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ll-The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Feb. '!1, 1978
nieces and nephews.
He was a retired employee

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

l
I

Area Deaths

l

I
ccndu
cted
Thursda
y
at
t1
a.
NORA LAWSON
Mrs. Nora Waye) La w- m io the Foglesong Funeral
son, 65, Rt. 4, Oak Hill , died Home w1t11 the Kev. 0 B.
Saturday mornm~ m Hoi1.er Ha tch ~r () Hicta tmg. Burial
MediCal Center , Ga llipolis. w11l be in the He nry
She was born at Thunnan. Cem etery.
Fnends may call at th e
Oh1o, daughter of 1he late
funeral
home any tlme on
Robert H. Lawson and Ethel
Wednesda
y evening
Watson Law son. who survives.
BUD RANDOLPH
She was a member of the
HO C ~INGPORT Bud
Comlth MISSIOnary BaptiSt
1
Dmg
1
Handolph,
82,
of
Church
Hoc
km
gport.
died
Sunday
Three s1st er s surv1 ve : Mrs
after noon a1 Selby General
Frances S1m s, a nd Mrs
In
Marietta
Ha zel Allen,
both of Hos pital
rono
wm~
a
brief
Illness
. He
Columbu s,
Mrs
Mary
was
born
al
Reed
s
ville
,
Pa yne, Bidwell ; thr ee
Me1
gs
Cnunty
,
son
of
the
late
brother s,
Rev
Les ter
Lawson, Xen 1a , Hollis James and Mmm~ Buchanan
La wson, Galllpnlts and Handolph . He was a lso
Howard Lawson , l.ugan , W. preceded 10 dea1h by two
v·H Sev eral nteces and s1sters and one brother
II &lt;spent the greater pa rt of
nephews survtve.
hiS
hfe 10 Hockmgport where
FuneraJ servtces will be
he
was
a fa rmer
held I p m . Tu esday ~ ~
Surv1vor
s 1ncludc three
Kuhner-Lewts Funeral Home
in Oak Hill Bunal will be m l~lllgh t crs, Mrs D 0 (Hena )
Cornith Cemetery Fnends Bh1kc a nd Mrs Cecal ( Nma )
both
of
may caU at the funeral humc Kuckhuld ,
Hockm
gport
and
Mr
s
on Monday frnm 2 untll 9 p.m
W1lham {Gr&lt;Jce J Smeeks of
Coo lvill e .
a
brothe r.
ELLA CUNUIFF
Haym
ond
of
Yp
silanti,
CLIFTON Ella M
MJChtgan;
se
veral
meccs
ami
Cu ndiff, 94, Pennsauken, New
Jersey, former ly of Clifton, nephe ws
Funeral scrv wcs will be
W. Va died friday in Cherry
Wednesday at l p rn at t he
Hill, New Jerser y
Born June 7, 1883, Chfton, Wh1te Funeral Humc m Coolshe was t he daughter of t he VIlle w1lh the Rev T1m
late Dartus and E ll en Snyder offiC iaUng Burial Wi ll
be 1n Stewart Cemetery m
Wluttmgtun Henry
She was preceded 10 death Hockingport . Frtends may
by her husband, J . Howard call after I p 111 Tuesday
Cundiff, 10 1951
EVF.REIT CONNOLLY
Survivi ng
are
one
RACINE - Everett l:ondaug ht er , Mrs . Robert
nolly,
75, Ruutc 2, Ra cme,
(Ruth) Ncsb1t , Pennsauken,
died
Sunday
ntghl at l-lolzer
N J , one son, Huward J
Med
1ca
l
Center
He was
Cund1fl, Cherry Hill, N J.,
111
death
by Ius
preceded
SIX grandchildren a nd 18
great-grandchildren
E1ghl parents, Anderson and Mary
meces, Mrs. Blanche Jones, Allee Campbell Connolly a
Mrs Norma Riggs, both of ~ n Hnd a brot her •
Surv1vlllg are tl1s w1fe,
Mason;
Mrs
Evelyn
Nel
lie E., three sons, Gene of
Ohhnger, New Haven; M1 s
Ca
li
forn ia,
James a nd
Theresa Becker, Mtddleport.
Mrs Mabe l Armstrong, George , both of Syracuse,
Waverl y, 0 ; Mrs . Alma iwu da ughters, Mrs. Wliilam
Reese , Manetta, and Mrs
K10g, Chilh cot he , Mr s
Thelma Exhne, Elizabeth, W Kathy Boney of Belpre; a
Eve l yn
Va " Mrs Ruth Ze rkl e, step-daug hte r ,
Boggess
of
fiH
cinc
, 18
Florida; one nephew, Romeo
g
ra
ndch
ildre
n
,
10
g
r ea t
Henry , Huntmglon.
~r
cmdchlldren
and
several
Funeral servi ces Will be
4

nf the Bosworth Towang
Cn mpany of Gallipolis.

l'unera l servaces wall tie at
I p.m. Wednesday at the

F.wmg Funeral nome with
the Rev . Freeland Norris
offaciatmg

Bunal will be tn Sand ,H1II
Cem etery l''riends mHy call
at the funera l home after 7
tins evcnmg

SYLVESTER HARRIS
SYRACUSE - Sylvester
I Bud l Hams, 78, of
Bloon ungdale , Ohio, a former
Sy ra cuse res ident, d1ed
Sa turday
at
Harrtson
Cummu mly Hospital, CadiZ
He was preceded 1n death by
h1s w1fc, an infant daughter
and a brother .
Surv ;vmg
are
three
children, Maxme, James and
Mar) Lou of Bloomingdale;
ftv e ~randchil dren; four
sastcrs, Ethel Ramey of pt
Pleasant ; Myrtle Durst of
Cuulvs!ll! ; Jess1e Cottrill of
Syracuse, lrene of BloomIngdale , two brothers, D1ck
of Syracuse a nd Wil bur of

•IS

Johnson, D1ana Johnson ,
Seaford Jordan, Eij1th
Kearns, Geraldme Layne,
Patty Montgomery, Mildred
Moore, Mark Mora, Melissa
Nance, Henry Pierce, Ellen
Russell, Elsa Russell, Teresa
Sayre. Sandra Slone, Barbara
Stephens,
Ellen
Stewart , Pauhne Wayne, Ray
Wllhams, Evelyn Wmter .
(Births, Feb. 25)
Mr. and Mrs . Thomas
Simpson, a son. Jackson
1Discharges, Feb. 26)
Bonny Allen, Ca rolyn
Colema n, Mrs Jason Davts
a nd da ughter, Mrs. Edward
Fulton and son, PhylliS
Garland, Miche lle Hall ,
Diana Henson, Robert Hill,
Amper Howell, Lewis l,wg,
Pomeroy
Sunday Discharges - Earl Gerald S~vte ..
( Blrlhs, Feb. 26)
Riggs, Fl orence Hellma n,
Mr and Mrs Ernie GardMary Derenberger, Stephen
ner, a daughter, Gallipolis.
Cochran, Janey Koch.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday Adm1sswns Kenneth Stout , Middleport ;
'ciadys Sigler, Middleport ;
Janey Koch , Pomeroy ;
Bermce Molde_n, Pomeroy;
Milley Cunningham, Tuppers
Plams; Ruth Wolfe, Racme.
Saturday Discharges Sheila Smclalr, Anna Wmes,
Lash Douglas. Hanford
Stanley , Annette Kmght,
Helene Sayre
Su nda y Admtsswns Kelly Johnson, La ngsville ,
Phyllls
Vanlnwagen.
Pomeroy , John Htll, New
Haven ;
Ella
Stewart,
Cheshire;
Viola Moon,
Chester ; Frances Howery,
Al ba ny , Leroy Bartrum,

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, Feb. 24)
Mrs Keith Ba nks a nd
daughter, J onaUiffn Bare,
John
Bocock,
De bra
Wm1crsv! Lic.
Hra mmer , La nce Clifford,
J&lt;~ uncra l serv1ces wtll be 2
p.m Tuesday at the Dunlop Terry Doty, Richard Dow,
Fune1at Home m Wmters· Bessie Fell, Willa Gilmore,
Mmam Greer. K1mberly
v11lc
HaMmg, Lowell Hamson,
E lmon Hut c hmson, Tra cy
LewiS, Sam McCarty, Harley
AUTOPSY EXPECTE D
McC
ulty, Jam es Mont OXFORD , Oh10 (UP I]
gomery,
Mrs. Kenneth
An a utopsy may be held on
Newsome
and
son, Wtlb.ur
Ule lx1dv of M1am1 Umversity
Patt
on,
Tamara
Pla nts,
semor Rtchard M Sammons,
21. New Alba ny, who died of Robm Potter, Bruce Pra ter,
Sa lem,
David
an apparent heart atta ck J oanna
dunnJ,!;
an
intramural Sizemore. Arnold Skaggs,
baske tball ~ame on th e Rockford Spurhck, Mrs Paul
Tucker and Mrs Norma
cmnpus Saturday
Sanununs collapsed on the Ward, Lon Warden, Paul
cuurt and was taken to a Wh1te, Mrs Rubert Wtlson
lwsp1tal where he was pro~ and son, Wtlham Woomer ,
Mrs. M1chael Yeagle a nd son
llOWlted dead Sammons had
(Births, Feb. 24)
a history of hea rt problems
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Holt,
and underwent hea rt surgery
Jr ., a son. Ray Mr and Mrs.
for the mlment
M1chael Justus, a daughter,
Vmton Mr and Mrs Randy
MEET MARCH 8
McGu ire, a da ughter, Crown
TUPP ERS PLA INS - The
C1ty ; Mr and Mrs. Paul
Orange Towns hi p Ftre McW111tams, a son, Wellston.
Ocpartment will meet at 7 30 Mr. and Mrs. Shan Faulk , a
p 111 on the second and fourth
daughter, Kerr.
Wedu esdays of each month
1Discharges, Feb. 25)
The s~ren w1il so und as the
Larry
Adkms,
Mr s.
rneet mg 1s begmning each Dewayne Ba ird and son,
evenmg and residents should Glori a
Blazer ,
Debra '
no te thai the siren is not a fire Bricker ,
Lu ke
F1elds,
ctt ll
Charlotte Griffith , Betty
Jenkms, Zelia Jesste, Anna

Our Direct
Deposit

Honor roll

HOSPITAL NEWS

Thfec ho memak e r s
recently represented Me1gs
County on the Jackson Area
Fam1ly Lt vlng Con cerns

• Pleasant Valley Hospital
Discharged - Bob Moore,
Syrac use: Oscar Frye,
Ga lhpohs; Clara Staats ,
Letart,
Philip
Craig,
Redhouse; Patricia Hayes,
Leon, Howard Pn ce, Pomt
Pleasant ; Mary Nibert ,
Gal hpoh s F erry , Mrs .
S1der s,
Point
Robe rt
Pleasant,
Mrs . Arnold
Marcum, Leon , Richard
Huffman , Charleston, Shawn
Hill , Ashton; John Hill ,
Ashton; PatriCia Shambhn ,
Ha rtford ; Mrs. J ames
Burdette, Poml P leasant;
Mrs J oe Ell1s, Cottageville;
George Newlon ,
P o int
P leasa nt , Mrs. Dempsey
Campbell, Elkview ; Robert
WIIhams, Rutland; Mrs
Be rnard
La mp.
Pomt
Pleasant ; Mrs. Birdie Kmg,
Leon; Jason Fry, Robertsburg, Donna Grinstead,
Mason; Mrs Earl Snyder,
Cheshire .
B1rths - A daughter to Mr
and Mrs . Bobby Sturgill,
Vmton. a son to Mr and Mrs
Karl Bla10e, Gallipolis
Ferry, a son to Mr and Mrs.
Dennis Butcher , Chiton
NOW YOU KNOW

Seventeenth- century Irish
pe asant s ascnbcd magtcal
qualities to me(heval lr tsh
books and d1pped t hem 10
water to make medicine for
cows

...
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volunt eer homemakers from
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Member federal Deposil Insurance CorporatiOn

From the opening Up, C01ch Lennie Barnette's Point
Pleasant Big Blacks, were off and running as all five starters
scored in double figures in an ...y ~ win over their C&lt;&gt;Uilty
neighbors - the Wahama White Falcons.
The Big Blacks, playing without their leading scorer, Ed
Nibert, who was fighting a bout with "the flu; used their
1uperior heighth and some hot shooting In the flrst half to pile
up an enonnous lead whlcli enabled them ID coaet to their
second victory of the year over the White Falcons.
PPHS defeated Waharna by
a ~ margin some two
weeks ago in their first en·
e&lt;&gt;unter at Point Pleasant.
The vlaitors shot a hot M
percent from the field in the
flr.!t half of action while
Wahama hit on just 25 percent
which accounted for the Big

I
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.,.
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I

EniJOV
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Brilliant
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INGELS ' ·
Fu RN ITU RE
106 N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport,

o.

I

converted 20 of 28 shots for a
71 percent average.
Both Wahama and Point
Pleasant get back into action
next week as they began the
final week of the regula+
seo:nTuesday, the White
t rtaln Baffalo of
Falcons en e
Putnam and their all-otate
didat ~ ck Noffsinger.
can
e. ""u
Wednesday evening, Point
Pleaanat visits Nitro.
Both teams wind up the
regular season at home next
Friday night with PPHS
entertaining highly-touted
BarboursvUle and Wahama
welcoming Ravenswood.

By JOHN T. KADV
Ualted Preu lDtemaUonal
The - top United Mine .
Workers Unlm official in
Ohio said tOday the " silent
majority" among the nation's
IM,OOO coal miners would
approve the
tentative
agreement reached between
the UMW and the Bitimunous
Coal Operators Associatlon
despite dissatisfaction
expressed by some local
UMW oftictals.
- Meanwhile, roving pickets
were reported at a non·union
coal operation today in
Jefferson County.
The Ohio Coal and Construction Co. at Rayland
along the Ohio River resumed
operations {oday after being
shut down since' the strike
· staf\ed.

1160 north of US 35.
The patrol said an auto
operated by DaMy 0 . Logue,
1 '!1, Vinton, hit the rear end of
a vehicle driven by Ruby R.
Marcum, 22, Vinton
1 Taken to the Holzer
Medical Center for treatment
of injuries were Mtchael R.
Marcum, 25, Vinton, and
James Waller , 31, GaUipobs,
passengers m the Marcum
car. Logue was cited for ,
failure to stop witHin the

I
I
1
I

assured dear distance. There
was moderate damage.
Brent A. Clark, 16,
Gallipolis, was mjured in an
acc ident at 10·24 p.m.
Saturday on SR 588, east of
milepost 5 in Green Twp.
The patrol sa1d tbe Clark
car going east struck an icy
spot in the roadway causing
his car to fishtail into a
vehicle operated by Earl E.
Neal, 37, Gallipolis.
,
Followmg the impact, the
Clark car struck a ditch then
overturned. 'J'l1ere was heavy

By KENN1:111 R. CLARK
United Press IDternational
Rdcks and bullets flew on
the picket lines and coalstarved Midwestern utilities
scrambled for anything
burnable
Monday
as
increasing numbers of
disgruntled UMW miners
damned the very contract
their
leadership
was
preparing ro sell them.
Eighty-five days deep into
the roal strike, few rould
book odds for or against the
pact designed to end it.
"This contract lS rotten
from the word go," fumed
Gene Oiler, president of an
Ohio UMW local.
" lt's.pretty bad. It's pretty
bad," sa1d Bill Cray, another
local officer, "I don't think it
wUl be ratified, but I don't
know who Is really going ro
back tilL• thing and who is

not."

~!!;~ge.

He added that if supply
goes down to 15 days and is
still in a declining stage,
homes will also be affected.
"To the extent practicable,
those customers proVIding
services which are essential
to the public health and
safety will be spared the
rotating blackouts," he said.
The utility executive
stressed that the energy alert
must remain on, regardless
of tentative agreements or
other reported settlements of
the coal striker until
deliveries of coal are be10g
received at power plants on a
steady basis . He further
pointed out that even with an
end to the strike it cculd take
as long as 20 days to get
substantia l amounts of coal to
the pla nts.

By United Presa!Dternational
MEDINA, OHIO-A FORMER MIAMI University
freshman charged with the mass murder of his parents and
two brothers went on trial today in Medina County Common
Pleaa Court before a three-judge panel.
Michael Swihart, 19, Brunswick, is charged with one count
of aggravated murder, three counts of murder and one count of
aggravated arson. He has been in jail without bond since being
charged last Oct . 25 - two days after Ibe four members of his
family were found 'dead in their home.
TRUCK DRIVER MILANO
CLEVELAND
MARTENJUK wept when a judge placed him on five years'
probation, instead of jailing him for three to 10 years, for the
salt overdose death of Martenjuk 's tl-yearo(lld foster son.
Martenjuk, 34, Cleveland, last Jan. II was cmvicted of
involuntary manslaughter in the death of Robert W. Arnold.
The boy died last Aug. 23 after being taken to a hospital
suffering from severe .Wmach pains, vom11ing and
convulsions.
ELKINS, W: VA. - ERIC WALTON, THE ALLEGED
"Ohio Valley e&lt;&gt;nnection" in an international drug ring, sat
stoically pollee officers took the stand ro testify agalllSt him in
a cmspiracy trlal. Walron, 26, a Wheeling resident who once
lived in Belmont County, Ohio, is charged with e&lt;&gt;nspiracy to
deliver drugs in a large-scale operation.
A Jury of 10 men and two women was seated in the U. S.
District Court ro hear the trtal.

operated by !!icky E. Clark,
At 3· 45 p.m. Sunday on the
21, Racine . There was w. T. Watson Rd. five tenths
moderate damage .
of a mile north of us "" '"
White was Cited to Meigs Gallia County,carsdr1ven by
County Court for failure to Billy F. Hunter, 51, Vinton,
yield the right of way.
and Robert L. Saunders, 25,
Another Meigs County Gallipolis,
stdeswiped
accident occurred at 6:5(1 causingslightdamagetoboth
p.m . Sunday on SR 7 at the vehicles.
junctiOn of US 33 where .
A deer was killed in an
Martin E
Seehg, 20. accident at 6:5(1 p.m. on SR
Pomeroy, lost control of his 325, one and one tenth mUes
car which ran off the road- eastoiSRIBO. Thepatrolsaid
way striking a guardrail. He the animal ran into the path
was charged with speed for of a car driven by Jeffery H.
conditions.
Burger , 19, Rt. 3, Gallipolis.

DETRoiT- A FEDERAL JUDGE SAYS THE Detroit
Pnlice pepartment's afflnnative action promotion Jli'OIIram is
uncOnstitutional because it discriminates against white
officers and pou!d "sow seeds of internal hatred."
The 60-page ruling Monday by Chief U. S. Dis!rict Judge
Fred Kaess marked tile first time a federal court has labeled a
big city pollee department's afflnnative action program
unconstitutional. It drew an angry reaction from Detroit
Mayor Coleman Young and city attorneys said tlley would
appeal. .
WASHINGTON - FEDERAL RESEARCHERS SAY
sugar.food TV commercials are Inherently unfair and
deceptive, and the result Ia !hat at any one time Americans are
walking around with I bllllon unfilled cavities in their mouths.
A cenlral Issue in the Federal Trade Coouniflslon staff
proposal to ben sugary TV rommerciala aimed at children Ia
- the question of whether a child 15 any match for a $400 million
advertising blitz.

SEE WHArS IN STORE
.
THE LimE GUYS

HACKENSACK, N. J. - A SUPERIOR COURT JUDGE
will question 18 potential jurors today on their mov!&lt;&gt;tloing
· habits in lhe trial of a doctor charged with killing hospital

* Smart Spring Styles

patients with overdosea of tile Illll8Cle relaunt curare.
A tentative panel was seated Monday after 19 other pe&lt;&gt;ple
were ,~ during lengthy questioning about their
knowledge of tile murder case against Dr. Marlon E.
,Jaocalevlcli.
'

for Easter

*2, 3 and 4 piece Suits
* Sailor Suits

No charges were

A Meigs County accident
occurred at 5:10 p .m .
Saturday on Foreot Run Rd.
at TR 403 State troopers said
a vehicle driven by Eli D.
White, 57, Miner~vllle, turned
left mto the path of a vehicle

Few of their district
leaders a'greed with the
crillclsm after a 5'h -hour
briefing on the new contract
with tile Bituminous Coal
Operators
Association
Monday in Washington , but
gloom rode 10 their ranks as
they emerged .
"Everybody's greedy and
wants more,'' said Lou Antal,
president of DistriCt 5 in
western Pennsylvania. ''How
can you get more tf there LSD't
any more?"
"I'm a little nwnb,, said
Otue Barton, of District 6 in
Ohio. " It's not going to be
easy. It's going to be an all
around tough hattie."
UMW Vice Pr"'ident Sam
Church was one of the few
o ptimists
predi c tin g
ratification of the pact.
" You hear the people who
are dissatisfied," he said.
" The silent maJority doesn't

rnent, etc."

*Toddler Sizes 2 to 4

FROM

\

NEW YORK - JEB MAGRUDER, ONE-TIME White
Houle aide and now a dlvintty student, says Richard Nixm
planned to perpetuate his presidency by clloom. successors
&lt;:aJIIble of -destroying their opposition.
Masruder is the latest WatergatepersonalltY'to publish his
ven1on of the hlltorlc events which led to their own
IJnprlaoiunent and Nixon's resignation. The book, "From
Power to Peace," Ia to be publlabed in May. Tbe Trib obtained
an advance copy of the manuscript and detailed lt in today's
edltlona.

MANAGUA, NICARAGUA-NICARAGUAN

IN POMEROY

Glllek approved the C&lt;llltract the other representatlves he
but Lamb was oposed to it. talked with Monday had the
"I think the majocity wm same opimon.
Oiler, who said he has so
approve the contract," sa1d
one UMW Local President far gone over JUsl nine of the
who did not wish to be 125 pages of the e&lt;&gt;ntract, sa1d
identified. "Th"'e pe&lt;&gt;ple are a stri ke clause " dtshungry . And remember they . crtminates agamst minare gomg to be voting by ers" because 1t would alsecret ballot. I think it wUl be low a coal operator to flre
any picketer the operator
ratified.''
But tllere is opposition ro m1ght . r ecogni&gt;e, while less
well-known miners would go
the e&lt;&gt;nlract in District 6.
Gene Oiler, president of wnolested.
He said the miners were
Meigs County Locall886, sa1d
also
dissallsf1ed w1th a cost of
representatives from about
adJUS\IIlent.
living
20 locals talked informally tn
Oiler
sa1d the local
Bellaire Monday where they
representa.tives
who met
met at district headquarters
while picking up copies of the Monday would "bring out
their opposition" loudly at a
tentative settlement.
"Ttns contract is rotten district conference about the
from the word go," he proposal expected to take
Wednesday
or
declared, and said nearly all place

•

Thursday.
Other Ohio UMW officials
UPI talked with also were
unhappy with the proposal.
"It's pretty bad, It's pretty
bad," said Bill Cray, vice
president of UMW Local 1957
tn Vmron County. "I don't
think 1t will be ratified. But I
don't know who IS really
gomg to back this thing and
who 15 not."
Sieve Elliot, president of
UMW Local!323 10 Coshocton
County, said he' d1d not hke
the e&lt;&gt;ntract because It does
not make up the funds lost
durmg the strike by some
UMW retirees.
"They're the ones that built
th1s union," said Elliott. " We
have bee n out for 84 days
nght now and we should stay
out another 84 days until we

TROOPS

STORMED a university Monday nlgbt,ldllln&amp; three lludents,
and battled against masked
.

ln!llans

beating drums and
·

1Contlnuell on pig&amp; 10)

have much ro say "
As the umon leaders
prepared to ta ke their
campaign for rallfication inro ,
the field , vocal mlnorilles did
their talking with a torch m
mmois and with rocks and
bullets in Alabama .
About 200 miners set fire ID
railroad ties and ripped up
rails on a hoe leadtng to the
Illinois Power Company 's
Baldwtn plant.
Alabama state police
escorted non-UMW workers
ro safety after nearly 100
rock-tossing miners shut
down the Crawford Mirung
Co. when it tried to r eopen
Three bullets hit a company
vehicle, but no arrests were
made because pollee said
they could not identify the
gunman.
In Kentucky, Robert Dean
Prater, a 23-yearo(l)d Pike
County miner , was arrested
after he and several others
were caught stoning a coal
truck.
While"th'e mill'ers wrangled
with their leader.slup, coalhungry Midwestern utilities
remamed under seige and
schools continued to feel tbe
pmch .
In West Virginm, where
coal stocks plununeted below
the 22-&lt;lay level, desperate
measures were underway.
1 'They're
out
there
scraping it, pushmg lt into
piles, and digging it out of the
mud, if they can, ro see
what's burnable and what's
not," said Lyle Corder of
Monongnhela Power Co.
In Tennessee , TVA assisted by delivery of nonUMW mal and by pw-chase of
more than 400,000 rons from
Western fields - held lts
stocks at a precarious 24-&lt;tay
level, and in Ohio, Toledo
Edison Pr"'ident Joltn P .
Williamson urged cusromers
not to relax in their
conservation efforts.
The Kentucky Public
SerVlce Co. proceeded with
plans for a mandatory
electrical cutback and the
state's
larg~st
utility
prepared ro turn ID high
sulfw- coal to stretch 1ts
supplies.

CLOSED
A part of former West
Malo Street uoder the
Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge
has been closed to traffic
due to a gasoline leak.
Pomeroy Fire Chief
Charles Leaper said a leak
had developed In an un·
derground storaKe tank at
the Certified Service
Station.
Gasoline apparenlly ran
uuder tbe road aad down
Into the old West Main
Street area, Legar said.
Gaaoltne left In the
storage laak was pumped
out and a new tsnlr. Is being
lnatalled loday ,
Tbe village placed sand
over lhe Weal Main Slreet
area
as
a
safety
precaulioa.

COMMISSIONER ILL
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to the
rounty rommissloners office
at 11:58 a .m. Monday for
Commissioner James Roush,
who collapsed there. He was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital for treatment and
released. Roush became ill
later and returned to the
hospital where he was ad·
mUted about midaight.

today kept up a media
barrage to urge cm1inulng
conservation
Columbus &amp; Soll\hern Ohio
Electric Co., with a JuU page
ad in the Columbus cttlzenJow-nal, says "the coal strike
is not over.
"At Columbus &amp; Southern ,
we're pleasad that a tentallve
agreement
ha s
been
reached," the ad said. " We
hope that this agreement wm
mark the first step in the long
process toward resumption of
normal coal deliveries. Yet
ow- optimism is clouded by
the fact that our present
supply of coal is low, and the
time nec-essary to bring the
c'Oul • lrlke to an end will be a
time when we will stU! be
rely10g largely on present
coal supplies."

FIU.een Cents
Vol . 2M, No. 222

Ratification
road is tough

TilE OH-KAN COIN CLUB made plans for Its 15th annual ccin show to be held (rom 9
a.m. ro,5 p.m. Sunday at the Holiday Inn at Kanauga when it met at Burkett's Barber Shop
in Middleport Monday night. Officers oftheclubwill take a leading role m the staging of the
annual show. They include: seated : John Bryan , sergeant-at-anns, and DoMa Davidson,
show registrar ; standmg from the left Edward Burkett, president ; Felix Alkire, vice
president; Roger Wamsley, secretary, an.d David Horton, treasure r. The show --:hiCh Will
feature a display of upward of a quarter milhon dollars worth of rare co ins, paper currency,
stamps, medals and related Items is open to the public

First reading okayed
on 4~2 council vote ·
By a 4-2 vote, Middleport $700,000.
Cle rk-Treas urer
Gene
Village Council meeting in
Grate
read
a
letter
from
the
regular session Mo.nda y
mght, approved first readmg Bureau of Unemployment m
ol an ordmance to provide reference t o payments
mcreased penalties for ovcr- r equired from politiCal
parkmg at a village parking subdivisiOnS in regard to
un employment of village
meter.
Charles Mullen suggested workers. As of J a n I,
the ordinance, whtch if glVen polihcal subdiVIsions must
final approval, w1ll provide a pay the full cost of benefits to
$1 penalty for parkmg employes.
However, subdiviSions can
overtime at a meter , if paid
withm the first 24 hours of the pay a percenta~e of the
violation and an add11lonal $2
penalty if not pa1d within the
first 24 hours a fter the
violation.
Councilmen Marvin Kelly
and William Walters voted
against approving the or-

dinance and Councilmen
Mullen, Allen Lee King, Carl

WASHINGTON ( UPl ) - A
ll&gt;ugh r atification road lies
ahead for a proposed settlement to the natiOnwide coal
stnke, some United Mine
Workers Un1on distri ct
officials mdicated Monday
alter a briefi ng by nKlional
leaders.
" If members in Di•irlct 12
are willing to take the lime
and evaluate th1s ctmtract .
I'd say iliere Is a chance for
rut1ficat10n, although I would
say at 1s not fl good chance,"
sa1d
John
Hen ry
of
Lewistown, lll.
Henry said his district has
abo ut 15,000 voting members
and would look over the
t e nt ative
agr eeme nt
carefuU y, even If tl means
marathon sessions.
But nHltona l secretarytreasurer William Esselstyn
sa id
he
thought
the
guaranteed pensiOn provision
was: the best part of the

72 babies
examined
at cl:iitics

Seve n well baby clinics
have been he ld since
Initiation of that ne w
pro
gra m for the Me igs
payroll. There was some
in- County Health Department
confusion on
the
last October .
terpretation of that prov1s1on
From October through
as to whether 11 pertams to
the first $6,000 of the village December, the seven clinics
pa yroll or ._the total annual attracted 72 patienta maldng
85 visita, A total of 73
payroll .
was
It was agreed to table the im mun iz attons
administered
bringing
57
matte r unt1l a clea r In~
children
ro
the
completed
terpretatton can be secured
from Solicitor Bernard Fultz. immum&gt;ation le vel, Mrs.
Co uncil a lso ta bled a Sharon lhle, R.N., county
request for a new contract clinic nurse, reports.
Procedur"' and laboratory
( Con1inued on P88• 10)
tests done included eightythree history a nd physical
examinations, two developmental screening t.,.ts, 19
tuberculin skin tests, 84llrine
checks for sugar or infec\ion,
46 blood tests for iron
defiCiency anemia and two
newborn blood tests for
protein Imbalance.
Sheriff Proffitt commended
A total of 66 conditions was
the a lert c1t1zens for in· sc reened by the clin ic
formatiOn instrunl)entalm the pediatrician
with
Iron
apprehensiOn .
deficiency anemia, ear
Shenff Proffitt said today infection, upper respiratory
the department has made an mfec tlon , urinary tract
arrest in th ~ Thursday Infection, various skin
break10g and entering of an ciJ!ldltions and problems with
unoccupied structure owned the growth of bones being the
by Norma Wilson , East Main majority of conditions fo1111d.
Street, Pomeroy According Sixteen referrala were made
to t he report, entry was to other special clinics.
gained by break10g out a rear
At the present time, there Is
window .
no charge for the clinic
Sherifrs lnvest1garor Gary services, however, the
Wolfe has fil ed charges department is working
agains t Blaine Qualls, toward a sliding fee scale,
Pomeroy. Qualls has been (that Is ) payment for
released on recognizance . servtces according ro the
bond pendmg hearing In amount of family income .
. Meigs County Court later this UntU the scale is completed,
week. Sheriff Proffitt reports clinics
are
accepting
Ronnie WiUiams has also donations. At preaent, clinics
heen charged with theft in- are state flUlded, but funding
volving another Unoccupied is only lemporary.
house owned by Norma'
A pediatrician
from
Wilson. That house located on O'Bleness Hospital In Athens
East Main Street, was a lso serves at the clinics and
entered last Th nrsdey. In- provides a thorough physical
vestigator Ga ry Wolfe exammatlon for children
discovered a theft had oc- through 21. Records are kept
curred there while in- confidential.
·
vestigahng
the
other
Anyone interested in
breaking a nd entering. having their child attend a
WUII~ms was also released clinic Ia asked to contact the
on recognizance bond.
department at 992-7160 or 992-

Charges fi~ed
•
zn theft case

Horky and Dewey Horton
Meigs Coumy Sheriff
approved the first readmg. James J . Proffitt reports
Mullen said mcre'asing the James Kritschner, 19, New
penalty to $1 from the present Haven, W. Va., Warren C.
5(1 cents would tend to en- Fields, 18, Hartford, W. Va.,
co urage motonsts to deposit and a Mason youth have been
cc ins in the parking meters, if charged with the theft of
nothing else.
empty pop bottles taken from
Supporters also com- J ay Mar Coal Company
mented the increase would property Saturday even10g
bring in more money to the The two adults have also been
village . Opponent William charged with contributmg to
Walters said the increase the delinquency of a minor,
would hurt business and
Sheriff Proffitt advises his
encourage shoppers to go to office was notified by two
other towns or locations even citizens, who reported there 1
where there is no parking had been three subjects
charge.
taking pop bottles at the Jay
Mayor Fred Hoffman Mar
Coal
Company .
reported he has the plans for Authorities were given a
the plaMed nursing home to description of the vehicle and
be constructed in lower 1ts license number.
Middleport . He said the
Officers were notified, but
village request for $60,000 the vehicle was not located
through the Appalachian until after the trio redeemed
Regional Council to provide a the empty bottles at Krogers.
sewage facility for the area
Pomeroy Police spotted the
has been given top priority by car just west of Krogers, and
the state and has gone ro stopped it The driver, J ames
Washington, D C. for ap- Kritschner WKS arrested by
proval.
the Pomeroy police lor
The nursmg home would be driving while under the inan advantage for the town fluence He will appear 10
economically, Mayor Hoff- Meigs County Co~rt to an-,
man said, m that it would swer the petty \heft and
employ 55~ persons and contributing charge along
With an aMual payroU of with a DWI charRe.
I ('

•

get what we want. "
Should the contract be
approved, says Leonard
Pnakovich, pr.,.ident of the
Oh1o V.Uley Coal Association,
headquartered
in
St.
ClairW!IIe, "Coal should be
flowing within a 24-hour
penod."
Pnakovic h Mond.ay
disputed claims by the state's
maJoc power ccmpanies that
getting coal production t&gt;ack
ro normal would take 10 to 15
days.
"Coal should be flowmg
within a 2~our period," said
PnakoVICh. "A lot of the coal
can be loaded directly into
barges or railroad cars In 24
hours, after a three shill
operation, a mine can ship
&lt;&gt;ut a 10,000-ton unit Ira in ."
Meanwhile, Ohio utilitles

en tine

at

Oiler feels pact rotten

Supplemental

Weddle, Melame Weese.

conlract. You can sit around
and listen to a lot of"things.
One guy wiD e&lt;&gt;mplain about
this and another guy will
complam about something
else . I don't care what
conlract you take to them,
somebody will be griping
about 11.
" But I think the silent
majority will accept the contract," satd Guzek. "I think
it's a fair one. I don't like
everything 10 it myself. But
you don't get everything you
want . No body does and
nobody ever will."
Guzek and UMW District 6
International Representative
Bill Lamb were both
members of the Bargaining
Counc il which approved
sending the contract out ro
the mmers for rauncatlon.

