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                  <text>••

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 .

)
.

'~

�•

2- The O.Uy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy; 0., Thursday, Jan-. 6, 1977

Maine's Curtis tapped
By HELEN THOMAS
has gone through tremendous constituency groups and state
UPJ White HoUle Reporter • structural reform over the party orgnizations.
"He understands the
PLAINS, Ga. (l!PI ) - In last eight years," Carter
telegrams to all members of said. "Ken Curtis would he a necessity of a party tllat
who would understands and represents
the Democratic National chairman
Committee, President-elect continue and build on the tlle a\'erage American."
Curtis, 45, served two
Jimmy
Carter
today work that we have
recommended former Maine accomplished and create terms as. governor of Maine
Gov . Kenneth Curtis as strong new avenues of . starting 1967. He was one of
chairman.
participation all(j service for Carter's early supporters.
today
also
Carter
Carter 's end orsement
announced the appointment
.
makes tlle choice almost
of Dr . Sidney Harman, a New
-r")"l
.
inevitable.
York electronic industrialist-,
In recommending Curtis, J.
~o be under secretary of
Carter said "! know he shares
commerce. Carter sald he
my strong · belief lllat the
made the selection on the
Democratic party must
advice
of
Commerce
he long to the"j&gt;eople and not
Secretary-designate Juanita
just tlle political figures."
Kreps.
Th e pr es ident -e l ect ,
Harman is president of
describ~ himBelf as the
Harman International Indus"party leader," . urged the
tries, manufacturer of high
Committee to approve his
INDEPENDENCE, Kan. fidelity equipment.
choice when it meets Jan. 21
A truckers '
lbe President-elect also
to select a succemr to (UPI )
newspaper
editor
has asked prlpared for a meeting ' with
Chairman !Whert Strauss,
drivers to park their trucks to his top economic advisers to
who is stepping down.
"The Democratic Party . protest President Ford's put finishing touches on a
possible decontrol of gasoline progr.am to stimulate the
prices.
economy.
Earl Stephens, editor of the
Democratic Senate and
0
National CB Truckm News, House leaders wiU join Carter
S81d Wednesday dr1vers had and his advisers in Plains ,
(Continued from page I l
been told of tlle protest Friday to try for a consensus
requesting a cash county through citizen band radios, on the proposal, which wiU be
audit.
truck stops and the submitted to Congress.
All applications for clerk- newspaper.
"We're asking them to take
treasurer are to he mailed to
Bobby Ord, Superintendent, them (trucks) home," he
Southern Hi gh School, said . "This is going to put a
Raci ne. Attend ing were shortage of groceries on the
·Pleasant Valley
Robe rt Sayre, presiden t, shelves and cut down· on
DISCHARGES Kip
Dennis · Evans,
vice delivery of raw materials for Hartenbach, Point Pleasant;
presi dent : Jack Bostick, industry."
Mrs. Ochel Rollins, daughter,
Stephens said decontrol Point Pleasant; Mrs. Jeffery
' Da llas Hill , and Rog er
Ada ms, board memb ers, would add 10 to 11 cents to the Wails, Northup, 0.; Mrs.
Mrs. Wagner and Ord.
price of a gallon of fuel.
Charles Bowen, Vinton; Mrs.
" We ' re requesting Carroll Taylor, Gallipolis;
complete Congress and Charles Mart in, Gallipolis
Seriate action to veto this and Ferry; Perry Sayre, Point
let the new administration Pleasant ; Cind y Taylor,
handle it, instead of letting Gallipolis ; Charl es Redthe lame duck President mond , Gallipolis Ferry;
motorll ls
and David Forshee, Point
Funeral services for Mrs. saddle
truckers
with
a
$60
billion
Irene L. Cunningham, 77, who
Pleasant ; Gladys Cains,
died at her Racine home price increase," Stephens Pomeroy; and · Va ughan
Tuesday night will he held at said.
Glassburn. Bidwell.
Ford last week indicated he
3 p.m. Friday at the. Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev. might order decontrol, which
Tim Smith and the Rev.· would become effective in 15 V&lt;lerans Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Ruth Cain,
Howard Shivley officiating. days unless hal.ttd by
Athens; George Rittenhouse,
The daughter of the late Congress.
Racine; Robert Bowen,
Joseph and Mary Bell
,,, Pomeroy ; Harry Wehrung;
Donohue, Mrs. Cunningham
Pomeroy; Adrienne French,
is survived by a son, Ca rl
Harrisonville.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Manges; a daughter, Mrs.
Discharged - · Richard
Saturda y tb r ou·gh
Robert (Florence) Smith; six
grandchildren, ·Mrs. Jerry Monday, a chan~ of snow Du gan , Harold Jones, Joseph
(Dorot hy) J ohnson, Md. Saturday and &lt;learning Stewart.
Jam es (Carol) Frt eman , Sunday. Cold with· lows
Mrs. Thomas (Judy) Klose,
near 15 and lilghs about 28
both days. Falr and qul(e
Mrs. James (1-!ary ) Rouda,
cold Monday · with lows
Martin Berouin, and Joseph
NOW YOU KNOW
Berouin ; two step grand- near zero north to near 10
The male silkworm moth,
south. Highs Monday wlll exhibiting the keenest sense
children, Robert and William
be aroudli is north fnd 25 of smell in all nature,. can
Smith ;
15
great·
1
south.
grandchild~e n , and six stepdetect the sex signals of a
great-grandchildren.
·
female moth 6.8 miles away.
"· • · ,.. , ·,.· Burial will be in l.etart :::;.;:;:;:;.;:;.;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:·:;:;:;.
•
Fa Us Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home at
an)'time,.
·r

ruek ers

urged to

park 'em

APplicatlOflS

Hospital News

Cunningham
service set

Peanut honcho is sitting p~tty
By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON t UPI) - The transition
period has been shaky for many
bureaucrats, but Dallas Smitll ls sitting
pretty.
He's Ute ,goverrunent's new peanut
honcho.
Specifically, Smith is chief of tlle Peanut
Branch of the TobaCQJ and Peanut
Division of the Stablll1atlon and Conservation Service of tlle U.S. Department of
Agriculture. Not a title to he taken lightly
these days.
. Smith doesn 'I have to sweat and strain to
prepare himself .for the advent of the new
administration. With a .. pe~nut farmer
moving into the White House, he already
speaks tlle language.
·'The peanut, that traditional symbol of
insignificance, suddenly has become
stattis. Smith said the peanut plant is
altogether remarkable, too long
underrated because it was so unobtrusive.
At, say, a cocktail party, one can extract
a handful of peanuts from a bowl with
one's nondrinking hand and consume same
witll hardly a break In the conversation.
· Compare that with consuming an
artichoke, which demands one's complete
attention,
·
But even wfthout President-elect Jimmy
Carter's reflected glory, peanuts truly are
wortlly of their new limelight.
For those citizens who may be coming
here for the inauguration and wlsh to he
C&lt;)nversant in the subject, here is a short
dissertation on the lore and mystique of
peanuts:
· A peanut is more pea than nut.
Botanically speaking, it isn't a nut at all. It

is a member of tlle family Legurnlnpsea a vegetable.
The main thing that distinguishes
peanuts from other peas is tllat they grow
underground. They also are known as
ground nu~s, ground peas and eal'!h nuts.
But tllat is not the reason they ~!so are
known as goobers.
"Goo her" is an English corruption of tlle
African word "nguba."
Acc,rding to Smith, peanuts were
brought to this country from Africa in
slave ships. Presumably, plantatiorr
owners heard tlle slaves talking about
"ngubas" and thought tlley were ·saying
11
goobers."
· W11atever, peanuts got off .to a slow start
in North America. Colonjsts fed tllem to
tlle hogs.
It was not untill917 peanuts began to he
grown commercially in this country. In
South America, · where the plant
originated, Indians have been growing
them for at least 1,1100 years. And even. .
today. about four.fiftlls tlle world's supply
ls grown in Africa and Asia.
In America, it was Dr. George
·Washington Carver who finally recognized
• peanuts had potential beyond a sandwich
spread tllat sticks to tlle roof of tlle mouth
and always falls gooey side down.
Carver developed more than 300 peanut
products, including peanut ink and peanl!t
''coffee.''
Not all are in use today, altllough
·peanuts are used in making soap, face
powder, shaving cream, shampoo, .paint,
textUes, plastics, cork .substitutes, waU
hoards and abrasives.
And if tlle price of the real thing keeps
going up, peanut coffee may yet catch on.

DR. LAMB

smaller, like rafts or
lifeboats," Coast Guard .Lt.
Gary Cosciusko said when
planes returned with no word
of the 642-foot tanker.
Cosciusko said the planes
were "going out at first light"
today.
The captain of the 23-yearold tanker radioed seven days
ago the
Panamanianregistered
ship
had
encountered rough seas soutll
of Nova Scotia en route from
England to Providence, R.! .
The ship has not heen heard
from since.
"After the all-out search
we've conducted, I'd say it's
going to be a 10 per cent
chance that she's still afloat,
disabled
and
without
electrical power and a 90 per
cent chance that we're

By CRAIG A. PALMER
WASHINGTON (UP! )
The National Cancer Institute
says more men tllan women
and more nonwhite~! lllan
whites die of cancer, but
striking geographic
stmilarltles in overaU cancer
death rates indicate a
relationship between
environmental factors and
tlle disease.
The institute Wednesday
released a report on U.S.
cancer death rates among
blacks, American Indians,
Chinese and Japanese as a
followup to a landmark 1975
study of geographic patterns
of cancer among whites;
Groups such as Puerto
Ricans, Mexican-Americans
and Flllpinos were not sepa·
rately included In the new
report. The first two groups
generally are classed with
whites and the latter with
nonwhites, said an institute
spokeswoman.
The
similarity
in
geographic patterns of
cancer for whites and
nonwhites was "particularly
striking" for cancers of the
breast, colon, rectum · and
esophagus, which showed
generally high rates in the
.. North and low rates in the
South, the institute said.
1_0'
"Similar geogruphic
~
patterns for .both males and
$6 blulon expenditure on new females for .a particular
plants in equipment thls year ,cancer suggest .lllat common
as t11e industry attempts to environmental factors may
write new records, topping contribute to causation," lt
1973.
said.
Volkswagen, once the No. I
The new cancer atlas, conImport and now fighting for taining ·color-coded death
IJlird spot, is spending more maps tracing 492,669 deatlls
than $300 million on an · from 1950 to 1969, found· the
assembly plant in West· · death rate for all . forins of
moreland, Pa.,to insure Itself cancer combined is slightly
a spot in the American higher for nonwhites and for
market.
·
males. Deatll rates for 35
The
four
domestic types of cancers varied by
automakers sold 8,606,573 race.
cars in 1976, nearly 22' per
But the survey centered on
cent above the 7 million in the distribution of fatal
1975 and the highest level cancer around the' cOuntry.
since pre-Arab oil embargo and con'cluded: "Similar
days in 1973. The foreign geographic patterns lor both
automakers watched their males and females for a
sales slip nearly 6 per cent to particular cancer suggest
just under l.S million cars. tllat eommon environmental

•
h
.
•
h
ar
uymg
.
b
Court upholds C
Bacon ruling
The Court of Appeals has
filed its opinion affirming
the decision by Judge John C.
Bacon April ·5, 1976, in the
divorce action Caudill vs
Caudill . Herman Caudill ,
Middleport, was appellee ..
Vwlet Caudill , the appellant, assigned nine errors:
Judgment
upon
un corroborated testimony ;.
weight of evidence and bias of
the
judge ;
excluding
testimony of behavior prior to
the second marriage of the
parties, undue reliance upon
former agreement of the
parties, exclusion of expert
testim~ y ;
erro&lt;
in
dismissing her complaint ;
disr e gardin g medic a l
testimony , and abuse o'P
discretion in alimony award.
Each was overrultJd .
Judge James Orennan of ·
Pike County wrote the
opinion, concurred in· by
Judge Gray, soorr .to retire,
and Judge Abele.

DETROIT (UP!)- Affieri;
cans bought 10.1 rtl!llion new
cars in 1976- the fourth
highest in history and 17 per
cent ahoye disastrous 1975
levels.
But the full significance of
the
figures · reported
Wednesday on the hest year
since the Arab oil embargo in
1973 was tlle effect on the
work force and on investment
plans by U.S. and . foreign
automakers.
It · enabled
Detroit
automakers to reduce layoffs
fr.om above 300,000 i.n early
1975-40 per cent of the blue
collar force -to below 15,000
at the end of last year.
Renewed interest in small
cars could drop the figure
even lower.
It also will lead to a record

looking for people in rafts and
lifeboats," said Hoyland,
chief of ~arch and rescue
operations for the Coast
Guard,
Water temperatures in the
area .hovered near 40
degrees, cold enough to
render a: man unconscious in
20minutes. Wind gusted to 40
knots during the night and
seas 'were running up to IS
feet. Water in the majority of
tlle search area is more than
6,1100 feet deep.
Other vessels mysteriously
have disappeared in tlle same
area: The Coast Guard said
tllat within tlle last two years,
the fishing vessels Zubenelgenubi and Patricia Marie
and the research ship Gulf
Stream have vanished.
"Everyone knows about the ·
Nortll Atlantic and its reputa·

3~The DaUy Sentlnel, Mtddleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Jan .

....·•

causation."

It said the study ''further
supports a relationship
...
between environmental
factors and cancer rlaks." .
Compared' WIIll other racial ' '
groups Including whites ,
blacks experienced high
rates for cancers of the "'
mouth and tllroat, esophagus, ' ,.
stomach, pancreas, larynx,
bmg, prostate, bladder and
cervix,
and
multiple
myeloma, whi,l1J Ia a bone
marrow cancer, the cancer
atlas said.
Whites have
higher
mortality lor cancers of the
colon and rectum, breast,
ovary, iest!a, kidney, skin
and b'raln, as, well as.
leukemia and lymphoma.
American Indians are more . n
prone to cancers of the.
gallbladder, bile ducta and
liver, witll lesser increases
lor
cancers
of
the
nasopharynx inper
passages of tlle nose - testis,
cervix,- lddney and female
,.
thyroid.
Chinese had higher death
rates lor cancers of the
nasopharynx, esophagus,
lung, thyroid, large bowel
and liver. ·
Japanese had higher death "
rates lor stomach cancers
only.
.
Copifl! of the Atlas of
Cancer Mortality Among U,S.
Nonwhites : 1950·19ftll are
avaUable from tlle National
Cancer Institute's Office of .,,
Cancer Commurdcatlons in ,
Betllesda, Md.

..

.....

..

'

.

PITTSBURGH ,(UP! ) Westinghouse Electric Corp.
has issued
subpoenas
. ordering Gulf Oil Corp.
officers to answer charges
tllat they participated in a
worldwide uranium cartel
allegedly designed to
"break" Westinghouse.
Dorcas; Clarence aoush ,
The officers, whom
Winfield, W. va:.; Till Webb, Wesilnghouse refused to
Letart FaDs; Mrs. Qeo,gia identify, are scheduled to
Durst, Niles; )'llrs. Herbert take t~e witness stand
Roush, Mrs. Bernice Roush, Monday m Allegheny Co\ffity
Mrs. Dorsa Parsons, all of " Common Pl"!'s Court here in
Racine; Mrs. Everette a multi-billion-dollar case.
Parsons, Negley, Ohio, and
Judge • I.
Martin
several great-grandchildren. Wekselman has ordered his
She was preceded in deatll courtroom cleared
by two husbands, Edward intermittenUy because of the
Burri and Will Snedeker ; one :cr~! ~~~ur~begol te~~o~ ~
daughter. Mrs . Louise
e , Ia a · an
. .
Chapman; her parents, three was recessed lor sevven
sl' sters, and a brother.
weeks last Nov. 5 because of,
Funeral servl'ces w·ere held court scheduling confllcts
h
d b i 11
Tuesday at the Dawson t en
resume
re Y
' Euneral Home in Coshocton Tuesday.
V:.ith burial in the cemeterY Attorneys for Westinghouse
there
said · the cartel a~d otber
·
factors caused the price of

BOOSTERS TO MEET
The Tuppers Plains
Booster Association wil) meet
Monday, Jan. 10 at'7:30 p. m.
at the Tuppers Plains
Elementary SchooL

lion," a Coast Guardsman
said. "When you go to sea,
you respect it."
· ft
Se ven Iong-range alrcra
from Canada and the United
States flew from dawn to
dusk for two days 1,000 feet
above an ocean area the size
Of California, searching for

. RACINE - Word has heen
received by relatives of the
death of Mrs. Mary \ Davls
(B~rri) Snedeker at the West
B'look Park nursing home in
Canton on New Year's Day,
Mrs. Snedeker was reared in
the Fairview-Apple Grove
community.
·
She is survived by a son,
Charles Burri, employee of
the lock and dam at Bolivar,
Ohio ; a daughter-in-law,
Marge Burri, of Bolivar;
.
three grandchildren, Ronme
.
Chapman, in Pennsyivama ;
Jack Chapman, Mason, W.
Va., and Thomas Chapman,
· Syracuse , Ohio; these
cousins, Mrs. Nora Pearson. ,

~=d~:P· ~~~~~e~ ~eo~.:/1~ Stroke fatal to ·Mrs. Norris

Sport Parade .

