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1.

•.: .12-The Paily Sentlnei,' Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Wednt!sday Feb. 8 1978

l -·!··

•

'

·r Blizzard claims 38 victims
.

'
United Press
International
The worst blizzard on
record in many areas of New
England .killed dozens of
people and virtually shut
down the nation's most
poJl!llous region today . More
than 1,000 federal troops
ordered into the area by
President ' Carter were
delayed because no airports
were open.
The brunt of the storm

passed Tuesday and the massive dig-out began in earnest.
Officials in Massachusetts,
Con necticut and Rhode
Island hoped to clear
runways by morning to land
the planes carrying troop•
and equipment.
States of emergency were
invoked ·in those three states
and in New Hampshire and
Maine, where record tides
combined with the blizzard to.

destroy or damage more than
400 coastal homes. Damage
was estimated in the millioru~
of dollars.
At least 38 people - some
stranded along roadsides
buried in huge drifts and
asphyxiated by exhaust
fumes - died in the
Northeast and otl\er areas of
the nation hit by bitter
wea ther
Monday
and
Tuesday, That bFoll.l(ht to-at-

least 225 the number killed by
the winter of 19'11.
A blizzard c"-1 highways
througllout North Dakota and
Montana. Freezing rain ·and
snow spread through the
western Gulf states and
across northern Texas and
into New Mexico. Drenching
rains threatened mudalides In
Southern California. Frigid
temperatures elltended deep
mto- the ·South, setting a

Forecaster says stortns
not .p.-oof of ice age

record high of 47 degrees in
Key West, Fla., and chilling
thoaeof this decade," Gilman Ueve the earth ia gradually
participants in New Orleans'
By AUCE Z. CUNEO
warming because byproducts
Mardi Gras celebration.
WASHINGTON (UP! )
said Tuesday.
Providence, R.I ., had a The furious winter storms
He called this winter with frml the burning of fossil
fuels are · trapped In the
record 'l/ inches of snow, which have dropped record its flurry of storms Bostnn a record 26, and · amounts of snow in the East including this weekend's East atmosphere.
But others believe a cooling
Hartford, Conn., 20. In aren't necessarily proof of a coast blizzard .- ua pothole"
trend
baa been under way for .
Burrillville, R.I., 35 inches new
Ice
age
or In the long weather road .
the
last
30 . years in the
fell.
transformation of Earth' Into
" The change from a
In Boston, ·police arrested a greenhouse, according to 'greenhouse' ellect would be Norlhern Hemisphere and
24 persons for looting or the naUon's top forecaster. slow, moderate and almost · shoW! no signs of ending.
Ac.cor!liml..l!!.irece!!t analrobbing -"tores. Off-duty -- 1M Jlo!lald..Gilman, chief · imperciiptible compared witll
, officers were called to duty in of the National Weather the change In weather from yais of climatic data ; this
cooling · haa progressed
full riot gear. Huodreds of Ser-ylce's long-range winter to winter," he said.
despite
the research, which ·
Bostonians traveled the prediction group, says it may
"It's . the
difference
suggests
the buildup of
empty streets on cross- be !be price the nation is between driving on a genUe
dioxide
from
country skis.
fli!Ying for the relatively mild downhill slope, which you can carbon
increased
burning
of
fossil
Under 18 inches of snow - wmters of the early 19'1Gs.
hardly feel, and hitting a
the most since 1947 - New
"The five easy winters pothole in'the road," he said, fuela should be causing a slow :
for ce it to curtail some York City Operated on a before this year and last are adding that "this winter is warming trend,
customers to emergency weekend schedule. Tens of m_o re reminiscent of the definitely a pothole."
Either of these activities :
telephone
calls
only. thousands &lt;of commuters Wlllters of the 1960s tban
"Greenhouse" theorists be- could be measured only over :
Ohio
Bell stayed horne. Gov, Hugh
However ,
decades and not from year to .
Telephone Co. said it would Carey requested federal
year, Gilman said.
·
face no such problem because disaster assistance . Using
He said several severe ·
it has diesel powered antiquated snow removal
storms which hit the East :
generators and plenty of fuel. equipment, workers in tbe
earlier this winter resulted :
The Ohio Department' of
from tile good luck of the ·
Transportation Tuesday
drought-stricken West, which :
began turning off highway snow.
finally was blessed with :
lights in the area served by
, Pacific Ocean $\Orms tllat :
"It's almost like running in
Ohio
Edison
Co., place," said Sanitation
winda combined for a wind- ~ it by for the past two ·
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) headquartered in Akron, Department spokesman Bill . It was h,ard to tell on Bourbon chUJ Index in the teens. Many years.
:
bec~ use of an electricity
people
jumped
up
and
down
The
leftover
weather
·
Horne. "You clear an area Street, but elsewhere it was
shortage.
to
keep
warm
or
wore
heavy
syatem
from
the
West
CoBst
'
turn around, look out the back immediately apparent that
It had previously taken of your vehicle and it's loaded this Mardi Gras was different
scarves and mufflers. Others, stonns got an extra kick from :
similar action in areas served up with snow again. It drives from most others.
perched on ladders for a the cold air which usually'
by Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio you wacky."
Almost everyone was better chance to catch Mardi drops down from Canada, .
Electric
Co.
and
Gras . throws, wrapped packing tlleir wallop last ;
The raging seas crushed a shivering.
Monongahela Power Co.
, month on the East.
home in Winthrop, Mass. like
Thousands turned out, as themselves In blankets.
A
cold,
steady
rain
that'
"There has been a timing of ,
a house of cards. "The waves always, for the celebration of
began
at
midday
forced
the
the
cold air outbreaks from :
hit the back side and broke It "Fat Tuesday," the day
cancellation
of
a
night
parade
Canada
with the storms
in half ," said a wilness. Gale· before tbe beginning of 40
by
the
Krewe
of
Comus,
coming
across
tile Pacific
force
winds
pushed days of Lenten penitence and
(Continued from page I)
traditionally
the
last
parade
into
California
and
through ·
Uale warner whom they are floodwaters into low·lylng sacrifice. But the crowds of the Carnival season. As
the
Southwest
and
the
.two
sections
of
Brooklyn's
Coney
stayed
inside
longer,
went
currently visiting.
always,
however,
formal
have
acted
to
reinforce
each
:
Island,
weakening
house
home
faster
and
often
used
Also speaking at the
Mardi Gras rPlPhrAtinns other," he said.
foundations.
One
man
beer
and
wine
as
anti-freeze.
chamber were Thereon
"It was a nice crowd, but it ended at midnight with the . But easterners can't blame ·
Johnson, president of the drowned in his basement
King of Comus toasting Rex,
Meigs County Regional apartment in Nahant, Mass., was cold - just too damned tile King of Carnival, at a the West for this week's .
Planning Commission and C. before an electrical short cold," said Blaine Kern, who traditional meeting of the blizzard.
Gllman's top aide said the
E. Blakeslee, e~e cutive circuit burned the apartment for 30 yeais has prepared courts.
powerhouse
that dropped to
the
waterline.
thousands
of
the
brillianlly
director.
Pollee said the crowd was tons of snow from Virginia to ·
Tufts-New
England
decorated
multl...tory
floats
Johnson told the members
one of the best.behaved In
that · th·e Planning Com- Medical Center, one of the that thread their way through recent years. Only two ~jor New England was a typical
mission spent seven to eight Boston's largest hospitals, the crowda, bearing riders · incidenta were reported ~ storm, which developed off :
..
years compiling the regional was without heat Tuesday who to511 tons of alwninum one in which a float rider was the Carolina coast.
Unlike
the
normal
Winter
·
night.
Nurses
pa!!$ed
out
coins
and
cheap
beada
to
the
plan for Meigs County. The
sbot in the shoulder and the Atlantic storm that shoots up ·
iong range plan extends to extra blankets to help the 400 hordes below. ,
patients keep warm In the 50Temperatures In the 3Qs otller when a · policeman, the coast fast and furiously, .
1990.
trying to stop li man from this one was held back by ·
. The regional plan was degree temperatures and and gusty .20-mile-per-llour stripping, was hit on the bead another
weather system and .
funded througgh federal jogged through the corridors
with
a
bottle.
crawled
along, heaping snow · .
funds . Johnson noted Meigs to warm themselves.
Another
side
of
Mardi
Gras
on
the
way,
the aide said.
Iu Chicago, more snow
County has a lot of historical
bFought masses to Bourbon
significance naminfi the blew in from Lake Michigan,
Street, where the annual
the
winter's
Chester Courthouse as one inching
transvestite 'beauty pageant
accumulation to 73 inches, 4
site.
'·
took place. But the prancing
Blakeslee ouUined plans inches short of the 1969-70 (Continued from page !)
,,
men dresaed as women
·
1,000 industries and large butterflies and bumblebees
throu~h
the
Planning record.
(f:::llpll!t)led from page 1)
''This is the winter to beat commercial users, will
Commission . Plans comwere
upstaged
by
a
woman
pleted include water and all winters," Cook County institute a 50 percent down the block Who first tOOk Mees King, Veneva Mae
sewage, Veterans Memorial Highway Department Chief mandatory cutback on large off her top and then her Gilliam, Ronda Dempsey,
rl!!:!· F'teIds , Dorothy Seth,
,....o~e
Ho&amp;pital that employs 150 Engineer Vernon Volke · users when Its stockpile bottom to wUd applauae.
Barbara
Dugan, Jayne
people, bouse numbering and moaned. "We've been getting reaches the :JO.day level.
On canal Street, after the
clobbered time after time and
"The situation does nOt look last of more than :1.00 parade Hutchison and Rebecca
access roads.
· Current plans lor the hit every day with some type good at ·all," said Dave · floats wound tllrougb down- Anderson.
Pomeroy National assets
Poeppelmeier, a spokesman town, crushed beads of every
Planning Commission call for of adverse situation.
for Ohio Edison. "There is color and size littered thi! and loans showed a marked
update of tax maps, trans- .
definitely going to be an street. Drenched parade- Increase during 1977, Hobportation, Page Street to
name few Blakeslee exHolzerMedieaiCenter
economic impact when we go goers, scurrying home or to stetter said. Total assets for
plained.
·(Discharges Feb. 7!
the three offices reached over
to the :JO.day level. I don't
llarik Cleland announced
Mrs. Timothy Betz and son, think we can avoid , their favorite barrooms, $26 million, an increase of
that Charles Cassell, chief Mark Black, John Boles, mandatory cutbacks. But we tramped on huge strips· of approximately $3.5 million.
civil engineer at tbe Hydro- Anthony Bosley ; Marjorie may not go to tile 30-day level bunting ripped from the "We believe that the prlnoe
Electri·c Plant at Racine will . Calvert, Marlene Cardwell, for, say, another ten days, floats and empty paper cupa. reason for our continued
A man who said be was
be next Tuesday's guest Betty Claypool, Da.vid because we are not burning a
Abraham
Lincoln growth is the services and
speaker . At an evening Drununond, Eleanor Ewmg, full day's supply every day
convenience that we extend
meeting on Tuesday, Feb. 28, Mrs. Keith Fitch and son, because of conservation Washington - '11188ked, like to three areas of our county
many of the revelers at the MeJgs Inn, Dick Misty Goble, Della. Gray, measures."
leaoed'against
a window and by having offices In Pomeroy,
Campbell managing editor Donna Greer, K~nneth
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric, surveyed the &amp;Cj!ne. Why did Rutland,. and Tuppers
of the Clilzens Journal will Larkins, Eutha McDaniel, which has about a 44-day
Plains." Hobatetter reported,
be the guest speaker. '
Marvin Morris, Juanita supply, said it would go into he stay?
"Where elSe have you seen "We will continue to set new
Attending were Fred Crow Nawman, Margaret Neal, mandatory 25 percent
many chicks at the same standards of service for our
president, Robertson. Blli William Oiler, Mrs. Ron cutbacks for Its 500 largest this
customers.''
Mayer, Dale Warner, N. w. Peter~ and daughter, David uaers when It reaches the ~ time?"
Compton Archie Stegall Phil Profitt!, James Slone, djly supply level.
Kelly, Boyd Ruth, Scott Br~nda S!"eltzer, . Dale
Lucas, Roy Shepherd, Bill Sptres,. Chnton SwtsMr,
MEET TONIGHT
· Quickel, Ada Warner, Mr. Patty Wilt.
Kimball W. Shields
and Mrs. Virgil Teaford Jim
(Births Feb. 7) .
director of Economic and
Frecker, Loo Vaughan: Bill
Mr. and Mrs. Dennie Community
Development,
Grueser Ted Reed Stan Evans, a son, Racine; Mr.
will meet this ~vening In tile
Houda;helt, Th'ereon and Mrs: W~liam Greene, a. Meigs
County Court room to
Johnson, Jack Carsey, Joe SOn, GaUtpolis; Mr. and Mrs. discuss the 1977 Housing and
Young, Hank Cleland, Jam~s Ntbert, , a daughter,
Development
Blake!lee, and Emmogene Galhpoiis; Mr. and Mrs. Community
Act, small cities program
Holstein, secretary.
.
Teddy Penix, a son, Thur- workshop.
man.

Guzek says pact, good, bad
By JOHN T. KADY
United Press Iuternatlonal
The tentative agreement
reached between the United
Mine Workers and the
nation's soft coal operators
has "some good points and
some bad points," says John
Guzek, president of UMW
District 6, who also ooted that

settlement to the record-long
nationwide coal strike.
.. There was a lot or wording
missing from the summary of
the agreement they gave us,n
said Guzek Tuesday night .
"!tight now I don't know if the
men would approve it or not
because we (the council )
didn't go over the whole .
the unio n's bargaining thing.
council will probably not take
"From what I've read, I
a detailed look at the pact even question If I would
until the weekend.
approve it. II has some good
Guzek is a member of the points, and it has .some bad
· bargaining council, which re- points," he said.
cessed Tuesday after more
Guzek declined to discuss
than seven hours of details of the agreement,
discussions concerning the until " I've taken a look at the
pact. The council took no exact wording ." But,· he said.
action on 'the · tentative a section con1 RininP" A ~ trnn ~

clause fining UMW members
for participating in wildcat
strikes could doom the
contract in a ratification

vote.
Guzek Said he realized "a
lot of people want this strike .
to end soon, including many
of our menibers. But, we
have an.obligation to see that
the contract it fair .~~
Ohio's co!'l burning electric
power companies Tuesday
continued
to
stress
conserva lion until coal is
moving again - which may
be not be before the end of tbe
month, if tben.
General Telephone Co.,
headquartered in Marion,
· said rolling blackouts may

,v----····='-'&lt;'""'""''"""''-'"",
· ~ Six fined, one bond forfeited

''My Heart
Of Gold"

~.·
1.1

1,1

pendant

,,,
i

A meanmglul statem en t
e)(pre ss•ng you r tru e
!eel1ngs . ''My He a• t
Gold" heart pendant m
Goldplated Sterlmg

.r

•il

Six defendants were fined
and a seventh forfeited bond
in Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman's Co urt Tuesday
night.
Fined were Carl E. Moore.
34 , Syracuse, $100 and costs,
contributin g
to
the

costs, contributing to the
delinquency of a minor and
$75 and costs, disturbin~ the
peace; Melanie Pullen, 21,
Middleport, $100 and costs, ·
con tributing
to
the
delinquency of a minor;

Rosemary Lish , 24, Mason,
); delinquency of a minor; Del W. Va ., $100 and costs,
to
the
P. ~ all, 18, Pomeroy, $100 and co ntributin g
delinquehcy of a minor; Bus
1
G. Daniels, 29, Wilke!ville,
on ly
)
$10 and costs ,' Improper
· ba cking , and Susan L.
,.,I
COURT NEWS
I
Tom Quillen, Pomeroy, Altherr, 22, Jackson, running
by
v yA
!, •'
was fined $50 and ·costs in the a stop sign and thereby
, vrrucn· {~
court of Pomeroy Mayor causing an accident, $15 and
i'
.,f
Clarence Andrews Tuesday costs. Forfeiting bonds were
night on a charge of disturb- Roger. K. McDaniel , 18,
Middleport, $100 posted on a
ing the peace.
charge
of contributing to the
Forfeiting $50 bonds each
of a minor, and
delinquency
were Lester Richard, Long
$:iO
posted
on'
a charge of
Bottom, posted on passing on
di&gt;t
urbing
the
peace.
a double line, and Donald
Sedgwick, Tuppers Plains,
$50, posted on ·a charge of
passing a school bus. ·
'
"
DANCE SATURDAY
. There will be a dance at
MOTHER PIES
Southern
High School
Eva A. Welton, mother of Saturday following the
the Rev. Father Paul Welton, basketball game . It Is
pastor of the Sacred Heart sponsored by the senior class.
Church in Pomeroy, died
A "Disco Show" will be
Tuesday night . Funeral provided by Brad Krings and
212 E. Mlln. Pomeroy
arrangements will be an- · Mtke Mayle of Rio Grande.
nounced later.
Admission is $1 .25 at the door.

Ot

~

$795

·

~

~elers

ACE
"Ai:e is 1he place wtlh
the Helpful Hardware Man"®

:~ti:~;~ ~~u~~Ja"::

different from others ·

50-ft. Powr-Center

EXTENSI

Ohi.OaDS

'K elly •••

MEN'S

BIB OVERALLS

CORD

562 )
( 31478

SPECIAL MEETING
Jeff Burt of Buckeye Hills
Hocking Valley Regional
Development District will
meet with the Meigs County
Commissioners on the
Areawide Action Program on
Feb. 9at 7 p.m. in the office of
the commissioners.

Veterallll Memorial Hilllpltal
ADMITTED ..:. Toni
Rutter, Pomeroy ; John
Collins, Syracuse; David
Riggs, Pomeroy; William
Morris, ,Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED - Bertie
Wyatt, Joan . Smith, Carol

GET LICENSES
Marriage licenkes were
issued to George Chester
Holter, 51, Mineravllle and
Ida Margaret VanMeter, 55,
MinersviUe; Tim Lawrence
Smith, 18, Racine, and Karen
Russell, Corena Fanner, Rebecca Fick, 17, Rt. I, Long
Edna Hart, Belva Sloan Bottom; John Philip Lahy,
Victor Diehl.
' 32, Rutland, and Susan Lynn
West, 25, Springfield.

Sl1110 21 waist 10 !0,
&lt;hooM your correct

length, 100 pe~ cent.
unlorlztd
lhrunk. good Mltcllon
of al- lor the boy&amp; aitd
glrlt who llkt bib
ovaralla 11 t fHhlon
cotton

lt.m.

use with

TOOLS,
APPLIANCES ,
ELECTRIC MOTORS ,
etc.
EXTRA LOW SALE PRICE

• 'Bright orange
for high
visibility.
• 3 wire
grounded .
• 3grounded
Powr-Center
outlets.

Ace Reg.

HANDY, SAFE,.
TO
RE

$924

E

MIDDLEPORT. OHIO
NOTICE NEW HOURS
To The Coil Shortage Open Mon. thfu Sat. 9 til 6 Sunday 12 til

votes needed for approval.
Rep. George D. Tab lack, DC&amp;inpbell. committee
chairman ,saidbackersofthe
bill will have a chance to
bring it up again next week.
Chances of a reversal were
viewed as dim.
The measure, sponsored by
Rep. Arthur R. Wilkowski , DToledo, has been under study
for a. year In two different
conunittees.
JL was Jlpproved }ast June
by the Economic Affatrs and
Federal Relations Committee
after Wilkowski used a
parliamentary trick to get it
before that panel, with which

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statellouoe Reporl•r .
OOLUMBUS (UPI ) - SU!&gt;portera of a pr~ school
district income tax have been
given a week to regroup in the
Ohio House of Represen·
taUves, but success may
be out of reach.
The House Ways and
Means Committee dealt a
decisive defeat Wednesday to
a bill allowing local school
ooarda to ask voters to enact
flat-rate Income -taXes on
indlvlduala and corporations
to replace real estate taxes
to operate schools.
Thevotewas6tn II. with 10

THE MOORE'S STORE
IN POMEROY IS PROUD
TO ANNOUNCE THAT

J)enver Kapple
Has beeq employed in
their automotive department.
He will be installing brakes; mufflers, shocks. water pumps,
alternators. fuel pumps and tune-ups.

SAVE UP TO 1'2 AND

MORE during our
tltlranct ulo of Foil
ond . Winter wotrlng

apparal fgr wom• .
&lt;hildren · boya tnd

girls. Stop In, look

oraund. Rttlty stvo.

Open Friday

Til 8 P.M.

chance of ralu or saow

Monday. Hlgbs Saturday
and Sunday wDI range
from tile mid %0s to the mid
30s and blglu! Moaday will
be In the 30s. Lows wDI be
betWeea 10 and 15 Saturday
and Sunday aud In the 20s
Mo11,day.

Saturday 9:30 to 5 p.m • .

Elberfelds In ·Pomeroy

few school districts. I think
we've got the cart before the
horse ."
Boggs is chairman of the
House E~ucation Committee ,
which is considering a
comprehensivesolutlontothe
school financing problem.
Prior to tile vote on the bill,
the committee narrowed the
circumstances under which
an income tax could be
imposed, limiting such
balloting to general elections.
. Last-minute !lllPQSI.ti!!ll !!1![faced from the Ohio Catholic
Conference, represented at
the hearing by David J.
Young.

Young told the rommittee
his group does not oppose
substituting income for
property taxes, but fears
nonpublic schools would not
share in the revenues from
any new income taxes
imposed.
·
Young cited a recent U.S.
Supreme Court decision
which held in a Tennessee
case that nonpublic schools
may roc-eive state aid ·as part
of an overall assisto nce
l!!!CkaJl..e , but not in a
pieeemeal addilion to U1e
program .
Earlier, the Ways and
Means Committee approvc'&lt;l

for a floor vote legislation
exempting inventory In a
foreign trade zone from
Ohio's personal property tax.
A foreign trade zone is a
facility near a port of entry
where goods are held or
assembled before shipping to
market .
Plans call for the establish·
ment of such a .One in an
abandoned tank plant at
BrOQk Park, where a trade
mart is to be set up for
demonstration of heavy
manufilcturmg " tOOls -llrl a
pennanent basis. Without the
bill, taxes would have to be
(Continued on page 10)

•

•

enttne

at y

e

COLUMBUS (UP!) - State
officials · and weather
forecasters were to gather in
Columbus today to discuss
how, and where, the state wm
be able to respond should a
quick thaw loose n icejanuned rivers in Ohio and
cause major flooding.
Gov . James A. Rhodes
called
the
meeting
Wednesday after flying over
eastern Ohio and inspecting
flood damage along the LitUe
Wheeling Creek in Belmont
County.
High waters in late

Woman

hurt in
wreck
An elderly Meigs County
woman was injured in a
traffic accident at 12::;() p.m:
. Wednesday on SR 7 at the
junction with US 33.
The patrol said an auto
driven by Cash Zimmerman,
82, Rutland, pulled off the exit
ramp onto SR 7 into the path
of a vehicle operated by

Weather
Partly sunny today and
Friday, with highs both days
in the upper 20s or low 30s.
Fair tonight , with lows between ·uve and 15 . The
probability of precipitation is

January froze and caused
widespread damage to the
homes of about 300 residents
of
Goosetown,
an
unin cor por a ted
area
adjacent to Bridgeport.
The meeting today was
among weather forecasters ,
disaster services agency officials and state public
information officers.
''This will be the strongest
preparation we've ever had
because of the (record ) snowfall this year," said Rhodes

after his inspection tour Wednesday. " You can't prepare
too early."

Wayne Nichols , deputy
director of the Ohio
Department of Natural
Resources, said his agency
will establish a flood
information center during

.::l:!~::.E~:;,:,~ ,~:,:~ ,r"n,,: , : ,:~,:, , : :,:,: , ~:,: ,:,: ,: '
Brr·efist~.:·j
~

e

fl ood emergencies in the
state.
.
Nichols said the center will
be able to forecast where
widespread flo oding may
occ ur by using weather
information, . historical
records of fl oods and
department topological
maps.
Nichols said Wednesday
the
Maumee,
Grand,
Vermillion, Chagrin, Scioto
and Muskingum rivers were
es pecially floodprone this
year because of backed up
waters due to ice and heavy,
headwater snowfalls. Other
potential areas were along
the Hocking and Ohio rivers.
The flood center will be
operated by Roy Winkle,
chief engineer of the ·
department.

GI

Firteen Cents
Vol. 2X. No. 209

lion" that will result in
substantial unemployment:
Glenn said, "It is no secret
that I have been greatly
concerped
with . the
emergency of dwindimg coal
. supplies which have ,r~chgd
dangerously low levels. ·
"Unless the strike is settled
quickly , the state faces
and a crisis of
unspeakable proportions," he
said . "The clock is running
out on Ohio .
" At some point __ and 1
think that point is now everyone needs to be
reminded that society
has a
.

blac~outs

CHICAGO - SPIEGEL INC., the nation's fourth largest
Catalfli(Ue firm, says it plans to close 131 catalogue order stores
in 11 states by the end of March.
· Board Chairman Henry A. Johnson said Wednesday the
Chicago-based company has decided to concentrate on
telephone and mail order sales through its catalogues. The
shutdown will affect. about 1,000 full-time and part-tlnoe
employees In Dllnois, Michigan, Missouri, Ohio, Pennsylvania,
New York, New Jer5ey, Kentucky, Maryland, Indiana and
Delaware.
NEW ORLEANS -SOMEWHERE IN THE tons of 'Mardl
Gras garbage, city cleanup crews found a set of false teeth,
and Blanca Mlller was thrilled, "It took every penny I had to
bave those made, but they were hurting and that's why I took
- them out of my mouth and put tilem in my pocket," Mrs. Miller
said Wednesday.
City sanitation director Pat Koloski said the dentures were
ooe of the few objects of value foWJd along parade routes. He
said a foreman described them as a pair of female dentures "though I don 'I know bow he was able to tell."

expoled to asbestos dust have been awarded an unprecedented
$7D million in an ouklf-court settlement, but they still face
health problema and possible death.
'!be agreement Wedneaday settles tile largest personal
injury suit ever filed aplnst the federal goverrunent.
Ho-, the prnbleml ~ot be over for the 445 workers
expooed to the cancer.fttling agent at a Tyler, Texas,
manufacturing plant.
'!be workers trlglnally sued for 1100 million.

,, '

,

losses.
In n letter to Carter
throu gh Robert Cm10o r,

Chicago regional admluiotrator of the ••ederal
Disaotcr Asslotance Admluiotratloo, Khodea aald
he appreciated the federal
aid that had come In Ohio,
but more was net.-ded.

"Much of the hea vy
damqgc •uolalned by Ohio
farm e rs was sustained

MRS. NANCY REED, left, and Mrs. Grace Eich, both of Pomeroy, have been named cochairmen of the annual Meigs County Heart Fund drive being held this month. A number of
special activities are being planned for the drive.
·

DESPITE THE SNOW, ice and cold weather, It's time
again to think about heart• and flowers day, Feb. 14, fast
approaching. Pretty Dena Manley, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. John Manley, Breezy Heights, Pomeroy and a
second grader at the P0111eroy Elementary School, flashes
a big smile as she holds a valentine offering featured at
Swisb~r-Lohse Drug Store and other merchants this year.
ThiS little goodie, five pounda of candy, retails for $29.95.

