<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15339" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/15339?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-10T01:49:49+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="48461">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/568e57eafc27d1151d0480f60c41defe.pdf</src>
      <authentication>e0c9bfbd499e151191b0b6a32e54e561</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="49225">
                  <text>10- The Daily Sent mel. Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Wedll&lt;sday. Feb. I, 1978

(Continued from page I)

"Probably the whole state
will not qualify (for a dtsaster
declaration 1." satd Maj Gen
James C. Clem. adjutant
general of Ohto " When the
whole state ts covered by two
feet of snow, (extensive)
damage ts hard tAl see."
Meanwhile, supermarket
cham s across OhiO have

reported thetr food supply
situation retl.II'ning to normal ,
as highways and secondary
roads become passable
Charles Crague, Kroger director of merchandtsing, sa1d
Kroger markets would have a
normal or

antlctpated anythtn g tht s
b;ld."
A spokesman for Btg Bear
supermarkets m Columbus
satd pamc buymg • had
reduced stocks at some stores
around the stale But
generally, Btg Bear stores
had nol expenenced seriOUS
shortages, he added
In Tifhn, a parucularlv
hard-htt area, the manager of
a Kroger store said Tuesday
the market had just received
tis ftrst fresh supphes of food

Crague sa1d overstockm g

Kroger

in several days "We've been
out or bread, m1lk and eggs

But our s1tuatmn IS a lot
.better now "

near no rma l

supplies on hand by today
" The biggest problem
we've had ts gettmg trucks to
our markets Some of the stde
roads sttll have been
unpassable in recent days,"
he explained
b~·

stores

·Sadat lookm·g

2~£r.::~:J~ev~~~WE~~

FDA.··

m

By W.G. KIROLOS
CAIRO, Egypt (UPI)
Egyptian President Anwar
Sadat IS looking forward to
hts talks w1th President
Carter thts weekend to break
the deadlock between Egypt
and Israel at thetr milttary
talks, which were resuming
today
Sadat, who fli es to
Washmgton this weekend to
meet Ca rter, satd Tuesday
"1t ts tune " Amertca stepped
tn to resolve the maj or
disputes between Egypt and
Israel.
The two Middle East

NEW
MARTINSVILLE,
W Va (UPI) - A pickup
truck has been tentaltvely
blamed by pollee as the
svurl'l' of a hqwd ol&lt;)'gen
explosiOn that turned hve
workmen
mto human
torches, killmg three and
leavmg the others with
mttcal burns
State Police behove the
truck provtded the spark
Tuesday that tgntted the
oxygen when tl escaped from
a ruptured tank at Air
Products, Inc
James H. Luster, 56,
Howard, Oh1o, and Paul
Weber, 31, Euchd, Oh10, both
employees or Dravo Corp., a
construction finn on contract
at the ad)Otntng Mobay
Chem1cal Co complex, and
Benjamm F Rodrtquez, 23,
Moundsville, a Mobay
employee, were killed
Hosp italized m the burn
umt at West Penn Hospital m
Pittsburgh were two other
Mobay workmen, Robert
BarroWS 1
25,
New
Martmsvtlle, and Joseph
Henry , 42, Moundsvtlle
Henry lost both legs m the
accident
Luster, Weber and Barrows
were ms1de the truck m the
plant area when the vehtcle
apparently set off the htghly

roo1~11

FLEXSTEEL

FIN Iii: U~I-IOLtJI'ElREil PURNJTllHE

FINE FURNITURE
AT SPECIAL SALE PRICES

flammable oxygen.
Ftre flashed in the
explosiOn, trapptng the trio
inside the vehtcle and the
other vtctims when they
lunged toward tn a rescue
attempt They were wtthut 75
yards of the ruptured tank
"They were m a dense

Sheep school
dates named

the temporary offtce 1s the
same as the off1 ce on

Mulberry Ave. , h1t by ftre,
992-3786.

Nattonal Bank Regwn Number 4

Stateme nt of Resources and Lmbllitles

Thousands of dollars
$1,828,000 00
10,162,00 00
1,712,00 00
. 2,000 00
. 48,000 00
1,700,000 00
. 10.&gt;92,000 00
50li()() 00
10,542,000 00

I .oans, Net

Bank pt mmses, furniture and fixture s. and

302,000.00
32,000 00
$26,328,000 00

other assets rcpresentmg bank premises
Other assets
TOTAL ASSETS

.-..
ID
~

6,056,000 00
Demand depoSi ts of mdlvtd uals, prtnshps . and corps
Tune and savmgs depositS of mdiViduals,
prtnsl11ps, and corps
15,443,000 00
Depos1ls of Umted States Goverrunent
175,000 00
Deposits of Sl&lt;l tes and pohhci:jJ subdiVIsions
2,332,000 00
Cert ified and offi cers checks
... .. . .... 74,000 00
24,080,000 00
TOTAL DOMESTIC DEPOSITS
Total demand depostts
. 7,221,000 00
Tott:~l tune e~ nd savlntJSdepostts
16,859,000 00
'I'O'I'AL DEPOSIJ'S IN DOMESTIC
AND FOREIG Nm FICES
24,080,000 00
71,000.00
Other habihtJes.
TOTAL LIABII JTIES le&lt;cludmg suburdmated notes and debentures)
$24,1511000.00

...

Common stock
a No shares authonzed 8,000
b No sha res outswndmg 8,000
1par value 1
Surplus
Und1vtded profits
Reserve for con ttngcnc1cs and other capital reserves
TOTAl. EQUITY CAPITAL
.
TOTAL LIABILITIES ANp EQUITY CAPITAL ..

.....

$200,000 00
1,400,000 00
534,000 00
43,000.00
$2,177,000.00
$:G,328,000.00

Avcrag'e for 30 ca lenda1 days endmg w1lh report date

Cash and due from banks
Fed. funds sold and sec unttes purchased
under agreements to resell
Total loans
1
T1me dcpos1ts of$100,000 01 more tn domestiCofrtces
Total depoSits
Total Assets
\

$1,624,000 00

..... .

.. .. .

1,593,000 00
11,127,000.00
. I 1,900,000.00
23,956,000 00
$26,699,000 00

I, Joan Wolfe, Asststanl Cash1er, ol the above-named bank do hereby ,leclare that llus
Report of Condttion ts true and correct to the best of my knowledge and behet
Joan Wolfe
Jan.1ary 23,1976

\'

We, the undersigned d1rectors attest the correctn ~ss of thts statement of resource,s and
liabtliltes. We decla re that tt has b&lt;:en exammed by us, and to the best of our knowledge and
beltef ts true and correct

Edtson Hobstetter
Roger Morgan - Directors
Orwn W Roush

,

J ohn C. RICe, County
Extension
Ag en t,
Agriculture, announces there

wtll be a sheep school held at
the Jackson Area Extenston
Center at 7. 30 p.m on
Wednesdays, February 8, 15
and 22
On February 8, Ohio's new
lamb teleauctton wtll be
explamed by Harold Bull and
Rubert Thurman~ both
directors of M1d-States Lamb
Producers
and Ralph
Grtmshaw, OSU Sheep
Spectalist. Equipment and
housing will be discussed on
the 15th and on the 22nd, a
good discussiOn on managmg
brood ewes and new lambs
wtll be featured by Mr. Grunshaw
Sellmg lambs by telephone,
a rather new concept, was
done by the Mid-States Lamb
Producers thts past fall. Th1s
marketmg method has been
qutte successful in other
parts of the country such as
V1rgm1a, says James C Clay,
Area ExtensiOn Agent,
Ammal Industry for the
Jackson Area
Everyone Int erested in
sheep productton ts tnvtted,
tncludmg 4-H and FF A
members. Sheep projects at
area fa1rs , especially market
lambs, have been quite
popular lately wtth juntor fatr
exhibitors.

m the state of Ohto, at the close of busmess on December 31, 1977 published m response to
ca ll made by Comptroller of the Currency, under tttle 12, United States Code, Sectton 161

Cash and due from banks
U S freas u1 y seeurttles
Obl 1 ~at10ns of States and pol1t1cal subchvlSlons
Other bonds, notes, and debentures
Feuera l Heserve stock and corporate stock
Federa l funds sold and secur1lics purchased
under agreements to resel l
Loa ns, Tota l •exdudmg unearned mcnme).
I .ess Reserv e f01 puss able ](Jan losses.

remamed cordoned off and

Power office
closed today

POMEROY NATIONAL BANK

Charter nwnber 1980

oxygen cloud," noted state
Trooper W.C. McBee. "W.e
know of nothtng else that
could have tgruted 1t at this
bme"
For several hours, the area

1

Consohdatmg domestic subsidtartes of the

..-....-....

Foretgn Mintster
the Sinat Pemnsula but Israel
Utststs on keeping a l!lllitary Mohammed KaJDel , whn met
presence around' 19 Jew1sh dunng the day wtth Assistant
Secretary of State Allred
settlements there.
The semi-official AI Ahram Atherton , praised the
newspaper satd the talks Amertcans for doing " thetr
were a " true test of IsraeJls best with sincerity to reach a
mtenttons. Wtthdrawal to common understandmg "
''This is not easy because
Egypt's mternat10nal borders
there
ar~ btg gaps and
caMot be the subject of
.
dtfferences
" between the
controversy ....
Israeb
and
"U Israel wants both peace Egypttan
and terntory , the mtlttary positions, be satd.
Sadat said the question of
talks as well as other contacts
lor
and consultations wtll reach a self-determ tnatton
dead end, brtngtng the region Palestinians tivmg on tbe
to the brmk of danger," it occupted West Bank of
Jordan and the Gaza Strtp
satd

trafftc was re-routed from the
plant as authortties stood by
and watched grtmly as the
oxygen contmued to leak,
powerless to go near 1t and
check for bod1es
At the rush hour, however,
the leak was stopped, and an
all-dear Signal came.
Due to a ftre at the
"We suspected all day long
Pomeroy ofl1ces of The Ohto
that
someone had been killed
Power Co Tuesday momtng,
m there," Marshall County
the office has been tem- Sheriff Robert Lightner satd
porartly closed.
"But we had to wa1t until the
On a temporary hasts, lhe opporturuty to get m there ."
Farmers Bank at 221 W
When the ftre erupted,
Second St , wtll accept Mobay quickly shut down tts
payment of electric bills A sprawlmg plant and sent tts
temporary office has been 900 employees home
established by the power
company at Its serV ICe
butldmg off Sprmg Ave. , at
the rear of the FultonThompson Tractor Sales
Requests for servtce and
payment of electrtc btlls can
be made at the temporary
office The phone number of

REPORT OF CONDITION

Ill

1

I

Social
Calendar
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Chamber of
Commerce Wednesday at
noon at Metgs Inn. Boyd Ruth
speaker.
LADIES AUXILIARY,
Mtddleport Ftre Department,
Wednesday, 7 30 p m. at the
ftre station Hostesses Will be
Betty Ohhnger, Helen Byer.
Paulme Greathouse, and Ber- ,
n~ce

to talks
was the "real dlfflculty" in
reaching an overall set tlement:
"We do not agree to the
settlements 1ssue," Sadat
S81d. "The whole world does
not agree and President
Carter does not agree."
Sadat said he will raise the
question of Palestinian seUdetermination with Carter.
" We are after permanent
peace, ooce and for all, and
wtthout
solving
the
Palesltnlan quest1on we
cannot have peace," he said.
Atherton brought an Israeli
draft declaration of peace

UMW leader sees settlement near

principles tAl Cairo and dtscussed It wlth Kamel
Tuesday. But AI Abram sa1d
Egypt objected to several
points in the document and
..:ounwould
submtt
terproJ10811ls.
x::y;~-.

~ The Poet's

~o wS~~

said that
people don't have a gizzard'
Something tn me sure lroze
when the good Lord
whipped up this bltuard.
The wmd blew harder and
r--------------------------~
harder and did tt ever
blow!
It ptcked up speed and then tt
I
I
threw at me lots of snow.
It
made drifts htgher than I
0 Parsons d•ed at 7 JO a m
G. B. GILLINGHAM
Tuesday
at
Holzer
Med•cal
could
see
Garland B Gtlhngham, a
Cen ter, where he had been a When I had IAJ go out U1 it I
hcensed praclicmg phar- pat•ent for three weeks
kept asking, " Lord, why
mactst for overs:; years, died
H 1s ,ome and real estate of
me? "
ftee
were
at
512
Second
Ave
,
at 7. 30 p.m. Tuesday at
But I know my prayers He dtd
below the Cttv Bu1tdlng
Holzer Medical Center after tust
He was born July 30, 1891 ,
hear,
an extended tllness.
'" Calhoun County , w va , For today the wind stopped
' G11ly " rece1ved hiS phar- one of ten ch tldren and the
blowing and the roads were
maceutical degree from Ohio last svrv111 tng of M A and
SophrOnia
Stump
Parsons
almost
clear
Northern Umvers1ty , and, m He was sc hooled tn Calhoun
But
don
'I
forget to keep
1973, recetved a cttatton from Cou nty on ly through the
tt will thaw
praying
that
the Ohto Pharmaceutical fourth reade r
•
and
melt
real
slow,
Mr
Parsons
·
worked
tn
Soctety for more than a halft1mber
.
as
a
boy:
he
earned
For
all
the
snciw
and flooding
century servtce.
water, and then he worked m ' waters the btlls we will
The year 1969 was hts 50th the sawm •ll ' He was a ma•l
have to go.
In June, 1968, he sold the · earner around Spencer, w
busmess at Pme St. and Se- Va , and marned Add 1e So keep your fatth m God and
you wtll see,
cond Ave., to Rtchard K•ngsbury , April 4. 1915, and
they ca me to Gal Ita County tn That there are better days
MacKenzie , who last 19 18, sett lmg a1 Ewmgtop
Novemb&lt;:r was elected to the They moved to Vmton and , ah!!ad fo~ bo\h you and me
Written by. Sarah C. Welsh
- 11
Galltpolts Ctty Commtsston fmal ly to Gallipolis
Mrs
Parsons
surv1ves
with
and ts the Comnusston presi- two sons and a daughter
dent However, Mr Gtll- Jabez Parsons of Ktrkland,
mgham continued to work Wash he and hts father
there unltl the autumn of star ted the Gallipolis vault
Company, whtch they sold to VetefB-. Memorial Hospital
1977
the Mart•ns, Dale of Blue
Admitted - Carol Russell,
Garland Gtlltngham and Rtdg e, va, Mrs Robert (Er
Pomeroy;
Joan Sellers,
Dallas Neal went mto a part- ma l Eagle of Vinton , five
Racme;
Jennie
lles,
grandchildren,
and
seven
nership at the same stte,
great
grandchildren
Pomeroy;
Charles
Werry,
where a drug store • bad
In Gallipol•s Mr. Parsons
operated for years before was assoc1ated wtth Cart Pomeroy; Robert Rathburn,
Unlll Mr Neal's death, II was Myers m rea l estate, and also Rutland; Janet Jenkms,
known as Neal &amp; G1lhngham, wtth Wtseman, and Grover Middleport; Mary Lavender,
owned h•s own real estate Syracuse; Eleanor Faulk,
but then tl was Gtllmgham He
bus m ess tor 30 years He was Pomeroy; Ruth Dye, Letart,
Drug from the late '20s or a
memb e r
of
the
early '30s, and MacKenzte Southeastern Ohto Re al W. Va ; Edna Hart,
Estate Association and of the Pomeroy; Robert Mays,
b;ls kept the name.
Bapt1 st Churc h, he was Reedsville; Anna Alley,
Born Dec 1, 1892, to Bert aF~rst
member of Morn1ng Dawn Racme.
and Pearl Ingles Gtlltngham, Lodge Number Seven, F ( A
Discharged - Pauhne
he was a hfelong restdent of M
Maso n•c serv1ces Will be Stewart, Everett Earles,
Galha County H1s parents atfor 0 D Parsons at 7 30 Charles Bush, Karen Batty,
tended Elizabeth Chapel held
th1 s evenmg at Miller's Mrs
Church, and the farruly re- Ke•th's body arnved today Russell Flagg, Dale Proffttt,
Harold Dewhurst, William
quests that contrtbuttons m from Grove City
Pallbearers for Thursday's Ferguson, George Foss,
his memory be made to that
rites will be rea l estate Mabel Swan, Ernest Bamchurch m care of the Rev fmal
Leadmghar'n , hart .
men
Allred Holley, Lower Rtver Russell Wdl1s
wood. John Fuller.
Rd , Galhpohs 45631, m lteu of Ronald Canaday, Merr 111
PLEASANT VALLEY
Car ter, and Jay Sheppard
flowers
Honorary
pa:llbearers
Will be
Discharged
- Mrs. Ricky
He marrted Ruth Ttplon John E Halliday , W1111am P
Sept. 5, 1922, at Granville, Cherri ngton, Oscar Batrd, Casto, Pomt Pleasant,
Marshall Riley, Mason; Paul
and she survtves wtth thetr and Willia m Conley
Roach, Point Pleasant; Gene
son, Jim Gtlltngham, Kansas
Bush, Jackson; Joe HamWILLIAM BARCUS
Ctty, Kans , w1th two grandW1l11am Barcus, .42 , a mack,
Point Pleasant;
children Also considered surresident of Rt. 1, Rlv~rea, Audrey
Pomt
Arnold,
VIVOrs are Jay and Lots Jean
Texas. and a former resident
Pleasant;
William
Shobe,
Smuns, young frtends who of Galtla County, died
Ashland, Ky.; Christopher
were loyal to him durmg thts Tuesday morning
The
body
wa$
taken
to
the
Hill,
Gallipolis; Mrs Carl
!mal tliness and who were at
Turcotte Mortuary In Kmgs. Hood, Mason; Mrs Philip
his stde every day.
'lill ie, Texas Bunal w111 be m
CurtiS, Point Pleasant.
Preceding him m death Texas
Loca I arrangements were
were a brother and a s1ster
He was a member of Mormng u nd er the dlrecl•on of
Holzer Medteal Center
Dawn Lodge Nwnber Seven Cremeens Funeral Home
(Discharges Jan. 31)
F&amp;AM , Elks, Amen can
Mehssa
Breezer, Mrs.
ALLEN NAMED
Legton; and the Grace Umteq
Donald
Chandler
and
LOS ANGELES (UP!) •
Methodist Church.
d~ugp),~r, Madge Clark,
Servtoes wtll be announced George Allen was named W1IIlam Cool, Leo pavidson
coach
of
the
Los
Angeles
head
by the McCoy-WelherholtMichael' Deck, Mrs. Charle~
Moore Funeral Home Hts Rams today.
Denney
and son, Danny
The former Washington
late res1dence was 1000 SeMrs.
Roger Jtviden
Franklin,
Redskins' coach met for
t-o~d Ave., Galltpolis
and
son,
Veronica
Kellogg,
several hours Tuesday night
M~rtle
~elly,
David
Long,
with Rams' owner Carroll
Ell•11
"
j'llc,
C
or)lle,
Mtchael
ODES D. PARSONS
&amp;senbloom and the two were
Double funeral serv1ces
behoved to have reached an McCoy, Barbara , Melvtn,
w1ll be held at 2 p m Thurs
Damse Mitchell, Myrtle
day for Odes Dale Parsons, agree~J~ent between them.
Radek1n,
Ruth Richards
86, GallipOliS, and htS SISter,
Carrie
Smtih,
Mae Syolson:
STAMPS AVAILABLE
Mrs George (Pet) Ke1th ,
Gro'w'e C•ty, at Mtller 's Home
Rockford
Spurlock,
Mrs.
Individuals interested in
for Funerals w •th th e Rev
EIUiy
Statke~.aod
son,
Emma
food stamps should contact
Joseph Godwm and the Rev
the Food Stamp Outreach Swql\, pi.,na Vance, Susan
Alfred Holley off1C1atmg.
Program at the Gallia-Meigs Veith, PauUne Wayne, Donn~
Bunal w1ll be stde by Stde
m V1nton Memonal Park
Community Action Agency Wells, Leon Yoder.
Calling hours Will be 3 5 and
(Birth Jan. 31)
Offtce, ~6-4612 , extenston 72,
7 9 p m today at Mtller's
Mr.
and Mrs. Frank
in
Gallia
County
and
992-5601i
Mrs Ke•th d1ed at 3 p m
Martin, a son, Crown City.
in Meigs County.
sunday ,n Columbu s, and o

Five workmen turned :
into human torches

CLASSES OFF
Baton classes of Mrs. Judy
R1ggs thiS evemng at Royal
Oak Park have been canceltt'&lt;l

legance in any

adversaries, seekmg to end 30
years of confl1ct, opened a
second round of mihtary
ta lks Tuesday and were
meetmg again today but the
same tssues that stalled the
conference on Jan . 13 still
plagued the delegates
"America ts a frtend of
both Egypt and Israel ,"
Sa4at satd at h1s Ntle-&lt;~tde
Barrages residence north of
Catro "It is tune this fnend ,
m whom we have conftdence,
should come m for a final
touch to the whole thing "
Egypt is demanding a completelsraeh withdrawal from

~orward
.1

Durst

THURSDAY
EVANGELINE CHAPTEH
172, Order of the Eastern
Star, 7 30 Thursday night .
at the Mtddleport Masomc
Temple.
LETART FALLS PTO,
Thursday evenmg, 7:30 p.m.
at the school.
SATURDAY
HARRISONVILLE Lodge
411, F. and A.M will hold a
special meeting at 2 p.m
Saturday for work In the
master mason degree
Refreshments wtll be served
at b p m and the regular
meetmg w1ll be held at 7· 311
p m All master masons are
mvited to attend.
_.

Area Deaths

Ulliled Pre111Dieraalioaal
"Settlement of the coal
strike is apparently near,"
says John Guzek , president of
United Mine Workers Distrtct
6 Wednesday, adding that he
has been IAlld to be ready to go
to Wa shington "at any
moment.,.
The UMW struck Dec. 6 and
contract talks m Washmgton
between the UMW and lhe
BJtununous Coal Opera!AJrs of
America
have
been
stalemated ever stnce.
Guzek said Wednesday, "I
have recetved a telegram
tellmg me to be ready w
rome tAl WashlJtl!on at any

!

moment - to De on u.hours
notice Settlement of the coal

stnke ts appurenUy near, or

they wou ldn 't send a
telegram like that "
An mdustry source also told
UP! Wednesday that "the
str1ke will be over wtthm a
week "

Guzek sa1d he was not told
any detatls concern ing a
tentattve agreement, but sa1d
he had been informed earlier
that most major stumbling
blocks had been troned out
Guzek, as pres1dent of Dlstnct 6 with 16,000 members m
OhiO and northPr'l

Wf' ~: 1

Vn

Women's Coats- Junior, missy and half sizes. Leathers
- Car Coats - Long Length Coats , Fur Trimmed Coats
and All Weather Coats .................................... 'h Price
Men's Jackets and Coats - Sizes up to 46, all warmly
lined. Entire stock on saje .. .............................. '/2 Price

of

Gov

By JOHN T. KADY

settlement m the naltonwtde
mmers strike "doesn't mean
a thtng until the coal starts to
move" and said curta llments
are almost a certainty unjess
a settlement ts reached by
Sunday.
IWbert E Stsmger, v1ce
prestdent for corporate
a!fatrs for Columbus &amp;
Southern Ohio Electnc Co.,
wht ch serves 1,340,000

there ' s been no £ederal
action
" We need so me real

I

•

Bardin, an admmtstrator of
the Economtc Regulatory
AdmtntstraUon of the Energy
Department
"The most dtsappomting
part of thts sessaon was when
Bardin was asked about the
progress of the coal
negotta !tons and all he could
say was 'they 're conttnuing '
Tha t's just not enough ,"

leadershtp at the e&lt;ecutive
level - I mean mtervention Heckman sutd.
" We've never been this fa r
tnto J(le mediauon process
through use of the power of down on our suppltes," he
the president's offtce," satd satd, addmg that the last 20
days of supply in a coal
Heckman

•

stockpile often has lost tts
capactty to produce energy
and tS JttiJ&lt;ed w1th dirt and
other debrts.
Hr

characte razed

situataon

m

Ohto

ooly ltmiled energy power to
authome ne1ghbormg utihty
comparues to supply the coal
short area wiUt power.
He said comparues must
agree among themselves on
the terms of sale and pointed
out the customers m those

the

as

··extremely serious' ' and sa1d

that Olher utility offtclals
from Michtgan and lndtana
agreed wtth him .
One Energy Department
offt cia l noted that the
Appalachia Power System
will next week begtn to cut
back on some of tis Industrial
customers
But Jerry Pfeffer noted the
Departn1ent of Energy has

areas genera Uy rec;et ve
power which cos ts the

romparues only one cent per
kilowatt from coal produclton
but those areas might b&lt;:
forced to
f1ve to eig ht
cents per kilowatt for oil
generated m a netghbormg

'"'r.

sta te

R

Gre~orv

Graham of the

Cindnnatl Gas and Electric
Co . Wednesday predicted
"havoc" if the strike f..-ces
ullliltel!i to shut off power .
" I surely tlunk there would
be havoc tf we get to the potnl
where we Catl't produce electrirlty. " he satd '' We are
now in a very senous
.sthmllon w1th dwmdhng coal
~upplies and no prospect of

addttlonal supplies. We can
delny nny havoc by not using
as' tnuch coal as usual, but the
on l}' way havoc can be
J)revcnted for suru IS tn have
the t•ual nc~ottutors l'Ome to a
~ttlement

•

at

enttne

customers m 24 Ohto
co unttes, took Issue With
reports from coal compa rues
and the Umted Mme Workers
un1on that productton could
be
res umed
a lmost
unmediately
Both Consolida tion Coal Co
and North Amencan Coal
Co . two or Ohto's largest coal
supphers, say thetr rnmes
have been ke pt m condilton
durmg the stnke that started
Dec. 6 and productwn could
start up shortly after the
mmers return to 1helr JObs

STREET LIGHTS TURNED OFF - Employes of the
Colwnbus and Southern Ohto Electrtc Power Co were in
Pomeroy Wednesday disconnecting the power to the
street lights. This is one of the steps taken by the electrtc
company to conserve on electricity due to the low stock
p1le of coal Several lights will still be burnmg m both
Middleport and Pomeroy m cructal areas. The cutback ts
m accordance w1th the plan ol Governor James Rhodes to
conserve electrlctty

By United Press International
PARIS - FILM DIRECTOR ROMAN POLANSKI arrtVed
m Pans today after fleemg the Uruted States hours before he
was tAl be sentenced lor unlawful sex with a 13-year-old gtrl
model.
Polanski, 44, arrived in Parts !rom London where he had
stopped ovem1ght
Polanski was to have appeared Wednesday tn Supertor
court in Santa Monica, Cahf , for sentencing Superior court
Judge Laurence Rittenband declined to say what penalty he
dectded lor Polanski, but Deputy Dtstrtct Attorney Roger
Gunsvn satd tt did mvolve tune m )ail. He would not say how
much time .
NASHVILLE, TENN -FOUR PEOPLE dted and three
were injured m a ftre Wednesday mght at a home for the
b;lndicapped and mentally retarded that apparently was
caused by someone smoking m bed, authortttes satd
Metro Ftre Marshal Howard Boyd said local offictals did
not know about the extstence of the home The woman who
operated tl apparently left with other restdents who escaped
the flames . Officials said the house was littered w1th empty
whiskey bottles and beer cans

Reclamatton of a st rtp
mmmg area m Sc1p10
Township for recreational &gt;'~
purposes w1U beg m t hi S
sprtng accordmg to Boyd
Ruth, d1stnct conservattonlst
for the Metgs County Sotl and
Water Conservatlon Service
Thts was disclosed Wednesday at the noon luncheon
of the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce
Boyd explatned that there
are 100 acres m the Pagev1He
area, 86 of the 1110 have been
selected lor reclamation, at a
cost of $5,200 an acre or a
total of $440,000 The property
ts state owned
For every ton of coal that' s
mined, four cents 1s placed m

H1gh Schoo 1 donate funds to
restore the old semor tngh
school butldmg.
He stated a plan ts m the
mfancy stage, that he had
wrttten to some alumnt but
has not gotten any response
as yet He explamed that the
buldmg could be renovated
for use as a VIllage hall With
the auditoriUm bemg used for
vanous events.
Crow sa1d he Muld hke to
get a realtsttc figure on
repatrofthe buildmg. He also
md1cated that industrial art
students at Meigs Htgh could
do some paintmg and help put
m wmdows
Crow stated that 1f federal
funds are used the floor would

board of reclamatiOn

have to be removed and

stnp mme fund 'nus IS where
the proceeds from the project
are dertved Boyd sa1d.
Boyd noted he was m
charge of the reclamation
operation m Metgs County
He also stated that there are
fiVe members on the Metgs
County S01l and Conservation
D1stnct Board
Thereon
Johnson Is a veteran member
havmg served for 20 years
Boyd showed shdes of the
area to be reclaimed. He
commented that a sediment
pond wtll be put m while the
project IS being done He satd
the area that is bemg
proposed 1s on the west
branch of Shade R1ver where
the stream ts now full of sand
There 1s no use to clean the
ditches until the source of the
sand ts corrected
Boyd stated that grass and
trees will be planted m the
area. He would hke to see
local contractors awarded
the b1ds whe n they are
submtlted
In other busmess, Fred
Crow, president, told the
chamber that he would ltketo
see the alumni of Pomeroy

replaced-with a new floor He
satd, " If we have to depend
on federal money the project
IS out."
He suggested that alumni
pledge a certam amount of
money over a three to five
year period BasiCally Crow
added, the structure IS m
good condtlton He did say a
new fumac• would have to be
mstalled.
Crow
commend e d
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews and village counCilmen for a job well done tn
the removal of 1ce and snow
He also stated that money IS

the

1

A spokesman tor Peat:,ody
Coal Co , whtch operates four
mmes for Columbus &amp; Southern, sa1d those mmes have
been mamtained and are
ready tAl go
''We can be puttmg coal out
the day they go back mtu the
mmes," sa1d John Guzek,
prestdent ol UMW Dtstnct 6
headquartered m Bellatre
"There will probably be a
httle dead work to do but that
IS only on the f1rst etght hour
shift Those mmes hCive been
kept up "

Guzek, a member of the
UMW Bargaintng Council
which has to approve the
contra ct for rataf1cahon by
tlle membership arter an
agrecment1s reached by the
negotiati ng teams, stud
Wednesday mght he had b&lt;:en
nottf1ed to be on 24-hour
not1ce to go to Washmgton tn
go over the contra(:l
"Settlement of the coal
str1ke IS appare ntly near ,"
sa1d Guzek
" Settlement , unttl coa l

