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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.

'

'

�Poisoned West Virginia dirt refused
Wll LIA MSBURG Ohto
( UPI J - Stx truckloads of
potsoned so tl from West Vtr
gmta woo t be burted tn a
Williamsburg landfi ll alter
all
It took a genmne public
outcry and the threat of a
lawsutt but Williamsburg s
ctltzens and public offtctals
succeeded m preventmg the
bur tal of the chemtca lly con
tammated soil m thetr area
As the !rocks loaded wtth
the hazardous sotl turned
around and headed back for
West
Vtrgtnt a
la te
Wtlhamsborg
Wed nesday

Mayor Donald Htler olfered
some angry comments about
Ute episode
I do not feel that Clermont
County or any other part of
Ohto should be the dumptng
ground lor waste matertal
from the entire country ,
Hiler asserted I thtnk t£
West Vtrgmta s got a problem
with the1r waste material
West Vtrgtma ought lD solve
th e tr problem themse lves
and not brmg 11 mto Ohio and
dump tt
The dectston not to bury tbe
sot! m Williamsburg was
m,ade by the owners of tbe

Clermont E nvtronme ntal
Reclama tion Landfill a
prtvat e lan dltll com pany
St rong public opposttton to
the sotl burtal gave them
little chotce
Pe&lt;&gt;ple a re ftghtm' mad
satd Gra ce
a bout t ht s
chatrwoma n of
Malott
William sburg s Board of
Public Alfatrs
Htler satd there was con
stderable lear the potsonous
sotl mtght contammate the
commuruty s ground water
supply The mam concern ts
that we hear lhts IS ahtghly
toxtc potsonous matertal We

Bid date fo~ boat rental
at Forked Run is extended
COLUMBUS - The Ohto
Department of Natural
Resources (ODNR ) has
extended the deadline to
Fnday Jan 27 lor submtttmg btds for operation of
three boat rental factiiltes
and two refreshment con
cessions at three state parks
We were scheduled to
open the submitted btd s
Fnday J an 20 sa td Ralph
Banza nt Chtel of ODNR s

OLD FRIENDS - Dr Raymond &amp;nee seated a boyhood lnend of the Dr Ed I ewu;
talked over old ttmes at the awards banquet held at the Metgs Inn Wednesday rught
Standmg 1-r are Dr Lewts and Fred Crow president of the chamber who made the dinner
possible

Chamber honors
1Continued from page I )
Dr I ewiS told of hts ex
pen ences from hts chtldhood
through college He recalled
the ttme hiS boyhood fnend
Dr Ra) mond Botce not yet
throug h medt cal schoo l
se \\ ed up hts ton gue
followmg a sleddtng acctdent
Dr l.ew1s was mtroduced
by Crow prestdent of the
Cha mber
of
Pomeroy
Commerce Before Dr Lewis
spoke his son Mark was

Frecker and Paul Stmon who
were presented men of the
year

awards

Rev Lew1s ret1red from
the m1mstry
rem a ms

Jones an his remarks about
!'reeker stated that !'reeker
performed noble servtce lor
the chamber Frecker was tn
charge of the Regatta
parades and asSisted m the
mstallatwn and consti uct10n
of the Chnstmas lighting
Jones satd of Paul Stmon •
He has made a great
contrtbuuon to the county and
Stmon
the commumty
operated Stmon s Market m
Pomeroy for 27 years He

nationally recogmzed for his

recently sold the busmess to

work tn a number of fields
religious education
Mark was tnO\ ed by the

Ace Wayland
The welcome was gtven by
Crow wh o pr ese nt ed 1n
dt vtdual awards for out

ho nor bestow ed upon ht s

st andm g

la ther He st ated You can
take Ed Lewts nut of Metgs
County but you can t take
Metgs County oul of Ed
Le w1s
Ri chard J ones Metgs
County CommiSSIOner and
manager of the Pomeroy
Branch Athens Co unty

communlly They went to
John Anderson second v1ce
preSident of the chamber Btll
Ma ye r Btll Qutckel Ed
Kennedy Harlan Wehrung
Chuc~ Mullen BtU Young

mtruduced

mcludmg

Savm gs

mission s

a nd

Loa n

and

was

master of ceremomes
Jones

mtrodu ced

Jtm

service

to

the

Barbara Chapman and Mrs

Paul Stmon
Frecker extended hiS
smcere thanks to the
chamber for the award
Stm on commented

HEALTH
Lawrence E Lamb, M 0

Efft'cts of
fhaht•lt&gt;"

d1et and e xerc1~e plus
medtcatwn tl needeq IS the
best bet to forestall comphca

t1ons

By Lawrence Lamb M D
DEAR DR LAMB - I a m
presently mvolved wtth a
man who has diabetes He
became a dia betic at 21 Is
unpotcnce mevttable '~ Can
the dtabetes account for
mood swmgs' Is alcohol per
tmtled and tf so what ktnd
a nd how much &gt; What ts the

Alcohol ts bad news for
dtabettcs It inlerfet es wtth
unportant enzyme actions m
the hver related to glucose
productiOn This can senous
ly affect the amount of msu)m
needed and may cause low
blood glucose reactiOns Thts
ts true of a II alcohol whether

chance of ha vmg dta betlc

anything else
I am sendmg you The
Health Letter number 3 II
Dtabetes Dtagnosts Preven
bon and Management to gtve
you more m!ormatton Others
"ho want thiS tssue can send
50
cents wtlh a long
stamped
sell-addressed
envelope for tl to me tn care
of thts newspaper P 0 Box
1551 Radto Ctty Statton New
York NY 10019
DEAR DR LAMB - I was
ltred and puttmg on wetght
and was puffy The doc ran
some tests on me and found
an underactiVe thyrmd I was
always cold
Now I am taking thyroid

c hlldre n '~

DEAR READER - You
didn t say how old your
bo) lrtend ts no" I preswne
he IS relattvely young
The effects of dtabetes have
a lot to do wtth how severe tl
ts We thmk there rna) be
more than one cause or at
least more than one factor m
causmg dtabetes

That means you can t
always be sure about the m
hented charactensttc Let s
s ay yo ur frt e nd had
Wlrecogmzed mwnps and hts
pancreas was m\ olved The

end result could be dtabetes
from a mumps vtrus mfec
t10n Then there JS some
evtdence that tf you have a
Irati lor dtabetes and have
a noth er dtsease 1t ma y
precipitate the dtabetes And
you may be carrying a
diabettc gene )ourself that ts
weak and w11l not cause you

to have dtabetes butt! could
contrtbute to the chances of
any offsp r mg havtng
diabetes Genetic counselmg
ts the best way to resolve
these thorny problems
The compltcaltons of
dtabetes tncludmg tm
potence eye problems and
even changes m the nerves to
the feet may be affected by
how we 11 the blood glucose
level ts controlled Un
fortunately standard msulm
therapy does not provtde the
smooth control that the nor
mal msultn production by
your own body does
However there are new
developments m the wmgs
Utat may change that For the
moment careful management of life style mcludmg

1t ts m beer wme whtskey or

and I am always burmng up I

lost Jcr pounds and the puf
!mess ts gone and I feel good
except lor bemg so hot
Please answer soon lhts IS
gelling me down I m 55
DEAR READER - Sounds
like you are on the nght
track If a person ts 1eally low
on Utyrotd nmd I etentton
wetght gam and feeiing cold
are part of the ptclure If a
person s thyroid lunclton IS
normal takmg thyrmd hor
mones m normal amounts
wtll not mduce the wetght loss

ou have expertenced
Excess thyrotd hormone
can cause a person to feel hot
and to lose wetght whtle
eatmg like a horse You may
not have adjusted to teh
amount of medtctne you are
taktng yet or tt may be a btl
too much lor you Talk to
your doctor and he may want
to decrease your dose a small
amount Don t do tl on your
own Uifough as there ts a
penod of adJustment to ne"
amounts of Utyrotd extract

apprectate the award t hat
has been bestowed upon me
You people made tl posstble
and th e teenagers that
asststed and the fme con
t r 1but1ons m ade toward the

clea n up an d pa tnl up of
Pomeroy
..
Barba ra Cha pman wa s
mtro duced

and

re cogmzed

r--------------------------,

:

for her work as secretary for I
the chamber She restgned
the pos1tmn recentlv

Al so recog mzed was
Emmogene Holstem who was
recently employed as the new
secretary for the chamber
SmlUn s brother and his w1fe
Mr and Mrs Fred Stmon of
Columbu s were Introduced
The mv ocatlon was given
by Pau l Smart and the
benedt ct ton by Rev Lewts

Disaster
satd tt had wtdespread
outages and do\vned power
hnes and transmtsston
malfuncltons were reported
by other electrtc utillltes
Rhodes satd he got lD bed at
2 a m today but was up at
4 30 a m and back at his desk
at 7 a m It s been a long
rught he satd
Rhodes groped hts way
around hts offtce flashlight m
hand because downtown
Columbus was blacked out
for 52mmules The only light
bestdes Rhodes llash\tght
''"s a smgle bulb powered by
11 12 volt uu!Dmobtle battery
All 90 Ohto National Guard
armortes were alerted and 70
or them had been stalled and
were operating by 10 am
MaJ Gen James C Clem
authorized the call uo of I 000
guardsmen Rhodes satd
more would be alerted if
needed
Wetr satd hundreds of
roads were closed mostly m
northwestern and northern
OhlO
Some roads m
soutjteastern Ohto were
closed because of htgh water
Days off lor highway patrol
officers were oancelled

DIVISIOn of Parks and
Recreation
However the
extreme ly poor weather
condt!ton s forced the clostng
of all st ate offices m
Columbus resultmg m the
rescheduling of the deadline
lor submtttmg btds
The btds are for operation
of two boat rentals and a
bea ch refreshment con
cesston at KISer Lake State
Park m Champaign County

Area Deaths

!
I

CLARENCE EDWARDS

MRS ALDA E FAUDREE

Clarence Edward s 82
Ga lena a nat ve of Langs
d•ed Jan
8 al a
v lie
Delaware hosp1tal
S urv1v1n~ are a daughter
Mrs
E leen
Withers
Ashland a step daughter m
law Mrs Lurene Kennedy
w1th whom he made h s
home and several grand
ch ldren
brother s
and
srsters
Born and re ared near
Langs v ill e Mr Ed wards
worked for the Penn Central
Railroad unt I hi s retirement
Bur at was n Galena

Mrs Aida E Faudree 78
Route 4 Pomeroy d1ed
Wednesday at home
She was a daughter of the
tate Dav1d S and Cynth a
Bailey Holter Also preced ng
her n deattl were her
h us band
Willard
two
brothers
Warren
and
Hanson three s1sters Clara
Holter
Esta Baer and
Amanda Baer Several mces
and nephews surv•ve
Mrs
Faudree was a
member of the Rut l and
Ch urch of the Nazarene and
the Home League of the
Sal vat on Army
Funeral services will be
held at I p m Saturday at the
Ew ng Funeral Home with
the Rev Lloyd Gr mm of
f c atlng Bunal w II be m
G Imore Cemetery Fr ends
may ca ll at t he funeral home
at anyt•me

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Saturday
through
Monday snow and snow
squalls dally and very cold
Highs will be In the teens
Saturday and In the 20s
both Sunday and Monday
Overnight lows will be between zero and 10 above
zero

EMPORIA Va (UPI) Houston Otlers runnmg back
Mtke Vmght 23 the all ltme
leading rusher at the
Uruverstty of North Carolma
suffered a senous htp mJury
Wednesday when hts car
collided wtth a dump truck
near
Emporia
m
Southamp!Dn County
Votght was treated at
Greensvtlle Memortal
Hospttal and transferred lD
Norfolk General Hospital m
late afternoon Doc!Ors satd
he wtll need extenstve
orthopedic surgery, but was
consc1ous and m otherwise
good condition

MERGER SET
CLEVELAND (UPI )
The acqm~uton of the Bay
Ctty Foundry Co Bay Ctty
Mtch and a merger wtth
Super.Strut Inc Oakland
Calif
was
announced
Wednesday by the Mtdland
Ross Corp

refreshment concesswn at
Hocking Htlls State Park in
Logan County and the boat
rental at Forked Run State
Park m Metgs County
Btds must be subnutted by
2 p m Friday Ja n 27 to the
Dtvtsion of Parks and
Recreation

Conc essions

Unton Ohto Department of
Natural Resources, Fountam
Square Columbus 43224
Jndtvtduals who have
already submitted btds but
WISh to change thetr ortgtnal
offer should contact the
Dtvtston of Parks and
Recreation s Concessions
Untl telephone (614 ) 466-3277
ProspectiVe btdders may
mspecl the factltltes at each
state park by contacting the
park manager m advance
More mformatlon con
cernmg the facthtles open for
btd may be obtamed by
contactmg the DivisiOn of
Parks and Recreation

Hospital News
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admttted
Brenda
Cunnmgham
Pomeroy
Margte Hunt
Ramne,
Everett Earles Crown Ctty
Discharged - Ehzabeth
Gtlkey Owen Watson Judtth
Crow Gary Terry II Joshua
Jenktns Ltnda Ferrell
Vtrgmta Kmg Emma Hood
Barbara Andrews

went out and surveyed the
area around the landfill and
we feel there Is a poSSibility
of a runoll of this malertal
mlo our water system ''
The dectslon by the landfill
owners took ol!tclals of the
Oht o Envir o nmental
Protection Agency off Ute
hook State EPA ad
minlstrators had come under
tn creastng pressure Wed
nesday to stop the plaMed
dumpmg m southwestern
Ohto Dan Redman an Ohto
EPA offtctal had contended
however that the sotl ' ts not
nearly as huardous as
everybody IS making tl out to
be
The sotl was contammated
when a tram derailment at

1977 totaled S20 377 85 ac

cord ng to Eleanor Robson
recorder Receipts were as
follows
re cordmg fees
SIS 954 f1llng fees S2 708
cancellat ons Sl 6l4 search
es Sl 3 sundries S88 85
The
Meigs
County
Depart ment ot Health advises all
food
servi c e
operators that now s the t1me
to proc ure their 1978 food
licenses Operators are to
kn ow the exact seating

capacity of the r establiSh

ments at the time of ap
plication Appllcahons and
ll censes are available durmg
regular business hours at the

Health Department Office

110 Meehan c St

Pomeroy

Me gs County s three local
school districts received a

total of S213 904 49 following

deductions for ret•rement as
the1r part of the January
State School Foundaf1on
subs1dy
payment
of

$6245403285 made to 611
(.)h o ci t y

exempted v llage
and local school d1str cts and
87
county
boards
of
educat on
Amounts received by each

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Dtscharged - Wtlham
Ramey Pomt Pleasant Mrs
Ervm Woodard, Apple
Grove Mrs Robert Smith
Galltpolts Ferry Mrs Larry
Myers Gallipolis Ferry
Mrs Gary Treadway Pomt
Pleasant Nellte Kent Pomt
Pleasant Rosa Shawver
Lakm Clara Lavender
Syracuse Terry Bonecutter
Pomt Pleasant
THE DAILV SENTINEL
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEJREST OF

MEIGS-MASON AREA

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges Jan 25)
Ellen Adktns Ktmberly
Brown Granville Burnette
Jeffrey Cameron Martlyn
Canter Irma Chambers
Everett Connolly Mrs Gary
MEETING CANCELLED
A meeting of the Twtn Ctty DePue and son Belva
Ftsher
Betty
Shnnettes to be held at the Fraley
home of Mary Bowen has Wtliiam Greuser Donald
been cancelled They wtU Hull Judtth Hull, Nancy
Hollmgshead, Cectl Jams
meet agam m February
Jaruce Jones Deborah Ohm
Andrew Phalen Belmda
Rames Lorena Rtce Nellie
Roberts Mary Sharp Donald
Now you Know
Wetdner
Htghway Patrol offtcers tn
(Births Jan 25)
North Dakota can choose the
Mr and Mrs Terry Plants
color of thetr patrol cars
a daughter Ga lltpohs Ferry

CHESTER L TANNEHILL
E1et Ed
RQBERT HOEn.JCH
~bUshed

Cit~ Editor

da ly ex\.&gt;tpl &amp;tturday
by The Ohio VKllt~y Publishing
Company Mullunedw Im:
111
Court St Pomeroy Ohib 4$769
BW~mesa OffJCe Phone 992 2156
EditorJal Phone 992-2 IS7
Second class postage paid ut
Pomeroy Ohio
NaUonal udvertL'lmg represerr
talive W11.rd Griffith Company

Inc Bottinelli and Gallllgher Dlv

757 Third Ave

10017

New York NY

Subscrapl on ntles Delive.W by
camer where IIVaiU&amp;ble 7S cenl.ll per
Wet!k By Motur Route where carr er
:wrvlce not av1dlable One monUl
$3 Z5 By rruul m Ohio and W Va
CAll! Year S22 00 Stx months
Sll 50 Three months S7 00
Elsewht!re S26 00 year Sll. months
$13 50 Three months $7 50
Sull9crlption prace mcludf!l Sunday
Times-Sentmel

Poison scare eased in Point Pleasant
POINT PLEASANT W
Va
(UPJ)
The
approxtmately 400 reSidents
of thts Ohto Rtver town wbo
were evacuated Monday
because of a chemtcal spill
from a tram derailment were
allowed to go home
Wednesday
Mayor John Musgrave satd
state and federal health
ol!tctals had detennmed that
excavation of contammated
dirt at the deratlment stte
was not resul!\ng m an m
crease of toxtc fumes from
the
c hemi c al
eptchlorohydrm as had been
•
feared earlier
About 370 of the 400
evacuees had stayed two
ru~hts and days wtth lrtends
and relatives and the other 30
were housed at the West
Vtrgtma Army Natwnal
Guard Armory on the north
stde of town
West Vtrgmla state Police
Trooper D M caldwell satd,
the Situation IS pretty much
under control but adrrutted
state and federal agenctes
were continuing to mom!Dr
air quality at the site
!rom
The
danger
exploSion is almost gone and
Ute onl~ problem may be
toxic fumes There ts no
chance or a catastrophe
now he satd
The emergency arose
Mooday mornmg when a
tram
Chesste
System
derruled m thts Mason County
commumty and some ~ 700
gallons of epichlorohydrin a
toxtc
and
flammable

substance leaked onto the
ground
Wednesday mght for about
~ mmutes beglDilmg at 5 p
m residents were able to use
thetr home faucets after
national guard and htghway
department trucks
poured enough water mto the
system to allow use for
samtary purposrs only

The water was trucked m
from Gallla County, across
the Ohio Rtver and dumped
mto Pomt Pleasants water
plant clear well People were
cauttoned against drmking
the water
Town offtctals hoped lD
continue this limited water
distrtbut1on on a schedule lor
Ute next few days while other
wells are tapped
Five people were shll
hospttahzed yesterday at
Ple!ISant Valley Hospital in
sahsfactory condilton after
inhaling some fumes and
suflermg Irritations Monday
and Tuesday, according lD
hospttal executive director
~ames F Farley
"Caldwell said work was
getting
along
!lne •
yesterday on mstallatlon of
pumps in two previously
unused wells m the Harmon
Park sectlm of town and
laymg 3 000 feet of eight-Inch
ptpe lD connect a 16-lnch
water main with a large
ca)lllclly well on the C C
Lewis farm north of !Dwn
All schools in this area are
closed for the rest of the week
because of the crtical water
shortage

Olftctals satd the railroad
will be paymg all Ute bills for
Utu; transportation and for
drilling the town a whole new

water supply away !rom the
railroad line
The Mason County Health
Department ordered all food

Potnt Pleasant W Va
sptlled 20 700 gallons of
eptchlorohydrm, a tollc and
nammable chemical U5ed to
make epoxy and rubber
products
Potnt Pleasant is located
alongSide the Ohto River, a
source Qf drinking water lor
many communities , and
ol!tctals wanted to get the
chemical and contaminated
sml away from the r1ver as
qmckly as poSSible
The Wtliiamsburg landftU
company IS ltcensed by both
the Ohto EPA and U S EPA
to dispose of such potsonous
matenals The sot! would
have been buried in sealed,
M-gallon drums 25 feet under
the surface

•

MOTORISTS ROBBED
BY GAS THIEF

'

Motor ists are being robbed by
a sly thief who steals gu wh1le

"

they dr •ve The culprit Is a
d irty car buretor
wh i c h
wastes preci ous fuef and
causes
poor
eng i ne
performance Now you can
restore efficiency thanks to

n

WYNNS Carburetor Cleaner
Th is special spray formula
works w ithout dismantling to
Instantly remove gun and
varnish curb rough idli ng and
stalling
as It Increases
mileage
So for happ1er

molorlng

related establlslunents that
would use water to wash
dtshes to remain closed
durmg Ute dry period

Teen-agers escape car
stalled on RR tracks
At750a m on Bob Me patrol reported a semt
Two teen agers escaped
Cormtck
Rd south or ST 160, operated by Randall L
mjury at II 25 p m Wed
vehtcles
drtven
by Fredrtck Moore, 35, Mtddleport, and a
nesday when thetr car stalled
Culltp
30
Galltpohs
and county truck driven by Jack
on a ratlroad track at the
&amp;bert
J
Grube,
17
Rt
2 H Davts 47, Galhpohs,
same ttme a C&amp;O tram was
stdesw tped causing minor
Galltpolls,
colltded
on
the
tcy
approachmg the mtersectwn
damage
roadway
No
one
was
mjured
The Galha Metgs Post
Another stdeswtplng ac
State Htghway Patrol satd or ctted
ctdent
occurred at 4 48 p m
Icy
roads
were
blamed
lor
James E Plants, 16 Bidwell
on
Bob
McCormtch Rd one
an
accident
at
9
20
a
m
and frtend Paula Covert were
and
two
tenths miles north of
Wednesday
on
Bulavtlle
Rd
gomg across the track on the
Kerr HarriSburg Rd two one l'ntl'llt&lt;)l;'th of ST 160 The SR 588
Accordmg
to
state
tenths of a mile west of SR 160 patrol saraait'aulo drtven by
troopers
cars
drtven
by
Oscar
C
Batrd
62
GallipoliS
when the car stalled They
Nancy
D
Kohlrieser
31,
slid
on
the
tcy
pavement
looked up saw the train
commg and ran from thet~ stnkmg a vehtcle operated by Gallipolis aod James E
car The tram operated by Raymond L Pennmgton 18 Kemper 22, Kerr stdeswtped
There
was causmg minor damage
Samuel Ford of Wellston Gallipolis
A smgle car mishap oc
moderate
damage
struck the car demohshtng
cured
at 8 15 p m on SR ltl,
Davtd
L
Poar
18
II
Seven other trarlic ac Southside, W Va was ctted west of SR 775 where an auto
Ctdents were mvesttgated to Municipal Court for failure drtven by Gerald L Taylor,
Wednesday by the Galha to stop wtthin the assured 2if, Gallipolis traveling east,
Metgs Post State Highway clear distance following an was forced off tbe roadway
accident at 9 30 a m on US by an unknown vehicle
Patrol
A Metgs County atcident
35
at Merry Rd The patrol
The first occurred at 7 30 a
occurred
at II p m Wed
Poar
s
car
struck
the
satd
m on Kmg Rd south of SR
nesday
on
township road 26
of
a
vehtcle
operated
by
rear
141 where Kenneth R
south
of
!be
Athens county
Donald
M
Ftggins,
23
Drummond 19 Galbpobs
lme
where
an
auto driven by
Btdwell
lost control of hiS car whtch
Sherry
L
Barton , 28,
True
ks
were
mvolved
In
sltd on the snowy road
Coolvtlle,
shd
mto
a parked
strtkmg a parked car owned an acctdent at 9 4Q a m
owned
by
Donme
Boggs
car
by Donald Cox Rt 2 Wednesday on SR 7 two
of
Coolville
tenths
of
a
mtle
south
of
the
lialJipoJ!!S i ht:re wtts mmor
Addtson·Bulavtlle Rd The
damage

gel

WYNN S

Carburetor Cleaner toda y

HECK •

Coach C D Hawhee s
Wa verly Ttgers remtned
close on the heels of leagueleadmg Ligan following a 5357 victory over vtsttlng
Ironton tn a makeup game
Wednesday ntght Waverly IS
9-1 overa ll and 6-1 m loop
play Ironton IS 3-8 and 3-4
Little Joe Arnett a 5-11
so phomore ca nned t w o
charity tosses wtth 40 seconds
left to gtve the W Ttgers a 58
55 advantage Joe Fletcher s
ba se line jumper wtth 17
seconds left completed the
game s sco ring
Ironton down 10m the ftrst
half came back to reduce
Waverly s lead to 33 31 m the

d tstnct according to State
Aud1tor Thomas E . Ferguson
Include Eastern S44 736 34