Juveniles sent to commission
Two juveniles were sen· reference to the breaking and
tenced to the Ohio Youth . entering of the Opal Goble
Commission Tuesday by residence in Middleport on
Meigs County Juvenile Judge Jan. 23. They will be taken to
Manning D. Webster.
the Ohio Youth CommissiQn
The two minors had been in tM near future.
charged with delinquency in

durlug th e devaa tatlng
winter Ntorms beginning
Jan. 18, t978 , appro&gt;lmalely a week prior
to the unprecedented killer
bllr.zard.'' wtote Rhodes.

carter to intervene .

stake In seeing tile strike
settled" said Glenn.
·
Glenn' srud he hopes Prestdent Carter "will invite the
coal operators _and union
lea ders to the Whlle Hou~ to .
express hts concer~ the

contract be
approved
promptly.
" Now that a tentattve
ijgreement
has been settled
'
?n 1 think the symbo 11c
influence of the presidency
could perhapa get us over the

prime mdustrial state, Ohio's
late will be shared by other
states.." he sat'd
Davtd
direc
tor Ztmmer,
o! th deputy
Ohio
.
e
Department ~f Energy. said
the Rhodes adl~lllistratlon
and the states power
compantes hav e bee n
.
working on what options can
.
.
be taken If the strik e
continues.
.
•
UMW negotiators and coal
operators reached tentative
agreement on a new eon tract
EAST MEIGS - The last night when the board Mttchem and Archi e R~se for Monday but the UMW
Eastern . Loc al . Board of voted only a one-year thel!' work as asSistant Bargining Coundl , which
Education
by. t a d3-2t Jvote
renewal.
. .
basketball co aches . Th e must pass on the contract
" t d
h
Like most school d!stncts
saian~s of hvc other em- before it is put up for
1
g,
. Ohio the Eastern dtstrtct
. .
·
·
d 1o ratification, said it needed
R'anb e1 superm en en t o· ctn m
P oyes were mcrease
lede da ono:yhetar con ra
ha s b'een pla gued with comply with th e federal
t'
ed d
We nes ay Dlg .
.
. .
. I .
more ques IOns answer an
On roll call, mem bers fina~ctal problems for m~ln'htmumbo wadge aws. I 14 did not act on the agreement .
D th c 11
e
ar approve&lt;
"We've recognized from
0 y·1 several months · Voters have
oro and
y Doug
a oway
Well
Bi~seli erapfailed to pass. a tax levy· to ca 1amt··t Y days when schoo1s the beginning that there is a
.
provide add!tlonai , fund s were closed due to weather high possibility that the
d th e mot ton 1or a one.
Sch
prove
year contract while members sever a1tunes.
· oo 1s o1 t he conditions ·
m1ners wou ld reject· an ·
Dorsel Larkins and James district were closed before . So far, the state allows only agreement," said Zimmer.
c ld 11
d 't
Christmas due to the lack of hve such days without the "We have been working all
a we oppose 1 ·
•
money .
additional days having to be week on this in the terms of
It was reported Larkms
At last night's meeting, the made up.
what sort of options we have
voted no because he wanted board granted Ni cole
However,
there are if they don 't ratify it. If the
Rtebel to have a longer term Abraham, EMR teacher at possibilities that additional miners fall to ratify the
pact.
.
Chester, a leave of absence days might be permitted this contract, 1 would say it Is an
In the preVIOUS 12 years due to illness and named year due to the bad weather extremely critical situation."
Rtebel has served . as David Jenkins to the sub- over an extended period.
Ohio Edison, with only a 37Clerk Eloise Boston was da
i f a!
inl
supermtendent of the distrtct, stt'tute teachers li•t.
he bas been gtven fo ur threeIt was agreed to pay Joe authorized to sec ure an ad- an~ s':!;~l%ho :rv:sem:oo,:
.year contract renewals untll
vance draw from the county cus tomers Including over
auditor and to borrow money J,QOO industries and large
from a bank to secure funds co mmercial users, will
with which to pay bills.
institute a 50 percent
Elementary schools, which mandatory cutback on large
are permitted only one fund users when its stockpile
drive activity in a school reaches the 30-day level.
year, were given permission
"The situation does not look
to hold a second such event if good at ali," said Dave
they desire.
Poeppelmeier, a spokesman ·
Bonds
were
purchased
for
.
for
Ohio Edison. "There Is
An ash tray, allegedly
CHARLESTON, W.Va.
Mrs. Boston and for Sally definitely going to be an
hurl
ed
by
Miller
rs
(UPI ) - Tempers frayed by
Mitchem, custodian of the economic impact when we go
the longest-ever United Mine bodyguard, exminer Charles activity funds. Dorothy to the 30-day level. I don't
J
ohnson,
hit
Roger
Workers strike led to a brief
Calaway was named liaison think we
can , avoid
scuffie Wednesday at the Hammack, a coal miner from representative of the board to mandatory cutbacks. "
District 17 headquarters over Cabin Creek.
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric,
.when tempe rs cooled, the Ohio School Boards Assn.
a magazine article.
The
board
voted
to
request
which
about a 44-day
Cecil Roberts, the diStrict . Miller went three blocks state approval of additional ,supply, has
said
it would go intn
president, took at least one across town to the Charleston provisions .for the vocational mandatory 25 percent
punch in the melee he said Newspapers building where agriculture program, and an cutbacks for its 500 large!!
was precipitated when UMW an interview was scheduled . agreement was . signed be- users when it reaches the 40.
President Arnold Miller and a He said he was sure no one tween non-certified employes day supply level.
oodyguard confronted him belted him in the brief round and tbe board.
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
.of fisticuffs.
about tile article .
Jim
Williams
was
named
a
Electric
Co., headquartered
''If I had been, I'd sure
In the January issue of
substitute
bus
driver.
in
Columbus,
said it was
"Coal Age,"
Roberts knock hell out of somebody,"
The
board
agreed
to
apply
disappointed
that
the
attacked
the
Miller Miller averred.
for
approval
to
purchase
two
Bargaining
Council
did
·not
Roberts, asked If Johnson
administration , saying "most
new buses.
act on the con tract.
of the people he's hired don't had been put up to provoke
Edgar
Pullins,
a
custodian,
"The action has virtually
know how to do anytltlng." him into 11. fights, told was named to serve as a assured our customers that
The district leader · also newsmen, l 'd say it's a building maintenance worker they will experience further
described the UMW's future possibility, but I wouldn't say on a month's trial basis.
hardahlps," said the utility.
as looking "definitely bleak it's a certa'l nty."
Attending
the
meeting
were
He said tile company bas an
Johnson
declined . to
now."
Supt.
Riebel,
Clark
Lees,
high
estimated
•7 day coal supply
No one was sure whether comment on the matter, school principal, and board and when that supply drops to
Roberts landed any pUnches calling it a "personal thing ." members, Dorothy Calaway, 30 days, commercial an!l
"I thought it was pretty
of his own.
disgraceful
If you ask me," Doug Bissell, Dorsel Larkins, industrial customers will be
Angry
·words
were
John Caldwell and Daryl required to curtial electric
exchanged and other men in Roberts said, ·but added he Well, and Mrs. Boston and' usage to 50 percent of normal
Roberts' office had to step in wouldn't press charges.
Mrs. Mitchem.
requirements.
and break up the men.

final hurdle before the
ratification vote," sa1d
Glenn.· "I ho~e th
. e presldent.
moves
· · · on•t thts
Oh' qwckly.
• 1 This
cr~;ns •sn • 10 s a one .
If our state !S.Crippled the
shockwaves wtli . be. fe lt .
throughout the natton . As a

E.as·tern
· superm
·• tendent
t raet
aJVen
one-year
con
e.a.
·
.·

Tempers cause
brief scuffle.

BEREA, OHIO - FIREMEN, DISGRUNTLED with
current wage talks witll Berea Mayor Jack Kafer, have vowed
not to work any overtime - beginning today. the 16
firefighters are members of Local 1836 of the lnterilational
Aasociation of Fire Fighters.
Lawrence R. DraveS, one of their negotiators, said
. Wednesday firemen want a 10 percent pay raise - but have
.been offered 7 percent - and that they also want that the
~omt agreed upon be paid retroactive to last Jan. I.
PHILADELPHIA- EILEEN BIWNGTON, 27, was left
Blllnheritance by her parents tllat she'll remember them by '
for the rest of her life. Her mother, who died two years ago,
contributed tile cornea from one of her eyes Blld when her
father diad last Saturday she received the other from him.
In 197~ Mrs. Billington lost her sight as a result of
lteracotonw., a disease that turns the rounded cornea into a
cone. She aaid, "Two years ago, when I looked out the hospilal
window, I rould see nothln,;. Now, wben I look out wltll the eye
that was operated on tllen , I can see the buildings all the way
across town. '~

WLUMIIUS t UPII Gov. James A. Rhode•
today asked Pres ident
Carter to "extend backward" to Jan. 18 his
drclaratlon of a federal
state of emergency l9r
Ohol becauoe ol winter
Mtorms to enable farmers
to n•t:ovcr some of their

enn urges

UnitedPressinternatlQDal
U ot
ttl d
the
500n,
~·
.
.
&lt;
n
se
e
~::
~ nationwide coal strike could
ByUnltedPresalnterJiatiooal
become a "cr!'st·s of
CLEVELAND-.~ UM,\, 0111~, woman, is suing RCA for unspeakable proportions,"
$1.7 million, datmlng a color televiSion set manufactured by says Sen. John Glenn, Dthe company caught fire and the blaze resulted in the death of Ohio, who ·hils called on
her husband and daughter. .
President Carter to intervene
Mrs. Leota A. Cheney filed tbe suit in Cuyahoga County to end the walkout.
Commo!l Pleas Court and demanded a jury trial. She claims
An official of the Ohio
tlleteleviBion set was not on when It suddenly burst into flames Department of Energy also
In the Cheney home Aug. 2, 1976 - killing her husband, Ronald, said Wednesday that if the
and daughter, Bethany.
tentative agreement between
the United Mine Workers
IMMOKALEE, FLA. - THE BODY OF an expert union and the soft coal
flsberman missing since Friday surfaced Wednesday near tbe
. d tr .
t !'fled Ohio's
center of the alligator-infested Lake Trafford, while searchers :a~!t:r~.:;ouJ~t:es face an
combed nearby waters for a companion who disappeared with ,, ex t reme 1.Y crt't'tc a! st't uahim The
in abody
ooatlng
accident.
of Thomas
Arnst.uts, 35, of Fairfield, Ohio, was
retrieved Wednesday afternoon, Lee County Sheriff's Lt.
Henry Booth said. Slill missing was Thomas Schweitzer, 28, of
hts, Ky .
'
,•.,.,
'"··
Highland Heig

e

ca pital improvements or any
combination thereof.
A majority vote of the
people in the district would
implement the plan, which
would also be subject to
repeal.
"This proposal has been
bandied
around
the
Legislature for 10 years,"
said Wilkowski. "Now is the
the time."
"This
is
not
a
comprehensi~e approach to
the
sehool
financing .
problem," objected Rep .
Robert J. Boggs, D-Jefferson.
"This is a piecemeal solution
which would benefit only a

Officials prepare for
major flood in Ohio

EXTENDED FORECAST
Fair Saturday, a chaace
of anow Sunday and a

~;News"
"
~:
e

difficulties.
But that city approved a
school operating levy last
fall , placing schools In the
black for another year.
Under the bill, boards of
education could place on the
ballot an income tax of at
least J ¥4 percent levied on
individuals living in the
sc hool . district
and
corporations doing business
there.
It would have to be stated
on the ballot whether tbe
proceeds were to be used to
supplant real estate taxes,
provide more operating
money for schools, finance

BEAUMONT, TEXAS ..:. MORE THAN · 400 workers

MOORE'S
\192-2148

he has influence.
Although the bill received
extensive subcommittee·
work. Tablack's committee
declined to send it out for fear
it might hinder enactment of
an overall revision of Ohio's
school financing and taxation
systems.
Wilkowski and other
supporters said the measure
would be .a "tool"' in the
banda of boarda of education
, to keep their schools afloat.
· Originally, tHe pNijl6SSI
was designed to assist the
Toledo school district, which
was forced to close briefly
last fall because of financial

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursl!a:v. February 9.• 1978

Baseball

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

&amp;~

for

Mardi Gras atmosphere

Inc me tax supporters given week

�3--The Daily Smtinel, Middlf!llOI'!·Pomeroy, 0 , Thursday, Feb. 9, 1978
~-The Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Thursday, Feb 9, 1978

peopletalk
By United Press International
FAUBUS FRACAS It started as a court appearance over
some trafftc vtolations, but when t\ was all over former
Arkansas Guv. Orval Faubus (and his wife, Elizabeth), faced
more serwus charges - slappiDg around a newspaper edttor
Carol Whittemore, of the weekly Madison County Record , says
she was trymg to take a ptcture of Mrs Faubus at the county
courthouse m HuntsVIlle, Ark , Tuesday when the couple
"went w1ld " They cursed her, pulled her hall', !!lapped her and
smashed her camera, the edt tor says. The Faubuses now face
up to a year m jail and $1,000 fine IS conVIcted of third&lt;legree
assault and battery.
FINAL WORD . The word ts lhat Richard NliDn has
dectded on a title for his sooMo-be-published memoirs · Rn" - wrttten m lhe style he used to mtUal all hts
prestdenttal memos and personal notes. Pubhshtng sources ID
San Clemente, Calif , say Grosset and Dunlap plan lnittally to
prmt about200,000 copies of the book, which 18 expected to hit
the stands m early May The sources say the final verslon wtll
be less than lhe I 3 nullion words the former prestdent
submttted, but will sttll be a hefty coffee table 1tem and wtU
sell for about $20 a copy
IN THE SPRING For three years New York Gov. Hugh

Carey and automo\tve hetress Alllle Ford UzlelU have been
kcepmg frequent company And for three years people have
been wonderiDg if they're planrung to get married they're
wondermg agam The New York Post reported Wednesday the
511-year.;&gt;ld Carey mtends to make a June brtde out of MISS
Ford, 24 years hts Jumor. But It's news to the governor Says
he "June ts commg , but I have no plans except to get the
leg islature home." Not lhe average bachelor's sprmg fancy
TEEN-AGE LANDLADY: At an age when most gtrls'
lhoughts are confmed to boys and the latest dance step, Pam
Moulder ts delVIng mto plumbmg manuals and tax laws she 's just become lhe proud landlady of a three-bedroom house
m suburban Indianapolis She bought the $18,000 home wtth a
$J,700 down payment - half from saVIngs earned on a paper
route and a half on loan from her motller The elghth-grader
plans to sell1t m 2'h years and buy a car - and another house
- and wants eventually to become a real estate agent like
Mom Her fll'sl tenants are due March I
GLIMPSI!.S Singer Connie Stevens will he m Los Angeles
New Hospttal until at least Saturday while doctors dl!solve a
blood clot behind her left knee that developed as a result of a
fall on stage two weeks ago
For the fifth stratght year,
Russian Aoawly Karpov won the lntel'llational Assoc18tlon of
Chess Wrtters 1 1977 "Oscar "

Norwegian CroWD Prince

Harald and Crown Princess Sonja are m Japan for a !0-day

Mia~i . ~tops Bowling Ge'e~

TV •••in Review
•

By JOAN HANAUER
UPI Televlsloo Wri~r
NEW YORK ( UPI) - Wilham Shakespeare wrote 37 plays
for lhe amusement of Elizabethan audiences, complete wtth
rtbald repartee , monstrous vtlla tns and slapsl!ck comedy as
broad as the River Thames
The BBC and Public Broadcasting System wtU brmg all 37
plays to Brttish and American audtences over a sti-year
period m what may be the most ambitiOUS dramatic U!levtston
project ever conceived
Target da~ for premtermg the shows m the United StaU!s is
January !979, butthat ts tentative and PBS has not yet decided
under what umbrella they wtll be shown , or whether thev wtll
be weekly or twice monthly presentattons
The ftrst of \he BBC producttons - "Much Ado About
Nothmg" - already has been completed, and the ftve
a&lt;ll!lttonal plays for the ftrst year are "Romeo and Juliet ,"
"Rlchard D," "Measure for Measure," " As You Ltke It" and
"Julius Caesar.''
The prospect appears dehghtful And executive producer
Cedrtc Messma msts\.!i the shows are bemg produced
"prlm8rtly as plays to entertam people " But, as an added
attrac\lon, the PBS system also enVIsions both audlo-vtsual
and prmt matertals , so the plays can be an educational asset
both to children and adults
A whole generation of youngsters will be able to see
Shakespeare performed by enormously talented actors m
traditiOnal but styhsh producttons that w1ll present the Bard of
Avon as a playwright, not a long-w1nded, Jong-&lt;lead author who
wrote In queer English wtlh lots of footnotes
The talent the BBC can muster ts tmpress1ve Michael York
and Penelope Ketth star m "Much Ado," but Amertcan
audtences might be more impressed wtth "Rtchard If,"
starrtng Derek Jacobt , Sll' John Gtelgud and Wendy Hiller
PBS audtences will remember Jacob! for his tour de force
performance m the t1tle role of "1, Claudius "
Meeting Jacobt at a lunch m New York held to pubh¢ze the
Shakespeare venture, the guests had to have him pomted out
Unlike Claudius, the actor ts of medtum hetght, sltm and w•ry ,
wtth reddtsh hatr and a sculptured down-turnmg moustache
and trmuned beard that give him a fey appearance
Jacobi, who IS currently appearmg m "Hamlet" at the Old
Vtc m London and may also play the melancholy Dane in the
television ser1es, satd t\ took him siX hours to don his Claudius
makeup uod 1\ so lrritated hts skin that on those days when the
scrJpt called for him to play both young and old Claudius ID a
smgle e)liSOde, he had to play the young man mthe mormng
because the makeup fur lhe old Caesar left hts skm ID VISibly
bad condition
"I'll be dotng Hanalei, too, as well as Rtchard, " Jacobi said
"Mter all, over lhe pertod of SIX years as the actors get older
\hey can play older parts Who knows- by 19841 mtght he old
enough to play 'King Lear"'
unofflctal VISit
Kay Mltlaod ts m Hollywood f1immg a
segment of ABC-1V's 11 Hardy Boys"

Wilma Rudolph, Olympic wonder, to
appear for Black Awareness Week

B MIKE rou.Y '
'
U~l Spurts Writer
Adecade ago before&amp; bby
Or r and Phil Espo!IJt&lt;i~gan
rewriting the record books, a
fellow named Stan · Milnta
owned the scormg champtonsh1p m lhe Na tional Hockey
League
',"
The fa ct remams that "01
Stosh" was an extraordmal'y
hockey
player
and
Wednesday mght he proved
he st1ll has lots of life left
Three monlhs shy of hts
38th b1rthday- Mikita taUted
two power play goals as the
ChiCago Black Hawks scored
a &gt;4 VICtory over the New
York Islanders, lhe Hawks'
seventh strmght VIctory
Mikita scored m the ftrsl
:X· ~ :;·:»::;.?».«&lt;.:

:m.:. :-:~:.:;~

I Today's
w
~;

=--.::~

I

HEALTH

,

Meigs
Property ,
Transfers

Sport Parade

Minnesota, s-o, Buffalo
ripped Cleveland, f&gt;-2, and
Toronto nipped St. Louis, S-4
, In the World Hockey