Fifto•o•n l'"nts

\ 'nl. 2X, No 2111

•

I

present
Attend1ng were Crow,
Walter Gruese r, Vernon
Weber, John Anderson, Dale
Warner, Bill Mayer, Phil
recent dmncr hononng Dr
Ed Lew1s, Paul S1mon , J1m Kelly, Vtrgtl Teaford, C. E
Frecker and others was well Blakeslee, Leo Vaughan, B11l
attended Another dmner 1s Grueser, Ferman Moore,
betng planned for February Hank Cleland, N W CompThe chamber wtll meet m ton, Stan Houdashelt, Jim
regular sessiOn on Tuesday, Frecker, Ted Reed, J ack
Feb 7, at noon at the Metgs Ca rse y, Thereon J ohnson ,
Hol stein,
Inn A represe ntativ e of Emmoge n e
Welcome Wa gon will be secretary, and Ruth.

betng collected to help defray
the cost of removing 1ce and
sno" from the parkmg lot
Cro w also reported that the

Need
bidsThefor
facilities
CO LUMBUS
of two boat rentals and a
weather conditions have once

agam forced the Ohio
Department of Natural
Reso urces (ODNR) to extend
the deadline for subm1ttmg
btds for operatwn of three
boat rental facthttes and two
refreshment concessiOns at
state parks to Frtday, Feb. 3
" We were scheduled to
open the submttted btds
Friday, Jan. 20.'' sa1d Ra lph
Vanzant, Chtef of ODNR's
Dtvtston of Parks a nd
RecreatiOn "However, the
extremely poor wea)her
cond11lons forced the clostng
or all sta te offtces 1n
Columbus resultmg tn the
rescheduling of the deadbne
for submlttmg b1ds "
The btds are for operatton

starts to move, doesn 't mean W-&lt;luy supply ol co11l remalanythtng and that' s ou1· run ~ lie sa id 1t w1ll Uikc 10
days to twc• weeks fur the
proble m ." said S1smgc1
Sasmger smd the Peu bud) UMW mcmberslup tn ~t~tlfy
mmes could produce about any H~l't•c mcnt um_l anothc1
half the coa l needed by some 15 d.nys to gN Ute utility's
or hiS ulihty's UIUtS but the supply Uu1lt up, winch ~: lvcs
Uw t f'mpany a 25-duy supply
rest has to be shipped tn
'We have 90 suppllers and u{ l u.al tO WO I k With
"Wf' dH~ g iHIIJ..( to be Ill n
bear m mtnd, 11ll the supplters
we have supply uther compH - sltu,tl!On ,tt 20 dnys where
mes than us ,md they will ~ blmkouts are stHndur d, " ::~md
demandtng the maxunum S1smge1 " There Will be some
amount of coal the day tho fm·m of eul'laJhm•nllf !l iNnot
mmers go buck to wm k , 1 ' Sl'ttled Uus wc~ k
" It will be nne of two
sa1d Sismgcr
w.'lyscu rtt-nlment or
"To brmg coal productton
bu
smctis
or mdu s try or
back up to normal m a couple
of days Is Impossible People rolhng blackouts I~ n lmost
are_ gomg to t.hmk that as so1J11 ccrt,!ln to happen ·
SISinger
SUI&lt;I
lim
as a settlement 1s 1 em::hed ,
there IS no problem any eurtaJbncnL&lt;;; to busmtoss und
more. That 1s JUSl not so, not mdustry w11l be for alxml 50
11Cit'Cnl or normal opel utmg
so"
capac
ity wluc h he i:hlHI will
SIStnger said he dtd nut
close
11
lot of plunt~
Uunk the statement by Guzek
"Thut mean;; a lot or them
was 'reahstlc
''M1ners, all of Utcm, do not Will cJO SC down bCt'l:IUSC Uu~y
go back that f1rst d &lt;.~y, · he Will rwt be able tu upc1 ulu
sa id
" We don't s tdlt w1th d 50 pcrct•nt hlad," said
rcce1vmg a normal .supply of S1smgc1 " There Isn't u glass
coal the flr st or second or company 1ll the stale, for
third day. lndtvtdual plants Instance, that Cdn llpcrute
a
&gt;O
percent
maybe If Peabody ca n start w1th
curtmbnent
They
w1
ll JUSt
up that wtll help tmmensely "
have
to
shutdown
"
S1smger smd C&amp;SOE has a

Bailey is named
EMS coordinator

beach refres hment (:On·
cesswn at Kiser Lake State
Parkm Champaign County, a
refreshment concesslOn at
Robert C Batley, Rt. 4,
Hockmg Htlls State Park m Pomeroy, wa s appomtcd
Logan County and a boat coo rdin a tor or the Mc1gs
rental at Forked Run State County Emergency Med1ca l
Park m Metgs County
Services by the Metgs Co unty
Bids must be submitted by Commissioners Tu es day
2 p m Friday (Feb 3) to the mght
DIVIsiO n of Parks and
Bailey, a Mer~s Co unt y
Rec r ea tiOn ,
Co ncesswns native, Will assume h1s new
Umt , Ohw Department or duties on Feb 13 The tnrmg
Natural Resources, Fountam of a coordmator ts the fir st
Square, Columbus, 43224
step m establtshmg a new
lndtvtduals who ha ve Meigs County EMS made
already submitted btds, but possible when the l' ittzens of
WISh to change thetr ortgmal Metgs County approved a one
offer, should contact the mill levy last November ..
Dtvlsion of Parks and
The commiSSion ers , 1n
Recrea tion's Concessions hmng Ba1lcy , acted upon the
Unit, telephon e (614 ) 466-3277 recommendatiOn of the Metgs
Co unty EMS board of
trustees.
The commi SS IOners also
appotnted Charles R. Hysell,
RD, Middleport as county dog
a parked pickup truck drtven warden to begin duttes Imby Stanley Jones, Jr. 21, Rt. 1, mediately Anyone wtshtng to
GallipoliS and owned by the contact Hysell may ca ll 992Ga lha
Co unty
Co m- 5310
missioners
A lengthy discussiOn was
Smith's veh1cle shd on the held concerning the excessive
icy pavement into the truck
amo unt of garbage that has
There was mmor damage. ptled up at all bux locatlons
Jones was Cited to MuniCipal durtng the past coupl e of
Court for parking un the weeks, because of Inclement
roadway
weather and continued
mechant cal problem s wtth
the garbage truck
It was decided that
begmmng yesterday, an slimt effort would begm to

Trucker injured Wednesday
A trucker was m]ured m an
accident at 6 39 p m. Wednesday on SH 7 at TR 207 m
Metgs County
The Galha-Metgs Post
State H1ghway Patrol said
John R Bauer, 35, Burwick,
Pa , dnving a sem1 ng lost
control of hts truck whtch ran
off the left side of the road,
)ackkntfed and struck a s1gn

Six more weeks of winter

post. There was moderate
damage Bauer was treated

at the scene by the Mtddieport Emergency Squad
A Gallla Co unty acctdent
occurred at 1.15 p. m on the
Fa~rf1 eld-Centenary Rd. one
m1le so uth of SR &gt;88
The patrol satd a~ auto
drtven by John S Smith, 79,
Galltpohs, attempted to pass

Bad news from p Unxsutawney •
Groundhog Phil sees shadow
•

PUNXSUTAWNEY,Pa. (UP!) -It's true. Punxsutawney
Phtl cheats.
While everyone waited for the world's most famous
groundhog to poke his noSI' from a burrow on Gobbler 's Nob
and make his aMual predictton about the wea.ther, Phil was
waiting out the latest cold sn•p m a clean, warm, well-lighted
cage
Today is Groundhog Day ano Phil scurried out long enough
tu see his shadow. According to led end, that means we'll be hll
with slx more weeks of the cold, ml•erable winter of '78.
II Phil had not seen his shadow, tl would have meant that
spring was just around the corner.

.

·.·· ... ·.. ·.••..... .·· ··: .. ··:·::··· ... ,• •' • •'•

'• '••''

WASHINGTON - AN ATTEMPT TO BLOCK the Navy's
purchaile of 22 light-duty airplanes for more than $20 mtllion
(Continued on Plat 2)

Elberfeld's In Pomeroy

Heckman met for more

Utan three hours wtlh Dav1d

Reclamation project topic

CAIRO, EGYPT - PRESIDENT ANWAR SADAT left
Egypt today for Morocco, the first stop on an e1ght-na1ton tour
that will take hinn to the Umted States for weekend talks with
President Carter on stalled Mtddle East peace efforts.
Assistant U.S. Secretary of State Alfred Atherton wound
up a 12-day mission to Israel and Egypt and left Cairo today for
Washington, where he will amve ahead of Sadat with
Egyptian "Ideas" about a draft declaralton ol peace
principles.

Boys Sizes 8 to 18 Winter Jackets - Denims - cotton
polyester blends and wool plaids. Good selection 'h Price

representatives

James A Rhodes demanded

United Press International
One of Ohw's maJOr
electrtc ublLlles sa1d today a

CARTERSVILLE, GA. - AN ALL-POINTS alert was
tssued today for an Ohio pickup truck containing radioacttve
matenal that was reported stolen Wednesday night from the
parking lot of a northeast Georgm motel Police satd ':he
maroon and white, 1971 three-quarter ton pickup was mounted
with a camper and had an Oh1o ltcense plate, 5G7647
"The rad10active material l-11 ~ot dangerous unless the
cor\tamer ts opened and 11 ts very hard to open," a pollee
spokeswoman smd. Th.re was no offictal word what type of
radioactive matertal was ln the container.

Little Boys Jackets, sizes 2 to 7. Entire stock - lined.
Jackets and Coats ............. : ............................ th Price

of!tctal of one of the state's
major electric uhlittes sa1d
there is· "ltttle hope" that it
can
avoid
supply
c urtailment s wcludtng
rolling blackouts 1f the
natlonwtde str1ke continued
Also
Wednesday ,

that President Carter step in
to the coal negottaUons
· In a meetmg wtth
representatives or some
eastern uttlittes, C. Luther
Heckman, chairman of the
Publtc Uhhties Commisston
of Oh to, said, " we are
runnmg out of coal and

Coal must move, says power chief

l!OLLAND AND WEST GERMANY announced today they
had found poisoned Spanish oranges m addttton to the Irael1
oranies spiked with mercury and eaten by at least ftve
children.
West Gennan authortttes speculated Arab terrorists had
tampered with shipments commg from Spatn, mistaking them
for the Israeli products They satd the ta ulted Spamsh !nut
was found in the Stuttgart area one day after Israeli oranges
injected with mercury- the metal used mstde thermometers
- tttrned up near Frankfurt.

PRICE COAT AND JACKET SALE

coal reserves for electrac
utahhes m Ohto and an

e

Hospital News

1h

agreement so he could
explatn the contract to the
district's members.
The strike has depleted

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, february 2, 197M

.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

gm1a, would go to Washmgton

w be bnefed on any tentative

\'&gt;

•'. •lli!

But Phtl gave,Punxsutawney restdenls a hmt months ago
that the wmterwould be long and hard, or so say his wngue-mcheck followers No more unheated burrow for Phtl
"It 's true that Phil mstalled both he~tmg and ltghtmg th1s
year," Charles Erhard Jr., preSident of the Punl!Sutawney
Groundhog Club and manager of radio statton WPME said
Wednesday
But then , Phil doesn't actually ltve in a burrow It's r
a glass cage m Punxsutawney's c1vic center
According lo legend, Punxsutawney Pltil first emerged
from his burrow on Gobbler's Nob to make a weather
prediction on Feb. %, 1887.
And, they say, only twice m the 91 years prior to today dtd
he fall to see his shadow. That's a lot of nasty wtnters.
Groundhog Day is believed to have origmated centurtes
ago in Europe, where a similar Candlemas Day was observed.
Other towns, such as Quarryville, Pa , and Sun Prairie,
Wts., have been trymg to ~tve Punxsutawney Phtl svme
competitiOn , each community clanmng 1t has "tlle weatherprognosttcatmg groundhog.
Erhard says they're not even good tmltatioos

lean up all areas Eq uip-

nent has been rented and the
\:ommiSSIDners stated that 1t
was thetr hope that all areas
wtll be cleared within one
week.
Donald Moore, Salisbury
Townshtp Trustee, met with
the commissioners and
requested perm1sston for the
trustees to purchase a new

truck to replace the one

recently demolished In an
accident. The commissioners
approved the request . Moore
also offered his asststance m
trying to clean up the garbage areas tn Salisbury
Township
A letter was read from
Fred Crow, Pomeroy atturney and president of the
Pomeroy
Chamber
of
Commerce wfor mw g the
comm iSSioners that
a
comm ttt ee
was
bemg
orgamzed for the purpose of
pursumg construction of a
new highway from U S. 33 to

the new Havenswood b11d~e
Henry Wells, p1 es1dent of the
boa rd was chosen to serve on
thai conumttcc
The next mcetmg w1ll be
hel d un Tuesday, F'ciJ 7,
when rcpresentut1vc:-; of Ohio
De part ment of TransPQrtl:ltiOn w11l he present to
mform oH!clals, plannin g
hod~es , and dt1zcns about
0001
planmng
and
p1ugru mmtng efforts.
Attcndmg were Wells and
H1 ch ard
Jon es,
commiSSioners and Mary llobstetter, clerk

Highway
•

meetmg
planned
MARI ETTA - Glenn A.
Smith , Oh10 Depa1tment of
Tran sportation D1str1ct
Deputy Dtrector for Dt•trtct
10, wtll hold an Informal
public sesston of approXIma tely two hours
duration m Me1gs County on
Tuesuay , February 7 The
meetmg will begm at 6:30 p
m . In th e County

Co'm·

missioners' Off1ce Purpose
ts to tnform offtctals, planmng bodtes and citizens about
ODO'f
plannmg
and
programming elforts and to
rcce1ve

suggestiOns,

questrons and pertment in·
formation relatmg to transportation operating and
construction needs
The results wtll be used in
developmg the annual update
of ODOT's five year Transpor tal ton Improvement
Program (TIP) for Fiscal
Years 1979 through 1983
Public mvolvcmCnt IS a
plannmg and programmmg
requirement for federally
supported projects and the
public Is urged to parttclpate.
lnqutrtes concerning this
meemg may be dtrected to
ODOT Dtstrtct 10, Marietta,
Ohio,45750, telephone 614·3730212, Ext. 278.

�:!-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Feb. 2, 1978

Shearing
school
· announced
According to John C. Rice,
Co unty Exten sion Agent,
Agrtculture, there will be a
sheep shearing school held 111
Jackson , Ohro, on February
23 and 24. Any adult or
student wishing to learn how
to shear sheep Is urged to fill
out an application which can
be picked up at the county
extension offtce.
Paul Taylor , a sheep
shearer from near Marysville, Ohio, and Bob Taylor, of
the Mid-States Wool Growers
will serve as 111structors.
Pa rticipants will be in·
structed on the proper
method of shearing sheep,
proper method of handling
wool, and on what equipment
is necessary. This will be a
working school where participants will be shearing
sheep.
This school IS sponsored by
The Ohio Cooperative Extension Service, Mid-states
Wool Growers, and the Oh1o
Sheep Shearer.s Association.
II you are interested in
learning how to shear sheep
or 10 upgrading"your shearing
skills, contact the county
Extension office for an a pphcation form .

1
WASHINGTON (UPil The federal goveram..t
Ieday rejected stale toUece
sy•t•m
deaecre1a11on
plaos In Georgia aad
VIrginia, but approved
plan• for Arkanna,
Florldo, Oklahoma and
part of North Carollu'a
oyslem.
Civil rtabta groupe aald
they woald Immedlalely
file a molloll ill U. S.
Dlalrtel Court lo ""' off
federal htcher edneallon
fulldJ to G.O.gla, Vlrcillla
and North Carolina within
30 days.

DlftfG'I'OR

Court fines
total $79,617
A total of $76,617.29 was
collected from fines in Meigs
County Court during tm
according to Betty Hobstetter, clerk.
Recipts were distributed as
follows: lines to state
$20,164.71; fees to sheriff of
Meigs C;IUnty, $4,185.61; fines
and costs to county, general
fund, $28,551.70; law llbrary
fund, $11,064.31; auto llcense
and gas fund, $12,650.96.
There was $3,169 collected
on judgements 111 small claim
cases, 203 civil cases filed and
1,960 criminal cases.

W reeks blamed
on icy streets

Livestock
•

FBI

"They're all over , but you ' ll get used to it."

Icy roads are stUI causing
accidents. In Middleport at
10:05 a .m. Wednesday, a car
COLUMBUS iUPI I
Tuesday ' s Ohio livestock driven by Anna Marie
Hopefully, there will be no
aucf 1ons repor t.
Gryeza, Middleport, at·
Compared with last week , tempted to stop at the traffic more snow for a while and
s laughter s t eers Sl -1.50
th10gs can gel back to nor·
h1gher , sl aughter heifers light on Race St. and skidded
steady, slaughter cows 1-1 50 into a parked car oWned by mal. Even though we have
h1 gher , slaughter bul ls and Richard D. Bless111g, Route 4, advised semor cttizens not to
feeder cattle steady .
come in to the Center because
Pomeroy
Slaughter steers · cho1ce 2 3
At 5:35 p.m., a car driven of the bad weather and
99 i 1175 lbs. 43.50-46.50, high
by Owen W, Fink, Mid· hazardous dnvmg conditions
good and low choice 2-3 10201240 ibs. 41 90-42 SO , good 2-3 dleport, skidded when at- the staff has been busy
985·1100 ibs . 39 25 -41.75 ;
helpmg people in need of
sia ndard 2 3 1045-1 350 lbs. tempting to stop on Brownell emergency assistance. We
Ave ., and hit a Jl'!rked car
34.75-37 85 Slaughter he 1fers
choice 2-3 995 1180 lbs. 42 25· owned by Franklin B. Wilson, would like to clarify what is
44.25 , good and choi ce 2-3 925 M1ddleport. Damages were meant by " emergency
1205 lbs. 36.75-39. Slaughter very minor in the accidents. as~istance ."
cowS . ut1l1ty and commercial
Emergency assistance 1s·
2 4 900 -1soo ibs 29-34.50.
11) - Delivering food and
cutter 1-2 BS0-1425 lbs 27 75·
medicine to persons who are
29 75 ; canner 650 1450 lbs . 2528. Slaughter bulls 2's 1140·
out ol food or who heed
1760 lbs 36.75-39.25.
prescriptions filled .
Vealers : pnme 155-230 lbs .
71-77 ; 125·140 ibs. 62 67.50;
cho1ce

Senior citizen scenes

185-235 lbs. 68-72 , 125-

140 lbs 44 50 50 85-120 ibs. 30

41, good and choice 150-300

lbs 45-47 ; good 175-230 lbs . 30·
45 ; SS 80 lbs. 23-30.50 Feeder
catt le

' cho1ce

and

prime

steers 450-650 lbs 35.50-40,
good 410-675 lbs. 30 50-34 ;
heifers choice

375 -550

lbs.

28 50 3&lt;.

Hogs : barrows and g I Its 25
htgher , sows sfe!ldy , feeder
pigs 5-7 higher. Barrows and

gilts US 1-3 215-250 lbs. 46.6047 30 ; sows US l' s 400 lbs 40

41. US 1-2 410-550 lbs 37 10·
38 50;

feeder

pigs per

head

Boy victim
of freak
accident

SIDNEY, Ohio (UPI)- A
9-year-&lt;Jid Shelby County boy
was kllled Wednesday in a
freak accident involving a
snowmobile he was operating
near hts home, authorittes
said.
Todd Monnin, of rural Botkins, apparently choked to
death when the scarf he was
wearing around hts neck
became entangled in the
snowmobile's drive pulley,
Shelby County authorities

(2)
Makmg
arrangements to get roads
cleared and fuel delivered to
persons who are low on fuel.
Note · Definition of " Low" 1s
one to three days supply.
Making
ar·
(3)
rangements to transport
persons to doctors' offices
and hospitals. The physician
lS checked w1th to determme
1! 11 is essentlal that the
patient come 10 or if the
be
appointment
can
rescheduled for a later date.
( 4)
Making
ar·
rangements for transportatiOn home for patients
discharged from hospitals.

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

bleeds

for

nose

ot your nose wnn baby oil m
the mormng w~en you gel up.
and agam at night before you
go to bed. Keeping the area

By l.awrencel.amb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB -I am 72 sofl and preventing dryness
Sheep lot pr1me 70 lbs
years old, I have a problem often prevents crusts, imta·
wooled 67
that is getting worse as I tlon and bleeding.
Even though your high
grow older. I have had nose
COLUMBUS IUP il
blood
pressure lS of more re·
bleeds all my life. My doctor
Wednesday ' s Oh io llve:. tock
said .
rent
ongm
1t can provade the
auct 1ons report
only burns the vessels in my
Compared
with
lll5t
They said the youth, who nose with an electnc needle. mcreased pressure to bleed
Wednesday , choice
and
was
operating
the In a day or two I have nose from tmy broken blood
prime slaughter steers and
snowmobile
in
the
front
yard
vessels so it may be an agbleeds a gam.
1'1elfers steady to firm, good
of
his
Jl'!rent's
home,
drove
gravatmg
factor.
steers and he1fers Sl higher ,
I have h1gh blood pressure
slaughter cows steady, no the vehicle over a large snow at times, but I don't believe
Vitamin K only helps if
slaughter bulls offered,
drift and it nose-dived onto thiS ts causmg my nose there is a decreased ability of
vealers 2- 10 higher, too few
feeder cattle for a price test. the driveway slamming his bleeds. A hltle ch1ld surely the blood to dot. ThiS IS pr&lt;&gt;body mto the sleermg wheel · would not have h1gh blood bably not your case and that
Trad 1ng and demand very
just before the scarf became pressure.
IS why your doctor has not
good.
Slaughter steers · choice entangled.
g1ven it to you.
I
also
have
smus
problems.
and prime 2-4 850 1250 lbs. 43He was dead on arrival at I need to know what I can do
I m1ght add that if you are
41&gt;.70, good 2-J 900-1300 lbs.
Wilson
Memorial
Hospital
in
takmg
aspirtn, or medtcmes
ranged from 38.50 &lt;14 ; bulk
for myself. I have heard that
Sidney.
for
your
smus problems that
41 00-42 75 ; standard and
vitamin K IS sometimes given
good 2 3 900 1400 lbs . mostly
contam
aspirin,
these may
to nose bleed patlenls. My
holste1ns 34-38 60
decrease
the
blood's
ability to
doctor has not suggested this
Slaughter heifers · choice
GASOLINE.
T
AXES
dol
and
may
make
it
easy for
few prime 2-4 850-1100 lbs .41 tome.
January gasoline excise
you
to
bleed.
I
am
sending
43 , individual 2 1100 lbs.
I am very discouraged
46 75 , choice 2-J 750.850 lbs . tax checks totaling $9,872,074
you
The
Health
Letter
and low dressing 37.25-40.50 ; were distributed by State Doctor bills are too high and number 11-3, Aspirin and
on
a
fixed
mcome
(soctal
good 2-3 800-1000 lbs 36-39,
Thomass
E , security), I cannot be running Related Med1c10es, so you
slandard 1-2 650 750 lbs . 30 75· Auditor
Ferguson's
offtce
to
Ohio
can review the list of
34.75 Slaughter cows · uti11ty
to a doctor all the tune.
and commercial 2-4 800-1800 counties, townships, cit1es
DEAR READER - The medlCmes that may contain
lbs 27 -33 85 , low dressing
and
villages.
Amount ullunalc cause of a nose bleed aspinn and be causmg you
16.00-27.00; canner and cutter
12 750-] 100 (bs 2275-2860 received by Meigs County ts a broken blood vessel and problems. Others who want
Bullocks: Individual 1 near villages included Middleport, cauterizmg it with an electric th1s tssue can send 50 cents
1000 lbs . 36.50.
$2,160; Pomeroy, $2,301;
with a long, stamped, selfVealers · choice 170 lbs. 50- Racine, $600; Rutland, $531, needle is often suff1c1ent.
addressed
envelope for 11, to
In other cases 1f there are a
62 , good 130-200 lbs 24 so. and Syracuse, $701, for a total
35 50; 95-120 lbs. 25 34 ; 85 95
lot of blood vessels, 11 is me m care of this newspaper,
of $6,293.
lbs . 7-19.50.
necessary to surgically Ue P.O. Box 1551, Radio City StaHogs: Sows 1 8 higher , US
tion, New York, NY 10019.
the source of them shut.
med1um and l's 337-370 lbs .
DEAR DR. LAMB - I'm a
Why don't you go see a
37 50-39.50; US 1-J&lt;J0-•50 lbs.
14-year-old
boy. About three
43 46 , us 1-3 490-600 lbs. 48.50specialist in ear, nose and
months
ago
a hard lump ap50; feeder pigs US 1-3 148-172
throat disorders if you can•
ibs. 32.10-35.75.
peared
in
both
nipples on my
He may be able to do some
SEEKS REELECTION
chest. The one on the left s1de
local
correcllon
that
helps.
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Stale
Meanwhile, use a small cot- ts much iarg~r than the one
MEIGS WINS
Treasurer Gertrude W.
on the right side. They cause
The Meigs Junior High Donahey, one of the top vote- ton
. swab and coat
. the tnstde no pam but make my mpples
Eighth Grade team defeated getters in Ohio politics, today
nfEDAJLY SENTINI!:L - ·~· protrude out ·Iarger than norAthens 44-35 on the hardwood announced she will seek a
DEVOTED tO THE
mal. They continued to grow
rNTERESTOF
at Middleport Tuesday night. lhtrd term in the 1978 elec·
MEIGs-MASON AREA
for
a whtle but seemed to
H1ghest scorers for the Meigs lion.
CHESTBR L. TANNEHILL
slop.
What could they be?
Exec. Ed
team were Bob Ashely, 21 ;
Mrs. Donahey, 69, the first
DEAR
READER - That's
ROBERT
HOEFUCH
Randy Murray, 14, and woman to hold statewide
Cll)' Editor
Many boys have
normal.
Roger Kovalchik, nine. This office in Ohio history, said
Pubhshed dally except Sllturday
these
"knots"
during the
by
The
Ohio
V~llley
Publishln.,
evening at 4:30 the Meigs she rejected the idea of
Company-MulUmedJa , Inc , 111
maturatiOn
phase
and they
team will meet Kyger Creek running for another office
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
are
related
to
the
increased
BWimtsS Office Phone 992· 2156
on the Middleport floor.
because "my first and
Ed1lorial Phone992-2157.
hormone production by your
foremost duty is to those
Secqnd Cla!l!l pu!lbllje paid Hl
body.
They usually go away
Pomero)', Ohio
,
citizens who have entriJJ!ed
m time. They are not cancer
NaUonal Mdveriasmg representhe slate treasurer's office to
LIIUve Wurd · Grilflth Company
SQUAD CALLED
If tney persiSt for a couple of
Inc , BottineUj and Gallagher OJV '
The
Mtddleport my care ''
yearJ and they bother you,
757 Third Ave., New York, N y '
10017.
Emergency Squad was called
perhaps you could see a docSubscrlpUon r.ates Delivered by
to the Route 7 bypass at 6: 14
tor about them.
L'Brrler where av!ul~:~bl ~ 75 cent..!l per
p.m, Wednesday for John
week. By Motor Route where Climer
Of course, if you were
servftoe not av.ailable, One month,
Bowers, Berwick, Pa .
overwetght
and had other
IU5 By mall 1r1 Ohio and W. Va.,
SEEK LICENSE
Bowers was the driver of a
signs of failure to develop you
lAte Year, $22.00; SIX munths
A marriage license was f11.50 , Three month~. $7,00;.
tractor-trailer which
should have a medical exEbewhere $26.00 ye~:~r , S!x months
jackknifed. He received a issued to Gary F , Hysell, 29, 113 .50; Three mo nlhs S7 50
•anunal10n . The knots alone,
face laceration and was Pomeroy, and Carolyn Lee SubstTipllon prtcc am:h.J&lt;Jts Sumle~y
though, are not an mdicatiOA
TimllS-SenUllcJ.
Deem, 34, Mason.
treated by the squad.
of an abnormality.
US 1 3 40 50 lbs. 20 50-23 so,
IX! 80 ibs 31-33

..

or equipment to clear
driveways and walks unless it
IS an emergency.
If you are liv10g on a fixed
mcome and are havtng
problems making ends meet
because of extra expenses
during this bad weather, such
as heating or plumbtng
problems, please let us know
and we will try to find help for
you .
In a two-day period last
week over 125 phone calls
were made by the staff to
senior citizens who live alone
or who might need help. Our
senior citizen volunteers have

HEALTH
Help

As much as we would like to

we do not have the manpower

Hospital's lifeblood
maintained in crisis
BY SAM NEAL
POINT PLEASA NT
Water is the hie blood of a
hospital's operation
without it, sterilizers wiD not
operate, surgeries must be
cancelled , fl oors and dishes
cannot be cleaned, in short ,
services must cease.
That is how 1t could have
been at Pleasant Valley
Hospital in Point Pleasant
during : the present water
crisis were it not for the ef·
forts of the Mason and New
Haven
Volunteer Fire
Departments and the per·
sonnel at the hospital.
James
L
Farley,
Executive Director of
Pleasant Valley Hospital said
th e facility has been
operatmg at 85 to 95 percent
of its efficiency during the
water shortage because the
two Mason County Fire
Departments have been
working around lh~ clock to
supply "'ater to the hospital.
Mason and New Haven
•.. tremen and equipment
began bringmg water to the
hospital about midmghl
Monday, seven hours after
the c1ty had shut off the
town's water supply because
of contamination from
chemicals sp11led following a

train derailment.
Two 1,250 gaUon tanker
pumpers are needed to keep
Pleasant Valley operating
because as one empties into
the hospital's water system,
the other is being filled with
fresh water from a distant

source- such as Kanauga,
Ohto, the Naval Station,
Camp Conley or l.akin Stale
Hospital. On an average,
Pleasant Valley will use the
1,250 gallons in about one
hour . Therefore, sinc e
Monday night, these two
trucks and men have been
supplying water to the
hospital every hour on the
hour. ThiS amounts to approximately 30,000 gallons of
water each 24 hours. As of 3
p.m. Friday, 70 loads totaling
87,500 gallons of water had
been delivered to the
hospital.
According to Farley, "the
Mason and New Haven Fire
Depart"ments are the reason
we have been able to maintain such elficl~ncy . I cannot
begin to thank these in·
dividuals for the countless
hours of volunteer support
they have given to our county
hospital. As long as they
continue to provide us with

~

\~~&amp;•

this type of service, we can
continue with near-normal
activities indefinitely and will
not have to curtail admtssions,

surgeries ,

deliveries and services."
While Mason and New
Haven men and units are at
Pleasant Valley Hospttal,
hack-up service for those
areas is being provided by
Rutland , Pomeroy and
Middleport, Ohio units. This
hack-up service was tested
last Thursday when two fires
broke out in Letart, The caDs
were answered with men and
equipment from Mason and
New Haven Volunteer Units
who were not at Pleasant
Valley Hospital, and by
Rutland and Pomeroy men
and equipment. During these
emergencies, the Middleport
unit covered the cities of
Mason and New Haven,
" This is evidence of
tremendous cooperation and
coordination by all units
involved and everyone can be
proud of their Volunteer Fire
Departments/' Farley said .
"Pleasant VaUey Hospital,
the staff and most of aU the
patients cannot express their
appreciation enough ," he
concluded.

