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                  <text>~-The Sunday Time!hSenbnel, Sunday.

Feb. 19, 1978

Senior Citizens' Scenes
POMEROY - The square
dance gro up is meeting
regularly on Mondays alter
being unable to hold a square
dance
susion
s1nce
December. Come 1n and join
them on Monday afternoons.
\4. lso,
a
black
lung
representative w1ll be at the
Center Monday (tomorrow)
to answer any questions you
may have on black lung
Jeg•slahon from 12 noon unlll
2 p.m.
Tuesday, Feb. 21 begmnmg
kmtting class at 10 a.m. and
crewel embroidery class atll
a.m. On Tuesday, Wednesday
and Thursday at 1 p.m. craft
makrng classes for the Easter
bazaar will be held. Thursday
beginmng at 10 a.m w1ll be
the monthly blood pressure
chmc . Fnda y morning,
beginning at 10 a.m . an advanced knittin g class IS
scheduled.
Lunch is served daily at the
Ce nt er through CO AD
Nutri tion Pro gram at 12
noon.

Please

register

for

lunch at least one day ahead
by calhng 992-7886.
ART SHOW
Remember to get your
entr~es 1n lor the third annual
Semor C1tizen Art Show, Sale
and Auction March 13-19 at
the Statehouse RolLmda m

Columbus. This art show IS

lor Oh io artists, age 60 and

STATE FARM

over, who may enter an
original work executed after
reaching age 60 All entries

lines. Material for work must
be furnished by the Senior
C1tiz.en For fu rther in -

must

formation on this program,

be

fram ed

and

call the Center at 992·7886.
LOW COST LOANS
Recently there have beed
than 5 entries per artist
in .... y;a rious
will be accepted, and no artlcles
painting can be larger than 3 publications about low cost
ft x 4 ft. Each entry must be loans and-or grants from the
Home
Adfor sa le with the price deSired Farmers
ministration for qualifymg
, mdica ted on the pamting.
Entnes for the Art Show families... ·
Since age is not a factor m
must be at the Center by
determming
your elig1bihty
March l so arrangements can
thiS
could
be
a
way for Semor
be made for transporting the
Citizen s on limited income to
paintings to Columbus
get necessary repairs, etc.,
FUEL INFORMATION
rr you filed for the ubhty for their homes at a low cost.
Generally the repair loans
dtscount and recea ve a
regular month ly gas or and-or grants are used to
electric b11l but the disco unt remove health hazards Some
has not been shown, call the of the repaars mclude
Center at 992-7311 so we can repaanng roofs, providmg a
che ck w1th the compan y samtary water and waste
disposal system (example ·
about your discount.
Effective January 1978, digging a well, putting in a
persons who receave food septi c ta nk), installing
stamps and have a n tncrease screens,. windows and m·
of $25 or more on the1r utility sulat10n.
To give you an idea of what
bills may be ellg1ble for an
these
loans would cost; a
adJustment in the cost of food
$t,500
loan
for 10 years at I
stamps. Contact the Welfare
percent
would
cost you $12 a
Department, Middleport ,
month
A
$2,500
loan for 15
Ohio or call 992-2117 for
years at I percent would be
further informa tion
repaid at $15 a month
RSVP LUNCHEON
ThC Farmers Home AdThe"' sec ond stat ewide
RSVP luncheon will be held ministration office for Me1gs
at t he Columbus Sheraton County IS located In the
Hotel, Columbus, Ohio April Farm ers Bank BUJldmg,
17, 1978. F1ve senior volun- Pomeroy, Ohio For more
tee rs have expressed a n information about these low
interest 1n attending so far cost loans, call the FHA office
Tickets for this luncheon at 992~644
have to be prdered by March
1, oo call 992-7684 1! you are
Interested m gomg . Trans·
purtat10n will be furnished
and the cost of the luncheon
w11l be a pproxunately $5
Persons who attended last
ready ·for hanging with

®

FOR INSURANCE CALL

C. K. SNOWDEN
24 State Street

Gallipolis, Oh10
Phone 446-4290

Like a good neighbor,
State Fann is there.
5111~

Hone

t. rm 1111,11 J!l ~~ I Ql\111111••11
O llt~~ ~ i:lloQmm 9 1Q~ l ll"'o'~

book gives
old names

year' s luncheon had an en·

joyable day and we hope to
have a la rger representation
from Me1gs County this year.
HOME MAINTENANCE
With spnng just around the
co rn er, according t o the
By James Sands
calenda r, tt's time to begm
GALIJPOLIS
- Matenals
thinking about those needed
home repairs If you have of histo rica l value a re
minor repairs to your home so m etime ~ to be found m
that need to be taken care of ~'lran gc places. Such a place
such as pamtmg porches, IS an old phone book. We have
steps hxed, roofs patched, before us a copy of a
etc. - the Home Main- Galhpohs phone directory for
tenance Program may be the year 1935. There were
able to be of assistance to some unusual (to us in the
1970's) phone numliers like t
you
Accerding to the Home or 6 or 9. 0 0 Mcintyre's
Mawtenance
Program number was 00. From teh
guidehn es, the labor lor book " e ca n tell pretty well
mtnor repairs to , }'our home what Galhpolls was like m
can be furnished 1f yo u a re 1935.
For mstance, Gallipohs
within the financial guide·
contained no fewer than 22
businesses that made money

:
eal
Sta ,.e:••
To ay •

) I 116fl'&gt;"

I • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

(I

d

.

By

Willis T. Leadmgham

•

-

Realtor

•
•
I
I

from the sale, repair, or

upkeep of the automobile.
There were four new car
Dodge
and
dea lers:
Plymouth ( 417 Second ),
FraZier Motor Sales (205
Third), Moore Brothers Ford
(50 State). and Gallipolis
Motor Company (Secon d
Avenue)
There were at least five
garages for repc.ur · E.E.

•
•
•
the date ot closing. Also •

Langdon (Pme and Fourth),
Harnngton 's (Second ),
Walter WISe (654 Second!,
Day and N1ght (444 Second),

: WHICH CI:OSING COSTS DEDUCTIBLE?
•

Expenses connected with

• the sale of real estate over
• an&lt;l above the selling pr ice

dedu cf tble as interest Is the 1
amount charged as points I

• are known as closing costs
• Some
of
these are
• dedu c tible irom you r
e income tax _ others are
• not .
•
Property ta xes are

and

Haskins

Garage

(Second).

h
1
1x
T ere were atu east s gas
stations: Butterfield (Pine),
Wetherholt (Third aod
Court), Sinclair (Second and
Sycamore), Evan Reese
(Chi ckamauga
Road),
Morgan Super Service {Pine
and Fourth) and Haffelt
Brothers (VIne).
•.
Other
auto
re lated

prov ided they are •
charged es a premium for •
the loan of the money - not I
when cha rged for services 1
Non -deductible closing I
ex pen ses , are
fire I
e usually prorated so tha t msurance, FHA mortgage •
e both the buyer and seller .insura nce , and charges for •
e each pay the ta xes for the . rent for occupancy before •
• portion of the year that ~ closmg
•
•
•

each owned the property
Each may deduct thts
e amount - and only this
If there is anything we
• amount - even though one can do to help you in the
or the other pays the entire flekt oi real estate please
• amount.
phone or drop 1n at

e

e Another deductible Item LEADINGHAM REAL
• that appears In closing ESTATE, 512 Second Av:9'
•
•

costs. Is Interest charged to
you on the mortgage up to

•
1
e
1

businesses were: Oscar Wood
Tire and Battery, L.M. Evans

e
e

and Sons Tires {Third and
Grape), G&amp;J Auto Parts
(Court ) plus Sterling Oil and
Standard Oil Bulk stations.

