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~lwnbla Gas of Ohio today made an urgent appeal to aU

natural gas customers for the strongest possible conservallon
efforts to 88Sist large volume customers - including schools who are experiencing the most severe gas curtailments the
company ever has been forced til impose·. ·
·
The gas company annoWICed Thursday that curtailment
leveb to ltsl,lOO large industrial customers will be 100 per cent
lor all manufacturing processes in which a fuel other than
natural gas can be used and 50 per cent for non ..ubstltutable
uses. In addition, 1,300 large volume commercial (\Stablishments, including schools, will have their supplies reduced an
addltionallO per cent to 50 per cent
Marvin E. While, Columbus, chairlilan of the board of the
gas company, pointed out that conservatlon by the residential
and commercial sectors .already has had a significant effect in '
holding down rurtailment levels.

STEREO COMPONENT
SETS

VE SEAT
~

I

REGULAR '149.95

SJ9

SALE:c.

95

REG. '24,95

HURRY I ONLY 3 LEFT

ONE ONLY

RADAR

3 VELVET PICTURES .·

R~NGE

CONSOLE WITH VELVET FRONT
I

REG. '399,95

3 PC. LIVING.ROOM SUITE
.

I

.

INCWDES

SOFA &amp;CHAIR

Get A'love Seat Free

NG.SIZE

MATTRESSES
SECONDS

$12500
TO
95
$169
want to save see these

If

$39995 '

'39995

BED
PILLOWS
PRICE v

RE.CLINING
CHAIRS

SALE

'II DINETTES I

40 IN STOCK

1 95

5

TAGGED AT

ALL REDUCED
FQR

SALE

ICK SALE

ONE FULL SIZE

100-lh SIZE MATTRESSES

20%

Sold for 11,500 New
Used On~ 9 Months
.'

OFF

.

SALE
ON ALL
WOOD 01 NETTES

WE HAVE
SOME

•aaaoo·

ALSO BOX SPRINGS •

'

ALL LAMPS

ELECTRIC
ORGAN

RETAIL FOR '99.95

HURRY I.N NOWI

SALE·

·''

NICE ONES

3 BASSET DINING ROOM SUITES
.CHINA
.·TABLE

MAnRESSES

REGULAR '59.95 .

_._.2_a_o_o_

6 c!IRS ,___SA_LE_
.

FACTORY SECONDS

•
REG. '699.95

SALE

'149

'448°

0

8 LOW BACK

BASE ROCKERS .·

'

I)

SALE

'12995

ElECTRIC CLEAN,; .
DAMAGED, NICE RANGE ::,
.JUST CHIPPED A LITTLE

WITH
FREE GIFT
3 CJN!.Y 2 PC• .

AU. LIVING ROOM SUITES

SOFA BED SUIT!

ON OUR FLOOR MUST GO

SM£

$139

THESE ARE NlCE SOFA

BED SUITS

BIG SAVINGS
SO WE ARE

REG. '199.95

95

95

PER
PAIR

SALE

15 CONVERTA BEDS
ELECT~IC R~NGE

REG. '169.95

QUEEN SIZE
MATTRESS &amp; BOXSPRINGS
These are .miss matched
Some worth as much as ilOO

R~DUCING

THEM BY 11110 TO 1i50 PER SUITE
REG. '699.95
EXAMPLE.
DISCOUNT '150.00

'549"

REG. '169.95

SALE

25 NICE BEDROOM SUITES

Make Fine Uving Room SuHes

schools in the Howland Uical
School district "in Trumbull
county and in the Napoleon
School district in Northwest
Ohio.
' · About 280 teachers in the
Howland District set up
picket lines at the system's
nine schools.
The old contract betWeen
the teachers and the Howland
Board of Education expired
over the weekend.
0 0

district has 137 teachers and
3,000 students at schools in
Napoleon and in the villages
of Florida and McClure.
The old contract expired
Dec. 31.
· The 489 teachers or· the
Westerville City Schools were
in their classes today after
they accepted an amended
change in negotiation
procedures as proposed by
.

required by existing codes.
- Shut of! gas kitchen equipment when ·not needed or not
in use .
·
• - Shut off heat in mall areas and close doors to adjoining
stores and shops.
- Lunit the number of entrances to be kept open at any
time. ·

·

- Limit operating hours to periods of reasonable activity.
- Shut off or reduce heat to storage and warehouse areas.
The local gas company office has a number of pamphlets
and brochures available on request with additional
sug gestiOns and tips to ir(lprove conservation techniques,
White pointed out.
·
• "all of these can prove helpful," he said, "in assisting all of
us to do our share to prevent additional gas j:Utbacks with
accompanying shutdowns or layoffs in affected industry and
commetce.''

SALE
SEALY ··

ROCKERS

SOFA '
&amp;

(SLIGHTLY DAMAGED)
REG. 1139.95

CHAIR
NICE COLORS &amp;
FABRICS

'299
THE

95

'100
DISCOUNT

ON ANY SUITE

•

•

en tine

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 28, No. 1 ~2

Essex to retire
COLuMBUS (UPI ) - State
School SUpt. Martin Essex
announced today he would
retire effective March 15
alter 10 years as head of the·

appropriate instrumentality
in the governan ce structure
of education.
Today, Essex said, "the
state Board of Education
·stands center stage as the
Martin Esse•, a native of model of the ·fourth branch of
Hamden In Jackson government concept.
County, began his ad· . "Some of the spotlight may .
mtntstratlve ca reer In Ohio ' not be desired, but the role
education as ·superln· · has been firmly established-"
teodent of Middleport as a dirrct result of a large,
Exempted School District solid
nucleus
of
In Meigs County In the conscientio us, dedi cated
1930s.
persons who have placed the
education of youth above self.
state's school public school interest or personal ambi·
sys.tem.
I
lion," said Essex.
Essex.\"ho took oj,fi"" July
" Immense gratification
I,
1966,
has
been has come from observing the
superintendent longer than Department of Educatio'h
any of his 29 predecessors. transformed from a rural"Over 10 years in the dominated, data ga therng
superintendency ought to be ,bureaucracy into an action·
· considered m3;Xirnum for an orient e d orga.nizatipn
evangelist/' said Esssx. "II . responsive to the needs of
has been savored with a spirit urban, suburban and rural
of adventure, and abundant schools- a n organization
satisfaction."
whose
personnel
and
Essex sa id · when he expertise are actively sought
accepted the job 10 years ago both
nationally
and
he fully recognized that "the internationally as well as
odds were against presen,ng throughout the state," he
an elected, nonpartisan state said.
board of educa tion as an
Essex said in a letter to the
State Board of Education,
''rapid emergence of a super.
sophisticated, technological
economy in a pluralistic
society, marked by lonely
anonymity, has brought more
turbulence to education
during !)lis decade than at

the board of education.
The · teachers
had 11. ,, 'i•lliilll•
threatened to strike today if
no agreement could be
reached.
Contract negotiations were
to begin between Jan. 15 and·
Feb. 15.
The system has 932 .
students in ten elementary
schools, two junior highs and
two senior highs.
The
Port . Clinton

~-~: :,::. ~.". ~ :~~~.:.~ . Olinese put r~~~~:~~~~~;~~~:~h:{~

Martin Essex

HAROLD BROWN may
provide
powerful new
· ···· ·-···· ·· · ·· · ·· ···· ····· ····· · · · ··· ·· ·
averted a planned ·walkout .
any time in the history of
support for the B·l bomber
America .
hact
scheduled for
project wben he moves Into
" Response· to these
the
Pentagon.
The
new
unprecedented
changes has
The teachers voted IIJ6.26 to
secretary
of
Defense
was
a
succeeded,
on
balance,
well
y
accept the new contract
supporter of the con·
beyo nd any reasonable
The annual free pickup or
which raised the base pay of lroverslal plane In Initial
expectation," . r;;ssex staled .
·Christmas trees wlll be
teachers to $8,450 a year in planning stages during his
"Unquestionably, Ohio has
held for ~lddleport
·the first year of a three year
previous tour of duty as Air
been and continues to be this
re•ldenls Tuesday, Jan. 4.
HONG KONG (.UPI)- The contract.
Force secretary In the
nation's proving ground for
Residents are asked to Chinese army has taken over
The sys tem has 2,000 Johnson administration.
education.
have their throwaway trees railway operations in one of students in seven schools.
"As ooe who sees challenge
at the eurb on Tuesday the country's key rail juncas a demand [or solutions this
momlog and they wlll be )ions, according to a
has been a spirited adventure
. One inch new snow oossible picke4 up free of charge by provincial radio report
and opportunity to serve," he
today. Cloudy tonight, lows
the village street depart· monitored here.
·
said. '·Perhaps it is needless
around ·25 (minus .4 C).
menl. Tbls Is one olseveral
Juo Wej.cheng, a deputy
to say that the time demands
Cloudy . a llttle · warmer free pickup servi&lt;es commander of the army's
have
been the most severe in
Tuesday, chance of rain or provided throughout .the railway corps lor more than
my
career."
snow by afternoon. Highs year by tbe village to a••lst 20 years, has been put in .
around 39 (4 C). Probability ret~ldents In keeping their charge of th.e Cheng~how
of precipitation 60 per cent properties clean • and to Railway Bureau, the Honan
today,·20 per cent to night,-40 make tbe village more Radio broadcast said Sunday.
lce.glazed roads in the accidents during the holiday vehicle and he jumped away
per cen! Tuesday.
allraelive.
Two other new leaders, Deep South triggered a flurry period, another 82 were killed from the car whim it began to
.
JOII down the incline. .
including a ·high-ranking of traffic accidents Surxlay as in fires. ,
A breakdown of accidental
Some of the worst ltres
officer of the army the New Year's weekend
~ere in Chicago.
engineering corps, also were death toll climbed past 300. deaths :
30!1
A blaze on Chicago's South·
appointed to the bureau and Weekend fires claimed more Traffic
Fires
82 west Side Sunday left live
Peking authorities seiit than 80 lives.
Sleet and snow slicked Planes
troops to help 11 in accordance
8 persons dead - four of them
A Gallia·Meigs Post Si&lt;ite on Starcher-Hamrick Rd .
with require.ments ," the hi'ghways jammed with Total
399
chiidren.
Police
said
the
fire
Highway
Patrol repOrt today lour tenths of a mile south of
By United Press International
homeward.bound holiday
enigmatic
broadcast
said.
Califotnia
reported
41
was
fgmted
by
gasoline
used
showed
1,20llraffic
accidents · SR 35.
WASHINGTON - SEN. EDWARD M. KENNEDY said
travelers Sunday but, despite traffi c deaths , Texas 20, to wash walls in the building. were investigated · during
The
report
on
the
railway
According to the report, an·
today the Environmental Protection Agency has "largely
the inclement weather, it Pennsylvania 18 and Ken· The fire occured just one 1976, an increase of 181, or 17 auto driven by Virginia R.
situation
came
at
almost
the
failed in its duty to assure the safe use of pesticides." The
the traffic death . lucky 16.
blqck from a building where per cent, over 1975.
Roush, 47, Rt. I, Bidwell, was
Massachusetts Democrat released a Senate staff report saying .same time as a statement by appeared
count
would
fail short of the
one
of
China's
lop
leaders
One
of
the
worst
auto
12
persons
died
in
a
Fatal
accidents
also
in·
pulling·
a car driven by her
the manufacturer of Lep!Dphos - which attacks the nervous
National Safety Council's accidents claimed the lives of Christmas Eve holocaust. A creased in the Meigs-GaUia husband, Virgil R. Roush, 45,
"
that
an
"excellent"
situation
system like snake venom - Ignored a warning by his medical
of
" united
struggle" )ll:eholiday estimate.
four children but did not lire Saturday claimed nine area during the year. Nine Rt. I, Bidwell. Mrs. Roush
consultant to "seriously consider" halting production.
The
Council
estimated
l?e·
count on the traffic toll. A lives on Chicago's Northwest persons were killed com· lost control of her car which
prevailed
throughout
the
The report also said EPA granted tolerances for.use of t!\e
tween 350 -and 450 persons station wagon , with the four Side. In all, lour fires have hit pared to five the previous ran off the east side of the
muntry.
pesticide oo tomatoes and lettuce in 1974 despite warnings
roadway forcing
her
Vice Premier Li Hsien- would die in traffic accidents children inside slid backward Chicago since Christmas
dating back to 19~1 that it. could cause paralysis and other
27
during
the
holiday
period,
"into 20 feet of water at a Eve, claiming a total of
ye~~- traffic fatalities were . husband's vehicle to "strike
men, speaking at a banquet in
neurotoxic symptoms.
which began at 6 p.m. local boatdock
near
the
lives.
Peking's
Great
Hall
of
the
investigated over the New her car.
EPA finally proposed in May 1975 that tolerances for
time
Thursday
and
ended
at
southeastern Texa.s town of
Year's Holiday. 1n aU, five
Mrs. Roush's vehi cle
Lep!Dphos be revoked. The reportpid the Vebicol Chemical People Sunday night, also midnight Sunday. .
S~~id
those
who
had
hoped
for
Goodrich.
Police
said
the
traffic
accidents
were
in·
flipped
over on its side. There
Corp. was told on Jwie .9, 1975, thtt workers at the company's
violent
disturbances
A
United
Press
Indriver,
Rubin
Munoz,
had
·
vestigated
including
two
was
heavy
damage. Mr.
Bayport, Tex., plant were suffering from "bizarre central
following
tit@
death
of
M4o
ternational
count
showed
that
linlsh•d
loading)lis
boat
onto.
t
ita}
injury
accidents.
Roush
was
cited lor no
nervo111 system symptoms." But production was not halted
Tse-tung
have
been
disap309
persons
died
in
traffic
.
a
trailer
on
the
rear
of
the
.
0
The
first
occurred
at
4:30
driver's
license.
until January 1976 - long afler scientistsJoWld the chemical to
pointed.
be dangerous.
·
Jacquellhe R. Roush, 12,
The Pomeroy Emergency p.m. New •Year's Day on CR
Squad answered a call to "28 in Meigs County., three and Rt. I, Bidwell, a passenger in
SAN JUAN ,. PUERTO RICO '- PUERTO Rico's new
Chester at 4:34 p.m. Sunday nine tenths mi)es south of SR her mother's car, complained
goV.rnor says the islarxl 's residents should decide in a
for Eber Gillilan who was 248.
of minor injuries.
. plebiscite whether they want to become America's 51st state .
· taken to Veterans Memorial
Stale troopers said Janet L.
In another Sunday ac·
But Carlos Romero Barcelo, who was inaugurated for·a follrHospital where he was ad· Stivers, 22, Pomeroy, lost ci&lt;(ent, vehicles driven by
year term .SUnday; did not indicate ,when such a vote should
Snow spread rapidly across 2til.
control of her car on the icy William H. Strodder, 62,
bring more snow or rain into milled.
Today's snow is mostly Ohio by Tuesday afternoon.
take place.
Ohio early today with some
AI 10 33
Sat da th
pavement. The vehicle ran Gallipolis, and Harland T.
. In his inaugural address, the 44-year-old former mayor of areas reporting as much as associated with a low
The extended outiook lor squad ~:-~·atle u~afburn~ · off the roadway striking, a Fillinger, 42, Rt. 2, Bidwell,
San Juan did not even mentioo the statehood controversy ooe inch of new snow on th&amp; pressure area moving across Wednesday through Friday Union Ave., ·to the ·Holzer tree . There was minor collided headon on an icy
touched off by President Ford's surprise announcement New grpuod.,wlth more expected. the state and the snow may calls lor a chance of rain or Medical Center, and at 6:45 damage.
curve causing minor
Year's Eve that I.e will ask Congress to pass a law making
The National Weather persist in the northern por· snow Wednesday and a · p.m. Friday Kathy Robinson ,A second iQjury accide~t damage. The accident OC·
· Puerto Rico the 51st state. Ford's proposal was considered a Service said new snow lion into early tonight before chance of snow Thursday and was taken to Veteraps occurred al5 :45 p.m. Sunday curred on Vaughn Rd. one
polenUQI embarr8Millent for Romero Barcelo, since he had accumulations of ooe to two finally ending.
Friday.
.
mile north of SR ~ Memorial
Hospital
from
the
An accident occurred 11 :15
always maintained that Puerto Ricans themselves should take inches were expected today
A warmtng trena · is
Highs around Wednesday Brown Trailer Court in
the initiative for statehood and not have it Imposed from with more localized areas expected to develop as will be around 4ll and in the
p.m. Saturday on Centerpoint
Washington.,
Minersville.
Rd. four tenths of a mile west
getting a bit more.
·
southerly low increases 30s on Thursday and Friday.
The Weather service said ahead
of
the
next LoWs near 25 Wednesday and
DEER STRUCK
of SR 325 when Keith D.
COLUMBUS, OHIO - ONE-TIURD OF THE lrunates temperatures r anged from approaching weather sysll!m. near 15 Thursday and Fri!lay.
Gilbert, Rt. I, Chesbire, . or
The Meigs County Sherifrs a_e(S'
entering stale prisons say drinking .:.. not drug addiction ..,. is the upper teeris -lo the mid· This next system could also
Department Investigated an t"
someontl driving his car, lost
related to their crime.· W. David Mathews, an Ohio State
accident lrfonday at6 :50 a.m,
Middleport Pollee reported control then ran off lire right
University student, surveyed 1781runates at lite state reception
in Rutland Township , on two holiday weekend ac· side of the highway into a
center atChUllctKhe last May and June in research.lng a thesis
county road three. Nonnan cldents.
ditch.
foramuter'· degreehewasgrantedinDecember.
Clyde Will, 63, Rt..J, Rutland,
AI 12 03 p m Friday a
During an effort to get out,
• on county road truck driven
'
·by· Donald ' R. the car's e•h•ust
system
He said 51 of those priaon«ssald drinklllg had something
was traveling
~.,
· to do with their lmprlsorunent. Slate prisons concentrate
·
.
'
three when he struck a deer Ash, Route I, Bainbridge, caught dry grass on fire. Rlq
treatment programs on drug addiction, not alcoholism.
that ran into the path of his · making a left turn off Locust Grande Fire fighters wei'C
car. The deer got up and ran St., turned into the side of 0 called to extinguish the blaze.
BEAUVAIS,FRANCE - I&gt;OUCESAVTIIE,Y havegot -, ·M·
off into a nearby woo&lt;!s.
car driven by Richard R. The accident Is still un.der
niled out foul play in the death ol Emillen Amaury. a leading
.L:
investigation.
FIRE DOUSED
Smith, Pearl St., ll!lddleport.
A windshield • type ac' .
French newspaper owner who wu killed Sunday when his
The Middleport Fire Dept. Damages were medium; Ash cident was Investigated at
lldttilh hone threw him qainlta tree. Amaury, whoee newsBuilding permits, $160.30.
Accident rej&gt;orts, $86.50. answered a call to a garage was elted for failing to yield 11 :30 p.m. Saturday on
Middleport Mayor Fred
paper Parilien Ubere was at the center of a national.labor
Parking
permits,
$285.
Po!ter
pmnlts, seo. ·
Hoffman
today
announced
owned by Mrs . Wayne ·the right of way.
Centerpoint Rd. six . miles
dilpute, died of a fractured skull and severe chest injuries. •
Merchant
pollee,
$1,670.
.
Mlscellaneou5,
$28. ·
that
.receipts
from
the
Witneuea said hla mount had been unusually nervous
Haniaon on Ash St., Sunday
At.. 6:30 p.m. Sunday, a west of SR 325. The patrol
Fines, $10,136.11$.
, Thi• total of ~.682.10 goes where • car owned by Dale · station wagon driven . by said an auto driveit by Bryon .
Sunday and hid thrown Amaury, an experienced horseman, mayor's office and court lor
Court
costs,
$1,919.40.
entirely
into the general fund Kennedy caught fire. The fire Lewis Johnson, Darwin,
1978
totaled
S2(),682.10.
Hl
ci.ce before Ole fatalacdde~t. Aveterinarian Sunday ran drug
4• Oak ll,
•·~
bac'ed
·
into
a
parked
.
car
.
Seagraves,
IB
,
Rt.
Bonda
forfeited,
~,87L
·
and
Is
used
for.
g~neral
Breakdown
of
receipts
Is
as
tin
was ex guuoned by . Mid·
•
OJ""'"' ..
b k' th
de!llctlon lelia on the horae. The resulta of uie testa :were not .
Soliciting permits, S6!J, · ' ·operating expenses of the dleport Pollee Chief J. J. owned • by Peggy Kerns ,
W.u a ..ooe rea mg e
11111ounced but a pollee source llicl authorities nave "not follows:, .
Trash hauling permits, f50. · village, the mayor said.
Cremeans before arrival of Middleport, on North Second Windshield of a car driven by ·
Taxi license, $137.50.
enUrely' excluded" .· the poaiblllty of foul play in their
Ave. Damage was moderate. Oak
John Hill.
Paul• Ban'Y.• 20, Rl. i ,'
Turnkey
fees,
$150.
Zoning
permits,
SS8.75.
lnvellliptlon.
·.the d-·rtm
~,..
ent .
.••

••.•••

• •.•.

Tree pickup is
set on Tuesda

guns at key ~::.

be~n

rail head

De~th

Traffic errors
increased 17%

Three removed
h
osp s

Snow covers Ohio

REG. '299,95

3 PINE

Teachers strikes tooay in
two Ohio school districts·kept
about 8,000 students ori an
enforced holiday vacation
while teachers in two other
districts reached agreements
Oil new contracts to avert a
walkout today.
Meanwhlle, · students In
eight Ohio school districts
who have been out of classes
because of the districts '
financial problems, returned
to school today.
The largest districts to
reopen today were Toledo
with 55,600 students who had.
been out of school since Dec. 3
and Groveport -Madison
Local ,in Franklin County
where 6,900 pupils have been
out of school since Nov. 3 the
day after failure of a school
levy.
Teachers to&lt;\lly struck

·.

list tops 300;
weekend fires kill 80

'

50 IN STOCK

\.

at y
To'ledo teachers
return to school

Weather

. FUU SIZE
SIMMONS
&amp; SEALY
.

HEX TABLES

•

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday ;. January ~. 1977

l .ELECJROPHONIC STEREO

REGULAR '449.95

WITH THE PURCHASE OF

'1400

SAL£

•

" U It were not for this outstanding effort," he said, "which
- Shut off heat and close doors to unused rooms and
rurrenUy accounts for some 17 billion cubic feet in gas savings storage areas.
anniJ!IllY , CW'taiimenl levels for all remaining ind~strial
- Avoid blocking heating vents or air return grilles with
customers would have to be raised to lOOper cent now."
furniture or draperies. .
•
However, White said there undoubtedly . are · some
- Make sure fireplace da mpers are closed when not in use
addlllonai things that gas &lt;Ompaoy customers can do and do not use log firepla c"eS that are only for decorative
lrtlmedlately as "good citizens" to help ease the burden on purposes.
industry, commercial establishments and schools. •
- Doors of garages attached to buildings should be kept
He offered the following suggestions for both residential • closed.
and commercial users that can produce significant gas
- Caulk or weatherstrip around all openings.
savings lmmediately with a minimum effort :
- Check hot water faucets for leaks and replace washers
- S'et furnace thermostats no higher than 67 degrees.
where necessary.
- Turn off aU decorative and accent gas lighting, both
- Operate .laundry a ppliances only with lull loa&lt;ts.
inside and out.
·
The following apply primarily to public buildings and
- Even with storm windows installed, open drapes to·let com mercial establishents :
the sun shine in and close them on overcast days and at night.
- Discontinue use of indoor swimming pools.
- Reduce fresh air intake to heatin_!! system to minimum

Truck driver
CI'tati'on

c0 urt f•mes

£ee
. sm
• •
· ~d' d
'.Ieport a"t · $20,682

~

·I

•,

'

I

·

�•
2-The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Monday, Jan 3,1m

efficien~y .g et

Economy,
PLAINS GA (UP!) Marshaling black support for
hi! chou:e of Griffm Bell to be
attorney general, President
elect Junmy carter turned
hts attention today to
preSSing problems of the
economy and government
reorgamzaton
Carter UlVlled Rep Jack
Brooks D-Tex chalrll\Bn of
the House Government
Operations Committee and
budget director-designate
Bert Lance ID Plarns to
diSCUSS hiS hope that
Coogress will g~ve him wide
rangmg
authonly
to
streamline the bureauCJ'llcy
He also arranged an rnterVIew With James Krng an

•
executive With the Massa
chusetls Bay Transit
Authority and a Carter
advance man during the
campaign, apparently I&lt;&gt;
ollet him a pos111oo
After a vosol to the
AmerocusSumler County
Hospital tQ, see his ailing

mother,

'Mtss LtUtan,' '..

Carter told reporters he has
begun work on his Inaugural
address Obvoously conscoous
of the historocal unpacl of the
speech Carter has read most
of the onaugural addresses m
mod""' times
• Woth 17 days more to go
before hts mauguratton,
Carter was preparrng an
economtc package mcluding

a tax cut and a job creating
poblic works program, to be
announced after a meeting
With his economtc advisers
aqd congress10nal .leade•s
here
Wtth Bell headmg for
today
to
Washmgton
intemew potential to!Hevel
assiStants and poSSibly a
new FBI chief, at the Jusltce
Department, the presidentelect lined up some vocal
black SliiJPOn m F•ll 's behalf
Carter utvoted three black
clergymen mcludmg a
boyhood churn and two
bishops, to hiS Btble class at
the PlalRS Baptist Church
&amp;mday, and they endorsed
hi! setectton of Bell whose

Revolutionary coal pulveiizing
•

process offers strong promise
WASIDNGTON (UP!) - Researchers about74 nucrons But the smaller coal can
say a revolutionary method of grmdil1g be ground, the more explostve 11 becomes,
coal mto ftne, explOSive powder free of and Ilok says getting coal down to four
most pollutants ' can and should" be used rrucron Size would Increase tts potentta1to
help Amertca become energy self·
whelp tap Amenca s most aoondant ener
suffiCient
gy resource
Among other thmgs he satd Ill an
Otsputmg earher c!atrns that the
mtemew,
such fine coal powder could be
lechmque will not work, experts from Ohio
rruxed
With
oil or gasoline to rncrease the
State Uruverstty satd they can discover no
energy
content
of llqwd fuels and stretch
vwlatton of known phystcal laws tn the
thelf
supply
theory
The study performed by Drs Jack
Dr Donald L Glower, dean of Oh10
COllms
and llenms Guenther concluded
"State s engmeermg school, constders the
there
was
nothmg wrong with Uok s key
process years ahead of extslmg teen
calculatloo
that operating the grmder will
nology accordmg to the Washingtou
requore
about
25 kllo"atl hours of
mventor behmd the theory, Dr Stephen
electrtCtly
per
lou
Crtltcs have satd tt
KraJCOVIC!lOk
would
lake
10
tunes
that much, a
In a letter accompanymg the report
probtbitive
amount
from the researchers, Glower told Ilok
COlllllS and Glower satd however, they
' The concluston of thelf study IS that this
could
not evaluate such factors as gr.mder
(coal grrndmg) mill can and should be
fatigue
wear and reliabthty or safety
oollt
hazards
such
as exploSion potential and
SuccesS the researchers satd, could
nmse
because
they lacked eng~neenng
proVIde a dramatic contrtbutton to U S
drawmgs
and world energy supplies
The way to prove or diSprove Ilok 's
Dok s tdea IS to pulveriZe coal mto grams
process,
they satd, IS to build and test a
Just four rntcrons- or 16 one-thousands of
mmdmg
mill
thai could handle one ton per
an mch, !mer than face powder - m
diameter AI that stze, ash and pyrtle lfiour
Dok has talked to representatives of
unplirtties, mcluding sulfur would be
separated from the coal and could be President-elect Junmy Carter, who wants
removed easily Nearly (JJre carbon would to rncrease us reltance on coal and
hopes to get a $30 million federal gran! to
remam
At present coal can be red,uced only to build a pilot plant

Those accornpanytng
Carter were Btshop Wllharn
R Wtlkes, chairman of the

farmer , becfarmers,
however The article lists 22
prestdents who had close
farm ttes but 11 makes no
mention of Prestdent-elect
Jtunt of fanrung , farm life
and food - past, present and
future - 15 a story that
bears repeated, telling, for
most Arnertcans have long
been separated from tbeor
agrtcultural ortgms saJd
Quentin M West, head of the
department's Ecooomtc Re
search ServiCe m a
foreword
The profusely illustrated
booklet ttseU ts a case of
repealed tellmg It IS a coD
West,
head
of
the
department s
Economic
Research Servtce, m a

ofhctals satd they had
ordered 5,435 coptes of \he
booklet from the government
prmting offtce at a cost of
$6,303, or about $116 a copy
Spokesmen
saod
m
response to QUenes that 1,435
coptes would go
to
department agencies for
theor use Of the rema11llllg
4 000, offtCtals satd 800 would
be sent to news rnedta, 50 to
heads
of
economtc
departments at
state
agnculturai uruversthes, 50
more to state extenston
servtce dlfectors and 535
would go, to members of
Coogress
The remaiiUJlg stock 2 565
coptes, wtll be held by the
ERS 'to sallsfy rndtvtdual

foreword

requests," an offiCial satd

The profusely illustrated
A department spokesman
booklet Itself ts 1ews of the satd smgle sample copies of
ftrst 200 years of Arnertcan the booklet would be
agncultural history available free from the
forecasts of the next 200 Publications uml Room 0054 ,
years, and reports on Dtvtston of Informatton,
subjects rangmg from the Economtc Research Servtce,
Department
of
stale of farrrung today to the U S
dally hardslups of rural life m Agrtculture Washmgton
earlier days, the hiStory of 0 C , 20250 But if orders
government farm programs, from the public get too
the changmg face of food ;. heavy, we'll have to cut tt off
rnarkelmg, and 'the truth and tell them to buy the
about grandma's cooking ' book," the of!tctal satd
Agncullure Department
U there are any stzable

board of trustees of the
Morrts Brown College ,
Btshop H I Bearden and Rev
Wtiham I Johnson, Jr, editor
of the Afncan Metho~tst
Episcopal Revtew, and Mrs
Fanme Johnson Htll

.