I

Carter. appeals to public
By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WAS!flNGTON (UP!) President Carter blended ap·
peals to patriotism and
common sense to rally public
support for the Panama

Canal treaties, and raised the
specter of jungle warfare tf
they are not implemented.
" This agreement with
Panama is something we
want because we know It is
right/ '
Carter
said
Wednesday night in a 25minute, nationally televised
and broadcast fireside chat
from the Wh1te House
hbrary.
"Tilts is not merely the
surest way to protect and

is the strong, positive act of a comment.
Sen. Barry Goldwater, R·
people who are still confident,
Ariz.,
said he had "never
still creative, still great."
listened
to (a fireside chat) so
Carter, hoping to boost
completely
filled with distorSenate support for the agreements to cede control of the tions, lack of honesty and
U.S.-built waterway to lack of candor as the one I
Panama in the year 2000, listened to tonight."
Senate Democratic Leader
called
opponents
misinformed and said Senate Robert Byrd of West
ratification would be in the Virginia, working to win
of
modified
"highest national interest.'' passage
11
agreements,
said,
When the
The president raised seven
facts
are
placed
on
the table
commonly asked questions
su~h
as
they
were
tonight
about the agreements and
proceeded to answer each in, there can't help but be a
a narrat1ve, patient way that shifting of sentiment m favor
recaUed his style on the of the treaties."
Polls show more than half
campaign trail.
the
populalton opposed to the
The president's speech
agreements,
but
the
prompted immediate
prestdent
said
once
understood, the lrealles
would be supported.
,
"Much of that opposition is
•
#
based on miSunderstanding
'
and miSinformation," carter
••
srud.
••
,·
"Nothing could strengthen ~ ·
4j
our
competitors
and
~·
in
this ·~ ·
as required under (he 1974 adversaries
hemisphere more than for us
pensiOn law,
~·
The action culminated a to rejOI'l tlus agreement," be
~·'
two-year investigation into said.
Should the vulnerable, 51·
the fund , which was accused
'
mile
link between the
..~,. ·
of investing "hundreds of
millions of dollars" in real Atlantic and Pacific Oceans
P I
estate deals and other risky be attacked, 1t would take "a
*
'
large
number
of
American
enterprises - some of them
•
•
troops
to
ward
off
a
heavy
lmked to organized crime.
•
.,
Poulos, 39, director of a attack." While pledging to
~·
Teamsters disstdent group deploy "whatever armed
known as PROD, Inc., asked forces are necessary to
Labor Secretary Ray defend the canal," the
Marshall
why
the president added:
uout there is a much better
governm~nt does not seek to
option
than sending our sons
remove Fitzsimmons from
and
grandsons
to fight in the
union office as a result of
jungles
of
Panama.
We would
evidence he invested the
pension money imprudently, serve our 111terests better by
Marshall said emphaticaUy implementing the new treathat the pension law does not ties ... ''
Carter's appeal for support
give
the
government
authority to remove union came five days before the
officers, ''That's for the Senate opens debate on the
members to decide," he said. agreements, reached after 14\
Marshall vowed to press for years of arduous negotiations
" 100 percent" repayment, through the adlmnistrations
bUt he added: "You can't gel of two Republican and two
Democratic presidents.
blood out of a turnip,"

also made many calls to other
senior cillzens. If they find save the canal," he sairl " It
someone who needs help,
they then call us. In regard to
phone calls, we would like to
add our plea to those of the
different telephone com·
Jl'!nies - " Please do not tie
up your telephone line
(especially if it is a Jl'!rtY
line) 'just visiting' durmg a
By SARA FRITZ
state of emergency such as
UP!l.abor Re1&gt;9rter
we 'have just been through.'
WASHINGTON (UP!)
'!Try to lim11 your con· The government's new legal
versattons so as to keep lmes complaint
against the
open for emergencies.
Teamsters could deprive
Our thanks go to the three Frank Fitzsimmons of his
Rutland Boy Scouts who personal wealth -but not his
volunteered to shovel paths position as head of the
for senior citizens so they nation's largest unton.
could get their coal, etc,, and
"We're still stuck with
to the persons who offered him," shouted Teamster
their fo~r-wheel drive member Paul Poulos vehicles for emergencies. A obviously referring to '
special thank you goes to Mr. F1tz51mmons - when the
Hugh Leifheit for spending action was announced
two days shoveling snow here Wednesday at the Labor
at the Center.
Depariment.
We hope that everyone who
The civil suit flied against
has elderly neighbors will Fitzsimmons and 18 others
check on them daily 10 this seeks to recover what could
kind of weather
be hundreds of millions of
Due to weather conditions, dollars squandered in bad
all activities here at the loans made by the Teamsters
Center are slowed down as Central States Pension Fund.
they have been for the past
Although government
few weeks . Parking con- officials did not rule out the
ditions are 1mprov111g and prospect of crimmal action,
lunch is being served, but the civil suit does not attempt
agam we advtse senior to remove the defendants
Citizens' to stay · home unlll from union office or put them
road conditions are better. in jail.
.
The numbers to caD here at
The sutt, representing the
the Center if you need biggest federal crackdown on
assistance are 992·7311, 992· Teamsters
since
the
7886 and 992-7884. We are imprisonment of former boss
(Continued !rom pace 1)
listed in the telephone book Jinuny Hoffa, asks that the
under Senior Citizens Center. money be reprud directly because tile mllltary didn't seek competitive bidding, was to be
from the defeodants' pockets made today.
Sens. Howard M. Metzenbaum, J).()hio, and Barry
Goldwater, R·Ariz., planned to file suit in federal court seeking
a temporary restraining order. The senators contend that at
least five fll'llls manufacture similar aircraft sought by the
Navy.

Teamsters' boss could
lose personal wealth

.

..

Generatio~ Rap
By Helen and Sue Hottel

I

NOTE FROM SUE : It's said that perhaps one out of every four
young children IS subJected to some sort of sexual molestation
(often w1lhin the family ). Parents should be alert for problems
and ready to deal with them candidly before the scarrmg
starts. ·SUE
RAP:
My boyfriend gave me a bcaut1ful bracelet for my b1rthday
But I don 't wear Jewelry. Should I return itlo him? I really
love him bull'm ·NOT INTO BRACELETS
DEAR NIB ·
Would 11 really hurl to gel mto bracelets'/ You m1ght even
like jewelry if you gave it a try · HELEN
OEARN :
· On the other hand , cons1der honesty. Isn'l1t better to level
wtth a guy, then let hun contmue g1vmg gifts you don't enjoy?SUE
.
TO BE INSTALLED
MEETING PLANNED
New offiCers will be inThe board of trustees of
stalled Sunday at 1:30 p.m.,
Columbia Township Will meet
the first Saturday of each at the Rutland American
Legion Hall for the new VFW.
month at 8 p.m.
There will be state and
national officers present.
Everyone welcome.

~ .

NAMED CHAIRPERSON
The Central Ohio Chapter
of the Cystic Ftbrosis
Foundation has named
James Bush as chairperson
of the spring bike-a-thon in
Cheshire.

..
.,
.,
..-·..
.....

NOV( OPEN

GINO'S

...

Kasem

OF MASON

WMPO

SATURDAYS
9 til Noon

PHONE 773-5536

and

building materials

CommissiOn on At&gt;credatation
Psychiat ric Facilities has

CLEVELAND- WILLIAM HARGRAYS JR, president of
National Investigation Security Services, Mayw~d, Ill,, has
been charged with murder in the shooting death of a man who
was picketing the strike-bound Bargar Metal Falricating Co.,
Cleveland,
Four of Hargrays' employees also are charged wilh
complicity in the case, according to chief police prosecutor
Almeta Johnson, who filed the charges Wednesday in the death
last Monday night of Thomas Moss Jr., 39, Cleveland,

WE
DELIVER

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY

OftPORATION
.

923 S. 3rd Ave.
Middleport, o.
992-2709 or 992-6611
Open: 7:00 to 5:00 Mon. thru Fri.
7:00to3:00 Saturday

approved the Gailia-Jackson· ·
Meigs Communit y Mt•nta l
Hea lth Cente r for ac·
cred1tat1on for a period uf unc
year
The Galiia·Jackson·Me1gs

•

Mental Health Center is one

of onl y t wo mental health
centers accredited j,n Ohio
and one of 70 accrediied
centers m the entire country. •
The citizens of Guilla,
Jackson and Meigs countws
can be justly proud uf !hiS

Gall1a , Jackso n and

~..,~
teaching expertence.
'i§."-:o; . •• . ~:;;;m~c~ncc~
.
.' •
Married to Frank H.
Harris, the Associate Dean of
Students at the Umversily of
Kentucky at Lexington, they
have two daughters, Virginia
Leigh, age 12 and Melinda
Kay, age 10.
Her exhibit in both
THURSDAY
Galleries at Riverby will
EVANGEUNE CHAPTER
include seven landscape
paintings in oil on canvas, 172, Order of the Eastern
nine graphic drawings and Star, 7·30 Thursday mghl
Guest."
at.the Middleport Masomc
She has presented several SIXteen life drawmgs m Temple,
one woman shows: the graphite. All of her work will
LETART FALLS PTO,
University of Kentucky be available for purchase,
Thursday evening, 7.30 p.m.
Should
the
weather
in·
Alumni Show and at the
Lexington Art League In 1973, terfere on February 3, the at the school.
SATURDAY
the Lexington Pubhc Library alternate date of February 10
HARRISONVILLE Lodge
has
been
set
aside
for
Mrs.
in 1974 and ws part of a two
woman show sponsored by Hams' reception at Riverby , 411, F and A.M. Will hoi~ a
spec1al meeting at 2 p.m.
the Owensboro Art League in If there is a questiOn about
the weather, call 446-1819 Saturday for work in the
Owensboro, Ky. in the faD of
!P.J.) on Fr1day afternoon, master mason degree.
1975.
for opening details.
Refreshments will be served
Mrs. Harris has many
at 6 p.m. and the regular
talents mcluding the deSign of
meetmg will be held at 7:3~
the Whitley Montessori
In 1976, Darnel Moynihan
p.m. All master masons are
School Brochure and the resigned as American
Sandy
Toes
Collages ambassador to tile United inv1ted to attend.
SATURDAY
NIGHT
brochure. She also has Nallons,
dances at Rutland Legion
Han will resume Saturday
beginning at 9 p.m.
.... w

Polly Cramer
l:luildup on tea pot
By Polly Cramer
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY- To chop
an omon Wlthoullears simply
place a large stand-up candle
(hghted, of course) near your
culling board.
Also, I would hke to know
how to remove hard water
'buildup from a heal reSistant
glass tea pot.- BEVERLY
DEAR BEVERLY- Try a
diluted solut10n of household
anunorua 1n your pot, let it
stand a while and rinse out.
Wash thoroughly wtth soap
suds and rinse again . Or you
rrught put tea leaves and
vinegar 10 the pol and shake
around until stains leave.
Washandr1nse. -POLLY
DEAR POLLY- One of the
readers wanted to know
whether or not she could dye
her rubber-backed draperies.
I dyed my cream colored
ones royal blue and they are
beaullful. Even the backs
look the dye. - EMOJEEN
DEAR POLLY - Instead
of buymg expenstve bubble
bath I put a bit of detergent in
the water in the tub. IllS gentle, cleansing and leaves no

tub ring. Good for all ages.
· My Pet Peeve lS to have a
box of strong scented
detergent or soap put in my
bag of grocertes ,right next to
sugar, bread or butter. MRS. VEE
DEAR POLLY -I just read
about Conme us10g a plastic
scraper

to

remove

..

· Social
Calendar

POLLY·s POINTERS

DANCES START
Workshops of the Belles
and Beaus Western Square

burned-on food from pots and
pans. PoUy, whenever I have
such burned-on food I lightly
scrape the food out and then
pour vinegar mto the pol, put
the lid on and let it stand
overntght. The next mormng
the- pan is shiny clean. OPAL
DEAR POLLY- When the
light from your flashlight
starts to be dun and you are
ready to put in two new batteries try just one first. Often
one new battery wtlh one of
the old ones will give several
more hours of hght.
When I buy new washcloths
I always stitcn around each
edge before th~y are used so
they will not fray - M.F S.
DEAR POU.Y - When
peehng cucumbers fur a
salad I peel the whole
cucumber and then take a
fork and go down aU sides
When 11 15 sliced 1! looks so
fancy. When I have guests
they often ask how I do this
and are amazed when I show
them how simple it 1s -MRS
D,F,
DEAR POLLY - I lll!e a
strip from one of those sheets
put m the dryer for static to
clean the dust from my
Afncan violets. - GLORM
Polly will send you one of
her signed thank-you
newspaper coupon cltppers if
she uses your favortle
Pointer, Peeve or Problem tn
her column. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper,

Malcolm Orebaugh, Administrator of the Mental
Health Center Wi th rralllne Plununer' Executive Director

achievement for it has only
been a few short years ago
that the three county a rea of

"landscape I" oil on canvas by Elsie Kay Harris.

of the 648 Board

'
!lEitE: VISITING
.Jcnmfcr Custc1, three yuu r

M e1~s

cuw1ties wer e last m the stH1e

old duughl c r of Mr, and Mrs
HoUcrt Custcl", Cha rleston ,
W V.I. has spent the paol lwo
WL'L'ks lwre With hl•r grundl"'trcnts, Mr . a 1111 Mt ~ JHiucs
t'l iswell, ~ !add le port, due to

of Ohio In avuilabl o mental
health services and raclltttcs

In term s of proVllling
mental health services ltl the
resident s of tillS three cuuntv
area, the accrcdltntion rntmg
means all bas1c comm unity
menta l hea lth se r v i ce~.
fac11lta es and sta ff , as
oullmed under the F ederal

t lw Jlhlct

JASON (:UESS
NEW AIUliVAL - Mr.
and Mrs . DcnniH GIH'SN,
Logan, W. Va. nrc uu·
nounc•lng the blrlh nf their

Groups and mdav ad ua ls
desirin g more infornwtion

about the ment ul hea lt h
and

so11, Jason Ut•nnls . He wns:
born on January 19 ui
Charl e ston M&lt;• morlal

fa cilita es

available to them should call
the Metgs satelhte Chmc 1n
Pom eroy (992-2192), the
Jackson satclhte Clinic 111
Jackson (286-5075) and the
Gallla Center 10 Oa llipohs
(446-5500)

llospltal

Lt·lnrt. W. Va . Mnternul

parent Is Mr!i. Jean Guess,

Beaus

l'alntsvHle, Ky. Maternal

Western Square Dance Club

grcut M graudparcutt~

will sponsor a &lt;lance Satlu -

to

nrc

Mr. and Mrs. L&lt;•o Clark

day mght at the Roy al O&lt;~ k
Recreation BUlldin~. 8 to II
p.m Caller w11l be Sunnv
Bess o£ Huntmglon, W V1i
All western Square dance
clubs are mvated to attend
Members of the Belles and

Dance Club will reswne
tomght !Thursday ) at the
Royal Oak Rec reatiOn BeC:Iu s i::l r e
refre::;hmenl'i .
buildmg.

grmul~

W, Vo., Putt:rna I

DANCE l't.ANNED
a nd

compaa sed of teams 1n
Boston , Chtcagn, Cincinnati ,

Nrw Y&lt;ll'k , Pluladelpllla, St.
IAJuis, IAlUlSVllle, Kentucky ,
and Hnrtf ont , Conn

weighed

and

Mrs. Bill LlcYing, I.ctnrl,
Be lles

Sl1ltes !o1· $15 nulhon
111 IB7U , the Nulinnul
Rascbnll League wus formt..~,

seven pounds nnd 8 1 ~
ounfePL Mrs. Guess Is tht•
former Cindy Llcvtng, •

gnmdpurenltt ore Mr. and

The

he l'fe~ ther

Also 1111 thi s day in
history :
Ill 1648 , MCX ICO Sllotlltxl a
tr N1ty ~i v iiiM Texas, New
M ex tco,
Art zonu
and
Cdllfornia t o the United

Community Mental Hculth
Serv1ces Act, are of suffi cient
quantity and quality to meet
the high standards dem and ed
by the Joint Conumsswn un
Accreditation of Hospltn ls

servi ces

c

greal·grundpurcnt,

ami

Mrs. Letha Llevlng,
W. Va.

L~lftrt,

Paternal

MORE
FOR
CARPET

··-

Get prof es si o nal
res ults a t a
fraction of lhe c os t

~

Rent

RIIISEil~ITVAC /1')

"MY ENGINE RAN
WHEN IT WAS OFF

sw1t ch lt1c 1Qn1 t1 on o fl bu t C/enmng
Sy stem
th e cng1nc wou ldn ' t s lop
In stead tl spu ltcrQ d, rockNI
and
cou gh ed
Th en I
di scovere d WY N N 'S SPIT
F I RE Now my troub les are
over ," wn l c~&gt; a hnppy user

run

ca use d by hcrlVy l.(lrllufl bui ld
up
can
be
no l
o n ly
exasperati n g, b ul downright
dcl nge ro us mechan1 c a tl y . So
be kmd l o your CM and
you r sel f . Add a can of
WYNN 'S SP i f F I R E l o your
gas l ank today Now fl Wi tlab le

u:~~

Anooroc•'s No r

Nome Carpet

I' d

Yes , eng tne ''.Ill e r

.

CLEANING

grea~

grandparent&amp; ure Mrs .
Flora Hale and Mrs . Rena
Guess, both of Henlawson •
W. Va .

Ut k l!

WHY
PAY

e::
· c.-J...I,j J
._ ~~~

/{

$100
PER HOUR
DIU
'
-- ------------STAR SUPPLY CO.
IIUIT
FOR

t4 HOUR MtNMJM)

949-2525
Racine, 0 .

nl all HECK'S

AMC Concord D/L.

The luxury Americcnis want.
The size America needs.

WINTER
TIRES
GENERAL
TIRE SALES

'

cru shed velour upho lstery rhmughiiUt, p\u:;h cut·pd ~:
Cllt'pt"tmg, wooJ-grameJ msmnm:nt pane l, Extra Qu!ct

11 ~ :-oUt', (or 1 x:-unpll·. make~ II
har\tllt• rn,,l m ane uvt' r. An J I( h.l~ .t ManJ ,m.l
cub1c mch Ct;l)o!lllc It ) g tvc yn u I he 6-q ·\t nJl•r power yol.
nceJ t\ 1 cruise cllm(orrahl y ;mJ pas~ safd y 11n the
h1ghway AnJ Con cord Dll 1s CPve reJ hy AM C':i
u c!us1ve Buyer Pmr'ecoun Plan.
The ConcorJ D/L cnmes m 2-J nor and 4-J om seJan
models anJ tn a 4-Jcm wagon Wh1che ver ynu l:honse ,
we thmk you'll a..:ree it' ~ unt t lf the fi101e5t. mmt 1henuti ful

ln:&gt;u lat1on , carpeted trunk anJ spare tire cnve r, an
electnc J1gltal cl11Ck i:inJ much mure AnJ ,..,u get all
these "exrras" at no extra char~c .
But [he CunnmJ 0 /L Jue:;n't ru:;t l,,.,k ~re~t. t t':; a11

th&lt; m•price
Y" U n&lt;eJ, .mJ a
sncker
that ma kes It
an increJ 1ble va lue 1

tht Cmcmd IJ/L
2-Joor sedan 15 rhc mcreJ1bly srnktng &lt;lPPl" lrance .
Everythmg about If sdyS luxur, O Ul:;IJl', the re :. a formal
LanJl\u vmyl roof w1rh o pera wmJ pws whltl.'w.Jll d res
co lm - ~ eyeJ wheel cnvers. w1Je cn lor-kc)cJ t:-.c.xlv
side scuff moiJm'gs, even an elcg,mt hooJ om,tment
lns1Je are luxunous mJ1vtJual recltn tn~ fn,nt seats,
The fant thmg you nonce abnut

~) u tsla n Jm g pe rformer luo

e asy

nz

t tl

,.1 AMC

ca rs AMC has ever buah . lr':~ J.!Ot the luxu ry yo u wan t,

-----------------~-~----------------~------~
'

.

WIDE SELECTIO'l I" WICK

NORTHSECONDAVENUE
MIDDLEPORT, OHI045760
PHONE: 992·7161

446·9800
•

RIVERSIDE AMC-JEEP
"

',

'

·-----~---------

1978 CONCORD 2-DR D/L

SEE US FIRST NO COMPARE OUR
PRICES. QUALI Y MATERIAL AT
REASONABLE P ICES.
CASH&amp;CARRY
PRICES

Max1ne .. Plumm e r .
Executive Direclor of the
Mental Health and Mt•niul
Retardation 648 13oard, an·
nounced
that
uffic1al
not lfication
had
been
received from the Joint
of Hospnals thm the Ac·
cr edit atlun Council for

BUILDING OR REMODEUNG?

COLUMBUS- OlflO'S RUBBER, PAPER and chemical
industnes have apparently decided to Jl'!Y a new state excise
tax on coal purchases even though electric utilities are
withholding payment claiming tbe tax is unconstitutional.
Majoc industries had paid $46,019 in the new tax to the Ohio
Department of Taxation through the end of January , A spokes·
man for the Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co,, Akron, said his
company decided to Jl'!Y the tax "in the spirit of good
citizenship."
•

CINCINNATI - REMODELING WORK wiD begin this '
spring to transform Cincinnati's historic Union Terminal into a
shopping and recrealiooal complex called "Oz.''
The project will he directed by the Joseph Skllken
Organization, a Colwnbus firm, whoae proposal for saving the
terminal was selected over aeveral others by a city task force ..

A recephon for members of
the French Art Colony to
meet and honor the talented
artist who will be exhibiting
in both Galleries at Riverby
throughout the month of
February, Elsie KaJI Harris
of Lexington, Kentucky, will
be held on Friday evening,
February 3 at '8 o'clock m
Riverby .
Mrs. Harris was born in
Charleston, W. Va . and
received her degrees in Art
from Sullins Junior College
and the University of Ken·
tucky. She has lived in
Lex111gton since 1965,
She is an active member of
the Lex10gton Art League,
having served as their
membership chalnnan lnd
just completed a two year
assignment on their Gallery
Committee.
IS
Her
creativity
recognized and admired
among arltsts. She illustrated
"The Black Hatted Troll," a
poem by Patrick M, Prosser,
published in 1976. In eary 1977
she deSigned the "Swan
l.ake" backdrop scene of a
mountain lake and distant
castle which enhanced the
desired mood of the dance
sequence for the Lexington
BaUet Company. She also did
the stage design, scenery and
drawings for "The Chrtstmas

tee

·

" Son, I can 't tell you how pleased 1 am to
learn that you like Debby Boone, too' "

I Reception announced
~
for Kentucky artist

DON'T LET THE HURT FESTER
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
Lots of times I have wa nted to write you When the subject
was hv10g together, I almost told you how my husband and I
had an apartment before ma rriage and how happy we are.
When I read that Sue is havmg a baby soon, I wanted to tell you
about our own little 6-montiH&gt;Id g~rl and how wonderful she is.
But what finally got me to the typewriter is the letter from
"Scarred for Life."
I too had an expenence with a child molester, and, like his,
my memory of the incident lay completely suppressed until I
left home at 18
What gave me the most pam was how my parents handled
the epiSode when it occurred. They saw me runmng froin his
place, crying, and unaglned much worse than what really happened. They were shocked, angry and frightened, also embarrassed, as we lived in a small town . Those powerful emotions
came through to me solely as anger. Instead of helping me to
understand what had happened, they loaded me with shame
and gwlt.
, "How can we hold up our heads m this town," they imphed,
after what you have done?" A relallvely mild encounter turn·
ed mlo a constant mghl.mare. Then we moyed away and the
matter wa s never mentioned agam.
I might have been a freer, happ1er person had I not been oppressed Wllh this guilt! couldn't quite understand. I love my
Jl'!rents, and we're close, but l could never tell them how they
hurt me .
What I'm saying is thls: Parents, tf you suspect or know that
your child has had a sexual experience at an early age, please
talk about it, and let him or her talk freely .
The bad (eelings that result from such an encounter can he
U1 the rrund llke poison m a festering wound. Your job as
parents lS to draw it out. Let your child know you love her (or
him), and won't condemn her for what happened. If confusion
brings questions hard to answer, gel professional help. Above
all, remember that thiS bad thing doesn't have to go on hurtmg
forever - H,W,M. DEAR H.:
Thanks for your good letter. As we've said l!lany times
before . ll1sn't what happens to you that causes the trauma 1t's
how your rrund continues reacl10g to it after the event. Best
therapy is frank , honest, understandmg discussiOn .- HELEN

News •• in Briefs

Berry's World

.(lccreditation granted to
Mental Health Center

i~-::w:::~~=~%"**~-;._~~~:~'*-m~~~;:;};;,.~:::.:::·:·:~:;::-:·:-:

GALLIPOLIS, 0.

�5-The Daily Scnhnel , Middleport-Pomeroy, U.. 'l'hursdil)'. ~'cb. 2, 1978

4--The Drtil)' Sentuu-1. Mtt.hllt-l)ort-Pwncru), U. I hur:-.tl&lt;•). Fl'IJ :!. itlj8

~!.~l!..'!:!s:~~~.:.~;::~c~ . :~':: ..... BS&amp;T player found dead

was field' WethH:~)')d(t) m~-tht ctt

world and gavt· tht•i r he~r·L-t

prcscJJilU~

the

tuG ...!
Tht• Hl'\'. W1lham Knttld
Wlkl.-d un .. The Prl(..l' uf
Frct.'t.lom .. \\Jlh the tho ught
bt.·tn~ on huw men 111 war-s
J,ta\·c. lhctr ltcs that we nught
havt• frt.•('(ltllll . Ht&gt; n·b r'''' t'li-:

ho

Mid&lt;llcporl

Unllcd

Pcntct'ohtal Chun.:h undertht•

diret:IIOn of Mrs. IAJU!St' London , hx·al&lt;:hun:htlm.'t'tor
The St'f\'il'l' upt~nL"&lt;l wtth
dcvutiUrml ~ in ~lll~ and
Spt:'c tal pra yer (or i: lll nlls·

1

a t·u uuncn~..ctr)

(Jtl

..

u 11111 &gt;r • w sl.,ulu lJt

w1~;1:1
~ ~~ ~i: \u ~·i1nst wh1:
~.a\'t' ht.s , lifL· tu save lht.'

world .
Prayer l'UfldUdl.&gt;d tl~ ser·
ViCC .

SIUilill'lCS St:fVIUg tn distant
£iclds and~~ home. Mr·s. Lon-

don read a il•ltcr to the eungrcJ(atlon rrom the Bonlt.•r
missiun• ry f•mily in New
Zealand ..A br14;!f summary
WiJS gi\'cn on tht.· Oen•ml..cr ···"'
nu!eti ng with Mrs. Maxme
VarlaJi g i vi n ~ u~ tr~asurcr 's
report , i:iHll Mrs . c~ rolyn Varl

HEATHER HILL
T URN S THR EE
Heather Rae Ane Hill
&lt;-elebraled her lhird birth·
da y on January 16 ~· Uh a
parly al the home of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Roger E. Hill. Ath!nding iJ
dinner followed by itc
cre~m and cake were he r
brother, Julian Scou. Mr.
and Mrs. Jerry A. Powe ll ,
Mrs. Inez Hill. and M.r. and
Mrs. Austin Wolle, J erry
a nd Aimee. AIS41 pn•scnting
gifts to Heather "'ere Mr .
and Mrs . Oval Diddle, Mr .
and Mrs. Andrew Manning,
and Mrs . Ruth Tucker .

Meter. the sct:rctltry's rcpmt.
Mr. and Mrs . David Acree
,.ng " I Love j\1y Saviour"
followeu by a duet. -- My Huus
Is Full, But My Fielu is F:mf&gt;ty" by Mrs. Ciruly Me&lt;:iduws
and Miss .Juy &amp;tu lcrs. A film
Wi.J S shown cntttled "The Turning Puiilt ". the sto ry or &lt;.1 •
young marriecJ cu~plc who

.

.

New member.·" welcomed
J

SL·vcntccn new llll'J IIIJl•rs
WL'J'e wdrometl IIllO lbc ('onw&lt;Jy Diet classes at ret:cnt

mcctmgs. They wen~ Carol
Sm ith . Nida Kearns, Vinid«
Randolph, Kathy Elias. Bar!Jara King, Brenda Peltit.
Jua nita .Justis, Lim.la Hubbart.J. Helen Diddle, Bceky
Br ude r il'k , Ann R~dford ,
Ca rulcc Cwnmins, Beckv

Mankin. Donnli Snf&gt;n•·•·r r,iJ

J-1(-Jrt , Anna ~anue l , ~nt.J B&lt;Jr·
!Jara llackij\t,
Zelia Riley received her 20
pound pin and ccrtirice:tte ~nd
Kathy Elias won the trophy
fur the m~ t weight lost durmg this week. Runner-up was
H.arbar&lt;J Ki ng. The eo upon
worth SS is still ~ff~dlvc for

those who enroll this Wet!k ur
11ext week .

0

E
n

room.

RIO

GRA NDE

- l! e-

th e
Oh io
Counci l
of
Elementary Schoo l Science's
reg ional worksh ip, Saturday ;
Feb. !I at Rio Grande College
a nd Community Co ll eg e
i RGC-CC J.
Registration can be made
thro ugh Feb. 6 for the one day
event -which will begin in the
campus din ing hall at 9 a.m .

onvv"" HOFFMAN

TURNS TWO The
second birthday of Brooke
Marie Hollman was observed Jan. 8 at the home
of her grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Bernard Hoffmao, Letart, Rl. I. AI·
lending were Brook e 's
mother, Connie; Marlene
Lawson. Mr . and Mrs.
James Roush and Kim , Mr.
and Mrs. George Hoffman.
Benny, Jane, Jennifer and
Joe, Debbie Hoffman and
ber grandparents, Mr. and
· Mrs. Hoffman. Ice cream
and clown cake we·re
served . .She received many
gills. Those sending gifts
were Cathy Missy Roush,
Charles Tennant, Martha
Clark and Erma Rottgen.

and is open to both college
stu dents and professio nal
tc&lt;Jchcrs. The sessions will
provi de elem enta ry sci ence
tea~h er s with an opportunity
to unde rsta nd and try new
teaching methodS and pa r·

ticipants wi ll be able to view
an exhibit of free and inexpensive science instructional
materia l.

