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.

10-- ~~e 0.0•: Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., TU~ay, Jan. f , lm

Women students hurt

Air Force
has Brown
...
m new post
NEW HAVEN; W. Va. Air Force Clptaln Edward
M. Brown, son of Mrs.

Frances Ohlinger, 616 Fifth
Street, New. Haven, hal been

assigned to Air Force
RecruttJni Servi~ as Chief of
Advertising and Pjlblielty for
JllrU of three states, In··
eluding 52 of Ohio's 88
eowtties.
A 1968 graduate of Wahama
High School, Clpt. Brown
holds a BS degree in radio
and. television broadcasting,
a MA degree In broadcast
management, and a MS
degree In public relations
from Ohio University.
In his new position Capt.
Brown will be responsible for
managing Recruiting Service
advertising and publicity
effortS In 52 counties in Ohio,
six In Kentucky and four in
Indiana. His headquarters
are In Columbus.
Clpt. Brown entered the
· Air Force in 1972, after
winning a regular comJnission through the Reserve
Of(icers Training program.
Prior to this assignment, he
was stationed at Laughlin Air
Force· Base Texas as an
Academic Instructor and
pilot•on T-38 trainer aircraft.
Captain Brown is lllllrried
to the former Dortha
· Wilcoxen of Racine in Meigs
County, Ohio. The couple and
their 8-month-old son, Teddy,
will reside at nearby
Rlckenbacker AFB, Ohio.

Lawyer charges
computers amok
STEUBENVILLE , Ohio
(UP!)- The.genersl counsel
for District 6 of the United
Mine Workers Union ssid
today regulations governing
suUur dioxide emissions were
based on a "vertiable host of
computers r.unnlng amok."
H. 'John Rogers testmed at
an Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency hearing
today.
He caUed.for another series
of studies to determine
''proven emission of sulfur
dioxide" from coal burning
plants before the EPA takes
any actidn on n~w emission
regulations. The hearing was
the third In a series held by
the EPA. Earlier hearingS'
were held In Cincinnati and
Cleveland and a fourth will be
held in Columbus.

~

Two Gallia County women
injured in a t .Ire&lt; vehicle
a""ident Moncay morning on
SR 7 at the junction of CR 5
(in Bradbury ) in Meigs
County are on critical lists
today.
Sue Ann Hughes, 19,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Hughes, Rt. I, Gallipolis, was
listed in critical condition at
St. Joseph 's Hospital In
Parkersburg where she was
taken for severe head injuries
after receiving emergency
treatment at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
A passenger in her car,
Diana L. Moles, 20, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Clifton
Moles, Cheshire, was also
liSted in critical condition at
the Holzer Medical. Center.
She suffered fractures of both
CAPT. BROWN

Nathaniel 8armon
dies in Florida
Nathaniel Harmon, 62,
· husband of the former Beulah
Lee Smith of Mid\lleport, died
Christmas Day at Bay Front
Center Hospital, St. Peters·
burg, Fla. Besides his wife,
he is survived by three
children and · nine grandchildren . Mrs . Harmon 's
address is 3455 JOist Street
Terrace,• North , Pinellas
Park, Fla . 33565.

BOND~ITED

One defendant was fined
and four forfeited bond in
Syracuse Mayor Herm'an
London' s court Monday
night. Police Chief Milton
Varian was the arrestirig
officer. Fined were Darrell L.
Dugan, Racine, $13 and costs
for speeding . Forfeiting
'bonds were Larry S. t,r.t·
terson , Racine , $21.70;
Rhonda F. West, Racine,
$19.70, and Donald E. Fin·
dley, Columbus, $25.70, -all
speeding, and Dennis M.
Lavender, Middleport, $12.70,
stop sign violation.
·

One Man's Family

made a

ni~: e

Otristmas ·

legs, an ann, and multiple the Holzer Medical Center for
~her injuries .
.
t~eatment
of
Injuries
State troopers said the· following a headon collision
Through the help of many
accident occun;ed at 10 :10 . ar2:30 p.m. Monday on Coa l
in
d I vi d u a 1 s ·and
a.m. when a Chesler town- Valley Rd. three tenths of a
orga
nizations,
the
15
ship truck driven by Hobart mile east of the Jackson
residents
of
the
Meigs
County
NeweU, 59, Chester, sliding . County line.
oo ice at the intersection,
The patrol said cars driven lnfinnary had "one of the
rammed into Miss Hughes' by Helen F. Potts, 40, Rt. 2 best Christmases ever."
foreign car.
Vinton , and Martha J ~, Responsible for making the
It was reported that she Brewer, 26, Rt. 2, Vinton,' hohday season il time to
remember for the residents
was thrown from her car and . collided in an icy curve. Both were:
Miss Miles was pinned In the drivers were ·injured as were
Reedsvil le
Methodist
wreckage. Newell had minor Ronald W. .Brewer, ag~ f, a Churc h Lad ie s , Feeney
injuries but was not treated. passen ger in the Brewer , Bennett P os l 128 , Feeney
Benne!t Po st Jr . Unil No. 128 ;
A car 'driven by James auto, and two ,passengers In Amcri.ta
n Legion Aux . unit
McCune, :11, of Charleston, the Potts car, Eli~abeth E. 39 , Mrs . Paul Casci Chair
ma~ ;
Eastern H igh FFA ,
was following the Hughes Young, 41, Rt. 1, Vinton, and M
CI QS Hig h Sc hool F FA
ca r. Police said McCune Bobby L. Young, ageS, Rt. I, Bradford Church of Christ '
Young Ad ul! Class ; Eagle~
swerved to avoid a coilislon, Vinton. There ~as heavy Club
of Pomeroy , se . . ent h
but his car struck an em.· damage to both vehicles. No Day A dventist of Po mer oy
laurel Cli ff Chu rc h. Eagl ~
bankment. Newell was cited charges were filed.
Ridg e Communi t y .Church ,
for speed in excess of road
Ray
Fairchild,
38, Mr
s Elve Hudson .. Rock
conditions.
.Columbus, was charged with Springs Methodist 'church ,
s·. Arlee Abbott·; Bradford
Both womeni graduates of failure to stop within the Mr
Churc h Of Chr ist , M issionary
Kyger Creekl".tiigh School, assured clear distance Circle . Brad for d Church of
Ady lt Class No. 1;
were enroute to Ohio following an accident at 2 • Christ,
Br ildford Church of Chr ist
University. Friends said bOth p.m. Monday on US 35 at the Youth Group , Mike Way land ;
(continued from page I)
were going to Athens. to junction to the Adamsville- M id dl eport Fi r st B ap t ist
Chur ch ." J une Klo es; Rutl and
$549,370; out of town $158,770, complete enrollment in Ohio Cora Rd.
C ~ r i s t ian Chur ch , L eno ra
University where Winter
The patrol said Fairchild's Mrcheal s Leifh ei t , Mr . and
in town, $390,600. ·
. Richard Gru eser , Mr .
Total Man Hours spent for Quarter classes bega n vehicle struck the rear end of- Mrs
and Mrs . Purl Van Meter and
Monday.
a car driven by Cheryl Ann "f ami l y ; He m lock Grov e
the year, 1,9(10.
,
Chr i stia n Church. Adult
OTHERS INJURED
Swain, 19, Rio Grande.
Legar reported that it was
Class ; Middleport Chu rc h ot
.Five persons werP t11lr'"" to
"not too good year" for the
Christ Loy a l Men &amp; Women
Class.
F ranc es
R oush 1
fire department in that there
M i ddl ep ort Fi r st Baptist
were large fires. Legar also
Churc h ,
Etecla
Cir Cl e;
Pomeroy Ju nior Girl Sco uts
reported that the contract
No :
1 tao , Mr s _ Patt y
with Salisbury Township will
Woor;lyard ; Ba ld· Knob Youth
be increased from $300 year
Gro up , MI . Moriah Baptist
otracted illnes s." Signers Churc h , So uthern Baptist
PALO ALTO. Cal if. UP! - pr
to $800.
of his obituary incl r; de(.:l Church of Pomeroy , Knig hts
Mrs .· Gertrude Tem pl e, S.t,
Mayor Andrews appointed mother
Templar No. 24. Pomeroy
of U.S. Protocol Chief Com munist party . le-aders. Communrty
Act ron Com .
A part y m em ber Bolfinsky
tbe following committees: Shirley Temple Black , died at
_mittee , RC Co la company ,
received
the
Order
of
Lenin
,
· BUILDING - Osborne.,. a hospi tal after a lengthy
Me~gs· · H igh
School Band ,
Stalin and State prizes · and Mergs
Hi gh Sc hool · sen io"r
Brown, Powell, Chairman. illness , i1 was announced was
named a Hero of Bus~ness Offi ce Edu cation .
FINANCE
Brown, Monda y .
Soci alist Labor . ,
Se nr o r
Class of Uni t ed

Werry

a

a

Chairman, Davis, Werry.

Mrs. Temple dies at 84

Mrs. Temp le died Saturd~y , her 6dth wedding an ntversary Her hl,ls band ,
George , was at her s"i de a I the
hospi ta l.
Other s u ~vivors include two
sons, John Tem pl e, San
Pedro, Calif ., and George
Temple Jr ., Laguna Hills ,

O!lDINANCE - Werry,
Chairman: Osborne, Davis.
STREET
Davis,
Chairman, Osborne, Werry.
SAFETY AND PARKING
- Powell, Osborn~. Chair·
Calif.
.
man, Globokar.
ORINDA.
Ca
lif
.
UPI
&gt;· UpL!TIES
AND Mi chae l T . Mann , 57, a
SANITATION - Globokar, professor of German at the
Chairman, Brown, Powell. UniversiJ y of Californ ia Berkl ey , and son of the late
MOBILE HOMES
German novel i st Thoma s
Globokar.
Mann , has died at his home .
A native of Munich, Ger ·
Attending were Mayor
man
y , ' Mann
was
the
Andrews, the ' Rev. William you nges
t of the novelis t's six
Middleswarth who opened the chi ldr en . He died Jan . 1.
meeting with prayer, Werry ,

Mann began his career as a

Davis, Lou Osborne, Powell, musician , playing t he.viola as
soloist and with the San
Brown, Donnie Ward aFrancisco
Sy mphon y or Charles Legar, Chief We~ chesl ra . He swi l che d hi s
ster, Glasgo, and Jane interest to German literature
and is the author of si x books.
Walton, clerk.
·
;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;.;:;.;.;.;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

REVIVAL PLANNED
Rev. Parker Husselton will
be the guest speaker at the
Church of the Nazarene In
Syracuse, 7:30 each evening
· Jan. 5·9. Rev . Husselton is a
scholar in' the doctrine of
Holiness and Prophecy . The
public is invited.

..

This one likely
to be shot down
·too by Congress

including a biogr aphy of hi S
father
_He is surv ived by hi s
widow , Gret. two sons living'
in Europe an d an adopted
daugh ter , Raju .
Ther e will be no funer al
ser v ices.

MOSCOW. UPI ~ P;of.

Vasiliy
Ni ko laevi c h
72 ,
an
i nBoltinsk y,
t er natio n ally kn ow n
specialist in agricultural
mecha niza tion, .who made the
s tudy of tractor s in l.o a
scientific school. has died , t he
Tas s news · agency sa id
Monday .
.
·
Tas s and Bolti nsky died In
Moscow afler " a gra\le and

WASHING TON I UPI) President Ford was ready
today to send Congress a
plan for removing federal
controls on gasoline prices
while protecling con·
somers and Independent
'!112 .
dealers against sharp
changes later In market
conditions.
Ford's proposal would
CHESHIRE
Fred
take effect if neither House
nor Senate reject II within . William Little, · 76, Rt. 1,
15 days- a deadline falllng , Cheshire, died suddenly this
just before the Jan. 20 morning at Holzer Medical
Inauguration of President- Center.
Mr. Little was born Feb. 24,
elect .Jimmy Carter. The
1900
at Cheshire to the late
Ford plan appeared to face
Samuel
and Flora Manley
stiff opposition even before
Little.
He
was also preceded
:11 was unveiled - likely
In death by his wife, •Jewell
today or Wednesday.
MuUord ·Little, in 1965; one
::::::.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::iii:::::::::::::::::::::::: daughter, Betty, in infancy;

STOC KHOLM, Jan. 3 UPI

County budget ·held up~
(Continued from page I'
flle (l'lsoners at a cost or'~ per day per prisoner. He said this
would eliminate $5,000 a year for a cook and the cost ()I
electricity or gas.
·
Proffitt argued that unlesa he could·get a man and wife
team as cook and jailer, he favored catering food. He said he
would like Ill have the Jiving room in the building converted
Into an office and two rooms upstairs u rooma where officers
could rest.
'
Jones wanted a oonclusion made on bow to feed the
prisoners, to which Proffitt answered he would "definitely like
to have the meals Catered."
'
Jones asked if he had Included janitor service, and Proffitt
sta!ed he had not, and Proffitt wondered If one of the court·
houae custodians could handle the work. Mrs. Chambers
Informed them that 0ne of the custodians had IJi,en·cJeanlng the
office area.
Proffitt stated that he would like to have prisoners In
coveralls to save members of the priaontn' family . from
bringing In clothing which they have Ill search. He said they
would be Issued one suit a week, He also Indicated that the jail
portion needed attention. However, he stated that he had not
inspected it thoroughly alnce be jU81took over at 12:01 a.m.
Monday.
.
Proffitt suggested that teletype service be added which
would help eliminate long distance phone caUs. He stated that ·
they could send and receive ·measages by the uae of the
teletype. He suggested that to cut d!ll"'l on gasoline cost a gas(
tank be placed at the county garage. Proffitt stated that 12to If
cents a gallon can be saved that way. Wells thought this was a
good Idea, and recaUed that it had been discusst!d previously,
but nothing done about it.
·
The oommissioners also interviewed Jbn Carnahan, head
custodian, who listed his duties. Carnahan said he did all the
'purchasing of suppUes.
.
Alao meeting with the co11ll11issioners was Alfred Frank,
county dog warden, who was asked by Jones if be was willing
to be reappointed. Frank said yes. Jones 88ked Frank just
what hts duties are and Frank replied that he piclt:s up stray
dogs, fills out animal claims, and goes to the dog pound every
day. He told the commissionerS it was aupposed to be a part- ·
time job but he could very easily make it a lull time job.
Attending were Henry Wells, Jones, Roush,
co11ll11issioners, and Martha Chambers, cierk.

.

I

(Continued from page I)
!Jody was found slumped in a white car near Tel Aviv's plush
seaside suburb of Herzliya a few hours after the prbne
minister issued an emotional appeal to the public to prevent
turning the police Investigation of Ofer into a witch hunt.

Chu r ch
of
Pomero y , Pom eroy Easter n
Star , Porn er oy Church of fh e

·-· -.
BREAK IN THE COLD - Workers took a coffee
break Tu~sday from .their cold job razing this large
storage buildlllg on Umon Ave. in Pomeroy. The building
belonged to the Pomeroy Motor Co. but was purchased
r«;ently by Prbne Builders, Inc., CQiumbus, which wiD
build 30 apartments to he known as Pomeroy Cliffs LTD
This is the · company's second building venture i~
Pomeroy, the other being on Mulberrry Ave., where four
buildings are near completion .

..

~;;:'"·:··]~~
By United Ptessllltemational
A POWERFUL WINTER STORM LUMBERED ACROSS
the Midwest early today after dumping welcome anows on
mountain ski areas of the West. By early today, the heaviest
snows extended through Illinois, Indiana and Ohio, though
portions of Kentucky, Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, the
Dakotas and eastern Montana also were hard hit. Snow also
clogged portions of Iowa.
·
Seven to eight .inches of fresh snow ~it ·southeast of
Lincoln, Neb., and Mexico, Mo., reported 61&gt; inches. Kansas
City, Mo., reported five Inches and St. Louis had thr~ Inches.
Five-inch snowfalls clogged the Illinois communities of
Springfield, Decatur and Quincy, while Peoria reported three
inches. Scores of high school bask@tbail games were postponed
or canceled Tuesday night because of the storm.

. DETROIT - BOLSTERED BY THE BEST December in
eight years, U. S. automakers built nearly 8.5 million cars In
1976 - a 261&gt; per cent gain over the previous year and the best
sln~e 1973 - the yar the Arab oil embargo threw the Industry
into a two-year slump. .
The report from the four companies Monday represented a
strong come~ck from the worst slump alnce the Great
Depression. The . automakers plan to start 1977 with the
production of about 813,000 cars, a 21
cent gain over last
January and the
In four years.

IN THE SIXTH L!BERIAN·FLAG TANKER ACCIDENT
in or near U. S. waters since mid-December, the 824-foot
Universe Leader ran aground in· the Delaware River Tuesday
night. No spillage of the tanker's 2i-million.gailon oil cargo
was reported.
·
· Abarge pumped oil from the Universe Leader today in an
. effort wlighten flle load and get the vessel jlfloat once again.
1 The accident occurred off Salem, N.J., at;&gt;out 20 miles down·
river from Marcus Hook, Pa ., where another Liherianregister• I tanker, the Olympic Games, ran aground Dec. 'l:l
and sp' I 133,500 gaUons of oil.

TilE INN PLACE

8\
i - A WINTER STORM CRAMPED plans today
to se~.r-. for the Panamanian tanker Grand Zenith,
mysteriously missing In the North Atlantic for six days with 38
crewmen and 8.2 million gallons of oil aboard.
U. S. and Canadian aircraft Tuesday scoured a 34,000.
square-mile area for the ship .;md reported "not a trace,"
Coast Guar,d spokesman Richard Griggs said. A Coast Guard
search vessel spotted patches of industrial'oil, but their origin
was uncertain.

Wednesday Nigh~ Special

Fred W. Little died at Holze~

.

.

{

Vacations Without Care
'

By making d'e posits in

u sa vings
accou.nt regul~rly, this family's
vacation fund IS ready when they
are! Start a savings account now!

W~LK.UP TELL~R

WINDOW AND
AUTO TEUfR WINDOW OPEN .
FRI. EVENINGS 5 to 7 P.M.

. '

"THE
I

I.

"b

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
M_.blr. Fednl Depasit Insurance Corporatior
,
DIPOIII'IINIUIID T.O '40.000

Tender Oi1 The tnslde.

CROW'S STEAK HOUSE
I,

0.

•

tax

THE MEIGS INN

a:

Pom'eroy I

PIZZA SHACK

Phone 992-6304

.

'

Save 20% on all curtains, dra.perles, tiers and
:.save on couch and chair throws, bed pillows
c:vnd toss cushlonL
·
Save ·a big 20% on all area rugi, runners, bath
. mat

~ts

.

and oval braided rugs.

VM:ATION
WATat .FOR

Now Available At:

Plus

Save QO% on our entl~e stock of sheets, pillow
ca..s, bath towels and towel enS.mbleL

awn FOR
Kentucky Frltd Chicken Now
Availa.ble .. . Crisp On The Outside
Moist ' oncl

Fish
French .Fries
Coffee, Tea or Milk

Special January Clearance.Sale Prices
•
~OME FURNISHINGS ANNEX

MEIGS THEATHE
:'EXTRA CRISPY"

' $295

Visit Our Salad Bar

Elberfelds lnP_omeroy

MEETING SET
The Southeastern Ohio
Garden Tractor Assn. will
meet Wednesday, 8 p.m. at
the bome of Dale Kautz,
~er.
-

FRIENDLY BANK"

FAIRBANKS: ALASKA - SHOPPERS WENT BAREHEADED ami 11 ;;:,..,t gloves Tuesday as Fairbanks recorded
a record high 38 degrees for Jan. 4.
Two years ago the city was shivering at 56 below zero and
the record low for the day is minus 66 set in 1934.
Meteorologists said the 4th, ~th and 6th days of January
usually are the coldest of the year.
·

.

LAD CONFINED
Lonnie LeMaster, 8, who
underwent brain surgery
about two years ago, is a
patient at St. Joseph Hospital
at ParkersbUrg. He is the son
of Mrs. Bonnie LeMaster,
Darwin, and
Edward
l&gt;!Master, Kingsbury. Cards
be sent to Room t32.

OPFNING

DA~

Weather

...

AWINTER STORM THAT PUMMELED.THE WEST with
up wsix inches of rain and three feet of snow surged toward
!he Midwest today and the Southland glistened under layers of
Ice that turned roads Into skid tracks and feUed power Jines.
Trees toppled from raiJI.drl!lfched earth over wide areas of
California Monday and ski resort operators reveled In a wealth
of snow In California's mountain, where Scant snows had kept
ski .resorts from opening.
.. .
. _
Up wthree feet of anow socked Shaver Lake, CaUl., In the
Si~rra . Heavy snows also hit portions of Idaho, Nevada and
Anzona and schools Closed In Flagstaff, Ariz., after a one-foot
snowfilD. Motorists In Southern California abandoned staUed
auwmobiles in flooded intersections and hea\oy runoff left
some roads impassable.

DINNER PREPARED
Year's Day dinner at
death he was president ot .the the- home of Mrs. Grace
Hollywood
Community
. ·
Concerts 'Association .
Glaze , Mtddleport, *as
He leaves a nephew, Ross prepared by her son, VIrgil,
Stevens of SHoam Springs, here from Florida. Guests
Ark , and a n1ece , Mrs Lee
M
d M. G
Hass of LaPuente Cal li
were. f . an
rs. eorge
'
·
Glaze, Brett and Brian, Rock ·
Bridge; Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Pullins, Amy and Kim,
Columbus, and 1\lr. and Mrs.
Bill Radford, Pomeroy, R.D.
two sisters, and a brother.
Amember of the Silver Run
Baptist Church, he was a coal
'
miner · and construction Veterans Memorial Hospital
worker.
. Admitted - Mary MarHe Is survived by two cinko, Tuppers Plains; Lucy
daughters, Mrs. Leon Spencer, Syracuse; Nellie
(Delores) Miller, Cheshire; Lemley, Portland; Okey
Mrs. Jackie (Freda) Little, Bennett, Parkersburg, W.
Middleport; one son, Bill, Va.; Pear!Jacobs, Pomeroy;
Middleport ; 10 grand· Harold Little, Middleport.
children, several great·
Discharged - Michael Van
grandchildren and several Meter.
nieees and nephews.
Funeral services wl lf be 2
p.m. Thursday at the Silver
PLEASANT VALLEY .
Run Baptist Church with the DISCHARGES .:._ Mrs.
Rev. Miles Trout offiCiating. James Holcomb, Point
Burial will be in Gravel Hill Pleasant; Mrs. Roger
Cemetery, Cheshire. Friends Berkley, son, Gallipolis; and
may call at Rawlings-Coats
Nancy Barr, Leon.
Funeral Home Wednesday, 2
to 4 and 7 to 9' p.ni. and on
Thursday until 12:30 p.m.
when the body will be taken to
the church.
studio and at the time of his ,......---, New

, SPECIAL SALE PRICES - ·HOME AJRNISHINGS.ANNEX

Elberfelds lnPomero

Ralph
K.
Patton, • Ohio's utilities w meet tbe fore~ us tO do it, we'll do it '
STEUBENVILLE, Ohio
( lJPf) ~ State geologist Consolidation Coal Co : proposed regulations in tbe with western coal and you
coal miners in Ohio can 'go
Horace R. Collins says Uttie representative, predicted same manner," he said,
fend
for yotlrselves."
Patton said Consolidation's
. of Ohio's coal could meet Ohio utilities woilld turn from
W
ith
threats of high levels
strict Ohio Enviroomental Ohio's liigh suUur coal to low forecasts indicate 91.4 per
of
unemployment
circulating.
Protection Agency low sulfur sulfur western coal to meet cent of its sales in Ohio would
coal
miners'
wives
presented
compliance standards.
drop under the proposed
standards.
the
co11ll11ission
a
petition
of
" The ove rwh elm ing
" utilities in Michigan regulations are enforced.
1,408
signatures.
majority of Ohio's coal does which have no indigenous
Joe Jur czack, • UMW
If unemploYIIlent comes w
not meet standar&lt;\s," he said production meet sulfur regional c ooord in a tor,
the
area, UMW's BiD Schmel· .
Tuesday at the third in a regulatio ns in · the most attacked Ohio's utilities and
zenbach
fllreatened "in case
series of foil!' Ohio EPA ~ economical way possible and coatc'ompanies,asking, "Are
·
you
have
never seen 14,000
heanngs which were to I would fully expect the they installlng scrubbers and
unemployed
coal miners on
·continue today .
commission would re~te working to perfect that
flle
war
path,
I can assure
"The low sulfur coal has
technology s0 that they can
you
that
it
could
make
~:. 1~;!~~r=~~:u;~;f~ .. ::::.:::::.:::::::::::::&gt;::::::::::::::·:-·::·:·:::.:-:·:::·:':·:-::::::: · ~~~aticalgh:t. The/~=~~ pu;ter 's last stand look lik~ a
reduction through washing is
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
ssidineffect: We don't mve a cakewalk.''
not feasible."
.
Friday
through
Sunday,
•·
h
f
·
damn what the law requires,
·
Representatives from the · a c ance 0 snow Friday
we won't do it; and if you
Ohio Coal Operators Associaand · Sunday but fair
lion, the United Mine Saturday. Cold with highs
Cloudy, chance of snow
Workers, elected public
near 28 and lows about 15
NOW YOU KNOW
tonight
, low s a round 22.
officials and interested
Friday and Saturday. Not
Thomas Jefferson ' s
Chance
of snqw Thursday
private citizens all presented
quite as cold Sunday with
hi storic Vir ginia house
·with
highs
near 34 .
testimony to show relaxing
highs near 30 north and 40 Monticello, served as a cow'
Probability
of
precipitation
the strict standards would
south . Lows Sunday wiil be
barn and rubbish heap irl the
187ps until it was bought and !10 per cent today, 30 per cent
preve~t a major dislocation near 25 ·
of flle local economy.
::·,-::·:::::-::::: ::-. :' :;.:: :.:.:::...:.: ': . ·: :-:':::::::::::: renovated by a new owDer. tonight, 40 per cent Thursday .

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Mc Fee ters taught ·plano

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follow .

and voice in hi s Los Angeles

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· News •. in Briefs

M et hodi s t

- Ernst Wigfors s, a leader of
the Social Democratic party N azarene , Feeney Benn ell
and
t he
Its
f ore mos t Post . Middleport ; Pomeroy
Ba pt ist Chu r ch , S" at\lation
economic lheor'e tician, died Army , E agle R idge Com .
Monday at Kronprinsessan m~ni ty Churc h. M inersv il le ·
Victoria
Hospital
. in tntl cpcn d cnt
Pcn tc cost.l 'l
of
Middleporf ·
Vejbystrand in southwestern Church
Disab led Amer ica n Vet eranS
Sweden . He was 95.
Wigforss was appointed Au x . . Mrs . A l ice Da\liS .
Finance Min ister for the first J&lt;;'y ne L ee Hoefl ich , Vick i
Frn~ , Re v . Roger B um~ ard
time in 1925. He held the post ner , Pau l· Sm ar t, Eleanor
aga in .from l9J2 until his Smi th , Et he l Ro.b in so.n ,
retirement from gover nment Ga ll ia Co unty Choru s; Earl
in 1949, dur ing which time he Frec ker , Mr s. Gla dys Parf i tt ,
Elva HudsQn . Mr . and Mrs .
l ai d the groundwork for
moder n Swedish socialism . Judson Whit e, Mr and Mrs.
Phil Wi se. Mr and Mrs . Jack
He was survived by his Hawl
ey , Mr , and Mrs .
widow, Eva , and one son .
' Charles · E . Bla keslee. D ick
HOL LYWOOD UPI ~ Karr . Ma r ion Eber sbach , Mr
Pianist Ra ym ond McFeeter s, and Mrs . Mike , Hammer ,
an accompanist for in - Evely n Gilmor e, Mr . ano ·
tern ati on all y ren ow ned Mrs Kennet h W . Wr lcO lC , Mr .
singers Lawrerice Tibbett , and Mrs . Wi ll ie Davis . C. F
Lily Pons , Marian Ander son. Hibbs . Phyll is s Hackett ,
Pomeroy Na tio nal Bank ,
John
Charles
Tho ma s. Mr s. Grace Eich , Jay Hall ,
Richard Bonelli and Tito Eloi se Mankin . Opal Kle es
Sc hipa , will
be buried Maxin e Coats Gas k il l. J ea~
Thursday .
Trussel l , Mr . an d . Mr s .
McFeeters , 77, died In his Howard Nolan . Merle an d
Mona Johnson, Meigs Avon
home last Friday .
Funeral services will be L adies , Asb ury Me t hod ist
Chu r ch Choir , Po meroy
hel d a t1 : 30p .m . Thursday in Elementary Grades d, 5, 6,
the Church of the Hills, John Arnot t .
A
Fores t La wn M emorial- Park r
Hollywood Hill s . . Burial will

-Ohio's coal too dirty ·for EPA's rules

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'When he does or does not

show his shadow , Henry
Werry is holding one that
made a big mistake in
coming early. Werry kiU~d
the animal near his home
Monday.

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VOL. XXVII · NO. 184·

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 5, 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS .

Sm_a ller·. schools going cold
..

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - A
school energy crisis task
force assembled by Marlln ·
W.
Essex,
state
superintendent of public
instruction , has called for a

higher priority on school
energy needs in current
proposed allocations.
The task force said
Tuesday Columbia Gas'
announced r.eductions in gas

continued operation of larger
schools (in the same
districts ) during the past
several years ," Essex said.
He said the abnormally cold
weather this year has
depleted energy reserves.
· Columbia has cut supplies
to larger schools from 40 per
· t'ent to 50 per cent' effective
flle first of the year.
.of free public events,
The task for ce is composed
including fireworks, square of representatives from tbe
dances, symphony concerts . state's · major educationand an all-11ight jazz, blues related organizations and
and soul session.
school superintendents.
The big ceremon iai
Essex said the group would
evenis- box seats at 'the meet with Columbia Gas
swearmg m and a chance ~ officials· to find out if
dance a.t one . of SIX . emergency natural gas is
p~esidenllal . partte: that available, iftbe present criSis
mght - are by m ~t tat1~n could he repeated next year,
only~ and only If you ve pa1d how company offiCials . feel
$25.
about turning off gas to
But . the
ina ugur al sch ools as opposed to
con\m1ttee an n.ounc e d charging a premium for use
Tuesday fll~t startmg Jan. beyond allocations and why
~8~two days before the Columbia is having problems
maugur~tion~fllere w1ll be different from other energy
(Continued on page 16)
suppliers.
allocations of 30 per cent for
smaller schools will create a
nearly impossible situation.
"Conservation measures in
fllese schools has enabled the

Plenty of fun is free
By CLAY F. RICHARDS . invitation to Jimmy Carter's
WASHINGTON (UP!) ~ inaugural, Americans still
Even without a special can come and enjoy hundreds

Three fined in mayor's court
Three defendants were
fined and two others forfeited
bonds in the court of Mid·
dleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night. · ·
Charles L, Kasee, 19,
GaUipolis, was fined $25 and
costs,
for . improper
registra,tion and $50 and costs
for reckless operation · Brian
W. Kizzee, 19, Middleport,
$100 apd costs and 30 days in
jail for a complicity (ac·
compli_ce) in commission of a

misdemeanor of breaking
wintlow glass; and Ralp~ J_
McDaniel, 31, Pomeroy, $200
and costs and three days in
jail · for driving while in·
toxicated.
Forfeiting bonds were
Donald A. Ash, 24, Bain·
bridge, $25 posted on a charge
of failing to yield the right of
way, and Dualle L. Sidders,
29, Middleport, $32, posted for
speeding charge. •

.Major improvements needed
in Meigs County described

There are 57 major capital improvements needed in Meigs children.
PLAINS~ GA. ~ JIMMY CARTER'S top appointees are
County Including 18 highway and bridge bnprovements, five .,
Provide day-care centers for children of working parents.·
pledging to serve as long as the President-elect wants fllem in law-enforcement needs, three social services projects, .five·,,.
Initiate s~ial education facilities for handicapped
· office. Carter Is requiring the appointees to sign the following
health program improvements, 10 parks and recr~ation persons.
't
,
..
pledge:
developments, and 16 otber services physical improvements
. Health Prote&lt;;tlon
•
"In accepting the position for which YOII propose to (such as for. the museum and library ), according to a capital · ,:2 Develop centrally4ocated sanitary landfill sites in eastern
nominate me, it Is my intention to serve tbe entire term for bnprovements study being made of the county.
and western Meigs County.
.
which you appoint me, and if my lerm is indefinite' It is my
Adetailed description of the 57 listed projects In this listing
Purchase at least two additional trash collection vehicles.
intention to serve as tong as you wish me to serve. The pledge follows :
Expand the office space available for the existing staff of.
Is designed to pu~ appointees on their honor not to leave to run
. Hlgllwaya and Bridges ,,
·
the Health Department.
for oHice or taM lucrative private industrY jobs.
Resurface CR I from SR 143 to the A\hens Co. Line in
Prov)de sufficient space for new Health Department
Columbia Twp.
positions such as Health or Building Inspection and Nuisance
MEXICO CITY - ANTS, GRASSHOPPERS and other
Resurface and bnprove the alignment of CR 1 from SR 124 COntrol.
.
·
insects are nutritious and also taste good, says the National w SR
325 In Salem Twp.
Construct a new 2,500-square foot Animal Control Center
University's Biology Institute.
.
Realign CR 3 to make flle By-Pass to the east of Rut~. on at least one acre of land.
Dr. Julieta Elorduy de Concon), an institute researcher,
Improve the intersection of CR 3 and SR 1 In Salis ry
,
Parts and Recreation
·said the grasshopper has up to 75 per cent protein per gram; Twp.
·
Develop a cooperative program with coal companies to
black ants hormiga chicatona up to 58.3 per cent per ·gram;
Resurface and realign CR 4 from Dexter to CR 3 in Salem acquire reclaimed"mlrface-miiled land.
and waterbugs up to 68.7 per cent per gram. Among the most and Rutland Townships.
Provide permanent structures (such as a lodge) at, or
commonly eaten in Mexico, the researcher said, are grass-,
Realign a portion •of CR 5 to JI'Ovide a direct access.from near Forked Run State Park.
hoppers which at adulthood m~sur~ about 1.2 Inches.
SR 124 to Middleport. .
Construct County Park facilities (such as cabins and
Resurface and realign CR 10 and CR 17 from Dexter to SR campgrounds) in the Shade River Forest Area.
COLUMBUS, OIDO - SEN. ANTHONY J. Celebrezze Jr., 143 in Salem, Columbia, and Scipio Twps.
Establish a County Park Board Office.
[).Cleveland has been selected by Senate President Pro
Resurface and realign CR 18 from SR lf3 to US 33 in Scipio
Acquire park 'site in western Meigs County.
Tempore Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron, as chairman of the Senate and Bedford Twps.
.,
Develop more playfields and picnic grounds.
Local Government and Urban Allain Committee .
Resurface CR 19 from. CR 26 to US 33 in Chester and
· Provide 2*-6 acre parks at Racine, Chester, Tuppers
Celebrezze, 34, is In his third year In the Senate. He has Salisbury Twps. ·
·•
Plains, Rutland, Pagevllle, and Portland.
been active in the areas of judicial legislation and lobbyist ·
J;tesurfai:e and realign CR 26 and CR 34 from SR 7 wSR 124
~velop Ohio River recreation ~eas :with boat launches,
regulation, and he chaired a special ~mmittee studying small in Chester and Sutton Twps. to form an Outerbelt of Syracuse, calnpmg, o!Jiervation benches, fishmg , p1crucking, etc .
.bullnesS problems. Local Government and Urban Mfalrs will Pomeroy, and Middleport.
·
. Acquire the unused locks a !!&lt;I dama along the Ohio River .
be a new ciiiUllltt'ee, partlaUy replacing the Transportation
Raurlace and straighten curves on CR :Ill from Keno to ·
Increue the availability of hunting and fishing
and Local Government Conunittee chaired last session by Sen.
Racine
In
Cho;oster
and
Sutton
Twps.
opportunities.
Wllllam F. Bowen, !).Cincinnati.
Other Service•
Realign CH 211 from .Keno (SR 248) to SR 7 In Chester and
Develop permanent Meigs County Museum exhibits on
WASHINGTON- PRESIDENT FORD, following through Orange l"AJIII.
history arid native sons.
Reaurfa\'e and realign CR ;JO plus TR 't26 and TR 127 from loonConstruct
oo a campaign promise, iti calling for major tax cuts In 1977
a viewing facility at the Museum plus develop
Including flO billion for lndlvlijuats· and $2.5 biliton for SR 7 to CR 28 in Sutton Twp.
media show that could also be used County-wide.
Resurface and realign CR 31 from Portland to CR 211 in
buslnesa. It's doubtlul they wiD be implemented.
Provide better Hghting and permanent seallng on second
•
He IIIIo is rec&lt;lmmending an increase in the Social l&gt;!banon and SUtton Twpi.
floor of Museum.
'Resurface CR 36 and realign TR 158 from SR 7 wSR 681 in
Security payroll las from the current 5.85 per cent to 6.15 per
Parchase a new bookmobile.
cent on both employer and employe in 1978, rising to 6.85 per · Cheater and Orange Twps.
Replace the esisting bookmobile.
continue CR 75 Jllsl the Hospital on a new alignment to a
bnprove library accessi!)lllty, energy conservation, and
cent by 11112.
junction with Old SR 7 In Pomeroy.
S)iace-us6 fleslbllity. .
r
Build an extenliion of CR 7li from SR 143 to SR 7 in
DETRbrr - DESPITE THEIR STRONGEST December
It Is anticipated that the final list of reconuneilded projects
salq In four years, domestic automakers have trimmed about Salisbury Twp~
wi)l be much aborter due to the limited lunda available.
Realign CR 24 and CR 3118 from SR. 121 Into Pomeroy.
This listing has been developed as the second step In a six
47,000 can from their January production schedules to keep
llllalkar lnwntorles from getting out ol hand. In addition,
part Meigs County capital bnJI'owments Program being
Law Eolormnellt
Gtn«al Moton' GMC Truclt: &amp; Coach Dlvlllon announced the
conducted currently by the James M. Jennings Assodates Co.,
Relocate
the
County
Sheriff's Office and Jail to a modern a Columbua firm of plannlpg conaultanta, working wlth 'the
·.llfoll of 2110 workers at ita medium-duty truck plant In
faciUty.
Meigs County Regional Plaming Commisalon (MCRPC). .
J""'!Int.t.c, Mich.
·.
Provide office 1p1ce for the Prosecuting ,4.ttorney, atleut
,
However, the addition of basic production for the hot·
· The f,iCRPC Invites Meigs County citlunll to review this
lelllnC llcht-dutY trucks wiD mean most wprkera wiD be · two autstanta, and clerical staff.
preliminary report that II available for readlni! at the CETA
Double the tirea allocated to the Clerk of Courts.
' olllce on the third floor of the Meigs County Court House. Any
recal1ad by sprlnc, 1poke1111en said.
Espand the IJliCf available to the Bureau of Support.
comments to be conaldered for lncluaion in the final report
Remodel the III!COild Boor of the Court House by lowering must be received by the consultant by January 17, 1977
OOLUMBUS-SEN. NEAL F. ZIMMERS, Jr., J).!Jayton,
wu named today u chaimum of the Ohio Senate Energy tllld the ceiling and lrnpt'9Vin(j the li&amp;bting. '
(~ available at Court Houae).
ledal Service•
.
Public UtWties Committee. Zlmmen, 34, wu vice-chairman
~ Establish a ll!la1l abuaeilfotectlon """ter for women and
1i
•(Contjnued 0/1 page 18)

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GETS GROUNDHOG
Although the groundhog !s'not ·
supposed to be seen until Feb.