~elation ,

ll'je

~~~

Stingers and Edmonton
0 1Iers ba ttl ed to a 6-6
overtime tie and the
Wmrupeg Jets routed . the
Bll'mingham Bulls, ~
Rangers S, North Stars 0:
Jerry Byers broke a
scoreless he with a secondperiod goal and Wayne
Thomas posted his fourth
shutout of the season. Phil
EspoS!,to and Dan Newman
supplied the other New York
goals
Sabres 5, Barons Z·
Danny Gare scored two
goals, the second mto an open

net wl
HC&lt;IIIdllett, u
Buffalo pulled even with
Boston for flnlt place in \be
Adams Divilion.
•
4
~~5,
oa1

!lliI~Ug·

'*"ok

of the year br e a H e at
17:17 of the fdmedal periodLoulsa~
Toronto exten
St.
winless streak to 10 games
~ : ..__ iod
pia
ll'..,...r
power
Y
goals by Ron Plumb, Claude

~':r~n~ ~ch~'i.,
c na

Led:

a e
ag.alll5t ~dmonton ... an~
Wmntpeg s Hot uJ'~~
Anders Hedberg,
for
and Bobby Hull ":"mbined ,
11 points to hlghltght the Jets
rout of Birmingham.

Graham surprise
in Hope Classic

By JOE SARGIS
UPI Sports Writer
PALM SPRINGS, Calli.
-:t=·
By MILTON RICHMAN
(UP!)
- David Graham
:~
UP! Sporll Editor
........
surpnsed hunseU and, for
lhat matter, his rivals as well
NEW YORK (UP! ) _ Today's tournament tennts players m the openmg round of the
remmd me of sheep
$225,000 Bob Hope Desert
Dtunb, drtven sheep following each other bUndiy and mmd- ClaSSic
lessly m the mtsgUtded belief there ts no Jurut to how much
Playmg for only lhe second
money they can make or to how much sheer boorishness they time lhts year ' and after a
can lay on lhose who come out to watch them before lhey ktU nearly three, week layoff
durmg wh1qh he hardly
lhe golden goose
To me Romama's Jlie Nastase was lhe forerunner, the one
ld
o e pattern for the kind of nauseat•n• conduct you see
practiced, the at-year-o
Who Set th
N..,
Austrahan shot a 6-under-par
so often dtsplayed m tournament tenms nowadays.
66 Wedoesday, for \he lead m
Somohow Nastase got the tdea he could make hintself more lhe ftveol'ound Hope by a shot
colorful, and more money at lhe the same time, by disrupting a over Peter Oosterhuis, Dave
match he was m, so he proceeded to make that t~ behaVIor Eichelberger, Vtc Regalado
his trademark
and Fuzzy Zoeller
Nastase ts fmed occaswnally, but so what' He's making
" It's kind of mce to come
more and more money, so what's an occastonal fine The back and play lhiS well,"
unportant thing wtth htm ts that he has made a reputation for Graham satd. "I've had so
himself as the Bad Boy of Tenms and •l IS paymg off much to do lately that I
handsomely
haven't been able to play
One ll1e Nastase would've been enough, but now you have much ..
any number of them tn tournament tenn1s The thinkmg wtth
Today, Graham, as well as
alllhe others 1sn't difficult to figure If tt worked for hlril, why OosterhuiS, Eichelberger and
can't tl work for me'
R
1d
11 1
L
ega a 0 • WI P ay
a
One of the results of that kind of rationale IS what took place Qumta,
the cou•se most think
m lhe world Cup Champtonshtps at Richmond, Va., last week 15 the toughest of the four
Vttas Gerulaltis, the 23-year-old wmner of the tournament, IS lhey use m Uie 00-hole Hope
bemg lhreatened wtth a $10,000 lme and a one-year suspenston ClaSSic, the stxth event of
because of the way he conducted himself durmg hts matches 1978 .
Speakmg of some of the thmgs Gerulattis did, referee Walter
"I have no illustons," satd
Horsley satd, "The way he was acting, he's not Itt to play Graham, "about bemg m
before a maJor audtence It was the most ll'rattonal behavior front I lhmk lhe pressure ts
I've ever seen "
the same whether you are in
Gerulmtis wasn't alone, though Etght others also were Cited front or a shot or two
and stand to be fmed for making obscene gestures, throwmg ' behind ,
lhetr rackets, wtthdrawmg w1\hout cause, and for hittlng balls " In lhe Hope there are 384
mto lhe stands
' ''amateurs gr~uped ID teams
Nastase also was m \he tournament Naturally, he d1d hiB : of three, ;.ho play one round
thmg, too, and has a $7110 !me hangmg over hun for three each on the four courses and
different mctdents, two involVIng obscemties
' l\'llh a different pro eacl,' day
Some of the more "understanding" tennis people, lhe soft- So tt can be a very nerveUners, are mclined to ratlonahze away aU this nusbehavtor by w;ackmg week and a
pomtmg to the Jack of efficient linesmen, umpll'es and frustrating one U:o
referees They also call attention to the fact that most of the
"Oh 1 don•t' mmd , satd
players are young, have gotten too much too soon and Graha~ ''Mter all ;t's the
obviously don't know bow to handle tt
amateurs who pay 'our way
1 don 'I buy any of that
, and 1 feel by playmg ID an
None of these players are too young to read, and if they d event such as thiS I am
merely take the trouble to read the bas1c Standards of Conduct makmg a contribution as
for teMts, they'd diSCOver that aU competitors are under a well I try to have fun and let
duty to encourage and mamtam htgh standards of genUemanly It go at lhat ,
conduct, fall' play and good sportsmanship
"
01 the foursome al 67,
These standards were set forlh for the good of the game and Zoeller played his fll'st round
for lhe good of all \bose competmg mtt To VIolate these rules, at easter Indtan Wells,
1t seems to me, IS nothing more than pure stuptdtty because Tnda he goes to Bennuda
such actions eventually ~an'\ help but turn off spectators and Dun y,
lhey're lhe ones who make t\ posstble for a Junmy Connors to
~ndmg champton Rik
earn $922,667, a Guillermo Vtlas $800,642 and ~ Gerulattts Massengale SUI'VIVed haVIng
$294,324 as they d1d last year·
to play wtth host Bob Hope
Somehow I can't ever remember a Bill Ttlden, Don Budge or former Prest dent Gerald
Fred Perry ever makmg an obscene gesture, throwmg a Ford and Flip Wilson to shoot
racket or cursmg out a linesman, ando I'm sure they were at 68 at La Qumta Keilh
VIctims of bad calls m lhetr day also
Fer s also had a 68 at La
" If 1 as much as satd 'damn' or 'beU' on the court, my folks Qu~ while Tom Purtter
would've have made me stay home .untilllear,ned to behave sltot 68 ~~ Bennuda and Larry
myseH," says Budge, tWice US smgles cha"!Pton, former Nelson 68 at Eldorado
Wunbledon utlist and one of the foremost tell!!!:; players of aU
Tom watsony already the
time

dmmg hall
graduate Lloyd Brewton, Co rnmg Fiberglass Corp
Whtle at Rto Grande he was a
Th e week of events, Monday , 2 p m
M1ss Rudolph, the subject two term president,, of the
Ame n can wom a n t o wtn planned by Rw's Black
three Olympi CGold Medals m Student Un1on to help com- of a recent NBC movte abuut Black Student Union and
one 01) mpt ad, "tll be the mumcate an understandmg her hie, will speak abuut her served as vtce-prestdent of
feat ured guest durmg Rio of black htstory and culture, Olymptc expertences and her Student Senate
The pubhc ts mvtted to aU
Grande College and Com- w1ll also mclude an ap- , own personal struggles to
Black Awareness Week
mumt y Colleg e s Bla ck pearance by Alv1s Moore and achleve success
hts New Ltfe Chotr, Tuesday, ' The 2oth ch1ld m a fam•lY of actlVlttes free of charge
Awa reness Week, Thursday
Feb 16, Bp rn , m the college Feb 14, 7 30 p m , and by Rio 22, she was the v1cttm of poho
from mfancy and d1d not walk
wtthout braces until she was
mne years old By the ttme
she was 15, she had overcome
her handtcap to quahfy for
the 1956 Olymptcs She came
home from Melbourn e,
Austraha, w1th a Bronze
Medal
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
Smce then she has been
acttvely mvolved m nearly
every OlympiC game She
Ralph A M•chael, exec ,
by
a
lcohol
A
lot
of
women
established three world Hazel Mtchael dec'd , to
Testing liver
are alcoholics It ts not JUS\ a records m the 1960 Olymptcs Glona Micha el, 1 Gerald
rt'covery
problem m men
m Rome m the 100, 200 and Mtchael , 'h A
I am sendmg you The 400 meter races
Morns Pecko, Betty Pecko
DEAR DR LAMB - I Health Leiter number 7-8,
Mtss Rudolph was the first to Larry Wayne Banks ,
developed hepat1t1s from Livmg wtlh Your Liver to Untied States Woman Athlete Carolyn Sue Banks, 20 A ,
eatmg contammaled ft sh g1ve you a better 1dea of how ofthe Year to earn that honor Bedford
How soon after c an a person your hver functtons Olhers two years m a row and the
Alba C Radford, Hazel B
sa fely consume alcohol? Is who want thts tssue can send first woman to be named Radford to Fred A Radford,
there any test that can be 50 cents w1th a long, stamped, Sports Woman of the Year by Int m 76 A , Chester
given to see If the hver ts In self-addressed envelope for 1\ European Sports Wnters
Alba C Radford, Hazel B
conditiOn lo take alcohol? to me m care of lhts
She ts one of only three Radford to Phthp A Radford,
IVould a person he damagmg newspaper, P 0 Box 1551, women to have recetved the lnt m 76 A , Chester
her hver by dnnkmg and not Radio Ct\y StattOn, New James E Sullivan Award,
Lo1s B Small, dec , to
know It" What would the York, NY 10019 Meanwhtle, presented aMually to the Nancy Lu Hanulton, Lots
symptoms be tf the hver was don't drmk alcohol unless year ' s most outstandtn g Anne Murphy , Cert of
your doctor tells you that you amateur athlete by the Trans , Lebanon
nut ready fur alcohol?
I am not a heavy drinker, have ret'Overed and your Amertcan AthletiC Umon
Ezra Sheets, Frances M
but enjoy one cocktail before hver ts normal enough for
Alvts Moore ts makmg hts Sheets to John C Sheets,
dinner and occasiOnally you to have an occaslonal second appearance at Rto Leshe J Sheets, 1 and onewould he drmkmg on a mght drmk soc1ally
Grande m as many years
DEAR DR LAMB - Could The 1974 Rto graduate has Sixteenth acre, Orange
out
Alta Ehzabeth Murray to
you please tell me what been mv1ted to return after
DE AR READER
Wtlltam E Murray, parcels,
causes
dark
ctrcles
around
Whether or not y ou can ever
his successful concert durmg Bedford
safely resume usmg alcohol the eyes' What can be done to Black Awareness Week last
Dearl Porter, Vtrgtnta M
7
after hepal!lls depends upon get nd of them
year
to Robert D Porter,
Porter
DEAR READER - There
how much residual hver
Moore's New Ufe Chotr, pa reels, Sctplo
damage you have, tf any The are (wo factors A thin skm based In Columbus, will
Charles W Carson, Marte
liver recovers at different and httle or no fat pad allows perform a collection of Carson to Jay HaU, Jr , 552
rates after hepaltl!s and to the dark venous blood to m traditional gospel mustc as acre, Rutland
different degrees, so your crease the color Then some well as some of Moore's own
doctor wtll have to do tests to people have more p1gment m com postltons
lhe skin m thts area In etther
Sports Transact1ons
hnd out how you are domg
Brewion has been mvtted to
Bv Un1ted Press International
case,
t\
ts
not
a
stgn
of
1ll
Yes, he can do such tests '
speak about h1s own career
Wednesday
Football
Some are blood tests and 1f health or dlsstpa\ton
expertences
since
graduating
A tlanta - S1gn ed D1 ck wood
Smce
you
are
a
woman
1t
IS
the cond1tton warrants tl, he
from Rto Grande m 197~
as quarterba ck collch
can even do a b1opsy of the a stmple matter for you to use
K~m s as C•tv - Named Bobby
He
.
1s
sales
marketmg
Ross ~n ass1stant coach han
liver and study small p1eces makeup and cover the area representative for Owens- dhng
k1&lt;:k 1ng team
uf the live r under a accordmg to your own likmg
New Orleans - Signed Ed
There
are
a
large
nwnber
of
Beard as linebacker coach
nucroscope
Baseball
Yes, you can damage your t"Overup creams and atds that
Cleveland - S1gn ed pitcher
will
serve
admtrably.
111E
OAILV
SENTINEa..
liver a nil not know 1\ In fact ,
Don
Hood to a two year
DEVOO'ED TO THE \
contract
A man mtght have a httle
that IS the b1g danger of
IN'I'ERESTUF
M+lwaukee - Purch.!lsed con
MEIGS-MASON AREA
aicuhol for everyone You more problem but not so
tract of out1 1elder Gor mlln
CHESTER
L
TANNEHILL
ThOmas from Te xas
have to have qwle a btl of much luday Men do lhings to
Ellec. Ed
Basketball
liver damage before stgns unprove thetr appearance
ROBERT HOEFLICH
Den'oler - Reachvated rook +e
have
been
conthat
would
Citf.UlOr
Rober t Sm lth to the r oster
that yuu can dele&lt; t really
Published da1ly• except Saturdlly
College
show up J rrught p01.11 oul stdered a scandal 20 years
by The Oh.io V~~oUey Publishing
Eastern M lch fga n - Appomt
and
actually,
there
ISD't
ago,
Cootpany
Multimedia
Inc
111
that even if the ltver has been
ed M l ke Sto ck head football
Court St Pomeroy Ohio ~769
coach
damaged by a VIrUS or . ony a thing wrong With tl Some
BWJtnesa Off1ce Phone m 2156
St
LOU IS
Univers ity
even
smell
better
because
of
Edllorial
Pl\one99'1·2t:i7
other cause rather ll!an..
Former ma 1or league pitch er
Secood
class
pcll'llage
p11
ld
11l
Sl')nny s.ebert named au.stant
alcohol, alcoholts still a toxm the change Men can use
Pomeroy,Ohio
bd Seball CO.!ICh
to the liver cells Regardless some of the coverup preparaN&amp;Uonal lldvert+Sin!! represenillUve Wald • GrlftiV1 Comp~~ny,
of what damages the liver, tions made for men lf they
Inc , BottinellJ and G11llagher D1v ,
alcohol ts an added msult to really want to and have the
157 Third Ave , New York, N Y
HI LOW TEMPS
nerve
to
tty
t\
10017
1ls health
Sut.crlpUon ratel!l Dellverel by
NEW
YORK (UP!) - The
Ttmes
do
change
Dunng
Although c~rrhosts of the
CMrrier where availab&amp;e 25 ~enl8 per
highest
temperature
reported
the
silent
mov1e
days
male
week ByMotorRout.ewhereL"8JTier
!1ver Is mm e common m men,
Wednesday to the Nattonal
:ter'VIce not avai.lable, One month
•I 1s st1ll the ftfth most com· actors used hpsttck and more
S3 25 By marl ln Ohio .and W Va
Wealher Servtce, excludmg
lllOII
Ci:i USe
Of
death Ill 1ecently General Douglas
One Year, $2200 Six monlh.s
Alaska and Hawau, was 74
flJ 50 Three months S7 00,
AmeriC an women between MacArthur ts satd to have
El!lewhere
S26
00
y.u~r Su; mor11hs
degrees
at Key West, Fla
the ages of 35 and 54 , 60 per- rouged his cheeks, and r
U.t SO, Three mo nths $7 50 1
Today's
low
was 19 degrees
suffered
Subscription prfce md utJes SWlday
cent of these cases are caused doubtanyon e
Timt'S&amp;nUnel
below
at
Pelston,
Mtch
because of tl.
RiO GRANDE - Wilma
Rudolph the fir st and only

penod and Darcy Rota and
Ivan Boldlrev added goals m
the second period Islanders'
goals by Bryan Trottier, M1ke
!lossy and Gerry Hart .&amp;1~
the game J.J after two ·'
'
'
periods before
Mikita
scored
the go ahead goal at 8 53 of
the third per!"'/, Ch1cago
never trailed tllet~a!ter.
" Gtve Chtcago credit, "
New York Coach AI Arbour
satd " It was only our fourth
loss m our last 22 games and I
thought we played well. That
httle eKtra ztp was misSmg
tom~ht, but lhal's _not an
eKcuse - Chtcago played
&lt;Well and deserved to WID "
' In other games m the
National Hockey League, the
New York Rangor• tnppf'd

Mikita paces Chicago
,,
•
•
to seventh wzn zn row
r

wmner of two events this
year, and Arnold Palmer.
wbo has woo the Hope five
times- but not smce 1973 both played at La Quina
Wednesday and Polh shot 69.
They play at Eldorado today
Jun White, Ron Cerrudo,
Bob Murphy, Tom Shaw,
Barry Jaeckel, Grier Jones
and Bill Rogers had 69 at
!ndtan, so they play Bennuda
ID the second round. Bob
Rosburg was lhe lone 69
shooter at Bermuda. He's at
La Quina today
U.S Open champ and
Hawauan Open wlnner
Hubert Green shot a 71, Gene
Littler was at 72 along With
Lee Trevmo, San Otego
champ Jay Hass had a 74 and
Johnny Miller, 76, aU at La
Qum\8 PhoeniX Open wtnner
Miller Barber had a 70 at
Bennuda and PGA champ
LaMy Wadkins had a 74 at
Indian

Sports briefs
ST LOlliS (UP!) - Shortstop Garry Templeton Is
among 29 players on the St.
Lms Cardtnals' 40-man
WIDier roster who have
stgned contracts
The
Cardinals
sa1d
Wednesday other recent
stgners are p1tcbers Earl
Bass, Joe Edelen and Aurelio
Lopez, catcher Steve Swisher
and
infielders Manny
Castillo, Tom Herr and Mike
Ramsey.

MILWAUKEE (UP!) The Milwaukee Brewers bave
purchased the contract of
outftelder Gorman Thomas
from the Texas Rangers for
an undisclosed amount of
cash, a club spokesman said
Wednesday.
Thomas, 27, played with a
Brewer farm club, the
Spokane lndtans of the
.Paclftc Coast League, last
season until Texas acquired
him as part of trade for
catcher Ed Kirkpatrick

INDIANAPOUS (UP!) The U S Auto Club has added
an 181h race to 118 1978
champtonshtp series and two
more events to the stock car
schedule
The Atlanta International
Raceway will be the scene of
two of the additlonal races, to
be r11n as a doubleheader July
23, by both cbampl.onshlp and
stock cars.
The other new stock car
event will be a 200-ldlometer
chase June 10 at MOS[lOrt
Park, Canada

By GENE CAPDES •
of the whole baU game "
mostly on the shooting of
UP! Sports Writer
Hedr!C also felt his swtl· Burrell McGhee,
who
Bowlmg Green's mad dash chmg to a zone defense late 1n fm1shed the game with 25
towards fll'st place ID the the gjine played a key role m pomts But the Bobcats 12 each Akron was led by
Mtd-Amertcan Conference the Mtamt wiD
caught the Flashes with 2:09 Marty Wtse and Zane Giles
basketball race has been at
"When we went IDto the left and then scored !~last wlth eight points apiece.
least temporartly halted
zone; they didn't penetrate at 10 pomts of the game
In the Ohio Conference,
The Falcons, who were all," hesald "They didn't get
Toledo scored mne unan- Martella handed Musltlngum
dead last in the MAC only a the ball where they wanted swered pomts durmg a thl'ee- tts third stralght loss,
couple of weeks ago but had a It "
mmute stretch in the second dowrung the Muskles 52-43
chance to t1e for the lead wtth
BG Coach John WeiDert, half to halt an Eastetn
Musklngum, now 7-3 In the
a WID over leagu~Jeadmg \)'hose team had won four " M1chtgan surge In its win OC Southern Division, led 33Mlamt Wednesday ntght, stratght, felt his team "dldo't over the Hurons
27 at halftime, but scored
dtdn't qmte get the job done .playashardaswehaddurmg
Eastern, down by 16 point~ only!Opointsthesecondh•lf
But they gave tt a good try
qur wmnlng streak But," he wtth 16 miDutes to play in th~, Quiny Carter led Marietta
The Falcons ended up • added, "I'm proud of my game, fought back to take a With 15 points and 10
losmg 611-M, but tl was sttll t''i&lt;ids"
54-53 lead but Toledo's nine- rebounds Larry Hall had 17
anybody's game wtth less~2 Ron Hammye led Bowling pomt sco;mg bmge put the points to pace Muaklngum.
than three mmutes to play;:: Green with 20 points, 12 of contest out of reach.
.., In other games, it was
That's when Archte Aldrtdge, • them comiDg m the flrst half
Dick Miller IU11shed with 21 : Xavier 72, Wheeling 88 in
went to work
:;,
In other MAC games points for Toledo, mcluding' overtime, Cleveland state 51,
The ~-semor forward fr-, _ W~JIIIUllalto. .ni81lt.., Ohio flve of the cructal mne points ... Wayne State, Mich. 49,
Mtddte!iWn, who scored r(Q ,,..um~ersit}' dowtie'd" Kent · IDihesecondhaHspurt, while Eastern !Uinois 64, Wright
his 23 polnts tn the sec. State 68-54, Toledo beat Jim Swaney and Ted state 60; Ohlo Wesleyan 119,
half, t"med' ID a key \hf"' Eastern Mtchtgan 78-72, Wllllams canned 18 and 14 Denison 65; Otterbein ~
(lOID\ . play, stretchmg .....~ WeS14lf.ll ,.. Mic;ltlgan stoppeit ~ respecttvely
~tta164; Ql!lotl~l'l~ 73,
Mtai'Oi~Qdfrom55-52to-.. '::'~1!\IS and C~ ,;"'- 4i Dayton, ,u,; ;:nyer • •1i'ildwin-Vlillae-e- 82,
and trlggertng a R~jll,lj],,,;J.r.c'tiiiarreifged Northern burled Akron 91-52 ' With 13 • Nlance 108, Bluffton 83;
raUy whtch QUICkly pgrthe nunols 69~7
players gethng into the Central State 81, CumSteve Skaggs scored 27 scoring act.
tierland, Ky. 70, Ohio
game out of reach.
"The turnmg pomt~ the pomts and Byckey Walden 17
Dayton, which led 44-17 at Dllillnlcan. -84, .Tiffin 60;
game was ARchie'!!,tlJree-, ,m, Ohio Uruverst\y's come halftime, was paced by' Mike ''"F'IilclllQ&gt;! ,., Anderson, Ind.
p01nt play," satd ,.,lam • j[OJ!l bi!hmd win over Kent Lee' with 14 ~ Jln) ~ ~~ 1blel
Coach Darrell Heih•c ''r- · Stlte: • " '"' Paxson with 13 ' and Jim':. Pi1111'11,' aha Dyke 111:
thought Aldrtdge had control
Kent Jed 26-25 at balftune, Rhodes1and Joe S1gglns with steubenville 18

,

r

Meig~ta ·host

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

Bobcats drop 77-71 league
Istandings I1
contest to Symmes Valley

:I

Pro

:I

1...

NIA Stllndings

Gallia quintet
By Greg BaUey
with · the Blue Devil! lhe
All the 1977-78 cage season VIctors by a surprisingly easy
winda down to a close, fans 84-39 score. The Galllans of
will get one last chance to see Coach Jim Osborne have by
an old-fashioned rlvalry when far the better record of the t
the Galllpolis Blue Devlls two teams, standing at 11-9
visit Morrison Gymnasturn overall and f&gt;-7 tnslde the
Friday night to battle the SEOAL, good enough for
Metgs Marauders
stxth place
When these two teams
But the Devils have been
meet, It's always a toss-up as playmg hke champions
to who wilL come out on top, lately, knockmg off Waverly,
and tomorrow night should the pre-season pick, 52-50 last
prove no exception
Saturday, and then Tuesday
The hrst meeting this takmg Jeagu~leading Logan
season of these two nvals nght down to the wtre before
took place m early January bowmg 34-32 m a defenstve
,

Nc S t ll t r
•
M aryl an d filve
o~ns

'0
U

,

United Preu Intemallonal
Maryland Coach Lefty
Drtesell sounded hke a
passionate advocate for a
college basketball ttme clock
Wednesday night
Wtth the score tied 58-all
and 13 30 remamlng ID a
tense
Atlanttc
Coast
at
Conference
game
Maryland, North Carolina
Coach Dean Smith ordered
his team IIllo a stalling, "four
corner" offense in an effort to
draw the Terps out of their 21-2 zone defense When
Maryland chased only haHheartedly, the seventhranked Tar Heels stalled
\hell' way to a 66-64 vtctory.
"I'd like to play 40 minutes
of full basketball, just one
time/' muttered Dr1esell,
reflecttng on hls fourth
stratght home loss to North
Carolina
"They were at home, and
the crowd (14,500, a sellout)
had them jutced up," said
Smith. "I thought we'd cool
them off If they had come out
and played man-t~an, we
would
have
played
basketball "
North CaroiiDa went ahead
for good, ~. wtth 10 07
remaining on a tapom by floor
leader Phtl Ford, who
!intshed with 22 pomts Two
Mike O'Koren baskets on
back-&lt;loor plays made the
lead six points before a futile
Maryland rally.
The game's ftrst 'll mmutes

WHY
PAY

were played at a breakneck
pace, much in contrast to the
final 13. North Carolma led
44-42 at halftime behind
Ford's 16 pomts, and held a
56-51 advantage at 15 .48 of
the second half before
Maryland came back to tte
O'Koren contrtbuted 14
pomts for the Tar Heels, 7-2 in
the ACC and 19-4 overall
Freshman AI King Jed
Maryland wtth 22 pomts
In other games lnvolving
top teams, sixth-ranked
Kansas whipped Mtssourl, 7252, Clemson upset Wake
Forest, 91-81, Nebraska
defeated Kansas State, &amp;:J.50
and Duke routed Virginta,
100-75
Senior forward
Ken
Koemgs scored a season.fugh
20 pomts to lead four Kansas
players ID double figures and
help keep the Jayhawks ID
sole possesston of Ill's! place
m the Btg Etght Conference
wtth a 9-1 record.
Colon Abraham and Jimmy
Howell combmed for 32 points
to lead Clemson to 1\s upset
over Wake Forest
Center Carl McP1pe,
anchormg a tough Nebraska
defense wtth a game.fugh II
rebounds, scored 21 pomts to
lead the Cornhuskers to a Big
E1ght Conference vtctory
over Kansas State The wm
boosted Nebraska's league
record to 11-2 and tis season
mark to 19-.1
Jun Spanarkel scored 30
points to lead fll'ed-up Duke
to an easy victory over
Vll'giDta m an Atlantic Coast
Conference game

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Racine, 0.

battle. Logan held scormg
ace Terry Wall to just two
poiDts Tuesday night, and
that seemed lo be the key to
the Chieftains' success But
IDthe WID over Waverly, Wall
tossed in 23 to keep his
average In the high teens
Gallipolis has been having
one ol the same problems
Meigs has had this season lack of reboundmg strength
But the Devils' center Brad
Abels and forwards Jeff
Brown and Jeff Lanham have
been tmprovmg steadily of
late In the last match up of
the two nvals, the Devtls won
the battle of the boards 48-31.
The starting ftve for
Galltpolil) wtU probably be
Brown, Lanham, Abels, Wall
and guard Jimmy Harris
GaU1polis will have to stop
the scormg threat of KeMy
Young who wtll be matched
up ;damst Wall Friday
sltouldhold mterest for local
fans just to see these two aces
matched Me1gs lost 78-58 to
Ironton last Saturday with
Young tossmg ID 23 markers
to keep hts average tn the
teens also
Metgs ts the shorter of the
two teams wtth a noltceable
lack of hetght. Although the
Gallians won the battle of the
boards the last ttme, Coach
Ron Logan can be counted on
to make some adjustments
Fnday to try to remedy that
The Marauders will have to
hold down Wall who dumped
m 24 pomts m that last
mee\IDg
Metgs has been having
problems also m the shootIng department frequently
hlttmg below 40 percent of
their shots from the field But
the Blue Devtls may have the
scales tilted m thetr favor As
has been the case w1th other
cage teams m the area thiS
last week, the flu bug has
mvaded the Metgs Counttans
On Tuesday, only three
Metgs players showed up for
practiCe as the others were
111. On Wednesday, hve
players made t\, but only two
starters were healthy, center
Brent Stanley and guard
Greg Becker
Young and forward Chuck
Follrod are home w1th the flu,
and so IS reserve forwaril
Ray Andrews. B11ly Elkms, a
guard who has been playing
well lately, also has been htt.
But by Frldey, It would be
no surprtse If the whole crew
makes t\ on the floor because
when these two rtvals get
together, players and fans
alike for 32 minutes seem to
forget about everything
except WIMtng Tip-off hme
for the varstty ts 6 whUe the
reserves of Bruce Wilson and
Rtck Van Matre get underway at 6:SO.

your family

WINTER
TIRES
NORTHSECONDAVENUE
, " MIDDL.E.I?QRT, QH 10 45760
,PHOttE :'992-7'1tl '

Cubs drop
52-24 tllt
Happy Hearts School of
Portsmouth ousted the
Gutding Hand School Cubs 5224 m an Area Seven contest
held last week tn the Lyne
Center at Rto Grande
College
The Cubs, lacklng to
provtde any offense or
rebound strength, failed to
handle the powei'ful Port·
sroouth team In any of the
four stanzas of play
Happy Hearts took an early
lead and led the entire game
H. Malone pumped ID 22
pomts for the Portsmouth
team, while 0
Snon
provtded 14 pomts for the
losers,
The Cubs next contest w1U
be Feb 9th when they play
host to the Open Door School
of ironton.
DENVER (UPI) - The
Denver Nuggets, down to a
llknan roster SIDce guard
Brlan Taylor bolted the team
In mid-January, were

By Unlttl Press lnternJtl onlll

Ellltrn Conference

Atlantic: Di vi sion
W L Pd
Phde
3S 15 100
New York
26 25 51 0

Boston

11 31

GB
9 1'1

367 l6 'h

Buffalo
t6 32 333
New Jersv
10 42 192
Ctntr111 Div is ion
W L
Pet
San Antoni
31 19 620
'27 24 529
WShngtn
Clevetnd
25 24 SID
New Orlns
26 26 500
Atlanta
24 28 462
Houston
19 31 380
Western Conference

18
26
GB

4 1ft
5 11!
6
8
12

MldwtJI Dlvlaion
Den ver
Chlcaoo
Mll w
Det ro•t

W
33
29
27
23

L
Pet GB
18 647
24 547 s
27 soo 7 1/ t
28 451 10

Ind i ana

19 32

373

Seattle
Go lden St

27 23
26 26
26 26

540 14
500 16
SOO 16

W1th four players In double
figures, Coach Ed Hardy's
Symmes Valley Vtklngs
defeated Coach Keith Ca rter's Kyger Crook Bobcats,
77-71 Wednesday mght m a
SVAC contest played on the
VIking planks
Apparently not sa ttsh ed
w1th the efforts of his first
f1ve players, Coach Hardy
benched the ftrst untt m1dway

---

polnts, 19 of those came in the
first haU Von Taylor, a quick
jumor forward, had 20 points
on etght baskets and four
cha rity tosses
Fred Helms, 6-4 senior,
dumped in t5 polnts Syrrunes
Valley trailed 16-14 at the end
of the first period but took a

Collete Bastetblll Res ults
By United Press l nt ern• t lonal
Ea st
Alfred 86 I tha ca 85
Allghn y Coli 94, Bth n y 87
Buc kntl 77 M ansfl d 50
Cse W Resrve 9 l T h +E'I 77
Ca t Pa 77 , lnd P• 70
E Strdsbg 65 Shppnsbg 55
Haml tton 68, Un ion 57
Har t w ick 91 U tica 75
Hn tr Co li 74 Qu~n!li 70
King S Pf 97, Pft ce U 78
Lafayett e 60 Rider 43
U I SAIIe 6A A mer tcan 62
L ehig h 7'2 W Chsfr St 54
El tztwn 78 Junta! a 70
Plttsbgh 60 St Lwrn ce 53
Potsdam 78, Oswego 71
Scranton 67 Wil kes 58
Te mple 74, Penn St 64
Wav nsbo 73 St VInce 69
Wstmn s'l r 61 Gro ve Ct y 58
South
Albn y St 80, E Wt rs 76
Btuefld '23 W Va Tch 20
U NC Ch er 72 St Fr en 63
Ci tadel 85 Furma n 82
Clem son 9 1 Wa ke For est 81
Colmbs 84, Valdst a St 82
Duke 100, V lrg1n1e 75
El ls Ctv St 88. St Pau ls 12
Frmnt S l 63 w va Wslyn 5J
Ferrum 64 Surr y 62
Hvrtrd 68 , wash Coli 65
J Madl sen 7t4 Old Oom 65
J Hopkins 81 , Swrth mre 62
Ky Wslyn 74 Bllarm ne 73
L aG rang e 56, Ogl ethrp ~ 49
Lyn chbg 86 Brldgewtr 64
M B rown 71 Bttme C km an 6'1

14

Kanss Cty
18 34 14" ,,. ,,..
Pu1f1C OiVISIOf'
W L
Pet GB
Por tland
40 8 833
Phoen ix
34 16 680 7

L05 Angels

Wednesday' s Resultl

N J 140 lnd 138 ot
Ph l la 117 New Or l eans 104
LOS Ang 105, Detroit 95

l&lt; en City lOA , Boston 100
M r1 waukee 104, Buffalo 103
Houston 105 Ch icago 101
Denver 114 Atlanta 109
Wash1noton 106, Sef!llfle 100
Thur5diY' 5 G•mes
tndlena at New York
Port land at Cleveland
Houston at San Anton 1o
Atlanta at Phoen1x
Denver at Golden State
Frldly' s Games
New Orleans at Boston
Ph1ladelphlfl at Buffalo
Detro,t at New Jersey
Porf lflnd at lnd1ana
Cleveland at Mllw•ukee
San Antonio at Houston
Ch icago at Kensas C+t Y
Golden St at Los Ano
Denver at Seattle
NHL Stllndtngs
BV United Press International
campbell Conference
Patrick Olvi5IOA
W L T Pts
NV Islanders
32 12 B 7'2
Phll.!ldelphla
30 12 10 70
Atlllnta
21 20 12 54
NY Rangers
18 25 10 46
Smythe Division
WLTP1S
Ch1c ago
22 11 17 56
vancouver
14 24 13
41
Colorado
1\ 28 12
34
St LOUIS •
1\ 34 7 29
M +nnesota
11 35 5 27
Wales Conference
Norris Division

No Car 66 Maryl an d 64
Norfol k St 67 , Shaw 63
N A la 66 Tenn St 54
No Ky 72 K y 5 1 69
ShOrter 65 Gl' Coli 56
s Ala 99 Ga Sthrn 79
V M I 66 Ri chm ond 51
Wi!lsh&amp;Lee 88 E mry &amp; Hnry 5'2
West Ga 71 Augu st a 67
Xav1er 0 71 Whe elng 68
Mldwe51
Adr ian 76, Hope 77
Alb1on 71. Calvlp 65
BlufHon 106 Defian ce 83
Cen t 5 1 83 Cmbrlnd K y 70
Cle'ol e Sf 58 , wa yne St 49
[ MIC.h 69 Nrthrn lll 6 7
c oe 95 Grinnell 87
Cornell 73 S1mpson 65
Dayton 91 Akron 52
Eastern Ill 64 Wright 60
Grn Bay 65 M a nkto 51 55
11!11sdale 78, A lma 62
Ill Sf 97 W I ll 79
Ia Wslyn 75, Mt M er cy 74
Li ncoln 103, F isk 72
M ia mi 68 Bwl lng Gr n 54
NW Mo BJ Avila 65
No Pt~rk 91 Crthge 70
NW Col i 70, Mt Mary 67
Oh•o U 68 Kent 51 54
0 Nrthrn 13 Bldwn Wll ce 67
0 Wslyn 89 Oen•son 65
Olivet 80, K alama 1oo 63
Ott erbein 82 Capital 64
Qu incy 70 Clvr Stckl n 5'i'
5 Ill 60 Sf LOU fS 58
Toledo 78 E M 1ch1Qan n
W MICh 7 4 Ball Sl 63
Xav ler 12 Wheeling 68
Southwest

W L T Ph
35 7 8 78
22 19 10 54

Montreal
Los Angeles
P1ttsburgh
18 23 11
Detroit
19 23 8
wash .ngton
9 33 11
Adams Dlv1ston

47

46
29

W L T ~ts
Boston
33 12 7 13
Buffalo
30 10 13 73
Toronto
27 15 10 64
Cleveland
18 32 5 41
Wednesday's Results
NY Rangers 3, M1nnesota 0
Toronto 5 Sf LOUIS 4
Buffalo 5 Clevelend 2
Ch1cago 5 NY IS fMders 4
Thunday's Games
NV Rangers at Buffalo
vancouver at Ph1ladelph1a
Ch1cago at Montreal
Boston at Detroit
At lanta at Los Angeles
Friday's Games
Atl&amp;nta at Colorado
Wash•noton at c tevE!tand

WHA Stlndings
By United Press lnternat1onal
W L T Pts
Wmnipeo
31 18 2 6.4
New Enoland
30 18 4 64
Edmonton
26 24 2 5.4
Houston
75 71 3 53
Quebec
75 22 2 52
B•rmlngham
72 28 2 46
C1ncmnat1
71 28 3 45
Indianapolis
16 31 4 36
Wednesd•v's Results
W1nn1peg 9 B+rm,ngt'lam 0
C•ncinnat1 6, Edmonton 6
Thursday's Game
Quebec et Houston
Friday's Game
C1ncinnat1 at Wlnn 1peo

HONAKER IUTS FROM OUTSIDE - Wahama's
Kelvin Honaker hits this one from way outside against
Duval to add to his six-point performance. Never-theless Wahama went down to Its seventh defeat, ~ ,

Duval stops
WHS, 60-50
BY GARY CLARK

With only one player scoring
in double flgures, Coach
Homer Preece's Wahama
White Falcon
cage team
dropped their seventh game of
the season Tuesday evenmg
International Hockey League
when visltlng Duval handed
United Press International
the
locals a 60-50 setback
North
w t t pts g1 ,111
The defeat was the fifth loss
Saginaw 28 16 7 63 242 175 ln the last. siX games for the
Port Huron
22 17 9 53 181 181 Bend Area squad and left
Flint
24 19 5 53 221 219 them with a 4-7 season record
Kalamazoo
15 23 11 42 186 192 The White Falcons visit Point
Pleasant in their nel&lt;t outing
Muskegon
Friday evening in search of
16 24 9 4\ 171 189
South
_ _
wttptsgfga thetr fifth wln
Duval, a team the local five
Fort Wayne
21 14 12 65 \74 172 defeated ~9 earlier in the
Toledo 18 19 11 47 184 181 season, broke away in the
Mllwoukee
\6 21 12 434 155 115 final quarter to claim the wm
and galn revenge for the loss
l&gt;rand Rapids
t7 24 8 42 167 199 earlier m December
Wednesday's Results
Wabama went right to work
Grand Rapids 4 Kalamazoo 1
in
the initial period and
Flint S Toledo 2
Thursday's Game
quickly took a 17-10 lead after
Muskegon at Milwaukee
eight minutes. Duval came
Friday's Games
storming
back during the
Grand Rap1ds at Muskegon
Kalamazoo at Port Huron
second stanza and outscored
Toledo at Flint
the locals 20-10 to knot the
Fort Wayne at Saginaw
score at 30-30 at the half
In the lhird quarter the
