, 1978

·•
••

Carpeting

PWMBING

..,'

&amp;·

B1Dw1

TEAFORD[H

~ ~ ~~ ~

.

IIIAL TQR

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR .
216 E . Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 992-3325
NEW
LISTING
-3
bedrooms , bath . utility
building, natural gas , city
Water and front porch .
Wano iusl $7.500.
MIDDLEPORT
-3
bedrooms, 2 baths, natural
.gas f urnac e, and city
wa ter. Located near the
business sec tio n. Now
$15,000.
RACINE - 4 bedrooms,
bath, city ut ilities, natural
gas central heati ng , la rge
lot and ext ra building .
AsKing S28,000.
TUPPERS PLAINS . ,_
Breezeway , 150x200 lot, 3
bedrooms.
bath,
gas
central heat ing, nice oak
floOr s a nd gcirage . Will
consider r e·asonabte offer .
POMEROY RURAL - 50
ac r es with min eral s, wate:r
a nd electricity ,
NEAR POMEROY - 175
acres Wi th gas well, 8 room
modern ranch house, barn,
minerals. and ·frui t.
M I DDLE PORT
4
bedroom
brick ,
bath,
natural
gas
central
heating, 2 porches and
basemen t . Asking 523.500.
NEW LISTING - Business
bu il ding thai can be
separa ted into 3 rentals.
Want .a good investment,
try lhls one. Only $35,000 .
Don ' t be five minu tes late.
· BUY
FOR
YOUR
SECURITY .
AN
INVESTMENT' IN ONE
OF THE ABOVE , IS
TOMORROW'S SAVINGS.
Helen L. Teaford
C. Bruce Teaford
Sue P. Murphy ,
Realtor Associates
THR EE YEAR o'ld, l .' h s tory , ra nch
style home . 4 bedrooms. 2 car
garage , ceme nt drivewoy , 1 A.
groun d . $33,900 . Pri vate
owner. Seen ~y appointme nt.
949·2B0 1.

HOBSTffiER
REALTY
GeorgeS. HobsteHer Jr.,
Broker
107 1fz Sycamore St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
PHONE 992-6333
Office Hours : 9' A.M. to ·•
P.M.
Close Thursdays
anc
• Saturday s at noon.
NEW
LISTING
.3
bedroom , 1111 baths, din·lng
area, kitchen has built-in
oven and range, one car
garage , family room. New
total electric home on an
acre lot . 541 .000.00. Located
on the Crow Sub-division,
near Five Points.
N~W

LISTING - 2 year
old Fuq ua double wide
mobile home, U'x52 ' wlth
pOrch in excellent condition·
including ali . furniture &amp;
appliances. Located on
corner lot, lOO 'x200' In the
Arbaugh ~ddlllon. Tuppers
Plains. Ohio, known as. the
Ralph Br ooKs property .
This is a good buy at
$21 ,000.00.
We have need of listings, ·
types; homes, land,
commercial; etc.
.CheNI Le"'ley
Associate
Home Phone 742-2003
Hilton Wolfe, Sr.
Associate
· ~om• Phone 949-15a9

•II

INCOME TAX Services . Federal
ond State To~ees . Walla ce
Russett . Bradbury. 992-7228. '

VA -FHA, 30 yr. financing . Ireland
Mortgage. 77 E. State, Athens,
phone (6 14) 592-3051 .
·

Financin&amp;- ~railabll

llow11 lata lblh &amp; Attics

STORM
WINDOWS &amp; OOORS
REPLICEMENT
WINOOWS
ALUMINUM
SIDINii-SOFFITT
GIJTTEil$-.IIIIIINGS

SALES AND SERVICE
i1-9-Hc

I NYStfj

Mil~~~

LARRY LAVENDER
Syracvse, Ollio
Ph. 992-!993

ALUMINUM SIDING
SOLID VINYL SIDING
SOFFIT &amp; CELINGS
GUTTERS &amp; DOWN
SPOUT
Easy
steP
~Y
. step
.instructions.

PlANING MILL •
RACINE,O .
992-397a

ACE HARIMARE

INSUlATION

Located In

SERVICE

MEIGS PLAZA

WOOD AND WOOL FIBER
12 · 11 ~ 1

HOMESITES for sal e , 1 acre and
up. Middleport. neo r Rutland .
Co/1992-7481.

MAIN
POMEROY, ,0 .

--.
. - ' --r
JUST LISTED - Approx. 3
acres wi th lovely newer
home. 3 bedrOQms with
wa lk -in closets, 2 modern
baths, kitchen with loa ds of
cabinets, range
oven,
formal din ing room , family
room, 2 yrs . old. $28,000.00.
JUST tiSTED ·- About 4
yrs. old brick &amp; frame . 1
aCre. 3 lovely bedrooms,
"1'12 bath s, kitche n has 27 ft.
cabinets, r:ange ~ Oven,
double g lass door s to
concrete pa t io,
large
garage, porch. 531,900.00.
YOU WILL ADORE THIS
- Newer 3 bedroom frame ,
modern bath , very nlc:e
kitchen .
Ca r pe ti ng,
paneling, all in excellent
condition, noth lng more to
do. JUST $1a,500.00.
LOCATED ON OLD RT: 33
- About 19 acres, water
available. overlooks both
old &amp; new Rts. 33 . Mostly
wooded . $5,000.00.
MIDDLE PORT --' One
floor plan , 2-3 bedrooms, 2
fireplaces, , ready· to move
Into.
Lvel
lo t ,
good
ne ig hborhood , l-Ias been
remode le d
t:tlceiy .
$13,000.00.
POMEROY - Basement. 3
bedrooms, carpeting, one
floor plan, gas for ced a ir
furnace . Call about lhls
on~ , s1a.ooo.oo.
WE HAVE BUY.ERS FOR
YOUR
PROPERTY,
ESPECIALLY
NEWER
HOMES, AND FARMS.

mo.

WORK FOR YOU. .
,
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
HANK, KAl:HY &amp; LEONA
CLELAND
ASSOCIATES

NEW ~ bedroom house,

..

~

12. 18-1 mo.

.--..
YES, BUT I'LL BET

TH.ol;l" -ru~ SOUP
01' ALJGGV'S WILL
MELT "n--E ICE!

1163-2nd Ave., Gallipolis
446'7a3J.-446· 1833

EXCAVATING, dozer , loader and
backhoe work ; dump trucks
· and lo -b9ys for hire; w il l haul
fill dirt. fo soil. limestone and
gravel. Coli Bob or Roger Jeffe rs, day phon e 992-7089, night
phone 992-3525 or 992- 5232.

SAVE ON
CARPETING

F-250 lfo ton 1973 Ford Pickup . 4speed. P.S. , P.B. White . $1 ,200.
(614)667- 3252 . .

Candy Stripe
Rubber Back
Regular S6.95.SaveS4.aa Sq . .Y~ .

1970 DODGE CORONET Sport
Coupe, Excellent condi tion.
1968 Pontiac Cotolino. Coli
Charles Griffith , 992-5782.
1969 CHEVROLET IMPALA. 4-door.
Fine condition. $550. 742-2359.

............
.
••

FERGUSON 20 Tractor , New rear
tires. Sl ,2'0 0. ! 42-2523.

••
,.•

•

ALARIC!

RIGHT...

You lool&lt;.

,....e

$T~ft,.S Wf:R! . ...,~

4.88 SQ. YD.

Reg. $6.9'5.not installed

•

...•

~1.-'· -

... -£1.$tWHifle, fiGH'riNG
CONif'INuED•• •
G

RUTLAND
FUitNITURE
,,

1171 b&lt;fNU. Inc., Ul. AIQ. U.S Pal. 011.

WINNIE

ROlli lid

• WITt\ DIANA ADAM&amp; lEAVINGIHE FIIZ'A,'THAT'LL MEAN
MORE PAPER WORK
FOR ME .•. AND

Convenient Shoppmg Hours

LEBO&gt; TIME FOR.

OHbTIMM::f.~ WHAT AM I GOING10 0 ? I&lt;UN L1 KEB UB Ban-t
VERY MUCH ... e&gt;UT I BTILL
MIBB \OUR FAIHErt
SOMETI-IING · r----::
FIEIZCE.I

DE&amp;IGNING'

MON., TUES., WED.
8:00 TIL 5:00

.•• •
•-

••

Commercial property approx. 17
acres , level land, located ot
742-2211
ARNOLD GRATE
RUTLAND
Tuppers Plains on Ohio. Route
7. Phone(614)667·6304,.
1 . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .- . . .