1

Galhpolis, whtch in the
1800s had over 30 grocery

~~~'::O~~re ~~o:lp~46- 76 · e

~·························

1

-

"IT TAKES A HEAP OF LIVING
TO MAKE A HOUSt A HOME!"

STEVE Dawson, left, director of alternatives program, Gallia-Meigs-Jackson
Commumty Mental Hea lth Center, and Maxine Plummer, executive dll'ector of 648 Board .

Wellston Teen Town
•

receives $3,000 grant
WELLSTON
The activities that s urvive over
Commumty Mental Health an extended penod of ttme
Teen Town provides a
646 Board awarded a $3,000
meetmg
place and actiVIty
gra nt to the Comm umt y
Mental Hea lth Center's center for high school youth
Alternatives Prog ram for use durmg after school hours.
in support of the Wellsto n The Alternatives Program
Teen Town Program. Teen staff recognize the Tee n
Town program as one
Town as a unique youth
type
of
alternative
project of t he Wellston to the developing of
Rotary Club Not only is Teen substance abuse Steve DawTown umque In the type
son , Program Darector
program ·it offers to the
the
Alternatives
Wellston area high sehoul for
Program,
states
that 11 is
youth, but also 1n the fact that
thetr
desire
to
work
with Teen
1t ha s bee n s uccessfull y
Town
tn
inc
reasing
the
scrvmg the youth for ()Ver 20
number
uf
actlvttles
that
can
years There are few youth

be provided by Teen Town
Alternatives staff believe
much can be done in the
prevention of drug problems

through

IncreaSin g

lei s ure and
communication skills among

youth.
Alternatives Program staff
are available to work and
mnsult with mdiv1duals and
community groups m the
preventiOn of drug abuse
Alternatives staff can be

contacted through the local
Commumty Mental Health
Center in Meigs, Jackson and
Gallia counties.

RonJames
(D-Proctorville,)

92ndHouseDistrlcl )
In 1ts darkenejl legislative
chamber ht only by sunlight
coming through the wmdows,
Ho\Jse
of
the · Oh io
Representa\lv es passed a

important symbolic effect of
showmg Washmgton offic ials
the cntlcal need for coal in
Ohto a nd the near. universal
ca llmg of Ohio political
leaders to settle the coal
dispute qmckiy and fairly.
Like most offices and
busmesses, the Statehouse is
usmg only mmimal lighting

resolutiOn Thursday urgmg and ts utilizing other conPrestdent Ca rter to per· servation measures ln order

sonally med1ate the co al
stnke negotiations. Th e
resolution which I cosponsored, was approved by
an 87 to 4 vote.
In part, the reso lution asks
the PreSident to "apply the
full power and prest ige of the
off1ce of President 111 order to
ex pedit e agreem ent and
prompt resumption of coal
mming."
The reso lution ha s th~

to consume hall of itsnormal
electrical usage
N1ght
committee hearmgs have
bee n
cancelled
and
rescheduled for da ylight
hours. TelevisiOn came ra

"hot lights" have not been
t urned on Copy machines are
used sparin gly. Anything
electrical that IS not vitally
needed is not used.
ln other legislative action

last week, the House passed
legislation providing for two
addttwnal com mon pleas
court jud ges for Lak e
County and one each for
Ashtabula and Greene
Counlles. All three counties'
populations are growing
rapHlly creating the need for
more jurists. Also passed in
the House was a measure

BUY N!&gt;W&amp; SAVE
DURING OUR
MID-WINTER SALE

KER FURNITURE
IN MIDDLEPORT

'

mto eastern Kentucky.
"The latest report I have is
that 60 carloads of miners,
with about four or live in each
car, had entered Lawrence
County
from
Jackso n
County," said Lawrence
County Sheriff James Howell
at Ironton
Howell said no non·union

coal was running in
Lawrence County today.
" They worked Friday,
Saturday and Sunday and
then shut down today, I guess
when they heard the miners
were commg," sa1d Howell.
Kentucky State Police were
reported out in force at the
Kentucky border to guard
against any violence.

Ohio UMW members and
the ir wives have also
scheduled a march on the
statehouse for Tuesday and
will attempt to meet with
Gov . James A. Rhndes m
order to show the public their
side of the contract dispute.
In a related development,
proposed cutbacks by the
Ohio
Edison
Co.
headql!Brtered in Akron and
the Monongahela Power Co.
m West Virginia , which
serves 22,000 customers m the
Marietta area have been
postponed.
Don Nunley, Glouster,
Ohio, a UMW District 6
official, sa1d members of four
southeastern Ohw locals
dec1ded over the weekend oo

I

say m the adoptiOn of a model
buiidmg code by the OhiO SI.OGWf!U, 7lfE
Board of Buildmg Standards.
~1-Tif Nll t;
Last year the Board adopted JOGS 2 MI/.£S
one code and recommended 11 /3V£R'(MORN
ro;f/3 H!Gif
to ·" communities and then
changed its mind . Now the WA~R 0'&lt;1
WHATEVER ...
legislature wants to better
scrutimze the actwns of the
board
·
Both the judges' bill and the
bulldmg code b1ll now go to
the Senate for consideration

:~~~:J~~~~~1 • A~IN'""• ',i

1
1
""''"
vvJN
I AIN'T WALKIN'
THAT fWi: PUSH IN'
A GROCE~¥ CART!!
WE'LL PARK

stores, had In 1935 over 20 (32 8 Second ), Mossman 's
11
p~ ~11
RIGHT HERE ..
groceries
They
were· Office Outfitters (46 Court ),
Gall ipolis Market (463 Gallipolis Ha rdwa re (338
make recommendations for
TH~E~S SPACE
Second ), G11ls Produce Second), Gathpohs Departfundmg pubhc zoos and assist
OVER THERE. '
(Third and Grape), Henkmg ment (302 Seco nd ), Kerr
in developmg long-ra'nge
Bovie Company (27 Court), Drugs (324 Second), Neal 's
plans of their operatiOn and
Kerr and Gooch (152 Third), Drugs (500 Second ), Neal and
unprovement. The bill is
Layne Products (19 Court), Gillingham Drugs (762
mtended to foster comLevisay (92 Olive) . Modern Second) and Harry Frank 's munication and cooperation
Markets (15 Grape), Myers Sons (322 Second ).
among Ohio's publicly-owned
The phone book listed: zoos
Produce (Second and Court
plus 219 Third ), Niday- Downtain Printing (48 State)',
McKinley Gro ce ry [Third Watters Hatchery (Third ),
and Grape ), J .D. Nurt~ Ohw Valley Laundry (841 •*******••***********************************~
(Vine), North 's Meats [463 Th~rd) , M.T. Epling Sand and
Second),
Central
[601 Gravel (First ), H. W. Dexter
Second), Ohio Produce (145 Plumbing and Heating, Un10n
Third ). Pine Street, Puritan Carbide Sales (719 First) ,
Mkt. (756 Second), Wood's G11imgham's Store (408
(Cedar and Third ), Barnett's Second )., Condee Coal (701
[4!i Court ), Evans (700 First ), First), Maytag Wa shing ~
Galha County Produce (240 Machme Co. (Third), White
Third ) and Galha FrUit Star (854 Second ) and Fontana FrUit (360 Second).
(Sycamore ).
Out In East Gallipolis was
Among the restaurants in
located
the CCC Work Camp.
town In 1935 were , Oscar's
Tbe
C&amp;O
Railroad had a
Place (346 Second ), The Rose
Kitchen (258 Third), Joe passenger depot on Olive and
I
Pierotti (312 Second ), Shartz freight depot on Third. First
Soda Gnll (404 Second) , National Bank was on
Swa1n' s
R es taurant Second, Ohio Valley Bank
(Second), Vmce's (47 Court), was at 366 Second and
and Vanden 's Restaurant Commercial Savings at 300
Second.
(416 Second ).
Then as now there were a &gt;t Long sleeve sport and dress shirts for men - men's sport coats Among the manufacturing
number
or busmesses that ; men's flannel shirts - unbelieveably low prices- many other sale ;
eslabllshments we would
Include: Spring HUI Dairy took advantage of the town's ..- items. too.
...
(Second), R. P. Thompson good name. Here we would
Stove (761 Second), Plymale- include Galhpohs Dye Works
Wagner Lumber (Pine) , (250 Second), Gallipolis Ice ;
Women's winter gowns. robes. and pajamas 112 price - Special
;
O'Dell Planing Mill, Linde (709 F~rst ), Gallipolis Oil and ..- group women's dresses and sportswear- tops and slacks '12 price.,.
Air Prnducts, Rue Marble Gas (Third and Vine) , It low ' prices on many other women's wear.
and Granite and Mootz GaUipolis Fertilizer (Second
~
and Olive ), GaUipolls Taxi
Bakery (71 VIae).
[412
Second)
and
the
Among other busmesses
were . Womeldorff and Gafiipohs Tribune [425 ~ Snow suits - sportswear - dresses - blouses - sweaters - boys slacks
~
Thomas Hardware (Third &amp; Second). Taking advantage
Court). Davis-Shuler Dry of the county's name were : ~ lops.
Goods (406 Second ), Haskins- GaUia Roller Mills (Grape
Davis Clothiers (49 Court), and Fourth), Gallia Iron &amp;
McKnight Dav1es Hardware Wrecking (Vme ), and the
(43 Court), Moch's Clothmg GaU1a Times (439 Second).

•

",..
,..

*

i

irlhdaj,..
:

i

~

!*

t WOMEN'S WEAR

t

*! CHILDREN'S WEAR ·

*
,.
2

i**********************************************'*
ELBERFELDS IN P.OMEROY a
I

I

at

en tine

-,

Fifteen Cents

•

Vol. 2M, No. 2lli

" We're looking for a real

good turnout today," said Bill
Cray, a UMW local official
from Vinton County. "We
expect between 500 and 700
men out there . We are
determined oo cut-off aU nonunion coal conung into Ulis

state the best way we can ."
OhiOans for Utility Reform,
m a statement prepared for a
news conference today, demanded the nation 's coal
operators "begin serious
negotiations with the United
Mine Workers Union to reach
a fair settlement.
"The coal operators-who

I

are in fact some of the
nation's largest oil, steel and
utihty companies-have lleen
taking a hard line designed
not to promote an equitable
contract but to break the
union,11 said OUR.
"In this state we point the
finger of blame at three
highly
profit a bl e
companies," the coalition
said, "Columbus &amp; Southern
Ohio Electr1c Co, Ohio Power
and Standard Oil of Ohio.

Weather
Snow tonight and Tuesday,

contmued cold wtlh lows from
10 to 15 and h1ghs near 30 The
probability of precipitation is
10 percent today and 70
percent tonight and Tuesday

:t;{esideJits
urged to
' Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman
today
urged
residents to attend and
participate in the public
hearing to be held Wednesday, Feb. 22, at 7 p.m. in
the Middleport council
chambers.
The purpose of thiS hearing
is to generally discuss the
contents of the draft of the
Environmental Assessment
and financial information
pertaining to the proposed
improvements to the existing
wastewater
treatment
lagoons and combined
sewerage system In the
Middleport-Meigs County
Planning Area.
Comments aQd suggestions
will he welcomed from all
concerned citizens on the
proposed
improvements
regarding feasibility , cost,
and unpact on the community
and the environment m
general.
Public participation is
encouraged in the planning of
all public facilities.
The meeting w1ll be conducted by the village
engineering firm of Floyd G.
Browne and Assoc. Ltd. and
village officials.
Draft copies of the
Facilities Plan have been

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Wednesday thru Friday
Fair Wednesday wttb
sod
snow Thursday
Frtday. Cold Wednesday
wlth highs In the 2Ds and
lows in the lower teens,
warming by Friday to
highs in the 30s and lows lo
tbe 20s.

EMS has four
weekend calls

"We are sick and tired of
the self-serving, full-pa ge
advertisements touting an
energy crrisis which C&amp;SOE
has bought with ratepayers'
money as a scare tactic to
shift blame for bargaining
failures to the
mme
workers," satd OUR. "What
the ads don't tell us is that
C&amp;SOE owns its own coal
mines . The utility has hired
Peabody Coal Co. to manage
the mines. Peabody is the
nation 's
operator.

largest

coal

"Ohio Power is a whollyowned
subSidiary
of
American Electric Power,
the nation's largest private
utility holding company,"
said the coalition. "AEP is
also the 11th largest coal
operator .

" Soh1o keeps it profits on
full not only by selhng
gasoline and oil, but owns Old
Ben Coal Co., the 14h largest

Editor·

will
speak
Editor Bob Wingett of the
Pl. Pleasant Register wlll
spea k to the luncheon
meetmg of the Meigs Human
Resources Council at noon on
Thursda y, Feb. 23, at the

coal operator, " said OUR.
OUR said the "companies
that are blocking the way of a
fair coal settlement IU'e the
same ones which have grown
fat while the rest of us have
tightened our belts as energy
prices rose out of sight."
The coalition sald the average price of coal has shot up
from $8.53 per ton in 1973 oo
$20 per ton in 1976.
" Mmer's wages and benefit
programs in 1969 accounted
for 49 cents per dollar of coal
cost," said the coalition. "By
1977 with high prices, profits
and productivity, the miners'
share had dropped to 36

cents."
Monongahela Power Co.
had pla iUled to Institute a 30
percent cutback beginning
today but moved back to a 10
percent cutback.
Ohio Edison had planned a
50 perce nt mandatory
cutback but postponed that
cutback aft&lt;:r it decided to cut
off all back-up generating
units.

•
CARRIER OF THE
is Steve
16, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Don ~aylor, 11 Fisher Street, Pomeroy . Steve has
been a carrier for The Daily Sentinel for approximately one
year. He IS a student at Me1gs High School and likes to ride
motorcycles.

'Crisis Watch'
By United Press International
A glance at developments in the nationwide Umtcd Mine Workers
Union strike :
UMW Negotiations
President Carter has asked Congress to help end the nationwide
coal strike by reviewing a course of action he has recommended but
kept secret. The recommendations probably mcluded natwna li~ati on
of the coal mines, binding arbitration or invoking the Taft-Hartley law.

The
Middl e port
Emergency Squad answered
four calls over the 1\oeekend.
At 6:31 p.m. Saturday the Meigs Inn, m Pomeroy.
PHILADELPHIA - THE MAN IDENTIFIED as "Deep
UMW Membership Activity
Wingett, whose talk was
squad
went to 991 S. Second
Throat" by H. R. Haldeman says be has proof he was out of the
Hundreds of Ohio UMW workers are to move into Lawrence
Ave., for Martha Hunnell who postponed in January due to
country when lthe secret informant gave key information about
snow,
will
share
some
of
his
had
rece1ved
a
possible
arm
County
, Ohio and eastern Kentucky today in a continuing attempt to
the Watergate scandal. Fred Fielding, who served as assistant
knowledge
and
expenence
fracture
in
a
fall.
She
was
close non-union mines.
to presidential coWISel John Dean, told the Philadelphia
taken to Veterans Memorial involving fund raismg and
Bulletin even though he denied Haldeman's allegations
community planning for the
Hospital.
lnunediately alter they were made three weeks ago, he felt he
Economic Reprecussions
city of Syracuse as well as Pl.
At
7:08p.m
.
the
squad
went
had oo prove that he was not "Deep Throat." In his book,
Pleasant.
The
Ohio
Edison
Co.,
l!eadquartered in Akron a nd Monongahela
to Route I, Cheshire for
"Ends of Power," Haldeman, the former White House chief of
The
Human
Resources
Marilyn Snyder, a medical
Power Co. headquartered in West Virginia, were to have instituted
staff, said he believes Fielding was "Deep Throat" and said
patient, transferred to Council InVItes interested
cutbacks that would have resulted in layoffs but have now postponed
former President Richard Nixon !bought so too.
agencies and individuals to
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
them.
its
monthly
luncheon
At
7
·58
a
.m.
Sunday,
!he
NEW YORK - POLICE HAVE CHARGED a lab
f1re department went to 680 S meeting.
technician at a municipal hospital with raping a 73-year-old
Consumer Reaction
Third Ave., the Marshall
woman who Ia dying of cancer. The woman , who weights only
McMillion
restdence,
where
Ohioans
for
Utility
Reform,
a consumer group, claims the coal
60 pounds, told police the technician, Bennett Marcus, took a
SQUAD CALLED
there
was
a
fire
around
the
operators are not negotiating seriously in an attempt to break the
blood Sample from her, then pulled down her sheets and raped
The Pomeroy ER Squad
chimney area.
her In her hospital room at Brooklyn Jewish Hospital.
was called three t1mes
UMW , The group demanded the operators begin serious negotiations
At 8:15
a.m.,
the Saturday night.
with
the UMW to reach a fair settlement.
emergency unit went to 733
COLUMBUS - THE GOVERNOR-LIEUTENANT
At 10:35 p.m. they transBeech St. lor Mildred M. ported Connie Romine to
governor team of Richard Celeste and Michael Dorrian bas
Bates, who was taken to Holzer Medical Center. At
UMW Reaction
been sanctioned by the Ohio Democratic Party. Lt. Gov.
Veterans Memorial Hospital. 11:47 they were called for
UMW President Arnold Miller says if the Taft-Hartley act is
Celeste and Franklin County Commissioner Dorrian won tbe
party's backing Saturday as the team bidding for the party
Doris Haynes and at 11-53
invoked in the strike there may be bloodshed but predicted the UMW
nomination in the June primary. That team could face available at the Mayor's Deputies probe
p.m. for Lawrence Cline.
membership would return to work under a federal ta keover of the
opposition , from Ohio Supreme Court Justice Frank D. office and will be available
Both were taken to Veterans
mines.
Celebrezze of Cleveland who has said he is considering lor inspectiOn at the public two accidents
Memorial Hospital.
entering the race.
hearing .
Saturday afternoon Meigs
ATLANTA_ u. N. AMBASSADOR Andrew Young says
This project is bemg funded
County
Deputies investigated
the United States is selling arms In Egypt oo bolsler the by 75 percent federal funds
from the Environmental a one-car accident on Scipio
security of President Anwar Sadat and thus the security of
Israel. "I think Israel's security is dependent on Anwar Protection Agency and 25 Township Road 14. The acSadat 's staying in power and !think we've got to look at Egypt percent from village funds . cident occurred atl2 :15 p.m. '
Dana H. Bailey, Jr., 26, Rt.
Icy road conditions were ISSUed.
GaU1potis, slid into a vehicle SR 160.
as really a new ally and treat them as such," Young said Total cost of the project is
3, Albany, told deputies he blamed on 10 of the 13 traffic
9
operated
A
single
car
mtshap
oc·
by Gary Fmley, 37,
State troopers said a
Sunday at the dedication of the Martin Luther Klilg Jr. chapel $26,! 1.
at Allilnta's Morehouse College.
One . ~ajor
re~om- was traveling south on the accidents investigated over curred on SR 554 west of GaUipotis.
vehiCle driven by Charles R.
•
mendallon IS the continued snow covered township road, the weekend by the Gallia- Cheshire where an auto
Walter R. Bradshaw, 25, Fuller, 26, VInton, slid on the
BOSTON _ THREE SUSPECTS WERE scheduled for • use of the lagoons as the slid off the roadway and Meigs Post State Highway driven by SaUy B. Oxyer, 26, Gallipolis, was cited to ~ow-covered roadway into
Gallipolis, going west, struck Municipal Court for improper the Durham vehicle . There
arraignment Tuesday in a $!-million-a-year check-cashing treat'!'ent facility with the struck a tree upon meeting Patrol.
The first occurred at 12:20 a bad section of the highway backing following an accident was moderate damage and no
scheme that victimized banks and stores In five New England addlt!on _of aer~tio.n and another vehicle. There was
p.m. on the Bulaville-Porter covered with lee and water. at 11 :17 am . Sunday on SR charges were flied .
slates. Authorities said the ring apparenUy had ties to chlorma!lon faclli!les as slight damage to his car.
Deputies
also
investigated
Rd.
one mile west of SR 160 ' The under carriage of her car 588, five tenths of a mile east
organized crime. Three suspects were arrested in the Boston requll'ed b~ EPA.
.
At 6:30 p.m. on SR 160,
a
hit-&lt;;kip
accident
that
ocwhere
a vehicle driven by was damaged.
of US 35.
area Saturday and Charged with forgery and receiving stolen . This project was. lmtlated
so uth of milepost 10, vehicles
The patrol said the Brad- driven by Wanlna PenningN(J cne was injured or cited
properly, Police and postal lnspeciAirn said they were m 1976 after meetmg~ w1th curred sometime between 9 Mary A. North, 30, GaUipolis,
seardllng lor 10 others but no new arrests had been mad b
the Corps of Engineers p.m. Saturday and 1:30 a.m. shd Into a car operated by in an accident at 1,20 p m. shaw car backed into a ton, 16, Bidwell, and Thomas
late &amp;mday
'
e Y reference to eroSion control Sunday.
Charles D. Lund, 58, Saturday on Georges Creek vehicle driven by Galen J . J Smith, 31, Gallipolis,
·
at the lagoons. Determina)ion
According to the report Gallipolis. There w~s minor Rd. one mile west of SR 7 Belville, 27, Galllpolls.
sideswiped
to be made on the filed by Douglas E. Hauber, damage.
At 10:45 p.m. Sa!urday on
where vehicles driven by
An acctdent ol'c urred on
, BONN, WEST GERMANY- WEST GERMAN TEEN- had
proposed life of the lagoon 20, Rt. I, Long Bottom, he had
A Me1gs County accident John R. Manley, 19, Bidwell, CR 30, a mile north of SR 160, Sugar Creek Rd. one tenth of
AGERS are taking their parents, Jesus and Elvis Presley as
role modela, according to a public opinion poll released treatment facility before any parked ltis auto at the occurred at 12:45 ' ·p.m. and Wanda M. Taylor, 28, Rt. a car driven by Clyde R. . a mile north of SR 7 when a
action could be taken by the parking lot of the TaU Tim- Saturday on CR IS north of 1, Gallipolis, sideswiped at a Hayden, 18, Kerr; slid into a vehicle driven by Patrick
Sunday. Adolf ffitler was the most disliked by boys and girls
Corps
to control erosion at bers Night Club. When he SR 124 where a Vehicle driven hillcrest on the snow covered vehicle operated by Kimberly Bal1ey, 21, Crown City, slid on
qed 12 to 18 in 81 clUes questioned by the Wickert PubUc
loCation.
this
started to leave Hauber by George D. Miller, 18, roadway .
There
wa s Hill, 22, Rt. I, Gallipolis.
the icy roadway striking an
Opinioo Institute for the newspaper Welt am Sonntag.
With the acceptance of this discovered an unknown Middlepo'r t, slid on the Icy moderate damage.
Lena H. Durham, Vinton, a auto operated by Thomas E .
A similar acc id ~nt oc- passenger in a car driven by Banks, 30, Crown City.
BAL HARBOR, FLA.- MAJOR UNION LEADERS from study by the EPA, it is an- vehicle had sideswiped the pavement striking an auto
ticipated
that
asalstance
may
operated
by
Kelly
D.
Stewart,
left
side
of
his
auto.
There
curred
at 6 p.m. on CR 42, one Edsel H. Durham, 35, Vinton,
A similar mishap occurred
the nation uaemble today In thbi sunny resort to the
north of Miami Beach for their annual mid-winter meeting. be obtained from the Corps was slight damage to 17, Pomeroy. There was and one tenth miles north of was injured 10 an acc1dent at a t 3: 45 p.m . Sunday on
for riverbank protection in Hauber's 1974 Mercury moderate damage to the SR 218 where an Auto driven 6:5; p.m. Sunday on the Eno- Hannan Trace Rd one mile
(Continued on Pili~ 8)
this area.
Miller car. No citation was . by Unda L. Johnson, 26, Vinton Rd. two miles east of
Comet.
IContinued on page 8)

OSP investigates 13 wrecks

i

i MENS9:30
to 5 P.M.
and BOYS' WEAR

go across the Ohio River into
Kentucky to halt the flow of
coal from mines to electric
power utilities.

be present
United Preoo InternaUonal
CINCINNATI - TWO MIC!flGAN YOUTHS and a
Cincinnati-area boy died in a suburban Cincinnati park
Saturday, when ice suspended in trees above them collapsed.
Dead were David Kroger, 10, and his brother, Billy, 7, both of
Orion, Mich., and Thomas Dauphin, 9, of Springfield
Township, Ohio.
Robert Mason, chief park ranger of the Hamilton County
Parks, said the boys were playing in an area of Winton Woods,
north of Cincinnati, where large sheets of ice were suspended
in trees - the reSUlt of a lowering of the lake at the woods
earlier this winter.

: MONDAy FEB. 20TH

The Finest Selection
And The Best Values
ANYWHERE'

non·union operations and
were expected to continue on

Meanwhile, a consumers

group today in Columbus
accused coal companies of
attempting to break the UMW
as the coal strike entered its
77th day today .

THE SNOW KEEPS falling, the coal strike seems to be up
in the all' as far as a settlement IS concerned at this point and
the flu is runnmg wild. However, keep smilin'.

! SALE PRICES

IT TAKES SOME FURNITURE TOOl

Uulted Press lnlernallonal
Several hundred strikmg
Umted Mine Workers Union
n\embers moved by car
caravan into Lawrence
County today in search of

YOU MIGHT WANT to send along a card to Brian Knopp,
wbo will be t)"o in April. Brian underwent brain surgery at
Children's Hospital in Columbus and IS confined there. His
parents are Mr. and Mrs. Max Knopp, Racine, and
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs . Otis Knopp, Racine, and Mr.
and Mrs. John Sprow, GaUipolls. The room number is 3005.

~ ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

•

Presidential press secretary Jody Powell told
reporters, "A series of definitive options have
been reviewed and reconfirmed for presentation
to the president. Consultation with congressional
leadership will begin immediately."
He held out httle hope for future collective
bargaining by the UMW and the Bituminous Coal
Operators Association, saying, ''It is clear that we
can waif no longer to initiate the process for
resolving this matter by other means."
Action, in whatever form. can be expected
this week, the admimstration offic1al said.
"The administration," the official said, " ha s
embarkt&gt;d on a process which will culm inate in
one of those three options" - Taft-Hartley ,
federal seizure of the mines, or binding
arbitration.

Coal strike in 77th day

AND THEN THERE'S Barbara Offutt and her jar full of
praymg mantis.
Barbara gathered up an egg sack and the other day things
started to happen. She now has a whole jar fuU of praying
manbs (that's plural - a whole bunch of 'em) . They're living ,
on sausage at the present time since no one seems oo know just
what they like. If any teacher would like the jar and its
contents for class study, do call Barbara at 992-3296. She'D part
with them!

l

Senate labor subcommittee. Chairman Frank
Thompson of the House labor-management
subcommittee was also to be briefed on the
" definitive" course of action.
Pittsburgh and Midway Coal Co., a subsidiary
of Gulf Oil, climaxed weeks of independent
bargaining by reaching a tentative settlement
with a bargaining team made up of UMW national
negotiators and local union leaders. Although
headquartered in Denver, P-and-M has mines in
western Kentucky, Kansas and Missouri.
The agreement was reached with the help of
the Federal Media lion and Conciliation Service,
which also announced that another round of talks
was underway between the Garland Coal Co. of
Arkansas and UMW local leadership.

VICe

:· ·. ·..;: .

:·

giving the legislature fmal

there
Last week the House also
passed and sent to·the Senate,
House Bill 902, legiSlation
creatmg a Zoological Ad•
v1sory Council in the
Department of Natural
Resources The co uncil would

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, February 20, 1978

HANG RIGHT IN THERE, you genealogists. Another
letter of request from Mrs. Dorothy Enloe, Sorento, Ill., 62086,
who writes :
"I wonder if your reading audience could be of any help to
me . I am trying to fmd who my great-great-grandparents
were. My great-grandfather, Samuel Ingalls (Ingels) was born
in Meigs County about 11121).1823. Could any of your readers tell
me who his parents were?"

recr eation,

View from the statehouse \
Yrom the Office of:
Stale Representative

WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Carter
--, Ordering the miners back to work under the
•setting aside collective bargaining for th~ Taft-Hartley Act - a move which UMW President
moment, sought the advice of key congressmen Arnold Miller warned would provoke bloodshed at
today liow to end the record 77 -day strike by the mines.
160,000 coal miners.
- Submitting the soft coal industry and ·the
At the same time, one independent coal UMW to binding arbitration.
company reached a tentative settlement of its
- A federal takeover of the mines, under
contract with the United Mine Workers " which the government would set "fair" wage and
apparently the first crack in the record-long profit levels while the bargaining continues.
walkout.
.
Congress would have to approve either of the
Carter himself spoke with Senate Democratic last two options.
Administration officials said Marshall was
leader Robert Byrd of West Virginia, who said he
told the president the best recourse was continued shuttling between the House and Senate today to
negotiations.
present the options.
Labor Secretary Ray Marshall and Carter
Marshall scheduled a midday meeting with
sounded out lawmakers on what administration Chairman Harrison Williams, D-N.J ., of the
officials indicated were three options :

You may or may not have tbought tha• returmng to a more
basic style of living might be your bag. Whether you've
thought about it or not you may not have any choice in the
matter, the way thing~ are going.
James and Helen Heaton have proven it can be done and
they are, after three years, enjoying their change of pace type
living,
Three years ago they built a one room house on Sklnner
Run and moved into it. Later, they built a second one room
house near the location of the first one and they are currently
residing in that ooe.
· The Heatons have no electricity whatsoever and despite
the mcooveruences that you think this brings about, !be
Heatonsare surviving very nicely. They use three oil lamps handed ,down through the family for years and years - to tight
their one room residence . There's no boob tube, refrigerator
and the 101 other electrical conveniences. However, the winter
months proVIde no problem for refrigeration and their
entertainment comes from a citizens band radio·and a regular
radio, both battery powered. There's no gas either but a wood
burning stove keeps them very warm and the Heatons don't
have to worry about a coal, gas or electricity shortage.
Reading has returned for the Heatons and they're enjoying it
unmensely . Who knows ? They 've probably even discovered
that conversation isn't really a lost art.
A couple of other interesting facts. The Heatons tore down
their home in Chester Township for materials with which to
build both of the one-room houses . Their son, David and family
decided that they would like to try the same way of life as h1s
parents and they are living m the first one-room structure.
That's why the second one materialized
The Heatons ra ised a huge garden last swruner and raised
livestock wh1ch was butchered. So for the most part they are
practiCally self-&lt;;ufflclent .
Their borne - built themselves - has a large porch on
which is a wooden swing and Mrs. Heaton says she really
enjoys this part of the living during the summer months.
Yep - it can be done so perhaps, you can get a little
encouragement from that while going through the problems of
1978.

wires attached. No more

Telephone

INSURANCE

Presi eilt ,.,.arter seeks a

•

•

acl'llll

•

�3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Feb. 20, 1978

2- The Daily Senti nel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Feb. 20, 1978
1978Au.-sEOALBASKETBALL TEAM
FIRST TEAM

PLAYER-SCHOOL
HT. YR.
Terry Wall, Galha Aca demy
IHl Sr .
Dick James, Ironton
~ Jr.
Scott Gasser, Logan
6-1 Sr.
Joe Oavena, Waverly
6-4 Sr.
John Royster, Wellston
5-11 Sr.
• SECOND TEAM
Mark Wallace, Athens
5-10 Sr.
Rich Harless, Jackson
5-10 Sr .
Dave Lehman, Logan
5-10 Jr .
Kenny Young, Meigs
5-11 sr.
John Martin, Wellston
6-3 Sr.
HONORABLE MENTION
Athens: ROB TOPPING ; Gallla Academy: J EFF
BROWN : !run ton : JOE FLETCHER · Jackson : DAVE
EVANS ; wgan : JAY BRAG LIN ; Meigs : GREG
BECKER; Waverly: ROBERT HOLSI NG ER··
Wellston: RAY GILLILAND.
'
MOST VALUABLE PLAYER
Joe Davena - Waverly
COACHOFTIIEYEAR
Scott Fitzgerald - Logan
NBA Stana•ngs
By Un1ted Press lnternattonal

M ezg"'S "o
hOSt
ah ama

Eastern conference
1,1
Atlantic D1v•s•on
l
Phtla
~ 6 ~~J GB .
New York
29 "28 509 11''•
Boston
20 33 377 151,1
Buffal o
19 3-4 358 191,
New Jersy
13 &lt;IS 224 28
TF.I:
Central Dovosoon
W
W L Pet, GB
San Anton i
35 21 625
Clevelnd
'1 9 21 518 6
The Meigs Marauders play
Wshngtn
29 21 518 6
26 31 450 91, their fmal regular season
Atlanta
New Or lns
26 32 448 10
game tonight when they host
Houston
22 35 386 13''" cross-river nval Wahama In
Western
M1dwestConterence
Otvls1on
a mak e·up contest at
w L Pet. GB M
G
M
Denver
ornson ymnasiUm. e1gs
37 21 638
M•lw
30 '19 508 7v1 won two vtctortes this season ,
Ch1c ago
30 29 508 7'u one of them bemg a Ion-sided
Detro1t
26 31 .456 I0"1
t'
Kanss Cty
23 36 390 J.4 1• Win over the White Falcons.
lnd1ana
21 38 356 16"'
Me1gs wall open AA SecPactflc w
Dtvtslon
· 1 competition Thursday
L
Pet. GB
tiona
Portland
45 10 .818
night at Federal Hocking
Pnoennt
37 19 661 91 ·2 HI h S
Seattle
30 26 536 1511
g choo1 by tangling With
3D '17 526 16
Nelsonville-York , a weekend
Los Angel s
GoldenSaturday's
St
28 Results
30 483 18 11 wmn
•
er over New [ ..exmg ton
Buffalo 122 , New YorK 112
m opening round tournament
Cleveland 105, Kan City 101
actton.
Houston 121 , Atlahfa 112
San Antonto 124, Ch ic ago 103
Phoen tx H4 . lndtana 10)
Sund.ay's Results
Phtla 120, New Jersey 110
Wi!!sh 130, New Orlei!llns 111
NORTHFIEIJ) RACE
Detro11 110. Kan C•ty 107
seatt le 108, M•lwaukee 103
NORTHFIELD,
Ohio
Denver 118, Boston 115
(UPI) _ · Sabadoto McShu
Los Ang 115, Golden St 93
Port land 127, Indiana IOd
scored a nine-length victory
Monday's Games
Saturday mght ln the
f
ed
(No games scheduled )
Tuuday 's Games
eatqr
pace at Northfield
Phoen 1&gt;e at Buffal o
p k · th
Seattle at New York
ar •goang emile ln 2:05 1Phllade lphta at Clev ~land
5. Sharon Princess was
Boston af Houston
second and J p Time was
Portland at San Anfon 10
third.
Los Angeles af Ch ic ago
_ _ _ _ _ _ _;..""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""•..

t

'

We cannot tell a lie,
these are your best

February Sale
CARPET BUYS!

Logan's Fitzgerald is
SEO's 'Coach-of-Year'
Scott Fttzgerald of Loga n
was named Coach of the
Year, Joe Davena of Waverly
won Most Valuable Player,