Winter gripping
into deep South
Uolted Press Ioternailonal
Wmter reached miD the
Deep South Sunday, glazmg
roads wtth sno" and sleet and
protnptmg pollee to urge
molorlSis to avoid drtVIng
except m ernergenctes
Heayy snows also socked
the Northwest and ram
triggered nood warnmgs m
Ca!Uotma
Storm warn mgs were
posted for portions of
Mtssourt and Tennessee for
snow and tee and an tee storm
warmng was m effect for
Alabama
Travelers
advtsortes were posted for
portions of North CaroUna,
South Carolma, Georgia and
Flortda as freezmg ram sleet
and tee spread over the
area
Snow or sleet was expected
over much of th~ Southland
The Nattonal Weather
SerVIce reported occasional
snow or freezrng rarn and
sleet over Arkansas and
much of Louts\ana and
Mississtpp• today
Amiserable combmatmn of
freezmg ram, sleet and snow
socked some 20 states
Sunday, slickmg roads durmg
peak New Year s "eekend
travel pertods dowmng
power lmes and ptlrng up
deep snows
In Lomstana, state police

urged motomts to stay off
the roads except in
emergenctes Traffic was
slowed by dozens of fenderbender acctdents and several
maJor roads were · closed,
rncludmg the 24-rmle long
Pontchartram Causewa9'.
Frozen tree lunbs and tee
downed power hnes for
several hundred homes m the
southwest part of the state
The outlook was for more of
the same tnday
We re geltmg another

Johnson and Mrs Hill are
the children of Boshop
Wilham D Johnson Sr They
were netghbors of the Carters
at Archery a hamlet two
miles from Piams years ago

.

front ' coming m fro!JI
Shreveport and It's gomg to
dump some more 10f thts
garbage on us said stale
trooper Wtlham R Beckham
m Monroe, La We ve got a
lot of oce on the road "
Up to three mches of snow
hit portwns of Mtssour• and
Tennessee
Ughter snows swept from
Vlfgrnia and the Carolrnas
and snow, sleet and freezmg
rmn stretched mlo Georgta 1
Flonda and west to LowSlana
and Texas
Snow also spread over the
Northwest and travelers' adVlsones were posted for
possible heavy snow m
northern Califorma Oregon,
Idaho Nevada and central
Amon a
The mountams of northern
Cahforma were hard ht! Two
feet of snow piled up at Mount
Rose and 21 mches clogged
Donner Pass
A wmter storm warrung
was posted for T.jlah and a
wmter storm y;atch was m
effect for the Colorado

Wilkes satd he believed Bell
would use whatever powers
he has to see that JUShce ts
done I think he IS tramed
and disciplined enough to do
JUStice
"
Wilkes satd he dtd not know
that Bell belonged to a
segregated club at the tune
that Morns Brown, a black
college of 1,500 students
named Bell tts man of the
year He satd tl "might have
made some difference • 2_

Peaceful
period

mountams

expected

Soakmg rams spread over
Ca itfornla s coastal
rnountams and a flash flood
warnmgs were m effect for
canyons of San Otego and
Santa Barbara counlles An
rnch of ram ht! Sacramento the most ram 1R 21 months
0Jai Cahf , reported three
mches of ram m two hours
and Santa Barbara reported
nearly two rnches
Light snow spread over the
midlands, sprawling from
Wisconsin through !llmo1s
and lnd1ana and mto
M1ehg1an
and
Ohto
Travelers advtsones were rn
effect over the whole area as
a light coatmg of snow glazed
roadways

WASHINGTON (UP!) The 95th Congress, whtch
convenes Tuesday
anttctpates at least a period
of peaceful coexistence With
Prestdent-elect Jtrnrny
Carter after etght years of
war by veto With the Ntxon·
F o r d R e P u b lt c a n
admmlStrations
But the long-term outlook
wtll be shaped largely by the
state of the economy and
Carter s comrnttment to
balance the budget by the end
of hiS llrst term, which will
have a maJor effect on
programs many of the
Democrats _ tncludmg

Astra-

USDA's bicentennial flap \is Idle
By BERNARD BRENNER
UPI Farm Editor
WASHINGTON (UPI) The Agrtculture Department
ftnng what may have been
the flll81 shot m tlle 1976
B1centenmal observance,
wound up the old year last
week by belatedly tssumg a
102-iJage, slh!k-paper booklet
to celebrate the farmer s
place m Amencan history
Offlctals had planned to
ISSue the booklet last April or
May as a Btcentenmal
proJect llut the agency
which has recetved rruxed
revtews fo r some recent
publlcatwns mcludmg a
Btcentenmal photo history
and ~ recent article on the
cost of the ChriStmas dmner
m Charles Otckens 19thcentury English novel A
Christmas Carol,
encountered a sertes of
delays an offtctal satd
The delays dtd not stretch
the !mal go-abead order on
prmting tlle publication far
enough to perrntt edttors to
update one article on White
House farmers however The
article lists 22 presidents who
had close farm ltes but 1t
makes no mention of
Presodent-elect Jtmrny
Carter, a Georgta peanut

Apple G~ve_ News Notes

Carter's attention

appomtment did not Sit well
wtth some clVll nghls
leaders

Graph

•

Berntce Bode Osol

sales the government could
For Tue1day Jan 4 1977
niake a profit The U S
government prmtmg offtce ARIES (March 21 April li) Be
will sell the booklet for $2 35 very careful today not to al enate
spensab e a es You re on
per smgle copy, or $1 76 a lnd
ve y thm tee and could eas y fall
copy m orders of 100 pr more through
sent to a smgle address
TAURUS (Apnl 20 May 20)
ERS Adrnrn1strator West There s a posstb•l ty today you
rn h1s foreword noted that could say the wrong th.ng to your
Amertcan farmers who boss 11 you ha..,e a cnl tctsm be
began from a

preca riOus

carefu l how you vo1ce 1t

foothold on the eastern edge GEMINI (May 21 June 20) Don t
of a vas t and unknown
continent' today have made

the Umled States the world's
best fed nation while also
supplymg food and fiber to
millions m other parts of the
world
Today s consumer one
article rn the book added eats
a lot better than hts
ancestors Desptte nostalgic
recollecttons, the report satd,
the fact 1s that for all but a
few
nch
relattvely
Amencans unttl recent
times meals were lacking
m vanet.Y and often tasteless
and eating was something
you dtd because you had to,
not because you enJoyed It
If you dtdn I nottce the
monotony of the oldllme
menu Grandma may have
been an even better cook than
you thought, the article
satd

DR. LAMB

part c1pate today n any th ng that
smacks of lmanctal rtsk The
odds are dehnttely not n your
lavor thro ugh tomorrow

CANCER (June 21-July 22) You
wont get awa y wtth anythtng to
day 1f you re tookmg out lor No 1
f you r approa c h IS se lll sh
be pr epared to be tumped on

on ly

LEO (July 23 Aug 22) Guard
aga ns t magn•l y ng prob ems to
day and makmg the m more
lrustrat ng than they really are
Don t sweat Ititle thmgs

VIRGO (Aug 23 Sepl 22) Avotd
any t ype of entanglement today
where money •s an ISSUe Don I
borrow lend or mvest any thmg
even w th close lr ends

LIBRA (Sept 23 Oct 23) Using
ha•d a nd camp i caled

p r ocedures doesn t assure

Carter - would like to see
enacted
At 2 p m EST Tuesday the
lawmakers convene wtth
traditional pomp as all 435 ,
House members and 33 new
and reelected senators take
lhelf oaths of office - the
gallenes~f the two chambers
jammed wtlh vtsttors
Democrats wtll choose Sen
Robert Byrd of West Vlfg~Rta
or Sen Hubert Humphrey of
Mmnesota as thetr new
leader ID succeed Sen Mtke
Mansfield of Montana, who
rellred
At the same tune, Republicans wtll ptck a successor to
Sen Hugh Scott of Pennsyl
vama, also retormg, as GOP
leader Sen Robert Griffm of
Mtchtgan ls a prohobtllve
favonte although he may be
challenged by Sen Howaro
Baker of Tennessee
The House ptcked 1ts new
leaders in December - Jun
Wrtghl of Texas for the
Democrats and John Rhodes
of
Artzona
for
the
Repubhcans
Rep Thomas P 0 Neill
hand -picked
by
the
Democrats will be elected
speaker on a party~me vote
shortly after the House
11
th

sur.:cess !of you today tt s better meets, comp e mg
e
to operate w th s1 mpl ~ proven rnqssive shakeup m the con·

21) Abo&lt;Je all don t poke your economy
nose nto s tuat1ons where •t
Carter plans

She doesn't believe in doctors

to meet With
con:.JessJ.onalleaders soon to
ljt'"

Ihem
outline his plans foc tbe
CAPRICORN (Doc 22 Jon 1t) economy and although be
o ne to one rei at onsh ps

mey

cannot formally submit

testy to( you legislation until he becomes sovtet un on
thr ough tomorrow Be extremelY president there lS nothmg to
Fowler who was one quc,rter
tactful when negat atmg m close prevent
Congress from Srou x Indian esteOIIshed the
ftr st mental health cl nlc on an
quaners
begmnrng hearings
lnd an resE;&gt;r&lt;Jat on in 1958 on
the Ute Reser&lt;Jat ion n Utah
AQUARIUS (Jon 20·Feb 1t) Two long-sought gOJ!ls
He served as d rector of that
You m1ght have some dlff1cu1Ues national health msurance and
CliniC SOC vears
joday ln'JOI&lt;Jmg people you re maJor welfare reform worktng with Have the courage stand little chance because of

pro&lt;Je parttcularly

By Lawrence E Lamb, MD
DEAR DR LAMB - l am
59 female , marned and have
high blood pressure around
175 I am womed about
strokes or a heart attack but
my fatth believes only "God'
IS the greatest of all ph¥S1•
c1ans I wondertf you can buy
somethtng over the t ounter
ala drug store]
DEAR READER - If you
belong to the faith I thrnk you
rntght, you may be m!erested
to know the lady who founded
the faith wore glasses- but I
don I know where she bought
!hem
You should be concerned
about your blood pressure as
tl does mcrease the chances
that you couhl have either a
stroke or hC!Jrt attack or
nth ,. 1l nrders assuu t~te d
'

JLseased .1rlenes

l usually prefer to see ~
•rson with htgh blood
lr~ssure unprove h1 s or her
1vlng patterns ftrst If that
I

can be done If you have any
amount of fat at all under
your skm go on a senstble
diet and exerctse dally At
least try to walk 30 rnt~utes to
an hour a day Walk m l\10
sessmns if you need to m
order to not be uneomfor
table
Tbe wetght loss often
lowers a person's blood
pressure, ana when 11 IS sue
cessfultt os far better for you
than any medtcmes available
for moderate elevations of
blood pressure
Also you should avotd cor
fee, tea and colas, as well as
cigarettes
None of these
measures should coofbct
with your faith I know of no
Chrtsllan religwn that os
agamst a g\'(MI healthy diet
program, .exercise and
avotdmg t tgarettes, coffee
and tea
To gtve you more onfonna
Uon l am sending you The

,

Health Letter nwnber HJ diseases that we suffet
Blood Pressure Others who because o£ our motlern
want this mfonn.al10n can bulkless d1et that leads to
send 50 c-ents with a long poor cui on functiOn
Appendtcllos may lie con
stamped, self-addressed
envelope for 1! to P 0 Box fused wtth '"vera! othe1
1551. RadiO Coty Station, New medical condtltons These In·
York, NY 10019
dude the pam a g1ri may
DEARDR ~-Doyou have related to ovulatiOn, or
have any mfonnalton per mflarrunatwn of large lymph
lammg to appendtctlos\~~d nodes ms1de the alxlomen m
how to prevent il' A~ I e1tber sex Once a case of
would like to know tf an appendlt llts IS dehmtely
operatiOn IS the only answer doagnosed most doctors
if a person has an appen agree tllat the only treatment
IS surg1cai If !.he patient IS
dicil18 attack•
DEAR READER - We severely 1ll for any reason a
have no deftntte mfonnabon period of pallent preparallon
on how to prevent attacks of may be required This can be
appendtclllS Dr Burktll and requtred tf the appendtx has
others wbo have studied the already ruptured 0therwtse
effects of cereal ftber bulk 111 one of the few conditions for
the dtet believe that appen· delaymg surgery would be a
dicotis IS rare m people who ve1y recc~II heat I att.ck 01
have suffonen! cereal ftber m snmlao ~evere Illne,g
In genet al doctors du not
thetr .dtet These tn·
vesugators l!eheve appen· tlnnk trymg to al&gt;w t the at
di&lt;It IS IS JUst one of rrumy tack wtth antibiOtics s acceptable The nsks "' c too g1e tl

Fowler was lo have gone to

Moscow May 15 to rece•ve hts
S50 000 sc ien ce pr ze from the

to stand up to th em They don t
real ize they m1ght

be wrong

tl1e lack of fWldS

THED.U.YSENTINEL

DEVOI'EDTO'niE
INTEIWITOF

PISCES (Feb 20 March 20 ) But some other programs,
~elltng m the bltnd today can bttlerly
fought
by
prove to be a costly el':perlence Repubhcans, stand a a good
Don 1gel rntxed up wtth anythmg chance with Carter in the
less ~nl1d than

e

a blue ch1p stock

llbmr~

(AreyouaCapr~r;orn?Bemlce

Osol has wrmen a special Astro

~;~~hseL:~r~O ~~;n~~uan~0~ rg~~
sell

oddrossod sl•mped
onvolopo 10 Aslro GraP.h P 0
Bor 489 RadiO City Slal1on llew
York N Y 10019 Be sure to ask
lor tJapncom Volume 1 J

MEJGS.MA80N ~REA

QIESTERL. T~EIIn..t.
En&lt; Ed

ROBERT HOEFLICH

White House

They include federal stand\Jl!J~:.~u
ards on strip mining of coal,
lol, Rooll,1lmt(11 ~reahon of a Consumer
l!llJI.l UWl!JI!l V Protection Agency, and tough
Jon 4 1177
new restrictions on lobbying,
You re gomg to meet many new financial disclosure and
people tt11s corni ng year and refonns stemmmg from
form some 1nteresUng alliances Watergate
Don t gtve up somelhtng unlrled Housing programs, help for
tor the proven and rel•able
urban areas, 8 possible in·

crease in mmunum wage1,
plcketlng of

contractors

COflstrUCtiOO Slles,

at

postcard

voter registration, and
poSSibly an lncreue In price
supports for 10111e crope could
pass
~

MIAMI Fla (UPI) - 1
Facing hiS 64th blfthday next
rnooth, Woody Hayes ts no
longer a young man But that
doesn't mean he s too old to
throw in a new wrinkle or two
ooce 1R a while
1
We don t dare g~t set m
our wa11-:• the Ohio Stale
coach sat~ Sunday after hiS
Buckeyes '(9-2-1) rolled to a
27-10 victort over Colorado m
the Orange Bowl Saturday
night We ll change JUSI as
quock as anybody, but we'll
damned well know why "
Hayes credt18 the wm w

CltyEdllllr

Published dally except S.turday
by The Ohio Valley PubU.~ C~
amy 111 Court St Pomeroy Ohio
45769 Bulneas Of(ice ~
2156 Editorial PhOne 11112-2167
Se&lt;ood clau pootage Pllld ot
Purnoroy Ohio
'
N1Uonal l&lt;fvertilinl' Ieprweit-

b!Uve Wvd GrifRth ~ I~
Bc:itt!nellt and Otllalher Dtv
7$7 Thin! An Now \'on. N Y
c

10017

S.bocrtollon roloo 0.11\'mtd by

CIJ'Titr Where IVIIJible 7r! C«&lt;tt per

ByMoiGrlloul owhencorrt.r
_..,. filii av,J~al ; CJno JJIOfllh
P II By maU lri iAtlo and W Va ,

s.- ""'-

Ono Year ltlOO Six monlho,
$11 10 Thr" monlha 1110
_..,_ PI 00 ,_ Six monlho

113 st

1br" month•

~
~Unol

t7 $0
Sondlr

IUPI) -

•
"

'

.

'

"
'

,

•

Ro~

Crocker retired president or,
Savings and
LoanJ
Assoe~allon lawyer and phlian •
throp•st died &lt;If a heart attac~
Sa turday a t his nome He was.:
J)

Lmcotn

83

•

Funeral ser11ices Will be helcftl
Tuesday at noon at the Church ~
of.L; the Recessional
Forest'"'
Lown Memorial Park Glen &lt;~~
dale
~
A
native
of
Minnesota'
Crocker came to Los AngeleS:
wllh his family In 1901 He was ,.
a graduate of Los Angeles Hlghl
School Cornell Unlvertlly anct:
the USC law school
•
He entered private
law '
practice In 1924 and became a1
d trector of L incoln Savlng1 In!
1926 and Its president In 1941,.
He retired In 1969
1
He leaves his widow JOM-'
phlne Scott end two sons ~
Donald
W
Crocker
succee&lt;leod ~· flim 11 lincoln '
Savings president and Sttphen 1
H Crocker end five gr 1ndch 11 •

wr.o.

'ljren

'

three changes m approach conference
movmg Jeff I:.ogan from
He satd the move of Logan
latlback to fullback on and rnsertton of Ron Sprmgs
certam plays a tougher at tailback had been under
atutude towaro post season conslderatioo ' for qutle some
condlttonmg and ms1stence hme The coaches kept
on workmg oul oo arltftctal harpmg on this one •
turf instead of grass
He sa od the odea was
But Hayes says when his borrowed from Mtchigan
assts!ants start proposmg Which uses latlback Rob
such changes they d better Lytle as the upback, or
be ready ID present a strong • fullback, occaswnally and
case
from Pittsburgh, which
They have to start moved Heisman wmrung tail
poundmg on th~ table before back Tony Dorsett to fullback
I'll listen Hayes satd at a at times durmg the Panthers
morntng-after news defeat of Penn State

We saw what Pitt dtd they put Dorsett at fullba ck
and he broke the big play
They sUpped hun In there
QUite a few times Hayes
satd
The forst time the lOth
ranked Buckeyes tried the
change Saturday ntght,
Logan scooted up the middle
for a 36-yard score Ohio
State s flfst of lbe 'llarne
Although Colorado (11-4) ied
11).7 at the tune Hayes called
the play the turnrng pomt of
the game
' That qutck tourh~"""

ourselves get out shape and
then 11 was easy gettmg Into
game condttion The defense
didn 't seem 10 get llfed at•
all
He smd the staff demanded
the pieyers keep m shape b)

satd Our defense throttled inJuries and adds qmckness
thts team better than anyone
Hayes m a JOVIal mood
did In the second half, the twice could no t rests!
Hayes sa 1d cond1t10nmg be
defense made the game cia1mmg the Big Etght
tween the end of the season
and the beglRRmg of practtce
dull
champwnsh1p for his B1g 10
Dernandmg an arttftc1al ct&gt;&lt;hampiOns because of the
for the Orange Bowl was a
turf pra cti ce field even vtctory over COlorado whtch
lesson learned 11\ two stratght
runnmg ever) day and on though t the Orange Bowl fmtshed rn a three-way he for
defeats at the Rose Bowl
' I m sllll lrymg to ftgure so me,.._ week s held two noor IS natural grass was a the t onference title
result of several years of
Yes Sir we re the Big
out why we played so lollSy m pract'ices
We ratsed heil if !hey workmg out on II at Eight champmns thiS year,
the Rose Bowl, bu t I lhmk the
btggest smgle thmg wa s didn't show up Ito run ) We Columbus
he sa1d with a grm COlorado
got mean about It • he sa id
condttionmg,' he srud
We feel very strongly ~t ued wuh those other two
!;,ams for the champiOnship
Our defense was superb 1 even though we play on
We dtd 11 differently th1s
year he satd of hts practtce Tins (Colorado) IS a high we desptse practicmg on II ,and • e bea t COlorado That
program after the regular scorrng ball dub - they he said addmg he and hiS makes us Big Eight
he staff thmk It reduces practice champions
season
We never let scorefi on everybody
thRI ~ :!!! ~~ ~uat

\I. e needed '

he said

Tt:ojans stop Wolverines, 14 to 6

He t1ad been a psych air c
consultant to the Utah Slate
Hospttal Peace Corps Wyom
mg State Hosp tal and se&lt;Jera
Veterans Admmstratlon hos
p tats
From 1962 to 1970 he was ~
d•rector
of men ta l
heallh ""
educahon for the University of :
Utah College of Med1c1ne and "'
served
later
as
associate '
professor of psychiatry as "'
M ch gan Sta te Medical School :
The Wh tectoud Cet:~ ter the "'
only one of Its k1nd
was •
established by th e Nat•onal 11
Tr i bal Cha irmenss Assoc atlon=
w th a $5 million grant from the •
National Institute of Mental•
Heallh
"'
Fowler s death was attrlbutect:
to a massive hematctma '
,..
Sur\l t'Jors 1nclude h s widow •
Juha
four sons and three r•
daughters
_
:
Funeral Will be weqnesday a»
st Jonn the Baptist EpiscopaC
Church 10 Por tland with Inter.,
ment at Sunset Hills Cemetery.-

LOS ANGELES

•

uc s

Psychiatry leader dies

of t he Wh tec lc ud Center a
mental nealth reseerch pro1ect
for Amen can tndtans and
nal ve Alaskans at the Umver
s t y of Oregon Hcallh Sc tences
Center srnce last Seplem ber

":'\

4-1lle &amp;Jtllu) ~.&gt;enun~ou, Mlacileport·r'wut~ruy, u , lrluuut~~y. d&amp;~h o1, "'' 1

Christmas dinner guests of
By Mf' Herbert Roush
Mr
and Mrs Charles
Mr and Mrs Lewis Mtller
M1chael
and famlly were Mr
of Tuppers Plains vlstled
and
Mrs
Lewis Pickett and
Mrs Margie Hunt Friday
Tracy
Afternoon
visitors
Other vistlors over Christmas
were
Mr
and
Mrs
Raymond
weekend were Mr and Mrs
Wunpy Hunt Tressa, Brian Grady, Mrs Russell Findley,
and Brenda Jean Ashley Iva E9waro Findley, Mr and
Orr; Mrs Herbert Roush Mrs , Roger RoWih
MISS Kathryn Philson was
Mr.! Beverl)l Wickline
a
Christmas
Day guest of her
Mr and Mrs Roger Roush,
brother,
Mr
and Mrs Ben
Mrs Iva Orr, Ml'll Edna
Philson
at
Racine
Roush were Chrtstmas dinner
Mrs Herschel Roush
guests of Mr , and Mrs
VISited
her brother In-law,
Herbert Roush Otljer VISitors
Errunett
Smalley at Arcadia
were Davtd Cmdy and Ed·
Rest
Horne
Sunday
warn Roush
Erwin
Gloeckner
attended
Mr and Mrs Charles
funeral
services
for his
Burrt, Btlly Wilson Ronme
brother-m·law,
Paul
Davis
at
Wtlson of Bolivar Dam, Mrs
Parkersburg
Tuesday
Erma Wtlson were Christmas
Mr and Mrs Boll Fox and
guests of Mrs Kathryn Hunt
son
Davtd spent Christmas
Mr and Mrs Wilham
Yllth
Mr and Mrs OrvlUe
Wtckline Scott and Kyle
Harpold
at Belpre
Mr and Mrs Ted Grmdley
Mrs
Ferne
B Hayman,
and children of Westerville
Junmy
Ally
and
friend were
Larry Lauderm1lt two sons
Chrostmas
Day
dinner
guests
Mr and Mrs George
of
Mrs
June
Wickersham
Rqberts, Bashan, v1slled Mr
and Mrs Charles Foster and son Jeff, Mr and Mrs
during Christmas holidays Roger Beegle and children of
Mrs Ada Norns Is residrng Spoiler were Christmas Eve
at the Christian Anchorage guests of Mrs Wickersham
Rest and Nursmg Home Inc and Jeff, also Mrs Ferne B
at Manetta Mr and Mrs Hayman They all exchanged
Roy Donohew, son J elf Chrtslmas gtfts and attended
the Christmas program at
viSited her Saturday
East Letart Methoatst
Olden Thaxton and Robert
Smtih, Sr are pattents at Church
Chmtrnas Eve dmner
Veterans Memortal Hosp1tal
guests of Mr and Mrs Archie
Mr and Mrs Gerald Jarrell and farruly were Mr
Hayman, son Ketlh were and Mrs Charles Michael,
Sunday guests of Mr and Chuck and Becky Mr and
Mrs Gene Jewell at Letart Mrs Roger Roush Mrs
Mr and Mrs Ted Hayman Russell Fmdley, Mary Find.
and farntly, Westerville, ley Mr and Mrs Louie
spent Thursday night wtlh the Pickett daughter Tracy
Haymans Mr and Mrs
Jtm Wtckersham
of
Hayman and Ketth were Columbus called on Mrs
visitors Chm!mas Day of Mr June Wtckersham and Jeft
and Mrs Robert Hart at
Sunday
Ractne
Chrtslmas Day
and
Mr and Mrs Terry Roush
weekend
guests
of
Mrs
Otto
of Aurora Ill spent the
Jarrell at Racme were Mr
Chrtstrnas holldays with Mr and Mrs otto Jarrell,
and Mrs Vtrgll Roush On
Christmas Eve Mr and Mrs Chicago Ill , Mr and Mrs
Terry Roush Fred Sham George Ball and daughter of
Racme, Mr and Mrs Mar St Albans, W Va, Mrs Rnth
shall Roush and son Joey Grmdstaff Mr and Mrs
were guests of Mr and Mrs Ronme Beddols and two sons
of Columbus, Dallas Jarrell
Vtrgil Roush
Guesto of Mr and Mrs Racme, Rt 2, Archie Jarrell
Lester Roush and farruly Letart Falls Mr and Mrs
Christmas Day were Mr and Freddie Brownmg of Rich
Mrs Don Rtfne and children rnond Va Mr and Mrs
Lucasville 0 • Mr and Mrs Chester Elkms and famtlyl of
Chapmansvtlle, W Va
Jim Connolly Shelly and
Chrtstmas dtnner guests of
Brian Syracuse Mr and Mr and Mrs Dallas Htll were
Mrs Roger Manuel Angie
Mrs Dolly Wolfe, Mrs Carl
and Amy Dtck Smtih Mr Wolfe Jr chtldren Wendy,
and Mr~ Gary Roush and Tracoa and Megan Dale
Jeremy
Wallace Hill Racine Mr and
Mr and 14J's Lester Roush, Mrs Marshall Roush son
Mr and Mrs Gary Roush and Joey Mr and Mrs Darrell
Jeremy Mr and Mrs Don Noms daughter Tracy Mr
Riffle and children were and Mrs Cecil Roseberry and
Sunday dmner guests of Mr children were afternoon
and Mrs Roger Manuel at VISitors of the Hills
Racine
Everette Connolly spent
On Sunday evenmg ,Dec Christmas night with Mr and
19 the chtldren of Mr and Mrs Jtrn Connolly and
Mrs Gerald Hayman met at children at Syracuse
their home . for a gtfl ex
Mr and Mrs Alex Wheeler
change Attending were Mr and son BtU of Bowling Green
and Mrs ,Robert Hart, Brice were Christmas guests of Mr
and Beth Ann Mr and Mrs and Mrs Larry Foster and
Allen Cunnmgham, daughter chtldren at Columbus Bill
Olevta of Ractne Mrs
Wheeler spent a week s
Phyllis Young, Mrs Mi¢y vaca!lon w1th his grand·
Seymore, son ~aron of parents, Mr ~nd Mrs
Moddleport Mr and Mrs Wheeler
Gene Jewell and children of
Mrs Margie Hunt vtsl!ed
Letart, W Va and Ketth Mr and Mrs Wimpy Hunt
Hayman
• and chlldren Christmas Day
Christmas Day evenmg
Mr and Mrs John Htll are
guests
of
Mr
and enjoying a vaca!lon in
Mrs Lewis Ptcke!t and Florida dunng the holidays
Tracy were Mr and Mrs
Mr and Mrs Robert
Max Pockett daughter Lynn, Spencer Tracy Mearns,
Mr and Mrs Charles Doug Barnette and Tray
Michael Chuck and Becky, Spencer were Christmas Day
Mr and Mrs Roger Roush guests of Mr and Mrs Paul
Buo ers at Parkersburg

methods
gresstonal leadership
'
SCORPIO (Ocl 24-Nov 22) .Congress IS expected to do
By Un ted PresS lntern~Jflonal
PORTLA ND Ore ( UP! ) Take that chtp all yo" shoulder little before Carter IS lnauguDr Herbert G Fowler a
today Don t et m1nor Jmpostt1ons rat~ Jan 20, but could break genet
c PS)IC h ~tr sl who recent,
ol olhers gel you upt ig ht and With tradttlon this year to ly was named to reccrve the
surly
hegm work before then on a Len•n Sc ence Pn ze dted at htS
home tn Portland Sunday
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23 Dec package to stunulale the
Fowler 58 had been d redor
doesn t belong toda y Know the
boundanes 'Bnd stayj w t hm