Meigs Local $116 088 92 and
Southern $53 078 23 In ad
dlt1on the county board of
education

allotment of

received
S15 315 98

an

The I nal day lor Me1gs
Count ans to pay tra•ler t8 x

at the Meigs County Auditor s

Off1ce to avoid a penalty ls
Jan 31

•

•

•
••
•
••

dogs have until Feb 1 to

•

purchase dog tags without a

20 was extended due to bad
weather conditions After the
Feb 1 deadline a ~natty of

•••
••

regular

•

penalty The deadline of Jan

S2 will be applied to each
application

and

A family plannmg clinic

scheduled at Heath Un ted
Methodist Church In Mid
dler.ort for today was can
eel ed The clln1c will be
rescheduled

Beta
Beta
S gma Phi tonight Is can
celled
The

meeting

of

••
•
••
••

•
•

Your HELPFUL
HARDWARE

ASTRO•GRAPH

MAN,

Bernice Bede Osol

offers you

,a\'](!J(!)l/

m~w~illmt]

Jan 27 1978

Your chance s for rewarding
10 nt ventures look prom1slng
for the coming year The man
ner m which you become In
valv ed could come about
throu g h exlraordmary c rcum
sta nGP- S

A&lt;lU AAIUS (Jan

20 Fab 19)

Any msunderstandmg that
anses today where a fnend IS
nvol11ed and money •s the

UPTO

"•••
•

••
••
•"

•'

ssue should be straightened
out promptly Unreso lved tt
bullds a barrier llke to hnd out
more of what lies ahead for
you? Send for your copy of
Aslro Graph Letter by ma1lmg
50 cents for each and a tong
self addressed stamped enve
tope to Astra Graph P 0 So:.:
489 Aad10 C ty Stat10n N Y
10019 Be sure to specify your
b rth s1gn

PISCES (Feb 20·March 20)
T .!:lay s Important dec1s ons
should not be made upon m1t1al
Input Facts you may learn of
later could substanlially alter
origmat concluSions

••

ON All WOOD
BURNING STOVES

••"
•
•••

•

••

•
•

••
•

ACE HARDWARE

ARIES (March 21 April 19) L llle

Located In The

thmgs assume greater 1mpor
lance than usual today espe
clally where your career IS
concerned A small happen ng
COI.IId st r up unusual benefits

MEIGS PLAZA

TAURUS (Aprtl20.Moy 20) lnfor
matlon may come todav
through an md1rect route re
gard nc somethmg you ve
been unable to fathom W th
facts m hand you II know how
to cope

QEMINI (May 21·Juno 20) Serv
mg as a backup tor your mate
today you may be able to
tiCComphsh somethmg advan
tageous for your family that he
or she was unable to swing

CANCER (June 21 July 22) The
r~ght

words can msp re lethar
g•c assistants today Shower
them w1th pos trve praise
Watch the1r productivity zoom

LEO (July 23 • Aug 22) In

fmanc•al dealings that are a
shade umque yet practical
you should fare rather well
today Where risk IS the pre
dommant !actor
the odds
outwe gh you

VlRQO (Aug 23·Sept 22) Sell
doubts relating to your leader

sh1p abollt1es will be qutckly
dlsm ssed today once you re m
the act on The secret hes m
the do1ng

LIBRA !Sept 23·0ct 23) Proce
dures for an arrangement that
could be personally profitable

are best left to the th nklng of
others today You may see only
the negative aspects

SCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov 22) Un
less you re prudent today
funds budgeted for other pur
poses may be d1pped nto for
somett,mg qu te fnvolous

SAGITTARIUS (Nov Z3 Deo Z1)
Small but meaningful returns
are well within your grasp
today prov1ded you keep your
m nd on business Flights of

fancy lessen possibilities
CAPRICORN (Dec 22 Jan 11)

Bemg In a somewhat gregarl
ous mood today you may be

tempted lo talk of things to pais

that are best kept secret Se
teet tOpiCS WISely
INEWSPAPER ENTERPRIEit ASSN l

Harvey

4 I 9 TOTALS 1S 7 57
WAVERLY 158) - F1elder

2 0 4 Crace so 10 Thompson
S 2 12 Thomas 4 0 8 Davena

8 o 16 R Frederock 1 o 2
Gordon I 2 4 TOTALS 26 6
58
Score by quarters

14 11 14 18- S7

Waverly

16 15 15 12- 58

Reserves -

Middleport, 0.

--..

So uthwestern s
un
predictable
Highlanders
Jumped mto a !6-11 ftrsl pertod
lead then survtved a last
quarter uprtSing to edge the
Hannan Trace Wildcats 55..14
Wednesday ntght
The wm knocked Hannan
Trace out of sole possesston
of hrst place m the SV AC
standmgs Coach Dan Cor
nell s Wtldcats are now tted
wtlh the ~elendmg champton
Southern Tornadoes
Weather permtltmg a
showdown match between the
two schools wtll be played at
Racme Fnday mght
Coach Wayne Bergdoll s
Htghlanders have been up
and down all year Tuesday
ntght Southwestern Jumped
mto a btg ftrst pertod lead
against Southern only to see
the Tornadoes rally to wm m
the last stanza
Southwestern s overall
record went to !Hi 3-4 m the
SVAC
J umor Gene Layton took
game scoring honors with 22
pomts 10 of those came m the
ftrst pertod
Sentor forward Larry
Carter added 17 pomts for the
Htghlanders SWHS held a 31
21 lead at the half and 43 35
advantage going mto the final
etght mmutes
Dunng the !mal pertod
Hannan Trace roared back
behind the shootmg of semor
Davtd Campbell Campbell
canned 13 of his 21 pomts for
the mght m the fmal quarter
Southwestern held an etght
pomt lead wtth I 28 seconds
to go however the Wildcats
moved to wtthm one pomt
wtlh JUst seconds remammg
No game stattsttcs were
available smce charts were
left at the school There was
no school today tn Ga!Ua
County
Campbell led Hannan
Traces attack With 21 pomts
Davtd Swam, senior center
was the only other Wtldcat
httttng double ligures with 12

Ironton

35

Waverly 30

pomts
Southwestern is slated to
play at Eastern Frtday mght
Next week the Highlanders
have scheduled Kyger Creek
Monday Oak Htll Tuesday
Symmes Valley Frtday and
Eastern Saturday
Hannan

Trace

(54)

-

Swam
Mooney
4 19
Campbel I 10 1 21 Beaver J
39 Pack 113 Totals 24 6

54

Southwestern

!SSJ

Baker

2 0 4 Jordan l I 3
Blanton 3 3 9 Carter 7 3 11
Layton II 0 22 Totals 24 7 SS
By Quarters
8 21 35 54
Hannan Trace
Southwestern
16 21 43 55

College
scores
College Basketball Results

By Unated Press International
East

Bucknll 79 W Chstr 55
Crng e Milo 91 Th el 66
Cal Pa 88 Slpry Rck 82

Clar•on 52 lck Hven 47
Conn 80 Boston U 63
Delaware 85 R der 68
Geotwn 72 Amer can 68
l nd Pa 84 PIt Jhns 76
lona 86 St

Fran

Pa 12

J Hopktns 87 Mss1ah 73

Lafayette 83 Leh gh 68
~tre

Dme 103 W Va 82
81 Lehman 72
~IU 87 R chmond 48
l Crnln 90 Del Val 76
;,eton Ha ll 88 Wagner 80
Spnngrtd 12 Amherst 56
St Bonny 83 Hofstra 73
51 Ptr S 75 Cn SIUS 74
Syrar;:use 91 Temple 66
~ueens

v rg n a 74 Duke

73

Vlln ova 98 Penn St

7~

Chttnga 84 C•tadel 81
Dyke 86 West L1b 68
E Car 86 Ga Sthrn 115
F rmnl 51 91 Oav&amp;Eik 65
Furman 87 Clemson 68
Gtenvl 94 Salem 62
J Md sn 65 w Car 63
M Haney 74 concord 48

N C St 80 Md 73
Tenn Wslyn Bl Tsclm 70
Towsn Sf 90 Mrgn Sf 71
V1rg ln a 74 Duke 73
VMI 69 Old Dom 60
Va Tech 77 Upsala 69
Va Cmnwlfh 91 AI Chrs 64
Wm&amp;Marv 6S Dav dson 56
W Va Wslyn 78 W va Tch 67

M ami 79 Toledo 70
Mo 65 Kan Slate 60
Muskmgum 63 Cap1tal 55
E Ill 87 lnd Cent 58
N Ill 61 Ball St 6.4
Rio Grnde 109 Urbna 74

...
•

~

~
~

~

OOCAGO (UPI) - The
Chicago Bears Wednesday
announced the stgnmg of
safety Doug Plank, who
played out hts option last
season
General Manager Jim
Finks declmed to release
terms of the contract stgned
by Plank a three year
veteran from Ohto State

~

N

AT

"•

•

•

~

M
Q

~

•

MOORE'S
STORE

..
..

NY Rang er s

W L T
27 10
27 10
18 17
16 21

~h

8

62
62
47
41

8
11
9

Smythe OtVISIOn
W l T Pts
Chic ago
17 11 12 40
Vancouver
11 2 1 12 J O
Co lorad o
10 23 11
J1
St Lou s
11 29 6 28
M nn esol!!l
9 JO 5 23
Wales Conference
Norris 01\ s1on
W L T Pt s
Montreal
J2 1 6 70
Los Ang el es
19 17 9 47
Detro t
17 20 6 40

P•ttsburgh

Washmgton
9 11
Adams Pt\:ISIOn

W l
Bos ton
Buffalo

t'

15 11 10

40

19

T Ph

28

11 6
25 9 11
Toronto
25 lll 7
Cleveland
16 '18 4
Wednesdays Results
Toronto 4 NY Ranqers 3
Col orado J Wash 3 t e
Thursday s Games
Toronto at NY Island er s
M ontreal at Atlanl a
Pittsburgh at Detro t
M nn eso ta at Buffalo
Col orado at Bo ston
Cleveland at Ch cago
St Lou sat Los Ang
Ph fa at Van couver
Fndilly s Game
B oslofJ at Wa sh nglon

62
61
51
36

WHA Standings
Bv United Press 1nternat1ona1
W l T Pts

New England
W1nn1p E'g

Quebec
Houston
Edmon ton
B rmmgham
C nc nnat
lnd an&amp;pol s

28 14
76 16
12 1B
2 1 19

4
2
2
3

22 21

1

20 '12 2
17 27 2
14 27 4

Wedneid•v s Results

60
54
46
45
45
42
J6
32

New England a Cmc nnat• 1
Birmingham 6 W nn peg 2
Edmonton 6 lnd anapol s 2
Thursd•v s G•me

New

England at Houston
Friday s Games
W nnlpeg at B rm ng:ham
Quebec 8f Edmonton

•

PH. 992·2848

W. MAIN ST.

POMEROY 0.

Ihe

Dave Grauzer scored 16
pomts and Jeff 1 rupf .md rt'&lt;i
Anderson added 15 each In
lead Central Mtcluga n tn tls
77 71 vtc tory over Ohw
Umverstty
fim Joyce scm ed a .,;arne
h1gh Z:l pmnL"l mC'lurltn.i&lt;! 19 m

Coach Art Lanham s R1o Grande College
Redmen nddled host Urbana , 109 74 m a Mtd
OhiO Conference game Wednesday mght
The VICtory left Rto Grande wtth an II 5 mark
Ins1de the MOC the Redmen remamed unbea ten
With a 6 0 record
,
Coach Bob Cawley s Blue Kmghts dropped to
4·13 overall and 2 5 mstde the conference
It was a ntp-and tuck aflatr
Urbana shot 47 6 from the
durmg the ltrst 10 minutes of held smktng 34 of 71 held
actton Wtth the score \ted 22 goa l att empt s 1 he Blu e
22 at the 10 40 mark 111 the Kntghts were stx of 10 al the
ftrst half Rto led by Mark foul line for 60 percent Ut
Swatn and Greg Jame s
bana had 30 rebounds and 25
erupted ror e1ght consecutive turnovers
Rto placed four men m
potnts and It was all but over
The Redmen led 50 40 double figures m scortng led
durtng the halfttmc m
by Gtl Prt ce s 26 potnts Mark
termiSston
Swam added 23 Greg Games
Rto Grande connected on 53 20 and Dun Btse 14
of 86 fteld goal attempts for
Art Juslln led the wmners
61 6 percent The Redmen
wtth 18 pomts Dave Chne
were perfect atthe loullme added 16
three-lor three - and ptckcd
The Redmcn wtll host 1tfftn
of! 39 rebounds II by Greg Untvcrstty at f yne Ccntct on
James and 10 by Gtl Prtce
Saturday bcg mmng 1! 7 10
Rto had 18 turnovers
pm

Akron club tops AAA
COLUMBUS IUPIJ - This

week s United Press In
ternattonal Oh1o High School
Board of Coaches
boys
basketball ratings (w1th f 1rst
place votes and won lo st
records In parentheses)

CLASSAAA

Team
Po1nts
1 Akron Central Hower
114 11 01
260

2 Kettering Akter
18 13 I)

3 Cincinnati St Xavier

13 14 OJ
4 Cleveland St
Ignatius 12 131)
&lt; Canton Tlmken 18 OJ
6 East Cleveland Shaw
II 13 0)
7 Col North (1 120)
8 Tol Scott 11 8 I)
9 Col Easl ( 1 10 2)
10 Day Roth 19 11

224

J

(6 10 OJ
Col Mifflin IJ 10 JJ

.4 Cleveland Cathedral

Latin (4 8 J t

5 Elyria C• thol lc
I)
6 Wheelersburg t I

7 Coshocton 110 21
8 New Leban Dixi e
9

(lie) W Holmes (8

53
49

9 It el Archbold

144

Hann bal River (2 ) 31

117

( t e) Mart1ns Ferry and
Waverl y 20 each 16 V nton
17 17 Youngstown Rayen (1)

116
11 1 16
96

76
72

Columbus lmden

Francs 18 17 Sandusky 17

Vandalia Butler 14

1)

163
II
127
104
82

II IIO J
49
Second ten 11 Well sv ille
46 12 Portsmouth 33 JJ

McKinley 23 15 Springfield
North 21 16 Toledo Sf
18

9 I)

Ill OJ

18 Akron South 14

14
19

Lora.n Cathol c 13 20 North

College Hill 12

Others w1th ten or more
po10ts Readmg and Bellaire

celon 37 13 Toledo St John
14

(I

208

Second ten
11 Dayton
Meadowdale 39 12 Pr n

28

197

191

unbeatt n

in

Suut hern

Dl\'lSi on pl.u} ~1th u f· !.-55 wm
(WCr

C'apttal

~htl c m

other

UA&lt; ~~mt s tl " as D&lt;:mson
70 MnneiUI 62 1n O\ ertllne
a nd Wtth nberg So Ohio

Wesle) tn 48
I lse\1 here 11 IV IS Pttt 82
Clevcl.wd
Stn te
71
Y n ungst ow n

75

St nte

Nnt thorn Kentucky t;tl lohn
C.trroll 91 Case Western 89
Ddt(ll\t e 76 Wthmngton 75
~ tn dlay
77 Munchoslet
(lnd ) 65 D) ke 116 West
ltbtrty (\V v 1 Jlill Wals11 67
Olun DomllH\ an 58 nnd Hio
Gt .mde IO!l Urbnnt 74
OnI} t w o ~ nnes ,u e on tu p
tn Ohu r I l m u~ h t witit
Ashl,uld cntct t nn mg Alu bn
ltnd Ohio Stn h.l trymg to mn k ~,:
it two m :1 rem dt home \\h en
th (y ~; nt c rt ,u n M kt ll j.tl ll l
State
I he SCVI nt h r lfi kf'fl
Sp.utans lead the B1g I en
With I ()..0 rl"t.' OI d IIlli UH 14 \
over aU

0Hklnntl
lind cnd t of th~ Ull l'C
clubs h~tcl offc1L.ttl u h..:ssc1
rtmount of mon u} tll m tl1r1t
mvulvc(l m lh~ Hcd"i l1 ,l(lt
Kuhn docsn t hkc lru mw~
tuns ror cash only but Ihe
Hcds have contended Umt
sendmg !levering to 0 Hkluut
111 .uldthon to the $1 7 nulhon
makes their de tl a tJ. mlc nut
8 SH IC

As far

dS

l1 n com:CJ ned

said Stembl enncr
Uu r.u_t
th at Hevcung IS 111 tlu dc.tl

mnkcs

1111

thff~ '

c ucc

li e s

just ,, Utrr w tn

Rto GRANDE lto91
~;;'" ~'rt c~ 1 ; 30 ,~a ms;~. 1 ~ ~
t4 Johnston 1 o 1 Gibson '
0 2 Purcell 1 0 4 Johnson 1
0 4 Niday 3 1 B ~ec 0 0 0
w est J o 6 TOTALS 5lJ tot
URBANA 174 1
Fa lkner
1 I 1S Cha m ber I 1 J Cl ne
0 0 16
J ston
9 0 IB
Rcngcrt 6 1 " L tl lu to 1
Stroble 1 'l 4 Ande r s 1 0 2
TOTALS H 6 10
R o 50
Halfl1nw score
;U;.r..;ba;;;..n•;;_4.:,0;____....,__

WE VE LOWEREU
THE COST OF
CARPET CLEANING

CLEANING
YSTEI'ol AT NEW

lci\RF'ET

LOWER
RATES

2 lnd•an Valley Sou th

15 II

163

0)

J Morral Ridgeda le

12 901
232
4 Columbus Ready ItO 21
152
5 Kal da 14 I&lt; 01
149
6 Windham 13 II 01
125
7 Patnck Henry (2

10 0 )
109

8 Clinton Massi e (10 I)
9 Ada(821
10 Southeastern Ross

II

91)

72

70

Do )IJ ur.s a I
an d ge t pr o l e s~l ona l
results

--------------

38

Second ten
11
Da It on
Buckeye Trail and Sebr ng
J2 each Buckeye Trail and
Sebrmg 32 each
14 For t
Recovery 26
15
Eastern

Ptke 18 16 !tiel Hopewell
Southington and
Eastern 16 each 19
Covmgton 12 20 Ottov il le II

----- -------STAR SUPPLY CO.

Loudon

~con

949 2525

Ractne 0

CLASS A
Team

Pomts

1 Mansfield St Peter s
15(13 OJ
286

19

Barberton 13 20 Def1ance 11

CLASSAA
Team

I Delphos St Johns
(9 10 I J

WINTER

2 Warsaw R•verV ew

TIRES

Free Installation.

MOORE'S
STORE

Ill

~ onference

Ute second hall fo r Ohto
E rnt e Wh il us an d t.ve
SkaAA• em It fmtshe&lt;I wtth 12
Men n" htl e at Bo" lin g
Gree n
Ky
Jac k
Zunmerma n ~md Jun Paxson
scored 21 pomts aptece w
lead D11yton to an 80-72 wm
oH r Western K entucky
D tyton """ 12-&lt;l ttiQk tbe
lead for good 16-14 w1U1 12 24
tn go m the ftrst half on a fast
break Ia) up by Paxson
In Ute Ohiu Conferenc-er
Mu skt ng um r e m a m e u

Redmen wallop Urbana

Regular Price Per Tire.
On~ On All Tires In Stock.

.

4 12 over •ll a nd 2-.1

CIN CINNATI (UPI ) - Reds bull believe that whlll
New York Yankees owner IS good for ti1e goose 1s gCK~d
George Stembrenner says he for the ~ander
sutd
wont take a ny court act1on If Stembrermcr in Cutt.: mrwti lo
Bas eba ll Commi Ss iOn e r pres ide over W cdn esda ~ s
Bowte Kuhn a pproves the annual ~tockholders meellnK
Ctn ctnnatt Reds acqutsttiOn of the Amen can Shtp
of Vtda Blue from the Butldtng Co of whtch he ts
Oakland A s
board chatrman
But Stembrenner stynued
It was brought out tn
tn hiS attempt to buy Blue m testtmony HI Ute heartngs
1976 says he would be held by tl•e commtsslnner
unhappy tf Kuhn allows the that three other clubs tn
Reds to get Blue lor $1 7 addtlton lD the Ya nke-es \let c
mtiiion and mmor leaguer turn ed down
by
th e
Dave Revermg
comnuss mner wh e n they
I have nothmg agamst the sought to purch.tse Blue ft t m

5 0FF

$ 00

e•

:z
••
"'

NY Islander s
Philadelph ia
Atlanta

N Ga 82 Shorter 71

Ill St 75 N M1Ch 58

~

Campbell Conference
Patnck DIVISIOn

awa)
Arch•e Aldrtdge scored 24
potnts and Ra nd) "'yers
added t8forMtamtand il )ers
tUd a superb dele nsl\ e job oo
Toledo s htgh &gt;Conng fed
Wtlltams holding htm to 10
potnts hts low of the year
The Rockets were paced b)
J un Swane) who came orr
the bench to srore 23 points
In other MA C gullie s
Wednesday m~ h t Bo~ ling
Green tnpped Kent State 69
63 Central Mtchtg.m tlnwn&lt;'&lt;i
Ohio Untversll y 77 71
Easle t n Mt&lt; In Hall bea l
Western Mtchtgan 66-51 and
Ball Statu mpped NorUt•rn
llltnots 64-lil
Freshman Joe Fatnc
scored 20 pomts to )llt&lt;"e
Bowlmg GI:een to 1ts wm over
Kent Stale Kent now 3 13
overall and JS m the Mi\C
held a 5549lead wtUt 8 44 to
go mostly on the sconn~ of
Burrell McGee who fmtshed
With 29 potnL'
But BG came 1oa t in~ bock
nulscOrtn&lt;: Kent 1;.2 at one
pomt lD take the le.td for
~ood wtlh 3 55 left m the
game BG upped It~ 1 ct·ord l&lt;

Steinbrenner wouldn't sue

United Press International

South

Loyola 90 Vlllpara so 65
Mercy 9 01 vet 61

~

Bv

Army 60 Colgate 58
Bowdon 93 Bates 89
Brandes 78 Bsn St 70

Bwtng Grn 69 Kent St 6.3
Cent MICh 77 Oh 0 71
Drury 95 Mo Sthrn 76
E M1Ch 66 W M Ch 53

SNOW TIRE

..-.
.-...