Reg istration fees for the
con ference var\' h,. ' ,"~"'~"'fl

INVERNESS, Scotland
$2.50 and $8.50 de pending un (UP!) - Billie Suthe rland,
whet her p1. rtic ipan ts ar e 64, wQ.s alive today because
teachers or students. More he sells la,dies' underwear .
in (ormation .is available by
Sutherland survived 80
contact ing Mrs: Joan Loeffler hours trapped in his car in a
at Rio Gra n~e College and 21).foot snowdrift by wrapping
Communi ty Co ll ege (245- himself in pantyhose samples
5353) .
to k~p warm.
Co nfe rence leader s anDoctors at Golspie hospital
no unced that pre-reg istration near Caithness in the Scottish
may be sent to Mrs. Loeffler Highlands said the traveling
at RGC-CC.
salesman was "cairn and
relaxed and in in credibly
good shape ."
DOES~ !T BOTHE'!&lt;
Sutherland was one of the
YOU N EV E~ HAVING
KIL-L ED A DRA.GON?
lucky hundreds of motorists
res cued from their snowcovered automobiles during

I

Holzer Medical Center
Dt~rharges Fe h. 1
J aco b Chevalier, Martha
Cla rk, Mr s. Ala n Cunnin gham a nd son , Mary
Da rst , Esther Davis, Peggy
Ellis, Mrs. J ames Grimm
and son, Willoughby Hill,
Mary Hoffm a n. Willi a m
Niles, Hattie Norris, Amber
Ohlinge r, Mrs . Raymon d
Paul ey and son , Lucill e
Ra m sey, Lola Ra tcliff,
Vicki e Sawyer , Ruby Sexton,
Vivian Siders, J uli us Swan

FILMS ANNOUNCE;D
This Friday evening the
Pom eroy Library will have a
program of short movies for
children. The moviP..C\ will
start at 7 p.m. and last for an
SOMEWI-IERE ! HERES A
DRAGoNS MO"T"HER hour. This week the library
SECRS"Ti..'Y ~ANK I N6 ME! will be showing " The Cricket
in · Times
Square , "
...__ -' " Pysanka : the Ukranian
Easter Egg,' ' ''Dragon Stew''
and " Silent Night" . P&amp;renls
are welcome to attend with
~ their children . The program
'! will be especiaUy fun lor
'-"".--' ~----.\. If grade school kids.