·''

Coffeegrowers content to
RIO DE JANEIRO, BRAZIL (UP!) - BRAZILIAN .
coffee growers earned record profits last year and
apparently are unconcerned over American attempts to
fight high prices with a boycott. The Brazilian Coffee
lns~itute was expected to disclose today gross sales of $2.3
b1lhon last. year, more than double the $900 million gros•J
export sales of 1975 and $1 btilion more than Brazil 's
previous record of $1.243 billion In 1973.
. Attempts at launching a coffee boycott w push down
the ,current (X'ice in the United States of nearly ~a pound
have been spearheaded by New York City's consumer
affairs conunissioner. Aspokesman said Coffee Institute
Presidept Camilo Calazans bad cofl(id~ to a small group
fllat attempts at boycotting Brazilia~ coffee "could be
good for Brazil."
The spokesma.~ SPid Calazans told tbe group : "The
fact is the Brazilian government isn 't interested in havil'.g
Brazil continue being responsible for the largest pli:'l of
international coffee demand . We cannot continue
exporting or we will exhaust our stocks In a few months."
U.S. Consumer groups are replying : If you persist in
this gouging of the coffee drinker our oncoming
generation will be totally economically psyched away
from drinking coffee. Reflect how your children-as adults·
will cope with that.
·" ''

Cadets return
By ROBERT KAYLOR
four to e1ght years.
WASHINGTON (UPI ) The blue·ribbon panel,
Army Secretary Martin R. beaded: by former asttonaut
Hoffman announced wday F r a n k B o r m a n ,
that cadets who have been recommended last month
dismissed or resigned from that the ISO cadets who have
West Point in a cheating resigned or been dismissed so
scandal will be readmitted to far ·as the result of
school.
.• collaboration on a takehome
And he.told a news confer- electronics esam last year be
ence he has decided to accept reinstated as · soon as
most recommendations of a possible.
special study panel to reform
Hoffman, saying the Anriy
· the honor system at the U.S. agreed . with
the
Military Academy.
recommendation, sal&lt;! cadets
Hoffman also announced "who apply and are accepted
that West Point's present after screening by the special
superintendent, Lt. Gen. rea!lmissions conunittee at
Sidney B. Berry, will be West Point will be admitted
removed in the next few in July, 1977." This will be
months and replaced by jl!l!~ alter the remaining
another officer who 1'/Ul members of their class are
undergo special orientatloo ' graduated.
for the post and serve from

Rou~eelected . The Meigs County Board of . representative to apply and
Education Tuesday night receive aU federal funds for
reelected HarQ.ld &gt;. Roush whichJhecounty board might
president and Gol\lon Collins biel'iglble. Attending were
vice president for the new Supt. Bowen, Roush, Collins,
year.
George Perry and Robert
~lllr meetings were set Burdette.
on the first Tuesday of each
month beginning at 8 p.m.
HANK SAYS THANKS
during the montha when DST
Henry Clatworthy,
Is In effect and 7: 30 p.m. chairman of the "Gift for the
when EST Is ln effect. It was Yanks Who Gave" program
agreed members wiD receive for Feeney-llennett Post 1:18
no a meeting, not to esceed American Legion, today
$240 a year, . and a service thhnked the Middleport
fund of fl,600 for expenses of community for its support.
members
and
their More than.f&amp;IO was raised In
representatives to · attend Middleport, The program
.professional mo:etings.
remembers veterans con·
The board approved a fined to hospitals.
$240,981 budget for the
calendar year of 1977 and BOARD TO MEET
voted to maintain liability
RACINE - .The Southern
ihsurance fcir 'Its members . . Local Board of Education wW
Bus driver certificates were meet In special -ton tbla
· Issued to Jesse Browning and evening at 7 to set a date
RandaU Gibbs.
when applications for clerk·
Supt. Robert Bowen was treuurw are to be ·BUbo
nll'(led
the
board's mitted .
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2- The J'&gt; · '\y Sentlnel,Middleport-llomeroy, 0 , Wednesday, Jan 5, 1977

·Republicans' big four huddle on new le~dership question
II)' CLAY F. RICHARDS

WASHJNGTON (UPI ) The Republican Party's blfl
four - including President
Fllrd - were hopmg ID find a
Way today to bring new
leadership to the GOP
Without a conservative vs~
liberal bloodbath,
Ford invited V1ce President
Nelson Rllckefeller, fonner
Texas Gov, Jolm Connally
and fonn~r Calilorma Gov
, Ronald Reagan- for a
"s111llllllt" luncheon at the
White House today, Just 10
days before the Republican
National Comnu\tee meets ID
PICk a SUCCessOr ID Chrurman
Mary Lomse Srruth

Nooe of the four will hold formation of a steenng
off1ce after Jan 20, but they committee - a kind of
are the party's most visible • counCII ·of elders - to help
activists and represent four bring the GOP back from 1ts
factions that will try te election disasters of 1976
dominate the future of the
All four expressed mterest
party
• in servmg on the comrruttee,
At the tune of the announ· but they s81d they dld not
cement, th,ere was no wish to dominate the body
mention made of InVIting Sen which rrught have 20 or 30
Howard Baker of Termessee members
ro sit in although on Tuesday
A similar committee was
he became the party's formed
after
Lyndon
highest-ranking elected Jolmson's landslide slipped
off1C18l by defeating Sen Republicans out of national,
Robert Griffm of Michlflan ID state and local offices In 1964.
become Senate Republican The body was credited with
leader
'
ass1stmg GOP comebacks m
In an 1111t1al conference last 1966 and creating at least part
month, the four agreed on of the orgaruzatlon that led ro

Richard NIXon's capturmg
the White Houae In 1966
The four also agreed that
none of thell' number should
serve as national Ch81t1118n.
They sa1d they did not want to
dlctate a chrunnan to the
committee, but they thought
it should be a "!echmCian"
rather than a big name
leader
t
That was before ex-Sen.
William Brock of Tennessee
announced he would become
an active contender for the
JOb At that time the names
most frequenUy mentlooed
for the post were state GOP
chairmen
Richard
Richarda of Utah, Thomas

Milligan of. Ind18na, Fred
B1ebel of CoMecticut, Kent
McGo\lgh of Ohio, and . Qdy
Fish of Wisconsin
Mrs Smith resigned rather
than serve out the final year
of her tenn and become the
scaP!'goat for the party's
losses. The election left the
GOP out of the White House,
m the mmonty In Congress,
controlling , only
12
statelmuses and SIX state

HOSPITAL·NEWS
Holzer Medical Center
1Discharges, Jan 4)
Mrs Ern1e Bowlmg and
daughter , Mrs
Harold
Braden and daughter ,
Marths Brewer, lms Corbin,
Ruby Ejlliott, Mrs Jackie
Harrison and son , Ruth
House, Lorena
Kapp ,
Elizabeth Lear, Demse
McGmness, Alma Miller,
John
Spires,
Audrey
Theobald, Harry Thevenln,
Jolm T1pton, W1tma Warns·
ley
(Births, Jan. 4)
Mr and Mrs Michael
Claar, daughter, Hamden,
Mr and Mrs Jolm Detllllon,
daughter, McArthur, Mr. and
Mrs Wilham Crawford,
daughter, Apple Grove, W
V~Mr and Mrs Harold
Moyer, daughter, Northup,
Mr and Mrs Thomas McNerhn, son, Jackson , Mr and
Mrs Robert Wood, son, Oak
H1ll, Mr and Mrs Arthur
Brown, daughter, Oak Hill;
Mr and Mrs Homer Goheen,
son, Wellston '

legislatur~s

ABOUT THE SAME
ALFRED - Vere Swartz
and Emma Fmdhng remam
about the same

Congress organizing its new work committees
By GENE BERNHARDT

WASHINGTON (UPI ) The 95th Congress officially IS
m busmess and lawmakers
started the mttyi:riity work
today
of
orgamz1ng
comrruttees m tune to start
unmed1ate work on Junmy
Carter's proposals after he
becomes president Jan 20
A new set of leaders took
over alllld the trad1Uonal
pomp and ceremony of
openmg day Tuesday that
saw only one surprise m the
hierarchy
Sen Howard Baker of
Tennessee nudged the
Cavor1te, Sen Robert Griffm
of M1ch1gan, by one vote - 19
to 18 - to wm the Senate
Republican leader's spot
vacated by Hugh Scott
'
Thomas "Tip" O'Neill was
elected Speaker of the House
and Sen Robert Byrd of West
V1rgm1a
was
named
DemocratiC leader m U1at
body, And With families and
fr1ends looking down from the
galleries all 435 members of
the House and 33 new or re·
lllected members of the
Senate took the oath of off1ce
Openmg-day busmess out
of the way , the Democratic
Steermg'
and
Polley
Committee •&gt;\vent behmd
closed doors to start making
assignments to the 21
standlng comrruttees of the
House
The
292-member

Democratic caucus will take
up •ts recommendations on
Jan. 18, mcludlng the election
of comrruttee charrmen and
certam subcommittee
ch8U'men
The
Senate
Rules
Comm•ttee scheduled
heanngs today on a
controvemal proposal to
reduce the 31 Senate conuruttees ID 15, and also were ID
cons1de~ a proposal making 1t
eas1er to cut off filibusters
Opemng
day
saw
mtroduct10n of a $4 billion bill
for pubhc works projects,
designed ID open .up some
300,000 new Jobs The
measure, mtrnduced m the
House, has leadership
backmg and 1s expected to he
worked mto Carter's JOb
plans, which he will ouUme m
ameetmgm Plams,Ga., With
congressmnal leaders th1s
week
O'Neill told the House "our
fll'st priOrity must be to put
AmeriCans back ID work "
W1th former Speakers John
McCormack and Carl Albert
lookmg on from guest seats
on the House floor , O'Neill
also sa1d ''we must bolster
public confidence m Congress
by adopting and livmg by a
IDugh code of eth1cs," an
unspoken but obvious
reference to the sex-scandals
that rocked the House last
year
Byrd, who was picked by

Rev. Mary Anderson given
ordination rites Tuesday
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Oh10 got !IS Ill's! woman
EpiSCopal pnest Tuesday mght when Bishop John Burt
ordamed the Rev Mary Sterrett Anderson at Trm1ty
Cathedral
The Btshop placed his hands on Mrs Anderson's head
and mtoned
"Therefore, 0 Father, through Jesus ChriSt your Son,
gtve your Holy Spll'lt to Mary; ftU her wtth grace and
'power, and make her a pnest myour church ''
Among the r,ooo persons wbo Witnessed the ceremony
was the Rev Peter Beebe, who was diSCiplmed by Burt
and •eventually removed •s rector of Omst Church m
Oberlin for allowmg Irregularly ordamed women pnests
to celebrate the Eucharist.
Rev Mrs. Anderson, 31, Is the wife of Rev Philip A
Anderson, a deacon He IDok part m the ceremony by
reading the Gospel anc' a ,., .... wo" .oncelebratlon ot
commumon by h1s w1fe and the 01snop.
"Yop are a woman pnest, and you Will be part of a
pamful era because many oppose what we are domg here
tnmght," sa1d the Rev George Regas of Pasadena, Calif.,
preacher at the service
"Most of your opponents will soon forget they opposed
you, and will accept your pnesthood," he added
The Rev. Mrs Anderson, a native of Dayton, was the
thll'd wpman ordained as a pr1est m the Umted States She
recently served as pastoral counselor m the Cleveland
Clm1c's pediatrics sec!lon
Burt was an act1ve supporter of women m the
priesthood He bad threatened to res1gn if the Church did
not approve ordination of ,women at 1ts convention last
year He disciplined Beebe, who was tried by an
ecclestastlcal court, because Beebe refused to wrut for the
conven!lon 's approval
M

'

by
the some ways our task as Senate
after Sen Democrats will he eas~er , In
Hubert Humphrey withdrew some ways 1t will be m9re
at the last moment, pledged •dlfficult "
President Ford timed the
cooperatiOn With Carter but
S81d the Senate also had 1ts start of the new Congress to
own respons1bhty to the propose mdl VIdual and
business tax cuts, a plan he
nation
"For the first time m e1ghl srud earlier he would subrmt
years, the Amencan govern· before leavmg office, but
ment will not be a divided which IS expected to be
govenunent," he " said '•Jn shelved by the Democrats
until they get Carter's tax
acclamation

Democratl~cauCiis

By Lawrence J'. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Is 1t
true that starch has the same
effect on your body as sugar'
Is 11 equally as dangerous '
DEAR READER - There
really 1sn't much difference
Starch IS made up of many
mole cules of glucose .
Digestive enzymes break
starch down to glucose which
IS absorbed mto the c~rcula-·
twn
'
Sugar IS a douj)le molecule,
one of fructose and one of
glucose It IS broken mto the
two smgle sugars m the mtcs(me The fructose 1s con·
verted to glucose m the body
tor energy use Thus, a
molecule of table sugar ends
up as two molecules of
glucose, and a molecule of
maltose from starch alsO
ends up as two molecules of
glucose
A graiJlo(lf wh1te fldur co11•

•

Meigs
Property

:meuu:::

Grant likes
•

1:

Social,
Calendar

~

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)Abill to estaplish an "energy
stamp" progr~m to offset
mcreasmg utility bills for
low·mcome Ohtoans was
among seven utility bills
mtroduced Tuesday, the f1rst
working day of the Ohio
General Assembly
The b1ll, sponsored by Rep
C J McLin Jr., D-Dayton,
would set up a program
sunilar to the fond stamp
program for low mcome
Citizens To be ehg1ble,
Ohioans would have to make
less than a $5,000 a year.
Gov James A Rhodes and
maj~h10 electric utilities
hav endorsed the Idea, but
no o has agreed on how ID

-

resolution.
- l:&gt;roVIde a utility bill
credit to those Oh10ans wbo
are granted homestead
exemptions on their property
taxes
- Exempt from the sales
tax the purchase of coal,
art1fic18Uy produced gas, or
fuel ml for home heatmg
- Let utilities charge con·
sumers for mstallation of fuel
conversiOn faciliti es or
pollutiOn control devices
while the facilities are' still
under con'struct10n
- Proh1 b1t telephone
comparues from chargmg for
more than • three dU'ectory
assistance calls a month
- Replace the three,
gubernatonally appointed
members of the PUCO w1th
an 11-member body elected
from utility llistrlcts
Rep Gene Branstool, DUllea, mtroduced the bill to
exempt the purchase of coal,
o1l and artificial gas for
residential heatmg from the
12th grade without passing
sales
tax.
the exam or satislymg an
He
estunated
his bill would
alternative
cut state tax revenues $26
Sweeney explamed that
provisiOns would he made for milhon In 1975, for example,
8 million tons of coal were
local boards of education to sold for restdential heatmg
vary t.pe standards m areas of Sales figures for fuel oil and
great socio-economiC artificially produced gas
difference or to set up
unavailable
remedial programs for those were
Abill settmg up the popular
who fail
election for four-year terms
The bill also provides for
an expanded PUCO was
promoting pupils who demoo- of
Introduced by Rep Michael
strate they are "perfoiiiiiiig ShnZiano, D-Columbus
to the1r capacity" even Stinizlano sponsored several
J
though they cannot pass the ut1Uty bills last session,
tests
COUPLE HONORED
"We have found·that many mcludmg one ID proh1b1t
ALFRED
- A pretty
of our students are not residential consumers from observance was held In the
College Baske tball Results
bearmg the cost of
By Untied Press lntcrnahon a l
learrung ID read and write m emergency,
church
basement
on
New
Saena Tournament
mdustnal
high school and It's costmg us
Year's Day, 1t hemg the 40th
( F•nal Round)
natural
gas
purchases
J
{ Champton stnp)
dollars and quahty," sa1d
weddmg
anmversary
of
Mr
Rep Arthur Bowers, !).
Ok ta C1 t y 77 Northeaster n 56
Sweeney
( Consolat,on)
Steubenville, sponsored the and Mrs Howard Flanders,
Some 17 states already
Amer1can U 69 Siena 83
who
attend
the
Alfred
church
have achievement tests or bill proh1bitmg utilities from The room was pa eked w1th Connecticut 79EaMstane 63
are considermg adopting auroma!lcally adding the cost relatives and fnends who Lafay ett e 90 Y a le 59
of out-of-!tate coal oniD the
Navy 102 Te)(as Wcs eyan 87
them, he sa1d
bills
of consumers through honored them
Niagara 66 Ver mont 61
Among the survival skllls
R der 63 Dr e)(e l 58
the
purchase
fuel
adjustment
South
recommended by Sweeney
Albion 73 Berry 71
21RUNSMADE
are balancing a checkbook clause.
ry 85 La Tec h 8.4
Bowers said enactment of
RACINE- The Racme ER Centena
and the use of loans and
East Car 76 New Ham p 65
the
bill
would
spur
Squad made 24 runs m Fla Te ch 115 Nor thwood 74
credit carda.
development
of
new December Joan Tutlle sa1d Furman 93 Penn 811
'
SW 63 St Ambr se 57
teclmolog1es to make Ohio's the urut drove 1,008 miles, Ga
Ga St 85 Jacksonville 63
high-sulphur coal more had 13:i man hours servmg Geo town DC 53 Boston U 49
attractive to electric power the VIllages of Racme and G twn Ky 100 Crsn New mn 66
Howard 78 Norfolk Sl 73
plant operators
Syracuse and the townships Kno)(v l11e 69 cumber land 65
Rep Thomas J Carney, !). of Letart, Sutton and Mar s Hil l 86 Limestone 4.4
Maryland 90 Richm ond 78
Youngstown, mtroduced the Lebanon
NC Ashev l 65 N C M eth 61
bill allowmg the PUCO ID
P m brke St 75 Coas t I Car 13
SW La 103 Marshall 70
authorize utilities ID charge
Tenn Tech 103 M ill gan 85 !
ousiDmers for construction of
Thomas Mor e 73 Un10n Ky 72
TAKEN TO HMC
Towson 110 Sparkill 89
polluhon control or fuel
RACINE - The Racme ER Troy St 71 L1vmg ston 58
conversion facilities.
S&lt;(uad was called Tuesday at Valdosta St ~2 Guilford 77
The PUCO could allow the 10 a m. to Southern High VIrginia St 81 Shaw 78
Md 81 Urslnus 62
mtroglyccrme tablets on charges, accordmg to School for Doug Huston, 16, Western
Xav1er 7l Lew1s 70
Carney's bill, if a utility is m Syracuse, who suffered a
Midwest
their person
Cornel l Ia 70 Simpson 6'1
• N1troglycenne tablets re- Usevere financial stress II
possible fractured leg He Creighton 86 Tulsa 75
mam effective only if they r.-....-~--:-----.:..., was taken to Holzer Medical Dayton 79 Morehead St 66
1
Drake 61 IOW8 Sf 55
are kept stored m a ttghtly
THEDALYSENTINFL
Center
F ranklin JS DePauw 68
sealed amber glass - not
DEVOTIDTOTHE
Hanover 95 Anderson 12
INTEREBrOF
Phllps...l07-----B.ethl Kan 68
plastic - bottle m the
MEIGS-M.\80N .t.REA
R1o Grande 13 Cedarvl 67
refngerator Take out p1lls
WALTON VISITING
CIIESn:RL. TANNEHILL
S wslrn Kan -73 Slt&gt;rlng 63
Euc.Ed
only for one week's supply, or
Scott Walton, servmg with St , Fran lnd 98 Manon 84
ROBERTHOEFUgt
Tr1 Ste le 66 Huntin gton 60 even for the day If you use a
the U S Army in Korea, Is Urbana 86 W1lm mgton 74
Cllf Edit«
Publt.hed datty 01"111 Sat&lt;rioy spending a leave with his wife Wtllenberg 70 Denison 62
lot of them Never use pills
by The Ohio Valley Publishing ComSt 98 NE Ill 96
that hsve been out of the
and son, Sean, and hiS Wright
any Ill Court St Pomero)", Oblo
'
SouthweSt
refrigerated pill bottle more
46789 Bustneu Office Phone mparents, Mr and Mrs Kermit Ab Chns 110 Panhandle 92
21$11 E&lt;btona.l Phont99'b2U7
Ark&amp;r~sas .41 Tex Tec h 38
than a week Replace the enWalton
Se&lt;!ond clasl: p&lt;:wta~e paid al
Baylor 97 TC U 62
tire opened bottle 111 the
Pomeroy Ohio
Mlctwstrn 61 E Cent Okla 59
VISITQRS COME
Na tional advertistna reprt"Mn.
SMU 81 Rice 71
refngerator w1thm three
tative Ward· Griffith Company, InALFRED
Ray SW Okla 82 Bethany Naz 74
months
Texas A&amp;M 68 Texas 59
c , BotUnelli and Gallacher Dlv
Rndehave•, son and family of washburn 71 M cMurry 63 ot
757 Third Ave New York , NY
You can alsO tell1f the pills
10017
West
Columbus recently visited at
are stillacl1ve by the reaction
SubBcnpUon rates Dellver!d by
Inti U 96 LA Bapt 80
the Rodehaver • Honacher AlA 98 C&amp; l Baptlst 80
of your tongue
carrier where avaUable 75 cents per
week By Motor Roul.e where carrier
home
Ariz St 115Prtlnd St 92
I think the label on the date
Carr II Monl 66 W$1rn Mont 56
5ervtce nol avallMble, • One month
of
usefulness
of
13 IS By mallli!)l~o lind W Va
D«mver 104 Neb wesleyan 78
ON SICK LIST
Gr eat Fal ls 97 No Mont 83
One Year, o~of2!.00, S1J moolhs,
mtroglycermc 'tablets should
1111G1 Thfee m011lh1, 17 00,
83 Sl Martin s 82
ALF.RED Thellpa Llnfld
defm1tely be a lot more
N ( Chrllle 111 HBW8 1 Hllo ](,
EL'fewnert PI 00 year Sll" months
Henderson and Osle Mie Pepperdine 92 C!ll-v ln 14
'13 50, three months fl 50
specific than 11 1s to av01d the
S~lrm
prict
lncludel
Sunday
Follrod have been on the s1ck Saclo 51 82 UC Rvrscte 81
coniUSJon t"any people face
Tl.t
nlint:l
Utah St 100 Cal 51 B f ld 89
list
Webr St 87 Ca l Sl N rdge SA
'
1$

fund the program.
McUn proposes that the
program be funded through a
tax on all advert1smg
revenues prepared and pa1d
for by public utilities
Advertlsmg IS defmed as
any brochure, "prepared
sales talks to the public," or
gener~l
CHculaiiOn
advert1smg m a periodical
Other
utility
bills
Introduced Included
measures to
·- Prohibit electnc utilities
from auiDmatlcaUy chargmg
consumers for the cost of coal
bought out of state, unless the
General Assembly approves
the purchase m a JOint

Price nets 18
Ri • ory

Achie\"ement exams woUld be
required by new legislation '
COLUMBUS, OhiO (UP!)Ohio's elementary and
secondary school pupils
would have ID pass perwdic
standard comprehensive
achievement exams under
legislation
now bemg
considered m the state House
of Representatives
The
measure
was
mtroduced Tuesday by Rep
Patnck A Sweeney, D·
Cleveland, who said not
enough of Oh1o's school
children can read and wnte
sat1sfactnrily.
Sweeney
sa1d
the
leg1slat10n 1s necessary to
ensure that pupils are being
given "surVIval skills" like
readmg comprehensiOn,
language arts and anthmetic
computation to take lntn the
adult world
'llle bill would requll'e the
state Board of Education to
set up standard achievement
tests to be administered at
the end of third, siXth, runth
and lith grades
Startmg in the fall of 1978,
no pupil would be adnutted ID
the fourth seventh, lOth or