~

There are sltll a lot of
games left before the Mtd
Amertcan Conferen ce
W l
Pe t G B basketba ll race ts dended
Ph Ia
J l 13 705
but Mtamt took a gtant step
New York
24 21 533 1 ,
!Dwards
the IIUe Wednesday
Buffalo
16 26 381 14
Boston
14 241 326 16', rught
N ew Jer sey
9 36 200 11• ,
The Redskins Shootmg a
Cenfrill DI VISIOn
W L J) ct GB SIZZling 65 per cent ror the
San Anton
28 18 609 game ended Toledo s 12
Wshnyln
24 20 545
J
Ctevelnd
2 ~ 11
517 4 , game wmmng streak with a
New Or lns
22 14 478 6
79-70 wm a nd at t)te same
Atlan ta
2 1 16 44 7 1 ~
too k ove r sole
Houston
16 ~ 356 11 l ttme
possession of first plat"e m the
Wtslern Confe re nce
Mtdwest DI VISIOn
league
W L
Pe t GB
It's a toug h loss to
Denver
29 16 6.44
( h c.!t90
'16 20 565 3 l swallow satd Toledo Coach
Mlw
16 22 542 4 1
Bob Nichols It was a more
Detro I
20 25 444 9
lnd ana
19 26 ~12 10
tmporlant game for us than
Kanss Cty
16 JO ] 48 13 1
lor
them and they won tl
Pic lflc Div iSion
Mtam
l Coa ch Darr ell
W L
F'Cf G 8
Porrt and
36 6 BIB
agreed
wtth Ntchols
Hedrtc
Phoen•x
JO 15 667
6 ,
but
ts
n
t
clal
mt ng any
Sea ttl e
'15 '1'1 532 1'1 1
LOS Ang els
'J I 2.1 d67 15 1 champtonshtp yet
Gotd en SI
21 25 457 16
nus was a n early season
Wednesdays Results
Oef r olt 99 Gol den St 95
wm but tl was aga mst a
Sa n Anton1o Jlj Boslon 103
contender and 1t gave them a
D en ver 121 Buffalo 11 9
sa id
home court loss
P.hoen x 11 8 Houston 96
Ph Ia 128 SeatTl e 125
Hedrtc
that s Important
Thursday s Gilmes
These last two wms (a!
Kansas Ci ty at New York
lnd ana a t Cle 'ol etand
Central Mt chlgan
and
Ch cage al w ashington
l
are
mce
WillS
but
Toledo
New Jersey at P1)r t and
there are a lot of games left to
Fndil'f s Gilmes
Go l den Slate at Buf fi:•l o
play
New Yor io. at A tlant a
M1rum broke away from an
K a t"\ CUy at New Or eans
Wash ngton at Ch cago
early 1~10 tte by ' scormg
Houston at Denv er
etght straight pomts a nd
Detro I at lnd• ana
Ph1 laC1 etpr. a at Phoen x
never tratled thereafter The
Milwaukee at Los Ang eles
Redskins led 38-31 at halftime
New Jer sey a t Seatt le
and every tuntll t h o:~ R ... l.bts
woul(l make a run at the lead
Mtamt would ag ain pull
Pre-n lnternifJ OOII
EIUtrn c onftrtnce
Atla n tiC DIVISIOft

Un•f~ d

Ade Ph 59 KIOQS 58

MICIWeSf

~

.•
-..•
"'
...-..
.."
.....•
.
,..,....
..
..,...
::..
....
.r..,
....."

By GENE CAODES
UPI Spo&gt;rts Writer

NHL Sfal"!d ngs

For Friday Jan 27 1978

,

IRONTON 1571 -

1 0 2 F letcher 4 4 12 Hodges
0 1 I James 10 0 20 lutz -4 I
9 W !Iiams 2 0 4 Fatzpatn ck

Highlanders m
•
upset victory

Preceptor Chapter of

w

Davena paced the W Tigers
wtth 16 potnts Dtck James
led Ironton s attac k wtth 20
In t he reserve game
Ironton downed Waverly ~
30 to throw the .reserve
standtngs tnto a three ""Y lte
lor ft rst pla ce between
Wa verl y
Iront on
and
Gaiiipolts a ll wtth 5 2
records
Frtday Ironton ~til host
Logan and Waverly ts at
Wellston
Box score

Ironton

Miami-·defeats Toledo

NI A Stil nd lng s

By

•

a penalty of $5 will be applied
for each kennel registration

thtrd pertod before Waverly
stormed out to a 45 33 spread
Ironton came back m th e
final pertod to cut Waverly s
lead to one 56-55 wtlh JUst a
littl e over one mmute
remammg tn the game
Waverly lost the ball Wtth
55 second s left Bobby
Wtlhams was fouled wtlh 49
seconds left Coach Ha whee
th en mserted h ve new
players on the floor - m
cludmg Rob Ho lstn~er lor the
ftrst lime m more than a
month Wtlhams miSSed the
front end of a one and-one
then ntne seconds later Ar
nett was fouled
Ironton htt 26 of 55 fteld goal
attempts The Ttgers were
_seven of 17 at the foul line and
had 33 rebound s Robtn
Fttzpatrtck ptcked off eight
Waverly htt 26 of 49 fteld goal
attempts and was SIX of II at
the foul line The wmners had
29 rebounds stx by Joe
Davena and l nP f: ,..rn,.n

•"

After Jan 31 a penalty wilt

be 1nvoked of ss or 10 percent
wh chever s greater
ONners or harborers of

:I
Pro
:I
IStan dings \

Waverly stays close behind
•
Logan with 58-57 loop wzn

Notices, local briefs
Re c: erpt s 1n the Me i gs
County Recorder s Off1ce for

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

3- The Daily Sentmel, Mtddieport Pomeroy 0 Thursday Jan 26 1978

Cay Kasem
WMPO

SATURDAYS
9 til Noon

'

GENERAL
TIRE SALES
NORTHSECONDAVENUE
MIDDLEPORT, OHI04S760
PHONE 992 7161

�4- The Daily Sentinel, MiddlepOrt-Pomeroy ;·0,, ThurJ&gt;day, Jan . 26, 1978

Pirates defeat Bobcats

Bench rider Joe Namath announces retirement
from pro football after one 'season with Rams
NEW YORK t UPI ) - It was
me I'd be lucky to play four seasons
sudden, but not unexpected .
with my legs. But I played 13." ,
" Broadway" Joe Namath, the
Namalh has not indicated what his
flamboyant quarterba c k who
plans ·a re, but they are not expected
. sparked the upstart 1969 New York
to include l'Oaching . The 34-year-(lld
Jets to ••ictory in Super Bowl Ill,
star, who signed with the Jets in 1965
Wednesday
announced
his
for a then-unheard of $400,000 bonus,
retirement after spending a season
has earned more than $3 million in
sitting on the bench with the Los
,his football ca reer and says he is
Angeles Rams.
.
"solid" financially . In addition to his
Narnath , who signed with the
athletic earnings, Namath ha s
Rams as a free agent after spending
played in throo movies and has
12 years with U1e Jets, started a few
numerous . contracts to promote
games early in the season but lost
men 's rologne and women's
the job to Pat Haden in the first
pantyhose , among other things .
month .
"I don 't know for sur e what I'm
" It was no fun being a secondgoing to be doing, " he said. " But I'm
string quarterback," said Narnath .
not concerned .''
"Sometimes it was a bit melancholy,
David A. "Sonny " Werblin, the
looking around and knowing I
man who signed Namath 13 years
wouldn't be playing football any
ago, says he think,s a movie career
more. But other than that it was no
might be " the thing " for his ex-star.
big deal. All I can say is, 'thank you,
" He's been taking dramatic
football.fans ."'
lessons. He 's a real student," said
" I have no regrelli, I'm not bitter
Werblin. ''He's got many careers
about anything," he added. " !
· ahead of him. "
~layed 13 sea~ons. I remember after .
Alabama Coach Bear Bryant,
my first knee operation, right after I
whose 1964 team Namath led to a
signed with the Jets, my doctor told
·naliona l champiOnship, says he

/

hopes Namath will move back to

Alabama,

where

he

runs

a

restaurant in Tusc aloosa .
" I'm just happy he's in a position
· to retire when he wants to," said
_ Bryant.
Weeb Ewbank, who coa ched the
Jets when Namath starred, said he
was somewhat surprised by

Narnatt)'s retirement announcement
because at the start of this past
season he figured Namath ~till was
healthy enough to lead the l.os
Angeles Rams to a championship .
" I saw Joe in training camp in 1976
and I knew he wasn't done then
because he l'Ould still really throw,"
said Ewbank . ''And when he went
out w l.&lt;&gt;S Angeles this season I
thought he would lead them to a
championship.
" I'm not questioning his decision
to retire , timugh, because it would be
unfair for me to make a judgment
when I on ly saw a little of him this
season . But I know he is the type of
· person who can't stand to sit around ·
the sidelines. It would kill him if was
on a team, but co uldn 't play ."

Mountaineers crushed by Irish
United Press International
Notre .Dame Coach Digger
Phelps was concerned about
his Irish keeping a sharp edge
entering their third game in
four days, but he shouldn't
have been.
Eighth-ranked
Notre
Dame's balan~ed scorin g
c ru shed
West
.attac k
Virginia, 103-82, Wednesday
night for the Mountai~eers'
wor st defeat of the year. It
made 13 victories against
thr~ losses for Ule Irish .
"Obv iously we are pleased
with
the
pe rforma nce

tonight," Phelps said . "It's
tough for any team to play
three games in four days. I

Bacon
wants
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P OP
Logan
Waverly
Portsmouth
Washinoton
Pt . Pleasant

10
9
8
6
4

1 743
1 640
2 694
3 609
3 453

592
527
589

526
449

Gallipol is

5 5 625 586

Ravenswood

2 2 253 219
4 7 689 733
A 8 797 86 2

to leave
Cincinnati

CINCINNATI ( UPI J- Cincinna
ti Bengal defensive end
Athens
C~y
Bacon
says he wants to
Wellston .
lr'onton
3 8 631 639
be traded to another NFL
Me-igs
2 9 623 806
club , the Cincin nati ·Enquirer
Ja ckson
2 9 575 724
repor ted Wednesday.
NOn-SEOAL results:
Bacon, .who ha's tWo more
Vinton County 64 Pt . Pleasant ·
52
years remaining on his
SEOAL VARSITY
cur rent contract, said he will
contacl Bengal officials in the
TEAM
W L P OP
next few days . He came to
Loga n
8 0 531 397
Cincinnati from San Diego in
Waverly
6 1 437 349
Ga llipoli s
4 3 457 405
1975, in a str aight player deal
Athens
4 4 499. 499
for
wide receiver Charlie
Well ston
4 4 535 545
.
lronltln
3 4 445 399 · Joiner .
He cited serious differences
M.e igs
1 7 423 607
Ja ckson
0 7 362 488
with Bengal defensive coach
TOTALS
30 30 3689 3689
Chuck Studley and general
· Tuesday's results :
disappointment with the
Gallipolis 66 Jackson 51
team's performance ~ the
Loqan 48 Athens 34
We ll ston 75 Meigs 58
reaSons he wants to move on.·
Wednesday ~s result :
·'I want to make it be
Wa verly 58 Ir on ton 57
known that Studley and I
Friday's gam es :
don 't get along ,., Bacon sa id .
Ga lli polis a t Athens
Logan at lron toh
~~ we ca n~ t beat teams with
Waverly at Wellston
the things we do on defense.
Meigs at Jackson
We argue all the time. I think
Teays Va lley at Court House
it's for the best that ·I leave.
Warren Local a t Ravenswood
Greenup at Por tsmouth
" Cincinnati has been good
N i tro at Pt. Pleasant
to me, no doubt about it. But
Saturday 's games :
there's no sense in going
Ja ckson at Well ston
th rough any more hassle,"
Galnpolis at Wa11erly
Hill sbor o a t Cou rt House
the 34-year..,ld Bacon said .
Athens at Mari etta
" I'm .disappointed ove r our
season.
When yo u have the
SEOAL RESERVES
talen t like we have on
TEAM ,
W. L P OP
Wa11erl y
5 2 319 236
defense, you. don 't have to do
Gallipolis
5 2 275 239
a lot of different stuff. Jus t
Athens
5 3 384 344
play ball. "
Ironton
5 2 297 278
Wei tston
5 3 386 355
Logan
4 4 307 311
Jackson
M eigs

1 6 197
o B 276

gomder."

3

2

178

200

~eigs

1

~

149 214

Jackson

0 6 2.43

TOTALS
Jan. 19

NOW OPEN

HARDWARE
HEADQUARTERS
Hammers, Saws,
Screwdrivers, Hatchets,
and

MUCH, MUCH MOREl

$

By KENNETH R. CLARK
United Press International
ZIPPER ZAPPED: Bestselling author (:ael Greene says
New York subway cars sport posters with far more raunch
th"': the ~nes advertising her oovel "Blue Skies, No Candy" shes Indignant that transit authorities have ordered tbem
removed. The ads for her novel show a woman's hand tugging
at the ztpper on a pair of jeans. Autllorilies say straphangers
have complained they're offensive . Says Ms. Greene, "I'm
shocked and disap~inted . If .it's a question of taste, what
about tile hemorrhOid ads?" A transit spokesman says she's
the first to get sore about those.
.

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statebuuse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
stage has been set for another
showdown in'1.he Ohio House
of
Representatives on
collective bargaining for
publicemplo)•ees, but there is
no indication when it will
come.
The Senate set the stage
Wednesday with a long·
awaited and predicta ble
party-line vote overriding
Gov. James A. Rhodes' veto
of the controversial measure,
which has been continually
stymied in the House .
The 26-12 Senate vote coneluded substantive legislative
activity for the week .
Senators planned a · brief
session for today, but House
members were sent home in
. advance of a severe weather
warning, particularly in the
northern portion of the state .
House Speaker Vernal G.

KANGAROO KUDO: Bob Keesban - better known to his
television fans as "Captain Kangaroo" - has been named to
receive the University of Texas' 1978 DeWitt carter Reddick
Award for outstanding achievement in corrununicatlon. But
not everyone on the Austin campus is cbeering. Veteran
journalism professor DeWitt Reddick, for whom the award is
D8med, says he's glad Keeshan was picked because his
children's program " teaches 'a lot about common sense." But
faculty member Bill Anderson says, "This is supposed to be an
award to bring prestige to tile School of Communication . This
is a joke." Previous recipients : Walter Cronkite and Bill
Moyers, among others.

·

QUOTE OF THE DAY: catherine Pettit, 66-year.old sister
of 68-year-(lld retired Manasqu'l,n, N.J., janitor .George Height
after he won $1 million in the New Jersey lottery : " We 've
never won ·a nything in our life and this whole thing is giving us
a headache."
GUMPSES: Joan Mondale attended " Red Robins, " · by
playwright Kenneth !{och, Wednesday nighl, and llked il so
much she went backstage at the St. Cleme,n ts Theater in New
York to congratulate the star - Donald Sanders, who plays
Santa Claus ... Tony Curtis will be in New 'York Sunday to
promote AvcoEmbassy's "The Manitou" ... Billy Crystal, star
of ABC-TV's "Soap," will be in New York next month to
promote Joan Rivers' "Rabbit Test," in which he makes his
fiim de but .. . Secretary of State Cyrus Vance is back in
Washington, to brief the Senate Foreign Relations Committee
on his recent trip to tbe Middle East ... Black militant Angela
Davis celebrated her 34th birthday today with a new job in feminism at San Francisco State

AI

SHOE SALE
CONTINUES

Pomeroy, 0 ,

By DICK KIMMINS
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Voters will be as ked to
autho rize. the issue of $275
million in bonds th is
November to build or
remodel jails and prisons
under terms of a resolution
adopted 64-28 by the Ohio
House a nd sent to the Senate
Wednesday.
The measure has been
before the Legislature for
three years, said its sponsor,
Rep . Harry J . Lehma n, 0Shaker
Hei ghts ,
and
overcrowding in antiquated
prisons had produced an
"explosive sit~ation" which
d emanded legislative

action.
Most of the funds, $160
· million, would be generated
in a new bond issue. Tbe
remain~ng $115 million would

GINO'S

••WALK

THE S'H OE BOX

.•• .-••RUN
TO .OUR

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

OF MASON
PHONE 773-5536

WEtRE CONTINUING OUR GREAT JANUARY SALE TO BRING YOU
THESE GREAT SAVINGS

E.

SALE
CONTINUES

l6 l6 !344 \344

SALE$599
FOR THE PAIR

Pel. Cotton

TWIN

P. CASES

Reg • .$3.99 to $6.49

$799
~~-~5 s12 99

Polly Filled

oe • •• • • •

~3.33

FAMOUS BRAND

To help deliver depe ndable pe rformance, th is Frigidaire Heavy ·
Duty Washer has a heavy duty
motor a nd o ther compo nents used
in Frigidaire Commerc ial Washers . II keeps the sh&lt;Ipe and strEttch
in kni ts longer with the gentle
wash action o f th e Fr ig idaire
Knits cycle, helps keep wrinkles
o~t of permanent press items wi lh
3 Perm~nent Press Wash cycles.
Team it up with the big-load drying capaci ty of t he Frig idai re
Dryer. It lets you dry as much as
a n 18- lb . load all at o nce,and pr(lvides te nde r care for everything ·
fro m deli cates to denims.

.s6oo

SALE
TO

Reg. $17 , 95 to $39.95

SALE

$17

00

to

GIRLS

COATS ·&amp;JACKETS
PRICE .'"-

Y2
'

1

FlATTER

B~~c~RESSES

1/2 PRICE.

•a.oo

'14.88

LA

Reg. S1U5 to $64.95

TO

GIRLS$6.95
DRESSES
to 513.95

SALE

6 c yl. , au1tlma tlc.
N A OA WhOlesale
r 52675 .00
Ouf- Sale Pric:e

Miss Wonderful

Reg. 52.49 to 56.49

, FLORIST

·PH. 992-2644

SALE

352 E. Main, Pomeroy
Your FTD Florist

. , . . TO $444

MEN'S SUEDE LINED
LUG SOLE BOOTS
'10.00

SALE

Good transportation .

NADA Wholesale
$825 .00
Our Sale Price

'495

1971 Chevrolet
Monte Carlo
NADA Wholesale
$1025.00

Our Sale Price

1975 Chevy
Nova LN
Loaded.!

NADA Who.losa te

sms.oo

Our Sale Price

'2525

'1

Nova

Reg. $10.96 to 529.95

1974 Subaru
2 Door 0/l
Air conditioning.
NADA Wholesale

19~4

Toyota

Corolla
_. cyl. •. 4 spe.ed .

NADA Whote•ate
$1!75.00 "

11325 .00

Our Sale Price

Our Sale Price

'1325

'1375

NADA Book Prices quoted are average lrstde,·ln -values ot more
kllown as Wholesale.

OTHER MODELS AT REDUCED SALE PRICES

SWEATERS

76 PACER, WasS3495 •••••••••••• •••• ••• •••• ••• .•••• ••••••••••• NOWS3195
75 CH EVE LL E, Was $3295.... .. ........ .. .. ........ .... . ..... NOW $2895
74 COMET, Wi!s 52995 ....... . . ...... ..... . . ......... ... . : ..... NOW$2595
73GRAND PRIX, WasS269s ............... . . .... ......... .. . NOW$2395
75 Econoline Club Wagon, Was $3995 •••••••••••••••• ••••• ••• NOW $3795

Reg. $~::~ $12.95

I

We Also Ha'!l'el

'
Completely Washable
Reg. $4.50

SALE

•2399

1971 Chevy

'24.95

HOUSESHOES

BAD WEATHER CAN
BENEFIT YOU!!

1976 Dodge
Dart

r.._-:-'-:-----;r---'4_.i._6__to_'9_;•..;;,50.:,..,..-4--'.=.;;'·" to •a.66
GIRLS TOPS

•
a

'7

TO

L

Due to the recent heavy snow fa lis, our used car business
has been affected drastically. As result we at Riverside
V.W.-AMC-Jeep are prepared to sacrifice our inventory
in order to clear our lot.

Y2 OFF REG. PRICE

COATS &amp; JACKETS.

SALE

Reg .

By Connie, Thorn MeAn

BOYS

JACKETS &amp; COATS
~~

no disagreement that some
framewo rk for colle ctive
bargaining is desperately

WOMEN'S DRESS
&amp; SPORT SHOES
&amp;

SALE
'

H
E

THESE CARS PRICED AT OR BELOW WHOLESALE

.-..... .-.NE

Reg . $6.50 to $11.00

ALL
REASONABLY
PRICED

~~i~i;e!ve~;c~~;i~~ ~~~

GROUP

JACKETS &amp; COATS

1ng disputes.
Van Mrter . warned that
" the one -sl d•d binding
arbitralion in this bill is going
to cause more strikes, and
you know ·it ." He also said
U1at if the measure were to
become law, U1e voters of
Ohio would repeal it .
"This is not going to be a
monster Iilli! w1ll destroy
Ohio," retorted Ocasek. " it 's.
time we ~ave first -dass
dtlzenship to th e. pub lie
emp loyees of this great
stale."

state this year, there can be

Reg . $5.95 to $18.00

GOWNS &amp; PJ'S .

govenunents veto power over
arbitration awards.
But Sen . Thomas A. Ven
Meter, R-Ashland, defended
the governor's veto and said
the Legislature should have
considered a Republican
alternative offered early last
year.
Senate Preoidenl ProTemporeOJiverOcasek,D-Akron,
said that proposal was too
weak, adding it would require
labor and manaKemenl only
to "meet and confer" without
setting a timetable for re_solv-

solving labor disputes in the
public sector.
1
"With strikes by pub ic

WRANGLER TOPS

16 oz. Fiber Loft •••••••.'1.33

Reg . $12 .00 to $34.00

The bill would repeal the 31year old Ferguson Act
barring · strikes by public
employees and set up
negotiating procedures for
U1e 500,000 workers serving
state and local government&amp;All except public safety
forces would be allowed to
strike as a last resort.
Public health and safety
workers would have binding
arbitra tion as a fiD81 step,
with a wards subjec t to
·
ratification
by
lo cal"
government units .
Sen . Harry Meshel, DYoungstown, lau nc hed a
heavy attack on news
,editorial writers for not fully
explaining the provisions of
the bill .
He said in some cases· they
were misled by ''slanderous''
direct mail campaigns from a
pair of "rig ht-to-work "
organ iz'atio ns in Virgini a,
which Meshel call ed " racist,
rig htwing , money-raising
front groups.~'
"Strikes will conttnue with
or without lhis law , with or
without 30 laws, because of
the nature of human
co nflic t,'' said Meshel in
support of his bill . "Thi s bill
merely reduces and potential
for such conflict ."
Opponents of the measure
ha ve pointed to ward a
firefi ghte rs' st~ike in Dayton,
a
police
walkout
in
Springfield and a teachers'
· strike in Ca nton as examples
of why public · employees
should not be given the right
to strike.
Meshel argued that these
incidents instead show a need
for a new mechanism for

MANY STYLES

Bl x90 ..... . ....... .

needed, " he satd.
" Few people approve of or
enjoy public employee
strikes, but no rational
person expects strlkes to go
away or magically disappear
merely by burying our heads
in the sand to avoid
confronting , the
to ugh
issues, " said Meshel.
He
said
majority
Democrats
had
made
a cc om mod at ions by
eliminating the right of police
officers and firefighters to
strike and by giv ing loca!

2.

JANUARY

90xl08 ..... ... ............ •3.99
0.

-$50 million for grants to
local governments on a twoforone matching basis for
local adult detention and
correc t ion fa ciliti es as
determined
by
the

Reg. $10-95 SALE

'366 - '266 - '211

QUILT BATTS

SHIRTS

SPORTSWEAR

~

FULL

so

institutioris.

take it up,''. said House
Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr.,
O-New Boston. "We won' t
bring lllo the floor until we
have the votes ."
11 three-lifths majority is
required to override the veto
of a governor, and it has been
reported that majority
Democrats favoring the
legislation are three votes
short of the 60 they need.
Rhodes' veto on a similar
measure was sustained in the
House 26 monthS ago because
of a lack of Democratic votes
after the Senate had overridden .
Each
time,
Rhodes
canceled the measure sought for a decade by public
worker groups - on grounds
it would be too costly to local
governments and force them
to submit to labor unions .
"There is no right for a
govermnent to put a picket
line between itself and lhe
taxpayers," Rhodes said in
his latest veto message Dec.

FINAL WEEK

COMFORTS

t----8-0_Y_S_P_E_R_M
__P_R--ES~S---+--~--~

.Frigidaire Hec;tvy
Duty Washer
and matching
big-capacity Dryer.

result~

aae

4 oz.
Skeins

Pel. Poly,

million for state

local governments on a twoforone matching basis for
local juvenile detention and
correction facilities as
determined
by
the
Legislature.