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, Feb. ~. 1978

Three persons hurt

persons were mjured
I mThree
six traffiC aCCidents inI vest,gated
over the weekend
by the Gall1a-Me1gs Post
II 'State
Highway, Patrol.
Two persons were mjured
at 4.10 p.m. Saturday on SR

John Guek, president of
UMW
District
6
headquartered in Bellaire
and with 16,000 members in
eastern Ohio and the
Northern Panhandle of West
Virginia, told UPI he felt the
agreement, although not
perfect, was "a fair
contract."
"The miners now have a
choice.'' said Guzek. "Before
they didn't have a choice.
They have lost all this time
due to not having a contract.
They
blamed
(UMW
Presulent ) Arnold Miller and
the BCOA. Now if tbey want
ro con1inue the strike, it's up
to them, They have the
choice.
" I think they will vote lor
it," said Guzek. " I most
certainly do. I think it's a fair

I

Blacks 47-21 lead at intermisslon
Scott H~wsrds' 12 points
topped Point Pleasant in the
half followed by J elf Holland
with 11 while Artie Vaughan
and Tfm Newberry notched 10
markers each.
WahamawaspacedbyGreg
Blessing and Bob Bamlu in
the first two quarters with slx
POINT PLEASANT (94)
points apiece.
FG .FT.PF .TP
Rick Bamltz .Wle the show
7-11 1-1 4 15
In the third stanza by hltUng Vaughan
7-H
0-1 2 14 '
on four of five field goal at- Newberry
7-16
11-2 2 14
tempts in the quarter but the Howard
u
7-3 4 13
Big Blacks still outscored the Bibbee
4'.1
3-4
I 11
Bend Area quintet by a 2H6 Holland
3-3
2-2
0
8
margin to lengthen their lead Stepp
2-2
4-4
2
8
to ~ going into the final Minton
].3 3-5 0 ~
eight minutes.
Vaughan
2-1 Il-l I 4
Reserves finished out the Workman
H~O 2
contest for Point Pleasant as Martin
37-32
20-28 16 94
the race for the wire became a TOTAI..'!
scoring contest::-.. between
Wahama's Rick Bamltz and WAHAMA (63)
Kelvin Honaker and PPHS's
FG .FT .PF . TP
Bryan Stepp, Jay Mlflton nd Barniu
8-18 1-2 3 17
John Bibbee.
Honaker
4-10 2-3 5 10
Stepp and Honaker even- Blessing_
~ 0-1 3 8
tually \von out with eight BlllZ8rd
3-10 2-4 3 B
points each in the period but Bam!!&gt;
U 2-2 2 . 8
the damage had already been Hobbs
2-7 !;! 5 5
done with the Big Blacks Rawtings
2-2 ~ 2 4
holding a ~ advantage Zuspan
1-2 1-2 I 3
when the final hom sounded. TOTAL
'l/.Q 9,17 24 63
Team statl!tics show the
winners with a 45 percent Score by Quarters:
!234Tot
accuracy mark from the field
6
18 16 23-33
Wahama
on 37 of 82 attempts. At the
24 23 21 26-94
Pt.
Pleasant
free throw ltne the Big Blacks

~~~~~. c~a:~r:'~r;;~~·er~o~ ~~;:r~~~~~ :.~J:~. D~~~tt:

:\H'Ii[l!':f"'1r\'l!\!l)',' f~l
FEBRUARY cLEARANcE DAYs

The

POMERm, OHIO

BY GARY CLAU

I

1
~~---~John Porter, Tracy Riffle,

Faster because your Social Security check is mailed
directly to The Farmers Bank and credited to your
account. Safer because there's no chance of loss or theft.
Surer, because you can be away on vacation or with
loved ones and never ask a favor of anyone. Inquire
today at The Farmers Bank, Pomeroy . Member FDIC.

Farmers Bank

wtth names m r:apttal letters
makmg a ll A's were:
SENIORS - Lois Bailey,
Shelley Chevalier, Sheila
Cro uch , Danny Dudding,
Donnie Dudding , LARRY
FISHER,
Okey
K1ser ,
TERESA MEADOWS, TIM
NEASE. Mike t-/orton, JAYE
ORD, Danny R1f0e, Cheryl
Roseberry, J ohn Sayre, Scott
Souder, Richard Teaford,
RcKanna Walk er, BARB
WHITE , Che r y l Wilson ,
MYRA WOODS.
JUNIORS ~- Rick Ables,
TAMMY BRADFORD, Pam
Brauer, Barbara Buchanan,
Lori Chapman, Becky Crow,
Mel Dailey, Teresa Ervm,
Dave Fmdley, Bill Harris,
BRICE HART, Don Hendncks, Dwight Hill, SETH
HILI., Sharon Hill, Loyal
Holma n, Jeanme Johnson ,
Caro l
Mom s.
BRENT
PATTERSON. Cmdy Patterson, DEBBIE PICKENS,
Mane Pickens, Curt1s Pr1ce,
Dale R1ffle, Ed Roush, Suzy
Scarberry, Kelly Taylor, Jeff
Thornton, K1m Ward, MARY
KAY DEETER, TERRI
ZIRKLE
SOPHOMORES - Me g
Amberg e r,
Tom
Bass,
Cricket Ca rpenter, Steve
Collman, Larry Cund1ff,
JACK DUFFY, Amy F1sher,
Dave Foreman, Pam Ha r den, ROSEMARY HUBBARD, Toni Hudson , Beth
Huffm a n, Brtan Johnson ,
MELISSA IHLE , Cmdy Lee,
Manuel, Tro y..
Carmen
Manuel , James Meadows,
Steve Norton, John Pa'pe,
Perry Snuth, Amy Souder,
Kent Varney.
FRESHMEN - Bonme
Boso, PEGGY BUSH, PAUL
CARDONE , Steve Cucle,
Eddie Duffy, Enc Foster,
J ody Grueser, Eric Harns,
SonJa H11l , Teresa Holsteln,
Armmtha Holter, Della
Johnson, Bob Lee, JANET
MIDDLESWART,
Carl
Morns, Mary Obllz, Kim
Hud son,
CHARLO TTE
PICKENS, Becky Rhodes ,
Ma rk Simpson, Mary Beth
Slavin , Dale Teaford, J uhe
Thoren, Robin
W11son,
JACKIE WOLFE, Paula
Wolfe
Principal Jennings Beegle
has annOunced the Southern
Jumor High School honor roll
for the thtrd s1x weeks
grading lJerwd
Makmg a grade of "B" or
above m all their subJects to
be nanled to the roll were:
EIGHTH - Jenny Manuel,
Melmda Salmons, Rita
Slater, all A's; Bnan Ash,
Den1se Deem, Kenn et h
McHaffie, Kelly Pickens,
Richard Randolph, Lisa
Roush , Randy Tucker and
Kent Wolfe.
SEVENTH - €mdy Evans,
R1chard Hobbs, Bruce
Johnson, David Salmons, all
A's; Kathy Baker , Zane
Beegle, N1ck
Bostick,
Tyrone
Bnnager,
Bnan
Burkhamer,

Silent majOrity will approve pact

'

(Continued from Jllge I)
blackouts on a rotating basiS
from one area to another in
ExtensiOn Area
order
to equallze the hardship
Anyone
havm
g
a
ny
Comnnttee Those attendmg
as
much
as possible.
sugge~110ns
or
would
hke
the F'ebruary 21 meetmg
Heller
pointed
out that only
mformallon
a
bout
the
mcluded Mrs Becky Cotthe
large
industrial
and
e
du
c
atwn
a
l
pr
o
grams
tenll , Mrs. Frances Spencer,
commercial custom ers are
a nd Mrs. Marilyn Spence r. sponsored by the Cooperative
covered by the first three
The group was accompamed Extenswn Service , please
mandatory steps above. &lt;~ The
to the Jackson Area Ex- conta ct the Me~gs County
30anti 25-day curtailment
tensiOn Cen ter by D1ana Extension Of!ice.lt is located
steps
no doubt will force some
Eberts, Me~gs County Ex- in the basement of the County
layoffs,
but 1f we reach the 20Home
Building
on
Mulberry
te ns iOn
Agen t ,
Home
dsy
supply
level and the
Heights
in
Pomeroy
The
Economics
stockpiles
are
still decltning,
telephone
number
IS
992-3895.
The Famtly L1vmg Conthis
step
will
virtually
cerns Committee consist s of
ehminate production at
most plants ana Will auow
______________,
these c ustomers only enough
..:1 •
1 Angie Glenn, Becky Lee, Kim power to maintain eqmpMaynard, Marlene Meagher,
lliiit
Tammy Meadows , Pam

~

"Grand ma, I'm glad you have more t1me to be with mttl"

RACINE - The Southern
H1gh School honor roll lor the
third six weeks grading
per1od has been announced.
Makmg a grade of "B" or
above to be li•ted on the roll

Wahama drops
94-63 battle

3723.
'•

e&lt;&gt;ntract a nd gave " positive

assessment on raUncation .
"I think It's going to go,"
smd Essclstyn
Unde r
the
UMW
co nstilu twn , the uni on's
leadership was required ID
cond uct lhe briefin g.
Dlstnct officials, bicludlng

pr es idents.
secret ory ~
treasurers and lnleruHtlonal

Executive Board members,
we re r equired by the
co nstitutiOn to push for
ratifiCation at meetings back
In U~elr districts .
Th e next s te p in the
ratific ation process
Is
meelin~s with leaders of
vario us loca ls w1thin t he
district
UMW president Arnold
Miller , who d1d not attend the
bncfmg, was said to be
negQhotlng a contract for
mine construcUon worke rs.
Earlier In the day, In the
same hotel room, Joseph
Brennan, hend of the Bituminous Coal Operarors Association, gave a S1m1}ar briefing
to about 80 senior executives
of
companies
and
associa tions r e presenting
companies covered by the
natmnal contract.
Brennan srud afterward no
action on acceptance was
made and he was uns ure
when such a vote would be
taken.
Tom Gaston , repre!ICnting
the IO,()()t).member Western
Kentucky District, said the
meetmg was pn~ductive and
" I think It's going real well."

DWI charged
after wreck
James R . Pooler , 33,
Reedsville, was cited for OWl
following an accident at II 10
p.m . Monday on SR 246, east
of milepost one.
The Gallla-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol said
Poole lost control of his car
which ran off the right side of
the roadway then overturned.
Pooler was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital for
treaiment of minor injuries.
There was heavy damage to
his car.
A second Meiga County
accident occurred on SR 124
at TR 1105 where a vehicle
driven by William E. Rizer,
5(1, Syracuse, pulled into the
path of a vehicle operated by
Ca rol J . Bush, 22, Racine.
There
was
moderate
damage. Rizer was charged
with !allure to yield the right
of way. ·
A Gallia County accideat
occurred at 6:30 p.m. on SR
Ill, west of milepost !I where
vehiCles driven by Jamea A.
Westfall, 51, and Virgil
Hatfield , 51 , both of
Galllpolls, collided. There
was minor damage and no
citation was Issued.
The accident occurred
when the Westfall car started
to pass just as the Hatfield
car was making a left turn,

WARNING ISSUED
Syracuse Police Chief
Milton Varian announced
today he has received several
complaints about do11
running loose in the villa&amp;e,
especially at night. Varian
warned that dogs mlllt be
ronfined at au times or
violarors will be taken to
e&lt;&gt;urt.

�Rio repeats, prepare
for District 22 action·

Den Talk
B)'GI'elllalley
The Dlvllloo of WUdlife has legal authority to protect all
wUd anlmala in Ohio. For oome speCiea this legal authority
reprt!llellts an Important form of protection, rut for all animals
additional !011111 of protecUon are necessary. To understand
why, several thlnga m1181 be considered.
WHAT IS A "WILD ?" Ohio wUdllfe laws protect tholle
speciea falllllg within the legal definition ol "wild animals."
Animals which the Division of Wildlife can legally protect are
vertebrates (mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, and
lishea), crustaceana (which Include crayfiSh aoo sowbugs),
mollusks (such assnalls and fresh-water mussels) and aquaUc
insects (whicb include hellgrammites, caddis rues, and
may!lles.).
Examples of organisms which are not classlfled as wild
anlmal!i, and which therefore do not rece1ve protection, are
terrestrial Insects (such as . bttterfiles, moths, praying
mantises, and aickets), spiders, anneUds (which include
earthworms and leeches), roondworms, and mOB! mlcroscoplc

'

Dan Purcell and Greg
James combmed for 55 pomts
Monday mght In leadmg the
R10 Grande College Redmen
to a hard-fought 95-19 MidOhio Conference Tournament

cham ptonsht p over the
Cedarville Yellow Jackets.
From the moment that
Skipper Johnson h1t an 18-foot
baseline jumper to open the
contest unt1l Dr Clyde Evans
presented the tournament

trophies to Coach Art
Lanham and his team the
large crowd was treated to a

DAN Purcell (2.1) scored a career-htgh 33 pomts
Monday mght to pace Rto Grande College to a 91-79
VIctory over Cedarville's Ye llow Jackets tn the
champiOnship game of the 1978 Mtd.()hio Conference postseason tournament. Jacket defender on left ts Jeff Reep
(35 )

superb evemng of basketball
at RIO's Lyn Center
The Intensity of the
contest did oot sideline
sport smanship as both
teams displayed a type of
clean play that awed most
of veteran basketball fans.
In the first half only seven
personal fouls were wh1stled
by the officials resultmg tn
two free throw attempts by
the Redmen and none by the
Jackets.
Foll owin g
J ohn so n' s
opemng goal the score was
deadlocked for the only tune
m the contest on a fielder by
Jeff Reep
'
W1th 18 57 showing on the
~l ock lUntor Dan Pur~ell
began h1s super effort w1th
a dtsplay of penmeter
shootmg over the Cedarville
defense that resulted m a
game htgh 33 pomts, a fme
defens•ve game, capped by a
near perfect seven for etght
at the charity strtpe m the

second half.
Purcell hit seven of his
lint elghl shots from the
15-18 foot range aod
finished the first half wllh
18 polnlil with Greg James
adding 10, and Gil Prtee
seven.
The Redmen raced off to a
qutck 14~ lead, saw the
Yellow Jackets narrow the
gap to one point (11-16) with
\3 mmutes remammg, and
then stave off nine different
assa ults by the vtsltors m the
first half to emerge wtlh a 4134 lead at mtermisston
·
Enc Mounts , a sha rpshooting fre shman, swished
10 points tn the first half with
6-5 Dan Reep and M1ke Allen
each ch1ppmg m each for the
VISitors
The second half was touch
and go for the first five
mmutes as Cedarvtlle's 6-1
Mark Schwenke and 6-5 Kmn
Kaufman ralhed their team
ttme and agatn to surge

w1thm three pomts only to see
Mark Swam, J ames, Purcell,

or Pnce hit a key bucket to
ward off the ra!hes.
AI the 16 ·34 mark the
spread reached mne pomts
157-48) and remamed there
until Pnce's goal made It a
ten pomt gap at 65-55 With
remaining
Constant pressure on

13·40

Purcell by the Yellow
Jacket defense to cool htm
down resulled in hili eight
gratis shots with seven
splitting the cord•

•

Rebounds favored R1o
Grande 31-30 With Greg
James hauling down 12 and a
22 pomt scormg effort
Jeff Reep snared mne
bounds for Cedarville and
contnbuted 13 points as SIX
Yellow Jackets hit double
d,ig1t sconng.
Mounts had 20, Jeff Reep
13, while Dan Reep, Mike
Allen, Kun Kaufman, and
Schwenke all added 10
Purcell enjoyed
his
greatest scormg game wtth 33
points, Greg James had 22,
and G1l Price 16 to lead the
crucial Rio Grande victory.
The Redmen converted 15
of 20 at the foul line while
Cedarville dropped in nme of
13 attempts.
Rio Grande now has a week
to savor the champiOnship
trophies of the MDC and the
MDC Tournament before
Immg up agamst W1lmmgton
College Monday night tn
quest 'Of that long overdue
tnp to Kansas C1ty for the
Nattonal NAJA tourney
'flie box score:
CEDARVILLE (79) - J
Reep 53 13 , D. Reep 5o 10,
Potier 1·0-2; Moonls 9 2 20,

Pnce, Swam, and JameB

took some of the heat off
Purcell as this trio accounted
for 28 points m that furwus
second half as Cedarville
countered w1th Kaufman ,
Schwenke, Mounts, and Jeff
Reep who npped m 35
markers.
, W1th the score standing at
116-13 at the I :02 mark both
coaches cleared their benches and the reserves
mopped up
The victory marked the
second in three outings for
R1o Grande over the Jackets
thts season as the teams split
two conference games, Rio
wmmng ~. and Cedarville
capturmg an 82-79 vtctory
Cedarville had pulled off a
small mtracle Saturday night
by mpp1ng Malone College 7669 m Canton where VIctories
by VISllmg teams are seldom

seen
The Yellow Jackets thus go
to the sidelmes for 1977-18
w1th a !mal record of 14-12
whtle Rto Grande is ahve and
healthy w1th a '!JJ-7 mark as
they prepare to host
Wilmington College next
Monday mght m the first Htckman 0 2-2 , Allen 5 0-10,
round play of the Distnct 22 Stnetwa1ter 1.0.2, Kaufman
NAJA
Tournament
4 2-10 , Schwenke 5-0 10
TOTALS 35-9-79.
Monday nlgbl's shooting
RIO GRANDE (91)- Prtce
exhibition by both teams
64- 16,
James
11022,
was Uke a page torn from
Johnson 1 0 2, Swam 3-3-9,
an NBA game as the
Purcell 13 7 33, Phelps 2 o 4;
Ntday 2 0 4, Johnson 0 1-l.
Redmen unued 38 of 67
TOTALS 38-15-91.
,
goals for a 56.7 pel. and
Halftime score .
Rto
Cedarville fired tn 35 of 6Z
Grande 41 , Cedarvtlle 34
for a dandy 56.4 1"'1

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAI)I
UPI Sporta Editor
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla (UP! I - One of the things Btlly
Martin always does before the start of each new season ts have
a private httle talk With h1s troops and he hasn't done that yet
because he's wa1tmg.
He's wruting until he gets the camp cleaned out, unttl he
dec1des who goes and who stays , and when that's all settled six
weeks from now, he'll get his world champiOn Yankees all
oogether in the clubhouse and mform them that Once Is Not
Enough.
Martm Mil remmd h1s players that people have short
memories along With the irritating habit of askmg what have
you done lately?
In his playmg days with the Yankees, Martin was w1tlt hve
pennant-wmners and four world championship units, so that
whatever he has to say m that regard comes from personal
expenence and not from something he read 1n a book.
"Last year ts history ," he says, looking at his defending
champs from his seaton the bench. "It's all over. We have to
forget about 1t The most important thing I'm going to have to
do 1s make sure Ulere's no comp1acency before it even begins.''
Although the 1977 season is behind hun, some of the scars be
p1cked up durmg 1t, those mternal ones nobody can really see,
probably will stay w1th Martm forever.
" Last year was the most pressure I ever felt m baseball," he
says "Tl\e outcome was fantastic, but 1t was a tough season
and the playoffs were tougher yet. By the time the World
Senes canoe around, 11 was an anti-dim8JI oo everythmg else."
As successful as everythmg turned out fo r him and his ball
club last year, Martin prefers to store tt m the back _of hiS mmd
someplace and concentrate mstead on the one commg up For
him it is a brand new slate, clean and unmarred, and there are
no P,.oblems Mth George Steinbrenner, Reggie Jackson or
anyone else
"Reggie and I got everything settled last year," he says.
"He's an outstanding ballplayer and I respect his ability. He
understands me and I understand hun. Everythmg IS perfl&gt;ctly
okay between us "
The way Martin looks at tt, h1s b1ggest problem will be his
pitchers.
"Cutting them will be the toughest JOb," he says "The rest
will take care of 1tself "
Not necessarily At vanous times last season , four Yankee
players, Thurman Munson, Mi ckey Rtvers, Ed Figueroa and
Roy White, expressed a des1re to pla y somewhere else. More
recently, Cy Young wmner Sparky Lyle sa1d the same thing
and Ken Holtzman IS far from thrtlled e1tlt~ r simply sttting
around
Despite all this, Martm doesn 't see any problems on the
horizon.
"I think everything's downhill now ," be says. "If we get out
m front, there'll be no catching us "
He was playmg for one of the teams along w1th fellows like
Whitey Ford, Yogi Berra, Elston Howard, D1ck Howser and
Munson while B1Uy Hunter, Toby Harrah , Kurt Bevacqua , Pat
Corrales and AI Rosen were on the other s1de .
At one pomt m the contest which Martin's team won, 13-10, a

grapefrUit was substituted for the baseball and Rosen, who
was up at the tmne, blasted the seeds out of 1\, giVmg you some
idea what kmd of game 11 was
But Martm, playmg center field, gave 1t everythmg he had
and commg mto second base, he barreled mto Bevacqua trymg
to bresk up a double play That's how he canoe up with tbe
bruise on his knee
' 'Playing was great," he says. " It was fun There's nothing
that can compare With playmg but all of a sudden you realize
you can't play anymore Talk about a downer. That's an aUtime downer .''

NORTHFIELD
NORTHF IELD , Ohio
(ln&gt;J) -- Candy D 1'ravel
urged to the front at the
cecJ, Jarter pole and held
f

1

unner·u p

Henery's

O:loolce lor a head victory m
the featured $2,200 pace at
N• ·thfle!d Park Monday
dgjll.

•

The wumer, driven by Ron
Rtchatdson, covered the mtle
m 2 09 2 5 for her second
trtumrl 111 her last three
;tarts Jnd returned $9.20,
$3 60 and $3 80. Nellie High
flmshed thtrd.
A crowd of 2,738 wagered
$408 ,811.

the c ountry~ won \ts 31st

Southeastern Conference
ba sketball champwnshlp
Monday night with a 18-67
VICtory over Georgia, but

mstead of savormg the
v1ctory, Hall's mind was
spmmng dreamy thoughts
about St Louis - s1te of the
NCAA fmals next month.
Not only d1d Hall deny the
No, 1 spot was an incentive
for his team, he went one step
further : "In fact, we'd rather

not have It (No I rating) ," he
said "l 'm more concerned

about how we' re piaymg
when we enter the NCAA
to urnament. There are
several teams who have the
talent to go all the way, and
we are one of them."

Tournament play starts
POMEROY
Korn,
Salisbury Fourth and Fifth,
and Salisbury S1xth all picked
up openmg round w1ns in the
Me1gs Local grade basketball
to urnament at Me1gs Jumor

20, Pomeroy-Soulsby 13
Salisbury Ed Dill ten, J ack
Welker s1x, and Demse
Stegall and Chuck Blake each
two
Pom•roy
Soulsby :
Vmcent Kmght nme, Chris
Shank two and Sean Do1dge
two
THIRD GAME - Pomeroy
- Perrin S1xth Grade 22,
Salisbury 24 Salisbury
Barry O'Brien and Jack
Howett each seven, Jay
Evans, s1x, Fred Colburn
two, and Randy Carl and
M1ke Kennedy each one.
Pomeroy - Perrin Nick
Rtggs thirteen, John Perrin

Htgh Monday mght.
Next games are Thursday
mght begmnmg at 6·30 when
Rutland Fourth and F1fth
plays
bradbury-Cassell
Followmg will be PomeroyBarton against Bradbury m
Stxth grade competition
Followmg are the results
and scorers of last night's
games .
First game - Pomeroy Korn 30, Bradbury-Thomas
Fourth and Fifth 26. mne.
Pomeroy· Brett Korn ten,
Bnan Korn nme, Kelly
W1secup nine, and Paul Duff'
two.
Bradbury - Thomas.
NEW YORK (UPI) - KenSteve Cro w fourteen , Danny
lucky
is No. I agam m the
Thomas and Shawn Baker
UP!
college
basketball poll,
each s1x
but
if
the
trend
of recent
SECOND
GAME
weeks
contmues,
an
old and
Sahsbury Fourth and Ftfth,
familiar squad may soon
occupy the cherished spot.
UCLA, no stranger to the
role of leader tn the
PORTLAND, Ore. (UPI) Gene Duaan, 28, expected to basketball ranks after years
be the youngest manager in as champion, inched closer to
professional Class AM base- the top w1th 318 votes, good
ball this season, was named for second place.
Seven members of the UP!
Monday oo head the Portland
Beavers who are returntng oo Board of Coaches thought
the Pacific Coast League highlyenoughofthe Bruins to
t tit em N0 . I ·
after a live-year absence.
rae
Kentucky recelved 27 firstplace votes and a total of 351
THEOAILV SENTINEL
pomts, replacmg Marquette
DEVOTED TO THE
atthetop Marquettedropped
INTEREST OF
·
tit
MEIGS-MASON ARF--A
two rungs to third place WI
CHESTER L TANNEHill
273 pomts and two first-place
Exec Ed

longest home WIOnmg streak
in major college basketball to
29. semor forward Marty
Byrnes scored 11 points and
sophomore forward Lows Orr
added 16 to lead the
Orangemen, who face St.
Bonaventure Wednesday m
the ECAC Upstate playoffs.
Bruce Campbell and Bill
Eason each scored 15 pomts
to lead Providence, which
bad little trouble when its
regulars were m the game.
Reggie Carter's 16 points
led St. John's, wh1ch shot only
40.5 'percent from the field
and 56.5 percent of 1ts free
throws to lead 34·32 at
mterrnissmn
Elsewhere, Lomsv1lle
ripped St . LOUIS, 94-59,
Tennessee handled
Vanderbilt, 59-46, and in the
Missouri VaUey Tournament,
Bradley defeated W1chita
State, 1&gt;-71, Indiana State
trounced West Texas State,
9!&gt;-71, Drake topped Southern
Ilhn01s, 75-59, and New
Mex•co State rupped Tulsa,
16-15

Guthrie is in no pos1t10n to
argue. And he doesn't.
"I don't have a vote m the
nauonal poll," Guthrie said,
"but 1! I did, I'd cast it for
them."
Guthne said Georgia
played as well as it possibly
could, but 11 just wasn't
enough to beat tbe talented
Wildcats.
Kentucky ran up a 21-pomt
lead early in the second hall
but had to hang on oo repulse
a Georgia rally which cut the
margm to e1ght points.
R1ck
Robey
paced
Kentucky with 15 pomts,
wh1le Georgia's Walter
Daniels scored 25 poinl$
In other maJor games, No
11 F\orids State defeated
Oral Roberts, 80-76, in
overtime,
14th-ranked
Syracuse routed Camsius,
100-59, No 16 Providence beat
Long Island University, 85-62,
and 19th..-ated st John's
(NY ) topped Niagara, 68-60.
Flonda State guard
Murra y Brown sent the game
mto overtune with one free
throw and then added two
more to lift the llth..-anked
Semmoles over Oral Roberts.
Forward Harry DaVIs led the
Semmoles, 22-4, with 24
pomts. Antomo Martm scored
20 pomts for Oral Roberts,
which led by 13 points
midway through the second
hall.
Syracuse stretched the

10017

SubscrlpUon rates Dellvered by
carrier where uva\lable 7~ cents pet
~eek By Motor Route where t:umer
servK't not ~:~vailable , One mon~,
$3 25 By m&amp;U in OhiO l;ffid W Va ,
(')r)l! Year $22 00, SIX months,
SH $0, Three months, $7 00:
Elsewhere $26..00 )ear , SLX months
$1 3 SO Three months, $7 5_~ :
SUbscnpUun prLl'l! mclodes Sunday

Tirnes.Sentuwl

vo tes.

Arkansas remamed 1n
lou rth Pace,
I
but this week
picked up some first-place
backingastwocoaches voted
the
Razorbacks first .
Arkansas totaled 220 pomts
for the week.
Kansas movd up a notch
into fifth place with t76
points , changing positions
with New Mexico, which
dropped to sixth on 156
DePaul stayed in seventh
State
Place With 116' Michigan
•
moved up to eighth with 115
pomts
North Carolina •'
'
•
dropped to ntnth place Wlth
114 pomts and Notre Dame

Sand

Boardman 58 Sa lem 50
Youngs S 40 Youngs Wilson 33
Warren Harding a9 Youngs
Ursu line 27

(A!Toledol
To! Ltbbey 59 To! Bowsher 43
Woodward

59 Anthony

Wayne 48
Oregon Clay 61 Tol Scott 46
Tot Whitmer 64 Port Cl tnlon
31
(AI Dayton)
Day Cham .Jul 56 Lebanon 42

Day

Alter

Day

58

Meadowdale 41

Kef

Fairmont E 44 Day

Points
351
318
273
220

176
156
116

115
82
57

2•
15
12
12
tO

9
~

s

Note By agreement with th e
Amer1can Basketball Coach es
ASsoc 1at1on, learns on probat1on

by the NCAA are Ineligible fO&lt;
top 20 and national champion
shIP conslderat1on by the UP!
Board of coaches Those teams

currently on probation tor '977
are Centenary, Clemson,
Hawaii , Mmnesota, Nevada·Las
Vegas, Western Carolina

high

33

(AI Huron)
Clyde 67 Edison 35

Norwalk 49 Qak Harbor 36

East Canton 76 South Range

40

Jackson Mtlton 36 Crewstview 35

(AI Bluffton)
Ada 83 Al len East 15
Ridgemont 35 Upper Scioto
Valley 25
(At Dayton)
Cedarville 47 Newlon 16
Yellow

Sprmgs

65 Dayton

Bethel 42 Anson1a 39

Class AA
(At Bloom Carroll)

(AI Bellefontaine)

Bl oom Carroll 36 Un 1on 29
P1cker t ngton 50 Amanda
Clearcreek 26

Fort Loram 1e 5~ West Liberty
Salem 32
Mechanicsburg 54 Botkins 33

(AI Elgtn)

Marlon Pleasant 38 Buckeye

Valley 18
Marysville 56 Norlhndge 43
(AI Ironton)
South Point 68 Wheelersburg
Lima
Lima

Norwayne 48 Canal

Fulton

Uniontown

Sandy

Lake

48

40

series -

Marlene Wilson 511, Betty
Smith 493
Men's high game - A. L
Phelps, Jr 201 ; Darrell

Monday's

Boys Ohto High
School Basketball
Umted Press International
Tournament Results

Class A
(At Leesburg)
Leesburg Fairfield 73 Macon
70
CAt Canton)
Dalton 67 South Amherst 46
Norwayne 71 Lowellville 53
Regular Season Result
Nel sonvil le
York
66
Alexander 61

Charges leveled
against NCAA

WASHINGTON (UP!) - A charges against an athlete
former mvest1gator for the when provided ''the services
Gerrl Rought 183 , Betty National Collegiate Athletic of a young lady."
Smith 179.
.
Association hilS told congresClark said universities
Team high series -Tom's SIOnal probers the powerful
justlfiably
fear the NCAA
Carry OUI 1963.
Team high game - Cline's sports organization is because the organization
Construction 672
tyranmcal and capricious punishes mavericks and
and ignores violations by caters to the establishment
popular coaches and schools He sa1d Mississippi State,
while cracking down on being somewhat of an
mavericks
outsider, IS a typical target.
The charges agamst the
Clark said he found
NCAA were leveled Monday " likely" illegal recruiting
by Brent Clark durmg activities at Ole Miss "at
hearmgs before the House least as serious" as those that
Monday's Sports Transactions
subcommittee on oversight. led to probation for
By United Press lntern1tion1l
B11eball
Clark quit the NCAA m Mississippi State . But
Cleveland - Sfgned pitcher December to work lor the
Mississippi State had shown
Tom Buskey to a one year
subcommittee while it itself to be a maverick by
contract
Pittsburgh - Signed outfield rev1ews the association's acseeking court relief from
ers John Milner and M1ke
tions in overseeing collegiate NCAA sanctions.
Easier
Milwaukee - Signed outfield· athletics.
He sald his superiors told
er Gorman Thomas
are
being
held
The
hearings
him
to "switch gears," Hockey
Mlnnesola Signed right at the request of Rep, Jun
ignoring possible Ole Miss
