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                  <text>8- The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-P001eroy, 0 .. ":"esday, Jan. ~4.1978

No serious injuries in spill
POINT PLEASANT _
· Wblle no serious Injuries
have resulted from the toxic
chemical spill Monday
morning in Point Pleasant,
Pleasant Valley Hospllal
reported that at least seven
people have been treated
there.
•·vera! of these people
"" admitted for ob·
were
servation . All are in
satisfactory .condition .
They
include
Point
Pleasant Volunteer Fireman
Junior Gillispie. zs, 2019 Short

' s m·
. New ••

St.; Albert Kelley, 72, Ar·
buckle, who was helping ~o
evacuate a brother on Ohio
St.; Patricia Condee. 31. 1410
Kanawha St .• Betty Van
Meter,39, 2106., ,North Main,
and National Guardsman
Matlhew Miller , 19, 2614
Garlield Ave.
·
Treated and later released
were Point PI easant C't
I Y
I, eonar d
Councilman
" Buster" Riffle. 42. 1805
Jefferson Ave .• and Point
Pleasant Fireman Gerald
Keams 22 2009 Maple Ave.
' '

Bn"e~s

.t:

(Continued from page 1)
Sixty entries were received, the bureau sajd Monday, but
more than two thirds were rejected because they were too
complicated would cost too much lo make, or bore the names
'-''VI'duals
' . The drink-off wi.II feature the 171inalisls mixing
Of """
candidatessuch as the Baja Bullet and the Pink Padre.
COLUMBUS - BOTH CHAMBERS OF THE omo
General As8embly hoped to begin a full week of work lDday,
barring further snowfall which kept most legislators stuck at
home lut week.
The Ohio Senate met Monday night with a bare quorum of
Its 33 member's . No roll call votes were held and the only
substantive business was a hearing after the floor session by
the Finance Committee on House-passed legislation boosting
the salary of the state's 620 judges beginning April I. The
Senate scheduled a 1:30 p.m. sesslon loday, 2., hours after tbe
House wu to begin its session .
WILMINGTON , omo - HOG PRODUCERS should
coosider joining the farmers ' strike " to reduce chances of a 33
percent drop in hog prices next winter," says an agricultural
economist. Dr. Donald Chaflln, chairman of Wilmington
College's agriculture department, said the buildup of hog
·breeding stock the last quarter of 1977 could cause prices to
drop to the low $30's per hundredweight by next winter. Recent
·
prices have been as high as f45 per hundredweight.
"Hog producers are responding to profitable prlces by
increasing produdion," said Chaflin. 11The. nation's ~ine
breeding stock invenlory on Dec. 1 was 8.8miJilon head. Th1s Is
9 percent higher than a year ago and could signal a glut on the
future market." Chaflln added the latest U. S. Agriculture
Department projection indicate hog prices might slip to about
$35 per hundredweigl)t by the spring.
COLUMBUS - OHIO HOUSE SPEAKER Vernal G. Riffe
Jr., D-New Boston, saying he does not want lo contribute to a
costly and bruising Democratic primary fight, bas taken
bimself out of this year's race for governor.
Acknowledlllng· it would require a massive electronic
media campaign to give him the recognition he would need to
win the nomination and election, Riffe aMounced Monday he ·
will seek re-election 1o an lith term in the House. Riffe's
withdrawal from consideration leaves Atlorncy General
William J . Brown !lie only bona fide conservative state-wide
figure within the Democtatic . ranks to. challenge Lt. Gov.
Richard F. Celeste for the gubernatorial norrunat1on next
June.-

'

.

Turner s .pow~r shored up
By WESLEY G. PlPPERT
WASffiNGTON (UP!) President Carter lDday gave
CIA Director Stansfield
Turner tighter control of the
nation's . intelligence
activities amid reporta the
Pentagon and spy cooununity
want Turner fll"ed .
Carter signed the ""ecutive
orde r in the Wbl te House
Ql binet Room just he fore
noon. White House and
Pentagon spokesmen,
meanwhile, denied reports
Turner might be on tile way
out less than a year after he
took tile loochy job.
Sources wlthin the intelllgence community indicate
that community and some
military officials feel Turner,
admlr 1 d 1 time
a Navy
a an ong
Carter friend has been unfair
ID CIA employes ln his efforts
ID improve the CIA's public
image.
The Intelligence order
formally confirtnl! a change
announced previously :
Turner, as direclor of oentral
intelligence, will have

authority for the estimated $8 w~~JF'cJ!~:t.': Detroit
billion intelligence budiet.
The Defense Department News siory that White Ho1184!
reportedly would keep aides and Defense Secretary
control of the National Har9ld Brown are seeking a ·
Security Agency and the face-aving way lo get rid of
National Reconnaissance Turner.
Office . NSA Is the Pentagon's unUd~:t.:urc~r~: t~
lop secret code-breakln~ and
electronic snooping unit; agreed lo go·il he is named lo
NRO opera..
•· s the us
.. spy an "equally prestigious"
post; such as chief of naval
sate Ul•..,•.
Turner, who was No. 1 in ~~:~=~r~~=nof~
Carter's class ¥t the U.S.
Both jobs are
be fUled
10
Naval Academy, has a double this summer . But the sources
tiUe - director of central
Intelligence and CIA director. said the . Pentagon wants no
He has been accused of part of Turner.
harming morale at the CIA,
Pentagon spokesman
particularly with his decision Thomas Ross, speaking for
lo remove roughly I,OOO Brown, denied the Detroit
people_ many of them from News
report,
saying
th
t dirty tricks Secretary of State Cyrus
e supersecre
·
Vance, National Security
operations - lncludmg some
station chiefs.
Adviser Zbignlew Brzezinski
"There . Is ahsolutely no nor. Brown ever bas raised
truth'to it,"_said Wblte House the question of Turner's
press secretary Jody Powell removal. Ross said relstions
just
before
Carter's between the two men are
departure from St. Simons good, and they mee!
Island, Ga., for Washington regularly at the Pentagon lo
Monday afternoon. "No one discuss Intelligence matters.

Comrades' freedom demanded
By ARTHUR HIGBEE
PARIS (UP!) - Political
extremists today claimed responsibility for kidnapping
Baron
Edoliar&lt;r-Jean
Empain, and threatened 1o
kill their victim unless their
"comrades' ' were freed from
prison
before
noon
Wednesday.
Empain, heir to an
industrial fortune and chief of
one of Europe's b i g g e s t
conglomerates. was abducted
Monday as he was driven to
work in his chauffeured
limousine.
In a telephone call lo a
Parts radio station, an
anonymous caller lDday read
out a statement that said:
"We, members of , the
Afmed-Nucleus for Popular
Au.tonomy, claim
responsibility for
this
abduction and demand tbe
release of our comrades
before Wednesday noon or
•else we will kiD the baron and
it wUI he the same for other
managers. ''
Empain, 40, blond and ·

CHARLESTON, W. VA. - A MULTIMIWON dollar suit
filed against the Pittston Co. on behalf of survivors of the 1972
Buffalo Creek' disaster ln Logan County, W. Va ., has been
settled, well-informed sources said loday.
The two sides- have agreed to a settlement for an
undisclosed amount of money , those sources said.
(Continued from page 1l
The suit was !Ued by David Webster of the Washington law
retardant purposes
fire
firm of Willlams and Connolly for children under the age of 18
The chemical spilled in a
at the time of the disaster, which killed 125 persons.
well field which contains five
.of the wells supplying water tq
this area.
·
Among the Items being
affected by tile water shutoff
are schools in Point Plelisant.
Assistant School Superln·
tendent William Capehart said
all schools ln Point Pleasant
... when you're
w111 remain closed unW water
is re ~-red . However, schools
sick or injured?
·~
ln other parts of the county,
To put a smile on a tlospltal patient's face takes these
things: Flowers, get-well cards, visitors and adequate.
not affected by the water
system, may be In se9slon
Wednesday.
CELINA NATIONAL LIFE INSURANCE
A spokesman from Pleasarit
Valley H06pltal said · wbile
water is being · conserve~
there, normal operations of
Across from the Court House in Pomeroy
Bill Quickel, Roy Shepberd, Jeonnie Starcher
the hospital are not helng
A Nolarr Service &amp; Complete Bonding Service
hampered.

Point

Who~

your

household bills

Davis Insurance Agency

CARS IN YOUR EYES?

square-jawed, was
overpowered as he was
driven ID work from his

apartment on the Avenue
Foch, one of the most
glittering streets in Paris.

Freezing rain
expected
over SE Ohio
United Press lnterJI!Itiooal . car heside a grader and
Gov. James A. Rhodes has promised to block the way
asked
the
fe deral forever unless his driveway
gQvei'nment to reimburse entrance, piled high with
local governments .for snow snow when equipment
· removal expenses and ,in passed, was cleared.
11
ln a third instailce, I'm
Columbus, snow removal
crews are having some pro)). aware of the fact th.at citizens
lems.' Five freighters remain were beating on the grader
ice-bound on Lake Erie with shovels, and we pulled
out of those areas, although
loday.
.
neighbors
are
The National Weather their
Service says Ohio may be requesting further assistance
getting some rain or snow at this point," Moody said .
Huge mounds of snow reloday with some freezing rain
mained
in the middle of
predicted
for
the
streets
in ·
downtown
southeastern part of the
Columbus loday.
Buckeye State.
Five ore carriers remained
Rhodes Monday asked the
Carter administration to locked in ice on Lake Erie
forget his request oflast week near Cleveland today ll!ld a
. that the federal government crewman aboard one of tbe
declare IS Ohio counties stranded · freighters was
picked up by a Coast Guard
federal disaster areas.
helicopter
Mqnday to be
The governor Instead asked
taken
to
his
wile who had
Carter administration for
suffered
a
heart
attack.
direct reimbursement for
The
Coast
Guard·
many areas that have spent a
Northwind
normal fourmonth snow icebreaker
removal budiet in just 10 refueled Monday and then
went back out on the lake 1o
days.
Columbus Mayor Tom help the freighters through
Moody pulled snow-removal the heav ice.
Much of that state snow
crews off certai,n streets
Monday after residents emergency activity is
blocked·. and
abused tapering off. From a high of
equipment and threatened 500 Ohio National Guard
city workers.
members at work in 35
" Some of our grader · counties last week, only 62
drivers, at least one, was remained iri GaUla, Bebnont ,.
threatened ·with heing shot if Cuyahoga, Noble and
he continued to plow the Washington counties .
The Ohio River was still
street," said Moody.
· Moody said . access to iceclogged and 40 barges
another street was impeded were back up by icy chunks
by someone who parked his that blocked two locks.

Notices, .local briefs
Ladles night will be ob-

Middleport lions Club meets
Thursday, Jan. 26 at the
Meigs Inn at 6: 30 p.m.

served . when the Pomeroy .

Chester Township Trustees
will meet In Special session
Thursday. Jan . 26 at 7:30
p .m. at the town hall.

NOW OPEN

See Your Way with an
Auto Loan
.
.

'Gofthat "car"-away look in your eye? Dreams do come true. and we
can prove if Just visit your local car dealers' showrooms and look
over the marvelous new 1978 models. Select your favorite, then see
us for a put-you-on-the-road Auto Loan. Thanks to bank rates;
convenient terms imd fast service, you'll get your loan ... and your
new car ... right away.
WALK-UP TELLER WINDOW AND
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
FRI. EVENINGSTo7 P.M.

' "THE
. FRIENDLY BANK"

GINO'S
OF MASON
PHONE 773-5536

.

The actiVIty group of the
Per.sonal AdVocacy Program
for · Jan. 25 will be cancelled.
Wea~her permitting, ther-e
will be sessions on Wednesday , Feb. 1.

r----·----------------~----1 .

Hospital News

!

Yeterau MemorloiHoapllal
·Admitted - Juslle Molden,
Rutland; Charles Withe-e,
Pomeroy; Joshpa Jenkins,
Middleport ; Howard Phillips.
Rutland; Virginia Michael,
Pomeroy; Mary Laudermilt,
Middleport; Curtis Cautbron,
Reedsville; Bertie Wyatt,
Middleport; Addie Rietmire,
Pomeroy; Mlnia Givens,
Portland; Willlirn Ferguson,
Pomeroy.
Discharged - Jessie Sansbury, Darlene Barrett, Ada
McHaffie, Virginia Lin·
deman, Glennie Little, NeUie
Lemley.

Ar~a

HARRY LAING
Harrv Laing, Cleveland,
former Mlddleporl rtsldent,
died Saturday at 1 Cleveland

day

hospital .

·

Holzer Medical Center
1Discharges, Jan. Z3 l
Mary Basham, Melba
Boggs, Charles Brohard,
George Galandros, Karen
Chattin, Mrs. Michael Evans
and son, Mitzi Green, Mrs.
Roger Hill and daughter,
Nellie Hughes, Mrs. William
Ja.mes and daughter, Betty
Jarvis, William Leach Sr.,
Mrs. Roger McGuire and son,
Ruth Patterson, Terry Powell
Jr., Howard Raimey, James
Slone, Minnie Stover , Mrs.
and
Kenneth
Thorne
daughter , Vivian Tope,
Tonya Tuckez.-, James Tyree,
&lt;Gertrude Wickline, Mrs .
Edward Zinn and son.
t Birth, Jan. Z3)
Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Wamsley. a son, Racine.

two

Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
DEPOSITS INSURED TO •40,000

Medical

grandchildren , three

great-grand children, and two
gre a tg re at· grande hII dren.
Last rites will be held at 1
p.m. Thursday at the Waugh· ,
Hallev·Wood Funeral Home,
the Rev. Alvis Pollard of·
ficiating, and burial wi II be in
Mound Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call 2·4 and 7-9
p.m . Wednesday at the

funeral home.

CHARLES W. FRANKE
Charles Wesley Franke. U,

severaf cousins.
Private funeral services
were held today at a
Clevela nd funeral home.

CARL MOODISPAUGH
C.rl W. Moodlspaugh, 70, of
101 Park Street. Middleport,
died at 3: 15 a.m. today at
Holzer Medical Center.
He was born Dec . 29, 1907, ..
the son of the late George W. "·

and
"Maude
Spires
Moodlspaugh of Gall ipolis . •
He was also preceded

Inc., a private company
licensed by the Ohio and
federal Environmental
Protection Agencies to
dlspooe of poisons .
Reinke said the poisoned
soil , which already had been
treated with otber chemicals
at the site of the spill lo
reduce the toxicity, was
again chemically treated
gpon arrival at his operation
and then buried 25 feet deep.
"The material Is now a
fairly innocuous subetance,"
added Reinke. "It bas been
changed through chemical
treatment so it can be

three

brothers ,

Albert and

Kernan

for MarauderS

He was

WW I, and a member of the
Beverly Presbyterian

Church.

Head . basketball coach
Roo Logaa ol Melg• High
School anooun~ed loday
dates for make-up games
postponed because of bad

He was married on Jan . 2.
1926 to Bertha Buchanan, who
survives. He Is also survivt;d
by two granddaughters, Mrs.
Sharon Bailey of Route 31
Pomeroy. and Mrs. Judith
Tompkins of Wolcott, Conn .,
and five great-grandchildren .
Funeral services will be

weather.
Tbe tllree delayed games
will be made up beglanlng.
toulgbt when Wellstoo
comes to Morrison Gym for
the reserve game starting
at 6 p.m., varsity at 7:30.
Then on Feb. i ( Satur·
day) Ironton is at Meigs,
reserves startlag at 6:30
p.m., and on Feli. 11
(Saturday! the Maraoders
are at Logan, activities
also starting at 6:30 p.m.

EXTENDEn FORECAST
Thursday tb•ough
Saturday, a cbance of snow
Thursday and Saturday
and fair Friday. Highs .wlll
he between %0 and 25
Thunday and warming to
the low or mid 30s by
Sahll"day. Overnlgbt lows
wlll be In ·the teens Thurs·
· day and Friday and between zen and 10 above
zero Saturday.

Pappaf.

employed by the U. 5.
Government, a veteran of

Thursday at 2 p,m. at the

McCurty
Beverly .
Beverly
may call

Funeral Home at

Burial will be In
Cemetery. Friends
any tlr'ne .

DA~SET

The Rio Grande CollegeTiffin Mid·Ohio Conference
basketball game which was
postponed last Saturday has
been rescheduled at Tiffin 'on
Monday, Feb. 20.

GAME STILL ON
Tonight ' s regularly
scheduled SV AC basketball
rontest between Southern and
Southwestern at Patriot is
still on a school spokesman
announced today. Varsity
tipoff is 8 p.m.

UMW
(Continued from page 1)
they say they are going to, it
will bang the bell out of the oil

industry."
GAME IS ON
The basketball g~e between Southern · and South·
western at Southwestern will
he played this evening.

Utility's
earnings

.

UMW President Arnold
Miller said Monday ·the coal
Industry's latest contract
offer
would
virtually
eliminate the penisons of
80,000 UMW members who
retired before 1976.
''There is no damned way
the coal miners are going to
go for that," said Guzek.
· "The old miners who worked
30 or 40 years ln those' mines
are not going to be put out lo

pasture."

daughter. Mrs . Gary ((9n nle} Scheiderer of Pomeroy;
one son. Carl W, at home, and
two grandchildren, Tracy
aod · Shannon Scholderer .
He was a veteran of WW II,
having served with the U.S.
Army .- He was a retired
carpenter with 40 years of
experience and a member of
Local 200 of Columbus. He
was an active member of

·

VOL. XXVIII NO. 198

Rawllngs -Cot~ts

(Continued from pale 1)
Upon the recommendation .
of Council President Marvin
Kelly, it was agreed to issue .
one more taxi license and to
place a street light at the end ·
of Williams St.
·
Councilman Charles
Mullen suggested that . the
.penalty for overparking at a '
meter be raised from 5G.cents
to $1. Councilman William
Walters said he thought that
would be too higb but
Councilman Allen King
agreed wjth Mullen and
obaerved that ln his opinion
not enougb overparking
tickets are being issued by
police. It was agreed that
Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate
will have an ordinance drawn
up providing for the $1 lor
overtime parking at a meter
to be considered at the ·next
meeting.
. Councilman Mullen also
said , that he felt it was
"rather foolish" for the pollee
to be Issuing warning tickets
1o persons parking on the
wrong side of the street with
12 inches· of snow on the
ground.
.
Mayor Hoffman said that a
warning ticket was issued
since the car was parked at
an intersection and it was
feared someone would hit the
car, slnce the streets were
slippery. Mullen said people ·
had to park sometimes so.
that they are able to move
their cars from parking
. spaces easily the next.
morning in order to get to
their jobs on time. There was
a general discussion on the
matter with no conclusion •
reached.
Attending were Mayor
Hoffman, Clerk Grate, and
council members, Kelly,
Mullen, Walters, King, Carl
Horky and Dewey Horton.
.

Tremendous Savings
During
-This Clearance Sale!
*LIVING ROOM SUITES
*CHAIRS
*PIANOS
*DINING ROOM SUITES
*BEDROOM SUITES
*PICTURES
·*WALL ACCESSORIES
*CEDAR CHESTS

Elberfelds-In PomeroY
(

relations officer Don Caldwell said there was " no
OOffi\BIC'y.
reason to believ•" any of the
chemical made its way Int o
Six coal trucks loaded
the Ohio River .
\l'ilh contaminated soil
National Guard troops
were destined lor a Cln·
passed out water shipped int o
dnoatl dumping ground as
town , allowing two gallons
the Chessle System sought
· clues lo explain Monday's
per family . The normal water
pre-dawo derailment thai
system was turned on at
spilled 20,700 gallons D~ . Intervals Wednesday night,
eplchlorchydrln ..
but strictly for non-drinking
Used . lo make epo•y and purposes.
With workers tapping a
rubber products . the toxic
and flammable chemical sent backup well north of town,
13 persons lo Pleasant Volley of(icials expected to hove
Hospital for treHtrnent, in- servire restored by Thurs· .
c,luding two pt:!rsuns helping day .
to sponge up the leaked
Later this morning Mayor
chemical with pent moss. John C. Musgrave said the
Five were admitted In water supply will be restored
satisfactory rendition.
for 21! to 3D minute Intervals
Crews also treat ed the tonight. but lhc water should
chemical with fnustl c soda he used only for sanitary
and soda a:-; h.

Eight ran of th•• 85-unlt
train , bouod "for Stoulfer
Chemical Co. in Gallipolis
Ferry, W. Ya .. lt•fl the
track. The cause hasn't
been dclermlncd.
St a t e
PoJic e · public

UnltedPress lntematlooal
Electric · comp a ny
executives from several
states hampered by dwin·
dllng coal supplies met with
Department of Energy .
representatives
in
Washington today, while
West Virginia Gov . Jay
Rockefeller applied pressure
to resume negotiations in the
eight-week-old United Mine
Workers strike.
· Talks bet ween the UMW
and
Bituminous
Coal
Operators Association "blew
up" early Tuesday after. a
marath on bargain.i ng
se~iOn, in which union and
management were reportedly close to agreement.
MIKE ROBERTS
Officia ls said the potential for
an agreement was " badly
damaged," and that it was
·not likely the bargaining
would resume within the next
few days.
The break increased the
prospect thlit . the hard·
Owens.Corning Fiberglass Corp. has announced Mike pressed utilities would run
Roberta of Newark, Ohio, formerly Senior Scientist, · out of coal supplies before the
Ellploratory Research, has been promoted to the Senior strike ends, which could force
Technical Staff as a Researc!l Associate, effective January 1, a warned curtailment on
becoming the youngest member of the Senior Technical Staff. industry and the private
APhi Beta Kappa graduate ofOhio University with a B.S. in
Chemistry in 1965, Mike has eight years of experience with
Owens-Corning.
He holds 10 patents, has 10 currenUy on file, and has
submitted 72 invention reeords . In tbe past year, Mike has
made significant ·contributions to the rapid technical
developments iii the Exploratory Highway Systems Program.
Prior to joining · Owens-Corning, Mike was a research
chemist with General Tire Company. A 1961 graduate of
Pomeroy High School, he Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ro~rt D.
Roherta, Wehe Terrace, Pomeroy. He and his wile, the former
Sharon Howell of RuUand, are the parents of a son, Michael,
and a daughter, Diana.

Roberts joins senior

sUJ.f{at~ Owens-Corning

sector.
Meanwhile. Rockefeller,
representing the state that
houses one-third of all UMW
miners, left . for Washington
late Tuesday. Altho ugh press
secretary Scott Widmeyer
would not comment on
Rockefeller's trip, one
unidentified official said the
governor
" is
really
dissatisfied with the talks,
and wants to apply all the
pressure he can to tak e a
more direct r ole itJ the
strike."
In developments in the
coalfields:
,
- In Kentucky, five striking
were
arrested
pickets
Tuesdoy near Lenarue,
Harlan County, where 75 to
100 pickets had gathered .
Two of them were accused of
kicking the vehicles of non·
union miners and throwing
objects at. them, and U.ree
were accused· of throwing
paint-filled balloons arid
rocking a state police cruiser.

EXTENDED FO,ftECAST
Friday through Sunday,
very cold and a chabce of
snow each day of the
period. Highs will range
from the teens to the low
20s Friday and will he In
the 20s Saturday and
Sunday. Lows will range
from zero to 10 above ;Eero.

- Gov. James A. Rhodes of
Ohio has asked President
Carter for federal int erve ntion in ~he strike,
sayin g it would be a
"catastrophe" H electric
utilities ran out of coal.
- Representatives of Pitts·
burgh area labor unions
Tuesday pledged " 100 percent" support to striking
miner:J. T~e Wcsterri Pennsy lvania Committee to
Support the United Mine
Workers offered several
resolution s for locals to pass,
including, no moverpent of
non· UMW coal to power
plants ; no state police escorts
for non-UMW coal; and a
moratorium on miners' debts
for the duration of the strike.
- More than 1,400 Virginia
railroad workers have been
laid off because of the crippling strike. according to
r.ailroad officials.
The
System
has
Chessie
furloughed 280 workers in
Newport and Norfolk, and
Norfolk &amp; Western Railway
Co. has laid off 282 employees
and another 860 in Roanoke. ·
Chessle and N&amp;W are two of
the nation's largest coal
cBrriers. serving mines in
four states.

' .

purposes . He l'Hutioned
against drinking the wnter,
unless It is belled first . The .
new water supply has been
trucked into the city from
Gallla County. Ohio. and
(Continued on JlOI!e 10)

sTUDENTS OF MEIGS LOCAL SCHOOL DISTRICT loaded onlo their buses Tuesday
evening after completing the first full day of classes In two weeks. All three distr\cl• of
Meigs County are over the five days allowed by the state for calamity days. Classes had to
be cancelled again loday because of lee on secondary roads .

More 'calamity days' needed

Unless help comes from the financial reason s, schools 13, That colcndor wJII also changes a ppea r to be
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::;:::;::::;;;:;;;:::::::: slate legislature, Meigs were to he ~losed for the ye_a r have to be revised unless -necessa ry at this time also .
Coonty school 'students will on June 13.
Educators appear to be
additional calilmity doys are
go to classes this y_e ar past
However , with the five granted by t.he state. The against Saturday classes as
mid·Juneor attend classes oh days over, 'and the ·po·ssibility June 13 closing was set alter makeup periods for students
.
.
.
'::::~::::::~:::;::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::;:;;;::;:~:~:::::~:::::::::~~:::~:~:~:~:~::::::::::::::=:::::::::::~:::::::::;:::::;:::::::~
Saturday.
of more bad weather yet this a teacher strike in the district because
attendance is
·
With
plenty
of·
winter
winter,
the
calendar
will
have
·
last
fall
.
generally
low
and teaching
1
weather still promised, all · to be revised.
RuMing only three and difficult. While there has
three districts of Meigs
Supt. Charles Dowler df the one-half days over the five been talk locally that the
County - Southern, Eastern Meigs District, reported the · days allowed by the state for stale will grunt additional
and Meigs - are .over the five district has slx days to make calamity days is the Soothern time this year due to the
By United
InternaUonal
calamity days allowed by Jaw up over the permitted five Lo cal
School
Di strict. severity of the winter, no
MRS. BRADBURY
OTTAWA- U. S. AND CANADIAN AIRCRAIT packed
dosed
due
to
calamity
days.
for
schools
to
be
Southern
a
lso
had
a
revised word has been forthcoming
with sophisticated detection equipment loday searched for
-emergen·
Meigs
Local
also
has
a
weather
or
other
calendar
which
was
adopted
from the state at this point.
radiation in the skies above northern Canads where a Soviet
the
distric1
was
closed
Last year additional days
after
cies.
revised
calendar.
That
nuclear-powered spy • satellite plunged from orbit and
Ail
students
in
the
county
calendar
was
for
closing
of
reasons.
The
for
financial
because of weather and the
• apparently dlslntegraled. "Our scientists tell us if there Is
at
home
·
today
schools
to
take
placeon
June
were
kept
closing
day
of
that
calendar
energy
c·risis were allowed.
anything there, this equipment will pick it up," Defense
The Meigs County Com· · because of icy conditions on
was set for June 13. However.
Department spokesman Doug Cais said Tuesday.
roads ,
the
missioners in:verviewed five secondary
Two higb.flying U.S. aircraft from Calilornta, a U-2 and a
superintendents
reported.
'
·
.
persons
for
the
position
of
dog
KC-135, took air sampl"" late Tuesday high above the spot near
One of Meigs Co~nty's warden In regular session ,
Great Slave Lake in the remote Northwest·Territories where
Supt. John Riebel of the
oldest residents, · Mrs. Laura Tuesday night.
the runaway Cosmos sa~Wte vlinlshed. U. s.· transport
Interviewed were Bill
Bradbury, Powell St .• Mid·
aircraft also arrived ln Edmonton, Alberta, with detection
While Gallia and Meigs were blamed on the icy road Patriot Stnr Rt. There was
dleport,
died
early
today
at
Osborne,
Ralph Shane, Keith that allotted by the state for
equipment to be fltled under.Canadian aircraft for a low-level
According
to
Counties'
major. highways rondltlons.
such
situations
.
age
of
100
at
Veterans
Cline,
Bob
Scarbury
and
Bill
the
light damage. No citation was
search.
il
revised
calendar
for
that
were
clear
and
in
good
The
first
occurred
at
1:05
No
decision
was
Memorial
Hospital.
Arnold.
Issued.
Officials ln both ottawa and Waahington said there was
Mrs. Bradbury was born made on filling the post. The district completed after the driving condition today, p.m. on SR 554, two and three
l!We chance any potenlially dangerous debris reached earth
and the Soviets said the ·s atellite was designed to be destroyed March 1, 1877 in Meigs . commissioners will meet district was closed he!ore the secondary roads were slip- tenths of a mile east of SR 325
Icy road conditions were
· County, the daughter of the again Friday, Jan. 27 at 5 Christmas vacation (or pery and Icy due to Tuesday' s . where Mary Becker, 21, Rt. I, blamed in an accident at 3:23
on .re-entering the atmosphere.
rains and cold temperatures. Middlepert, going east, lost
tate Paleman and Mary p.m. to interview additional
On roads whfre snow had control of her car on the, Icy p.m. on Wa rd Rd. in Cheshire
She
was
also
applicants
and
to
discuss
Eakin
Powell.
CAPE CANAVERAL, FLA. - A HUGE TELESCOPE will
Twp. where an auto driven by
•
d
been scraped, the rain Raccoon Creek bridge. Her
Department
preceded in death by her Welf.are
be launched lnto space Thursday lo help astronomers gather
Papers d elrvere
washed the snow down to the · vehicle spun around and hit a Dorothy Basham, 35, Rt. I,
husband, Asa H. Bradbury operations. ·
clues ln their attemptlo learn the origln of the universe. The
Longsville, slid on the Icy
icy surface underneath it.
guardrail. There was slight
and a brother, Ross Powell.
The following were apInternational lntravlolet Explorer, which will orbit the Earth,
pavement striking a. United
Four traffic accidents had damage.
She was a member of the pointed to the Citizen. Council•. despiie snow,
Is scheduled lo speed into space at 10:58 a.m. ThurSday alop a
· Parcel truck operated by
At 1:15 p.m . on SR 141 at
heen
reported to the Ohio
fotrner
Swedenburg
Church.
for
the
·Emergency
Medical
.
Delta rocket.
Smith, 32, Jackson .
cold and misery State Hi[hway Patrol Post on Gage, a state highway Sidney
~he is survived by the services and wUI represent
The 1,482-pound eraft will carry a telescope wlth· four .
There was moderate d~mage
US 35 plllbr to 10 a.m. today . department truck driven by
following· children: Cecil their respective toW!Iships :
cameras, which ground cmtroll~rs at Madrid, Spaln, and at
to the Basham vehicle and
Four of . live traffic ac· David J . Frazier , 22,
the Goddard Space Light Center ln Greenbelt, Md., can aim at Bradbury and Mrs. James · Edison Hobstetter,
slight damage to the truck .
The
Dally
Sentinel
cidents investigated by the Gallipolis, sideswiped a car
(Ruth) Arnold , both of Salisbury; Mrs. Bob Jones,
Cllfferent objects in space. •1on any given day, we can point the
wlsbes
to
publicly . Gallia·Meigs Post Tuesday driven by Mary Fallon, 28,
Middleport ; Mrs: John H. N., Bedford; Dick Gaul,
. ·telescope at any heavenly body we wish," said Kenneth
Another collision on icy
achowledge the great
(Esther) Greer, Knoxville, Chester ; Bob Tripp, Orange ;
Sizemore, Goddard's spacecraft manager. "li Is the first time
pavement
occurred at 5:15
efforts of Its uewspaper
astronomers will be able to have continuous observations of Tenn., and Miami Beach. Grant Smith, Olive ; Andrew
p.m.
on
Merry
Rd. in Spring·
carrten.
Fla.; four grandchildren, 'Cross, Letart; Fred Morrow,
whatever they wish through a space talescope."
field Twp. where ail auto
. While many services
Carol
Rhodes,
Charles Asa Bradbury and Sutton;
operated
by
Richard
reudered by adults were •
SAN FRANCIS&lt;Xl - n..LEGmLE HANDWRITING foiled Judy Arnold, Middleport; Lebanon; Robert Snow~en ,
Plymale, 25, Gallipolis, slid
balled by the weather thiJ
a hank robbery attempt, pollee reported Tuesday. PoUce said Mrs. Hila Urban, Zanesville, Rutland; Glenna Crisp,
on the Icy roadway striking a
A suit to quiet title, four · Eugene Hudson Pomeroy
past
week,
carriers
and James M. Arnold, Cin·' Salem; Pauline Atkins ,
a wc:man walked into a Bank of America branch on Monday
divorce actions and one for from Sandra S~e Hudson' parked vehicle owned by
generally plowed ihrough
cinnati;
nine
great· Scipio;
David
Baker ,
and tuinded the teller a noie demanding money.
David Dunn, 29, Rt. 2, Bid·
dissolution have been filed In Kokomo, Ind. ; Linda
heavy snows to malntalu
ui'm sorry. I can't read it," said the teUer, Rose Ten~an, grandchildren and several · Columbia.
Meigs County Common Pleas ~atterson, Ht. 3, Racine, well . There was minor
home delivery.
great-great • grandchildren .
In other action the beard
who banded the note haclt . The would-be robber mumbled,
Some papers were late
from James B. Patieroon, damage.
Court.
Funeral services will be appointed Herman London to
leaned ~rward and !Qld the teller: "l'llkill yoo ."
Athens
County
Savings
·
same
address, and Arthur
The
because of tile heavy snow
.A deer was killed in an
· 'uWhatt" · e~~la1med Ms. Terzian. ''Ah, forget it," , the . held .Friday at 2 p.m. at the the SEOEMS board of but carrten did their best and Loan Co., filed a suit to. Dillon Roush, Racine against
Rawlin@s·Coats
·
~uneral
tru,tiees
to
;fill
·the
vacancy
.
at6 :46 a .m. Tuesday
accident
won~~n llld, turnln8 · and . tnakinl! ller departura empty·
. to get lllem tlltouib. The quiet title against Ronald D. Claudia Lynn Roush South
handed.
.
.
.
on
CR
36,
·one half of a mile
Home with the Rev. Dwight created by the resignation of
Bend, Ind.
'
Thomas, Cincinnati, et al.
DaUy Sentinel Ia proud of
SR
.681 in Meigs .
south
of
Zavitz officiating. Burial will Clarence Andr~ws.
Filing for divorces were
Filing for dissolut.lon were
every one. of Its young
be in Cheshire Gtavel Hill
Attending were Henry
County.
The
animal
ran into
COLUMBUS - THE omo BUREAU of Em)iloyment
Samuel · Eugene McKinney. B~ rbara J . Smith , Mid·
lndependenl merchants
Cemetery. Friends may call Wells, Richard Jones and Jim
path
of
a
vehicle
operated
the
Services said Tuesday It had been notified by the Department
Sr., Pomeroy, from Peggy dleport, and Gary Michael
and adult delivery agents.
by Benjamin Upton, 20, Rt. 2,
of Labor that the federal government's extended benefits at the funeral home Thursday Ro•sh. coll)missioners and
Sue Enke Mckinney, War- Smith, Mason.
from 3 to g p.m.
· Mary Hobstetter, clerk.
.(Continued on _page ,~)
Reedsville.
densvllie, W. Va.; Robert

Dog War.d. en

fNews • •.. •in Briefsl

l

candidates

p...,..