eight semors, and two JUniors
were picked Sunday to the
1977-78 ed1t10n of the All·
SEOAL Basketball Team .
Mem bers of the SEO
Sport swriters a nd Broad ca st ers Assoc1atton and
coaches from the etght
SEOAL schools met at J olly
Lanes m Jackson tu nommate

and select the all league pla ce fintsh w1th hiS con·
team.
sistent sco ring and excellent
ChampiOn Logan and sixth defens1ve efforts
place Wellston were the only
He Is a third year starter
team t o land more than one for Coach Carroll Hawhee
player, but all eight league and as mjuries bit into the
schools are represented on T1ger hneup, Davena ha s
the first two tea ms.
unselfi shly pla yed both
Da vena , a ru gged 6·4 ce nt er an d forward with
senior, won MVP honors over equa l enthusia sm .
Logan's Scott Gasser and
Fitzgerald , who gutded
Ironton's Dick James as he Logan to a 13-() record m
led the injury plagued league play and 1~·2 overall
Waverly Tigers to a second w1th two games remammg,
wa s chosen coach of the year
over Fred Gibson of Athens
and Buddy Bell of Ironton
Fitzgerald thus becomes
At Canton
the loop's ftrst most valuable
Fa trless 54 Tuslaw 53
player to complete the full
Akron S 83 Way nedale 44
circle
and be chosen coach of
At Chillicothe
Gr eenfield
Mclai n 65 the year.
Hil lsboro 52
The 31-year-old Chieftatn
At Stewart
mentor was the SEOAL MVP
Nels onville York 86 New
in 1964 as a senior at Athens
Le•ington 56
htgh school and then played
At Marton
Col Watlerson 62 Dublin 56 collegi ate basketball at
.Marysville 43 Col Beechcroft
Flortda Southern Untversity.
39
He is concludmg his sixth
f!Aar ion Elgin 57
season at the helm of the
Fredencldown 43
Ch1eftams where hts overall
CLASS A
At Warren
reco rd is now 86-42
Windham 77 Farmington 40
Logan was picked in preBnstol 52 Kinsman Badger 4~
season ballots by both
AI Minford
Eastern (P1kel 124 Symmes coaches and members of the
Va lley 57
assoc1at1on to fmish third m
At Dayton
leagu e play behind Waverly
Twtn Valley N 62 Cedar vill e
,
and
Ironton. The Chiefs were
57
M1 ssiss1nawa V 53 Ansonia 28 eliminated from Class AAA
Greene vlew 70 Arcanum 63 tournament play last WedBethel 83 Xenta Wilson 40
Franklm Monroe 75 Twin nesday m a close 45-44 loss to
M1am1 Trace
Valley S 64
The selection uf the 1977-78
Cov mgton 57 M1am1 Valley 35
Yellow Spnng s 66 Bradford team was as unpredictable as
54
the wmter-shredded season
Waynesv tl le 62 Newlon 58
as
none of the players named
At Bellefontaine
Jackson Center 54 Versa illes to the ftrst two teams were
52 {of)
unammous selections, none
Botkins 65 Russ1a 63
were repeaters from last
Fairlawn 58 Mechanicsburg
year, and it was pomted out
56
W L1bert y Salem 50 Ft that the e1ght league teams
Loramie 48
showed only 10 vtctortes in 30
At Cmcmnat1
games ag ainst non-league
lockland 43 Fayeftevolle 36
Mtddle Fenwick 70 Summ1t opponents.
Waverly ' s Robert
Ctry Day 56
At Cleveland
Holsinger, a member of the
Cl e Lutheran E 42 R1chmond team for two years, was
His 39
hampered by inJUries most of
At Hillsboro
the season and fmtshed as
W Umon 66 N Adams 65
At Pomeroy
honorable mentiOn. His
Kyger Creek 72 Nor th Galha teammate, Chuck Thompson,
71
whu won a berth last year, d1d
not earn any awards this
Regular Season
Ada 74 Spencerville 57
season , as he played the
Antwerp 49 North Centra! 47 entlre season on an ouchy
Asht 51 John 61 Perry 53
Ayersville 61 lnd1an Valley S ankle, broken in a football
game.
53
Barberton 66 Alliance 61
A total of 25 players were
Celina 74 St Marys 50
recommended
by the roacheS
Claxmonl 63 Northwest tt7
for
the
10
spots
available on
Coldwater 76 St He/"lry 75
Conttnenta l 95 Hilltop 55
the first two teams and e1ght
Convoy Crestv1ew 72 Wayne others received honorable
Trace 70
Cory Rawson 57 Bluffton 38 mention.
Coaches attending Sun·
Edon 56 Edg erton 50
Evergreen 66 ltberty Center day's meetmg were Fred
45
G1bson ,
Athens;
Jim
Ftndlay 78 Fremont 68
Osb
orne,
Gallipolis;
Scott
Hardtn
Nort hern
83
Fitzgerald, · Logan; Ron
R1dgemont 73
H1cksv ll le 65 Sherwood Logan, Me1gs; Rtck Perdue,
Fairv1ew 49
Wellston; and C. D. Hawkee,
Kal!da 68 Ottovil le 62
Waverly.
Kent Roosevelt 82 Cle John
AsSistant co a ch Steve
Hay 55
·
Keystone 74 Monroeville 52 Walburn
of
Jackson
Lake 68 Syl vania Southvtew represented
Coach
AI
65
Burger,
who
IS
recovermg
Uberty Benton 63 McComb 56
L1ma Perry 69 Paulding SO from a broken hip
L1ma Shawnee 63 Van Wert 61
Guests were Gallipolis
{of)
ass istant coaches Dick
Marion Hardtn 59 El1da 51
f!Aanon Local81 Ft. Recovery Parsons and Rtck Van Metre
and Jun Myers, edttor of the
53
.Mass Christ 63 Logan Elm 55 Logan Dally News.
New Knoxvtlle 70 Rlvers1de
All of the 18 players named
50
Oregon Clay 48 Tal St Francis to the team and hon orable
mention wtll be guests at the
41
Parkway 58 Mendon Un1on 57 Ali.SEOAL banquet t9 be held
Perry 69 Pauldtng SO
at Logan high . school on
Perrysburg 65 Rossford 44 March 30
Pett•sville 58 Ttnora 56
Swanton 53 Delta 52
Tol Scott JV 66 Spencer
GAME CANCELLED
Sharples 45
The Meigs Girls-Gallipolis
Tol Sf John 66 Maumee 52
Tal Whitmer 78 Anthony game Saturday at Meigs was
cancelled with no make-up
Wayne 61
Tnad BO Waynesville n
date set. The Meigs Gtrls
Van Lue 70 Arcad1a 69
schedule this week is as
Vinton County 59 Washtngfon
follows . Monday at Waverly,
CH 57
Wadsworth 57 Strongsvil le 65 Tuesday at Vinton, and
Zanesville 67 Steubenville 63 Thursday at GaUtpolis.

Saturday's cage scores
Boys High School
Basketball
Untted Press International
Saturday
Tournament
CLASS AAA
At Columbus
Upper Arlongton 70 Col West

61

Delaware 54 Reynoldsburg 31
Col
Eastmoor 5 4 Col
Brookhaven 53
Col Lmden Mc K1nle y 64
Hil liard 52
Grovepor t 64 WestervlII e S 6I
At Cleveland
Cle Glenv il le 69 Solon 59
Cle JF K 55 Cle Hts 43
Cl e
John
Adam s
57
Brecksvil le 49
Cle 51 tanattus .88 Parm a
VIlli~ Forg~

}1

Cle 67 Parma Padua 63
Will oughby S 42 Eastlake N 50
Mayf1eld 49 Lake Cath 45
Loram 73 N Olmsted 62
Roc ky R1ver 61 N R1dgevdle
50
AI T
roy
Vandalia 51 Piqua 36
At Oxford
Frank lin 58 Colerain 44
Mt Healthy 76 Hami lton
Garfield 64
Ctn Northwes t 57 Lem on
f.Aonroe 56
At C1ncinnat1
Cm McNi cholas 76 Deer Park
35
Hamilton Ross 5B Manemont
38
Read1ng 61 Goshen 32
At Canton
Glen Oak 74 Wooster 32
Perry 63 Marling ton so
At Copley
Akron Buchtel 49 Akron
Ell ett 44
Cuyahoga Fa lls 55 Norton 54
CLASS AA
At Lucasville
Ironton 61 Minford 56
At Salem
Spnngfleld Local 70 Mmerva
53
Bel o1t W Bran ch 11 E
Palestine 52
At Newark
Licking Valley 47 Heath 44
Col Mifflin 96 Ufl ca 51
Rtver Valley 81 Col DeSal es
61
AI Cleveland
Elyna West 65 Avon 49
Oberlm 76 Olmsted Falls 60
At Dayton
Kln9s 56 Mtdd Mad1son 46
Dl~1e 72 Valley Vtew 57
Day K•ser "73 Oay Cham -Ju l
67
Eaton 43 Carl1 sle 40
Day Jeff 87 Little M•am1 53
Af Urbana
Sprmg Shawnee 43 Kenton
Ridge 39
Sprtng Cath 69 Northeastern
31
Northwestern 57 Northndge
53
THE DAILY SENTINEl
DEVOTIO:O TO THE
IN'TEREST OF'
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTBIR L. TANNEHill.
E:cee.Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH
Cl1y Edllor
Published Wuly enepl Saturday
by The Ohto VaUey Publishmg
Comptin) ·MultunedlH, Inc ,
lll
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Cage Scores
Collefl Bulletbell Rnul1s
U" lted Pre ss tntern•fifmel
EiiSt
Ad lpht 86, C W Psf 75
Allegh en y 64, Thlet 6 1
Army 77 , N1agara 65
Assm ptn 10 1, 5 1 Mcht's 75
Clarion 76, Cal P a 11
Clark 100, MIT 07
Colby 98, Babson 86 ,
Co l g at ~ 85, N H BI
Columb ia 88, Yale 71
Conn, S9, Vermont 48
Cornell 84, Brown 66
Del St. 73. Md E Sh 62
Oetro11 124. can is1us 89
Fatrfld 86, st Jos 62
Harvard 93, Penn S7
lnd Pa. 73 , Lck Hven 56
tona 93, Cen tenary 83
Mar 1st 69, Trnton 63
Mass 77, G wash S7 Ll U 87, Boston U 78
Mntd r 71, Jrsy C1ly 70
NC Char 81, Bflo St. 65
Penn St 75, P1tl 68
PI Park 74, Mrcyhst 72
Pratt 54, NJ Tech SO
Pro11 63. Campbell 54
R I U 82. King 's Pa 71
Rutgers 81, Fordham 64
St Bonnv 82, Dt:~ uesn e 80
Se ton HI I 76, Hl y Crss 74
Slppry Rc:; k 69, Ednbo ro 54
Syra cse JJ , St John's 65
Tem pl e 72, American 61
Vli Pova 82, La Salle 79
W Va 10 1, Sl Fran NY 84
South
Alcrn Sf 67, Grmblng 65
Au burn 92, MISS, 67
Bl uet ld St 75, Glenvi 71
CentWst yn 86 , Lee Coli 71
Duke 81, Maryland 70
Frmnl Sl 72, W Va St 61
Fvttevl Sf 108, Shaw 103
Fla 73, LOUIS iana St 7'1
Fl a Sf 81. LOU ISVI 70
Furman 82 , Dav idSon 69
G Mason 7[] Balflmre 68
Geotown 55, St Ptr's 38
Ga Sthr n 92, Bapt Coli 82
J Madtson 86, W Ca r 75
Kent uc ky 58, Miss St 56
Md Ball Co 74 , Frstbg 67
M e r c er 79, Georo1a St 56
MtSS Coli 56, N Ala 53
M Harvy 74, W Va Tch 69
Navy 86 Man ha ttan 71
New Orlns 86, Dayton 79
No Car 71, Va 54
N C St 72, Clemson 65
NC W• Jm 80, F Dcknsn 65
Sheph erd 88 , Salem 73
So Car 65, Ntre Dme 60
Tenn 77 , Georgta 72
Twsn St BO, Ch yny St 78
Vanderbilt 71, Ala ba ma 69
VM177 , Appy Sf 70
Wke Forst 88, Va Tch 74
Wes t Ltb 91 , Concrd 89
Wheelng 79, WVa Wslyn 73
Wm&amp;Mary59 , R1chmond 48
Mtdwest
AlA 100. Ill Sf 97
Bthny 98, Kan Wslyn 92
Bwlng Grn 66 , W Mtch . 44
Bul ler 74 , DePauw 69
C Mlch 91, Ball St 84
DePaul 73. Loyola 63
E M1ch 88. Kent Sf 70
E Ill 84, Akron 59
Empr1a Sf 91, Krny St 65
IllinOIS 77, Iowa 76
Ill Coli 83 , Greenvl 71
Ill Wslyn 87, Wheaton 82
lnd•ana 71 , M1ch1gan 59
lnd1ana St 90, Drake 71
Kansas 75, Nebraska 70
Kan 51 67, MISSOUri 54
MrQuette 57, C1nc1 45
MtCh St 79 , O hiO Sf 74
M1 ch Tch 10, Moorhed 60
M1 nnesota 79 , Purdue 7'1
Mo KC 77, Mo -St L 66
Monmth 90, Roosev lt 81
N Mtc h 87, Northwd 77
NE Mo 102, Mo Rolla 82
NW Mo 83, SE Mo 68
Olivet 94 , Aurora 77
Sthwsfrn 82, St Mry•s 19
SJ Jos ao, Frankl•n 74
St L U 83, Tulane 79
St Xvr 64 , 51 Fran 60
Tarkto 57 , Mo Val 53
Tn St 75, Goshen 64
W Ill 97, Prdue lndpls 71
W\ttnbg 71 , 0 Ws lyn 69
Wts , 81. Northwestern so
Wchta St 66, Bradly 64
Southwest
Baylor 75 , R1ce 65
Bthny Naz 85 , Okla Bapl 60
B1shop 94, Southern 89
E N M 63 , Grand Cnyn 59
E T e ;~t 79 , Sam Houston 75
Hous ton 84, Arkansas 75
Lamar 59. Ark St 54
Mesa 81. w N M 73
N M Hllnds 118, Wstrn St 105
N M 59, Texas El Paso 51
N Tex6l , O Roberts 59
NE Okla 59 , NW Okla 57
Ok (,ty 83, Hous Bapt 69
Okla St 79 , Colorado ~8
SMU 83, TCU 53
SW Tex 51 86, Ab Chrts 71
SE Okl a 72. SW Okla 71
So I !I 77, N M St. 72
Texas 78 , Texas Tech 63
Tex So 89 , Prare Vw 73
west Texas 78, Tulsa 71
West
Ar1 ZOn8 10!1, BY U 90
Boise St 80, Gnzga 69
Cal tf 76, Oregon 67
Cat Poly SLO 68 , B1ola 52
Cent Wash 74, E Ore 50
Col M1nes 75, Adms St 71
Coto St 82, Wyom tng 70
Crghfon 73, Atr Force 64
Fresno Pa c 56 , Ambssdr 44
Frsno St 75, LngBch Sf 67
Fll rtn St 80, Sn Jse St 78
G Fox 87 , NW Naz 83
Idaho St 77, Idaho 72
Mont 58, Weber St 56
Mont St 84, No Artz 83
Nev Reno 82, Sttle u 63
Ore TeCh 9'1, Ore Coli 79
Ore Sf 8&lt;1, Stanfrd n
Prtlnd U 91 , St Mry 's 86
Portland St 89, UNL V 84
Puget Snd 100, Stle Pac 74
San Fran 89, Pepprdne 56
S.F 51 74, Ch1c0 St. 60
Sanla Clara 89, Loyola 75
S 0 Sf 46, UC lrv 42
UCLA 104 Washtngton 64
us c 55, wash St 54
USO 93, UC S D 73
Utah 88, Artz St 75
Utah St 82. Denvr 12
w Wash 76, E Wash 54
Whtt 1er 84, Porn Ptzr 54

By

Morg3:11 wins
title by twoWS ANGELES (UP!) Everyone agreed it was a
tournament Jack Nicklaus
lost, not ooe Dr. Gil Morgan
won .
Professional golf's all-time
leading money king had only
himself to blame for what
happened m the fmal round of
the $200,000 Los Angeles Open
golf tournament Sunday, as
he took a double bogey on the
l~th hole and followed it up
With a bogey on the 16th to
hand Morgan a two-s hot
Vlctory.
It provided the nonpracticmg optometnst from
Wewoka, Okla , his second
career victory and cost the
fa,ned Golden Bear from
North Palin Beach, Fla., by
way of Columbus , Ohio , his
64th PGA triumph.
On
a
spectacularly
beautiful February day m
Pacifi c Palisad e s
overlooking the ocean when
Charles Coody managed a 65
for the best round of
tournament on the tough
Rtviera Country Club course,
the steady Morgan finished
with a one-under-par 70 while
Ntcklaus wound up with a
one~ver 72 .
Nicklaus tned to mask hts
feelings w1th a smile, but the

Wllamette 76, Whtlman 68
Sunday's Results
East
Bklyn Col1 71. J Jay 59
Brdgwtr Sf 74, S E Mass 66
CCNY 82, Hunter 65
Hly crss 96, K1ngs Coli 83
Mtdwest
Mtnn . 72, LOUISVI 71

~

hurt showed on his face.
Instead of a win, he had hls
43rd runnerup flrush on the
tour.
" I'm very disappointed,"
he S81d . "I played darn well
thiS week and it's a darn
shame to let it get away like
thiS .
" When I made that double
bogey on 15, that turned out to
be the tournament.
"I thought I rrught bave a
chance if I btrdied 17 and 18
and I could have. But I
rrussed a H)-foot putt on 17."
Ntcklaus, with previous
rounds of 72-66·70, and
Morgan, 66.09-73, both started
the day at 208, five under par
and three shots ahead of the
!teld.
Everybody felt Morgan
was due. But, after all, the Gil
Morgans of the world JUSt
aren't supposed to be able to
beat the Jack N•cklauses.
· Ntcklaus, who will defend
his title m the Inverrary
Classic 1n Flonda next
weekend , has never won the
Los Angeles Open. The only
other professional events that
have been around for 20 years
or longer tbat he hasn't won
are the Colonial National
Invitational m Texas and the
Canadian Open .

rumbling crash on the grass
m the infield. He was rushed
to a hospital with head and
shoulder InJuries. Doctors
said X-rays of his upper spme
proved negat1ve, but kept
h1m
overmght
for
observation.
The race then boiled down
to AlliSOn, Yarborough and
Baker, and Yarborough had
that
engine
problems
gradually slowed him.

By MILT&lt;lN RICHMAN
UPI Sporll Editor

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NEW YORK (UPI ) - Poor Leon Spinks. He fights his heart
out, gives it everything he's got and overcomes enormous odds
to win the world heavywetght championship , only to discover
skeptics still aren't convinced the whole thing was on the up
and up.
Everywhere I go, people ask me the same question · Was the
fight fixed? Did Mubammad Ali dump it ? Didn't he merely
"loan" Spinks the title to set up another fight with him?
Sometimes they don 't even bother asking those questions,
they sunply say straight out that Ali went into the tank . Never
rrund that they can 't offer the slightest shred of proof . They
just KNOW something was fishy, tbat's all.
WeU,if they know it, they know something I don't . The way I
saw it, Leon Spmks earned the deciSion over Muhammad
Ali solely because he outpunched him and to suggest Ali
dwnped the fight makes no sense whatsoever.
Besides, when someone goes about throwing a ftght , he
doesn't take the physical beating Ali did, nor does he do all he
can to try and knock out the other guy as Ali was doing while
fighting for his life in the late rounds.
Most people don't understand all it takes to fiX a fight. If one
of the fighters tsn't gomg to lie down completely, then the
judges have to be locked in and If you remember, one of them
voted Ali the winner, so there goes another theory out the
window . Moreover, when you make up your mind to lose a fight
purposely, you don't lose 11 on a split dectston.
To carry all the allegations a step further, if Ali had been a
party to any delusion, wouldn't he have continued the masquerade by hollering he had been robbed of the decision? He
didn'tdo that at all . On the contrary, he said Spinks had fought
a good light and deserved to win.
But there are some people who don't recognize the truth
when it's right there in front of them.
Aesop touched on thatm one ofhtsiables when he told of how
a marketplace audtence warmly congratulated a patr of
contestants for their splendid imitations of a squealmg pig and
then showed lhetr dtsapproval of another competitor by
tossmg stale fruit at hun because they felt his imitation was so
poor .
Before departing, the young man who had been rejected and
branded a fraud, opened his coat to reveal a small pig inside ,
which he had been pinching all along.
Without realtzmg tl, Alt may have planted the seed for some
of the doubt now circulating by what he satd after he was
beaten by Spinks. He satd he'd like to become the first man
ever to win the heavywei~ht Iitle three t_imes , a statemen~ he
has made tdly once or twtce while he still had the champiOnship, and after hearing that , some people said to themselves
this was something he bad been planning all along .
But ,if you k_now anythmg about Ali, then you ~now his ~nd
doesn t work m that directton. Whatever _he does, he does rtght
up front. Th~rets nothmg sneaky about hun . All you have to do
IS look at hiS background.
.
. .
_When he became~ member of the Musluns, he dtd 1\ openly,
wtthout trymg to hide the fact from anyone. He conducted
himself the same way when he bucked public opinion and
refused to go into the Army and you mtght also_bear m ~d
that when be Stllfted gomg wtth hiS present wife, Veromca,
even while married to his prev10us one, Belinda, he did that
publicly, too. All has his faults but deviousness isn't one of
them .
.
. .
.
Both the Wodd BolWlg Assoctalion and World BolWlg
Council would like to see Spmks make hls first tttle defense
against Norton. Most likely, he won't, though. Jlook for him to
make hiS first defense agamst Ali and for Ali to beat him next
time, thereby becpming the first heavyweight ever to Wtn the
title three times.
And If that happens, there'll be some people hollering " fix"
all over again. You can make book on that.

K

..
,.

COLUMBUS ( UPI)
"We're 17-2 and not getting
any
headlines,"
saiq
Barberton Coach Jack
Greynolds
jokingly
in
explaining hts sudden col·
lapse during Saturday night's
game against Alliance.
"We've got to get some
headlines some way."
Greynolds, who suffered a
severe heart attack some I~
months ago, fell to the floor
when he jumped to hiS feet to
protest an official's call. Most
of the fans in the Barberton
gym thought the worst - that
Greynolds had suffered
another heart attack
"What
happened,"
Greynolds said Sunday in a
telephone conservation, "is I
had jumped up on about three
calls in a row. I pulled a
muscle in my neck whtch cut
off the oxygen supply and I
hit the deck."
Greynolds, 45, said he was
down about 15 mmutes.
"'lbe crowd went nuts and
the kids went under the
basket and started praying,"
said Greynolds, who missed
all the early pari of last
season when his Magics ran
their winning streak to 51
games before losing to
Columbus linden McKinley
in the finals of the Class AAA
State Tournament. .
When Greynolds got back
on his feet Saturday night, he ,
went to hls office and listened
to the rest of the game on
radio, Barberton winning, 6961. Afterwards, be was taken
to the hospital where tests
showed no signs of a heart
attack.
"I didn't know what to
think," he said. "There was a
hell of a pain in my neck, like
a bolt of lightning , and It just
knocked me down. When I hit
the floor, everyone thought it
was a heart attack."
Greynolds, reportedly one
of several candidates being
considered for the vaeant
Kent State University head
basketball coaching job,
talked about his current

Barberton team, which fell to
top-ranked Akron CentralHower and No. 7 Canton
Timken in December but
hasn't lost smce.
The Magics, ninth in last
week's UPI Board of Coaches
ratings, had some big shoes
to fill, including those of three
aiiOhio performers - Carter
Scott and Mark and Marty
Bodnar.
"I just told them 'you've
got to establish your own
identity,'" said Greynolds,
"that •you were lucky to play
behind a great bunch of
players, but unlucky not to
get to play more."
Greynolds says "we're not
better than more than five or
six of the teams we've played
th1s year. I'm really ji'Oud of
these kids . They just play and
scratch away.
"They kind of remind me of
a Charlie Huggins team,
which I called a gym class
team, that won the state
tournament," said
Greynolds, referring to his
fellow Alderson-Broaddus
grad, who has led Indian
Valley South to two state
Class A titles and the No. I
ranking again this year.
Saturday
night's
experience has Greynolds
thinking about turning over a
llfW leaf.
"I guess I'm just going to
have to sit there and let the
referees referee and· let
whatever happens happen,"
he said.
That'll be the day. •
LEBANON RACEWAY fJ
LEBANON, Ohio (Ul'i) Bret's Beau won Saturday
night's featured mile race lit
a photo finish over Noble
Silrook at Lebanon Raceway
with Talisha coming in third.
The winning time was 2:10 2-

5.
Pine Willo and Maggie's
May won the first two I'8ce8
to return $64 in the dally
double.
The crowd of 2,746 wagered

$236,093.

~-ger

away late in Uie second half
in its win over Ohio
Universtty.
Miami, down 49-11 with 13
minutes remaining, rallied to
knot the game at 49-19 and
slowly pulled away to a ~
margin with 45 seconds to go.
OU, playing without
starting forward Steve
Skaggs , mjured in last
Wednesday night's IOl!B to
Virginia Tech, was led by
Joyce with 29 pomts .
"I think we did what we
have all year," said Miami
Coach Darrell Hedrlc, "reach
back and come up wtth
wh8tever it takes to win.
Maybe that's seniors and
what they do lor you.
"Now we have a big one
Wednesday night agamst
Central Mlchtgan, " added
Hedric.
"Tlrey're a hell of a
basketball team," said OU
Coach Dale Bandy. "That's

why they 're leadmg the
league ."
In other MAC games Saturday, Central downed Ball
state 91-34 , Toledo remained
in the chase with a 54-63
decision over Nor thern
llllnois, Bowling Green
whacked Western Michigan
86-44 and Eastern Michigan
downed Kent State 118-70.
Fre shman Jay Lehman
was the hero for Toledo.
Lehman's layup shot as time
ran out gave the Rockets
their 54-.13 win .
Dan Stacey 's patr of free
throws with slX seconds remaming had give n th e
Huskies a 53-02 lead .
Toledo, now 8-4 in the
league, was paced by Ted
Willtams with 13 points and
Jim Swaney wtth 10.
Ron Hammye, Joe Faine
and Duane Gray led a
balanced Bowling Green
attack
over
Western

Michtga n . The Falcons
exploded lor 23 straig ht
points midway through the
second hall.
BG, now 7-4'm the MAC, led
31-30 at halftime and were
sttll only up 43-38 wtth 12
minutes leftin the game. But ,
Western Mi chigan we nt
nearly 10 nu nutes w1U10ut a
pomt and the Falcons zoomed
out to a 66-38 margm
Hammye led the BG
scormg wtth 16 pomts, ~' a1ne
added 15 and Gray 14
Forwards Gary Green and
Ken Harmon combmed for 48
pomts as Eastern Michtgan
cruised to its romp over Kent
State .
Gree n fin ished with a
career-h1 t;h 2.8 _potnts ~ nd
hauled down 18 rebo unds
while Harmon ch1pped m for
20 pmnts .
Burr ell McGhee, the
league's leadmg scorer , had
21 pomts to pa ce Kent State ,

which dropped to 3-9 in the
MAC and 5-18 overall
At Milwaukee, top-ranked
Marquette broke away from
a 37-37 tie and then pulled
away for a 57-4~ win over
Cincinnati
Jerome Wh itehead and
Bernard Toone both scored 14
points to lead the Warrters.
Toone had three baskets in
that key nine minute stretch
of play .
Tile Bearcats were led by
Pat CUmmmgs with 23 points.
At Cincinnati, Max Kipfe r 's
35-loot fi eld goal with three
seconds remaining gave Valpara iso a 76-75 overtlme win
over Xavier.
The Crusa ders , who
snapped a H)-game losmg
streak and now stand 5-16,
tratled all the way in the
game until Darryl Ashby's 22foote r wtth two seconds
remaining tied it at 66-&amp;l af
U1e end of regulation play .
Nick Daniels scored 18

Creek upsets North Gal.lia, 72-71

By Greg Batley
In a thnlhng offenstve
showmg by the startmg ftve,
the Kyger Creek Bobcats
upset the North Gallia
Ptrates 72·71 Saturday night
to advance to the semifinals
of the Class A Sectional Cage
Tournament at Meigs H1gh
School.
Four of Kyger's hve
starters htt double figures,
but the Pirate five outdid that

by placmg all five starters m
double figures .
The Bobcats jumped out
to a 21-14first per10d lead and
seemed to have things m
command as they led 41-30 at
mtermtSsion. But the Pirates
came stormmg out to open
the second half then roared to
a 51-49 lead at the end of the
thtrd period.
Then came the thrilling
fourth period Neither team
could seem to put the game

on iee as the other just kept
coming back. W1th . 09
remammg in the contest,
North Gall! a was on top 71·70.
But an inbounds pass was
mtercepted by the Bobcats'
John Thompson under hts
own bucket and he quickly
latd 11 m for a 72-71 Bobcat
lead With :04left, the ,Pirate
who took !he ball out stepped
over the ltne and the ball went
to the Bobcats who then got 1!

OOCAGO (UPI) - Min·
nesota which wants the Big
Ten title because It can't
enter the NCAA tournament
and Michigan State, whtch
can go to the tournament and
doesn't care about the title,
begm the stretch run lor the
championship thiS week, and
neither can expect a downhill
roll .
The Gophers, on probation
to prohtbit a tournament
chance this year face the
toughest prospects' this week,
forced to travel to both Ohio
State and Indiana, where
they must win in order to

expect to stay in a deadlock
for the top spot With the
Spartans
Michigan State, on the
other hand, will be home,
where it has lost only once in
seven games,
against
Northwestern, in last place,
and Illinois, in a sixth place
tie.
The task will he far more
difficult for Minnesota. Ohio
State though losers in three
of se~en games at home has
been improving rapidly ,
losing by only five pomts on
the Michigan State court
Saturday 79-74 and Indiana
'
'
'

in a fourth place tie, has
become one of the league 's
hottest teams. The Hoosiers
have lost only one of seven at
home and beat Michigan and
Purdue.
But MIIUlesota Coach Jim
Dutcher may have the
solution to the problem of
beating Indiana in hiS center,
Mychal Thompson, the
league scoring leader.
He tallted 22 pomts in the
Gophers' 79-72 wm Saturday
over Purdue, and Dutcher
said "every coach we've
played has called Mychal the
best player in ther country

points to puce Xavier, now JIll, while Ste ve Spivery and
Joe Sundenna n had 12 points
apiece.
In other games Saturday, lt
was Michigan State 79 Ohio
State 74; New Orleans 86
Dayton 77 , East Ulinols 84
Akron 59; Ashland 54 Wayne
State 44 ; Cent ral State 99
Steubenville 51 ; Cleveland
Sta te 82 Robert Morris ( Pa .)
54 ; Kentucky State 92 Wr ight
State 7~ ; Gannon ( Pa ) 61
Youngstown
State 57 ;
Musktn b'lllll 58 Cupital 49;
Kenyon 56 Heidelberg :i:i;
Marietl n 91 De ntson 74 ;
Wittenberg 71 Ohio Wesleyan
69; Ohi o Northern 71
Otterbem 66, Mount Union 86
S.ldwm-Wallace 80; Wooster
84 0 berlin 74, Hanover (Ind. )
78 W1~nington 11 ; Defiance 82
Anderson (l nd ) 88 ; Findlay
82 T11ylor (Ind.) 74 (2 ot t ;
Case W c'St~ rn 83 CarnegieMellon (Pa.) 66 ; Bethany (W.
Va .) 56 Hiram 38; Cedarville
37 11flm 79, Malone 9S Mt.
Vernon Nu:r:urcne 82.

safely mbounds as tnnc ran
out.
Thompson took the mgh1 's
scot lng honors a:s he npped
the nets for 19 poin!S Von
Tay lor had 16, George W!llts
14, and Fred Helms 12 1o pace
Kyger 'l11e Bo bca ts htl 12 uf
18 free throws and hud 12
per sonal foul s called ugamst
them
North Ga llia was led by
Henry Siewert 's 18 mark ers,

Prevention is the
best policy. . .
FOR CURBING
CRIME LOSSES

a ll of them m the sel·ond half
as he led that third quarter
surge. Sam Sm1th netted 17,
Calvtn Mmnts had 14. and
Rex Justu:e had 10 The
Ptratcs were called for 16
personals and mode u perfect
You can help cut down on
crime losses , losses that
mght of It at the foul hne as
d ir ec tly
t'lff ec t
you ,
they sank all thtrteen of then·
whether Ihey happen to you
att empts
or not .
In Secltonal play, WedTake the crim e of arson
ne$day nt ght finds Hu nYou 're paylng an In nan
Trace
pitted
creasingly
heavy subsidy
agamst Southwestern , and
for
deliberately
set ftres
Thur sduy n1ght the Bob·
through your
cat s meet SV AC c ham prem iums
p10n Southern to determtn c
In suran ce
costs
the two teams who will meet
adversel y a ffected
in Saturday night's cham·
burglaries. robberies
and m the fmal 10 mmutes pionshtp t1lt
car lhelts , plus
Box sl'ore
agamst Purdue you could see
countl ess CB radios
why.n
KYGER CREEK Pl l bic ycles th"t turn up
Thompson won sumlur ac· Wdll s 6 2 14 , Hel ms 6-0,l'l ;
mi ssing
9-l-19 ; Taylor 6-4·
claim from Purdue's Fred Thompson
i6; Wesllalll -5-7, Springer 1One thing you can do Is to
Schaus, f ormerly a pru 02 1 Smith 1-0-7 Totals 3012
support programs prowho
dec lared 72.
coa ch,
viding stltfer penalties tor
North Galha (71) - Mlnn1s
Thompson " a fant astic
wrongdoers and proposAls
5-4-14
,
Just1ce
5-0
10
;
Winston
offensive player "
for
strengthened crime
5 2-12 , Sievert 9·0· 18, Smith 4
Mtchlgan State's Couch Jud 7-l5 . Phillips 1 o-2. Peck 0 0
lnvestlga11on efforts
Heathcote sounded the poltcy 0 Totals 29 13-71 .
You can also make It
Score by quarter s:
for his ~'partans the rest of
tougher
for crooks Use
Kyger
Oeek
21
20
8
2372
I
the way though a fter the
good strong locks Mark
Nort h Gall 1a 14 16 21 20---71
decision over Ohio State.
possessions wlth your
social security number.
"We're more interested m "'jiiiiiiiiiiiithe tournament than the I•
Our agen cy provIdes
titlet he said "That's our
finan ci al protection and
No. 1 objective.
Mnllce when cr\me \oss••
''I'm thanldul we had a
occur
but many can be
lead so we could hang on for
prevented . That's why we
dear life. We started to coast
say - prevention Is the
besl policy
a little bit, but kids are kids.
"Sec me for car, home,
They thought they had the
game won ."
life, health and business
Three players htt career
insurance~'
scoring highs in Saturdsy's
992-2143
games, freshman Earvm
102 W Main
Pomeroy
Johnson of Michigan State
~, ., , ~ "~' ~~~v ~~· • to· , •• • 1
w1Ut 32, Mich1gan 's freshman ~=::=::-:!......:"":"'~":'':_:"~':'":•·:"~"·:·_":'":·'":"J
M1ke McGee with 34 ,
equalling th e best single
APubh( SetVI(e ofl hi:O ilCWSIJ&lt;lpCI &amp; l iK'AdVI' I 1 1~111!) CounCil
game performance in the Big
Ten conference race this
year, and Ind1ana's Wayne
Radford with 32.
In other Saturday games
Ulmois edged Iowa 77·76,
lnd1ana downed Mtchigan 11·
~5, and Wisconsin nudged
Northwestern 81-80, the
Badgers' first road wm .

B zg
• 1 olea d e rs begin stretch run

Barberton fans,
players get scare

HEATING OIL

NEWSPAPER
CAR.RIERS
WANTED

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sporll Wrller
It's showdown ttme in the
Mid-American Conference .
Miami, which too~ another
big step towards the
conference crown with a 7~
win at Ohio University
Saturday, can grab a
stranglehold on the title
Wednesday night.
The Redskins, ~2 in the
MAC, host Central Michigan,
a team which they couldn't
handle in two tries a year
ago, costing them a trip to the
NCAA Tournament. But ,
Miami already has beaten the
Chippewas at Mt . Pleasant,
Mich., this year :
Central brings an 8· 3
conference mark to Oxford
and another Miami wm will
givetheRedskinsa two-game
lead with only four games
remaining .
Miami , led by Archie AI·
dridge with 27 points, pulled

Sport Para.d e

Allison captures
Daytona 500 race
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
( UPI) - " All of a sudden I
felt like crying," said Buddy
Baker.
So did a lot of others.
It was that kind of day at
the Daytona 500.
But there were no tears
fr om Bobby Allison, the
sharp-featured veteran from
Alabama, who had begun to
think he had run out of
vtctones on NASCAR's
Grand National circuit.
Alltson, driving a Thunderbird, a car that hadn't won a
major race smce Eisenhower
was pres1dent, won the
nchest of all· stock car races
Sunday wtth a 33-second
margin over defending
champion Cale Yarborou~h.
But that doesn't tell all of
the tale. With only loO miles
gone m the race, R1chard
Petty, Darrell Waltrip and
David Pearson were running
ahead of everybody, drafting
together bumper-to-bumper.
Then Petty blew a tire and aU
three cars tangled and
slammed into the wall.
The dr1vers weren't hw-t,
but Petty and Pearson were
out of the race and Waltrtp
could never get back into
contention .
Ten laps later, A.J . Foyt
ran mto debriS from a blown
tire and his car (tipped in to
the air and came to a

Redskins step closer to .crown

Today's

'

.I

Redmen trip Bulldogs,
face Tiffin tonight
Coach Art Lanham's Rto
Grande Redmen defeated
host Wilberforce, 104-77, m a
non-conference
basketball
game Saturday mght.
Tonight, the Redmen travel
to Tiffin . for a Mid-Ohio
Conference makeup game
with the Dragons and Thurs·
day, Ttflin visits Rio Grande
for a makeup contest and
what wtll probably be the 1978
regular season champtonshtp
game.
Rto, now 16-7 overall, is 10-2
tn conference play The
Dragons are 9-3 m league

Cage
standings
All GAMES
TEAM
W l POP
logan
15 2 1090 888
South Point
13 5 )194 1079
Waverly-x
13 6 1152 1030
Court House
12 6 1211 1036
Portsmouth
11 7 1195 1089
Ironton
10 B1124 1023
Pt. Pleasant
9 6 917 875
Gallipolis
9 9 1063 1026
Ravenswood
7 8 913 887
Falrland-x
9 10 1035 1021
Athens
8 10 1138 1163

action. Rio needs at least a
split for a second straight
championship and a sweep
for another undisputed
crown. Malone has finished
loop play wtth an 11-3 mark.
Saturday, Rio placed lour
men in double figures, led by
Gtl Price's 24 points. Greg
James added 23 POints. alon"
wtth Dan Purcell. Mark
Swam tossed in 18. Purcell
had nine assists and five
rebounds.
Rio hit 47 of 73 field goal
attempts for 64.3 percent. The
Redmen were 10 of 14 at the
foul line for 71.4 percent. Rto
had 3S rebounds, 10 by Prtce
and nine by James. The
Redmen had 14 turnovers.
Wilberforce, now 1-15, hit M
of 82 field goal attempts for
41.4 percent. The Bulldogs
were nine of 13 at the foul line

·Ohio
Cage scores

Meigs
2 15 970 1272
x · Completed season
Saturday's results:
Ironton 61 Minford S6 (Tny)
Wahoma 61 Ravenswood 55
Soufh Point 74 Huntington
East 60
Vlnfon County 59 Court House

United Press lnternetlonat
Saturday
Ashland 54 Wayne Sf 44
Bethany {W Va) S6 Hiram 38
)l,:t~~~~~ Green 66 Western
Case Western 83 CarnegieMellon 66
Cedarville 87 Tlllln 79
Central Sf 99 Steubenville 51
Cleveland Sf 82 Robert
Morris {Pal 54
Del lance 82 Anderson {lnd)

57

88