w~ng
Kelly Greenbank on Santini, 0-Nev., who became
recruiting violations to
waivers
Washington !...... Recalled de angry when the NCAA placed
develop as much damaging
fenseman Yvon Labre trom two Nevada universities on • information as possible
Her shy Of th~ AHL
probation.
against Mississippi State.
Football
LOS Ange les
Rehir~d
Clark told the panel the
" In the end, Mlsslsslppl
Lionel Taylor as ar; as.s1stant
NCAA's chief enforcement State lost its court case and,
coach
San Francisco Signed officer once offered a
in my view, has good cause to
UCLA assistanl Frank Gansz as basketball player a pro tryout
be
nervous about the next
speclal teams coordinator.
to
cooperate
in
an time it encounters the NCAA
College llsketblll
Montana State - Head coach investigation, and another
enforcement
machinery,"
R1ch Juarez announced nis
Investigator withheld Clark sa1d.
res1g nat ion
Dugan 190.
Women 1!i

high

game -

Sports
transactions

t

'

r------------,
l Pro
l
l St8;1ldings \

Class A

(At Hanoverton)

Christ 50

Belmont 32

Valley 37

Tom's Carry OUt
38
R. C. Bottling Co
36
Cline's Consfructlon
18
Men's high series - A. L.
Phelps, Jr . 550, Darrell
Dugan 526.
Women 1s

Portsmouth 43 Vinton County
Meigs 67 Ja ckson 47

tAl Hubbard)

Tot

so

Warren Local
Belpre 37
New Lex.ngton 40 Nelsonville

York 36
(At Jackson)

43

Mansfield Senior
Perk1ns 25

Northwest 46 (ol )

42
40

glbbs1 Grocery

11 Florida State (21 "''

•

ClassAAA
(At Shelby)
Shelby 52 Madison 21

27
East Pa lestine 43 Girard 35
CAt Athens)

Pis.

Town Kiln
Jack's Dolry Bar

1,,.

11 Doke 120 6)
~~ ?if:1gSfj~~hn~s~~,~.~,
10 (Tiellndoana (16 7J

United Press International
Regular Season Result
Clear Fork 81 Coshocton 75
Tournament Results

(AI Lake)

Feb. 19, 1971

89 North
Moch'(7an
stote 121 • J
caro11na (23 6)
10 Noire oame t 18 SJ

14 (Tie) Syracuse (21 4)
16 Prov idence (22-6)

L1bedy 42 Warren Kennedy

Shawnee 26

Pom8roy Bowling Lanes

U n 1 ted Press lntern~tional
Board of Coaches' top 20
college basketball r.!ltlngs, with
first place llotes and records
through sa turday, Feb 25 In
parentheses

12 Te&lt;os C2'l 4l
13 Uloh (21 5l
,. \Toe) Goorgelwn(21 •&gt;

(At Canfield!

Gtrls Ohio Htgh
School Basketball

(At L1ma)
Delphos Sl John 102

moved mto lOth place on 82
points.
Florida State dropped out
of the top 10 to 11th place w1tlt
51 points, followed by Texas,
24; Utah, 13; Syracuse and
Georgetown tied lor 14th
place wllh 12 points,
Providence 16th on 10 points;
Duke, No. 11 With 9 points;
Georgia Tech rated 18th with
6 pomts, and Indiana and St.
John's \ted for 19th on 5
pomts.
NEW YORK CUPIJ - The

5 Kansas (23 3)
6 New MeX ICO {22 3)
1 DePaul (23·2&gt;

•

Monday's

Sha wnee 26

Wildcats back on top

ROBERT HOEFLI CH
City Editor
Pubil.shed dally except Saturtbly
by The Ohio Valley Publillhin!l
Company-Multlmedla. Inc ,
lll
Court St, Pomeroy, Ohio 4:)769
Bll!imess Office Phone 992- 2156
Editorial Phone 992-21&amp;7
Sa·ond class posta!jt paid at
Puml.'!rpy,Ohio
Nabomd advertLSmg represenwuve W11rd . GriHltl'1 Company,
Inc , BuUinel!i and GallaMher Ot\' 1
7&amp;7 Third Ave , New York NY

CEDARVILLE'S Kim Kauffman (23) leaps high to
block a Gil Price (34) shot durtng Monday's MOC postseason tournament ganoe at Lyne Center.

,
(At Lima)
Delphos Sf John 102

BOWLING

EIGHTH GRADE
SQtJAD - Making up the eighth grade basketball teano at
REGULATED HARVEST - Ills important to understand
Meigs Junior High are front, 1-r,
Miller, Tanya Aleshire, Vicky DeBord, Edie Smtih;
what kind of protection the Division of Wildlife can give to wild
back, Coach Weooy Halar , Laura
Barb Whitlatch, Lynne Oliver, Kr!Stm Anderson
animals. WUdlife laws directly protect animals in four ways:
and Melanie Dlllard
they specify whether an animal may be taken, bow it may be
taken, when it may be taken, and how many may be taken.
Laws of this type pennlt the Division to protect animals by
regulating their harvest. Harvest regulation insures that no
wild anlmal populaUon in Ohio will become threatened or
endangered by sport hunting, trapping, or fiShmg, or by
conunercial harvest.
For oome species, harvest Is not permitted at any time.
Animals protected in this way are songbirds, hawks , owls, and
endangered species. In some cases, an anunal of thts group
may be killed bY the owner of property to which the anunal ts
and the Aii.SEOAL semor Me1gs mto the fmals to be
By Greg Bailey
causing substantial damage. Limited numben of these
tallied
a game-high 29 pomts. held Thursday at 6 p m.
The
Me1gs
g~rls
basketball
animals also may be taken for scienUiic or educational
Glenda
Brown of the Me1gs wtll play the wmner of
team advanced to the Class
purposes.
Marauders
also h1t double t he Portsmouth-Galllp olts
HABITAT DESTRUCTION -It was mentioned above that AA SectiOnal Ftnals at
figures
w1th
14 and hauled m contest for the rtght to adwith
a
67Jackson
last
mgbt
only some species presently are benefitmg from Division of
II
rebounds.
Tern Wilson vance to the Dtslrict at
47
win
over
Jackson
Wildllle protection, and that regulations are set to insure that
controlled
the
boards for Waverly next week
After
a
close
three
quarters
no animal population in Ohio will be threatened bY overharvest
Me1gs
w1th
13
caroms
Me1gs
of
action,
Me1gs
poured
it
on
Box score.
for sport or conunercial purposes. Which anunals, then, are in
connected
for
28
f1eld
goals
m
m
the
fourth
period
to
pull
MEIGS 167) - Brown 4-6
need of additional protection, and what are the dangers which
away for the wm. Toma Ash 65 attempts for a good 43 14 , Bordetle 3·0·6; Eppl e 12 5
thresten them?
29 , Vaughan 4-0·8 , Wil son 3 Q..
All of Ohio's native wild animals are threatened by habitat came off the bench in the percent while hlltmg on II of 6.
T Ash 2·0·4 Toals 28-11 67
16
free
throws
destruction The concept of habitat destruction ts extremely fourth period and held
JACKSON (47) - Connelly
Connelly
led
the
losers
w1th
II 3 25, McDona ld 1-0 2.
important in wildlife protection It is essy to understand. U the Jackson's high scorin g
places are destroyed where an animal nests, dens, spawns, Connelly to Just two more 25 markers as the lrongirls Jewell 044 , Massay 2-15 .
Brandt 408 ; Schmid 033
feeds or obtains any of its other basic needs, then that kind of points to allow the Marauder h1t Just 18 of 61 shots for 30 Totals
18-11 47.
percent
They
canned
.11
of
19
girls
to
wm
~I will be endangered. Habitat can be destroyed directly
By quarters
Metgs was 6ehmd 11-10 at foul shots
M
10 24 4t&gt;-t17
(as with earth moving equ1pment) or indirectly (as with
That contest counted as a J
the
end of the first pertod, and
11 12 36-47
pestiCide contamination).
and
put
league
game
also,
24-23lead
had
taken
a
narrow
The Division of Wildlife has very little direct authority to
control destrucUon of hab1tat. The type of protection that Is at intermiSSIOn By the third
mollt necessary for Ohio's wildlife must ultimately result from buzzer, the g1rls of Coach Joy
M1IW
32 '19 525 6
wise land use dec~sioits. This means that wildlife conservation Bentley had slipped out to a
Chicago
31 3'1 492 8
40-16
advantage
and
were
on
must be an impoi!\ant part of each decision on how land is
28 32 467 9' '
Detroit
C1ty
24 37 393 14
I
I Kans
used. For example, if lt isdec1ded that the landahould be used their way
lnd1ana
22 38 367 15 112
Metgs'
Vtcky
Epple
came
in part for conservaUon of bald eagles, then it must also be
PacifiC DI VIi iOn
W L Pet GB
decided that the land cannot be used lor purposes requiring on strong 1n the second half,
Porlland
49 10 83 1
applkation of certain pesticides at levels that would cause
Ph0en1x
38 22 633
NHL Standings
Seattl e
33 27 550
reproductive failure in those eagles
By United Press International LOS Ang
32 29 525
The most important action that Ohio c1tlzens can take lor
campbell Conference
Golden St
29 32 475
PatriCk DIVISIOn
Monday's Result
the benefit of wildlife today is to support their local and stale
W L T. Pts
Clevel and 110 Houston 97
govenunents in clevelopmg and implementing programs for
NY Islanders
37 13 11 85
Tuesdav 's Games
Philadelphia
35 15 10 so
wise use of the state's valuable land and water resources. Wtse
San Anton10 at New York
At lanta
23 22 17 63
Boston at A tlant a
use of Ohio's land and water wiU result in the long lasting
NY Rangers
21 30 11 • 53
O env~r at lnd 1ana
Smythe D1v1Ston
protection of more wildlife than any other action that can be
Buffalo at New Orleans
W L T Pis.
Phocn 1x at Chicago
taken.
Ch1cago
24 21 16 64

Meigs girls advance
in sectional tourney

36

Te1m

Teom
1 Kenlucky 121112221
2 UCLA (7) \22 21
3 Marouel1e 121 (21 21
• Arkansas 12) \27 2)

anunals.

Tournament scores

Kentucky wins 31st cage title
College Rasketball Roundup
By
United
Press
Internallonal
' Georg ia Coach J ohn
Guthrie agrees w1th the UPI
Board of Coaches that
Kentucky" the nation's No I
team but Wildcats' Coach
Joe Hall sounds like he's
ready to reiUIQUish his team's
lofty position to anybody who
wants 1t.
Kentucky, ranked first in

Otterbein claims
first cage title

College
results
Monday ReSults
By Untted Press International
Conference Playoff Results
Missouri Valley Conterenc
First Round
Bradley 75, W1 Ch1ta St 71
Drake 75, So Illinois 59
Indiana St 90, West Texa s 71
New Me1oco 51 76, Tulsa 75

Cavs end
••
•
Jmxm
Houston

HOUSTON (UP!) - Alter a
five-year dry spell, the Cleveland Cavaliers have struck oil
m Texas.
In a losing streak that
East coast conference
started five years ago, the
First Round
Amer.can 97, Hofstra 77
Cavaliers had dropped 12
Bucknell 88, West Chester St
straight
games on the
73
Lehigh 67, R1der 60
Houston Rockets' homecourt
St Joseph's 90, Drexel! 80
- until Mondsy mght.
lOT I
Jim Chones grabbed 15
City U of N Y Tournament
rebounds,
Elmore Smith
ChampionshiP Game
pulled
m
14
and Campy
CC NY 64, Brooklyn Col\ .59
Russell scored 25 pomts as
East
Cleveland beat a depleted
AIC 9.5, New Haven U 86
Brandeis 80, Tufts 63
Rockets' team, liG-97.
Br1dg e;por t 96, Trenton St 80
Cleveland Coach Bill Fitch
Bryant 91 , Babson 80
srud an overtone loss 21
Cheyney 75, Slippery Rock 72
ColbY 107, Lowell 93
games ago made him change
Hartwick 81 . Brockport 63
to his present lineup, which
Ham11ton 89 Cortland 70
Holy Cross 99, Boston Coil 98 mcludes playmg Chones :
(Ot)
Mass U 71 , PittSburgh U 68 Russell and Smith at the
New Ham p U 6A , Northeast. same time
Cleveland's
ern 62
record
smce
the
change has
N. Adams St 81, F1tchburg
not been outstanding due to a
Sf 62
NY Mar ltlme 71, Cathedral 65 large number of road games,
Providence 85, Long Island U
but Monday night, the big
62
St Thm AQ 112, New Paltz , front line paid off.
St 91
"What is this, Thanks- ,
St Lawrence 103, Ci arkson 90
givmg?" Fitch asked. "I
St John's 69, Niagara 60
St
Bonaventure
7.5, St
thought we played weU. I
Francis 72
thought we came out of the
Syracuse 100, Can 1slus 59
Upsala 71 , Manhattanvil\e 63
blocks, something we don't
Wash &amp; Jeff 62, Ali 1ance 61
often
do here.''
W New Eng 91, W Conn St
Houston
was Wlthout tts top
81
Williams 70, WPI 62
rebounder , Moses Malone,
and 1ts top scorer, Rudy Tomsouth
janovlch, both out with
Alabama 81 , Flor1da 70
Allen 82, cntral weslyan 79
mjur1es.
But Houston Coach
E. Tenn 93, Morehead 79
Tom
N1ssalke
ssid even with
Kentucky 78, Georgia 67
Lander 96, Wofford 66
Malone and Tomjanovlch m
L lmestone90, Charleston 81
the lineup, his Rockets would
Louisville 94, St LOUIS 59
have been bard pressed to
McNeese St 8.4, Lamar 80
Mississippi St 83, Auburn 82
beat Cleveland.
Samtord 11, Ga Southern 68
"Since Bill made hia lineup
sw La 106, Texas Arl 10.4
Tennessee 59, vanderb 1!t .46
chtlhge with Jim Chones,
Campy RusseU and Elmore
.
Midwest
Smith in there, they are a
Augsburg 64, St Thome s 62
Detro it 89, Loyola 69
good basketball team. We
Green Bay 78, Oshkosh 59
used to match up against
Ham line 66, Maca\ester 55
Lake Superior 81, W Michl· them. Not now," Nisealke
gan 1A
said.
N c .. wilmington
66.
Mil
The Cavaliers' 52-32
waukee 60
Ripon 100, Knox 76
rebounding
edge marked the
St John's 73, Gustavus SB
first time in three seasons
Southwest
Cleveland has dommated the
Fla st 80, Oral Roberts 76
boards agamst Houston.
(Of)
"They are hurting without
.
West
those
guys (Malone and TomPuget Sound 99, Portland Sf
janovich).
I have to say that
75
Utah St 89, Montana 68
m their defense," Fitch said.
"We hurt them where they
Monday's
were
hurting mo~, which ~
Ohio College
not a fault of theirs ."
Bosketblll Results
United Pross International
Houston, 24-38, closed a 20Ohio Conference
point lead 19 six early in the
Ch.smplonshlp
fourth quarter, but Russell's
Otterbein 72 wooster 71
three straight baskets from
Mid-Ohio Collferenct
20 feet or more qu1ckly put
Ch.smptonshlp
Rio Gronde 91 Cedorvllle 79 the game on ice.

Eastern
8th grade
team wins

The Eastern E1ghth grade
basketball squad of Coach
Arch Rose rallied for 19
fourth quarter pomts and
held host Southern to just
three to post a 53-41 comefrom-behind victory Friday
evemng. Behmd 25-15 at the
half, Eastern came to the
court an QISpired team to
start the third period and had
narrowed the margm to 38-34
at the thud quarter buzzer.
Then !ightmng struck the host
Tornadoes as the Eastern
offense exploded m that last
quarter to take the win Just a
year ago, Eastern rallled
from a 25 point deficit to post

a wm.
Eastern's Greg Cole led all
scorers w1th 26 pomts John
R1ebel and Mtke B1ssell shot
60 percent from the floor for
nine and eight pomts,
respectively
T1m Dill
cleared the boards for the
winners with 12 caroms.
Rodney Spurlock was
credited by Coach Rose Wllh
playmg good defense against
Southern's Ieadmg season
scorer, Richard Wolfe. Coach
Rose commended h1s whole
team for its Impressive come~
from-behmd wln Others
menlloned by Rose were Rob
Sm1th, Charles Massar, and
P. G. Riffe.
Kent Wolfe led the Southern
scorers w1th 15 pomts while
R1chard Wolfe had 13.
By quarters
10 25 38 41
Southern
12 15 34 53
Eastern
BOZEMAN,Mont. (UPI) Montana State basketball
coach Rich Juarez quit
Monday after directing the
Bobcats for four years.
Juarez' clubs amassed a 4262 rec!td and last year's
team made an appearance in
the Big Sky Conference
playoffs.

Vancouver
Colorado
St LOUIS

'6 31 14
13 31 16
13 38 9
M ~nn eso t a
14 39 6
Wales Conference
NorriS DIVISIOn
W

L

T

46
42
35
3'4

Pis

Montreal
43 8 9 95
Los Angeles
23 25 ' 2 58
P1ttsburgh
20 24 16 56
Det ro1t
23 27 9 55
Was h1ng ton
1l 40 11
33
Adams Division
WLTPts.
Buffalo
35 12 1.4 84
Boston
38 13 1 B3
Toronto
33 16 10 76
Cleve land
19 36 8 46
Monday's Results
Atlant a 5, NY Rangers 3
Cleve land 3, Vancouver 3
Tuesday 's Games
PhiladelPhia at Boston
Toronto at NY Islanders
Colorado at Washmgton
Detro11 at Montrea l
Mmnesota ar St Lou1s
Cleveland at Los Angeles
Wednesday's Games
Detro1t at NY Rangers
Philadelphia at Toronto
Buffalo at Atlanta
Montr eal et P1ftsburgh
Sl Lou1 s at Minnesota
Chicago at Vancou ver
WHA Standmgs
By United Press 1nternat1ona1
W l T Pts
Winnip eg
41 18 2 84
New England
34 22 .4 72
Edmonton
31 27 2 64
Houst on
30 26 3 63
Quebec
27 30 2 56
Blrm1ngham
26 33 2 54
C1ncmnat1
24 33 J 51
lnd1anapo11s
18 36 4 40
Monday's Results
( No gam es scheduled)
Tuesday 's Game
Houston at Quebec
Wednesday's Games
Quebec at New England
Houston al Indianapolis
W1nn1peg at Birmingham
Cincinnati at Edmonton

NBA Stand•ngs
By United Press lnternat1onal
Eastern Conference
Atlanhc OiVUiiOn
W L Pet. GB
Phlia
41 18 695
New York
31 28 525 10
Boston
22 Jol 393 171!2
Buffalo
19 38 333 21
New Jrsey
14 47 230 28
Central DIVISIOn
W l Pet . GB
San Anton
37 '12 627
Wash
31 28 525 6
Clevvlnd
30 31 492 8
New Or ins
28 33 459 10
Atlanta
28 33 459 ,10
Houston
24 38 387 141h
western Conference
Midwest Division
W L Pet GB
Den ver
38 23 623

By
Unll•d
Press offense. "We've played zone shot at the buzzer by Scot
luiei'Witlonal
the last three ~ames Our Sum DIJ(oo cut the !mal
The Otterbein Cardinals kids have been ttred and its murgm to one.
Jeff Benson led the
have prec1ous lltUe tune to enabled us to rest our b1g men
cardinals.
now 19-a overall,
savor thelr first ever Ohio who carry us ·;
wtth
21
pomts
while Don
Con I e r e n ce Atit 1e 11 c
The Cardinals looked hke
Asso Ciati on basketball they would blow the Fighting Brough added 20
Wooster, 2\l-5 a nd the OAC
Scots out of U1c championship
champiOnship
The Cardinals earned the contest at Berea as U1ey rwmerup for the srL'ond year
crown Monday night wtth " pulled out to a 14-pomt lend m m a row, was hopmg to get
72-71 v1ct0ry over Woo;ter, U1e second half. but ti1e Sco~s the rcmummg at~lurge bcrU1
but now must gear up for battled back and Otterbem m the tournament m
NCAA DiVISion II 10urnament ' lutd to 1ely on a Mike selectiOns 'I'ut&gt;sday morrung
An o ther
lea g u e
action .
Wohtheter free throw "'th 15
('luunpwnsh
lp
a
lso was
The VICtory also earned the seconds left to &lt;"lmch UJe win
determmL&gt;d
Monday
night
Cardinals a berth in the Great
Thereal ltattle of the ~mne
At Ct• ru~rvllle, Dun Purl'ell
Lakes Regional tourney c.tl cam.e m the last mmute nnd
Terra Haull!, ind , Friday 59 seeonds after JUlllor F~t'&lt;l IXJured tn a ga me-l ugh 33
mght. They w1U battle Albion Balser, Wooster 's l ea dm ~ pmnt s to lend the Rio Granile
(Mtch.) in the ftrst round
scm er w1th 16, put in three '!JJ- Hedtllen to the Mtd -Oino
Otterbefn Coach Dtck Rei- footers :md d ust.•! tt 1&lt;1 69. Co nf erence chumplanship
with a 91-79 wm over
nolds, drippmg wet from a 61.
CL'&lt;ia
1vtllo
shower w1th h1s clothes on,
Wmste1 's 6-6 scmor Cal vm
Eric
Mounts led the Yellow
pratsed total team effm·t ,,s Kostohryz made 11lh1 cc poi nt
"the key to uur sucl"C.s ,J!J play w1th 56 se&lt;"Onds left 1111d Jackets' losmg effort wtth 2il
year "
u l.ayup w 1U1 42 Sl'tOIHb to \){l int S,
Hio Grnnde, hmshmg lht•
" We caught them (Scots} m play cut t he mnr ~ m clown
n•
g uh:U Sl'a:S&lt;Hl HI 20~7 ,
a btl of a lull in the second 11101 e to 69-jj6
J
Umped
out tn n 2-0 hmd und
ha lf ," he sa td "They
Jeff Benson r:mnL'i both
led
the
\\
hole game
pamcked for JUst a mrnute t..!rtds of &lt;t 9nc..and-(lne to put
Ct.•tJurv1lle
wound up wtth n
and we were able to JUmp theCa rdmals bac\1. up by five
14-12
record
ahead by 14. But I knew 1t w1th 37 seconds left , but w1lh
Monda;, the Ht..•&lt;.hncn wtll
wasn 't gmng to be ltke that al 22 seconds left ll-7 sc nio•·
the end."
Wayne A!ltSim, !til the fu &gt;1 of fnt'C Wthnmglon 1n NAJA
DH:MH.;l 22 tourrmmcnt play
Reynolds credtted Ca1 duw l " two shot foul for Wooster
Out he spun the sc('ond shnt
pressW'e zone derense ror
contal ntn g the Wooster off the run, wh1ch helped set
up Wohlheter 's p!dy A 20-foot
THIS WEEK 'S SPECIAL

Marshall signs
Moeller player
HUNTINGTON , W Va .
(UPI) - Marshall University
announced today the s a gmn~
of Tom Schroeder , a runmng
back and Wide receiver for
OhiO AAA champtun Moeller
H1gh School of Cmcmnatt
Schroeder, a 5-foot-10 1111poundcr,
playe d
both
positwns for Moeller, which
has ca ptured the sta te AAA
crown the past three yem·s
and has won 58 consecutive
games m the last SIX years
Marsha ll Coac h Frank

USED CARS

Elw ood satd Schroeder
st(u ted the last five gamt!s

tnc ludmg
the
· state
champoionshtp g11rnc Ht
r unmng ba ck after the
t cgulat running IMck was
Ill JUred

" Pnor to that he started at
w1de r eceJvcr ln i: i ta le nt
should

gave

htm

' th e

opportumty to play seve1 a!
(JOSlllOnS here at Marshall
mclud mg t unnmg back and
wtde rece lvcr," Elwood sal(l.
The coach Said M:~rshall
has s1gned 20 athletes for the
fall footba ll campa1gn and
nwy sign "a couple more "
The school begins spnng
football pruct1ce Mm ch 2\l

Sp ecial!
75 PINTO WAGON
6 cy l , au to . radio,

low

mileage

•2495
73 PINTO WAGON
4 cy l , 4 speed, radio

•1495
Karr &amp; VanZandt
You'll Like Our Quo lit~
Way of Do1ng Busin ess

GM,\C FI NANCI NG

Pomeroy
SARASOTA, Fla (UPI) Open Evenings 'tll6 00
Ch1cago Wh1te Sox rehef
T115p m Sot
Sea ttl e vs
Kan C1ty at
p1tcher John Verhoeven was
Omaha
washington at M ilwaukee
struck durin g batting
Philadelphia at Portland
practice Monday by a !me
Wednesday ' s Games
drive off the bat of Wayne
Atlanta at NeW Jersey
-----~-----------------~,
San An t a t Washmgton
1
Nordagen
Boston at New Orl eans
I
WILL
NOT
INTEF!FEREWtTH
PRESENT
I
Verhoeven
escaped
senous
Buffalo al Houslon
Cl eveland al Denver
injury but h1s workday was '
EMPLOYMENT
I
Detro 11 at Phoen1x
NO SELLING REQUIRED
I
cut short so his sore left
Ph1\a at Go lden Sta te
shoulder could be 1ced
We are seh:~ct lng distribut ors for fast moving produc t s I
m Gal lipolis and surrounding counties These product s
· Outfielder Bobby Coluccto
I
publlcl1ed In newspapers, TV, magazi nes. e tc
r
I
joined the Sox sprmg trammg
SHARE HONORS
II
camp, bringing the number of
Twen ty year old company will place producls In
CINC INNATI (UP! )
players working out oo 46 The
grocery , department , drug stores, super market s, glfl
I
R1ck Wilson of the umvers1ty full squad of 59 IS due
shops, etc Distr ibut or will serve these retail oufl ets
monthly, requ iring approxlmat elr, 20 hours spa r e l ime
I
of l&lt;lulSVIIIe and Harry Davis Wednesday.
per month CPA reports exce l en t profit potential
1
of Florida State have been
Each location requires $200 Investment You may have
1
voted co-Mo st Valuable
25,
30 or 35 locati on s Company sec ures loca tion s and
I
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) Players in t he Metro Seven
1nstalls products 1or you
I
Th is Is a bona flde offer and If you are not si n ce re abou t
basketball conference for the New Orleans Jazz offiCials
srud Monday they may fi le a
yo ur own bu siness, or do not meet the a~ve flnan Gii.'ll
I
1917-78 season.
requ irement , let' s not waste each other s time
1
formal
protest
w1th
the
NBA
Also voted onto the conFOR PERSONAL CONFIDENTIAL INTERVIEW, I
of£1ce
ference all-star team by commissioner 's
CALL
I
MRS. RUS S COLETTI, HUNTINGTON, 304 -697-7500
sports reporters were because an official's whtstle
Today thru Wednesday- 9 A.M. to 9 P.M
I
Sammy Drummer of Georgia was not blowmg properly
S.E . I., CUMMING, GA . \ NEAR ATLANTA)
durmg
a
game
against
the
Tech, Darrell Griffith of
l&lt;lmsv1lle, J ames Bradley of Milwaukee Bucks
~-----------------------Da ve Fredman , pubhc
MemphiS State and Pat
Cummm gs of Cincmna ll relatiOns dtrector , sa 1d
Bradley and Cununlngs \led official Bill Saar's whistle
was not operatmg m the
for the last spot
second half of the Jazz' 122120 overtime loss to the
Bucks.
Fredman sa1d thr ee
LOS ANGELES (UP!) seconds had to be added to
Northndge State, the CCAA the clock at th e end of the
basketball champion, w11l ga~ecause no one could
host three other West CQ.~
r 's whistle
mther offtc1a l had a
teams in the NCAA DIVISIOn
II
reglonals
starting reserve whistle, a v1olatwn of
Thursday night.
league rules, Fredman said.

'f

91J'2 ·5l4l

DISTRIBUTORSHIP

J

We'll Update
Fire Insurance

"We stand
behind Qur
work.
That's Reason No.5
why you should let
us do your taxes:'
Hwe prepare your return and the IRS should
call you in for an audit, Block will go with
you &lt;it no extra charge. Not as your legal
representative, but to answer any questions
about how your taxes were,prepared.

M

ake sure you've got full
proteclion in case of fire,
by keeping your policy up to
rising replacement costs. See
us soon for a policy update.

Protect Yourself!

H&amp;R BLOCit
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

618 E. MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO
Open 9:00 to 6:00 Weekdays.
9:00io5 :00 S.turdoy
Phone 992-3795
No

Necessary

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

�.

5- The

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••
••
Green
•••
Thumb
••
•
•
Notes
••
weH!y feature
Gorden Club members.
••

4- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday,Feb. 28, 1978

~: : '($ Ge,m;mssn-.er.'ii'a~t""'I~.Oo""n•'di&gt;:::&lt;.&lt;:&lt;:R~'fia
'::@p
~'!':'t~,..:::,:,;l·:&lt; al\~ !"_r~a~~~=~ to him, Instead, I end up feeling
~
§~

By Helen· and Sue Hottel

-

SHE'S RUSHING THE REASONS

envious. When friends ask UB, "When is the big day?" he
&gt; answers, "Why should I?" Implying he's not anywhere near 8
~, decision.
!§ Ought! to push a bit' -CONFUSED AND ENVIOUS
DEAR C AND E.:
No ! Your boyfriend knows he isn 't ready for marriage. If
you are, then perhaps you should find another man. -SUE

DEARRAP:
•.
I'm 20, my boyfriend, 18. We've been going together three
years, and love each other very much.
·
The problem is all our friends are either engaged or getting
married. Dirk has never mentioned marriage. l feel left out of

HAVE YOU
WRinEN A BOOK?
Mr. John G. Long the field edl.tor of 'a well-known
New Ycrk subsidy publ ishing firm w ill be Interviewing
local authors In a .quest for finished manuscripts
suitable for book .Publi cation . All subjects wtt1 be
considered, Including fiction and non-fict ion, poetry,
fuvenlles, religious. books, etc.
He will be In Athens In mid-April.
If you have completed a book -length ·manuscript
lor nearly SO) on any sub ject and would like a
professional appraisal (without cost or obl igation),
please write Immediately and descr ibe your work .
State whether you would prefer a mornlno . afternoon,
or evening appointment, and klni:Hy mention your
phone number . You will receive a confirmation by ma ll
for a definite time and place .
Authors with completed maousc:rlpts unable to
appear mav send them directly to us for a free reading
and evaluations. We will also be glad to hear from
those whose literary works are still In progress.

DEAR C AND E.:
Honest now : is it really a permanent union with an IS-yearold you want, or do you simply crave the fun and excitement of
showers, wedding plans, etc,?
Too many young people marry disastrously because they're
playing "follow' the leader." I suspect·Dirk is wiser than you
are. -HELEN

:

Mr . ] ohn G. Long

[~trlr1m 'Pms.

Love is hest when it starts with friendship and deelops slowly. It you push too soon for a couunltment, you might shove it

b• .

right out the window. - SUE

84 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10011
l'llone (212) 243.ll000

CHOICE

MoigJ

BY MRS. CLIFFORD MORRIS
BEND0'111E RIVER GARDEN CLUB

PRICES GOOD THRU SATURDAY, MAR. 4
WE ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS

though each day as It closes
Doth darker and colder grow,
how tile roots of the bright red roses
Are kept alive in Ule snow!' '

RAP:
My brother is a pain in the neck. Every time I bring a boy to
the house, the little brat makes a fool out of himself and me.
Like last night, my boyfriend was just about to kls1! me when
Stinky ran in with a cowboy hat on, shooting rubber darts at us.
What's with a first grader who should know better? - EMBAR·
RASSED
EMB: He's six, six, six. That age would rather tease than
eat. So laugh: there's no other way to take a little brother.
HELEN AND SUE
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
Tom and I have lots of fun together, but he never expresses
his feelings about me. He's not shy. He doesn't date anyone
else and we see each other a lot.
Do you think if I told him I love him, he'd open up and say he
loves me too? He's 21, several years older tha.n me. (Mom says
he's "too old," but! don~t think so.-SANDY
DEAR SANDY:
If you enjoy one another's company, have fun.together and
see each other exclusively, why worry over those three.little
words' They'll come, in time, unless your mother i.s right and
the relationship cools.-HELEN
'

~

A
C.U.ty

USDA

'l'he snow, tllat in the past two winters has turned our landinto beautiful picture post cards, has also caused much
~~~~~ in getting from one place to another, and
:
some problems, as well as benefits to gardeners and