Century-old
Mrs. Bradbury
·dies today .

interviewed

·Sec0 n dary roads
· gerous
. . dan

~~st~~r~~~:'n~~:~ ::!~ .

SoIX actoIODS go t 0 co url

*TABLE

The
utility said It
anticipates further reduction
in earnings until rate reUef Is ,
granted,
·
Hearings befoce the fubllc
Ulllltles Commission of Ohio
on the company's applicatiOn
for a $~5.5 mUUon rate
Increase · began
last
Thursday.
The company said the in·
crease is necessary· to meet .
increasing costa of operatlon
and the additional Interest
and dividends on funds
obtained from .inveators lor
the cmstruction l""ogram·

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 25, 1978

the day he ld no ·firm
assurance of a return to

Utilities confer
on coal problem

Funeral

Burial cost

POINT PLEASANT. W.
operaUon like ours in West Va . - A town accustomed to
VlrginU.," answered Reinke . advertisy Is grappling with
"Treating it and burying It at _yet another harsh hand dealt
a facility like ours Is the best by fate - a chemical leak
thlnjj to do. The percentages that has displaced 400 per·
of danger are much less when sons and Jed to wat er ·
you can get it down lnto the rationing.
eHrth ."
It was·here in Dec. 15. 1967.
Reinke said cootrary 1o that the Silver Bridge across
some reports, no liquid was the Ohio River fell during the
belnjj shipped in from the evening rush of Christ mas
spill.
shoppers. F orty-six persons
" It's all soil and absorbent lost theh· lives, most of them
material." he said.
residents o£ Point Pleasant
Reinke said his facility and neighboring Gallipolis.
regularly handles disposal or Ohio.
materl.als contaminated by
Evacuees hoped to return
poi8011S .
home by late afternoon, but

en tine

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Feeney -Bennett Post 128
Mlddleporl .
·
Funeral ser~lces will be
Thursday at I p.m . at the

FURNITURE SALE ,

"SALE PRiaD"

•

.e

married the former Er ·
nestlne Criner ol Jan . 17,
1934, who survives .
•
Also surviving are one ~

,.

down 42%

The
soil
became
COIItaminated Monday when
20.700
gallons
of
epichlorohydrin, a toxic and
flammable chemical used W
make epol&lt;)l and rubber pro·
ducts, leaked from derailed
railroad tank cars in Point
Pleasant, W.Va .
Point Pleasant Is located
alongside the Ohio River,

Everett , '

Kenneth . He

which provides drinking
water for many comrnuniUes.
and oflicl.als wanted to get the
chemical and cootamlnated
90ll away from the river as
quickly as possible.
"It was very important not
to let it get into the river,"
said Reinke, "and if the soil
was hot taken and buried ln a
· place like ours, the possibility
Is It would have gotten inlo
the river."
Some Ohioans were upoet
that West Virginia poisoned
soil was trucked Into Ohio for
disposal.
~'I don't know of any

care of. 11

In ,.

~:·:~:~::~:::~: ::::::::: ~::::: : : :: : ::::·: :-:;:::::;:::;:;:;:·8;:;:;: ~"'r~~~ra :~orl'::r~da~~ita~~

Make-up dates
are announced

handled m a safe manner."
Reinke said trucks began
arriving at his operation at
about 8:30 a.m. today "and
by the end of the day we
expect to bave It all taken

death by one sister, Lula. and

Home with the Rev . Robert .
Bumgarner officiating.
Burial will 'be In Riverview
Cemetery . Friends may call .
. The son of the Iale Fred and . at the funeral home Wed·
FF-ances Quick Franke. he nesday from 21111 40nd 71111 9
was alsb preceded in death by p.m.
one daughter, El'izabeth

year.

MIDDI.£PORT, OHIO

Holler

Thomas Sowards and the
former Mary. Sims and she
spent her entire life in Gall .
County . Her husband ,
Charles Ross Carter, died
Jan . 1, 1949.
They are survived by these
children :
Earl
Carter,
Circlevlll.
Chancle,
Gallipolis; Mrs. Dale (Ida
Muriel Durkee. Gallipolis;
Stanley, Dover. Mass.; Mrs.
John (Mabel) Hersman,
Cleveland. A son and a
daughter preceded her in
deatn.
Three brothers, three
sisters, a haU ·brother , and
two half-sisters preceded her
in death. She was the last of
her family.
Other survivors are 25
grandchildren. 47 great·
grandchildren, 23 great·
great · gr,a ndchlldren .
Preceding her in deo;~th were

COLUMBUS (UP!)
Coiumbils &amp; Southern Ohio
Electric Co. Monday reported
a 42 percent decline in
earnings lor the fourth
The East letart United
fll..ethodist Women 's Week of quarter and a 5 percent drop ,
Prayer meeting has been in earnings during 1977.
rescheduled until foAonday,
The company attributed
Jan. Jl.
the drpp ln earnings to
Increasing costs due to
inflatlon, slower growth in
Jdlowatt hour sales and an
increase in outstanding
shares.
·
C&amp;SOE said quarterly
earnings on C01Dffion shares
were $8.9 million, compared
ID 115.3 mUilon for the same
ITEMS
period last year while yearly·
earnings on common sharea
dropped from $46.37 miJilon
in 1976 to $44.2 million lor last

$148

at

WILUAMSBURG. Ohio
(UPI) - SoU cmlamlnated
by a 20,"700i!aUoil chemical
poiaon spill In Weal Virginia
wu trqcked 1o southwestern
· Ohio today and burled 25 feet
underground.
Although some residents
were nervous about having
pol8011ed soil in the area, an
official of the compa·ny
burying the soil declared,
"There is absolutely no
danger."
"This is the safest thlng 1o
do with it," said Ron Reinke,
sales manager of Clermont
Environmental Reclalhation,

Center. She had been in fail ·
Surviving are .his wife,
lng health lor about a year.
Evelyn; two sons, Joe and
· She was born S@pf. 1, 1878,
Wallace, both of Cleveland;
at Crown City to George · tour grandehlldren , and

ONE OF lHE MANY

BEDROOM
SUITES

I

, \ MARGARET CARTER
Mrs. Maroaret K. Carter ,
99, of 503 Secona Ave ..
Gallipolis. died at • a.m. ro-

Water rationed

Poison··'p ut 25 ·feet .down

!

Deaths

L:

�W;)t;;q;-~~~fu~~d about costs, quality of education in Ohio
By LEE LEONARD
UP! Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBIJS (UP!) - Dr.
Franklin B. Walter, state
superintendent of public instruction, says Ohio schools
are getting the most out of
their mooey now, and that
cutting expenditures is not
the entire answer to tbe
fmancing problents.
But as he opened testunony
in a legisiattve study
Tuesday, tbe state's public
school chief met with some

resistance ~ hill 111ggestion
that more tnoney be
provided.
Walter was the intttal
witness b\!fore ll)e House
Finance Cootmittee in what
ill expected to· be a lengthy
exploration into the reasons
15 schoo l districts were
forced to close in 1977.
While lamenting the
schoo ls ' financial plight ,
Waller painted a picture of
quality education in Ohio for
a minimum of dollar

expenditures .
He said Ohio ill 48th In the
nallon in per capita state and
local tax effort for primary
and secondary education,
ran king ahead of only
Alabama and Arkansas, and
$143 per pupU below the
nattonai
average
expenditure.
"These data show that the
management of Ohio schools
bas endeavored to get the
most from each dollar
mvested," said Walter.

chairman, was me of several beyond
Yet, he satd, scholastic
the
minimum
legislat&lt;irs' who appeared ir- rrequirements,'' answered
aptitude and college entrance
scores have been on the ritated by Walter's insistence Walter.
on more money for the
increase m Ohto while the
One recommendation he
national level dropped "This schools.
made was for full funding of
··I've already pointed out the current " equal yteid "
ts evidence of quality
that we (the legislature) have state subsidy formula, but
education," Walter satd.
increased spending for some legislators are shymg
The superintendent said
by more than 200 away from that because it
schools
local school dtstricts are
percent smce 1971," said has
being
pinched
by
a
been
declared
combination of inflation, Shoemaker.
unconstitutional
m
a
"Money alone is not the Hamilton County Court.
erosion of property tax
dollars and diversion of a answer," agrero Rep. Robert
"Full fundmg may not
larger portton of the state's A. Nader, D-Warren. "There solve all the problems, but it
income to other programs. has ~be greater control over could be a significant ftrst
He said there ts "no single the expenditures. "
step in correcting financial
Walter argued that most difficulties," satd Walter.
factor " tha t ean be blamed
for the cash problems of 52 school dtstricts are hindered
He also recommended :
school districts in 1977 and by state mandates and
-{)ffering subsidies for the
the closing of schools m 15 inflattonary trends in their "cost of doing business''
efforts to reduce thetr rather than tn equalized
districts.
" In simple terms," satd . spendtng.
dollars across the state to pay
" It should be a combination for varying service costs.
Walter, " one solution would
be to cut expenses and still ofexceUentrnanagernentand
- Increasing assistance for
provide a quality program. U more money where it is areas with high numbers of
thill will not work, and il will needed,'' said the superinten- disadvantaged pupils.
not in most cases, the other dent.
- Assisti ng
schoo ls
" What do you suggest ?" · required to mtegrate by the
alternative is to seek
asked Nader.
additional revenue."
law .
"There should be some
Rep . Myrl H. Shoemaker,
Walter told the committee
D· Bourne'(ille, commtttee choice for districts to go tn an 18-page opemng

Livestock, toU1fh in bad weather,
need protection from high wind and cold
GALION, Ohio (UP!) - The wind is
howling outside, around and over
mountainous snowdrifts, creating new
forms outofoldmes, as the mercury hovers
around zero.
You're snug and warm, perhaps sitting
beside a glowing fireplace inside. But what
of your livestock? As you glance out the
frosted window, you wonder how tbey're
doing on a miserable day like today.
Although livestock surprisingly can stand
very cold temperatures, you'd better
double-eheck your situation when winds
gust to 30 or 40 miles per hour and the
thermometer reads . zero. The wind chUI
factor with 30 mph winds and a zero reading
is 49 degree~~ below zero.
Galion veterinarian Dr. M. E . Epperson
says one of the most important factors ill to
have a clean, weD-bedded pen or staU out of
the wind, but which is well-ventilated.
Farmers and others with livestock,
including those with horses, should be
concerned with ' pneumoola as the number
one threat during winter weather stress
times, the verteran animal doctor says.
·"Cattle, hogs, sheep and other livestock
need plenty of good ventilation, without a lot
of molalure, It's sweating that makes
animals have pneumonia, not cold air. They
pile up and sweat and then go out.slde and
chUI," Epperson aays, adding that plenty of
clean, dry bedding is absolutely euential.
The veterinarian said he has this winter
treated a considerable amount of
pneumonia in cattle and hogs and some ill
horses .
Another ttem to check is the animals' diet
- make sure there Is plenty of protein and
carbohydrates for body maintenance,
growth and energy. Generous amounts of
freechoice water and mineralized salt also
are recommended.
Even though animals should be wellprotected from high winds, they should have
a place for exercise, too.
A vlst to the Pleasant Valley Farm, on

Ohio 61, about two miles south of Galloo,
showed dairy cows llanding outalde in five
degree temperatures even though they
could have gone inside the barn. The key
difference was that winds were cBim and tbe
sun was shining.
Darold Beachy, of Pleasant Valley Farm,
said they feed the Holatein cows ·a high
protein diet of silage, haylage, baled hay.
high-molalure corn and supplement yearround, and that generally no special
procedures are used dUring cold weatber .
However, one special procedure tbe
dairyman uses in ex1remely cold weatber ill
drying udders and teats after milldng and
before turning the cows out of the milklng
parlor . He said before they started drying,
the moisture froze and caused cracked and
dry teats.
Morrow County Extension Agent Chuck
Reutter aays that animals have a good
· tolerance for cold weather If they can get out
of the wind. " Even If livestock that are kept
out.llde have at least a windbreak, plenty of
fond and water, they can show surprising
resilience to cold temperatures," he says.
Reutter cautioned against closing up
buildings too tightly. "We recognize that
very tight cold buildings may not be as
healthy as where there is some air
movement to carry off moisture," he says,
inferring thai pneumonia could be a
problem.
Asked If animals should be led more
during arctic-like cmditions, Reutter said it
may be alright to increase the ration a bit,
but added, "Animals' food maintenance
needs don't really increase that much.''
What about pets, and dogs in particular,
Dr. Epperson? Dogs may be kept outside, he
answers, If they are out of the winds, have
clean, dry bedding and plently of food and
water.
But, do not In any cireuntstances leave a
dog tied outside wlthoutlood. he says he has
seen cases where family pooches have
frozen to death due to lack of fond .

Egyptians ask more
pressure on ~srael

.
1

By W. G. KIROLOS
CAIRO, Egypt (U P!)
Egypt ended its press attacks
on Israeh Prime Minister
Menachem Begin today, but
appealed to the United States
to put more pressure on the
Jewish state or face increased Sovtet meddling In
the Mtddie East.
Catro sources satd the
government ordered th e
three main state-controlled
newspapers to stop their
vttriohc campaign against
Begtn following a meeting between President Anwar Sadat
and U. S. Ambassador
HermaM F. Etlts .
They satd the decision
apparently was made m
response to aU. S.-Israeli call
for a halt to the propaganda
war that ts hampermg a
resumption of collapsed
peace taiks
,
Mustafa Am in, whose
commentary

in

the

newspaper
AI
Akhbar
compared
Begin
to
Shakespeare's Jewtsh
money-lender , Shylock,
published a low-key rebuttal
of lsraeh charges of anti·
Semihsm by the Eyptian
press.
No
other
newspaper
prmted personal attacks on
Begin today But, echoing
what dtplomat described as
Sadat's dtssattsfaction with
U.S policy, they called for
much stronger American
pressure to soften lsraell's
repeated rejectiOn of key
Ca1ro negotiating demands.
Al Akhbar said in a front·
page editorial it supported
Washington's call for "quiet
diplomacy" if that meant an
end to the war of words between the mam Mtddle East
adversaries. But it added ·
"We oppose thts ... if it
means a slow diplomacy .. .
We warn against a negative

FBI sure Ray alone
HEALTH

'

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

Causes of
epilepsy
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - fn
August of 1972 my hus band
suffered a grand mal seizure
while sleepmg A bram scan,
EEG and complete evaluation found no callSe for the
seizure
doctors prescnbed
1 The
Dliantm which he took for a
while, then QUit He was all
nght for over a year. Then he
hi.Jd three severe seizures,
one after the other. A repeat
evaluatton agam fatled to
show any cause for his
seizures
Agam, he was put on Dilan·
tin and he took it fatlhfully
twtce a day. Dunng the next
two years he agam had some
Ug~t seizures, but only one at
a tune and he recovered
QUickly.
Then last November he
agam suffered three grand
mal seizures in about two and
a half hours. These were the
most severe attacks he has
ever had . He was completely
disorgamzed and dehrious.
He is now on four Dilanttn
tablets and day and Mebaral
at bed tune .
What ca n be the cause of
these setzures and why
should they have started at
the age of 49' There is no
history of eptlepsy . tn his
famtly, he has suffered no
severe head injury and he is
~ not a heavy drmker. f am
concerned as to what these
setzures might do to hnn. The
doctor says not to worry as
long as he takes his rttedicme
butl'mnotso sure.
DEAR READER - You
have to realize that over half
of all cases of eptlepsy occur
without any apparent callSe.
This common form of eptlepsy is called "idiopathic" as
opposed \O ," acqwred" which
1ia8 an identifiable cause
The other point your hilS·
band 's htstory makes is that
many people who develop
epilepsy do not have a family
history of the disorder. The
relatively low Incidence of
children of parents of epJleplics and the occurrence of
epilepsy in people With no
family history as m your hus·

band's case demonstrates
that the chances of inherltmg
eptlepsy are not very great
That, coupled with the abihty
to control most setzures with
modern medicmes, means
there need be little concern
about ·a person With eptlepsy
bavmg children.
You can expect your hilS·
band to be sertollSiy c-onfllSed
with
such
attacks .
Headaches, confusion and
fatigue are all part of the pte·
ture in many patients in the
post convulstonstate, called
the " post ictal state."
Desptte how it looks, the
person wtth a convulswn does
no\ expertence pam from the
convulsion. The only pam
that occurs is after the person
wakes up If he has bitten his
tongue or cheek or hurt
himself in a fall . That is why
it is important to put the person in a safe position where
he is not apt to strike himself
and have hun he down so he
can't hurl himself. If you
have something soft, such as
a handkerchtef, you can pultl
between his teeth to help prevent btting his tongue ot
cheek.
To gtve you more information about epilepsy and what
to expect f am sending you
The Health Letter number
11&gt;-8, Eptiepsy: You Can Have
It Too. I used that title bacllSe
anyone at any age can
develop eptiepsy as a compUcation of an automobile acctdent, a stroke or any other
cause of brain damage. It is
more common than you
might think. Others who want
.this information can send 50
cents wtth a long, stamped,
self-addressed envelope for it
to me in care of this
newspaper, P .O. Box 1~1,
Radio City Station, New
York, NY 10019.
And I must caution you that
an epileptic should not stop
his medicine wtthout .his doc·
tor's approval. Getting a pa·
tlent adjusted to the right
medicine for him often lakes
many months, well over a
year. If your husband stops
his Mebaral he may
precipitate severe recurrent
attacks called status epilepticllS, which is an emergency.

By MIKE FEINSU.BER
UP! Senior Editor
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Martin Lutber King's friends
believed there must have
heen a conspiracy to kill him
-and even James Eilrl Ray
S8ld h"e had an accomplice but the FBI privately dectded
Ray killed King with help

from no me.
In the largest manhunt m
history, the bureau dectded
Ray had both the racial
hatred to provide a motive
and the means to finance an
escape that carried hun to
Mexico two days after the
slaying and to Usbon and to
London within five weeks.
The FBI, 1rylng to question
everyone in contact with Ray
In the year between his
escape from prison and the
April 4, 1968, slaying, could
find no one who plotted
murder with him.
The bureau's internal !ties
on the King case, compUed by
3,075 agents and totaling
more than 40,000 pages, were
made available to United
Press International in
compliance
with
the
Freedom of lnformatioo Act,
They portray a small-time
robber who charged fellow
prisoners 50 percent interest
on loans to finance their
poker games . And he
''mRlDiined" ampbetamines
and barbiturates, and alter
he escaped from a Missouri
prison moved to Los Angeles,
visited a hypnotist, paid a
plastic surgeon to reconstruct
his nose, and pulled bills from
alai wad in his pocket to pay
for dancing lessons. He
'niE DAILYSENTINM.

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHDJ..
Ex«. Ed.
ROBEII.T HOEFLICH

c•rEdlt«

Publlahtd dilly except S.turdly
by The Ohio
PubU..hlnM

\',u.,

Qrnpany·Multimedla, Inc. , I ll
Court St, Pomeroy, Ohio 45789.

Buslneu Oftu.-e Phone 182-

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Editort.l Phonl m-21~7
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Pumeroy,Oh6o.

NaUonal advert.l.slrij( reprfltn\ltlve Ward - Griffltfi Company,
Inc , BotUntlli and Gatllagher D1v ,

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Sublcrlption !"lites DeliV1!red by

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OrM! Y.-rh $22.00. Six monl.h.s,
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•7

stgned up for lessons
wherever he moved - but
never became much of a
go
dancer.
His racism came through in
a remark he made to a' friend,
Charles Stein, who drove with
him from Los Angeles to New
Orleans and back.
"U Negroes want to he free,
they should go north or
west," Stem quoted Ray. ''H
they stay In the South, they
should be willing to be
slaves."
The FBI acknowledged in a
memo that it failed to
establish how Ray raised the
money for the $1,995 white
MllSiang in which he escaped
or the $134.95 for the 30-06
caliber Remington pump rifle
with $74 .60 telescopic sight
llSed to kill King, or the
money to go first to Mexico,
then to canada, where he
bought a roundtrtp ticket to
London.

But the special agent-Incharge of the Memphts
bureau told headquarters on
June 27, 19'14, that agents
found "nothing to mdicate
that Ray ever received any
large sum of money from him $12,000 to kUI King, the
anyone, and what we know of bureau, after an exhuastlve
rejected
that
his livmg habits both before effort,
posstbility
Dec
.
2,
1968,
and after the murder would
indicate that he lived on a saymg :
"Investigation by us, the
very hmtted amount of
Royal Canadian Mounted
money .
Police and the Mexican
" We do not l&lt;now the source
·
authorities
bas failed thus far
of even the smaUest amount
to identify Raoul or to verify
of money possessed by Ray,
his existence. We have no
but since we know him to
information
to date to
have robbed a bank m
indicate
thay
Ray was
England after fleeing to that
involved
in
a
conspiracy.''
country, it is a reasonable
Ray also encouraged conpresumption that Ray
sptracy
plots when he stood In
committed robberies during
court
on
March 10, 1969, and
the time he was a fugitive,"
changed
his plea from
the agent said.
innocent
to
guilty but satd he
A1l for Ray's claim in a
could
"
not
accept" the
magazine mterview that a
assertton
of
his
own lawyers
shadowy "Raoul" offered
and the prosecution that no
conspiracy existed
Ray , 50, was sentenced to
99 years and has made
numerous attempts for a new
trtal.

Rairi to
•
contznue
By
Untied
Prell
!Dtemadonal
Temperatures
remained
above freezing in Ohio today
which means more rain for
the Buckeye State.
A storm now over the Gulf
states will be moving
northeastwa.rd today,
bringing rain to Ohio. That
rain, combined with melting
snow, will cause some ·
slippery condttlons today in
Ohio.
The National Weather
Service says the snow melt
today will produce urban and
small s tre~m flooding in
Ohio. Residents In floodprone areas are being
advised to lake necessarv
precautions and travele~s
should be alert to pools of
standing water In low lying
areas.
A cold front now In the
northern plains states wUI
move to tbe southeast and
enter western Oblo about
midnight \might moving east
of the Buckeye State by
Thursday
morning.
Temperatures will bold
nearly steady until the front

Amertcan diplomacy.' ' I said
such a policy would fuel
'' lsraeh procrastination.''
The daily said unless
Washmgton brought qutck
pressure on Israel, " ft wlll be
gtving a full opportunity to
the Soviet Union and its
hi relings to succee~ in
sabotaging the great hopes
and deep conftdence the Arab
peoples have pinned on the
soundness and capabthty of
the American positiOn."
Hard-lme Arab countnes
Tuesday announced new
moves to counter Egypt's
stalled peace drive with
Israel, but moderate Saudi
Arabia sought to bring the
two stdes closer together .
Syrta said it was taking
measures to " boost our
country's seif·suffictency and
capabilities and strengthen
our armed forces" and
reports in Lebanon said the
hard-liners agreed to hold
another anti-Sadat con·
ference in Algiers later this
month.
But Saudi Foreign Minister
Prince Saud al Faisal visited
Kuwatt to discuss ways of
patchmg up Arab ranks and
avoidtng a complete collapse
of the Arab stance against
Israel .

passes and then 'drop to or
below the freezing mark by
sometime Thursday.
Cold air will spread over
Ohio during the day
Thursday, accompanied by
strong and gusty winds, with
temperatures reaching the
teens during the day.
Rain and widespread heavy
fog were common In Ohio
overnight. Temperatures at 7
A.M.ranged from 37 degrees
In the Akron-Canton area to
29 degrees at Toledo. Fog,
mostly lleavy, was reported
at nearly every major Ohio
city.
The Ohio extended forecast
for Friday through SUnday
calla for very cold weather
and a chance of snow each
day. Higha will range from
the teens to the 'low ?nil
Friday and in the 20.s
Saturday and Sunday. Overnight lows will range from
zero to 10 above zero.
The Ohio extended outlook
for Jan. 30 through Feb. 3
indicates much below normal
temperatures but near
normal precipitation.

statement that up to IS6
school districts i nclud ing
five of the eight INgest in tbe
Slate, face either closing or
reducing services later in
1978 unless additional mooey
IS obtained.
Walter said local funds are
the only realistic resource
envisioned, and that llSing
1977 figures, only half tbe
addttional tax levies would
pass . ·
This would leave "as many
as 73 of Ohio's school districts
In serious financial difficulty
before the end of this year,"
he said .
" Avatlable data indicate
that as many as 156 school
districts, including flve of the
eight largest, face etther the
threat of school closing or
reduction of educallonal
offerings during calendar
year 1978 unless additional
resources are forthcoming ,"
Walters said.
The supermtendent satd of

the eight largest city school
dtstricts,
only Akron,
Youngstown and Toledo can
complete 1978 without a
deficrt but are "quick to note
that calendar year 1971 will
bring
forth
financial
problents unless additional
revenue is available.' :
Walter sale! Cleveia~ pr~
jects a $30 million deficit Uus
year , Columbus an $11.7
million deficit, Cincinnati $7
mUUon, Dayton $1 million to
$2 millton and Canton $1
million .
In survey of administrators
of the state's 616 school
districts Jan . 13, Walter said
the Department of Education
found that 156 districts would
definitely have a deficit in
1978 and 21 more might have
one.
The survey showed that 184
districts
are planning
operating levies for the
ballot , and 64 otbers are
considering the possibility.

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Editor
NEW YORK (UP!) - Some guys come to play , but Ray
Nitschke never did. With him, football wasn't a game, but
rather a life-and-death struggle for survtval and he went about
11 with such ferocity that his name became a synonym for
·
sheer brute force
Off the fteld, he wore dark horn-nnuned glasses, spoke as
softly as a mortician and never neglected to hold the door for
little old ladies, but once he put on his )YOrk clothes, he was
something else completely.
A middle linebacker for the Green Bay Packers from 1958
until he retired at the end of the 1972season, Nitschke dtd such
a devastating job on his opponents that he heard himself
described as an "animal" and a "madman" among other
thmgs. He apprectated the comparisons others made between
his playing ability and that of fellows like Dick Butkus and Joe
Schmidt, but never apprectated being called some of those
names.
Last weekend, the phone ra ng in Nitschke 's home Earl
Schretber, prestdent of the ProfessiOnal Football Hall of Fame
in Canton, Ohio, was calling from Tampa, Fla .
,
"Are you sitting down?" Schreiber asked hun .
"Yes, sir ,1• answered the 41·year-olc;l former Ali~Pro.
"You 've just been elected to the Hall of Fame," Schreiber
told him.
Nitschke was so stunned, he was speechless for a moment .
"Is this on the level?" he wanted to know.
Schreiber assured him it was, infornung Nitschke he bad
been voted in along with Weeb Ewbank, only coach ever to win
championships tn both the NFL and AFL; Lance Atworth, San
Diego's one-time brilliant wide recetver ; Larry Wtlson , the
best free safety St. Louis ever bad, and Tully Leemans, who
used to put his head down , churn those legs of his like a pair of
ptstons and make all those tough yards for the New York
Giants back m the '30s and '40s.
Many things flashed through f\ily Nttschke's mind when he
recetved that phone call last Saturday afternoon .
He recalled playing for the University of IllinoiS and how
four of his front teeth were knocked out in a game with Ohio
State. But what he thought about most were his days with tbe
Packers and the men he played with like LeRoy Jordan, Wtllie
Davts, Lionel Aldridge, Dave Robmson, Herb Adderley, Fuzzy
Thurston Jerry Kramer, Jun Taylor, Paul Hornung, Jtm
Ringo an'd Bart Starr, aU of whom were part of the Vince
Lombardi legend at Green Bay.
"It's difficult to explain how proud I am to have played wtth
aU those fellows and for Vinnie Lombardt," says Nitschke .
"Coach Lombardi· had a tremendous influence on me, but the
man who maybe had even more was Phtl Bengtson. He's m the
real estate bllSiness m San Otego now but he was in charge of
the defense for the Packers when I was wtth them.

peopletalk
By KENNETHR. CLARK
Unlted Preso1Dte11111Uonal
CLUB OR AX: French actress Brigitte Bardo! got the cold
shoulder Tuesday from Canadian Prime Mlolaler Pierre .
Trudeau- Ul response to her protest of canada'S aMuaJ seal
pup slaughter. Trudeau's answer was delivered to her In
Strasbourg, France, where Miss Bardo\ Is attending talks
auned at getting the seal hunt banned. Says Trudeau, "Seals
are killed in a quicker and more l)umane manner than are
most domestic animals in civilized countries ... The clubbing
on the ice floes and the use of the felling ax in the
slaughterhouses are not tender gestures but what counts is
that they make the animal unconscious.''

