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D-11- The Stulday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Jan. 15, 1978

Four deer killed
GALUPOUS - Four deer
were killed in six \raffle
acc id ent s Investi gated
Friday and early Saturday by
the Gallia·Melgs Post State
Hi ghway Patrol.
The first dee r fatality
occ urred at 6:30 a.m.' Friday
on US 35, two tenths of a mile
west of SR 7. A deer ran into
the path of a vehicle driven
by Fred ·J . Deel, 27, Rt. 2,
Vinton.
At Ir a.m. Friday, a deer
was killed when it ran into the
path of a car driven by Blain
C. Lemon , 40, Coolville.
Another died at II :45 p.m.
on SR 113, two and eight
. tenths miles north of SR 7. II
ran into the path of a vehicle .
drive n by Ritchie E.
Blum en auer, 22, Rt . 4,
Pomeroy .

Th e. final deer kill came at
I :45 a:m. Saturday on SR 248
in Mei@:s. County, six and two
tenths of a mile east of SR 7.
The animal-ran into the path
of a vehicle driven by
Raymond 1,.. Byrd, Rt. 2,
1-&lt;Jrig Bottom.
A single car mishap occurred at 1:30 a.m. Saturday
on SR 7, six tenths of a mile
north of US 35 where Thomas
J. Davison, 19, Addison, lost
control of his car. The vehicle
sl id on the snowy highway
striking a mailbox owned by
Dale L . . VanSickle, Rt. 1,
Gallipolis.
Both drivers were char~ed

following an accident at 10:25
a.m. Friday on US 35 at the
junction to old SR 35.
The patrol said an auto
driven by Dennis E.
Hamiltun, 34, Rt. 2, Bidwell,
turned into the path of a
vehicle driven by Terry R.
Brennan, · 28, Wellston .
Hamilton was charged with
turning without due caution
and Brennan with failure to
display registration.

----------------------------1

Disabilities projects
win additional grants

Time right for l
fishing on ice

COLU MBUS - D. Cordell produces a Developmental
Brown, Chairperson of the Disabilities State Plan which
Oh i o De ve l o pmen tal sets priorities and specifies
Disabilities ·Planning Council activities for better meeting
&lt;ODDPC,, announced last the service needs of people in
week the awarding of 14 Ohio who are deve lop·
grants, bringing to a total of mentally disabled. Based on
77 the number of projects the activities named, money
throu ghout
the
stat e is alloca ted for funding
finan c ia l special projects and en·
r ec eiving
assistance from the ODDPC. cq uragi ng the development of
Of the total number of new programs which wiiJ
pro jects , eight are in offer needed services.
Ronald
J.
Cutter ,
soutbea stern Ohio and
receive '195,900 in funding Executive Director of the
QUAKE KILLS 18
from the ODDPC.
ODDPC. expressed the hope
TOKYO (UPI) - One of the
AU of the project~ spon· that "the grants will Initiate
most powerful earthquakes to sored by the ODDPC are new programs and serve as a
hit postwar Japan shook aimed at alleviating,· where catalyst for developing a
crowded vacation areas of possible, the handicapping comprehensi ve progr am of
the Pacific Coast Saturday, aspects of developmental community based services
leaving at least 18 persons disabiliti es - - disabiliti es for Ohio's residents who are
dead or missing, police ca used by mental retar ... developmentally disabled, "
reported. The quake, which dation, epilepsy, autism or
registered 7 on the open· cerebral palsy.
T
ended Richter scale and
The focuses of the projects
lasted about one minute, was range from research into the ·
accompanied by nearly !50 prevention of developmental
weaker tremors.
disabilities 1
to
encouragement of 11ew or model
GALLIPOLIS - Ice and
se rvices . for people with snow·on First Ave. caused a
LOOK AT STEEL
developmental disabilities, to coflision at 11 :02 p.m. Friday
KENT, Ohio (UP[) - A increased
public
un· which caused moderate
national conference that will derstanding and acceptance · damage to two cars.
look at the slump in the steel of people with developmental
Gallipolis police said that
industry is planned by Kent disabilities. Specific services Linda Sue Casey, 38, Rt. 2,
State University officials who assisted by ODDPC's funds Point Pleasant, was driving
·have
invited
labor, include stimulation programs down First Ave. and was
management, government for Infants, adoption and preparing to tum right onto
and consumer represen · foster ca re programs for Sycamore St. at the same
tatives to attend Feb. 1·2.
children, and community · time that George R Medas,
residential program for 47,.Rt. I, Northup, was tumadults.
ing left to go up First Ave.

.1.Ce, snow are
cause of-·wreck .

Council me mbership ,
appointed by the Governor, is

from Sycamore.
The Point Pleasant woman

composed
of . broad touched her brake pedal, and
representation of service the car slid into the Medas
providers an.d consumers . car.
Yearly, the
ODD PC

Appeals court
•
sets h eanng
on Feb. 15th

Continued from
was

pa~e

D-1

declared

unconstitu tiona)
by
a
Hamilton County court.
The committee may
continue its meeting to
CINCINNATI · (UPI)
Wednesday evening or
Feb. 15 has been set as the Thursday.
date the 6th U. S. Circuit . ~ep. John E. Johnson's
Court of Appeals In Cin·. proposal to establish a basic
cinnatl will hear oral education fund will receive
arguments on the Columbus another airing before the
and Ohio state school boards' House Ways and Means
appeal of a federal judge's Committee Wednesday
order
to
desegregate morning .
Columbus schools.
That was the only portion of
An appeals court decision the educatloo study that went
on the case Is not expected forward last week as Johnsort
until-several weeks or months . explaihed his plan to the
after the oral arguments:
committee.
.
Being appealed is u. s.
The Senate Is to vote
District Court Judge Robert Tuesday or Wednesday on
M. Duncan's decision last overriding Gov. James A.
March blaming both the Rhodes' veto of a collective
Columbus and state school bargaining bill for public
boards for Illegal segregation employees.
In . the
98,000-student
The Ho~ Highways and
Columbus school system,
Highway Saf.ety Commlttee .
will hold a aec·ood . hearing
Wednesday on a bill delaying·
until Jaq. I, 1980, the start of
auto registration on a year- ·
around basis.
'!'he Senate Finance
Committee
wlll
meet
· Wednesday afternoon to
consider a House-passed bill
authorizing pay raiBes for
judges.

NOW IN PROGRESS

FINE FURNITURE
AND

NAME BRAND
APPLIANCES
SALE PRICED

DOC

State

:SONA:N%&amp;

SMITH'S

:

DORA C. HUBER
GALL IPOLI S - Dora C.

Huber. 82. a resi den t of 3$

Grape St .. Gallipolis. died at

Unlled Press lntematlonal
January is generally the
coldest month of the year and
the month when ice fishing is
most pbpular. If you've been
thinking about giving it a try,
there's no better time than
now.
Fish form tight schools and
move around very little. They
leed, but not as voraciously
as in the summer months.
Mor e than a virtue, patience
is a necess it y for ice
fi sherm en and so is

your outing by others, it
would be best to look for solid
ice that's at least six inches
thick. Given the weather

favorite, use meal worms or

the small grubs found inside
of the stalks of goldenrod.
These are best fished by
tip-out." This is
merely a device which can be
using a

11

6:45 p.m. Frida y at Jenkins
Memorial Nursing Center .
Wellston, where she had been
si nce 1972. Her health has

been faili ng fo r severa l
year$.
She was born Jan. 6, 1896, Jn
that should'! be too hard to Char
les ton , W. Va ., to Mr .
fin d.
'
and Mrs. Fri tz Nunnenka mp .
Ice fishing can be just as . She was preceded in death by
much fun as castin g or two brother s.
, Mrs. Huber was a member
trolling in the s ummer time, of
the Women 's Auxi liary of
so put on your electric socks
l af ayette Post 27, Amer ican
and head fqr tlle pond.
Leg ion , and of the First
United Presbyteri an Chu rch.

we've been having recently,

COLUMBUS (UP[) - A
statewide survey of Ohio
manufacturers showed that
19 percent plan tlJ hire more
people this year, 5 percent
will reduce employment and
76 percent will maintain the
same employment level.
The Ohio Manufacturers' .
AsSociation which conducted ,
the survey said Friday most
of the increases will be in
p r o du c t i on
a nd

Senators will
study problem

• y OUDgStOWD
ID
WASHINGTON (UP!) Both Ohio Democratic
Senators, John Glenn and
Howard Metzenbaum, said
Frida y they wlll hold a
in
meeting
Monday

planted over a hole in the ice
and is rigged with a line spool
and a trigger that releases a
flag when a strike is Wa shin gton with Mayor
produced. They require less Philip Richley and Rep .
effort on the part of the Charles Carney , D-Youngsfi sherman , but must be town, to explore long~range
for
the
constantly tended while in the proposals
revitali zat ion o f
Among the other items that town 's industry.

water :

Youn gs ~

Representatives of the
Departments of Labor and
that looks like a straightened Comm erce are expected to
hoe with a heayy blade. You attend. The Youngstown area
will also need an ice skinuner has been hard hit recently by
to keep the water from re- the layoff of thousands of
.freezing over the hole you steel workers.
chipped and a weighted line
that has been marked in one
foOt measurements for
checking the depth of the
you'll need to get started is an

" ice spud." This is a device

Opera star is
dead at age 72

water .

Three inches of ice is
sufficient to support your
weight if It Is of the clear,
blue kind that tells you it's
new and very cold. H you
think you may be joined on

.

Weather
Continued Intermittent
snow mixed with rain today
and tonight and Monday.
Lows tonight in the 20s. High
Monday in the low 30s.
Probability of precipitation
50 per cent throughout period.

Spri ng , Md . Also surviving
are three grandchi ldren and
five great.grandchildren .
Private funeral ser vices
wil l be conducted by 1he Rev.
Frank Ha yes from the McCoy
. Wetherholt·· Moore Funeral
Home, Gal li polis , at t he
conven ience of th e family.
· There wi ll be no call ing
hours. Bur ial wil l be in
iVIound Hil l Ceme1er y .
In lieu of flower s the fami ly
reques ts dona ti ons to the
Jenk ins Memori a l Nursing
Center , Well st on .
·

CINCINNATI tUPI ) Lydia Dozier Ketcham, a
former Cincinnati opera
soprano , died Thursday

administrative personnel.
Industrial leaders aod· eco- .
nomi.c forecasters were not
pleased by another statistic
that showed up in the survey.
Eight percent of the respond·
ents said they plan to move
all or part of their operations
out of Ohio in 1978, while only
2 percent said they are
moving facilities into the
state this year.
Moreover, only 8 percent
said they would be)nvesting
in new plants in Ohio
compared to II percent wbo
will invest outside the state.
Respoodents said about 20
percent of their capital
investment budgets would be
spend outside Ohio because of .
an unfavorable tax structure,
inadequate energy sources
and a general

i
:
.•
.

anti~business

:

Willis T. Leadingham

:
•
•
•
•
•
•

•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

Realtor

Are Damages Tax Deductibrer
'

• AIr conditioning
e While-Wilt Rllcli•ls
• Sport ·mirrows
e Deluxe whHI COVIi'S

e Radt·o ICcOm. pki. ·

Payoff set
for jail time

.....

phone or .drop
LEADINGHAM

Special of the Week

ALL BEEF MEXICAN

BURR liTO
Reg. 95c SPECIAL
PRICE

49~

Prosecutor's

Office

This speci~l is oHered to you to •icqu•int you with
tht goodness and economy of · our homemade
\\exic•n food. ·
..v
No lim

if to qUintity of purchase. Offer good for

Drivt-ln or Corry-Out S.rvlct Only.

GETS THE CHAIR
CINCINNATI (UP!) _: A
three-judge panel Friday
sentenced convicted murderer Herman E . Sexton , 52

to die in the electric chair~
The judges said they could
find no mltlgailng · cir·
cumstances to justify
reducing Se&lt;ton 's penalty for
the shooting death of his
girlfriend, Norma Jean
Vaughn, 35, last Aug. 7.

:

In at
REAL

e
•

e

The snow is being brought
to Ohio by a complex low
pressure center now in the

single digits with readings in
\he teens, elsewhere in the
state.
The Ohio extended forecast
for the Wednesday through
Friday period calls for a
chance of snow each day but
most likely in eastern sections on Wednesday and in
the north Friday . Highs
Wednesday will range from

t he upper 20s to the low 30s,
Texas panhandle. That ·low with overnight lows between
pressure is forecast to move · five and 15. Highs Thursday
to the lower Ohio Valley by and Friday will be in the
tonight and into eastern upper 20s and lows in the
Kentucky by
Tuesday iower 20s.
. Meanwhile, five freighters
moming.
steamed
out of the Cleveland·
The Weather Service·
Cuyahoga
Coqnty Port
predicts between four and six
Sunday
into
ice-clogged
Lake
inches of snow. will ac~
cumulate by tonight in south· Erie with a convoy of three U.
western Ohio and by mid- S. Coast Guard cutternight
in
southeastern icebreakers.
Two were bound for Toledo
counties. A travelers' ad·
visory is up for northern Ohio
where between one and three

and one for Marquette, Mich. ,

but the destinations of the
others .were not reported.

inches of snow is expected by
A Coast Guard spokesman
tonight. And fUrther sno\\iall
said
in the first 14 hours four
accumulations are expected
across the entire state tonight of the ships. travelled only
about six miles because of
and tomorrow.
It will be cold in Ohio heavy ice up to 4-5 feet thick.
through Tuesday with highs · The fifth, the .Leon Falk Jr.,
mainly in the teens or 20s had a sharper bow than the
today and lows tonight bet· others and went seven or
eight miles ahead.
ween five and 15 degrees .
None of the five carried
Skies cleared in western
cargo.
A shipping spokesman
counties durin"g the night,
said
it
was hoped .thinner ice
with scattered snow flurry
activity reporte~ in eastern would be found further out in
Ohio. And - in areas having the Jake , based on the
those clear skies - tern~ progress of the Falli.
peratures dropped into the

tJ]News. . •in Brief~

ON MANY ITEMS DURING THIS
BIG ANNUAL SALES EVENT
_Save 20 Per Cent on enti~!l st~ck of Sheets and Bedspreads. Save 40 Per Cent
on ltttle boys Sweaters ·. Kn1t Sh1rts · Sweal Shirts. Jeans and Corduroy Pants.
Save JO _Per Cent ,on Jun1or Coordtnates and Tops. Junior Sweaters . Children's
Sno.w sutts &amp; Jackets.
,
.
·
.

'

United Press lnternatloaal
. A significant amount of
snow is forecast for Ohio .
through Tuesday.
·
The National Weather
Service · has posted heavy
snow warnings for . today
across the southern twothirds of the state.

·::::::;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::;;::::;;:::::::;:::;:;;;;;:;:~:~:::~:::~:::~:::::::::::::~:::~:::~=~=~~~:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:x::;

SAVE 20% ··
UP
40% 50%

.. r·

.

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

Elberfelds In Pome

,

•

ESTATE, 512 Second Ave., · •

and

Sheriff Uncoln Stokes to take
$3,000 as com_pensation for
the mistake by the sheriff's
and ,Prosecutor's office.
T~e· Hamilton
County ·
Board of CommissionerS still
must formally aptlrove the
transaction.

•
•

G•\llpolls. Phone 446-7699. • I
Were he.re to help'
,.

TO

CINCINNATI (UP! )
Willard Lewis of Cincinnati
will receive $3,000 for 29. days
he spent in illegal detention in
the Hamilton County Jail.
Lewis and his attomey
reached agreement with the
Hamilton
County

Snow to hit
south 0 hi0

As
a
h!?meowner , preserve cancelled checks •
expenses fro11,1 damage or and receipted bills . They •
lmprovemen1s may affec1 will help su'bstan1late the . •
your Income taxes. For figures if necessary.
Instance: damage to your
I'm just scratching. 1he •
house form . say , fire or surface here . lf th is •
windstorm may . be
situation app(ies t o you , I •
partially deductible as a sugge~t you contact your •
casualty
l oss .
After nearest Internal Revenue •
subtracting
Insurance Office for a copy of their •
compensation , deduct SlOO pamphlet No. 530 " Tax •
for each accident and the ~ Information on Deductions •
remainder can be Cla imed for Homeowners." If may •
as a tax deduction .
save you some money .
•
Improvements such as ia
•
porch . garage, flnish~d 11 there Is anything we ·· e
basement, and so·in cannot can. do to help you In the e
be deducted. Howev'er. field of real estate please

following a long illness. She
was 72.
Known professionally as
Lydia Dozier, she sang In •
leading roles with the Cin· · I
cinnati Opera and later ap- I
they tan be added to the
peared with the Cincinnati •e cost
of the house when
Symphony Orchestra.
I figuring profit on the sa le.
Her name is on an opera e So, keep good records · of
program buried in a time • such expenSes . Try to
capsule in 1926 at the Union
Central Anne• in Cincinnati.

•

Save on Me~'s Dress Slacks· Sport Coats · Flannel Sport Shirts . Me;.s and
Boys' ·Jackels · Men's and Boys' Shirts - Sweaters· Men's Corduroy Siac,ks.
. ·
Save 40 Per Cent on Women's Dress and Pant Suits. Special prices on
Women's Scarfs . Save 30 Per Cent on Women's Coats • Preteen Sportswear •
Blouses.
Buy Wintuk Knitting Yarn for'$1.19 skein. Big sale of Polyester S2 .99 to $3.44
yd. material for SJ.188.
.
·
. . Plus Big Savings in the Furniture Department on Chairs, Bedroom Suites,
L1vmg ~oom Suites &amp; Lane Cedar Chests.
·
And at the Warehouse on Mec~anic Street a . sale of metal cabinets and 6x9
.room size rugs.

'

Elberfelds In·Pomeroy

all the earth, who hast set
Thy glory above the
heavens ... "
Rom a n
C a th o I i c
Archbishop John R. Roach of
St. Paul was to read the New
Testament lesson from J ohn
14: " ... Peace I leave with
you, my peace I give unto
you: not as the world giveth ,
giv e I unto you . .Let not your
heart be troubled, nei ther let
It be afraid ..."
Humphrey will be burled in
Lakewood Cemete ry In Min·
neapolis , where he began his
public service career as
mayor in 1945 at the age of 34.
Monda le escorted Hum phrey's body a nd the
senator's widow, Muriel, and
his immediate famJiy to the
Twin Cities aboard President
Carter 's personal plane late
Sunday, following a round of
goodbyes in Washi~ton

About 300 persons watched
a military hoo..- guard carry
the coffin off the plane at the
snowy a irport. Temperatures
were in the teens.
Mrs . . Humphrey and the
senator 's four children, eight
.of his 10 grandchildren and
two sisters were met by Gov:
Rudy
Perpich,
th e
Mhmeapolls and St. Paul
mayors a nd two old friends,
Federal .J udge Miles Lord
nod former U.S. Secretary of
Agriculture Orville Fmmum.
The body was taken to the
state Capitol rotunda ,
decorated with floral wreaths
Irom friends across the
l'O imtry, for an ali-night vigil
UJat began at 7::10 p.m.
Sunday .
"!!rs. Currie Peoples, 75, a
bla ck· St. Paul reside nt ,
waited sevenhourslnthecold
,(Continued on Pill• 10)

•

Today :

•
•

years in Congress, who lost a
courageous battle with
cancer Friday night at the
age of 66, asked a week before
his death that the service he
simple, "In the style of a
ce lebration '' wit hout
eulogies.
"I've had enough eulogies
for two lif etimes," the
senator said. ·
Pastor Colvin W. Didier, a
Humphrey friend , arranged
the funeral, with remarks by
Carter, Mondale and the Rev.
Robert Schuler of the "Hour
of
Power"
television
program. The music was to
be provided by famou s
violinist Isaac Stern, pianist
Eugene lstomin and opera
star Robert Merrill.
Rabbi Max A. Shapiro of
Minneapolis was to read the
8th Psalm: "0 Lord, 0 Locd,
how excellent is Thy name in

THE BIG BEND AREA is blanketed by snow and ice
aa proven in this photo taken from Lincoln Hill in
Pomeroy. Snow continu~ to fall Saturday and Sunday
and more is predicted tonight.

.. ~8Ti
~state:
- .

&lt;lay.

301 V-8 engine
Autom1tic tr1ns.
Power steering
Power br11kes
':'inted lil•ss

ST. PAUL, Minn: (UPI ) Thousands of friends said a
f111al goodbye today to Sen.
Hubert H. Humphrey, champion of tlle underdog and a
man President Carter called
"the most beloved of all
Americans."
Thousands ol mourner•
filed by the flag-draped coffin
of the DemocraUc " HaP!lY·
·warrior" and former vice
president Sunday night and
early today in the rotunda of
the Minnesota Capitol. A 7S.
year-&lt;Jid . black woman, who
said, "He meant everything
to me," was first In line.
President Carter, Vice
President Walter Mondale
and former President Gerald
Ford planned to Join 3,000
persons at services at the
House of Hope Presbyterian
Church in St. Paul at 2 p.m.
The veteran of almost 30

climate in Ohio. ·
Thomas R. Johnson , president or the association, said a
significant result of the
survey was that 62 percent
anticipate increased sales
and 50 percent believe profits
will be higher.
other survey findings:
- About 70 percent of the
ftrms plan product changes in
1978, with 64 percent
introducing new products.
- Fort)'-three per cent
indicated they have no
alternate sources of energy
and most have electricity as
their prima ry sowce.
·- Problem areas as listed
by the manufacturers were
topped by governmental
regulations, employee
productivity and products
liability.

The House reconvenes

•
•
•
•
•

Thousands say farewell

survi ves at 1he home of thei r

son, Charles E. Huber. Silver

Tuesday at 11 a.m .. and the
Senate at 1:30 p.m. the same
In scheduled floor action,
the House is to vote on a
Senate-approved bUl making
the misuse of a credit card a
under
certain
felony
cirCUmstances.
Meanwhile the Senate is to
take up a controversial bill
allowing optometrists to use
eye drops in making eye
examinations.

I

She married Cnaries C.
Hu ber Dec . 25, 1918, and he

Ohioans to hire 19% more

endurance.

Be prepared to spen d
several hours standing on a
fr ozen surface in an
unshellered area . Dress for
maximum warmth and bring
along a windbreaker of some
kind . A tarp that can be
rigged over poles works
nicely.
Artificial baits are usually
fished using a shortened rod
of about two feet. in length.
There are many baits made
especially for ice Hshing on
the market. Most of them are
small, jigging type baits that
are meant to be lowered. to a
predetermined depth and
wor~ed slowly by the angler
untii a strike is felt.
If live baits are your

!

Area Deaths

I

By United Preos International
NAIROBI, KENYA - SOMAUA CHARGED TODAY that
the Soviet and Cuban defense ministers are secretly in
Ethiopia planning an "air, land and sea" offensive aimed at
overthrowing the Somali government.
The statement by Abdel Kaasim Hassan, S0J1111li minister
of information, was the first suggestion that the · Soviet
minister, Dmitry Ustinov, was in Addis. Ababa. U. S.
Intelligence sources reported last week the presence of Raul
Castro, the Caban defense chief and Fidel Castro's younger
broth"tr. Hassan said the violent reaction from Moscow and
Addis Ababa to President Carter's call at a new~ conference
last week for a negotiated settlement of the crisis on the Hqm
of Africa showed \hat those countries had already made
invasion plans.
WASffiNGTON - SENATE REPUBUCAN Leader
Howard Baker told President Carter today he is willihg to
support the Panama Canal treaties if amendments are
attached guatt~~~teelng U.S. right to defend the canal.
Carter met with Baker at the White House for 30 minutes.
The· president arranged to hy to Minnesota at noon for the
funeral of Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey.

_vo_L_
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M_ON_D_AY_.J_AN_U_AR_Y_l6_._19_7B_ _ _ _ _P_R_
ICE_ F
_IFT
_E_EN_ CE_NT_S

WASHINGTON (UPI) The trappings were familiar
- the military guard, the
distinguished mourners, the
flags at haH-6\aff, the slow
cadence of drums. The
capital is accustomed to state
EXTENDED I)UTLOOK
Wed•esday through
Friday, chance of snow

Wednesday through
Friday, .but most likely In
the east Wednesday and In
the north Friday. Highs
Wednesday wUI be from
lhe upper 20s to low 30s and
lows from 5 to 15. Highs
Thursday and Friday· will
beln the upper 20s and lows
In the low 20s.

James asks.
new song
for Ohio
\

COLUMBUS (UP[) - If
State Re_p. Ronald H. James,
D-Proctorville, and Archie
Henry of Columbus • have
their way, Ohioans could be
marching to the beat of a
different drum.
James has introduced a bill
to replace Ohio's official song
"Beautiful Ohio" with "Ohio
Gloria" written by Henry.
The House Governmental
Affairs Committee will ·hold
the first hearing on the bill
Tuesday.
James says "Beautiful
Ohio" is merely a "love
song ...too narrowly based
and does not do the whole of
Ohio justice." He says it

romances a bout th~ Ohio
River.
James says "Ohio Gloria"
is a "patriotic, uplifting ,
spirited" song.

Humphrey came within a
the Capitol.
Some 55,000 of his fellow tenth of one percent of
citizens lined up in the bitter . achieving his dream of the
January cold to walk past his presidency, emerged from a
casket. They had c&lt;me from . kind of self-imposed exile in
all over the Eastern Seaboard California to attend the
to pay their respects to what service. Gerald and Betty
many of them called "this Ford were there, aa was Mrs.
Lady Bird Johnson, wife of
good man."
Many wore the buttons the president who picked
from
old
campaigns, Humphrey as his vice
••pressing once again their president in 1964.
President Carter opened
belief that Hubert Hora Uo
Humphrey should have be.en the brief memorial service by
calling Humphrey "the most
president.
Richard Nixon, winner of beloved of all Americans,"
the election · in which and said :
"His greatest personal
attribute was he really knew
bow tb love. There was
GUARDSORDEBEDThnOPOMEROY
nothing abstract or remote
By United Press Intel'llllioDBI
about
It. ·He did not love
Gov. James A. Rhodes today ordered 15 Ohio National
humanity
only In the mass.
Guardsnien into the Pomeroy area of Meigs County to aid
.
You
could
feel It ln the scope
in snow removal projects.
·
of
his
concern,
in his worda,
Guardsnien from the 216th Engineers Battallion in
in
the
clasp
of
his
hand, in the
Portsmouth were ordered to move road 'graders, loaders
genuine
eager
interest
in his
and dump trucks into the area.
eyes
as
he
looked
at
you.
He
A significant amount of new snow has heen forecast
always
spoke
up
(or
the
weak
for Ohio f..- today, tonight and ·Tuesday.
and the hungry and for the

funerals, and does them well.
But this time the rituals
were for Hubert H.
Humphrey: all the tears were
genuine and the words were
sincere,
the
tributes
heartfelt. And all seemed
somehow ~dequate as an
expression of grief for his
absence.
Humphrey succutnbed to
cancer at his home near
Minneapolis Friday night and
was brought to Washington
for the last time Saturday to
lie in state on the Lincoln catafalque in the rottulda of

·: :::::;::~ ::::::::::::::: :::::: ::::: ::::::: : :: ::: :::::::::: ::::::: :: :·:=: =:: :=::::;:;:;;;:: ::=: = : =:= : = :~::;:; :;:; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;

Dr. King remember-e d
ATLANTA (UP!) '-- A five- The Minnesota senator, who
day 'observance that brought died Friday night, was
black
leaders
from credited with doing more for
throughout the ·countrY. to blacks than any other
remember and praise the member of his race dUring
work of Dr. Martin Luther the past 30 years ..
· T!)ey called him ''gallant ·
King Jr. ends today.
Hundreds of blacks and a warrior ," ''Falthful friend,"
sprinkling , of whites poured humanitarian. Some called
into .Ebenezer Baptist him "the second great .
Church,

where

King

emancipator."

acknowledging Abraham
Uncoln as the first .
Leaders from virtually
every segment of the black
community came the historic
Atlanta church Saturday
on how to carry on his work night· to say farewell to
and how to achieve full Humphrey, who had fought
for decades for equality and
employment.
The highlight ot the justice.
One by one, they .took the
celebration 1 ironically, was
JX)~i
urn to praise him, . to
devoted to a white man Hubert Horatio Humphrey.

preached years ago, to observe what would have been
his 49th birthday - Jan . 15.
They sang spirituals, heard
speeches about King and " the
struggle" and held meetings

remember him and to thank
him. The memorial . service
originally had heen scheduled
as a tribute to Humphrey and
organizers had p18nned tc
talk to him by telephone.
Coretta Scott King, Widow
of the slain civil rights leader,
presented
Humphrey
posthumously with the
Martin Luther King Jr .
Humanitarian Award. .
Vice President Walter
Humphrey's
Mondale,
political protege, called the
church during the service to
say the senator would have
'ppreclated the tribute.
. "I can't think of any other
way Hubert Humphrey would
like to have been remem·
bered than in the service you

'

Pupils go
to jail for
skipping
IRONTON , Ohio (UPI )
Juvenile delinquency a nd

sc hool

absenteeism

in

Lawrence County are on the
decline.
Officials think It may he
due in part to a judge who
metes out jail sentences to
truant school pupils.
Lawrence County Juvenile

taught us how to die.
And, defying tlle advice, h i~
own voice broke as he said :

"Even though this Is one of
the saddest moments of my
life, and I feel as great a Joss

as I've ever known. we must
remind ourselves of Huhert 's
last great. wish : that this he u
time to c-elebrate life and the
future, ·not to mourn the past
and his death."
Opera star Robert Merrill
sang
"Americ a
the
Beautiful" to close the
service. Then he sang It
again, at Carter's request, so
the guests c-ould join ln.
Inside and ou!Bide U1e room
they clasped hands, and sang
softly. And they wept.
For Humphrey was the
Happy Warrior whose
Indefatigable optimism and
zest and heart made him
loved by 'his friends and liked
by his opponents.
And this was farewell.

Weather
Heavy snow warnings for
today and tonight , beginning
this afternoon , bc,!ornin &amp;
heavy by evening, continuing
tonight, to four to six Inches ,
by midnight. Lows tonight In
the teens . Snow ond cold
Tuesday, highs in the upper
20s. ·

Court Judge Lloyd Burwell
has adopted a policy of one
day in jail lor each day of
school skipped. Youngsters
sent to jail for skipping school
are separated from other
juveniles in the new
Lawrence County Jail who '
have committed acts that
would be crimes if they were
Sheriff James J. Proffitt
adults .
School officials say ab- said today his deportment Is
sences in the schools have investigating one mailbox
dropped from about 20 per· vandalism In Lebanon
Township and two in Chester
cent to 5 percent.
Pollee Chief George Akers Township.
Caro·I Rhodes, Rt. 3, Racine
told the judge the juvenile
crime went down 22 percent (Old Town Fluts ·a rea )
repq[led Saturday morning
In the city. '
are having," he said.
their mailbox had been
C OF CCANCELLE,D · .
damaged. She recalled that '
Pomeroy Chamber ·.ol .,..t\round 10 p. m. Friday the
Commerce sche.duled to meet family heard a noise and
Tuesday at The Meigs Inn; looked out to see a pickup
·has been cancelled .
truck leaving the area .
suit in U. S. District Court's
Roy Miller said Saturday
CALL ANSWERED
Southern District of the
his large mail box had heen
Middleport smashed nat by a vehlcfe.
Eastern Division seeking - rhe
$200,000 in damages and to be Emergency Squad answered Sometime Friday evening or
returned his teaching job at a call to Route 143 near early Saturday morning, the
Kyger Creek . The suit alleged Middleport at 7:58 p.m. mailbox and post had been
that Bahr was dismissed as a saturday for Cheryl Lee who pulled out of the ground and
result of his activities In the had a hack injury. She was thrown Into the roadway . It
local teachers' assoclatiori taken to Veterans Memorial was not known if the culprits
and that this was a violation Hospital. At 12 : 52 a .m. had run over the mailbox or If
of freedom of association as Sunday the squad w,ent to it was done by a passtns
guaranteed by the first ·Beech St., for Tony Brad- motorist. ·
Otis Casto, Rt. I, Long
amendment of the u' s·. bury; a medical patient, who
Constiiutlon. It also claims was also taken to Veterans Bottom, who lives just out of
Chester, said his mailbox was
that the board had violated Memorial Hospital.
the "Sunshine Law" by
missing Saturday morning
discussing the employment
UNIT CALLED
when he went out to check for
status of Bahr in executive
The Pomeroy Emergency mall. Deputies located 'the
session without a waiver Squad was called to Mulberry mailbox about 1'.. mile away.
from him.
Heightaat 6:59p.m. Saturday
Other comrrilttee chairmen , for Mrs. John Terrell who
appointed were:
was taken to Holzer Medical
MEETING CANCELLED
Purchasing Committee - Center and retumed borne.
The.
M~igs
Men's
Jimmy Hlll, to develop The squad was called again Fellowship meeting
recommended board policy for Mrs. Terrell at 10:58 p.m. scheduled for this evening
and action with regard to Sunday and she was returned has been canc.)lled. to Holzer Medical Center. At
purchasing activities.
Board Policy Committee ~. ll:47 p.m. Saturday, the
Jim Blevins, to develop . squad went to New St. for
PTt;lCANCELLED
recommended board policies Brenda Templeton whC&gt; was
Southern Junior High PTO
and compile policies ap- .taken to Veterans Memorial · meeting on Wednesday has
·
been cancelled.
·(Continued on Pille JO)
Hospital.