•

""

••

Today's

Sport Parade

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sporta Editor
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - Super Bo"l XI sttll IS siX days
away and a problem has surfaced already Thts ts no httle one,
eother, nor is 1\ confrned only to football Right now It's up m
the alf swinging like some enormous threatemng steel ball,
capable of demolishrng all professoonal sports
The lDlrnediale problem revolves around runrung back
Chuck Foreman of the Minnesota Vtkmgs, the most versa ltle
runnrng back m the game today and that s not excludmg 0 J
Sunpson
Chuck Foreman has 11 lot gomg for hun
He was PlaJII&lt;!r of the Year m the NFC he broke the club's
rushrng record wtth 1,155 yards he caught 55 passes for 567
yards and scored 141Duchdowns wftmsh the NFL co-leader m
thai department with Pittsburgh s Franco HarriS
Chuck Foreman tsn't happy with his contract which has two
more yeal's to run He was delighted wtth tt when he ortgmally
signed tllR 1975, but then was then and now ts now He wants to
renegotiate hLS contract, whtch ts another wa) of saytng he
wants more money
In a way, you can t blame hun for the way he feels He IS a
product of olir tune a time when everybody IS lookmg at what
everybody else makes and then compares that with his own
salary !tlaybe Foreman won t come out and say so, but he has
wthink he contrtbut&lt;s as much to the Vtkmgs as Julius ErVIng
did to the New York Nets and you remember thataffalf
Chuck' Foreman s feelmg ts contagmus Most athletes look
around at all the motltings as Juhus Ervmg did to the New
York Net.., and you remember that affatr
Chuck Foreman s feelmg ts cont.agtous reaching epidemic
proportions tn all sports
Ed Figueroa wrns 19 games for the New York Yankees thts
year, remembers they gave Catfish Hunter $3 mtlhon and
Hunter won only 17 thts year, then sees them giVe Don Gullett
$2 mllllon and ReARle Jackson another $3 mtllion so now Ed
Ftgueroa says he wants a multo year contract for 12 mtlllon
They laul!hed at Charlie Finley for domg 11 but m the end, all
of the teams will have to follow hts lead or else wmd up
estrang~Rg the fans which sometimes can be worse than
ahenating the players You can always get players fans are
harder to come by, espectally m tough economtc tunes
In Ftgueroa 's case the Yankees already have an answer
• We do not negottale player contracts m the press, says
club Prestdent Gabe Paul, ' but Ed Ftgueroa ts nota $2 million
ballplayer We certamly would prefer to have him pitchmg for
us rather than wtth someone else but if he s dectded to play out
his option, we're gonna miSS him •
More and more teams In all ~ports are bound to begm taking
that stance because you can't keep paymg out money you don' t
lake m, and how much longer are the fans gomg to hold still for
mcreased ltcket prtces Even some players realtze that
There s no way of knowmg yet what the V1kmgs wtll do m
Chnck Foreman's case Right now they re more occupied
pre]Niring for the Oakland Raiders, but something drasttc wtll
have to be done by all professional teams about the growmg
]X'acltce of seeking new contracts everytune the tide goes m
and out
Jerry Kapsteln, who has negotiated more than 300 baseball,
football, hockey and basketball contracis for players, IS unoque
among agents m that he doesn't beheve rn re-negottating any
contracts
• I v.e never renegohaled a contract, • he says I had one
player who wanted ID do that, but We parted company He got
another agent U a contraci has a wrttlen clause glVlng the
athlete the right to re-negoltale or if there ts some verbal
agreement to that effect among both parties, that s one thing
II both parties want to re&lt;~pen negohations that's another
thrng But once an agreement Is reached, both parhes ahould
honor that agreement Otherwise, contracts become meanmgless and that'snot good for the club or the player •
Not good for anyone, Jerry Kapstem could have added

QUARTER POUNDER
&amp;
I
FRENCH FRIES

99~
McCLURE'S

airy isl

PASADENA, Calif (UP!)
- Rtcky Bell s college
football career stunted by
ffiJUrles hiS semor year, came
In a grmdmg halt on the fifth
play of the Rose Bowl game
agalRSI Mtchtgan New Years
Day when he was knocked
unconscmus by a tackle
Bell took off around the
rtghl stde of the lme and
churned rnto the Wolverme
secondary where he was htl
1R the back of the head by
safety James Bolden s
drtvmg tackle

After the game, team offt half rnonlhs, oot Vmce Evans
ctals told reporters that Bell has played great and Charles
would be unavailable for White has come on and
mtervtews, that hts head (jjlayed tremendously
hurts very much he ts weak
Bell was taken to
and hred •
Huntington Mernor1al
But despite dizztness, Bell Hospttal but released three
sat on a dressmg room bench hours later reported m good
and talked bnefly not a bout condttlon " wtth no 1ll effects
htmself, but about hiS from the Jn)Ur)
teammates
Coach John Robmson said
Everybody on the team the Trojans 14~ vtctory over
ha~ played trer..endously
the Wollverrnes - Mtchlgan s
sa1d the 21 year old All· third strrught Rose Bowl loss
Arnerir:; tailback I was - enttth!d USC to a claim to
hur• f ~"f" more than two and a the nat10nal champtonshtp

whtch the TroJans last
enJ OYed m 1974
\
He prrused the ltl]ured Bel!
for the tnp 10 the Rosel ,
1
Bowl
He s been the leader of
our team " Robmson said
He s the greatest team
player I ve ever seen He s
JUSt an exceptional hwnan
berng Desptte all the things
that have hapened he had a .
bad two and a haif months
but he's hung m there and
cared about the team

But now there IS a ne" star
on the TroJan honzon and
fo rmer USC grea t 0 J
Sunpson g1ves hiS prophecy
f'm already out of the
record bOoks h~re ' satd the
Buffalo Btlls runrung star I
thmk Charles Whtle IS gomg
to erase ail of us fr om the
books - myself Rtcky Bell
and Anthony DaVIs And the
thmg about Il ls Wh1te ISonly
a freshman
White an 18-year-old Sfoot 18(l.pounder packed the
ba II l2 limes m place of the

InJ ured Bell ga mm g 114
yards and scamperrng seven
ya rds for the frnal TroJan
wuchdown
I kind of fe lt bad about It
SBld White of havrng w
replace Bell
Thts wa s
supposed ID be hos year Bu t I
can I thmk about tha t I JUS!
have to go ont and ptck up the
slack

Pitt Panthers romp, 27-3
NEW ORLEANS (UP! ) As far as the Pittsburgh

Panthers and Georgta
Bulldogs are concerned
today s ballotmg for the
nattonal college football
champiOnship ts a mere for
mahty
I feel Ptltsburgh ts,
without a doubt the best
football team m the country
Georgia .coach Vmce Dooley

satd after his fourth-&lt;anked
Bulldogs were crushed by the
Panthers 27-3, m Saturday s
Sugar Bowl
(Pittsburgh ) co uld do so
many thmgs There are no
weaknesses m lhts football
team
To no one s surpriSe Pttts
oorgh coach Johnny MaJors
agreed

I haven t waved my fmger
1n the a1r and

I haven t worn a

No 1 button ali year long he
sa1d But after the game I
told the team 11 was the best
rn the country
Maybe I should JUSt qmt
while I m ahead
satd
MaJors who IS leavmg w
coach at hts alma mater
Tennessee~ nex.t season
I

don I know how four years
hke thts can be repeated
In four years MaJ ors
brough t Pittsburgh from a t
10 record to Ils first 12-&lt;l
season The chmb was steadv

and none of hiS pl ayers ever
doubled the outcome
We re not exctted We
knew 11 would be thts way all
the Um e said Pittsburgh

defensive back James
Wilson
Before the game, Geor~1a
feit Its strongest problem
wou ld be contarnmg He1sman
Trophy wmner Tony Dorsett
lf the Bulldog s Junkyard
De fense
could muzzle
Dorsett s ru\uAng they felt
thev had a chance

Bul we for ceq them to
throw and after we forced
them mto tl we couldn 1 stop
It sa1d Dooley
Dorsett had JUSt 12 yards on
his flfst seven cames but
Pittsburgh quarterba ck Ma tt
C'&lt;Ivanaugh helped get tbe
Indiana 116 Bucks 109
Panther offense movmg
Dave Rob1sch WI! Jor.cs through the alf Cavanaugh
and Billy Knight combmed completed 10 of 18 passes for
for 73 pomt.. to lead Indiana 192 yards and was voted the
over Mtlwauk ee Rob1 sch game s most valuable player
scored 27, mciuding seven m
While Georgm held Dorsett
a row, m leadrng 111e Pa cers In 65 yards on the flfst half
down the stretch
Cavanaugh was connectmg
Nuggets 145, Spurs 120
on seven of his frrst 11 passes
Dan Issei scored 27 pomts for 165 yards Then 1R lhe
Dav1d Thompson 20, Bobby second half Dorsett took
Jones 18 and Willie W1se and advantage of the startled
Marvm Weool er 17 each as Georgta defense to ftmsh the
Denver ran up the most game w1th a Sugar Bowl
pomts scored m th.e _league record 202 yards rushmg
this year lssel hit\11-&lt;Jf 14
from the field m heipmg the
Nuggets raise their record to
24 10 tops m the Mtd&gt;~ es l
DIVISIOn
Cavahers 104 Rocket.. 80
Cleveland broke open a
light
game with 18
coosecuttvepomt..m the final
quarter, hoidrng Houston to
12 pomts durrng thaI sesston
Campy Russell scored 23
pomts w lead the Cavs two
pomts less than Rudy Torn
JanOVICh had for th e
NEWSPAPER
Rockets

76ers overwhelm Nets 139-110
By KEN ROSENBERG
UPI Sports Writer
For the beneht of millions
of people who had never seen
Juhus Ervmg play but
perh;ops more unportantly
for their own dechnmg
ratmgs CBS-TV dectded to
feature the three-tune ABA
Most Valuable Player m tis
ftrsl national telecast of the
season agamst hiS former
teanunates, the New York
Nets
And while 11 was true th•l
ErVIng dtd score 18 pornts 1R
Philadelphia s 139-110 romp
Sunday 11 was clearly
ev1denl to Nets Coach Kevin
Loughery lhat Ervmg only
remotely resemble! hts
former
self
I just
couldn t believe It," satd
LoUghery Then ltY see hun
play m the flfsl half really
shocked me
Maybe 11 s because he
didn't get the ball as much as
he did here I don 'I think he's
happy playing basketball He
may be happy m life but not
on the court I don I thmk he

likes the role he's playmg
'Juhus ts sunply the most
exc1hng player I ve ever seen

and he s a ~wrrmer I don t
thmk he should he put m that
poslttoft for basketball's sake
It s a shame for the people to
rntss the greatest show m
basketball ''
People may be rnlSSmg the
greatest one-man show m the
game, but Sunday s shoWing
smgled the 76ers as one of the
league's true powers and
s1lenced many Critics who
srud when Ervmg was sold to
Philadelphia on Ocl&lt;Jber for $3
million there weren t enough
basketballs to sahs(y Ervmg
George McGmms and Doug
Collms
Combmmg a balanced
scormg attack wtth strong
rebounding and a prectston
last
break,
they
overwhelmed the Nets to
remam m first place m the
Atlantic DIVISion
Steve Mtx, who hot on all10
of his shots from the 1loor, led
the 76ers wtth a season-lugh
24 pomts, while Uoyd Free

added 22 McGmms 18 'ilnd
Cald"ell Jones and Henry
Bibby 16 apiece
Elsewhere, Golden State
beat Boston 105 98 New
Orleans downed Atlanta 9388
Indo~na
defeated
Milwaukee 118-109 Denver
npped San Anlnmo 145-120
Cleveland trounced Houston
104 80 Los Angeles bea t
Portiand 104-99 Seattle beat
Chicago 83-79 and Kansas
C1ty edged Phoenllt 89-lUI
Warriors 105 Celtics 98
RICk Barry scored 29 pomts
and Phd Smtih and Charles
Johnson each added 18 as
Golden State outsfbre~
Boston 12-4 m the warung
mmutes Jo Jo White had 31
for the Celhcs and Charlie
Scott 31
Jazz 93, Hawks 88
Pete Maravtch fired m 38
pomls and New Orleans
staved off a second-hall rally
to hand Atlanta tts eighth
stratght
defeat
Gaol
Goodrtch added 14 pomt.. for
the Jazz

Turner suspended one year
ATLANTA (UP!) - Flam
boyan! Atlanta Braves owner
Ted Turner ,' suspended for
"tampermg Wllh another
losmg club s slugger, feels hiS
ouster may have dashed hiS
bopes of bemg baseball s
"executive of the year
But Turner satd, his hopes
of a champtonship for the
Braves are sttll alive
Thts ts gomg to make 11
hard for me to be executive of
the year, if we wm the World
Ser~es next year " he satd
Turner, the adverllsmg
rnlllionalfe who took over the
lackluster Nat tonal League
franchise last year and
pledged to 11 a winner,
thought it over a btl m an
mterview &amp;mday night and
added, 'I had my heart set oo
being executive of the year "
He was suspended, and the
Braves lost a ftrst-round
draft turn, when basebiU
Commisstoner Sowle Kuhn
accused htm of violating
regulations of the free agent
r...ntry draft last November
in recMlltlng outfielder Gary
Matli1ews then of the San
Francisco Gtants
The ' • tampering "
allegation apparently
resulted from a cocktail
party Turner held to
mtroduce Matthews to :140
promment Allantana and a
remark he made ID Bob
Lupe, the Giants prealdenl ,
at the World Series A team
spokesman dented that

Turner diScussed money wtth
Matthews pnor w the free
agent draft
Turner was also accused of
tellmg Lurte, 'I don't care
bow much yOu pay Matthews,
I ll pay him more
He s8Jd he will continue
contacttng prospecllve
players, because Kuhn "can t
take my First Amendment
rights away from me
'My frlend, the PreSident
of the United Sillies, Jimmy
Carter, Is the only man I
know who is a bigger cheese
than Bowie Kuhn," he said
Turner, who occupies a box
seat near the Braves dugout
and VISibly cheers foc hiS
team, said he may have w
stay ~orne from games
tfurmg
his
season's
suapelliiOil""; but can keep an
eye on the club on the road
beca111e • the cunmialloner
ham 't uld he'agoing 1.o take
my televillon away from

who played out hos option last
year with the San Franctsco
Gtants, was stgned Nov 4 by
the Braves for a reported
$1 75 million for ftve years
An offtctal m Kuhn 's offtce
said free agent draft

~~·yffltllllhttl

A

"LIIalnl•* ..

oo...,. -"'~·
draf!e\1

'l'llmi!'Mill
Motllle
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bell value n car home !tie
and he ~lh 1n1urance I nv1te
you to call or drop tn ~me

1 "' ' good"'~""'
SU. k faru

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BI:JQnll!ljllll

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ADS DO IT
FOR YOU!
dtrecltves prohibit ciub
offlmals from d1scussmg
salary before the end of the
regular season Clubs are ,
however
permtlted to
approach free agents about
possoble employment and
thetr chmce of location

8 1./J/t fJj

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'dhl?Jseft

THE INN PLACE

TuesdJJy Night Special

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SHOP FOR THE BEST
BARGAINS RIGHT
fROM YOUR ARMCHAIR •• .IN THE PAGES
OF THE

Italion

but IIlli piMa lG Atllnla.
Tllmtr uld Ill

l11s 1 my State fa moil ce
~ l·m I can 1me you wth tile

AGREll IIY
TO SHOP!

me " Many rllld aames are
bro8tlcul on a Tumtr&lt;lomtd

'l'llmtr uld Mallhewt III
ll1hlppy Willi lilt 3 I ...... ,

149 South Thord
Middleport, 0
Phone 992 7155

Vos1t OUr Salad Bar
Spaghetti

Garlic Breao
Coffee. Tea or Mllll
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THE MEIGS INN
Pomeroy, 0.
Pbo·1~e 992 6304

The Daily Sentinel
PHONE 992·2156

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School adniinistrative staff
wins across-hoard increases
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Salary increases for local
schoo l administrators and
county school office personnel, were approved
Sat~rday afternoon following
the' org11nizatiori meetings of
the Gallia Cou.nty and Gallia
Local Boards of Education.
Elementary and secondary

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principals,

·supervisor~,

and

non-.:ertificattid employees of
the county board were
granted an 8.55 pet. increase
in pay·, the same raise-given
to teachers · and classi fied
employees las\ month.
Administ~ators, upon the
recommendation of County
•• Supt. Tom Hairston, were
• p(aced on an U&gt;dex salary
•' schedule. Supt. Hairston said
J
·an index schedule is easier to
change and to calculate; it
provides for a more equitable
means of rewarding training,
e~ perien ce
and respon •
sibility,
and
it relates ad' ministrative salaries
to the

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I Pro :I
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!St~ntlings
Wti

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A.Stand i ngs

19 14 2 40 116 125
17 17 J 38 118 119

New Englnd 17 18

San Drego
Houston

'23 lJ '} JB 133 11 8
18 15 4 JO 12&amp; 118

Winnipeg
Edmonton
Calgary

19 IS

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W L T Pt s. GF GA
1 39

159 129

16 71
JJ 100 137
15 17 4" 37 105 107
Phoenix
14 11 i ;o 121 16/
Satur da y's R cs ulfs
Calgary 5 Edmon ton I
(only gam e scheduled )
Sundttv 's Res ults
Winnipeg "5 Hovs ton 1
Ind ianapolis 4 Phoenix 1
New Eng lane! J Ci nci nnat i 2
Minnesota J Birm ingh am 1
(on I y games sc hedul ed 1
M ond ay 's Ga mE's
(no games sch edu led l
.
Tu esda y 's Ga mes
Hous ton at EdmOnton
San D iego at Qvebec
lndianopolis at Winn ipeg
Pho enix at Birm ingham
lonty games sc hec!vled J

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38 132 138

17 17 2 36 158 1))
13 77 J ·· 77 135160
West

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Cincin na t i
Birmnghm
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Bv United P r ess Inter na ti onal
Eas t
W l T P t s . GF GA
Quebec
22 15 1 .15 168 137
Ind i ana pi s
Minnesota

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Gallia Local school budget
.o f $6,116,516 is approved

NHL Standi ng s
The Gallia County LoCal
By Unifl'd Press tnrer ni\fional
Cam pbell Conference
Board
of Education Saturday
Pa tri ck Oiv ision
W l T Pt s . GF GA afternoon approved Its· 1977
Philade lph" 23 7 8 54 l d~ 97 appropriati ons tot alin g
NY lsla ndrs 22 9 6 50 129 92
$6,116,5'16.37: Assistant School
A tla n ta .
~8 14 7 43 176 122
NY Rangers 16 15 10 .17 150 139 Superintendent David C.
Sm ythe Division
Campbell ' said the budget's
W L T Pf s. GF G A
St llov is
16 18 S 37 111 134 General Fund thereby was
Chlca9o
13 20 6 32 126 14~ increased $827,517.86.
Colorado
10 n 6 26 107 136
Although the 1977 General
Vancovver 1127 3 25 111 16J
Minnesota
7 21 9 23 102 155 Fund totals $5,698,427 .86, the
Wal es Confer ence
overall fi gure was reduced by
Norris Di visi on
W L T Pt s. G F G A $247,500 over the original
Montreal
28 5 6 6? 186 86
Pitt sburgh 16 16 6 Ja 112 130 budget request the board of
• Los Ange.les 13 16 10 36 1?5 124 education submitted to the
Det ro it
13 21 4 30 11 3 139 Gallia
County . Budget
4 26 101 152
• WashingAIndam11s 23Divis
Commission last July.
ion
W L T Pt s. GF G A
Last summer, the hoard's
Bu ffalo
24 9 4 52 139 91
J
proposed
budget was .based
Sosfon
23 1i 3 49
119
,I
Tor onto
18 16 ··6 4? 149 133 upon an est!l)late income
•• Cleveland 11 22 1 29 114 1'44
generated from 16 mills,
Saturd ay ' s Results
however, the pudget· comVancouver S NY lstanders 1
Phil a 7 Cleveland 2
mission did noi increase the
Toronto 3 Washington 1
,;
millage to 16 mills, but went
Pittsburgh 6 Bu ff alo 3
St Louis 3 MinnesoTa 1
to 15.4 mills ; thus the board
Los Angeles 5 Bo ston 2
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~ill nat receive an·additional
(only g a mes schedu led)
•',,
Sunda y' s Res ults
'247',500 as originally
Montreal 7 Atlanta 0
estimated.
Washington 2 St. Loui s 1
In. order to maintain a
· Colorado 6 Detro it 4
.,
NY Rangers 5 Vancouver 3
balanced
budget, several
NY lslenders 3 Bvffa lo 3. tie
adjustments
were made ,
Chicago 6 To r onto 4
(only games sch.eduledl
according to Campbell. The
Monda y's Gam e!i
overall budget represents an
Philadelph ia at Mon treal
! only game scheduled )
extension
of
present
,•
Tu e!id~"t 'S Gam es
programming,
or
planning,
Detroit at Washing ton
Vancouver at PittSbur gn
including such unknown
Los Ange le-s at St Lo u is
factors
as inflation, the gas
(only g ames scheduled )
shortage and increased~
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NBA Stand ing s
By Un ited·Pr e!i s lntern afi onal

Eastern Conference
Atlant ic Di vis ion
W L. Pet ,
Ph il adelph ia
19 14 576
NY Kn icks
18 15 5d5
Boston
17 16 .515
Buffalo
15 20 .. 429
NY Nets
12 1? JSJ
Centr al DiVision
W. L. P c1.
Cleveland ·· 21 U .600
Houston
19 13 .591l
New Orleans 19 17 52B
San Antonio \ 1,8 17 ,514
Wa shington
16 17 485
Atla nta
11 ?6 316
. Wes tern Con fer ence
Midwest Divisi on
W. L. Pd.
Den ver
21l 10 706
Det ro it
20 15 571
Indiana
17 70 ..459
Kans as City
17 20 .459
Chicago
11 70 355
M il waukee
9 17 250
Paci fic Division

w. L Pet.

GB
1

1
5

'J

2' '

3
4
10! 1
GB

-

41 ~

8' 1
8• 1
111 1

16

SUr'!d tly '~ Res ult s
13' NY ~ ~ -itt~ 110

Ph il a
New OrleeM ~J Allen ra &amp;8
Indiana \16 M ilwavk.ee 109
Denver 14$ San Anton io 110
Golden St•te lOS Boston 98
Cle-veland 104 .,.ouston 80 ·
Kansas Cit y 89 Phoen i w 88
LOs .C.ngetes · tO• Portland 99
Seattle 8J C, icago 7'1
ronly games scheduled I

MondoJ j's Gam es
Buffalo.. ar San Antonio
(onlv game scheduled I

Tue-sday's

G1 m e~

GoiOeo Slate .iJ t NY K nlt ks
Ocnv~r at AIIMta
NY Nets.a t Chicago
PhormiK .at M il waukee
Bllston at Por fl nnd
ltnl y gall"'\'5 ~ • edul cd t

Bowl

Rose Bowl
So. Ca li fornia 14 Mich iga n 6

SYRACUSE - Miss
Ola1 e Lyon Benschoter, 18,
d•~hler of Mr. and Mrs.
Ka ,. J. Beoschoter, Cyg·
net, nd granddau&amp;bter of
Mrs. Los Damewood of
Syracuse, has been accepted lor the 1976
pubUcatlon of" Who's Who
Among American · Higb
School Students". A senior
at Elmwood High School In
Cygnet, sbe works as a
teacher's aide In tbe
elementary school kindergarten tbere. Her
bobbles : :e painting,
music and basketball.
Follow ' 0g graduation,
Diane plans to work
towards becoming a certified nursery scbool
teacher.

Phone-free advice offered on
how to pay y~ur income taxes
ATHENS
Starting
January 3, tbe toll-free
telephone service to assist
taxpayers will be available
from 8:30a.m. until 5:45p.m,
Monday through Friday. The
number to call is 1-M0-5821700.
David VanVoorhis, District
Director's Representative .for
Athens stated the extended
hours of telephone service
wil,l continue throughout the
filing period.
Most calls are received between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. and
taxpayers calling during this
period may experienc,e a
brief wail. VanVoorhis stated
that last year Mondays were
also very busy. "Many people
worked on their taxes over
the weekends, VanVoorhis
said, and would call .JRS on
Monday."
VanVoorhis suggested
taxpayers could g~t faster
ass istance if they . called
principals. Tile board has
approved the employment of
two fulltime school nurses
~nd

additio~al

elemenl~ry

school prmcJpals. Beginmng
with the ,1977-78 school term,
no elementary principal will
have more than one building.
Supt. Hairston
was
authoriz~ to write a job
description for David Campbell, who was recently appointed Assistant Supt. for
administration and program,
and to make specific
recommenda tlons regarding
the disl&amp;t's needs and goals
for 197~
.