NO DEALERS PLEASE
Open Mon.-Sat. 9 am · 9 pm

A!J tile poet in the lines above reminds us, the beautiful,

O!i~n Sunday 9 am - 6 pm

white blanket of snow does protect and warm the roots
the many beautiful flowers tllat are tucked away,
to greet us witll their cheery bloom in springtime.
growing grains are protected during the very cold:
The cold temperature tllat accompanies snow also
of bloom on our fruit trees until
warmer weather will prevent a late killing

Karen DeMoss
ENGAGED - Mr. and Mrs. Richard DeMoss,
Pomeroy, are announcing the engagement and
approaching marriage of their daughter, Karen June, to
Douglas Allen Phillin, son of Virginia Phalin, Pomeroy,
and the late Alvie Phalin. Wedding plans are incomplete.

New officers are instalkd
New officers were installed
at the Thursday meeting of

the Meigs County Women's
Fellowship held at the
Hemlock Grove Christian

Church .

.

The group sang 0 0ur Best"

with Marilyn Wilcox giving
the opening prayer. Mrs.
Merle Johnson, president,
conducted the short business
meeting. ..
Next meeting will he held
at the Middleport Church of
Christ on March 30 at 7:30
p.m. he group sang "Have

LEAN &amp; TENDER
· ¢
CHUCK STEAK •••••••• ;~~
BONELE~S
LB l9
CHUCK ROAST.......... :.
BONELESS
$}39
ENGLISH' ROAST. ......L~~.
BONELESS
.
$}lg
BEEF STEW •••••••••••••• ~?:
FRESH
.
LB $}S9
CUBE STEAK .....................
SUPERIOR
SLAB BACON.~~?.L~.~~~~~~~ ••••• ;~;. 79~

99
$1

Snow on the soil Is extremely valuable In agricultural
districts, because it brings down from the air a great many
substances, nitrogen being the most abundsnt, to help to
enrich the soil,
Snow, by laying on the ground and melting rather slowly,
instead of running off llke rain, permits these elements to soak
into tile soil and be available to growing plants.
When snow covers tile ground, animals, such as deer,
rabbits, and mice may use the bark of fruit and landscape
trees for food if the trees haven't been protected by wire mesh
guards.
Heavy snow can be harmful to evergreens, unless
removed when it first falls. If the temperature i.s near 32
degrees, str,ike the branches gently with a broom, but if
temperature drops to 10 degrees or less do not strike the ·
plants, or you may snap off the branches.
Salt-treated ice and snow on walks and drives should be
swept or shoveled away from planIs and lawns to wash away
without damaging your landscape.
"The stiff ralls were softened to swan's down,
And still fluttered down the snow."

Thine Own Way 1 Lord" and
Eleanor Hoover had prayer
to dismiss the meeting .
Refreshments were served in

CHUNK· BOLOGNA~ ..................~~-.

WHOLE BARBECUED CHICKEN ... ;... .. ............... ~~~.H ....'1.59
FRESH LEAN GROUND BEEF... .. ................. ........ ~~·.. .... 89'
COLUMBIA SLICED BACON ... .. .. ....... ...................~B: ......99'

POLLY·s POINTERS

the church basement.

69¢

~IIP~IlJOR

Polly Cramer
SEEN VISITING
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hill
a!ld children, Denise Byers
and Tim Hill, spent Saturday
in Middleport visiting her

Try solvent
on oil stain

has improved and we find this
quite rewarding. One does not
need a degree in psychology
bot just pl;iin common sense.

mother 1 Mrs. Grace Glaze,

and other relatives. Mrs. Hill
has suffered several heart
attacks in recent months.
.Denise will again enter

Children's Hospital next
month for additional heart
surgery .

DEAR POlLY - I .have a
rug with grease or Oil stains
on it. Nothing I have tried will
remove them. Could you tell

me how to take out these terrible

looking

stains?

-MRS.J.C. .
DEAR MRS.J.C. - One
carpet company suggests usDAUGHTER BORN
ing a nonflammable
Captain and Mrs. Sean E. household dry cleaning fluid.
Mullen, Myrtle Beach, S. C., Apply to stain only and
are announcing the birth of a ' sponge with a clean white
. daughter, Courtney Danelle. unstarched cloth. If the
She was _
born on Feb. 7 and carpet has a rubber backing
weighed seven pounds, 13 the solvent should be applied
ounces . Captain and Mrs. lightly so as to prevent
Mullen have two other ·. damage to the backing. daughters, Kellie, eight, and POLLY
Kerrie, three. Grandparents
DEAR POLLY- A reader
are Mr. and Mrs. P. K. wrote that she had so much
Russell, Syracuse, and Mr. time on her hands. I suggest
and Mrs. Don Mullen, Mid- she consider a handicappeddleport. Great-grandparents foster child. Two and a half
are Mr. and Mrs. George years ago we took into our .
Hackett, Sr., Middleport, and home a blind and retarded·
Mrs. E. B. McGraw, Meadow from-neglect young woman.
Bridge, W. Va.
We did have a rough time at
first but now everything Is
pretty well smoothed out. She

to death.
We aU work hard to get ahead in life. Unfortunately, that all-too-often
can mean more stress on your body than it can stand ... pHtting in
hours beyond reason, grabbing non-nutritious meals, chain
smoking .. . and not taking time off to relax or exercise. Ambition is
healthy ... stress can kill you.
Your Blue Cross and Blue Shield Plans can't send you home
each evening before you've pushed yourself to the point bf
exhaustion. And we can't take you away from the grind when it's
time for a weU deserved vacation, We're helping to hold down health
care costs by doing things within our area of influence ... like
pioneering and broadening ambulatory programs such as
pre-admission testing, post discharge testing, same-day surgery and
home care ... by being involved in utilization review and peer
review ... by experimenting with second opinion surgical
consultation ... and, as active participants iri the health planning
process, by advocating better use of health care resources,
discouraging waste and preventing unnecessary duplication of
facilities and services.
And, as always, we're helping company groups and individual
subscribers get the greatest value out of every health care dollar
they spend.
We'll take the responsibility for setting up effective, economical
health care programs. But the responsibility for holding down health
care costs is something we all share. '
Frankly, some of the reasons for the high cost of health care
make us sick.
,
.
·

Nobod'y
tells you the time ·
tn as many ways
I

,

,

asBULOVA..
ooody!
.B!Jio\ta makes •!I klnda ·
of dlgltala. And all klndt
of conventional watchea;
, too. In every. price. range.
So when you're In the
market for • watch, 188
us. We'll show you
precisely what you want
... a beautifUl watch by
Bulova, the dependable.
name In time.

Please, take care of yourself.

Headq~artwa"tor - . ..
Bulova·· Bulow Acout1on • Bulova"CitMue- 1
• and the new Bulova Olllrtz Olg!IIAI.
·

Blue Cross .
Blue Shield
All of us helping each of us.
r

ll.l ~..,...,..,s-o Moo:u l l"o ''"' 4 o -oon
~ · - :otHIIoor...:o lolotU -

•

'

!If,- "...,."'""'
•
I

Often homes are needed for

senile.. old people, · too.
-MRS.R.G.
' DEAR MRS.R.G. - How I
envy your big, kind and
generous heart. What a
shame that more of us cannot
think more of helping others
less fortunate. Thanks for
your letter. I am sure it will
make others think as if has
made me.- POLLY
DEAR POLLY - The
movers told my daughter to
put charcoal in her closed

•
CARNATION
.HOT
·
COCOA MIX .....~:.1?.~.~~::.
HUNT'S BITS, HERB OR SPECIAL

99 ~

when we Were away for siX

months and had great success. I put in about a dozen
briquets on a sheet of waxed
paper and a few more in the
freezer part. We relurned to
lind it smelling fresh as new
and with not a trace of
mildew. For moving, put lhe
charcoal in a plastic bag with
some holes punched it. THELMA
DEAR POLLY- My Pet
Peeve is with the glue ori
postage stamps. I am always
getting a letter hack because
the stamp has slipped off
before it reaches the post office for cancellation. I hit on
what I think is a great idea. I
have a package of selfadhesive paper stickers for
mounting photos &amp;O I moisten
a slamp at the corners and
put one of thesedouble-faced
stickers on the back of the
stamp. Even if the comers
curl the stamp will not slip
off.- MRS. L.G.H.
DEAR POLLY - I roll my
sweaters before placing them
in a dresser drawer. Fold the
sweater in half, fold anns
straight across and then roll.
They are neat, take less room
and it is so easy to choose the
style and color one wants.
-ELLEN

''

'
I

•.

CHEF BOY-AR-DEE

-

,., \0~\\llEN fRE~\\

.

\JC\C .· . HOT HOUSE GROWN
[) u c , ,,/~~· FRESH
\J1S .-~, . RHUBARB ........ ;~~.

.J

I

COUPON

~ ~-::;.::;:_ , -......_-:--· -:- 1

~:4!4-A~l

SOFT PRINTS

BATHROOM TISSUE
4 ROLL
PKG.

69¢

.

HEFTY

1.: ' :::

TRASH BAGS

1 ,1 .
I

Coupon Expires March 4, 1978

t:
f:

255

Coupon

.

.

: :: f :

W/C : ·1,1· :
Expires March 4, 1978
· :1 ~: ·

APPLES ...3.~~~.B.~~79

,

COUPON

HUNrS PRIMA SALSA
SPAGHETII SAUCE
NO. 85

125

W/C

BOX
·

¢
.

"

ROME BEAUTY

CHICKEN ·NOODLE
WITH BROTH
NO.

:

59~

BOX

BREAD

79¢

.

'

I

·1 ,I' :

NO.
20 CT. PKG.

.• , .19

BETSY ROss ·
BAKE N' SERVE

r. ~ .~.-;- -:" "7"" ,~.--: (,
r
. , ,, ,._ · -·. . ..... 1.11· .. · "· . . . ". , COUPON
.
,
: ·1,r :
LIPTON

-; -:- --:-- :-. - . '""7 ~ ,

~~ ,:: .

~1

W/C

r. '7'"' -:- •-. "':"" -:- .-;--, -:
I· .· ·· -· "· . . .

1

.
19

CHEESE
z:0~z
PIZZA MIX.............

APPLESAUCE .... ~~~ ...

· Coupon Expires March 4. 1978

: ,

· '

15

49¢

oz. jar

W/C

Coupon Expires March 4, 1978

~~~~T~W~I~N~C~I~T~Y~G~A~T~E~W~A~Y~~~~~-~1 k~~- ·~·::~:~~-~~--:~:~
____~~·,_...... , , -.,-~ :jl[ :, ,:_;;,;,; ... -~~~:--~~:.:.~.~~:~A·~·~ ,:.~-"we .lJ~~~!i!T~W~I~N~C~I~T~Y~G~A~T~E~W~A~Y~~~~~
' '.

COUPON

~~

CRACKERS

LIQUID CLEANER
NO. 75

49¢

W/C

MR. Museu;

CHEER

NO. 105
16 oz.' box

8 oz. can

·w;c

79¢

I

.I
I

SOAP POWDER

W/C

Coupon Expires March .4, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

84 oz. box

W!C

Coupon Expires March 4. 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

COuPON r,

· COUP O,N

COUPON

COUPON

OVEN CLEANER
NO. 155

Coupon Expires March 4, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

Coupon Expires March 4, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

COUPON

~ · ~ · ~..
· ~·""'""'jto
~4 l
.,...;
;.w,:.:-.r.~~~

TOWN HOUSE

SNO BOWL

18 oz. btl.
IN THE SERVICE
Sergeant James R. Young,
whose wife, Barbara, lives at
525 S. Front St., Middleport,
recently departed for Germany for six months of
temporary duty, where he
will train with other members of hla unit under the
"Brigade'75" program. The
"Brigade '75" "program In;
volves the rotating of units
from Ft. Hood, Tex., to
Europe to increase Army
combat capability while
maintaining a scheduled
level of troop strength.
His parents, Mr. and Mrs.
James H. YOWI8, live on
Route 2, Racine, Oh!h.

CREAMER ... !~.~~~!~~ ... ~

~~~~~~....... !?.?~~~~~..~9~
MOTTS
.
35 oz. 79~

refrigerator when she was

moving. I tried it last winter

COFFEEMA TE

,

COU P ON

HELLMEN'S

PURINA

BIRDSEYE

MOUNTAIN TOP

SPIN BLEND

DOG CHOW

AWAKE

CHERRY PIES

155 79¢
32 oz.
NO.

jar

W!C

Coupon Expires March 4, 1978
· TWIN CITY GATEWAY

50 lb. bag

$899

W/C

Coupon Expires March 4, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

NO.

155 21201.79¢
cans

W/C

Coupon Expires March 4, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

•
'

35 OZ. SIZE

$}69

Coupon Expires March 4, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

W/C

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Muldleport-Porneroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Feb. 28, 1978

peopletalk

Wahama High
School Releases
Honor Roll

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

By KENNETH R. CLARK

United Press International
HANGING ON : Former San ~-rancisco Mayor Joseph Alioto Differences in
married Kathlcen Sullivan Saturday tn New York, but Alioto's
ex-wife challenges the union - says the Rev , Joseph diuretics
O'Rourli'e, who performed the t-eremony, is a phony . Says
DEAR DH . LAMB - Why
Angelina Alioto, "This renegade priest wants publicity ... He'll
marry you on an hour 's notice and for 75 cents a guest he'll arc there so many different
, serve champagne." '!be San Francisco Chronicle says kinds of blood pressure pills
on the murkct? Everyone I
O'Rourke is an ex-Jesuit, dismissed from the order in 1973 but not excommunicated - man abortion flap . While the 62- talk to namc:i 'a different
year-&lt;Jld Alioto and his 33-year-old bride honeymoon m Europe, kuuj My husband IS l&lt;.1k1ng
his ,ex-wife says, "I
still Mrs. Joseph L. Alioto and will be Regrutun &lt;.~nd I am Laktng
AJdat.:law.lc . What's the l.llfas long as Joe Jives.''
FROST-BmEN : Will the real David Frust please stand up? fc renct! '! What 's the bt!st
That seems to be llle plea in the question of who IS helping blond pressure pill ont he
market 1
former President Rtchard Nixon overhaul his memoirs- if
The 1\ldactazide pili and
indeed, an overhaul actually is m the works . The New York
Trib said Monday " David ~· rost " IS hefptng Nixon rewrite his Hegt·oton pill make you
book m response to allegations made in " Ends of Power" by urinate a lot. Can this harm
H.R. Haldeman , but a Nixon aide says the Frost in question me if I am prone to phlebitis
works for Grosset and Dunlop - Nixon's publisher - Ill at he 's vr varicose veins? Plc&lt;Jsc
not the British talk show host who interviewed Nixon last year . help . I arn so confused.
DEAR RF;ADER - The old
Says Jack Breonan in San Clemente, Cctlif., "We have not
say1nM
that oue man 's meat 1s
changed one word because of what Bob (Haldeman) has
another man's poison ccrtamwritten. We haven't read Bob's book."
TIN CAN KUDOS : When they first started passtng out ly applies to all medtdnes
Academy Award nominations in Hollywood, llley snubbed RZ. and particularly the
D2 of "Star Wars" ~ just because he's a robot- and some of mcdi&lt;:mes used to trcM high
his fans were furious_ But the Academy's board of directors blood pressure.
There is no one pill that is
bas taken care of that oversight . The affable android will get
his Oscar after all - in llle form 1of a special achievement better than others. You have
award for hi&lt; creator, Benjamin Burtt Jr. Another specia l to dccu.lc wlmt is the best
statue - for sound effects editing - will go to Frank Warner cm nlnnatwn on Hn indn11liu&lt;JI
wbo handled the sci-fi sounil for "Close Encounters of the b&lt;:~ s 1s" Because there are diffen.mt levels of blood
Third Kind."
pressure, &lt;.JJfferen t t'ctuses
and individual responseS to
the medicmcs mvolved.
I ,et me give you an Jllustr&lt;:~­
tion . Mcmy of the combina twn
medH.:ines contain scrpasil,
(ltcscrp1 ne ) Ill fad Regroton
REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE
duus Patients who have a
tendeney tu devt!lop a depresWe are going to purchase a home for the first time .
Would it be better to buy insurlnce for protection
sion should not be given any
against fire and another policy against burglary and
of thcse medicines even
theU or is t~ere a policy which would take care of both?
~ though its action in controllA package pol!cy called a Homeowners Policy could
ing Lllood pressure is good.
Inc lude protection against these and many other perils .
Many patients with lower
The number of types of peril s you ~re protected aga1nst
levels of blood pressure resdepends on whe th er you purchase a Basit Form
pond well to &lt;1 tre~tment proHomeowners Polley (covering 11 perils ), a Broad
gw
m dc~1g n ed to elinunate
Form Homeowners Polley (covering 18 perils) or a
exl'cSs
body fat. A gurK.I
Comprehensive Form Polley insuri ng you for most
we1ght-1 educmg reg1me,
perils except those listed on your pol ley such as earth·
often accompanied w1th senquaker nuclear af1ack. etc . The advantage of a
Homeowners Policy Is ha vi ng one policy, one premium
sible moder0:1te exercise, may
.. less to keep up wi th Your property is 1nsured
enable these peple to have a
against a w1de range ot perils and the cost 1s generally
normi:ll blood pressure
less than If you purchased these coverages sepa ratel'y .
Without takmg i:lny medicines
at all. Restriction of dietary
S&lt;~!t may help mothers.
If eh0:1nges 111 life style e~ r e
The lnsura nee Store
nut sufficient e~nd the blood
114 E . Main
Q'jl? 5130
Pomeroy, 0 .
pn~ssure IS h1gh enough to
warrant it, the doctor n~ay

am

IIIUR·IIT%01 RB

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE SERVIC!

chouse to give the IIOJlicnls
onl'

uf

the

thun' tJ l'~

kulnt!y~
otJI sa lt ami wat~1 .

tlml

eu us~s

tilt'

tu flush

wlliil

Ahhu.:tazic

That IS
IS etnd

John Kaznoski , Principal of
Wahama Junior and Senior
High Schools announces the
Honor Roll for the third, nine
w.,.ks and the first semester.
These students have attained
an average of B or Better and
a 3 point in their scholastic

HEgrotun abu (.:onkuns a
lhurctlc.: ttlu11g w1th the HcscrJ&gt;IIIc.
~re

St!VC I'ai
tliurelij,'S !;omc Len!l to iulTcasc t11e cxcre ll un uf
sodJUIII ~e~ll and water whii L·
preventin g the I us~ uf
pota ss ium , whtit.' uthcrs
c.:&lt;:~ usc a loss of both Smne a re
st ruu~er than others and they
have tliffcrcnl Sites vf action
Ill the bully . We ha ve had i:t
parade ol iliffcrent and, I am
happy to say. better diuretics
as the ytars have passed . At
one tune mercury compour1ds
wcr·e the main dirurct1c
avai lf:lble ami thcv left &lt;J !Jit to
IJc l!CSII'Cd .
•
W1th mure severe r ases of
high blood (JI'C:SSUI' C, com·
binat10ns of medicines mciy
be needed. These tncludc
diun:tics, serpasH, agents to
blo c k spcc rfi t' nerve
PiJthways so tlmt the &lt;Jrtcrics
will dilate and let the
prc!isurc ' drup. Still other
mcdicmcs arc till'ought ul Increase the
clrculCJtLOn
l/u uugh the kidneys .
Nuw you may be more t'Oil·
fused thCJn before but I am
sending you The Health Letter number 1-8, Blood
Pressure tu give you B bette r
idea of how blood pressure 1s
con trolled . Others Whu w&lt;.~nt
th1s mformatwn ~.:au send :iO
ceu ts w1th a l ong, stamped,
self-addressed envelope 'for it
to me in care of this
newspaper ~ P.O. Box 1551.
· Radio Ci ty Station, New
York, NY 10019.
No, your medicmc w1ll nut
c.~ffed your varu:ose veins nor
will it c;-msc phlebitis . It
1m ght even help prt!vent
..S\\ ellmg of the ft:ct CJtld
ankles that a..:cumpanies
some cases of VC~nt:osc veins.
In any t'ase follow your tloc·
tor's advit'e and take the
medicine he has given }'OU.
Try to lose 0:1ny excess ft.~l yo u
lllHY lmve and stay lec111 and
'fll C I' C

endeavors.
FIRST SEMESTER
SENIORS
Bob Bamitz, Greg Blessing,
Bonme Burton, Connie Bur·
ton, Cathy Breeman, Beverly
Click, Darla Fowler, Usa
Gilland, Christina Green,
Brent Hart.
Phil Hobbs, Brett Holbrook,
Kelvin Honaker, Jennie
James, Kimberly Javins,
Rhonda Kay, Louis Kent, Dale
King, Jane Lievlng, ll!ary
McFarland. .
Mary Nicewander, April
Parsons, David Roush, Kurt
Sayre, Gary- Siders, John
Stevens, Karen Stodola,
Kathleen Test, Jane Van-

matre.
Dwayne White, Charles
Zuspa n, Diana Abel, Tim
Bennett, Mark Ferguson,

Kevin Knight, Lisa Tucker,
Keith Goldsberry and Ted
Swartz.
JIJI'j!ORS
Donald RuS.eli, Kreig
, ~yre, Melanie Sisson, Greg
Stodola, Randy Thorne,
Chrystal Weaver, Bonnie
Marr.
'Howard
Myers,
Lisa
Reynolds, Brenda Roush,
Mike Roush, Sheryl Roush,
Pat Keams, Libby Belcher.
Linda Glllispie, Lisa
Grimm, Mary Oldaker,
Jennifer Badgley, Rachel
Beard.
John Kenny Bond, Lisa
Brown, Eric Bumgardner,
Angie Casto, Joni Clark,
Susan Edwards.
SOPHOMORES
Joyce
Stevens,
Lisa
Stewart, Jill Taylor, Richie
-Thornton, Julie Weaver,
Ca rol
Willett,
Debbie

adJVC .

Welendahand.

"Civmg the bncle away."

The mom_e~ts that mean so much. You v.:ant them to be perfect. CITY LOAN
Whether 1t s for the wecldmg ceremony, the college education,
&amp;SAVINGS
or for any other good reason, come to City Loan &amp; Savings for
a personal loan. Borrow w1th trust where Ohioans have saved
with tmst since 1912.
r.:ll::\ flllc\ncli\1. servtce o f
,1

\::;, r:J CONTr&lt;pt_ 1:&gt;\TA COilJ'OI\ATION

\lk find ways to hell'·

12.i E. Me in S1. •

I

Y9~

2171

I

Do _y ou remember?

MacKnight, Maureen
Morrison, Tammy Ohlinger,
Jerry Oldaker.
Angle Proffitt, Gary
Richards, Tereasa Richards,
Jackie Ridgway, Teresa
Riggs, Alice Roush, Tim
Arnold Roush, Terry Wayne
Angel, Jeff Keith Arnold,
Teresa Ayers.
Eric Barnitz, John BeMett,
Connie Bird, Karen Brown,
Jeff Bumgardner, Annette
Campbell, Regina Clark,
Yvonne, Dee Dee Collier,
Nellie Esque, Stephanie
Estes.
Julie Gibbs, Barbara
Gordon, Brenda Gray, Milte
Grimm, Brett Grlnstead, Judy
Hall, Micki Hankinson, Lisa
Hayes, Mary Hoffman, Terri
Lynn Jolmson. '
Terri Lynne Johnson,
Relrna Goodnlte, Usa Hlll,
Jeff Lathey, Tim Allen ROWih,
Randy Wright and Troy
Hesson.
FRESHMI',;N
Scott Bamitz, Kim Bash,
Terri Brown, Rod Bwngard·
ner, Julie Clark, Carl Dugan,
Patty Estep, Audrey Fields,
Peggy Fisher, Jeff Fowler.
Sheldon Gerlach, Kathy
Gibbs, Larry Gibbs, Vickie
Gibbs, Wands Gibbs, Mark
Gilland, Connie Hart, Larry
Hesson, · Andrea Hill, Carla
Hood.
Heldt Huber, York Ingles,
Tim Kelly, Raymond Kimes,
Tndd Kitchen, Beth Knight,
Mark MacKnight, Robert
Mossman, Marilyn Myers,
Anna Parsons.