Jr ., John .Thompson, Zelpha
Thompson, Kare~ Wills.
Births Feb. 1
Mr . and Mrs. William
Buttrick , -a
dau ght e[,
Gallipolis : Mr . and Mrs.
Ben jamin Hash , . a so n,
Bidwell; Mr . and Mrs.
Ch a rlie Ma the ws, Jr ., a
daughter , Syr ac use.

~~~~~---.u•

Campoutand
h 'k la
Dinner pklnned
t e p nned
A Winter Hike and Overnight Campout will be co n·
ducte&lt;l at Bob Evans Fa rms
on Saturday , February 11.
The outing will begin at 2 ·
p.tn . and leave from the Bob
Evans Farms' Canoe Uvery
Log Cabin . The hike will
follow
th e
Grand ma
Gatewood Tra il a nd la st
approximately one and onehalf hours.
All person s interested in
c amping out that sa me
evening following the hike
should attend a free Winter
Camping Workshop to lle held
at 7 p.m. February '8 in the
Bob Evans Fann s' Craftbarn . The workshop will be
taught by the Adamsville
Outfitters' Staff and will lle
primarily concern ed with
cold weather clothing, food,
cooking. and shelters.

We en courage· our

Herbert needed the needles
for insulin injections as a
diabetic.
Herbert lived with his wile
and
the ir
child.
in
Philadelphia . " The group
·
manager informed Mrs. Par~ .
·
The
consulate
was
told the
Herbe rt, " the con sulate
group
was
leaving
lor the
source sa id.
United
States,
leaving
The U.S. Consulate source
said the manager of the group · luneralarrangemen~ to U.S.
told them they
were officials , the source said .

A U.S. Consulate source
confirmed the consulate was
advised by police about the
presence of drugs in
Herbert's room .
But the source said the
group manager reported that

What 's up in holidays

.

ad-

A public Lineo ln Day dinner will be held Saturday at
the Middleport M&lt;Jsun ic Temple. ·
Sponsored by E vangeline
Chapter , 01·der of t he
Eastern Sta r, the dinner will
lle served fl•om 4 to 7 p. m . The
IJi:J ked steak din ners will ·be
ser ved cmnplete wit h des~c11
for S3 each, two for ~ .7 5 , fuu r
for Sll . Children under 10 will
lle ser ved lor $2.25 each. For
tickets or additional information, residents are invited to
ea ll Mrs. Ha rry Chesher, .
992-3335.

Scotland's worst snowlaU in
three decades. Four people,
imprisoned in their cars,
have died.
The second bli'zzard in
three . days swept across
Scotland
Tuesday,
hampering rescuers. still
digging out people trapped in
cars, houses and botels.
SUther land left his home in
Wick Saturday morning to
drive the 77 miles to Golspie .
His car's roof was covered
with two feet of snow alter
plowing into the snowdrift.
He wrapped himself in the
pantybose and drilled an air
vent in ttle snow with his car's
starting handle ..
Rescue teams found his car .
with metal dete.ctors.

" The first 30 days have
been better t han anticipated," according to Dr.
James Orr, Chairman of
Holzer Cllnic Ltd., as he
described the first month of
operations at t he new
Jackson County Branch near
Wellston.
The n e w branc h. was

canceling the rest of what he
called a " successful," tour,
f&gt;hlch would have included a
concert in The Hague
Tuesday
and
further
performances in London -and

"It could be a case of an
overdose of d rugs," a police
spokesman said. "We found a
small quantity of heroin and
cocaine and also a few
injec tlon needles in the
room.''
Legal sources said they
expected the exact cause of
death would be established by
an autopsy .

Broadway foe isn 't
Regzstratzon announc_ed fqr the only man ~ho
regional science workshop wears pantyhose
gist ration is st ill ooen fo r

tour

u~opean

AMSTERDAM,
Netherlands 1UP!) - Dutch
police say Gregory Delano
Herbert, lead sax player fo r
the Blood, Sweat and Tears
pop group, may have died
from an overdose of drugs .
The 30-yea r -o ld Her be rt
had bee n descr ibe d by
· Downbea t Maga zine as _
"possibly the finest yo ung
tenor player in jat.t."
Blood, Sweat and Tears, on
a European concert tour,
arrived in Amsterdam fr om
West Germany Monday and
early Tuesday Her bert 's
body was found in his hote I

First month operations better
than anticipated,. says Dr. Orr

McGregor graduates

Who e ver hea rd o f cele brating New Year ' s and
Mothe r's Da y in _Februar y? The Chinese and Norwe gia ns , that' s who . Here a re some Fe bruary holidays
fro m the file s of the Nationa l Geo graphic S oc iety and
the Un ited Nation s:
February 1: Robinson Crusoe Day (According tc
Dani el Defoe's novel, Cru soe was rescued froni hif
dese rt isl and on thi s day in 1709. )1-----February 2: Ground Hog Day I .S . and Ca nada)
February 3: Bean Throwing Ni ht (Japan )
February 5: Weathermen 's Day
February 6: Bun Day (Iceland)
February 7: New Year 's (Ch inese)
February 8: Ash Wednesday (Chr ist ian)
February 1.2: Mother ' s Day !Norway)
February 18: National Holiday (Gambia)
February 20: Mohammed 's Birthday (Islam ic)
Fe bruary 21: Lantern Festival (Ch inese )
February 22: Girl Guide Thinking Day
February 25: Powamu !Hopi Ind ian)
February 26: Intercalary Days (Baha 'i)
February 27: National Holiday !Dominican Republic)
February 28: Bac helors' Day
·
INt-:WSPAPE !i ENT E RPiliSE AS; N. J

MAKE LIST
Barbara
Andrews,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Andrews, Lcng Bottom,
was named to U1e dean's list
at the Hocking Technical College. She received a perfect
4.0 averag'e for the fall
quarter. Barbara Andrews is
a second year student in the
medical a ssistant technology
course.

Your " Extra Touch"
Flor ist Since 1957

FLORIST

PH. 992-2644

I

352 E . Ma i n. Porn eroy

L _,_.._.._.._,_,_...--Jt
You ~

FTD Flor ist

AIC James A. McGregor , a
recent graduate of the Air
Force's Technica l Training
Center at Keesler AFB ,
Mississippi, and a 1975
graduate of Nelsonville-York ·
High School, has returned ·
borne to assist his recruiter· .
..U.der the Ilecruiter Helper
·program.
. Recruiter Helper enables
selected first-term ainnen
the oppnrtunity of returning
to their hometowns for
temporary periods of time to
discuss Air Force op:portunities with potential
enlistees.
"AIC McGregor, 20, son of
Mr. and Mrs. John McGregor
of Nelsonville, Ohio, has
volunteered to assist us in our
recruiting efforts," said SAIC McGREGOR
•Sgt. Vern Zeger, Air Force
'J;'ecru1ter
. here. "It h.as long
been our contention that no Keesler Technical Center, he
~ one can communicate better
completed six weeks of baSic
what Air Force life is really military training at Lack la nd
like than those who have Air Force Base, Texas. He is
completed basic military and presently assigned to K. I.
technical training at one of Sawyer AFB, MI.
.our centers. Recruiter Helper
"While here, " explained SProgram allows our first- Sgt.
Zeger ,
" Air man
termers the chance of McGregor will be visiting his
sharing their experiences old high school with me and
w)th
other
potential . answering any quesHons
enlistees."
interested students may have
AIC McGregor selected about the Air Force. He wilr
training as a .P ersonnel also be available at my office
Specialist prior to entering at 221 N. Columbus Rd. in
tbe Air F orce 's Delayed Athens , Ohio, . or may be
,.Enlistment Program last reached by calling (614) 592·
July. Prior to attending 4592."

ATTENTION
'

OHIO POWER

CONTINUES
ALL

LADIES' &amp; GIRLS'
WINTER COATS

COMPANY

1f2 PRICE
'

.,! '

.CUSTOMERS
I

4

.,

NOW OPEN

opened by Holzer Clinic on
December 19, 1977 in the new
J en kins Memoria l Health
Care facility after a year
delay because of federal " red .
ta pe".
F ed e ral offi cials have
wit hhe ld a pprova l of the
operating contracts signed
last June between Holzer

New farm hill
unveiled today
By BERNARD BRENNER

WASHINGTON (UP!) Two House memllers today
introduced a sweeping farm
bill that would boost food and
fiber prices sharply and
impose a rigid "marketing
certificate" control program
on farmers to regulate
production :
The measure was unveHed
a day after Sen. Robert Dole,
a
R-Kan .,
announce.d
package of other farm aid
measures ihcluding one
allowing individual farmers
to choose their own levels of
1978
federal
Income .
protection - up to 100 percent
of the iederal farm parity .
standard - by deciding how
much of their acreage they
will idle.
The House bill, outlined by
Reps. Richard Nolan, 0Minn ., and George Brown, 0~lif,, at a news conference
wOuld raise · government
support loans - which put a
Hoor under market prices to 90 percent of the federal
parity standard lor all major
crops.
Actual market prices
currently average only 6S
percent of the parity
standard which is designed to
give each bushel or pound of

SPORTSWEAR

NOW OPEN

50% OFF

GINO'S
OF MASON
PHONE 773-5536

Open Friday ti 1a
Saturday til6

farm products the same
buying power it had in 1911).
14.
A spokesman lor the
lawmakers said he had no
estimate of what the plan
would do to food prices.
Earlier,
however,
administration officials
estimated that a plan backed
by a farm strike group to set
prices at 100 percent of parity
would raise retail food prices
about 2U percent.
Nolan and Brown said that
in return lor the higher prices
provided by their bill,
producers of wheat, cocn and
other supported crops would
have to agree to sell only the
amount
covered
by
"marketing certificates''
whlch ~ould ~ Issued to each
farm.
Under the bill, it would be
illegal to seU, buy or !rade
farm products covered by the
program unless · !hey were
accompanied · by
the
marketing certificates. No
farm would be allowed
certificates covering more
than $500,000 in sales In any
year.
Nolan and Brown said their
bill was needed because
current low prices are
driving thousands of effldent
family farmers off the land .
Their blllw.s introduced a•
members of a !ann strike
movement were demanding a
federal price floor of 100
percent of parity. But the
lawmakero ~~&amp;id their plan
was the result of a year'•
study by more than 20
organizations Including the
Consumer Federation of
America, Rural America and
several study groups such as
Ralph Nader's Congress
Watch and the Exploratory
Project lor Economic Alter-

natives.

Until further notice the Farmers Bank at 221

GINO'S
OF MASON

Other features of the farranging measure Included
plans to discourage tax~oss
farming, grants to local
communities ·to preserve
family farms, research on

SNOW TIRE

West Second Street In Pomeroy will accept ..

activity offered by Bob E vans
F anns at no cost to t he
public. For more information
caU 245-5304.

•
These attractive new quarters of the Meigs County
Branch of the Athens County Savings and Loan are
nearing completion on Pomeroy's West Main St. Although
the quarters will undoubtedly be earlier , the local staff

United Presslnlernalloaal
National Guardsmen will
rmnain ln snowb91.41ld areas
of Ohio for up to two more
weeks helping residents
recover from last week's
blizzard. The gilard said most
of the work would lle done in
the northwestern part of the
state.
" Disaster relief operations
throughout
Ohio
are

will not be occupying the new fa cility until about March I ,
Richard Jon~. local marwger , reports . CtmstrucUon is Uy
Ute Karr Construction Co., Pomeroy.

•

will rentain

~en

.A I .J..

continuing after six days of
emergency effort by the Ohio
National Guard, the Army
Corps of Engineers and
active Army troops, '' a guard
spokesman said.
The spokesman said some
2,000 Ohlo guardsmen are
still on duty along with 317
soldiers of the 21th Engineer
Battalion from Fort Bragg,
N.C., while the active Army
troops are contlnuine: to work

in Hancock, Lucas, Ottawa
and Wood counties which
were among the hardest hll.
The Army _ Corps of
Engineers said about 8,000
miles of roads have been
cleared at a cost of over $4
million .
The
National
Guard
estimates It will cost the state
more than $500,000 lor the
callup of guardsmen which

Carter has no plant
rallying national support In
ad.v ance of the Senate debate
on the treaties starting next
week . The speech will be at 9
p.m. EST from the library on
the ground floor of the While
House.
Callers on the president
today
Included
Ernest
Moria!, the first black mayor
of New Orleans, and Joan
Mondale, wife of the vice ·
president who wanted to
discuss plans for ,focusing
national
attention
on
environmentally · sound American artists.
technology for small forms
Deputy press secretary
and creation of a new famUy . Rex Granum- said .the Senate
farm
service in the Foreign Relations Committee
Agriculture Department.
approval of the treaties Another section would Monday "serves as a very
require all retail stores to good prelude to his talk ."
post signs showing how much
. Carter also was continuing
farmers got for each food preparations
for
his
produet on sale.
forthcoming weekend talks
Sen. Dole's farm aid with Egyptian President
package, announced at a Anwar Sadat at Camp David,
news conference Tuesday, Md.
would tailor 1978. grain and
By the time the talks begin,
cotton Income. protectio~ · Carter expected lo have
subsidies on each !ann to the recommendations from the
amount of land each Iarmer National Security Council on
was wUling tO idle.
. the . Egypllan's request for
Wheat growers idling 20 arms purchases. Sadat wants
percent of their ·tand, for F-15 and F-16 jet lighters, but
example, would be eligible diplomatic sources doubt he
for payments coverlilg any ' will
get·
the
most
gap between market prices
and $3 a busheL A Iarmer
idling 50 perCf!lt of his land
would get payments covering
any gap between the actual
WS ANGELES (UP!) market and the 100 percent of
Jess
Hillis retiring July I as
parity level of $5.04 a busheL
commissioner
of the Pacific
Dole said hls bill and a
Coast
Athletic
Association, il
package of other fann aid
was
aMounced
today.
measures would be reviewed
A
search
lor
a new
during Senate Agrlculture
In
progress,
commissioner
is
Committee hearings on farm
problems which are due to ilald Frank Bowman, PCAA
president .
·
start Feb. 23.

By HELEN THOMAS
uPI Wblt~ House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UP!) Encouraged by growing
support for the Panama
Canal treaties, President
Carter will deliver a
nationally broadcast fireside
chat tonight to confront the
most controversial questions
about the agreements.
The speech is aimed at

sophisticated planes .
Israel and Saudi Arabia
also have submitted arms
shopping llsts to the White
House and aides indicated
last week the Arab and
Israeli requests are viewed
as Interrelated .
The president met Tuesday
with governors from some 10
Midwest states who brought
along 22 proposals to solve
the n~J,tion's farm problems.
Afterwar~s .
Agriculture
Secretary Bob Bergland
pledged they would se e
results on some of the
recomtpendations within 60
days. Carter plaiiB a meeting,
possibly next week, with
leaders of farm strike
activists.
Proposals the governors
gave Carter dealt with
international commodity
agreemen~. the need lor
realistic set-aside programs
with target prices above loan
prices and alternate forms of
credit to reflect farm
· conditions.

.
began last Thursday .
The F e deral Disa ste r
NJ~istance AgetiCY snld u
progrmn to oflsef75 perL'Cnt
of the loc al cos ts for
contracted snow removal
wnrk comple t ed before
midnight Tuesday, 1!1 any
instanc e
wh ere
snow
accwnulation hnd proven a
threat to life and property ,
will remain ln effect.
Reports that there is to be
an y c urtailme nt oL th e
fedt..-al effort until the job in
Ohio Is wrapped-up ar e fal se ,
FDAA Ac ting He gional
Director Dennis Kwia tkowski
said Wednesday .
Any eligible work costs
ro_111plcled unde,r contract Uy
that midnight Tuesday is
eligible for reimbursement.
He also said application for
reimbursment
procedures
will be announced to eligible
local gove rnme ntal uniis
early next week . .
Meanwhile, the Ohio
D e partment
o f
Transportati on issue d a
spacial one week overloa d
permit upon individual
applic ation from tanker
trucks that are carryi~g fue l
oil .
The deparlment said it wus
reluctant tn issue the permit
because the lack of a deep
freeze under the roads which
normally provid es extra
strength is. not present due to
the wann weather prior to
the r ecent storm.
However bl'CltU~ or the
blizzard and the many
organlzaUo.ns s witching to
fuel oil as an alternative to
I

coal, there has been a seri()US
lag created betwe en the
demand and the supply .

Here's to you,

SWEETHEART.
One of the new herghtened,
lightened looks from
Nurse Mates"

payments of customers electric bills.

venturous friends to join in

these events. This is another

•

Guard s

FAMOUS NAME

A fire at the Ohio Power Company office building in
· Pomeroy has resulted in the temporary closing of the
office.

..

Pediatrid ans from HolZer
Clinic began seeing patients
in the Branch on a one day
per week basla. Dr. Zim·
merly advised that Pediatric
coverage at the Branch will
soon be expanding to two
days per week. and specialists
from Internal Medicine and
OB-Gyn wlU be coming there
In the future.
In response to the con·
troversy surrounding the
Bran ch Clinic , Dr. Orr
reported that the same
federal official&gt;! who delayed
the opening are now placing
pressure on the local owners
to Ioree the clinic to close
again by/ cancelling the
contract. He expressed
concern that in the absence of ·
a strong expression of support by the people in the
Jackson and Vinton County
areas, the Clinic may be
forced to close again.
Dr . Orr urged Interested
citizens
to
contact
Congressman Clarence
Miller's office at the House
Office Building, Washington,
D.C. 20515, telepbone 202-~
5!31, to express their OJ&gt;inlon
on kcepmg the Clln1c 1n
Jackson County.

Clinic and the local owners of
the new facility, J ackson
County Hea lt h Facil ities,
Inc., that was built in 1976 to
house the new clinic.
Conti n1,1 ing ,
Dr.
Orr
comm ent ed tha t , "s ince
Qpening t he new clinic, we
have found that our decision
to begin practice there has
been met with overwhelming
a pproval by _the ge'lera l
public in the Jackson County
ar ea. This response has been
most gratify ing a nd ha s
strengthened our belief that
in opening the Clinic in the
face of bureauc ratic o pposition , we made the right
decision! ''
Branch Directar, Dr. John
Zimmerly, reported that 86S
·patients were seen in this
first month by himself and
F a mily
Practitioners,
Pediatrici a ns, and
Ophthalmologists traveling
from Holzer. Over 200 of the
patients seen at the new clinic
had previously traveled to
Gallipolis lor their care.
,Additionally, over 40 patients
were new to both Dr. Zim·
merly and other Holzer
physicians.
During this first month,

1LOU lOB lftUll

PHONE 773-5536
The Ohio Power Company will temporarily
opal'! an office

STILL IN
PROGRESS

en their service

MOORE~S

TraCtor Salas In Pomeroy.

·sTORE

APPARELL FOR

bills can also be made at the Spring Avenue
We Also Have a
Fine Selection of

..

Hallmark C.:ards

~~
~

advanced styhng with

Spring Avenue at the rear of Fulton-Thompson

Requests for sarvlca"and payment of,, electric

MEN &amp; WOMEN

AT

building off

ON FINE
WEARING

I

c;oddl1n9 com fon and
luxunousl1ghtne55 We'l1

make sure you gel a perfec t f1t
for your perfect shoe

For Someone Special!

Mrs.

$5 0FF
00

~§'

-~

McDonald's
Chocolates

Regular Price Per Tire.
On~

J G.

On All Tires In Stock.
Free Installation.

CT

~

i
heritage hou~i

Village .Pharmacy
I

MOORE'S
STORE

service bulldh'!g or by calling 992-3786.

DUTTON DRUG CO.
122 N. 2nd Ave.

Come see our complete ltne
of Nurse Mtltes''Jnevvest looks
The shoes thai comb1ne

PH. 992-2848

Middleport. 0.

!.

't

W. MAIN ST.

.Middleport, Ohio

OF SHOES

New Haven;
W. Va.

Open Monday thru Thursday &amp; Saturday
9:30 to 5:00. Friday 9:30 to 8:00.
N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, 0 .

POMEROY 0.

•

'·

'

,.

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tnursday, Feb. 2, 1978

Marauders in
60-53 defeat
By Greg Bailey
The Meigs Marauders,
showing signs of im-

provement after being cold
for the last two games, staged
a terrific comeback in the
last quarter but fell just short
as they bowed to host J ackS()n
last nigh!. 60-S3.
Meigs was within striking
distance the entire first half
although they hit just seven of
42 shots. MHS canned six of Z1
to trail 15·10 at the first
buzzer, and after connecting
on just one of 15 the second
period, went into the locker
room trailing, 27-19.
The third period seemed to
go the same way although by
the entl of the period jackson
was on top 45·32 and seemed
to he in command.
In the last quarter, Coach
Ron Logan instructed his
Marauders to press and the
lronmen got rattled.
J)()wn by 17 points at one

point, Meigs pulled to within
one point, 54-53, in the waning
minutes and even had a
chance to tie or go ahead . But
a tip-in on a missed free
throw gave the hosts the
incentive they needed to hang
on for the win .
In that torrid last period,
• Jackson shot 22 free throws
while the Marauders got just
two chances at the charity
stripe.
D. Evans led the winners
with 19 points to take the
night's scoring honors. Rich
Harless also hit double
fig ores with 17. The lronmen
hit 22 of 37 foul shots to win
the game at the foul line.
Meigs outscored the hosts on
field goals, 21-19.
Meigs hit on 11 of 16 free
throws, as Kenny Young got
back on the scoring trail,
leading Me)gs with 13 points.
Brent Stanley also hit dooble
ligures with 10 markers.

Meigs-Jackson box •..
MEIGS MARAUDERS (5U

FG-A FT-A PF RB TP

Player
Young
Blake
Stanley
Becker
Foil rod
Andrews
Elkins
Coats

5- 13

0·2
3-5
4.12
4-10
0-J

2-5
0-0
2-6

H~wley

.
12

Kennedy

TOTALS

. 11·58

J.J

4

0·0
4·6

0

13

5
1

0

0-1

10
5
8
6 0 8
1· 3 0

o.o

o o o

1

Q. Q

0.0

4-6

Q. Q

0. 0
11 - 16

S
S

2

I

8

3
2
24

3
0

4
2

73

Sl

JACKSON IRONMEN

FG-A FT-A PF TP

Player
Harless
Conger
Dorsey
Forsythe
D . Evans
T . Eva ns
Martin

!): It
2·3
, _4
3-10
6-lJ
2.5
0-4

7-12
0-2
4

Rebounds Jackson Score by quart·ers '
Meigs
Jackson

3

17
4
6

o.o
2-2

2 8
3 19
2 4
1 2

22-37

15 60

2-2
7·11

IY -)1

TOTALS

.a

4

0

JO

10 9 13 21 - 53
15 12 18 15-&lt;10

College results
College Basketball Results
Bv Uni1ed Press tn terna t ~onal
Eas1
Bluef!d 82 , w .va .St . 12
Bsn Coli 81. Geotown 76
Brdgprt 81, Springfld 7.&lt;1
Cse -Wslrn 83, Wsh&amp;Jeff 76
Crnege -MIIn 73 . Bthny 61
Cot gate. 69, Clarkson 64
Ovs&amp;Eikns 74, Ald -Brdds n
Frlgh Ocknsn 62 , Drxel 54
Hartford 79, AI!= 69
Jun ia ta 81. Messiah 6.:1
Louisvl B5, Mrshatt 69
Manh,altan 15, LIU 73
Ntre Dl"!le 95, LaSaLLe 90
Shephrd 83 ," M . Harvey 81
S. Car . 61 , R-1 CQII 59
St . Fran 95 , Buffalo 82
St . Jos 74, American 48
Ssquehnna 82 . Wit~es 77
Temple 89, Hofstra BJ
Vermont 72, New Hamp . 59
W .Ve .Wslyn 87 W.Lib 78
South
Appy St . 66 , Citadel. 65
Auburn 77 , Ga . Tech 72
Clumbs 77 , Vldsta St. 76
"High PI 85 , At . Chri s 63
Mt . Sf.Mry's 79 BaH 70
New Orlns 73 . S, Fla . 61
No . Ga . 74, Ga . Col t. 72
Virgin ia 66, Maryland 64
Va . Tec h 109, Ark .· LR 75
Va . St. 72, Campbell 65
va cmnwlth 13, wm&amp;Mry 62
UNC -Wi lm 83, S.C. St . 68
Midwest
· Albion 94, Olivet 75
Alma 91,' Kalamazoo 82
Allghny Pa 65, J. Crrl l .61
Bw l ~,g Grn, 12 E : Mich 57
Cap .tal 64, 0 . Wslyn 58
Cen M lh 9A , Ctumbia 74
Clell,_ l·a d St . 71 Akron 62
Detroit 1)4, Wayne St. 51
Findlay 84, Adr ian 69
Gnnon Pa . 89, Stbnvl 68
Kan . St . 74, low~ St . 63
Kan. 83, Okla . St . 65
Kan .Wslyn 92, Bethel 80
M~lone 79, Walsh 12
Morhed St . 75, Mrrls 69
Mt . Union 82, Heldelbg 81
Muskingum 78, Denison 56

OhiO 86, Loyola Ill. BO
Oklahoma 65 , Missouri .6.tl
SE Mo . 96. Mo . Bapl 69
St. Mry'S 57, Str ing 53
Tiffin 93, Cedarv l 69
Toledo 67 , w. Mien . 51
Witfnbg 65 , Otterbn 53
wooster 81 . O .Nrthrn 76
Southwest
Arkansas 75, Texas 71
Houston 93 , T CU 55
Phill ips 83, SW Okta 74
SMU '71, TeKas A&amp;M 70
Sthwstrn 95, Tr.trcn 80
Texas Tech 81, Rice 17
·
,
west
Cai · Bkrsfd 80, omngz Hils 77
c:a1 ,Ply SLO 79. Stnsls 71
Fresno St . 55. UC-FIIrtn 4? .
L i nlld lOS, So . Ore. 102
Pug.el Snd 11) 1. Rdlnds 52 ·
S1. Mrtn 's 61. W . Wash . 52

Bobcats stun Loyola
of Chicago, 86-80
afler it blew a 10-pvint
halftime margin, but Bandy
said he had a feeling the
Bobcats were going to win .
"We .played hard," said
Bandy. " We were going to
win it some ho'l' and I'm
p-oud of them for thai. I felt
that when we had the ball
with 16 seconds left in the
game we would win ."
Bandy and Loyola Coach
overtime.
Jerry
Lyne both felt ~he
You say, so what? Who is
Ramblers' two big wins had
Loyola of Chicago?
Well, going into the game at something to do with their
Athens, the Ramblers were Wedne sday night
com ing off back-to-back performance.
victories over second-ranked
" I think wlth t~eir big Wi.ns
Marquette and highly- over Marquette and Indiana
regarded Indiana State, State and then having to
which at one lime was as high travel here after that Monday
game that we ca ught them at
as No. 4 in the nation.
fl took OU an extra five the right time," said Bandy."
"We cBme out burning and
minutes to get t h11 _iflh "'""'"

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sport• Writer
Ohio
Dale
Bandy's
University basketball learn
has done more bouncing this
year than a rubber ball.
Every time you get ready
to count the Bobcats out, back
they come, just as they did
Wednesday night in nailing
Loyola of Chicago 86-80 in

Pro Standings

two games."
Steve Skaggs scored eight
of his 27 points in overtime to ·
spark the OU win.
OU, now 8-8, le&lt;\ 42-32 at
halftime, but the Ramblers,
paced by Andte Wakefield
with 28 points, grabbed a 4944 lead early in the final 20
minutes and it was close the
rest of the way.
OU scored the the first four
points of the overtime and led
the rest of the way. Tim
Joyce added 22 . points for
Ohio University.
· In the Mid-American

Revised

NHL Standings
By United Press International
By United Press International
Campbell conference
Eastern Confer ence
Patrick Division
Atlantie Division
W. L. T . PIS
W. L Pd. Ga
NY Islanders
30 11 8 6B
Phila
33 t.t .702
Philadelphia
:28 12 9 65
New York
26 23 .531 1
At lan ta
:20 19 1 1 51
Bllffalo
16 19 .356 15
16 25 9 41
Boston
16 30 .348 15 1 2 NY Ranger s
Smvrhe Dillision
New Jersey
9 4.1 .180 751 2
W. L . T . Pts.
Due· to the recent bad
Central Division
20 17 12
5~
W. L Pc~. GB Chicago
weather,
sporting events
Vancouver
14 22 12 · 40
San An ton i
30 IB 625
have
been
either
cancelled or
11 25 11 33
Wshngtr
26 21 .553 ]l/ 2 Colorado
St. LO,U iS
II 32 6
28 rescheduled for Meigs County
New Orlns
26 24 .520 S
M innesota
11 33 5 21
Clevelnd
'12 24 478 7
teams. Bat;"ring more bad
Wales Conference
Atlanta
23 27 .460 8
Norris Division
Houston
17 31 .354 13
wea.ther, here's how the
Western conference
'!/· L. T . Pts. remaining schedule looks for
Montreal
35 7 6 76
Midwest Division
22 18 9 53 the varsity boys basketball in
W. l
Pet. GB Los Angeles
Pittsburgn
D 72 11 45 Meigs County:
Denver
31 18 .633
17 23 7
&lt;~I
Chicago
27 23 . ~40 41 1 Detroit
Thursday, Feb. 2- Kyger
Washington
9 31 11
29
Mil w
26 25 .510 6
Adams Division
Detroit
23 25 .479 71 1
Creek at Eastern.
Indiana
19 28 .404 11
W. L. T . Pts.
Friday, Feb. 3 - Meigs at
32 11 6
70
Kanss Cty
16 34 .320 15' 1 Boston
Buffalo
26 10 1J
65 Waverly, North Gallia at
Pacific Division
26 15 8 60
W. L Pet. GB Toronto
Cle ve land
18 JO 4 . 40 Southern.
. Portland
39 B .830
Wednesday 's Results
Saturday, Feb. 4- Eastern
Ph'OeniK
33 16 .673 7
NY ISindrS 7, NY Rangrs 6
~eatlle
27 22 .551 13
at
Southwestern, Ironton at"
Pittsbllrgh 6, Minnesota 1
24 75 .490 16
Golden St
Meigs, Wahama at Southern.
Cleveland 2, Detroit o
Los Angels
23 ·26 .469 17
Buffalo 2, Toronto 2
Wednesday's Results
Mon(iay, Feb. 6 - Eastern
Chicago 3, Phi ladelphia 1
Boston 103. Los Ang 100. of
at
Federal Hocking.
Boston 5, St . LO Ui ~ 3
Phila 104, Denver 101
Lo s Ang 8, Wash ington 3
TUesday, Feb. 7- Eastern
Detrqlt 127, PMe·n ix 120
t hursday's Games
New Ortns 117 , Ch icago lll
· at Waterford, Southern at
NY Islanders at Atlanta
Houston 124, New Jersey 103
Co lo.rado at Philadelphia
Kyger Creek, Wahama at
Thursdav•s Games
Boston at Buffalo
Washington at Cleveland
Meigs (tentative).
Montrea l at Vancouver
At lanta ar Indiana
Thursday, Feb. 9- SouthWHA Standings
Detroit at Kansas City
By United Press International
New York at San Antonio
western at Eastern (Parents
W. L. 'r. Pts.
Mil waukee at Golden State
Night).
New England
30 16 4
6~
Friday 's Games
Winnipeg
28 18 2 58
Washington at Boston
Friday, Feb. 10
Houston
24 20 3
51
Cle11e1and at Bllflato
Gallipolis
at Meigs, Trimble
Edmonton
2~ 23
1 49
Los Angeles at New Jersey
Quebec
23 20 2
4i! at Southern, Eastern at
lndi~na at Philadelphia
Birmingham
21 2&lt;1 2
4d
New York at Hollslon
Kyger Creek.
San Antonio at Chicago
Cinci nnati
20 27 2 4~
Saturday, Feb. 11 - Meigs
Indianapolis
14 30 4
J2
Detroit at Denver
Wednesday's Results
Milwaukee at Phoenix
at Logan, Symmes Valley at
GOlden Sl. at Porllil:nd
Cinci B. Indianapolis 0
Southern, Waterford at
New Eng 4, Edm~nton 3
N &amp;A Standings

schedules

released

Eastern.

Little Marauders win
first league contest

PARIS (UP!) - Ray
Famechon, 53, who at 21
hec.ame the youngest French
featherweight champion In
hi story,
the n
became
European cha·mpion, died
Tuesday in the Paris suburb
of Chelles, family friends
said.
Famechon, having won the
European title in 1948, fought
Willie Pep. lor the world title
in 1950 and Percy Bassett in
1953 but was defeated boUo
times.
Already having troubles
witll alcoholism, Famechon
gave up boxing in 1956.

jost let up," said Lyne. "We
had a letdown. But Ohio
University played well. There
is no way we played wiUo the
same intensity we did Uoe-last

The Meigs Reserves picked
up their first SEOAL win by
dumping the lronboys 34-24
last night.
Meigs and the hosts battl~d
hotly the first half with Meigs
com ing from the locker room
on top 17-14. The Meigs
defe~se held the hosts to just
two points in the third period
to pad their lead.
Britt Dodson led the locals
with 10 points while Chris
Yeauger tossed in ni n e.
Jenkins led Jackson with 12.
Meigs varsity and reserves
travel to Waverly Friday and
then host Ironton on Satur·
day.

Monday ; Feb. 13 ~ South·
ern at North Gallia.
TUesday, Feb. 14 - Hannan
Trace at Eastern.
Wednesday, Feb. 15 -

Eastern junior high
cagers defeat 'Cats

7- The Daily Sentinel, Moduleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 2,1978

Arkansas gains revenge, 75-71

....
' .,
··~

By Grec Balley
only one point the last period.
The Eastern Juiolor High, Gibbs ted Wahama with six. ..
.•..
. after a Ioog lay-off, got back
The Eastern eighth grade ...
in their winning ways dtopped a real thriller, 45-40.
Mooday by sweeping two The hosts led 23-20 at halftime
.•.
from host HaMan Tr~ce. The and it was nip and tuck the
seventh grade of Coach rest of the way until the
Dennis Eichinger put oo a visitors pulled away at the .,
0Jnference Wednesday night,
good defensive show in the end.
Bow ling Green handed
last quarter t.J win 29-23.
Eastern Michigan a 72-57
Tim Dill led Eastern with
The score was tied 15-all at 14 and Greg Cole had eight.
setback and Toledo downed
the half, and it was still nip Haymaker led the winners
Western Michigan 67-51.
and tuck after three periods. with 24 big poings.
Bowling Green jumped t.J
an ~ lead and was never But seven unanswered points
t.J start the fourth quarter put
headed in its victory over
the game away. Brian · Well
Eastern Michigan.
led Eastern With 17 of his
Duane Gray led Bowling
Green with 21 points, while · ·learn's 29 points.
The eighth grade of Coach
Ron Hanunye had 12 and Joe
Arch Rose also used a second
Faine 10.
half spurt to win in a big way,
Toledo reeled oflll straight
41-28.
Tim Dill poured in 19
points midway through the
points
lor the wirmers.
secopd half and then cruised
It was lied ~20 at half·
to its win over Western
lime, but then the defense of
Michigan .
. Western scored the first . Eastern allowed just six
See Our Windows
four poin_ts of the game and points the entire second half.
For Specials!
Eastern came out the second
led until Tim Selgo's 22-foot
half
with
a
press
that
rattled
jump shot put Toledo ahead
22-20 with 7:40 to play In the the hosts. Dill was also
MANY MORE
first half . The Rockets credited by Rose lor playing ·
INSIDE
stretched Uoe margin to 37-29 a good buard game, along
at halftime and never trailed with Johnnie Riebel. Riebel
ON SALE!
Uoroughout the second half. and Greg Cole had nine and
Ted Williams had 14 points eight points, respectively.
WHITE
to lead Toledo while Eastern entertains Federal
teammates Jim Swaney and Hocking Thursday and South·
PORTABLE
Dick Miller each added 11. ern Saturday afternoon.
Last
night
the
seventh
Muskingum kepi its perfect
SEWING
Ohio Conference Southern grade got another win, this
Division record intact with an time 21-17 over visiting
MACHINES
easy 71h\6 win over Denison. Wahama. Brian Well ted the
In other OC games, it was winners with 14, Mike
Wonderfully
Mount Union 82, Heidelherg Whitlatch got four, Mark
1
Simple
81; Wooster 81, Ohio Northern Gaddis two, and Mark Riddle
Simply
one.
76; Wittenberg 65, Otterbein
Eastern had to hold off a
Wonderful
53; Capltal64, Ohip Wesleyan
late
Wahama
rally
for
the
58 ; and Kenyon 86, Marietta
win. The score was :ID-9 at the
80 in overtime.
In other games it was end of three quarters, but the
xavier 69, Valparaiso (Ind.) visitors allowed the hosts
60; Clevelaod State 77, Akron
62; Gannon (Pa.) 89,
Steubenville 68; Wr ight State
WS ANGELES (UP!) 78, Indiana Central 75;
The
Los Angeles Dodgers
Wilmington 96, Taylor (Ind.) .
On the T
today
welcomed back
80; Defiance 67, Earlham
Middleport, 0.
outfielder Willie Crawford,
(Ind.) 59; Case Western 83,
signed as a free agent.
L,_._:..__._
- - ...
Washington &amp; Jefferson 76;
Hiram 42, Thiel ( Pa.) 39;
Malone 79, Walsh 72; Rio
Grande 61), Ohio J)()minican
58; Tiffin 93, Cedarville 69;
Findlay 84, Adrian (Mich.)
69; Hanover (In d.) 85,
Ja,jkio1U .
Bluffton 77; and Allegheny
(Pa. ) 65, John Carroll 61.

.------,--,I
SEW

I
I
I
I

FOR
SPRING! I
I
I

I
I

I
I

I
I
I

I

THE
SEWING

I CENTER
I
I
I
I

J,J,,.j

%PRICE
WINTER SALE
NOW IN PROGRESS

NOW OPEN

No Refunds- No Exchanges
Phone 1-304-882-3312
OP~NOAILY

GINO'S

9:110-5: 00

Friday till

OF MASON

Eastern at Symmes Valley.

Sport Parade
By MILTON RIOIMAN
UP! Sporl.t Editor

NEW YORK (UP! ) - Back in August, Steve Garvey, the
Dodgers' first baseman, received .an unusual phone call, which
is something In itself, because dur-ing the course of his career a
ballplayer becomes accustomed to so many different types of
calls that none seems so unusual -anymore .
This caller identified himself as the principal of a junior high
school in Lindsay, Calif., which is an agricultural community
approximately 40 miles from ins Angeles. He said his name
was Bob Edwards and he was principal of Lincoln Junior High
Scbool.
~dwards told Garvey his school was having some problems.
Not any real major ones, but the kind he fell stili called for
some action on his part. Mostly, the problems dealt with the
general morale of the students, Edwards explained.
~We'vecome up with an idea , but'f irst we want to check with
yoy to find .out whether it's all right," he went on. "We'd like to
reuame OW' school after you."
.
For a moment or so, Garvey didn 'I know what to say.
""It's such a big step,'' he said. ''Are you sure you want to d()
it?"
' 'We're positive," the principal answered. "'Our students,
naturally, are young and it's difficult for them to relate to
soineone as far back as Abraham Lincoln, but they certainly
have no troubie relating to you. When we put the idea of
changing the name of the school to the kids and asked them for
their suggestions, you were the overwhelming choice. Not only
Coach Art Lanham's Rio
that, but they also voted to cha nge the school's nickname to the Grande Redmen avoided a
Dodgers."
major Mid-Ohio Conference
"Well, if that's the case and you're so sure this is the right upset Wednesday night by
step, it'll be my pleasure," said Garvey.
sl ipping
past
Ohio
Some 300 kids from the school came to Dodger Stadium a few Dominican's lowly Panthers,
, weeks later to present him with a scroll and on the 24th of this 60-58 . .
month he'll be in lindsay for the dedication ceremony offi.
Ohio J)()minican, now t-14
dally changing the name of the educational facility from Lin· overall and .()..7 in conference
coln to Steve Garve)' Junior High.
play, ca ught the league·
At the present time, nobody in baseball or perhapa in all leading Redmen, now 12-5
sp&lt;irts, personifies the All-American Boy or Mister Straight and 7-{), way off form . The
Ar~ow more than the 29-year..,Jd Garvey.
Panthers led 30·29 during the
Unfailingly courteous and cooperative with youngsters and halftime intermission.
adults alike, the Dodgers' dark-haired, compactly boilt line·
Don Gibson's two charity
drive hitter has a way of so rarely ever saying or doing the tosses with Z1 seconds left
wrong thing that sometimes he gives the impression of being and a free throw by Vince
too good to be true. A couple of years ago a national magazine Phelps with four seconds left
ran a story about him with the the straight-faced Iitle: Steve preserved Rio's lead an li
Garvey Can't Help II If He 's Perfect.
In answer to that, he says, "f don't try to put on any images
and I don't try to be someone I'm \wt.l just try to be myself."
· •Garvey doesn't sm~ke, doesn't dtink and doesn't use Xrated language, but he os a self-confessed addict.
.
"I'm addicted to chocolate cake," he laughs. "Ail kinds of
.
.
tl 1
chocolate cake. That's my vice."
UnJtedPr~s~loter~a 0 ~ 8 •
Right now' Garvey is in the Bahamas taking part in the
Doug Colhns didn I score a
Superstars competition, a series of events which include whole
lot. of
pomts
weightlifting bicycle-racing tennis bowling and the 880-yard Wednesday rught, but he still
run. Among ~!hers competing are ~ger teammate Ron Cey; may have been the most
footba ll players Dave Casper, Bill Bergey 'and Mark van important player on the
Eeghen; race car dtiver Tom Sneva and water skier Wayne court.
Grandilch. The overall winner gets $25,000 and ABC-TV is
"I think I'm a verx capable
airing it all in two parts on Sunday and on Feb.l2.
defensove player,. Colhns
Speaking from the Caribbean over the phone, Garvey talked . said, after harassmg Denver
about the upcoming season and holj', unlike some others, he star David Thompson ~to an
didn't think Tommy Lasorda's enthusiasm would be any less in offrught and lhrowmg m two
his second year as Dodger (llanager than it was in his first.
key baskets for good
" I played for him at Ogden and Spokane and 1 think I know measure, . in leadmg the
' him fairly well," said Carvey. "The secqnd year · for a
Pluladelph1a 76ers to a 104·
manager always is rougher than the first because he has to 101 VJctory over the Nuggets.
keep coming up with fresh ideas to motivate. his players, but
Tho~pson had averaged 32
Torrimy is the type of individual who can do it. He reminds me pomts mhos l~st 10 games but
of everybody's relative. He's an ·uncle to one; a father 10 Collms h~ld,bun to 18 on 6-forsomecne else and a brother t.J still another. He never overlooks 12 shootmg from the floor.
· Thompson sat out 10\',:
anyone."

NAMED COACH
CLEVELAND (UP! )
December.
Rich Kotite, a former NFL
Reserve box :
tight end with the New York
MEIGS RESERVES (341- Giants and the Pittsburgh
0hlinger 1·0-2; B!aettnar 0·0· Steelers, today was appointed

0; Faulk 1·0·2; Cliff Ken nedy receivers coach for the
1·0·2 ; Thomas .--1 -7; Yeauger
3-3·9 ; Chuck Kennedy 1·0-2; Cleveland Browns.
Kotite last season was a
Dodson S-0-10. TOTALS lS -4-

Wednesday
Raskefba lt
~oston - Signed guard Ernie
DiGregorio to a 10-d&amp;y contract
and
traded
forward
Fred
SaUnders to New Orleans tor a
second -round draft choice; for Ward Kermit washington was
reinsta ted by N BA Commission .
~r Larry O'Brien effect il.'e Feb .

C}ftesday cJib. 14

o

1'.·.• - - - - - - - -....

NOW OPEN

quality control coach with the
JACK.SDN RESERVES New Orleans Saints 1241 - Davis 0-0-0; Neal 1-02; Patton 1-2-4; Barnette 1-1· specializing in breaking down
analyzi ng
film,
J; Sydow 0-1 -1; Jenkins 4-4- and
12; Cosby 1-0-2. TOTALS 8-8- according to Sam Rutigliano,
24.
Cleveland's new head coach,
Score by quarters :
who last year also was a
~ i gs
7 10 8 9- 34
Jackson
7 7 2 8- 2d coach witll the Saints.

34.

RED FOIL HEART
