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                  <text>1D-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport·Pomeroy , 0 ., Thursday , Mar.j9loi
,liii!17i08;..,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _lllllll!lllllll!l.

OSP has

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
SPECIAL -WEEK-END VALUES

(Continued from pace I)
the limits of those charged before the walkout began, but one
Cincinnati-area independent producer said he is getting $40 a
!Dn from utilities and $50 ID $60a ton from private users. ·
"Our average price is about 19 bucks a ton, give or take a few
bucks," Jones said. "We 're not in this business to gouge
people."
" It is unfoctunate that some producers pick this time lor an
opportunity to take advanage of people," Corn said. "I koow
one independent that went from $25 a ton to $60 a ton lor
residential users, and sometimes people 'have no choice.
"Our residential coal sales have doubled over the last two or
three months," he said, "mostly because we haven 'I raised our
prices. We are charging exacily the same price we were
c~arging in September."
Ernest J. Hartong, executive vice president of the Marietta
Chamber of Commerce, said the 25 per cent cutback by
Monongahela "won't have a great effect on merchants who
have been operating at about 30 per cent sa.vings or better
since Feb. I.
"Most manufacturers at least for the time being will be able
ID continue without layoffs," he said. "But if additional cuts
are ordered it will be a new bail game ."
Mayor Geoff Brun!Dn said the conservation ethic has been a
way of tile lor more than a month in Marietta .
"We will tive with it but I hope the coal starts moving, " he
said. "Our people are frustrated but not bitter, You just have
ID accept some facts of life."
One fact of life that Cincinnati Mayor Springer doesn't want
ID accept is that mandatory allocation plan which means
utilities would have to share coal and power with other
utilities.
"This (proposal ) would mean that coal would be taken from
Cincinnati , which has done a good job of conserving it, and sent
ID other cities tilat have not," said Springer .

Schedule

WOMENS
SPRING COORDINATES

.
PANASONIC

••

S-TRACK TAPE SALE

PORTABLE 8-TRACK STEREO

Special Sale Pri ces on a n y 8 track tape in
sto ck . Country , Popu lar , Rock, Blue Grass ,
Religious. In s trumentals , Sound Tracks .

TAPE PLAYER
HC/DC
*Red or white finish

I

AS LOW AS

OCCASIONAL TABLES

Clear tonight, with lows
nearly 20. Sunny and mild
Friday, with hi ghs in the mid
or upper 40s. .

Large group of coffee .tables, step
.tables, hex end tables in maple or
pine finish with Formica tops.

!
I

NELLIE BAKER
COO LVILLE Ne lli e
Grace Baker, 75, Coolville,
died Wedn esday at St.
Jo seph's
Hosp it ol,

SALE
.

brother, Clarence Ashcraft,
and sister, Mrs . Della J or~
t.I&lt;Jn , Columbus ; five grand-

chi ldren, Robert, Philip, and
Lctrry BHker, Maryland, and
D:Hl ene and Gere:t ldine
Mc Leod . Coolville. Twu
great-grandchildren survive.
. Preceding her in death
were a grandson, three
brothers, and a sister.

brief il-

'359

I

I-~

I , . .. . .

2 DAY SALE

CHILDRENS
SPRING &amp; SUMMER
SLEEPWEAR
Pajamas. Gowns , Robes and Shorties . Sizes
6 mos . to 18 mos ., 2 to 4, 4 to6x, 7 te14.

•359

FROM

''

JBNELRY CLEARANCE

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, March 10, 1978

SurvivOrs includ~ her son,

GUN
CABINET SALE

II

REG. $209.00 6 GUN
OAK FIN·ISH ................. , SALE $161.00
REG. $269.00 8 GUN
PINE FJNJSH ................. SALE $208.00
REG. $309.00 8 GUN
OAK FINISH .. ~ ...... .. ....... SALE $238.00
REG. $279 .00 10 GUN
PINE FINISH .. .............. SALE$216,00
REG. $359.00 10 GUN
OAK FINISH ... .... ........... SALE$279.00

'4800

EACH

EUREKA
..
SWEEPER SALE

GARMENT BAGS
Vinyl Garmel Bags use .

SAVE '39.95

6 Only 13.95 (Holds 16 Garments) ...•.••• '2.00
16 Only '2.25 (Holds 8 Garments).•.•••.•. 1l.l5
18 Only 12.95 Blanket Bags ....... ......... 11.50
6 Only 14.25·'3.95.i3.55 Travel Bags .... ... 12~00
9 Only 14.95 Travel Bags.... ................ 12.50
11 Only 15.49 Travel Bag$ .............. ..... 12.75

Eureka $89.95 Upright Sweeper plus
$19.95 deluxe attachments.
Sale

'6995

Pricnds m ay ~.:all at the
funeral home at any lime

after noon F rida y.

for travel &amp; storage

Sweeper
and Attachments

BAKE 'N BROILER PAN

16 .PC. FLATWARE SERVICE

Non -slick interior · chrome plated bro iling
rack. Bakes · Broils - Roasts · Cools .

•s9•

Service for four.
Stainless, dishwasher safe,

i
I
!
!
I
!

limited quantitY.

'699

Values to 15.00.

MENS
WEM BLEY TIES

4 quart size. Self buttering. See-

through heat resisting cover .

From our regular stock. Were $5.50.
$6.00 • $7.50. Good selection.

SPECIAL SALE

l

'1]69

-·--IWMENS
. . . _.•3.50
._. _
w

w

. _.._.._...-_.

Ken tucky

co nservation

Regular Prices from S!.29to $2.49

SMOKE DETECTOR
FIRE ALARM

2

FOR

easy to stack.

'1 09

ICE CUBE BIN

! Stores extra cubes you need so often . Holds
1 four full trays of loose Ice cubes.