DIRECTORS NOMINATED: The Directors Guild of
America Tuesday named five nominees for best director of a
feature movie In 1977- Woody Allen for "Annie Hall," Georse
Lacao for "Star Wars," Herbert Rosa for "The Turning
Point " Fred Zinnemano for "Julia" and Sleven Spielberg for
"Clo~ Encounters of Ute Third Kind."
'

QUOTE OF 'I1IE DAY: Columbus, Ohio, Judge Jameo
Pearson after attorney Frederlcl&lt; Glttes claimed his client's
nght to toss a banana cream pie at Gov. James A. Rhodes is
protected by free speech provisions of the Fint Amendment :
"!want to commend you for being able to present that motion
with a straight face - that took courage."

Tri-County

GUMPSES: Janet Louise Johnson replaces PBJDela Sne
Martin in the role of Nancy Drew next month for a special
ABC-TV episode of "The Hardy Boys," starring Sbaua C8111dy
and Parker Stevenson ... Dinah Shore welcomes old, old friend
Burt Revoolds as IIUest star on ber show Feb. 3 ... Former
Olympic medalist Olga ConooU~ was sworn In Tuesday as the
first Wootan ever to sit on !he C811fornia State Athletic Commission ... Irene Worth will accept the New York Film Critic
Award Sunday at Sardl's on behalf of Sir John Gielgud, with
presentation by Lyno Redgrave ... Peter Boyle and Mlcbael
Moriarty opened Monday at New York's actors Studio In Israel
Horovitz' "Wakefield Plays" ... Fonner Prelldeot Gerald
Ford was given the Americanism Award of the Great Western
Council of the Boy Scouts Tuesday r.ight a t a dinner in Los
Angeles ....

Sport
Shop

I

Lawmaking at a glance
COLUMBUS (UPI) A
glance at activtty Tuesday In
th e Ohto General Assembly
SENATE
BILL PASSED
Sub SB 163, Jackson Allows

tratned

optometn sts

to

use

dtagnostlc drugs Vote 70 11
MOTION DEFEATED

Lukens
Relieve Judtc iarv
Comm tttee of HB 91, school
medttat ton b•ll Vote . 2 29
HOUSE
BILLS PASSED
Am Sub HB 765 , McEwen
Al lows church buses to dtsp tay
flas h1 ng red tights Vot~ 68 15
Am
Sub H B 870, H t~l e

Licensing of res ldent l.!lt care
fac 1lit1es for the mentally lit .
Vote : 83 -4
Am SB 289, Gdtmor . Makes
m1suse of credit cards a fe lony
Vote 84 5
HOUSE CONCURS IN SENATE
AMENDMENTS .
Sub HB 648, J _ Johnson
Requ~res compta1nant aga1nst
the valuation of rear pro pert~
to provide the board of rev1Sion
all available mforml!tion 77 0.
A m . HB 412, Fauver Proh1b
11s the use of eldra cred1t on
CIVIl serv1ce exams unless the

• Fishing Tackle
and Rods
and Reels
• Guns and
Reloading
e Ba II Gloves
Camping
Equipment
e Archery
• Indoor Games
• We
have Gilt
Certificates

passmg grade BO 0
Am HBA56, Pope Grants
v1ctims of juvenile theft a civil
act10n against the luventte's
parents 72 9
BlL(S INTRODUCED
HB 1031, ShOemaker
ReQuires grocery ~tores usmg
computer prtcing to have shelf
pr1cmg also
HB 1032, Branstoot Requires
tax comm rsstoner to make
1ncome tax returns ava il able to
the welfare department to
verify welfare eligtbll lty
H B 1033, Stlnzlano. , Requlr¥
the state to make payments ih
lteu of taxes on state.owned,
tax exempt property
HB 1034, R James Regulo!ltes
the takmg of mournmg doves
H B 1035, Madd ux Confirms
agreements between the Lake
Lands Admin istrator and land
owners at Buckeye lake
H B 1036, Maddux Confirms
agreements between the Lake
Lands Adm inist rator and lana
owners at Buckeye lake
HB 1037. Branstool Conf irms
agreements between the Lake
Lands Admlntst rator and land
owners at Buckeye lake

Pardee wasting
no time at all
ByPATRICIAKOZA
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Jack Pardee dtdn't waste any
tune taking over from his
mentor, George Allen, as
head coach of the Washington
Redskins.
'!;he former Chtcago Bears
head coach, who signed a
multi-year contract with
Redskins Prestdent Edward
Bennett Williams Tuesday,
said he would be In hts new
offtce today to begin picking
his assistants and to assess
the team's potential for next

season.
"Right now we've got to get
ready for next year, not walt
to do any celebrating;" he
explained. "I don't know
what the . situation is at
Redskin Park right now, and
I want to lind out im·
mediately.''

MAN KILLED
WARREN, Ohto (UPI )
Leon Rodgers, 35, Howland
Townshtp, dted early today of
gunshot wounds recetved late
Monday, -police satd Police
satd Rodgers was shot
several ttmes at a residence
tn Howland Township. There
have been no arrests.

NOW OPEN

601 Main St.
Pt . Pleasant, W.Va.

Holy Cross rallied from a
16-j&gt;oint halft~e deficit to
defeat Boston\ College, 82-76.
Boston College led by 18
points at halftime but Ronnie
Perry and Chris Potier led a
54iJolnt surge by Holy Cross
In the second half.
Alvin Wright hit two foul
shots with 15 seconds left
giving Memphis State a ~2
win over Georgia Tech .
Memphis trailed, 62-61, when
Wright, the game's high
scorer with 22 points, was
fouled by Tech's Rob Noyes
and came through with the
liame-ciincblng points.
St. Joon's scored a 89-88
triumph over Manhattan in a
game marred by a fight.
George JohJl!llln made two
free throws for St. Joon's
following a fight, which
resulted in referee Hank
Nichols getting a surprise
and unintentional punch In
the""""·
Phil Taylor scored a
careerblgh 36 points and Joe
Nehls had 22 In leading
Arizona to Its runaway 114-89
triumph over Nevada-Las
Vegas.

Playmg wtthout the ser- second stanza . The thtrd
vtces of htgh scoring Ron quaner ended wtlh the Meigs
Jackson, a senior guard, the Counllans hoidtng a 44_.3
,
Highlanders lead
Southwestern
The ga me see-sawed back
still made "'game" showing
Tuesday mght before bowtng and forth until Southern took
to the SVAC defendin g charge with about three
cha mpton Southern Tor· mmutes remaimng . DurtnK
nadoes, 69-60. Jackson, ac· the final penod, Southern
cording to head basketball won the contest by hitting
coach Wayne Bergdoll, wtll mne of 13 free throws.
"
Rtchard Teaford , J ohn
be lost to the team for at least
three weeks due to a fra c- Sayre and Jtm O'Bnen were
the big guns during the rally.
tured hand.
Four players hit double
The Highlanders t ook
control of the game m the figures for Coach Carl
first period only to see the Wolfe1s Tornat1nrc: l&lt;'"ll"v
TornadoE'" hnnnr,. h:~rk 'I" the

a

PHONE
675-2988

the move . Btliy E lkins
By Greg Bailey
After a two-week layoff due brought Metgs wtthm two at
to the bad weather, the.Metgs 57-52 with 6· 00 left on a long
Marauders got back tnto cage JUmper. Less than a mmute
actton last mght by hosttng later, senior co-capta in
the Wellston Go)den Rockets Chuck Folirod sank two
But Metgs probably would chanty tosses to pull Metgs
hke to have had the game wtthin three at 59-56 But then
post poned agam as the Metgs htl one of tis naggmg
vtsttors pulled away tn the cold spells and was outscored
clostng mmutes for a 75-SB 16-2 m the next four mtnutes
as the Rockets put the game
wm.
Two big fa ctors m the wtn away .
The crew of Coach Ron
for the Rockets were their
rebounding and Metgs' cold l..&lt;&gt;ga n turned in a balanced
hand from t he floor. The sconng attack, but the attack
Rockets of Coach Ri ck wa sn 'l enough. Three men hit
Purdue hauled in a hefty total double figures with Kenny
of 59 caroms, led by senior Young leadmg the way wtth
John Martin 's 22, as Meigs 18 to take scortng honors for
collected just 35 The Rockets th e even mg Foilrod and
htl a warm "43 pet. from the Elkins both had 10.
Brent Stanley had a good
fl oor , but Meigs seemed to be
affected by the recent cold night under the boards wtth
weather as they netted JUs! 32 11 caroms to go along with his
four potnts. Ray Andrews and
pet. on 22 of 68 shots
On the opening ttp, Metgs' Foilrod each garnered SIX
Dave Blake put hts team rebounds. The team htt on 14
ahead 2-0 wtth Jus! 10 seconds of 20 free thr ows.
Martin led the wmn ers with
gone, but that was the only
hts
17 potnts to complement
Marauder lead of the mght.
Jeff Montgomery sank ftve his 22 rebounds. Three other
st raight points for the Rockets htt double fi gu res
Rockets to make the score 5· John Royster 15, Mon·
2, and the VISitors were never tgome roy 12 , a nd Ted
headed or tted from then on Wtiliams 10. The Rockets
Metgs was behtnd only 18·12 were cold from the line as
when the first pertod ended, they canned JUst 11 of 22
and after fallmg 11 potnts tosses Personal fouls for
behtnd mtdway through the each team were even-twenty
second canto, came back aptece
Metgs is in a n important
wtthtn reach at 35-28 when the
half ended The third period week of basketball. Fnday
was gomg to be ail Wellston. mght they go to Jackson , a
seemingly, but the hosts team they upset earlier m the
ca ught ftre after failing 16 year, and then on Saturday
pomts behmd and made up 10 they host Wahama , one of the
to get within reach by the Marauders' vacltms earlier 10
the season . Two more Wins
buzzer at 52-46.
The last stanza saw Mmgs could get the Metgs crew 1n
ptck up where the last canto the nght spirit for some tough
ended and the h'osts were on games to come 1n the last two
weeks of the season.

Foil rod
Becker
Stenley
Young

PHONE 773-5536

Open Sunday 1- p.m -6 p.m
Monday thru Saturday

9a.m.to8pm .

Blake
Elkms
Andrews
Hawley
Kennedy
Totals
32 percent

all

13
13

4

0

5

0

11

3

7

1
3

0

0

3
1
2

4
1
4
1
0

2

7
l
1

•

0
0
0
14

4
2

3
0
1
0

7

•

1
1
1
2

4
5
2•

0
0
0

I

0

6
0
0
1
0

0

2

2

4

4
3
3
4

2

3 22
3

3

9
5
8

6
6

I
I
t

1
0
0

2
0
1

w

LOBBYING EFFORT
COLUMBUS (UP! )
Advocates of " prayer m
school" who are maintaining
a 2~our vtgil in the Capitol
lost a chance to influence a
vote earlier this week .
Freshman Sen. Paul E .
Pfeifer, R-Bucyrus, told the
Senate Republican caucus
Tuesda; that one of the
advocates of the bill came

28
25

46
52

•

773-5554

,,,

'-

BRENT STANLEY , 6-1 semor (42) and Chuck F
Foilrod, 6-0 ~enior, on the Meigs Marauder squad go up for
a rebound on the defensive board Tuesday night at
Mornson gym_

sop h om ore

r, om

DENVER (UP! ) - A scheduled court appearance for
Denver Bronco quarterback
Cratg Morto n has been
vacated and an out-o r--c:ourl
se ttlement of a $.17,60 1
judgment aga mst him "is m
the works ," uccording to
Morton 's attorney
Morton! 34, had been scllC·
duied to appear tn Adams
County Dtst ri ct Court at
Bri ghton today for an
exammatton or h1s assets
because of a jud gment
obtamed m mid-December by
Manuf acturer's

'Ad•7llll

101
S Lau r 1'ihf't C~"tth '} (!l I) 79
6 C 11 d1nglon
70
I Huntmg l on (7 0)
68
B MuH.lM 1 ( 10 0)
·IB
9 r ritn ... lo•tA rlt' !1ll (J 11
M\
10 Ro(lo,y R1vcr
lu th WC!!of(ttl\
·11
Q t he•~ witt1 !('n 0 1 n10I &lt;'
point... Bu1..kcy(' l1 a• I l}).
New
R tt:'gl' l ,
S~t llllt'vd lt•

f

c\11\l (?11\101) ( 1)

rmd B!urtlon

D1m Corne ll '~ Wt ldi '&lt;~ I S
slllh' 111 the SVAf'.

11

~-il

C' ulll'll Du a nf' Wtllf t •'~
l&lt;:clj.!lt•s 111111 111!-L 4ll·.ll ,It lh t•
t'l1ll of tlw ltll1 d S! .J!IZ.t nlllll'
ll l&gt; wilh 25 Pt• mts ! Li makt • l h•
fmHI Sl 'IJI c Li(ISt•

Scmor:t Dtn1 id Sw:lln :111d
Duv e (' ampiH'II led t ht•
Wildcats with 17 :md 12 poi nt ~
rcspct·t 1\·c\y Hon P,H k a I.&lt;.:( I
\ut double f1 g1 ucs \\llh 10
point s
Pudng Ill~· EnHh'l'i Wt'l 1'
nan SpctlC'el Wit h 24 point s
und Hu sty Wi~-:n l wllh HI
ll annun Tnu·c znmm•d mtu
its early lcacl l&gt;ehtnd t i lt'
"lluutm~ uf ~Wa11 1 nnd Klt'Vt'
Heaver
E.a!',1 crn cunu' ba ck 111 lh• '
f11Hii 1'illlllUI till ! ht• h oi
shoolillg efforts of f.ipt·net•r 's
10 pmnl .s Hntl I:h W ll Ht shl'll 'l'i
SIX ]&gt;OIIli S The loss left !llf'
f.uglcs with n l·fi 1CGtl cl
IIHnnan Trut:e w1111 ttw
reserve ttlt , 39·2G ( ' l ~.tr h·s
Hme rm m JUH.:Cd tlw !. !Il l~·
Wildcats w1lh 12 points ( :rc ~
WIKu1 t l·~ lhe l' o~gl cs will! ttl

points
W c ut hc t

Jl l) lllllll!n g,

FndHy

n1 ght.

l htn/HIII

Trace w1ll play a t Soullu!m m
~Jnot hcr showciuwn fo r Llw
SVAC rm;t pill CD bml h
Box score
Eastern (56 )
8

Goebel 3 'l

B 211 B• ssr ll 11 0
1 2-4. W1g.11 ·1 'l 10 ,

Sp~nce r 8

a; Brown

1

Enynon I 0·2. Totals 21 · 1&lt;1-56 .
Hannan Tra ce (S~) Swam 9·1 17, Moon ey 3 3 9
Beaver 4 1-9 , Campbell 11 4
I'} , Betrver 4 1· 9 : N ~ al I 0 ') _

Pack s 0 10 To tal s 25-9·59
By Quarters
Eil sl er n
10 13 8 25- 56

H. Tra ce

11 15 10 13

59

Hanover

10
8

•

18
2
10

MARTIN, Tenn . (UP!J Umver stty of Te nnesseeMarlin football Coach George
Macintyre, who coached with
steve Sloan at Vanderbilt
four years ago, satd Tuesday
he is leaving the ·P acers w
join Sloan's staff at the
University of MISSISSippi.
Macintyre, who said he wUI
be the Rebels' defe ns tve
coordinator a nd secondary
coach, will he succeeded by
Vester Newcomb, the Pacers'
offensive coordinator .

15
17
7
10
12

4
6
0
2
2

..-------·

mto his offtce Mooday night
"She asked me if there
were any senators around,"
said Pfeifer. "I told her I
didn 'I think so and she left "
Pfeifer was one of 29
senators voting agamst a
parhamentary maneuver to
get the btll on the Senate floor
from the Senate Judiciary
Commtttee.

7 '12 Pet . per year on a
4 year certificate of
deposit .
$5,000.00
mimm urn
deposit.
A 1u1Jst~ntiat pen1lt y Is
Invoked on all ce rtifi cate
accounts withdrawn J)rior

to the dale of maturity

I FISH FRY I
I SATURDAY I
I JANUARY 28th I

58
75

I
I
I
I
KENNY YOUNG , 5-11 senior, the Marauders leading
scorer, drives in for a lay-up agamst an umdentified "
Wellston player Tuesday nij:ht at Morrison gym. Pictures
by Greg Bailey.

II

STARTING AT
11:00 A.M.
' AI The

The Athens County
Savings &amp; loan Co.

296 Second St
Pomeroy, Oh1o ·

.______..
MIDDLEPORT
FIRE DEPARTMENT

F5f.JC
I
I L-~-~-:-~--;;;;;:...J

HARDWARE
HEAD
SHOP:

Wilkinson Small EttQine Sales &amp; Service
498 Locust St .

..

1 (6 Jl 107

Trust Co of New York City
for an unpaid loa n.

SEE OUR SELECTION

MASON, W.VA.

lOB
P~ter 's

Hannan 'l'nu·c gnes tu South·
western tOillt4hl

Bu1lt w ith plenty of power . ease of
ndllng
Intended
lor
light
profe ssi onal use or around the home or
. Equipped
with an anti vlbrat1on mounted front handle to help '
dampen vibrations and a large effective silencer Th e
65 IS a lightweight yet powerful chain ':lo0..V (' · , · ',
guard Is optional.)

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.

01
J Man!. Sl

Hannan Trace trips

po und

CHAIN SAWS

"

/8

Class A
Team
Po1nt s
I Ar c-tu w•n 6 (J 0)
I I}
7 t.ah.f'Sidt' Dt)nbu ry 2 I 8

~ou t l1ern ( 1)

Pomt s

Cleveland Centrnl Clllhuhe
iltgh Sc hool , scurcd the
gu me-wmnmg basket with 46
seconds r emnuung in .• the
game, then sed l ed the
Husktes' fate with a key
rebound w1lh JUSt 20 seconds
left

Right for Any Culling Job

each

••

COLUMBUS IUPII
Trent Groo m s ~ wh o look
charge 1n the late go1ng In
Kenl State's 63-62 victury
ove r Nort hern Illi nois
Saturday mght, has been
selected the Mtd-Amcrican
Conference player uf the
week
Grooms, a ti-foo\·7, 185·

By Quarters
12
18

99

S Campbell Mem 'J \9 I ) 70
6 Pcrrysburg 1 l8 1l
a~
' Chaqrln'Falls I9 OJ
4?
8 Wat s~w R111et V1cw (52) 35
9 Pemberville
Eas twood {5 1)
JJ
10 Chardon 18 11
11
Oth~r s with te-n or 11101"&lt;"
potn ts Avon ( H Lm,a Bath
~)nd At chbold

Grooms named
top in MAC

32 74 11 22 59 20 75

M

m

11 Dtt.'"\dNl Trl Vttllny (7 0 ) 71

Host Humwn Truce JUIHJWd
mto a 21-10 lead ut the end uf
the hrst period then held off a
lute rally t o upend the
Eastern
Eag les,
59·51&gt;
Tue,;day mght.
The victory gu ve Coud\

6
6
0 1
0
0 1 I 0
20 35 20 58
1

17
16
8
10

• 11

Baker
Totals
43 percent

\

4

0

3

Pugh
Lockhart

6

6

7
8

Montgomery
Swonger
Norman

l
0

5

0
22 68

Royster

'

I D&lt;•lpho; Sl Joho; 8 (9 OJ

Eastern,- 59 to 56

• •

6 22
3
0
0

Martin
Gi lli land
Witt lams .

NO. 2
- PRECUT STUDS

pal' t•d

tg Ita It Ita rg rf t p•
3
4
2

Wettston

.

LJ ylun

Southern (69 ) - Te~ l ord 7
scorers with 22 points Munlc
Blanton had 13 putnts and 0 1-1 , Wt nebrenner 7 '} 16 ;
Bn na ger 'l· 3 7. Sayre .J '1 10
Larry rartcr 12.
fidl 10 2 ; Baker 01 1,
Southwestern sank 27 uf 54 O'Bnen 6·4 16 . FAqd iC'y 1 01 ,
floor attempt s for 50 pd . •md and Souder 0 I 1 Total s 28· 13·
69
SIX of 11 fr ee throws .
Southwestern
(60 )
Soulhcrncanncd2B ufol from Ca rl er 6·0 1'). Jordan 4 I 9 ,
the floor for 46 pet and 13 of Bla nt on 6 I l J Lay ton 10 7 17
20 at the chanty ;tnpe. The and T Ba ker 1 2 4 t otals 17
Funnel Clouds too k the • 60.
By Quarters :
reserve game, 43·29
SQU therri
16 76 44 69
Southwestern 4-6 Y+J\l play S Wes tern
13 33 43 60

Rockets pummel Meigs 75-58

Meias

OF MASON

Across fiom Courthouse

Gl'lll'

Hannan Trace this cnnmg
and go ro Eastern Fnday .
Sout hern 6-3 overall will hust
lhuuwn Traer Frid:ty .
Ro1C Ston•

terna t ional OtHo H1gh School
Board o l Coi\ches · girls
basketball ratings wi th ftrsl
place votes and won los t
records in parerrtheses
Class AAA
Team
Point&amp;
1 Sprmgfteld N IJ i7 0)
179
2 Mlddttown I ( 10 01
111
J Kettenng F~rrmont
Wes t (7 0)
93
4 Col WAl nut Rtdge (6 I) 89
S Sylvan•a North v1cw I ( 8
0)
80
6 Bay VIlla ge Ill 01
7 Eas tlake N 3 1II 0)
67
8 Gahanna Lmcoln (9 Ol
63
9 Co Wa tt erson ( 6 I)
55
10 Cleveland Ltncoln
W ~s t (6 1)
78
Olfler s w1th 10 or· m Ot' ('
poin ts Fairfield, Kel tcr•119
Fairmon t East , Ment or' ,
Stru th ers, Ch1c1nnali Mother
ol Mer cy , Culcinnatl OAk
Hr l l s.
To l edo
Ce ntral
Cat hol ic, Canton M cKrnley
Clndnnat l tlughes. Detawc1rc
Hayes.

/

2 Co Harth'y ( 10 OJ
J Onlttrlo I (7 0)

Class AA

Meigs- Wellston .box.

GINO'S

Wi ne br enner
and
Jim
O'i:lrict\ led the wa y with 16
pmnt s each Teaford dumped
tn 14 and S~yre added to

C.OLUMBU&gt; (UPIJ
Tlus
week ' s United Press In

Team

VISA "

'

Warriors deserve the No . I
ranking in the nation but
admits, "I'd like to be No. 1,
you better believe it.''
The defending . NCAA
champions beat Xavier, 7662, Tuesday rught in an easy
victory in which Raymonds
used
all
12
players.
Afterwards there was more
. interest in Marquette's
chances of being No. I than
there was In the game.
The Warriors, now 15-1, are
ranked No . 2 by UPI in this
week's coaches ratings
behind Kentucky. But the
Wildcats lost Monday night
and Marquette now has a shot
at the No . !/spot.
"I was shocked (about the
Kentucky loss) but I'll still
vote for Kentucky," said
Raymoods, who is on the UPI
coaches panel that ranks
teams. "I think they're the
best team In the COW11ry."
Xavier Coach Tay Baker
admitted that the Warriors
simply best his team and he
said that's because they have
so much talent and so much
depth.

NAMED COACH
TIFFIN, Ohto IUP!) John P. (Spez) Spezzafert(.
56, has been named head
football coach at Hetdelberg
College , succeeding Bob
Rankm who restgned after
two years on the JOb

appli cant atta1ns at least a

Marquette can he No. 1
By MICIIAEL V. USCHAN
Hank Raymonds says he
isn't sure if his Marquette

Southern cops 69-60
win over SW quintet

Girls' basketball ratings

.

o.

Mi

..

PICKEN'S HARDWARE
MASON, W. VA.
OPEN

...

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Wednesday , Jan . :IS, 1978 .

•

··Falcons 'lose 75 to 59

College
scores

Blue Devils now
third in league

BY GARY CLARK

Coline IA5ketbtll Re5ulh
BV U"it•d Pr tn tntE&gt;rnat10na l

Ea 5t

The long layoff took ill toll
on the Wa harna Whlte Falcon

After an " unscheduled" layoff which lasted 18 Assmptn 66, Sf Anslms s1
Columbia. 67 . ~ordh&amp;m ••
cage squad Tuesday evening
days, due to bad weather, Coach Jim Osborne's
Ham11fon 80. Hobart 71
h th
ed ba-"
H(lly Cross 8:1, Bsn Coli 76
W en ey resum
;,a.etball
Gallipolis }Jiue Devils resumed hardwood action
llhaca 9•. Alfre-d 71
actiQn by journeying to
LIU 81. Prall
SO
BUIf8 J0 Where th ey Su1fered 8
Tuesday night with a 66-51 makeup victory over Mnhltnvi
61 , York SS
Coach AI Burger's visiting Jackson lronmen.
N H Coli 78. E Naz 73
~ setback at the band! of
Oswt&gt;Qo
6S,
Brockpor
t
64
the BiJons
Approximately 600 fans braved outside Pikeville 1•. Union 71
•
9•.
utic&amp; eo
Wahlma had a catastrophic
elements to attend the Southeastern Ohio League Siena
51 John'&gt; 69, Mnhttn 68
· lint half when they scored
Wst ttd St 7'1, E. Conn 71
contest.
Whhng 89, Bluttd St. a1
only 13 points. Meanwhile
The victory left Gallipolis with a .5-5 season
Wllkt&gt;s n .. Phlt. Pharm 7S
the hot shooting Bisons, wer~
wrcs tr ST 71 , Frmnghm 69
mark . Inside the SEOAL, Gallia Academy upped
5oulh
busy building a 37-13 lead
Geo
Wash
.
87,
Catl'l
U.
67
it rf
its record to 4-3 , and moved into third place behind
Hmpdn Sydny 81, Wash&amp;Lee behl nd B ••
~po n pe OMnBDCe
,.
· by the All-State candidate
Logan and Waverly.
The I ron men dropped to 2-9
overall a nd 0-7 in the con~
[('renee. J ackson led three times in

the .cont est. 2.{) on a pair of
cha rit y t osses by Rich
H• rless , 5· 10 senior co·
captain guard, and 14·13, on
two free throws by Harless
wil h two Seconds left in the

first stanza.
David Evans, 6-0 junior,

gave the lronmeo a 16-13
advantage with a drtvllrgla)·up to open second period
play.

Ev~ns

canned two

free tosses with 6:31 left In
the first hall to give the
lronmen their final lead of

Hmpt n I M I. tt4 , va . Sf. 99
Lvnchbg 97, E. Mnnonite 71l
Mryvt 75 , emor y&amp;Henry 64
Md. E.Sh 90, Del. Sl. 61
Midwest
Bldwn wt ce toe, Mt.union 78
Baker vt66.
America89 S1
Ced&amp;r
ueMld
96, Mato"e
Chicago St. 84, Lewis 65
Chi crete71,97,Iowa
G. wms
cornell
wstyn6959
CDe 101. Grinnell 88
111 . Wslyn 91, N cent 82
Marqu ett e 78. Xav ier 62
o . oom 62. cen1re K'( . ss
O.Roberts -73. Dr ake 71
pu incy 73 , Milli kin 57
ROC kfOrd 79, Tr' ini!y 72
Tabor ~ '\.. Me Pherson 84
~~."~ e5n'ri 967,", ~~~~~r
Southwest
BlhnyNaz. 69 , USAO 53
Cent. Okla . ao. ca mrn 76,
E.Telt Ba pt 51. La. co11 49

attempts for 54 percent. The
Gallians were eight of II at
the foui line for 72 percent.
The Blue Devils had 17
personals, 32 rebcunds, including a game-high of 12 by
Brad Abels. The Blue Devils
had 14 turnovers .
Gallipolis placed four men
in double figures, led by
Wall' s 16 points. Sterrett, 6-2
junior forward , playing for
senior Jeff Brown who
missed Tuesday's game, due
to Illness, added IS points.
Abels . and. Jinuny Harris
each had 12 markers .
Galllpollo had 19 assists,
led by Jimmy Harris '
sevea. The wimlen had six
;teals and Abel• blocked
. six Jackson shots.
Friday, the Blue Devils
play at Athens in a regularly·
scheduled game. Gallia plays
at Waverly Saturday in a
makeup contest. Jackson will
host Meigs Friday and play at
Wellston Saturday in a
makeup game.

-

~~'tu:;~a~Z. 2 Ee~~~~~~. ~!

Prade vw 85, Gramblng 70
Te&gt; Wslyn lw06 • LaTrn eau 76
0 51
AI • Force 63, Denver 57
51 54
Al nA 99, Seattle Pac 58
Azus&lt;!l P&lt;!!c 75, PT.Loma 74
Biola 66. Cal S l. Qo m 54
cent wash . 94, St.Mrtn 's 70
E . Mont . 78, N. Mont. 59
Grt Fall s 76, w. Mont . 59
Pnhnd le st 56. coL con 55
UC lr
v 72101
, Lyla Mr'ym t 69
Whi
ttier
, cat Luth 81
Whtwrtl'1 79, Lw is&amp;Cirk 63
.

Chuck Noffslnger.
If it was any consolation to
White Falcon head coach
Homer Preece. his FalCon
cag ers won '"
u•e secon d half
batUe by a 46-38 margin but
the 21 -potn
· t hB tftl me a dvantage
held by Buffalo
proved to be too much for the
Mason Countians to overcome.
Wahama's season record
feU to 3-4 with the defeat while
Buffalo was g'aining only its
second victory in eJght starts.
Th B d
e en Are.a team is
.scheduled for two more
contests before the week is out
with both dates on the road.
North GaUia entertains the
White Falcons on Friday night
followed by a trip to Meigs on
Saturday.
Following the Intermission

termlsalon but Buffalo roared
back to knot the score at 51-ll1
after three periods. Wahama
won the final quarter 26-13 to
chalk up the victory.
Four players hit for twin
figures for the local charges
while another Falcon IIIII
barely mls•ed the double
figure plateau With 9 markers.
Vince Weaver neUed 16
followed by Gary Rlcbarda
with IS, Tim Roush with II,
Fred Smith with 11 and Kreig
Sayre, added 9.
Buffalo bad only one scorer
with more than 10 points and
that was Bill Reed with 23
tailles which was tops for all
scorers.
WAHAMA (59)

FG FT TP
Rick Barnltz
6 11-13 23
Rick Buzzard
4 2-2 10
Kelvin Honaker
3 2-2 8
Phil Hobbs
2 3-0 7
Greg Blessing
2 3-4 7
Charley Zuspan
1 0.1 2
Tim Ra wllngs
I 11-4 2
ToddRawUngs
0 lh'i 0

John Utile
Troy Booth
Bill Johns
, Bill Reed

2 ll-1

4

111-4

2
2

1 l)-1.

111-4

Totals

2

33 9-13 75

:~~~."~~:k~;::LC::~~

~!~~ s1.19
MEATo~0 ~~~~l:a~eef ~~1.79

FRENCH CITY RING PUDDING •••••••

SALAD ••••••••••••••••

!~~ 99~

FRYERS •••••••••••••••••

~~~ 57~

HOME MADE HAM
CUT UP FROZEN

BUFFAW (

75 )

Ed Thompson
signs with
Green Bay

~:~~~

8 oz. Bowl Soft

PARKAY MARGARINE.. ... 75t PINK GRAPEFRUIT..
CHUNK CHEESE...........
2% MILK ..............
1.49 GREEN CABBAGE. .. :.

19¢

11 oz.

69t

~:.". 59~

YAMS~

~:~

~

&amp;

79c

2/99~

~~~.sl.l9

'

;

'

'

ONE OF THE MANY HEMS

,;SALE PRICED"
3 PC.