·e

••

.

j

.

I

'
e ·;

t '
:

.

5 Max or
Neville
6 Supennan's
girlfriend, '
with 17 D.
7 Puts up with
8 Caviar
source
9 Most painful
II Lying flat
15 Subdue

Yesterday's Answer

17 See 6 D.
20 -'s eye
21 French
river
22 In lieu of
23 Listen!
2-t Inferior
25 Confronted

27 Safe spot
28 Fling
Z9 Harold or
Richard
30 Wee
32 Alter alpha
Monday, Jan . 9
35 Seed
holder

BRIDGE

Oswald Jacoby.and Alan Sontag

MAN SNUFFY DON'T
MI.{ HEAD HURTS.. WHERE
ARE MY GLASSES?

South closes bid at 3NT
NORT H

THE!/ FLEW OFF WHEN
YOU f.! IT THE ICE ... I
DON'T KNOW WHERE

THE!/ LANDED...

1/!:1 -A

• ,J 7
' KQ4

• QR 5
•
•

AQ U 53

' 962
• J 974

•s

A 10 9 8 7
E~ST

WEST

• en

. , JIOR3
. • 10 6 3
• Q62
SOIJTH
• K 10 9

' A 75
+
II K 2
• K J43

'TT-J-t--JIID~V·clui~'·;"~;·
~ .,r Sou
a b Ithe:, Openi
bothng,
,.

-...L.-L.....J.~~~o. eao : Five of sp,ades.
West North Eas~
· South
DAILY CRYPTO(IUQTE - Jle~·e's how to work it:
I NT
Pass
3 NT
Pass
Pass
AXYDLBAAXR
Pass
Is · L 0 N G F E T. L. 0 W
.One letter simply sta nds for a noJh e r. In this sa mple A is By Oswald Jacoby &amp; · Alan
Sontag
used for the t hree L's, X for the twO o·~. {'tc. Single letters,
apostrophes, t he length and form ation of the ·words arc all
hints. Each day the rode. lett ers arc diffe rent. .
Oswald : " We will discuss
'the jump to game and It's
CRYPTOQUOTES
relation to s lam bidding in
this week's articles. "
EM K'S Y X K
LA EN
NZVV
MZHZQ.
Alan : " Some jumps to
game are what 1$ known as
JMNGV 1Stop' bids. They are meant
XY
KYJ'QZ
CYG M C
NY
lo close the bidding . Among
X Y M Z
G N .. KYJ:Hz
these stop bids are jumps
from one to three notrump
OYQ .MZYg_ JR HE~XZQSGVN
as made by today's North ."
Oswald: " South hos a
Satunlay"o Cryploquole: MERIT BEGETS CONFIDENCE,
maximum 18-point riOtrump,
CONFIDENCE BEGETS ENTIIUSIASM, ENTHUSIASM CON- but doesn't make any move
over North's jump to game.
QUERS 1'liE WORLD.-WALTER CUNNINGfiAM
He knows that If the re is a

HOW COME I./ORE

••

:

style

4 Chwn

roUed
up
35 Ashy
36 JubUant
37 Pizzeria
fixture
38 Fortifi·
cation
39 Gainsay

"NP Gfit.AND r;MPIDS. .·/ .rl'

Call742-2211
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

RUTLAND FURNITURE

city
3 Window

3411 can be

'I"ODIIY IN 'P'OICYO,

'

30 i"olls. of carpet in stock .
Good selectiOn all on sale.
Installed wilh padding, no
extra to pay .

,

DOWN
I Antonym of
repel
2 Vietnamese

subj .
i2-t Exclusive
2S Strike out
26 Feminine
suffix
27 Miner's
headwear:
2wds.
31 Reverse
33 Before

-~

·GOOD MNaNG.

1

CLOSE SATURDAY

by THOMAS JpSEPH

ACROSS

well. Clovia!

l1 and IS ft. wfdth Carpet •
rubber back.
.

FRIDAY TIL 5

SMAll form lor sale. 10% down ,
owner financed . Monroe County , W. Vo. Phone (30-4) 7723 102o• (31J.4)172-3227.
'

oo-

~
I Tennis
stroke
5 Sanctify
John 0' II Right away
12 Indigo
plant
13 Oakland
pro
14 Fish eggs
15 Monkly
· haircut
16 "Lost Weo:kend" star
18 Literary
initials
19 Wooden
core
20 Suitabl,e;
proper
21 Explosive

THURSDAY 8 TIL NOON

all elec .. 1 acre , Middleport,
·dose to Rvfland. Phone- . 992·
7481 .

(Answers tomorrow)
PIECE COLON BASKET LAWFUL
Answer: How to move with t he tim•• ~
''CLOCKWISE"

23School

,

••••

WE H.oi.VE
FOUNDniEM,

I HOPI:

'&gt;()U'RE

GASOUNEALLEY

ERNIE

742-2211

IIIJ(IXII n

NEW -JUSTOFF PRESSI JliMBLE BOOK 111 with 110 puulealeavall·
able ror $1 .:;5 postpa id ho rn Jumble, c/o this newspaper , P.O. Box 34,
Norwood, N.J. 076-48. Include your name, address, zip code atld make
chKks payable to Nawapaperboo!l,e.

ALLEYOOP

PUlliNS EXCAVATING . Complete
Se rvice. Phone 992-2478·.

Answer: THE(

I Jumbles:Sau
I rd avs

-

SEWING MACHINE Repairs , ser·
vice, all mokes, 992-2284. The
Fabr ic Shop ,
P omeroy .·"·"~
Autho"rized Singe r Sales and ~
Service. We sharpen Scissors .

/

WHAT DR'AC.UI.A WAS
LOOKIN&amp; FOR WHILE
DR:IVIN€&gt; ON A
C.OUNiRY 1(0A!/.
Now arrange the cttcled letters to
fonn the surprise answer, as sug gested by the abOve cartoon.

•

'_,,.
••
•

BATHROOMS AND KitchenS
re modeled . ceramic tile , pl um, bing : carpentry, ond general
mai ntenance. 13 yedrs e:-.c perience. ~ -3685 .

1974 GRAN TORINO . V-8, P.S.,
P.B.. A.C.. good condition ,
good tires . Earl Cross .
9&lt;9-2168.

US? ,

~.

UpholsteiJ
Shop

1971 FORD TORI NO Station
Wogan . 302 motor . PS Good
cond ifion. Wh ite , $250. Coli
(614)667-3252.

W E~LY

DID OUil, JOB 1
WHO CAll BLAME

·~·-

REMODELING , Pl um bing. heat ing
and all ty pes of genera l repair.
Work guor Onteed 20 yea rs e~e - ­
perienc e. Phone 99~-2409.

1975 PlYMOUTH -DUSTER . 2-dr .,
auto. Slant Six , dark green with
while vinyl top , P. S., radio , air .
Good condition' 1 owner. (304)
773-5977.

AXEL!

_, _"

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers , toaste rs . irons. oil
small appliances . la wn mowe'r,
nex t to Stol e 1-flghwoy .Goroge
on Rou te 7. Phone · (614) 9853825.

1971 VW SU.PER Be~tle , $1,300 ,
E~ecellent
condit io n . 1970
Chevelle , $500. POdded bar,
stools, $300. 992-2987 .

A TRICK 01'-4

,

WILl do rooflng, conStruct ion,
plumbing bnd heating . No job
too Iorge o r too s mall. Phone
742-2348.
·~
HOWERY AND MARTIN E:-.c covoting , sepfic system"$ ,
dozer , backhoe, dump truc:;_k ,
limesto ne, gravel. blacktop
paving , Rt . 143 . Pho('le 1 (614)
698-733 1.

1966 V.W. with 1970 V.W . motor .
AlsO t..;,.o new snow tires
mounte d on V.W. rims. Best offer, Coll992-3866.

2 bottls .

, COUNTRY farmland with seclude-d woods, water and good OC ·
cess in Monroe County, W. Vo .
$1 ,000 down , coli (304) 7723102 6• (304) 772-3227 .