Board will review Bahr case

By DALE ROTHGEB
Bahr case was controversial pertinent infomatlon."
In an unprecedented move and the board was split on the
His statement continued:
Saturday evening, the Gallia non-renewal action . All " In formulating a recomNEW YORK - PRESIDENT CARTER AND , Egyptian County Local Board of things
considered,
a mended course of action, I
President Anwar Sadat lead the Jlst of the world's best dressed . Education by a 3-0 vote ap- reeval~ation ol this entire urge you to consider that as
men for 1978, according toe Fashion Fowxlntlon of America. · pointed a legal committee matter is needed. Since you board members you have
The foundation released its selections Sunday, naming composed of board members are both new board members first an obligation of
Carter the best-dressed statesman because his "public David Cannan and Jimmy D. . and . in the best possibl~ protecting the interests of the
appearances are. now more in keeping with the dignity of high Hill to make an impartial position to make an impartial board and the school system.
office, the camoailm casualness is now reserved for off. · evaluation into the pending evaluation, I will appreciate Additionally you have an
camera privacy." Carter was bumped from the liBt last year lit\gation filed by former KC your serving as a committee equally compelling obligation
by Vice President Moodale. In the field of international science teacher William for that purpose,
to be just and equitable to the
government, Sadat was praised as -''tbe diplomatic standard Bahr. The ·.committee was
"Your general objective is Individuals ·involved. I also
bearer."
·
appointed upon the recom· to review the
case, urge that you .maintain .the
MOSCOW- mE SOYUZ 'J!I COSMONAUTS RETURNED mendation of board president reevaluate the facts· and information that you gather
safely to earth today alter their historic fiVIHlay double James Blevins.
circumstances, conS!lloo:..t.he in c~e, withhold public
docking with the Salyut 6 space station. The official Soviet
The motion was approved potential m~rits and risks~ment throughout your
ne,.s agency_ Tass reported that cosmonauts Vladimir after the board came out of the board associated with the inquiry, and present your
Janibekpv and bleg Makarov returned to earth aboard the an esecutive session. Board current litigation, and report report and recommendations
Soyuz 28 apace capaule - while Soyuz 28 COIIIIIonaull Yurt member J . E. (Dick) back to the board with a to the board in closed
Romanenko and Georgy Grechko remained aboard Salyut 8. Cremeens left just prior to recommendation as to bow session."
MoocowRadloannounced that the cosmonauts made a 110ft the vote.
the board should proceed.
On April 23, 1976, the board
lanlllng · on Soviet territory 192.6 miles southwest of
Board member James
"In conducting your voted 3-2 not to renew Bahr's
Tlellnograd In Kazakhstan, Soviet Central Asia. The Soyuz 27 Mitchell was absent. Mitchell evaluation, I · urge you to contract. Bahr, a teacher
mla8lon was launched last Tuesday and carried out a unique has not participated in a remain open and impartial. with a Bachelor's Degree
double-docking with Salyut 6 the following ~. The Soyuz 26 re~ular board session 1n over You should meet with the with over 150 hours, was at
COIIIDOI18Uts have heen aboard ·the space lab Since Dec. 11 - . a year due to ' a heart con· board's attorney, (David the end of a two-year limited
and Will continue their research after having been resupplied dition .
Se!cer), Bahr, the principal contract. Six documented
by the Soyuz '!I mission.
In a statement hamled to involved (Robert Lanning) reasons ·were given for the
the board members, 'Blevins and those -on the board at the non-renewal. Blevins and
SEOUL, SOtml KOREA .- ASSISTANT .ATI'ORNEY wrote:
· time, and aay other people Mitchell opposed the action.
"As
you
may
he
aware,
the
you believe can contribute
On June 25,1976, Bahr filed
(Continued on Pill• 10)

victims of discrimination and
poverty
his family
encompassed not just the
people of the United States
bot all people everywhere."
The sun began shining
through the windows on the
Capitol dome as • VIce
President Walter Mondale
eulogized the man who
brought him into politics; the
. man he called his mentor and
teacher, his political father,
· his patron and his friend .
"He taught us all how to
hope, and how to love, how to
win and how to lose,"
Mondale said. "He taught us
ho,w to live and, finally , he

Mailboxes
living a
hard life

�3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Jun. l6, 1978
~-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Monday, Jan. l6, 1978

Israelis want U. S. in talks
role made by an Egyptian
JERUSALEM ( UP!) Israel today elCpressed the spokesman at the conference
need lor the United States te but was evidence Israel
play &amp;11, active role in Middle supported President Carter's.
East peace talks and released pledge that the United States
an
agenda
for
the would play an active role in
forthcoming poiilica·l the talks.
The luncheon and informal
conference that contained a
compro!llise U.S. proposal on talks between Kamel, Dayan
and aides from both sides
tile Palestinian issue.
Foreig n Minister Moshe were held as Secretary o!
Dayan termed positive the State Cyrus Vance was flying
U.S. role in the talks that will to Israel 24 hours later than
resume Tuesday with the originally scheduled .
Vance had canceled his
foreign ministeria I session
and expressed satisfaction origi na l departure from
with the agenda worked out Washington Saturday night
because Lsrael and Egypt
for the conference .
were
unable to agree on the
" Israel needs the United
States as an
active wording of an agenda item on
mediator ," he told reporters the Palestinian iss~e, the
prior to a luncheon witll central obstacle to a peace
Egyptian Foreign Minister . agreement. Vance left
Mohanuned Kamel at the Washington late Sunday after .
Plaza Hotel, several miles a U.S. t'Ompromise proposal ·
from the ·conference site at apparently resolved arrived
the sleek 21-story Hilton in Jerusalem Sunday.
Israeli official s today
Hotel.
Daya n's statement not only released what was described
coincided with similar as the propo~ agenda for
remarks about the American the ta lks although they said

Egypt and Israel agreed to all
three items on it. All of them
were vaguely worded though
comprehensive in scope.
The agenda items were :
· ,... "The declaration of
principles which would
govern the negotiations of aco mprehensive peace
settlement in the Middle
East:
- "The guidelines for
negotiations relating to the
issues or Judea, Samaria and
the Gaza strip." (Judea and
Samaria are how Israel
refers to the occupied West
Bank of the J ordan) .'
- "The elements of peace
treaties between Israel and
its neighbors in accordance
with the principles of U.N .
Security Council Resolution
242.
Israeli officials said the
second item, which deals with
the Palestinian issue, was

agreed upon only after the
United States suggested new
wording to make it a compromise formula between what

Egypt
and
Israel o! self-determination for the
demanded.
Palestinians.
''The basis for the eomproIsrael interprets the
mise was a U.S. proposal that agenda Item as meaning
was worked over," one withdrawal from territories
official said. He said the - not necessarily .all of them
Egyptiall! wanted to word the - and secure borders for the·
Item as "the problem of the Jewish state. By secure
West Bank" but Israel borders, Israel rheans
viewed tbat as referring to retention of some occupied
territorial withdrawal, which • land to give it strategic depth ·
it did not want Included.
as a protective measure.
Although the wording o!
With respect to the Paleseach heading has been tlnians, Israel views the
agreed upon, both sides are second item as meaning selfexpected te make their own rule for the Palestinians in
proposals lor the settlement -the West Bank and Gaza and
of each issue. They still dlHer not self-determination . It
widely on how to find equates self-determination
solutions. But agreement on with eventpal Palestinian
the headings was needed statehood.
before the conference could
The officials said they saw
start, which is why they are a big concession by Egypt in
worded so vaguely.
the second item because
For example, Israeli there was no reference in it to
officials
said
Egypt , either the Palestinian people
interpreis the item relating to or a Palestinian nation even
the declaration of prlnciples though mention of the West
as meaning total Israeli Bank and Gaza means the
withdrawal from occupied Palestinians.
Arab territories and the right

Municipal power disdained ~y Rhodes
COLUMBUS ( UPI) deaf ear to public power.
Tardiness on the part of the
Admittedly , said John
office of Gov . James A. Young, counsel for the
Rhodes cost the state a assoc iatio n and former
chance to pick up a small Columbus city attorney, the
additional electrical supply 30 megawatts of Niagara
last year, according to a Mohawk power avai lable
municipal power group.
from a pool near. Buffalo,
And the ultimate response N.Y., would not have
from the governor's office _ alleviated last week's
nine months after it was electrical shortage in Ohio.
requested - still might not be
But it is enough to serve a
enough to attract public city of 20,000, he said, and
pewer from other states, the similar purchases could help
Ohio Municipal El'ect ric prevent brownouts in the
Associa tion said during the future .
weekend.
Young said Ohio al!;O could
The charge followed a week · · be in a position to p~rchase
during which several electric 100 megawatts from a
companies had to reduce hydroelectri c generating
voltage because of a shortage station on the Ohio River at
of fuel to run their Vanceburg, Ky.
generators.
OMEA, representing 85
The OMEA said Ohio could municipal electric companies
have purchased electricity . in Ohio, tried to negotiate for
from the Power Authority of the New York State power a
the SUite of New York for one- year ago but was rebuffed on
ha lf totwo-thirds the amount grounds it was not the
normally p_aid by utilities, designated bargaining agent
and is missing out on similar for the state.
opportunities in other areas
On Feb. 22, 1977, the power
because
the
Rhodes authority asked Rbodes to
administration has turned a clarify the matter before

allowi ng negotia tio ns by
American Municipal PowerOhio, Inc., representing the
m u n i c i p a 1 e lee t ric
companies.
Last autumn, Thomas J.
Moyer, the governor 's top
aide , said federal law
a ppeared to requ ire the
General
Assembly
to
deisgnate any bargaining
agent . But he said the
governor 's office would act
soon and he saw " no reason"
why AMPO should not be
designated .
On Nov . 22, Moyer wrote
t.t&gt;e New York authority that
the Legtslature had not
designated a bargaining
agent and " therefore, the
negotiations for Niagara
Power may be carried on by
the municipal power systems
involved."
.
"We were ·looking for
somethin~ a little more
positive," sa id George
Crosby, executive secretary
of OMEA, adding that
competi ng states have
recognized agents.
"We thou~ht we did what

they wanted us to do," said
Frederick Mills, legal
counsel in the governor's
office.
Youngwasmorebluntthan
Crosby, saying the Rhodes
administration Is lining up
with investor-owned utilities
who do not want Ohio served
by public power.
"They (electric utilities)
are fighting us at every turn
te keep public power out,"
said Young. "They are afraid
of the competition. l don't
know why we scare these
people, We only furnish ~
percent of the power in the
state."
Young said the investorow ned electri c.. companies
refused to ask for reserve
power from the municipals
durfug last week's shortage .
"Ra th er than ask' our
peopleto fire up, they asked
their cusiomers to cut back,"
he said.
"They don't want to admit
they can't handle it. Well,
somebody had better sit down

andfigurethisoutorintwo!Q
five years, we're going to be
having . brownouts all year
long."
Young said Rhodes has
rep~atedly ignored the
muntCJpals as a source of
power while claiming "he's
doing everything he can te
develop further sources." .
C. Luther Heckman, ch8lrman of the Public Utilities
CommissiOn of Ohio, srud be
has not looked I~ to _the
municipal power SituatiOn,
but noted the a~ount of
power te be obtamed from
ot~,"r, state~ is small.. . ,
Its not m my bailiWick,
said Heckman.
.
Youngpomtedoutthat Ohio
could get a percentage o!
Niagara Mohawk power
which would expiJild over the
years . "You get 30
megawatts here and 100
there," he said. "You take
every bit you carl get. Tbe
more sources yoij get, the
harder it is to brown you
out."

Mourners waited
. tO killin
.• g
Willd dog.S turn
to Se.e Humph •ey

PHILADELPHIA (UP!) Robert Hudson, executive
Last Nov. 9, a pack ol dogs director of the Women 's
led by a three-legged German Society .for the Prevention of
shepherd killed nine sheep at . Cruelty to Animals in
an agricultural high school in Philadelphia, said a lot of
Philadelphia 's residential time arid money have gone
Roxborough section .
into hunting the pack that
Since that slaughter, struck Nov. f
" We're not sure if any of
mounted police and SPCA
workers have patroll&lt;:d the those (caught) are from that
area searching for the dogs . pack, " Hudson said. 11 We're
They've captured 24 strays even uncertain at this time of
with the use of tranquilizer · the number of dogs in the
rifles and nets,' but they're pack. There have been
not S\U'e they got the right reports of six. or s'even.
ones.
''There's a white German
Moreover, they say, the shepherd that either has
hunt for.strays - dogs whose three legs or one crippled leg
owners have aba.ndoned them that 's held up in the air ," he
or allowed them to run loose said. "It's suppposed to be
at night, killing livestock and the leader of this pack of
terrifying people - is not a dogs."
neighborhood problem, nor is
The problem , he said, is
it peculiar to the city o! peop le who careless ly
Philadelphia. The problem is abandon their dogs or allow
national in scope.
them to run free at night .

peopletalk
By United Preos International
BELLA BEATEN : Bella Abzug's been running into some
tough luck lately. She suffered her third major political
setback in two years Sunday - this time narrowly losing a bid
te become the Democratic candidate for the congressiona l seat
vacated by New York City Mayor Edward Kdeb . The feisty
Mrs. Abzug lost a party committee vote to wealthy former
Councilman Carter Burden by half a percentage point. The ex·
congresswoman last year lost a bid for the mayoral
nomination and two years ago she was edged out by Daniel
Patrick Moynihan for tile party's U.S. Senate nod. But Mrs.
AbZIIil!llYS she'll challen~e Burden's victorv in the courts. '

WASHINGTON (.UPI) - The Labor
Department, Initialing a cootroversial
anti-cancer policy, today ilsued an emergency order requiring a drastic cut in
worker nposure to a . compound
commonly used in producing synthetic
fibers.
The «der sharply reduce~ permissible
worker exposure to acrylonitrile, which
was blamed for an ezcess risk of lung and
colon cancer among wockers in an E.l. du
Pont de Nemours and Co. plant in Camden,
S.C.
The order was governed by OSHA's new
policy te reduce w«ker exposure to
cancer-causihg chemicals to the lowest
feasible level. Iii this case, It was 2 parta
per mWlon averaged over eight hours,
down from 20 parts per mWlon.
The deparbnent's Occupational Safety
and Health Administration ilsued the
order basetl on a recent report concluding
that acrylonitrUe "must be -viewed as a
proven animal carcinogen and a suspect
hwnan carcinogen." Experiments wltll
the compound produced tumors in mice.
"As a carcinogen, acrylonitrile can pose
Its llfe-tbreatenlng danger in a very l:rlef
period of exposure," said OSHA chief Eula
Bingham.

.

,

II

»

.;

NEW ORLEANS (UP[) - The Dallas Cowboys are pro '
football's new world champions, and it all began and -ended
with Craig Morton,
The Denver Broncos surprised everyone this season and
reaChed the Super Bowl largely because of Craig Morton. And
theCowboysarechampions again for the second time in seven
years largely because of what they did to Morton Sunday in a
27-10 Super Bowl XII victory over tlle Broncos.

TALLAHASSEE ,

NOW OPEN

••

GINO'S
OF MASON
PHONE 773-5536

'
bedroom,
screaming
(UP! ) - Police say the
incooerently.
strangler who killed two
However , police
sleeping Florida State spokeSI)lan Wayne Smltll said
University sorority sisters the descriptions were "too
and bludgeoned three other general and too broad. It
coeds is " a very sick, would probably identify baH
depraved young man wbo of Tallahassee if' we tried a
should turn himself in before drawing."
he hurts anyone else."
Tight security was clamped
Margaret Bowman, 21, and on the 23,000.Student campus
Usa Levy, 20, both of St.
in Florida's state capital ·and
Petersburg, were killed as some girls moved into town
they slept in their Chi Omega with friends.
sorority bouse rooms early
"Weassesstbat the danger
Su~~y~ssailant was seen by element is very, very high,"
said · Lu Goldhagen, chief
one surviving victim and student affairs officer .
another coed, but Sheriff Ken · "There is a very real
Katsaris said · he hils no possibility that it could
suspects.
happen again ."
The pre-dawn attack was
Katsaris said the attacker
described by pollee as vicious apparently was a stranger to
and senseless, with rape the his victims. He theorized the
appatant motive. One victim man foun.d a side · door
was beaten so badly she
required hours of surgery to
restore her face, according to
a hospital source.
Katsaris said the autopsy

"

1

"•
••

••
••

running the country and
inclusion ~f the Communists
te help deal with Italy's
chronic economic, BOCiaJ and
political terrorism problems.
Instead of giving the
Communists seats In an
emergency
all"[larty
government,
politicians
predicted the Christian
Democrats would try to come
up witll a formula allowing
both sideo to save face and
avoid a confrontation leading
to general elections that
could
wreck
Italy's
precarious economy.
Under such a formula, the
Communists would vote for
previously agreed-on govern·
menl programs and the
Christian Democrats woii!d
accept the leftist votes but
declare this did not mean the
Communists were part of the
parliamentary majority.

the quarter.

Spencer got six points each
from Ronnie Stagg, Craig
Houston and J elf Boggs in the
second canto to erase the
short-llved Falcon advantage
and pull even at 41-41 at in·
tennlssion.
The game was actually
decided in the ensuing eight
minutes of action when the
Yellow Jackets broke away
from the deadlock and took a
comfortablenine-polntleadby
the quarter's · end at 6Q.6l.

Ohio College
Basketba II Schedule

Uni1ed Press International

,
unlocked, walked in, and ,
looked inte several secondfloorbedroomsbeforefindlng •
one in which a single girl was ~
sleeping.
•
The dead girls had roommates, but ·one was out of
town and the other was on a
date .
Two others who survived
the attack- Karen Chandler
of Tallahassee and Kathy
Kleiner, 21, of Miami- were
listed
in
satisfactory
condition in Tallahassee
· Memorial Hospital. ·
•
The fifth victiril - Cheryl
Ann Thomas, 22, of "
Richmond, Va., a sophomore
dance major - was beaten
unconscious in a duple•
apartment six blocks from
the sorority houae. She W84
hospitalized in critical
condition.

Monday

DRASTIC
SAVINGS
ON
EVERYTHING

.

!Gal

'SAYRE

HARDWARE.
882•2525
126 MAIN

INGELS FURNITURE

Bogga with 14 whlle Mark
Taylor chipped in with II in a
substitute role·.
In the preliminary game,
Vince Weaver put on a real
show for the U!Ue Falcons to
lead Coach Lewis Hall'a
charges to their fourth eonsecutlve win againt one
defeat.
The 5'10" Weaver poured in
26 points and hauled down a
game high 17 rebounds in a
spectacular performance as
Wabama downed the Spencer
Junior Vanity, 77-72.
Gary Richards and "Tim
Roush also provided lllllple
scoring by netting 17 and 15
points, reapect.ively.
Spencer got 20 poin'·
'" ·from
Mike Benson, followed by 16
from Barker, 1S from Hunt
and 11 from Burdetti to round
out the double figure scoring,
WAIIAMA (..)
•• FG.F.T
Player
WIOMU.u
R.B'·---'
7 •or'7 19
R.Barnitz
8 0-3 18
P. Hobba
2-t 14
6
G.Biessing
6 1_1 13
K.Honaker
2 1~ 5
C.Zuspan
1 o-o 2
B.Barnltz
0 o-o o.
T.Rawllngs
0 o-o 0
TOTAL
30 9-19 119
SPENCER (IZI.
R.Staggs
8 5-9 21

,\

N. 2nd Ave.

~iddleport,

0..

183 yards, inunedlately threw 13 yards to tight end Billy Joe
Dupree to the 12.
The Cowboys gi'OWid out the final12 yards, with roukie Tony
Dorsett getting tile final three off left tacl&lt;.le for the opening
score.
Aaron Kyle intercepted 'Morton's next attempt, which was
tipped first by linebacker Bob Breunig, returning It 19 yards te
the Denver 35. The Cowboys penetrated to the 18 before
stalling and Efren Herrera kicked a 35-yard field goalfor a 10.0
Dallaa first~uarter lead.
UaJias&lt;!rove 32yards with Its next possession after a 32-yard
punt by Denver's Bucky Dilts, setting up Herrera 's second
field goal, a 4~yarder for a I~ lead 3:44 lnte the second
quarter. ·
·
The Broncos never really got back into the game, though
they did pull within 13.'1 and 20-10 in the third quarter. Jim
Turner's 47-yard fiel4 goal2:28 into the second half got Denver
on the scoreboard.
Dallas seemed to have put the game away midway through
the third quarter when Butch Johnson made a diving grab at'
the goal line of Staubach's ' ~yard TD ~us on a third-and-10

(Ky)

~ ·~-

NEW ORLEANS (UP! ) Super Bowl xn appeared to
be the most brutal of the
dozen NFL championship
games and at least one of the
injured players felt the
artificial surface of the
Superdome had something to
do with it. .
On the Dallas Cowboys side

Ashland at Youngstown Sf
Capital at Marietta

Wooster at Mount Union
Oberl in at Ohio Nort hern

Wilming1on a1 Hanover lind }
NEW HAVEN'
Earlham (lnd) at Bl uffton
Find lay a1 Taylor ( lndl
Hiram at Case Western
.
A.
W
V
•
.."'!'_..;,;.;,.,;;,;,,;;,
__... John Carroll at Carnegie ·

!
,
:

Mel lon (Pal
Urbana a1 Malone
Thursday
Ohio Sf a t Ind ia na
Cleveland St at Air Force

Friday

Dyk e a t La Roche ( Pa)
Saturday
M ichiga n at Ohio St
Toledo at Ball St
Ohio Uni v at Bowling Green
Eastern Michigan af M iami
Northern illinois at Kent St
Memphis St at Cincinnati
Dayton at DePaul

Akron at Wright St ·

Central St at Chicago ·St
Cleveland St at Denver
Youngstown St at Gannon

"

(Pal

Capital at Wittenberg '
Denison at Otterbein
Marlett13 at Ohio Wes leyan
Baldwin-Wa l lace at Woo ster
Heidelberg at Ohio Northern
Kenyon at Oberlin
California St (Pa) at Mount
Union
Anderson (Pa) at Wilm i ngton
Defiance at Indiana-Pu rdue
Bluffton at Manchester ( In d)

NATIONAL JAYCEE WEEK
JANUARY 15-21

Findlay a1 Earlham ( ind l

Bethany (Pa) at John Car roll
Case Western at Allegheny

:
'

~
•
•

,

'

I Pal

Progress in action
that's what today's
Jaycees are all about!
They're young men with
a hand in the future, and
a mind for challenge.
Their
outstanding
service and projects for
civic improvement have
helped this community
to become a better place
in which to live and
work. Let's show them
our support, arid pride.

Sunday night, quarterback
Roger Staubaeh suffered a
broken index finger on his
right band and probably will
miss next week's Pro Bowl,
Tony Dorsett sprained his
right knee and Butch Johnson
sulfered a severely sprained
right thumb,
For Denver , John Grant

injured a knee, Randy Cradishar twisted his right ankle,
Louis Wright suffered a
shoulder injury and Lyle
Alzedo pulled a muscle .
"I don 't know if the game
was all that brutal," said
Co wboys wide receiver
Golden Richards, whn
scraped his back on the turf.
"I think a lot of it had to do

24 records set
in XII contest

at

Wi1tenberg a1 Musk ingum
Ohio Wes leya n a1 Ot1erbein

play. But Denver refused to give up.
Riel&lt; Upchurch returned the ensuing kickoff a Super Bowl
record 67 yards to the Cowboys 26. Weese came into tile gllllle
after Morten, on first down, almost threw his fifth interception,
which was dropped by defensive end Ed "Too Tall" Jones.
Weese, a runninK quarter hack not known for his passing,
moved the Broncos in lor a TD, witll rookie Rob Lytle going the
final yard to cloae the score to 2().]0.
"I'm not concerned thai l wao replaced, " Morton said.
"Norris can scramble and we thought he might get something
going. He came up with a big play and they decided to leave
him in."
The Cowboys sealed the game following the laal turnover ol
the game. Weese, attempting to pass from the shotgun formalion , was hlt by Martin and fumbled at his own 29. Kyle made
the recovery .and on the next play, fullback Robert New bouse
ran to his left, stopped and lofted a 29-yard TD pass te Golden
Rleharda.
"We have nothing to be aShamed of," Denver Coach Red
Miller said. "We have nothing to hang our heads about. We
came a lot farther than people elCpCCted."

Several players injured
in tilt
......

NEW ORLEANS (UP!) There were 24 Super Bowl
Tuesflay
records set in Sunday's 27-10
Ci ncinna ti at Florida St
Dallas victory over Denver.
Cleveland St at Crei ghton
They are as follows :
Ba ldwin -Wallace at Kenyon
Purdue- Indiana at Akron
Most
yards
gained,
·central St at Shaw (Michl
passing, career--.";06 Roger
Def iance at And erson {lndl
Staubach.
M1 . Vemon Nazarene a1 Oh io
Highest passing completion
Dominican
percentage, career....: 64. 7
watsh a1 Tiffin
..
Wednesday
Roger Staubach ( 4~1 .
Detroit at Bowling Green
Most Wuchdowns passing,
Miami at Central Michiga n
career-."; Roger Staubach.
Ken t Sf at Toledo
·passes
had
Most
rr~~s~ern Mich igan at Ohio
intercepted, game--'1 Craig .
Th omas M ora
Wilberforce

FREE REPLACEMENT
GUARANTEE I

106

Carnegie-Mellon (Pal at
Hiram
Dyke at Pitt-John stown ( Pa)
Malone at Ohio Dominican
Mt. Vernon Nazarene at

Walsh

Rio Grande at Tiffin
Urbana a1 Cedarv i ll,e

.:

share MVP award

Morten (1&gt; alt. )
Most
passes
had
intercepted, career--7 Craig
Morton 41 all.)
Most field goals attempted,
career- 6 J im Turn~r ( 2
games ).
•
Most yards gained kickoff
returns, game - 94 Rick Upchurch.
Longest kickoff return ,
game ~7 Rick Upchurch.
Highest average kickoff returns, game--31.3 Rick Upchurch.
Most fumbles, career - 4
Roger StaubAch.
Fewest lir.s t downs,
passing, game- 1 Denver.
Fewest first downs passing,
both teams, ga me- 9 Denver
(1), Dallas (6).
Fewest yards passi ng ,
game - 1 Denver.
Fewest yards gained, punt
returns, game-0 Denver.
Most yards gained, kickoff
returns, game-173 Denver.
Longest kickoff return,
game ----67 Denver ,
'
Most yards gaine&lt;l, kickoff
returns, both te~s, game224 Denver (173), Dallas ( ~1 ).
Highest average kickoff returns, game--8.8. Denver.
Most penalties, game- 12
Dallas.
Most penalties, both teams,
game- 20 Dallas. (12 ),
Deriver (6).
Most fumbles, game - 6
Dallas.
Most fumbles, both teams,
game- 10 Dallas (6), Denver

NEW ORLEANS (UPI) Harvey Martin and Randy
White, who form the right
side of the Dallas Cowboys'
defensive line , will form
another type of unique duo
next week .
That 's wl]en they will he
presented with an automobile
by a national sport s
magazine afteP being named
the outstanding players · in
Sunday's 27-10 Super Bowl
victory over the Denver
Broncos.
Their selection marks the
first time · in the -12-yeu r
history of the award that lwo
players have been selected.
"I'm happy that Randy and

xn

I won

Most fumbles, . recovered ,
Dallas, · 4 opp., 4
own .
Most points, third quarter,
both teams-17 Denver (10),
Dall~s (7).
game~

L

.

I

OFFICE HOURS; 9 :30 to 1'2, 2 to S (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS. ) - E"ST
COURT
.
ST., POMEROY.
·

---------····-------~-------·

the award, 11 said

Martin, who had two sacks
for 19 yards aild helped lead a
pressure-packed rush that
'held Denver to a Super Bowl
record low J5 yards net
passing. "Anybody in the line
could have gotten it."
.
" It's nice," added White,
who was in on five tackles
and caused the interception
that resulted in the Cowboys'
first teuchdown. "It's been a
little difficult for me this
year, not knowirig exactly
where 1was going to play and
having to make · so 'many
CO LUMBUS (UP!i adjustments. It was my first
for races at Scioto
Purses
year playing defensive ta.ckle
Downs
will
be on estimated
in the pros and this is a nice
$917,500
when
the harness
way W finish ."
racing
season
bogins
Moy ~ .
Both players said their
The
Ohio
Sires
Stokes
defensive strategy was to
series of the Ohio Stan ~
pressure BronCo quarterbac~
Craig Morton because of his dardbred Development Fund
will put out $663,500 for 16
lack of mobility.
events
lor 2-and 3-year-old
It worked to perfection as
trott
ers
and pacers.
Morton was for ced IntO
Post
tim
e for most racing
throwing a Super Bowl record
will
be
7 : 4~ p.m., but 2 p.m.
four interceptions.
While said he was confident post times hnve been set for
!&gt;lay 29, the Monday
entering the game .
"I wer,t intn the game Memorial Day observance ;
feeling we had to put out 100 · Tuesday, July 4 and Labor
percent and let the chips fall Day, Sept. 4.
Three nights will feature au
where they may," he
10
races on the program for
explained. "I was worried,
fillies
and mares.
but only about whether we

:
1I
"
'

Prevention is
the best policy ...

Attention ·Dog Owners

'

FOR YOUNG

· l ,·_,.QLINE FOR PURCHASE OF 1978 DOG LICENSE l.S JANUARY lOTH. TWO
DOLLARS (Sl.OOI PENALTY IF LICENSE IS PURCHASED AFTER THAT DATE .
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE USE THIS HANDY APPLICAl&lt;.)N BLANK AND
MAIL TO THE COUNTY AUDITOR AT THE COURT HOUSE NOW, FEES ARE
TWO DOLLARS (Sl .OOI FOR EACH DOG. MALE OR F6MALE .

DRIVERS
Young men ~ nd women
often ask why they have to
more for
t heir
pay
automobile Insurance.
Drivers In their teens and
earlier twentle! cause fflr
more th&amp;fl their share of
traffic accidents . Reports

To obtain license by mail, fill in and mail thl5 form to HOWARD E. FRANK,

COUNTY AUDITOR, MEIGS COUNTY, POMEROY. OHIO.
Enclose self-addressed stamped enVelope and price of license .

1he

.I«JME. NATIONAL

BANK
JRQNE

OWNER'S NAME

Farttters Bank

1?1·

POOEROY, OHIO

.

OHIO

· _ ;40,000 Maximum 111Surance For fadl ' ~
n a a
' 1t1ember Fe!ierai Deposrt lnsuriii1Ce Cor)JOIItitin

ADDRESS

people

TOWNSHiP

are·

respon sib l e

Age

Sex

Yr. Mo. M F

COLOR
Blk White Groy Brindle Ton Brown Yellow

'

Long

Sliort

Breed Fees
If
Pold

Known

.

Howard
.