- dead Bearcats

•

!acton may ·contribute to

'Gulf gets
called in
n . h ges.
0 c ar

Marauders at Jackson

Boos. woke up

..

'

"

"

By GENE CADDF.S
UPI Sports Writer
Cincinnati Bearcat fans are
' hard to please,
The lourt~-ranked a nd un·
beaten Bearcats got a taste of
the old "Bronx cheer"
Wednesday night after
struggUng through a sluggish
fir~. half agsinst ~emple ,
trailing 29-23 at intennission.
But the boos had a positive
effect on tlle Cats, who roared
out to a 2!h&gt; surge to start the
second half and led the rest of
tlle way In posting their lOth
straight win, 61-46.
Cincinnati coach Gale
Catlett refused to criticize the
booing by the ~.256 who
braved seven inches of snow
to be part of the largest
Riverfront Coliseum crowd to
see the Bearca!S play tllis
year.
"You pay your bucks and
you can do what you want/ '
said Catlett. "I really think
the crowd deserves credit for
the win tonight. For the first
time I tllink the fans helped
us out and Miller got them
excited." ~
Catlett was talking about 610 junior -center Bob Miller
who Scored all14 of his points
in the second half and ignited
the crowd witll three slam
dunks.
"They (Temple) did a
great job In the first half of
jamming the inside witll their
zone and malting us shoot
from the outside, " said
weren 't
Catlett. "We
penetrating tlleir zone. But
all tllose things changed in
the second half."
Gary Yoder rna tched
Miller's 14 ' points to share
Cincinnati scoring honors,
-while Brian Williams had 12.
Miarr.i, the pre-!leason MidAmerican Conference choice,
got off on the right foot in the

conference with a hard·
fought ~ decision over
Kent State,
Senior forward Chuck
Goodyear scored 19 points
and hit a pair of clinching
free throws with five seconds
remaining to lead the
Redskin win.
Goodyear 's free throws
came after Kent 's Joe
McKeown had cut tlle margin
to ~ with a basket with
seven seeonds to play'
Burrell McGhee led Kent
witll 27 points, while Archie
Aldridge added · 14 and
Bernard Newman 12 for
Miami, now 6-2 overall.
Toledo, evened its · MAC
mark at 1-1 witll an 82-liS
victory over Ohio University.
Dave Speicher scored 23
points and grabbed 14
rebounds for the !Wckets,
wbo led 43-31 at halftime but
had to rally in the secmtl half
after tlle Bobcats . got to
witllin one. ·
Tim Joyce had 19 points
and Steve Skaggs 17 to lead
the OU scoring. The Bobcats
are also now 1-1 in the
c~ference.

Otterbein .!ops

•
•

Pioneers 72-70

"

(Otterhelu 72 Marietta 70)
MARlETT A, Ohio (UPI) Don Brough sank a 15-footer
from the foul tine with five
seconds to go Wednesday
night to give Otterbein a 72-70
· win over Marietta in both
teams' first Ohio Conference
game,
,
Marietta, paced by Mitch
Miracle and Jeff Faloba witll
18 points each, had a 39-31
lead at intermission of the
close· game and was ahead
most of the !list half until two
Otterbein freetllrows tied it
up at ~and the score was
knotted again at 71).70.
Otterbein, paced by
Stephan Jones witll 21 points,
now is 6-4 and Marietta ~ .

.,

··
By MILTON RICHMAN
··
UP! Sports Editor
NEWPORT BEACH, Calif. (UP!) - Outwardly, George
Atkinson offers the perfect portrait of a cavalier, the
completely oblivious, devil-may-care type not bothered at aU
over being branded a dirty player, cheap-6hot artist or coldblooded hit man who goes around busting up other guys for the
Oakland Raiders.
·
lnw~rdly, it's an entirely dlfferent matter for tlle 30-year·
old, Savannah, Ga., strongside safety man, one of the three
hest players at his position in the National Footl:lall League.
Atkinson, getting ready here for Sunday's Super Bowl battle
with tlle Minnesota Vikings, doesn't care so much what the rest
of the world thinks about ·him, but he does care what his only
son, a ·J3-year-()ld named Craig, thinks about him.
,
"I was concerned about what my son would think," Atlunson
said Wednesday, seated at a huge circular table in the Raiders'
hotel. "We talked. What did I say to him ? I let him know what
was going on·. He goes to school in Oakland, he's in.the eighth
grade, and you know how kids are."
Kids have a way of being incredibly cruel toward one
another. They seem to take a delight in it at times. George
Atkinson kne~me of them might read what was being
written about hilff'ifl the papers and tllen strike back at his son
with it. He wanted his boy at least to hear his version.
·
One of the things George Atkinson didn't bother telling his
son, nor tiother bringing up over the table Wednesday, was an
. exchange he had with New England's Russ Francis after
Atkinson broke Francis' nose in tlle Raiders' opening round
playoff with tlle Patriots tllree weeks ago.
Atkinson made it a point to see Francis after the game and
said to him :
"Hey, I'm sorry about you getting hurt. I didn't do that on

In other games Wednesday
night, Cleveland State nipped
Akron 71-70, Youngstown
State slipped by Northern
Iowa 48-16, Xavier downed
. Campbells~ille (Ky.) 82-56,
Westminster ( Pa.) beat
Baldwin-Wallace 84-68,
Kenyon edged Wooster 73-71,
Mount Union defeated Ohio
Northern 85·81, Otterbein
took Marietta 72-70 and
Defiance beat Findlay 82-74
in 'O vertime.
Ohio State opens its Big Ten
schedule against illinois in
the highlight of tonight's Ohio
college schedule. The
Buckeyes will match a S-4
mark against 8-4 for the IUini.
Other. games tonight find
Ohio · Wesleyan
at
Muskingum, Franklin &amp;
Marshall at Ashland, Ohio
Dominican at Mt. Vernon
Nazarene and Bluffton at
Wilmington.

",
'

Mrs. Snedeker died Jan. 1st

Roth will play ·
with chest tumor
HONOLULU (UP!) California's Joe !Wth will
remain as the West's
quarterback in tlle Hula Bowl
Saturday
despite , his
disclosure that he is
undergoing treatment for
cancer.
Roth said Wednesday he is
rece1v1ng chemotherapy
treatment for a malignant
tumor found in his chest a few
weeks ago, but hts doctor
cleared him for play. He said
he was not in any pain and the
cancer was a recurrence of a
malignant melanoma he had
removed more than two
years ago.

News m· Bn·efs
.

I

the fluid in the canals shifts
and this stimulates nerve en·
dings that relay \he informs·
tio~ back to central controlthe brain, This is one of the
major ways your brain ,has of
finding out the , position of
your head.
,.Some people can be trained
to he less sensitive to motion.
A good example is a long
cruise. Many people will have
motion sensation tlle first few
days a:nd then will no longer
notice the movement of the
ship. They no longer stagger
across the deck. Then a
curious thing happens -when
tlle ship docks the people who
have the most trouble with
motion originally may have it
retum after they are off the
ship. This is sometimes caU·.
·ed "sea-legs." Thattoo dlsap-'
pears after a few days.
Apparently a person's
balance mechanism - canals
and brain receptors 'becomes accustomed to

:

C&amp;SOE rebates are out

1:

.•

I

'
••

CIUCAGO ( UPI ) - The
Big Ten opens its llli!aine
double . r ound -r o bin
conference
basketball
schedule today with three
teams ranked in the nation's
top 20, but only one unbeaten
club, Minnesota.
Rated the favorite for the
crown, heading into the
regular season, was No. 3
ranked Michigan, runnerup
to Indiana for tlle NCAA
championship last year and
boasting a 7-1 record this
season. Its only defeat was by
one point in a double
overtime against Providence.
The Wolverines play lwo
games this week , both at
borne, and it would he an
upset should Michigan lose
either. Northwestern, whose
.2-7 record is the poorest in the
conference , plays on the
Wolverines' floor l'hursday in
the season opener arid
Wisconsin, 4-4 so far, appears
on Saturday.
· Minnesota, with a 9-0
record, pliiJs only one game,
at home against Iowa, whose
9-1 record ranks second best
in
the
league
in
noncoliference competition.
Iowa likewise has only one
game.·
Purdue, in a tie for No. l8 in
tlle national rankings, plays
an intrastate game at Indiana
Thursday and at Ohio State
Saturday: The Boi)ermakers
have a 6-3 record, Indiana 5-4

·I

·

YPSILANTI, Mich. (UP!)
Senior guard Tommy

NO CLEARANCE! NO TAX SALE!
JUST GOOD HONEST DEALS FOR
~liijiliiEARNED

ctmASS

Harris scored 21 points and
tllree teammates contrlbu~ed
15 each Wednesday night to
lift Bowling Green to a 103-62
Mid-American Conference
victory
over
Eastern
Michigan. ,
.. The win boosted the
Falcons to ~ over aU and I-ll
in the league wtlile the
Hurons dropped to 5-S on the
season and ().2 in MAC play.
Norvain Morgan, Ron
Hammye and Dan Shumaker
had IS points apiece for the
• Falcons.
Junior forward Kenny Harmon led Eastern witll 16
points while John Boteler had
12.
Bowling (/reen led from the
start, holding a 47-22 lead at
the half.

V8, H.T.. P .S., ,A. C.. V.T.

I

I

II LUMBER, HARDWARE .&amp;
I

niinois , Indiana, Michigan,

Northwestern, Purdue and
Wisconsin, will play in the
afternoon on Saturday.

Wedn es da y's
Ohio Coll ege

Ba s k e tb a ll R esults
U ni t ed Press I n t erna ti ona l
Cjncmn a t1 61 Tem ple 46

Bow l 1ng Gr ee n

10 3 Ea '&gt; l

M ich . 61

M ia m 1 66 Kent State 63
Tol edo 82 Oh1 o Univsity 66

Cl e v el a nd State 71 t. kr on 70
Yo u nq s town S late d6
North ern I llino is .\6
Xavi er 62 Campbellsvi l l e ,
Ky . 56

Wes tm inster . Pa 84
Bntdwin Wallace 68
Kenyon 73 Woost e r 71
·
M ou nt Un ion 85 Ohio N o r
thern 81
·~·
Ott e rb e1rl n'"'M ar ietta 70
De f ianCe 82 Findlay 7d , ot

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BUILDING SUPPliES

Bowling Green is 102-62 winner

Reader suffers motion sickness
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - What
is happening to me while ex·
periencing motion sickness? I
have hall motion sickness of
different degrees depending
on the vehicle in motion. ,
. Thank good n-e-G s. for
Dramamint\;'lilllibugh if !try
to read or carry on a conver·
sation, I feel myself working
against the Dramamine.
I experienced \frrible mo- .
lion sickness en a sailboat
and a bus ride that was extremely fast, on a winding
and hilly road. Could I have
helped myself in anotller
way J I am not nervous about
anyvehicles-includingjets.
. DEAR RE:ADER - Some
people are more susceptible
to moti~n sickness than
t~ ·'rq, lt i~-generally believ"t motion siCkness is
.,,, ed to overstimulation.of
' the three little balance canals
lthe labyrinth) ol each ear.
[helle work like a.carpenter's
level. When you tilt your head

Big Ten has 3
national powers

Francis understoOd.
"That's part of football," the Patriots' tight end said to
Atkinson. "I know you didn't do it purposely, I ducked my head
·at the wrong time, that's aU . It wasn't your fault."
George Atkinson is finishing his ninth season with the
Raiders, playing cornerback as a rookie, he was bu&lt;ned
frequently by any number of wide receivers, notably Don
Maynard of tlle Jets, who snared 10 passes for 212 yards in the.
famed "Heidi" game of 1968.
The following year Atkinson was no longer a cornerback. He
was a safetyman, and realized he wouldn't be around long if he .
didn't change his style of play . He had to be more aggressiVe.
"I made up my mind I wasn't going to he pushed around
anymore," he promised himself.
.
Atkinson became a different player altogether . Otllers mthe
league began calling him a head-hunter. His reputation grew
following last year's AFC title game with Pittsburgh when
Lynn Swann had to he helped off the field after Atkinson put a
headlock on him and slammed him onto the frozen turf.
In tllis year's opening game with the Steelers, Atkinson hit
Swann with his forearm and Steeler Coach Chuck Null made
reference to the Raiders' "criminal element" when Swann was
found to have suffered a concussion.
The episode resulted in Atkinson and Noll being fined $1,500
apiece by NFL Commissioner Pete Rozelle. Atkinson stll11s
appealing his !\no and has a $3 million slander suit going
against Noll .
"I don 't go around breaking people's noses or try~g I?hurt
anyone " Atkinson said to the group of newsmen listemng to
him at 'tlle table , "l don't hold grudges, eitller. A couple of
years ago, Nat Moore, I believe it was,,hit me in tlle back, I fell
into a pile and broke my arm. Sure 1! was a cheap shot. He
came up oo me from behind."
.
As a kid in Savannah, Atkinson used to hang around the
basebaU park there and shine tlle shoes of such players as
Hawk Harrelson, Cookie Rojas, Chico Cardenas and To~y
Harper simply to get into tlle game for nothing. He was lim1d
tllen , -but isn't now.
"This is football, and you gotta take care of yourself,". he
said to the writers at tlle table. "If I become less aggressive,
you know what you'd say in your columns• 'George Atkinson
works down at the car wash now."'

~~:hoU:~ke:~~;""~ ~

'74

Vinton Countt on Saturday . A • lt down to come home with a
win over fav~ Jackson or win . Ja ckson has bench
talented Vinton could really strength, and they like to us•
a fuU court, man to man
lift his teani.
Allen Stewart , ~ 6'3" pivot press. Their offense likes to
man, will once again start at run with the baU, so the
the center spot, while Dale Marauder bench will have to
Browning and Alan Dodson, be ready to play. Greg Witte,
both seniors, will again he at Tim Scltes and Brian
Hamilton will be three of the
tlle forwa rd posts.
Senio r playmaker and subs who usually see quite a
letterman Steve Randolph •bit of action for Meigs.
Meigs will he playing a
will be back at his ·guard
deliberate
offense, waiting
posi tion, and junior Kenny
fo
r
the
perce
ntage shot .
Yo ung has bee n proving
will
mean a lot in
Rebounding
himself capable lately and
a
Meigs
win,
and
so will fo uls .
will get the starting nod at the
The
Marauders
are
last in the
Other·guard post.
in
rebounding,
and
league
The Jronmen will start
have
committed
more
fouls
three men at 6'3" - Dorsey,
Bucha nan and Oiler. Two than any other team, nearly
guards at 5'10" are Harless always having men in foul
and MacDonald, and one of trouble.
The Marauders may have
the Ironmen's assets is that
the
cards stacked against
all five players break double
and Ohio State 5-4,
them,
but they've· come up
Other Thursday games wiU figu res consistently.
wjth
a
few surprises 'in ' the
AI Berger's ~rew plays a
he Illinois 8-4 at Ohio State
past
,
and
'they just may do it
fast paced game, and the
and Wisconsin at Micliiga~ Marauders will have to slo w again this weekend.
State 3-6, while on Saturday
'
Dlinois will play at Indiana,
Nortllwestern at Michigan ,---------~---,-,
State and Purdue at Ohio
State in the re gional
television game.
The conference wiD play
most of its games on a
Thursday-Saturday foremat
this year, abandoning the ·
Tuesday,:Saturday schedule
of recent years. There will be
games on only four Mondays
and one_Tuesday during the
season .
All Thursday games will he
at night, but six schools,

Coach
Ron Logan's
Marauders, off to a slow 1-4
start ,·have shown signs of a
winning team, droppin g
Athens and playing a- fin-e
game against Ironton before
faDing. The Ma rauders' last
game was December 17 when
they lost to powerful Logan,
already the classiest team of
the league by far.
Coach Logan believes this
weekend is important to his
Meigs crew as they travel to

By Greg Bailey
Meigs Marauder ca~ers,
after a long holiday break,
take to the hardwood again
Friday ni ght when they
travel to Jackson, to tangle
with Coach AI Berge r's
lronmen.
J ackson, although not
picked to finish high in the
SEOAL, is off to a fine 6-2
start and already owns an
upset victory over highly·
touted Ironton.

purpos~."