DUE TO THE SEVERE WEATHER CONDITIONS OF LAST WEEK

so

'"'~$ 25

Legislature.
-$25 million for grants to

OPEN FRIDAY _TIL 8-SATURDA Y TIL 6

SHEETS ·

be a reissue of a lready
au th orized, but unneeded ,
Viet n am
Conflict
Col'(lpensation Fund bonds.
The new bond issue would
be funded by a new tax of 00cents on eac h gallon oi
distilled liquor - about one
cent per drink - sold in the
state. The Vietnam bonus
bonds are already funded
t hrough general r evenue
fu nds.
" By piling inmate upon
inmate in antiquated institutions, we have created an
explosive s ituation," sa id
Lehman , who led off
arguments in favor of the
resolution.
,
"If we do no less, we .must
provide decenl, s~fe a nd
sanitary housing for those
per S&lt;Jns committed to correctional institutions," he added.
"We
have
neglected
corrections and it is the area
where there is the most
critical need. n
The funds generated by the
proposed bond issue would be
divided into four areas:
-$175 million for state
operated , adult offender pri-

operated, juvenile offender

MIDDLEPORT DEPARTMENT STORE

ACRYLIC YARN

Riffe Jr ., 0-New Boston, also
noted that next week 's
schedule would be limited to
two days because o!
anticipated
incle ment
weather.
Prior to adjourrunent , the
House adopted 64-28 and sent
to the Senate a .resolulion to
authorize a public vote in
November on a $275 million
bond issue to build or remodel
jails and prisons.
Mosl of the funds, $160
million, would be generated
in a new bond issue financed
by an additional !Xk:ent tax
on a gallon of liquor . The
remaining $115 million would
be a 1 reissue of already
authorized, but unneeded ,
Vie t n am
Con f 1 i c t
Compensation Fund bonds.
The House has until the end
of this year to override the
governor 's veto on the colleclive bargaining qill.
"I have no idea when we 'll

Updated jails
·bonds' target

NOW OPEN

•••• DOH'T

PHONE 773-553b

MARGUERITE'S
SHOES Pome roy ,
Main

280

-----~---·

House set to vote on collective bargainin~

were made in iest /'

NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE

OF MASON

•SHOES •BOOTS
•PURSES

Wellston 50 Jackson 46 (ot)'
Thursday's games :
Athens at Gallipoli s
Jackson at Meigs

...

Both Now Available

peopleialk

JUST KIDDING: White House press secretary Jody Powell
says it was all a joke - that President Carter dido 'I really
mean it when, shortly after taking office, he said couples
''living in sin'' ought to get married. The response apparently
was designed to get Powell off tile hook when a reporter asked
him why Carter's new tax program does not fulfill his promise
to lighten the tax burden for married couples. Powell's
answer: ''The president's comments about living in sin clearly

HANES
THERMAL
KNIT
INSULATED
UNDERWEAR
AND
DICKIE OR
CARHARTT
INSULATED
COVERALLS

For The Do-lt·YoUJselfer.

GINO'S

CLEARANCE

Wednesday's result:
Ironton 35 Wa~erly 30

Wellston

PACKER GAME SET
CINC INNATI (UP!) - The
Cincinnati Bengals will play
the Green Bay Packers in an
NFL
pre-season
game
Saturday night, Aug. 26, in
Milwaukee, t he Benga ls
annou nced WedneJ&gt;day.
The Bengals, like all other
NFL clubs, will play only four
pre-season games next
season . Opponents and dates
of the Bengals' three otherpreseason contests - including two home games are to be announced later.

NEW YORK (UP! ) National Football League
players earned an average
salary of $55,288 for the 19TI
season,
the
NFL
Management Council announced Wednesday, making
football players the lowest
paid athletes in the four
major professional leagues.
The National Basketball
Association had the highest
salaried p layers with an
average of $109,000 a year for
I975-76. Major
League
baseba II said its players last
year earned an average
annual salary of $76,349,
while the National Hockey
League put its figure at more
than $90,000,

For
Work

STOP IN·TODAY I

JANUARY

Wellston 51 Meigs 38

OP
247
182
221

Keith Carter's team began a . Kyger Creek hit 24 of &gt;I at·
comeback bid a~ junior tempts for &gt;2 pet. and 17 of 26
forward Von Taylor got six at the foul line. North Gallia
quick points, then came a connected on 31 of 98 floor
l'Ouple of baskets by 6~ Jon attempts for 31 pet . and 11 'Of
Thompson and two by 6-4
21 at the foul circle.
Fred Helms .
Coach Ted Lehew's Little
However, North Gallia's Bucs made the Bobkittens
walk the plank for the second
Minnis suddenly got hot
hitting four field goals to pace
time this year, 46-38. C.
the Pirate rally. Justice and
Cordell led the Bucs with 12
Stacy Winston also added
points. Bruce Gilmore had 14
four points that can,t o.
for the Bobkittens.
Both teams enjoyed a good
Weather permitting, North
fourth P.riod as the Bo cats Gallia will host Wahama
outscored NG, 21-20.
Friday night while Kyger
Four Pirates hit double
Creek visits Syrrunes Valley.
figures . Justice led the way
Box score:
with 18 points, Sam Smith got
NORTH GALLI A (73) 15, Minnis 14 and Henry Jusfic:e 8·2-18 ; Minnis 6·2-14;
McComas 3-l-7; Winston 2-0·
Siewert, 11.
4 ; Smith 6-3-15 ; Siewert 5-TJon Thompson took game 11 ; Shaw o.o.o; P~ i ltips o.o.o
scoring honors with 23 points and Peck 1-0·2. TOTALS 3l 11
on 10 baskets and three
~~GER CREEK t6SI _
charity
tosseS. Taylor Tavtor 6-5-17 ; Smith O-l -1;
finished with 17 points, while
Helms canned 13.
According to the charts,

S-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomer.oy, 0 ., Thursday . Jan. 26, 1978

100 PCT. ORLON

TOTALS
30 30 2441 244!
Tuesday 's resul1s :
Gall ipolis 35 Jackson 27
Loga n 49 Athens 41

FROSH
W L P
5 1 316
4 1 216
3 2 242

Elsewhere,
Missouri
downed Kansas State, 65~0.
Furman surprised Clemson,
87~8 . Houston whipped Texas
Tech, 84-11, North Carolina
Slate handled Maryland, 8073, TCU wppled Texis A&amp;M,
66-59, Iowa Sta te nipped
Oklahoma, 76-74, in overtime,
and Oklahoma State got by
Colorado, 7M4.

LEXINGTON, Ky, (UP!)
- Ken tucky football Coach
Frank Curci, who guided t he
Wildcats to their best. season
in 27 years last year, has
s igned a new five-year
contract, UK President Otis
Singletary anno unced
Wednesday .
Curci 's sa la ry was not
disclosed, but Singletary said
th e fi g ure reflected the
accomplishments Curci has
niade and r e pre se nted a
substantial increase.

329
349

SEOAL
TEAM
Athen s
Gallipolis
Logan

73.

New York Yankees' owner
George Steinb r enner, who
was stymied in his attempt to
. buy Vida Blue in 1976, said
Wednesday he will not take
a ny court . action shou ld
baseball Commiss ioner
Bowie Kuhn approve the
Cincinnati Reds' acquisition
of Blue from the Oakland A's.
But Steinbrenner said be
would be · unhappy if Kuhn
allows the deal. " ! have
• nothing against the Reds, but
I believe that what is good for
the goose is good for the

North Calha broke a 33-33
tie early in the third period
Wednesday night enroute to a
73-65 victory over the Kyger
Creek Bo bcat s. The win
pushed the Pirates' season
record to 4-4, 4-2 in the
So uthern Valley Athletic
Conference.
The loss left Kyger Creek
with an 0-8 record , 0-5 against
league foes.
Coach Ron Twyman' s
Pirates led 13-12 at the end of
the first period ahd 33-iS at
the half. NGHS was paced
durin_g the first l wo periods
by seniors Rex Justice and
Calvin Minnis and junior
center Tim McComas.
Kyger Creek got back into
the contest during the second
period when North Gallia got
into foul trouble. The Bobcats sank 10 of 13 foul shots
that stanza.
In the opening minutes of
the third quarter , Coach

/

Providence sli thered pa st
Ma ssachuse&amp;ts, 50-49,
Syracuse drubbed Temple,
91-66, Georgetown got by
American U., 72-68, Texas
fought off Baylor , 71!-76; and
Virginia surprised Duke, 74- .

thought if we could get the West Virginia, now 6-9 on the
early lead, it would be wugh scaS&lt;Jn.
for them to go into their fourWest Virginia Coach Joedy
corners offense."
Gardner praised the aggrel:iSophomore guard Rich s ivene ss of the Irish.
Branning and junior center
" They're bi g a nd th ey
Bruce . Flowers scored 17 hustle," he said. " That,
points each, freshman Kelly couplt'!l with the fact that we
Tripucka scored 15, Dave played a poor first half - and
Batton added 13 and Don well, you see the results."
Williams contributed 10 for
In other games featuring
the lrlsh.
top learns, Nebraska stunned
West Virginia sophomore sixth-ranked Kansas, 62-58,
guard 11lwes Moore scored 40 No. 8 Notre Dame crushed
points, a record against the West Virginia ~ 103-82, _No. 10
Irish in the 10 years they have :
played in the Ath letic and
Convocation center . Junius
Lewis added 19 points for
CINCINNAT I (UPIJ -

Wilti$ Q. o.Q; Helm• S-3, 13;
Thompson 10·3·23 ; Westfall 2.
5.9 ; Springer 1·0·2. TOTALS
24-17-65.
By quarrers :
North Galtta 13 20 20 20-73
Kyger Creek 12 16 16 21~5

Fine Selection of
Hallmtrk Cards

~~~
~

DUTTON DRUG CO.
122 N. 2nd Ave ,

Middleport,

o.

Due to the nature of this sale all prices will be in effect for
a limited time only.
3:00P.M. Thursda.y , l-26-78-5:00 P.M. Sat., 1-28-78

heritage house
OF SHOES
Open Monday 1hru Thursday &amp; Saturday
9:30 to 5:00. Friday 9 : 30 to 8:00.
.
N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport,

o.

•

�••

•

6-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursday, Jan . 26, 1978

mad~

Sewers propoSal
WASHINGTON (UPI) President Carter has been
presented a proposa l for a
multibillion-dollar public
works program to rebuild the
sewers of the nation's big
cities, according Ill Cleveland
Mayor D!'nnis J. Kucinich,
who presented the written
package and said the
president had no inunedia te

Carter were the mayor's
wile , Sandy, and Sens .
Howard M. Metrenbaum, (}.
Ohio, and John H. GleM, (}.
Ohio. Metzenbaum arranged
the meeting.
The public works proposal,
Kucinich told Carter, would
go !ar ·toward reducing - as
well as curbing - flooding
and water pollution problems
comment.
in the cities involved.
" I'll wait," Kucinich said. ' Such a program in
~~we have to give the
Cleveland would cost · $1.5
administration a chance Ill million, the mayor said,
look at it and do something quickly adding that it also
with the proposal. "
would provide jobs for 18
During his 10 minute months for the city's 12,000
conference with Chrter unemployed and unskilled
Wednesday at the White laborers.
House, Kucinich also told the
As for the people mover,
president why he turned Kucinich said Carter was the
down the $41 million redera1 one who brought up the
grant from the federal subject.
government Ill build a people
·· J guess everybody in
mover
.fn
downtown Washirrgton has heard about
Cleveland. The president also Ulat, 11 Kucinich related. 11 1
received a key to the city indicated to the president
from Kucinlch , 'Who also that the people of Cleveland
issued him an invitation Ill are responsible when they get
visit Cleveland.
federal money . .
"I think the president was
"They don't want $41
impressed with the needs of million for a people mover,
Cleveland," the 31 •year-&lt;~ld but we do want it for jobs/'
mayor said. 11 And, I'm added the mayor, who will
hopeful he'll be able to help remain in Washington until
my' cit)'."
Friday for meetings with
Besides Kucinich , govenunent and Democratic
attending the session with party ol!icials - hoping to

anniversary of the general's

··'

landing at Leyte in . the
Philippines on Oct. 20, 1944.
The fulfillment of the "I
shall return" vow was
documented by a ·battery of
cameramen and MacArthur
chose a picture. to distribute
to those who took part in the
event. He· wrote on the
pictUre, "I have returned."
The problem is, MacArthur
chose a picture of the wrong
island, Conkovich said.
"The picture he wrote oo
was •taken Jan. 9 at Lingayen
Gull," Conkovich said. "That
was one o! four •Philippine
landings, but Leyte was the
first.
"I went to Norfolk ·. with
Paul Barnett, the Navy
coxswain wbo piloted the boat
.that
took
MacArthur
ashore," ConkoViCh said. ''He
pointed out the error to me."
Conkovich, '54, a Navy
signalman who spent two
years in the Philippines, said
the incorrect picture hangs in
the Archives at Norfolk and
was distributed to generais,
dignitaries and politicians
who attended the anniversary
celebration. Mrs. MacArthur

11

EVerything is wnr1rl"a

T

Likely radiation
contact reported
By. JOHN USHER
OTTAWA (UPII
A
Canadian aircraft searching
for radioactive faUout from a
· crashed Soviet spy ·satellite
reported a "highly probable

contact" in a remote region

o! northern Canada, a
Def~nse
Department
spoke !lilian said today.
"A Canadian Forces C-130
Hercules engaged in the lowlevel search for radiation
from the re-..ntry of a Soviet
satellite has reported a highly
probable contact about 200
miles eastnortheast of Fort
Reliance in !he Northwest
Territories," Capt. 8ud
McDonald said.
The Defense Department
said the area did not appear
to be inhabited.
The
combined U.S.Conadian crew aboard the
even got one.
plane expressed "a high
.. It's been in several war degree of competence" the
books, D. Clayton James' radiation was not from a
famous MacArthur natural source, McDonald
biography, and has appeared said.
twice in Life magazine, n he
"However, full information
said. " In fact, Time-Life is · must await post-(li•ht
putting out another World
War II book and plans to use
the picture again. That would
be three times they used the
mistake.''
Conkovich has signed BUTCHER KNIVES
COLUMBUS (UP!) -Rep.
statements supporting his
claim from five people who Harry C. Malott, (}.Mt. Orab,
took part in the landing- Blll tllld his Ohio House
Dunn, a CBS correspondent; colleagu~ Wednesday that
Barnett, pilot of the boat; he had a solution for prison
Carlos Romulo, then minister overcrowding.
Noting that two Southern
of foreign affairs for the
Ohio
Correctional Facility inPhilippine . government;
mates
had eut off the end of
F'rancis
Savelron,
MacArthur's top aide; and their fingers to dramatize
Gaetano Fail)asce, a retiied their request to renounce
United
States
major who Was chief their
photographer for the expedi' citizenship, Malott suggested
the state send butcher knives
lion.
He noted . Savelron and to the Lucasvllle prison so
Romulo doo't even appear in "they could cut off their own
the photo taken at Lingayen heads."
Malott's comments CB:ffie
Gulf. He also said Philippine
President Sergio Osmena during debate on a resolution
took part ·in the historic to authorize a $275 million
landing, and is missing in the bond issue Ill build new
prisons.
incorrect picture.
"He's the No. 1 Dative son
of the Philippines and he's not
even in the picture marking
the
famous
landing,"
Conkovich said. "That could
start
some
kind · of
. revQlution."
Conkovich said he isn't
trying to soil the memory of
MacArthur, be just wants to
set histor)'&lt;o'ltraight.
"Why prolong the mistake?
It's historically . inaccurate
and not fair to those who took
part in the tanding," he said.
" Just because MacArthur
wrote on the picture doesn't
• make it right."

MacArthur had
•
wrong ptcture
By TOM UHLENBROCK
GRANITE CITY, Ill. (UPI)
- Steve Conkovich has some
unsettling news to mark the
birthday of the late Gen.
Douglas MacArthur, who
would have been 98 today.
Conkovich says he has
proof MacArthur made an
embarrassing mistake when
documenting his famous
return tQ th~ PhUippines.
Conkovich said he learned
of the error when visiting the
MacArthur Memorial
Foundation at Norfolk, Va.,
in 1974, for ceremonies
commemorating the 30th

woo the Democrat. into think,II
holding their 1980 convention
The
mayor's
wife.
in Cleveland.
· obviously elated by her visit
Also during his chat with Ill the Oval Offiee, said : "It
!he president, Kuclnich was was beautiful: He (Corter)
asked by Cader what seemed very relaxed. He told
Cleveland's biggest problem Dennis he was pleased to
was.
.
meet a young man with fresh
''Unemployment ,•.... Kuciideas."
nich answered, adding that it
Kucinich and hi s wife
particularly affects youth . Friday plan to go to Los
'
Angeles, ·where the mayor is
"How are you getting along to address the annual
'with City Council members?" meeting o! the American
Corter asked.
Zionist Federation Sunday
"OK," Kucinich answered. night.

analysis ol the data which
began as soon as the aircraft
returned to Canadian Forces
base Namao, just north of
Edmonton at 2:45a.m. EST.
Post analysis will take approximately £our hours."
Once the analysis is
completed further action will
be decided, McDonald said.
" At this time, the
operational plan devised by
the Canadian Forces is to
deplay a smaU team of U. S.
and Can~dian radiation
survey and health physics
personnel to Baker Lake,
.Northwest Territories,'' he
said.
Earlier, authorities said
the· air mass over northern
Canada where the nuclear·
powered satellite apparently
burned up in the atmosphere
Tuesday was moving south
toward the northern Great
Lakes area and U. S. and
Canadian Sniffer planes were
expanding their search lor
contamination into the United
States.

.

DUBUQUE , Iowa (UP! ) - Four women
with a combined total of nearly 80 years
experience playing bridge claim they all
were dealt perfect hands in a game Monday
night - a !eat that bucked incredible ndds.
And the women were so shocked, they
didn't play the hand.
The Dubuque Telegraph Herald detailed
the occurrence In a copyright story Wed·
nesday. The four plaxers told the newspaper
the deal· ol the cards was legitimate and
there was no way the deck could have been
arranged beforehand.
According to the paper, the perfect hands
- meaning the 13 cards of every player
were of the same suit - were dealt by Carol
Gehl to her partner, Jean Reiter, and their
opponents, Margaret Moran and Norjfla
Kurt. It happened in the first hand of their
game at Mrs. Reiter's rural home near
Peosta .
Mrs. Gehl had 13 clubs, 1\!rs. Moran , who
has been playing bridge for 47 years, had 13
spades, Mrs. Reiter 13 hearts and Mrs. Kurt
was dealt 13 diamonds, the Telegraph
Herald quoted the women as saying.
The newspaper did some re~PAr('h nn the

COVINGTON, KY. (UP!)
matter and reponed the t;mnness Book of
- Some 57 FBI field offlees
World Records say such an occurrence are
will soon receive photographs
more than two octillion to I.
and information about
To
be .e xact,
it
would
be
missing 5-year-old Keith
2,235,197,400,895,366,368,301,559,999 to I.
Holliday , an FBI spokesman
Fut1hermore, Guinness says if aU the
in Covington has announced.
people in the world were divided into bridge
Michael Holliday , Keith's
foursomes, and each group was dealt 120
father, had requested FBI
hands a day, a perfect deal could be ex'intervention
in
the
pected only once every 62 trillion years.
mysterious case. The boy
"I shuffled the cards, Mrs. Kurt cut the
disappeared Dec. 21 and
deck, I dealt and what happened after that
Kentucky State · POlice have
was unbelievable," Mrs. Gehl said. "I said,
been unable to turn up any
'Something has to be wrong!' "
substantive leads, despite an
Mrs. Moran said she was dubious because
intensive investigation.
it was the first band of the night, but added
"Th.is does not mean the
the deck was an old one and Mrs. Reiter said
FBI
is intervening in the
no one who had been in the house that day
case," State Police Lt. John
knew enough about bridge to rig the deck.
Akers said Wednesday, The
"I asked Mrs. Gehl about her shuffling
cannot' formally
method and everything," she told the paper . . FBI
intervene in !he case because
" It all checks out."
there is no proof the boy was
Mrs. Reiter said nobody had handled the
kidnapped, Akers explained.
deck since she used it last Thursday.
"I'd put them away in my bedroom and
nobody touches my bridge cards," she said.

!

!

•••
•'

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••
•

••
••
4•

J;-iant barge firm hit hard

•

•

By United Press International
Wednesday
Football
Los Angeles - Quarterback
Joe Namath announced his
retirement alter 13 seasons .
New York Jets - Announced
the signing of nine free agents :
Wide receiver Gerald Butler ,
cornerback Mike Harris, IC!Ck ·
les Mike Hughes and John
Rosette, safety W illie Jenkins .
defen si\le end Roose\lelt Kelly ,
quarterback Sieve ,Mathieson
and
running
backs Robert
Morgan dnd Darnell Powell
Chicago - Signed tr ee .agen t
salety Doug Plank .
College Foo1ball
Wake Forest Announced
the· hir ing of Marty Galbraith
and Ray Sherman as assistant
coaches .
Baseball

\\j[

Texas

~

"

Reg. 169"'

'•

,
I

l'\)JllC ,

Uy II dPn und

~ue

Hottel

21 - 1580

ooo

Reg. 42995

'

40 chanrH~Is • 3 120 AM . upper and lowe r s1de.banci
ct,&lt;Jnnel s LED reao,ou t. dlglli:'ll clo ck PO SIIIV e neg&lt;'!

.."
••'
'

[

I

I ·,I ·

t1ve g r o und

...

CB WALKIE
TALKIE

"'

••'

11!~

"

21-173

•
••
,..'

Reg. 19"

MOBILE PREAMP MIKE

S MW
AUE
23 -601 450/c

Pust• 10 lalk

Reou•res 7V

ball

1195

°

13 19

CUT
40%

OMNIDIRECTIONAL
BASE STATION
ANTENNA

11 - 1m

Reg. 21"

~~~~."~ 3 %19~~~

21?~
Reg . 34"

Reg. 34"

Reg . 29"

lli'H! S

DUAL MOBILE
CB ANTENNA

24?.~

BASE PREAMP MIKE ·
A P IJHiff'S 2 ""A,A

Red Oa:k ................................

Ttl E.

REG.4.95
Cherry Tone ...................................... REG.5.95
Mountain Hickoly............................... REG:7.49
Moun~in Butter................................. REG. 7.49
Brady Birch ........................................REG. 8.48
Acrytuff Walnut ................................... REG. 8.59
I •••••••••••

CAR CB SECURITY LOCK

CUT 28%

!~
:~

science tech nology, und
histury exhibits, pm1il'iput.t•
in •·mu k(•-it and tuke ~ il "
workhsups, und cnjur tin•

('Ulturnl rccsuurcc prof,!rams.

Social
Calendar

...

Reg. 799 '

Hoo~ s

THURSDAY
POMEROY
MIP·
DLEPORT · Lion s Club ,
specia l meeting, 6::10 p.m.
Thursdar ut the Mei~-:s · Inn .
Ludies ·Night to be observed.

•

•

Pharmacy
Kenneth McCullough, R. ·PII.
Charles RiHte, R. Ph.
·
Ronald Hanning, R. I'll
Mon. thru Sat. 8:00a.m. to 9 p. m . ~
Sunday 10:30 to 12 :30and sto 9 p.m.
PRESCRIPTIONS
• PH . 992.2955
Friendly Service

E. Main

·o.,en Niuhh ti 119

•

•
•'

CUT-PRICED AM-FM RECEIVER

95

•

STA-S 2

·Reg. 19995 own
AM-FM DIGITAL CLOCK' RADIO

Pomeroy,O.

923 S. 3.RD AVE.

'

"

"

•
••

OPEN: 7 to 5 Mon. thru FrL - 7 to 3 Saturday
\

39"

AM FM llu tlel ai&lt;Hm
3 -Ill slt:ep S WitCh

2-STA. WIRELESS INTERCOM

27

88Pr. SAVE 20%
U -109

Reg . 34" Pr.

.

95

11 Ill

Each has l1ghlf!d 1aU1;
And 0 111 hliUon~ A C

1

~0I/O

fC

Co nv ~;rts AM r ad•n
tuAM fM112V

.

uos

n~

84~~0 ,',

gr nd

Reg.99"

TELEPHONE EXTENSION CORD

2~.~,

.

Reg . 3"

s~~~~~~~1 5 • 3 ~~(QVHF '"

to

AM . FM

"-' ' ~"lo-u ~· ·"' Sum~ 51 ~1 .. ~

lortd1ny Anl iHV
FM f1ra!