E. Frank

County Auditor of Melga County.
.

License must bt obtained notlator Ilion Jon. 20, 1971to avoid paying penalty . Allor
I~ Is d•to penalty w111 be S2.00 for single tog ond ss.oo for kennolllcenso.

,

Safely

skilled,
drivers.

Obviously, though, qul1e a
few a re not .
There' s no subs11tute for
development competence

and 1he right altitudes,

'

.

Nationa l

Council : 21. 8 percent of all
motorists are 24 years of
age or under, yet these
youthful operators are
lnvorved as drivers In 38.6
per cent of all accidents
and 37 .3 per cent of all fatal
m ishaps.
A great many young

Male Dog S2 .0Q-Spayed Female $2 .00- Female$2 .00- Kennel Ucense SlO

RACINE

would play our game. I knew
if we did we would wln .
Denver is u field position
team . I think we only gave
them good field pO!iltlon titree
times and we stopped them
two of the three times. "
Martin said he and White,
who pluy side-by-&lt;!lde, spenl a
lot of time together studying
opposition . Martin led the
NFL in quarterback sucks
Utis year with 23 und be
credits White's presence with
helping compile that total .
''White and l spend time
during the week away from
the tea m meetings und
practice studying · the
opponents," sold Mnrtln.
"We determine our loops and
our games and then we
practice them. I hated to see
·Morton go out In the third
period beCBlL'ie he's H Slll)CT
guy but the other coach must
have fell he was having u bad
clay or he wouldn't have made
the chunge ."
·

Scioto purse set

( 4) .

OPlOMETRIST

with the extreme traction you
get on the surface .
·
"It is lightning fast . But at
the same lime you c·an stop
faster than you think you are
going to .
''As u result you ca n wind
up in some bad positions
when you are hil. .And I saw
some people in some awfully
ood body positions when they
were hit."

Martin, White

· ~r··--·----··--------------------·-~
N. W. COMPTON. 0.0. I

'

..

'

Northern Illi nois a t Bowling
Green
Chattanooga at Dayton
Ce d arv ill ~
at
Kentucky
Chri stian
Wright St a t Armstrong St

'

C.Houaten
8 1·2 17 · •
J.Boggs
7 0.0 14 '
M.Taylor
4 3-6 11
N.Craig
4 1-4 9
R.Fiaher
I 5-8 7
Spencer limited the Bend Area J.Pickens
1-2 3
telllll to a mere 10 points in the TOT A
33 1&amp;-21 82
• "" .:
pei:Iod on juat four field goals WAHAMA
23 18 Hi 1"""
and two free thrawa.
The YeUow Jack.U added SPENCER
17 24 19 :Q-82 ;
l9 more marken to tl1elr own Total Fouls: Wahama 21, ;
Soencer 1&amp;.
mountlnl tcital. ·
.R
In the final llat&gt;:.a, Wabanul
EBERVE GAME
tried dapal'lltlbt to ltap I
WAIIAMA (7'1
comeback but their in· Player
FG F T
conailtency' fram the cbarity Weaver
7 12-21 28
stripe hampered tl1elr vlalons Rlcbarda
7 S-4 17
of victory' as the . Yellow RoUib
. 7 1-4 IS
Jackets captured the contell Sayre
3 2-3 8
by an 82~ margin.
Dlftgey
3 o-o 8 . '
Both teama placed four men Smith
2 o-o 4
in double flgureafor the night, stanley
0 1-2 1
with lilck Buaard leadine . TOTAUI
29 19-34 7'1
Wahama· with 19 points,
'.
foUowed by: Rick Barnitz with
SPENCER '('II)
is,. Phll Hobbo with 14 and Pinson
8 U 20
Greg Blessing adding 13 Barker
8 ~I 18
before eziiiDC the game after HIDit
5 5-8 15
being asseNd his fifth · per- Burdetti
5 14 11
sonal foul.
Moore
2 ~ 4
I 0.0 2
Spen(er got 21 markers from Mlller
Ronnie Stacp, who came Drake
I o-o 2
away with gllllle high honors Mcintyre
I o-o 2
by canning eigbt field ·8081s Bogp
0 o-3 0
and five of nine free throw~; TOTAL
31 1~19 72
Staggs was followed In ICOI'In!l. WAHAMA
II 18 II ..77
by Craig HoUlton with 17, Jeff SPENCER
14 13 23 :IS-72

.

Tiris week's
cage schedule

•

Wah
over
ama

I.JIY.GARY CLAMThe Wahama White Falcon
Basketball Squad braved the
freezing temperatures and
blowing snow Saturday nil!ht
as it journeyed to Spencer in
search ofits fourth cage win of
the season but the Yellow
Jackets had other ideas and
turned back the locals by an
IIU9 score.
With the defeat, the While
Falcons season record evens
up at 3.'1 on the year with two
games scheduled for this
week.
Coach Ed Coon's surpriaing
Hannan Wildcats invade
Tuesday night for a big intercounty contest before the
Fa1CQnS vislt So Uthern on
Fridav.
Wahama opened up a qui-~
'-'
23-17 lead alter just eight
minutes of action against the
Roane Countlans behind Greg
81 ln
d Ri k · B rnltz
ess g an
c
a
'
who combined for 14 poin'· in
"'

"The No. 1 plan "'as to .pressure Craig Morton ," Dallas
Coach Tom Landry said. "Not give him enough time to throw."
The game was anything but a super performance, except
perhaps for the Dallas defense, which held the Broncos to only
!56 total yards.
There were 10turnovers, one short of the Super Bowl record,
and 20 penalties, a Super Bowl record.
No one was clearly the star of this game, so the most
valuable player award went to two people, Dallas defensive
lineman Harvey Martin and Randy White, who pressufed
Morton and his second-half replacement, Norris Weese! all
game.
The NFC Champion Cowboys earned $16,000 each for the
victory that broke the Super Bowl dominance of the AFC,
which bad won the last five and eight of the last nine NFL title
games. Dallas won its second Super Bowl in four appearances.
The Bront'Os, the AFC champions who finished with a 14-3
mark, picked up the $9,000 per player losers share.
Everything about the contest seemed te revolve around the
34-year-old Morton, who completed only 4-of·l~ passes for 39
yards and was replaced by Norris Weese midway through the
third quarter.
In the early stages, DaUas looked as if it might be the team to
give the game away. The Cowboys fumbled three times in tbe
first six minutes, including Tony Hill's dropped punt return at
the one, but they r ecovered them all . The Cowboys lost only
two of the slx fumbles in the game.
The Cowboys then turned the game in their favor when
Randy Hughes snared the first of Morton's four interceptions
at the Broncos' 25. Staubach, who completed 17-of-25 passes for

NOW IN PROGRESS

•

•

spencer .82. •69

~~:. r:!~~C:a~~ b~: ~~:

A cubic mile of sea \I'Uler
·· contains an 3\'era ge of
49,500,000 tons of sodium.

•

•

Fla .

TO HONOR UPON
COLUMBUS (UP! )
Columbus Clippers Manager
John Lipon, who too k over the
helm of the International
League t eam midway
through its first season, will
be honored as the Neil House
Clipper of the Year Feb. 10 at
an awards banquet.

•

. 3 hurt
Two coeds killed,

Comm~ists force Andreotti to quit

.

An estimated 125,1110 wortera ba1t contact with IICI')'Ionltrlle, a cokJrt.,
hillhlY tedc, Oim11111ble and volatile liquid
Uled in tbe manufacture rl plaotlc 111111
synthetic nlbber and Iibera.
lnduatry oppooent.l argue that ~ new
policy doesnoteeektodetermlne a "Safe,"
or :•acceptable" level of apollll't to
carcinogens. But OSHA olficials say there
is no means of detennlnlng Slfe Ieveii for
carcinogens.
The producers o! acrylonltrUe include
American Cyanamid, Moosanto, Stand...ct
Oil, Dow Badi.&amp;he and Eastman Kodak.
AcrylonitrDe is the lint eancer-ciuslng
subltance cited by OSHA since the new
pollcy was iBBued last October. A
spokeaman described it aa "a._ good
eumple of bow the new policy will work."
The policy is not yet final, and the
agency will hold hearings on It be~
AprU 4. Meanwhile, officials said the
proposal will be used as an informal guide
for regulating cancer-&lt;:ausing chemicals. . .
The emergency rule reqUires industry to·
alter engineering and work practices to
reduce worker exposure to aerylonltrtle,
and supply workers with respiratory
protective equipment.

.

inconclusive as to the other.
.He would not say which one.
Sophomore Nita Jane
• ,
Neary, 20, saw the fleeing
Many dogs can't find their
intruder when she returned te
way back home and for
the sorority house from a late
protection seek out other
ST. PAUL, Minn. (UPI) "God Bless America," "The date about 3:30a.m. Sunday,
dogs, forming packs .
Throughout the night they Battle Hymn of
the
According to statistics gathered in cold that dipped Republic,' ' and "America the just as one of- the bloody
from the Friends of Animals, · to 10 degrees below zero te . Beautiful," as they waited te victims staggered from her
Inc., a national volunteer wait their turn to say a final enter Sunday.
r-=rn=E=o-.=.L-v-s=ENTIN-=--E-L---7
group based in New York, of goodbye te Sen. Hubert Hum·
DEVOTEDTOntE
They were silent and
the 33 million dogs and cats in phrey,
M~~~~~...
somber as they entered the
the country, 20 million are . They were the " little rotunda, where Humphrey's
CIIF.'ITER L. TANNEHILL
abandoned, starved, or people" wbo considered the body lay in a flag-draped
itooe'ii;.":'io~ruCH •
destroyed. Close te 20 million Minnesota senator their own casket surrounded
by
CHy Editor
die in suffering,
special friend. During the tnilitary honor guard and .
Published
dally except &amp;«u,..,
by The Ohio VaUey Publi1shing
A spokesman, Nancy night state police estimated floral remembrances.
Company-Multimedia, In c., 111
Walsh, said the problem of that more than 20,000 bad
About 3,000 persons were on
Court St., Pomemy, Ohio 45769.
wild dogs exists throughout ,passed by Humphrey 's band when ·the doors opened· Business Office Phone 992- 2Hi6.
EditorJaiPhone992-2151.
the country because' "people closed, flag-draped casket in around 8 p.m. and the crowd
Second class postoge. poid ••
Pomeroy, Ohio.
are so careless about their the rotunda of the State increased throughout the
Natioooal
advertbing ,..,.,.n.
animals.
night.
Cl\pitol.
tative Ward • Griffith Company,
''They're irresponsible,''
Inc., BotUnelll and Gallagher Dlv.,
At daybreak, the crowd
"He meant everything to
151 Third Ave .. New York, N.Y.
she said. "They leave their swelled again . The body was me, such a wonderful man,"
10011.
dogs out. They abandon their te lie in state until! p.m CST. said Mrs. Carrie Peoples, 75,
Subscription rates: Delivered by ·
carrieewhece
availob!O 75 cents pee
dogs. They take a ride inte .
The senator's oldest son, St. Paul, who had waited for
week. By Motor Rout. whm carrier
the country and let the dog Hubert " Skip" Humphrey hours te pass the bier.
service not available, One month,
out if they don't want it any lll, slipped back to the
130ne
.20. Yay man on Ohio .nd w. va.,
Monsignor Terrence
more . They think some Capitol Sunday night to watch Murphy, president of the
ear, $22 .00 ; Six monthlJ,
$1! .50; The.. months, $7 .00 :
benevolent farmer is going te and mingle with the College of St. Thomas,
Elsewhere $26.00 year ; Six months
I 13.50; Three months , 17.50.
give it a home ."
presided at a short prayer
mourners.
Subs&lt;.Tiption pMce includes Sunday'
She said domesticated dogs
"I just had to come back," service when the casket
Tlrnes-Sentinet.
cannot fend for themselves, he said.
arrived from the funeral
so they form packs, stalking
During the night the thou- borne.
hands in his while they
livestock.
sands clapped hands and
"We celebrate IOOay not exchanged words,
·
"Dogs in packs are not very stOmped their feel te keep death, but life and the
Vice President Walter
kind/ ' she said. "They don't warm.
triumph of the human spirit Mondale and his wife
kill like a wild animal kills.
Bundled in heavy coats and as shoWII in the life and death escorted Mrs. Humphrey inte
It's much more painful. When snowmobile suits, they sang of this remarkable man," he · the capitol, followed by the
a dog pack kills an animal,
said. "His day of death is a rest of the Humphrey family
the animal being attacked
birthday into a new and ;md Gov. and Mra. Rudy
suffers far more than with a
better life. And so we dare to Perpich.
wolf,
which
kills attack people since they make this day a day of
Secretary o! Agriculture
immediately . Dogs will usually are non-agressi ve. celebration."
Bob Bergland was on hand
attack all over the animal."
"Abandoned dogs become
Monsignor Murphy for the prayer service as
Hudson said it was uncom· very shy and retiring comforted Humphrey's were Sen. and Mrs. WendeD
mon for the dog packs to animals," he said.
widow, Muriel, after the Anderson and former Gov.
prayer, taking both of . her and Mrs. Orville Freeman.

BORN AGAIN, DARN IT: Speaking as one born-again
)lolltico about anO\her, ~arold Hugbes, former senator and
governor of Iowa, says he wasn't too pleased when Cbarles
Colson joined the convert ranks. Hughes said he was miffed
when a mutual friend asked him to talk to ColSon after the · ROME (UP!) - Premier on Tuesday for a new may have a hard time living
up to the United States'
conversion of the former Rlehard Nixon aide . "I disliked Giulio Andreotti yielded te government.
expectations.
They won 38.8
Conununist
pressure
IOOay
Poli6ciaps
predicted
Leone
everytlling the Nixon White House 9lo'od for, and l didn 'I want
percent
of
the
vote
in the June
and
handed
in
the
resignation
would
ask
Andreotti
or
•
te do it," Hughes said. "To tell the truth, at first 1 was
disappointed that the Lord saw fit to save him." In time, of his U.S.-backed Christian another Christian 1976 national election
however, religion overcame politics. Hughes made his Democratic government, Democratic leader lo form compared to 34.5 for the
remarks in. Los Angeles, where he is playing, himself in a Italy's 39th administration the new govenunent and that Communists - an outcome
since World War ll.
the .Christian Democrats that left neither party able to
movie about Colson titled- what else? - "Born Again."
The move opened the way would stand firm on their form a governing majocity in
for
a possible Conununist role rejection of ConuniUiist de· parliament wlth their
COOPED Winl THE FLU: Uza MIDDeW was out of "The
in
the
n""t govenunent.
mands for cabinet seats and tradltiooal allieo.
Act" and back in bed with the !J~'thhrweekend, the second time
Andreotti's minority
Andr(!(llti turned in his give tile Marxists as li!Ue
the bug has laid her up and suspended performances of the
virtually oqe-woman Broadway musical. Both Saturday govenunent's resignation te additional
power
as cabinet survived 17 mooths
and 17 days on the basis o! an .
perlocmances were canceled, but producers o! the hit show,are President Giovanni Leone possible.
hoping Uza can make it on stage tonight. She was out for a after Italy's leftist parties
Negotiations for the new accord in whiCh the Christian·
their gov~rnment, Italy 's 40th Democrats consulted with the
week last month, closing the show down for seven perfor- withdrew
parliamentary
support
of his since the fall of Dictator left on major legislation and
mances and costing backers nearly $200,!100.
minority
cabinet and Benito Mussolini's Fascists in programs' and the leftist
GLIMPSES: New Hainpshire Gov. Meldrim Tbomaon, demanded seats for ,the Com- 1943, will take place against a ·parties agreed in turn to
in
major
chairman of the national Conservative Caucus is in South mdnists in the next govern- backdrop of warnings from abstain
Africa for an eight:.U.y visit ... Anlta Bry~t sang and ment.
the United States that the parliamentary votes.
That arrangement started
In accepting the govern- Communists do not share
preached at the Fundamentalist People's Church in .Toconto
Sunday night, while some 500 ,chanting demon.strators ment's resignation, Leone Western democratic values coming apart in November
gathered outside to protest hef anti-gay rights crusade ... asked Andreotti and his and should not be ~ll~ed to when the Communists,
Socialista and the amall
Sarah Vaughan will perform along with Slaa Getz, Dizzy cabinet te stay on in a increase their influence.
caretaker
capacity
and
said
The
Christian Democrats Republican parties began
Gilltsple and the Dute EIIJDgton Orchestra Jan. 2().22 at the
_....,
agitating for more say in
be
would
begin
consultations
soon.tq-be-closed Radio City Music Hall.

Dallas Cowboys claim NFL title

Drastic cut ordered in hwnan exposure
to chemical used in synthetic fibers

f

.

Includ i ng
a · positiVe
approach to defensive
driving .
Our agency provides
financial pro1ectlon and
service Jn case of accidents
involving young drivers .. ,
but
many
of
these ·
accidents
C8n
be
prevented . That 's why we
S&lt;!ly prevention Is the

bts1 pol icy.

MLE C.992-2143
WARNER
102 W. Main

Pomeroy

)

�•

~

•

4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Jan. 16, 1!)78

Redmen rally to
clip Mt. Venton

well. We're not big and we
don ' t jump that well ."
Michigan· freshman Mike
McGee was the leading
scorer with 22 points, while
Mark Smith tallied 16 to lead
the Dlini.
Michigan's Johnny Orr,
who said "nlinois played
well," declared a "judgment
call" made the difference. It
came when_, Dave Baxter,
driving for the nlinols basket,
·•rollided with Rob Judson and
no foul was called. Baxter
drew a technical foul instead
for comp laining to the
officials, and Judson ma(!e
the gilt throw as well as two
more free throws Ill clinch the
\lecision.
Iowa, tied wilh the Boilermakers at ~ at the hall,
ouiBcored Purdue 16-2 in the
first six minutes of the second
hall and cashed 20 of 32 free

_____ l Rain halts

I
I

HS &amp; college
cage scores

Atlantic DiVIIiOn
W. L PC'f. G8
Phlle
21 11 .711 N8&gt; York
22 19 .537 7 .
Buffato
· 16 22 .m 111/J
Boston
13 26 .333 15

New Jersey

SAl£

9 !2 .220 20

Centnl Di vision
W. l
Pet. G8
wsnngtn
24 " .600 Son Antoni
23 18 .561- 11'2

~~1~~1~•

New Ortns

~: ~~ :;~

17 24 .415

:'"
71tJ

Houston
15 25 .375 '
Western ConferenCe
Midwest Division

~· ~J .~~~ · Gl
23 19 .5•8 5
23 21. .523 6
!~~ 1:

oenm
Chicaoo
Mllw

li ll

lj'.'\~ao7r

Kanss cty
15 27 .357 13
Pacific Division
w. L Pet . GB
Portland
33 6 .8.46
Phoenix
27 14 .659 7
seattle
23
20 .535 12
Got den St.
19 22 .463 15

Los Anoe"

11 ,. .415 17

Butf!t~tl;g,•J;!s~~s;f1~~ 93

Oenver 123, Los Angeles 112
Houston 104, San Antonio 93
Kansas City 110, Atlanta 101
Phila 136, New Jersey 120
New Or Ins 118, Golden, St . Ill
Sundn's Resul.ts
Chicago l07, Oetrolt 101
seattle 108, New York 102
Phoenix 113, Cleveland 10-4
Prttnd 101, Boston 103, ot
Mondey's Game
New Jersey at lndia"na
Tuesday's GJmU

tndiana at Chicaoo

shoot from further out than
we'd like with their size and
movement, but we were
beaten badly, and Minnesota
deserves the credit for
making us look bad."
In the Mid-American Conference, Kent State interim
coach Mike Boyd called a
last-second desperation play
and it failed.
The Flashes had tied
Eastern Michigan at 5U3
with 4:45 to go. With two
seconds left, Ha~k Wiggins
was fouled by Kent's Burl
Nesbitt and dropped in two
shots, the only points he made
all night.
"On the last play of the
game, I wanted Ill throw the
ball to Trent Grooms because
he is our best leaper," said
Boyd. "! called the play. It
was my decision. It just did~ ;t

Cleveland at Denver
Portland at Buffalo
Kansas City l!lt Atlanta
Hou&amp;ton at New Orleans
Seattle at San Antoolo
New Jei"sev at Milwaukee
New York at Los Anoeles

1

NOW

o

Sundijy 's Results

(No games schedule&lt;:!)
Monday's Game
Atlanta at Philadelphia
Tuesday's Games
Toronto at St Louis
NY Rangers at Vancouver

WHA sr•nolnos
By Unileo Press tnrernallonat
New England
~6 Li2 T3P'J;
Winn ipeg
25 14 I 51
Quebec:
2015242
Edmon ron
19 19 1 39
Houston
17 f9 J 37

p·0 Iand come
.
b. ack
rt
·t op s B0 st 0 n five

17 21 2

Birmingham

Cinc innati

16 23 2

Indianapolis
13 24 '
Silturd•v's
Res.ults
Quebec 7, Edmonton 4

36
3.4

30

Houston5,NewEng land4
Birmingham 4, Cincinnati 3

Winnipeg
6, indResults
ianapolis 3
Sunday's
Cincinnati 6, Quebec 3

Edmo~~':tnd!y!';ia~~:~ 3, ot

I No games scheduled )
Tu05d•y's Game
AII ·Star Game &amp;I Quebec

·united Press International topp~d Detroit, 107-101,
The Portland Trail Blazers Phoenix defeated Clevei&amp;nd;
were playing in Boston 113-104, and seatUe beat New
Garden with a 13-poinl York, 108-102.
BUENOS AIRES,
halftime deficit and without Bulls
107, Plslolll 101:
. star player.
Argentina (UPI) - Andrettl,
thelf
""'-a go Roo kie Ta te Arm"'""
in his Lotus MK-4, jumped
In Other Years' that WOuld strong
1 doubled his
from his pole position to an
have meant a loss for tbe prevt'o near y hi h with
Blazers.
us career g ·
a
inmedlate lead In the
But, that was before 22-point performance and
Argentine Grand Prix
was prommen
·
t tn
·
t wo
as the 1978 Formula
Portland and not Boston Was
1
g
th Bulls
ded . Sunday,
One
racing
season got under
the NBA champ and before sp
ur
es
as
e
upen
Detr 01't
way,
and
never
gave It up,
Boston did to basketball what
·
•
crossing the finish line 13
Abbott and Costello did to SUns 113• Cav.Uers 104 '
baseball lineups.
Rookie Walt Davis scored
seconds ahead of Austrian
· ts a nd Ron I.e e 26 as
"We were burrymg
' in the 31 potn
Nlki Lauda in a Brabham
Phoenix br k
in tbe
. st half," orUand Coach . third q rte0 et away
BT45C.
flf
Jack Ramsay said Sunday, .
ua r o down ClevePatrick Depailler of
land. Campy Russell led the
France
finished third in an
after Portland topped Bostoo, Cavs with 24 while Walt .
Ell-Tyrrell.
107-103, in overtime, despite Frazier had 22.
"It was a good race,"
the absence of star center Bill
Walton . "We would have had SuperSonics 108, Koicks
Andrettl ·said. "At least Y'.e
10%:
were in control tpe whole
the same shots if we had
Gus Williams fired in 30
way."
waited for them in the first points and blunted a New
.ball, but we didn't .
York c&lt;meback by stealing
Portland trailed, 59-16, at the ball with 25 seconds
balftime and, 63-46, at one remaining to lead SeatUe to
. point of the third period.
Its seventh consecutive W R.. Aco 54 Cle Benedictine
52
.
.
Forward Maurice Lucas
led the charge af that point, victory. Bob McAdoo led the Wellsvtlte 6~ Cadiz 64
scoring the next seven points. Knicks. with 31 points.
Wiltoughby S 59 Wicktlffe 53

N'S

AVAILABU

AT OUR
STORE

PHOENIX, Ariz. (UPI)They may never play the last
rowxl of the rain-delayed
h . Ope
ot
$11M),OOO P oenlX
n, n
today nor 011 Tuesday, wbich
might be interpreted as a big
• break for leader George
Knudson . However ' . theI
veteran canadian ISn t
interested in hall a loaf - he
wants the whole thing.
Nlght.longJain Saturllay___
left the Phoenix country Club
course,
site
of
the
tournament half under
'
water, so officials called oH
· play Sund3y and rescheduled
. f •-•· per slst
1t
or WUtiY . If ram
_ s,
they might try to finish oo
Tuesday, but mly if the
course, already wet from
earlier rain • drains off ·
Knudson, who needs a
victory desperately to regain
· • f
b ·
exempt status, ISm ront Ya
stroke over Lee Trevino,
d J' S'
Jerry Pate an un ~ons.
The weather forecast ts not
promising and betting ls the
·
.
final round wtll not be pl~ed .

COUNTRY CURED

•FRESH
OYSTERS

GROUND

~u

R
Di
W;
A

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R

E

•

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' "" " '

89•

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FRESH

GROUND BEEF

HAM

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PICNIC

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lOAF
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79(

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EXPECTING
COMPANY?
Any Special
Cuts· Of
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.
PACKED BY RICHARD

Meat You

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TOMATOES .......~·~~.~~~ ... 89~ ~. 99~

QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

MONARCH
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MONARCH

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CORN

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4

16 -oz.
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MONARCH SLICED RED BEET$ .. ,3 't;:: 89'
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MONARCH SALTINES ...................

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MONARCH

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MONARCH STEWED TOMATOES

MONARCH STfMS .t "ECES

MUSHROOMS .................... 2 ~~".:;

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14·0Z.

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39~
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~~MONARCH

.

TOMATO JUICE.......