_
••

swaths on ea~h sweep.
.
bo
t f
ani
1 1
Another tanker was lost to
RACINE - Mrs. Iva Orr (formerly of. the Plants
W· ou o ur urn ue "":
the AUantic three weeks ago. received word Sunday of the area ); one son, John H. 'contracts with '1!1 utilities, •
The 640-foot Liberian-flag · death of Mrs. Julia Eileen Norris, Cora polls, Pa. ; one incl~g Duquesne Ugh! Co. ::
Argo Merchant broke up on Norris at the East Live~l brother, Steve Mick, East of Pittsbla'gh.
-;.~
Nantucket Shoals, dumping C1ty Hospital after sulfermg Liverpool; three sisters, Mrs. . At stake are 65 mUUon ·:
7.6 million gallons of a stroke Thur,sday of last Anna Bentz and Mrs. Helen "'pounds of uraniwn valued at "
industrial oil into the ocean. week.
Danley , both of East about f.!.5 billlon.
;
Prevailing northwesterly
She was born Oct. 27, 1900 Liverpool and Mrs. Mary
Duquesne Light and two ::
winds drove the 270-rnile oil at East Liverpool to Henry McLaughlin, Sarasota, Fla.; others sued here to recQver w
slick seaward but tlle Coast and Mary Bacho ~lck. ~
three grandchildren and four llleir share of the fuel, whUe
Guard said it could- circle
Mrs. Norris was1\jn€mher great-grandchildren.
llle other suits . ha,ve heen ~
back and · threaten Cape of the Saint Anne's Catholic
Burial was at · Saint consolldated in a federal ~
Hatteras.
Church at East Liverpool.
Elizabeth Cemetery at Wells- court in Vltglnla.
·:
She is survived by her ville by the Mac Lean
In separate f~eral court :
"One of our chief concerns
is what happens to the oil husband , Lamire Norris Funeral Home of Wellsville. action
In
Chicago, ~
hits
the
Gulf
Westinghouse
h!IS
sued
Gulf ·t
When l
and other members of the ~
Stream," Coast Guard
alleged cartel lor triple 4
Spokesman Doug White said.
.~
damages of fl.5 bUlion. That
"If it should get into tlle Gulf
trial has not begun.
_:
.
(Continued from page I)
St ream, ••
uoere •s no way to
Gulf Ia expected, to be tbe ",
know which way it will montll," he continued. "It darn near takes every dime we get onlv member of the alleged ~
"
from Social Security to live on."
'
·
·
cartel that will take the ,:
·tra vel ·
He said tlle spill might
Pridemore and hia l)'ile, Stella, 77, were returning from 11 witness ·stand In tlle trial ::
-·
whatever level of motion.a used to prevent motion move toward-Cape Hatteras, neighborhood grocery store when two men forced their way
or
slice
fllrough
tlle
Gulf
·
into
tbeir
East
Side
home.
''One
of
them
grabbed
me
on
the
=~
~
J:~=~
person is regularly exposed sickness. Jt · is an an·
to, and whert the exposure tihistaminic and does make Stream to menace the fishing shoulder and whirled me around," Pridemore said. "Then pop, suit are localed outside the .,
changes, either increasing or you drowsy. There are other grounds of Icelan4.
he hit me."
•
subpoena range or ·'Ute. ,!
decreasing, symptoms ol mo- medicines that are ,
Allegheny County court.
:
tion sickness occur.
sometimes used. Some in•
We -worried about this in clude medicines to
regard to the space program. counteract the drowsiness.
TIIED.ILYSEHTIND.
~
DEVOTED TOniE
•
We thought that when gravity
You may he able to help
IN'I'I'JlEIJ'I' or
•·
COLUMBUS
(UPI)
-The
Special
hearings
were
beld
term
basis
even
though
the
was no longer a factor it yourself when you notice an
MEIGIIUION AJW'
!
Publlc
Utilities
Commission
last
month
·
by
the
Public
compaey
occulonally
pays
it
CHEITEII L. TANND!ILL
'4
might cause a temporary attack starting. Lie ba,ck as
Kut.Ed.
• .
reaction and that wheli the much as possible and press of Ohio has decided not to Utilities Comml.ssion ol Ohio subsidiary more lor coal than
IIOIII:IIT IIOII:JUCII
~
after
ptelbninary
findings
Ioree
'
the
Columbus
&amp;
lt
pays
Independent
"
CIIy•
astronauts returned to earth your head against the seat or
Publilhed 1111y netpt So....Oy ~
after a long space v0yage it a pillow. Shut your eyes or·at Southern Ohio Electric Co. to tllat the company waa paying suppliers.
b)'The~\ .1: 1 cyPubUahlrwComo ...
Th~ . c'Ommiuloners,
might he a problem. There least focus on a fixed point. make rebates I'UMing into too much to Us aub.sidiary for
any, Ill Court St., -..y, Oblo ~
41181J. Ollkt ~ ... ..
were some reactions, but These hints may help, but tlle millions of dollars to poor quality coal that could however, ordered the firm to
2\511. EdltoriaiPhoneiJD.2111. ·
:
the lm(l'ove the efficiency of Its
they were tolerable.
very sehsitive people stlU . customers on 1976 fuel be obtained on
Second clau PQitall paid 11 ...
Pomtruy, Ohio.
....
Incidentally; people can he need to . take medicine to charges on the basts of ihe 'independent market. The subll~ mine operations In
NattolliJ
·
advtl'Uiinl
......,...
::·
higher
price
It
pays
PUCO
staff
concluded
the
line
wiih
audit
recommends·
trained to he resistant to ino- avoid the tinpleasant reac- ·
IIUve Ward • Grtfflth Compi.ny In- •
subsidiary
mlJies
for.
coal.
prices
represented
a
tiona,
and
to
keep
the
com·
.tion by using special chairs lion.
c., BottlrieW IJIII Gollolhor Dt•., ::
7$7 Thk'd Ave., New "'fort, N.Y. .;
"This commlulon findS temporary fluctuation in mission Informed on the price
designed to whirl tlle in·
For information on
1..17.
'
..
nothing
in
the
record
Of
this
long-term
trends
and
that
ll
pays
for
coal.
dividual about in different "Aerosol Dlingers" send 50
SublcrtDtlon ratll: Dellvtrld by •
carrier Whn tvailable 1$ LWLt pw ..
directions and llterally· over· cents for The Health Letter proceeding· lo suggest that customers benefit on the
weell. By llolclr Rolllnbor"ll'rt. :
C&amp;li&gt;E's
fuel
procurement
whole
from
the
utility's
cOil
The
cmunlaalonera
allo
orstimulate the balance , number 3-4. Send a !onB,"
l!l'\1Ce not avalllble, One lnOillth, ..
dered CirSOE to ,give
13.• . II)' mou ill Olio and II. Vo ., •
mechanism. With enough stamped, aelf-addressed lei· practices and policies have reserves.
&lt;ft Yw · ID-00; 1111 - . •
Commission
hearing
been
Imprudent
or
unreason·
cuitDmera a 11111U credit on
stimulation it is possible to ter for mailing with your reg:,':l,.~'" IIIOftlho, 11.111;
examiner
David
.
Neubauer
able,"
commlsslooers
said
·FebruarY
billings
for
a
make almost anyone sick quest to Dr. Lamb, in care ol
...., JOII': Sll •
DIOIItho, 1'1.10. ...
from excess motipn ..
this newapaper, P.O. Bux Wednesday in voting 2-0 said In hll report that the U8,2U bookkeeping , 13.110; ThrH
""'" loclldoo illlnday :
utlllty's mining operation overcbarp Jut ll1lllllllel'.
l-...1
. • ;;
DralDllmine is commonly , 1~1. Radio City Statiurt, New a!(alnlll the rebate.
benefits
customers
on
a
longYork, NY 10019.
•

.

.

kin to. cancer

7"

. Tanker. Grand z
·•h. ValliS• h es
. enit

By STEW ART POWELL
PRINZ' PLEA
BOSTON (UP!) . - The
LO~· ANGELES (UP))
tanker
Grand Zenith,
Come&lt;lian Freddie Prinz has carrying 32 crewmen and 8.2
entered ·an innocent plea to a mUiion gallons of industrial
mis demea nor c ~arge of fuel, apparently has vanished
driving under the influence of without a trace beneath the
drugs. · ·
snarljng North Atlantic that
Cou rt record s di sc losed has claimed ships and men
Wednesday that Prinz en· for centuries·.
tered the plea last week a'nd
"There's one wild card in a
was scheduled ~or trial Feb. thousand that says that ship
28.
"'--..j
·is still afloat," Coast Guard
The co-star of the "Chico Capt. Bernard Hoyland said
and the Man" television Wednesday, even before
series was arrested Nov. 5 by planes completed a sweep of
an officer who said he saw nearly 150,1100 square nilles of
him driving erratically on a ocean in a corridor 540 mUes
freeway. The officer also east oJ Cape Cod.
confiscated a presc ription · "The search for the tanker
bottle, which contained only ended at nightfall today witll
nose drops. But blood tests negative results. We are
revealed a quantity , of a changing our assumptions ...
tranquilizer.
and asswning tllat we are
looking for something much

Environment

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FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT

.
.. 391 N. 2ND AVE.

.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO ,

.. .,

992·5321

..

�t- '!be Dollly Senttnei,Middlel»rt.PtmeroY, o., Thunday, Jlll. B,lm

Grant tries psyching Raiders
BYJIMCOUR
UPI Sporll Writer
LOS ANGELES (UPl)
Bud Grant says the
Minnesota Vildnp defense is
getting too old but his Super
Bowl · coaching rival, Jolin
MaddeJ\, thinks It's aD a ploy
to fool the Oakland Jtalders.
As far as Madden Is
c:oocerned, Jim Marshail, 39,
Carl Eller, 34, and Alan Page
31, ~e as good as they're.
ever been.
"We're awfully old," Grant
ismented WedneSday, when
asked why the Minnesota
defense Wlllll't as dominating
as it once was .. "We just don't
move aroWid as quickly as we

,_
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used to."

Informed of Gra.n t's
r,emarks, the Oakland Coach
• smUed and said, "that sounds

:~~!stba':~U: ~=~:

the national rankings this .

~

COLUMBUA IUPIJ - The
first 1977 Un i ted Press In ler naliona) Oh;o High School
Boar'd of Coaches' bqsketba If
ratings with f irst .place votes

.

and won -lost r"ords ;n
parentheses
cLAss•••
Team
Po;nts
1. aarberoon I2B 7-0J
318
c

2. Coi.Linden(17 .0l

·~:. '~· '·~· ..a : Mi.ddl e,to,wnt.J,.fl. . tJ

,,.....

..

4. Cin. Eiderl16·11
5 Elyr;a 118·01
6. DaytOn Roth { 6-0)
7. Lebanon I " ·01
a. so. Soulh &lt;a 1I
'10.· cr.
E . TeCh 17·' 1
Newar
&lt; &lt;10 OJ

211
119 .

.

Irish
drop
.third
by the sharp drop it took in

.. on top of
AAAheap
.

like a psych job to me. Hell,
that's an old fashioned qeych
job."
,
'
"Actually," added Grant,
the straight-faced, put-on
artist, ''therealreaaon Is that
offensive linemen have
gotten so much better. You
don't have big, fat olfenalve

United Press International
ll Notre Dame wu stunned

Barterton

•'

, BESTDEFENSE ·
NEW YORK (UPl) Middle
Unehae..r -raelt
Unemen any more."
"I think there'll be some
Lambert
of the Pltllbarlh
On the second day of secires,'' he said. "! don't
Sle•len
aad defeasive
preparations here for Super think you'll see a 14-10 game.
18cltle
Willy
Chambers of
Bowl XI at the Rriae Bowl oo Not with these QUBrterhacks
the
Cbtcaco
Bean were
and
the
talent
there
is
at
the
Sunday, the Vlktn«s' Oluck
selected
defeaalve
pllyera
skilled
JlOSitions.
You
'll
Foreman hinted he was ready
to all out nest season unless definitely see more scoring." ol the year Ia their
Madden was asked about reapeellve eonlereacea
Minnesota renegotiated his
c:ootract.
· Stabler, the leading passer In Wedneoday by Ualled
Pren laterullonal
"1 woo 't' play under fhls the AFC this season, and
type of contract again,'.' he Raiders' safetyman George
Lambert- received 14
emphasized. "I'm not happy Atklnaon.
votes to lead the AFC
about my coo tract ... "
'"llie amazing thing about . ballolllli, 1&lt;111111 Hve more
than co·raaaenup Coy
After holding .out lor 211 Ken,'' he replied , "other than
weeks before lhe season got the obviou,l things like his Bacon of ClacluaU and
under way, Foreman rushed talent, is his ability to abaorb I'OOtle Mite Haynes of New
for 1,155 yards and alSo lnflrlllBdon and store it. You Eaglaad, whUe Chambers
caught 55 passes in his fourth give hlni something and it reeelved 11 votes Ia the
pro year . He is completing comes out at the right time. NFC balloting to lead
"Atkinson ~ppens lobe a raanerup Tommy Hart ol
the first season of a thr,!!e·
very good football player. He San Francisco by two.
year contract.
.
Because of the presence of plays his position extremely
Ken Stabler and Fran well. H~ is aggressive but not
Tarkenton, Grant expects overly so. He plays hard and
more than a few Pc&gt;lnts to be with intensity."
scored Sunday. .

102
93
89
78

73
7
67

°

Second ten: 11
warren
Western Res . 65; 12. To ledo

A single loss at Kentucky
last week caused' the Irish to
fall from second place to
eighth in the national
rankings, and since the11 they
have lost two.
h more
h d8road
f
0
gimes, at t e an
Princeton Monday night and
surain to Villanova, 64-i12,
""e
Wednesday night.
Brothers Keith
· an.d Larry .,.
Herron teamed to lead the
Villanova troops , Keith
· g ••*"ehi•hl9points
scorm 8 ~·· -eo ··
··
andLlih'yaddingl2, three ·o!
them in the finaJ2\2 minutes
of play. Notre Dame, now 7-J,
was led by Bill Paterno with
14 'poin.ts. However, It was
Paterno who cost the Irish a
chance to force an overtime

s,o ii60 ; 13. Gro"Cily4J ; u . whenhemissedth~ftrstl)alf
canton McKinley 36 ; 15 .
Ca nton T imk en 35 ; 16 (He)
9f a one..and-one with eight
Columbus Marion Franklin
and Del;ance, 23 each ; 18 . seconds to play.
(t ie l Cincinnati St , Xavie r ,
Both · fourtharanked
Cl,eveland 5 1 Ignatius and .~€incinnati and fifth~anked
Bay Village. 22 each .
O•hers .r;m oen or mo re Alabama also appearlld io be
po ints : Princeton_..Cincinnati
upset bait before Utey' rallied
La Salle , .Ak r oiP'f centra! .
Hower . Cuyahoga Falls , from halftime deficits. The
Mass illon Perry , Xenia . Bearcals tralled Temple by
Tole do St
Johns . Lemon If ·
b
Monroe , Kettering Alter and
29-23 at ha . l lOle, ut 6--10
'!;

•

• .·

7. ( he ) Elmwood (l7 1)
7 ( tie l Carlisle {0. 1)

60
60

' · Delphos Sl. John (16 21
10 . ( t 1e ) Buckeye Sou th
&lt;16-01
10. llle l Ridgewo.oo IBO J

58

51
51

Rover .voew 35 ; 15. Elyroa
32 ; 16 . Columbus
Ha'm illon Townsh ip 11 i 31 ,
17 . Lora in -olholk 26 ; 18 .
Indian Lake-2 5; 19. Co l.u.mbu5
Mifflin 22 : 20. New concord
John Glenn 20.