0

PHONE
742-2570

BRADFORD.. Auctioneer, Com·
plete S~rvic~ . Phone 949-2487
or 949·2000. Rocine , Ohio, Cri lf ·,.
8rodfor'd.
I

1972 FORD GRAN Tor ino Station
Wagon . 35 1 engine . A .C., auto.
51.000 mile s. $1.,300. 949-20B2.

I
1 (J

IQUORIL

EXCAVATING, dozer, backhoe
and ditc.her. Char"les R. HotJie ld, Sock Hoe Service ,
Rutl bhd, O hio. Phone 742-2008.

a.

~~lTIN~UR'· SE =~~l~

Boilers, Furnaces, Heat
Pumps. &amp; Auto-Controls.
GA!.-OIL-COAL

Tr~State

"SINCE 1947

o

,.......,._

II ~

&amp; SERVICE:

Professional Service, 39
vrs. experience .
Free
estiJllates,
pickup
&amp;
"elivery
service .
Residential &amp; Commercial.

bvHenriArnotdand6obLee

I MERFlli

HEATING SERVICE

-UPholsteiY-

RACINE

Middieport, Ohio
11 -9-lfc

I·

•

12: oo-Newscenttr 3; Newt -4,6, 10; To Say The Least
15; Divorce Court 8: Midday 13 ,
12 :»;- Ryan's Hope~ , 1J ; Bob Braun"; Gong Show IS ;
Starc.h for Tomorrow 8,1 0; Elec . Co. 3~ ; Cross-Wits
3
1:liD-All My Children 6, 13; News 8; Y 0\lng &amp; I he
ReslleSI 10; Not For Women Only 15.
1 :311-Days ot Our Lives 3,4, 15 ; As The World Turns
8.10; 2: 110-520.000 Pyramid 6,13.
2:311-Doclors 3••• 15; One Lite to Live 6, 13 ; Guiding
Light a. 10.
·
3;00-Another World 3,4,15 ; Lilias Yoga &amp; You· 2o.
3:1So--General Hoapltal 6,13 ; 3 :30-AII In The Family
8,10J Consumer .~urvl val Kit 20.
• :liD-Special Treat~3,4 , 15 : Merv Griffin 6: Gilligan's
Is . 8; Sesame St. 20,33: Gomer Pyle. USMC 10;
Dinah 13 .
'
4:311-Brady Bunch a ;, 10.
5:DO-Bonan za 3; .My Three Sons " ; Gunsmoke 8;
Mosler Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33 ; Hogan's
Heroes 10; E mergency One IJ ; My Three Sons 15 .
5:311-Qdd C ouple&lt;; News 6; EJec . Co. 20, 3:3; Mary
Tvler Moore 10; Hogan's Heroes 15.
6 :DO-News 3,4,a, I0.13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33 .
6: 30-NS C Newo3,,, 1S; ABC News 13; Carol Burnell &amp;
Friends 6; CBS New s 8, 10; Over Easy 20,33.
7:111).-{;ross-WIIs3 ; My Father, My Brother and Me 4;
Liars Club 6 ; Pop Goes the Coun try 8 ; News 10; To
Tell the Trulh 13; Gilligan' s Ia . 15; French Chef 20 ;
Me and Stella 33 .
7 :311-Hollywood Squares 3; Lot's Go To The Race• 8:
Next Step Beyond 4: Wollman Jack 6; Ma c Neil Lehrer Report 211,33; Price Is Right 10: That's
Hollywood 13; Television Honor Society 15. ·
&amp;:liD-Man From Atlant is 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13 ;
Fltzpalrlcks 8, 10; Hollywood l:e lev lslon Thea tr e
'20; Greenpeace : Voyages to Save the Whale ll .
8:311-Laverne &amp; Shirl e y 6, 13; 9 :
Three's Co mpan y
6,13; Mash 8,1 0; Medica l Convoca t ion 33.
9:30-Soap 6; One Day at a Time 8, 10; Mary Tyler
1
Moore 13.
IO :IID-NBC Reporls 3,4,15; Fam ily 6,13; Lou Grano
a, 10; News 20; Jacques Llpc hllz 33 .
'
·
10:3Q-Black Perspec tive on the News 20; 11 :liD-News
3,4,6,8,10,13, 15: Dick Cavett 20; Over Easy 33.
11 :3o-Johnn y Carson 3,4,15 ; Movie " Niaht Wale~"
6,13; Movie "Callow" 8; ABC New s 33 ; Movie
"You'r.e a Big Boy Now" 10.
·
12 :11D-Janakl 33 ; 1 :liD-Tomorrow 3.4; 1: 1o-News 13 .

"" one letter to each square, to form
four ordinary words.

4[1\ I,..,Tho~ T ...-.

REPAIR

I 0:1»--1.:

10:110-Sontord &amp; Son 3,, , 15; Big' Valley 6; Talllelales •
a ; Joker ' s Wild 10; M ike Douglas 13.
10: 311-Hollywood Squares 3,4 , 15 ; Price Is R lghl 8. 10.
II : IID-W heel ot Fortune 3, 15 ; Happy Days 6,1 3:
Marcus Welby, M .D . &lt;: .
11 : 311-Knockout 3,15; Family Feud 6,13; Love ol Lite
8, 10: Sesame St .20; Mi c robes &amp; Men 33 .
11 :55--CBS News a : Loving Free 10.

UnScramble these four Jumbles,

IWt.miF
I CJ.I.l ~T

OHIO

CHEMICALS
We Strip Paint - Varnishes ·
etc.
.Wood -Meta I- Plastics
, Antiques &amp; Modern
Upholstering Service
Custom
Professional
Refinishing - Repairing.
Antiques Bought &amp; Sold
·
Dick Seyler
Phone 992-279a
TOO Kerr St .
Pomeroy, Ohio
12-30-1 mo.

lnnlation S•~tic•

a.

'f}fJI}N'} fj}'fl ~· THAT SCRAMBLED WORD OAME

300Moin St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
PomeroY 992-6282
or 992-6263
aA:M. to4 :30P.M.

.M

3: My Three Sons 4: Gunsmoke ' '
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33 : Hogan ' s
Heroes 10: Emergency One 13; My Three Sons 15 .
5 : JO--&lt;ldd Couple " News 6; Elec. Co. 20,33 : Mary
'· Tyler Moore 10; Mogan's Heroes 15.
6 :110-News 3•• •a. o0,13, 15: ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6 :311-NBC News 3,• . 15 : ABC News 13; Carol Burneto S.
Friends 6: CBS News 8,10: Over Easy 20,33 .
7:1l0--Cross-W its 3.•: Liars Club 6; Marty Robbins
Spotlight 8; News 10; To Tell The Truth 13 ; ,
Gilligan's Is . 15 : Da~lel Foster, M .D . 20; Know'
Your Schools 33,
7:30--That Nashville Muslo 3; l'fee Haw Honeys 4;
Muppet Show 6: Malch Game PM 8 ; MacNeilLehrer Report 20,33: Wild Kingdom 10: Cand id
Camera 13 ; Nashville On The R. . d 15 .
8 :110-LIIIIe House On The Prairie 3.• . 15; Lucan 6,13 :
Variety '77 -The Yea' In Enter ta inment a.I O:
National Geogra phi c 20.33.
9 :QO-Movle. " Car Wash" 3,4, 15; Movie " SupC!rdome"
6, 13; Adams Chrorilcles 20; Fall ot Eagles 33.
9 : 3Q-BeHy White. a, iO.
10:00---Swltcl"l 8,10; New s 20; Great Performances 33 .
10:30--Farm Digest 20; 11 :oo-News 3,4.6,8, 10,13, 15:
Dic k Cavett 20 .

.

HEAnNG INC.

e.t&gt;l-1&lt;;

FREE ESTIMATES

TUESDAY, JANUARY 10, 1'71
5 :.s--Farm Roporl'l3; 5:51)-PTL Club 13: 6 :110-PTL
Club IS; 6: 25--Concerns
Comments 10; 6 : 311Focus on Columbus 4; News 6; 6:.ts-Mornlng
Ropo•t3 : 6 : 5()-Chuck Whitt Rports 10; News 13.
7:110-Today 3,4, 15 ; GoOd Morning Amer ica 6, 13 ; CBS
Nows 8 ; Bullwlnkle 10; 7 :311-Schoolles 10 .
I :OCI-capl. K1ngaroo I , 10; S1iamo St. 33 .
9 :oo-Merv Grltrln 3; Phil Donahue 4, 13. 15; New
, Mickey MO\Ise Club 6; Family Affair I ; Mil ch
Game 11) ,
9 :311-Edgo of Nlghl6 ; Andy Grltfllh 8; Family Atfelr
10.