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MONARcH AED

KIDNEY BEANS ............ •g;~· 59c

~~~:

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-

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

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9
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Plo.v .
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llil\'ol lll.to ,,.,,.,
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SOFT PRINTS ...........79e

APPIAN WAY PIZZA MIX ................. ~·.~:·49'
DINTY MOORE BEEF STEW ............. '~:: 89'

MONARCH

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BY NORTHERN

GINO'S

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· I..lt'h
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CATS'P

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ICICI.E PICKLES .......................'.~ .'.'; .79
MONARCH COOKING OIL ........ .. ...::;.~ s1n
MOiiiARCH PORK &amp; BEANS .. ..
·~;~· 11}-_

to Serve
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XlteliJ ilt•l:l

MONARCH

2 ~;~:~ sI 00

PETER PIPERS

C&gt;

~Mill~ ,(.')

["; AHUIN Al \rs"

'

SWEET PEAS .............3 79&lt;

~

e...... "'"•"' . .... lluooo

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:::
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Cans

..:n
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MONARCH

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$549~
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BUY 1 CREME SODA

MONARCH WAX BEANS ............... l 'i't:

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COFFEE

GEM FLAVORS

WHOLE GREEN BEANS ................l 'i';:; s I 00

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29-oz.

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Small

Big

BROS. • JACKSON, 0.

RIPE '

Stop In
·or Call
and We'll
Cut It
·ro Your .
Satisfaction

So, after three rounds,
Knudson has a score of II).
Wlderi'ar 203 with Trevino,
Pate, who is the Phoenix
defending champion, and
Simons at 204 and Funseth at
205. Joe Inman, Danny Edwarda, Jobn Schroeder, Bill
Kratzert, Andy Bean, Miller
Barber, Rik Massengale and
U.S, Open champ !Iuber!
Green are at 207 and Arnold
Palmer, Bob Payne, Howard
Twitty, George Archer and
Gary McCord are at 208.

RIVAL DOG FOOD .............................6 ·~;:: s P'
OfflABn

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PHONE 773-5536

BE PREPARED BY REPI.ACI~G
THO
. SE RUSTED STOVE PIPE
·
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LIQUID PALMOLIVE ......................... i:,;::; sI"

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55'
WIND,SHIELD WASHER FLUID •::r 99'

PURINA MEOW MIX.

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I
1

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BEN GAY OINTMENT . .. ..... .. ......'i::: sI "

16-oz.$,49
Can

~

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CONVEN

•

·CARRY·

Plla .

COFFEE

.......
; VAUGHAN'S
:

Open Monday thru Saturday
9:0Dto5:00
992-3831

o.
I
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r
--------------------------------------~
Middleport,

•

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...
;• CARDINAL .
;• FOOD STORE
••

BIRDS EYE

139

· ALL NATURAL·YOGUU ................. JC:;:-:;.89•

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MIFIESH GLAZED DONUTS ............. ,':;:·

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WINTER IS HERE

·.A.

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.$MOkED

LB.

Not lost on Knudson is tbe
fact that in the . ftrsl 10
tournaments on the 1977 PGA
Tour the man who led after
three roWlds wont on to
win.
"I'm not saying I will win
it,, Knudson offered, "but I
like my chances if we
Play.n
What an official victory
would do for Knudson is give
him exempt status the rest of
this year and put him in
excellent position to win
enough money in the
remaining 38 events (a total
of_aroUI)d $65,1100 f:9,llllting the
$40,1100 here) to make tbe
year's top 60 money winners.
And that would make him
exempt for 1979.
It has been raining steadily
on the Monterey Peninsula
for more than a week as
Knudson shot an opening
round 6-underpar 65 here but
had a 72 in the second round
as Rod Funseth, another
. veteran in need of a good year
to avoid becoming a Monday
rabbit, forged into the lead.
Then, Knudson regained tbe
top spot on Saturday with a

j

Walton was absent due to
the birth of his second child.
. One of Walton's replacements, Lloyd Neal,
came through and scored six
of his 10 points in overtime.
It was a secood chance for
Neal, who missed a chance to
put the game away when he
missed two foul shots wiUr
ooly five secooda left in
regulation play.
"There was no excuse. I
just missed the two of tbem.
It doesn't hother me as much
now because we won," Neal
said. "It was a real nice win."
In other ·games, ""'cago

~-:·

A.CHOICf

SALAD

money."

Guard Lionel Hollins took the , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - cue and netted the next.fout; I
·
···· ..... · . ·
,
"In tbe second half .we I
GET REA.DY FOR OLD MAN WINTER!
moved niuch better and I
1·
waited for our shots," said 1
1
Ramsay. "Tbe key was that I
1

.·H·

BONELESS

CHUCK ..........~~
POJ .ROAST

·

OF BEEF...•..................... ~~~ 79e
49
BEEF STEW..................~~·..~..l
CUBED STEAK ............~~·.~.169

FRESH &amp; LEAN

HAM

at ree qu rs o
total purse. Under that
formula, Knudson woulcf r~­
ceive $30,1100. However, he
·would not be credited with an
offlcal victory.
" I'd rather take my
chances and play," Knudson ,
said when be learned of
Sunday's postponement.
"Sure, the money would be
fine if they had .to pay off oo
three roWlds, but I need a
victory now more than the

WE GlADLY ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS

GROCERY CARRY OUT

SHORT RIBS

·p

::op~eo~": pe~~ve~.:r. .. nlne .I

LOCUST &amp; PEARL STS. • ON THE CORNER • MIDDLEPORT

HOME
MADE

H that happens Ule Uiird•
, ill be
round standmgs w
come
official and the payoff will be ·
mad
th
rte f the

FQDD STORES

LOCATED IN THE MEIGS PLAZA

STORE HOURS
MON. lHRU SAT. 9 AM 10 9 PM
SUNDAY 9 AM 10 9 PM

·•HAMS

e

NHL Standings
By United Press International
campbell Conference
Pltrlck Division
W. L T. P1s.
Ph lla&lt;:lelphia
26 9 7 59
NV Islanders
2.4 10 -8 56
Atlanta
15 16 11 41
NV Rangers
1.4 _· 19 9 J7
Smytne Division
w. L T. P1s.
Chicago
14 16 12 40
Vancouver
12 19 10 34
Colorado
9 22 9 27
St . LOUiS
11 26 5 27
Minnesota
9 27 5 23
Wales Conference
Norris Division
W. L. T. Pts.
MOntreal
30 7 5 65
Los Angeles
18 15 9 45
Pittsburgh
14 19 10 38
Detroit
15 19 s . 35
Wash ington
8 24 10 26
Adams Olv!s.lon
w. L. T. "Pts..
Boston
26 10 6 · 58
Buffalo
23 9 10 56
Toronto
24 13 5 53
Cleveland
,,. 26 .4 32
Saturday' s Results
Montreal 5, Boston 3
Detroit 6, Buffalo 2
Chicago 3, Toronto 3
Colorado 3, Vancouver 3
Los Arig 8r Atlanta ,.
Sf. Louis 5, Minnesota 2
Pittsbgh .4, Cleveland 2
NY Islanders 4, Wash 0
Phlla 4, NY Rangers 1

Tar Heels bounce
back after defeat

Frigidaire Heavy
Duty Washer ·
·and matching
big-capacity Dryer.

_,._._,&amp;.,_,
'""-"t
•
i
~The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Mondiy, J8ll . 16,1978

'

N&amp;A Stlnclintt

Buckeyes suffer 72-47 loop loss

~

I
I

IStapdings \ play zn
ay unt•••
Press
tnrornollonol P,1toenzx'
Eastern
conrerenn

throw attempts to · win. The
Hawkeyes' &amp;nnie Lester led
the scoring with 21 points,
holding second in the league
scoring chase:
~isconsiil
coach Bill
Cofield aaid his Badgers were
"tired ol getting beal and
decided to do something
abwt it," in explnnation lor
the win over Indiana.
"Psychologically this was a
must game for us,'' he said.
"! think the guys reaUzed
that if we have any chance of
surviving, jl'e have to win
some games at home."
Arnold Gaines led the BBdger
sco~g with 25 points.
Mmnesota outscored the
Buckeyes 24-7 in the last 11:30
minutes of the first hall for a
38-20 intermissloo lead, and
Ohio· State never could come
back . Michael Thompson
netted 21 points to hold on to
the league scoring lead.

That long pass was
intercepted and Eastern
Michigan won 61-59. •
Elsewhere around , the
MAC, Ted Williams led
Toledo to its loth straight
win, a 66-64 decision · over
Northern Illinois to tie the
two teams at 3-1 in the league,
Bowling Green broke an
eight.game losing streak with
a ~ win over Western
Michigan and Miami downed
Ohio University 90-77.
In other games, Memphis
State defeated 19th ranked
Cinclnnati 67-63; · once
defeated Detroit handed
Dayton ·. an 87-73 loss;
Youngstown . -state downed
Akron 101-31; Northern Kentucky edged Xavier 59-SS;
Capital got by Otterbein 5755; Muskingum stopped
76-72;
Ohio
Marietta
Wesleyan downed Denison 68work ."
65; Wooster beat Wittenberg
72-57; Baldwin-Wallace
stormed over Ohio Northern
Bl.al.
Also, Heidelberg squeezed
past Oberlin 75-73; Mount
Union rolled over Kenyon 8668; Bluffton edged Taylor
State defeated Nocthweslern, (Ind.) 87-86; Defiance
67.63, Georgetown nipped decisioned Hanover (Ind.) 68Soutb Carolina, 47-43, Indiana 67; Findlay overpowered
lost.to Wisconsin, 76-65, Holy Wilmington 84-77; Bethany
Cross downed St. Peter's, 104- (W.Va.) was victorious over
65,
Providence
beat Case
Western
·97-83,
Pennsylvania, 67-65, New Cedarville stopped . Ohio
Mexico beat Arizona, 93-31, Dominican 91).&lt;)1; Dyke beat
Iowa State upset Nebraska, Detroit Institute 97-M; Rio
65-59, Virginia upset North Grande put down Mt. Vernon
Carolina St., 74-60, and Nazarene 8(k;8 and !{entucky
Memphis State surprised · State edged Central State 77Cincinnati, 67~ .
·
76 ·

_.........

r--~-P-ro

Spartans take over Big 10
lead with perfect 4-0 mark

Rio Grande College trailed Ohio. Brad Kentosh picked
CHICAGO
(U P!)
Wisconsin tripped Indiana 78visiting Mt . Vernon Nazarene of! 12 caroms and Art
State
holds 60 and MiMesota upended
more Ulan half the game Freeman 11 for the Cougars. Michigan
Saturday night before coming Mt. Vernon had 16 turnovers. undisputed Jirst place in the Ohio State 7247.
"We were very lucky to
Rio placed live men in Big Ten basketball race, and,
from behind to post an 8(k;8
Olach
Jud
Heathcote
pol
his
win,"
Heathcote said. "You
·Mid-Ohio Conference victory double rigures in scoring.
rongue
on
the
word
that
helps
have
to
be ready to play any
over Co•ch Bobby Martin's Bise led the attack with 16
the Spart8lls' · Big Ten game, no matter who
· poi nts . Price, Swain and explain
Cougars.
it's against. It's tough every
Purcell each had 12 and Greg success.
More than 700 fans
Luck, said Heathcote, who single game."
James chipped in with- 10.
braved frigid winter
Sophomore Terry Donnelly
weather conditions outside
Kentosh and Freeman i.; now in his second season.
Michigan State ran its made the clinching play for
to attend the epntest, the
paced the Cougars. with 14
only basketball game
points apiece . Reynolds record to 12-1 overall and ~ the Spartans when be stole
played In Gallla County
added 11. Justice, 6-1 junior in the Big Ten, sharing first the ball with the score ~I
during tbe pasl week.
guard who entered the piace with Purdue, with a 67· and ·set up freshman Jay
And it looked as if Coach con test with an 18-point 63 decision at Northwestern, Vincent for a layup which
Art Lanham's Redmen were scoring average, was limited and the Spartans . were insured victory . Vincent, who
scored 19 points, hit another
going down to defeat for tbe to eight markers by Rio reeling at the finish.
Purdue, the pre-season basket at the buzzer for tbe
first time in con ference play, defenders.
favorite , toppled out of the final Michig8ll State points.
but after a hard struggle, Rio
The Redmen will play at
lead when Iowa scored a 6IH&gt;O Greg Keiser led the Spartans
Grande finally gained the
Steubenville tonight In a
upset on the strength of a scoring with 23 points and
lead for good with 11 :22
non·conference game.
second
half rally, and Mike campbell had 23 and
remaining in the contest. TI1e
Next home game is Jan. 28,
Michigan
too foWld the road Tony Allen 22 for the losers.
r.esult was Rio's lOth victory against Tiffin University.
too
tough
and
slipped from a
"Defense won the game,"
in 14 starts this winter.
In Saturday's preliminary
first
place
tie
when
lllinols
Dlinols'
LAlu Henson said .
Inside the MOC, Rio game, Rio Grande's Red"We just didn't shoot that
Grande upped its league- women edged Wright State took a ~I win.
In other Saturday games, .
leading mark to 5.0. The University, 57-56.
Co ugars dropped t·o 6-7
Saturday's box:
overall and 2-3 inside the
MT . VERNON 1681 - Fries
1-0 4; Nog gle 4-0-8 ; J ustice 4league.
0 B.
F r ee man
7 0 - 14 ;
It was another teflm victory R t; ynold s 4 3 11 , Kento.sh 6-2for the Rcdmen. Despite 18 14 : F ischer 4 1 9, TOTALS 31 ·
MinnesOta coach .:Jim
Minnesota's zone defense,
6-68 .
costly turnovers and a poor
RIO GRANOE ( 80). - Bisc
Dutcher called it bench changed after losses to
first half shooting per- B 0 to : Gibson 0 2. 2 ; James 4
strenglh; Ohio State coach Michig'an and Michigan
2 10 . N i day I 0-2: Phelps J -A
formanc~ (13 of 34 for 38.2
6 : Price 5 2- 12; Purcell 5-2-12 ;
Eldon Miller called it poor Stale, held the Buckeyes to its
percent) the Redmen never Swai n 52 12 ; Lee 0-0 0; West shooting. .
lowest point total of the year,
2
d
8.
TOTALS
31
-18
-80
.
lost their cool.
But
whatever
you
call
it,
it
38
Wider its season average
Halltime score : MI . Vern on
Rio led only once in the first 33. R io Grande 31 .
was a 72-47 Minnesota romp going into the game.
hall, 2-0, on Gil Price's tap-in
over Ohio State Saturday
Freshman center Herbie
with 19 :28 showing on the
Williams had 14 and Kelvin
night in the Big 'fen.
clock.
Although
Mychal Ransey 10 as the Buckeyes
The ~o ugars took the lead
Thompson and Kevin McHale evened their conference
4-2 on a long jurntter by 6-4
combined for 36 points, record to 2-2, the same as
sophomore Jeff Fischer with
Saturday's
Dutcher credited reserves .MiMesota.
Ohio College
18 : 11 showing on the clock,
Pederson and Bill
Brian
But it was the shooting
Basketball Results
and built up their biggest
Hai-mon
with
the
win.
which
had Miller perturbed.
United ·Press Internationa l
advantage of Lhe game, 27-17, Mirm
12 Oh io 51 47
·
"We got great play off the
He called it the first ~d
on a goa l by 6-5 sophomore Miam i 90 Ohio U 77
bench, ;' Dutcher said . shooting game his team has
E Mich 61 Kent St 59
Brad Kentosh wit h 5:25
"Harmon gave us excellent had all year.
Toledo 66 North HI 64
remaining in the first half.
~&lt;We've shot a minimum of
leadership, and we seemed to
Bow _
l ing Green 65 Western
AI this point, Coach
Michigan 63
have our best combination 40 per cent from the field in
Lanham Inserted Dan Blse,
Memphis St 67 Cincinnati 63
with Harmon and Pederson in every game until !his one,"
Detroit 87 Dayton 7J
6-6 junior into the lineup
there ."
he said, "but Ransey, (Ken)
Youngstown St . 101 Akron 81
· a nd
th e
ex-Fe deral
Harmon scored six points Page and (Mike) Cline all
N Kentucky 59 Xavier 58
Hocking nee, along with 6-0
Ca pital 57 Otterbein 55
and grabbed nine rebounds, had a bad shooting night
junior
Dan
Purcell,
Muskingum 76 Marietta 72
and Pederson scored eight together.
Ohio Wesleyan 88 Denison 65
responded with five quick
points and had five rebounds.
"MiMesota forced us to
WOoster 72 Wittenberg 57
buc~ets near the end of the
Baldwin "Wal l ace 81 Ohi o
half to reduce Mt. Vc. rilo~' s
Northern 61
lead to one, 33·32,
Hei .delber~ 75 Oberlin 73
The Cougars 6-4 junior Art Mount Un1on 86 Kenron 68
Bluffton 87 Taylor lnd) 86
Freeman hit. two buckets to Defiance
68 Hanove r ( lndl 67
open second hall play, giving Fi ndlay 84 Wilmington 77
the visitors a 37-32 ad· Be thany (W Va) 97 Case
Western 83
va nt age .
At this· point, the Redmen Cedarville 90 Ohio Domin ican
UnitedPresSinternational
baskets by Johnson and one
61
rega ined their ~arty season Dyke 9] Detroit lnst 84
North Carolina's famed by Griffin·, cracked North
form and began pecking
Rio Grande 80 ML Vernon
"four-corner" offense almost Carolina's delay game and
away at the Mt. Vernon lead. Nazarene 68
turned into a dead end for the cut the lead to 66-65 with four
St 77 Central St 76
Bise hit a short jumper and Kentu ckySaturday's
Tar Heels Sunday afternoon. minutes to play, before
Greg James, playing one of
The second-ranked Tar Ford's four free throws and
Ohio High School
his finest games ever on the
Basketball Results
Heels , who Saturday suffered teammate Jeff Wolf's foul
United Press lnternationa I
boards, tapped in a loose ball
their first conference setback shot preserved the win.
to cut the Co ugars' lead to Ak r . Buchtel 55 Louis Sf in a . 9U4 loss to Duke,
Jerome Whitehead scored
Thomas 49
one, 37-36, with 18:14 left in Alliitn ce 71 Ak r E 70
dominated Wake Forest most 21points and Ulice Payne and
, Sund
hd
t~e game.
Ash 94 Geneva 57
ofth e way
aybut
a a Butch Lee 19 eachtoiead !be
Ash
Harbor
88
Ash
Edgewood
F reeman hit a short
Hi&gt;oint second-hall lead cut fired-up defending NyAA
jumper at the 16:56 mark 49
to
one by the Deacons' Rod champion
Marquette
Ash S t John 53 Madison 51
before Gil Price came back Bay 55 Berea 54
Griffin and Frank Johnson Warriors to a 97-31 victory
with a three-point play at the
Breck$ville 62 Maple Hts 35
before North Carolina held on over Nevada-Las Vegas.
16:42 mark to knot the count Bristol 55 Grand Va lley 41
fora71~9victory .
The fourth .. ranked
Buckeye S 7-4 Jeff Union 47
a t 39 - all.
Leading, 66-61, with 5:57 ·- Warriors led by as many as 16
Buckeye Trail 74 Lakeland 53
Dan Purcell's free throw
.le.lt to·play, UNC went into its at 34-18 in the first hall, but
Can Cent Cath 71 A.l&lt;r St
~as a result of a technical
Vincent 61
fourcorner offense - with the Rebels finally got oo
Can Glen Qak 76 Jackson 46
foul on the Cougars' bench)
AU-America guard Phil Ford track and pulled to within 46Can Timken 67 N Canton
put Rio ahead for the first
controlling the ball and the 42 at the half before fading .
Hoover 63
time since the opening tip,
other four players spread . Hot-shooting Tony ·Smith of
Cle Brunnerda le Aca 71 Cle
aroWld the court - but three Nevada had a game high 27
40-39, wllh 15:33 Iell to
Bratena hl 62
Cle Lutheran E 43 Cle · turnovers almost cost the Tar
play.
points.
~
Kentosh's three·point play Hawken School 38
Heels !he game.
On Sa.turday '
ed
at the 13:59 mark made it 42· Col Marion Frank 67
North
Carolina
Coach
Dean
Kentucky
had
tie
trouble
56
40. Mark Swain tied it again Weslland
Smith refused to concede his with LSU, mauling the
Dublin ·82 N Union 49
with a long jumper at the . Grove City 56 Frank Hts 55 sla II strategy ha d heen a Tigers, 91.al.
· 13:46 mark .
lndiaf1 Valley S 70 Bellaire St
mistake: " I don't think they
In .other top 10 games,
(turnovers) were our fa ul1," third-rated Arakansas lost to
Freeman popped in another John 60
Kalida 52 Ada 51
·
short jumper at the 13:27 , Keys
Smith said. "Wake Forest Texas, 75-69, and No. 9
tone 79 Columbia 71
mark before Bise's driving -lakewood 57 Parma Valley ca used them wit~ grea t Syracuse lost to Pittsburgh,
layup knotted the co unt at 44- Forge 54'
basketball."
86-81, lifth.£ated UCLA beat
L~hi
d two Oregon St., 77~. No. 6 Notre
Lo uisvi lle 71 Marlington 6.4
all with 13 : 11 remaining .
Til
·
e
Deacons,
.
.,;,
n
Mans St Peter's 58 Mans
Jimmy Justice, who played Madison
Dame
edged
st.
35
his junior higb and freshman Massillon 62 Wooster 61
Parma PadVI} 61 Cle Lincoln
Bonaventure, 79-78, seventhbasketball at Gallipolis , Medina 67 Manchester 63
W 58 12 of)
ranked Indiana St. defeated
· sw ished a long jumper at the Nevvark 73 Col Waln u t Ridge Perry 47 Can S 40
9UO, No . 8 Louisville
Drake,
6J
Richmond Hts 61 Cardinal 51
12:56 mar~ to give Mt . Orange
downed
Georgia Tech, 90-84,
57 Cle University
lot)
Vernon its final lead of the School 40
and No. 10 Kansas beat
Southi ngton 69 Perr y 48
Parma Normandy 59 Shaker
game, 46-44.
Oklahoma, 9HI.
Tr i -Valley 67 W Muski ngum
58
And elsewhere, Michigan
Bise's shm1 j1.1.mper tied it Hts 54
up at 46-all with 12 :24 left.
Another · driving layup by
Bise with 11:22 showing on
the clock put Rio Grande
ahead to stay .
Howard Lee West, 6-3
freshman , came off the
bench to spark the Redmen
during tbe flnai!O minutes
· of play. West popped In
eight points for Rio.
To help deliver dependable perMean"·hUe, Greg James.,
fo rmance, this Frigidaire Heavy
Swain, Bise, Price and
Duty Was her has a heavy duty
VIncent Phelps teamed up
motor and other components used
lo give the Redmen a 71).6()
in Frigidaire Comme rc ia l Washlead wllh 2:16 remaining.
ers.
It keeps the shape and stretch
Rio outscored the visitors
in
knits
longe r with the gentle
1().8 during ibe final two
wash action of the Frigidaire
minutes of action.
Rio Grande connected on 31
Knits cycle, helps keep wrinkles
of 69 field goal attempts for 44
out of permanent press items with
percent. The Redmen were 18
3 Permanent Press Wash cycles.
of 30 at the foul line for 60 ·
Team il up with the big-load drypercent. Rio Grande picked
ing capaci ty oflhe Frigidaire
off 47 rebounds, 19 by Greg
Dryer. It lets you dry as much as
James and nine by Gil Price.
a
n 18-lb. load all at once, and pro- .
Rio had 27 turnovers.
vide~·tender care for everything
The Cougars hit 31 of 73
FOR THE PAIR
from delicates to denims:
field goa l attempts for 42
percent. Mt. Vernon was six
of nine at the foul line for 66
percent. Mt. Vernon was six
of nine at the foul line for 66
percent. The losers had 46
rebounas, 13 by newcomer
Scott Reynolds, a 6-6 .
sophomore from Galion, . ._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _;;;;;,;;;,;;;,;;;,;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:;:

-

••
••
•

tO"' "

Xi{ 1114 ]:1
I

e

BAGS . ~
89~ ~

I

�6-The Daily Sentinel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Monday Jan 16 1978
~.... ' :&gt; , ~ '"
m&gt;.&lt;i' :;;,~&lt;-~*i

Helen Help

r.

USe • •

By Helen Bolte]

.I

I

,Community
By Charlene
Corner Hoeflich

~

GUILTTRIPISLONELY JOURNEY
BY HELEN HOTTEL
DEAR HELEN
When I got pregnant the f r~t tune [ hated the Idea We had
been mamed four years I had a temf1c JOb Jake and I
weren t close Everything was against a baby
So I had an abort•on Jake never knew I didn t think tk d

Mrs G L Michael Will celebrate her 92nd birthday Fnday
Ja1 20 and fr ends and relall ves are hopmg to make 1t a
special day for her Being a shutm she thoroughly enjoys
cards and the farru ly s ask ng that you JOin m a card shower
for her Her address IS Route I MinersVIlle 45765 She lives
wllh her granddaughter Lowse M chael

care

If ti e weather of the past couple of weeks have kept you from
atlendmg the western square dance lessons of the Belles and
Beaus Club the word we hear IS that 11 s not too late to enroll
Next lesson will be held on Thursday and for more informa
t on JUsttelephone Mrs Wyatt Chadwell The lessons are g1ven
at the Royal Oak recreatiOn bwldmg and of course they are a
couple thmg

But I wasn t prepared for the guilt I went mto a deep depresSIOn and I felt the only cure was to start another haby wh1ch I
did
Now I fmd Jake doesn l want kids He s so mad he says he II
leave unless I get an abortiOn
Here I am m a pregnancy I m begmn ng to regret (I m not
the mother type at all 1 faced w1th d1vorce (which w11l prohably be best for both of us I won t regret that ) and if I kill
another ch1ld I II surely have a mental breakdown
But if I don t how can I face unwanted motherhood ' Alone'
NO RIGHT CHOICE
DEARN RC
Lets be pragmatic For you divorce IS okay an abortiOn
LSn t okay ra s ng a ch1ld d•llo The solution then m1ght be
leave Jake continue work ng have o/Our baby and 1f you shU
feel the same cons der adopllon of foster care by relat ves
who really want h•m
The future s nuch eas er to face when you ve made a finn
deciSion whether or not you act on the !mal part at least you
know you have an out f you need t erapJSt who m1ghl
gu1de you toward a different deciSIOn H
DEAR HE! EN
My husband of 20 years says our sex life IS dull and he wants
someth ng different which s disgust ng to me Last mghl
he 1mpl ed he d fmd a woman who will If I won t
I love him but must I be perverted to prove II' OLD WAY
ISONLYWAY
DEAROWIOW
You d be surprised how great a problem this has become
among many of today s couples Often-one-s1ded expecta
lions are burgeomng what w1th med1a s open diScUSsion of
sex practiCes
Counselors w11l tell you no lovmg sex act IS perverted 1f
mutually e1JOyed But whe1 a partner 1s forced to perlonn by
threats loved sappears
I d suggest compromiSe With you los ng some of your
represSions and your husband conceding to your outs1de Iuruts
which may change 1n t1n1e
And you must each work on carmg concern for the others
needs as well as your own H
Memo to Me Brace yourself Helen for the nood of letters
this question will bnng

FIVE
GENERATIONS F1rst
great great
grandchild of Mrs G W (Da1sy ) Vance of Hamson
Ville seated fight IS Melissa Barnette bemg held by
her father Allen Barnett Dunbar great grandson of
Mrs Vance Standing left IS Mrs Clayton (Delores)
Barnette Dunbar granddaughter of Mrs Vance and
Mrs Edward (Zelma ) Lester also of Dunbar
dau~htero!Mrs Vance

Karen Blaker Ph 0

Hope for hyperactzvzty 1

NOW OPEN

GINO'S

OF MASON

PHONE 773-5536

Chances are f you re between 55 and 75 years old
you need 150 to 200 fewer calor es da•ly than you d d
when you were younger
But you st1ll need the r ght kinds of foods
To tell you what those foods are and why you need
them the Department of Health
Educat on and Welfare has
published a free book et Food Is
More Than Just Someth ng to Eat
For your copy wnle Nutr ton
Pueblo Color~do 61009

Jessie White preSident of the AUXIliary of Veterans
Memonal Hosp1tal reports a well filled room of toys for boys
and g~rls m the pediatric ward Her thanks on behalf of the
orgamzatwn go to the many mdtvlduals and clubs who gave so
generously
Our belated congratulations to Mr and Mrs G W Vance of
Harnsonvtlle who celebrated thelf 6lst wedding anmversary
on Jan 12 Mrs VanceJS60andherhusband s61
Eleven of the r 15 children are llvmg and they have 54 grand
chlldren a bout a hundred g1ve or take a few great
grandcluldren and one great great grandchild

CHOICES

By Karen Blaker Ph D
Letters poured m from
readers of my Oct 7 Hot Line
conversatiOn w th the mother
of a hyperactive ch1ld Most
responses came from parents
of hyperactive children seek
mg more mfonnatwn about
the Ka1ser Permanente d et
mentiOned m the column
(That diet treats hyperactive
behaviOr by ellm natmg the
mtake of food add111ves )
Because uf the mterest eK
pressed m this toptc my next
DEAR HELEN
Is t true a woman can have a dangerous tubal pregnancy two columns will further ex
plore dietary management of
afterstenllzatwn ' MRS J B DEAR MRS B
Yes The Center for D sease Control Atlanta has reported the hyperacllve child
DEAR DR BLAKER several Instances of ectopic preg anc1es after tubal stenliza
What exa ctly IS the Ka1 ser
lion H
Permanente diet'
DEAR READER The K P
diet was form ulated by Dr
MEETINGS PLANNED
Ben
Fe1ngold
who
The Gall pol s Chnstlan demonstrated that hyperac
Church w11l have an Elders live children often show a
and Deacons Cllmc and a remarkable Improvement n
Chr st an Women s Semmar behav1or when synthetic 'ood
Monday thru Fr day J an 16- colonngs and flavor ngs are
20 at 7 p m mghtly
removed from their dtets
Children Who were excess ve
ly act1ve With poor concentra
twn tend to become calmer
Certam types of bamboo more re s pon s ive less
a re th e world s tallest distractible and more able to
grasses some of which grow cope w1thout drugs
DEAR DR BLAKER My
to 100 feet or h gher
pedJalrlc an says he has
never heard of the K P diet
He seems Interested Is It ex
plamed m detail n some book
or magazme? Please answer
We are hopeful this may help
OUHhlld
DEAR READER
The
most reliable source IS Femgold s book Why Your
Child s Hyperact ve (New
York Random House 1974 )
If 1t sn t ava table at your
library a local book store w111
order 1t for you The book
costs$7 95
Femgold s book offers a
clear and sc1ent1f1c explana
lion of how the discovery
came about The book also
hsts spectflc foods to avoid
and sample menus to make
the diet more palatable
DEAR DR BLAKER
Why are you agamst drugs
for the treatment of hyperac
live children'
DEAR READER I m not
partiCularly for or agamst
drugs for hyperacllve
children However as an
educated consumer of
mediCal care I have a
responsibility to help make
Femgold s work known to the
parents of hyper act ve
children
Femgold by the way IS not
totally agamst drugs to treat
hyperkmesiS But he feels
!hey should be used only after
mcludmg
everything else

If you're over 55,
you shouldn't eat like
you're~ still25.

SPEAKING OF SQUARE DANCING the Belles and Beaus
Club w1ll sponsor a dance on Saturday mght from 8 to II p m
With all area square dance club members bemg cordially m
Vlted They II have a natwnal caller Johnny Jones of
Kingsport Tenn so you all come

the nexpens1ve dietary treat
ment has fa1Ied
DEAR DR BLAKER Do
you thmk I could put my
hyperact1ve child on this d el
Without the superviSion of a
ped1atnc1an' My ped1atr
c an thmks the d1et IS
craz ness
DEAR READER- The d1et
can t hurt anyone - all you
are domg IS cuttmg out syn
theltcs and Junk food
However smce your ch1ld
has a mediCal a Imenl I
would suggest that you look
for a ped~atr c1an who w11l
work w1th you I thmk people
need support and gmdance to
carry through With the d1et
Wr le to Dr Blaker m care
of thi s newspaper P 0 Box
489 Radw C1ty Statwn New
York N Y 10019 Volume of
m::HI proh bits personal
replies but quesllons of
general mterest w ll be
discussed m future columns
;:

V.AAO.o.AO..•I' •

0)0

...,._

~:-:·;oo...,---.~WJ!Hbb!JLO:Um~a:

I

Social
J Calendar
~

MONUAY
MEIGS COUNTY Churches
of Christ Men s Fellowship
Monday at Dexter Church of
Chrst730pm
CANDYSTRIPERS
Monday 7 p m at Veterans
Memonal Hospital weather
perm ttmg New members
asked to attend
MEIGS COUNTY P1one~r
and H1stoncal Soc ety
meetmg 7 30 p m Monday at
Me1gs Museum Pomeroy
TUESDAY
CHESTER PTA 7 30 p m
Tuesday at school
POMEROY Mason c Lodge
164 F&amp;AM special meeting
7 30 p m Tuesday work m
MM Degree all Ma ster
Masons mv ted
SALISBURY PTO 7 30
p m Tuesday at the school
Mrs Opal Grueser of the
Meigs County Health Depart
ment to be the speaker
XI
GAMMA
MU
CHAPTER Beta S 1gm~ Phi
Soror1ty 7 30 p m Tuesday