'

Quarters
10 16 32 S1
M
6 19 29 :,18
Wel lston (51) - Ma ssie tl -2·
10, Benson· 1-0-2, Sett les 1· 4·
18, Spires6 -0-12, l ockhart :1 -1·
5, Martlndlll 1·0·2,: McManus
o.o.o, Po!ltton 1·0·2. Total 2'2 -7 ·
51.
.
Meigs (38) - Oh linger J.Q.
6, Yeau·ger 2-3-7, Faulk 5-2-12,
Dodson 1-5·7. Kennedy 2·0·4,
O'Brien o.o.o, Snowden 1.·0·2,
Blaetlnar 0-0-0. Totals 14 -10·
38 .

BEDROOM

NOW OPEN
SUITES

s4.89

'.

The Meigs Reserves are
still looking lor their second
win of t he sea son alt er .
dropping a thriller to visiting
Wellston last night, 51·38. lt
was a see-Saw contest until
ihe last quarter when the
visitors netted 19 points to
just 9 for the locals to pull
. away.
Meigs fell behind 1~ at the .
first buzzer, but stonned
back to take a 19-16 lead into
the locker room at half-time.
A nip-and-tuck third period
saw Wellston regain the lead
32·29 at the third buzzer, and
the Boby Rockets pull ed
away in that torrid last
period.
The winners placed three
men rn double ligures, Lowell
Settles leading all scorers
with 18. Spires and Massie
had 12 and 10, respectively.
The visitors were hot from
the field as they connected on
22 of 42 attempts for a hot 52
percent while canning 7 oil! ,
free throws. Oddly enough,
all their foul attempts came
in the fourth quarter to
enable them to put the game
out of reach.
Tim Faulk led Meigs wjth
12 while Chris Yeauger and
Britt Dodson each chipped in
seven. ThC boys oF Coach

W

SAUCE •••••••••••••••••••••• ,89c

·standings

.

GINO'S

69······

OF MASON

PHONE 773-553t.

PHEBE SAYS-

,,

victory over host Oberlin.
ThevictorygivesWooster a
12-3 record overall and 4-i in
the OAC's northern division,
while Oberlin dropped to 8-7
overall a nd to 3-3 in
con ference action. '
At Berea. Baldwin-Wallace
he ld onto first place in the
OAC's northern division and
SurP&lt;!Ssed the 100-point mark
lor the fir st time in seven
years with its trouncillg of
Mount Union.
BW is undefeated in five
OAC match ups and 11·4
overall, while the Purple
Raiders - who had their fivega me winning streak broken
by the Yellow Jackets ~ are
11 _7 overall and 4_2 in
conference play.
Freshman guard Jerry
Prestier led BW's charge

with a season~•igh, personalhigh and team-high 30 points,
while Mt. Union was paced b y
.senior guard Dave Scarpitti,
who had 2l points.
In other games, Cedarville
whipped Malone 96.,'19, Tiffin
defeated Mount Ve rnon
Nazarene 89..'l4.

Sparky Lyle
wants tO go
By JENNY KELLNER
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK I UP! ) - It's
started already.
Sparky Lyle, one of the less
outspoken members of the
world champion New York
Yankees, Tuesday revealed
M has asked General
Manager Cedric Tallis to be
traded.
"I asked them to do that
before the winter meet~ngs , "
said Lyle from his home in .
Demarest, N.J. "I didn 't fee l
I was doing anything out of
.the ordinary."
'
Lyle is is unhappy about the
overpopulated
Yankee
hull pen .
"The thing I want
everybody to understand is
that with myself, (Rich) .
Gossage, ·(Rawly) Eastwick
plus (Dick) Tidrow in the
bullpen, well, there's too
many good arms that are
going to be wasted .
"But rather than raise hell
and derriand they trade somebody else, I'm offering them
the option of trading for me. I
.J"ant to be the one to go . Of.
course, being a 10 and five
player I have to approve any
deals they make. I wouldn't
want to end up somewhere I'd
be pitching even less. I think
this is the best way.' '

--

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!nctiana
1916 :422
Kanss Cly . 16. 30 .348 13
l&gt;ilclfic w.
D1vls.lon
L
Per. GB
Portland
36 8 .8 18