'' '" 'l'"""l"' '

BATTERY TESTER

SAVE 27% }!?.'"CUT 31% 7?.,.~ SAVE 20%
sues'
30 · 11 4 - prnn~ ptd
r~nct plug

Cu !S rgn 1110n n01se
rnstallalron

Reg,. 211 , Easy

•

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

PRECEP'I'OH BETA Beta
pot before putting in the soil
Bclu
Sigmu
Chapter,
and this keeps the soil in the
Sorority,
will
meet
at
8 p.m .
pot but let. the water escape.
tonight
at
the
Meigs
Pizzu
-NANETTE.
POLLY'S PROBLEM
.
Shack
DEAR POLLY - I have
DEAR POLLY - Dampabout 500 old negatives that · ness made the rubber backed
were taken during the First carpet in our den buckle up
and Second World Wars. Will and it was fastened down all
you please tell me if they around the edges. f bought a
have any value or could be us- disposable syringe and also a existing weevils.- El..SIE.
Polly will send you one of
ed in any way? -AVALON
14-gauge needle at a place
her
sig ned thank-you
DEAR AVALON - Of that sells livestock supplies
newspaper
coupon clippers if
course, the subject matter oi or about 70 cents). I gave the
she
use
s
your (avorite
these pictures would r,.have carpeting a :'shot" of contact
Peeve
or Problem in
P.ointer,
something to do with their eement, placed a heavy obher
column.
Write
POLLY'S
· disposal. Unless they are . ject over the area and left it
POINTERS
in
care
of this
strictly personal pictures of lor a couple of hours. Now the
newspaper,
friends you might ask ,your bubble is gone.- MRS. M.S.
DEAR POLLY ., Do tell
local Historical Society or
library if they are interested Marlene that a bag of salt will
in having them. -POLLY.
. help her get rid of !h~ weevils ·
· DEAR POLLY - My Pet in her Dour. Many years ago
Peeve is with needlework an elderly lady gave me this
kits. When I buy one I have to tip and I have never had a
spend hours . sot·ting the weevil since. I put a bag or
various colors of sequins and pickling salt in my flour bin.
beads needed Lo ITUlke the ar· Mine is large and I use a
ticle .. I am sure most people paper . bag but for smaller
would pay a few cents more container little fabric bags
for a kit if each co)or was In could be made for the ~It.
an individual bag. (Polly's This does not interfere with
note - I do not sort them but the Oavor of the food and I
pour out into a saucer and use have found that it kills any
my needle to pick up each as
needed.)
When 'making up a bed with
printed sheets put the print to
the inside on the top sheet so
when it is turned down the
pretty pattern shows.
When my baby outgrew the
loy mobile on his crib I cut off
the cute animals and use
them lor Christmas tree ornaments.- CAROLYN.
DEAR POLLY - I have
Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat.another use for old nylon
stockings. Cut circles out ol
·8:30 til 5:00 ThuiSday Till2 Noon
the nylon in the different sizes
of the bottoms of the pots you
Iiut plant. in. When planting
· Herman Grate
or repotting something place
773-5592
Mason, W. Va.
a circle in the bottom of the

Reg . gu
Must 11111ns

also t~vnda hl c at
Aild10 SIHu:k

Dealers

look for 1h1 s
Sign Hl

your

~

Tests popular
Made b¥ us•

r'-.,.----.
ltadle
~k

ne1ghborhood

PRICES rv1AV VARY AT INDIVIDUAL

•

NOW OPEN

GINO'S
OF MASON

••

PHONE 77J.4j536

'•

••••

NOISE"ELIMINATOR

RADIO SHACK HAS OVER 6000 STORES AND DEALERS IN THE USA AND CANADA!

.•

992-2709 OR 992~11

'

~eg .

••'

M!DDLEPORT, 0.

5-B

49

95

34~~" SAVE12% SAVE

'•
••

VALLEY LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY CORP.

CAR FM STEREO/CASSETTE

CUT

'

CASH AND CARRY PRICES

LAB ~ 52

Reg . 79"

'

.69

STA ~ 52 AM ~ FM

Stereo Receiver
Automatic Change&lt;
• Two MC· 500 Shelf·Size Speakers

lac1ory'

CAR FM CONVERTER

29

••

GOLD LACE Reg. S\0.50 ... .'.............. '1.69
AVOCADO FLORENTINE Reg. $11.84 '9

•
•

·Wa lnut venee r. pust1bu11on loud m!SS . t ape monttor Made 1n our

31-2072

'

CUT 10980

SAVES70

CHE~Tt.n
TOWNSHIP
Tnlstees Thursday 7:30 p.rn . ·
ut town hall .

Value of
old negatives

up to any TV se t 2 or 4 c an pl11y

•

POLLY"S POINTERS
Polly Cramer

STA-52 STEREO SYSTEM SAVINGS!

WatcJrtower Elm "A'~..... :........ :............ REG.ll.95 SALE9.85
~nty Pine %'.'................................. REG.l2.80 SALE 9.89
Silhouette .Birch "A'~............................ REG. 11.95 SALE10.1~ "
Brid~n~~VV~ lfarbo
lA , .
. .
.. 6"1""•
Ur ' ......................... REG.l4.95 SALE 12.65 ''.
Gaslight Red Brick ~·~ ..................... ,.. REG.l7.95 SALE 14.95
Tsuga Sierra 7/16~ ............................. REG.l5.95 SALE12A5 •
PANELS

~

te nn• s. hockey or $Q u as h Pra ct1ce . shoo t
skee t. mov•ng target Remote controls

SALE6.95
SALE 6.95

........... : .................

TV SCOREBOARD

SAVE ·s 40

SALE4;25
SALE 5.25
SALE 6;49
'
.SALE 6.49

Gatehouse Antique .............................. REG. 7.95 SALE6.95
Seafoam White ......................... ,.......... REG .. 8.99 SALE 7.59
Blue Mist .:..·............................... ~.~ ..... ·REG.· 8.99 . SALE7.59

first serve" busis by

troop. Brochures on COS! arc
avuilable to scouts from tht'ir
leadt!rs whn urc rcspunsiblc
for re~isterlng the ~iris for a
camp-out. The n·~i strutiv11
(ee includes Uil lllHit•rilllS,
SpPdal prutotnnns, mcu\ s,
inslruL1.ions, und u patch .
'fh(' cn mp-o uts art' an
opportunity lor st·o ul s tu
experience first huml the

I

95 .SAVE .
TRC·457
$150·

ALL SHEDS ARE 4'X8'

SWISHER LOHSE

·,

VISA

AM/SSB BASE STATION

•
•'
•'
'

JANUARY

BATHROOM

\

In previous years lhe
·scouts have slept in the
Center of Science and In·

60 -3057

The Fresh Idea Company . . .

_____.

T.rrtveler ·s a•d for w1nte ~ dnversl All popular CB fea
tur es Po s•t1ve .nega11ve ground Backed by Aad•o
Shack know · howt

-~

AOD ATTACHMENTS
- IT'S A RIFLE ! ·

) ~f!J~Af

..

go at no cost .

Generation Rap

only take u

sleeping bag, minimum
toiletries, a tvwcl and a wu sh·
doth .
lleglstration is on !t "fi rst

HELEN AND SUE :
About very young teens and pregnancy : Our youngest
daughter had our first grandchild when she was H. My hus·
band was so deeply hurt I couldn't talk to him. The woman at
Planned Parenthood glive such advice as ''too young, too much
responsiblity," etc. No one gave any thought to the life which
would not be, i! we signed abortiun papers, or the effect this
would have on the grandparents.
I found myself loving our future grandchild, and couldn 't
turn him away.
!love my daughter and saw her through the pregnancy. We
got welfare to help with hospital and doctor bills. I have kept'
my promise to be responsible lor the baby. He'll be 2 this year,
a blond, blue-eyed rascal with two very proud grandparents
and a mother who have no regrets . - SO GLAD HE'S HERE
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
Mr. und Mrs. Chnrlt•s
When you print letters from girls who have kept their qabics
Hluke
art~ unuuundng tht!
and done well, you make us who had abortions !eel terribly
birth
ol
their !!nil child, II
guilty.
!;1011, IUuhurd Blukc II horn
Please· sometimes it's the only way . I couldn 't have faced
motherhood at 15, and my folks couldn't take the responsibili· at 1:·53 a.m. on .fun. 4 ut
ty. They have .their own lives, who could blame them? TI&gt;e Jllcnl'lant Vullcy . Uospllul 1
alternative, having the baby and adopting him out would have Point l,lenRunt. (~ruaid ·
meant even more heartbreak for me. And at less Ulan two parcntH an~ Mr. mul Mr".
months along, abortion isn't "killing" : it's scarce ly more than ' {;uy Hysell, tlyseli lim&gt;
Road, nnd Mrs. Wllmu
a delayed contraceptive.· ONLY A FEW REGRETS
Bluk•·· (lllton, W. Vu .
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
.
(;rt~ot-gru ndpan! nts
un•
You said something about the fact that you were a fat baby
Mr.
and
Mrs
.
lll'nvt•r
doesn't necessarily mean you'll be fat all your li!e, or that
Uyscll, Ruutc 4, Pomeroy,
you'll have a hard time staying thin. Please explain. I thought
and
Mrs. Gludys nuwers of
,overteeding in infancy built up aU those extra fat cells and
Guysvlllr.
Tho bahy '""
that's why I couldn'tlose. : ovERWEIGHT
the
Whiner
or
lhe Seutlnl~I'N
DEAR OVERWEIGHT:
t978
baby
derby.
Here's what Dr. Lendon H. Smith, well-known pediatric
counselor, says:
~="'l~
&amp;. ' ..
~c'c •
~·n?o.
.
. ~-·
"An English investigator found that of nine. h•t babies, only x·:s::-=~·····~
one was overweight at ages six to ten . So it gets back to genetic
predisposition to store !at and not burn it up. The fat-prone arc
more liable to have short, tapering fingers, thick lips and 40
feet of intestines (which absorb more than the 20 feet which
scrawny ones have). William Sheldon of 'Endomorph ' fame,
discovered this."
Okay' -HELEN AND SUE

SAVE•70

over river.

u

.., ..

.TRC -424
21 -1522

'••

REG 899 SALE7.59
Natu~l Bii'Ql w~·;; ............................. REG.· 9:95 SALE8.95
.Crestline Pecan "A ..... ·........ ·· ............. REG~ 10.50 SALE8.95
ttrr
,
• B'rch
SPIC8
I
74 .•
;~REG.l0.75 SALE9.25

- .-..

95

.••

Eastland Pecan .............. ;....................

..-..

dot hing and

LOOKING TOW MD~ BETTER WORLD?
RAP:
Wouldn't the world be beautiful if alf bigots wero as ~omiclli
and essentially hannless as Archie Bunker' If all troublesome
students..caused no worse problems than the Sweathogs give
Mr. Kotter? II criminals caused no more suffering and grief
than the·ones Barney Miller and his men deal with? And II war
l~ft us as untouched and lighthearted as an episode in MASH'! ·
Ed
DEAR ED :
Yes, beautiful, if ...
But would you eliminate ''"medy just because it's better
than life ?· HELEN AND SUE

·ouR BEST REALISTIC .
40-CHANNEL MOBILE

•'

PROGRESS

Confirmed the trade

dustry iCOSIJ but this year
lhey will sleep in a rcccnti)'
ronstructt'&lt;l recreation li'nler
owned by the City ol
Columbus. Transportation to
and from the center will be bl'
COTA bu s. Giris arc being
asked to sleep in the ir

~

STILL IN

of pitc;her Gay lord Perry to the
San Diego Padres tor pitcher
Dave Tom lin and cash .
New York Mets Signed
outfie ld er Mike Canon , their
No . 2 pick in the win ter free .
agent amateur draft.

CARDS ·

· Near Stiffler's in Pomeroy
2nd Street
992.3586
Pomeroy, o.

,:i:

•
•
•

NET IS UP
CLEVELAND (UP!)- Net
income of $181 million in 1977
on net sales of $3.5 billion was
reported Wednesday by the
Standard Oil Co. of Ohio,
according to chairman Alton
W. Whitehouse, who credits
much of the sharp increase
over 1976 to the arrival of oil
through the Alaskan pipeline.

"The weather is a little
275,000 tons of cargo a day on
the Ohio River . It also rough now and !he couple of
operates on the Mississippi . tows we do have out are being
slowed by some ice, rut the
and several other rivers.
"We're primarily a coal weather isn't OW' problem,"
mover," said Martenson. said Martenson. "The coal
"More than half our tonnage miners' strike is. You won't
is coal. But now we're down believe .bow glad we'll be
to virtually .zero coal. And, when this strike is oyer."
for some reasori Ulat I can't
explain, some of our other
cargo is down (oo.''
Martenson, vice president
of oper8tions, said his
company normally has 15
tows pushing 13 barges each
on the Ohio River every day.
"Tnday we've only got a
couple of tows running and
only two barges have coal on
!hem. And t!lat coal was
loaded a long time ago."
Martenson said !he firm
has been trying to keep some
ON FINE
crew members on the payroll
even though they have
WEARING
nothing to haul. ·
''Obviously , some crew
APPARELL FOR
members are.not working but
we'·ve got some who are us·
up accrued vacation
MEN &amp; WOMEN
with pay. And w 're
maintaining skeleton ere s
on our tows to keep thin in
working order.
A year ago at this time, all
Ohio River barging firms
were closed down for several
weeks - because of an iced·

scheduled · for junior girl
srouts on Mar. i and 5, and
April 8 and 9. Scouts will
arrive on both weekends at 4
p.m. on Saturday and remHin
until noon on Sunday. The
cost is $8.15 per girl with the
senior aides, leaders, and
accompanying adults who
' take the camrruut trainin).\ to

;:::::::::~:::::::::::::;:;~:;:;:;~.;;:;:;:::;:;."!1:;:·:·::::::~':.::=:::::~.;:::::::~::~:::::::,..;~..~:;:::::::=::::;:;:;;,-.:;::::; ::.:·:·:·:·:-:·:::

•

'

.IUVDIILE
VALEIIIIN

KIDDJE
SHOPPE
'

A workshop for leaders and
senior aides ol the Big Bend
area of the Black Diamond
Girl Sco ut Cuuncil in
preparation lor the t978
Center ol Science and Industry Camp-Out later in
Columbus, Ohio, will be held
Saturday, Feb. 4 from! to 3 p.
m. at the Parkersbur~·Wood
County
Library , 3100
Emerson, Parkersburg.
The
Camp-Ouls
In
Columbus
have
been

j
:
:
•
:

•'

By RICK VANSANT
CINCINNATI (UP!)
Another big impact or the
eight-week coal miners '
strike has been felt - the
world's largest barge
company
has
been
"staggered" by the walkout.
"I dofl'l even want _to say
poblicly how much money
we're losing each day the .
strike continues," said David
Martenson o! the Ohio River
Co. '' Believe me , it's a
staggering amount."
Asked when he hopes the
strike will end, Martenson
said, "Yesterday."
The Ohio River Co., a
Cincinnati · headquartered
firm with 1,600 barges and 70
towbOats, normally moves

Scout leaders to attend
~--..,. · workshop in Parkersburg

FBrwill
·h~lp search

Perfect bridge hands beat odds
of more than two octillion to 1

Sports. "(ransactlons

DOUBLE VISION
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov.
James A. Rhodes began a
news conference Wednesday
morning by introducing
dozens of industry executives
and northern Ohio elected
officials assembled around
him.
As Rhodes called each
guest's name, he asked them
Ill, hold up their hand and
wave to reporters.
.When Rhodes failed to note
that one of his. guests
standing behind him had
signaled his attendance, the
governor turned around and
quipped !hat he was the "only
elected official in the state
without eyes in the back of
my head."

7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Jan. 26. 1918

'10000 TRADE-IN
On All Living Room Suites

MASON FUR.NITURE
FRIDAY UNnL 8 PM

•
'

l'

,

•

••

,'

&gt;

••'
'
,.•I

,,
•

1,

•
''••

'r
~

~
\

••

�.
.
••
Let The Want Ads Turn
Unwanted
.Items
.Into
Cash
.

S- The Daily Senti nel. Middleporl·Pomeroy. 0 .. Thursday. Jan. :!6, 1978

WANT AD
CHARGES
1~ Word-;

'lda)'!l
J d.M)'ll
6d.Hys

r:ach

word

In ~l r mm1·

1.90

~-=

"'

lf'j (OM~ lAX S..,rvl(u"'
f-e-dC•al
n nd ~tole lo~t.eJ. Wanda ~blln

IN lOVING mt.''llU'Y ol uu ' dt•u'
hv,homl ond lolhL•r Lha!l('~
H o b~•!
l/lllnl'blmme•
who

3 .7~

over Ilk manunwn

I~
tia)'

QQ;jl1'}7'j
l id
fiACIN~

ril'port~d th· ~ ht.• J011 14 'I Ql)

wprds m 4 l"f!nts per word ptr
Ads rurmmt: other th.!in \.'Vf\S«Uilv~
&amp;ys ••II De t;harged jt( lht' I da)'

l&gt;L'OI bob loolo.mq bmlo. w ilt. lullCf

01•po• ltnent woll sponr.o1 0 gurt
~ huo l C"11er 'I )ot~.lfdov ot b pm ot
lht•ll bu•ld1ng 111 Ho~h011 f-a&lt;
101 v (hoke guns 011lv

111~1110111!\

along Tho •ood wn t1od
We bl eh t/w ye01 ~ we hod you
bC'I OtE'
Thf' &lt;alllrom God
You arC' olwoy~ "' ou• th ov qht ~
No matiC'I wh011~ w~ g o
Alway ~ 111 our hcaor · ~ b c.: ov ~ Q
w(' loved you ~o
lht&gt;•C' ·~ a l•nk death ton n u l

"'"'

In nwmor~ . C.rd !A Thanlo. HlkJ
OIJth&amp;Mry 6 '-'~ nts per word, $:1 00
nunu nwn CH!ih mlldviifM.'t!.
Molul~

Home st~le,~; 11nU Y11rd ~le~

ure tH.1:epted ooly wtlh !,;lllih w•th

order . ~ t'I!Jii ch.arto:e fur ;ub t'~:~rry 111~ Rux. Number In C11re ..J The Sen·

ltncl

\tU: HAUNt Gun Club Gun ~hooT
""''''Y ~undov olt~llloo n f-oe.:
•o• y cholo. c gun~ onlv A~sorted
on(!OI !o
INCOMi: 1 AX ServiCes Fede•ol
and Stat~ I a•~)
Wollon.1
flu~ :.e ll 81odbury 9Y1 711B

~i&gt;\l t• f

Lo 11c and rememb1·ron ce l o ~ •
IQI ('" E' '
So•• awfully rrHr.sed by wtle
Mabel daughto&lt;&gt;r 5 lr1'\ AlrlmP
01 \d Dono 011d 9' ond( htldron

rhe J•ubll.sher res.:Mies tiM: nghl
h• t!tht or reJt!d any ttd::i (!~mcd obJtX'lt (Jfl.ill The 1•ubhsht:r Will not be
r~pullStblto

lqr more than Ollt' mt·or·

1 ~~ in~rtion

Phooe 992-21 ~

t N THE COURT OF
COMMOJo( PLEAS ,
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO

NOTICE

ANNOUNCI NG the opl.'nutg of th£&gt;
pub l1c occounltng oll "e ol
J.l oge~
Luclt eydoo
l1ren:.ed
public 0C(0Uill !01 OC&lt;OU!l l my
and bookkeepong ~e • 111CC!o ond
~ preparottoll ol
t od~ •ol and
~ Tole IO • •elurn s ot '](,It WalnuT
St M,ddlcpoo Oh 99'J 2b0o
~au• 1o by appomtmen t

BOBBY J . RUPE and

"

ARTHUR GENI-IE IMER ,
Res1 dcnce Unll no wn

Momi&lt;•y
Noon on S&lt;tturdit)'

Tuesd1:1y
thru Fr1d11y
4P M

t.he day before pub lit at tun

Sunduy ·
4P M

Fr1d11y afternoon

BOWLING
Pomeroy Bowling Lane
Tuesdav Triplicate
January 3, 1978
Standings

Pis.
20
16

Team
Sh amro ck Mot el
Roy a I Cr own Co la
Oav1d Bn ck les •
General Con t ra ctor
Mark V

12
12

Royal Oak Park

8

Franc rs Flonst
4
High individual game
Belfy Smi th 207 ; Ma )(i ne
Dug an 182 . Bev er ly H ensley

El at ,
Dl'hm danh .
Case No . 16,6H
N OTIC E
SERV ICE BY
PUBLICATION
Ar thur C.e rH'IC1mcr . whose
place ot r es.cten ce 1S unknown
and who se l.lst address 1S
unknown anc;l the unknown
11C•r s. d!'v1sees. legatees ,
dJstr,bu tees , adm,nostrator s
e~n d
c • ecutors . If any , ol
Arthur Gcnhctmer , dCc('ased ,
whose names Clnd places ol
I'C Si den c e &lt;tre unknown a nd
c a n not
wtHl
re.:tsonab l e
dl l,qcnce be asce rl a tnt!d .
Wlll1a111
Sct'1 m1dl , whos e
pla ce ot r es1den ce 1S unknown
and wtlosc lust address 1S
unknown nnd t he unknown
he1 r s. dCvJS£&gt;es. l ega t ees
d ,str1but Pes. admt nl!s trators
And e)( ecutors. if any, of
Wdham Sch m id! , r;teceased ,
whoc;e n arnes and places of
rcs tden ce are un kn own and
c an nol
wdh
rea sonable
d1liounc:e be in,cerl ained H
F Sc hmtd l , whose place of
res1dence 1S unk now n and
whose
ta sr
address
rs
1.1 nknown and the unknown
he1 r s. dev1secs. l eg a t ees.
dJstrJbu tees. admtnts lrator s
clnd exec utor s ' ' any , o f H F
Sch m1d t deceased , whose
names
an d
places
ol
res1dence are unknown and
c a nno t
w!lh
reasor) abl e
diligence be asce rt a1 n ed, C
. , Schm1d t . vt'hose place of
r !;'SJdcn ce 1S unknown and

179
H1gh ser 1es - Betty Sm ith
5 10 , M axi n e D ug an 493 ,
Helen Phelps 472
Tea m
h igh
game
Sha mr ock Mote l 468
Tea m
h igh
se r i es
Shamrock Motel 1328

when children climb on them .
The ma nager of the bill ,
Sen. Anthony J . Celebrezze,
D-Cievela nd, sa1d a five-year·
old Fa1rv1ew Park gi rl was
crushed when one of the

contamers -

known as a

" dumpster" - fell on her
DANGEROUS DUMPS
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Under Celebrezze's bill, the
Ohio Senate Wednesday state Boa rd of Buildin g
passed and returned w t he • Standards would have to
H ouse for concurrence in
adopt safety standards for
changes a bill forbidding the th e containers, used by

LLSe Of tndustrialsize refuse
contamers wh1ch t ip over

businesses and apartment
comple~es.

STOP IN TODAY FOR
.
YOUR BEST BUYS

1977 Chev: lmpala •••••$5495
4 dr ., 11.000 miles by careful owner . Beautiful whtte
over dark red fi nish , 305 V 8, au to matic , P S , P B , air
conditioned. spare never used , showroom clean Save .

1975 Dodge Dart ••••• }2395
:iw•nger, 6 ~y l , std . trans , radio , good tires. real
economy

1974 Camaro Cpe ••••••
!3295
v.a,
automatic:

1974 Chev. 8'........... $3495
Fleets 1de Ch eyenne cab, ful l c hrome tn m , step
bumper , 454 engine, automatic: pow er steering &amp;
brakes, rally wheels, air conditioning , c olor wh ite, real
sharp .

F15o.:::~~~~$2500

8' Styleside, V -8 engine. automatic trans., power
steering &amp; brakes, radio , good f tres, 40,000 miles &amp;
local owner, needs tailgate &amp; some paint work .