Others w i th ten or mor e
po in ts : O i)(ie , vounqstow n

Easl. l;lyrio wesl. Be,ley,
Gen oa . Ooy lesI own· ChiP ·
pewo.
Marlins Ferry, Lora .
Broo·ksl de, Ottawa G landorf,
Wa;;e rly , Washington

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Cou r t

House and ~Le~~~n.L ak ewood .
Team
~oints
I. Indian Va lley Souoh
112 6-01
187
' Morra l R;dgedal e
1
16 6 0
~;
3. Ada 12; d1
4. Mansfield 51. Peter's
116-11
sa
57
s6. Card;ngoon
II 8· 91
Windham (5 .1)
54
7. Stryker (7-01
53
a.
Oak
Hill
&lt;
6-tl
"
9. NewRiegel(17 . 1)
40
10. Slrasburo 1611
31
seco nd len . 11 . Paor;ck
Henry 36 ; 12. Versa Hies ( II

JS ; 13. southeastern CRoss)
34 ; 14 . Ayersv i lle 32 ; 15 .
Sparta Highland 29 ; 16 .
Covington
26 ;
11 . New
Bremen 25 ; 18 . Sandusky St.
. Marys 23 ; 19. Olel Lockland
Cll and ArchbOld (1) , 22each .
Others with te n or mor e
poin ts : A r canum, R i ve~ da le,
Cory
Rawso n ,
Fort

Recov ery . Map!lon , Danville ,

''

me Up."
entered

the gaine

without a point or a reho.und early in the first quarter
m the first half, had e1ght wh,en George Gervin, who
points during a 20-5 scored a game-high 30 points,
c·mcmnat
. ,. spurI an d th e · k d his third foul Mark
Bearcatscarriedonfora61- pice up
·
46 victory ' stretching their Olberding added a seasonrecord to 10-{1.
Alabama, on the .road,
tr iledFI. .da
· b
a
0r1 yasmanyas
eightpuintsearlytnlhegame
db y 47.....
.u
~. .:. ,b.:But
an
atiU:lllwue.
the Q'imson Tide finally took
the lead for good with nine · WOOSTER, Ohio (UP!) •
nunutes left to play and went Tim Appleton scored 38
on to register their lith 1!0111\liU!clucljnglh.ellnaltwo
.
~seeut1ve victory , 83-71.
with nine seconds 1d.i go
"Florida is lor real," said Wednesday night, to give
im presse d AI a b~,ma Kenyon a 73- 71 Ohi
an
. ~
coach, C. M. Newton. We Conference Northern· DiVlexpeoded a lot to stay in there sion victory over Wooster.
. th'e fir st half. I'ffi surpr ised 1. The 6-7 12
.. Appleton , top
W stayed in that:clo·ae." .·
SCOrer in the conference,
Seventh-ranked
North rebounded in a missed shot
Carolina e.flectively withninesecondsleft after
minimized 7-foot Wayne , theLords,now7-Joveraliand
ROllins and breezed to a 91-'3 l.Oin the OAC, stalled for the
triumph over Clemson. final 48 seconds.
However, Tar Heel Coach
Appleton, 'llho also had 19
Dean Smith missed a lot of rebounds, hit 11 of 24 from the
fun - he was ejected after floor and 8 of 9 from the
drawing his third technical charity line.
loulwith41secondaleltinthe
WayneAllisonliad17points
first half.
to pace Wooster , now 11-3
Elsewhere, Wake Forest overall and 0.1 in the OAC.
edged Virginia, ~ ••, Provio1'"W
dence. squeezed by St.
Joseph 's, 65-84 an d--{J~al
Roberts had a 6&amp;-50 victory
over Oklahoma.
Also, North Carolina State
trounced Western Carolina,
defeated
' 107..,'9• Vanderb"t
u
Georgia, 72-69, ' Mississippi
State had an 81-79 win oVer
Auburn, and Duke doubled
the score on Davidson, 11J2..51.

Calho1tc

•

Bob Miller , held .

Team C LAS S AA Points
1. c; : Calh . La1in 17 10.01 10! "
2 coshOcron 14 a.oJ
oa
3A&lt;. So u!hl67 1)
97
4. wellsville (5 .1)
79
5. Col SI. Chor . &lt;6.2J .
66
' B!ll elonra ;ne i4 8-IJ
64

; :
·, •
,

.' .'

""
pepped

center

Second
n1ne :
12 ;
Wheele r sb.u rg (2) 37 ; 13
S~ndy V~lley 36 ; 14 , Wa r sa~

~

28minutestoleadtheSpurs
to a !37-!33 VI'ctory OVOf .the
Oenver Nuggets. He sank 9ol
15 .shots from the field, made
10of 11 free throws, had three
assists and one steal.
He also gave further eredence to his nickname by
·
scoring nine ofhis points 1n
the fourth qUarter, including
five free throws in the last
2:20 to stop a Denver raUy.
" II really got me going
knowin g everyone - was
waiting for me," Silas sai(!,
" ' · lstoodoutthere 1·treaUy

Syl,. an ia sou rhv iew 111

, •
r •

..

weeksagq,~ored2BpoJntsin

Pe eb les ,
Dalton ,
Ripley ,
Ka lid a ,
Fra nkli.n

Sebring , Mogadore ,
Liberty
Union ,
Frenk rort Ad.e n a ,
Monroeville and
Monroe .

Silas

Appleton cans

36 for Kenyon

l

high 22 points.
l!!!bby..:....Jones and David
Thompson led Denver with '1:/
points ~ach and Dan Issei
scored 26.
The Nuggets played Part of
the game without Coach
Larry· Brown, who was
ejected at 7:29 of the third
period after receiving his
second technical foul.
Elsewhere in the NBA,
Philadelphia beat Los
Angeles, 117-114, Golden State
defeated Buffalo, 118-109 ,
Washington downed the New
York Nets, !07,92, Detroit
topped Phoenix, 118-115,
Indiana dumped Chicago,
1011,94, Houston tripped the
New York Knicks, 108-107,
and Seattle edged Boston, 9493.
76ers 117, Lakers 1M:
Julius Ervlug had a gamehigh 26 points and George
McGinnis 20 \'Jiead Atlantic
Division - leading Phila·
delphia .
Lloyd
Free
scored 12 of his 19 points in
the first period when the
76ers grabbed a 38-~ lead to
put . the game out of reach.
Kareem Abdui.Jabbar led the
Lakers with 28 poiilts .
Warriors 118, Braves 109:
Phil Smith scored a teamhigh 24 points, Jamaal Wllkes
23 and Robert Parrish 18 as
Golden State rallied to beat
Buffalo. The Braves, who
were ahead 85-66 with 5:24
left in third quarter, were led
by Randy Smith with 33
points.
BuUets 107, Nets !li::
Phil Chenier and Leonard
Robinson each scored 28
points to send Washington to
Its fourth straight victor)&lt;.
Elvin Hayes added 21 for the
Bullets who boosted their
record to the .500 mark for
the first time since Nov. 20.
,P,llltoos 118, SIIDI ill:
O!rls Ford's basket with 56
.seconds left climaxed a wild
l.Q.urth period, sending Detroit
to its loth victory in Its last 14
games~ H~ara Porter's
jumper tied tlil! ·gillle at 114
before .Ford connecied,~b
Lanier finished with 30 poin!l
and M.L. Carr had 23 to pace
the Pistons. Alvan Adams
topped the SWII with 24.

Bowl

GENERAL
REVENUE

'

"If there's a
way .thene~

'

.r .
~ -

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SHAAINQ

•

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$1 , 121
Tf?t

OvnnQ IN lllfiOCl

1
• ACCQI.INI NO. l6

..

ttu~ ~rnHr

31.

''

' ,.,•'

.. .
.
'I

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1r
(.

'
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'
~ '~

'

:J 052 Oil

StiPIO TOWNSHIP
60.5
COUNTY TREASURER
MEIGS fSOUNTY

,

o40i' 10

~0710

li10i0~~J"~: :~': ::0~~ ~·~~!'TO I II I

S11l ,

1 11...,.,. Snau"'il r vn"~om JUI~

Rtcll¥f!l

I, TillS IIIIU llKtfi'IDIIll , 1i76

1$1,121.
t _ __;,=C::,

c,,cl"..:IRKoo.....,
IJU'Y 1. T97S rru OtctmMr JT 1111e1

l '"'" .. '

• (lr

4 f•MI
"

OT H~

S89J.

iSOO&lt;IIyl

_ Lobo" -~-'=~-

15 TOW.S

... H~I

6 fur&gt;lll llehlrn.cl IO ORS (If ..VH)
/ TO ...

5193.

OENEII.Al

~OIIUOCII•~rn 0~11 fll00ti1 11 F

llo s Sum Of lines 1, 2, ~ . 4

. ..

funo-A~IH-

ACTUAL USE REPORT

REY!NUI
SHARING

ao~U NMI~~

COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP

COLUMBIA TOWN SHIP
·TWP. CLERK ,
MEIGS COUNTY
ALBANY.' OHIO 4S710

'

"•----o· ~r~

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•

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I:

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~f

The new 1976 tax law is full of.cnanges.
New credits ... new deductions ... r]ew
rules that affect you and every taxpayer.
aut Block people are ready to help save
you money by taking every allowable
deduction and credit.

H&amp;R BLOCJt
THE INCOME fAX PEOPLE

Open 9 A.M. · 6 P.M. Wttkdlys, 9·5 Sat.
Pllone 992-1795
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY

A1nhcrs1 69 J\ ril I fit I 5)
Ar:my 1~ Ruffalo 56

90th St., Cleveland, Ohio
44106, Room 5 N. 20.

,l,S5S.

r

INSPECTION SET

DAN'S
318 N. 2nd Ave.
OPEN

9:00-5:00
Monday thru Salu'&lt;lf•Y .

I .

Annual inspection of
Pomeroy Chapter 80, Royal
Arch ·Mason s has been
scheduled for Tuesday, Jan.
2li at the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple, 7:30 p.m. Dinner
will be served preceding the
work in the mark ma;1er
· degree. Ladies are invited to
the 6:30p.m. dinner.

F Dickinson 64 IOM 62

Fairmnt 91 D&lt;w ls&amp;Eikins too
Gl en\1 1 8.! M Harvey 87, ot
Holy Cr oss 109 AsSmption 73
Juniata d7 Genysburg .u
K inq s Point 76 Yesh iva 45
Lll) HI Can isius 57
Manhal!an 81 BroWn 68
Monml h N J 94 Shepl1erd 86
Pl1a Text 49 Cl1eynv St ..i7
Prov 65 Sl. Joe Pa . 64
Rol lns 82 Albny 5 1 N Y 7'!
Rutgers 89 P enn Sl n
Seton Hall 81 Buck ne ll 68
So uthmptn 74 King 's Pa . 63
Syracuse 87 Fordham 68
Upsala 77 Mrav ian 74, Jots
V illanova 64 Notr e Dame 67
West Virg inia 100 Pil l 91
Wheeling 76 Edinboro 70
Sout h
AlabBma 83 Florida 71
Bll r mine 115 Ind . Cent it:?
Duke 102 Davidson 51
F la . St. 91 W . Ken tuc ky 73
Gq . Tech 97 Cl1ar les ton 76
Mississipp i Sl Bl Auburn 79
Morgan 5 1 90 R Morr is 87
N .C St . 107 W. Carolina 49
No. Carolina 91 Clemson 63
No. l&lt;y . 74 Ky Wesleyan 58
vande rb ilt 71 Georgia 69
Va . Tech 96 .Tex . WrS ieyan 71
VMI 73 Roanoke 57
Wake For es t 67 Vi rginia 63
Wabash 73 centre
Midwest
Bowling Grn 1103 E Mich , 62
,C Michig~n 71 Ball St 69
Cinc innati 61 Templ e d6
Cleve land St 71 Akron 70
Defiance 82 F ind lay 7d
De Paul 85 Sl. Bonnie 7d
Ft Hays 5 1 H Kan . Newm n 65
Illinois Sl. 74 Paci f ic 56
Kenyon 73 Woos ter l1
Miami 0 66 Kenl 51 63
MI. ~Inion 85 0 . Norlhrn S l
. Qtl cr bcin 72 Marietta 70
Pitt sburg 51 81 Drury 75
Rose Hu lm an 70 Greenvl -IB
Tay lor 109 Manch ester 76
Tole{Jo B? Ohio U 66
Xav ier 0 . 82 ('v ille 56
Yngs l wn St dB No. Iowa 46
Southwest
East Te)(a s 58 Sthwst r n J3
New Me)( . 109 Prllnd 51 87
Oktahomq Sl 88 Mo . '~l~rn 72
Oral ROber ts 68 Ok la homa 50
Pan American 94 Ark St 83
Sl Mrv 's Tex 85 S F Astn 67
w es t
Colo Co li Bil Neb . Wes l yn 77
N C Chrllle 80 Hawa ii Hi to 6-1

n

Meigs

Property
Transfers
Charles E, Griffith, Maxine
Griffith , Gary Griffith,
Juanita Griffith to David
Alan Griffith , .31 acre,
Chester.
Raymond E. Hensler, Doris .
L. Hensler to David A.
Hensler, Rebecca E. Hensler,
5.48 acres, Sutton.
United States to State of
Ohio, 4.57 acres, Lebanon.
United States to State of
Ohio, 11.86 acres, Letart.
Carl . Barnhart , Velma
Barnhart to Foster G. Niday,
Rosy L. Niday, 1.888 acres,
Olive.

'

Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Company wil l.hold two public met!fin'gs
to discuss with area residents the Company 's intention to build two 375 megawatt"
coal fired generating units along the Ohio Aiver, The first unit is proposed to be .·.~,;, .
in service early in 1985.
·- " .-:::.:
Th~ primary site is known as ,t he Newbury site and is located in.:fJ.!'srying(on

Get
18
mobile TV cart
FREEl with the purchase of this
this 5

County near Belpre, Ohio. The alternate site is in the Great Bend area across the Ohio
River from Ravenswood, West Virginia.

•

Complete copies of all the Company's work to date and their Letter of Intent
are ava.ilable for review at the following locations:
·
·
'

Athens Public Library · ,
Washington·County Library, BelprB Branch .
Pomeroy Public LibrBry
J~eklfin County Library, Rmmswood Br~nch
Plrk~r~burv41ood County Libmry. · ,,

95 value

'NirH

...

®

lO.. H

'

'

,7-compact
'11

-- .. .

HEATERS

DIAGONAL

wood-gratn Ame rtcan Walnut.

Solici-State Super V1deo
Range Tuning System with
Synchroma\iC 70-Posl lion UHF
Chann el Selector. Automat iC
Tint Guard . VHF and UHF
Antenn as.
tOO% Solid-Stale Til an ·
26bV Chassis
• Pa1en1ed Power Sentry
Voltage Regulating Syslel"
Brilliant Chromacolor
PiciUre Tube

Monday,.January 17

OFF

I

I
I

OR

ON AI! MJOD, GAS- AND
COAL BURNING HEATERS
LEFT IN STOCK.

Tuesday, Janu•rv 18

-

•

-

.AlliEN'O

'·-:

•

r

Ani~NS

.I

·&lt;r

CO.

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COOlVIUoE •

Southern L~l (Racine) High Sch9!ll/· •- - -- • • ·-- -. __ _
7 00
'
. M~IGS CD.
: P.M. ~; ".

~

~

I
I............... ___ ..

Grtet Bend Site•~

992-28ll .

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The PLAZA • G3850W
Dr~mat1c decorator styling•
Cabi net fln•sh ed in simulated

All intlrSitBd fllrSOnl "' urgld to lf(end.

Little Hocking Elementary School
7:00P.M.

.

portable
TV.
.

Col unibus and Southern is interested in public input before the formal ~.
environmental work program, needed to prepare an application, begins. ReRresentatives
from the consulting firms hired by Columbus and Sout~ern to study th~ eQvironmental
and economic impacts of such a plant will also be present at the meetings.

-~ ·

POMEROY, OHIO

..

..

..

only

__

·

Hurryl ·.
Come in todayl
0

Ingels

Furni~ure
992-2635

I 0 •'I

)

...

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St _'I •
! Sin nmgs
:
I

Two classes beginning

\

The

H11is Career Center, R.w
Grande, plans to .offer two
classes M Med1cal Terminoiogy m February 1917.
The first course, Medical
Terminology lformal!.y
Medical Recorru I will inelude bas1~ medtcai related
terms. It w11l he offered.each
Mond ay and Wednesday
evem.ng from 6:30 to 9;~0
p.m. m room 208. The startmg
·date is Jan. 31, and the ending
date is March 9. There will be
a total of 33 instructional
hours. The fee is ·125.
The second course, Inlermediate- Medical Terrninology will inrlnrl f':

I

Stand.nq ~

w.

L Pet .

w

Gil.

1,
3' .
:·

L Pe t .