Sizes 32 to SO - solid color, black or brown .
1'1• inch width.
For This Sale

~~~1lfA Home Bank

'2..

For

MENS •3.95 LEATHER

Meigs County

People

RACINE ..
HOME NATIONAL

13/•lnc~e~~~~~~~
l!l~~!~zes
so.
•311

32

to

I

1
-------------------·~--...l..__.,..,

BANK

._.,._,.,,

FDII
'"'' ""'0(1~, ...."...... ,... ..,. ...0 •

RACINE

OHIO

10 oz. denim· sanforized pre-shrunk.
Size 29 to 44 waist. Triple stitched
seams. Very well made.
.

••••

-·--~~------------M~~----------~--··--+-------------~---·--

Mens Banlon

BWE DENIM WESTERN

·DRESS SOCKS

JEANS

Solid color panel /knit. One size fits ali sizes
10 to 15. Regular $1.00.
Sale

Popular Mr. Leggs make. 100 per
cent cotton . flare leg style. Sizes 29
to 42 waist. Select proper length.
Sale Price

•7••

Men's $1.25 Bulky Knit Oi'lon Socks. Big

______,__.__,_______.,L.,_~s~e-lection
"'"'

,....__ ..,__..

BA'ITLE FOR SALL - Meigs' Glenda Brown (12)
tallied 19 points lor Meigs in tile girls Class AA District
Tournament Thursday , but the Marauder girls went down
to a 75-M defeat. Here, Brown battles un identified
Waverly player for loose ball. (See Page 3 story).

colorsI,.._
. Sale
99c pr.
- - ,...____
I __________
...

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

protec ti on

of

miners

returning to work " is goi ng ro
be a loca l problem "
notwithstanding a telegram
fr orri the president to

WASHINGTON (UP! ) The nation's unemployment
rate fell to 6.1 percent in
February, the lowest level in
more . than three years, the
Labor Department reported
today.
TI1e report said a record·
high 58 percent of the nation's
population was employed last
month . Six of every 10
Americans held jobs.
The coal strike and bad
wea ther had only marginal
impact on employment, the
depar tm ent
said .
It
est imated more than 100,000
people were hired last month,
sweiiing the nation's job rolls

to 93 million workers.
An estimated 6.1 million
persons looked fOr work in
February , but we.re unable to
find it.
The j'obless rate was 6.3
percent in J anuary and averaged just under 7 percent for
all of 1977.
The February rate wa s the
lowest since 5.9 per cent in
October, 1974 - the montil
that preceded • massive
fa ctory layoffs as the nation
moved into its wor st
r ecession in 40 years.

The department said 3. 7
million persons have ga ined

sUi d.

··we have plans for a lot of
things th;Jt we're not going tu
reveal," said the governor

when
asked
abo ut
contingency plans, adding he
will not use them " unless it
gets clea r out of. hand ."
Rhodes also refu sed to tip
his hand on the possibility uf
man datory conse rvation .
sHy ing "we'll ha v~ to cross
that bridge when we come lo
i~ . "

The

Public
Utilities
Co mm iss ion , at Rhodes'
dir ection,
has
limited
mandato ry curtail ments to 25
percent.
The original enef gy contingency pla n called lor 50
percent cuts whe n co a f
stockpiles reach the 3tkla y
mark , but the governor sai d
volUntary cohservation , Coal

1

textbouk s tandard s after

three unprecedented years in
which both inflation and
tandem.

Lamb. '' He is obviously sm1j.

who heard tilat speech Is
hollering
through
the
coalfields ·go to hell Jimmy
CHrter ....

Greg Driscoll, a vice pres!·
dent o.f the Ohio Coal Association and a former miner, said
he felt Carter "expressed
himself very vividly'' when
he SptJkC of the injunction
during u news eonference.
"! hope they ac,-ept that
la&lt;·t and return ro work and
pursue action according to
tile ICtws of lhe land, " he said.
"liow long cun the (.'O WJtry
eoi&gt;1 when 166,000 people (the
miners ) tell 200 million
people they won 't abide by
the law."

Fil'lt•en Cents

Vol. 2X. No.

~:111

weather

tary co n t:~ervl_\ tion plan
Tuesday aimed at savin~ 25
pert-ent u[ the electricity ust!d

in Ohio. He also ca lled for
iilllOn~ Ohio
utilities .
Except for suspending air
stu ndct rd s
tn
permit
ad ditiona l coal bur nin g.

power sharing

Work order
is ignored
A back to work request by Southern Ohio Coa I
owners of the lhree deep-shaft mining
opera tions in the Meigs Counl y area, was ignored
this morning according lo David Baker, public
relations officia I for Ihe coal company.
Baker sa id Southern Ohio Coal Thursday
evening received notice for a back to work order
under the Tafl -1-iart.iey Act signed 11mrsday by a
federal judge in Washinglon. D. C.
·
After receiving its notification, Southern Ohio
Coal Company was in structed to make its mines
ready for work at 7 a.m. today.
An appeal was made for workers to report at
all three mines, Langsv ille , Wilkesville and
Raccoon Creek. However. as of 9 a.m. I&lt;Mlay, no
union workers had reported.
The second shift for mining workers is sl11 l.ed
to begin at4 p.m. today. The third shill is l.o rcporl
at midnight tonight.
The three Meigs mines have I ,cl7tl union
employees, all members of three unions affiliated
wfth the United Mine Workers of America.
Compan~.

Rhodes ha s nut ~xerdsed his
authority to take mandatory

steps to stretch fue l supplies
under Ol1io law .
Fedc rul offi cials havt!
warnedl hut
u nl ess ·
mandatory curtailment (t !ld
t:11nservaUon nJeasures iii'C

ta ken, Ohio stands to lose out
un any power-sharin~ efforts
Wldertaken by th e federal

gpvcrnment.
.·.·,•:-:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:-:-:-.·,·:-:·:·:·:.:-:·:-:·:·:·:

EXTENDEU FOUUECAST
Sunday
lhrou g h
Tuesday, a chan ce

or·

showers through the
forecast period, with highs
in the upper 40s or tht• 50s
and lows In lhe lOs.

Additional funding is approved
Addition al funding has
been approved for the multi·
purpose health facility lo be
constructed behind Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
The State Department of
Mental Health approved th e
fu ndi ng ma de poss ible
through the newly enacted
House Bill 618.
Meigs County will receive
90 percent funding on the
project with aggrega te
amount totaling $921,000.
Ot her monies rece ive d

through a HUD block grunt
and Ohio Va ll ey HeH it h
Services, will incrCf}Sc l.hc
total project over $1 m illion.
'i'he
approva l
an·
nouncemenl came at the
Meigs County Commission
meeting Tucsd~ y night.
Commissi oners. expressed
their Rinccrc thanks tu Mrs.
Maxine Plumlflcr, executiv e
· director (J f the Gallia- !Vi(!igs ·

Exam for

LONG BOTTOM - The
United States Postal Service
is
a nnou ncing
t he
examination for substitute
rural carrier of record at the
Long Bottom Post Office.
Substitute rural ca rriers
are asSigned to perform the
du ties of the regular rural
carrier of the ro ute for which
the substitute of record has
been designated during the

C()nunissioncr James Rnush,

bids for new hlghwuy trucks
were tabled .
Att ending wer e Henr y
Wells and

Hich~Jrd

Jones,

Turner named
to new post

absence of t he regular rural

Richard Turner has joined
tbe Citizens National Bank as
Vice President in charge of
the Real Estate Department,
· President Charles C. Lanham
announced today.

::::::::::::::::::;:::::::·:::::·:::::::::&lt;·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::::·:·:·:·:·:·:' '

WASHINGTON (UPIINegotiators lor the Unlted
Mine Workers union and
soft coal Industry resumed
bargaining today as
federal marshals moved
into the coal fields to
deltver a court order to end
the 95-day coal strike.
The talks resumed
shortly after IOa.m. EST at
a Washington hotel, but
olllclals of both sides had
Utile to say. as they
returned to the table .
Federal mediators were
not present as le talks
began.
::::::::::::;:;:;:;:::;:::;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

ubtuinln~

funds for the project..
It was· also annuuncml thut
plans fo r the facility hnvc
been completed lind bids will
be taken April .2.
Due to the absence nf

The Coal Situation At· A-Glance
By United Press Internationul
'The strike: The UMW strike of the nation's soft coal
mines is in its 95th day. The most recent contract offer
was rejected by a 2·1 margin.
The government: At President Carter's request, a
federal court 'Thursday ordered miners to return to
work for an 81klay cooling off period.
The o4tiook: Bleak. [)()fiance is ringing through
mine country, amid warnings of "war in the .coa l
fields." Those who actively defy the court order could
be jailed.
The effects: Already slung by electrical shortages
tilat have forced layoffs, industry and businesses face
possible rationing . Ma ndatory cutbacks are already in
effect in West Virginia and Maryland , and
schoolchildren in Ohio are studying in cold classrooms.

·announced

carrier .
The post sta rting salary is
$47 .50 per day pius 18.5 cents
per mile each day with the
route being 85.4 miles.
Appli cations must be
submitted before March 30.
Applications may be secured
at the Long Bottom Post
Office . The test fo r the
position will be given at
Parkersburg, W. Va .

for her crforts IIi

Jackson Mental Hea lth an d cummi ss ion ers , a nd Mary
Mental Retardation Board Hobstctter, clerk.

fn~fif;n~!i~::n~:.;:.~~~a:! . substitute

more dollars are in
circulation. As employment
worsens, inflation improves.
The jobless rate for blacks
.
, · and adult women showed the
the Great Lakes and in the bi ggest impr ovement la st
higher elevations of nothern month, the dep•rtmenl said.
Arizona.
Bla c k un e mpl oy ment
But the NWS forecast dropped a full I percent to
indicated spring had not yet 11.8 per cen t while the
turned the corner on the women's jobless rate fell
harshwinter.WhiletheSoutil from 6.1\o 5.7 percent.
was to enjoy clear and sunny
Adult men showed less
skies and a warm front would improvement, dropping from
ex!end int o central New 4.7 to 4.5 percent. The jobless
England, the NWS said much rate for teenagers worsened
of the country could expect from 16 to 1M percent. Help
cool to cold conditions.
wanted signs lured many
youths back into the iahor
market.
Over the past 12 months,
the white unemploymen t rate
Mostly clear tonight, with has dropped 20 percent while
log in the ea rly morning joblessness among blacks has
hours and lows in the mid 30s. fall en 5 percent.
Partly cloudy Saturday, with
The average term of unem·
hi gh temperatures in the mid pioyment fell by a half week ·
to 12.5 weeks, reflecting a
50 s,
relatively large decline in the
of.
persons
number
SUMMONED
unemployed six months or
The Pomeroy Emergency more.
Squad answered a call to
Laurel St ., Thursday mor·
ning for Jack Oiler. No
NEW HOURS
treatment was required.
SYRACUSE - New hours
The squad went to the
Glasgo home, 201 Mulberry have been announced lor the
Ave., at 2:3 7 p.m. Th ursday. Syracuse Post Office by
A member olthe family had a Margaret Cottrill, officer In
nosebleed, which was treated charge.
Window
serv
ice
at the
at the scene.
.office wiii be available
Monday through Friday from
8:30
a.m . to noon and from 1
SQUAD CALLED
4:30
p.m.
to
The · Middtepor!
The lobby Is locked at 5
Emergency Squad was called
at 1:21 a.m . Friday to the p.m. those days. On SaturCharles Burt home on Rt. 124 days, window services are
near Middleport. Burt, who available from 8:30 to 10:30
was Ill, was taken to Holzer a.m. with the lobby being
locked at 11 a.m .
Medical Center.

across count ry

·
United Press International
Winter began a slow retreat
mpt•Msed on his knowledge of large and small governmental across the country today as
bodies.
temperatures
started
Rhodes announced Thursday his selection of the 41-year- climbing out of the cellar and
old atiorney for tile Republican nomination for lieutenant rain began replacing snow as
governor ;making official what had been speculated for weeks. the common preeipitation.
Even
Montana
and
CINCINNATI - THE NATION'S SECOND LARGEST W y o m i n g ,
whe r e
coffee roaster, Folger's, has reduced wholesale prices and the temperatures this winter
reductions should be felt by conswners in about two months. regularly plunged to below
The company on Thursday reduced the price of a pound of zero , received a dose of rain .
vacuurn coffee by 15 cents to $3.03, cut the price of a l:k&gt;unce
Thawing throughout the
can of flaked coffee by 12 cents lo $2.44 and trimmed the cost of Midwest flooded cellars, but
a llklunce Jar of instant coffee by 2 cents ID $4.45.
' was a welcome relief from
.
the heavy snow blanket that
WASHINGTON - HAVING COMPLETED HIS SECRET had covered the Plains states
testimony lor the House ethics committee, Tongsun Park now since the beginning of the
moves on lo the Senate for more questioning ahout his dealings 1 year.
with members of Congress.
High rainfall totals reached
Park, who says he gave about $750,000 in cash and gifts to nearly ! I&gt; inches at Fort
various congressmen,ls scheduled to testify before the Senate Bragg, N.C. and over 'It of an
ethics committee Tuesday. He will later return to the House inch at Knoxville, Tenn. But
side for a public hearing.
the scattered showers over
California Thursday evening
COLUMBUS - IT WOULD HAVE BEEN A ,ROUTINE were pale in comparison ID
last-dayo()f-the-week session· of lhe Ohio House on Thursday the heavy rainstorrru; that
had not Rep. James L. Baumann, D-Columbu,g, gotten mad . battered the West Coast just a
Baumann strongly criticized fonner Gov. John W. Brown, week ago.
now Ohio Lake Lands Administrator, for being "just another Clear skies over the
politician." Bawnann was upset about what he termed Northeast, the Southern
Brown's '~bby treatment" in not advising the legislator of a Plains and the ·· Pacific
bill up for.a vote in the lower chamber.
Northwest, accompanied by
Ten minutes later, Baumann had to apologize when he was considerably warmer
told by a reporter that the bill he was talking about was temperatures that soared
different from the one on the floor lor a vote.
into the upper 30s and 40s
seemed tropical tc residents
WASlllNGTON - PRESIDENT CARTER, told a televised used to the bon~hilllng, .
and J:roadcasl neWS COI)ference Thursday, "! have absolutely record-setting cold of the
no plans to seek congressiol)81 action authorizing seizure of the winter of 1!178.
coal mines." He said he expects striking miners to return to
"Temperatures were not
work under a Taft.Ha_rt.ley injunction.
extremely cold in any section
Carter said that despite the strike, the nation's coal of the country," the National
production still is about 50 percent of normal as a result of Weather Service
said
increased output at non-union mines. He said 'if a moderate Thursday and predicted the
number of mineni return ID work "we can prevent a crisis only snow in store for today
evolving in our country."
would be mere showers near

jobs since February a year
ago.
Th e report wa s good news
for President Ca rter .and it
followed on the heels of a bad
one from the Labor
Department Thursday wholesale prices rose 1.1
percent in February . It was
their biggest jump in more
than three years.
Improving Job conditions
and worsening infl(!tion see·rn
to indicate that the national
economy has returned to

employme nt wor se ned in

JN;;;,
~
~
'
'
~
-~·
:
,i;;~s·
~
;
;;re~;.J
Retr-'
e
at
begm·
s
~
J '-;
By Unlled Press International
COLUMBUS -CUYAHOGA COUNTY COMMISSIONER
George V. Voinovich, a former county auditor and state
Jecislator, has been tapped as Gov. James A. Rhodes ' running

l WORK DUNGAREES

has

· The governor said he has

indications that his r equest
for 25 percent voluntary
e lec trical t.:onservatio u is
working.
He said between 60,000 and
75,000 tons of coal were
delivered Wednesday. Ohio's
normal daily consumption is
128,000 tons . He sa 1d
deliveries were up by 10 to 15
percent.
repeat e d
' under
qu es tion ing, Rhodes sa id

to handle in the past," he

Unemployment . down

Battery operated. easy to install. limited
quantity •

Twist-pop to empty tray -

he

want to return to work under
the Taft-Hartley Act ; that he
will not use the Ohio National
Guard "unless it gets clear
out of hand. 11

At the same lime , Rhodes
extended the state's energy
emergency for another 30
days and asked President
Carter to follow suit on a governors saying protection
of life and property will be
reg ional basis.
deliveries
and
power
And he assured that the their responsibility.
purchases
cou
ld
fores
tall
Rhodes sa id the Highway .
Ohio Highway Patrol and
such
dras
tic
reduc
tions.
Patrol
and
sheriffs
will
take
cou nty sheriffs will be a ble ID
Rhodes announced a volu nprotec t any coal miners who care of it. "They've been able

KWIKSO

HOUSEWARES-1st FLOOR

are

the na tion.''

Y2··PRICE

RUBBERMAID SPECIALS

mines

requested would brin g
supplies up to 75 percent of
the total dema nd, Rhodes told
a news conference Thursday.
" We're trying to get up ro
75 percent of th e total
demand," said the governor .
"U.wecangetthat, we' ll be in
the best shape of any state in

Polyester blends · quilled fabrics • nylon
tricots • sailcloth· c_rinkle crepes.

M_o
MENS sg,95

LEATHER WORK BELTS

labor and pro-business and
apparently he is doing what
we suspected - he Is oul to
lreak the union . Well, he ha
a ~oddamned surprise
t'Uming, I can tell him that . I
can't help it if U1e man is
ignorant."
·
"l look lor widespread
defiance of U1at injuncliun,"
snid
Monty
Finnegan,
presidenl of local 1360 near
Cadiz, Ohio.
"I' ll tell U1e men to go to
work, but they will probably
tell me to go to hell,'' said
Don Nunley-, a member of the
District 6 extoculive board. "I
ima~ine every t'Oal miner

" These people are not
criminals. We do not want to
put anybody in jail," said
Brown. ·'We are hopeful the
majority will hold sway and
they will return ID work ."
Bill Lamb, an Ohiv union
official and member of the
UM W national executive
board, sahJ it would be
"virtually impossible" to get
miners back under the Taft·
Hartley law.
"[ wish that gentleman
(Carter ) would go back to
raising peanuts because he
sure doesn 't know anything
ahout mining coal," said

en tine

at

providing half the state's
daily
r equ iremen t for
electri cal generators and
boilers.
The 25 percent voluntary

ODDS and ENDS
YARD GOODS

PRICE

_ . . . . _ , _ . . _ _ . . _ . . _ . . ___

e
COLUMBUS (lJPI ) - Gov .
James A. Rhodes says shipments of non.union and in·
dependent coal from Ohio and

YOUR
atOICE

WEST BEND S13.95

ELECTRIC CORN POPPER

•

be made by marshals to serve
the
court
order
at
inopportune times.
"TI1ey're not going 1o go
ferret people out in the
middle of the night ," said
Brown. "Service of the order
is not that critical. w., feel
with the publicity given the
restraining order we don't
think it is reasonable tilat a
party connected with tills
doesn 't know about the
restraining order.
"1be marshals are under
strict orders
not to
antagonize anybody," said
Brown. "U anybody gives
them a hard tin1e Urey are
ju;i to walk ""'"Y

Non-union coal helping Ohio

earrings, bracele1s and rings.

----~--. . ~-~~·-~·~-~-~------M·----~---------i-----·-·---·'--"-"--"-·~~~-..__,...._,____.~-----------------------1
WESTBEND '8.95

Caravelle $11.95

extremely
critical
of work. But I don't think they
President Carter's failure to will . That's my opinion, they
seize the mines.
just won 't."
''They're going to have to
Rick Stiller, vice president
lind me first before tiley can of 11lCnl 1323 in Coshocton
serve that (order )," said Ed County, said following
Bell ,
Marlins
Ferry, Carter's news con ference
president of local 1110 at a Thursday, "it seems to me
Consolidation Coal Co. mine . that he was more worried
in
Mo undsville,
W.Va . abuut peace overseas and
"They're going 1o have 1o then he goes and lights a fuse
chase me ."
in the coal fields .
" We're just sitting around
"He just might have a war
here wailing on the'm (the in the coa lfields," said
marshals)," said Bill Cray, Stiller. "He hasn't got enough
vice president of l..ocal1957 in jails to hold us all, and he
Vin!Dn County, "We did go isn't going to mine coal
down lo the mine today and without us."
Brown said no effort would
saw ahout setting up a safety
check if thE" mPn rl.-. rf"turn tl"

Large selection .of necklaces, chains,

.....- ,.., .... --~· -· _.._.,_.._,_ ---------------·~·---·----· ~~---------~--~~----·--·~----~---~,.._,-------------~-~-~·-~·.-1.:1.. -------SPECIAL PRICE
CLOSE-OUT SALE!

lness.
She wHs born in Dudridge
County, W. Va.,adaughlcrof
the late J oshua and Myrtle
Thompson Ashcraft.
She was a member of the
Funera l services will be
Vanderhoff
Me t h\Hiist he,id a\2 p.m. Saturday at the
Church, ·but for 25 years she Whit ~ l,-· un era l Hom e ,
had oltended th ~ North Coolville, the Rev. Roy
Bethel Methodist Church, Deeter and the Rev. Charles
where she was the adu.lt class Domig1:.1 n officiating, with
.Sunday School teacher.
· burial in Coolvi.lle Cemetery.
Jack, Kerisi ngton, Md .;
daughter, Mrs. Willi am
(Dolores) McLeod. CoulviiiP:

II

SALE

Weather

.

H

••••• •

2 DAY SALE

SPECIAL

Area Deaths

PCJrkersburg, after

0

REG. '49.95

r----- --------------------- ~

'

Reg . 57.SO 16le.24 Wall Mirro r•• •••• o
S•le S6 .00
Reg . sB.SO 1Bx24 Woll Mirror ........ .. ... , . S..lt U .80
Reg . S15.0024XJO Wall Mirror .. ... .... .... Salt$12.00
Reg . $19 .95 24x36 Wall Mirror , •• , ,., •••• , •• Salt S1US
Reg . S29 .95 lOX40 Wall Mirror •• , ....... ,.,. Sale $23.95
Reg . $36 .00 30x4B Wall Mirror , , ........... , Salt S2B.!JO
Reg. $42 .00 36x4B Wall Mirror •.• ••••••••••• Sale $33.60
Reg . 515 .95 16X56 Door Mirror••••••• : ...... Sale 512 .75
Reg . $21 .00 16x68 Door Mi rror . .. .... ... .... Sale 516.!10
Reg. 525 .00 20x68 Door Mirror • ••• •••••••••• Sale 520 .00
Reg . $32 .00 22x6B Door Mi rror ••••• , ...... ,. Sale s2UO
Reg . 533 .95 24x68 Door Mirror•••••••••• , ••• Sale $27. 00

I

bootl

coaiAelds," oodsy waited for
federal marshals to serve a
court order that President
Carter hopes will force the
men back to work.
At least one mining
company, tile Southern Ohio
Coal Co. with three mines in
Meigs and Vinton County,
says it is ready to resume
production with the midnight
shift Monday.
The Ohio Coal Association,
in
St.
headquartered
Olairsville, said it is rPady_to

abide by "everything the
president has set up" and
said , " we will have the mines
open and ready to resume
operations ."
But Assistant U.S . Attorney
Dan Brown in Colwnbus said
!Dday it was not immediately
known when the marshals
will begin serving the
re straining order handed
down Thursday by a federal
judge in Washington.
Ohio UMW local officials
said they did not think the
miners would return to work
under the Taft·HarUey law ,
under which the court order
was obtained , and wer e

_..~_..._.._.._.._..,~----.&gt;+t--·---·,~-------~~--.._--.~------,---·------1t---------------,--------t

tonight at 7:45 at the home of
Ruby Baer in Pomeroy.

.

Venitla n Type p Wall &amp; Door Mirror s.

REG. $ 4.00 ... .... . ........... . .. . SAlE$ 3.49
REG.$ 7. 00 ...................... SALES 6.09
REG. 515.00.. .. ................... SALE 513.19
REG. $17 .oo ..... .. ... ... ... ....... SALE $14.99
REG . S22.00 ... . .......... ..... . ... SALE 519.39
REG . 531.00 . ..................... SALE 527.29

. . . _.. _____._. . _. ._. _

Sigma Phi Sorority will meet

I

GLAss MIRRORS

Special prices on our new Jane Colby and
Lady Jane Colby Sportswear. P ink and
green pastel s - Regular and extra sizes.

contact Stowers.

-- --

--sP:i!-sissETr- Pu1i·- -- r· ---

WEEKEND SA,lE

the Ohi o sta[e high school
basket ball tournament sla ted
in Columbus next week .
Anyone interested in
securing the tickets should

SORORITY TO MEET
Preceptor Chapter Beta

:

warning of Hwar in th e

OPEN
FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8
.......

two sets of tickets for sale for

Bookmobile Schedule for
Meigs County :
Friday, Mar. 10 - Rutland
Elementary, 12·3: Meigs·
Ga!lia Line, 3:15-3: 45 ; Silver
Run , 4-4 :30; Hobso n. 4:45·
5:15 ; Park Avenue Housing,
5:30-6 :30; Bradbury, 6:45·
7:15; Bailey's Run , 7:30-ll.

By JOHN T. KADY
U111ted Preas International
Defiant Ohio United Mine
Workers Union leader s,

FRIDAY MARCH 10th AND SATURDAY MARCH 11th

TICKETS AVAILABLE
Walt Stowers, principal at
North Gallla High School. has

Bookmobile

Defiant UMW leaders await orders

RICHARD TURNER

Mr . Turner began his
financial career with the City
Loan and Savings Company of
Jackson in . 1952, tr a nsferring to Lancaster In 1956
and to Pomeroy in 1962.
,
In 1983, Turner joined The
First National Bank of
Jackson, as manager Ot
t he
Installment Loan
Department, and after a
number of promotions at Fi~
National, he ultimately
became vice president of the
bank. in charge of the loan
department, the public
relations department, the
advertising department and a
member of the Board of
Directors.
In 1!172, Mr. Turner became
the Chief Ezecutive Officer
and member of the board of
directors of the Commercial
and Savings Bank in
Gallipolis.
(Contbiued on page 10)
't

�2- The Daily Sentin~l . Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday. Mar. 10. !978

NIT play resumes tonight

Mideast Regional cage Angels whip
Oakland, 4-1
play starts Saturday
I

United Pre" Internatlonnl
Kentucky, th e na ti on 's
f i r st'r ank e d
co ll ege
baske t ball
team,
and
Marquette defending NCAA
champion and ranked No . 3,
are favored to advam..'e in this

yea r 's

pr estigio u s

tournament wit h victories in
the
Mi de as t
Re gional
Saturday ni ght whe n the
tourney gets under way.
Kentucky, see king it.s fifth
NCAA tournament victory,
meets Florida State in the
first
ga me
of
th e
doubleheader a t Knoxville,

Te nn . Western Ke ntuc ky
laces Syracuse in the secon4o
game.
Marqu et te, a s urp rise

winner
in
the
1977
tournament , faces Miami of
Oh io at Indianapolis with
fifth-ra nked Michigan State
opposing Providence in the
second game of
that
doubleheader .
The ndd smake rs and
experts see Kentucky a nd
Ma rquette on a collision
course with their meeting in
the Mideast fin als at Da yton,
Ohio, March 18.

The Western Region a ls ;
fneanwhil.e, open at two sites
wit h No. 2 UCI.A fa cing No. 8
Kansas ; No. 6 Arkansas playing Weber State at Eugene,
Ore . ; No. 10 North Ca rolina
lacing San Franc isco, and
No. 4 New Mex.ico opiJ(lsing
Fullerton State, at Tempe ,
Ariz. The Western fiMis will
be he ld a t · Albuque rque,
N ..M .," March 16and 16.
'
Eastern a nd Midwes t
r egionals begin Sunday.
No. 7 Duke plays Rhode
Island and Indiana meets
Furman at Charlotte, N.C., in
one se gme nt of ea s tern

acti on. Penn is on court with

ou'll be happier
WllH

St.
Bo naventure
and
Villanova takes on l..aSalle at
Philadelphia the s ame day .

The four winners move on to
Providence, R.I., for finals on
March 17 and 19.
In the opening Midwest
round at Wichita , Kan .,"No. 18
Utah is out to s ubdue
Missouri , the only team in the

TEXAC

Seaver will
start Reds
tilt Satur8ay
TAMPA, Fla. iUPI )
T?m Sea ver w1ll face
Piltsb':""gh Saturday when
the Ctrycmnall .Reds be~ ·~

pl~y l[l,'!IJ~.dr~beYnllt'f1"t't!~

tournament under .500 and an· 1 aoBrHdentan, t!;ii'., llll!spbfig

HEATING OIL

-Fuel--Chief

--~

HEATING DIL
CALL ART HARTLEY JR.

entran t on the basi s of
winning tile Big Eight
Conference tourney . No . 7
DePaul against Creighton is
in th e other Wichita bra cket.