or l eave Blue

Golden St.
21 24 .467 15\J
Los Angels
71 74 .467 15 J
Tve•d•v'• Re•vlfs
LOUISVILLE, KY . (UPI)
N ew York 99, Golden $ 1 91
Detroit 104, Wasn.ng ton 101
- Cincinnati Reds Manager
CteYel anct 96, lndt ana 92
Sparky Anderson Is taking a
New Orleans 96, Bos ton 91
philoS(&gt;phical view of the
Cnicago
131.
Denver
11 4
. the
PorTla nd 110, Kan Ci ty 91
current talks conc.'Crmng
Los Angeles 117, Pt1ita 102
ed tr
wednesda y's Gam es
propos
ade that would
Go lden Sta te at o"trott
bring southpaw Vida Blue to
Boston at San Antonio
his teru~l.
Aullalo at Denl!er
Commissioner Bowie Kuhn
~~~~~~~ ;~ i =~~e~,~~ ttl e
is .discussing u1e proJ}o~ed
Thursday ' s Games
Kansas City at New York
trade between the Reds and
India na at Clevelan d ·
the Oakland A 's with officials
Chicago al Washlnglon
from both clubs and he may
veto the deal.
New Jersey nt Portl and
NHL standing s
But, Anderson who was in
By United Press Internationa l Louisville. with other team
Campbell Conference
members on a publicity tour,
Patnck OiVIs10n
w. L. T. Pts. said, " I don't know what he's
NY tslancters
21 tO 1'1 62 &lt;Kuhn ) going to decide."
Ph iladelphi
21 10 8 62
Atl
an ta a
18 17 11
Til~ Reds manager did say
47 ·
NY Rangers
16 21 ' " he was prepared in case the
Smythe Division
commissioner vetoed the
W . L . T , Ph.
Ct1 ic ago
t7 17 12 · .116 trade , addin g it was
Va ncouver
1'2 11 l ~ 3 ~ necessary to have someone in
Col
oraOo
10 23 10 JO ·
Sl. Louis '
11 79 6
2EI baseball's hierachy prepared
Mi nn eso ta
9 JO s 13 to make a final decision.
Wal.es Conference
NorriS Divi sion
"You have to have someone
w. L. T Pts. make the final decision ,n
~0°s"~~;~l es
~~ 1 ~ ; ~~ Anderson said . " It's · not
Detroll
11 20 '
40 always going to go your way ,
Pit tsbu rgh
t5· 1 1 10 110 but one person has to have a
Washington
9 27 10 19
Adam s Di\·is 1on
final say."
W. l . T . Pts.
Boston
28 11 6 6 2
Buff alo
25 9 11 61
Toron lo
24 14 1 55
Cleveland
16 28 4 36
Tuesday 's Game
AII·Siar Game
at Buffalo, N . V ..
Wa les 3, Cam pbell 2. 01
Wednesday's Games
Toronto at NY Ranger s
Colorado at washi ng ton
Thursd'ay 's G'ames
Toronto at NY lslndr s
Montreal a t Atl anta
Pittsburgh at Detroit
Min nesola at Buffalo
United Press International
Co lor ado at Boston
Clevel And at Chi cago
Tuesday night Chi cago
St. Louis at Los Ang
topped Denver, 131-114, to
Phil a at Va nc:.ouver
move within three games of
the Nuggets.
WHL Standings
B Jl • C h Ed Bad
By United Press International
U S
03C
ger
w . L. T . Pis. said, "-It was a good
New En gland
21· 14 4 58 contribution from the bench.
Winnipeg
26 15 2 54
·
Quebec
22 18 2 46 Your chances of winning are
Houston
21 19 3 45 good when your bertch
21
21 1 43
· be nc h ."
· Edn']On
Birminglon
hpm
19 n 2 40 outscores lhelr
C1 ncinna1
11 26 2 36
Chic·a go' s
res e rves
Indianapolis
14 26 4 32 outscored
the
Denver
Tuesday's Result
Houston 6. Qu ebec 5
reserves, 34-26, held an edge
Wednesday's Games
on the boards at 9-4 and had
New Eng at CinCif1 nat r
f
h
Winni peg at Birmi ngha m
10 assists to four or t e
lndpl s al Edmon ton
Nuggets. ·
· Thursday'S
Til e star ters he1ped , t00, a 11
New
Eng land at Game
Houston
hitting in double figures with
Wilbur Holland 's 26 points,
Scott May's 22 and Mickey
Girls
Johnson 's 20 leading the way .
Ohio High School
Basketball Results
David Thompson paced
United Press International
Denver
with 26 points and
Bucyrus 42 Bel levue 30
Dan
Issei
added 23.
Norwayne 46 Waynedale 3A
"We didn't get anything off
Smi1hvi lle 4S Dalton 29
Upper Sandusky 40 Tiffin our bench and there weren't
~olumbian 35
1

}.())rtlUl cashed in on ll fret'
throws while Athens wrnt
cold and hit only three or 13
shots from the floor t• s~
•
their season record drop" tn "47 aild 4-4 in the league.

Da ve Lehm an and Murty

Hullett each swishrd 11 tx~int s
to pare J ~t.tlUl whilr Ken
Kreig added 10 markt•rs,
mduding six of si x frrc
thro w~ in tht· fo urt h qum1cr.
Mm k Wn llllt't! scurcd 12
. mne
·
puj nt s Hud ( iary B.entlcy
fur the Bulldogs .
'111e Chieftains shot '4 3 pet.
'un1G,lf 37fromthc floor, had
t6 of 21 ut tht• line a nd pulled
·th John
down 25 r ebounds' w1
Albc11 u nd .John Kt' lllllC'r
t'Ht'h gr~bbin~ six~
Alhcns hit 14 of 40 from the
f" I ll . ••&lt;
,~pel. , convcrlcd six
ulc'
r 12"'charity
throws, IIIUI
mtlll'd 26 rt!buumls led l&gt;v

Dan Driessen, the Reds'
ha d I ' .
II
k ..
r utting rst l.lt1semnn,
said he was not sure what the
outcome would be concerning
A11hur Chunko's 10 ~rubs.
the Blue lr".. &lt;le.
-111C·box .score·
. ·
"V
k
h
ATHENS {34, - Edward 2
ou guys now as muc
Q.-4 ; Be ntley J .:.J.9 ; Wall ace 5·
about it as we do, probnbly 2. 12; Hal1er 0·0·0,· Ma thews 1
moi'e ," Driessen said. 1;Alll
t.J.· Chonko 3·0·6. TOTALS 14·
know is what I read in the 6 •34 ·
papers. "
LOGAN (48) - Gasser 0·1
I
2i Kemper J.Q.6 ; Hat lett 5 t
A so on hand for the
11: Lehman 3.5 11 ; Albert 3 o
cara van appearan ce were 6; Kreig 1-8-10; Dal ton 1 a 2.
Reds ' pitchers Doug Capilla TOTALS 16-16-48.
and Pa ul Moskau, coaches
Score by quarten :
A1hens
10 9 6 9 3A
Russ Nlxon and Ted Logan.
ll 12 6 t9- .ttl
K.lusewski. and director of
Reserve score : Logan &lt;~9,
player personne'I Chief Athens 41.
· Bender.
.Anderson , pointing to the
wor k done by Capllla and
Boys
Moskau during their first full
Ohio High School
~·ear last season, said regard·
Basketball Res ults
l
f
United Pres s lntcrn.;~tinnal
ess o the outcome of the
Blue trade, the Reds will Akron Sprlngt leld 64 Stow 59
AkrM 51 Vln Sl Mc.ry 51 Cuy
have. a solid pit~hing staff 1-alls ·47
next season and for future Amhers t 70 Midview t16
Ashtabula 51 Joh n 55 Fai rport
seasons.
3.1
"Wilh or without Blue, we · Avstln1own Fi lch 57 Young'i
feel we will have a pitching Mooney 48
staff which will be heard Avon 69 Keys tone 68
from during the ·next few Baptis t Christ 71 Her ltilge
Cltri sl 35
years, " Andf rson said .
Batav ia 42 Nor theas tern :10
Bay ViH.=tgc 55 Med ina 50'
Beachwood 55 Kirtl a nd il~
Beallsvil le 82 Woodsllc l&lt;l 80
Beaver Loca l n. Toronto t15
Bea v~r cr eek . 60 Day Cham.
Jol 59
Bedf or d C h ~ n e l 6? Lake
Catholic ·5•1
Bet hel 60 Trl Villil_ge 55
Bex ley 85 North Uni on .18
B.ig Walnut 63 Mary svi lle 57
Bloom Ca rroll 60 Arnancla
ClearcreC.k 54
Bl oo mt ~e l d 60 Br i~ t o\ 47
muny misse&lt;J shots IJy Clli ca~
Boardman 87 How la nd 67
go ," said Denver Coach Bowling Green 65 Anthony
ayne 60
11
Larry
Brown.
They W
Brecksv ill e 54 Brook lyn 46
con trolled tbe tempo. "
Brooke (W Va l 87 Sloubcn
In other NBA games, New . ville 85 &lt;on
York nipped Golden Slltte, 99- · Brookfi el d 93 Cha mp ion 53
97 ,
Detroit
tipped Brookvill e 56 Twin Va lley S 49
toll
washington,
104-101 , Bu
ckeye S 81 B rl d g~por t 60
Cleveland edged fndiana, 96- Buckeye W 65 Uni on Local 13
92, New Orleans dumped Buck eye Va ll ey 66 Co l
c.;1dem y 63
,
Boston, 96-91, Portland A
Bu ~keye . Trail 60 Guern sey
routed Kansas City, 120.97, Cat h 37
and Los Angeles 'blasted Canal Winchester 60 Mill ers
port 52
Philadelphia, 117-102.
Canfon Glen Oak 5 1 Can ton S
Knieks 99, Warrlvrs 97 :
&lt;2
Jim Cleamons sank a 17- Carlisle
75 W Ca rrollt on ~ a
loot jump shot with I :38 Chagri.n Fall s 69 Aurorn 51
remaining • to provide the Cln Elder 58 Cin Wes tern
eventual margin of victory . Hills 51
La Sall e 56 Cln Purcell 5.1
Bob McAdoo paced New York Cln
Cl n Mc Nic holi1s 70 Cin An
with 2:l points and Lonnie dcr son 37
Shelton added 22. Phil Smith G n Taft 54 Woodwar d 46
led Golden State with 22 and (i n Withr ow 77 Ci n Walnu t
Hill s 60
Rick Barry added 19.
Claymont 57 Sand y Va ll ey 48
·Pistuns 104, Bullets 101:
Clc Bene di ctin e 68 Univ
. Leon DouglaS hit four foul School. 64
shots in the final 14 seconds Cl e East 67 Cle King 4'4
Cle East Tech 74 Cl e Co ll in
and Chris Ford added a layup wood
65
·
to lift Detroit. The Pistons' Cl e Glenvill e 76 Cle John Ho1y
Bob Lanier led all scorers
Cle He ight s 69 Parma M
with 24 points:
Cle John Ada ms 59 Cle
'Cavaliers 96, Pacers 92:
Kennedy S6
I A pair of jump shots by Cle Linco ln W 67 Oe Rhodes
Bingo Smith and a dunk by 52
Jim Brewer Ufted Cleveland Cle Ma~ Hayes 72 Cle South
after the Cavaliers had blown 62
Col Brookha ven 7 1 Col In
a 17-point lead.
dependence 52
Jazz 96, Cdlles 91:
Col East 96 Col Whe tstone 64
Eas1moo r 61 Col Cent ra l
Pete Marovich fired in 31 Col
53
.
points tii lead New Orleans to Col Linden 76 Col Walnut
its sixth consecutive victory . Ridge 53
Truck Robinson scored 22 Col Milllin 62 Col Wesl -58
points for the Jazz and took Col North 71 Col Briggs 59
Col Northland 73 Col Mohaw k'
down 16 rebounds .
64
.
.. Trail Blazers 120, Kings ~7:
Col ·south 69 Col Marion.
Guard Lionel Hollins Franklin 66
scored 18 points to lead seven Col 51 Charles 52 Col R ea~y 51
Cot Wehrle 60 Col Centenn ia l
Portland players in double 55
.
figures for their win over the Colera in 58 Turpin 5,4
Continental 70 Lei psic 60
·
Kings.
Copley 93 Coventry 59'
Lakers 117, Slxers 102:
-Rawson 73 Miller City
Center Kareem Abdul- Cory
72
Jabbar scored 39 points, Crestv iew 68 E Kno x ~4
grabbed 18 rebounds, handed Crooksv.J IIe 71 Sheridan 69
off six assists and blocked Day Dunbar 81 Day Kiser 76
Northridge 77 New ton 71
four sh 0ts to lead L&lt;&gt;s Angeles Day
Day Stebbins 83 Trotwood 76
to its fourth straight victory. 9ay Wqyne 90 Tecumseh 61
L

Bulls' bench
.
comes through
.

j-;.n~ 25th thru 281h"-

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The Fabric Shop ·

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5th &amp; Pearl

'fV•.Gladly Accept Foci. Food Stamps

•

lttiioiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-'---,.._ . ..., ----~

foul shooting and a Shill
Go
.
Chi er.
.
earn.ed t he 'I.,NMan
talns
1
to a ~8-34 victory over the
13
· · · g, A
151, VISltln
. t h ~ns Bu ild ogs
'11
Tuesday n~g ht. .

,.,..

Coach Sl~ott li' itZJ;lcrald's
c~ · f
,. 11c s ca nned 16 of 21 free
throws. includinu
a perfect IJ
0
1or 11 ·ln ~ he f()urt h period.
The Chiefs led 11~10 aft er
~ e ~h l~f(ams t:xlended • one period and stood.utop H
68
the1r. wmmng sk~n to 10 ZJ-19lead at hotlft ime. A third
~~ ~ !:ra ighttean dd utpp ed t h ~ i r pc r iod st a l.l cmployffi by
cor
o 10~ • tn· 1.ogan agamst t he Athens
5, -;- ,..;SSOn
1
cludlng it pc rfer t 8·0 ln r.onc dde:nse resulted in e11&lt;:h
Hou.st ~ cs.t e rn ~ ! n 1~8re n3~~ 101 • SEO~l . ~o m ~e t ition . Lo~un _
is team scoring only slx point s.
Midwest o i\.·1sion
nearmg It-S f1 rst cugc h tle m
In the &lt;'r urlal fou rth period
w. L Pet. GB
Denyer
'78 t6 .636
Chict~go ·
26 20 .565 3

Att ant 1c 01\'noion
w
Phila
30 L13 P&lt;f
698 .
New York
1A :21 533
Buflalo
16
25 :lll
3'10
Boston
IJ :28
New Jersey
9 3,6.. 100
Central~ 1\~s• o:cr
san Antoni
7; 18 .600 ·
~!~~?~~
~~· ~~ .~~~
·New Orlns
22 24 . 418
Atlanta
11 26 .447

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·-

PHONE 773-5536

'•

I

"'

NOW OPEN

1

'

·
: Pro : Logan .step closer to
:st~~~gs \ SEO title in 27 years
I

Senior center Wayne
Allison scored 26 poin1S and
pulled down 16 re bounds
while junior guard Randy
Backus chipped in with 18
points t o pace Wooste r 's

1 b
eserves ose y
51-38 count
•
Ja
•d
m st peno .

foul · shots.

GRAPE DRINK •••••.•••••••••••·••••••••••••••:a.~.sgc

Howsam happy
in Cincinnati

R

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~· field
Bruce Wilson "hit on 14 of 40
attempts and 10 of 17

01 L•••••••••••••••••••••·••••••••••~~·:~e. 77e

SEO cage

' 'They were a Uttle tight
tonight," Rayrnoods said. "I
just- think they were scared.
They 're a better tea m than
that ."
Elsewhere ·Tuesday night,
Wooster downed Oberlin 78-70
and Baldwin-Wallace blas\ed
Mount Unioo 1oa-78 in Ohio
Athletic Cooference action.

...

Prices Effective Thru Sat., Jan. 28th

19 21.,'!2 59

RUBBER
FOOTWEAR
HEADQUARTERS

S'J10 rtS .
transactions

chances of being No. 1 than
there was in the game.
The Warriors, now 1&amp;-1, are
ranked No. 2 by UP! in this
eek ' poll behind K t k
w
s
en uc Y·
But the Wildcats lost Monday
night and Marquette now has
a shot at the No. 1 spot.
"I was shocked (abcut the
Kentucky loss) hut I'll still
vote for Kentucky ;• said
Raymonds, who is oo the UP!
coaches panel that ranks
teams. "I think they're the
_best team in the country.
..--- -- - -- - - , -;-...I'd like to be No. 1, you
better believe it. Let
everyone take a shot at us ."
Xavier Coach Tay Baker
admitted thai the Warriors
simply beat his team and he
said that's because they have
so much ta 1enl and so much
depth;
"I think they're better
(than •last year) because
they've got a little more
depth. And Raymonda does a
lot of substituting, not the
way Al McGuire used to do it.
That can wear down your
opponent," he said.
Baker said he doesn't put
much faith in national
rankings " but of course they
· are amoog the top five teams
in the country. And to me
..,,' 1! 1/MIIH IQn S
they're
the defending
ell'oJIJJf.'J
c~pions, the champions of
American college basketball.
What more can you say than
that."
· T/le Warriors had Uttle
Say "I Love You"
trouble with the Musketeers
with Diamonds.
as they built a 36-27 lead by
Her Heart's Desire ... halftime shooting .667 from
the field, a school record, and
finishing with a .545 percenblge.
While Marquette was
hitting l8 of 27 first half shots
xavier made just 11 of 33 and
Raymonds ·said it was
because the Musketeers were
·nervOus.
UnltedPressluternatlonal
. Hank Raymonds says he
&lt; isn't sure U his Marqu~tte
Warriors deserve the No . 1
ranking in the natioo but
admits, " I'd like to be No. 1;
you better believe it."
1'he defending NCAA
champions beat xavier 78-62
Tuesday night in an easy
victory in which Raymonds
used all 12 players.
Afterwa rds there was more
interes t in Marquette's

Phone 742-2100

FG FT TP
Chuck Noffsin~er 12 H 28
16 oz. Colby longhorn •
Jim Whittington
4 o-1 8
3 22 8
~l.65
Broughton
4 - 8
Randy Linville
11-4
fb
1
3 1-2 7
~~-':
Harris and Brad Abels built
Chip BayUss
2 22 6
up a tl·point lead, 33-22, with
break Buffalo held a com- , - - - - - - - - - · - . ,
a dl
I d h" h
1:52 remaining in the half.
m n ng ea w lC was
virtually
insurmountable
so
The Gallians led 35·26 during
MORTONS T.V. DINNERS ................
th bl
·
the halftime intermission.
e g.questloo in the contest
Sterrett and Wall pushed
was who would come · away
20 oz. DEL MONTE
the Gallians in front by 13
with top scoring honors
points, 43-30, with 4:03 left in
between Wahama ' s Rick
the third period before
Bamltz and Buffalo's Chuck
CHUNK PINEAPPLE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
J ackso n, behind Greg ForFor The
•
Noffsinger.
·
syth, John Dorsey and
Entire Family
24 oz .
dNoffslnger held a two-point _,..........,_
Hal"less, cut the margin back
sports Transactions
e ge at mterm1sson over
to seven, 45·38, with 2:07 on
By Un•ted Pren International
Barnitz and added 10 tallies in
ROYAL PRINCE
•••••••••••••••••••
••
the dock . GAHS led 48-38
T"'sday
each
of
the
final
two
quarters
Baseball
17 oz . DEL MONTE'
going into the last stanza .
M i nne ~o ta - Signed pitche rs to come away with 28 markers
GAHS gradually increased
Paul T hormod s~e r~ and Greg on 12 field goals and fOUl&amp; of
The Green Bay Packers of Thayer
and mf•elder Dan
its lead to 17 points. It was 66GREEN LIMA ' BEANS •••• ••••••••••••••••• .
four free throws.
49, with 32 seconds in the the National Football Con- Graham for th e 19711 season
Clev eland - Signed st10rtstop o Barnjtz began the second
ferenc~ announced this week
40 oz. CHEF-BOY.AR-DEE
contest. That was Gallia 's
Tom Veryzcr to a one-yea r .
the
signing
of
Waverly's
Ed
contro
ct.
half
with
six
points
and
added
biggest lead of the game.
Thompson to a three year
. Ch,ic ago Wh ite ?o'~~ ~ Si gned nine more in the third period '
Jackson was cold from
r1ght . handed p•fcher Steve
SPAGHETTI
MEAT BALLS ••••••• ." •••
contract.
LeuPber and left hander M ike ·and another· eight in the final
the lipid, sinking only IS ol '
Thompson, a 1973 graduate Pazlk for their Iowa Oaks larrry canto to tinish with 23 tallies
16 oz.
55 attempts for 27 percent.
club .
of
Waverly
High
School,
Ball i more - Signed Rav on sl.x field goals and 11 of 13
However, the Burgermen
played lin ebacker three Miller as pitching coach
Charity tosses .
were sizzling hot at the
WESSON ·
Football
·
,
years
·
at
Ohio
State
charity line, sinking 21 of 23
washington - Si gned Jack
The only other double fagure
46 oz. WELCH AID
.
·
University where he was · Pardee as head coach .
scol-er Was the White Falcons
(including their first 17 In a
Kansas City - Named Tom
'
twice named to the Ail Big 10
row) for 91 percent.
Drop in at:
Pagna , &lt;!I tor mer · Notr e oa me Rick Buzzard, who popped ln
Team.
assistant, as offen sive bac k.f iel d 10 points on four field goals
·J ackson ~ad 11 personals,
The former SEOAL athlete coa ch.
24 rebounds , seven by Dor1Dif2 oz. VIETTI
New York Gi ants An
and two of two free throws,
thus
gets a second chance to
· cHAPMAN
sey , a nd 11 turnovers .
npunced
r cs ig~a t i on b f defen··
Team
s
tatistics
show
c o o r d 1 n a t o r Marly
Harle$s, who was 12-for-12 at play in the NFL following his s•ve
Sc hottenhei mer.
Wahama shooting a frigid 26
release
in
1977
by
the
New
BEEF WITH BBQ
the lout lipe, paced the
c. l e vel~nd - An':'ouhced the percent from the floor and 68
SHOES
York
Jets
.
res•gnat1on
of
o,
ck
Evans,
·
·
.
lronmen with 20 points.
10 oz. N ESCAF E
percent from the foul line. The
Th ompson·•s
yoUnger director of pro scout ing .
David Evans added 18.
Next to Elberfelds
. C~llege Football
locals pulled down 28 ·total
Un1v ersllv ofT e n n e ss e e
GAHS hit 29 of 53 field goa l brother, Chuck, is a senior at
in Pomeroy
led
bY
Waverly High School this Mr~rt1n - Announ ced re:signa. rebounds
INSTANT COFFEE •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
tlon of hea d football Coach Kevin Honakers' 12· and
992 -2815
year ..
George Macintyre. ·who will
'
ioin Stt&gt; ve Sloan 's coaching COI,Tllllitt~d . 27 turnovers.
staff at Mississippi .
· BuffalO Shot a hot 48 pei-c'ent
Navv - Announced resigna·
·
,
lion of assistanl football coacl'1 from the floor and aCl.ded
L.es . Stec k~L who. will accept a percent from the free throw
s1m1lar tob w1th the San .
.
Francisco 49ers of the NF L.
lrne. Jim Whittington h.Buled
Virgin ia Tech - H1red Tol"f1 -:
·
PROPOSED PLAN FOR SOCIAL SERVICES IN OHIO
ALL GAMES
Harpe r. former assist anl at lnl8oftheBisons. 38rebounds
TEAM
W L P OP
Logan
10 1 743 592
CINCINNATI (UPII- Bob · North Carol ina . as a def ensive and as a team the Putnam
County sc hoo I conumtte
. d 25
Waverly
8 ., 582 470
Basketball •
JULY 1,1978 ·JUNE 30, 1979
Howsam, the Cincinnati Reds coach.
Portsmou th
8 2 694 589
Washing ton - Sig ned gua.rd turnovers.
president
who
twice
was
Wash ington
6 3 609 526
1
The Plan for Ohio has been developed in accordan ce with Title XX of th e Social SecuritYAct.
In the reserve contest the
voted minor league executive ~~:tr !~ 1 _.J ol1 n son to a lO·day
Pt. Pleasant
4 2 401 385
Gal lipoli S5 5 625 586
Hockey
Little Falcons turned back the
of the ye.a r when he headed
Chicago . . . . Aqu lred goal ie
Ravenswood · 2 2 253 219 Denver's minor league teami Eddie
Johnston
trom
the
st.
Baby
Bisons by a 71-64 score
Social services available for eligible per_sons in Oh io are described in the Plan Social services in the Plan include :
Al hens
4 7 689 733
acknowledges
he
Louis
was
Blues
.
for
their
IHth consecutive win
Wellston
4 8 797 862
- Recalled
lie against but one lOSS.
approached 1Q run the front MiCcl'olorado
Ironton
3 7 574 581
Home Oil livered and Co ngregal e Meals
Adoption
1el Plasse
from goo
their
Meigs
2 9 623 806 office of Denver's proposed Hampton, va , farm club .
Home Management
The Little Falcons jumped
Campership
Jack son
2 9 575 724 major league team.
Housing
$o~cer
Chore
Port la nd (NA
SL) - .Retamed out to a 17-7 a d·'vantage at the
Non·SEOAL results :
lntormation and Referral
Counseling
Howsam
said
he
turned
the s e r v i c e·s ot de tender · first turn and led 38-30 at inPort smouth 74 Russel l 58
Leg al
Day
Care
for
Mulls
.
Rav enswood 57 Gau ley down the offer of Denver oil Graham
Mental Retardation AsSessment
Day Care for Children - Em ployment and Trai ning
Day
fromLeague
Br istol of ~~---------.
the
English
Soccer
Br idge 44
,
millionaire Marvln Davis,
Other Educational
Day Care fo r Children- Protect1ve
SEOAL VARSITY
Protective Care for Adults
Day Care fo r Children- Special Needs
who up until early tb.is week
Protective Services for Children
Oevelopmental Serv ices for Children
had
been
negotiating
with
TEAM
W L P OP
Psychothe(apetJtic Services
· Em ployment and Tra ining (non-WIN)
NEW YORK (UP!) -Paul
Logan
9 0 531 397 Oakland A's owner Charles
Representative Payee
Fa mily life Education
Wa verl y
5 1 379 292
Finley to move the Oakland Mastropasqua, a 39-year-old
Residential Treatment for Adults
Family Pla nning
Ga ll ipoli s
4 3 457 405
GINO'S
Residential Treatment for Children
Foster Care for Adults
franchise to Denve~~. A physical fitness expert. has
Athens
4 4 499 499
Socialization/ Oevelopment Service for Adulls
Foster Care lor Children
spokesman
lor
Davis
said
been
hired
by
the
New
York
Wellston
4 4 535 545
· Spec1al Serv'ces fo r the Blmd
,.__
Guardianship
Ironton
3 3 388 341 although it now appears Met.s for the 1978 season lt
t ransportation
Heallh·Aelated
Meigs
1 7 423 607 · unlikely Denver will get the was announced Tuesday.
Homemake r/ Home Health Aide
• OF MASJ
Jackson
0 7 362 488 Oakland franchise this
Mastropasqua
will
join
the
TOTALS
29 29 3574 3574
season, Davis still is hoping team in spring training and
Tuesday'.s results:
WHO IS ELIGIBLE
to field a major league team remain with the club for the
Gallipoli s 66 Jackson 51
LoQan 48 Athens 34
in Denver in 1979.
entire season. He has been
Eligible persons include:
lion and r~ferral . and family planning services may ~e
Wellston 75 Meigs 58
Said · Howsam about his working with ath letes for the
prov1ded Wllhout regard to family income.
{1) Aid lor Dependent Children (ADC) recipients.
Tonight's game:
(6) Income eligible wilh a fee lor .servlces listed in the Plan.
earlier Denver offer, "I have last 20 years.
(2) Sup pleme ntal Security Income (SSl) recipients.
Ironton at Waver.ly
provided gross annual family income for a fa mily of four is
(3) Medicaid Only recipients whose gross fa mily income is no
told Mr. Davis I am not
Friday's games:
not over $12,70o·or under $8,701.
more than the Incom e of eligible persons described in (4)
Gallipolls at Athens
interested.! said I appreciate
(7) All persons in Ohio 60 years ot age and older are con·
· and (61.
Logan at Ironton
the opportunity, but I have a
siderod eligible for social services listed In the Plan.
(4) Income Eligibl e without a fee payment:
THE SINGER MACHINE
Waver ly a I Wellston
wonderful
relatiooship
with
(B)
Identified groups of persons in need of social services
.
exam
ple:
Fam
ily
of
lour
with
gross
ann
ual
income
not
Meigs at Jackson
establi shed by ind1vidual County Welfare Departments are ·
exceedmg $8,700.00.
Teays Valley at Courl House Lou Nippert (Reds' board
shown in the Plan.
(5) Persons in inimediate danger need1ng pr&lt;Jtective. informaWarrerflocal at Ravenswood chairman) and I have three
Greenup at Portsmouth
years on my contract."
Nitro at Pt. Pleasant
Saturdav's games :
PUBLIC REVIEW AND COMMENT
J~ cks o n -at Wellston
REG
.
PRICE
A period for public review and comment on the Plan is being provided fr om February 1, 1978 through March 11, 1978.
Gallipol is at Waverly
Hillsboro at Court House'
New Arrival of Spring Fabrics
Athens at Marietta
PUBLIC HEARINGS
WRITTEN COMMENTS
SEOAL RESERVES
STATE PUBLIC HEARING ,
Written comm ents may be mB.de on the Plan and sent to·
SAN FRANCISCO (UP! ) TEAM
W L P OP
Title XX Comments
·
.
D
ate
:
F
ebruary
14.
1978
A
funeral
will
be
today
for
Wa ve,ly
5 1 289 201
Mrs
.
Mildred
Madry,
Chief
Tim
e.
9:30A.M.
·
Alf~ed Samuel Sandell, a top
Ga llipol is
5 2' 275 239
Plaoe: Lbbby Hearing Room
Pivlsion of Social Services
Athens
5 3 384 344
figure in amateur boxing for
30
Easl
Broad
Streel
Ohio
Department of Public Welfare
Ironton
4 2 262 248
a half-century.
·
Columbus.
Ohio
30
E
asl
Broad Street, 30th Floor
Wellslon
5 3 386 355
Col umbus, Ohio 4321 5
. AI his death, Sandell, who
COUNTY PUBLIC HEARINGS
Logan
4 4 307 311
Jackson
1 6 197 329 died two days ago at 87, was
Date·
Time: Contact Your Local
Meigs
o 8 276 349 secretary emeritus for the
Place: County Welfare Department
TOTALS
2'1 29 2376 2376 · Pacific As8ociaUon of the
Tuesday's results :
Amateur Athletic Union
Gallipolis JS Jackson 27
secretary,treasurer of the'
Loga n 49 Athens 41
OBTAINING A PLAN FOR REVIEW
Wellston 51 Meigs 38 ' I
California Boxers and
Wrestlers
Welfare
VISit you r L~cal C~~nty Welfare Depar1ffient tp review the co~plete State Plan. To obtain a complete free copy of t.he Pl an send il
SEOAL FROSH
selt·addressed matlmg labello: Proposed 1979 CASP, 227 North Front Sl(eet. Columbus. ·Ohio 43215.
'
Association,
and'
tourney
TEAM
W L P OP
Visit The
director
of
the
annual
Golden
Athens
5 1 3)6 247
Meigs County Welfare Dept.
GalliPQiis
4 1 216 182 Gloves tournament, a post he
'12 PRICE TABLE
Logan
3 2 242 221 lllok over In 1931.
·
&amp;
Wellston
3 2 118 200
The Los Angeles native was
175 Race Street Box 191
1/3 OFF TABLE
Meigs
1
149 214
Jackson
0 6 243 280 the first t-ecipient of the
TOTALS
16 16 1344 1344 NatidMJ A~U Hall of Fame
James A..Rhodes
Middleport, Ohio 45760 :
Kenneth B. Creasy
Jan. 19 result :
·Governor
honor , named in 1967. He was
Director
Wellston SO Jackson 46 Iot I also a member of the
State of Ohio
Ohio Department of Pu blic Welfare
Thursday's games :
TILE.
(614}
992-21
J7
"California
Old
'rime
Boxing
Athens at Gallipolis
"'"'0 .. 10 11 ~••• 01
~2nd St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Jackson at Meigs
Hall of Fame.
the game, 111-11.
Matt Sterrett's short
jumper (6:221 put the Blue
Devils ahead to stay. GAHS,
behind Terry Wall. Jimmy

·4"-

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT STORE

FRENCH CITY LUNCH

r-----------1

The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wedne!day,Jan . 25, 1971

ljWarriors triP, · Xavier

Cremeans 346; Zoolr 346;
Lanham 1-1-3 ; Booth ll-2-2 ;
RESERVEGAME
1-G-2; Bayl.lss G-o-O ;
Jolllll
WAHAMA (71) - Weaver7·
2-16; Richarda 1·1·1~ ; ROWib 5- Totals 25-1~ .
~14;Smith4-3-II ; SayreH-9 ; Score By Qua.rten
17 21 13 20 -71
R.,...ll 1-Z-4; Dlngey 1-G-Z ; Wahama
7"23 21 13 -Gf
Stanley G-o-0 ; Total• 2!1-13-71. Buffalo

- ---

Totals

5-

BUFFALO (64 )- Reed 1-5Score IIY Quarten
23;
Boggess 3-3-9; Gatens 1,J.
Wahama
7 I 17 2!1 ~
7;
R. Cremeans 346; L.
Buffalo
23 14 16 22 .?)

'

.

Mohdoy thru. F ridoy
9 :00 Ill 1:00 '
Soturdoy 9:00-9: 00
CLOSED

HARnEY'S SHOES,
Sloro·Houro
.
'
fl.m.-5 p.m.
"Middle of
Mon. thriJ Thurs. &amp; Sot. Upper Block"
9 o.m.-8 p.m. Fri.
Closed Sundov
Pomeroy, () . .

.'

•

INC~

•

�~--------------------------------·:

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Jan . 2:i, 1978

7- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wedne!day, Jan. 25,1978

other day. The family loved it' !bought it tasted like lemon
custard . She promised to pass •long tbe recipe to us.
··

fiide-:Jid;IProjects reviewed by ITu~~.,!~
:~! us. . . By
Butte! it Methodist women,
*

Don Whetstine to
lead youth seminar

Gelling v•riety into meals is certa inly a problem for the
basy homemaker. Have you ever tried a noodle and
~ottage cheese casserole
One- eight ounce package noodles
Nuw we ·ve heard .of cvcryth.itiJ.;:. ~
).....a-ount'e package noodles.! cup cottage
BEEfl BHEAD .. .. .. .. .. ..
I! eggs, well beaten, chopped green pepper to taste nd
Gerri Kcs.":iin,g'c r Parsorts: who shared the recipe with us salt and pepper to taste.
'
devotions. .
St1ys it IS n.:ally a " la,zy woman's bread." The recipe calls
Cook
noodles
according
to
the
package
directions
.
Drain
The meeting was l&gt;cld in for three cups of se lf-rising Oour, 3 tablespoon&amp; of sugar,
well. Combine all ingredients, ntixing carefully . Spoon into
mnjunction with the c•ll to and one cetn of !Jeer. Mlx the ingredi ents together , put in a
greased
bakiQg pan. Bake in 350 degree oven for.one hour.
pray er and self-denial loaf p(:ln i.tlltl back for 35 minutes at 350 degrees. No
service at the home of Mrs. kucalling, no waitin~ ror it to nse, she says .
MASHED POTATOES MAGNIFICENT -haven't tried it
Opal Kloes .
but am sure it must be good · since it has all the
·'Be Thou My Vision" was
Do you l&gt;y any chanl.'c h:HI a recipe for applesauc;e ingredients one on a diet shouldn't nave.
the . theme presented by gingcrbl'ci:id?
J'hc recipe CHlls for a :smHJI package of cream cheese,
Mr s. Kl oes and Mrs.
Velsia Housh h:td one many years &lt;Jgo but can 't find it six potatoes , pared, 1 cup of sour cream, I' teaspoon salt
Teaford . The four part now . The gin gerbread ls m:1de . with cooked applt[sauce and and 2 tablespoons butler. Have the cream cheese at room
program had as topics, ha s buttermilk anO soda in it.
temperature.- Boil and mash the potatoes.· Combine tbe
'' God Be Our Vision, A
The I'Ccipt! was i11 her West V irg in~ct looseleaf cookbook sour cream with the salt and cream cheese; ~lend
Time for Praise, Confession Put out about ~ or 40 y~ars ago which she lo.!l-1 several thoroughly with potatoes. Place in a greased casserole; dot
•nd ~ardon " , "God Be Our years ago .
with butter, and bake at J:iO degrees for 30 ntinutes,
Wisdom, A Tim e for
I~cident a ll y , Mrs Roush coll ecl' cookbooks and has over
Proclamation", " God Be a hundred now. Sht' made her first buttermilk pie the
Our Treasurer. A Time for
Dedication of Goods", and
"God Be Our Victory, A
Time of Dedication of Self.' ' ·
The program closed with
the hymn, "Spirit of the
Living God" and the
benediction , Mrs. Kloes

Helen

«

OON'T LET HER THROW YOU!

SYRA&lt;.:USE·A donation of
DEAR HELEN :
SID to CROP was made and
This woman at work never tells the truth. She's always brag- reports on several recehl
ging about money. No matter how much our husbands make,
projects of assistance to
hers carhs more. Wha!ewr we have, she has better. And her others were given at a
stories are never the same twice.
recent meeting of the
She think:; she must havl' rots of men hanging around her,
United Methodist Women of
and she lies about her SCI-Called affairs too.
·
tH e Asbury Church,
Should we just go along ; or call her on these tall tales' At Syracuse.
least we could say, " Th:.11 isn 't whCJt you told us yesterday." Letters were read from
WE'REFULLOFJT
the
pediatric . ward
DEAR FULl. OF rr:
personnel at Veterans
(You mean she is, 'don 't yoll'?)
Memorial Hospital thanking
Habitual liars need help . You ntig h~be doing this woman a
the group for toys for
favor !f you'd suggest therapy · but contact her as a friend, not &lt;'Onfined boys and girls, and
a disg u~ted listener .. H.
from the . Community
&lt;llurch in Guam for a
DEAR HELEN:
donation to a building fund.
J 'm going with a married man for over two years. Every
The lel!er spoke of
tlmc I suggest he get a divorce and marry me , he is full of eX- problems which have
cuses.
cause!! delays but reported
He's the fa ther of five children . Wlmt would you suggest? IN
good response from
LOVE ,
churches.
DEAR IN LOVE :
The birthday of Mrs.
... A new man.· H.
Anna
Hilldore
was served a luncheon .
celebrated and membersDEAR HELEN ;
report 60 shulin vislta made
ARONOt'F TO RUN
My guy and l have bt~n Living together long enough to have
during the pas! month . Mts.
CINCINNATI (UP ! ) all our appliances,· linens, etc. We do need cash. How could we · Mary Lisle conducted the State Sen. Stanley J . Aronoff
go about asking (or money as wt:dding gifts, so we can sUtrt a
down payment on a house'?- HOPEFUL

DEAR H.:
As in '' Come to our weddmg - bring money''?

You can't do that, bui.'1:r friends ask your needs, mention
your hope for a house. casually. They should catch on. · H.

DEAR HELEN.
My wife, like the •· involved person " in your column, was

always picking up strays- abused worn~~ who needed ~helter.
- Sometimes her judgment wasn't too sharp. We were taken a

business

meeting .

few times. My house stopped being my home.
So 1 did something about it. I brought home several men at
different times. They ranged from alcoholics to tossed-out
husbands. And they weren't easy to live with. Some were
three times a week, and my home is again my castle.
Maybe "J. P.'s" husband should Jearn from me. SYM·
PATHETIC BUT AT ADISTANCE

.

1 Mason eo'unty News Notes },

~

Karen Blaker Ph.D.

Emotional
litterbug

ly with your husband'
If you fear confronting hin:a,
that may partially explain
why you are confiding in your

By Karen Blaker, Ph.D.
:~:~
·By Alma Marshall
:~~:
DEAR DR. BLAKE~ - I
· Many have expr""sed gratitude for the assistance they · stay home mornings with my
2-year-old son. AI noon, my
rece ived during tlle recent deluge of snow. Citizens of Clifton
daughter comes home from a
are thankful to the Mason Volunteer Fire Department for
half day in first grade. It's
rernoving the snow from their streeta. I remember a Clifton
senior citizen telling me she couldn't go anywhere, Well, such a relief to have someone
to talk to that I tell her many
Laura , you ·can get out now.
things
I should probably keep
The Volunteer Fire DeJl!lrlment also went to West
to
myself.
Columbia where they also ·removed a lot of that white stuff
For example, la st Tuesday
which in spite of its beauty can after awhile become a
night
my husband and I at·
nuisance.
Greg Roush, an energetic sophomore at Wahama High tended a parent-teacher con·
School, found \ime to help many Mason area citizens. He took feren ce at her school. My hus:
his farm tractor and removed snow from many driveways for band ·asked some pointl~ss
. several days . He reportedly spent a night at the Mason Fire questions and then fell asleep
while the principal was talk·
Station ready to belp people.
ing.
I was so embarrassed.
Greg has a parttime job at the Mason Car Wash. He's a
Yesterday,
I told my .
most ambitious young man . His parenta are Mr. and Mrs.
daughter all about the inci·
Rohert E. Roush, · Mason.
I ~sure the Mason Volunteer Fire Department helped den!.
What seems worse is that'
many of the citizens of Mason. I just haven't heard from them.
I'm
templed to tell her other
Many of us are grateflll to the Nallonal Guard. They
things
too. I have to talk to s&lt;&gt;cleaned Breezy Heighta or Ann Street at Pomeroy. This is !he
meone.
Since l do feel better
first lime I believe this was necessary ~ call out the Guard!
after
I
get
my feelings out, is
That hill is a challenge in nice weather, and wlth all that snow
it was quite a feat removing so much. On hehalf of my mother what I'm doing really so bad'
DEAR READER - I am
who lives on the mountain, thanks!
certain you feel better when
MR. AND MRS. JOE USH entertained with a New Year's you e.xpress your f~elings.
dinner at their home in Mason. Their gu""Ls Included Mr. and But your daughter iS hardly
Mrs. Roher! (Kay ) Wilson, Pomeroy RFD; Mr. and Mrs. BiU an appropriate person to tell
Pethtel, New Haven; Mr . and Mrs. Larry Sntitll, Mrs. Charles all tbe complaints you have
·about your husband - and, I
Yeager, Mi- . and Mrs. Nolan Swackhamer, aU o~ Mason.
· The group sang Happy Birtllday to Mrs. Nolan (LiiciUe) 3sswne, her fathef. This sort
Swackh~er.

The Lishes also entertained with another holiday party
and their guests included.Mr. and Mrs. George Roupe, Mr, and
Mrs. Ken Fury, ail of Mineral Wells , W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Cecil Sayre, New Haven ; Mr. arid Mrs. Larry Noble, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Yeager , Mr . and Mrs. Larry Sntith, aU of Mason.
LETART - Albe&lt;t Roush, a new service director of Falin
Credit, for the State of West Virginia, attended a sentinar for
new direcwrs at the Federal Land Bank lp Baltimore, Md.
over the weeke~. Mr. Roush was the only one of nine dlre.ctors
in the State of West Virginia to attend the meeting held at the
Federal Land Bank,
He went by plane from Charleston, On his return because
of snow, many air fields were closed, and the return trip took
approximately 12 hours. He left Baltimore by plane to Pittsburgh, which took 4S minutes. It was necessary to take a bus
.from Pittaburgh to C~brict8e, Ohio and from there to
Parkersburg where he was met by his son, Tom, and a friend,
Jack Pickens.

is planning to announce .his

CHOICES

moochers .
R~sul! : My wife now workS at the battered wives' sheller

~=~:~:».::&gt;.::::::::~:*::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;.;::::::~:;:::;::::::::::::;:;:::;:;:::::::;;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Mrs.

Helen Teaford reported that candidacy for the second
the missiOnary ~ard for the congreSsional district at a
month had been sen! to Friday news conference.
India. February meeting Aronoff will challenge former
will be held at the home of Cincinnati televi sion an Mrs. Helen Teaford with chorman Tom Atkins fof'1M/
Mrs. Rose Ann Jenkins Republican nomination to
presenting the program and oppose incumbent Democrat
Miss Marcia Karr, the . .Thomas Lukens .

daughter. For you, ·'getting
at him" through her may
seem safer than facing him.

Think again if you do not
fight with your husband in
front of the children only
because of the effect you
think it will have on them.
Children seem able to handle
open cohflict between th~i r

parenta far better than in·
direct, passive ba ckbiting .
It is clear from your letter
that you value your ~lose
re lationship with your

sheese.

Store Hours:
Mon.·Sal 8 am·10 pm
· Sunday 10 am-10 pm

A specia l task force of ttie warning ·signal is abnormal ·
American Cancer Society has . bleeding, and that any
co mpleted a five-year woman experiencing this
program of helping American shoulq see her physician
women protect themselves promptly.
against uterine cancer.
In Ohio, some 2,000 new
Sharon Michael, the local cases of cervical cance&lt; are
chapter's public information expected to be diagnosed with
chairman, sajd the campaign . 600 deaths from the disease
helped increase the number this year ...The estimates for
of women who have had at endometrial cancer are 2,500
least one pap test from 48 new cases and 250 deaths.
Michael said the Society
percent 'in 1964 to 80 percent
today.
is continuing its progr~ of
"The pap test can detect uterine cancer education and
cervical canc·e r early enough cervical cancer screening in
for treatment to be near!) 100 an al!empt to teach all
percent effective," .she said.
"It has become part of the
s t a. n d a r d
ph y s i c a 1
examination
given
to
women ."

women how

themselves

to

protect

Marie

Hoffman,

Sharp said Hickerson .will be
responsible for the maintenam:;e ·und procurement of
buildin~ s , Vtihic lcs · and
materials ·for the 68 excha nges in the division.

W~Pt1k on e ta 50

against

this

disease. · .'·
In Meigs, women interested
in knowing where they can be

Endometrial cancer
tested and where uterine
affecting the body of the cancer programs are . held,
uterus - Is more difficult to should contact the Society at
detect, and affects primarily. East Main St. (Senior
older women, from the time Citizens Center). There are
·of menopouse.
also Ire~ pamphlets availab)e
The most accurate early on the subject.

Dhcie n National Tra i l 56
Dover 59 lanesv i ll e 43
East Can ton 74 M inerva 65
East Cle Shaw 82 Berea 75
Edon 51 North Central 44
Elyria 88 Lort'l tn 79
·
Fairborn
Baker
BB
Springfiel d N 86
Fairfield 67 Ha n1ilton Taft 66
(2. oil
.
·
Fa.ir lawn 70 Anna 64
Fairview 74 North Olmsted 73
Fayette 71 Camden F r on ti er

DEADLINE EXTENDED
COLUMBUS - TI1e Ohio

SLAB
BACON ••••••••••••••••• ~o~.
'

Social
Calendar
luncheon, Wednesday at
Meigs Inn ; Ladies night to be

~

1

p.m.

.

PORK

LOIN~ ••• ·•••• ;~
12

0~ PKG. 6'

_BUCKET

$}49

.

CUBE STEAK••••••••• !~· ...

STARTING PRICE AT 499.95 PAIR-'50.00

Hills

&lt;1~

rc vivn t nt llw C:nlliputis
Church.

moru inforinath\lt t•nl\
186:1 ur 44H*:H79.

44tl ~

"North

Ridgevi ll e 63 Ctcnr
vieW ~ 1
Nor thn1onl S9 Piqua 44
Nort hwest Slll r' k. 68 Cc1rro ll
ton 50
Ohi o Dertt 73 Xer~'a Wil son n
Por tsmou th 1.1 R u"scll ~K yl

58

•

Rnv enn11 7J Field 67
Revere 15 Woodridqc ·19
Ri ver VI ew M M .1ysvl llc 51
.Rocky Riv er 45 gt rn s lf"d F"A ib
·l1
Sandus ky 66 Mnrlon Hnrdh,g
51
.

$he nnndMh 55 Ci'1 ldwe ll 5?
Sidney Lct1rhfm 6/ ~lpp ( lty
53
Sky vue 7~ MeAdow brook 69
Solon 49 Kens tor1 118 (ot J
Sou th Wcb5 ter 59 New Aos l o11
Sp ringb oro
71
l re nt on
Edg ewood 66 ( :t' o t)
Spri ng fie ld 64 Stow 59
~ p rl ng flc l d 81 S l·ant ~n ;,.1
Sp rlngllfHd
l,.oc n l
.) 1
Col urnbi nnll J6
St Hen r y &lt;IY New Brem en M
Steu benvil le Cil lh (,()Win ters
vl! lc 57
Stryk er 5;, Pe!ll svl ll c YJ

Tallrnndg(: /6 Kent

l~oosew ll

71

Tl t tiil Calvert 65 Cl yde ~7
To·l Libbey 64 To l Stril ch •IIJ
T o 1 M il COrit b cr
6J
l ol
W oodward J~
To l Roger s 79 Orcgo11 Cli!y 6/

Tot St Fr.1ncis 9•1 Tot Wall e 56
Upper Arlingt on 62 Wh lleh,111
51
Va ll ey VI ew 68 Middl etOw n
Mitdi son 66
Versai llc:!§ 47 Gr a Mn 1 :11
Warren Harding 9 1 A:;h lrlbu lol

5r 79

War ren Western R$v 66 F
liverpool 54
Warr e nsv ill e
56
I ll
dependence 55
Watkin s M emorl r. l 77 U! Jc,l 5U
Wel lington 6•1 ·Brookside )6
Wel lsv ille 78 Gi r r1rU 61
West Branch 61 Ca nf ield ,jg
Wes t Gea uga 53 Chardon 51
West Holrncs M S lllilh v ill ~.' .'&gt; I
We st M uski n gu rrr 66 1 r i
Va ll ey 54
Western Rescr vf' M Cle Lit fill

Logan Elm 68 Pickerington 60
Lordstown
77
Ravenna
Southeast .t .J
Lou isVille 68 Massi llon 513
Malvern 82 Tus c a r awas
Va ll ey 50
Manchester 82 Mogadore 75
Maplewood 62 Farmingfon 58
Martins Ferry 79 St . Cla i rs·
ville 60
Ma ssi llon Ferry 65 Fa irland

67

Mt Healthy 89 Lak ota 76
MI. Vernon 62 Ashland 53
Napoleon 60 Bryan 47
Nelson ville· York 85 Miller 44
New Concord JG 83 Philo 71
Nort h Coll ege Hill 43 Tayl or

Western Brown QO New Ri c. li
mor1d 56
William sburg 71 Goslwn 69
Xt;.&gt;nia 73 Da y F il ir view 11S
Yellow Spring s 85 Grcc-nvlf'w
67
Youngs Ur sul lnO n Vluhbnrd
67
.

JB
Maumee 74 Springfi eld 47

FAYEJTTEVILLE, Ark .
(UPI) - George R. Cole, 11,

• Stainless Steel Tub. so durable. it
has a lifetime limited warranty.
• Compare all tho quality Speed
Ouoen features that make it the
most dependable washer you can
own!
• Exclusive Stainless Steel Dry&amp;r
Drum comes with matching lifetime limited wrtrranty .
• Complete test results &amp;nq warronty
details available upon request.
• Cash Rebates available on many
models, come In and cOmpare .

BANANAS..............~~

Middleport, 0.

Hazorb:.1 Ck l»'ogrHm for 42 ·
yc;.trs.
A na tive of Bauxite, Ark ,,
he lettered us u quartcrtm ck

retired director of athletics at

YELLOW
.
. 3LB.
ONIONS ••••••••••••••••••

the University of. AJ:kansas
died Tuesday.
'

for the ltltzm·backs in 1!125-2627 and woo All .So ~Utwest

Cole was a player, eoach
and administra tor in the

Conference honors his seni or
yc~r .

NOW OPEN
EAST RUTHERFORD,
N.J . (UPT)
Marty .
Schottenheime r Tuesday

GINO'S .

1

resigned hi s posi tion as
defensive coordinator· for the

OF MASON

New York Giants .
Schottenheimcr, a former

linchacker with the Buffalo
Bills and New England Patri-

PHONE 773-5536

GRADE A

/$1SMAU EGGS ...... .'.~.~

.AS
ARGO PE •••••••••••
11 oz.

·KRAFT

1

.

A·; 1

1

j

TIDE DETERGENT
49

0~

99'

Limit 1 Per Cvstomer'
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Jan. 28, 1978

~ -~ ~ • ~ ~

; •~ ~ :!

COUPON

COUPON

COUPON

---

- -

MAXWELL HOUSE

,GOOD VALU

GOLO MEDAL

INSTANT.COFFEE
10 OZ. $449 W/C

ICE CREAM

FLOUR

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Jan. 28, 1978

VAN. &amp; CHOC.

~GAL

59''

REG. or S.R.

W/C

Lim i11 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer
Jan. 28, 1978

5 LB.

ots, cited personal teasons
for his decision .

29

$ ., ~ANQUET FROZEN
.
74 oz
SUPP·ERS ...............
EXCEPT BEEF . 32 0~ .
&amp; CHEE·SE .............
!it
.

MACARON·I
COUPON

INGELS FURNITURE.
1

IIHirning Hnd rvt&gt;nln~, J1t'il . 2'J
at 10::\5 11.111. Ul\tl 1 p :111 .
Cu111 i n ~ up M111T h 19-24 ht•
will Lit• ltulllin g 11 you th

· Sports briefs

HURRY IN.TODAY ... AND SAVE AND SAVE AND SAVE!

Offer Expires February 15, 1978

•

Galion 85 Upper Sandusky 51
Gar f i el d Hi s 59 Parma
Normandy 56
Genoa 62 Oak Harbor 53
Grandview 66 W Jefferson 57
Grove City 74 Westerv ille S 62
Hamilton Ross 59 Ma son 55
Hamilton Badin 59 Green

Union 61 '
·
Lima Shawnee 62 St Marys 46
Lockland 91 Blanch ester 76

FRANKIE WIENERS •••

Queen·s famou s Arc •Q.
Matic transmission with only six
IT!Owlng parts is backed by a 10-y8ar
limited warranty. Twice tHe war ranty of any other washer .

106 N. 2nd Ave.

Brothers, and Dtwul Bennrtt.
Don b; H grmtu~ tc or Otnrk
Uiblr rilllt'[:e. Whilt•Jhe&lt;'t' he
tnn•elcd with B\;L Stacy, uow
roundl·r und dit·,~·t ur of Chl'ist
in Youth . Tulsn. Ok.IJthvuw.
singing in a ~ospcl &lt;IULU1. t.'t .
II•• will bt• prt.'IH.'hmg nntl·
singing in st•rv trcs Sumllly

&gt;17

Harnil!on Gar f iel d 36 Prince
lon 31
HIHiard 73 Re·ynoldsburg 6'1
Indian Lake 55 Mlarni E JJ
Ind ian
Va l l ey
N
5•1
Ridgewoo d 53
Ket Fairrnont W 64 Miarn iS
burg 59
Lakeview 65 New t on Fall s 58
Lakewood 76 Granvi ll e 72
Lakewood 54 Ber ea M i dpark
52
L a ncas te r Fisher 53 Berne

. $J29

SUPERIORS

THURSDAY
POMEROY
MID·
DLEPORT Lipns Club,
special meeting, 6:30 p.m.
Thursday at the Meigs Inn.
Ladies Nigh! to be observed.
CHESTER TOWNSHIP
Trustees Thursday 7:30p.m.
at town hall.

HURRY!
Offer \Limited.

Fort Frye 69 Wat er ford 50
Fort Jenni ng s 82 Pandora
Gilboa 59
Gahanna 51 Frank li n Heigh ts

;:~~~~~~- •••••••••••'!·. 79¢

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY
•
MID·
DLEPORT Lions Club, noon
Wednesday at the Meigs Inn.
POMEROY
MID·
DLF.PORT Lions · Club noon

SAVE8,000
Ions of Water ,

JB

47

plar stated conclave .7:30
p.m . Wednesday. Annual
.inspe ction Sa-tQrday, 3:30

Four- Quartet, 'l1tc Jackson

Dt'llll)' ('ubu m , ministt' r ,
Jnl'k IJI'rry , a !"~oew h• . F'11r

fa ith

Wr ight / 0 K e t 1-atnnont
E 68
Delaware 50 Weste r v ill e N 47
Delphos Jefferson 59 Crest
view 55
De lph os
St John s 78

Jan. 26 at Inn, 6:30p.m.
OHIO VALLEY Com·
mandery 24 , Knights Tern·

!.U&lt;'liS,

e \'llllg elist. , tht• Wut('hll\l'll

sc hool assemblies,

Uo1','

mother , Connie i Marlene

Hi ckerson ot Rockbridge hd S
been n ~uned supply and
transportation man age r for
General telephon e Co. o[
Oh io's so uthern divi sion
headquartered here. Division
Genera,! Manager Joseph C.

inr luch'

Mirl111 l

Basketball·Results

observed on January 8 at the
home of her grandparents,
Mr. and Mr s. Bernard
Hoffman , Letart, Rt. 1.
Attending were Brooke's

MANAGER NAMED
PORTSMOUTH - G. Scott

personnel

Duvld

Chri~'&gt;1iniJ

prcse nlin~ music·:~! conCCI'tS .

was

Lawson , Mr . and Mrs . J.ames
RoushandKim, Mr , and Mrs.
Georg e Hoffman, Be nny,
Jane, Jennifer and Joe,
Debbie Hoffman and her
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs,
Hoffman .
Ice cream and clown cake
were served. She received
many gilLs. Those sending
gilLs included Cathy Missy
Roush, Charles Tennant,
Martha Clark and Erma
Rottgen .

Otht"r

youth udvisor SCJninurs, hiijll
promise rallies, wol'king in
Christiun Scrvi&lt;.:o C0111lps, and

Starting This Saturday,
Registration in Middleport can be
made at Gilllons Fashion Center or
by calling 992-6389. In Gaillpolis at
446-3632, 446-0727 or 256-1392. This
will be the only class enrollment
until .September.

the Word of God to young
l.ocuted
in
peopl e.
Chesa pea ke, Ohio. O.F: .
truVels t'Xlt'IISiV~iy holtting

LETART, W. Va. - Tbe
second birthday of Brooke

Will Have Classes· In Meigs County
January 28th

Ope rati o n F.vungclill'
{0.1!: .1 is a multi· medi u
' 111issio11 dedicated to takinJ.:

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU JANUARY 28, 1978

141l(j'J,f) llY
illJ'I,II f) lliZI~J)
lll~llifl'l~
.

'

party will follow thr &lt;'om·ert .
Public Invit ed.

Second
birthday
celebrated

daughter. Rig~! now you are,
indeed, close. She appears to
accept ·what you say about Department of Natural
your husband and she Seems Resourc es iODNR) -has
announced the deadline for
to support you.
nomination
s for the Ohio
But what happens in the
Conservation
Hi-~11 of Fame
future when she starts putand
the
Ohio
Conservation
ting her childhood in perspecHALL CLOSED
Achievement
Award
has been
tive - when she gets to know
The
Racine
Legion Hall will
extended
until
Friday,
Feb.
3.
her father for herself? Are
be
closed
until
Feb. I.
The
previous
deadline
wa
s
you sure your daughter won't
Jan
.
20.
ODNR
officials
made
turn against you for unfairly
prejudicing her against hirri . . tile decision because bad
Speaking of the future , wea ther · conditions are
m.an delays,
what message are you giving · creating
Tana Burbridge, senior at
resulting
in
several
requests
y.our daughter about men?
Meigs
High was omitted from
After listening to your bar• f.or an eKtended nomination the honor roll.
rage of complaints, is it likely period.
she will ever trust a man]?
Don't despair. Don't ex·
ofemotional littering can plain. Don't apologize. And
create severe proble1ruf for by all means don 't over·
your child.
compensate by flattering
Unleashing your rnarital your husband for your
~ issatisfactions on your
daughter's benefit. (That will
daughter may force her to al- only confuse her more.)
ly with you against her father
Instead, channel your
just to show her love for you. anger and frustr-a tion
By taking advantage of the elsewhere - away from your
loyalty conflicts experienced impressionable daughter.
by all nQrmal children, you
Write to Dr. Blaker in care
are imposing a tremendoUs · of this newspaper, P.O: Box
and unfair burden on her.
489 , Radio City Station, New
If you need to talk to some- York, N.Y. 10019. Volume of
one about your problems mail prohibits Personal
- and it sounds like you do- replies, but questions ·of
why not choose a friend or a general interest will be
professional therapist ? Or ..~;~,.,,.~._ed in future columns.
w?y not discuss things d1rect-

The Gallia-Meigs
Performing
Arts
Center

'Concert a t 7 p.m. A pina

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.

• Speed

Cancer information program
·completed by national society

Don Whetstine. evangelist
with 'Oporation EvangelizeYouth Mission, Inc.. will be
t'Ondu\.'tlng a Youth Workers
Seminar at .the Gallipolis
Chris1ian Church, SR 588 untl
Mitchell Rd ., January 28
from9·11 :30a.m. anda Youth

59¢

limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer
res Jan. :za; 1978

Straight or Rough
Recapped Tires
Now At Meigs
Tire Center.

Drop In Today
Quality Tires At

A Reasonable' Price

MEIGS TIRE

CENTER. INC.
Jol'ln F. Fultz, Manager
Phone 992-2107
Pomeroy, Ohio

'

•

�.
8 - The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., WednesdaY. Jan . 2&amp;, 1978

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash --..

p~£L~~~;~s~~~G

•V

IMPAOVEji1ENTS TO
THE VILLAGE OF
MIDDLEPORT AND
ADJACENT MEIGS
COUNTY AREA
EXISTING SEWERAGE
FACILITIES

WANT AD .
CHARGES

NOTICE is hereby given
th e V1llage of M id
dleport , Ohio , pursuant to th e
reQuirement s of the Ohio
Env i ronmenta l
Protect 10n
Agenty and the Un i ted Slates
En .oronmental
Protect ion
Agenty , w i ll hold a PUBLIC
HEARING on
FEBR!UARY 11, 19 78
AT 7 : 00P . M .
IN THE COUNCIL
CHAMBERS AT
CITY t!ALL
237 RACE STREET
The purpose of th is hearing

I~

IN

I dlly

1.00

:!dllys
Jd:.lys
Gdays

1.0)
3.00

""

tbilrgi!
1.15
1.90
215
375

Alls runn111g uO~er thl.n t'tlr&amp;'(·ullv~

&lt;Wys will be charged Ill lht I tla)'
f411l~ .

In memory, Card of Thanks anll
Olliluary 6 ctmt.s per word $l 00
rnlmmum CHsh lnlldvunl~ .

Mubtlc Horne !la le:s &lt;tml Yard s.lt's
Hre lolt-cepl..ct! only wtlh cash With
order. 2S cent charger()( a&lt;b c-•rry·
InK Bu• Numbllr fn Care ofTht ~~~ t.mel.
·

The Publisher r l'st-rve!l lht nghl
to OOtt ur rejed lillY •ds d~med L'LJ)~tWr'!.llol The Publisher w1ll nul lA:
mpun.Juble fur rnurl! Lhan tme lnl'ur·

ret'l ln senJOn
Phone 9!1'..!·21 :i6

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

IN MEMORY ol John Profl rfl
w)lo dred January 24 1974
We nli SS 111'~ love
We rn1 ss h1 s smrlr:,o ,
And E.. ery day we m1ss h1m
more
Sodl-, missed by wr lc, e-h1ldren
grond(hr ld1 en , br others and

Mundlly
Noon on Sollturdlty
Tuesday

frrend~ .

Ulru Jo r1day

4 P.td
the day befure pu!Jlirallon
&lt;P M

Nolic..es ·

F'rtdlly arlemoon

992-2272

ASTRO•GRAPH

THE RACINE Vofunleer F1re
Depo!lfnenl will spo n ~or a gun
shoot e ... ery So lurdoy ol 6 pm ol
lhe1r bu1 ldrng in El o~hon Foe·
rory cho k e g un s~on l y
_
THE RACIN E Gun Club Gun Shoot
cYcrv Sunday afternoon . Foe lory choke guns on ly Assorted
meals .

Bernice Bede Osol
The Almanac
United Press International

Today is Wednesday, J an.
25, the 25th day of 1976 w1th
340 to folio w.
The moon is between its full
phase and last quarter.

~\1-!Jim

INCOME TAX Sen•ion Feder al
and State Taxes
Wallace
Russell , B10dbury 992 -72'18

• Jan . 26, 1978
Unrque or unu sual types of
husrness ventures wrll cap tu re
your laney thrs c omrnQ year It
co uld be somet hrng new that
11pu wrtl cr eate the market l or

ANNOUNCI NG the openrng ol the
public accounting oll ice of
Roger
luckcydoo. lice nsed
publ 1c account for occountrr)g
and bookkeeping ser'Jices and
pr epo ro t1 on of l edt:~rol and
stal e lo x relurns al 29 1 Walnut
Sl M1ddleport , Oh 992 2666
Hours by oppoinlmenl

W' l:JdlfJ~r~W\'/

T h e mornin g stars a re
Mercury and Saturn .
The eve nin g stars are
Venus, Mars and Jup ite1·.

Those born on thiS dale are
under the s ign of Aquarius.
Scottish poet Robert Burns
was born Jan . 25, 1759.
·
On this day in history:
In 1890, Nellie Bly, a daring
yqung New York reporter,
com pl eted a trip aro und the
world in the astounding time

of 72 days , six hours and 11
minutes.

transcontinental

AQUARIUS

-

Jj;"

wont to buy or sell some thing.
oe laokmg for wotk
or
who re.,.Qr
you II ger resulrs
fo srer wi th a Sen 1mel Won! Ad
Cofl.992 215b .

l:'ets ll&gt;r Sale
HOOF HOllOW Hor~e~ Bu y, St!ll
lrQde or lrarn New and used
saddles. Ruth Ree.,.es Albany
(b14) 698·3290
MEIGS COUN TY Humane Soctery.
Cor el me and adop tion Serii'IC~ .
992 7680 742 3 102 . 992 54,21

Verbal ag reemen ts are no t
likely to count for rnuc h today
m bu sr noss II you want it to
str ck you d be Iter get rt rn
wrrt l ng Havrng trouble Se lect·
1ng a career? Send tor your
copy a t Astra -Graph Letter by
rnarlrng 50 cents lor each and a
long . sell·add ressed stam pe d
envelope to Ast ro Graph, P 0
Box 489 Aadro Crty Statron .
NY 10019 Be sure lo spec rl y
vour brr tn sign

be more o f a
a help today
that you don ' t
m istakes
TAURUS (April 20·May 201 A
person who rs rntroduce d to
-,ou as a tnend o f a fn end of
yours may be trave lrng under
fal se co lor s. Check. her e ul
be fore you gel too rnv olved
GEMINI (May 21 ~June 20) Ttl rs
is no day to resurrect an o ld
domestic problem You II ha,.e
everyone at home drvided and
nolhing ca n be se ttl ed anyway

persons.

In 1972, P resident Nixon
s aid North Vi etnam had
tgnored a peace bid, which
included withdrawal of all U.
for ces f r om Vietnam tn six

months

Soviet nuclear
satelljte down
over Canada ·

CAN CE R (June 21-July

22)

Matctl your la,nguage to the
gra111ty of the sit uation to day II
you use oral overkr l1 you ' ll
accompli sh on ly yo ur own
down fall.

LEO (July 23-Aug.22) II you 're

WASHINGTON (UP! ) - A
Soviet military satelliie with
a small nuclear reac tor
aboard fell to earth over
northwest Canada today, the
White House announced. The
probability of contamination
was described as minimal.
Reporters were summoned
to an urgent briefing by
Na tional Security Affairs
advilier Zbigniew Brze'linski
a nd informed that The
Cosmos satellite, in orbit ·
since Sept. 18, had been
malfunctioning since December .

bu ytng m e r c handtse a t a
str ang e place . check the brll
ca ref ully be fore -,cw pay
Someone may be tr ying to
chisel a few cen ts

VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sep1. 22) Loo&lt;
ou t fo r a sharpte today who w111
tell you how to reap some
windfall profr ts . Hr s opera tron
rs n t th e krnd you d want to be
tnvo lved rn .

" Th is is not 8 horror
scenario," Brzezinski said.
" The cliances of real hazard

are small."
But, he said, the United
States dispatched two Air
Force planes to the scene
over Great Slave Lake to
sample the a bnosphere.
. Brzezinski said that results
of
the
sampling
for
radioactivity would be known
within five or six hours .

LI BRA

iSepl .

23-0cl.23)

your areo . look1ng tor o
respor1s1 bl e par ty Ia toke over
ba lance Con be see n locally
Coli credit manager coll ect
OI 4-Sq3 -6097 or wri le cred 11
manager . Athens Mall State
Stree t Athe ns, Oh1o 4570 1
~-----

(0ti.24-Nov . 22 )

Read the rnstructions today
befor e you try to assemble
so me th rng you ve bought .
Plunging rn blr ndty could end tn
chaos .

SAGITTARIUS I Nov . 23-0ec .21)
Don ·t burld yOur hopes today
on crrc umstances beyond your
co nlrol. or not rn accord wtth
yo ur ideals Take the sa fe and
moral route

CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Ja n. 19)
You cou ld possrbly repeat a
patie rn today that has te d to
mtstakes rn the past. ,The leop·
ard doesn ' t cnange 11 s spo ts ~
tt1 e e nd resu lt w•ll be the same.
rNf:WSF"A PEH ENT!o:H I'H.ISE 1\S.'iN.!

LAFF - A - DAY
Athens Livestock Sales
Saturday, Jan . 1' 1 , 1978
Feeder Heifer s ( 400· 700)
lbs. ) Choice 28.50 -JJ
· Feeder Bulls ( 400-800 lbs )

Choice 28-36.50; Good 23

50-

24.85.
'
Slaug hter Bulls (over 1,000

lbs . I 33.
Slaugh ter Cows, U tilifies
31 .85·35; Canners and Cutters

23 .75-28.25

.

Veals ( Choice. and PrrmeJ

, ., ~

!teal Eotale lor Sale ·

owner hnom:ed Monroe Coun·
ty W . Vo Phone (304) 772
3102 or (304) 772·3227

1975 GRANADA 2 dr 'Winy! root
AM-FM . recli ning seats Good CO UN TRY fa rmland wr th seclud·
ed woods . woler and good Q (
cond rllon . must sell 992 2703 .
cess in Monr oe Coun ty , W. Va
SPECIAL CAR bargains . Jq69 O lds
Sl ,OOO down , call (304) 772
Del la 88 wd h O!r Nice , $J60
3102 or (304) 772 3227
1967 CheVrolet Carpnce 307
!urba t rons m1ssror1 . m(lg Com mercial properlv oppro~e 17
ceres le¥el land . lo(o ted O!
whee ls. CB rodlo . n1ce . $375
Tuppers Plorns on Oh1 o . Rou le
Call 74'1 3010
7 Phone (614 ) 667 6304.

49·53.
Baby Ca lves (by tho head)
S· 14.

"I don 't reallv eilrn liO much A.Hog s ( No . 1. Barrow~ and
by the time ~ou subtract m y. J il ts, 200·230 lbs. ) 46 30 -46 .35 .
"
·
Boars 26.

'lgs (by lho head) 17-10.?8

.

-

STARCRA FT FAll Sole
M1n1·
mo tors. 20' and 22 . lroVel
Trollers . 18' 5' S3 799 . 25· 7'
Bunkhouse $4 875 . 'F old down
SI . 700 up We sell servi&lt;:e and
quality Open Su'ndays . Camp
Conley Slorc rolr Soles, Rt . 62 ,
N. of PI Pl easan t

GeorgeS . Hobstetter Jr.,
Broker
107 1(~ Sycamore St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

PHONE 992-6333
Office Hours : 9 A . M . to •l

"========~==~
ALUMINUM SIDING
SOLID VINYL SIDING
SOFFIT &amp; CELINGS
GUTTERS &amp; DOWN
SPOUT
Easy
step
by
step

Clo s e
Thursdays
saturdays at noon .

COUNTRY MOBIL~ Home Pork .
Route 33 north of Pomeroy
Lorge lots. Co11992 7479

Have 4 Bedroom, ra nch ,
located 3 miles from Rt. 7.

----

·--~

TWO BEDROOM Tr01Ier, real
nice. Aduls on ly
Browns
Trailer Park . qQ2 .J324
·--~-

COAl . lrmcsto ne . and cafc1um
chlo rrde and colo um brine for
dus t (On lrol and special mixrng
sai l for formers , Ex(e fs1or So l!
Works Main Stree t, Pomeroy ,
~ O ~ro or phon ':_9_?2· 389_1 - - €AM PER
$bOO
Al so. horse
trorler $450 Pl'lone (6 14 ) 698.

3290~--~----RES PON SI BLE OlDER lad y to li,.e ECONOMY TRACTOR wi th all at.n and core l or aged lady 1n
tachmenl5 like new, ask ing
Rut land . light housework and
$2250. Phone (614) 698·3290
cook rng , no laundry More l or •
RUGS, WAl l
Hong1ngs and
home than
wages . Ca ll
olgons. Nrce for Chr1stmos
7&lt;2 -2078
-~-..,·_---;--_
Reasonable Colt 992·22 14
wANTED AUT Q mechamc lor GM
1976 FORD f ·250 Custom . 17 50,:
dealers hip Wrr le. Box 743.
14 00 tires · winc h. Onl y 14,000
Pomeroy , OH 457 c'l~'
mi. Headers CB. Tope deck .
"
Over ~3 . 000 In e• troS. Se nous
co il s onl y after 12 noon
b96:'_D7_2_ S6.-:
800
:::c:-.-,-,--~-,--'197A SKYLINE t4 x 5b 3 bedroom. 6 &amp; S MOBilE HOMES , Pt. Pl@o·
lolol elec rr ic $7500 . 992·20\ 9.
sonl . W Vo b ~s rd e H eck ' s
19'73 Broodmo re 14 x b4 2
12 by 72ft . Mobile Home for sole ,
bedroom
lurn1shed
01r cond..
two
1973 Dorion 14 JC 60 2 bedroom
bedroorns . $6 ,000 Page St .
1972 Victoroon U x 67 3 bedroo111 ,
M1ddlepor t.
2 both
t9J2 (O\Ienfry 12 IC 65 3 bedr OOm
1969 State smen 12 IC 60 2
bedroom
----~~

ACE HARIMME

p.m . - - - - - -

\\;m~~~:-~2~
CAS H paid l or oil makes and
mode ls of mobile homes
Phone ar ea tode 6\4 ..,23·9531
TIM BER . Pomeroy Forest Pro ·
duct!&gt; Top pnce lor srondrng
sow limber . ' Coli 997·5965 ,or
~~en I Ho~b~~B~ - ~
COIN S. CUR RENCY . lokens old
po&lt;.kc t watches and (horns .
silver and go ld . We need 1964
and older siiYerco 1ns. Buy, sell ,
or trade' Ca ll Roger Wam sley,
.
742 ·'7331
- ·- _._ -OlD FURNI TURE. 1ce boxes . brass
bed s rron beds etc com plele
horaeholds Wrrtc M D. M1ller .
Rt. 4. Pomero'r' Oh10 or call
992 -7760.
NO ITEM TOO l arge or too small .
Will buy 1 piece or com plete
household N ew , used. or on r1·
ques . Mort1n 's Furniture . 20 N.
2nd St.. M iddlepor t Phone
992 ·b370
CHIP V. 00 0 . Poles mox ,
drometer \(;' ' on larges t end , SB
per lOti. BvPd led sloh , $6 per
ton O~ tlviitred lo O~_o Poll el
Co , Rl_;_ 2, P!)meroy J9l2b89 _,
CASH FOR Junlo. Cars . Fry~ s Tru(k
and Au to Wrecker Ser v1ce
Phone 742· 208\ or Penn zoil
Ru11011d 742 QS75 r
GOOt.&gt; USI:O trotlor
wr th
hydro vlic 3 pt. hi l ~h . 742·3074

BURROUGHS SEN SI MATIC oc
co unting machin e, Has been
under ser•11C e con tra ct anti In
good cond1\1on Con be seen ot
The Doily, Sen tinel 111 Court

~'__ ~~~..9_H - - - - HAY FOR sol e . SS5 per ton . Corn
for sa fe. $2 per bu . Co li oll er 5
pm , 985 ·4131 or 985.3537 .

"- --

wra PAY top dollar for used shot
guns r 1fles, -p1s lols. swords.
daggers , go·korte m1n1 bikes ,
Gro . . ely's or what hove you.
Open I 2 7 pm Fife's Jrd Sl .
Rt , 7 M iddleport. neMt to
Sp ee dquee n
lou ndromol.
992·749-4 .
-~-

-

~~----

-·-

KIMB LE ORGAN . 'J manual
k eyboards wi th full oc tave fool
pedal s
Gero ld
Powell
?9'3_3E'!. ~e_r 5 pm _ - - · CATTlE. ONE C ~or ola i s bull. 5
cows due to cotf. 3 yeorlmg
caiYl:s·.!!? ~72~ - - - - . . HENS and baby co lt . Phone
843·?353 ofrer 7 p m.
BUNDY TROMBONE, used one
yeor 111 good condr t1on Coil
q49 2-472

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?
~et

Pomeroy Landmark
soflen &amp; condition your
water with Co-op water

sol1ener,

Model

Now Only

•279,95

UC-SV(,

Let us test your water Free

Pomeroy Landmark .
Jack W. Carstv , Mgr.
• Phone 902 .2111

In

Middleport, Ohio

11 -9-llc

NOTICE

JOHNIE'S BEAUTY

~LEANING

SALON
Corner Union Ave.

and St. R1.
Pomeroy,.Ohio
Change of
Phone Number

Phone 985-3806

Jack's Septic
Tank Service
Box 34

Phone

992 -7608

Chester, Ohio

10-30·&lt; '

V~ · F H A.

30 yr lmonc rn g Ireland
Mor rgoge, 71 E Stole . A thens .

pho~e 16 ~41 ~~~---

and Attics
- Save Fuel &amp; Money-

LAVENDER
CONSTRUCTION
Syracuse, Ohio

TEAFORDm
r?fA II OI{

Nice Double Wide 24x56 on
corner lot in Arbaugh
Addition.
Including
furniture and appliances.

$2 1.000.
Nice l Bedroom bunga low
with ba sement &amp; garage.
$32,000. 2 acre of gro und .
Tuppers Plains.
New l bedroom home with
garage
in
Crew ' s
Subdivision . S41,000.
Nice small home located In
Darwin , Ohio on St. Rt. 33,
$19,900 .
Have
Business ,
and
investment pr operty in
Pomeroy.
Check with us before you
buy .
Cheryl Lemley
Associate
Home Phone 742· 2003
Hilton Wolfe, Sr .
Associate
Home Phone 949-2589

LIKE NEW -

4

Phone 992-3993

MACGIES UPHOLSTERY Rel 1n1sh,
r eup ho l slery ,
r ebu dd m g .
Beoul tf ul selecl 1on of mo lerro f
and Y!n yl s Free es timate Te l
742·285 2. locot•o n · Sa lem
Center
NICIN SKY S ElECTRIC SERVIC E All
type of w iring and electr rcol
reporrs. 742·3092.

good barbed · w ire fence .
Some f ruit, old house and
barn. s36,000

MIDDLEPORT -

WI LL CARE for the eldedy m our
home Phone992·7314 .

Nice 3

MOBILE HOME repo1rs. 992·5858

bedroom, dining , I iving
about 22x24, equipped
kitchen, int er ·com. natura l
gas furnace, and fenced
yard. All furnished for

PIANO TUNING ·-l ane Daniels 13
yea r s of serv•ce New phone
number , 992·258 1
ATTE N TION MARe
Owners ·
AQHA stud servrce . ln troducrng
to Southe rn Ol'lio, Cortok a. sorrell son of Otoe. Breed tor col
or , con forma tion and di sposi·
t1on Pho11e 698· 824 1 evenings
or wr1t e lor breedtng con tro&lt;.t.
Belle Echo Q_uorter Horses,
40225 SR 692. Pomeroy, Ohio

$38,500.
ANXIOUS - To se ll 1hls 3
bedroom 3 yr. old ranch
home with large living,
din i ng
and
equipped
,kitchen .
Unf i nished
basement and 2 acres. Only
~

AREA

45769.
3

bedroom, beam ceiling
living,
c olored
bath ,

equipped kitchen, family
room with wood burner,
ca rpet and extra lot .

NEW LISTING -

large 7

Brick,

r oom older home with bath,
nat ural gas and 2 car
garage , near stores In

ranch
t y pe
hom e,
3
Bdrms., w~ bath s, d in ing
room, WBFP, cen tral air,
hardwood
f loors
&amp;
carpeting, stor m w indows
&amp; doors, low e lec. bill s,
many
fine
features

Middleport. $15,000.
IF YOU NEED A 1978
CALENDAR DROP IN
AND GET ONE OF OURS.
Helen L. Teaford
Gordon B. Teaford
Sue P. Murphy

NEW LISTING -

135,000.00.
POMEROY -

0.

1112 STORY In good
repa ir , 3 bdrms ., nice built
in kit .• bath, ·leve l lot,

WBFP. good looking in &amp;.
oul. ONLY 114,000.00.
CDUNTR Y - 2 acres, 2
story, Ph baths, garage,
storage bldg . 'remodeled .

PRI CE REDUCED TO
$9,000 .00 ..
BUILDING SI"\'ES
Apprx . 10 acres, mostly
leve l, on pa ve d Rd .. water
&amp;
elec.
availab le .

113, 100 00.
SPECIAL -

Th is 3 level

home ca n be yours for only
725 .00 in Pomeroy ,

remodeling, kit ., bath . Call
for more In fo.

WE MAY HAVE THE
BUYER
THAT'S
INTERESTED IN YOUR
PROPERTY! LIST WITH
US TODAY .
.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REAlTOR
HANK, KATHY &amp; LEONA
CLELAND
ASSOCIATES
992-22n, 992-6191
· "2·2S.8

[H
Il l o\ liQ II

Jllot fhe Imitators
2·2l·l

1111).

largo 2 story frame wl1h

3 bedrooms, la rge l iving room, dining room eat-in
kitchen and ce llar . Garage w ith 3 room ap~rtment
overhead. Make us an off er .

OLDER HOME AND 4 ACRES -

AI lhe edge ol

CHEMICALS
We Strip Paint - Varnishes -

IBALMOG!

etc .
Wood. Meta I· Plastics
Antiques &amp; Modern
Upholstering Service
Custom • Professional
Refinishing • Repairing .
An1Jques Bought &amp; Sold
Dick Seyler
Phone 992-2798
100 Kerr St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

rn

ORPHAN ANNIE

MA'X! THAT
WORTHLESS BUM
YPU 'Rf FOND 0F"'
WH ERE IS HE'?

~Y.

NOTHING SERIOUS
E NOUG~ EVfR
HAPPfNS TO HIS
KIND! HERE'S
HIS ROOM.'

I HAVEWT

SEEN HIM SINCE
SUNDA'f'··- MAlBE

SOMETH ING

WHY ,I HIS

lHiNGS ARE
GONE ... l CAN'T
UNDERST,..ND.

8 ACRES - Small houSe in good con dition . Has 2
trailer spots with ' sephc tanks . Frontage on Rt. 124
n ~a r junction of Rt . 7. $20,000.
MILL STREET - Older 2 story bl ock home on a nice
lot . Features forma l entrance &amp; d ining, fireplace In
liv ing room , 2 large bedrooms &amp; garage . Modern
heating . House is in excellent condition .

Price reduced, 546.900. Comple1ely

remodeled 4 bedroom ~ home (new plumbing and
neat lng, new ca rpet , new kitchen ). Some excellent
bottom land, balance in rolling pasture &amp; woodland .
The house, barn, and 5 ac res are wortn the asking
price. Owner In a bind &amp; must sell .

CALL
THE WISEMAN REAL ESTATE AGENCY
•

446-3643

500 2nd Ave~ Gallipolis

I

3,A , IS; Guiding light 8, 10.
3 :oo--Another Wor ld 3, 4, 15; General Hospital 6, 13 ,·
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.

HOW TO iELL. iHE
PII:ICE OF SOMETHING
IN A &amp;ER'MAN \S-HOP.

Sons4 ; For Ri cher , For Poorer 15; M er v Gri ffin 6;
Gil liga n 's I S. 8; Sesame Sl. 20, 33; Gomer Pyl e,

NOw arrange the ci rcled letters 10
form the surprise answer, 8s suggested by the above cartoon.

·USMC 10
4:31&gt;-UII Ie Rascals3,15; Gllllga~ 's Is . 4 ; Brady Bun ch
B. 10; Mary Tyler Moore 13.

"(I XIIIJ"

IT'S

Jumbles· PILOT

3: 31&gt;-AII In The Fami ly 8,10; Anllquos 20;
4 :CJO-Misler Car loon 3; Edge of Nlghl 13: My Th r ee

SIEGE HEALTH

5 :QO-Her e Come The Brides 3; St ar Trek 4; Gu nsmoke
O; Mister Rogers• Neighborhood 20,33; Hogan 's
Heroes 10; Emergency One 13; My Three Son s 15.
S:Jo-News 6; Etec . Co 20,33 ; M ary Tyler Moore 10,
Hogan 's Heroes tS.

(Answera tomorrow)
CORNER

Answer : Whtt drinking songa uaualty haye plenty
of -"HIGH" NOTES

6:00-News 34,4.8.1 0.13. 15. ABC News 6; Zoom 33, 20
6:31&gt;-NBC News3,4, 15; ABC New s 13; Carol Burnell &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20 .

The lateat JU '-4BLES are here In JUMBLE BOOK ItO and JUMBLE
9001&lt; t1 t. Available 1or St 36 EACH, poatpald kom Jumble, cfo lhlt
ne!Ntpa~er. P.O. Box 34, NorwOOd , N.J 07648. Make chaolr.a p,~yllble to

7:QO--Cross.Wits 3; ,4; liars Club 6; Gong Show 8;

Capitol Boa1 33; News 10; To Te ll The Trulh 13;
Gil ligan'• Is. IS ; Hocking Valley Bluegross 20

New spaperbooka.

Professional Service, 39
vrs. experience .
Free
esttmates,
pickuP
&amp; :.del ive ry
service. 1.#
Residential &amp; Commercial. : :

Tri-State Upholstery
Shop

ACROSS
1 Goose genus
6 Emulate Lou
Brock
11 Unravel
12 Subtraction
word
13 Road
terrors
15 Moslem
Easter
16 Guido's note
17 Russian lake
19 Wee drink
22 Venerated
Z5 Nurse 's
helper
Z6 Crooked

"'

l16l-2nd Ave ., Gallipolis

446-7833-446-1833

.

BRADFORD, Auctionee r . Com·':
plete Service. Phone 949·2487 •'
or 9-49·2000. Raci ne, Oh 10, Crill ;
Brad ford .
.-

,.

~

ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR - ,.
Sweeper §. toasters , irons, ott-:,:
small appliance s Lawn mower •
ne xl to Stole Higl'lwoy Goroge ;;
on Rou te 7. Pnone (614) 985· •

3825.

. •

-"~~-------~----~~­
REMODELING . Plumbing , heot rirg , ,
and a ll ty'pes ol general repair .
Work guaranteed 20 yea rs ex - "
perrence . Phone 992·2409

You'll f ind ample
room here in the r---.--.._
boot for

luqqaqe!

FRANK &amp; ERNIE

'
~

•
•
:

MI~51N6, ,..,.,. 'I"Hir:N
H~'.S

NO'I" filliNG
ON A4J,. cY&amp;.11'11Df:ilS,
f:I'I'!HEll.

..

TELL ME1 0LD·
TIMER1 ARE

~ h'OLYMACKEREL/
"' OONKER. OF SOI&lt;TS .•.

SAVE ON

YOU HERE

SINCE THE

CARPETING

WAR?

charge
37 Boy
38 ~ foo
yong
39

33 French port
31 Cad

Wonder-

Wednr:! .&lt;uJny .Jan P5

land party _.:...,.._.:...,.._ _-::::c-::::-:=:-:::-:::-:- - - - - -

,.,.......,.-.,,.....r.c--.r-

Oswald

6--+-lf--+--+-

.'

.

and

sappearing trump
NOHTH
•

I

~5

A

A 10 75

'I' II o:l
• A Y 4 'l

.. i\ ~.

E: AST

• K i1J 8

'I'

A 54

.

l.J .J ti 4

+.1 10

SOU Tit

•

62

'I' K 7 6

•

K

S. Afr.
z Slangy

10 9 8

7

ulne~able_· Both, Dea le r·
m•&gt;nn. Ope n 1n~ lead : Jack

6-+-l--+-+---lol

turndown

3 Logger's
vehicle
DAILY C RY•P TOQUOTEIs

Here's how to work . ll :

A X Y D L _B A A X R
LONGFELLOW

hearts.

Wt:sl

Norlh
It

Pass

Pass

Ea!il
Doub le

and Alan Sontag

One l etter simply stands for nnother. In t hi s sam ple A ts
Declarer probably s houl d
used !or the three L's. X " f &lt;Jr th e two O' s, etc. Si n gle l etters,
have
been in a notrump,
apostrophes, t he l ength and format io n of the words are all
part-score c on(ract, but he
hi nts. Each day the code l etters are d iff.e r c nt.
bid his club s uit over the '
CRYPTOQUOTES
takeout double and everyone

KCV

OR

KQ

SJ 0 C H

OHCKGFCMV -

F

N 'K S

SK
OS

passed .
The bidding left a good
deal to be desired, but South
RBGV redeemed himself . His play

wv

would be

KQ

nothing short of

OCSVG- magnificent.
South won the opening
VRSO O H
FGHBLVCSR .
FCK C heart lead with the king and
led a lo w heart to dummy's
Yesl~rday's Cryploquote: OUR BRAINS, LIKE OUR BO·
nine, which was taken by
DIES, DON'T COJ14E WITH A SET OF DIRECfiONS AT· East's ace .
TACHED.-KEYES .
East r e turned the king of

MFBRVR

spades,

Copr. 1978 King Feuuru Syndicate, Inc.

which

declarer al·

lowed to win . Eas t switched

Good selection 111 on sale.
Installed wilh padding, no
extra to pay.

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
Rutlond

Q 8 of diamonds and the :1 2
of clubs . South had the five
of diarrlonds and the K 10 9 of
club.~.

Sou th l e d the los ing diu·
mond from his hand whic h
was won by W est with the
queen But East , down to
nothing but trump, had to
ruff has partner's good trick
wi th th e four . East n ow was

end played . H East led the Q
or ' .J f rom his hund South
wou ld play his nine, win with
t he

-.

,,
"

50 MlJCH FOR M"i
REPORT ON IMPROVED
TRAFFIC CONTROL

WHAT ·ABOUT
M'l RULER?

16NO~E 1-liM,MA'AM ..

!olE HA5 A ONE·Ti?ACK
MIND!

GUESS WHAT. SNUFFY!!
MY EZRA'S DONE 50 GOOD
IN SCHOOL, TH' TEACHER'S
SKIPPED HIM
TO FOURTH

GRADE!!

GLORY

BE!!

ace

tn dummy and
East's remai nin g
t rump honor.
If East leads Ius l ow c lub,
declare r wm s with th e nine
a nd takes the l ast two t ric k s
with the A K . ~ast in effect,
had ta ken no trump tric ks on

finesse

this hand . He had simply
ruffed his partner' s winner
and his seeming l y impreg n ..

able

trutnp

holding

had

crumbled
IN .: WS I,Al'E it f:NTEH I 'IUS t~ ASSN I

!For a copy of JACOBY MOD-

ERN, send $1 to ·' Win at
Bridge," ca re of thiS newspa·
per, P 0 Box 489 Radio Ci fy
Stat1on, New York . N Y 10019)

BARNEY

Reg. 56.95-not installed

Call742·2211
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPI;T CONSULTANT

to hearts a nd South won with
dummy 's queen . Decla r er
quickly ca ptured t he next
five tri c k s: a ce of s pudes,
low spade r uffed m decl3r·
er's hand with t he seven ,
king of dt amonds, ace o f
diamonds, last s pade ruffed
with th e eight of clubs.
The player s were each
down to foul,' c ard s East hnd
his original four clubs. North
had two low diamonds and
the II 5 of cl ubs. West hod the

+ K f1 :l

DOWN

RFOX

I WA£o 'THE ONLY

BRIDGE

40 Radiation
unit

I Fox of

BEING ON A SHIP 'THAT
HIT A r.!EEF. I GUESS

LATER . I REMEMBER

$4.88 SQ. YD.

'

lamp

36 Fixe d

opposite

wind .

beetle

SJ V G V

:

742-2211

35 Spirit

32 Stet's

22 Southwest

30 Inlet

NO! I CAME ~OME TIME

GURVIVORJ

Candy Stripe
Rubber !lack

carpef.

Answer

