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The Tribune from Coshocton, Ohio • 8

Publication:
The Tribunei
Location:
Coshocton, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

8 The Coshocton Tribune Wednesday, Feb. 2, 1977 est Lafayette game of 207. She also turned in a 233 handicap game and a 459 actual series. Bonnie Geese a first year bowler turned in third high handicap series of 577. Splits were converted by: Lucille Long, 2-7; Lillian Wagner, 5-6; Janice Riley and Natalie Ott, 3-10; Bonnie Geese, 5-6-10; and Bobbie McCrea, 5-7.

When play contines first place Wentz will take on Variety Art Works and second place Given go up against Cabot Lumber. Coshocton National Bank meets Tastee Caramel Apples and in the final match is Hickory Flats and Ermaline's Beauty Shop will be effective Sunday at 9:15 a.m. for Sunday School classes and at 10:30 a.m. for Sunday Morning Worship. This is being done in an effort to conserve on fuel consumption.

Bowling Wentz Concrete Team of Gutter Dusters Bowling League turned it all on Thursday afternoon and took four points and first place in the second half of competition. They are 12 and 4 on the season. Given Funeral Home also took four points and are in second place with a 11 and 5 record. They had second high series of 2104 and high team game of 747. By SHIRLEY KIRKPATRICK Phone 545-6549 The Rev.

Orville O. Wilson of the West Lafayette United Methodist Church announced Monday the church has been put on a 30 percent gas curtailment. The church has reportedly already exceeded the allocation. Because of the gas curtailment, The Rev. Wilson announced that the mortgage burning service, set for Sunday, has been indefinitely postponed.

All the Sunday Morning Worship and Sunday School classes will be conducted in the Educational Wing during the entire month of February. This I People In The News Variety Art Works also took four points and are in third place with a 10 and 6 record. Cabot Lumber and Coshocton National Bank are even on the season with an 8 and 8 record. Coshocton National Bank had high team series of 2119 and second high team game of 739. Cabot Lumber had third high series of 2089 and third high team game of 732.

Hickory Flats Golf Course had their problems and dropped all four points for a 6 and 10 record. Ermaline's Beauty Shop also had an off day, failing to garner any points, for seventh place and a and 11 record. Also getting "zilched" was Tastee Caramel Apples who still have their cart upset in the basement with a 4 and 12 record. Erma Weaver had high individual actual series of 512. She also had second high handicap series of 593 and had handicap games of 213 and 209.

She had 186 and 182 actual games. Doris Stonebrook turned in her first 500 series of the year, good enough for second high actual series. She also had high handicap series of 599 and third high handicap game of 209. Judy Norman had third high actual series of 498 and third high actual game of 180. Lela Hardesty had high actual Breon Assists Newark Campus WASHINGTON (UPI) -Lawyers for Spiro Agnew today were under a court order to produce one sheet of paper the Internal Revenue Service says it needs to complete an audit of the former vice president's 1973 tax return.

Federal Judge John H. Pratt ruled Monday the IRS has a right to see the paper a file copy of a bill from from a legal firm for 1973 services to Agnew in order to complete a routine tax audit. Two of the firm's attorneys argued the bill is a confidential client communication because it contains notations about Agnew's private arrangement for paying the legal fee. Association and has served on the National Potato Council and as president of the Ohio Horticultural Council. A resident of Coshocton County since 1947, he has been active with the Community Chest and Red Cross programs.

Breon has a B.S. from Penn State, M.S. from the University of New Hampshire and Ph.D. from Purdue University. Scaling The Mountain Of Ice hour climb to the top of a 60-foot high mound of ice formed by a fountain left on during the winter at a westside Indianapolis apartment complex.

(L'PI) A youngster who braved (he subzero cold raises his arms in triumph after a half- Coshocton's Local Crisis Hotline Still Needs Some New Volunteers COLUMBUS-Ohio State University President Harold L. Enarson has announced the appointment of two new members to the Ohio State Newark Campus Citizens Advisory Council. Willard S. Breon, vice chairman of the board of directors of Coshocton National Bank, and Helen Weiner Zelkowitz, chairman of the board and owner of WMVO Broadcasting Station and Mt. Vernon Cablevision, have been appointed for three-year terms ending Dec.

31, 1979. They replace Mary Miller and Jack T. Lytle, whose terms have expired. The 15-member council provides consultation and advice on matters related to Ohio State's regional campus at Newark. Council members assist in determining community educational needs, selection of nominees for administrative positions and in development of scholarships, student loans, capital improvements and other campus support programs.