Th e oth er Midwest regional
at Tulsa , Okla ., finda No. II
Notre Dame playing 16th
ranked Houston and No. 14
Louisville fadng unranked
St. J ohn 's (N .Y ).
Midwest fina ls are at l.a-

home of the Ptrates.
The Reds pitching , ace,
who 's a lso scheduled to take
on Houston in the home
ope ner at Cin c innati 's
Riv e rfr o nt Stadium,
compiled a 21~ r ecord last
year, 14 of his victories and
three of the losses coming
after being acquired from the
New York Mets June 15.

wren('e, Kan ., March 17 and

Daug Capilla, Mike LaCoss
and Dan Damoulin are slated
to follow Seaver to the mound
Saturday .
" Tum ," said Reds pitching
coach l.arry Shepard, "will
pitch on ly the first two

19.
Th e four ul timate regiona l

winners converge on St. l.ouis
fur the NCM semifinals on
March 25, witll the title round
slated for Monday , March
27.

AT 992·2145
FOR FURTHER DETAILS

Sports Transactions
B&gt;t

~ n i te d

Press lnt crnaliol)al
Thursday

Baseball

DISTRIBUTED BY

City Ice &amp;Fuel Co.

M on trea l "'-- Renewed th e
c on Ir a c f of pitc her Rick

Sawy er .

,

P i I I s b' u r g h - E x tend ed
M anager Chuck Tann er 's con t ra ct tor two )' ear s through 1980
and signed Mar io Mendola ,
Alberto Lo is and O ss ie O l iv a -

res

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

ASH ST.

Unlt• d Pre55 1nternatlonal
Optimi&gt;"n al the start of the
s prin g baseball training
season can be descr ibed as
th e reaction to wa t ching
F ra nk Ta nana th ro win g
smoke a t hitters who' ve been
idle for live months.
The California Angels had
that feeling Thursday when
the left~1anded star of their
superb 1·2 ·pit ching punch of
Tana na and Nolan Ryan went
three perfect innings in the
An gels ' 4-1 exhibition game
victory over the Oakland A's.
Tana na struck out th ree

N ew Y ork Yank ees -

Signed

in fi elder G'E!org e Zeber .
Chic ago Wh ite Sox - El'. le nd ed th e contr act of center f ield er
Ch ct Lemon bv four y ea r s.

Youngster s Tom Hume,

innings."

Paul Moskau, AI Dawning,
Fred Norman , Doug Rair and
Frank Pastore will share the
Reds' pitching duties when
th ey play the Pirates in a
return engagement Sunday at
Tampa 's Lopez F ield .
Downing, 37, is in the Cin cy
camp on a trial basis, bidding
for a spot in the bullpen as a
left-handed relief pitcher.
The 28-year-old Bair was
acquired by the Reds some 10
days a go in the deal that sent
rookie first baseman Dave
Reverin g to the Oakland A's.

By
United
Press
ln lematluna1
Whe n
th e
Nat iona l
J nv itatio n T ourn a m e n t
continues in earnest Friday
night, Frank McGuire will be
back at an ACC court. He' ll
be a bout as inconspicuous as
a snake in a henhouse.
" We better play well ," said
North · Ca rolina State Coach
Norm Sloan. "There's no
question in my mind but wha t
South Carolina will be ready .
They have a lot of additiona l
incentive In this game."
The incentive comes from
McGuire. It's been seven
years since he was in the
Atlantic Coast Conference,
and tonight the veteran South
Carolina coach gel.s a chance
to tackle an ACC club in postseason play.
Slo a n's North Carolina
State squad, 111-9, plays the
Garnee&lt;lCks, 16-11,. in one of
lour first-round games on
Friday 's agenda, with the
winner advancing to meet the
University
of
Detroit
Tuesday . Jllin~is State is at
Indiana State, Texas hosts
Temple and Fairfield is at
Dayton in the other games.
In Thursday night games,
Detroit topped Virginia COm·
monwealth,
94-86 , and
Rutgers edged Army, 72-70.
Senior center Terry Tyler
scored nine of his 19 point.s in
the second half and senior
substitute Turono Anderson
got 11 of his 14 to lead tbe
University of Detroit .
The Titans, 25-3 a nd

ba tt e r s in th e Angels '
triumph suggesting that he
and Ryan, the major league's
perennial sir ikeout king, can
form the nucleus of a pitching
o1a ff that will lead the Angels
to their fir st Ame rica n
Lea g ue West er n Divi sio n
title .
Ron Jackson and Carney
l.ansford each homered in the
s i.th inn ing t o lead the
Angels ' a ttac k. Oakland
scored its nm in the ninth
whe n Jerry Tabb doubled in
Ray COsey, who had singled
with one out.
Els ewher e around the
Citrus and Cactus ctrcuits:
George Scutt drove in two
runs with a sacrifice and a
single as the Boston Red Sox
defeated the Detroit Tigers in
a rain-shortened game . Luis
Tiant gave up both Detroit
hits in ·three innings with
Reggie Cleveland adding two
shutout innings ... Rain
-·F~s hed out exhibition games
,W, Sarasota, and Ft .
· r.auderdale
and
the
Ba ltimore Orioles' scheduled
intrasquad game in Miami.
Commissioner Bowie Kuhn
said there is a " 50-50 chan ce ·•
the Oakland A's will still
receive
a
f a vorable
recommendation to move to
an other city from the
Oakland-Area Board of
Superviso rs .

r--------'-------------r

Outdoors
United Press International
March I was the first da y to
apply for a permit to hunt
wild turkey. the department
of Natural Resources will
issue 2,000 such permits on a
first-come-first-served basis.
To apply for a turkey
permit send a completed
ap plica tion fortn and $10,50 to
the Division of Wildlif e,
F ountain Square, Columbus,
Ohio 43224 .
In addition to the turkey

permit, all hun ters a re
required to hold a valid Ohio
hunting license. The bag ltmit
is one per season . Oth er legal
details will be sent along with

th e permit to successful
applicants.
Two thousa nd permits do
not equal that many birds
harvested. The hunt - to be
held from May I through Ma y
13 - will take place in the
hilly southern portion of the

state.
Be prepared lor difficult
terra in and long hours in t he
fi eld .
The first problem a turkey
hunter lac es is that of
locating his prey . Usually,
this is done with a call -

'

I

In 1977, Ford sold more trucks
than any other make in U.S. history!*
.

'

·Based o n 1977 c a lend ar year re la1l de liver ieS .

equaling their record for
most victories in a season, led
50-40 at the half, alter junior
guard Terry Duerod scored
17 of his 18 points. Anderson
and Ty ler took over from
there as the Tit.ans ran up a
lead which ranged up t o 18
points in the first 11 minutes
of the second hall.
Senior forward John Loog,
De troit's a ll -lime lead ing
scor er , contributed 16 points
while senior forward Kevin
Kaseta rea ched double
figures with 10.
Virginia Commonwealth,
24-0, was unable to force
Detroit out of it.s zone and was
crippled when junior center
Reo Watson drew his fourth
foul of the game 21 seconds
into the Second half. Watson
sc ored 19 points and
freshman forward Danny
Kotlak led the Rams with 22.

comfort . •• Iough
truck chassis.

Valley State (16-19) .
10: 45 p.m. - (B) • Mer The firsf ·round pa irings
for the Nat i ona l Assoc ia tion cyhurst ( Pa .) 126-2) vs
of Inter -collegiate Athletics Kearney State (Neb .) (21-8) .
basketball championships in

9:30a.m . ( 11 ) Birmingham
Kansas City March 13-1B with
Southern (Ala. ) (28-4) vs
seeds in parentheses :
LeMoyne Owen &lt;Tenn .) (20·
Monday, March 13
9:30 a .m . - (12) Lake 9) .
11: t5a .m. - (10 ) Hampton
Superior Sta te (Mich. ) (23 -3)
va Erskin College (S.C.) (20· - lnslilute IVa.) (24-6) Central
Stale (Ohi o) (17-10) .
11) .
1:00 p.m . - (7) Fairmont
II : 15 a.m. - (9) Wiscons lnPar kside ( 18-10) vs Dowling State (W. Va .) (27·5) vs
Westm ont (Calif.) (22-9) .
(N .Y.) (20-7l.
2:45 p.m. - ( 14) Central
t :OO p.m . - 14) Ouachita
Baptist (Ark . ) (24-4) vs Wa shi ngton (21 -7) vs St.
John's (Minn.) (22-7) .
Eastern Mon tana (22 ·9).
5:00 p.m . - (5) Quincy
2:45 p.m . - (16) Briar Cliff
I Iowa) (23-4) vs Maine Port. tlll.l 26-4) vs. Southern Tech
.(Ga . l (28·5) .
land-Gorham (22-6) .
6:45 p .m. - (3 ) Drury
5: 00 p.m . - (2) Grand
Canyo n (Ari z.) (25 ·3) vs (Mo.) (27-3) vs Midwestern
State &lt;Tex .) (21 -12.
Cumber land ( Ky.) 27 -9) .
8:30 p.m . - (6) East Texas
6 : .45 p.m . (1) Wi nst onSa lem State (N.C.) 26-3) vs St ate (23-B l vs Ka nsas
Bethany Nazarene (Okla .) Newman (21 -10 ).
10: 15 p.m . - (15) Hawaii ·
(24-11) .
9: 00 p.m. - I 13 ) Missour i Hllo (25-5) vs Franklin (Ind.)
(19-5) .
Sou ther n (25 -8 ) vs Mississippi

either a mouth reed or one of
th e box-type ca lls. But
turkeys aren 't easily fooled .
Practice is the best advice
s ince on some .flays even the r----------~.,
best callers can 't raise · an
answer .
If yo u so und off with l
I
anything that is less than
convincing you may as well
head for the next watershed
and try· . a~a in because _vou
NBA Standings
can bet your over-and·under
BV United Press Internat ional
Eastern Conference
that's what the turkey did .
Atl~ntie Divisio n
Most hunters find success
w. L . Pet. GB
Phila
.il 4 20 .688
with a 12-gauge shotgun
New York
35 30 ,538 911:1
loaded with fairly heavy shot
Boston
24 37 .393 l8'1:1
- usuall y number four or live
Bu ffalo
22 41 .349 2 1'1~
17 49 .258 28
- with the choke set on full . New ·Jrsey
Central Qi vision
Expect t o ge t th e mos t
W. L. Pet. GB
San. An ton
40 25 .615
response to your calls around
Wash
34 29 .540 5
the time the sun comes up, Atla nta
32 35 .478 9
Clevelnd
31 34 .477 9
even though it may take the
New Or lns
32 36 .471 91;~
rest of the day to locate the
Hous ton
24 43 .358 17
bird.
western conference
Midwest Division
By the first of ·May the
W. L. Pet. GB
weather should have begun to
Denver ·
40 25 .615
J.4 31 .52l 6
warm up and the mosquitos Milw
Chic ago
33 33 .500 1.112
will be out in full for ce. Still, Detr oit'
30 35 .462 10
25 40 .385 15
th at's part of the reason tha t Kan Ci ty
Ind iana
24 41 .369 16
turkey hunting is such a
Pacif i c Division
challenge . What better way to
W. L Pet. GB
land
53 12 .815
cap off a hunting season than Port
Phoenix
41 25 .621 121!2
with a spring hunt for the wild Los Ang
34 29 .540 18
.
Sea ttl e
35 30 .538 18
turkey .

: Pro :
:Standings.\

•

BUILDINGS

MPG "

MPG'

HWY.
Fordf· 100 wlth50
litre (302 CI O) Y-8 an(t
manual trarismlnlon .

HWY.

I"'RE llliSiliTANT

IIJi~• pnmlllfl\t ln111 lation pm1.8."11on frw Wlnuor and

&amp;.mm tr

"f'"P"~i• l

• Seal• ~~cold&amp;. heet. Fluwa intourry co mer and cavity
•

PHI rMittanL Crut.o:a ho•t il~ ~nvil'l.lnmrml for rnrll!nta

and i118KI.I
Fi,. H11iatanl - Minimal tn aid ty
• S.fety fo r your family by I II1'1'0Undr1111 c.biH and w rm
..,;tb rnau lation foam
• Moi1ture rHiatllnt
• Chemically 1Ublt • Euy to apply

•

SAVES MONEY • FIRERESISTIINT• EIISYTOAPPLY

28/19
CITY

manual transml u ron.

MOAf: ABOUT MIL!A.Gl RATINGS.

'EPA ••lfmar ... Your 1etual ml\11ga may v1ry dapancll(ll
on ~our •ah lela'• ~ondlllon . oD1 Ion11 equiom..,t. a nd llo•
and wfllfl you .Sri-11. (Comp11 iaooa •bon u ~l urit cartruc l• 1nd diiMII.]

Y1n1 -with extra
room ln1lde

Golden St.
30 34 ..469 22 11~
Thursday's Results
Indiana 11 2, Detroit 105
Phoenl)( 112, Chicago.103
Friday's Games
Cleveland at Buffalo
New Orlns at New Jersey
- Boston at Ph il adelph ia
Portland at Atlanta
New York at Indiana
wa~h i ngto n

-~--------------------~----1
MAIL THIS COUPON
1
I

.1

I

I

1 TO :

I
1

HACKffi FOAM INSULATION

~~!~:::~me lurlller inlormolion on FoaM~d=~o7i.!::

I
I
I
I

NAME
ADDRESS
City

I

Zip

Phone

I

L-----------------------.--J

DOXOL
SERVICE

at Houston

Denver at Kan sas City
Golden St . at Milwa ukee
Chicago at Los Angeles
Saturday 's Games
New Jer sey at New Yor k
Seattle at Houston
wash ing ton at sa·n Antonio
Los Angeles at Phoen i•

RIDENOUR'S
TV &amp; Apeliance
Gas Servtce

NHL StandlnQs
By United Pren International
Campbell Conference
P11trlck Division
w. L T. Pts.
NY Islanders
41 l.t 12
9.4
Philadelph i
37 11 11
as
Atlanta
25 25 17
67
NY Rangers
23 31 11
57
Smythe Division
W. L. T. Pts.
Chicago
26 22 17
69
Vanc;ouver
17 35 14
48
Colorado
13 34 18
u
St. LOUIS
15 41 10
40
Minn esota
14 44 6
34
Wales Conference

Racine, Ohio
Chesler, Ohio

Winnipeg
42 22 2
86
New Eng la nd
34 27 4
72
Housto"
Jd 28 4
12
Edmonton
32 31 2
66
Quebec
31 32 3 65
Birm lnghm
29 34 2
60
Cincinnati
28 34 3
59
Indianapolis
22 38 4
48
Thursday 's Results
Cincinnati 6, Edmonton .5
Bir mi ngham 9, Quebec 2
Houston 6, New England 4
· W innipeg 6, Indianapolis 5
Friday's Game
New England at Birmingham
Saturday's Gimes
Edmonton at Cincinnati
Houston at Indianapol is
Winnipeg at Quebec

NORTHFIEW
NORTHFIELD,
Ohio
(UP!) - George Mueller
guided C.D. Dac to a one·
length victory over Blue
Ribbon l)ollln featured t2,300
eighth race at Northfield
Park Thursday night.
The winner covered the
mile In 2:08 and retlirned
$15.80, $4.60 and $3. Blue
Ribbon doll paid $3.80 and $3
for second and Marla
Almahurst kicked back $5.40
lor third.
Fast Express captured the
first .race, triggering a 7-U
big triple combination that
was worth $489.110. Robert J
was second and Olerlahed
Dream third.
A crowd of 3,226 wagered

Walnut Ridge
upsets Panther s
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - De·
fending s tate champion
Columbps Linden McKinley
was upset 55-50 Thursday
night by Columbus Walnut
Ridge in the semifinals of t he
Class
AAA
reg ional
basketball tournament.
The Scots were led by Andy
I..oe with 16 point.s, William
White with 14 and Brad
Parkinson with 13.
Walnut Ridge , now 13-10 on
the year, will meet Miami
Trace, 21-2, Saturday night
lor a trip to the state
sem ifinals next weekend.
PORTLAND, Maine (UP!)
Organizers of th e
Downeast Tennis Classic
Thursday said Australian
Ken Rosewall is the first
confirmed entry for their fifth
annual tournament.
This year's tournament will
be held May 1)-13 at the
Cumberland County Civic
Center in PorUand .

By Gre&amp; Railey
The Meigs Marauder Girl
cagers made a valiant try
last night In the District
tournament opening round at
Waverly, but the Waverly
girls proved to be just t oo
much for the third time this
year as they downed Meigs,
75-M. Waverly's defense held
AII-8EOAL Vicky Epple to
just sll points while the
Waverly offense put three
girls In double ligures.
Waverly. started to take
control in the opening
minutes of the contest as they
jumped out to a quick 6-0
lead. But Meigs seemed to be
eyeing an upset as they
fought back to tie the score at
11-all with 4:36 to go in the first
period on three buckets by
Glenda Brown and one by
Terri Wilson. Meigs went
ahead on a two-pointer by
Brown and jumped Into a 14·9
lead when Vicky Epple sank
two quick buckets. The first
quarter ended with Meigs on

top, 14-11.
But then t he Tigr esses
broke l oose t o ope n the
second period . They scor ed
lhe first bucket to narrow t he
score to on e, 14·13. P at
Vaugha n put Meigs up by
three, but then Waverly
reeled off five straight points
to take a 18-16 lead , and they,
were never behind from then
on. Meigs tied lt once more at
18-all on a · bucket by Tracy
Burdette, and then again at
20-all, but they then began to
falter . By the lime the horn
s ounded for inte rmissio n ,
Waverly had scored 26 second
quarter . points to take a
commanding 37·26 lead into
the locker room.
The third period was no
different as Meigs could
come no closer than ~ -32
with 5:06 remaining in that
quarter . From then on it was
Waverly's ball game.
The balanced scoring atta.ck IY,~,a,'P~!n tapqr il:t.the
wrn as cent er l&lt;11n Kmgllt

Bradhury·Cassell and
Rutland claim titles
Bradbury-Cassell and
Rutlan d won t he championship games of the Meigs
Local Elementary cage
tournament last night at the
junior high In Middleport ,
In the combined fourth and
filth grades bracket, Bradbury-Cassell
d o wn ed
Pom eroy-Wright ha ndily, 4ll25. Scott Gheen Jed the
winners with his 20 points
while Tim Wamsley also had
a line night with 12 markers.
Other scorers were Nick
Bush with six and Eric
J oboson with two.
Brian Bullington led t he
losers . with 11 while Bill
Howell· had six. Bria n
Houdashelt had four, Rodney
Roush had three, and Trina

Reeves had one.
In. the sixth grade championship, Rutland won a
t hriller over Bradbury, 22-20.
In the low-scoring contest, ·
Mike Willford and Shawn
Eada led the winners with
eight points each. David Barr
got lour a nd Eddie Bishop
two.
For Bradbury , J e nn y
Meadows and Chris Burdette
each had· fiv e points . Bobby
So uthern a nd David Follrod
each got fo ur and John Aeiker
had two.

Tournament director J ohn
Mora wishes to t hank the
parents and all other s who
helped make the tourn ament
a success.

Boys tourney scores ·
Boys Ohio

High School Basketball
United Press International
· Thursday's Regional
Tournament Re-sults

Class A
(At POwling Green)
Maria Stein Marion Loca l 69
Arcadia 59

tossed in 22 Jl(lints to lead all

scorers . Gwyn Bobo was not
far behind as she netted 18
while L.isa Shoemaker had
II. The winners canned a hot
19 of 2:i foul a ttem pts and
sank 28 of 68 field goal tries
for 41 percent . They were
outreboW!ded by MeiHs, ~
42.
Meigs had a good niHhl at
the foul line, sinking 14 of 21,
bu~ the team was cold from
the floor, connecting on just
21 of 75 xhots for 28 percent.
Brown led he r team In
scoring with 19 marker s
while Vaughan was the only
ot her Marauder to hit double
figures wit h her 12. Brown led
the rebounders with 14 while
Wilson had nine .
Box Sl'O f C :
MEIGS (54) - . Brown 6·7·
19, Vaughan 5·1· 12. Bur dette

3-3-9, Eppl e 2·2·6, Wilson 2-0·
4, Ho ward 0·0-0, Ash 2-0~4 .

Totals 20-14-54.
WAVERLY (75) -

Fa ir

c~ild 3-1-7, Shar f enaker 2·3-7

Sword 1·2·4, Harflev 1-0 2'
Knight 9·4·22, Shoemaker 5 -4~

14, Bobo 7-4-18, Conkel o t-t.

Totals 28 ~ 19-75 .
Score by quart ers :
Meigs
14 26 36 54
Waver l y
11 37 5 1 75

Girls
tourney
scores
Girls OhiO
High School Basketball
United Press Internationa l
Thursday's Di strict
Tournament Results
Class AA
( At Avon Lake)
Avon 46 Medina Highl and 29

'

I At Kalida)

De l phos Sf .
John ' s 63
Pavlding 29
( At Perry sbUrg)
Car d i na l Str i tch 48 Pem berville Eastwood 46
(At Be llevue)
Uppe r
Sand usk y
48
Ma r gar etta 29
·
Ontar io 65 Clyde 51

(Class A
tAt Dayton)
Cedarv i lle 52 Yell ow Springs

50 tot)

...
••

FIRES JUMPER - Meigs ' Pat Vaughan (II ) fires
jump shot over Waverly defender (Vicky Smith ) during
Thursday's tQurnament action . Waverly won, 75-54.
Vaughan tallied 12 points for Meigs.

~

•.•
t
•••
••

SAN FllANCISCO ( UPI ) O.J . Simpson , prodaiming tx:
is fully rt..'Covert"£1from n krwe
injury Uwt sidelined him for
part of the seuson lnst year,
Wednesday said is lookinp.!

11U: UA II.Y SENTINEl .
UI·~ VOTEU

'1'0 T il t-:

INTfo~ RK"iTtll&lt;'

MEI(;s-MAStiN AKt-: A
CHgsTt: R 1•. TANNt-~ 1111 , 1 .
t::XI!C'. t:d .
UOHt:HT llot~ t'l.l( 'It

('lt(tAiilnr
PUbllsht.-d !Ia Jr cxct~ pl . Sulunllt_r
by 'rht' Ohlv Vullt!y Publls hill'!
Com~n y-Mult i n lc d ilt , IlK:-. ,
I ll
Court St. , Pomcr uy, {)hiu ~ !J71i9 .
nusmcss Offit•c Phunc 00'.!- Zl 56.
t:AUlOrWI Ph lmt191i2-2157.

----------,
MElGS I

Semntl dHss IMJ.S llt ~ e pa id ut
Pomeroy, Oh io.
Nullona l ~td v m· tiNin !( t CIU'escll·
Nc~

Subsl:ripti un rates:

I
I

Equipment Co.

tHtivt.· WJt n l • £:rimt h l'o m iN!J I)',
Inc., 8ollinclli and GKIIliMilt•r lllv .1

7[17 Thinl Ave.,
10017.

II

York . N.Y.

POMEROY, 0.

l~ li v t~ rutl by

PH. 992·2176

t•urrler where nvmlnblt! 7$ ccmU1 11Cr
week. Uy Mutm· lhmtc where currier

International
Harvester
New Idea

-"'~ I"V lcc

not tl vitllulllc, One month ,
$:1 .'l!i . By rn~til iu Ohlu uni.l W. VH.,
On e Year , $22.00 ; S1x munt hs .
Sli .!JG ; Three month s, $7 .00;
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$1 3.50 o ,Thr ee u\Onlh.'&gt;, $7.50.
Subscription· price n\Clu1tu~ Suntluy

L~!":":_ _____ j

l'lrn ~s-Scnli nel .

I
I
I

ClassAAA
(AI Columbus)
Col Walnut Ridge 55 Col
Linden 50

Plow a perfect seedbed in
one,operatioh-power or

WQI cultivate. spray, co..m ~
· post, mow, and more. A
Gravely conve rtible tractor

a nd attachments does it all .
Ge't a Gravely .and see how

your ~rden grows. ·

GRAVELY
TRACTOR
SALES
204 Condor Street
992-2975
Pomeroy, Ohio
OPEN:
9-5: 30 Mon.-Saturda y
Manning Roush ,
Owner

Akron Central -Hewer .49 Cle

"If you use
the short
fonn, we do it
for less."

St. Ignatius 47
Class AA
I At Dayton)
Cin Reading 56 New Lebanon
Dixie 43

Henr\1 W. Block

SUTTON HONORED
NEW YORK (UP!)
Eddie
Sutton,
who
resurrected an all but dead
basketball program at the
University of Arkansas, was
na med Friday as Unite d
Press International's college
basketball Coach of the Year .
In a close nationwide poll of
SPQrts writers, editors and
broadcasters,
Sutton
received 31 of the 171 votes
cast. Hank Raymonds of
Marquette finished second
with 23 votes while Abe
Lemons of Texas was third
with 22 and Jud Heathcote ill
Michigan State was fourth
with 19.

If you qualify for the short fonn, we charge
a very low price. The simpler the return, the

less we charge. That's Reason No. 2 why
you should let us do your taxes.

H&amp;R BLOCit
. THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

618 E. MAIN ST., POMEROY, OHIO
Open 9:00 to 6:00 Weekdays
9:00to5:00 Saturday
Phone 992-3795
No Appointment Necessary

ONE OF THREE
"'ULTIMATE M"ACHIN ES "'
r us1Uill11 Ud l ry l h u m l!! rJI S
ol Hm l~o d mnu1111 tHl
NO PUR CHA SE REO Uifl EO

1st

" Sup11 r Stone s"

M r1c h o M 11 c hrn e

•

''

.
•
I

··super S t o nn " 1978
St re et Cnu srng Fo rd
Couri 01 Picku p

PLUS ••• 30 Super M i n i -Vona to be glwe n awuy f
S wr,o p s lilk tl ~ rtn tr y tm nts ond trr ll r lo lll r l ~ 111 0 11VIl lloriJhJ 11 1uny f rr o5Hll1u
StOl l! Of p ~ t i i C q l/! lr nu f llhStono tltJ ill l!l Jusl til l (ll rl llfl ~ n lr y fo rm no
l111et lhan Mav 3 1 . ! U/ 8 No purc h rtsu IIHtrr lrutl Op en 10 ! le tm ~tltl
tliw e• ~ only V1J rd rn Mrs s a un nn tl II W &gt;o M !ll ylanU J.ou n t rc 's A lto onn v.

Ct~ c t l. Garrell Harlmd. Howl!liJ . M onl uonrar v. P r1 ncu Gcor uus. Som
ersot. Tal bot nnd w llOiover pwhrhrtod ll ',' tnw Hostctonts o f Qt1•0
only may roco r.,. e l!ll on1ry lorrn anti tiC!ttr l&amp; hy Sirb mmr n y n ~~~ ~~
add iOSSCd s tm npcd onvolol)o 10 F1 t 0 ~ 1 ono S u p ., , Stono s S w e ep~ l n ~ ll!.,

College 81sketball Results
By United Press International
Conference Pl1yoff Rt1ults

P0

Bo lt 900 7,

COIVOti by

8la11.

N u t.) r lr ~ ~ ~~

6600 9 Su c t1 rrn t ll ll~ t s mu ~ t hli rtJ

Atllll 26, 1976

Natllnvltatlonal Tourney
First Round
·
Rutgers 72, Army 70
D etroit 94, VtJ. Cmmnwlth 8~

Quality you knpw_
at pru:es you. U ltke

'fares tone

.,•

•'

" Suprill Slon u " 1978
P"rl u ri!11UU;': e Ford
Eo:ono lip t! lfoO S1rfH•I V u n

2nd 197B4 x 4Fo rdf1 50
3rd

NEWSPAPER
CARRIER
WANTED
FOR MIDDLEPORT AREA

PHONE
992-2156

THE DAILY SENTINEL
BETWEEN

8 AM a'nd 5 PM

Polyester cord

8 h. p. Wheel

Horse tractor-

$

now

9

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complete with
36" mower and
eteccric start;

9s

Champion~

save

regularly $1294.

s29

9

$19!8~.

AS

L0,W

• Qure t

muffi er , cut s

ond o ld •h e
Whlutw a ll add U

nbrse

S it e

·uoo 11

Aprrl 1. 197 A

Th1s power ful B-81 Wh eel Horse lawn trac t or w rll grve
you ye ars of dependable serv1ce. Cast rron frc11t a•le
f ollows th e t erratn and soa ks up bumps . B i.g. 1 1/:! gall on-c apacrtv gas t ank .

· b r&gt;O n
P l b 5J800 IJ
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AH pr .,•.,. pl u t

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POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

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CHESTER, 0.

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l.

••'
•

•

furw urd to pluying fur ut lcu~t
two more s e~sons .

IAI Kent)
Toledo Scott 67 Cle St . Joseph
61
.
(AI Canton&gt;

Norris Division
W. L. T. fits.
x,Mont reel
48 9 9 105
Los Angeles
26 26 13
65
Oelroit
25 29 10
60
Pittsburgh
21 76 17 • 59
Washington
12 41 12
36
Adams Division

$424,1166 •

•

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I
I
I

•

Attendance was 1,331 a nd
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·,

MPG •

Ford F -HIO wh/'14.9
lllie (300 C IOI Sl• aMI

$29.80.

Vancouver at Pittsburgh

COM~ERCIAL

·~

26/17

lead and held on to defeat
Caro T. by a length a nd a half
in the featured $1,000 eighth
race Th ursday nigh t at
Lebanon Raceway.
Razor Blade showed.
• • • • • • • • • • • The
winner , driven in 2:13
2-{; over a slow track by Lloyd
Rodgers, returned $7.60, $5.40
and $3 .60.
The 2·3 n ightly double
combination of Ben Bulben
and Flaming King was worth
LEBANON
LEBANON, Ohio (UPI ) Charloe Byrd took the early

WHA Standings
By United Press International
W. L. T. Pf!.

Foa '" " ln tuhotiun hi.,. ahut out noi...
• No (iliamrP me.~ l ype uf lnaule tion
• Payt ror l *tr In t hort pl'riod of timt
• Foam• into odd ah ape I PIICH around pipe. , wirin11 and

BESTS GAS
MILEAGE RATINGS
INA PICKUP.

WAVERLY'S Kim Knight (44, right) picks off rebound during this ac~on shot of last
night'~ tournament game at Waverly. Knight led the winners attack with 22 points . Meigs'
Tonia Ash (30) and Tracy Burdette (32) look on.
1

W. L. T. Pts.
Bos to n
42 13 9
93
Buff al o
38 13 15
91
Toronto
36 19 10
82
Cleveland
19 j9 9
47
x-clinched division title
Thursday's Results
Montr eal A, Toronto 1
Boston 2, Detroit 2, tie
Los Ang 3, Buffa lo 3, tie
NY Islanders 6, St. Louis 3
FridiY'S Games
(No games scheduled)
Saturday's Games
Boston at Philadelphia, aft
Buffa lo at NY Islanders
Chicago at At la nta
Los Angeles at Montreal

• NEWHOMES

•

BESTV·BGAS
MILEAGE RATINGS
IN A. PICKUP.

Tuesday.~rch14

Colorado at Detroit
Clevela nd at Toronto
Minnesota at st. Louis

•

Ford tough plckupe With top gae
mileage rallngt.

James Bailey scored 20
points to lead Rutgers into •
Tuesday date against the
winner of the Indiana StateDiinois State game.
Knight teammate Hollis
Copeland contributed 18
points and had seven
rebounds to up Rutgers'
record to 22-6 on the year. The
Cadets, who had won their
previow; 11 games, finished
the season 19-9.
West Point 's all-time
leading scorer and rebounder
Gary Winton had 11 points for
the night, shooting 4-lor-10
from tbe field, and 3-for-10
from the line.
Army 's Scott Eason had 16
points, while partner Clennle
Brundidge had 13. Rutgers'
Rodney Duncan chipped In
with 12 Jl(lints as counterpart
Tom Brown had eight.

KANSAS CITY , Mo. (UPil

I'm insulating
America against
the high cost
of fuel bills!

•

THESE BETTER IDEAS FROM
FORD MADE US NO . 1:

Waverly girls oust
Meigs team, 75-54

NAJA national pairings

• OLDHOMES
New Bronco - famlly-alze

~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Mar. IO, 1978

992-2094

Pomeroy, 0.

985-3301
"

•

'•
••

•'·•
l

'
'

''

�4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Mar. 10. 1978

Sorority plans for Easter

·~~·~H~e,:m.i,:m·~~'~'ji;ip
~~

TO BE FEATURED - The . Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church wiU feature a youth group from the
Oakdale Christian High School, Oakdale, Ky ., Sunday
morning, in the 9:30 a.m. worship service. The group
consists of Lanny Sparrow with Leo, the friendly lion,
pictured above, Tim Whitten berry, Cheryl LitUe and Lynn
Tullar. High School Math Teacher, Robert Hollis, will
acco'!'pany · the. young people. Gospel Magic,
ventriloquism mus1cal cow bells, songs and choruses will
be presented by the students.

PROTECT YOUR
LIVESTOCK!

POLLY.$ POINTERS

