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10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. Wednesday Feb 15 1978

Methodist missionary's schedule
given for churches in two states
MASON - '!'he Rev

~·rank

Anderson , recently rctunJ&lt;'d
f1 om Za1re, will be spei:iklllg

-u~.
/{!JP.es
~u

lntc;
shic;n.

m a number

or ch uf(hes and

1n sp1te ol grea t dlff~eullles
lie 1s a United Methodist
miSSionary and wtll be
spe akm~ accordmg to th1s
S&lt; hedule
Sunday Feb 19 - 9 40
am . The Heights Umted
Method ist Church of Pomt
Pleasant. 1045 am, the
Tnn1ty Un1ted MethodJSI
C.'h urch of Po111t Pleasant
2 30 p m •. a rally at the St
Paul s Un1ted MethodiSt
(.'!lurch , 7 30 p m , a rally at
the New Haven Untted
Methodist Church
Monday . Feb :'lJ - 8 30
a m , a t.hstrlL1 mmtsters

appreciation for general
work and effort Ut Jaycee

proJects was John R HuMel.

January arrests
total 19, report
Nmeteen arrests

tmgtnn,

pm

7 30

Charge rally

1n

Unton

the Umon

LllUI Ch

1uesday , Feb 21 - 6 15
p m , KiwaniS Club of Poml
Pleasant at th~. K1n Folks
Hcstaurant , 7 30 p m,
Heights Umted Met hodiSt
Church, he w1ll have a shde
program
Wednesday, Feb 22 Noon the Good Shepherd
Un1ted MethodiSt Chu rch
qu1Itmg group 7 p m , St
P.1u l's
Chur~h

Umtcd Methodist
He wlll present a

slide pro~r.Jm
Everyone IS IIWJted to
dltcnd the meet1ugs, conce f nmg the recent conflict 111
Za are

Red. Navy

Smce 1972, the Anderson s

Black &amp; Brown

COORDINATING
BAGS

CHAPMAN
SHOES
Next to Elbertelds
'"Pomeroy
992-281 s

FRANK ANDERSON
M1mstr1es for three months
Mrs Anderson, along With
uther miSSIOnary waves and

children, left Sandora pnor to
Ute Katangese mvas1oo and

worked at l.uburnbashl for
two and one-half mon ths
before commg to the Slates
Born 1n I &lt;&gt;S Angeles, Calif ,
Anderson spent his early hfe
m England He rece1ved a
bachelor of sc1ence degree m
soc iology fr om Corne ll
1,Jmvers1ty a bachelor of
d1v1mty degree from D r ew
Univennly and a master of
&lt;Jrts deKree m education from
the Umverstty of Rochester
Before entermg missionary
set v1ce he was pastor of
Umted Method 1st chu rches 111

have been ass1gned to the the Central New York Co n·
nuss10n station at Sandora ference
where Mr Anderson is a
He IS a member of the
professor at the Institute for Western New Yo rk Con·
the Development of lndus tr) fcrence He was mamster of
and Agnculture tlDIAS ) and C'h nstlan outreach at the
teaches co urses m math
Umted Methodist Church m
sc1ence and related subJects Kenmore, N Y from 1966 to
Mrs Andel son teaches 1971 From 1962 to 1964 he also
English as a foreign langm1ge
served m Za1re as a professor
and operates the n11sswn at the Congo Polytechmc
1ad10
Institute
Dunng the Za 1re l'OnflJct ,
Ande rso n rcma med at the
llliSSIOn statiOn and was uut of
GRUESER RATES
cont.1ct wJth Iu s fam1ly and
the Boa rd of Global
LEADERS CLUB
Waller M Grueser, held
representative of the Midland
Mut ual Life Ins uran ce
Company, quahf1ed for the
Company's Leaders Club It
was announced by James B
Mcintosh, PreSident of the
Columbus Oh1o-based hrm
Mcintosh sa1d the Leaders
Club ts compoSed of the
com pan) 's top 68 sales

SINGER

SEWinG
mACHinE
IAI
OFF

were on charges of con-

tributing to the delinquency
of a minor and fo ur others
were on a dtsorde~ly manner
charge
There were two charges
each for drJVmg while mtoxJcated and reck less
operation
There was one arrest each
on the followmg charges left
of center, no operator 's
li cense, assured clear
distance, pcrmltt mg an
unlicensed person to operate
a motor vehicle, and res1strng
arrest
Charges were dropped 1n
two cases The department
also mvest1gated 17 motor
vehicle accidents dunng the
month

parents of a daughter, Lon
Ann , age fiVe

(Contmued from page I)

Sycamore Streets m Racme

1s associated with the Ed·
ward P Ttce Agency m
Columbus

Racine. • •

for new members who have

shown effort and mterest In
Jaycee work went to Ken
Searles and John Kauff
The group discussed
securmg Jls own meeting

quarters and established a
phone crew whiCh will June·
twn by phone m gettmg
Jaycees out to help w1th

Hospital News
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Adm11t ed
Helen
Sauvage, Syracuse, Tammy
Blake Middleport, V1ctor
Counts, Syracuse, Clarence
Murray, Middleport , Betty
Manley, Middleport, Grady
W1lhams , Harrisonville ,
Dorothy Norrts , Racme ,
Sandra Patterson, Racme ,
Vtctorla W1se, Pomeroy ,
J ames Roush , Hartford ,
Dana Glassburn , Bidwell ,

Judy Gmther, long Bollom ,
MarJorie G1bbs New Haven,
Ora R1ce, M1ddleport, Lmda
Bragg, Vmton
DIScharged - Celesta
Bush, General McCune, Paul
Marr, Cheryl Smith, Jamce
Crit es, W1lham Morns, Carol
Humphrey
E..SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad answered a ca ll to
Laurel St at 2 25 a m
Wedn esday for Webster
Hodge, a mediCal pat~ent,
who " as taken to Veterans
Memonal Hospital

IN HOSPITAL

Vetermanan John Moore IS
a patient at Lake Reg1onal
Hosp1tal, Lacoma, N H ,
room number 136

CLU B TO MEET
The Me1gs County Better
Livestock Beef 4·H Club w1ll
meet on Thursday evemng, at
7 30 p m at the County
ExtensiOn office All boys and
g ~rls m 4-H &lt;arrymg steer
projects '" 1978, plus any
other boys and g1rls m·
terested m takm g beef
breedmg projects, are mv1ted
to attend

LENTEN SERVICE SET
The v11la~e . Crow md1cated, or phone 949·2629
Tnmly
Church and the
would use the upstmrs for a
Pomeroy
Umted
MethodiSt
Clty·hall and downsta~rs to jle
CL~SSES'OFF
Church
w1ll
hold
combmed
used for vanous actiVJbes
Baton classes of Mrs Judy
Crow reported that the R1ggs held on Wednesdays at Lenten serv1ces at 7 30 thiS
clcanmg of the parkmg lot Royal Oak Park have been evemng at Tr101ty The public
cost $400 and thus far $140 has cancelled for the remamder IS mvtted
been co ll ected, and $60 of the month
pledged Cro w noted that they

'Ti..,::::=~::.~~~~:&lt;:::~:#;:~;:,~:~::::::::~:::~:::~:=:=;~::::;;,:~;;~~,,'l(:

Beat

1s due the Ben· Tom Corp
~
Crow Introduced the
• • •
foilo•mg
guests,
Pat
O'Bnen, Pomeroy attorney,
I
Judge Hobert E Buck and
Greg Dav1s
By Bob Hoeflich
Atlendmg were Cro w,
Em mogene
i1olste1n,
secretary , Cassell , B11l
Mayer, Dale Warner , Phil
The ~Mual rad1o-thoo for the benefit of the Meigs County
Kelt), Mr and Mrs VIrgil
Hearl
Flind has been set for Tuesday, Feb. 21, and the activity
Teaford, Pat O'Bnen, Roger
,
can use your talent
Dav1s Allen L Rtchards, Leo'
The day4ong broadcast to raiSe funds lor the heart chapter
Vaughan, Thereon Johnson,
wili be held at the EpiSCOJl8l Parish House in Pomeroy Those
Allan Richards, B11l QUickel,
who are willing to g~ve the1r talent to the activity should call
Judge Buck, Ted Reed, Joe
Mrs James Soulsby, 992-2377, or Mrs Margaret Newnan, 992Young , Boyd Ruth , John
3450 as far as poSSible before Sunday These calls are
Anderson, John Koebel, Jack
Carsey, Hank Cleland, necessary so that you can be scheduled for your appearance.
Now don't be backward - g~ve these two ladies a call nght
Beulah Jones and Katie away You can brmg your own accompamst if you 'd like
Crow

Of t h e Bend

MACHINES NOW
TliRU FEBRUARY 25th

~

THE FABRIC SHOP
Pomeroy, D.

I.

HAZEL CAPEHART
Hazel E Capehart, 81, New
Haven, d1ed Tuesday 1n
projects
Jaycees made plans to Pleasant Valley Hospital
make repa1rs lo the equlp- after a long Illness
Born Aug 'l/, 1896, Umon
ment at the Pomeroy
Communlty,
she was the
Elementary School The
playground equipment has daughter of the late Millard
Emma
Roush
become dtsplaced due to the and
Bumgarner
bad weather Plans also were
She was preceded m death
made lo complete the mini·
by
her husband Harry S
park m Pomeroy as soon as
Capehart
Aug 13, 1967 She
weather permats A vote of
thanks was g1ven Rtchard

The couple also a re the

response has been favorable

representahves
Grueser mamtams off1ces
at 300 R1ver Vte\11 Dr1ve and

Jr Th; s~rmgbnard award

BABY BORN
Mr and Mrs Robert W
Crow Syracuse, announce
SAVE ON HOURS
the b1rth of a son Robert
RUTLAND - Due to the
Wilham Crow II born Fr1day energy CriSIS the Leadmg
Feb 10, at O'Bieness Creek Conservancy D1str1ct
Hospital, Athens The mfanl off1ces wtll establi sh shorter
we1ghed e1ght pounds and hours, 10 30a m lo4 30pm,
three oun ces Maternal effectiVe today until the
grandpareJ]tS arc Mr and energy cns1s 1s over
M1s 'tofn '' He'rtdershot ,
Ga ban na , paternal g rand ·
parents, Mr and Mrs Robert
MEETING CANCELLED
H Crow, Syracuse, great
The Magn0ha Club meetmg
grandmothers Mrs Mane fo r Thursday evenmg has
Dorsey, Albany, and Mrs been ca ncelled
Josephme Crow, Pomeroy

CLOTHING NEEDED
A plea IS bemg made for
clothmg and household goods
for the Belly Wllhams family
who lost everythmg they
owned when hre destroyed
the1r Rt I , Long Bottom
home on Tuesday, Feb 7
Clothing SIZes needed are,
lad1es, blouses 42-44, and Size
40, 20 and one-hail slacks and
18 stacks, or 15 1o 16m stretch
slacks, boys clolhmg needed
are shirts large and medium
and 34 and 32 wa1SI In pants
The clothmg may be left at
the Raymond Smder home at
the comer of Third and

are short $200m paymg what

ON ALL SINGER

Second St.

wez e

made by the M1ddleporl
Pollee Department dunng
January, accordmg to the
monthly report of Pollee
Clue! J J Cremeans su~
nutted to council Monday
mght
Four of the total arrests

mcetmg at the First United

Methodist Church of Hun·

Runnel, Searles, Kauff
, get Jaycee certificates
Three
awards
were
presented when the Me1gs
County Jaycees met Monday
even1ng allhe Me1gs Inn w1Ih
M1ke Mullen pres1dmg
Rece1vmg a rertlflcate uf

qther lucatluns on the ad
\ ances the church has made

---------------------------1
! Area Deaths !~

Roseberry lor a desk model
Amencan flag wh1ch he
presented to the group The
flag was created from
stamless steel
'l'he group discussed also
the need tor new members
Anyone Interested m )olmng
the group which works
towards

comm umty

1m~

provemeniiS asked to contact
a Jaycee or attend the next
meeting to be held at 8 p m
on Feb 27 at the Me1gs Inn
Actlve members are to be
from 18 to 35 years of age
However, assocaate mem·
bers, over 36 a nd under 18,

are mv1ted also The Jaycee
rreed closed the meetmg

Omrch growth
noted in Papua

was a former employee vf the
SuperiOr Porcelam Co , New
Haven , and a member of the

New Haven Umted Methodist
Church
Surv1vors

mclude

one

daughter ,

Lethia Belle
Bumgarner, Letart, three
sons, LewiS F Capehart,
Garden Grove, Ca hf , Harry
A. Capehart, Columbus, and
Wayne L Capehart, New
Haven, one sister, Mary G
Hoffman, New Ha ven, II
grandchi ldren and 13 great·
grandchildren
Funeral serv1ces w11l be
held Thursday, I 30 p m m
th e New Haven Umted
Methodist Church w11h the
Rev J ohn Campbell of·
fJCiatmg Bunal wtll follow m
the Umon Cemetery

Fnends may call a t the
Fog leso ng Funeral Home
today from 3 to 4 30 p m and
'The Seventh-day Ad· from 7 to 9 p.m The body Will
ventlst Church IS the fo urth be taken to the church one
largest denommat10n m the hour prwr to serVICes
South Pac1h c nation of
RUSSELL DIXON
Papua, New Gumea," says
COOLVILlE - Russell L
Clara Mcintyre, supenn·
tendent of the Sabbath School Dtxon, 54, of Coolville, died
at th e Pomeroy S D A Tuesday at Roswell Park
Church "With nearly 70,000 Memonal Institute, Buffalo,
AdventiSt Sabbath School N Y , followmg an extended
members 1n 854locauons, the Illness
He was born at Coolville,
people speak about 700 dlf·
ferent tongu es
Pidgin the son of the late Vern and
Enghsh 1s the only un1fying Bertma Russell D1xpn A
SISter Abbott also preceded
factor ''
Mrs Mcintyre adds that h1m m death
Mr D1xon was a member of
the deveiopmg natwn IS
the
Wes leyan
Umted
heav1ly weighted towa rd
MethodiSt
Church
He
was a
young people, and the Ad·
building
contractor
for
a
ventlst Church operates 105
elementary and three h1gh number of years and served
schools ' Our schools ate the m the European Theatre w1th
only ones m the country that
rece1ve no fmanc~al help
from the Papua govern·
menl," she says
Durmg t he f1rst quarter of

1978 we are Sludymg the
culture and needs of people m
thiS remote part of the
world,' ' says Mrs Mcintyre
Papua, New Gumea, con·
sututes the eastern half of the
Island of New Gumea, and
w1lh 1\s populatiOn of 2 5
mtlhon the natton became
mdependent on September 16,
1975
At the end of next month,
members of the Pomeroy
church will JOin AdventiSts
around the world m donatmg
an offermg to furmsh mission

a1rcraft and youth centers for
the people of Papua, New
Gumea, as well as a new
library for Sonoma College,
the denomination ' s higher
education ' mstltuhon on
nearby New Br1tam Island
Th1s sprmg the college w11I
graduate Tl teachers, mne
clergymen , and 11 off1ce
workers

Services at the Pomeroy
church, on Mulberry Heights
Road, begm at 2 p m , and the
pubhc 1s mv1ted to all ser·
v1ces, which are on Saturday

the Armed Forces durtng WW :
II
Surviving are h1s w1fe,
Mane TumU D11on; two
sons, Ronald of Coolville,
Brooks of Columbus, two '
daughters, Mrs
Jerry ·
!Ginger) Sm1th of Coolville
and Laura Lee D11on at •
home, a stster, Mrs. Beryl :
Castel of Columbus and four
grandchildren
Funeral services Will be at ·
I p m Fnday at the White •
Funeral Home with the Rev
Robert Brooks officiating •
Bunal will be in Coolville
Cemetery Fnends may caU
at the funeral home after 1 ·
p m Thursday.
DOROTHY TIIOMA
Dorothy
V Stafford .'
Thoma, 61, Letart Falls, 0 , •
formerly of Mason, d1ed '
Tuesday m Pleasant Valley .
Hosp1tal
The owner of Dot's
Restaurant, Mason, she was ..
born Aug 2, 1916, Cleveland"•
0., the daughter of the tate
Harry and V1ola Pascal ·
Carroll
She was preceded m death
by her first husband Jack
Stafford Sr , m 1973
Survivors mclude her:
hu sband W1lham Thoma ,•
Letart Falls, 0 , two '
daughters, Cathleen A. '
Barnes, New Albany, 0, and
Linda C Carpenter, Mid·
dleport , four sons, Jack H.
Stafford Jr , San Jose, Calif., '
Benny L Stafford, New
Haven, Larry W Stafford,
Grove Port, 0 , and Joseph R ;
Stafford, San J ose, Callf , one
brother, Buddy Carroll,'
Santa Anna, Calif , one
SISter, Helen Lober, Lima, 0
Funeral services wili be
conducted Fr~day, I 30 p m
m the Foglesong Funeral
Home with the Rev Gary R'
Kmg off1c1atmg Bunal will
be m Miles Cemetery,
Rutland, 0
Fncnds may call at the
funeral home after 3 p m
Thursday

Hoffman fines 5 at Middleport
Ftve defenda nts were fmed
and SIK others forfeited bonds
m the court of Middleport
Mayor
Fred
Hoffman
Tuesday mght
Fmed were Donald Lovett,
54, Middleport, $50 and costs,

!allure to have vehicle under
control, Debra E Fife, 19,
Cheshire, $27, speedmg; J S
Kloes, 40, Middleport, $27,
speedmg, and Gibson Prmce,
2~.
Parkersburg, $350,
dr1vmg wile mtox1cated

disorderly manner , Donald
L1tlle, 41 , Middleport, $25 and
costs, assault and battery,
.Betty'"' Armentrout , 36,

Two actions 1~or d1vorce

Middleport, $1&gt; and costs,
d1sturbmg the peace, Elwood
Ph1ll1ps, 66, Middleport, $10
and costs, failure to y1eld the
r~ght of way, Michael R
M1ller, 22 , Middletown, $25
and costs, Illegal license
Forfe1tmg bonds were
Ernestine FIScher , 61 ,
Racme, $50, posted on a
disorderly manner charge,

-Browme Stewart, 32, Mid·
dleporl, $&gt;0, disorderly
manner charge, Darrell
Jenks, Mason, W Va , $25,

TWO SEEK DIVORCE

have been flied m Me1gs
County Common Pleas Court.
Sharon K . Stark, Pomeroy,
filed for d1vorce against
Edward A. Stark and
Elizabeth Mane Booth, RD,
Reedsville agamst Archie
Ray Booth, V1enna , W Va
MARRIAGE LICENSE
A mamage license was
1ssued to Del Lehmar Ogdm,
'rl, Wilkesville and Unda
Carol S1gman, 19, Mid·
dleport

News •• in Briefs
(Continued from page 1)
the beart of Jerusalem a lew blocks north of tbe old walled
c1ty, uprooted seats and shattered apartment windows for
hundreds of yards around

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
SALE! DOGWOOD PATTERN

KODACOLOR II FILM

C110-12
FOR COLOR PRINTS
12 EXPOSURES

Ll MIT 1 PLEASE
NELSON'S REG. '1.29

MR AND MRS CALVIN LANE, Route I, Middleport,
wnte
"We, too, had wooderful neighbors durmg the bad snow
storms. 1
"Jack and J'ohn Clark would come and shovel out our
driveway and take my husband to the doctor and grocery
store Tbey refused pay for 1t
"Cindy and Tina Smith brought the paper to our door when
the snow was almost up to their knees. As we both are seruor
citizens, we are thl!lldulfor what they all did for us."
The Lanes have learned that theseverewmter weather did
brbtgoutalot of goodqualit1es in a Jot of people so it wasn't aU
bad, was it'

By JOHN T. KADY
Unlted Press International
Rovmg Umled M1ne
Workers Umon p1ckets cut off
a source of supply for one of
the state's top electric
producers Wednesday and
the pickets are expected to be
out m force agam today ,
vowtng to "Slop the runrung
of scab coal" m Oh1o
Meanwhile, Gov James A
f\hodes today planned to
meet m Washmgton w1th
other governors to discuss the
nationWide coal stnk.e wttll
PreSident Carter who has
negotiators for both s1des at a
Wh1te House

• resolution Wednesda) urging

barga101ng

table
The Ohio House of
Representative" Ad(lpff'ti 1i

both Carter and Rhodes to
' brmg the full prest1ge and
full powers"nf the1r offices to
assure speedy and safe
debvery of mal w1thm Ohio
Also
Wednesday,
repre~entatlves

of

coal-

starved mtdwestern !&gt;tales

and federal energy officials
huddled m Cleveland to
discuss what steps can be
taken to deliver power to the
area
The rovmg pickets closed
two mmes m Lawrence
County Wednesday as the
UMW stepped up act1v1ty
auned at shuttmg mm-wuon
mmes
One of tht' mmp.::

r1r)~ ,-.l'l

··:···· '• .;..· :: ::: :: :: . ·=· . . . •

BATH TOWEL ENSEMBLE

~

~

··

By United Press lnlernational
1 CHICAGO - THE NATIONAL PTA, ESCALATING 1ts
two-year campaign agamst teleVISIOn v1olence, has 1ssued a
hstmg of the tO most VIolent, 10 worst and 10 best shows
"Violence is still a pervas1ve factor m TV programs,
according to PTA members," the 6.ikmlhon-member Parent
Teachers Assoc1ahon sa1d Wednesday " While most of the
VIewers agreed that the amount of gratu1tuous vwlence m the
regular series program had di!mmshed somewhat, the current
level 1s sllll unacceptable "
Of the lObes\, three have been canceled- "F1tzpatncks,"
"Rafferty" and "Mulligan's Stew." Of the tO worst and 10 most
violent, three have been cancelled- Redd Foxx Show, "Man
from Atlanhs" and "Bustmg Loose "
COLUMBUS - COMEDIAN BOB HOPE AND Dr Albert
B Sabm, ileveloper of the oral vaccme agamst poho, top the
hst of 18 Ohwans named as charter members of the Ohio
Seruor C1t1zen's Hall of Fame by Gov. James A. Rhodes
Wednesday The first enshrmement w1ll take place March I at
theOhw State F111rgrounds. Rhodes swd the new Hall of Fame
would recogmze the "leadership, 1!U1ovat10n, motivation and
contrtbutionsof older Ohioans for the benefit of mankmd "
WASIUNGTON -A SIUP BEARING 101,000 CASES of
Israel! oranges IS e•pected to dock m Phlladleph1a Fnday and
the Food and Drug Adrr\inistrahon says 11 IS easy for
conswners to see 1f the frUit has been sabotaged "1th mercury
FDA emphasized that 1\ knows of no mercury The FDA also
report there have been recorded cases of persons eatmg up to a
pound of 11 w1thout ill effect
COLUMBUS
STATE SEN
ANTHONY J
CEI.EBREZZE JR , !).Cleveland, today was to announce h1s
candidacy for the Democratic nommatlon for secretary of
Celebrezze, 35, scheduled news conferences

SPECIAL SALE PRICES

s3.99 BA'TH J(MEL............................................ 52.50
'2.99 MATCHING HAND TOWEL ...................... 12.00
'1.69 MATCHING WASH CLOTIL ...................... 11.25

Elberfelds In Pom

By ALLAN R BRUCE
Unlted Press International
Power producers gave millions of Amencans a blunt
warnmg Wednesday cut
back voluntm tly on the use of
elec tfl clly unt1l the coal
stnke IS over or we'll fm ce 1t
upon yo u
The nation's two biggest
users of b1twmnous coal The Tennessee Valley
Aulhonty and the American
Elecln c Power Co - both
warned customers that coal

HEIDELBERG, WEST GERMANY THREE
AMERICAN soldiers huddimg m their broken down tank
retr1ever to escape a freak cold wave have died of po1sonous
fumesm the latest tragedy marking U. S. wmter war games m
the Rhineland Earlier, a runaway automobile struck and
killed a U S serVIceman on a snowbound highway and an
American tank crushed a West German pollee off1cer to death
A U S Army spokesman sa1d Wednesday the three
untdentified Gls had sought refuge from subfreezing
temperatures during the mght m the1r disabled tank retnever
on a remote highway near the snow-blanketed town of
Rockenhausen
HOUSTON - A 21-YEAR.Qill OIL-FJELD WOI\KER
WHO UNDERWENT A HEART TRANSPLANT AS "a lastditch fmal resort" because of heart problems started by an
abcessed tooth was reported m critical but stable condition
today The operatiOn Wednesday ended an e1ght-year
moratonwn on such transplants by Dr Denton A Cooley
Cooley had stopped performmg heart transplants m 1969
because most patients' munumty systems reJected new
hearts.