~~~~~nx

t J~

1

~1J~~

Tonight's games:
East 111 84 Akron 59
Logan af lronfoo .
Eastern Mlch 88 Kenf Sf 70
Hlflsboro af Court House
Findlay 82 Taylor Ond) 74 (2
Wahama af Melos
of)
Tuesday's games:
Gannon (Pa) 61 Youngsfown
Gallipolis vs .. Soulh Polnf at Sf 57
Ironton
Hanover (lnd) 78 Wilmington
Pf Pleasant af Ripley
71
Parkersburg at Ravenswood Kentucky St 92 Wrlghf 75
Rock Hill vs. Chesapeake at Kenyon 56 Heidelberg 55
Ironton
Malone 9S Mt Vernon
WednesdiY'"s games :
Nazarene 82
Ripley at Ravenswood
Marietta 91 Denison 74
Court House vs . Wellston at Marquette 57 Cincinnati .t5
Unlofo
Miami 70 Ohlo U 66
Thursday's games : •
Michigan St ?9 Ohio Sf 74
Pt. Pleasant at Parkersburg Mount Union 86 Baldwin South
Wallace 80
Ironton vs . Portsmouth at _ Musklngum 58 Capital 49
lucasville
New Orleans 86 Dayton 77
Meigs vs. Nelsonville York af Ohio Northern 71 Otterbein 66
Stewart
'
Toledo 54 Northern Illinois 53
Friday's pmes:
Valparaiso ( lnd) 76 Xavier 75
Pt. Pleasant at Wahama
{ot)
Sissonville at Ravenswood Wlllenberg 71 Ohio Wesleyan
Class AA Sectional cham- 69
plonshlp game at Ironton .
Wooster 84 Oberlin 74

for 69.2 percent Wtlberforce
had 29 rebounds and 17 turn·
overs
Jay Stiles led the losers
wtth 17 points
Box score .
RIO GRANDE (104) Swain 9 0-18; James 10-3-23 ,
Price 10-4 24; B1se o 0-0;
Phelps 4-0-8; Purcell 111 23.
Royse 1-0-2, Johnson 1.o 2,
Nlday0-0-0; lee 1 0-2; Wesf 02 2. TOTALS 47-10-104.
WILBERFORCE {771 Stoles 6-5 17. Mart in 6-3-15 .
Taylor 5-0-10, Davis 2-0-4;
Hargraves 4·0-8; Styles 5-0
10 , Weatherspoon 1·0 2,
Peasent 1-0-2; Hookf1n 2-1 5,
Nicholson 2 0 4. TOTALS 34-9·
77.
Halftime score: Wilber
force 48 R1o 45
•

I

" "

' "

DALE C. WARNER
INS.

"'

, ,., ~ oo ~ u.

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

!1

Girls Oass AA
drawing held

The Girls Class AA Sectional Tournament pa1nngs
have been announced for the
I
Secttonal at Jackson Htgh
BtQ Ten Co~ference
School.
W L Pet. W l Pel.
Metgs High School IS
Mlch 51 11 3 .786 19 4 826
Number 1 seeded tn the
Minn
11 3 786 15 7 682
tourney wtth Galltpolt s
Purdue 5 5 .643 14 9 609
Mich
8 6 .571 13 9 591
seeded Number Two.
Ohio 51 6 8 429 .13 10 565
Action gets underway Feb
lnd
8 6 .571 16 7 696
Z7
at 6 when Portsmouth
Ill
6 8 429 12 11 522
Vtnton
County
Iowa
4 10 286 11 12 .478 meets
Wls
4 10 286 8 15 348
Following that game, Meigs
Nowest 3 11 214 7 16 .304
will go against Jackson in the
lower bracket
On March I at 6:30,
Gallipolis, which drew a bye
G1rls High School
in the upper bracket, wtll
Basketball
clash with the wtnner of the
United Press lnternattonal
Portsmouth-Vtnton game lor
Saturday
Col Walnut Ridge 62 Sylvanoa the rtght to advance to the
49
finals . The winner of the
Edger1on 59 Tlnora 45
tilt
ts
Meigs-Jackson
Holgate 67 Ottoville 61
Mt. Golead 65 Marion Calh 31 automatically tn the fina ls of
Paulding 88 Cridersvi lle the ftve team tourn ey.
Perry 28
That champiOnship game
Spring N 61 Ketl Fairmont W wtll be played on March 2 at
34
630
W Jell 54 Otenlangy 38

Today is
the first day
of the rest
of your life.

•

IVe

.
'
•

'

••,.
•

••
••
t
•

•

•

so1tcan
be the
first day
of somebody
else's, too.

•
•
•
..

.

"•

'.
'

•

•'

Reel Cross
_is counting
on you.

•

�•

4- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , Feb. 20, 1978

Food
p''

.·&gt;O&gt;i~,·'l"'"•'•'o'•'•'•'•'•'•'•'•' •'•' •'·'•V•'•'•'•~'.Y.•'..!.'-'b~~··((Q'j"~' .. ,.

w. ........ ff~;-~·wirlt

janet Tillis ~weds

ii

1
' r·· .

.• Helen Help

~

)v Charlene Hoeflich

a

Mr. and M1:r. John Miller

r·····----------------------------1
1 N. W. COMPTON. O.D.
l

1

OPTOMETRIST

I

QFFICEHOU~S :9: 301o12,21oS(CLOSE

AT NOON ON THURS.) -

EAST COURT

I

L-:l~!-~~~-R_o_!.·---------·•-••••••••J·

1

'

green polyester dress and

Out-of-town guests at the

wore the peach rose corsage

wedding includ ed Odas
Nelson, Colwnbus; Mr. and
Mrs. Kenny Miller, Springfield; Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
Blosser, Colwnbus; Mr. and

from her bridal bouquet.
The

couple ,. resides

at

Rutland. Mrs. Miller is
employed at Valley Lumber
Co., Middleport, and Mr.
Miller is an age.nl with the
Wester-Southern · Life Insurance Co., Pomeroy office.

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;

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.

ELMER'S

,.(.~\'

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• CARPENTER'S • •
: WOOD GLUE ::
•

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lPIE~&lt;

CIRCULAR

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GirM • •. · ··.
-

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WINDSHIELD :
WASHER
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697
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REG. 1.79

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Bounce

1· Supn1 bond for oii Tvpes ~ood

e • Sondoble and po1ntoble
•

SAW BLADE I
••
PACK
.

• Re~is t s wa ter ancl ~ornishe!l

::

•

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SALE
PR ICE

• · ' 71 ~ ·· blades

•••• •e••••••

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- •• . : R.~G. 1.29

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GAL.IJII!Bil!!i~

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e • lnc;l ude ~ Combination, cross
e e cu t and plyWood blode5
•

•

Stephen Taylor, Fostoria.

:

... •

r.l:;

Davis, Dallas Weber, Colwnbus, and Mr. and Mrs.

•

.

-!

Mrs . Eugene Hood, Li.nda

e. •·• Pr~t·mixed solution

e • Anti.frMie and solvent
e • · . • ~fe for all ~r finishes
•

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•••••••••••••1~••••••••••
(an non Crail·

7V. INCH

CIRCULAR
SAW
• -Rugged, ...&lt;Jmmewnl duty

• 7 MP. 10 amp motor
• Safety SJiitch lo pre'lenT
accideriiO• srorts
• Solet~ $TOp

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REG . 69.95

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LOUVERED
SHUmis··

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4900 2

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S.lected west coost pine
Permits I!Qht one! air

ttrculotlon
• Aeody to point or stain
• (Leuhordwore)

16 West Washington
Athens

Mrs . Annie Chapman and

Mrs.

~

the~. ~

roses, greenery and baby's
Salads are only as good as the dressing that goes on
breath, all tied w(th rainbow
and
our favorite these days is a homemade one ... a blender
ribbon . Her only jewelry was
french
dressing. We've tried about every french dressing from
pearl earrings, a glrt of the
the
grocery
shell and lind this homemade homemade one more
groom.
flavorful
than
any . Try it, you might like it too .
Sharon Michael of Point
One-third
cup catsup, I&gt; cup vinegar, I cup sugar, 2
Pleasant, W. Va. was the
teaspoons
grated
onion, I tsp . salt, I tsp. paprika, and I cup
honor attendant. She wore a
salad
oil.
peach polyester knit gown acCombine catsup, vinegar, sugar, onion,,salt and paprika in
cented with ivory lace trim
blender
container. Blend to mix well. Pour in the salad oil
around the neckline, the yoke
slowly,
blending
at low speed . Store in the refrigerator.
and the sleeves. She wore a
Now
most
refrigerated
dressings will cloud. And il this
matching wide brimmed hal.
occurs;
just
take
the
jar
out
an
hour or so before dinner time .
Karen Redmond . Rutland,
When
the
dressing
comes
to
room
temperature, the cloudiness
was a bridesmaid and she will disappear.
··
wore an olive green polyester
knit gown with ivory lace
HAVE YOU TRIED the buttermilk pie recipe included in
trim. Flower girl was Usa this column
a week ago. It wassent to us by Mrs. Valsia Roush,
Tillis, daughter of the bride,
and
yes,
it
is delicious.
and she was in· a peach
The
recipe
makes two pies all right. Mrs . Freda Edwards
polyester knit gown with long
had
asked
after
reviewing the ingredients. Now if your family
sleeves trinuned with li:l ce
and ••Ev;ergreen. ''
isn't
much
for
buttermilk~ lust •o abead and bake the pie and
Given in marriage by her and a matching bow and call it lemon chiffon. They'lllove it. Mine did. ·
father,' the bride was attired baby's breath in her hair. She
white basket of
In a formal gown of ivory silk carried
wn"MA MEES called to share a sauerkraut salad recipe
organza fashioned with a high flower petals in fall colors.·
which
she described as inexpensive to make, low in calories,
Derek Tillis, son of the nutritious,
·neckline, long bishop sleeves
and something which can be made on a slow dsy
bride, was the ring bearer
.J~nd a natural waistline. Tbe
and
served
on a busy day. It keeps abnost indefinitely in tbe
full skirt flowed into a and he wore a beige three- refrigerator, she says. In fact lt-needs to set for several days to
cathedral train. English em- piece suit with a bronze marinate.
lroidery accented the sheer boutonniere. He carried the
The recipe calls for a quart of kraut, drained and rinsed to
yoke and cluny lace trimmed rings on a heart-shaped remove some of the salt, 1 green sweet pepper , 1 mediwn size
the neckline, sleeves , yoke pillow trimmed with ivory onion, and llarge or 2 small carrots, all grated.
and full skirt. A net and lace lace and ribbons made by
Boil for one minute l iJ4 cups of sugar, lh cup vinegar, and
framer held the bride's ivory Mrs. Mabel Walburn , Mid- v, cup of oil. Cool, and then pour over the kraut mixture. Cover
1 tulle cathedral train and dleport.
and refrlgerate.
Davey Miller of Rutland
bl118her veil.
The Mees family finds the kraut salad terrific with
She carried a bouquet of was best ma n, and William hotdogs , as well as pork chops or roast.
fall flowers of yellow and Quickel of Cheshire was the
bronze pompons with peach usher.
TUESDAY
For her daughter's wedPOMEROY Chamber of
ding, Mrs. Davis wore i:l turCommerce Tuesday at noon
quoise green gpwn fashioned
al Meigs Inn. David Pratt,
with eyelet sleeves and front
president of the Big Bend CB
yok.e. Mrs. Miller was in an
Radio Club, guest speaker.
olive green gown with white
.
XI GAMMA MU CHAPlace accent, and both
TER, Beta Sigma Phi
mothers . wore white carnaSorority,
7:30 Tuesday night
MONDAY
tion corsa~es.
at
the
home
of Mrs . Carol
CANDYSTRIPER Monday
A recejltion honoring the
McCullough
with
Mrs. Annie
couple was held in the church 7 p.m. at Veterans Memorial
Cllapman
and
Mrs.
Donna
Hospital.
fellowship hall immediately
Byer
as
co-h.ostesses.
Mrs.
following the ceremony. The
RACINE PTO Monday, 2
McCullough
and
Mrs.
Karen
bride's table featured a three- p.m. instead of evening due to ·
tiered cake decorated in the energy crisis at elementary Golns to have the cultural
fall colors of the wedding wiln school cafeteria. Fifth grade report.
DORCAS CIRCLE, B. H.
bridges extending from the mother~ will serve refreshSanborn Missionary Society,
tiered cake to smaller side ments.
cakes. The traditional
MEIGS County Churches of Middleport First Baptist
miniature bride and groom Christ Men's Fellowship Church to meet at 7:30
lopped the tiered cake and Monday 7:30 p.m. at Dexter Tuesday at the home of Mrs.
David Darst. LOVE JOY
figurines of attendants were Church.
Circle
of the church will meet
featured on the bridges.
TUESDAY
wilh
Mrs.
Dorothy Anth0ny.
Sandy Walker and Ully
WOMEN'S AUXILIARY,
XI ·GAMMA MU Chapter,
Kennedy presided at the serving table. Guests were Veterans Memorial Hospilal, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, will
registered by Angela Ken- Tuesda:t 2 p.m. in the hospital meet Tuesday at the home of
conference room . Walter Mrs. Carol McCullough. Mrs.
nedy.
hospital
ad- McCullough and Mrs. Karen
For a wedding trip through Lucas,
ministrator,
will
speak.
Goiru; will give the cultural
the Smoky Mountains, the
report. Co-hostesses will be
bride changed into a dark
MIDDLEPORT --Sevenbranch candelabra trimmed
with greenery and ivory bows
and flanked by yellow and
bronze mwns with rainbow
ribbon accents decorated the
Middleport Church of Christ
for the wedding of Janet
Davis Tillis and John Miller.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Davis,
Rutland , and the grOO(ll i~ the
son of Mr.and Mrs. Robert
Miller, Route I, Middleport.
The wedding was an event
of.Oct. I~ at 6:30p.m. with the
Rev. George Glaze solemnizIng the double-rin g
ceremony. Organ selections
by Miss Donna Weber,
Rutland, Included "Feelings"

Donna
Byer.
WEDNESEAY
POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT Lions Club,
Wednesday noon at the Meigs
Inn. All Lions urged to attend.
AMERICAN LEGION,
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, will
meet at 7:30p.m. Wednesday
at the Middleport Legion hall.

~:

~The Daily Sentinel,

'"'-&gt;;o;$::::;;,-;;::::~'*'~'....~~:&gt;.:::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::&gt;,::::::o;:::::::~:;&lt;:&gt;;o;:;:&gt;.m&lt;&gt;ll'::,

US

BY Helen Hottel
•

•

•

Roush-McClure vows
exchanged in Middleport

1
~!

l~

ISPSYCHIATRYWORTIITIIECOS'M
BY HELEN BO'ITEL
DEAR HELEN:
These days it seems that the pat answer to any problem is,

MIDDLEPORT-- In
a blue,hergarter.
double- ring ceremony at the
Miss Tammy Michael ,
Heath United Methodist Pomeroy, was the maid of
Church, Middleport, Miss honor'. and the brideslllllids
Darlene Roush and Jimmy were Miss Georgene Grate,
McClure exchanged wedding Rutland; Mrs. Autumn

"see a professional counselor," which i lies a psychiatrist or
psychologist. Since you don't use this CO!H&gt;UI as much as most

advisors, your emphasis being more on the " work it out for
yourseU" angle, I've chosen your column to ask a question : Is
psychiatry (and similar mental therapy) really efficient, and
doe~ it belp appreciably in the majority of cases?
For myself, it hasn't. I've spe~t up to 160 per hour for "listening" sessions which gave me no particular insights and left me
frustrated and resentful. Finally I realized the only person who
could change me was- me. I stopped all therapy and dug deep
into my psyche or whatever it was that was making me a
miserable loser.
Within six months my depressions was gone. I'm a successful, relatively relaxed and guilt-free individual now. And I
did it on my own.
·
I'd like to bear from others who have gone the couch-route.
Do they agree with me most people (except the deeply disturbed) ~re better off being their own psychiatrists) And the
psychotics, hard-core neurotics, etc., probably won't change no
matter how much money is spent to CU.re" them. - WHOLE
AGAIN
READERS:
The question is: From your personal experience, have you
or have you not been appreciably helped by psychiatric or
other professional aids toward mental (or marital) healll)?
That is, do you think you have benefited by therapeutic
coWJSeling? If so, how? (Or why not?)
Your answers should make an interesting column.- H.

vows.
' Walker, Columbus, Miss
The wedding was an event Jeannie McClure, Pomeroy.

of0c\.16at2:30p.m.withthe
Rev. Paul White officiating.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Unley Roush, ·
Jr. of Rutland, and the
bridegroom is the son o( Mr.
and Mrs. Hershel McClure of
Route 3, Pomeroy.
Mrs. Twila Childs, Mid·
dleport, presented the music
with selections including
theme from " Romeo .and
Juliet", theme from " Love
Story", "Colour My World",
and the traditional wedding

11

marches.

Tbe ceremony was perfonned before the altar
decorated with spiral
candelabra between which
was an arch trimmed with
greenery, yellow ribbon and

doves. Pots of yellow mwns
were included in the decorations along with pew candles
trimmed with yellow ribbon.
Ughting of unity candle

DEAR HELEN:
We've been married five years. Alter much thought and
many talks, we decided we would have no children, and
foolishly believed that friends and family would understand.
Not so! We're shocked and bewildered by the reaction. The
pressure on married people to have children is still intense. So
here's my rebuttal.
·
A baby is not a gilt to please eager grandparents or glue to
bind a weak marriage; nor even a cute little plaything. It is a
tiny human who deserves to be born wanted, needed and loved.
II society would remove the pressure to reproduce and allow
couples ch&lt;!ices free of guilt, perhaps there wouldn't be so
many bitter parents and children in the world. We might even
see an end to child neglect and abuse.- BARREN BY CHOICE
DEAR BARREN.
f'm surprised that you're getting so much static. With many
couples choosing to remain childless these days, I assumed
baby-pushers would keep quiet- no matter how they privately
feel. (All except disappointed non-grandparents, that is.) -H.
FOR RELEASE TUESDAY, FE-BRUARY 21,1978 BO'ITELHELEN BOTTEL

from single candles ca ndles
was included in the
ceremony. Given in marriage
by her father, the bride wore

a formal gown fashioned with
a high neckline, long sheer
sleeves, and a sheer overlay
accented with lace motifs.
The chapel length train was
attached at the back with a
ribbon which extended from
the empire waistline. It, too,
had lace trim.
The bride's headpiece was
a floral design in pearls and
held the shoulder length veil
of Illusion. She carried a bouquet of yellow carnations,

Polly Cramer
.~ .