~~~rr--------------------------------,IIWriter
':::
St. Johns

w!J..L., NO •• .fRNie-':5
N.O ,. E)CIIG~Y

___..,..
'

6. 13.
10 :00-Ciass of ' 65 3,4, 15; Redd Foxx 13; J ack V an
tmpre Crusa de 6; 1. Claudius 33.
10 : 3G--Lock, Stock &amp; Barrel 20;
11 ; 00-News
3,4,6,8,1 0,13,1 5; Dick Cllv ett 20; Over Easy 33.
11 : Jo-Johnny Carson 3,4, IS; Starsky &amp; H u tch 6, 13;
Movie " House of 1.000 Doll s" 8; ABC N ews 33;
Movie " Warn i ng Shot" 10.
12 : 0o-Janakl 33; 12 :4o-Tom a 6, 13; 1 oo- Tomorrow
3,4; 1 :So- Ne w s 13.
Movie Channel 4 5 &amp; 9 P .M. - The Car lPG I
7 &amp; 11 p M. - All The Presidents's Men ( PGl

beauty
38 London's
journalism center
41 Golf score
42 Devoured
43 Moved
sidewise

NEIGLER' S FOR buddrng houses,
ba throoms , ott kmds of repo1r ;:.
work an d what hove you . Guy ..r
Ne1gler, Ra cine, Ohi o . Cot!
9Jf9·2508 e\i'enrngs
~:..:.:.=::::.:::.:::.::::!!::.:_ _ _~, "

12 and 15 fl. wid111
rubber back.