COLUMBUS
Registration for all non·
passenger motor vehicles
except motor homes and non·
commercial veh1cles, w11l
begin March I and contmue
through May 31 at specially
designated deputy r&lt;gistrar
locatmns, Oh10 Bureilu of
Motor Veh1cles Registrar
Dean L Dollison sa1d today
DolliSOn said that H B 166
makes two major changes
which Will go mto effect for
the 1978 registration per1od
They are :
-Creates a category of
non-commeretal vehtcles,
which IS any motor vehtcle,
including farm trucks, Mth a
load capacity of three·
quarter ton or less 1hat IS
used lor purposes other than
for profit The cost of

a

at y

natlonwtde

('Oal

strtkc

because leaders of slates
affeued most by the power
shortages do not " ant
1mmed1ate
fcd e rHI
mtervcnt10n

Instead,

the

fL•dPf ,11

govcrrunenl w1ll wurk .t~ a
cleunnghou se
to
h ~ lp
du;semmale mforma tlon

comptled b) the 12 :states m
the Mtdwest arr~ctctl mo~1 m
ell\ effort to lessen the llllpll('l
of U1e walkoul
· nus 1s an e mer~en q
situation whkh neL-ds were
not llntiCiptlled by us ,'' l~nllp
S
Hughe s,
us sJSimtl
sel' rt.•tar)

f o t

mter gn vernmcnto~l

and

UlslltutwiJ&lt;tl 1 elutton!'i

tlf lht~

en tine

non ~

home

A motor home

The effects of the strike,

which began Dec 6, have
caused energy dtsruptlon m
several states OhiO and Indiana are the hardest hit, and
maJor utlhttes tllere ha ve

sesswns cha1red by l.11bor
Secretary Ray M.1rshall
todav

announced they w1il reduce
power next week, a step that
could lead to culbacks m

COAL SUPPLIES
Rovmg Umted Mine Workers Umon pickets Wednesday shutdown
two non umon mines m Lawrence County, one of which supplted coal to
Columbus &amp;Southern Ohio Electr.c Co The pickets were a lso expected
to be out mother areas of Ohio today man effort to stop the movement
of all non·umon coal m Ohio

FEBRUARY Is Boy
Seoul Monlh and m
recognition of the ob·
servance The Dally Sen·
line! pays trlbule lo Bob
Arms, Scoutmaster of
Pomeroy Boy Seoul Troop
249 The troop is one of the
oldest and most aclive In
Meigs County and has
produced over the years a

number of Eagle Scopts.
Arms has no children ofbis
own in the troop ~~I
devotes endless hours In
training mem hers in the
skills of good scoullng
Adults who serve on the
troop committee Include
Oon Thomas, Patrick
Wood , Hank Cleland,
Harold Norton and Ray
Laudermnt. Tomorro\\ 's
Daily Senllnel will feature
several photographs of
troop members In t~elr
learnjog

procc~~oses

through
the scouting program

Although about an mch of

IS

Bargamers for the two

Sides met for 90 mmutes
Wedn esday mght 1n th e
Roosevelt Room of the Wh1te
House
and laid
th e
gro Wtdwork for the renewed

By United Press International

new snow fell ove rmght,

defmed as a "self-propelled
rec reatiOnal vehtcle , constructed w1th permanently
mstalled fac1ht1es for cold
storage, cookmg, and con~

1

- The pres1dent mv1ted the
governors of 12 st1:ttes to the
Whtle House toda) to l'tmfer
on esca latmg I" ublcms
caused by the c..:n.tl strike
Car te r 's press secre l&lt;H y
Judy Powell , sa1d ''Even
wtder the absolute best of
cJrt.:umstances I tlunk tt IS
clear that 11 would be a
matte1 of se vCI al weeks
before a normal productiOn of
coal could be resumed '
- About 65 mmers were
a rrested near the V1rgmu.1-

'Crisis Watch'

Oasses going
despite snow

commercl81 truck IS $25
- RaiSes the fee from $ii to
$25 for reg1strahon of a motor

mdustry offt c1als of massive
layoffs 1f th e na twn 's longest
contmuous coal stnke doesn l
end soon
In oth er developmen ts
Wednesday
- Representatives of the
Umted Mme Workers Umon
munities are blacked out to and the Bltwmnous Coal
Operators Assoctatlon, press·
conserve power
The TVA and AmeriCan ured b) President Carter to
ElectriC Power serve a total end the 73-day-&lt;~ld walkout
of 11 milhon people m 12 reswned contract Utlks at the
sta tes
Their warmngs Whtte House Wednesday
followed predictions by auto mgh t

are
rapt dl y
dwmdhng and
severe
measW"es to reduce the use of
electricity he ahead
Those measures could even
mc lude rotatmg blackouts planned outages where com ~
mumt1es or portwns of com-

supplies

WASHINGTON (UP!) The soft coal mdustry and
Uruted Mme Workers umon
...--- w1th a persuastve boost
from Pt estdent Cartet were back to full scale
negot iations today m an
effort to end the record coal
stnke

Columbus and Cincinnati to make h1s
ann&lt;lwtcement But two orgamzat10ns, the Senate Democratic
caucus and the Black Elected Democrats of Ohio , Jwnped the
gun Wednesday and 1ssued statements endorsmg him

re~istertng

ease the Situation. he sa1d
Operators Assoc1auon met m
Invited were the governors
the While House Wednesday oflllm01s, Indiana , Oll1o, M1
mght to try to end the 73-&lt;lny· ch1gan. MISsouri , Kenlu&lt;kY,
old walknut , Carter tnvtll'd West V1rgmm V1rgm1a ,
the governors of 12 states to Pennsylv&lt;:~m.t l t! nnessee ,
eome tu Wa!ihtnghm today to Maryland and Wt sconsm
llli:tp w a) s to ease the
Even und~r the absolute
problems caused bv the best of t:lrcum stan&lt;:es, 1 thmk
strike
IllS clear that 1t would be a
A spoke&gt;1nan for f\hodes matter of seve ral \\eeks
sa1d th e go\ernor Yl OUld before a normal produt.: Uon of
attend the meetmg 1\hodes coal could be resumed, ·
has been urgmg Carter to Powell srud
mtervene m the strake
At the Cleveland meetmg,
Carter medw sec1 etary ofhc1als of the federa l
Jody Puwcll sw.d mo!&gt;1 of the goverrunent sa1d they do not
governors would Hltend The plan to order mandatory
governors either were from energy cutbacks to help
!:l-1ates hard htt by U1e stflkt&gt; ~;often the effects uf the

Department or Erwrgy sa1d

Wednesday
made
the
fullowtn;.:
a
wurkshup 111 suburban Brook
Pat k , otuu, uttended by
Hu ~ hes

stuh•menl

fcdet tt l ofh t: Jals nnd re ~N"l' st..~ntatJvt•:s of the states
d cu lm~

wlth the en(•rgy
uisls He stud · ~\!e ~mnt.&gt;d on
tl~e

problem ,'

but QUICkly

nntcd that no s pt•c tfl('
solutions \\Ct c adm·vl'd
And ufflce wurket s nt the

t;encJ .al Eled1 u; Co atrL'mft
eng me plant h1 the Cint'llmatl
b Qf Fvendnle an~
bt: mgmg hunps from hnmc to
hght "01 k phi\ cs dnrkCilt'&lt;l
I&gt;&gt; energy c omst•t vu t ton

s ubu~

111Cd :-i lU C:s

F lflt•t•n ( ' t•nts
Vo l !M Nu 21 1

Kentucky border as a 1ocklhrowmg mc1dent d.unaged

~eve 1

nl cars State pollee s.ud
hncd up along
V1rg 1ma 421 1 ~ route Jlllncns
fu.oqucntly usc on U1c1r way to
Kentucky mme.s The mmcrs

p1ckcts

were charged With wtl.twful
and refusal tu

H~s~mbly
di~pcrse

- Anothe1 100 mme1s ~ath ­
er t.&gt;d on the steps of the stdte

Capitol at Omrleston W Va ,
vowmg to p10long the stnkc
.1s Ion~ as nece~ury tQ obtam

Full scale talks have begun

Cleveland,

Registration to
start March 1
85

ur 1n a position to offer help to

Citizens warned to reduce use

m

SANTA FE, N M -THE NEW MEXICO Supreme Court
has upheld an mdictment chargmg a 23-year-old woman w1th
contributing to the delmquency of a 15-year-&lt;~ld male because
they engaged m sexual mtercourse The ruling reverses a
decisiOn of the Court of Appeals, which found the woman d1d
not v1olate any state laws by engagmg 1n consensual sexual
mtercouse With the youth Feb 12, 1977, at her Clov1s, N M ,
borne

Blue, pink, or gold do11wood pattern on wh1fe background percent cotton, 15 percent polyester. Very attractive.

•

As negotiators lor the UMW
and the Rltlmmous Coa l

···!·!·!·:·:·:·:·:·:-:•!••!•!

,_
1News. . . in Brie~s\~

state

Lhose nunes down and WL'
hope they stay down We are
gomg to keep thiS up the best
we can unul this ~1rtke 1s
settled ·
Another UMW p1c ket
leader smd unum members
James Howell saJd several would he out throughout the
hundred piCkets \\ere m the state to "stop Ute rUMmg of
area They also closed the scab coal" in Oh10
'There 1s too mu&lt;:h sea b
Collms Co,al Co mme and
coal
movmg tn lhl~ state,"
forced one driver to dwnp a
srud tl1e UMW member who
load of coal
'We had a pretty good crew did not w1sh to be 1dent1f1ed
Meanwhile, the OhiO
down there and we are
satlsfaed tlley are shut, at Chamber of Commerce sa1d
least for nuw ," R1ll Cray, v1ce m a telegram tu PreSident
pr0&gt;1dent of UMW Local 1957 Carter that an energy
m Vmton County and one of disaster ts unmment unless
the p1c ket leader s, .a1d federal achon IS taken to
toda) · We're glad to get be~Hl l r1,1l nr• d r hnn If'.! I~
Wednesday was the Super1or
Coal Co wh1ch su pplied
Ollumbus &amp; Southern Ohio
F.lectrtl' Co with ~me of the
nnn-umon coal U1e ut1hty was
recetvtng
Lawrence County Sheriff

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, February 16, 1978

COLUMBUS - REP THOMAS J CARNEY, DYoungstown, introduced legislation Wednesday which may
result in the electric utihty industry's reversal of current
policy of not paying OhiO's new coal exc1se tax . The blll would
create a spec1al t8ll refund account wlthm the state spec1al
revenue fund where receipts from the coal exe~se ta• on coal
purchases greater than 500 tons a year would be deposited

MAE AND ELMER NICHDJ.IDN HARMON would have
been marned 77 years thiS month Formerly of M01gs County,
the couple had m recent years been w1th a daughter, Vebna, m
Columbus. Unfortunately, Mr. Harmon died on Jan 6 and Mrs.
Harmon died on Feb. S. They both were returned here lor
burial in tbe White Oak Cemetery between HarriSOnville and
Dexter
LONNIE LeMASTER remains a patient at Children's
Hosp1tal in Colwnbus following brain surgery. He IS expected
to be there for some three more weeks although he's up some
and IS gettmg along well Loome sent valentines to his classmates at tbe Salisbury Scbool where he would have been a
fourth grader thiS year had he been able to attend classes.
Cards to i.onmemay be sent to Room 3007 and needless to say,
cards would go a long way m helpmg the youngster have some
happ1er days r1ght now.

Roving pickets cutting off source

schools of Me1gs Co unty were
open today
In some mstances, buses
d1d not run or were able to
make only a pa rt of their
runs

Absentemm, whi ch has
run h1gh m the Me1gs High
School thiS week due mostly
summg of food , and for to mfluenza, was down on
Wednesday
sleepmg"
On Monday and Tuesday,
The reg1strat1on period lor
non-commerctal vehicles and absenteeiSm ran about 45
motdr homes begms March 7, Jl"rcent of the student body at
the effectiVe date of H B 166. the h1gh school, Dw1ght
admmtstrat1ve
Owners of such vehicles are Go1ns,
reqUired to s1gn affidavits assistant of the d1stnct, sa1d
However, only about 25
statmg thai the mtended use
of the vehicle IS not for percent of the student body
was absent Wednesday
busmess purposes
Wh1le absenteeiSm was
Dollison stressed that no
passenger car validation running h1gh m the h1gh
Slickers Will be 1ssued m school, 1t was about normal at
elementary schools of the
March
d1Sir1ct, Goms reports

UMW NEGOTIATIONS
The soft-coal mdustry and the UMW resumed negottatmns at the
Whtte House today Talks re-opened Wednesday mght and Labor
Secretary Ray Marshall sa1d the sesston was "good, hea ted m some
cases.''

commemal and mdus111al

opet uttons and possibly

nt.~ ss

l.1yuffs

In .nldltJOn U1e nation :stop
a utnm akers scud energy
reductions mciY lead to the
layo ff of hundreds of
thousands of workers b) the
end nf Ihe month
It was the longest
contmuous nattonwltle strike
1n history
Ca rte r spoke for h vt•
mmutes at the oulSI!t of
Wt"tlnesday mght s sesswn ,
and accor d111 g to press
secretary Jod y Powell, ut ged

LEGISL!\TIVE REACTION
The OhiO House of Representatives adopted a resolutwn urgmg
President Carter and Gov James A Rhodes to "brmg the full presllge
and full powers" of the1r offices to assure the speedy and safe delivery
of coal w1thm Ohio The resolullon was adopted 87-4
BUSINESS REACTION
The Ohm Chamber of Commerce said m a telegram to President
Carter that "an energy disaster IS immment unless federal act10n 1s
taken to begm coal productiOn agam "

warned of a possible back~o­
workorder 1f ta lks fall , sa 1d If
the new negotia tiOns break
down "II would hurt bt~h the
operators a nd the un10n, but
most unportant of all 11
would hurt the country '
Carter has power under the
Taft-Harley Act to order the
mmers back to work for an
lltklay coolmg off periOd
Both Marsha ll and UMW
optun1SI1c as they left the
sessiOn
"We're most anxmus to
eome back tmnorrow and get
down to busmess, ' Said
Mille r
" I 'm somewhat
uptumsttc that af we follow
the format we set here

tomght , we'll ge t very close to
where we want to go to "
Marshall sa1d the mood
was good, heated m some
cases "
' I t wasn't angry," he
added "Just fu:mly stated

pos1t1ons"

' I thought 11 went well ,"
Marshall sa1d "The pos1t1ons
were latd out 1n general
term s It se t a good
foundatiOn for our wo rk
tomorrow' '

No quorum, no action

Na lwnn I Gm11 d tit ilCII and

:-.1ctte

poh~ .

but 10 of the O:J

truckl:l were (hsubk'&lt;l by nn1ls
tostiell on Uw lughwuy
- Hundreds of Ohio pkkots
fo1 ct.•d one trul.:k drtvcz to
du mp h1s load of i.:OUI uml
t loscd d nunc uml luncUng
duc k OW IU'd
IJy
twu
COIII(}d !IICS thC:t l suppl y 114111 ~
UMW Clllll lo Columbus &amp;
~1u ther n Oh iO EIL'C trlc 01
~flee wm k ~rs ut the
General EIL'Ctllt: Co 1111 c..: rurt
cng m ~ phmt m the Ciuc..: nmat1
su!Jml1 of F.vc 1tdo~lc ()lllo, HIt::
IJI mgmg l.1mps h om tlu mc lu

hght
by

WtJI

k

tlurkt•nt.'tl
IJOO:-Iervuliun
A plant off lciul

pl~u.:es

energy

measures
l':ldl d dbo ut 75 e1nployees have
been :o;UJ&gt;plywg their nwn

hght111g the

IM~t

few dctys

th e negol1.1Lors to 1 each a OOcau:-;c the company turned
(1Uick setthnenl to p1 event uff ovcrhcctd hlo( hts to snvc
clcctru;Jty
harm to the nation
Cm tct , m a hvc':tnmutc
J'he pres1de nt , who has

president Arnold Miller were

GOVERNMENT REACTION
Gov James A Rhodes and governors from 11 other states were to
meet wtth Prestdent Carter today to discuss the coal strtke and the
resultant power shortage At a meetmg m Cleveland, federal offic1als
told representatives of the states hardest hit by the coal stnke that the
government does not plan to order mandatory energy cutbacks

lJ1C II demands llw mm~rs
slgnuturtts ft~r n
!X!tltiOII Ul m~'(j Ut I(.'{ ~1 lhn ~
UMW Pres1dcnt Az nold
Mili CI Pctltwns scckm~
Mtller s rccu ll u\so wt•rc
( n culatt.'ll m UMW D1sh 11.:1 2!i
111 wcsl ctn Kentulk.Y
- A ('UilVtlY U.lrl ymg 1,240
tuns of l'O dl to un dct litCHI
pl.mt
zolh•d
tluuu g h
suuthwet;teln Jmh.ma w1lh an
.111 a nd ~~ uwtd L'Snn t of
co lle~.:ted

Industry officials left the
scene without commentm g
Earher m the day. M1ller
expanded the un10n team
from SIX to mne, addmg three
members of the UMW

!l'tatcment dt the resumption
of c..:ontrad t~tlk~. told both
s1des thai ' 1f 1t b1 eaks down
here tl would hu1 t both the

opera tors and Ute umon but
mo~t tmportun l of all, 1t
would hurl the country "

Sheriff
probes
theft
Met gs Cou nt y Shc 11ff's
deputies a rc JnVC:iligatulg th e
theft of a battery, t1res , and a
set of c ho~m s Laken ftum a

p1ckup truck i&gt;arkcd along SH
124 \I. est of Sulcm l enter
Wesley WI SC, IU
I,
Ew mgton ,
c:1.tlled
t he

department I ucsday f•ventng
ufter he rctumed lu hh.!
vehicle ami rhseuvet ed thC
1tems m1 ssmg
Sheriff James Proffitt
requ es t s
that
anyone
tra veling m the VICinity who
m1ght have seen anyone
around the vehicle (197:1 Ji'ord
p1ckup truck 1 coni act the
shen ff 's office Immed ia tely
W1lh the current electn ca l
cns1s, many a rea residents
a nd busmcsscs are tummg
off their outSide sec urity
llghtmg
Me1gs County Sheriff
Proffitt urges area residents
to be on the alert to no1ses a nd
to strange a nd suspiciOUS
act1v111es on the1r properties
Motonsts can also· be of
asSistance m that as they
dnve along they can be on the
alert to suspiCious persons
a round darkened bulldmgs,
etc
The Sheriff also requests
that h1s off1ce be notified
of
a ny
1mmcd1alely
SUSpiCIOUS actiVIties SO that a
deputy can Investigate

w1ll be sub-contracted O'Ne1l bargatmng council , who had
ca lled the general contractor voted 3~ to reject a tentative
the co nstructiOn manager settlement reached by Miller
and ms1sted that work on the
The Bituminous Cnal
fac1hty could be done by local Operators Association at first
builders.
refused Carter's call for the
• The only function of the CIC White House sesston, but
and the county board of changed position Within three
commiSSIOners Will be to hours With
Marshall 's
approve the project The interceSSion.
commiSSioners would gtve
The rejected coa l pact
approval for the Issuance of would have boosted mmers'
industnal revenue bonds, tax average pay from $7 80 to
free, to construct the home at $10 15 an hour over three
the nursmg home , had taken options on ground, no cost to the county
years, guaranteed mediCal
Cost to residents of the benelits cut off durmg the
requested the meetmg hired an architect, whose
yesterday w1th CI C directors work IS 85 percent complete, home "Ill be $31 private strtke, and restructured the
and the Me1gs Co unty and has a general contractor room, and $27 sem1-pr1vate umon's deple ted penswn
CommiSSIOn
O'Nell sa1d he has gone lo a O'Neil also pomted out that funds
Bernard Fultz,
CIC lot of expense and time not to medicare and med1ca1d will
Rank-and -file
mmers, ' :::::::::::::::::::.:·:: ::::··:·:::':·:::::::::::::,:::,';':' :':,:,:,:·::,:,:-:·,:,.
president, who set up the next be serious about a nursmg be ava1lable
however, were infuriated by
EXTENDED FORECAST
Jones md1cated that he saw a proVISion allowmg coal
meetmg, satd he w11J not be home
Saturday
through
no
problem,
but
was
Inable to attend the Feb 23
Jones Slated that he would
operators to fine Wildcat
Monday,
fair
and
cold
terested
m
local
contractors
session
hke to see local builders have
Sinkers up to $20 a day. And
weather
during
the
period,
bemg
Involved
m
the
project
II was reported the new an opportumly to b1d on the
they were unhappy w1th the
with highs in the ZOs ond
Fultz, as a ctbzen, expressed pension changes, elimmat1on
nursmg home would be contract to bUild the home
overnight lows hetweeo
located 1n Middleport at Page
O'Neil explamed that thiS a des1re to see the nurSlllg of coSI-of·hvmg increases and
~ero and 10 abeve zero.
and Powell Streets It w11I would be possible as all work home become a reahty
w1th controversial production
cost appruXIIllately $2
mcentives
Due to a lack of a quorum ,
CIC directors co uld not take

nulllon Between 55 to 60
peo pl e w11l be employed
achon Wednesday endorsmg rece1vmg a payroll of $700,000
l'Onstructwn of a nursmg annually
home m Middleport
Richard Jones, co m·
Smce there wasn't enough m1sstoner, asked 1f O'Netl's
members present, another certificate of need had e•·
meetmg w1ll be held Feb 23 p1red, a nd O'Neil explam ed
m the bureau of support at th e that 11 had, but 1t had been
Me1gs County Courthouse extended by the Slgmng of a
The sess10n will begm at 7 30 general contractor. wlu ch
pm
keeps the prolect current,
John O'Neil of Cleveland, and on hie m Manetta
who ts expected to construct
O'Neil also sa1d he has

·~

,."

•

�a

3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb. 16,1978 ·
2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Feb. 16, 197fl

HOSPITAL NEWS

COVIC to meet
February 21

Mrs. Kenneth Ha1nry and
daughter, Vicki Rousl!. Mary
Shropshire , Hilda Shuler,
Lillie Smith, Maur icl' Smith .
Hobert Smith. Ma ry Stiles,
Hubert Tul·ker , Beverl y
Wau gh .
Births Fch. 5
Mr. and Mrs. James
Baug hm an, a daught er ,
Gallipolis.
Mr . and Mrs. William
dau ght er,
a
Co nley,
Gallipolis .

Vtlerans Memorial Hospital
" 'fhe Economic
a11d
ADMITTED
Leona
Financia l Outlook for 1978" tiubbard . Sy racuse; Robert
wil l be the topi c for the Feb. · Cummins. Racin e; Ell en
21 meeting of the Central ArnOtt , Hacine; Barbara
Ohio Vall'ey Industrial Pierce, Haci ne ; Ma r~arc t
Council, to be held in Hun- Barrett, Middleport ; FaMi C
tington.
PhiiHps, Pomeroy; Hanford
Thoma s Rideout, sen ior Stanley , Pnmerny ;_ James
vice president or the Ad~:mls, Rutl a11d ; Da nn y
F'inancial
In Stit uti ons Terzoppl ous, Hacine ; J anna
Department of the Wachovia Evans, Middleport ; Shei la
Bank and Trust Company of Sinclair , 'fu pp\!rs Plainsi
Winston-salem , N. C., will be Don na Kn app, Syracuse ;
the speaker .
Judy Buchanan, Portland.
The meeting will be held .at
DISCHARG ED - Jimmie
.lhc Ramada Inn , South Poi11t, Kin g,
Da isy
Taylor ,
Ohio . A sncia l hour is
Genevieve Sherman, Anne
sc heduled at 6: JO p.m . with
Edward s , George Hupp ,
dinner at 7: 30 p.m . The cost
Clarence Hldcnour. Bonn ie
wi ll be $9 per person .
Rife, Virginia Pierce, Graee
Non-membe r s arc welcome Eich, Cla rence Murr ay,
to attend . Reservatiuns may Betty Wise , Edna Russell.
he made b y Calli ng th e
Chamber of Cmnrncrce in
Huntington, Ashla nd, lrun·
to n , Port smouth, Point

Plea sa nt, Ravens wood , or
Chesapeake.

Weather
Highs today in the upper
ZOs or lower 30s, lows tonight
in the teens . Variable
c:lo udiness Frida y, with
occasional snow Ourries and
highs again in the upper 20k

No one injured,
cited in wreck

No one was injured or cited
in a collision at 6 p.m.
Wednesday on CR 35 in Meigs
County just east of SR 124.
HOLZER MEDICAL
The Gallia-Meigs Po st
. CENTEH
State Highway Patrol said
Discha rges Feb. IS
car s dri·ven by Hober t
Cec il Bauerle , Vicki Boso, Deeter, 16, Raci ne, a nd
Mr ~- Paul Channe ll and Cheryl R. Ro seberry, 17,
daughter , Myla Conner, Mrs. Ra cine, collided at a
Raymond
Den uit a nd hi llcrest. There was li ght
daughter , Linda F'i elds , Mrs . damage.
Ricky Fowler ami daughter ,
William Grosvcoor , Maude
Henry, F'red Howell, Chad
Johnson, Etta Marshall ,
Sandra McCoy ,, Allen Pape,
Phy llis Perry, Cla ra Pullins,

Problems of
shoplifting
or lower 30s.
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 are discussed

Area Deaths

!
1

WILHAM GEN HEIM ER
William Alpha Gcnhei mer,
83, fo m1erly of Meigs Co un ty,
a 1missionary to Africa for
many years, died at 6 Windso r
Avenue,
P ictcrma ritzburg Natal, 3201
Rep ublic ni South Africa
recently .
Mr. Genheirncr had been in
ill health for sumc time . Born
and reared at Bunker Hill in
MeigS County , he was one of
seven childr en of the late
Harry Horatio and Elizabeth
Genheimer .
'
·
At an early Hge he joined
the Met hodist Church and
became a mini.ster se rvin g

~~

n urr 1bt!f of ch urchos in Athens
Till:: UAILY SENTINEL
0~: \· on~ OTOTUE
I N'I" t: H~:"''fiiF

1\l ~; u: s- MMi()N

AilE/\
CIIESTM il L. l 'ANNEIIILt

Excl·. t:;d.
HVIIE itTIIOEFU CH

Cit)' t~d iiOr

.
d&lt;1 1l)" t'lll'cpl S"!! lun l ay
[jy The Oh1o Vull~~· Pub\l s lun~o:
CulllPWIY·Mullnnedla. Int ., ~ Il l
C'uurt SL., Punwroy. Oluo ~5769 .
l~u b U ~ I~t:d

I~U-!i UI C.S~ QFf1ee Phnrw
'FA.IitUrial Phone 992-:.!157.
~u01ll..l d.HS.'i
t&gt;um croy , Ohio.

N~llvnul

pll,~ l&lt;tge

1tdvt:r\1s111~

t.aliY I ~

•

:

.

~1 2·

21511.

llilld at
rt'tlr cs,.n·

Wu"-.1 - Griffith Cmnpml}' ,
Int ., Boltilll'lll :-u\tl ii ullaghcr I)IV:,
i57 Thirt.l Ave .. New York. N.Y.
\0017.
S uli~l ' l'illtl!Jil fates . Ddinrcd by
t.~ u-ric r w 1crc u v inlabl ~ ;"J l"t:!ll.'l t' cr
W1·ck. R ~· Mo111r Ruutc where cu rrier
stl"': io..: c "nut uvailaLic, One month,
$3.25 . By mml in otuuund W. Vn .,
One Year, $2:!.00; Six llli.Jillhs,
$1Ui0: Three n"wnths. $7.00 ;
F.Lscwlwrc 526.00 }'t:ilr; S1.~ mvnths
$1~ . :;0 ;
Thr ee mo nth s, $7.50.
Subst:riptiun tirkc indudti.s Sum.lay '
· Timl'!;.St:utlJtcl :

,
Co unty. Not long after
beginning his service as a
minister, he decided to be a
missionary in Africa.
He then prepared himsetr
for that work by ent ering
Moudy Bible Inst itut e in
Chicago and .after graduation
from there he tuuk extra
trainin g in New York City to
better prepare himself for
mission work
He left New Yurk by boat in
February, 1922, with other
mi ss ionmies, among them
being Luci ndH Chi se nh a ll
who became his wife three
years later.
The co uple had two sons,
Dona ld Living ston and
Ronald Wi lliam, and both or
th€se sons also be&lt;;ar'nc
. missiona ries. They are both
serving in Africa and both
rel'Clvecl
their
higher
education in America, both
marl'y in g girl s while in
America . Mr. and Mrs .
Gcnheimer had completed a
total of 108 years· in
missiona ry service.
Surv iving are his wife,

I
I

Lucinda:
son.grandchildren;
Donald and
wife
and five
son, ·Ronald and four grandchildren and a greatgrandqaughter. Also s urviving are four brothers.
Ha rry , or So uth Vienna , Ohio ;
Ea rl of Dayton: Evan of
Melbourne, Fla., anct Vi ctor
of Pomeroy; two sisters,
Edith Spr ingston of The
Plains, and Mrs. Eva
Schreiber of Pomeroy.

RAUIU-THIJN
WMPO for the benefit of tho
Meigs County Heart Fund
will be held Tuesday "ith

4 ' speed transmiss i on, a1r

condition i ng . ·LocaL one
owner.

)975 FORD
ECONOLINE
CLUB WAGON
7 pa ssenger , window van .

1975 CHEVROLET
C-20 TRUCK
·CREW CAB
Ton, a :t, bed, passe.1ger
space for 6.
J,!t

Epi sco pal

SQUAD RUN
T he
M idd l eport
Emergency Squad wa s call ed
to 732 Sycamore St. at 2:56
p.m.
Wednesday
for
Woodrow Call whu was tak en
to Holier Mc1i.cal Center.
TA KEN TO VMH
At 12 :47 p.m., Wednesday,
the Pomeroy Emer ge ncy
Squad was called lu village
ha ll where Donald Sedwick,
Tuppers Plains, had gone
after becomin g ill . He was
taken to Veter ans Memorial
HospitaL
CANCELLED
The February meeting or
the Salisbury PTO has been
canc elled due to elect ricity
cutbacks.

NO TRIAL
Residents called for jury
An assembly about (he duty fi' riday will not have to
prob lems
or teen-age appear in the Meigs Common
shoplifti ng was presented Ht Pleas Co urt. '11t~y will be
the Meigs Junior High School notified when they are to
Tuesday morni ng by the report when needed for duty.
Distributive Education class
of Meigs Hi gh School.
Nancy Stanley, vice
CANCELLED
pre sident of the DECA
A meeting of the Busy Bee
chapter opened the program Class of the Middleport First
by int roducing the par- Baptist Church sc1Jeduled for
ticipants·.
tonight has been cancelled,
A shde·tape presentation
showing the problems of a
te enage r that had · bee n
caught shoplifting preced ed
MEET FRIDAY
remarks by officer Ma ndy·
Middleport Lodge 363
Lefebre nf the Meigs County F&amp;AM wiU have inspectkm at
Sheri ff's Departm ent and 7:30 · p. m. Friday at the
Carl Hysell, J uvenile officer Temple. ·
for Meigs Co unty.
The State or Ohio Depa rtment of Education an~ the
AliENDS MEETING
Oh io Co un ci l or Retail
Mrs.
David Fields. Jr .,
Mcrchunts, in cooperation
State
Preside
nt or West
with the Ohio Council Against
Virginia
Women
of The
Shopl ift ing, suggested thai
Church
or
God.
attended
an
the distr ibutive edu catio n
Execu
ti
ve
Comm
ittee
students
pr ese nt
th is
assembly to the junior high meeting held at 't he Main
students. Th is projl't1 was a St reet Church of God in
DECA" club activity in the Charleston on Monday and
area of civic consciousness. Tuesday.
.Il was not onl y designed to
make yo unger . students

HE RMAN KOHY, Ph.
0 .1 is chairman of the
GH.IIia - J ackson - Meigs
Cnmmunity Mental Health

viny l l op .