at the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electnc Co
Karen Stanley and Texanna
Well have the cultural report
Ruth R•ffle and Susan Oliver
hostesses
REGULAR MEETING
Drew Webster Post 39
Amencan Leg1on 6 p m
Tuesday at post home no
postponement regardless of
weather

DeiiiUii~s
m only one or two days

POLLY"$ POINTERS
Polly Cramer

iron1_esidue on sktllet
POLl Y S PROBLEM
DEAR POI LY -f do hope
someone can tell me what can
be done about a black ~ron
skillet tha t has a res due of
black film after wash ng and
r 1s ng Many times when I
use t for anythmg hght n col
or th1s dark ness IS on the
food I have tried bollmg
water m l but that d1d not
help MRS WAR
DEAR MRS W A R Put
hot water and bakmg soda n
yo r sk1ll el and let 11 soak
and If necessary bo I this
solut19n m the sk11let Wash
out w1th hot suds and a st1ff
scourmg pad and cleanser
R10 se and th en dr y
thoroughly Hope th s helps POLLY
DEAR POI LY
Many
l1n1es I used to fmd my small
ch ldren uncovered at mght
Now I put one blanket on the
bed lengthwiSe and then
another blanket on top of 1t
but placed crosswise If one
should pull out the ch ldren
are never uncovered
We I ave a pool a1 d there
are times when friends br1ng
thelf chlldre over but do not
br ng bathmg su ts so I cut
the leg parts off my old pan
tyhose and the children go m
the pool w1lh the pants part
on-E B
DEAR POLlY Recently
when our walls were re(la nted the sw lch plates
looked very shabby Rather
than pay ng a r d culous pncc
for new ones I covered the old
ones w1lh that pretty
adhes1ve ba cked
paper
Holes were cut for the sw t
ches to come through so now
the plates are all color coor
dinated to match the rooms
and look fresh as da s1es
BE1TE

Wh1le spray pamtmg our
trader some of the new pamt
chipped off when the maskmg
tape was removed There was
no matchmg touch up pamt
available so my husband
sprayed some of the exter or
pamt mto a foam cup unlll
there was about one fourth
mch of pamt He then took a
bny brush and pamted over
the chips This pamt dr1es
very qu ckly so one should not
put much m the cup at one
time -MRS J C
DEAR POLLY - I want to
tell Eff1e who has towels that
fee~ like sandpaper how I
remed ed that condition I ad
ded three to four cups whi'vmcgar to the r1nse water
and then rinsed agam Too
much fabric softener or too
much soap can cause thiS I
think I even bought some
sandpaper towels at a
rummage sale but after
repeatmg th s procedure
three or four tunes they were
soft agam Also do not
overload the l!'l!llher - JEAN
B

DEAR POLLY - I have an
easy way to make my home
smell fresh all wmter I hook
two or three mch w1de str1ps
of fabriC softener such as I
use m my dryer on my heater
vents As the warmed a1r
passes over and around these
stnps they g1ve off a mce
light scent This does away
With musty odors Without an
overpowermg scent and 1t s
easytodo MLM
Polly Will send you one of
he r SJgned thank you
newspaper coupon clippers if
she uses your favonte
Pomter Peeve or Problem m
her column Wnte POLLY S
POINTERS m care of this
newspaper

7- TheDallySentinel M ddleport Pomeroy 0 Monday Jan 16 1978

Rio will host
workshop Feb. 11

Rosenbloom
mum on new
Rams coach
WS ANGELES (UP!)
Stanford s Bill Walsh may he
the
media s
leadmg
candidate to replace Chuck
Knox as coach of the Los
Angeles Rams but owner
Carroll Rosenbloom 1sn t
givmg any hints
Knox 45 left tile Rams
Wednesday to accept a SIX
year $200 000 a season
contract to become head
coach of tile Butfalo Bills and
tbe 45 year-old Walsh a
10 year
NFL
former
assistant who compiled a 9-3
record at Stanford thiS
season IIDmedJately was
mslalled as the odds-on
favorite to leave Palo Alto
Calif and replace h1n1
Asked pomt blank If Walsh
had been offered the JOb
Rosenbloom replied
We
can t cootrol what people
Write
Asked if Walsh was the
leading candidate the Ram
owner answered They (the
med1a) have made him ooe
anybody who IS available who
has good credentials IS a
candidate
Rosenbloom reiterated that
he planned on takmg his time
m
selectmg
Knox s
successor
My hirmg practices he
declared have been wen
documented many times I
don t talk to a man just once
before I hJre hun We have
SaJd for publication that It
wili take two or three weeks
to make a decision - if we
make one that soon
Under Knox the Rams
compiled a 54-15-1 regular
season record and won ftve
NFC West t1tles but Rosen
bloom was unhappy with
Knox s ground onented
offense and his IJI8billty to gel
them mto the Super Bowl

ON DEAN S LIST
Two Me1gs County students
at Marietta College have
been named to the college
dean s hst for the first
semester 1977 76 They are
Dav1d B Wolfe 278 Pearl St
Middleport and M1chael B
May Rutland Both are 1974
graduates of Me~gs H1gh
School and both are semors m
the school of petroleum
engmeermg at Marietta
HOLMAN PRQMOTED
James E Holman has been
promoted from pnvate to
pnvate f1rst class w th the U
S Army Pfc Holman spent
from Christmas until New
Years Eve w1th hiS mother
Mrs Jacob Holman Racme
area and other relatives and
fr1ends Mail may be sent to
him at th s address Pfc
James F Holman 272 60 9512
SUC Btry 3rd 21st Bn Fort
Polk La 71459

Smce the founding of the
American Red Cross Blood
Program m 1948 the Red
Cross
has
collected
processed and d1str buted
65 198 753 umts of blood

WEEK

Son born to Erwtns
Mr and Mrs Howard R named Howard Raymond Jll
Racme are an
Mrs Ervm the former Sal
nouncmg \He birth of their ly Carleton IS the daughter of
f rst ch1Id a son born Thurs Mrs Frances Carleton of
dsy Jan ' at the Holzer Pomeroy Mr Ervm IS the
Medical Center
son of Mr and Mrs Howard
The mfant weighed seven R Ervm Sr Racme
pounds mne OWices and was
20 mches long He has been

JANUARY 15·21

Erv. n Jr

CLUBCANCELLS
A meetmg of the Rock Spr
mgs Better Health Club
scheduled for Thursday IS
cancelled due to the weather
Next meetmg will b&lt;i held 1n
February on the regul~r date
Ha lf of the free wor.ld s
newspapers are prmted on
Canad an newsprmt

HAMBURGER
&amp;

Mike Swiger

FRENCH FRIES
89~

CHEESEBURGER
&amp;

FRENCH FRJES
99~

1-800-282-6410

The better you eat,
the better you are.
Locust Street

992 5248

Middleport

o

••

1977
News
Highlights
in Meigs County asTRO·GRAPH
»_
Ger1 Walton was
sworn Ul as village treasurer
by Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews to fill the unexpired
term of PhylliS Hennessy
who resigned Rev a J
Snowden Rutland post
master smce 1951 retired
OCTOBER

HULTH

Se(ll

lawrence E lamb M D

Lost equilibrium
By Lawrence Lamb M D
DEAR DR LAMB I am 76
years olrl and had cataracts
retnoved !rom both eyes
three years ago Smce then I
have lost my equilibrium I
do very well around the house
fl)l)St of the lime as f can get
h9.1P of lhmgs to steady me
but when I am outs1de or 10
stores w1th bright lights I am
off balance and cannot walk
well unless I hold onto someone and feel a bout If f
close my eyes I w1II black out
My doctor says It could be
my eyes or poor Clfculallon
MY eye doctor does not seem
tQ know what caused 1t
Anything you can tell me
a~out my loss of eqml br urn
and anyth ng ti at could be
done to help would be greatly
aR_Precmted
fiE AR READER ~ Loss of
cqu 1 br urn 1s a symptom
aHil t can be caused by many
dtf:lercnl problems Your
sense of balance really
depends upon the 10put from
thfee different systems the
eyh the bala nce system m
the ears and the sensatiOns
you get from your jomts ten
dons and muscles throughout
the body Fmally these three
systems are all ntegrated Ill
s1de the bra n to g1 ve you n
formatiOn on body pos1t10n
and sense of balance As the
bm n receives this mforma
t1on 11 sends out Signals
aulomallcally that help you
adjust to mamta n your
balance
Jf two of your systems are
work ng well-you can usually
namtam your balance If on
ly one IS workmg you are m
trouble As an example a
person who has had some
degeneratiOn m the spmal
cord that affects the sense of
body pos1l10n •nay get along
flo e stand ng still unlll he
clpses h1s eyes When he loses
the signals of or1entallon
from h s e) es and already
has lost the sensa! on from
h1~ body tha l passes through
hi~ spmal cord he w11I sway
and fa ll f not protected ThiS
1s a class ca l phySical test for
damage to parts of the spmal
c'Ord
So f you have dunn 1shed
eyeSight 11 could m certam
Circumstances contnbute to
your loss of balance Also you
co~ld have d sease of the
artenes to the bram that af
feels the mtegrat on of the
Signals (rom these three
sy,:;tems or affects the centers
m the bram that control your
blood pressure In the latter
case the drop n blond
pressure on sta ndmg may
lead to a sense of famtmg
Of course you could have
d1sease to the balance
mechamsm m the mternal
ear This s a corrunon cause
of loss of balance m younger

people
Oct 1 - Walter Grueser
I am sendmg you The
Health Letter nwnber 9-10 elected president of the Me1gs
D1mness and Vertigo to g1ve County Chapter of the Central
you a more complete ex Heart Assn
Oct
4
Eastern
planation of the number of
homecommg
candidates
things that can cause loss of
balance problems Others named Bill QuJckel new
who want this mformallon owner of Davis Insurance
can send 50 cents wtth a long located at 114 Court St
Oct S- Plans lor a sewage
stamped
se lf addressed
envelope for t to me m care system that wlll serve
of this newspaper P 0 Box VIllages of Syra cuse and
326 San Antonio TX 78292 It Racme completed and
w II discuss more fully what speclfJcatJons being Written
can go wrong m the ear to Carl Gheen semor at Me1gs
H1gh
named
d1str~ct
cause thiS problem
cha•rman
for
the
D1stnbut1ve
Because you probably do
have some arterl81 diSease I Education Clubs of AmeriCa
Oct 7 - Marauders edged
would suggest that you see a
specJallst m neurology He Jackson 13 12 fpr the f1rst
can then detefffilne If you grid wm of season Southern
also need to see a spec•aiJSt m edged North GaU1a 6-0 for
ear nose and throat d1seases fourth grid v1ctory
Oct 9 - Schools In
You can see from the d1f
Southern
Local D1stnct
ferent systems that can cause
closed
due
to fmanc•al d1f
this symptom that you may
fJCU]UeS
need to see more than one
Oct 10-ErnestC (Dutch)
specialist
Rutland
The f~rsl step m dec1dmg Nicholson o2
what can be done to help you VIllage Counc•I president
IS to dehne precisely and ac
died unexpectedlY
Oct II- Me1gs H1gh queen
curately what your problem
candidates named Two of
really s
three members of the class of
1927 at Letart FaDs H1gh
School reunited
Oct 1% - Shenang Sprmgs
N1te Club on Rt 7 north of
Pomeroy gutted by fire at
3 45 a m
Oct 13 - ConstructiOn of
two tenms courts begun at
CAPE GIRARDEAU Mo
Middleport Mumc1pal Park
(UPI) - It seemed at first
Oct II - Marauders
the would be bank robber was defeated Waverly 20 to 0 Kim
domg everythmg r1ght But Krautter crowned Meigs
no one would pay attention to Homecoming queen Sandy
h1m
Hensley
was
crowned
He walked mto the Cape Eastern
H1gh
School
Mercantile Bank Fr~day homecommg queen James
holdmg a red handkerchief m Wiles and Patty Eblin
front of h1s face and told two Phillips were found dead due
tellers ThiS IS a stiCkup
to
carbon
monox1de
It was just like the mov1es
po1sonmg
but the tellers d1dn t seem to
Oct 17 - A curfew unposed
hear h1m The man tr1ed m Pomeroy for all persons
agam
under 16 Metgs Board of
Th1s 1s a st•ckup
he Education approved new
UISJsted
school calendar
Agam no response There
Oct 18 - Fred Morrow told
d1d not seem anything for the the Pomeroy Chamber of
man to do but leave - which Commerce a $54 m•lllon
he d1d on the run empty hydroelectriC power plant
handed Pollee sa1d they did Will be constructed at the
not thmk he had a gun
Racine Dam
Oct 19 - Me•gs County
CommiSSioners urged Meigs
County voters to support
State Issue I Ill November
Oct 25 - Freda M1d
dleswart 40 Rt I Portland
sentenced to 15 years to life at
WATER POISONED
the women s reformatory m
GRAY Mame (UP!)
Marysville after pleadmg
Offlc•als have ordered 751! guilty to murder m Me1gs
families to stop drmkmg or County Common Pleas
cookmg w1th water from the Court A 6 5 m•ll levy passed
Gray Water D1stnct because m a spectal electiOn 111
11 contams traces of Southern Local School
poisonous chemicals used as Distncl by 115 votes
solvents m the recovery of
Oct 26 - Winter mspectwn
wastes at a waste oU disposal made at State H•ghway
plant m the area
Department Garage m Me1gs
County

Hey! Listen,
I'm trying to
rob your bank

oct. n -

Thomas Clothiers
purchased
New
York
Clothing House Kerm1t
Walt on to rem am as
manager
Oct 30 - The Eagle Scout
rank bestowed on Jeff Couch
Ocl 31 - A major step
taken fo r posSible con
struct1on of $1 665 000 nursmg
home 1n Me1gs County

NOVEMBER
Nov 1 - Mmersv1lle Post
Office closed Me1gs County
Commlsstoners went on
record opposmg enactment of
an
anti trappmg am
mendment to the Oh10
Consl1tutlon Issue 2
Nov 2 - F1re to the home
of Mr and Mrs Henry Klem
EnterpriSe caused damages
m the amount of $7 000
Nov 3 - Dav1d Buskirk
named advertiSing manager
of the Dally Sent mel Charles
Chancey named one of 11
outstandmg southeastern
Ohw men by the Southeastern
Ohio Reg10nal Council
Nov 5 - Patnck Harmon
0 Bnen 10 ned hiS father m
the practice of law James B
0 Brien long t•me Me1gs
attorney
Nov 7 - Pomeroy council
accepted the b1d of Sm1th
Nelson Motors for a new
pollee crutser
Nov 8 - Three women
candidates won seats on the
Southern Local School
D1slr1ct Board of Education
Sh~rley A Johnson Janet Sue
Grueser and Betty Wagner
Nov 9 - Galha Me1gs
Fraternal Order of Pollee
presented awards to Ivan
F1fe GallipoliS and Holly
Hudnell Athens Harry
Lyons was named by the FOP
as of11cer of the year
Nov 11 - Services m observance of Velera 1s Day
conducted by Drew Webster
Post 39 representatives of
Feeney Bennett Post 128 and
Chapter 53 of the D sabled
American Veterans
Nov 12 - Large amount of
manjuana was destroyed
that was con fiscat ed by
Sheriff James J Proffitt s
department
Nov 14 - R1bbon cutrtmg
ceremomes to maugurate the
use of the new AORTA bus

servace
Nov 17 - Dave Diles sport
broadcaster for ABC s W1de
World of Sports guest
speaker at the annual dinner
meeting of the Me1gs Soli and
Water ConsetvatJon District
at Chester Elementary
School
Nov 18 - Miss Vicki
Spencer of Redsviiie awarded
the graduate FellowshiP for
Rotary D stnct 869
Nov 20 - KIID Batey was
crowned Metgs County Jumor
MISS South and K1n1 Taylor
Me1gs County Jumor MISs
North at-the Southeast Ohio
Jumor M1ss Scholarship
program Other wirmers were
Mary Mora first runnerup
Jud1 Perry Jumor M1ss
Spmt award and Pa1ge
Sm1th second runnerup
Nov 21 - Jim Neutzllng
elected to council at the

•

November election for a four
year term named to ftll the
unexpired term of Phil
Globokar who resigned Oct
1 Neutzllng was sworn 1n by
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews Trooper Thomas D
Danner 1s assigned to the
Gallla Me1gs Post State
H ghway Patrol Jan Htll
Middleport Elementary
Th1rd Grade teacher named
by the M1ddlewrt BuSiness
an d ProfessiOnal Women
Young Careens! of 1977
Nov Z% - Plans made for
annual Chnslmas parade by
the Middleport Chamber of
Comme rce
Nov 23 - Rtchard Jones
manager of the Pomeroy
Branch Athe ns Count y
Sav1ngs and Loan and a
county
comm iSSioner
rece1ved a hve turkey m a
large box with a card at
tached from a fr1end but
who • The annual Christmas
tree was placed m downtown
Pomeroy by employes of the
OhiO Power Co A new
pharmacy to provtde an
effiCient drug diStribut iO n
system wh le prov1dmg the
patient wtth the best phar
maceutJcal serv1ces possible
estabhshed at Vet erans
Memorial Hospital
Nov 26 - Christmas tree of
Mrs Hobart (Evelyn Ft ck)
Young Pomeroy featured
over 400 mm1 I ght s and
hundreds of attractive or
naments
Nov %8 - Losses were set
at $30 000 when fire destroyed
the home of James Ferguson
Hysell Run Sheriff James J
Proffitt and former Shenff
Roscoe Fowler roommates
at Veterans Memorial
Hospital Edward Holter son
of Mr and Mrs Roy Holter
Rt 3 Pomeroy attends the
Natlonal4 H Club Congress n
Ch cago
Nov 29-Theflrstphase n
constructiOn of two 20 000 kw
hydroel ectnc generators and
reereat1on fac1I li es got
underway at the U S
GoHrnment Racme Dam on
the OhiO R1ver
Nov 30 - Farmers Home
AdmJmstratJOn D1 s tnct
Director Milton Rou sh
rece1ves a bank draft for
$12 653 95 which pa1d off the
FHA fmanced portiOn of the
Syracuse water system The
pay off 30 years earlier than
reqUired allows the village of
Syracuse to lower Its tax rate
by 2 60

DECEMBER
Dec 1 - London Swim
mmg Pool n Syracuse made
a profit of $4 528 00 m ltrs first
summer of operation
Dec 3- Howard K1ser 29
Rt 2 Racme dJCd at
Veterans Memonat Hosp tal
after an apparent ace denlal
shootin g at his residence on
Mile H11l
Dec 4 - Santa arnved m
Pomeroy to off •tally open
the Chnstmas season
Southern Ohio Coal Company
mmes number one and two
and Vmton County Raccoon
number three went out on

str~ke puttmg t 579 rruners

out of ]&lt;Jbs
Dee S - Archie Gnllln
runnmg hack of the Cm
c1nnaU Bengals and Dave
D1les of ABC Sports
~elcomed hundreds of guests
al the Racme Home National
Bank open house Me1gs
Co unty Shenff James J
Proffitt reported that $2 000
•orth of merchand se was
taken n a breakmg and
entering
at
Howard
lawrence s Grocery at
DeWitt s Run m Lebanon
Township Pomeroy V llage
employes were g \en approxm1ate SIX percent pay
mcreases effective Jan I
1978 Schools uf the Mc1gs
Local Schoo l D str ct were
d sm1sscd t wo hours early
due to flood threats m rural
areas due to the heav) rau s
whiCh fell Sunday a nd
Monday
Dec 6 - Dale Ellis became
$8 ~00 n cher when he
rece1ved hiS pr1ze as a wmner
m the Oh10 Lottery s T uch
down ruboff gafne
Dec 7 - Paula Sill ndell
11 daughter of Mr and Mrs
Ned Swindell Shade a SJxth
grade ;1 udent at Salisbury
Elementary won flfst place
n her age d1v slon m the
Hoop Shoot co ntest held at
the Elks Lodge m Gallipolis
Shots were exchanged be
t"een str1k ng coal miners
and superviSory personnel at
the No 1mme of the Southern
OhiO Coa l Co In Meigs
County In southeastern Oh•o
Dec 8 - A wooden fence
was placed m front of the
Amy Kmgsland property
located between Warn e r
In s urance and the new
St1fners Store on West Main
Street
Dec 9 - Schools of the
Me1gs Local School D•strlct
"ere close d when bad
weather was forecast Harry
Samuel Moo re
rettred
Mtddleport bu s nessman
d1ed aft er a lin ge r ng Jllness
at h s S Third Av e
reSi dence n Middleport
OrthopediC cliniC held at
Veterans Memor al Hosp1lal
Dec 10 - Jack Stanley
named Mr Bass 1977 of the
B g Bend Bass Anglers Club
He was presented a plaque
and the traveling trophy
Dec 13 - Wlll am W
E1ch1nger who had 38 years
of pubhc servtce as an em
ployee of 1 ransportatiOn was
among 273 state employees
w1th 35 years or more of
public service honored at the
State "Fairgrounds by Gov
James A Rhodes Parkmg
meters freed n Middleport
for the Christmas season
Dec 15 - Paul ,Scott
Middleport S1lver Br1dge
disaster surv vor recalls
Dec 15 1967 tragedy
Dec 17 - Three of the
wmners n the annual dress
a-doll contest of the Farme1 s
Bank and Sav ngs Co were
Mary Dorst Rt I Shade
character category Patrtc a
Wolf Rt 3 Pomeroy kn t
and crochet category and
Shirley Huston Syracuse
grand pr1ze wmner

flee 18 - Meters freed •n

quarters m Montecito will be
dedicated to the facts and
truths of 1llummed ones who
walk thiS planet
The foundation w1U brmg
together men of science and
rehgwn There will be
meetmgs of the mmd among
people of spiritual scientific
•
educational and philosophical
concepts
for
pnvate
and
pubhc
: Anne ts preoccupied wtth a dialogues
ilh losophJcal combmat10n of dissemmahon
There will be films and
lei g10n and metaphySICS
m depth
t-ctmg has been a means for lectures and
oupportmg her avocational mterVJews to send to surular
;.terests m spiritual matters centers aro\Did the COWltry
Anne who has played her
: Currently she IS starrmg m
: Born Agam
the film share of neurotics hookers
-.ersmn of Charles Colson s and other troubled wotnen on
!look She plays Patty Colson screen IS a marvelously
4jlpos1te Dean Jones who lranqull assured woman off
O&gt;rtrays the former N1xon screen She speaks With au
thonty on the subject of mner
'!Ide
• The mov1e 1s a labor of love space
tZr Jones who descnbes She sa1d she has been
Jllmself as a born again mvolved since her teen-age
itrtsttan as does the moVle s years With the Internat•onal
former
ad New Thought Alliance
producer
The orgaruzauon IS 65
oleeullve Robert L Munger
:,Anne says she too has years old Anne sa1d It 1s
an
umbrella
lfen horn agam but m a really
different way than her co-6lar orgamzatlon for several
metaphysical
churches
~d producer
• Th1s sprmg Anne will sell InCluding Science of Mind
U:le Brentwood home m whiCh , Umty and the Church of
s!le has lived for many years Truth
I ve been mvolved smce I
I&amp; move to Montee to Call!
was 16 But only m the last
a· luburb of Santa Barbara
s[ime 75 m1les north of few years have I made my
own personal transition to the
J:l&gt;llywood
:;rume a divorcee With two point where I feel born agam
daughters has purchased a When a person realizes hiS
Fl:ench-style chalet on four own spiritual nature he JS
a&amp;-es of rollmg countryside born agam
But I don t proselytize
w.l)ich she Will transform mto
among my fr1ends As pres1
a &lt;Ulmk tank
~ I ve already established dent I ve provided most of
T6e
Inner
Space tile funds for The Inner Space
F:O undatJon
Anne Foundation Last fall I
eX!Jlamed
And my new rece1ved a sizable donatiOn

• BY VERNON SCOTT
: HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
"""e FranciS the ash blonde
~auty of scores of moVIes
«nd the defunct Honey
lvest TV senes moves on a
~fferent plane than most of
tler contemporanes

Bank robber
gets 95 years
INDIANAPOLIS (UP!) lloward Calderon 27 In
dtanapohs was sentenced to
95 years m prison Friday for
bank robbery
Federal Judge W•llulln
Steckler pronounced the
sentenced after Calderon
earlier pleaded guilty to four
bank robbenes three In
Ind1anapoh s and one tn
Cmcmnatl
Calderon also told the judge
he had partiCipated m two
olher bank holdups

I

7
,

Without solicitation I don t
believe lllSOhcJtmg
I thmk my board of
directors Is 1mpress1ve
There s Dr Jack Holland a
professor at San Jose State
and an associate minister In
the Unity and Sc1ence of Mind
Churches
Also a member 1s the Rev
Sig Paulson of the Kansas
City Umty Village which
publishes The Daily Word
And Dr Evarts LoomiS an
M D and bJochemtst who bas
a clmiC m Hemet Galif
There are many other
sc1entlsts
who
will
participate m semmars at the
foundallon begmmng this
sununer
Anne devote's much of her
time between moVIe and TV
ass1gmnents studymg meta
phystcs religion and sctence
She belongs to no church
herself but encourages belief
10 aU rellg10ns
She feels a kindred spirit to
Patty t&lt;1lson whom she met
m Washmgton DC during
the early days of filming
Born Agam
This IS the story of
someone
overcom1ng
adversity
Anne said
Charles Colson Is con
troverstal politically and
religiOusly I play a woman
who loves and stands by her
husband
I felt an instant rapport
with Mrs Colson when we
met I was pleaaed to find her
honest straightforward and a
penlln WJIIJ trmer strength
Maybe most Important was
her ~ense of humor
I can understand her husband s attitudes toward rei!
gwn although I don t

necessarily share them
in tile past few years I ve
addressed many church
congregations m vartous
parts of the country About
one or two a month My

mm ster fnends call me
Reverend Anne But I d never
thmk of bemg ordamed m any
of the orgamzed rellgwns
That wouldn t be a part of
my phtlosophtcal concept

The most liTlportant thmg is
Iettmg love of hfe move
through you I believe all
th ngs come together for good
to those who beheve m God
Anne FranciS IS puttmg

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) -State
Rep John E Johnson D-Orr
Ville IS standmg virtually
alone so far in espousing
wholesale changes m OhiO s
school funding and taxation
laws
Legislators officials and
public policy groups around
the Statehouse seem tn
terested but wary of JOlmng
Johnson s enthusiasm for the
plan
Everyone wants to do
something to keep the schools
afloat but they won t get out
front for fear someone might
get hurt (translation 1t
might cost them some votes)
Johnson says he Is having
difficulty gettmg an audience
w1th legJSlative leaders even
from his own party to d1scuss
the necessity of his plan
House Spaker Vernal G
Riffe Jr has called for a
lludy of the proposal by
standing committ""
Senate President Pro
Tempore Oliver Ocasek an
advocate of the current
3Cbool subs1dy fonnula has
done nothing to encourage the
Johnson plan For that
matter the Senate did

•

nothmg aU last week to look
nto the problem of the
schools
Johnson presented h1s plan
to the House Ways and Means
Committee and was met w th
some chin strokmg and
questions
The plan basically calls for
more school funds to come
from personal and corporate
mcome taxes instead of from
local real estate taxes
It also sets up a basic
education fund - spec•f•cally
mcludmg state lottery
revenues - to funnel $1 732
per pupil to every school
district m the state startmg n
1979 Only 32 of the 616
districts spend that much

now
Johnson agrees that h1s
plan s revolutionary and
the diffiCUlt part Will be
selling t to the LegiSlature
and then to the voters
because 11 requires changes
m the Ohio Const tubon and
the tax structure
Wayne
Co unty
The
lawmaker who has seven
years of experience on the
fmance and tax writing
committees m the House
concedes he s facmg an uphill
battle
It may be totally
unrealistic for me to expect
the Leg slature to pass tl this
year sa1d Johnson But he

Name changed for $1 million
WNDON (UPI) -

What s

m a name• For Army Capt

Aubrey Russell.SCarr more
than $1 m1U10n
When Russeii.SCarr s 82
year old cousm d1ed last
August she left hun the bulk
of her $1 17 milhon estate
providing he changed his
sumame to hers

I have compl ed with her
w1sh My name Is now
the
Meysey Thompson
former Russell Scarr said
this week
With the change of name
came a fortune and a new
address - his late couSin s
30-room mansion

Russia s White Sea was
named for the ghste g tee
that covers It most of th e
yeur
NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATEOFOH 0
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Co um'bus Ohio
January 6 1978
Cant act Sales L egal

Copy No 111 s

down her thoughts n a book
The Inner Space which
she hopes w1ll shed some light
on her own lifestyle and
perhaps brmg some new
thoughts to others

Johnson tax changes plan
draws little but interest

Ohio politics

Bermce Be de Osol

Pomeroy for the Christmas
season
Dtc %II - A motion for a
mtsmal was made by Joseph
Vanity Athens defense
attorney on behalf ol his
client John W Flemmg
whose tr a! on aggravated
murder charges got un
derway was overruled by
Judge John C Bacon In Me1gs
County Common Pleas Court
Ted Reed president of the
Farmers Bank and Savings
Co and Maxine Griffith on
behalf of the Pomerov
National
Bank
each
present ed checks m It e
amount of $300 to the
Pomeroy
Cham ber
ol
Con merce for the Chr stmas
lighting fund
Dec Z1 - Freda Mid
dleswart Proffitt serving a 15
year to life se1tC1 ce In the
Marysville Reformatory for
the potsonmg death oi her
husband Wilham C Mid
dl es wart la st July a p
parently unperturbed told
how she adn mlslered Ierro
ant po1sonmg to her husband
when she appeared as a
prosecution witness m the
trial of John Wayne Flemmg
charged also with Mr s
Proffitt In the death of
Middles wart
Dec %2 - John Wayne
Flen mg 45 Rt t Lon~
Bottom was found gullty of
murder endm~ I Is JUry trial
John Marshall New Haven
won the top pme of the Gold
Star Give Away of $1 000
Dec 28 - A two story
frame home and Its ~'Ontents
were destroyed by fire
owned by Larry Barrett ncar
Danv11le
Dec 27 - Offlc Robert
Hawley
who
was
hosp•tahzed July 29 was
g1ven a donation of $100 by
Ray Manley on behalf of the
Ga llla Me1g s Fraternal
Order of Pollee
Dec 29 - John Wa)ne
Flemmg 45 Rt I Long
Bottom was sentenced to 15
years to life In a state penal
mstJlullon by Me gs County
Common Pleas Judge John C
Bal'On
Dec 30 - Eric Chambers
to leach sell-defense at RIO
Grande

Ann Francis, zn 'Born Again plans own think tank

;."cott 's World

denture serv ce
par als &amp; el nes
lnfonna on

$12 1100 RECEIVED
State Auditor Thomas E
Ferguson reported the
J anuary d1stnbut on of
S5 689 509 011 m local govern
ment money to Ohio s 68
counties and 388 c t1es and
villages Ievymg Iocalmcome
taxes Me1gs County s portion
of the total was $12 500

THIS

One or wo day fu

Call Frt&lt; Anywhere n Ohio

Ron Tuccen assistant "
profeSS&lt;&gt;r of chemistry at •
RGC CC will lead one
morning session on helpmg
teachers mstrucl children In
chemistry Dr Ray Skinner
Jr professor of curriculum
and Instruction at Ohio
UniverSity will lead a second
session on environmental
education
Developing Primary
Science Umts IS the subject
for one afternoon session
which will be led by two
Portsmouth city school
teachers Wanda Kmker
second grade and Sharon
Woodrum readmg and math
supervisor
Rio Grande science
methods students are
preparmg a work,jhop on
makmg teacher a1ds
In add1t1on partiCipants
will be able to v1ew on e.hiblt
of free and Inexpens• ve
sc1ence Instructional
material
Registration fees for the
conference vary between
$2 50 and $6 51l dependmg on
whether participants are
teachers or students More
mformatwn 1s available by
contactmg Mrs Joan Loeffler
at R10 Grande College and
Community College (2 45
5353)
Conference leaders an
nounced that pre-registratiOn
may be sent to Mrs Loeffler
at RGC-CC by Feb I

RIO
GRANDE
Chemistry
Fun
for
Elementary Teachers and
Environmental and Energy
Crises are the subjects of
two workshops planned when
the Oh1o Council of
Elementary School Science
meets for its regiOnal
workshop Saturday Feb 11
at RIO Grande College and
Community College (RGC
CC)
The sess10ns will provide
elementary SCience teachers
With an opportunity to un
derstand and try new
teachmg methods They one
day event will begin m the
campus dining hall at 9 a m
and IS open to both college
students and professiOnal
teachers
Marc•a Reichard con
sultan! for the Division of
Planning and Evaluation
Ohw State Department of
EducatiOn Will gtve the
welcommg address Par
tiCJpants wlll be able to
choose between two morning
and
two
afternoon
Workshops

For 1'\lt'sday Jan l'1 l91ll

sa1d 1t can be done Jf someone
exerts the leadership
The alternative he said IS
widespread closing of
schools Johnson said even if
the plan 1s approved this
year the tax structure will
not change until 1979