5 : 110-BonaJ~a

-•
...

Young's

Phone
992 -7608
TWO STORY 3 bedroom !rome
house . F.A. Iurnace , ~ lorm ;,.,.in dews , firep lace. In Middleport.
PH. 992 -3457 or 992· 5867 .

MONDAY, JANUARY 9, 1971

••
•••
•
••
"

Stum EltrKIIoll

E:lec .,

house .

HOUSE FOR Lease on li ncoln Hill
;n Pomeroy. 5 bedrooms .
Deposit required . 992 -3489
a her 5 pm .

'

I

•
-"
•

TWO BEDROOM Troller . Adults
only. 992-3324 ,

Pomeroy Landmark

RA IDER 100 watt linear . $ 125 .
PIANO TU-NING lone Daniels,
9&lt;9-2322.
New phone number , 992-2581.
1976 Suzuki RM ' 100MXER , 41Jlo ,
If rlo on ~W e r . coll992·2b82.
old , 0 hOur s on engine , new '
ports ' needs as sembled, $200. MOBILE HOME repairs . 992-5858 .
1977Suzuki RM 12SBMXER, e~e ­
tros , excellent cond ition . $675.
PP . 992-3082 .
HAY FO R sole . Round boles . PH .
843-2524 .

3 AND -4 RM.. furn ished and unfurnished opts. Phone 9925-434.

Business Services

+-

AKC REGISTERED Dobermo n
_pups . 843-3053 after 5.

De liver ~d.

' • • • • • • • • • • • • •••• , . 6" thru 25"
31ZE • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ••
lENGTH • • • • • • .. • • • • • • • 6'4", 7'8", 8'6", 11' and 12'6"
PAY BY MEASUREMENT OR WEIGHT
5119.00 Per Thousand Ft. orSI2 .00 Per Ton

;

( 614~9 ~32'10 . ~

FIREWOOD.'

LOW GRADE LOGS
I

RESPONSIBLE OLDER lady to live
in and core for aged lady in
Rutland . Light housework and
HOOF HOllOW Hor,es . Buy , sel l
cooking, no laundry . More for
trade or train. New ond used
home thon wages . Coli
sodd,t:'s . Ruth Reeves . Albany .
742-2078.

STARCRAFf FALL Sole. Mini
motOrs. , 20' and 22'. TraVel
Tra ilers., 18' S" $3,799, 25' 7''
Bunkhouse $4 ,875. f:old -down,
$1 .700 up . We sell •ervice and
qualify . Open Sundays . Comp
Conley Storcroft Sol-s . Rt . 62,
N. of Pt . Pht o!!lont .
1972 . ARISTOCRAT
TRAVEL
Trailer, 18'. $2.200. Call
992-3580.

11 :311-Johnny Carsorq,4,1l; Pollee Story 6,13 : Movie
'Partners In Crimi" 1: BC News 33 .
12:oll--Janakl 33.
·
12:A~News 13; 1:00-Tomorrow 3,4.

TELEVISION
VIEWING

C.1wrHe

1.00
1.50
1.90
3.00

ldoy

9-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Jan. 9, 1978
DICK TRACY

GIT HISSELF A

JOB?

PAW 'S
GOT

BACK
TROUBLE

.play for a s lam It must be •
very poor one/ '
Alan : " In the play, South

managed to luke twelve
tricks . He wou ld neve r· ha ve
made them lf.he l&gt;id the •ia n\
since West woutd not ha ve
led a spade against u six
bid ."
'
Oswald : "South won tho)
spade lead with dum my's -·
jack. He-did not want to let
l':ast gain the lead so he
played dummy' s ace .. of
clubs, conllnued by finessing
against t he queen and wound
up with fi ve clubs, one spade
a nd Si x tricks in the r e d

suits."

..A Dakota reader wants to
know if there ever was Hn
invitational master's Individual.
Yes, there

was. Jt was

limited to 36 player s and
played fr om 1933 on. Sometime around 1950 it was
extended to a llow any num"
her to play . It was dlsconllnued in 1960 and revived In
1966 as a minor event.
The early w)nners look
like a who 's who of bridge .
(For a copy ol JACOBY MOD·
ERN, se nd Sl to .· " Win at
Bridge,'· care of this newspaper, P.O. Box 489, Radio City
Station, Ne w Yoro, f!l . Y. 1~019. )
rNEWSPAPEF\ F.NTERPRI,SE

~SSN . )

�,

10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Monday, Jan. 9,1978

Sulfur dioxide
-levels raised
in
Virginia

w.

CHARLESTON, W. Va .
(UPI) - Regulations to relax
the level of suHur dioxide
pollutants that can be let iniD
West Virginia air were approved today by the
Legislative Rule-Makmg
Review Committee.
The vote was 7·1 with
chairman Sen. Robert
Steptoe, D·Berkeley, the only
dissenter .
Air Pollution Control
Commission Director Carl
·· Beard said that barring any
action on the part of the
federal Environmental
Protection Agency the
regulations will become
effective In 30 days.
The new regulations will
permit coal with ··a sulfur
content of up\(&gt; 4.3 percent at
Mitchell power plant; 3.7
percent at Harrison plant;
and 1.9 ·percent at Fort
Martin. It delays, pending
1further studies, changes at
Ohio Power Co.'s Kanuner
plant.

SMITH TO RUN
COLUMBUS CUPI)
Franklin County Prosecutor
George Smith, 42, announced
today he would seek the
Republican nomina lion for
attorney general. Smith was
the Republican canpidate in
1974 arid was defeated by
Ohio . Attorney General
William J . Brown by over
200,000 votes.

Religious freedom doesn't
··
apply to real Americans
according to Abourezk.
Problem areas which
Inhibit Indian practice of
their tradtlonal religion
include such things as lack of
access to sacred sites,

By DAVJD E. ANDERSON

UPI Religion Writer
One of this nation's most
prized rights is freedom of
. religion - the right to believe
whatever religious Ideas and
practice whatever religious
rites the individual thinks are

restriction on the use of

sacred objects, such as
peyote or eagle feathers and
actual Interference with religious rites and ceremonies.
Commenting on the latter,
Abourezk said that "even
today, certain symbolic portioos of the Sun Dance which
deal with fertiU(y and the
cycle of life are banned."
"The prejudice involved of·
flcials' belief that it was
'sinful' in Chrlstian terms,"
Abourezk said . "Such
mi s understanding
is
analogous to attributing the
taking of communion to cannibalism."
Its effect, he said, is the
imposition of one set of

correct.
It also includes the right not

to believe ·or practice any
religion .
Although religi o us
toleration has had a long and
not always trouble free
history in the United States,
~st Americans believe the
constituti ona l principle
allowing free exercise of
religion is firmly enshrined.
But one group of Americans
- native Americans continues to have difficulties
·In practicing traditional
religions.
As Sen. James Abourezk of
South Dakota has pointed out,
in · recent years there have
been increasing numbers of
incidents in which the rights
of Indians 1&lt;&gt; practice their
traditional religion have been
interfered with.
According 1&lt;&gt; Ab11urezk , it
gener8lly has been less a
matter of deliberate interference as a "lack of knowledge ,
unawareness, insensitivity

religious

values

Christian ~ upon another
and becomes "a direct threat
I&lt;&gt; the foundation of religious
freedom in America . It
comes far to close to an
informal state religion."
Some. states have already
moved In the direction of
protecting traditional Indian
practices.
Montana, for example, reand neglect ... "
"This state of affairs is sponding to the eagle feather
enhanced by the perception of crisis of 1974 In which Indians
many non-Indian officials were arrested for possessing
that because Indian religious and exchanging the feathers
practices are different than of the federally protected
·their own that they somehow eagle, passed a state
do not have the same stautus · co ngressional resolution
as a 'real' religion ," setting forth the policy of free

HOSPITAL NEWS

to

serve

on

coounittees whose actions
might aflect traditionalist
practice.
Abourezk would like to see
similar action oo the federal
level and has introduced
would
legislation that
establish a clear federal
policy w protect the practice
of traditional religion.
President Carter has promised that should the legislation be approved by Coogress
it will he "given thorough,
sensitve
and
prompt
attention and consideration."
Abouretk , in introducing
the proPosed legislation, said
the foundation for a
comprehensive
and
coordinated implementation
of the policy could be quJckly
established and the goals of
protection achieved with
little difficulty.
''The Indian traditional and
religious leaders rightfUlly
regard a clear federal policy
as a crucial matter which
must be resolved if the Indian
culture and religion is I&lt;&gt;
survive," Abourezk said.

to Parental Advice·
Let.' s face II. Butch Is far more likely to follo w you r exampl_e than your advice.
So. when it comes to l eaching ch i ldren about thrift , skip the " penny saved is a
penny ear ned " speech ; and , instead ,· take the kids wi th you to Farmers Bank and
let them watch YOU qpen a savi ng s account . ~ow , that' s examp le .