1971 Ford F250...•... }1395
4-WHEEL DRIVES
CHEVY BLAZER &amp;
3/4 TON PICKUP

Hurl} In For AGood Deal

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
992-2126

I

ev,.,nings

PHONE 773-5536
H..Jp \l anted
OL OtH lad y to love
111 ond (Ore to• aged lady "'
Hullond ltghl hou:.ework and
cooku1g no lou ndr v Mo•e lo1
home Thou
wogtn
Colt

H~~PON~Ibl ~

1 4 1107~

~

279 ,95

La rrv E Sp eoccr
Clerk of court ot
Com mon Pleas,
M f'1Q S County,
Ohio

Dealer"

IJ.,fil8 P.M.
~ I

I 12, 19, 1 : ' 2) '} , 9, 16, 61

Let us test your water Free

· Pomemy Landmark
Jock W. Corsey, M~r.
Phone 992-2181

Cellulosic (wood fiber)
Thermal Insu lation

300 Main 51.
or 9924263
8 A. M, lo4 : 30 P.M.
SALES AND SERVICE
11 -9-llc

end baby colt .
8AJ 1353 otter 7 p m

Middleport, Ohio
11 ·9-lfc

BORN LOSER

Change of
Phone Number

~~ ~ BR\Jft.JS,PII.JCX.H~e f..T MI.{
f'i..Aa; I~ IS Mll.llJltS!

Phone
992-7608
Closed Jan. 10
Til18111, 1978

''The OfiJtn1tors
Not Tht lmlbiOIS

h

TANK
CLEANING

Residen1ial
and
commercral.
Call
for
estimate, 24 hour serviee.
Anyday , anytime.

Phone 985 -3806

Jack's Septic
Tank Service
Chester, Ohio

10-30 c ,

HEH-fl,f;HI HaJR!.{ HE'IJPiiC.K I BH?
~ I'OJ'T I..!IT l()U'?

Mf..~

Cellulose Fiber

1\-lf..T rtv~
ltOT 1\-11~
1D co\

IT,

ORBIB.

Blown Into Walls
and Attics

) [J

LAVENDER · •
CONSTRUCTION .r
Syracuse, Ohio

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

ORPHAN AJOIIE-V ACANC1

Estim•tes

HE OWNS THAT
BUILDING·· TilEY
LEFT OW!M' HIM

Phone 992-3993
1-18-1 mo.

mo

H1.4 ·M· M ··~T HE

9&lt;!9 1. 472

MOBilE HOMii repo1r s 9~2 ~~~1!_

!:ILACI&lt; PADDED BAR
w 1tt)
woodg ro 1p top ond storage
shelve s Exce llen1 co nd1t10n .
sso 992 1312

PIAN O TUNING - ~on e Dontel s 13
years of sen.nc e New ph one
number 992 2581
ATT ENTION MARE Owne1 s
AQ HA ~ tu d ser v1ce lntroducrng
To Sou thern O hio Cor toko . sor·
r e ll son ol Otoe Breed for co l·
or conlor mollon and d ls po ~ • ­
hon Phone 698 ·8241 evenmgs
or w r 1te lor breeding con tract
Se lle Echo Quart er Horses .
&lt;10225 SR 692. Pomeroy, Ohto
45769 .

tf.lb5 CHl:: VEL LE 4-dr . A C , 283
eng 2 bbl auto trOllS be ·

ce llenl co ndi iJon. Tru ck topper
~Td E! ft
bed 28 Ill h1gh
742 -2485
2f:l9 FORO ENQ INE and trons. 327
"bloclo. bored OW w1th 12 to I
p1stons Chevy 3 speed trans
992 7759
SElliNG OUT due to il l heolth ·
~ma ll gr ocery slor e and gos
5!0t1on wdh stock ond equip·
men ! Loco ted at Lang sville on
Rou te 124 Very good buy Coli
992·5868 or 742 9045

APPLIANCE

Auction ' :
SPE CIAL AUC TI ON Saturday 7
p rn All new lurn1 tu re ond
olhe t m1 sc
from a store
do.eo ut
at O h' o
R;, e,
Au cl1 on
Me•g s
Plo zo
Middleport , Oh•o
AUCTION FRIOAY 7 p m Used
guaran teed
wo5her
and
dryer , 85 ,000 STU
lro1ler
lurnace deslo. ond lots of
new ond used mer chond1 se
a! Oh1o R1 ver Aucl!on , Metgs
Plozo , M 1ddlepor1 Oh1o .

Bn.Uuiii&amp;oOplm•lilriitie~ :
BU SINE SS OPPORTUNI TY Own
you r own bu smess , oreo
dis t flbuto r lor Ra nd M c Na ll~
Mops No se llmg serv1cn . prt!·.
es tObl1sh ed occoun ts
In
OJes tments $2500 to $12,500
sec ure by mven tory and equip·
men! . Wr ite include norne, od·
dress ,
tel ep hon e and 3
re f erences to Personne l!
N AM 0 ., 3t:n8 M er ! clair
Rood , B ~r minghom , Ato 35213
or coli toll f ree 800-633· 8441

9a _Jack W. Carsey, Mgr
·Ail
Phone 992 -2181
!.===:.....-----=.-:.--:.~.
- -

\'~~ ~ ;:-t~£-=-~
IF YOU ho \le a ser111Ce to offer,
won t To buy or se ll some th1ng ,
oe loolo.mg lor wor lo.
or
wha tever .
yo u'll get resul!s
lester w1th a Senttnel Wont Ad .
Call99:1 2151;1

REALTY
b

PHONE 992-6333
Otftce Hours . 9 A . M. to •I

P.M.
'

Close
Thursdays
Saturdays at noon.

anc

Have, 4 Bedroom, ranch ,
located J miles from Rt . 7.

West Shade
Nice Double Wide 24x56 on
corner

lot

In

Addition

Arbaugh

Including

furn i1ure and appliances.

3

4 Yr . old

bedroom

ranch

baths,

2 112

woodburn •ng fireplace,
ni ce luxur tous kitchen with
range , dishwasher and
disposal. 2 car garage on
1.4 acres.
LOT with c1ty wafer,
electrklty, &amp; sewer . Near
store with 2 bedroom
trailer for only S6.000.

145 ACRES - Two thirds Is
good barbed wire fence .
Some fruit, old house and

barn . SJ6 ,000.
MIDDLEPORT -

Nice 3

bedroom, dining , living
about 22x24, equipped
kitchen ,· inter-com, natural
gas furnace, and fenced
yard. All furnished for

S38,500.
ANXIOUS -

To sell this 3

bedroom 3 yr _ old ranch
home with large liv ing ,

dining

Nice 3 Bedroom bungalow
with basement &amp; garage .
$32,000. 2 acre of ground .
Tuppers Plains.

kitchen
Unf i nished
basement and 2 acres ' Only

· garage

In

Craw's

Subdivis ion . S41 ,000.
Nice small home located In

Darwin, Ohio on Sl. Rl . 33.
S19 ,900.
Have
Business,
and
inves1ment property I n
Pomeroy .
Check with us before you ·

buy .
Cheryl Lemley
Associate
Home Phone 741:-'2003

Hilton Wolfe, Sr.

Associ1te
Home Phone949-25t9

3102 0' {304 ) 772 3227.
Comm erc1ol property opprox. 17
acres, level la nd , located ot
Tuppers Ploms on Oh to Route
7 Phone (61 4] 667 -6304 .
VA FHA . 30 yr fi nancing Ireland
Mo rtgag e 77 E Stole , Athens

ph_~~~i~~--~

..

,1

and

equipped

S24,000.
RACINE

AREA

bedroom,

beam

3
ceiling

llvln~.

colored
bath ,
equipped kitchen, family
room with wood burner,
carpet and extra lot .

NEW LISTING- Large 7
room older home with bath,
naturil gas ,and 2 car
garage, near stores In

Middleport . 515,000.
IF YOU NEED A 1978
CALENDAR DROP IN
AND GET ONE OF OURS.
Holon L. Teo ford

Gordon B. Tuford
Sue P. Murphy
Reallor Assoclalts

NEW LISTING -

Brick,

ranch
type
home,
3
Bdrm s , 1'12 ba1hs, din ing
room. WBFp. central ·a ir,

hardwood

floors

&amp;

carpeting, storm windows
8. doors, low elec: . b ills,
many
fine
features.

SJ5,000.00.
POMEROY -

Close In, 3

Bdrm. , new home, dining
room, leVel lot, hardwood
floors &amp; carpeting. Owner

will help wllh financing .
S26.600.00.
It;, STORY In good
repair, 3 bdrms , nice built

In kll., bath, level lol,
WBFP, good looking IO &amp;
out ONLY $14,000,00.
COUNTRY - 2 ac'r es, 2
story, 1112 baths, garage,
storage bldg. remodeled .
PRICE REDUCED TO
S9.000.00,
BUILDING SITES

Jn Pomeroy,
remodeling , kit., bath . Coli

56,725 .00

for more Info

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
992·2159, 992..1191
.
992.2561

BRADFORD , Auctioneer , Com ~ :
plete Send&lt;:e Phone 949 2487 '
or 9&lt;t9-2(X)() Roci nEt, Oh1o , Cntt ;
Bradford
1

------

'

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR - a
• Sweeper s toa sters. irons a ll'
smell appliances Lawn mower .~
ne)(t to Stole Htghwoy Garage '
on Rou t e 7 Phone (614 ) 98~- :
3825 .
~
REMODELING, Plumb1ng , heottng
and all types of general repair '
Work guorontel3d 20 yea rs ew -

-'P:.:•::'c:
'•c:n.:.
ce:.:_.P.:.hc:
on::e:;.99
:_:_:2c·2::_4:::0.:.
9·c__

..-- -- -- .,.--.,.-.,.----._
'·

SEWING MACHINE Repo.rs. ser· :·
vice , all makes , 992 -2284 . The .;
Fob"c
Shop .
Po meroy ;.
Aut hor ized Smger Soles ond- 1"
Servrce We sharpen Sctss ors
;'
EXCAVATING , dozer . loader anct :
backhoe work&lt; dump tr ucks ,.
and lo· bOyr. for h1re. will houl 1
fill d1rt to so1 l , l1mestone and '
gr ovel Coli Bob or Roger Jeffers day ph one 992 7089. n1ght ·
phone 9 ~2 - 3525 or 992· )232 .

You have
directions
and where
to call
if. there's
'trouble!

PARKA

Week In Review 20: Showdown of the Dream teams

(.Answers tomorrow)
BEHIND GAMBOL

10; So The People May Know 33
8:30-C hico &amp; lhe Man 3,4,15; Wa ll Slreel Week 20,33;

How to teU the price of tomething In •
'German Shop - IT'S ,.MARKED"

Honest Al 's Tigers

3,4,15, M ovie " The Bermuda
Depths" 6, 13; P ilot " The World Beyond'" 8, Keeper
of the Wild 10; Soundstage 20. Te levision . 1984 33
9 :~n .Trial 10.
10 :011-Qulncy 3,4,15 ; CBS News Special Report 8,10;
News 20 ; Un ion Maids 33
10:3o-Monty Python's Flying Circ us 20.
II .oo-News 3,4,6,8,10, 13 , 15; Dick Cavell 20: Lilias .
Yoga &amp; You 33
11 :3o-Johnny CarSO[I J, A, l5 ; Baretta 6, 13 ; Mash B;

2 Turkish

city
3 Poe bird
4 Dutch Wiele
5 Matthew or
prowl~
Benedict
11 Blackguard 6 Heston role
13 Keep ready 7 LaWYer :
15 One : Scot.
abor.
Yesterday's Answer
....-Jr--~.J 16 BaUerina 's
8 Word for an
mainstay
ace pitcher 22 New wine
30 - mignon
Fraterruty
9 Arranged
23 Shuffle
31 Chemical
symbol
in a row
· along
salt
18 Chronicles 12 Took a nat 24 Chanted
32 Peep show
25 &lt;Azy up to 36 Sly trick
r:-.,.----..-:.,.--:-::----:--:-~ 20 &amp;lrving of
14 " Harold
2&amp;
Stop
38 Edifice
butter
in -"
28
Parasitic
extension
up
2221 Ancient
19 Hialeah
margin
fish
39 canine talk
23 Mama's bov,-..,.,............,..box! 26 Enticed
:.-...- 27 Thousand·
day woman
28 Matter : law b--+-+-+29 Man's
nickname
30 Shackle
33 Greedy one

Yep! I even shined
the padlock on
the ,;ecret

-

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

@)

111 111

PUlLINS EXCAVATING . Complete •
Serv1ce . Phone 992 -2478 .
!
t

!

NEIGLER .. S FOR bUJidtng hou se~ .
bathrooms , ol t kmds ol repotr ,
work and whot hove you Guy •·
Ne1gler , Racine. Ohio. CoiL!"
q-49-2508 even1ngs.
MAGGIES UPHOLSTERY. Refinish ;
rouphol stery .
r e bu il ding ~
Beoulilul selec ti on of motenal '
and vinyls , Free estimate . Tel. ;
742 -2852 . locat ion . Solem ,
Cen ter .
~;
-...-'.
NIC INSKY SElECTRIC SERVICE . A_ll :.
type o f wiring and etect~icol .·
repa1rs . 7412 -3092 .
-.-;·1

0

•

35Maxim
31 American

J2 ·4o-Lohman &amp; Barkley 6; Ironside 13 , 1.ooMldn lghl Special 3,4, 15; Mo vie " Wild . Wild Plane!"
10.
l : ..o--News 13; 2:30-News 3; J:OQ-Movle "Crazy
House" 3; 5 :00--Movle " Go W es t, Young Man " 3.

Movie Channel 4 5 &amp; 9 P .M. - Midway {PG)
7 a. 11 P .M. - Audrey Rose {PG)
Th ursday. Jan 26

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Picking up the 9th trick
1'his

0

NORTH
• 972

'A&gt;&lt;
+A 7Z
• A 7 53

Vulnerable · 'soth, Dealer:
· uth , Openmg lead . Jac k of

Here's 'how
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

to work

J NT

Pa s."i

trump It a s ks partner to bid

lead a diamond to the ace
and a second diamond back

E B 0

T 0 I G

A T Y Y

0

Y Y

,\)NLY (;URVIVOR FROM II

BEETNPZOK

R T

T WN

to his jack. West w111 win
with the queen and c ontinue
hearts. Eventually, South
will wind. up with his eight
sure

EBAPEZRG . -

CTFO

NWYUZO

Yesterday's CJ'yploquote : THERE IS ONE TiflNG TO BE
SAID OF IGNORANCE - IT SURE CAUSES A LOT OF
INTERESTING ARGUMENTS .-ANON

'

Copr. 1978 Kinp; Jo"eatures Syndaute, lne.

1

...

--"'""---------...,.···
' ' I.
I

'

1974 SKYLINE 14 x 56. a bedroom , :
totol electr1&lt;: . $7500, 992 -2019 . 1

12-by 72ft~ Mobile Home for sole

:
orr cond,, tw~:
furnished
bedr90m5 , $6,000. Poge St., ,

!-"' ddl_~ _

p

•

li MEAN5 'IOU SllOOLDN T
~-lAVE ,BORROWED THPJ KID'5
Rill~ IN lHE FIRST PlACf:!
MAKE5 ~00 lJ.IINK,OOESN'r IT?

Pass

ways to get a ninth trick, but
the best line must be to sta rt
on diamonds.
" The ordinary player will

tricks and a chance to

tontlnue the rubber .
The expert will go alter
diamonds also, but he will
try a different approach . He
will cash the k1ng and are of
diamonds. The queen will
drop and he will have his
ninth trick .

BARNEY

FREE PUPPIES. Part German
Shepherd . 2 moles nd - 3
female s. Coli 992-6321 oher 5
P m·

bid
that

clearly Indicate the bidder

winners There are several

CRYPTOQUOTES

CAT . FEMALE. l onghoired ,
labrador type. Both
frie ndly
l ov eable
looking pets . 949 -2607 ,

Roth of New York, In ge n ·
cral whe n notrump i s
under drcumstances

South
I NT

South counts to eight easy

hinls. Earh day the rode l ett ers are d tfTerent.

WI NNW,_

TURLEY 'S WRECKER Semce ~
Racine . ' Ohto. Day or n1 ght ,
949-2657

An Arizona reader wants
to know who irivcnted the
Unusual notrump anti what
is it ?
U was inven t ed by Alvin

Nor th Easl

it:

lett er simply stands for anot h er In th1 s samp le ,\ i&amp;
used for the three L' s, X for th e t wo O's, et c Si ngle l etters ,
apostrop hes, the l ength and formation o f the words o;re all

XDBIRF

. ~\c.jj :&lt; rfu~ ~ j) :u~

docs not want to play noSuppose you hold :

One

X 0

line would
overtri ck 1£

a mmor sutt.

Is

~HIP Di5A$Tfi&lt;. ••. ANI7 IM
TilE l.ONE &amp;URVIVOR OF
'A PLANE CRA.?H ! '

, 976
• 10 9 6 4
• Q 10
SOU Til
AJ 3
' K Q2

at limes

WHEN

~ · ITS !NCREP01.£.' ~U 1 RE

+K6 5 4

+ KK 62
J5 3

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-

wa:s

EAST

WEST

+ Q 10 8

letter
43 On the
hoWie
DOWN
1 S,u nk fence

0

. l l:tll·1\

•

42 Greek

cost him
dwmonds
broke :t-:1 and 8ast he ld the
queen , ll would give him th e
same nine tricks as the
fine sse wolJ,ld have if ERst
he ld four to the queen or
three small, but it gave hi.Jn
that a ll important tric k
when West turned up with
t~e do~bleton queen .
an

+

41 Whirl

0

"

12 : 4G-LohmnM

educator

'

.. .----·

12 :0o-Janak1 33; 12 ·05-Movle " Shafl' ' 8,

10 Cheerleader,

FRANK&amp;ERNIE
0

Movie "The Curse of the Mummy's Tomb " 10;
Monty Python 's Flying Circus 33

, ,[1083
• Q6
• J984

ing pit

• ,.,• .,,... c.•.._l._

10.

~ · 00--Rockford F lies

31 Luau bak·

HOWERY
AND MARTIN Ex -,~
covot rn g , sep ti c systems ,.,
doze r , backhoe , dump truck .~
lrmestone, grovel , blacktop ..
pov1ng . Rt 143 Phone I (6 I") :·
698 -7331 .
:·
BATHROOMS AND K1tchens t'
remode led , ce ramic tile, plum -:bing carpentry and general ,1
ma1n tenonce
13 years ex - :
penence 992 -3685
,

m
II[ a ; TOll

I Answer .

ACROSS
I Fabled
racer
5 Gather
10 Male

Apprx . 10 acres, mostly
levet , on paved Rd., water
&amp;
elec .
available ,

S13, 100.00.
SPECIAL - This 3 level
home can be yours for only

Jumbles · FEVER

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Will do roo fi ng conslruc tion , ·
plumbmg and heating. No job
too Iorge or too small . Phone
742-2348 .

POMEROY, 0.

I I I I I I X1 IT

~

dozer . ba ckhoe
and d1tc:her Chorles R. Hot·
fi eld , Bock Hoe Service ,
Rutland. Oh ro Phone 742-2008.

MAIN

Phone 992-3325

S2 1.000.

New 3 bedroom home with

COUNTRY farmland with sedud·
ed woods , wotfn and good OC·
cess 10 Monroe County , W Vo
!51 ,()()() down coB (304 ) 712·

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD, SR .
216 E. Second Street

large

GeorgeS. Hobsteffer Jr.,
·
Broker
107V2 Sycamore St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

~

Now arrange the circled leners to
form the surprise answer. as sug ·
gested by the abo¥e cartoon.

5:3o-News &amp;; Elec , Co. 20.33 ; Mar y Tyler Moore 10;
Hogan ' s Heroes 15.
6:oo-News 3,4,8, 10,13, 15; ABC News 6 ; Zoom 20,33 .
6:31}-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News ll , Carol Burnell&amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8,10J Over Easy 20,33,
7•00-Cross-Wito 3; Cross Wlls 4; Liars Club 6. MupRel
Show 8; Copltol Beat 33. News 10; To Tell The
Trulh 13; Gilligan ' s ls. 15; Almanac 20.
7: 30-Porter Wagoner J ; Gong Show 4; Match G.!~me
PM 6 ; Price Is Righi B; Mo cNeii -Lehrer Reporl
20,33; Beach Gi rls 10; SIOO,OOO Name That Tune13 ;
Pop Goes The Country 15
8:oo-CPO Sharkey 3, 15; Donny &amp; Marie 6.13. Odd
Couple 4; Jack Van lmpre Crusade 8; W ashington

NEW - JUST OFF PRESS! JUMBLE BOOK 111 with 1 tO fKJlZiat II avail·
able tor SI .3S postpaid tram Jumtxe, c/o thla newtpaper, P.O. Bo~ 34,
Norwood, N J . 07648 Include your name, addreu. zip cOda and mike
checks pa~ablo to Newapaparbookt.
·- ·

1- 18-lmo . '

IH A..tT O I?

home ·

HOBSTETTER

446-7833-446-1833

TEAFORD[B
Pomerov, Ohio 45769

Answer: "[

SIILL OVER
'THERE?

5E A VERY
"DI!AR• ONE.

COULl:'

'

---EXCAVATING ,

LIKE NEW -

1

--~

WIRE "•

MUCH ·•·

Syracuse, Ohio
Ph . 992-3993

1163-1nd Ave., Gallipolis

---

A LOT TO OLD

I HAllE AN IDfA
... IS MR. WIRE

LARRY LAVENDER

SMAlL far m for sole 10'1, down
owner flf"!On ced Monroe Coun·
1)1 W. Vo Phone · (304 ] 772
3 I 02 o' {304 J7:.:7c:.2c:.·3.:.
22:.:7.:....._ _

Pomernu
Landmark
""1

1

Tri-State UpholsteJY
Shop

~

COULDN'T
HAVE BEEN

1·00-For Rlcher . For Poorer 3; All My Children 6. 13;
News a, Young &amp; the Estless 10; Not For Women
Only 15.
1:3G-Days of Our Lives 3,_., 15; As The World Turns
8,10; 2 ,oo-One Life to Llve 6,13; 2:3o-Doclors
3,4,15 ; Guidi ng Llght8,10
3 &gt;oo-Another World 3,4, 15; Genera l Hospital 6. 13 ;
Lilias Yoga a. You 20 ; Best of Families 33.
J :Jo-AII In The Femlty 8,10; Crocketts ' s V Ictory
Garden 20
4·oo-Mister Carloon 3; Edge of Night 13; My Three
Sons 4 ; F or Ri cker , For Poorer 15; Merv Griffi n 6,
Gilllgan' s Is 8; Sesame Sl. 20.33; Gomer Pyle,
USMC 10
4·3o-Llltle Rasca ls 3,15 : Gilligan 's Is . 4; Brady Bunch
8,10; Mary Tyler Moore 13.
5·oo-Here Come The Brides 3; Slar Trek 4, Gun smoke
8; Mlsler Rogers' Neighbor hood 20,33 , Hogan•s
Heroes 10; Emergen cy One 13 ; M y Three Sons 1.5

THE S.WIAT£R

IHERBpj
I IC
n
Yesterday·s

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

Professional Service, 39
yrs. experience.
Free
estimates,
pickup
&amp;
delivery
service .
Residential &amp; Commerc:laL

NEW 3 bedroom hou§e 2 bath s.
ot l elec. , J ce re, M•ddlepor l ,
dose to Rutland Phone 992
74 81 .

We have er11arged our
se rvice department and
will service Hotpoint and
other brands.

11 SEEMS LIKE

STORE

FREE ESTIMATES

HOMESITES for sale . I acre end
up Middleport . n~ or Rvtlond
Co11992 -7481 .

SERVICE

MAYBE NOT··· BUT

REMT FOR 1HAT

RI:NT · ..

-Upholstery-

txJ

rJ

1

- Save Fuel &amp; Money-

Free

I

I AUPSE

oo~rr~ JtJo&gt;T
CAIJtT

THREE MON1HS'

Will CARE tor the elderly 1n our
ho me P~ one 992 73 14 ~ _ ~ _

()

Cl'"" .. - o.:-..1-.. ... ,.,...._

Blown Insulation

We
Paint · Varnishes ·
etc .
Wood -Metal- Plastics
Antiques &amp; Modern
Upholstering service
Custom . Professional
Refinishing • Repairing.
Antiques Bought &amp; Sold
Dick Seyler
Phone 992-2798
100 Kerr St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

DR EEL

&gt;1,

,.