·

·

1976 v.w.
BErnE

A.C., power s·e ats, powe r
windows . Everything!

Ex tra nice, d iamond sl iVer
metal li c pai nt . New Beetle
conver t ible trade in.

s
WE ALSO HAVE A LARGE INVENTORY OF ALL
MODELS, SOME AS FAR BACK AS 1965.
SroP AND SEE OUR SELECTION

Quality co nstruc ti o n at a n econo m ica l p rice.
Fully ha rde ned d rop-forg ed a ll oy stee l ja ws .
Prec isio n milled teeth in a rugg ed d esig n ho using . Re pl acea ble low er jaws. The jaws ope n to
a full 2 inches , so it' s big eno ugh to handl e '
most jo bs a r ~imd your ho me .
514

I
!

.... ....

8; Da ltoo 0-2-2. TOTALS 14Score by

S. lrdAv;92 -2709or992-66i;'iddleport, O.
Open : 7; 00to5 : 00Mon . thruFri .

quarters :

Miam i Tra ce l3 12 10 10- 4S
Logan
14 15 9 6--44

Chonko 3·2·8. TOTALS 23· t0-

56 . .
Score by quarters :
Mar i etta
10 24 14 19- 57
Athens
20 17 12 7- 56

Lancaster 57
Jack son 41
JACKSO N

(411 -

Harless

3·3-9; Dorsey 5-0. JO : Forsyth
2-0.&lt;t; D . E vans 4·2· 10 ; Conger

Marietta 57
Ath ens 56

3·0·6;
7-41.
.

'

6·24; Weihe! 2-1-5; Wharff J- 1·
7; Safford 5-4- 14 ; Modie 1-0· 2;

Zide 0· 1-1. TOTAL S 26-15-57.

.,.

STOVE

Gi.-ls' High Sc hoo l
Bask etba ll Res ults
United Press Inte rnation a l
Beaver Loca l 57 Well sv il le 38
Berli n W est ern Rsv 47 Sout h
Ra nge 35
Carr ol lton 52 East Canton 45
Lowellv ille 46 Sou thern Loca l

WITH BlOWER
RE G. 34B5

$289 95

SALE

24
M apl ewood 53 F ar m ington 12
Sand y Va lley 43 L ake 27
Sou t h Poi n t 49 Ga lli polis 44
Ta l DeV i l b i ss 46 O r e gon
Str i tch 41. 6 ot
Ta l Libbey 66 T ol Woo dwar d

36

Willis 0· 2-2. TOTALS t7 .

LA NCASTE R (57)
Hanning 10-2.22 ; Webb 1-1-3 ;
Cordle 1- 1-3; Harvey 7-0·14 ;
Peerv 3-1-7; Brown 4·0·8.

TOTALS 26-5-57 .

.

Score b y q uar ters :
JackJon
10 10 10 11- 41
Lancasfer
10 10 18 19- 57

Cit"v , Tenn ., fai-m cl ub.
Phitad.etphia - Signed p itch ·
er s Randy L erch and Warren
Brusstar and outfielder Jose
Cardenal to three -year con
tracts ; signed pitchers Ji m
Wrigh t and Steve Waterbury ,
ce tcher Bobby Moreland , f irst
basemen Joe Jones and John
Poff, second baseman Jose
Moreno and ou tfielders Or lando
lsa tes and Bobby Brown .
Oakland
Signed
Red
Schoendienst , Johnny Sai n and
Jack McKeon as coaches.
Hock ey
St . Louis - Sent rigt1t wing
Ric k Bourbonnais to Salt Lake
CiTy fa r m club .
Soccer
New En!11and (NASLl ,Signe'd midf 1elder Ringo Cantel to to a one -year contract .

OHIO COLL EGE
BASKETBALL RESULTS
United Press Intern ational
Nor f h Ca r olina 92 Ken t St ate

59
Mia m i 63 Oayfon 60
V irgi n ia T ech 105 Ohio U 83
Cinci nn a ti 80 St . Lou is 62
Ca pi t al 58 W itt enberg 44
OhiQ Wesleya n 91 ~riet.ta 73
Wooster 86 Ba ldw in -Wallace

73

.

Kenyon 83 Oberlin 65
Otter bei n SO Den ison 71
Ur ban a 82 Tiffi n 73
Wi lber for ce 75 St eubenvil le

62

A kr on 8o Gannon, .Pa. 74
A sh la nd 109 D y k e 87
Cleveland St. 77 Wri ght St. 62
Bluffton 97 T ayl or 95
John Carr oll 71 Ca rnegi eMe llon 67
Walsh 83 La Roche , Pa . SO

1

MOORE 5
POMEROY, 0.

992·2848

124 W. MAIN ST.

l

l

lliE UNITED STATES OF' AMERICA

CaseyKasem
WMPO
SATURDAYS
9 til Noon

SEATTLE
(UPI)
Infi elder Lar ry Milbou rne
and right handed pitcher Mike
Parrott Wednesday signed
two~year contracts with the
Seattle Ma riners .
Th e
Marine rs
a lso
a nnounced third-baseman
Bill Stein, who was in. the
final year of a two-year
agreement, signed a new
co ntr act,
t h ree-yea r
extending through the 1980
seasOn.

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sporta Editor
LAS VEGAS, Nev . (UP! ) - 11 only hurt Ior a little while.
But, hardly an hour after losing the world heavyweight tiUe
he che rished so much - losing it to someone like Leon Spinks,
a 24-year-old, 10 to 1 underdog who had idolized him since
Spinks was out of the amateurs barely more than a year Muhammad Ali was back up in his hotel suite, surrounded by
his family, and actually joking over his defeat.
"Boo, hoo," he clowned, putting his face into his hands .
Ali was doing all he could to take some of the sting out of it
for all the others around him. What he really was doing was
laughing with tears in his eyes.
Before that, though, he had felt the run impact of his loss
silting in his dressing room, applYing a cold compress to his
puffed up swollen features right afler the fight.
He sal in a chair in the back of the room with his wife,
Verooica, standing at hlsside. Every few moments, she would
lean down close to his battered, perspiring face and whisper
reassuring endearments into his ear.
Now and then, Ali would nod his head at her. wordlessly. At
one point, when her face was close to hls, he kissed her.
11 was a tableau reminiscent of another, 52 years ago. In that
one, Jack Dempsey was sitting in his dressing room afler
having lost his title to Gene T unn~y in Philadelphia, and
Estelle Taylor, his wife then, was with him also.
"What happened, Ginsberg?" she asked him. calling him by
the pet name she always used._
" I for got to duck, honey," he answered her.
In the elise of Ali, he forgot that it isn't as easy to turn on the
steam and pull out a fi ght in the late roiUlds when you're 36, as
it is when you're 26or even 30. Ali tried, oh, Lord, how be tried,
as the capacity crowd of 5,298 in the llilton Pavilion trled to
spur him on with their cries of "Ali, All, All" after the loth
round, but yoiDlg, eager !£on Spinks- feeling he had lt if he
didn 't let it get away - never let up .
He kept coming and coming after the man he had followed
and admired since his early childhood, the man who was all
ready til pay Spinks' mother 's fare to Mootreal two yea rs ago,
· when he heard she didn 't have enough money to go see her boy
fight iri the Olympics.
·
There was no dirge in Ali 's dressing quarters after he lost.
His handlers took their cue from him. He wasn't carrying on as
if it were lhe end or th e world, so neither did they. But they
were hurting for him .
"You got jobbed , champ," one of them called out . "Bad
decision.''
Ali didn't buy that at all.
"No sore losers here,'' he said. ''No excuses, no aHbis.' '
SUddenly, Ali looked up to see Leon Spinks standing in front
of him tllere in his dressing room. Ali had tr ied to come across
the ring to C&lt;Jngratulate the new champion inunediately after
tbe deCision had ~en annOlmced, but .there was so much
confusion he never got th e cha nce.
Now Spinks had come to pay his respects to him.
11
You're a good man and a great fighter,." said the boyishlooking St. Louis native, extending his hand to Ali.
"You a in 't bad yourself," replied the ex~hamp.
The j_wo men embraced .one apother and then, in a purely
spontaneo us ac ti on, Le on Sp ink s im pulsive ly kissed
Muhammad Ali on the che.ek.
Later , Ali was asked how he felt over losing a title which had
meant so much to him .
14
1 don't feel so bad,'' he answered. '' I'd like to try one more
time, though. l'd like to reg !\in the title for a third time if I can
get another shot."
Spinks assured Ali he'd give him one although the contracts
·they signed for Wednesday night's fight contained no provision
for a return bout.
Spinks had fought only seven previous times professionally
before meeting Ali and All prajse.d him for the poise and
·
aggressiveness he showed.
"I was on the defense and he was on the offense ," sa ld the exchamp softly. "I just got behind. We au have to lose. I did my
best. I trained. I was in shape . I just lost . Ono thing I felt - .1
fell my age."
Even in defeat, Muhammad Ali still numbers many admirers. He won some more in the manner he accepted his loss.
He went oul with class, the way a world chal!lpion should.

Basketball Results .

BIRTHDAY

•••
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*••

•*
••
••
••*

MONDAY, FEB. 20th .ONLY

IN CELEBRATION
OF .PRESIDENTS .DAY
.

We have a classified special for you. You wUI

a

:

be able to run a. classified ad (no commercial) .

*:

for 6 days for

•*
•

*:
*
•.
*

·lh PRICE

~

i

With a mmtmum price of $1.50. No cancellations or
refunds . Take a look around your ·home and select the
items you are no longer able to use and then just stop in
our classified office. Take advantage of this
1, ~ exceptionally low price. All ads must be in the Daily
1 ::: Sentinel office no later than 12 :00 noon, Saturday, Feb.

I:

LUMBER '&amp; *:
SUPPLY
CORPORATION
I ~.

923

thewS S-2·12; Smith 1-2-4;

. 16-44.

WOOD HEATING

;
r-----~~~---· - . --.- , ~

I

2; Kemper 0-7-2; Braglin J.J.
9; Lehman 6-9-21 ; A l bert 4-0-

Today's

J -2·8 · Halter 7·0· 4,· Mal

1·0·

SP.o rt s Transac tions
By Untted Pr ess I nternational
T uesday
Baseball
Ch icago 1Al l AcQuired
f irst baseman Frank Or tenzio
from Monfre~! on a conditional
Oasis .
Seattle Signed infielder
Larry Milbourne and p itcher
M ik.e
Parrolt
to
two.year
contracts . '
Named Nic k
St . Louis Levva manaoer of Johnson

•

®OMEGA

v'ALLEY

TOTA LS 18 -9-45 .
LOGAN (441 - Gasser

ATHE NS !S.I - Bentley 2·
H : Topplno 7-0·14 ; Wallace

Sports transactions

••**
••
•••
:*•

REG. $8.99

I
I
1
1

8; Richardson 2·0-4; Coe 2-0· 4.

FEBRUARY

At their February meeting
the Ga llia - Jackson - Meigs
Community Mental Healt h
Center Board elected Dr.
Herman Koby to the position
of chairman o( the Board . Dr.
Koby has been a member of
the Board froro i~s inception
in 1974. He has served on the
Per so nnel and Executive
Committees in addi tion to
cha irperson for t he Subcommittee on Conti nuing
Education . Dr . Koby, a
· res ident of Gallia Co unty, is
associated with the Rio
Grande College-Community
Co llege.
The Board elected Mrs.
Leah Ord to the position or
vice-chairman. Mrs. Ord has
also served on the Board
since 1974. She has been on
the Pe rsonnel and Exec utive
Committee.
In other action, the Board
accepted the resignation of
David Strang . The Board also
approved the eKpansion of the
Personal Advocacy Program
into Ga llia County and inst ructed Mr s. Mary Skfimer,
Coordinator of . Personal
Advocacy, to develqp plans
for advocacy in J ackson
County. A most successful
advocacy pro ~ra m has been
in operation in Meigs Count y
for the pa st several years
under the leadership of Mary
Skinner, Coordinator of the
Center's Personal Advocacy
Programs . The progrHm
prov ides serv ices to th e
menta lly retarded arid other
deve lopmentally · disabled
!'&lt;'Ople through the use of
trained volunteers.

Super sharp local ca r .

1972 CHRYSLER
NEW YORKER

Schlichter 5-3·13; Hanners 4
J- Il l Grooms 1 - 3· ~ ; Glau 4·0·

GJM board

QUANTITIES LIMITED

Slant 6 cyl. engine, auto.,
P.S., loca l one owner .

MIAMI TRACE . (451

MAR IETTA rm - l&gt;n« &lt;.
2· 12 ; Spindler t -Q~; Wt~tr ~-

Koby heads

of the Month
14" PIPE
WRENCH

1976 DODGE
DART

A.C. , P .S .. snow tires ,
custom ve l our inte r ) or ,

The NWS said it foresaw no
significant
temperature
changes in the Midwest at
least until the weekend.
Four inches of snow fell in
New Mexico , relieving South.
westerners who had been
'w;n-ned by the NWS of a
heavy snowfall.
1n northwest Texas, where
icy highways hampered
crews , trying to restore
electricily to 1,200 homes, the
snow changed to a light
freezing drizzle and heavy
fog late Wednesday.

Cl'11ter bpa r d.

rad ia ls. sty led wheels.

1975 NOVA
LN

Mia m i Trace 45
Logan 44

22.

Sunday and sell anything but
alcoltolic beverages.
" The people want to shop,
and so many stores were hurt
by being shut down for so
long," Garrahy press
sec retary
Lorraine
Silberthau said Wednesday .
A record of 39 days of
freezing temperatures was
set in Omaha and Des Molnes
Wednesday . The National·
Weather Service attempted
w console those cities by
reporting the mercury has
not risen above :J2 degrees in
' (ioux Palls, S.D., sin:e Dec .

aware that
shoplifting
·serious
. crime,
but it isalsoa - ~;=r~~~~~~==J:~=~:J:~::J[l
gave t h~ DECA mem ber $ a
chance wbe of service to ihe
business community.
Oth er m·embers of th e
DECA club participating in
the 1 program were: David
Ca rpenter, Jim Dav is,
Marcia Dilla rd , Dora Dorfer ,
Denise Ga rnes, F'aith Herman. Paula Thomas, and
Tony Dill.

1977 OLDS.
1975 CHEVROLET
CAMARO LT
CUTlASS SUPREME
P owe r s tee r ing , powe r
brakes, A.C. , viny l top,

Pari :;h

House.
Ta lent is irivited to take
pan. in the daf·long proMram
and those wi shing to do"" are
tu cuntact Mrs . James
S4"Jul sby ur Mr"s. Margaret
Neuman bcfure Sunday ,

DUE ro RECENT HIGH VOLUME NEW JEEP SALES WE ARE ABLE TO
OFFER YOU THE MOST COMPLETE AND SHARPEST USED CAR
INVENTORY IN THE AREA

1975 v.w.
VAN

United Press International
Temperatures in blizzardbattered New England
climbed inw the 30s today to
melt some HI-foot drifts still
left from last week 's blizzard ,
but there was no easing of the
deep fr eeze in the Midwest .
Army troops airlifted into
New England 10 days ago
were packing fo r the return
trip to their Southern bases
wday . Rhode Island (i()v. J .
Joseph Garrahy , attempting
to stimulate hi s state 's
eeonomy , gave permission
for retailers to nppn nn

broadcasting t o be frum
Gra&lt;.·e

Wednesday's box

Still have Arctic cold in Midwest

The annual raai u·tlum uvcr

SHOP FOR THE BEST
BARGAINS RIGHT
FROM YOUR ARMCHAIR •• .IN THE P-AGES
OF THE
•

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:

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:::

!
Ii
•
THE
DAILY
SENTINEL
i
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18

·

POMEROY, 0.

~****************************************••••*
·
t

do llars." Spinks said as he
hugged hi s fri ends and
relatives in lhe tumultuous
after ~fi ghl scene. " l' ve hHd
Iwo dreams - to btl ttw
Olympk champion and to be
the wMid heavywe ight
champion. I've got them both
now. I've got everything ." ·
Ali didn 't argue with lht•
narrow decision. He didn 't
claim he'd bt:.--en robbed. ln l'itead , he sat somberly with
his wife and close friends and
spoke ln whi spers wiU1 an
tllmob-1 vacant expression uri
his fa ce.
'' 1dnn't know if l l'im t...'fmll'
back again," he sa id softly .
"I'm tired . Very tirl'tl . l wmat
to have u rematch. ~want tu
be the first man to win tltl'
title three times.
Second fen : 11. Dily fon
"People said to me, ' You
COLUMBUS (U PII - Thi s
week ' s Un i ted Press I n - Meadowdate ; 12. Allian ce 18 ;
were
r obbed .' I wn sn'l
1J . Columbus linden 14 ; 14 .
ternational Ohio High School
robbed
. The man wm;
Cincinnati W i throw ; 15. tf lel
Board o f Coaches ' boys
agressive.
He la nded some of
Fairborn
Baker
,
Prince
ton
basketbal l ra tings with f irst place vo1es and won -l ost and Spring f ield North, 11
t.he best pwtehes. I was on the
each ; 18 . {t iel Toledo St .
records in pa r entheses .
defense, he wa s on th e
Johns and Cambridg e. 9
CLASS AAA
off
ense. "
edch
;
10.
E
l
yri
a
8.
Team
Poi n ls
An estimated 70 million
I. Akron Central -Hewer
CL ASS A A
vicwe1·s across the Unitt.."&lt;!
115 17 -01
126
Tea m
Points
2. Kellering Alter
States
saw the figh t und
I. Elyria Catholi c
t7 16· II
196
countless
millions more
18 17 -1)
178
3. Col u mbu s North
2.
Warsaw
River
Vi
ew
wt~t
ch
e
d
it
t.hmugh out
11 17· 11
146
\3 15-1)
147
Europe, the Mi(ldle E:ust ,
4. Clev e St. Igna t ius
3. Delphos St . Johns
11 17· t)
129
Latin America and Africa .
(2 14-2)
134
5. Cincinna ti St. Xavier
The shock WHVCS nf Ali 's
I 12-2)
t23 4. Col. M ifflin ( 2 14· 4) 129
decline were felt uroqud the
5. Cleveland C!l l hoilc
6. Tot Scott ( 13. 1)
105
La t in ( 3 15·3)
11 8
7 Can . Ti mken ( 15··2)
82
world.
0. Whee lersburg
8. E , CieShaw ( 17-ll
66
Ali wus nut merely artulhcr
(2 17 - 1)
11 4
9 . Ba r ber ton ( 15·2)
47
heavyweight
chm111&gt;iP11 - he
7.
N
ew
Lebanon
Di
11ie
tO. Day . Roth 112·31
38
was
a
symiJol
of bl ade; pride ,
( 17 - 1J
67
8. A~.:hbold (I 17 -01
40
an unoffical ambassudor to
9. Coshoc ton (1 1-4)
J4
the TI1ird World, u hero to
10. {Tiel Wes t Hol mes
Mtuilims. He has ont! of the
115 -21
15
I
I 10. {Tie) Norl h College
mo~t recognizable faces and
Hi ll I 15·21
25
voices on earth .
Sec ond
nine:
12 .
Even · if Ali retires now
You ngs town Rayen ( I ) 20 ; 13.
followi
ng the Joss, he will still
Portsm
out
h
;
15
.
(tiel
Akron
NH A St andi ngs
go down in boxi ng history un
Bv Un ited Press tnter naf iunat
Sou th ,
Bel l aire
and
~ a sTe r n Confer ence
Wel ls'VI II e, II each ; 18. El yria
a plateau by himself. Pi."ple
All antic Dh·ision
West' 10; 19. (tiel Waverly ,
will always argue who wet s
W. L Pe t , GB
M a r t i ns
F e rry ,
Da yton
Phila
38 16 704
best - Ali, Joe I Aluis. Rocky
Read i ng
and
New Yo r k
} 8 '17 .509 101 1 J effe r ~on,
Marciano
or a few Others Wynford.
9
ea
ch
.
19 31 .380 11
Boston
Buffalo
18 32 .360 18
but
Ali
brougltt
the sport ba ck
New Jcrs~
1? 43 211.1 26 1 1
CLA SS A
to
life
in
t~
1000s
and ca rr i e~!
Centra l Div ision
Team
Points
it
into
a
ne·w
era
of higher
W. l
P et. GB
1. Ind ian Va lley Sou th
san Anloni
34 20 .630 prices
and
greater
popul
arity
(I
I
16•0
)
304
27 :n .509 6 1 1
Wshngtn
2. Morral Ridgeda le
in the 1970s .
C!evelnd
26 27 .491
711
( 11
14· 1)
289
New Or tns
76 30 .464 9
"He's still the gr e.;t tes~ ,"
3. Mans f ie ld St . Peter 's ·
At lanta
25 30 .455
91 ?
Spi
nks admuwlegcd. '' I' n 1
Hous ton
71 34 .382 13 1 7
t5 17· 11
243
Wes tern Conf er ence
just·
tiae latest."
4. W indham ( J 17 -.0)
20'il
Midwest Di vision
5. P al. Hen ry (l 15·2)
13 1
Sp
ink!i,
1 97 11~&amp; , gnvc away 27"
Pet . GB
W. l
6. Kal ida (1 5·2&gt;
11 8
JXI W1ds to the 224 ~~~.-pu u nd Ali ,
35 20 .636
Denver
7. Bu ckeye T r a i l ( 1 16-0J 196
Chicago
30 27 .526 6
plus two inc hes in total height
8. Col. Rea dy ( 14.Jl
88
M i lw
29 28 .509 7
9. Clin ton M assie ( 16-2)
59 ~:~nd four inctws in r(uH:h. Ali
D etroit
25 :)O .455 10
K anss Cty
12 34 .393 13' 2 10. Sou theas i ern ( Ross J
seemed to dw..,a rf him. as they
Indiana
20 36 .357 15 1 1
1ts .2l
so
stood ned to e.uch uthcr, hut
Pacil ic Di vis ion

Hy STEVt: WILSI'ElN
blood still fresh on his lower
LAS VEGAS I UPI l
lip and his brow swollen.
Muhammad Ali grew old in
Spinks,
vi rtuall y
the ring at the age or 36 and in Wlmarked, fought a n inspired
a split decision reluctantly 15-round bout, a ttacking Ali
bequeathed his heavyweight with
unleas hed
fury ,
championship .to 24-year-old cumpleting his rise from a St .
upstart Leon Spinks.
l . nuJs ghettu to sport 's richest
Relentless Father Time prize .
was in Spinks' corner .
Only 18 ~:.: months ago
Every punch Spinks threw, Spinks won the Olympic l78Father Time was there to poW1d gold medal aml now , 20
do uble it. Every 'dance Ali poW1ds heavier , he St'Ured
began, Father Time was one of the greatest upsets in
there to stop the music: Ali ring history &lt;;
aged 10 years in an hour .
The world is his playpen
" I reall y fell my age and he want s to rroHc.
holding me back," Ali said . " I want to relax, enjoy
moments after the fight, the myse!I and blow a few

Boy's UPI cage ratings

, -----------,

: Pro
l
l Standings \

.Seco nd t e n : II
Sebri ng
GB 47 ; 12. ( l ie ) Ada and
Sou th ing ton, 78 each : 14. S f.
8
Hen r v 25 : 15. Ber lin Cen ter
16
Wester n Reserve 24; 16. (tie l
17
18' ? IV\acon Eas ter n . D alton and
Otl o'V ill e ,
13 each ;
19 .
St r aSburg 11 ; 20. Eastern
Pike ( 11 10.

W L P et .
Port land
44 9 .830
36 17 .679
PhOenix
Seatt le
28 25 .528
Los Angels
28 27 .509
Gol den 51.
27 29 .482
Wednesday 's Res ults
Phi ta 116, Detr oi t 11 3
Mi lw 112. New Orl eans 99
HOlJSTOn 126, Indiana 122
Portl and 102, Alla nta 99
Thursday 's Gam es
Sea llle·at New Jersey
Buffalo at wash ingTon
Denver at Clevel and
Boston at PhOeni X
Fr iday' s Gam es
Ka nsas City a t BuHalo
Cle11eland a t New Jer sey ,
San Antonio at Ph iladelphia
Motorist s a r e be ing robbed by
Atl anta vs . New Oi' lcans
a sl y t h ief w ho sf eals gas w h i le
at Baton Ro uge
they d rive . Th e cu lprit is a
Ne w Yo rk a t Detr oi t
· di rt y
ca rbur e t o r ,
w hi c h
Washington a t Indiana
Houston at Milwaukee
w a st es prec!O"u s fu e l a nd
Sea tt le at Chic ago
ca u ses
poo r
engin e
Por tland aT Denver
performance. N ow yo u ca n
Phoen i11 at Golden St ate
Bos1on aT Los Ange le!&gt;
restore efficien cy thank s t o
WYNN' S Carbu r et or Cleaner .
Th is speci al spra y form ula
s wit hout d is mantl ing t o
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Beth work
Instantly r emov e g un a nd
Stone of Miami , Fla., was varni sh, cur b r o ugh Idling a nd
elected president Qf the ladies st a lling, a s It Inc r eases
Professional Golf Association mil e ag e. So for h ap p ier

MOTORISTS ROBBED
BY GAS TliiEF

Wednesday night a t the
organ iza t i on 's annual
meeting.

molorlng .

get

Ali's 12 el((ra )'Cars and
hundreds of extrn rounds
were too mu&lt;;: h for hi.Jn to
t·arr y, f\spcdnlly toward the
t•nt.l nf thC' fight.
Spinks wun UH.~ finn! lhrCe
ruunds on all thr\."t'! official
comb to bc~·mnr the . firb-1
dmllen~~r lo {'Upture the
henvywcit-:ht Iitl e on u
dcc1siun sinea:o Jim Braddock
cll'ft•att·d Mnx Bner in 1935.
.lullge Art Luril• gave Ali a
14:1-\42 c'lgt•, but lilu Tnbnt
liUd Spink s cn mfortubly
ahead, 14~- 140, :tml Hurold
lhu:k scored it 144-141 for
Spin ~ . Ali Tll'Cdl'd tn win two
(If the lu:;t t hn:c ruumL'\ nr
luwck Spinks out to KHin the
vic toq' und U1is time, he just
didn 't hHvc it in him .
Ali nu:dved $3.6 milli.11n
twrore ~xpcnscs and tuxes,
whil e Spink s em' nC'd less Uum
01\l'-tcnth or thHl at $:t20,0Q0.
lf there is a rcmutch, their
Plii'SCs will be H lpt closer
to~ ether .

WE'VE LOW EREti
THE COST OF
CARP ET CLE ANING

NOW RENT
APET CLEANINfl

SYS TEM AT NEW

LOWER
RATES
/J o . r i ~ V OI JI

[!A( fli OIIJ s .qio nDI
results

_ __ ________ _
_.

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949-2525

Ra ci ne, 0 .

ANNJVERSA~a&amp;
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NEW
CHEVROLET
CARS
&amp;
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Ca rbu re tQ r Clea n P.r to d ay .

HE CK's.

MODEL CARRY
OVER

CLE ARANC

GREAT DEALS ON
USED CARS &amp; TRUCKS

Plus F. E. T. $2.13
No Charge For
White-walls, Mounted &amp;
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GENERAL TIRE
N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport, 0 . ·

PRICES TliAfll MAKE YOU
JUMP Willi JOY
HURRY- SALE ENDS FEB. 28th

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
Ope n E veni ng s liiB : 00-5: 00 p.m. on Sat .

Pomeroy , o.

.992-2126

SAVE· SAVE· SAVE·
'I

••1

soli

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SALUTING
A. R. KNIGHT'S BIRTHDAY

WYNN ' S

E-78·14 4 PLY
POLYESTER

PHONE 992·2156 .