By Elizabeth Rutherford
Jordan
The recent blizzard brought
back many memories as we
recalled the blizzard on
January 22-23, 1936. How the
wind did blow and how the
snow came down!
It has a special meaning in

our family for our older son
was born at our home that
day. Alter the doctor was
belped to the main road so he
could get back to Albany, and
my husband's sister was gone
after, we were "snowed" in
lor days.
Perhaps many Columbia
Township

residents

will

recall that school was let out
early, but not early enough.
The buses were caught in
snow drifts that transported
students to Columbia Con- .
solidated School at that tinne.
I do not remember where two
of them were stopped by
drifts on the routes but the
bus driven by Earl Starkey
was stopped by a drift on the
Carpenter-Dyesville road

near the home of my
husband's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Walter Jordan, and
many of the children went to
their home and stayed until
parents could come with
horses to take them home.
I remember my father-inlaw telling about going to the
smoke bouse for a cured ham
which was $lleed and fried,
and along with canned
vegetables and fruits from
the cellar; milk and eggs
available; 'furnished food for
the hungry young people.
How many changes we can
see in the rural areas from
then

to now! There was no

electric in the homes and
although the wind blew and
the snow came, ther:,e was no
fear of the electric going off
and having no lights, (oil
lamps were used them), or
the water pipes freezing
(water was drawn from a
well or carried from a

spring). Supplies of coal and
wood were close by where a
winter's supply was stored
during the summer or fall.
Most families had cows for
their milk and butter supply
and hens in the henhouse
furnished eggs. Sugar was
always bought by llle 25 lbs.,
also flour, and a supply was
usually kept on hand ,
especially in a home where
there were still seven
children. Hogs butchered in
the fall, the meat cured and
store d , furnished meat,
especiaJly during the cold
winter months. Many tinnes a
cow was · butchered and
canned or Jet freeze and hang
to use trom until the
weather warmed and then the
remainder was canned.
Apples, potatoes and turnips,
along with cabbage, were
kept in straw lined holes in
the ground or stored in the
ceJlars along with a variety of
canned vegetables and fruits.
Think for . a minute of 100
gallons of berries, !iO gallons
of peaches, 25 gaJlons of apple
butter (many had their own

Melanie Sisson, Greg Stodola,
Chrystal Weaver, Sheryl
Roush.
Libby Belcher, Linda
Gillispie, Mary Oldaker,
Jennifer Badgley, Rachael
Beard, John KeMY Bond, Usa
Browri, Eric Bumgardner,
Angle Casto.
Joni Clark, Lisa Davis,
Susan Edwards and Mark
Fisher.
SOPHOMORES
Usa Hill, Jeff Lathey, Tim
Allen Roush, Randy Wright,
Joyce Stevens, Usa Slewart,
Jill Taylor, Julie Weaver,
Tammy Ohlinger, Jerry
Oldaker.
Jackie Ridgway, Teresa
Riggs;
Alice Roush, Tim
Denise Riffle, Ltlrry Roach,
Arnold Roush, Terry Wayne
Joey Roush, Dottle Roush,
Angel, Jeff Keith Arnold,
Terry Roush, Risa Sayre,
Teresa Lynn Ayers, Eric
Debbie Scott, Tim Sines,
Barnltz, John Bennett, CoMie
Debbie Smith.
fruit trees), these weren't
Debbie Starr, Ronald Keith Bird.
Karen
Brown,
Jeff
unusual amounts. If they
Johnson, Mark Thompson,
Bumgardner
,
Annette
were
lucky and raised cane
Mary Ann Tripp, Todd
Campbell, Nellie Esque, and made sorghum molasses
Tucker, Barry Van Matre,
Stephanie Estes, Julia Gibbs, or kept bees and had honey,
Jeff Van Matre, Melloney
Brenda Gray, Milte Grimm, they had delicious gingerWhite, Tammi Young, Martin Judy Hail, Micki Handinsore·. bread, cakes, and cookies
Zerkle.
Lisa Hayes, Terri Lynn made from these. Oh, those
EIGH111 GRADE
Johnson and Terri Lynne delicious pies, cookies and
Carl Allensworth, Rhonda Johnson .
cakes that our mothers and
Beard, Jenny Clark, AIeric
FRESHMEN
grandmothers made! If you
Clarke, Venill Clarke, Nathati
Seott Damitz, Kim Bash, doubt my word, try some of
Davls, Robin Foreman, Mark Terri Brown, Rnd Bumgard· the recipes that have been
Fowler, Riehle Fry, Marcia ner, David Burton, Lori given by one generation to
Goodnite.
Chapman, Julie Clark, Carl another for many yea,rs.
Tinn Greene, Anna Grin- Dugan, Patty Estep, Audrey
Bedrooms weren t exstead, Jack Hayes, Bikki Fields pected to be very warm, even
Hayes, Tom Haymaker, Mike
Peggy Fisher Jeff Fowler in my early years, but after
Hobbs, Tammy Jordan, Sheldon Geriach, Larry -table boar~. warmed by the
Brenda Kent, Tonda Kerwood, Gibbs, Vickie Gibbs, Wanda stov~. or bncks heated m the
Malinda Lowman.
~ookstove oven and wrapped
Gibbs Mark Gilland La
•
'
rry m cloth, were put bet ween a
Liz MacKnight, Randy
Pierce, Regina Rayburn, Hesson, Andrea Hill, Carla feather bed and those warm
comforters Mom made,
Wally Raynes, Jeffrey P. Hood.
Heldt
Huber,
Grant
Hysell,
(many from wool material),
Roush, Jerome Roush, Tena
York
Ingles,
Tim
Kelly
·and
blankets one could crawl
Roush, Terry Roush, Brenda
Raymond Kimes, Todd Kit- into a warn: bed and forget
Russell, LIBa Russell.
chen, Mark MacKnight, the wind and cold ·air. Of
Greg . Johnson, Miriam
Robert Mossman, Ma,rilyn course, fiannel gowns or even
Sisson, Troy Smith, Jeff
Myers, Anna Parsons.
long underwear (which seem
Stafford, Karen Starr, Charles
Martha Patterson, Kay to be coming in style again),
Stodola, Danny Test, Ralph Reltmire, Denise Riffle, Larry weren't frowned on then lor
Thompson, David Yarian, Roach, Joey Roush, Dottie most folks wore them.
Charles Wilkins and Tammy Roush, Terry Roush, Risa
So, you can see how my
Yoho.
Sayre, Debbie Scott.
thoughts ramble on as I
SEVENTH GRADE
Randy Simpkins, Debbie remember the blizzard of
Rebecca Fields, Melissa Smith Debbie Starr Mark • 1936.
Friend, Scott Greene, April ThomP..,. Tim Sin~ Mary
Our recent days without
Hughes, Laura James, Tina Ann Trlpp, Todd Tucker, mail took us back to 1936
GiU, Melissa Lathey, Brad Barry Van Matre Jeff Van · when our mailman, John L.
'
Rawlings, now living in
Layne, Anna Levils, JeMifer Matre
Jo '
Weans, Tammy Jacksonville,
Florida,
Uevlng.
Usa Ush, Ellen McDennitt, Yo.:: Martin Zerkle and couldn't get through on the
'
roads for several days and
Carol Mitchell, Melanie Melloney White.
then he went through drifts
Mossman, Lisa Pickens,
EIGH111 GRADE
higher than his car where
Carolyn Roble, Julie Roush,
Rhonda Beard, Jenny men had shoveled the width
Mark Roush, Lisa Long, Angie Clark, Alaric Clarke, Venill of a car out so he could get
. Northup, Beth Smith.
Clarke, Nathan Davia, CoMie through. Also men on horses
Ellison, Robin Foreman, helped in bad places until the
Jerry Spradling, Julia Mark Fowler, Richie Fry, roads were clear.
Stevens, LiBa Thomas, Krlsty Marcia Goodnite.
Another incident that I
Tucker, Kay Van Fosson, Kim
Leon Gray, Anna Grinstead, remember - a man died tn
Van Meter, Susan Wald, Jack Hayes, Vikkl' Hayes, the area and the undertaker,
Kelly Weaver, Rodney Tom Haymaker, Mike Hobbs, W. B. Martin of Vales Mill
Weaver, Beth WiUougbby and Tammy Jordan, Brenda Kenl, couldn't go to the house lo;
Kinn Wright:__
Tonda· Kerwood, Dean Lewis. dsys. Mr. Martin had a
Scott Litchfield, Greg covered van, with an oil stove
THIRD SIX WEEKS
McCarthy' Liz MacKnight, in the back of it, and several
men went with him and
SENIORS
Reggie Pauley, Jinn Powell, helped him shovel through
Jim Kretschmer, Jane Regina Rayburn, Wally the drifts. They would warm
Lieving, Mary McFarland, Raynes, Jeffrey P. Roush, and rest in the van and then
Mory Nicewander, April Jerome Roush, Tena Roush, llhovel snow again, until they
Parsons, David Roush, Kurt Terry Roush.
got through . This was after
Sayre, Gary Siders, Li18
Usa Russell, Greg Johnson, the wind stopped drifting the
Jeff Stafford, Karen starr, snow. ,
_
Gilland, Brent Hart.
Phil Hobbs, Brett Holbrook, Charles Stodola, Danny There were some teleJennie James, Kimberly Test,Ralph Thompaon, David pho.nes in the rural , area
Javins, Rhonda Kay, Rita Varian, Charles Wilkins, but those winds tore many of
the Jines down and cut off that
Hendrickson, Louis Kent, Tammy Yoho.
communication,
too.
Dale King, Bob Damitz, Greg
Just
thought
you
might like
Blessing.
SEVENTHGRADE
to
reminisce
some
about •
Bonnie Burton, Co~nie
Rebecca Fields, Rhonda
another_
blizzard
·and
wonBurton, Cathy Breman, Fisher, Arnold Fry, Scott
dered
how
many
would
read
Beverly CUck, Darla Fowler, Greene, April Hughes, Tina
lllis and remember not only
John Stevens, Karen Stodola, GiU, Brad Layne, Anna Lewis,
what I've written about but
Kathleen Test, D":aype While, Jennifer Uevlng.
many other incidents as well.
Diana Abel. .
Usa Lish, Ellen McDennitt,
Incidentally, some areas
. Tim· Bennett,
Mark .Delcle Phalen, Usa Pickens, reported (unofficial) 40
Ferguson, Kevin Knight, Tim Carolyn Roble, Julie Roush, degrees below zero on the
Neal, Laramie Roush, Steve Matk Roush, Tammy ROWih, morning of January 23, 1936. 1
Tennant, Lisa Tueker, James Usa Long, Angle Northup.
do not know )that our official
Young, Ted Swartz.
Beth Smitl!, Julia Steven.!, weather station at the CarJUNIORS
Usa 1bomas, KriBty Tucker, penter Experiment Farm
Bonnie Mark , Howard Kay Van Fouon, Susan Wald, recorded. Anyway, It was
Myers, Lisa Reynolds, Rodney
Weaver; Beth cold.
Michael Roush, Kreig Sayre, Willoughby and Kim Wright.

,- - • R •
TV • • .m eVIew

•, 7-- The Oetlv Senllnel,MidtDeport·Pomeroy,O., Tuesday, Feb. 1.8,!978 ·
'havinl babies.' you're .CRAZY !" ("Having Babies" is a new
ABC Umited series lor spring.) The teller continues:
"You can't turn down millions of kids, teenagers, adults! II
you
DO: UP YOUR EAR WITH IT! (printed in red pencil ).
By JOAN HANAUEil
Jurkes!
Idiot! ReTARTS! STUPIDS! If you do take it off the
UPI TeleviJioci Writer
air, your 're the pits.
MEW YORK (UPI) -Dear Jamie A., Carolyn, and Mal :
" DO WHAT l SAY!" .
l rreelved yu~rleUeratoday in which you all said how scared
A colleague at UPI suggested that a network official might
were that I would take your favorile prograll18 off the air have prompted his children to wrlle the letters, or even have
written them himself. Then the paranoid thought occurred use the PTA did not approve of them.
(So the real ol you will know what this lll•ll about, I received
what if tbe culprit were a vicious PTA type out to prove her
t111ers wrltlell by three children, all postmarked North Jersey, point by ghost-writing the Mtii.Carolyn letter?
.J., opp8fflltly in t1lllp008e ID a colwnn on the PTA naming
ws lt folmd IIIOI!It violent, least desirable and most
Jirable. I will quole !rem Jamie's letter- she's 9 years old
- which said in part:
Holzer Medical Center
("I wish you didn't write about T.V. In the newspaper, yau
Veterans Memorial Hospital
!Discharges)
bve everyone on my block worried sick that Charlie's Angels
Admitted - Larry Curtis,
'll
- Mrs. Larry Bugg
Feb.
Md U~rees company are going to go off the air.")
Long Bottom; William
First of all, no critic can Jake a show off the air. Critics Owens, Athens; Timothy and daughter; Damel Bush,
Carol
Pxpress their opinion of obows, and then the viewers watch It or Haynes, Syracuse; James Harry Goheen,
' "'' -Very ollell the aitlcs will admire a program, only to find LeMaster, Pomeroy; Carolyn Hampton, Wayne Harbarger,
tl&gt;ut llle real of the country feels differently. That happened Chase , Pomeroyj Janice Sr., Gloria Herdman, Mrs.
r ec-ently with the "KinK" miniseries oo NBC.
Davis, Pomeroy; Jerry Henry Holt and son; Danielle
Ireland, Teresa Jordan, ,
It is the networks that take shows off the air, and tbe PTA Owens, Syracuse.
wields power only if its disapp-oval of prograll18 ill translated
Discharged - Charles Kenneth Markins, Mrs,
McMillin
and
Into smaller audiences for the shows Involved. Some of tbe Wolfe, Sandra Sayre, Homer
Mildred
ohows the PTA disapproved bad already gone off the air Timothy Jones, Arvella daughter;
l.w&lt;:ause of viewer dialnlerest.
Donahue, Mary Bostic, Wade Shoemaker, Bernard White
The two lhowB that you children are worried about Nicholson,
Margaret and Robert Williams.
(Births)
"Charlie's Angela" and ''Three's Company"- are high In the Gloeckner, Bess Ellis, Larry
' " lings and probably will be around longer than most of the Eakins, Milley Cunningham, , Feb. 'll - Mr. and Mrs.
son.
r rograOIS the critics praise.
Julia Gibbs, James Adams, Mark Ballenger,
While it la essy to feel compassion for Jamie's being Ruth Parsons, Gertrude Wellston; Mr. and Mrs.
James Durst, son, Leon; Mr.
"•!enprltly worried!", Carolyn and Mal bit a sour note. I don't Pellegrino, Bessie Athey.
and
Mrs. Bruce Hawley, son,
Iilrc the tone of the letter, which carries with it the kind of
Pomeroy.
lH.,tilily that might well be nurtured by a violent show.
'11ley defend "Charlie's Angels," "Three's Company," and
iuddentally "Six Million -Dollar Man" and 11 Bionic Woman."
Periods of snow tonight and
' ~n e of them - probablv Mal - adds. "U you think I'll watch
Wednesday and becoming FOOD COSTS
CLEVELAND (UP! ) windy with a low tomght in
The
Bureau ·of Labor
the teens and high temStatistics
reports that food
peratures Wednesday beprices
in
Cleveland
increased
tween 30 and 36.
1.2 percent last month,
compared to last December,
WEEKEND REVIVAL
and that prices were higher in
A weekend revival will b&lt; January 1978 for all food
held at the Hartford Church categories except dairy
of Christ In Christian Union products.
.beginning March I and
William E. Rice , the
continuing through March 5.
bureau 's regional
Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp;SatThe speaker for the ser· commissioner. said Monday
·8:30 til 5:110 Thursdar._l]_12 Noon
vices will be the newly aJr the overall Cleveland Food
pointed pastor, the Rev. R.G . Price Index jumped 4.9
Tanner. The meeting~ will percent from a year ago Herman Grate
begin at 1:30 p.m. The public , meaning that conswners paid
Mason •. W. Va.
is invited to attend.
$10.49 for the same foods that

HOSPITAL NEWS

Weather

•• •••••••••••

'10000 TRADE-IN

EXTENDED FORECAST
Thursday through
Saturday, very rold Thurs·
day, with bighs In the tos
and lows In the teens. A
ehanre of rain or snow on
Friday, wtth blghs between
35 and 40 and overnight
lows between !5 and 35.
TuroJng colder Saturday1
with a chance or snow aod
highs in the 30s and lows In

Oilld's ID is finally resolved
CLEVELAND (UP I) - . found along Interstate 71 near
Police have identified the Ashlond, Ohio, as that of
battered body ol a young boy Artenchy Williams In, Mem-

Interest rate rises

By LEONARD CURRY
WASHINGTON ( UPI l - In
a reflection of worsening
inllation, the interest rate on
the teens or lower ZOs.
government-backed
,:;;:;.;:,:;.:::.::,:;:..,:·.;:;.;:;.,:;:;:;.:::.;::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:···:· mortgages rose to 8.75
percent today for the first
Atheos Livestock Sales

Saturday, Feb. 25, 197ll
Cattle
Slaughter Steers ; Grade 'l/31.25.
Feeder Steers (40fl.800
lbs.) choice 35-47.!i0; good
31.60-34. :;o.

Feeder Heifers (400-700
lbs.), choice 37-44 ; good 1936.75;

f'eeder Bulls (400-l!OO lbs.),
choice 33 .7~-49; good 3()-33.25.
Slaughter Bulls (over 1,000
lbs.) 34.25-36.25.
Slaughter Cows: Utilities
29-33.85; Canners and cutters
24-2!.75.

Veals (choice and prime )
40~ .

Baby Calves (by the head )
15-36.
(Hogs)
Hogs (No. 1, Barrows and
Gtlis, 200-230 lbs. ) 46.~0-48.
Sows 36.85-41.35.
Boars 28-25-30.!i0.
Pigs (by the head) 18.
(Lambs)
Slaughter Lambs 5~1.!i0.

mcrease in eight months.

11le mortgage rate rise,
announced
by
the
Department of Houstng and
Urban Development, was the
latest in a series of indicators
that appeared to show a
weakening of economic
conditions.
The Labor Department
sa id workers' spendable
earnings in January dropped
3 percent lor the deepest dive
in 11 years.
But in the biggest inllation
news, the Labor Department
said Monday that consmner
prices doubled from the less
than 5 percent annual rate
that prevailed for the final six
monllls of 1977 to an annual
rate of nearly 10 percent in
January.
Stock market prices
decllned in active trading
after the inflation report
became public. Prices rose in
initial trading Monday.

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

the basic tliJercent and 6.5percent rate of inflation."
But• the
Republican
National Committee and the
U.S. Chamber of Commerce
immediately attacked the
administration lor following
policies that have made
inflation cHmb !rom un
average monthly rate of 0.4
percent between July and
December to 0.8 percent in
January.
Chamber economist
Richard Landry sa id federal
\ legislation to raise mtnbnum
wages, payroll taxes and
sugar innport fees played a
significant role in the
"surprisingly large". rise in
conswner prices.
&lt;~Federal polic~es

are now a

prln1ary cause of inflation
and employers and labor
WJions are put in a position of
playing catch up hall to get
even," l.andry said.

his lif•.

Sgt. Harold Murphy and
Dctertive Jlm Koelliker wert·
told by Williams Jr. that his
wife left him in Ml'nl&gt;his
ubout Oct. 1, 1977.
1lte child, whose body wus
found lust Oct . 2H , w11 s
JH'Ovidcd with n bunnl mitt
with a lwmh;tone marked :
" AShland Cotmty'~ Little

Buy. Somcom·
l'tiUrtesy

uf

satd White House press
secretary Jody Powell. But

cost $10 m 1977.

ADOLPH'S

Ja nuary's biggest increase

was in the meats, poultry and
fi sh group - up 2.2 percent.
Restaurant meals and
other foods consumed away
from home also were up 0.3
percent for the month and 6.6
percent more than a year
ago, Rtce said.

DAIRY VALLEY ·

Now you Know
The dollar sign can b&lt; seen
on Fifth-century B.C. Chinese

a

(~,

. LOIN END

29
'1
RIB END
19
PORK ROAST••.....••.•••••..•.••••...••.••~~·. '1

INSTANT

PORK ROAST. •••.....•.•••.•••••••••••.••••.L.B:.
.

·

RIB CHOPS .•...•.•..•••••••••...••...••.••..• ~~:.

PAK

CENTER CUT

PORK
19
·CHOPS...........

.,59

PURE PORK SAUSAGE •••••••••••••••••••••••• :.

LB.

BACON ENDS ••..•.••..•••••.••.. :..•••••L.B~ ••
SLICED

SUPERIOR

9
5 e

ALL MEAT WIENERS or SLICED BOLOGNA ..................~·.

79e
DR. PEPPER

THURSDAY ONI. Y

RC COLA or
DIET' RilE COLA
8-16

0~

8-16

99~

BOTTLES

COFFEE

$439

10 oz.
jar

LB . , • •

LOIN CHOPS ....•••••.••..•.•••....•••.•••;.
~~~
LBS1M

·
HI·DRI

TOWELS
LARGE
ROLL

0~

BOTTLES

BROUGHTON'S

\

HOT COCOA
MIX
12 ct
pllg.

,,

TANGY CATSUP

.,19

HILlUN'S

10~

oz.

can
"

49~

BROUGHTON'S

3

12~

oz.

REG. 79'

can

CANS

., .

BANANAS

SLICED PORK
&amp; GRAVY

OYSTER STEW

DOG FOOD

DOG FOOD

14 oz.
bottle

49e

2% LOW FAT ~

CASH SAVER

ALPO

4LB.

.,00

25 lb.
Bag

•339

...'

GALLON

.,39

WITH MARSHMAU.OWS
pkg.

'119

79e
VAliD BEll
BUnERMILK •••••••••~.~!~~.. 69e

,,,

MILK

HOT COCOA MIX
12 ct

~ GALLON

HOM0 • MILK •••••••••••••••••

"
••

...

.

'

'"

_,

iJ.S. GRADE B

DOZEN

LARGE EGG$ ••••••••••••••••.. 6 9 e
\

SALTINES

'

48e ·

SUPER MARKET - OPEN DAILY 9 10 10 P.M.
SUNDAY 10 10 10

We Accept federal Food Stamps-We ReseM The

To Lmit

'

..

tit 11 :00 p.m . Sun.- Thur . 10 til l
Frl•dlv 1nd Saturday. See Us at the

coins.

-

1\ ~ hland

residents.

HILLS BROTHERS

CENTER CUT

care~ . ''

"Obviously, this was a
significant increase following
six months of low increases/'

On All Uving Room Suites

MASON FURNITURE

he said " 1t tS nut seen as an
indication of any change in

~is, Tenn . Williams would
have ·been 3-years-old in
June.
The boy 's father , Artenchy
Wiliiams Jr., nnd his father.
identified the child's photogruph at the city homi cide
unit. They told uuthorities
that Williams Jr .'s estr!Ulgt-d
wile, Yvonne D. Williams, 23,
Wid hinn the baby had died
and that she dropped him off
nlong a expressway in tl'e
NorU1.
Ashland or Memphi s
pollee, or both, it 's
anticipated, will try to locult•
U1e missing woman to ~ct her
statement ~(m how U1e child
&lt;tied, according to pulke, who
believe lhe youUt's b&lt;atin~
injuries were what ciHlmed

�•
8 _ The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday , Feb . 28, 1978

WA NT AD
CHARGES"

F INAN
CIA L REPORT
OFTOWNSH!PS
ForDfece
iSca
l Year End'"g
mber ] I, 197 1
S t~p to

W:ant Ads Tlirn Unwanted Items Into Cash

pW~ t lb 1 ,.

A nd E ,_ p en d tt u re'
Ba l ance Jan 1, 1917
General Fund
~ 10 7!19 85
Motor Veh•rle LJcense
5 61127
587 67

Total Recet ph

if.~

m~ tnory

\lilt I
1ht l'ull1•l&gt; ln:• " M t vt"!; u~ 111-(ht
tu tdll ur ltjl t t.m y utbdt t nM.'llob·
JCtLWIIUI The. l 'u!Jiisht'l \lo lllll&lt;ll ho
' lt , JIUIISIIJJC fiJI II lUll' lh.tll Ullt IIII UI

1 563 oo

Federal R evenue Sharrng
Fund
'178 6 00
40 703 a r

Tot al R e c et pl s &amp; Balar) ce~
Genera l Funcl
19 073 ?8
M o t or Veh1c l e L1&lt;.Cnse
TaxFund
137 1639
Gasolme T o l( Fu nd ?n ,, ,.~, Qll.
t .re Prol ec t•on F d
2.150 67
Ft"der at Reven ue Shar.ng
F u nd
'1,69'J '13
Total s
57 799 53
E ~ pend 1tu r es
Gen era l Fund
11 460 98
Motor 'J'eh1cle L1 ce nse
TaxFund
9 17 868
Gasol1 ne Tax Fu nd
I] 285 l !J
r. re Protec t •on Fd
1138 25
FcdNa l R evPnue Shar ng
Fund
'1 132 66
Total s
38 '195 65
Bala nc e D ec 31, 1977
Gene ral Fund
6 562 '10
Motor Ve h tcle L1cense
Tax Funo
4,537 71
Gaso!•M Ta x F u nc:l
6 93 1 78
F 1r c Prot eclwn Fd
91'1 4'1
Fede r a l Revenul' Sh u r .ng
F und
559 S7
TOh'll
'
, 19 503 88
Cash Balance , RecetpfS
And Expenditures
By Fund
Gene ra l Fund
Balan ce Jan 1 19 !7 10 259 85
R ece•ph
Gen eral Pr opcr t'l' Ta x
Re al Est ate a nd
Tr a11 er tG r oss l
3 290 14
Tang b le Per soni! l Prop erty
Tal( (G ro Ss l
59 16
L oca l GovNnment and
St ate Income Ta x
2,444 20
\49 00
L 1quor Per m11 F N•s
C•qarell e Lfcense Fees ,
and F m c!&gt; (G r oss)
Ill 25
l n t ang tb le
J 689 68
To l a l Rec e p ts
8,7 63 43
To ta l Be grnnrn g B&lt;~l a n cc
P l us Rece rpt s
19 023 28
Ellpc nd1fu res
Total Ex pend1 t u r es
Adm m •s1r a t1ve 9 838 28
Tow n H o ll s M em or ra l
Buii(Jrnq.s 8. G r ounds
I 4 16 85
I 133 75
Ccme t er es
LrQI\I1ng
72 00
Gr and r o ta l E)C p
Gene r a l F und
12, 460 88
Ba l Dec 3 1 19 77
6 562 .so
To ta l Ex p P lus Ba l,
Dec 31 19 77
19 0'13 28
MQ!or VehfC IC L1ce nse
Tax Fund
7'1 4 70
Batan cl" Jan 1 1977
R ece•pts
Mo t or vch cl e License
Ta~
6 9'ill69
Oth er
6, 000 00
11r99 1 69
To t a l Rece p ts
Tol &lt;l l Beg1 nn rn g Ba lance
Pl us Rece pt s
11, 7\6 39

I

Mtlbt lc llun w sa ltJs illld Y&lt;t r d sa~~~
il l ~ 111n j1\~d only Wll h t iiSh Wi\1\
IJIII ~I .!!itcnt t lrou~r rut &gt;~d.!i o.:lll l )
U* !l.tX ~UII \bt:r ]Il l ,u t ufT ht !it'll

406 23
t 7 s11s n

General ! un d
8 763 43
Motor Vchtcle ltr e nsc
Ta~tru nd
t79Yt 09
Gasolrne Ta)( F u nd
14 599 69

To ra ts

"'

100

l ,ml ttf 1hallb illld
Olult,HII ) G to.:nL., prr v.vr• l 5:100
lllllllll\111!1 ( oiSI1111 ildViiiiH
lu

7'2J 10

Ftre Pr ot ect ton Fd

I !Ill

~••Hh V.Uid &lt; 11 ~1 \lk IIIIIHIIIIUI! 15
lloUiol&gt; L~ I I t IIlli V't'l li-llrd IJ'l't thty
Ad~ nUt! Ul/ot t•tl l ~l thitl l I Oll!M't ll\1\t'
t ht\ ~ \Ioiii 0t rll&lt;t l~td ilt th~ I d&lt;~Y

of Cash

Federal Revenuo
Sh &lt;lr rn9 Fund
Tot als

"'

1110

hd. r l~

Bala nces, R ece tpl s

Tall rund
Gesol10eTa,;Fl.l nd
F rrP PrOil'Cl rOn Fd

( hiH~r

IIIII
I !tO

i llill
Jt1d}.,
lt!;t)'

TcJ N o 691:1511 $
Su mm~r v

Urulor

, .....h

il't \lii Sl I tl\!11

PhHIIt'!I'Jt 2151:1

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

th~

I ut•stlil}
llu u Fr1dt1 }
~ p M
t.ill) ho. f&lt;lil pu lJhl ,IILull

In Memol")

1\ ont&lt;d to Uu~

IN LOVIN (. f11t'&gt;nOfy ol our dCOI
mo the1 A manda Kosp01 who

IIMBt-R
Pomer oy
du, 1\ lop p• IC(I
.,ow tu obe1 Call
l&lt;11n l Ho1tbv 1 4d. b

po!tt.ed away l our veot ~ ogo to

day
It docs n t mnller whc1 e wu QO Of
who! we do
l herc t\o olwu y~o '&gt;Ome l.ule th1ng
10 thrnk ol you
Yo\H lole and vo t e ~ Oft! l r(!osh on
rn 1nd
We neve• .. hall fa, get no mo tte1
who l the tome
~odly rTH ~!ed by you t dnught or~
M1 ldt ed A rnold oncl lucro tro

CO IN~

lU RIU NCY lolo.en !&gt; old
pQc k el wolt he\ and cha1m;
"' lvet and gold We need 19b4
011d n tder \rh•er cOlll'l&lt; Buy sell
01 trade Coli Moger Wamsle y
742 2J3 1

OLD ~URN/lUlU rce bo..:e5 bro!t'&gt;
bed':&gt; 11 011 bed '&gt; et{ c.o mplcru
liou!.e h o l d~ Wnt e M 0 Mtllor
1&lt; 1 4 Pornmoy Ol11o o• &lt;oil
4n nbO

4P M

Notice•

,,rtt••m u n

Wednesday , March 1, 1918

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

'ilwm~
~~~~~~ [!Jnw~rllm\1

E~pend1tures

March 1 1978
Bemg u naware o f what to d o
w1th the e xce ll e n t c hances tha i
come yo ur way IS t he o nl y bar
to you r s u ccess th1 s commg
yea r Yo u rnu s t kno w ho w to
recogn1ze a nd tak e advantag e
o f the m

PI SCES

(Feb &lt;O-March

20)

Don 1 was te y o ur tim e JOusttng
wt l h wm dm ttl s toda y Se t yo ur
pnorttt es earl y m the day or 11
co uld oltp b y w1 th ve ry 11111e
acco rnphsh ed F1nd ou t more
about yo urself by se ndtn g lor'
yo1.n co py o f A str a Graph L et
ter Matl 50 ce nt s for e ac h and a
tong se ll-a d d r essed stampe d
en velope to A str a-Graph P 0
Bo~ 489 Ra dt o Ctty Statt on
N Y 10019 Be s ure to spec 1l y
your birth s1gn