into glucose

Starch
Carbo hydrates
Others who want this m·
formation can send 50 cents
With a long, stamped selfaddressed envelope for mall·
mg Just send your request to
me m care of this newspaper,
P 0 Box 1551 , Radio C1ty
Station, New York, NY 10019
DEAR DR. LAMB -I have
angma pector1s I take
mtroglycerme for chest
pll tn&gt; The druggist told my
husband. ID make sure I
replace the mtroglycerme
piiJB 1 every two months for
thr.y become weak and are
not fresh My questiOn IS
~~~~ I open the bottle, how
Ioiii: are they usable I Why
are t1.ey d•ted on the bottle
for over a year if they are only good two months'
DEAR READER - This IS
an lm()jtrtanl pomt Many
heurt plftlents ure wulktng
urtund w1th us eless
r

1

I

,,

UPI Sporn Writer
LOS ANGELES (UPIJ
The subJect"Was Super Bowl
distractions and whst effect
they m1ght have on the
Oakland Ra1ders John
Madden just shook h1s head
"I don't look at all of this as
a distraction/' he stud "I
think all that busmess 1s
overrated "
Mmnesota Vlkmes' Coach

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sporn Editor
LONG BEACH, Calif (UPI ) - "My arm IS sore I can't

THURSDAY
MEETING
OF
In·
ternat!onal
Union
of
Operating Engineers has
been changed to the junlor
fa1r buUding of the Athens
County Fairgrounds at 7-30
pm Thursday

throw"

FRIDAY

'

Fran Tarkenton sa1d 11 strictly as a gag, and then as If tn
furnish lndlsputsble, fll'st-haod eVIdence of how utterly
outlandish any report like thst was, he uncorked a low,
spiraling :11;-yarder, w1th plenty of smoke on 1t, to a waiting
receiver shortly before the Mmnesota Vikmgs broke up
Tuesday's photo SeSSion here
r-----------~
For the past two weeks now, rumors have been circulating I
1
that Tarkenton's throwmg ann Isn't all 1! should be It
certainly wasn't in the Vikings' 24-13 victory over the Los
Angeles Rams for the NFC title at Bloomigton, Minn , a week I
and a pall ago
t &gt;lD!!S lI By STEVE WILSI'EIN
Tarkenton didn't throw the ball well at all, completmg less
N BA Slandm.,
UPI Sports Writer
th an 50 per cen t of hIS tosses, only 12 of 27 for 143 yards A 8 V Un•ted
Press International
..
East""
co"'"'"''
Sometimes the ball has
number of those he connected with were little swmg passes w
Altanhc D•"'•on
eyes and 11 goes straight to
some of the other Vlkmg backs
Ph.tad etph•• ~ ~4 P~;6 _GB the hoop," R1ck Barry sa•d
HIS passmg per!onnance against the Rams was so subpar, NY Kn&gt;Cks
J8 t6 m " , "It's somethmg you have no
so sub.Tarkenton, that Tom Brookshier, the former :e~;~~o
~\ ~~~ ~: ~ co~trol over" ,
Philadelphia Eagles'. cornerback handlmg the TV coverage NY Nets
When you get hot like
12 23 343 8
that day With Pat Summerall, wondered out loud repeatedly
central DIV&gt;Ston
that," Jamaal Wilkes added
whether there was somethmg wrong With Tarkenton's ann
et"eland
~ ~4 P~o .." " With a sm1le, "you could kick
The Vikings are fouriJOm! underdogs for Sunday's Super-&gt; Houst on
19 13 594 •, the ball m"
Bowl meetmg with the Oakland Ra1ders Most of the Vikings' ~::2:,~:.~'
g
Barry put on a spectacular
shootmg show m the third
hopes are bed m wtth Tarkenton's arm H there 1s anything Washington 16 17 485 4
wrong With 11, and thst fact became known the Raiders rmght Atlanta
JJ "
JJJ to
quarter Tuesday rught when
jump as high as 8or 9pomtfavorltes.
'
w~:~~;,f~~~:;~·
he chckedon JUmpers up to 30
Tarkenton keeps msiSting hiS arm IS okay, that there 1sn't
w L Pet GB feet ID reel off 20 of )lis
anythmg wrong With 11, but he has been known 1D lay back m g~~,V0~~
l~
4 season-high 38 pomts agamst
the weeds before thiS and not say a word when he actually was tnd•ana
11 20 459 8
the New York Kmcks and
handicapped physically
Kansa s C• tv 17 20 459 a pace the Golden State
Two years ago, after Pittsburgh beat the Vikings,lli-6, 10 the ~~:~'a9u0k ee
:~ l~
:~· I Wamors to a 120-110 VICtory
Super Bowl, Tarkenton admitted hiS ann was bothermg him
Pac•f&gt;&lt; D•m•on
In a 71'.!-mmule span early m
for some time although he hadn't sa1d anything about 1t before Pont and
';':; ~3 P~1 8 GB the penod, he scored 16 pomts
the game
Los Ang eles n IJ 6,. t , to help the Warriors outscore
Now he keepsms1sting the armiS perfecUy allnght
Go' den Stale 18 15 545 ' ' the Kmcks, 22~. and take a
"There's nothing wrong With It," he S81d during Tuesday'S ~~~~~~.
:~ :~ ;~~ : 7~2lead after trallmg, 54-50,
Tuesdays Re.utls
at halftime
tumoutfor the med18 "My arm IS not hurt Yeah,l know what
Brookahier said when we played the Rams but had he asked GOlden 51 120 NY Kn&gt;eks It O
Wilkes, scoreless m the
'
Atlanta l l J Denver 109
me beforehand I would've IDid hun my arm was okay It was Ch&gt;&lt;aoo as NY Nets 80
third period, picked up
my knee that was hurt We've never made a B•cret of that M•twaukee 139 Phocn.x t t1
Barry's cue m the fourth
Portland 128 Bo ston 8~
IOntv gam es scheduled !
quarter and began bombmg
BesIde s, when the wind chill factnr was 12 below, like It was
that day ,It's not a day for Fancy Dan passmg "
Wednesday s Games
long;ange bank shots with
It's posalble Tarkenton's knee problem IS preventmg hun Golden
sta
te
at
Bulla
to
Bill Bradley draped all over
Los A.ij.9 al Ph1la delph a
him Wilkes hit h1s f1rst SIX
fr om setting up the way he would normally, and that IS NY Kn&gt; cks at Houston
affecting his throWing Baseball pitchers 'ICriOdicaUy run miD Denver at San Antonoo
shots, fhppmg 20-25-footers
tlus tr9uble
~~o~n~~s :/ ~~;~,'f 910 n
off the backboard with h1s
It's~osslble Tarkenton IS keepmg a physical problem ID Chocago at lnd ana
unorthodox behind the head
11
himself, e same way he d1d two years ago prwr to Super B~s6~7,'~,s;,~~ ;',heduted t
shootmg style, m JUSt four
Bowl
e qow clauns the cond1t10nof his arm was reported
Thursday 's Games
mmutes, to provide the
to the league before that gsme but a league spokesman derues tndoana at Atlanta
1 Warnors wtth a 103-66 lead
Golden St ., Ctevetand
With 7. 30 ,, go
Buffalo at Milwauk ee
w
thiS
The player w1th the V1kmga who probably knows Fran
NHL stand.ngs
The Knicks, who wasted a
Tarkenton best IS veteran center M1ck Tlngelhoff The two By Umted P"ss tntemahonat 32-poml mght by Earl
have been clos_e friends nearly 15 years They room together
campbell
Conlerence
Monroe, made a b1d for a
Patnck DI VI!.IOn
'He's a sloppy roomiTIHte," laughs Tingle hoff "Throws hiS
w L T Pts GF GA comeback when the Wamors
clothes aU over Plus 1 always hsve to buy the newspaper He Ph&gt;Ia
2J B 8 s• 146 t03 "started to celebrate too
NY l slandr' s 2'1 9 6 50 119 92
mak es a mi Ilion a year and I have to buy the paper every day Anant a
1814 1 43 126172
He never bought a paper m h~o life He's a great guy, though, NY Rangers t6 IS 10 &lt;? 150 IJ9
0
0
tops We're always getting on each other about something "
Smythe
' " GF GA
W L "T "Pts
Yeah, but what about h1s arm'
st Lo u1s
17 111 s J9 115 137
''lknewitwasbadtwoyeatsago,"saysTingelhoff ''He was Co
Ch1 c ago
n 20 6 Jt 126144
lorado
10 n 6 26 107 136
hurtin"g and never let on to anyone But hlS arm lS okay now'' vancouver 11 21 "' 26 113 166
H 11 wasn't would Tlngelhoff say so'
Mmnesqta 7 " 9 2J 102 155
'No," says the Vikes' center, laughing some more.
Wale~
NOrriSConlertfhct&gt;
DIVI SIO n

MEETING SET
Pomeroy Bethel 62 In·
ternational Order of Jobs
Daughters wtll meet at the
temple Monday. Dec 10, at
730pm
GROUP TO MEET
Me1gs Chapter Order of
DeMolay w1ll meet m special
sess1on at Middleport, on
Monday, Dec 10 at 7 30 p m

\

Cage Scores

1

Normandy 82 Garlteld Hgts
SB
Norfhndge 66 Gr o vlll t 65
50 ( ansas

Parma Padua 71
ncoln
West 46
Perry 82 Hardin Nvrthern 72

Portsmouth 57 Greenup I Ky)
53
Portsmouth W 61

Rtdgedale 84 Elgtn 18
Shaker Hgls 53 Valley Forge
51
Sout hern Local64 Leetonta 50

Tu slaw 47 Dalton 44 loll

I

' r

Wes t Bran c h 81 loutsvllle
Aquinas 77

Wa shtnglon CH 62 Hill sboro
60
Way ne 58 Carroll 45
West Holmes 39 Wayne~ate 37
Westerville S 43 Cot North
land 35
Wtckllffe B9 Lakewood Sf
Edward 87
Woodsfte ld 78 Waterford 62
Western Brown 62 New R1ch
mond 51

Geneva 44 Eastlake North 27
Grand Valley 60 Ledgmont 49
Fatrport 72

103

Stanton 41
Beaver Local 61 Newton Falls

liS bon 72
60

East L1verpool 68 Wetrton {W

67 lot)
Mohawk 68 Arcadoa 64
Cot Mtfflt n 81 North Union
Va)

58

Day Bel moo t 71 Beavercreek
50

Day Stivers Patterson 79
Jefferson 73
Fatrborn Baker 42 Spring
ftetd North 41 •
Wayne 58 Carroll 45
National Trails 79 Preble
Shawnee 1 73

Covtngton 58 Bradford 'YI

Franklin Monroe 99 Russta 83

Groveport 74 Mt Vernon 69
Johnstown

103

Sf .Rn ,l"

'

:i

m-

m

Montrea l
P1 1tsburg h
Los Angeles
Detr o1l
Wa!&gt;hl ngtn

Vikings, Wildcats

Bu ffalo

clash Friday night

Watkins

Memortal 72
Northr idge 66 Granvtlle 65
Uttca 65 Ltckmg 63
Newark
Catholtc
78
Lakewood 65
Cot South 84 Cot Wehrle 71
Wes tervllle South 43 Col
Northland 35
London 78 Cot Ready 66
Grove City 57 Whitehall 49
Madison Pla ins 55 West
Jefferson 54

Be•ley 84 Big Walnut 59
Ridgedale 84 Elgin 18
Cot Mifflin 81 North U~ton 58
Cot Academy 60 Fairbanks 59
•
Girts
OhiO Htgh School
Basketb'll Reoutts
Un1ted Press lniirnatlona I

Adena 'YI w.. htngton C H 20
Canton ,, ,!1 of Fame

Tournament

Po•nt Park I Pa l 89 Malone
7i (champ!
Ohio COtlf90

Boskttba II Scor01

Tuoodoy Night
United Press lntor'nallonal
Dayton 79 Morehead ( Ky 166

Wtttonberg 70 Denison 62
Rio Grande 13 (.-!arvllle ~7
Urbana 86 l'{llmtngton 74
Wright State 98 NE Illinois 96
loti
Haft of Fame Clluic
Consollllon Go me
Walsh 86 Steube'?l'ltle eo

,

One SV AC contest w11r be
amcng four games mvolvmg
SV AC schools th1s weekend
Action gets underway Fr1day
mght when Symmes Valley
hosts Hannan Trace
In non 'league battles,
Wahama VISits unbeaten
Southern and Miller plays at
North Gallia Saturday mght,
Eastern w1ll host Waterford
Going mto Fr~day's ga me,
Hannan Trace IS right on the
heels of the Southern Tornados with a 2-0 league slate
Coach Gary Salyers'
Vlklllgs hold down third place
m the loop standmgs w1th a 2·
I record. Both teams played
non-league opposition
Tuesday mght
Coach Ron Twyman's
North Gall1a Pirates Will try
to avenge an earlier loss at
M11ler and the high Dying
Southern Tornados of Coach
Carl Wolfe wUI go afterthelr
seventh straight victory
against the White Falcons
Saturday night , Coach
Duane Wolfe's Eastern
Eagles will attempt to snap a

long losmg streak SoutJJ.
western and Kyger Creek are
1dle this weekend
SIJAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L P OP
Southern
6 0 492 349
Sym Valley
3 2 27? 29&amp;
Hannan Trace

2 2

~ 56

278

Southwestern 2 4 365 390
Kyger Creek
2 4 408 416
North Gal Ita
I 4 307 361
Eastern
o 4 137 228
SVAC ONLY
TEAM
W L P OP
Southern
3 0 272 184
Hannan Trace

2 0 124 121

Sym Valley
North Gal ita

2

Southwestern

1 2 188 176
0 2 71 116
0 3 172 232

Eastern

I 182 181
I I 129 128

Kyger Creek
RESERVES
TEAM
W L P OP
North Ga lita
2 0 92 11

Southern

Sym Valley
Southwestern
Kyger Creek
Hannan Trace
Eastern

;3

1 145 1'23

l 1 130 131
2 1 114 110
1 2 106 124
0 2 72

W l T Pis GF GA
29 S 6 64 t9? 90
16 16 7 39 124 137

13 17 10 36 126 116
13 21 5 31 t1 5 14l
11 23 5 27 103 154
Adam s DI VIS IOn

'

Utica 65 Ltckmg 63

He tghls

1

81

o 2 61 100

Thts week s !ilames

Boston
Toron to
Cleve land

WL
24 9
23 12
18 16
11 27

T Pt s
4 57
3 49
6 42

GF GA
139 91
148 119
149 133
7 ~ 114 w

Tu esday ' s R es ult s
Det ro d 1 Wash mg ton 1
vancouve r 2 P1tt sburgh 1
St LOUIS 4 LOS Ange les 3
JOn t v games sc heduled)
Wedn estf.Oiy s Gam es
Philade lphia at NY Ran ger s
Vancou ver a t A tlanta
LOS Angeles at M1nn esota
BuHa\o at Ch1 c ago
Colorado at Toronto
Bos ton at Cleve land
(On ly games sc hedul ed )
Thunda y s Game s

St LOUI S at Ph !ad elphia
M on t r eat at Butfal o
Pittsburgh a l wash1ngton
Mmn esota at Detro1t

WHA Standmgs
By Un1ted Press lnternahonal
East
W L T Pts
Quebec
13 15 I 41
lnd1a napl s 19 15 1 40
M 1nnesota 11 17 4 38
New Eng lnd 17 19 4 38
Cmcmna li 17 17 'l 36
B~rmnghm

San Otego

GF GA
173 140
117 125
118 119
135 \43
156 133

1.4 27 1 29 U3 16S

west
W l T Pts
23 13 2 48
19 15 4 42
10 15 1 41
16 21 1 33

GF GA

133 118
I'll
130
137

Hous ton
133
W1nn1peg
l.tl
Edmonton
103
Calgarv
15 17 2 32 lOS
Phoenl )(
lA 21 7 JC. 126
Tuesday s Results
Quebec S New England 3
W1n n1peg 2 lnd,anapOII S 1
B~rmmqham 8 Phoen1x 5
Houston 5 Edm onton 3

104
170

(Only gllmes schedul ed )
Friday - Mtller at North
Wednesday s Games
Gal ita . Wahama~t Southern LSan 01ego
at New England
Hannan

Valley

Trace at Symmes
' 4~

Saturday Eastern

Waterford at

~~t-~ou~ton

ai(I Calga r y

' '
Hockey
''
'
League Standmgs

lnt~rnational

Un1ted Press lntetnahonal

Jets &amp; Co. unanimous
for Walter Michaels
•

HEMPSTEAD, NY. (UP!)
- Never was the selection of
a head cosch simpler Walt
Michaels was everybody's
choice to becOOie the coach of
the New York Jets
" It was a strange selection
of a head coach," said Jets'
General Manager A) Ward
Tuesday-"fter naJl)ing the 47·
yel!'.old Michaela !be team's
head COICb. "It was as much
an election sa a selection.
And I'm not just talking about
the board rJ dlrectorl, but the
playen, the people In the
orpnlzallon, the medii and
' the fans There II no question
that be wu a nearly

the season ended to accept
th~ head coaching position at
the University of Arkansas
:l'he Jets signed Michaels ID
a three-year contract
estimated ID be worth about
f&amp;O,OOOayear. They also gave
Ward a new three-year
cootract and e~panded his
dutles· to include the overall
operaUon of the team. In a
third move, the club's board
of dlrectors appointed Leon
Heu 11 acting presldomt,
succeeding PhU Iselin, who
died last 'l'uelday.
Michaels, an a11istant
coscb with the Jell !rom 1963
tluvugb 1972, takes over a
Jearn that aulfered ltlltCOIId

tbul Mleballl, !be Jeta'
delenaive coordlnatnr last

atrll8bl S.ll f!IUOI1
"I will have to sit down and

uiwimodl chalc:e."

evalute our. people and aee
· Ia lbl
beltl whit our needa will be for
coach,
u~ new
Lw Holll,
whlj resipid- week before nell year," he aald. ''The ,top

auc,,..

North
wttplsgfga

Kalamazoo

Saginaw
Fltnt

For Oakland, 1t Will be 1ts
second Super Bowl, haVIng
lost Super Bowl D to Green
Bay,
The Raiders beat the twoof game 1t's gomg to be"
The Raiders, wbo have pro time defending Super Bowl
footbsll' s best record at 15-1, ch ampion Pi ttsburgh
have been mstaUed as four- Steelers, 24-7, m the AFC
pomt favontes agamst the fmals but they 're sttll hYing
V1kmgs, who are plaYJng m under the unage of not bemg
the1r record fourth Super able to wm the big game
Ten Vikings- Fred Cox ,
Bowl
Carl Eller, Ron Yary, Roy
that we' re an underdog Thst
JUSt makes for good copy all
week It doesn't have
anythmg to do With what kind

1

early," according to Golden
State Coach AI Attles, but
even a 13-2bI1tz by New York ,
m JUSI over two mmutes, feU
short when Barry hit a layup
and two free throws m the
closmg seconds
In
other
Nat10nal
Basketball Assoc1at1on
act10n, Portland trounced
Boston 128-84, Atlanta
surprued Denver With a 113109 VIctory , Milwaukee
npped Pboemx, 139-111, and
ChiCago beat the New York
Nets, oa.ao.
Blazers 128, Celllcs 84
Boston Coach Tommy
Hemsohn sa1d the Celt1cs
played "lousy defense, lousy
offense, lousy everything,"
and he was nght Larl'\'
Steele and Cork} Calhoun
came off the bench to score 16
and 16 pomts , respectively ,
and Bdl Walton, recovermg
from a bruised knee, grabbed
15 rebounds, blocked f1ve
shots and hao s1x assists m 22
t W (''
ed 1
mmu es awn scor on y
two pomts but his teammates
proVIded plenty off poml.'l
on
th
th
etr own m one o e most
one-s1ded games m the NBA
tlus season
Hawks llJ, Nuggets 109:
Led by lou Hudson's 25
pomts, Atlanta snapped an
e1ghli:ame losmg streak The
Hawks, plamng !hell' first
J•
game under new owner Ted
Turner, scored nme straight
pomts
k m a one-mmute stretch
to ta e an 8().721ead w1th 2 24
left m the lhir~ quarter and

for fighting
United Press International
Maryland's 90-&lt;8 victory
over Richmond Tuesday
rughL was marred by two
outbursts of fighting that
resulted m the ejection of four
players, mcludmg the
Terrapms' top three b1g men
Mike DaVIs was tossed out
shorUy before the second half
started, for throWing a punch
at
Richmond's
Cra1g
Sullivan, who remamedln~
game The Terrapins' Larry
Gibson and Lawrence Boston
then were eJected, w1th 5 57
remammg, atter a scuffle
With Richmond's Mike Dow,
who also was thrown out
"It started when one of
the II' players spat on Mike
Davts at the start of the half,"
sa1d the 6-foot-8 Bostofi
"There was some pushing
and shovmg durmg the hslf,
then I saw everybody
throwmg punches, so I
decided to throw some too I
bad to get hun (Dow) off my
teanunates It looked like he
was
hurting
,my

teanunate.''
R1chmond Coach Carl
Slone denied that Sullivan
spat on the &amp;-foot~ Davis No
mjur1es were reported as a
result of the fighting
"We can't afford ID have
our three big men on the
bench," said Maryland Coach
Lefty Dr1esell, looking ahead
to weekend Atlantic Coast

Port Huron

Tuesday's Results

No games scheduled

Wednesday's Games

Myskegon at Dayton
Fort Wayne at Toledo
Flint at t&lt;atam~zoo

Port Huron at Columbus

p-lorlty now Ia lor me 10 Dnd
good assiltanta We'll do
what II neceuary to turn this
thinl around."
When asked aboilt the
future of quarterback Joe
Namath, Michaels said, "Joe
Is part of ' the Jet
organ!Jatioil. We will have ID
lit down and talk with hbn
about hll feellilp. It would be
unfair to make a atatemenl
aboht Joe at this ttme."

the Nuggets were never able
,, regam the lead
w
Bucks
139, Suus lll .
Jumor Bndgeman scored
38 pomts and grabbed 11
rebounds ID lead Milwa ukee
to its stxth v1Ctory m the last
eight games The Bucks
playmg
without
Bob
DandJ:Idge who had the flu
led 77-55 at the ball Theil' 139
pomts were a season high
Bulls 88 Nets 110
Mickey Johnson scored 20
pomts to help Chica go snap a
four .game losmg streak and
extend the Nets' losses to hve
straight

W1nslon , Ed White M1ck Page- played in Mmnesota's
T 1n ge lh of f, Wa l ly three prevtous Super Bowls
Hilg enbe rg , Paul Krause ,
Madden was a linebacker
J uJl Marsha ll and Alan coach under John Rauch
when the Raiders ITUlde !hell'
only prev1ous Super Bowl
appearance m 1968 Four
members of the Oaklantl
Concepcion says team
were members of !hal
Ra1der club-Cene Upshaw ,
he'll play om
Fred g1letnlkoff, Pete
Banaszak-and Willie Brown
more enthusiastiC
option ... unless now'We're
," sa1d B1lentmkoff "We
CARACAS, Venezuela were a little bit m awe when
(UPI)- Dave Concepcion, we played lhefll'st tune We'd
lbe Clncin~att Reds' all· never played Green Ba) and
star shortstop, Is seeking a JUS! couldn't cope wtth 11 "
"Wf weren 'l menta Jl y
three-year contract for a
ready
then," noted Upshaw
half-million dollars, he said
'Now
Y.. e1re more matw-e
Tuesday
•
Concepcion, represented , We llavf grown through
by Jerry Kapslein, sa id, adverSity '
"I thought we were as good
" the Reds \\dll have to give
as
Green Bay but thst game
me a good contract or I will
got
twisted around fast, " sa1d
play out my option and
Brown
'Nobotjf knew what
become a free agent In
to
expect.
Now we all have
1977." Concepcion, who
the
nght
altitude
"
usually plays with th e
I can look back now and
Aragua Tigres dur(ng the tell some funny stories They
Ve nezuelan wint e r weren t funny then Daryle
baseball season, was Lamomca, our quarterback,
suspended m November would come mto the huddle
after hitting " an umpire and ask rece1vers what U1ey
during an argument over a lhought would go and he d get
decision In a game
no answers 11

Eaglets split
with Athens
Co unt y sch00}
TUPPERS PI A INS Eastern Jumor Ht gh spltt t ~ o
basketball games Wi th
Federal Hockmg Monday al
Tuppers Plams, the seventh
grade losmg 48 26, the c1ghlh
wmnmg 4().24
In the prelimmary contest
J Adams and D ( lass both
ca nned 15 pomts ~o o,•crcome
a 15-14 first quarter dtftc1t as
the 'viSitors ex ploded "'th 17
pomts m the lhtrd period to
wm 20mg away
Greg Cole led the hosts~ tth
mne pomts ll'htle Johnnv
Riebel chipped m w1th e1ght
pomts and a ftne floor game
E
15 3 4 4
F
14 7 17 10
After the ChriStmas break
Coach Arch Rose's e1ghth
gra der s apparen tly came
back refreshed as Eastern
allowed the VISitors JUSt nme
pomts m the second half for
that 4().24 wm
Behmd 8-4 at the first
quarter, Eastern went ahead
17-15 at the half and won
gomg away
Greg W1ga l had 12 for
Eastern
~ h tl c
Bobby
Bamnger and Joe Bo11 ers
each had seven pomts and stx
rebounds Everyone on the
Eastern team gollo play bu t
the team st11l btl 30 percent
from the f1eld The teams
were about even on the
boards
4 13 10 13
E

WINTER

5
A
L

Conference games agamsl
Wake Forest and North
Carolma State "We can't
have people swmgmg atpeopl~ and play the kind of
basketball we have to play "
Steve Sheppard preserved
Maryland's VIctory m the
closmg mmutes as Richmond
fa1led to get closer than e1ght
pomts
Sheppard
led
Maryland w1th 25 pomts,
MASON, W.
!ncludmg 9-of-12 shootmg
9
7
5
4
F
from the field
Brad DaviS added 19 pomts
and Bill Bryant had 14 as the
Terps, who mot 59 per cent
from the f1eld compared to 40
per cent for Richmond, Improved t1Wr.. record to 1().1
Senior IWWard Jeff Butler
pa ced Richmond with 23
' pomts
,
In other games, Demck
Jackson scored 20 pomts and
Georgetown sank 6 of 12 foul
shots m the last 3 30 to hold
off Boston University, 53-49
Seruor Steve Jones scored
24 pomts and sophomore
Wally Swanson added 16 ID
lead Texas A&amp;M to a Blh'i9
viciDry over Texas In the
Southwest Conference opener
for both teams
James Holliman, Mark
Landsberger and Tony Zeno
each scored 'll points ID offset
PLY WINTER TRACTION
Freeman Williams' 36 points
as Amona State downed
PorUand State, 115-92
DEEP POWERFUL

19 13 3 41 161 127
17 15 7 41 158 145
18 15 4 40 158 133

16 18 4 36 116 141
Muskegon 15 17 I 35 140 112
South
wltpts.glga
Dayton
18 17 1 37 151 151
loledo
16 17 5 37 153 16S
Columbus IS 17 7 37 149 155
Ft W'!)lne 14 19 6 34 136 169

gs' underdog role

Barry
• ' s shots had eyes

:: m ;: ;

Ports

Maplewood 64 Perry 38

"

• :;

Oak H'arbor
Lakota 40

Northwest 60

1

v·

Four ejected

Boys
Nordonta 61 Re ere 47

Cuyahoga

p ro

1

JAN 10 IS de adime for
reservations for Me1gs
Chapter of the Women's
Aglow Fellowship, 7 p m. at
Me1gs Inn, with Rev William
Moms of Manetta to be
speaker Reservations may
be made at $3 25 per dinner
by callmg Glor1a Jolmson,
992-5845, June Baker, 9492723, Joyce Hoback, 949-2325,
or Judy Jones, Gal11pohs
area, 446-0946
Dinner
Is
non-demeetmg
nominational
P(!)MONA GRANGE, B
p m Friday at the Rock
Sprmgs hall w1th Hemlock
Grange as host.
SATURDAY
THE
POSTPONED
meetmg of Harrisonville
Lodge 411, F&amp;AM, Will be
held at 7 30 p m. Saturday at
the temple

Bud Grant, who1s o:3 m Super
Bowl history, and Madden,
who 1s coachmg m hls first
one, were on display for an
army of reporters and
photographers Tuesday
"It doesn't bother m~ that
we lost tho!l!&gt; other three
games," Grant contended
"It's not like a busmess
failure. Remember, it's only
a gam~
"It alsO doesn't bother me

ily JIM COUR

Sport Parade

Transfers

digesre_~

t.lms 3 64 calones ( 12 per cent
of Its weight IS water ), and a
gram of sugar contams 3 85
calories (essenttally water
free ) So they are comparable In ~alone content.
Sugar IS not dangerous
Ne1thsr IS st..rch ¥ ou have
been readmg health miSmformatiOn Both sugar and
starch can prov1de too many
calories ~oth must be used m
moderahon m certain
medical conditions OtherWISe, both are Important
sources of calones - energy
to run your bndy
The carbohydrates m any
food, mcludmg fresh fru11.'1
and vegetables, eventually
become gl ucose before bemg
used for energy To g1ve you
more lnfommtwn about these
unportant foods I am sending
you The Health Letter
number 3·8, Sugar and

NEWHART QUITS
LOS ANGELES (UPI)
Comedl8n Bob Newhart 1s
qUittmg bis hit television
series, "The Bob Newhart
Show," at the end of the
current season, tts fifth
"ThiS 1s no ploy, no device
for negohallon," Newhart
sa1d Tuesday "I am absolutely smcere about leaVIng
the ser1es at the end of
productiOn this year and CBS
has been notified "

GUESTS ENTERTAINED
LETART, W Va
Christmas day guests of Mr
and Mrs Harold Johnson, RD
I Letart, were Mr and Mrs
Stephen Johnson, children
Valene, Amy, Brooke,
Stephen Jr , PomLPieasant,
Mr and' Mrs David Johnson,
son Michael, Racme, Mr and
Mrs Michael M11ler, Mid·
dleport. Mr and Mrs
Carl H Platter Jr , Kay
Richard Johnson, Mtss Ahce Platter to Donald E Roush,
Roach, Mr and Mrs Edward lot 76, Syracuse
lhle, daughters Donna and
6 Ease Col &amp; So Oh1o
Debra and Larry Gene Electric Co , Pomeroy
Johnson
Ray Hemey, Gold1e Hemey
to Ray He~ney, Goldte
Hemey, Parcels, Letart
CALLERS WELCOMED
Jerome Goldberg, Alma
LETART, W Va
Goldberg, Thomas Westen
Holiday callers at the home oC Hazel M Westen to Gale
M1ss Allee Roach were Rev Eugene Wolfe, Charlotte L
Charles Hargraves, New Wolfe,"Lots, Pomeroy
Haven , Mr and Mrs Robert
Pomeroy L1m1ted to Oh10
Roach and Mr and Mrs Power Co,, Ease , Pomero)
Mark Kearns, Mason, Mr
Sybil Ebersbach, admrx ,
and Mrs Paul Reuter, 0 W W1seman, dec to
children Pete and Julie , Donald Martm, Lucmda K
Urbana; Mrs Kathy 1\!lller, Martm, Rutland
Mtddleport, Dale Roach ,
New Haven , Mr and Mrs
Edwa'd lhle, daughters
Donna and Debra, Mrs Jack
Roach sons Ronme and
1'1mmy , Mr and Mrs '
t
Richard Johnson and Ottle m
0 VIC
Roush
• CEDARVILLE, Oh1o (UP!)
- Gil Pr1ce score~ 18 pomts
Tuesday mght to pace RIO
Grande
to a 73~7 M1d.Oh1o
GROUP ENTERTAINED
Basketball
Conference win
ALFRED - Mr and Mrs
over
Cedamlle
Arthur Atherton entertained
Don Smith, who con
21 relatives and fr1ends on
Chrtstmas Day among whom tnbuted 24 pomts to Cedarwere their daughter and son- VIlle's losing effort, was
m-law, Mr and Mrs Ernest game-high scorer
Vmeyard and son of , The Redmen took a 14-ponrt
M1ch1gan;
the1r
son, lead early m the second half
Clarence Atherton and fam1ly and Cedarville could not
of Long Bottom, and thmr catch up
The Win g1ves Rio Grande a
grandson, Larry, from the
Serv1ce Others were local !J.2 record and drops the
Yellow Jackets to 5·1
relatives of the couple

Energy stamp plan offered

DR. LAMB

Starch

proposals.
Other operung day busmess
mcluded aMouncement that
Ford would be rece1ved at a
jomt sess1on Jan 12 for hiS
final State of the Umon
mesaage, and that another
joint sess1on would be held
Thursday to go through the
formality of counting
eleciDral voteS that certify
Carter's victory In the Nov 2
election

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Mildred Ward,
Pomeroy; Hubert Stewart,
Middleport ; Fonda Sue
Wood , Rutland , Edwm
Wehrung, Pomeroy, Stanley
Bennett, , Jr, Coolville,
Charles Frazier, Middleport:
Beatrice Vmlng, Pomeroy,
Mary
Derenberger,
Pomeroy; James Lawrence,
Long Bottom ; Richard
Dugan, Racme
Discharged - Donald
Wagner, Lori Faulk

t~-:::~·,.

•

with us!
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THE ALL NEW

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-Enjoy threl! sizes of your tavorite ,
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992-6304

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THE WORST OF WINTER
IS YET TO COMESO GET QUALITY SNOW TIRES
FROM COOPER

�..

•

. .,

4..:. The DaUy Sentinel, Mlddleport-PIIIIefoy, 0., Wednesday, Jan. 5, 1977

,

wouldrl"t hive hired me!'
Mra. Shane, 28, II a IW10
graduate of the Unlventty of
Wiaconaln-Madlaon and lhe
first tried her hand at
teaching, thotigh her heart
belonged to sports aU aloog.
She has covered Milwaukee
be In for a big surprise this Admlrall ~ey and the
season when they tune Into Brewers aloog with lbe other
major sports in the city.
White Sox broadcasts.
A woman wiD be doing !be
broadcasts on radio station
WMAQ along wiih · veteran
White Sox broadcaster Harry
Garay.
Mary Shane, who has been
reporting sporting events
here for more than a year lot
radio station WRIT, has beeQ
tabbed as Carey's new
partner on at least 20 White
Sox broadcasts ~ and the
Milwaukee r!'llident hopes to
do eolen more games.
Mrs. Shane, who may be
the first woman to ever do
play-by-play broadcasting for
a major league team, first ·
came to Caray's attention
when he was In Milwaukee to
broadcast a game with the
Milwaukee Brewers.
Come In
He got to know Mrs. Shane
·and ·asked her if she would
and Browsel
like to do some play-by-play
announcing with him on
White Sox games. She
jumped at the chance and did
three games last season in a
11
5
. tryout that led to her job this
season. She will begin wi\h
spring training in Sarasota,
Fla .
"After I did the games the
letters I recel ved were
f~vorable tho11gh I didn'~ see
the ' letters the station got,"
she said. "But they must
Pomeroy, 0.
have been good or they

5 ~ The DaUySentlnel,Mlddlepor(.Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday ,Jan. 5,1977

Wahama douses Eastern hopes 76 to 43__White Sox h~e.
.

take~ commanding 19-2 lead Eastern
with 1:22 to play in the lnl_Ual .Fouled

BYGARYCi,ARK .

6' 114 18 45.
Out : Wahama·
Blessing, Eastern-Nelson ·
Officials: Raymond Cundiff
and Danny Rizer
.Reserve Score : Eastern 63
Wahama 56

an~

dropped the Little Falcon$ and Phil Hobbs with 18
15
record to 2·2 on the year.
points respectively.
Wahama led 31·30 at In· Score by quarters!
termission bef 0re falliriA
·
1 2 3 4 Tot.
liehlnd 47-46 after three Wahama "B" 16 15 14 11 56
Quarters. The final canto see- Eastern "B" 14 IIi 17 16 63
sawea back ~d forth before Wahama (56) Barniu 11-2·18;
Little Eagles pulled it out by'a Hob\15 1-1·15; Smith H-9;
113-W margin. I
. Honaker2·2-6; Rawlings 2-o-4;
Rusty Wi.gal paced !he Scott 2.0-4; ·Zu• pan 0-0-0;
winners w1tl\ 20 taU1es Totals 25-&amp;-56.
followed by Don Enyon with Eastern (63) Wigal 7-6-20;
16, Mike Hayman with 14 and Enyon 8.{).16; Hayman 7.{).14;
Brian Bissell with 11.
Bissell 3-5-11 ; Boyles 1-o-2;
Wahama placed two men in Norton 0.0.0; Goebel 0411;
twin figures in Bob Barnitz Totals 26-11-63.

The Wahama White Falcons quarter. WahaJ.lla held an
scored 19 upanswered points enormous 21-6 lead after just
in the opening period Tuesday eight minutes of action.
'
•
• nlg.ht ·m·coasting !' o an easy "6"
The second canto proved to
45 . win over the visiting be just as fatal for the Meigs
Easte~ Eagle!~,.
Countians with the locals
The vicj.,?y' upped the White outscoring their oppon·ents 13The preliminary game at
Fa1cons~~~a~_on record to 3-1 2 to take a monstrous l4-3lead Wahama. Tuesday night saw
~th an . 81-15 loss to county midway through the period. the Little Falcons fall In the
nval PomtPieasant bemg the · The lead bulged to 39-! 3 at the final minute of play to a hot
only blem1sh on the locals halfway mark.
shooting, Eastern quintet 63card.
Eastern's ·offense began to· 56.
Wahama mu~t now prepare show some signs. of life in the
The victory avenged ~n
lor . wh~t IS ~mg termed as third quarter behind the earlier season setback •nd
the1r ~hffest test to date ~hen scoring of Steve Little. The
they vtstt Racme,O. on Fnftay Eagles managed to outscore
t_o tangle with a strong Wahama by a 14-13 ·margin in
,,outhern Tont~oe qumtet. the eight minute span but still
Nme players ~ action for trailed 52·27 after three
th~ ..JNI&gt;lte . Falcons in the quarters of play.
lopstded wm and all nme Substitutes finished out the
broke mto th~ scort~g column. contest for the White Falcons ·
The teams leadmg scorer, and suprisingly enough put a
'
Duke Smith , once , agam total of twenty-four poinis on
emerged atop the pack wtth the board. Tim Davis, Tim
seve~teen markers on . etght Soyre and sophomore Todd
fteld goals and one free ihrow. Rawlings making his fir~t
Mtke GoldsbelT)' and Tl!ll
'
Davis also hit in double appeara.nc e . of the . .year,
!'
'th th . t
d scored SIX pomts each m the
" een a~
tgure s '."1
stanza to give Wahama an
twelve pomts respec!lvely. . easy. 16...,, 5 wm.
·
East ern pIaced one man m Th
h
.
. i!i .1 10
. St
L'ttl
ho
e 1oca 1 c arges com·
1Win
1
gl s
ev~
e w pletely dominated the final
~etted eighteen pomts on mne statistics just as they did the
field g~als to take game score by coming out on top in
scormg onor~ . .
. aimost every category. ·
Waha':"a traded only once 10 The White Falcons shot 46.9
the contest when. Gary Nelson percent (31 of 661 from the.
htt fo r the ?~enmg bucket of floor and hit an even 70 per·
the game gtv,mg the Eagles a ·
.
. d 2.," 1ea d. 'Th. e bend cent. on thetr free throws (14 o1
short I1ve
201
· area team retaliated with Eastern canned a mere 19
nineteen consecutive points to of 68.from the field for a frigid
21.9 percent and were equally
as cool from the charity stripe
by converting only 7 of 21 for a
poor 33.3 percent.
The rebounding edge went
to Wahama with a total of 55
while the Eagles grabbed. 27.
The White Fa Icons committed
25 turnovers to 16 miscues for
NEA
Eastern.
The top rebounders of the
game were Tim Davis and
NORTHFIELI\ O~o Bob Nicewand'er. Th 6'2"
A Tough One to Stop
(UP! ) - The strikmg 0
Davis hauied in seventeen
Harne ss
Horsemen's
't
.
.
Association planned to seek a carooms whtle Ntcewander
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Team 2
47 89
· Morning Glories
Fonz ie Followers
42 94
court order today enjoining added ten.
.
Dec. 28, 1976
High single game _; Selby
Wahama must nowj)lay two
the award of purses at
Team
P1s.
Manley 177, 163, 148.
Northfield Park Thursday games . on the road before
Newell Sunoco
66
High se ries - Selby
night.
returning home for the annual
G. &amp;J . Auto Parts
74 Manley 488; Jerry Whitlatch
Karr &amp; Van Z·a ndt
72 382 ; Mary~ Hoover 379.
John Phillips , general Alumni clash slated for
Sears
61
manager of Northfield, Friday January 14. The White
Roach ' s Gun Shop
46
Tuesday Triplicate League
announc·ed Tuesday there Falcons will fa'ce their first
No. 2
23
Dec. 28, 1976
~
High Ind . game
Betty
Standings ·
would b\l a IIH'ace program big obstacle on Friday night at
Whitlatch 193. 185.
Team ·
P1s.
Thursday night despite tbe Southern. Then ' on Tuesday
. High ind . 3-games ~ Betty
Shamrock
16
lack of a 1977 contract wit)! they journey to Spencer to
Whitlatch
562;
Rhea
Willis
Royal Oak Park
14
Pomeroy
Bowling Lanes
465.
·
Royal
Crown
Cola
the horsemen's association. · take on the Yellow Jackets
8
Tri -County League
High team game - Newell Shirts, Ltd.
·
6
"We ~.re. making every before returning home for a
· Dec. 28, 1976
Sunoco 798.
Ruth's Beauty Shop
2
Standings
effo~t to fmdenough hors~ to. Friday night encounter with·a
High ·f eam 3:games New York Clothing
2
Pts. Newell Sunoco 2280.
continue racmg at 1'14rthfte~d, tale nted
Alumni squad. Team
~ .
. High individual game
Pom
.
Cement
Block
Co
~
8
and hope that a contract wtth
.· .
.
· .. Mary Voss 215 ; Fr6nkle
6
. Ham H semen's Actton w1ll begtn at .Southern Ea9ies Club
Hunnel 181.
th e Oh10
6 Early Wednesday.Mixed
essbeorsigned as at6 :30 p.m . Wl'ththe ]untor
· · · Str 1kers
High series -; Mary Voss
· lion will
ASSOCia
(;line's
Canst.
Co.
2
. cas
I h WI'th the varst't y
leauue
542 ; -paf Carson 497 .
quick ly as possible " he varstty
H.&amp;R. Firestone
2
l)ec. 29,1976
Team high game
Computer Services
0
said.
'
tilt to follow.
Standings
Shamrock Motel 4~7 .
High
individual
game
Ed
Prs::··. · Team high ser i es
Phillips canceled two )I'AHAMA (16)FGM·AT· Voss 222 ; A. L. Phelps .. Jr . Team
Sm
ith
Nelson
Motors
Co.
14 Shamr~k Mot~! 1454.
previous winter racing dates T F . T M A T T T P 219; Jerry Cline 212 .
Tenth Framers
10
High
series
Ed
Vosl
588
;
this week because of the Smith
8-11 1·2 11
Young's.Super
Market
8
contract situa.tion. He said Goldsberry
6-11 1-1 13 Jerry Cline 581 ; Henr y Oilers Four
8
Wednesday Afternoon
Clatworthy 576.
~I de' s Sport ShOp
6
League
the dispute put tbe entire Davis
· 5-9 2-2 12
Team high game - H.&amp;R . Nelson Drug Co .
2
Dec.
29, 1976
winter schedule In jeopardy. Nicewander
4-11 1-2 9 Firestone 954 .
High individual game - A.
Standings
Team
high
series
Eagles
The horsemen, who have Sayre
2-11 5-7 9
L. Phelps, Jr. 258 Carolyn Team
W. L.
Bachner 187; Bill Porter 2T9 VIllage Pharmacy
B 0
filed complaints with the Ohio Rawlings
3-5 '().{) 6 Club 2537.
Pat Carson .183; Larry Dugan Team 6 ·
8 0
Racing Commission and the Tucker
1-5 2·2 4
210 Carolyn Bachner 182.
Pin Busters
6 2
2-4 Q.l 4
U.S. Trotting Association, Blessing
Early Sunday MiKed
High series - A. L. Phelps, Wald Cross &amp;Son
2 6
Jr. 581 Carolyn Bachner 524 ; Fonzie Followers
,Dec. 26, 1976
().1 2-3 2
maintain Northfield violated Ti;ompson
o 8
Standl,ngs
Bill Porter 545 Pat Carson Team2
0 8
two regulations. They say the Totals
31-66 14-20 76 Team Pts.Tom
sCarryOut 6 524, Betty Smith 4l!6; Richard
High single game - Jenny
track latl~d to announce over EASTERN (45 )
Jack's
Dairy Bar
6 R
11 533 Maxme
·
Dugan Whltlalch 168 ; Mary Hoover
Pomeroy Flower Shop
6
usse
the pu,blic aadress system I .ttl
480
162. 158.
.
9-20
00-3
18
1
ToWn Kiln
2
•
wben the entry box was " e
High ser ies - Mary Hoover
Cline's
Canst.
Co.
2
Fo~~a;';4high
game
~
Oilers
2-13
3-4
7
opened and ·the post positions Spencer
469; Jenny Whitlatch 462;
2
Team high series - Smith Selby Manley 424.
.3-7 o-o 6 Mar.k v. . .
filled for Thursday. They also Nelson
1
· H1gh md1v1dual game - A. Nelson Motors Co. 2019 .
·
2~ 6-2 4 L. Phelps, Jr. 200 Mary Voso
charged the track .doesJtot ~rown
•().2 3-5 3 213; Larry Hendr icks 200
have on file a statement of I mitb
1·2 6-1 2 Marlene . Wilson 199 ; Larry
health for aU the horses Matthews
Pomeroy Bowling tenter
Dugar 196 Mary Voss 1aa,
Wednesday Afternoon
1·7 0-4 2
entered for Tnlirsday.
Goeble
High series - A. L. Phelps. .
League
Philllps said the Thursday Carnahan
1·7 o-o 2 Jr . 546 Mary Voss 580 ; Larry
Dec. 22, 1976
A thought t'i&gt;r the day :
Dugan
507
Marlene
Wilson
program would include heat Trussell
0.0 1·2 I
End of 1st half
555 ; Darrell Dugan 496 Betty
British
author William
racing by four fields, Barton
0-4\)-00 Whitlatch 4l!J.
Standings ·
Somerset
Maugham said, ,
W. L
meaning each of the four TOTALS
19-&amp;1 7-21 45
Team high game - Town Team
Pin
Busters
102
34
"There
are
two
good things in
fields would race twice bn the Score by quarters:
Kiln 700.
VIllage
Pharmacy
97
39
life
freedom
of
thought and
Team high series ~ Tom 's
same program. Heat racing
1234Tot. Carry Out 2075.
Wald Cross &amp; Son
67 69 freedom of action."
is usually confmed to county Wahama
Team6
53 83
21 18 13 24 76
fa lrs.

~ellston fa,_s won.dering: Lea~e, or stay .in SEOA~?:

woman for radio

By MICHAEL V. USCHAN

MILWAUKEE (UP! ) Sports
fans
aren't
accuStomed- to hearing a
woman's voice. at sporting
events In an ofllcllll capacity
except, perfiaps, for the
singing of the National
Anthem. And because of that,
Chicago White Sox fans wiU

~hlen

/

may help

Michigan passing
.

I

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UP!)
- Reeenlly resigned Bowling
Green football coach Bon
Nehlen is slated to become an
assistant under Bo Schem·
bechler, it has been learned,
possibly to help Michigan
develop its passing attack.
The former Bowling Green
quarterback · guided · the
Falcons to a 21-2-4 record as a
player from 1955-51 . He
resigned as coach after
Bowling Green, 6-5 overall,
went 4·3·in the Mid-American
Conference this past season.
Michigan is in the market
for assistant coaches since
two ipem bers of Schem·
bechler's staff have moved
up to·head jobs since the end
of the season, Gary Moeller
at Illinois and Chuek Stohart
to Toledo.

' once again
According to reports in Wellstvn, ther~ is talk
(3) ~·allowing the 1969 school ye•r. Nelsonville York
of Wellston HighSchool, a charter mernlJet of the Southeastern reluctantly dropped out of the leaglie. Tilt reason ? They fell
Ohio Athletic J.,eague, w.ltlldl'awlng from the eight-team they could be more competiti ve in the Tri-Valley Conf ~. 1
·· ·cooference. .
·
league of schools with enrolin)ents closer to their size.
Four years ago, some Golden Rocketfans felt WHS shou.ld
(4) Waverly entered the league in the 1970-71 season whtn
withdraw from the SEOAL, and seek a conference where Nelsonville York dropped out. Since their entry, Wa vtrly hs1
Wellston would be more competitive. Alter discussing the won lour of the six conference haskethall crowns 176-71, 71-72,
sltuatiop, it wsa agreed that Rockets would remain in one of 13-74, 74-75).
the 'state's oldest schoolboy, conferences. (The SEOAL was
) 5) In 1967, Athens consolidated with several surroundii\JC
formed in 1925).
smhll schools to f'Jsh their enrollment even higher.
Now, it appears some Wellston fans and officials want to
. (6) In the early 70s, the Ohio High School Athletic
Association decided to change their system of size
get out of the conference .
On Dec. 23, The WeUston Sentry, a J:'eekly newspaper , classification from two, Class Aaod AA, to lhree, Class A, AA.
reported school board member Paul King initiated a and AAA. Next season the SEOAL will !\ave three class AAA
discussion ·during the WeUston board's December meeting schools, Athens, Ja ckson and LOgan.
concerning the athletic program at Weliston High School
· The Ohio High School Athletic Association each year
rel~tive to ·enroUment figures of hoys in the upper three
compiles a list of high schools in tbe state. Frortj the high
grades.
'
.
.
school enrollment cards submitted by the principal, the
Discussion followed as to whether or not WeUston should Association wUl determine which class that particular school
remain in the SEOAL or,aUempt to find another conference in will be plal!!(d in the following year. For example, even though
which to play where the Golden Rockets could compete againsl Jackson High School is currently AA , they. will be classified
schoo)f of similar size.
.
. AAA next year because they have 412.boys in the upper three
Paul Frick, another board member, inquired as to whose grades (10, 11 and ·12) .
·
responsibllity if would be to determine if Wellston stays in the
The breakdown for next season based on currenl enrollleague. Supt. Ralph McCormick said it was the bQ!lrd's mentofboysin gradesiO, ll, and 12ls : '·
,.. ilecision.
·
·
·Q.l!!B Class A
. Also mentioned was the fa ct that several of the school
199-404ClassAA
districts had experienced consolidations which strengthened
405 and over Class AAA
them athletically, but Wellston l!ad enjoyed no such growth in
What is the current enrollment of boys in the top three
psst years. Tbe history of the SEOAL was .also discussed, and grades of tile eiglltmemb&lt;.- ;ehools of the SEOAL?
the fact that a WeUston man, Bill T)lomas, was credited with
( (nexlseason)
founding the leaglle.
SCHOOL
BOYS CLASS
'!)'ace emphasized the fact that this was merely a Logan
512 AAA
discussion, and that at . the present ·time there Is no Athens
484 AAA
conslderationaboutleaving the league. He said that he felt !be Jackson
412 AAA
board wol!id have to u.llke an indepth study of the athletic Galltpolts
376 AA
program before the ma ll.,r could be seriously con~idered .
Meigs
359
AA
Last Thursday, (Dec. 30) Steve Jeffers, sports writer for ~ lronton
• 319
AA
'lbe Sentry, had this to say about Wellston's psrticipation in Waverly
.261 AA
the SEOAL:
Wellston
?1?
· '"
In view of the recent WeUston City School Board's
' Lc•~u• •verage is 36.'1)
-4 discussion of t)le current and future status of !he high school's
Let 's examine the rltar-by 'tri-Valley Conference.
BOYS CLASS
competitiveness in the Sout'Jeastern Ohio Athletlc League, l SCUOOL ,..
~1 the following facts should be !&gt;resented to interested Warren Local
347 AA
parents of WeUston High School athletes and the fans who Be\pre
~
2
support the program.
Vinton County
First, let's examine some Ql the significant changes which Nelsonville Y.
214
AA
have occurred in the SEOALin the last ten years (1967-1916 ). Fed. Hockmg
193
A
.
(1) In 1968, Ironton dropped out of their leagu.,(Central Alexander .
~
.
185
A
·Ohio League) to re-join the SEOAL. Their reason for leavihg .
(League avera~e ts 510)
the COL? They could not he competitive. Since 1911, Ironton
A look at the Ohio Valley Conference reveals these facts.
has either wm or shared UJe SEOAL title in football. Ironton · SCHOOL
BOYS CLASS
also won last year's basketball crown.
·
Rock Hill
219 A
· (2) In 1967~ Pomeroy and Middleport dropped out of the South Pomt
265 .' ~
228
conference and consolidated with non-league member Rutland Chesapeake
· to form Meigs Counly High School. Thus, two small SEOAL Farrland
}
, ~ ~
schools had consolidated with another to form one.
·
Coal Grove
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seven seconds to ice the
victory.
Scott Gibson, senior Ooor
leader, led the Wildcats with
16 points. Whitt and junior
F rank Mooney had 10 each·
Coach Carl York's Dragons
were led by Mark Barnett's
14 points. Darrell T!Uls had 13
. k Lo
d
whi! e R IC
ve an Steve
Hamlin. dumped in 10 each.
•HaMan Trace. hit 14 out of
19 ·at the free throw line
compared to Fairland's one
.
of mne. The first half was
close as host Hannan Trace
held a slim 26-25 lead at the
half
·
Fairland came back with a
20 pointfourth period, but the
rally fell short.
·
•ct
.
hed
H
The,v1 ory pus
annan
Traces overall record to 3-2
whlleFairlanddroppedto3-3.
FAIRLAND ISS) - Barnett
14, Tillis 13, Love 10. Hamlin
10, Powell 8.
HANNAN TRACE ml Gibson 18 ; Whitt 10; Mooney
10 ; Swain 9; McGuire 8;
Campbell J.
David Marshall scored 18
points to lead Chesapeake to
a &amp;7-47 come-from-behind wln
over Symmes Valley Tuesday
night.
I
The Panthers, 4-2, tralled
29-20.ai half before grabbing
the lead on the strength of a
thlrd quarter that saw
. Chesapeake outscore the
Vikings 15-4 Behind Mar·
'
shall, tbe Panthers continued
to extend the lead by out·
scoring Symmes Valley 22-14
In the final period.
MarshaU, a senior guard,
was the only Panther In
double figures. Mark WUson
topped Symmes VaUby with
19.

Coach Dan Cornell 's
Hannan Trace Wildcats
pull~d off a mUd upset
Tuesday night edging Ohio
Valley Conference foe,
Fairland, 56-55 at MercervlUe.
CHESAPEAKE (57) Rlck'Whltt, 5-10 senior, hit-Marshall 18 ; McGuire 8;
two foul shots In the final McWhorter 2; Boster 9; Hill

..

0.

N.2ND

KRAFT

'fRENCH CITY

..

' I

GOLDEN ISLE

ICE CREAM

Wtth three players in
double figures, Coach Wayne
Bergdoll's Southwestern'
Highlanders defeated non·
league foe,lronton St. Joo for
the second time this season,
7)-52 Tuesday night.
Doug MiUer, senior guard,
led the attack with 15 points;
Ron Jackson, a transfer from
GaUlpoUs, had 14 points while
sophomore Gene 'Layton
dumped In 12 points. Boyle
topped the Flyer scoring with
12 points while Haas had II.
Southwestern trailed 10-11 at
the end of the first quarter
but took a 21·25 lead at the
half then bolted In front for
keeps with an 18 point third
quarter.
Southwestern hit 31 of 81
floor attempts for 38.6 pet
and nine of 20 foul shots for 45
pet. Ironton St. Joe sank only
19 of 85 field goal tries for 29
pet. and H of 37 charity tosses
for 37 pet. Southwestern
held a 41-33 rebounding edge.
The victory pushed SWHS's
season record to 3-4. South·
western's reserves won 411-~. .
Box Scar~ :
.
Ironton St. Joe !52) - M.
Walker 2.J.7 ; Boyle 4·4·12 ;
Rattle 2-0·4; Walker 2·0·4;
Haas 4·3·11 ; Myers 1·0·2 and
Holms 4-1·9. Totals 19-14.-52.
Southwester.r\ 171 l
Layton S-2·12 ; Carter J.).7;
Law is 2·0·4 ; Grate 4-0·B•
Blanton 2·1-5; Bush 2 26 ;
Jockson 7·0·14; Miller 6·3·15 .
Tot•ls 31-9.71./
· ·
By Quarters:
Ironton Sl. Joe
10 15 9 18- 52
Southwestern 8 19 18 26- 71

'NirH

BOWLING

-

Southwestern, Hannan Trace JXJst wins

"

Geswein 11 ; Estep 6; Engles
11; Wi)son 19 .

Ohio High School
Basketball Results
United Press International
Ba lavia 55 Clermont Northeas I 51
Beachwood 64 G ~ tmour 60
Beaver Local6111ewton Fa lls

60

·

Bellaire 67 John Ma rsha ll IW
Val 56 .
Be Kiey 8• Bi~ Wa lnu t 59
Botk lns .95 Mm ster 66
Brooklyn 68 Columbia 65
Brookside 56 Elyria West 54
Cambr idge 70 Dover 45
Cin Purcell84 Boone ( ~yl 65
Cin Sl Xavier 65 Cln Bacon Sll
Cle Cen Cafh 61 Cle Sov th 60
loll
Cle John . Marshall 7S Cle
Rhode s 56
Cle St Joseph 98 Brush 86
Col Academy 60 Felrbank 5 59
Col Mltll ln 81 Nor1h Union 58
Col South a• Col Wehrle 71
Covington 58 Bradford ~
Cuya~oga . Heig hts
103
Faorport 12
Dayloo Belmont 11 Beaver
creek SO
Day Strvero. Patterson 79
Jelfersoo 73
East Cleveland Shaw 58
Berea Al

East Knox 74 Hiland 73
Ea~t Llverrool68 Weirton IW
Val 67 lot
Etyr Chris Aca 126 Geougo
Chris 34
Fairborn Baker 42 Sprlngfld
North 41
Felicity 38 Amelia 35
Fort Frye 56 Beallsville 45
Fort Laram ie
Recovery 61

Fort

Franklin Monroe 99 Russia 93
Geneva 44 Eastlake North 27
Goshen 62 Wil liamsburg S2
Grand Valley SO Ledgmoo! 49

-

txiLUMBUS (UPI ) - Govl
James A. Rhodes said today
he w!U propose legislatioo
this session authorillng
private fJnns to develop taxfree pOrts on the Ohio Rl.ver
to help attract industry.
Rhodes told a news conference lie would like ((I see ·
ports developed at Eut
Uverpool and in the lrontonPorumouth area , providing
shipping faclUties for coal
from nearby mines to
northeastern Ohio sieel
· plaqta alone Lake Erie.
" We could have two of the
largest CO!Il ports lh North
America," uid the governor,
adding they could either be
developed by steel ot
tratWpOrtation comp!lnles if
the proper Incentives were
written by the General
Auembly.
"Somebody .wlll build a
port If !bey get a tax
Incentive," he said .
Rhodes 11 ld his port
propoul wUI be part of a
pachge of lour or five
industrial tax Incentive bOla
to be offered t.o the General
Auembly later this month or
early In February.
He said a port at East
Uverpool
would
be

~

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Ken ton 60 Upper Sandus ky 56
(of

particularly altractive to
U.S. Steel Co. which is
considering . locating a
manufacturing plant at Conneaut on tpe shores of Lake
Erie at the Pennsylvania line.
Rhodes said a hail-dozen
representatives of his
administration are in
Pit tsburgh negotiating ·
''around. the clllck" with the
steel firm for loca Uon of the
facillly .
The governor said his
induslrial development tax
incentive package also w!U
include fUrther tax breaks for
exp!lnston to Inner cities.

1

Landmark Chr is 74 Southern
Hil ls 42
Licking Vall ey 72 H~at h 66
Lisbon
Sta nton 41

n.

London 78 Col Ready

Engagemenl and wedding
trios by Keepsake are outstanding
beauty and qual ity. Choose tra m ou r
Keepsake collection of 14K gold
" designed by master cra11tsrnerd

6~

Madison Pl ains 55 Wes t
Jeff erson 54
Maplewood 6-4 Perry 38
Meadowbrook 44 Barnesv ill e

LUO E

'

41

Miller City 70 Liberty Benton
49

Milton IW Va l70 Soulh Point

66

M inford 61 Port smouth East

49

Mohawk 68 Arcadia 64

North Adams 48 Bethel 46

North College Hill 54 Finney town· 51
·
Nationa l Tr ails 79 Preble

Shawnee 73
Newark

Lakewood 65

78

Catholic

YOUR OPPORTUNITY TO

BEGINS THUR., JAN. 6, 1977 AT 9:00 AM
FOR 'rUE MEN

FLORSHEIM SHOES

DECORATIVE

A MESSAGE
FROM THE PEOPLE OF

HURRI CANE - E:d Nibert
scored 26 points as visiting
Point Pleasant came from
behind to capture a 57-55
victory over host Hurricane
Tuesday ni ght .
Artl e Vaugh scored J2
points and Steve' McDermit
added 10 for the Big Blacks, ·
who r~ised their'record to 2-1.
. Scott Hensen scored 14
points and pulled down ·12
rebounds to lead the Redskins, G-1. Doug ·Fr'lf:r
added 12 points ~ 13
rebounds.
The game was played close
all the way with the Redskins
holding a slim 28·26 lead at
the intermission. The Big
Blacks scored 18 points .in the
third ;tanza to wrap up the
victory.
POINT PLEASANT IS7) -

here?

ports proposed

'i-'ANUAA·Y BALEI ·

-ABRIGHtER
tOMORROW
We ar.e beginning· a new y~ar.
The 1977th year since the Ch'rist
was born In Bethlehem. Will
this year be any b~tter than the
other 1976 years that have
passed? If they are better days,
you and I and God will have to
work together to make them
better. Let us determine, now,
to make this the best year ever
lor a II people by giving our best
to the Master in all ways . Each
one going o~t to win one for
Chri,s t,, nch one helptn·g
along . life's way can

79

A
11~
O.kHill ·
42
A
lronlon Sl. Joe
.
]League average Is 204 .)
Wbllt do these·figures reveal ? Thi!y show that w~ are
currently the smallest school in the league; that we are