1

*I

Hmpdn -Sydn y 92 , Lynchbg 63
Kentuck y 90. Tennessee 77 ·
LaGrnge 95, 5Thern Tec h 91
Meth 85 N .C. Wes leyan 76
Mercer 11, Tenn . Tech 7A
N. Car. 92. Ken t Sf a . 59
N Ky . 67 , OaklndU . Mich SJ
Salem 84, W .Va . Tech 76
s . Ala . 67, La . Tech 65
Sthrn 102. Miss. Va l 9-t
S.Ws lrn 81. Ci)r iS· Br os 71
New Orl eans 95, Furm~n ~3
Union 82. Tranvstvan ia 70
Vldsta st . 10 1, Arm strng 99
VM I 60. Wm &amp;Mar y 59
v a . Tech , 105 Ohio 83
Va . Un ion 87, N .C. Cent 78
Wke Forst 115 , Davidson 82 '
W.Lib 87. Aldrsn Br-dds 80
Wheeling 85, M . Harvey 82
Wo fford 83. Presby 75
M idwest
Adr ian 67 , 01 ivet SO
Albion 91, Kal am azoo 16
Blu fft on.~7. Ta ylor 95
But ler 69 , R. Morr is 56
DePauw 83, Vlp raiso 74
Detr oi t 11 3, W. M ic.h . 9 1
E . Mich . 66, Ba ll 51. 64
E. til . 86, Towson St . 76
Hope 85, Alm a 83
Il l. St. 79, N . Ill. 67
Kansas 80, Iowa St . 70
No. Park 95, Carroll 81
Rose -Htm n 79, Wabas,t; 69
Sagnw Val 79 , WJJyne St . 63
SL JOS. 74, Ind . Cen t 59
Suythwest
Bay lor 79 , Texas 77
HotJ sfon 81. Tex T ec h 77
Mc Neese 76, Lamar 75
N. Tex . 107. Roosev lt 55
Okl a St . 67, Kan . St. 65
Pan Am 11.3, Oilas Bapt 89
SW O k l a 86, NW Okl a 73
Texas ·A&amp;M 88 , T( U 72
Tex St hrn 102. Xav ier 82
Te x,Arl 95, Tex . Wsl yn 83
West
Clrmn t M dd 83, Cat Tch 67
ColOr ado 69, Missouri 63
Rd t ness 77, Pom Ptzr 73
St. M rtn 's 91. G. Fox 76
Whi ttier 114. LaVrne 93

The Daily Sentinel

.

t____ ~!!~!~~_'!!!____.J : 111 COURT St.

·c oll, ge Bask etball Results
By United Press I nternational
East
Ad lph i 96. S. Conn . 72
Ak r on 80, Gannon 74
Amher st 57 , M iddlbury 56
A m e r ic~n 73, Na'Vy 66
Ar m y 63. lona 61
Ben tl ey 97, A IC 88
Be tha ny 68. Thiel 66
Ben tl ey 97, A IC 88
Brdg prt 61, Frlgh -Ocknsn 52
Bry ant 84, C. Conn . 80
Ca nis ius 76, Ll U 62
USCG 72, W. Con n . 54
Che yn y St . 51, K utztwn 40
Colby 95, Bates 79
Drexel 58, Ph il a Tex 45
Hr tfrd 67, Assm pt ion 60
Jck sn vl 77, Brown 70
Kings Pt. 58• .Bkl yn Co li 55
LaSalle 77, Stetson 72
L af y tte 78. W. Chester 60
L ycmng 58, Del. Va lley 49
Mai ne 79, Connect icut 73
Mans tl d 85 , B!oom sbg 74
Mrav ian 68, Dck nson 57
·M uhteri berg 89, F &amp;M 85
N.H . Cdll. 94, St .Fran 89
Penn St. 76; W .Va . 75
Rl d.er 78, Bucknell 65
st . Jos. 80, K ing's 78
St. Anst m 's 104. St.Jos 64
Slppry Rck 66, Cal. Pa. 55
Suffol k U . 90, MI T 79
T mple 75 , St . Jhli'S 65
Tufts 9·3, Bowdoin 88
U.Maine 79 , Conn . 73
Ursi nus 85, Swrthmre 74
Wash&amp;Jetf 77 . Allghnv 75
Waynesbg 66, Geneva 49
Wst mn str 86 . A lliance 66
Widener 11 2. was h . 54
York 68, Lehman 60
So uth
~· Alcrn 51 121. Pra r ie Vw 101
Albnv St. .105, C\rt&lt; Coli 78
Augusta 80, Ga . Col i 68
Barber . scotia 75, Shawn
BapT 83, The Ci tadel 77
~ er e a 116, «;:mpb llsvl 91
Bluef ld 78, Concord 73
Clemson 63. Vir"gin ia 55
Duke 76, N.C. St. 6A
E . K y . 89, I U-Stheast 68

Spinks ·crOwned
world champion

..

.

SAVE

�l

4-- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Feb

16. 1978

~-

Concert Association
to present Hal Shane

f

show tunes. (:urr cnt folk
musi l' and hts uwn C'O ill pusit ions.
ShanC. &lt;-H the a!4l' ,Jr ~J. has
a lt·ea dy pt•rf ur m e d
t hrou~hnut the CIJUntr·y in
contert,
conducted
w t~ rk sh&lt;JPS and
lcct u re
demnnstralions ,,n \IU rio us
co ll ege &lt;:ampu ses, and
at'quired an illiJJrcssivc list uf
theatrical credits.
During the 1976-77 season ,
hl• appr~red un Broudway irr
the revival 11f Jenmic Kt.'l'n'!'i
" Very Gul)d Eddie." Hi s
thea ter credits also indude
principal rules at the New

llal- Shan , billed as an
"Entertainer Supreme," will
be appearing at the Gatlia
Academy
High Sehoul
auditorium on Sunday at 8
p.m. as a presentation of the
Tri -Co unty Community
l'onl'Crt Assodation.
With hi s ly ric !JQritune
Yoice, Sh;mc is (irsl &lt;~nd
foremost u singer , but his
talents alsn indude self·
accompaniment un the guitar
and banjo. solu guita r per ~
fmmance of dassicti! cwd
modern guitar co mpositions.
dancing , and cumpusin~. The
program uffercd will en·
compass this variety ·and ·
range from ea rly English
madrigals and Vil l a~ l .d&gt;us'
guitar solos to Broadwav

Foundland Arts Center

rl-------·-l
Your " Extra Tou ch"

~

Florist Since 19:7

I

PH. 992-2644

L

352 E . Ma in, Pomeroy
Your FTO Flori st

111

Pennsylvania and at the
Guudspccll Opera Hnuse m
Connecticut. He uppeared in
" Shenanduah "
at
th e
Goodspeed Opera.
In stoc k he has played
major roles in " Guys and
Dolls," "Little Mary Sunshine," and " A Fu"nny Thing
Happened on the Way to the
Porum."
The program will indude
songs of Jacques Brei and
Rod McKuen, :ts well as the
Trinidadian
folk
snng
"Sha me a nd Sca ndal on the
F'a rnily: ·
Shnnc, u nutiVe 'New

I
\
\

_,_.._...._..._._...._....._.. ....

POLLY·s POINTERS
Polly Cramer

Yorker , t·omes frmn a per~
forming barkgruund . He
b1artcU his musical traini ng
Hl Lht.• uge of (uur on the
piHnn , £olluw ed by the
1rtllli JWL At the &lt;:~ge of twi!l\le
hl' bcg&lt;Hl I('SSuns (In the
~-: uitar , whlth ht· has since
dl•velnped as his firl:l1 in·
strur11C'nt , later IC.arning the
bi.tnju . His study of dancing
be~&lt;HJ at an t•a rly age and
nuw indudcs lap and jazz: A
gro duate
of
Hofstr(l
Univ ersity, Stwne par·
litipated both in that school's
churus a nd in its highly
renowned theater group.
lli s career began in the
l!.tll-12 seasun und has taken
him to a ll t:ornCrs of the
cou ntry. Between co ncert
cnga~ements, he has been in
increaslng demand on &lt;:ollegt:
l'am pu scs for sem inars .
wo rkshops and arti st-in ·
reside.ncc programs .
The next tW(J ~.: o ncerts
s~.:hed u led by a neighboring
association will both be in
Znnesvill l'. The Ohio Ballet
will appc~1r at 3 p.m. this
Sun dHy, and un Sunday,
M&lt;.~ r ch 5, at 3 p.m., the Zanes~
ville Association will offer an
extra attraction , the Allan
l ~1kos Company perform ing
in "Opera as You Like It and
Even If You Never Did."

NOTICE
INSULATION
CONSTRACTORS

This ma kes good hoops for
small chilt.lrcn whu are in·
terestecl in lcarnin~ tu :;c w. OOROTHY
I)EAH POLLY - During
DEAH POLLY- We have a
small hooked rug on the hard- the wintc1· I keep a lJum:h uf
wood floor in front of our ewu.Jies in my car for use durtelevision set. If I step on the in~ &lt;i traffic tie-up ur pussibl~
:-;tra ndi n~ in the snow. I stort!
ru~ it slips. It is really
dange1·ous. CQu )d anyone tell them in 0::1 tall can with a sna~
on lid, imbedded in a sma ll
lite what I can get to keep this
packet of sand. These candles
rug from sliding?- S.D.
DEAR S.D. - You might will help keep you warm,
sew ru bber jar rings el:ipedally your fingers, and
wulcrnealh in the t.:OI'Ilt!I'S of they save you from running
your ·rug . Perhaps two at the ca r motor and using up all
cad1corner, one on tup of the your gas . - BEATRICE
DEAR POLLY- I am a freother. A scrap of rulJber~
lJO:Acked carpet eut l:i!i~htly quent visitor to nursing
:') lll&lt;c.d ler than your- rug !:ihoulc.l homes and notice that lap
robes are more oft en on the
&amp;lsodo the tnck . -Pm".LY .
DEA R POLLY -- My Ooor than on laps and legs.
daughter made embroidery Many patients ca nnot help
hoops from empty pla s ti ~.: themselves and the staff is
mcng.i:!.rinc bowls. She l'Ul the often too busy to kee p picking
center ou t uf lhe licl and then tip these covers. Those who
l'UI uff t hl' top rim of the bowl. may be crocheting or knitting

Hooked rug
tokes o slide

The first two concerts in the
current 1 977~78 series of the

'

-----------------------~OHIO POWER COMPANY
Customer Services Department

P.O. Box 400
44701

Yes. I am in terested in how I can be hs1ed
as an insu lation contractor . Please provide
me wi th more de tails.
(Please Print)
Nam~

I

Firm Na~e

AddrE'SS

-·-

+

'

Ci1y/ Z1p
Te.iepho ne

Number

'

'

Hal Sbane

PLEASE RETURN THIS COUPON BY MARCH 1

u ........

Tri -Co unty Comm unity
Association have illustrated
the wide variety of entertainment offered to
niembers. ·
Although unpredictable
· weather limited the size of
the audience thos e who
braved their way into the
Gallia Academy High School
aud itorium to hear Paul'
Lavalle and the Chamber
Music Society of Lower Basin
Street thoroughly enjoyed a
most welcome esc;ape from
another monotonously bad
winter.
The curtain opened on an
apparently sedate, tuxedo~
clad gro up of 11 musicians,
but
closer
inspection
revealed accessories which
included over·sized bowties
in a variety of colors 1 loud
vests, hats ranging from a.n
eng ineer's cap to a bright
green beret, and quit~ a
collection of footwear, from
boots .to gym shoes.
The attire of the group
portended the type of
· program presented during
the evening. Although many
of · the numbers were the
classics of the three more
more
modern
" B's",
barrelhouse; boogie-woogie
and the blues, the group ably
demonstrated their excellent

I r~~E;V~y()ii;(---;:;~~~~~=~=~~~~~~~~~;;;::--1 jazzed~up
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.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _POMEROY'
_ __;,_OHIO
_J
I•

Generation Rap

true classics
with several
education
grounded
in the
selectio.ns from the
ol~ masters.
Opening with "The Split
Apple ,"
a
Lavalle
arrangement of Rossini 's
William Tell overture, the
orchestra went "Basin Street
Formal" with " Muskrat
Ramble, " " Darktown
Strutter's Ball" and " That'a
A-Plenty ."
Following "Concert ina for
Li corice Stick," which
featured the conductor. a
collection of novelty numbers, grouped as " Lavalle
Originals,'; were presented .·
Paying tribute to the three
" ba sic B's," Lavalle's
arran g ements included
" Bach Talks Back ," a
-delightful Brahms' " Lullaboogie-bye," and "A Nickle's
Worth of Beethoven." The
first port ion of the program
closed with "S onata for
Barrelhouse, Boogie~woogie
and the Blues,'' based on W.
C. Handy 's "St. Louis Blues."
After the intermission, a
rousing ver$ion of " Joshua
Fit the Battle of Jericho" was
followed
by
"Clarinet
M·armalade,' '
again
featuring the "tnaestro."
Jazz chamber music at its
best was certainly Lavalle's
"llach of Basin Street. "
0
Honeysuckle Rose" and
" Shoemaker's
Holiday"
(another Lavalle composition) were followed ·by
"Ellington Etudes," a great
s:&amp;:~::l!·~~·'*'l"':&lt;$1~'t:l.:~;"'·Ill~
· :ojl!tCII.JI$JilUijll~
···•

~

Social
.
Calendar

THURSDAY
MEIGS Democrat Central
Committee meeting 7:30p.m:
changed to Meigs Inn rather
than Grace Episcopal
Church.
FAMILY PANCAKE
SUPPER 6 p.m. at Grace ·
Episcopal.
FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT Masonic
Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, inspection,
7:30p.m. Friday at temple ;
all Master Masons invited.
f

Glass Menagerie to have
last performance Saturday

·

•

~

:~::::::~::."**-'=&gt;"!-~::;::,.~·
.....
.

Social
Fund raising projects underwayl
~ Calendar
RACINE--Several fund
ra ising projects were discussed during a recent meeting of
the Auxiliary of the Racine
Fire Department held at the
firehouse.
The Auxiliary is selling zip
code books at $2.95 and knife

sets. The .,bigslicer" sells for Rose, vice president ; Ruth
$2, the middle size knife for Shane, secretary; Judy B~rd ,
$1.25, and the pa ring knife for treasurer, and Jean Johnson,
·$1. The knives may be pur- reporter . Mrs. Rose presided
chased at .the Village Cut in the absence of the presiRateStore.
dent. The birthday uf Mrs.
The 1978 officers are Chris Rose was observed. Mrs .
Shane, president: Maxine Bird won the door prize.
)'

UMW study witnessing
EAST LETART-"Ye Shall
Be My Witnesses : Witness in
Jerusalem" was the program
topic at the Tuesday night
meeting of the East Letart
United Methodist Women
held at the church.
Sally Gloeckner was the
program . leader. Members

Baby born
TIMOTIIY COLMER
TURNS NINE
Timothy ScoU Colmer was
honored on his ninth birthday with • party held at his
home .on Wright St. in
Pomeroy. Games were
played wlth prizes going to
Darrln Roach, Shannon
•. lUndy and Greg Fields.
Cake, lee cream, potato
chips, heart candy and
koolald were served.
Others attending were Billy, Shari and Amber Colmer, Mike Hlndy, Mamie
Stephenso·n,
Tammy
Johnson. Sending a gift was
Kenny Lunsford.

MARGUERITE'S SHOES

CLINIC CANCELLED
A program book and
; publicity book clinic schedul. ed for Saturday by Mrs.
:Charles Kuhl, Region ll, Ohio
' Association of Garden Clubs,
·director, has been cancelled.
There are no plans for con~
dueling the clinic at a later

Here's New Life
For Tired Walls!

;time!

'

VANYL-ITE LATEX -INTERIOR
PAINT

· t'ruwds
have
t' IJ·
thusiastirally rC&lt;"..·ivt•d tht•
perfurmant'CS uf the four
characters in Tt•nncsst..'t'
\Y iII i am s'
· • &lt;: I ass
Mcnugerie" at The I .ittle
Theatre this week .
Special thea tre pa rt}rS
have all ended the play. whleh
is noted as unc of Williams'
ni41St pnpular and sucerssful
works . Area high st·hoo l
drama classes are attendin~.
with
stud en ts
having
"t.Titiqm• sessions" fo'\luwing
the perfurmance wit h tht•
actors . li''riday night . tht•
Wekume Wagon·Ncwl'o!llers
Clu b is planning to attend .
Even though these spcd a l
gru ups are attending each
performance, tickets ure still
availa ble for every performance and may be pur·
chased at the duor ur at My
Sister's Cluset in th e
Lafayette Mall or PJ 's in
Ga llipoli s, and Citizens
National Bank in Point
·Pleasant. Admission is $2.50.
Many of those attending

KNOW YOUR GOVERNMENT DAY PARTICIPANTS- Three students from
Wahama High School wlU participate In the 28th Annual West VIrginia Education
Assoclatlon "Know Your Government Day" at the Charleston Civic Center Feb. 20. The
purpose of this day Is to give students the opportunity to become acquainted with elected
and appointed governrnent officials and the process of the state governmental system.
Pictured, left to right, are Mike Roush lind Lisa Reynolds, both juniors and Instructor Jerry
Romine. Absent Is Cathy Breeman.

Paul Lavalle concert
greeted with _success
.M

Ohio Power is preparing a lis t of home insu lation
contrac t ors to t:Je fu rnished to our elect ri c heating
customers. as requ ired by Ohio law . If you are
interest ed In how your name can be pl aced on t he tlst.
complete and return the cou pon below by March 1.

Can ton , O hio

.~

lap robe&gt;; for such fri.nds ·=·:-=:::=:=:::::."$}-:;!~:~=~~~~
-~-~~:~&lt;:-~=w."*-:;.~::=;;:~:-&amp;m~
might add a tie to one side,
sunilar to thctl on an apron.
'!'he robes can then be fa;ten·
cd to th e person or
\i\
By Helen and Sue Hottel
wheelchair. - VIOlET
DEAR POLLY - Chamois v .
has become so expensive, bul
' IS HIS HOBBY PRETTY GIRI.S?
I have discovered that inex:- RAP :
, ...:, ) .
.
pcnslve vdvetcen i~ u good
We were married four lllOnths ago. A week before the wedsul&gt;stitute. Wash it firSt and
ding, I found Terry with a girl he said was his sister.. He eKyou'll be ready to polish.
During the winter keep the plained he was only trying to help her understand about affecwindows fret! from iCe by rub- tion. They seemed pretty affectionate!
I let it pass, but somehow I can't trust him, though he does
bing the glass with a s ponge
everything to make me happy and swears I'm the only one for
that has been dipped in rul&gt;
him.
bing alcohol.
He has a part-time photogra phy business and gets girls to
The swing set has always
model
for him. That's why a lithe numbers in his pocket phone
been a favorite with our book are
for women (he says) . When we go out he stares at
children but we have had
good-looking
babes. The photographer 's eye, he says.
many fingers pinched in the
I'm
not
very
attractive and am too chubby but can't seem to
chains. Finally my husband
Jose. Do I have good reason to be suSpicious? - MISTRUSTING
cut long pieces from an old
garden hose and slipped them MIS :
Perhaps the biggest reason for your suspicions is: poor self,
over the chain.s before hangesteem.
See yourself as a worthwhile, much-loved person and
ing the swings. No more pinbelieve
Terry
when he says you're the only one for him. -SUE
ching and they are also easier
to grip. -VICKI.
NOTE FROM HELEN: ... At least until you have more prQOf
Polly will send you one of
than presently that he spreads his affection around among
her oigned thank-you
newspaper coupon clippers if other females .
s he uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I'm responding to K.B. 's Jetter on dress code in schools. At
her column. Write POLLY'S
my
school, girls are hardest hit, while boys have almost no ·
PROBLEM in care of this
rules.
newsp;:tper.
Girls can't wear plain white T-shirts, tube tops,' midriffs,
halters, shorts or short skirts (by the principal's standards!).
Only things the boys are restricted on are T-shirts with such
saying as "Marijuana Picker," etc.
Does anyone else have stricter dress codes? Isn't this seK
discrimination?- R.M.
DEARR.:
As we've said before, we feel overly strict dreSS codes raise
more resentment than standards. Young people respond best
to a student C&lt;JllllTlittee which quietly informs disruptive
dressers they' re out of line. (And the eoiTUllitte~ should not be ·
·
tribute to "The Duke, " which governed by a rigid principal !) -HELEN
included " Mood Indigo,"
"Salin Dall, " "Sophisticated DEARR. :
Yes, I'd consider your school's dress code pretty sex
Lady, " "Take the 'A' Train,"
discriminatory . Why should girls have all those restrictions
and "Caravan."
A unique feature of the when boys must only watch the wording on their T-shirts?
How about a well-signed petition to your principal? And save
Basin Street Chamber Music
a
copy
for the PTA. -SUE
Society has always been the
DEAR
RAP :
"Doctor of Musicology," a
I
am
8. Dad yells and ScrealllS at me for things I didn't do.
role ably filled presently by
Then
he
finds out I didn't do them and buys me presents and
Don McCall, who also
doubled on the banjo. McCall, tells me he loves me. Why does he do this? - L.G.
as well as giving a humorous DEAHL.:
Give your Dad credit for implying he's sorry, even though he
introduction to each number,
entertained the. audience with can't quite say it. Maybe someday soon he'll Jearn to think .
the one vocal number, before he yells, Your mother could help him here . - HELEN
" Cleopatra's Jazz Band ," AND SUE
complete with megaphone
and backed by a "Winchester
In 1969, Collllllunist China owned by an American. Four.
Cathedral " sounding orseized three yachts near Americans were among the
chestra. ·
The final number on the Hong Kong, one of them 15 persons taken captive.
program was "D ixieland
Concerto," followed by an
encore "Dizzy Fingers, "
which again featured Lavalle
·on the clarinet.
The season's first concert,
presented late in the fall by
the Orpheus Trio, emphasized the high caliber of
fine classical musicians who
appear every year on the
Association 's schedule. The
lovely com bination of harp,
flute and viola was shown to
. great advantage by the
CONTINUES
auditorium's excelle nt
acoustics.
The next artist to appear on
the concert schedule will be
Hal Shane, talented one-man
entertainer, who_se perPomeroy, 0.
Betty Oh li ilger
forma nce will be held at 6 p.
m. Sunday.

Mr. and Mrs. Charlie
Mathews, Jr. are announcing
the birth of a daughter, Jyl
Alanna, on Feb. I at the
Holzer Medical Center. She
weighed nine pounds, two
ounces. Mr . and . Mrs .
Mathews have another
daughter,Marcy, age 18 months.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Grover Salser.
Jr., Racine, and the p'aternat
graodpctrents are Bonnie
Mathews · and . Charlie
Mathews, Sr., both of Racine.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Pearson
and Mrs. E = Salser,
Racine,,
are
great·
grandparents.

WILL BE SPEAKER
Saffiuel Zonker, patriarch
evangelist, will be at the
Portland-Racine Branch of
the Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter Day Saints, Saturday
and Sunday. On Saturday
evening there will be a family
night potluck preceding the
service.

YOUR GOOD
HEALTH IS OUR
CONCERN

studied assigned scriptures in
small groups and then
reported before · the entire
membership. Mrs. M•bel
Shields presided at the
meeting which opened with
devotions from the Upper
Room, '' Take Up Your
Cross" by Mrs . Lucy
Donahue. There were thank
you notes from Edna Roush
and Edna Foster for fruit
baskets.
The birthdays of Mrs .
Eileen Rousl1 arid Kathryn
Philson were observed.
Refreshm~nts were served
by Mrs . Housh and Mrs.
Donahue. Attending besides
those named were June
Wickersham ,
Marlene
Fisher, Sue Beegle, Hazel
Fox, Margaret Gloeckner,
Focie Hayman, Josephine
Mallory, and Carrie
Gloeckner.

t~arher pt:'rfurnwm:es ha\'t.'
~ud thl'Y wcr(' surprised lll
till' pruf~ssiumtliSIH uf the
t· a s~ and t'lll'ourH~t· l'\'eryum•

mteresh'd in " livC' " lht.•atn· tu
&lt;~I tt•ml · ~ne .,f Itw rrnHtinln~
nights. Thr show will ruu
through Sat urduy. Fl•brum)'
16.
Fuur d1aructt•r!' are 111
" Tht.' t:la~s Mt•nag('rie" :
Mat1h:.t Ev~IOS us Amando•
Winl-(rield : Mkhellr Mit·
llenu.l!l, hrr daughtt·r. Laura;
Mak Nirhuls , Turn W iB~field
4:1nd MichHcl C'urlHn is lh~
~entlenwn
t•aller,
Jim
O'Con nur . Allcu Whitt• IS
dirt•cting .
Greg Miller , tht:' lllanaging
diret'tu r nr The Little
Thl'atre , says ~1nc nwn•
prod'ul'l ion will be forth·
eom ing this season before
t r y~o ut s arc held fnr "Ga ll iu
Country ". Dal.es for aud it i(JflS
will be announc&lt;'d Suun.
Mea nti1 ne. he says, it is
hoped that people in the
entire area will be supportive
of this proj ect to kt•cp "live
lhea tre" alive . The Gal\ ia
Dramatic Art s Society is
produ cer of the th eatre
series.

~

FRIDAY .
SOUTHERN Junior High
Athletic Boo sters Friday 7:30
p.m. to make pla ns for
banquet. · Parents urged to
attend .
SATURDAY
HEMLOCK Grange
Saturday 6 p.m. Oyster
supper before meeting.
MONDAY
MEIGS Co~nty Ch urches of
Christ Men's Fellowship
Monday 7:30 p.m. at Dexter
Church.
GAY LA HANING
SUNDAY
turns
elt'\ 'Cil ~ Gayla
POMEROY Youth Baseball ·
.Lc·
e
Haning,
daughter ol
League Sunday al Pomeroy
Mr.
and Mrs. Keith Curtis,
Legion · HaiL Plans will be
celebrated her ttth birthmade for sign up day, money
day on Saturday at her
making projects, field repair
home on Ruck Springs
and maintenance. All parents
of youth involved in the · Road. The party room was
appropriately decorated in
program ~re asked to att end .
a valentine theme. A valenManagers are needed for Ttine cake was served with
Eall and pee wee teams.
iCe cream. and Kooi~Aid.
Anyone interested in helping
Attending were Karen
with the teams may contact
Don Hunnel.

G'allipolis Christian
celebrates day of love
The Ga'' llipulis Chri:-)1 ian
t'hurch

h~d

thPir annuul

Valentirll' D111ner l"r1day ,
ft"bruary 9. in the Jo'elluwship
Hall.
Harold Taylor upt'ned With
prayer 11YCr the potlu{'k
dumer. Dan Silvers ·..:ave
d~votions frum I' John 4:7·21.
Fullowing D'tn's scripture
reading Jea n IAHnphicr rt.&gt;ad
several puems of l1we nnd
God .

Several f&gt; litnned ii Ctivltics
followed· in keeping with the
thrmr of lt~ve . Lucille Kunsz.abo was the sweetheart of
the evening and won the
favor . Oule Lamphier gave
th e benedi ction for the
evening. The evening wus one
of goud fellowship ~md love.
The deeu r of the evening
was red and white. Hed and
white eheckered tablecloth s
were used to decorate the
tables und hea1t centerpieces
with heart -shaped 1nint cups.
Hea rts on dainty doil ies with
scripture passages of luve,
deco rated the wa lls.
Co-chairp erso ns for the
felhlwship were Darl! King
and Odella Taylor . Barb
Langhorne and Larma Waugh
were planning assistants.
J ean Lamphier wns activities
co~ordinator . Ca rla Mill er
was food CO-{)rdinator.
The Junior High Youth
made Valentine Tray Favors
for the resldt!nt::; of Pin c~.:rcst
Nursing Home.
The youth mt~dc fuvors
from hcar1·shapcd riut cups,
with scripture ve rses. After
filling the cups with soft
Valentine cand y they took
them to the nursing hume
excited by the response and
fellowship of the residents.