9 : QO-James at 15 31 4, 15; Barney Miller 6, 13; Ber na by
J ones 8,10; Advocates 20133, 9 : 3G-Car t er Country

member

BATHROOMS AND Ki tchens
remodeled , cera mic til e, plum · •
• bing, carpen try , and gener al !
mo rntenonce. 13 yeor!l. e•· t
perience. 992·3685.
:

Regular $6.95

Inactive

20.33 .
8:3Q-Fish 6,13; Wodehouse Playhouse 20; Me &amp; Slel la
33.
.

33 ' 1- walks

EXCAVATING . dozer , backh oe
and ditcher . Charles R. Hat· "''
he ld
Bo ck Hoe Se r vrce '
Rul lond , Ohio. Pl'lon e 742· 2008,

saveS4.8B Sq . Yd.

&amp;: DO-Chips 3,4,15 ; Waltons 8, 10; On ce Upon A C lassic

21 Gaze

rem

29 Click
31 r..oal region
of Europe
32 Family .

LJOUr

EXCAVATING . dozer . looder and .,'
backhoe work , dump trucks '.
an d lo-bo'(S lor hire, wtll hovl ~
f ill dtrl , to sari, lrmestone end
gro ve l Call Sob or Roge r Jef. ·,'
fers, day phone 992 ·7089, n1ght ,
phone 992-3525 or 992· 5232
:,.

20

Z8 - Schiapa-

Under no circumstances is
this lock to be
disturbect!

Lehrer Repo ri20.3J; That 's Ho llywood! 10; Nas hville on .the Road 13; Marl y Rob bins' Spolllghl IS.

4 Applegiver
5 Cornell's
color ,
6 One of •
the senses
7 Kind of bean
8 Daughter
of Cadmus
9 Press for
Yesterday 's
payment
10 Suffix lor
23 Surrealist
lion
·24 Base for
14 Freeloaders
Pelion
17 IOnian gulf
25 Off
I~ Matter : law
yonder
IIi Screen, as
21 The gums
flour
31 Cloyed

deal

GASOUNE 'ALLEY

SEWING MACHINE Repo1 r s, ser· '
v1ce. all molo.es, 992. 2284 . Tl'le 1 :
Fa b r i c s nap , Pome r oy ' I
Aurhorized S1nger Soles and '
Ser . . . rc e. We snorpen Scissors.

,....

7 : 15- Labor News 33; 7 · 3G-Ho 11ywood Squares 3,4 ;
$100,000 Name That Tune 6; Tatt leh1le5 8; M ac N ell ·

~'6by THOMAS JOSEPH

30 rolls of catpet in sfock .

68 ACRE FARM -

Y esterday s

1: 3G-Oays of Our Lives 3,-4,15; As The World Turns
8, 10; 2·QO-One Life to Live 6,13 ; 2 . Jo--Doctors

II

Print answer hete:

HAS HAPPENEO··

Dan v ille. 0\Nner trying to set1Je an estate - wa n ts
property sold . Tl'le acreage IS beautiful (some fine
bu i lding lots) . The house Is In need of repairs but

liveable . Ca ll 1oday. 120.000.

1 :oo-For Richer, Fo Poorer 3; All My Children 6, 13;
N ews 8; Young 8. the Restless 10; Not For Wom en
Only IS .

tJ
tfHBID I
I I

••_

4TH ST. - MIDDLEPORT -

To Say The Leas1 IS ; Gambl1 8; .
12 :3Q-Ry an ' s Hope 6, 13 : Bob Braun 4 ; Gong Show 15:
Search for Tomorrow 8,10 ; E lec Co . 33 .

I I I

PULLIN S EXCAVATING . Complete :·
Service. Ph one 992-2478 .
"

MEIGS COUNTY PROPERTY

Family 4; Love of life 8, 10; Sesa me 51. 20; Nova
33; 11 :55-CBS News 8; Loving Free 10.

KRAAP

''
'

HOWERY AND MARTIN
E•cay ofing . sep tic sys tems,
dozer, bockl'loe , dump tr uck .
limestone. gro . . . el , blacktop
pov!ng , Rl. 143, Pl'lone 1 ( Ot-4 ~
698-7331.
'

Realtor Associates

126.600.00.

''fhe Orilinalors

We have enlarged our
service department and
will service Hotpoint and
other brands.

Close In, 3

Bdrm , ne w home , dining
room , level lot, hard Wood
floors &amp; carpeting . Owner
will help w ith f i nanci ng .

~I

992-2206 or 992-7630

Will do roofing , cansln.Jctlon ,
plumbing and heal ing . N o tob :
too large or too smalL Phone
742·2348

9a _Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
1Ait1 . Phone 992-2181

Price Is R ight 8, 10; R ick Faucheux 13 .
11 :00-Wheel ot Forlune 3,A, 15; Happy Days 6,13
11 : 31&gt;-Knockoul 3, 15; Family Feud 6. 13; Parlrldge

12: 0G-NeWscenter 3; S20,000 Pyramid 13 ; News 4, 6, 10;

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Pomeroy Landmark

10; Not tor Women Only 13.

10:31&gt;-Hollywood Squares 3A,A,I5; Andy Grllfllh 6 ;

ll:ll'"""n-.lli&gt;IOOt&gt;•- .... .,.,..._

Yr old

145 ACRES - Two-thirds Is

$24,000 .
RACINE

MAIN
POMEROY,

Phone Mike Yaung

1· 18-1 mo.

large 3 bedroom ranch
t-rome .
2 1h
ba t hs ,
woodburning fireplace,
nice luxurious ki tc hen· with
range , d is hwasher and
d isposal. 2 car garage on
1.4 acres. •
LOT wrth City water,
electricity , &amp; sewer.. Near
store with 2 b edroom
trailer f or only $6,000.

Repor1 3; 6 :51&gt;-Good Morning, Wes1 VIrgi nia 13:
6 .55-Chuck While Repor1s 10; News 13.
7:00-Today 3,A, 15 ; Good Morning America 6, 13; CBS
News 8; Bullwlnkle 10; 7: 31&gt;-Schoolles 10.
8:oo--&lt;:apl. Kangaroo 8. 10; I
9:00-Merv Grill in 3; Phil Donahue A. l3, 15; Edge ol
Nlghl 6; Fam ily Allalr 8; Match Game 10.
9:31&gt;-Emergency One 61 Andy Grlllllh 8; Family
Affair 10.
'
10 :00-Sanlord &amp; Son ),A , 15; Talllolales 8; J oker"s Wild

I VEREF

..

Free Estimates

216 E . Second Street
Pomeroy , Ohto 457"
Phone 992 -332.5

6 : Jo-OoctorJ on Cell 4i News 6; 6 : •s-Mornlng

one letter to each square, to lonn

Blown Insulation
Cellulose Fiber
Blown Into Walls

Sunrlse Semester \0 ,

6:00-PTL Club 15; 6 :25-For You ... Biatk Woman 10;

four ordinary word&amp;.

...IJ 3;.'""'~· 0.
Ca~pet Uph sleiJ

Residential
and
commercial.
Call for
estimate, 24 hour service.
Anyday, anyttme.

THURSDAY , JANUARY 26, 1111
5:45-Farm Reporl 13; 5:50-PTL Club 13; 5:55-

Unscramble these four Jumbles,

Young's
Carpeting

p..,""

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY25, 1971
. 3: 30-AII . In T~e Family 1,101 Ohio Journal :w.
4:110-Mister Cartoon 3; Edge o1 Night 13; My Three
Sons 4 ; For Richer, For Poorer 15; Merv Griffin 6;
Gilligan's Is. 8 ; Sesame St. 2&lt;1,33; Gomer Pyle.
USMC 10.
A: 3o-Lit11e Rascals 3, 15; Gilligan's Is . ~ ~ Brady Bunct
8i Brady Bunch 10; Mary Tyler Moore 13.
.s :oo-Here Come The Br ides 3; Star Trek .f; Gu nsmoke
8; Mls1er Rogers' Neighborhood 20.33; Hogan's
Heroes 10; Allerschool Special 13; My Three Sons
15.
5:Jo-Eiec . Co. 10.33; Mary Tyler Moore 10; Hogan' •
Heroes 1.5 .
6:110-News 3,4,8.10, 13,15; ABC News 6 ; Zoom 20,33.
6: Jo-N BC News 3,4, 15; ABC New• 13; Carol Burnell &amp;.
Friends 6; CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 2&lt;1,33 _
7:110-Cross.Wit• 3,4; Liars Club 6; Sha Na Na 8;
Capl1ol Beat 33; News 10; To Tell The Truth 13;
Gilligan's Is. 151 Charac1erlstlcs ol learning
Disabilities 20.
7:3o-Funny Farm 3: Sha Na Na A; Wh~ H~voc
~truck 6; Fami ly Feud 8; MacNeli · Lehrer Report

'ft j1\}f.\.ft.~11 ~ THAT SCAAIIIILED WOAD GAllE
Q:!J ~ ~~ .. byHenrtAmoldan&lt;IBoblee

'
''

SEPTIC TANK

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR.

Wes1 Shade.

~UN$HINII11

~

Superior

I

PU92-2174

f.,,
'

St11m Eltrtction

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

MEIGS PlAZA

ant

----

Labrador type. Bolh very
lr 1endly . lo . . eoble
N ice
look ing peh pq·26 0"'7-~FRfE- PUPPi'ES . Part German
2 mol es nd 3
Shepherd
fem ale s Call 992 6322 otter 5

IIHiotor to tiM

e.••.

WOIJU)!/'T DRJ;AM
OF &amp;U1!61Ne YOU
WIT~ &amp;U!IINI!!IIt,
VARNUM! A~T.I!~
ALL.'fOUit MAIN
INTIIItt!!IT NOW 1!1

Cilll : 66 7· 6479 or 99 2·3815
1·1ll· 1mo.

EXPERIENCED
RadiatorService
.
, , _ the ....._.., Trvd cw hll4o

instructions.

P.M.

3 AND 4 RM. furn1shed and un ·
lurn1shed op ts Phone W2·
5434

TRAILER
SPA CE
lor
ren t.
Coun lry. 4 miles !rom tow n.
~~ 7 N Phone-614 ·247 -291 1.

11·9·'1fc

Ov

on heating cost
Experience and ·
tully insured

F ree E5t .

SALES AND SERVICE

Til18111. 1978

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

Sa ve 30 Pet. to so pet .

8 A.M. fo UO P.M.

1·1 8-1 mo.

located

Cellulosic I wood fib!!r)
Thermal Insulation

Pomerov 991·6282
or 992·6263
·

Ph. 992 -3993 ,

F.

Blown Insulation ~
liM KEESEE -

30Q Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

Closed Jan . 10

c-amjl_ing_Equf_pml'i:il
-"C~
- ---·-

TWO BEDROOM apartment Call
before 8 30 o.m 992·2288.

II CAT . FEMALE . longhoired , dog

you' re gorng to speak o f some·
one who ' s net lhere spe ak
well o f tn m II you deroga te a
person wh o can ' t answe r, rt
may boo merang

SCORPIO

AUCT ION FRIDAY 7 p .m U~ed
guoronteed
wos hvr
and
dryer '
85 ,000 sru
"oil er
lu • na(e , desk, and loh. of
new end used rnerchon\11se
at Oh1o R1ver Au c11on, Me1gs
Plato. M1ddleporl , Oh1o

.

PWMBING &amp;
HEAnNG INC.

Syracuse, Ohio

closeoU l
o r Ohio
Rive r
A u c l10n
Me rgs
Pl aza , f
M•ddleport Ohro

RISING STAR Kermel. Boarding.
lndo01 and ou ldoor runli, HOMESITE S for sole I acre ond
up Mrddleporl ncar Rutland .
Groornmg all breeds. Clean
Coll992 748t .
sondory lo(d ,t1es . Ches h1re
Phone (614 ) 367 0~2
NEW 3 bedroom house . 2 both s
oil e lec . I acre Midd lepor t
AKC DOBERMAN P1nscher 2 mole
close to Rutland Phone 992·
puppre~ 7 weeks old Block &amp;
7A8\ .
rusl 992 2572 .

(Jan . 2Q-Feb.19) WANTED Prclo.mg up o plano 111

work ers co uld
hmd ra11 ce th an
Be ,.ery ca reful
fall heir to the rr

guilty in the murders of
actress Sharon Tate a nd six

Stprm
Windows &amp; Doors
Replacement
Windows
Aluminum
Siding- Soffitt
Gutters- Awnings

1-·

J&amp;L

CARTER

FREE ESTIMATES

LARRY LAVENDER

SPECI Al AUCTION Sa tu rday 7
p.lll . All new lurni tu re ond
other m1sc
tram o store

••

'----------------------------------------------------J.,;
'
-

VOU Move o serv1ce to oil er . Auction

ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) Co-

a nd t hree women were found

Business Services

Yard Sale

-

sa fe r not to rely on otners who
say they II ge t some thing lo r
you or ope n doors today . Use
'(Our own co ntac t s or abrlit y

In 1971, Charles MansQn

weekly $120 soap bill ."

~

PISCES (Feb.20-March 20) It 's

t el ephone
se rvi ce
wa s
inaugurated in a hoo kup be·
tween New York and San
F r an cisco.

r---------------------------------~~'---------------------------------,~~

WANT 10 BUY House or mobile
home .n counrry wrth some
acreage on land co nrrocl . Co11
poy down
po~rnent
rl
reasonable
Onl'r' u)teresled
people rwod to mool mlorma. GROW EAR1HWORM S for prolll .
Free Do to
WORM WORlD .
lion to PO Sox 9 longsv1 lle.
11:110 5 Josephone Den\ler .
OH 45741.
Colorado 80210 or coli Mr
James collect (303177 8- 1026.

Aoto-!Saleo

INCOME TAX Ser .. rces Federal
and Stol e roxes . Wando Eblm .

18, 25, Feb . 1. 3tc

··~ · ~~,.~.... ·~- • ..---'

TELEVISION
VIEWING

--

SW)ALL form lor sol e, 10"1o down

Jan

S.

BUSINESS OPPOHlUNll'Y Own
you r own bus1nCs&gt;:.
area
d rs tr~butor lor Rond McNally
Mops . t.lo '!.etlmg servrce pre
es tabl ished occounls , In
.. e~trnenls S2500 to $1'2 500
~ecure by 1nventor'r' onc;i equ1p·
men! Wrrle 1ndude nome ad
dre s.~
telephone and 3
references to Personneti
N A .M 0 .
3q28 Montcl o1r
Rood. Bitrnmghorn. Ala . 3!:1213
or {o tltolllreP BOO 633-8441

11fles p1 s rol~ ~word~
dogger~ go kon' mu11 brke\ .
Grovel~ s or who.t ho.,.., you.
Open I 7 7 prn hies 3rd St
Rt 1 Middleport next to
Speedqueen
laundrOmat
qq1 7494
'
gtms

Sunday

For Thursda'1 , Jan . 26, 1978

other

Will PAY ref, dollar lor used shot

Sr

MEMORY o l Howard 8
( aldwvU Sr
0'1 Januar y 15 1971 1ust one
yea r ago
You IQII us ro 90 ro Cod above
We loved you ~.or lt wa~ hard
10 let you go
8u1 Cod f..nows best m h· ~
mfln11e w1~dorn ond lo"'e
We would no t wls.h '(O\J bock ,
lo lad or m sunshone, ~now or
rom
Or ro suller 01'1y more pam I
Memon es of your goodness
krndn ess and love,
W1ll olwo.,..s 111 our hea• ts
rcm orn
10 r emam stedl osl rn our lollh
to Gad
Is our doll,. prayer ,
Un11l some day we con meet
you up I here
Sodl'r' m1ssed by w1le Rube l
ch1ldren Howard Jr , J1 mmy
Mo r . . ene
and
Solly
g•ondchrldren .
great
grondc hrfd1en and his rnony
l nends

Fre d L Hol t man, Mayor
VIllage o f M 1ddleporL Ohio

1915,

lJwr;in~fis Opportunitic~

IN

E.!u:h word over the m1nUnum. 1 ~
words .,. • c~nts. per word per day

Generally discuss the
co n1ents of ttl (' draft ol the
Environmental Assessment
and Financ i al lntormal ron
perta1n rn g to the proposed
imp r ovement~ to the exis ting
wastewater
treatmenl
lagoons · ~nd
com bln ed
sewerage svs tem 1n the
Middleport Meig S Coun ty
Planning Area
Obtam comments and
advice tFom all concerned
cit1te n s on the proposed
improvements 111 ref eren ce to
the ir l easibr!rty , cost . and
impact on the cammun1fV and
the envi ronment 1n gen era l
Gr:-ne ra llv prov rde for
and encourage public par
ticrpation In th e planning ot
publiC tacllrl1eS
........ Meel l he r equ 1remen t s of
the Un1ICd Sta tes Envrron
mental Protec:tlon Agency
(Sec tions 35 .9257 a nd a · o t
Par i 35 , and Se010n c .53 o l
Su bpar! E of Part 6. Chap t er
I, Title 40 , USEPA Rul es and
Regu lations)
Draft
co p res
of
the
FacllrHes Plan . whi Ch 1n
eludes t h e p roposed rm
provemen ts , the Env i ron
menta l Assessment , anr:l
trnanc•al informa ti on will be
a . . . ailable t o r publiC in
spection from February l,
19 711 until February 15. t978 ,
Monday through Fr~day , be
tw een !he nou r s of 8 o'c lock
AM and 4 o 'c lock PM . at I he
Mayor 's office , 237 Race
Stree t . Middleport, Oh io .
·

M~rno1~

ol Mr io
who depar red
1h 1!&gt; hfe l 2 year ~ ago rodaY
January 25 ,
196b
Sadly
nH!i.'I.Cd by husband t hrld•en
aad gram;khrldren

Words or Umk-r
C.'lh

I S "10

lOVINC

Allen Or II

Wanted to Buy

20,33; The Judge 10; In Search of 13: Wild.(( lngdOm
15.
.
8·oo-Grltrly Adams 3.A,15; Elgh1 Is EnOU!Ih 6,13;
Good Times 8,10; Nova 20,33; 1 : 30-Szysznyk 1,10.
9:00-Peeplng Ti me• 3,A, 15; Charlie' s Angels 6, 13:
Mo11le " The Train Robbers" 8, 10; Great Performances 2&lt;l.33.
10:00-Pol lce Woman 3.A,15; Slarsky &amp; Hu1ch 6,131
10: 30-News 20; Book Seal 33.
11 :00-Newo 3,A,6,8,10, 13,1S; Olck Cavell 2&lt;1; lilies
Yoga &amp; You 33.
.
11 : 30-Johnny Corson l.A, IS; Pollee SIOI'y 6.13, Hawaii
Flve-0 8; ABC News 33; Movie " Georgy Girl" 10.
n ·oo-Janakl 33 ; 12 :AO-Myslery ol 1M Week 6,13;
Ko)ak 8; 1:00-Tomorrow.2 J,A; 2 :11&gt;-News 13.
MaY ie Channel 4 l 1 &amp; 9 P.M. - NickelodeOn tPGl
7 &amp; 11 P .M. - Rocky (PG I

TRACY

~

thaf

In

-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday; Jan. 25, 1978

'

.

CONGRANULATIONS,
EZRA!!

�•
10 -TheDailySentinei,Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Wednesdav,Jan. 25. 197B

...

.

1- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - I

H

•taJ News

Camps Arrowhead, Kiashuta will be improved ! Area Deaths ! v~;;~=:t:
with $861,480 being asked in 4-month drive
1~~\~treP~O~~!~~s ~!:,~~llle·: ~:Jr"!t~!~t~ni hRlfJ:.....fi
·e,MIRa,d lcpln!:e·,:Ko;ayte;F1J~afl!l r el ct,
HUNTINGTON, .W. Va. The Tri.State Area Council of
the Boy Scouts of America
bas started a four-month
campaign to raise $861,480 for
the improvement of Camp
Arro)l'head and its other
Scouting facilities, Including
Camp Ka::.huta , according to

Cowicil President Leo M.
MaeCourtney.
Orin E. Atkins, chairman of
board and chief executive
officer of Ashland Oil, Inc.,
will serve a:s Campaign

Cabinet Chairman, directing
the unprecedented campaign.

Fines levied
in Middleport
mayor's court
Two defendants were fined
- one on three counts - and
a third forfeited bond In the
co urt of Middleport Mayor
Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
Don E. Johnson, Jr., 18,
West Columbia, was fined $50
and costs for no operator's

license, $25 and costs for not
having license tags on his
car, and $7~ and costs for
contributing
to
the
delinquency of a minor.
Mike Darst, no age or
address, was fined $50 and
costs, for allowing an
unlicensed driver to operate
his motor vehicle and for·

feitlng a $50 hond posted for
disorderly manner was
Ronnie L. Bonecutter 1 24,

Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va.

··we are now building a
team of 2,000 volunteers to
help in this effort, which will
give a new dimension to
Scouting
activities
th•oug~out the council,"
Ma cCourtoey said . " With
leadership of the sort that
Orin Atkins and many others

tucky also will be reparred.

can provide, we are confident

gifts, special gifts, and family

we'll reach our goal by April
30."
Campaign funds will be
used to expand year-round
camping and · training
facilities for Cub Scouts,
Scouts; coed Explorers and
their leaders. Special troop
sites, ramps and paths for
physically a nd mentally
handicapped hoys also will he
provided.
The money will enable
Camp Arrowhead to be
adapted to the needs of area
Scouting for the next 20 to :!!j

gifts - are now being
Organized.
Incorporated In 1935, the
·Tri-State Area Council serves
ten co unties in Kentucky,
Ohio and West Virginia.
Atkins, who was reared in
Huntin gton , has long been a
supporter of Scouting and
other civic and regional
· public service activities. He
. attended Marshall University
and has been associated with
Ashland Oil sinre receiving
his law degree from the
University of Virginia in 1950.

years, MacCourtney said.

He became the firm 's ad·

Plans for the Z74 acre camp
near Ona, W. Va., include
development of a Webelos
fath er-son ca mpsite, 13
shelters, a first aid lodge,
kitchen remodeling. swimmin g poo l winterization,
dining hall winterization, and
parking lot improvement.
Plans lor Camp Klashuta, a
125 acre facility near Chester
In Meigs County, Ohio, In·
elude road upgrading, bridge
repairs, electrical system
repairs, and cabin floor
replacemeol'll

ministrative vice president in
19~9, a director in 1962,
president In 196~ and
chairman of the board in 1972.
The Tri..State Area Council
Is a member agency or the
Ca beli-Wayne United Way,
the Boyd County Community
Chest, and the Lawrence
County, Ohio, United Way.

The well and well house
serving the 640 acre leased

Scouting area at Greenbo
State Resort Park in Ken-

News
•• in Briefs
(Continued from page
I)

program for unemployment compl!nsatlon would be phased
out in Ohio on Saturday . The cuUiff of extended benefits will
affect about 11,000 jobless Ohioans. The national rate of
Insured unemployment has dropped below 4.~ percent, a level
at which extended benefits are no longer payable.
The Ohio Insured unemployment rate for the week ending
Jan. 7 was 3.6 percent. Without extended benefits, the
maximum number of weeks for regular benefit payments ur
eligible claimants in the state is 28, Giles said.
CINCINNATI - A DEFECTIVE, GASOLINEOPERAtED saw being used by·workmen to saw cement while
·enlarglrig a Kroger grocery store has been blamed for the
carbon monoxide sickness of 13 Kroger employees Tuesday.
The 13, who complained of headaches and nausea while
working at Kroger's Kenwood Mall store, all were treated at
Bethesda North Hospital and released.

In addition, n.opayment of

Proff itt and was also
preceded In death by his first
wife. Oelcle Cleek Proffitt.
He was a member of the Old
Town Un ited Method ist
Church.

(Continued from page I)
dumped in a city well.
With the spigots dry ,
residents were turning up
urday at water distribution
sites to pick up their alloted
two gallons of drinking water.
Ralph Sayre, principal of
Point Pleasant High School,
one of the distribution cen·
ters, said residents · took
about 1,000 gallons of water
home Tuesday .
"Water Buffaios," mobile
water tanks, are set up at
seven sites in the town .

Residents brought picnic jugs
and other plastic containers
and tapped the tanks.
Trooper D· M· Ca ldweII •
public affairs officer on the

Butch's Response.
to Parental Advice
Let's face H. Sutch Is filr more likely to follow your example than your advice.
SO, when It comes to teaching children about thrift. skip the " penn y saved Is a

·penny earned" speech ; and, Instead, take the kids with you fo Farmers Bank and
let them watch YOU open a savi ngs account. Now, that's e~te mple .

Farmers Bank
POMEROY. OHIO .

'40,000 MaKim um Insurance For E.ach

Depo~tor

Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

ORIN E. ATKINS

Notices, local briefs
Guy Hysell , pres ident of

Meigs County REACT ex.

tends his thanks to ~ill Biggs
and Dennis Howell for their
four hours of four-wheel work
and Dav id F . Df.ed for being
on standby . Hysell also
thanks all
monitoring
stations of REACT for their

help,

A gymnastics

meet be·
tween Meigs and Athens
Saturday at Meigs has been
cancelled.
On Feb. 11 Mel9s will go to

Athens to participate in an
invitational meet.
The . Meigs Local School

District Board · ot Educa tion
has discu ssed with Mrs.

hill mvolved is dangerous and
also that getting back onto
Route JJ is a problem for any
bus driver' . The board will
review the situation, when
and If road Improvements
take place.
· Nine . year .old Lonn ie

OUT TIIREE TIMES
'Illree calls were aAswered

LeMaster ot near Pomeroy
has undergone brain surgery
at Children 's Hospital in
Cofumbus , according to word
received from his mother ,
Mrs. Bonnie LeMaster; who
is in Columbus with Lonnie .
Lonniels able to be up some .
He l.s expected to require
more surgery later. He will
be hoSpitalized at this time
tor abou.f three more weeks .
Residents are invited to send
greeting cards to Lonnie at
the hospital.
t.n a recent accident on
West Main St.. Pomeroy, a
car driven by Veva Searles,
Rutland, slid on the Ice,
turned broads~de on the
street, and was struck by a
car· from behind driven by
Jame.s H. Qulvey, Pomeroy.
D~mages were minor .
A ·me·etlng of the Loyal Men

and Women 's Class of the
Middleport ·Church of Christ
scheduled for Thursday night
has been cancelled.
meeting df • Prec::epter
Beta Beta Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority will be
A

held at 8 p.m. Thursday atlhe

Meigs P•zza Shack.