•

•

•

0

0

Farmers Bank·
I'OMEROY, 01-110
'

'40,000 Maximum Insurance For Each Oepolitor
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

NOT INTERESTED' In
Israel's Ideas on tbe
Palestinians' future, PLO
observer at tbe United
Nations, says th~ proposal
to give home rule to &lt;&gt;ecupled territories Is a
''rldueulous joke." Teni
vows Palestinian groups
wlll oppose such an
arrangement by 11 &amp;11
methods available."

Meigs
Property
Transfers

CLOSED MONDAY
JANUARY 16TH
FOR MARTIN
LUTHER KING DAY

Special of the Week
Monday, Jan. Ylh thru Saturday, Jan . 14th

ALL BEEF
HOTDOGS
GERMAN DOG
(Kraut Dog)
SPECIAL 40~
PRICE
I
Footlong German Dog
SPECIAL 60~
Reg . 9Sc
PRICE
Reg. 60c'

This special is Offered to 1cquaint you with tht
goodness of our Government inspected wien~rs
and oUr homemade sauce.

No limit to q""ntlty of purch.lse. Offer good ior
Drive-In or C.Orry-Out Service Only.

·

!

I
v tterollll Memorllll Hoopilal
Mrs.
Roger
Canter
and
son,
Saturday Admissions Survltt"Of"S Include two sons,
RUSSELL PlYMALE
Gladys Blackwood, Rutland ; Arnold Fulk, Zachery Green,
Jack
Hlnkle and Billy Hinkle,
Russell
Allred
Plymale,
66.
Nellie Lemley, Portland ; Mary Harmon , Phfllls Lane, a rHident of 205 Parke-r both of Sylmar, Calif.; two ·
Clara Phillips, RuUand ; Lois George Nutter , George Drive , Springboro, Ohio, and sisters, Carrie M. Judson.
Victoria
S.
Mrs .
Dav id a native of Gallla COtJnty, Hartford.
S ch oo nov e r , . Rutland ; Ratcliff,
Lucretia Werry, Pomeroy. Richards and son, Ethel died al 9:..0 a . m. Sundar rn Hueslng , Ft. Mitchel l. Ky .;
two brothers. Fred E. Hinkle,
the Middletown Hosplta in
Sheets.
Saturday Discharges Akron, 0 .. and Joseph R.
Middletown.
He
had
beeh
In
(Blrths,Jau, 8)
Gladys Cuckler, Jessyca
Hinkle, Lincoln, Ill., and one
fall ing health for tt'le past four
Mr . and Mrs. Bryce Sayre, year::s .
grandchild.
Hatfield, Genrral McCune ,
Funeral services will be
He was born Sept. 27, 1911
Judy Miller, Stanley Shaven , a daughter. Jackson.
conducted we-qnesday I p.m.
In
Gallla
County,
son
of
the
Sylvia Zwilling, Perry Beebe,
at the Fogle!IO!l!l Funeral
late James R. and Delma
Thomas Hendrix, Peggy
Home with lhe Rev. George
PLEASANT VAU..EY
Houck Plymale. He was a
White, Charlotte Coon.
Discharged - Mrs. Eugene retired maintenance welder Hoschor officiating. Burfal
be In the Fry Cemetery.
Sunday Admissions Kincaid, Point Pleasant ; for the Dayton Power and will
'Fr iends may coli at tHe
Light
Company
In
Steven Cremeans, Coolville; Mrs. Cline Stover, Leon; Miamisburg , Oh io. Surviving funeral home 011 Tue-sday
Kathryn Lambert, Rutland; John Harrah, MaS!ln ; Mrs. are hls wife, Katherine from 2 to 4 p.m. and from 7 to ·
Bert Williams, Cheshire ; Don WoUord, Vinton; Mabel Wright Plymale; two sons, 9 p.m.
Lucy Jacobs, Rutland; Nara Goff, Langsville; Mrs. Rus&gt;ell Jr . of Sprlngsboro
Robert Wayne Carlisle,
L. PALMAGE COTTRELL
Hartman, Long Bottom; Roy Charles Blake and son, and
Ohio ; a granddaughter.
Graveside services will be
Reuter, Pomeroy; Kenneth Pomeroy ; Mrs . David Shelly Renae ; a sister, Mrs . held at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday
Imboden , Middleport; "Floyd Atkinson, Point Pleasant; Belva Metz ler of Los Angeles, at Cahtary Cemetery In Rio
Grande for L. Palmage
Spence, Pomeroy.
Earl Wilbur, Lakin ; Nellie Calif.
He
was
a
member
of
the
Cottrell of Columbus who
Sunday Discharges Kent, Point Pleasant; Oloita MlssiOI)ary Baptist Church In died
Sunday.
Florine Ginther , Bessie Bennett, Point Pleasant; Franklin, Ohio and the
Cottrell was a former
Hysell ,
Ediih
Ward, Mrs. Joe Ball, Ashton ; Mrs. Minerva Lodge 98 of the school pr incipal In Gollla
Elizabeth Beaumont, Ken- Frances Pickens, New F&amp;AM and ·the Scottish Rite County and a longtime ·
Valley of Dayton.
resident of the Rio Grande
neth Mullins , Joyce Me· Haven; Dr. Edilberto Rogue , Lodge
Funeral services will be at
Community.
Clellan.
Lakin; Mrs . Dan He slip, 2 p. m, Wednesday of the
syracuse; Claude Marcum, Cremeens FUnera l Home
Ft. Gay , W. Va.; Douglas with the Rev . Eddie Bates
Holzer Medical Center
Burial will be In
Eades,
Cottageville; Mary officiating.
(Discharges, Jan. 8)
Mound Hill Cemetery.
Charles Akers , Vance Wamsley , Point Pleasant; friends may call from 7 1111 9
ATTEND.FUNERAL
Baker , Eva Barcus, Millie Mrs. Frederick Nibert, Point on Tuesday .
POMEROY - Mr. and
Clagg, Elva Corbil\, Ryan Pleasant ; Mrs . Archie
Mrs. C. E. Blakeslee were
JOHN C. HINKLE
Cowan , William Davidson , Newell, Point Pleasant;
HARTFORD - John C. called to St. John's, Michigan
Point Hinkle, 68, Haldford, d ied for the funeral of his brother,
Joan Dill, Audrea Elberfeld, Sherry · Mayes ,
Sunday morning at Pleasant
Pleasant.
Horner Elliott, Linda Faulk ,
Levi. Attending the funeral
Valley Hospital.
Births
A
son
to
Mr.
and
Charles Fick, Elias Hatfield,
with
the Blakesleea are Mrs.
Born Oct. 30, . 1909, Letart,
Gerald Hayman, Robert Mrs . Bryan Higginbolhm , he was. the son of the late Patricia Circle and children
Herdman, Ralph Jeffers , Buffalo ; a daughter w Mr. Joseph G. and Mary Glly Fry of Columbus. The luneral will ·
Hinkle. He was a retired
Nicholas Johnson, Delbert and Mrs. Charles Reitmire, painter.
be Tuesday at I :30 p. m. at
Lawson, Dale Maddy, Troy Pomeroy.
the Osgood Funeral Home.
Martin, George McHaffie ,
Mrs . David Mohler and MOVE UP
OXFORD, Ohio (UP!) daughter, Loveva Ours, Faye
Roberts, Brandy Roush, Mrs. City Manager Lee Davis
Kenneth Sheets and son, resigned during the weekend
(Continued fran .-ce L)
Curtis Short, Melvin Smith, to take a similar position In
others attended Presley film festivals or lrowsed through
Bernease Tabor, Mrs. Randy Albion , Mich .
Elvis
sourvenirs displayed by dozens of exhibitors. However;
Van Meter and son, Sue - Davis said he considers his
expected
large turnouts at the shows and exhibits never ·
move w tile south central
Winnell.
.
materialized.
By far the largest crowda were at Graceland,
Michigan town of 12,000 a
(Births, Jan. 6)
.
where
Presley
died on Aug. 16 and where his coffin eventually
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas professional step up. He will
was
moved
for
burial next to his mother.
Arnott , a daughter, Long receive a 30 percent pay
Botwm. Mr. and Mrs, Ralph increase.
CLEVELAND - A FEDERAL GRAND JURY has
Gibbs, a son, Cheshire. Mr. · Davis came to Oxford, in
indicted
eight alleged La Coss Nostra members on charges of
and Mrs. William, Malone , a 1973 and has been city
racketeering
and conspiracy to kill in the 1977 bombing deaths •
manager foc some two and
son, Jackson.
of
Teamsters
Union leader John Nardi and Cleveland rackets •
ooe.!Jalf years.
(Discharges, Jan. 7)
figtire
Daniel
Greene. The eight are James Licavoli, 73;
Jeffrey Adkins, Laura
Angelo Lonardo, 66; John Calandra, 62; Ronald Carabbia, 48;
Aelker, Carol Barnett, Janye
Pasquale Cisternino, 38; Aladena Fratianno, 64; Allred
Basil, Wesley Beuhl, Denise NEW JOB
Calabrese, 34; and ThOIJll!S Sinitn, 39.
CLEVELAND
HEIGHTS,
Carter, Hazel Collins, Lewis Ohio (UPI) - City Manager
Raymond Ferritto, · 48, Erie, Pa., was named as , an
Dailey, Arline Davis, Harold
unindlcted co-Conspirator. According w the government, be
Robert
Edwards
has
resigned
Dillon, Orville Eastman, waccept a new job with the has confessed participation in the Greene murder and will help
Larry Ferguson, Stella Hall, City of Akron .
with the prosecution of the others. Nardi, an alleged leader in
Connie James, Jane Jordan,
Edwards, 45, blamed his local organized crime, died May 17 in a parking lot near his
Mrs. Gary Lamm and son,
departure on what he termed union office when a bomb in the car next to his was triggered
Albert McCain, Alma Morris, "serious differences in policy by remote control. Once Cleveland's waterfront union boss,
Marvin
Morris,
Jean direction with city council.'' · Greene was slhln by a remote control bomb in a car pa~ked
· Norman, William PenniCk,
As of Feb. I, he will become next to his in the parking lot at .a suburban Lyndhurst office .
Ben Philson,- Tamara Plimts, Akron 's service director ; He building Oct. 6.
. .
.
Peggy Reynolds, Allison served four years as chief
Sirback, .Beulah Swindler, administrative officer of
CINCINNATI- THE 19~ PADDIJNG of a &amp;-year-old boy
John Thompson, Usa Ward, Prince Georges County, Md., will cost the teacher who m~ted out tbe punishment $1,500, as a
Amy Woomer.
before he was hired by result of a damage settlement witll tile youth's family.
Births, Jan. 7)
Cleveland Heights.
The family of Samuel Carpenter ·Jr., also received $25 II&gt;
Mr. and Mrs. Randall
cover medical expenses. The Carpenters originally had sought ·
Evans, a son, Jackson. Mr.
$85,000 in damages from tile Cincinnati Board of Education
and Mrs. Charles Haner, a
IWLA CANCELED
and the teacher , 'Ernie ·Triplett. They accused Triplett of
daughter, Gallipolis.
There will be no lzaak "wholly unnecessary and extremely excessive force" in
(Discharges, Jan. 8)
Walton Directors meeting punishing Samuel.
Mrs. Thomas Arnott and tonight.