Houston
20 13 606 GB
Cleveland
21 l A 600
San Antonio
?0 17 541 1
New Orleans
19 17 528
Washington
17 17 .5.00
Attanra
13 16 333 10
Western Con ference
Midweo;t Di vision

l: ;

W. L . Pet.

~Edu cation

I rhlpartment of the I!uckeye

By United Press tnternattonal
Eastern conference.
Atlantic Division
Phil"delphia 10 14 588
NY Knicks . 1A 11 Sl.t
Boston
17 18 d96
Bu ff alo
1~ n
405
NY Nets
17 7d 333
Central Division

Adult

GB

Denver
?d 12 .667
Detroit
21 15 .583 3
Indiana
IR 20 .AH 7
K ansas Ci ty
17 20 459 • 71 ~
Chicago
11 71 JM IQ! ,
Milwaukee
10 27 270 J4l ~
Pac ific Division
W L Pet. GB
Portland
75 n 6511
Los Ange les
22 ld .61 1 2
Golden State
19 15 .559 4
Se att le
' \'20 19 ,513 5 1 ~
Phoeni x
1&lt;4 19 . 424
51 '
· Wednesday's Resu lts
Golden St. 118 Buffalo 109
Pl1 il &amp;delphia 117 Los Ang 9.:!
San Antonio 137 Denver 13)
Washington ' l 07 N Y Ne ts 97
Detroit 118 Phoenix 1l5
I ndiana 109 Chicago 94
Ho us ton 108 N Y Knicks 107
Seallle 94 Boston 93
!On l y games sc h edu led I
Thursday's Games
In diana at Attanta
Golden Stat e at Cl eveland.
Bu ffalo at Milwaukee
(Qn t ~ games scheduled )
Friday 's Gam es
Los Angeles at NY Nets
Clevetan~ at Phila delph ia .
Denver at Hous ton
Phoeni)( at washington
NY Kn icks at Ch icago
Milwaukee at Port lan d
New Orl eans at Por tland
San Antonio at seattle
!Only games sched uled )

The Odds &amp; Ends Shop

Review committee will meet
-.ATII_!':NS - J. B. Vanity, Margaret Chirk Oakfield
Jr., Chairman of the Inc ., Convalescent Cen ter
Areawide Review Committee which proposes a new 100 hed
of Ohio Valley Health Ser- facility lor Logan, Ohio. The
vices Foundation. · Inc., has second proposal is for a 100
announced that the com- bed facility in Athens, Ohio
mittee will hold a meeting sponsored by Athens Health
Thursday, January 13, at the Services , Inc.
; Ohio University Inn here. The
general business session at 7
~ PTA TO MEET
p. m. is open to the public.
SALEM CENTER. - The
The agenda in clu des Salem Center PTA will meet
consi deration of two · ap- Monday. Jan.lO at 7:30p.m.
plications for reimbursement · Miss Rebecca Triplett's third
eligibility of expenses related • grade class will present the
to ca pital expenditures for program and a travelog of
proposed nursin g home California will be given by
facilities. The first is the Mrs. Carol Evans.

M{\NY UNUSUAL
NOVELTY ITEMS.

.
ASPINSUES
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Rep . Les Aspin, P-Wis.. is
suing the Navy to obtain
secret intelligence projections , which he believes show
the Soviet · navy to be
shrinking - not expanding as
some Navy spokesmen claim.
"The U. S. Navy is getting
billions of additional dollars
in its budget because of Its
'Russians - are .. coming'
campaign" Aspln said. "But
before Congress and the
taxpayers are taken for s
ride, they should be given tl:e
complete facts about the
Soviet IJeet. "
·
Aspin flied his suit in
federal District Court in
Madison, Wis., under the
Freedom of Information Act.
HAMMER TO COURT
LOS ANGELES (UP))
JuUus Hammer, the 47-yearold son of Industrialist Ar·
mand Hammer, pleaded
innocent Wednesday !o three
misdemeanor counts of
receiving stolen property and
one of possession of narcotics.
Hammer was arrested last
month by sheriff's deputies
who searched his home in
Pacific Pallsldes and conllacated an antique dagger,
achool ring and silver-dollar
helllhey !!Bid were takei&gt; in ;
recent robberies. They also
confiscated a quantity of a
dePressant drug .

0

9

SOMETHING FOR
EVERYONE .

20 · 30 • 40% OFF
ON All MERCHANDISE
Located on Rt. 7 below Middleport.
Open Noon til 6 p . m . Tues . thru Sat.,
Sunday 1-6.

SPECIAl STORE HOURS - THRU JANUARY
9:1S TO 5 PM MON. THRU THURS.
9:15 TO 8 PM FRI. &amp; SAT.

MEN'S '

LADIES'
1 LOT OF LAD! ES'

MEN'S SUITS·
Reg. $60 to
$140 .00
-'

Sizes\

Je to .SO Regular
~

381o 50 Long
~6 to 46 Shorl

Sale $42.00
to $98 .00

SUBURBAN COATS
Ny [Ons , Wools, Viny ls

REG . .

$45 lo $100 .

REDUCED 30%

SALE

13 i.5o

to s7o

LADIES' PANT SUITS .

REDUCED 30% -

Sizes 8 to 20-=Potyester Knits &amp; Blends

•
WHA ~tandings
By United Pr ess International
E ast
W L T Pts. GF GA
Quebec
23 15 1 47 173 l JO
Indian a pis 19 I S 1 .. do 11 7 125
Minnesota 17 17 4 38 1IB 119
New Eng tnd 17 20 4 38 136 145
Cincinnati
17 17 1 36 ' 1.58 133
Birmnghm 1&lt;1 27 I 29 143 165
West
W l T PIS. GF GA
San Diego
24 13 2 50 135 119
Houston
20 15 4 dJ 137 1?4
Wi nn ipe~
10 15 1 d1 161 130
Edmon ton 16 22 1 33 103 137
Calgary
15 18 2 J2 108 108
Pll oenix
14 12 1 30 1?6 170
Wednesday' s Results
San Diego 2 New England 1
Hous ton 4 Calgary 3
!Only games sched uled 1
Thursday 's Games
- ! No games sc h edu led )
Friday 's Gam es
Birm ingham at Cincinnati
Calqary !II Edmon ion
Houston al M innesgta
Indianapolis at Winn ipeg
Ou~bec &lt;'It New England
!Only games scheduled )

,,

WORKSHOP SI~ATED

~

NHL Standing s
By Un i ted Press Inte rn ational
Ca mpbell Conference
Patrick Div ision
W l T Pts . GF GA
Phila
23 B 9 55 150 107
NY lslandrs 22 9 6 50 179 9?
Allan 1a
19 1~ 7 45 130 173
N·v Rang er s 16 1 ~ 11 43 154 143
Smy ttle Divi si on
W l T Pt s. GF GA
St Louis
17 18 5 39 115137
Chicago
14 70 6 34 173 1&lt;15
Co lorado
1013 6 76 111 142
Vancouver 11 ?8 .4 76 11111 70
Mi nnesota
8 21 9 25 107 157
Wo:~ les Co nff!re nc e
Norris Oivi sion
W l T Pts . G F GA
Montreal
79 5 6 64 19? 90
Pittsburgh 16 16 7 39 12·t 132
los Ange les 13 18 10 36 130 133
Detro i t
13 21 s 31 11514 1
Washing In 11 23 5 27 103 154
Adams Di vision
W l T Pts. GF GA
Bu ff alo
24 10 4 52 140 93
Boston
24 12 3 51 151 121
Toronto
19 16 6 4~ 155 137
Clevel and
1123 7 29 116147
Wednesday's Results
Phila d NY Range r s 4
· A llan Ia 4 Vancouver 1
M innesota 5 Los Angeles 7
Chicago ' 2 Buffalo 1
Toronto 6 Co lor aao 4
Bos ton 3 Cleve land 7
Thu rsday' s Gam es
St Lou is i!lt Philadelph ia
Montreal a t Buffalo
P1IISburgh a t washington
Minneso ta a l Det ro i t (01'\iy games sche'du.led l
Friday 's Gam es
NY Rangers al ColOrado
N v lslan df:'rs at At lan1 a '
Va ncouver at Cleveland
!Onl y games sc h eCiu tedJ

•

WIFE SURPRISED
Mike Werry hosted a surprise birthday party for his
ti ssues, skeletal, muscular . A representative of the wife , Carla, at the couple's
system, nerVous system, Ohiu Department of Health Belpre home on New Year's
circulatory system.. digestive will be in Pomeroy Wednes· night. Joining several
system, bodily Quids and d"y to conduct a workshop couples from Belpre for the
other related bodily func - and demonslr3tion on the celebra·tion were Mr. and
lions. Previous Medical Heimlj ch maneuver which i ~ Mrs. Ch•ries Werry, Mr. and
Terminology background is tite new trea tment for vic- Mr s. Jim Werry and
recommended. It will be tinlll who are choking. Two children, Jim, Randy and
offer'@d each Tuesday and sessions of 45 minutes to an Ricky, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Thursday evening in room 208 hour, one at 10:30 a.m. and Werry, and Mr. and Mrs.
the other •t i p.m. will be con·
from 6 until 9 p.m.
ducted
. The public is urged to Steve Price and Stephanie,\
The starting date is Feb. 1.
Pomeroy,
T'-J
The ending date is March 17. attend.
There will be a total of 42
'instructional hours. The fee is
$40.
..,., ·
Int erested
individuals
should register at the Adult
Educalion Office during the
week of January 24, 1977.

MEN'S SPORT COATS

Reg . $25 to $10'90

. Sizes 35to 50
Reg . $40 fo'$85- SALE S32to S68

LEISURE SUITS
...11
Sizes 36 to 46
" --Reg . $44to $90- SALE $35 to $72

REDUCED 20%

TOP COATS &amp; All WEATHER COATS
'

Sizes 36to 48
Reg . Price $45 to $90

REDUCED 20-30%
ONE RACK

SPORT S~IRTS
REDUCED 20%
MEN'S LONG SLEEVE

COLORED DRESS SHIRTS
Sizes 14'12 to 17 112

REDUCED20%

SALE S17.50 to $76.30

LADIES' SLACKS
Sizes 6 to 20
REDUCED 30%

REDUCED 20%

MEN'S LONG SLEEVE

·100% SOLID-S+-ATE

"

:---p~---l
NRA

Cent Conn 64 Un ion NY .H
Colby 90 5.1!Ji em Mass 84
Colqalc 79 Cornell U A4

and Lee . Cibrowski, Consumer Education Coordina tor for the GalliaJackson-Vinton Joint
Vocational School District.
Registration and payment of
fees will be done during the
first class session. For more
infonnation or to reserve a
place in the class, contact Lee
Cibrowski, at Buckeye Hills
·Ca reer, Center, at 245-5336,
ext. 239.

.

MAIN ST.

o .1 und1

ClSOE Schedules Public Meetings for Proposed Plant Construction

Ebersbach ·Hardware

618 EAST MAIN

Cl ~ t

Foundation, Carnegie and

T O T~I S

.

1 .. .mer~ !·

Clanic
Holstra tOO 1 , ran Pn 91
r rtirficld HlP t ehi~h 14
East
Atbriqht 1S Susquehanna 1.9

University with options for
three quarter hours of credit
at either the undergra duate
or graduate level.
The course will provide an
opportun ity for classroom
teachers to he updated in the
areas of Consumer Education
content, materials and
resourresc,;ncluding where
to get materials and
information and how to make
your own multi-media
materia ls. New teachin g
methods and strategies will
be discussed and used during
the nine week course. The
major emphasis of the course
will be on providing practical
information to the elementary and special education
teachers or major that can be
used in the classroom.
1
The course will be taught
by Dr. Shirley Slater, June
Varner, Ju.dy Matthews,
fa culty at Ohio University

''--::-;;;~­

,_

Tow

&amp;:o~irl w''

: =Ji:
l1 ~.5l[l.==

,.
.s_.,,
_;.'Stone
11

Col! r q(' Baskt&gt;fbttll Result\
By Un ited P · •' SS Inti r ni\Tion~l

DEAN'S LIST
Five Meigs Countians
Ohio
Stale
attending
University named to th e
dean's list lor the autumn
quarter are Mandie Kay .
Rose, Long Bottom; James
HOSPITA~IZED
Lee Schmoll, Middleport ;
Richard Alan Couch and
Mrs. Peal'i Reynolds of
Vicki Sue Spencer, Pomeroy, Middleport· is confined to the
and Nancy Mcintyre Cross, Cleveland Clini c where she is
Racine.
teportedly respomljng to
treatment. Prior . to being
taken to CieVel~nd a week
WESTERN BOOTS
ago, she had been a patient
several .weeks at St. Joseph
BELTS
Hospital in Parkersburg. She
is
therapy for the
SHEBOYGAN WORK leftw:dergoing
side affected by a stroke
.and lias regained some of her
SHOES
speech, it is repol1cd. Her address is Cleveland Clinic ·
JUSTIN HANDBAGS

®~~~ ~~~u ~ [K]~~

'

•

I

.

•'

-.

Coon, ()zyille Dearth, Jt.,
Nellie Eblin, John Eynon, ·
Deanna Freeman, Margaret
Greenlee, Lenora Headley,
Mae Jordan, Charles North,
Myrtle Peters, Flor ence
Price, Stella Reid, Margaret
Rizer, Mrs. Ja ck Saunders
and daughter, Jason Stanley,
Deborah Stapleton, and Mrs.
Paul Stinson and daughter.
~Births, Jan. S)
Mr · and Mrs. Harley
Crouse, daughter , Gallipolis:
Mr. and ]\irs. Jerry Taylor,
Jackson, Mr. and Mrs. Daniel
Polcyn, daughter, Gallipolis.

11'8'

IN MIDDLEPORT

(

A brand-new reason why H&amp;R
Block should do your taxes.
Q

· Begliining Tuesd;y January 11, from 6 to 9 p.m. ~
course for elementary and
special education teachers
and majors wm be offered at
Buckeye Hills Career Center
Room 280, Rio Gra~de .
'
"Consumer Education _
It's Elementary" is being
offered throug~
Ohio

.

'

WINKHART RESIGNS
MASSILLON, Ohio (UP!)
- Tom Winkhart resigned
·Wednesday .as head lootb8U
coach at suburban Perry
High SchOQl after 12 years to
devote full time to his other
duties as acting principal and
athletic director.

taxlawcan
save you money,
we'll fmd it."

'

I Course to start

.

ACTUAL USE REP

.

.

'

HolzerMedlcalCenter
(Discharges, Jaa. 5 )'
Gertrude Ables, Mrs. John
Albert and daughter, Betty
Baker, Roxie Brumfield
Shirley Bush, Ernest Cald:
well, Earlie Carr, Myrtle

'
,. '

$-!he DaHy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Jan. 8, 1977

announced aa asalstanl "who resigned~ the mooey
coachea. Heater also II a wu . allotted 14 lleCIIPI the .
head coaching a1ot at Ta.u,
Michigan graduate.
·
got $10,000, the a.ullltantl
$5,000 each, and the lralnel'll
'$1,000.
LARAM!E, Wyo. (UP!) Gordon Brodrick, board ,
Wyoming football Coach vice president, uld the
Fred· Akers, eight assistants, jX'acttce of giving bonulel to
and two trainers received bowi.IJound·coachlng lllllfs II
more than $50,000 In bonuses common; Ha uld, '"lbere
for ex!J'a _work performed_in_ lhould be aome lnoentlw." ., :

the staff of Chuck Stobart, the
new head footbaU coach at
the University of Toledo.
Stobart named Larry
GIL!Iafson, 25,. a Michigan
graduate assistant, and Dave
Elliott, 21, of the University
of Miami, as defensive
8SI!istants Tuesday.
Chuck Heater, a native of
Tiffin who is an assistant
coach at Northern Arizona

ALBANY OHIO

Pacers '109, BuDs 1M:
Billy Knight scored a
season-high 39 to . spark
Indiana. Chicago wu led by
Mickey Johnson with 22
points and Artis Glhnore with
18; Indiana's Don Buse, the
NBA's assist leader, got 12
assists and 12 points. '
Roeket• 108, Kalcb 107:
Mike Newlin scored 26
points to sparII, HoiiSton frolri
a 141Joint deficit late· In the
third period as the Roekets
slipped into first place In the
NBA's Central Division.
Kevin Kunnert had 15 and
Rudy Tomjanovlch 14. Bob
McAdoo was high man for
New York with 'J:1 while
Lonnie Shelton had 20. .
SuperSoalca 94; Celtlcs 93:
Tom Burleson stole the baU
with four seconds remaining
and made a slam dunk to lift
the Seattle SuperSonics to
victory. Only secon&amp; earlier,
Burleson, a 7-2 center, had
missed an inside shot and
drawn an olfenslve foul to
turn the baD over to Boston
with 11 seconds remaining.
Rookie Ilemis Johnson led
SeatUe with 20 points; Olarlle
Scott had 26 points lor J!ostort

lilt , . . ·

game, ' unlvenlty

olfldala Aid weme.tay.
Patrick J.
Quealy,
TOLEDO ( UPl) - Two Univeradty, andGary'Prahlt,
more Univerllty of Michigan · an assistant at Ashland. prelldent ol lilt Unlve!'lllty
graduates have been added to College, previously were Board of~ Aid Allen,

Silas 1·8. all way b ack

By GREG AIELW
UP! Sports Writer
A crowd of 11,237 in San
Anionio stood and cheered for
nearly
five
minutes
d
d
·
hi
We nes ay nlg . When·
James Silas was introduced.
He had not pla.yed in six
weeks - and he did not
disappoint the fans who
1
·
hopedto see hlsmagcagam.
The ·fifth-year guard, who
Wid.erwent knee surgery six

fer

preparation

Stobart adds Michigan grads

LADIES' BLOUSES
By

Lady Manhattan · Jant~n · Catalina - Lori Lynn

REDUCED 30%
1 RACK

LADIES' KNIT lOPS

, Long&amp; Short Sleeves

REDUCED 40%
1 LOT-SUEDE CLOTH

LADIES' SUBURBAN OOATS
REDUCED 20%
LADlE DRESSES

Berkshire - Hob· Nobber . Rontu 1i . City
Scene

REDUCED 20%
LADIES' ROBE$
Plush Nylon &amp; Quilled Nylon

REDUCED 20%
LADIES' JEANS
Sizes 5-6 to 20

REDUCED 20%
.
1 Racll Ladles
DRESS COATS. ~UBURBAN COATS;
JACKETS, DRESSES, BLOUSES.