To put 1t off until next
year 1s only to put off the day
of Armageddon he said
Johnson leveled heavy
crJilclsm at Gov James A
Rhodes for falling to offer a
plan to change the school
fmancing program Rhodes
sa1d It would be up to the
Legislature which Johnson
described as a nice way to
dodge the bullets

PURL C NOTICE
Not ce s he ebr g ven hat
Wle annua mee ng of the
s ockh o ders o f Th e Fa me s
Bank &amp; Savings Company of
2 1 WH.
Seco nd Stre e
Pome oy Oho w
b~ h~d
at the off ce o f sad Bank n
Pome oy Oh o accord ng to
ts by aws
on the th rd
Wednesday of Janullry 1978
at 4 oo P M for he purpose
of e ec ng d rec o s end the
t an sec on of such othe
bu!l ness as may properly
come before sad mee ng

12 28

Peu l E K oes
Secrete y
\) 8 11 16 4 c

UN T PR CE CONTRACT
RAP 0005(30

SRS 0005(471
Se aled propo si"' s w I be
ece ved a he off ce o h e
0 r ec o
o
he
Oh o
Depa me n t
of
T en s
por at on
Co umbus Oh o
un I
0 00 A M
Oh o
Stand&amp; d T me
Tu es d&amp;V
Februll y 7 1976 fo
m
provement s n
Athens
Ga a
Hock n g
Me gs
Morgen
N ob e
V non
and
W&amp; sh ng t on
Coun es Oh o on var ous
sec t ons
by
app v ng
preformed plast c
B lroad
cron ng symb o s
The Oh o Dep&amp;rtm en of
Transpor a lon
here b y
not ties etl b dders hat w t
aft rma vely nsure ha
n
any contra c
en ered
n o
pursuan
o
th s
i"'d
vertlsement
m n or tv
business en e p ses w 1 be
llfforded full opport un y o
su bm t b ds n response o
h s nv at on and w 1 no be
d scrim na ed aoa nst on he
oro unds of ra ce c:o or o
natural
or g n
in
con
s dera on for an award
M n mum Wl!ge ra es tor
th s pro ec
h ll ve been
predtle m ned as requ red
by aw and are se t forth n th e
bid propose
The date se t fo
com
plet on ot h s wo k she ll be
set forth
n t h~ b dd ng
propos a
Each b dder she I
be
reQulrea to f te w th h s b d a
C!r t t ed check or cash er s
check for an ('I mount equa to
live per cent of h 1 b d bu n
no event more than r tty
thousand do Iars or a bond
for ten per cent of h 1 bid
payeb e to the 0 rector
9 dders mus app
on the
proper
forms
for
que f cat on at eas en days
pr or o the de e se
fo
open ng b ds n accordance
wl h Chapter 5525 Oh o
Rev sed Code
Plans and '\1\tflcatlot'ls
are on f e
tment
of TranspQ
':ff!_(l the
off ce of tht
f Oeputy
0 rec: or
The 0 rector reserves the
r Oh to re ect any lind all

v

"&amp;

b "'
D~V

Rev 8 17 73
(
62J2c

D L WEIR
0 RE CTOR

�•

.

WANT AD ""'""'i;t·"Th;···want Ads ·T urn Unwanted Items Into Cash
,_,....,~"'""
CHARGES
15 Words ur Under

Cuh

.

!.00
!.lCl
1.90
3.00

!:loy
2days
3dlyl
fid.lys

E.ch word

1.90
! .IS
3.75

TWO STORY 3 bed1oom lrdmv
hou11e F A fu1nare 'ilo•m &gt;'{ In
dows fireplace In M1ddleport .
Phone Q97.J.4S7 or QQ7 5867
IN MEMORY ol F1ank Odl who
passed away one year ago lo
doy Jonuory 16 IQ77
Sadly m1ued by chtldrel1 grand
chtldren a nd lomtly

In ~mary, Gi rd oi 'I'twnb ~md

Obttuarv · 6 t.-enl.l pr_r word, 1.1.00
rnitlimuin Cuh in 11dvance
MobtR HUffiC'. :u.k!s tu'ld Y11rd 511~
art! ICC..'t pled only With cuh with
order , 2$ ctnl d'larK e for tHis c11rry-

Box Number rn C.re ol TheSe~
Unt:l.

INCOME TA)( Serv•ces . Federal
and Stote ra•es Wando fbl1n
9&lt;n.2772

'Mle Pu blis~ rese rv~ Ow&gt; r1ght
1o «!1t ur re-~ Mnrw!' dtf'mt'd objectiorwl. T Pub '
r wtU not be
respon!lible fur mort' thMn ooe lncor•
'ra1 tnsenJon .
Phme 992-21 54)

TH'E RACI NE Valvnteer Ftre
Depotrment will sponso• o gun
shoo t every Sa turday at 6 pm at
the•r b~oHid• n g '" Ba shon. Foe·
10 1 y choke gunii only

~~"~ 1!1

.

THE RACINE Gun Club Cun Shoo1 COAL l1mestone. and colctum
c hl~, ,(lle ond col.;;iurn br ine lor
every Sunday; afternoon Foe·
d ust con trol ond specto1 m11ung
torv choke guns only Assorted
soh for formert. , hcel•ior Salt
meoh
Works Motn Street Pomeroy
INCOME TAX Sen•ices Federal
Ohio or phone Qq2 . 3891 .
gnd Stole ToxE!~
Wa ll ace
CAM PER. $600. Also. hor'ie
Ruuell Bra dbury . q~Y.~ . 7228 .
troller . $450. Phone (614 ) 6qa.

..

5 4~~

COUNJ RY MO BilE Home Pork
Route 33 , north of Pomeroy
Lu.ge lou . Coll991 7Hq.
only . 992-3324.
FOUR ROOMS and bath upstou ~
opt. Ca ll 992 -5021 Of 992-2205.
· THREE BED ROOM
985·33.4 I .

Let Pomero y La ndmark
soften &amp; cond it ion you r
water with Co-op wat er
softener. Model UC -SVt ,

•279,95

Now Only

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

..

Monday
Noon on Sa turday
T11Hday
thru Friday
4 P.M
till! tilly ~f ort! publk11tion

Sy
i P.M.
rrid"Yilftem 0011

ORDI NANC E NO . 486
ANNU AL
AP P ROPR IATI ON
OR DIN ANCE
POMEROY
A RESOL UTI O N 10 maKe
apprO pr ia ti on s for Cu r re n !
E•pense s and oth e r Ex .
pe ndi tur es of th e Village of
Po me ro y, St a t e o t Ohio ,
au r ing the l tsc al year end ing
Dece mber 31. 1918 .
s ec t ion
1.
BE
1T
R ES OL VED by th e Cou ncil
lor t he Vi llage of Pome ro y,
Sta te of Ohi o, That. to prov id e
for the curr ent e xpenses a nd
ot her e xpend it ure s of th e sa id
Vill age ot Pom e r oy du r ino
th e fi sc a l ye ar -endi n g
Dec em be r 31, 19 78, th e
fo ll owing sums be a nd th e y
are hereby set asi de and
appro pr ia ted as fo llow s, Vi~ :
GE N.E_R AL
1

P ROBATE COURT Or
MEIGS COU NTY , OH I O
ESTATE O F EMMA MAY
S ~O E NB E R GER ,

SER VI CES
MA YOR
Persona l Ser vices ! 2, 400 .00
To tal F or Ma yor
2, 400.00
CLER KCL E RK·TR E AS UR E R
Person a l Serv ices
3,000.00
Total For Clerk Clerk -Treas urer
3. 000.00
TREAS U R E R
Person a- l Ser vice s
360.00
Tota l F or Tr ea su r e r
360.00
SOLICI T OR ·
LEGAL ADVI SOR
P·e r sonal Ser vi c es
2,500 00
Tot a l For Solici tor .
2.500 .00
Leg al Adv isor
ELECTI O NS
Person al Serv ice s
1,500.00
Tota l For Electio ns
1.500.00
COUN C IL
Pe r sonal Ser \l lce s
1, 440 00
Tot a l For Cou nc il
1, 440 .00
GENERAL
ADMIN !STR ATt ON
Person a l Services
5,500.00
Supp li es a nd Ma ter ia ls
.
1.300 .00
cap ilal Ou tl ay
2.000.00
Ot he r
18,000 00
Tota l
26,800.00
38,000.00

SECURITY OF
PERSONS AND
PROPERTY

POLICE DEPARTMENT P e r sona l Se r \l ices
65,000.00
Supp lies a nd Ma ter ials
35,000 .00
Ca p ital Ou tla y
7.000.00
Ot her
2,000.00
Tot a l For Pol ice
Depa r t m en t
109,600.00
Tot al Fo r Secu r ity of
P ersons an d P ro per ty '
109,600 .00
·
PLANNING COMMISSION
Oth e r
2,500.00
Tot al For P la nn ing
co m mis sion
2,500.00
Tot al For Com m uni ty
E nv ironme nt
2,500.00
TRANSPORTATION
FACILITIES
STREET DEPT .
Persona l Se r vices
22,500.00
Supp li es a nd Ma ter il!IS
14 ,000 00
Ot her
8,500 .00
To ta l For
&lt;i5 ,000.00
Str eet Pa&lt;J ing
Tota l For St reet
c on s truction , Main te nan ce
and Rept'll r Fu nd 45 ,000.00
STATE HIG~WAY
Pe n ont'l l Se r \lices
2,000.00
Ot her
3,000.00
Tota l For St a te
H l ~ h wa y Impro veme nt
Fu nd
5,000.00
PUBLIC HEALTH
SERVICE S
CEMETERY OPERATION
AND MAINTENANCE
Per sonal Ser vices
13 ,000.00
Su pplies a nd Ma ter ia ls
2.000. 00
Ot her
500 .00
Tot a l For Ce m etery
Ope r ation and
Ml!l lnt ena nce
15 ,500 .00'
UTILITY FUND
Ot her
23.000 .00
Tota l For Elec tr ic
(Ligh t) ( R e\l enue )
F und
, 23,000.00
Set; li on 9. That ther e be
ap p ro p r iate d
fr om
the
WATER'
( RE VE NU E)
F UND
WATER PUMPING
Ot her
o
13,000 .00
To tal For Wate r
P u mp fn_g
13,000 .00
WATER DISTRIBU T ION
Pe r sona l Se r &lt;J ices
35 ,000.00
Supp lies a nd Materi als
30,000.00
C i.'lpi t~ I Ou tl ay
2.000.00
Othe r
13,000.00
Tot al For Wate r
System Ope r at ion 80 ,000.00
ADMINISTRATION WA TE R
De bt se r vice
87 ,282 .00
O th e r
500.00
Totel For Admin islra flon
- Wa ter
87 ,882 .00
Total For Wa fer
{Re ven ue) F un ~ 180,78 2. 00
-5~£ WER MAINT E NAN CE
P e r so n&amp; I Services
10,000.00
Su ppl ies end Ma ter ials
.
18,000 .00
Tot ~ I F or Sewer
Mai ntenanc e
28,000 .00
ADMINISTRATION .
- SEWAGE
Oe iJt Ser vice
29 ,000.00
Othe r
400.00
Tota l For Ad mi nis tr a tion Se wag e
29,400.00
Total For Sewer
&lt;R e ve nue ) Fund 57,400.00
Sec t ion 13 . T hBt ther e be
a pprop r i ~t t e d
fr om
th e

COUPLE

"O n January 5, l9 7A. in The
Meigs Coun ty Probate Cou rt ,
Ca se No . 22215, Hen r y Wel ls ,
R .O 2, P ome roy , Oh io 45769
waS appoi nt ed E xec u to r ot
the es ta te of Em m a Ma y
Shoe ntle r ge r . deceas_e d. l,a te
of SaliSbu r y Tow nSh ip, R D.
'1 , Pome roy , Oh,io .

Fo r
ligh t
ho use k ee ping
for
re t i r e d m a il . · P a ul
O rr, Long Bottom
( Bas h a n l. O h io .

Manni ng 0 . Webster
P robate Judge.
Cler k
( I ) 9, 16; 23 , 3tc

NEEDE D A beau tv o pera far . Con ·
tact Janet s Ho ir -Go·Round .
(J04) 773 ·5404.

949-21 93

w~ilj&gt;~~~-~~-~=

G D V ERN~E NT AL

CASH pa id lor oil makes and
models ol mobile homes .
Phone orea cod e 61 4-42J.q531 .
TIMBER. Pomeroy Fo res t Pro·
duc h To p pr ice for s tand ing
sa wtimbe r. Call 992-5965 or
Keni' Hon by, 1.446-8570.
COINS. CUR RENCY . toke ns, old
poc-ket w ot c ~ es and chain s,
s1lver and go ld. We need 1964
and older silver coins Buy , se ll ,
or trade ' Coli Roger Wa msley .
742-2331 . ·---~~
O LD FURN IT URE , ice bo xes , brass
beds, iron beds. etc .. complete
househo lds. Wr ite M, 0 . Mill er ,
Rl. 4 Po me ro v. ..Ohi'o or co li
992-7760.
NO ITEM TO O large or too small.
Will buy 1 piece or comple te
hous eho ld. New, used. o r a nti ques . Mart in's Furni ture . 20 N.
2nd St., Middleport . Phone
q92.6370.

G ENE RAL
B O ND
RE T IREMENT F UN D
Pa.., m£&gt;n t o f Pri nci p a l 7,000.00
P a y men t o f I n ter es t

2, 887 50

To tal F or Gener a l
Bond Ret irem en t
F und

9,987 .50
A DDITION A L F UNDS
Sec t ion 15. T hat ther e be

a p p r op r i at e d
f r om
th e
Fe d e r l'll R eve n ue Sha r i n g

FUND
Capi ta l Outl ay

3.000 .00

Ot he r
26,200 .00
To tal Fo r F ed . R ev .
Shar ing
21i. 200.00
~S e c flon . 16 . That

ther e be

app r op r ia t ed from

The Fir e

D ep t. F UND
F I RE D EPT .
P e r s on a l Serv ices
4,000.00
Supplie s a nd M a ter ia Is

s.ooo .oo
O th e r

3,630.00

T otal F o r

J ack W. Carsey , Mg r .
P hone992·2 18 1

LADY OR MARRIED

DECE ASED .
Ca se No, 2227S
NOTlCE OF
APPO I NTMENT
OF FI DU CIARY

Pro bate Cou r t
Mei gs Co unty , Oh io
Esta1e
o f Baby G ir l
Johnso n, decease d, Case No,.
22292 .
No tice of Appoi ntmen t
of F id ucia ry
On Janu ar y 10. 1978. in th e
Meigs cou nty Pro ba te Cour t,
Ca se No . 22,?92 , Ron ni e D.
Johnso n, Ro u te l , P o m eroy ,
Oh io , w a s appo int e d Ad ·
mi ni st rator of th e esta te of
Bab y Gtr l J ohnson , d eceased,
late of Rou te 3, P om e r oy.
OhiO.
Ma nn ing D. Webster
Proba te Judg e
( 11 14, 23 , 30 , 3t c

Landmark

HELP WANTED

RUGS, WAl l Hangi ngs and
olgans . Nice for Chri"l tma s
Reasonable . Co11992·2214 .
1976 FORD F-250 Custom . 17 .50 IC
14 .00 tires - wmch , On ly 14 000
m• He a ders . CB Tope dec k
O~e r S3 .0&lt;X&gt; in ex tr as . Se rious
'calls on ly alt er 12 noon
696-1072 . 56 ,800 .

-

-

BURROUGHS SENSI, MAT IC oc·
counting mac hine. Hos been
under se rvice contract and in
good condi tion. Con be seen ot
The Doily Senhnel, Il l Court
St. Pome roy, OH.
LARG E ROUND Bale fe ed ers
mode of square tub ing. $76.
Ver meer Io rge ro und baler .
$250 Dtscau nl until Fe b . 15,
1978 . Woodmo ste r cabine t
wood hea le rs, lh!l'rrT)a\ tot , osh
pon. hinged top lo r coo kmg ,
brick·line d . $'14:2 . Coolmo ste '
some as a bo11 e but Shake r
gra te for cool. $264 . Blower for
edhe r. $4 8, Mer rill Cho se. (614)
6Q8 3021.

-----·
GOOD USE D rv ·s.
·--

Color and
Blo ck ond Whil e. Har rison 's TV,
276 Sycamore Stree t, Mid ·

CHIP WOOD.. Pol e s ma x. ~ le p~~O h i~ 9~2:._2522
d iameter 10 .. on lar ges t end, sa
per to n. Bundl ed slob, S6 per HA Y f.O R sole. Round boles . PH.
843-2524.
ton, Dell.,ered to Ohi o Polle t
Co .. R!.-2. Po meroy . 992 .::2689 .
ONE HEATWA VE wood bu rning
~ l ove. I year old wtlh stove ptpe
CASH FOR Junk Ca rs Frye 's Truck
o nd damper , one 6 " ch1 mney
ond Auto Wrecker Ser vice .
kit . One Croltsmo n cha in sow ,
Ph one 7.&lt;1 2-2081 or Pennzoi l
au tom at ic
oile r ,
sel f .
~~ 4:::2..:
·9:::5..:
75::·_ __
sharpe ning bar . 241 cu . in
SILV ER DOLLARS &amp; &lt;: oins. Will pov
e ng me , 14 " bar . Used once .
3 ttme s wor th ond up . Coli
247-3941 .
'
.
742·2316.
HAY FOR SALE. Royal Oak For m.
Will PAY top dollar lor used shot
985-334 1.
guns , ri fles, pi, !ol-s . sword s,
HAY
FOR sole . $55 pe r ton. Co m ,
dagg ers. go·kor ts , min ! bikes ,
fo r sa le , $2 p"r bu. Ca ll a lt e r S
Grave ly's o r wha t ho ve you .
prp , 98 ~· &lt;11 3 1 or 9B5 ·3537 .
_
Open 12·7 pm. Fife 's , 3rd St .
Rt . 7. Middle port . ne•T 10 · 197.7 C H E~Y srePsn)E'pickup. 350
Speedque en
l a undro mat .
cu ., 4 bbl. Shor p $5 ,000 Co li
9q2·7494.
992 2912

-·

P assed J.J .78

IF YOU ho 11e o servic e to ol! er ,
won t to buy or sell some thing ,
oe loo king lor wo rk . . nr
wha tever ... vou'tl ge t resu lts
fo ster with a Sentine l Wont Ad .
Call qn.21 56.

HOOF HOLLOW Hors es . Buy , se ll
!rode o r tra in. New a nd used
sodd le s. Ruth Reeves , Alba ny.
(614 ) 698-3290.
MEIGS COUNTY Hu ma ne Soc iety .
Coral ine and adopt ion Service .
992:7b80 , 742-3162, 992-5427.
AKC REGISTERED pekingese pup·
pies. Phone (304 ) 882·2683.
RI SING STAR Kennel, Boo i- ding
Ind oor ond outd·o o r runs.
Groomi ng a ll breedii . Cle an
son ilory facil ities Chesht re .
Phone (614) 367-0292 .
AKC DOBERMAN Pin che r pu p·
pies. 8 weeks old ; red &amp; ru st.
fed i gc.fl~d
wif h Cha mpion
Blood!ins . Also. certified heal th
c: ertil icote $150 firm , your
choice mol e o r le mole.
614-797·4500 ,

H . D . Brow n

Pres ide nt of Council
Attest : Ja n Wa lton
Cl e rk of Council '
CERTIFICATE
Sec t ion 5705.39. R .c. - " No
ap propria t io n m e asure sha ll
become e ffec t i\IE! unti l the r e
is flied w ith the appr opr iatin g
au t hority by t h e c ou n t y
a ud itor a cert if ic: a te th at th e
to tal a p p r o priation s from
eac h fun d , taken toge th er
w ith a ll other o utstand tng
a pprop r ia tions , do rio t exce ed
s uch off ici a l est ima t e or
amended o ff i c io~~ I es timat e r
When the appropr iat ion does
nol e Kceed such offic ial
es tima te , the county aud itor
sha ll give s uch ce r tif icate
fo rthwit h u pon r e ce iving
fr o m the appr opr iating
au thO r ity a certi f ied copy o f
the ap pr:opr ia tlo n measu re . "
Th e State of Ohi o Meigs
Cou nty , ss .
t, Jane· Wa lton , Cler k of th e
Village of Pomeroy in sai d
c oun ty , and in wh ose c us tod y
the Fi les , Jov r nl! IS an d
Records a r ~ r e~u l red by th e
Laws of the Slate of Oh io to be
kep t, do here by cer tify th at
t he for eg oing Annual Ap ·
pro p r iatlon s Reso lu tio n Is
taken and copies f rom the
ori ginal Resolu t ion now o n
fi le w ith s a id Vill age , t h!! l the
foregoing Resolu t iO n has
been compa re d by me w ith
t he sa id or ig ina l and tha t th e
sa me IS· a true a nd correc t
c:opy th ereof.
.
Wltnen my s ig l"l' a tur e , thi s
4t h day o f J an u ary 1978.
Jane Wa lton
Clerk of the
Vl ll aoe of
Pom eroy
Meig s Cou nt y, Oh io
(1) 9, 16, 2tc

1969. DO DGE CORON ET. 318
motor. $375. Call 9q2 .5Q I 1.
1971 LTD WAGON . 1974 Pin to
Woga n . 992-5756.

Wi ll CARE lor the e lde rly in our
home . Pha ne q92-731 4.
MO BILE HOME

r~po lrs. 992 - ~

WeAre Now
Taking New
Custon)ers For

FUEL OIL AND
GAS SERVICE
CAU US
Pomeroy Landmark
·~ ~~ack W. Ca rsey, Mg r .

~

Phone 992-2181

PIANO TUN ING··lone Dani e ls. 13
yeors ol se r11ice. New phone
num be r, 9q2.258 1.

APPLIANCE

ha~~~~C~d
de;;~n1

We
our
ser v ic e
and
will se r vice Hotpoint and
other brands.

Pomeroy Landmark

STARCRAFT FALL Sol e . Mini·
motors 20' and 22'. TroVe!
T roiler~ . 1B' 5" S3.799, 25' 7"
Bunkho use $4,875 . Fald·down ,
$1 .700 up . We se ll service ond
quality, Open Sundoys . Camp
Conley Sto rcroft So les , Rt. 62,
N. of Pi. Pleasa nt .

FIREWOOD , FO R so le .
742·2131.

Phone

9 ... _Ja ck W. ~arsey, Mgr.
·16 11 Phone 992·218 1
ATT ENTI O N MAR E O wn e r ~:
AQHA !i tud se rvice . In troducing
to Southern, Oh io_ Cortoko, sorr'ell son of Otoe. Bre ed lor color,. con formo tio~ and dl sposi·
tion . Phone 698-8241 e vening s
or wr ite lo• breeding conl roCI .
Belle Echo b uo rter Horses ,
40225 SR 692. Pome r,ov. Oh1o
45769.

ATTRACTIVE QUI LTS for ii Oie : I
opplique , 3 pteced . Coli (Mo)
Garne t Will iam so n . (614)
742·2803 .
·

FERGUSON 20 Tractor . New re a r
tire! . $ 1,200. 742-2523.
WILL PA Y top do lla r for uiied sho t

guns. rifles , pistols . swords ,
dagge rs. go-ka rte , min i bik es.
Grave ly 's or wha t have you.
Open 12-7 pm. Fife 's' 3rd Si .:
Rt. 7, Middleport , ne xt to
Speed q uee n
l aundr om a t.
992-7494.
8 N TRA CTOR. New tires and
ri ms . E)Ccelhm t mec h(m icol co n·
diiion. Phone qq2-720 1.
REDUCE SAFE &amp;To:::,-, .:.
w.:.;t"'h""'
" Go
c-:a-. -, .
Tablets &amp; E-Va p "wa te r pills".
Ne lson Drug .

-

-

HO USE FOR le a se on Lincoln Hill
1n Pome ro y. S , bEtdrooms
Deposit requi red. 992 ·3489
alter 5 pm,
2 BEDROOM 1 2 ~e60 Mob1le Home
111 Syracuse. Comletely furnish·
e d, sto rage bldg Wi ll rent to
cons truction wo rk er O f cou ple
with child . $1 5() p e r month . Call
992 2897 .

..,

NEW 3 bed• oo m housa , 2 baths,
oil e lec .. 1 o cre , Middle po rt.
dos e !a Rutland . Phone 992·
7481.

SMAll fo rm fo r s o le , 10•1o. d o wn.
·--

owne r f1no nced . Monroe Coun·
ty, W. Vo . Phone (304} 772·
3101 or (304) 772·322'7,

B &amp; S MOB ILE HOMES, Pt. Plea·
so n!. w. Yo . bes•de Hec k's.
CO UNTRY formlond with seclud1973 Broa drnore 14 x b4 2
e d woo.ds, wa te r o'nd good QC·
bedroom
ces~ in Monroe County , W . Vo
1973 Dor ion 14 x 60 2 bedroom
SI,OOO dow n , &lt;: oil (304 ) 77 2·
1972 Vic torian 1d ~ 67 3 bedroom ,
3102 o r (304) 772·3127 .
2 bath
---~--l 972 Coventry 1'1,.. 65 3 bedroom
1969 Stoteuna n 12 ,.. 60 2
bedroom .

Fi r e D ept .
12 ,630 DO
Tot al For Addi t ion a l Fund s
FUND Sl 2,6JO.OO.

TO TA L AL L
A P PROPR IATI ON S
528,499 .50
-- Sec t ion 17. And th e Vi llage
Clerk is h er ~&gt;b y autt1 or izl'd to
d r ew h is wa r ran ts on tt;l e
Vill a ge
Tr e a's ur e r
fo r
pa ymen ts fro m any of th e
foreg o in g
at:Jpr o p r latio n s
upon r ece iving pr o per cc r .
t if ic a t e s
and
v ou che r s
ther !'for , ii ppro ved by the
boa rd o r off icers l!lu tho r ized
by law to approve the sa me ,
or an ord ina nc e or ..r eso lu ti on
of co un cil to m a K'e th e ex ·
pendi tu r es ; pr o ~oli d ed that no
warrants s hall be dr a wn or
paid tor sa la r ies or wages
exce p t to persons em p loy ed
by autho r ity of an d In a c .
cordan c: e wi th taw Of or .
· d ln e nce . P rovi d ed fur: t h er
tha t the ap propr iations for
con ti nge n cies ca n on ly be
ex pend ed upon a pp eal ot tw o .
th irds \I Ote of Counci l for
item s of e)(pense c onSt itu ti ng
a lega l ob lig at ion agai ns t the
vi llage , and ror pur pos es
othe r t ha n those CO\Ic r ed by
th e othe r
speci fic ap .
propria t ion s he r ei n ma de .
s ~ c t i o n 18. Th is resolu tion
s hall take e ff e c t a t t he
earlies t per iod al lowed . by
taw .

House .

THREE BEDROOM tro iler for ren t.
Nat ove r 2( hildren allowed . No
pels. One trailer lot for rent.
7&lt;12·3122 .

ECO NOMY TRAC TOR wi th oil o t
tochments . like new, asking
$2250 Phone (6 14 ) 69B-3290.

-

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr .,
Broker
107112 Sycamore St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
PHONE 992-6333
OHice Hours : 9 A.M. to ,,
P. M.
Clo se
Thursdays
anc
Saturdays at noon.
NEW
LISTING 3
bedroom , 1V2 baths, din ing
a re a , k itche n ha s bu i! 1-in
o ve n anP r ang e, one car
garage, fa m ily room . New
tot a l elec tr ic: home on an
a c re lot . $41 ,000, 00. located
on the Crow Sub-di vis ion .
near Fi ve P oi n ts.
NE W LISTING - 2 year
ol d F uqua double w ide
mobi le hom e , 24'x56' wi th
po rch In eKce ll en t conditio n
inc luding a ll lur nlt ur e &amp;
app li ances . Locate d on
cor ner lot , 100'x200' in t he
Ar baugh a dd it ion, Tuppe r s
Plains , Ohio, kno wn a s the
Ral ph Broo ks pro pe rt y .
T his is a good buy at
$21,000.00.

We have need of list ings,
all tvpes, hom es, land.
commercial, etc.
Cheryl Lemley
Associa1e
Home Phone 742-2003
Hilton Wolfe, Sr.
A.ssociate
Hom11 Phone 949-2~89
Commercial property app ro• 17
a cres. level lond . loca te d 0 1
Tuppe rs Pla ins on Ohio , Route
7. Phone (61 4) 66!..:.~-·__
VA-FH A, 30 yr . f ina ncing. Ire la nd
Mortga 9e . 77 E. Stol e , Athe ns,
phone (61 4) 592·3051.
·
1
THRE E YEAR o ld , 1 ft story . r a r.~ c h
stvle home . 4 bedrooms. 2 cor
garage , cemen t dri11ewo y . I A.
gro und . $33 ,900 . P ri va te
owner. Seen bv oppoin tm'ent.
949-280 1.

TEAFORDrn
~f -' LT O~

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR.
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy 1 Ohio 45769
Phone 992-!325
BUSINESS CORNER - Ori
Rou te
12 4 .
Bu si ne ss
buJid lng ~ith 3 bedroom , 2
bath home. Has a 2 car
ga rag e . All for $35,000.
NEW LISTING - 2 year
old · 3 bedroom.
fu ll
base ment home . Has 2
baths, nice din ing room,
e lec tri c baseboard heat,
carport with utility a nd 2
a c res. $36,500 .
RUTLAND - o bedrooms,
bath, flr~ptace , all c ity
ut il ities, 2 c ar car port and
one-third acre lot . $14,000.
SYRACUSE - We have 4
houses t o self ~ e re . Th is 9
room brick ha s cit y water,
natural gas. electr ic a nd
extra lot for iust $5,500 .
POMERO '(
2
apar tmen ts for S9,600. It
ha s a 1 bedr oom clPartment
ard ba th u p , plus a s tudio
down now rente d . You..
better see th is one .
ROU li E :i3 - 3 bedroom
block home _ Bath , natural
gas fu rna c e , c ity, and 1
acre. $20.000.
WIT.H
US
· CHECK
BEFORE YOU BUY. WE
HAVE
SOME
NICE
PROPERTIES FOR YOU
TO COMPARE.

C. Bruce Teaford
Sue P . Murphy
Helen L . Teaford
Realtor Assoc iates

Will ~AB YS IT IN my home , an y
age . Pho ne 992·6180.c·_ _ __

.
Home Service

TWO BEDROO M Troller . Adl'.llls

32'10.

RESPONSIBLE OLDER lody to ltve
n1 and core lor aged lady m
Rullond . l •gh1 hou5ework ond
~.oo"-1ng , no laundry . Mare lor
home tha n woge s
Coli
7&lt;2-2078
PA.RT TIME bookkeeper . Send
re,ume to Box 729-£ C· O The
Do1ly Sentmftl , Pome roy . c;m
45769 .

.B usiness Services

J AN D I RM. furmshed ond Ufl
furnished o pts , Phone 992·

Let us test your water Free

NOTICE

IMPOSSIBLE ...T~E

THIS IS WHO

SHOT

57 A. FARM. 5 rooms a nd both.
Good born o nd outbu ild ing! .
AU fence d. 24 7·22.42 otter 5 pm.
Shown by a ppointme n t a ni)' .
Must iiell.

·=--- --

- Upholstery-

El ec . ,
plumb i ng •
ca rp e nt er
wor k.
painti ng ,
pane li ng ,
a ny job th a t need s t o
· b e don e a r ound your
h o me .

P rofessi on lf Service. 39
yrs . , ex perie nce . Free
es li m iltes,
p ic kup
&amp;
d elive ry
se r vice .
Residenti • l &amp; Commercit~~l.

YEARS AGO.

'

Tri-State Upholstety
Shop

PHONE
.. 992-5705
12:-7-1 m o .

1163-2nd Ave ., Ga ll lpolls
446-1133-446-1833

ALUMINUM SIDING
SOL I D VINYL SIDlNG
S O F FIT &amp; CELINGS
GUTTERS&amp;DOWN
S POUT
Easy
st ep
by
step
instruc;tions.

EXPERIENCED

Radiator~
Service ~
the t.r••lt Trudli Of' au IIlio•~
.... .. tor t o fl••
fr-

Located In

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

MEIGS PlAZA ·
Middleport, Ohio
1J.9-Ifc

P~

99HI 74

~

U IO- Cross-WIIs 3, 4; l lers Cl ub 6; Marly Robbins '
Spot light 8; Capitol Beat 33; News 10; To Tell the
Truth 13 ; G i lligan's Is . IS; Dan lel Foster. M .D. 20.
7: 1S-To· Be An nounced 33; 7: » -That Nashville
Music 3; In Search of 4; Muppel Show 6; Malch
Game PM 8; MacNe il-Lehrer Report 211; W.lld
Kingdom 10; Candid Camera 1! ; Nashv ille on the
Road 15; Know Your Schoo ls 33.
8 :00-LIIIIe House on The Prairie 3,4,15: Luc an 6.13;
Logan ' s ~un 8, 10; Consumer Survival Kif 20 ;
American Short Story 33.
8 :3o-U .S. Art : G ilt of Oursel ves 20.
9 :Q-Movle '' Nowhere to Run ' ' 3,-4, lS ; Amer lcen Mus ic
Awards 6. 13 ; Maude 8.10: Adams Chron icles 20;
Hollywood Television Thea t re 33.
9 :3o-.P IIot " The Fighting Nightingales" 8.10. .
10:00-Swllc h 8. 10; tolews 20; 10 :»-Farm D igest 20 .
11 :DO-News 3,4,6.8.10, 13 .15: Dic k Cavell 20; MacNeilLehrer Report 33 .
11 :3o-Johnny Carson J ,-4, 15 ; Po Ike Stnry " · 13 ,- Movie
· · ~ eve" So l= e w' ij ; ABC News 33; Movie ·· oear
Br ig if1 e !0.
12 00- -J dn dki 33 . '' : 4Q- ~ J\I e '!"s tJ ; 1 :00.- T o mor row
3. 4.'

KEESEE
CAPTAIN EASY
~Ell

.

992-3918

RACIN E ,

I'M AFRAID NO T...
!'VERY T IME SHE'
CALLS, SHE INf,T$
ON 5 P!fAI&lt;Io.t6 TO NO
O&gt;JE SUT THE HEAD
· OF THE COMPANY!

DAFFODIL ~ •••YE
C AT!&gt;! $HE 'G
G OTTA BE

lo/AM5 '! J
DAFFODIL.

Save 30 pet . to so pet .
on heating cost
Experi.ence ~nd
fully insured
Free E st.
'
Call : 667 -6479 or 9f2 · 381S u 1
1· 16- Jmo . •

RACINE
PlANING MILl

DOII&amp;INS...

KIDDINE&gt;!

6 NI\T5!

CRANK~

ARE M D ENOU GH··
A FEMALE CRA NK
COULD So T~RMINA L !

0.:'

INSULATION
SERVICE

\ljJ~NJID'il ~ THATSC:RAMBLEDWORDQAME
~ ~ ~~ ~
byHenri ArnoldandBoblee
Un scramble these tour Jumbles,
one letter to each squa re, to form
lour ordina ry words.

BORN LOSER

I'D SV~ST A $oi.D0t..8 \UITH A

WOOD AND WOOL F IBE R .

I ~D HAVe Sf,I.Lf!;O fW.K
HOMB Ql.\ 1\.1£; I(N.I0fl .

G,to. t-1'T I JUST !t:O

'l'£eP- ev'*'?'

HORI-l I W!.AM'

"S INCE 1947
12·11 -1 mo. 1

Pom•JVJ

1

M

8~··
lns&amp;tlltion Strrices

CHEMICALS
We Strip Paint . Va r ni shes ·

Financin&amp;Avail.able

e tc .
Wood -Meta I- Plastics
Antiques &amp; Mode rn
Upholstering Service
Cu s to'm - Profess ional
Rei lnishing - Repairing .
Antiques Bought &amp; Sold

Blow1lnto Wllh • Attics
STORM
WINDOWS l DOORS
RIPIACEIIENI
WINDOWs
IWMINUM

SIDING-SOFFIT!
GUTTERS-AWNINGS

LARRY LAVENDER
Srt'ICIIM, Ohio
PU92·39ll3

WHAT &gt;IAPP'et.IED
OF AN IN C~EA!SED AI.LOWAN CEWI'TH iHIS KIND
~16 HOPE~

OF A

ORPHAN ANNIE-THE ONE THAT GOT AWAY

PHONE
742-2570
12-18- 1 mo

tn ·-'-"-

ID

Boilers, Furnaces, Heat
Pumps &amp; Auto. Contr ols .
GA S-OIL- COAL

Phone 992-2798
100 Ke r r 51.
Pomer oy , Ohio
12-J 0-1 mo.

1

.. ...,__

ENG IF

OHIO .
HEATING SERVICE
REPAIR &amp; SERVICE

Dick Seyler

rx

•••,.l¥ '"',__ r_

0

FREE ESTIMATES

9&amp; 11 P .M. - Twilight ' s Last G loom ing I R I
C. blo C"-nnel Flva 6 :311 P .M . - Testimony Ti me
7:00 - Paul Gaud ino Fam ily Fitness
7: 30- - Ironton at Meig s Bas ke tb a ll
10 :00 - 700 Club .

MO N DAY, JA N UARY 16, 1171

Ce llulosic (wo od f ib er)
Thermal In sulation

C.re .

ACE HARIMARE

'

J&amp;L
Blown Insulation

JIM

Movt• CM:nnel 4 s&amp; 1 P~M . ·- Voy ag eol te dam ned f P GJ

TELE VISION
VIEWING

6ROW WAS KILLED

VITAMIN?

E BROW?

OYff the m111imwn 15

Tota l For Gen er a l
Govern me ntal
Ser vices

.

a..,..
! .IS

wor&lt;ll a 4 cents per word per &lt;!My.
Ads I'WUlinl ut.ht-!" lhlan l.'Ofl!IK"UUVI:!
diys will bt chlrt(f'd ill 1/:W I day
ratt .

..

9-The Daily Sentinel. Middleport· P omeroy, 0 ., Monda y, J an. 16, 1978
DICK TRACY

) I I

1 TURN lt-110 THIS ALLEY ...
WHY? --- 0 ~ . MY HEAD!
EIUT I MU ST GO 0 1'1 ··· 0 1'1 "

..

I I

·~EF'OI(T. "

Now arrange the clrc :ltd lanars lo
form the surprise answer, as aug-

i:':...LI_-l_..L~::::;:;;::::~....,~g=ested
:; by the a bove cartoon.

'

I I

ArM: THEv r

rrrxx xr1

(Answers tomorrow)

NOTICE

Superior
Steam Extraction

JOHNIE'S BEAUTY
SALON

Young's

Carpeting

Corne r
and St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Change of
Phone Number
Phone

R110le I Pom"", 0.
Carpet &amp;UphOlStery
Phone Mike Young
At
992-2206 or 99V63~
''The Ofi1in1IOB
Not Tht Imitators

. SaturdaY's

R e s i dentia l
a nd....
comm e r c ial . Call
for
estimate , 24 hour se rvi c e.
4
Anyda v, anytim e.
Phone 985-3806

Closed Jan. TO
Til lith, 1918

]4

ELWOOD

BOWERS REP A IR

-

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Chest er, Ohio
10·30-c ,

ACROSS

l Dross
S Marsh

SEW ING MACHINE Re pg irs, ser ·
vice . oU mak es , 99 2-2284 The
Fa b r ic ,S h o p , Po meroy .
Au thorized Singer So les a nd
Se r_vice. We sharpen Scissors.

Sweep!l'rs, toos,ters, trOns , oil EXCAVAT ING , dozer , loade r and
backhoe wor k: dum p trucks
. sm a ll oppli onces. l a wn mowe r.
an d lo-boys l j:H hire : will hau l
next to Std te High way Garoge
fill di rt , to so d, lime stone ond
on Rou te 7. Phon e {6 14) 985·
g rovel. Ca iJ Bob or Roger Jef3825 .
fers , do y phone 992· 7089, ni ght
REMO DELING. Pl um bing . heal 1ng
phone 992-3525 o r 992· 5232.
an d al l types o f ge nera l repoir.
E)(CAVA
TING . doze r·. back hoe
Wo rk guar anteed 20 year s e• ·
and ditcher. Cha rl es R. Hot pe rie nce. ~h o n e 992 ·24Qtil .
fie ld , Boc k Hoe Serv 1&lt;:e ,
Rutla nd . O hio . Phone 742-2008
HOM ESITES for sole , 1 a cre ond
up . Middle po rt ,·· nea r Rutland .
Co !l 992-7481 .

WILl do rooting, const r uction ,
plu mb ing ond he atin g. No job
too lgrge or too small. Phone
742-2348 .
HOWE RY

MAIN
.POMEROY, 0.
NEW LISTING ~ One of
the nicest hom es ava ilable,
ne ar Middle port, 3 Bdrm s .•
2 baths, large fam ily room
w ;th WBFP, s plit entry
with nice beamed ceiling &amp;
wall des igns. 2 car garage,
1 . a cre ,
many
other
feat1.1 res, neve r lived in for
545,000.00.
WOOD
BURNING
Fireplace . s· yea r old ranc h
typ e home. 3 · Bdrm s.,
modern ki tc hen , · 2 car
g a rage , appro x. 1 a c re,
carpeting
&amp;
modern .
$31.900.00.
MODERN RANCH 2
years old , 3 Bdrm s . ,
att ached g a rage, good
s ubdiv ision , really nic e,
$2.5,900.00.
TWO STORY - We ll ke pt,
formal d ining , 3 Bdrms .•
farge bath, l~rg e . utility ,
garage, c arpeting . Only
$19 ,500 .00.
$13.900.00 - Will bu y t hi s
ni ce two st or y home, J
Bdrms ., Ph bath s, in good
shape, read y to move into .
$12,500.00 - Will buy this
bea utiful o lder home ln
Pom e r o y.
o r igina l
woodwork , mvst be seen .
IN . THE COUNTRY - l'h
story , 3 Bdrms ., stor age
buildings,
remodeling
"started. ONLy · 56,900.130.
CALL
FOR
MORE
INFORMATION, PHOTO
liSTING HELPS SELL
PROPERTY .
HENRY E . CLELAND
REALTOR ·
HANK, KATHY &amp; LEONA
CLELAND
ASSOCIATES
992-61tl' 992-2541

27 A .: mos tly wooded . Some sow
ti mber. GoOd 10 x 50 traile r
with wood burn ing fireploce.
Orll le d we ll . T.C. water olsa
a va ilable . Eltctra bui lding sights.
1 mi. from Chester , Ohio.
$9,500. l ouie B. Frede ric k, l ong
Bott om. Ohio 45743.

AND MARTIN Ex co~Ja t i n g .
se pt 1c systems.
dozer, ba ckhoe. du mp lruck.
limes tone, g rovel, bla cktop
pa ving. Rt . 143. Phone I (614)
698·73,3 1'
BAT HR OO MS AND Kitchen s
· remode led , ceramic tile , 'plu mbing, cor pen try, ond gene ra l
moi nlenan c:e . 13 year!i ex pe rience . qq2· 3685.

CARTER
PWMBING &amp;
HEAnNG INC.

NEIGL ER.. S FO R bu ilding houses .
bathrooms , all km ds of re pair
wor k and what hove yo u. Guy
Ne igler , Roc.i ne . Ohio . Col i
949·2508 eve nings .

PHONE 773-5536

girl et a l.
13 Colleen' s
countr y
14 Liable to

,,