DEAR POLLY- Please tell
me of something that will
clean a la!1linated plastic
wall covering in my kitchen
that has turned yellow near
the stove.- JO
DEAR JO - It is doubtless
grease that has yellowed your
.wall. The manufacturer of
such .materials warns against
the use of harsh abrasives,
powders or bleaches that will

Ray Lynn Basham, a cousin
of the groom, was the .flower
girl. All of their dresses were
identical in brown with peach
panels down the front. Lace
trimmed the rounded
necklines and yokes as well
as the long sleeves of the
gowns.
The attendants wore headbands of yellow flowers and
carried bouquets of yellow
carnations and mwns with
yellow streamers tied in
lover's knots . The ·flower girl
wore a single yellow flower in
her hair and carried a basket
or petals.
Sammy Wtle of Colulnbus
was best man, and the ushers
were Gary Grueser, Bob Me·
Clu re, and Terry Farrar, all
of Pomeroy. John Joseph
Pierotti of Gallipolis was the
ringbearer and he carried a

heart-shaped pillow and wore
a yellow boutonniere. He is a
cousin of the bride. All of the
groom's attendant.s were in
brown tux:edos and wore
white

carnations

tint ed

ye1tow. The groom was in a
white tuxedo and wore a

dull the surface and thus lay
it open to more stains. You
!Jlight try a UGHT touch of
that popular soap for window
washing. The makers of baking soda recommend some of
it on a damp sponge. Scrub,
rinse and ·dry lam.inated
plastic surfaces, A popular
kitchen wax that cleans and
polisbes is also suggested for
such yellowing surfaces. POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - Tillie
wrote to recommend dipping

CHOICES
Karen Blaker Ph.D.

Wonder woman
DEI\R DR. BLAKER- One
night each.week I take som~
time ror myself and at the
same time give my S.year-&lt;&gt;ld
daughter a good expericrwe. l
turn on the television so she
can watch Wonder Woman .
Alter Supennan and Batnum,_it's a 'relief to have her

were suspended over the

reception table and at the
table front were bells inscribed "Darlene and Jim" . Pompon arrangements were used
on the reception and the gilt
tables. White and yellow
streamers decorated the gilt
table.
Presiding at the refreshment table were Mrs. Corena
Farmer,

Cheshire:

boutonniere of white carna-

level, sl1e would have filed
that example of sexual role
stereotyping il I hadn't comm~nted on the issue.
I am not suggesting you
watch every episode of your
child's television shQws. Who
has the time. energy or interest'!
But I tun suggesting you

ting

its

at·~

mcs.."iugt•

Wlwn CBS itltt•rvit•wetl 4,000
children. nint.• oul of 10 S t't:' IIJ ·
to umiPt~lantllhe mura l uf
thl' story. Why don't yuu

l"CI

WPtch with her from time to
change. We nl'ed more such time, pointing out Ihin~s thai wHtdi this :-.how with your
programs and I lhink you rub against your valu~s . This da u~llh·r a'nd St't' how you
should share my feelings with will help sensili1.e yuur child hkc it.'~
Write to LJL Ulttkl'l' 111 CHI't'
your readers.·
to what you consider wor··
DEAR READER- Wonder thwhitc und hasten the time uf thi s m•wsp.a pcr. P.O. Box
Woman may provide a when she will be able to ~J . Hmlio C1t)' SlHtion. New
positive role model lor little watch television with u Yurk, N.Y. 100l9. Votunw of
mail prtlhibtt s p CI' SOII HI
girls. But you shoul~ not be criticalond perceptive eye.
overly enthusiastic about the
No question about it : rcplicii, but qucsltons o£
series.
Television is a passivt~ activi. gcncml , iutcresl will LM·
II you watch the show ly . .But, as a parent. you can tlist·usscd in futui'U coltlnlns.
carefully, yo'u may lind tbal,

Mrs .

Meigs High School graduate
of 1976 in business and office
education and is employed as
a cashier at the Twin-City
Gateway in Middleport. Mr.
McClure, a 1975 graduate of
Meigs High School, is
manager of McC!ures Dairy
Isle, Middleport. Both are
members of th e First
Southern Baptist Church in
Pomeroy.

notit'ed that only the woman
looked away. But on some

see a super·heroine for a

Shirley Pierotti, Gallipolis;
and Mrs. Amanda Starcher,
Gallipolis. Guests were
registered by Miss Brenda
Rupe,l..angsville.
For a wedding trip to the
Penn Hills Honeymoon
Resort in Pocono Mountains
of Pennsylvania, the bride
changed into a tan corduroy
vested pantsuit and a leather
coat, gill of the groom.
The couple resides on
Union Terrace. in Pomeroy.
The new Mrs. McClure is a

lwlp ~Hmul;;~te som£.&gt; activr
thinking during th1s pas ·'v('
expt•rience.
Isis is ~mother popular
television show designed to
unpm1 social values simtlal'
to thost! of Wund~r Wom~n.
As many u.s 10 nulli on
childrl'n \\'atch this show
t!very Saturda)' mMntng !
This progntnl lli abuut a htt.th
school sl'icnce tci:icht•r whn
can transfm·m herself into a
n)!lll~ SUperheroine Jx!nt Ufl
doln~ ~ood ch••ds.
The show ctppcars to be g(.'!
4

marked with orange and
yellow bells. Wedding bells

tion tinted yellow and a
sweetheart rose.
For her daughter's wedding, Mrs. Roush was In a
floor length gown of blue and
white floral design with sheer PUBLIC HEARING
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - '!'he.
blue sleeves. Mrs. McClure
wore a yellow floor length Public Utilities Commission
gown with a white shawl. of Ohio has scheduled a
Both mothers had carnation · hearing for 7:30 . p.m .
Thur sday to get citizen
corsages.
mums, pompons and burnt
A reception honoring the comment on a proposed $45,5
orange sweetheart roses with couple was held in the church niillion rate increase by the
baby's breath, from which sOcial room . Tables were Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
fell rainbow ribbon tied in covered in white with yellow Electric Co.
The evenirig session is to
lover's knots. For the tradi- net overlays. The bride's
tiona! something old, she tabie featured a three tiered get imput from customers
placed a four leaf clover in wedding cake decorated in unable to attend other PUCO
her bouquet, something new, orange and yellow and topped hearings on the increase !hat
' her wedding attire, with the traditional miniature began Jan. 19 because they
something borrowed, a fami- bride and groom and bells. were held during work hours.
ly necklace, and something Sheet cakes served .were

POLLY'S POINTERS
Grease turns
.wall yellow

Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Feb. 20,1978

as a who)e. other wmnen are

portrayed in · a way. that
leaves much to be desired .
In a recent episode, for ex·
ample, a group of top sci entis Is - including one token
woman - were shown seated
around a large table listening
to one scientist speak . The

Mr. and Mrs. jimmy Mc·Cture

Bridal shower hosted
Mrs. Paul Smart. Mrs.
George Hackett, Jr ., and
Mrs . Manning Kloes entertained Friday night with a
bridal shower honoring Miss

Beth Fultz, bride-eled of
Dallas Weber.
The sho wer was held at the
Hackett home. Games were

played with prizes going to
Mrs. Flossie Allensworth,
Mrs. Edie King, Miss Bar·

bara Fullz. Mrs. Betty Fultz,
and Mrs. Clarice Erwin.
Others attending were Mrs.
Sabra Morrison, Mrs. GraCe
Hawley, Mrs . Barbara
Knight , Mrs. Mary Picken~.
Mrs. Dorothy Karr, Mrs.
Margaret Weber , Mrs. Lynn
Brown, Mrs. Agnes Brown,

speaker .., actually

Miller and Mrs. Virginia
Hubbard .
Among the gifts was a
horse created of cleaning
utensils and supplies.

FAREWELL DINNER
COLUMBUS (UPII - W.
E. Richardson, 67, ending 33
years as executive director of
the Big Brothers Association
of Columbus, will be bon,gred
Friday at the group's annual
di.nner.
Rlch3rdson . is

r.~tiring

during the 75th anniversary
week of the Big Brothers
national organization. He will
be succeeded by Don
Pkkens, current associate
dirl;!ctor.

Mrs . .ludy Riggs.
Sending gifts were Mrs.
Maxine Price, Miss Judy
A~nold, Mrs. Ruth Arnold,

Mrs. Margaret Dutton, Mrs.
Mr~.

Mary Webster,

Maxine

Philsoo, Mrs. Ellie Bla.etlnar,
Miss Becky Fullz, Mrs. Helen

In 1976, former President
Richard Nixon and his wife
left California lor a private
visit to China .

H

rn any roo

human-

like robot . suddenly began to
me lt.
As he oozed over the table
and onto lht! floor, the men
could be seen watc~ing - in
anlazemcnt ur 'in horror, but
watching. Only the woman

turned her head to avoid the
ugly sight.
Here was graphically
shown the stereotypic image
of rnen as the emotionally as well as physically stfonger sex. The ma le scientists were able to watch while
the weak woman had to avert

FtE,XSTEEL

her ·eyes.
I watched this episode with

FIN£ UPHOUfl'lj)}\11::1) P'llftNI'l'\ l ltti:

my 8-year-old daughler and
pointed out the underlying
message of the melting robot
scerie. She said she hadn'l

FINE FURNITURE
AT SPECIAL SALE PRICES

A thought lor the ·day : At
the battle of Bunker Hill on
June 17, 1775, American
Revolutionary War hero
William Prescott said, •'Don't

lire WJtil you see the whites of
their eyes."

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

SALE,, DATES

FEBRUARY 20-25, 1978

·vAUGHAN'S

IBII RlriHIDA\lY

ardinal

QUANTITY RIGHTS RES.ERVED

. . ..... . .

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COCKT

99( ~

Lun!l Or&gt;ft w•1h CI&gt;I•I&gt;Url
(J n t CQUpOfl p•r

SIRLOIN
STEAK

eggs. Cover eggs with cold
water and bring to a boil.
Reduce heat to very low and
leave for 15 minutes. Drain
off hot water and shake pan
briskly until shells are cracked all over. Run cold water in
pan. Shells can be easily
removed, eggs are smooth
and yolks do not become
discolored.- MOLLY
DEAR POLLY - Living in
an older farm house I must
put plastic paper on the windows to keep out the cold and
wind.
However
my
youngsters consider it quite a
challenge to pop their tiny
fingers through tbe plastic,
thus defeating its purpose. So
when I install such plastic I
put a strip of self-sticking,
see-through plastic over it so
that it is impossible for tiny
lingers to poke through.
My Pet Peeve concerns the
snaps or buttons attached to
children's jeans that do not
have ·elastic in the back,
These fastenings are abnost
impossible- for a child to
cl.ose. I remove the buttons,
sew up the buttonholes and
attach that stick-on fastening
in·theirplace. -JANE
DEAR POLLY - When
making gravy after cooking a
roast I remove the roast and
then· put a handful of ice
cubes in the broth. The fat
clings to the cubes and they
can then be easily removed
with a slotted spoon. - MRS.
E.B.
DEAR POLLY - I used to
use those pre-moistened
towelettes on my baby when
changing diapers, but a little
petroleum jelly on a facial
tissue does an even better
job. It ~s not only more
economical but the petrolewn
jelly acts as a repellent
against wetness and prevents
diaper rash. ·KATHY
Polly will send you one of
hu signed thank-you
newspaper coupon clippers il
she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her co.lumn. Write POLLY'S
POINTER In care of this
newspaper.

~

BROWNIE MIX

UST&amp; PEARL STREETS
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

one's thumb in oil when sh.eliing hard cooked eggs. I have
an easier ·way to get smooth

.."·

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BETTY CROCKER

MAXWEll HOUSE

. . ..COFFEE

~-

~n~~~:~:o~·~~c;:':;;

!

2 Lb.$ 56~~
Can

22 01.

~

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CARCJINALfG
0

00·10·01

LIMIT 1

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LIFEBUOY

bottle

LIMIT 1,. .... ~ .......
LIQUI 0

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�Anyone For Tennyson ? 33.

6- The DailySentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Feb. 20, 1978

Theiss recently .

Mr . and Mr&gt;

Delbert

Morrts of Athens visited Mr.
and Mrs Clifford Murns ,and

Mr . and Mrs. Franc1s Morrts
Sunday afternoon.

Mr. and Mrs. Sherodan
Russell, Jr. of Mason . W.Va .
spent Sunday afternoon with
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Tutley
and famtly
Myron Leadman of Wm·
held, W. Va. spent Saturday
evemng with Mr and Mrs.
Edison Brace.
Mrs. Kathryn Hart called
on Mrs. Mary Roush and
John Joe Sham. East Letart :
Saturday afternoon
Twenty members we re
present for the meeltng of
The Bertha M Sayre
Mtssionary Society Friday
evenmg, Feb :i at Ftrst

Baptist Church
Mrs Myrtle Lou Beegle
opened the · meeting wllh
devotions, t1tled "Love ''
There was group singing of

"Love Lifted Me, " Ullian
at the ptano,
-followed by script ure, Mark
Hayman

9.41 a nd a reading, "Love

Makes Little Thmgs Large"
" He Lo ves You" closmg
devottons with prayer
Mrs Nondus Hendn cks.
vtce pres1dent of Chnsttan
and

Scrv1ce conducted the Love
G•lt Dedtcation with scrorr
ture, Ph•ltpp•ans 2. A reading
on "Love'' by Barbara Gheen
a nd a readmg " Where There
Is Love" by Helen Slack and
Rev . 3·20 " The Love nf
Christ,"

were read The l ..ove

Gift of $188 from the Cordes
was presented by Olhe Mae
Cozart and Dnmlhy Badgley .
Ded1calion prayer was by
Mrs Hendnck s Mrs. Mary

.,
'

'&lt;loy

Mrs L1Ihan Hayman was

hostess for the Esther Ctrcle
meetmg Fnday eventng,
Feb. 10 at the home of her
mother, Mrs. Grella Stmrr
son . Mrs. Helen Slack,
opened
the
presodent,
meeting with devotlons, usmg
the them e " Do you own
thmgs, or do they own you ?"

The hymn, "God Wtll Take
Ca r e of You" was sung

by the

group and prayer by Gretta.
Mrs Slack had a readmg,
"My Life ts a Gtft o! God Yesterday - Today and
Tomorrow." Scripture Matt
ti . :IS-33. Devotoons closed wtth
a poem, "Must I leave tl all
behmd." A program was
presented
by
Frances
Wilcox en . Scripture, Romans
8·28 A medttatton, "Let's Be
Happy Chrtsttans. There
were SIX readmgs by
members on the subject,
"M•ssoons - Flourtshtng In
Florida."
A Valent me

Greetmg was sent to Susae

Curtis, who is attendmg Ft.
Wayne Bible College m In·
diana . Also a greetmg was
sent to Jean K1 ser and

several other ca rds to those
who are ill. Mrs. Hayman,
h os te ss,
serve d
love ly
refreshments to ten mem-

300

&amp;days

Eatil word uver the minimum JS
word! UJ 4 c~nts pe:r word per lilly.
Ads rwlllVIIJ uUit!r Uwn l11f1Se(UliVed.il)'ll wUJ be chlirged Ill ~ I dwy

.....

In memury, Qlrd uf Thanks and
ObitWtry · 6 cen&amp;s per word, $3 00
munmwn. CuhinlldvlltK.'t

T HE PUBLIC
UTILI T IE S
COM MI SS I O N
OF OH 10
B y R 1cha r d L Sm• ttT .
Secre t ary
121 20 . li e

ASTRO•GRAPH

Mobi.., Hume »~~lei Mod Vwn:l SKits
are ll&lt;.-ctpted only with cuh wtth
!Kdt:r 25o .:;enl cNarge for 11ds Cfrt") •
In!!; Bot Number In Can ri The Serr
Unt:l
~

TH I: RACINI: Gun Club Gun Shoo t
u11er y Sunday aft ernoon Foe
to' y cho t. e guns on ly Assor ted
meO I $
CLEARAN CE SA l t: b ~ g1 n!&gt; Mon
Feb 14 ot Sew N Sew Out let
Morn S t r £u~ t
Rocme
A ll
po lyester double kntl s reduced
40° • and so•. Th1 e0d b1g ~pool
5 for $ 1

The Publlllhtt reaervt~~ the right
t.o t.'dit or reje&lt;.1 any 11ds deemed ubJt!CUotUII The Publisher will not bt
responsible for more Lhan ooe incor·
red ln*rtion

Phone99'2-2156

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
Feb . 21 , 1978
Yo u can move rap tdly a head
111 1s commg ye ar If yo u kee p
one th• ng upperm ost tr1 m m d
P1 c k goals yo u kno w you c an
ac h1 eve wdh th e e)(p en e n ce
and men tal eq utpment yo u pos·
sess

Mondoy

Noon on Sllturdlly

Tuelldliy
thru F'rkttiy
4P.M
tht! day before publication

Sundlly
4P.M
Friday afternoon

PI SCES (Feb 20-March 20) Use

TAURUS (Aprol 20-May 20) De
cas•o nall y we all nave a lOug h
t1me lea ... •n g th e s tar t• ng
bloc k5 but ge t a seco nd w tncl
be fo re th e lml sh hne Th 1s tS
such a day lor you Do n I
de spa11
GEMINI ~May 21 -June 20) Has t e,
re ally m akes was te today The
lhmg s tha t you con ce nt rat e o n
to th e bes t o l your abil ity are
th e o nl y one s that ' ll be gralll y

a short tu se today apolog• ze
qu1ckt y If yo u expl od e at a
lnend s re ma rks

VIRGO (Aug 23-Sepl.22)

In·

sllnc t IS often 11aluab le but
what you know to be ng tu 1s th e
be s t gu 1d e today That w h •sper
m your ear cou ld Oe the vo1ce
ol a ml sChleiJOus leprec haun

LIBRA (Sepi .23-0ct.23) Guard
zealously the po ssess ions you
pn ze today A tn end who bor rows them may not have the
same res pe c t l or them that you
have

SCORPIO

(0ct.24 -Nov .22)

There ' s mo re than one way to
ski n a cat , as the old saymg
goes Ha ve ano th er meth od In
mmd to promote va luable plans
If you r first one IS sudden!~
blo cke d

SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Dec.21)

The only way to do l hmg s today
IS In the be st and most e fl• capous way you know , Anythmg
done othe rw •s e may boom·
erang

CAPRICORN

(Dec.22-Jon .19)

Pats and bu s1 ness m1x today.
onl y 1f you do thmg s acco rd1ng
to Hoy le It wou ld be easy to be
Oree zy and m fo rma l , but that
co uld event ually cost money

AQUARIUS (Jon. ZIJ.Feb.191
Before you make an_y bmdtng
co mmi tments today , we1gh all
th e ramjl tce, trons You co uld
OK so mething not m your Oest
mterests

Harrisonville
Society News

Uelp Wanted
DAIR YMAN

FREE ESTIMATES

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

IWO BEDROOM f rolic • 1 o&lt;.lult
pn:;l ened SOO pc• mon th M1d
dlepo r T CW1 5147
Till: BLO CK bu1ldu1g Nuw con
oe te lloor 1400 ~ q I t Corn er
Pomeroy end 2r1d St . Moso 11
Ideal l or gorage o• ) loroge
(304) El8 2 2971

Coli

P\JBLIC NOTICE
B id s w111 be rece11Jed by th e
Tr u stees
of
Sa l tsbury
To wn sh i P M e igs County ,
Onto , until 12 o'clock noon , on
February n , 1978, for the
purchase of ll new dump
t ruck wllh the follow,ng
spe e~ ft c at 10n s
158" wh~el t~ ase . 84 " CA .
Chass is Cab
JSO cu .n V 8 Eng1ne
9,000 lb front ax l e
18 , 500 lb two sp eed rear

BABY SITTER won ted 1n my home
f or

2 thild ren

!"hone

(614 )

696 1002 al ter 5 pm

Pow er steer •ng
S1ng le va cuum hydrauli c
booster brakes
15 " x 7" heavy d u ty r ear
brak es
Re•nlor ce men l
Fram e,
tn verled ' ' I " , 192 SM 36,000

...

rtMBER . Pomero y
duels Top p( tCI&gt;'
sow lunber Coli
Kent H onb ~ . 1-446

Forest Pr o
lor ~ l or'ld 11 19
(Jq 2 5905 or
85 70

____

Russell Nursing Hotne in
Albany Thursday p.m.
Mr. Dale Williams is now at
home from hospital and
slowly improvmg.
Mrs. Bonnie Swisher and
daughter of Cheshire were
Sunday guests of her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. F.lwood ·
Howard.

__

1972 Che; ote"t sub~bo,:;-p-;-,
P B . outo Irons Call 949 -2220

-----

-

--~--

-

1972 OLDS 4·dr Delio 88 In good
cond1 hon
$1 075 992 -5786.
noon to 6 pm only or 992·2529

,975 GR ANADA V-8 outomot"

Cellulosic (wood fiber)
Thermal Insulation

773-5955

30 yr fmo netng al so
Ireland Mortgage
77 E Stol e A thens phone {61 4)
592 -3051
r e l~non c: tng

NICE THR EE bedroom ho u~e w 1th
garage
1n Ru sl1 c Hills
Syracuse $27,000 992 _5~41

R

SOFTENER?
Let Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; condttion your
water with Co-op water
so ftener , Model Ut -SVI,

Now Only •279.95
Let us test your water Free

Pomeroy Landmark '

'9.

_Jack W Carsey, Mgr .
.....
Phone99 2-2 181
EAR CORN S2 \0 bu Ground ear
co rn $75 ton Mm1mum I !on
Coli alter 6 P.'.n
. 985 35 81
ONE WHITE G1b son elec,tnc
r elr •g erofor Good cond1tmn
S12S One copp ert one Roya l
Chtel elecfr1 c stove Good con
d1 110 n
$75
Ph one (614 )
667 3477

WIL L CARE lor the elderl y
home Phone 992 73 14

111

out

POMEROY
LANDMARK
G1 ,,,., , II f li ' ( t11(

T V

. II HI
H·llp 11111 Appllollll
' ~, 1! 1

. ,~~!~~rn

I '

pI I ( 1··

J,H k W C1r ·, 1·'r Mqt
I'IHllll 1}4 .' ) 181
ATTENHON MARE Owner s
AQ HA stu d ser111 Ce lntrodu cmg
to Southern Oh•o Cortok o sor
re i! son of Ot ae Breed lo r col·
or conlormOIIOn end diSpOSI
t1on Pho ne 69B 824 1 evenmgs
or wnte l or breedmg con trocl.
Bell e Echo Quarter Horses.
40225 SR 692 Pomeroy. Oh1o
45769

.

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
We have enlarged our
service department and
will service Hotpoint and
ather brands.

Pomeroy Landmark
J:.

-

SfA1&lt;1

~ITH .. .

ST~OF

\.C~ I CKE'!.l

eroT11 \

M'{ l-IFE' 1•

COUNTRY - 7 room ranch
home. Real nice kitchen,
large bedrooms, fireplace ,
2112 baths , 2 car garage,
1948 sq ft. of floor spa ce .
Almost l 1/1 acres $70;ooo .

NEW LISTING - 2 family
9 room house, 4 bedrooms,
'1 baths, n atural gas.
central heating , c1 ty water
and view of the Ohio R1ver
on 2 lots

NEAR

STOR~

-

Lo1

50xl00 with city wate;:
sewer and etectnctty _
ONner will let 2 bedroom
trailer go W1th sale All for
jUSt $6,000.

Young's
Carpeting

$38,500.
RANCH -

3 nice size

bedrooms,
2
walk - In
c l ose1s, modern bath,
equipped large kitchen.
dining , sundeck 11nd 2
acres. S25,000
LARGE ~ 7 room older
home rn Middleport . Bath ,
natural gas heat, city
water and 2 car garage.

C. Bruce Teaford
Helen L. Teaford

·

Sue P. Murphy
Realtor Associates
Commerc 1al property approx 17
acres , level lend loca ted of
Tupper s Pla1nS on Oh1o Route
_? _!~ne (6 14.!_6E ·630~ ~---

I

rJ

'

'

--------..
IT lOOKED
LIKE A c•~CH! DAT

hMDtDr t D the

C.r•.

Phone 98S-3806

51'\FE

..
•..•.--

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Chester, Ohio

STUFFED

MOtlEY ... AHD
TH' DOOR OPEN .. ·

WIT'

TUR LEY S WRECKER Ser111 ce
Racme Oh 1o Day or mghl
949 2657
AJI.Y SEWING moch1ne cleaned
orl ed &amp; adjusted SS 98 FREE
p1ckup ond delivery Belpre
Ohta I 423·5-4 97
WINTER GET lo yo ur house? let us
make ne~ess or y repa1rs A I
Tromm Construction 742 -2328
MAGGIES
UNHOLSTERY
Reft n1sh 1ng .
reuphol~tery .
rebudd tng Beoutilul se le ~ h o n
of mater•ols on d vmy ls Free
es hmate Te l 742 2852 loco·
hon So lem Center

HOMESITES for sole 1 acre and
up. M1 dd leport . near R&amp;-tlan d
Call992-7481
'
NEW 3 bedroom house 2 baths
all t~lec
1 acre , Middleport
close to Rutla nd Phone 992746 1
COUNTRY farmland w1th se&lt;:lu d·
ed woods , woter ond good ac·
cess tn Monroe County, W Vo
$1,000 down , ca ll (304) 772·
3102 or (304) 772 -3227 .

-----"'""'--,-----

REALTY
Pomeroy. Ohio

PHONE'9'12-6333
Office Hours : 9 A . M . to ,,

P.M.

_,

Close
1 hursdays
Saturdays at noon.

anc

MAIN
POMEROY, 0.
VERY NICE - 2 s!ory
frame, 3 BR, ba1h, forced
air
heat ,
utility
R.,
carpeting ,
paneling ,
garage, garden, other

features . JUST $19,500.00.
5 YEARS OLD - Ranch, 3
electric B B heat, fireplace,
2 car garage, storage shecl.