considerably below the h:ague aver•ge; and th•t Logan High
School has 300 more boys. (almost. two and one-half times
more ) Ulllll WeUston . lf Wellston had 141ewer boys, they would
be classified Class A. Can we compete'
·
If ooe were wlook a little deeper inti! our record the last 10
seasons (1967-76) in fool ball, he would discover the following
fa cts :
1I) Our overall record In league play is 16 wins, 5ll losses
and 3 ties. Five oi these wins ha ve been against Waverly . In
other words, we have won less than one out of four games the
last lOyears.
12) W~ have scored 700 points in the 69 games for an
average 'of 10.1 points per game.
13) We have yielded 1,646 points for an average of 24 points
per game.
14) We have·becn shut out 19 times1n the 60 games l 27.5
per cent ), or. more Ulan one out of fouFI times we have been
bl anked.
·
15) We have scored one touchdown or less in 40 of the 69
' games (58ger cent) iJr more than one-hail the time we scored
, one touchdown or Jess.
(6) The most alarming figure bf all is that we have been
beaten by 20 or more points 31out of the 69 games (45 per cent ).
Our basketball record in all probability is worse. During
this 1G-year period, Wellston set a league record when, from
1971 to 1974, we lost 36 consecutive games. At this writing our
current cage program from grades seven through the varsity
shows 5wins and 17losses tn the 1916-71 school year .
Wellston's last outright championship in a major sport was
1951 when the Rockets won the football title. Our last basketball crown was a co-;,hampionship in 1965-66 when we shared
the title with Athens. Wellston High School has never won an .
outright championship in basketball. WeUston High School has
never won a,baseball championship. Wellston High School has
never won a track title.
Should we remain in the SEOAL? Let 's look at the purpose
for forming a league. Why do we have conferences' The
dictionary defines the w0rd "league" as an association of
persons or groups united by common interests or goals. The
word "conference'' is defined as an associa tion of schools for a
common purpose. What is this "common purpose or goal''"
The answer is obvious, e championship. Leagues are formed
for one reason ~ so schools can compete for a championship.
·Can our boys ever again compete for a championship in
the SEOAL? Do our athletes have a "chance' ' to win a league
title when the deck is so heavily stacked against them ?
HopefuUy , our school board will take a closer look at our
athletic program to determine whatis best for our athletes.
Wellston High School athletics - where do we go from

Tax-free river''

8; Shope 2; England 3;
.·Russell 2; Black J.
SYMMES VAlLEY (42) -

Big Blacks win
second battle

ON NATIONALLr·ADVERTISED
BRANDS OF SHOES FOR
MEf!l, WQ~EN AND CHILDREN
CHILDREN'S SHOES
Values Ill '15.00 NOW '3:00
FOR THE LADIES

in a. wide selection ol styles
(but not sizes)
Values to Sl9.9S

All Leather

JOYCE-VINER- COVER GIRLRISQUE- EASY STREETCOBBLER-:-HUSH PUPPIES &amp;

..

~1611 To

INGERS
Values to $26.0.0
ONLY

$2411

SALE PRICE
Two Pairs A Good Investment!
Also Jarman- Rand- Hush Puppies
· IJaluesto '$31.95
SALE PRICED

ALL 'SALE SHOES DISPLAYH.'
ON RACKS FOR EASY SELECTION!
Your Chance to Save
.. Has Never Been Greater!
ALL ~LES FINAL-NO RETURNS
NO EXCHANGES
All lTAftTSP a.m., JAN. 6, 6, 1977
. WSPitNG SHOES ARRIVING DAILY

�I

'

••

·- - ..

•

....

•

. Bapti}t church enjoys r~ii~l~;'''~'ii';}'p'~~==~~=~=~'=*-'''~&lt;::::~, c00 kie sale ·time
I
.
liusy 'holiday season I. Us. • . By Helen Bottel .:t ~~~;:~7rf!:u~~~~~~
8;-The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport.Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Jan. 5, 19n

-

~

is here again

this month. The theme of the
sale is1o ~ carried out in the
poster design which must
also include either the name
"Black DiamondGirl Sc'Out
Council" or specific mention
of Girl Seoul Cookies. Also to

'•

7- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Jan.

be included on the posters are
the order dates. Rules specify
tbal the posters must be completed and on display by Jan.
2i. The scouts will be display·
ing !he posters in store and
home window s at libraries,
service stations, and schools.
After the order laking time
Is past (Feb. 6) the troop
posters are to be collected
and judged. ·The best poster
from each troop is to be tum·
ed into.the service unit direc·
tor by Feb. 1~. One county
winner will be selected and
that poster will be entered in
Area and Council con\peti·
lion.
A council winner and '
runner-up will be selected as
and a prize each.will receive
a case of cookies of her choice ·
and her troop will •also
receive a case of cookies.
Delivery date for the
l'Ookies ordered will be bet·
weeri May 17 and April 9. The
cQSt is $1.25 per hox ·and the
varieties a re tre foils ,
.vanillaand vanilla and
chocolate sa ndwich es,
samoas, peanut butter sandwiches, mints, and peanut
butter patties ca ll ed
Tagalongs. •
·
is chairman for the Big
Bend cookie sale.
.
Mrs. Mary Dorst From the
$1.25 sale of each hox of
coo~ies, I~ cents g6es into the
troop treasury. The Council
receives 58 cenl.s for development of camp fa cilities,

STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION

NOTIC~OFHEARtNG

special scouting programs
ami operating expenses,
while one cent goes for the ad·
ministrative cost of the
cookie sale. The producl cost
is 51 cents.

.,., to be conducted in the Big
Bend, Jan. 28 to Feb. 6.
. ·
Caroling, parties and pre&gt;- atseveral homes in Syracuse
A
Corporatloa
Wife
Elplodes
In
conjunction
with
the
anjects of cheer for others were and at the Meigs County In·
nual cookie sale, a poster conCllrried out at the First firmary where gift hoxes Dear Helen :
If
lbe
"corporation
biddies
club"
knew,
I
was
writing
this
test
for scouts wil l 11" h••irl
Southern Baptist Church, were presented to each resi·
·
I'd
be
dnunmed out of lbe group. Nollbal I'd mind - I suffer
Pomeroy, during the. hoUday dent. Refreshments ·or hot
mighWy through thelt gossip and put-down sessions - but
~ason .
chocolate were served follow· then my husband would be tagged as baving an ''undesirable
Thursdliy night the junior ing the sing.
Influence In hiS famUy," and he might get skipped, over at
and senior high Sunday
The Baptist Women's group
school classes met . at the of the church made hospital promotion time.
Why can't executives' wives be themselves? I hate
church lora party. The New tray cards for· Christmas
cocktail parties and formal entertaining: I can't talk these
Year's theme was carried out Day. They also gathered food
women's language. They're either involved In charity bashes
in the decoraticms. The group for baskets which were (a·good way to get your name in the paper ) m' up)Vard mobility
played game·s and had delivered to two families: The - each time a man step!! up, his wife shope for a fancier house.
refreshments of pizza, church gave $103 to the Lottie
I
If you enroll your clii!dren in public school, they wonder
homemade candy and soft Moon Foreign Missions whetller you've got secret vices that siphon off.all your money. By Polly Cramer
drinks. Attending were Don· Christmas Offering taken If you don't shop atfancy, overpriced salOlls, Ukewise; and if
minutes. In 30 minutes it will
na Spencer, Clara · While, during December.
Polly's Problem _
you admit you do your own housework and gardening,
go up to 120 degrees. A dog's
Cheryl U!febre, Cindy Pat·
A· planning meeting is condescell$ion prevails. .
'DEAR
POLLY
We
just
'
terson, Jeannie McClure, scheduled for the evening of
My biggest problem, however, Is that my husband expects moved into a house where the normal hody temperature is
Rena Lefebre, Cu rtiss Jan. 10 at the church with the me to be a corporate wife. I m011tn't make waves or express bathroom tiles were heavy .102 degrees F. A dog can
a
body
Spencer, DebbiePickens, regular meeting of the Bap- my real thoughts. I can't take a "silly little job" as it would with soap. Now that the tile is withstand
Kath y· Adkins, Gerald • tis\ Women to be held at the demean his di!lJ1ity (and I'm not trained for a high'llowered washed free of that scum, temperature of ltrl·IO degrees
Spencer, Sue Taylor, Mark home of Clara White on Jan. career).
what can I do to make it shine F. for only a short time before
s uff erin g ir r eparable
Clay, Teresa Taylor, and Jen· 17. Each member is to lake
''
.
again
' - H.R.
He's given me an option: Either conform or clear out and
nifer VanOver.
something (or th.e church kit· make' way for a new wife who will promote his -ilream of
DEAR lj.R. - I presume damage to the brain or even
Befor.e
Christmas chen and their old copies of becoming company eresident. He's ·.married to the you refer to tile walls. Plastic death. The closed car in·
Men's!
members and friends of the Horne Life magazine.
corporation: If I can't be his decoration, who needs me? What tiles )I'Ould be treated to a terferes with the dog's nor·
Women's!
church · went caroli ng
do you do when you're a hored,lonely, unwanted, unneeded - coat of self polishing wax - do mal cooling procesS, that is
Children's!
not use polishing wax. evaporation through panting. ·
REBEL IN BLUE JEANS•
Ceramic tiles should rub to • It would be best to leave . the
gloss with a soft cloth unless pet at home. - P.R.
Dear Rebel:
DEAR POLLY - I want to
you used a very harsh
Haven'! you already answered that question ?
leU
other recipe collectors
cleanser
that
has
removed
Since you can't conform (and If your husband's
that
the
best way I have found
the
top
finish.
ln.that
case
try
corporaUon Is as stuffy as you describe - congratulations! !)
to
keep
them
is in a magnetic
a
silicone-type
automobile
then you're headed for the other option.
photo album under the plastic
I can't believe you'll mourn long over losing a man you've polish.
A letter from Jane E. says sheets. I can read them easi·
A World Missions Service the responsibility of Chris- long ago lost to tile "company." - H. ·
that
after she had cleaned the ly, they stay clean and none
+++
.
was held Wednesday nig6t at tians ·to send missionaries
soapy
s~um off her bathroom are ever lost. -MILUE.
Dear
Helen
:
the . Middleport United there so that all can hear the
DEAR POLLY - If your
tile
she
dried them and rubbMy
doctor
says
I
need
an
operation
for
gall
stones.
I'm
Pentecostal Church under the gospel. Mrs. London said that
family
is like mine, finding a
ed
with
!i
generous
amount
o(
taking
medicine
that
doesn't
seem
to
help.
Isn't
there
some
direction of Mrs. Louise Lon· not only are more mis·
pin
or
safety pin when it is
lemon
oil.
While
she
did
this
other
way,
as
I'm
the
type
that
couldn't
go
through
my
whole
don, Syracuse, director of the sionaries needed but more
needed
can be a bit of trouble.
to
keep
water
drops
from
for·
life
being
called
"Scar·Belly."
C,
E.
World MissiOf1S Department. people with a burden for mis·
To
solve
our dilemma I made
ming
and
scum
accwnulating
Devotional singing and sionary work.
a
pin
cushion
from il smaller ·
it
should
imparl
a
certain
Dear
C.
:
prayet opened the service
It was noted that the need
type
velvet
chai~ cushion, ·put
Better
a
scar
on
the
belly
than
a
pain
in
it.
Get
another
amount
of
luster.
Do
be
and then Mrs. London in· for more missionary services
traduced the needs for is the purpose of the church Opinion jf you must, but should hoth doctors recommend careful not to putany of these a hanger on it and hung il in a
foreign missionaries and progr;un, that there con· surgery, don't worry about a line that ;viii searceiy show. - H. on the floor or inside a tub or prominent place in the
'
shower, since someone might bathroom. Now we no longer
~
evangelists, emphasizing ' linues a need to tell the people
have
that
every
morning
Dear
Helen
:
~ ·
1\ave
a
bad
fall.POLLY.
ITEMS~
needed work inEurope.
in foreign countries and on ·
search
for
a
pin
or
safety
pin.
Open
files
for
adoptions
?
No!
Those
motllers
who
yearn
to
DEAR
POLLY
I
know
She described Europe as home fields 0! Christ.
"just check on" their given-up children, send shudders Eunice mearit well when she . This is a fairly large cushion
having 10 of· the 12 most
Following her talk, the tllrough my heart.
said she look along a cold so no one has the excuse of
· populated countries in the speaker turned the meeting
Consider
tile
adoptive.
parents.
For
the
first
year
or
so,
water bottle for her dog and not finding it. If you are
world and a place where the over to the Rev. William Knit·
they're
seared
stiff
every
time
the
doorbell
rings
for
fear
the
then
opened the windows a bit afraid t he bottom of a metal
.,
people are intelligent and tel who gave a brief message
natural
mother
bas
changed
her
mind.
In
later
years,
each
·
when
she bad to leave her pet wastebasket is going to rust
literary but iii need of hearing and then oonclucted (he ser·
time their bel.oved cplld is out playing and a car slows it's : in the c~r, but this could still make a no-cost liner [rom a
the full gospel. She said that vice with prayer and the "Will
she 'be trying to kidnap her offspring?"
·
be dangerous on a hoi day. big plastic blea~h bottle. It
OFF
Europe seems to be a.forgot· · song, "Jesus is the Lord of
The
mere
idea
Of
opening
files·
to
mothers
who
didn't
want
According
to the Animal Pre&gt;- can he cut down to the desired
ten mission field and talked of All. "
'
tlleir children but do now, is terrifying. - PARENTS WHO tection Institute in California size and prevents the cbance
ADOPTED
on a hot summer day the in· of rust. Mine is priceless to
i8::~~:::::::::.:::::::::-:.::::::::.:::::::~::::~· .•. •
side of the ~r heats very me. ·LUCILE ..
Polly will send you one of
Dear Helen'
quickly. On an 85 degree day,
Ahout adopted chUdren finding their natural parents, and for example, the temperature her "peachy" thank-you
Located on Rt. 7 below Middleport.
~ .
'
vice versa, several organizations try to arrange this. The-best inside your car, with the win· cards, jdeal for framing or
Open
Noon til 6 p. m. Tues. thru S;!t .,
known, ALMA (Adoptees' Uberty Movement Association ) has dows slightly opened, will placing in your family scrap~ v C:harlene H!ll'flirh
Sunday
1-6.
joined many parents, brothers, sisters, children, etc.
reach 102 degrees in 10 book, If she uses your favorite
The address is : A.L.M.A., P. 0 . Box .1M, Washington
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
One of the heartaches of ·the holidays is thai one morning in
Bridge
Station, New York, N. Y., 1003.1. - UNDA ,
her column . Write Polly's
early January you wake up and find yourself. five pounds
· Pointers in care of this
heavier.
newspaper.
The rich foods of yuletide cookery bave taken their 'toll!
Lowering your calorie intake is the only way to go, and that's
not easy.
To give you no help at all in that di~on, we sbare two
recipes - one for a broccoli-rice casserole, absolutely
The Friendly Neighbors Werry, Mrs. Lucretia Smith
delicious, and the other for a bam-noodle casserole.
The broccoli-rice dish is a favorite with my neighbor, Clara Club met. at t~ Meigs .Inn with Mrs. Pat McKnight win·
l,llchary, who passed along the recipe to me for holiday com· recently-lor a Christmas din· ning the traveling prize. Door
ner and then went to the home prizes went to Mrs.r Janet
pany.
•
of Mrs. Elsie Hines for a par· Venoy and. Mrs. Mildred ArBRoCCOLI·RICECASSEROLE
ty.
nold. Gifts were excbanged
Mix slighUy in a casserole, I package of frozen chopped broc·
The · heme was !decorated by the members with prizes
cOli, thawed, I small jar of cheese whiz or Velvetta, three- . extensively for the season. for gift wrappings going to
fourth cup of rice (measlll'e and then cook), one-half cup of Mrs. Eileen Bowers was Mrs. Elizabeth Well and Mrs.
chopped celery, one-half cup of chopped onion, I can of reported ill. Prizes were Eleanor Werry. The next
mushroom soup. Sprinkle shapcheddarcheese which has been · awarded to Mrs. Vera meeting will be held at the
shredded on top, and bake ahout 40 minutes in a 350 degree Buchanan, Mrs. Eleanor home of Mrs. McKnight.
oven.
· Cookies, ~offee and punch
TilE SEcOND RECIPE which Is great for lefk&gt;ver ham is :':': ':':':':':'::.:,:,:,.,:,.:::::·::::::::::::::::::::.:,.,:,:,:,:,.,:,.,., were served.
·
•
1-Lb. Pkg. .
from tile Ohio Society DAR cookbook, Olde Famlly Favorites,
SPECIAL HOLIDAYS '
a bicentennial edition.
••••••••• ••••••••••••
I
cLIFTON
The
holidays Ill lr76 were exira
EMPLOYED - Tammy
speelal lor Mr.. Helen
Mrs. Lawrence Manley has
HAM·NOODLECASSEROLE
Diane Pickens, a 1976
received
word
that
her
9rle-eight ounce package noodles, l and one-half cups chop- Barter of CW!oll. On New
graduate of Meigs High
ped cooked ham, l cup peas, I cup grated sbarp cheese, I tbsp. Year's Eve she became lbe nephew and his wife, Mr. and
School,
is employed at the
dried onion flakes, l can cream of chicken soup, one-half cup great-grandmother of twill Mrs. Richard Casto, are the
l .......
Chateau
Beauty Salon. She
pare
nts
of
triplets.
The
two
milk, one-half tsp. curry powder, 2tbsp. butter or margarine.
sons bora to Mr. and Mra. girls, one weighing five
is
tM
daughter
of
Mr.
and
Cook the noodles accqrding to package directions and drain. MarvlD Barter of Marmet,
ds thre
Mrs .
Thoma s
A.
1
e ounces, and tile
Combine the ham, peas, three-fourth cup cheese, and onion W. Va. at CharleJton . poun
Schoonover,
Rutland.
other
four
pounds
arid
I~
flakes; place alternate layers of ham mixtures and noodles in Memorial Hospital. The ounces, a.nd the bOy, weighing
g~quart b!lking.dish. Mix soup, milk and curry powder,
Barters also have a ' four pounds, five ounces,
·
. ·
pour over noodles. ·
daughter, Mela'Die, ' 18 were hom on Dec. 29. Casto
Sprinkle with remaining cheese; dot with butter,and bake in months.
' •
350 degree over for 20 to 30 minutes, Yields six servings.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer ~son Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Harris of Charleston toot
sto o Columbus, formerly ·
Mrs. Helen Barter from of Middleport. The couple
Mr. and Mrs. James
also have a two year old
Clifton to Marmet the day daughter. At the time of Mrs. Carpenter ·and · son, Jay,
3 lb. Bag ·
• • • •
entertained at their . home
before Cbrutmas to spend -Manley's news of the births
tbe boUdays wltb Mrs. nam~s' had not been selected.' with a Buckeye victory parly
The Ralph Keller home on ·Keller. Enjoying the evening
Iiams' s011 and wife, Mr.
on New Year's Day.
Roote 3, Pomeroy, was exten· )Vere Hilda Weber, Mr. and aad Mrs. Barker and
LONG BOTTOM - Mr. and
Their guests were Mr. and
Mrs. Michael Bing of Long
sively decorated for the Mrs. Don Williams, David Melanie. ..
Mrs.
Bruce May, Debra and
Bottom are announcing the
ChriStmas season when the and Deanna, Columbus; Mr.
0 0 .Cbrlstmas Day the
Michael, Mr. and Mrs.
birth
of
their
first
child
a
son
Kellers- were hosts at the an· and Mrs. Roger Keller, Ran· above were dinner guests
14 oz. Box
'
' HomerPar~er,!Miand; Mr. .
nual Christmas · Eve get. dy, Rodney and Russell, of Mr. and Mrs. Harris Ill Randy Eugene, Dec. 23, at • and
Mrs. Carrol Snowden and '
together of lbFir family.
Route 3, Pomeroy; Mr. and Charleston. Also preseat the Holzer Medical Center. Annette, Gallipolis; Greg Me- 1-•••-.•••••••.;.~.;...;.. .i.----~
Following . a ham and , Mrs. Floyd Weber, Long Bot· was another soo of Mrs.' The baby weighed seven Call, The Plains; Mr. and
turkey buffet supper, gifts tom.
Harris and grandson of pounds, nine OIUK:es.
.
3/•
Mrs. Wilson Carpenter,
from beneath the lighted tree
Mro. Barter, Robert
(;randpareilts are Mr. and Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs.
were distributed by Randy
.
Barter, of Charleston. Mrs. Lowell Bing, Long Bot· Howard Parker, April and
'
Mrs. Helen Barter's two tom, and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Aaron, Long Bottom.
OL
gr..dsono, Marvlo and Painter of Middleport. Great·
Robert, brought their grandparents are Mr. and
4~H
Mrs. Denver Hysell of
OL
grudmother borne on Pomeroy, Mrs. Blanche
OLDER THAN OLD
DINNER
ENJOYED
.
SUII!iay lad viltted 4urlng p ·
The National Gusrd Is older
LoNG B1iJTTOM - Mr. and
Officers were elected when lbe altera-.
amter, Minersville, . and
than our country itself, the Meigs County Shepherds
Mrs. Mae Spencer, Long Bot· Mrs. Joe Bissell of Long Bot,
.
originating in 1636. The 4-H club met recently at the .~:::::::::::;:::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: tom.
tmn were dinner. guests of her
Guard has participated in an county extension office.
Mr ..~nd Mrs. James David sisters, Mrs. LeQna Hensley
P~aJn
'
~
·,.
'
.
major U.S. conflicta from the
The new officers are Dan
VISIT ENJOYED
Reed of Lancaster are an· and Mrs. Mae McPeek at
Revolutionary War to Dailey , president: Scott LONG Ba!'TOM - Holiday nouncing the birth of their Craw's Steak House Sunday
OL
. VIetnam. Fifteen of our Bearhs , vice , president; guests of Mr. and Mrs. Paul first child,
son, James in celebration of their 48th
presidents, Including Tereaa Carr, secretary; Andrews of Long Bottom. Lawrence, Dec. 26 at St. Ami wedding . anniversary .
Wuhincton, Lincoln, and Sonia Carr, treasurer, and were tlleir children, Michael Hospital, Columbus. The in· · Another sister, . Mrs. U!ola
Truman were National Rodney Tripp, news reporter. Andrews of Cleveland, Bar· !ant weighed seven flOI\Jlds Ferrell of Florida sent
Guardsmen. Find out if you The II members attending . bara Andrews of Nelsonville five ounces. Mrs. Reed Is
greetings.
quaUty to join thele ~~elect discu, sed club dues, the Mr. and Mrs .. Paul J. ~ formerPhyUisDavidson.
rankl ,and share In this sheey show at the fair and drews a~d son, Christopher,
Grandparents arc Mr. and
RAU.Y SLATED
· ~tkJn. CaD your w. va. three members were named Westerville, Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Leo D. Davidson
OL
Achurch rally will be held
Natiaaal Guard Armory in to meet with the senior fair Larry Milliron and son, RuUand, and Mr. and Mrs: at 7:30p.m. on Jan. II at the
Pt. f'leual!l, W. Va. at 815- hoard. The weigh-in date for Mark, Columbus. ALso James Reed, Middleport: Morgan Center Gospel Mis• - . or DP' by-:-The Annory market Iambs was set lor visiting were Mary Ellen An- · Great-grandparents are Mrs: sion located on the Vinton·
II opllllll Friday evenings til May 28. The next meeting will drews of Pittsburgh, Pa. and Mabel Wood, Ewington, Mrs. Keno Road. The Rev.
I p.m. to anawer your lJ!! _Jan. 26 at the extension theJ_ev. Fr. John Wippel oJ Helen Miller, Middleport, and Thereon Durham, pastor, in' quelllanJ. Be lher.e.
office.
,
.
·
W mgton, D. C. .
l&lt;~wrence Reed, Middleport.
vitesthepublic.
~

Polly's Pointers
Lemon oil.shines
bathroom tiles

World Missions service
conducted at church

ENTIRE
FAMILY! .

The Odds &amp; Ends Shop

0

9·

MANY UNUSUAL ·
NOVELTY

SOMETHING FOR
EVERYONE

20 • 30 • 40'%
ON ALL MERCHANDISr

r Fun With Food

Yule dinner enjoyed

$115
SALA.D•••••••••••••••••••• !Jl•••• ggc
p FROZEN FRYERS •••• •. ~ •• n ••. 59*

New arrivals

HAM ••••• ••••••• •••••••l

t

•

IS.

Football win
is celebrated

&amp;r

ORANGEs •••
FLORIDA CELERY ~~~~i. 39~

Keller home scene offamily party

YEllOW ONIONS •• • .49~

$ 39

MRS. PAUL'S -FISH SJIC·KS

•

Swanson Chicken Broth 13

Officers named
for

oz. ccins

.

Borden's Cremora 22
larllmlt one '1.39
Kava Instant Coffee 4
·lar •••••••••1.1
Pops-Rite .Yellow I"'Opcorn 2 lb. bag •••• 59~
Ragu Spaghetti Sauce
or .with Meat'
32
lar •••~••••• •• •••••••••••'1.19 ·
s Thin Spaghetti 16 oz. picg••••• 49•
Cream or·CrunchyPeanut Butter
12
lar .~ •• ••••••••••••••••••• 73•
iolld Medal Flour 10 '1b. bae ••••••• ,,'lM
White Plain Corn Meal 5 lb. bag

club

~

'

a

u.;

.

'

.

'

.

'

'

OWNERS AT SUC H TIME AS
THE
OIR ECTOR
H A~
COMPLIED
WITH'
T HE
PROV I SIO N S O F"

1971

;

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

S ECTIO N

CONT RACT SALESLEGAL
5511 07 OF THE REVI S ED
.
COPY NO. 76·1006
CODE Or OH IO
COLUMBU S, OHIO ,
An~
be ing m.rir c
f u lly
DECEMBER 1, 1976
desc r 1bed as fQIIows ·
I n accordan ce wi,lh the
Bei ng a ll of that portion ot
Provisions of Chapter 55 11 of rer:_ou ted Sl at e Route No . 11d
the Revised Cod e of Ohio , the loca ted betw een the beg inning
D irec tor of Transportar.l pn of ?nd fi'nd of the above d eScribed
Ohio w ill holc:t a public hear ing Improvemen t not n~ccss ary
a t tO ; OO o' clock AM .. Ohio for . the c on s tru c t ion or
_ Standard Time, January 12, ma1nl enan ce
of
th e
1917, in th e Common Plea s ~ orrc s ponding propo Se d
Courtroom , Me igs Cou n ty 1mprovemen I or ·needed for
Cour thouse In Pomeroy , Ohio any oth er publi c highway
f or the pur ~ ~ se of heafing
s t atem~nts on . the proppsed
Richard 0 Jackson , P.E .
rerout1ng ,
Improvemen t,
Director o'
aba ndonm en t a nd va ca tion of
Tran sport ation
port ions of Sta te Route No . 12d
in M eigs County .
( 12) 29 fl l s. 21c ·~,
PROPQ S ED .
TH E
RER OU TIN G ~ S TA TE
ROUTE
NO".
14
IN
LEBA N ON
·TO N SI-t iP ,
ME t (?S COUNTY . HI O
An\1 being · mor e full y
described as follows :
Beg inning a r the second
·'iri tersec tion of existing State
Bern ice Bode Oool
Rout e Nos 124 and JJB . 6.d
mi l es , m or e\ or ·tess , as
.For ThurSday, Jan. 6, ·1977
m easu red alonp ex ist ing State
·Rout e No . 124, east of th e eas t
cor poration lin e of th e Vil lflge ARIES (March 21 -Aprll 191 rr
of Racine ; t hence, sou th erly, yoLJ app ly yourself tod ay you
so utheas terlv, norther ly and have a way of turn ing shuations
northw es terly along existi ng and people around to l'letp you
Sta te Rout e No . 338 to the mos t achieve your particu lar goals .
eas terl y iun clion of existing
State Route N os . 124 and 33 6, TAURUS (April 20-May 20) Pul '
and a lso being .t be exis ting mto operation quickly any ideas
eas terly terminus of State you ma y get today t hat wi lt
Rout e N o. J38, · and th er e benefil your fam ily. Hesitati on
t ermi hate . Said desc'rib ed
portion hav ing a tota l lenq th of .could dilute their eff ect.
5.71 mil es, more or less:
PROPO SED , THE
tM . GEMINI (May 21·June 20)
You 're better today at helping
PRO VEMEN T
OF
others sor t out the ir problems
REROUT E D STA TE RO U TE
NO . 124 , SEC TI ON 40 .) 0 , than yo u are with you r own.
(M IN OR 1AR TERI A L A-NO Don 't ~esi tat e to be of service. II
MAJ0R
C 0 L L·E C T 0 R t cou ld 'be rewarding ..
SI TUA 'TED IN LEBANO N
TOW N S HIP ,
ME I GS CANCER (June 21 -July 22) If
COU NT Y . OH i O
ther.e's a commerc ial situation
A nq b ei n g more f u ll y lhat nee d s to be recti f ied.
described. as fol lows:
Beginning at a poi nt in the Ieday's t!1e day·_~ You are able to
br ing all the l acti?ns together.
ce nter of pro pose d r erouted
Sta t e Ro ut e No
124 . as
LEO (July 23 · A.u~. 22) You ha ve
descr ibed above . said point
being 2.46 mi les , more or less , some heavyweights on your s•de
as m easu red sout h easterly today who are ready to bac k you
an d sou thw es terly a lon g Up 1n a cqreer situat ion . They'll
r er outed Stc;n e Ro.u te No. 124 co me- forth wh en they see you
fro m - the mo st eas terly iun c . moving .
t ion of e)(isllng State Route
Nos . 124 anll· 338 ; thence VIRGO (Aug . 23· Sopl. 22) Let
north erl y at"on g an d in close ano ther state your (;ase today.
pr ox im i ty to exis tin g St a te
Rout e No . 338 and proposed Ar med with the facts. this person
S,la te Ro ute. No . 124 with a • can do a better job than you
tang ent , a c urve to the right, could
and a tangent for a distan ce of
0.45 m i le, m ore or less , to a LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) The
point in lh.e ce nt erl ine of the lr iends you should be most
rerou ted Stat e Rou te No 12.1 solici tous o t today are members
and th ere ter mina je
Sa id or your fa m 1ty Wh en the cl1i ps
point of term ination being 2.0t are down. b lood is th icker lhan
m l i es , m or e o r l ess·, as
measured southeast er ly , an d water .
~ou . thwester l v a long propose d
SCORPIO (Oct . 24 -Nov. 22)
St a t e Rout e No 17J a'nd
e)(isli ng Sta te Rout e No . 338 Your chances for success are
from the most east erl y j une
eJCcellent today because you can
lion of e)( is ling State Route think on your feel. As the si1uaNos . 174 an d JJB
.110n becomes more challengi ng.
PROPO SED . THE AD "
"I ht
OtT /ON T O TH E STA T E y.ol.l ueco me urg er
HI GHWAY SY STEM OF A SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-0ec.
FACI LIT Y
TO
BE
21).You 're sharper than usualt p·
DE SI GNATED AS ST A TE
da~ in af fai rs of a m at erial
ROUTE NO . 824 . SA ME TO
B E ESTABLI SHED AS A nature. Seek ways to use th is
talen t - 11cou ld fatt en your bank
LIM IT ED AC:CE SS HIGH
W AY A N D CL AS SI F I ED AS A accoun t.
MI NOR AR TERI AL ON A
STA T E HI GH WAY SYS TEM . CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 19)
SA ID H IGHW A Y T 0 8 E In JOII1t ventu res today it's better
SITU A T E D IN LI;BANQN · tokeeplherf;!insinyourhands_
T 0 W N SH I P ·
M E I G S Don 't let partner s act without
COU NTY , OH I O
An d b eing . mor e f u ll y consulting ~au .
d esc rib ed as fo l lows
AQUARIUS t (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Beginn ing a t a po int in the Before making an Important
Cl!f1 ter of the proposed im
prov emen t of Sta te Rout e No. det•sion tOd ay , dig a little deeper
1'1.1 as desc r ibe d abov£l, said for f acls. You wi ll uncover
poi nt bei ng 2. 2 m iles. mo r e or
so melhing very interesting.
)e ss ,
as
measured
southeaste rl y and so uth
PISCES (Feb . 20-March 20)
wester l y a long pr opose d State Don't hesitate to go to fr iends t o~
Rou te No. 124 and e11 isti ng day for co unsel or assistance in
Sta r e Route No 33 8. · as
desc r ibed abov e f rom ihe yo ur work or career. They'll be
mos t eas t erly l~tnction o.f hap py lo help.

Store Hours:
Mon.·Sat. 8-am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 Second St.

AstraGraph

.,;,l;ng Sta te Rou te Nos . 12&lt;

and 3l8; then ce . in a nor
thea sterl y di r ection with a
fanQent, a curve to th e tefl ,
and a t angen t fo r a distance of
O.S7 mi~ e. m or e Or less , .to a
poi n t in
th e Oh io West
· virg ini a Stat e Ltne and ther e
ter m in lna l e Said polnl be ing
located · at Oh io . Ri ve r Mile
22 1.3 1. Said es tab l i.shmen t o f
ll tn ited access is to inc lude all
interchange areas an d ext end
along in tercha ng e cross roads
1n acc or da n ce w i th t he
Depa rtm ent of Tr ansportation
lim i ted access pol icy .

A~ARN~6NOMSlN~ , 0~

H ~
PORT I ON OF EXI STIN G
ST A TE ROUTE NO . 338
SITU A TED IN LEB A N O N
iOWN S HIP ,
ME IGS
COUNTY , OHIO . THE SAME
TO BE RE TA INED O r-J THE
STA TE HI GHWAY SYSTEM
A S STATE ROUTE NO . 124.
de~c~~b e ~e~~~oil:w0:: e f u lly
Beginn ing at the f irs t in ·
rer secli on of eKisli ng Sta te
R: oule Nos. 124 and 33 8 ~ 6.0
miles , more or l ess, as
measured along e•isti ng Sta re
Ro ute No. 124, east .of the eas t
corpo ration l ine ot the Village
of
Racine ,
th en ce.
southeaste rl y , north erl y and .
northwesterly along ~~~ ist l ng
Stat e Rou te No. 338 to the most
easterl y junct ion of eK ist ing
Slate Route Nos . 124 and 338
and also bein g the eK ist ing
ea st er l y terrrin.us of Sta te
Ro ute No . 3lB . and there
terminat e .. Said d escrib ed
port ion hav ing a tota l le ngth of
6.17 m il es, more or tess.
.
PROPO S ED .
THE
ABANDONMENT
OF
A
PORTION OF E X I STING
&amp;TATE ROUTE NO . 1?4 ,
SITU A TED IN LEBANON
TOWN S HIP ,
M EiGS
COUNTY . OHIO .- THE SA ME
TO. REV'ERT TO THE MEI GS
COUNTY
H IG HW AY
SYS TEM AT SUCH TIM E
TH AT THE CORRESPOND ING IMPROV.ED PORTION
OF STATE ROUTE NO . 124
,AND .STATE ROUTE NO . 824
I S OPEN ;tO T-RAFF IC AND
AF TER
.THE
F INAL
ABANDONMENT
ENTRY
HA S SEEN ENTt:=RED ON
THE . JOURNAL ON TflE
DIRECTOR
OF
TRAN S·
PORTATION ..
And be i ng mor e tul ly
d e scribe~ as foiiOW fi :
Beginning at the sec ond
Intersection of eKistlng State
Route NOS . 12A •nd 33 8, 6.4
.miles , more or t ess~ as
metsurt:d •tong fi!•lsllnU Sta te
ROute No, 124, east of the east
.,corporellon line of tne VIllaGe
of ~a C! Ine. thence ; easterly.
norther'ly , and easterly along
existing State Aovte No. 17.4 to
,, the mos1 eastertv junction of
''••lsllng Stele Route Nos . 121
' 1nd 331 and there terminate,
.,,aid described portion hav i ng
·a totll length of 1 . 8~ miles,

em on or tess .

·

PROPOSED ,
THE
VACATION OF A PORTtoN
t OF REROUTED STATE
ROUTE
NO . . 121
AND ·
'' EXISTING STATE ROUTE
NO . JiB, SITUATED IN
, LEBANON
TOWNSHIP .
MEIG S COUNTV ; OHIO.
"SAME TO ~EVERT TO THE
ABUTTt~
PROPERTY
,

-~[!J~
[])~

lli~

fil\TJ

Jan. :&amp;, 00 • 1
UU
I.!J)j
1977

"POMEROY, OHIO
Prices Effective Thru

· NO SALES TO DEAlERS
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERV?.O

January 8, 1976

$ 39
.SIRLOIN STEAK •••••• ~~ ••
.USDA CHOICE

USDA CHOICE

$ 59

RIB .STEAK ••••••••••••••••
LB.

'GROUND CHUCK... ·.;~-.
·-tiSDA CHOICE

ARM ROAST•••••••••• ~B.
USDA CHOICE BONELESS

CHUCK ~OAST ••••••• ;~.
&lt;

USDA CHOICE STANDING

RIB ROAST

LB.

$ 59

You're going to be more enterpris tng than usual th is year .
Others have faith in your projects. II you put lhe right learn
together. it will be a prof itable
period
'

(A re you a Capricorn? Bernice
Osol has written a spec;a/ Astro. Graph LelteT fO£ yq u. Far your
copy send 50 cen ts and a lOng
se lf -ad dres sed . s t a mp6d
envelope to Asuo-G raph, P.O.
Box 489, Radio City Station. New
York, N.Y. 100 19. {3e sure tO ask
for Capricorn Volume 1.),.

·SoCia
'I

:~f*~'@~t'::us.ec.:J!J ·~:».::·

WHITE OR

I.Calendar
S:
~
~

~

·

WEDNESD.AY
MIDDLEPORT Fire·
men 's AuxillBTy, 7:30
W~nesda y at the firehouse.
Mrs. Kate Bachner, Mrs.
Euvetta Bechtle and Mrs.
Roberta Dailey will be
hostesses .

FRmAY
RUTLAND GUN Club
Friday, 7:30 p.m. at club
!louse on New Uma Road. An
members urged to attend.

5 LB.

GRAPEFRUIT•••••••B.~.

•

THURSDAY
EVANGELINE CHAPTER
172, Order of the Eastern
Star, 7:30 Thursday at the
Middleport Masonic Temple.
AU membe~s asked to atteqd,
and dues are now payable.
CATHOLIC WOMENrS
Club will meet Thursday at ·
the Sacred Heart Chu~ch.
Ann Colburn, Teresa Collins,
Catherine Welsh and Suilan
Baet will be hostesses. New
officers 1flll be installed
during the Mau at 7:30 p.m.
·preceding the meeting.
REVIVAL SERVICES now
In progreu at Syrachuse
Church of the Nazarene. Rev.
Parker Hunelton, guest
~peaker . Services nightly at
7:110 p.m. Services through
Sunday. Public Is Invited .

P~K

FLAVORITE FROZEN

s oz.
CANS

ORA-NGE JUICE .••••
USDA CHOICE BONELESS_.

SHOWBOAT

. _$

t5

oz.

49 PORK &amp; BEANS~".

RUMP ROAST•••••••••L!~ ••
' FLAVORITE
USDACHOICE
$ 49
BREAD•••••••••••
CUBE STEAK.·••••••••• ~ ••
0

.

l8

1 0
:. : ••

1

rouPo~

,

COUPON

COtJ P ON

CllUPON

CHEER

CQRONET

s_LB.
BAG

sge _::r
W/C

Limit 1 Pe.r Customer
Good Only AI,Powell's
Offer Exp1re\ 1·8·77

:~ ~T BEE~, ORANGE, GRAPE, COI:A:
: :12
00 W/C

-.f: ·
: · · .
· ·.

uz.lQ/$1

Unlit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's .
Offer Expires 1·8·77 ·

. .... .. ..

.
. ·

:l..l

.,.....~·"'·-·~·~·~·
• • • • . . • • • •!lif.ll71!4GiP.4JIP.'

..,....r-. . --.-..,........ ....

-

-

..... :'('

TOILET TISSUE

:]
$109.
8 PACK
. W/C
Limii 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires 1-8·77 ,

DETERGENT

o,

-:1

10
11 LB.
OZ.

BOX

$399 W/C

Limit 1·Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires 1·8-77

oii lii

...._.,.... ··- .

•

.'

''

"

.:.

.•

�! -The DRllv Sentinel,Mlddleport·Pomroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Jan. 5,1977

_Local news

highlight~

of 1976
,

Legis~ive summary
O~o

·L etistative 'llriels

regulations " no more strinQE'flf

Aprll22- ABC TV s Dave By United Press lnternitional than nec:Hsary."
Farmers Bank and Savings when struck by a car in
(Continued)
Ptoposed
rf'gUialiOtiS
are
returned to MeigS CARTER INAUGURAL. · .
March I - Mrs. ·Ulufa Co.
Middleport. The Meigs Diles
,
- COLU MBU S (UP I I - The currently the subject of Ot!io
March 20 - Miss Lucille Cancer Unit staged "bail and County to speak at the Ohio House and SPnate passed EPA hearings, which conclude
Bradbury ·observed her 99th
Southern High School resolutions Tuesday authorizing next wee-k in Columbus.
birthday at
Veterans Smith was honored by the jail day" In Pomeroy.
DINNER GUES1S
basketbaU banquet Marte • delegation of II&gt; members to Th~ re-gutt!il i 0t1S e\lentuliiiiY
~
Memorial Hospital. Pomeroy. National Retired Teachers
April 12 - Bessie Darst,
·
~
rep r esent OhtO at Prt'!S tdtnf - adopted bv the s t i!'te shoUld
Mike Hindy, Delores
Racine ,
was elect Jimmy c_arter's inrwgura . " consider the lobs ot 15 ,000 Elliott, andJoyce HaU were
rr WANIS YOU!
arranged to borrow $475,000 Assn. for her contributions to Middleport, big Ohio lottery Norr-is,
tion in, Washington . O,C Jan Ohio coal miners" and " maK i
liip :daGI l!llian CID
to retirll indebtedness of the · the enrichment of retirement winner, received ber first presented a ·new c&amp;r .p top 20
m i ze the use of (high sulphur ) Ouistmas day dinner guesls
fllllill ill tile .,......., Geard
winner in Landmark's Name:s in the . Senate were Ohio cod l."
waterworks system and to living. Mrs. John Sebo was $1,000 a month cheek.
of Mr. and Mrs. William
Bowers will pr esent the
promotion. ..
Sens. Oliver ocaSf:!k. D-Akrpn :
NOW IIIII Nceift .-, fir up
provide improvements.
seriously Injured in an ac·
April 13 -'- Some 100 local • bi.centennial
·1 ·
d M. Morris Jacks'on , 0 C:leve petiUon ·IO. Ohio ·E PA d ir ector Stephenson alcq with Mrs.
land ; Harrv Meshel . 0-Youno - Ned Will iams.
to
Illlllllbo wllile , . nil
· March 2 - Bruce WaUace, cldentnearGlenwood, W. Va. organizational and com· ' Aprl 24 - A se~on
Stephenson's cbildre!l IIIII
far adift doir lraillillcMarch 21 , - Stiffler's · munity leaders attended a juvenile was charged m a stown ; Mar tgene Val iquette, o FUEL TAX . . .
Middleport, was one of 11
grandchildren.
.
calls to Toledo ; Tony . P . Hall , 0
persons injured and. four opened In temporary quar· luncheon at the Meigs Inn to wave of bomb threat
.
.
•
Dayton ; St anley J . Aronoff , R
COLUMBU S (UP I) '- A bill
.... • ·}--r' ~ «
killed in a jail blast at Point ters on E. Main St., Pomeroy. promote the mental health the Meigs Juruor High in Cinc innati ; and Oakley c. e~ee m pi i ng the sale ot, coat, tuel
oil and artificially produced.
Middleport
Collins, R -lrqnton .
:
I
. :"&lt;~ ...,.,.
..• .4
Pleasant. ·
March. 24 - Connie Jones, taJ: levy.
·
Eight House members will be natural gas from Ohio's 4 per
April 25 - FaiUt Perrin, n~~ rne&lt;t tater this week by cent sates ta• , if the fuels are
March 4 - Rutland fifth Tuppers Plains, honored by
April 14 - Herman Werry
BAKER FURNIRJRF5
Pomeroy, was named in the Speaker vernal G- Riffe, Jr ., o. used to heat a home. was
graders work ed on a Gallla-Meigs Fraternal was honored for over 60 years top
five percent of over a N e~ Boston . ~ xpenses of the 15 intr oduced Tuesday in the Ohio
leg iSlators Will be pa id by the ·General Assembly .
bicentennial quilt. Jayne Lee Order of Police, for saving service with the Pomeroy
The Legislative St'rv ice Con .
million students tested In the ""'
Hoeflich was named spelling the lives of children when fire Fire Department.
mission estimates that passage
NaUonal
Merit
Scholarship
champion at Meigs Junior broke out at a home where
April 15 - The beautiful
COMMIT;JEE NAMED
· of the bil'l would cut state tax
CQLUMBUS (U PI ) -: Si x revenues by \26 m ill ion. The
High School.
she was babysitting. Tina frame 12·room home of Leslie Program.
April26 - The old Pomeroy Democr atic and thr ee Republi bill is sponsored by Rep. Gene
March 5 - Mrs. Dorothy Beaver named Meigs Carr, Lincoln HiD ·Road, was
sena tors were nam ed Branstool. 0 -Utica.
Seni,
or Higb was doeded to can
Tuesday to the Senate Commit
Johnston was appointed County's ch.ampion speller. leveled by fire.
te e on Commi ttee to make MER IT SCHOLARS.
.
·I
.
.
director of the Meigs Board of
March 25 - Plans an·
Aprll18 - The Middleport • Pomeroy Village for use as a assignments
for the 11 2th
COLUMBUS
IU.P II
..
town
hall.
Meigs
Jaycees
Elections.
.
.
nounced for establishment of Pomeroy Rotary Club staged
Genera l Assembly .
Twenty two House members
,j I
Fmuring the W1J lilest it lane ...Named by unan imous adop
from both part ies introduced
March 6 - Pomeroy Boy Buckeye Golden Card one of Its most successful installed new officers.
pr
a
r
esolution
w
er
e
Sen
s
lion
legislation
Tuesday
ca
lling
on
April ZB - .Rutland Oliver Ocasek , O.Akron :. .M the Boar d of R:eg enls to
Scout Troop 249 created program in Meigs County.'
Easter egg hunts . . John
and m.p lfl k•es
_:
Elementary
School students Mor r is Jackson , D-Cieveland ; establish a merit schol ar sh ip Pl.,j \'/1' .fumisflinp
..
bicentennial trash containers
Marc!) 26 - Arrangements Cremeans and David 'Hoff·
Mar lgene ValiQuet te. 0 TOl edO; program
ror Oh i(l
college
put
the
final
touches
on
a
for Pomeroy. Velvet Swisher, wer.e oompleted for Veterans man the big winners, found
, William F . Bowen . D·Cin ci n
students.
low COSUI J111L
Under the program , at least
Kevin King and Laura Memorial Hospital to be a the gold and silver egg, bicenteMlal presentation. ·nali ; Tony P. Hall. Q.Qayton ,
April 29 - A group of Michael J . Maloney , R Cincin 2.000 ful l timt! students at Ohio
Hoover received superior teaching facility for the Ohio respectively. .
, .
; Paul E . Gillmor. R Port co ll eges and un ivers ities would
Pomeroy
firemen left for n&amp;ti
ratings in instrumental solo · University Colle~e of · Aprill9 - ·candystripers at
Clinton ; and M . Ben Gaeth, R
receive scholarships amounting ·
ance .
to at least S600 a yea r tor
competition at .Athens.
Osteopathic Medicine.
Veterans Memorial Hospital Springfield, lll., to return Defi
Ocasek,
whO
sponsored
the
with
a
ladder
truck
pur·
meeting" high academic stand
:
March 7 - The Middleport
March 27 - Traffic at were honored for their hours
resolution. said committee as
ards set by the board .
,
chased
through
public
con·
signments would be made by
B&amp;PW raised $510 for the, Lincoln and S. Third in of volunteer service.
The sta te would set aside $3.6
m illion tor the program under
f
'
ne•t week . ·
Heart Fund in Middleport. Middleporf blocked as aged
April 20 Fifty-six tribuUons.
the bill sponsored by Rep.
'
•
April
30
Meigs
County's
The Auxiliary of Drew tree fell due to high winds.
PETITION PASSED.
firemen from 12 departments
Donna Pope , R Parma .
,
SEE US TODAYI
l,OOOth Golden Buckeye Card · COLUMBUS ( UPI ) - More
Webster Post 39, American
March 29 .:... Fire destroyed met in Syracuse.
"'
than
half
the
membNS
of
~ the
Legion, raised almost $4,000 the Alvin Reed home at
April21- Denise Dean was ·was Issued to Mrs. Lessie Ohio General Assembly have ·~~L\r..:..~~f wi&gt;1 1.- state
in a house-to-house canvass .Reedsville with damages name6 1976 Meigs County Lusk, Pomeroy. - To be signed a petit ion circulated by Rep. Michael P . Slinz ia no. 0
Rep. Art Bowers, D·Steubcnvil · Columbus, introduced tegisla ~
continued. '
for the ladder truck fund.
going to $20,000. The Meigs Dairy Princess,
le, asking the Oh io Environ . lion Tuesday establishi!"g a t ee
MIDDlfP"iiJ
.
~.z..zmenta l Protection Agency to c.e i ling· at Ohio col leges and '"1-lri------..:..:~~-=~--:--~:..·· March 9 - Donald Sheets, Co unty Co mmissioners
~~~
·
adop t sulphur diOKide emi ss~o n unlversi ties.
Chester, lost his life in a signed an application to the
tractor accident. The Meigs Ohio Department of Mental
; Local School of Educaiion Health for MOI,OOO ' for a
agreed to purchase only on an health ser-vice facility.
emergency basis because of
March 30- The Pomeroy •
the tight financial picture. Mason Bridge closed for five
Chester Gooding was given a months for repair work.
three year co ntract as Ferry service between
Eastern High School prin· Pomeroy and Mason started .
cipal. Greg Thomas won the
APRIL
When many people think of SBA estimates.
Pome roy Elem enta ry
April
1
- Mrs . Lula the American free enterprise
spelling bee.
Besides providing more
March ll - Cheryl Lehew Hampton became a top system , they often think of jobs for American workers,
won the scholarship of the winner in Ohio of the Lucille large cocporations and the Senate Select . Committee
Scholarship and Education Loy Kuck Award for ex· conglomerates. Certainly big on SrnaU Business indicates
Committee of Drew Webster cellen ce in literary ex- business plays a vital role in that small business. en·
Post 39, American Legion , pression.
our economic lives, but we terprises account for more
April 2 ~ The Marching should remember that small than one half of the major.
Auxiliary.
·
March 13 - Tony's Carry- Marauders of Dwight Goins business is the backbone of inventiO!lS and Innovations in
Out in Middleport was hit by are invited to appear at · our economic system. Ac~ the economy.
Riverfront Stadium.
SPECIAL STORE HOURS - lHRU JANUARY
breaking and entering,
cording to the Internal , These statistics should tell
March 14-Meigs Chapter . .April 3 _: John S. Stiffler Revenue Service, the total us that we must not un·
9:15 TO 5 PM MON. lHRU lHURS.
joined the observance of .presented the Pomeroy Fire number of aU businesses in derestimate the importance
Department
with
$500
to
be
National DeMolay Week.
the United States in 1972 was of smaU business in our
9:15 TO 8 PM FRI. &amp; SAT.
March 15 - 'l)te Meigs used on the ladder truck fund. about 9.7 miUion. Applying economy. Consequently,
The
ferry
providing
service
Reg ional Planning Com·
,site standards of . tbe Small government at aU levels must
mission approved plans for a between Pomeroy and Mason Business Administration, 9.4 be more responsive lo the
multi-se rvice .building to closed down due to higb million of these may be concems of smaU business.
MEN'S
serve
several
Meigs water , Eig~t Humane defined as smaU,
Problems caused by govern·
Societies met at the Meigs
organizatioos.
S.B .A. defines a small ment must he lessened in at
. •
M.arch 16 - John A. Inn in Pomeroy.
business as one that meets least the followillg two ways:
•
50 !Qgular · Sale S42.00
, Aprll5 - Pomeroy Council these general size standards:.
Epling, Ga.llipolis, spoke at
·1: A reduction of federal
Reg . $60 to Sizes- 38 toJ~to
REG.
so Long
granted
permission
for
Lynp
annual birthday party of
Whole sale - annual receipts form poUutioil. Government
$45 fD SIOO
to
$98.00
$140.00
36 to 46 Shorl
Drew
Webster
Post St, to be. closed and used for from a ceiling of $5 to $1~ required forms at alt levels
Big Bend Regatta activities million, depending on the costs businessmen about $18
American Legion.
March 17 - Middleport's but rain later cancelled the Industry; Retail or Service billion per year.
Feeney · Bennett Post 128, activities.
annual receipts of no more ~- 2. Continued tax · reform.
April 6 - Twenty-two than $1 to $5 million, dpend· We will work closely with tax
American Legion, honored
charter members of the post Middleport firemen were ing on the industry ; Con· sp~cialists ln the new
and auxiliary at its birthday honored for completing 36 struction - annual receipts Congress to further refine the
50 $32 to $68
LAN~';J
hours of instruction in firll no more than $1 to $5' million, tax code so that it wiD be
party.
Reg. $40 toSizes
$85-351o
SALE
~
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skillsand ·depending on the Industry; more equitable as far as
March 18 - Salisbury fighting
Elementary took first place techniques.
and Manufacturing - rio smaU business is C()ncemed.
April 9 - Edward W, more than 25 to 1,500 em· . Many of the largest cor·
In the fourth and filth grade
division of Meigs I.Mal's Rowles, Pleasantville, ad·. ployees, depending . on the porations pay only about 25
in tramura 1 basketball dress , the annual Mejgs industry:
percent of their Income in
County l&gt;omona Grange
Sizes 36 to 46
By Lady Mal)hatlan - Ja:nlun - c..tolinot -l.crl ~tourney. ·
SmaU business enterprises' federal taxes because of
Reg. 544 to StO-' SALE $35 to $72
March 19 - The ladder banquet at Salisbury School. contoibute 4ll percent to the special treatment that has
truck fund drive got a $1,000 ' April 10 - Laura Horsley, business portion of total gross accumulated over tbe years.
shot in ' the arm from The 9, Middleport, was injured national product. Fifty five In contrast, numerous
1 RACK
perce.nt of the workers In the smaller firms do pay at the
private secl&lt;lr are employed fuU 43 percent rate, accord·
by small business according ing to studies by the Treasury
6 :&gt;nort Sleeves
Sizes 36 to 48
By JOAN HANAUER
. to data provided by the U.S. Departent am tbe Federal
UPITeievillloo Writer
Department of Labor and Trade Commission.
Reg. Price S45 to $90
NEW YORK (UPI) -The Sherpa guides of Nepal climb Mt.
!'verest for money. Why do Americans challenge the IDOUI\" r-----------~~~~~-!!!!!!~1
tain ? AcC()rding to one Sherpa guide, "You have too mucft•
money and you don't know how to speod."
ONE RACK
That bit of dialogue comes through in "To The Top ol. the ·
World: Assault on Mount Everest," a documentary CBS will
MEN'S LONG SLEEVE
broadcast Jan. ~,11&gt;9 p.m., Eastern Time. The sbow originaUy
was slated for a Sunday afternoon ''football death," but luckily .
someone waa smart enough to switch it Into prime time. The
story it teUs is fantastic .. Philip Trimble, a State Departlpent
lawyer and amateur mountain climber, wanted to get a group
together to climb a Himalayan peak in the 8,()()0.foot category.
MEN'S LONG SLEEVE
He contacted a friend in Nepal, and instead was offered il
STARTS THURSDAY, JAN. 6
crack at Everest. Nepal allows only two Everest climbs a year
..,. ~re-and post-monsoon - and Mt. Everest is booked solid
Piush Nvlon &amp; Quilted Nylon
Sizes 141!2 to 17'12
•
unlil the early 1980s. But a gap developed in the SRO booking
for the world's high•r:t and most challenging mountain when a
French group canceled.
Trimble and ten others - nine Americans and a Dutchman
- made record time in organi:rlng the apventure for which, as
an amateur team, flley were not qualified. "Weak," smiling
Sizes S-4 to 20
Wools, Corduroy, Nylon, Demln- Size 36 to 4
Nepalese characterized it.
I .
The American Bicentennial Everest Expedition set out to
reach the summit of the 29;028-foot mountain - where temper·
·atures were 40 degrees below zero, winds gusted tit 100 mUes
. an hour, and from which over the years more than 30 climbers
DRESS (OATS, SUBURBAN COATS
have not returned.
JACKETS, DRESSES. BLOUSES.
'
As the party setout for basecamp17,500feetabovesea level;
they were beset by the steamy aftermath of the monsooris,
SIURTS
Including the Inevitable leeches that could be bested only by a
sense of humor.
RJMP SUITS
NO LAYAWAYS
As they climbed higher, several team members, inCluding
GLOV£5,
HATS
&amp;
its two women, were forced to give up hope of reaching the
NO APPROVALS
summit beCause of physical ailments. On Oct. 8, 1976, blond,
SCARVES
~TS
· pony-tailed Dr. Chris Chandler, a speclaUst in emergency
AJ.L SAI.ES CASH
N.I.GREAnY
medicine, and Robert Cormack, a gilder pilot wbo took "home
movies" at the summit, were the only ones to achieve their
REDOCEDI
goal.
..
Tbe cUmb t.Qok 10 weeks; the men remained at the summit
for hall an hour, then began a perilous descent that provides a
OPEN FRI. TIL I~SA T. TIL 5 PM
susJ)enJeful end to-the real~ffe drama ..
"Everest" makes fucinating viewing, willl the mountain
the star of the show !rem ita !Will loothllla to the misty reaches
of ita bulk up to the aiCelic beauty of ita Icy peak outlined ·
against a bright blue sky.
The top Wnet?oork televtaion shows for the week ending Jan.
2, according to the A.C. Nielsen CO., were :
.J: "Happy Days;" 2: "W.W. and the Dixie Dancel&lt;ings"
&lt;ABG &amp;mdly movie); 3: "Laverne and Shirley;" 4: G.E.
The.~ter - '"lbe Secret ~ffe. ol John Chapman;'' S: "Six
175 N. SECOND AYE, MIDDLEPORT. OH
Million Dollar ·M in;" 8: ~~M-A~H; i' 7: ''Maude:'' 8: 10SmUe1'
45760
(CBS Wednellday Movie); 9: "Starsky am Hutch; " 10:

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~ JANUARY~

,IJI

CLEARANCE SALE
at

t

SOFA
BEDS

soo
1
1

$
.

BAKER fURNITURE

:1

.fi·:
I
~

'

t

FALLA

I_· ·

TER

..'
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•

0..1' "" ,~·

•"-

"'l

•

, MEN'S SUITS

.REDUCED 30%

MEN'S SPORT COATS

I

ACKS

I

~===•::D:u:a:D=:20;o/t=·====~~·=====·=~=·z='===~=3D~%====~·
. LEISURE SUITS

LADIES' BlOUSEs

REDUaD 20%

TV •.•in Review

LADIES' KJIIT lOPS

10P COATS &amp;All WEATHER COATS
REDUaD 20-30% ·

SAVE!

ANNIVERSARY CLEARANCE
SALE

SPORT SHIRTS

REDUCED 20%

·COlDRED DRESS SHIRTS

GREAT.BUYS FOR THE ·ENTIRE FAMILY!

:

REDUcED ·20%

LADIES' JEANS

wf~TER JACKETS .

'

.LADIES' WEAR, MEN'S WEAR, GIRLS' WEAR, BOYS' WEAR.

REDUaD 20.%

COATS
SLEEPWEAR

INrANT WEAR

DRESSES
.JEANS

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ONLY

PENDI.ElON 10PS1ERS .

MD lEAVY JDETS

KIDDIE SHOPPE

.

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REDUaD 20-30%

..

"Welcome Bilek, Kotter."

BLUE TAG
MERCHANDI.SE

REDU&lt;ED

SUBURBAN COATS. VINYL JACKEl'S,
LEATHER
&amp; JACKETS

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13 _ Tre Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport.Pdmel'oy, 0 ., Wednellday. Jan. $, 1977 ·

~-

.· I .. the poets' t.~omer

·Carpen!er
Personals ·

THE PEARLOFGREAT.PRICE
·
There· is a Jewel most precious and priceless In Its worth,
Unique In oil its glory. origin'alln Its birth;
'
No gem on earth could e' er compareorequalln Its value

The key that unlocks the kingdom and leads you thru the
val ley .

it vou 're searching for directions to earthly wealth or fame
Or rich rewards In Heaven. the answer Is the same ;

Just look beneath theco"er of the Master's Book of Life
To discover true Instructions with the Master's copyright

It's all there between the pages, his ·,?mmandments clear and

plain,

Follow each one. 'oh so carefully. and a

.
mans1on vou

w

Ill

claim;
t
t h'
He said " mansions there are man.v in my Ki ngdom Q ou s tne,
Should you aim for the Celestial, then the highest may be
th ine .''
If e&lt;Jery soul could see th~ weal th that lies bene~th" its cover
:")f wisdom and knowledge, r ich and rare, there isn't any other ;

To take your spirit high above this troub led earthly strife
Or give you peacefu"l slumber in the deepest, darkest ntght.