. REDUCED 30.50%
ONE RACK

-SUBURBAN COATS. VINYL JM:KETS,
LEAniER COATS &amp; JACKETS .
REDUCED 2Q.30%
ONE RAC

PENDLETON lOfSTERS

AND HEAVY JM:KETS
REDUaD 20-30%

-

NO LAYAWAYS
NO1· APPROVALS
- . ALL SALES CASH
AND FINAL

�,.

I

r:tr::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::;:::::;::=:::=:~=::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::~:::::::::::::::~=::::;~::frir

Generation Rap · a~~· Officers

i,
v

~

.By Helen and Sue Bottel

«

j

»

~

.

~-'l'ne UIUY ~ntulei,M10wepon..r~~n:~· uy, v., 1t1W~;, Jltll, o: .Hilt
'*::~::~~~:::;...~~~~~{'...'*:::.~:~:~0::.":-'1~&lt;:::::~~:::~::;:-~m;:o:;:;%8~:...~:;~

are elected ,,
at recent meeting \·.\
:~
~

ua"'~t.~uosch·~r
114
~ 111
u

Motber ApiDit Uve-Togetben .
Dear Helen and Sue :
. !.would llke to tell "Been Through It Mother" et al, (who
N'ew officer~ were elected ·
believe Uw.togethers are good tests for marriage) that you and a fellowship supper plan·
can't c011111 on It!
.
ned during a meeting of the
A girl in love iJ blind. Living-together sometimes doesn't Golden Rule Class of the
cure that, or perhaps she won't admlt ber mistake. Pomeroy Church of Christ
P81'effiilog!ciillf,lt's alffiost as di!IICiil!WalJi111g0Urotra-JiCi(!a!l:nenome orMr. ana norunarrlage u getting a divorce.
Mrs. Jerry Fields.
. Our daughter has been living for over a year with .someone
Elected were Mrs. Fields,
whose faults she recognizes; but still they drill on ~ because president ; Mrs. Betty Lou
be doesn'tbelieveinmarriage . Frien&lt;b as well as family know Evanson, vice president;
they aren'tright lor each other, that she's throwing away her Mrs . Frances Eskew,
young years.
secretary ; Mrs. Thelma
Peopljotodaysay getting married is too muchof a gamble. Osborne treasurer· and Mrs.
W_ell, everything in life is ~ gamble! Why make things worse ·Evelyn Smith, flow~r fund.
wtth a deck stacked agamst you?
.
. .
The fellowship supper was
I wonder II th~y know how much straan !hear ll!sls,!enCj! on set for •Jan. 30'atthe church
lhiJmoral revolution puts on the best of parent..,hild relation· at 5 p.m. and conunittees for
ships? Some parents harden themselves, but I cannot stop that were named: Several
caring very much what my daughter does and whether or not
•- hea dedIor ultimate ha ppaness.
·
she ..
Pe&lt;Jple In love are usually sure theirs Is the love story of
the century. When theydon'tfeel that it will last forever, !here
is something WI'OI)g and I don't believe living together iJ going
to make it right. - AGAINST PLAYING HOUSE

7-;-

wed , ,, Sorority
~

~

on Christmas Day

llil

meets for
Christmas dinner .

•.

Calendar·

Po II y' s .Po nte rs

-

Like a good
neighbor.
State Fann
is there.

..

Holiday buffet

SILL FLETCHER

treats family

a·

' STATE FARM

~:iANUAav~ "

with us!

~1. . CLEARANCE SALE t~

PLANNING APIZZA PARTY

fi~est

~~

.

~

MEIGS INN PIZZA SHACK

DEWXE 19" .
ADMIRAL
COlDR T.V.'s

M

$39800

~· BAK~~~~~TURE

Rheumatism Pain Stri

t

L

p1
~

· ft.

j,

EVERYBODY UVEl HERE
'

JANUARY CLEARANCE

Puts Pain to

SALE CONTINUES '

SALE
OF
FABRICS

ALL FROM
REGULAR STOCK

'6.99 to •12.99'·

SLEE'

Group of Women's

FILlED WHILE YOU WAIT

Now lor the first time. overnight blessed temporary relief
tram the pain of arthritis,

bursitis, rheumatism , soreness.

NaN ONLY. 1.79
1

AVAILABLE FROM:

Offer Good
Thru Sundoy
Ja~uary 91h

SWISHER LUHSt
Pharmo&lt;y
Kennoth McCullough. R: Ph: Charles RiHie, R. Ph.
. Ronald Hanning, R. Ph.
Motl. lhru Sot. 8:110 a.m. to 9 p.m.
· Sunday IO:lOto 12 :30.nd 5 to 9 p.m.
'PRESCRIPTIONS
PH. 992·2955
Friendly Sorvlct
112E.MAIN
O!leiiNiehtaljlt
I:'QMEitOY, O.

I

5110ES
•3•·Pr. or 2 Pr •. •500

00 .PR.

Men's

Group 01

STOP IN SOON!

PRICE
Men's Weyenberg
Fast· and friendly prescription serviCe Is
always available. We carry a large supply
of prescription drugs along with remedies"
that
can~
be
purchased
without
prescriptions.

Sizes·

DINGO
BOOTS
Values to $40.00
'19" Pr.
'1-0" PR.

PURSES:
MATCH
MATE
COTION
KNITS
11.69 yd.

- Group Of .

WOMEN'S. &amp;CHILDREN;S

BETTER· SHOES

'5

stiffness. .lust rub Icy-Hot's creamy balm over the
affected jo~nts or muscles, and you can actually feel
the pain start leS38nlng . Begin to sleep peacefully
again. It you don 't have relief in 24 hours we'll
refund your money. 3,11 oz . Reg , 53 .00

.

DRESS SHOES

Values to $lf1.00

MARGUERITE'S ·SHOES
Setty Ohlinger

992-3106

Dutt~

Drugs ·

N. 2nd. Ave., Middleport, 0.

1.

Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Jan. 6, 1977

. May 26 - N. W. Compton in his isolated home near Weekend.
named president of the Portland.
June 17 - Syracuse
Pomeroy·Middleport Lions
June 5 - The National residents met with Rep. Ron
Club. • .
Bicentennial Wagon Train James ~o discuss a hazardous
May Zl - Mrs. Norma was a big hit as it visited road condition of ST 124 in the
May 17 - Middleport held a WilSon, 15 years, Mrs. Helen Pomeroy.
village.
citizen's input meeting as a Maag, :14 years, and Mrs.
'June 7 - Extended area
June 18 - One of the best
step towards updating its Maxine Philson, 24 years, phone service between Big Bend Regatta parades
comprehensive phin.
Middleport Elementary customersofmostolthearea was staged. •
May 18 - Some 30 can· teachers honored upon their of General Telephone Co. and . June 19 - Brill King and
d!dates appeared at the retirement.
the Chester exchange of the Uoyd1King took top honors in
Meigs Senior Citizens sueMay 28 - Mrs. Lula Westem Reserve Telephone the annual fr og jumping
cessful candidates nigbt.
Hampton modeled the best Co. was ordered Into effect contest.
May 19 - A free bridge' bicentennial gown and boone! for July 16.
June 20 - The Meigs
across the OhiuLBal!ellS·
h Gov rnor's Conference
June 7- Pomeroy Village County
Pioneer
and
wood was announced. Molly,_,.J!in"-""'c"o"'tu"'m
E!lbu"s'-'.'""'p!"o~m"e"'r"o"'y--CO
..-'Cu~cilinenvoteir
n
to selllour ·- HISW!'IC!I-sm:tetr stageehm
Fisher and Paul Cross were teachers, Nonga Roberts, parcels no longer needed.
excellen'f annual He ritage
named · valedictorian and Helen
Williams,
and
June 8 - Meigs Countians Sunday observance.
June 21 - Street light fees
salutatorian, respectively, of Katherine Jacobs along with went to the polls to name
the Southern High School custodian, Austin Phillips;- county office nominees. ·
were increased in Mid·
graduating Class.
honored on their retirement.
June 10 ·- Coal miners' dleport. H. E. (Pete) Shields
May 20 - Donna Thornton,
May 30 ..:. Drew Web§.ler wives picketed the Meigs received a 40-year service
Rt. I, Dexter was named Post 39, American Legion, Welfare Office in Middleport award from the district
salutatorian and Debbie ·and Feeney·Bennett Post 128, in their bid lor food stamps. director of Agricultural
James and Tamora Stanley American Legion, took to the
June · II - Phil Ro~rts, Stabilization and Conwere
named
co· highways and by·ways to help Engineer, firmed up the Sept. servation.
valedictorians of the Meigs the county observe Memorial I date for reopening the
June 22 - Popular Denn.is
High senolrs.
· · · Day.
Pomeroy·Mason Bridge.
Keney . a vice president of the
May 21 - Tracy Burdette,
June 12 - The Middleport Pomeroy National Bank, was
Middleport. was named the
JUNE
Community Pool began night critically injured in a
best girl athlete at Meigs
June I - Asimulated plane hours.
motorcycle-car accident in
High School.
crash in Gallia County was
June 14 - Thomas Frazier, · Pomeroy.
· May 23 - Betty Morlan, the signal for a thre~ county St. Albans , W. Va ., was
June 23 - Offices· or the
Reedsville, and Diana Lynn hospital emergency problem. employed as SoUthern School county courthouse were
Pullins, Route I, Reedsville, Fiord E. Hendricks died of District instrumental ransacked during a breaking
named salutatorian and gurt'Shot wounds at his supervisor.
and entering.
valedictorian respectively, at Minersville home.
June 15 - Clarence Sch·
June 24
Popular
Eastern High SchooL
June 2. - The Meigs mucker was named head of Pomeroy businessman Bob
May 24
Rutland Marauder hssehsll team was Drew Webster .Post 39, Jacobs died unexpectedly.
residents painted bridges in taking part In state chalQ, American Legion .
June 25 - Mrs. Mary
. the bicentennial colors.
·· pionship play.
June 16 - Concessions Meinhart, for many years a
May 25 - A coal strike
June 3 - The body of opened for business as a part public figure in Me igs
continued across the area. Elmer Owen Hall was found of Big Bend Re gatta County, died following a