~~~~~
i

'

...,-

16 Isl e t
17 Large tub
18 Brooks of
~--------~~
romedy
19 Born
20 Suffix for
differ
21 Subatomic
particles
23 Sheltered
24 Chat
27 Harp : l t.
0 28 Hebrew
letter
29 ·_ Fail,
Jr . crowning stone
30 Ma rine
bird
31 Crash into.
34 Malay
g iboon
. 35 Moslem
I ruler
36 " Butter·
flies

SAVE ON
CARPETING
Candy Stripe
Rubber Back
Regu larS6.95
Saves4.INI Sq . Yd.
\

r'

PHIIftAOH ~J . WHAT
PMAfZAoH?- -

4 G olly!
5 G ay Paree
musi c ha ll
6 Make joyous
7 Pen point
10 G allic
. motto
II Hawk-like

Yesterday's Alisw••t

26 Fore arm

12 Parlor
piece

bone
16 " - Christie" 30 Conswned
32 Incendi·
22 Son -

gun

arism

23 Bre wery
output ·
21 Telephone
25 Elizabeth I

to

4.88 SQ. YD.

1

s6.95-not installed

~ 'T'HOU~

30 rolls of carpet in stoc k .
Good selection all on sale ..
Installed with padding. no
extra to pay .

LION

Ca il742-2211
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

,......

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

WINNIE

~

C ltTI Dy trlf:A, IIC, T.ll. flee

..

U.S. hi. !:'I. ,

I

-

.J\1~

7:15-To Be Anno un ced 33 .
7 :30-Holl ywood Sq uares 3,4: Let's Go To The Rac es 8;
Cand id ca m er a 6; Mac Ne il-Le hr er Report 20.33;
Price Is Right 10; Te lev ision Honor Soclely IS.
B:oo-Mov le " The o .t her Side o t He ll" 3.4.15: Ha ppy
Days 6, 13: C BS Ne ws Sp eclo l8 .10: Er ic Hofler: The
Crowded Lite 20 : F iring Line 33.
8:30-Lave rne &amp; Shirl ey 6, 13 ; 9:oo-Three' s Co m pa ny
6,13; M esh 8, 10 .
'9 :30--Soa p 6; One Day At A Time 8, 10 8, 10; Mary Ty le r
Moore 13; Symbios is· 20 .
!O :Oo-F a mll y 6, 13; Lou Gran l8, 10: Ne ws 20; Equa lity
33.
10:30--Biack P e r s pec ti ve O n The New ~ 20; 11:0()News 34, 16; D ic k Ca ve1t 20; Ove r Ea! y 33 .
11 : 3~Johnn y Ca r so n 3,-4 , 15; Movie " Me lv in P u r\l ls ,
G -Man" 6,13; Columbo B; A BC News 33 ; Movie
" Th e Ba nd Wa gon" 10.
12:0D-Jana k l 33; 1 :oo- Tomor r o w 3,4; 1:05-Ko ja k 8;
1: 1o- Ne ws 13.
Movie Chonnel • s &amp; 9 P .M . - J a c k &amp;.the Bean s t a lk (G )
7 &amp; 11 P .M . - Cas sa ndr a Crossing (PG )
,Coble Chonnel F·tve 6 :30 P .M .-Test imony Time
7:00 - P au l G11 udlno Fam il y F itness
7:30-Home Diges t
8 :30-Celebrll y
9 :30-Co n sultatlon
10 ,00-700 Club

33 U.S . laoor
leader
Monday, Jan 16
38 One time
39 Suc cor

~-+-+-1--+-l Biddin
h -+-+--

•

~

~ -

.'

- ···

~; A ST

• 9B
' J9 632

• Q 10 7 2
. AKB7

•

L..-1--I.......I...,-dl
.
Is

Here's how to work it :

A X V D J, B A A X R
J, 0 N G F E L L 0 W

"

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

THURSDAY 8 TIL NOON
'
FRIDAY TIL 5

V uln e rab le : Ea s t · W e s t ,
D eale r : So u t h , O p e n i n g
le ad : T h re e o( hearts.
West

Nort h East

South

Pass

t•

Pass

·2+

Pal-is

Pass

Pa ss

1+

742·221)

ARNOLD GRATE

• RUTLAND ·

dia mond~·~·South

would
a nd lose two
hearts, a club a nd a tr ump to
collect an overtri ck."
Alan : " A two-club reM
sponse would get to the s ame
s pot this time but the futu re
there

partnership wo uld be damaged w he n Nor t h , who h ad
prac tic ally promised a nothe r bid, faile d to mak e It. " ·

A Ve rmon t reade r wa nts
t o know w ha t a matc h p oint

is.
It is a term in dupli cat e
scori n g . "ac h h a n d Is
c ounte d separa t e ly a nd y ou
scor e o ne-ha lf a ma t c h p o int
for each pai r yo u tie and I
match point for each pair
you beat. In a nine t a b le
ga m e you ca n score e ig ht
matc h points if you b e at
every other pai r .

(Fo r a copy of JACOBY MOO·
send $1 to: " Win at
Bridge ," care o f thfs ne wspa per, P. 0 . Box 489, Radio Cily
Station, New York , N. .Y. 10019.)
ERN,

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

IT DOES A BODY GOOD TO GIT AWAY

FROM
(l ll71 United Future

CLOSE SATURDAY

RUTLAND FURNITURE

de p e nding on how h e pla ye d
the hand. "
Oswa ld: " A be tte r re b id Is
play

One lctlc r s im ply stand s fo r anothe r. I n this .sam ple A is
UM•d fur thl' three I.'s, X for t he two O's. etc. Sm ~ l c letters. By O swald Ja c oby
npostroph cs, t he leng th ;m d ror-mati?n of the wo rds are all aod Alan Sontag
hints . Earh d;~y th e r ode lcttNs .nrc d1fTe rcnt.
Oswald : " Let 's · d iscu ss
('RVPTOQ UOTI!S
your fi rst bid whe n y ou have
one fi ve-ca r d s uit , one fou r BXCPJWOU , card suit and enough cards
DEFQL
AWOO
to war rant action ."
BXC
0 E w. AXPOV
J
Ala n: " You s hould bid the
fi ve-card suit a lmo st a ll the
ZD
BXCP
XAQ
WJDFNZDW . - time . So we mi ght look at the
e xceptions. "
--C!!!1111 ZOUPWV
ZPNZQV
NXQDZHWPD
0 swald : " The ftrs t excep.
Saturday's Cryptoquote : THE TROUBLE WITH DOING lio n Is in respo nding to part·
NOTHING IS THAT IT'S TOO DIFFICULT TO TELL WHEN_ ne r' s s uit opening when you
have e nough for a r e s ponse
YOU'RE Fll'!JSHED.-NA11iAN S . MITCHEU.
but not e nough t o g o to the
l"opr. 1971'1 Ki nj( ~\·at ure !tll ~y ndic at• , lnt .
two lev~ Today, m ost e x ·

Rutland '

reSponds one spade. A rew
South players would raise to
two spades . North would
struggle a lon f!: a nd either
m a ke it or go down one

two

• AK9 7 4 2
... Q9

z

••

A 5:1

' Q10

J&gt;AIJ.Y CRYPTOIIUOTE -

'

Ala n : " North ha s lus t
e ig ht hl g h·card p oi nL, . H e

+ QJ
+t o BJ
•A I064
•a s
SOU Tit

handle
40 Gurruned
label

.....

shows a t least ten points and
prom lse8 3 rebid.' '

KJ 64

WEST

Christian

'.

perts pla y tha t when r esp o n·
der goes lo the two level he

•' 65 54
... K J 732

39 Vase

'

a 4-card suit

NUHTII

- Free"

) ·.

BRIDGE

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

:rl Eastern

INE

~DOING ft

4:QO-M ister C ar t oon~ ; Edge of N igh t 13 ; My Three
Sons 4; For R lcher, For Poorer 1S; Me r v Griffin 6;
Gilligan' s Is . 8; Seso m e Sl . 20.33; Gomer Py le ,
USM C 10.4 :»-LIII Ie Rasca ls 3,15: G il ligan ' s Is. 4 ,
Brad y Bunch B, 10; Mary Tyler Moore 13 .
5 : 0G- H ~re Come t he Brides 3; Star Trek 4; Gun smoke
8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33 ; Hogan 's
Heroes 10 ; Eme r gen cy One 13 ; M y Three Sons 15.
5 :30-Ne ws 6; E lec . Co. 2D,3J ; M ary Ty le r Moore 10;
Hoga n' s He ( oe5 15 .
6 : ~News 3,.4,8, 10, 13, 15,· Zoom 20,33 .
6 :3o-NBC Ne ws 3.• . 15 : A BC Ne w s 13; Ca rol Bu rnett~
Frie nds 6: C BS News 8,10; O ve r Easy 20.
7:oo-Cross.WIIs 3,4; Liars Club 6; Pop Goes The
Count r y 8; Capllo l Beat 33 : News 10 ; To Tell T he
Truth 13 ; G ill iga n ' s Is. 1S; French Che f 20.

xu

•

·e

river
3 Doris Day
film : 1953

1

•••••
•••

·:

u ·Sacr ed
image
42 Che m istry
suffix
43 G a insay
DOWN
I Shove l or
table
2 Frenc h

.F~R:AN::K~&amp;:E:I:lN=I=E--~------------------------------------------------------------

12 and 15 ft. width Carpet .
rubber back .

742-2211

c hange
15 Late Mr.

Onassis

MA GGIES UPHOlSTERY . Relmis h.'
re up ho lstery ,
re bu il d ing .
Beautif ul se le ct1on of m('lte rial
ond vinyls. Free es timate. Te L
742-2852 . lo&lt;:ot ion: Sole rn
Cente r.

Reg.

GINO'S
OF MASON

.'
'

SALES AND SERVICE
11·9 -tf c

NICI NSKY ELECT RI C Se rvk e .•
Rutland , O hio . 742·3092

NOW OPEN

..

8 Tipple
9 P opey e 's

300 Main 51.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Pomeroy 992·6282
or 992-626J
8A. M. to4 : 30P .M.

PUlliNS EXCAVATIN G. Co mple te
-Serv1ce. Phone 97.2-2478.

-

EXILE MENACE TYPIS T
Answer: What dad was looking forward t o after
sonny Hnlehed playing his tittle place A UnLE PEACE

chec ks p1yable to Newspapo!trbooks.

.
BRADFORD , Auctioneer'- Com·
ple te Se rvice . Phone q49· 2187
or 949· 2000. Raci ne . Ohio , Cri ll
Brad ford.

I J umbles: FLAME

NEW - JU ST OFF PRESS! JUMB LE BOOK 111 wllt'l1 10 puulas Ill l VIII·
able tor S1 .35 pos tpaid from Ju mbl e, c/o this newspiPer, P.O. Boll 34,
Norwood, N.J. 07648. Include yoUr name, addreaa, zip code 1nd m1kfl

Jack's Septic
Tank Service
Bo)(

992,7608

l2Jimo

SEPTIC TANK •..
CLEANING •

TUESDAY . JANUARY 11. lt11
5 :• 5-Farm Report 13; 5 : ~ PT L Cl ub 13 ; 6 :00-PTL
l.. lub 15.
6 :2l-Concerns &amp; Comm e nts 10 ; ' :3G-Foc us on
Columbus _.; News 6; 6 :4s-Mor n lng Report 3;6; 50-Good Morn ing, esl
6 :50-Good Morn ing. West Vl rg ln lo 13; 6 :5S-Ch uc k
While Reports 10; News 13.
·
7: oo-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning America 6. 13; CBS
News 8; Bullwinkle 10.
7:30-Schoolles 10; 8 :00-Copt . Ko ngo roo I , 10; Se .. me
St. 33 .
9 :00-Merv G rlt fln 3; Ph il Donohue 4,13.15: Edge of
Nlgh16; Family Afla lr 8: Ma tc h Game 10. •
9 :30-Emergenc y One 6; Andy Grltfllh 8; F a mily
Atfalr 10.
tO : DO-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,15; Joke r ' s Wild 10 ; Nol Fo r
Women Only ll.
10 :3Q-Hollywood Squares 3, 4.15: Andy Grltf ll h 6;
Price Is Right 8,10: Rick Fauc heux 13 .
11:00-Whoe l ot Fortu ne 3,4, 15: Happy Doys 6.13.
11 :3o-Knockout 3, 15 ; Family Feud 6,13 ; Partridge
Family -. Love or Ute 8, 10; Se~m e St. 20;
Mic r o bes &amp; Men 33 ; 11 :55-CBS News 8; Loving
Free 10 .
12:00-New scenter 3; S20.000 Pyramid 13: Ne ws 4,6, 10;
To Say The Least 15: Gambit B.
t2 :3Q-Ryan ' s Hope6,13 ; Bob Braun 4; Gong Show 15:
Searc h for Tomorrow 8, 10; E lee. Co. 33.
1 :QO-Fo,. R ic her , For Poorer J ; All My Children 6. 13 ;
News 8; Young &amp; the Rest le s s 10; Not For Wome n
Only 15.
, l:JQ-Oays of Our Lives J, A, lS ; A s The World Turns
B,lO; 2:oo-One life to Ll lve 6,13; 2:31)- 0oc tors
3,4, 15; Gu iding Ligh t 8, 10.
J :CIO-A nother Wor ld 3,4, 15; Gene-ral Hospital 6, 13 ;
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
J :3o-A fl In T he F a mily B, 10; CoM ur:n e r Survival Kit
20.

.•,

•:

!

t ••••••••••••••••••••••••
~.
.

S~ndtcate,lnc ,

OOPS! SORRY, M~AM !
I GUESS I OOZED
OFF FOR A SECOND .

W'ELL, BACK
TO REALIT'r'!

TH'

HOUSE ONCET IN A WHILE

�•
4

10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Mondlly, Jan. t6, t978

No injuries in
5 fenderhenders
No one was injured in five
minor tralfic accidents investigated over the weekend
b)' the Gallia-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol.
David A. Freeman, 23,
Oteshire, was in an accident
at 4 p.m. Saturday on SR 554,
one and fi ve tenths miles east
of CR 30. Freeman, going
west, lost control gf his lourwheel drive vehicle which ran
off the right side of the road
into a ditch and overturned.
There
w~s
moderate
damage.
Leslie R. Hayman. J8, Rt. 1,
Middleport, was cited to
Gallipolis Municipal Court
for failure to stop within the
assured clear distance
following an accident at 7:05
p.m. on SR 7, seven tenths of
a m1le north of the Gaiha
County line The Hayman car

,_________"'1
1

NOW OPEN

GINO'S
OF MASON
PHONE 773-553b

HOSPITAL NEWS

:

Mrs .

Richard

Caldwell .and daughter,
Nancy Downard, Mrs. James
Fraley and son, Sandra
Hamilton, Jessia Hughes,
Anna Jenkins, Kenneth
Matten III, David McDaniel,
Clara McMaster, Amanda
Mooney,
Earl Naylor,
Catherine Poetker, John
Rhodes Sr ., Mrs. Allan Riffey
and
daughter,
Bobbi
Warrington.
Births Jan. 15
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Edwards. daughter, Wellston;
Mt. and Mrs. Terrence
Fortner, daughter, Oak Hill;
Mr. and Mrs Gregory
Stalnaker, son, Pt. Pleasant.

Board will

It' s natural to feel guilty about putting off a planned savings
program . But the hardest.part is beginning. We understand how
pfes.su~e can b~tld up when you're the one respon'sible for your
family s financial secur tly. Regardless of your income or goal,
Farmers Bank has a savtngs plan to help relieve the tension . See us.
You ' ll sleep better .
_,

Farmers Bank
I'OMEROY , OHIO
1 $ L

'40.000 MaXImum Insu rance For Each Oepos1tor
Member Federal Depos1l Insurance Corporation

Special of the Week

ALL BEEF MEXICAN

BURRITTO
•
49~

Reg. 9Sc SPECIAL
PRICE
.

This spec:i' Iis oHer,cl to you to acquaint you with
the goodness and economy of . our homemade

'kxican food .
No limit to quantity of purchase . Offer good tor

Drive-In .,. C.rry-Oul Service pn1y.

(Continued from paRe I)
proved for the board manual.
Finance and Bu&lt;lget
Committee - Jim Hill, to
monitor financial matters
pertainin g to the school
system and develop and
present to the board specific
recommendations pertalning
to financial matters.
Cafeteria · Committee David Carnian, to develop
policies and procedures for
recommendations to the
board oriented towards
providing cost effective and
efficient cafeterl~ systems.
Housekeeping Committee
-Dick Cremeens, to develop
recommended board policy
and actions pertaining to the
housekeepmg functions .
Public Relations and
Commumcations - David
Carman, to improve the
internal and public com·
munications of the school
system, to increase the m~
ternel effectiveness of the
administration, to inform the
pubhc, and to improve the
public image of the school
system.
Maintenance Committee Dick Cremeens, to develop
recommended board policy
and actions pertaining to the
maintenance functions in the
school system.
Personnel Committee Jim Blevins, to develop
"policy
and
system
• parameters" in the areas of
personnel management.
Transportation Committee
- David Cannan, to develop
recommended board policy to
improve the effectiveness of
the transportation system.
Equipment Committee Dick Cremeens, to monitor
and develop a board policy
pertaining to the purchase
and control over board-owned
equipment.
Curriculum and Ac·
credltation-Commltlee- Jim
Hill, to invelll.lgate and assess
deficiencle~~ in curriculum,
particularly as they threaten
accteditatlon, and develop
and present to the board
specific
recommendations
· for elimination of any
deficiencies:

-~

Area Deaths

Vetuans Memorial Hospital Pozzie, Gallipolls; Jan . 14, a
sop to Mr. and Mrs. Hubert I
Saturday Admissions • Jessie Sansbury, Middleport; Settle, Racine ; Jan. 15, a
ALMAMPAMPOURAs'
Mild ted Tubbs, Pomeroy; daughter to Mr. and Mrs.
Alma Fr'ancls Mitchell
Mpampocras. 56, a re~dent
Robert Painter, Bidwell.
Sara Curtis, Middleport.
slid into the left side of a
of Wilmington, Del . ana··•
Saturday Discharges former resident of Vlnto'n,
Hotrer Medlrat Center
vehicle operated by Susan C. Karl Grueser, Jesse Swan,
died Sunday at 5 a. m. In
Davey, 26, Point Pleasanl. Timothy Hayden , Steven
Discharge• Jao.l3
Licking County Hospital ,
There was minor damage . Triplett.
Mrs. Philip Blazer and Newark,
Ohio, follow ing an
Ro~er D. George, 22,
Carry
Blanken·
daughter
,
extended
illness.
Sunday AdmiSSIOns - Ada
Gallipolis, was charged with McHaffie, Middleport ; ship, Linda Bonecutter,
She was born Oct. 17, 1921.
an unsafe vehicle following Carrie Deem, Racine; Judith Merrill Brown, Virginia in Vinton . daughter of the
late James H. M itchell and
an accident at 12:45 p.m. on
Crow, Middleport; Dwight Burke, Phillip Curry, Paul Katie Woodrum Mitchell
F1fth Ave. in Kanauga. The Sayre; New Haven; Mcihael Dillin II, Judith Drummond, Wallace.
George car struck a vehicle
She was preceded In death
Heck, Pomeroy; Alice Jodeile Edwards, Glenna
owned by Debra G. Moore, 20, Kennedy, Rutland ; Emogene Frey, Jason Friend, Mrs. by her first husband, Wallac!
Sheets 1n 1974. One son surKamiuga.
Simms, Langsville ; Hazel Jimmy Hale and son, vives this union. Buell F.
Tamera Lee Smith, t8, Rt. Lynch, Athens.
Clarence
Hall,
James Sheets, Fort Deposit, Del
3, Gallipolis, was charged
Heaton
,
Mrs.
Michael
Little &lt;Xte son and one daughter
Sunday Discharges .:..
with assured clear distance Paula Hysell, Jeffrey Miller, and
James preceded her in death. Three
daughter,
suryive .
following an accident at 3:55 Darlene Good.
McGoon, Velma Parsons, grandchildren
Brothers and s1sters surp.m . Sunday on SR 7, one
Mrs. Daniel Polcyn and son, vivi ng are : Earl Mitchell,
mile south ol US 35. The
Mrs. Alvis Pollard daughter, Florida ; John and James
PLEASANT VALLEY
patrol sa1d the Smith vehicle
Clarence Ramey, Robert Mitchell, Newark ; Mrs . Irene
Shronk and Mrs. Margaret
struck the · rear end of a car
Dis.cha rged : Mildred Riter, Gertrude Roush, Roy McCroskey,
also of Newark
operated by James E. Ramey, Point Pleasant; Mrs. Sherrill, Karen Spencer, and Mrs . Thelma Linton.
Baldwin, 48, Rt . 2, Gallipolis. t;:arl Fruth, Point Pleasant; Vance Thornton, Willie Martinsburg, W. Va .
Funeral services will be
A deer was killed m an Mrs. Claude· Thornton, Leon; Vanness, Tera Wallis, Paul
1, p m. Tuesday -.t the
accident at 6:40p.m. Sunday Naomi Call , Point Pleasant ; Williams, Charles Verian Jr. held
McCoy -Moore Funeral Home
on SR 7, nine tenths ol a mile Okey VanMeter Jr ., Mason ;
Births Jan. 13
v;tth Rev. Noble Russell
north of SR 248 in Meigs Mrs. Albert Rhodes, Point
Mr. and Mrs. Jon Kloes, officiating . Burial will be fn
County. The patrol said the
Pleasant ; Clinton Chandler, daughter, Pomeroy; Mr. and Morgan Center Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
ammal ran mto the path of a Clendenin ; Mrs. Wilham Mrs. Wilham Metzler, son, funeral
home from 6 unt11 9
car driven by James M. Newe ll , Southside ; Leona Oak Hill; Mr. and Mrs. Von p.m . today
Farley, 35, Marietta .
Jones, Hender son; Paula Womeldorf, son, Wellston .
CARRIE STEWART
Roush, Point Pleasant; Mrs.
Discharges Jan. 14
Carrie E. Stewart, 73,
Wilham
Bums,
Rio
Grande;
Sharon
Barnett,
Hulda
HILOTEMPS
11271f2
Second
Ave .,
NEW YORK (UPII.- The Eddie Russell , Gallipolis; Brown, Maude Butcher, Gallipolis, died at 1: 45 p.m.
highest temperature reported Joseph VanSickle, Point Karen Chattin, Mrs. James Sunday in the Holzer Medical
Center following a brief
Sunday to the National Pleasant ; Darrin Carter, Christian and daughter, lll
ness . She retired from the
Weather Service, exclutling Pomt Pleasant; James Pore·, Virginia Coburn, Fr1,m k GSI Dec . 31, 1975 after
West
Columbia
;
Yvonne
Conley, Ruby Ferris, Debra working there- 33 years
Alaska and Hawaii, was 77
She was born Oct. 27, 1904,
Fortner, Theodore Frey,
degrees at Mca llen, Texas. Wright, Cheshire.
daughter
of the late Ira
Births:
Jan
.
13,
a
daughter
Sandra Gillispie, William
Today 's low was 32 degrees
Deckard and Rose Bugg . Her
and
son
to
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Paul
HoWell
Sr.,
Grace
Jones,
below zero at Williston, N. D.
husband, Floyd A. Stewart
Mrs. Davie Kearns and d•ed Sept. 13, 1931.
Survivors
incluQe
a
daughter, Mamie Uoyd, Etta
Luikart , Kenneth Markin , daughter, Mrs fV\ary Wallis
Gallipolis ; three grandKatie Mayes , Heber Mc- of
sons, Jerry, Robert; and
Clung, Oneida Mullens, Stephen Wallis , all of
Clifford Nichols, Recie Oiler, Gallipolis; a brother , MaPJIM
Sandra Roach, Vicki Sawyer, Deckard, Gallipolis; three
Mrs Belva Smith,
James
Snyder,
Doris sisters,
Gallifolis; Mrs . Charles
stapleton, Thomas Thornton, !Gall Reed and Mrs . Wilbur
Elizabeth Weich, Kelly (Genevieve) Reed, both of
Anr Arbor , Mich .
Wilson .
She was a member of the
Births Jan. 11
First Church of God on
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Colvin, GarfieiQ Ave.
Funeral services will be
daughter, Rodney; Mr. and
Mrs .
Charles
Walton , held at 1 p. m . Wednesday
from the Waugh-Halley-Wood
daughter, Vinton.
Funeral Home with Rev
Discharges Jan. 15
Chalmers Conley officiating.
Sharon Bailey, Emma Burial wilt be In Mound Hill
Brown,

t

.---------------------,----1

Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9
p. m. Tuesday -

JAMES CHAPMAN. JR.
Funeral services were held
this afternoon for James
Cooper Chapman, Jr.. twoday old son of James and
Beverly Johnson Chapman.
The
infant
died
in
University
Hospital
in
Columbus Saturday morning .
Bes1des the parents, the
infant is survived by one
sis1er, Tammy. Paternal
grandmother is Mrs. Gypsie
Chapman , Miller, Ohio.
Maternal grandmother is
Mrs. Margaret Johnsoh ,
Gallipolis. Several aunts and
uncles survive.
Services were under the ,
arrangements of WilliS
Funeral Home with Rev.
Kenneth Sanders officiating.
Burial was in Victory
Cemetery

I

grandchildren .
Four brothers survive :

Jake Cline, West Jefferson,

Ohio ; Morgan and Hubert,

Inez. Ky .; Bill, Dover Del.