There' sa saying lh this Bible- it's pathetic - but It's true.
One man inquired of .Jesus, " Oh, Lord, what must I do?
To·inh'e rlt life eternal. a·ki ngdom of. great worth,
For all of Thy command ments I have honored since my birth ."
Then upon this man looked Jesus, in co mpas~lon to behold,
For he knew of all his riches, his silver and h1s gold.
Jesus said, " It thou be perfect, share thy riches with the poo~:
Take up thy crossi
nd follow nie to that eternal shore.
But he turned away i
rrow, for possession of hls gain
Wa's to him so muc more precious tha n a Kingdom e'er to
claim ;
·
·
.
Shall a rich man enter heaven, when from this earth his feet
have trod?
,

.. Judge not. lest ye be judged.'' sa id He. "All thongs are
possible with God ."
There is Qne route, the Master says that leadS to life eternal ,
·• But straight the gate and narrow the ~ay .'' to paradiSe
supernal ;
" Be meek and mild and hum ble," ·says he ....,. " and Insecure of
worth.''
,
And then He prayed th is praye r, ' ' Oh Father of Heaven and

•

Mrs. Rose Hooper, Janet
and Darla, Athens, were
overnight guests of her
mother, Ava Greenlees and
granddaughter, Rilla
Rhoades. They, along with
~hothet daughter and family,
Mr. and Mill. Clifton Fraley,
Jr. and son, Roger, were
Christmas guests of Mrs.
Greenlees- and RUla.
Those attending a family
gathering on Sunday at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Bob
HarriSon and family, Stouts·
ville, were Mr. and . Mrs.
WlUlam Cheadle, Mrs. Metta
Fisher, Mr. and Mrs. Rex
Cheadle, Don and Kathy and
Mr. and Mrs. Rexie Cheadle,
all of this area.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Rose
and daughters , Hilliards,
spent part of the Chrislmas
vacation here with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon
Perry and other relatives.
. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey,
local, along with their .On-titlaw and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs.
Ray
Wiseman,
Harrlsonvllle, and Mrs.
Margaret Parsons; Rutland,
spent Christmas with
Reverend and Mrs. David
Wiseman and family, Woods·

field, 0. Evan David
Wileman, great-grandaon of
the Starkeys who had spent
three days with them, and
Owen Earl, who had been
visited with his grandmother
Parsons in Rutland, returned ·
home with the group for
. Christmas.
Mn. Ida Denison, who had
spent some timf visiting In
Columbus, retpmed here on
Sunday . She visited the John
Knott family and also was a
· .guest of her niece, Vina
Rutherford, for her birthday
and to accompany her to
church services.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsey
Jordan and family spent a
day shopping in Columbus
and also.called on his sister,
Vlna Rutherford.
Christmas dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Harold GlUogly,
Vicky and Bruce, were the
following relatives; Mr.
· Lincoln Russell, Pomt:rOY;
Mr. and Mrs. F.ranlilin
Russell, Middleport; Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Russell ·and Su.san,
Columbus; Karen Gilkey,
· Athens, Mr. and Mrs. Clinton
Gilkey and Mr. and Mrs. Tad
Gilkey, Albany; and Mr. and
Mrs. Walter ·Jordan and
Joshua , local.
. . Mr. and Mrs. William P.
Brooks and children recently
moved to the former Rob
Turner farm which he purchased some time ago. Mr.
Brooks, son of Mr. and Mrs.
W. R. Brooks, who live south

ol School Lot, has retired
fromtheservlceandtheywill
make their home here. •
Christmas dinner guests of
Mrs. Rolland Crabtree in·
eluded Mrs. D. V. Cununlngs,
Athens; Murl Galaway, Dale
Dye, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Crabtree and Mr. and Mrs.
Dooald Crabtree and Cindy.
Afternoon callers were Mr.
and Mrs. Arthur Crabtree.
Mr. Dale Dye and grand·
daughter Lisa Dye ac·
companied the Clyde Walkers
of Thurman to Hartford,
Ohio, where they joined
relatives for a family
gathering on Sunday at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Peter
Kepnar (Mary Dye) and
family. Mr. Dye and the
Clyde Walkers visited with
Mr. and Mrs. Chester
Baumgardner and famlJy at
Coshocton as they were
enfoute home.
Those calllng during
Chrislmas Holidays at the
home of Mr. and Mrs.' Noble
Hamon indudtd Terry and
Mary Wiseman and children,
and Mr. and Mrs. Tom Kirby
and children, Hamden ; Mr.
and Mrs. Preston Hamon and
sons and Polly Dillon,
McArthur; Mr. lind Mrs.
Gary Hamon and children,
Rutiand, Ohio; and the Rex
Cheadle family, local.
Goldie Gillogly, from the
Russell Nursing Home in
Albany, joined relatives at
the home of Mr. and Mrs.

Ch
. ester
.
News Notes
·

with Mrs. Opal Eichinger.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
DeTray spent a couple of
days in T9ledo and on Sunday
they attended the ~Oth
wedding anniversary of Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy' Christy and Mrs. Smalley.
and Mrs. Letha W\)O(l CQlled
on Mr. and Mrs. Haro:d Hawk SIDE GLANCES
and family, Tuppers i'lains,
on Christmas Day.
· Mrs. Fred Rice was
returned to her home on
Chrislmas from the Veterans
Memorial Hospital after
undergoing surgery there.
. Mr, and Mrs. John
Ridenour and sons were
Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Stanley Trussel,
Bashan.
Mr, and Mrs. Charles
Eichinger and Suzannah,
Columbus, spent the weekend
Cecil Gillogly on Christmas
Day.
Mr. and Mrs. Lavern
Jordan, Betty and Jerrie
have returned from a week's
vacation .spent with hi s
brother and sister-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Eddie Jordan, Clay
William and E. J ., in the West
Palm· Beach area of Florida.
They drove to Columbus and
went by plane, returning on
Friday.
. .
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Stanley
and Anna, Edison , spent
Christmas with Mr. and Mrs.
Lewis Smith and Anna stayed
to spend her vacation with
her grandparents.

Mr. and Mrs. · Roscoe
Hollon were Christmas
dinner guesta of Mr. and Ml1.
Edison Hollon, Mlnem!Ue.
Mrs. Jessie Weber spent
Sunday with Mr . . and Mu.
Roy Grueser.

Byrd's· secret: har~ work!

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"If they've got all THAT much money, why do they get upset

over a $3.95 overdraft?"

·

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Margaret VanMeter .

by Jon Peterson

61G BEND

C:ONCHIIA. C.A.N'T
$WiM... SHE
DOESN'T HA.V~
ANY ARMS.

'-

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AREA
..

All of the folks at Country Cousins wan~o thank all of the residents of the Big
Bend Area for you.r support in 1976 and welcoming us into the community. We
appreciate it and for three big days we want to show it by offering old fashioned
prices! · ·

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© i977 by NEA.Inc.

FUNNY BUSINESS

By R~r Bollen

CHEESEBURGERS......... :.......~......................... .! FOR 3r OR 5 FOR s1.25
DOUBLE HAMBURGERS .. :........ ~ ............
............ ! FOR 45' OR 5 FOR 52.00
.
DoUBLE CHEESEBURGERS ... :.......................... 1 FOR 5(r OR 5·FOR s2.25
HAMBURGERS ................................................! FOR 25' OR 5 FOR 51.00
TRIPLE TREATS• ...·..................... ;...................... 1 FOR SOC OR 5 FOR .s2.25
CONEYS ................................. ~ ...................... .! FOR 3Q4 OR 5 FOR 51.25
REGULAR FRENCH FRIES........................ :..... ;.. .l FOR·2(r OR 5 FOR 8oe
•

1 Tt-IINK HEI'S 'STARTING
TO DRIFT AWA'f FROM US ·
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Please no specials during old fashioned price.days. If you want specials order
inside "without" fix em your way at our sandwich bar. Offer good Thursday
Friday, and Sa!urday, Jan. 6th thru 8th, 1977. No co.uponsnecessary.
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Moderation marks new GOP lea.d e
By United Press IDternatlooal
·
Sen. Ted Stevens of Alaska, the new assistant Republican
leader, is a modoratewho engineered GOP election strategy in
key Senate races during the 1976 campaign. .
As head ofthe GOP senatorial campaign commitooe, Stevens
offered advice and doled out money to incumbent Republicans
and promising GOP challengers. The incwnbents took the
money but used the campaign committee very little. The
,political expertise was vital for chatrengers .
Eleven Republican challengers each received the maximum
S17,500the campaign committee was aUowed to donate. Eight
won their races, including five who ousted Democratic
incumbents.
Had the Republican incumbents fared as well as Stevens'
promising newcomers, the GOP could have gotten a net gain of
three or four seats during the 95th Congress instead of ending
up with the same 38seats as the party held last session.
Stevens, 53, is an articulate debater and .a member of the
Senate's Wednesday Glub, a group of moderate Republicans,
He was appointed to the Senaoo Dec. 23, 1968 to fill a vacancy
created by the death of Sen. E.L. (Bob ) Bartlett . Stevens won
his first full tenn in 1972.
During his first two years in the Senate, Stevens traveled
•
more than I million miles by flying the 10,000-mile rounu-trip
.. to Anchorage each wee~ . He still visits th~ state frequently but
no longer makes the difficult weekly tr1p.
Born in Indianapolis Nov. 18, 1923, Stevens was a World War
II pilot, serving in the famous "Flying Tiger" squadron in

China, and was decorated 'five Urnes.
After the war, Stevens returned to collect, Jt·lllhiAI!I'It
UCLA in 1947 and earning a law degree from RarYirlllll
Stevens practiced la.w in Fairbanks In lllrl3, ·
yee,rs as the U.S. attorney there. In liM, he
legislative counsel to the Interior Depal1m&lt;nt and llo
appointed assistant to the Interior se&lt;:relllr)'.
In 1960, as chief counsel of the Interior Departmenl, _..._
played a leading role in the battle for Alaskan talehtlud ,
Stevens returned to Alaska in 1961 and bti!ln a In pradkw
in Anchorage. He served two terms in the Alaska lecailltt.h
where he was majority leader and speaker pro Inn ol IJie
House.
Since coming to the Senate, Stevens' private law practi« In
Anchorage has been inactive.

Wilkesboro, N.C. He was no opposition in the primaries
orphaned an at early age and or general election.
raised on a dirt farm in
He has a~ been a ·colorful
southern West Virginia by . campaigner,
using his
foster parents.
almostprofessional ability as
He was graduated from a footstomping fiddler to
high school, went to junior entertain crowda.
• d
college ami later to Concord
Once
m ll)e Senate, Byr
CoUege in West Virginia. It qu1ckly became lagged as a
wasn't until he was a U.S. conservative. He fought most
senator that he earned his of the civil rights bills of the
law degree going to night !!HIIE (hefilioostered aU'night
school and graduating cum once), and welfare programs
laude from Amerlca'n
f::s !~rro~~U.::l~o~~c~:
University in 1963.
In his early years he Harrold Carswell to ·th e
Payne.
worked as a store clerk and a Su preme Co urt ·
Anna Jean Phipers left
butcher and it was during this
'In 1971, he chaUenged Sen.
Thursday
for her home in
period that he joined the Ku Edward Kennedy for the post
Denver,
Colorado,
after a
S
te
.
t
t
Klux Klan at age 24 -an act · 0 f
as~ Is an
ena
visit
with
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Roger
he now calls I! "mistal&lt;e of Demo:crat1c leader. To the
Keller
and
other
relatives.
youth."
surpriSe of many, · he beat
· Mr. and Mrs. McCauley,
Byrd, who has held more Kennedy· ,
INTEREST
David
and Linda, Columbus,
legislative elective offices
That election wtderscored
spent Wednesday with Mr.
than · anyone in West Byr_d's hard work and
and Mrs. Roscoe Hoilon.
Virginia 's history, was meticulous plannmg.
------------------------~
-Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Ailen
electro to the state's House of · Although
he
won
\
Letten
of
opinion
are
welcomed.
They
should
be
visited
Tuesday in Ashland,
Delegates in 1946; the. state
1
1
less
than
300
words
long
(or
be
subject
to
reduction
by
1
Ky
.,
with
Mr. and Mrs.
Senate In 1950; the House in
l
the
editor)
and
must
be
signed
with
the
signee's
ad·
I
Wa
lter
Kouns,
Mr. and Mrs.
1952 and the Senaoo in 1958.
I
dress.
Names
may
be
withheld
upon
publication.
l
D.
B.
Martin
and Robert
A demon at laking care of
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Hill constituents and tending to
. By Mrs. Francis Morris
son. Joining them for Christ- I However, on request, names will he disclosed. Letten : · AI~~~ and Mrs. Dan Zimhave completed remodeling his state's needs, Byrd . has
Charles Wagner underwent mas dinner were Mr. and : should be in good taste , addressing issues, not per- 1 merman, Galion , spe nt
Nin e ty day i nt e r es t penalty
their home they purchased become so politically surgery at Holzer Medical Mrs. Gerald Simpson and
1
sonallties.
,
I Wednesday with her grand·
1f
wit hd rawn
befor
oowerlul
that
last
year
he
had
from Clifford Hill. Christmas
m a tur itv dat e ,
Center.
family and Mr. pnd Mrs. Bob I
~
!
parents,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Arthur
Day guests of the Hills were
Olden Thaxton is a Stemple. Eveni ng guests
I
, Q~~
· : orr . . ·
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hill, Mr.
medical patient at Veterans · were Mr. and Mrs. William
Bran~h
Mrs. Opal Hollon .spent a
and l',frs. Charley Hill and
1
Mem9rial Hospital.
Hayman.
1 • • •
1 few days with Mr. and Mrs.
child~en, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
•
Mrs. Harry Curtis ha s
Christmas .dinner guests of 1
1
Gerald Hoilon, Co lumbus.
!jill and son P. J., Clara
returned from Holzer Mr. and Mrs. Wiliia m 1
1
D. D. Clelland , Columbus,
Powell, Jerry PoweU, son
Medical Center and is con· Hayman were Mr. and Mrs.
called
on Denzel Cleland
Jimmy, Mike Powell, sons.
valescing at her home after Mike Hayman and children of
Tuesday.
Billy and Joey, Mr. and Mrs.
suffering a stroke.
Jonesboro, Tenn.
. Pomeroy area gave $688.25
Mrs. Audrey Woode spent
Th e At he ns County
Johnnie Powell, son Jason,
Mrs. Gladys Baughman
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Curtis of
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Hart
Sa11 1ng s - Loan Co .
Christmas
with
Mr.
~nd Mrs.
Barry Ailen, Mr. and Mrs. and Jack Gale of Gahanna Norwalk and Mr. and Mrs. spent Christma s . holidays Dear Sir:
'
296 Seco nd St .
Willard Hines.
Po meroY, Ohio
Gl~n Hensler, Middle~ort,
visited with Mrs. Rose Richard Curtis and daughter with Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Good
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Glen ·and Thomas during the holidays. Sherri of · Vinton spent the Hart at Newark. They were . Dill-ing the past several years when Seventh-day and Tammy Kimes, Norwalk.
children.
Visiting recently with Mr. Christmas holida ys with their accompanied by Mrs. Helen Adventists have conducted a World Service Appeal '" and Tad Kimes , Key West,
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Don and Mrs. Lawrence Rose parents,- Mr. and Mrs. Harry Simpson wh~isited her son, Pomeroy and the surrounding area, the residents and several
Fla., spent Sunday with Mr. ·
Bell Christmas Eve were were Mrs. Ruth Bonnett of Curtis.
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Simpsn business establishn\en\s have always responded generously. and Mrs. Roscoe Hoilon.
Raymond Bell, Mr. and Mrs. Parkersburg, W. Va., Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Birch and family at Baltimore.
This year is no exception.
.
.
John Chaney, sons Roger and Dorothy Effinger of Belpre and daughter of Bellevue
Mr. and . Mrs . Ralph
At the conclusion of this year's campa1gn on ChriStmas Day
Edward, Mr. and Mrs. P~ ul and Thomas J. Rose of spent Christmas weekend
the total contributions made by the public and by our own
spent Christmas church members amounted to $688.25. Since the_se funds _were
Ervin, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Akron.
with their parents, Mr. and Badgley
with Mr. and Mrs. Brian
Ervin, . Keliy and Jason of
Christmas Eve guests of Mrs. E!za Birch ,and Mrs. Simpson and Sunday with Mr. solicited by our members on a volunteer baSis, ther~ IS _no
Raclne-Bashan Rd., Bruce Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Foster and Emma Salser.
and Mrs. Steve Badgley and overhead and the total amount is channeled to humarutar1an
Hart, Columbus, Wendell family were Joe and Judy
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Adams were calied home due to the needs.
•
th
d
Ervin and Peg Cunningham. MacKnight, Jack Roush , and .Mr. and Mrs. Boone serious illness of his brother,
Each year brin~ new crises to demand our sympa Yan
Mr. and Mrs. Jess An· Janet and Tom Bush, Tom · Adams were Christmas Cloist Badgley.
bel~. As we meet the numerous needs .in many coun(ries,
derson spent Christmas Brown, Connie Terry and . supper guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Mr . and Mrs. Cisco Pomeroy area citizens can enjoy the satisfaction of knowmg
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Lisa Brown, · all of New Charles Cobb ahd Heidi at W
t t.tiey also had a part.
f Alba
illiams 0
ny spen
In times of tragedy itis not alone the tei_Ilporal help people
!.eo Wiggington at St. Albans, Haven, W. Va .
Syracuse.
W. Va.
Sunday dinner guests of
William Lake, Lori ·and Sunday with Mr. ' and Mrs. receive that is important, but also the feeling of brot~erhood
demoostrated by such aid, even between people of differ~nt
Mr . and Mrs. Wayne Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Foster and Sean, were guests of their Charles Williams and son.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Charles
.
RosebeQ"y were Christmas family were Mr. and Mrs. grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Williams and Shannon visited races. It is this that hell" renew their spirits and makes life
seem worth living again.
·.
Day guests of Mr. and Mrs. Delmar Foster, ofBuff~lo , W. Francis Morris, Thursday,
relatives recently at lroqton.
We are happy for the support of our many_friends and ~sh
Benny Boggess . Other Va. and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Dec. 23.
to publicly express our deep thanks for thetr. concern which
visitors were .Mr. and Mrs. Bise. ·
Christmas holiday guests of
they
have translated into generous gifts agam this year. Mickey Mugrage, two
Christmas dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. George Neigler
Gerard Seton, Pastor, Seventh-&lt;iay Adventist Church.
children, Joey Lee Pierce, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Rose were Mr. and Mrs. Phlllp
Blll Hoback, Lois Jean were Mr. and Mrs. Dana Van Miller and daughter, Sarah of
Mugrage, Zel Boggess, Todd Meter and family . of Belpre Anna, Ohio and Mr. and Mrs.
Margaret Cox, Mr.' and Mrs. dinner on Christmas Eve
and Mickey Mugrage visited and Mr~ and Mrs. Ernest Robert Pabner of Goldsboro,
BY
CLARICE
ALLEN
Berrea cox, Mr. and Mrs. were Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
Mr. and Mrs. Denzil Boggess· Ruth. Ben · Buckley was a N. C. Mrs. Frankie Neigler
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Larry
Roush
Carrol
Cox and Mrs. Wolf, all Weber, Keno, and Mr. and
at Antiquity.
supper guest of the Roses.
joined them for Christmas
and
Jean
Ann
left
for
their
of
Point
Pleasant.
Mrs. Roger Keller, Randy,
Terry and John Smith, dinner.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles
home
in
Winter
Haven,
Fla.
Mrs.
Mary
Dobbins,
Rodney and Russell.
Blakeslee, Pomeroy, Mrs. Ira students at Rio Grande
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Cross
afte.r
spending
Chri
stmas
Tuppers
Plains
called
on
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Neuman,
Butcher of Middleport were College, are spending t!Jeir and Ray and Mr. and Mrs.
week
with
Mrs.
Jean
SumMrs.
Letha
Wood
recently.
Kathy
, Jane and David,
Christmas Eve guests of Mr. holiday vacation with Mr. John Nichols and Christine of
merfield,
Mrs.
Nora
Brown
Mrs.
Freda
Miller
and
Miss
Galion.
were weekend euest&lt;
and Mrs. James Butcher and and Mrs. Grant and Mike.
Columbus spent Sunday with
and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Virgil
Lenora
Betzing
spent
Christ·
of
Mr.
and
Mrs. Arthur Orr.
son and attended the Christ·
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Mrs. Frankie Neigler.
Roush.
Mrs.
Brown
went
mas
with
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Victor
Joining
them
for Christmas
mas program at the East Rose visited with Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Critt Brad·
home
with
the
Roushes
for
Bahr.
dinner
were
Dr.
and Mrs.
Letart Methodist ~ .....
Mrs. Roger Keller and family ford Jr. of Worthington spent
the
winter.
Mr.
and
.Mrs.
Delmar
Roger
Grucser,
Gina,
Lisa .
Mr. and Mrs. ft!!rl)ert and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Dean a liaY with Mr: and Mrs. Crltt
.Mr.
and
Mrs.
Billy
Robert
Hollon,
Ronnie
and
Billy,
Susie
and
Jenniler,
Logan,
Shields, Mrs. Kathryn · and' family of Pomeroy Rd., Bradford Sr .
Philson. Millie Ripley of during the holidays.
Henry Roush returned Allen, Columbus, spent Albany, and Mr, and Mrs. and Mrs. Martha Lee and
Charleston were Christmas
Christmas dinner guests of home after a visit in Christmas weekend with Mr. Edison Hollon, Minersville, Becky and Bob Bill, Bashan.
The MADEIRA • H1910C
Christmas dinner guests of
Eve night guests of Mrs . • MJ:. and Mrs. Grant Smith Uniontown with Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. Clayton Allen. . ~ -visited with Mr. and Mrs.
Decorator compact table
Christmas
dinner
guests
of
Roscoe
Hollon.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Earl
Dean
were
Marlene Fisher and children and family were Mrs. Lucille John Fisher who brought
model. Dar~ Brown
Weekend guests of Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. George
at Racine.
Smith and Mr. and Mic. Reed him . . They are enroute to Mr . and Mrs. James
polystyrene cabinet. Sol ld·
Ridenour, Lowell and John Mrs. Ralph Keller were Miss Genheimer, Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs . 1• Herbert Crary.
Florida.
St~te
Video Range
Mrs . Bess Larkins is
Melvin Riffle of Columbus were Mr. and Mrs. John Hilda Weber and Mr. and Dale Machir, Mr. and Mrs.
Roush , Mr. and Mrs: Dorsa
Parsons, Bertha Robinson , spending some time with her spent Christmas with Mr. and Wickham, Mr. and Mrs, Buel Mrs. Don Williams, David Terry Stethem, Wilbur Dean,
Florence Smith attended the daughter, Mrs. Do~ Marks Mn. Roy Riffle. Spending Ridenour, Thelma Ridenour, and Deanne , Columbus . Mrs. Betty Chevalier, Miss
Christmas program at at Chester after returning Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. John Ha yes and Joining them for a family Denise Dean and Johnny
Mr. and Mrs. John Ridenour
Morning Star Church.
from the hospitaL
Bill McKenzie, Phil, Jeff and and sons.
Christmas guests at tho Jo&amp;ie of Gallipolis. Other
Mrs. Vashti Grimm. Mrs.
Charles Kimes and two
Pstty."Farr and children of home of H. E. Kibble and visitors through the holidays
daughters
of South Carolina
Cuyahoga Falls spent three Forrest were Mr. and Mrs. 'tl'ert Patty Shain of Antiquity spent a couple
of days with
old Mr. and Mrs. Sam Curtis his grandparents,
days duririg Christmas with Charles Foster and family,
Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Brutvan 'Mr. and Mrs. Roger Weslfa'' ql Norwallt.
Mrs.
Roscoe
Hollon.
and family of Belpre, Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Miller
and family at CincinnaU.
Christmas dinner guests of
Hazel
Barton,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
IPtfll
Chl'illmas with Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Dillion
Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Wood
and son of Hartselle, Ala . William Congrove and Pam, Helen Slack and Mrs. Pearl
were
Miss Sandy Wood,
spent Christmas with Mr. and all of ReedavUle and James WUIIa at Letart Falls .
Parkersburg,
Mr. and Mrs .
·
· Mr. and Mrs. Bud Simpson
Mrs. Guy Shuler; Mrs. Dillion Jackson of Belpre:
Bill
Beegle,
Gallipolis,
Mf\
Holiday dinner guests of of .&amp;ymour, Ind. spent the
and son remained for the
·
and
Mrs.
Bob
Wood,
Charlie
h~lldays.
Mr.
Dillion Mrs. Lucille Smith were Mi.U holiday weekend with his
Debbie Graham of Elizabeth, . mother, Mrs. Gretta Simi&gt;' and Amy, Racine , · M~s.
returned home Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Wavne W. Va., Mr. and Mrs. Grant
Wilson and familY. have Smith; Terry, John and Mike
moved to their new mobile and Teresa Smith.
The MALIBU • H1310C •
Holiday guests at the
home at Letart.
Sllm·line styled portable . Ebony
Williams
•
Balderson
home
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold An·
co lor cabine t with Silver color
derson,, Brenda and Lori, were Mrs. Kathryn Di~tz of
on top and pedestal base. 110"
were Sunday guests of Mr. Belpre, Bill Dietz of
Chromacolor In-Line Picture
and Mrs. Owen Anderson, Columbus, Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Tube. Solid-Sta te Silper Video
Williams of Athens, Ga. and
abo Bart Rhodes.
Mrs. Paul Hill and son P. J . Mr. and Mrs. Warren
were . Chrlslmas Day guests · Pickens.
Jane Whitehead Is visiting
of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
George Hicks at Pomeroy. Ed Mensch family at ·
during the
Mr. and Mrs.. Lawrence Cleveland
Ables, VIcki Ables of Canal boUdays.
Mr. and Mrs. Denver
The quality goes'" before the name~~~ onft
Winchester were Chrislmaa
......
·weekend ' guests of Mr. and Weber and sons were
Mrs. Jack Ables and Mr. and Chrlstmaa dinner guests · of
Modular .SterJo
Mrs. Chllrles Congo at Spiller Mr; and Mn. Oscar Weber
• .WII'MI!Itefto "' T~Nt"""C'
• ~ ~IM!MIIIe ttnoftO
and family of Keno.
.
and Mrs. Allee Balser.
• AlllfrO f'b ~
Mr. and Mrs. Isaac
• t~tnu~t,;••" W1tflll1 Jllnl•tt Chrlalrnas Day· guests of
• Alllo /l,n l{l'.JI' with 1-Trldl T. .
Mr. and Mn. Young were Mr, Frydrnan of Columbus spent
and Mrs. David Kearns and the Christmas weekend with
aon of Cllltoo, W. Va., Mr. her parenis, Mr.. and Mri
~BELTS
. and Mrs. James Heaton and Ernest Whiteheall and
family, Chelttr, Mr. · and family.
- Mrs. L. Balderaon
Mn. Harry Barton and
family of B....an, ·Mr. and
~rs. Wayne ltoseberry.
Wllsori and family . .
Mrs. Florence Smith was a
Mr. and Mrs. Bob ·spencer
ChrlltmU Day guest of Mr. are enjoying a vacation In
and Mn. Jerry Jotmon at North Carolina during the
Radne.
holidays.
•
Mr: and Mrs. Charles
Mrs. Paul Hill's mother,
Mason, W.Va .
RAciNE, 0.
Burri, Ronald Wilson, Billy · Mrs. George Hicks, Is a
Hours: Mon.- Tliurs. &amp; Sat. 8·$: 30
!11NIIIon •of Bolivar Dam spent patient at Veterans Memorial
• 773-5554
r.ASO
8-8.
..
a week with Mrs. Enna Ho.tpltal .wlth poeumonla .. ·

i{!em.

News Notes

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On Certnicates
Of Deposit
$1,000 Minimum

Racine Social Events

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Reedsville
News· Notes

IJIIL

''Vl.•' .

Meigs Co.

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Chester
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•

comfortably, 31-24, Byrd was
sure of only 26 votes - the
bare majority he netded.
That included the vote of
Georgia Sen. Richard Rus·
sell, who was on his deathbed.
Only after . Byrd was
certain he was still ali~ ,did
he allow Russell's vote to be
cast by proxy, three hours
before the Georgian died.
After his election to the
leadership, Byrd _ feeling
his constituency was no
longer . west Virginia but
national _ began to move
toward the center. He has
ted "th liberals on a
· yo
WI .
1
number of ISSues he fonner y
fought but never became one
of
major
acc~plishments have been
compromise la~gua.ge to
controversial l~g 1slation sch001 b · ·
d oting
.
usms. an v
nghts extension are two
examples.
Adevout Baptist, Byrd has
shunned Washington's social
cil!atlt keeping the littie time
he tak~ offfrom work for his
if Erma two daughters
::;,;• five sr'andchildren. He
does not drink liquor, but
enjoys a large cigar.

1 Yr. Term .

0

OF COURSE

By
United
Preu
1Die111AIIonal
Robert Byrd of West
Virginia, the Senate's newly
elected Democratic leader,
has climbed from poverty to
power . His secret : Hard
work. ·
The 58-year-&lt;Jld Byrd Is an
• expert politician In and
0\llBlde the Senate. He Is
gifted
iit
achieving
compromise, a master at
maneuvering ~nd a tireless
workhorse.
Once considered a southern
conservative, Byrd has
moved toward ·the center
politically and as assistant
Democratic leader. earned
higb marks from liberals for
even-handed treatment.
The son of a co~! miner'
Byrd was born Jan. 15, 1918 in

Apple Grove

But fhe humble shal l be exalted on that glorious Judgement

MR. FLUGG

•

Personality spotlight .

by Gill Fox ·

" Thank Thee - for hiding truth from ones who think
themselves so wise
And revealing it to the hu mb,le, even as children In ~hine eye ~;
Their mansion s .3 11 will tumble', for their f oundations are of •