Local news. highlights of 1976

•
A Christmas dinner and were Mrs. Lewis, Mrs. Debmembers were reported ill
1\ACINE-The Christmas employed at the Ohio Pallet secret sister gilt exchange of bie Finlaw, Mrs. Tel8llllll
and a thank you note was Day wedding of James Hawk Co., Pomeroy.
Xi Gamma Mu Chapter of Well and Mrs. Carol Mcread from Mrs. Pauline Ken· · and Miss Lynn Huschar look
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority Cullough. : '
A meeting and program
nedy fur caroling and gift:; at place at 6 p.m. at the Plants
were held recently at the
were
held
the din·
Christmas time.
.
1\lemorial Church located on !:::.&lt;::.&lt;.~" '!:' ::.::::::::::: . .;; · .. ·. home of Mrs. Rita Lewis,
Mrs.Tlii!lirufO!:ilOfrie-gHVe---Ruoi.,.;J, Raeine" ~ ~·- Ro'"te·3;-P'Offi,oro.'r.'~---n&lt;!r~rith-Mlr&amp;,.;i'ln,tawr.Sll"la:1--devotiqns using 1 Cor. 13, the
The Re~. Freeland Norris
dinner chairman, reporting that 19
love chapier of the Bible, tor performed tbe ceremony in
members had attended the
her theme. Prayer was by the presenc"e. of a fe.w friends
Christmas party at the Meigs
Bill McDaniel.
and relatives. The church
Inn on Dec. 17 with husbands
Refreshments were served· was decorated in keeping
SON BORN
and guests. The Janusry
by the hosts. Attending with the Christmas season
social event \viii be a trip to
besides those named were with evergreen, fern and
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Huntingi&lt;Jn on Jan. 9 for a
Mrs. Carolyn McDaniel , golden tall ca~dlesticks with
'liiURSDAY
Flowers of Marion, formerly performance of Holiday on
Richar&lt;l Evanson, Gertrude red tapers lted wtlh red
EVANGELINE CHAPTER of Minersville, are announc· Ice. Two families were
Bass, Mrs. E.v.clyn Smith, velvet bows. The doQble ring 172, Order of the Eastem ing the birih of a nine pound assisted at Christmas time.
Mrs. Mary McAngus, and a t"eremony was used.
Star, 7:30 Thursday at the son, Paul David. He was born
The ·cultliral report was
guest, Mrs. Eva Dessauer.
The bride was attired in a Middleport Masonic Teinple. at Marion General Hospital given by Mrs. Kathy Miller
gown with rhineslune accent. · All members asked to attend,
Dec 31 M
d M
and Mrs. Roberta Maidens on
·
· two
r. other
an sons,
rs. " Communicating with
Ht'l' corllage
was uf wh.:te car·. and dues are now payable. on
Flowers· have
nations edged in blue as was
CATHOLIC WOMEN'S Ralph age nine, and Robert, Music". A hrief.story about
I.
the corsage of her Club will meet .Thursday at eight. Paternal gtandparents music was. presented with
.
·'
bridesmaid Miss Reba Reil· •. the Sacred Heart Church. are William and Olen Olena selections of various kinds
mire, collsi~ of the bride, of Ann Colburn, Teresa ColUns, Anderson,Midland; Pa.
being played. The program
Jacksonville, Fla.
Clftherine Welsh and Susan ·
concluded with carol singing
The groom was in a .blue Baer will be hostesses. New
accompanied by Mrs .
Dear Readers:
Maidens on the harpsichord.
suit and both he and his best officers will be installed
For the other side of the coin, read on : - HELEN AND
SUE
.
.
man, Edward Bill Sarver of during the Mass at 7:30 p.m. '
ON HONOR ROLL
Pomeroy wore white cama· preceding the meeting.
+++
Students from Meigs • ,_;..:.:
\
•
Dear Rap : •
lion boutonnieres, as did the
REVIVAL SERVICES now County rating the honor roll '
By
Polly
Cramer
We love our folks and didn't want to hurt them. But we
minister.
in progress at Syrachuse at Gallipolis Business College
knew we weren't sure enough for marriage - yet. Living
Following
the
ceremony,
Church
of the Nazarene. Rev. lor tbe Fall Quarter, which
By Polly Cramer
tilication and' many people do the wedding party was enter· Parker Husselton, . guest
together was the practical way - we saved money while
DEAR POLLY - Does not have established credit tained at the home of the speaker. Services nightly at ended December 6 were Bea
making up our minds. Since adult engaged couples usually
Comell, Route 3, Racine;
have sex, why go through the hassle of "my place or yours?" anyone have any suggestions cards, some because they do bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. 7:30 . p.m. Services throug~ Guy Harper, 394 Ashe Street,
This is how we made !lie decision acceptable to our as to how I can keep my mal· not . believe in buying on William Hoschar.
Sunday. Public is invited. ·
Middleport, a,nd George
parenlll: Both families got together and we went through a tress from sliding? I . have· credit. Being stranded in a
The couple resides in their
MEETING
OF
In· Jenkins, Box 250, Cheshire.
ceremooy which was actually a "contract marriage, minus tried rotating the mattress strange city or even )Vhere own home on Route 338 near ternatlonal
Union
of
license." We agreed, in writing, that in exacUy one year we'd but that did not help. -MRS. one li~es and not being able to Hacine. Mr. Hawk is Operating Engineers has
with hPip for yout
review our conlract and decide then on a "legal renewal." We C.T.
cash a check because of inbe~n changed lo the junior
car. homr. life ann
exchanged plain gold bands, which we wear on our right hands
DEAR MRS. C. T, - Have adequate Identification is
fair
building
of
the
Athens
health instil dllCP
(and will change IDourlefts, when we choose marriage) ..
you tried a thin sheet of foam frustrating, aggravating, em·
County Fairgrounds at 7:30 ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;: ;:;:; :~:; :;:;:;:;:;;;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::
It's been n~ months now, and everything's cool. There's fUbber placed between the barrassing and incon~~nient,
p.m. Thursday.
me.
no doubt anymore: ·We'll renew - ·for keeps! .- HAPPY·· mattress and box spring• - When one lives in a small
FRIDAY
COMPROMISE
POLLY.
town this is no problem but in
APPLE GROVE, Ohio JAN. 10 is deadline for
DEAR POLLY - I want w a large city it . presents many
Heiney a former
George
149 South Third Street
reservations for Meigs
Dear Helen and Sue.:
pass on some Pointers from a problems. -N.S.
resident
of
this community,
Middleport. Ohio
Cha
pter
of
the
Women
's
Abqut living-together: I am old.fashioned.. and do not florist as well as my own hal&gt;'
DEAR POLLY ·· My
992-7155
has suffered a coronary and
Aglow
Fellowship,
7
p.m.
at
approve. It would be better ·w allow !ive-year..,hildless py experience with growing mother was always talking
Mrs. Beulah Ewing hosted Meigs Inn, with Rev. William is a patient In Intensive care
marriages from which there could be no divorce or annulment. gardenias. oullive years ago about how the baCks of ber a holiday buffet for the Twin
ST.I.TI UIM
At the end of that time, the couple would be free to remarry or my children gave me such a shoes.were wrecked when she City ~hrinctlcs Club at her Morris of Marietta to be at the Marietta Memorial
HospitaL
He
is
a
nephew
of
speaker'"
Reservations
may
to separate, at no expensf
plant. From it I have grown was drivlpg the car, but! had home recently.
be madeJI $3.25 per dinner Mr. and Mrs. Ray Heiney,
At the same lime, landlords and motel managers should be seven baby plants by putting a bright solution for her. Cut
The buffet was served from ilJ{o
calling Gloria Johnson, Mrs. Dolly Wolle, and Mr.
IN$UU.Nt~,
subject to. severe penalties if they allowed unmarried couples cuttings in water and .then the toe off of an old sock and ihe dining room table which
and
Mrs.
Floyd
Farra.
9§2-5845;
June
Baker,
949·
to co-habit. - HENRY .
potting them three weeks slip the sock over the foot you was covered with white and
later. They like the morning , use while ~driving. Make sure l)ad an overlay of red netting 2723; Joyce Hohsck, 949·2325,
sun as well as weekly ·the sock ,is pulled over the oound in velvet. While tapers or Judy Jones, Gallipolis ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:
Insurance Companies
showers to wet the leaves ·· heel to completely cover .the were used on the table and .area, 446·0946 . Dinner
,,• Home Oil ices: Bloomington, Illinois
meeting
is
non·de·
completely. Do not aUow the · back of the shoe and is put on poinsettias and carnations
soil to dry out. I use tepid so that it does not interfere were featured in the decvra- nominationa L
POMONA GRANGE, 8
'_yt'.; ,
'. . ;
., ~··"'~'~"' '' "
•. . '
:• •
water once a week when tbe' with YOII{ II'"' of the f?"l while lions of the Ewing home. On
p.m.
Friday
at
the
Rock'
•.
~
·
.
:-;,~"'·~A!'(
~P't!L....:,
&lt;
:&gt;
....
,..._
. ..,~
plant IS mdoors. Durang the driving. Such a cut off sock the occasional tables in the
• I
· "' ··
· ··
:~}J
·1 ~
Springs
hall
with
Hemlock
three montha vacation on the slips on and off easily when · family room were white and
Grange as host.
pstio, where .it is in filtered you gel in and out or'the car red velvet skirt:;.
RUTLA!W GUN Club
sunlight, I water daily and and certainly saves the shoes.
Mrs. Harry S. Moore
aiso shower the plant off dur· -ANNA. . Polly wiU send you presented each member · a ' Friday, 7:30 p.m. at club
ing the summer heat. This one of her "peachy" thank· gift. She also gave the devo- house on New Lima Road. All
has kept my gardenia plant you cards, ideal lor framing tions and presided at a brief members urged to attend.
blooming and healthy. I hope or placing in your famil~ bUsiness meeting. Pl41ns
THE SA~~~~~ONED
it will also help the reader :;crapbopk, if she uses. your were made for the next three
who has such a plant.- MRS. favorite 'Pointer, Peeve or meetings to be held at'the meeting . Of Harrisonville
D. T.
Problem in her colwnn. Write Ewing home. In lieu of a gilt l&lt;ldge 411, F&amp;AM, will be
rijr
Featuring the ¥eJY
in
DEAR POLLY- I keep my Polly's Pointers in care of exchange, members con- held at 7:30p.m. Saturday at
1
gardenias in partial sun sum· this newspaper.
PHONE
tributed to Crippled Children the temple.
Home Furnishings and Major Appliances
'
mer and winter, and as the
and the Bums Institute.
SUNDAY
leaves need moisture I spray
THE ALL NEW
at low cost to you.
MEIGS
COUNTY Pomona
the plant every other day.
When it is brought indoors in
ding New Year's with Mrs. Grange degree team prac·
the fall I trim it hack. In the
I
Barnitz were Mr. ani) Mrs. !lees the first degree at 2 p.
~Er joy three sizes of your favorite
early spring I add some wood
Robert Wells, Warsaw, Lynn m. Sunday at Rock Springs
ashes to the soil for the acid
pizzas.
and Kim Wells, Columbus, Grange Hall rather than
Hemlock Grove. All par·
the plant needs. My plant
-Try our delicious subs while you
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Werry and Kay Wells, Westerville.
ticipants remind~ to commit
blooms the year round and I · of Mannington, W. Va. visited.
sip your fS'vorite suds.
:.·t -··
·
their parts .to , memory .
have
had
as
many
as
tOO
Joining
Mr.
~nd
Mrs.
·~
SEE US TODA'Y . ·
.'
. Eat In Or Carry Out
Thursday . and Friday with
flowers at one time. (Poily's his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence J. Struble for Anyone una bl~ to . attend :
Phone
note - This must be a huge . Charles Werry.
Christmas dinner were. Mr. please contact another team ..
·992·6304
plant.)- MRS. W.O.
and Mrs. Dick Struble and member or Mr~1 Lucille
, DEAR POLLY -.1 hope s~r
family,
Carroll; Mr. and Leifheit, captain: ,
Holiday· visitors of Mrs.
meone has a solution or ad· Thomas Young were Mr. and Mrs. Dan Struble and
Vice about my Pet Peeve. It Mrs. Robert Rogers and children, Columbus, and Mr.
concerns "misplaced per- " Julie, Nelsonville, Janet and Mrs. Joe Struble,
~OIIN:tCIOCH:tCICIO&lt;IIIM:tCIOCH::XICIO&lt;IIIM:teiCI~ soos" who cannot make
Rogers of near Cincinnati , Pomcruy:
satisfactory identification and Mrs. Paul Wells and
when they need to cash a Jodi, Cutler.
Mr. and Mrs. Milru Stru·
check
and
so
on.
Most
places,
ble
of
Newport INews, Va.
Rheumatic and Arthritic
even hanks, seem to accept
were
here
for the holidays
Mr. and Mrs. Harry
.
Pain can strike the jqipts
only drivers' licenses as iden- Young 'of Galion spent with their parents, Mr. and
AS
OUR
tification and there are Christmas with Mrs. W, 0 . Mrs. Joe Struble, Pomeroy,
in any of the indicated
many, lille me, whO do not
They were joined lor and Mr. and Mrs. John Ihle,
areas (see arrows on chart) drive. Social Security cards Barnitz.
Racine.
di~ner by .Mr. and Mrs.
are not to be used lor idenc Hayman Barnitz. Other
callers during the ,day were
Mr. and Mrs. David Eske"(
Mr. imd Mrs. Wilson and children, Kandt, Beth
Carpenter, Pomeroy, Mr. and Amy, of Newark spent
and Mrs. John Young and ••Chrtstmaswtththetrparents,
Starts Jan. 3 at 9 a .m . '
children, Lancaster, and Mr. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Eskew
Women's
and Mrs. ·Bub Barnitz .ind and Mr. and Mrs. Harvey
Auditions
family, Mason, W. Va. Spen· Erlewine.
Naturalizers
.
'
Vogue
Values to $25.00 , ..
Fanfares
Jolenes

Weary bedtime story
of sliding mattress

~Sentmel,

..

,I

MAY
May 1 - The Meigs High
band members were honored
at a banquet.
May 2 - Frank Case,
Cheshire , Bob Buck and
Chuck Bartels, Pomeroy .
were winners of the
Lions
3
Chester
Elementary School Patrol
members prepared lor a trip
to Washington, D. c., · a

AstraGraph
BerntCe Bede Osol

For Friday, Jan. 7, 1977
ARIES (March 21)\)rll 19) Be
carefu l'today as to wl1om you de·
pen d on ror busi ness advice. especially of a speculative nature.
Wrong guidan ce coul d be very
costly.

.. .TAURUS (April 20·Miy 20)
Unless you 're wtlllng to pay you r
du es today , don't expect any
great measure of success. You 'll
have to really go at it tooth and
nail .

GEMINI (May 21·Juno '20)
·There 's a strong possibility today
th at what you say may be mis·
interpreted . Thlnl&lt; twice before
you open your mouth.

reward for their safety work.
May 4- Walls left standing
during the Stiffler Depart·
ment Store fire collapsed as
clean up work progressed.
May 5 - Meigs County
Democrats honored Lt .
Governor Richard Celeste at
the
Rock
Springs

Council.
May 7- Mrs. Linda Lear's
classes at the Meigs Junior
High held intensive studies on
the metric system. Southern
High students presented a
variety show, ~~a~vue '76,"
directed by Lee Lee.
May 8 - Jan Wilson and
Don-Eiehlnger-were-erowned
6 - Mrs . Clara Eastern High prom king and
l&lt;lchary was named ' 'Meigs queen while the same hOnors
County's Unsung Heroine•· by at Meigs High School went to
the Black Diamond Girl Scout . Debbie Bailey and Mike
Davenport.
May II - The Meigs l&lt;Jcal
Board of Education put the
old Coalport School mlower
Pomeroy on the bidding
PUBLIC NOTICE
Se a ted bid s w ill be recei ved block.
in th e ott ice of the V illage
May 12 _: Veterans
· Clerk , Sec ond Street, V illage
Memorial
Hospital was of&gt;.
of P ome roy , Ohio . until 12
o'cloc k noon on JiJnuary 17 . serving National Hospital
1977 ,
tor
th e
t o t l ow i ng
Week.
pro posa I.
May 13 ·- Eastern High
For the purchas e of a !9 77
diesel engin e drive n rubb er:
School
made plans to
tired industria l tractor load er .
bac kho e co mplete with th e graduate 64.
manufacturer' s . standard
May 14 - The Meigs Senior
ac cess ori .eS . All co mponent s
Citizens
Center was van·
and acces}ories sh all be new .
llnused , serviced and ready dalized.
for operation upon del ivery ·A
May 15 - Some 200 riders
dea ler's representative shall
pr ovi d e i nstruction in th e braved the elements of a
proper operation and main
nasty day to take part in the
tenance at th e time of
deliv er y . One se t of paris . arunial Hike Bike. "
ma int enance and nperr'llor 's
May 16 - Pomeroy Police
manua ls shalt be provid ed
Chief
Jed Webster wamed
The dealer and manufa c
turer shall prov ide a one year churches of telephone calls
warranty includ ing par_t s and relating to church funds.
tabor for the tractor and a t
ta chm ent s

supplied

CANCER (June · 21·July 22) warranty per iod
l .osses could offset your gains
1oday. Keep your wits about yoU
where thrrtgs of value are co ncerned .

LEO.IJuly 23-Aug . 22) Yo,u have
illusions about tt1'e perfect ways
to do things today. 0 111ers may
not have the same ideas . Be
realistic. Avoid some bitter dis·
appointments.

VIFIGO (Aug. 23·Stpl. 22) Don't
assume the obligations ol others
today : The lion's share may fall
on your shoulders and you 'll
have no one to blame bu t
vourse ll.
7

LIBRA (Sept. 23~0ct. 23) Today,
you lack your usuall,y toler ant
nature. Do n't be too pus h Y· P8 I5
won't app.rec t ~te Your attitude .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·NOv •. 22) It's
I ious, b ut
a¢mir~ble to be 8mb,t.
avoid tramping on too many toes
today. They may be on feet tt1at
people will later stick out to trip
yo
u.
SAQIT'TARIUS (Nov. 23-0ec.
21} You have a tende ncytodey
1o secon d -guess everyone, 1n.
el udin g yourself . You could
juggle your plarls around so
much they 'll be 61 small benelil.
CAPRICOFIN (O~c. 22~J-n. Ul)
Keep away from dealings with
epersonwhosereputat!onlsthe
lea~t bit questtonab le today .
You're on sha~y ground . Keep
your guard up. ,

shall

( 1] 6. '13. 2!C

VACATION
• WATCH FOR

OPfNING DATE

.

....,

! .......

Fairview
News Notes

.

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Pyles
·which you've already eKpended a . of Racjne spent Sunday with
lot ol1ime and toil. tt may take ~ Mr. and Mrs. Don ·Manuel
surprising turn th is cor111ng year
and children.
an9 reward yo ur efforts ,
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Hudson
jAre you a Capricorn? Bernice
Osol has written a spacial Astra- of Minersville were New
Graph Letter for you. For Y!'ur Year's weekend visitors of
copy send 50 oe~t~ and a long Mr. and Mrs. Joe Manuel, Sid
self - addressea. , stamped
envelop9 to Astro ~G ;aph. P.O.
Box 489, Radio 'Clty Station, New

CLOSED FOR

CHEESEBURGERS
.........·..................................l FOR 3(1 OR 5 FOR $1.25
.
DOUBLE HAMBURGERS ...........................
1 FOR 45~ OR 5 FOR $2.00
DOUBLE CHEESEBURGERS .......... .'...·................ 1 FOR S(r OR. 5 FOR $2.25
HAMBURGERS ............. ~ .............. :...................1 FOR 25~0R 5 FOR $1.00
TRIPLE TREATS ............................................... ! FOR SOC 0~ 5
$2.25 _
OONEYS ............... -........................................ l FOR 3oe OR 5 FOR $.. ·"'~
REGUlAR FRENCH
FRIES.. :.............................. l FOR 2(1 OR 5 FOR 8(1
.

Jane Walton . Clerk
V IL LAG E oF POMEROY

on .

Don 'l abandon a •project

"

All of the folks at Country Cousins want to thank all of the residents of the Big
Bend Area for your support iri 1976 and welcoming us into the community. We
appreciate it and for three big days we w,ant to show it by offering old fashioned
·
.
prices!

PISCES IFib. 20·Morch 20) It'll

®.J•g~~m~

MEIGS TMEATME ·

'AREA

BIG BEND

Unfortunately, you 're going to be
judged today by the company
you keep . Avoid shady types or
be tarred with tl1e same brush.

I(}:!J(!)IT

...

' •·

AQUARIUS (Jin. 20·Fob. 18)

thin will only brln9 fra! ed .narves.

lingering Illness.
June 26 - The Meigs Local
School District staged a big
sale in Rutland to«et rid of no
longer used equipment.
Pomeroy Attomey Rick Crow
was the high bidder to pur·
chase the long·abandone1
Coalport School.
June 28 - The Eastern
Board of Education atred
possibilities of reassigning
students to Riverview ScbooL
Middleport Council voted to
advertise for bids on ·
resuffiillng some streets:
June 29 - Tbe sheriff's
department and Middleport
police seized some 300
marijuana plants In the
Rutland area.
June 30 - Mrs. Beulah
Strauss retired from her
duties as administrative
assistant of the Meigs County
Department of Health. - To
be continued.