News •• in Briefs

Butch's Response

~l

l · Area Deaths

daughter, Nicole Beegle, I

e&gt;:ercise and protection for
Indian rellgioos and urging
appointment of traditional
Indians

--~--- ---------------------1

Alba c. Radford; Hazel B.
Radford to Fred A. Radford,
i!lterest 78 acres , Cllester.
Delbert C. Hayes, dec. to
Dwight H. Rutherford,
Eveleth A. Harshffian, Cert.
of trans., Salem.
Thomas F . Hendrix to
Theria Marie Hendrix, Lots,
Middle(l&lt;Jrt.
\,.
Jimmy Blaine McClure,

Gloria Darlene McClure to
William Edward Bartels,
Diana . Louise Bartels, 2
acres, Chester.
Donald L. Randolph to
Buckeye · Rural Electric
Coop, Inc., right of way,
Orange .
Pearl Randolph to lluckeye
Rural Elec. Coop Inc., right
of way, Orange.
Carroll W.
Johnson,
Mildred Johnson to Gordon B.
Stout, Donna L. Stout, Lot 8,
Goegleln Sub., Middleport.
Danny C. Russell, Debra .L.
Russell to Delbert C. Russell,
2.5 acres, Chester.
Archie E'. Lee, June P. Lee
to Charles M. Fry, Kathy D.
Fry, part 100 acre Lot 296,
acre, Syracuse.
Archie E. Lee, June P. Lee
to Jean Coates, Dor, c:·
:::Oates, part 100 acre lot 296,
826 acres, Syracuse.
Archie E. Lee, June P. Lee
to Daniel M. Dodson, Anna F.
Dodson, pal'\ 100 acres Lot
2!16, &gt;117 aaea, Syracuse.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

s arts irt clearance
This January Sale includes
our entire -sto·ck of Men's Sports
Shirts - a fine selection - solid
colors and patterns. Sizes sma II
!14-141/2), medium (15-151/2); large
(16-161/2), extra large (17-171/21.
Full cut and tapered styles.

SAVE

3

GINO'S

OF MASON
PHONE 773-5536

.

Northent counties hit
hard by.wind an:d snow
By

United

Preai

closed again today by the
drifting snow.
'Blowing and drifting snow
Gov. James A. Rhodes
clogged roads throughout activate d 140 National
northern Ohio late Mmday Guardsmen to help local
and eru:ly today, stranding autllorities rescue stranded
hundreds of motorists and motorists in Cuyahoga,
I 200 air travelers at Huron and Erie Counties.
cleveland Hopkins airport.·A
Over ioo flights were canstate of emergency was celled at Cleveland Hopkins
declared In Cuyahoga, Huron Airport . The Red Cross
and Erie counties.
shipped cots and blankets w
High winds witll gusts up w tile airport and set up a
35 miles an hour swept snow. nurses station.
onw roads In fender high
Officials in the Cuyahoga
drifts from Mahoning County County community of Brook
in eastern Ohio aloog Lake
Park set up emergency acErie to Erie county in north - commodations for stranded
central Ohio.
motorists at the city's old
Hundreds of schools were
recreation center and more
lJnlled Presalllternattoul

than 200 people stayed there Guard got t~or 20 out of theJv
overnight.
cars last rught usmg fetfi'.
- The Cuyahoga County she- wheel vehicles ~nd jeeps."
riff's office said two
"They took them to various
Cleveland area men died of homes in the area and to local
heart attacks while shoveling police stat ions," Derv)'
snow.
said.
.
)
The main problem facing . " It 's , · tetrib le,
just
rescue operations ":as the terrible," said a sheriff 's
continual drifting of snow.
dispatcher at the Erie&gt;County
''There are cars all over the sheriff's office in Sandusky.
place," said ·warrensville "We took a lot of them off of
Heights Police Chief Marvin route 250. There are over 50
Grossman. "We can't even cars abandooed out there."
get tnw trucks in to move · "The roads are all snow
them."
,
covered and plugged up but
Huron County Deputy good;" said Lake County
Sheriff Jalnes Dervy said sheriff's deputy Chuck
"cars are abandooed all over Panico. "We have dozens and
the area" a.nd " the Natiooal
(Continued on page 10).

FUN IN SNOW - Despite icy cold winds which senl
Ule snowfall. into drifts, sleigh riding became a diversion

among UlC 6'ow1gcr

St•t

Monday wtwm schools were

rtismissed in Md ~s Cmmty dut~ to weuther ronditions.