Day. ~

•

12-TM DaUySentlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday,Jan. 5, 1977

~~~------------------------------------~ .'

Earth."

clay

.

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·~

CUT STUDS

II

I3:fGONAL

'c

..

·'

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

with M.jor Hoople

MINING

SUPPLIES

'I

! RECML L11WE~INCI
MY 81NOCULAAS
AFT~R .31. HOUI?~
C1' OBGERVATION
WI\Et&gt;l 5UDI?ft-ILY-

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·couN·JR.YCOUSINS
COOK.SHOPPE
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•BOOTS
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•ROUND &amp; OVAt WNCH PAILS

Pickens Hardware Co.

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HOGG &amp; ZUS·P.AN
MATERIALS CO.

RIDENOUR

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I

U-Tile DallySentmot, Mlddleport-Pcmey, 0., Wtdnelday, J111 . 5,11'17

· ~·~'or

WA~T ADI
INFORMATION
OUDLINIS
5
P .M . DIY
8tfore
Pubtlc.llon .
C•nctllltiOnl ,
cornc
tiona •ccepte&lt;l first day ot
publ lcttlon.
UGULATIONS
Tne Publisher reserves
the right to ecm or reltct
any ldl Clttmtd ob lt-ctlonal The publlsl'ler
will not be responsible tor
more th•n one Incorrect
insertion.

- tN LOVING nwnory of my ~vt­
bond, t!orn.r Howkint who

po11ed away Jon...ary 5, 1m.
In a gravftld. IOftly •I"I'Jng.
wtw.theHowen get'llly wave,
ll" my husband llovOd 44&gt; doorly
But whom Icould not tove,
I didn 't know the pom he llod
Or hear his finalsivh
I onty knew M pou.d away
Without o lo1t goodbye.
Deep In my heart lies o pkture,

-~

In memory frame I shall hMp it
&amp;.couse he wat one of the best.
Sadly missed by his wife. lO!Jist
Howklns .

GUARAN.~TE"'E"-DJOBS lOC~TION

For W111t &amp;d S'tr~ln
5 cent1 per word one
1ns,rtton
Minimum Char;e 11 .00.
u cents per word thru
consecuti~e insertions .
26 cents per word six
consecutive Insertions .
1S Per Cent Discount on
paid tds , lnd ads Plld
within lO days.
CARD OF THANKS
~ 1 OBITUARY
I - .,2 00
f
so WO d
r r
0 .. 1~/inJ.!m or
EacK ai:ldlflonal word 3
cents
BLIND ADS
Addlttontl 25c Charo e
per Advertisement
:
OFFICE HOURS
1 JO ,a m to 5:00 p m
Dally , 8 JO a .m to 12 00
Noon Saturday .
Phone today 992-2156

•

'"

~

We would like to thank the M1d·
dleport Emergency Squad , Dr

Telle c;md 1taff. all those who
brought food, 5ent cards or
flowers and helped m any way
durmg the lllne55 and death of
Alma Beller .
Husband. Sam . Mr. 9nd Mrs
Harold Kirby. Rov and Oole
Ellis

SHOOTING MATCH , Sunday,
January 9, stortmg at noon
Rutland legion Ha ll
SHOOTING MATCH, tust off Rt 7
by-pass near Rock Spnng
Cem~tterv Every Sunday
1:2
noon

RACINE FIRE De..pt will kove a
Gun Shoot everv Saturday night
6 p m at the.r budding m
Boskan , Oh1o .

I

Case No. 21,994

Eslile of Bertha

Ne•mever

Deceased .
Not1ce Is hereby g1ven that
James E . Simpson of 264 South

Second Street . Middleport.
Ohio , has been tfuty appo1nted
Administrator of the Estate of
Bertha Neimeyer , deceased,
late o' Villaoe of Pomeroy ,
Meigs ·ounty , Ohio
erect rs are required to
ffle tt
claimS wttl1 satd
f1CIUC11
within four months
Oat"-:: this 17th day of
Dec" n be r 1976
Manning D Webster
Judge
(12J 22, 29 (l) 5, 3tc

fte Alm-e
lJillted Pnu lalenullloaal

. Today II W~aday, Jan.
5, tbe fifth cWy ol19'/i with 360
to follow. ~ 'lbe 1110011 18 full.

•

The morning alan are
.
'lbe I!VIIIinllltlnl are Mer·
cury, Venua and Jupiter.

Mara and Salum.

'lbole ben onlhll date are
lllllllr tbe llga .. Capricorn.
Zebulon PUre, dllcomer ol
Plke'a Peak In Colcndo, wu
born on .Jmt. 5, 1m.
Allo Clllhll dly In blltory :
In 1115, Mn. Nellie Tayloe
S.. of Wyamlng wu nrorn
In u t.be flrat woman
......... in u.s. hllltcly.
In lilt, PojJe Plul VI ll1d
On* Orllwdox Palrilrdl
At.btDIIOfU
met
In
Jerualem far a hl8torlc
dloc: 'm of C1rlltlln unity.
Ia IMI, Aleunder Dubceli
became chairman ol lbe
CmPnnnl• part)' ol Czedw.
laler to bt dlpolld
far Jeadlnl a reform
D»t&amp;l&amp;it . . . . Molcow

lonkla;

Cllllll'ol.

• '

In lm, · Prelldltnt Ford
-.1 u
tllh!·man
!DIImll'zddi·III,ID t.clld b7 Vice
PnlldtDt RoelllfeUII', to
·in "IP'II dlarlll lbl CIA
.......,ted llllpJ .........
U.S, ,M..._, In lhll
I
l
-.

.....0

r

Pomeroy

co.

'I

~e:so~rl. wor~~~~~~~oct ~~~~~

m

7A2.3154 after 5 P m'-~--

19Z4 CHEVROLET .V. TON
53495
Cheyene. white ami Qreen finish , -chrome bumper and
moldings, rear step bumper, v.a automatic, power
steering and brakes, rftdlo. real clean.

SOMEONE NEEDED Ia slay w1lh
my fnvalid husbond and son
_P_ha_n_e 992
_ ·_32_54_ --· __ __

1971 CHEVROLET\; TON
$199!.
1 owner, good t.l res, custom cab, 8' Fleetslde.
COAL. limestone, and calciUm
chloride and calcium bnne for
dust control and spec1al m1xmg
salt for formers. Mom Street
Pomeroy Oh10 or pflone 992

l...-------~~-----

POL I .fOAM

LHOME IM_P_~OVE"' ENT

uPHOLSTERY"
-f

POMEROY, OHIO

IIISIIII!ial

·~o:n::!:;s~:~dino~h:::i

w•

B1on11110
Ulli&lt;l
S10IIII
WI-&amp;DOOIS
ltrUU,EIIT

far CJmpers. V•rlety of
lslzes.
Velvets, nylon prints,
herculons, vinyl so~ds, and
tancv prin~. accessories:

WI-

DIRECT FABRIC SALES

AWMIRUM
~~III§L

Pl. Ple1s1nt
Ph. 67!-3469
9:30·5:00 Dolly
cUJ8~0 F.![dar.• .

rh. !tl·3!tJ

'""' lllo .....
._tolllo . . .MIIoll

~

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

- ________

-

-- ·-

REW~RD

FOR the return of lod•es
purse and contents lo1t m
Racine area. Phone 949 25.46
LOST · B&amp;agla, mole, brown' head
white top on to1l, answers to
nome of "Wheeler · los t on
Sumner , Rood, reword. Phone
Fred Karshner, 985-3874

. HEI&lt;:E,0&amp;;AR
Will 'l-OU GO AND
G tVE il-116"""T'"0

OLD furn 1ture, 1ce bo)(es , bran
beds, wall telephones and
ports. or complee households
Write M. 0 Miller, Rt 4,
Pomeroy, Oh1o. Coll992-n60.
CASH potd for oil makes ond
models of mobile kames
Phane area code 614-423-9531 .
TIMBER , Pomeroy Forest Pro·
ducts. Top pnce for stondmg
sowt1mber . Colt Kent Hanby
1 -~·8570 .

COINS, CURRENCY tokens , old
. pocket wokhes and chains ,
s1lver and gold . We need 196-4
and older silver coins Buy, sell,
or trade' Call Roger Wamsley,
742 2331
CASH! I I for junk cars. Frye's
Truck and Auto. 2.. HOUR
WRECKER SERV ICE! Phone
742-2081
NOW BUYING Scrap. Pomeroy
Auto RKycllng, high prices
paid . auto bodies motors ,
scrap, 'iron , metals, battenes,
open 8 till .4 ·30 Monday thru
Saturday, Old 33, just above
fairgrounds , Pomeroy , Ohto
Will alto pickup cars Phone

992-6337
WANTED. CHIPWOOD. poles
mQ)(IUmum diameter, 10 incher
on Iorge end, SB 00 per ton
&amp;undled slabs, $6 00 per ton
del1vered to Ohio Pollet Com·
pony, Rt. 2. Pomeroy Phone

992-2689'-.- OLD TYPE peddle tew~r~g
moehlne typ. used 1n shoe

_s~:.t;·J!2~:.2·:::
2656
.:.::....--~

IF YOU hove a •er..••ce to offer ,
wont td buy br sell10mething .
oe loot..lng for worlt , , or
whatever
. ~ou' lf g.t r~•ulrs
fen tar wit!), a Sentinel Wor.• Ad,
Call992 2156.

--

_

CENTRAL RrAI 'JY

co.

car-,

~.

FURNITUid

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

.. ITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-'' - ~ T 'J: HERE 8 E LIGHT • •
••••!::I~nJ'l\\'.'ill;:ll~~~~~~~~r':~~~~~

~

'279.95

--

.

__

sov,

.......

••
• •
, ••

fRIDAY TIL 8
Close S1f. Af J ,,m,

• ••
••
:• RUTLAND pu ft'UIII

•••••••••

Pameroy Ulldmarl

11...:

I

.a •
e
e

•

:•

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••

No rth 's thr ee-

dJamond bid was torrect. li e
held
'
AK QJx • JKx t A.Jxxxx

"'-.

Norlh d oubled • one-club
ope nmg by West EasL b1d a
he&gt;rt. South a spade West
two hearts and North three

diamonds

The an swer JS a de ctded
·No ' North shou ld have
e1ther btd an optJm iStlc th ree
spad es or a conservattve two
spades Wh e n you have fou nd
a spade ht. why bid oth er
su1ts'1

(For a ~co py of JACOBY
MODERN send $1 1o" · Wm
Br~dge .

at

· c l o th1s

newspapyr. P 0 Box 489
Rad1o Cl!,&gt;statron .New York.
N Y 10019)

by THOMAS JOSEPH

'

ACROSS
I PoliSh ca ke
5 Monk
10 Literary

BORN LOSER

38 Suit fabric
39 We1ght
deduction
DOWN

con01ct

Cf COURSe IT 91\ELLSI IT'S SI.IProSSD TO 5Mm! IT I;
COT~ De V~AU AU C:URRL( 1 TR.'i IT A~D IF IT'S NOT
ABSO!.UT"BL.'1 DWC:ICIJS, I'U.. ~f&lt;'SWI\.1-l..'l TmT
10J TO Di~NBR AT TliE' ~Sf
Rl%rAURAI.JT lfL.

1 Yeast

II Last move-

2 Fee lor money

menl of a

exchange

sonata

3 - compamon

12 Cellblock

Papa
5014

40u is

much

4 Ele ment
disturban C!'"'
related to
Yeste fiday's Answer
13 Pa st and
arsemc
present ·
5 .. _ Jacques" 13 Sound
25 Kind of
quality
salts
14 Mer.runac' s 6 Turfdom's
27 Noled
foe
Turcotle
15 Minuscule
clergyma n
16 Rmg rah
7 Defianl
19 Woo with
30 Notion
17 Ex plosiv e
8 " Guys and
song
31 Approxl.
dev1cc
Dolls "
211"Joined
18 Helat1ve of
char•cter
21 Play·room
mate
long.
9 Famed
site
32 Grafted
19 See 9 Down
Egyptian
22 North Star
(her I
21 So tablel, with
23 Prefix for
34 Yellow
(2 wds. 1
19 Across
Site •
journal
Crowfoot
fam1ly

flow er
23 Ttbel&lt;ln
beast

obliqe~ 24 Homan
1'[1:,'--, ~- revelry

·~

25 Moisten
with fal

lOKUM,SIJH-

YOLJR BELOJED 60/6Rt-Ja&lt;. 6ET M£ Tl-/fi.;
f'lr! CUTTA HERErr- OH, vA c::c:c1 " ,_
,~,..,
HOW ?¥-

:\~_:~~=l

llo.

THURSDAY, iANUARY 6.1977
6.QO-Sunrtse Semesler 10
6 15- Farm Report 13
6· 20-Not Fo'r Women Only 13
6.3o-QSU Overview 4. News 6, Su nnse Semesle r 8,
Public AUatrs 10.
h 15--Morning Repor t 3
6 50-Good Morntng . West V1rg q·~ 13
6 55--Good Morntng, Tn State 13
7· 00- Today3,4,15 , GoodMornmg Amenca 6,13, CBS
News 8, Chuck Whit e Repor ts 10
J 05-Bugs Bunny &amp; F nends 10
7 30-Schoolles 10
8 00--:Lassie 6; Capt Kangaroo 8, 10, Sesame St 33
8 3o-B1g Valley 6
9 OQ-A M 3; Phil Donahue 4,13. , 15. Lucy Show 8.
M1ke Doug las 10
9 30--:C ross Wits 3, One L1fe lo L1ve 6, Good Day 8
10 DO--Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 15 ; Price 1s R1ght 8. 10. M1ke
Doug las 13
10 i5-General Hospllal 6
10·30--:Holl ywood Squares 3,4 , 15.
11.00--:Whee l of Fortune 3,15; Weekday 4 , Edge of
N1 ght 6 , Double Dare 8 10. Morning with D J 13,
Elec Co 20
11 30--:S hoot for t he Stars 3,4,15, Happy Days 6,13,
Love of Life 8, 10, Sesame St 20
'
11 55--CBS Ne ws 8, Ms Ftxtt 10
12 OO~News 3,6,8, 10, Don Ho 13 , Bob Braun J, Name
rhat Tune 15
... 12 3(}-Lovers &amp; Fnends 34, 15, Ryan's Hope 6, 13,
Search for Tomorrow 8, 10.
1 OG-Gong Show 3. All My Chil dren 6, 13, Concentrat ion 8, Young &amp; the Rest less 10, Not For
Women Only 15
l 30-Days of Our L1ves 3,4,15, Family Feud 6, 13, As
The World Turn s 8.10
2 OG-$20 ,000 Pyra mtd 13, D1nah 6.
2 3G--Doctor s 3,4, 15. One l1 fe to Live 13 Gu1d1ng
L1ghl B.10
3 Oo-Anolher Wor ld 3,4 15 , All In The Fam1ly 8,10;
Ant•ques 20
3 15-General Ho spd al 13
3 30--:Bev.~ltched 6, Mat ch Game 8, 10 . Li lias Yoga &amp;
You 20
4 OG--M1sler Cartoon 3, Mar cus WElby, M D 4, Gong
ShoW 15~ Howdy Doody 6, M1ckey Mouse Club 8;
Sesame S 20 ,33
3 jO--Bew •tched 6 , Mat ch Game 8, 10, Lil 1as Yoga &amp;
You 20
4' 00-Mister Cartoon3, Marcus WElby , M . D 4, Gong
Sho w 15; Howdy Doody 6, M ickey Mouse Clu b 8,
Sesame Sl 20,33
a
4 30--My Three Sons 3, Emergency One 6, Parfrtdge
Fmdy 8, Flintstones 15
5 OD-B1g Valley J, Merv Griff tn 4, Brady Bunch 8;
M1 s ter Rog e rs 20 33, Star rek 15
5 3G--News 6: Family Affa1r 8; E lec Co 20 ,33, Adam
12 13
6 oo-News 3,4 ,8.10,13 ,15 , ABC News 6, Once Upon a
Classic 20,33
6 Jo- NBC News3,4.15. ABC News 13, Andy Gn ll llh 6;
CB S News B.IO.
7 OD---Truth or Co11s 3, To Tell the Truth 4; Bowl1ng fo r
Dollars6, Muppet Show a. Ne ws 10 , To Tel l the Truth
13 , My Th r ee Sons 15, Anyone for Tennyson? 20.
Gell1ng On 33
7 30- Hoflywood Squares 3,4; Oh10 State Lottery 6,
Pri ce is Rt ght 8, Ma cNetl Lehrer Report 20,33, Wild
K1ngdom 10, Nash ville on the Road 13 . Dolly 15
8 oo-Movle " The Ca ll ollhe Wild" J, 4, 15 ; Welcome
Back, Kotter 13 ; Coll ege Bas ket ball 6; Walto ns 8, 10 ,
V1S 1ons 20 . Ma s terpi ece Theatre 33
a Jl)- Whaf 's Happenmg 1! 13
9 DO-Barney Miller 13, Hawa111 F1ve 0 8, V1s1ons 33 ;
Mov1e " Do Not D1stu turb " 10
9 3Q-Jeanne Wolf With 20
10 00- Be st Se llers 3,-t, 15; Street s of San Franc1sco
6,1 3. Barnaby Jones a. News 20
10 30-Woman 20
11 00- News 3,4,6,8, 10,13 15 ; MacN ei l-Lehrer Report

.

cutter

•------•r---------....;...-----...----.
LI'L ABNER
NEVAf-111fEI&lt;Dd &gt;D!-Af-11\-1 w:x:-,.'·1

oo-.-

33.

Brenda
Trtm
J..eaf

ULABNER

Amertca na 33
7 30-Dolly 3, SIOO,QOO Name That Tune 4; Match
Game PM 6; $25,000 Pyramtd B; MacNeil Lehrer
20,33, The Judge 10; Break the Bank 13, Wild
Kingdom 15
8 DO-C PO Sharkey 3,4, 15, Biontc Woman 6, 13, Gun.
smoke 8, Oranqe Bowl Preview tO, Nova 20
8·3G-McLean Stevenson 3,4,15.
9 OC&gt;--Sirot a's Cou rt 3,4 15, Baretta 6 13; Mustc Hal!
Amer ica 6; Movte "Smi le" 8.10. Soundstage 20
9 Jo---We Th !nk You Should Know 3, The P ractice 4, 15;
Great Performances 33
10 Oo-Que s t 3,4,15, Charlie's Angels 6,13, News 20.
11 QO-- Ne.ws 3,4,6,8, 10. 13, 15, ABC News 33 ,
1i ,JO-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15 ; Rook fes 6.13. Cannon 8;
Mary~ Hartman 10, Janak 1 33
12 OO--Mov1 e "Hell Is For l"!tbes" 10
12 4o--Mystery of the W ee~ 6, 13
I
Tomorrow 3, 4
2 10-- News 13

11 30-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15 ; Bunny of t~e Year
Pageant 6, 13; Ko 1ak 8, Mary Harima n 10 , BC News
33
12 DO-Mov1 e " R1de the T1ger " 10, Janak 1 33
12 30-Movie '' Necroman cy" 8.
1 00---Tomorrow 3,4. News 13

26 Brute or

Cotlon
fabric

llltlt~ ID'il ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~~ ®

3.1 cheer
College

3$ F'lrst place
name
3li Perfect

POSOT

:n Sans

ll:\II.Y

I'HYI''I'O&lt;!IJOTE - IICie', hn11 lo 11o1k il ·
A X Y ll I . II A 1\ X R
;, I, 0 ~ G t " t: I , I. 0 W

Unt• IN i t•r ~t mply !&lt;! l.md~ for :~ nol h e1 In llu s sample A is
u~rd lor th t• thr('(' L's, X l ot the 1wo O's, etc Si ngl e letters,
apn:o.l tu!Jhes. lh&lt;' lenglh •mtl formaltun of the words ar c all
h.tnl q, f::wh da~· th(' cnd&lt;·lt•lt&lt;'ts :u c diff C' Il'tll

&lt;'RYI'TUQUOTES

.' • WINNIE 100K TilE NEWS
AWUT "THE OOILDINGDq.IIN
'2

PRETTY

0 p

H K K·N

AFTER "THE
INmAL&amp;HOCK

l'.JVKY{)

OFF/

VUIIK

byHenr1Arnold and Bob Lee

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one tetter to eacl1 square. to form {-......;"-'j
four ord1 na ry worcls.

12 wils.J

chaser

' VKANWBX

TGOD

.!

v u .!

J W QK

IJ I'&lt;; Y 0 K '' E .

D P G

J p
P

E Y K
Y.

C P B ' J

J

L P V K B,

I Y,

Yt·.stcrda)"s CryptoqUC&gt;tc : THE SlJRGEON CAN CUT OUT

DH WA!.T"H ALVAREZ

() ttn Kllll Peaha••

Svnd1nt ~, Int..

I

II

II K II

t
J I I J

~RECRON
ENTAUB
"'J
( A

I V1

~_A
I
.L_j~...!!.-...L_h...il

UTPGJ

nm ULCE H, BUT HE CAN 'T CUT OUT THE TENSIONS

Print anawer here:
Yfl~terday·,~;.

Now ar.range t.he circled fetters to
form the surpnse answer, as sug·
gested by th~ above cartoon

"v~ I_

!I I I
_

_

_

_

j
'i"

(Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles· TOPAZ PUNCE BLUISH K~IGHl
Answer: What you're apt to
when you pay too
much for an umbre a that doesn't wor1&lt;

I

r.t

prope~y-"SOAKED"

BARNEY

·•

-·••::

know · If

~

. ................. .
•
••
~=
:•

~:~ ·;tJ\EI~~~

¥

worked beautifull y. bul unfor·
tun ate lv for South East show·
ed out · Now South wa s gm ng
to be able to take only lhree
CAME IN- club lncks'
,..,-""""' ~~
Three club s p l us five
trump s plus one ace of
diamonds only ~.:arne to nme
South had on e last dmnce for

WAR8UCKS PRETENDED
HE WAS A PI?OfESSOR 901 WHEN OUR GUYS
rOUN(} 'TH' MESS"AGE AN
tt(DIAN WAS CARRYIH'
rOR WARBUCKS, WE KNEW
WliO HE REALLY WA9 -

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••
••
••
:
:

-

pmnt score

Th e pl ay sta rted ou t ha pp1·
ly He rulfed Lhe thml heart
took •• club rmesse, drew
trump s With th ree leads and
took " second c lub fmesse 11

""''··I

rnmAND ..

- -------.

P.1 ~s

ht s mtmmum hand

sao

Tues., wtd.

Pas ~

P"J~~
P t~ss

24

South was con cerned when he
went on to rour spades wtlh

'10,95

501 Nn.oN

3A

rubber bndge gam e At lea st
was free wht&gt;elmg as far as

SAVE ON
CARPRING,

__ -

Pass
!'ass

South
lA
24
~ A

1t

~----

Hl-lO SHAG

North t. .1st

We watched · Loday s hand
pl ayed m a fre e -W hee ltng

- - ·---

~- ~--~

Wt&gt;st

A F'londa reader wa nts to

-

PomeroyJ.andmark

4 5

Pa ss
llpl·mnll: lt:wl - K

-

sentlli!•
-

~

• Q I0963
t K H54

Hy Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

~-

TEAFORD

~---

. ,\K7
t 4 IU 2
4 K 10.9 H

Both vu Incr ,1blt•

1

-

-

.ti 52

"

ALLEYOOP

~

~·

EAST

A74 3

o\ 1\QJO!:IH

-·---- · -

~-

•

Wt:&gt;T

--· -

--

o4&gt; A(/.J 72

~

~
~

and played hiS ja ck. but West
produced the queen and even·
tually th e defense scored 100
pomts
South had a safely play al
hiS dis posal. When he led lhe
seco nd club he could h3ve
played low fro m dummy ThiS
would cOs t h1m an u~rtnck if
cl ub s had broken
, bul
would have g1ven ht
con·
tr ac t aga m s t the actual break
Incid entally , tlm ts the sort
of sa f et y p lay an e xpert
matc h· pu1nt p lrtyt! r would
take on the theory tha t h1 s
fou r -spade contract was an
abnormal one and JUSt ma km g
1t would g1ve h1m good match·

II ~&gt; 4
• 'J 6 3

·==·· ,.....

ft~p;€N:I"-·=tn-' ~~:~

~-

"' K .I

• .1 2
t A.I l
+ 6 4 :1

--

--- --

a lOth trick He led a d1amund

¥

. _ .,L.j I f-1-l..J

PHOTOGRAPHY

-- -

l. t,W!

... Squar•'6.95
Yard lnSIIIItd

KEN GROVER

___ __ -

\

-- \~ ~

YIJllll. SON ·IN

MANTRAP. IF THAT S
WHAT YOU MoAN!

ASSORTED RUBBER
BACK CARPETING

-

--

HU5BA~D· · ANr

~ FIREO:

Racine, Ohio '"'

· PHOTOGRAPHY

--

-

Nolf1u

ShU Ill ID I

1969 Novo eldra sharp , new HOMESITES for sole , I acre and
Rutland, Ohio 45775
David Plrsofts~ Owner
point bucket seals , air shocks
APPLES. FITZP"TRICK ORCH"RD,
up M1ddleport, near Rutland
Ph ( 614 I 742-2409
STATE ROUTE 689 PHONE _ mags. Pha~e 949· 2480:'-'--~·
Co11992-748 1
We t&gt;e11ver
949·2114
'
,~,z.zm
WILKESVIllE , (6 14) 669 378S.
12224mos
1).4-1 mo.
1969 CHEVROLET B•squoJn&amp;, 1966 NEW 3 bedroom ho use. 2 baths
BUICK Elttclro , 225 2 Rokon
FUllER Bru sh Products for sale
oil elec , I acre , Middleport,
tnolbikes. Pflone 949·2432
Phone 992-3410
close to Rutland Phone 992·
7481
'
CAMPER, $600 . ~ Also , horse 1968 CHEVROLET Camara, black
PROFE"SSIONAL
exter1or olld 1ntenor, V·8 A
tro1 ler, $.450. Phone (61-4) 698·
• . . . . . . lllltfltrt •
HOUSE , 3 B R both I r , d1mng
speed, mag wfleefs , very n1te
3290
81 JJiifh
I
and k1tchen , gas heat basecor Phone 742-2516
PEARCE SIMPSON C B bose sto- ·
Aerial
ment 2 cor garage , Iorge fenc·
t1on Phone 247·2684 after 5 1964 CHEVY 111 ton p1ckup good
ed ya rd wttf-1 ga rden spot. See
Commercial
pm
shape •n good runn•ng condi ot 242 Condor Sl., Pomeroy,
----tion . New 11res . Phone
Sc• .•s
Oh1o
FENCE POSTS $1.00 . Also.
992-3994
.
We.&lt;dings
l~rewood
three fourth ton
3 BEDROOM home breezeway
p•ckup loads delivered, $25 1965 FORD MUSTANG 2B9 VB
and goroge around I ocre
automatiC needs alternator,
-¥Yifl-un 25· mtles
Phone
located m Ar1bough Ed•l1on Tup·
NO. 194 - Middleport. 2
$125 Phone Tuppers Plotns
985-4197
pa rs
Plotns • Ofl1o .
story frame home with four
667-3031 __,_
$15,500 Phone992·7292
bedrooms, tv II basement, 2
HEAVY GAUGE I Beams and• H
1971 FORD 'It ton outomol1c,
Beams lor sale 8 9 10 1nch
car
garage,
some
NEW 3 bedrOom house. built-10
(614) 985·41!5
p s , ekcellent condition Call
Phone 992· 7034
carpeting, large living
k1tchen , balk and 'h, Phone
Chester, Ohio
after 5 p m (614) 667 .33J.4
room and dming room, new
742-2306 or conlo tt MdO B Hut·
NEW AM·FM Stere&lt;l·rod•o 8 track
- - ----10-17-1 mo {Pd)
roof , fully msulated Priced
ch1son Rut land Oflio.
tape combmot1on $129 95 or 1971 AMC Matador, 4 door
al $25,000.
outomahc, p s. and p b , V-8,
terms Phone 992-3965
4 ACRES UNDEVELOPED land near
new front hres ond battery
m1 nes
reduced
Phone
POLOROIO SX 70 camera $100
Make good work car, S550 · We ha ve several business
742-2867
Phone cm"-7354.
1roperfies for sale. Call for
Phone 949·2660
-r
IJnsine~~•
Si!litce•~
-··-- --- - - - --------HOUSE AND lot 128 laurel St ..
urther
informat1on
.
GRAND PIANO wk1te f1msh
1969 FORO lonna G T. 2 door
Pomeroy Ohlo Contact Ooc DOZER work and ·weldmg Con BRADFORD Auct1oneer Com
•' good action also Rotot1ller
flordtop wtlf-1 scope Phone
plete Serv1ce Phone 9.49 2487
Eblen
tact James Parsons , Rt , 1
B04W.
Main
Phone 949-220:2.
949 2589 1600.
or 949-2000 Roc•ne Ohto , Cntt
Rocme, on Carmel Rood
Pomeroy
1992-2296
-.-~·-~
STEREO AM-FM ·FM stereo· radio, 1971 FORD BRONCO w1th 302 1J 8
Bradford
Aller Hours C'll''
MOBILE ~orne Repa1r , Elec '
8 track tope combmollon
ouxtllory , gas tonk , full cob.
992-7133
ELWOOD
BOWERS REPA IR plumbmg and heating Phone
Balance due S1~ :20 or terms ,
Warren elec wmcli Pnted
CONTACT:
Sweepers, toasters, 1rons , all
9'12 5858
Phone1992 3965. ..... _
12100 Call949-2449 .
small oppl1once~ Lown mower,
Lois Pauley
ELECTRONIC T V, CLINIC, New
USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT
next to. Stote Hishway Garogft:
Brandl Manage'
TV shop, EleCtronic TV. Clmic
Belott 300B Sk1dder , Ttmbeqock
on Route 7. Phone (614) 985·
Serv1ce
t
oll,
$5
95.
Color
,
8
&amp;
W
360 Grapple Skidder. John
3B2S .
antenna systems stereos etc
Deere 360 Crawler loader wag ONE
BEDROOM
apt
furntsfled
.
REMODEliNG
, Plumbing, heotmg
572
So!Jfh
Thtrd
,
Middleport
forks
Bush 6()" Metallurg•col
Phone Randy Hunt , 992 6197 •.
ond oil types of general repo1r
Pflone 992·6306 Corry 1n and
Ch1pper Contact Don Gro11es ,
offer6p m
Work guoronta.d 20 years el(·
save money~~or lyons Equ•pment Co, Inc
pe rif;l'nce__Ph ~n~ Wl · :24~
Ctrdevtlle Oh1o 43113 Phone
VIrgil B. Sr., t&lt;eallor
, HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
{614) 596 4769
IUVER \/lEW - 3 large
216 E. Second Sir,eet
C011011 ng, , septic systems , SEWING MACHINE Repa1rs ser
- ··bedrooms, bath , dining
vtce, all makes. 992-2284 The
dozer, backhoe, dump tru ck
Pomeroy, Ohto 45769
TWO 900 lb steers , 2 m•xed
Fobr1c
ShoA , Pomeroy
room,
large
kitchen,
l1mes
tone
,
gravel
blacktop
Hereford he1fers to freshen 3 AND 4 RM furnished and un·
Phone 992·3325
Authonzed Singer Soles and
po11mg, Rt 143. Phone 1 (614)
basement. natural gas
around Feb. 1, rear wheel
furntshed opts Phone 99:2698-7331
.
~~t e We__!_harpen S:-sson
we1ghts lor Far moll A tractor ,
furnace, hardwood floors.
DEXTER - Large lot on
5.434..:.
. ~--·.
-- . --------'Phone 843 :2353
ASKING
ONLY
112,500.00
small
brook,
3
bedroom
EXCAVATING,
dozer , lood&amp;r and
EXCAVATING
.
BACKHOES
.
COUNTRY Mobtle Home Pork , Rt.
backh.oe work · dump trucks
BRICK i bedrooms,
DOZER. TRENCHER lOWBOY ,
mobile home and garage
INVALID WALKER 1n good cond1 ·
33 , ten m1les rtbrth of Pomeroy.
and lo -boys for k1re , w1ll koul
DUMP TRUCKS. BILL PULLINS.
bath , dining room, finished
l•on , be.!KJ;t has converh mlo
Lorge lots w1fh concrete patios. with 112 bath
f11! d1rt, to sod , hmeslone and
PHONE 992 2478 DA Y OR
tub. Gen.erol Electnc floor
POMEROY - 2 bedroom
back porch , natural gas
s1dewolks runners and off
grovel. Call Bob or Roger Jel
NIGHT
polishe r Phone 992 3234
street pork1ng Phone 992-7.4.79
modest home , Ntce bath ,
furnace. garage, lovely
- - --fers , day pkone 992 7089
-·
kitchen,
full
basement
and
level lot $8,900 00
CHRISTMAS SP'ECtAl Sew~ng
TWO 878 x 15 snow ttres $25
FUR NISHEp two bedroom opt .
mgkt phone 99:2 ·3525 or 992gas furnace $5,500
Machines cleaned , oiled and
NE~R
VETERANS
Phone 247 3895,
adults only No peh M1d
S232
adjusted
$5 98
Sew1ng
HEMLOCK GROIIE - 3
MEMORIAL HOSPITAL_d~~rt _ Ph~'2.e992 387~ _
HONEY FOR sole . Phone
EXCAVATING dozer bockfloe
bedrooms wlth closets,
&lt;:_e~~r. Middleport, Oh1o _
New
lovely
split
entrance
9B5 3555
ONE BEDROOM Apts at VILLAGE
and ditcher Cha rles R Hot·
modern
bath ,
eat tn
home,
A
bedroom
s,
2
baths,
Oil AND GAS furnace serviCe and
M~NOR In Mtddleport for $104
Bock Hoe Serv1ce ,
f1eld
kitchen
and
full
basemeht
ports. Trailer and homes, 24
sewing room or den, dining
mon thly plus elec ·or $130 m
Rutland,- Oh•o
Phone
_____,...,.,_
......,..7~2-2008
.
120.000.
flour
service
Phone
8
..
3.2165,
room, util1ty room , la rge
F
dud1ng elec LOWER RATES for
NEAR
ROCK
SPRINGSSEPTIC Systems .~stalled by
SENIOR CITIZENS Conven1ent
recreation room, garage,
hrensed mstoller
Shepord
One good used Rem1ngton
to shoppmg on Th1rd and M1lf One floor 3 bedroom home,
carpeted , located on double
Cl'lain Saw
S50
Contractors Phone 742-2409
nice bath , gas, FA
Sts tn Middlepo rt Brand new
lot. 140,000.00.
One good used McCullough
Qff.,r;~-;~=~;~ SEPTIC TANKS cleaned. Modern
h1gh quality apartmen ts. See
furnace and level lot
MIDDLEPORT - Corner
Chain Saw
S7S
the manager at Apt 28 or coli
522.000.
Son1totton , 992 3QSA .
lot, 3 bedrooms, d1ning
Wtll do odd tabs roofmg poln·
One good used tiomehte
992-7721 An Equal Housmg
SYRACUSE - 4 lots, 3
Cham Saw
$150
t.ng,
gutter
work
Phone
992·
room
,
2
baths.
utiltty
WILL
do roof,ng, constrvtf lon.
Opportun11y
bedroom all electric home,
New co -Op Water Sof .
7409.
plumbmg and fleotmg No job
space, natural gas furnace,
nice kitchen and dining ,
tef1ers
2 BEDROOM tro1ler, real nice
too Iorge or too smoll Phone
carpeting. extra building
WILL DO plumb1ng. hea tmg. roof·
modeiVC -XVI Only$279 95
Phone 992 3324, adults only
bodacious view of nver,
742-234B
- --~..
used
for
office
or
storage.
1ng
,
remodel1ng
,
fr
ee
'
One good used Gillson Sfde·
-~
137,500.
1by -S tde Refpgerator 52~0
5 ROOMS AND both , large yard
es1
1motes
Coli
Ckarles
m.ooo oo.
C ARPENTE~
floormg , ced ing,
·
UNCONL
HTS.
2
also garden spot In Pomeroy
Smdoir 985·41:2 1
RUTLAND - 4 acres with
poneHng Pho ne 992-2759.
bedroom home with n1ce
1deol for d1ildren . On dead end
older home, 3 bedrooms.
GUN STOCKS re -fm1sfled PI-lone
bath, dtntng, basement and
street Phone 992-3090
bath,
d1nlng
&amp;oo m ,
9._ Jack W. Carsey. Mgr. AVAILABlE AT R1vers•de Apts 1 furniture . $12,900
992_7_168__
· - - - - - - -. .
a lum1num Siding, out
Will CARE for elderly woman m
GALLIA-MEIGS LINE- ~
....
Phone 992-2181
bedrm apartment, $100 per
cellar, storage building ,
rooms, 3 bedrooms, bath ,
~~~m~~~2-73 14 __
month , 2 bedroom opls S133
trailer hookup to rent .
nice kitchen, gas. FA
per montf-1 Eq_uot Opportunity
Sl5,500 .00 .
SCHOOL SEWING Moch•nes
furnace , and rural water
Singers m walnut consolette, --~?usm~ ~~~ne ~92-3273
$22,000
$46 Pflone992- 51~6
WANT TO SELL? ITIME
RUTLAND Garden,
WICK HOMES 1s e)(pondmg to all
IS MONEY I LET US SELL
SINGER GOLDEN Touth N' SEW
utility building, garage and
area of Ohio NO FRANCHISE
INSTALLED
YOUR
PROPERTY
NOW.
does 11 alii Z1g-zags sews on
2 bedroom home with bath
FEE Big money opportunity
PLEASURE
HORSES
and
pon1
es
,
~titular 114.tf
kmls, automat iC buttonholer ,
!SERVING
MEIGS
and gas heat. $11,000.
homes mercfland1sed from
also w1ll buy horses and
makes des1gns , many other
COUNTY FOR SEVERAL
LOTS- Nice large wooded
your model home For free
ponteS
Phone
(614)
698
3290
,
Sq. Yd.
Pho ne992 5146
features __,__
YEARS I
dealer pockets, send to WICK
and cleared ones. $2,500.00
Ruth Reeves
E.
CLELAND
HENRY
HOMES
PLANT.
12S
South
FREIGHT DAMAGED October 19.
up.
HVW.
lve,Yillr BROKER,
M1chigon Avenue, Coldwater,
1976 Zlg·zog sew1ng mochtnes , RISING STAR KENNEL , boordmg
Good
dlalca
&lt;-a.
indoor
and
outdoor
.
Grooming
buttonhole, monogram , etc.
M~ ig~~~~:'-'-~~
'NOW IS THE TIME TO
APPRAISER ,
all breeds, complete sanitary
Ongtnolly $179 95 wd l sell for
12WI$ Ft.
PUT THAT PROPERTY
facil1t
1e;s,
Chesh1re.
Phone
(614)
CONSULTANT.
$59 95 cosh or terms Phone
ON
THE
MARKET.
CALL
367-0292,
992 5146
992-22!9 or 992 -2!68
m .n25.
FIREWooD PHQNE 742 . 2131 or BEAGlE i'UPS and trained
gold, recl,lllut.
742 2521
• 985 3813.
Beagles. Phone
· c:::.:;' - - ; . . - - - . , . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - NEED CASH? Turn that older fur
De II r"rseJt, with
NEW SNOW tires 700 )( 15
'
n1turtt lnto cash toCiay We pay
l*ldlnt. f7. ff Ill· yd. With
Goodyttar'sCuslomextrognp:.
the H1ghest pouible pr1ces on
Pllddlnt Installed H.H
a ply nylon cord, mlertubes ore
IJIIL
Antique Furniture and Collec ·
...
.... r~rcl.
steel and packaged \.Y- price . SMAll form for sole , 10% down ,
SPECIAL- 3 bedroom and attached garage, tOhu
ttbles ~sk oboul our complete
C:l11742-1211
Contact 74:2·2538
owner f~nonced Monroe Coun·
ele¢ric home"Under construc:tlon on 1h acre lot , Owner
auction and appraisal services
~-~~-------ty , W Vo Phon9 (304) 772
f
Call collect, Athens , (614)
11
TALK TO
CONSOLE STEREO ond ' albums
{
I
will
finish
In
lO
·davs
or
buyer
or
will
sell
"U
iS
May
5~~
59:2
.
9~
eventngs
4743
4
2 304 772 3
310
WENDELL
OIIATI
T1lt ~ck rocker , gold with
or
~.!:........__ _
take trade. Located near Chester.
--CAIIPET.CONSUL 1'1\NT
· VIbrator and heat, 10 Case COUNTRY farmland w1th secludAliCTION , START your new year
pocket kni'IQI, birdcage on
ed woods water and good oc·
51 ACRES FREE GAS- Modern 1112 story house, 3 br..
out the ouchon way m 1977. Fri
cen 1n Monroe County. W. Va
dl nmg
· room, fl rep Iace, ,ru II b asemen t , n Ice porcn• - a nd
doy.
7 of 7/.m edAuction
'lond Phon. -..,..,4 ·6021 .
Hou•eJon.New
- -St.OOO down , call {304) 112.
on us
merBIG DEAL DAYS SALE. make your
out buildings. Large scenic lake with green grass and
chonldse .
Con"s 1gnments
3102 or {:W..) 772 3227
pine trees around lt. Watch the large bassawlm along
welcomed Morton St, Mason,
best deal before January 28. -. '---~ ----- ~
1977 on Mossey Ferguson !roc Commerclol property appro ~e. 17
In the clear water Pretty as a picture. Priced to sell
W Yo , Phone (304) 773·5.471 ,
tors, balers ond 1mplements
acres , level fond , located of
137,400.00
- - - - - - - - -- ~-------.:
No. I Cosh Rebates $100 to
Tuppers Ploms on Ohio. Route
7· Phone 1614) 667 ·6304 ·
SSOO. No . 2 Cash Rebates , 540
COOLVILLE - Nice mod. brick home containing three
10
$250, w•th no finance charge 3 bedrOOms, I\f, b;hs,la~e 1~bedrooms, dining room, living room with fireplace, full
till May 1 dependmg on pro·
lng 'oom, din,ng room and "'II·
ba semen t wlth garage. 1argo Iron I porch , na t . gas.
ducts. No. 3 Na Fmonee charge
chen , fully cornAted. Phone
t
tlll July 1 on tractor Implements
furnace, city Wa er and well water, I beautiful home,
992 3129 , or m .5i34
1
or Sep-t 1 on balers Comeonfn ___ ............___,_ _ _ ~- _
with approx . 5 12 acres of land, fruit trees ancllhadt .
and make your best deal now. 59 acres , 6 room house. bath,
trees surrounding it. Plenty of garden space, Qood!
Shinn'• Tractor Soles, Lean,
portly corp~ted , two outfishing arte close by, located In Coolville, Olio. Priced'
w~~_?n• (304~~:.!.~ · . _
building•. dug basement ,
af only $32,000. Call now.
•
Mon.,
one·third 111lable, mineral
rights focated near Danville.
•
•
•
8:001115:00
••
HARD WATER
Redu&lt;:ed for quick sol•, 1 , CHESTER - 113 acres farm, 10 acres II liable lend,
1
nice 2 story farm house, 7 rooms end bath, ell
$23 ,500 Phon• 742·271&gt;6.
• :
·• •
, Thursday 8111 noon
PROBLEMS7
hardwood floors and basement. Barn ""d olher
HOUSE FOft tole near Eastern
outbuilding•. 2 pond•. A nice laying farm priced logo.
let Pomeroy lllldm1ik
High Schoo1, 3 bedrOCim!l, 2
located near Chesler, toll lo~ appt.
salltn &amp; condition your
baths. full basement, 2 cor
w•ter with • Co-op w1ttr
garage. Phone 985·3867_.,_
,
CHESTER Ever dreem of owning your own
saltonor, - 1 UC· XVI.
fUPPERS PLAINS three b.droam
golfcourae? Here's your chance for yoa or your frlends1
house, 2 Paths, ll1.1l ng room ,
Now Onl~
1o own a nice, rolling golf course.
ecru. 9 greens,
f
•
fam•ly room , fireplace . carpet ,
nice
modern
du~house, outbuilding with all spraying
I
't
.
.
d1shwosher
disposal.
range
.
lll •• list your Wiler
and seeding equ ipment, needs 10me mowing end e l
Iorge lot . $26 ,500 . Phone (6ltl)
61&gt;7 .6:MJ4
llltle repair - k on golf course. This could be
purchased
with the 113 acret listed abOve and
lARCE HOUSE on a good s•ze lot.
develot&gt;Od Into a beautiful 18 hale golf course, cell lor
Out of hfgh water, dose to
JICk W. C:lrMy, Mgr .
appt.
·
shopping oreo . Priced to sell.
• 141-2211
AIINOLDO~
RYlAND •
Phont,l92.1111
phone 992.5786.
L--_;_;~_ CALL JIMMY DEEM949-2388
---~

MY

CARPET SHOP

-Service.
-

Located in Langsville
Box 28-A

HOOKS INTO

_v(_!HEREFO R:E- l WA!Jf

WINE

Radiator,......~....,

Southeastern.Ohio
Trus5 Rafter Co.

COAl for sole , Open 6 doys ptl'r
week and evemngs For furtfler
•nformotion.taU (61 .. }367·7338

41~1

REAL.LY . ~ J: '~'ES~ REALLY! AN C'

WHAT '~ t,\ORE ,

SHE'5 GOT HER

$ HE'$ A PAINrEO

Fru Est.
Work Guar.
Rutland 1?-9-1 mo. 742·2121,

EXPERIENCED
ANY PITCH
ANY SIZE

SHIVAUr.J SHAFTOE- l ... LET ME 5 EE ,.

ONo OF OUR oX.CUTIVE STENO GRAP HER$,
15N T .5HE~ QUITE ATTRACT IVE, A5 I REcAL l.-

"We C.ren

LARRl,,~eDER

WIN AT BRIDGE
Safety play scores best

CAPTAIN EASY

AL TROMM CONST.