After \' ist tln~ with thtrestdents. the youth wt&gt;nt (JUt
fur pizza and ft'llowship at
IA.Jn1bi's in tht' Silver Bridgt•
Plaza. A sh,Jppm~ excursion

'11\(' t'Yetlii\J,: WH S S! iHtt•d ofC
with l'hoi"H\ SIII.~Lil~ b~ llll1
l'hildrt'll nnd .lal'k Pt•IT)' .
ussucmtc mmistt·r . pli:l) lllH
thr ~mt.ar . l&gt;'nlluwmg ttw

f1Jill1 WCd ,

sin~ in~

NEW
IMP .ROVED
VANYL · ITE . an out·
standing latex paint -1

;

Family and

APPLIANCES

Budget

Hemsley, April Clark ,
Michl King, Angelia Curtis,
Ci ndy Curtis, Duugtus
Beaver, .Bret Korn, Sean
Doidge, Sandra Mutlox,
and Debra Werry . Unable
to attend but sending a gift
was Glenda Gum.

•

Son born
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Hoff-

man, 1469 Norma Road, Colwnbus, are announcing the
birth of their first child, a son,
at the Riverside Methodist
Hospital in Columbus, Monday, Feb. 6. He has been named Christopher Ryan. He
weighed seven pounds, eight
oUilces and measured ttlmost
21 inches.
Christopher will be baptized at the lllllllaculate Coneeption Church · on North
Broadway on March 5. Godparents will be Ms. Patrice
Smith and Greg Harding.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. John McCoy,
Sr., Columbus. Paternal
grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Dana E. Hoffman, Jr.,
Rutland, and the patemal
great-grandparents are Mr.
·and Mrs . Dan• E. Hoffman,
Sr., and Mrs . Charles Betzing, Tuppers Plains.
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Hoffman, Jr. were in Columbus
for several days assisting in
the care of their grandson .

.. ·

'

~,,,

FRIDAY, FEB. 17
THRU MONDAY FEB. 20TH

·····,,

DINGO BOOTS
DRESS ANI) CASUAL
VALUES TO

'36.99
THE ORCHESTRA STRUCK UP "Love Makes the
World Go Round" as President and Mrs. Carter took to
the dance floor at one of their Inaugural Balls. In the
year since, the Carters haYe emerged as partners in
government as well as in marriage . To kct•p politiC's nut
of dinner table l'n.n vcrsat,ion, the president and firfit
lady hold weekly "working lunches.''

ONE GROUP MEN'S and WOMEN'S

'2.22

SHOES

(rJcanveRserCOACH
REG. '13.99

Shop Our Store For Many

made with a new Acryfi(: .

Vinyl Latex
PolymH .
ADAPTABLE for all
types of Interior wallS and
ceilings- ECONOMICAL
one c:Oat co\lers most

· minutes

pleasant odor EASILY

-

w~sh

'255 ,

CLEAN

equip-

ment in warm, soapy water

SUPERIOR
WASHABILITY- dirt and

finger prints wash off
btCiute the new

easily

Viny -lte has unsurpassed

water

reslstenc~ .

.

:.

''

Ebersbach Hardware
"EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE"
110 W. MAIN

992-2811
I

POMEROY

You can count on us to provid e
tht· finest in health products
and services Vitamins to prescriptions - you'll find we offer
the latest in health needs.

For Men and Womenl

Includes
Women's Dress
Boots
I
.

4Qo/o

Day Sale, Starting

OFF

REGULAR PRICE

Friday, Feb. 17 to 25th.

-VILLAGE PHARMACY
Middleport, 0.
or
New Haven, W. Va.

WINTER BOOTS

During Our Presidents'

PHONE

N.2ND

BAHR

ANGEL TREAD
SUPPERS
WINTER STYLES

CHILDREN'S

in Fine Wearing A·pparel

QUART '

-i n thirty
leaving no un .

REG. PRICE

WOMEN'S

Excellent Bargains

RAPIDLY

For Every

MICROWAVE
COOKING

Uses 50 pet . to 75 pet . less elec tr li:l ty th .:m
convenHonal cooking
CooK s h1 one lourth
conven t iona l time . 675 waf ts of cooking power
at " high_" se tting . Touch Panel cont r ol s
Separat e start . s top defro st con t ro ls
Ultramaf ic Power Selector to ch oosl! a
variety of warm and cooking speed s. l'ull
down door · Large oven ca paclly Stain less
,steel Inter ior · Removabl e glass oven tray
dishwasher sate Ti ming - 9 to 99 199minuh•s
- dlgita_l display lnter!or l ight See-Hwough
oven door . Automati c digital clock di sp layed
In lights. Operates on ordina r y 115 vol t
household current .

SUPPER I'LANNED
There will be a fmni!y pan·
cake supper at 6 p.m. Thursday at Grac-e Episcopal
Church.

GALLON .

surfaces, use in tap-water
for thinning - EASY TO
APPLY - by brush, roller
or
spray
DRIES·

a shurt

81/Y.

DISCONTINUED COLORS
.

!!.&lt;~vt'

BE WISE-

BY

Vanguard

Jm·k

Sponsors fur the dt~y Wl'rt• de\' ol lun u11 t hl' (i lltld
Ginn)' Noe. Kalhy Browmng, &amp;unantan
l.tlkt• lO .:lH.
Sharon
Burris, C:irrt•t•
J tH'k and U11l Tnwnt')'
Knotter. Phtnning l•onunittL•e plnycd umbrella tttss bull .
for thr trny {nvors wf•n· umt ht'll11 fuul riH. 'l' will! till'
E\,erett King sr. and Wilda llldt.' r dlih.ln·u owd Juut·
Kincaid . Youth whH helpl•d Vins,m phtyl'li ganws wilh lin•
wen· : Junct Burris, Jimm y sma!lt' l' t11t !l Ht\1 ~m· ~· a
Hale , Natali(• Simms. Husty pnty('r fvr 1ht' snal'k limt• fnr
Moo re, AlistUJ Simms e:tnd the t'hildrt.•n . 11Pa l1 -slmpl'd
Sherrie I Am~ ley .
V'Hh•ntinc t'mlkil'S and rt·d
The Juninr Yuuth Cum· Koo i-Aid were Sl' rwd b~ _
mittee of the Gallipoli s Kit1 y Prrr)' mH I l.rlly llull t:'y .·
l.11risl1an Church spunsored :1 '!11e childn•n Wl'l'(' t•ach ~ivt• n
Valentine Party for th~ sixth 11 Vnll;'nliiU' fHvnr to take
grade through nursery, hot!H' . Tht• ha ll WH .'i l11•&lt;·un1H'd
February 13 in the fellnwship ~t pprup ri ~l tely fur tht.• fcs1ivt•
hall .
· hl'['i iSiun .

THOM MeAN

Men's Dress Shoes
VALUE.S TO

'26.99

.

$1 5 22

heritage house of Shoes
·

0.

Store Hours: 9:30to5:00 Monday
Thru Saturday, Due to Energy Crisis , ·
N- 2nd Ave :

Middt&lt;&gt;nl&gt;rl-

0-

�Lack 0 f pile
• h mg
• h urt cmcmnati
• ' . • m• 1977

6-The Daily Senlmel. Mldtlleporl·l'omcroy, 0 .• Thursday. Feb 16, 1978

Tup~ary 1s the a rt uf
l rammg. cutting and trim-

The term Itself derives frum
th e l.alin " t oparius, " i· r

~~i~l~n~;~~~~a~~~~~~~~~~r1~~l~e~~~~ ~~~~~~~:;.tal

or !andSCli pe

. ..,.._. ..,.._..,,. ~,.,,,......... • • • • • • • • • • • ~

•1 00

00

TRADE-IN

On All Uving Room Suites

MASON FURNITURE
Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat.·8:30 til 5:00 Thursday Til 12 Noon

FRIDAYUNTIL 8 PM
Her m an Gr a t e

Mason , W. Va .

773-5592

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday ,Feb . 16, 1978

You and the income tax

•

(Edit ur 's Nute: Th is Is t he
seeund uf a thrre-pan serlcs
un lhl" 1978 Chtd nnati Rt·ds,
~· hu upon spring trai ning next
wt•ek. Tuday: Wh at it a ll
t·umcs dt•wn lu - pill'hin' and
hillin '. t
By Rl l:K VAN SANT
CINCI NNAT I IUPI 1 _
Last May 7, the hard~J itti 11 g
Cincinnati Huds senn?CJ 10
nms against Pittsburgh. Rut
lo~1 12-10.
1.a~1 June 22, tlw slugging

fell H-9 . ·
Ande r son. " There 's no use him to ov erpowe r the
And on July 28, the Beds denying that. The statistics oppo stion most times out and
rijvaged Chica~o pitching for are there.''
at least keep the game within
t5 big unes. Oh yes. the Cubs
The Cincy pitching stall reach all the time.
got 16.
was lOth in the 12-team ' Anderson doesn 't like the
Besides wasting great National l.eague in earned thought of scor ing 1~ rWls _
hitting performances like · run averaJ;{e last season, with and losing .
those, Hed&lt;' pitchers last a 4.22 EHA average per
Although the bi&amp; ·deal lor
year were losing games by game. Leag ue cham p Los Vida Blue was vetoed, the
the likesofi0-1 , 10-3,12-1, 10-4 Ange les was lops with a 3.22 Reds did acquire a starting
C::lnd 13-4.
ERA .
pitcher in an offwseason trade
For t"'o-t ime de£e nding
But, like every year , the tha t ha s been so mewhat
wnrld dmm pions, those were Heds figure they're bound to overshadowed by the Blue
wer e !:iOillC pn.&gt;tty hwniliating get some good pitching in the ballyhoo .
,

Heds ta llied 9 run.s aga inst

eKpericnces.

emn ing season.

Plliladelphia. And lost 15-9.
On June 27. Cincy gut 9
against San Francisco. But:

" A lac k of pitching
definitely hurt us last year ,"
says ~ecb ' manager ~parky

So what's the reason lor
1978's optimism?
Well , the main bright spot,

ca me o ver from the Cubs .
Althoug h Bonham's 10-13
record last year was his

.of course , is having Tom
Seaver around for an entire

fourth straight losing season
with Chicago, Anderson has

year . Acquired from lhe Mets
a t mid season last yea r ,
Seaver came on to compile a
br illi a nt 14-3 r ecord l or
Cincy .
Seaver fi gur es to start
between 35 a nd 40 gam es this
year. Anderson is counting on

him tabbed as a winner .

Right-hander Bill Bonham

" You wait and see," says
Anderson. "Bonham is going
to pitch much better in
Cincinnati than in Olicago.
Forget that record in
Olicago . People don' t realize
how difficut it is to pitch

there . ll'sgoing to be a totally
different thing lor him here ."
Anderson also is counting
on youngsters Paul Moskau
and Doug Cap ilia to have
benefitted
!rom
the

or

experience

their first

season with Cincy last year
and lend support lo lhe key
man - ·Seaver.
As for hitting, well, if you
don't co unt on that continuing
in 1978, then you're writing
off the Reds altogether . The
Reds have to keep busttng
barns to be contenders.
And, at thi s point , there's
no reason to doubt the Reds'
hitting for '78, not with the
likes of George Foster, Pete
Rose, J ohnny Bench , Joe
Morgan and Ken Griffey still
around.
Fosler, the
National
League's mos t valuable
player last season, led the
league in home runs (52),
HBI's ( 149), and runs (124 )

and also had the third best
batting avera ge ( .320) .
"Certa inly F oster c an
repeat that kind of year,"
snaps Anderson . "The man
has arrived. He's going to get
better, not worse."
R&lt;&gt;se, de spite turning 37
years old in April, trained
more and banqueted less in
the oil-season and is !ired-up
about becoming only the 13th
player ever to get 3,000
career hits. Rose goes into
the season just 34 hits shy of
that ma rk.
Bench rebounded last year
and is optimiStic about the
coming year . Morgan has
vowed to recapture that little
bit · he lost last year after
winning two straight MVPs
and Griffe y is figuring on a
fo urt h s traig ht plus-.300
hitting season .
So, as usua l, the Reds are
banking on their hitting and
hoping lor their pitching.

Vikings spill Eagles, 73-65
By Greg Bailey
Symm es Va lle y pla c ed
three m en in double figu res
and pulled 0:1way from v isiting
Eastern in the last quarter to
notch a win last night, 7H5.
Ra lph Ingles an d Mi ll er

tossed in 22 point&amp; apiece to
pace lhal Viking atta ck, wit h
Miller getting 12 of his team's
18 fourth quarter po ints.
The scor e was lied at 34-ali

FLOOR/SHELF
3-WAY SPEAKER

at intermission , and Ingles
was dominating the boards
and scoring as he rac ked up
18 or his points in that lirsl
ha lf. But he wa s destined to
ex it via the persona l foul

I'

route.
I'

East ern was in its ninth
ba II game in which they lost
by ei ght points or less. J ust
the night before they were

Waverly .
girls trip
Reg. 119
'·

The . Meigs Girls cagers

Ea.

drop ped their second game in

~:ov::~s~~~~~d~~~nh~~~~i~~

SAVE ·SSO

55. A slow sta rt a nd a cold
third q uarter a llowed the

n n 11 f IWt•Pt er . 4 drrvers rn a ll
Ge nu rn t• waln trt veneer enclos ur e

•
SAVE 35%ON A REALISTIC HI-FI RECEIVER!

CHARGE IT
(MOST STORES)

VISA

... •

ooo o·o D

SAVE s7o

MEIGS (S5) .:.. Brown 6· 1·

13; Vaughan 2'0-4; Burdette
2-0-4; Epple 12-7 -31; Chapman 1-1-3. TOTAL S 23-9-55.

STA-52

Get grea t soun d for a so ng I H1gh qua l rtv A M .• FM

31· 2072

stereo recer ver wrth 12 w att s per channel, mlllr -

Reg. 19995

mum RM S a1 8 ohms fr o rn 20 · 20.000 Hz. w 1t h

WAVERLY (68) - Fair .
4-0-8; Fenaker 2-0-4;
Hartl ey 2-0-4; Knight 1Q-J-23 ;