Yellow
Jackets outscored the
granted hardship reltef from
Bend
Area
team 14·11 to tske a
the NBA Wednesday and
44-41
lead
gomg
Into the final
allowed to restore rookie
of
play
period
Robert Snllth to the roster
With Duval holding a slim
Smith was placed on
waivers last month, when the three-point lead and only eight
Nuggets completed a trade minutes to play, it looked Jlke
with New Jersey that brought the White Falcons would win
forward Darnell Hillman to 1 going away as they have outDenver, but has not been scored their opponents 233 to
picked up by aoother team 195 in the fourth quarter this
season and haven't scored
under 17 points in thai final
Duval placed two players
in twin flgures with Browning
taking game high honors with
19 while Hager added 10.
Since Duval does not have a
reserve team there was no
prellmlnary contest .
However, some members of
the Wahama faculty provided
the opposlUon for the White
Falcon Junior Varsity before
the va!'lllly lUI

R Barnttz
lllessmg
Honaker
Hobbs
Rawlings
Zuspan
R Barnitz
Weaver
Rllush
Hagger
McClure
Mttchell
Belcher
McConnlck
Cooper
South
Totals

4 1-4 3
3 2-3 2
3 0-0 2
I 3-4 5
2 0-0 2
I 0-0 1
I 0-0 2
0 0-0 2
0 0-1 0

N E Okle 13 SE Okla 67
Ok la 77 Okln Sf 70

SW Okla 67 E C Okla 50
Tuisll 81 SW L a 71
West
Chamlnde 7l Pugel Snd 70
Chpmn 85 S Cal Coli
Clrmnt Mdd 81 Pom Ptzr 73
Colo 70r Iowa St 64
Hwllil Hfto BJ A l s kr~ An ch 11
Whittier 16 Occ 1den tal 58

n

9

KANSAS CITY, Mo (UPI )
8 - Coach Marv Levy has
6 htred Bobby Ro ~. head
5 coach at The Citadel, to
4 handle the Kansas Ctty Ch1efs
2 ktcking game, tt was
2 announced IVednesday
0 'l:he hiriDg of ~oss, 41,
0 completes the seven-man
roster of assistant coaches
by lhe Chlefs' new head
hired
10
4 2~ 4
mentor.
9
2 f&gt;-10 2
4 0-1 2 8
30-0 2 6
3 0~ 4 6
I 0-1 4 2
0 0-0 0 0
24 12-25 20 60

17 13 11 9-50
Wahama
10 20 14 16 .$
Duval
Total Fouls Wahama 23,
Duval 20
Ol!lcials Ray Redman,
Hmdu Henderson

We're Just
What You're
Looking For
•Mobtle Home

Underpmntng
• Roof Coaling
• Tte-Downs

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INSURANCE
REPAIRS

KINGSBURY
HOME SAlES
1100 E. Matn
Pom eroy , Ohto

WAHAMA (50)
992-7034
Player
FG F PF TP
Buzzard
6
4 14 ..__ _ _ _ _ _ _•
2~

J

m the ft rst pertod After that
the V1kmgs responded Brent
Mtll er , a hot-shooti ng
sophomore guard, led the
way wtth 25 pomts on nine
fteld goa ls and seven free
throws
Ted Payne and big Ralph
Ingles canned 16 points each
while Ed Da vis tossed m II
Jumor center Jon Thompson paced the Bobcats with 24

38-34 lead at the half
The Vikings pulled away
wi th a 21 po1nt t hird
per1od During tha t canto,
Ing les had seven pomts,
Davis, Miller a nd Sexton four
each

Kyge r Cree k outscored
SVHS 21-16 m the !mal stanza
behmd the shooting of Taylor,
Helms and Thompson Taylor
had seven pomts, Helms and
Thon&gt;pso n, five each
Sta tistic-wise, Symmes
Valley connected on 32 of 67
floor attempts a nd 13 of 25 at
the- foul hne
Kyger Creek hit 'll of 64
from the held for 4Z percent
and l7 of 32 ot the charity

•

Circle

11te Vlkmgs outrebounded
the visitors, 40-38 Helms had
t ~ rcbuunds for the Bobcats
1 he w1 n pu shed SV 's
overall record to 4-9 while KC
dropped to 1·12
TI1e Little Vikings took the
reserve game, 46-34.
Kyger Cree k will host
En;t ern Frtday and Coal
Gru\ c Saturday
Kyger Creek (71) - Taylor,
8 0 0 Smlth , 226 Willis I
0 2 Helms 6 3- IS, Thomp
son 9 6 24 , Westfall 0 2·2 ftnd
Spri nger 1 0 2 Totals 21 17

71

S)lmmes Valley (77) -.
Ing les 7 2 16 Davi s, 5 1 11 ,
Mn ler , 9 7 25 Wi seman o 0

0, Pa yne 7 2 16 R igney I 0
'], Sexton 2 0 4 F lack , 1 a 'J
Sowards, 0 I 1 and Galloway
0 0 0 Totals 32 ll-77
B.y Quarters

K Creek

15 19 16 n - 71

S Valley

14 24 21

16 ~11

Waverly 72
Wellston 64
WAVERLY
(721
Th om p s on
3 0 6
R a ndy
Thomas 3 1 1 , R ick Thomas.
1 2 4 , Davena 13 2 28
Ar
notl, J 4 10, Fielder 3 3 9 R
Fr eder ick 1 3 5 Gordoh 1 0

2 Holsi nger 0 0 o TOTALS
28 16 72 .
WELLSTON (64) ~ Mont
gomcry. 52 12 Royster, 12 0
24 Williams, 1 2 4 Gilliland
5 111
ma n

Mart i n , 2 2 6
Swonger

20 4

TOTALS 28 8 64

Nor
11 3

Score by quarters

Waverly
Wel lston

13 16 23
17 19 10

Reserves W averl y 4 4

20~12
18 ~64

W ellston

48

MOTORIST
TORTURED
ON HIGHWAY
Driving a sluggish car that
coughs misses or drags on the
highway can be sheer torture
E rrati c eng in e performance Is
oft en cau sed by c rankcase
c ontamlnents a nd s ticking
m echani cal parts
In su ch
cases you can help restore lost
p P. r f orman ce thank s to a
spe cia l f ormulation c alled

WYNN 'S ENGINE TUNE UP
This fam ous oil treatm ent
work s In 10 mmutes as you
drive to help quiet valve s and
l i fter s, whil e It dissOlves away
harmful deposits So to help
end highway torture GET

WYNN'S ENGINE TUNE UP
todoy HECK'S

and

building materials

BUILDING OR REMODEUNG?
SEE US FIRST AND COMPARE OUR
PRICES. QUALITY MATERIAL AT
R~ASONABLE PRICESCASH&amp;CARRY
PRICES

WE
DELIVER

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
CORPORATION
923 S. 3rd Ave.
Middleport, 0.
992 2709 ~ ' qq' 6611
Open 7 .1l0 to &gt;. 00 Mvn thr u F rt

7:00to3:00 Saturday

•

�'

.

.'

~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport•Pomtroy,O.,1'tlllj.jl1,t'eb. 9,1978-

Nets snap ·l~~game losing streak
But ..

By MARK FRIEDMAN
UPI Sports Writer
Danny
Roundfield
searched out "Super John"
Williamson, said to him, "I
thoughlllold you to give us a
break tonight and take it
easy," winked, then headed
· back to the Indiana Pacers'
locker room .
II was Roundfield's way of
letting Willlamson - who
was traded by the Pacers ·to
the New Jersey_ Nets last
week - know that his 38
pointS, six rebounds, four
steals, and three assists that
snapped th·e Nets' l&amp;ilame
losing streak Wednesday
evening with a 140-138
overtime victory over
Indiana, were indeed super.
"I'm beat," smiled
Williamson, who got in New
York City just in time to get
two hours sleep.

._..nO
It
\hit-Ia ii

tffiCII, Jabbar chipped in with 22 to

scorlna tz of
poilU
In the louriii~New
Jenty IIMI
··J: . of
steabo. Ill IIIII
lt\ltn
of tilt Ntll'
· ...ume
polnll whUt · IIINietiQ tn

overall 174W4t ·• tl'lllli ~ the
field and INrlf....., lrorn
the free lllro'll· .W 'iD:hand
lndiMa ill ~··
. .. . lir•laht
,
~ lo' ,
'!-!
·
IOSI,
Et.whlrt 1ft .. ~BA; Loa
Angeln clo~ D.~• 10&amp;95, PhlltdelpltJa dli
New
Orlean•, IIMM;· MBh'*ee
edged BuffalO, ... , 1114-103,
Kanau Clly Pt li~ llellon,
104-100, H.-a~ . taq.ped
Chicaao. t•ttt,; 'Denver
toppled AliaJllli b4-1., and
Washlnl!lan I!Nl lltilltle, 10&amp;100.
' .i" ... ·~ .
Laker• 1111 . . . . _. • •
Lou HudiCIJI':""'lli:tod 2$
polnll IIIII ~\ _,.bdulf

'.
~ '•

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·.'
,-. ,

You're intc). ·· : ·, ·
Traditionals : .: .·
by
.

q

5-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Feb. 9, 1978

"'f)Q

lead !JJs Angeles to its ninth
win in 11 games. Detroit's
Bob Lanier topped all scorers
with 31.
'llera 117, Jazz 104:
Julius Erving scored 23
points to lead five 76ers in
double
figures
as
Philadelphia· won its 15th
game In the last 19. Gall
Goodrich led New Orleans
with 24 points .
Bucks 104, Braves 103 :
Brian Winters poured in a
season·lligh 37 points to hand
Buffalo its lOth straight
defeat . Marques J ohnson
added 21 points a nd 18
reboWlds.
KlDgs 104, Celtlcs 100:
Rm Boone's 22 points led
Kansas City over the Celtlcs
to snap Boston's four-game
winning streak. Dave Bing
had 28 and Dave Cowens 24
for Boston.
Rockets 105, Bulls 10.1:
Calvin Murphy scored 36
points. to offset a 34-point
output from Chicago's Artis
Gilmore .
With
2:32
remaining, Houston's Dwight
Jones drew three. straight
fouls and hit three of six free

••' ~ .

'

Wednesday's Results
Gir-ls Hiqh School

Basketball Results
United Press International
Campbell 71 Boardman 30
Chagrin Fa lls 52 Aurora 32
Cle Li ncol n W 56 Cle Glenville {

47

Col Watter son 53 Col Hartley

Lebanon Raceway.

40

The winner, driven by Tom
Tharps, covered the mile in
2:10 and returned $11.40, $3.80
and S4. ,,, Pappy 's Pride
finished second and paid $2.60
and $2.80 while Mini Baby
showed and returned $6.40.
The 8-5 nightly double
combination of Irish Brandy
and Determination was worth
$t24 .
A crowd of 1,338 wagered
$t24 ,12l.

Cuyahoga Falls 48 Ravenna

14

Eastwood 7-4 Woodmore 41
Grandview 45 Dublin 29

Hilllop 39 Monlpeller 34

Ket
Fairmont
W
45
Sp r ingfield S 41
Lowellville 53 McDona ld 19
Miller s port 52 Amanda ·
Clearcreek 39
Minster 58 Bradford 29
Ontario 47 Mansfi eld St Pete

42

.

PerrysbU rg

-44

Holland

Springf iel d 43 12-ofl

Tol Libbey 60 Tol McCauley

18

'•

Waver ly 76 Athens 26

Wednesday's
Boys High School

Basketball Results
United Press International
Belpre 84 Federal Hocking 53
Cle St. Ignatius 49 C(e John

STILL IN ·

Adams 47

Col Hartley 70 Col Wehrle 61

Col Ready 56 Col St. Charles
48

PROGRESS
ON FINE
WEARING
APPARELL FOR

Colerain 76 Anderson 47
Delaware 53 Mf Vernon 47
Macon Eastern 88 West Un ion

,,

69

Marysville 56 Dublin 50
Trimble 65 Miller 59
Waverly 72 Wellston 64
Westervi lle S 64 Worthington

59

I

MEN &amp; WOMEN

Wednesday's
Ohio College
Basketball Results
United Press International
Miami 68 Bowling Green 54
ToledO 78 . East. Michigan 72

Ohio u 68 .Kent Sf 54

Dayton 91 Akron 52
Xavier 72 Wheeling 68 (ot)
Cleveland St. 58 Wayne St .,
Mich . 49
.Eastern Illinois 64 Wright St .

1

Wheelersbuir.g
•
th
·rated.S lx

~-

.

throws to putthe game away . 100:
Nuggets 114, Hawks 109 :
Washington's Elvin Hayes
Dan Issei hit a team-high 28 connected on three jump
;points and David Thompson shots in the final 2\(niinu~s
.added 21 , to i'Jiower Deriver a:fthe Bullets ended''l nineover the Hawks. John Drew ·' •game road losing streak.
led all scorers with 30 for Hayes topped all scorers with
Atlanta. "
25 while Gus Williams paced
Bullets t06, SuperSnn lcs Seattle with 21.
"' '

LEBANON RESULTS
LEBANON , Ohio (UP! ) Princess ·Crimson charged
• past Pappy's Pride at the
wire Wednesday night to win
the featu oed eighth race at

.r~~'*!-~w:.;:: ~~:~~~to:.'$!;:;::-.::::::::::;:::::

Boys UPI .ratings

Ky . 70

Olio Dominican 64 Tiff.i n 60:

'

Findlay 79 Anderson, ln~L 66

HOUSTON (UPI ) ..:. A
Honston Rockets olficial
Wednesday said the club has
decided to file a damage suit
against t he Los Angeles
!.akers to seek compensation
for
the loss of injured
~
Rock~ts' forward
Rudy

Case Western 92 ·Thiel , Pa. 77 .
Dyke 111. Steubenville 86
._

YPSILANTI, MiCh. (UP!)
· - Mike Stock, former
assistant coach at ·Notre
"'' Dame and Wisconsin, 1 was
named head football coach
Wednesday at Mid-America ·
Conference power Eastern
Michigan.
Stock, 38, replaces Ed Chle·
bek, wbo resigned in January
to · become head cmich at
Boston College.

Tomjanovich,

who

was

BOWLING
POMEROY LANES
Morning Glories

January 31, 1978

Pis
Jones Boys

87

Newel l Sunoco

77

punched by !Qrmer !.akers' · G&amp;J Aulo Parts
forward Kermit Washington Gibbs Grocery
in a December game.
Sears
"Our
·

attorneys
h
d

are
h

d etermming w ere an w en

the suit will be filed," said
Ray Patterson, president and
general manager of the
Rockets.
Tomjanovich's nose, -jaw
and cheekbone were broken
in the scuffle and he will miss
the remainder of the season.

68
64
60

Karr
&amp;
VanZandt
28
High Ind . Game - Lena

Howard 188; Drema Smith
112.
High Ind. Series - Drema
Smith 510; Lena Howard 487.
Hlsh Team Game - G&amp;J
Auto Parts '~811.
High Team Series - G&amp;J
Auto Parts 2333.
T~esday

Triplicate
January 31 , 1978

Pis
34

20

Roy a I Oak Park

19

Brlckles-Gen . Cont.
Mark V

machine'...
.

Palm

By
McGregor,
Beach &amp; Sewell.

SLACKS
Levi'$

&amp;

% PRICE

MEN'S SHORT

JARMAN
SHOES

LEATHER
JACKETS .,
By lakeland &amp; Cresco.

BOYS WEAR

'200
VALUES TO 112.98 '

.

NEW

126 E. MAIN STREET
·'

'

INSULATED

........

'29

%·PRICE...

•. 11

CLOTHING HOUSE
'

....... ""'
I' "'

l

•

' ,.

~'

RAP:
~can 't understand parents 'Who don't talk freely with their
children. I have always corrununicated with my folks about
eVerything. I'm aimost 17 and have been on the pill for nearly a
year. If il weren't for this parental understanding I'd probably
be pregnant and-&lt;Jr married by now. Why can't adults realize
we're old enough when we're mature enough? Mine did .•
'THANKFUL

Oak Park 1379,

NEW ORLEAN:&gt; (UP!) The New Orleans Saints
Wednesday signed Ed Beard,
a former player and
linebacker coach under Dick
Nolan at San Francisco as
linebacker coach. .
' ·
The Saints also announced
quarterback coach Dick
Woods signed with the
Atlanta Falcons, the fourth
member of Hank Stram's old
staff to leave.

. James and Verdie Bailey or
Chester enterlamed Sunday
with a celebration in obser·
vance of the birthdays of
their daughter, Jeanette, and
their neighbor, Mrs. Otis K.
Casto.
The afiernoon was spent
visiting, taking pictures and
singing with Jeanette at the
piano: A decorated cake was
served with homemade ice .
cream
and
other
refreshments to Mr. and Mrs.
. Mark Still, Sr., and son,
Ma(k, Jr., Middleport; Andy
English, Minersville ; Miss

··10000

Open Friday fil8

~

CLASS TO START
A class in crewel at the
Senior Citiz~ns Center will
begin at ll a.m. on Feb. 21
under the direction of Mrs.
Irene Christy. Mrs. Christy
advises that those wbo enroll
should know the basic em·
broidery stitches. At the first
class slle will discuss
materials needed for crewel.

TRADE-IN

'f:f/APO

.~~ ~~TURD A

Mon., Tu&amp;, Wet!:.~ Sat.- · ·

·8:30 til 5:00 ThuiSdaJ Til 12 Noon

'FRIDA~r~~!.PM

.,.

rs

...

~--~~~~. . . . . .s.at~u~rd•a•y~ti•I'~----'L---~,9~tll Noon

I

"""
•'

773-5592

'

Mason.

.-

DojA
has night
meeting.

COQ~IRG
.
.

w. va.

Party enjoyed .

SATIN HEART 1 LB. $10.95

Lg.

ASSORTED ·
CHOCOLAHS
I LB. $3.]5

BOYS'2·1PANtS
r
Tops &amp; Pants
&amp; Covera lis
ALL
SLEEPWEAR

GIRLS TOPS
&amp; SWEATERS

I-.£!!!:!

Gl
DRESS SLACKS
1·14

Se Ieelion of
1

DRESSES
2·14

Cardigan Sweaters

40% OFF ON
s.r.

BUY NOW!

r--vwruiNHTDERII$ATS-1
JACKETS .

INfANTS

Boys
SPORTSWEAR
Matched Sets

.'

RED FOIL HEI\RT
I LB. $4.25

2·7

r-1G~ir~ls~~~~

I

MASON FURfj,IJURE

...

r-------------

COVERAllS

Brenda Lanham, Jeanette
Lanham, Mr. and Mrs. Otis
K.· Casto, and the host and
hostess.

On All LMng RiJom Suites
•

I

1-.j h
ntURSDAY
M\ss Ficka !!Wied that 11 M •U)odJst. Middleport Heath
A Lenten breukfast and
the pants ~"'I- wrong side out
POMEROY CHAPTER
fasttng is enfO).Il'aged in lluth ,MclhodJst, Middleport First
and resew ~ side seam. - Women's Aglow Fellowship, 7 q~iet hour hosted by women the C..tholic and l&gt;rotcstant J&gt;n•shy teria n,
Syracuse
of
Trinity
Church,
Pomeroy
,
MARGA,RET.
p.m. Thursday at Meigs Inn
churches
so
Uwt
Christian!&gt;
Presbyterian,
H!lrl
the
Racine
mornirig was at·
DE~ J'91.1-Y - During · with Gisela Stevens, world· Wednesday
share
symbolically
in
Baptist
.
The
Hev.
Floyd
may
as
speaker. tended by approximately 75
the s~ the winds usual· traveler ,
Chris~'s ~4ff~fin g . Sht• ~·!so ,toq~ of the Laun•l Cliff t ' rc'O
representatives
of
•rea
clntr·
ly blow my ~heer curtains up Reservations for dinner
called It an a ppropriate tune
clhvdi ~ t Church, Pau l
against the window screens meeting by calling 992-5845, cbes.
for baptisms, confirmations.
ease, und the H ~v . Mr . Per·
Mrs.
W.
H.
Perrin
extended
so to overcome this I now put 949-2325 or 949·2723, Meigs the welcome to the wom~n and church tm.•mbcrships.
ri11also al tciH,it'd
round curtain rods in the County; 4~46, Gallipolis;
A prayer in um:~on , a ::;ihmt
As.s:isttng with the quit•t
seated
aruund
tables
cover(.'&lt;i
bems. I have no more blowing 773-Q768 , Mason County.
in white, centered with light prayer for tllost• ill arH I IKHII' :tnd 1Jreakfus1·wcre Miss
wrll!i!ll l!!ll! the curtains
ROCK SPRINGS Gnmge, .
&lt;icc"eas(.~! lllctnbcl-,., ~ lid tht•
1'1'111~ Smith, M.s"~ Philip
hang nice and straighl- - 7:30 Thursday at the hall. green· streamen;· and deeura.- bcnedict iun Uy U1c Hev . W. H. MPi nhar1 , Ml':s. Edith La ning,
lions of while crosses with
If you do not have a curtain Subjecllu canl"llalion in the
lilies and greenery. Mrs. Perrin dosed the prognun. Mr!;. Perrin. Mi ~ Fkk. Mrs.
guard to use when threading . event of inclement wealber.
Phillip Meinhart had grace Mrs. Paul Nt~ctsc had l: har-,.~t· Huy Mu ycr , Mrs. Host• Gin~
sheers or other curtains on a
ELEANOR CIRCLE of before the breakfast of of 1h~ musil'. Tlw hymn was tht'l', Mrs. Pu ul NcHSC, Mrs.
rod ~· thimble works very
Heath United Methodist • or,mge juice, cofree cak~ ami "Suviour Thy Dying Love.'' Huy lloltl'r, Mrs. Pl'a rl Mora,
nicely.
Church will meet at 7:30 •'Offee was served. There was Included on the program was Mrs. l'arri~ Kcmwdy, Mrs.
Small children usually get Thursdoy night at Lhe home
quiet music by Miss Lori Ann a memorial for Mrs . CmTil' Slui!H K h~s. Mrs. Edith
their shoes, galoshes, etc. on
of Mrs. Mary Wise.
Wood and a solo by Mrs. Roy Ntmtzling, long-tunc Qtdivc Dt•s:;o.wt•r. Hntl Mrs. M»l'Y
the wrong feet so I put a piece
Sh•wttrl.
PRECEPTOR ' BETA Holter entitled "1 Asked the member of Trinity Chureh.
of adhesive tape on the heel of BETA
Churches represented t:l t
Chapter, Beta Sigma !JJrd."
each of their left shoes and Phi Sorority, 7:30p.m. at the
For the meditation, Miss lhc brm1kfasl were llw Nmit lli
mark with on L. No more
Your " E:.O:tr(1 Touch"
Baptist Chm'l'h, ihe Enter·
Meigs
Inn
.
•
EliZ~Jbeth Fick reflected on
~xupsalmyhouse.
F lorlst Si nce 1957
GIRL SCOUT Service Unit the Ash Wednesday obser- pri se United Mcthudtst ,
Lillie children seem to be·
Laurel Cliff Methodist, St. ,.
, nieeling , 7:30 Thursday, Colalways skinning their knees umbus ond Southern Ohio vances which have been tak· Pau l Luth cra 11 . United
lng
place
at
the
church
fur
and ending up with holes in
many')'ears. She spoke of the Methodist of Po meroy.
their pants. I remove the Electric Co.
FRIDAY
significance
of Lent noting Pume r oy Firsl Hapti sl,
back pocket and use it for a
HAPPY ,HARVESTERS that it is a period of pi·epaJ'a· Grace Epiocopal. !;hester
patch or one could remove Class, Trinity Church, 7:30
FLORIST
lion for the celebration of Unite&lt;i Methodist, Syrat•usc
the front inside pocket as it is
Methodis
t,
Senior
Citizm1s
p.m. at the church .
Easter. She said that Lent
usually make of the same
PH. 992-2644
RETURN Jonathan Meigs means springtime and Center, Hock St&gt;rin~s Unitc&lt;i
material. ·ARIJNE.
Chapter, D.A.R., meeting lengthening days or a sca!:lun Methodist, Fot·est llnn United
DEAR POLLY -If one has
clothes with snaps, zippers, I :30 p.m .. Friday at Grace given to increased religious Methodist. Asbyrl' Methodist,
Sacred HcHrt ·ca th uiit•,
etc. thatcausernstonclothes Eposcopal Parish House, c-omtempiation.
Mincr s vill ~
Uurll•d
Pomeroy with Smithsonian
I find naval jelly alwoys
film, "Portraits of the
removes these stains from
Presidents" and a silent
any Iabrie. -MARY D,
auction to be featured .
Polly will send you one of
her signed thank-you Hostesses, Mrs. Dwight
newspaper coupon clippers if Milhoan, Mrs. Thomas
she uses your favorite Ewing, Mrs. John Rose and
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in Mrs. Gerald Powell.
MARY SHRINE 37 Order of
her colullUl. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this the White Shrine of
.Several members were
Jerusalem Friday 8 p.m. at
newspaper.
reported
ill at the Tuesday
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
nil# meeting of lhe Chester
SATURDAY
Council 323, Danghters of
Crulcb clothes
DANCE Saturday at
America, held at the hail .
Stuck on crutches for a Southern
High School Mrs. Erma Cleland was comJwhile? Choose clothes following basketball game. cilor pro tem .
without
a
waistline "Disco Show'' by
Brad
Mrs . Eileen Marlin mul
For Every
MICRIW/AVE
since there'll be. quite Krings and Mike Mayle of Rio
Mrs . Pauline Brewer we1·e
a bit of pull under the Grande. Admission $1.25 at
both reported confined to
Family and
arms and iwisiing at the door. Sponsored by senior Veterans Memorial Hospital.
'
wai!!l when you walk.
class.
M1·s. Golda Wolfe and Mrs.
APPLIANCES
·Budget
Golda Frederick were
SUNDAY
SPECIAL MEETING of the reported ill. Mrs. Dorothy
Ritchie, district deputy,
American Legion Auxllwry
of Drew Webster Post 39, noted two deaths in the .
Pomeroy, 2 p.m. · Sunday district, Faye Parlin of
Marietta, a member of Gallia
. afternoon at the post home.
Councilll4, and Millie Mober:
MONDAY
BABY SITTING Workshop ly, New Matamoras, men&gt;ber
of Matamoras Council 52.
diving and shell collecting. session 6:30 p. m. Monday at
Refreshments were served
Participants will be able to St. Paul Lutheran Church,
by
Mrs. Erma Cleland and
register for two of .three Pomeroy: 4Ist chance to Mrs. Ethel Orr to Mrs. lnzy
classes io be offered either enroll in the program.
Newell, Mrs. Mary Hayes,
for credit or as non-credit
Mrs. Margaret Tuttle, Mrs.
continu~g education courses.
Marcia Keller, Mrs. Mary K.
Registrotion deadline, with a
Holter, Mrs. Julio Rose, Mrs.
$100 deposit, is Monday, Feb.
Thebna White, Mrs. Dorothy
20.
'
Den 2 of Pack 245 Cub Lawson, Mrs. Dorothy Rit·
Cost for those taking one or Scouts, Middleport, held a chie, Mrs. Elizabeth Hayes,
two classes for credit will be valentine pariy Wednesday Mrs. Opol Eichinger, Mrs.
$315 or $335. Non·credlt at the home of Mrs. Patty Cleland, Mrs. Dnrls Grueser,
registration is $305 or $315. stein.
Mrs. Zelda Weber, and Mrs.
The co!!! Includes aU trans·
Hotdogs roasted over a Ada Van Meter.
porlation, insurance, tent !!'replace were served with
lodging, Iood, instruction, potato chips, heart·shaped
plus trnck and boat service cookies, and koolaide. Atten·
·while on the island.
ding were James Buskirk,
Students participating will Davie Dodson, Darrin Drencamp on an isolated beach ner, Scott liaoning, Trey
and will be transported Into Glaze, Donald Stein, and Jeff
different study areas on the,· Nelson, cubs, and Mrs. Stein
Island and over the reef.
and Mrs. Sandy Hanning, den
More information on the mothers. Also attending were ·
trip is available from the Kim Ronning and Mary Beth
Department of Biological Stein. A cub, Jay Marlin, WliS
Science at RGCCC, 245-5353. unable to attend .

BIG SAVINGS
BIG SELECTION
V2 OFF ON

Entertain with party ,

••••

• • , . ¥A

RIO .GRANDE - II you're
tir.ed ' ~f snow drifts and
bel'o~'Zero wind chill factors,
then·ypu might want to enroll
In .Rio Grande College and
Community College's (RGC·
CC) annual Bahama Island
study trip, March ~-13.
Anyone can participate in
the program which will offer
opportunities to study plant
and animal life, traditions
and cultures of island
natives,
and
outdoor
education in the form of skin
diving, scuba diving and
sailing.
The group will leave Rio
Grande at 2 p.m., March 2.
Plans call for students to
drive. to Ft. Lauderdale by
bus and then fly lo Andres
Island, the largest island In
the Bahamas chain. Situated
on one of the most beautiful
coral reefs in the world, the
island is ideal for scuba

Thin mints are just that covered with chocolate.
Do-Si·Dos are peanut butter sandwiches.
Van' c)los are vanilla and chocolate cremes
Tagalongs are chocolate pean.ut butter cookies.
And Trefoils are shortbread.
Girl scouts have been selling cookies for forty years and the
profits from the cookie sale provide almost half of the money
needed to fund the Black Diamond Girl Scout Council. This
means thai camps are developed, activities are arranged, and
all sort.s of programs and services are offered becal!Be people
like you buy a box or two or three or more.

Casey 'Kasem

.

.....
POMEROY, OHIO ·

By Polly Cramer
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - SOme hoi
tar got into my electric
clothes dryer and, of course,
got on my white and my blue
pants suit. I w•s sick when I
saw the blackish. brown
streaks and used a spot lifter
and a cleaning solvent but
neither helped. After clean·
ing out the dryer I washed
them twice in soapy water
and then put in the dryer but
that did not work. I am ad·
justed to the idea that they
are ruined but thought someone might have another sug·
gestion for me. Stains just
seem to hang on to knits. .
V.C.
DEAR V.C. -Did you take
yonr suits to the dry cleaner•
It seems doubtful that
anything will work now that
they must be set but turpen· ,
tine usually removes tar and
then is followed by a good
rinsing in detergent suds. Use
turpentine with care and
away Irom fire of any kind.
-POLLY.
DEAR POLLY- My Pet
Peeve is · with those stores
that put price tags over -the
instructions or ingredie'lts in
the product. I like to re~d all
about a prodnct before I buy
jl and the stickers u5ually
cover the key wordS and
sometimes removiQg the
price tag even removes the
words
nnderneath
.SHIRLEY.
DEAR POLLY .. My
Pointer is for those ladies
who do not have open arm
sewing machines. When I
need to mend the knees in
blne jeans I open up the seam
on the ontside ..of the leg just
part way so that I have a flat
surface to work on and when
.the mending is.finished I turn

Samoas are chocolate, caramel, and coconut.

..

,...

Try turpentine
on lor

Lenten breakfast h,osted by
Trinity church womef!t

Bah(lma trip offered
by .Rio Grande

Had a note from Etoilla L. Cassell of Middleport telling us of
a beanless chili recipe which she acquired many years ago
while a student at the Bryan Street High School in Dallas,
Texas.
•
She recalled that while she was a student there and helped in
the lunch room, beanless chili was on the menu about once a
week. Mrs. Cassell said that the cook gave the home economic •
· girls a version of the recipe for a family.
tlEANLESS CHILI
1 clove of garlic, crushed, I stalk of celery, chopped fine, I
onion cut fine, and I green sweet pepper, chopped. Cook until
done in oil, then add Ill pounds of either ground chuck or lean
shredded beef. Brown. Add I can tomato paste, I can
tomatoes, I can Hunt's tomato sauce, a can of water from each
' tomato preparation, 1 scant tbsp. of chili powder, a sprinkle of
oregano, ltsp, garlic salt, and coarsely ground pepper to taste.
Stir frequently to prevent slicking. Cook one to two hours.
Mrs. Cassell recalls that at school il was always served with
hard crusty ~oils.
Tomorrow the annual Girl Seoul cookie sale gets underway
in Meigs.County.
· 'Girl scouts will be taking orders through next week - just
orders. not money now- for delivery the first pari of,April. Be
sure to order plenty. It not only helps tbe scout treasury, but
the cookies are good and really not much more than.you'd pay
in the store.
.
Later we'll be sharing some recipes which call for the
cookies as an ingredient.
And now about the varieties- we thought you'd like to know:

Oak Park and Brickles
General Contractor 482 .
High Team Ser ies - Royal

I

• Otf •

•0

P.W. :
Parents usually foot the sex bill if a pregnancy occurs - this
when young people don't receive contraceptive information.
. Legislators aren't trying lo make kids inunoral. They 're facmg a modern problem m a way that may save families money
and heartbreak. · SUE

556. Betty Smith 504. Helen
Phelps 451.
High Game Team - Royal

95

_•,.- .
1' 1'".

•

DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
You go along with legislators who affirm the right of people
under _18 to receive contraceptive care without parental
knowledge.
If a person under 18 commits vandalism or thievery, parents
are not only notified but also held responsible, having to pay
damage~. ~o why shouldn't they also be responsible lor their
children s unmoral se&lt; acts? ·If kids are considered adult in
this area, then they should be tried in adult court.s go to adult
jails, and parents shouldn't have to foot the bills. '
A catch phrase used often these days is' "You can't legislate
morality." I do?'t know the validity of this, but it certainly
seems to me legiSlators feel they can interfere with morality .•
P.W.
DEARP.:
You're lUmping crime and sex in the same category. Since
.kids aren •t jailed, or their parents fined, for consenting private
love, there isn't much validity to your argument. -HELEN

And

.

'

DEAR JAMES:
You can't slop a bully by running away from him. We'd suggest y~u wr11e down an acconnt of all his school-ground
shena?1gans. Keep strict taba for a week, and hand the list to
the pnnclpll:l. Save copies for your teacher and parents
Then ... th_e next time he shoves you around, let him have it?
II his relallves cause trouble. haul out the list. Surely your
fo~ won't knuckle under to these town leaders, even though
llUlquetoasts appear to be running your school.. HELEN AND
SUE

'16"
'1399

&amp;

..

J=

Pat Carson

' JOGGING
SUITS

LONG SLEEVE
SHORT SLEEVE
SPORT SHIRTS
DRESS SHIRTS
By Levi. Jantzen
Van
By Manhattan
Shapely.
Heusen .
-. . ,_ . ·-·~-~-pRICE i
'
( •

High Serie s -

Men's &amp; Boys'

MEN

&amp;

Betty Smilh 180.

COVERALLS

lhPRICE

% PRICE
MEN'S

'By ind tptro dt~~l
ltllirol group•. Lifl·
1nsr a oolfabl" an r~q uu t

By Arrow, Manhattan &amp;
Van Heusen.

% PRICE

'!'here 's a bully In our cia":' who's got the teacher thiinking
he san angel. He pusbes us k1ds around when she isn'llooking.
II we !1ght back, she puniShes us with exira homework, etc. '
We tell her what really happens, but she won't believe us
because his fa~ly is rich and town leaders, and she doesn't
want trouble With them. The princip•l's the same.
~ guy h.S hit me so hard my head rang, but the worst p11rt
is he s always fmdmg ways to get me and my friends in trou·
ble.
says to lust avoid him. How ~can i when he's there?

On the T in Middleport

DRESS SHIRTS

Palm

~-

. 1HE SEWING CENTER

MEN'S

17
16

Francis Florist
14
· High Ind . Game
Pat
Carson 196; Pat Carson 192 ;

Stop In and See Why at,

- · ALL SALES CASH-

SPORT COATS

.

RAP :

"

RC Cola

DOORS OPEN PROMPTLY AT 9 A.M.

SCHOOL BULLY WEARS A HALO

flv Charlene Hoefl.ich

Shamrock Motel

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY lOTH

Polly Cramer

130

60

'•

~:

Social
Calendar

RS

By Helen Hottel

IPike l and Ottovi lle. 16 each.

4. Cleveland Cathedral

Latin 12 11 -3 1

~
;:&lt;

··

Lockland and South Central,
18 each ; 20. (tie ) Eastern

161

Ohio Wesle yan 89 Den ison 65
Mariet1a 52 Muskingum 43
Otterbein 82 Capital 64
Ohio Northern 73 BaldwinWallace 62
Defiance 106 Bluffton 83
Central St. 81 Cumberland ,.

NEW YORK
CLOTHING .
SE

~

the top this week was the only
change among the leaders,
. ~c Mansfield · SL · Pl!tef's w?nld
appear to be In seroous
danger of losing its No. I spot
by Delphos St. Johns.
In Class A.
By GENE CADDES
The Sp~rtans, the lop·
Coach J ohn Smith's
UPI Sports Wpter
lioth
St.
ranked
A club since the
Punchers
went
past
COLUMBUS {IJI't)- After
Johns,
ratings
which
fell
to
third,
and
began,
had their Illseveral weeks of relative
·
unbeaten
Warsaw
River
game
winning
streak
come lo
calm, the United Press
an
abrupt
end
Monday
night,
View
,
which
remained
in
the
International Ohio High
runnefup
spot.
71-49
decision
to
losing
a
School Board of COaches boys
Mifflin,' a state tournament t hird -r anked Morral
basketball ratings has one
new leader with yet another a finalist last March losing to Ridgedale.
Cleveland Cathedral Latin in
·That loss, however1 came
distinct possibility.
Columbus Mifflin, which the tiUe game, has lost only to too law to alfect this week's
has waded through its tough Wheelersburg (50-48) early in voting and St. Pete climbed
Columbus City League the season, Columbus East out of a first place tie with
schedule with a 13-3 record. ( 66-63 in overtime) and Indian Valley South to
took over the No. I spot in unbeaten and third;anked reclaim sole possession of the
Class AA this week following (AAA) Columbus North (62- top spot with a 32-point lead ·
over the Rebels .
the second loss of the season 56 ).
In Class AAA, things remained unchanged , with
Akron Central-Rower rolling
along unbeaten and holding a
252-229 edge over once-beaten
5. Elyria Cath. 115-11
128 Kettering Alter among the
COLUMBUS I UPII
·big schools.
6.
Wheelersburg
(1
14·
1)
This week's Unit~ Press
118
A · pair of losses by
Internat i ona l Oh i o Hig h
7. New Leb. Di xie (1 15·0)
School Board of Coaches'
~Cincinnati St. Xavier dropped
105
boys basketball ratings with
8. Archbold (3 13-01
72 the Bombers from third to
fi rsf .place votes and won -lost
with
unbeaten
9. Coshoclon (10-3)
49 fifth,
records in parentheses :
10.
West
Holmes
(12
·0
Al
Columbus
North
and
onceCLASS AAA
Second ten : 11. Portsmou1h beaten Cleveland St. Ignatius
Points
Team
28 ; 12. {tie ) Hann i bal Riv&amp;
1. Akron Central252 (1) and Akron South, 22 each; moving into third and fourth.
Hewer ( 16 14-0)
Toledo Scott, Dayton Roth,
14. Well svi lle 19 ; 15. (tiel
2. Kettering Alter
(7 15·ll
229 Waverly and Martins Ferry, Canton Timken and East
3. Colunbus Nerlh ( 16-0l 143 15 each ; 17. Norlh Col leoe Cleveland Shaw filled the
Hi ll 13 ; 18. Youn9stown
4. Cleve . 51. lgnastius
140 Rayen 11 ; 19. (l ie ) Claymonl, s¢h through ninth spots,
12 15-ll
Vinton, Lorain Catholic; and with Dayton Meadowdale,
5. Cincinnati St. Xavier
with a 15-1 record, making its
(1 152)
124 Bellaire. 10 each .
6. Toledo Scott (2 11 -ll . lOB
CLASS A
first top ten appearance In
7. Dayton Rol h (1 0~ 2)
76
Points
tenth.
Team
8. Canton Timken (Il -l') · 69
There were no newcomers
1. Man s. St . Peter 's