$31,500.00.
LARGE OLDER HOME -

We have Two Trailers with
lots In Tuppers Plains,

Ohio.
1 home In Tuppers Plains,

Ohio.
1 home on Wes! Shade,
near Chester. Ohio.
1 home,
New , , Crow

Subdivision, R! . 7 near
Five Points.

listings

Cheryl Lemley
Assaci•te

Home Phone 74~-2003
Hi lion Wolfe, Sr.
ASIOCIIte

Home Phone 949-2589

modern kitchen,

u!lll!y, NG hoi wa!er heal,
paneling,

carpor!, corner lo! All this
lor jus1 $31,900.00.
2 YEARS OLD - 1 lloor
plan. 3 BR. bath; nice
kitchen, u1ill!y, carpe!lng,
finished garage, lois of
space,
far
replacement

'

below
costs .

$25,900.00.
MIDDLEPORT
Immediate

possession,

3

bedrooms, balh , NG heal,
cold
rOom, carpeting,
storms, parking, older but

In VOf'Y good condition.
$13,900.00.
I STORY FRAME - 2-3
BR, balh , level lo!, good
neighborhood. somo
remodeling .

WE COULD'A'

DROWMED
D"T BRAT
•5

A

KILLER · ·

DtS! ~ · If- WE GrT

EXCAVATING dozer looder and
backhoe work . dump trucks
ond lo-boys for h1re. w il l houl
ldl d1rt . to soil limestone end
grovel Coli Bob or Roger Jef
fers , da y phone 992-7089, n1ght
phone 992 -3525 or 992 5232 .
EXCAVATING, dozer , backhoe
and d1 tcher Chart~s R. Hat
f1eld , Bock Hoe Service
Rutland Oh10 . Phone 742 -2008 .

Goi ng

at

$13,000.00.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
•
HANK, KATHY &amp; LEONA
CLELAND
ASSOCIATES
992-225,...,2-6009
9'124191

GASOLINE ALLEY

lt hasn't

Doq col lar. ball ,
ticked since
1
rubber bone No we removed
bloodu
this lock 1
bomb! J--.c,_ ,__..

The lock was
tapp1nq
aqainst

/ - ' .....--y/

•

more

'RNIE

·-•

::t•M THINf'ING
./"" Gfo SINI,.c;HrNti
"fb I'ILUMINUM
SIDING.

••
•

••
&gt;
~

;;
l

SAVE ON
CARPOING
DRIVE A LimE

9'xl2'

sq. yd.
&amp; up

Yin~

Flooring In Stock
Buy where you c:~~n come in
and see wh•t you'regeHing

TEN

•,

WE'LL GIVE
THEM JUST A

FEW MINUT0:3&gt;
MORE I

..'•

•'
'

""

"
•••

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
742-2211

Rutl&lt;tnd

10 Property
16 Puny
19 News break
22 Particle
23 Settle
matters
24 Toll

21 Spectacle
29 Blot out
33 Czech river
35 Famed
feather·
we•ght
36Sauce

Mov1e Channel 4 -

5&amp;7 P M - FunW IIh Dick&amp;Jane i PG)

Monday, Feb 20 '918

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Hand calls for review

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
l. ONGFEI. LOW

JKEEF

HBE

VGUYLWHE'C

Syndic:ale. Inc:.

· BARNEY

~

•

'"

NO RTII
. Q 10 95

2/20·A

• 10 6 2

t

.A

K 9

... 7 53 2

. 7:1

W"ST

"AST

• KQB74

' J9 5

+8 6 5 3

+.J 10 7 4

... QB6

ofoAt 094

SOU TH

• KJH642

NO, MA:AM ... ! DON'I
.KNOW WHAT'S GOING ON

6UT IM AWAKE! ,

SIC' 'EM,
OL.: BULLET!!

d efender holds one '} "
Oswa ld · " That is where
the review
the biddlng
com es 1n handy W est has
dealt and passed a nd has
shown up wtth the ace of

or

A 3

't

spades a nd king-queen o!
hearts . If he ulso held the

AQ2

ace of c lubs he would ha v e

... KJ

opened the b•ddtn g Instead,
West hml pu sscd u s dealer "
J•m: "So, when South

Vulnerab le Bot h
Dealer West

leads the club from dummy
E ast plays low, South i s

and

Wer;l
Pass

North East
Pa ss
Pa ss

South.
1•

Pa~

2•

Puss

4•

Pass

Pa ss

Pa ss

Opcnmg lead • K
By Oswald .Jacoby
J1m : '"In the code word

tric ks. ''
Jim ·

co ntr·act depends on the club

su •t If ~:ast holds both ace
and queen, South ca n ' t go
wro ng If West holds both
those cards, S outh can't do
a nythmg. How 11boul i! each

•

'ARCH' the 'R' stands for
SKUTUVYC
UV
CUYLN
RG Review the b•ddmg As de·
clarer you get information
HRV
JEUIGC
HPGE about the play !rom pa sses
NLEHR
HBE
as well as b1ds."
Oswald : ·"South takes his
HBE
CLHBTMGEC.AEHPGEW
ace of h earts and l e ad s a
Saturday's Cryptoquote: WHEN THE TIME COMES FOR trwnp. Wes t wins with the
THE MEEK TO INHERIT THE EARTH, THE INHERITANCE ace and c ontmues with the
TAXES WILL BE SO IDGH, THEY WON'T WANT lT.- queen and another h eart
South ruffs and has lost two
ANONYMOUS

© 1978 Kang f"ealurea

'....••
,.'

Ca ti742-Z211
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

25 Lathered

9 River mouth 26 Heavy

US.S.R.
city
28 Drastic
30 GJ's
address
3ilslet
32 Rage
34 Dog-tired
36 For men
only
37 JeWISh ·
ascetic
38 Bactertologist's Wire L-...1..-J......J..-J......J...,.,

RG

MINliTEB lATE
ALREADY I

- Good settdlons - Fully

stocked.

8 Prefer

10 OG---F amlly 6, 13; Reach for Tomorrow 33, News 20.
10 JI)-Biack Per~ c tlve On Th~ News 20 : 11 ·00N ews 3,_.,6,8,10,13,15. D ick Cave tt 20 , Over Easy
33 11 · 30- Johnny
Can;on
3, 4, 15 ,
M ovie
"Crescendo" 6,13 , Movie " Attack on Terror " B;
ABC N ews 33 ; Mov ie "Three God fa th ers " 10.
12 ,oo--Janakl33, 1 oo- Tomorrow 3,4; 1: 15-News 13

and Alan Son1ag

Expert installltion.

14 • 88

Yesterday 's Alllwer

CRYPTOQUOTES

padding at no charge.

As Low As

Gull!" 8, 00
9 Jo-Soap 6, M ary Ty ler M oore 13.

One l eiter s1mp ly stands for another. In t his sample A 11
used f or th e three L's, X f or th e two O' s, et c Srn gle l ett er s.
apostrophes, the le ngth and fo"rmatJOn of the words are all
hmts. Each day t he code l et t ers arc different.

All carpet installed with

Rubber Back Carpet

a:

BRIDGE

Is

SAVE A LOT

r

15.
5 JG-N ews 6; Elcc Co 20,33 , Mary Tyler Moore 10.
Hogan's Heroes 15
6 oo-N ews 3,4, 8, 10. 13, 15, ABC N ews 6. Zoom 20
6 Jo-NBC News 3,4, 15, ABC N ews 13, Caro l Burnett &amp;
Friends 6; CBS N e w s 8, 10. Over Easy 20.
7 Oo-Cross-W its 3,4 ; Liar s Club 6, Pop Goes The
Country 8; Capitol Beat 33 ; News 10, To Tet f The
Truth 13; Gil ligan ' s I s 15; French Che f 20
7 . 1 5~ Big Green Magazine 33 , 7 30- Hollywood
•
Squares 3,4; Let's Go To The Ra c es
Candid
Ca m era 6; Ma c N ei l-L ehrer Repor t 20,33; Price Is
Right 10 1 That ' s Hol lywood \3 , Te l evis ion Honor
Society 15
8·DO-Awakenlng Land 3,4, 15, Happy Days 6,13 ,
Celebrity Challenge of the Sexes 8, 10, H ollywood
Television 20,33 ; 8 : 3G-Laverne &amp; Shir ley 6,13,
Shields &amp; Yarnell 8,10
9 oo- Three's Comp any 6, 13. M ov ie " A Question of

Kirghiz,

PUlliN S EXCA VATING Comple te
Serv•ce. Phone 992-2478

&amp;

X I IX ) THE r I I

22 Piela
!tgure
,23 June 6,
24 Roman
historian
Ailing
Apollo's
mother

Will do r oofmg, &lt;ons truct1on ,
plumb•ng and healtng No 1ob
too Iorge or too smotl Phone
742 2J..C8

BATHROOMS AND Krtchens
remode led ceramic hie plum·
bmg, car pentr y ~ and general
rno•ntenonce . 13 year s elC·
penence 992 3685

Now arrange the circled letters 10
lorm ihe surprise answer, as sug
gested by the above canaan

:.-:----~.::

the box!
see?

a,10

USMC 10

'

"

..

Gambll 8

4 3G-Little Ra scals J, 15; Gil ligan ' s I s 4; Brady Bunch
B. 10 ; Mary Tyler Moore 13.
s ·oo-HereCom e The Brides J; Star Trek 4; Gunsmoke
8, Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20.33 ; Hogan' s
Heroes 10; Emergency One 13, To Be Annou nced

1

-----~

12 :0o-

3 QO-Ano ther World 3,4, 15, General Hospital o., 13 ;
Llllas Yoga &amp; You 20
·
3 3G-AII In The Famlly B, 10, Con sume r Survi val K i t

J

profound
Marnbo
5 Sportsman's 40 FrancoBelgian
vehicle
liver
II Among
12 Words of
DOWN
warning
1 Brazilian
IJ Anagram
state
2 Group
of care
together
14 Mustcal
3 Be discrunwork
mating
15 Seek
16 "- the
I Thtrst
season
"
quencher
11 Brynner
5 Trig
word
18 Salty
6ltevolted
20 In need
7 Sorority
of diettng
loptc
21 Hawaii's
state bird

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers, toas ters , •rons , all
5mall opphon ces lo wn mower
nex t lo Stol e H •ghwo~ Garage
on Route 7 Phone (614 ) 985
3B25

10;

Only 15.

(Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles PIPER CHANT JUNGLE MISFIT
Answer These tines actually seAm 10 disappear on
som e pt~ople as they get old er ~ HAIRLIN ES

1 "- Loves

Free

JG-Days o f Our Lives J, A, 15; As Tt'le World Tur ns
8. 10. 2. oo-one Life to Live 6, 13 , 2 Jo- Doc tors

by THOMAS JOSEPH
:r.1 Become
ACROSS
AN t=M•SSA~
l'llOM LEM 15

Loving

12 :30--Ryan' s Hope6, 13. Bob Braun 4; Gong Show 15.
Search for Tomorrow 8, 10, E lec Co 33
~ 1 ·OO-For Richer, For Poorer 3, All My Children 6.13 ,
News 8; Young &amp; 1he Restless 10; Not For Women

~111'-~

BRADFORD
Auctroneer Com
plete Serv1 ce Phone 949·2&lt;187
or 949 -2000. Roc: me Oh1o, Cr11l
Bradford

"

I

Saturday·s

OUT ALI~E, DAT '" .. .

GUARD!' WH,lcr"~ HERE ,~
HI6HNESS1
GO•N' ON?

SEWING MACHINE Repo1rs ser·
111ce, o!t makes 992 22B 4 The
Fobr1 c Sh op
Pomeroy
Authomed Smger Sole s ond
Ser111ce . We shorpen Sc1ssors

I

Answerhere : "[

WAIT TILL 1 \Ell ME
OW MAN ABOUT

All.EYOOP

REMODELING . Plumbtn g heofmg
and all types of general repo1r
Work guaranteed 20 ~eors ex
__E~e Phone 99!:_~0_9__ _

Say The Least IS,

NEW - JUSTOFF PRESS• JUMBLE BOOK llt wltl1 t 10puules Is av•ll·
able for $1 35 po slpald from Jumble, c/o lhts newspaper, P 0 Bow 34,
Norwood. N J 07648 Include your nam11, addreu, zip code and make
c hacks payabl&amp; to New spape rbooka.

HOLLER: IN, FOR I

698 733'

carpeting,

SE W ER ~

WHATCHA

HOWERY
AND MARTIN EK·
COV Ot 1ng
SepliC sy~te m ~
d ozer ba ck hoe dump truck
lrmestone
gra11el
blockt op
pavmg Rt 143. Phone 1 (6 14)

formal dining , all carpeted,

GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr.,
Broker
1071!'.1: Sycamore St.

't'E A.H 'ONL'11HEI(E
WAS A BOOBY
lRAP ... A~ D WE
DROPS tNlO TH I

News 8;