c hild

Shoema ker 6.J -13 ; Bobo 6-4-

no mo re tht:Hl 0 9°0 THO

16. TOTALS 30-8·68.

Meigs

~~~ '"" p, ~ ..

• S TA · 52 AM· FM Stereo R eceiver
• LAB -52 Aut o / M anual Chan g er
• Two MC - 500 Willnu t Venee r
Speahers

/J~ '

/ ';....._ .

REALISTIC S-TRACK
RECORDING TAPE

2 FoR1 SALE
80- MINUTE

F~Rl?.~o F~R2~~
Re g. 2" Ea,

• f lf. lended H ig h-Fr equenc y R esponse'

r

:

-

11

-1

-

--- -

..........
•

'
'"\ 000

for

Coach

Carl

Wolfe's c ham pions. They
were Kelly Winebrenner with
24 points ; Richa rd Teafor d,
23 points; J ohn Say re, 12 and
Tim Brinager 20.
The win gave So uthe rn a 13·
· 4 record while North Gallia
dro pped lo 8-9 overall.
Stacy Winston topped the
Pira t es with 15 poi nts.

Br ina ger , 20 ; Sayre, 12 ;
O' Brien , 3; Hil l, 9; Baker, J ;
D. Hill , 4; F indlay , 9 and
Souder, 8.
North Gallia (7 4)
J us t ice . 14; Minnis, 10:
McComas , 4; Winston, 15 ;

Smith, 12; Siewert, 11 ; Shaw,
2 ; Phil lips , 4, and Glassburn,
2.

BY Quarte r s :

Sou thern

27 20 .31 37- 115
14 15 16 29- 74

N. Ga llia

.
.
l
cats trzp
K)'iger· .cr·eek
.

·

·

Dav-id Swa in. senior center,
led the way with 19 points.
David Cam pbell finished with
· 18 points and F rank Mooney,
senior guard , had 10 points.
Von Ta ylor , a junior
gua rd-for wa rd , led Ky ge r
Cr eek's attack with 19 points .
Georg e Willis and Fred
Helms canned 10 each.
Hannan Trace jumped into
a 16-9 lead at the end of the
first period and were never
seriously threatened.
The Wildkillens .look the
reserve game, 62-39.
Box Score

Box score:
EASTERN (65l - Goebel 6·
3-15; Spencer' ll -1.23; Bissell
2-l -5; Brown 4-6-14 ; Wigal 2·0·
4; Eynon 1-0-2; Boyles 1-0-2.

TOTALS 27-11·65 .
SYMMES VALLEY !73) Ingles 10-2-22 ; Davis 1·0-2;
Mil ler 10-2-22; Wiseman 3·0. 6 ; Ga lloway ·1-1-3; Flack 8·1·
t7; Crawford O· f.t. TOTALS
33·7-73.
Scoi-e by quarte rs :

Eas tern

Vikings

15 19 16 15- 65
18 .16 21 18- 73

We're Just
What You're
Looking For
'Mobile Home
Underpinning
• Roof Coating
• Tie-Downs
• Awnings-Carports

INSURANCE
REPAIRS

Willi s 5·0-10 ; Helms 5-0·10;

KINGSBURY
HOME SALES

HANNAN TRACE 162) -

1100 E. Main

KYGER CREEK (51) -

Taylor 8-3-19 ; . Smith 0-0-0 ;

Tr e a s ury a nd
Intern a l
Revenue Ser vi ce (IRS l
regulations and guidelines.
The followin g individuals
(th e
most
commo n
situations) arc required t o
lile fe deral in come ta x

returns:
A. Single individuals (and
cert u in legally separa t e d

spouses ) who twve more than
$2,lJ50 in mmm1l gross in~
com e. Gross in come is
defined for tax purposes as
all income received regard~
ic~s of fo rm (cash, checks,
goods and-or services ) unless
spt•l'ifically ex.cludcd from
incume. Some common ex·
eluded items from income
a n~: social security ben.efits,
w t~ lfare payments, unem·
pluyment benefits, loans and
gifts.
H. I\ Dependent uf another
(no rma lly a c hild ) w ith

•

IJ

•

I)

•

•

'

0 0 (')

.
0

69?~
SAVE

Gif" ilt stprpo adO -ani Copy yo ur reco rds to take on the road !

5 30

ryo ,J~ l

Swain 8-3-19; Mooney 3- 4-10 ;
Ca mpbell 8-2-18 ; Bea ver 3-1·
'1 ; Neal 0-2-2; Pack 3-0-6.

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

l

'

t o 5 per·

children; Heck y a nd
Michael. Paternal grand·
parents are Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Salser, Minersville,
and maternal grandpa rent

cent penalty per month for a
maximum uf 5 months (25
percent 1. To s t ate th is
another way, if yo u do not file
yo ur tax ret urn timely (on t he
due dale of the return - this
year April17, 1978 - plus a ny

is Bobby Joe Ada ms, Sr..
Raci ne. Mr.. and Mrs. Roy
Prollitt, Radnc, and Mr.
and Mrs. J ack Adams! also
of Rac ine . are great·
grandparents.

extensions) yo u will have to
pay in addition to yo ur tax
liability per your return, a
late penally of 5 percent per
month or the unpa id Hmount

for each month or part of a
month you are late. Fur
example, you file yo ur ta x

(94 11 and Unemploym ent Ta x
1\clurn s (940 ).
Jf you fa ll within one o£ t he

return on April 18, 1978 and

situations in A·F above you

une uUnl'c. Timothy William.
at Holter Medical l'enter un
Feb . 8. Ma ternal grand ~
pa rents· are Mr. and Mrs.

dl't CIS S411l~ l c arl~r .

J !lhn Harra h. MaS&lt;&gt;n . W. Va ..
and paternal grandpan•nts
are Mr . and Mrs. Hubert
Starfflrd. Pomeroy . Matern&lt;Jl
grea t·grandparcnts are Mr.
and Mrs': Bas il Harrah,
MaS4m, a nd paternal great grandmother is Mrs, J.illlt•
Cununings of Pomeroy . Mr.
a nd Mrs. Stafford's ulhcr twv
sons are Dl•ron Hil·ha rd, 9.
a nd Andrew Ch&lt;J rles, 4.

tJt 7:30 p. m t•ach l'vt·ning .
Tht' rv&lt;'ngelis\ will bt• .Jun
Ditty and his so n, ,l1rhn , w!ll

Th£•rc· wall
·tx,&gt; sprdal musk fur ~al'11
~crvire and a nurst'r)' ";Ill l&gt;r
pru\'ldr d. The puiJlir is m·

status. This column should be

Employment Tax Returns

only.

used

aS geOeral

Score by quarters:
9 11 l1 2G-5 1

Kyger Creek
Han . Tr .

A I'ATI F:NT
11

pa lil'nt

SUNDAYS

at

Holzer Medkal l 'enter.

UNTIL FURTHER NOl iCE
DUE ID THE COAL SHORTAGE

MENTO MEET
Meigs Co unt y Churches "f
f.RAN CETII MEET
IN IIUSPITAL .
•
',
.
Albl' lt l Ht'(l) Kea ton IS a ,
Christ Men's Fellowsh ip ·; . Hemlock ( , r;1cc Will uw~t- s urg tcctl palicut \It t ill'
meetin~ will be held Monday , Saturday.a t 6 p. 111 . An u.y stc l . Umvcrsity Hospita l in Culum~
Feb. 20 at the 0@.Xter Ch ur('h supper w~Jl be ser ved pn ur t o bu!:&gt; . Hi.s l'OUIII IIU!Ili.I~ I'L'i 62!),
at 7: 30p.m.
thl' m t•ct m ~ .
·

At Swisher &amp; Lohse
Pharmacy

We're having a
•

Birthday

•

KLEENEX
PAPER TOWELS

REVOLUTIONARY VALUES

SINGLE ROLL

RAND McNALLY
Reg. 13.95
ONLY

Q-TIPS

BIC LIGHTERS
REG. '1.49

ONLY

fil ing a joint ret urn, must fiJe
if. their gross income is JTl,ore
tha n $4 ,7110. If one is over 65,
· tile income level is increased

59~

Reg.
ONLY

RUBBER BOOTS
With

INSULATION

Coughing ...

PACK

I

dividuul gross incom e is
mor e than $750 . The $750
~russ income ruh~ is also used
. fo r murrit..-d individuals not
living tog~ther .
F .,ll you a re sei f-emolov~d
11 nd earn more t ha n $400 1n
net ea rni11gs . you are

MEN'S INSULATED COVERALLS

I

Try

Benylin®
Cough Syrup

Open Friday tile

Fo r years a lead in g
pre s crip ti o n p re pa ra t ion .
No w ava ilab le in the s ame

lil6

4 oz.
Reg. 12.42

$}36

992-7034

Refreshing

16 16 8 22-62

Cepacoi.Mouthwash
18 oz.

SALE ENDS SATURDAY, FEB. 18TH

bottle

Reg. 12.29

% OFF ON

ONLY $}24

•

COVERALLS

ALL .
SLEEPWEAR

2·7

1-14

BOYS!

BAYER ASPIRIN

GIRLS TOPS
&amp; SWEATERS

Sweatshirts
Cardigan Sweaters
Valour Pullovers

Lg.

100 TABLETS

GIRLS
DRESS SLACKS

Reg. 11.54 ONLY

Se leCtion of

I
~

R.

•

·--~

BOX OF 170

sug

to $5,450, and if both are over
f~ . Kross income of more than
$6,200 Is needed before a
ret urn Is required .
E . A husband and wile,
which decide to file separate
returns instead of a joint
return , m ust fil e il their in·

...... ....... ,

Pomeroy, Ohio

Tops &amp; Pants
GIRLS' JEANS
_D
::;,:re:;;s;;:s~es;;,&amp;
.;;..'C;;,o;,;v..;e,.ra;,l_ls...._..! .__ _slim. Reg . 7. 1' _

BUY
NOWIII

WeWorkWith
""'";(
Your Doctor

r

Malc hed Sets

""""'

BAYER

2-14

Selection of

10 CAPSULES

GIRLS PANTS
SLAf~~ps

We follow doctor's orders to the
letter . Your prescription s and
health depend on our reliaaccurate service. Call on us.

lf\IIAl , ,,

rftft il l\,

88e

DRESSES

MISS OUTI

40°/o OFF ON

leather atop ligh t-we ight, cus hro ny crepe sole s,
these Hush Puppies · bas1c casual s are
priced econom ically. Avaitat;t le in a litlinglywrde
rang e of sizes.

I ·. llt

•••

Reg. '2.09

ONLY

99 C

DISPOSABLE INSULIN
COATS

2-6 x

JACKETS

Boys
SPORTSWEAR
Mate hed Sets

INFANTS
SNOWSUITS

BOYS SHIRTS

RACK OF

INFANT WEAR

2-14

ILDREN'S ASPIRI
36 TABLETS
Reg. 59'

ONLY

33~

U-100 SYRINGES WITH NEEDLES
PKG. OF

lO

Ke nneth McCullough, R. Ph.

Charles RiHi e , R. Ph .

Ronald Hann ing, R . Ph

Mon. thru Sat. 8:00a.m. to 9 p.m.
Sunda y lO : JOJo 12: 30and S to9p.m .

PR E.SCRIPT ION S

PH. 992-2955
Friendl y Service

9:30, M-Th.-Sat.
9:30-8, Fri. ·
2nd

PRICES MAY VA RY AT INDI VID UAL STO" • '

•

WILL BE CLOSED

l'tmrlcs Smi th , age si"-,
Pullit'ruy , b

54TH EDI'TION

4 BUCKLE
ARCTICS

DON'T MISS OUTI

... more. comfortable
than feet! In ric h. smooth

DEAL E ~"!

V£'\t•r&lt;.lns Mt•morial tloSpital.

plans fur the banquet.
Parent s U l'l' askNl to attend .

ROAD ATLAS

FOR THOSE COLD WINTERY
DAYS AHEAD

nwro tha n $3,950 (if over 65 $1,700) . A qualifying widow
(l' l' } is a perS4.m whose spouse
lws died wi thin t he past 3
yea r s , has a dependent child,
anti has pHid over one h~ lf of
t.hc cost of maintaining a
home.
J) . A husl.tand and wife ,

LOCATED IN THE MEIGS PLAZA

('ummings wh o was tHk t•n tn

information

Anti-Freeze Footgear

child with gross Income of

tu nut:ine

at 121 :40 p. m .· fur Bub ·

fimtl

have no extensio"ns and you sho uld file an a nn ual federal
owe $950 in addition to th e income tax return - fo rm
amount withheld fro m yo ur 1040 or 1040 A. Failure to do so
earning. Your penalty for can subject you to penalties.
that lateness would be $4 7. 50
Next week : Filing lor a
(5 percent X $950! .' This t ype re.f und i and Your fili ng
of penalty a lso applies t o
other type tax returns such as

IUADWAAE

SQUAll l:A U .F.Il
'Jltc Syraeusc EH Squad
WI;IS t•aU~I Tucsdu~·

HOOSTE IIS l'll MF.F.T
'llw Southl'l'll Juniu r· llit-( h
i\thl·c t ic· Bu11sters will n1eet
Friday Ht 7::.10 p. Ill. w nmkc

ACE

0

vitrd .

13 18 .24 13- 68

Leather Casuals

~

.

birth of their third ehild,
Ja ml'S Allen. He was bum
un Feb. 7 at the Hub.cr
Medical Center and weigh·
ed seven pounds, fi\'C
ounces. Mr. and Mrs.
Evans hav~ lwei ulher

lhr11ugh Suuda~· with s~·rvin•s

l'LU B ~'OU NUt~ tJ

A Karden club. rccentlv
~~r~nniled at Wulfe Pl'n. will
nn~t Ft•b . 21 at 7:30 p. 111. at
l ht• Z1un ('hurl'h ur C11rist .
Helen J uhnsun will Sl'rvt&gt; as
hustcs:;. Anyune wi shin~ tv
juin. 1hey need /ltlt bt.• n
I'('Sidt•nt ur WtJ lf(' Pen. iti'C
askt-d ttJ atlentl the mecl ing .

Totals 25-12-62 .

a 3 eyelet

!l·· l h":.
I !,
p

"II·,,, .,. .,,
'· , "''

~ ubject

Mrs. Gary Dennis 1-::vans,
Racine, are announcing th t·

their third son. eighl pt1und ,

p res c ription stre ng t h w ithout
a prescnpt1o n .
ONlY

- Also-

o lt- nl~

•; o. ·"

yo u will be

JAM ES EVANS
CHILD BORN - Mr. and

Thompson 4·0-8; Westfa ll 1· 2·
4 , Totals 23·5-51 .
·

Color-Tan

,tl"' •" "·' l,tblt·· d l
l!,oi(,.,

Wha t il you are required to

unea rned income of more

may contact Don Hunuel.

~Hush P~pp1:.

Reg. 99"

return .

to file a return.
The six cl a s sific atio ns
abnve are the geriera l

"DUCHESS"

-

TR-882

fili ng class ification, the
safest action is to fil e u

I~equ i red

Middleport, Ohio

I

'

about your sit uation and you
appear to be in a required

tha n $750. Unearned income
is income r ec eived from
passive sources such as in·
tcr cst and dividends. This
waS written into the law to
help &gt;top income spreading
~ m u n g family m embers.
C. A qualifying widow or
widower with a dependent

Involved in the baseball
league are asked to a ttend.
Managers are needed for
T·Ball and pee wee teams.
Anyo ne inter ested Jn
helping with the teams

REALISTIC S-TRACK RECORD/PLAY DECK

THINK OF H I -Fl . THINK O F. REALIS!IC. THINK OF RADI O S HAC K I

OF TANDY CORPORATIO N

fig ures

requirements are clarified by

THE
SHOE BOX

$109 80

339

80

ADIViSION

1977-78 SVAC cage cham·
pionship, posted a convincing
115-74 romp over North Galli a
Wednesday night
Fo ur player s hit dou ble

should lite an individual
annua l tax return . Then• arr
additional requirements for
special situations such as
Aliens. If y ~U a re in · doubt

file a federal income tax
ret urn and do not do so ? Two
problems can come_ up : a
civ ll action and a criminal
tax refund or credit.
. action . We will discuss only
The legal requirement is the civil act ion which nor·
t.lefin ed in th l' Inte rn a l mally ends up being a pena lly
lievenuue Code of 19M, a assessme nt. If yo u fail to file
federal law. The "Code " a timely federal im:om e tax
st ates in pm1 that: "Returns return without "reasonable
with respect to lncorne taxes cause" and uwe taxes in
under subtitle A shall be by addition to that alrea dy paid ,

t he followin g ... " These

arc annuuncing thr birth uf

guidelines tu determlne if yuu

Vtl UTIII\t:\' 1\' Al.
uuth rc\ aval will ht• hl'ld
a1 tht· Ftrst Suuthern H ~1pti:-;t
t ;hurdl in r'HniCl'! IY Frillo.t~
1\ \

.4 16 8 17- 55

Waver ly

SAVE

Sep•tl !t

Reg . 1" Ea .

Southern, , winner of the

Belo w is the fi rst or a series
ol Income tax a rticles to be
publi shed In The Daily
~entineleach week. Author ul
the a rticles is Hoger l..
Luck eydoo.
Middl eport .
lkt•nsed pu blic accountant .
Must You File A
Fednallurome Tu
Retu rn
·111cre are two prima r y
l'&lt;•usons to file a federal t ax
return . TI1c fi rst Is a legal
req uirement to file, which we
will di sc uss t oda y, a nd
secumlly to obt a in a feder a l

ev quarters:

ABOVE RECEIVER IN A SYSTEM

40 -MINUTE

Southern rips
North Gallia

Coa ch · Dan Cor nell 's
Hanna n Trace Wild cats
Waverly's tall center Kim • finished the l977-78 r egular
Knight was just too m uch season orl a high· note We'd~
under the boa rds as sh e nesday night with a 62-5! win
over Coach · Keith Cart er's
co ntroll e d the glass and
po ured in 23 points. GQards Kyger Creek Bobcats .
The Wildcats closed the
Shoemaker and Bob o hit
double figures also with 13 season with a 10..7. record
and 16 respect ively. Waver ly overa ll .
The loss left Kyger Creek
wa s hot from the fi eld ,
ca nning a good 51 percent of with a 2-14 ma rk heading to
their attempts. They only Saturday's Class A Sectional
Tou rnament game at Meigs
sank 8 or 22 free t hrows.
Meigs ' Vicky Epple took High School.
the night's scoring honors :::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::
wit h her 31 markers. Glenda ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:::::::::::::·:·:·:·:::::::::::::·:·:::::::·:·:
Brown joined her in double
fig ures with 13 a nd collect ed
BASEBALL MEETING
13 re bounds. The gals or
There wtll be a meeting
Coach J oy Bentley we re cold
ol th e Pom eroy Youth
.from the floor, hitt ing just 34
Baseball League Sunday,
pe rce nt while sinki ng 9 of 19
Feb. 19 at 2 p. m. at . the
from t he free th ro w line.
Pqmerily Legion Hall.
Hampe r ed by the flu bug,
Plans wtll be made lor
Meigs slipped to 6-5 on lhe
slgnup day, money making
year. They trave l to Athens
projects, field repafr and
tonight
maintenance.
Box score:
All pare nts ol youth

sped k• ·r~

R~g

when they fa.ce Hannan Trace

victors to stay ahead despite
a s izzlin g secon d period
show ing by Meigs.

Su pr r co rnporH'Il l ~i ucl r o ~ln ~l s avrng s 1
Mass rve 12 '' wnofer .-- dupl r n(drang~

l) '

they'll be loo king fo r r evenge

Friday night In t he opening la llered in the last period
round ol t he Class A Sectional when they couldn't seem to
at Meigs High School.
. , find lhe range on their fo ul
Last
n ight,
East ern shots. Ma ny times they
missed on a one and one
situation , and on the night the
Eagles canned just 1l of Tl
free throws. A hotter hand at
the foul line could have
spelled a win lor the Eagles.
J unior Dan Spencer led the
Eastern a ttack with 23 points.
Jell Goebel, another junio r ,
added 15. a nd Dave Brown
Senior s Rex J ustice and had !4 . Eastern connected on
Hen ry Siewert had l4 a nd 11 'll or 77 shots for 35 per cent.
respective ly.
No stats or score was
availa ble on the reserve till,
Box Score
Southern (115) - Tea f()rd, just that the Baby Vikes
23 ;
Wi nebrenner ,
24 ; picked up the win .

Meigs 68-55 Wt ld

OPTIMUS-5 8
95

defeated by Hannan Trace on

two last second points. But

SON BOliN
HUTl.ANIJ Mr. and Mrs.
Marvin Sta ff ord. llutland ,

I

I

Pomeroy, O.

E. Main

Near Stiffler's in Pomer oy
992-3586

Open NIQ hls I i ll 9

�8-'l'he Daily Sent mel, Mlddlepoll-l''omeroy, U , 'I hursday . Feb 16, 1978

I

'

For Friday, Feb. 17, 19711

ASTRO·GRAPif
Bernice Bede Osol

~'lfj· !JJ
JJJ J~l~l!Jij

w

Fl'b li, 197M
A w elcome cnange may be m
st01e for you th• s corn•ng year
It w 1ll alter you r ba s•c lif es tyle
to • th e Detter an(! g rve vo u th e
means to do mo rt1 tun thmg s

AII UAHIIJS (,lan 20·F&lt;b 19 1

Man agm g o th ers today ts no t
mPre ly an execut•ve !u r• c t•on
You make •1 an arl fo rm Yo u do
'' so $1-.IIHull y th at no o n e wrtl

be otl ended L1ke to f111d ou t
more of wh a t Ires ah e ad tor
yOlJ "' Se nd to r yo ur cop y of
Astra Grdph l e lh11 b y mat lmg
50 .J:,en ts !01 each and a long
set! add ressed sta mpC'd c nve
lope to Astr u Gr aph P 0 Box
489 Radt o Crty Stati on. N Y
100 19 Be sure to specrl y yoUI

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash -·...
-·
WANT AD
CHARGES
,
Business
Services
'
,.,
.'

\

I

I~

Wonb or Under
C.Sh

t•rsc..:s

1Ft·b 20..Mar( h

Th e re ward s wil l be bo untdul
to d a y rn srtua t ron s wher e you
use yo ur talen ts &lt;:Hid c apabrh
tr es to the fulle st Pull out all
th e stops
GEM INI IMay l l-.Juru• 201
C learly d eltne d ltnan c ra l or ca·
reer goats can be ac hr e ve d wrth
retatr ve ease tod ay The se cret
Belreve yo u re a wrnn e r then
ac t r~cc or cl rng l y
LAN~ F.It

IJun&lt;• 21-July 22 1

Do r1 t dehber alel,- s queez~
you rsel f rnto R corne r bu t on
th e Oth er t1an () Uon I toss m th e
to welrf you get rna t1 ght spot
Chall en ge s awaken you r bett er
q u al 1tres
I EO t hd} 2J· Aug 22 t An op
por trrr1rty to further enhance an
alr ead y rn eanrnlul rela t1 ons hrp
rn a y pr esent rtself today Mak e
the neces sary gestures
\ IHGO ~ Aug 23·SL·pt 22t p ne
ol the rn ator th1ng s tn a t wtll
1ngratrate yo u Wltll yo u r pe er
gr o up today 1s you r wrtl rngness
to shaw w1ttl pal s you r good
tor tun e

L!U itA

iS&lt;· pl 23-()( I 2:11

Adhere to your tog1c a t as sess

rnen t tod1:1y The brrght s pot s
y o u II

see

~ 111 exr s t

Don I let

assoc ra les Nlth te ss percep
Ir on dr ss uartc you
S &lt; OHPIO t0( l 24·Nov 22)
Luck y are th o se wh o halfe a
place rn yo ur heal! Ther r wants
take prec e dence o ve r yo urs
to da y Yo u II d o to r th em wha t
they co uldn 1 do alone

SA(; IlTARI US

INu\' 23·

D t"~e 21) 11 wri t be re adily appa r
en t to per sons you Hade wtth
to day that yo u re not lo Qk1 ng
tor specral deals o r d tsc ounts
That s w.hy you II ge t one
CAI•RIC()RN t Oct .22-.Jan. 19 J
Trea t yOur wo rk toda} not as an
ar d ou s task bu t as a labor at
lo ve You will be amazed at the
rewa rd1n g r esu lt s s uc ll an attr
tude Will prod tJC€

l NEW SP, PER

E N lE H P~'&lt;tSE

ASSN 1

Alfred
Social Notes
Sunday School attendance
on r'e b 12 was ~3 . the offermg
$.10
W orship servtces wer e held
at 10 ~5 w1th Cha rles

Don11ga n br1ng1ng
th e
message from Matthew, " A
Challenge " Howard Flan·
der s w as song leader and
Nma Rob mson was p1amst
Attendan ce wcs 37 The
theme for Sunday's serv1ce

was
Day "

" Human

Relat10ns

The au d1 tmg comm1tt ee
Will meet thi s week to audit
the treasury books of the
church
Ella Yost's youngest
brother, Dewey Werry, died
last Monday of a heart attack
a nd Mrs Yost and son
Delbert and family of Sugar
Grove , Oh10 made the tnp to
services and buna l at St
Marys, W Va
Mr and Mrs Arthur
Atherton rece1ved word that
their daughter, W1lma Jean
Vmcyard, has the nu and her
young son IS with the
Athertons

Carmel News,
By the Day
Mrs Donald Pi erce of
Athens VISited her mother,
Mary Ctrcle , on Fr&amp;day.
Rev and Mrs Carl H1cks
spent Sunday evenmg w1th
Mr and Mrs Roher! Lee and
family.
Wilham r.arleton ol Qacme
and Eume Brmker called at
the home of Mr and Mrs
Arthur Johnson and Sh,·rvl
LeAnn, Patrrck and Betly
Van Meter
Mrs . Hatti e
Powell ,
daughter Addle , R. D.
Racine, Mr and Mrs. George
C~rcle, Mr. and Mrs James
Circle of New Haven , W. Va .
VISited at the home of Mary
C~rcle on Sunday
Mrs Patty Crrcl e and
fanuly v1s1ted at the home of
Mr and Mrs . Douglas Circle
on Sunday

ANNOUN CING lH~ open1ng ol
lhl.! pub loc occoun t. ng olhce ol
ko ge1 l ur ke ydoo
lr ctm ~e d
publ o( Q(tQunton t l o1 acton long
01rd bookk eep111g !tC/VICe!t ond
~1cpooah o n of
f~d e • o l and
stole 1011 r elurn !t ot 291 Wa lnu t
St
M1 d dt epo • 1
Oh1 o
Q91100b Hov r !&gt; by oppo1nt

'l1 ARCHAfT fAll ~oil;!
M1n1
lllOIOI '&gt; 10 and j'2
fi QVel
l to•le r s lti 5 S3 7 ~ 1':, 7
Burolo. hou'&gt;e S4 87 ~ f old do wn
S l 100 up We -.e ll " e1v1CC and
quality Open Su nday ~ Comp
Conle y !:i torc roll Spies li'r b1
N o l Pt Pll•asont

WACtNE

tt! err bllddmg m Bo!iohou

f oe

!HI: RACINE Gun Club C un Shoo t

30&gt;

370

to ry choke guns on ly A !i.SQI!ed

U\Mn

cun.sec.: ui.Jv~
11lth~ I d11y

'""'

In mernory Clrd of Thwnlui .. ...t
Obtluwry 6 t;enb pt!r lfunJ S3 00
nununwn C;a!lh U1 adv11n ~r
M ~bt le

H.umt! Sllll:!li 11nd Yard S¥l~s
trrt! ~~~npl.ril only wrth ush wuh
urtle r. 2:i tent cholr!!:,e for Mlh c.:~rry­
uJg Bux Nwnbt'r In Ci6tt' uf The Sen-

unel
Tlw Pubii.Siwr tt"St'rvd I~ n~hl
tu ed 1l ur rejet l~~;ny wd!i dt&gt;t'1ned obP'lrUfl&lt;ll Thr Pubhshrr wtll nut ~
fur mor~ thtin unt: Uk.: or·

111:!'(.1.m~rtiun

Phone 992 215&amp;

201

TA UII US li\pnl 2().May 201

Ill~

Jill
2.2&gt;

dilylj wtll btl dwrged

rt!Spoxtslbl~

l:amping t:quipmmt

,..

liS

f'.ileh word uv~r Uw mrnlmwn 15
words " 4 t f'nl5 ~r wurd ~r cia)'
runnu~g ~

Notices

Charw~

'"'

Atls

Notices

Vo lunltH:•r
FuP
D e po l lln ~nt w ill s po n~ or o gu, ,
!.hoot every Satu r day at 0 prnol

br nh s•gn
Extra eff or t ma y he neces s ary
toda y but rt wil l be w o rth 11 If
vou re mvo lve d m an e n
ter prr se that looks lrk c a
mone vrnak e r
AHIF.S t J\.1anh 21·Apnl l!f l
Your en th USi aSm rs co ntagrous
10day Anv p rOJec t s o r plans
tha t y-ou promo te wrll no t b e
uantmg for supporte rs

9-Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursday, Feb. 16, !978
OICKTRACY

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Munday
NIJOnllflSatun!oy
Tu!!.sdwy

thru t"r1d11y
t PM
lhe tla} before pu b H~a u on
Swuiay
t PM

Fnd11y ~~oft~moon

NOTICE OF ~'
A PPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY

On January 30 1978 ,n t he
Metgs Coun ly Proba te Cou r t
Case No
22 279 Pau I
S
Sm a r t
44 Lrnco tn Str eet
M1ddleport , Oh tO 45 760 was
appo1nled E'll:ecutor of the
esta le of I rene T Cross,
de ce ased , ta te of Ru tland
Str eet
M1ddleport
Oh10
45760

tor y choke guns 011 ly

ev ery !&gt;undoy ohfl'rn oo n

f- of

rneo h

CU: ARAN C( ~ AU: begu t!t" M on
f e b 13 at SewN 5.,,.. O OJt te t
MOIII S lf EJC I
RO CIIl('
A ll
p o l~ e ~!Pr d ouble ~I I I ~ I OfiU(Od
40° • and ~· • fht uod b1 g !t pool
51or $1

BOBBY J RUPE and
KAREN K RUPE
20 8 Mu lberry Street ,
Pom eroy, Ohro ,
Pta 1nfrffs

"

ARTHUR GE NHEIM ER
Rc-s 1dence Unknown
E t .i'll ,

D efendants
C~s e

No

16 LU5

NOTICE

SER V ICE BY
PUBLICATION
Arthur Genhe 1mer whos e
place ot r l.' sl dence IS unkno wn
ilnd whos e last aCiarcs s rs
unknown and th e unk n own
ht&gt; Jr s dev , see5 , lt'Qatees ,
admm ,slrrt tor s
diS i rlbutees
and CH'Cu lor s 1t any
of
Arthur Genhe , mer dec.-:q sed
whose n;:~rnes and place s of
res.dence a r e unknown and
canno t wdh
r easonable
d t,qe n ce be asc erta1n(1d
W,IJ,arn Schm1 dl
whose
pla c e ot n •s•dence ~~u nk nown
itnd whose last addr ess s
unknown and the unknown
he , rs , dev 1sccs l egatees ,
admmrstrafors
d isr r , t:lutecs
and exe cutors 1f any
of
Wi ll•am Schm1d f deceased
whose names and ptacl's of
re-s 1dence a r e unknown and
c n nno l
wdh
r easonable
dd gence be ascertamed H
F Schrn 1dl whose pl ace o f
r es 1dence i S unknown and
whose
Ia s t
addr ess
ts
unknown and th e unknown
11c r :; dCifiS e es legatees
d1s t r , bu tces
admm, st r-a tor s
,1 nc.1 elC eculor s 11 any o t H r
Schm1d l dece a se d w ho se
na mes
and
p la ces
of
r es 1dence are unknown and
can not
wilt'!
r easo nable
diligence be a scer ta 1ned C
Schm1d t wl'1ase pla ce of
res 1dence Is unknown anrl
whose
ta s l
add r ess
1S
un k.n ow n and the unknown
he1rs dev •sees legatees
d1Sff1bUJees . admrnrstrators
ana E.'l(ec utors r1 any o f C
Schmi dt dece a se d whn ~r
man deceased , whose names
and pla ces o f r es1 den ce are
unk no w n an d c an notw1 t h
r easo nable
drlrgence
IJC
a sce'rli11ned
are
hereby
no t 1f 1ed l hill pla 1nlr tt s have
broug ht t h r ~ ac t on namtng
eac h ot you as on e of the
defendants
n th e abo~e
named court by l d1 ng !herr
petilron on January
JO in
11178
Th e ob 1ec t o f I he pettt10n rs
tha 1 the
de f endan t s be
r eQu tr ea t o se t up !herr
a11 eg.ep es ta te or nter est 1n
th e herem afl er descr,bed
proper ty or be for eve r barred
fr om asser lm g the same and
thaI p la 1nt1f f s' I dle be f orever
qu1 e le d a~ aga1ns t any cia 1m
estate or 1n t erest o f t he de
fendant s and for such other
r elte f , legal or eQU itable as
may be found 10 b e pr oper
and ne cess aq to a ff or d
Plalfl l ltf S full re11ef
wr th
1u dgm ent tor cost s h er e1 n
t h at :;r'lld relit e sta t e 1S
desc r 1be d as follOW $
T he: l oltowmg real est at e
s.tuated tn the Coun t y of
M e tg s State of Oh10 and 1n
lhe V tllage of Pomero y to
1

Mannrn g 0 Webster
Proba te Judge
Clerk
(212916J tc

tarpente:r
Personals

Mr. and Mrs Vernon Perry
and Mr and Mrs Michael
Perry Y. ~r e overmght guests
uf relatives m Columbus and
consulted therr doctors there
Mr and Mrs Mendal
J ordan and Mr and Mrs
Kennet h Crabtree were
supper guests at the home of
Mr and Mrs Dwame Jordan
and family to help Dwame
ce lebrate hiS b1rthday
Mr
a nd Mrs
Roy
l
Wi seman, Harnson vt ll e 1 W&lt; TRACT
ONE Fr actiOn 17
were recent guests o f her l awn '1 , Range 13 bounaea
parents, Mr and Mrs. Earl an d descr1 b ed as f ollows
Begmn rng 3 10 I 3 fee t North
Starkey
ot the corn er of the Fac tor y
Frank Epple, Middleport, form erl y known ac; th e Pr obst
e Factory on Sugar
VISit ed W C. Peck and took Furn1tur
Run Stree t th en ce North 65
him lo Parkersburg W Va , Deg SO West 181 f eet to a
to see Paul Peck W C Peck &lt;;t ak e !hen ce Nor th 25 Deg
!H
23
teet
to
stayed 10 Parkersburg w1th aEast
s tak e
t he nce
South
hi s brother-In-law and stster, 59 Deg East 175 t eet to
the nc e Sout h 22 D eg
Mr and Mrs Emz1e Davis a10s' take
Wes t 66 2 3 l e£'1 to tne
who returned h•m to his h ome place of beg1 nn1ng
TRACT TWO In Fra cl 10n
he re on Saturday
No 17 Town No 2 and Ran ge
Guests llf Mr and Mrs No 13 o f the Oh10 Compan y's
ct)ase and bound e d an d
Reed J effers at the ume of dPur
esc r i bed
as
fo l l ow~
the death of her molher , Mrs 8eg rnn1n g 177 fee l North erly
Beulah Cordray were !'lr fro m the c orner of th e Fac
tory forme rl y known as th e
and Mrs John Cordray, Probst
F urn1ture Fa c tor 'I'
Fullerton, Calif., Mr. and on Sugar Run Str ee t , t hence
Nort h 65 Deg 50 m rnules
Mrs Robert Cordray and W
es t 18 3 f ee t 10 a stake
En c and Dr and Mrs . John thence Nort h 25 Deg Ea st 66
2 J t eet to a stake th e cor ner
Parnsh, Westervi lle ; Mr ot
a tot now or formerly
a nd Mrs Michael Lawson, owned
by
Wll hemt na
Co lumbus, Mrs Herman Ge n he1me r s lot , th en ce
Sou t h 65 D eg 50' East 1e 11eet
Cordray , Mr and Mrs Gale to a stak e then ce Sou th 22
Pnce and Jearuue Boggs, D eg 10 m 1nutes W£&gt;st 60 2 3
I O the place of begummg
Athens, Mr and Mrs Gene feel
EX CEPT the f o tt ow1 n g
Jeffers, Lester, Marco and p ar cel fr om Tract Two
In Fraclio n 17 Town No 2
Roher!, Mr and Mrs Lavern a nd
Range No 13 of th e Oh10
Jordan and Jerr1e Sue, Mr Com pany 's Purcha se and
and Mrs. Lan y Birchfield, bounded and dcscrrb ed as
lot to w s
Mr
and Mrs
Dav1d
BEG INNIN G
177
11'£' 1
Uewellyn, Mr and Mrs Jack N or th rr l y fr om th e cor n er of
th e F actor y formerly krt, ow n
Jordan and Mr and Mrs . Dan as
t he Pr o b s t Furnrlure
Jordan and Derek, all local Fac tor y o n Suga r Run
Street th ence North 65 Dcg
Mrs. Amy Lowther and SO
West 183 f ee t
t hence
Hazel Dumgan called at the N orth 25 Oeg 00' East 42 7
home of their brother and feet to a s la ke , thence Sou th
saster·m-Jaw , Mr and Mrs.

V1ctor Perry on Sunday to see
their mother, Zelia Perry
who has been staymg there
f or some ume

Rex Cheadle suffered a
broken ankle \\hen h e fell
while accompanymg the ball
t ea m to a game and 1s con·
f1ned lo h1s home With a
substitute drrvmg h1s bus
Mr and Mrs Earl Starkey
and daughter, W1lda Mae
Wrseman spent Sunday af·
ternoon m Middleport v islllng
Mr and Mrs. Larry Clark
and fam1ly

A thought for the day
Dlustratmg how times and
nations change 1s th1s
quotation from frrst U S
Pres1dent George
Washmgtoh , '"Tis our true
policy to steer clear of
permanent alliances, w1th
any portion of the foreign
world."

•

72 Deg 00 ' Eas t 18 2 te e t to the
West sr de of sard Sugar Run
Street th en ce South 22 Df' g
10 ' West 6.&amp; tee! along th e
wes t s1de ot satd Stre e t to the
place o f b eg rnn rng
con
l a1nrng 22 100 acr es
Ref eren ce Dee d Vo l 269
Page 27 Deed Records , Me1gs
Count)' , O h10
You ar e requ ired to an swer
t h e Pel1 1ron With in tw ent y
e1ght days aft er the la st
publ 1ca tron of th rs n ot, ce
which will be publi Sh ed on ce
eaC h WCek fOr SIX SU CCf.'S$1Ve
weeks ,
and
the
l ast
pub ! ca110n will be maJe on
Feb ru('l r y' 161h 1978
t n case of yo ur fail ure to
answer or otherw 1se r espond
a s perm rtted by t he Ohro
R u les of Crvd P r ocedure
w•lhrn the t rme
s tale d ,
Judgment by defau lt wt ll be
rende r ed against you for the
r et1e l dema nd ed rn lhe
per 11ron
La rr y E Spen cer
Clerk of Cour t o f
com 1non P leas ,
M e1ys County
Oh10
( 1 ) 12 , 19, 26 ( 2) 2 9, 16 6t

In 1970, J oe Frazier stopped
Jimmy Ellis tn five rounds to
become the undisputed
heavyweight bux 1ng
champion .

,.

'

f

I

PUBLIC AU C110N l1 1do ~ 7 p n1
N('w a nd u&lt;,C.d mer&lt;hQnd lse
At ~o SotlJt dO'f I p1 11 l oh of
1\('W IO I"iC at Oh1 o ~1 ver Au c
li o n M e1g'&gt; f'loto M,ddtepo•l
OhiO

PH'IUI'l Smp and Cu1 f f. o1111(!1ly
~ h1 d C '1' Kay s Beauty Sol on 1n
Business Opportunities
Pouu;•10 '1'
No w
O ~ tHl
l or
bu ~ lll CS!t 111 l ong Bo tlom Oh iO
POMEROY Moores ~l o re Ah e1
l- o r
op po u11mero 1 ph one
30 yeor!t o f !t u «; li!'~ !i ful bu smcs!&gt;
985 3577
we o re !tCIImg rhr., general
ha1d wo1 e
au loroo l•ve !t lOre
MUGS COUN I Y F1sh onrl Ga me
P11 Ccd at nve ntory Contact
A ~sr1 w dl hold on
1111p011ont
':loln!HlHv•lle R~of E~ tote pho11e
meetmg Frtday f eb t I ol l J O
I 304 67 5 3030 PI P le a ~a nt
prn lor membe1!t only Wdl be
hPid ol Coo n Hunler1o Cl ub
House on Snowball Hdl

THE PHOTO PLACE

DA I RYMAN
742 3002

WANT EO

Coli

IHE ME IGS County Council on A g
mg IS accep11ng oppl collon s l or
the
f ollow ng
pOSi il cn
Gerrotncs Arde (pan T1me)
Quoil f lcOIIons
Expenence
with oll 1ce machtnes and book
l..eep1ng procedures
ex
p crren ce 1n warkm g wrth
groups and leod·ung crolt s
musl be lrcen~ed dr 1ver {c hauf
fer s license preferred ) wllh
own cor and w1llmg lo trave l
over coun ty Appl, c otlon ~ on•.
ovorloble 0 1 t he Seruor C1l1len s
Cente r Pomero y and w .t l be
o cce pl ed th ro ugh February 21
The MCCOA IS o pr vo le nan
prof1l corporot• on and on equal
opporlun ll'l' amployer

MASON TWO bed1oom opt Par
11all v t urn Ful ly corpetcd No
peb Depos •f requued S200
pe1 mo A ft er 5 p m coli (304)
882 3356
EFFICIENCY APARTMENT
pre ferred Co ll 992 3 140

Lady

ECONOMY TRACTOR w 11 h al l at
1oc hments L1ke new osl.. ong
S22"50 Phon e (614) 698 3290
RUG S
WAl l
Hongrngs ond
al gons N ce lor Ch11\trno~
Reasonab le Co li ~92 21..14

For e!. ! Pr o B &amp; S MOBIL E HOMES Pt Plea
san t W Yo besrd e Heck s
l o1 stand 1ng
992 5965 or 1973 Br aod111ore 14 !( 6.&lt;1 2
bedroom
8570
1973 Darren 14 ll.60 2 bedroom
COINS CURRENCY token s old 1972 V rclorron 14 11 b7 3 bedroom
poclo;e l wo lchelo and choul s
2bo th
srl11 e1 and gold We need 1964 1972 Co .. entr y 12 X 65 3 bedroom
and older ~ 1l ver co uls Bu'f se ll 1969 Sto!esrna11 12 x 60 2
or lrade Coli Rage• Worn sley
bedroom
742 233 1
1%5 CHE VEllE 4 d1
A C 283
O LD FUR NllURE rce bo~&lt;es bro ~s
eng 2 bbl oulo tran s Ex
beds ~ron bed s e tc comp lete
ce lten t co nd1l10il T1 uc k loppe •
hous eh olds Wrlle M D Mill er
std 8 ft bed 28 111 h1gh
Rt 4 Pome roy Oh10 or co lt
7 42 24B5
992 77b0
HAY FOR SA LE
NO ITEM TOO Lor ge or roo sma ll HA Y FO R SALE
985 3849 or
W1ll buy I p ece or comple te
9B5 4248
household New used or on l 1
ques Morlnl s Furn1lure 20 N REDU CE SAFE &amp; l os t w t!h C oBcse
Tab le ts 8. E Vop water p11l s
2nd St
Mtddl eporl
Ph one
Nelson Dr ug
QqJ 03 70
CH IP
WOOD
Pol es
ITIOI( FIREWOO D SPLIT ond de l1 vered
Sd5 a co rd or $35 o lrucldoad
d iameter 10 on largest end sa
All har dwood 843 2933 or
per ton Bu ndled slo b $6 pe r
992 b29S
ton Del1vered to Oh10 Poll et
Co Rt 2 Pomeroy 992 2689
NICE PIGS tor solo Call oller 5
949 2857
GOO D USED
tr a cto r
w rth
hydr au l1 c 3 pi hllch 7d2 307 4 SELLING OUT due to 111 hea hh

WANTED TO buy Good u ~e d
bunk bed s cOIJ\pl ete Phone
742 3014

5rn a11 grocer y st ore an d ga s
sla tiO II w1 th stm:k and eq utp
men t l oca ted at Lon gsvdle on
Rout e 124 Very g ood buy Ca ll
992 5868 or 742 9045

WA NT TO buy R1g ht t. on t l er1de1
l or 1970 Cheve lle Mol1bu In
good co nd lion
Reo ~on ably
pmed 992 509 7

HOOF HOLLOW Hor ses Buy se ll
trad e or tra in New and u$ed
saddles Ruth Reeve s Albany
(614 ) 698 3290

300 Ma1n Sl
Pomeroy, Ohio
Pomeroy 992 6282
or 992-6263

RI SI NG STAR Kennel Boordrng
Indoor and outdoor runs
Groorntr•g all breed s Clean
son1to ry focd1 11es Chesh1re
Phone (6 14 ) 367 0292

SMALL BLOCK Chevy eng ne 11
111 clutc h d speed tron sm1 s
sro n Good co nd11ion S125
949 2860

DINETTE SET $25 Bed $20 Eosv
ME IGS COUNTY Humone Soc tel y
cho1r $5 1wo 3 v.~Jy lamps $5
on1mol carelme and adopl1on
eoch
All of obo11e
545
se rv1ce (f ree onrmols) 99'1 7680
9915 418
or e11enmg s and Sundays
992 542 7
Mod
co
M 1972 1 • ton Dodg e p1c kup $1 100
Mtght !rod e for sma ll
Craw ford
Rt 4 Bo){ 326
Phone 742 2460
Pomeroy Ohto 45769 Membe r
!.h1ps and donol1 ons PO Box ZENITH 19 mch Blo ck ond w hrte
b82 !_~neroy O hto 45?69
te lev1s1on E• ce llenl cond1 tron
FOR SPECI AL people AKC Dober
~·~ i3e • L 77~2 16
mon P1n sc her pups Red and 23 INCH MOTOROl A co lor TV
r ust Good pedrgrees $125 ond
Good cond111 0n 25 rnch GE col
up (614 ) 797 4500 or (614 )
or TV console ex ce ll ent con d1
7Q7 4197
11on Phonr 992 2292
AKC REGI STER ED Boxer pup5 FIRE WOOD 949 2358 or 985 35b7
Ho11e been wormed 1st shots
CONDITIONED HAY
M 1){ed
992 2726
$100Phonc
$1 50
Clover
AKC RE GISTE RED Dob erm an
742 2873
pups 8 weeks old hove health
ce rtrf rcote
$75
Ph o ne
843 3053

NEED A WAT R
SOFTENER?

1964 RAMBLER WAGON
6
cylrn der 3 speed Irons Body
and engrn e 1n lair condrtron
985 3B1 8
1961 OlOS 98 Good cond1hon
Con be .s een ot 655 Sycamore
Slll~e l M1d dleporl Oh1o A 1ok
111ll.. St25
1/"j69 CHEVY 4 dr Excellent cond r
lion $49 5 M ode l 12 Wm
chester
sho t gun
-$300

Let Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; cond1tton your
water wtth Coop water

sotlener, Model UC SVI,
Now Only ,. 2 79,95
Let us test your water Free

Pomeroy Landmark
Jack W . Carsey, Mgr

Phone 992 2181

747 7359
7

I +HOULP ONLY

!li!LL 11\'V SOLAR

"The Or~onaltn

1 1 · 9 - i ~c

••

~7:

==~

ACE HARDWARE
Located In The
MEIGS PLAZA
Middleport. Oh10

Open
DOMan -Frtday
• 001116 OOSolurday
12 00 t1l6 ·OO Sunday

Lakin, W Va

2 51

2-2·ifC

mo

FREE "ESTIMATES
Storm
Windows &amp; Doors
Replacement
Windows
Aluminum
S1di ng· Soffitt
Gutters-Awnings

WIL L CARE for the elderly 1n our
home Phone 992 73 14

,.

A TT EN TION
MARE Ow ner$
AOHA stud se rvrce lntroducrng
lo Sou thern Oh1o Cor taka so r
rell son of Otoe Br eed for co l
or conformo110n and drspos 1
tron Ph one 698 82dl even 1ngs
or wnte l or breedtng con tract
Belle Echo Quarter Hors es
40225 SR 692 Pomero y- Oh1o
45769

Room Additions
Garages

Phone 992-2181

1974 SKYLI NE 1d x 56 3 bedroom
ic 57500 992 20 19
tofol-electr __._..

____ _

1971 liBERTY TRA IL ER 12 I( 60
Tw o bedrooms 2 oc re!t Coli
992 594 3 offer 5 00 or 742 2768
on yt1rn e

8:

52 TRAILER l--;-r---;;1; Would
make o good ca mper Phone
94~ ~3~? nyl~me ~~r ~ 30

VA FHA 30 'l'r frna ncrng al so
r elrnoncmg Ire land Mortgage
77 E Stole At hens phone (614)
592 3051

do roo fm g con'i lr uc tton
plumbmg and healrng No tob
too Iorge or too small Phone
7 42 2348

HOWERY A ND MARTIN
Ex
covo11ng
!tep lt c sys tems
dozer backhoe dump tr uck
lrm es lone
gro vel
blacktop
pov1ng Rt 143 Phone I (61.&amp; )

698 7331

PULLIN S EXCAVATING Complete
Serv1ce Ph one 992 2478
MAGGIES UPHOLSTERY Refrnrsh
re uphol$tery
r ebu rldmg
Beoutrful selectron of mQlenol
and vmyf s Free eSiimOie Tel
742 2852
Locot 10n
Solem
Center
TURLEY S WRECKER
Servrce
Roone Oh1 o Day or nrght
949 2657
ANY SEWING mochrne cleaned
o iled &amp; od1u sted $5 98 F-REE
p1c ku p and delrlfery Belpr e
Oh to I 423 5497

GeorgeS Hobstetter Jr ,
Broker
107 \f:l Sycamore St
Pomeroy, Oh1o

THEY IN
JAil?

AnER ALL" ·· B&lt;JT
THEY'RE ON PROBATION

THIS TIME

JAIL AND A I="!NE 1

TEET~.

Almana c 20

7 30--Porter W agoner 3 Gong Show 4, M a t ch Game
PM 6 , Price is Right e, MacNeil Lehrer Report

70,33. $100 000 Name That Tune 13 Pop Goes The
Country 15

XI I X]" r r 1 I I I ]

Couple 4 , Wonder Wom an 8, 10 Washington W eek
In Review 70 , So The People M ay Know 3)

B 3~C PO Sharkey 34, 15, Wall Slreel Week 70.33

(Answers tomorrow)

9 00-Rocktord Flies 3,4, 1s M ovie Thr ee On A Da t e"
6, 13 , Mov ie " Big M o" e, IO Soundstage 70
Gr eenpeace Voyages l o Save the Wh a le 33

Jumbles MAUVE CROWN DEPUTY ASTRAY
Answer Wh at no golfer would take lying down ASTANCE

Ves terday s

10 OQ-Qulncy 3,4, 15, News 20 , Ska llng Speclacular 33.
10 30-Monly Pythons Flyi ng Circus 20
11 00-News 3,4,6,8, 10 13,15, Di ck Cavell 20 Li lias
Yoga II. You 33
11 Jo-Johnnv Carson 3,.4, IS . Baret! a 6, 13

Mash 8,
M ovie ' Dra c ula vs Frankenstein " 10, M ont y
Python 's Flying C ircus 33
12 00---Janald 33 12 05-Mov le " The M a ting Game''
12 4G-lohman &amp; Ba rkl ey 6, Ironside 13
1 00-Midnlgh t Special J,A, 1.S , Mov ie " T error In the
Haunted House " 10, 1 40-N ew s 13
2 Jo-News 3, 3 Oo-M o\lle " T he Dr ea m Mclker" J ,
4 Jo-Movi e " A D egree ot Murder" 3 6 00- M ov1e

e,

Free Esttmates
Work Guaranteed

2-10-llc

"Slightly Terrifi c" 3
Movie Channel 4 -

216 E. Second Slreel
BUSINESS LOT - On !he
corner of Rl
124. Has
bustness room , restdence
of 9 r ooms, 2 baths , and
double
garage
Only

$35,000
NEW
6 room ranch
home Equtpped ktichen,
dm1ng room, 2 full baths,
full basement, carport and
2 acres $36,500

TUPPERS

PLAINS

lois In Tuppers
O!olo

gas, city water , 21ots, front
and back porches $5,500

wilh Oak floors , utility
room , bath , breezeway and
garage

1 home In Tuppers Plams,

CORNER LOT - 7 room

O!oio

1ncome property One apt
rented, owner lives In one,
another to be renovated

1 home on West Shade,
near Chester, Ohio.
1 home,
New,
Crow
SubdiviSIOn , Rt 7 nellr
1
Ftve Points
listings

before you buy.
Cheryl Lemley
Assoda1e
Home Phone 742·2003

H1llon Wolfe, Sr.
Associ1te
Home Phone 949-2589

gray
14 Helped
Ref's count
~~~::: ;~ "R1goletto"
composer
18 Work With
dough
l\.1~"&lt;f~' .w Grrl 's
mckname
:l3 "Key Largo"
star
25 Harrdo
26 Exprate
0 ~;-~Cl-~fl.!~~'!....GL_ 21 Compact
;:,
28 Port1co
1
Its 'appen1n' 29 Lay bare
'ere and now ' 30 Brrck
earner
__...::. 31 Embank ment
32 Not a soul
34 Capture
37 Flock of
w1ld fowl
39 Happen
agam
· r......__,4J Regwn of
Gennany
12 Girl'S
name