Breon, the first Newark council member to be appointed from Coshocton, is past president and director of the Ohio State Potato Growers PAY YOUR REAL ESTATE TAXES WITH it 1 1 sponsors of the Hotline. "Anyone who is 18 years old or older and able to keep a secret is encouraged to join the Hotline staff," he said. Interested persons are required to fill out an application, attend 24 hours of training and spend two four-hour shifts observing with a certified volunteer. The training course is designed to cover all information needed to handle Hotline calls. The topics to be covered are: Communication Skills: active listening, how to avoid barriers to effective communication, and how this applies to telephone counseling; Crisis Intervention: how to define a crisis and what to do about it; Telephone Counseling: background and development of Hotline, and how to be an effective telephone counselor; Values Clarification: explaining the necessity of understanding both the caller's and the volunteer's values and how they affect telephone counseling; Drug and Alcohol Abuse: basic pharmacology and education on drugs and alcohol and demonstrations with discussion on how to handle drug related problems; Last call is being made for persons interested in becoming Crisis Hotline volunteers.

An orientation session for a new class of volunteers is scheduled for Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at The Listening Post, 224 N. Fourth St. The session will familiarize prospective volunteers with the Hotline program. A short film will be shown and questions answered.

Those attending the meeting will set dates for the remaining training sessions. According to Terry Swango, volunteers are needed to keep the Hotline running 24 hours daily, seven days a week. Swango is director of the Coshocton County Drug Council, WILLARD S. BREON Calls concerning sex: related problems including discussion on various types of calls and a presentation by one of the Family Planning staff, covering VD, birth control, and pregnancy testing; Suicidology: "aspects of the suicide situation, how to determine the seriousness of the threat, a demonstration of how to handle a suicide call, and practice exercises; Problem Calls: how to handle chronic, hoax or obscene calls, and encouragement to handle all calls as serious; Community Resources: discussion and presentation of agencies and services available in order to refer the caller for more help, if necessary. Although the Hotline training enables the volunteers to help others, there are also benefits to his or her personal growth.

The training encourages the volunteer to review personal values and attitudes and accept the rights of others to differ. It also provides an education in various aspects of human concerns and needs, Swango said. Applications for becoming a volunteer are available at The Listening Post, or can be filled out at the first meeting. Any questions about Hotline training can he answered by calling The Listening Post at 622-0033. Threatened Blizzard Friday Led To A Run On Foodstuffs Important Message or Ohio Power Customers Sp ecial payment plan created to help lessen cold weather impact of higher electric bills.

item buyers." The Buehlers salespeople claimed the have sold "lots and lots of meat" besides the landslide of bread and milk. "They burned us out" a spokesman for Brown's IGA on Walnut said. Everyone agreed that there was absolutely more purchased Friday while it was "snowin' and blowin" than during normal winter weather conditions. all agreed that they were "extremely busy" between the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 5 p.m.

Sales people at Kroger's on Chestnut and Buehler's in Downtowner Plaza were amazed at the huge orders their regular customers purchased. "It was really tremendous!" a Kroger spokeman remarked. "We had huge orders ranging from $40 to over $100 in staple foods. We didn't have any single A frantic feeling prevailed as local residents fled to grocery stores to "stock during blizzard weather conditions here Friday. The results of a small Tribune survey showed milk, bread and meat to be the most sought-after items.

Canned goods, frozen foods and paper products followed. Although no grocers claimed to have broken any records, they CESEEE 4. Ph. 622-3004 Friendly Service We redeem FOOD STAMPS 311 South Fifteenth St. Rj Checks Cashed Free W( are Prices Good Thurs.

thru Sat. We reserve the right to limit quantities. upcoming bills. You can make arrangements for us to average your electric bills for the high-use months of January, February and March with the lower-use months of April, May and June. The year-around or 12-month plan isn't new, but it offers the same advantages over a longer period with the twelfth month 1 being "settle-up" or final payment month.

We call it the Equal Payment Plan, but some prefer to call it budget billing. The idea in both plans is to allow residential customers to spread electricity costs as evenly as possible over a specified period. For details, call our nearest office. No one could do much about the amount of electricity used to getus through recent frigid weather which gripped our part of the country. Nearly everybody needed more power.

And, fortunately, we were able to supply it. We know the hard part for some paying for it is still ahead. Because of high usage, electric bills most certainly will be higher. We recognize this and are trying to help make it just a little bit easier. Here's how: Two budget billing options to choose from.

Six-Month Plan 2. Year-Around Plan The six-month plan is brand new and especially created to help our customers handle these immediately chickens I STEAK SALE I ground T-Bones Sirloin Sugardale Home Made BOLOGNA Ct, a (Tv HAM SALAD I Rib ,51.49 1 SPARER-IBS! It, 991 RABBITS $U9 First Cut Shurfine Rittberger PORK CHOPS MUSHROOMS WIENERS '1-09 2- 89' 79' Crisp n' Crunchy Nickle's Gold Medal PRETZELS BREAD FLOUR nn a fin 701 Jif brand Shurfine Shurfine PEANUT BUTTER PEARS POTATOES $1.38 31.001 4 89 Ohio Power Company Working together is the only way..

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