Newscenter 3; S20,000 Pyrnmld 13; News 4,6, 10, To

20

1

~~~

Ph. 992·2174

10-30 c

3-4 BR ,

_

•

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

IUs-CBS

4.QO-M ister Cartoon J , Edge of Night \J, My Three
Son s 4 ; For Richer, For Poorer 15. Merv Griffin 6,
Gi ll igan ' s Is • 8, Sesame St 20,33 ; Gomer Pyle,

I rn

ORPIIAM AMJOE-RIVER RATS

BUT

Service,,_ th LtlrtMt Trvdl: or l'llltloa.,.

ReStdenltal
and
commercial.
Call
for
estimate, 14 hour service •
Anyday, anytime.

byHennArnoldandBobLae

tJ

CEX I E$J:.._j-.,-,

~ -

Radiator~

BR, bath, lovely kitchen,

HOBSTElTER

e.·

9 30--Emergency One 6 ; Andy Griffith
Joker' s Wild
10; 10 t»-Sonford &amp; Son 3,A,15. Price Is lllglil
8, 10. Not For Women Only IJ
10 3G-Hnl lywood Squares 3, 4, 1S; Andy Griffith 6, Ri ck
Faucheux. 13
11 ·00-Wheel ot Fortune 3. -C, 15, Happy Days 6, 13.
America ' s Bake -Otf Awards B, IO : ll · 3o-Knoc kout
3, 15. Family Feud 6, 13; Partridge Family 4, Love
of Life 8, 10, Sesl'lme St 20; Royal Heritage 33

3,4, 1S ; Guiding Lighl

ISABDURt

'

,

Nlgh1 6, F•mlly All•lr 8: Malch Game 10

ZIPER

.. ..
~

EXPERIENCED

EXTRA NICE - 7 rooms,
1112
baths.
stove.
refrigerator.
d ishwasher
and fu rn •ture. Natural gas
furnace
and
fenced
backyard. Complete for.

St . 33 ;.

9 ·00-M erv Griffin 3, Phil Donahue 4, 13. 15, Edge of

t

..,• ..

'1he Orrvn•lors
Not The lmitltors

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

Box 34

News 8. Bullwlnkle 10
7 · JG-School les 10; 8 .oo-Capt. Kl!lngllrOO 8, 10; Se s-ame

I •111""' ... c......, ,......... '"'""'•- ..

I I I

216 E Second Street

Look ov•r our
before you buy .
JUST COMPlETED new house m
Middlepo rt For more 1nformo
11c. n coil 992 -223S or 992-5.304
.
......._ .. "
TWO ST ORY 3 bedroom frarne
hou se FA . furnace storm wm
dows f lrcp loce In Mtddleporl
Phone 992-J-457 or 992 5867

'THIS IS 1HB

R"'te 3, Pomo..,, 0.
Ca1pet 10 UphorsteiJ
Phono Miko Young
AI
992·2206 or 992-7630

...

REALTOR

Only $15,000.
DON'T HURRY YOUR
REALTOR IN SELLING
YOUR PLACE QR YOU
WILL LIKELY HAVE TO
TAKE LESS.

~ •II I\ I I Y&lt;~IJI

~0\JR FAI,OI&lt;\1B TO

'

7 · 00-Toda~ ) ,4,15; Good Morn ing America 6, 13, C BS

KNrfb

I

2·5·1 mo

VA FHA

NEED A WA

"
"

q , 6 55-Chuck White Reports 10; News

13

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one lener to each square . to form
lour ordinary word s

*

Superio1
Steam E1traction

-=-= r.1if,

RNR

8A.M.1o4 :30P.M.
SALES AND SERVICE
11 -9-lfc

"' ''

'•
'

..-.cu . ·~

Pomeroy, Ohio
Pomerov 992-6282
or 992-6263

VIrginia

~ THATSCRAM8LEDWORDGAME

~ ~J..!!l~ ~

742-2321

!!1'·2T

NIC F

JJ lf\1'Nl fii}1}

Free Estimates
Work Guaranteed
2 10 tfc

Wood Stoves
.

Mornlng Report 3, 6 50-Good Morning, West

Land 3,4, IS, Movie "Wild and Wooly" 6, tJ :'

AI Tromm
Construction

Sa..-e JOpet. to 50 pet
on heating cost
Expertence and
fully insured
Free Est .
Call 667 -6479 or 992·J81S
1-16-lmo

JOO Main St.

175 BU MANURE spr ead er f'ro c
heally new Phone 949 2072

'"

Roofing
Remodeling
Room AdditiOns
Garages

2 2 tfc

Power steerrng , power brakes
air cond •tion lng AM rod1o Ex Jack W. Carsey, Mgr
ce lle nt
conditton
$2 900 1
. Phone 992·2181
__P_
h~n-•_9!3 - 3~~ -~----- ...~· t===~--.:..:.:.:.::.;.::__J

ST ARCRAFT FAll Sole
Mtnt
motors . 20' and 22
Tro\'el
Trorlers . 18 S $3,799 25 7
Bunkhou se $-4 875 Fold -dawn
S1,700 up We sell serv1ce 'and
quolrty Open Sundays Camp
Con ley Storcroh Soles Rt 62 ,
N of Pt Pleasant

Located In The

CARTER

Sunr lse Semester 10. 6 :0G-PTL Club 15
6 25---Concerns &amp; Comments 10, 6 :3Q-F ocus on
Columbus t ; News 6; Sunri se Semester 8; 6 · .ts-

People' s Choice Awards 8, 10; Hard Times 33 :
Adams Chronicles 20,
JO ·OQ--New s 20; Originals 33 ; 10 : 30--Farm Digest 20,

JIM KEESEE

9 : 00 til9 : 00 Mon .Fr iday
9 OOtil6 : 00 Siturday
12 :00 til6 oo Sunday

TUESDAY , FEBRUARY 21 , 1911
S As-Farm Repor! 13; s ·50-PTL Club 13 : 5·5s-

Wits 4; Liars Club 6; Capitol Beat 33, News 10; To
Tell The T r uth 13, Daniel Foster, M .D . 20.
7· 15---Labor Scene 33. 7· 3o-That Nashville Mus ic 3;
ln Search of 4, Muppet Show 6, Mac Ne il -Lehrer
Report 20; Wi ld Kingdom 10, Candid Camera 13;
Know Your Schools JJ
8 ()()-l1tfle House on the Prairie 3,4 ; StK Million Dollar
Man 6, 13 ; Consumer Survi val Kit 20. 33 ; Baby, I ' m
Back 10.
B· Jo-Tvrnabout 20,33; Mash 10 ; 9 ·()()-Awakenlnc

1- 18-1 mo.

J&amp;L
Blown Insulation

Open

HA V FO~ sole 949 2870

COIN S CURRE NCY lokens, old HAY FOR Sole 1500 bol e~ of
f uno l hy Hoy Ph oo e 992· 7573
pock el wat ches and c ho1n ~
s•l ver and gold We nee d 1964 PIGS FOR sole One 75 IQ $ 42
and old er s1l 11er coms Bu~ o;,e ll
One 50 lb., S32 Two OS lb . $38
or !rode Call Ro ger Wamsley
eo Three 40 lb $26 eo 1up
742 2331
pers Plo1r)S, Ohto bb7 3368
OLD FURNI TURE ICe boxe s hra5s f-'I CT URE WINDO W and ba lh lub
bed s 1ron beds, etc co mplete
All er 6 coll992 34 0 1
househ ol ds Wn fe M 0 M1llcr
FfR
I::WOOD $25 a p1ck1; p load
Rt 4. PorTlct oy Oh1 o o r call
949 21 29
992 -7760

·! '

Mrs. Frances Young
VlSited Adnene French at

2·16-1 mo

NICE PIGS lor sal e Co lt ol 1er 5
949 2857
HAY FOR so le 992 7306

Movie Channel • 5&amp; 7 P .M . - And T hen There Were None tG )
9 &amp; 11 P M - C•rn•l Knowledge ( R)

7 .ro-C ross Wlls 3, Coll"9e Basketball 8, IS. Cross

Phone 992-39'13

ACE HARDWARE

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

.::

LAVENDER
CONSTRUCTION

Bc*MoiHith

MEIGS PLAZA
Middleport , Ohio

POMERO Y Moor e s Store Alt er
WAll
Han g m g~
urrd
.30 y eors of success ful b u ~1n e !. s HUGS
a!gons N1ce l or C h· ~ ~ ' ' "o ,
we ore sell•ng th 1s generol
Re m;onable Call 992 22 14
har dware
ou tomot111e !&gt; l or ~
Pnced at 11111entory Con tacT 8 8. 5 MOBILE HOMES f' t f'l eo
Som mer11dle Real Esta te phone
:.onl W Vo bvs1de Hee l&lt; ,
I 304 675 3030 . PI Pleo son t,
1973 Broodrn ort.' 14 Jt 64 2
be dr oom
1973 00fiOill4 x 60 2 bed room
GiveAway
1972 Vrcldnon 14 " 07 J bedroom
2 bo th
CAl FEMALE. Lo ngho1r ed dog 1972 C ov ent r ~ 12"' 65 J bedr oom
Labrad or
type
Both v c r~ 1969 Stotes rn an 12 x 60 1
lo en dl y
lovcob le
Nr ce
b€-dr oorn
lookmg p i'!I S 949 2007
1965 CHE VEllE 4 dr A C 283
eng 2 bbl au to Irons Ell
ce ll ent cond 11 10il Truck topper
MDI}i).,. ltumes lor -s.le
std 8 It bed 28 m h1 gll
74 2· 748 5
1974 SKYLIN E 14 .11 50 3 bedr oom
total electn c $75{10 9'1'12 20 19
HAY ~ OR SAlE
8 x 52 ! RAILER lor so le Would HAY FOR SALE 98 5 384 9 or
985 4148.
make o good camper Ph one
949 2344 onyt1rn e oiler 5 30
REDUCE SAFE 8 lost wilh GoBese
Tab le ts 8 E Vop woler pd l ~ '
N elson Dru g

4, 500 10 ea front spnng s
11 .500 lb ea rear spr ings
2,250 l b
Au11. illllry n!ar
sprtngs
Front Tow HoQkS (1 )
5 speed, d1rect trans
m1SS1Dn , Clark '285V
2 - 9 00 x '20 , 12 PR , Group
F , tr on t fires &amp; tubes
~ - 9 OOx 20 , 12 PR , GrQ up
F , ·M &amp; s Super Ro ad L ug ,
NO ITEM TOO La rge or too sm all
r ear t1res &amp; t ubes
W1 ll buy 1 p1 ece or co mp lete
Cast spoke whee ls w 1th 7 0"
r1 ms
ho useh old New used or Oflll
1 - Spare r1 m 7 0" x 20 "
ques Mortm s Furmtur e: 20 N
Heavy duty bl•ck .,.u..,y\ ~e~~ot
2nd 51
ModQ!eporl Phone
tnm wt tl1 full Wi dth seat
992 6370
Custom cushio n seat w 1111
standar d cab full w 1dlh seat
CHI P WOO D
Pol es
m ax
Chrome Yellow sol td color
dtom eter 10 on large'&gt; I end SS
60 Amp A lterna tor
per ton Bundled slob., $6 per
F A Heater. Ammeter &amp;
To n Dei 111Cred to Oh• o Pa l let
Oil pressure gauges , s1ngl e
So
2: Pomeroy 992 2689
el ec t riC ho rn ; f 1ve (51 cab
l 1ghts . seat bells . d u a l
Sll VER DOLLARS and co1ns Top
Weste rn
type
m1rrors
~~l~r_po t d Co11 7~2 23_16
WtndSh 1el d washer &amp; 2 speed
wi pers ; dual W~stern type
WANTED TO buy Good used
m1rrors , Windshield washer
bunk bed s co mplete Ph one
&amp; 2 spee d W1pers . 70 Amp
742 3074
battery
hand
co ntr ol
throttle . 19 5 gal st eel •n cab
$CASH$ lor fU nk cors Fry e s
fuel ta nk
Tr uck ond Au to Port s Wre cker
1 - R &amp; S Dump Body , 7' x
Serv1ce Trre sol e and Repo1 r
10 ', s•des 30,' Head &amp; Ta11
Rullond 742 -208 \ or Pe nnz o•l
Gate 36 ', U730 Ho tst, Un
7-4 2 9575
derbody or T el escopic Ho 1st
with cable or Floor controls ,
5 to 20 acres o n rural wa te r m
pow er take -off ; 11 Cab
Me1gs Loca l School D1sl nc1
protector with &lt;I" l ip , 10
Su1toble for butld1ng and acce ss
gauge h1gh te nsll floor &amp; 12
gauge high tensd sides
to g~o ~~od ~2 ~3~ __
lights, r eflec t o r s, mud f la ps .
2" x 6" wood Side boa rd s
m stal led and pa.nted Chrome
Yellow
Rear Tow loo p
IF YO U ha11e o ser v1ce lo otler ,
50 gal
" 0 " Step Tank ,
wont to buy or sell somethmg,
Stee l LH or R H
oe 1ooloung for work
or
G lad hill No 707 Tat lg ate
who1e11er
~ou II get r esu lt s
Sp r ea der In st a ll ed
The Tr ustees wil l const der
fos t~r w1th a Sent1nel Won! Ad
b•ds for the t rad e m of a used
Coll992 2156
7' K 9' R &amp; 5 Dump body ,
•ncluding Mist , will1 a 707
Gtadh•ll Spr ea der atrached ,
sard dump body can be seen
a t Townsh ip Ha ll at Rock
HOOF HOlLOW Horses Bu y sel l
Springs, Oh•o
trodti' or tro tn New and used
The Tr ustees r eserve th e
saddles Ruth Reeves, Albany
nght to cons •der b•ds wl'1•cl'1
have
mmo r
9anation s,
(614} 696 -3290.
prov1dt'd th e b1dS sub
RISING STAR Ken nel, Boord•ng
stanlially comp l y wtth thes e
spectflcat1on s
Indoor and outdoor
runs
B1d to be •n sealed en ve lope
Groom 1ng oil breeds Clean
marked m to w er l ett ha nd
som tory foe~ llll e$ . Chesh1r e
cor n er "Bid For Dump
!h.?~': i~.!.~L 3~7_o29~ _
Truck ," and mailed or
dell\lered to -463 H ooker
MEIGS, COUNTY Humane SocuHy
Stree t. M •ddleport , Oh to
on 1mol corel.ne ond odqphon
service (free an1mals } 992 7bSO
(21 6, 13 , ~ 0 . 3t c
or e11en1ngs and Sunda~ s
992 5427
M01 l
c: o M
Crawford
RI 4 8011 326
PROBATE COURT OF
Pomeroy Oh1 o 45769 Member
MEIGS COUNTY,OHIO
shrps and donalrom PO Box
ESTA TE OF Gra ce Paynter ,
6B2
. Pomeroy
Ohto 45769
____,
--DECEASED
Case No, 22,182
FOR SPECIAL people AKC Dober
NOTICE OF
man Pm s&lt;her pups Red and
APPOINTMENT
rust Good ped•grees S125 ond
OF FIDUCIAR'I"
up. (OU ) 797 4500 or (014)
On February 8, 1978, m tne
797 ·4\97
Metgs County Probate Co urt ,
case
No
22 , 182 ,
Pau l
Paynter, Route 3, Albany , AKC REGISTERED Saxer pups
Ho11e been wormed 1st shols
O t1 10 was appoin t ed Ad
992-2726
m i nistrator, W •lh Wilt An
ne)(ed ot tne estate of Grace
Paynter , deceased, la te of
Route I , Portland, OhtO
Manning 0 Webster
Probllte Judge Clerk
1969 CHEVY 4 -dr . b cetlent &lt;ond1
(2) 13, 20, 27, 3tc
lion . $495 Model 12 Win
ches t er shot gun
5300
742 2359.

Douglas.
Mrs. Betty Bistlop and
daughters, Brenda and
Beverly, 'visited her sister,
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cart·
wright and family in Dresden
Sunday afternoon.

CO AL lll m~$ 1 0ne and colci urn
chlon dc ond caktum br1ne for
dust con lrol and spt&gt;Ci ol !YI I~tlng
· soil l or /arm or s EKc efs1or Sa lt
Wo rk s Mom Str eet Pomer oy
Oh1 o or phone 992 3691

'

'

Syracuse, Ohio
Free Estimates

WAUPAPER.
PAINT &amp; SUPPLIES

TR ACTOR w 1th oil ol
tar hrnenls Ltk c now a ~o ll. lfl g
s:nso Pllone (6 14 } 698 3290

a~~.le

--....

5 31&gt;-News 6; Elec . Co 20.33 , Mary Tyler Moore 10.
Hogan ' s Heroes l S
6·CJO-News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 'J.:i; ABC News 6, Zoom 20.
6: 3Q-NBC N ews 3,4, l S; ").BC News 13; Caro l Burnett &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20.

-Sove F .. l &amp; Money-

Special

Syracuse, Ohio
Ph. 992-3993

~ CO N O M Y

IJiu;iDe•• Opportunities

5.()0-Here Come The Brldes 3; Star Trek 4, Gunsmoke
8: Mister Rogers ' Neighborhood 20,33; Hogan' s
Heroes 10. ·Emergency One 13; T o. Be Announced

~

Cellulose fiber.
Blown Into Walls
and Attics .

Weddings
Portrails

LARRY LAVENDER

t 'o r Sale

W ANlE D

3,A.

..

~·

Blown Insulation

THE PHOTO PLACE

1-18 1 mo.

742 3002

NOTICE

sha rp or d an g e r o~J S tools w1th
th e utmos t ca re toda y Make
su1 e th ose arou nd you do the
same Sav e yo ur !1me ott tor an
enJ oya bl e ... ac at• o n F1nd o u t to
wh o m yo u re ro ma n t ic ally
su•ted to by sen dmg lo r yo w
copy ol A s tra -Graph l e tte r
Mat! 50 cen ts lo r each a nd a
lo11 g se lf· add ressed . StiJimped
en ve lope t o A s troGraph P 0
8 0)( 489 Radi o Ctt y Sta t1o n
NY 1001 9 Be s ur e to sp eC ify
your b1rlh s tgn
ARIES (March 21·Apn l 19) Ftnd
a pfiV ate pl ace to pur su e a
ta ... or •t e ho bby today It s a fi ne
t1 me to do thmgs lha t are lo w
key , sal e and sane

NEE D A n de to C S I \0 6 Pho n ~

:s.c,

MONDAY , FEBRUARY 20, 1978

",.

J,A,6,8, 10, 13, 15; Dick Covel1 10: MacNeil-

Lehrer Rei)Ort :IJ
1t ·30-Johnny ~,.;arso"
l S; Poll ee Story 6, 13.· Mov ie
"' Atta c k on Terror " 8, ABC News 33; Movie " The
Green Berets" 10.
12 :0()-Janakl 33 ; 12: .. o-New s 13 , l ·QO-Tomorrow

15

MASO N IWO bedroom op t Par
ltolfy hun f ull y cat p(!led No
rr· t... O epOS II requ•rcd $700
per mo Alter 5 p rn call (304)
fiB/ 3356

INCOM E TA X Serv1ces f eder al
a nd s lat e . loxes
Wa ll a ce
kv $se ll , 8r odbur r' 992 727EI

S ECMTO
LOOSEN •.,

~·

COU N tRY MOBill: Home Pa r ~ .
Hau te 33 no11h of Potneroy
Lorge loT, Call 9&lt;n 7479

99'} 7513

Bernice Bede Osol

Mr. and Mrs Jack Neal
and
son o f The Plams were
bers.
Sunday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Waldo Neal.
Sunday guests of Mr. and
Mrs Robert Alktre were Bob
The Apple Grove United and Robtn Gtbson, Colum"Methodtst Women met at the bus; Ray Alkore, Athens;
home of Mrs Ditllas H•ll Vtrg•nia Burke, Pomeroy,
and Helen Pickens and Roger
Tuesday evening
Prayer and self-dema l Theiss, Racine .
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Clark
program was presented by
who
vacationed in Florida for
Mrs. Dolly Wolle "Be Thou
six weeks have retur ned
My VIsion:' was the topic.
Mrs. Hill presided at the home.
Mark Gtbson of Columbus
business session when plans
spent
weekend with hos
were made to adopt a chtld
grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs.
from ihe World Evangehsm
Bud
Douglas.
Mission :-;chool. Alw a
Betty Bishop and Wilda
fellowship dinne r
was
Wiseman
entertained the
planned for sometime In
Lend-A-Hand
Circle Friday
March. Mrs Robert Sayre
evening
at
the
home of Mrs.
was a guest and sang a solo
W
isem
a
n.
11
Remind Me, Dear Lord."
Dr. and Mrs. Don Gtbson
Following the meeting Mrs.
and
daughter, Gay LyM, of
Sayre held a Chrtstian Book
party The birthday of Mrs. Rockville , Md . spent the
Lucille Rhodes was observed. weekend wtth Mrs. Lana
Refreshments were served to G•bson and Mr. and Mrs. Bud
Mrs. Darrell Norris &amp;nd
Tracy, Mrs. Dolly Wolfe,
Mrs. Eileen Buck, Mrs. Scott Smith, Mrs. Dorsey Parsons,
Shank, Mrs . Bob Rhodes and Mrs. Marshall Roush and
Karen, Mrs. Max Hill , Aimee Courtney, Mrs. Say~e and
and Justin , Mrs. Robert Mrs. Hill.

Apple Grove

""

ZdM.ys

3dlly s

K Yost, presodent, presided ong
a t the bu smess sessiOn and
CAN CE R (June 21-July 22)
mtroduced Pastor Walker, Bu ye r ' s re mo r se w111 haunt you
who showed slides of The tomorrow unless you u se dts ·
nmtn a t1 o n tn p ur c ha s mg
Holy Land whtch were very ctoday
Impul s e c ould lead you
much enjoyed
to grab th e fir st arti c le you see
The Ruth Ctrcle members LEO (July 23-Aug.22) Recall
served refreshments m the Never let tne sun go down on
basement Table decorawms your w ralh Because Y9 U ha¥e
and favors were In k eeping of
Valentme's Day.

...,.,

Under
C..h

TELEVISION
VIEWING

&gt;&lt;ANDS 'PIPED
TIGHT .• CAN,T

~.

•

Business Services

3 AND 4 RM l urrw;hed oml un
l um•shed oph
Phone fiCI2
543.4

THI:
JtACINl: llolunlePr Ftre
Opp01 tmcnt w 1tl \\po ll !&gt;Or o gun
1ohoot every Soh.udoy or 0 p•n o t
th en bu1ldmg 1n Bb \ hon FoL
tory choloo. e gun!&gt; on ly

-

Harrison and children nf
Reynoldsburg visited the ~r
parents, Mr. and Mrs Blythe

1 ~ w~ ur

t 'o r Hent

-

Mr s. Vern on

WANT AD
CHARGES

-

I

and

PUBLIC NOTICE
NO! i ce IS rereby g l11 et' !hal
the P ub l iC Ull l iiiCS Com
m 1SS10n Of Oh 10 W1l l COMf UCI
pu~l1 c hear•ng s on oet •f •ons
tor rel l ef fro m the ,-nandatory
redu c 11o n s i n el ec tr ici ty
usage author•H~d as a result
ot the c urr ent c oal s ~ or ta ge ,
m ca ses wn er e Thf! Com
m.ss1on f ind s !h a l near lngs
are necess ary Su ch Ma r mgs
w il l b e condu c teci at the o t
tices ot the comm 1ssion , 180
Ea st Br oad StreeJ . Col um
bus , Oh•O 4321S Bec ause of
th e need to ac t ur on su c:; h
pet ll l on s
p r omp \y ,
•n
d tll ldual no t 1ce ot e a c h
hea r 1ng will not bt' pubi•Shed
l nl or mat•on on 1ndlv 1d ual
hear •ngs m a y be ob tained by
conta c ting the Conlm tssl on a t
\ 800 282 0198 ,

.

'

'

~

By Mrs. Frands Morris
Mrs. Martha Lou Reegle
had the misfortune of falling
on tee Saturday breakmg her
leg . She was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.
Rev . Don Walker. Mrs.
Grella Simpson , Mrs. Olhe
Mae Cozart and Mrs. Mary K
Yost attended the trustees
meetmg of Ri o Grande
Assoctat&lt;on Saturday
Mr

-·-

Let The Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

Racine

11 :«»-News

going to go up with hts king
and wrap up t h e ga m e
rubber "

and

J.\1!r rltr;.t [@J!).;Dl3
A Ca nadia n reader wants

to know 1f we a lways r espond to partner's opening

club btd .
Dc t:; ldedly not
W e cert ainly pass wt th a ba lanced
ha nd and le.ss th;m SIX highcard pomts and might e v en
Pf!IS.S With SlX OUI" h a nd WaS
most unattractive
• NFWSPAI 'I :U r N"l'J. Ili 'II/ SF A..1i.SN 1

1r

(For a copy of J ACOBY MOD·
ERN send II lo
Wrn al
care ol thrs newspa8 fldge
per P 0 Bm 489 Radro City
SUJtr on N e w Yo rk. N Y 10019 )

" The success of the

�8-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday. Feb. 20, t978

Wahama Upsets Ravenswood
a S-9 ' season slate. Raven· points for the locals 15 camo game with the main event to Hilton

BY GARY CLARK

swood saw their record
The Ravenswood Red dwindle to 7~.
Devils, found out Saturday
Wahama actually won the
night that they couldn't defeat contest at the' free throw Une
two Mason County teams on by canning Tl of 37 attempts
successive nights as Coach while the Red Devils
Homer
Preece's Wahama managed just 8 of 14. All told,
White Falcons upset the the Jackson CoWJtians were
hlgh1y-favore'd Red Devils by whl!tled for 27 foulS to just 13
a 61-55 score.
for the locals whlch' accoWlted
Ravenswood had previously for the
difference as
pulled off their biggest upset Ravenswood outgoaled the
of the season Friday night visiting Falcons 23-17.
when they turned hack Point . After a close first quarter In
Pleasant, 63.W, before the, which the hosts held a slim.lSWhlte Falcons suprlsed the 14 lead the White Falcons
JacksOn County live with the caught! ire in the s!M!ond canto
aid of a 27-point second to pUe up 27 . points while
quarter outburst.
limiting their opponents to
The win snapped a four· just eight secon~ period
game losing skid for the White markers and give the Bend
Falcons and was only their ·Area team a 41·23 halftime
second victory In their last advantage.
nine games leaving them with
Of those 27 second quarter

NOT CUTTING THE MUSTARD?

Hospital News

2 0-1
0 2·2
0 1-2
0~
0~

5 4
2 2
2 1
5 0
1 0
Tl 55

Miller
by way of charity !oases as follow .
Pannell
they converted 15 of 18 at·
tempts. Rick Buuard, 5'5" WAHA!M(61 ) FG FT PF TP Fleming
3 10.12 1 16 Kelly
senior, guard paced the White Barnltz
23 ~14
6 U 1 16 TOTAL
Falcon attack In the eight Buzzard
3 5-7 4 11 Score by quarters :
minute span with 12 t.alllea Blessing
1 2 3 4 Tot
3 lio6 3 11
while Rick Bamltz and Greg Barnitz
Blessing added six and four Honaker
1 ~ 1 5 Wahama 14 Tl 11 &amp; 61
Zuspan
I ~ 3 2 Raven
respectively.
15 8 13 19 55
17 TI-'SI 13 81 swood
Following Intermission, TOTAL
Olliclal!K:ene Carpenter and
Wahama continued to stymie
Paul Raines
the Red Devils and built their RAVENSWOOD (55 )
6 ~ 2 16 RESERVE GAME
biggest lead or the night at 23 Stanley
6 1-3 2 13 Score by Quarters:
points and led by as much aa Fowler
1 2 3 4 Tot
Hardy
5 ~ 5 10
16 throughout the period.
2 2-2 3 6 Wahama 13 12 13 24 82
However , Ravenswood Brown
2 ~ 0 4, Raven
made a run !or the victory In Finney
15 12 15 11 53
swood
the llnal stanza but came up
short as the White Falcons
came away with an lm·
presslve 61-55 trlwnph.
'
.
Wahama placed four men In
(Continued from page lJ
double figures with Rick
Barnltz and Rick Buzzard This year, the week4ong session of the AFL.CIO's executive
council Is expected to focus on the economy, trade legialat10n
sharing game high honors .
and jobs. As in the past, AFL.CIO leader George Meany Will
with 16 markers apiece. Greg chair the session with nothing to indicate any retirement plans
Blessing and Bob Barnltz on his part
·
followed with 11 tallles each.
Ravenswood ~ot 15 points
BEREA, OHIO - THREE MEN ARE BEING sought in
from Mark Stanley, 13 !rom connection with the death of a Berea man and the beating of his
Mark Fowler and 10 from Rick elderly parents . Police said Joseph Stanley, 45, was fatally
Hardy.
shot Saturday night by three men who forced their way in Ill the
While shooting percentages Stanley home. The victim's father, Frank, 77, was listed in
were unavailable for the Red serious condition in the intensive care unit at Southwest
Devils the local charges shot a General Hospital. His 7S.year..,ld mother was in fair condition.
poor 36 percent from the field
ROCK F ALI.S, ILL. - TWO PERSONS WERE killed and
and a respectable 73 percent
from the charity stripe which two others injured SWlday when their car hit the rear of a
was the difference In the semi-trailer truck at a four-way stop at U.S. 30 and !llinois 2.
Killed were Jerry Johnson, 24, and Franslsco Olalde, 22, both
game.
of
SterUng, !11. Listed In satisfactory condition were James
The bend area team
28, and . his wile, Olga, 26, also of sterling. Truck
Branch,
collected 32 total rebounds and
driver
Michael
Sullivan, 23, Clinton, Ohio, was not injured .,
committed just 14 turnovers.
Wahama also took the
jWJior varsity contest when
they outscored the Little
Devils 24-llin thellnal period
Three persons were killed over a Portage County near
to take a come from behind 62- in a two-vehicle accident Ravenna.
53 victory.
Saturday in Cincinnati w
Cincinnati: Richard W. SetGary Richards paced the boost the weekend traffic wart, 21, Kathy J . Hawley, 23
Falcon attack with 16 points to . death wll to at least nine, the and David Hawley, 21, all of
help move Coach Lewis Hall's State Highway Patrol said Cincinnati, killed when Setwart 's car collided head on
Utile Falcon record to 9-3 on wday.
the year.
The Patrol survey shows no with another in the Cincinnati
-Craig Easter led the hosts deaths Friday night, seven suburb Of Sharonville.
Lancaster: William R.
with 14 markers as the Little Saturday and two Sunday.
Devils fell to 4-11.
The survey also shows one Deems, 24, Baltimore, Ohi,o,
Wahama tet!U'ns to action car-train
victim,
one killed in a one-vehicle
four times this week with two pedestrian and one person accident on Ohio 158 north of
regularly schedule contests crushed between two cars. Lancaster in Fairfield
This weekend 's count was County.
and two make up dates.
.
· .
· ·· up from the previous Sunday
Tomte the White Falcons visit weekend when six persons
Warren: Robert Odvar Sr.,
Meigs m a rescheduled game wee killed in five accidents 46, Cortland, killed when he
before hosting Spencer during the 54-hour period.
bent to tighten a chain on a
Killed in the Cincinnati car he was towing and his son
Tuesday evening.
hit
the
crash were Richard W. accidentally
Hannan Invades Mason on Seiwart, 21, David Hawley, accelerator, pinning Odvar
rrtiursday
before Po~nt 21, and his wife Kathy J. ~tween the two cars.
Pleasant closes out the week Hawley, 23, aU of Cincinnati.
Chardon: Darryl J . Vargo,
in. a return maich also slated
13, Chesterland, struck by a
for the White Falcon home Friday Night
vehicle on U.S. 322 in Geauga
None.
County near Chardon .
. court.
.
Game time tonlte at Meigs Saturday
Canton:
Janice
is 6 p.m. for the preliminary
Hockensmith, 31, Navarre,
killed In a two-car crash on a
Stark County road near IRISH WINS
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (UP! )Canton.
Toledo : Brent Peacock, 21, Michigan won its third
Tillsonburg, Ontario, can., straight Big Ten women's
diving
killed when he drove into the swimming and
weekend.
championship
this
rear end of truck that was
Michigan scored 1,197 team
trying to merge into traffic on
points
Cor the victory, w·lih
r-m.
Wisconsin
in second at ::»i:la
Ravenna: Thomas . 0 .
Myers, 25, Ravenna, killed In points and Indiana third with
a cartrain crash at a crossing 334 .

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday Admission - Carl
Fulton, Gallipolis.
Saturday Discharges Victor Counts, Conna Knapp,
Jana Evans, Elizabeth
Bartoe, Linda Dye, Esta
David., Raymond Ridgway,
Helen
Sauvage,
Jesse
Browning, Jr.
Sunday Admissions Jennie Williamson. Rutland ;
James Williams, Lone
Bottom ; Earl Riggs, Langsville; Gertrude Pellegrino,
Long
Bottom ; Robert
Manley, Middleport ; Grace
Roush, Ra ci ne .
Sunday Discharges Danny Terzopplous, Brian
Ri!Oe , Ellen Arnott , Her·
metta Hysell , Pauline
Cunningham.

News •• in Briefs

Nine die in traffic

Perk up your sales
. .. by placing an ad · in
our newspaper! You'll
cut in on a bigger slice
of profits bec a use we spread
your advertising message to
our entire circulation! Call.

The Daily Sentinel
I

992-2156

GREAT.HABIT
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into the savings habit! .Regula r deposits into one
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you for all emergenc ies ... give you th at extra
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get into the habit .. , open your ac.c ount today!

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Farmers Bank
POMEROY, OHIO
'40.000 Ma~imum Insurance for Each Depositor
Member federal ll€posit Insurance CorporatK&gt;n

'

---------------------------.
! Area Deaths !
I

I

Ark. Friends may call at the
DELBERT C. GARNES
funeral
after 7 this evening.
Delbert C. Garnes, 59,
whose home was 746 Fourth
FRANCES FOLMER
Ave ., Gallipolis,
died
Frances Folmer, 77, of
unexpectedly at 12:26 a. m.
Sunday at Holzer Medical Rock Springs, dled Sunday
Center . He was a con· afternoon at Honer Medical
struction worker and cook. Center.
She was born May 28, 1900,
Born March 30, 1918. in
the
daughter of the late Dave
Columbus to the late Guy and ·
and
Anna Davidson Jamea.
Nellie Pounds Games, he
She
was also preceded In
married the former Virginia
Scott April 9, 1942, in Vinton, death by one Infant daughter.
and she survives with five one sister, Cora; two
brothers, John and Dan.
sons and a daughter.
Survivors include her
They are : Douglas
Games, Columbus; Frank, husband, Scott; one son,
· St. Louis; Charles, in the William of Pomeroy; three
military in Germany; Guy gra ndchildre, Mrs. James
and John , both Gallipolis, and (Judy) Durham of Grand
Mrs. Anthony (Martha) Island, N. Y.; Mrs. Steven
Woodfork,
Chillicothe, and (Jeni) Hill of Forestville, Md.
Holzer Medical Center
and Jeffery Folmer of Rock
eight
grandchildren.
Discharges Feb. 17
live
great·
Also surviving are a Springs;
Dou glas Bayes, Ronald
Brewer , Fl'orence Casey, brother, Lawrence Garnes, grandchildren, Chris and
Curtis Casto, Willis Cox, Mrs. Orient. and a sister. Mrs. Susan Durham, DeDee and
Michael Dameron and Gladys Ragland, Jackson . A Kimberly Hill and Jerod
'
daughter, Edna Denney, brother preceded him in Folmer.
She was a member of the
Ethel Durst ; Eva Elias , death . He was a member of
Springs
United
Arlene Evans , George Mt. Carmel Baptist Church, Rock
Methodist
Church.
Bidwell
.
Goheen, Nora Harvey ,
Funeral services will be 1
Delbert Garnes was a
Beulah Hickman, Mandy
Hill, Jamma Holley, Mrs. former troo p leader of Boy p.m . Wednesday at Ewing
Chapel with the Rev . James