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR
Swe eper s loa sler5 1rom oil
small opphonces Law11 mower
neMI to State H1ghwoy Gw •ugt'
on Route 7 Phone (6 14 ) 9U5
REMODELING Plumbrng hr.o11r q
and all typ ~s of general repo1r
Work guaranteed 20 ye&lt;:Jr s ex
penence Phone 992 2409

-

1
'i

GASOLINE ALLEY

---

SEWING MACHINE Rep01 rs ser
v1ce ott mok es 9Q2 2284 Th•
Fobrr c
Sho p
Pomer oy
Autho11 zed Smger So les 011d
Servt ce We sharpen SCi sso r &lt;.

-

1

EXCAVATING dozer loader ort d
backhoe work dump l 1 u c~
ond lo b oys for htre w 1ll h01 r ''
frll drrt to sort limestone oml _..
grovel Colt Bob or Ro ger Jt t
fers day phone qq2.7089 111gh t .-

1

Are tJOUqo1nq

not?

phone~2~~r ~93 ~~32

EXCAVATING
dozer bock h l ~
and d•tcher Chorles R Hot
f 1e ld
Bo ck Hoe
Serv1cr•
Rutland Ohro Phone 742 200!1

Only $9,600

TOWARD ROCK SfRINGS
-

6 JOOm stucco block

home
Has natural gas
furnace , city water , 2
baths, and almost 1 acre

Wanl $20,000.
Don't be caught tn another
snow storm, buy near town

Call992-m5
Helen L. Teaford
Sue P. Murphy
G . Bruce Teaford

Realtor Assoc•ates

$33,000 00.
NEW LISTING - Appro &lt;

14 acres, several bulldmg
sites, close In on good road

RL-1. RIG..,., ,....!N- / "''HlS cOM~I~fE WILL

HEJltiY ORGR"'I"'E R
.J&amp;INJC~,. '1'0 L.OOfC 1,.,.0

PO$S18LI!: viOLA'riON

oF HUMIW IZIGH'I".S
IN MONAGOf
1i

but

lovely

3

"'i\1 152
•; 1\sT

,, .. •"""•...
............
~

• 10
•

.1 8 7

+ &lt;1 1119 52
"'(/ '18

II

K (' 6 I

SULITII
.AQ 1Hn6

'

+ ,,4 I2

"'K 10 6
V ulne1 .1blc llot h
Deal er South
Norlh

AXVDI. BAAXR
One lell c r stmply stands for another In lh11 umple A Is
u sc•l for the three t.'s, X fnr th e two O's, etc Stnglc letters.
apostro phes, t he length and f o rmalmn
the words are all

or

En c h day the c-ode l etters

arc

d11ferenl

F DV

NA
UMI

OWVNME
QNVXMDV

NA

BJNAVA

FDV

OEMVXBI
OEH

XB

MLLMIVD·
HMBA

EMV

(1 I

· Fmrly g uud pl ay " r c ·
plt e d the P rofc:-;sm
You
d1d htk c th e sr1 fcly piet y tn

trumps, but you wound up
hdVIIlg to guess about the
queen u£ clubs Correct pluy
would ha ve c hmmc.tlcd the
dUb/-1UCSS'

Wh.tt th e

that ti H' st uclc nt was
right for the fu st twn tri cks
Hut a t ·t11 c k s ' 4 and 5 he
s h o uld h dV(.' c a s h e d
dummy's m.:c cllltl k tng of
dJ,amonds a nd then r uffe d

the la st dtarnond
fhe next pla y would be the
heart E tthe r opponent
c o uld wm but would hc~vc to
lead a club to tnk c S outh 's
fmcs~c for hun g tv c South .1
r:u ff ~md d1 scar d or sHcnfu•c
a trump tn ~ k

,..... . .
I'

I s.~

p ' ""

By
Santa~

Th e stude nt took h1 s al:C ol
h ea rts . ca s h e d the ace of
s pades. entered dummy
w1th a dia m o nd and led a
spade from dummy
This way of playtng
trumps was th e c orrect

safety play It g u t:~rdcd
aga mst losmg two trump
tncks unless 1t turned out to
b e a n tmposs tblht y. as 11 w;~ s
tn th1 s mstance
West took h1 s two s pades
and led hccJrt.s Eventually ,
tt wa s up to the stud e nt to
dec1de whu·h way he s hould
f messe for the qu een of

A CahfornM 1 ca d cr wants
t o know 1f a ma r ried couple

has ever won the Life Ma sters Patrs

Morrts a nd Helen Portu-

gal won 11 1rr 1960 They are
Still happily marned as of
thi s wrJtmg anrl really fme
players
1 NFWS P~ P I-H t Nnttl'lll st A~'iN

care of thr s newsot.J
lncfi vrnua f ques tron s wtfl

E~tper r s

pet

clubs He guessed r&amp;ght and

be answe rt:!d Jf accomrarued
tJy srampcd
s el f addressed
envelopos The most mletest
mQ que st• on s will be (JSed m

turned happ1ly to the Profes·
to ask. Good play 1

cap.es ol JACOBY MODER N J

sor

/tll 5

CQ /omll

11118 KIRK feat urea Syndltale, lnt

dining,

Put yourself in our hands.
Whether you're house

hunting, selling or bolll
- Yollr Interests are OUR
interestsl

rn

HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK, KATHY &amp; LEONA
CLELAND
ASSOCIATES
U•UOII

t.

11MSO~~Y. MAAM .I

i.U&lt;\5N'T PA~ING ATTENTION

I ACCIDENTALll( STEPPED
ON ABUG ON Mil WA'-1
TO SCHOOL TODA'f

I FEEL 50 GUlLT'i... I

HATE TAKING A LI~E ...

PUNISH ME, MA'AM ...
GIVE ..V.E AN 1'F''
IN SOMETHING'

PAW··DID '-IE NOfiCE
I RE-ARRANGED TH'
FURNITURE WHILE
'IOU WUZ GONE ?

1

100 you f JaVf' a ftu Ps tro n for
the e~perts ' Wflte A sk lfn:

BARNEY

$12,000 00.

Professor m cu nt

w~ s

Opem ng lead ' Q
and Alan

I , 0 N G F E J, L 0 W

Wa:-;n t 1t '

low

1-'.~...;"

RNTB
PBMIPB
X
XNRROIH
Yesterday's Cryp~uole : MEN'S EVIL MANNERS LIVE IN
BRASS. THEIR VIRTUES WE WRITE IN WATER.SHAK.ESPEARE

. . ....

K I 1

&lt;liiOBI

I' ,Is"
l '.ts..;

ENVZ

hardwood floors , 2 porches,
overlooks
the
river .

992-2259-992-6099
992-6191

' 75
+
II K h

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

QXM

• "2

•

Alan Sontag

scores 'B' on test

NUHTII :.! tf\ 1\

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

I•

Show

BRIDGE

Wt&gt;st

EOYB

bedrooms,

formal

35 Polly, to
9 30 - Consultati On
Tom Sawyer
10 oo - 700 Club
a. Scottish
hillside
l !rtl! sd,l\ l'lhrlull \' 16 l ll78
31 - Na Na
38 Football's
Stabler
to Ending lor
Oswald Jacoby and
client

~-+-4--I--IStudent

R NUB

$6.900 00
POMEROY - Older home

balh ,

25 Lloyd's top
ratmg
21 Strmgent
29 Unter Linden
31 Fr~end·
less one
33 French
river

CRVPTOQUOTES

WINNIE

corner, 1 level acre, 3
bedrooms, bath , format
dining , fireplace , carport &amp;

story brick, 2 rooms down,
2 apartmenls up , good
location , needs repair

Yesterday's Allswer

14 Noble
Italian
fanuly
DOWN
I Beyond
2 Caprr, e g

L-------------------------------------..;,;____~,.,:~..:...":..~;...:'Z:;;·':::"':..hmts

$10,000.00.
BRAND NEW - l ovely
ranch 'type located on

storage
BUY
NOW
$35,900 00
BUSINESS BUILDING -- 2

favor

9 Bandleader
Weems
11 Hold 1n
high esteem
17 Conswne
19 ZOla novel
21 Parched
22 Stem part
2:1 W1ld party
24 Bismarck

P-------------------~------------~--------------------------------------13Goose
genus

••
I
•"

bnck &amp; frame ranc h,
equtpped kitchen , ft"rm al
dmmg , 2 baths, util ity.
carport. 1 level acr e

5&amp;9PM - Lion lnWinteriPGI
711.11 PM - Meel John Doe (Gi
Ca~le Channel 5 6 30 PM - Tesll mony Time
7 00 - Paul Gaudino Family Fitness
7 30 - Wreslllng
8 30 - Modern Spo rts

e.g .
8 Ending for
pamons,

"·-"f''

open
or

MAIN
POMEROY, 0 .
NEW LISTING - 3 yrs old

9 ROOM BRICK - Natural

Plains,

BRADFORD
Auct ioneer
Com
plete Servtce Phone 9d9 7•187
or 949·2000 Racme Oh1o Cn tl
Bradford

-

Family Feud 10

8 OO-CPO Sharkey 3,15, Donny &amp; Marie 6.13, Odd

The latest JUMBL ES are here In JUMBLE BOOK 110 and JUMBLE
BOOK til Avaii&amp;Oie lor St :MI EACH postpaid from Jumote. c/o this
newspape1 P 0 Box 34 Nof¥'000 N J 07~8 . Make checks payable to
NtoNSPBP&amp;rbaoks

·.

FIV E ROOM house 1n M1ddl eport
Partrol both Basement Fully
carpete d 949 2655

We have Two Trailers with

our

THEM

CONVICTED ,

SUSPI'NDED SENTENCE

Answer here"[

....O NLY CHILDRE N

I~

JUST COMPLETED new house rn
Mrddleporl For more mformo
!ton call992 2238 or 992 530.&amp;

...

over

THAT ONE'

HOMESITES l or sole I acre unt!
up M1ddleport neo1 Rutlund
Coll992 748 1

Over two thrrds of an acre
Is this 3 bedroom home

Office Hours 9 A M . to '

Look

PUBLIC

OPINION"· FIGGER

WINTER GET to yo ur house? Let us
make necessary repo 1rs AI
l rorn m Construction 742 2328

--

HOBSTmER
REALTY

Close
Thursdays
Saturdays at noon

"AROUSED

3825

BATH ROO MS
AND K1tchen s
remodeled cerom1 c h ie p lum
bmg carpen t ry ond general
morntenonce
13 years ex
per1ence 992 3685

NICE THREE bedroom house w1th
goroge
1n Rust c Hrll s
S ~r ocu~~ $27 000 992 5541

PM.

WHAT HE ~HOWED
WHEN HE GOT

LJTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

ORPHAN ANNIE-DID JUSTICE TRIUMPH!

1

3~ NBC

News 3,4 15, ABC News 13 Carol Burne ll II.
Friends 6 CBS News 8,10 : Over Easy 20
7 00-Cross Wits 3,4 , Liars Club 6. Ca pllol Beal 33,
News 10. To Tell The Tulh 13 Gi llig an s Is 15,

Now arrange the crrcled letters to
form the surprise answar as sug
gesled by the above cartoon

YfAH" TH fN
WHY ARE N'T

8, Mi s t er Roger 's N eigh borhood 20, 33,
Hogan s Heroes 10, Emergency One 13 , To Be
Announ ced 15
~News 6, Elec Co 20,33. Mar y Tyler Moore 10,
Hogan ' s H er oes 15
Adams Chronic les 33

6

742-2328

Syracuse, Ohio
Ph. 992 -3993

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

PHONE 997-6333

s

Construction

LARRY LAVENDER

W ill

9.., _Jack W Carsey, Mgr

·~---

smo~e

Hl5 NEW

HEY 1 YOU AND YER
Tl1f PICTURE
y---~--------.----'POW!'R OF THE. PRESS"' DID GE.T

70,33 Gomer Pyle,

4 30-Litt le Rascals 3. 15 Gil ligan s Is .s , Bra dy Bun c h
e 10, M ary T yl e r Moore 13
5 QO-Here Come The Brides 3. Star T r ek 4 G un .

AMOS?

Pomeroy Landmark

----

Gilligan's ls 8. Sesame St
USMC 10

'IOUGETHU~

servtce department and
wtll servtce Hotpomt and
other brands

__

Garden 20

4 OQ-Misler Carloon 3, Edge ol Night 13 My Three
Son s 4, For Richer , For Poo r er 15 , M erv Gr iffin 6 ,

I

'

'

AI Tromm

3 30-AII In The Family 8. 10, Crocke llt' s Vl clory

ED? HOW DID

We have enlarged our

~Alii

'

.'

AscentofMan JJ, L l llesYoga&amp;you20

byHenn ArnoldandBoblae

6 110--News 3 4, 8, 10,13 15, ABC News 6. Zoom 70

tlEXFAN

&lt; '·

~n~
Remodeling

I•

l -l8· 1mo

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

..

Save 30 pet tc 50 pet.
on heatmg cost
Expenence and
fully Insured
Free Est
Call 667 6479 or 992·381 5
1·16 Int o

9. 00til9

773-5955

.,•
'

Cellulosrc (wood fiber)
Thermal Insulation

3 00--Another World 3,4, 15 , General Hospi tal 6, 13 ,

rx

1

Hope 6, 13; Gong Show 15, Elec Co 33

3,4,15, Guiding Llgh18,10

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

I ESTACb

''
'
"

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

3~ Ryan 's

Only 15

1t''""'0'""""'""- ··-n
-

Pometoy

•

Mel

17

3 , $20,000 Pyramid 13 . N ews 4,6, 10 .
To Say The Least 15. Gambit B

J()-Oays of Our Lives 3,4 15 As The W or ld Turns
B,to , 2 oo---One Lite to Uve 6, 13, 2 3G-0octor s

I

YIPTE

BORN LOSER

J&amp;L

00- Ne~ sce nter

1 OG--for Ri c her, For Poorer 3 , All M y Children 6, 13 ,
News e Young &amp; the Restless 10, No t For W omen

Unscramble these tour Jumbles
one letter to each square to form
lour ordrnary words

~

u

WAUPAPER.
PAINT &amp; SUPPLIES

12

10 00- 700 Club

12Ji mo

Wood Stoves

1 DO--Tomorrow

"
Paul Gaudino Fam 1ly Fitness Show

7 00 -

~ ~ ~~ ®

Ph. 9!!·!174

Not The lmitltors

SALES AND SERVICE

Movie " Murder on Fllghl 502" 8, ABC News 33,
Mo vie " Inherit the W ind" 10
12 00-Janak l 33, 12 4Q-Toma 6,13

Cable Channel 5 6 30 PM - Test 1mony Time

c-.

992·2206 or 992-7630

fA M. lo4 .30PM

11 30-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15, Starsk y &amp; Hul ch 6,13,

l f lt\lNl fi;}'\l

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Geographic 33
11 OG-Wheel ol For tune 3.4 15, Happy Days 6, 13, Ele&lt;.
Co 20
II 3o-Knockout 3, 15, Family Feud 6, 13, Partr idge
Fami ly 4, Love ol Llle 8,10, Sesame Sl 20,33 .
II 55-C BS News 8 Loving Free 10

3.4 : I 50-- News 13
Movie Channel 4 s &amp; 7 P M - Seven Percent SolutIon ( PG )
911. II PM - The Sent1nel IRI

501 FEEL

..... the .........
. . . a.tor to the

Route 3;, ''"";,'{;
0.
Carpl!t
Upli tery
Phone Mrke Youn1
At

Commerc1 ol property opprox 17
a cres leve l land loc ated ol
Tupper s Plorr1 s on Ohro Route
7 Phone (61A) 667 6304

HAY FOR sol e 949 2870

RESfARCH HAS ALWAYS
Nail A LAI!OR OF LOVE!

Service

Carpeting

COUNTRY farmland w 11h seclud
e d woods water ond good ac
C9$S rn Monroe Cou n1y W Vo
$1 000 down r oll (304) 772
3102 or (304 ) 772 3227

HAY FOR sol e 992 7306

&amp;UT PO COME &amp;AC:K·· WHeNeVER
YOU' ~E PREPARED TO FLINII
VOUR HEART AT MV FEiTI

VOLJ SEE, MY SCII!NTIFIC

11\I:Z. POI!&gt;IIINS··
llliiVIiR Mill &amp;USINI!-9S
WITH PLI!A+U~ ... LET'S
JU+T 5/IY l'M NOT THe
ROMANTIC TYPE!