Assistance to a family at
The cultural report wllll
Easter time was planned dur· presented by Janet Peavley
ing a meeting ol Xi Gamma on the life Of Rachel Carson.
Polly Cramer
Ml! Chapter of Beta Sigma Aspecial feature of the even- ,
By Helen Bottel
Phi Sorority held Tuesday ing was a "getting to know \
night at the home of s. Doris you" activity. Mrs. Adams
would not stitch some fabrics. Ewing.
MALE MENOPAUSE? 'NO! ' HE SAYS
distributed sheets of quesOld trunk
I
solved
it
by
putting
a
strip
of
The
servit'e
conunittee
will
tions to the members who
DEAR HELEN :
toilet
paper
under
the
seam
smells
musty
handle
the
project
for
the
worked in pairs to answer the
I'm a little angry over your statement, " That's the name of
as a backing. Then it would chapter. Mrs. Donna Byer, questions and then' later
the male menopause," in regard to the philandering older husband.
.
DEAR POLLY - My hus- stitch. The toilet paper tears service chainnan, read a shared the infonnation ·with
Aman can live with a woman 20 years and be " normal" at 41) band has beautifully refinish- away easily and works thank you from the March of the entire chapter.
Dimes chairman for the
Mrs. Ruth ~ffle and Mrs.
when he gets a divorce. Yet a man over 50 has to be some ed an antique trunk but the in- wonders for me.
Also
I
lind
a
bottle
brush
is
participation . Susan Oliver were hostesses.
chapter's
psychological freak when he discovers a new woman.
side smells musty . I have
great to use for cleaning cor- Charlotte Hanning, ways and
As a coimsellng psychologist (male) I bave found that older tried drenching it in vinegar,
men can have the same needs as those aged 20, 30, and 40. They leaving camphor squares in it ners in baking pans. - NAN- means chairman, asked for
CY
volunteers to secure advertiscan !aU m. l~ve! They can also make good second marriages.
and using both baking soda
DEAR POLLY- Mary C. ing for the Meigs County Fair
I think 11 IS time we put a little sense into "Separation after and vanilla bullo no avail. I
TRIO SLATED
50." These men ~re not any mo~e " hung~uP" than younger would appreciate any sugges- might find her machine premium book, noting that it
CHESTf;R
- The Calvary
would stitch the fabric she is must be completed by the last
men who find their present mamages lacking. It's much too tions you could give us. Trio
of
Jackson
will entertain
using for a shirt for her hus- week in ApriL
facile to blame the male menopause implying these elders are MARY
7:30
p.m.
Sunday
at the
at
band if she would try a
It was noted that 15
a little soft in the head.
'
DEAR MARY- Try filling number nine ballpoint needle.
Chester
Church
of
the
members and three guests atIn case you're wondering, I bave been married 36 years and the trunk with crumpled .
Nazarene.
The
Rev.
Herbert
A smaller needle penetrates tended the chapter's movie
·
plan no change. -I.A.G., Ed. D.
newspapers, close lightly and
Grate, pastor, invUes the
the
material much more easiDEAR I:
leave a couple of weeks. This ly than a large one. She and pizza party on March 2. public.
Carol Adams wekomed LinI didn't mean to Imply that all older men who fail in love are eould even be repeated if
sulfering from the s&lt;H:alled male menopause (a nebulous need be. Perhaps some char- should buy two in case one da King to the meeting.ll was
description at best). But it seemed that !Iris "Particular 60ish coal briquets place on waxed breaks when sl\e is stitching announced that Debbi Buck
Why do · contact lenses
heavier materiaL -.BETTY will host the March 21
feU ow had urges tbal weren't exactly related to love.
paper would also help. Good
always
fall on deep-pile rugs
T.
meelinJ(.
According to his wife's lengthy description (shortened for luck! -POLLY
or
thick
grass, instead of on
DEAR POLLY - To keep
the colWTm) he was quite irrational in rrlany- areas the "fat
DEAR POLLY - I wash
nice,
smooth
places? ·
blond floozy" being only one symptom.
'
and save those plastic trays mittens together I sew stick. Tbanks for catching me up. I'll try not to imply generaliza- that meat is on when it comes together fastener on to each
tionsmthefuture.-H.
. 11 __,, li.J· b•m
.from the store. I place them · mitten at the cuff. Cut out the
· P.S .. Yes, I agree with you, IIWe'canconle to any age; elders in my refrigerator to set the comers to one-half inch
pieces and attach to mittens
who divorce should not be ridiculed as "senile" for they may water bottle, milk cartons,
with
a few stitches. Snap mitbave very vaud reasons; and the male menopause shouldn't pickle jar, etc. on. Keeps the
lens together and they stay
become a catch-all diagnosis used in place of real understan- shelves clean.
together. -SOPHlE.
ding. Okay? -H.
My Pet Peeve is when
•
something is advertised on ~------ ..
radio or TV and they give the
DEAR HELEN :
The letter from the couple who were unable to conceive tugg- name and address so fast one
ed at a familiar pang.
,
does not have lime to write it
We had a difficult lime conceiving our first child, but figured down.- EVELYN
.
there would be no problem with the second. Instead, we went
DEAR POLLY- Mary C.
through 30 months of ovulation charts, pills, shots, extensive wrote that she was having
FRII,l,t.Y
tests and .surgery for both of us. Lots Of tears and prayers trouble with her sewing
later, we fmally produced a beautiful little daughter.
rrutchine not sewing on some
POMONA GRANGI', 8
Through aU our trying, we were aware not to make love a fabrics. After a few such p.m. Friday allhe Rock Sprmechanical " baby-making" act (as you suspected happened frustrating experiences I ings hall. Rock Springs
when the husband in question turned of(). The fact remains found I could remedy this by Grange to be host.
that just five weeks after I, in a fit of tears, tore up all our laundering the fabric before
DANCE Friday 9 to 12 in
charts, forbade the word "baby" in our home, and we spent a cutting it. Some fabrics seem archery building at Royal
long weekend away together -I was pregnant!
to be processed with a finish Oak Park, Sponsored by Ohio
We wish this couple luck and happiness - and much, much that makes them hard to Eta Phi Chapter of Beta
stitch.
love.-GandJ.
Sigma Phi. Admission $2.50
My Pointer is that if you per person. Refreshments
MACHINE
want really sharp creases in will be sold. Everyone
slacks you can put a piece of welcome.
RENTAL
foil on the fabric under the
RETURN Jonathan Meigs
pressing cloth. The foll Chapter, Daughters of the
reflects the heat from the American
'2500 PER DAY
RevolUtion,
iron. -JEAN R.
Charter Day luncheon, 1 p.m.
DEAR POLLY - I had the 'Friday at Trinity Church.
Karen Blaker Ph.D.
same trouble as Mary C. in Good Citizenship award winR·VALUE COMPARISON CHART
that my sewing machine ner will be a guest. Hostesses
0
1
3
4
will be Mrs. Harold Sargent,
our daughter got married. We
Uninformed
I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I .I I
R-value
all learne d English -- money from him because he Mrs. Richard Henderson,
consent
Mrs.
Pearl
Mora
and
Mrs.
everyone, that is, except
U.S. FIBER
Daniel Thomas.
Maria. I encouragad her to mistreated Maria.
Mrs. G : I would like to do
ROCK WOOl
SPECIAL
MEETING,
Although the issue of study but she did.n't unders- that. How do I begin?
FIBER GLASS
United
Steelworkers
6197
of
sterilization · abuse was tand why il was important.
Counselor: Your first step Midwest Steel, 7:30 p. m.
After
all,
she
was
engaged
to
·
recently overshadowed by
would be to consult a lawyer. Friday at Foote Mineral
These values are for one inch of loose'·fill insulation.
· the abortion financing con- a Spsnish-si&gt;eaking man.
He
will
tell
you
what
to
do.
Union Hall, Mason, W. Va.
Counselor: Your daughter
troversy, it is just as volatile
The mother and daughter Purpose to present and vote
never
learned
to
speak
a subject.
began lo work on the of ratification · of new
This is a double-edged pro- English.?
malpractice suit. Their contract; all members asked
Mrs. G: Well, she knows a
blem. While the operationhas
· depression lifted as " they
been denied to thousands of few words. But she never became more involved in the to attend.
MARY SHRINE 37, Order
women, thousands more have really learned to read. legal action. They no longer
224 lst Street
Point Pleasant
been sterilized unwillingly. Anyway, she became preg- blamed themselves for the of While Shrine of Jerusalem
(304\ 675-2460
Most victims of this abuse are nant. After an uneventful tragedy- and, in the process, regular · meeting B p.m.
Friday at Pomeroy Masonic
pour and members of minori- pregnancy, she had a Maria learned English.
stillborn son by Caesarian
Temple. Election of officers
ty groups.
Dr. Blaker cannot take
In ll•i• excerpt from a hot- section. We were heart- telephone ealls from her will be held and all reports
·
must be in at this time.
tine conversation, a Spanish broken.
readers. However, there are
SATURDAY
Counselor: I can unders- hundreds of crisis intervenspeaking woman called to
MIDDLEPORT
LODGE
talk about her daughter, who fBnd. That must have been tion phone lines in the United
363,
F&amp;AM,
will
host
12th
was sterilizad " by mistake" terrible.
Stales. For the phone number Masonic District ritual
Mrs.
G:
Just
wait,
the
when she signed a paper she
Of one near you, contact your meeting Saturday beginning
worst is yet to come. She had
could not read.
local
mental health associaThe counselor could not un- been in labor for 10 hours tion or mental health in- 12 noon. Master Mason
Degree to be by Past Masters
do this family tragedy. But when the doctor asked her to formation service.
the outomatic
Unit of Aladdin Temple
she did find a way to comfort sign a paper that would
Write to Dr. Blaker in .care Shrine, Columbus. Second
·'solve all her problems.''
· picture control system!
the mother.
uf this newspaper, P.O. Box
· Mrs. G: Our family came Assuming he would deliver 489, !Wdio City Station, New section of degree begins at
19.
here from Mexico two years the baby if she signed, she York, N.Y., 10019. Volume of 6:30p.m. Evangeline Chapter
thought
nothing
more
about
it
OES
will
serve
dinner
at
5:15
ago so our daughter could
100% SOLID-STATE
mail prohibits personal
have a better life. Al first - until she returned to the replies, but questions of p.m.
WESTERN BOOT CB Club
everything went well. My hospital three weeks later for general interest will be
Saturday, 7:30 p. m. at club
husband found a good job and contraceptives. At that time, discussed in future columns.
she was told she had been
house in Racine.
,.~,::, giont-screen console TV
sterilized. How can I help
her? She is so depressed. We
Zenith's Col01 Sentry'"- The Automatic Picture
never Should h0:1ve left MexControl System-controls the col01 pictu'1e when the
ico.
scene changes. or the channel changes. even
Counselor: Why do you say
when the room light changes.
that'
The CORSICA
Mrs. G: It was my idea to
~232~P
come to the states and look
Mediterl'\lnean
what I've done. It's terristyling. qasters.
ble .. .il's terrible.
Dark Oal&lt;. color

§;'

LANNY SPARROW AND LEO

1'&gt;-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, b., Friday, Mar. 10, 1978

US. • •

malr Windon of the Eastern High School Future
Farmers of America, will be a candidate for sentinel at
the district meeting to be held March 28.

1 Social 1
1 Calendar 1

PER BAG

ment in the future. Keep your animals
happy with specially balanced food
and supplements developed to
produce healthy stock with maxi mum growth.

CALL 992-2115

"

City Ice &amp; Fuel Co.

•
•

' ":;--.-/

Treat The Family
To Dinner Out!

.•

It makes o nice chong.e . Mom
con relax, and the kids can
eat their favorite foods .. .
at a price to make Dad smile!

NEW FROM ZENITH l

t-OW OPEN SUNDAYS

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399 W. Main St.
992-2164

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985-2307

Meigs Historical Society

Lnose long ago days, when
area .
Stories were passed down sleighs were relied on for
from
generation
to transportation in the winter
generat ion. When people months .
One of the most , beautiful
made their own esterlainment, they often spent pieces of history I have
much time playing checkers, witnessed was the paddlecards, dominoes, reading, wheel steamboals on the Ohio
telling stories, sewing, River. During my childhood
popping corn, making candy years, I took for granted the
and a host of other pastirpes beauty of these boats as they
that allowed them to com- plied the river. Until one day,
municate with others at the l realized they were no more.
Where had they gone? I tried
same time .
Each family had their to remember when I saw the
jokes, songs, superstitions, last one and . couldn't.
and "I Reinember" stories Somewhere bet ween childthat was passed through the hood and adulthood,! bad lost
generations. Of course, some a piece of history . My
of these stories could grow children would not have the
out of proportion as time opportunity to stand and
passed. The human mind watch the dark waters of the
somelin1es "forgets." The Ohi o transformed to crystal
as \he mighty paddlewheels
we~ther is one of the most
discussed conditions when churned the water.
This experience has made
people lalk . From the newsme
reaHze how important it is
paper records, on January 20,
to
preserve
our history . We
!854, at 4 a.m., the · temneed
to
lake
lime to talk to
perature was 26 degrees
our
future
generations.
To
below. However, when in
tell
them
of
our
childhood
January, 1856, the temperature was 15 degrees and years, and if they don 'l want
18 degrees beloW on two to lake time and. listen, then
different mornings, residents write it down. Make a record
could recall no such severe of your family . The ancestors
you know, where they lived,
past winter.
After this winter, many of when and what they worked
us have felt we never ex- at. Tell about your schools,
perienced such a bad one pastimes, and a ny other
before, but the newspaper information that you think
would be of interest to a
records show different.
In 1879, a sleighing party future person.
Your life may not seem
from Pomeroy to Gallipolis
was enjoyed. Although no one important, but to someone,
remembers this, it shows us someday, it will be a link in
cr:::.! that the snow of this winter their past. Help to preserve it
father, Robert). She is was probably no more than in for them.
supposed to pay a $1 million '
bribe to obtain·her husband's
pardon - but she discovers
his affair with his secretary,
Gladys. Add insult· to
adultery, Gladys is 48 years
Middleport, Ohio
old.
The third wife, played by
SandY Dennis, is married to a
delicatessen owner who
"withheld" - first he
withheld from his employes
psychecks, then he withheld
from Internal Revenue.
The show starts out with
high good humor, but
Ufn
unfortunately sinks in the
. •· _ _ _ _ _ _ _

~~c~~e~~~~~~f~~~z~; ~~~r of~~~~;v~~:n

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MILL STREET

Racine. o.

Middleport. Ohio .
992 -~ 542 or ~ . ,,M

949-2020

..'

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.

BAI&lt;ER FURNITURE

When the white-haired
mute, nicknamed "Snow
Man," is accused of murder,
he demoostrates a prideful
dignity, while his small ·I
friend'sfather defends him in
a trial that almost ends in
tragedy.
The values of the show
might be termed oldfashioned, as when the father
explains that a truly strong
man can choose not to fightthat his s!rength gives him
that cbolce. But are those
values at the mercy of
fashion?
The morality is a lot more
modern In "Perfect Gentlemen," a CBS offering that
airs March 14, 9-11 p.m.,
Eastern time.
In this one three wives of
prison irunates plot to steal $1
million, wlth the help of an
elderly gunmoll mother-in-

V •IS It Ba. k er's b u d get
shop for Inexpensive
f
If ure f 0 day

These members of the Eastern High School Chapter of
the Future Farmers of America, were recent district
award winners. They are,lto r, Rocky Van Meter, third in
agri mechanics and third in outdoor recreation; Terry
Life, third in forest management, and lllll Kautz, second
in soil and water conservation.

The
• •

~~
(;n 'l'llldHnl :-.. (in•,• r•
,.a·m al i1111 :-. . Th1 ·.\ ' rt' ll

nu t ural for ~l . l'ult· i~ · l-. · ,.,
ll u\ . \ut onl\ III'I 'IIU .. I '

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\\ annth Htll l _io~ ' till'~ l.rill l!~tnp 1 , ~ lll'~·h I ' u..; a ca ll. Ll •t ':-.
itiii ' I' JP hrHII ' [ \\1' \\I"HI'ill l!

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h~· )! i\• in/!

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Bl igl1ten $t. ~~~ ick's Day
with fb\815 and planls.
REMEMBER TO ORDER
EARLY FOR EASU:R

Y2

OFF SPECIAL

On selected group of scented candles. Have
beauty and fragrance if the lights should
happen to go out .

Pomeroy

Flo~er

Shop

Mrs . Millard VanMeter
106 Butternut Ave.
Pomeroy
Phone 992 -2039 or 992 -5721

Something special. ..
Initial Earrings and
Necklaces for her.
At Easter
Designer styles in custom-made initial
jewelry. Mix them or match them .These

elegant earrings-and necklaces were
designed especially for .her .
A ll styles are available in 14kl yellow or

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p.m., Eastern time. Tbe story
takes place in Bridgeport,
Conn., in 19J7, when people
drove cars.with rumble seats,
read The Saturday Evening
Post, and still debated the
Sacco-Vanzettl trial of the
previous decade.
In its low-key, nostalgic
way the touching and
compassionate Story tells of
·. the friendshli!'between a little
girl and a mute shellshocked
World War I veteran whom
the town derides and fears.

(H2526DE) or

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featuring Mikki Buck
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(Fonnetly with the popular group Tigress)

Meandmy

ASK ABOUT THE AMAZING

the depression; the state's worse If coal does not start to
By DAVID SM&lt;1fHERS
gross
product .is flown $M , , move soon.
UPI Senior Editor
Bethlehem Steel said
Bethlehem Steel, the , bUuon and state government
nation's second largest steel has lost $34 · mill! on ill&lt;H;· ThJII:S&lt;Iay it would start next
week to bank one of the two
producer, will close down one revenue, Rockefeller said.
The steel and automotive batteries at its plant in Burns
of its key coke batteries next
week because of the coal induslrires, heavily Harbor, Ind., the company's
on
coal , most modern
facility .
strike and the 'pinch was dependent
spokesman
beginning to effect other acknowledged they were Company
considering curtailments or Michael Heagy said 200 of the
industries today.
An official of the United even shutdowns and massive plant's 8,300 emplpyes would
Steelworkers Union in Pitts- layoffs if the strike continues go on four-day work weeks,
but denied reports of planned
burgh said the 91Hiay-old much longer.
" In two or three weeks the mass layoffs.
strike could start crippling
In Indiana, where power
the steel industry before the Pittsburgh works will ·be a
ghobt town," said J .B. Grice, has been cut back as much as
month is out.
The .energy drain has cha irman of the usw 40 percent because of the
already led to mandatory Political Action Committee at strike, warnings went out
sever'ul
hundred
power cutbacks in Indiana the Jones &amp; Laughlin Cor(is that
and West Virginia, with more Pittsburgh and South Side commercial and Industrial
users of Public Service
states contemplating the Works.
Figures from the U.S . Indiana are risking loss of
same course.
West Virginia Gov. Jay Labor Department said 25,500 electricity.
"Several of them are apRockefeller said Thursday workers across the country
the strike has inunobilized 26 were laid off for all or part of proaching the date where we
percent of his state's last week because of the coal have to cut them off," PSI
·eeomony. Unemployment is strike , Officials indicated spokesman Robert Norris
atl7 percent, the worst since matters could become much said.

By Margaret Parker
Meigs Historical Society
Something in the past. A
memorable, significant
event. This the dictionary
describes as - History.
With television, radio,
newspapers and various
By JOAN HANAUER
means of communication, the
UPl Television Writer
main events of each day will
NEW YORK (UP!)
Television movies come and be recorded. But, what about
go but tllere is a new series the day by day lives of us, the
star on the television screen ord inary p~rson? What
seems unimportant todaY,
- Sam.
Sam has the most may mean much to someone
appealing brown eyes since of a future generation.
So it is with the history of
. Cary Grant. The fact that he
is a yellow Labrador our early pioneers. Without
retriever doesn't detract the resources (or recording
from his charm. That he events that we have today, it
barks instead of talks puts · was up to each individual to
him one upon some of today's see that his or her history was
television performers.·
preserved. Letters and
"Sapl!l is a new Jack
diaries give us an opportunity
Webb-produced CBS series
to know our ancestors.
that premieres March 14, &amp;. Through· official documents
8:30p.m., Eastern time.
we can learn mote about
It's a police procedural, but them . Early newspapers
instead of "One-Adam- reported the .important
Twelve," it's "Two-Henry· events of families in the
Six," instead of a black-and- scattered communities of an
white radio car, the vehiCle iS
an unmarked conVertible,
and instead of two uniformed
cops, the stars are a law.
plainclothes cop and his
The mother~n-law is Ruth
d
Gordon, who flips off
0
1 db
k gangland nicknames as lf
e cop IS p aye Y Mar
they were biscuit recipe
. s. She
Harmon, real life son of
former football star Tom is brought into the plot by her
' Harmon. He 's almost as daughter:in-law' played by
handsome as Sam.
Lisa Pelikan·, who
is married
1
A more serious ' entry is to a " jerk."
NBC's movie, "When Every
Lauren Bacall plays the

TV•••in
Review

z

District competitors in the small engines contest of
the Future Farmers of America to be held March 20 at the
Swiss Hill Joint Vocational School are , I tor, Rock Van
Meter, Mike Dailey and Dewayne Good of the Eastern
High School FF A.

Bethlehem "must close plant

COLUMilUS - Now's the and outboard motors, $3; available for boaters wanting
time for Ohio boaters to inboard powercraft and sail- to use their boats imregister their watercraft for boats with auxiliary inboard mediately, but experiencing
the 1978 boating season. says engines less than 100 horse- difficulty in obtaining a
the Ohio Department of power, $7.50; inboard power- permanent registration.
Boaters registering boats
Natural Resources (ODNR) . craft and sailboats with
14
feel or longer and motors
auxiliary
inboard
engines
100
The 1977 registration ex10
horsepower and more,
horsepower
or
more,
$10.
pired March 1. This year's
must
present their title to gel
A writing fee of 50 cents, in
boat and motor registrations
a
registration.
Watercraft
are available from agents addition to the regular fee, is
titles
are
stamped
annually
charged by the licensing
throughout the state.
at
the
time
of
registration,
Annual fees for watercraft agents for each registration
just as automobile titles are.
and
outboard
motor issued.
Those individuals who
Temporary 21-day
registrations are: outboard
.
acquired
boat~ or outboard
registrations
for
both
boats
hulls, rowbOats, canoes,
motors
before
Jan. I, 1964
and
outboard
motors
are
barges or rafts, $1; sailboats
when the stale's watercraft
titling law became effective,
are not required to present a
title when registering the
craft or motor. Registration
fees do not reduce throughout
the year as does the auto
registration fee .
Local registrars are Doyle
Smales, Forked Run State
Park, Reedsville, and
William C. Quickel, 114 Court
St., Pomeroy.

CHOICES

Your livestock is your invest-

Chapter of the Fu!ure Farmers of America. Front, 1 to r,
Ed Scyoc, sentinel ; Larry Harris, secretary ; Dean Hawk,
reporter; back, I to r, Don Eynon, president; Dennis
Durst, vice president and Rocky Pitzer, treasurer.

Ohio boaters should
register watercrafts

Senco • Oren • or
U.S. Fiber Insulation

-,

These are the new officers of the Eastern High School

JUST ARRIVED

NEW SHIPMENT ·OF
~ PF..A..::I:.JI.X"ZG::R,A.FF lB'o.

Yorktown, Village and
Village Wood Styles.

All initials are available.

Also, just arrived
new spring line of
fashionable Costume
Jewelry to asset any Easter
Dress only s3.00 a pair

CANDYS CLASSICS
in

"'OTTUII I INC! !811

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE
99 MIU ST.

INGLES FURNITURE
"Two In One Store"
N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, 0.

�7-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport Pomeroy 0 Fnday Mar lO 197&amp;

Middleport P omeroy 0 Fnday Mar 10;,!!!!__ _ _ __._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

1

WANT AD
CHARGES

THESE MESSAGES OF OUR RELIGIOUS HERITNJE ME SPONSORm EM:H WEEK BY tHE FOI.IJMING
THIS SPACE
FOR RENT

MEIGS TIRE CENTER INC.
TRINlTV CHURCH Rev W H
Pen n posiOf Bob But!.. Sunday
school supt Church School 9 IS
o m worsh p service 10 30 o m
Cho r reheo sol Tul!tsdoy 7 30
p m under d reel on of AI ce
Nease
POMEROY CHURCH OF THE
NAZARE NE Corner Un on and
Mulb wr y Rev C yde V Hend&amp;r
son po!oiOr Sunday school 9 30
o m Glen McCl ung sup mo n
ng wor ship 10 30 o m eyen ng

serv ce 7 30 m d week
Wednesday 7 30 p m

Ultll

ce

G RACE EP SCOP AL Th e Rev
Albert MocKenz e 1ecto
Ser
v ces an d Sunday schoo l at 12
noa n

POM EROY CHURCH OF CHRIST
2 2 W Mo n St John MeA thur

pas.tor B ble school 9 30 a m
mo n ng worsh p
10 30
Youth mee t ng!&gt; 6 30 p m

am
Clien

ng wo rsh p 7 30 Wed esday
p aye mell'! l ng and B bl e
sudy 730 pm
THE SALVATION ARMY 115
n gh

Bult e r nu

A ve

Po m e oy

Envoy

and Mrs Roy W nin g off ce s n
cho g e
Sunday hoi ness
mee t ng 10 am Sunday School
0 JO o m Sunday sc hool leade
YP~M
Elo $9 Adam s 7 p m
$Di vot on me e ng
... a ous
speoke s and nu~ c ~pe e ol $ 7 30
p m H u sday -'- 10 o n to 2 p n
Lad es Home league o I women
nv ted 7 30 p m p ave mee ng
and B be study
Bob Estep
Rev
Noe
He man
eod e
eoche
BURL NG TON SOUTHERN BAP
TIST CHAPEL Rou e 1 Shade
Pos ta
Bobby Elk ns
Sundav
schoo 5 p m Sundov worsh p
5 45 p m Wed nes day p ave se
wee 7 30p m

POMEROY WES !SIDE CHURCH
OF CHR ST 200 W Mo n St Je y
Paul m n stc
phone 992 7666
Conse \10 ve
on s umen o
Svn day worsh p
0 o m B bl e
s udy 11 a m w o sh p 6 p m
Wednesday B ble s vd y 7 p m
OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
CHURCH
Re,. Ro ph
Sm 1h
pos o Sunday schoo l 9 30 a m
Mrs War ev Francs supe n en
dent P each ng se v ce s f s 8
th rd Sundays f ollow ng Su ldO)I
School
GRAHAM UNITED METHOD ISl
Peach ng ~ 30 o m I r sl and se
cond Sunday s o f eac h non h
th r d and lou th Sundays each
month wo sh p Ht vee at 7 30
p n
Wedne sda y even ngs o
7 30 P aye and B blc S udy
SEVEN TH DAY
ADVEN t Sl
Mulbe ry He ghts Rood Pom eroy
Pas o
Albe t D es Sabbath
Ciao
School Supe ntendenl