Port Huron

l o~Uskeg on

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16 18 4 36 136 14S
15 17 5 35 140 152

south
w II pis. gf ga
· O.vton
18 11 1 37 151"151
Toledo
16 17 S 37 1S3 165
Columbus 15 17 i 37 149 ISS
Fl. Wayr10 U ·16 6 34 136 169
Solunloy's Results
Dayton 6 Col umbus J
Sag lfh!W 6 Por t Huron 3

F!J!:f Wayr10 4 Mu skegon 0
· unly gam~s scl&gt;eduled
Sunday's ~esulh

'Port HUI'on -4 Dayton 3

Flint 8 Muskegon 3
Ka lamazoo 6 Columbus 3
Sagi naw 9 Toledo 1
Mo..... y's Gomts
No games schedul!d

ONE
LARGE GROUP

But, we also have a vital
interest · in loss protection,
as sh ould our client s. We

Dear CUE :

encourage care, caution

Even the biggest spenders have theb- own private tittle
economies: and the reasons usually date back to " how they

and
safety ..... preventIve
mea sures whi ch can keep
that (;ar accident from

were raised. "

MISS LILLIAN BETI'ER
PLAINS, Ga. CUP!)·
Jimmy Carter says his
mother, '.'Miss Ullian", is
feeling better and may be
released soon from the
hospital where She is being
lreated for a muscle ailment
In her leg . .
"She's feeling really good
today - the best I've seen
her,", Carter told reporters
who- buttonholed h!l)l at the
Americus:Sumter County
Hospilal after he visited his
mother Sunday evening.
Mrs. Carter has been in the
hospital for the past 12 days,
recuperating from a painful
"muscle spasm" and a postelection fatigue.

.

, . PR.

,Your mother, for Instance, probably squeezed her tea bags
dry, while I'll bet someone in your husband's family had an

from

lnlJI'esalve string ball.
.
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· A good parlor game I~ ""Name Your Par$nony ," But it
may become a confessional before the evening ends, or a ''Can
you top this?" session ''fingering" various mates and friends.
I'm ~ catsup bottle rinser, myself.
How about YOU,readers? If you're hoarders or recyclers
of silmethlng less common than !isSUe paper and two.&lt;fay oid
pot roast, let me know. Your "savers" Should make a goOd
column. - H.

Prev~nt ion saves li fe, limb

and properly .... and helps
control inSurance costs and
premiums.

When losses do occur, our

policy holde.r s can count on
protection and service in

lime of need , But we still
say -

Dear Helen :

best poli cy.

~­

DALE C. WARNER
INS.

'I

Dear Mad:
Answers to your question range from tbe "Madonna
complex" ("sex Is for hookers, not pure, squeaky-clean wifemothers") to "Maybe you don't offer what he wants."
· You may never find the real reason your husband prefers a
pro's!led, butyou'llcomecloser asking HIM, not me. - H.

992·2143
1.02 W. Main

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Pomeroy

.

Dear How:
Write to the Ditect' Mail-Marketing Association, Inc., 6
Easl43rd St., New York, N. Y. 10017, and ask that your name
be taken off advertisers' lists. Since most reputable sellers are
DMMA members, yolir mail volume Should soon decrease. H.
•
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· · oonan~
8 X 10
NATURAL COLOR
PORTRAIT

handling

• Oian Mill~ uses Kodak paper • Limit: O~e special ollerperlami·
ly every 90 days • Cannot be used wllh Olan Mills Club Plans or
at
other advertising oilers.

_
Fire Hall
Come early,.np bring this ad to: Middle ort
Tuesday. January 4: Ho11rs : 1-7 p.m. P
Bring gra~dparents in for a free 8 x 10 color
portrait of them. · ·

gfontr;ills

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MISS AMERICA &amp; CONNIE
DRESS.&amp;SPORT SHOES

lADIES'

Grim forecast

. BAGS

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Reg. 115.99 to 121.00

Shoulder &amp;
Dress Styles

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Y2 OFF

It's no news that this heating season's been colder than usual. ·
Unfortunately, the worst is yet to co~e. The National
Weather Service predicts colder than normal wea.ther over the
next few months. This means your furnace must use more gas
to keep you warm.
'
On top of tha\. rate increases. caused by higher wellhead
p(ices will also boost gaSbills substantially this winter.
,
What ~an you do to hold down rising gas bills? The best
way is to lower your thermQstat. Simply cutting back from 72
degrees to 67 degrees will redu~ consumption by 15-18 percent.
Call us for tips on additional conservation method~
Save gas for all of us. Save money for yourself.
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NEXT DOOR TO ELBERFELDS
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CHAPMAN SHOES
0.

Not-so-simpk case
of caviar 'Stains

MIDDLEPORT DEPARTMENT STORE'S
MONDAY
MEIGS CHAPTER, Order
of De Molay, 7:30 p.m.
Monday at . Middleport
Ma sonic
Tem ple
lor
initiation . All Master Masons
invited.
.
..
FO REST RUN Ba ptist
Chur c h, congreg ationa l
meeting, 6:30p.m. Monday at
the church. The Rev. Ny!e
Borden to outline the year's
prog ram . other church
business to be discussed..

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STARTS TODAY!...:

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TUESDAY
POMEROY CHAPTER,
O.E.S. 7: 45 p. m. Tuesday
night at th e Pomeroy.
Masonic Temple.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Firemen's Auxiliary , 7: 30
Wednesday at the firehouse.
Mrs. Kate Bachner, Mrs.
Euvetta Bechtle and Mrs.
Robert a Dalle y will be
hostesses.

TO
NO. 3 F'OR FOXX
LAS VEGAS , Nev. IUPI J Comedian Redd Foxx, the
Sharp-tongued junkman in
the television series "Sanford
and So,n, n was ma_rried
during the weekend to Yun
Chi Chung, a Korean native
who lives in Los Angeles.
Clark County District Court
Judge Michael Wendell
officiated during the fourminute ceremony attended
by 50 invited guests.

ON ALL

WINTER-WEAR
THROUGHOUf THE STORE!
COATS, JACKETS, SHIRfS,
PANTS, AND MANY OTHER

Mr. and Mrs. Carl McElroy ·.charlotte and Mr, Harley
of Columbus, Mr. and Mrs, Smith were Sunday callers of
DEGREE WON
ITEMS ON SALE.
Bill McElroy, Jeff and Joey Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith
SYRACUSE Roger
POLLY'S' PROBLEM
in wanu water. Good luck for Sayre, son of Mr. and Mrs.
were Christmas Day guests and Mr. and Mrs. Daniel
D
·
h' · ·
of Mr. and Mrs. Pa ul Worley and. Stacy.
EAR POLLY - Recently . I IS IS JUSt a gamb1e. Repeat Brooks Sayre, Syracuse, has
I served ~ ·.black caviar if necessary, - POLLY.
. received h1's bachelor of
MCElroy.
Miss Patricia Thoma of
spread ·to my guests and i~ . DEAR POLLY - One of science degree in industrial ·
Mr. and M"".
· on my while my p e1 p eeves IS
· WI'th pat- technology
-.. Loo Davidson Kentucky spent Christmas . rnade 'st alliS
fr om
the
and daughters and Mable with her parents, Mr. and Ia bl ec1ot h that I cannot wash , 1ern compames
·
for not University of North Flor1·da
Wood were Christmas Mrs. ljoward Thoma . Also
- h ·
out How can I remove these
avmg more patterns 1or at Jacksonville. Roger 1·s
holiday guests of Mr. and visited l!randparents, Mr.
·
t
th 1
be
Mrs. Jam,es Reed of Lan- and Mrs. Harley T. Johnson . cav1ar stains? - MRS. M. Z. cos .umes a ,can worn. on ho.me for !he hol•'days and on
caster.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom SumDEAR MRS. M. Z. vanous occaSions. fl seems Feb. 1 will report to Pen·.
and
Mrs.
·Daniel
Caviar
is
not
an
everyday
they
a standard
item ·sa cola', Fla., where he wt"ll .
Mr
merfield and daughters of f
th 1 couldld he ld
h
W I
S
Illinois were · Christmas . ood so I can find ~o stain
a ·wou se om ave to be attend the Naval Aviation
or ey, tocky of Beckley ,
removal suggestions for It changed. - SHARON.
Officers Candidate Sch·•I of
W Va Mr and Mrs Doyle holiday visitors of Mr. and ·
·
DEAR POLLY
Th
~
' ·• Kall,
·
specifically.
Since caviar is
.the U.S. Navy. Sayre ea•!
107 MILL
MIDDLEPORT 0.
992·3148
Knapp,
Kevin· and Mrs. Robert Russell, Mr. and r·
h
h t k
·- t ose
·
' 1'er
IS eggs you might try the
w o a t campmg nps served in the navy.
llllliiiiooiiiiiiii.,.iiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiioiiiiiiiioriiior----------------.
.
Charles
Mr. and were
Mrs. Mrs.. Steve
Haggy
and
1o11 owmg
· remedy ' suggested m1g
· hlllke the 1o11 owmg,
· Take
M
d
M
D
ld
Harlev and
T.•Johnson
1anu1y, r . an
&lt;
.
rs. ona
for LINENS stained by eggs anewtrasilcanalongto wash
'
Christmas Day guests of Mr. Russell, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald or meat juice. Soak in cool in. The kids will love this.
and Mrs. Charley Smith. Mr. Russell and family.
water. Apply unseasoned Clothes could be stored in it
and Mra. Hurley E. Jolinson
Mr. and Mrs. William meat tenderizer to stain, keep for the trip home and then usc
and family were evening Boy!!$ of Columbus spent moist and when satisfactory it for the trash . Also save old
caUers.
·
·
Christma s with Bertha
results are attained rinse out ' clothes and socks and take
•M•r•a•.-G•e•n•e•"- L•a•m•b•e•rt•,- •R•usse.., 11. ___
.,.__~~~~~~~~, them along to wear while
, camping,
even
old
1111111
11111111
mismatched socks could be
'
,worn. Then nobody has to
then worry about their
clothes, since they can be
thrown away as they are
taken off. Of course, they
. would he put in the proper
trash containers and not be
left scattered about the
SALE STARTS TUESDAY, JAN. 4, 1977
camping site. - KATHIE.
WOMEN'S
&amp;
ONE GROUP .
DEAR POLLY - I clean
cloth shoes by sprayU&gt;g them
CHILDREN'S
witK rug shampoo at night, let
them dry and then brush the
wi~h
next day and they look like
new , (Test first to see effect
ONL~ •
of spray on color and fabric. )
:.... KIT.
Dress Patents &amp;
DEAR POLLY - Everyone
·
OFF
Leather Casuals
does not bave access to sand
lues to $14.50)
to use for their winter driving
REG. PRICE
problems, but everyone does
ON G
have
newspapers.
I
MEN'S SHOES
remembered this when I got
Dress &amp; l;asual
stuck on the Ice on my own
•
ON' ALL MERCHANDISE
driveway and the wheels
SAL.E
were spinning away , I tucked
IN STOCK!
some newspapers in front and '
ANOTHER GROU
DIAObNAL
back of the tires and along ·'
ONE
with a little shoveling was
GROUP
AT
soon able to d.rive right ·off
{
.
that Ice. When you put the
The PLAZA • G38!iOW
Shovel in your. car trunk to
Drama li e deco r~ lor styling'
have ready fo,r such
Cabmet fin&lt;s hed m si mul ated
lmlergencies
put in a pile of
'wood -gram .AmeriCan Wal nut.
newspapers, too. This really
Solid-Sta le Super Vodeo
works. Do ~ot forget to pick
Values to S26.99
Range Tum ng Syste m woth 1
NtE - MISS WONDERf:liL
up
the
newspapers
after
you
Syn ch roma lic 70- Pos!\•on UHF
have gotten off the ice. - V.
THOM MeAN
Cha nnei 'Selector. Automatic
s.
Tint Guard . VH F and UHF
DEAR POLLY - I used the
Antennas .
Casual &amp;
ONLY
smallest curve-of a paper &lt;;,lip
Dress
.
• tOO% Solid-Stale Tilan:.
to replace a missing wlreln a
26DV Chass(s
Alid
louvered window shutter. I
ONE GROUP
One
Group
• Patented Power Senlry
cut the clip with the pliers
WOMEN'S
Voltage Regulating System
and used a small hammer tb
MEN'S &amp; BOYS'
lap II into place. - BAR• Br!lliant Chroma color
BARA L.
PiCiure Tube
AND ALL
Polly will send you one of
,her . "peacliy" ·thank-you
SALE . . . ..
cards, Ideal for framing or
OFF
placing In your family scrapValues to $16.99
•
, book, if she uses your favorite
REG.
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her column. Write Polly's
PRICE
Pointers In care of this newspaper.

Get this '1895 value mobile TV cart
the purchase of this
FREEl ·

•

GIRLS'

LINED
WINTER
BOOTS

100% SO~IO-STATE

lllO II

,SHOES

8..

20%

30%0FF

STORE-WIDE

17"compact

•8.88

portable TV

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DINGO "
BOOTS

...

'

1 GROUP

Polly's Pointers

GUESTS ENTERTAINED
Holiday guests of Mrs. Mrs. Butch Russ~ll and ,
Thelma Grueser 21 her iOS Tamara, Colu.nlius; Mf. and
Plum St., Pomeroy residence Mrs. Robert Hall ey and
were Mr. and Mrs. .Jork da ughter , Amy, Cheshire,
Grueser, Sheila Kay and and Mr. and MI'II. Larry
Brya n, Mt: 'Vernon; Mr. and Hudson and Lori, Pomeroy.

heritage house's JANUARY

·~

GREAT SA VINGSI

lea

Other Christmas weekend · Nelgler, Mrs. Eunice Eblin
visitors Included Mr. and and Mr. and Mrs. Larry Eblin
Mrs. Robert Eblin, Sandy visiting here !rOll) Alabama.

NOW I

'

.FAMILY GROUPS: $1.00 EXTRA PER PERSON

....•-

Names!

THE ART OF AWARENESS
BY MRS. BERNICE CARPENTER,
.
BEND 0 ' THE RIVERt ARDEN CLUB
·
The persons who are intere ted in ga rdening or flower
arrangement can find many bo s which will teach them
technique, color and rules of design as well as methods of
growing "bigger and better" tomatoes or dahlias. These are
helpful and important, but there is one other quality, not found
m books, that is even more importa nt -the art or awareness.
Martha Ryan Lowry writes in her book, "Floral Art for
America;; '
"Awareness is seeing the color of the sea as it rolls in to
shore.
"It is seeing abstract sculpture in a
shell.
"It is seeing sculpture in a branch against a wintry sky.
" It is ·seeing beauty in wood that has been twisted and
turned by the tide or other forces of nature.
" It is seeing expression in the faces of flowers.
" It is seeing texture in a leaf.
" It is seeing rhythm in the stems of flowers as they hold up
their heads~
" It is seeing form in fruits and veg~ tables.
" It is seeing the architectural structure of a pine cone.
"It is seeing and feeling a poem in a pine tree againsta sky
of blue.
'
'
" It is seeing the basic relationShip of all things to Nature
and striving to discover NatW'e's unexplained mysteries.
" All this and ever so much more lies within everyone of us ,
ready to awaken when the desire to create 'demands fulfillment.
" I believe in the beauty that I see, hear and feel around
me. We all have access to it in plant material, in flowers colorful ,fragile , sculptured; c!Janging and exquisite. I believe
that beauty is a necessity, that if we see beauty, feel beauty ,
think and express' it, that this.world will become a better place
in which to live.
·
"For the pure joy of living let us bring flowers into our
hom es, in sickness and sadness, joy and gladness, and let them
speak for us when words come not too readily to our lips."

Wolfpen News Notes

99¢
-

+++

Dear Helen:
You printed a .way to eliminate junk mail from your life,
butllost the address. Please tell us again, - ijOW?

aortrait ·

pius soc

+++

•
My husband hasn't slept with me in seven years. A friend
told me yesterday She saw qim disappearing into a cheap hot~ I
with an obvious prostitute .
Why would a man waste money on something he could get
at home for free? - MAD
·

prevention iS the

"

2PR. $10

,

starting , that

fire

.•·:
...··..•

And Many
Other
I
Famous

,

happening. that building

.•... .

Miss
•••Connie.
- . America
.

DRESS .· SPORT
BOOTS

'No yaw s schoduled

•

in case of loss. ·.

·..••,
....

STARTS TUES., JAN. 4 AT 9:00 A.M.

Tuesd1y 's G.mes

.....

provi de pollcle$ which ,
afford financial prqtecllon •

•

·North
'¥. I I pis, gf go
17 15 7 4f 158 145
18 15 4 40 158 133

prl rn arv funct ion Is to

com m itted .

ROYAL PREDICTION
LONDON IUPI ) - · A
British astrologer ' has
predicted that Prince
Charles, heir to the BritiSh
throne, will marry this year.
The new princess of wales
could be· Caroline Longman,
2:&gt;, daugh ~er of ooe of Queen
Elizabeth"s bridesmaids, astrologer' Roger Elliot said.
Though Cbarles' current
girlfriend is Davina Sheffield,
Elliot ssid Miss Longman
was "a real possibility"
because · "her Mars is
precisely in line with his
Venus, making it a very
sweetly sexy liaison as well.;,
Charles lias taken Miss
. Longman, daughter of Lady
Elizabeth Longman, skiing
and oul to dinner. She has
been his guest at the ,Ascot
races and at Ba!l)loral, his
mother's castle in Scotland.

League Standings
United Press International

Saginaw
Flinl

, 1aat through three cupe of hot water.
· But get him : he expects·me to save old string and roll it on
his atrlng ball !hat is already almost a foot through.
Why Is It that people can be so parsimonious about some
thlnga, 110 proDigate with others ? He's.•extravagant .. about
wutlng hot waler,lor example, buill the kids leave the hose
. oo outiloors, be raises the roof. - CAN'T UNDERSTAND 'EM'

our

.;~ gen cy ,

~ ~ ~ burglary from being

Tuesday through Friday
from 8:30-10 a.m. and ~ : 45 .
. p.m.
The Athens office, located
at24 E. State St. will be open
every Monday from 9 a.m.-4
p.m., during the fi!in_g season
to help people with \heir tax
returns.

International Hockey

19 13 3 A1 16 1 127

As an Independen t In·

surance

'

B 1
ow
Hou s ton 20 Maryland 21

K a l~ mazoo

- Dear Helen :
My husband ldds thepanfs off me because I make a lea)lag

..•'•
.-

c011on

GB

Portland
211 lJ .6.d9 Los Ange les
l2 13 629 1
Golden Sta re
17 15 531 ,p ,
s eatHe
19 19 .500 51 .,
Phoenix
\ 4 17 452 7
Saturday ' s ReJul ls
Bu ff alo 101 NY Nets 87
NV Kn lck;s 121 Cleveland 110
Washington 104 Houston 89
Por tland 89 Chicago 87
Con ly games scheduled)

.

Oranqe

Ohio St. 27 Colorado 10·

L

To Eaeb lila ' Own Parsimony

••,

College Football Results
Sugar Bowl
Plllsburgh 27 Georgia 3

'.

of Huntington-East Exit 5
from 1-'4 ; U. S. 60 North,
Huntington, West Virginia
{304 ) 529-1331, and February
15, 1977, . Holiday Inn Riverfront ·(Covlngton, Ky.),
Fit~ St. Edt from 1·75, 800
West Third Street, Covington,
Kentucky, (606) 291-4300.
Handout materia!' will lie
available at the meeting or
may be obtained from E. A.
Joering, Study Manager,
Ohio River Basin Commission, 36 E. Fourth St.,
Clnclnnat~ Ohio, 45202. j .

Mr. and · Mrs . William Stephenson's children and
S!ephensqn entertained with grandchildren , Mr. and Mrs.
a Christmas Day buffet style Jerry Colmer, Shari, Billie
dinner at their home.
· and Timmy , Mr. and Mrs.
Their guests were Mrs. Jim Farley, David·, Jamie
and Joey, Dave and Tarr.my
Johnson, Harold and Nancy
Whittekind, Randy and
Jimmie Snider.
A gift exchange was enjoyed following the dinner.

BEST' POLICY

'

United Press lnternationa t
Bowls

;s mE

workshops

Two pu~llc workshops have
been scheduled by the Ohio
River Basin Commission to
solicit recommendations lor
tbe development or a viable
water resources plan lor the
· Middle section of the Ohio
River (Kanawha River to
Kentucky River ) and Its
minor tributaries.
These wor,kshops are
designed to provide an opportunlty for the general
public in the Huntington, W,
Va., ancJ,.the Cincinnati, Ohio,
areas to discuss with the
study management team all
water and related land
resource needs and problems
and potential solutions, and to
express their opinions as to
which needs and problems
Should.be ilolved··and in what
way.
Similar workshops have
been held in Parkersburg,
Youngstown, Wheeling, and
Beaver Falls, 'Pa.
.
Two separate sessions will
be held at each city, one from
3 p.m. to 5:30 p.m., and the
second from 7 p.m. to 8:30 ·
p.m. The dales and locations
of the workshops are
February 8, 1977, Holiday Inn

Stephensons (3ntertain family at dinner

•'

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Saturday

Administrative o.ther expenses, $49,034; Instruction,
$2,631 ,031 ;' Coordinate Activities, $43,000; , Libraries,
$90,808 ; Transportation ,
$694 .SSB; Playgrounds ,
$29,952; Other Auxiliary,
$590 ,~ ; School Operations,
$642,096 ; Mamtenance of
schools, $298,435.; General
Debt Service, $215,000 a'ld
Contingency, $100,000.
Regarding the board's
recent allocation of $200,000
for classroom supplies and
equipment, Supt. Thom as
Hairston reported that all
requisitions for new text·
books, classroom supplies
·and new equipment have
been completed and placed in·
the mail.
Hairston also told the board
that he is now interviewing
for the positions of school
nurse and elementary

PREVENTION

CHAPMAN'S JAN'UARY

maintenan ce costs which
could necessitate some adjustments in the expenditure
accounts.

7 11

GB

The board's 'budget funds
are as follows:
· General $5 ,698 , 427 .86 ;
Bond, 135',185 ; Lunchroom,
$390,240; Uniform, $1,500 and
Permanent ·Improvement,
$1 ,163.51 for a total budget' of
$6,126,517.37.'
General Fund receipts
will include .$4,504,500 from
real estate taxes; $60,000
from personal property
taxes ; $660,012 from state
foundation fund s from
January - through July;
$18,000 from the State Of
Ohio ;
$15,000
from
miscellaneous; $300,000 from
sale of notes; $100,000 from
other miscellaneous accounts
and $8,500 from F edera I
sources.
Here is an overall breakdown ofthe budget by various
categories:
Administration, $136,822;

stem study

~ two

teac'hers ' salary schedule. schedule; Asst. Supts. 1.50 ; a.m . to 2 p.m. In terms of
The initiation oP the ad- directors, 1.42; high ,school salary, the board agreed that
minlstrators' salary schedule prin~lpa ls, 1.40; supervisors, those cooks working on eight
calls for a two-step process, 1.34; elementary principals, hour shift receive one hour
due to some inequities of past 1.27; school psychologist , additional pay based on ,the
admi nistrative salaries as 1.34, and dietician - cafeteria cook's S!llary schedule (2.80
per hour or $500 per year
well as the need to keep manager, 1.23.
based
on a 182 day work
administrators salaries at !he
Last month , teachers
·
sa me percentage level as the received an 8 . ~ increase in · yean .
raises provided l~r teachers. salary, pushing a starting
J. C. Mitchell, Rt. i, BidElem~ntary principals are on teacher's salary to $8,'600 well, a member of the board
a 10\1 month contract .. High beginning Jan. I. Although for the past two years, was
schoi)l principals wo,rk II starting teachers received na med . board president ,
months .
•
,
just a $880 pay hike, veteran replacin g J . E. (Dick )
Effective Saturday, the ' instructors with· their in- Cremeens. William Carter,
sa laries of the four county crements got over $1,000.
Rt. 2, Patriot, was' elected
elementary principals were
Cla ss ifi ed emplo yes , vi ce-presi dent. Carte r
increased · from a low of {cooks, sec retaries, bus presided over the four-hour
$15,999 per yea r to $17,365. drivers and custodians ) were session in the absence of
The two elementary prin- given an 8.55 in,ease in pay Mitchell, a heart patient at
cipals witll .mo,re experience as was Mrs. N ,mi Beman, the Holzer Medical Center.
Following a written request
went from $16,237 to $17,628, board clerk.
ll igh sch ool principals'
in a separate motion, .the by WIUiam Bahr, president of
salaries for the two with the board gave Asst. Supt. for the Galli a County Local
most exP.,rience w~nl from Administration David C. Teachers' Assn., the hoard
$17,955 to S19,491 while the Campbell, ·a 1.53 pet. index named Carter, Supt. Hairston
two administrators with less ra ise (8.55 pay hik e), · and board member James'v.
experience were raised from equivalent to other em- Blevins to se rve· . as
$17,910 to $19,437.
' ployees. His income will be negotiators this year for a
new board-teacher master
Supervisors went from over 121,000 per year.
$17.143 to $18,619; the bus
The board also extended contra!!(. The request, on
supervisor and Title coor- the number of personal leave behalf of the GCLTA, stated
dinator from $18,149 to days from two to three for that negotiations should
$19,708; d!etician-.:afeteria certificated employ3 and begin as set forth by article I
mana ger from $10,500 to increased the prese
I ~ , of the master contract signed
$1 1,400
and
school a ccumuhitive sick leave , Sept. 1974.
psychologist from $15,622 to provisi on to 150 days.
Regular board meetings
$16,968,
Classified personnel already were set for the second
The county hoard adopted had three days of personal Saturday of each month
the new localteachers' salary leave. In addition, regular beginning at 9 a.in. for the
schedule which provides for partlime employees (3 or 4 county board business and
an 8.55 pet. increase for its hours per day ) will be paid shortly afterwards for local
hea ring
and
speech their regular wage for p~ id business . Board member
therapi sts , county school holidays.
"
compensati9n was set at $20
se cretary and attendance
To establish a consistent · per r.egular meeting . plus
officer.
P;Olicy, the board lipon the travel.
Beginning with the 1977-78 recommendation of Supt.
In a final action, the hoard
school year, administrators Hairston,
adopted
a accepted the resignation of
will be placed on the resolution that cooks who are Ed Spears, Rt. I , Cheshire,
following index:
assigned to the new breakfast lOngtime maintenance man
Asst. Supt. for ad- program work from 6 a.m. to for the old Kyger Creek and
ministration, 1.53 (all in 2 p.m. dally while those cooks Gallia County Local School
percent) of le.achers' salary who just have a lunch Districts. Spears retired due
program only work from ! "to health .reasons.

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·--

WOMEN'S SHOES

BOYS'

SHOES

DINGO EAGLE BOOT

only·

$888

DINGO BOOTS

PURSES ·

30%

30%

· Hurryl
Come in todayl

l~gels-· Furniture
992·2635

A tbGMhl lor ll)e day:
Brltlah satlrlat Jonathan
Swift said, ''!'here Ia nothing
In thia warld constant ' but

InconstancY·" .