CHEMICALS
Strip

byHenriAmoldandBobLee

Unscramble these tour Jumbles,
one letter 10 each square, to lorm
lour ord•nary words

and St. Rt . 7
Pomeroy, Ohio

~EPTIC

TR OMBONE used one
yeor 1n good co nd111on Coil

To Say The Least 15; Gambll B.
12:3D--Ryan' s Hooe 6, 13; Bob Braun c; GonQ Show 15,
Seerch for Tomorrow 8,10, Elec. Co 33 .

1tli~Nl ~'\l ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~\!:!)~~ a

Corner Union Ave.

2HI1110

BU NOV

12 :oo-Newscenter 3; $20,000 Pyram id 13 ; News 4,6, 10.

10 :3o-Lock. Stock &amp; Barrel 20; 11 : 00-News
3,4,6,8,1 0.13.15; Dick Cavell 20: Over Easy 33.
11. 3o-Johnny Carson 3.•. 15; Slarsky &amp; Hulch 6, 13;

Phone

Box 34

6,13

10 :00-Ciass of '65 3,• , 15; Redd Fo-. 13; J ack Van

JOHNIE'S BEAUTY.
SALON

992-2206 or992·7630

p..,...,

99Z·2174

9 ·0Q-Ja mes at 15 3,4, 15; Barney Miller 6, 13; Bar naby
Jones 8, ld; Advocates 20,33; 9: 30-Carter Coun1ry

NOTICE

Rooto 3, Pomtt.,, 0.
Carpet • UphOlStery
Phone Mike Young
At

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
P~

'

MEIGS PLAZA

In Transition

10; 6 :30--Columbus Today o; News 6 .
6 : 45-Mornln~ Report 3; 6:50-Good Morn ing. Wesl
Virg inia 13; 6· 55-Chuck While Reporls 10; News
13.
7:DO-Today 3,• , 15; Good Morning America 6, 13; CBS
News 8; Bullwlnkle 10; 7:3o-Schoolles 10.
8·00-Capt . Kangaroo 8. 10; Sesame S. 33 .
9:DO-Merv Griffin 3; Phil Donahue 4, 13,15: Edge ot
Nlghl 6; Famil y Affair 8. Molch Game 10.
9 : 3o-Emerg~ncy One 6: Andy Grilflth 8; Fam ily
Affair 10.
,
•
'
IO :oo-Sanlord &amp; Son 3,4, I 5J Ta)llelales 8; J oker"• Wild
10; Not For Women Only IJ .
10:3o-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; Andy Gr lffllh 6;
Price ls Right 8, 10. Ri c k Foucheux 13.
11 :DO-Wheel ol Fortune 3,, , 15: : Hap py Days 6,13;
Elec Co. 20,
11 3o-Knockout 3,15; Family Feud 6. 13; Love ot Lite
8,10; Se•ame St 20,33 ; 11 :55-CBS News 8; Loving
Free 10.

lmpre Crusade 6, I, Claudius 33.

Nothon
IIHIIIotor

ONE Choro!o'l&gt; bu ll , 5
cowvs due to colt 3 yeorl 1ng
tolv e ~ 992 7201

-

loalod In

Young's
Carpeting

CA TH ~

O~·..,.OU DID HAVE ONE' POSITIVEL'I
FINAL CALL Fl'tOM THAT ~~~61~TENT
VOUN6 LADY, DAFFODIL OO&amp;&amp;lt.f5 .. SUT
l GOT ~10 OF tlelt. AS VOU 5-AID~

ACE HARlMARE

Superior
Steam Ellraction

Will PAY top dollar tor vscd 5hot
gun~
n iles p1 slols swords
dagger s go lo. orle rnl l"\1 blkijs
Gra ve ly s or who! ho 11e )I OU
Open 12 7 pm , Ftfe s' :hd ~~ ,
Rl 7 M1dd lepo• I ne x t lo
l oun~romol
Spee dqu c&lt;&gt;n
992·7494

H~N~

instructions.

Save 30 pet . ro so pet.
an heating cost
EMper ie nc:e and
fully i nsured
F ree Est.
Cat! : 667 -U79 or 991: -3 815
1· 16· 1mo.

Pomeroy, Ohio
Pomerov 991 -6282

Sunrlse Semes1er 10; 6· '2s-Socletles

Hogan' s Heroes 15.

ALUMINUM SIDING
. ..,
SOLID VINYL SIDING -&lt;
SOFFIT &amp; CELINGS
GUTTERS&amp;DOWN
SPOCIT
Eilsy
slop
by
slop ,

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

PWMBING &amp;
'HEATING INC.

BURROUG HS SfNSI MA rtC oc
count1ng m9ch.ne Has been
undc1 ~Nv1cc con tra ct ond tn
good c.:ondd10n Con be seen ol
The Dotty Sentmel Il l Co ur t
~· . PO!Il(HOy OH

sa

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?

J&amp;L

CARTER

7 &amp; 11 P.M . - All The Presidents's Men lPG)
FRIOAY, JANUARY 27,1971
S:.S- Farm Reporl 13; 5:50-PTL Club 13J 5 :5s-

6·oo-News :14,, ,8, 10,13. 15; ABC News 6 ; Zoom 3l.20
6:3o- NBC News3,4,1 5; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6: C B S News 8,1 0; Over Easy 20.
7:00-Cross-Wits 3; ·' ' Liars Club 6; Gong Show 8;
Capito l Beat 33; News 10: To Tell The Trulh 13;
Gll l l ~an 's Is . 15; Hocki ng Valley Bluegrass 20
Us-Labor New• 33; 7:3o-Hollywood Squares 3,,,
$100,000 Name That Tune 6; Tattletale• 8; MacNeil Lehrer Report 20.33; That' s Hol ly wood ! 10; NasH.
ville on t~e Road 13 , Mar t y Robbins' Spotlight 15.
8:00-Chlps 3,4, 15; Waf tons 8. 10. Once Upon A Classic
20,33.
8 3o-Fish 6. 13; Wodehouse P layhouse 20, Me &amp; Slella
33

•

M081U: H OMt~ 1-'1 Plea
~o ,•• W Vo be~·de Ho( lt ~
t97J !lt oodrno• L&gt; 14 • 04 '1
bed 1o0m
19/:! Oanon 14 • bO 2 bedroo1n
197:1VJ&lt;IOI IOII 14 ll 67 J tJ,oodiOOITl ..
'J both
197') Coventt y 12 ~ b~ 3 bed• oo n1
1969 Stot esma" 12 11. W 1
bcd •oon1

B &amp;

.'

Movie Channel • 5 fl, 9 P . M - The Car {PG )

THURSDAY JANUARY 26 . 1971
'
5:oo-HereCome T~t Brides3 ; Star Trek 4; Gunsmoke
8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Hogan' o
Heroes 10; Emergency One 13; My Three Sont 15
5· Jo-News 6; Elec . Co . 20,33. Mary Tyler Moore 10;

:T'O\IVARD
INDIVIDUAL.
POLICE'
OFFICERSDICK TRACY
INcLUDED.

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

Cu~lorn 17 5U,
1.:1 00 111c., wmch . 01'IV 14 OClO
"" H JJodN~ Ui IOpL· dt:l k ,
Ovll' I)J 000 111 eli;IJO~ ~eiHJU'!t
( olh only ot ter I 'l 110011'
69b I07'2 SO.HOO

f.'JJ;kH'9 up o p•ono '" W AN IEO AUf O 111echonoc lo1GM
area
lookmg for a·
dcolor~h1p
W11 1e So.: lt~:J
1e~po n~1blc par ly to lolo.e ovl!'l
Porne •oy 0 ~14 5169
holonce Can be seen locally
C.: oll credtl •nanogm toileo
b 14 5q3 bb9"f or wnte credll
Wantod to Bu )"
monogm Ath ens Moll Stole
~ l lf&gt;l' l AI hen s Oh1 o 45701
CASH po1d for otl mo lo. es on d
models of " ]Ob,l e homes
Phone oreo code b 14 423 9531
wt1ose
last
address
•s
unknown and th e un known
liMB~R
Pomeroy Forest P1o
llC' I fS . dC¥1SeCS , ICQo;l l ('eS,
ducts l op pnco lor stondmg
diSir•bul ees, admrnis lr a tors
sow t.mber Colt 992 5q05 o•
,lnd e)(CC U!OrS , 11 any, Of ( I
Ken I Han by I 440 8570
Sc hm ,d t , dece a se d . whose
no:lm('S
and
places
ot COI NS CUKRENCV token s old
res,dencco are unknown and
pocket wo!Che~ and chon15
cannot
wdh
reas on able
stlve• and gold We need l9b4
ddtgence be ascer t a, n ed .
011d old er ~river co ms Buy sell
As i a
Schm1d l ' Gehma n ,
or trnds Coli ROg€1 Wom sle'l'
whos e place of residence 1S
un kn own and whose las !
7&lt;1'2 233 1
o:ldd r css 1S unknown and th e
OLD FUI!N II URE 1ce boKeS b•o ss
un kn own h C1 r S. ctt~v1secs.
beds 11011 bed s etc.: c0 111plete
ICQat res. d 1str r butre ~. ad
m,n,s trator s and executor s, 1f
h ouse hol ds Wnte M . 0 , Miller
r.ny ot As ia Schm 1dl Geh
Rt 4, fJ ome•oy Ohio or co li
man, Qe ceased, who se nam ed
99'2 1760
and p taces o f r esi den ce a"e
NO
tl ~M TOO Lorge or too ~m o ll
u n~ nown
&lt;1nd ca nnot Wtlh
re a sonab le dil1gence
be
W ill buy I pictc or co mplete
asccrtamed , M~randa Sell
hcu~e hold New used or oniJ
m 1dl ,
whose
place
ot
quer. Mor1111 r. Fu m1 turo , 20 N
reS Jd ence Is unknown and
1nd ~t
M1ddleport
Phone
whose
la st
ad d ress
1S
992 6370
unknown, and th e unknown
tle1rs . ctevrs ees, l eg at ees, CH IP WO OD
Poles m(u
d JS! r,bu t ees, admm•slralors
dlotnel
er
10
on
largest
end
and e.:ec utors , 1f any , at
pet Ton Bundl ed ~ lob Sb per
Mtranda Sch m 1dt. deceased .
l Or) Oelt vered to Ohro Pollet
whose names and pla ces ot
Co Rt 2 1-'om eroy 991·261J9
res1dence are un kn own ,and
ca nnot
with
r easonable
w1t h
dil1ge n ce be asce rla tne d . GOOD USED tr octo•
h)ld•oui JC 3 pt, httch 742 307 4
A.nna Sc hm i dt Wec k man
whose pla ce o f r es1dence 1s WILL PAY lop dollar for u$ed shol
\Jn kn o wn a nd whose l ast
gu ns niles p 1 ~ t o l s . sword!&gt; ,
ad ar es s •s un know n, and th e
dogger s go -korts. moni b1i&lt; er.
unknown he 1rs . d e¥ 1sees .
Gra ... cly 's or whot hove you
le ga t ees, dr Sirl bU ICeS, ad
m•n ,sl ra l ors and e.:ec utors . If
Open 17 l pm F. te s 3rd 51
any ot Anna Schm tdl we ek
Rt 7 M 1ddlepor1 . ne~• to
rna n , deceased , whose nome ~
Lou n dromol
Spee dq ue en
and p l ac es of r eS1denc~ &lt;~r e
qcn 74Q4
un kn own and canno t wllh
reaso naiJte
d iligence
be
WAN T 10 BUY House or mobilE'!
ascc rt a1 ned
are
he r eb y
hem s "' cou nh'V w 1th some
no l tlled that pla int,ffs ha ve
oueage on land con tract Con
br ough t lh 1S action nam mg
poy dow n poym an l d
each of you as one of tne
reor.onoble
Only tnl ere~ted
d c t endan l s 1n th e above
people need to mo il ml onno·
nam ed cour t bY filing the1r
pc! Jiton on Januarv l Oth
lion to , fJO 8 011. 9 L o11 g~v 1l le
1978
OH .&lt;t57 41
The Obje ct Ol !he pCtJI IOn iS
that
th e de f enda nt s be
r equ i red to se t up ! h eir
.;r lleged es tat e or inter est m
the hereinafter described
properly or be for ever barr ed
HOOF HOLLOW Horses Bu( se ll
from asse rting th e same , and
trade or trom New on d u ~ed
tha i plaint iffS' !1tle be forever
saddl es Rutta Reeves Alba ny
QUJC i ed as agarnst any r:la 1.m,
(614 ) 698·3290
estate or 1nterest o f th e de
fen danls and for suc h o the r
MEIGS COUNTY Humone Soc•e ty
r~ t 1e t. lega l or equ it ab le as
Co rel1ne and odop!Jon Serv tce
mav be tou nd to be proper
992 7b80, 7&lt;12 -3162 992·5427
a nd necessary to afl or d
plaintd t s f u ll r el 1et
w1th
RISING STAR Kennel . Boordm g
IUdgm enL_!or cosl s her em'
Indoo r bnd ou td oor ru nr.
that ~~i &lt;t reo!l l es tate 1S
Groommg oil br eeds (l eon
descri bed as follows
s on,t or ~
lo cdJII&amp;S, Che~ hl re
Th e follow ing rea l estat e
Phone (014 ) 307 029'2 .
situ ated 1n the Cou nt y of
Mc iqs , State o f Ohio , and m AK C DOBERMAN Pins cher 2 mole
th e ·v, nage of Pomero y to
puppies 7 weelo. s o ld . Btoclo. &amp;
ru s! 9922572 .
TRACT ON.E : Fra cti on 17 ,
To wn 2, Ran ge I J. bounded
AK C RE GISTERED
Do be1m on
and descr 1bE' d as follo ws
p up~ Hove health ce rtifi caT e 7
Begmn1ng JIO I •J teet Nor th
w~~ old $100eoch 843 ·3053
of t h e cor n er o f th e Fa c tor y
form erly k nown a:; th e Probst
Furn i ture fa ctor y , on Sugar
Run St reet. th ence North 65
Deg 50' West 181 teet to a
st ake , the nc e N or t h 25 0£&gt; g
SPECIAL CAR bor goms 1969 Old s
Eas t
87
2 3
teet
to
Della 88 wt lh Olr N Ke . $360.
a st ake ,
thence
South
1967 Chevro let Corpric e, 301
59 Oeg , Eas t 175 t ee t to
tu r bo trons m•sston
mag
a st ake . th en ce Sou th 22 Oeg
wheels , CB rod1o , niCe , $37 5
\0' Wes t 66 2 3 f eel to the
Coll742 3010.
place of begm ni n g
TRACT TWO : In Fraction
1977
CAMARO P S P 8 AM ·
No 17, Town No 2and Ran ge
FM , auto . V 8. Cal l 992 3565
No l 3,o t lhe Oh10 Com pany 's
P urc ha se an d bounded and
?f:er 5_30 pm
desc r 1bed
as
f ol lo ws .
...__
Beg1nnrng 177 t eet Norther lv
!rom the co rner ot the F ac
tor y , for mer l y known as th e
Probst F urniture Fact orv ,
STA RCRAFT FAll Sale Mtm ·
on Sugar Run Street : thon ce
motors , 20' and 22 ' Tro Ve !
N or th 65 Deg 50 mmutes
fr01lers. I 8' 5 SJ . 799 25 7
West 183 tee t to a st ake
8u n~hou se $4 ,815 Fold·down,
then c e Nort h 25 Oeg Eas t 66
Sl 700 up We se ll ser'o'1ce ond
2 3 f ee t l o a st ak e the corner
ol a tot now or fo rmerly
quali ty . Opon Sunday s Camp
ow n ed
by
WJihem1na
Conlev Storcr olt Soles Rt 62
Cc n he• m er's l o t
)hence
N ol PI , Pleasant .
Soulh 65 Oeg , SO' East 18 1 f ee t
Ia a stake , thence Sou th
Oeg 10 m 1nutes Wes t 66 2 3
fee t t o the pla ce of beginning
EXCEPT the foll owing
3 AND 4 RM lurnr sh ed and un·
pa r ce l tr om Tr act Two
fu rn1s hed opts
Ph one 992tn Fra ct 10n 17, Town No 2
5434.
and Ra nge N o 13 of the Ohro
Company's Pur cha se. an d
COUN TRV MOBI LE Home Pork
bounded an d descr1 bed iiS
Rou te 33 n o1lh of Pom eroy .
fOllOW !'.
BEG INNIN G
117
f ee t
Lorge loh Coli 992· 7 479
Northertv trom the corner of
TWO
BEDROOM oport ment Colt
th e F ac t or~ . l ormerly known
be lore 8 30 a rn 992 -128B
a!l tne Pr obst F urn itu r e
Fa ctorv, on Su ga r
R un
TWO BEDROOM lro•ler real
Str etO" t , !hence North 65 D~g
ni c&amp;
Adul s onlv . Brown s
50' West 183 t ee t
t t,en(e
Tro1ler Po rk 992 ·3324
North 25 Oeg . 00 ' East &lt;t2 7
tee t to Q stake : the nce South
n Deg oo· East 182 fe et to the
W£'SI S1 de of SOld Sugar Run
Str eet : thence So uth 22 Deg .
tO ' Wes t M fee t &lt;~long the
COAl , limes tone . and col c1 um
W e!'.t su:te o f sa 1d St reet , to the
ch lori de and &lt;:olci um b11ne l or
pia~ ot
beg , nn1n9. co n
dust conTrol ond speci al m•)( mg
tam in9 22 100 acres
Re fer en ce Deed Vol 2~ 9 .
salt lor form e r~ . Exce !r.i01 Solt
Pa9e 27 Deed R ecord s, Me1gs
Works Mo1n Stree t. Pomeroy.
Cou nty , Oh iO .
Oh1o or phone 991 3891
You are r equir ed to answer
the Petit ion wil hrn twent y - CAMPER , $600. Al so
hor§e
CIQht day s after the last
tr o,ler. S4 50. Phone (614 ) 698pu bli cation o f lh ts notic e,
3&lt;90.
wh 1C h will b e published once
each week for Sl)l. su cce ss 1ve
w ee k. s.
and
t he
last
pu bli cation w i ll be ma de on
February 16th 1978
In case o f vour failur e to
an!wer or o therw 1se respond
Let Pomeroy Landmark
as permitted by the Oh10
soften &amp; condition your
R u les of Civil Pro .... ~ dure
Within· the ti m e ~ l illed ,
water wtth Co-op water
tudgm ent by dr&gt; l ou ll w ill be
softener, Model UC-SV J,
re n dered &lt;1Qi1Jn :; l YOII f or the
Now Only ,
rei!('! drrn.'lnrt~;&gt;tt 1n the
pe tll ,on

Pomeroy
Open

O'!o kmg

Phone !614 ) 6'1ti 3?40

IY7b j.QI(O f 0150

,.,

,Crew cab , 6 cyl.. 4 speed trans , H . duty t •res, 61h'
pi ck up box.

Ltlo.t• n(•w

hrucnt~

HUG~
WAll
H011QIIIQ:. ond
olgon~ N1ce lo1 lh''"''"IO\
Rco~ onob lc Coli c;cn 1:t14

n

TRUCKS

"Your Chevy

GINO'S
OF MASON

e-;~~~~'~ ~

Travel top, 258 cu . in . 6 cyl. engine, auto. tra ns .• tike
new t ires. radio , 2 wheel dr ive .

1975 Ford

to(

S'J'J~

__

1974 Scout 11 ......•.. }2895

Business Services

i:( ONOMV lkAClOk w•th oil 01

w,,

CARS

Dark red with matching vi nyl roof,
P.S , P B., air , spotters, rad io Sharp.

NOW OPEN

~ o ur

Pomeroy. Ohto
P la1 nttt h

" ''

t 'or iial ..

WAN li:U

KAREN K RUPE ,
1UR Mulberry Str eet.

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

I

TELEVISION
. VIEWIJVG

•'

l.IS

1.00
1.50

Movie " House of 1.000 Dolls" 8; ABC News 33;
Movie " Wprnlng Shot•• 10.
12:DO-Janakl 33J 12 :41}-Tom a 6. 13; 1:oo-Tomorrow
3,4; 1. 50-News 13 .

'

• I

ur Ultlkor
t'hargc
Cash

Ida)

9-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport- Pomeroy, 0 ,, Thursday, Jan. 26 1978

Olt:K TRACY

WASH 'lORE HANDS
AN' FACE REAL
GOOD AFORE 'IE
COME IN,
HONEY POT!!

+x

+K HXXXXX

' X

.K KXXX

and the bidding has gone one
h ea rt - pa ss by you-two

hearts-pass-pass You know
your partner has som e good
cards. You bid two notrump
to ask him to bid a minor
suit.
·
I N ~; W/Wr\1 '1':11

I':NTT&lt;: ttl'IU SE r\.'i."lN , I

(Do you h.1ve a questiOn for
the oxperts' Wn te · Ask th e
Experts ·. care of lhts newspa·
pet IndiVIdual question s wllf
be answered If acco mpamed
by startmed. se lf-addressed
en velopes rhe mos t mlet eSI·
lng que srlons will be used fn
/h1s column and w111 re ce ive
COPIBS Ol JA OOBY MODERN )

�10--The Doily Septinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., ThursdHy, JHn.

26_.'~"'.·---------------------------------~-----------------------"'l

Scouts -helping

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

throughout the Tri-state area

END OF JHE MONTH SALE

~~!:~.~~;~~~~~:~·r.
his community . "We are

~~:~ ~e~e~~~li~:~ d~~i~ agreed
~~u~e~~~~~h:::
::·;:pi~~
the local storm situation.
to serve in anyway

FRIDAy I JANUARY
27TH THRU TUESDAy. JANUARY 31ST
•
·

1 000
More in
than
boys area
and
•
leaders
the 10-county
of the Tri-State Council have
been performing services
such as picking up needed
medical prescriptions for
those unable to ·leave their
pomes for
andthosesecuring
without
groceries
food ,
All efforts are being
coordinated by the Scout
Council at the Scout ServiceCenter in Huntington (523·
3408 ) according to Scout
Executive W. Robert Cree.
Cree added that incoming
requests are being relayed to
Scout Troops located near the
individual needing help.
Cree sa id Scouting teaches
a boy to "Help other people at
all limes" and the current
situation offers every Scout

EXTRA SAVINGS DURING THIS FOUR DAY SALE. QUANTITIES LIMITED. ALL SALES FINAL SHOP, EARLY FOR BEST SELECTIONS.

0

.

Meigs
Property
Transfers

'

they
can ." needing help or
Anyone
willing to give help, can
contact the Scout Service
Center by phoning 523-3408
and the Scouts will do their
best.
CHILD CENTER
COLUMBUS (UPfi-State
Rep. Ronald H. James, RProctorville, reported
Wednesday that the Ohio
Office of the Appalachian
Regional Commission has
approved a $108,329 grant for
a two-year cOntinuation of the
Ironton-Lawrence County
Community Action . Child
Development Center in
Sybene .
James said that despite
discontinued federal funding
since last July, the center has
remained open because the
sta ll took a 40 percent
voluntary pay cut.
CONTRABAND
PENALTIES
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio House accepted Senate
amendments and sent to the
governor Wedne s day
legislation to set strict
penalties for the conveyance
of liquor, drugsor weapons
into .state men tal health
institutions.
The House agreed to the
minor Senate changes in the
bill 73-1.
The penalties 'will apply ro
persons convicted of carrying
the contraband articles inro
any institution operated by
the Ohio Department ol
Mental Health and Mental
Retnrdation.

Delbert
Massingale,
Emma .Jane Massingale to
Charles Ray Gaska lla,
Maryanne B. Whitt, -Parcels,
Bedford.
Jerry Eugene Fields,
Barbara F. Fields to Leo F.
Young, May Mayle, Lots,
Pomeroy.
Edna E. Shields to Claudia

C. Roush, Parcels, Letart.
Darryl V. Sttimbo, Richard
Hovatter, Sharon Stumbo ,
Gail Hovatter to Gosney. Martin Enterprises, Lots,
Middleport.
Fred Kessinger, Dana
Kessinger to Columbus &amp;
Southern Ohio Elec . Co .,
Ease., Orange.