9. E. Cleveland Shaw
347
in
either the Class Aor AA top
(19
16-ll
62
I 14· i I
2. IV South (7 14-0)
315 ten this week.
10. Dayton Meadowdale
(15-11
40 3. Morral Ridgedale
Cleveland Cathedral Lalin
(2 12-0)
263
Second ten : 11 . Springfield
again
finished fourth in AA,
4.
Windham
(3
13-0)
175
North 23 ; 12. Allianct! 20 ; 13.
5. Kalida(J 14-1)
134 followed in order by Elyria
Barberton 18 ; 14. (tie) Toledo
6. Pal. Henry 14 13-0l 133 Catholic, Wheelersburg, New
St. Francis and Princeton , 17
7. Col Ready ( 12-3)
89 Lebanon Dixie, Archbold, Co·
each ; 16. (tie) Cincinnati
8. Buckeye Trail {14-0)
74
Withrow and Columbus West ,
shocton and West Ho\mes.
9. Cl in ton Mass ie (1 14- ll 69
15 each ; 18. Vandalia -Butler
10.
Sou
theastern
(Ross)
Unbeaten Windham was a
14 ; 19, Cincinnati LaSalle 12;
(13·11
64 distant fourth in Class A with
20. (tie l Columbus East and
Second len : 11 . Ada 46; 12.
Fairborn Baker , 10 each .
Sebr ing 28 ; 13. Hopewell· Kalida, Patrick Henry,
loudon 25 ; 14. ttie) . Macon Columbus Ready, Buckeye
CLASS AA
Trail, Clinton Massie ·and
Team
Points Easterl"! ( 1) ' and Southington
I. Col. Mifflin 15 13-3)
192 22 each ; 16. Dalton 21; 17. Ross Southeastern rounding
Ber'lin
Center Western out the IDp ten .
2. Warsaw River V-iew
190 Reserve
20 ;
18.
(tiel
I11 lJ-Ol
12 12-2)

·us. • •

~=·

· Bul, while Mifflin's move to

3. Delphos St . Johns

Helen Help

SNOWSUITS
OF

BOYS SHIRTS.

INFANT

2-14

9:30, M·
9:30-8, Fri.

W~R

Kenneth McCullough, R. Ph.
Char los RIHie, R. Ph .
RO!lald Hanning, R. Ph
"1!'.n .. thru S.t,B ;go a.m. to 9 p.m.

' T_av. \D:JotOT1:t : loandSto9p.m.

PRESCR
E. Main

Near Stiffler's in Pomeroy

TIONS.

F rlendly Service

PH. 992·2955
Pomeroy,O.

Open Nights fill9

L...~2~n~d~S~tr!"~t~. . . . . . . .~'~~~-;35:u~............::~~~o~·~L- . --------------~~~:=::::~~::::::::::::::~
.,. .

�Ohio woman named list
Young people seldo_m prepared for marrzage co~~nru~:.:·e~~~:~~h~~: ~~.~e:.ri~~ct~on%..':1
6-TheDallySenlinel,Middleport-Pomeroy.O., Thursday , f eb. 9, !978

COLUMBUS (UP!) .
Young ~eople hav~ little
preparation for marnage and
pa~enling t?day_. thlnk_mg
theJr hves will wmd up Jl!St
like in the movies - :·happtly
ever after ," according to a
YWCA worker .
"Happily ever a!U!r is the
most overworked phrase,"

said Kay Drake, the adult
progra"'; dJrector. for the
YWCA m Franklin County
who talks with high sch~l
students about the social
problem of spouse beating .
".Young people have hiMh
hopes they will live happily
ever after," she said. "They
aretrainedforanoccupali~n.

THE
SHOE
BOX
Middleport , 0 .

...,.,=.,.:;, I! you rea man wh ose
tastes run to the claSSIC .
trad!llonallook thiS Hu sh

::;~~5~Pupp1es· casual IS a·f1lt 1ng

~

accessory Subtle st yling
prm11de s a co mfnrtnble
rt~~;;;r· l1dence - alwf)yS nght 1n
tun e w1t h your lifestyl e
And lrad111 0n al1n va lue t

Colors:
Brown
Gray
Also in a Tie
Color
Brown

not for running a household or
for raising children.
" In rur culture, we are not
taught alternatives on how to
cope with situations or even
how 10 argue, " said Mrs.
Drake.
Shepointedoutthatsociety
hasputman at the head of the
house, to earn the money, to
make the rules, and the
woman is to make everyone
happy .
She added that many times
the- couple has not learned
they should share, how to
express their fears and even
to argue .
11
The man often takes his
frustrations - whatever they
may be arxl whawver causes
••e
"' m - out on ••
u•e woman, "
she said, quickly pointing out
that wife-beating need not be
only physical, but can be
mental as well.
"Wife beating is not new ·to
society, but talking about it

'

•

separate rooms when an
argument starts.
But she admits abuse and
wife-beating does happen and
knows no socio-economic
barrier.
One example she presents
.to her young audience is the
woman who says, " If he hjls
me, I'll leave." She then
poses the question of where
can the woman go.
Some suggestions she lists
are family, clergy and police,
whom sh&lt;l says often soothe
the situation over and the
couple gel back together. A
fourth alternative, she liste&lt;l
was an attorney who can help
the woman with the legal
aspects, which she said could
prove to be cost 1y 1·r
separation and di vor ce
result.
" But if the woman would
take action the first time it
happens, she has a chance to
stop it," she said. "But if she

She said a shelter house
offers shelter for the woman
and her children, but the
woman must care for the
children while she is there .
The woman must make her
own decisions, and if she
decides to separate, workers
at the shelter house will help
her find housing, a job and
welfare
assistance
if
necessary .
-

is," said MrS. Drake . "Some

doesn 't take any a~ion and

women are either afraid to
talk about it or are
embarrased about it."
Mrs . Drake stresses
alternatives to abuse in
attempts 10 avoid it.
She tells the girls they don't
have to get married at age 18,
that they should wait awhile,
take their time, go to school
and get some skills.
She also tells teen-agers
that during the dating period,
if the fellow hits the girl nQw,
he probably willlawr on.
She also suggests some
alternatives, such as making
agreements or going into

lets the man apologize,
chancesaretheabusewillget
progressively worse ."
Another alternative she
listed is sheller house for
battered wome n, if the
community has one .
Mrs. Drake serves on the
board of directors for the
sheller house in Columbus,
one of a few in the nation . She
.said the location is .kept a
secret 80 the men won't find it .
and lind where the woman is
running off to.
She said workers at a
shelter house will meet the
woman at 8 neutral location.

a

.ATIEND FUNERAL
Mr. aniiMrs. E. M. Harrah
of Long Bottom, R. D., Mr.
and Mrs. IA!o Vaug'han, and
Mrs. Marie Watson were in
Canton Saturday lor the
fw1eral servkes of Mr. Harral1's· s1'ster, E1nily
R. With,
94, of Canton. Mrs. With died
on Feb. 2 at a Canton
Hospital. Services were held
at the Arnold Funeral Home
and burial was in the· -Northlawn Cemetery in Canton.
She i~ s urv-ived by two sons,
Donald and Glen, and two
llaughlel·s, Mary Emily and
Anna Ruth .

been named .one
of at the Ohio Bell Telephone
GLAMOUR Magazine's Company in Columbus, Ohio.
Success Choices for 1978.
She supervise! five foremen
She is among eleven who in tum oversee forty
achievers GLAMOUR craftsmen responsible for
selected from over 500 ap- outside cable installation and
phcants who represent a - splicing. Prior to her cuiTent
&lt;Toss-section of successful job,shewasadivisionbudget
young working women manager
and
human
throughout the nation who resources consultant at Ohio
have excelled In their Bell.lnthiscapaclty,shewas
careers. Their professions the youngest person and the
represent a wide range · of only woman at her level in the
fields and reflect a growing division (740 people).
interest among women to
In addition lo her caretr
Pursue careers - not just achievements, Ms. Weiser
Jobs.
chairs
two
statewide
organiZIItioos - one involves
coordinating volunteer ef·
MAKE LIST
forts in environmenta l
MASON - Four Mason awareness and the ,other
County students were named develop g non-pro r·t
1 speec h
to the dean's list at West therapy centers. A member
Virginia Tech, Montgomery, of the Capitol City Business
lor the fall semester. Making and Professional Women's
a four point averal(e was Club, she was recently
Daniel P. Stodola, Mason. honored as their Outstanding
Others named to the roll with Young Career Women for

7- The DanySentinel,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 9,1978

•

1977.

Kenneth Holbrook, New
Haven, and James Doeffinger and Richard J.
Pickens, both o.f Point
Pleasant.

A graduate of the
University of California, Ms.
Weiser is pursuing her
master's degree in business
administration at Ohio Slate

HAVING A HIRTHDAY
Mrs . Glada Davis of Dexter
will celebra te her 80th birthday Sunday, Feb. 12. She and
her husband, Worley,, have
five children, Clyde and Kenneth of Rutland, Mary
Kathryn Holler, Bashan, ·and
twins, Robe rl W. of
L•ngsvi lle and Ronald of Sandusky. They · have 14 grandl' hildren , and 16 great~
grandl'hlldren.

·

Mary L. Lewis, 78, Rio
Gran(le, died Thursday morn. ing In the Worthington Nursing and Convaleseent Center.
~ She was the widow of William
• , A. Lewis, former president
: and dean of Rio Grarxle Cui• lege.
•. Mary Lewis was born July
••. 15, 1899, in Philadelphia. Pa.,
lo H. H. und Ada Morgan
Lintner• She was married in
1923 in Colwnbus, and Dean
:;.: Lewis preceded her in death
~,. in Octobel'1 1956. Survivors in·
;;; elude a stepdaughter, Mr!i.
r . William
(Thebna J Ewing,

.

·~

For Friday, Feb.lO, 1978

ASTRO·GRAPH

JAN WEISER

Bernice Bede Osol

University. She is t he
da ughter of Col. (Ret.) and
Mrs. W. W. Lewin of Sumpter , South Carolina.

Ft•b. 10, 1978

'

Aes tJ ictioJ1S yo u had to con-

.•

tend with !he pas t lew years
will be lif!l:d thi s corn ing year .
• lnS!ei.Jd of stJ ess amllinlitation
you ' ll now ha..,e more time for
.. fun and games .
&gt;1

~·

AQUAIUUS J.tan. 20-Feb.19 )
You will be well rece rved so-

•• ciall y today , and friend s Will go
to do favors lor
"" you You might even get a
surprise gift Like to find out
rnore o f wllat lies ahead for
~ You ? Se nd lo1 your copy of
Astra-Graph .Le tter by mail1ng .
... 50 cents lor e ach and a long ,
·se ll-addressed , stamped eJrve : tope to Astw -Graph , P Q _ BoK
: 489, Radio City Statio n. N.Y.
10019. Be sure to specify your
birth sr gn .

., out of H1eir way
Family Fries

FRENCH
FRIES

TOTINO
PIZZA
•

2 lb.

O~rieties 89~

bag

•

--------

I

------~------------

1

Eva
of
Chesapeake, died Tuesday at South Point; one sister ,
II p. m. at St. Mary's Frances L. King of'Tampa .
Hospital in Huntington . She Fla ., and four grarxlchildren.
was born in Huntington, W.
Funeral arrangements
Va., Aug . 16, 1912, and was a were made by Schneider
daughter oft he late Dennis--P. Funer al Home. Ch ristian
and Veva V. Pyles.
Wak!"'Service will"be tonight
She was preceded in death at 8:90 p. m. at Schneider
by her husband , Joseph D. Funeral Home. Mass of lh e
Welton, l wo daughters in Resurrection will be at St.
infancy and a brother , Ann's Choreh in Chesapeake
Preston Pyles.
wilh f'ather T. A. Travis and
daSughrv eivingCI arwe It her Fath er Paul Welton. of·
u 1 r, ara
e on o1 11c1a1mg.
The body IS at the funera l
Ch esapea ke and four sons:
Billy Joe Welton of Akron ; home where friends may call
.Father Paul D. Welton, today after 6 p. m. Burial will
Sacred Heart Ch urch of be in Rome Cemetery.
Pomeroy; CArl Prp~t ,..~

,.

•

FROZEN

•

Mary L. Lewzs, 78, wzdow of! Area Deaths ! OWners must have permit
for11J-er Rio president, dies
~~:~~~N~. ::~~~·~o~~~t:::o·~:i;~~a~~l

m
·

a 3.250 average or above were

•

8-16 oz.
bottles

P ISCI;;s (Feb. 20-March 20)
"- Before th e clay is over it's
, po ssi ble sorn e ttring will occur
•· that w itt IJe personally pro fitable . 11 tout(.J come about in a
"" circui tous fa shion .

FRUIT
BOWLS
or BASKETS

" Altn-:s

l i\'hnch 21· April 19 1

.. Clos e triem.! s o f l11e opposite
gende r are. lucky lor you today .
"'~ They' ll be sa ying ni ce things
.. ~ bout you to those who ca n
: fur tt1 er yOlr'r seH-interes1.

ORDER NOW
GREAT FOR VALENTINE GIFTING

._ TAUitUS IApril 20.Ma y :tO) A
..
~·

VAUGHAN'S CARDINAL

:
,.

Locust &amp; Pearl St.
. Middleport , 0 .
Open.:-:Mon.thru Sat. II a.m . to 9 p.m.-Sunday 9to 9

:

r•

...
:

•

-

matt er 011er whic h you ha11e
litHe or no co ntrol w ill be
engineered a:&gt; fa110rably lor
yo u today as if yo u blueprint ed
the plan yo ur self
GEMINI I May 21-June 20 J
'rake advan t\lge of every oppor·
\u ni ty tOday to meet new p·e opte . There 's a po ssibility you
could rnake · an enormou sly
valuable cori lact.

CANt.:F:It (.lnne 2l·July 22 1 In
~!'- cornpe tili11e

ca reer Siluations
you won't be mee ting the charlenges ato ne today . A booste r
behind H1e scenes wil i be back'
ing you .
..
.;. I.F:n j.luly 2.:t-A ug.22 1 Ot hers
"' will find you r positive altitude
r • . admirable today . You lOok 1,1nd
act li ke a winner. They ' ll wan t
•·· to be on your team .

,.•
....
~.
::

THE iMOST COPIED CAR
IN THE WORLD TODAY

ec:onomi cs depilrlmenl in
1922. She was the first house
restdent of th~ new Davis
Hall ; a member of Simpson
Chapel , United Methodist
Church ; the Rio - Grande
Garden Club; the Atwood
Club l honorary life
member); Faculty Women's
Club; and she was !he first
curator of the Heritage
~ Room.
'•
She was fo·n ner Gallii:i
••••• Counly chainnan of the
Ohioana Library, and a
former member of the
Creative Writers Club. She
was a tireless collector of Rio
Grande College archives, and
a member of the Gallia County Historical Society.
Funeral services will be
MARY LEWIS
held at 2 p.m. Sunday at the
Simpson Chapel United
Methodist Chu rch at Rio
Robert Johnson was
Colwnbus; a granddaughter; Grande, the Rev . Robert
elected
chief of the Racine
and two great-grandehildren. Dan1Schroder offi dctli ng, and
Volunt
eer
Fire Department
Also surviv ing are a burial will he in Calvary
when
they
met recently .
brother, Harold Lintner, ·Cemetery.
Others
elected
were Glenn
Westerville ; two sisters, Mrs.
The body will lie in stale in Rizer, assistant chief; Junior
Ross IMargarite ) Ashbrook, the ch urch for one hour prior
Cleveland, and Mrs. Sam to the services. Friends may Johnson , captaini Harry
(Dorothy) Pritchard, An- contribute to the William A. Lyons , co·captain: Randy
napolis, Md ; and several Lewis Scholarship Fund at Pyles, 1st Lt. ; Bill Roberts,
nieces an.d nephews. One Rio Grande College. Ar- ~d Lt.; Dave Nelgler, 3rd
U .; Randy Pyles president ;
sister preceded her in death .
rangementS for the ~ervices Hank
Johnson ,
vlce
She was graduated from arc in uharge o( the W~ugh~
president:
Doug
Reese
,
Ohio State University's home Ha lley-Wood Funeral Home.

shale, clay, limestone,
Ca ll warned the Division of
dolomite, gyrum, saildstone Reclamation will tpkc legal
or fill dirt .
action a~ainst persons, sur.,
"Coal strip mine operators fa ce mining in Ohio without a
are aware of what's required pennit. ~
of them under the Ohio Strip
Several illegal operators,
Mine Law of 1972, but some have been proseeutL..r since
who ore mining the other the Ohio Surface Mine Law;
minerals evidently are not wasenacted . TI~emost recent
aware of the provisions of the- -case- w~s in huNts County ,'
newer surface mine Ia"··" wh ere
a
ternporary
said Charles Call , Qlief of t11e rcstrainln~ order was . olh
Division of lleclamatiun.
tained to stop an uperutor
" By issuing permits, we who was mining without a .
are better uble to ensure pennit.
public safety , prot ect
App!icution s for s urfa ce
property bordering surfncc mining permits may be ob::
a nd taincd from the Division of
mine
operations
guarantee that reclamation Reclamullon, Ohio Departstandards are met . based on mcnt of Nut ural Hcsources •.
plaMed future uses of mining Fuuntnin Square. Columbus
areas.' ' he said.
1322~ .

Owners of Ohio mining
uperaUons for minerals other
than coal are ren\lnded they
must obtain a permit from
the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources !ODNRJ
before · any mining takes
place.
'
· Under the Ohio Surface
Mine Law of 1975, surface
mine operators must obtain a
from
ODNR 's
pe rmit
Divasi un of Reclamation
before mining sand, gravel,
doing.
'111e grant was give11 by the
Ohio
Department
of
Education under Title IV-C
and is to be in effect from
January 1, to December 31.

Johnson nanted Meigs teacher
Racm·e chief
given grant

.

Scho.o l spending
totals released
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio schoo l districts spent a n
spent about $116.22 more per average $1,115.96.
"Caution
should' be
pupil on· its 2.2 million
exercised
in
comparing
the
students in 197&amp;-77 thanl in
1975-76, bot still placed only differing expenditures of
dis\ricts," Walter . sai d.
27th a mong. the slates.
In its annual costs per pupil "Each district has difierent
study released today, the pupil q~ds . "
slate Education Department .
said Ohio invests an average
of $1,205.11 per pupil
compared to a national
average of $1,4G4.
" In spite of 9.6 P.rcent
increase
In
school
experxliture last year, Ohio
schools c;ontinued to lag
hehind the other states in
school expenditure," said · t
Franklin B. Walter, stale
superintendent of public instruction. "Ohio is not a high ,.,
expenditure state in teJTnS of
elementary . and secondary
'
education .''
The report also showed that
in general it costs more to ,
educate city pupils than those,
in local school districts or
exempted villages. The
slate's 185 city districts spent
an average $1 ,392.72 per
pupil, while the 382 local

secretary-treasurer.

MEMBERSHIP OFFICER
MARIETTA, 0. - Marietta
College junior Judy Owen of
Middleport is the membership a nd rush officer of
the Sigma Sigma Sigma
sorority . Sigma Sigma Siglf\a
is one of five sororities on
campus and was founded in
1962 at Marieita.
A 1975 graduate of Meigs
High School, Judy is lh~
daughter of Mr. a~d Mrs,
Richard S. Owen, of 212 N.
3rd Ave.

Jean Shaver, a Meigs High
School English teacher. has
received a grant award for
$1 ,800 for the implementation
of a new English program in
her ninth grade classes. The
program is titled !LA, Individualized Language Arts;
An Integrated Approach .
A main goal of the project
is to have a humanistic
classroom as well as in·
corporating " the basics" .
The program is integrated,
combining reading, writln~.
speak ing and listening into
one discipline with each of
these skills reinforci ng the
others.
The materials which the
grant has made available will
be high int erest and suited for
all reading levels to insure
maximum lea rning.
Another goal of the project
is to move the emphasis from
grades and competition to
individual progress and selfachievement. Eac~ student
will compare what he has
done to what he is capable of

For Someone Special!

Mrs.

J G.
McDonald's
Chocolates

Village Pharmacy
Middleport, Ohio
N~w

Haven,

W. Va.

a

VIRGO 1Aug.2:1-Sepl.221 Your

ta len ts for so lving dilemmas of
others cah eam you a big
bonu s today . Otter yo ur ser vices willingly where they are
needed .

LlfUIA !St!pi.23-&lt;Jct.231 Function ing .as a middterOa n is a role
you 're parti cularly suiteQ to
today . Under you r aus pi cio us
management all parties w ill ge l
a lair shake .

SCURPIO

!Oct.

24-Nov.221

Severa l clla nges are stirr ing
workwise that could prove
advantageous . Today yo u
might gel a preview of what to
e~o:pect

SAGITTARIUS !Nov . 23De c.2H Think big today .

v. w.

You ·re ·in yoUr element if something large is at stak e . Size
~- se rve s to awake n your fu llest
,~ po ten ti al.
1
' CAP IU(!0RN (Dec . ~2·Jan.19)
.. Stay on top o f si tu ations to add
: to your materia l resources .
,;..-, Wra p them up today wt1ile lady
: luck favor s yo u.

RABBIT
Don't Buy An Imposter. Get The Original For L-ess Than A Copy.

as
seen on.

'

Manufacturer's suaeste~ retail price at Port of entry.
Freight, dealer prep., taxes, and title are extra.
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WHEREVER YOU LIVE . WORK OR PLAY . THERE'S A RADIO SHACK STO('?E NEAR YO()I
I

·SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
MA D1V!SIQN OF TA ND¥ CORPORA TI O ~

$4,030.00 ·

. tl, ,o o ,t ', H1 .il lit • , 11

H .ufto $11,,. ~

D••.rh•r.,
I ""~ l w Hw.
~ rrur

Fuel Injection
Fold Down Rear Seat
Reclining Bucket Seat
Rear Window Defroster
Bucket Seats
Rack and Pinton Steering
Rear Hatchback
Built In Safety Features

.
'\
See One Of Our Salesmen Today and Discover The
Difference Between A Copy and,.The Ori&amp;inal

Mo•..,l&gt;lt •t'!

'•'li lt 111

•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

DEALEFI

•· • ·•ll l• lror htu u!

1--'RICE$ MA'I' VARY AI INOIVIOU/\L STORES

•

--

DRIVER APPROVED
A bus driver's certificate
was iSsued to James
Williams , -Eastern Local
District, when the Meigs
County Board of Education
met in regular session
Tuesday night.
Harold Roush was named
as the board 's liaison
representatives to the Ohio
School Boards Assn. Others
attending the meeting were
George Perry, Bob Burdette,
Oris Smith and County Supt.
Rohert Bowen.

SAY "I LOVE YOU" WITH A
$1.00 SENTINEL VALENTINE AD.
(Umit 16 Words-Sizes Illustrated BelOw)

~~czy·q

nojV you know
Bonfires are derived from
English " bone fires " to burn
the bellies of victims of the
plague.

............
HARDWARE

JNEWSPAPE A ENTERPRISE ASSN.J

Searching for the clever way to say "I Love
Y&lt;!u?" Our Happy Valentine Ads will be
published on February 14, and offer you a truly
unusual way to proclaim your love and best
wishes.

To My Wife, Ann

Afte r 14 wo nderful
years of marr iage, I' m
sti ll head-over-heels in
love wi th you!

: ,.............................~
v

*

---...
~

•

-.--. HEADQUARTERS
~

~

For The o.Ht-Yourselfer.
HammeJS, Saws,
Screwdrivers, Hatchels,
and

•

Mlk~

and Sue

WRITE YOUR MESSAGE BELOW AND BRING IT
OR MAIL IT WITH 11.00 BY FEBRUARY 11TH .ro lHE
DAILY SENTINEL, P. 0. BOX 729, POMEROY, 0.
16 WORDS 11.00-CASH WITH ORDER

-•.
M

We cou ldn't have picked
a nicer pair of parents In
the world! Ha ve
Happy Valentine's Day I

r-------------------------------------------~--------1

...

••

To Mom and Dad ...

Walter Z,

w

.
••
--...

...

2.

.'
I

6.
13.

10.
14.

3.
7.
11.
15.

'

1

4.

8.
12.
16.

1-------------------------------------·-·---..·-·--·--·-·-·--·--J
PHONE 992-2156

THE DAILY SENTI·NEL

�.8- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• 'fhursdlly. Feb. 9, 178

M~:;df~g~C:lR~,o

BOBBY J . RUPE and
KAREN K . RUPE .

101

Mulb~rry

S1 ree t,

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

WANTAD ,
CHARGES

Pl.il i MI IftS ,

vs .
ARTHUR GENHEIMER .
R es •denc ~ Unknown

I day

Case No . " ·"5

NOTICE

SERVICE BV
- - -PU&amp;LIE-A-TION' " "
Art hur Genheimer , whose
pl a ce of res1 dence 1s un kno w n
and wHose l ast ad dr ess Is
u nkn o wn a nd t h e u nkn ow n

heirs. devisees, leg at ees.
dis trib vt ees. admi n ist ra tor s
and

execu tor s.

...

1f

any . of

Ar t h ur Gen ht&gt;•mer . deteased .
w hose n a m es a nd p l aces o f
res•de n ce a r e un k nown and
c a11not
w ith
r easonable
d ilige n ce b e ascerla, n e d .
W dl•am
Schmid t , wt1ose
pl ace of r esi d en ce Is un kno w n
and w hose tas t a ddress is
unkno wn and t he un kno wn
t1e1 r S, d e \lrS CCS . I £1Qa t £&gt;eS.
drs tr rb ufees , ad mi n rst r a to r s
a nd ex ecu tors . I t a ny . o r
Wdli am Sc hm id t. d eceased .
whos e n a m es and pl aces o r
resr d en ce ar e unknown and
c an no t
wrl h
r eas ona b l e
drllgen ce be asce rl ame d , H
r Sc h mr d t, whosto p lace of
resr d en ce is un kn ow n a nd
who se
la st
a d dress
rs
unkn ow n a, d th e unkno wn
h e 1r s. de "J i se es. l e gat ees.
dJs trr butees, a dmi n is t r ator s
and e:rc. ec uto r s , rf any, o f H F
Sc hm rdt. d ec ea se d , w ho se
n a mes
and
p l a ces
at
resr d en ce are u nkno wn a nd
cann o t
w rth
r eas ona b l e
dr l rge n ce be a sc ert a m ed , C .
, Sch m rdl. wh ose pl ace of
resr d en ce is u nkno wn an d
wh ose
la s t
a ddr ess
is
un know n and t he un kn own
her r s. de visees . l eg ate es ,
dls tnb u t ees, ad m mis t r ator s
an d e:rc. ec u tors, rt any , ot C I
Sc h mi dt. de ce a se d . wh no:r&gt;
m an . dec ea sed, who se n am es
and p l ac es ot resr den ce a r e
un kno w n a nd c a n no t w 1t h
r eas o n ab l e d il i g e n ce b e
asc e r' t a rned
ar e
he r eb y
notrl red th at pt a rntrfl s l') a iJ e
bro ught thi s a ctron na ming
ea ch o f you a s one ot th e
de f endant s •n th e above
na m ed co urt by l1l ing t hei r
p!! t iliOr1 on Jan u ar y l Oth
1978
T h e ob lect o f th e pe t ition is
That the def e nd a n ts b e
r eq ui red to set u p l he1 r
alleg ed estat e or rnter es t in
th e h er e in a Ite r de scr rbe d
pr operty or b e forev er ba rr ed
fro m a ss ertrng the sam e. an d
tha t pla1nl1ft s' ! rile be for eve r
Qu ret e d a s ag arn st a n y c larm ,
esta t e or Interest o l t he de ,
fendan t s and lor such othe r
r e11et, legal or equ•lab te a s
may be fou nd to be proper
and n e ces sary to a fford
p la rnliffs fv ll r el ie f , with
judgm en t tor costs her ern '
!bat s a1d r~?a l e stat e rs
desc ribed as fol lows ·
T h e tollowrng rea l esta t e
situated rn the Covnty of
M eig s, State o f Ohro , a nd rn
th e V il lag e of Pomeroy , to

wol
TRACT ONE : Frac t ron 17 ,
To wn 1, Rang e 13, bo u nded
and de sc r rbed as foll o ws ·
Begr n n in g 310 I 3 f ee t North
of th e corn er of the Fa ctory .
for m erly lo. no' w n a s the Probst
Furn i ture Factory , on Sugar
Run Street , t he nce North 6 5
Deg 50' Wes t 181 t ee t to a
stak e , then ce North 15 D eg
East
87
2 J
teet
lo
a stake ,
t hen ce
South
59 Deg
East 175 feet to
;;~ s take . then ce South 22 Ocg .
10 ' West 66 :t ~ teet to t he
place of begrnn rng .
TRACT TWO In Fra c t•on
No 17, Town No . :rand Range
No I J, olthe Ohro Compa n y' s
Pu r cha se and bounded and
desc ribed
as
follows :
Begrnn1 ng 177 teet Northerly
from the corner of t h e Fac ·
tory . form erly known as the
Probst Furnrture Fac tory , '
on Sugar Run St r ee t , thence
North 65 Deg . 50 mtnutes
West 183 feet to a stake ,
thenc e North 25 Deg East 66
1 3 t eet to a st ake the corner
of a lot now vr formerly
own e d
by
W 1th emrna
G en h e i mer' s l ot , then ce
South 65 D eg 50 ' East 1Bl1 ee t
to a stake , then ce South 27
Deg 10 m1nu t es West 66 2·3
feet to the place ot begrnnl n. g
EXCEPT the following
pa r cel f r om Tra c t T wo ·
In F'ractron 11 , Town No 2
and Range No 13 ot th e Ohro
Company 's Purchas e, and
bounded and d es cr1bed a s
fo l lows ·
BE G INN ING
177
teet
Northerly lrom th e corner of
the Factory . formerly kn own
a s the Probst F u rnrture
F act ory , on Suga r
Run
Street , thence North 65 Deg
50' Wes t 183 f ee t. t h ence
North 25 Deg 00' East 42 7
t ee t to a stake , thence South
72 D eq . 00 ' l;ast 182 f eet to the
Wes t s rde of sard Sugar Run
St ree t the nc e South 22 Deg .
10' W est 64 fee t alon g the
West Stde ot sa rd Street , to the
p l a c e o f beginning , con
tarnrng 22 100 acres
Reference Deed Vol 269,
Page 27 Deed Records, Meigs
County , Otrro
You 3re requ tr ed t o answ er
the Pe trllon wrthrn twenty .
e•gh t days a ft er th e last
publ ic ation of lh1 s nottce .
wh rc h writ be pub l rshed once
ea ch we e k for six suc cessive
we e k s,
and
the
fast
pu bt rc at ron wi ll b e made on
F ebr u ary 16th 1978
In case; of your 'farl ur e to
ans wer or ot herwi se r es pond
as p erm 1tted by th e Ohro
R ule ~
o t ~i vil Pr oc edure
w rt hi n the tim e s tated ,
tud g m ent by d etault w il l be
ren d ered a garns t you for t he
re l tef dem and ed 1n the
petr t ron
Larry E Spen cer
Clerk o fCourt o f
Common Pleas ,
Mergs Coun t y ,
Ohio
( t )) 2. 19, 26(2 ) 2, 9, 16 . 6t

In 1900, 7.000 consttuction
workers In &lt;llicago voted tD '

strike for an eight.flou.r day .

NOTICE OF
AP,;POINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On J an ua ry 30, 1978, In the
Meigs County Probate Court,
Case No . 22.279, P au l S
Smart, .44 Lincoln Str ee t ,
Middleport. Ohio 45760 was
appointed Executor of th e
estate of Irene T
Cross,
deceased, late of Rutland
Stree t, M iddleport , Ohio
45760

Mann i ng D Webs1er
Probate JudgeClerk
(2) 2. 9, 16, 3tc

2dayJ
3dayJ
6 day!

15 Wordl or Under
Cuh
Chau·w.e
1.00 '
I %5
1.50
uo
1.110
us
!J.OO

-··

3 75

-~-

word over the mlnll1\Uift 15
wurdJ IS t cenU per word per day,
Ads runninrJ olher Lhan consecutive
F.~rch

dlly1 wdl be charged il the 1 day

......

In tnt=mor')', Cllrd rJ Thllnb 111nd
Obituary : 6 toentl per word, SJ.OO
mlmmum Cuh m ~~;dv ~tnce .
Mobile Home U.~and Yard SM!e:!i

111re lk't't'pted onl) lrith cash w1th

onier %5 cenl chluij:e tor ada carryin!!! So• Number In Care oll'htSenlinel.
The Publisher r e5t'rvn the right
W1!€ht or re}e(.1. any 11dti deemed otr
)IX1iooal. The Publl!.her will nol

IN LOVING rnemot 'I of Thehno
Wo ldntg, who paned owor o
yeor ogoFeb. 9, 1977
Deo• M other . 'JOU ore no! forgot
ten
!hough on eorth'you ore no more
Strll •n memory vou ore wrth us
As yo u olw oy s were bc-to•e
•
Sadl y mtued by ~to n Robe• r
and Family

HOO .. HOL LOW Horses Buy sell
!rode o• 11om Ne w and v§f'd
~ oddlf' \ Rulh l&lt;eeves Albcny
to 14 } o9ij 3190

IHE ~A C !Nl: Gun Club Gun Shoot
every Sunday olte•noon Fa(
tor y choke guns-on ly A ~so r led
meats
INCOME l AX S!!r\l tCes . Federal
and Stow To ~ees . Wo lloc.c
Ru sse ll Br adburv 992-?278

NOTICE

ANN O UN&lt;;ING THE open rng o l
The publr( accou nting olf iC e ol
Luckeyd oo, lr o.msed
Rog er
pu blr c o"ounTo nt lor occonllng
an d boo klo. eepmg servrc~s and
prepo r ouo•1 ol l edero l an d
~t t o te Ia..- re turns ot 291 Wal nuT
St .
Mrd d l e p o rt ,
O h ro
99'1·2666. Ho ur s by op pomt
tt1en t

Monday

Tuesday
lhru Frk111y
t P.M
the dll y before pubUeaUon
Sun&amp;r.y

Cl EARANCE SAL E be gms M o n
Feb 13 aT Sew N·Sew Ou tl e t
Main Str ee l
Rocrne
A ll
pol ves te r doub le kntl s redu ced
40°0 ond 50 °~ rh reod brg spool
5 lor $1

aflernoon

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio
January 31. 1f78
contract Sates Leta I
Copy No. 78 ·SA
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
R

~

P · OOOS( lO)

SRS -0005(47 )
Seated proposals will be
received at the office of th e
D i recto r
of
the
Ohio
Department
of
Trans .
portatlon , Co l umbus, Ohio ,
untrl
10 00
AM,
Oh1o
Stan dard
Time, Fr i dey ,
February 7, 1978, fo r 1m
provements in . •
Athens , Gallla, Hocking.
Meigs,
Mor r;~an,
Nobl e.
Vinto n
a nd
Washing_ton
Cou ntie s, Ohto, on varrous
s·ectrons
by
applyrng
preformed pl astic ra ilroad
crOS$1 ng symbols
The above prolect was
sc h edu led tor th e lettin g of
Februa ry 7, 1978, wh 1ch has
been postponed and bids will
now be recer\led untrl 10 00
AM , Friday , February 17 ,
1978.
Th e Oh ro Department of
Transportat i o n
hereby
notifies all bidders tha t it will
affirmatively insure that rn
any cont ract en ter ed into
p ur s uant
to
th1.s
ad 1/ertlsement.
minor i ty
business ente rp rises wi ll be
afforded full opport unity to
su bm rf brds 1n re ; pon se to
this lnv 1lation and will not be
disc riminated against on th e
ground s of ra ce , co tar , or
na tura l
origin
in
co n ·
srder at ton tor an award
" M inimum wage rates tor
thiS project • hav e b ee n
jJl-ei:tetermined as req uired
by taw and are se t fort h in th e
bi d proposal "
" Th"e date set for com ·
plefron of thrS work shall be
se t forth in the b tddrng
proposal "
Each b rdder shall
be
requ•red to file with his bid a
cer tif ie d c heck or cashie r ' s ·
check for an amount equal to
five per cent of his tlld . but in
no event more t h'an fitly
th ousa nd dollars. or a bond
for ten percent ot hts bid ,
pavabl e to the Director .
B•dders must apply , on th e
pr o p er
· forms ,
tor
quat1f1catlon at least t en days
prror to the date set lor
ope ning bids in accordance
wrth .Chapt e r 5525 Ohro
R e\lised Code
Pla ns and specitrcations
are on ft le in the Departm en t
of Transportatron and th e
otrrce of the D istr ict D eputy
D trector
The D irector r ese r&gt;J es t he
righ t to reject any and al l
b1dS .
DAVID L WE I R
DIRECTOR
Rev

8· 17 ·73

(1) 9, l ie

b&lt;J&amp;I itnd ~·ound
FOUND MALE do c h ~ h o u nd on Rt
33
Pree to goo d ho me
992 ·7481
FOUND BLACK G ermon po lr ce
puppy mole' 8elween B &amp; 11
w ee k s
ol d
Underne at h
M ason bn dg e
Porne ro v
Pho nc 992 7018
LOST. SMALL brown mr ~ e d breed
dog, belween 15 &amp; 20 lbs In
Sugar Run oreo . Answ ers Ia
Pu ddles ·. Loved ve ry m uch .
Coll992 b077 or 9'12 -5161
l OST BLOND mole pelongnese •n
Ro cm e area An swe rs To the
nome Chov Pho ne 949 -26-46 or
949 2359' Rewo rd ,
LOST SMAll !em a le lrr sh Sett er ,
Pos si bl y 111 heal . If anyon e ho ~
her or hos seen her pl ease coli
992 ·3163 Rewardl '
FO UND· SET of k e)I S A t Ktddr e
Shappe Chry sle r onrl GM pro
duc ts M us t rden trfy by go ld tog
n umber . 992 3586
Krddt e
Sho ppe
l OST RUST ond block shagg y
female rn edtun'lle rrro• Reten t.
ly spay ed. Red co llar . Plea se
re turn chrld s pel Been g one 4
w ee!_~_t roc u s e . 992-2897 ••
.

-~

~~..!_.~_ ;;' -"·
RESPONSIBLE O LDER lady to lr ve
111 and core l or aged lady 111
Rutland . Light housework and
cookin g no laundty Mor e for
hq me
than
wage s
Ca ll
742·2078

Mercury and Saturn,
Th e evenlng stars are
Venus, Jupiter and Mars .

Those born on this date are
under the sign of Aquarius.
William Henry Harrison ,'
ninlll president of the United
States, was born Feb . 9,
1773,
On lllis day In history:
In 1825, llle U.S. House of
Representatives elected John
Quincy Adams as president.
No ca ndidate in the
December 1824 election had
received the necessary

rnajcrity.
In 1950, Wisconsin Sen.
Joseph McCarllly charged
that the
U.S.
State
Department was Infested
wllll Communists.
In 1971, 64 persons were
killed when an earlllquake
shook Los Angeles.

A lllought for the day:
American President William
Henry Harrison said, "A
decent
and
manly
examination of the acts of
govenunent should be not
only tolerated bul · en-

courAared."

b

FO~

SPI:C lAl people AKC DobEH
mon P111'!&gt;ther pup~ Red and
rust Good pedrg,ees. $115 ond
Uf.l
(61 4) /9/4500 or (61 4) '
79/ 4 197
.