*

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_SHOES

AtL SALES
FINAL!
.

he~-ltage

house

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"

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proposed permissive auto Boosters.
license tax .
Feb. 18 - Closing of the
~· eb . 12- Eastern teachers
Pomeroy-Mason bridge time
attended a workshop to was reduced to five month&amp;,
review the metric · system. about one-half of the orlgl~al
Southern
teachers attended schedule: •
$500,000.
enforce restrictions on
in-service
workshops.
Feb. 19- Mines I and 2 of ·
Jan. 29 - A drive began to mobile hon\es·. Fire hit two
Feb.
14
- Two persons the Southern Ohio Coal Co.
collect funds•lor a ladder fire garage buildings in which
truck to serve Meigs County. !ann equipment was stored escaped serious injury or jVere closed due to .a 'saf~y
.
Damages were set at $25.000 . ·with losses set at $8;000 in the death when a car driven by · dispute .
Marcella
Charles,.
Columbus,
Feb. »- The Ohio 'River ·
In a fire which struck the Carpenter area.
home of Mr. and Mrs. James . Feb. 6 - .It was announced was struck and went over the again went on the rise and
Alexander near Rutland.
that two women - Evelyn riverbank in Minersville , . Pomeroy's business section
Jan. 30 - Eleanor Robson Clark and Virginia Blazewlcz coining very close to going was threatened with a Ooqd.
Feb . 22 - Costuming
. became the first candidate \O · - would begin serving for the. Into the Ohio River. The
Dalton
Grover
ho/fle,
Bailey
carried
out the jnternatlol)lll
file a P.tition for a county first ~time on the Meigs
Run
Road
,
was
destroyed
by
theme
asl:lrl
Scout Thinking
office.
County Board of Elections.
fire
.
Day
was
observed
at._the
.
Feb. 8 - The .first Miss
Feb.
16
Air
Force
U.
Middleport
Elemenii'ry
FEBRUARY
Majorette of Ohio contest was
Feb. 2 - The legendary held in Middleport under the Gen. James V. . Hartinger, School.
Feb. 23 - Stud~nts, about
~roundhog ~aw his shadow direction. of Gloria Buck Middleport was inducted into
the
Lacrosse
Hall
of
Fame
75,
walked out of Soutllern
and six more weeks of cold Wallace.
Museum
at
·Baltimore,
Md.
High
School in protest of rules
wea~hef..--'were forecast.
Feb. 9 - Albert Woodard
Feb.J7
!twas
announced
set
down
earlier by the board
Thereon Johnson was was named president of the
the
CONRAIL
wouid
operate
of
·education
In regard to
reelected chilinnan of the Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Co.
from
Corning·
to
Hobson
.'
smoking
and
more · orderly
Meigs Soil and Water Con· Van W. Buzzard, 74, was
Rohert
Mills
was
named
to
.
class
changes.
servation District.
killed in apparent logging
Feb. 24 - Operations at
Feb. 3 _ Three men were accident ·at his property, head the · Eastern Athletic
fired at the county highway Route -~ . Pomeroy.
garage. Robert Bowen was
Feb. 10 - John Triplett,
given a new five year c&lt;in- Wellston, was hired as clerk·
tract · as county superin. · treasurer of tHe Meigs Lgcal
School District on two year
tendent of schools.
Feb. 5 - A teachers aide contract.
. course was completed by
Feb. II - A referendum
more than 20· persons . was reported underw~y in
Syracuse officials agreed to Middleport against the

Local news -h ighlights ·o f 1976
.

.

JANUARY .
the Middleport Fire DepartJan. 1 _ Mr. and Mrs. ment. Sid Uttle home in
Stephen Wood of Syracuse Middl~port was g~tted by
were ·parents of Meigs fire .
• Ccunty's first baby of · the
Jan. IS - 1{athrvn Cr:ow
year.
·
, bej!an her dut1es as the f1rst
· se
Jan. 2- Pomeroy's Mayor woman to serve on Syracu
Clarence Andrews gave . the Village Council. John Werner
oath of office to new council became president of the
members Or. Harold ·Brown Middleport Chamber of
and Charles Bartels.
Ccmmerce and the chamber
Jan.' 3 - The Ohio River and others went on record in
moved into the swag of tile protest against a long closing
parkin~! lots . and it was a of
the Pomeroy-Mason
"river stay 'way from my bridge.
.
door" situation. A picture
Jan. 16- Expansmn plans
window was shot out at the were announced by the
Robert Imboden home near Racine Hmne National Bank.
Rutland by ·an unknown
Jan . 18 .-,-- A railroad
assailant. The home of Dan mementos display was
VanCooney In Rutland featured at the Meigs
Town.shlp was gutted by fire. Museum.
•
Jan. 5 _ The home of
Jan. 19 - Meigs Jaycees
Pearlie .F . Jewell, jr.1 ·near joined in observance. of
Rutland was leveled by fire. National Jaycee Week .
Middleport village officials Tragedy -struck as 17-monthwere given their oath of of- old
Brandon . Co_l_l nts,
-• 1n a
flee. Meigs Local teachers Syracuse, was kil1""
and principals were given a highway accident, The Ohio
salary hike. L. W. McComas Valley Lumbe~ Co. in Midresignedasclerk-treasurerof dleport was hit by fire and
the Meigs Local " School Pomeroy Council voted to
District. The Southam Local purchase 181 new parking
Board of Education elected meters. · ·
·
Jack Bostick as ~.resident . , Jan. 20 - John K. Putn_am,
The .Meigs County Com· 15, Route I, Coolv1iie1
missioners adopted a drowned in the Hocking
$1,547.983.68 budget for 1976. , River. Volunteers with long
Jan!'&amp; - Harold Roush was hours service w1th the
reelected president of the women's a uxiliary . at
Meigs County Board of Veterans Memor~al Hosp1tai
Education. ·
were honored.
Jan. 7 .::_' Heavy snows
Jan. 22 - Snow struck
blanketed the area sod the again and schools were
three ~nt stamp became the closed again . a~ a result.
contin ued
on
hottest sale item hecause of Stud1es
.the postage hike to 13 cents. providing better ferry service
Schools. closed due to the \luring the closing of the
heavy snow. .
Pomeroy-Ma5on bridge.
Jan. 8 - Pomeroy long a
Jan. 24 -Syracuse officials
Saturday night town an. made plans for the estabiishnounced plans for merchants men! of a municipal park.
to stay open on Friday Home of Mr. and Mrs. Gene
evenings and close on Bass, Pomeroy, struck .by
Saturday evenings. $400 was fire .
lifted in a safe cracking job at
Jan. 25- The retirement of
Fulton-Thompson Tractor RalphS. Graves as manager
Sales In Pomeroy.
. of the G. and J. Auto Parts in
Jan. 9 - Fire destroyed the Pomer:oy after over 40 years
.home of Mr. and Mrs. Marion of service annouMed. The
Hawk in Minersville.
mobile home of Mr. and Mrs.
Jan. 10 - Damages were Jeff Karr, Pomeroy, hea vily
set at $8,000 resulting from a damaged by fire.
fire at the Freddie Older
Jan. 26 - Mr. and Mrs.
home ill Letart Falls..
Clarence Nichols observed
Jan. 12 - Eastern and their 69th wedding an-Southern schools' closed for niversary at their home in
the third day in a row due to Tuppers Plains .. Middleport
· snow .and ice. Middleport Village again tried for the 15
Council began passage of permissive auto license tag
legislation to increase water fee.
and' sewer tap fees. Henry
Jan. 27- One of the worst
Wells was named president of fires in history struck the
the Meigs Board of Com· lower busi~ess. block in
missioners.
Pomeroy With f1re depart·
Jan. 13 - A smoking area ments from the entire area
was returned to Meigs High battling the blaze which
School. - started at the Stiffler Depart·
. Jan: 14 - Losses were set ment Store. In Middleport,
at $21,000 resulting from a fire . hit th~ Blue ·Tarian
fire at the Delmer Shamblin causmg conSiderable loss.
home in Dexter. C. Robert
Jan. 28 - Losses in the
Fisher was named chief of Stiffler fire were set at over

a

.

.,
~

DIXIE.:~P
·R.UB~ER

~ A5k for BQII •. or Norman

..

Be ~eady fo·~ .winte~, ~et where you,want
to go safely with. 4 ·good set af siiow tires.

: -~ · . ·
.
,,GE-NERAL
'•

'

generation steelworke r, a

swatch of bla ck ha ir spilling
over his forehead , rumpled
open-necked ' shirt , baggy
pants, a long.forgotten can of
Budweiser at his elbow.

The

"outside · money"

charge , he sai d, is " an

illusion on the part of
McBride - a shadow he puts
up that he wants me to chase
and I'm not going to do it.
"Has lhe guy on t~e streel
given me 10bucks'! Yes. Does
the saloon keeper down the
street give you a sawbuck?
Yeah. Have I got bosses '
money' No. Have i got
leftwing organizations'
money' The fact · of . the
matter is no.
" Hell , I !guess this
campaign is probably going
to cost about $200,000. I'm

$67,0011 in the hole now . We
ran't sper1d any more. We

work. In UJC Suulh Chicago
works of U.S. Steel. By the
time he Was .25 1 he \l{as
president of USW's !neal 65
and still working in the
mill .
In 197:1, he ran for director
of Drstrict 31, Ore biggest In
the USW. and was counted

just mn'l move. Tha t's how
hruke we ore.' 1

Still, Sadlowski said, he
lookioi to win Uccause "there's

a ve ry, very large amount of
clisgruntledness and
fru ~tration on the shoP fl oor.

tnsurgenl.'l. Rauh persuaded
lhe Labor Depaatmenl to
order a new election and
Sadlowski won that one In
· 1974, two to one.
Now Sadlowski is going for
it all. He ch arges lhe Abel
regime with becoming cozy
with big steel, wilh abridging

"There's a feeling and an• oul.
the strike weapon through an
attitud e t!HJt emanates out of
But SadlowsKi teamed up agreement not to walk out
the mind' of working people · ~ith a sharp Washington . over economic issues, with
that tllis union does not labor lawyer, Joseph Rauh, denying more lhan half the
r ep res~nl thcrn in the proper
oneofthe "oul.'liders" allegro membersh ip the right to vote
fashion .
to be masterminding. the Dn their conlracl.'l.
·• ... What I've got to offer is cou rse of the
USW
the development of our cause,
the cause of putting th e·labor
mov,etnent back in the main-

Ohio gains high

stream

of socia l and
eco.nonlic affairs in this
country ."'
SadloWski is no roo kie at

'

'

COLUMBUS iUPI) - Gov.
James Rhodes, who noted
record capital investment
gains in Ohio in 1976, said
needed indus ·trial
development iricentivies
Could make the sta te 's
economic future growth unlimited.
Rhodes sa id capital

bucking the establishme nt.
He has been at it most' of his
adult life and has been a
winner most of the time.

The son of Polish and Irish
parenl.'l, Sadlowski quit high
school when he was 1714&gt; go to

'

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expenditures totaled almost
$5.5 billion tllis yeat, almost
double the previoll'l record of
$2.87 billion In 1969.
·
Includoo in the total was
$4.4 billion for an addition to
the urariium enrichment
plant hear Portsmouth, and
$100 million for preparations
of the Lima tank plant for
battle tank assemjlly, by the
U.S. Army.
"We have gained 47,400
jobs In 1976 and lhe record
c apital investment

.

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..; .

'/2 OZ. or

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~IIi JANUARY~jl

.'

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So

Local news highlights

.0:(';;c-1;,~"-*'.,
,_,_A
1
.. r;:-

BIGGER AND BffiER

STEEL AXLES. MOTOR SOUND.

68

(o t 1

Mr. and Mrs. John E.
Murphy , Chris, Mr. and Mrs. ·
Robert Murphy, Veronica,
Mr . and Mrs. John Downs,
Adam were Christmas Day
guests of Mr . and Mrs. J. R.
Murphy, Peggy, &lt;;armel and
Barbara .
Mr. and Mrs. Harley E.
Johnson, Tammy, Cheryl and
Terry were Christma s
visitors of Mr: and Mrs. Gene
Slack and family of Syracuse.
. Mr. and Mrs. Everett Ray
Johnson , Audra. Jeff and
Eric of Dublin, Mr. and Mrs.
James Johnson , Jamie, Todd
and Teresa, Mr. and Mrs.
l.arry Johnson, Gina, Tahnee
and Brady, Mr. and Mrs .
Kenneth Johnson , Annelte
and Duane, loca l, Mr. and
Mrs. Lee Roush, Rodnev,
Chetyl, Joey r hd Beth of
P.omeroy, and Stefanie,
Becky Hamm of Jqdiana polis, , Indiana enjoyed
Grove .
'
Christmas E\'e at home of
Mr. and Mrs. Leon Mrs. Helen Johnson.
Shumate, Bruce and David of
Bandytown, W.Va. were preChristmas visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Johnson, Gina In 1967 Ja ck Ruby, who
Tahnee and Brady and Mrs. fa ta ll y shot presidential
Geneva Shumate.
· assassin Lee Harvey Oswa ld,
Mr. and Mrs. Bill McElroy, died of cancer in Dallas.
Jeff and Bill were Christmas In
1972 ;
American
evening visitors of Mr. and industrial leader Charles·
Mrs. Vernon Bing and family. Wilson diod at the a~e - of 85.

li

REAR TIRES, HEAVY DUTY

Sunday
Michi gan 90 5o . Caro l ina 86
UCLA 96 Housrpn 83 ··
Providence 71 Seton Hall

Mr. and Mrs. James
Reeves. Mr. and Mrs. Eu~ene
Haning , Rhonda and Ronald,
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Elam, Bill
and Carolyn, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Reeves, Bryan and
Jamie of Chesler, Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Darnell, Jeff were
Christmas dinner guests of
Mr. and · Mrs.
Fred
Tuckerman. .
. Mr. ·Unco)n Russell, · Mr.
and Mrs. Franklin Russell,
Middleport, Mr. and Mrs.
Clinton Gilkey, Karen •. Mr.
and Mrs. Walter. Jordan,
Joshua, Mr: and Mrs. Da le
Russell, Jeff 1and Susan of
Colurnbu~ were Christmas
Day guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Gillogly, Vtcki and
Rruce of- Albany. .
Mrs. Ca rol Sprouse ,
Kil)lberly of St. Louis spent
Christmas holidays with Guy
Sargent and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Reed 1 of Hemlock

~~ t~,·

THAN EVER. WIDE TRACK

Corteg e Basketball Re sults
By Unit ed Press International
Saturday
Lonq Beach Sr . 84 Ill i nois 70
Utah 10 2 U tah 5t , ?8
Wak e Forest 8~ Richmond 73

·Wolfpen News Notes . •

' ~,

WHEEL"

I.
I

.-

I
I WOMIN'I
I
1 DIICOuNr, ,.,CI ·
I Bond or elm I ~-' 1 6e.~
I

NEW ACTION
· "BIG

I

Texas. He and his wlfe, tht

former MUa Jane Powell,
and son, Jeremv Paul. live
at KWeen, Tex. Raymond
enlisted in April, 1976', took
basic training at Fort ·
Jackson , S. C., and advanced training In com·
munlcatlons at Fort
Gordon,
Ga.
Mrs.
Raymond ·Is the daugliter
of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Powell, Pomeroy.

Continuod from page_6
Feb. 25 -- A bomb threat saws stolen In Meigs County
was received at Southern during a robbery spree.
High School and classes were Merri Ault was named 1976
cancelled:
Sweetheart of the Meigs
Feb . .2t1 - Lynne Crow DeMolay Chapter .
began work as Pomeroy ·Fe_b, 2!1 - A poodle dog
Chamber of Comme~ce drowned at Royal Oak Park
secretary. Mrs. Bessie Darst. when the brakes of a car
Middleport, became a owned by Johnny Rose,
minimum $400,000 winner in Huntington,let go and the car
the Ohio Lottery.
drifts into the lake from its
Feb. 27 - The department parking place. The car was
of Sheriff Robert Harten bach recilveroo an hour and onerecovered many guns and half later.

PAIITIES I

I

Steven M. Raymond has
been promoled from E2 to
E31n communications with
the 641th Malntenaoce Co.
General Support, 13th Co.,
!69th Bttn., Fort Hood,

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AT ALL llliUIPHT'S STOifES. &amp; MURPHY'S MARTS

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Tops have mock

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expansions
and
new
fa cilities, we are extremely
optimistic about Ohio's
future.
"By Instituting a positive
attit ude toward industrial
growth on the part of state
goverrune11t, we are re-estab·
tishing Ohio as a good place
for business. and industry ~"
said Rhodes!

·.

turtle o r tur -

riiG.l

,.

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68

. ' A mjnd is a terrible thing to waste .

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._EaJNOMICAL
.TIRE MILEAGE

. . . and

CR~ CittN G

.

FOR

tll ey havC not been l!mptied m

a week . ·
Sadlowski fairly hulks over
Iris desk, a beefy man with
the formidable shoulders imd
for earm s of a ·third

have expressed plans for

" e•p~ I"~ '~ "'
ChiPPING
SPLI TTING

In 1860. fvlynil la t\lincr. a whit e
. woman. stm1 ed a school for hl ack chi ldren
in Rhode Island. She was hmassed in
Ihe dai ly press. &lt;llld fo rced to move from
r
place to place. Miss Miner did evc1-y thin~
possible to keep her school open. uni il
it was b-urned down .
I . ,
To comn1cmorate her ideals and
.. courage, a coll ege in Wash ington . D.C.
was named in her honor: The rvlincr
• Teachers College.
Suppo11 ing black cducat ion once
meant putling you r life or li tx-rty on the
line. Fortunately. today wejusl need your
signat ure . Ptca sc wriic a check lp the
'· United N~ro Coli~€ Fund. And con..•
tinue a great American rradiiion .

was accusoo of being a comes by the Cadillac liberal
Ccmmunist. Walter Reuther slur and other charges
. CHICAGO · (UP!) - Ed was accusoo of being a · largely because h~ has
Sadlowski could be a herald Communist. Gene Debs was attracted· the interest and, in
of a 'new Union ism Ql' a accused
of · being a some cases, active supJJUrt of
throwback to the old.
Communist1
.people
often
labeled
Or, If one Is to believe his
"I'm not sure I put myself "Eastern liberals. ·•
..enemies, he could be an in lhe same league with !hose
There are other cha rges
empty demagogue, a patsy of guys, but I'm not • a lhat he is !tying w buys lhe
·"Cadillac liberals," and Ccmmunist. The unfortunate USW presidency with
maybe wocse - pinko.
flling is tllat I'm accusoo of "outside money'' ... ,"
Whatever he is, Sadlowski being a Communist by labor Iertwing money ," even,
Is certainly this year's circles."
·
McBride cl)l!cged in a suit,
stormy petrol in union
Sadlowski's opponent ne'f) bosses' money.
politics,
the
rebel montll is Uoyd McBride, like · Whatever the ~alidity o( the
troublemaker who is aspiring him a USW district director , charges, the man who sat in
. to eleCtion Feb. 8 as president unlike hilp the favproo one of his second floor loft
of the 1.4-million United the union establishment sym- headquarters over an Italian
llteelwofker8 Union.
bolized by retiring USW restaurimt rind bar on Soutll
"I find myself nOw heing a President I.W. Abel.
Chicago Avenue did not seem
Ccmmunisl 'by virtue ·that
McBride and Abel hint right for l,he role.
they told me' I was one," strongly they may qu it
His cramped corner Office
Sadlowski said in an outright if they do not win. has Stained, cracked wiodows
Interview. "T.hat's . the Not Sadlowski.
looking across the frozen
furthest thing from ttie truth.
'' I don't intend to quit," he street to the railroad viaduct
· "You cim't be a political said. "You can't quit fighting· across the way. In the. long
baiter in lhe unions. Those until you die. You just keep room oul.side, his people wa lk
are bosses' games. Phil ·fighting until you die. "
on scuffed, wrca rpeted floors
Mlll'l'ay was aceused of being
Sa dlo ws ki ,
a or sit on a couple of tatteroo
a Communist. John L. !Jewis comparatively young JB, sofas. The as~trays look as if

year will have positive
economic impact on Ohio for
many years/ ~ said ·Rhodes.
"Combined with many
additional companies· who

----------------~-------------------~
)i,r. /4 ·
I
I
I ouR or/N
..
1

,.

By DAVID SM&lt;YfHERS

UP! Senior Edil&lt;lr

..IAN

,

your signature.

Sad1ow·ski: new or old brand of unionism?

announceme nts made this

Big lavl•ti On Misses'
Polyester/Acrylic ltants

1.

honofed for his service as
diJ!rtct clerk at the IMU&amp;I
Meigs Hll!h football baiWjuel.
The Southern Board of
Education m~ and decided to
bold !Inn on lllrlct discipline.
Continued on page 7

Southern Hll!h School !fere
back to nonnal. ~ddleport
Council abandoned ·Ill permissive auto Ucenae ~~~ and
decided to travel a 111 levy
path fo_r m6re operating .
funds . L. W. McComas was

•

moch1ne washable polyes ter or nylon . S. M, l.

Once you had to
put' your life
·on the line to .
support black education.
Today, we just need

-.

V-The DaUv Sentinel, Mid&lt;lleport-Ponieroy, 0 .. Monday, Jan. 3,1977

DlCOIIATIYI
ltLA.TIRI

$
-.(1

)

~78~

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MIDDLEPORT

'

�9_- The Daily Sentinel, Midcneport-Pomeroy,

II-The Da~y Sentinel, Mlddl~port-Pomeroy , O.,Monday, Jan. 3,1!117
HOUSE TRAILER
OWN Ell ' S TAX
PAYMENT CHARGE

NANT ADS
INFORMATION

R•vind Code 5ect 1ons -4S03.06

DEADliNES

-" P M
Day
Seton
Publlc•tlon .
Sub H B. No. JJD and Ef·
Cancellations,
correc
lt'C tln August 26, 196f.
lions at:ce"ted hnl day of
CO M P U TED
AND
~
A~ SESS ED BY _
publ ication
REGULATIONS
01 nd 4SOJ .Oll •. u amended by

C oun t y
Aud i tor
by
mu ltiplying t he assessab le
".,tue of the novse trader by
Hte taM r at e Of the ta x•ng
d•s tr• ct •n wh iCh the house
rr .. ile r has It s situs
The
m •n•m vm tax ts $36 00 per
) c ar
Howe11er,
if
th e

r

By Mrs, Herbert Roush
Mrs. Bertha Robmson and
son Btll were Chrtstmas Day
gu ests of Mr and Mrs J ack
Sargent at Racine. ·
Mrs. Flossie Badgely spent
Sund a y ntght Wl th Mrs

I.enna Brmkcr and Herschel
Ba dgely at Racme .
Christmas weekend guests
of Mr and Mrs. Cbarle~
Lawson were Mr and Mrs.
Gat'y M1Uer and daughter
Amy , Bellevue, 0 ; Mr. and
Mt s, Edward Lawson and
son , Mr. and Mrs Harold
Lawson ~nd son, Letart, W.
Va .; Mr. and Mrs. Rick
Moms and Michelle and Mr.
a nd Mrs. Bob Lawson and
fa mily.
Mrs. J oyce Manuel spent
Clrris!mas Eve with Mr and
Mrs. Cha rles Pyles, Earl
Hart, Mrs Audrey Hart,
Denny, Monty and Bret at

Racine.
Mr . and Mrs. Ernest Bush
were Christmas Day dmner
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Joe
Manuel, Sid and Tun. Sunday
guests of the Manuels were
Mr a rxl Mrs. Harry Roush,
Mr . and Mrs. Lewts Hudson.
Min ersv ille, Mr s . Ma rvin
McG uire, daughter Becka
J ean and Renee AflllS of
Pomeroy were Tuesday
guests of the ll!anuels.
Mr . and Mro Arnold Hupp
VISited Mr. and Mrs. Don
Manuel Sunday evening
Mr . and Mrs. Hom er
Wa mer, Mrs. Pearl Norris,
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Warner and children, Mr. and
Mrs. Hoyt Feigu9on of Pl.
Pleasant, Mrs. Marie Roy
spent Christmas Day wilh
Mt. arxl Mra. Clarence Roy
and family at Racine
Mr. and Mrs Dorsa Parsons, Mr. • and Mrs. Dana
Lewis, .Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
, RUBSell :and children of Wolf
Pen, Melba Thomas, Chester,
afic!. f!ou8h visited Mr.
• alit• .,111.~11 . lloush and
famlly Clirtlti!lits day.

CROW

CROW

/l lfor ne.ys for
1\dml nts tra lo r

&amp; PORTER

APPOINTMENT
c"se No 21q96
o t fll1.lh (' fh Ryr&gt;r

N OTICF O F
F ~ 1 ii1 r

J;'lt kson D Pcc ;. ~ ed
Nor1c! 1&lt;. lwn•hv q1vCn 1h o l
I • rn,lrd V 1 ullt o f Mrtns
C"n11111' Ot-.10 h &lt;t ~ been dul y
r1)ii/Oinl• d ri S f.dmln.St rat or o f
rtH f'.l(liP Of E1113b('th P.y r r
~I&lt;H k GOn
CINC i'l'&gt;f'd 1,11(' o t
Mf',q -;. Cou n'v Oh1o
(" rprttlo r s are reQU ired ro
l tl f' ' ~ 'f. ' r c lll !m5 wtlh ~,.11cl
l•dl tc1a r 'y wil h1n thr ee monlh s
''"''rd lh 1S ?Or h day of
11 f'(f' ll'lilcr 19 76
Mi'l niY'InQ n V..rbS it:'r
tudq c

· IN MEMORY of Ronald Grtndley
Jo.nuory 1, 1960 We miss you
Dad. when the sun
comes up
When the ground ts wet with
dew
We mrss you Dod when the
dark oppwn
Wh&amp;n the star shine through
the blue
We m155 the love we shorod
together
So sweet ond yet so true
But more than o!l the !hmgs
mltle,
Our deoresl,we miss vou.
So&amp;r. missed by Mrs Ronal
Gnndley and chlldi'en

Thanks also Ia the doc tor
and nurses at Veteran
Memonol Hospital for trv tng st
hard to soye my son's lite, olsc.
thonks to the Shenff s Deport
ment and the Pom&amp;O)
Emergencv Squad and I ¥fill b£
eternally grateful to tha t de&lt;u
swe-et voung lady Mrs . Oscar
Imboden , Jhead, co~Jered him
w1tk a blanket and he ld h1s
hand until the emergency untt
arnved God -bless you dear
on•
lost of oil but most
especially I would like to e)C
press smcerest apprec1oilon to
oil my soO's classmates, fellow
studen ts . teachers, and other
stat£ members ot Southern H1gh
School for thelr many deeds ol
kmdness and expressiOns ol
sympath y Bless you one and
all Mrs . Emmogene Holsletn
and Fom1l y
IN MEMORY OF BOBBY HOLS'JEIN
"WHOBUTGOD
CAN HEALA HEART'
When sorrows come
we
.somettmes feel
As though our heort~ w1 ll break
And through the loflg and lone lv
rughts
\
We often he awake.
The fnencfs who Df~ ught us so
much fOV
I_
Through bnght untroubled dovs
Brmg httle comfort ·!hough they
r,y
In many specJol ways
The hours poss so slowly
That a week seems hke a yeor
And we feed on thoughts and
memones
So preciOus ond so deor
How foohsh but ho w human too
l o lhlllk our lou mov be
The end ol .,verv lOY m l1fe
If only we could see
That someone watches O~Jer us
And understands our potn
Someone whose mere presence
Means we do no t weep m vom
H1s strength . Hts core H1s gut don

'"Are a deep ond endless well
H1s heortts olwoys open
To the lhmgs we need to tell
And w1th th1s help we fmd the w•ll
to make o fresh new start
For who but God m H1s greot
lo.,e,
Con heol a troubled hea rt

NOW occep ~ mg p1on o students
beg 1nners 1nlermed1otes ad
vonced studen ts Coli 992
2270.

.