I LB. $4.:25

•

GINO'S
OF MASON
PHONE 773-553t.

SATIN HEART 2 LB. SI0.95

- ~s~
CALORIC
MICROWAVE
COOKING
APPLIANCES

Budget

Uses 50 pet. to 75 pet. less electricity than
conventional cQOklng • Cooks '" one-fourth
conventional t ime. 675 watts of (OOk lng power

at "high" seHing. Touch Panel c:ontrots ·
Separa te start-stop ·defrost controls ·
Ultramafic Power Selector to choose a
variety of warming and cooking $pHds. Pull·
down door . Lbrge oven capacity - Stainless
stet-! Interior . Removable glass oven tray -

dlshwasller safe. Timing~ to 99.99 minutes
-digital display . Interior light. See-through
oven door . Automatic digital clock displayed
In lights. Operates on ordinary 115-volt
household Current.

•

poinl Texas lead, but was
unable to move in front until
Reed stepped in late in the
game. He hit two quick
baskets t.J lie Uoe score, at 6565, and after Marvin Delph
scored Uoe last of his 30 points
to put Uoe Rawrbacks in
front, Reed added four more
points t6 put the game away.
"Arkansas is a class
team," said Texas Coach Abe
Lemons . " Eleven points is

ARROW DRESS SHIRTS,. ................. 25%' OFF

final point, called time with
four seconds left to set up the
game's fina l shot.
The Panthers got it in·
bounds, but a desperation
shot from mid-court· fa iled.
Rio, apparently lookin g
ahead to Saturday's big
engagement with Malone at
Malone, hit 23 of 57 from the
field for 40.3 percent. The
Redmen were cool at the foul
line, sinking 14 of 25 for 56
percent.

winne rs with 18 points.

throwS, and after Pllelps'

·
· te 0 f th !hi d quarter
· mmu ~
e
r i f urth by Phoenix, 127-120, New
.
Orleans tipped Chicago, 117·
after pockmg up h s o
foul and fmally fouled out lll, and Houston pounded
.New Jersey, 124-103.
woth 4:40 to play.
. .
. Held scoreless f~ hi~ forst Celtlcs 103, Lakers 100:
Los Angeles took a 98-94
16 mmutes of playmg tune m
the second. half,. Collins lead in the overtime but
busted loose m the fonal I :04 Sidney Wicks scored a basket
woth the Sixers down, 97:96. and hit three foul shots as
He hot a layup at that~~~~~ Boston · sco~ed nine of the last
11 points. Kareem Abdulthen . pop[lOd a Jumper o
the so de w1th 39 seconds left I&lt;&gt; Jabbar led the Lakers with 30
make It 1()().97. He oced the points.
~me on two foul shots woth Pistons 127, Suns 120:
Bob Lanier tied a Cobo
"l"e ~econds. remammg . "'
gove hun 16 pomts - handing Arena record with 14 first·
Uoe 76ers theor .second wm m quarter points, then bailed
four days over the Nuggets. Detroit out in the fourUo
In other games, Boston quarter with six free throws
topped Los Angele~, IOJ:lllO, and a basket as the Pistons
m overtune, Oetrool cruosed won tbeir fifth straight game.
Jazz 117, Bulls 111 :
l.t.'Onard "Truck'' Robinson
scored 31 points and pulled
down 10 rebouods as New
Orleans scored its lOth
consecutive victory despite
4. DreSden Tri Valley 12 7,0)
77 the absence of league4eading
5. Ontario II 7-01
75 scorer Pete Maravich, out
6. Chagrin Falls (10·0)
SO With a knee injury.
7. Perrysburg (1 9-1)
46
8. Chardon 19-21
33 Houston 124, Nets 103:
Calvin Murphy scored his
9. Avon II 6-01
29
10. Pemberville EastwOod (6- ll,llOOI.h NBA point, the 20th
11
25 player to reach ll1at plateau,
Others wit h ten or more
and Moses Malone scored 23
points · Warsaw. River View,
points and had 19 rebounds to
Waver I y (.1) , South Point anti
Cortland Lakeview.
send the Nets reeling to their
15th str.aight loss.
CLASS A

Girls cage ratings
COLUMBUS IUPil - Thi s
week's .United Press In terna t ional Ohi9 High School
Board of Coach·e s' gir l s
basketball ratings with firs tplace votes and won -lost
records in parentheses :

CLASSAAA

pts.
· rig
ht -ha
pitcher
Grie f Team
to thei
r nded
training
qar"((p Bill
.
I. Springfield No . (11 9- 0) 144
Pittsburgh - AcQui r ed right ·
handed reliever El ias Sosa of
2. Middletown II 10-0l
125
the Dodgers on waivers.
3. Kettering Fairmont
·
Minnesota ..... Signed outfield West 19-01
85
er Rich Chiles to a one -year 4. Eastlake No. l3 11 -01
78
contract.
S. Sylvania Northview (1 8College
76
Hamline ·..... Hired Richard 0l
6. (tie) Columbus Walnut
Tressel as head football coach.
Ohio Un i versity - Bi ll Rohr
Ridge 17·11
69
announced his resignation as
6. (tiel Bay Village 111 -0) 69
athletic director ettecli11e June
8. Col. Wa tter.son (6· 1)
45
30.
9.
Gahanna
L
ine,
(9
-1)
39
Citadel - Hired Tom Park as
10. (tie) Cleveland Lincoln
football defensive line coach .
West 16-1)
25
Temple Signed
Herb
25
Adde r ley as football defensive 10. (tie) Mentor (7 -2)
backfield coach.
Others with 10 or more
Soccer
points : Fairfield, Kettering
Washington. (NASLl - Signed
striker PaUl Cannell to a two - Fe~irmont Easf, St ru th ers,
Cincinnati Motller of Mercy,
year eontract .
Toledo Cen tra l Cathol ic and
Del aware ( 1).

Team

Ph.

1. Arcanum (5 4·0}
2. Lakeside Danbury

0l

p

100
9-

Pts

01
115
2. Col. Hartley II 10-01
90
3. Campbell Mem. 12 10-1178

89

3. (tie) lancaster
Fisher (1 9-1)
69
3. (tie l Cardin'gton -lincoln

5. Ada

II 7,01

17 ~ tl

6. Huntington (7.0)

7. Buckeye Trail l2 6-0l

a. Mansfield St. Peter 's (6·

31
.
9. Minster 110-t)

10. Rocky River luth .

West 1n1

CLASSAA

1. Delphos St . Johns (4 9·

Team

69
68
59
46
4J

37
29

Others w ith ten or more
points : Frankfort Adena,
New
R i egeL
Salinev i lle
Sou thern ·( 1), East Canton ( 1)
and Bluffto n .

Ohio Colleqe
Baske1ball SCores
United Press-lnternationa I
Toledo 63 West. M ichigan 51
Bowling Green 72 Eastern
Mich . 57
Ohio U. 86 -l oyola, Il l., BO. at
Musk ingum 78 Denison 56
Mount Union 82 Heidelberg 81
Wooster 81 Ohio Northern 76
Wittenberg 65 Ot terbe in 53
Capital 64 Ohio Wesleyan 58
Kenyon 86 Marietta 80
Cleveland St . 77 Akron 62
Xavier 69 Valpara iso, Ind . 60
Tiffin 93 Cedarville 69
Findlay 84 Adrian~ Mich . 69
Rio Grande 60 Ohio
Dominican 58
' Hanover, Ind . 85 Bluffton 77

McGREGOR OUTERWEAR.. ,. ........ ,.33%
LEVI'S JEANS ,. ...... ,. .. ,. .............. ,. ... ,.. 25%
LEATHER COATS.,.,.,. ....................... 33%
SWEATERS ...... :...................................20%
CORDUROY PANTS......................... 25%
FLANNEL SHIRTS ...........·...,.... ~ .......... 20%

OFF
OFF
OFF
OFF
OFF
OFF

Carroll 61
Case Western 83 . Wash . &amp;

Jetf. 76

68

Hammers, Saws,
Screwdrivers, Hatchets,
and

Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph.
Ctworles RIHie, R. Ph.
Ronald tt.nnlng. ~. Ph
Mon. thru Sat. 8:00 a.m. lo9 p.m.
, . Sundayi0:30io12:30and5to9p.m.
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH. 992-2955

•

MUCH, MUCH MOREl

•'

STOP IN TODAYI

•

Friendly service

E.MIIn

Pomeroy,O

Open

••

Nlghlstill9

•

~----~~~~====~ :
I,

Elsewhere

in

games

Prior to Wednesday's MOC
contest, it was aMOWlCed Rio
Grande will play Marshall
University next season in
Huntington on Dec. 16, 1978.
Here's Wednesday's box:
RIO GRANDE 1601 Swa in , J-0·6; James , 0·2·2;
Price. · 9, J-21; Blse , 2-1-.5 ;
Royse, 0-1-1; Purcell . 5-2-12;

Phelps, 0-3-3; Gibson, 4-2-10.
TOTALS 23-14-60.
OHIO DOMINICAN t58 l Brewer, J- 1-7; Stenger, 3-1-7; ·
Massey , 1-4·6 ; Senner 4--4·12 ;
Nash, 7-4- 18 ; Ba ldwin, 0·0-0;
Lang, 1-0-2; Loewendick, 3-0·

Williams scored 23 points
against LaSalle t.J lead the
Irish to their eighth str aighl
victory.
Freshman Darnell
Valentine scored a careerhigh 22 points to lead four
Kansas players in double
fig_ures against Oklahoma
Stal-e. The Jayhawks now
have sole possession of first
place in the Big Eight
Conference with a 7·1
rec&lt;Jrd.
Boston
College
Georgetown's 13

.

Hiram 42 Thiel, Pa . 39
Malone 79 Walsh 72
Wright St. 78 lnd!a na Central

75

Get Ready For

.

Wilmington 96 TaylOr, Ind . 80
Def ia nce 67 Earlham, Ind. 59

Warm Weather

Allen, smiling and affable,

o·eturned"' the club that (ired

him t wtce, under an ear Her
regime, mid said he thought
the Rams would have a good
chance to get to the Super
Bowl, a goal dear to the heart
of owner Carroll Rosen bloom.

announced

two-point

victorr

over

Marylaod, after Virginia 's !:&gt;point halftime lead dwindled
to 64~2 with 1:51 remaining.
Syracuse forward Louis
Orr scored eight of his 14
points midway through the
first half 111 spark a 211-.2
scoring spurt as Syracuse
broke a two-game los ing
streak .
.
Freshman Andre Smith
scored 21 points to lead
Nebraska to a Big Eight
Conference victory over
Colorado.

plnyers in t11c
l'Ollege draft.

forttwomin~

Allen, n(tlty in u beigt~ suit

with ~ggshell shirt and brown

tie with • light stripe, looked
like a noan who l111d the world
by ll1e tall .
Rosenbloom

und

Klosternum joked uiJo ut the
coach's rcpuli1tiun ns
trader.

"When we wanted 11 drnft
l'hoice, we went to Washing tt)n, " said Klost.ennnn . "Now

Uoat 's going to be diffic·ult."
Rosenbloom said, "He will
b1kc un udivc purl in
drafting players. It will be a
refreshing experit1nce ror

him to pick players in the
draft."
When ll.llen was asked the
direct question if he would
trade uway draft choices, he
replied :
" No. When I we nt

to

l had a big
r~building program . The
Rcdskins hadn't hud a
winning season in 14 ycao·s.
We were askl'll to win !Jig lit
once. We won't hnVe to L~~
that policy here."
He said the Rams have the
second hest personnel behind
Da lla s in · the National ·
Football Conference.
At another point , he Sllid ;
"We're goirig to have arl
interestii1g, exciti11~ offense.
The fans are going to enjoy it
and the players are going to
like it."
Vet he was qoick to add,
11
Fir!tt of all , you win on
defense . Dallas . won the
Super Bowl on defense ."
Washington

Youngs Mooney

In 1933, two days after
gaining
office,
Na&gt;i
Chancellor Adolf ·Hitler
ordered dissolution of the
Reichstag - the German
parliament.

Increases. Call Us. Now.

MASON FURNITURE

52

59 Boardman

Sam Smith, junior guard,
scored a season high of 27
.points, how ever, game
scoring honors went tu Henry
Siewort, 6-0 senior guitrdl
who canned a career high of
29 points.
Others hitting double
figures for the Pirates were
Rex J ustice with 12 and
Stacey Winston had 10 points.
Ri~k Buzzard scored 17 points
and Greg Blessing 15 to lc"d
Wahama.
The victory gave the
Pirates a H slate while
Wahama dropped to 3'5.
North Gallia goes to ·
Southern Friday and will host
Symmes Valley Saturday.
WAHAMA IB3l - Barnett 4· 4··12; Blessl ng 7-1- 15.Buzzar.d 8· 1-17 ; Hobbs 1-0-2;
• Honaker 7·0· 14; B . Barnet1 4·
Rawlings
3· 5 - 11.
4- 12:

TOTALS 34-15-83.
NORTH GALLIA 1901 -

Justice 5~2 - 12; McComas o.o.
0 ; Winston 5-0-10; Smltli J2.J .
27; Siewert 13-3-29; Phillips 41-9 ; Glassburn 0-0·0; Peele o.

)·3. TOTALS 39-12-tO.
By Quarten :

Wahama
No. Gall Ia

17 41 64 83
24 38 64 90

Reserves -

North Ga ll la

Wahama
46.

SHOE SALE
CONTINUES

On All Living Room Suites
Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat.8:30 til 5:00 Thursday Til 12 Noon

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM
773-5592

u

Pirates trip
Falcons 90-83

'1QQUO TRADE-IN

"For the Finest in Manufacture Housing" ·
1100 E. Main St.. Po~~roy
Call 992-7058

LOS ANGELES (UP!) - A
new George Allen is the new
coach of the Los Angeles
Rams today with a promise of
an exciting new offense and a
commitment to coach and
teach only and stay out of
most front-office activities.

hearings

Making a Deal for a New
Manufactured Home Now.
8ectit the Spring Price

KINGSBURY
HOME SALES, INC.

Jeff Lamp tossed in two
free throws in the final nine
seconds to give Virginia a

Allen named
Rams coach

State game

••••

· (Be ,Optlmlstlc) by

broke

game
winning streak - the longest
in the nation this year - Jed
by Ernie Cobb's 29 points.

Rosenbloom emphasized
Allen was hired to t'Oach and
6; TOTALS 22·14-58.
Halftime score:
not to be general manager.
00 30 Rio Grande 29
which he was with the
Washington
Redskin s .
During his seven year.s wiU1
the Redskir'ls, Allen gained n
reputation as a wheeler' and
dealer
who
bought
experienced players by
giving up dtaft choices for
years to come.
The contract with Allen has
not yet been drawn but
agreement was reached on
all points for a multi-year
pact, Rosenbloom said. He
Even though district Would not mention money .
There will be no giveaway
wildlife hearings w~re
of
draft choices with the
cancelled in Ohio due to the
Rams,
both Rosenbloom and
weather Meigs Countians ran
Allen
said
at a Wednesday
sHU make their suggestions
news
cOnference.
Friday
on
Wildlife
Allen was given the right to
regulations, Game Protector
select his own assistants and
Andy Lyles said today.
The state fish and game would like t.J bring some
aides
from
hearing will be held at 9;30 a. former
Washington
to
the
Rams
. He
m. Friday in the first Ooor
will
take
part
with
other
conference room of building
C at· the wildlife headquar· members of the Ram
tets, Fo untain Square, organization in selectinR
Columbus, two blocks east of
the Northern Shopping
Center, off Morse Road.
All residents are urged to
attend the state hearing since
the district hearings were
cancelled •. Lyles said.
However, residents unable
to go to the hearing Friday
can write their proposals to
Coach Run
Twyman's
the Chief of th.e Division of
North
Gatlia
Pirates
rolled to
Wildlife Dale L. Haney,
Fountain Square, Building C, their third straight vi¢ory
Wednesday nlghi 90-83 over
Columbus, Ohio 43224.
Residents writing are to visiting Wahama.
mark on the front of their
mailing envelopes: All : Fish
·and Game Proposals.
Even though the hearing is
Girls
Friday and letters · could not
Ohio High School
reach Col umbus in time for
Basketball Results
that, the written proposals
United Press Interna t ional
will still be considered by the Akron FIres tone 43 Canton
Cen t Ca th 34
division. Changes are made Beaver
Local
51
East
by the Wildlife Council and
Palestine 37
council members do not meet Berlin Western Rsv 38
. until late February or early . Springfield Local 36
March so letters will st ill be East Canton 71 Mal11ern 48
Jackson -M IItQn 51 M cDona ld
effective, Lyles &amp;tated.
23
One of the major proposals Kefterlng Fairmont W 60
Xe nia 30
up for 1978 is extending the
Lowellville
43 Mineral Ridge
beaver .season from one
28
month to two months . and R i dgewood
53
New
increasing the limit from lour
Phi !adelphia 37
River View 53 New Concord
to six.
Glenn 46
Another proposal is at· Southern
Local 46 Wellsv i lle
tempting to stabilize the
38 loti
season for fur bearing Tri .Valley 66 Crooks11ille 21
animals making fox trapping Urichsville Claymont 43
Uniontown Lake 40
a nd
hunting
season
Warren Kennedy 46 Liberty
simultaneous1y, for example.
44 (ot)

Gannon, Pa. 89 Steubenvi ll e

For The Do-lt·YouJSelfer.

HAGGAR SLACKS,..,..,. .. ,. ... ,. 20%-25% OFF

Reed. "The shots came and 1
took them, bot offensive
comes secondary. We had tc
play good defense first ."

involving top teams, seventhranked Notre Dame defeated
LaSalle, 95-90; ninth-ranked
play . Their only loss was at
Kansa_s beat Oklahoma State,
the hands of Texas, which is 83-65; No . 10 Louisville
17·3 overall and 8-1 in defeated Marshall, 85-69;
conference play .
Boston
College
upset
neect, averaging 1.8 points Georgetown, 81 -76; Virginia
per appearance. said he was got by Maryland, 66-64;
more concerned with his Syracuse routed Siena, !()().
defensive performance than ·73, and Nebraska topped
he was with sroring points . Color ado, 86-75.
"I knew I l1ad to help
Notre Dame boosted its
control tlleir guards," said record to 15-3, as Don

Rio had 31 rebounds, Dan
Bise and Gil Price each
hauled in seven. Gibson had
six. Rio had 12 turnovers .
Phelps picked up six assists
for the winners.
1loe Panthers used slow
down tat1.ics throughout most
oft he game. OD finished with
22 of 57 froil1 the field for 38.5
percent. The Panthers lj'ere
14 of 20 at the foul line for 70
percent and Kad 29 rebounds.
Pr[ce led Rio Grande's
attack with 21 points. Gibson
added 10.
Mark Nash paced the

eventual victory.
The Panthers cut Rio's lead
to 59-58 after Gibson's free

·~

SUITS .... ,.,. ... ,.,. .... ,.,.,. ....... ,. ..... ·:20%-50% OFF

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE

•

aw{\y at what was once an 11-

Allegheny. Pa .. 65. John

For Every

Family and

Football
L os Angeles - Hired George
Allen as he9d coach .
De I r o I I Signed Bob
Schne.l ker o!S assistant offensive
coach.
Oen11er Signed running
back Ken Carrllthers, tight end
Tom Milanovich and wide
receiVer Tr~vis McCord, all
free agents.
Baseball
New York Mets - 'Invited

HARDWARE
HEADQUARTERS

CANDIES

Arkansas had chipped

•
c0 11•lns paces ·'[16ers wzn

Sport s Transactions

rJOr 'Your 'Valentine

seen ."

not any kind of lead "'Jainsl
them , especially with the
kind of players Uoey have .
The difference is the hom~
court advantage ."
Arkansas has now won 24
t'Onsecuti ve games at home.
is 20-1 overall and 9-1 in SWC

60-58 conference loss

By United Press l nte.-nat iona l

Morrison Gymnasium in

Arkansas Coach Eddie
&amp;&gt;!ton. "II was one of the
guttiest comebacks l've

R e dmen hand Panthers

PHONE 773-5536

Meigs gave highly-touted
Waverly all it could handle
when the Tigers visited

United Presslpt.rnatlonal
U.S. Reed, a freshman
guard for fourth-ranked ·
Arkansas, has seen very little
playing time and his
contributions have been
minimal, until Wedne!$y
night .
Then he came off Uoe hench ·
against streaking Texas Arkansas' No. 1 rival in the
Southwest Conference - to
lead the Rawrbacks to a
come-from-behind 75-71
victory and end the
Longhorns nine-game SW.C
winning streak.
" We really found a
thoroughbred tonight," said

Herman Grate
Mason . W. Va.

HE SHOEBOX
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

48

•

�8-The !)ally Sen tone I, M!ddlcpurl-Pumeruy, 0 .. Thur,d•Y, Feb . 2, 1978
For Friday, •'e b . 3, 1978

ASTRO·GRAPH

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

~ V}i!Jl!Jli

WANT AD
CHARGES

GJOwllil!JW'lJ

Feb 3, 1978
Although unmaterlahslic by
nature. you w•ll become a
shade ' more conservat• ve th •s
com•ng year '" your fmanc•al
dealmgs Your new found prudence shou l d help you
subsbant~al!y •ncrease your re
sources and assets by year· s
end
.
AQUARIUS !Jon . ' z~H'eb. l9i
Fnends, as welt as soc•al con
tacts, can be o ltmmense bene lit to you today Success '"
invok •ng th ett atd depend s
upon using t h e proper
approach Ltk e to lmd ou t rnore
of what ltes ahead lor you?
Send for your copy of Astra Graph Le tter by matlmg 50
cents for each and a long selfaddressed, stamped envelope
to As1ro-Graph PrO Box 489 ,
Radto City Statt o n , N v 10019
Be sure to speedy your b •rth

COMMON PLEAS ,

MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
BOBBY J

15 Wor\ls ur Urnl~tr
Chlorg,
Cwsh

"'
3,75
'"

1.110

?ti.Yy!i

""''

I &gt;II

3thly!l

101

6di1)'ll

3110

I ill

Res.dence Untlnown

PUBLICATION

In mernury , U. rd of Thanks 11ntl
Oh&amp;lu»ry

6 c enlll pt!r wur!J , $3 00

nununwn Cashmadv11 n1.:e
Mubll~ Hume ~In and VanJ :!UIIc~
are &lt;tct.~ptt!d only wtth c&lt;~sh w1th
vrdt!r 25 celll ch.arKe fo r &lt;tdli carry ·
In~ Box Numbtr In Care ur The &amp;!1~ ·

~

tlmd

The

ref&gt;t'rves till! r1~ ht
Lu ~ ht or rejed any il d~ deemed ohJt!t:lu.Hl4tl. Tilt! Publ~ht!r wall nul be
respun:ubk: fur more than une llll ur·
Publ~her

rl't.'tln!Wrt.Jon

Phune99H l56

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

Transfers

(N EWSP.t..PER E"'TERPRI SE ASSN I

STOP IN -TODAY FOR
YOUR BEST BUYS

CARS
1977 Chev. lmpala .....s5495
1975 Dodge Dart ..... ..S2395
trans , rad1o , good t1res, real

Dark red wi th matching viny l roof . V a, automatic,
P S., P . B , air , spoilers, radio. Sharp .

Travel top, 258 cu . m . 6 cy l eng me, auto. trans ., like
new t.res, radio, 2 wheel dnve.

TRUCKS
Fl50.5:.::':~.~2500

8' Sty ieside, V-8 engine, automr.t lc trans , jXIwer
steering &amp;- brakes, rad10, good t ires, 40,000 miles &amp;
local owner, needs tailgate &amp; some patnt wOrk

1971 Ford' F250 ....... }1395
Crew cab, 6 cyl. , 4 speed trans., H duty t.res. 61/ 2 '
pickup bo)(

1974 Chevrolet 8...... J3195
Fleetstde, a lum co':'er r 34,500 miles by 1 owner, 6 cyl. ,
std . trr~ns., P steenng, new fires. radic. custom t•res

Hurry In For AGood Deal

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
"Your Chevy Dealer"
Pomeroy
Open Evenings Until 8 P.M.

HOOf. I'IOllOW Horse s Buy sell
!rode or tro1n . New ond u§ed
saddles Ruth Reeve&lt;; Albany
INCOME TAX Se rYteOs . Federal
( 61~ ) 698 3190
and Stol e roxes Wa nda Eblon
992 -2272
RIS ING SI AR ~en n ol Baord1ng
Indoor a nd outdoor ~ , runs
THE RACINE Voluntee r f.re
G• oommg oil breeds Clean
DliJportment will spons01 a gun
somtory foCJii t1es . Chesh1 re
shoot every Saturday ol 6 prn o l
Phone (614 ) 367 ·0292
thetr butlding tn Bashan Foe
lory c:;holo.e guns oni,REGISTE RED BLUETICI&lt; pu ps b

I

THE RACINE Gun Club Gun Shoo t
every Sunday afternoon Foe·
lory choke guns only Assor led
meats
INCOME TA.X Services Federal
and State Taxes
Wallace
Russe ll , Bradbury 992 7218

THE FEBRUARY AAA Dnver s
Edu co110n Cla;s w1 ll begtn
Tuesd ay February 71h For m
fo•ma11on colt Ben Slowte r ol
742 2170 bet ween 6 OOand 8 00
pm

ANNOUNCIN G THE opftmng ol
lhe publ1c o&lt;counling offte e ol
Rog er Lu clo.eydoo, l1censed
public a ccoun tant for bccon tmg
and bookkeepmg stnv•ces and
pr eporoll on of tederol and
slat e tox relur ns ot 291 Wolnut
St
Mrddlep ort
Oh10
q92·2666 Hou rs by oppomt
men!

lOST SUN glo ~ses PreH ropt1on
gr ound bt foc ots 2~ 7 , 2162

Cellulose Fiber
Blown Into Walls
and Attics
-Save Fuel &amp; Money-

1-

LAVENDER
CONSTRUCTION
Syracuse, Ohio

rno old ( 328
ONE YEAR old mo le Peek ·A Poa
Coli 991-3844

Free Estimates
Phone 992-3993
1-18-1 mo .

MEIGS CO UNTY Humane Sac. tety
on1mo l corel rne and adoption
serv1ce (lree on1mols ) 991·76fj0
or eyemngs and Sundays
992 S~27
Mod
c ·o
M
Crow lord Rl 4 Box 326
Pomeroy Oh• o 45769 Member·
!&gt; hipS and donol10ns PO Box
b82 Pomeroy Ohto 45769
REGISTE RED BL UE T1ck
mo old 1304) 882 3328

pup~

b

camping :EQUipm..ii£"'r
~

--~

ST ARCRA"FT FAll Sole Mtnl ·
tnolor s 20 on e! 2'l TraVel
Traders 18 5' $3 799 25 ' 7'
Bunkhouse $4 ,875 fold down ,
$1.700 up We s~ ll ser v1ce ond
quoltty Open Sunda ys Comp
Conley Storcroll Soles Rt 62 ,
N of Pt Pleasant

Fiir:ftJJf'~ '- t ~~

J , __ - _

lOST ON Gat eway Po rkmg lo t
R1ng key s Fmder please coli 3 AND ~ RM fun111;hed and un ·
992 3477 Reward
lur nr s hed opts Phone 992
5434
NORWEGIAN EU&lt;HOUND lost
around Umon Ave Blo ck w1th COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork
silve r ond wh1te Weanng red
Rou te 33 , nort h of Po mero y
coll ar
Ans wer s to N1klu
Lorge lots Coll992 7479
992 -2889

NOTICE

SALON
Corner Union Ave.
and 51 . Rt .
Pomeroy, Ohio
Change of
Phon e Number

Phone
992-7608
Closed Jan l 10
till 8th, 1978

lADIE S (O R MEN ) NEEDED FOR
GOOD PAYING TEMPORARY
OFF ICE LIKE WORK PLEASA NT
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARV
ALSO NEED LADIES (OR MEN )
WITH CAR FOR LIGHT DEli VERV
WORK APPLY IN PER SON ON
LY (NO PHONE CA LLS) TO MRS
CARTER S ROOM 19 ME IGS
INN PO MEROY 9 to 9 30 AM
_.M ~NOAY . FEBRUARY 6

Superior
Slum Ellraclion

Professional Service. 39
vrs . experienct. Free
estimates.
pickup
&amp;
delivery
service .
Restdential &amp; Commercial.

Tri-State UpholsteiJ
Shop

••

EXPERIENCED
Radiator~

!!~!!~!, r!!!!!!!l

htfkltOt" to tM

c., •.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
Pomeroy

-

-

NEED A WAT R
SOFTENER?

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Pomeroy Landmark

9 ... Jack W. Carsejl, Mg1
.. . . .

Phone 992-2181

HOMESITES for so le , 1 a cre and
up Mtddlepo rt , ne or Ru tlan d
Co ll 992 748 1
NEW 3 bedroom house 2 baths
oil elec., 1 acre M1ddleporl ,
close to Rut land Phone 992 ~
7481
I...Ommerc tol property appro x 17
ocres, level lond , located at
Tuppers Ploms on Oh 1o, Route
7 Phone-{ 614 ) 667..:6::3:-04:::__ __
VA FHA 30 yr fm ancmg also
refmoncmg Ireland Mo r tgage ,
77 E. State Athens ph one (b14)
592·305 1
NEW HOME Full bedroom . Fu lly
car peted, oil electnc. In Middleport Pnced $19,900 Co li
(614) " 6·3045

HOBSTETTER
REALTY
GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr.,
Broker
107 1!:~ Sycamore St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
PHONE 992 -6333
Office Hours : 9 A.M. to ,,
P .M .
Close Thursdays
am.
Saturdays at noon.
Have 4 Bedroom, ranch,
located 3 miles from R.t . 7.
Wesf Shode.
'
Nice Double Wide 24x56 on
c orner lo t 1n Arbaugh
Addition .
lnclud lng
furn iture and appliances ..
$21.000.
Nice 3 Bedroom bungalow
with besement &amp; garage.
$32,000 2 acre of ground.
Tuppers Plains.
New 3 bedroom home with
garage
in
Crow's
Subdlv1slon $41,000.
Nice small home located In
Dorwln, Oh io on 51. Rt . 33,
$19,900.
Have
Bus1ness,
and
Investment property In
Pomeroy .
Check with us belore you

b!l y.
Cheryl Lemley
Associate..
Home Phone 742-2003
Hilton Wolfe, Sr ,
Associate
Home Phone 949-2589

Carpeting

WHAT'D SH6

..... l, ' -· 0.

l·(HUMPH,AHEM)

DIDN'T CATCH THE
~xACT W01lP$·· 5HE
HUNGo UP TOO
QUICKLY I

At

"The OrtJinators
Jlo1 Tho lmibloo

WALLPAPER. •
PAINT &amp; SUPPLIES.

TANK
CLEANING

Re si dential
and
commercial .
Call
for
est•mate, 24 hour service.
Anvdayl anyttme.
·
Phone 985-3806

Jack's Septic
Chester, Ohio
10-30-c

FREE ESTIMATES

ACE

'ft'f}~f.\,f} \1i)'ft j1'l THAT SCRAMBLEOWORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ..

Located In The

'

'
;BORN
LOSER

MEIGS PLAZA
Middleport, Ohio ••
Open

we:'RE 001!0 'V C.~B WJ MID- ~.{)
~ 51.\.&amp;.ti&lt;l~ l).JE&gt; WN, OR

9 :00 f119 , 00 Mon.- Friday
9. 00 ti 16 ' 00 Saturday
12 :00 til6 :OQ Sunday
2-2-tf c

'1~..-.:,:.
R E=.:;P,-:.1:.;.
K --1l~-.

AOOTH&amp;R!

I I I tJ

Syracuse, Ohio
Ph. 992-3993

300 Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Pomeroy 992-6211
or 992-6263
8A.M. ta4 ,30 P.M.

INECTED

rJ

(

PWMBING &amp;
HEAnNG INC.

LARRY LAVENDER

T~~!.~~rn

.,
S HE HAD MONEY
WHEN SHE CAME
HERE .. ,

SALES AND SERVICE
ll -9-tfc

~

Yes Ier day's

BRAD FOR D, Auct 1oneer , Com-:
plete Servtce Phone 949-2487 1
or 9.49-2000 Rocme Oh ro , Cr~tt ;

NEW LISTING - A house
to be c her ished and large
too Approx. 1,600 oq. ft . of
livin'g s pa ce, 4 bedrooms, 2
car garage, 1 acre. 4 yrs.
old , modern and In the
county $36,100 .
A STEAL - 6 acreo In lhe
cou n try , large garden,
garage, 2 yr. old double
wide. $15,000.00
OVER 3 ACRES - Home
been modernized , barn,
and busfness building .
JUST LOOK $11,500.00.
OLDER HOME N1ce
locallon 3 bedroomo, bath,
N.G. heat. klfchen wllh
range &amp; ref . Porches.
$11 ,000 00.
JUST LOOK - 2 acreo,
small barn , 6 yr . old home.
3 or 4 bedrooms, FREE
GAS , brick &amp; frame, per me
pane windows, carport.
J
SJ2,ooo.oo.
THIS OFFICE STANDS
READY TO SERVE YOU
WHENEVER
YOU'RE
BUYING OR SELLING A
PROPERTY.
!CALL
TODAVl
HENRY E . CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK, KATHY
CLELAND
REALTOR
ASSOCIATES
992·6191

... '"

It &lt;,;eems Iike
we just

SEWING MACHINE Repairs, ser:
vtce. all makes 992 2284, The
Fa br1 c Shop , Pome ro,.b
Authomed S1nger Soles onll
Ser11 rC8 We sharpen Scissors ..:

usr

Poo Pinq drinks

too much coff~e::e~'C:;:;:::-:7

stopped!

Riley's
daughter

jeer at

Yesterday's Answer
19 Pinafore
22 Heart
23 Evaluate
24 Glove
material
25 Honey of
a place
27 Symbol of
victory

:!9 Greek
30
31
38
37

• " 54

37 Decree

38lt has
100 members
39 Teased
40 Insurgent
41 Punch : sl.
to work

it :

AXYDLBi\AXR
LONGFELLOW

One le tt er st mply 5tands for another In lhts sa mple \ u
u sed for the three L's, X for the h~o O's, e tc S mgle letters.
apostrophes, the le ngt h a nd formilli o n o f th e words arc a ll
h mts Each day t he code lett ers nrc d iffere nt

Jm ,

C RYPTOQUOTES

WINNIE

L

Servtce
Do y or ntg h~.

DSM

SMWVP

ZS I

KMVCIW

Z.R D S

MWYIP

SRECMGA
BRAD

lA

ULW
ULW

GMRCJVM .

BVMNMV

Yesterday's Cryptoquole: NOTHING IS SO STRONG AS
GENTLENESS;
NOTIUNG SO GENTLE
AS REAL
STRENGTH. -DE SALES

1974 SKYliNE 14 x 56 3 bedroom
toto I electnc. $7500. 992-20fq.' '

Capr 1978 K1ng Features Syndtcate. lne.
B ARNEY

IT LOOKS LIKE
A GOOD DAY

•

PUPPIES, PART fm,h Setter , pah
Coll992-7201.

WHAT DO '{0\) MEAN
A GOOD DAY ? I

IT15 RAINING ... IT'S
WINDY ...IT'S COLD!

f.

'"

·

IT'S A GOOD
THING MAW
AIN'T HOME --'
SHE'D PROB'LV
SWOON
COMPLETE

..

·'•

Pa s~

3 N I'

East
J&gt;as..o.;
Pa ss

Pass

Pu :-;.&lt;;

Pi.l s.&lt;;

F:ly co uld h ave made th e

hnnd Oy d ue ktng one dla ·
So uth
~•
4•

By O s wald Jacoby

Is

GROM

Norlh

tnok hb king and led u
second d tamond Then~ was
no way to .r. hut ou t Hal 's nine
of srwdes .!Hid Ely still h ad to

mond , but there wus and has
been no cnl1cism of his
act ual play
~

Ope m ng lead t Q

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - He re's how

IWGP

Wt&gt;sl

wus a good llllJtc h
I n Uus hand, E ly Hhouh.l
t·cu ll y tu::IVc pa::;s~d at th ree
notrump Jo wnuld have
IJmught t ha t contl'lad horne
ca~ tly by t-a rdul play
llowcv11r, F:Jy went to f o ur
s pades
lla l Oflf.'tlt'd the
queen of dtamunds. E;Jy rose
w1t11 the acL· of dlamunds,
l'la yed at·c und o ne s pade
oul y to ~ o dow n when Hal

lose unothcr tnck

1=-l---~...J I Vulllerabl&lt;• Ne 11her
Dealer t:a • l

35 Black eye

·--

+

"' a

b+-+-

title
1"------------------------------------~----------~--------------~Minruan

2·

r\10\!

,1 ,) 53

+

as a mine

-~

,

.

+ AQ 7
Wt:Sl'
~. 1\ST
K 9 .I
!0
• .18:1
, 1176
+&lt;.i V
+K1 118H
• .Jl0 9ij l
""K8 51
SOli Ttl
• /418 7 2
• K 5~:!
• 62

32 Biblical
verb ending

..

Players vied for standings
NUll T tl

group

... :

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

of once

29 Collapses,

-

BRIDGE

22 Anagram

33 Slreet : Fr.

,

sun wus a fctr better J.tla ycr
tha n Dorothy ~t ill s St ill It

:!II U.S. air

~.1\RANK &amp; ERNIE

____ ______

T h u 1 stl a\' , l •'c~ 1 uar y 2, I U7H.

island
Sultan's
decree
Gunpowder
ingredient
Catch
To and

271talian
river

MAGGIES UPHOLSTERY. Re11n 1 ~ .
reuphofslery ,
rebu dd•nt .
Beout1f ul selecllon of ma ten ol
and viny ls Free est1mate TeL
742 2852. l ocation
Solem
'
Cente r

r

16 Chester

Movie Channel 4 5 &amp; 7 PM - FunWilh Di ck andJaneiPGJ
9 &amp; 11 P :M .- Two Mlnul e Warning IRJ

26 Burn

PUlliNS EXCAVATING Comp leMt
Serv1ce Phone 992-2478.
:

PUBLIC AUCTION Solo . Fri. 7 P"J ·
New and used merchandise qt
Ohio River Auct ion. Mei
Plozo . Middleport, oh 1
Special aucti on Sat. 7 pm
Truckloads oJ new furnlt~
and mise from store closeout,

certarn way
6 Shabby
7 Cameroof1S
tribe
8 Nondoer's
Iault
9 Watery route
d2 Cain
was one

23 Egyptian
dancers
25 Greek poet

EXCAVATING . dozer load er onl
backhoe work , dump trucM
and lo boys for h1re w1ll hd!
1111 dtrl , to soil l1m es tone ahtl
grovel Call Bob or Roger Jef ·
fers, doy phon e 992-7089, mgh t
phone 992-3525 or 992 5232

CAT. FEMALE. Longha tred , d£11 .
Labra dor type
Both ver,yf riendly . l oveabl e
N 1 t:~loakmg pets 9-49-2607
' 1

s Cook a

mus1c

ElWOOD BOWER S REPAIR ~ '
Sweepe rs toosler!t Irons. au:
sma ll oppl1onces lawn mow~
next to Stole H1ghwoy Gorog~',
on Route 7 Phone (6 14) 985•
3825

TURLEY 'S

DOWN
I Rice dish
2 Turkis h
c ity
3 Mother's
Day gift
4 Light color

15 Black
cuckoo
16 Drilling tool
17 Palm leal
18 Hallu·
cination
20 Actress
Bainter
21 Taunt;

~8~ro~d~t~or~d~----------~- •

NEIGLER "S.. FOR bu ildt ng house:.
bathrooms , oi l kmds of re pair
work and what hove you GU\r
Net gfer Rocme Ohio. Call
:
949-2508 evemngs

What jokes about old age usually are FEEBLE

Answer

ACROSS
1 11 Remembrance
of Things -"
5 Pentagon
aUoy
10 Concept
II Hydrophobia
13 Greensward
14 Like Berg's

BATHROOMS AND Kttcher(s
re modeled ceramr c tile, plum·
btng ca rpent ry, ond genertll
momlenonce 13 yeors e~·
penence 992-3685
•

MAIN
POMEROY, O.

{Answers tomorrow)
ABUSED FALLEN

by THOMAS JOSEPH

•

Save 30 pet . to so pc1 .
on hea1ing cost
E x perience and
fully In sured
Free Est.
Call: 66 ?·6479 or 992 ·381$
1-16 ·1mo. "'

Wil l do roofing construction,
pf umbmg ond heotmg No jOb
too Ior ge or too small Phon,
742 2348.
"
'
HOWERY AND MARTIN E&gt;t
cavat1ng , sept tc sys te m,.
dozer , backhoe , dump truch
limestone. gro11el, blocktoJ&gt;
paving, Rt. 143 Phone 1 (6 1~ )
698-7331

EAGLE

~!U'M~

Cellulosic lwoodfibefJ!
Thermallnsulaliop ~

EXCAVATING , dozer, backhoe
and d ttcher Cho~;les R Hoi ·
he ld, Bock Hoe Serv1ce .
Rutland , Ohro Phone 742-2001(..

I

J uinbles GRIME

NEW-JUST OFF PRESS! JUMBLE BOOK 11 I with ttO puzzln II avai l·
ab le fo rS t 35 postpaid from Jumble, c/o lhle newepepar, P.O. Bolt 34,
NorwOOd, N J 07848 Include your nama , addraa1, zip code and miKe
c hecks peyable to New1pll)erbook1

BkMn
JIM KEESEE ; .:

REMODELING. Plumb1ng , heohng
and all types of gene ral rep otr
Work guaranteed 20 years 811 penence Phone 99.2-2409
\

I I I I I IT'

Print answer here:

I KNOW SHE'S A
HUMDINGER AT BUSINESS
'" fO U S HOULD SEE
T11E WAY S HE 'S
GETT ING THAT
S TOR E 601 ~6 , ..

11" SEE;MS

REALTOR
216 E. Second Street
RIVER FRONT - 3 lols
and 7 room house Bath ,
nat. gas f u rnace .. ct ty
water,
and
excellent
garden .
Want
only
ST6,500 00
CORNER LOT - On State
road 3 bedrooms, bath ,
nat. gas f u rnace. city
water , and garage. Need
ST5,500
IN THE COUNTRY - 5
room fra me home. C istern .
bath , fireplace , and almost
an acre of land. Asking
S7,SOO
GOOD OLD HOME - Has
3 bedrooms with large
closets and storages . 1111
bath s, nat gas furnace,
city water and garage
$27.500.
40 ACRES - Small barn ,
spr1ng and dug well. Good
hOuse s ite a nd nice hunt•ng
land .
45 ACRES - L.C water,
~ l ectnc , and septic tank .
W ill take a qutek offer of
$TO.OOO.
BUY REAL ESTATE, IT' S
A
KEY
TO
YOUR
SECURITY
AND
WEALTH .
Helen ~ . Teaford
Gorden B. Tnford
Sue P. Murphy
Realtor Associates

LEiTERS WERE
"SCAiiER'ED'UNDEiA:
iHE R.AILR'OAD.
Now arrange the CirCI&amp;d leners 10
form the surprtse answer, as suggested by the above cartoon

·!
lnsulatioi) ~

COU NTRY fa rmland w1th seclud·
ed woods , water and good ac
cess 1n Monroe County. W Vo
$1 ,000 down , coli {304) 772·
3102 or 1304 ) 772-3227

I

I0

LlTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

J&amp;L

772

byHonAAmoldandBobLM

Unscramble these rour Jumbles,
one tener 10 each square, to form
four ordtnary words.

HARDWARE~-

CARTER

Storm
Windows &amp; Doors
Replacement
Windows
Aluminum
Siding· Soffi tt
Gutters-Awnings

--

TRACT ONE Fraclton 17
Town 7.. Range 13 , bounded
and descnbed as follows
Begtnn mg 310 1 3 feet North CASH po1d lo r oil mokes and
models of mobile homes
of th e cor ner of th e Factory ,
Pho ne orea code 614 -423 -9S3 t
form erly know n as the Prob :;, l
Fu rn •tu r e Fac tory , on Suga r
Run Str ee t . th ence North 65 TIMBER Pomero y Fores t Pro
ducts lop pnce for stand1ng
Deg 50' we s t ta 1 teet to a
Sl&lt;tk e then ce North 25 Deg
sow t1mber Coli 992 5965 or
~Kent Hanby 1-446_8~_
0__ _
East
87
23
fee t
to
a stake.
thence South
COINS
CURRENCY
toke
ns old
59 Deg
East 175 feet to
poc ket welc hes ond cha ms
a s tak e , th ence Sou th 21 Dcg
silver and gol d We need 1964
10' Wes t 66 2 3 tee t to the
place ot beg 1nnmg
and qlder silver co ms Buy sell ,
TRACT TWO In Fracl1 0n
o r !rode Co il Roge r Woms ley
No 17 To w.n No 2 and Range
742 2331
No 13 of the Oh10 Com pany's
~~~~01~~~ ~!!. __. --Purchase a nd bounrJe d and OLD FURN IT URE ICC b o~&lt;es bro ss
BLA
CK PADDED BAR w1th
d e scr 1bed
as
tol low s
beds , 1ron beds, etc , comple te
woodgro m tap and s torage
Bfgmnmg 177 feet Northerly
households Wnle M 0 . Mtll er
Ir om the corner ot th e Fa'
shel11cs Excc llenl cond1t1on
Rt 4, Pomeroy , Ohto or ca ll
tory form erl y know n as the
sso 992 7312
992·7760
Pr obs! Furnttu r e Factory ,
----~-1965 CHEVEllE ~ dr A C 283
on Sugar Run Str ee t , then ce NO ITE¥ TOO Lorge or too sma ll
North 65 Deg 50 m1 nutes
eng 2 bbf . auto Irons Ex
Wil l buy 1 ptecc or comple te
Wes t 183 feet to a stake
ce llent condJIIon Truck topper '
ho usehold New , U§ed , or onft ·
thence Nort h 25 Deg East 66
std 8 II bed 28 m h1gh
ques Marrtn 's Furntture 20 N
2 3 teet to a stake &lt;the co r ner
742 2485
2n d St
M1ddleport Phone
ot a lol now or tormefly
o wne.d
by
W ilh e m tna
SE LLING OUT due to ill hea lth
992·0370-'-.---'---'-Ge nhe1mer 's lot , th ence
Small grocery s tore and gos
CHI P WOOD
Pole s mox
Sou lh 65 Deg . 50' Eas t 181 feet
stot1on wit h stock and equtp
d1ometer 10 on largest end $8
to u s t a ke . th ence South 22
ment Loco ted ot lo ngs11dle on
Deg 10 m 1nures Wes t 66 '} 3
per ton Bundled slob, S6 per
Route 124 Very goad buy Co il
tee t to tn e pl ace of oeg1nnmg
ton Del tvered ro Oh1o Polle t
992 5868 or 7~2 9045
EXCE PT the followtng
Co , Rt 2: Pomeroy 992-2689.
parce l from Tract Tw o
----In Fraclion 17, Town No 2 GOOD USED tra cto r wtth
and Range No 13 of th e OhJO
hyd roul oc 3 pt h1tch 742 307.4
Company's Pur cha5e , and
--WANT
TO BUY Hou se or mobtle
bounded and d escrt bcd as
rot tow s
home 1n co untry with some
B EG INNI N G
177
t e et
Let Pomeroy Landmark
ac.reoge on lond co ntrocl Con
Nor therly tr am til e co rner ot
pay
down poymenl d
s often &amp; condition your
the F a c tor y, form e r ly known
reasonable Only Inte rested
water with Co-op water
a s th e Prob s t Furniture
peop le need lo motl ~n l orrno ·
softener, Model UC-SVI ,
Factory, on Sugar Run
liOn 10 PO Box 9 l ongsv1lle,
Street thence North 65 Deg
Now Only
OH 45741
SO' West 183 fe et . th enc e
North 25 Deg 00' East ~2 7
SILVE R DOllARS ond coms Top
reel to a s t ake. tt:len cc South
do llar pmd Coll742·23 1b
72 Deg 00' East 18 2 feet to the
Let us test your water Free
West Std e of sa td Sugar Run
Str eet tr ence Sou th 21 beg
10' Wes t 6~ feet along the
_Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
We st S1de of sa 1d Street . lo the
pl ace or beg1nnmg, c on ·
Phone 992 2181
ta1n 1ng n 100 a c res
Re feren ce Deed Vol 269,
A thought for the day:
Pa ge 27 Deed Records , Me1 gs
Roman
poet Ovid sa1d, 11 To HAY FOR so le Ttmothy olfolfo
County, Ohro
dnd clover 949 2102
You arc rcaulred lo answer
be l oved, be lovable."
the Pet1110n Wlfhtn twenty
PONY HARNESS for !iD le . PH .
erght days affer the last
992-55 10
publ1catron of fh1 S notrce .
wh1 ch wt!l be publ1shed once
.4 l78 15 8 F Goodrich wh1te let·
each week for srx successrve
tered radto ls moun ted on sel of
weeks
and
t he
fas t
Appl1o nce Crogers 15 x 8. Wdl
publlcailon will be made on
_ flt51ugG Mp1 rkup 742-3154
February 16th 1978
PROBATE COURT OF
In case of your la ti\J re to
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
1968 DODGE J, ton tr uck. V 8
an s we r or Otherwrse respond
ESTATE OF Ire ne T Cross,
e ngme radio heoter good
as pe rm.tted by th e Oh10
DECEASED
!~r es Pme $750 Coli 949-2589,
Rule s of Crvrl Proc edu r e
Case - No 2'1279 Docket 12
Hilton Wo lf e
w!lhtn the f1me sla,ted,
Page
44
tudgment by default will be
NOTICE OF
t'I"J76 FORD VA N 4 Brown St ,
r endered aga inst you for the
'- HEARING ON
Masoc. , WV (304) 773 5986
rel1 ef de m and ed 111 the
INVENTORY
pet1 tion
BULL, rHREE yeorltngs , 5 hetfers.
To the rottowing persons
To the Executor or Ad
Also . hay for sole
Ca ll
Larry E Soencer
mmtsfrator of the estate, to
992 7201
•
ClerK vt.court of
such
of
the
tol
low
lng
as
are
Com mon Pleas .
1977
JEEP
CJ
7
$5,000.
Coli
rest
dents
of
the
State
of
Ohto
.
Metgs Coun t y,
viz · ~ the surv1v1ng spouse 1
843·3155 before 12 00 noo n or
Oh io
ft'le
next
ot
k1n ,
th e
a ft e r 6 00 pm
benef1C
1anes
under
th
e
wtll
,
{1) 12, 19 , 26 (2 ) 2. 9, 16, 6t
27_ l OC UST FENCE pos ts, 90'
and to the attorney or at
torney s representif"lg any o f
_!.~ch Pllone 742 2359.
the aforementtoned persons
The lnvvntorv of deceden t's
assets has been tiled In this
Court
The hean no Ofl the 1n
NOTICE OF
v"'ntory
will beheld F-ebfuary
APPOINTMENT OF
27 , 1978 at 10 oo o'clock A M
FIDUCIARY \
in this Cou r t.
On January 30, 1978 . .n the
The Court is located Meigs
Me rgs Countv Probate Court,
County
Cour t
House ,
Case No 22.'279. Pev t s .
Smart , 44 Lm co ln Sfreet 1 Pomeroy, Ohio.
You may file except1ons to
M iddleport, Ohio 45760 waS
the inventory at any t1me
appo inted E;cecutor of the
pr1or lo fi ve days before the
estate of Iren e T Cross ,
date set fo_r the heMtng
dec eased , la te of Rutland
Streel. Middleport , Ohio
Manning 0 Webster
45760
Proba te Judge Clerk
Mann 1ng D Webster
HV · Carolyn G . Thomes
Pro~ate Ju dg e Deputy Clerk
Cle r k
(2) 2, He
(2) 2, 9, 16, 31C