~~~ui-

-

-

TIMB ER, Pomeroy Forest Pro:
du els . Top prtc e l or standing
sow tr mber Ca ll 992·59b5 or
~n t Hanby , 1 - 44 ~· 8570 -~ _

CO Al lr rn es to ne , and colcrum
ch londe ond colc •u rn br111e l or
du st control and specrolm111:1 11g
~ o l t l or lor mC!S Excebror So li
Wo • k s Mom 511 ee l Pome1 oy
Ohro or phone C/92 · 3t:i9 1

RU GS

Hangings
and
ofgo n~ . NkP. for Chm tmo'!&gt;
Rem;onobl e Coll992.22 14
WALL

B &amp; s MOBIL!: HO M Es. P1 f&gt; le oson t W Vo be!&gt;r d e Hec k s
1973 Hroodrnore 14 x 04 '1
bedr oom
1973 Do(ron 14 x 60 2 bedroom
1972 V rclorron 14 x 67 3 bed roo m
2 bo th
1972Coventry 12~t653 b ed r oo rn
1909 Stolesrnon 17 ~ bO 2
bc d roo rn
1905 CHEVELLI: 4.dr . A C 1l!3
e ng 2 bb l . ou lo li on s Exce ll ent condrl ton fr uck loppe•
!&gt; ld 8 ft bed 28 rn h•gh
74'1 7485

8

78 .

STD
rOPPER
74'1 246 5

CONDili ONED
992 ·720 1

HAY

HAY FOR SAt E
HAY FOR SA lE
985 4248
&lt;

hrgh
~ole.

lor

985 3849
,' ~'

or

.,

REDU CE SAFE &amp; l o st wr th GoBese
Tobl e l s &amp; E Vop ' wa ter prll '!&gt;
Ne lson Dr ug

POMEROY
LANDMARK

USED
t ra cto r
w 1th
~ y~r?~£c . 3 p~• \0 741 3~

SILVER DOLlARS and co rn s. Top
dollar poid . Co l1 742 2316

-

-

-

f-·'t 1\11 Yr111t
G•'lll t,rl flr·(trH

TV 'c,

.illd

Holp·ilrt! 1\pplt.liH 1",

Plwnt' rt?t 2 181
MIX ED HA Y lo r sole . $1 25 bole
94 9 7b60 Rolph Tr ussell

FIREWOOD
FOR SALE

THREE BROWN Bele ved ere sham •
poo bow ls 992·3829 alte r 6 or
(304 ) 773·5352

- - --.-ROUND BALED hoy f or sol e

-~-

Ca ll

843 2524
ONE 3 p t . hrtch 2 row Powell plo nt
seller , $200 I 6 cy l. Ch ev
engrn e 4 sp
trons m rssion
Run s_good S~ . 24 7·2192,
HA V I=OR SALE
1500
Trmot h v hov 9'12 -7573

bo les

STARCRAFT FALL Sole
Mrnt·
mo tors . 20' ond 21
TraV£&gt; 1 --~HAMMERMILLS FOR: ce llulose IM ·
Tr orler s 18' .$" 53 799 25' T'
sulotion monulo ct urrng. 16" to
Bunkhouse S4 ,875 Fold ·do w n
48 ' ovodobl e. Thermco In ·
SI , 700 up . We sell ser vrce ond
dustrr, s, 1·412-922·28 53
quohty Op9n Sundays Cornp
Con ley Storcro ft Sole s, Rt. 61 , FIREWOlsQ,_$25 per prckup lo ad .
N ol Pt Pleasant
9492129
-~

~~::;~~ NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?
3 AND .ol RM . lu rmshed ond un·
-~-~-

~

Phone

992

----MOBIL E Home

~----

COUNTRY
Pork
Raute 33, nbrlh ol Pomeroy
Lorge !o t5 Co ll99'2·7479

-

--~-

TWO TRAILERS for rent I furnrshed 2 bedroom . 1 partly furn , 3
bedroom , 7.,.2 ·3 122

MASON TWO bedr6om opt Par·
tially f urn . Fully car peted No
pets Depotlt requ ired $200
per mo . Alt er 5 r nr : (I ll (3rJ4 )

882;3,:!5:::
6:...
. -•'

L et Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; condition your
water' wtth Co-ap water
softener, Model UC-SV I.

Now Only ,

279 ,95

Let us te st your wa1er Free

Pomeroy Landmark
Jack W Carsey , Mgr _

Phone 992·218 1

Superior
Slum Eztrlttion

~

Carpet &amp;UphOlstery
Phone Mike Young
At

992·2206 or 992-7630

773-5955
L•ktn ,

w. V• .

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

MAIN
POMEROY. 0 .

1974 SKYLINE 14 x 56 3 bed room ,
to lolelectr rc $7500 992 2019.

very

T...WO BEDROOM Trail er 8 x 45
Furntshed $ 1495. 992 ·3324

15

rooms, 3112 baths, hot water
heat. utll1ty, basement,
garage, wa lk to shop JU ST

1975 14,;70 rnobrle home o il elec ·
h 1c, cen1 ro l atr cond tlronrng , II
tnleres ted col i 147 -282! after
b 30
p m
ev e nrnQ s
or
weekend s

3 yr. old

RANCH TYPE ~ 1 acre, 2
ba ths, 3 bedrooms, formal
dinmg, equipped kl t ch,en ,
storms &amp; .nsulat1on Ve r y
private. $37,300.00

~'&amp;fu::::. -=:::_..:-...:_:::0
-

---~-

:
--

IF VOU ho ve a ser vrce to olfer
w on T to buv or sell somelhrng,
or
oe lookrng l or wo r k
whatever ,
yo u'll get r esuhs
fo ster wrth a Sentrnel Won t Ad
Colt 992 2156.

bldg . $17,200.00.
POMEROY - 4 LOTS l'n story f ram e, g o od
HOMESITES lor sale 1 ocr~ ond
up Mtddleport , near Ru t land .

~011~92 7481

.
· ~,~NEW 3 bedroom house , 2 bath s,
oil e lec., I acre, Mrddleport .
cl ose \o Ru tland Phone 992 748!

APPROX. 3 ACRES - Age
2 y r s LoVely equipped
k1 tchen. 3 bedrooms (walkm closets) , 2 baths. formal
d ming room . fam i ly room ,
loads of other . fe atu r es .

SMAll lorm for so le, 10% down
owner lrnon(ed . MOnroe Coun ty; W Vo Phone (304 ) 772·
3fu2 o' (304 ) 772 322,c7.:...._~

JUS T $78,000 00.
WANT TO SELL?--" Take
tl easy - let us do the work .
Ou..t: long list of satisfied
customers speaks for 1tself.

COUNTRY forrnlond wrth sed ud·
ed woods wa ter and good access rn Monroe County , VY Va
$ 1,000 down . co li (30 4) 772102 or (304 l.c7c;
12:..·::
32;:2c:.
7:__ _

WHEN YOU THINK OF
REALTY, lhlnk of us.
HENRY E . CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK , KATHY &amp; LEONA

Commercrol pr ope rty opprox . 17
acres, le\lel lond located a1
Tupper s Plo rns on Oh1o Route
7 Phone {614 ) b67·6304 .

Realtor
Associates

VA-FHA , 30 yr . frnancing, al so
r elrnoncmg Ireland Mor tgage
77 E Stole Athens, phone (614 )
592·305 1

992·6009

~

HOBSTETTER

Want $12,500
HAS YOUR PROPERTY
INCREASED IN VALUE?
WE
HAVE
PEOPLE
WANTING TO BUY. LIST
IT WITH US .

-~~-

ANV SEWING machrne cleaned
oi led &amp; adtu sted , SS 98 FREE
pickup and delivery Belpre
Ohio . 1-423 -5497
FE BR UARY IS the month to tlo\le
your uphol~terr~g done before
the spnng rush. V•srl us lor
good selectron ol fobrrcs
Reasonable p11 ces and good
w o rkmanship
Bob ' s
Upho ls tery , Morn
Street
Racrne In bock of Sew -N -Sew
Outlet Store .
WINTER GET to you r house? let us
make necessa ry reporrs . AI
Tromm Con struction 742-2328

$35 PER HUNDRED stu ff rn g
en11elopes already stamped
and add ressed Free supphes ,
send sel l addressed stomped
en ... el ope to
'
Roe l, 5005 Old Mrdlothian Prke ,
Suit e 64 , Richmond VA 23224.

CAT FEMALE Longhoired . dog
Lobrodor type. Both
very
fr1endly
Lovea b le . N rce ·
loo king pets . 949·2607 .
CAT-. FEMALE Beoultful long hotr .
Orange and gold Very lovoble .
N•ce hou5e pet or ou tdoors
949-2607
FEMALE SHEPHERD Colli e m i ~&lt;cd
puppy . Young mole Ierner ,
Smo)l mole beag le . 742 2949

'

..,.'

.,.

LAVENDER
CONSTRUCTION
Phone 992-3993
1-18-1 mo.

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

11 :30 p .m . -Wahama B;;~sketball .

SaiJe 30 pet. to 50 pet.
on heat tng cos I
E•perlence and
fully insured
Free Est .
Call : 667 -6479 or 9t2 -381S
1-16- lm o .

BORN LOSER

YEASS

..'.'
..'' .

ITONPHYI

-

--

-.

JUDGE TtJI&lt;NE.D EM LOOSE ···

'"

lAWYERS

Addition

In c luding

Subdlvl•lon. $41,000 .
Nice sma II home loca ted In

Darw in, Ohio· on St Rl . 33,
$19.900 .
Have
Business,
and
Investment property i n
Pomeroy .

NEW

LISTING ,

1974

Spring
Manner,
total
e l ec t ric
12x60
Mobile
· Home, e)(cellent cond ition,
located on 150')(165' level
lot in Arbaugh addition,
Tuppers
Pla i ns. Ohio .
Kl1chen
stove ,
r E1 frlgerator.
&amp; wood ·
burning
stove
(new)
included in sale. Going to

•ell lost at $11,000.00.
Check with us befort you
buy .
Cheryl Lemley

Assoclote
Home Phone 742·2003
Hilton W..tfe, Sr.
Assoclote
Home Phonef49-2589

J I

WPG "fALK 0'
c ""AI&lt;GtN' YOU FoR
RLitt.j,IN' -rnEIP.. suns
WIJH l MAT POI,Nl···,

BLEEDING

HEARTS .. , f¥\RE'NTS ...
WHAT COULD Hf DO?

.

::
•

, .,.

.
'

1•

1'

::

-~:

.,

GASOUNE ALLEY
I

''
~·

"

'

I trq him
aqain in the
morninq'

Mr. Show's number
doesn't

we're not blown
to Kinqdom Come
b4 then!

answer?,,~, '"""

BATHROO M S AND
Ki t c h er 1~
re modeled cerom•c t rle plum ·
brng , carpen try . an d general
morntenonce . 13 years e x·
perience . 992 3685":----:----:-PULLINS EXCAVATING . Comp lete
Service Phone 992-2478 .

~

,F~R~AN::;K:,:&amp;:,:E::,:R:;.N:_:fE:;:.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _1;-?~------~:--------,

•••

Swinger, 6 cyL, std. trans. , radio, good t ires, real
economy.

I

A SAIZ. E'PNrE • • •
S 'I'"HINI( ,..,.,.

-

'I ·~

''

I

~

1

• IVE GIVEN A LOT
OF "THOUGHT TO
I&lt;QN, •.

MADE ME
"THE HAPPII"BT MAN IN "THE
WORLD. AND I'LL CO EVERY·
THIN&amp; ICAN 1D JIMKcYOU
AND LITTLE TIMMY HAPPY 1
100!

29 Historian

25 Versifier

26 Lay away
27 Afghanis·
tan city
28 Rap

31 Cook
3J Dance
38 Pig poke
39 Kimono

session

sash

Bando

WUl -

AND LIITLE TIMMY ARE
1/0INcr TON IGHT?' GOe&lt;H 1
I MI&amp;Bl"HEM
11012.1&lt;1BLY!

rr-1--+-l

~
II

.'

-' . ''
'''

.... ,
'

_,''

IF I WERE LOST IN THE
YJi)ODS, YOU KNOW WHAT
f=WOULD DO? I'D OPEN
THIS CAN OF TENNIS BALLS

1./0U KNOW WHY I'D
OPEN THIS CAN OF
TENNIS BALLS?

BECAUSE, WHEN I WAS
.PACKING MI.( 6EAR, I
THOUGHT IT WAS A
TALL CAN OF SOUP!

2/'~ · A

would nev er lead aw~.ty from

+A Q8 4

saw thai 1f East ht•ld the

•

WEST

EAST

•

10 9 R 7

•

'
•

8
10 9 4:1

+810592
+ K .I 3

K64 32

'

t

A KQ

• 92

Vulnerable : Ea st-West
Dealer· North
West
Pass

customs

Pass

41 Detonation
42 Beverage

Norlh

I N'l'
4NT
Pass

Pas.&lt;&gt;
Pass

LONGFELLOW

South's

W MS

TSVVBN

NMB

0 U X K L

ACROST THAT
W088LY Ot.:
FOOTLOG WIF
THIS LOAD

0' GROCERIES

the c ards

+ 10

four..club

bld was

many players to ask for aces
in response to a notrump

openlng. North's
trump respon se

four·no-

s howe d
three aces ( four diamo nds
would show none, four
hearts one and four s pade s

two) . South could count II
H M S XE
MS
MSX WL sure tricks and really should
XOBPW
MBN
have bid six notrump, but
WMS South wanted to play the
XVNXJL
LSSL
MGL
MBDS
hand.
TGULW
UBO"GZ.YGZ
MPOOXUQ
A club lead would have
Yesterday's Cryptoquole: THE MIND IS AN ICEBERG- IT beaten South since both
FLOATS WITH ONLY ONE..SEVENTII OF ITS BULK ABOVE black kings were held by
East but West opened a
WATER,- FREUD

.

a ll

have gon e down .

Gerber, which is used by

s~de .

he could lead up to that acequeen of clubs
Had North played six notrump h e could make lt if he

were , but probably would

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It' l-By-0-sw_a_I_d_J_ac-o.,.b_y_ _ _ ,
AX YD L 8 AAX R
and Alan Sontag
Is

king of spades he cou ld he
sure of his contrac t .
Then South rose with
dummy's a~c of !ipadcs,
play e d tw o rounds of
trumps ; c&amp;.~ shcd the diamonds and threw East tn
with tha t spade king ,
East had the c h oice o f two
kinds of death. He c ould g1vc
South u ruff and discard or

kn ew where

East
1a 5S

Openmg lead

sion altnck one . Uc ..:a ll II! to
the c onclusion tha t West
a king aga inst a s lum and

SOU Til

NEVER MAKE IT

'"

Queen sets up end play

• J 5
' K Q.J6 54

LAW5Y ME!! I'LL
. ,,
"
l l

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

+ 10 7 6 5

country
Of man's
habits and

BARNEY

OKAY. TROOP5...MORE
ABOUT SURVIVAL IN
JHE WILDERNESS ...