PERSONs BODY Shop, 26 Ro tlrood
St M1ddleporl wou ld hke to
remrnd cu~t omers thai Dec :n
1s the lost day to ta ke ad
vantage of !he po1nt 1obs . oil
over 1n 1 color $100, 2 lone
$1 25 Without body work Stop
m or phone 985 -4174 lor op
po tn lment
SEWIN G

fq ,1f l'

Dr r•

ot

ra s r No 21'1'19
(,r- orc!l' R

Younq

. t ~ t (I

t'&gt; ll( r rhy cnvrn thfll
P •r h~lrfl f&lt;/' '1'0U IHJ O J Routfl I
Pto 1 • ro~ Oh10 ha s bf'C' n duTy
o1ppoml f'cJ
Adn111u !&gt;t r ator of
111r f '.t etlc of Grorq c R
Yo un q clccrascd la te of
Mf'1q s County Oh 10
Crcdttor s ar e r routred 10
Id e lhC 1r clatms wt th s&lt;ud
l1dU c1a ry wll htn three mon tl s
[)cl led
th1s ,?nd day lot
nP cf1m he r 1970
M&lt;1nn1nq D Web ster
N olli r

,Jodqe

( 1? 1

AND

r~onabl e

Alterat1ons

572 Sou th Th1rd

A ... e
Mtddlepor l
992 b306

Phone

IF YOU hove o seriJICe to offer
wa nt to buy or sell somethrng
oe looktng lor work
. or
you II gel results
whatever
foster wtfh a Sent mel Wont Ad
Coll992 2156

wst and·}'oun_d 0....
FOUN D HUNTINV or b1rddog
Found rn ~J ic tnlf)l ol Middleport
Col! 992 3165 and 1denr1fy
REWARD F.OR the re turn of-. lodres
purse ond co nten!S los t m
Roc.ne a reo _Phone 949 2546

•
Auction

NOTij':"F O F fiPPO I NTMENT

Cour t of Common Ptt'ii S.
· Probiltf' Olv•c,,on
?711 131 10 Jt c

•

..

Televi~ion

Valley 3: Meh Griffon 4, Brady Bunch a:
M ister Rogers 20,33 ; St ar Trek 15
S·JO- News 6; F~m l ly Affaor 8, Elec Co 20.33 : Adam
12 13
6 \\()-News 3,&lt;,8, 10, 13, 15, ABC News 6; Zoom ~ 33
6 . :'fo-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News ,13; Andy G r ~f l th 6;
C&lt;!S News 8.10, Vegetable Soup 20, Voila Alegre 33
7 oo-Trulh orCons 3, ToTelltheTruth4 . Bowl ing to~
Dollars 6, Bu ck Owens 8, News 10, To Tell the
Trulh 13 , My Three So_ns 151 Amencana 20, Know
Your Schoo ls 33.
7 3Q-Thai Good Ole Nas hville Music 3, Bobby Vln\f&gt;n
4, Muppel Show 6, Gong Show 8, MacNeil Lehrer
20,33 ; Price IS Roght 10 , Candid Camera 13;
Fnends ot Man 15 .

s oo-Big

.

NEED CASH? Turn that older lur

n•t ure mto &lt; o~h todoy We pav
th ~ Htghest po ss1 ble pqces on
Ant1que Furntture ond Co llec ·
ttbl e~ Ask obout ou1 complete
ouc t1on ond oppra1sol 5e-rvtCes
Coli collect Athens, (bl"l
592 -4743 592 -4929 evenmgs

WAITRESS WANTED, 35 or older,
Old Uberty , app ly 1n person
118 W Main St Pomeroy Oh1o,
afternoons
GUA$3U 40NrEED JOBSCA TION
$37 40 single $502 80 mo rned
Army Recruiting Call coll ect
593 3022 385·6318

HELP WI ANTED
Engineering firm desires to emp loy one or
t!No Mei gs County residents !b provide field
work for count·t-wide house numbering
project. Applicant must be able to interpret
and scale mapping .

'

The person must be willing to meet the
public . A car will be required. The work
duration will be limited to the project
complelton (estimated time B months to one
year) .
Slar l rng sa la ry S2 .50 to $3 .00 per hour (plu s
mol ea ge l depe nding on qua lificalion s.
Call 1-5 13-644 -1272 after January 1 for job
interview .
Equal opportunity employer .

'

2 SIGNS Pomeroy

1

Mot"l'.Co.j

Of '

QUAUll

. Business Services

j,___ __;,___ _ _ __.:___ _--d

LL-J..._......._ __.. I•&gt;

PROFESSIONAL

1916AMCHORNET
um
1Sportabout. 6 cylinder , automaflc, power steering,
de!uKe equipment, whitewall tires, luggage ntck, dark
green finish , less than 9,000 miles. shQwroom clean ,

~89~

1976 CHEVELLE MALIBU CPE .
Green finish , good tires, V 8, autllmatic, power
steermg, radio, factory air.
191SFORD TORIN04 DR .
,
$2898
Lcx:.al car, clean vinyl interior, green fi nish, good t11es~
rad1o, 351 v.a, automatic, power steering and brakes.

PHOTOGRAPHY
Aerial
Commercial
Schools · •
Weddings

CAPTAI !I EASY

KEN GROVER

IT'5 5WEET OF
YOU TO ?PARE
TIME ,[0 HEAR
MY PROB CEM ·

NON5EN5E . CAROL.
DEAf&gt;: .. THOJ.;H. l'lL

DADDY!

C RISE~!

Qll!NTZ MAN UFACTUF:1N6

FOR INSTANCE .. OUR
B l0&lt;lE$T COMPETITOR
IN HOME APPLIANCE$

AD~IIT MY 5.CHE DULE

15 CRAMMED WITH

l 5 GIVI o.J G U5 A
MAJO R HEAD~

PHOTOGRAPHY

.WIN AT BRI9GE
Play safe in rubber b~idge

t11C'1 "'t: 1 ~'I'I Nr, ru ou1z tHE
MARKH WITH 50MHHIN6
CALLED TH~ QUI NTZ QUEEP E ~- YH A$ ~OU SEE , OU R C05f
/'o"'-._ PR ICo £,T~UC.TURE-

A CHE ~

NORTII I DI
0. 91542
¥ 94
• Q8 2
,. A K 2

(614) 911·4115

Chnter. Ohio
1017 I mo(Pd)

'

POM0~~?!ve~~!'!~· CO. 'i&gt;
;&gt;OMEROY, OHIQ

..

~

~-----------------.--. ~ ~----~---~ ·
1969 No"r•, extra sharp, new
'·

OLD lurntture 1Ce baxes brass
beds woll telephones and
ports., or complee households
Wnre M 0 Mdler Rt 4,
Pomeroy Ohro Col! 992 77f:IJ
CASH po td for all mokes and
models of mobtle homes
Phon e oreo code 614-423·9531.
TI MBER Pomeroy Forest Pro·
ducts Top pnce for stondmg
sowtttnber . Ca ll Kent Honby
•·«6·BS70.
COINS CURRENCY tok onJ. old
pocket watc he s and chatns
s1lver and gold. We need 1964
end olde~ stl.,er coms Buy , !iell ,
or trade Coli Roger Wamsley
742 2331
•
CASHIII lor tunk cars Frye's
Tru&lt;k ond Auto 24 HOUR
WRECKER SERVICE• Phone
7&lt;2 2081.
NOW BUYING Scrap Pomeroy
Auto Recycling k1gh pnces
po1d auto bodte~ . motors
scrap, tro n metals botterres ,
open 8 hlf 4 30 Mondoy thru
So tu rda,.. Old 33, just obo . . e
fa1rgr.ounds Pomeroy Ohro
W1ll also ptckup cars Phone
992 6337
WANTED CHIPWOOD poles
mo x1um um dtomeler 10 mcher
on la rge end $8 00 per ton
Bund led slobs $6 00 per ton
deh..,.ered to Ohto Poll et Cam ·
)&gt;any, Rt 2 Pomeroy Phone
992 2689

EAS1

J
¥ 2
+ J975 !1
.. Q 10 8 3
0. A K

lrnul•tiGn Senices
fllllntiDI-1111
Blown rniO llollt lAUra

.. Q J 10 8 6

+ K 10 6 4
• •1 96 5

average ' .

potnt bucket seats, o~r shocks,
.mags Phone 949 2480.
IEI'Ua:~II!T
1969 CHEVROLET Btsquame. 1966
·• lllltii()IIS •
BUICK Electro 225 2 Rokon
' AWIIWUI
tnolbikes , Phone 949 2432 .
SIDIII5-WFm
1968 CHEVROLET Cornaro, block
eMienor and 1ntenor V-8, .t
, \ "We Care"
speed, mag wheels, ..,ery ntce
Free Esl.
Work Guor.
cor Phon&amp; 742-2516
Rutland 12·9·1 mo 742·2328
410 I mo.
196-C CHEVY 1h ton p1 ckup. good
shape m good runnmg cond•
Phone
lton . New tires
992 3994
24
hour
Dependable
Furnace Servite.
FOLIAGE PLANTS FOR
1965 FORD MUSTANG 289 VB
YOUR HOME In pots and
011 or Gas Burners
oulomottc r needs alternator,
hanging baskets from 75c
$125 Phone Tuppers Plains,
to ss 00 Also, le y away
667 3031
POINSETTIAS now for
CHRISTMAS . 6000 to
THE UNDERSIGNED woll sell or
choose from PERFECT
pubhc so le for cosh the follow ·
FOR GIFTS In r~whlte
1ng molor veh1de to be token
and pink . SJ 00 1o)S6 00. 'llo
from Harold W R1ckard , box
pet off on 10 or more
33 , Cl1fton West Virgimo 1970
Chevrole t ,
Ser~ol
No
136370A130240 The sale w1ll
1t41-? 16S
be hejd at the Scott Shonk _
'""donco , Un•on Avenue .
Phone 9f2·577'
Pomeroy Oh1o at 10 00 A M
Syracuse, Otttio
on the 15th day of January
Porlliind, 0
1977 The und erstgned reserves j ._ _ _;_:;,;,;;:;,::::_::;__ _ _ ' - - - - - - - - - - - "
the nght to b1d. THE FARMERS
BA NK AND SAVINGS COM
PA NY Pomerov Oh1o
HOUSE, 3 B R bolh I r dmmg
and k1tchel'), gas heat, bose
ment , 2 cor garage , Iorge fenc
For Sale
ed vord wtfh garden spot See
Racine, Ohio
COAL limestone , and calciUm
ot 1.t2 Condor St , Pome roy
chlonde and colctum bnn e for
OhiO
dusl control and spectal mnCing
3 BEDROOM home breezeway
salt for formers Motn Street
and garage oround 1 acre
Pomeroy Ohto or phone 992
locoted 1n Arbaug h Ed111on Tup
1
3B9l
pers
P lo tns
Ohio
1971 HONDA CL :450, 12,000
$15,500 Phone992 7292
Square Y1rd tnslatled
m1!es. srssy bar, crosh bon
David Parsons , ~er
pull back handle bars new tire
.'49·2114
ond seals, Scrambler · stde
11-.4.1 mo.
pt pes $650 Call 949-2400

o.Q 10 8 6.1
¥ AK75!1

+A

olo 74

Both vulnerable

AL TROMM CONST.

West

A utl•nd , Ohio 45715
Ph . c 614) 742-2409

I

Pass
Pass

We Deliver
12 22 ·4 mos

Greenhouse ·

PICKENS HOWE.
~INE

.CARPET SHOP

ASSORTED RUBBER
,.BACK CARPETING

.

3 AND 4 RM lurnts hed ond unfu rntshed · opts Phone 992
5.43-4
COU NTRY Mob1le Home Pork Rt POTATOES and pumpk tns C W
33 ten m1les north of Pomeroy
Pro ffitt , Portland Oh1o Phone
la rge lots w1th concrete pet ros
843-225.tl
s1dewolks runnan nnd off
street porkmg Phone 992 7479
HOMESITES for iale , 1 acre and
FURNISHED two bedroom opt ,
up MiciJ1epor t, neor Rutland
adults only No pets M1d·
Coll 992·7481
On e good used R em•ngton
~ l epor t Phone 992-3674
NEW 3 bedroom hOU$8 2 baths
SSO
Cham Saw
ONE BEDROOM Apts at VILLAGE
oil elec , 1 ocre, Mtddleport
On e good used McCullough
MANOR m Mtddlepor t for $104
close to Rutland Phone 992
Cham Saw
$75
monlhly plus elec or $130 tn
7481.
One good used Homelrte
cludtng el e~ LOWER RA TES for
SlSO
Cham Saw
SENIOR CITIZENS Ctnventent
New Co -Op Wa te r Sof .
to ~ ho pp 10g on T h~rd and Mdl
leners
Sis 1n M1ddleport Brand new
model VC -&gt;C VI Onfv $279 95
One good used G1bson Stde
high quoit]! apartments See
Yorgolll.~r , Realtor
by.Side Retngerator S2~0
the manager at Apl 2&amp; or coli
216 E. Second Slreel
992 7771 An Equal Hous1ng
Pomeroy, Ohoo 45169
Opportun1ty,
Phone 992-3325
2 BEDROOM trotler reo! nice
"''._ Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Phone 992 3324 , adults only
611&amp; Phone 992·2181
DEXTER .:... Large lot 011
TRAILER IN Chesht re, Oh1o
small , brook. 3 bedroom
SUitable far 2 or 3 construction COAL for sole Open 6 days per mobile home and garage
men preferred Ph oniJ' (304)
week and e'.'entngi. For further
with 'h bath
773 1873
mformotion &lt;oi l {614) 367 7338
POMEROY - 2 bedroom
modest home, Nice bath,
APPLES FITZPATRICK ORCHARD ,
STATE ROUTE 689 PHONE kitchen, full basement and
Pet• for Sale
WILKESVILLE , (61 &lt;) 669 378S •
gas furnace, $5,500.
HEMLOCK GROVE - 3
PlEASURE HORSES and pon1es. FUllER Brush Products for •ole"
bedrooms w'tth closets,
Phone 992-3410
also wtll buy horses ond
modern
bath .
eat -I n
pomes Phone (614) 698 3290.
CAMPER. $600 Al so. horse
Ruth Reeves.
kitchen a nd full basement
tro1ler. $-450. Phone (61-4) 698
,
$20,000. '
RIS ING STAR KENNEl, boordtng
3290
NEAR ROCK SPRINGS 1ndoor and outdoor Grooming PEARCE SIMPSON C.B. bose sto
(')le floor 3 bedroom home.
all breeds. complete sonltorv
t1 on Phone 247 2684 after 5 'ntce bath , gas, F .A.
foCII IItes, Ct'iesht re Phone (61-4)
pm
367 0292
furnace 1 and level lot.
POSTS $1 00 Al &gt;o
$22,000.
FREE TO good ho mes small wh1te FENCE
flf ewood three fourth ton
SYRACUU - &lt; tors, 3
femole
dog .
h o use
p1ckup loads delivered $25
bedroom all electroc home,
broken, verv offechonole, and
w1thm 25 mrles
Phone
nice ktlchen aoo dlring,
playful Pho ne 992·3263
985 &lt;197 .
bodacious vtew of ri ver.
SIBERIAN HUSKY , mole . 2 yrs
$37,500
old , $30 ShotS up to dote .
LINCONL HU.
~
Phone 992 6244
bedroom home with nice
balh, dining, basement and
For'Sale
furniture . $12,900
GALLIA· MEIGS LINE - 6
soften &amp;
295 AMP ELECTRIC we l ~er . new
rooms, 3 bedrooms, bath,
water W1th a Co-op water
$)50 Burn1ng outht, new , $125
nice ktlc hen, gas, F.A.
soflener, Model UC-XVt .
or both for $2SO Phone
furnace , and rural water .
992 2759
Now Only
$22,000
POlOROID SX 70 comero $100
RUTLAND Garden ,
Phone 992-7354
Let us I"I your waler
utility building, garage and
Fr".
GRANO PIANO wht te fmt sh.
2 bedroom home with bath
good oct1on, also RotottUer.
and gas heat. $11,000.
Phone '1 49-2202
LOTS - Nice large wooded
and cleared ones. $2,500.00
STEREO AM FM·FM ste reo-rod1o.
8 track tope combination.
up
Balance due $10-4 70 or terms.
GOC;u EAI{ corn . $2 00 bushel
Phone 992.3965
'NOW IS THE TIME TO
Phone 742 2359
PUT THAT PROPERTY
lWO NANNYS . I bolly goor $20
FIREWOQD fo, 10le. Phone
eoch Phone 949-2739
ON THE MARKET . CALL
742 2131
99l !325.
USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT
Beloit3008 Skidder Ttmbeqock HEAVY ~GAUGE I Beams and H
Beams for sole , 8 9. 10 mc h
360 Grapple Sk rdder John
Phone 992-7034
Deere 360 Cra wler Loader wog
SMALL form for sole, 10•1. down
forks Bush b(l " Metoi!Urg, cai NEW AM FM Stereo rod1o, 8 trock
ownvr financed. Monroe Coun·
Chtpper . Contact Don Groves ,
ly , W Vo Phone (004) 772·
tope combtnatlon . $12995 or
or lyons Equtpmenl Co Inc
310'2 0' (304) 172·3227.
t~r m ~ Phone 992 ·~ .
·-·-·~·
C1rdevdle , Oh1o 43113 Phone
(6 14) 596·4769
SET OF Mud n' Snow tires, H-7815 COUNTRY farmland wtth sedud·
ed woOch water and good ac ·
$25, Phone992 2759
MEN'S USED dothmg for 1ole ,
cen In Monroe Counrv. W Vo
Open .41il19 everyday Proffitt's
$1 000 down, coli (304) 772·
Recreotton Cen ter, Portland,
~102 0' !30417!2 ·~27 .
'
Real Eelalc for Sale
OhiO 45770
Commercial ~rty opprox. 17
acre• lev;i -rc,~d located at
REFRIGIDAIRE ELEC 'on11- lop HciUSE FOR sole neoi- Eastern
ovenrt, bollom cobt nel~ , pullout
Tuppen Plains on Oh1o, Route
High School 3 btd,oom•. 2
burners Also, antique chlster
7 Phone (614) 667-6304
boths, full bo1ement, 2 cor
.
drawers w11J' mirror on top
garage Phone 985-3867.
3 bedroom• I% baths large Uv.
Phone '1&lt;2·2116.
lng room , dtnlng room and kit·
TUPPERS PLAINS · three bedroom
TWO ~ lb steers , 2 r-ot•ed
chen, fully carpeted Phone
house, 2 bothli, u. . mg room ,
Hereford he1fers fo fr esh•n
m -3129 or 992-5434
lomlly room, f1reploce. carpel,
ar ound Feb. 1 rear wheel
d1shwosher . dispotol ronge 59 acres . 6 room house, both,
weighh lo1 Farmoll A fracto'
Iorge lot $26 500. Phone (614)
portly carpeted. two out·
• 6676304
Phone 8.t!3-2353 ,
buildings , du9 bnstment ,
INV ... liD W... l KER on good condl· LARGE f1()USE on o gOod sire lot
one th1rrl tillable, m.neral
liqn, bench has converts mto
Out of high water, close to
nghtt locoftd near Danville.
tub, General Electnc lloor
shopping Orea, Pricotd Ia sell.
Redu ct!d for quic:~ 1ale,
~U sher Phon• 991-323-4
ptlont 99'2·5186
•
$23 500. Phbno 747·2766.

TEA~ORD

Pomeroy Landmark

•279.95

.

........

..

~

r..u

..:....:~ ·

---

tncks "
Oswa ld " Here os a hand
that Illu strates t.h os poont qmte
well Playong atfourspades a
doplocate player woll won the
club lead on dummy a nd lead a ·
trump East woll s ho~ out
West woll rash three tru mps
and lead another club or

SMITH ftiLSON
MOTORS, INC.

n. ltl'%114

,._

BRADFORD Audioneer, Complete ServiCe Phone 949-2487
or «~'•9·2000 Roc.ne Ohto Crl't
Brodford.
""'t .....-- - ElWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers, toosfefl , 1rons, oil
small app!tonces. Lawn mower,
nel( t to State Highway Gdrgge
on Rout" 7 Phone (61.4) 91S3825

400 )(I.DJ.I ~AT
COb IS MJ.JJ'S Bt;ST

DID

----·----

•••

1
•

-

•

We fed 'im!

Now.

what?

•~a

•

:•

.

•

colleges ·
22 Germa n

11?
jl

24 Flonda
county
25 E lectrical
term
: 26 - esprrt
17 Cons umed
28 " F a ther
ofthe
•
1

•/

~-

J

•••

6

6
7

26 Liberty and
chur ch

28 Wee
29 Arabtan
• noble
30 Rambled

(2 wds I
34 Stctlian
volcano
36 Pep
37 Matlrnan's
home ,.office
( a bbr )

21 Street of

fiction
25 Fowl 's
throat
decor

HI.

7 3(}--ScRoolles 10
B·oo-Lassle 6, Cap I Kangaroo 8, 10; Se!&gt;4rne St 33.
8 3(}--Big Valley 6
9.0Q-A M 3: Phol Donahue 4,13, 15 , Lucy Show 8, Mike
•
Doug las 10
9 3(}--Cross.Wits 3, One Life lo Live 6, GOO&lt;jOay a
IO ·Oo-Sanford a. Son 3.4, 15 , Price is Right B, 1o, Ml kt
Douglas 13
10 . 15-General Hospita l 6
10 3(}--Hol lywood Squares 3,4, 15
11 oo-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15, Weekday 4, Ed9e ol
Night 6, Double Dare 8, 10. Morning wlfh D J 13
II 3G--Shoot for the Stars 3,4, 15, Happy pays 6,13,
Love of Lo fe 8.10. Sesame St io
11.55-'CBS News 8, Ms Flxot 10
12 00-News 3.6.8, 10, Don Ho 13, Bob Braun 4; Name
Thnt Tune 15
12 3Q-Lovers a. Fr iends 3, 1&gt;; Ryan's Hope 6, 13;
Search for Tomorrow 8,1 0
l ~Gong Show 3; All My Children 6, 13, Con.
cenlratlon B: Young a. the Restless 10. Not For
Women Only 15
• -....
3G--Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15. Family Feud 6, 13, As
The Wor ld Turns a, 10
2 oo-s20.000 Pyramod 13; D inah 6
2 3Q-Ooctors 3,4.15 ; One Li fe to Live 13, Guiding
Loght 8,10 •
3 OQ-Another World 3,4,15 , All In The Family 8 tO·
Consurper Surviva l Kit :w
' '
3 15-Generol Hospilal 13.
3 3G--Bewllched 6. Match Ga me 8,10, Llloas Yoga &amp;
YntJ 20
4 OQ-Moster Ca rtoon 3, Marcus Welby M D 4, G011g
Show 15, Howdy Doody 6, Mo ckey Mouse Club 8
Sesame St . 20,33. Mo•le " Rhubarb" 10; Dinah 1l.
4 3G--My Three Sons 3. Emergency One 6, Partridge
Famoly 8, Fllntstones 15
5 OG--Bog Valley 3, Merv Grl fl on 4, Brody Bunch 8:
Mosier Rogers 20,33; Star Trek 15
5 3G--News 6; Famoly Affair 8. Elec . Co 10.33; Adam
12 13
6 00- News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33
6.31).".NBC News 3,4, 15. ABC News 13 , Andy Griffith 6:
,CBS ~ews 8, 10, Borth a nd Dealh of a Star 33;
Vegotable Soup 20.
7 oo-wo nde&lt;ful Wor ld of Magic 3, To Tel l t he Truth 4
Bowling for Dollars 6; Let' s Go To The Rces
folews 10; To Tell the Truth 13, My Three Sons 15;
Cooking with a Continental Flavor 20; American
Issues Forum 33.
.
7 3(}--Hollywood Square s 4, ~et's Dea l with It 6; Match
Game Pm 8, MacNe ll.Lehrer Re port 20,33, tn The
Know 10. Wild Kingdom 13, Nash vi lle on t he Road
15
8 Oo-Baa Baa Block Sheep 3,4, Happy Days 6, 13,
~ondertul World of Mag ic 15; Who's Who 8, 10; Tell
Me If Anything Ever Was Done 20,33
8 3Q-Laverne a. Shirley 6,13
9.0Q-Pollce Woman 3,4, 15 , Ric h Man, Poor Man 6.13,
MAS H 8, 10, Mark Russell 20,33, Opening Soon at a
Theatre Near You 20 . World War I 33.
10 OQ-Poll ce Story 3,4,15; Fam ol y 6,1J, Switch 8,10,
News 20, Fight to be Remembered 33.
10 3(}--Biack Perspecl1ve onhhe News 20
II OQ-News 3, &lt;,6,8, 10, 13, 15 , MacNell .Le hrer Report
33
II 3Q-Johnny Carson 3.&lt;. IS , Movie "Crossfire " 6
Kojak 8: Mary Hart man 10, ABC News 33. ' '
12 00-Movle " The lto 11an Brigands" 10; Janak l 33
12 ·3G--Movle " Change of Mind" 8
I oo-Tomorrow 3.&lt;: News 13

a.'

Yesterday's Answer·
18 E ncoura ge
21 Use the
telephone
22 Rome's •
Cburch of
St John 23 Repeat

TUESDAY, JANUARY 4, 1977
oo-sunrlse semester
15-Farm Report 13
2Q- Not For Women Only 13
JG- Teacher' s Classroom 4; News 6; SunriH
Semester 8, Concerns &amp; ·Comments 10
45-Mornlng Report 3
SO-Good Morn ing, Tr l Slate 13
oo-Today 3,4, !5; Good Morning, America 6, 13; CBS
News 8, Chuck White Reporls 10.
05- Bugs Bunny a. Friends 10

iJ

•

~-1--1--l JJ&amp;WID~:AT S~RAMBLEDWORDOAIIE
1...-+--+~f--l Unscrambft these four Juffibles 1
one latter tc eath square, to form
1--+--1--+---1 tour ordinary words •

P1'0!lU•O'I' E - Here's how

e

is

I. 0 N G F E I , 1. 0 W

( 'RYI'TOQ UOTES

·WINNIE
WINNIE, WE KNEW HON UNHAPPY

WHEN 'rOU LEARNED 'THAT
eUILDIN6WA6COMING l70WN ...
SQWEWAITED

.

WHAT AWAY
TOBTART
THE NEW

EVEI&lt;Ymi NG

'I'

IVE FOUGHT

AND WORKED FOR ALL.

c J w1

MY LIFE BEING DE -

YEAR!

6'TROVED . BY A

WRECKER'S
IJAL L!

11LLAFTER THE
'TELLYOUJ

s

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WJ'1FTI.

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OFJOHF

----""==""

(So8 .. SoB)

HOLIDAY&amp; TO

QJ J

J

TKIPJL

s·s

BJ L

WJ H K I ZJ U
•

NJ K HS

1P F C.

K U V U JN U

Yeslerdiy's Cryploquote: HE WHO DRINKS BOILERMAKERS TONIGHT WilL HEAR THE NOISE OF THE
CONSTRUCfiON WORK IN THE MORNING, - JOHN
KISELA
BARNEY

SHERIFF TAIT'S
GOT A NEW GIMMICK

e·

I CAN'T
STAND TO
LISTEN
TO TH IS.

i' : :~

THIS
l..fEAR, ELVINEI./
.
.

I READ EVER~ DAY!
AND 'IOU KNOW
WHAT

IS

THAR IT,

LOWEElll?

I READ'

. ~:

,

IIUTLANb
fUINnUB
: ·
142-2211
ARNOLDGIATI
tiiif'LAND t '

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.~_..A
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CAMP 15 NOT
L.IKEL.Y TO 15E.