·;:~W:::;~~::::::::~::::;;;:;:::::::::::o;~;:~:~:;:?.;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:;

!News.
. . in Briefsl•
•
•

•

By United PresslnteroiiUonal
WASHINGTON - DAILY COBALT RADIATION
treaiments for.a malignant tumor on his left vocal cord will
keep Supreme Court Justice William ·-Brennan, 71, . off the
bench for the rest of this month . The justice's condition was
disclosed Monday when the Supreme Court 'returned from a
four-week holidaY recess and Brennan was absent from his
usual seat at the right of Chief Justice Warren Burger.
Meanwhile, Justice Harry Blackman, 69, returned w the
bench Mooday for the firsi time since undergoing surgery in
mid-November for cancer of tile prostate: A court spokesman
said doctors sre hopeful the radiation. treatments will
completely cure Brennan, a liberal who has served longer on
tile court tllan any other current member.
Spokesman Barrett McGurn said the treatments were
started Dec. 22after a biopsy earlier in the month "tevealed a
small squamous cell carcinoma- a malignant tumor - of the
left vocal cord."
CINCINNATI - FEDERATED DEPARTMENT
Sl'ORES, Inc., officials announced Monday that Fred Lazarus
III will hecome a vice president in Federated's corporate&lt;!
office.
He will resign a post he has held for tile past -13 years as
chairman and chief executive officer of Shillitn's, the
Cincinnati division of Federated. Lazarus, 65, has been
associated with Shlllito's for 43 years. Edward H. Selonick,
current president of Shillito's, will su&lt;;eeed Lazarus. StePhen
A. Glassman, now Sl)illll&lt;&gt; 's vice president and general
merchandise manager of hard lines, will become president.

VOL. XXVIII

NO. 187

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thursday through
Saturday, ·B chance of so ow
or snow flurries each day .
Highs will he iD the upper
2ts or low 30s Tburoday and
lu \be 30s Friday and
Saturday. Lows will be In
the teens early Thursday
and between 15 and %5 early
Saturday.

POMEROY :MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TUESDAY, JANUARY 10, 1978

Wells is

·By JOHN T. KAOY
'
" We have asked for a
'
United Press International
curtailment of usage by ali of
1 The J&gt;umcroy office or the Ohio Power
Co , warned
Frozen coal stockpiles cou- our eustome rs," said Corn~­
·today of lh~ severe clectrh- puwer supply pr11blcm that
pled with sutrzero weather " We are experiencing major
has de\'Cli1pcd as a result of severe cu ld wea ther, Inability
wday forced two of Ohio's problems. We have instituted
h• get cual into the puwer plants due to freezing tondltluus,
majoc utilities into "critical " a 2.~ percent across the board
and loss of capaeHy bcC"ause of fur('ed unit uutoge~.
supply situations and forced v9ltage reduction .''
Tu help ease the prublern Ohio Power urges all Its
two other utilities to institute
" It is not a problem for us
custmners, in homes, factories, stores, and everywhere power cutbacks:.
right now," said a spokesman
tu reduce their usage of electric puwer In every possib le
LANCASI'ER, OHIO- MORE THAN 100 families in the
· RACINE - Racine town
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio for CEI which serves most of
way. Please avoid using SU('h appliances IL~ clutltlos
Sugar Grove-Rockbridge area of Fairfield and Hocking Council Friday night elr:cted Electric Co. and Toledo the Cleveland area . "But I
He nr y Well s, vctc run
washers, dishwashers, dothes dryers, and ranges ; turn
counties faced the prospect Monday night of eyacuation from Albert Hill, Jr., 1ts president Edison botn said they were know talks are being held to
Meigs
County Conunlssluner,
uff wmccessary lighting, and turu down clcclrlc heating.
their cold, dark homes . Nearly two-thirds of Fairfield County and retaoned Frank W. Porter ,. experiencing a ••critical" discuss what we might do if it
was elected president und
Please cuoperate nuw by reducing the use of
was thrown into darkness by . a South Central Power Co. as solicitor.
. .
power shortage .
• .
becomes a problem."
James Roush, vice president
eleCtricity. By dving this everyone can help prevent Lhc
problem diagnosed ooly v~guely as generator trouble. .
Mayor Charles Payles
Dayl&lt;&gt;n Power &amp; Light and
Charles
Carter,
a
power sup_ply problem from hec.,mlng ~rlllcol and
when the boa rd or t:nunty
· At ·g :30 p.m:'some residents had ·already been four hours name~ members of two Ohio
·power
co .. · spokesman for Ohio ' EdisOn
perhaps avoid possible interruption to cle&lt;:trlc service.
co mmissioners organl?.e d
Without power, and South Central representatives said it could standmg committees, on headquartered in Canton, which serves about 700,000
Monday evening. Jt was the
Ohl" P"wer will keep the public lnfnrmcrl thr.,ugh
tske another four to five hoUrs to restore service. Fairfield fmance, Maxme Wingett, both said the said they were customers, said "we are tight
annuuncements uUtil the ·problem Cases .
third consecutive year Wells
County Sherifrs deputies said evacuation, especial!~ of the Earl Cleland , and Harry experiencing problems with . but holding " . bu t he
ha s been cil-ctc-d president.
elde~ly, was being colisidered, but a decision was put off
Wtllfo~d, and the street meeting electric supply emphasized "we are looking
Th e board re-uppointed
because of icy temperatures and bad road conditions that commtltee, Albert Hill, demands but said the at the situation hourly."
Mary Hob•tettcr its clerk,
would hamper any evacuation effort.
Clarence Bradford and Ben situation was not yet , Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio,
Jumes Cornell as courthouse
Petrel. .
,
.
critical.
which serves customers in 25
ouo
tudian. and Everett J .
WASHINGTON - HAMILTON JORDAN, President
Filing ror dissolution·wcre Holmes
Alfred Ly~ns, Pollee Chtef,
Dayton Power &amp; Light central Ohio counties, said it · Barbara Smilh,' Mid apiary inspoctor.
Carter's tOp aide, and his wife Nancy are separated,the couple presented h1s annual report Instituted a five percent cut- had asked all industrial and · ·.- dleport, has filed suit against Jean Hllodes , Cheshire. and
The
commissioners
did not
has announced. "We have decided to se])Bfate. We know that which showed that 106 arrests ~ck and Ohio Power Co. business customers to " im· Gary Michael Smith, Mid- Je rry
Wyn
Rhodes , reach a dt.ocision on the apour families and our friends will understand and respect our were
Co nni e
A, pointment of a dog warden.
mad~,
$3,615 .90 Wday instituted a . voltage mediately" curtail electricity dlcport , for a limonY. an d Ga llipolis;
mutual decision," the lrlef announcement said Monday. They collected m fmes and 1,426 cutback of _ per cent.
Swisher,
Rt.
1,
Middleport
by
percent
because
of
C
US\ody
of
children
In
Meigs
50
25
The. board appointed the
were married in 1970. They have no children.
and Melvin fl . Swisher, same following to the Community
miles w~re traveled. .
h i 0
E d i s 0 n , fr ozen coal stockpiles.
Common Pleas Court.
0
The irreverent, tun4oving Jordan, who often wears casual
Council warned res1dents headquartered in Akron, said
Toledo Edison said it had
The Jaymar Coal Co., Rt. 1, address.
Improvement CQrp ., Henry
clothes to the White House, drew wide attention in Washington th~t dogs will not he per· It" had a "tight capacity asked for "voluntary " Cheshire filed suit in the
Well s.
Bernard ~' ultz,
gossip circles in t11e past few weeks for a remark he reportedly nutted to run loo~e. If n?tt1ed situation.. while Cleveland cutbacks at the present time amount of $20,500 against G.
Howa'rd
J., rank , Eleanor
made at a recent party given by ABC anchorwoman Barbara up, warrants w1ll be 1ssued Electric Illuminating and because it was not getting c. Towing, Point Pleasant
Hobson
,
E.
F. Robinson and
Walters. Jordan is said to have tugged at the bodice of the and arrests of owners made. Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric electricty from its major for damages as a result of an
Vernon
Weber
.
FIVE KltLED
Egyptian ambassador's wife and said he always had wanted to Dogs picked up without tags said tlley had 00 problems at suppliers.
.
accident on April 8, 1974 on
Appoi
nt
ed
to the TB
TEHRAN, !run [UP!)
see the Pyramida. There l)as been speculation recently on how wtll be taken. to the dog the present time . ·
" Weare ina very bad, very SR 7 two and one-half miles
Association
Board
of
long he will remain in the White House.
pound.
Jack Corns, a spokesman critical situation ," sa id Jack north of the Meigs-Gallia line. Police shot and killed at least Tru,tees we" Howa rd BirchA letter ":as read fr?m for Ohio Power which serves Dyer, ·a spokesman for
Yvonne Bareswilt, Mid- five . anti - ~ o vernm e nt fi eld, Marie Blrchfleld,
COLUMBUS- Sl'ATEWIDE PUBLIC FORUMS will be
~emonstrators in a university
held soon by the State Board of Education which wants to find Buckeye H1lls .Plannmg customersin _53 counties,said Toledo Edison which serves dleport. filed suit in the tuwn south of Tehran in the Thelnw Dill, Elizabeth
out what parents, teachers and·administt'awrs thin)t minimum group tn r~gard to possible it is part · of the American customers over 2,500 sQuare amount of $1,000 against bloodiest street vio lence Cutl er , Jam es
Roush,
grants available for VIllages. Electdc Power system and miles of northwestern Ohio . Mindy • Davis Seymour,
competency expectations ahould be for Ohio students.
Charles
Riffle
,
Mrs.
Dwight
since the Shah of Iran's visit
Recommendations on a minimum competency program The;e will be a meeting Jan . that the system is operating "We have asked all of our Middleport, for damages as a to Washington last Novem- Wallace. Mrs. . B•uce May,
will be submitted to tile state board and to the education 12, m P~meroy which Mayor at " 38 percent of its customers to ' conserve result of an accident Jan. 8, ber, officials said today.
Mrs. Mildrt.! Betting and
Pyles will. attend .
generating ability."
(Continued on page 10)
1978 in Middleport.
commltt.eesof the State Senate and House by July I.
Dollie Hayes.