Me n yr e Sabba h Schoo l So u
day ofte oon at 2 00 w th Wq
sh p Ser v ce foll ow ng at 3 15
RUTLAND
FIR ST BAPTI ST
CHURC HS ste
Ha
e I
Wa ne
Sup! Sunday School
9 30 a m
mo n g wo sl p
0 45 om
TH E H LAND CHAPEL George
Casto pa stor Sunday Schoo l
9 30 o m even ng wo sh p 7 30
Thu rsday even ng p aye se v ce
7 30p m
POMEROY FIRST BAPT ST
Do\ld Mann mn sa
W o
Wo son Sunday sc;: hoo l sup Su n
day sc hoo 9 30 a m
no ng
woshp 10 30am
F RST SOUTHERN BAPTIST 282
Mulbe y Ave Pome oy Pau J
Wh e P o~ o Co y Basham Sun
day school sup Sunday schoo l
930 am
monng w osh p
10 30 e... en ng wo sh p 6 30 p m
M dweek p O)l e se 11 ce 7 30
p n

MIDWAY COMMUNIT Y CE NTER
Dexle Rd Lon gs"' le Oh o Rev
Clyde Fe e ll
Pa s a
Sunday
School
11 a m
Sa urdoy
p each ng serv ces 7 30 p m
Wednesda,- even ng B b e study
at7 30pm
FA TH TABERNACLE CHURCH
Bo ley Run Rood Re"' Emmel
Rowso
pasta
Ho dley Dunn
sup Sunday schoo 10 a n Su n
day even ng serv ce 7 30 B ble
teach ng 7 30 p m Thu sdoy
OYESVILLE
CO MMUNITY
CHURCH Rage C Turne pas a
Sunday sc hool 9 30 a m Sunday
morn g wors hip 10 30 Sund ay
eve
g e v ce 7 30
M DDLEPOR T
MT MURIAH BAPTIST Cone
Fou th and Mo n M ddlepo
Re v Henry Key Jr pastor Sun
day Schoo 9JOa n M s Ervn
Boumga dne
sup
Morn ng
wors h p 10 45a m
M ID DL EPOR T CHUR CH OF
CHR ST IN CHR STIAN UNION
law en ce Manley pas o
M ~
Rus!ell Young Sunday School
Supt Sunda y School 9 30 a m
Eve ng wo sh p 1 30 Wednes
day proy e meet ng 7 30 p m

•
•

•

•

Rev &amp;abb y Po l e pas to Su
doy school 10o m Sunday war
sh p 11 o m
Sundoy evening
se v ce 7 p m W•dr1esday Faf'tl
I'( Tra ng Hour 7 p m Wednesday
worih p serv ce 7 JO p m
HAZEl COMMUNilV CHURCH
Neor Lon g Bottom Edsel Hart
ptnlo Sunday school 10 om
(hu ch
7 30 p m
proye
meet ng 'J 30 p m Thursday
M DOLE PORT PEN JECOSl AL
Th r d AYe the Rev W II am Kn t
tel pa s o Ronald Dugan Sun
day S&lt;hoo Sup! Classes to all
oges e ... en ng ~erv ce 7 30 B ble
s udy Wedne5 doy 7 30 p n
youth serv ces Fr day 7 30 p m
MIDDLEPORT FREEW ILL BAP
TIST Co er A !ih o d Plum Noel
He rmon pastor So u day e ... en
ng se rv te 7 30 p m Sunday
Schoo 0 30 a m
MEIGS

John F Fulh
Ph 992 2101

Pomeroy

UNDA'S LADY FAIR
BEAUTY SALoN
Call949 11ll For Appomtment
Rac1ne OhtO

PHONE 992·2156

EWS &amp; SONS SOHIO
Complete Automotive Serv1ce

,
,l'"'OO

C..h

PHONE 992·2156

Locusl &amp; Beech Sis Middleport
Ph "lfnl

WE FILL DOCTORS
PRESCRIPTIONS
Pomeroy
2955

Mobt~ H...-nt! lilt~ 1i K1 Yard
art at't-epi.ed ut ly wtth ut.&amp;l

lllnkr 25

212 W M11n Pomeroy 992 9962
510 N 2nd M1ddleporl 992 3451

Phon~t

p n

RUTLAND W lbu HIt Paso
Wo s. h p 10 30 o m Chu ch Schoo l
9 JO o n
SYRACUSE ClU STER
Rev Harve y Koc h Jr
A SBURY
W01 sh p 11 a n
Chu ch School 9 50 o n UMW
f st Tuesday B blc Study Thur s
7 30 p n
FORE ST RUN Wo sh p 9 a n
Chu ch Scho ol I 0 o m
M NERSV LLE Wo sh p 0 o n
Chu ch School 9 a m
SYRACUSE C u cl S(hoo 9 DO
o
Worsh p !ioerv ce 7 30 p n
SOU THERN CL USTER
Rev 1 mothy Sn1 th
Clu ster Leader
Rev Steven W Ison
A ssoc o e
BETHANY (Do cas ) Wo sh p
9 30 a n Chu ch School 10 30

am
CARMEl Ch uch School 9 30
a n Wo sQ p 10 30 o m 2nd and
4t h Sundays
APP LE GROVE Su day School
9 30 a m Wo sh p 7 30 p n I !io l
and Jrd Sunday s P aye mee ng
Wednesday 7 30 p n Fe owsh p
suppe fl sf Saturday 6 p m UMW
2nd Tuesday 7 30 p m
EAST lETART Chruch Schoo
l si 2 d 3 d Sunday s 9 30 om
Fou r h Sunday 10 30 o m Wo
s.h p 2nd Sunday 7 30 p m 4 h
Sunday 9 30 a m P aye mee ng
Wed nes day 7 :lO p m UMW s
Tu esday 7 30 p 11
WESLEYAN
Roc ne)
Su day
Schoo 10 an Wo sh p 1 om
Jr UMVF Wedne sday 3 30 p m
B b e Stvdy I hursday 7 p m Choir
P oc ce Thu sday 8 p n
LETART FALLS Chu ch School
l lj t 2nd 3rd Sundays 10 15 am
4 h Sun day 9 15 a m W9r sh p
ls t 2 d 3 d Sunday s 9 15 a m
4 h Sunday 7 30 p m
MORNING STAR Wo sh p 9 30
o m Chu ch School 10 .30 a m
M d Week Serv ce Wednesday 8
p n

MORSE CHAPEl Wo shp 1
am Church Schoo l 9 30 a m
PORTLAND Wo sh p 7 30 p m
Church School 9 30a m
SUTTON Chur ch School 9 30
o m Wo sh p 1st and 3rd Sundays.
0 30a m
NORTHEAST ClUSTER
Rev R chord Thomas
Po~ o
Duane Syden5 eke
John Dougla s
A ssoc a es
JOPP A
Wo sh p 10 am
Church School 9 a m
Prayer
Meet ng Wednesday 8 p m
LONG BOTTOM Sunday school
o 9 30 a m Wors h1p lie~v ces a t
7 30 p m B ble study and Youth
me e ng
at
8 p m
on
Wednesdays
NORTH BETHEL Worsh p 11
a m Chu ch SchoollO am
ALFRED Sun day School 9 30
a m Worsh p 10 45 o m Praye r
mee ng Wed esdoy 7 45 p m
UMW J d Tu esdoyBp m
REEDSVILLE Sunday Schoo i9 30
MT MOR AH CH URCH OF GOD o n Wo sh p 7 30 p m Pr aye r
Roc ne Route '2 he Rev James Mee ng 7 30 p m
Tuesday
V s at on7 30 p m s Th u sday
M Muncy pastor Sunday school
SIL VE R R DGE Wo sh p 10om
9 45 om mo n g woshp I
o m
even ng wo sh p 7 30 Chu ch Schoo 9 om
TUPPERS PLAINS Wo sh p 9
P aye meet ng Tuesday 7 30
o m Chu c:h School 1'0 o m
p m Young peop le s mee ng
KENO CHURC H OF CHRIST
7 30 p m Thur sdo.,.
Geo ge Frede ck sup! Se v ce
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAP T ST
weekly 9 30 a m on Sunday
Corner S .IC!h and Pol me the Rev
K rby 0 le
pastor
Robe I Preach ng f s and th d Sundays
of month by Cl fi ord Sm lh 9 30
Po ker supe ntenden Sunday
WMPO Rod o prog om 7 45 a m
am
HOBSON CHR ST AN UN ON
Sunday School 9 15 o m Mo n
Re v Ke th Ebl n pasta Sunday
ngWo shp 0 15om You tkoc
9 30 a m
Leona d
I v ltes and f ellowsh p for jun or School
G I more f nt elder even ng !er
and sen o h gh s udenls 6 p m
Sur)doy e\len ng worsh p 7 30 v ce 7 30 p m Wednesday p ay e
n eel ng 7 30 p m
p m M d week p oyer se v cos
M T MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD
Wednesday 7 30 p m
CH URCH OF CHRIST Md Ro c ne Rou e 2 lhe Re v Cho les
dlepo t Sth and Mo n Geo ge Hond pas t or Sunday sc hoo 9 45
o m morn ng wor sh p 11 a m
G loze m n ster M ke Ger ac h
Even ng se 11 ces Tuesday and
supe n endent
Ter y Yo kev
youth m n sler B be schoo 9 30 Frdoy 7 JOp m
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH
a m
morn ng worsh p 10 30
OF CHRI ST
Duane Wo den
o m
even ng worsh p 7 30
m n $ e B b le class 9 30 o m
prayer serv ce 7 p m Wednes
mo n ng worsh p 10 30 om
day
6 30 p m
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE even ng wo sh p
Wednesday B ble study 6 30 p m
NAZARENE Rev J m Broome
KENO CHURCH OF CHR ST
paso Mrs Mo y Lath e,. Sunday
school sup Sunday sc hool 9 30 George Freder ck sup! Sunday
am
morn ng wor sh p 10 30 mo ng se vee 930 am w th
o m
Su n day
evangel sl c p eoch ng on f sl ond th d Sun
meel ng
7 00 p m
P oyer day of month by George P cken s
NEW 5 H VERSVIllE COMMUNI
meet ng Wednesday 7 30 p m
YN TED PRESBYTERIAN T't' Church Sundo)l School se
MINISTRY OF MEIGS COUNTY 'Ice 9 45 o m Wor~h p se 11 ce
Ow ght L Zov tz d ec tor
10 30 Evangel st c Ser v ce 7 30
Wedne sday
Prayer
HARRI SONVIllE p m
mee t ng 7 30
PRESBYTERIAN
Rev
E nes
Z ON CH URCH OF CHR ST
Str ckl n pastor Sunday church
Don
school 9 30 o m Mrs Homer Pome oy Hor !ionv le Rd
Kennedy pasta
B II McEI oy
Lee supt
mo n ng worsh p
10 30
Sunday school supt
Sunday
sctlool 9 30 o m morn ng war
MIDDLEPORT Sund ay school
sh p and c:ommu n on 10 30om
9 30 o m R chord Vaughan sup!
Morn ng worsh p 0 30
Sun day even ng yout h Chmt on
SYRACUSE Morn ng worshtp 9 Endeavor 6 p m worsh p ser
v ce 7 p m Wednesday even ng
am Sunday school 10 am Mrs
prayer meet ng and B ble study 7
Sampson fiaH sup!
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD pm

Nationwide Ins Cso of
Columbus 0

104 W Main

Ph 949 9130

AI Cine

Pomeroy

MEIGS COUNTY BRANCH

Ph 992 3163

Suntiay

IP M
Fridoty afw

Fresh

Ph 992 2512
Matson

Ph 713 5721

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
&amp; SERVICE, INC.

Racme

Ph 949 2882

Ph 992 5130

WAID CROSS SONS STORE

mvolvemel)t
talents unself

HEINER'S BAKERY

THIS SPACE FOR RENT

PISCES IFeb 20 March 20) Luck

Huntmgton W Va

PHONE 992 2156

ARIES

RIGGS USED CARS, INC.

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

Ray Rtggs

Church &amp; Olhce Supplies
GIFTS
99 M1il Sl
Middleport

NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE
KERMIT 5 KORNER
Pomeroy Ohto

RIDENOUR SUPPLY
FURNITURE&amp; HARDWARE
Homeltte Saws

Ph 985 llOB

Chesler

days

are

(March

21 April

19)

Focus your aHenllon on pr onty
ISSues today l esser matt e r s
wtU prove to be ttrne wa ster s
that II ha11 e you sp nn ng you r
wheels

Deep Steam Extraction
Ph m 2206
Ph 992 7630
Rl 3 Pomeroy

M1ddlepgrt Ohio

happy

tends to fa11or you matenally
today but it won t be by tak ng
gambles It wHI happen thro u gh
a chan o f event s set 1 mot on
by anoth e Ftnd ou t to wllom
you re romantically su ted by
send ng for your copy ol Astra
Graph Letter Ma I 50 cents t o
each and a l ong
se H
addressed s lamped envelope
to Astr a Graph P 0 8 011 489
RadiO C tty Slatton N Y 10019
Be sure to spec fy your btrlh
stgn

YOUNG'S CARPETING

985 4155

Ph 985 0100

&gt;

Featuring

BAKERS OF GOODBREAD

Chester

toget her
ahead

F1re Depl Equ1p
Rulland
Ph 742 2777

Chester Ohio 45720

51 Rl 7

~

F1re EKf1ngulshers

Let us capture the story
of your Wedd1ng

th ai w II mean muc h to you and
your fam ly If everyone pu ll s

can 992 2505

MARK V STORE

ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH

CHURCH OF JESUS CHR IST

EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHR ST Elden R Bloke pastor
Sunday School 10 om Howard
McCoy sup! M orn ng se mon
II om
Sund ay nght servces
Chr sl on Endeavor 7 30 p m
Song se v ce 8 p m P eoch ng
8 30 p m
M dweek Pra yer
meet ng Wednesday 7 p m Roy
Ada ms loy f' oder

DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST
Cho les Russell
Sr
mn s e
R ck Mocombe
supt Svndoy
schoo l 9 30 a m wo shi p ser
vee 1030o m BbleSudy l ues
day 7 30 p m
REORG ANI ZED CHURCH OF
JESUS CHRIST OF LAflER DAY
SAINT S Portlo1 d Roc ne Rood
W II an Roush poslo
Rus'&gt;('l

Ra d ft chu ch school D rec o
Sunday Schoo 9 30 a m Mo n
ng wo sh p 10 30 a m Sunday
eve ng se v ce 7 p m Wednes
day even ng p oyer ser v ces 7 30
pm
BETHLEH EM BA Prt ST Rev Earl
Shuler paslo Worsh p se v ce
9 30 a m Sunday schoo l 0 30
o m 8 bl e Study and proy e se
v ce Thu r sday 7 30 p m
CARLETON CHURCH K ngsbury
Road Go y K ng pasta Sunday
school 9 30 a m even ng wo
sh p 7 30 p m P oy e mee t ng
Wednesday 'J 30 p m
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN
Bru ce Sm th post o
Wallace
Dam ewood Supl B b e School
preach ng se v ce
9 30 o m
0 45 o m No even ng serv ce
H't'SEll RUN FREE METHODIST
CHU RCH Re"' He bert A ng
pastor Sunday School 9 JO a m
Monng sttvce
1030 om
Evangel !II c se r¥ ce 7 p m Prayer
mee ng Thur sday 7 p m
I
FREEDOM GOSPEL M SS ON at
Bold Kn ob
Rev
Low ence
G uesencomp Sr pasta Rage
W IIfor d Sr Sunday sc hool sup!
Sunday sc hool 9 30 o
Sunday
even ng ser"' ce 7 p m P aye
mee ng
Tues day
7 30 p m
Erne s
Dee e
class
eader
Youth meet ng Wednesday 7 30
pm
w th Don and Martha
Meadows leader s
WHIT E S CHAPEL Coo v lie RD
Re... Roy Dee ter pa sta Sunday
sc hool 9 30 o m wo rsh p ser v ce
0 30 a m 8 bl e study and proye r
se v ce Wednesday 7 30 p m
RUTLAND

RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST
Denn s Sm th
pas to
F ani..
't'oung Sunday school supt Sun
day school and commu n on 9 30
a n
Wo sh p and co nun on
OJOo m
RUTLAND
COMMUN TY
CHU RC H Sunday School 9 30
o m worsh p servtce
I a m
Wednesday pray er meet ng 7 30
p m you th se rvlces Sunday 7
p m Sunday n ght worsh p 7 JO
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE
NAZARENE Rev lloyd 0 Gr mm
J
pas o Sunckiy schoo l 9 30
om worsh p se v ce 10 30 a m
Broadtast I ve over WMPO youn g
p eop l es
nr11 ce
6 30
evangel sf c serv ce
7 pm
Wednesday 'I p m
MASON COUNTY
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPT ST Cor
ne o f Second and Ande son
Mason Pas or Frank Lowther
Su doy school 9 45 a m war
sh p serv ce 11 a m and 7 30
p m
Week y B ble Stu dy
Wednesday 7 30 p m
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST P
0 Bo .. 487 M ll er St Maso n W
Va Sunday B blc Stud y 0 am
Woshp I om ond7p m Bbe
S udy Wednesday 7 p m Voco
mu~ c

MASON A SSEMBLY OF GOD
Dudd ng lane Mason W Va
Cheste Tennant Pa !ilor Sunday
School 9 45 o m
Ch ldren s
Church 6 45 p m Young Peop les
Se v ce 6 45 p m Evon9el s c
Se\lce 730 pm Womens Ms
s onar y Counc I 10 am t s and
th rd ruesdoys P oye and 8 ble
Study W ednesday 7 30 p m
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST
IN CHR STIAN UN O N The Rev
W lltam Campbell pastor Su nda y
School 9 30 a m James Hughes
sup! even ng se rv ce 7 JO p m
We dnesda y even ng prayer
meet ng 7 30 p m Vou h p oyer
ser11 ce each Tuesdoy
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH
Leo 1 W Vo Rt 1 Re\1 Charles
Horg oves past a Wo sh p ser
v ces 9 30 o m Sunday school
1 o m even ng worsh p 7 30
pm
Tuesday co t oge p oyer
mee t ng and B bl e study 9 30
a m Worship serv1ce Wednes
doy 730pm
CALVAR't' B BLE CHURCH 26 N
Secon d
M ddlep ort
Alan
Blackwood pas o
Ser 11 ces on
Sund ay at 10 JO a m and 7 30
p m w th Sunday school at 9 30
o m 8 ble study Wednesday
"30 p m
NDEPENDENT
HOLINESS
CHURCH IN C - Corner Fourth
and l nco In Sl!i M ddlepo I Rev
ODel Manley pastor Sony Hod
son Sunday School supe nten
dent Sunday school 9 30 o m
7 30 p m
even ng worsh p
pro ve r and prose ser v ce
Wedt)esdoy 7 30 p m
THE PEOPLES CHURCH OF
POMEROY - Corner Mo n and
Cour t Sis
th rd floor over
L ghthouse Restaurant
Henry
Cook pastor Sunday school 10
a m morn ng wo sh p 1 a m
even ng ser vtce 7 30 Wednes
day even ng se v ce 7 30 In
terdenom not anal full gaspe

RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD Poslor Oenn s Boles
Sunda y
School 10om worsh p serv ce
11 30 o m and 7 30 p m Prayer
meet ng Wednesday 7 30 p m

RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH
OF JESUS CHRIST Elde Jome5
M ll er B bl e sttJdy Wednesday
7 30 p m Sundav School 10om
Sunday n ght s.erv te 7 30 p m

POMEROY

WE SLEYAN

HOLINESS - Horr sonv lie Rood
Dewey K ng
pastor
Ed son
Weo11er a ss slant Henry Ebhn
Jr Sunday school sup! Sunday
schoo 9 30 a m morn ng war
sh p 11 a m Sunday even ng ser
v ce 7 30 prayer meet ng Thurs
day 730 p m

SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF
GOO - Nol Pentecostal Rev
George 0 te r pastor Worshtp
se 11 ce Sunday 9 45 a m Sun
day school 11 a m worsh p ser
11 ce 7 30 p m Thursday pray er
meet ng 7 30p m

MT HERMON Un ted B elhren
Church Sunday School 9 30 o m
Worsh p servtce 10 45 o m
P each ng serv ces eve y Sunday
olternot ng wtth C E Wednest:loy
prayer meet ng 7 30 p m Rev
James leach
pastor
Dov d
Hoi er oyleader

10ft se H m a s ttu at on where
you have somelh ng b g to gam
today
You lt be w o r k ng
agams t your o wn be st mt erests
tf you get too pushy

POMEROY
BEN FRANKLIN STORE

GEMINI

(May

21 June

20)

Fnends are prepared to do
favors for you today but for
what they render th ere w II be a
pnce Regardless of the cost
you II st II be ahead

Pomeroy Ohio

com peltltve s tuat ons you
ha11e the upper hand today bul
may not rea l ze tl Why c red t
opponent s w th attr buies they
dOn t po ssess?

Harrisonville
Society News

LEO (July 23 A*g 22) Don I

Dav1d Ray R1ggs spent a
JEHOVAH S WITNESSES I m lo week m Cookesv1Ue Tenn
east o f Rutland rune! on of Route With the mus1c chmr to a
1 2~ and Noble Summtl Rood (T mus1c workshop

174) Sunday B ble letlure 9 30
a
Wat chto wer study
10 30
o m Tuesday Btble study 7 and
B 5 p m
Thursday theocrat c
schoo l
'J 30 p m
servtce
meetng 830p m
HOPE BAPTI ST - 570 Grant St
M ddleporl Bobby Elk ns pastor
Sunday School 10 o m worsh p
serv ce 11 a m even ng serviCe
7 30 p m
Thursday p oyer
meet ng and B ble study 7 30
pm
RUTLAND FREEWILL BAPTIST
Church - leland Haley pastor
Sunday school 10 a m even ng
serv ce
7 30 p m
Prayer
meet ng Wednesday 7 30 p m
CHURCH OF GOD of Prophecy
oco ted on the 0 J Whtle Rood
oH h ghway 160 Sunday Sch oo l
10 a m
Supe mten dent John
Lo ... edoy F rsf Wednesday n ght
ol month CPMA services second
Wednesday WMB meal ng th~rd
hrough
ftfth youth serv ce
George Cr oyle pastor
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL - 570
Grant St Mtddleporl Rev Bobby
Elk ns Sundoy 5Chool 10 am
morn ng worshtp I I even ng
worsh p 7 :lO p m
Thursday
even ng B ble study and prayer
meeting 7 30 p m Affthated w th

SBC
BRADFORD
CHURCH
OF
CHR IST Gobr el Mro z pastor
Sunday school 9 30 a m morn
ng church 10 30 a m Jun or
churc h program under direct on
of Ko en Mroz for ch ldren 2 10
dur ng regular church hour n
thu ch basement Sunday even
ng serv ce 7 p m Wednesday
servce 730pm

JUBILEE CHRISTIAN CENTER Georges Creek Road Church
school 9 ~ 30 a m morn ng wor
sh p 10 30 even ng serv ce 7 30
Prayer meet ng Wednesday 7 30
pm
ST PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH
Corner ol Sycamore ond Second
Sts Pomeroy The Rev W II om
M ddlesworth
Pastor
Sunday
o m ond Church
School at 9
Se vres II am
SACRED HEART Rev Father
Paul D Welton pastor Phone
992 2825 Saturday evening Mau
7 30 Sunday Moss 8 and 10 am
Confess on Saturday 77 30 p m
CHRISTIAN BAPTIST - On the
Route 7 bypon James E Keesee
past or Sunday school 10 om
morntng worsh p 11 a m even
lng servtce 7

•s

Mrs

jump to conclustons today be
cause you mtght hi;lsl ly wr te
somethmg olf thai s poten ttall y
promtstng Lt s lenmg not leap
ng tS the ans we r

France s Kmg ts

VIRGO (Aug 23 Sept 22) Some

spending a week 1n Mar10n
helpmg her s1ster Ruth
Lowry who had surgery
recently
Mrs Bess Elhs Is home
from the hospJtal and slowly
Improving
Frances
Young
and
Frances Alkire VISited
Garnet Willlamson at Holzer
Medical Center Saturday
afternoon
Mr and Mrs Delmar
Rhodes New Marshfield
VISited Mr and Mrs Bob
Cla,rk and Mr and Mrs Jerry
Frlim Saturday afternoon
Mr and Mrs David R1ggs
and fanuly and Mr and Mrs
Fellll Alkire VISited their
grandmother Mary D1ehl on
her lOlst b1rthday Saturday
evemng

one vou thought to be out of
your league may propo se an
mterest ng JOint ~enture wtlh
you today 11 could be a s tep up
to th e b g lime

LIBRA

(Sepl 23 Ocl 23)

You

hav e the g ift to mak e tor1unate
agreem e nts today
pr o~ ded
you r e prepa red to g t~e a I ttle
to get a lo t Pr me the pu mp 1f
necessary

J

I ··

Pomeroy Landmark

9.
_Jack W Carsey Mgr
Ail Phone99lltl1
FOUND BLACK eothe key ca se
w !h o I gh ns de case Co
Q ns 4 keys 2 o Chrys e pro
duc t Found Mo ch l o ound
ou d y o Se co d S Owne
ge n ouc h w th he Pone oy
Po ce Dept

SERVICEMAN WITH plumb ng o d
heat ng exper ence Effe ct ve
mmed otely Wr e So.. 466
Pone oy or co 992 29 1B of e

s

ARCMAFl FAll Sole
M
o Ot ~ ']{) o d 21
I aVe
1 o le s 8 5 S:J 7~ 1~ 7
Bu khouse $4 8 7~ ~old dow
S 700 up We r.e se v ce o d
CluOI ty Ope 1 Su day ~ Co p
Co ley ) a c at Sa l~ ., R 02
N o fPP eo so t

TIMBER
Pomer oy
due s T.op pr ce
sow mbe
Ca ll
Ken t Hanby 1 446

Hvltles thai are no t prof t yteld
mg shou ld not be permttted to
bJte tnto th e ttme of tho se that
are Devote your energtes to
the moneymaker s

SAGITIARIUS (Nov 23 Dec 2t)
Luck has ts hrnttattons today
As lo ng as you are aware of
thts you wtll fare rather w ell
Press your lu ck to o far and t
wtll snap

CAPRICORN

(Dec 22 Jan 19)

Rather than depend upon co
operatton regard ng so meth ng
you wan t to fmahze t oda~
you II be better oil se al ng the
I d by your lonesome

AQUARIUS (Jon 2G-Feb 19) All
work and no play ts a sure
formula for tak ng the zing ou t
of ltfe Set your tools astde
early today
Do someth ng
that s fun
~NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I

News Notes

•

In 11169, James Earl Ray
pleaded guUty to the murder
of Dr Martin Luther King
and was sentenced to 99 yel!rs
In prisott

A thought for the day

President Dwight D Elsen·
bower, while supreme com
mander of Allied f&lt;rees in
·Wcrld War II, said, ' In the

Forest P o
for sand ng
992 596S o
8510

CO NS CURRENCY okens old
pocke wo ches and cho ns
s lve and gold We need 964
and olde s lver &lt;'0 ns Buy sel
or !r ode Co l Roge r Wa nslcy
742 233 1

it. !&gt; M061Lt:

HOM~ )

P

CH P WOOD
Po les
no~-:
d ometer 10 on larges t end $8
pt~
on Bundled slob $6 pe
ton Del ve ed to Oh o Pallet
Co R 2 Pomeroy 992 268 9
$CASH$ for un k cars f yes
Tr uck and Au o Po ts Wrecke
Serv ce l e so e a d Repo
Rut land 742 2081 or Pennzo I

7&lt;2 9575
WANTED TO buy Good used
baby furn tu e Call992 5326

RISIN G STAR Kenne l Boo d ng
lndoo
and outdoo
uns
G oom ng all breeds Clean
so o y foe I es
Chesh r e
Phone (614) 367 0292
AKC
MINIA TURE
Sch auze s
Mole 9 mo Feme e 2 yeo s o
good home 304 773 5568 oft e

nb P I ~ 8. ~ Vnp
N t'ISo I) ug

s:.o;

wa l ~

throne

742 2321

.t

lHRtf ROOMS a 1d bo h up s o s
opt
Po e oy W e Box
7'29 C co lie Do,- Sell el
Po 1e oy OH
befo e B a

e

I

~j

804 w MaiO

Porn eroy
992 1298
After Hours Ca II

Lo l

992 7133

992 2288

/'t.U CbQD

torM!e
FREWO OO spl t a d del ve ed
$4 5 o co d o S:JS o ucl. oad
843 2933 o
A
hardwood
992 62 95

1-'UBl C AU C O N F doy
p
N ew a d us ed
~ cl o I ~~J
A 1~u ~a t
l p
La ~ ol ew
~
o Oh o ~ ... e Au o
Meg~ P a Ja M ddlupo

!&gt;a e

LIME STONE sa d gra ... el

u n hlo de le I'" do9 AK C M N A UN:l: Sc h ou e ~
food o d o il ypes ot soli b&lt;
Mo e 9 no Fe no I ~ 2 yeo
o
ce 5 o Sol Work s I c ~ Mo
good hone 3(1.4 773 S568 ol e
~ Po 'oy 0'12 3891
&gt;pn
US ~D TRAC ORS
47 Fo d N 53
Case Va&lt; 59 MF 35 D ese 64 l\lobi1e Home• for :;ale
Joh ' Dee e OW Gas I MF
1b5 0 ese 74 MF 35 D esel 75 MOB LE liOME w I e&gt;: po do o 3
MJ.- I 3S D esel w th cob o d
a es Dr Hed well !:lcp c 10 k
a
77 M F 285 0 ese Used In
11 ned a e
p os~ IHS o
p e T!e s
MF
10 Mo u e
~4:.0 JU ~
Sp eode
A ll ed fr o 1 e d
loode
Freemon I o 1 e d
:;ern~&lt;!• Offered
foode Dav s f o e d lo ode
Case 220 Hoy Bo e MF 1() Hoy
W ll CAll E fa he e de y
ou
8ole Moll hews Ro a y Sy I e
hone Pho e 992 ~314
MF 10 Hoy Rake Fo c;:l Hay
Rak e MF 42 M o we
AllEN T O N MARl: Ow~~
S
s T a to Sole ~ leo WV
AQHA 5 ud se v ce I I od uc g
~h one (304 45B 1030
to Sou he 0 o lo ak a so
e so ol 0 oe 8 eed Ia o
CORN S2 o bu Co 985 3537 o
o co to no o o d d spos
985 41 3
o Pho e 698 l:J2dl Ulo' e Q!&gt;
197b CHEVROLET
o p ckup
o .... e f o b e~ d go a
La ..... n eoge Good co d I o 4
Belle hho OuQ e
Ho ses
spe ed 350 eng ne heavy duty
40225 SW 692 Po e oy 0 o
$3750
Reed s ... li e
b okes
45709
b14 3 8b3 1 o f e Opm
&lt;O'

l'lFl ALUMINUM boot o d 7
ho se nolo l o sale l I.e new
Co l iO t R chord Toy o
58
Ma n St M ddlepo I 992 6025

USI:O
UN CO
992 3430

D ye

Phone

APPLIANCE
SERVICE
We 11ave enlarged our
serv1ce department and
will servtce Hotpotnt and
other brands

973 CHEVROlET PICKUP 1 uck
Lo....., m &amp;age 0 e ow e Fo
deto s Co ll 992 2974

Pomeroy Landmark

9 ... _Jack W Carsey Mgr
NEED A WATER ~Ail
Phone 992 2181
SOFTENER?

Let us test your water Free

~OR

K NG SIZE round bed complele
Red ve lvet head boo d and bed
sr eod $299 l nge s Fu n u e
992 2635
AVACA DO
s de by
ef r ge oto 4 mo old
Exc:e en cond t o 2 !4
C oge s lo
Chev o e
b end new G 50 I es
Mu s t sell 992 2292

GeorgeS HobsteHer Jr
Broker
107'h Sycamore St '
Pomeroy Ohto

s de
$400
x8 n
w h
$150

SAlE by o w e New I ouse
w h 3000 sq f I v ng space
o d opp ox 2 ac e!&gt; of lo d 8
roo ns 2 ba hs 2 ca go oge
k chen he~ bu It
appl a ces
such as s and cook op s o"'e
I ash compactor Tappa o ... en
d 5hwodle
ce noch e o d o
Nu one Food Cen e
Pho e
9 ~9 250

NICE HOME n
o o eo w h 26
o c es N ew a u n u n s d ng
camp e ely
su a e d a d
remade ed
~ de S o n w n
g
dows La ge co pe ed I
o
oo nand bo th Coli 91)5 41
992 502 1

MUST SELL NOWI 2 story home n Middleport near
churches shopping etc The owner has to sell this home
Immediately Features 3 bedrooms large family
room eat in kitchen and dining cellar &amp; garage wit h 3
room apt W II sell to first reasoneable offer

REDUCE 0 TO $25 OGO - 2 story stone Ira me on large
lot In Middleport Has formal entrance &amp; din ing 2
-4arge bedrooms living room with fireplace &amp; eat In

kitchen Central gas heat &amp; garage

Office Hours
9amto5pm
Closed Thursdays
Saturdays at noon

and

Your FuU Ttme
Re,al Est11te Broker
We h,ave one trifler and
one double wtde mobtle
home with lots ln Tuppers
Plam s Ohio

One three bedroom home 2
acres of ground on Rt 7
Tuppers Plams Ohto
One 4 bedroom
ranch
very modern West Shade
N ear Chest er Ohio
One 3 bedroom new Crow
Su b divis i on near F ve
Points

~

Slam blrKIIOft

Young's

Carpeting
~""""'' 0

Open

Tilt ir•~"ton
11tt Thtlmluton

REAL BUY - 2 bedroom

$23 500
NEW LISTING - Modern 3
one floor plan
nice
c losets

equipped ki tchen

carpettng

and

large

lot

S25 000
WILL TRADE for vacant
land 6 room home with 2 or
3 bedrooms 1 12 baths and
large lot

HELEN L TEAFORD
GORDON B TEAFORD
SUE P MURPHY
Realtor Asso(tates

Pomeroy

Esllmolos by Appointm ent

12 oo 1116 oo Sunday
2 2 tic

"" ""'

Phone 992 7119

2 2&lt; It c

!teal .I!: stale for Sal.,.

l:lu~In~s" St!nu~t

HOMI:Sit ~ S fo

I:H-IADf!ORD
Au( o co
1...0
WNIHi G l
p f.l t: Se v ce PI u u Q4 Y 748?
ok
o 949 1000 Ror e 0
C 1
l o
B o llo d

~o"'

up M ddlcpo
t:o 99'1 ?481

1

oc e o I
Ru t a d

eo

Nt:W J ~Htd oo I ovse 2 bo I
a elec
I a e M dd ~ ~ o
do ~e o Hu Ia d PI o e
99'J
7481
COUNl RY to nlo d w II s e I r1
ed wood s w o o a d good oc
CC!S'&gt;
M o oe C01.1 y W Va
s 000 dow
roll ( 304) nl
3 02o (30d ) ?72 3277

equipped kitchen N G F A

house
fireplace
bath
ba se ment
d nlng
and
almo st an acre Need $7500
or good offer
BRICK 4 bedrooms
bath gas furn~ ce dining 2
porches
and all
city
conven iences Would like

Route 1
Ohio 45769

9 00 Ill 9 00 Mon Friday
9 00 1116 oo Sllurday

992 2206 01992 7630

216 E Second S1reel

dining

General Contracting

Middleport Oh10

A
HOME
TO - BE
CHERISHED
4

bedroom frame house that
look s good
Basement
natural gas furrace
All
uti I foes As king $28 000

DAVID BRICKLES

Locotoclln Tho

T~~!~~~rn
4

Remodeling

MEIGS PLAZA

Associate
Home Phone "49 2589

bedrooms natural ga s city
water smart lot th a t needs
little care On ly $7500

Kllchon Coblnets Roofing
Concrete
Patios
Sldewalkl
New
Construction
&amp;

ACE HARDWARE

s

BOWfR ~

ElWOOD

form a l dining

heat
carpeting
2 car
garage about 4 years old

$36 100 DO
BUDGET HOME -

Ni ce

locatio n 3 bedrooms beth
natural ga s heat kitchen
has range &amp; ref Por ches

$1100000
LOVELY

BRICK

&amp;
FRAME - Level 1 acre 3
bedrooms 1 '/'1 baths lovely
kitchen car peting garage
porch
Very private &amp;

about 3 yrs old $31 900 00
APPROX 2 ACRES - 2
story frame 4 bedrooms
1 h. baths some carpeting
forma l
dtnlng
blo c k
storage bldg 2 car garage

S9 000 00

TIt STORY FRAME -

oo~

Rfl A N:

HI:MODH ING PI
b 9 I uo g
o d c I tn r of !] I.; f.l
e1 a
Wo k guo o cod 20 vco ~ &lt;:M
p~ e C! PI o (:! 99 2 7409
~~

11,
oy
u &lt;I
~

o d

ho k oe wo k
lu ~
u ks
a f o bo y l o
~ w
1 au
us to t 0 j
I I I ! a ~a I
g ovol Co li Bob o Wag£! J I
tc1s doy pl o u99"} 7089
gl
pi o ~ 997 3S2;, w '192 ~2J'J

W lL do oo l g
o
plu nb g o I ! co
too a ge o oo
14"} 234 8

Pl o e

BATHR OO MS AND
K I q s.
e odo led ce an c lo plu
b g r o pen t y ond ge e a
nol tonance
13 vco !. c ..
po e cu 992 36BS
PU LLI NS EX CAVAl NG Co 'nplc to
s~ v ce PI o e9n 247ij

gt1 :. ,.. I w

c)

I)

Po u oy
II ~ 4 J tl
l UWII:V ~

w o
C
M Ci 'JC:J ~

f QII'

' CENTRRL REALTY CO.

lHE WISEMAN REAL ESTATE AGENCY