SIDIIIIPSOffiTT

"'"128 Mlln~trut

~

_64
_3_
· 2_
25.4
_~-~­

Prated your lnvoslmont
plus add Ia !he valut of ·
your home. Trust thoM
1ntceanry fix-it, room
:o.idlllan ond rtmodtllng
job• to your friendly,
neighborhood, qualified
builder

Stnicn
FloaocioaAIIilliio ,

a-n;u-:'"CI!s

"'

POM!~?!~~?!~~. CO. l(i\

---

3891.
---1971 HONDA Cl-450. 12,000
m1les ._. IS!'f bar, crash bon ,
pull bock handle bars , new hre
and siiKJis, Scrambler s•de
- ~~ $650~ 1_9~.9 _?480 POTATOES and pumpkms C W
Proft1t1 , Portland Otuo Phone

WEOI&lt;jESDAY, OECEMBER 29, 1976
5 3()...,-News 6, Fam1ly Atfalr 8. Elec Co 20,33, Adam
12 13
6 OD-News 3,4, 6,8, 10, 13, 15 , ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33
6 JI}-.--NBC News3,4, 15; ABC News 13. Andy Gn fl!th 6,
CBS News 8, 10, Hodgepodge Lodge 20; Lilias Yoga
&amp; You J3 .
7 ClO--T ruth or Cons 3,To Tell the Truth 13. Bowlmg for
Dollars 6; Pop Goes the Country 8: Ne ws 10, My
Three Sons 15, Consumer Survi\lal Ktf 20,

Business ,Services· ' ,II

,

1975 CHEV. 2 TON .
'$4500.
Engine, 15,000 lb., 2 speed, r axle, 108" cab to aJtle,
clean cab, like new 825K20 tires .

Television log for easy viewing

~

NOTil:E OF APPOINTMENT
1

Kum'Side&amp;-_
"'"""
~
- "- ~ ..-------

QU Al.ITY Motor

$374 .40 .. ngla: $502 80 mor·
"ed Army Rac:ru•Mg Call Col ·
_ tee• i6"l 593·302'.1 385-631B
MAN NEEDED lhal tan do body

CARD Of THANKS
My humbled thanks from the
depthofmyhearttoaiiWhoso
dlllgently tried to save mr
devoted son's hfe. I wtll also
always r..-nltmber those dear
ones who prayed with me dur·
mg my 100's cructol per1od and
for all who aided in any way. I
love you all and may God richly
bless eoch of you. Thank• to
our monv fnends , ne1ghbors
and relatfves . Our formly Is
nchly blessed with much
w~talth of love from all of lhem.
Thank you Rev. and Mrs Jot~~ is ,
NOTICES
Rose Ann Jenlc1n!l , and oil who
ATTN.: II
offend the SyracuN Asbury
ALL HOUSEWIVES
Un1t.d Methochst Church os All Yard Sates, Rummage,
well as Benny Ewing and staff . Porc:t1 and Basement Porc,b
Thanks also to the doctors ond and Basement Sates, et~
nurses of Veterans Memorial must be pa id In advance
Hospital for trying so hard to Get yours In early Dy
by our office at
!love my son's lite. also thanks stopping
The Dally Sentinel , 111
to the Sheriff s Deportment ond Court St or writ !ng Box
the Pomeoy Emergency Squad I 7~9; Pomeroy , ..Ohio ~S769
and t will be etttrnolly groteful 1 ~h your rem1ttance
to that dear sweet young lady
Mrs 01cor Imboden, Jr who ~
pot o p1ilow under my !on's
head, covered h1m wtth a
blanket and held his hand untd
the emergency un1 t armed .
God bless you dear one lost af
all, but most espec1ollv . t would
hke to express Sincerest op·
preciohon to all my sons • NOW accepting piono students ,
classmates fellow st udents
beginners mtermedtates, ad·
vanced -students Coli 992·
hrocflers. ' and other slotf
members ot Southern High _ 2'=.,
.17.:.
0 _ _ _~--::-c-:-School for thei r many deeds of PERSON's BOOY Shop 26 Railroad
k1ndness
and
St. , Middleport would like to
express1ons of sympathy . Bien
ramfnd customers tqot Dec 31
you
one
and
1s the lost day to toke ad·
all. Mrs Emrnogene Holstein ond
vantage of tl1e pomt 1obs - all
Fom•lv
a~.~er m 1 color, $100, 2 tone
INMEMORYOFBOBBYHOLSTEIN
$125 without body work Stop
"WHO BUT GOD CAN HEAL A
1n or phone 985-4 174 for opHEART"
po1ntment
When sorrows come , we
somet1mes feel
NOTICE
Pratt's Meal Mkt.
As though our hearts w1ll break
(Pleasanton Meat Processmg,
And through the long and lonely
Inc ) Custom sloughtenng, and
nighh
process1ng Reto1l wholesale
We often he awake.
No oppomment necessary . Colt
The friends who brought us so
{614) 593·8655 , hOurs, 9.00 hit
much IOV
6 00 7 Pomeroy Road. Athens .
Oh
Through bnght untroubled days
Brmg httle comfort though they SPECIALS at D &amp; J House of
try
Fobncs , Iorge blanket pieces ,
lnmonyspeciolwoys
reg $1.50 lb . now $1.00 lb .
The hours pass so slowly
Crusl velvef pieces reg
Thotoweekseemshkeoyeor.
$250
now$2001b 1 table
And we feed on · thoughts and
of po knit reg $2 .4.9 yard ,
memories
now $1.39 yard , 1 mile below
So predous and so dear .' ~.
Middleport on S.R. 7.
~ow foolish , but how human too
REVIVAL NOW In progress . thru
To thmk our loss moy be
Jon 9 at Pomerov Wesleyan
The end of eve')' joy in life.
Holiness Churcl1 on Rt. J.l3 .
If only we could see
Speaker IS Rev. Wm . Owen ,
That someo,l\e watches aver us
Dtst. Supt . Special smgmg each
And understands our pam
evanmg. Pastor Rev Oawev
Someone wflose mere presence
K1ng mv1tes the publ•c.~...__~
Means we do not weep in vo1n .
His strength, H1s care His guidon- GUN SHOOT ct the Rocme Gun
Club every Sunday . 1 pm
Are o deep and endleu well
Assorted meats .
H11 heart 1s olwoys open
SWEEPER AND Stwmg Moch1nes
To the HHngs we need to tell
Repo1r, Ports and Suppl1es
And with this help we find the wdl
Do v1s Votuum Cleaner , one·
to moke o fresh !"jeW start
half mile up George's Creek off
For wko but God, •n H1s great
State Route 7 Phone (61 .. )
love,
446·0294
Con heal a troubled heart
1

'@) 2 SIGNS
OF .

WAITRESS WANTED 35 or older, . - - - - - - - - - - Old ut-ty. apply in penon.
118W, MotnSt. Pomeroy , Oh lo,
afternoons.

RATES

Ofo IQV.c:t on• laid to red.

Fast· Results Use The Sentinel' Classifiet!s

1'1 \'\t I '

Ml{ BOOK REPORT ?
. OH, 6001&gt; &amp;ltlEF!

SHE WAS SO SUS't'
6Lft;61NG ME,MA)IM,THAT
SHE FORGOT TO READ
AN'I'TH IN6 HERSELF I

MARCIE ... I
AFFORD 10 ASSOCIATE
SOMEONE WHO DO€SN 'T
AROUND,

DO HER HOMEWORK ' •

GUESS WHAT, PAW~!
THEM TWO LOVEBIRDS,
CYNTHY-MAE AN' IEB, ARE FINALLY
GITTIN'

HITCHED

-'- DON'T KNOW
WHAT THAT PURTY

LE!:TLE CHICK
IN THAT OL
L.; ...........

·BUZ'ZARD

1

�••

New gas cuiback 'threatens Meigs Schools

~ 16 - The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Jan. S, 1917

Honeymoon to ~:,~c~~":ro:~.h::::=y
t
6.
o
·
days.
.
las
By DONALD LAMBR'O
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Senate Republican Leader
Howard Baker of Tennessee
said t..day ihe honeymoon
between
Democratic
~sidentelect Jimmy Ca.rter
and a GOP minority In
Congress will last "about 60
days."

·

Baker, who upset Michigan
Sen. Robert Griffm to win the
party's top Senate post·Tuesday, said Republicans want
to cooperate but also want to
move carefully on the issues
of major federal jobs
programs and taxes.
"! think eve!')' Republican
wishes President-elect carter
well. I certainly do. They
want him to prosper, because
as he prospers, the eountry
prospers,,, 83k'e r

sa i~ .

"But as controversy
develops,' as it surely will, I
think the relationship feelings
will sharpen up, the
confrontations wiD he more
apparent."
Baker was ·interviewed on
the NBC Today program.
He was asked how long the

. Plenty .of
(Continued from page 1)
hundreds of free events for
Republicans and Democrats
alike who just Will!! to come
to town for the festivities.
Bardyl
Tirana,
cochairman of the inaugural
comm ittee, sa id the free
events were part of carter's
plan to "make. Washington a
stage for the celebration of
the Inauguration."
"President-elect Ca rter
wanted as many people as
possible to come to
Washington
for
the
ina uguration and participate
in as many events as
possible," Tirana said.
The free ev~nts include:
- A fireworks display on
the mall, officially· opening
Jan. 18. ·
- An all-night jazz, blues
and soul session at a
WaShington church.
- Four two-hour informal
concerts at seven of the
Smithsonian f(IUseums, and
200 musical events at
museums and galleries
throughout the city.
- Free concerts at the
Kennedy Ce nter by the
combined Atlanta and
Na tional Symphonies
.
directed by Robert Shaw,
leader of the. Robert Shaw
Chorale.

honeymoon between carter,
who takes office Jan. W, and
the Republican 111inority in
Congress would last.
"I guess the answer to your
question is about 60 dsys,"
said Baker.
There are 38 Republicans
and 62 Democrats In the
Senate, and Baker said the
GOP might not provide the
only opposition to ~r .
"On substantive issues the
,Senate has always been a
pretty individualistic group
of people," he said. "I think
that our leverage of
Republicans
is
much
stronger than our nwnbers
would indicate and I think
that on particuiar issues we
can be very effective
indeed." ·
Baker said Carter will
probably have little trouble
with cabinet confirmations·in
· the Senate alUwugh there
might be "two or tllr'ee rough

spots."
" ! can't even begin

to

speculate on who might, or
might not, have difficulty,"
he said. "But I would
speculate that there are two ·
or three rough spots that
might have to be . fully
explored." He refused to
elaborate.
Baker defeated Griffin by a
close vote of 19 to 18 for the
minority leadership post . ae
succeeds Pennsylvanian
Hugh Salt!, who retired this
;xear from the Senate.

Two fined for
guilt in thefts
at Kroger store

Cunmngham, 17, died.· Mrs.
James
(Carol)
unexpectedly Tuesday night . Freeman, Irwin, .Pa. ; Mrs.
at her home on Thin! Street Thomas (Judy ) Close,
here. Mrs. Cunmngham was -Zalencia, Pa.; Mrs. James
dead upon the arrival of the (Mary) Rouda, Norfolk , Va.;
Raclne.Emergency Squad at Martin Berouln, Clinton, Pa.;
approltmately 8 p.m.
Joseph Derouin, Mllviile,
She was a daughter of the Pa.; two step-grandchildren,
late Joseph and Mary Bell Robert and William Smith
Denoh~e:
.
both ·Of Milville; 15 great:
Survtvmg are her hushand, grandchildren and six stepMartin; a son, Carl Mangus, great-grandchildren.
Saxonburg, Pa,; a daughter,
Funeral arrangement&amp; ~re
Mrs. Robert (Florence) beingcompletedatthe Ewing
Smith, Apple Grove· sli: Funeral Home
grandchildren, Mrs. . Jerry
· ·

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
.

~

.

-CANNON ROYAL FAMILY SHEETS AND PILlOW CASES

Two defendants were fined
and seven others forfeited
bonds in Pomeroy Mayor
Clarence Andrews court
Monday night.
Fined were Ra ndy P.
Snider, P.omeroy, $200 and
costs, accessory to a theft at
Krogers, and William R.
Hayes, Syracuse, $100 and
costs, petty theft at Krogers.
Forfeiting bonds were
Lawrence Coats, $30, failure
to stop within assured clear
distance; Robert C. Fife,
Middleport, $35 speed ing;
Roger Reynolds, Middleport,
$25
d
' spee ing ; Kenneth S. BREEZE .JAILED
Brown , Galloway, $30 . LANCASTER, Ohio (UPI)
d
Harry Breeze, 33,
spee ing; George Perry , Dexter, $30. failure to yield ; Nelsonville, one of four men
Robin Petry, New Haven, $:10, charged in a scheme to steal
speeding , and Elias C. and .use blank auto !lUes and
Howard, Jr., Pomeroy, $31, drivers licenses, has been
sentenced to two consecutive
speeding.
,
.
terms
in
the
Ohio
·
tO COurt Penitentiary.
·
Breeze was arrested last
Two cars were damaged
- The "world's biggest
Sept.
29 by Columbus pollee
square dance" in cavernous and a driver was cited to after the thefts 'from the
Union Station Jan. 21. The mayor's court in an accident Coshocton County Courthouse
first 10,000 people who pick up at 1:40 p.m. Tuesday on and a Columbus warehouae
free tickets will be admitted. North Second Ave. , Mid· used by the state Bureau of
- Folk dancing in Union dleport.
Motor Vehicles.
Police said a car driven by
Station Jan. 18, also open to
~~eeze
received
Jesse W. Browning, Route I,
•10,1100,
consecutive · sentences of 2-5
One thing the public will not Portland, backed • .from a and 1-5 years on two counts of
be able to do is visit the White driveway across the street receiving and concealing
House, which Pr~sident and siruck a parked car stolen property and was fltled
Andrew Jackson threw open owned by Bob Barton, Route $400. A third count was
Medium dropped.
for his inaugural. "It was 3, Pomeroy .
never considered because of damages were incurred and
AJJ to·the other suspects in
logistical problems and Browning was cited to the case: John Mathews, til,
problems of security ," mayor's court on · an im· of Columbus, goes on trial
proper ·backing charge.
Tirana said.
Jan. 11 and Bert Mastell, tO,
of Millersport faces a court
appearances next month.
John Warren;· 4\1; of l,olian, Is .
rf]l(rted sliD at large. _
(Continued from page I)
of Ute Judiciary Committee in the llllh General AJJs~mbiy and
is mid-way .through his first four-year term.
The commltt!lf is a newly created panel. In Ute last session ·
of the.leglslature, ener.gy matters were handled by the Energy ·
UNIT CALLED
· and Epvirorunent Committee, which no longer eJists
The
Middleport
· Zimmers was judge of Ute Montgomery County Court fro~
Emergency
Squad was c~lled
1961! through 1974, and is a graduate of Dennison University
to 169\l N. Second Ave., at
an:! ihe George Washington University Law School.
II : ~0 a.m. Tuesday for
Hubert Stewart, a medical
patient, who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he was admitted.

Cited

1

Reg. 4.99 Pair Pillow Cases ........ Sale 3.99 pr.
Reg. ,,49 Twin Bed Sheets ............Sale 15.19
Reg. 17.99 Full Bed Sheets •••••••••••• Sale lfi.39
·Reg. 'lQ99 Queen Bed Sheets. ••••••••• Sale 18.79
Reg. 113.99 King Bed Sheets •••••••••• Sale 111.19
1

CANNON.
ROYAL
FAMILY

®

•

r

MEIGS THEATKE
CLOSED FOR
VACATION

THE MEIGS INN
I '

992-JolY

Pomeroy,

P~one 992-6304
..., .

o:

~

WAltH .FOR
OPFNING DATE

.

,.

VOL XXVII

NO

P.OMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Ford choice
•
lS blocked·

JANUARY .

WASHINGTON (UP! ) - A
conservative-moderate battle
ove r a new Republican
National Chairman is on,
·with President Ford and Vi~
President Nelson Rockefeller
backing Texan James Baker,
Ford's presidential campaign
manager .
Ford and Rockefeller met
at the White House
Wednesday with former
Govs. Ronald Reagan of
calUornia and John Connally
of Texas, both of whom said
there was no agreement on
who should succeed Mary
Lo uise Smith when the
Repu~ii can
Natlo ,,;. '
Committee meets hr· t · m.
14-15.
Sen. Barry Goldwawr, the
party's 1964 presidential candidate;was so angered at opt
being invited to the party's

'

TAKES ADVANTAGE - Davie Dodson, 7, of
Middleport, took advantage,of the snow Wednesday to go
sledding ~down the hill at the Legion Park next to the
Middleport Post Office . Children were out everywhere
with the.ir sleds.
&lt;

WOMEN'S S,tlgR SEAMIISS

THESE

•
Snow blamed m
.5 ·of 7 wrecks

KNEE ·HIGH.
NYLONS

Marked

Down

Values!

·

ANKLE.JENGTH, 1'00 ·
Regular 39t .

·

,

ENTIRE
STOCK
REOUCED

NOW $400 • $500 • $600

_MEN'S TUBE SOCKS.......... 77$ PR.

WOMEN'S AND TEENS'

Sportsviear Clearance!
AU HOliDAY ANQ FAll STOCK REDUCED

DOZENS OF SALE ITEMS NOT ADVERTISED

•PANT SUITS • PANlS
•KNIT TOPS •BlDUSES

ARY

KITCHEN

TOWELS

SIZE 24x40
SOLIDS · STRIPES

• JUMP SUITS •SWEATERS
•FASHION IDPS

tsl QUALITY
Regular 69c

Values

GIRLS

GIRLS

BLOUSES

JEANS

'2.77

V!RY WELL MADE

WOMEN'S

SUPPORT
PANTY
HOSE

"

BEDSPREADS
-\voven Matelasse Types
Heav~wei9ht .

REG.

Textured Brocilldt

Sl.29

P•tterns. Full bed sire. Fully
wuhable . Gold, Blue, AYou do or

DEEP PRICE CUTS!

FIBERGLAS

sse

Pinch Plut.
Ptlyestu
blcldng. Floral or Swirl
dnlon1. Ht~vywtftllt. 't'ou
_ save S4.00 on uch pair.

REGULAR SI0.99 I

Orange.

PANTY HOSE

$21.98

lsi OUA_LITY
2 COLORS

3ru PR.

BIG CASH
SAVINGS

Set
SILICONE COVER
FITS STANDARO 54"
IRONING BOARDS

BATH nMB.S
Regul1r 51.99
SOL.IOS .

~~AZER

$2.39

STRIPES

BATtt TOWELS
PINK, BLUE, GOLD, AVOCAOO

I

..

Weather

State education officials are

develop alternative heaUng sources for their buildings besides
natural gas.
'
"There's been considerable discussion that we've got to
move to schools; having two sources of heatirig/' said Steve
Markham, director ol Buildings and Grounds In the state
Education Department. "This is taking place right now 'in
30111e places." The acUon comes In response to continuing
natural gas service curtailmenta in the state. Columbia Gas
Co. lul week announced a 15 per cent curtailment for large
COIIllllercial wen, which comes on top of a 25 per cent cuthaclr
inltltuted In mid-December, The finn considers schools to be
"large commercial users."

MAIIRESS
COVERS
REG.

invited by Bobhy-Ord

FRANKFORT, KY. -

FITTEO PLASTIC

ZIPPER END
FULL BED SIZE

Snow covered, sli ppery roadway, striking a bridge
highways were ~:•med for abutment.
live of seven traffic accidents
A deer was killed in an
iovestigated Wednesday by accident at 2 p.m. on SR 7 at
the Galiia-Meigs Post State the Middleport business loop.
Highway Patrol.
The animal ran into the path
The first ocCUlTed at 8 a.m. of ~ car operated by Robert
on CR 12, east of SR 218 where E. Daniels, 42, Middleport.
Norman R. Brumfield, 2(1,
A single car accident oc·
Scottown, traveling east, lost curred at f30 p.m. on CR 31,
control of his en on the icy six tenths of a mile northwest
roadway . His vehicle ran off of SR 790 in Gallia County.
the right side of the highway, Roy D. Martin, 26, Crown
over an embankment, and City, lost control on the snowinto a qeek. There was covered highway. The vehicle
WASHINGTON - HUBERT HUMPHREY has a new job
ran off the road , striking two
moderate damage.,
- one never held by anyone else - as deputy president pro
Heavy damage resulted trees. There was moderate
tern of the Senate; The Minnesota Democrat will be a member
from a collision at 9:20 p.m. damage.
.
of the senior team of Senate and House leaders, who meet
Diane L. Brown, 31 ,
on SR 218, one mile north of
JOHNNY LYNN NELSON, employe of the Pomeroy
regularly with the president, and will get the same salary as
Gallipolis,
a. passenger in a
SR
790.
Court House, was . one of hundreds of people out
the Senate majority leader -a rise of $7,400 over regular
driven
by William K.
car
The
Jlalrol
reported
a
van
Wednesday shovelin g sno w from sidewalks. •
congressional pity of $44,600.
operated
by
Edgar
Harrop
Brown,
28,
Gallip&lt;ills was
Approximately three inches fell Wednesday.
He also will receive a limousine with a driver and get three
lll , 32, Gallipolis, went out of injured· in a traffic accident
additional met))berS for his staff plus an office suite in the
control on the snowy roadway on SR 3118 east of Bob Mccapitol. The w'ording of the resolution approved by Democrats
then skidded into a pick up Cormick Rd: The Bro1m car
in caucus, ·creating the job to honor Hwnphrey after he
truck operated by Robert L. pulled into the path of a car
withdrew-from the race for majority leader, will grant the
Condee, 47, Gallipolis. No one operated by James M. Klskis,
same position and benefits to any future member of the Senate
44, Rt. 2, Gallipolis. There
was injured or cited.
who has been Ute nation's Vice president or president· during
Diane Polcyn, 22, Rt. 1, was moderate damage to
his political career.
Gallipolis wa s injured in an both vehicles. Brown was
accident at 11:45 a.m. on the cited to Municipal Court for
HONG KONG - CHINA HAS BEGUN a massive
RACINE - Bobby Ord,
treasurer.
· Bulaville-Porter Rd . at the failure to yield the right of
campaign to pay tribute to the late Premier Chou En-lai, superintendent of Southern
Mrs. Jane Wagner who Gallipolis Shrine Club.
way .
whose death last Jan. 8 triggered one of the most momentous Local School District, is resigned 'as· clerk-treasurer · Troopers said the Polcyn
poi!Ucal upheavals in the nation's history. A movie on Chou's accepting applications for effective Jan. l3 has accepted car slid Into a snow plow
life began showing at theaters throughout the country. The district clerk-treasurer.
the position of clerk for meigs blade on a truck operated by.
purged ra!jical faction known as the "Gang of Four" w~lt • .Applications must be Local School District. The Jimmy Dale McGuire, 40, Rt.
Cloudy tonight, periods of
accused of suppressing the film last year.
submitted by noon on Mon· Southern board commended 2, Crown City.
snow, and ·lows near 20.
Broadcasts by Peking Radio and provincial radio stations day, Jan. 10. The hoard will Mrs. Wagner "(or a fine job."
Marvin E. Craig, 4S , Chance of a few snow Hurries
were flooded wiUt songs, poems and articles praising "our meet in special session that
Mrs. Wa gner was em· Pomeroy, was charged with Friday morning. Highs near
belo~ Premier Chou." Sl{nilar articles filled the nallen's
day, at 5 ,p.m. to review the pioyed as a consultant to driving an unsafe vehicle 30.
Probability
of
ntWSDBperS, according to official reports from Peking and . applications, and on Wed· ' train the new clerk. The following an accident at 1:20
!IIIYierous other clUes. One "article in the Communist Party ntsday, Jan. 12, will meet al6 board passed a resolution p.m. Wednesday on SR 124 precipitaiion 70 per cent this
afternoon, 80 per cent tonight
newspaper, People's Daily, gave an account of Chou's p.m. \o hire a clerk·
(Continued on page 2)
Craig's vehicle siid on the icv and 30 per cent Friday. •
activities In Nanking shortly after World War n when he was
the cblef Communist negotiator In mediation talks with the
IP:''I~:t;:: ::::t~:~:?~Ittf=:=r:=r =:: =:=
tr:=::tt:=tttitt:::::rr=:rr= rn¥::tt:rrrr:rrr:Jt=?'t:''':=:==r=t:Jr?r::::::::::;:::::::::=r:r:tf:::::::::r=:=T::~:
Natlonall.st government sponsored by the United States.
!!lOVin!! to encourage Kentucky's public school systems to

;J

Ironing Board
Pad and Cover

United Press International
MAAION, OHIO - ATTORNEY GENERAL William J .
Brown predioled Wednesday that Democrats, who control both
houses of the Ohio General Assembly, will trim state
goveritment and make it more respon~ive to the people at less
cost. Brown, speaking at a Mario!\ De{llocratic dinner, also
accused the administration . of Gov. James A. Rhodes of·
operating government "by crisis" with no pian and no
direction .
He said . oemocrats. are .the ones who have the
responsibility of bringing back better quality of life to Ohioans,
which he sald has been lost since former Gov. John J. Gilligan
left office. The attorney general said Democrats this year will
seek efficient school financing; strengthen consumer rights ;
begin a fight against organized crime; and established a
uniform system of justice for juveniles.

Applications for clerk

JUNIOR, MISSY AND X-LARGE
COME ON IN AND SAVE!

S4.98

•

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY, JANUARY 6, 1977

t'

Thursday Night Special

$295 ·

up to 66 or 67 degrees, even wiUt plenty of gas.
Another problem facing the district is that the amount of
gas used during a month Is not known until the end of that
month , makin·g it impossible for officials to know if they are
coping satisfactorily with the cutback.
O'lliER SOIOOLS
Bob Ord, superintendellt of the Southern Local District
said none of that district's schools use gas heatirig where ~
conversion program has been underway and three schools
already are using fuel oil. More schools will he converted to
fuel oil furnaces as funds permit.
,,
In the Eastern l.Dcal District, Supt. John Riebel said only
one school, Chester Elementary, uses natural gas heat and it
appears at present Utat no serious .problem in having .enough
heat for the building exists.

.

HOME FURNISHINGS ANNEX

'Values

Visii OUr ~a lad Bar
.
Roast Beef
Mashed 'Potatoes &amp; Gravy
Vegetable
Coffee; Tea or Milk
Plus tax

bas asked for more specific guidelines and will discuss the
problem with the board of ·education and with building
principals.
Since the district has done well in keeping with the earlier ·
~40percent cutback, the 50 percent figure ,wiU not be hased on
the last couple of years' gas conswnption but rather on Ute
amount used in 1971 when gas was more plentiful, Dowler
icated.
. ·
·
The pollcy earUer was to charge lor gas over the allotted
amount. However, according to the company gas will be shut
oH In buUdlngs where the cutback quota Is 'not met Dowler
said.
'
· Dowler pointed out that not only is the natural gas quota a
problem but he indicated tha t is is impossible in some rooms of
the junior high building in Middleport to get the temperature

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

THE INN PLACE

SCHOOLS CLOSED
Schools of the Meigs,
Eastern and' Southern Local
School DistriCts were closed
Wednesday due to .an over
two Inch snow which fell
overnight. The snow which
closed the schools was continuing ,Wednesday morning
with as much· as four inches ·
more predicted to fall.

Mei!!JI Local is the only school district ot tl••.lh!·ee in M&lt;Jgs
Coun!Y which may be forced to close one Of more o1 its
butidings because of the gas cutback program of Columbia Gas
of Ohio, a survey made Weditesday showed. .
Olarles L. Dowler, superrntendent of Metgs Local, said
awru:ently hts district w.tll have problems because of the new
curtailment whtch !I'Ovtdes that the schools must cut back
!hell' use of gas hy 50 percent. Previously , the cutback was 40
percent and the district had been successful in meeting that
figure.
However, Dowler indicated yesterday Meigs Local may
encounter difficulty in meeting the ?O percent cutback if the
extreme cold ~ontinues._ .
J?owler SBJd that gutdeirnes to be followed have not been
recetved from Colwnbta Gas, although he has been advised
that the additional 10 per cent cutback will he necessary. He

ALL OTHER SHEETS ALSO AT SALE .PRICES NOW

News .. in Briefs

/

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Gov . James A. Rhodes has
two 'of his energy experts to investigate the
tmpilct of recent natural gas curtailments In Ohio and
determine Whether he should declare an "energy crisis"
for the purpose of direct goverrunenlintervenUon.
Rhodes issued the assignment Wednesday in separate
letters to Robert S. Ryan ; director o! the Energy and
Resource Deyelopment Agency, and c. Luther Heckman,
chairtnan of Ute Public Utllltles Coinmission of Ohio.
Columbia Gas of Ohio has reduced allocations of
natural gas to industries with alternative fuel capabiUtles,
small businesses and schools. East Ohio Gas Co. is
operaUng wiUt a mild curtailment, and the Cincinnati Gas
&amp; Electric Co.- and Dayton Power &amp; Light Co. are cutting
back.
Under a 197S law, · Rhodes is empowered after
conslllatlon with ERDA to declare an "energy crisis" if he
finds that the health, welfare or safety of the citizens is
threatened.
·
He Is · also authorized to institute , rationing
procedures, suspend state and local rules and use local
. government supplies and equipment to minimize the
crisis .
.
·
~ned

HERES HOW YOU SAVE

families. Mrs. Nora Riggs,
Easo~. \'!• . 1. Pomeroy and
Mrs. Joan Riggs, Johnson,
Atlanta, Ga .; a sister-in-law,
•Mrs. Ray Windon, Columbus
and sever a I nieces and
nephews and their families.
Funeral services will be
2:30 . p.m. Frldsy at the
Flatwoods United Methodist
Church with the Rev . James
. Corbitt officialing. Friends
may call at the Ewing
Funeral Home until noon
Friday when the body will be
taken to tho! church to lie in
state until time of services.
Burial will be in Chester
Cemetery.

,.

Energy experts ordered to
learn depth of emergency

Includes all our Cannon Royal Family Sheets
and Pillow Cases. No iron Royal Family in full
bed size, twin bed, king and queen sizes. Fitted
or flat,.,.....sheets.

Mrs. Morgan died Tuesday
Mrs. Edna Mae Morgan,
Rt. 3, Pomeroy, porn Marr.h
12, 1890 at Flatwoods, died
Tuesday evening at Kimes
Convalescent Home in
Athens. Mrs. Morgan had
been a patient at the convalescent home since suffering a broken hlp several
months ago. ·
A life member of the
Flatwoods United Methodist
Churc h, she attended
regularly until her accident.
She was a daughter of the late
Joseph M. and Ethel Johnson
Windon,
Also preceding her in death
were a son, David J ., Jr. in
infancy; two brotherS, Ray
and Wald Wlttdon · two
sisters, Norma Wind~n Will
and A~a Windon, and a
granddaughter, Gloria K.
Gaul in infancy.
Mrs. Morgan was married
May 29, 1920 to David J .
(Bud) Morgan, and the
couple lived their entire
married life on a farm in the
Flatwoods community until
their recent illnesses.
Surviving besides her
husband are a dsughter and
son-in-law, Mildred and J. M.
Gaul, Rt. · 3, Pomeroy; a
grandson, Victor E. Gaul and
two great-grandchildren,
Vtctor, Jr .. and Lisa, au of
Metropolis, Ill.; two grand·
daughters, Mrs. Patricia A.
Clay, Ypsilanti, Mich and
Vicki L. Gaul, Itt. 3,
Pomeroy.
Also surviving are a
stepdaughter and her
hushand, Gladys and Perry
Riggs, Rt. 3, Pomeroy; tw~
step-grandchildren and their

'

JANUARY SALEI

V

•

SIZE
, 72d0

$1 44

NEW STORE
HOURS

"·"

VALUES

SHOP YOUR
NIAIIIST GTOitl

-

JANUARY.fEBRUARY
OPEN

ePOINT PLIASANT
•MAlON

IUM lO 8. PM

•SILVII AlDOl

~~NDAfS

•

1!1:!!!!

Supermarket anger promises coffee war

United PmalntemaUooal
Hell hath no furj like a woman storned at the
~rket, and for Mrs. Beverly Ribaudo, of St.
Clair !lt&lt;ns, Mich., a price pushing ·t3 a pound for
coffee Is scorn enough lor war.
.Mrs. Barbara Shuttleworth, of Vernon, CoM., also
is ready for coffee cup combat.
But Camflo Calazans, president of the Brazilian .
OJifee Institute, says he isn~ afraid q1 either one of
thl!l11.
.
.. ,,
Neither Mrs. Ribaudo_nor Mrs. ShuWeworth is a
straq~er to the batUefield of boycott economics. Mrs.
Ribaudo headed the sugar boycott of 1974-75, and four
PARKERSBURG, W. VA. - A DAMAGE suit of $112,300
~•ll1liii!O, Mrs. SltutUeworth took en the meal packers
baa been fUad against Wood County officials by the ~~~ow of a
In
a similar drive ID force down spiraling prices.
man beaten to death in the Wood County Correctional Center.
1bls week, both women zeroed in on the nation's
Delores Malone, 30, charged llll!llgence In the lull filed In
,
•
.,...
national
beverage, organWng housewives to resist
Wood County Circuit Court In the Jan .. 3, 1971 death of her
increuing costs llpUITed by a .frost that killed 73.5 per
ltublnd, Floyd Malone, 52, of Parkersburg.
cent of Brazil's colfff trees in 1975, and by hefty raises
Frank Rile of Belpre, Ohio, wasJtelltenced to 5-to-11 years
in eJ:port tarlffa both by Brazil and Colombia.
In prl.m Dec. 71 on hia conviction of MCOnd4egree murder In
"We're bell1! taken advantage of conataillly, and
Malone's death. Olester E. Airhart, sheriff at the time, was
we'vehad
enough," said Mrs. Ribaudo. "U housewives
linonc the defendanta 111111ed by .the widow.
stop buying coffee, the price will go down .'We proved It
with qar."
~LUMBUS, OJUO - "EVERY .DAMN DIME we had Ia
!lte llld she will launch a natlonal "coffee brake"
IOIJI," Aid 78-yev.old Oacar Pl:ldemore moments after he
¥~
next
Monda~, sendln&amp; Dyet:s to women In all 50 states
-beaten 1011 rollbed leylna to defendhiawlle Wedneeday. "I
don't !mow what wt're going to live on W the end d. the
(ConUnued on page 2)

- many ol whom .were her comrades In the fight
&amp;gllinst high sugar prices.
"We're ask!~ ..cit hOusewife who gets a flyer to
. tell (ive frlendubout it, and have ..ch friend tell live
more,'' shellld. "It will be a chain reactlo~ involving
housewives all over the country."
Mrs. SltutUtworth - a tea ~r - said she Will
repeat her enllltment oi state women's clubs In the
battle to trlnil down colfee prices - just as she did in
the meat price war d. 11731
"I'd support an)'lhlnc tnat's sensible bu
,"she

t:

Braall's harvest Is goll1! to be small and because
Brazil's stocks are rapidly dwindling,'' he said. "A
boycott . might be good for Brazil . .• We cannot
continue el!pOrting or we will exhaust our stocks in a
few months."
Calazans said coffee prices have been
."excessively low" lor aeveral years and that any U.S.
conswner boycott would have to he "long and intense"
to affect prl~ .

:!:! ~!

~~ summit "

council . he

declared he would never
again raise funds for or
otherwise help the GOP.
Several sources said ·the
GOP meeting was held in a

...

.

Meigs County Sheriff
James J . Proffitt said today
his department is investigating a breaking and
entering and theft of the
Norman Russell residence on
Rock Springs Rd. Monday
morning. Entry was gained
by prying open a back door.
An undisclosed amount of
money was taken from a
piggy bank.
The department is also
investigating an incident at
Southern High School in
Racine In which a beer bottle
was thrown through an oflice
window over New Year's
holldsy.
Sheriff Proffitt disclosed
his department is assisting
Racine police In investigating
the opening of two lire
hydrants. Water board of·
ficials did not . report how
muCh water was lost during
the time the hydrants were

Two accidents
blamed on ice

open.
Mark Haley, 25, Mid·
dleport , was arrested bl
sheriff's deputies on a
warrant charging non support, and Bill Reeves ,
Pomeroy was jailed for
disorderly conduct.

Suit filed ·

for $24,261
A suit asking $24,261.25 has
been filed iti Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by"
Athens County Savings and
Loan Co., Pomeroy, agaiitst
Richard K. and Nancy Jef·
fers, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, and
George Collins, county
treasure!'!
Two other suits filed were
by John
Michailides,
Cleveland, vs. Guy Harper,
lU. 4, Pomeroy, charging that
he was injured on SR 143 in
Meigs County due to '
negligence of the defendant,
Guy Harper, and The Ohio
Farmers Insurance Co.,
Westfield Center, Ohio &amp;$king
$771.2S from Franklin
Laudermilt, Middleport,
alleged due on ·a promissory ·
note.
. George Allan Blanks,
Middleport, and Mary Kay
Blanks, Pomeroy, filed for
dlssoiQtion oi marriage..

Middleport Police investigated two · accidents
Wednesday, the result of ice
and snow.
At4 :35 p.m. on Grant St., a
car driven by Ronald
Browning, 20, Route 2,
Pomeroy, skidded on the ice
and struck a car driven by
Alberta Koehler, Middleport.
At6:30 p.m., a car driven by
Donald L Stivers, 19, Mid·
TO MEET FRIDAY
..... dleport, studded and struck a
Howard E. Frank, clerk,
parked· car owned by Larry aMounced t.,:eytherewill be
Bailey, North Front St. There a 'lleeting of the Meigs
were no Injuries and no County Budget Commission
citations.
at 10:,10 a. m. Friday .in the
auditor's office of th~ court· '
:·:·:·:·
house.
CLOSED AGAIN
CALL ANSWERED
Schools were closed today
The
. Middleport
in all three of Meigs Counly's
Emergency
Squad answered
school districts for the second
a
call
to
169
~
N. Second Ave.
day In a row due to Ice an~
9:18
p.
m.
Wednesday for
at
snow. Secondary roads in the
Caodace
Lambert,
3, who ·
Meigs, Eastern a~ Southern
was
having
difficulty
~:@ Local . Districts were
primarily the reason for the breathing. She was taken to
Vetera1111 Memorial \Jospital.
closing.
.

.

M1t~i~:=:=:m1!HW~t:m~:,:q:::::l=::::::m::t::t'===:=:=:::::=:=t~:~==~::t:n=m:mr::m:t:=tt:=::=::rm:::::r::::::= ::=:::::::::nmm:::: : : : : : : ;: : : : : : : : : :::;:::::g::n:::::;:::::::$~

\1

~

Piggy hank in
home robifed

PLAIA
~:

cordial atmosphere at which
Ford strongly backed Baker.
Rockefeller , did not state a
preference 'at the meeling,
but his office later announced
he wo11ld hack whomever
Ford wantedwithout
naming Baker.
Reagan reportedly told the
other three that .Baker was
·not acceptable, and his
choice-and Utat of most
sunbelt conservatives-was
Utah State Chairman
Richard Richards.
Connally was mwn. He was
once mentioned lor the chairmanship and boosted by a
• roup of southern GOP
eaders. When Conna lly
withdrew, they switched to
former Sen. William Brock of
Tennessee, who is now a full
time contender for the post.
Baker, a young Houston
lawyer, was never involved in
a major national campaign
before he served as Ford's
chief delegate hunter and
later campaign chairman
last year .

)
.

'~

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