(:APTAIN EASY

992·2206 or 992-JUO

1· 18-1 mo .
COAL limestone , and calc1um
chlorr de and calci um bnne lor
dust co ntr o l and s pec:to l mtxtng
sol! for formers Excels1or Soil
Works Mom Streel Pomeroy Will CARE for the e lderly tn our
Oh1o or phone 992 3891
home Phone 992-7314
-~-'ECO NOMY TRACTOR wtth oil o! MOBil E HOM E repotr s 992·5858
to chmenh L1ke new oskmg
PIANO TUNING lone Don1els 13
$2250 Phone {614 ) 698 3290
yea rs of serv1ce New phone
RUGS , WALL Ho ng~n gs and
numbet, 992 258 1
afgons N1 ce lor Chrtslmas
ATTENT
ION MARE Owners
Rea so nable Call 992 ·2::2~1_:
4 c_:_
AQHA stud serYrce lnlr oducmg
1976 FOR D F 250 Custom 17 .50 x
to Southern Oh10 Cortoko. sor
14 00 11res wmch O nl y 14 000
rell son ol Otoe Breed for col·
mt Headers CB. Tope deck
or conformotton ond dlspost Over $3 000 111 ex tra s Senous
llon Phone 698 824 1 even1ngs
ca ll s only oi ler 12 noon
or wr~te for breedmg conlroct
Belle Ec ho Quo r,ler Horses,
690 l9~~-~~s_~ =--~
.40225
SR 692 Pomeroy Oh ao
B &amp; S MOBILE HOMES Pt Plea45769
.
s a n t W Va bestde Heck s
1973 Br oodmore 14 x b4 2
bedroom
1973 Do non 1~ x 60 2 bedroom
1972 Vrclorron 1.4 w b7 3 bedroom
2 bo th
~
1972 Coven lry12 x 65 3 bedroom
1969 Statesman 12 x 60 2
We hav e enlarged our
bedroorn
se rvice department and
C:......will se rvtce Hotpoint and
BURROUGHS SENSI MAliC oc
counhng mochme Ho s been
other brands.
under se rvtce contract ond tn
good cond!11on Con be seen ql
The Darty Sentmcl, 11 1 Court

Young's .

1163-2nd Ave .. Golllpalls
446-7833-446-1833

Box 34

•

Ctrpela UphOlStery
Phone llike Younc

Tank Service

tktp Wanted~-=-~ _,-~ - ~
RESPONSIBlE OLDER lady to hve
1n and core for aged lady rn
Rullond ltght housework and
coo k1ng , no lou ndry More lor
hom e !han wog es
Coli
742 -2078

-Upholstery-

~EPTIC

JOHNIE'S BEAUTY

PU92ZI74

wll

,.

~--------------------------------------------------------------------~_·:

Blown Insulation

S:o5-Farm Roport: S : ~PTL Club 13: S:S5-Sunrlse
Semester 10. 6 :00-PTL Club 15: 6 : 25-Soclelles In
Transtt lon 10.
6 · 30-Columbus Today 4; News' ; Sunrilt Semester
8; 6:05-Mornlng Report 3: 6 . ~Good Morning,
Wool VIrginia 13: 6: S5--Chuc k While Reporls 10;
News 13
7 :00-Today 3.~. IS: Good Morning America 6, !3;
CBS News 8; Bullwlnkle 10; 7 : 3~Schoolles 10
B:*-Capl . Kangaroo 8,10: Ses•me 5133
9:00-Merv Grlllln 3; Phil Donahue~ . 13, IS, Edge ol
Nlghl 6, Family Affair 8: Molch Game 10.
9 : 3~Emergency One 6 , Andy Grlltlth 8; Family
Affair 10 .
10 GO-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 15. Tattletales 8; Joker 1 s
Wild 10. Not For Women Only 13.
10 3~HollyiNOOd Square• 3,4, 15 ; Andy Griffith 6 ;
Price Is Right 8 ,10, Rick Fouc heu• 13 .
11 :00-Wheel ot Fortune 3,4, 15, Happy Days 6. 13:
Elec Co 20.
11 3()-Knockout 3, IS: Family Feud 6.13: Parlrldge
Family 4: Se•ame 51. 20,33 : 11 :55-CBS News 8:
Loving Free 10
T2 00-Newscenter 3; $20,000 Pyram id 13; News
4,6, !0; To Say The Leaot 15: Gamlbt 8
12·3~ Ryan ' s Hope 6,13 : Gong Show 15, Search lor
Tomorrow 8 . 10; Elec . Co. 33
1 oo--For Richer . For Poorer 3. All My Children
6,13 : New• 8 ; Yaung &amp; lhe Reslless 10: Nol For
Women Only 15
1 JG-Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15, As The World Turns
8,10, 2 ·QO--One Lite lo Live 6. 13 ; 2 3~Doc1ors
3,4 , 15; Guiding Light 8,1 0: 3 . oo-Anol her World
3,4 , T5; General Hoop11al6. 13 , ~I lias Yoga &amp; You 20;
Ascent of Man 33.
J · 3~A II In The Family 8, 10, Crockell' s VIctory
Garden 20.
• · OO-M1oter Cartoon 3; Edge ol Nlgh113 , My Thr..
Sons 4; For Richer, For Poorer 15, .Merv Griffin 6;
Gilligan'• Is. 8. Gomer Pyle, USMC 10
4· Jif-LIItle Rascal• 3, 15; Gilligan's Is . 4; Brody
Bunch 8, 10; Mary Tyler Moore 13
5 ·01)-Here Come The Brides 3. Star Trek. 4; Gun .
omoke 8, Mloter Rogers ' Ne1ghborhood 20,33 :
Hogan's Heroes 10; Emergency One IJ ; My T h ree
Sons 15
5 3~News 6, E le c . Co 20.33. Mary Tyler Moore 10;
Hogan's Heroes 1S
6 :1l0-News 3,4,8, T0,13,15 ; ABC New• 6; Zoom 20,
Adams Chronicles 33 .
6 : 3~NBC Ne w s3,4, 15 ; ABC New• 13; Carol Burnett
&amp; Friends 6 , CBS Newo 8, 10, Over Easy 20.
7:00-Croso-WII s 3.~ : Liars Club 6; Capl lol Beal 33 :
News 10, Gill igan's Is. 15, Alm anac 20
7. 3o-Porter Wagoner 3; Gong Show 4 ,· Match Game
PM 6: P rice Is Right 8: Mac Neil -Le hrer Reporl
20,33, Family Feud JO. $100,000 Name Thai Tune
13, Pop Goes The Coun try 15
8 . 00-Biack Beauly 3,4, 15; Donny &amp; Ma rie 6,13,
Wonder Wom an 8, 10; Washin g ton Week In Review
20 , So Th e Peo ple M ay Know 33
8 3~Wall Street Week 20,33: 9 ·00- Rock lord Flies
3,4,15, Movie "Cruise Into Terror" 13,6 ; Movie
" Deadman's Curve" 8, 10 , Soundstage 20; Great
Perrormances 33 .
10 . 00- Qulncv 3,4, 15 , New• 20 : 10 30- Mon ty
Python's F lying Circus 20. Symbiosis JJ
11 00-News 3,4,6,8, 10 , 13,15 : Dick Cavell 20; ~I lias,
Yoga &amp; You 33.
11 JO-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15 ; Ba r e tta 6.13, Ma s h 8.
Movi e " The In cred ibl e Two Headed Transplant"
10, M onty Python'• F lying Clrcuo 33.; 12 ooJanakl 33
T2 o~Mov1e " Bob &amp; Caro l &amp; Ted &amp; Allee" 8: 12 A~
Lohman &amp; Barkley 6; Ironside 13 .
1 DO-- Midn lg hl Special 3,4, 15, Movie " Murder
Man sion" 10 ; 1· 4G-News ll, 2 · 30-News 3.
3 oo-:.Movle " The Forbln Prolecl" 3, 5 . 00-Movle
" If I Had a Million" 3, 6 .00-FB I 3: 7·0QBewlt c he d 3

5 3~News6: Elec. Co 20,33; Mary Tyler Moore 10;
Hogan's Heroes lS.
6:00-News 3.~.8. 10, 13, 15: ABC Nows 6, Zoom 20.
6: J()....NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett
&amp; Friends 6: CBS News 8, 10. Over Ea•y 20
7 .00-Cross-W ils M . L laro Club 6, Capitol Seat 33:
Gong Show 8, News 10: To Tell 'rho Truth 13;
Gilligan' s Is. IS; Hocking Vallev Bluegrass 20
7 . 15-Marohall U
Report 33: 7: J()....Hollywood
Squares 3,4; $100.000 Name That Tune 6; Tattletales 8 ; MacNeii. Lehrer Report 20, 33; That' s
Hollywood 10; Nashville on the Road 13; Mariy
Robbins' Spolllghl 15
8 oo-Biack Beauty 3. • . 15, Wal1ons 8, 10; Welcome
Back, Kotter 6, 13: Once Upon A Clo .. lc 20,33 .,
8 . 3~F1oh 6, !3 ; Originals 20: Shaken 33
9 .oo-Celebratlon at Ford' s Theatre 3,4,1 5; Hawaii
Flve-0 8, 10, Barney Miller 6,13 ; World 20,33 .
9: 3o-Carter Country 6, 13; lO · oo-Hall of Fame
3,4, 15; Baretta 6, 13 t Barnaby Jones. 8, 10; I.
Cleudlus '33; News 20.
10 : 3~Lock, Stock &amp; Barrel 20: 11 00-News
3, 4,6,8,1 0 ,T3, 15: Dick Cavett 20 : Over Eaoy 33 .
11 . 3~Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Movie "The Carey
Treatment'' 8; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6, 13; ABC News 33 ;
Movie "To Have and Have Not " 10.
12 00- Janokl 33 , 12 ; 40- Toma 6 , 13; 1 : 00-

Business Services

Notices

9a.
Ail

1974 Scout 11.. ......... 2895

.

I WANT to thank eovery0 •1 ~ !01 IF YOU have o !&gt;e rv tce to ofler
wo nt to buy or sell ~ Qrne llung ,
the1r cord~ proy&lt;H s floWers
ae lookmg for work
or
and vrsd,_ dutmg my •vuml II
whote ... er
you II gel • e~ull\
!ne ss Al so Dr Harder and
fa"&gt;ltH w.th o Se ntme l Wont Ad
• Hol.~:er Hospital nu•s•ng staH
Rcme Emergent; y Squad C od
Call 992 11 St:t
Bien you all
Mrs Soroh Otddle
l:'el• for ~e

Pomeroy Landmark

$

,. ,'

\ard~e

'279.95

1974 Camara Cpe...... ~3295
i

Arthur Genhe1mer . whose
plan? of res idence Is unk.nown
and wnose last addre'iS 1S
unknown and the un k. nown
he 1 r~ . de'll isces·. legatees ,
P1 s tnbutees . admln•s trator s
and exet"utors, if any , of
Art h ur Genheimc r , deceased.
whos e names and places ot
r C'i1d en ce a re unknown and
c .1nnot
w!lh
reasonable
dil1q e.nce be as c ertamed ,
Wdloam Sc hm1dl, whose
pl ac e of re~1dence is u nknow n
&lt;tnd whos e last address is
unKnown and th e unknown
he trs, dev1sees . lega t ees .
d JS tr1butces , adm tnts trators
and executo r s, 11 any o f
Wott,am Sc hm •d t , deceased ,
whos~ names e-nd places o f
res1dence a. f e un know n and
c annot
w 1fh
r easonable
dil1qence be ascertamed , H .
F Sch midt , whose place of
rcstdcnce 1S unknown and
wnose
last
adl'lress
tS
unknown i'lnd til e unknown
hetrs dev1sees , l eg &lt;t lf"!es.
dts lr 1bu tees .· adm1n1!&gt;trators
a nd executors, 1f any, of H F
Sc hmtd l. deceased. who se
names
and
pl aces
of
r es1den ce are unknown and
ca n no t
wtlh
reasonable
dllt g ence be ascert amcd , C
, Schmtdl. whose place of
rcstdcnce 1S unknown and
whose
las t address
tS
unknown and the un Known
hCtrS dev1sees, lega lee s,
ths tnbut ees, adrn1 n1 s tr a tor s
and executors, 1f any, ot C I
Sc hmdH, deceased whn ""'
man , det"cased , whose nam es
a nrJ plan•s ol res1dence are
unk no wn and c an no lwllh
r easonao te dlltQence b e
asccrta•ned
ar c hereby
not1f1Cd thJt pla1nl tlf S hav e
brought thiS act1on nam .ng
Nlch o r you a s onc ot the
de fen dant s tn th e a bove
named cou rt by fdmg th e1r
pelil 10n on January 10th
1978
l'he obtecl of the pe t1 t1on ts
th a t the d efe nd an t s b e
rc Qut rcd to s et up lh C1f
alleged es ta te or 1ntercst m
th e her e inafter descr 1bed
pfopert 'I or be lor eve r barr ed
fr om asserl1ng the sa m e, and
th at pl a1 ntlffs' l1lle be forev er
QUil'l cd a s agam51 an y cla trn ,
esta te or tnterest a t the de
fendant s and tor su ch other
r c ltel. legill or eau1tab le ilS
m~y be found to be pr oper
&lt;tnd 11 eccssa ry to alfo rd
pla!RI 1ff s full relu;•f , w tth
JU dgm en t for cost s herein '
tl")at :;.'I d r eal es tate 1S
descnbe d as foll o ws
~ The loll owtng r ea l esta te
s ttuated in th e Cou nty of
Me tg s, St at e or Qh to and tn
the Village or Pome r oy. ro

tard of Thank.

- -

4 dr ., 11 ,000 m1les by ca r e ful owner Beautiful white
over dark red finish . 305 V-8, au tomatic. P S. , P B , a1r
condi tioned , S"pare never used, s hoWroom· c lea n Save

992·2126

,.,

ARTHUR GENHEIMER .

....

P ISCF.S Web. 20-Morch 20.
Where others fall today you are
capable ol pickmg up the fallen
standard Lead by example
Your acttons w111 b e em ulated
ARIF.S (March ZI·Aprll 19)
Success 1s ltkety today tn enMondl:ly.
deavors m acco fdance w tlll
Noon un Salu r(llty
your highe st tdeal s
Your
The!llla)
chances become quest• onab te
thru Fnday
1n tnstances where th ey are
&lt;PM
lowered
the tlay before publication
TAURUS (April 20-May ZOJ
Sundl:ly
Commercta l area s took promtsf PM
mg for you today bu t vou may
l' ndll f lifl~niM.Jn
no t reap thetr tulles! poten tt al
due to mtstudgme.pt o r tnd •fference
GEM INI (May 21-.June 20)
Several people wtlt1 whom you
ha11e close l•es will be rno re
helpful than usual m covenng
Delmar C. Larki ns to
th e bases lor yo u today All
Arnold Eugene Riggs, Eiame
they 'll e~&lt;pectts your grat tt ude
CANCER !June ZI·J ul y ZZ)
Riggs, lot, Rutland
Your ltnan ctal lot ca n be
Athens Co. Savmgs a nd
beltered today throu gh strnn ng
Loan Co. to R ichard W.
to tncre ase your productiveness Leave nothmg to Lady Freeze , Ltnda L. Freese, l'"z
ac r e. Orange .
Luck , as she can be hck le
Athens Co Savings and
LEO (J ul y 23-Aug.22) Among
old ln ends you I! be th e cen te,r I.oan Co. to Benme N.
o f aHenttOn today In newer ~Rinehart , Betty Rinehart , lot
groups you may not make s uc h
3, Orange
a b•g h•l
Pomeroy Cli ffs , Ltd.,
VI R GO (A ug . 23-Se Jn ..tt 1 VLJ•Pnm e B uilders o f Ohio Inc . l o
cen tral e your e ff ort s today on
th ing s that you kno w to r ce rt ain Oh1o Power Co., easement,
wi ll produ ce mean•ngfu(
Pomeroy
returns Prof• fable poSSibilities
M1 lo HutchiSOn, Betty
s ho uldn I be neglected lor
Hutchi so n to M a rvin R
may bas
LIBRA 1Sept.Z3·0cl. z:J. You ' ll Stafford, Wanda L. St afford,
be pleasant co mpany and an Lot, R u t land
mt or mat1ve conversa ti o nali s t
R oy
Moore,
Barbara
today Aat1ng po1nts could be
Lou1se Moure , Paul M .
los\, howev er , II you s p read tl · Sidner, Donna Jean Sidner lo
on loo th1 c k
Orla nd D . Cremea ns, Jen·
SCORPIO Wcl. 24- Nov.Z2!
nife r E . Sayre, 3 acres,
When 11 co mes to dollars and
cen ls. you ' ve got th e Mtdas
R utl and .
touch today Family re so urces
Delb ert
C.
Russell,
wtll gro w und er your manage
Kathryn Russell to Homer H .
me n! , but perhaps na t your
Ha nk ms 1 J ean Hankms, 2.5
mate 's
acres,
Chester.
SAG ITTARI US ( Nov .z:J·I)ec.
George H. Warner, Grace
21) Once you s ta rt rot t1 ng today
you'll gather even grea ter M Warner t o Richard A .
momentum You're c harged Warner , Sharon K. Warner,
wtlh tnlttaltve Avo 1d assocta tes 17 1h acres , Salisbury
who co uld brake your s tnde
St. Pa ul United Methodist
CAP RICORN {l)ec.ZZ·.Ian.l91
Ch
u rc h
( by
merger) ,
lntult1ve 1nst ghts can s erve as
adtunc ts to your logi c tn bus t- Methodist EpiSco pal Church,
ness af!a1rs today Gut teelmg T . P . t o Dale W . We ls h ,
may fer ret ou t what mt e ll ecl Marjori e E Wels h , Lot,
overlooks
Oran ge.

1975 Ford

RUPE and
KAREN k RUPE ,
108 Mulbeny Stteet .
Pom e roy , Oh1 o,
Platntiff s,

1;: 1 at •
F.11t:h wurU liVer tho! mmunum 15
wonls 1.!1 4 t'i! II L~ per word pt'r dily l .
Oefe nd a nh
C;ue No . 16,695
Ad!:i runnUIK othfr than t"OUlim: U liY~
tlilyti w1U be charKi!tl 11 1 the I da)
NOTICE
SERVICE BY

s1gn

Sw1nger, 6 cyt , std
economy

IN THE COURT OF

Tomorrow 3.~; 1: 50-New5 13.
Mavlo Ch.onnel 4 5&amp;7P .M - AndThenThereWereNone(G)
9 &amp; 11 P .M . -Carnal Knowledge (Rl
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 3. 1'1t

TELEVISION
VIEWING

'

"'

.'

Bernice Bede Osol · .-----~-.

W

"'

'
I'M fiXII\J'TO PATCH
' ROOF TODAY

and Alan Sontag

A Ca nad!CHI r eader wants
to kn ow what W (! bad with
• K)i • '\.J:&lt; + K:ocxx.

While the Culbert:son-l..e nz.
match gave Culbertson the
opportumty to cla im that he
was the best playe r and hi s
system the best system. by

"" K.xx

1935 it had becom e apparent
lo leadmg bndg• pla yers
that the teani of Oswa ld
Jucoby-Davtd Brucc~How ·
ard Schenken·Michael
Gottlieb and v.artous s ubsti-

you 'ca n r ea lly shade a no~
trump hid Some players go
way down
Certa ml y, 14
pomts ts eno ugh

tutes were the best playe rs
m the world and their system, which was futrly s imilar to Ely's , the best system
Culbe rtso n c ountered by
playing a match aga ins t Hal
and Dorothy Sims. A match
lhe C ulbcrtsons really could

not lose because Jo Culbert·

T h e bidding hi:tS gone: 1
s pa dc·pass-pa$~

We reopen w tth one
nolrurnp lu thas sttuation

I N"'

WSI ' IIf'l-1 &lt; .. NTJ-: HPH ISF-' A."irSN

I

(0 0 you have a fJues iiOn lor

rhe experts ' Wme AsJt. the
f"Pf:! rts care ollhts newspa 7
/n dtwdual quest1ons w1ff
be aflswetetl II acco mpamed
by stamped self-actdressed
envelopes The mos t mtereslrnQ QUe sltons wtll be used rn
rt1IG column anct will recetve
cop,es of JACOBY MODERN i

per

�..

10- The Daily St!ntin.;'J. M~tl&lt;ll•t&gt;Ort -Pum•r·uy. u .. llrurs&lt;la), Feu. 2. 1978

:----A.~~;~n~;th~----~
LEROY DICKEY
Funera l services for Lerov
Dickey were held Wednesday
In Columbus. Graveside r 1res
will be held at noon Friday in
Mound Hill Cemetery

AMOS LEONARO ·
Am os Leonard. 76, well ·
known Rock Springs res ident.
died Thursday morni ng at
Veterans M emorial Hospi tal.

Mr . Leonard was taken to

...

Finances may
force merger

l

i

' ' I

ESTHER FOWLER
Es1her Fay Fowler , 61 , of

MlddlepQtl , died Wed nesday
at Hol zer Medical Center .
Born June 19, 1910 in He nderson , she wa s the da ughter
of the late Andrew and Edna

Martin Bugg . '
She was an employee of th e
Cl ements State Tree Nur ser y

and a member of the Salem
Communi ty Church .
Survi ving
ar e . one

da ughter , Marce lene B.
Wi Isorl of Pomeroy ; a son ,
Donald ; one brother , Glenn
F. of Henderson ; a sister ,
Mrs. Lynn Edwards of Mason
along with 12 grandchildren
and
eight
great .
gr andchildren .
Funeral ~rv ices wi ll be
Saturday at I : 30 p. m . at the
Sa lem Community Church
wi th th e Rev . Georg e
Hoschar and the Rev. Her .
man Jordan officiat ing .
Bur ial Will be i n Graham
Cemetery . Friends may call
after 2 p. m . Friday at t he
Foglesong Funeral Hom e in
Mason .
The body w i ll be tak en to
the church one hour before
services .

Ro ck Spring s Cemeter y.
Friends may ca ll at the
funeral hom e F r iday and
Saturda y until ttme of ser .

vices .

Leaders ask Bergland
about farm economy
WASHINGTON (UPII House members who have
heen besieged in recent
weeks by fanners appealing
for higher crop prices," today
asked Agriculture Secretary
Bob Bergland what he plans
tu do to boister the distressed
fann economy,
_Bergland was the leadoff
witness for a series of hearings scheduled by the House
Agriculture Committee in
response to pleas for help
which carne chiefly from
leaders of a !ann strike protest movement.
The hearings will reswne
next week with testimony
from members of cong rcs~
'e~nd

farmer spokesme~ .

Bergland told the Senate
Agriculture Committee in a
similar session last week he
hoped to get !ann prices up
c hiefly by pe r suadin g
farmers to lock up to 800

rnillron bliShel• ot surplu•
grain away !rum the glutted
commercial market in

a

g ,u 1v e rn men t - s p o n so r e d

reserve program.
The senate panel, _ meanwhile, scheduled a bus iness
meeting today and' was ex~ded to vote on an advisory
"sense of the senate" resolu-

tion urging Bergland to use
existin~

admini s trat ive

powers to pwnp ove&lt; $1 .5
billion int o the farm
economy .