ARIES (March 21-Aprlll9)

K e e~

\HI:
RACI NI:
Volur1tec r Fu e
Deportment wrll 5 por~so • o gun
shoo t every Saturday ol 6 prn or
thcu buddmg 1n l)o ~ ho n ~ a ~
101y choke gun s Of11y
THI: RA CI N ~ Gun Club Gun ~ h oo t
every Sunday ofl eii &gt;Oon Fa(
to ty cho lo. egun., o11ly A ~~m t e d
r11 eot &lt;&gt;
Clt-AR ANct SAL!: beg 111s M o11
f-e b 13 rll Sew N Sew Ou tl e t
Morn
) I I cc t
Ro c1 ne
All
p o l ye~ I C I double lo. n1 1 ~ •edu ced
•$(1 °" on d 50° 0 Th1ead brg spool
5 lo• $1
IN CO M ~ 1A X Serv 1 c e~ f ede, al
and slate To..: c !&gt;
Walla ce
Ru ~se ll B• odbu&lt; y qn 1228
POM ERO Y TWIN C11y Cob Open ': &gt;
8 om do~e~ 0 pm 992 J2QQ
LA MA R Beau ty Solon lon ncily
owned by Clar o McMosler ~~
under new ow ne1sh1p ol fe rl tl:!
Mrller W a lk~H Worch lor o pen
111g m ne01 lu luf e ~ he •5
pt ese ntly wor km g at Helens
Beau ty Sol on Potnero y

Check our low, low
pnces on

FERTILIZER, NITROGEN,
POTASH, FERT~PELS
&amp; BLEND

your ltsh s to nes to yo ur s elf "'
To t o l Expend rtu rcs
'
745 00 today Yo u II took stuptd 1f you
- M•sce llaneo us
e 433 6a lr y to be at at ht s ow n gam e
Mam lcn oJnce
Gr and Tot a l Ex p
someo ne wh o s already told an
Mo tor Veh•c l e Lf cc n sc
ObiJIO US whoppe r
9 178 68
T ax Fun_d
Sal Dec 31, 19 77
4 537 71 TAURUS (April 20-May 20) You
mus t have a good an d t r u sted
To lO!I El( p Plu s Sal
_Jack W Carse~. Mgr.
Dec 31 19 77
13 71 6 39 cou nterpar t 1n any b usm ess
Phone 992 2181
Gasolt ne Ta x Fund
deah ng s tod a y He or she na s a
Sa l Jan 1 19'7
5 617 27 profound e ll e c t on wh eth e r you
Rece •ph
ftmsh tn th e t&gt; lac k or red
SHOOTING MA TC H Fo,ked Run
14 .200 00
Gaso 11ne Tn x
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) The
Ot her
399 69
Spo1 l srnan Club eve ry Sunda y
Tot all'lccc• p ts
14 599 69
on ly pr o nounc e ment s you
olter notm Fac tory choke gu n:l
To t al Beg1 nn ng Bala nce
should make today are thos e
onl y
P l us Rece•p t s
20,21 6 96
whtch are w e ll th ought o ut and
COON HUNTERS mee tmg a t cl ub
Expen d•tures
calml y voiced
Say no th 1ng
To t al E xpendilur es
house on Sl'l owbol l H1H Fn
qu1ckly o r w1 th 1re
M sce llaneo us
6 310 11
Marc h 3 7 p m Refreshme nt s
M a nlenance
6 974 91 CANCER (June 21·July 22) You
Gr and To tal E:x p are !he masle• ol your tate r-------------~1 ·
Gasol111 e T ax Fund
todat where p ledges are con 13 285 18
Ba l Dec 31 1977
6,931 78 cern ed No one w1!1 c o me to
you r re sc ue 1f you c an t futftll
Total E xp P l us Ba l ,
10 1 16 96
Dec J t, 19 77
what yo u ve prom• sed
F 1re Protechon Fund
LEO (July 23-Aug .22) Thai s no!
Ba 1 Ja n 1 19 77
587 66
an
ange l on yoUr shoulder
R ece1p t s
who s tellmg you to tak e h1gh
Gene r al Pr o perly Ta x cal tber nsks today Stt lle the
Rea l Estat e and
Trail er { Gr oss)
1 535 39
urge to li sten You already
T a ng 1b le Per son a l Prop e rt y
kno w the ou tcome
Tax (G ross)
27 61
VIRGO (Aug 23-Sepl 22)
TOtil l Rece 1p\ s
I 563 00
Uncharaclerts t• cally yo u fo r·
T otal Beg nn1ng Ba lance
Plus Recer pl s
2 150 67 get abou t the I! tile thtngs that
e ~ pend•tures
are Important today
Oddly
Conl r ac ts
1 200 00
enough
;or
a
Vtrgo
you
don I
. .• -Jack
carsey , Mgr
A ud ~ Tr eas Fees
38 t5
pay enough at tentiO n to
~
Phone 9922181
Tot a l E xp
1 238 25
Ba l , De c 31,1 977
912 42 details
To t al E l\p Plu s Bal
LIBRA (Sept 23-0ct 23) Be
Dec 31 1977
2 150 67
humble and modest about your
Federal Re\·enue Shanng
accompli
s hments today You
Fund
cou ld sway tho se who are o n
Recetpts
FOUND WHITE or1d bl ock do wrth
th e fen c e or aga tn st you to
Bala nce Jan 1977
406 23
br o wll spot s Beagle hound
Gr an ts - f ed era l
2,286 00 become a part o f your team
Roc me or ed q49 26 78
2,287 00 SCORPIO (Oct 24-Nov 22) Co n
To Tal Rece 1pt r;
To ta l Beg• nnr ng Balanc e
stder any s• t uatton 1n wh1c h
Plu s Rece 1p ts
2 692 23
you re hand ling ahOther s re
EM pendttures
sources as a sac red tru st II
Ma1nt a nd Operatton
behooves yo u to live up to th e tr
Sa l a r t e s ~ E mployee s 2, 13 1 66
IN PORTLAND need boby stl le r 5
T o ta l Exp
1, 132 66
!attn tn yo u
day s o week f rom 7orn to 6pm
Bal Dec 31 19 77
559 57 SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Dec 21)
F. or more m form olfon coli
To ta l Exp P l us Ba l,
Must ho ve own
843 4803
D I'C 31 19 77
2. 692 23 It s not like ly you II s1t s llll If
anyon e t r ies to put down you r
tran spor ta t.:_o n
1dea s and supplan t them w tth
(2 1 28 lie
NEED BABYSI TT ER lor 7 year ol d rn
h1s or her own You II tea1ou s1 y
Middlepor t oreo '1'12 601 7 alter
guard yo u r own Interes ts
__: p m__

Pomeroy Landmark

9.
6il

If you want the
lowest prices on
Baler Twine now's
the time to buy.
Call us today.

Pomeroy Landmark
w

~iili&lt;lr~~~ ;.:-~~

CAPRICORN

(Dec 22-Jan . l9)

Keep you r p r obo sc1 s where 11
De tong s today In other words
putltnQ your nose m lo ano th·
er s bu smess c ou ld get tl STARCRAFf FALL Sol ~
Mm1
chopped ofl
mo tors 20 and 22
Tr aVel
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb 19)
Tra •l ers 18 5 $3 799 25 7
Buy only thm g s that you rea ll y
Bunkhou se $4 875 Fo ld down
need today In luxury 1tems
$1 700 up We sel l se rv •ce and
yo u re 1nc11ned to p ay m uc h
quo lrty Open Sunday s Ca mp
Conley Starcr aft Soles Rt 62
more th an they re worth
!NEWSPAPER EN TERPRISE ASSN!
N of Pt Pleo san t

Will PAY ca:.h lor gun ~ m n1
bfk e~ boo t., 01 what ho ... e )' O U
hi e!&gt; Jtd Sl ~I 7 M 11'1 cHepm t
~q'} 74'1 4

There 1s no
The evemn g
cury, Venus ,
and Saturn

mornmg star

stars are MerMars, Juptter

Those born on thts day are
•mder the s1gn of Pisces.
Mary Lyon, fowlder of
Mount Holyoke Semmary for
women tn Ma ssachu ~e tts f

was born F eb 28, 1797.
'
On thts day m history:
In 1849, the f1rst slnpload of
gold seekers arriVed m San
FranciSCo after a !tve-month
Journ ey from New , York
C1ty
In 1942, Japanese forces
landed m Java. the last All ted
bastion in the Dutch East
Indtes
1966,
Amencan
In
astronauts Elhotl See and
Charles Bassett were killed
when their ltght plane
crashed mto a building in St
Loms

l CONO M Y IHAU OM wtlh ott ol
loc hmc nl'o L1k 1"' n~w j:J'&gt;klng
S 'l1~ Pho11e (014) 09li J290
RUG~

WALl
~tong1 ngs
ond
o!qon., Nrw fo• C hrr -.. lrno ~
U 1·o~on ab!c Coli '1'12 2214
~ M O lS I L~ H O M~ ~

\ ard Sale
If YOU ho ve o ser v1C£! to otf e•
w!]n t lo buy or $C II sorn elh 1119
oc look 1ng l or wor k
01
you II get 1esu lts
whatever
l a~ l e f w11h o Sen l1n el Won t Ad
toii99'J. 2150
RUMM A GE SAL!: Clo thfng and
111 1~ Fr1 &amp; Sot
Morr h 3rd ot1d
4t h
Bo ~eme nt
M 1dl'll epo rl
M os b ii iC Templ e b~ Evongei111C
Chopl er

RI SIN G SlAH K e n ne ~ Boo1dmg
Ind oo r and ou ldoo r r uns
G roomn g oil bleeds Cleat\
~Oitl lo r y
loc11 111eS Che&lt;:&gt;h1re
Phone (61 4) 36 7 0292

All hmdwood
99;; 6295

1968 VW aul om oh ( st1 ck shd t
engme runs
Fo 1r condd1 on
goo d $475 747 37Q1
11U2 VEG A Good run111ng co nd1
t1 on $200 Coli 992 5530 otter
Cp rn
191 4 PINTO 2 doo r Excv llent cor)
dl tr on
R e o ~o n
lor sollmg
bo ught b1 gger cor 9q2 5S 33

Let Pom eroy landmark
so ften &amp; cond1t1on your
water w1th Coop water
softener , Model UC SVI,

2.79.95

Now Only

Let us test your water F"ree

Landmarll
Car sey , Mgr
Phone 992 2181

CUNOil tONED OHCHARD gr oss
and dover hoy A lso 8 N Ford
Tra ctor. Ex cc ll enl co nd1 1ton
992 77 01
WI Cl PAY ~as h fo, gum; 1n1111
b1k es boots or what hove yuu
F le s J rd S! Rt 7 M1ddl eport
qn 7494

POMEROY
LANDMARK
F-Ill 1\11 Yt:·lll

G··llt r,d

r

It (~II(

T \1 ·.,

, It Hl

H•J!p

Appii.JI]( '"•
'l.1 l1 · flr I\,.
IIIli

1972 OLD S FOR Sal e Vf!ry ver y ATTENTI O N MAR E Own er s
AQHA Sl ud serv 1ce In troduCi ng
1s t $ 1 000
good c.o ndii10n
to Sout h ern Oh10 Carl oko o;o r
tok es 11 991. 2529
rei I so n ol O tcre Breed for ( 0!
! 972 PINTO ST ATI O N Wagon
or (onformollon and dt spoSI
A~,~t o mnii C 2B Q(XJ mrle s Rod10!
t1on Ph one 698 8241 ev enmgs
t 1r~s
Exc e llent co n d1 110n
or wrrte l or b reed1ng co ntract
949 2880
Belle Echo Ovor te• Horses,
40225 SR 092 Pomeroy Oh1o
45769

l arge Ia !' Col1992 7479

-

Giw AWay --~"'"-::=._
PARl GERMAN Shepher d and
port col lie female about 3
montn s old 843 2933

f@i!ltii!8EE!#~n~"'-- ='"

197 4 SKYUNE 14 • 56 3 bedroom
tota l elec l fl( $7500 qq2 20 19
8 x 52 TRAilER for so le WotJid
mak e o goo d l! omper Phone
949 2344 onytr me oiler 5 30

APPLIANCE
SERVICE

We have enlarged our
se rv1ce department and
w1tl serv•ce Hotpomt and
other brands

Pomeroy Landmarll

9. _Jack W. Carsey, Mgr

IAi(

Phone m 2181

10 x50 2 bedroom mobil e home for
so le $3000 742 2215 alter 5
pm

Aimtion

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

REGULAR
AU CTI O N
Sol es
Tuesday s 7 p m Fndoy 7 p m
Saturday 1 p m New an d used
merc hond•se ot Oh1o Rwer Au c
t o n Merg s Ploz:a Middle por t

Oh
NOTICE DEAlER Auct 1on Sole
Public rnv 1ted now on Fndoy o t
1 p m Tru ck load s of ne w mer
chond•se mc !udmg so me fur
mture Sold 1n quonll ly ot Oh 1o
R1ve• Auct•on Me1 gs Plozo
Mfd~l ep~r' --~- _

for Sale
HEALTHY YOUNG p1g s for sol e
949 1774 after 5 p m
ONE HOO VER spm wa sher or -1 a
orrr dry &lt;&gt; r I me 1ot k 11
H1 o~•
chv11 '
I polf of berge bo wl
mg sho(o. 7 ~ . &lt;N $iq2 7537

__ ....-

NEW 3 be droom house 1 baths
oU elec 1 oc rc Middleport
close to Rvtlo nd Phone 992
7481
COUNTRY forrnlond w1lh sedud
ed woo ds woler and goad oc
ce ss m Monroe Coun ty W V9
S1 000 down coli (304) 772
3102 or (~4 ) ?}'!_32'}!__ ~Com merctal pr o per!~ appro:.: 17
one'&gt; le vel land lq~ ot
Tupper s Pfoms on Oh1o Route
7 Phone (614 ) 66} 6304
VA FHA 30 vr fmonc1ng al so
refrn onon g Ireland Mor tgage
7, E Sl ate A th en s phone{614 )
597 JOS 1
JUS T COMPLHED new h ouse rn
M1 ddlepor t For more m formo
I fan ( at199'J 2238 or 992 !&gt;304

.

16 A ( Rt: S on Flotwood~ Rood tn
qu11 e of 7qb South 3rd Avenue
Mrddleport

Sl1111 Eltrlctlon

li'!)o

KE MY FATHER

ESCAPE

·-

''

MEIGS PLAZA
Middleport, Ohio

12 00 til6 :00 Sunday

Phone 992 7119
2·24-llc

2·2·11C

MOBILE HOM ~ Wi!h c xpondo o n 3
oc r cs Dr1lted w ~l l SeptiC to nk
l m rn e d ate
p ossess r o n
142 30~ 4

All bnck
3
2 both &lt;; Iorge k 1l
chen drn mg a nd lam fly roo m 2
f l(ep lo(CS 2 ( Or goro ge u1tl1ty
roon1 All tenced Wdl cons1der
tr ade l o~ oted 1n Mason WV
Coli S01nerv lie Rea! Estate
(30 4 lr;) .lll.tu td n\ -. 1 11r
tt:·, ~ I U h " m'lil!"l

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

TO THl: hu n ler wh o wan ts h1 s own
land 20 A uphill land w1th
~ l an d ng
tim be r
56 50 0
991 7330

GeorgeS HobsleHer Jr.,
Broker
101112 Sycamore St.
Pomeroy, Ohto

8A.M.I04 30P M
SALES AND SERVICE
11 ·9-tfc

Off1ce Hours. 9 a.m . to 5

PM
and

THIS WEEK' S SPECIAL
1974 Sprmg manor, 12' x

60', located on level lot,
mobile home 150 lt 165' , all
electric, with new wood·
burntng stove All furniture
•ncluded
Going fast at
$11 ,000 Known as the Keith
M 1ller property, Arbaugh
addtt1on (Tuppers Plains,
Ohtol

A 1976 FUQUA, 24' x 56
double wtde. mob1le home.
located on 100' x 200' c orner
lot, all electnc. 2 baths, l
bedrooms, 1nc l ud1ng all
furmture, known as the
· Ralph Bro o ks property ,
Arbaugh addition, Tuppers
P1a 1ns. Oh1o A good buy
for $21,000
We have 3 bedroom home,
nice, wtth 2 acres ground
near Tuppers Plains, Ohio

on Rt 7, priced a t $32,000
Al so new 3 bedroom home,
Crow's Subdtv!slon. fl\le
Po1nts, sell1ng for $39,500
Cheryl Lemley
Associate
Home Phone 742-2003
Hilton Wolfe, Sr.
Associate
Home Phone 949 2589

r------------.
TEAFORD

m

u::::!

VIRGILB. SR
REAL TO
992 . 332 s
216 E Second Street

4

bedrooms, 1112 stor )es, w1th
a ll c tty u tt ll t 1es Nat ga s,
F A furnace 3 lots
AT 124 - 3 bedroom fram e
home wtth bath, na t gas
heal, ctfy water and
garage

NEW LISTING - 13 acres
mostly
bottom
land
Mtnerals, dril led wel l. and
2 bedroom res1dence .

ScipiO

Townsh•p
w i th
the
mtn er a ls . No build i ngs
Good hunt1ng land
so ACRES - 2 good natural
spnngs , small fresh w ater
strea m , all mmerals and
fenced

Fancy

master bedroom, 3 others,
plenty of closets, nat gas
F A
furna ce and c dy
water on 3 lots

NICE OLDER HOME
Has 3 bedrooms, large
st orages and closets. Full
basement, 2 porches. and
garage

40

ACRES ,-

Excellenl

huntmg l and . Good site for
co untr y home with 8 acres
nearl y level

COUNTRY -

3 bedroom

modern home w1 lh family
room , wood burner, ca r port and 2 lots

HELEN L. TEAFORD
GORDON B TEAFORD
SUE P MURPHY
R~altor Associates

Chester, Ohtu

10 30 c

----- ---~-

1.::::..:.:.~~-

TEAFORD GOLF Clubs buffed lor
sprrng

14 BUILD ING LO TS oil su rveyed
wrth O( Ces s To wa fer and
sewage l ois wr ll range fr om
50 )C 154 to 56 x 221 Out of
htgh wa ter and w1t h1n wolk mg
dtstonce ol town Pr 1ced o t only
$4500 l or all \ 4 lots Plent y of
room lor 2 3 or 4 fon'lllr es Ia
bUild Buy together and save

992 2529
BUSINESS BUILDING lo(oted on
lots 102 103 and \04 wt fh 114
l rontoge on Mom St
1n
Pomerov Buddmg 1s ce ment
b lo ck wrth wood !rome 2nd
!&gt;lory Hos beaut lu i ott iurn 1sl1
erl oppor tmer11 over head Free
pork rng Close to shoppmg
p laza Bu s1 nes s downstarrs for
sole separate ly lnqu1r e at 605
W Mom St
Pomeroy Oh•o
from noon to 6 pm onl y or r oll
992 5786 or 992 25~
GROUND AND tro tt er tn Ftve
P01nts oreo 1 10 acres w1 th
ele( tn c wate r and sewage
12x50 '} bedroom trad er fur
mshed mclud mg was her and
drver Awmngs f ront and br~ck
w •th storage Harry Deems
Parkersburg 304 422 89.,.1 or
992 3435

BRADFORD
Auctioneer
Com
p le te Serv1ce Phone 949 :2 4!!7
o r 94'il 2000 RaCine Ob1o Cn !J
Bradford
ELWOOD BOWERS RE PAI R
Sweepe rs toasters 1rons oil
srnol t appliances Lo w' nww~'&gt;r
nex t to Stole Htghwo y G01~,gt!
on Reule 7 Phone (6 1J) 91:l 5
3825

$8,000 00
NEW LISTING

-

1974

Mob •le ,
14x65
Two
bedroom s, ba1h , equtpped
kit che n, al l f urniture, 1
acre A sk fo r delatls
JUST LOOK - llt2 acres,
barn, business room , 2
bedroom home, r ecently
renovaled, bath, basement,
forced air heat $11 ,500 00

6 YEARS OLD - Very nice
ranch t ype, 3 4 bedrooms,

balh, ul1hly, FREE GAS
HEAT, carport, ' storage,
small barn, about 2 acres

$32,000.00.
NEW LISTING - Close

10,

lots of remodeling, new
S1ding, carpeting, some
paneling , 3 bedrooms,
bath, forced a tr furnace.
Ntce
for
the
money

SIS,OOO 00
3 YEARS OLD -

Beautiful

ranch
type ,
modern
equipped
kitchen ,
3
bedrooms, 2 baths. electric
B B . heat, formal dinmg
R ..
1
acre
ground.

$37,300.00.

LET US SELL YOUR
PROPERTY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK, KATHY &amp; LEONA
CLELANO
ASSOCIATES
H2-2259- 9f2-•oot
992-6191

On ly 15

[B
REMT "

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

[I ]

30--0ays of Our Live s 3, 4, I S A s The W or ld T u r ns
8, 10, 2' 00.- 0ne Life to Live 6 11
2 30--Doc:tors 3,4, 15, Guidi ng Light 8 10
3 0()--.
Another World 3, 4 15, Gener a l H ospit a l 6 13, Lili as
Yoga
You 20
J J{)-A lt In The Family 8, 10, Ohio Journa l 20 , 4
Edgeof N ight 13. My Three Son s 4 F or Rt c ht!r For
Poorer 15. Merv Griffin 6 Gi ll ig an s I s 8, Sesam e

a.

ORPHAN ANNIE-STAND-IN
GO ! TO B E GOlf'\

LOTS

~

uOOD LUCK ? fifE BFST
I' VE EVER HAD WHY,

NO W

TO DO ~· GOOD

Sl 20 33 Gomer Pyle, USMC 10

'T I I I I J"
tAn swe1 s tomorrow)

NOW I CAN REGAIN MY
s ELF RE SPEC f

LU C K

Ye,stc• da y 5 I Jumbles PLAIT GULC H INDU CT FROLIC
Answe• Why t he astiO!lallt S w eren t 11ble t o land Ot'l
the m oon IT WAS FULl
Jumble Book No 10 with The lateSt 110 puutes Is available tor $1 35 poe_t·
paid tram Jumble CJo thts new&amp;papel Box 34 Norwood N J 07848 Include
your n8111e. address zip coda and make ct1ecks PB'I'able lo Newspepemooka.

•

-

6itMIM~t~
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
2 Plowed
I Donated
land
3 Gentleman s
5 MISS
gentleman
Amertca
4 Bmldmg
measure.,.

"¥OUR STRIDE HAS

HEL.t..O, MY FRIEND! IT'S

PUR?OSE 1 WHE~
DO YOU GO? 1$ l"HE

BI:SN A WHlLE, S INGE

I'VE LAID EYES UPON
YOUR S MILE !

!"lACE YOU RE
SOUND, ONE 711&lt;1U
I KNOW

ment

wmg

10 Spoken
II Arnold or
Betsy
"t!.--l~::"J-J12 Conforms
14 Poem
15 Neighbor of
lnd
16 Faucet
17 Tra1tor
18 Bauble
=='-~=="""-"' l&gt;w.!!!l!!!!!.l.!"-.!.!!.!!il!!l.!:!!J"---U 19 One - lime
20 Tyke
1();;:;:;';~21 Enghsh
school
22 "The - m

·~

Will do roofmg , (on st, uct• on
plumb mg ond heotmg Nu JO b
too Iorge or too sma ll l;hol'le

_ ? •_2 _
23~:"8'--~--

rltti1:ieD

s Wtth
deathlike
co lor
6 ··- the
Tbmgs
You Are"
7 Ape
8 Legtslator
9 Bormg
tool
11 Helmsman
13 Suppress
20 - hZZJe
21 Shppery
fellow

8.10 ABC New s 33
12 00-Hawal! F1ve 0 8 Movie ' Rope o t Sand ' 10,
Jan ak t 3l
1 oo-Tomorrow 3,4
1()-KOIBk B 1 1{}-N ews 13
Movte Channel 4 -

Yesterday 's Anllwer

22 D1sobed1ent,
unruly
23 Weaponry
repository
24 Vermont
c1ty
25 Shone
26 Construct
28 New York's
governor

5 &amp; 9 PM - Aorporr ' 77 lPG I
7 &amp; 11 PM - Ode ' lo B1lly J oe lPG I

29 Ire
30 French
c1ty
31 Stadium
36 Harem
chamber
37 Irutlals
before
an
ahas

Spam"

"

Release Tu esday , Feb 18

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

East down for count

Ballpark
servmg

must

25 SWISS City
nOW 26 French
n
'
dance
?oo rOO.127 Wntten
letter
tal~ 28 Mongrel
J29 Macaw
Had lunch
"'f::=:f33 Melody
And not
35 Baseball

NOR Til

qb

• Q8 2
•AQI0 7
WEST
EAS1

later
.._L.£__c;.,.

.. .
~

... .,.

- : : · .1.

\.....
I "..

' ~.

• .1 9

•QI08 6 4

•1 7.1

t ~

-..

•

..

WATER WELL Dnlltng Al$o oil oncl
gas well work Heat on Or di1 11Q
Co
Dovrd S Heat on Rt 3
Pomerov
O h1 o
f-' h ~l n E!
985 43J5

DODD[

TURlEV S

'

, . ~'~, 9 usr.t011 -r.
ti·U,.,f.,

"Fl8

Vuln era bl e
Dealer So uth

.__.__..__.._,:If I

DAILY C RYPTOClUOTE; - Here's how to work It:
A X V ll L B A A X R
is I. 0 N C. F E I. t. 0 W
One t eu er samp1y stands for anot h er I n th1s sample A Ia
Utoed f or l hl' ttt rcc I.'s, X f o1 t ile two o· ~ . de Si ngle letters,
apostrophes, the le ng t h and f o r ma t m n of t he words are all
h t nt s Each day th f' &lt;'ndc letter s are dillcrc nt

-.,::-z:: -- crz::
~ 1 (:7 ~

.....

WA5'JT YCUZ
W~ IZ:O

YOU -::

&lt;'OIVYOUIZ

HU53AN:7 \VAt;
s-IL - ,AL v=?

:ut: l\H.J..-

YOV ? I WOULJ\' T
WA~ T

-::;

• 3u-

.J..:!:8'.J-

- urz-

YCL1'VIZ -•;;

w::xzw •

'

T

t-;5

~ I!Z ST Tl \':;
: WM~ L::_;:-

;3r-A"J7i"'J.3 --\-

-;105 ALTA '&lt;

\=

o\~ = ~=-zrz:: ~G . ,_

..lS~;:::; :;Tc;A':..(~
:. 'Y V\- {'\lQ~\ :7'-l::::.

WAS JOI'J6 IT "'"'C'
W\~~
MA\ 5-2

THEY RAN 01'1' T06E7JIB?
R/6HT BEFORE THE
CEREMONY / c· - --&lt;1.1

MVASA
UCK

FB

MVA

zvc

TC

XPMPSA

XPMPSA

FT

WFAB

FT

HTO
MVA

-:1-1=

N HT

JEAL.:JU;'

JS
GVHSWAB GSHTA
Yeste rday 's Cryploquote: BY THE STREET OF BY·ANDBY, ONE ARRIVES AT THE HOUSE OF NEVER CERVANTES

V C WJB

MVA

UCK

REALLY LCJV!O;J

Both

c lub s
West
WIIJ COVC I
wlwr c up o n our c&amp; reful

player will lead and ruff
dummy's last h em t
When I: as t follows, South
w1ll know that East held two
spu des, thr ee hco rls, seven

li ttle cl ub he lta s already
play ed It w11l be u simple
matter to t a k e the deep sea
fmcsse ngmns t Wes t's 9·8
::. nd avmd a cl ub los er

,.

Wesl

North

Ea!it

So uth

Pass
Puss

2•

2t
PuNs

3+

:t+

to Iu s . l lC Both
oppon ents follow drld il l thi s
poin t a c a rt"le~ ~ d eclarer
wtll slLtr t the clubs
!\ Cd l c fut dcclurcr will
ca~ h th e at:c of h em t s first

d~t~momJs u nd JU st that on e

• 10 f1
• J 652

CRVPTflQUOTES

;::A,U _.,.. HC:I\

POMEROY Moores Sloi' (-• A fte 1
30 years of successful hus moss
we ore selhng th• s gr• netol
hardware
outomot•v o slure
Pttced ot •nvenlorv Co, toct
Sommerv11le Real Es tot e rhone
-...!...~~3030 Pt Pl ea'lunt

"AK

0

nt

•1

SOUTH
• AQ76 5

FHANK &amp; EHN!F
bathwtck
~~~~~--------------~----------·--------------------------------38Shwmed
39 Percepll ve
40 Moratorium 1..:-+-+--ffi
41 lndtan
sheep
DOWN
I Fetch,
love

tllf 9 ,H W~A

+ AKJ9 7 43

AK 981

one b.H' k

Then he Will lead the jack or

.104 .1

scout's

[-l
JILL 'J"Hf 80oi'S
I,____.-----Ofll $Pf!D f2!ADING
ARe OVfRPUE •• •
of COUR5E.

:.! 28 A

• K 82
• 9 52

We'll

.-....

PULLINS EXC AVATING CompiF! te.
Serv1ce Pkon e 992 24 71:1

oo--

4 3o--LittleRas ca l sJ, 15 Gl l jlga n s Is a, Brady Bun c h
8, 10 , Mar y Ty ler Moore 13
5 oo-Her e Come The Brides J Star Tr eK 4 Gunsmoke
8 Mister Rogers ' N e igh borhood 20 JJ . Hogan s
Heroes \0 , Emergen c y One 13. Petll coal 15
5 3()-N ews 6. E fec Co 20 JJ , Mary Ty ler M oore 10,
Hoan ' s H eroes 15
6 OO-N ew s 3.4 ,8 10 13 15, AB C N ew s 6 Zoom 20
6 30-NBC NewsJ.4.1S AB C N ew s 13 Carol Burne tt &amp;
Fr tends 6 CBS N ews 8 10 Over Easy 20
7 .00--Cross Wit s J 4, Liars Club 6 Sha N a N i'l 8,
Capi to l Beat JJ , N ews 10 To Te l l The T ru th 13
G ill igan ' s I s 15, ChMa ct er lsll cs o t Learning
D isabi lit ies 20
7 15- M ar sh&lt;tl l U Report 33 7 J6-- Funny Farm 3,
Sha N a Na 4 Wh en Havoc Stru c k 6, ~ am tty F e ud
a, M ac N eil Lehrer Report 20 33. I n Sear c h O f 13
W ild Ktngdom 15
8 oo-Gnzzly Adams 3.4. 15 E lgh t Is E nough 6 13,
Goldie Hawn 8, to N ova 10 33
9 oo-B lack Sh eep Squadron 3,4 15 Charlie s Ange ls
6, 13 , M ovie
A Death I n Canaan ' 8. 10, Gr ea t
Performances 20,33
10 DO- Poll ee Wo man 3 4, 15 , Star sky 8. Hut c h 6 1J ,
Fever 33 . N ews 20
10 3o- You Be t Your L 1te 20 . Book Bea t 33
11 oo-News 3,4,6, 13, 15, 01ck C avett 10 Lilia s Yoga 8.
You 33
11 3()-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15, Pollee Story 6 13, N ews

Now an ange the crrctea 1e11e. s to
form the surp11se a r~ swer as sug
gested by the above cartoon

Pnnt answer here

-·

HOWER't' AND MARl iN
E~
CO\I olmg
sept~&lt;
sy&lt;&gt; tenl'&gt;
dozer backhoe dump tru ck
hmettone
grovel
b!uck tu p
povrng Rt 143 Phone 1 (614)
698 7331
B-A T-;. R:-:0::-0
:c:-M:-:S~-:,.,-:N-::0~ K11 c h e ns
remodeled cerdm1c trl e plum
b1ng carpentry an d gt.•nerol
mo 1n1enonce
13 ye01 ~ e ;c
penence 992·3685

I HiS INt?EED "OUNDS
LikE A WEIRD LAKE .

·1l

-----

EX CAVATING dozer b(rrldroe
and drtcher C horl~ s R Hot
f1 e ld
Bock Hoe St&gt;r v&lt; ce
Rutland , Oh•o Phone 742 7.000

I _ I

B:ETLIF

-·

EXCAVATING dozer loader ond
backhoe work dump tr uc. k s
ond !o bovs for h~r e w il l haul
1111 d1rl to soli , ltmes!ont1 end
grove! Call Sob or Rogl'r Jet
fer s day phone 992 70BQ mght
~ £.hon e 9'il2 3525 or 9~2 _5 23~ _

992 7789

byHenn Arnold and 80bl ee

ase:

SEWING MACHINE Repa11s so.. 1
11rce oil makes 'lll2 27f3&lt;1 111
Fabri c Shop
P01 1r\? r v y
A u thorrzed Stnger S ol ~ s o nd
Serv1r:e We shor ~Sc t &lt;&gt;so r s

INTERIOR PAINTING and dr ywall
l rntsh rf) g Co li Doy le Knopp

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

OR Al&lt;t: '(OU !&lt;AFFLlt.liO
CfF '30Mim!JI..l0

REMODELING Plumbmg hval nrg
a nd all types of gene1a l ' CIJlll '
Work guar anteed 20 yt: ors " "
.e:r •ence Phone992J~09

WRECKER Se r vtce
Ra cl~ Oh•o Day or r&gt;rgh t
949 2657

m'\1

~~~ ·

12 3D- Ryan s Hope 6. IJ Bob Brau n 4 Gong Show 15,
Search for Tomorrow 8. 10 E lee Co 33
00--"For R lcher , For Poorer 3 All My Childr en 6, 13
News 8 Y o ung &amp; the Rest less 10. Not F or Wom en

.--.