AT 446-3643

Evening• Call446 3796or446 7881
8 ACRES -

Reduced fo $18 000 Includes a small house
In good condition Also 2 mobile home spaces with
septic tank Good rental income Near !unction of Rt 7
en Rt 124

$11 700 Will buy • good 2 bedroom house with balh
Garage and storage bu I ding Nat gas heat Driveway
Is ele(f heated Nice Ohio River view Furniture can
be bought ex tra Price reduced for quick sale

SO ACRES- FREE GAS Why worry about tho high
cost of heating your home drying your clotl'les hot
water etc We have a 1'12 story house with 3 bedrms

and balh dining room with flreplaco Full basement
Large pond stocked Priced only $42 soo

All carpet installed with
padding at no charge
Expert Installation

Rubber Back Carpel
As low A s

9' and 12' Vtnyl
Aoonng In Stock

Auto Salet1
975 GRAN ADA V 8 ou o a t c
powe
steer r g
AM rod o
powe b akv s a r co d I o g
E.1C cell ent cond I on
$2 900
Phone 992 3886
977 DODGE CUSTOM IOU p ckup
1b 000 o c uol 1 es Sh n s
I oc o Soles Leon WV PI o e
97b (AMARO Good
Call 992 6084
973 PINT O 2 d
cell en
co nd

992 5533

o dto

4 speed b
150

0 l

s

1973 CHEVROLET IMPA LA
e g h t ellenl co nd t on
ofte 7 p n 949 2849

350

Co li

Buy where you can come in

•nd see what you re getting
- Good se lections stocked

IN YOUR HAIR,

LOOK

HERE -

Five
with
shining oak flooring Iorge kitchen wllh dining area 2
full baths 2 bedrooms down and 3 upslalrs Completely
Insu lated with F A nat !I'll furnaco Large porche• &amp;
garage Loc In Chester Prlc;e $19 100

acres with fruit tres, ftrawbf!rrles free water
The llh story home has alum siding Uvlng

&amp; gas
room

family room eat In kitchen dining area &amp; balh Small
basement with excellent storage

Small bern with

workshop and a good garden spot S45 600

W. neocl Llstlnts
W. hove buyers far mony typos of proerty
CALL JIMMY DEEM osoocl•tt 949 2311

Fully

Call742 2211
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
7422211

IF YOU NEED
A SOFA THAT
MAKES A
BED FOR
YOU

High School Nice building slfes Ideal for new home
builders Call now for Info
KIDS

v

SAVE ON
CARPETING
DRIVE A llffiE
&amp;
SAVE A LOT

4 ACRES of nice laying land not far from Southern

bedrooms nice 1 / 2 story house laro.tlvlng room

u y

Alm O 0 11 UU Y
( ~ 1o
Ov
9 1b! u
~
MU I 1
o 99'2 llb/J

room with fireplace Garden space work shop block
cellar and ( ity water Nice country setting Owner may
take n ice mobile home as part payment Price now

$14 300

~

WR I &lt; KIH

n

•4.88 ~\~d

(30&lt;145B 1630
~

"

WA

I

HO WI:RV
AND MAJ.! IIN
r.o ... o t g
_se pt c sys e
dozo
bo{ khoc du p
1..
I n es o e
g o ... €
I o k IOJ.l
p011 g ~ 143 Pf o e (b &lt;I )
b9l:l 7331

m
IH

Nl: GU:fl ~ I OU I
Call 94Q 'l1UU I
I u ~o t { h

b'l&lt;C A VA lNG
l o r~
hQ cl\1 oo
Cl
l w ~ R Hu
o I d he
I e ld
Bo k Hoe Se v re
Ru Ia d 0 1 o PI
c742100U

good repair 3 bedrooms
built In ki tchen nat ga s
F A
heat
nice
l ot

CLELAND
ASSOCIATES
992 2259- 992 2518
992 6191

~

!.

In

$14 000 00
HOW LONG HAS YOUR
HOUSE BEEN ON THE
MARKET1 LET US SELL
IT
HENRY E CLELAND
REALTOR
HANI&lt; KATHY &amp; LEONA

Sen tel

18 ~~

0
bedrooms

~s

o ~ oI
ol opp o ce l ow
ow&lt;r
e11 1 o Stet c H g way Go 190
o " ou u 7
o e (C 4) Ql;l!)
~w eepu ~

c

Uufiiint

SI:WING MACH N~ fl(jpo s
"'ce o l
a l&lt; u~ QY2 778 4
Foh c
~ho p
Po f!
Autl o wd S gc So e
~ e v e W e~ ~ a pe Sc sso
I:X CA VArtN G dol e loodc

3

1 16 I o

3 3 tfc

WALLPAPER.
PAINT &amp; SUPPLIES

Home Phone 742 2003
H1llon Wolfe Sr

bedroom
Several

Phono 992 lffl

SUpe!IOI

Associate

REASONABLE

Ann1vtrsenos
$poc1al DeciSIOns

Syracuse Ohio
Free Estimates

.....,

Chery I Lemley

RE~

P01tr11ts
Possporb

lAVENDER
CONSTRUCTION

Cerptl l UphOISitiJ
Phone Mike Yoone
AI

PHONE 992 6333

Wedd1np

- S..vo Fuoll Money -

PRICE DRASTICALLY REDUCED - 1'12 acres nice
laying land with a nlce12x64 all carpeted mobile home
compJe1ely lurnlshed 2 rooms bullf on with nice family

CALL
IN GALLIPOLIS

01' ...

!tl 2171

... It 3

THE PHOTO PLACE

Cellulose Ftber
Blown Into Walls
and Attics

""'"

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

NEAR SHOPP ING THR EE BEDROOM w th bo h 5 96
oc es lu ly co pe ed
us
r e node led aU e ee l c du g
ce o otf lo. d e
.4 au
bu ld ng s
Me gs M e o eo
992 3993

Blown Insulation

Service
!lliB
, .......... INd.
1"'-.,-

~~

Chester Ohio
10 JO c

11 9 rt c

SMITH NELSON
,.., MOTORS, INC.

AI-'T
FOR
re t
Re o s
ass ss ta ce ro es lor Se o
C I ze s Co ac V age Mo o
A p ls M dd epo I 992 778~

Box 3

SALES AND SERVICE

Radiator~

P~

Tank SeMce

lAM lo4 30PM

EXPERIENCED

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

Jack's Septic

ortn •2•1

Free E1t1mates
Work Guaranttt&lt;l

$18 000

Residential
and
commercial
C.all
for
estimate 24 hour ser\ltce
Anyday •nyhme
PhOne 985 )806

300 Main 51
Pomeroy Ohio
Pomeroy "2 n12

Construction
No 200 - Wilkesville area
approx 1 acre road on 3
sides Gas furnace 2 story
bottom story a ll carpeted
and
refinished
Prtce

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

PWMBING &amp;
HEATING INC.

2 10 tfc

bO MOBILE HOME eo De11
e Pho e !'n 58S8

WO BWHOOM opo

CARTER

AI Tromm

o p k v1 load

COUNTRY LIVIN' - Very nice 3 bedroom home on 28

In 11184 Queen Elizabeth II

0

1 II

5pm
NOTICE OF BIDS
Noti ce s hereby g1ven tha t
bids w I be re c: e ved by
Co lumblo
Townsh p
Trustees Me gs County R t 3
Bo x 8'2 Albany Oh o 45710
unt I March 30 1978
B ds w II be opened April 1
1978 et 8 p m
Building
s ze
ap
pro»etmately 40 ft x 60 ft .
approx mate y 14 It h gh
3 - 14 tt sltd ng doors
2 walk through doors
s ding and root 28 gauge
steef or better
Pr ce with and w tr.out at
least 6 nch r e nfor ce d con
c rete floor
~n ee must nclude bu!ldlng
perm ts
blu~:pflnts
and
erect on
P ut
Bu ld ng Btd
on
outs de of envelope
The Board of Trusfees
reserves th e r Qht to reject
any or all b ds
By order of the Board of
Townsh p Trusten
Gloria Hutton Clerk
13 ) 10 lie

1

IU:OU&lt;.:t: SAH &amp; f a~ w I G IS

0 SPEED b ke S lve grey w h Co nme c ol p ope y opp 011
7
ed tr m Real goad cond on
ac es leve o d Iota ad 0
Call949 2824
TUfJ pe s P o 5 on Oh o Rou e
l Phone (61&lt;1 ) bM 6304
HOOF HOLLOW Ho ses Buy sell
!rode or tro n New and used
sadd es Ru h Re eves Alba y
(614 69B 3290

JU) 1 COMPl ~I t:O
Mrlrl pvt h )
n
I
1 I Y9'1 /JJb v (j9'J )J04

Roofing
Remodeling
Room Additions
Garages

11

"279.95

NO IT EM TOO La ge 01 oo small
W II buy I p ece o comp lete
househo d New used o ant
ques Mar n !i Fu n lure 20 N
2nd St
M dd eporl
Phone
~92 6370

Business Services

Gl49 2 29

Pomeroy Landmark
OLD FURNITURE ce bo.ICes bras s l.s&lt;1fh•n &amp; cond1hon your
beds ron beds e tc co 11ple te
water with Coop water
househo ds Wr e M 0 M I e
so1tener Model UC SVI
Rl ~ Pomeroy Oh o a coli
992 7760
Now Only

gave birth to her fourth chUd,
final choice, a soldier a pack Prince Edward, third in Une
18 not ., heavy a burden u a of succession to the BriUsh
prlaoner 1 chalna "

w, a~on ohl

HWl:WOOO

M00El1 2W nches te shotgu 2B
fu ll Good cond t o
SJDO
Phone 742 2359

SCORPIO (Del 24 Nov 22) Ac

Laurel iliff
Attendance al the Free
Methodist Church March 5
was 80
Rev Cecil WISe Chester
attended morning services at
the local church
Mrs Tma Jacobs has been
reported ill at her home
Mr and Mrs Pearl Gilkey
VISited recently with Mr and
Mrs Ha!Ty Stahl
Mr and Mrs PhiU Wise
and Beverly attended Sunday
sernces at the local church
Mr
and Mrs
John
Douglas Byerville Mr and
Mrs Clell Woods Syracuse
visited recently with Mrs
Emma Fox
Mr and Mrs Lennie
Lymons and Mrs Emma Fox
attended the show Beyond
and Back" m Parkersburg

~

HEAL1 HY YOUNG p gs I a
9~9 277 .4 ol e 5 p n

TAURUS (April 20 May 20) Use

CANCER (June 21 July 22) n
P ne Grove The R.ev W 11 om located o Rullo d on New L n a
M dd esworth
Pa s to
Church Rood neJoCt to Forest A cre Po rk
se v ces 9 30 a n Sunday Schoo l Rev Ray Rouse pos o Robe rt
0 30 o m
Mvsser Sunday Schoo sup! Svn
BRADBURY
CHURC H
OF day school 0 30 am worsh p
CHR ST M Donald Ra ey pa so
7 30 p m B be Stud y Wednes
Sunday school 9 30 o m wo
day 7 30 p m Saturday n gh t
sl p ~e "'ce 10 30 o m Sunday P aye se v ce 7 30 p m
yo uth g oup
HEMLOCK GROVE CHR STIAN
se v ces 7 p m
Wednesd ay 7 p m
Roger Wa son pas o Kenneth
ANTlQU TV BAPT ST Rev Eo I Bye Su day sc ho ol sup! Mo n
Shul e
pos a
Sunday schoo l ng wo r sh p 9 30 o m
Sun
9 30a n Ch u ch se v ce 7 p n
dayschoo l 10 30 am
C'.len ng
youth meet ng 6 p m Tuesdoy 8
se v ce 7 30 Wednesday B ble
bleS udy- 7 p m
Study 7 30p m
RACINE CHURC H OF THE
M T UNION BAPT ST
Don
NAZARENE Rev John A (off
W l so n
Sundo)l
Hhool
man paso Frankl n mboden
super ntendent Sunday school
cho man ol the Boo d of Chr s 9 45 a m
elo'e n ng wo sh p 7
on l l e Sunday School 9 JO p m Prayer mee t ng 7 p m
a n
mo n ng worsh p 10 30 Wednesday
Sunday even ng worsh p 7 30
TUPPERS PLANS CHRISTIAN
p m P aye meet ng Wednes CHURCH
Eugene Underwood
day 7 30 p m
pas a
Howa d Co dwell J
RACINE FIRST BAP.TIST Don l
Sunday School Sup!
Sunday
Ronn e Sal se
Scho ol 9 30 a m Morn ng Ser
Walker Pas o
!iupt
Sundoy man 10 30om Sunday even ng
Sunday ~ c ha o
school 9 30 a m mo n ng war
serv ce 7 p m
LETART
FALLS
UNITED
shp 1040om Su doye,.en g
wo sh p 7 30 Wednesday even
BRETHREN Rev Free and No r s
ng 8 be study 7 30
pas tor Floyd Norr s sup! Sunday
DANVILLE WE SLEYAN Re¥:;t'~~t..~30 d m f.&lt; mQ n n ~e
D Brown pa stor Sunday SchdOI
T~of~ a'"?- 11-P.roye sej\V ce
9 30 o m
mo n ng worsh p 1/t/ rVs~aY~ ®Jim
10 ~5 youth serv ce 6 45 p m
C URCH OF GOD OF PRO
even ng worsh p
7 30 p m
PHECY 0 J Wh le Rood oft 160
p oyer and pro se Wednesday
Rev Geo g e Groyle postorSun
day Sc hoo l 0 o m Ar hur Hen
7 30 p m
S l VER RUN FREE BAPTIST
son Sup! Mo n ng Worsh p 11
M les T ou t
pas tor
Sunday om Young Peop e s serv ce 7
schoo l 10om Steve L e sup! p m Even ng serv ce 7 30 p m
Even ng se v ce 7 p n
proye
Wed ne5doy M d Week P aye
mee t ng Thu sd ay 7 p m
Se v ce
7 30 p m
Yo u th
CHESTER CHURCHOF COO
mee t ng 6 30 p m Even ng war
Rev Bobby Parler pas tor Sun
sh p 7 30 p m
day sc hool ~ 30 o m worsh p
CHESTE R CHURCH OF THE
~e "' ce 11 o m even ng se 11 ce
NAZARENE Rev Herber Grote
7 30 yo ulh ser v ce Wednesday
pas tor Wo sh p se rv ce 11 a m
an d 7 30 p m Sunday
Sunday
7 30 p m
LAN GSVLLE
C HRISTIAN Schoo 930om RchodBo rton
CHURCH Robert Musse pastor
supl Prayer mee ng Wednes
Sunday !!i Choo 9 30 a n
Roy day 7 30 p m
S gmon sup! morn ng wors h p
BRADFORD
CHUR CH
OF
10 30 Sunday even ng se v ce CHRIST G obr el Mzrs po s or 8
7 30 m d week serv ce Wednes
b1e Sunday School 9 30 a m mo
dav 7 30 p m
n ng ch\1 ch 10 30 a m Sunday
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE even ng setv ce
7 00 p m
NAZARE NE
Rev
Dale Bo ss Wednesdays~ v t:e 7 30 p m
poslo
Bob Moore
Sunday
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHOD ST
School sup! Sunday uhool 9 30 CHURCH Rev Floyd F Shook
om
mo n ng worsh p 10 45 pos tor
Ll oyd Wr ght Sunday
a m evangel st c serv ce 7 p m Sckool Sup! Morn ng Wo sh p
Wednesday sent c~s - p (!yer 9 30 o m Sunday School 10 20
and pro se 7 p
Nazarene o m Wednesday P oye ond B
youth 7 p m
Oo ly p oyer ble Stud y 7 JO p m Sunday even
meet ng a 30om Mens p aye
ng wo sh p 730 p m Cho r Proc
meet ng Sa urdoy 7 p m
Ice Thursday 7 p m

low

&amp; BLEND

Several large oppor tumt es
may pop up th is com ng year

For The Best 1n TV Vlewrng

V gna

Ph 949 2550

ly

J

POINTVIEW CABLE TV
SYSTEMS, INC.

Sunday Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Fnday Saturday
John
John
John
John
Luke
Luke
John
4 7 26 4 31 42 519 47
3 1 21
14 15 24 4 1 13 1 35 51

GROCERIES&amp; GENERAL
MERCHANDISE

Ken GriM!r Photography

CARS &amp; TRUCKS
461 S 3rd
Middleport
Ph 992 2196

or

Pomeroy

SHOOTIN G MATCH Fa ked ~u
Spo s o C ub eve y Su day
of e no on Fo e o y choke gu s

FERTILIZER NITROGEN
POTASH, fERT.Q.PELS

DAN THOMPSON FORD, INC.

And there s usually a th1rd elemen t but tt s n eve r boasted uf
paraded about That s sacrifice People of character are always
w1llmg to de ny t hem selves some thmg to ach1eve somethmg
greater
Nearby are plenty of labora,tones where behef comm1t
ment and sacnfice oombme lo prudm:e ChnstuJn characte r
They recalled CH URCHES

REUTER BROGAN INSURANCE
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~

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fo U
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qol.,.o
I o
q I o.;lO d Mo fJOqf'
11 l !:1
A ('
1
c (6 1&lt;1 !
i::l9J 00~1

u.mpmg t:quipmenl

'J

. . . Jack W ClrMY Mfr
...
Phone992 2181

March11 1978

Y..omen we most adm1re generall y h ave strong conv1ct1ons wh1c h
mUuence tht::tr da.aly l1 ves
Another 1S commitme nt Far beyond mere
l hose who sltrour admtratJon d evote thear I me and
LShly to worthwh1le cau ses

Pomeroy Landmark

0

WALl
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216 E Second
Pomeroy
Ph 992 3325

On~ as bel ef And not JUSt hehef m ones self 1 he men and

RACINE PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

214 E Ma1n

VIRGIL B. TEAFORD SR.
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There s no prec1se formula But there are certam elements
sually found m s1gnifk:ant measure 10 persons of character

Ph 992 7034

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bermce Bede Osol

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Third 51

PHONE 992-2156

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1100 E Mam

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Pomeroy

MIDWAY MARKET
BOB'S MARKET

IOOI't

e t1o l kc t' w n ~ k q
~nso Pt o ~ b 4) b9ij :J~
In I

COUN I RV MOIHL I: Hone Po k
l! oute 33
orth of Po ne1oy
l o g e loh Call qq'l 7479

INCOME TAX Se v ces Fede ol
a d slate Taxes
Walla ce
Ru nell 8 odbury 992 722B

THIS SPACE FOR RENT

2 CONVENIENT MARKETS

Racme

Pomeroy

296 W 2nd

HIACIQ W w II o

J AND 4 RM fut 1 5hed a d u
lu
shed opts
Pho 1e 992
5434

CLEARANCE SALE beg s M o
Feb 13 ol SewN Sew Ou tl e
Mo
S ee t
Roc e
All
polye s e daub e l&lt; n s reduced
40". 0 d so•" 1hreod b g spool
Slo $1

Tuesday
th 11 Fr da)
!PM
the I.Wy bt!fun: publ oto

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o buy u

tor Hcnl

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Not ot Stiturdlly

THE ATliENS _COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp;LOAN CO.

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Ph ~49 1621

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Ph 992 llll

RACINE FOOD MARKET

RACINE Gu Cub Gu Shoot
every Su day olt e oo
f a&lt;
to y choke gu ~a ly A~'&gt; o rled
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NOTICE

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

ROSEBERRfS PENNZOIL

rur ildll l:arry

o ~c " (' u f!
ll&gt;£&gt;1 ~a l.lll q
n~ lnnk 9 to
wotk
o
wl o .-.ve
wr ou 1l gu t ( u I
to., e• w
o ~e 1 e Wa Act
loll9q'J 2 ~
wo

lH~

}i!t:llotlolll Tlw Pttb]ISh«!r Will 1ot ~
~purL•nble for mure llw u "Ulc:t.ll..
redu ~rt ur

COOP ERA T VE PARISH
METHOOISl CHURCH
Robe 1 T Bumgarner
D o&lt; o
POMEROY CL USTER
Rev RobertHoyden
Rev James Co b t
CHESTEP W o sh p 9 I S a n
Church School 10 a m
POMEROY
wo sh p serv re
9 IS am Sunday school 10 30
o 1
R€-v
Robe I Hoyden
min star
ENTERPRISE Wo s.h p 9 o m
Chu ch Srhoo 0 o m
ROCK SPRINGS Wo !h p 0
a
Chu ch School 9 I 5o m
UMYFb JOpm
FLA l WOOOS Wo sh p I a n
Chu ch Schoo 10 o n
MIDDLEPORT CLU STER
Rev Robe I Bumgo ne
HEA TH
R obt;~
Bumg ar e
Pa s o
Wo sh p
0 30 a m
Cl u ch Sci ool 9 30 o m UMYF 6

dwrge

I~ YOU hove

lHE RACI NE Volu tee
f e
Oepo I e I w ll spa \SO o gu
shoo eve v Saturday a b p nat
!he 1 bu d g n Sosha
Foe
101y &lt;hoke gu u o ly

The Pubhsher reservts tht n~ ll
so 001 ur rt'j t L'\ any ads dl'* 1Wd 00.

SERVICE CENTERS

PHONE 992 2156

~nl

sulcs
w t1

lt.al t: s lalr for !;a!&lt;

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111 MBoa Nu nbn I 1Citrt! uf Tht• $to
Utd

FRENCH'S SUNOCO
THIS SPACE FOR RENT

2.2S
J75

In metnury Ol.nl of TI1o11 tks .v.rd
Obituary I ('tnbl per wurd t3 00
minunWn CMSh Ul atfva '-~

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Phone 949 21101 or 9U 2160
FREE ESTIMATES

PHARMACY

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dlty1 wUI ~ dwrgi!d al tiM: I day
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BISSEU SIDING CO

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

m

... ,..

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nus SPACE FOR RENT

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

IN LOVING nemory of ou hu~o
bo rl to he a d g a dlothe
Molh Bearhs o t h s 7tsth b th
day MQ ch 10 h
W lc M ohel So' J
Doug! ~
1 lo...., ~hyll " G o td~o ~ t
a d Seal

15 IN STOCK

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�6- The D•lly Sentinel . MHidil'IXJI1·PI&gt;Incruy. U .. Fnday . Mar. 10, 197H
DI CK TRACY

Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Mar. 10. 1978
10:3Q-Monly Python' s Flying Ci r cus 10
11 :00--News J,4,8,10,ll,l5,6; Utlas, Yoga &amp; You 33 .
11 :JG-Johnny Carson 3.4. 1S; Baretta 6, 13; Mash B;
Movie " Blood &amp; Black Lace" 10; Monty Pythons
Flyi ng Circus 33
11 oo-Janaki 33; 12 ·05 M o'Jie " Don' t Go Nea r The

TELEVISION
VIEWING

Water'' 8.
12: 4o-Lohman &amp; Barkley 6; Ironside 13
1 :OQ- Midnlght Specia l 3,4, IS; Movie " Creature tram
t he Haunted Sea" 10; I :4G---News 13.
, :i' :Jo-News 3; J:oo-Movie " The K ing' s Pi rate" J ;
S.Oo-Movie " The Plainsma n" 3: 6: 3()-..FB I 3.
Movie Channel 4 ;&amp;9 P.M - TheEagleHas~andediPG l
7 &amp; II P M.-Wh ltls i PG I

FRIDAY , MARCH 10, 1978
S:OQ-Here Come TheBrides 3; Star Trek 4; Gun smoke
8; M ister Roger s' Neighborhood 20,33 ; Hogan' s
Heroes 10; Emergency One ! 13; Petticoat 15.

S:JQ-News 6; Elec . Co. 20.33; Mary Tyler Moore 10;

MIZ 00&amp;51NS, 1 DU NNO
HO W MY COMPANY CO N·
! RIVED THIS I,\EI;T IN6!
l WAS SUPPOSED TO
COME HERE F -

0 NATS!

B L AZE ~ ~

IS SHE

MA'ISE YOU'D

TRVIN6 TO
~ R EAK

'" 'IOU CAN GET FOO·FOO flA CK

n L SELl YOUR COMPANY MY
SOL AR ENER5Y PROCESS··AND

SETT ER LE-T

ME

'IOU WON 'T EVEN

ME TAK E YOU
HOME·· YOU
CAN TEL L ME

DOWN WITH
TEARS ;

HAVE TO

MARRY ME !

ALL ABOUT
If ON THE

WAY!

. ·-.

Hogan's Heroes 15.
6: 00-News 3,4,8,10,13,15 ; ABC News 6; Zoom 20 :
Adam s Chronic les 33 .
6 :3G-NBC News3,4,15 ; ABC Newsl3 ; Carol Burnett &amp;
F r iends 6; CBS News 9, 10; Over Easy 20.
7 :0Q-Cross-Wits 3,4; Liars Club 6; Muppet Show 8;
Capito l Beat 33; News 10 ; To Tell The Truth 13 ;
Gllll9•n' s Is. 15; Almanac 20..
..
7:3 ~Porte r Wagoner 3; Gong Show 4; Matc h Game
PM 6; Pr ice Is Righ t 8; MacNeii . Le hrer Report
20,33; F a m ily Feud 10; $100,000 Name That Tune
. 13; Pop Goes T he Count r y 15.
8 :QO--Quar k 3. 15; Movie " The Boy in the Plast ic
Bubble" 6, 13; Odd Couple 4; Wo nder Woman B. 10;
Washington Week in ~eview 20 ; So The People May
Know 33.
8:31)--( P O Shar key ~ . 4, 15 ; Wall Slreet Week 20,33 .
9 :0o-Rockford F iles ,3,4, 15 ; Incredible Hulk 8,10 ;
Soundstage 20; Shephe rd 's P ie 33 .
9 :3o-Make m &amp; Clancy 33 ; lO :Oo-Qulncy 3,4,15;
Charlie's Angels 6, 13; Husbands , Wives &amp; Lovers
8,10; Ne ws 20; Scenes fro m A Mar r iage 33.

SATURDAY , MARCH 11, 1978
6:DO-Sunr ise Semester a, 10; 6 :30--Marlo &amp; The Magic
Movie Mach ine 4; TV Classroom 8; U.S. Farm
Report 10; Ken tucky Af ield 13.
7: ()()--.,Fun for Everyone 6 ; Ghost Busters 8; P ublic
Polley Forums 10; Weekend Specia l 13.
7: 30--Saturday Report 3; World of Survival 4: Ad ventures of Muhammad Ali IS ; Dusty' s Treehouse
6 ; Wacko 8.
S : ~Hong Kong Phooey 3.4.15 : Superfrlends 6, 13;
Three Robonlc Stooges 8, 10; 8:31&gt;--Go Go
Globetrotters 3.4.15; Speed Buggy 8, 10.
9 :oo-Scooby' s Laff.A-!._ympics 6, 13 ; Bugs Bu nny.
Road Runner 8; Final Senate Session 33 .
10:3G-Pink Panther 3,4, 15; Batman.Ta r zan 8, 10;
11 :00-Baggy Pants 3,4; 15; Kra fft Supe rshow 6,13.
11 : 3D-Space Sentinels 3, 15; Little Rascals 4; Secrets
of Isis 8; In The Know 10.
12 :01}-l and of the l ost 3; Weekend Specia l 6; Mo vie
" F rom Hell to Texa s 4; Fat Albe r t 8.1 0; Ac tion

~**"'*'~··~······1·*
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OUR USED CAR
DEALS

••,, .
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PON' T YOU GUYS WORRY NOH E 1
AROUND tl"t.IO clOT AWAY

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ABOUT?

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'1995

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o' th' law,suh'

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Chevelle,

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Club 15; Flnol Senote

12 :30-Thunder 3; American Bandstand 13; Poi nt or

VIew 6; Space Academy 8,10.
1:00-Jetsons 3; Outdoors with Julius Boros 6: Mr.
Magoo 8. 10.
I :»-NCAA Basketboll J; CBPA Bowllng6; Viewpoint
8; Winners 10; Tr l State : Today &amp; Tomorrow 13.
l :oo-NCAA Basketball 3,4,15; Movie " Quicksand" 8;
Movie " Crosscurrent " tO; Mo\l le "Cry of the Wild"
13.
2:3()--Mod Squad 6; J :oo-Finol Senote Session Con .
Hnues 33.

3 :31)--Pro Bowling 6, 13; 4 :()()---NCAA Basketball 3,4, IS ;
Golt 8. 10.
5:00-Wide World of Sports 6, 13; Sports Spectacular 8; .
Pop Goes The Countr y 10: Ada ms Chronicles 20:
5:3G--Porter Waao,er 10.
6:oo-News J ,-4, 10; Lawrence Welk 8; God Has the
Answer 15; Zoom 20; F Ina I Sena te Session Con .
t inues 33.
6:3o- NBC News 3,4, 15; A BC News 13; News 6; CBS
News 10; Que Pasa . USA 20.
7:00--Litt le Rascal s 3; Lawrence Wel k 4, 15; Hee Haw
6,8; Bugs Bunny tO; Wild Ki ngdom 13; Elec. Co. 20 .
7:3()--We Thi nk You Should Kno w 3; All· Star Anylhlng
Goes 10; Snake : Villain or VIctim ? 13; Once Upon A
Classic 20 .
a :oo-.--. Bionlc Woman 3,4,1S; Wha t' s H~ppe nl ng ! 6. 13;

Bob Newhart 8, 10; Roya l He rllage 20.
8:30-0per atlon Petti coat 6, 13; Tony Randall8, 10.
9 :oo-M ovie " Rus sian Ro ulette " 3,4, IS; Love Boat 6, 13;
Jell er sons 8. 10; Anna Karen tna 20; Fina l Senate

Session Continues 33.
9:3o-M aude 8,10; 10 :00--Fant asy I sland 6,13; Kojak
B,lO ; Meeting o f Minds 20.

~

ARE OUT OF THIS WORLD!

NOBODY YET EVER
SlAPPE-D "L1Tl lE MONSTER."

News tor Kids 13: PTL
Session Continues J3

ll :oo- News 3•••e, IO, I3,1l;; 11 : 15-ABC New• 6.
11 :Jo-Movle " The Strawberry Blonde" l ; Saturday
Night 4, lS ; Movie " The Terrornauts" 6; Soap 8;
Mo..,le "One Eyed Jacks"' 10; Movie " The Pleasure
of Hls Company" 13.
12 :oo-Second City T.V. 8; 12 ;31&gt;--Don Kirshner's Rock
Concert 8 .
1 :()(}-Movie " Dreams of Gins" .t; Wolfman Jack 6;
1: 3G--News 3.
I :35-Movle " The Wasp Womon" 13; 3:01)---ABC News
13.
AAov ie Channe l ,. 5 &amp; 7 P.M. - Hedda lPG !
9 &amp; 11 P.M.-The Ritz iRl

Alfred

Social Not~
Sunday School attenda nce
on Ma rch 5 was 41. the of·
Cering wsa $23 .15.
Worship ser vices were held
at 10:45 with an attenda nre of
27, wi t h Rev . Rir hard
Tho mas
spea k ing
on ,
" Follo w
Th e
Good
Shephe r d ."
Commu n ion
ser vices followe d the sermon.
A committe~ meeting hus
been called for Thursday;
Ma rch 9, lo gel lhe In-

( ' R \ 1 1"1't )l~\ 1( ,'I'ES

'

I

forma t ion ready for the
Chur r h Pictorial Album (to
be do ne by March 16, if
possible .)
Easter Sunrise Se r vices
a re being pla nned a l 6:30
Easter Sunduy morni ng with
br eakfast to fo llow in t he
chu rdl basemenL All are
welcmnc.

G uesls In lhe Foll ro d Robinso n home this past
Sun(.lay were Mr . a nd Mrs.
Bill Follrod and S u• Ann of
At hens, Mr . und Mrs. Otto
Swartz of Shade a nd Ru th

Basom , a friend.
Cha rles a nd Helen Woode
rece ive d word lha t h e r
brothe r , Clifford Hayc~ will
undergo surger y In Holze r
Medical Center on Monda y
m ornin g . A s is t er , flil oh
Roumelette. has come to be
with him .

by THOMAS JOSEPH
PQK
2 Jellied
ACROSS
PDKM P Wfi KPH
X QK ' M
Q
1 Chess piece
dish
MWV E Q V W DK
I WM
l WX
:; Ta lk group
3 Shrewd
V H ZZ
operato r
10 Court star
Forest reso urces a r e
N Q V Pl ·
MH S fi K
VI Q K
JHVVHU
11 Wife of
4 Unused
rene wa ble: the nutlon today
:; Hide
Paris
XHK WK Q ZD YV G V DN HU . MW UQ I' l has 759 m illion a cres of forest
12 Cast out
6 Anecd olal
la nd - u rcm urk uble le al
Y.. tcrday's Cryptocjuole: Wlir ;N YO U AHE &lt;:F:TTI NG ~ince it rc prcscr\ts threecollection
13 Neb r aska
KJ CKED FROM THE RE AR IT ME ANS YOU AilE UP fourt hs of wh ut fili'CSI wus
river
7 Lombard
~'RONT . -{l,B. SHAW
film ; ! 937
It Yoke
her e
when
Culurnbu s
Yesterda y's Auswt~ r
.1 •· 1\f1M Kill~ F1•aturl'~ S)·ndu·a1o• . In•·
8 Covenant
Ia Pampe r
discovered the Ne w World.
26 Outch
16 Pronoun
twixt
19 Pi ne Tree
painte r
17 Pastry
countries
slate
29 " Wha t's - ?"
19 Ma Ki's
9 More
22 Le•st
opposite
cautious
ori gina l
30 Shabby
p••••-~p••••••••llllil••••••••••••
32 High·
20 Apoplexy
11 Paris' 23 llalia n
lander
eorn meal
plant
Comique
35 Gl 's a ddress
21 Pa rt of a .m . 15 Early
dish'
36 Dislaff
22 Spar
Britishe r
24 Ci vil
Merino
2~ Detroit pro
18 Apart from
wrong
25 One of Liz's .---r:,-r-:--,-,,-,.,..,.. ,..,..,.,-,.,.---r,-;::-rnl l
husba nds
26 " - a nd
I .overs''
27 Toward
shelter
28 Footprints
31 Gr•ssy
ground
32 AdJust
33 College in
Iowa
34 Twine
36 Buffa lo-Alba ny canal
37 Trample
38 - one's
wa y
39 Fortune·
telle r 's

To Bigger Savings

TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS

L.W.B .. Sid.

..
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1972 OlDSMOBilE 88 2 DR.. ..... -.. ..... :.... ............ .......... ..·'1095
1972 OlDSMOBilE 88 ROYAlE SED. ........ ......... .. ... ...... ;.. ... '1095

cards

'1895

~0

Ne rvous

DOWN
I G lue
j

I WA5

A MAN

SEEING-...

WHEN I TrlOUGHT YOU
WERE NEVER COM fNG-

DAILY C RYPTO&lt;lUOTE - Here's how lo work It :
A X V D I. B A A X R

YOU'vE BEEN 'sEEING '/
SOMEONE ? HOW". HOW
ISERIOU.S DID IT GET

I . 0 N G F E I. L 0 W

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Nh\1 Yollf(, Sll~ •••
~l\===~~~~~~ Af'f'!fl IlL.\-, T'HII"r'~

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Find the play for 1NT
•
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ollll."( A PENNY A DAY.

NORTH 3 IO·t)
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A91-

THE ALMANAC
Unjled Press International
Today is Friday, March 10,
the 69th day of 1978 with 296 to
follow.
The moon is between its
new phase and first quarter.
There is no morning sta r _
The evening stars are Mercury, Mars, Venus, Jupiter
and Saturn.
Those born on this date are

'

65

+ K Q 10 9 '

"'A K 10. 3
StWTH ~

'K

• J 10.,

f&gt;.. QJCSTIOtJ,
GaTOR~

Q

+ A7 3
"' Q J 87
Vu lnerab le: .\'either
Deal er ; Nurlh

to get on lead. l&lt; "cw .Soutn
players fo und this defense
a nd a lmost aJI diamond declarer s made eig ht trieks.
The most common bidding
wa s that shown in the box
with South play ing one
notrump , laking the s pade
finesse and losing on e spade' JJfJ]J~~rn
four dia monds. two clubs
D
THATSCRAMBLEDWORDGAMI
8
and 50 points.
®
by Henri Arnold and Bob LM
The re is a way to make . Unscramble these lour J umbles, /~tf~~~~~~~
if you can one letter to each square. to lorm
find it. Not many Souths did. four ordinary words
liere's the play. South
wins the second dia mond
and dec ides that East will be
c
th e missing high

t

one ·n ot r ump. Se e