Tuesday by the Pomeroy
Emergency Squad: ' at 11:39
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Ball,
a.m., to old US ~3 for Belva
Columbus
and Mrs. Frances
Sloan who had fallen and was
Young
spent
a week sight·
taken to Veterans Memorial
seeing
in
Florida.
They went
Hospital where she was
to
the
Keys
and
Disney
admitted; at 2:03 p.m., to
World,
also
called
on
Mr.
and
Flatwoods for Ricky, Murray
Mrs.
Dwight
Siple
who
live
in
who also had fallen , and was
Albany
bu!
spend
their
taken ,to Holzer Medical
Center, and at 6:09 p.m., to winters in Florida.
Mr. and Mrs. K. C. Welch
. Mulberry Ave. for Archie
·
went
to Florida for a week.
Swartz , having difficulty
After
ret~mlng home Mrs.
breathing. He was taken to
Welsh
had
to enter O'Bieness
Holzer Medicai Center.
Hospital at Athens.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Alkire
visited
Mr. and Mrs. Clinton
TWO DRAW FINES
Gilkey,
Albany, Thursday
Two defendants were fined
evening.
in the court of Pomeroy
Charles McGrath, Florida,
Mayor Clarence Andrews
who
drives a semi truck was
Tuesday night. Gerald Frye,
Hartford, was fined $500 and ori his way to Cleveland,
costs and was given a 90 day stopped over weekend to visit
jaU sentence on petty theft his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Earl McGrath.
ch~rges . Michael O' Neal,
Mrs. Betty Bishop and
Pomer9y, was fined $30 and
Beverly
and Brenda made a
costs on a left of center
business
trip to · Columbus
charge.
Monday.
Mrs. Bess Ellis is a patient
CROSSED RIVER
at
Veterans Memorial
The
Middleport HospitaL
Emergency Squad answered
a call to West Columbia, W.
Va., at 7:28a.m. Wednesday
to . assist the Mason
NOW YOU KNOW
Emergency squad at the
The favorite dish at a
scene of an auto accident. Bedouin wedding least
The Middleport unit trans- consists of cooked eggs
ported Etta Hall, and Shelly stuffed into fish which are
and Gary Hoffman to stuffed into chickens which
Pleasant Valley Hospital are stuffed into a sheep which
suffering minor Injuries.
then .is stuffed Into a whole
camel.

..

I

1

'"''

officiating. Burial will be In
Great Bend · Cemetery .
Friends may call at the
funeral home after 7 tl'tls
evening.

the Rev. Freeland Norr is

HIW TEMPS
NEW YORK (UPI) - The .
highest temperature reported
Tuesday to · the Nat!~
Weather Service, exclu
Alaska and Hawaii, was 80
degrees at Orlando, Fla.
Today's low was 14 degrees
below at Williston, N. D.

GINO'S
OF M.ASON

By Katie Crow
A rnan who grew up In
)lllverty in Middleport showed

Pomeroy; Selma Rltten·
house, Radne ; Jeffrey
R
p
Alb t

his humility and grutilude

euter,, omeroy;
er
Zahl, Racine; Belva Sloan,

Wednesday night when he
S)lllke to approximately 100
persons at the annual awards
dinntr at the Meigs Inn
sponsored by the Pomeroy

Pomeroy ; Gary Terry II,
Pomeroy ; Wilbur Napper,
Pomeroy ·, Gertrude· Woods,
Middleport.
Discharged Sherr!
Frederick, Colin Chevalier,
Sarah Curtis, Gert
. rude

Chamber ofi Commerce.

" We were poor but I didn't
know we were poor," said Dr.

Ed Lewis, who was presented

Drake, Ambert Davis, Ronda

the "man or .disHnction 1 '
award .

Dempsey, Larry Gilland,
IJllle Adams. ·

."Fred Crow, that gia nt of a
man , literally as well as
figuratively, is the one who
should be honored. I am oo

PLEASANT VALLEY ,
DiSCHARGED : Mrs.
William Maddy, Wilkesville;
Mrs. Raymond Moss, Apple
Grove ; Geraldine Varian,
Hartford ; Mrs. Steven
Greenlee and daughter, Point
Pleasant ; Mrs. Clinton Klein,
New
Haven;
Bruce
Bonecutter, Point Pleasant;
Ara Jewell, New Haven, Mrs.
Melvin
Wears,
Point
Pleasant; .Wavle Barnett,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Nelson
Rayburn , Point Pleasant;
Mrs. James Burdette, Point
Pleasant; Richard Meadows,
Glenwood; David DeWitt,
Hendersoni Glen Lawson,
Reedsville; Mrs. .Walter
Lulu!', Leon; Patricia Condee,
Point Pleasant; Chaos Love,
Point Pleasant.
Births: A daughter to Mr.

grateful to Fred Crow and Hll

NEW YORK (UPI) - The week's Nielsen ratings provide a
lesson ln how difficult It wW be for either of the other two
networks to knockoff ABC!nthenext few years.
ABC came In with its second highest ratings of the season for
the week ending Jan. 22, second only to World Serleo week.
· Seven of the top 10 went to ABC, and flw ol thD~M; '!fere regular
programs, although one was a special two-hour "Love Boat.·:
And !hat was without a strong showing bY two of Its steady
standbys, "Barney Miller" and "Carter Country," both of
which suffered in the ratings bY being dlaplaced and shoved ln
an hour late because of President Cate!t's State of the Union
addreas.
Over at the other networks, NBC remains behind CBS ln the
battle ID stay out of third place ln the se&amp;80n ratings to date,
but NBC took second place for the week. ·
One r~ason was the appalllng sho~ of eight CBS shows,
which took up the last eight slots ln the 63-ltem televl.s!on
shopping Ust. The dud shows, reading from the bottom up, and Mrs . Larry Myers,
were: "Charlie Company," a CBS News special; HKojak:'.' Gallipolis Ferry; a son to Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Me·
ULog~n's Run;" 11 Switch;" UTony Randall;" "carol Bur·
Callister, Apple Grove; a son
nett;'" "Bug." a Friday night movie, and "Maude."
The sad fact about documen~rleo these days Is that their to Mr. and Mrs. James
audience Is spuill, in television terms, and the Industry has Woomer, Point Pleasant; a
becm&gt;e enonnously competitive and much less tolerant of daughter to Mr. and Mrs.
Johnny
Krebs, . Point
poor ratings performance.
It lsn 'I just a matter of being unwilling to take a ratings Pleasant; a 59n to Mr. and
Robert Donnett,
beating for an hour once ln a while. It Ia Industry gospel that Mrs.
audiences have an Inertial resistance ID switchlnfl the dial. · Gallipolis.
Once driven to a rival channel by a doeuinentary, the conven·
Hol2er Medical Ceater
tiona! wisdom holds, the viewer will stay there until driven of!.
(Discharges, Jaa. %4)
· The rating figures tend to confinn this theory. "M-A-8-H"
Scott Bond, David Bran·
had a bad week with only a 'l/ percent share of the audience ln de berry, Camlllia Broyles,
its time slot, possibly the vlctlin of the news special that Mrs. Glenn Cardwell and son,
preceded it. That's what television programers mean by lead Judith Drummond, Edward
in' or now ln.
Finley II, Paul Gerlach,
Speaking of "M-A.S..H" unfortunately brings to mind "The David Gillispie, Rosalene
F1ghting Nightingales," CBS' misguided attempt at lmltatlng Harkins, Nikki Howell, Mrs.
its own Korean War comedy. The audience showed Its ·good Steven James and son, Rosa ·
taste bv stavln~ awav and the show came ln 53rd •.
Jones, Mary Kessler, Ann
Lemley, Ronald Malone,
· The 10 top network television programs for the week ending Effie Mayes, Anna Mayo,
Jan. 22, according to the'A.C. Nielsen Co., were:
Wilbur McCubbin, Gloria
1: ''Laverne&amp; Shirley''; 2: ''Happy Days''; 3: "LitUeHouse
on the Prairie"; 4: "Three's Coinpany"; 5: "80 Minutes"; 6:
''Charlie's Angels"; 7: "Love Boat"'; 8: "4Jnerican Music

Awards" ; 9: "Fifty Years of Country Music"; 10; "Man with
the Golden Gun" (ABC SUnday movie) ,

Three new
restaurants

Harrisonville
Society News

NOW OPEN

....

Athens; three daughters.
Mrs. Jack (June I Turner,
Ravenswood ; Mrs . Robert
(J udy) Bruce. Westerville,
and Mrs. Jack Uoyce) Ervin,
Ath~n·u ;11 ,t,.ndauqhter, M ....

TV•••in Review

NEWSLE'M'ER MAILED
Wf'SHINGTON , D.C. - ·Congressman Clarence
A
thought
for the day; Poet
Miller has armoWJced his
'!End of ·. the Session" Robert Burris said, "Man's
legisl.ative report has' been Inhumanity to man makes
mailed to each household In COWltless thousands mourn."
the Tenth Distrtct. Southeastern Ohio residents who do
not receive the newsletter
may call or write the
Congressman's office !o
obtain a copy.

'

Va ., end 2.,. grandchildren .
Funeral services will be
held at 1 p.m. Friday .at the
Ewing Funeral Home with

Lee, Coolv ille, and Jay Dee.

scene, said there is no in· Naomi Floyd, school bus
dication yet when the 400 driver, requests tha.t her bus
residents evaCuated from . go up~ hill near ~oute 33 at
. .
Burlmgham to p1 ck up 13
near the sptll site can return students . The board t'lad
to their homes. Workers are dete rmined
earlier
In
installing new lines from an denying the requests, that the

old well north of the city
.
which will provide an rm·
-medlqte water supply in a

Elmer Proffitt. Portland. and
William Proctor. Canton;
three halt sisters, Mrs. Helen
Harris. Portland ; Elizabeth
Mae Blane. Columbus. and
Nell ie Kohen, St. Marys, W.

wlfe,
three
E-ast
Jerry

Surviving are his
Leona Aliff Proffitt;
sons, Jack M . of
We natchee , Wash .;

Water

-

t • • t:uJ

He was a son ·or the late • Carl R. Proffitt, ParkersJames R. and Daisy Kno)( burg ; two ha If brothers.

loans and improvement of the
parking tot will be com pleted
for the Council Service
Center at 733 7th Ave. in
Huntington .
Four baSk pledge divisions
- advance gifts, pacesetter

COLUMBUS- THE OffiO DEPARTMENT of Insurance few days, he said.
Fifteen people have been
this week is holding hearings on a landmark Blue O'oss
decision to attempt to terminate Its contract .with St. treated at the Pleasant
Elizabeth's Hospital In Dayton. Blue O'oss requires approval Valley Hospital after coming
by local health planning agencies before apprqvlng Its In contact with the toxic
· contracts, and St. Elizabeth's did not receive approval before chemical.
The hospital's water supply
recent construction.
The agency called the addition unnecessary, .and Blue is being maintained by the
O'oss said It is under orders from the slate to make an honest New Havep and Mason
effort ID eliminate as much needless expense as possible. Blue V~lUnteer fire departments.
O'oss said that according to an estimate for aU Dayton The firefighters have made
hoSpitals, there are an average of 242 empty beds per day, about 33 trips with their
which is more than the total nlilnher of beds added at St. · pumper trucks to keep the
Elizabeth's. Therefore, the .addition was considered needless. water lines fuU at the facility.

~

Melvin Proffitt, ~1 . Rovte 1, Robertson, Cotvmbla, Go.;
Coolville, died Tuesday at James Robertson, Guys~llte ;
Camden Clark Hospital In Jerry W., Athens, and David,
Porkersbvrg.,
Little Hocking ; o brother,

Chamber hOnors Ed Lewis, man of distinction

COLUMI!US - Bob Evans
Farm Foods, Inc., the
Columbus, Ohio, based
restaurant cbain,. has ana
nounced ~- construction plans

for three new rest,aurants.
Locations have been
selected ln Akron, Columbus,
and Fort Wayne, Indiana.
Uke the other 33 Bob Evans
Restaurants operating In
Ohio, Michigan, Indiana,
Kentucky, and West VIrginia,
the restaurants will feature
Evans' spe~lal brand of
country cooMIIg now popular
in
19
Midwestern
metropolitan areas.

Bob Evans Farm Sausage,
now sold throughout a12 state
distribution area, is the main
menu Item centered around
traditional breakfasts such as
eggs, hot cakes, and waffles.
A number of sandwiches,

•luncheon platters, and din·
ners featuring sausage or
are also served. The
restaur~nt . chain Is also
famous for its country style
-menu Items Uke irled mush,
bam hock bean soup, sausage
gravy and hot ·nur!y biscuits.
The new restaurants wUI

I

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

INews. . . in Briefs\\\
United Press Ioternatlooal
CINCINNATI- A BUZZARD WITH WINDS blasting ilp
ur iiO miles an hour and a wind&lt;hill factor of minus 50 degrees
tumed Cincinnati into a replica of the North Pole IDday.
Thousanda of residents in the hilly greater Cincinnati area
were unable ur negotiate roadways. Most streets were a glaze
of ice and some were also blocked by snow drifts. "U it seems
like a blizzard to you, that's because it is officially a blizzard,"
reported Ivan Winterberg of Cinciru\ati's National Weather
Service.

.

'

Two hired

IN

unless agreement on a new contract covering the system's 187
teachers is reached before en. Claudine Clinton, p~esident of
the Rocky River Teachers Association - which represents 116
of the system's teachers - said 79 percent of those in
attendance at a meeting Wedneoday nigh~ voted to withhold
services as of 6 a. m. Jan. 31.
The RRTA wants a one-year contract upping ·the annual
base pay for a starting teacher to $10,700 from the current
$9,122. The school board, however, has offered a two-year
conlract with an annuul base salary of $9,669. "They (school
hoard negotiators) didn't give us a salary proposal until
Tuesday night,'' Ms. Clinton said. "That was the ol)ly time
slnee last September that they presented even a salary
proposal."

CINCINNATI - A "DEATH FAST"' BY FOUR inmates at
the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility has ended after 24
days, but few details have emerged about .the agreement
reacht;d between prison administraUirs and the four Jllen ID
stop U\e protest.
The four prisoners, all held in ·solitary confinement at
Lucasville, had demanded the transfer of one of them, Wayne
L. Raney. The fast, which began New Year's Day, ended at
noon Tuesday, when the Inmates agreed to eatlunch.

·

·

hoard

The Southern Local Board
of Education in regular
session Tuesday night em·
ployed David Jenkins as
substii.ute teacher and Jesse
Browning as variety show
director.

In other business the board
established an elementary
music fund to be added to the
activity fun. Jan. ·9, 10, 11, 13
and

17

were

declared

calamity days . .
The board approved the
participation of the district in
a school health workshop
sponsored by the State
Department of Education in
May, at Salt Fork State Park.
It also approved a disad·
vanlaged pupil program fund

Homeowhers of limited
income who need repairs or
improvements to their

property but cannot afford to
make them can be helped by
Farmers
Home
Ad·
. ministration . Perhaps the
'house In which you live is
Inadequate for your family's
needs, but you are without the
. personal resources to· do

. JANUARY SAUl

anything about it.
Federal Funds are also
available for the purchase of
new homes as well as the
rehabilitation of older ones.
Improvements that may be
financed through the FmHA
include:
Repairs or replacement of

' '

Mens 3 Place
VESTED·SUITS

SUITS. ,.......~47 ·
$8995 SUITS...........$5400
00

roof, ceilings, doors and

Sizes 38 to ..t6 In regular and longs -'- not

every sl ze In ·every style - solid colors and
.-

grant of up to

$~ ,000

for

necessary repairs and im·
provements. The grant

program is administered on a
first-come,

first~serve

basis,

so it is important to make an
application now.

The Farmers Home Ad·
ministration al ·221 West
Second StreetJ Pomeroy ,

phone 992~&amp;14 ; invites the
public to visit them.

· weather
Snow and blowing and
drifting snow through
tonight, acc umulating be·
tween four and six Inches
today, with temperatures
falling to near 10 above z~ro.
tonight. Windy and cold, with
snow OWTies Friday antl high

floors.
: Installation of storm temperatures near 20.
windows, Insulation
Well drilling and in·
RI·HOTEMPS
stallation of septic systems
NEW YORK (UPIJ - The
Any other repair deemed
highest temperature reported.
necessary for your safety.
Wednesday
to the National
Persons qualifying for this
type loan wUI pay one per Weather Service, excluding
cent Interest and have up to Alaska and Hawaii, was 116
degrees at Vero Beach, Fla .
:Ill years to repay the loan.
If one Is 62 years of age or Today's low was 20 degrees
older., he may 'be eligible for a below :. :·oat Williston , N. D.

.,

I

Power cutbacks possible
by the end of Februai-y
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Federal energy officiaill
said Wednesday utiljties i~ the Appalachian region
might have ur begin mandatory power cutbacks at the
end of February because of the coal shortage brought
on by the miners' strike.
The cutbacks may soon spread to other areas of the
nation, Including the Solith, the officials said.
David Bardin, the Energy Department's &lt;!COnomlc
regulatory admlnistraiDr, said, "As we go Into
February, prudence requires that utilities begin to
implement a series of programs, first for voluntary
conservation and then, if need be, later ln February,
fof mandatory measures."
"We have not set a goal for conservation yet,"
Bardin sold.
In the meantime, utilities wiU bave to cooperate to
make best use of power available, Bardin added.
. · .Bardin met with officials of the Allegheny Power' ~
System, the Tennessee Valley Authority and the
National Electric Reliability Council.
Ohio; ·Pennylvania and West Virginia "appear to
be the critical areas right now,'' one of Bardin's aides
said.

project for a speech and

hearing program for 1977·78;
an advance draw on tax

Loans available
by Meigs FmHA

Rhodes also ordered state offices throughout Ohio closed
with the exception of those on emergency status .
The National Weather Service said the bllnard moved Into
southwest Ohio and then spread over the rest of the state.
Forecasters predicted an additional accumulation of six
inches before tonight.

.

by Southern
ROCKY RIVER, OHIO - TEACHERS the Rocky River
school district, working without a contract since their old two- L . a}
year pact expired last Dec. 31, have voted to strike Tuesday
OC

....~~RFELDS IN POMEROY

EROY

en tine

The blowing snow which reduced visibility to neur zero in
because of power outages.
Rhodes said he declared the emergency under authority some areas and piled up fender high drifl.'l , forced the closing
granted to him by the Ohio constitution. Rhodes said he did so of hundreds of schools including Ohio State University,
to enable him to activate the Ohio National Guard throoghou! Bowling Green State University and Kent State.
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric Co. reported nearly
the state- if needed - instead of issuing individual orders.
"The entire state of Ohio is at a standstiU," the Ohio 30,000 homes and businesses,. Including part of the downtown
area.of Columbus, lost power because of the snow.
Highway Patrol said In Columbus.
Dayton Power &amp; Light Co. reported "widespread" power
SnoWmobiles and four-wheel vehicles were used to rescue
outages
in the 25 county area of central and 80uthwestern Ohio
the stranded motorists from Interstates, county and state
it
serves.
·that
roads and also to remove people from homes that had lost their
Montgomery· c;ounty Deputy Sheriff Steve McDowell in
heat.
Rhodes, before declaring the emergency, activated the Na- DayiDn said four wheeled vehicles and snowmobiles were
tiomil Guard fn lAcking, Union aod KnOx counties and in the being used to rescue stranded motorisl.'l on Interstate 75.
''We are getting thein off pretty well now," said McDowell.
communities of Bellefontaine, Covington and Wlnchester.
"Most of our roads are lrtlpiissable," said Butler County
" We are responding to local emergencies as they are called
in to us,' ' Rhodes said from a command post he set up in his Sheriff's Deputy Richard Laney at Hamilton. "We are having
office where he met with cabinet members and National Guard quite a bit of trouble. A lot of ears are off the roadways and a
lot of people are stranded."
officers.

possible by this date, in my opinion,'' said Torley.

for more money

FELDS IN

'

COLUMBUS ~ A MARATHON NEGOTIATING ·session
with Gov. James A. Rhndes acting as mediator ended late
Wednesday with an agreement' in a 13-week strike at Dayton
Malleable Iron Inc. plants ln Columbus and Ironton.
"U the locals raUfy the agreement reached ln our offices
tonlght,.the !~trike is over," Rhodes said early today.
Dayton Malleable Chairman John F. Torley and United
' rn.trlct
'
Steelworklt••v
23 Direc;tor Pau) Rosen , Jo.lntly
· announced the"igreement following the 15-hour bargalnlng
sesalon. The strike involved about 2,000 United Steelworkers in
the two cities. No date for a 'rat!ftcatlon vote was announced.
"Without the help of the governor and his staff, the
successful .completion of this contract would not have been

Amber Ohlln'ger, Paul
Reynolds, Marion Roberts,
Margaret Sayre, Betty
Whetsel.
iBirtbo,Jaa.%4)
Mr. and l!frs. Randy
Crawford, a 4aughter,
Pomeroy ..Mr. and Mrs. John
J agers, ason, Gallipolis. Mr.
and Mrs. William Morgan, a ·
daughter, Oak HIU.

By JOHN T. KADV
United Pressloternatlooa1
Ablizzard packing winds of 7~ miles an hour battered Ohio to
"a standstill" early IDday. Gov. James A. Rhodes declared a

···· "statewide emergency'", hwtdreds of motorists were stranded
and thousands of Ohioans were left without heat or electricity

.;.·

'

PHONE 773-5536

at

"man of distinction" award . On !he right is Mark Lewis, son of Dr . Lewis.

Fiflct•n Ct• nts
Vt•. 2N, No. 1\1!1

Blizzard hits into Ohio at 75 mph

McQuaid, Jennie Myers,

stripes.

•

PRESENTED AWARDS OF DISTINCI'ION Wednesday night •t the nnmwl awards
dinner were, I~, Jim Frecker and Paul Simon, ' 'men of the year'' and Dr. Edwu r(ll ..cwis, a

·.

feature some of the latest
technology in energy con·
servatlon systems. Bob
Evans Farm Foods, Inc., Is
now utilizing two building
plans tQ accommodate
community and site sizes.
The larger buildings seat 161
patrons and the smaller, 118.
-Including the three new ·
units, the company reports .41
restaurants will be In
operation by the Spring .of
COLUMBUS (UPI) 1978.
Hampered In their efforts to
battle last week's record
snow
fall, county engineer
PALM SPRINGS, Calif.
members
of the County
(UP!) - A pro-amateur preEngineers
Assn. of Ohio
lude to the $1116,000 Colgate
again
are
voicing their
Triple Crown was on the
desperate
need
for additional
agenda today at Mission Hills
funds.
Country Club.
As last year's extreme cold
Seventeen foursomes com'bit
into the llrtlited fund so
posed of one pro alld three
this
year's heavy snow
. amateurs were scheduled to
fighting
has used· up monies .
start on the fll'st .and loth tees
Intended
for summer paving,
With the pros shooting for a
resurfacing
and bridge
total of $10,000.
·
repairs.
The Triple Crown, rwmlng
Thursday through .Sunday, Is
the only match play event on
the LPGA tour this rear.
IRS WILL HELP
First prize i.s $21,000 and an
COLUMBUS
- Taxpayers
automobile.
are reminded of the extenslte
assistance program Initiated
by the Department of
Taxation
to aid Ohio tax·
CLEVELAND (UP!) payers
in
completing their
The Cleveland Browns
1977
Ohio
personal. Income
announced Tuesday Dick
tax
returns.
Serving . M4!!gs .
Evans, director of pro
and
Gallia
is
lhe office ln
scotitlng for the Cleveland
• Browns lhe past four years, Athens' Baker Center Feb. 2, ·
16, March 9 and April 6 from
has resigned.
10 a.m. to noon and I p.m. • 4
p.m.
•

~79'15

pictured was Barbara Chapman, also presented an
award . An award also wUI go ID the Pomeroy Fire
Department for assisting In making the Christmas lights.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, January 26, 1978

Engineers ask

planned

ham

AWARDS FOR OUTSTANDING SERVICE TO THE
COMMUNITY went to, front 1-r, Mrs. Paul Simon, Bill
Yount, Harlan Wehrung, Chuck Mullen; back, Bill Mayer,
John Anderson, Ed Kennedy and Bill Qt!ickel. Not

who made t his possible.
Nothing co uld move me more
than seeing this crowd from
the bottom of my heart to the .
top of my head. I shall ever he
grateful to you for honoring
me," Dr. Le wis said.
(Continued on page 2)

collection, and use of the
buildings in the district by the
Southern Athletic Boosters
for a " rinky dink" bas~etbali
Program.
·
The next meeting of the
hoard will be held Feb. 21 at
7;30 p. m. in the high school
cafeteria.
Attending were Gene Yost,
vice president; Shirley
Johnson and Sue Grueser ,

Disaster unit
put in action
By DICK KIMMINS
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Gov.
James A. Rhodes activated
the Ohio Disaster Services
Agency crisis center in

Columbus today to deal with
bo3rd . members ; Linda what he termed the "worst
Spencer, clerk, and Bobby blizzard ln the history of
Ord, superintendent.

Ohio."

"The worst problem is that

. tak eleclrlc lines are down,' said
Dr• BoIce
en Rhodes at a morning news
briefing. ·Rhodes issued an
urgent
plea that people check
ill at dinner
on their neighbors
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to the Meigs
Inn at 9:39 p. m. Wednesday
for Dr. R. E ~ Boice who
became ill while attending a
Pomeroy Chamber of
Conlmerce dinner. Dr. Boice.

especially senior ~itlzens ID Insure that elderly Ohioans
were not

uhouse~lock~d "

without pqwer. -·
"The problem now is fear

TWO RUNS MADE
who suffered a possible heart
The
Mlddlepor.t
attack, was taken to Veterans' Emergency Squad answered
· Memorial HospitaL
two calls Wednesday. At 3:14
· ·Earlier . Wednesday the p. m., the squad went to
squad went to the county Route 1 for Mrs. George
infirmary for Mrs. Aida Casto who was taken to
Faudree who was dead upon Holzer Medical Center. At
.the unit's arrival. At 9:16 a. 7:~7 p. m., the unit went to
m. Thursday. the squad was Silver Run for V!cie Williams
called to Tuppers Plains for who was taken to Veterans
Mrs. Allen Hartley. ·
Memorial HospitaL

'

"The wind Is blowing terribly und visibility Is zero here,''
said Paulding CoWlty sheriff's dispatcher Maxine Zeller ut
Paulding ln western Ohio. "We have a lot of stranded motoris ts
·Including 80me of my deputies. Deputies are usi ng four w~c'il l
vehicles and they are still getting stuck."
"The whole county Is absolutely dosed down " sa id Marsha
Bailey, a dispatcher in the Champaign County sheriff's offic-e.
" I'm telling you right now UlC only thing moving in the county
is a state snow plow. Sheriffs de[mties are stuck ull over the
county and there are power outages in the biggest purl of the

county. We have people stranded we can't even get to."
.
The Hamilton County sheriff's offlee at CincirmaU suld between 300 and 400 cars were abandoned on lnterstute 27~
circling the city.
Janet Headley , a dispatcher at the Darke County sheri ff 's
office in Greenville in the western portion tlf the sltlte,' !mid
"thi.s whole county is p~.~ruJyzCd .
"We had One ambulance run H.•ld Uumk Cud it wus i.n the

city," she said.
The Miami University basketball team, which plnyed In
Toledo Wednesda;r nigh!, was stranded in Vandalia and SIJCnt
the night in the police station with team members sleeping In
jail ce lls.

Schools closed
Schools of Meigs County
were closed agaio Thursday
as hi.gh water, and icy roads
Continued to create hazardous driving conditions.

The Meigs County office of
the Ohio Department of High·
ways reported this morning
the closing of Route 681 be·
tween west of Darwin and
State Route 692; Route 143
between Route 7 and the
Athens County line; Route 33
at Burlingham and Route 194,
between Routes 7 and 325 in
the Rutland area.
Weather predictions were

Coal supply
dwindles to
55-day level
Columbus and Southern

Ohio Electric Co. disclosed
today that coaJ.supplies have
dropped to the 55 day leve l
and high moisture content of
the coal continues to hinder
efficient burning . Columbus

bl\d. There was expected to

even mnrc un con1fmtHtJic fnr

be poor , driving visibility
today and tonigM along With
om ice buildup. A bli7.7.lll'fl is
predicted and this morning,
the chill factur nf the high
winds mad e t he situutlon

rcsidc11tS growing wem·y uf
the winter ·uf 1!17R.
· ·
Winds were rc~:;ponsiiJi c for
knocking out H icu~e plate
glass window at the oHi t:cs of
Cu pit&lt;~ ! F'inance in Ptnncruy .

Georgia lawmen
holding suspect
Safe-cracking and breaking
and entering incidents three
months ago hav e resulted In
arrests
remote
fr om

lllchi :Hid

James J. Proffitt and Middleport Police Chief J, J .
Crem ea ns left Wednesday
afternoon for Hen ry County,
Ga ., to return Larry A.
Smrth, who had waived ex-

with the Octo.bcr, 1977,
breaking and entering ~md

County .Jl1il ut
will . rei e liSe to
M c i ~s Cuunly· aulhnritics
within a co uple of Wee k~ .
Pomeroy - one in Georgia ·
Q1argcs of breaking and
and the other in Mansfield , enterin g have been fil ed
Ohio.
against these two in Meigs
·Mei gs Co unty Sheriff County Court in conn ection

tradition

to

Ohio.

Th e

sheriff' s offi ce at Loc ust

Grove, Ga ., notified

th ~

Middleport police.
Another suspect is Jack
Wade Oshorne, whom the

and Southern customers'
that the elderly and senior requirements
are being met
citizens may be !rapped in
by a combination of l'Omp~ny
their homes . without heat. generated electricity and
This is a dire emergency. purchased power.
We've got to see that these
The
company
asks
people get to city halls, (Ohio
customers to continue conNatiooal Guard) armories servation efforts, indicating
and churches."
that wise use of electricity
The crisis center was coor- will help to str·ctch coal
dinating the state's response supplies. Company operating
The annual meeting of the
to the fourth major snowfall procedures are based on Mei gs Cq unty Rcglomd
in Ohio this month, made savinG coal w,h enever Planning Commission has
worse because of whipping possible and the cdmpony been set for 3:10 p. 'tn.
50-to-75 mph winds.
continues to keep internal use , Monday in the conference
All state Transporation De- of electricity to a minimum. room of the agricultural
partment
crew's · were
ColumbusandSouthernhas .center on the second floor of
recalled beeause ·of the zero energy savings brochures the Fanners Bank Building
visibility conditions.
available. Customers are In Pomeroy.
One highway wtrker losing encouraged to call and
Purposeofthe meeting Is to
a battle to clear roads near request thi s prepared hear the annual report of the.
Sidney was stranded out of literature.
commtsslon ,
establish
gas for at least seven hoW's.
regular meeting dates, apTransportation
director
prove the actions of the
David Weir aald at mid·
executive' committee for the
. morning that rescuers m
GROCERY ROBBED
past year, elect officers and
snowmobiles were still two
LANGSVILLE - Bertha's employes for the coming
miles from the stranded state Grocery at Langsville was yesr.
employee.
broken Into • sometime beR e presen ta t ion
is
At least 40,000 customers of . tween 6 p.m. Monday and 8 requested from each hoard of
the Columbus and Southern a.m. Tuesday, and several township trustees, frotn each
Ohio Electric Co. were · cases of empty pop bottles of the five villages, from
without aerviet' ln cenlral were stolen. The Meigs county elected officials and
OhiQ. Oaytoo PoMr I&lt; Ught County sheriff's department from appointive and ••·
is inve•\igating.
officio members,
(Continued on page 2)

Planners to
meet Monday

Munsfi eld

sa fe-cracking ·jobs at the
Meigs Phn.a anti the Meigs
H.ardware stores.
Chief Cremeans sa id that

Richland County she riff 's
detectiVes· several weeks ago
recovered some change chips

tfor food ;tamps) imprinted
" Ace Hardware" and "Meigs

Plaza ." l11e Richland County
officers yen·t out u teletype
requesting identification of
lhe sto res named.

TALKS USEFUL
JERUSALEM iUPii
U.S. Assistant Secretary of
Slat• Alfred Atherton held
41

very good, ve[!y usefUl"

talks today with Prjme
Minister Menachem Begin'
and said he hoped lo
convey Israel's views on

the stalled Middle East
peace talks to Egypt aext
week . 1

Atherton met for 90
minutes with Begla,
·Foreign Minister Moshe
Dayan
and
Defense
Mlnlster Ezer Weiztnun as

part of a behind-the-scenes
U. S. dlplombtlc campaign
to revive direct Egyptian·
Israel! contacts.

'

'

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