The resolution would not
have the force by law,
~owev e r ,
and Bergland
already has publicly rejected
most uf the pr:upq,;ais IJy Sen.
Herma n Talmadge, [),{;a .,
the Senate committee chair·

man . They include plans. to
ra ise wheat, corn, soybean

and peanut supports and a
proposal to pay farmers $3.5
billion to idle up the 50 million
acres of crop .

'

t

1
('

/

Emergency Squad at 12: 18

By THEOOORE U.IFF
Born at Gallipolis . Ohio.
SOU THFI E LD, Mi c h .
July 17, 1901 , Mr . Leonard
(U
PI J
Financially
wa s a son of the late Venton
bel eag uered Ameri ca n
and Jessie Rou sh Leona rd .
He was a lso preceded In
Moto rs Corp ., whic h ha s
death by two br others, Wa y
consistently denied It might
and Claude, and two sister s,
pull out of the passenger car
E t he l Pickere ll a nd Ina
business,
now admits it .is
Bowen . He was a member Ot
t he Rock S pri n gs United
discussing a merger with
M e th odi st Chu r ch, Roc k
other firms.
Sp r i n g s G ran ge , and t he·
Ge rald
C.
Meyers ,
Me ig s Cou nt y , s tate an d
. president of the small car
nationa l P omona Gra nge .
Sur viving a r e his wi fe,
specialist, said Wednesday
Lott ie Smith Leonard ; tw o
the company would consider
sons , Law rence of Pom er oy.
a
merger or some other form
and Harry of M i ll wood. W.
of '!Ssociati-on if it is
Va .; t hree daughter s, L oi s
Tay lor. Ney. Ohio ; Dorothy
advantageous to AMC , its
M iley., Baton Rouge, La .. and . em pl o yee s
and
Bet ty Conkle of Gallipolis ; a
shareholders.
brother, Floyd of . Ga llipotis ;
"The door is open when tile
10 grandchlldren, si x great .
right opportunity comes
gr andchildr en a nd several
ni eces and nephews,
along," Meyers said, in · his
Funera l servi ces will be
first
speech as AMC chief
held at 1 p .m Saturday at the
executive, to stockholders.
Ew i ng Funeral Home with
" It hasri't yet. Nothing has
the Rev. James Corbitt of .
fi ci a li ng , Budai will be in
matured II&gt; a point that

•

I

the hospi tal bv 1he Pomeroy
a .m . Thursday .

•

f

while ago. We'll correct the
situation ."

I

By DREW VON BERGEN

I

•

••••

\

•

Public confidence in AMC's ; ·
ability to stay in business was
a concern of executives,

Meyers said , but " the
concern is not showing up in

l

'I

our dealer showrooms."
For evidence of a revival ,

he recited strong sales of the
luxury compact Concord and '·
profits of S3 million last fisca l
year and $1 .9 million in t he
most recent quarter. He also

warrants further discussion
now.''

Rwnors have circulated
since last year that AMC
· might cease car production
a nd rely instead on its
profitable Jeep and AM
General operat i ons .
Executives have denied the
speculation, citing plans for
new models into the 1980s.
But at a news conference
after the stockholders
meeting, Meyers said ialks
have been conducted recenUy
and hinted more than one
company was involved.
"Talks have been going on
for a long time," he said . " I

assume they will go on for the
time being. Some firms on
our list fit us better than
others. But we will consider
all possibilities that might
suit our 'needs .; ,

He would not name companies courting AMC, or eVen
whether they were foreign or
domestic competitors.
To stockholders, however,
he painted a picture of a
reviving company that .had ·
lost its way in the car market.
"It may sound strange to
say this," Meyers told
shareholders, "but the fact is
we got off the prnd"uct track a

ann o un c ed

\

a no th e r

production increase for Jeep ,

the 14th since 1970.
Meyers also discounted ihe
current dip in industry car
saies, saying most of it was
due II&gt; bad weather.

WHITE TREES - The low temperatw-e Tuesday
night and Wednesday morni(lg caused a heavy white frost

through the s now cover

today , he may see his
shadow. And that would be of
small consolation to Snowweary Midwesterners.
The snow belt took another
dose Wednesday, furth e r
hampering the cleanup
operations from last week' s
blizzard. Light to moderate
amoWJts fell in the middle
and upper Mississippi Valley ,
the Great Lakes region and
the Ohio Valley.
At least 3 inches blanketed
Chicago, which was running
short of road salt. Unsalted
expressways turned into slippery messes . and the
accwnulation set back efforts
of snow removal crews to tow

abandoned cars from side
streets still clogged from the
blizzard.
Four inches fell on
Ottumwa,
Iowa,
and
LaCrosse, Wis .; 3 i(rches on
Omaha, Neb., and an inch or
more on Minneapolis,
Muskegon, Mich., and South
Bend, Ind .

The National Weather
Service cautiously predicted
the slow-moving system
would creep eastward,
allowing groundhogs in at
least part of the Midwest 11&gt;
have a crack at sunlight on
their day .
And of course the sunlight,
if you believe the groundhog
legend, would mean we 're in
for another six weeks of
winter .

There were no predictions
uf an immediate thaw.
Bitterly cold temperatw-es
followed the system in the
northern Great Plains. High
temperatures barely reached
zero Wednesday and lows
dropped to 2().30 below zero in
Minnesota
and
North
Dakota.
TravelerS advisories were

posted throughout the
Mississippi Valley . South of
the snow, freezing rain and ·
.drizzle . extended from
Arkansas through the central
Appaiachians and inti&gt; North
Carolina. Rain and drizzle
dampened most of the Gulf
and Southern Atlantic states.
In the West, 4 inches of
snow fell on Wenatchee·,

enormous ice gorge - 2'h
miles long and up II&gt; 20 feet
thick - jammed against the
face of the Markland Dam at
Warsaw, Ky ., blocking
critical
barge traffic .
Demolition experts failed to
break the gorge Tuesday and
planned to try again today .
"If the explosives don't
work for us, we will probably
have to rely on Mother
Nature to clear the river for •
~. " said Col. Thomas Nack,
district engineer for the
Army Corps of Engineers.
Logansport, lnd., Mayor
Gene Mohahan Wednesday
declared
a state of
emergency, saying the eight·
week-old coal strike had.
exhausted the city's coal
supply. He said the city has a
two-week supply of coal, but
it's so water~oggedit will.not
burn .
In South Bend, residents

Big Water
The California legislature
named a large take on the
California - Nevada border
Lake Bigler, in honor of Gov.
William Bigler (1814-1880),
Wash ., and 2 inches on but the people ignored the
Spokane. Up to a half inch of official name and continued
rain fell on portions of to call it Lake Tahoe, an
Northern California.
Iridian term meaning 'big
Along the Ohio River, an water.''

basic money issues, although
WASHINGTON (UP! ) be said the issues had been
The strike by 160,000 coal narrowed significantly.
miners became the longest in
" Basically we a re still
the industry 's history today apa rt on economics," he said .
as a marathon bargaining
No new meetin g was scheseSSion failed to produce duled when the talks ended,
agreement on a new wage- but Horvitz said he would try
benefit package.
to get the two sides together
Negoliators for the miners again later today.
and the bituminous · coal
The stri.ke, now in its 60th
industry were thought to ha ve day, began Dec. 6, with
been close II&gt; a settlement, miners leaving jobs that paid
but the talks were recessed at up to , 7.80 an hour. The
, !2 :30a.m. EST today without longest coal strike previously
agreement on new. contract recorded lasted 59 days in
provisions.
1946.
Chief federal med iat or
Horvitz said he had been
Wayne Horvitz said the two very hopeful that an
sides were still at odds over agreement could be r eached

that made trees a thing of beauty. This picture shows
trees on the Ohio side of the river and trees in the
neighboring state of West Virginia.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, February 3, 1978

Snow belt has another dose
By
United
Press
lntemattonal
H the groundhog can dig

Issues narrowed--strike goes on

noted the official snowfall
accwnulation of 66.1 inches
for January would reach
close 11&gt; the cowlick on a 7·
foot-2 basketball center.
In San Diego, where it was
sunny and the temperatw-es

ranged from 53 to 65 degrees
Wednesday,
the
only
complaint about the weather
came from golf course
managers whose greens were
soaked from recent drought·
ending rains.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED
John
Compton, Middleport; Henry
Cunningham,
Pomeroy;

Pleasant Valley Hospital
DISCHARGED - Mrs .
George Mullinex and son,
Letart; Mrs. Roger Johnson,
Sharon Pierce, Racine; · Gallipolis; Roy Siders, Point
Evelyn Murray, Middleport; Pleasant; Mrs. Robert E.
Shirley Glasgow, Pomeroy; Peoples, Point Pleasant ;
Stacy Wollard , Pomeroy; Lonnie Watson,
Point
Vivian Jones, Racine; Ricky Pleasant; Georgia Robbins,
Lunsford, Pomeroy; Timothy Point Pl~asant; Tiffany,
Deem, Pomeroy; Myrtle Franklin, Point Pleasant ;
Hayes, Pomeroy; Anna William Fielder, Gallipolis
Johnson, Letart, W. Va.; Ferry; Mrs. Donald Bandy,'
Selem Yates, Racine ; Apple
Grove;
Junior
Rodney Pierce, Long Bottom. Gillispie, Point Pleasant;
DISCHARGED - Robert Yvonne Wilson,
Point
Hayden, Barbara Davis, Bess Pleasant; Mrs. James
Ellis, Gladys Blackwood, Mitchell, West Columbia ;
Raymond Russell.
Robert
Poore,
Point
Pleasant; Ralph Davis, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Jack Buxton,
Nothing New
The principle of jet Point Pleasant; Michael
propulsioh was discovered Bailey, Point Pleasant.
Births- A daughter to Mr.
about 100 B.C. py Hero tn
and
Mrs. Forest Long, Point
Alexandria. This was used
Pleasant;
A son to Mr. and
2,000 years later to help make
Mrs.
John
Michael,
Pomeroy.
jet planes . .

m· Thursday's session and
was disappointed by the lack
of success. " You don 't see me
at my most buoyant. We don't
have an agreement tonight,"

he said.
Asked if the talks might not
reswne today Horvitz said;

CLINIC SE:J'
There will be a cancer
clini c at the Middleport
Methodist Church Feb. 8 and
15 during the aft ernoon.
Anyone wishing to make an
appointment are to call 9927531 during the day ·or 992·
5832 evenings.

any agreement before 1t IS
" It 's always possible."
The United 'Mine Workers submitted II&gt; the rank-and-£ile
bargaining council planned to union members. John Guzek,
meet in Wash ingll&gt;n tl&gt;day , a barga ining council member
possibly to review the indus- in Ohio, said the meeting was
ca llc'!lll&gt; provide the negotiatry's latest offer.
The council plaMed a mid- tors " guidance " on an
morning meeting. It must OK unspecified contract issue.
The strike caused ha rdship
-on thousands of min e
famili es , but had IHtle
immediate impact on a major
conswner of coal - the
Sunny this aft ernoon, with elec tric industry . Utilities
highs in t~e mid 20s. In· stockpiled mountains of coal
creasing cloudiness tonight ,
in anticipation of the contract
with lows between 10 a nd 15. expiration.
Cons ie ra ble clo udin ess
But the reL'ent wave of icy
Saturday, with highs between winter weather began to
25 and 30.
deplete the stockpiles ,

Weather

•

e

at y

By ROBERT SANGEORGE

WARSAW, Ky. (UP! ) The off-again, on-again effort
to blast away a marrunoth
Ohio River ice gorge blocking
the Markland Dam is off
again.
U.S. Army Corps_of Engi·
neers officials late Timrsday
reversed themselves for the
third time in recent days and
decided to abandon, at least
temporarily, the attempt to
blast a channel through the
three-mile ice gorge.
Aiter two-&lt;lays of testing
the effects of progressively
larger charges of dynamite
on the ice pack, corp officials
plan to try to clear a channel
through the jam with
towboats.
·The project could take a
month or more, during which
time commerCial barges
carrying critical supplies of
conunodities to cities upriver
will be unable to move
through the Markland locks.
Demolition experts had
minor success Thursday in
blasting the ice gorge.
Several chunks of ice aooue ,_ .
to-10 feet long could be seen.

noating downstream late in
the afternoor. after explosives
specialists working under
contract to the U.S . ·Army
Corps of Engineers set off
three loud·~harges equivalent
to 50 pounds of dynamite
each.
Despite the use of large
charges, Thursday was
mairily a second " test day"

for personnel from Controlled
Demolition, lnc., a private
contractor . The additional
testing was made necessary
when officials of the
Kentucky Bureau of Mines
and Minerals decided they
had to
monitor
the
"con&lt;;ttssive effect" of the
blasting on the community
near the darn .
Charles Schumann, a
spokesman for the cOrps at
the dam, had said today
would be the first of several
days in which explosives
experts would try II&gt; crack a
channel through the gorge.
Later, Schumann said the
dynamiting would resume
·only if the towboats failed to
break through. ·

Towboat crews under contract to the corp, lead by the
6,000 horsepower craft
" Charles

Lehman,"

The stuck barges' have
aggravated the problem by
apparently preventing two
gates at the dam from being
closed. Schumann said
Thursday there is increasing
concern the open gates could
drain the Ohio River pool
above the dam , from
Warsaw, Ky. , upriver to
Chilo, Ohio, where the next
dam , the Meldahl , is located.
A pool of 20 feet is
necessary to keep the river
functioning for barge traffic
above the darn. Low water
levels also would make the
job of breaking up the ice
gorge more difficult. With
current situ a tion at · the
Markland gates, the pool can
only be maintained about
another week, Schumann
said .
The Markland Dam . is
located about 40 miles
downriver from Cincinnati.
Since the ice gorge formed at
the dam a week ago, barge
traffic has been una_ble to
pass upstream to destinations
in Ohio, Kentucky, West Virginia and Pennsylvania,

are

trying w breakup the ice and
push it into the dam's locks,
where it is flushed downriver,
The towboats began the
arduous proCess of slowly
knocking at the ice gorge on
Wednesday . They had progressed only several hundred
yards into the three-mile
gorge by late Thursday. "It's
going to be a long, slow
process,' '
Schum a nn
acknowledged.
The ice extends from the
Kentucky to Indiana banks
and corp engineers estimate
the ice is 40-to-60 feet in spots.
The tons of ice began
pressing against the dam
Friday· evening , when an ice

gorge
several
miles
upstream broke up.
A&lt; the ice began moving, it
sent nearly 100 barges out of
control and noating toward
the dam . Despite frantic
salvage efforts, at ·least II
barges remain caught
against the face of the
Markland Dam .

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
CLEARANCE SALE
CONTINUES WITH SAVINGS
UP TO 50%

National Bank Region Nurnber4
Thousands

Ste:ttcment of Resources and LiobiliUes

Cash and due! rom banks. . . . . .. . . . . ....... .. .. .. .. .... .. . . ...._.. .... ..
. .... 798
U.S. Treasury securities.. . . .. .. ..
.. .. .. .. .. . .. ... .. . . .. ... .. .. .. 1,767
Obligations of other U.S. Gov't: agencies and corps . . ........ . .... . . . .. . .. . . ...... . . 11
Obligations of States and politiCal suixlivisiuns .. .. . . . . ... ... . ....... . .. . • . ... , .. ... 330
Federal Reserve stock and corporate stuck . . . .. . . . . . . . .. . . ..... . . . ...... . ... .. .. . .. 8
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
.
· ·· .
under agreements to resell . .. .. .. . . ........ . ...... . . • . . . •. . , . . .. . . . . . .. .. . . . .. 200
J,oariS, 'rol&lt;ll Iexcluding unearned income) ..... ......... .. . . ..... . .. 6,820
Less:

Re~crve

for possible loan losses .. .... ... , , , .. . , . . .. . ..... . ...... 98

LtJans. Net . . . . .. . . . . . .. . . .......... .... . . .. .. ..... . . ..... .. :. ·.... .. . . ... .. 6,722
Bank premises, {umiture and fixtures. and
other assets representin g b.cmk premb es .. .. . ... . . .. .... .. . . .. . ..... . . . .. . . . . . .. 146

---11--

~~;~~s!~E:rs .......·..·.·... ....... ... .·.· .·... ..' ...·.·: .·.....·.·.·.·:..·....·.· .· .·.. ..·.·.·io.~~

Demand deposits of individuals, prtnshps., and corps ... ... , . . . .. •....... . . . ..... . . 2,125
Ill

.---.. .
oC
Ill

1-

•
&gt;

I ll

.-..

...
t:oe

:)-

Oa.
... uoe

Pomeroy .

This grant will be matched
with $20,275 in local non·
federal funds . and will go
toward funding a Retired
Senior Volunteer Program
(RSVP), through January 3t,
1979.
RSVP participants serve in
public and private non-profit
organizationS such as courts,

schools, hospitals, day care
centers and others.
There are no eligibility
requirements for volunteers
based on education , exACTION .assists Senior
Volunteers with transportation, training and
development, community
support and also assist in
sponsoring r~ognition activities.
RSVP operates through
grants to public and private
non·profit organizations in

~·

Shirts
•Save 50%, too, on Clearance Sale priced Women's Co.ats - Children's

local communities

Coats, Jackets and Snowsuits - Women's Coordinate Sportswear - Junior
Sportswear -:- Women's Blouses and Sweaters - Girls Sportswear - Slacks

Average for 30 calendar days ending with report dale:
Ca sh and due from banks ... ....... .... . .. ...... . ... . . . . ........ ...... ,. .. .. . . . 799
Total loans .. .. . . . ................... . . ....... .. . . ... . . .. .. .. . . . .. .. . . . .. ... 6,655
Total deposits . .. ......... . ' .... .. . .. . .'. , .. . ... . .. .. . .. , .... . . .. . ........... 9,016
TOTAL ASSETS . . . . . .. . . . . ............ ... . ... . ... ... . . .. ... ... ..... .. .. . ... ll,031

Tops and Blouses - Girls' Sweaters.
)

MEMBERS of the Orange Township Volunteer Fire
Department are pictured with two self contained
breathing units and .a portable pump bought through
contributions from the public. Some $1,500 was

•Plus Special Sale Prices on many other ~ems all over the store. Good

I, John T. Wolfe, President, of the above-named bank do
hereby declare that this Report of Condition is true and cor·
reel to the best of my knowledge and belief.
John T. Wolfe
January 2:!, 1978
I

We the undersigned directors attest the correctness of this sl&lt;lternent of resources and

0

W. Arthur Orr

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

Carroll R. Norris - Director·s

•

Clarence V. PriL'e

'

·ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY·
f

'

\ \

'

,..

COLUMBUS
State whiter because of snow,
Senator Oaki.ey C. Collins (R· winds, storm damage, im·
Ironton) today introduced passable roads and-or
legislation which would grant energy-related shortages. If
Ohio. school districts 10 ad· my btU is not passed, these
ditional snow-calamity days will have to be made up
closing days during the before July I, 1978. This
current school year.
would cause very serious
Collins said : "Many financial hardships for many
schools throughout Ohio have school districts which are
been forced to close this alrea&lt;. hard-pressed for
v
\It

futKts.' '

The .Ironton lawmaker
"The · General
added:
Assembly took a similar
appraoch in response to last
winter's energy crisis. This
winter's weather has been
equally severe and has
resulted m the necessity to
close sehools for •r.tended
periods of time."

and its

roster currently stands at
more than 213,000 Senior
Volunteers in the United
States.
For more information on
the Retired Senior Volunteer
Program, contact the Projee!
Director, Alice Wamsley on
East Main Street in Pomeroy.

EMS answers
three calls

The . Middleport
Emergency Squad was called
to near the Mark V Super·
market at 12:47 p.m. Thurs' day for Victor Diehl. 82, who
. had fallen on the sidewaik
and struck his head. He was
'"I know of no ill-effects for taken to Veterans Memorial
·granting the extra snow· Hospital and admitted there.
energy closing days last . At 5:34 p.m., the squad
winter and I am hopeful tHat went to the LaSalle Hotel lor
the legislature will act Cloyd Brookover who was
promptly to grant the same also taken "to Veterans
type of relief to our schools as Memorial Hospital.
they try to recover from this
At 7:44p.m. the squad went
winter's weath'e r-related to 735 Hobert St. for Roy
problems," ,Collins con· Boggs who was taken to
eluded.
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Collins' bill is introduced·

Women's Clothing

belief is true and correct.

.

contributed to the firemen in a recent fund drive to make ·
the purchase of the equipment possible. Fire Chief Robert
Tripp and department members extend thanks to all those
who,gave in the suc~essful drive.

Selections of Styles and Sizes In Men's • ~· • Children's · Girts' and

liabilities. We d~darc that it has been ~xamined by us, and to the best o£ our ktowledge and

A new wa ge-and-berw£it

off er by the industry was
under study by the un ion.
Wages and benefi ts were the
only unresolved issues. The
wtion rejerted an Ct'Onomic
package exceeding 30 perce nt
over three years, sources
said. ·
Wil dca t strik es a nd
solve ncy uf the un ion's
benefit fund') - a pair o{
iss ues
t hat
div1dc't
negotiators ea rlier ...... hnve
been settled tentat ively.

So un·es said ncgotiutun:i
for the Bituminous Co al

Operators Associ ation a!(reed
tentativelv last w!!ekend to
b'Uarru1tee benefits pairl frnm
the w1ion', ailing health aod
pension funds .
Tile uruon agreed 1niners
would reimbur~ the healUl
and penslon funds ror any

re\•cnue lost during a wildcat
stri ke , so urCes sni d . The

companit&gt;s agreed to mitkc

the rc pn ytl iC!ll in cnses wtwrc
iHl

a r bitrat or

hln mes

lmlllngcmcnt {or the wlldt·ut.
NOW YOU KNOW
'l11c llll hon wi th tlw lu._:lll'St

n• purt t•d munlc r n i le is
! . UXt' l 1l J:&gt;._l U I'~ .

Fifto•t•n Ct•rrts
~ H , N u. t n;,

Vol.

Larry Milllione, Charles Savoy, Joe Struble, instructor,
presenting the ~ epartm e nt certificate to ~'ir•· c;hlcf
Robert Tripp, Tim Spencer and Larnnr Lyons . Completing
the training but hut present Wednesday night waN
La wrence Balse r.

Thirteen fire fighters
complete 32 hour course
Thirteeh members of the
Orange Town ship Volunteer

Educa tion in coopc rn tiun

Fire Department received

Distriet..

with the Ea stern Local School

certificates for completin g 12
Instruct or Struble praised
·hours of instruction in fire members of the class fur
fi ghting skills and techn iques
by Joe Struble, 'f. and l. Fire
Service instru ctor Wed· ·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:·.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:•;.
nespay night.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
A department certificate
Sunday
through
was presented to Fire Chief
Tuesday.
a
chance
of snow
Robert Stripp and individual
or
snow
flurrtc.R
each
day.
cards to each Ilia n comSlowly
warming
tem·
. pleting the training.
The certificates and cards peratures, wllh high• In the
as well as the instruction 20s or low 30s Sunday and
were authorized and made in theJOs by Tuesday. Lows
will be in the teens or low
available by the Trade and
20s
Sunday and In the nild
Industrial Vocati o nal
or
upper
20s by Tuesday.
Education Services of the
State
Department
uf

perience or income, and

'

Dress, Sport, Knit and Western Shirts - Men's and Boys' Sweaters -

b. No. shares oUtstandinS ... . .. .. ....... . . .. . .. .... ... . . ..... . .. ...... ...... .. .. 125
Surplus .. . ... . .. .. . ..... ...... .. .... . . . ....... ... ... . , .. .. .. ,. ... .. .. . .... . .. . 125
Undivided profits ....... .. .. . .. . , ....... . . .. ... .. ..... ... ... . .. .. ..... .. ..... .. 504
Reserve for contingencies and other capital reseryes . .... . .. . . . . ......... .. . ... ; . . .. . I
TOTALEQUITYCArrnL ...... . . , .. . . ..... .. . .... ... ...... .. .. . .. .. ..... ~
TOTAL LIABIUTJJ·:S AND EQUITY CAPITAL .. ...... .. ... . .. ... .. . ... ... .. . .. 10,0!12

-1-

The Federal agency,
ACTION, has awarded
$23,447 to Meigs County
Council on Aging , Inc. in

•On Men's and ·Boys' Winter Jackets - Men's Corduroy Slacks - Men's
.

THESE MEN received rec.ognition cards for
completing a 32 hour fire fighting course. Thev are
mernb(,rs of the Orange Township Volunteer Fire
Department. The group includes : seated, I tor , Charles
Carr, Cliff Longenette, Norman Weber, Ri chard Spencer,
Keith Miller, Ron Lascar. Sta"nding, I tor , Charles Weber, .

grant

Time and savings deposits of individuals.

prtnshps .. and corps. .. . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... ... .. .... . . .. . . . .. . ... : .. 6,408
Deposits of United States Government ... .. .. ... , . ..... .. . . . . .... .. .. .. . .. .. .... . . 100
Deposits of Slates and political subdivisions .. . ... . . , . .. .. . . .. , .... . . .... .. ...... . . 588
Certified and officers' checks .... . , .... .. .. , .. ......... .- '· . .. 1 .. ... . ... - • - · • .. • • · • • 26
TOT 1\L DOMESTIC DEPOSI1'S ... . . .. : . ..... .... .. . .. .. .. ... .. .. . .. ..... .. .. .. 9,247
Total demand deposits ...... .. ..... ... ..... . .. . .. .. .. .. .. ·. ... ... .. 2,.693
Total time and savings deposrts ... . . . ........ .. ....... . . , .. . . ... ... 6 554
TOTAL LIAB!J.!TIES (excluding subordinated notes and debentures ) . . ... . .. . .. ... . 9,247

Pe n nsyl van iu ,

en tine

Meigs
awarded

RACINE HOME NATIONAL BANK

Charter nurnber9815

MINOR DAMAGE
Medi um. dn nw g~s· were
incurred in an accident un
F ronl St ., Middle)l&lt;lrt, at
10 :54 p.m. Thursday when 11
car dri ven by B. G. Daniels.
Wilk esvi ll e, attempti ng to
back up before pullin~ from a
parking spa ce, hit the Iront o!
another park ed cor owned by
Randall Hayes. Middleport ,
police said.

weste rn

southern West Virgina and
eastern Kentueky.

Blast ,e ffort now off

Consolidating domestic sub.·~idiaries ?{the

in the state of Ohio. a t the close of business on December 31 , 1977 published in response to
ca ll made IJy Comptroller of the Currency, under title t2, United States Code, Scctron 161 .

threa tening a number . of
Appalae hi an sta tes with
electr icity cutbacks. Officials
estimated less than a 30-&lt;lay
supply of q ml in Ohio ,

administrator
Robert Wingett, veteran
member of the Syracuse

and William Hubbard, a
citizen ; news. Kathryn Crow ;
village council , wa s ap- Pool, George Holman, Robert
pointed village administrator Wingett and Mayor London.
Thursday night.
In a letter receive~ from
Wingett will oversee the Jim Diddle of Syracuse Home
trustees of the board of public Utilities, it was noted thut due
affairs and other village to the fuel rate clause ef·
·
operations.
fe~tive January, residents
The village's annual ap- are now paying $2.80 per t,OOO
propriation wa s set at cubic feet of gas.
$104,435.
Council went on record
Mayor Herman London expressing thanks to several
named the following com· people who assisted iri snow
mittees ; Street, . . Eber removal the past two weeks.
Picken~. chairma n, J ohn
Mayor Lond on reported
Arnott, Larry Brogan , that he received 271 phone
Jimmy Joe Hemsley and calls in four days following
Clyde Triplett ; Finance, the heavy snow.
Larry Brogan, chairman ,
Council agreed to purchase
John Arnotl and Clyde smoke ejector fan and por·
Triplett; ordinance, Jinuny table power plant generator.
.J oe Hem~ ley, ~hairman, The purchase of the fire
Larry Brogan and Eber department could possibly
Pickens; Safety, emergency, .lower insurance rates lor the
and fire, Clyde Triplett, residents of Syracuse.
Att ending were Mayor
chairman, Jimmy Joe Hems·
ley and John Arnott ; Plan- London, Clyde Triplett, Eber
ning and development, Larry Pickens, Larry Brogan, J ohn
Brogan, chairman; Eber Amott and Kathryn Crow,
Pickens, and Kathryn Crow; council members , Janice
Recreation and scheduling, Lawson , clerk, George
John Arnott, chairman, Clyde Holman, treasurer , and
Triplett, Jimmy-~·~ Hemsley Robert Wingett .
'I
~'&lt;I

their cummunity spirit in
improving their cffi cil~n c:y in
righting (ires. He commend ed
the rncn for their interest In
the . training and for t he
eoopcr&lt;Jtinn h~ rcceivCll. Ht~
out t hat nw n y
community fire depa rtments

pointed

were requ cstin ~ ll'ttining m1d

that int erest i n fire
prc\' Cntiun ami protection is
growin g lhrouf4h the stutc .

Ohio River

Ohiu Hiver -traffk i!-i being
hampered today by icc Iron\
't11e Ra cine IAJcks und Dam,
some 13 miles away.
Heaviest acc umulations of
the ~:~i·x· feet deeP icc ut:e-the
f\acine and Belleville IAJCks
and darns. Trame has been
reduced to about fi ve percent
of normal flow according to a
locks spokesman.
Th e ri ver wa s cove red
Wednesday with chunks of icc
for a distance of 13 miles .
This is more than one-third of
the length of th e pool between
the Racine Dam and th e
Belleville Dam at Rtedsville.
It it belie-ved that the ice
accumu.Jations arc not as bad
us last year.
Tows were being used more
than usual lor lockage at the
Gallipolis Roller Dam, nine
miles so uth of Gallipolis. Ice
was not as heavy there as the
locks are not as large as those
on other dams .
Several barges tied to the
sh or e were taken down -

stream by the large icc flow.
MEET TONIGH.T
Meigs County REACT wlll
meet this evening at 7 p.m. lit
the senior citizens center .
SESSION PLANNED
The Southern Local Board
of Education will meet Feb. 6
at 7:30p.m. in the high school
cafeteria.

..

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="800">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11443">
                <text>02. February</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="49227">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="49226">
              <text>February 2, 1978</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="4287">
      <name>dickey</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="11">
      <name>fowler</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1458">
      <name>leonard</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="246">
      <name>wilson</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