Four sisters survive : Mrs.
Opal Preece , Mrs . Don

(Katherine) Cline, Inez, Ky.;
Mrs . Delbert (Hatl}e Ward,
Willlam•porl . Ky. ; Mrs .

Thurman (Ora) Butcher ,
Columbus.
Funeral ser~Jices will be
l'leld at 1p.m . Thursday at tl'le

Waugh -Halley-Wood Funeral

Home, the Rev Monte Sheets
officiating , and burial wi ll be
in Rldgelawn Cemetery,
Mercerville . Friends may
call 3 5 and 7-9 p.m. Wednesday at tl'le funeral home

a-t

WADE LOUKS
John Wade Louks, 87, died

4 p .m . Saturday at
Pinecrest Care Center. He
had been ill a couple of years .
His home was at 1108 Teodora
Ave.
A railroader for nearly a
half-century , Wade Louks .
went fa work as a young man
for tt)e Hocking Valley
Railroad and then for the C &amp;
0, working principally out of
Columbus where he married
the daughter
Vio la
Westlake - of a Columbus
mayor.
Th~y
wed
in
Delaware, Ohto, March 19,
1913, and ca me to Gallipolis
tn 1955, when he retired . She

died Dec.
He was

T~ledo

16, 1961.

tra!n~aster

d lvtston

of

of tl)e
the

rculroad .
He was an active member
of Kinsman Lodge 617, F &amp; A
M ; . Aladdin
Temple ; ·
Galllpolts Shrine Club ; and
the Scottish Rite.
He was born Oct. 1890, at
Addison, the only child of
John W. Louks and Clara E.
Fisher Louk.s
.
, He and hts w1fe are sur'iiJved by Qnly one son , Robert
Louks,
Syracuse ;
four
grandchildren ; Si)( great grandchlh;iren .
friend~ may ~all , after 7
thts evenmg at Millers Home
for Funerals. where last rites
will be held at 2 Tuesday
af1ernoon , the Re&lt;J. Alfred
Holley officiatl_ng, and intermen t will be •n Gravel Hill
Cemetery, Cheshire .
Pallbearers will be James
Louks, Roy Armes. Jr., Dean
Jones, Robert Taylor, C~rl
Woods, and Emerson Corbm.

LAWRENCE SMELTZER
• Lawrence Elan Smeltzer,
84, died at 6 a.m. Sunday at
the home he built him self on
SR 588 w~th sliCe rule and
squares he was a
mathema tiel an who taught
math for 40 years, retlnng in
1955.

He had been bedfast for

seven years .
Bicyclist. boxer , swimmer,
and tennis player - these
were actlvl1 1es which brought
him local fame. Not in frequently he rode his bicycle
to Columbus and back .
Born in Gallia County May
7, 1893, he was one of three
children of Peter and Addie

News •• in Briefs

Tim Glaze readyfoi-3800 mile hike

(Cootinuod hun Pice 1)
General Benjamin ClvUeW said today . quelll.lonlng ol.
mllllonalre Toogsun Park has been a useful uerc!Je for
obtaining facts concerning a Korean payoff scamal In
Washington . "The cooperative attitude of the Korean govern•
ment has been excellent," he said.
·
ClvUetll said It will take about 70 hours to conclude the
questioning in Seoul. ''I will have no comment on Mr. Park's
testimony in detail because that's a maller of confidentiality
and lt· ls importllnl lor mimy reasons to preserve that
confidentiality," be said.

By Bob Hoelllcll
Rockford, IU., who made the. trek with Glare.
different.''
Becbtrand and Glaze met originaUy on tbe Appalachian
Thls iJ what Tim Glare, son rl Mrs. Belva G~ r# Trail In 1973 and oooq began malting plans for the walk from
Pomeroy, Ia daring to do and he's enjoying every monent ol. it. Mexico to Canada. Thill trip had been a loog-tlme dream for
A school fl. pharmacy student at Ohio Slate University Glaze.
.
with only a couple more quarters to finlah, Tim has turned his
Becltstrand iJ a fast walker and 1001elimes aloog the trip
41

Edwards Smeltzer, who
started the Farmers Hotel
where the VFW hall now Is on
Th1rd
Ave .
Lawrence
Smel1zer's brother Meade
wl'lo died In Florida als~
operated t he Farmers' Hotel
after severa l years as sheriff
of Logan County, W Va :
Their sister Genevieve /lllrs Edward Harrison also died in Florida.
Lawrence Smeltzer was life
squad at the old public beach

at the toot of Cedar St. He

spent a year 1n France,
taught in the Gall ia Count(.
schools prior to World War ,
and became a war veteran In

1917-18.

Asont)yaformermarrlage
was kllled In an airplane
crash after World War 11
Surv ivors lnclude 'hls widow
Betty Champer, whom h~
married In 1932; a step-son 1
Jack Frazier, Grove City,
Ohio ; and a step-dauqhter,
Mary Bloomberg, Carson
City, M lch
Lawrence Smeltzer was
graduated
from
Gallla
Academy High School , wl'lere
most of his math teaching
was done, and Rio Grande
College ; he attended Ohio
Universit, . He was a
member o the Gallla County
R e t i red
Teachers
Association .
Services will be held at 2
p.m. Wednesday at Miller's
Home for Funerals, the Rev .
Charles Lusher offlclaflng,
and bunal will be in Mound
Hill Cemetery . Friends may
call a~ter 7 Tuesday evening
at Miller's.
Pallbearers will be Jack
Frazier, Christ Artus, Stan

Evans,

Kimball

Suiter ,

Delmar Gingerich, and
Charles Beard . Honorary
pallbearer will be Dr. Edwin
E Higgins.

HAZEL WOODS
Mrs. Hazel Woods , a
resident of Third Ave ,

Gallipolis, died at 10 a.m.

today at the home of her
daugh1er, Mrs. Jim B~tz .
Arrangements wil"to be
announced by the WaughHalley-Wood Funeral Home.

the proceedings of a short
session Saturday.
About
188,000
UMW
members walked off the job
last Dec. 6 when their con·
tracts expired. Since then,
some western mmers have
reached settlements and
about 160,000 UMW members
remain on strikt!'
The nation's coalfields
were quiet during the
weekend.
In Indiana, 32 members of
the Pro~ve Coal Miners
Union were to return to work:·
today at the Center Poin~ ·
Mine near Brazil. No trouble
was .reported at the mine,
which has been picketed by ·
UMW members. Sporadic
violence has occurred in
southwestern Indiana during .
the strike.
'

to Canada he aild Glare would not see each other for several
houra at a time. However, thlngll Sot a bit shaky iii' the High •
Sierras, whal with breaking tlu'oulth snbw to the waist and
higher and hearing water running underneath. The hlldng pair
stayed closer during these times.
Struggling sometimes to keeP' afoot burns up a lot of
energy, Tiin reports, alld the 55 pound pack of fond and
suppHes sometimes gets mucb beavier. Only the bare
necessities are carried. There's no change of clothing Included
In the pack. Glaze lost 75 pounds during the hike to Canada
which lasted 1~2days. Food - the freeze dried variety used by
back packers - was sent by mail to towns along the route by
aren't you?
Beckstrand's parents. A·small lent provided sheller and there
If you have any doubt let me forge ahead to point out was a small stove to provide hot water for making the freeze
that the la.st hike Tlm was on was a total of 2,557 miles -from dried food for meals.
Mexico to Canada.
Sixteen miles is considered a good daily distance by
Hlldng ls many limes a lonely way of We. During his last veteran bikers. However, Glaze and Beckstrand averaged
jaunt;Tim ooce went for 580 miles seeing only two people. about 7D miles a day. It was vital to get to Canada before
These do not "!"''I IU.. !!lklng partner, Tom Beckstrand, winter set in.
U110n C.WlDietion oLthe Ioiii!. IQn• walk Tim vi&lt;ilf'd

wen.

State Highway Patrolman
Jlm Sheets was the guest
speaker at the first meeting
of the year of the Meigs
County React Team held
recently.
Sheets discussed several
subjects including safety and
monitoring of citizens band
Guy
Hysell,
radios .
president, presided .
Membership for 1978 Is 49, an
increase of 28 over 1977, with
16 pending.
"HELP" signs were
discussed to belp stranded
motorists
along
the
highways. The HELP. signs
would be sold at a reasonable
price. A discussion on coffee
breaks, rummage and bake
sales was beld.
Doopa Stewart was elected
team newspaper reporter and
Charles Williams, Rutland, to
. keep Team log records.

NO. 192

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

By United PressiDternallonal
WASHINGroN- CHRISTMAS MAIL reached a record
high of 8.5 billion pieces thls season but was handled just as
fast as a year ago and at lower cost to tbe government, says
Postmaster General Benjamin Bailar.
Boilar said Monday the Postal Ser11ce achiO\'ed thls
record for the period from Dec. 3 through Dec. 30 In spite of
poor weather and budget limits . .Nationwide stailsUcs show
overnight delll'llry performance was equal to that of 1976.
Preliminary ligures show revenue from domestic mail for tbe
period was up 6 percent, Bailar said.
"Without the o1•erwhei!Ding dedication of our employees
we could not ha1•e handled this' record volume while at tbe
same time reducing work hours by I percent," Bailar said in-a
statement.
SAN JUAN, ARGENTINA- A STRONG EARTHQUAKE
shook Argentina's Andean range and western pampas thls
morning, causing panic among resideniB but no reported
injuries or damages.
·
The epicenter of the quake, which hit 8 on the 12-point
Mercalllscale at 8:33a.m. (6:33a.m. EST), was about 50 miles
east of San Juan, the prm&gt;lnclni capital hardest hit by a major
tremor last No\'. 23.

from page I)
to be first in line to pay ber
last respects.

SHREVEPORT, LA.- A WOMAN WHO CLAIMED to
have been married to the late oil tycoon H. L. HWII has
accepted a reported $7.5 millton out-of-court settlement and
dropped her suit seeking a share of his estate.
The settlement was aceepted Monday by Franta Tye Lee,
73, of Atlanta, wbo said she married Hunt in 1925 and remained
his wife Willi 1934 when she learned he had another family
H\~g in Arkansas. Mrs. Lee 'and her lawyers refused to
• &lt;liBcll!s the amount of the settlement, but the Shreveport
Times today, quoting unnamed sources, said she settled for
$7.5 million, half of Hunt's worth in 1945, the year Mrs. Lee
agreed to a $200,000 settlement and a promise that ber
marriage be recognized In Hunt's will.

DOY HIGGINBOTHAM
Higginbotham ,
56, o Tampa, Fla .. who died

Saturday as his residence,
was born Oct . 28, 1921. He was
preceded 1n death by a son,
Doy Jr. He was a member of

the World Wide Church of

God tn Tampa

Mr.

Higginbotham

ROME - PRESIDENT GIOVANNI LEONE Is officially
beginning the ritual of seeking -Italy's 40th post-FasciSt era
lll'emier, but behind-the-scenes talks already are Wlderway to
find a formula to hold the Communlsta at bay. The
Communists, led by party secretary Enilco Berlinguer,
triggered the resignation Monday of Washington-backed
Olristlan Democratic Premier Glulio Andreotti by demanding
seats In an emergencY. government to fight Italy's mounting
Wlemployment, continued inflation and street \1olence.
For 17monthsand 17days, the blggestConununlatparty In
the West had allowed Andreotti to r11le by not voting him down.
Then they, the thirckanklng Sociallsta and other smaller
parties acthoely backed in emergency program to pull Italy
out of the quagmire, demanding the ultimate reward of cabinet
seats.
Now the problem is to find a comlll'om!Je that will save the
face of both the Olrlstian Democrats and the Communists and
avert a ganeral election, which all parties agree would be
dlsastro111 at tills time.

Is

survived by his wife, Dorothy
Pauline ; his paren1s, Enos
and Stella Smith Higg inbotham; three sons, Paul and

Keith, Mansfield, Ohio, and

Roger,
Tampa ;
two
daughters , Mrs . Charles
(louise) Dulaney, Shilo, Oh1o

and Mrs . Robert (Gloria)
Mabe of Mansfield : two

sisters, lona Ross of Albany,

Ohio and Texle Shuttleworth;

two brothers, Coy, Albany,
and Cody, Columbus ; nine
grandchildren, - and several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral ser'llces will be
Wednesday at 1 p.m. at

Ewing Chapel. Burial wi ll be ·

In Letart Falls Cemetery.
Friends will be received at
the funeral home after 7 this
evemng .

79, of 557 Princeton Ave.,
Barberton , Ohio, formerly of

NEWPORT, KY. - FIRE RAGED THROUGH a
congested quarter-block of downtown Newport Monday,
destroying several businesses.
Avacant two«ory buildlng,the Public Finance Corp., and
a te!O\'islon shop were ruined. A building housing a clothing
store and an American Legion hall also was hit by the fire . The
second and third floors were destroyed.

She Is survived by three
sons, Roll in 0 ., Thomas A.,
and Jerry P ., 10 grandchildren and three greaf.
grandchildren.
Funeral services will be

Postponed, cancelled

GLADYS SNOWBALL
Gladys Shirley Snowball,
Meigs County, died Sunday
following a short illness. Mrs.
Snowball was born May :15,
• 1898 at Chillicothe.

Wednesday at 1 p.m. at the
Paul L. Mills Funerai .Home

A special meeting of
Pomeroy Lodge 164, F&amp;AM,
scheduled for Tuesday
evening has been postponed.

30%

in Barberton . Burial will be In
Greenlawn Memorial Park.

EOGAR 'CLINE
Edgar Cline. 67, Rt. 1,
Crown City. died at 6:45p.m.
months'
health.

period of falling

He was a retired employee
of the C &amp; 0 railroad at
Huntington and Russell, Ky .
He also farmed .
He was born Dec . 131 1910,

at Inez, Ky .. to William and

Genoa Oa&lt;J1s Cline. His wife,

the former Mabel Sheets,

survives ; he and she were
mllrrled IY.arch 16, 1934.
Three daugl::lfers survlv~ :

Mrs . Raymond (Pauline)
Sheets

and

Mrs.

Karl

(Barharal Stolz, COiumbu"
and IV\rs . Ray (Marilyn)
Jones, Crown City; there Is a

son, Eddy Cline, Crown City.
There

are

also

four

Hurry
Entire stock reduced!
Pantcoats, fur-trimmed coats,
stonn coats, fake furs and more!
AU sizes!
\

tonight are cancelled.
Conway Diet classes In
Pomeroy, Athens and Point
Pleasant cancelled this week.

The Chester PTA bas
cancelled a regular meeting
scheduled for this evening.

Sunday at Holzer Medical
Center after a several

,

WOMEN'S READY·TO·WEAR. 2ND FLOOR

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
!.

•

TUESDAY, JANUARY 17, 1978

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TIM GLAZE , SON o~· Mrs. Belva Gluze, Pomeroy,
completed a 2,557 mile hiking trip in 1976, from Mexico lo
Canada, and this week will move on to Florida to begin
what will be a 3,800 mile trek .

Ohio buried by snow, more coming

(Co~lillued

Dor O'Dell

coai

•

Thousands

ROY

liOllle ready ca~ together.
Tim came to Pomeroy and visited for several days with
relatives and friends and tbls week will move on to Florida
wbere he will begin another hike from about 80 miles west of
Miami and then will go onto the Appalacblan Trall In Georgia
to walk that trail, a combined dlslance r# about 3,800 miles.
lnoldnR ahead, Tim wants also to walk the Continental Divide
Trail before he gives It all up. Tim wW be26thismonth.
With his adventures, Tim iJ beglnlnnlng to sUr up a bit of
Interest from companies who manufacture hiking clothing
booL'I, food and equipment. In fact, his next trip will really
him practically nothing beCause ettnpanles are Interested in
his testing various articles for hikers for them.
So far, Tim has encountered no seriOU8 lllnesaes or
accidents on his trips which began with "shorter hauls" back
in 1970. He stresses the necesalty of good mental attitudes for
long distance hiking. He has only the highest praise lor other
hikers whom he has met on ·the traU. He keeps in touch with
many of them.
,
Yes- Tim Glaze iJ "daring to be different."

en tine
VOL. XXVIII

speaker at
React meeting

relatives In California and then went to ltockford, IU., to show

slides of the trip to hla hiking partner. WhUe in Rockford he
secured a good job at a bakery - a prolesalon he learned while
working and attendine collegeat the tw'i\e time In Columbus and oo he stayed on in Rockford l!fllil thls month In order to get

"

Pit. Sheets

ELBERFELDS IN

be

back on the d.,...oom for a while.
Tim Ia a "hiker" or a "backpacker" these days and I don't
mean short Inks around a couple ol. blocks . Hls hikee are the
real profesalonal thing.
And what d- Tim expect lfl!lll doing his "thing"?
Well- Tlnl hopes his hiking experiences and the photos be
lakes on the jaunts will be his steppq stone Into joumallsm
and photocrapby. He also plans a book about his experiences.
n yoo're the type who objects to walkln8 a block to do a bit
of shopping or to take care of some business, just remember
things could be worse . You could be a professional hiker, and
peraonally I'm lor letting Tlm have my spot In that limelight,

Coal talks ·resumed
United Pres• International
Representatives of the
United Mine Workers and the
Bituminous Coal Operators
Association resumed talks
today in Washington almed at
ending the nationwide soft
coal strike.
Neither side commented on

Dare to

Special
meeting
of
Pomeroy Chapter 80 Wed·
nesday. Work in past master
The auxWary meeting of . and , the mark master
the Rutland Fire Department degrees.
has been cancelled for this
evening.
The Wednesday meeting of
the Middleport Literary Club
The January meeting of has been canceUed due to the
Salisbury PTO scheduled for weather.
this evening has been can·
celled.
There will be no' meeting of
the Magnolia Club Thursday
The Southern Junior High night as earlier announced.
PTO meeting scheduled .for
Wednesday night has been
Meeting of the Eplacopal
cancelled.
Church Women scheduled to
be held 'Thursday has been
The baton • gymnastics cancelled.
"
., C~.,¥ses of Gloria Wallace lor
'

••

'·

United Press International
New snow blew into Ohio
Monday and continued across
the state today with up to six
more inches of snow forecast
for sections of the Buckeye
State. Another storm is
fonrung and may move into
Ohio Thursday.
The snow forced the closing
of many schools throughout
the state and made dri1ing
hazardous in all areas. A
cara,•an of
freighters
escorted by Coast Guard ice
breakers continued to plough
through Lake Erie.
Gov. James A. Rhodes
ordered a contingent of 15
Ohio National Guardsmen
into the Pomeroy area of
Meigs County to aid in snow
removal projects."
The National Weather
Senice has Issued hea\oy
snow warnings for most of
Ohio today with the exception
of some extreme northern
counties, where travelers'
advisories are in effect.
Ohioans living in the northwest Inland, west Lake Erie
shore and east Lake Erie
shore areas may expect
between one and four inches
of new snow by tonight.

BOOKS TO STAY
OPEN ro FEB. 18
Real estate collection
boaka wiD be open for tax
payments untO Feb. 18,
Meigs County Treasurer
George Collins said today.
This Is an extension of lime
for residents to pay their
taxes.

Meigs High
launches its

Hall of Fame

There ls now a Meigs High
School Hall of Fame, thanks
to the work of the Meigs
Athletic Boosters, Charles
Hamilton, president, an·

Residents of west central,
central and southwestern
counties may receive up to
five inches of new snow by
tonight and up to six inches of
additional snow may fall in
northeast inland, east central
and southeastern Ohio
counties today.
Winds will become more
northerly today and increase
up to 30 miles per hour by this
afternoon in some areas
which means drh&gt;lng will
become el'en more hazardous
with l'isibility in some areas
· expeeted to drop to near zero
in blowing and drifting snow
before the day ends.
Snow was reported across
the state overnight and the
forecast calls lor that snow to
continue throughout the day.
The heaviest snowfall
. during the night was in
soQthern Ohio where more
than four mches of additional
accumulations were reported
at Cincinnati.
Dayton
reported receil•lng three
inches of new snow by early
today and Colwnbus and
Zanes\'ille both receil'lld two
inches of additional snow.
The low pressure system
responsible for the current

snow actil&gt;lty is now centered
over north-central
Mississippi and ls expected to
move northeastward today
reaching extreme western
Virginia by tonight.
The current snow actil•lty
will be pretty much o1•er by
early Wednesday along with
diminishing winds . But
colder air will be mol'ing into
Ohio tonight with lows
expeeted to dip to near zero in
northwestern counties and to
near 10 degri!es o1•er the rest
of the state.
And our snowy winter is not
yet over. The National
Weather Serl'ice says
another storm system has
already begun forming and
more snow may be moving
into southern Ohio by early
Thursday.
The Ohio extended forecast
for Thursday
through
Saturday calls for continued
cold weather, with snow each
day and high temperatures in
the upper 20s or the lol"er 30s
on Thursday and in the 20s on
Friday and
Saturday .
Overnight lows will be in the
teens.
The Franklin County
sheriff's office reported roads

in the Colwnbus area were
"'rery sUppery" with some
drifting.
"The roads are bad, aU
snow col'erect and slippery,"
said Muskingum County
sheriff's deputy Kevin
Bunting.
The Hamilton County
sheriff's office reported all
roads jn the Cincinnati area
as " \'ery sJippery" and
cautioned
against
unnecessary drhing.
A Montgomery County sheriff's deputy in Dayton de·
scribed road cooditions as
"miserable."
"Everything 's snowcovered and underneath that
it's ice COI'ered so driving is
miserable
this
really
morning," he said.
On Lake Erie, fi1•e
freighters escorted by
icebreakers got through the
Pelee pasaage Monday but
are approaching a bottleneck:
at the St. Mary's River near
Detroit, where the Coast
Guard reports about 20
freighters awaiting transit .
The ore carrier Adam E.
Cornelius is icebound at Ash·
tabula after dropping off a
load of ore.

Speech to test market
'

WASHINGroN (UPI) President Carter told House
Speaker Thomas O'Neill
h
1d
k
to d ay I e troub e sloe
market could measure the
impact of Carter's State of
the Union speech Thursday
night.
"We'llsee know how good a
· ls b
y what the
speech ll
market dlieil on Friday,"
'd H
d
w
Carter sat . e tol O'Ne
he ha d been up llince 5 a.m.
~;M
he
1
wor..;..,. ~ t speech, wh ch
is expected to outline Carter's
$25 billion tax reduction plan.
The While House meeting

was the ' first in a series lull of papers to Carter,
Carter
plans
with annarenlly In anticioation of
Democratic lawmakers this
setting goals and dales for
week to prepare for pro.,.arns the admlnlstratiort
le•lslatl\'e
action on such key hopes
e·
•
to complete In 1978.
issues as energy, the
The president, meanwhile,
economy, welfare reform and said Monday night if the
Panama Canal tre,at1011 are
taxes.
O'Neill prompted the
rejeeted there could be an
market comment when he attempt to disrupt the watertold Carter the slumping
way by- dissident
or
market "ls wailing to hear commWiist groups outside
what vou ha1•e got to say" In
'
t he
P a n a m a,n i a n
the nationally tele1•ised gol•ernment. But he pledged
address to a joint session of ' to defend the canal if that
Coogreos.
O'Neill carried an envelope
(Continued on page 10)
.

L
db
H
h
no~~~!~~ihecreationof " ast goo
ye to ump rey

the Hall is to honor out·
standing athletes that have
brought special attention to
themselves and Meigs High
School.
There are 17 inttlal in·
ductees this year, with a
maximum of seven per year
to follow. These first 17 will
be honored prior to the Meigs·
Wahama basketball game on
January 28. No matter what
year the nominee graduated,
he will be eligible In·
definitely. In other words, If a
nominee didn't make it this
year, he (or she) is still
eligible next year.
·
Thelinpartialselection was
made by tbree committees. A
selection committee had the
Hrst job of making initial
selections. 'The names were
then sent to an approval
committee, and finally to an
advisory committee lor final
approval.

By RICHARD McFARLAND

"Hubert,yourmernoryH!ts humanity."
our spirits just as yout
He recalled a deputy sheriff
presence did."
had told him Humpbrey was
Humphrey, 66, whose long "an A· I, OK cat."
battle against cancer touched
Uke Lincoln, Mondale said,
the nation's beart, asked a Humphrey "cannot be·
week before hls death that be separated lrmn the people ."
have a almple funeral "In the
Huaky men wiped their
spirit rl a celebration" with
eyes with handkerchiefs. But
no eulogies. Hls friends tried there also was laughter when
to follow his wiahes, but they Mondale and Pastor Calvin
couldn't keep from praising Didier of the House of Hope
him.
church joshed the senator a
Carter recalled a recent bit.
vlsit with Hwnphrey by a
Humpbrey "had time ror
fireside at Cilmp David. He everybody,whichwaswhyhe
said Humphrey had a was always late," Mondule
yearning for peace and said.
fought for the hungry, the
''The last time this church
poor, the minorities. "He 1"88
ever had a service thls long
the expression rl the good (two hours) was when Hubert
and dec~nt and peaceful himself was the preacher,"
attributes of'our nation."
the pastor said.
Carter recalled visiting tbe
Even1 Humphrey's widow,
memorial of ¥!1handaa .Muriel, smiled at times
Gandhi in India ani! reading Wring the ser;lces.
Gandhi's list rl the seven
The black choir of
greatest sins, including S.bathani Baptl&amp; Church of
''j)olitics without principle." , Mlnneapolls sang an exciting
"According to Gandhi's veraloo of "I'm Going Up
definltions," he said, "Hubert Yonder," with swinging
Applications are being Heahh Center.
the Humphrey was without plano and .drums. Had
accepted from persons who · Applications for
be
sin."
Humphrey been alive he
want training as babysltters. t 1n1n
ra
g
may
picked
up
at
Mondale
called
his
former
probably would have bounded
Claaoes will begin Monday,
Feb. e, 6:30p.m. to 8:30p.m. the Community Mental mentor and colleai!UC In tbe up the stairs to shake their
and continue each Monday al ~ealth Center, old Meigs . Senate "a apecl•l man in 8 hands.
S::ltapl, 238 West ipedaJ place." He referred to
Opera singer Robert
thole houra for seven
• omeroy or Humphrey's ''torrenla o1. en- Merrill aang "Ave Marla"
The "workshop" wW be at
phone 1182-2192. Application• lhu 18 ..
d "I
· tinullll
0)
.the Meigs Community Mental must be returned !If Jan. :!0.
• om an
mmense
(Coo 1 __ on Pll• 1
ST. PAUL, Minn. (UPI)The nation has said Its last
goodbye to its beloved Hubert
Horatio Humphrey, His final
tributes ended the way he
wanted -with a "celebration
of joy."
President Carter and VIce
President Walle&lt; Mondale
led Monday's series of
funeral eulogies .to the
"Happy
Warrior"
of
American politics, a senator
of almost 28 years, former
vice
president
and
presidential nominee. ·
Toda'y, the enthusiastic
man who loved Hfe so much
lay in a grave beneath two
oak trees in snow-covered
Lakewood Cemetery In
Minneapolis. But as Mondale
said In the two-hour service.
attended by 2,500 people ·at
House of fiope Presbyterian ·
Cl!urch:

Babysitter training offered

-Irs. s."::"f

Schools closed
again by snow
Me1gs Cou nt y School&lt;,
closed Monday in observdnce
of Martin Luther King Day,
remained closed toduy due tu
at least fnur Inches of additional snow wh1ch fell
overnight.
More snow was predicted
for today and it IS unknown
when sc hool s will be
reopened . Schools were open
only one day la;t week . Th e
Meigs-Welbton
busketbull
game is postponed.
Meantime , Pom er..&gt; Y
Mayor Cla rence Andrews
said 15 National Guardsmen
from the 216th Engineering
Battalion at Portsmouth
arrived Monduy mght with
several pieces of equipment
to help the commumty in
clea ring the snow.
The guardsmen will work
two sh1 fts - from B H.m to 5
p m. and from midnight to R
a.m. while in Pomeroy, Ow

Snow

St ops

legislation

Jl1MY III'

work (rom

nn dnl~ ht unUI murnin~ ttm;

evening in

dcar1n~

Muh1 St.

nnd r csldc.ni'Nim.~ nskt!tl nut t o

pnrk on tlw str eet duri.ng
th ese ho urs so thu t the
blearing cnn be fHcilitntcd.
Mayur Andrew s said l ht•
men urc Woddng In I he hill

areas lodHy in orclcr to free
rot:tds so thu t residents cH n
get out ll) purchw;c rood
supplies und get tu doctors.
·n1e gtwrd lws u jeep whkh
will be used )r• LI·anspol1
pcr~m H mw blc to get out o(
their ho m ~s ro,· rnedkalmd,
Mayor Anch uws :-·w id.

Guards unit
will help
clear snow
Pomeroy nm y get help rnr

' sever" I day~ in clcarin~ IIWIJY
/l)HIW in the town, Muyor
Cla ren ce Andrews su ld
Munday aflcrn onn Hftcr It

By LEE LEONARD
UP! Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio House.of
RepresentatiYes today was
forced to cancel a scheduled
11 a.m. floor scssioh because
a number of members were
unable to reach the staLe
Capitol because of the heaYy

snows.
A spokesman lor Hou.se
Speaker Vernal G. Rifle Jr ,
DNew Boston, said his office
receiYed telephone caUs from
members
In
Dayton,
Cincinnati and northeastern·
Ohio saying they were
snowbound.
Rille 's office said the bills
on the calendar would be
.postponed until Wednesday
and a ''skeleton" session
would be held today to take
care of routine buslness.
The office ol Senate Clerk
Wllliam H. Chavanne said it
was not yet decided whether
the scheduled 1:30 p.m .
Senate session would also be
cancelled .

Tax receipts up,
Retail sales tax receipts
were up abnost 20 percent in
December, 1977, compared to
December, 1976, wliile motor
vehicle sales tax receipts In
Meigs County were up 32.93
percent for the same month.
according to the report of
Mrs. Gertrude Donahey,
state tre85urer.
In December, 1976, retail
sales tax receipts ln the
county totaled $68,792 .40
while in December, 1977, the
receipts totaled $82,550.81 , an
increase of _$13 ,758.41. In
December , ~·1976, co unty
motQr vehicle sales tax
receipts
amounted
to
$27,402.12 while in December,
1977, receipts amounted .to
$36,425.67, an increase of
$9,023.55, the ~rt states.

::mid.

'J1tc m en will

was

a nn oun&lt;;cd

that

a

Nutinnu l Gut~ rd dctauhrnunt
is comin K to Pomeroy .
MH yur Antlrews ~m id he
contaded State llcp. 11on '
James Ht Proctorville Sunda y ', and indi cated thal Pomt•roy
needs help in snow cleuring.
'Ole town's only cinder truck
"threw u rnd" last Wt...'Ck Hnd
is m for rcpnlrs which will
t ak c a week or longer, Muyor
Andrews sa1d.
Mayor Andrews indit:nh:d
that the first tr u ~k and four
men frpm the 21Gt h En~l ne cr
Bn. of Lhe Ohio Natlonul
Guard left the Portsmouth
area at 3:30p.m . Monday •nd
that another unit with several
men would be coming to
Pomeroy to help later in the
evening . A grader and
backhoe will be brought In
from Chilli cothe by the
guard , Mayor And rews
stated.
The men may be In
Pomeroy some three or four
days if sno wfall reaches
predictions. the mayor said.
The men will stay at the
Meigs Inn and their food and
lodging will be at the guard's
expense. The village wilt
provide wf\atever fuel Is
needed to operate the
equipment, the mayor in·
dicated .
According to the United
Press, Gov . James . Rhudes
ordered the Guardsmen into
Pomeroy.
E-R CALLED OUT I
The Syracuse ER Squad
was called Monday at 10:30
a .m. for Maxine Darst,
Portland, who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
SESSION SET
The board of coun•
commissioners will meet in
special session Thursday,
Jan. 19, at 7 p.m. in the office
of the co~issioners. Ill.

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