Floyd Jordan and son, Scott Seoul Troop 210, Bidwell.
The McCoy-Moore FWJeral Corbett officiating . Burial
Kearns, Kristian Kerns, Gail
Dehorah Smallwood, Clinton Home is in charge of will be In Rock Springs
Cemetery. Friends may call
Smith, Anna Snyder, Robert arrangements.
at
the funeral home on
Thorson, Mrs. Richard Tipple
Tuesday from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
and son, Gilford Turley, Leah
ALVA STATON
Van Meter,' Mrs . David
Mrs. Alva Staton, 83,
Whaley and son , Mary
MacAndrews,
Ky. , the widow
Wilson.
of Samuel Station, died
Births Feb.18
Mr . and Mrs . Kenneth unexpectedly Sunday while
Newsome, a son , Ewington. she was visiting at the home
of her son, William Staton,
Discharges Feb. 1~
(Continued from page 1)
Mrs. James Baughman and Rt. 2, Vinton .
west
of SR 77&gt; when an auto
She was the daughter of
daughter, Mrs. William
by John G. Black,_27,
driven
Conley and daughter , Dale Please and Kathryn Castle.
Northup,
slid on the snow
Preceded in death· by two
Hom, Alice Lathey, Bertha
hitting a
covered
roadway
Miller , Sandra Mitchell, daughters, she is survived by
vehicle
driven
by
James
C.
Debra Smith, Floren ce four daughters and four sons:
33,
Columbus.
Eggers,
Mrs, Bertha Blackburn,
Watson, Velma Young.
A truck-car accident ocMac Andrews, Ky .; Mrs. Esta
Births Feb. 19
curred
at 12:20 p.m. Sunday
Mr . and Mrs. Keith Banks, Estep, Wellston; Mrs. Lillian
on
the
Rodney-Cora
Rd.110uth
Looney~ .Chesapeaker; Mrs.
a daughter, Gallipolis.
of
SR
588
where
a
car
driyen
Turner
in
Large, Donna Lawhon , Mrs. · Madgaline
by
•
Sye
E
.
Kuntz,
20,
Leo Layne and son, Charles California; William Staton, Galloway; 0., and a truck
McDonald, Donnie Me· Rt. 2, Vinton; Ralph Staton, operated by Charles W. Kall·
Farland, Lenora Mooney, Vulcan, W. Va .; Manuel and
ner, 57, Jackson, collided.
Ja·net Norman, Elizabeth Danny Paul, Taylor, Mich.;
Catherine C. King, 34, Rio
Ohlinger, George Petty, Lena 23 grandchildren, and nine . Grande, claimed minor in·
Raike, Mary Rawlings, great-grandchildren.
She was a member of the juries In a traffic acclden.t at
William Roush, Xylpha
8 a.m. Sunday on the Cen·
Saunders,
Mrs.
Bryan Freewill Baptist Church at
terpoint
Rd ; three miles west
Seagraves and daughter , MacAndrews.
of
SR
325.
Local arrangements a·r e
Addie Smith, Christie Swarts,
The patrol said the King
being
made by McCoy-Moore
Sammy Thacker, James
collided headon with a
car
Tyree, Judy Waugh, Faye Funeral Home.
vehicle operated by Wayne D.
Young, Christopher Zerkle.
Johnson, 19, Oak Hill. There
Births Feb. 17
MRS. BATES
was moderate damage.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
Mrs. George C. Bates, 57, of
Johnson was cited to
I...ouderbatk, a son, Jackson; 733 Beech St., Middleport ,
Municipal Court for failure to
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Otto, a died Sunday at Veterans yield one half of the roadway.
son, Reedsville.
Memorial Hospital, She was
Mr . and Mrs_. Brinley Seth, pr!M!eded in death by her
a son, Middleport; .Mr. and parents, Elmus and Dulcie
Mrs. Ronald Warrington, a Bonnell Collins and one
daughter, Wellston.
sister, Alma Boor.·
. ENTERS HOSPITAL
Discharges, Feb, 18
She is survived by her
Sharon Smith, Pomeroy,
Sherry Adams , Mrs. Arthur husband, George; one will
enter
Universi!Y
Bradshaw and son , Ruby daughter,
Patricia
A. Hospital, Columbus, to,..y
Carmon, Jenny Dennis , Pummel of Springfield; a for observation and treat·
Nolene Hatfield. Melanie son, Clyde M. Combs of ment .
Lewis, Pearl Little, Mable Grove City, Pa.; a sister,
Mahan, Charlotte Marriner , Mrs. William Lough of
Mary Martin. Melissa Me· Burning Springs, W.Va.; two
HI-WWTEMPS
Daniel , Dorothy McGhee , brothers, Howard Collins of
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
James McQuaid, Sr., Jeremy Newport, Ark., and Paul · highest temperature reported
Meaige, Cecil Newell, Edna Collins of Mt .. Vernon, Ohio; Sunday to the National
Payne, Emma Reed, Selcus five grandchildren and Weather Service, excluding
Reynolds , Thomas Scott, several nieces ·and nephews. Alaska and Hawaii, was 76
Funeral services will be 2 degrees at Red Bluff and
p.m. Tuesday at Ewing Redding, Ga. Today's low
Chapel. Burial will ~ in was 19 degrees below zero at
Lonke Cemetery in Lonke, Philipsburg, Pa .

OSP
'

Mason man is stable
A driver was charged with
hit and run following an
accident which sent a Mason
man to the hospital early
Sunday morning in Mason.
Listed in stable condition at
St. Mary's Hospital is Carl
Brannen, 47. According to a
hospital spokesman. Brannen
is suffering from two !raetured legs.
Arrested and charged with
hit and run and · DUI was
Larry R. Grimm Sr.. 28,
Mason.· He was arraigned
before Magistrate Miles
Epling who set bond at $!i,a00.
Grimm remains in jail in lieu
of posting bond.
Brannen had been ·a
passenger in a car driven by
Earl Thomas, Racine , 0.,
just prior to the incident.
According to Mason Police
Chief Joe Young, Thomas and
Brannen were getting out of
their parked car on Second
St., shortly after miclnight,
when Grimm allegedly
sideswiped the car and struck
Brannen before leaving the
scene.
Estimates of $200 and $100
worth of damage resulted to

and struck the Gill car.
Estimates of 1900 and $400
worth of dama ga resulted to
the Gill and Camp cars,
· respectively.
Another car collided into a
parked car on Sand Hill Rd.
near
Point
Pleasant,
Saturday at 12:20 p.m., a ccording to Deputy Perry.
Eleanor L. Sayre, 42, Rt . 1
Letart, was identified as the
driver, while Sandra R.
Roush, Rt. 2 Letart, was
identified as the owner of the
parked car.
Sayre was traveling east
when she came upon the
Roush car which according to
.Deputy Perry, was partially
blocking the westboWld lane.
Deputy Perry stated that.
Sayre did not have enough
time to stop her car before
she collided into the Roush
car. Estimates of $050 and
$400 worth of damage
resulted to the Sayre and
Roush cars, .respectively.
RETURNED HEBE
Robert Lewis Coffey, 25,
Belpre, was returned io
Meigs County Saturday sfternoon from the Washington

the Thomas and Grimm cars,

County Jail to answer a bench

. respectively.
No injuries were reported
in a two-car .collision
Saturday on Rt . 62 near Point
Pleasant, at 9: 25 a.m., according to Mason County
Sheriff's Depuiy J.E . Perry.
Catherine S. Camp, 20,
Front St., Mason, and Amy A.
Gill, 31, Mason , were iden"
tilled as the drivers.
According to Deputy Perry,
Camp was traveling south
when she apparently had
trouble traveling through a
curve in the road. Her car
went left of the center line

warrant issued by Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
Judge John C. Bacon. It
charged· Coffey failed to
comply with the terms of his
probation.
Coffey, originally sentenced for the 1977 Armed
!Wbbery of Thomas Zano was
released by the court on
Shock Probation. The State
Parole-Probation officer filed
the complaint that he failed to
comply with the terms of
pro bali on. Coffeey is ex·
pected to be taken before
Judge Bacon Tues day.

ELBERFELD$
Look for this
emblem
on the package.

By LEE LEONARD
UP! Statehouae Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) -About 40 members Of the United
Mine Workers Union and their families held a peaceful raUy In
the Sll!tehouse Rotunda today and two ol their representatives
met with Gov. James A. Rhodes to seek his help In speeding
contract negotiations.
TI•e UMW members, employees Of the Peabody Coal Co .,
New Lexington, said they hoped to have 200 people
.participating later today.
Glen Wyclnski and his uncle, George Wycinskl, met lor 30
minutes with Rhodes. Rhodes then left Columhn• for

•

Governor
requests
•
pnvate
contract
..

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)Gov. James A. Rhodes today
sent a telegram weight coal
company officials, the White
House, the United Mine
Workers Union and Ohio's ·
congressional - delegation
urging nationwide adoption of
a private coal contract.
·
"Ohio must be saved from
a billion (b) dqllar blackout ·
that would force massive
unemployment, wideapread
school closings and coal and
darkened ·homes throughout
tl1C state,'' said Rhodes.
The telegram was sent
minutes before Rhodes left
for Charleston, W.Va. to meet
with the governors of
Kentucky, Pennsylvania and
West Virginia on the
stalmated coal contrac.t
talks.
Rhodes urged approval of
the P&amp;M Coal Co. · contract
with the UMWA approved
Monday by the union's
bargaining coWJcll. The coil!
company Is not a member of
the
Bituminous
Coal
Operators Association · and
reached agreement outside of
the
BCOA·UMWA
negotiations.
Rhodes said the BCOA
should adopt the P&amp;M
contract as a ''model
contract" and that approval
"will restore mov~ment of
·c ritically-needed
coal
supplies to Ohio utilities."
"Quick aciion io settle the
coal issue Is needed to avoid a
catastrophe of incalculable
proportions," said Rhodes.
The telegram was sent' to
the top officials of the
Consolidation Coal Co.,
Peabody Coal Co., North
American Coal Co., Valley
c.lmp Coal Corp., Island
Creek Coal ·eo., Old Ben Coal
Co., Y&amp;O Coal Co. and tbe
Boich Mining Co., as well as
U1e UMWA, the White House,
the American El!M!tric Power
Corp. and the state'S 23
congressmen and
two
senators. ·
Ohio Senate President Pro
Tern Oliver ·Ocasek of Akroo
and House Speaker Vernal G.
Riffe, Jr., of New Boston also
signed the telegram with
Rhodes .

·probing
thefts
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see for yourself Big people. the search
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MEN'S AND BOYS DEPT. • 1ST FLOOR

ELBERFELDS IN ·POMEROY

a1 y

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, February 21, 1978

Deputies

HANES THINKS IT'S TIME SOME·
BODY MADE BIG UNDERWEAR THAT,
REALLY FITS.Now, HanesoftersTHE BIG
MAN com fortable fitting underwear at reasonable prices . But BIG MAN SIZE is more
than fit: irs the quality and style selection
only Hanes has .

Charleston, W. Va., to meet withGovs. Jay Rockefeller of West Yours.' '
·wasn 't enough health benefits, there was penallzaUon for wild·
Wyclnski said the governor told them he wlll "work hard to cat striki'S and not enough time off ,"
Virginia, Julian Carroll of Kentucky and Mill&lt;ln Shapp of
get a settlement in the next one or two days, " but did not say
Pennsylvania to diBcuss developments in the strike.
.
Howard also sald the miners want the "federal govern· Wyclnski said the governor told them he favors a quick what he would do.
ment to guarantee that our families will be taken care of in
The mine worker said he was "very satisfied" with the case of an accident."
settlement of the coal miners' strike, now in Its 78th day, but
governor's
response .
that he had to remain "neutral" between the wlion and coal
He said federalizing the coal minoa Is the only acceptable
Robert
Howard, recording secretary of Local 1340 of the soluUon in lieu of a contract.
operators.
"You can throw out Taft-Hartley and binding arbltratloo ,"
Meanwhile, other miners and their families milled about UMW, said the unioo wants Rhodes to "put pressure on the
the Rotunda, {I'Uiny ol them carrying signs which read: "I'm a coal companies for a quick settlement. We want to get the he said, explaining the miners won't work under their old
contract.·
Coal Miner, Not a Mindless Weasel ," "Rolling Blackouts Will President Involved and get the talks going again," he said .
Howard said the.Jast contract offer by the Bituminous Coal
" We've come too far to go hack now," he said.
Ughten Our Hearts" and "Our Ughts Will Go Out But So Wlll
Operators Association was unacceptablf' hecattlilf' "t hPr~P

Meigs County Sheriff
James J . Prollltt reports
deputies investigated a
breaking and enteri"g in
Columbia Township over the
weekend. Wilbur Dailey, Rt.
2, Albany, Ohio, reported
tha't his residence was en·
tered sometime Saturday. A
· .222 caliber bolt action riDe
was stolen. Monday, deputies
investigated theft. of three
chain saws from a sawmill
owned by Terry Woodyard,
Rt. 3, Albany, Ohio. The
sawmill Is located near
School Lot in Columbia
Township.
Deputies are continuing the
investigation on both thefts.

en tine

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 28, No. 217

Mandatory cut woula close Meigs High
There's no way the Meigs
High School can continue to
remain open for classes if a
mandatory 50 percent power
reduction materiaHzes.
This was the report of
Charles Dowler, district
superintendent, at Monday's
regular hoard session at the
Meigs Junior High School in
Middleport.
Dowler said everyone in the

district had been cooperative
in reducing on · a vo!WJtary
basis. However, he reporteq
the high school, which 'is
considered a large industrial

kilowatt hours. H(IWC\'er, he reduction date for industrial
has been advised by the use rs has not be.en set.
electric company that the · Hoover reported.
"pooling" would not work in , The board also discussed
thalman:ner.
problems In making up sehoul
Board President Wendell missed by students due to the
Hoover, who is associated teachers strike in the Call and
with the Columbus and the "bad weat¥r days ."
Southern Ohio Electric Co., There a re 11 days involved as
serving the high school, said a result of the strike, and 16
the mandatory order of a 50 bad weather days. In ail, the
percent
reduction
is state allows only five days for
scheduled to come from the the latt er. It appears the state
company when the coal is not going to allow ad·
supply is down to a 30 day ditional days at this time,
supply.
Dowler reported.
As of Sunday, the supply
Consequently, Supt. Dowler
stood at 42 days, Hoover · recommended that make-up
.
· reported . However, due to the classes be held on five
almmpany' s purchaseofpower Saturdays, two days during
from otherfirms,mandatory the spring break and the
remainder of the time at the
end of the school year. This
would make June 19 lhe final
day of classes.
Board member~ expressed
Cloudy and cold with some
snow. Highs will be in the mid concern ove r Saturday
20s. Cloudy with snow ending classes because of the attonight. Cold with lows from tendance pro~lems. MrS .
10 to t~ . Partly cloudy and Jennifer Sheets, board
continued cold Wednesday member, exp.ressed her
with. highs from the mid to desire that days made up· be
·' meaningful" to students and
·hit by UM\V pickets, suffered upper 20s.
not just a case of making up
"at least a million dollars
damage.''
"Private individuals and
·
private companies are beingo
terrorized to the point they
can't even operare," said
corns. "The only way _you can
operate Is with guns.
Corns said his family ,Jives
Uolted Press loteroatloual
situation was under control
.within 50 yards of the tipple at
Gene Oiler, Middleport , at II p.m. alter all
the Low Sulfur Coal Co.
president of UMW Local 1886 available state troopers
"Try living with that for 77 in Meigs County, said today and sheriff's deputies from
days," said Corns. "You he condoned the violence. in Hocklog and four neigh·
never know when someone is Southeastern Ohio that oc- borlog counties rushed to
going to throw a · bomb curred Monday.
the company just after8 :30
through·your window.
"I condone it. They went p.m.
"I have carried a gun out to shut down these nonThis morning, Ohio Unlled
continuously since the strike union places. These non· Mine Workers union mem·
started," he said.
union peop~e take a chance hers and their wives were
Paul Wal!meymer, Colum- being out on the road during a expected to demonstrate at
bus, president of Utility Coals nationwide strike," Oiler the Statehouse In Columbus.
Inc., an independent coal added.
Miners based .in New
broker, said there Is plenty of
An explosion, . fire and Lexington, Ohio, planned the
coal In the state but it is not heavy vandalism were Capitol march in an effort to
· moving because of UMW · reported at the Tiffany Mine bring their side of the strike
pickets.
Co. south of Logan Monday story to the· public.
" Independent operators night as more than 200
Hocking County deputies
normally supply better than picketing miners took received a report of a fire set
50 percent of tbe coal in this revenge for 15 loads of coal off by an explosion at Tiffany,
state," h,e said. "But a . shipped out by the non·unlon but later found picketing
handful of people are keeping firm during the day. UMW members blocking
them from their jobs."
Hocking County Sheriff trarric on Ohio· 93, throwing
Hap Thrush reporred .the

user , could not remain open if
an order is received requirihg
the school to reduce usage by
50 percent.
There iS some confusion on
the "pooling" of the saving of
electricity in other schools to
be applied to the high school
usage if the mandatory order
comes, Dowler said. He said
his
interpretation
of
"pooling" is different from
that of the electric company
in that he believed usage
saved in other schools could
he applied to the high school,
giving the larger School extra

•
Non •UDIOn . CO
.

operators will
form caravan
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Non-uni.on coal operators
from southern Ohio, an area
hit by United Mine Workers
Union pickets Monday, said
today they will drive a
caravan of trucks loaded with
non-union coal to Columbus to
show "there ls coal in Ohio. ''
UMW pickets closed non·
tmion mines in Lawrence,
VInton and Hocking CoWJties
Monday and turned over
cars, set fires, smashed
windows and blocked traffic.
The caravan was to start at
the Low SUlfur Coal Co. in
Pike County and will consist
Of at least seven trucks, Said
Rex Corns, tlpple manager-at
the firm in Beaver, Ohio.
"We have a

cr~stOmer

in

Columbus, Capital City Products, and we are going to
deliver that coal today," said
Corns. "The IUghway Patrol
has promised they would
escort the trucks.
"We want it publicized bow
much personal property was
destroyed by UMW vandals
last night," said Corns. Corns
said the Tiffany Mine Co. In
Hocking CoWJty, one of those

Weather

EXTENDED t'ORECAST ·
Thursday through
Saturday, fair Thursday,
chance uf snow Friday and
c\eaJ SaturM)'. Hlgba wl\l

be from the mid 20s to mid
3lls. Lows will be from the
teens to the low 20!1.

rccommemlu.Uons on a

tw,,

levy which would be put
IJcfure the voters at the Jun•'
elccllon. Plcrcc and Mrs.
Sheets volunteered to serve
on the committee.
l}nwler . said he estlmotes
the district will be about
$168 ,0011 short. TI1e committee
will decide the amo1mt ul
money needed and the size of
the levy to be voted upon .
During the meeUng Duwle'r
also presented a com·
inunication
from Myrt
Shoemaker, chainnon of the
finance appropriations
cor\unitlec q! the leglslatutc
in regard to school flnandul
problemS.· The letter stater!
1~6 districts in the stole hav~
indicated that they wlll not
have money to take them
through 1978.
'11JC · board employed Alrm
Holter us a substitUte teucher
for the remainder uf the
schnol
·
year
uml
. MEETS THURSDAY
acknowledged
a
lhfl.nk-you
There will be a CIC meeting
Thursday ~'eb . 23 in the letter from the Meigs Council
Bureau of Support room at on Aging for the repair of the
the Meigs Co unty Court - furnace at the Pomerny
house . The sc~sion begins at Junior Hil::h SciutO), used nt
the sen lor citizens center.
7:30 p.m.
Dwight
Goins,
ad·
ministrutivc ns~istant, suhl
that repa ir worJc; Wns done for
$.101.94.
Joy Bentley, Glennu
Sprague and Rita Slavin were
given permission to attend
the state basketball tour350 and he complied.
nament for girls on March 31
Another witness said he
could see rifles in some of lhe and five men basketball
coaches were given per·
miners' pi ckup trucks and Hl
mission
to attend the men's
least one pistol in a holder on
~tnt.
e
tourney
in Columbus 011
a ·dashboard. But the miners
March
17.
were asked by UMW
Velma Douglas, a cook at
lea'dership not to Carry
Salisbury
School, was given u
weapons because no violence
leave of absence for the
was wanted.
Two trainloads of coal were second semester du e to
stalled outside the Ohio family illness.
·Mrs. Wagner was given
Power Co. Cardinal power
permission
to request 1m
plant near Martins Ferry
advance
draw
of $300,0011 to
Monday, reportedly because
meet
expenses
and
the board
of threats to the Norfolk &amp;
report
approved
the
financial
Western Railroad .
C
or
the
Pomeroy-Middleport
The two 80-car trains
carrying about 16,000 tons of I.ibrnries.
Dan Mor.ris outlined his
coal were moved to the plant
area on ConRail tracks but plans for seeking several tltlc
program grants . Letters
would have to be s wltch~d to
N&amp;W tracks to move Into the from Conrad Ott, silperln·
tendent of Akron City
plant.
Schools, in regard to school
financing, and the Ohio
Bureau of J;:mployment
Services in regard to how the
district pays unemployment
insurance into the fWld were
read and tabled for further
study.
Morris, who is curriclllum
director, reported the Meigs
Local District will be
evaluated in regard to its
special education programs
uall over the country,"
for a two-&lt;lay period. During
according to the unloll
the
evaluation, parents, the
~urce .
One Independent, the staf! and students will be
Garland Coal Co. of interviewed as well as the
records st~dled, t.lorrls
Arkansas, was involved In
reported.
such t,alks Wlder the guidance
Goins said gas meters In
of a federal mediator.
Rutland had been loWld to ho
working incorr!M!tly and that
the district will receive some
refund on bills paid. He also
reported that an ·Individual is
interested
in renting the
Damages were set at about
and he
Rutland
gymnasium
$150 as the result of a fire at
was
asked
to
secure
more
the trailer home of Brenda
Smith mi Rose Hlll ahoul 7 detail on the mptter.
Attending.the meeting were
p.m. Monday. ·
those
named earlier and
Pomeroy Fire Chief
Virgil
King,
board member;
Charles Legar said the fire
Bob
Morris,
elementary
started In the thawing of
~rlnclpal,
and
Charles
water lines under the trailer.
Downie
and
John
Krawsczyn
It was confined to under
of the teachers association.
covering of the trailer.
At 4:54p.m. the emergency
squad went to West Main St.
\ MEETING OFF
for Floyd Spence who was
The Shrinettes meeting lor
dead upon the squad's Thursday night haa been
arrival.
cancelled.

•t
l e r condones violence

Pomeroy's water system
• •
ISm financial trouble
According to village
Fred
Crow,
solicitor
. Pomeroy's water system is in
financial trouble. This was
revealed Monday night
through a letter read by
village clerk, Jane Walton.
According to Crow council
must consider raising water
rates In order to meet the
payment of mortgage
revenue bonds. An additional
$41,817.65 must he raised for
the operation, payment of
principal and Interest on the
bonds.
Crow also emphasized that
if the village did not meet its
obligation and defaulted hond
holders could appoint a
r!M!elver and take over the
water operation.
Crow suggested a com·
mlttee be formed to meet
with· the water hoard to raise
rates and recommend an
equitable program for raising
the water rates.
Larry Powell, councilman,
said t~at the situation was
serious and must be looked

time.
additiono l proble ms, " he..
The board took no action·un said. Ohio law requires that
a new schedule last night ·the school year be completed
preferrh•g apparently to wait by June 30.
and see if some ~dditional
Board Member Carro ll
days will be permitted by the Pierce suggested that
state.
students make up nne hour n·
Dowler pointed out that day thereby makinK up one
Saturday school will cost the day each five-day wc'ek.
district additional money
However, during this
since some employes will discussion, it was pointed out
have to he paid time and one· that under such a plan small
hall their regular salaries for children wo.uld not be
overtime work . He also re\urning to their homes until
pointed out, however, that after dark .
unless Saturday school is
Dowler again warned that
held, then buildin gs Will have · the district is not gnlng to
to be kept open until late in h~:~ve enough money to get
June.
through the 1978 calendar
" Mor e tinle off due to year. He asked for two board
weather or some other menlbers to serve with him
co ndition s would create and clerk, Jome Wagner, In
studying the fin a ncial pic·
lure,
and
preparing

into immediately. He added
that he would like to see some
costs figures and study the
situation.
·"We do have . a serious.
obligation in the payment of
the .honds," Powell noted.
Council, following the
meeting, went into executive
session to study proposed
rate increases. ·
In other business, council
rejected a rate increase
sought by Columbia Gas
Company of Ohio .
The increase, proposed by
the gas company,wastwo and
one-ha If percent the first year
and seven and one-half the
second yeur.
John Koebel, re~resentlng
the gas company was
present. Cou~cll's utility·
commit!~ with Bill Young as
chairman, proposed an increase of two and one-half
percent for each year. Koebel
said he could agree to such an
increase for one year, but
seriously doubted if It would
be approved over a one-year

period~

Koebel told council if they
rej!M!ted the proposed increase the gas company
would go to the Public
Utilities, commission.
Fred Crow also .presented
another letter to council in
regard to restoring the
Pomeroy Senior High School
with funds from the alumni.
Crow recommended the
second floor be used · for
village offices and the first
floor be used for council
meetings . and other civic
meetings.
Crow said lf the village
council is interested he would
attempt
(through the
Chamber of
Pomeroy
Commerce) to have a
committee fanned to look
into the. cost of the repairs
and to contact alumni and
friends of Pomeroy Senior
High School for contributions,
Crow wrote the letter as
president of the chamber
with the idea that something
(Cootinu'!l on pqe 10)

rocks a nd overturning: trucks.
It was not the only trouble
of the day. during which
about 300 miners patrolled
coal-hauling roads between
Ohio and Kentucky in a 1110vehicle caravan, trailed by
police and police planes.
About 150 strikers hurled
rocks at ·Addlngton Brothers
Mining Co., Inc., a non-UMW
facility in Coal Grove earlier
in the day .
Newsmao Jerry Sander
of WSAZ..TV of Huntlogtoo,
W. Va., was asked to turn
over film he had shot of
miners throwing rocks and
overturning empty coal
trucks at a coal loading
dock In Hanging Rock lo
Lawrence County, Ohio.
Sander said the · request
came from a group of about

Maverick bargaining
is ·boosting chances
WASHINGTON (UP!) Maverick bargaining by in·
dependent coal companies
and union miners today
boosted chances for a
negotiated end to the 7lklayold walkout and eased
pressure on an admlnslratioo
reluctant to take more
drastic actioo.
'
President Carter scheduled
brealilast with a bipartiaan
group of congressional
leaders thla morning lor
further consult.atloo on his
strategy.
At the same time, however,
talks Involving the UMW and
Independent coal C&lt;llllpanies
neared settlements
perhaps patterned alter
Mooday's - which could
snowball Into a nationwide
pact.
One jublllant wlioo source
foresaw the virtual collspse
of the Bituminous Coal
Operators
Association
because of the separate

negotiations.
That process JH'oduced the
first break In the record~ong
impasse Monday when the
Pittsburg and Midway Coal
Co. of Denver agreed to
· rerrns with the UMW oo a
contract covering Its 700
workers in
Kentucky ,
Mtsaouri and Kansas.
Within hours, the union
bargaining councU embraced
·the settlement, 26-13, and sent
Jt to the rank WJd file for
ratification.
Presidential press
secretary Jody Powell called
the vote "an Interesting
development which all
parties should asseaa senously." Apprised of the vote,
Carter said, ''That's great."
' The Ziegler Coal Co., a
subsidiary of Houston
Natural Gas, was also said to
be nearing an agreement JlOMibly today - with the
UMW,
and
similar
negotiations were uniler way

Trailer has
$150 damages

1

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