NURSES' GRANTS
COLUMBUS (UP! )
Legislation · to
extend
eligibility lor the Ohio
instructional -grant program
to students at certain schools
or nursing bas been sent tc
Gov . James A. Rhodes for his
signature,
The bill was given final
legislative approval
Wednesday as the Ohio House

NOW OPEN

GINO'S

unanimously

agreed

to

Senate amendments.
The maximum grant
ailowed under the program is
$1,500. Grant amounts
decrease according ro the
gross income of the recipient ,
less any funds awarded under
the state's new Ohio Merit
Scholarship program.

OF MASON
PHONE 773-5536

MEN'S SWEATERS

WOMEN'S

PAJAMAS - GOWNS _ ROBES

Sizes small thru extta large, for this sale.

Entire stock of women's winter sleepwear .

Solid colors. variegated and sparkle colors.

'12 PRICE

REDUCED 20%
60 INCHES WIDE '2.99 &amp; '3.99

POLYESTER DOUBLE KNIT

Good selection, solid colors and
patterns.

YARD GOODS
So lid colors and patterns, limited quantity .

. '1 ~~~ · YARD

SAVE 25%
CAPS AND HATS

2

pockets. long tails.
s11.95 5 HI RTS ...... • ........... ... • ...... $8 .37
$12.95 SHIRTS ............ .......... ...... $9.07
$13 .95 SHIRTS •••••••.•.•.••.••••••••••••• $9 .77

lined , good select ion, while they last.

SAVE 50%

BOYS' WINTER JACKETS
Sizes 8 to· 20, e ntire stock included.

Save on. our entire stock of men's
jackets and coats. Sizes 36 to 46.

Neck sizes 14112 to 17112, solid colors and
patterns, long sleeves, famous brands.

S, M, L. XL sizes. This sale includes all of
our men's long sleeve sport shirts, knit
shirts, velour sh irts and westerns.

Y2 PRICE

SAVE Y2

MEN'S CORDUROY SLACKS

MEN'S SPORT COATS

REDUCED Y2

\

1f2 PRICE
MEN'S POLYESTER

DOUBLEKNIT DRESS SLACKS

Regu'lar Prices 539.95 to $69.95

Sizes-29 to 42 waist. flares and straight legs;
entire stock included.

Sizes 29 to 42 waist, solid colors and
patterns, regular price $11.95 to $17.95.

Sizes _38 ·to 46, regulars a nd longs .

SAVE 35%

MEN'S FLANNEL

REDUCED 35%

HOME FURNISHINGS DEPT.
1ST FLOOR

SPORT SHIRTS

SAVE
20%
On our entire stock of sheets and

Sizes S, M, L and XL. Colorful patterns ,
regular ·prices $7.95 to $19.95.

SAVE 40%

LlnLE BOYS'

WINTER CLOTHING

Sweaters, jeans, sweatshirts and
shirts.
.
·

Y2 PRICE

pillow cases, quilted bedspreads.

COSMETICS

GIRLS'
DRESS
SLACKS
Sizes 4. 6x and 7-14. Regulars and slims .

KNIT TOPS &amp; BLOUSES

50% OFF

.112 PRICE

GIRLS'

GIRLS'
SWEATER ·SALE

GIRLS'
Many nice styles remaining .

CHILDREN'S
COATS &amp;SNOWSUITS

COORDINATE SPORTSWEAR

REDUCED 50%

1f2 PRICE

REDUCED 50%

JEWELRY SALE

WOMEN'S
WINTER GLOVES

Many nice styles to choose from!

Y2 PRICE

WOMEN'S SWEATERS

HAT &amp; SCARF SETS

REDUCED 50%

112 PRICE

Cardigans. pullovers. vests. crew necks ,
and coat sweaters. Sizes 34 thru 48.

Y2 PRICE

'S

40% OFF

WINTER COATS
All winter coats Included; junior, m issy and
half sizes .

BLOUSE ·CLEARANCE
Women ' s sizes 28 thru 46 solid, printed or
plaid styles.

Y2 PRICE

WOMEN'S

Meigs County
People

COORDINATED
'SPORTSWEAR
Includes our entire stock of fall and winter

REDUCED 50%

,

-WOMEN'S

WOMEN'S
HANDBAGS

sportswear in missy and half sizes.

REMAINING STOCK IS

Save SO per cent on a large group of
necklaces, bracelets, earrings and scarf
rings.

Y2 PRICE

For

OHIO

Sizes 8 to 18, long sleeves.

MEN'S SHIRT SALE

DRESSES
&amp;
PANTSUITS
Save 40 Per Cent on women's dresses and

•

BOYS' KNIT SHIRTS

MEN'S DRESS SHIRTS

pantsuits.

RACINE

'4.95 TO '5.95 SHIRTS ....................'2.00
'6.95 TO '7.95 SHIRTS .. .... .... ... :..... '3.00

MEN'S WINTER JACKETS

SALE I

BANK

BOYS! SPORT SHIRTS

Sizes 8 to 16, solids an·d patterns . long
sleeves.

REDUCED 50%

SAVE

REDUCED 50%

tllME NATIONAL

.•4.50

$8.95 and sg,gs SWEATERS ..........'3.50
$11.95 SWEATERS ....................... -'4.50

Children's blanket sleepers, robes,
gowns and footed pajamas.

RACINE

UNION SUITS

Only size small, large and extra large, long
s leeves. ankle length legs.

Coat styles and sllpovers. sizes 8 through 20 .

SLEEPWEAR SALE

~~~iJimi A Home Bank

MEN'S $5.95 lHERMAL

BOYS' SWEATERS

Y2 PRICE

· Get a head start! The sooner
you begin saving regul arly ...
the bigg·e r your nest egg will be
later! Open one of our high interest savings accounts today!

•

MEN'S WINTER

MEN'S FLANNEL

WORK SHIRTS
Heavy weight. sizes s; ·M. L and XL.

'1.19 SKEIN

MEN'S WEMBLEY TIES

Assorted cosmetics including colognes,
sprays. cream perfumes. compacts,
perfumes and p(Jwders. ·

is the time to start
a savings account •••

-$1,49 RED HEART
WINTUK KNITTING YARN

SWEATERS. TOPS &amp;COORDINATES
-3 RACKS OF SMART WINTER CLOTHES
-JUNIOR SIZES

Y2

PRICE~

PRE-TEEN SPORTSWEAR
LARGE GROUP
GOOD VAWES

PRICE

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT

:ELBERFELDS· IN P-OMER
"{

Thousands rescued-hy
NG ·from homes, cars
By EDWARD DIPIETRO .

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)Nearly 3,000 Ohio National
Guardsmen battled 46-mile
w. hour winds roday followin~

Wet coal
•
IS
still
problem

a "killer stonn looking for
victi ms 11
to
evacuate
thousands of residents from
heatless homes and r....,ue
stranded motorists. At least

CEREMONY POSTPONED
Ao ioductloo eeremooy
for the Meigs Local School
District Athletle Hall of
Fame scheduled lor
Saturday night at the Larry
Morrison Gymnasium has

beeo postponed uotll
Saturday, Feb. 4. (See
Page 3).

six deaths were reported.
President Carter declared ·
a federal emergency in Ohio
after a blizzard with winds
guSting up ro 80 miles an hour
whipped through the Buckeye
State Thursday, leaving
150,000 homes without heat
and electricity w.d thousands
of motorists stranded.
Gov. James A. Rhodes sent
about 3,000 guardsmen into
the field ro aid in evacuations
and in a tear~hoked voice
Thursday night called , the
blizzard "a killer storm

looking for victims."
" Ohio

is in trouble,"

"They're helpless. They're
viclimB. They want mercy .
They want belp and we can't
get to them, " Rhodes said,
his voice cracking. "We need
belp and assistance of every
Ohioan in this crisis. We must
be motivate~ by deep
concern."
The Ohio Highway "Patrol
said 5,700 motorists were
rescued Thursay and 1,200 to
1,400 were still stranded
today.
·
Rhodes, National Guard
officials and state, county
and local law enforcement
agencies expressed fear at
what may be found today
when rescue units reach
thousands of Isolated homes
and cars.

death in this county," said a
dispatcher at the Wood
County sheriff's office at
Bowling Green in western
Ohio. "We have a lot of old
people and kids out in tbe
county without heat We don't
even wantto think about what
we may find ."
The Ohio River was
reported close )o flood stage
at Pomeroy apd one road ,in
Meigs county was covered by
the rapidly rising river .
· Carter's declaration of a
federal emergency means
personnel from military
bases in Ohio W1d equipment
such as snow plows and fourwheel drive vehicles will be
put into use to help restore
power a ~d to get through

-.

. ...

-

•

'"'

. ·--.
•

.

Columbus and Southern
Rhodes said w.d added be
• •
Ohio Electric Co. today
had received many "caUsJor
•
reported continuin] 'difficulty
me r·c y" from helpless
~- iit:···
Y»* ' .
in drying wet coal but Legion meeting
tt"' ' . •
Ohioans stranded in the
·.;. ,
··~" w.~
....,
"We've ' had one freezin~ huge $lOW drifts.
· customers' electric energy vi'ctun' of ~torm
blizzard.
;.,
needs are still being met
c
~·~ •• .t ,,,.._ ...
,.•
through company generated
COLUMBUS (U P! ) - The
r---------------------------~-------electricity supplemented by American Legion of Ohio's
•
purchased power.
Mid-Winter Conference
The coal supply estimate scheduled for Sunday at the
I
· remains at the 55 day level as Ohio State Fairgrounds has
RUTLANDHITHARD - RuUand'sMainSt. was amass of ice and water Thursday due
I at'' .
&lt;
I
ro high water from Leading Creek which came onto the street, as deep as three and one-half
o( January 26, While the been ca nceled, a legion
•
company has received a very spokesman said today.
feet in some locations. Four families were evacuated becalL'!e water in their basements cut
••
small supply of new coal, the
Clayton Starr, legion public
healing'units . Police officer Bruce Davis was on duty mor~ than 24 hours In case the ~i sing
•
day supply stabilization is relations direclor, said adwater required more evacuation. Fire and emergency equipment was placed at each end of
attributed to Wednesday's v,erse weather co nd itions
the town In case it was needed . The creek crested about 7 a.m. Thursday but remamed on
•
'
the street and of course, froze due wthe low temperatures made wors~ by high winds. Mrs .
moderating temperatures. around the state forced the
,.
The company still asks . cancellation. ·
Joan Stewart, village co1iticil president, said a bulldozer would be used to clear the street
after the water recedes.
customers to exercise wise
Up to 2,000 legion members
•'
use of electricity, cutting out were expected to attend the
nonessential . uses where conference.
possible. ' Columbus and
sOuthern urged customers to
call its offices and ask for
GAME IS OFF
-e~~erg'\o saving booklets.
The Meigs Mara uder .
Meanwhile, negotiations Jackoon SEOAL basketball
bet ween ihe United Mine game scheduled tonight has
Workers union and the coal . been postponed with no
industry to end the eight- make-up date yet made.
week nationwide strike
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
VOL XXVIII NO. 200
PRIC E FIFTEEN CENTS
FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 1978
remain stalemated today.
CALLED TWICE
Federal mediators
The
Pomeroy E-R Squad
reported no progress after
was
called
Thursday at 6:31
meeting separately with both
p.ll].
for
Franklin
Wolfe who
sides Thursday in an effort to
was
taken
to
Holzer
Medical
get face-to-face talks started
Center.
At
4:48
a.m.
today
again. A spokesman said the
separate · meetings would Mrs. Pat NeQtzling was taken
to Pleasaqt Valley Hospital.
probably continue today.
"There is a growing feeling
DANCE CANCELLED
by everybody that they must
AU. s. Corps of Engmeen spokesman said roday at 11:45 posed a far more seriolL'I threat w the weifare of river officials indicated it was not possible yet this morning to
soon get a settlement," said
The dance to be held at
communities in the county.
predict a crest at Pomeroy . Hopefully, it will crest sometime
chief federal mediator Wayne So uthern High School this a.m. the Ohio River should crest at Poll!eroy at 46 feet by 8
At 9:20a.m. the river was at ~3.6 feet with flood stnge in tonight.
.
a.m.
Saturday,
oae
baH
fool
below
the
level
at
which
water
evening has been cancelled.
Horvitz.
Pomeroy 4&amp;.5.
A complicating factor Is the heavy Oow of ice in the river ,
' ll!oves oaro East Main St.
At 6:55a.m. tbe reading in Pomeroy was 42.9, at 7:50a.m . most or all .of it coming from lributaries of the Ohio. Such ice
last Friday's weather repeated itself today, again at (3.0,and by 8:15a.m. al43.1, or about .2foot per hour.
concentrations in the past have caused the water to ba ck up,
· There was encouraging news from up tbe river . It crested creating flood conditions.
paralyzing Meigs County.
And if that was not enough, the Ohio River , rising rapidly . toda.Y below flood stage in Pittsburgh at 2:30 a.m. River
· (Continued on page 10)
I
a
By United Presslliternatlonal
ATWTA - RUSSIAN FLU FINALLY has appeared in
the United States and although no protective vaccine is
available, health officials say anti-vital drugs could have
· CANTON, Ohio (UP!) loweri ng by a· degree or .two, lhe Publi c Uli litlc• Cum limited effectiveness against it. ·
The Ohio Power Co. today electric heating t hermostats, ' miss iotl or Ohio.
Authorities at the national Center for Disease Control said
appea led to all customers to eliminating sorne displ~:~y
''How ever , subsequent
Thursday the vii'IL'I, which has appeared among high school
" exercise prudence" in the lighting in st ore windows, !&gt;1eps will have an in cr cusi n~
students in 0\eyenne, Wyo., Is expected ro touch off outbreaks
use of electricity because of using. dishwa shers only once eff ed, since they wi1111 0l only
across the country within two weeks. The anti-viral drug most ,
dwindling stockpiles and the a day and clothes dryers less curtail lifestyle - which is
p-ominently mentioned is Amantadine, which if taken. daily,
national coal strike.
frequently than before.
merel y inconven ient
offers a high degree of protection against any A-type influenza .
C. A. Heller, exec utive vice
Heller said Ohio Power, which will aiSQ lead ln inpresident and chief operating lik e other Ohio elec tr ic du ~1rial produetion cutbacks
OTTAWA- SCIENTISTS WORKED THROUGH the night
officer of the firm, said the utilities, has fli ed a planned Nnd uncmploymcnl a"nd that
to measure ganuna rays emanating fr om a highly radioactive
' strike by the United Mine curtailment program with would be tra~i c , ''said Heller .
spot in northern Canada's barren tundra that may mark tbe ·
Workers Union had cut
remains Of a disintegrated Soviet spy salellite.
sharply into the stockpiles of
A 25-rnan team of experts walled on standby 200 miles
coal ol the American Electric
from the site, ready to approach the remot&lt;l location, while
Power system of which Ohio
scientists in Edmonton, AJbertn, spent the night analyzing the
·
Power Is a part.
radiation measurements.
·
"AlthOugh the system had a
"They would want ro make sure everything is safe for all
105-day
stockpile of coa l when
personnel," Defense Department spokesman Capt, Bud
AWARD PRESENTED - Roy Miller, left, a supervisor of the Meigs Soil and Water·
the
strike
began, we have
Mci)Qnald said. ''They're playing it very cool."
Conservation Distri!'l, is receiving a "superior award" given tbe Meigs District at the 35th
seen that erode to 59 days'
w.nual state session recently in Columbus. Making the presentation Is R Arthur Brandt,
supply as of today," Heller
THEY JUST CAN'T TAKE IT ANYMORE - blizzards,
president of the Ohio Federation of Soil"and Water Conservation Districts.
said.
storm . " They 're victlms .
By ANDREW A. YEMMA
snow drifts, ice-slicked roads , dead auto batteries and wind"
The
s
trike
continues,
and
They want mercy. They want
United
Press
International
chill factors. Thousands of people across Ohio are making
111 •
t.
each day w• get closer to the
Snow stopped falling roday help and · we can't get to
last-minute decisions to bead south, if only for a week or two . 1r~ezgs
timewhenmajorreductionin in the Midwest, Great Lakes them.''
Travel agencies around the state report a tremendous
electric
power use will and Ohio Valley regions
In Michigan , Gov. WiUlam
surge in such "impulsive" vacation blL'!iness since Christmas.
The Meigs Soil and Water annually. This year, 77 Ohio reduced sediment erosion. become essential unless the leaving behind death imd G. Milliken said, " In aU
And it's been particularly hectic at most agencies during the Conservation Distri ct · districts rated superior,
Supervisors from all 88
last two weeks. " 'I can't stand it,' that's what they've been received a superior award for eight, excellent, and three, counties also discussed and coaJ strike ends," he said . devastation from a raging likelihood this will go down in
''What we are asking now is
coming in and telling us, " said Beverly Melcher, manager of distinctive service as part of good.
compared present district for everyone to pitch in and two-day snowstorm which · the records as the worst
killed at least 52 persons and storm we've ever had .:.. if nDt
Tower Travel Service in Cleveland.
The theme for the 35th programs of soil and water help delay the need for virtually shut qown the in history, at lea.st in recent
the Goodyear Conservation
program at the 35th annual annual session was " Lefs management" practices and emergency ~eps."
memory .''
region.
CLEVELAND- 1liREE CLEVE~D AREA charities meeting of the Ohio Keep a Balance Between Man conservation eduCation.
Heller
added
that
severe
The
!'1atlonal
Guard
was
·
The Ohio Patrol estimated
bave invested hundreds of thousands of dollars in a loan Federation of Soil and Water and Nature.'' The. superAttending the state meeting
company authorities charge is controlled by tbe Mafia and has Conservation Distri cts in visors discussed their newly from the Meigs District were winter weather conditions activated in four states . as many as I, 400 motorists
result -in increased electrical Thousands of people · were might still be stranded roday .
bank-rolled such figures as alleged Mafaa boss Angela " Big Columbus, 'Jan. 17-19 .
expsnded responsibilities in Roy E. Miller, Mr. and Mrs. consumption which further · stranded or without power. In
many states, authorities
Ange" Lonardo, the Cleveland Press said Wednesday in a
The
Goodyear
Co n- pollution abatement Rex Shenefield, Mrs. Leota erodes coal supplies.
An
Amtr&amp;k
train
was
stopped
feared
bodies would be found
copyrighted article.
servation Program, span· prog rams affecting both Young, Boyd Ruth and Reid
Parents Volunteer Association for Retarded Children and sored by the Goodyear Tire agricultural and urblln land. Young. Miller and Shenefield • He suggested a significant dead on the tracks by drifted in cars stuck alongside the
savings in the corisumption of snow. Flooding comnounded highways.
Adults Inc. (PYA) , Variety Club Tene No. 6 and Ohio Boys and Rubber Co., pennits Considerable
discus sion are sppervisors and Mr. and coal in AEP system power problems in some areas.
The death toll included
Town Inc. bave reportedly invested a current total of $202,000 supervisors to evaluate their concerned the use of energy ·Mrs. Ydung and Ruth are
plants
could
be
realized
in
a
Ohio
Gov.
James
Rhodes,
Wisconsin
pnd Dllnols nine
in the loan company, Seaway Acceptance Corp.
natural resources progra~ sav ing equipment and district employes.
number
·
ol
ways,
including
each;
his
voice
quivering
with
Ohio
six, Indiana and
The principal stockholders of Cleveland-I&gt;&amp;Sed Seaway are
Kentucky
four
each,
emotion,
asked
residents
of
distributors and operators of jukeboxes, pinball and vending
his state to help each other Alabama and Michigan three
machines. The boards of trustees of tbe charities include 21
because, "Ohio is in trouble." each , Missouri, Georgia and
judges, former mayor Ralph Perk, Bob Hope and Lou Groza.
President Carter declared South Carolina. two each, and
Most of the judges and other celebrities serve as honorary
a federal emergency for Ohio Sol!th Dakotlo, Virginia, Iowa,
trustees and have no say in the decision-making process.
Additional snow and drifts feet of water on It this m0r- Mooney, 20, GaUipolis, struc• .;truck In the rear by an auto and Rhodes ordered 3,000 Te nnessee,· Penn sylvania;
COLUMBUS - THE INABILITY TO ATT):tACT adequate from heavy winds have made ning .
the rear ol a car which had operated by Willard L. Call, Nation.al Guardsmen into tlie West Virginia, Maryland and
financial backing forc,ed Ohio Seriate President Pro Tempore major roads in · the GalllaSix traffic accidents .were stopped for another car 41 , Gallipolis: Bradham was snow-clogged stale's high- Maine one each.
Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron, out of the running for tbe Democratic Meigs County area slippery investigated Thursday in the driven by Sharon L. White, cited to Municipal Court fo r ways and towns to help with
and dangerolL'I in some areas. Gallia-Meigs area all blamed 30, Gallipolis.
having no driver's license. evacuations.
(Continued on page 10)
Beca use of the hea vy on icy road conditions. No one
"They're helpless ," he said
An accident occurred at II
An accident occurred on
rainfall Wednesday, ice was injured or charged.
of
people stranded by the
a.m . on SR 160, where an Bob McCormick Rd. where
exists on various roads.
BOND SALES SHY ·
The first occurred at 7;40 . unknown vehicle splashed Andrew Evans,17, GaUipolls,
Secondary highways are a.m. on US 33 north of 661 in water and ice on the wind-' lost control of his car on ice.
December 1977 sales of
EXTENDED OHIO FORECAST'
.
snowy, slippery and also in Meigs County where. an auto shield ol an auto driven by His vehicle hit a stalled auto
Series E &amp; H United States
FIREMEN CALLED
dangerous condition.
Sunday through Tuesday, snow flurries in·
driven by James P. Wilson , Becky A. Brlckles, 20, owned by Everett E. JohnSavings
Bonds in Ohio were
Th e
Middleport
High, water from the heavy 22, Leon, W. Va. going 5outh Gallipolis. Brickles' car then son, 30, Gallipolis.
northeastern counties Sunday, with · fair
$35
million.
At the end of
Emergency Unit and Fire
rain
earlier
this
week
have
December,
the
State attained
The
sixth
accident
went
out
of
control,
slid
left
of
struck
the
rear
end
of
an
auw
ocDepartment went to 186
weather on Monday and a chance of snow in
closed five state routes in the -center to strike a xehicle operated by William H. curred at 2:05p.m. Thursday North Second Ave., at 6:45 91.9 of its 1971 Sales GoaL
southern Ohio on Tuesday.
·
two county area . .There are op~rated by R~beri J . Saxton, 19, Gallipolis.
on the Harrisburg Rd. two p.m . Thursday to the Voss Theodore T. Reed Jr., Meigs
Highs Sunday .and Monday will be In the
SR 554 west of Cheshire, SR Kennedy, 25, Ironton. There
Another rear-end accident miles north ol SR 160. An auto aj&gt;artment when smoke filled Co unty Volunteer Savings
teens, with lows between zero and 10 allove
141 at Cadinus, SR 124 at was minor damage. ·
occurred at 12:10 p.m. on the driven by Ronald E. Neal, 16, ·. the apartment from a pan Bonds Chairman, reported
zero. Highs Tuesday wiU be in the mill or · LangsviUe; · SR 248 between · A rear-end collision oc• Bidwell-Rodney Rd. An auto Bidwell, slid on ice striking containing food overheated December sales of Savings
SR 7 and SR m, and SR 338 at curred a\8:25 a.m.. on SR 7 in driven by T~eodore T. the rear of a vehicle driven by
upper 30s, with overnight lows between 10 and
and there was actually no Bonds in the county were
Antiquity.
Gallipolis
Twp.,
where
an
Bradham,
25,
Rodney
,
JohnS.
Eggleton,
24,
Bidwell.
$38,580. The county achieved
15.
The Bulaville-Addison Rd. auto driven by Mark S. stopped to back when It was There was minor damage. fire. The person preparing 82.9 per c~nt of its annual
the food had fainted and the
in Addison Twp. h&amp;\l thi't:e
~ les goal December 31.
food burned.

..

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e

•

.-

•

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enttne

•

agatn

r;v;=;;;;==:= = = ==
:=
= = = =:= =i =; =;:,:,n ;i;/;\\

Ohio Power asks .prudence

Devastation left

in storm's wake

S&amp; W D zs,;
· .....lC
· t ra ed supen"or

Meigs-Gallia roads dangerous

•I

!

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