BRIDGE
. • AQ
' A7 32
J 7,6

Copr. 1978 Krng Feature1 Sy ndrcate, Inc.

'' ''

1/

For re l ea~ Thursday , l'.. c hruar y 9, 1978

NORTII

I WONDEl&lt;. WHAT BIRDIE

'
_,
'
,, '

~·

"Your Ch.evy ljlealer" ·' ,.;..'
Pomeroy
1
Open Evenings Until&amp; P. M.

23 Baseball's

Paul Gaudino Family Fitness Show

7 :30 - Wrestling
8 · 30 - Modern Sports
9 30 - Consultation
10 · 0Q.....700 Club.

Answer

CRYPTOQUOTES

"'

'J

99'2-2126

Yesterday' s

One letter simply st ands f or :mothe r In this sample A is
use d for the three L'!5. X f o r the two O's , et c Single l etters,
apostroph es, the length and formalton o f the words are all
hints. Ea&lt;'h day thc .ro de !ellen; are differe n t.

Hurry In For AGOod Deal

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

'I P .M .-

5 Ladder·

heart: lr.
37 Dispense

WINNIE

YOUIZ PIZOPOSAL 1

,,

~

'\ \

OH , ~IRDIE ,
'

i
'

•·.

•

Dark red with matchlng 1V inyl roof, V.8, automatic,
P.S .• P. B .• air. sooners, radio. Sharp.

Travel top. 258 cu . ln. 6 cyl. engine, auto. trans ., like
new tires, radio, 2 whee! drive.

1 Swiss city
2Starry
3 Buck novel
4 Cut down

• t!~e~y
.f
~

Lil 1'&amp;.! DPI~IC.!

1974 Camaro Cpe.....•!3295
1974 Scout li.. ..•..•• .-'2895

pASSING

C"&amp;J.S fol2' "

CARS

1975 Dodge Dart ••••• }2395

~Gj~ ~

Forever

Dull Momenl" 3, S:31r-FBI 3; Big Va lley 3.
Movie Channel 4 •
5 &amp; 7 P .M. - Seven Pe rcent Sol ut ion iPG l
9 a. 11 P.M.- Tho Sentinel ( R l
Cable Channel 5 -

26 Sweet-

r

10 ;

Synthetic Brain" 10; 1·4G-News 13; 2 3D-News 3.
3:QO-Mavle "Six of a Kind" 3; 4 : 15-M ov le '' N ever a

32 Eccentnc
34 Hockey
star
35 Traitor

d:!;;W\~-~

B.C."

12 ()()...--Janakl 33; 12 · 0s-Movle "Kan sas City Born .
ber " Bi 12 ·40-Lohman &amp; Bar kley 6 ; Ironside 13.
I .Oil-Midnlghf Special 3.4, 15; Movie " Man wlthlhe

DOWN

like .
6 Ukea
bad actor
1 Sioux
10 Itinerant
11 Rabbit fur
12 African
antelope
16 Elysium
22 Anagram
of dew

Years

Fernwood 19; Monty Python's Flying Circus 33 .

circle

NEIGLER 'S FOR burldmg hou ses
bathroo ms, oil lo.mds of repair .
wor k and who ! hove you . G uy
Ne1gler . Rocrne Ohto Col i
949 -2508 ev enrng s.

over dark red 1!nish, 3Q5 V -8, automatic . P .S .• P . B .• air
conditioned, sp;;~re never used, showroom cl ean . Save .

word

9 Beef on
th~ hoof
13 Ragout
14 Unscrupulous
15 Work
unit
·16 Tree
17WaUaba
18 Thai
language
19 24 hours
20 - rose
21 Demote
23 Dismiss
:USnuggery
25Chum
26 Lean.W
28 Compact
:W Afternoon
reception
31 Sewing

:

~1

43 Division

measure

'·

1

ACROSS
I Tub rub ·
5 Japanese
8 TeMis star

.

HOWERY
AND MARTIN
co vo ting , sep tr c sy 5tem ·; ,
dozer , backhoe dump truck ,
lrmesJone . gro11e l. bla c kt o~,
po11 tng Rl. 143, Phone 1 (61 4)

lO ·oo...Qu lncy 3,4, 15; News 20. 10· 3tr-Mon ly Python's
Flying Clrcu• 20. Harpsic hord Maker 33 .
11 :OQ.....News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; Dl,ck Cavell 20 ; Llllas,
'
Yoga &amp; You 33 .
11 :3D-J ohnny Carson 3,4.15; Ba retta 6,13 ; Mash 8• .

by THOMAS JOSEPH

. _.

,

Bean " 6, 13; Movie " The President ' s Mistress"
8,10, ·soundstage 20 ; Action The O c tober 1970
Crisis 33

Jumbles SPITE VAGU E PEWTER BlAZER
Answer A swinging bar around which you 'll ...
athletic guys and gets - A TRAPUE

I'

Will do root rng, con struction ,
plumbrng and heolir\g. No tab
too Iorge or too small . Phone
742 -2348

8 :3tr-CPO Shorkey 3,4,15; Wa ll Street Week 20.33 ;
9 :0Q.....Roc kford Flies 3,4, 15, Movie "F r eebie &amp; lhe

~

!

4 dr .. 11.000 m tles by careful oWner . Beautiful white

I

8, 10. Washington Week !n Review 20; So The People
May Know 33

Mo&lt;vle " On e M i llion

''

frll dtrl , to ~oil , ltm es tone and
gra.,.el Col Bob or Roger Jef
fers day phone 992-7089 , night
phone 992 3525 or 992 5232

)"

13; Pop Goes the Countr.v 15.
.
8 .0G-Spec lal Valentine with the Family Ci r cus 3, 15 .
Donny &amp; Marie 6,13 ; Odd t ouple 4; Wonder Woman

NEW- JUST OFF PRESSI JUMBLE BOOK 111t1 with 110 puutesls IVIIJ·
ab le tor $1 35 postpaid tram Jumflta, c/o this newspaper, P.O 8011: 34,
NorwooQ, N J . 076.ol8 Incl ude your name, aoe~reu, zip code and m.t\e
chec ks pavabte to NewapaperbOoka . '
·
.