~~~~i~~g ~II

•

West

~Or th
l'a ~s

l'ws;o.

1¥
1-'a .. s

l'a :-.~

Open ing \ ~a d .

East So ulh
It
i'a s.-.
l ' a~" I NT
Pa ss

+J

By Os Wald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

BARNEY

,---;..------------, r~-P_U_T-,-'E_R_T
_
H
_A_R
_._ r-:::--::;;;::::=--------~--,
He r e is a pa ri-score hand
fro m the cha rity ga m e .
YONDER COMES MY
SHERIFF 11
No rth will a lmost s urely colGOOD OL' 8UDDY- SHERIFF TAIT

••

lcct e ight tri cks in h earts for
plus 11 0 a nd those No rth
player s who played in he• r ts
~ot ver y goorl scores .
The bes t fi:as i-Wcs t scores
c:tmc when F.a:;;t bid two
clubs aft(' r' Nnrl h reope ned
with one heart. So utl'1 d oubled two cl ub:; a nd the n
someone clou blcd two d iamonds. T wo di a m ond15 c a n
nrliy be bcil ten if South leads
a• ·c and a nothe r dia mond
b•' forc givi ng EIJ ~ t a ehom cc

under the sign of Pisces.
American organist and
composer Dudley Buck was
born March 10, 1839.
()p this day in history:
In 1662, the U.S. Treasury
issued the first American
currency, in denominations
from $5 to $1,000.
In 1945, B-29 bombers of the
U.S. Air Force began incondiary raids on Japan in lhe
waning days of World War U.

I CQH l .T ,
I rcr.).:.,. ....... ... J...-

I

~...,.

f l l l .... , ..

Then h~ cashes the kmg r-:==-::-:-:-~-,
and queen of hearts and I
thr ows E ast in with a diam oneL East t~ kes his dia- '--r
~ ----:;;f',.;._;,J.;:.---f-...,p,.......,~
monds but must give de.
~ _
~
cl&lt;:~rc r his .se venth t r ic k in a
bla ck suit.1
r~,.--..,.................,

SEG IN
-·

...•%·--

Highway

......
...
.""

34 MPG

-.........
~·

......

...
...

lOWEST
MID-SIZE
STICKER .PRICE
STARTS AT

-.......••..
~

i·

.=
.,• ·.

.. . !

landau roof, P.S .. P . B., air, rally wheels, radial tires,
tw in racing mirrors. EXTRA NICE .

.4 Dr . H.T., burgundy, P .S., P . B.. air.

&lt;&amp;;

:·
.••..-••••
••
......~:••

1975 COUGAR XR7 .... ...................... '3695
1974 CHEVROLET IMPAlA. ....... -........ 11895

_

FAIRMONT
..

2 &amp; 4 DR.

1972 LINCOlN CONTINENTAL ........ .... '1895
.s Dr., new rad ial tires, loaded .

1973 PlYMOUTH DUSTER ......... .. ...... '1595
P.s.

Automatic,

1973 CHRYSlER NEWPORT... ... ........ •·'1295
2 Dr. H.T., air, P .S., P .B., vinyl roof .

1972 PlYMOUTH.- .................... ... .... 1895
2 Dr . H.T .

'3589

1968 OlDS 442 ...... ........................'895
Extra d.ean, sharp.

FAIRMONT FUTURA

::.
....

33 MPG
Highway
23 MPG
City

1969 RAMBlER WAGON ............ .. .......'295
Auto., 4 Dr .

SHOP EARLY FOR YOUR CHOICE

TRUCKS .

~ 'liJ_;j ~jJlUb IMALORF I

1977 FORD F-250 % TON ................. '4895

A Florida reader wants to
( )
know what the " Unusual "
notr ump convention is and lrO::-cU-S~A-R-I--.1
who Jnve nted 1t.
.
.
•
Now arrange the circled letters to
Wte wdill ansltwe r th~ secondd
'J
form lhe surprise answer. as sug·
par to a y.
was mvente 1--l._.cf:..~Aa____t_ _r~"---'l
gesred by the above ~anoon .
by Alvin Roth of Ne w York,
one of the g rea test bridge
t heor ists and playe rs. SecPrint answer here: ~
H
'Y
om l pa rt a ns we r ed tom or ~ - :d ~ _ ~ _ _ .:
row
.
(Answers tomorrow
·NI-: Ws l',, l 'l-:1! J-:N n :HI'IUS I·: AS-'IN )
.
Jumbles · RIGOR HEDGE lWING
.
Yes!e rda y s
·
E PAGODA
1For d copy of JACOB Y MODAnswer· What he was a~arded when he graduated
ERN . . send $1 to : ·· Wif'l at
frcm dog tralmng school - A " PE·DIGREE"

1975 GMC GENnEMAN JIM PACKAGE .• 13695

Custom Packoge. 351 . V-8. 4Sp., P.S., P. B., L.W.B.

I v

r ·J

J X

I

Brtdge. ·· care o f tl"lis newspaper, P.O Box 489. Radio City
Station . New York . N . Y 1001 9. I

BETTER IDEAS KEEP COMING FROM FORD

I

•..
I X' ....
:I.

...~:
...·
=
......
...
~·

J;

Tradesman , B-300, "l.W.B. New t ires, V-8, standard.

1969 INTERNATIONAL CARRY-All ........s1295

Open Evenings Til6 : 00
Except Thurs. and Sat . Closed Sunday

,•

Automatic, P.S., P. B., 4-wheel drive.

DAN THOMPSON FORD
992·2196

P.S., P . B., factory air, tilt wheel , AM-FM, tape. Bucket'
seats.

1973 DODGE VAN ............... ~ .......... '2495

See: Pat Kill, Rocky Hupp
' or Darrel Dodrill
For a good deal on a new.or used vehicle

Middleport

1977 OLDSMOBILE
98 Regency Sedan (Demo.). Loaded with options .
Ba lance of warranty .

'7600

1977 CADillAC DEVIllE CPE.... ,__,., .............. ,_ ................ '9700
1976 CADilLAC DEVIllE CPE... .................... .......... -.........'6300
1976 CADillAC DEVIllE CPE......................... ..................'7500
1976 CUTlASS SUPREME CPE.. ... .......... ,....... .. ..... .. ......... '4495
1972 VISTA CRUISER WAGON ,...... :......... -....................... 12295
1977 CUTlASS SUPREME CPE.. ...... ...................... . -.... ..... s5495
1973 CUTlASS 4 DR. SED................... -..................... -....'2395
1973 BUICK leSABRE 4 DR ................... .............. .......... s1995
1973 CHEVROLET IMPAlA H.T. SED........................ .......... 11995
1973 NOVA SS CPE ............... ,_ ........................ -.......... '1795
1975 PINTO WAGON ................. ........ .. -.... ----····-- .. -····--'2495
1976 PlYMOUTH VOlARE SED..................... ,_ .... -...... ,_,.,_ '3195
1973 CADillAC DEVIllE SED..................................... ... '2495

SPECIAL - SPECIAL - SPECIAL

1969 FORD XL ........ ... ................... '695

A

r) I I

SUPER SAVINGS

SAVE

Exciting New Little Cars

.......:~ '·

f&lt;'n r relea se F'1·idn,v. Ma rch 10, 1978.

1971 OlDSMOBilE lUX. SED. 98... ... ........ :... ... .. ... ......... .. .'1395
1972 CHEVROlET IMPAlA 2 DR ... -................ ....... ... ........ .''1095
1973 FORD PINTO WAGON .... .................. .. ... ................. 11295

One te ll e r si m ply sta nds fo r ;mo th er. · In t h is sa mrle A is
used fo r the three L"s, X fm· 1hc t wn O's. t&gt;lt• . S ing1 c l£&gt;lt ers,
a pos tro phes, the l&lt;~ n g th and fo rm ation of t l\o worQs nrc nil
hints. Ear ll da y tlw cod ~ ld t£&gt; r:-; ar e differe nt.

...