Hill elected

president

president of
Racine council

of board

Court actions instituted

ROME - U. S. AMBASSADOR RICHARD GARDNER

· Auditor won't
pay any bills
without funds

imminent fall nf the Italian government. The governinent of
Christian Democrat Prime Minister Glullo Andreotti is
expected w collapse within the next few days when the
powerful Communist Party withdraws its indirect support.
The Communists have kept Andreotti's minority
government in power for 17 months by abstaining •in key
parliament votes. Leftist factions · within tbe party have
bitterly criticized the Communist leadership for what they call ·
"this collusion with an inefficiept and corrupt government."

Meigs County government
, departments out of funds
before the end of a year ·
should not expect the county
auditor, Howard Frank, to
"write checks fn payment or
thei r bills . the auditor

.

-Ice,--snow-eause
two collisions
Two citations were Issued
by Meigs County Sheriff
James J . Proffitt's depart·
ment by deputies who In·
vestlgated two accidents
Monday.
'
The first accident occurred
at Racine on SR 124, at 9:39
a.m. when an auto driven by
William L. Foster, 45, Rt. 2,
Racine, was traveling north
near the north corporation
limit (downriver side) and
came upon a vhelcle parked
partially ill the highway.
Due to the snow anq lee on
the ro8d bis only coolce was
to go left of center., In the
meantime another vehicle
was coming upriver on SR 124
driven by Richard R. Smith,
211, Middleport. He observed
the auto partially parked on
tile roadway, also·the Foster
auto, and In attempting to
avoid colllslon, and due to
1110w and Ice, his auw went
off the road on the right .
Fostm;'s and Smith's vehicles
aJilded.
.

.
$4'93
'695 SHIRTS..................
,
s895 SHIRTS...................'633
s1095 SHIRTS ... -...........s773 ·
s1295 SHIRTS .... :........... ~13
s1495 SHIRTS ...............s1Q63

sl695 SHIRTS .........,..... ~!~
·Also Sale Priced Our Men's Long Sle.e ve Western Shirts-·and Knit· Shirts.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
•'

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

C&amp;SOE in critical
electricity shortage

fiew to Washmgton today for White House consultations on the

.33.

NOW OPEN

'

commented today .

SWORN IN -These four councilmen took their oath of office to new

terms on the Middleport Village Coqncil Monday night. Receiving their

Mullen , Marvin Kelly and Dewey Horton. King. Kelly and Horton are
incttmbents elected to new terms last falL Mullen is a new council
member.

There · was moderate
oath ftom Mayor Fred Hoffman , II&lt;&gt; r, were Allen Lee King, Charles
damage to the Foster vehicle,
a 1971 Olds and heavy
damage to Smith's 197~
Chevy tw&lt;Hioor. ·
Robert Jennings Arlx, 52,
Miami, Fla., was cited for
psrking his auto on the
roadway. He had been
By Bob Hoeflich
mental services, $66,720.
- personal services, $10,000; fund - payment of prindpal,
. operating the vehicle parked ···'
An appropriations
Security of persons and other expense, $53,100, total, $5.000; payment of interest,
at the accident scene.
$1,800; other, $500, total,
The second accident oc- resolqtlon providing for property - police depart- $63,100.
Cemetery operation and $7,300.
curred around 11:10 a.m. on expenditures of $546,075 in ment, personal services,
Meter deposit fund - other
US 33 at the Dale Hart 1978 was approved when $34,500; other, $20,746; total maintenance - Personal
$2,500. ·
expenses,
driveway. Warren J . Bar- Middleport VIllage Council for police; $~5,248; fire services, $7,780; other,
Federal
Revenue Sharing
' nhlll, 46, Rt. I, · Guysville, met In regular session department : personal ser- $3,865; total $11,845.
Other
expenses,
Fund
vices,
$942;
other,
$5,080,
Administration
water
Mqnday
night.
.
.
traveling south In a 1973.Ford
$18,000.
Breakdown
of
the
funds
$8,022;
total
for
security
personal
services,
$24,600;
total,
truck owned by the Talbott
Anti-recession fund - other
, of persons and property, debt service, $36,570 ; other.
Drllllng Co., Chesterhill, was appropriated includes:
expenses, $2,000.
General governmental $61,270.
$26,430; total, $87,600.
unable to stop and collided
Preceding the meetin g,
Leisure time activities Sewer Construction with a vehicle driven by services - mayor: personal
Mayor
Fred Hoffman gave
Royal Jerome Cook, 71, services, $2,MIO; other, t5,800, parks and playgrounds: capital outlay, $125,000.
the
oath
to four council
Administration sewage Hemlock Grove. Cook bad total $8,300; clerk-treasurer: personal services, $4,~00;
members,
who
are starting
· backed into the highway · personal services, $2,500; other, $11,650i total, $18.150: · personal services, $19,500;
full
terms
of
office.
They are
Community environment debt service, $24,360; other,
while attempting to make It other, $2000; . total, $4,500;
Charles
Mullen,
a new
aollcltor:
personal
services,
·
planning
commission,
other
$28,930;
total,
$7.2,790.
up a slick driveway. Cook
member,
and
incwnbents,
$2,000;
council:
personal
expenses,
$500.
Total
$500.
Policeman's
Relief
and
was·cited by Lt. Mike Zirkle,
Street lights - total, · Pension Fund - other ex- Dewey Horton , Allen Lee
for falling to yield right of services, $1,008; buildings
King and Marvin Kelly . Kelly
and miscellaneous: $50,912. $12,000.
. pense, $1,500.
way.
Total for general gqvern•
Street Mainten~ce Fund • General bond retirement was reel"'\ted president of

Appropriation approve(J
council.

The December report of
Mayor Hoffman showing
receipts of $2,016.70 in fines
and fees and $156 in merchant
police collections for a total of
$2,172.70 was approved and a
payroll ordinance W!IS passed
which makes provisions for
health insurance for some
village employes. Those
already having insurance
coverage will receive pay
increases .

Council discussed a request
from the village •cemetery
trustees suggesting that the
cost of cemetery lots and
holiday burials be increased.
The matter was tabled until
(Continued o~Jlllle 10)

These departments should
not ·ex ceed their ap·
propriatlons or · anticipated
revenues in spending during
a business year, the auditor
said. They are advised of the
amounts appropriated at the

first of each .year.
" Departments

expecting

the Meigs County Auditor to
write checks when lhelr funds
are exhausted should elect .an
auditor who. will do that/'
Frank commented.
Meantime, the budget
commission coJTiposed of

Frank, the county prosecutor
Rick Crow, and the county
treas~rer, George Collins
wa s in session today'
establishing appropriations
for 1978.

Weather
Partly cloudy tonigl&gt;t , low
between zero and flve above.
Partly sunny Wednesday,
highs in the lower 20s .
Probablllty of precipitation
30 peroent today, 10 percent
tonight and Wednesdav.

"

...

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