'

~~~k~o~~oy~ ,ro~' h~r~m~~~:r~:~

"K 1 I I XXX:

(Answers 10mo"ow)
Yesterday 5

EXCAVATING. dozer loader arrd
0

Now anange the cirCled teners to
rann the surprise answer, as sugges1ed by the above cartoon

Printanswarhare :

SEWING MACHINE Repo rrs. , ser -~ t._. '
\/ ICE' , all makes 9'12 -2284 The- '-: '
Fabr ic
Sh o p , Pomeroy
_,
Authorized Singer ,Soles and
SerYice , We sharpen Sc~ ~~1

1977 Chev. lmpala •••..s5495

j
K

kHELTIB
NOBODY ·- tHERE

,

6 :0Q.....New• 3,4,8, 10. 13 , lS ; ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
Adams Chronl clel 33
6 :31r-NB C News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13 ; Caro l Burnett &amp;
Friends 6; C BS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20 .
7 : ~ross.W i ts 3,4; Liars Club 6; Muppet Show 8;
Capitol Beat 33; News 10, To Tell The Trulh 13 ;
Gilligan's Is IS : Alml!mac 20.
7:3o-Porter Wagoner J; Gong Show 4; M a t ch Game
PM 6: Pri ce Is Right 8 : Mac N e il · Lehrer Report
20,33; Fa mily Feud 10; $100,000 Name Tha t Tu ne

I KJ

l;;

~~r~~~~y!:~:e~e~~r;~~~:~·; ~~
penence . Phone 992 · 2 4 0~ .

Hogan' s H eroes 15.

I I I

El"'NOOD BOWERS REPAIR -- _; ~~ :
Sweepers , toasters, rr ons oil · ... .J
sma ll oppltonces lown mow er
ne~e t to State Hrghway Goroge
on Route 7 Phone (6 14) YB S
3825 ,
L (&gt;

~---

Young &amp;. the Rest less TO , Not F o r Women

8, Mister Rogero' Neighborhood 20,33; Emergency
One 13; My Three Sons 15 .
S: JQ--News 6 ; Elec. Co. 20,33; Ml1ry Tyler Moore 10 ,

'·
'

REMODELING . Plumbing, heotrrr g

Sunrl&amp;e

5 :00--He r eCom e The Brides 3, Star Trek 4; Gunsmoke

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Com
plcte Servtee . Phone 949 24 87
or 949 2000. Rocrne , Oh ro Crr tt
Bradford_
. _ _ _~
....::.:..:.:c.:;;..:-.

6:

You 20, Ascent ot Man 33 .
3 · 3D-AII In The . Fami ly 8,10 ; Crockett'• VIctory
Garclen 20.
4 Oil-Mister Cartoon 3. Edge ot Nlghl 13; My Three
Sons4 ; For Ri cher , F or Poorer 15 ; Merv Grltfln 6;
Gilligan' • Is . 8; Se•ame Sl 20,33 ; Gomer Pyle,
USMC 10.
~ · 3o-Little Rascals3 , 15 ; Gilligan ' s I s. 4i Brady Bunc h
8,10; Mary Tyler Moore 13.

••

Cellulosic (wood fiber)
Thermal Insulation

News

1 : 3D-Days of Our Uves J ,i , lS ; ; As The World Turns
8,10 ; 2.QO-One Life 10 Live 6, 13.
2 &lt;M&gt;- Doctors 34, 15; Guidi ng Light 8,10; 3 :co-Another
World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6, 13; Lilias Yoga &amp;

,.
""
,,.
"
. ' ..

~

8.

News

'

'

Syracuse, Ohio
Free Estimates

·~

4;

Only 15 .

.'

STOP IN IODA Y FOR
YOUR BEST BUYS

anc

Nice Double Wide 24x56 on
corner l ot in Arbaugh

5 &amp; 7 P .M . - Fun with Dick &amp; Jane ( PGI
9 &amp; 11 P .M .-Two Minute Warning IRI

b98 ~ 7331 .

P.M.
Clo se
Thursdays
Saturdays 11 noon.

&amp;liT TRV NOT TO
HURT THE !liCE
MAll'!! FEELINSS!

6. 13 ; l : ~Tomorrow

9 · 30 p .m . - Blue ~ldge Quartet
10· 00 p ni . - 700 Club

~

EXCAVATING . doter b~;t;;,~
ond drtcher. Cha rles R. Hot
freld . Bo ck Hoe Service
Rutland , O hio. Phone 742·2008.

PHONE 992·6333

$35,000

3 Bedroom

TURLEY 'S WRECKER Ser\IICe
Rocrne , Ohto . Day or nrght
949·2657

12.oo-Janaki 33; 12 : 4Q--Tom a
3,4; 1 :50-News 13.
Movie Channel 4 .

'''.

Office Hours ; 9 A.M. to ·•

Nice 3 Bedroom bungalow
wit h basement &amp; garage
S32,000, 2 acre of ground.
Tuppers Plains.
New 3 bedroom home with
garage
In
Crow's

frame home with bath,
basemen t , cf1y water,
natural gas F . A , fu'rnace,
porch and garage. Over 1
acre land with garden ,

MAGG tE 5 UPH OLSTERY Refrn1sh
reupholst &amp;r)l ,
rebutld•ng
Beaut rfu l se lec ltan ol mot e r ro l
ond vrnyls Free estrma te Tel
742 2852. Lo Co tr on
Salem
Center.

GeorgeS . Hobstetter Jr. ,
Broker
1071fl Sycamore 51.
POmeroy, Ohio

$21,1100.

land $65,000.

SALES AND SERVICE
11·9-ffc

UP YOUR ~O!IE. FOO·

FOOl t KNOW THEW
5MELL A TRIFLE ODD··

'

we•Rt

furniture and appliances.

BRICK 7 ro om s, 4
bedrooms, all c1ty utilit ies,
2 porches,
ba semen t ,
na t ura l gas F .A. furnace,
1n Middleport. $23,500

300 Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohto
Pomeroy 992·6282
or 9'12-6263

IMPORTEDl.,.llMM,NOOOU&amp;T ..,..----....,.NOW DON'T TURIJ

THAT EXPLAIN!! lT... PERt\AP!I THEY
W!R! A UTTLE TOO LON6 IN TRAN51T.

•

REALTY

$26,000
ON RT. 7 -

175ACRES - 8room ran ch
home with gas well
Equipped kitchen , gas
forced air furnace and
m inerals. Lots of pa sture

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

?

CLELAND

New brick
b usi n ess bui lding w i th
central a1r and heat. 2.900
sq. It of f loor space. 2 large
off1ces and large storage.
Leadi ng Creek water'. Only

Blown Insulation

(§NIFF)

3,4,6,8,10,13.15. Dick Cavell 20; Over Easy 33.
11 .3tr-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Sfaroky &amp; Hutch 6, 13;
Movie '~ 'Dillinger" 8 i ABC News .33 . Movie " G
1 Blues" 10.

Cable Channel Five 7 ·00 p .m . - Paul Gaudino Family Fitness Show
7: 30p.m . - Coach ' s Corner
8 . 30 p .m - Will There Be School Tomorrow?

"'

BRICK &amp; FRAME RANCH
Age J yrs 1 acre, J
bedrooms.
l 'h baths ,

hom e, bat h , natural gas
heat, city wate r and near a
store. Only $7,500 .
HANDY ~ In t ow n . near
stores, 3 bedroom s. 2 baths,
natural gas fu rnace, city
wafer Asking just $15,000.
ON RT. 124 - Sma ll vi llage
prop ert y , has 4 o r 5
bedrooms ,
n i ce
bath ,
natural
gas
fu rnace ,
basement and large lot

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

J&amp;L

SA.M.to4:30P.M.

1· 18· 1 mo.

-·

l2l1 ""'

CARTER

1&amp;-:-t:3-Ciil&lt;-&amp; ct '65 3,"1
lO :OQ--Ciass ot '65 3 .~. 1S; Bar etta 6, 13; Barnaby Jones
8. 10; Anna Karer~im1 33; News 20.
10 : 3~Lock , Stotk &amp; Barrel 20; lt :oo-News

CAPTAIN E;MV,
MA'AM·· ,fROM
Mcl&lt;!!E INDIJSTRIE!I!
I THOU6HT 'ltlU MlaHT
ENJOY TH!!IE IMPOitfo
ED &amp;ON&amp;0'-1!1~

Pomeroy

•

9: Jo-Carter Counfry 6,13

Radiator
Service
rr ... ,._..,....t
-.Mi•h&gt;r to ,..,.

··r~, Ona:tniiOfS
Not T~e lmibtor~

2·5-1 mo .

Syracuse, Ohio
Ph. 992-3993

TEAFORDm
VIRGIL B. SR. ~

''

Today

Semester ' ; 6 .4S....Mornlng Report 3.
6 :50-Good Morning, West Vlrglnlo 13; 6 : 5s-Chuck
While Reporh 10; New• 13; 7 :Oil-Today 3,4. 15;
Good Morning Amer lco 6,13; CBS New• 8:
Bullwlnkle 10
7 : JG-Schoolleo 10; 8 :QO-Capl . Kangaroo 8, 10; Ses.ame
Sl. 33.
9 · 01)-Merv Griffin 3; Phll Donahue 4,1 3,15; Edge of
Nlghl 6; Fam ily Affalr 8.
9 :3tr-Emergency One 6; Andy Grlff llh 8; Family
Affair 10.
lO :oo-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, lS; Tattletale• 8; Jo~er' • Wild
10; Nol For Womon Only 13.
10:3D-Hollywood Squares 34,15; Andy Griffith 6; Price
Is Right 8,10; Rick Foucheux 13
11 :Oil-Wheel ot Fortune 3,4, 1S; Happy Days 6. 13 ; Eloc.
Co. 20.
11 :3D-Knockoul ~ 15 , Family Feud 6 , 13; Partridge
Family 4; Love ot Life 8, 10; Sesame Sl. 20.33 ;
11 ·SS....CBS News8; Loving Free 10,
12 :01)-Newscenter 3; $20.000 Pyramid 13 ; New• 4,6, 10;
To Say The Lent 15; Gambit 8.
12 : 3D-Ryan' • Hope 6, 13; Bob Broun 4; Gong Show IS;
Search for Tomorrow 8, 10: Elec. Co. JJ.
1 · 00--For R icher, For Poorer 3; All My Children 6, 13;

8. 3tr-Fish 6,13; Originals 20; Oled Young 33.
9:QO-James at 16 . 3, 15; Barney M iller 6, 13 ; Hawaii
F l&lt;ve -0 8, 11) ; Advocates 20,33

••
,.

-So ve Fuel &amp; Money-

Roule 3 ,..,..,, 0.

FREE ESTIMATES

HARD TO BELIEVE -

-·.

an.

~

Cellulose Fiber
Blown Into Walls
and Attics

Young's
Carpeting

. '

LARRY LAVENDER

Helen L . T e'a ford
Gordon B. Teaford
Sue P. Murphy
Realtor Associ1tes

·r-------...,

RNR

NIU - THR.EE bedroom house w rth
go1oge
rn
Ru sT IC Htf )s
Syra cuse $27,000 992 5S41

SYRACUSE -

9:00 til 9:00 Mon.- Friday
9 :00fi16 : 00 Saturday
12 :00til6 :00 Sunday
2-2-ffc

HEAT&amp;FU~

Real Estate lor :sale

9n ··~2S,9,

MEIGS PLAZA
Middleport, Ohio
Open

··.

. J a c k W. Carsey, Mg r .
Phone 992 -2 J81

$16,000 00
CLOSE IN -

Located In The

!l'i\\\'1:.

tTDVIt
AHD
WT-

Pomeroy Landmark

"'c arpeted, garage ,
prt vate. S3L900 00,

ACE HARDWARE

-,
·fii

bl

GREAT BUY - 3 bedroom

1973 VW SUPER Beetle Runs good
$1200 or be st oller A lso 1969
Chevrole t . ,. Ton prckup , 6 cyl.
~d ~uns good ~~2· 2292

opt s.

Wood Stoves

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

216 E . Second Street

SAWMILL SLABS
$5.00 A BUNDLE

Chester, Ohio
10-30·C

d 'i71&gt;Q

REALTOR,

Bailey Run Road
Phone 992 -5965

fur n1 shed
5434

Box l4

cond1t1on, 3-4 bedrooms.
bafh, car peting , porches,
basement . S12 ,000 00

1970 MERCURY COMET 429 eng
C·6 auto. tronsm rsston 4 new
ltres .
New
brakes , $900
949 24 17.

r.aut@t#i@@menF:-.-

Jack's Septic
Tank Setvi~

kitchen, 3 bedroom, bath,
ca rport , s mall st orag e

POMEROY FOREST
PRODUCTS

1974 FORD LTD Country Squrre
5I01ton wagon _Good condrtron
Phone 949·2008

Phone 981-3806

OLDER BUT NICE - Lots
of remodelmg . equ1pped

FIREWOOD , SPLIT ond delrvered
$4 5 a cord or $35 o l r ut k load
843·2933 or
A ll hardwood
COIN S, CURRENCY . t o ke n~ o ld • 997 6295
pocket wa tches and cham s. ,
sd... er and gold We need 1964 NICE PI GS lor sole Co li alt er 5
949 2857
end o lder silver corn s Buy sell ,
o r trade ' Ce ll Roger Wamsley , 1969 7·doo • Po ntiac, $550 P a r ~
7 42 ']3.~
3 ;.:
1 ~-~
tabl e GE TV 7 ', to 10 A rr co n·
drlro ner wrlh heat pur'n p 7000 to
OlD FURNITURE , •ce bo;o;es , bras s
8000 BIU , $100 Gr ee rl reclrnmg
beds iron beds , etc , comp le te
chorr $10 Phone" 992 ·337 5 or
hou s. eholds Wnte M D Mtller .
742·2952
Rt . 4 Pomeroy , Oh1o or coli
992 7760
SELLING OUT duo to rll heo)th
Small gr ocery st ore ond ga s
NO ITEM TOO Lo rge or too small
stolr on wrt h stoc k ond e qurpW rll buy , I prec e or com plete
men1. Loca ted o l longsvd le on
househ ol d New used 01 onlr ·
Route 124 Ver v goo d buy . Coli
qu es. MarTin s Furn 1ture , 20 N .
Q92·58b8 or 742·9045
2nd St , Mrddlepor t Phon e
992 -6370
CH IP
WOOD ,
Po les
ma x
d rornet er 10" on larges t en d sa
per ton Bun dled slob S6 per
Ton Oehve red To Ohro Polle T
_s_o,_ ! t_.l Pomer oy 99_2·2689

Al l t N TION MAR E Owners
AQ HA stud se rvic e- ln troduc rng
10 Southern O hio Conoka. !&gt;Or
•ell son at O toe, Breed fo r col
or con for ma t •on o nd drsposr
tr Oll. Phone 69B·8'14 1 evemng ~
or wrrTe l or bree~rng contract
Be lle hho Q vor ter Hors.es
40215 SH b92 Po m er..o y Ohro

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

L1 ck W Cn &lt;....I'Y Mqr.

CA6H pard l or all make s and
mode ls o f m ob ile homes
Phon e orca code 614-423 9531

Residential
and
commerdat .
Call
tor
estimaf&amp;, 24 hour service.
Anyday, af.ytrme.

We

For :Sale

.

WAllPAPER.
PAINT &amp; SUPPLIES

6: 3G-Columbus

THURSDAY . FEBRUARY t, 1t71
8 DO-Chips 3, lS; Welcome Ba~k . Kollei" 6, 13; Collf9e
Baskelball ., Waltons 8, 10;' Once Upon A Cla.. lc

,.

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

FRIDA f. FEBIIUARY 10,1971
'5 :AS....Farm Report 13 ; 5 :5(}-.-PTL Club 13 ; l :SS....
Sunrlu Semester 10.
6 : QO-PT~ Club 15; 6 :2S....Socletles In Translt1on 10;

TELEVISION
VIEWING

.::,.

'' ·,

WIL L CAR E tor lhe elder l y 111 our
ho,ne Phone 992. 73 14

ONI: Yl:A R !'lid malfl Peek A Poo
$35 Co) l 992 3844

Sdli' Ptt&lt; i",

GOOD

The Almanac
Uolted Press lnternalloual
Today is Thursday, Feb. 9,
llle 40th day of 1978 willl 325 tD
follow.
The moon Is hetween iis
new phase and fU"st quarter.
The morning s tars are

pup~

ECONO MY TRACT OR w1th a ll ot lochrnent s lrke r1E':w oslo. u'g
!.2250 Pho ~e (6 14 ) 098·3290

4P.M.
Fnd~:ry

UlUI: l.ck
rno old (304 ) 882 3328

IU GI~ Tl:RW

,,.,...------.

-=

Business .Services

PUBliC AUC liON Sole frt 7 pm .
Loh ol new and used rnerc:hon
dr~;oe at Ohro f.t!Ye' Auc: tton,
Mergs Plaza M rdd lepor l , OH
Spccr al ouc tron Sol 1 pm
lf!J&lt;kloods ol new f urn1 ture
O!ld rnr~(

• Senice&amp; Offered

pups

COU NT Y Humane Socmtp&gt;
OlllntO I carclmq and odop1ro n
sc tvrcc (h ee onunob ) 9'n 76 80
or evenrng s and . Sunday~
99'1 5427
Mpd
c o
M
(!Ow lor d, ~~
4 llo.o' 326
Pom eror Ohoo 457b9 M ('m ber
~ h·ps. and donotrons PO Bo ~
b8? Pomero y, Ohu? 4570'1

THl:
RA CIN E Volunt eer
Frro
Depo rtmen t wi ll sponsor a gun
shoo r every Satu r da y ot 6 prn at
rh eu bu tld1119 in Boshon Foe
I01y choke gun'!&gt; on ly.

Phone 992-2156

Noon on &amp;!turday

STAR l&lt; ertnel Boordmg
ryns
Indoor
ond ou tdQOI
G•oornrng oil breeds Clean
~orutofy
lo ~IIITIO'!&gt;
Che !&gt;l me
Pho11e (614 ) 367 0'}92

M~ IGS

Notice&amp;

rellponslble fur mure than one incCK-

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

~I SI NG

8LUU I( t(
mo old ( 318

IJ1C.:K TRACY

~-.-

AuC'tion

t'ets for Salr•

~

ret'l mserti on.

•

ln MI!Diory

~~GIS il~ W

9--The Daily Sentin!l. Middleport·Porneroy. 0 ., Thursday, ~·eb. 9, 1978

"

•

Pomer-Oy, Ohio,

E t at .,
Oef endiinh .

"'

South had to make a decl·

A Texas reader wants to
know when you should open

a short su it a gainst a notrump contract
The an::;wer is that you d o
so when

it appears that a

lead of any one o f your long
suits is ma dvisable. Howev~
er , if your lead turns out
wrong, we will riot be h eld
respon si ble .

t NEW S P AN~ R

I•: N'rt:": tUII, I!I SE

AS.':-iN. t

(Do you have a question for
/h e experts ? Wrife " Ask th e
Experts , · care of thiS newspa·
per. lndtvtdua f questions wtll
be ans wered If accompanied
by stamped, self-addressed
envelopes The most mterest
in g quest1ons will be use~J m
this column and will recetve
cop•es of JACOBY MOD!'RN.I

�1~The Daily Sentinel. Middleport· Pomeroy. 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 9, 197~

ELBERFELD$~ .IN

Racine youth trip winner
An Ohio youth, who raised .
hot peppers, eggplants and
tomatoes and made a ,cash
profit, has been named the
•
d
winner of an expense-pal
tnp to the 27th 4·H Com·
modity Mark eting Sym·
posium in Chicago, Feb. 26March I .
Paul Cross, 18, of Route 2,
Racine, will be among nearly
30 4-H'ers attending the four·
day educational event in the
Windy City. Winners were
selected by the Cooperative
Extension Service.
The annual event brings
together 4-H'ers who have
co mpleted out standing
marketing
commodity
projects during the last year.
Young people from 39 states
are eligible for trips to the
symposium in the 4-H
commodity
mark eting
awards program sponsored
by the Chicago · Board of
Trade.
Cross, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Andrew Cross , is a
sophomore at Ohio State
University and plans a career

as a famter . He is a 10--year 4H'er.

The Meigs County youth

ra ised hot peppers and tivlties that explain the use of
eggplants as a specialty crop futu res ma r kets a s a
project, but soon branched
out into such conventional management tool and aid
them in ada piing market
produce as tomatoes and infonnatlon ana k wled 0 1
sweet co m. All of his produce
no
ge
was sold for a cash profit.
Last year, he raised 1.4
acres of tomatoes and ex·
1.'
panded his array of produce
by adding two acres of
ca ntaloupes , which were SC
started in his greenhouse.
This year Cross raised six·
tenths of an acre of Silver m"
Queen white sweet corn and
planted it May I so that it
would be ready to harvest
Some 200 representatives of
about Aug. I. He sold It to legion posts and their
local retailers and sa id he auxiliaries are expected to
learned how to deal with visit Pomeroy March 19 when
people to get a good price for Drew Webster Post 39,
com.
American Legion, and its
· The 4-H Commodity auxiliary host the District 8
Marketin g Symposium is Spring Conference.
designed to help participants
The spring event was
understand the basic prin· discussed Tuesday night at a
ciples
of
commodity post meeting presided over
marketing, and .how these by Clarence Schmucker,
prin~iples apply to com ~
commander. A committee
moditiessold m cash markets composed of Charles Hayes,
and traded in futures Charles Swatzel and Paul
markets of major commodity Casci was appointed to meet
eK:changes.
Sunday with a committee
Delegates will participate from the auxiliary to plan for
in seminars, tours and ac- the spring conference and
post's annual birthday party
slated March 7. The birthday
party is open to post mem·
bers, the auxiliary and their
families.
Homer Smith reviewed last
year's financial report an~
room . No estimate was !Jlade reviewed e&lt;penses for the
oo the loss. Racine, Syracuse American Legion baseball
and Bashan fire · units team . This year, the
Pomeroy and Middleport
responded.
posts
will again Combine
Sheriff James J. Proffitt
to provide the ex·
efforts
urges area residents to make
penses
for
the team. It is
it harder on the criminal by
hoped
there
will be many
marking their property with
team
participants.
their social security numbers
At the request of the
or other system that will
Pomeroy
Chamber
of
make the property more
easily identifiable in case of Commerce, Allen Downie
was named to represent the
theft .
post
on a committee whlch
If the items can be traced
wili
push
for a new high way
through serial numbers or
to
the
Ravenswood
bridge
other marking system, the
now
under
construction.
criminal will have a difficult
Plans were made for
time in disposing or the stoien
a chartered bus for ·
securing
property. If the criminal
a
trip
to Pittsburgh this
cannot get rid of l!'e property,
then crime will•not pay,, · s ummer for members to
c
As Operation Crime Alert attend a doubleheader.
Membership
was
reported
suggests "don t let crime
pay. Make it hard on the at 336 and refreshments were
served by Charles Hayes.
criminal.''

Con£erence

h e dule d

Pomeroy

Deputies called
for two B&amp;E's
Meigs CoUnty Sheriff's
Deputies are investigating
vandalism and theft that
occurred at the parking lot of
Southern High School on
Tuesday evening.
According to the report
filed by Sheriff's Deputy
Mike Zirkle , John Mark
Sayre, Rt. 2, Racine , a
Tornado basketball player,
had parked his auto at the
parking lot Tuesday evening
while attending an out-of·
toW!l basketball game.
When h.e rei urned he
"' discovered someone had
broken 'out both side window
gla!ises. Missing was an eight
track tape player.
Deputies are also in·
vestlgating a breaking and
entering at a weekend cot·
tage owned by Pomeroy
Attorney James O'Brien. The
cottage is located on Owl
Hollow Rd.
In other · activity , fire
desuoyed a horne owned by
Ann Fleming located at Bald
Knobs in Lebanon Twp .
Accotdin~ to reports, the
house was occupied by the
Mitchell Barber faoilly. The
fire apparently started in the
chimney area in the living

1

ANNUAL BEE
The annual Meigs .County
spelling bee has been set for
March 14 at the Southern
l!igh School . cafeteria,
Racine . Bees will be held in
the various schools of. the
county to select participants
of the county event.

Income

pension plan. by putting aside as much as . 15% of
your ,annual earned income. up to $1,500 Q.er year.
.

.

You don 't pay ta•es until you

Veteraos Memorial Hospital
· ADMITTED - Jo Ann
Collins, . Syracuse; Zelma
Grady, Racine; Clarence
RobinSon, Tuppers Plains;
Mary McCallister, Mid·
dleport ; Sampson Hall,
Syracuse.
DISCHARGED - .Dorothy
Miller, Joan Sellers, Veletta
Rowe, Robert Knotts, Anna
Vaughan, Willie Blaine, John
Compton.

Pleasant Valley Hospital
DISCHARGED - Russell
Carson. Middleport; William
Leport Jr., Point Pleasant;
Carl Lambert , Patriot;
Edward Gouart, Hartford;
Thomas Metz, Letart ; Mrs.
Orval Ballinger, Ashton;
Merrill Clark, Vinton; Mrs.
Robert Johnson, Gallipolis;
Mrs. James Jones, Point
Pleasant; Mrs . Alexander
May, Pomeroy.
BI~THS - A daughter to
Mr. and Mrs. ~obert
Flemming, Gallipolis.

CLEARANCE SALE PRICES
QUANTITIES LIMITED TO STOCK ON HAND ..:. 'Au_ SALES FINAL

DRESSES &amp; PANTSUITS

Sizes small thru extra large.

Save 40 Per Cent on women's dr'ess
d
pantsUits.
es an

40% OFF

1f2 PRICE

$1.49 RED HEART

WOMEN'S

'1.19 SKEIN

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, February Hi, 19'18

MEN'S WINTER

BOYS' SPORT SHIRTS

CAPS AND HATS
lined. good selection :

Sizes 8 to 16, solids and patterns, long
sleeves.

SAVE 50%

'4.95 TO '5.95 SHIRTS.................... 12.00
~.95 TO $7.95 SHIRTS ................... 13.00

CHILDREN'S
COATS &amp; SNOWSUITS·

.

Coat styles and slipovers, sizes 8 through 20.

'8.95 AND '9.95 SWEATERS ...... ~3.50
'11.95 SWEATERS.....................$4.50

LlnLE BOYS'

SLEEPWEAR SALE

WINTER CLOTHING

Sweaters, jeans, sweatshirts and
shirts. .
·
.

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

Y2 PRICE

REDUCED 50%

MEN'S DRESS SHIRTs

MEN'S SHIRT SALE.

S, M, L. ;XL sizh Thi~ sale includes all of
ou~

men s long sleeve sport shirts, knit
sh1rts, velour shirts and western. ·

Y2 PRICE

MEN'S WINTER JACKETS .

MEN'S SPORT COATS
Regular Prices$39.95 to $69.95

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

Sizes 38 to 46, regulars and longs.

·Y2 PRICE

SAVE 35%

MEN'S POLYESTER

MEN'S CORDUROY SLACKS

DOUBLEKNIT DRESS SLACKS

Sizes 29 to 42 waist, flares and straight legs,

Si~es 29 to 42 waist, solid colors. regular
pnce 511.95 to $17.95.

REDUCED Y2

REDUCED .Vz.

GIRLS'

GIRLS' DRESS SLACKS

KNIT TOPS &amp; BLOUSES

Sizes 4-6x and 7-14. Regulars and slims.

Many nice styles rem;~ining.

50% OFF
POLYES~EI! _DOUBLE

%PRICE
GIRLS'

KNIT

COORDINATE SPORTSWEAR

YARD GOODS

Many nice styles to choose from!

Solid colors and patterns.

%PRICE

'1.88 YARD

GIRLS' SWEATER SALE

W~_RK SHIRTS·

Heavy weight, sizes S. M, L and XL 2
pockets, long tails.
' ·
511.95 SHIRTS............................ $8.37

REMAINING STOCK IS

REDUCED 50%.
NOW
IN
PROGRESS

949-2211
You have until February 15, 1978 to claim
this deduction for 1977.
.

RACI.NE
HOME NATIONAL

BANK
RACINE

OHIO

SHOES FASHION BOOTS
Group 15.00
30% OfF
I Group $7.99
REG. PRICE
1 Group
Women' s &amp; Children's

$

$

SHOES

OFF

2 PAIRS FOR 1500

MEN'S DINGO
&amp; ACME BOOTS

$

$

-30%

'3.110 PAIR OR

GROUP

Sl9'!.R

$13.95 SHIRTS ............................. $9.77

WOMEN'S SWEATERS

BQYS'· WINTER JACKETS

Cardigans, p·ullovers, .. vests, crew necks,
and coat sweaters. Sizes 34 thru 48.

Sizes 8 to 20.

MEN'S WEYENIII!RG

DRESS SHOES

'5"

PllltR

Pomeroy, Ohio

SAVE%
BLOUSE· CLEARANCE

WINTER COATS

:f;~s~n's sizes 28 thru 46 solid, print or Pl&lt;!id

All wi~ter coats included, junior, missy and
half s1zes.
•

Y2 PRICE
JUNIOR

· GROUP

MARGUERITE'S
SHOES
Oh

$12.95 SHI_RTS. ...................... : ••••. $9.07

REDUCED 50%

LADIES

A Home Bank
For
Meigs County
People

BOYS' SWEATERS .

'

REDUCED 50% ·

SAVE 112

COME IN FOR INFORMATION
OR CAll

enforcement of air pollution
regulations.
Waiver of
would allow
"o's electric
utilities to tur
heir
pollution cootrol equi!JDOnt
and . save between 2 and 7
percent of their dwindling
coal stockpiles - now
depleted to the 30-50 day
level.
Rhodes said Ohio was in a
''countdown to castrophe''
that could lead to the closing
of industries and schools
because of power shortages,
rollin£ blackouts or the

Solid colors, variegated and sparkle colors.

(Continued from Pill• 1l
Racine.
Injured in the accident was
Emma Zimmerman, 81,
Rutland .
There
was
moderate damage.
Zimmer.man was cited to
Meigs CountY Court for
failure to yield the right of
way.
. Snow covered icy roadways
were blamed for three other ·
traffic accidents.
The first occurred on SR
124 at 9:24 a. m. when a
vehicle
by Danny
Barrett, driven
18, Langsville,
slid ·

ref~re,

UDlted Preoolnten~~~UolUII

COORDINATED SPORTSWEAR

WINTUK KNITTING YARN

Woman •••

BEnY OHLINGER'S

MEN'S SWEATERS

SALE II

Rhodes ·declares energy·emergency
Gov. James A. Rhodes has
declared
an
energy
emergency In Ohio due to lbe
nationwide coal strike, while
striking miners in eastern
Ohio have rejected a
tentative agreement aimed at
settling the record-long
walkout that threatens to
plunge Ohio industry into
darkness.
In issuing the.~ executive
order Thursday, Rhodes
asked the U. S. En
Vironmental Pr~tection
Agency to temporarily wa1ve

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

Neck sizes 14'12 to 17'12, solid colors and
patterns, long sleeves, famous brands.

(Continued from Pill• 1)
pa'id on the machines.
Meanwhile, '\he House
flighways and Highway
Safety Committee reported
outabilldelayingbyoneyear
the implementation of
1 computerized
registrations. motor vehicle
The measure was sent to on the icy pavement hitting a
the Finance Committee after vehicle operated by Danny
a ,1.5 million appropriation Wells, 29, Wilkesville.
was inserted for mailing
No one was injured or cited
notices to motor vehicle . in an accident at 12:55 p. m.
owners about the staggered on Dry Ridge Rd. three tenths
registration system, targeted of a mile south of SR 233.
for completion .In 1980.
· The patrol said vehicles
Rep. M.yrl H. Shoemaker, driven by MichaelS. Miller,
[).Bourneville, chairman of 19, ,Oak Hill, and Josepn D.
.tile FiPance Committe~. sent Carter, 55, Patriot, collided
letters to 156 school oo the icy roadway.
superintendents asking for
A final accident was on
their help in a legislative Graham School Rd., two
study of school closings.
tenths of a mile north of SR
The superintendents to 141 where a pickup truck
whom Shoemaker wrote are driven by Joyce K. Knotts, 31,
in districts identified by the Gallipolis, slid on the icy
state
Department
pf pavement hitting a fuel oil
Education as those which iruck operated by Lonnie•W.
may have to close in 1978 Burger, 59, Bidwell. There
of
financial was moderate damage to the
because
difficulties.
pickup truck.

r--------------------

You may be able to build your own Individual
Retirement Account (IRA) . if you are not pres·
ently a· participant 1n any company or government

market functions to ongoing
+H projects.
Al so,
they' ll
vie w
audiovisual presentations on
marketing topics, meet
commodity traders and
brokers, and tour the pit
trading floor. There, they' ll
watch traders buy and sell
cash and futures . Four-H'ers
will also meet with officials of
the Chicago Board of Trade
.and hear from floor traders
an4 marketing representatives.
Along
with
their
chaperones, they will tour
points of interest in Chic1go
and enjoy special en ·
tertairunent during their stay
in the Windy City.
The 4-H Commodity
Marketing Symposium is
arranged and announced by
Nati6nal 4·H Council.

.

POMEROY
- ..

Y2 OFF
.

JEWELRY

SWEATERS. lOPS &amp; CXJORDINATES
-3 RACKS OF SMART WINTER CLOTHES
'-JUNIOR SIZES

1 :

PRI

,.

Earrings, chains. pins, necklaces,':
sea rf rings'. . ' "'
Limited quantitv.'

OPEN SATURDAY 9:30 A.M;

IN

PRICE
..

'fii''''~,,~~~,,,,.~,,,,~,.~,.""""''·=·:,s·"'"'~=·==="':.."~"""'':*''::;'~,..,i

wNews • • •zn Brzefst

dislntegregation of the
national electric interconnect
system .
"We have to take drastic
action ," said Rhodes, who for
the third time urged
President Carter to intervene
in the coal strik~ against the
Bituminous Co al Operators
Association.
Rhodes said regional EPA
admin istrator Ge orge
Alexander in Chicago had
agreed with the temporary
waiver

of

air

pollutio n

enforcement a nd would
recommend to the U.S. EPA

e

Near ly 1,000 industrial customers of the CoiWllbUS &amp;
Soutbern Ohio Electric Co.
got telephone calls or visits
Wednesday and Thursday
from utility officials who are
preparing for a 50 percent
mandatory power cutback to
lose wha t he's a lreudy won lr large-use clients in about 16
he goes back in 1lo days.
utility will require lbe
negotiate:). But I ca n't :;:ee
cur1ailment when its coal
what he got. "
Nunley said the union offi· •1ockpile reaches a :Jiklay
,
cials were displeased with level.
Compan y official s said
"the whole thing," including
clauses govern ing wages , U&gt;el r contingency plan also
(Continued on Pll• 12) ·
benefits a nd wild('fl t st r i kin~ .

52 UMW locals in the union's
in Washington that Rhodes' days.
request be granted.
Heckman sa id the Ohio huge 16,000rnember District
Rhodes took similar action Edison Co. and the Cincinnati 6 voted to turn down the
last year when the state's Gas and Elec tr ic Co . tentative agreement reached
natural gas distribution · stockpiles had dwindled to 35 Monday .
District executive board
industry was unable to meet and 41 days respectively, and
demand and many industries •the Coiwnbus and South em member Don Nunley said the
switched to low-g rade coal Ohio Electric Co. was down to local presidents would tele·
46 days' co al supply.
l(raph union president Arnold
for their fuel.
Heckman
said
requests
for
Miller to urge that he return
C. Luther Heckman, chair·
man of the Public Utilities voluntarily conservatioo had 111 the bargaining table.
He added that plans wete
CommiSSion of Ohio, said.at a not been heeded a nd that "it
Thur sday afternoon riews looks likely there may be also in the making for a
conference where Rhodes an: mandatory cuts" in electric caravan of miners from Dis·
trict 6 and neighboring West
nounced his latest action , that supply.
Al so
Thursd ay,
the Virginia District t7 to travel
the Monogahcla Power Co.
coal stockpile was down to 27 presidents and offi cers of the to Washington to personall y

•

at y

pressure Miller and the
union 's Bargaining Council,
which has n01 yet acled on the
pact. Into rejeeting it,
"It 's the worst t'Ontract
1'\·e seen in ~ years as a
miner,' ' Nun ley said. " Miller
went on TV ru1d said he would

·n,.

en tine

Wholesale

.

pnces
increased

Power compan:
starts plan

ByUnltedPressinternattonal
·
BEIRUT, LEBANON-HEAVILY ARMED SYRIAN and
Lebanese forces faced each other across truce lines today and
negotiators raced to prevent a new outbreak of the worst
Beirut fighllng since Lebanon's civil war.
WASHINGTON (UPI) The Syrians, part of the Arab League force that ended the
.Wholesale
prices increased
civil war 15 months ago, clashed for the third straight day
0.6
percent
in
January, about
Thursday with Lebanese army regulars and later with bands
the
same
rate
as the previos
of Lebanese rlglitist militiamen. Machine-gun, mortar, ·rocket
four
months,
the Labor
and sheU exchanges rocked Beirut.
Department reported today .
It was the second mooth in
COLUMBUS- A HALF-DOZEN P~AYE~·IN.SCHOOL
which
the department has
demonstrators are once again waiting in tbe Statehouse
reported
the new inflation
rotunda for the Legislature to reconvene and act on a bill
for
bulk purchasers.
figures
requiring a period of meditation in the classroom.
The
new
method
places most
The group, restricled to demonstrate during normal
emphasis
on
goods
that are
business hours in a confined area of the rotunda, reappeared
sold
in
so-called
final
user
Thursday shortly after they received official stale permission .
form.
They brought with them tbeir casket declaring that the "Voice
Although the 0.6 percent
of America" is dead.
rate at a seasonally adjusted
CLEVELAND - THE NUCLEAR REGULATORY rate was in line with
Commission has ordered a hali to major construction at the $2 increases back to September
revised
billing Perry Nuclear Power Plant in North Perry - citing under
measuye.ments
, th e
substantial deficiencies involving construction and inspecliop
department
said
that
procedures.
,
stronger
inflationary
A recent NRC inspection of the plant- in Lake County
revealed "substantial deficiencies" in four safety·related pressureS surfaced in the
areas - training methods, the installation of piping and pr-ice- of materials not yet m·
structural steel, the application of protection coatings and final form .
The department said prices
concrete placement.
for
all
commodities
of
their
fmished
regardless
COLUMBUS - NEWSPAPER EDITORS AND pnblishers
attending the 45th Ohio Newspaper Association meeting were state rose 0.9 percent . This is
told Thursday to keep with the "new values" held by most of the highest gain for total
their readers or toile their circulation to television and special commodities in nine· months.
Unless these pressures are
·
.
.
' Interest publications.
absorbed
along
the
The "new values" described by Robert G. Marbut,
THE FIRST BROADWAY musical to be presented since Meigs High School was
they
will
production
line,
president of Harte-Hanks Communications, New York, were
founded
is under rehearsal by the music depat\l'nent. Students are putting in many hours
thought of as "radical" only 15 years ago. Now, he said, tbe show up In higher wholesale
for •the musical which is Meredith Wilson's "Music Man". PictW"ed are the two
preparing
· prices on finished goods in the
values are shared by 60 percent of the population.
leads of the musical, Eric Scites, w~o wi.ll play Harold Hill, The Music Man, and Lynelta
. spring. Wholesale ptices are
. Whittington ,as "Marian,.the librarian". Despite the recent bad weather, the musical is
arTAWA - CANADA HAS EXPELLED 13 members of a eventually passed on to
scheduled for 7:30p.m. on Mar!'h 10 and 11 in the high school auditorium.
Soviet spy ring it say5 attempted to infiltrate the Royal consumers.
canadian Mounted Police in the largest espionage operation
uncovered in canada in 33 years.
The government said Thursday tbe Soviets, using such
classic spy techniques as passwords and information drops in
parks, paid ~0,500 to a member of the Mounties for what they
thought was top-secret information. .
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - A Hollywood area , police said . emergency command pot.i in homes.
A debris bas in dam
furious wind and rain storm The Hollywood Freeway the City Hall basement for
' up in the Northeast, at least lpng lashed Southern California northbound lanes were closed the first time sinee it was set collapsed in Big Tujunga
THE WEATHE~HASlet
Canyon, pouring a wall of
enough to let residents start getting dug out from the effects of Thursday night and early by a stream of water running up several years ago.
A tornado lashed . El water down into the
its worst blizzard in a century, but the second mudslide in a today, causing widespread 20 mp~, the Highway Patrol
residential area below. A City
said, and cars were floating Segundo and there were early
week closed southbound lanes of Southern california's main damage and some deaths.
north&lt;Jtluth artery as a result of pounding rains.
Streets, · roads
and in water six ' feet deep ill - unconfirmed - police Fire D e partment
Nwnerous streets and highways were closed by slides and freeways were closed by knee residential area Hollywood reports Of a flash floods in sapokesman said "the extent
mountain and canyon areas of damage is not yet known,
deep mud and water up to six streets.
(Conllnued on ))lie 12)
feet deep rnshil)g down from
Police activated the washing away cars and but we're trying to evacuate
the area - there are so many
the hills throughout the
things happening throughout
the city, but that's U&gt;e worst
problem we have now."
Police said there were at
least two known deaths in the
city proper, including a man
drowned by a wall of water
meets agam toaay .to decide Miller wore a pistol in West that struck his car in West
By DKEW VON BERGt;N
If
Bundy
were
convicted
of
By PETER GlWNS
whether to accept a Virginia, saying threats had Los Angeles.
WASHINGTON (UP!) SALT. LAKE CITY· (UP!) all the killings in which he is a
settlement
of the record coal been made against his life .
The
United
Mirie
Workers
.Elsewhere a teen.ager was
-Saying he may be the most suspect, he would be the most union is in turmoil as its st•ike.
Union
officials
in
Illinois
prolific
mass
murderer
in
swept
to his death in u flood·
prolific mass murderer in
UMW president Arnold' called
special
bargaining
council
for
Miller's
American
history;
surpassing
swoJlen
stream.
Arnerlan history, the FBI has
resignation.
·
Roads
throughout the area
Juan
Corona,
who
.
k
illed
26
placed escaped kidnapper
And presidents of 52 dhio - including the Pacific Coast
Theodore Robert Bundy - migrant farm workers . in
locals are against t~e Highway and Interstate 5, the
suspected in 36 sex siayings California.
tentative pact signed with the main north-south traffic
But
so
far,
police
have
- on its list of 10 Most
soft coal industry Monday. artery on the West Coast amassed
only
enough
Wanted Fugitives.
The 39-member bargaining were closed by mud and rock
to
convict
him
of
evidence
Bundy, 31, escaped from a
which must approve
council,
kidnapping.
They
officially
slides , so me of which
jail in Glenwood Springs,
the
agreement
before
it
is
him
with
just
have
charged
smashed
into autos.
Colo., last New Year's Eve
sent
to
the
miners
for
a
By
early
this morning the
one
murder,
but
authorities
while awalllng trial for tbe
referendum,
scheduled
a
storm
had
dumped 3.09
i~
four
states
are
murder of Caryn Campbell, a
ATLANTA (UP! ) - The confirmed at the U.S. meeting today at the UMW inches of rain on central Los
investigating
his
possible
Michigan nurse who was
Russian flu virus has seeded Military Academy in West
raped and killed near Aspen, connection with a string of itself in major areas of the Point, N.Y. , and the Air headquarters in Washington. Angeles, bringing the rainfall
In Charleston, W.Va . , for the season to 19.5 inches killings and disappearances
Colo., in 1975.
nation, raising tbe possibility Force Academy in Colorado. Thursday, as the strike was
involving
attractive
. well over twice the normal 8.5
all
The Tacoma, Wash., native
of a second wave of influe11za At the U.S. Naval Academy in its 65th day, Miller told a
yqung
women
with
long,
by this time of the year.
had been extradited to
in the United States . this at Ann~polis, Md .. a flu~ike newspaper he has turned
brown
hair
who
looked
much
At the height of the storm,
Colorado from U.tah, where
illness
wiih
clinical
winter. ·
threats
O\'llr
to
the
FBI,
death
the
local office of the Weather
·
alike.
he was serving 1-to-15 years
The National Center for symptoms resembling ~ose but refused to spesulate on Service reported it was sus·
Bundy
is
one
of
three
new
in prison for kidnapping a
of the A-USSR virus has
faces placed on the 10 most Di~ase Control issued a list struck, but specimens have the source of the tliteats .
pendtrlg reports because of
teen-age girl.
of
nine
localities
Thursday
·" I've been receiving very
''weather ,related line
Jack N. Egnor, · special wanted list. The others are where the A-USSR-1977 flu not been clinically identified
serious
personal
threats
on
Warren,
32,
a
Gary
Ronald
trOuble."
agent·in-eharge of the FBI
strain has bi.en detecied. The yet.
my lire," he said. "I've
Scattered power blackouts
bureau in Utah, called a news San Pedro, c'alif.; man who list included U.S. military
The increasing nwnber of r-eceived information that
escaped
from
a
Florida
jail
hit
the area , including one
conferepce Thursday to
academies, military bases, Ru5sian flu cases coincides someone is going til Chicago
tbat
struck major .buildings
announce that Bundy, a where he was serving a term public
schools
and with epidemics caused·by the to hire a professional to kill
and hotels in downtown Los
former University of U!Eh for bank robbery, and universities.
A-Texas and A-Victoria flu
law student, made the \op 10 William. David· Smith, 35, . It was the third strain of A· strains in at least 37 states. me. I can handle most things, Angeles the city Department
because he is a suspect in the sought for the mutilation· type influenza to hit this The latter two strains - most but if someone hires a of Water and Power blamed
slaylngs of thr~ozen young murder of his exwife's country since early January, of the illness being caused by professional, they're going to oo the rain and a wet cat that
get you.''
husband. '
got into a power vault and
. women.
an event ·termed highly the A·Texas variety - have
Miller also was involved in was electrocuted, shorting
Bundy was sent to prison
"He was added to the list
by
'medical claimed an estimated 1,100 a melee with the president of
Carol unusual
because he escaped while for , kidnapping
lives siPce the epidemic District 17 - the uMw's out a 34,50t).volt line and
a11thorities.
trapping several hotel guests
awaiting ulal for murder and ·DaRonch in November 1974
Since the first case of began early in January.
largest with about 34,000 in o!l(side elevators for about
because he is a suspect in 36 from Fashipn Place Mall in Russian flu was identified the
The Russian flu virus is
similar-type sexual slayings Murray, Ulllh. She escaped third week of January at a said to cause a mild illness, members .:... when he visited 90 minutes. •
Ei Segundo police reported
which began in california in and identified Bundy as the high school in Cheyenne, marked by the usual nu district headquarters in
Charleston
Wedinesday
night.
who
posed
as
a
man
a
tornado
touched down on El
1969 and extended throughout
Wyo., the virus has spread symptoms of chills, muscles
Miller
and
District
17
presi·
policeman,
lured
her
to
his
Segundo
Boulevard
at Main
the Pacific Northwest and
rapidly In virtually every acbes, .headache and cough, dent Cecil Roberts nearly
car
and
tried
to
handcuff
her
street
and
swirled
a
patb of
· Into Utah and Colorado,"
direction- to the Southwest, and lasting up to three days. · came to blows when Miller
and
slug
her
with
a
tire
iron.
moderate
damage
for
about a
Egnor said.
North Cenral, Northeast, The virus, as exPected, has confronted Roberts about
That
same
taU,
five
other
knocking
down
utility
mile,
"!Iundy
should
be
Middle Atlantic and mid· attacked young people under
and
hurling
uprooted
poles
considered armed, dangerous women either ,disappeared or South areas .
age 23-25 .almost exclusively.
( Conllnued on Pll• 12)
were fo\Dld dead In Utah.
trees into cars.
~t~Jd an escape risk."
Russian
flu
epidemics
were
i\11
••

Furious storm causes deaths

Murderer· makes
FBI wanted list

UMW in turmoil

Russian flu has
hit major areas

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 28. No. 210

Ohi o Power Compan y's
l'OHI stockpileS hUVC dwindled

progressively lesser mnuunts
o£ C()Ul on huml lQ t;eiJOrUtC

to a 51kluy supply as u result electricity.
of the United Mine Workers
Heller said , thai if the
Strike, the compttr1y tod~y ::;tockpile or coa l should
advised the Public Ut iii lies depreciate to u 4\klay supply .
Commission of Ohio. The fm1.hcr mcusures will hnve to
compa ny hu ~ institut e d betaken in compliunce with u
several mcnsures designed to "Capa cit y ttnd Energy
slow further deteriorution of E m c r g e n c y
Co n t r ul
its cool supply .
ProJ.(rarn" upprovud by the
Ohio Power has curtuilcd

PUCO on January 18.

its own use of electric energy
If that supply should drop
in its offi ces a nd othe r to 40 duy ~, the fullow lng steps
buildin gs; it has hal!t"l would be taken:
"economy " sa les of electric
( I ) -. Oil, providing it is
energy to nei ghborin g uvailable , will be substituted
utilities not affiliutetl with the for coa l at those plunts
Ameri c an El ecld t; Puw er · capable of buminK oil;
System, of which Ohio Power
t 2) - "Short term" sales to
is a part, and i~ has discon· neighbOring ·uti)itles will be
tinued ." economlc disputcll"

di ~continucd ;

(:l ) No mnergenc y power
will be suld to nei'ghiJorlng
utiliti es
unl ess
su ch
officer of Ohio Power, ex- ass istance
would
be

of generation.

.
C. A. Heller, executive v ice
president and chief operating

plained that coonomy sales
ar e tho se
transacti ons
generally made when AE P
has the power to spare, and

that economi c dispatch
procedures normally cull for
the greater use of the more
efficient g e ne ratin~ unit s.
With the discontinuation "of
the economi c dis pa.t ch .

necessa r y to ullow the pur·
chasing compuny to avoid
lntcrruptin~ power supply to
its re~ular customers ;
(4) -

Power to lndulltrial

cu stom e r s

unde r

"In·

lcrruplible" contracts wlli be
curta iled ;

15I ~ 1'hc cmnpany will .
appeal t o all customerft,

procedure, power is produ ced
from all available units to

reta il and whol c~alc , to limit
their use- of electricity to

g~in better distribution of the
coal on hand .
"This is a rirst step," Mr .
Heller said, and will improve our ability to supply the
needs of our nearly 600,000
customers. However, we are
urging all of our custc;mcrs to
curtail usage of electricity to
help get us through the
current coal strike without
more serious repercussions. ''
The company had u 105-&lt;.luy
stockpile of coal when the
UMW s(rike began last
December 6. Continuation of

essential needs;

11

the strike will result In

R acme
'• · mall
·
ex·tradited

(6) -· Th~ cump~:~ny wi11
implement. uround-thc.clock
voltage redUctions of 2.5 per

cent :
(7 I - Ohio Power wiii
advise al1 custom ers or
mandatory reductions to be
implemented if t'Oai ll\ock·
pil es fall to a 30-&lt;.lay supply;
and

(8) -

Ohio Power will

(Continued on

~

12)

EXTENDED FORECAST '
Sunday
through
Tue•day, fair Sunday, a
chance of snow Monday

and snow flurrtes Tuesday.
High• will be between Z5
and 35 Sunday und Monday
and In the 30. TueRday.
Low• mostly will be In the
teens.

Kelly Hayman, Racin e,
was arrested by the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department
on a felony warrant from the
State of West Virginia
charging Hayman with
aiding and abetting In the
taking of merchandise , a
felony . On February 8, Fred
W. Crow, fll , Meigs County
Prosecuting AUorhey , took
Hayman before the court,
based on an affidavit signed
by Gary Wolfe.
At the hearing, he waived
extradition. An order was
entered requiring the Sheriff
of Meigs County to deliver
Hayman to the West Virignla
law enforcement officials.
On February 8, William
Sharp, Route I, Ree~sville,
was tried for D.W.l. before
Judge Robert E. Buck, Meigs
County Court. After a day and
a half trial, the jury began
deliberations
at
ap·
proximately 2 . p.m. Wed·
nesday afternoon.
In approximately one hour
and 45 minutes the jury
returned with a verdict of
is
guilty.
Sentencing
scheduled for Feb. 18.
,The defendant had tested
.10 on the lntoxilizer machine,
whfch rendered the legai..
presumption.
At a previous tri_al, the jury
could not reach a decision in
the matter. Jury members
were Troy Zwilling, foreman,
William H. King, Kathy
Hood, Larry Edwards, Guy
Harper, Arthur Eblin. Harold
Teaford and Betty Donovan .

))Ill

~~.

Journal entries
fiJed in court .
Entries have been filed in
the Meigs County Clerk's
Office providing for the
dissolution of the marriages
of Jess VIrgil Louden and
Cynthia Lee Louden, both of
Bidwell, and Jean Rhodes,
Cheshire, and Jerry W.
Rhodes, Gallipolis.
Also filed was an entry
'setting Feb. 17 at 9 a.m. as
the trial of the Pomeroy
National Bank, et al. against
Fred B. Goeglein, Jr., et al.
An action dismissed was
ROnald Shepard, dba •Shepard
Construction against Cecil
R&lt;&gt;sellerty.
An entry finding George W.
Brown guilty of breaking and
entering has been flied in the
Meigs County Clerk's Office.
Bond was set at U,OGO.
Sentencing was deferred
pending on investlgatlon.

This week'.s wtnnla&amp; Ohio
Lottery numbers:
Gold number-3.
White number-50.
Blue number- 064 .
E•tra Casb-7541148.
Lucky Ruck Two
Three·dl&amp;lt number045.

Slx·dlglt
038506.

number

-

' ' ' ' ''' '' ' ' W'' '''''''''''''''''' '' 'N''''':::'''':::

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