MAIN
POMEROY, 0.
Older 2

t

IY A LD DE t---,--,

MAGGIES
UNH O LSTERY
Re f 1nls htng
re uph ol!. t r;H y
rebUI!dmg Beout1ful scl.,.ct10 n
of matenol!. and vmyl &lt;o Ftee
esttmo l e Tel 742 28 52 l ol o
t1o n Solem Cf:lnter

NEW LISTING -

St 33

~ oo-Merv Griff in 3, Phil Dona twe ~ J . lli.S . E d ge o f
N ight 6, F a mt1y Atfair B. M a t c h G,,me 10
9 Jo-Emergeen cy One 6 And y Gr ltlllh 8 F ru n lly
Affa ir 10
10 oo--Sanford
Son 3. 4. 15 T a tlle t ales8. J oker ' s Wild
10. Not For Women O nly 13
10 3()-Hollywood Squar es 3,4 15, An d y Grtltlth 6,
Pr ice Is R lghl 8, 10 R !C k F ouche u lt 13
11 oo-Wheel of Fortune 3 .4 . 15 , H Ap p y Day s 6, 13.
Elec Co 20 , 11 JD-- Knoc k o vt 3 15 Fa m il y Feud
613 PartrldgeFamlly4 L ov eo fl•fc8 . 10 Sesame
St 20.33 . 11 55-CB S News 8, L O\I) ng Free 10
12 oo-New scenter 3 S20.000 Pyrarn •d 13 N e ws .4 6 10,

THIS 'I'BAR:i!

ANY SEWING machm c d i?OI1Rd
o•led &amp; adJusted SS 98 FHEE
ACRE •; , m1le of f Rt 143 20
p1ckup and del1very !ie lp•e
acres near Fores t A cres Pork
Oh1o 1 423·5"'il7 ,
Q92 7790
- ----~---'""- WINTER GET to your hou se? l e f u ~
make necessary reporr s AI
Tro mm Construchon 7&lt;J2 2328

story home
Features 4
bedrooms bath, formal
d1n1ng, ultltty R Garage&amp;.
storage bldg . Level lot.

Report 13, 5 so- P TL Club 1l 5 SS
Sunr ise Sem es ter 10
6 25- Chrlstopher C loseup 10. 6 .. ()- N ew s Co n reren ce
4, News 6 . Sunrise Sem es t er 81 6 4
M orn ing
Report 3 6 SO- Good Mornin g , W es t Vtr g tn !a 13
~ 6 S5- Ch uc k White Report s 10 News 13
1 00- Today 3 4, 15. Good M orni n g America 6, 13. CBS
News 8. B ullwlnkte 10
7 3 Schoo lles 10: 8 oo--Ca pt Ka n gar oo B. 10, Sesame

I(

1\CKBT, ~HE:!&lt;.

2·\0.Ifc

\!:1}

WEONESDAY, MARCH 1. 1978

To Say The LeaS! 15. G ambll 8

em 10 W( A'iWRB

742-2321
Free Estimates
Work Guaranteed

s 45- Fa rm

Unsetamble these !o"Ur Jumbles
one lenet to each squ are to torm
!ou1 ordinary word s

BUJ( N I Oiil

ConsJrudjon

BoXl

TWO STORY frame house 6
room s and both cellar out
bu1 ldtngs 4 acres !ond ol edge
of Rutl and Comp le te lro•ler
hook up al$0 2 bonks apprm s
ed prope r ty o t $15 500 Phone
992 7094

PHONE 992·6333

\1\1\lrul

~

~

Jack's Septic
Tank Servie&amp;

Pomeroy 992·6282
or 992 6263

TH REE MOB ILE homes on 5 ocres
All cleared fen ced &amp; 111 grass 4
mi les fr om A rc odro and 55
m iles from Fort Myer s Flondo
142 3 156

REALTY

FAMILY ROOM -

I•

5 &amp; 7 PM - Seven Percenl So lul lon I PGJ
9 &amp; II PM - The Senl lnel ( R I

20,33

~

Phone 915-3106

lOU Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

HOBSTETTER

-

..·-".....
CJ1;m~
••
Remodeling
•.,.
•
..
Room AdditiOns
Garages
121 lll'll

Restdent11l
and
commercial
Call
for
estimate. 24 hour servtce
Anyday, anyttme.

A CRES

b o d1 00 n1 ~

ACRES

,.

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

CARTER

GARDEN

"' -:-. .:!-

IN THAT CA~!'. !'A5'/ DI?AR.•·
THI?R!'S ~0MeTHir.l6 I THlr.ll&lt;.
YOU SHOULD KNOW!

0

AI Tromm

Route 2
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Estimates by Appotntmtnl

9 001119·00Mon. Friday
9 .00ttl6.00 Saturday

GOOO

'

. ...

llttlllol-

General Contracting

Open

-

oo--

......... -·
--

AI
992·22115 • Ml-7630

DAVID BRICKLES

Loc.Jted In The

Close
Thursdays
Saturdays a1 noon

30 - L ttf le Rasc al s:l , IS. G1l lt gan s I s 4, B r ad y Bun ch
8 10, Mary T y ler M oore IJ
5
Her e Com e The B n de s J . Sar T rek 4 Gun sm o ke
8 M 1s ter Roge r s Nei ghbor hood 10 33 , Hogan' s
Heroes 10 £ mergency One 13, Pe ttt coat IS
5 J{)- N ews 6. E lee Co 20 33 Mar y T y le r Moo re 10
Hogan' s H ero es 15
6 DO-N ew s 3, 4,1 10, 13, 15, AB C ew s 6. Zoom 20
6 Jo--N BC N ew s 3,4, IS ABC N e w s 13 Carol B u rnett &amp;
Fnends 6 C B S News 8. 10. O v er E a sy 20
7 QO-CrosswUs 3 4 , L •ar s Cl u b 6 Pop Goes T h e
Country 8, Capitol Beat JJ , N ews 10. To Te ll The
T r u th 13 Gllltgan ' s Is 15. Fren c h Chef 20
I 1S-- Btg Gr een MagaL inE! 33
7 30--Hol!y wood S ~va res 3 4, L et s Go To The Ra c es
8 Candtd Cam era 0 Mac Ne il L ehrer R eport 20.33 .
Pr ice •s R1gh t 10. That' s Ho ll ywood 13 Telev isi on
Honor Soci ety 1s
8 00- Chu c K Barrts 3,4, 15 Happy D a ys 6, 13 Celebrity
Challenge of t~e Sexes 8 10 Ne w Orleans Concer to

~

ACE HARDWARE

I I .ss- M ov ie T he Thousand P lan e Raid" 8 1 M ovie
· Seven D a y s In May " 10
12 oo-Janakl 33 1 00-- To m orrow 3.4 I 11)--- N ews 13
Mov•t Channtl 4 -

4

••tol•'~· o.

Kttchen Cabmefs. Roof1ng,
P.Jtios ,
Concrete
New
Sidewalks,
&amp;
Construction
Remodeling

6.13. ABCN ews 33

TUESOAY , HBRUARY 21. 1978

'11tt8riclak 1

WAUPAPER.
PAINT &amp; SUPPLIES

TWO

ANGEl-TOP ...
UNl-ESS-

-

Cltptla Up11111lery
P'-llib YDUng

M o v ie " M a gnum For r e" 8, 10, Jerusalem Pe ace
J3, Conver satio n W ith Howard Thurmao 10
'il 10--Soap 6 M ary T yle r M oore l3
10 oo- Fa m1 ly o, lJ , 500 M ile Scu lpture Garcten 33.
N e w s 20 10 3D- B lack P erspective Or) t h e N ews 10
11 3G- Johnny C ar son 3,.,. IS,. M ovie ' To F1nd A M an "

TELEVJSifJN
VIE WIN(;

r couLD DROWN-

---

Young's
Carpeting

1-161 me

103
HO ME'SITE S l or sol e 1 acr e and
up Middleport near Ru t land
Co 11 992 748 1 __.___

10! Hilh Sl

PIUjiOIIS

Will DO rug w eovmg $2 per
yar d M rs Junm1 e (Mary ) Kmg
CR 32 oppr ox 11, m fle o; fr om
M e 1gs Memor 1ol Garden s No
p hone

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork ~ -~---~---~~,
Rout e 33 north ol Po meroy

Sti.....

Annr&lt;erUues
Spec~al OtcasiOM

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

----

THE PHOTO PLACE

Wedd1np
POll ralls

"'"

12 JO INTS of I 111 b lo c!. tron p1p.P
21 too l tong Al so w ood w tn
do ws w1 th c. osmgs an d gloss
Phone Heedsv 1lle 61 4 378 0279

J.1ck W C.li"',,··y·. Mc p .
197 4 APOl l O 2 dr low m deoge.
A l
P S P B 8 track tope
Ph u lll ' o.JQ) /.181
Very goon t:ond1t1 on Con ta ct
Peggy Gfro lam1 132 Bu fl ern ul
Pomeroy Oh o (Merg'&gt; H1 gh
son .or )
~nices Ofi.,red
1969 Dor t G TS 340 outomo 11c
$700 Ph one 9Q2 7190 o1J e 1 Wi ll CAR E for th e eldedy m ou1
home Phone 992 731 d.
5 00

3 AND 4 RM lurn1shed and un
l ur n1 shed opt &lt;&gt;
Phone 992
5434

......._ ......

Heal Eslal" for Sale

MEI GS COUN TY Hurno ne Soc1e 1~
o rwnol cor eJ me on d od opt 1011
serv 1ce (free an1m ol .. ) 9Q2 7680
01
e ... enmg s and
Su ndoy 5 CO LOR l V Vonou s househo ld
1 1 e rn ~
Mod
c o
M
Re9 son o bl e
Coli
992 542l
99'1. b36:.!
Cro wf o1d Rt
4 60!&lt; 32b
Po m e r o ~ O h1 0 45769 M em ber
SO YBEAN ~ l AY
Lorge round
sh tps and donations PO B o ~
bo les w .ll load on your ! ruck
o82 Porn ~f S-' Y Ohto 45769
01 d el 1ver 992 3336
COlli ES 1 AKC Reg 4 ye ars old
1 AK C reg 3 yea1 '&gt; old On y 4
pups lelt 843 27 53

Auto Sales

EXPER:IENgD
Radiator __.-..,
Service
rr- the .. ,...,

de lt ve&lt;E' d
ll uckl o od
843 2933 or

l'elo for Sale
HOOF HOLLOW H or~e'&gt; Buy sell
trade 01 tr OIIl New ond u sed
&lt;;addl es Ru th Ree ... e~ A lbany
(b14 ) bql:l 3290

Business Services

I I~L WOOO ~ p l 1 t or1d
5.4~ n co rd 01 S35 o

WAN T TO BU Y house by o wner
Wo ld prefer oul of town loco
t1on 992 77JO

-~~

The Almanac
United Press lnternallonal
Today ts 'I'Uesday, Feb 21!,
tile 59th day of 1978 wtth 306 to
follow .
The moon 1s movmg toward
its last quarter

l0At I1111C'~IOtiC ar1d &lt;alqum
( hlond c ond &lt;alcrum brtne l or
du!&gt; l onl rol ond ~ pect o l muong
~o h lo • ~~~ u10, !&gt; t- • &lt;elMo• Sol!
Wook ,. Mou) Sllt;.oel Pomf):roy,
Oh•o o• ph o"c Q9'1 3tl9t

8 8

1Htll r

FOR

PI Pleo
&lt;,On• IN Vo bcs •de He{ k ~
J~n:J
~I OO d fi)OIU
14 ..: b4 ')
bed• oo rn
N O II ~M !00 lo1q11 01 too s,noll
I~JJ Oar tOn 14 x bO 2 bedlo(HT\
t:ard of llmnks
w,u bu y I P 1"( 0 Of complole IIIJ~ V o ( I OfiOr l l4 · 073 bcd room
hou!&gt;ehold
Ne
w
u ~f:-(1 01 an tr
2 both
1Ht: FAM ILY ol Fto nte~ FolnHH
9ue\ Maf tlll s 1-urtutu•e :w N _J-'H'2 (o.,pn lf~ l'i K ~S 3 bedroom
e :o. len d th(l:fr !honk~ IO lhc
7nd St
Mu1dlepm1
Ph o11" 19 t/l ~t 1
bO 1
12
l' orne roy l: mi'Hgency Squod 1hc
99'} bJ'/0
a e\ man
.r;
Rev
Jot:nC$ Corb1 t1
l:wtng
bcd1 oo m
f uneral Holl\e the pallbemcr ~
WOOD
Po le!&gt;
m o)(,
CHIP
190 5 C H t:VHL ~ 4 dr A C 283
and to the many lr1end\&gt; and
dtOinO IOI \0 On I01ge~ 1 end $8
en g '2 bbl auto Hans E.ro
llCtghbm ~ lor piO)'eJ $ !lawen.
PC' 1011 Bundled slo b $6 per
ccll cn t co ndrt iQ/1 f•u ck topper
food and c o r d~o May God B l~:;.s
ton Delrvered to Oh 1o PolltJt
'l. ld E:l It bed 2EI 111 l 11gh
all ol you
l o HI 2 f-'omei OV 992 2b89
742 2485
Husba&lt;)d Sco tt Son Bfll and
SILVH! DOllARS and co 1n&amp; t op
Gf ondchr ldf on
HAY FOH SA l t
dolla r po1d (oll74'11316
HAY FOR S A L ~
IH~ FAMil Y of h or1lo.1e Ne1gle1
985 414 8
Sl A'3HS lor IUnk (QIS hye ~
e•l c nd-. !honk s to HoLter
I! U ( ~ and A u! o P o1 1 ~ Wrecke1
Med 1col Cen te1 Pfneo es t Cm e
R~OUCE SAFE li. l o~ t w1th GoBe!&gt; e
Serv f ~ ~t l u i"! '&gt;OIA and Rc pou
l obleh &amp; E Vap wa ter p It s
Cen te1 Ew1119 Funeral Hornc
Hu tlond ~ 4 2 2081 01 P CI1r1lOrl
oncl Don Walk er po~ t 01 Ho c1 nC
Nelson Drug
742 9575
~ op lt ~ t Chur ch We w1 ~ h t oe ~
Nlct f' IC.S lot !oo lc Colt al te1 S'
ptc~ s
ou r opprcc.ro 11o 1r to WA N l 10 buy 5 to 20 ac•es 0 11
949 '1B~ 7
rc f o11ve~
l~ronds
or1d
ru1 ol wat e r 111 Mcrg!&gt; local
llOfghb01s for theu ~ y lll pothe lr c
) choo t Ot ~ t11 c t Surtoblc lo1 HAY f-OR '&gt; ole 949 2870
ltvlp ol 1 h1~ l&lt;n\e
but ld1119 UfRI o ne&amp;~ to goo d f- IIUWOO D S:/5 o picku p load
rood 99{ 0139
949 ;..'1'19

S uud&lt;~ }

~ 11d.1 \

-·..-

ForSalc
Foret! Pt p
l o• stond1ng
Q9'1 S96~ or
E:l570

8 3G-Ltwerne &amp; Sh ir le y 6. 13, Sh ields &amp; Ya r nell 8, 10
q 00-Loose Change 3. 15, T h r ee ' s Comoany 6, 13,

4

.

Tow ns h ip

M el q s c ou nh
P 0 Add r e ss Rt 2.
A lbany , OhtO 45710
cert fy the l ollowrng
report ro br&gt; correct
c;;tenn E Jr wetl
T owns htp Cle rk

9 - The Dally Se nl tnt:'l MJddJeporL Porne-ro . l • TnescJa \' . Feb 28, l 1J78

Pass Pass Pass ~·
Opemng lead + 5

wants to know the meanang
of • e 1g ht ever, mnc n ever "

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

a s u1t yo u s h o uld finesse (or
a m1ssmg queen, with nane
you s hould play for n drop

H er e 1s a hand that 1s a

cmch with correct play a nd
hke ly to fa tl miserably 1f
declarer does n ' t remember

A Hhodc

It means that wtlh mghl of

However the u se of "ever"
and 'never " Is very stron g.

You don 't follow this proce·

to get a co unt before a ttack ~

mg the dub suit

t Nl'. W/'ii'/\ 1 '1-~ H

The defense sta rts w1t~
three rounds of diamonds
Declarer ruffs the th1rd lead
to force West to ruff also If

(Do you ha ve a ques tiOn lor
/h e eJ&lt;perts ? Write Ask tne
Experr s care o f Uus n e wspa~

he holds f our trumps Wes t

p er

who has discarded a heart
on t.he second d1amond o v er·
ruffs and leads a hea rt to
South's kmg
SOuth leads a trump to

be answered 11 acc ompanted
by stamped
se fl addr ess ed
envelopes The most mtere s t ~
mg questions w11f be used fn
lh(s column and will rece iV E
cop1es of JACOBY MODERN)

l' N J I

ELVINEV WILL
BE WIF 'IE IN A
MINUTE, LOWEEZY··
SHE'S UNDER TH'
HAIR DRYER

.
"

Eagle Industries
3931 MtldOWbtOOk Rd .
Mtnnupotls. Minn . !5416

"'

'•

L--------- - ...J ;;__:

\

IU' I U ~ I- ~'iN

l

fndlwdua l QUe SIIOr'IS WIJI

fl , \H N~. Y

Wlnttd to own 1nd op erate
nndy I contectlon nnding
route
Pomeroy
and
surnundlnllfll, Plea sant
business H lth profit Ite m '
C1n start puttlme Age or
experience not Important
Require&amp; cu lnd S149S to
l49tS cash investment. For
detiiiS write and Incl ud e
yoru Dhone ftumber ,

read er

durc w h en you h ave some
good r eason not to do so

dummy' s kmg a nd a second

RESPONSIBLE
PERSON

I s l a nd

•

�'
10 _The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Feb . 28~
· r;;'1~9~
78l\&lt;IIII~W!'JOM.MIII!liJJili

News •• in Briefs

(Continued !rml pap 1)
wielding machetes.
About 100 National Guardsmen attacked Managua's
Autonomous UniverSity after students threw stones over the
school's 'wall at the troops and chanted curses against
President Anastasio Somoza.
AKRON, OHIO - WHILE AKRON COUNCIL today was
scheduled a vote on a controversial abortion ordinance, a
doctor said Its passage would put the city in direct violation of
Ohio law.
''Our attitude on this ordinance Is that actually the city Is
trying to write an &lt;rdlnance whith usurps the power of the
state in the governing of medicine," Dr. Manley Ford,
)l'esldent of the Sununlt County Medical Society, said. Manley,
speaking on behall of the society, said the ordinance would put
the city U1 violation of state law.

First ...
(Continued lrom Pll' 1)
with Columbia Gas of Ohio
Counc il President Marvin
Kelly rev1ewed meet in g of
the council committee with
John Koebel of the gas
company on the new con·
tract. Kelly sa1d th e
minimum charge would be
raised to $4.88 the first year
and $5.28 the second year He
said he really does not objel1
to this because at the present
costs, even a pilot light wo uld
cost more than the minimum
charges.
However, he said the objection IS that residents who
have gas turned off in their
homes or places of busmess
would have to pay th e
mmimum for the number uf
months it was t urned off in '
order to get gas t.umed on

a

From The
Amish

Counlty
•Trail Bologna
• Lim burger cheese
• Colby cheese
• &lt;;wiss Cheese

(Regular or Salt Free)

Simon's Markel
and
Carty.Out

again . That would be costly to
the customer, he said.
The matter was tabled
when 11 was reported that
Koebel will appear before
council to discuss the new
contract at the next meeting
Mayor Hoffman said the
village now has two pollee
off1cers workmg from 8 p.m.
to 4 a m., w1th the new offl eer bemg provided through
the CETA program . Council,
at 1ts last meeting, had expressed the need lor an additiona l officer durmg the
designated hours.
Upon t he recommendation
of the mayor, it was also
agreed to increase the pay of
the extra clerical help and the
extra dispatcher by 10 cents
an· hour. These extr a employes received no benefit ~
thiS year even though they
work in the neighborhood of
30 hours a month.
Att end ing th e meetin g
beSides offiCials were three
street department workers
who wanted to observe the
meetin g, Pa ul McDan iel,
Dav1d E. Ross and Lawrence
R W1ll .

ACTIONS FILED
In Meigs County Common
Pleas Co urt Monday, Usa
P1erce, Rt. I , Middleport and
Mark P ierce, same address,
fil ed for d1ssolut 10n of
rn arnage.

Pomero , 0 .

,--F'eb1ruary Sale

FLEX STEEL
The quality furniture
that looks like it .

TUESDAY
ANNUAL INSPECTION ,
Pomeroy Chapter 80, Royal
Arch Ma so ns, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday ; work in Past
Ma.ter Degree.
MEIGS LOCAL CHAPTER
17 of Ohio Association of
Publi c Schoo l Em ployees
Tuesday 7:30p.m. at Rutland
Amer~ can Legion Ha il on SR
124. Robert LeClam, field
representative, Will be
present . Members urged to
attend
METHOD IST Men Tuesday at 7:30 p.m at Forest
· Run Umted
Methodi st
Church The Rev . Paul Yeun,
pastor of Alb any Umt ed
Methodist Ch urch, speaker.
SHADE RLVE R Lodge 453
F&amp;AM, Chester , Tuesday
7:30p.m. Work In EA degree.
Ail master masons are in·
v1ted.
AMERICAN LEGION Auxlllary, Racine Post &amp;02, at the
hall, 7:30p.m. Tuesday.
AMERICAN Leg;oo Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post 39,
Pomeroy, 7:30 at the hail .
Pro g r Hm t o be o n
1\m e r J c a nl s m .
AMERICAN AssociaTion
of Un ive rs ity Wom e n ,
Middleport-Pomeroy Area
Branch, 7:30 Tuesday evening at the home of Jeanne
Bowen, Syracuse. "Redes•gnmg the Goal of Education"
w1il be the program topic
prese nted by Sha r on
Johnson, Gallipolis, educa·
lion cha irma n for the Ohio
Div1si on,AAUW . Mrs. Jea nne
Bowen, Mrs. J ean Alkire,
Mrs Ma ur~ ta' Miller, a nd
Christine Garst, hostesses .
MIDDLEPORT Chamber
of Commerce, 7:30 thi s
evening at Citizens National
Bank.
--WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Litera ry
Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday at
the home of Mrs. Dwight
Wallace. Mrs . Nan Moore to
revie w '' A Book of Common

J. E. Paulus, Ashtabula,
fil ed for support under the
Reciprocal- Agreement Act Prayer "
against
Willia m
M
Baumgardner, Pomeroy.
FREE CE RVI CAL cancer
Dav1s · Sey ler Sales , cHnic, Wednesday afternoon,
Pomeroy, filed for recjss•on at Heath United Methodist
of co ntract and judg{Tlent Church for f.!ei gs a r ea
aga inst Wmdcraft M&amp;M INc.. women, for appointment ca ll
Toledo.
992-7531 d,ays and 992-5832

and Suites.
SALE PRICED!

OTHER SURVIVORS
Addthona l survtvo r s of
Everett Connolly, 75, Rt. 2,
Racine, who d1ed Sunday are
four sisters, Lethe McCa in,
Ellen Wells, beth of Long
Bottom; Ermaiene Johnson,
Reedsville and Ma rtha
.Marks, Belpre; two brothers,
William Connolly, Reedaville
and Joe Connolly of Tuppers
Plains. _

IT'S NO ACCIDENT

Work crews frustrated

Social mUSICianS
• •
•
Calendar supenor

cvenmgs and weekends.

Sofas · Chairs

Five KC

THURSDAY
EVANGEIJNE
CHAPTER, Order of Eastern
Star, bean dinner, 6 p.m.
Thursday to honor members
of Middleport Masonic Lodge
363, F&amp;AM, and WIVes. Film :
' 'Our Precious Heritage" to
be shown; business meeting
at 7:30
FRIDAY
WESTE RN Square Dance
with John Hendren, national
ca ller, sponso red by t he
Belles and Beaus Club at
Royal Oak Park recrea tion
buildmg, 8 to II p.m Fnday.
Host club to take refresh·
ment s All area western
square dance club members

Charles Wills, instrumental
band Instructor at Kyger
Creek High School, has announced the results of his
stu&lt;lents In the District XVII
Solo and Ensemble contest
held over the weekend at Ohio
University.
Resu lts were:
Su penor ( I ) ratingsTarissa Harless, piano solo;
Sherry Harrison, Deb bie
Stover, Theresa Thompson
and Kim Reynolds, clarinet
quartet.
Receiving Excellent (II)
ratings were : Teresa
Hammond, flute solo; Sherry
Ha rrison, cla rinet solo;
Dav 1d Cra bt ree, trum pet
solo; AI Thompson, baritone
horn solo; Debbie Wamsley,
Danelle Clay, Woody Bur·
nett , J eff White and David
Crabtree ,' percussio n en·
semble.
Piano a ccompaniments
were played by Mane Janko
and Todd Thomas.

RUMMAGE SALE
There will be a rummage
sale of clothing and other
itema Friday and Saturday,
March 3 and 4 in the
basement at the Middleport
Masonic Temple sponsored
by the Evangelme Chapter.

by The Public Utilities

January 16, 1978,

t he

Company hereby apprises

the public ol the state of
electric supply In Its
serVIce a rea ,

Comm ission of Ohio on

ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY FACILITIES
The Company's electric

SO MANY ARE DRIVING NEW CARS
WITHOUT WRECKING THEIR BUDGETS
How do they d o it ? With on e of our
low-cost a uto loans, of course ! Eve n
th e most " accidenl·prone" budge twatch e rs can find a payment pla n
tha t d oesn't sp ell di sa s t~r! See u s !

WALK-UP TELLER WINDOW AND
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
FRI. EVENINGS To 1 P.M.

"THE
FRIENDLY BANK "

power supply raclllttes - kilowatt
nuclear
Includ ing power generating generating
untt
at
plants, ma jor transm ission Bridgman, Michigan .
tac ll tl les and
Inter· During the peak load
c onnections
with period of the next winter
ne ighboring electr4c utility ( 1978-79), Jreserves are
systems - are adequate to projected
to
be
provide rel iable electric appro•lmately 22 percent.
service to Its customers.
Currently, generating·
capacity reserves on the
American Eledrlc Power

tAEP) System, of which
Ohio Power Compllny Is a
part, are approximately 23
percent of peak load. These
reserves are expected to
Increase to about 24
percent during the forthcom ing summer, following

adequate
to , provide
reliable electric service fo
the Company's customers,

the ability of the Company
to satisfy the full electric
energy requirements of Its
supplies

of

fuel

principally coat - af the
power generating plants of
the AEP System . As a
direct result of the ongoing
strike by the Untied Mine
Workers,
whi ch
was
wmmenced December 6,

Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corp01alion

By
United
Press
International
A winter storm spread
today from the Gulf of Mexcio
through the Mi ss issippi
va lley, dashing hopes for an
early end to the recordbreaking winter of 1978.
Freezing rain and snow

Generating . capacity
reserves are required In
order to meet unexpected
lncr~sesln system load, fo
provide for an effecflve
program of preventive
maintenance of generating

facilities and to allow for
random shutdowns and

t977, coal supplies at
Individual power
generating plants have

been depleted . As or
February 24, 1978, the AE P

System coal supply was

have

been

notified as to the required
reductions In their
consumption .
.

ener~y

·

Following settlement of
the eoat strike , the
Company expeets to
replenish coal supplies at
the AEP System's power
generating stations and to
be able to again supply the
full
electric energy
requleements
cusfory'lers.

of

Its

caUed impact aid program of
subsidies for school systems
with large numbers of
children of federal workers.
One
change
would
eliminate payme nts lor
children whose parents are
employed on federal property
outside the county in which
the school district is located.
The administration also
asked Congress to clarify the
requirement for equitable
services to children in private
• schools by providing that
expenditures for such
children should be equal to
expenditures f~r J;&gt;Ublic
school children With similar
needs.
Other proposed changes 111
education law were to be
outlined todsy at the White
House and
later In
congressional testimony.
Carter
seeks
major
changes in the $2.1 billion •
package of subsidies for
improving the reading, math
and other learning skUis of
needy school children,
according to a summary
prepared by the Department
of Health, Education and
Welfare.
This aid, provided under
Title I of the landmark
Elementary and Secondary
Education Act of 1965,
represents the largest federal
program of aid to schools.
Among the changes, Carter
proposes a new grant
incentive plan to encourage
states to set up their own socalled compensatory
education programs. States
would get one federal dollar
for each two dollars of their
own money spent on
classroom
enrichment
courses lor poor children.