MCKI

'0

RIEBEL'S USED CARS
St. Rt. 7

See Roger Riebel
667. 3463
1 mile north
Tuppers Plains. Ohio

~~~
......

~

-· ~

Be reac!y for vacation or plan any trip you want with this unit . Low
mileage, realsharp. Equipped about the way you want it. 1976 VW

Kombi Wagon ••.• ••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.•.••• • ••..••• 55295.00

1975 DElTA 88 ROYAlE CPE.................................... ...... '3995
1973 OlDS. 98 H.T. SED............................................... 12895
1973 CUTlASS 4 DR. SED......... .. .................... _.... ......... '1995
1973 CADillAC DEVIllE CPE......... ...... -.......... ... -........... '2495
1975 CADillAC DEVIllE CPE.. ...... -......... -----··-- .. ---- ....... ,_ '5600,
1976 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX-............ .. -.......................... '4695
1975 MONTE CARL0 ......................................................13995
75-76-77 CADillACS HAVE EXTENDED WARRANTY-12,000 MilES
OR 12 MONTHS

--NNOW IN ST

K-

Large Selecnon 1978 Oldsmobiles Ready for Delivery . Come
In Pick Yours Out-We Are Ready to Deal .
See oneot these courteous salesmen: Pete Burris, Marvin Keebaugh
or George Harris.
·

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

f'You ' llllke Our Qu•lltr Way ot UOUII IIUIIIIIII" GMC Fln•nclng
992·5)42
Unll16:-nt
Sot.

..
I

�10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Friday, Mar. 10, 1978

:-:-:-::-:-::-:-:·:·.-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:·:·:·.·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:···:·:···:·:

::: Area : :
I
s
;·,: Deaths ,:
..

·~

::·:

;:

Police seeking couple
ATLANTA i UPI ) - Pulice
said today a man and "''oman
they have been seeking since
Tuesday may hold the key to
the shootrng of Hu slter
magazine owner Larry Flynt,
paralyzed by a bullet that
severed nerve. roots m his
spme.
F'lynt, 35 , was in serious
condition
in
Emory
University Hospit a l here
a ft er his th ird operau on since
lhe shonHng at Lawrenceville, 30 m iles northeast of
Allanla, Monday .
Thursday' s s urgery, according tu Dr. George Tm-

ROSA BRADV
Rosa E. Brady , 71, Mason.
died Thursday at Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
She was bOrn on Feb. 3,
1907, in Webster Cu., the
daughter of the late George
and Minnie Keener ijamick .
She was preceded in death
by one sun, Richard Hill
Brad)• in 1974. She was alS&lt;I a
member of the Apostolic
Church.
Surv1vors include her
husband, Lewis A. Brady;
four daughters, Mrs . Roberta
A. Umbarger, Mrs . Mnnuka
R. Dinguss, Miss Reamona L
Brady, all of Maso n, and Mrs.
Belly D. Ltlly, Cowa n. W.
Hy RICK VAN SANT
Va. ; two si sters, Huth
United Press International
Ha m ick, Cl eveland . and
Taking cold showers and
Flossie Bennett , Coshocton,
drinkin~ warm water .
0.: two brothers, Eugene and
Tha t's th e to psy-turvy
Elmer Hamlck . both of world some schoolchildren
Toledo, 0 . ; 12 grandchildren . are livmg in because of the
and one great-grandch ild.
electric crunch caused by the
Funera l services will be coal miners' strike .
held Sunday I :30 p.m . in the
In Columbu s, for example,
F og leson g Funera l Hom e. s tudents in schoo ls with
Mason, with the Rev Chester electric hot water heaters
Tenna nt and the Rev . Charles ha ve tn take cold showers
Birchfield officiating. Burial after physica l education.
will follow in Kirkl a nd
In Spnn g fi eld, el ect ri c
Memor ial Gardens
water eoolers have been
r' riends may call at th e
funeral home on Saturday
fro m 2 to 4 p.m. and from 7 to
9 p.m.

dall, chief of neuros urgery at
Emory, removed bullet fragments and bone chips that
damaged the nerves at the
base of his spinal colunuJ, and
a bullet lodged in his
stomach . It relieved his pain ,
but Tindall estimated his
chances of recovering full use
of his legs at less than 50 per
cent.
In l.awrenceville, a spokesman for the co unty police
said the man and woma n
whose compos ite pi ctures
were released earlier this
week "could be the clue to the
whole thing ."

" They should, if they tum
out to be as good witnesses as
we hope they could be. They
could possi bly give us the
information we need" to
track down the s niper who
shot Flynt and a local lawy er
on a street comer during a
break in the Ohioan's obscenity trial.
The man and woman were
described as in their early
JOs. The man had light hair
and a m oustache and wore a
leather' coat. Th e woman
stood about 5-feel-4 inches
tall and weighed about 170
pounds , accordin~ to the

School routine changing

Bookmobile
NOW YOU KNOW
Rather than be bothered
doing their own wash ing.
19th-century prospectors in
Ca lifornia oft en sent th e u~
laundry back East.

6%%
INTEREST

On Certificates
Of Deposit
'1,000 Minimum
•

Meigs-Ja ckson · VInt on
Cou nt1e s
Bookmobile
Schedule lor Meigs County :
Monday , Mar. 13
Pomeroy Elementary, 9:30·
2:30; Snowville, 3-3 :30 ;
PagcvJI!e,
3:45-4 . 15;
Harrisonville Store, 4 · 30-5 ;
Wolf Pen, 5: 15-5 ·45.
Thursday , Mar . 16 Racine Elementary, 9·11:30;
Port la nd Elementary, 1-3;
Portland Post Office, 3: 15·
3: 45; Racine Wagner's
Hardware, 4:15-5 :15 : Rac1ne
Bank. 5: 15-6 : 15 , Syra c use
Swimmin g P oo l , 6 :30-8;
Mmersvtlle-Brown 's Tra tler
Court , 8: t5-8 :30.
Friday, Mar. 17 - Brad·
bury El e men tary. 10 :30-12
noon .

1 Yr. Term

Nine1y
penalty

day

i!

l nl erest

w•thd r awn

before maturi fy dal e .

The Ath ens County

Savtngs &amp; La on Co.
296 Second St
Pom"eroy , Ohto

KNIFE SHOW SUNDAY
A Knife Show will be held
this Sunda y, from ll a m . to
6:30 p.m ., at the Carpenter's
Union Hall on Jackson Ave. in
Point Pleasant.
Sponsored by the Btg Black
Backers, a wide variety of
knrves are expected to he
shown . Any person wrshmg to
exhibit is welcome with no
collectiOn too large or small .
The show has been tabbed as
" buy, sell, trade or look
event.'' .Those attending will
be asked to donate $1 to the
Backers.

unplugged and the drinking
wat er is warmer than usuaL
And m hard-hit Marietta,
where every other light bulb
already has been removed,
qffi c ials fear closin g the
schools could be next.
In sc hool after school, c utback s ~re e vid e nt . Some
typing classes are c urtailing
el ectric typewriters.
use
Some shop cla sses are
foregoi ng
electric
machinery. Some home ec
classes are cutting ba ck on
haking .
ln fac t , a UPI survey
re veal s that school s are
am ong the most a rde nt
practitioners of electriCa l
conservation. ·
"We figure schoolchildren
arc gett in g t he biggest
message about the strike and
about e lectri c c u l ba cks,''
says Alice Wolf of the
Springfield school system .
" We hope they are laking
home the conservation efforts
they see at school. " ·
Desptle
the
drasttc
cutbacks - Columbus, for
instance, is moving from hot
lunches to cold lunches students haven't complained
much.
" Everybody smil es and
says that's the w,a y 1t is, 11
says
William
English,
assistant superintendent of
Mari etta schools . " We 're ·
serious abo ut this thing. We
know it (the energy crunch)
is out there."
Columbus, which will begin
. cold IW'lches next Monday for
all 92,000 students to go along
with cold showers for some
students, has trained school
admimstrators to read
electric meters and ma ke
dally reports lo lop school
officials.
And , like just about everywhere, Columbus has doused
a lot of lights .
" It's rare to see a light on,"
says Howard Merriman, a
Columbus
assistant
superintendent. " It's come to
the pomllhal when you see a
light on you almost stop and
say, 'Gee, why is that light

or

Springfield
also
is
m onitoring elect.rica l usage
at all its schools.
" We had one school that
was able lo cut back 68
per cent from its regular
usage,'' reported Ms. Wolf .
" We 've had marvelous
cooperatwn from everyone.''
You can feel the bite of the'
energy crunch almost every·
where. And in some places,
taste it. Mashed potatoes, for
eKample , don't appear on the
Springfield lunch menu quite
as often now because electnc
appliances are required to
mash the potatoes. Other
vegetables requiring less
electrical pr e paration are
used.
While every other light bulb
ha s been removed from
Marietta schools, two out of
every three bulbs have been
eliminated
from
the
admtnistration offices.
" We didn 't realize we could
do this and gel away with it,"
said English. " We may never
go ·back."
For
Manetta 's 5,000
students , the e lectrica l
cu tba c k started several
months before the miners'
stnke.
" You know," said English,
"people have been U!lking
about conserving all kinds of
energy for some time, so
we've been at this since last
fall."
Still, it may not be enough.
Marietta is served by Monongahela Power, which has one
- of the lowest supphes of coal
of any utility in the country.
" If it gets worse, we've got
two alternatives," moaned
Enghsh . "One, close the
schools for a period of lime .
Maybe five days, 10 days,
whatever is necessary. Two,
resort to split sessions for our
students.
" We've got a few more
lillie things we can do," he
added. " Like pull the plugs on
the kilns for our art classes.
But
that' s not
much
compared with the big things
we need, like heal for our
buildings "

on?'"

TIME IS MONEY

BULOVA converts a replica of a $20 gold p1 ece
into a beautiful. lil lie alarm clock with a re liable
30-hour key-wound movement . The decoral;ve,
embossed co1n cover sw1vels aside to reveal a
regal Roman-fa ced clock, handsomel,v ..,~""
housed 1n a four-coin case. Satin
gold fin ish. 3'!~.-· diameter.

Let us come to you.
24 hours a day.
W1th our free
Save-by-Mail envelope.
One of our tellers
will do the rest.

1'k' deep. $24.95

ers

Main- Pomeroy

This Week's Special Mar. 11 thru 18

police description .
Police have never revealed
just what they expect the
couple could tell them , but
have insisted they are want ed
as· witnesses and are not
suspects .
In the meantime, the
spok esman said t o rfi cers
have ·•good invest igative
leads that need to be checked
furth er . We ha ve not
eliminated all those leads as
possibilities.' '
Late Thursday Dr . Scott
McCloskey , who assisted
Tindall in the operation ,
reported Flynt was " doing
ve ry well. He is fully awake
and said he !elf well."
As a result of the operatton,
he said, Flynt was " no longer
experiencmg some of the pain
in his ba ck and legs."
After the operation, Tindall
said Flynt was unable to
"move his lower extremities
V&lt;lluntartly. Ther e are no
refle xes in his lower extremities. There is loss of
sensation from the mid-level
down. "

Turner
from paae ll

(ConUnued
Educated in the public
schools of Jackson, Turner
is a 1952 graduate of the
University of Virginia at
Charlottesville .
Active in civic, fraternal
and business organizations, he
is a member of the Methodist
Church, F&amp;AM 132, Chapter
Council, Rose Corrunandery,
Scottish Rite, and Aladdin
Shrine; Gallipolis Cbamber of
Commerce,
Community
Improvement Association Bi·
Cenntenial Comn;tission,
Gallipolis GoH Club, Lions
International, Unitee Commercial Travelers, County
Chairman Group IV Ohio
Bankers Assn ., Stale Com·
mlttee Installment Credit
Ohio Bankers Assn., Order of
Elks, Past President Ohi&lt;&gt;Kentucky Chapter B.A .!. ,
Past District Governor Lions
International , to list a few .
Turner and his wife, Lucille,
reside in Spring Valley
Estates on Route 35, are the
parents of two children, Dick,
a
senior
at
Marshall
University, and Colleen, a
freshman
at
Otterbein
College.
President Lanham expressed regret that Jim
Lewis, a long time employee
of Citizens National, bad
decldeil to resign from active ·
management of the Bank to
devote full time to biB other
businesses. Lewis wl!l remain
active In the aHaUrs of the
Bank as a member of the
Board of Directors.
E~tpressing pleasure at
having a man of Turner's
experience and expertise on
the banking team, President
Lanham stated that Citizens
would be placing even greater
emphasis on the serving of the
Residentlal
Mortgage
Customers.
!;itizens has developed four
basic mortgage programs :
Conv'entiona I
Mortgage
program, .Federal National

lihmber

FDIC

pomeror
•
c:~~na
the bank of
the century
established 1872

&amp; FRENCH
FRIES

ONLY!

992'5248

expensive investments and
no one is going to let them
deteriorate.:• the U.S . Steel

Judg1nent
•
action
is filed
A $6,500 judgment action
has been hled in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
as the result of a traffic ac·
cident Dec. 12, 1977 on SR 7 in
Salisbury Twp.
Warren G. Farmer, Rt . 3,
Pomeroy, filed the suit
against Thrasher Leasing
Company, Birmingham, Ala.
and Lucien Fortner, of
Birmingham .
Filing foreclosure actions
Thursday were Citizens
National Bank, Middleport ,
against Paul Denver Anderson, Dorothy Marie Frwn
and Jerry Frum, aU of Rt. 4,
Pomeroy and George Collins ,
as treasurer of Metgs County .
The Athens County Savings
and Loan Company, Athens,
filed a foreclosure action
against Lee Combs and
Peggy Combs, Rt .
I,
Rutland; Milo B. Hutchison
and Belly Hutchison, Rutland
and Meigs County Treasurer
George Collins.
·

CB'ER NABBED
DANVILLE, Iii. (UPI)-in
the parlance of citizens hand
radio aficionados, Maxine
Brown was a rachet jaw.
FBI agents arrested Mrs.
Brown, 53, Thursday and
charged her with broad·
casting obscene language on
her CB radio .
She also was charged with
obstructing a police search of
her home on the city's East
Side.

w

w

w

Gallia County is ready

dieted most idle mlne3 In the
state
could
resume
production within days, or in
some cases hours.
" We could get back l&lt;l work
immediately - at least
within a shltt or two after the
order comes down ," sald
Doug Jones, vice president of
the Pathford·Harlan Coal cO.
l'eabOcly Coal Co ., the ·
largest mine employer in
illinois, said all of its four
underground and three
surface mines are ready w go
back into production when
miners show up for work.
"The mines are secure and
.sale and ready
resume
operations," a Peabody
official said.
In southwest VIrginia,
surface mine operators said .
there may be some problems
in a quick start-up because of
heavy ·precipitation that has
weakened roadways and
flooded mining areas. Some
delays are possible In the
deep mines because of
subsurface equlpnent that
has not been used in three
months.

GAI.I.IPOIJS - Gallm County IS n·a&lt;l) .
Wlwlt!ver the emergency, bt,• 1t lJUWt'r
~tage or fluod, the Gallla County Civil
DiSHsters Agt!nc:y has prepi.in'd its peoplt•
tocopewithit .
That'sU1e word fl'lllf\ Hobert K. Dullllnl·
!&gt;'•lht! ~&amp;rector, aflt'l'thrce meetings llur-

Tht• 'Gallipnlis Slatt·lnslltutt.•'has its uwn
J)IJWCI' SOUI'l'C, I Till' (;SJ has ufrcrt.'tl l11
house a~ muny pt!uplt&gt; us it l'all at·-

generator'S to supply the waturwork s with
puwcr to pump wat~:r on a lill llll'&lt;.l basi s
Donnally says lhnt the f;alha Count v
Huri:il ~atcr A.ssodat1 un Uucs nul ha \'~
bmlted servu:e.
J!CIIcnttmg fadlitics. ·· ronsl'qucnlly, tlll'ir
EMERGENCY puwersuppl)' also 1s custome rs would lH.' w1Lhuut water soon
avu 1lable to afler a powct· feu lure," l)unnf.llly said .

w

l'ht• t'I\'J! cidt'I N' i.l llt't'llll IJ:-&gt;IL'tJ t'I~)U
lh 'lll~ for t'lll7.(' 11 '1 lu h &lt;l\' l' 111 rt.•udlllt"Ss fur
;ml' llll'l').~t·m ·~ ·
J· 1\ J!IM..Id fl .t, hilght and l'ldr~ luillcl'll'~

for tl
:! : ~UIIIl' I)(&gt;\' u f Cll ll'l'l!l'llt ')' hl'HI nlhl'l'
th;m l'ict't I'll'.
:~ · A ,:,; upply uf f..:i t"ultllt• or kcrosclll' fur
tit! lmllps , Jhn\'l'l' ~• •" , l'C IIIIJ&gt; !&lt;!luvt.• . IJIIWt•r
~l' llCI'i.lll)l' .

4: A fl~" gall uns uf WCih'l' stol'l'd fm·
dt·inkmg and t:tl(tking.
5· Some food tha t dt~t.'. ·n'lnt'l'd l'tiOk lll ~ .
11 : Yuun·cu· full vf JM~uhllt' .
7: Hattt!ry-typc fiiLi w ami t.•x tr&lt;t lmltt ' I' ll's
fur it.
8 · If yuu hi::IVC H t'H illf&gt;t' l', h&lt;tw it n:t.tdy to
l'Hlllp .

IF THE t·m~rgt·m·y lu t:i. Duunally
tssucd Uu.s clght-pt tint pi ect•uf Hdvtct• :
Continued on A-2

Mitchell resigns board post
VINToN - Gallia County's Board of
Educalion, meeting at N011h Galhi::i 1-li~::th
School near here Saturday, acceptW with
rc~rct the resignati on of buard memUcr
J•rnes C. Mitchell , Rt. I, Bidwell
Mitchell , a fo11n er member of the old
North Galia Boartl of Educi::ltiOJI, was fore·
ed to restgn due to til health . Mitchell wa s

hnst t!led ed to the county l&gt;uanJ m11174. He
was n~dedcd to u four·ycar term inl97S.

In Deceml.x•r , 19i6, Mitchell suffcrOO a
hear~

i:lltad. He was t!lectell boal'd pre~i­
dent la~t yea r . but wa ~ unable to e~ttcnd
bua rd mcet1ng:s bcl'CIU.Sl' ·ur his health pnr
blcm.s .
Th e 00m'Linow compul:i(_"&lt;.l uf Ji::imcs V .

Ulcvins, Dr David H. C~ nllCIII , Ju nmy I)
Htl! and J . E . 1Dick 1 C r cmt't'II S w1 1l nanw
a rcplHt:cment Uris nwnth . If they fCIIl tu
agrco on a rcplat'l'IIICilt, a new member
would be selc...:ted by G~ llia County Pruba tc Court Judge n. Wil lii:i lll Jenkins .
The board, in othe1· matt cr~. n .:rl1ficd
Continued on A-2

Hospital News
Pl"l!sant Valley Hospital
DISCHARGED - Misty
McDaniel, Point Pleasant;
Charles Whittington, Jr.,
Buffalo; Dewey White Jr.,
Gallipolis; Mrs. Thomas
Roush, Hartford; Sherry
Hawkins, Clifton; David
Wills, Gallipolis; Mack
Bauer, Point Pleasant;
Chester Wolfe , Letart;
George Hunt , Addison; Roy
Ellis, P omeroy; Mrs. Clyde
Asbury, Point Pleasant;
Tiffany Franklin, Point
Pleasant;
Mrs. Ronald
Plumley, Pomt Pleasant.
BIRTH - A daughter lo
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Deter,
Racine.

tmts

having meetings
COOLVILLE - Youth of
White's Chapel Church,
Route 3, Coolville, are having
a weekend meeting with
workers being Earl and
Caroline McCandlish.
The first session will be this
evening at the senior citizens
building in Coolville with a
dinner at 6 p.m. followed by a
meeting at 7:30 p.m. The
Saturday
and
Sunday
meetings will be at 7:30p.m.
at the church.

VOL. 13 NO . 6

GALLIPOLIS-POINT PLEASANT

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted -r Harold Han·
son, Pomeroy; Mildred
Roush, Little Hocking.
Discharged Samuel
Rairden, Grace Roush,
Benny Spears, Bernice
Molden, Linda Martin, Ethel
Priddy, Kelly Johnson.

·-·::····:·:-:···: :·:·:-:·:--;:·:·::.·.·.·&gt;&lt;·:•,•:-::·.·.·:.·.·.·: ,·.·...·.· .• ::·.·::·:·,·.

POSTPONED ·
The baton and gymnastics
classes of Gloria Wallace will
not be held at the Orchid
Room, Pomeroy, tomorrow
due to public schools being
held in Meigs.
Classes wlll· be changed
back to Tuesday but will not
be held until March 21.
Student classes will follow the
previous class schedule on
Tuesday. Anyone having
questions may call 992-7326.

IRA M. HAVES

HERB GILKEY,lefl, former Middleport Police Chief clatms that thts is the
groundbog whtch predicted six more weeks of bad we~ther on Feb. 2. It reappeared last w~ek lu recheck th ~ situation . Gilkey says that the return of the
groWldhog IS a stgn that spring is just around the corner. With Gilkey is Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andrews. '
·

r N. W.OPTOMETRIST
COMPTON. O.D. ·1

l

•==

.

~

OFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to 12,2 to 5 (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT
ST., POMEROY.

'. •==··········-·--==

I
1

.........
I

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S~uthern

Ohio Co.
mine hours listed
Wl!.KESVI!.I.E - David P. Baker . crla pluycc:o t111d Aft . Sl1ift 14- 12 ), pruUlU'IIttn
personnel manager, St1uthcrn Oh iu Cottl shtf! and truck drivers
Hu ving Crt•w
Company Saturday annuunced schedules
fur employees to rcporl to work beginning
Owl Shift 11 2-6 ), l' un cl Fun est 's
at 12 :01 a .m. Monday .
c mpl uy ccs, Da y Shirt ~l.l -4), G\• nc
S r mwdt~ n' scmplo y~c s nnd Afl Shift ( 4-12),
Sd~edule.s are in nccnrdancc with th e
terms of the lcmporory t·cstnnnin~ ordc1 Tom Pasq ulllP's ctnpl l)yccs
issued under the Tafk)1arllcy Act MHrch U.
B~ker said Suuthcrn Ohio Coa l Company
mmes are open and U\'a ilable fnr work.
Schedules are as foll ows :
Melg• Mine l
·Owl Shift (12.0 }, J ack MLPeck' s
maintenance shift; Day Shift !8-4), .Jim
Salycr's'productinn shiftmtd Aft Shift t4·
SEN. OAKLEY COLLINS
12 ), Jim McCormick's producllon Shift'.
Preparation Plant (No. I)
Owl shift , 112-8), Rob Stephen 's
main t enance shi ft ; Day Shift tB-41
Elwuud Wilson 's produrt.Jon shifl and Aft ~
Shift (4 -12 ), P. J . Jewell's produttioll shift.
Central Shop 1No. I)
Owl Shlflt12-8), Tale Post' s employees ;
Day Sh1ft 18·4,1, AI Clark - l.ec McMmus '
COLUMBUS - State Senator Oakley employees and Aft Shift (4·12), Glenn
C. Collins IR·Ironlon ) Saturday an - Johnson and Arvil Miller's employees.
Melg• Mine 2
n o unc~d that he will be a candidate for
Uwl Shift (12-8 ), Pottsie VanMeter 's
reelection this year in the 17th Senate
maintenance shift; Day Shift {8-4), Benny
Dtstrit1..
•
Spears'
production shift and Aft. Shift 14Col!lns is p~esently completing his 20th
12),
Lindber~h
Arnold's produdion shift .
year ln the Ohio Senate, where he serves
Raccoon MJne 3
on the Education and Health, Highways
Owl Shift ( 12-B) , Ed Fl em ing ' s
and Transportation and Local Governmaintenance
shift ; Day Shift (8-4 ) t.:lrff
ment and Urban Affairs Committees
Stiltner'
s
production
sh1fl and Aft. Sl;ift (4.IAM F.S A. COCIIKAN. Jll.
" Ohio is now facin g several very se~ioos
problems," Collins noted. " Elementary 12), Doug Elhson's pr6du C:1ion shift.
Preparation Planl (Nu. 3)
and ~ec~nd~ry school finance, the needs uf
Owl
Shill ( 12-8), maintenance shift
our mstituttons of higher education the
sky-rocketing costs of utilities ristng ::··;::: ·:·:· ::.:: :';:.:.:-·::&lt;;;::··::·.:-::·:·.-:·.;.:!.:·&lt;-:·,·.:::': ::::.::::::;.
health care costs ar'id the need for more
WASHINGTON (UPI' - Strtklng
jobs f?r Oht.oans will all require concoal miners can get f'IOd stamps during
structive action by the state legislature "
a temporary restraining order agabast
he said
· '
f:ALL!POLIS - E. M. Wrscrnan nf the
their walkout, but nut under a
W1seman Hen! E stale Ag~m:y announced
" I have always worked diligently to
permanent lnjunetlon in a~~ordane e
serve the bcsl Interests of the people of
~~l~nlay that Jumes It Cochran, Jr., is
with lhe Taft-Hartley Act, an
Southeastern Ohio," Col!lns said. "I would
)ummg the st1 \es .stnrf of the Wiseman Heol
administration spukesman said
like to have the opportumty to continue to
Est.al c Agency, lltcated at 500 Sccund Avo .,
Saturday.
serve our area in the Senate and help
Gnlllpolis. Cochrlln recently cutuplcted Ihe
Presidential prC!Is secretary Jody
resolve these pressing problems " he
required College cou!'ses as well 11s un
added.
'
Puwell sought to clear up some uf the
C:\tcnsivc training pro gram a t the
cunfuslun regarding the withholding ur
Wiseman Agf!nc y.
"Regardless of what some publicity
fiHtd stamp benefltH to mlnel'8 _
seekers may say, there are no simple
Col'hran is a 1972 gradua te of Gallm
something that Agriculture SeCretary
solutions to these problems. To deal ef·
Academy Jligh School, atte nded Morehead
Bob Berglund has promised his
fectively with problems in the areas of
State Umvcrsity and Rio Grande Coll c~e
department
will du if the 96-day-&lt;lld
education, ~eallh, utility costs, and job
and was most recentl y employed as the
strike cuntinues.
creation ~equlres a great deal of
assistant manager of Credlthrlft fo~lu~:~nchJ!
knowledge .and experience. I am running :-:·.::::-·::-·:::;.. ::·.·.·.•.•:· &lt;·:·.·.·.·&gt;:·.·, ,-:· ·.: ..... ,.': :; .·:-: :•.::-: :-:·:: :::
Management Corporation .
For re-electton because I believe I have the
The new renl estlllc sa lesman IS a
necessary background, experience and
member of t he Gallipolis Area Jaycees
comf!lon sense to help develop workable
and attends Faith Baptist Church. fie will
solutions to meet the challenge of the
become a member or the local Ohio nnd
future, " Collins stated.
National Board uf Hculto rs. '
'
" I am hopeful that the citizens of the
He and his wife, .Joyce reside at 191
GALLIPOLIS - A six-year old boy Adelaide Drive, Gallipolis . '
17th District will return me to the Senate
so I can continue to represent them escaped serious injury· here Friday when
struck by a car on Eastern A·ve. at Cr'uzet
energetically and effectively in ColumReduced Service is for
St.
bus," the veteran lawmaker concluded.
City pollee said Bryan S. Keeler ran
Saturdays only--Bane
into. the path of a car operated by
GALLIPOLIS
Gallipolis
Frederick J . Cannon, 36, Williamstown, W.
Va. Keeler was treated and released at the Postmaster Richard ( Dick) Bane
.
Holzer Medical Center for abrasions to the announced Saturday that reduced hours
for window service which was armounced
hip.
A hit-skip occurred on the Municipal Thursday Is for Saturdays only. The
Parking lot off Third Ave. where an reduced window service hours on
POMEROY - Attendance on the first
unknown vehfcle struck a car oWned by Saturdays during the energy crisis are
from .8:30a.m . unlU 10:30 a. m .
day of Saturday school ( m~keup ) in the Alta E. Dailey, Rl. I, Crown City .
Regular window service hour§ wiJI
Meigs Local School District yesterday ran
A final accident occurred on Madison
72 percent.
Ave . where an auto owned by William (l'evail Monday through Friday, which is
Supt. Charles L. Dowler said that at- Saxon, Gallipolis, was struck by a ca r 8:15 a.m. to 4:15p .m . according Jo Ba~e .
tendance at some 'schools yesterday such driven by Rex Browning, t7, Gallipolis.
as Harrisonville and Bradbury ran as high
as 85 percent while others were much
FACES FOURTII OPERATION
ATLANTA (UPI) - Sex magarine
lower reducing the overall district per·
SHERIFF PROBES INCIDENT
centage to 72 percent.
·
o~er Larry Flynt, paralyzed from the
POMEROY - Meigs sheri Irs deputies
thtghs.down by gunshot wounds, faceo the
Friday evening investigated a complaint
po:&gt;'tbihly of a fourth operation, doctors
that a half-pound of nails had been seal· swd Saturday.
COMMISSION MEETS WEDNESDAY
GALLIPOLIS - Regular meeting of tered in the driveway at the residence of
Flynt, 35, and his attorney Gene
the Galha County Planning Commission Mr. and Mrs. Mathew Grueser, Rt . J, Reeves, were gunned down In 'nearby
Shade .
.
wtll be Wednesday, M~rch 15 at 7. 30 p m
Lawrenceville Monday as they walked to
Mrs.
James
Council,
Langsville,
tn the Law Library at the Galli." Cou~ty
the Gwinnell County courthouse where
reported the theft of a .22 caliber pistol
Co~rthouse according to Bud Carter
Flynt was on trial for distributing obscene
actmg chairman.
' from her residence.
matertal.
·

Sen. Collins
to run again

MEET TUESDAY
Syracuse PTO will meet
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the
school.

=

bhzuud . Warm temperatures Friday and Saturday melted
most of th~ 1978 winler snow U1roughput U1e area lenv\nu Its
sca rs behind.
'
~"~

entintl

SUNDAY, MARCH 12, 1978
EXTENDED FORECAST
Monday thruugh Wednesday, a
chance of raJn ur' snow north and rain
south Monday and Tuesday and fair
and cooler Wedoesday. Highs wttt
range from the mid 10. to the mid 50s
Munday and Tue&gt;day and from the
mid 305 tu the mid 411r! Wednesday.
Lows wltl be In the 3tls Monday and
Tuesday and In the 20s Wednesday.

State Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson reported the March
distribution of $11,776,064.14
in local government fund
money to Ohio's 88 counties
and 388 cities and villages
levying · local income taxes.
Meigs County received a
payment of $12,500.

-·~-~-·---------====

pic nic tftblt•s . Note criLSh•-d guard rail (lop center) where

hl~ ge Piles of snuw were dumped following the January 26

;:::::'':':'::·-·:::: :;: ::·.;::.:.::::·::-:····:·:-:···:···:· ·· ·..·..·.·.·.·.·.•,•:,·.

FUNDS DISTRIBUTED
Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, March 9)
Walter Abblelt, Ora 1\1.
Bacon, Edith Bischoff, Ruth
Boyd, Albert Bums, Kenneth
Ewing, Chad Granen, Ruby
Hall,
Andrea
Hudson,
Deanna Hudson, Charles
Hughes
Sr.,
Prudence
Humphreys, Mrs. Michael
Myers and daughter, Mrs.
Timothy
Ousley
and
daughter, Frances Remy,
Cheryl
Rutter ,
Lillian
Southard.
.(Births, Mareb9)
Mr. and Mrs. George
Mapes, II, a son, Wellston.
Mr . and Mrs. Gary Erlewine,
a daughter, Dexter.

UPSTREAM PUBUC USE AREA, below the Gallipolis
park front, resembled a battleground Saturday as a result of
the Jong hard winter. The picnic area was a quagmire as mud
from recent high water covered both the parldng lot and

•

Church youth

. Meigs spelling bee
:- finals set Tuesday
POMEROY
Sixteen school
champions will take part in the· annual

and Bob Ord, superintendent of t he
Southern Local District.
Meigs County Spelling Bee to be held at
Runners-up have been selected in each
7:30 p.m . Tuesday at the Southern High school and they will lake part t'n the
School
Th in Racine .
Tuesday competitton only if the school
e school champions and runners-up champ!on is unable to be present.
were selected through spelling bees among Followmg are the school champions and
school finalists who were named after their rWUlers-up, respeCttvely:
competition in the various rooms of each
Chester Elementary _ A D'ddl
school.
nn t e,
Th
·
T d
.
srxth grader, daughter of Mr. and Mrs
e wanner o1 ues ay evenmg's ' Don Diddle· La · I..A)lik:
h
·
event will receive atrophy and will be the daughter of'M rt d M s, stxl grader,
county's representative in the state
East
Jr .. an H' hrs. JaRmes Louks .
spelling contest to be held at Fawcell
:
ern umor tg oger Gaul,
Center in Columbus n May 6 Th
.
etghlh grader, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roger

PANTY HOSE

Middleport, 0.

alln..'s tdcnL.., . f•Jtont• H6-98 ~0.
Hnlll·r 1\oh•dit·:.d f't•ntcrl~s tt£ own stew• I·
br genemtiug ...,,\':s1t:H I

sheriff' s radio system.
The telephone num ber IS 4464lil2. Donrmlly says that the Ohio Bell Telephone
~Ol~pany ~as ~cnerati ng capad t y fol'

PLAYTEX CONTROL TOP

Drink

Tht· f·nunty..fuudt'iJ t·n~rgcm:y am IJulatlC.'4.' St'l'\' h 'l' ts (l mH.·har~e sct'\' lt't' tu

mt; . wh1 rh proc·t."()urcs uf quit'kMmuvin ~
aSSistance have Uccume vi 1tually a .st-"t.'Ond l'UIIU lludctlt• I.
nat.ure.
Tht• 648 bocu·d 's mental U:uih.ling has tls
_Emer~Aeney Opt.•r~:~tio ns Ce11tcr (F:OC1 liWII puWt'l' SUUI'l't!, i.llld l.'HII huu SC a
wall be the Court Huu:il'. w1th a small IIUI'Il~l' of_PcopJc dun ng the CIIICr~l'IU')' .
~ene rator, powered by lli:t lur&lt;JI gas, tu kL:ep
C.alhpt,hs Ctt)' ha!:i madl· atTHUJ.!etn~·nts
hghts on and to pruvtde power fur tlw with a local fil1n to usc one of tls

INTRODUCING

r'~

Locust &amp; 4th St .

"CoJJI mines are very

spokesman said. " You have
protect your investment."
The spokesman said it
could take 10 days
two
weeks before
industry
receives coal shipments at
pre-61rike levels.
The largest deep mine
systems in Ohio -· Consotida·
lion , North American and
Pubody - ·are ready for
immediate production, mine
officials said. Some strip
mines could be hampered by
frozen water, but that is
considered a minor problem.
spokesman
for
A
Westmoreland Coal Co., with
43 mines In West Virginia,
said the mines could reopen
within 24
4ll hours of a
back-to-work order.
" We've been (l'eparing for
this in anticipation of the
possibility of going back to
work," the Westmoreland
Coal spokesman said. "Ule
only problems could be that
the equipment has been
W'lderground so long it may
have trouble starting."
.
Kentucky coal officials pre-

ELBERFELD$

89C

. • +
A
\~!" da1ry tsle ~d

By JOHN RtmfERFORD
United Press laterutlonal
Coal operators say most
deep mines closed during the
long United Mine Workers
strike have been kept in safe
working condition and can
resume production soon as
miners return to work.
" Basically, our mines have
been in good condition
throughout the strike . There
might be minimal work to be
done , but at this stage our
mines will be ready to begin
operations soon as the miners
return / ' said a spokesman
for United States Steel Corp.,
which owns 23 coal mines in
Pennsylvania, West Virginia,
Kentucky, Alabama, Utah
and Colorado .
The U.S. Steel spokesman
. said federal laws require that
mines be patrolled on a daily
basis and be ventilated to
guard against any buildup of
gases. In addition, federal
and state agencies have been
cond ucting routine
inspections during the strike.
If UMW members abtde by
a Taft-Hartley injunction, a
company foreman is required
to make a safety inspection of
a mine three hours before
miners go into the pit. The
union's safety committee also
makes its own inspection and
investigates
complaints
made by members.

Mortgage
State
BoardFHA-VAprogram,
of Investments ·1. .- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
FHA·VA program and a new
program just announced, the
West
Virginia
Housing
Development Fund Program.
Mr. Turner said, "We have
made application for
$3
million in the latter program
alone and should have the
program fully developed and
operational by April 15."
Commenting
further,
Turner added : "We anticipate
having $15 to $18 mil·
lion
dollars
invested
tn mortgage loa ns by
. the end of 1978. Citizens
National bas always- placed
strong emphasis on home
ownership as an Important
factor in our community
Offer Ends April 1, 1978
development."

HAMBURG
pomeroy
rutland
tuppers plains

Deep mines in.good shape

willaloo be given a ~laque ro·r hi= :;~~:r ~a~~~!hZ~';;r ~~~e~ se~nth ~~':::;·
The ruMer-up w1U receJVe a trophy
.
.
. rs. oger 1e .
and each school champion will re.ceive a
Rive~vJew Elementary - Angela
certificate of award. Room champions in ~hades, st.xth grader' daughter of Mr . and
the (l'eliminary competition also will
rs. Eddte Rhodes; Scott Trussell, sixth
grader, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
receive certificates of award
.
·
Trussell.
Mrs. Grella Suttle, county supervisor
T ·
·
·
·
will again head the spelling bee and Robert
uppe~s Plams Elementary - Angie
E. Bowen, county supe;lntendent of ~. ~sneer, fifth grader, daughter of Mr. and
schools, will present the awards at the
r . Roger Spencer; James Watson, fifth
conclusion of the competition.
grader, daughter of Mrs. Faye Watson,
: Carla Shuler, teacher at Southern High La~~~~~r~h El~me~taryh - fTammy
Schoo), will serve a pronouncer and jud es
•
gra er' aug te~ o Mr . and
WHll.llhbe Tom Kelly, counselor at East:rn
0
• g School; Charles Dowler, superin·
H . '.
·
ro ·
, tendent of tbe Meigs Local School District
B
arrtsonvllle Elementary - VIcki
•
owers, stxth grader, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. David Bowers ; Sherry Arnold, sixth
grader, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bobby
Arnold.
l WILL MEET TUESDAY
Meigs Junior High ·- Laura Smith,
GAL!JPOL!S - City Manager Chris
eighth grader, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Morris announced l!aturday city com·
Oscar Smith ; Kathy Parker , eighth
mission will hold another special session
grader, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Leland
_on Tuesday, beginning at 8 p.m. in the Parker.
commiSBloner's room in the city building.
Continued on A-2

~~:h ;.~~:• sor:~te~~s ~~V:e ~o::ro~,

Chamber
fete set
Thursday
RIO GRANDE - Ira M. Hayes , NCR
speakers bureau, will be the keynote
speaker for the 41 st annual Gallipolis Area
Chamber of Commerce meeting Thursday
· at 7:30p .m. at the college cafeteria here.
Hayes, known nationwide as " Ambassador of Enthusiasm," will use the
toptc "Keeping pace with tomorrow ,"
H~yes has spokes before more than one
nul!Jon people.
Hayes is a veteran of the U. S. Air
Force and has held v,arious managem ent
)X)Sttiuns with National Cash Register.

James Cochran, Jr.,

joins Wiseman staff

Car hits 6-year-old

on Gallipolis street

SAYS STAFF CLEARED
CINCINNATI (UP!) - City Manager
William V. Donaldson says a city m·
v~stl~atton has cleared it.s Manpower
D1vi~1on ~aff or any wrongdoing in con~
nect10n wtth alleged improper payments to
a local finn.'
·
Don~ldson's statement Friday carne
after ctty Manpower Director Henry
Chris.tmon, Training Manager Larry
Manntx, and Luther Church director' of
the Citizens Committee on Youth were
named in findings for recovery in ~ state
auditor'S report.

WOMAN FREE ON BOND
.CLEVELAND (UP!' - A South
Euclid woman arrested Friday night for
refusing lo let her children attend stale
certified schools was free on bond
Saturday but was not allowed to see her
children.
Martha Lippitt, who has vowed never
to let her daughters, Amy, 7, and Allee, 8,
attend public schools, was arrested for
defying a court Qrder. As she was arrested
she watched her children being taken
away as temporary wards of the courtt

Makeup attendance

72 percent at Meigs

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