SOM!OI&lt;/~ WIT~
W~OM I 'M RO ·
MANTICAL~Y
I N~OLVED!

Young's

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

J.•.

3 4,6,8, 10 13,15, Dick Cavett 70. Ove Easy 33

~RV,

,

Affair 10
10·QO-S&lt;tnford &amp; Son 3,4, 15, Tattletales 8 , Joker ' s W ild
10, Not for Women Only 13
10 3~Hollyw00d Squares
15. Andy Grl llllh 6
Pr ice Is Right 8 , IOJ Rick. Foucheux 13, National

e

1(

SUpl!lior
Steam ExtrKtron

NEW 3 bed room hou se 2 baths
oi l elec
1 acre Mtddleporl
close to Rut la nd Phone 992
7481

IF YOU hove a serv 1ce to a ft er
w on! to buy or se ll sorn elh1n g
oe lookmg for work
or
w hat e11er
you II gel res ults
fos ter w rth o Sent mel Wont Ad
Ca ll 992 2150

...

oo- Today l ,, , 15. Good Morn ing America 6,1], CBS

News 8, Bullwlnkle 10, 7 ·»-Schoo lies 10
8 OQ-Capl Kangoroo8,1 0, Se5ame ST 33. 9 OQ-Merv
Grollln 3. Phil Donahue •· 13, IS, Edge ol Nigh! 6,
Family Allair 8. Match Game 10
9 3~ Emergency One 6. Andy Grlllllh 8. Family

10 oo-Ciasso f '65 3,4, 15, Baret! a 6, IJ , Hawaii Five 0
lO j Anna Karen Ina 33, News 20
10 30- Lock, Stock &amp;
Barrel '20,
ll oo-News

CAPTAIN EASY

Chester, Oht o
10-30 c

News 13

7

World 20,33

1

Tank SeiVice

Box 34

6 45-Morn lng Reporl 3. 6 ' 50--Good Morning ,
West VIrginia 13 , 6 55-Chuck While Reporls 10.

8 oo-Ch tps 3 4, 15. Welcome Back, Kotter 6, 13,
Walt o ns 8 10, Natlonllt Geograph ic 4'0 11
8 J()-John Oen&gt;Jer 6,13 9 DO-James at 16 3, 4 IS,

\

Jack:s Septic

6 JG-Columbus Today A; News 6. Sunrise SeMester I J

Societies In Transition

10

Thai ' s HollywOO&lt;I 10. Nashville on lhe Road 13.
Marly Robbins' Spolllghl 15

I

Phone 985-3806

VIE WIND

Sunrise Semester 10, 6 ' 2

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1911
15-Marshall u Reporl 33. 7 3~Hollyw00&lt;1 Squa

WOUNDED

'I

Res1denttal
and
commercial
Call
for
esttmate, 24 hour serv1ce.
Anyday, anyttme

TELEVJSJ(JN
res
3,.4 ,
SlOO.OOO
Na me
That
Tune
6, Tattletales 8 , MacNeil Lehrer Report 10,33,

TO

CARTER

TIMBER
Pomeroy
duc ts Top pn ce
sow l1mbe r Call
K;ent Han by t 4 46

SIL VER DOLLARS an d co1 ns l op
d ollar pmd Co li 742 231 b

Phone 99'1-3'193
I 18 I mo

t'or~"
COAL limes 1one ond colc ium
chl onde and cok1um br rne l or
dusl con tro l ond spec 10l flliiW19
-:&gt; Dh lor Ianners Excels1or Soh
Wor k s Mo m Sl reel Pomeroy
Ohr o or phone 992 389 1

7

EllEReY DI~OVERY

b1rd dog

LOST IN Laurel Cl1fl ar ea fema le
MI S$1119 for 7 3 A ND 4 RM h.H n1shed ond un
ln $h Se ller
l u1rushed a ph
Ph one 992
wee k s~s Hl heot when she
5434
left 992 ::J tb3
COUNTRY MOBil E Home Park
Route 33 11011h ol Porn oroy
Help Wanted
Lo rge loh lall 992 7479

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

LAVENDER
CONSTRUCTION
99! 1!9!
2 16 1 mo

'

LOS f ON rood between Athen s
ond Po1nli.'r 0'1' Sovt hern Tor CUfE LONG haired lw tens to o
nod o tocket S1ze 4 Purple wllh
good ho rne 949 7093
Jerli.'my on Irani ond lorandoes
BEAUTIFUL FEMALE coll1e !ype
on bock 949 2869 M1 o; DrII
pup N1 cc mor k1ng s Gentle
LO ST LASI
week
between
Wdl g1ve to good horne Ca ll
Syro cusc ond Mtddlcporl Ford
742 2949
hubcap Chrom e w 1lh po1 n ted
green nng Coli 992 7536 oftc•
5
t'or Hent

- Sove Fuel &amp; Money-

Syr1cu1t, Ohto
Free Estemates

GimAwav

, WALKER AND 1 ,
pup!o Cot194Q 2671

Blown Insulation
Cellulose Fiber
Blown Into Walls
and Attics

Weddmes
Porbails
Pauporls
Annrwerunes
Spl!cial Occasions

IN COME fAX Scrv 1li!S Federal
Wallac e, CAT FEMALE l ongho1r ed dog
ond l&gt; lote 1o•tt!t
Ru ssell 81odbury 992 7'}18
lab,odo• lypa
Bo th very
lrt endly
Loveable
N1 ce
lookmg pet~ Q49 '1607

Lmt and round

REPLICA S HI P
AT CIT'/ PARK
LAGOON ,
ANGEL.TOP
NURSES HER
l-OVER-

Auction

llll.."rll

IN TH E COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS ,
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO

'

T~E HOLLOW
)H~'LL. OF THE

FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 17, 1971
5 5()-PTL Club 13, S 55-

S •s-Farm Report 13

NOPE -- HE
DIDN'T NOTICE

8nr1 Wl/1 fC CCIY(!

�Pickets move into Hocking County
By JOHN T. KADV
U11lted Preas lnlematlooa1
Roving United Mine
Workers unioo pickets moved
into Hocking County today
and the Ohio Edison Co .
announced It Is instituting a
program to limit the
probability of mandatory
power cutbacks . that could
result In temporary sectional
blackouts as the coal strike
entered its 74th claY.
The UMW pickets moved
by car caravan to near Logan
and were met by the Hoelting
County sheriff's deputies and
Ohio
Highway
Patrol
troopers .

"We have our men out
there
protecting
toe
highways," said Patrol C..pt.

Ohio
Edison,
headquartered in Akron and
serving
over
700 ,000
customers including 1,000
industrial users, said it Is
eliminating
backup
gene-ration ca pabilities in

utilities. Ohio Edison last
week said it would have to
institute mandatory, 50
percent curtailment of
electricity when it reaches
the 3&lt;klay supply mark which
would result in hundreds of
thousands of layoffs.
Striking UMW members,

order to save coal. But a

who

spokes111a n
says
that
increases the possiblity that
if a major unit goes down, or
if tllere is a reduction in
power being purchased from
other states, blackouts might
occur.
Ohio Edison has about a 34day supply of coal on hand
but earlier this week
managed to purchase some
power from out-of·state

operations in carroll and

R.C. Wilson . " And the sheriff

has his men out there. ''

r:; . ··--. . .

;:ll&gt;S!O' ~:=:~"''*'.,._,...,_-;:,....__'&amp;...___~

~. ~

~

Jl1'ews • •• in Briefs!

\

'

peopletalk
By United Press lntemaUunal

IF I HAD A HAMMER: Singer Trlnl Lupez may have been
deeply attached to his condominium when he sold it , but new
owners, Selma and Manuel Udku, complained to a oourt in Los
Angeles that too much of tile condo was attached to Lopez.
They sued him for more than $1 million. charging that when he
moved out, I.opez stripped the place, U.king even tile doors and
paneling. Lopez was unavailable for corrm'lent.
DISCORD : Alari·J. Lerner, who wrote the book for " My Fair
· Lady, " might well now be singing "never let a woman in your
life" - he's having more legal trouble over his estranged wife,
Karen . The Broadway lyricist was sued for $25,543 in New
York Wednesday by the law firm of Seward and Kissel for
payment of legal services provided Mrs . Lerner "in settlement

of marital affairs. " The firm says Lerner agreed to pay it
$21 ,000 in three installments of $7,000, the last on Feb. 15, 1977.
But, the .suit says , Lerner " failed to pay any of the payments"
and so the attorneys are also seeking $4,543 in interest . .

By Ualted Press lotemadooal
l.OS ANGELES - PRESCRIPTION DRUGS were found
near the body of actress Mary Tyler Moore's younger slsler,
Elizabeth Ann, and the young woman's wrist had been cut
repeatedly but superficially, the county coroner's office said
Thw-sday.
·
Miss Moore, 21, was found dead In bed of unknown causes
Wednesday morning at tile Burbank home of ber two aunts. A
small quantity of tile drugs Darvon and Librium were found
not far from her body, coroner's spokesman James Kono said,
and "some indications from the preliminary examinations are
consistent with an overdose."

TilE UNITED STATES AND Egypt will begin detailed
dlilcussions in the next few days on tile sale of u, S. jet fighters
to Cairo, an Egyptian newspaper said today. Israel lamented
the "difflculti,s, agonies and concerns" in Middle East peace

technical aspects of the U.s. decisioo to sell Egypt :;o F-OE jet·
fighters.
·

BONN, WEST BERMANY - TilE WEST GERMANY
PARLIAMENT has narrowly approved a bill giving police
expanded powers to hold suspects and search private homes in
an effort to halt a wave of kidnappings, assassinations and
hijactpngs.
.
Chancellor Helmut Schmidt's government supported the
legislatloo in 10 hours of often acrimonious debate which
culminated Thursday in a 245-244 vote, with no votes to spare.

Come in . .. start saving· · ·
. and EARNINGI

CLOSED MONDAY
FEBRUARY 20TH
PRESIDENTS' DAY
For

However,

People

RACINE
HOME NATIONAl.
C... .._irar ••~ooOo•o ~Oiw

FDICi

..........,....•."...,,•o·-···o- RACINE

classes

BANK
OHIO

at y

..

Non-union
By JOHN T. KADY
United Press International
Actual

violence

picketi~g .activity

72-day old_ strike.

was·

minimal, but the threat of
violence was enough·, to force

'

There are about 200 to 250

4

out there, at. least," said a
spOkesman for the mining

two non-union mines in company who did not wish to
eastern Ohio to shut down
Thursday after hundreds of
striking United Mine Workers
Union members toured the
sites .

The miners gathered at
several locations in Bebnont
County in eastern Ohio before
leaving in a caravan of 50 to

the· Puskarich Mining Co. in
Sherrodsville,
Carroll
County, the scene of sporadic

ends.
John

Prout, a UMW
organizer from Bellaire, who
was one of the leader$ of u
caravan llf rO\•ing pil'ke!s
U1at closed the Puskaric·h
Mining Co. i'n Carroll C11 Unty
and the Hurdy Mininj.l Co .. m
Tusc ara wa .s
C(1 unty
Thursday , said today , "I
th ink wt• got our · poin t
across ."
Several wi ndows were
bro ken by rOl'k· throw ing
pickets at the two no-uniQn
operations but violen(·c wns

miniiiml .
" We have a rew seattet't.'&lt;J
non-w1iun mines operating
here and there," .saHI Prout.

"111L'Y try to sneak a ft"w

be identified. "But we feel we
are well protected with the
sheriff departments out
there.''

The spokesman was aske&lt;j
if his men were armed and
said, " No sir, we are just

depending on the sheriff's
department. You can't meet
force with force ."

Carroll County Sheriff!.
Deputy Norman Eddy in
carrollton said about 60 car·
loads of miners arrived at the
operation shortly . after

noon .
" As far as this deparlment

MEETING CANCELLED
The February meeling of
the Wildwood Garden Club ·
scheduled for next week has
been cancelled. Meetings will
be resumed in March.
MEETS TUESDAY
The Southern Local School
Board will nieet Tuesday at
7:30 p.m. in the high school
cafeteria.
CLOSED MONDAY
The courthouse will be
· ~losed Monday in observance
Of President's Day.

it. Wt• 're

~oin~

tu try ami

ea lt&gt;h Utcm."

C;trroll t'ounty ' U~puty
Norman EdllV salt!
the Pusk.artrh opt:rutwn
ngrccd to dose fi)r 10 d&lt;.ty s~
The miners th('n w~nt w tht·
Hardy Minin~ Co. m•ar Nl'"'
PhiJHdt•lphia ,
OHkials uf lilt• llurdy
Mining Co. mt•t wiUt Sht•riff
Lou Cla rk who thcnmN with
lhc minct·s. l'Lal'k smd tht•
company Ul{re-ed to do~c but
did not spt•cify {nr blw lung .
1
'WL• ' Il
munitur
!hat
Sht~nff

O(Jl'l'i t1 iun

a nd

1f 1t

takt•s

i)kkets to close tl thun Uutl ts
what well d1)," sai d Prv11l
Mt•mmhiJ, •. H1·p

is concerned, and we are
s hort han ded anyway, we
huve aboul seven or eight
men out there. I really don't

knqw how lilany guys they
have out , l!ut one thing is for
sure ,
we s ur e don' t
outnwn ber them.

Eddy said the men left
after the ·company agreed tn
shut down for 10 days and
after som e windows in the
mining co mpany 's office
were brok en and some

drilling equipment damaged.
"That was abOut the exte nt
of it." sa id Eddy.
The miners then went to the

Hardy Coal Co. facility in
Tusc arawas Co unty a nd
asked its owner.s to close the
mine for 10 da Ys.
The mlne offi cials met with

hundreds of thousands of

beneficial by l•bor· offi cials.

workers.
The talks continued until 2

" Face-to-face coal negotialions are continuing which, in

a.m. EST today, when the

negotiators· rece~sed for a
few hours' rest.
A department soUrce

Sheriff Lou Clark, who Uu~n
met with the min er s. t:lark
said the Company :• gre~cl hJ
close but ditl nut· spcl'ify for
hnw long.

"Many difficulties remanJ,

One
sticking
point
Thursday night called the
U.lks "!lluddled," but insisted . appeared to be a provision
"'things are happening. "
allowing coal comparues to
President Carter, in an fine wildcat strikers $20 a
interview released today, in- day . Miners a lso were
dicated preparations were unhappy with elimination of
cost-of·hvong
underway for possible use of automatic
the Taft-Hartley Act in the boosts and changes in their
event negotiations totally medical
and
·pension
collapse - an ''eventuality systems.
that I hope we never see."
At midday Thursday the
That the two sides were still secreU.ry outlined his bluot
talking, after one full day of new approach to the .
discussions, was seen as

barg_ai ning: talks were to ·go

oo for two days without
cessation - excepting meals
until " full-fledg e d
settlement was in hand.

· And he said he wanted tllat
settlement before Saturday
because, t" We ' fe~l t he
urgency of the problem

Irresponsibly .

('arnt•y askcll tht• Puhht ·
uf Ohl u
!11 "t ell them tu turil ut'f tilt' II
UtihiH:'S C'onmnssion

lights."

J&lt;' (• I' Ul t' f · '}' I' (' H S U I' \ '
&amp;crrtnry Will\nm F: . Simnn.
SIH'aking :11 Witl1•1d wq!
Univcr~nty 111 .Sprin~-;fil'lcl ,
~m ll Tlmrsda)' ui)!.ht the ro~l

strik.t.' may I)Ut

U1~·

cmmu·y in

"a prn{O\lllil Pl'\•lh)U\h..' nbi1 ~

"f'iqd is nn imporlllul
tu the llmlt•ll
stutt·s as 11111ny peuplt· illl'
Plll'l'gy Slltii'('C

tJt•giuuin~

tv

l't'~llil.t• .'' ~.u I

Sunt~n .

Fillt•t•n ( 't•nt.s
\' nl. 2~. Nu . 21;,

govc t·rurw ru t·uulcl d!l :~!)nut
th e s ituat ion in ('mTull

County
Hovi ilg pkkds Wl 'rt' •H·t ivt•
in lite souUwrn pari of tlll'
When informt:..'\1 that the . sta te Wedncs•·luy but tlul 111 1t
company would not agret• tn go int.o Uu~t arcu 'l'h un·a lc1y.
close for 10 day s, sonw nf the
" Wt• had a pn•tty g,~ld ('i'l'W
miners ~1 rew rm.· k ~ &lt;~t the
office ' build ing, brea king
se veral
wi nd ows .
The
caravan then disbanded.
The J ustice Department
announced ea rlier Thursday
it had a l(!rted U.S. utl111'neys,

U.S. mtu·slmls and FBI
offi c es in nme st;~tes.
including Ohio, to l&gt;e alert to
incidents of vio lence in their

a reas.
The FBI spokcsma11 i11
Cleveland said he
lhe

sure. whut

not
federal

WHS

requires thal we put S&lt;Jtne
deadline on it ."

But Marsha 11 was not preitself , must be con$idered a . pa1·cd to speculate on his
good s ign ," said Marsh~H ­ options if the negotiators fall
however."

Ult U sen ·tcl' stations wh tdl
IH·t•p outd('lor udvt~n t sin1~
:&gt;ol~ll_S t)fl Ill ni~ht an• ilt'IIIIJ:

Th,llll il~

down !h er~ tin ~~~u tlwrn
Ohi111 tm d w~ a n · salisfll•( l
tl H'y an· shut. , al li'HSI for

bargaining

co un cil

was

summoned to the department

so, as Ma rshall put it, they

Weather

cou nc il that rejected the
tentative contract settlement

reached last week with the
soft coal industry. Council
membe rs would ha ve to
approve any new settlement.
so having them stand by in
the new round of lu tk.s wus
seen as promising.
Marshall said Thu~day his
deadline was not

''l rd and

!1111';'

st a) down. \\'(• Ill'(' goiiiJ ' 1•
kl•t•p thi s 111'l I liP IJt'sl wt• l':tl •

unt H this stdkc ts Sl't! ),•d .:
AnHthn

IJMW

pw kd

~i\':1 h t 'll:t l. "

Two hurt

•
m
rear

fa st" and cou ld be cxtcudt'tl ,
but, " I expect we will do
everything w'e can tn rt.&gt;solve
the issues'' within the two ~

as much a pmdlict or Cu rtcr't:
persuasiveness a s any olhc r

factc1r .
The preside nt

111l~ l

a t lhc

White H o ll'~e Thur sduy with
UMW negotiating learn as. Ohio Gov .. JHmes A. Hhodes

eliminate delays."
]twas the same bargaining

~l' l

ulim•s dHWil Hllcl Wt• liupt ' till'

Vanalllc c:lu udi m•ss und H
"Tht•1't• ls l.t~ · mud• s, ·;~b
frw sno w nurrirs tqda v, wit11 I'Oil l 111t1Ving in thi s S!JIIt•, "
hig hs bctwcrn :10 aiul :\fl. said the' UMW plt 'kl' l hoadt•J
O&lt;.:'CasioiHi l snow lun ight 111111 who di tl JWl wish t.u lw
Sat.untay, with l o~s ltlll ig hl in ttll'ntifil'd .
t h e low 20s ami lli g!I S
Saturda y in th e upper ZOs lll'
hiwer :lOH.

would be "a s close to the

possible in order to improve
communications
and

TlmrsdHy .
" W(•'n• g i&lt;Jd lu

said um uu nu ••••ht•! •.
wuuld be out t.llnnJJ~I111ut I In ·
Sl llll' In "S!op 11 11' I UI UIII.lt'. •r!

day timetable.
short of U1e mark.
l.andon Butler. 11 l'nlitic,:H I
There was, however, some ~1ide to the president, wa~
encouraging racws . The· sitting in on the dis&lt;'ussiuns,
Wlion 's entire: 39-man union

Hill t'l'il)', \1\
prt·~u lt•lll uf UMW Lt•l·a\ 1'1
in Vu1 111n ('tH III( .\' mul IIIIi' ~
011' pl('kl'l
lcn dt•J s, -"' 1'
now,"

lt•t~dt;r

Settlement talks enter second day
By DEAN REYNOLDS
WASHINGTON (UP!) .
Labor Secreu.ry Ray Marshall'~ target date .for settlement of the coal strike has
arrived, but signs of real
progress were missing as the
latest round ·of bargaining
proceeded for a second daY
today. .
Negotiators for the Bituminous Coal Operators Associa·
lion · and 160,000 striking
United
Mine
Workers
remained
closeted
in

Cll nll!y , n-Yuwl~SlU WII, ::hllll

forced to close

By United Press International
A glance at developments in the nationwide United Mine Workers
Union strike :

are

loads out at ni~ht wht·n th t'~
think tht&gt;y l'Hil gl't away wu h

en tine

~nines

during the

'Crisis Watch'

scheduled for this Saturday.

Meigs County

•

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

Students of the Southern
Local School .District will be
going to school Saturd~y. ·
It was reported thiS morning that students will be
attending classes Saturday
thls week. How lost time is to
be made up in the future will
depend upon a poll being
taken among employes .
The district has 13 days to
make up due to a closing of
the schools for financial
reasons in October.
The district is now over the
five calamity days by seven
and one-half days.
·
In accordance with a recent
board decision, when schools ·
are closed, a day that week
will bt&gt; made up on Sahirday.
Schools were closed one
day last week due to weather,
but classes were not heid iasi
Saturday because of the time
element being too short.

by its cover.

Thursday, shifted their
emphasis to tile south-central
portion of tile Buckeye Slate to a 32 hour week at its is doing a ll he l'&lt;Hl to end the
today.
fa cilities.
strike, before Ohio s uffers
Meanwhile , layoffs are
Rhodes, who along with 11 - more from its effects."
scheduled for the Marietta other governors met witit
Mea nwhile, UMW pickets
area Monday because of Carter
in
Washington have stepped up activity to
power cutbacks and Gov. Thursday, said today he was make sure no non-union coal
James A. Rhodes said "greatly enf'onragrd" hy the moves in Ohio until tho ~!rikl'
President Carter i!'l rl nin g: ~dl progress of negotiations.

CLEVELAND - FORMER PRESIDENT GERAW R.
Ford Is expected to lecture here April 24, it was jointly
announced by Clodus Smith, vice pr.esldent of Cleveland State
University, and Lawrence Dolin, head of the Front Row Marshall's conference room,
trying to end the 74&lt;1ay-old
Theatre in Highland Heights.
walkout
that could shut down
The appearance was to' be non-oolltical, with Ford to
·
America's
automakers, force
spe8k on "A Day In the l.ife of a President," Dolin said, and all
power
outages
i.n several
(Continued on page f2)
states and cause layoffs of

Students
will go
Saturday
Judge this book

Tuscarawas tounties on

60 cars for non-union
operations
in
Carroll,
efforts.
.
Tusca
rawas
and
Stark
The Cairo newspaper AI Ahram said an American military
counties.
missloo and will visit Ciliro next week and War Minister Gen .
. The miners first stopped at
Mohammed Gamassywilltravef.to WaShington to eX.mine the

MANCHESTER, N. H. - A WOMAN JAILED for
rt!llloving her daughter from two· schools because of sex
education courses was freed Thursday for agreeing to send the
girl to an unaccredited private scbool.
·
.
Judge John King of Hillsborough County Superior Court
released Carin LaMon from jail 10 days after she was
incarcerated for failing to produce her. daughter at a truancy
hearing in the Nashua District Court:

•.

no n~union

e

Pomeroy·Middleport, Ohio
Friday, February.17, 1978
••

closed

he can to end the nationwide
"The president assured us
coal strike.
·
the negotiaions will go on
The Mooongahela Power around the clock to bring the
Co., headquartered in West stri ke
to
an
ear ly
Virginia and serving 22,000 concl usion:· said Rhodes .
customers in the MarietU., '"The president said l1e will
Ohio, area wiJI have only a 31}- use all federal gove rrunenl
day supply of coal on hand by powers through lhe a tt orne)'
Monday.
general to maintain law and
Union carbide Co . sa id it order in the coal fields.
·would layoff 8Q to 85 of its 900
"P r esiden t Carter's
·employees at its operation personal report of progress
near MarieiU. while Sperry- should
e ncourge
a ll
Univac Corp . said it would go Ohioans:· said Hhodes. ··He

and 11 oth er govern or s whost'

sta tes have been hardc!-it hit
by str ike~re l t:t ted problems.

They urged him not to.
order the miners biJ Ck to
work under terms of U1c 'J'cJftHartley Act. Carter hao oald
he would weigh suet) ~n order
....... forcing the union membe rs
bm:k·tu th e mir1 e~ for 80 d tys
- if need be ,
The strike P.,gan Dec. 6

when the old three-year UMW
contra ct expired.

end crash
Twu persons WCI't' in jill t• tl
in u •·ca r end co llisiou :II 'I :10
p.rn . 'lllllrsd.uy on :-1 11 7, tl1r 1''
tm t h!-; of n mil&lt;• no rth 1tl t t:;.
:~.r,

Tlw . UJJ IIlfl - M1•1 1~~ J 'w.;t
St ut.e Jl i~ h way Putrul ,-:aid 1111
autu 1lri ven by l-:li7.li1J(•!Ir 1\
Ua iley , 58, Cheshire , sl t twk
Uu• rem· end o r a vehid l'

rn nking

;_1

ldt turn (Jpl't'pH·d

by Jo llll B. Pll l l'kk , ::"..), Ht

th~

lu kP11 In
llolzcr Mcd ku l Ce11l t.'f' ftn

t{·cntlll t'l1t of injurl !l~ h,\' 11
:'lEOEMS
U IIJIJ U] il /l( 'j'

('u riJI)I Ui nt~d of Ill
hut w'n:; aot 111 1
n1Cdialcly t r«.!&lt;ltcd. Tlw n ~ w:•t.:
lllodct·a tc
dmnu ge
to

i'HU 'i(·k

j url~}S ,

unr l 1 11 · 1·\·~
dnmugc to the Bniky vPhif'I P

Pt.llrlck's &lt;.:a r

Mrs . Bailey was d JargPtl
with fail ure to s tj111 Willii11 til'
(Continued on P8K• \2)

UMW NEGOTIATIONS

Negotiators broke off talks at 2 a.m. in Washington and are to
continue today. Labor Secretary Ray Marshall said "face-to·face coal
negotiations are continuing" but he added "many difficulties remain."
The Ohio Edison Co. today announced it is instituting a program,
involving backup generation capability elimination, to limit the
probability of mandatory power cutbacks. It presents the possibility of
temporary sectional blackouts.
Striking UMW workers were to move into southern Ohio today
after closing two non·union operations in Carroll and Tuscarawas
counties on Thursday. UMW pickets have vowed to stop.the movement
of all non-union coal in Ohio.
Layoffs are scheduled to start in the Marietta area on Monday
because of electrical shortages experiences by the Monongahela
Power Co. which serves 22,000 customers in' Ohio. Union Carbide Co.
said it would layoff 80 to 85workers and Sperry· Univac.said it would go
to a 32·hour week.
GOVERNMENT REACTION

• Gov. James A. Rhodes returned from a meeting with President
Carter and said · he was "greatly encouraged" by Carter
administration participation in the coal negotiations. Rhodes said
Carter "is doing all he can to end the strike, before Ohio suffers more
from its effects."
LEGISLATIVE REACTION

, State ijep. Thomas Carney, D-Boardman, asked the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio to force service stations to turn off outside
advertising signs; Carney ~aid the service . stations are acting
irresponsibly by keeping the $igns lighted.
ECONOMIC OBSERVATIONS

Former Treasury Secretary William E. Simon said at Wittenberg
University Thursday night, the coal strike may put the country in the
midst of a "profound economic crisis."
· ~

~

THEsE THREE Meigs High School Distributive
Education Students played a major role in presenting a
program lD Meigs Junior High students this week on
shoplifting. On hand to assist the stud~ts witll problems

I.

Calli poliH .
Mrs. Bai ley w11s

encountered when ca ught shoplifting were law
enforcement officials. Frcm the left are Jane Miller
Nancy Stanley, DECA vice president, and Mel Snouffer:
who were joined also by other students In the
presentatlo~
1
'

..

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