.
'
as U. S. attorney lor southern

Ohio.
Senate confirmation is
expected in about a month lor
Cissell, 36, who has been a
CinciMati lawyer the past
decade.

(Juv•nlle Lflvfll T•rm Changing to
Whole Wt Polley)

•
$35 00 a year provldfll 110,000 term lnaur·
ance to age 23. The coverage men ct'lanon
to permanent ln1ur1nce lor the 11me amount
with the payment of higher, yet a!IU attractive
premluma . Guaranteed lnaurablll~ with
opllont to purch ... addlllonel ponman-j
ent protection means thit pte n can be
lhe foundallon of a llle·iong program
of life meurance.

DAVIS INSURANCE AGENCY
C..urt St.

PHONE 992-6677

Pomeroy, Ohto

entinC

Fiftet•n Cent s
Vo l. 2~ . No . 223

EXTEN DED t'OR ECAST
Friday through Sunday,
a r hanee of sno"'' fl urries

Friday and Suturday and
la ir Sund ay . Contin ued
rold, with highs in the
upper 20s or the 30s and
lows in the teens.

Weather
Clea ring and cold tomght,
With lows tn the teens. Mostly
sunny and becoming windy
Thursday, w1th lughs 111 the,
nud ur upper JOs

ta blecloths and a
g lass a t one Silting

.'
I

•

'I

.. . •.'t '• '

Short dress with

panties

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
0

. l

broken

FORMER TEACHERS a ttending the awards banquet
Tuesday night at the Me1gs Inn honoring former students.

George Massar and Dtek Cmnpl&gt;f•ll were fron t 1-r , M1\rion

Ebersbach, Wheeler Drake and Carl lluusc ; lluck, Bub
Roberts and Aa ron Zahi.

'

Massar, Campbell honorees
Geor ge Massar Hnd Otck
Cmn p bcll wc t'c avnu d cd
certificates uf dist hwttun Ht
an awards banqurt h('ld at
the Mctgs Inn Tut•stla y ni ~ ht
It wa s spo nsored by the
Pol llc r oy
f'hH tli i.H'J'
of

TiiESE MEIGS COUNTY deputies of the sheriff's department helped in a raid of a
Scipio Township farm Tuesday when some $60,000 worth of mariJuana was confiscated
From the left are Sam Shain, Mike Mullen, Lou Osborne, Gary Wolfe, Randy Forbes, Ron
Hollon, Dana Aldridge and Mike Zirkle.

Four arrested after raid
A Scipio Township farmer
' &amp;nd his three son s are bemg
held in the Meigs County Ja1l
on drug r elated cha rges
followmg a raid Tuesday
afternoon resultmg m eonflscation of $60,000 worth of
marijuana
Shenff James Proffitt sa1d
today the m a r~jua na wa s
se1zed by use of a search
wan-ant on a farm m the

Harnsonv11le area .

Booked were Charles
But cher , 62; Ro be rt
Butcher , 19; Ra nda 11
Butcher, 22 and Ronald
Butcher, 25 , ail of Rt.

L.

D.
L.

D.
4,

Pon1eroy .
Sher~ff

de puti es

Pomeroy and his
reco ver ed

a p-

proximate ly 98 pounds of
ma nJ ua na , som e a lready

cured and

~ rapped

in trash

§§ .......VVY'o-..................-.....-..-................ .. . ...:-,.... . ....-. ................ ........v ............... ...-............

::::..~'~''o'lo,'lo'&amp;""'Y•'••''"'-..._......._.._'Q.~•;-:•,&gt;;.X~•;-,•,•,•,•,•,•,•,•,•,..•,•,•,•,•-:•'o"o..'•''•'•'•'o'o!t.:.,_-.•.:._'o_o,._..._.._..._..._'o!
~

~News. • . in Brief.J
i

Commerce

Massm , an altu1ney, Js
prese ntl y pr rs tdcn ! and
d1rcdo r of th e Shltl'
1\utonwbt lc Mutua l In-

ha gs, trash cans and baggies.
It was estimated the "grass "
has a street value of $60,000.
Part1cipat1ng U1 the ra1d
w1th Me1gs Co unty Sheriff
Proff1tt were depuhes Gary
Wolfe, Michael Zirkle, Ron
Hollon, Randy Forbes, Dana
Aldridge, Lou Osborne, Sam
Sham , Keit h Woods, Andy
Lyles, M1k e Mullens and Ph1l
McKmney.
Butcher and h1s sons arc
expected to have the1r 1mllal

surance Cu , Odu 111 bus.
Ca mpbell IS cthl ol uf the

Cltizen s-J oufll,-11 Massar 1s a
native or Meigs Cuunty ,md ~
gradua te nf Pomeroy lh ~ h

Schoo l a nd

Bv Unlted Press International
WASHJNGTON - SOUTH KOREAN nee merchant
Tongsun Park's testimony held no surprises as, under tight
security and Leon Javorski prodding, he began telling the
House Ethics Committee about some of his payments to
congressmen. Park evidently st11l demes gmng br1bes to help
South Korea's government.
Several committee members agreed that Park, who was
reswning his secret testrmony today, had no great reve lations
at his first appearance Tuesday despite his pledge to try to
"clear the air."
ZURICH, SWITZERLAND - THE DOLLAR TODAY
plummeted to an all-time low against the SWISS franc and fell
sharply against the Japanese yen, renecting a growing sense
of crisis surrounding the sagging American currency. "There
simply is no confidence either In the dollar or in Washington's
assertions that it will act forcefully to support the dollar," a
leading Zurich dealer sa1d.
The dollar opened on the Zurich exchange at 1.8130 Swiss
francs, down overnight from the Tuesday close of 1.8430.
Within the first 10 minutes of trading, it collapsed to a buying
rate oll.7725 Swiss francs, a new low.
ORLANDO, FLA. - LOOKING LIKE ELVIS PRESLEY
in never having to feel sorry, according to Dennis Wlae , who
went to considerable lengths to achieve that state. Wise said he
first got the idea from a movie.
"The idea of plastic surgery came when I was 14 or 15 after
I had seen it on a science fiction movie, " he said. "I thought it
would be great to look like Elv1s Presley." And after such
surgery, Wise bears a fair resemblance to his late idol, though
one makeup man said it still took a lot of work.

MEDINA, OHIO - A HAND-WRITTEN statement by a
man charged with clubbing his parents and brothers to death ,
then setting fire to their house, has been admitted as evidence
In the murder trial of a former Miami (Ohio) Umversity
freshman.
The statement of Michael Swihart, 19, Brunswick, describes
the killings, police Tuesday told a three-judge panel hearing
the case. "I hlthimand he fell down . My mother screamed and
came forward. I kept SWinging." It's part of Swihart's account
of what happened last Oct. 23 when he allegedly killed his
father, Donald, his mother, Sue, and brothers, Br1an, 16, and
Russell, 9, police said.
AKRON, OlfiO - AN ABORTION CONTROL law
requiring doctors to use techniques most likely to preserve the
life and health of an unborn child h'as been passed by Akron
City Council.
,
The council, following an often . emotional, one • hour
debate, passed the ordinance by a 7~ vote Tuesday. The
ordinance mandates that alter the abortion all available
methods and techniques must be used to keep the child alive,
and a second physician must be present to assist in preserving
the child's life.
TEL AVIV, ISRAEL - A POWERFUL bomb today
destroyed a one..9tory home, killing an elderly Israeli couple
and wounding three other persons, police said.
They said the lour'flOund bemb killed an 00-year-old man
and his 76-year-old wife as they slept in their suburban Ramal
Gan home. Three others were wounded, two of them seriously.
LOS ANGELES - RAYMOND J. FERRITTO an ex
convict from Erie, Pa., described by police as "a real Mafia hit
man," was charged Tuesday with murder Ill the slaying more
than eight years ,ago of Julius Antbony Petro, a reputed Cleveland\safecracker.
{'

C am p b ~ ll

at·

tended Pon1e1oy lli t;h Sd mo l
Massa r scud , " This 1s a
hem1 we:trn llng a ffc nr " He
attribu ted his s ut'ccss to Ius
parents, and the people tha i
pulled him a l un ~. lie added
" l have been ver y lueky "
Mass ar cr cd 1t &lt;:d h1s

court a ppearance so rnetrme

Wednesday afternoon.

and his scuul leuder,
Carl House. II Js 1alk was
f1lll&gt;d with hurnor "as he to ld
ta bles of his cx pen enccs at
Ohm St ate where Fred Crow
played footllall
Ma ss ar mtro du ce cl Il ls
co usin Ste lla Klocs ~md s puke
uf the late Th o m&lt;~ s Hennessy
lie ended by add 111g tha t 1t
was a " grand and generpus
cvenmg."
Cam pbell spoke on th e
thin gs he lik ed abo ut
Pomeroy. He ;1ated that he
spent a great dea l uf t1m c 111
the Pomeroy Libr·ary rcadmg
all the books he could gel his
hands on wh1ch helped shape
his future.
He s poke ,,f the fine
teachers he had and the late
Marga ret Cha pn wn fur hi s
knowledge or Latin He added
that he deplores the fact that
th ey don't teach La t m
anymo re
Campbell also pa1d tnbute
to House as a hnc scout
lea der . " I was an Eagle Scuut
and so was my son" Ca mpbell observed.
" l grew up here dur1ng the
depres sion a nd cu llectcd
tea ch ~ r s

-~

WASHINGTON - THANKS IN PART TO the efforts of a
Columbus, Ohio, optometrist, the U. S. Food and Orug
Administration sa1d Tuesday that sodium valproate has been
approved for sale as a prescriptiOn drug to treat epilepsy.
The drug, which could be ready for use m a month, has
been tested at Children's Hospital m Columbus lor the past
year. The FDA Tu'Xday credited Dr. Bernard Abrams with
helping bring attention to the drug.,

Pajamas in soft
cotton terry

Pretty print dress in
soft cotton . Toddlers
sizes.

at

• I

·.

CELINA's
YOUTH MASTER

estimated to be sulftclent

customers

Envoy carrying
new peace talks

Ufe Insurance for the growing
years that provides adult
protection, too

generating units.

the Company's Copoelfy
ond E1111rgy Emorgency
Control Progrom Is being
applied and the Company's

By CRAIG A. PALMER
children in private schools
WASHINGTON (UPI )
get their la ir sha re of
President Carter said today government subsidies.
he wants to concentra te
In a message to Congress
federal fund s for needy the president also announced
school children on the poorest proposals for changmg and
students and make sure that reducmg the $BOO million so-

•

NOW YOU KNOW
A Roman glutton named
Arpoeras once dcvuured four

BABY

loading curtailments or

for forty days of operation.
In order to conserve fuel ,

e

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Wednesday, March ) . 1978

for needy children

By
Uniled
Press on a declaration of principles
International
lor a peace settlement, said
An American env oy is Beg in ga ve him " some
carrying new Israeli peace concrete suggestions which I
proposals to Cairo today but will be taking hack with me to
both Egyptian and Israeli Egypt."
But Dayan said the indirect
officials say the U.S. shuttle
effort is stalled on the talks have so for produced
stubborn issues facing the little pro gress "lor one
Middle East.
reason only- because Egypt
Assistant Secreta ry of doesn 't want to agree on a
State Alfred Atherton met separate settlement, a
Israeli Prime Minister separate peace or even
Menachem Begm Monday separate negotiations."
and was carrying the latest
He said Atherton's mission
Israeli proposals to t he has been fo..-ng on the
Egyptian government.
Palestinian question instead
But Fore1gn M1mster of differences between Egypt
Moshe Dayan ac'CUsed the and
Israel such
as
Egyptians of hampering settlements and the location
negotiations and sa id of armies in peacetime.
Atherton ' s ne go ti a t ing
"This is against our will
strategy " is against our and requests and suggestions
will."
and ' declarations, " Dayan
Egypt in turn said Israel's said.
policy
of
expa nding
Despite that, Begin said,
settlements in occupied Arab "There Is reason to assume
lands was threatening the • the negotiations will go on.
indirect talks. A prominent We hope for the best. Let us
Egyptian columnist branded be optimistiC."
the Jew1sh state's · policy
In Cairo, Egyptian Foreign
"national madness."
Minister Mohammed Kamel
Syria, a hardline opponent said Israel's policy decision
of Egyptian President Anwar Sunday
to
expand
Sadat' s peace lntitlalive, settlements in occupied Arab
snubbed Atherton and instead lands was ''contrary to the
sent its top military man to success of Atherton's
Moscow to seek mcreased rrussion .
Soviet military aid.
Atherton , who is tr)'ing to
get israel and Egypt tJ"agree
storm."
NOMINATED
CINCINNATI (UPI) - City
Grants given Mason projects
council member James C.
Cissell
was nominated
C HARL E STON
Gra nts will ena ble the Monday by President Carter
Govern or Ro&lt;:J&lt;eleller an· Mason Police Department to
nounced today the release of purchase a "speedalyzer" to succeed William Milligan
$1,250 1n federal matching wh1ch is considered prima
funds to the Town of \'&lt;fason facie evidence of speeding in
for use 1n traffic control West V1rgmia courts and the
THINGS
programs and $1,4~ to the sheriff to
have
the
Mason County Sheriff's breathalyzer to mcrease DWI
FOR
Department to purchase a convictions.
model 1000 breathalyzer.
The Governor explamed
Total funds of $2,500 have that there has been an in·
been made available through crease in trall1c flow because
the Cruninal JustiCe and of construction of a power
Highway Safety Division of plant in the Mason area. The
the Governor 's Office of new eqmpment win decrease
Economic and Community speed violations.
Development fo r traffic
control.

ELECTRIC ENERGY SUPPLY
Allhoug h power supply
fa cilities are judged to be

eustomers Is alfected by
the avallabltlty of adequate

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

completion ot a 1,100,000

area.
Crews worked in a snowfall
Mondsy night, trying to get
cranes an d bull dozers in
posiiion to move the tank car,
one of 25 that derailed from
an Illinois Central Gu lf
·freight SUnday.
" They can't get it up
because the ground Is too
soft," said Gibson County
sheriff's deputy Bob Moore.
Cleanup crews also were
working 80 miles east of
Cades, at Waverly, Tenn.,
where 12 persons were killed
and more than 50 others
injured irl the explosion of a
derruled propane gas tanker
from a Louisville &amp; Nashville
freight Friday.
Some 1,200 Waver ly

residents returned to their industry for some time."
Bul Prime F . Osborn,
homes Sunday and helped in
the cleanup work Monday. president of Seaboard Coast
Tennessee Gov. Ray Line Industries, said in
Blanton met in Washington Jacksonville, Fla., ''These
Monday with TransportatlOI) accidents happen. We have
Secretary Brock Adams and rigid standards for the
called for the nationalization movement of haza rdous
of the naUon's "decrepit" materials. There Ia no way to
prevent them completely .
railroads.
"The sad fact is that in the The re will a lways be
sta te of Tennessee we are derailments."
The derailment of 43 cars of
averaging lour derailments a
the IOI~ar Atlanta and St.
week," Blanton said.
Adams said he did not Andrews Bay Railroad
support nationalization, but freight Sl!llday was the 36th
rathe r is pushing a series of train wreck in the Florids
proposals for more federal panhandle in the past 212
r ai lroa d Inspe c t o r s, years.
increased federal sutllidies to
The chlorine gas from the
railroads a nd stricter ruptured tanker rode the
standards for rail shipment of wind through the town of
hazardous materials. •
Youngstown , 22 miles
The president of one of the northeast of . .Panama City,
nation's largest railroad sys- forcing thousands to Dee lor
tems said the accidents will safety. Eight persol)s, many
throw "a cloud over our of them motorists , died.

Good Luck Southern in district tourney

An. h
ot er Carter wants funds
storm

reached from Louisiana and
Texas into central Illinois,
where w1thin an hour of the
DATE CHANGED
start of the snowfall , an mch
The Mei!!B High School
Mu s i c D e partm e nt ' s was recorded in Springfield.
Highways iced by sleet,
presentation of the Broadway
freezing
rain and snow made
11
musical,
Music Man "
tra
vel
tr e a c herous
originally set for March 10
throughout
the
middle of the
and 11 has been postponed to
Mississippi
valley
into the
March 31 and April I, Mrs.
lower
Ohio
basin.
Paige Hwrt, vocal music
The Na tional Weather
supervisor, announced .
Service posted l(aveler s
adv1sones for most of the
Midwest, warned of heavy
DANCE SET
snows for Mi ssouri and
The Bell es and Beaus southern and central IUinms,
Western Square Dance Club and predicted up to 4 mches
will sponsor a dance Friday of new snow for a coal·
night from 8 to II p.m at starved
Indiana
still
Royal Oak Park recreation recovermg fr om the worst
buildmg. J ohn Hendren will blizzard in its history .
be the caller . All area
The NWS said the eastward
western square dance clubs moving storm would bring
are invited. Members of the snow into the mid-Atlantic
host club are to take refresh· states
by
W e dn e~d a y
ments.
morning . ,
The Midwest was not the
PAIR FINED
only part of the country
Pomeroy Mayor Claren ce where hopes for an easy end
Andrews Monday fin ed to the disastrous winter of '78,
Wa nda Patterson, Pomeroy, kindled by a warmmg trend
and Ali ce Wagn er , Mid- during the weekend, were
dleport, $200 and co sts each doused by rain and poor
for petty larceny.
weather. ·
Local flooding in southern
developed alte,r
Arizona
HOSPITALIZED
Charles Smith, Pomeroy, 1s heavy rains, and the Pacific
a patient at the Holzer coast - drenched one week
and dry the next - braced lor
Medical Center
a possible heavy "rainstorm
approaching from the Pacific
InVIted;
ocean .
Heavy rains Monday in
WORLD Day of Prayer,
1:30 p.m. Friday at the Southern California were acPomeroy First Baptist companied by mild enough
for
Church sponsored by Church temp e ratures
Women United of Me1gs metereologists to call the
County.
precipitation a " spring

PUBLIC NOTICE
FROM OHIO POWER COMPANY
Pursuant
to
the
Company' s C1pacity 1nd
Energy
Emergency
Control Progr1m approved

By O'NEIL HENDRICK
United Press International
Work
crews
were
frustrated Mondsy in efforts
to neutralize deadly chlorine
gas leaking from a derailed
railroad tanker in the Florida
panhandle and to move an
overturned tanker spilling
noxious lye fumes in West
Tennessee.
The
problem
at
9Voung.stown, F la ., where
eight persons have been
killed by a greenish-yellow
death cloud of chlorine gas,
was a lack of the right
equipment.
"It's the old 'for lack of a
nail' story," said cleanup
supervisor Don Tullis, whose
crew waited while the equipmen t was rushed from
Virden, Ill ., hopefully for use
today.
At Cades, Tenn ., soggy
ground hindered efforts to

right a lanker containing
sod1um hydroxide , whose
possibly dange rous fumes
prompted the evacuation of
around 150 persons in the

Material
purchases
reviewed
Ted Warner , superm·
tendent a nd Dave Spencer,
off1ce manager of the Me~gs
County H1ghway Department
met with the board of commi ss ion e r s Tuesda y mght
d1scussmg the purchase of
aggreg ate and bltummous
'maten als for 1978
The
co mmi SS ion er s
grant ed authorization for the
hi ghway departm ent to
advertise for bids.
The board rev1ewed b1ds
[or a tandem dump truck and
a p1ckup for the highway
department. Again bids were
tabled for additwnal study.
Cha rles Pyles, mayor of
Ra cin e was a ppomt ed to
serve on the Southeastern

Ohi o Emergency Medica l
Services Board, SEOEMS.
Bob Ba1ley, Meigs County
E MS coordinator , met with
the commissioners to discuss

the progress of the new
emergency medical services.
Bailey sa1d the new system is
working well, with only mmor
problems m Implem entation
and budgets.

Progress
• • •
IS tOpiC
Edison Baker rev re wed

progress on the constructiOn
of a nursing home in Middleport at Tuesday's Mid·
dleport Chamber of Com·
merce meeting .
Accordmg to plans, the

nursin g home
besides
providing a local facility long
been needed in Meigs County,
would emp)oy some 55 to 80
people witH a $700,000 annual
payroll. Excellent progress is
being made towards con·
strudion plans.
Th e chamber agreed to
hold future meetings at the
Meigs Inn at 6:30p.m. on the
fourth Tuesday of each month
w1th a dinner session for
members and their spouses.
A discussion was held on
holding a sidewalk sale in
April and plans will be
fmalized at the March
meet mg .
George Ingels, president,
was m charge of the meeting:

RETIRED - George Hobstetter, Pomeroy, vice
president of the Pomeroy National Bank, retired Tuesday
Hobstetter began h1s duties with the bank in 1934 as a
bookkeeper. He served in the second World War for 43
months as a Master Sgt. in the Army Air Force . Following
the war he returned to the bank. In November 1948 he
went to the Peoples Bank at Nelsonville as cashier where
he stayed 14 months. He returned to Pomeroy m March,
1950where he operated the General Insurance Agency for
10 years. He returned to the Pomeroy National Bank in
1961 as VICe president. His wife is the former Maxine
Ebershach who is a registered nurse and Utilization
Rev•ew.{;oord~nator at Veterans Memorial Hospital. They
have two daughters, Pamela O'Laughhn, Athens, and
Mrs. John (Betty Jean) Krawsczyn, Mmersville. They
also have two grandsons. Hobsteller will devote hiS time
to h1s business, Hobstetter Realty.

Bill will make
benefits easier
WASHINGTON IUPI ) President Ca rter toda y
s1gned leg1siatwn makmg it
easier for the nation's coal
mmers to cl aim black lung
benef1ts and to reapply 1f
benef1ts had been demed.
The law. cases eligibility

w1th be nefits, on ce rt a in
reapplications, pa1d from t he
da te ur the ongmal demed
application
The Wh1te House was ex·
peeled to announce today that
Ca rter Will Oy to Savannah,
Ga , March 17, to take part in
reqUirements and procedures St. Patrick's Da y ceremorues
for miners or their suvtvors and then spend the weekend
to c la im beneflt s for at his fa vorite vacatum spot ,
pneumoconiOsis - commonly Musg rove Plantation on St.
called ' black lung" - a Stmuns Island, Ga.
The Carters were expected
debilitating disease of the
lungs brought on by long- to rema m Ill Washington uver
term exposure to coal dust th e Easter holida ys to
The president Signed the prepa re for the week·long
m easure 1nto la w a m1d Latin
Am erican-Afr ica n
continum g admini stration swing that begms March 28.
efforts to convince the 160,000
st r~kmg Umted Mme Workers
ln ra t1f y a
tentative
agreement promrsing an end
DWI CONVICTION
to the nearly three-month
J ames Kr1tschmer, New
long coal walkout.
A separat e financing Haven, was fined $350 and
measure was passed earlier costs and given a three-day
th1 s year to tax co al ja il sentence when he was
production to pay for the convicted of dnving while
benefits. The lax would int oxica ted in a h ear~ n g
amount to 50 cents per ton befor e Pomeroy Ma yor
from underground mines and Clarence Andrews Tuesday
25 cents per ton on coal from night.
F orfeiting a $30 a p·
surface mines
The new law broadens the pearance bond in the coutt
defmttion of " miner ' ' to in· · was Billy Painter, Bidwell,
elude workers m and around $30, posted on speed ing
a coal mine or preparation char ges.
facility, in miniflg or
preparation or transportation
of coal, and even construction
SQUAD CALLED
workers exposed to coal dust.
The
Pomeroy Emergency
And 11 accepts affidavits for
eligibility or surv1vors of a Squad was called to the
mmer who died even when Darwm area at 11 52 a. m.
the re is no conclus1v e · Tuesday for Herb Gilkey,
medica. l . that he had who was taken to Vetera ns
Memorial Hospital. He was
black
application ~
adlllitted
there.
for benei s.l e expedited

•

cli st ir wt 1011 by

Fred l'l'uw ,
Pom ero y Atl urn cy u nd
pi eshlcnt of t he Pu n JCI't lY
l l J&lt;uulR'I of Cummt.'ITC .
(' row . 111 In s rema rh .

! haukcd

&lt;~II

those uttcnd mg

t·~pl amcd the
d i! JI ICI \\t iS part

H tld

progralll

ur

nwmcl.s
nf lh t•
the d w!llbcr· lo

ms!Jtlltt• !JI Ilil• 111 our L'illl lnl iiiHty IJc fH.Idt~ d, " \,hCI'C oil('
pn 1ud pcu l)h • In M L• Jgs

( :uunt \ ''

has di.,.tingmslwll hi111 self in
l11s pl41fcssion and lcadt•r in
Ins Cull lii\ UIIi l \'
~I I ulllt.' II IS41 Solld !hal l 'O III C
Spnug , t '1·ow W11 11ld t..e u! ·
lt• n ng " krll'c iii'I'p" as llt' is
tht• lng}.!cst (' I'Mik e r nf llll'm
,dl. {'row 11-1 thc ruaslt•r 111 111tl

uf !Ia• f1og JUIIlp held cttl'h
\ l' i ll

.1! t il l' lhg B1•nd Hcga tla

~ ti' U il lc

1111r odutetl Mr s

( 'ro w Sd ld , ' Ther e IS one · ( 'arnpbt·ll , Mrs Massa r , Mrs .
I II UJtlr

me

thlll j.{, and If God g1vcs
Pm ucwy Sc111m

b~t.:ut h .

llq..; h will be rcsturcd wllhout
fcdc1al l l tHI I CV if we ha vt• to
do 1t oursel ves " Tha t
brough! (qJpla u1'ie.
ln mtroducing the two n 1cn,
Cro w !:i&lt;Ud , " Th ey wc 1c

lemll'I'S of tllelr classes Hnd
had ~ u 1 1 C f1 0 11 1 her c and r tmdc
themselves J.H't i Ud It I S H
grcc1t pleasun· to know they

hav&lt;• gone out Hnd llonc
IJ r J IImntl ~ "
J oe Str·u!Jie, who :;cr·vcd

~~~
HS

1I13SlCI of CCI CIII OIU CS, Ill
mtrndu t mg Crow stated the
di nner wo uld 1111! lmvc bt• Prl

,,r

Uu t h Ma ss llr , m ot her
Ma ss a r, .Ju dge
M.u 1n 111~ Wc hstl!l , .l udgc
.luh1 1 (' Bll c'uu , C c urgc
ll t~ b s l i.'t t c r
fi nd Mnxine
(;t 'O I J.!.t!

C: r1 ffi t h, I' C J JfC S t~ nlin g the

NHllouHI B11 11k and
t c ai'IJc r s,
Bob
ll Pbcrt s, Wh cc l(•r ll ru ke ,
( ' o~ rt ll nus t•, Au l u tl Znh l,
M,1n un Ebcrs bcach Hncl l.cc
Mt·(:111lliiS
Pn 1vuhrw, (•ntcrtuhu rlcnl
was Stun Jtuml.t!:iiH'It with
vuL'MI
numl&lt; ers
ac·
l'o rHpanying hi msr lf un tile
1\&lt; 11\ CI I&lt;Y
I C f lr e tl

)..( 1111 &lt;11

He;lvy rains,
hail, winds hit
By ANDII EW VEMMA
United Prt·ss International
C:a le force WllldS, haJ J Ullli

hcHvy

J'HIIl s
p(JU nd ed
S4,uthcrn C.IIJfornJa tod(ly ,
touch i n ~ off fla sh .noods and
m udsl rdcs 111 a rea s s till
I'CC(I vcrrng fmm disast r ous

n uns less lha11 a munth Hgo
Th e Nati ona l Wea !he r

Ser vu.:e wa rn ctl the region to
expect sevc r·c thu nde r·
storms, wmds cxceedm,r.;: 45
mph, WBV C!:i or 6 lO 8 f CC! ,
puss1bly large hml and rain of
4 to 6 rnchcs
" If you ·hvc Ill an ar ea
s ubject to fl(&gt;odmg or m udslides and heavy ram 1s ob~
ashes on Lincoln H11l to ma ke served, take a ction to move to •
money" Ca mpbell added " I a sH!e pl.al'e Jm m etliHtely . Do
am
proud
of
my not wml ifor a wanning ur
backgr ound."
actual n8oding," a weather
Campbell mtroduced Greg serv1ce statement wa rned.
Becker, a earn er for the
Hcs1de nt s of seve ral
Cit1zens·J ournal m Pomeroy r a nyons e vacuated · t he ir
a nd Mi ddl eport. He also homes Tuesda y mght, either
spoke of the impact the vo luntarily or under orde rs
church had on his life He from the I.()s Ange les Pnlwe

all end eq t he Federated
Churc h, no w th e 'l'l llll ly
Church.
The two m en were
prese nted certifica tes of

Jk.ISSJ!Jit' 1f 11 had uut l.H·cn for
1hc l'ffm1 s of F1 t•d r' rc1 w who

Depa rtment
An Hlert was 1ssued for the
B1 g Tujungtt Ca nyon, 50 miles
north of I AJS Angeles . TII irtcen persons d1ed when a 20-

fout wall of Wi ller swept
thruugh tile t.:ll nyon till F'cb.
10.
Hcsidcnl s uf Lhe Sunland-

TUJUCIIHt :area, which burc the
hrunt uf the Feb !1-10 slnrm,
r)ll cd !; rt ndbn gs Ill front uf
therr homes well before Uw
slurrn hit Hccent rum s,
L'om bmcd with a 1'175 brush
fn c, left the arc" w1th little
watershed

" With no wate1shed left , if
the n1ins r urnes ha rd and
heavy, we 're rn trouble," C1ty
C(lunc1lman Bob Ronka sa id

Mudslides blocked pa1ts uf
the Pacif ic Coast H1ghway in
the Ma\J bu a rea and s~ v e ra l
cunyon roads in the SunlHnd
a rea . The so uth bound Junes uf
lntcr stnte 5, the major north·
so uth ru ute, wc1c cl osed neu r

r;ra pevme, but th e north·
bouud lanes were kept open
Sheriff's offi cers 1n the San
Ferna ndo Vall ey kept a wary
eye on the Pa co tma Dam,

brun ming with water from

the early

~'e bruary

rains.

Onl y a few munths ago,
most of Ca lifornia was suf-

fc rmg from a prolonged
drought

"

MEN 0~ DISTINCTION AWARDS were presented to George Massar, left, and Dick
Campbell, r1ght, by Fred Crow, center, at a dinner held at the Meigs Inn sponsored by the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce Tuesday night. There were 82 persons in attendance.
•

~

il

~

'.

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            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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                <text>02. February</text>
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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
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        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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            <text>Newspaper</text>
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        </elementTextContainer>
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      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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              <text>February 28, 1978</text>
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        </element>
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</item>