NUDI~T

II

Print lniWirhtf'l:
Salurday's

I

11

Now orraf\00 tto. ctrefed ltl1111 to
tonn lht surprtso - · a sugOttled

by""'--·

(1IIITTI"

(Mowell-...,
Jumbln WHEEL MESSY FLATLY BISHOP
Answer: Comtt to a point In church-THE STEEPlE

'IEP-· A

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t-,
ww:v~~~ !#~D

I. 1· I CO

MF

MLFTVZUQ

• 1:

·~······················~··

work It :

One ll'll cr stmply stan ds for anot her In th1s sample A ia
used for thl' t hreo I. s. X rm !he two 0 ~. l'tr ~Ingle lett ers,
upostropJ.tc..s, the length nnd fM nt:llUln of the \\ords are all ·
hint s F.:j)•h day the rude !etten; arc d1fTcrent

•

,

to

AXYOI.BAAXR

•• ..,,.:r•
•
~.

NY 10019)

art song

Hour~ ;

Close Sat. At 5 p.m
-

?''--

6
6
6
6

---

''

Thu~sday 8111 noon

~ ••

He need Hold it! Kitty's qone! Papa sa4
a place .I'se lost ,_..,..----' ne's in 4er
'im!
pocket!
hba4!

-

ports Troller and homes , 2"
hour service PhoneS-43-2165. 1

a : ootns:oo

,

•

GASOUNE ALLEY

..E_'!,n ~er, M!ddlo~,et~lo ~
OIL AND GAS furnO&lt;:e tervlce and

Mon., Tues., Wed.

•

•

FRit&gt;flD '2

.• •
••
•••
i• :. FRIDAY TIL 8 ..}! .l
.. ··•••••· . ..' "
.•

DOWN
lUmp
Pmcllo's
mckname
writer's
2 Dame
concern
Edi th 3
Baste
f2 wds.J
14 Opposote
doctrme
of WSW
4 Deluge
I&gt; Easter
refuge
5 Ms Reddy
. para&lt;\e sote
( abbr )
6 WWII proce
16 Hem's
agency
partner
• 7 Mascu hmty
17 Is land rn
8 Man on
the run
N.Y Bay
19 Unlock,
9 F retted
poetocally
II Harr
20 Wtllard's
color
pet ra t
13 Wllh breath
21 Like ma ny

--~

...WILL BAavSii";n-~y hom~~ M;;_ ,
·
rmg, gutter work . Ptgle 991 ' doy through Friday. Call Jone •
7JIYI \
ry _
- ~nnH~I.:..~~~-~ ~-- - .• t

•••

newspaper, P 0 Box 489
Rad1o City S7aloo/i New York

measure

5 Dens, caves,
etc
10 Profess
11 Food
12 Check-

' LOSER
BORN

REMODELING, Plumbong heo!Jnt
and oH types of general repolr.
Work guaranteed 20 yean ..,
penence Phone 992-2409
. --.-SEWING MACHINE Ropol,. , M&lt;·
viCe, oil mokes, 992·278-4 , The
Fabri c Sho p , Pomeroy .
AutMorl:red Srnger Sale• and
Service We sharpen Scissors,
··EXCAVATING , dozer , loader and
backhoe work , dump trucks "'
and lo-boys for h.re will haul
till d1rt , to sorl, limestone and
grcvel Coli Bob or Roger Jet·
fers. day phone 992-71)39,
night phone 992-3525 or 9'12·
5232
fXCAVATING , dozer, bockho.
and d1tcher Charles R Hat·
field , Bock f"1oe Service,
Rutland, Ohio Phone 7~2-2008 .
SEPTIC Systems 1nstolled ~
hce nsed mstoller
Shepord
Contractors . Phone 7.42·2409,
SEPTIC TANKS cleaned Modern
Samtat1on 991·39.54 or 992·
2A2B.
~
WILi' do r~~ling, consf;;;ctlo;,'
' plumbmg and h ahng No job
too Iorge or otoo small Phone
742 2348
CARPEt•HER, flooring , ceiling.
_po~~I'"!J P.ho~e 992 -2759.
_
DOZER work and welding Contact Ja mes Parsons, Rt. 1, ,
Rac tne on Ca!~•!_!ood. _, _
MOBilE Home Repair , Elec ,
plumbmg and heating Phone 1
992-5858

••••••••••
•• Convenient Shoppinq

!Fo r a co py or JACOBY
MODERN, send $1 to 'Won
at ' Budge ,· c l o 1hls

ACROSS
41 Tneste
I Gree k letter
wone

•

-· -

from hts hand and then play
fro m dummy before hos lef t
hand opponent has played
The answer os that he can do
lhos of he wants to. but he can't
change the card that he has
played premat•orely

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Se-;.;;; ,.

ro6f't~g-~ln·

Wt ll do odd robs.

A floroda reader wants to

know 1f declarer can play '-"

player makes sure of hi s con-

~

.:a:. ~ -:-:;.:-

~~'JU"U~~~

tract , whrle a match·poob t
player th onk s a bout ove r -

ElECTRONIC T. V. CliNIC, Now
' T V sh5p , Electro01C T V Clinic
Service col! , $5 95. Color B&amp; W
antenna systems stereos etc: ,
572 South Third , Middleport.
Phone 992·6306 Corry In ond
_ ~a~~2'aney .. ~ •. --·
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex· '
covotmg , septic systems,
dozer. backhoe, dump tru~k .
l1mestone, grovel, blacktop
pGVIng, R,t 143. Phone I (614)
6'111·7331 .
EXCAVATING ,
B... CKHOES,
DOZER . 'TRENCHER. LOWBOY,
DUMP TRUCKS. BILL PULLINS.
PHONE 9'12·2478, DAY Olt
NIGHT '
CHRISTM...S - SPECIAL •
Machines cleaned, oiled and
od!u•ted , $5 .98
Sowing

SriTice&amp;UUaep.: -:. ~ :,t

••

4A

Jom " lfow about starling
out the year woth some hands
shuwmg how a r ubber bndge

- --

WANT TO SELL? ITIME
IS MONEY I LET US SELL
YOUR PROPERTY NOW.
~SERVING
ME•IGS
COUNTY FOR SEVERAL
YEARS)
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER,
APPRAISER,
CONSULTANT.
992-2259 or 992·2561

South

By Oswa ld &amp; James Jacoby

----

RIVER VIEW - l large
bedrooms . bath, din ing
ro om , la rge kttchen,
basement, na tu ral gas
furnace, hardwood floors
ASKING ONLY ' $12,500 00
BRICK 2 bedrooms,
bath, dining room , finished
back porch, natural gas
furna Ge, garage , lo"Vely
level lot $8,900 00.
NEAR
VETERANS
MEf,IORIAL HOSPITAL New lovely split entrance
home, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths,
sewmg room or den, dining
room . utlllly room. large
recreation room . garage,
carpeted, located oo double
lot . $40,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Corner
lot, 3 bedrooms, dining
room , 2 bath s, utility
space, nafural gas furnace,
carpeting, exira building
used for oft tee or storage.
$22,000 00.
RUTLAND -&lt; acres \Vlth
older home , 3 bedrooms.
bath ,
dining
room ,
a luminu m sldtng, out
cellar, storage building,
traile r hookup to rent .
$15,500 00.

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

Opemng lead - .I "'

NOTICE

Hubbard's

Nor th
Pass
3 .a
Pass

B:OO,Little House on the Pralr1e 3,4, 15; Capt. &amp;
Tepnllle 6. 13. Rhoda 8, 10; Restless Earth 33; 8411t
ol Amhersl 20
B· 3Q-$128,000 Question 8, Phyll is 10.
9·0Q-Movle " Judge Hor ton &amp; the Scotlsboro Boys"
3,&lt;, 15, Movie "Green .Eyes" 6, 13; Mou~ 8, 10.
9 3~AII's Fair 8, 10, Renascence 20
10 oo-E~ecutlve Suite 8, 10; News 20: Soundstage :D.
10 - 3~Farm Digest 20
.
11 oo-News 3,4,6,8, 10,1 3, 15, Monly Python's Flying
Circus 20
·
11 ·3G--Johnny Carson 3,&lt;, 15, Slreets of San FranciKo
•6, Columbo 8, Mary J'artma n 10; Collf90
Basketball 13 , ABC News 33.
12 00-Mo•le " Anything Goes" 10; Janak! 33 .·
12 · 4G--Dan August 6
I 00- Tomorrow 3,4
1 3Q-News 13

7

Jom 'Lots of ru bber bhdge
players woll take thrs same
lone of play ' ·tt can only becostly of West holds a ll three
trumps a nd the hearts break
badly However a rea ll y
careful rubber brodge player
woll leave trumps ent~re!y
a lone and go after hearts Thos
way the bad br,eak will only
ho ld hom to four It wont be
able to cost hom hrs contract.

SOUTH

S10III
' WtiiDOIIS IIIOOIS

--

anythmg e lse for that matter
When Soulll goes after hearts
he will have to lose a trtck rn
that su1t on account of the 5·1
break It won't gove hom a bot·
tom score Every other man
rn four spades woll have taken
the same . hne o£ play Four
spades down one Wl ll be about

J

·-

WEST

6.95

For Rent

log for easy viewing

MONDAY, JANUARY 3, 1,977

Auto Sales

Yard Sale.

t 1 t 1 10 7 c

~o~day, Jan . 3. 1977

.'

For Fast Results Use The_ Sentinel Classifieds-·.

mser!lon .
RATES
F W tAd S '
l'l'llnl mum ta )( Of th irty SIX
do llars tS"applicable to a house
or an
tPilct
l re~~ i ler not lo~:eted In this stare
S cents p.:r word one
inser
llon
on The firS Tday of JanUllry , the
Minimum Charge Sl 00
1S
l&lt;lX
determ1ned
by
1-1 cents per word three
•nu! hplymg three dollars by
consecut ive Insert ions
th e number of full months
26 cents r,er j_ WDrd s 1x
n 1Tl a1n1ng to the fol low ing
consecut 1ve nser t 1ons
25 Per Cent o1scoun t on
th ,rty l1rsJ of De ce mb er
com mencmg Wtth ~e da te ol
paid ads and 1eds pa1d
dC QUt!S.IIIOn or entrance Into
w1ttun 10 days
.tHS Slate
CARD OF THANKS
PAYAB LE A. T - County
&amp; OBITUARY
Tre asurer ' s Office , Co urt
s~ 00
tor so word
Hou se
•,.. rn 1 u m
T AX DUE AND PAYABLE
- •tac ·ad dl t1o1el w0i-d -J
cen Is
·
When a house tra11er ha s a
N',tff/fio
s
':.! Ius tn tht s state , as pro vtded
Ad ditional 2Sc Charge ""
m th1S sechon , on the ls i da y
per Advertise ment
Qt J r.nu ary the ful l am ount of
OFFICE HOliR5
the oro r at e talC rs dU{' and
8 30 a m to S 00 p m
~ay able on or before the 31s t
Oa!IV , 8 JO II m to 12 00
dt\ y of January
Noon Saturday
Whe n a house tr ader
Phone tod ay 992 2156
ilCQUiff&gt;S a SitUS tn thiS Slate i'S
iJrO'lllded in thrs sect ton , after
,I he- f1rst day of Ja rw ary and on
NOTICES
ur prtor to tl'1e 31st day of
ATTN . 1 1
Dt:!ccm ber , the full amount of
ALL HOUSEWIVES
the pro rate tax 1S due and
All Yard Sa tes , Rummage
payable 1mmediatel y upon the
Porch and Bosement Porch
r.x pi r alton of a 30 day penod
and Basement Sales , etc
co m mencmg wtlh the date the
must be pa id tn advance
SII US IS Jl CqU irE'd
Get yours tn earl v by
P ENALTY stoppi ng by our offtce at
If tne PI!Yment of the tax ts
The Daily Sentmel , I l l
101 made as pro vr df&gt;'d abo ve a
Court St or wrl!mg Box
P"'n alty of h ve dol lars or len
729 , Pom e roy , Oh to 457 69
;Jurce nt of the taxes du e,
with vo u r remttlan.;e
Nh lt heve r ts gr eater shall be
,rn posed and collecte d in
~CC1 lion to the ta;x: due and
.. wtng
OELINQUENT TAXE S The .Cou nty Treasurer , m NOTICE . Prall s Meot Milt
o:H.Jd il1on to any other remedy
(Pleasanton Meat Processmg
prO 'o'td cd by taw ror t)le
Inc .) Custom slough ten ng, and
c oltect ton of taxes o'HHI
process1ng Reto1l wholesa le
pC,&gt; nalhes
sha ll
enforce
No appo tnmen t necessary Call
co tl ec lton of s uch taxes and
(61&lt;) 593 ·8655 hours . 9 00 hll
r1e naiTtes by ctvtl act ron 11'1 th e
nam e of s uc h treasurer
6 00 7 Pomeroy ~ood Alhens
ciga tnst the qwner for the
Oh
re cover y of the unpa id taxes
OF • THERE will be no gun shoot Dec
R E SPON SIBILIT Y
HOUS E TR AILER OWNER ...,
25th or Jon 3 ct the Rocme F1re
All owners of hou se tra ilers
Dept Bu1~d1ng~ Bo~h a~
hav1nQ a SITUS m The State of
Oh10 and su bt ec t to th eta)( as SPECIALS AT the 0 &amp; J House of
l)rov1ded
a bov e
MUST
Fabn&lt;s. La rge blanket p1 eces
lt:&gt;QISier such trai ler wt lh the
regu lar $1 50 lb , now $1 00 lb
Co unty AUdttor' on or prror to
Lorge p1eces of crushed ..,elvel
ltte daf t&gt; the ta x tS du e and
pieces
reg $2.50 lb now
!lAy ab le
$2
00
lb
Real
nrce Tobie of po
-No person who IS the owner
ly kn1t reg $2 49 yard now ,
of &lt;1 hous~ trailer and who IS
$1 39 yard on S R 7 1 mtle
requ1 red lo reg1sfer a house
trader shalt lail 10 drsplay on
below ~d~lep_:&gt;~t ~h• o
the fro nt of such trailer th e
Ct&gt;rt ltlcate or " Oecal " tssu ed SElDOM REST Cerom1CS w1ll be
· dosed Dec 28th thro ugh Sun
by !he Coun ty T.reasu r er
OPE RATOR OF A HOU SE
day Ja nuary 2 Pa ulme Dorst
TRA ILER COUR T Every operator of a house SPECIALS at D &amp; J House of
Fobr1{s, . Io rge blanket pteces
trader cou rt or park or every
owner of ~roper t y used tor
reg $1 50 !b now $1 00 lb
o;uch pu rpose when there 1S no
Crushed vei~Je l pteces reg
opera tor s.hall keep a regt s ter
$2 SO lb now $2 00 lb ·I table
ol all house tra tl ers wh tc h
of poly kn1t reg $2 49 ya rd
1r1 a k e use of the court . park , or
now $1 39 yard I m1le below
propert y
M1ddlepor t on S R 7
HOWARD E FRANK
COUNTY AUDITOR
ME IGS COUNTY , OHIO
- NOTICE OF SALE (I J 3, 10, 17 , 24 , 31
5tc
The rt&gt;al e!itate of the late
Hale I A Moore deceased ,
Wh1 c h •s lo cated 1n the
• Town sh 1p of Salisbury , Co unty
PUBLIC NOTICE
of MetQ S, and State of Oh10 , on
Not ICC ts hereby gtven tha t Un1on Avenue (see Volume
the annual meet.ng ol the 1'21 Page 'l9 Me1gs Co unly
st oc kholders of The Farm ers Mortqage Rec ords ). wtll be
Ban k aeyd Savtn.gs Compar:1y of off er ed tor sale a t th e offic es
21 1 West Seco nd Stree t. of Crow Cro w &amp; Port er , At
Pomero)l Ohto, wtll be held at torn eys a t Law Pom eroy , at
the oHtce of sa1d Bank tn 10 00 A M on Monda~· .
Pome roy , Ohto , accordtng to J anuary 17 .1 977 Th e proper~y
1t s o;v laws , on the th ~ rd IS appra1sed at Sl 800 00 and
Wednll!sday of January , 1977 , cannot b e so ld for tess than the
a t ,. 00 P M for the purpo se of . ap pra ised value Ter ms of
l'l ect ing drre ctors and th e sa le are cash Th e prope rty
rr.,nsacl ,on o f suc h ol he r wil t be sold sub te ct to the lien
bust ness as may pro perly for rea l estelle ra,., es The rtghJ
com e befor e sa Jd meett ng
1S re!iervcd ro rcrecJ any 11nd
,11 1 h•dS
Pa u lE Klees
Secret a ry
HOME R BA XTER
Adm lniSirator of
"1 12 1 27 (I) J . 10. 16 dt c
the Esta tepf
Hazel A Moor e
Deceased

Fairview

,.

The Pub li sher reserves
' he r 1gnt 10 ecm or reject
any ads deemed ob ~
1ectlonel The publ•sher
will not be rtspons lble for
more than one Incorrect

DICK TRACY

'

LIVIN' POSTER

•

�.,
;. ,

•·

~77

.

10- The Daily Sentinel, _Middl!port-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Jan. 3, 1

J-anuary sale
'

OF SHOES
·: BEGINS TUES., JAN. 4

.BROKEN IZE - AU SAlES FINAL!..
.

WOMEN'S DRESS SHOES.
1 GROUP REG. '15"
' 50%0FF
AND 114• ·
1 GROUP REG. 116" · 115"
40%0FF
• 113" • 110" .

,,

,1 GROUP REG. 1!~ · 1 17~ 30%0FF
. '12" . '9"
"
'

~- ~~~UP REG. .W • '14" 20%9FF
1

MISSES SHOES
50%OFF

1 GROUP REG. 111"

~ ~~~~UP REG. '12:- 'Ill" · 40%0FF
11 GR.OUP
REG. '1~ , '111" · 30'tOF~
1411 • '15"
/(,

CHILDREN'S SHOES
1 GROUP REG, '9"

killed last Saturday in
another apartment fire on
Chicago's Near West Side and
five others died Sunday in a
second blaze in the Pilsen

.An Evanston w'oman also
died in a house fire, bringing
the 11-day toll to 32 dead , 'tl
injured lind more than 100
homeless.

1~

.

f(,

10
30%OFF

. '16• . .

1.GROUP REG. 1'8"
1

·BOYS' ·DRESS SHOES
1 GROUP REG. 115!1) · 113!1)
1 GROUP REG. '11" . s10 79
I

30%0'FF

S4

1 GROUP MEN'S ..... ~.. ~~~-~~~ 99
1 GROUP ~EN'S ..... ~-~-~~~~-~ $599

THE SHOE BOX
.

.

992-3770

N. 2ND AVE., MIDDLEPORT

Mrs. Frances Lutz, Uttle
·so.cking, and

Mrs. !::dLy

Corn~ll,

fvfincral Wells, W.
Va .; one sister, Mrs. Lula
Belle !jjlockey, Akron; 20 ·
gra nd children, 24 great- .
grandchildren, and several
nieces and nephews. 1

She was preceded in death
of her husband, Thomas W.,
in 1970, four brothers and two
sisters.
.Funeral services will be
held Tuesday at 2 p.m. at the
White Funeral Home here
with the Rev. Carl A. McPherson officiating. Burial
will be in the Torch Baptist
Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home any time.

,
.
a son, Robert W., of
Rosemont, Ill.; two brothers,
Walter Curtis of Granville
and Dale P. Curtis of Heath ;
three grandchildren, and one
great-grandchild.
Funeral services will
be held at 2p.m. Wednesday
at the McPeek Funeral Home
at Granville with burial to be
in the Welsh Hills Cemetery.
Friends may- call at the
funeral home from 7 to 9 p.m.
·Monday and from 2 to 4 and 7
to 9 p.m. Tuesday.
'

,Grove Road.
._Surviving are her husband,
James; a daughter and son·
in-law, Virginia and Cecil
Heilman of Canton; a
grandson and his wife, Allen
and Jean Heilman, and their
children, Mark and Debbie,
all of' Columbus; a brother,
David J. Morgan, Pomeroy;
a niece, Gladys,Riggs, whom
she helped rear· in early
childhood, and several
younger nieces and nephews
and their families.
Services will be atl :30 p.m.
Wednesday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with Roger
Watson, minister at the
Hemlock Grove Christian
Church, officiating. Burial
will be in Chester Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home any time
Tuesday.

SENIOR CITIZENS
Are Preferred People
.

,,

....

~

0

NEW CONSTRUCTION - This addition, 216 E. Second St., Pomeroy, houses the new_
quarters of the Teaford Realty Co. Virgil Teaford piirchased the structure at 214 E. Seoond ·
which formerly housed General Telephone Co. in 'Pomeroy for a number of·years and
has had these new quarters built for his office. Occupying the 214 E. Seoond address is 'the
Cbateau Beauty Salon. Teaford Realty Co has been located on Mechanic St., Pomeroy, the
past several years.
•

At Farmers Bank '

EXTENDED oun.ooK
Wednesday through
Friday, chance of rain or
snow Wednesday and a
chance of snow Thursday
·and Friday. Highs around
10 14 C) Wednesday and
around 30 (minus I C)
Thur;day and Friday.
Low• near 25 (minus 4 C)
Wednesday and near 15
1minus 9 C) Thursday and
Friday..
· ·

MEIGS THEATitE
CLOSED FOR

•VACATION
WATCH FOR

OPFNING DAn

'

UNWANTED HONOR
COLUMBUS (UP! ) William E. Summers 20
Columbus, became th~
capital city's first homicide
of 1977. Police said he had
been shot in the head and was
either thrown or fell doWn a
40-foot embankment where
his body was foun11 in a
raVine on the city's west side
New Year's Day.
'

I

I

JUSTICES SWORN
COLUMBUS (Uri) - A.
WilHam Sweeney and Ralph
Locher became the two new
justices of the' Ohio Supreme
Court this weekend. Sweeney,
56, Cleveland . succeeded
Justice J. J. P. Corrigan
while ·Locher, 61, Cleveland,
replaced Justice Leonard
Stern.
,
"
Both won their seats in the
November · electioh.
Sweeney's six-year term
began Saturday; Locher's
six-year term began Sunday.

Murder of 25 by arson
.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday Admlsslolh'l
None.
·
saturday Discharge
Thelma LeMaster.
sunday Admissions . _
Ernest Stewart, Minersville;
JuanitaFerrell Middleport ·
Harold Jones, Dexter; Ebe~ ·
Gillihin, · Chester; Mabel
HennesSy, Pomeroy.
.
Sunday -Discharges --&lt;
Richard Baker
Clyde
Hubbard
·
'
·
HoberMedicaiCenter
I·Birlbs, Dec. 30)
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Saunders, dRughter, Gallipolis ;
Mr. ·and Mrs. John Albert,
daughter, JacksOn; Mr. and
Mrs :
Calvin
Wright,
daughtet, Jackson: Mr. arid
Mrs.
Howard
Kisor,
daughter, Wellston ; Mr: and
Mrs. Robert Rlmmey, S r.,
·d w v
son, So uths1 e, . a.
(Births, Jan.!)
Mr. and Mrs. Ernie

is charged to two

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, January 4, 1977

m~n .

·
NEW YORK (UP!) - Two in !he ·second-Btory' Puerto .
men ,have been charged wl~ Rico Club. Merola called it
arson and murder m "the wrst. mass murder by
• connection with_ the burning arson ever to occur In the
of a Br.onx soetal cl~b that United States."
.
killed 25 persons and mjured
li ~as also ·lbe worlj! fatal
24 others.
.
. fU"e m the . Clly .since 't1
The suspects, Antomo Cor· perlllnswerelrilled,ina blaze
dero, 40, and Hector Lopez, · at a textile fa~tor!! in lower
17, were arrested Saturday ' Manhattan lri ..J958.
night ?4ld ·charged Sunday
Cordero, 8n unemployed
with 25 counts of murder and salesman, and Lopez both•
arson.
pleaded innocent at !heir
A third suspect is being arraignment in Bronx
sought and Bronx District Criminal Court. No ball was
Attorney Mario Merola said · set · and Judge Willlam
his arrest is "imminent." H . Holland adjourned tM
convicted, all three co_uld get hearing until Jan. ~· to allow
up to life in prison.
the suspects time to get
Merola said Cordero, Lopez lawyers.
·
and
!he
third
man
started
the
According
to
Merola,
f
ire Oct. 24 to avenge an ~ero was angry because
.
C d
h d lth
de him
argument or ero a )I'
Sanchez persua d. · ,
his ,16-year-old girlfriend, against his will, to drop her
Diana Sanchez, who with her off at a dance at the cfub. He
Bowllrig, daughter, Jackson; sister was killed In the fire: ·· roii"-..ed up 1 npez and atleast.
Mr. and Mrs . Jackie
"&lt;"
Twenty-four others were ooe'"'other man
to firebomb
Harrison; son, Crown City.
injured by jumping out !be the club, Merola said.
(Births, Jan. 2).
windows to escape the flames
Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Dilley, daughter, Gallipolis;
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Lambert,
son, Patriot i Mr. and Mrs.
J
•
Darrell Nickels, son, ·oak
HUI; Mr. and Mrs. Paul
RACINE - Racine Chapter County Common Pleas Court
Stinson, daughter, Cheshire. 134, OES, will mee11n regular . by F....,ces Adams, Sunny.
session at 8 p.m . Monday at vale, Calif., agalns1 Guy
the Masonic Temple with Winfrey Jo hnsOn , Baton
PLEASANT VALLEY
Qbligation night to be served . Rouge, La .. et al. Bel1¥
DISCHARGES - Mrs._
Ferguson f iled for dlvQrce
Gaybert Bechtle, Henderson;
EAST ME lGS - The against Jerry Ferguson, and
Leland Bonecutter, Gallipolis Eastern Band BOosters wlfl the merr laqe of Robert R. ..
Ferry ; Carolyn Long, mee1 at 7:30 this evening In MuSse r ar\d Debra Ann
the hi gh school band- room .
was d ~ss olved and the"
Gallipolis Ferry ; MrS. Edwin All band parents are asked to Musser
petitioner was restored to her
Fowler, daughter, Mid- attend .
fOrmer name of Debra Ann
dleport; .Mrs. Charles Smith,.
Priddy .
RACINE -. The Western
daughter, Gallipolis Ferry; Bopl
CB Clu b will meet at 7
Mrs. Johnny Caldwell and this evening at the Roush
son , Crown City; John Landing in Racine.
Chapman, Gallipolis Ferry;
Pomeroy Lodg e 164,
TElCHERS STRIKE
. Ollie Legg, Leon; Carolyn F&amp;AM,
will meet at 7:30p.m. . NAPOLEON, Ohio (UPI)
Montcaslle_, Apple Grove; .·Wednesday at 1he 1emple. All
Larry Whittington, Arbuckle; Master Masons are Invited. - Teachers in the Napoleon
School District went on strike
Mrs. John Carter, Pliny ;
·
The
Letart
Township
Granville
Hill,
Point Trus1ees will meet at 1:30 early today In a contract
· Pleasant; Mrs. James p.m. Wednesday at 1he Le1art dispute. with the· board of
educatioo. The district has
Beaver, Gallipolis; Carl Falls Comm un l1y Hall.
137 teachers 1 arid ,3,000
McDade , Point Ple~sant;
A
marriage
license
was
'studento
at schools here and
Mrs. Mervin Norris, Lakin; issued 1o Wayne . Virgil
In
the
nearby
villages of
Sara Rainey, Point 'Pleasant ; Barnell, 22, Rt. 4, Pomeroy.
Florida
and
McClure.
. Mrs. Mervin Norri~. Lakin; and Sharon Sue Mi lliron, 19,
The old contract expired
Sara Rainey, Gallipolis Racine .
Dec.
31.
Ferry.
A suit to partition real
Charles Litchfield Jr., estate was filed _ in Meigs
Henderson ; Mrs. Robert
Roush, Point Pleasant; John
Crudum, Point Pleasant ; daughter, 'Southside; John
ROUSH RESIGNS Mrs. Roy Huffman, Clifton; · Dereilberger, Mason; Mrs.
Effective today Manning K.
Mrs. Bernard Goelling, Robert Byers, ·scottown , . Roush reslgn_ed his position
Gallipolis ; Betty ·Durst, Ohio; Mrs. Delbert Powell, as peputy sheriff of Meigs
Mason; Mrs. Elmer Wood, Gallipolis; Bernard Wilson, County. Roush worked as a
New. Haven ; Stephanie Oiler, Point Pleasant; Otis Parson~. dispatcher for three years
VIJ)ton; Mrs. Donald Blazer, Gallipolis.
and 16 years as a deputy.

.

)

with us!

Free Checking "ccount For Y~u
,.

We Invite you to use this pr~ferred service with no
service charge . All those 65 years and over are
welcome-to open an account any time. Stop In and
see us now.

'

'

PLANNING APIZZA PARTY
PHONE
. THE ALL NEW

MEIGS INN PillA SHACK
POMEROY, OHIO

,S4o,ooo.oo Maximum Insurance For Each · DePOsitor
Member Feder.a I Deposit Insurance Corporation

•••••••••••••

Mrs. Wagner
is
.
new board ·,c lerk
.

-E njoy three sizes of' your favorite
piuas.
-Try our delicious subs While you
sip your favorite suds.
Eat In Or Carry Out
Phone
992-6304 ·..

.

At the Home Furnl~hlngs Annex get big Mvlnis on
sheets, towels, bedspreads and blanket..
l '

f

.,

Shop EvetY Weekday 9:30 1D 5 p.m.

.

.

I

Friday 9:30 ID 8 p,tn.,- Saturday 9:30.. 1D 5 p.Jii.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Fifteen Cents
Vol 28, No. 183

j

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thursday through
Saturday, a chance of rain
or · snow Thursday with
lows around 25 and blghs
near 35. Colder Friday and
Saturday wltlt .a chance of
snow flurries. Lows will be
around 15 and blghs will be
near 25.

Weather

&gt;

on council 1•acated by Charleg'Bartels who resigned due to
out of town employment.
.

SWO!l.N IN - Larry Powell, left; was sworn in as a
new member of Pomeroy Council Mqnday night by
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews. Powell fllla the seat

jfJV;;;;,::,,, ,,,.:,:,,,,:,i;'' ' ' Jj;i;j;J iii~ch holds Werry reelected council president

~

'·

~

~

up polio ·

By United Presslnteruatlolll!l
DETROIT - DOUGLAS . A. FRASER, a Scottish
Immigrant who nise·from the "line" in Detroit's auto plantolo
a vice presidency in the powerful Uitlted Auto Workers,
appears cet:tain to become president of the 1.4 million-member
ll!lion in 1\lay:
.
.
All that remains Is the formality of an official endorsement
by the UAW leadership next Tuesday and election by delegates
to a national convention in Loa Angeles in mid-May. UA W
President Leonard Woodcock, who at 65 has reached
mandatory retirement age, announced Monday that Fraser's
principal opponents told him 'they would not seek the
presidency:
·
As head of the union's Chrysler Department and director
of the UAW's Ctllllllunity Action Program, Fraser, 60, has
become a power. In both the state and national Democratic
parties.

r"

program .
Ahitch has developed in the
sc hool Immunizati on
program against polio of the
Meigs County Department of
Health.
Mrs. Mary Myers, R.N.,
county health nurse said the
S~:hedule for lmmuliization at
the .various schools was
announced bul because of
lechnicaliiies on the state
level, the local department
has been unable to secure the
vaccine.
As a result, the schedule for
visiting the schools to provide
immunization has not been
followed . In some instances
parents already had signed
consent slips for the Immunization 01 their ·children.
Mrs. Myers said the visits
will be rescheduled as soon as
vaccine is received.

WASHINGTON - MAJOR LEAGUE basebell's blanket
antitrust exemption hasn't gone down SJiflnging yet but
Commissioner Bowie Kuhn and the owners have been picked
oil base and are trapped IIi a congresa!CI!lal !'Widown. ·
A special ·House Conunlttee :&lt;1 Profesalonal Spor~
approved a final repor,t Monday declarl'l&amp; baseball's unique
court-ordained gnm\U)Ity "unjullllfled" aTld urging that the
95th Congress corislder ending it. The 1:1-mtmber House group,
however, wllli only ooe opposing vote, dMI.not HcrAIUIIend that
baseball be stripped lnunediltely ol the pro~tion It has
enjoyed under a 1922 SUpreme Court declllon. n.oe panel said
such legislative action lltould await a further .study by a
succesaor committee to. see U a general prolesalooal sporti
antitrust biU might be needed.
·

'

Pomeroy Council Monday Pomeroy Cliffs Ltd., closes
nigh_! reelected Ralph Werry off a mine in the area as·
presldent ·of council and Fred agreed .before the ordinance
Crow, Jr., . was retained as was offered.
village solicitor.
R. c. Glasgo, surveyor,
Counc-il rehired Jack told council' that Pomeroy
Krautter as street com· Cliffs Ltd., had material on
missioner and gave .Lihe the site to close off the area.
second reading to an 'ltdi,
Council ·also approved a
nance that con veys 0.146 · first reading to an ordinance
.acres along Osborne St. by related toR. c. Glasgo, Ohio
Pomeroy Cliffs Ltd. , to surveyor, locating the centerPomeroy Village Council. line o!'the storm and sanitary
Final passage could be held sewer at the site along
up because councilman ··osborne St. where Pomeroy
Harold Brown Is not in favor Cliffs Ltd., will erect apart·
of passing the ordinance until menl buildings.

Buying policy under fire

.

COLUMBUS (UPI ) - State Rep. Michael P.
Stinziano, ~lun bus, today caUed for an Immediate
state investigation into !he gas purchasing ' and
·curtallmeilt policies of Colwnbla Qas of Ohio. Stinziano
said the Public UUUties Commission of Ohio should
begin an Inquiry, and if it falll 1 the legislature should
step in.
:
The Columbus lawiDaker charged Columbia Gas
would not have had to issue !lrastic industrial an4
commercial rationing directives If it had purchased
fuel when it was available last fall ..
Colwnbia ordered full wrtatlment of gas tQ any
firms wltich can con~rt tQ alternate fuels, and 50 per
cent cutbacks in supplies to beavy induStries and
schools, effective last Saturday.
"The whole gas curlallm~nt scheme Is a wellplanned plot in which the gas company purposely did .
not buy Industrial gas that It lme)V II would rleed this ·
winter," said Stinzlano.
•·
He said Columbia
only gas conipany IIi Ohio
to ·request drastic cutbacks; that othel flnns
anticipated winter needs and made the industrial
purchases last fall.

. ·· ''WASHINGTON - RICHARD NIXON, WHO was not ~yre
tnv'lied - or more than mentioned - at the national convention
. '
of his own Republican party, Is lrivlted !0 the lnaliguralion of
Democrat Jimmy Carter Jan. 20.
.
The 1977 Inaugural Conunlttee said invitations were sent
to NIIDn and hil family, and to the four surviving first ~dies Mrs. Jobn Kemedy, Mn. Harry Truman, Mrs. Dwight Elsen- .
hower and. Mrs. Lyndon Johnson. "It's protocol to invite
RACI!iE - Robert Sayre
fonner pl'lll!Jideall and fCII'IMI' first ladles to an inauguration,' '
was
elected . president/ and
· a apokenroman for the C&lt;llllllllttee said. She said Carter was
Dennie
Evans vice president ·
consulted before the lnv11811cln was sent.
·
by
the
Southern
Local School
It was not !mown If the Nimnl would accept.
District Board of Education
HALIFAX, NNOVA SCOTIA - CANADIAN AND In ito organizational spsslon
American olliclals ..-nbled all available aircraft and ilsed · Monday night at the hlg~ i:if:i~:;~:i!it~!irrtft!~!!i!!i!i!~i!~i!~!i!i!!!!!i~!!ii!:itirtmt:~:t:t:!:itttt:!:tt:t:::t:t:!i!:!t''f!::;::t::i!i!:
computer-drawn mapa to hWlt today for a.PIIIUimanlan timker s~hool.
. .1
•
milling for Ills days IIi the Atlantic Ocean with 38 Chinese crew
Th.e board set ll;S regular
' Q
members and
of heavy oil aboard.
. meetings tor the third Thurst.
The Grand Zenith, owned by Zenith Navigations of day of each month at 7:30
l?anama wu bound from Europe to the United States. It was p.m. at the high school
MASON, W. Va . ...:. A letter water office. Pickup will be
)1st reporlect last~ lbout 50 mUeuouth o Cape Sable, cafeteria. The clerk, Jane of credit was'read to mem· · held Jan. 6 aad 7 between 8
1fn the soulheilUIIO• tip of Nova Scotia. Offlclals said no Wagner, was given a four bers of the Mason Town a.m. and 4 p.m.
dlllreull&amp;nal- recelnd 1rom the ohlp and there was no year contract. However, Mrs. Council Monday evening , Present at the meeting ·
. ~ion why 11 was mllttlnc~
Wagner was last night em- wllen the group met In were Mayor Fred Taylor,
·
ployed by the Meigs Local regular session. '
Recorder Carl Cline and
TEL AVID, ISRAEL .-·'niE DRAAtATIC stiiCIDE ol School Board as clerk and
The letter, from Housing &amp; members Catherine Smith,
ltaulbli Minllter Avraham Ofer rocUd llrlel'a troubled Indicated today that lite' will Urban Development, Charlotte Jenks, Lawrence
Labor party today and dellla- blow to Premier Yilzhak accept the job as clerk· a~thorlzed spending of · Roush and Ed Perry.
lllbln's cimpalgn to stay In power. Th&lt; 56-year-old cabinet treasurer In the Meigs f239 ,000 In federal grant
PLACE CHANGED
mlnilter, qne of Rabln'l clolell Ctlllfldartll, lbol hlrnle1l to District.
·funds for ·a proposed
The location of the meeting
death 1n h1l car aloq a duwl8d beach Monday In the lace of.a
The board joined the Ohio renovation oi the town wale~
'lridelp'tlld ~Uon acandal thai hu tthaken Israel's School Boards. Aaan. and syale!Jl and storage tank of the lnternatlooal Union of
• Operating Engineers . to be
ciomJMnt poUticsl .-rtf. ,
•
renewed )laj)lllty Insurance . construction in Mason .
.
"Ihllveno dollbt that lise truth wtUcome out," he &amp;Bid·ln a for board members. The Council agreed to have a · held at 7:SO p.m. Thursday
auldde liOtlfoulld by bllboiiJ. "I did nottjllbtllle Cl' atea1. It regular mettlng in January Christmas tree pickup. baa been changed to. the
Ia aU alancler and 111111. IIIII 01111C11 lib UIIJJDIOI'I." The will be held on Jan. 1~ ralher ~Yeryone wanllng trees Junior fair buUdlng on the
(Otlnu..l on paga 10)
!han on the thin! Thunday. plc:ltectupshouldcallthetown Athens County Fairgrounds.

·

elected

()()() , d b
Town can go ""239,
m e

a.zlhUIIon caUona

Vlilt the Furniture Department on the 3rd 'flooi for
.ale prices on living room suites, soto's and ch~lrs.

' . .....

en tine

isfhe

SpeCial clearqnce sale .prices,. too, on men'i and
boys' shirts, lockets, sweaters and trou~&amp;rs. . ·

'

.

school board

Save plenty_~n_women's dreue~, coati, sportsw~ar,
and sweaters. - Girls' .a nd pre-Teen sleepwearand
sportswear - Women's. robes and gowns.

.

.

president of

Storewide January Clearance Sale .

at y

Mrs~Jane Wainer, Racine, Wagner repla ces
John attend professional meeting&amp;
was employed as clerk· Triplett who was not rehired during the year. Supt. ·:'''''''''''''''''''''''''::::::::::::;::':':':':::::::::':':':':':':':':':
treasurer of ihe Meigs Local ' recently at the end of a two- Charles Dowler was named to
School · District . Board of year contract. Mrs. Wagner serve as agent to receive,
Cloudy .to night, lows
Education . inlts-:'las given a two year con- expend and account for
around 27; chance of rain or
organizational meeting at th~ tl[act.
federal funds .
snow Wednesday, highs near
junior high school IIi Mid·
The board agreed to hold
The board agreed to ask for 39.
Probability · of
dleport Monday· night.
regular meetings on the a cash accounting and an
preciplta~ ion is 40 per cent
, Mrs. Wagner has been second Monda y of each audit by the state auditor's
employed as clerk of ·the month at 7;30. p.m. at the office, a normal process in today, 20 per cent tonight and
Southern Local l!oard of junior high building. The the changing of clerks. Board 50 per cenl: Wednesday.
· Education the past two years. regular January meeting will members salaries were set at
She will, how!)Ver, llegin her be held, however ,~ Jan. II , $20 for 'regular meetings.
TRUSTEES TO MEET
new ·duties at once. Her next Tuesday.
All members were present,
The Letart Township
starling -salary is $13,000 per
The board purchased a being Hoover, King, Mrs. Trustees will meet on the
year.
·
bond for the new clerk and . Jennifer Sheets, Dr. Keith second Mon day of each
The Meigs Local Board renewed liability insurance · Riggs and Robert Snowden month at 7 p.m. at the Letart
reelected Wenden · Hoover · for its members. A lund of who served as temrrary Falls Community Hall. In
president for this year and ' $300 was set up to provide clerk. Rick Crow, th new January, however., the group
reelected Virgil King vice expenses for members to prosecuting attorne also will meet at 1:30 p.m. this
presldenl. As clerk. Mrs.
·
attended as did Supt. Dowler Wednesday.
'
and his assi stant, Dan .

'

ELBERFELD$-IN ·POMEROY

•

check on the exact cost and that possibly one of the courthouse
custodians could cover the windows.
.
Newly elected Sheriff James Ri-offitt asked for a budge! of
$1~7,580, abnost a 100 percent $crease over last year. Last
:z:ear's budget ·was approximately $83,000. Proffitt explained
!hal be would Uke to have six full time deputies and five
dispatchers. He stated he was relying heavily on the federal
PrOgrams to support the dispatchers. Proffitt also stated that ·
he intended to have all mille dispatchers around the clock.
One of the programs listed by Proffit! was the
''Furtherance of Justice" program which would cost _one-half
of his salary plus $6,000. This would be used for the purchase of
radios, TV for prisoners, informants and transporting
prisoners.
'
Frederick Crow, Ill, newly elected prosecuting attorney,
said the sheriff could use the money for about anything he
wanted.
.
·
The llterlff's.salary according to the appropriation, was
set at $13,000, deputies, cook, dispatcher and detective, ·
.. $68,500; six deputies, $43,680; collk, $5,000; jailer, $1,000, and
two dispatchers at $2.50 per hour ($10,40/i) .
Proffitt disclosed he will not live in the Sheriff's quarters
and that he was seriously consider~ havin~ food catered to
(Cq_ntinued on page 10)

:;:::::;:;:;:::;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::.

Local news, in briefs

BRINGS YOU EXCEPTIONAL SAVINGS

.Because We Furnish A

e

0

Hospital News

garbage containers are ln. a disgraceful condition.
Wells pointed out that township trustees are supposed to
clean up around the containers and Jones asked if the matter
had been d~ with the trustees. Wells admitted "not as a
group."
·
. •
•
Dave Spencer of the cdunty highway departineni
discussed the existing contract with Ohio Civil Service
Employes Assn. and informed the commissioners that the
engineer is responsible for negotiating it.
Spencer also discussed the budget which last year was
$750,000 and this year $950,000. Spencer said the highway fund
has a balance of $67,000.
Bill Wickline met with the commissioners In regard to the
grant of $80,000for housing rehabilitation, of which $18,000 was
received today. Of the $80,000, $16,000 •'ls to be used for an
environmental study which Jones questioned. Jones asked
what the $16,000 involved as It left "only $64,000' for the
project." He as](ed if the $16,000 is dictated by the governmentor by the engineering firm of Fleming, Page and Stolle.
The commissioners adjourned for lunch imd resumed the
meeting at I p.in.
Afternoon business included:
Robert Bowen, county superintendent of schools, told the
commissioners thst· the fonner Children's home had been

m

Margaret Smith dies on Sunday.

40%0FF

ARCTICS

~

Jones asked Martha Chambers, clerk, to prepare a ·list of pla~d by Columbia Gas CO., oo a gas allotment and asked if.
aU CETA employes ·ullder jurisdiction of the commissioners .. plasttc could be bought and placed over the windows at a co~ '
and the job each Is doing. Jones obServed that the county m the area of $25 to $30. The commissioners advised him tQ

The Meigs County Colllll1bllonera, in an aU~y meeting
Jones said he would ask Buehl what roads he intends to
Monday, approved 20 perctnt of last year's budget 10 cai'ry Improve, If there will he ·any major project in 1977, and what
. lhro\18h !he coming January.
·
.
equipment will need to be purchased in 1977.
tuchard E. Jone~, newly elected commlasloner, argued
He indicated lhat he will ask Buehl to assist the
against approving the budget for 1977 until he had time to · commissioners In develOPing a five year overall program for a
review all funds and lhe. coun1y'a financlalotructure,
hard surface road building program.
.
He suggested, and-the other comrnialoners, Henry Wells
Jones, stressing that It Is Important that expendib!res ·be
IU(d James Roush, agree!~ that 20 percent of the !9'18 general discussed with the engineer before the budget is approved,
fund budgetlltould be appropriated to pay billa and wages said, "We must have a concrete proposalfor 1977, and over !he
until i final appropriation can be made.
.
next five years."
·
The general fund in 1976 was $855,512.55, 20 per cent of this
Jones asked Wells foc more information on the agreement
la $131,102.51,
between the Bureau of Unemployment and the county in
Jones slated that any lrio:ease in salaries should be made locating in Pomeroy.
retroactive to Jan. 1 when the budget 1s approved. He also
Wells advised that the old commission had worked over a
r~ended that appropriation Information be kept 1n !he year to relocate the offiCe in Pomeroy but thai a large room
COIIU!lissloners' office at all times for review as necessary.
was needed. They intended at one time to use one of the rooms
The organizational meeting, according to the Ohio Revfse9 in the senior high building, but since the grant did not go
Code, will be held on the second Monday of January, Wells was . through for the VillaRe of Pomeroy to remodel the building,
president of the board last year.
they had agreed upon ·h building on Sycamore St. owned by
Bids invited for two pickup trucks, two dwnp trucks and a George Hobstetter.
passenger. car by the old commission al!o ran into a hitch ,
The rent is $200 a month, with the·county to pay half.
County f;ngineer Buehl w11J. be asked to Justify them.
HoweveF, Wells pointed out, this will have to have fmal
Jones-a~ that he would direct a letter today to county approval of the Bureau of Unemployment. Utilities are
engineer Wesley Buehl advising him that llie commissione~s included in .the $200 figure. Jones thought the Issue a very
wish to he Informed what Buehl had in mind on resurfacing Important one.
""
and repairing of roads
1977 as this plan will affect the ·
The proposed nursing home merits attentioo of the
appropriation for the county highway deparln].ent.
commissioners, it wd agreed.

Elsie Gorrell died Saturday

Arts, crafts
classes will
·MEN'S DRESS SHOES
begin Jan. 22
1
GROUP
RE_
G
.
'21"
·
'18"
•
·
4007
OFF
1
1 GROUP REG. '1219 • '9"

-•
•

~rea .

Mrs. Moreland dies in Newark .

50%0FF
ct0FF

4o

children of a suburban Kenneth Fanta, 41, the
!koolifield family died in · father, spent an hour at the
Uleir be&lt;jrooms early today in h!&gt;spital after he was notified
a fire only five blocks from of !he fire.
the t.Qwn 's fire station.
It was the fourth multipleTireir .deaths brought' the death fire in the Chicago area
l!-&lt;l:ly toll due to fires in the since Cliristmas Eve. Twelve
, Chicago area to 32.
were killed in an apartment
· The Cook County medical house fire on Christmas Eve
examiner's office identified in Chicago's largely Spanish·
the dead as Michael Fanta: ~peak ·ing Pilsen
17, his sister Theresa, 13, and neighborhood on the Near
brothers Ronald, 16, and ·
twins Kevin and Michael, ll.
Firemen said the children,
apparent smoke inhalation
COOLVILLE - Mrs. Elsie
victims, were found in M. Gorrell, 83, of 609 Cross
bedrooms on the second floor St., Belpre, who died
·of Ule single-family unit.
_Saturday evening 8t the
Mrs. Yvonne Fanta, 33, Camden Clark Memorial
described by a spokesman at Hospital in Parkersburg
Loyqla Community Hospital following an extended illness,
in Maywood as ·the mother, was born in Jackson Cqunty,
w.as in serious ·t:ondition with W. Va.,a daughter of the late'
burns over 50 per cent of her Henry H. and Sarah C: ·wilson
body.
. Finch. Formerly of Coolville,
Brookfield Fire Chief she was a· member of the
Edward Gorniak said the Torch United Methodist
woman reported !he fire on Church and a resident of
Uie 911 emergency number Belpre the past six years.
about 1:30 a. m. and
Surviving are three sons,
apparently tr.ied to fight the Homer L., Litile · Hocking;
blaze before She jufnped from Howard H., Coolville and S-M
a window. When firemen Sgt. Kenneth E. , of Lompoc,
found her, her hair ~ntl C~ lif. ; three daughters, !)Irs.
clothing had been burne&lt;l and Florence Slm111ons. Coolvill•.
she was screaming her
children were still in the
house.
Hospital authorities ·said
LONG BOTTOM- Gladys
Moreland, 72, of 2669 Sharon
Valley Road , Newark, died
Sunday at Licking Memofial
H9spital in Newark.
She was born here Dec. II,
19Q4 a daughter of the late
Daman E. and Florence
Ridenour Curtis. She was a
member of the. Welsh :Hills
Baptist
Church , Granville
Arts and wilts classes
Grange
and
the Welsh Hills
taught by Tricia Adleta for
Garden
Club.
eight weeks will begin at the
Surviving are her husband,
Meigs Museum on Jan. 22.
~ade
A.Moreland, Newark:
Mrs. Adleta, a certified art
·
teacher, will offer adult
macrame, Monday 7 to 9
p.m.; adUlt arts and crafts,
· Tuesday , 7 to 9 p.m.; adult
Mrs. Margaret Ann Smith,
·drawing and painting, Route 3, Pomeroy, born Feb,
Wednesday, 7 to 9 p.m.; 7, 1882 at Minersville, died
junior and senior high Sunday at O'Bleness Hospital
drawing and painting, in Athens.
Tuesday, 4 to 5:30 p.m.;
Mrs. Smith had been a
junior and senior high arts patient at the Kimes Conand crafts, Satur.day, 10 to valescent Center in Athens
noon, and children arts and since suffering a fall "t
crafts, Saturday, I to 2:30 proximately four months ago.
p.m. ages 5 to II .
Her parents were · the late
A genera l meeting of David J. and Letitia Williams
persons interested is planned Morgan. A member of the
for the second week in Hemlock Grove' Christian
January. Additional in- Church, she also was a
formation may be obtained charter member of l{emlock
from Mrs. Adleta, 992-6040 or Grove Grange.
992-0651.
Preceding her In death ·
,besides her parents were two
sons who died in infancy; two
sisters, Mary, who died in
· early childhood,. and Blanch
Mercer, and a brother,
William A. Morgan.
'
Mrs. Smith was married
June 18, 1913 .to . James A.
Smith. They lived from th;l!
date until her recent illness at
the family home on Hemlock

•

•

County budget held ·for -m ore review

--

' the parents were diVOrCed. Southwest Side. Nine were
CHICAGO (UP!) - Five

't

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Children die in fire.

"•

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Brown asked what was
going to be done ~bo~t the
cinders on !he streeto. Mayor
Andrews replied that since
councll turned down the $5
permissive tax the cinders
wouldstayonthestreetsunlil
spring. If businessmen sweep
up the cinders in .plies the
town crew will pick them up.
Chief of Pollee Jed Webster
issued the following report
for his department in
December:
The department.
investigated 22 accidents,
made 43 arrests, issuing ~55

parking tickets, collected
$3,~81 from the parking
meters drove 4,338 miles and
had !he car serviced twice.
Named lo the volunteer
fi.remen committee were
Ralph Werry, ch~irman and
Brown. Davis suggested that
Christmas tree pickup be set
for Thursday, Dec : 6. Council ,
also agreed to advertise for
bids for the pu rchase of a 1977
diesel engine-driven trador
loader-backhoe.
' Charles Legar, fire chief,
presented his report for the
department from July I

.
through Dec. 31, 1976.
In town calls, 10 and out of
town calls, 24.
Losses (Julyl thru Dec. 31)
totaled$!!6.B20onoutof town ;
$76,125 in town.
• Total miles driven each
vehicle, 239 out-of-town , 12 in
town.
Prime Buiiders Apartment
Fire loss was estimated at
$75,000 .
Total number of calls for
the year, 89 ; out of town, 59;
in town 30.
Total loss for the year
(Continued on page 10)

Deeper curtailment asked

by .Columbia Gas in Ohio
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Columbia Gas .of Ohio la
readY to Impose natural gas
curtailmenlo of up to 30 per ·
cent on about 10;000 small
industrial or commercial gas
customers. ·..
The 'firm is only walling for
permission fnnn the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio

396 small Industries that
would be affected . They
would be eatabllshed for the
9,~74 commercial users, he
said, on the basis of each's
highest five -month winter
comsumption and highest
seve n-month summer
consumption between 1971

~~~p~~~ayfor ~hat Middleport E·R
Affected would be all users
of 200,000 or more .cubic feet
of gas a month with tbe

unit called oui

,
exception of such customers
T h e Mi d d I e Por t
as· apartment buildings, Emergency Squad · went to
hospitals and n~ homes; the intersection of CR 5 and
that usegasfor human needs. SR 7at 10:11 a.m: Monday for
Last week, Columbia Susan Hughes; Cheshire, who
ll)lposed SO pef cent was Injured In an auto accurtallments on large cident. She was taken to .
commercial users including Veterans Memorial Hospital
schools that cannot use and later to a Parkersburg
alternate· fuels , Industries hospital. At 11 :09 a.m., the
that can COR\'ert to oil or fire department )l'ent to lhe
propanewerehltwlth-JOOper home of Mrs. Otho Karr,
cent cuts.
· Leading Creek Road, where
Columbia further asked smoke had filled ber house.
Monday that the P.l:JCO However, thete was no• lire .
reconsider curtailment .At 11.:21 a.m. Monday the
exemptions previously squad went to the Silver
granted food Jrocessoi's and Ridge Road for Fred Little,
bakeries in the state:
who was taken· to Holzer
Marvin E. White, chairman Medical Center.
of the board of Colwnbla Gas,
•
Slid the plan would go into
ASK TOWED
effect Immediately ·after
A marriage ·ucense was
PUCO granted afl!lroval and
customers were off,lclally issued to Keltb · Herbert
Petrie, 21, Pomeroy, and
notified.
He said natural gas alloca· Connie Kay Musser, )8, Rt. 2,
tioos are already aet for the Pomeroy.

and 1974.
· Thus, customers that have
conserved volunljlrily will not
be penalized, White said.
Under the latest plan, Columbia would cut back small
itidustrial and commercial
users a maximum of 30 per
cent in the winter and IP per
cent in the swruner. And no
curtailment would be
imposed
until
,large
commercial customers are
curtailed in exCess of 40 per
cent.
White said Columbia is not
now seeking to curtail..
supplies to ito 58,000 lndutrial
and coi1Jilercial customers
that use less than 200,000
cubic feet of gas a month. He
said the volume of gas
involved In supplying !hoses
customers was small and the
grolip is already conserving
voluntarily "in excess of 14
per cent ··
.'
UNIT CALLED
The Racine ER Squad was
called Saturday at 12:30 p.m.
for Beverly Powell, Portland,
a me&lt;llcal patient, who was
taken 'to Veterans Memotia)
Hospltai ..Sunday at 5:02p.m.
TI1elma Kiser, Racine, was
takep to Holzer Medi cal
Center and Monday at 10 :23
-a.m. Nellie Lemley, Racine,
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

.

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