The
not

limit operaling hOurs.
1 F urther spe.cificatjon!.
wi lt be on fil e with th e Village
Clerk . Second Street , Village
of Pom er oy . Oh i o.
2. For sal e by th e Village of
1969
Ford
Pom eroy its
Backho e with a front end
loader a nd 1959 Wayne Slr,ee t
Sweep er .
The bi dder may state either
what he will give for th e 1969
•F ord Buckhoe w ith front end
l oad er
and
1959 Street
sweeper ·at what am ou nt he
will allow as a trade in for the
1977
l ndu.str i a l
tractor
described above .
Each bidder may bid for
either the purchas e•of the 1969
Ford BackhOe with front end
loader and 1959 Wayne Street
Sw eeper or for th e sale to the
Village of Pomeroy of e 1977
InduStria l Tractor described
;;~bove or both . Each bid must
con tain th e full nam .e of every
person or company in ter ested
· in the same . and the' bid must
be accompan ied by a check or
bond in the sum of $100 .00 to
the satisfact ion of the Village
Council as a gu aranty that if
th€ bid is accepted , con tract
wil t b e ente r ed into and its
p or formanc f:
prop erty
sec ured
Th ese checks or bonds wil l
be re turn ed at once to . all
except th e success ful bidd er .
His checks or bond will be held
'-Unt il the contrac t or bid is
properly e"JCecu l(,'d by him .
Th e right i s reserved to
rei ec t any and all bids .

be better for you today If you
don 't tr~ to do more than you can
handle. Spre{I,Qing , yourself too

)'BS

'

Please no spedals 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 coupons necessary. ,

and .Tinl·

Mrs. Jadi: Sargent, Mrs,
York. N.Y. 10019. Be sure to ask Marlene '·Fisher of Racine ,
Mrs. Ann Radford and
for Capricorn Volume 1.)
daughter Stephanie of
Pomeroy Rt., Mrs. .Focie .
Hay""'!~· Mrs. Mabel Shields
visited Mrs. Bertha.Robinson
Sunday.
·
• ' f ••
KIU'Bn Rhodes returned to
Becky Lee, daughter of Mr. Rio Grande College Monday
~nd
Mrs. Robert Lee alter spending the holidays
celebrated her birthday with her paren~. Mr. and
Sunday afternoon. Her guests . Mrs. Robert Rhodes. The
were Kim Follrod, Ktm Rhodes heard from their son,
Bickers, Patrick, Johns9n: Ainnan Michael Rhodes wbo
he~ brother, Bob Bill Lee.
is stationed in Alaska during
Others at the Lee home were· tbe holidays.
Mr. and Mrs. Ben Bic~ers of
Mike and Mandy Russell of
R. D., Gallipolis, Mr. and Wollpen spent New Year's
Mrs. Arthur Orr of Che.ter. night with their grand·
Rev. af!(l Mrs. Richard parents, · Mr. and Mrs.
Young and family or Sldlley, Russell Roush and famUy.
Ohio . visited with Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie
Mrs. Edson Roush from · Russell of Wolfpen were
Friday until Sunday,
Sunday dinner guests of Mr. ·
Mr: and Mrs. William and Mrs. Russell Roush and
CarleiDn of Racine, Mrs. lamUy.
Dean Brinker spent New r Rev. and Mrs. 0. G.
Year's day with · Betty McKinney, Syracuse, Mr.
VanMeter, Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs. Herbert Rouall,
Arthur Jolwon and family. Roger . BlueII Of Chester
Mr. and Mrl. Jama Circle, atlended services at the
New Haven, were at the home Na.. rene Church at Belpre
of Mary Circle on Sunday.
Wednesday evening where
lhe Rev. Robert Stewart Is
tbe pastor. Rev. McKinney
was ' guest speaker lor the
evening. After services they
were aU entertalnecj by Rev.
and Mrs. Stewart at their
home 1n Belpre.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Findley, Matt and Angle, of
Columbus spent New Year's
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Ruaell Findley, Marj' and
Edward.
·~
Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Miller
of Racine visited Mrs. '
"Dr~p··-;ilit' yo;i~ dolna ,
Slack during the
Helen
Crand&amp;ll, and report lo the front
holidays:
office!"

•..

·

Carmel News,
By the Day

•\
•
•
•

••
'•

.'•

Daisy... Daisy..'.Come Get These

I

~. ~ ,_..J~~-·~
C.;)
I

; ;; ;

. .

~
T~
•

01~ ........

~ill~~

~~~ -...Jrl

coOkshot't"

..

Ji~·
~
. ~ FIXINS tO ~
.

.

~-

DON'T MISS OUT
ON THESE OLD FASHION
PRICES NOW AT
'

I

•

'

COUNTRY COUSINS
COOK SHOPPE
I,

' I

,,

�Ror

8- 'Ole DeUy Sentinel, Mlddleoort-Pcmerov. o .. TIIUI'Idav, J111. 6,19'77
P.Ueuc NOTICE

- NToce

F R"-N"CES ADAMS NO 16,2!15
v:LAINTIFF
Uy
~T
ALWINFREY JOHNSON ,
oe'FE NOANTS
w o T 1 c e'

._.,

Hazel

oF sALE -

estat~

The rul

ot

ttl~

1life

A . Moore . deceased.

will be offered tor sale- at the
offices of crow . Crow a.
Porter , Attorneys at Law,

.

TO i IR:A MC CAV.E , ~ddress
unknown , whose last ~nown
address IS General Oeh~ery ,
Daytona Bee ch , Florida , an_d
wh ose
presenl addresS 1s
unknown and c.a nno t w lttl
rea!ion~ble _ dll •ge nce
be

Sa id

rut

estate

described as follows : Sifuale
in the Township of Salisbury,
Ccuntyo f Me igs , s ta.teof OhiO ,
Md bou nded and descr ibed as
follows , 10 wit : In Sec:: lion 26,

Reco rd\
Yo u are r-eqv•rf'O

1hto conlptamt w '"'

, ,c,r,t

ct~v•

.,,.,

., ...,er

10 .,.,,...,.
t1

• ._,..- '

. t _.
N'

•

D\tiW ,.,.. . ,

''"
• • ,..,,
• J

1077 and tt'l" Jl

•

w 1t1 t'.t't -.

2.

anO

•s Olll'•lf
~·~'

0' ,,. \

pu bhC il l lOn
wl\l( h w1li 0,.
t·i!(h Wt~\ t('r
well/Iii Trt'
wlll be m•d•

Town

•
•

• I'

1n cui at y " ' '
Dns wt r or o•~•fw •• ..,.,.
a s rtQ1,11rtd bt '"" ~.. •""
b f Ctlitl PrO ('~.,,.
"'~
Dy d,l., ull 'olt •tl bf'
N
tt~ a iMt
vo u
t ot
,. . t~
dem 11 ncte&lt;t rn til t
~

t.,._
,.,._If

&lt;0""'•"

Larry E htnce"

Cl fl~"

Common Ptr•\COurl
Mt ig!!l Caun ly. Oh ta
'17 (1 1 6 , 61 C

NOfJCI OF A,P OINTMENT
CUt No . 21911
'' ''• •• CtyGt Oevid Frye,
O.u ne41
tli l'ttreby g l'llen the!
• 4 •
•orter Jr ,, o f R 0 .
••
Oft,, r.u been Clv ty
.... ~t•.. Aammlstrator of
, ''•'" Gl Clyde OaOJid
ltff
e•tftUt4 . IBte of
111 1
TO Wftlifl lp , Me igs

-" •«•

1•"'•
th!PI•r 0

WANT ADS

••

&lt;•N·*tf ' '''

rtQuired to
• '' ' i\t' c:l e ~ nu with said
• \14' •rv ... urtl n '"'~e mont hs.
Ot tH t ' ' 18th day ot

-:=-.

IN~OIMATION

be•no

Rtnoe 13 .
Begmn 1ng at - the Nor the!st
a-sc ertained ·
.
cor ner of Ben Eblen 's · land ,
You are hereby notified that thence Nort h 332 feet to the
yo v ~ave been named defend south side of Un ion Aven ue ;
a nt 1n a legal action e~tlll!!-d thence so uth 88 deg . JO' West
~r anees Adams . plalnt1ff vs ~ 56 feet to the Nort h east
Gu y Winfrey Johnson,. et at , corner- of a 96 . 100 acre to(;
de fendants This act1on has thence South 1 deg 15' west
Oe-en assigned Case No. 16.135. 116 feet 10 the creek ; thence
In the Commo n Pleas Court~ ~ So uth 83 deg . JO ' West 328 teet
Me igs Coun t y , Pomeroy , Oh io atong·sald cre ek , the nce North
45 9
~~ e ob lect of the com plaint 3 deg J.o· West 13? feet to the
1s to p&amp;rt itwn and quiet title to south S1 de of Un1on Avtmue ,
real estate sit u ated In and the northwest corrft'r of
Lebanon Towmh 1p , Me igs the 96-100 acre tot : thence
c ounty , Ohio . descr ibed as follow ing the south side of
follows
Union to the center of Thomas
Being in Section 21 . Town J. Fork Cr eek , tfl.l~ce dow.n Sal.d
R&amp;nge 11 of the Ohio com . creek to a ~ 1nt WhiCh 1S
pany'!; Purchase ; beginn ing 10 southwest co rner o.f a 1 /~ acre
th e south line o f sa id sect ion trac t of la nd dese r t bed m vol.
21. and adjOining lands owned 97 • . Page 612, Dee~ Records .
by A J Rose and Cha rl e!; Metgs County , Oh10 1 thence
McMurray ; thence eas t along east about 11 61 teet I~ :he
said section tine J.ot rods to line place Of beg lni') IOQ , con1ai0 1MQ
of A J Rose , thence easter ly 1 J a~res more o~ tess T~ is
cllong sa 1d A. J Rose's si)( descn ptlon taken from Me1gs
ro ds lo th.e Portl a nd and Long Cou n t ~ Mortga ge Re cord s,
Bottom road to a stake in the Volume 112:2 , Page ~9 . The
ce nter ot sa id road ; then'ce pro perty is appra1sed at
wes t 56 degrees nort h a long $1 ,800 .00 a nd cannot b e ~ol d
t he center of said road 34 rods for tess than the appra.sed
to a st&lt;~ke 1n the center of sa 1d \la tue, Terms or sa.te are cesh.4
road ; thence west 14 rod!; ; The. prope rty ~Ill be sol . .
th en ce west 60 deg r ees north svbtect to the l1en ft? r r e~ t
73 rod!; to a stake 10 the roa'd , estate tl!lxes . The ngh t 1S
thence ]5 degrees west '26 ro dS reServes to re tect any and all
to the Pitts run , thence east SO b11:ls .
de grees south 60 rods w ith the
HOMER BAXTER ,
m eander1ngs of said run to a
Admmist rator of
roc k corner in the run , the
th e Es ta te of
place of beg inn ing , conta 1ning
HaiZel A . MoOr e,
30 acres to be the ume more
Deceased
or tess EK cept1ng ten a cres on
rhe west en d of sa id th1r ty CROW. CROW &amp; PORTER .
_
a cre s . ly ing west of ll l me Attorneys for
co mmencing at the corner of Admin istrator
A J Rose aM Charles Me.,
Murray 's lands Bnd runn i.nQ Ill 6. 13, ?tc
east to a stOne c; orntr hear the
reS idence ot ... 1CI J E sm~lh
d eeded ro Evcrttf! Motttr
Referen ce Volt.~mtt
?5 6 M c tg ,
C::ountr

'

Pomeroy , Oh lo , at 10 . 00 A .M .•
11 . 1~77

on Monday , January

Fast Results Use The Sentinel Classifieds

DEADLINES

P ,M .
Day
Befor e
Publ ication ,
Cenctll at lont,
correc .
nons lccepttd f lrlt dey of
publ lc•tlon .
5

'2 .SIGNS
OF

REGULATIONS

Tfle Publlther nurves
the rlgflt to tctlt or reltc t
any ldl deemtct Ob ·
iectl ona l. The publ ishe r
w i ll not be retponlltile for
more th•n on e Incorrect
insertion .

QUALITY

Fo'r Wut Ad StrYict
5 cen ts per word one
insertion .
Min imum Charge Sl .OO .
\4 ctnts per word three
consec utiVe Insert ions.
26 cents r,er " word s ix
consecutive nsertlons .
75 Per Cent Discount on
paid Ids and Ids pa id
w ith in 10 days
CARD OF THANkS
12. 00

1'73CAPRICE4DR. HT

for

50

! 11 J 7J , JO Ill 6, 3tc

1976 ~ TON WV PICK UP

LUV Pickup

Color white, bl'-'e pin striping , blue vinyl
interior, ll:M radio, rear step bumper .
Retail $4,093.35
Del. Plus Tax &amp; Tille ONLY

'3698

'fRUCK HEADQUARTERS

6"h' PICKUP ·
6 cylinder eng ine, std. trans., 5 g 78xl5 tires,
back up lamps, dual mirrors, AM radio,
painted rear bumper . List $4,466.25.
Special
Add Tax &amp; Tille
Choice, Blue, green or white.

'3800

HPIM:lMIIII'

IIIIOOIIS
AlUM IliUM

3 passenger rear seat, stl. mirrors, 350 V8,
automatic, power steering, AM radio.
chrome front and rear bumper, H78 on and
off tires, upper and lower body mouldings,
gauges. beautiful white and red fin ish.
Priced To Save You Monf.y

'

BLIND ADS

Ad dit ional 25c Charge
per Adv t. rt lsemel'lt .

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
POMEROY, OHIO

8. 30 a .m . to 5:00 p.m .
Da lly , 8:30 a .m . to u .oo
Noon Saturday .
Phone today 992·2156.

.,

We

...

&amp;ellnr •
12·22·4 mos .

THE

QUEoFoR, DON'T REM IND
Mr OF THEM
EVER. THAT 1$ ~ .
AN D THE IR
CONFOUNDE D

5-TIL.i,.., IF THAf'5
WHAT YOU WANT -"

MARKET

WA?H ~ !

MITZ:

NO RTH

ASSORTED RUBBER
BACK CARPETING
6.95

1

Squirt Yard lnst1llod
David Plrsons:Owner
949-2114

SchOols

~-

Weddings

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

HARD WATER-

t AQ

fi.h1ons~

I

.Jl

Let

CAMPER, $600. Also, horse
trailer, $450. Phone (6JoC) 698·
3290.
PEARCE SIMPSON C B. bose sto·
l1on. Phone- 247·268-4 ofter 5
p.m.

NOW accepting piano students,
beginners, intermedlotes, od·
vOncvd students . Coli 992OLD furniture, It'&lt;! bo..1 . Dross FENCE POSTS , $1 00. Also.
2270 .
beds, woll • l~es and
flfewood three-fourth ton
PERSON's BODY Shop,,26 Rail rood
porfl , Of ct ~..,1.. households.
pickup loads delivered , $25
St ... Middleport wovld like to
Write M. D. Miller. Rt. 4,
with111 25 miles . Phone
remind customen that Dec. 31
Pamero~ . Ohio . Coli m .niJJ.
985-AI 97..
1s the lost doy to toke ad·
vantage of the point job• · all CASH pold for oil mok•• and HEAVY GAUGE I Beams and H
models of mobile homes.
Beams for 'sole, 8. 9, 10 inch.
over in I color ~ $100, 2 tone
Phone ~2 · 7034
Phone area code61 .. ·423·9531 .
$125 without l;tody work. S1op
in or phone 985·417 .. for ap- TIM6Efl . Pomeroy Fqrest Pro· NEW AM·FM Stereo-rodlo, 8 frock
pointment .
ducts . lop price for standing
tcipe combinolion , $129.95 or
.awtlmber , Call Kent Hanby,
terms. Phone 992.3965 .
NOTICE , Prott'1 Meat Mkt,
1-"6-8570.
(Pleasanton Meat Processing,
POLOROIO SX 70 c:omero , $100.
Inc ) Custom slaughtering, and COINS, CURRENCY, tokens, old
Phone 992· 735-4 .
proceu~ng . Retail. wholesale.
pock•t watchet ond chains,
No oppoinment neussary. Coli
Sll'ller and gold. We need 1964 GRAND PIANO, white flntsh ,
,good oction ; olso RototUier.
(614) 593·8655 . hou,.. 9.00 1111
and old•r silv•r coins . Buy, sell,
Phone 9"9·2202.
6:00 7 Pom!roy !toad. Athens,
or trod•' Call Roger Wamsley,
Oh.
742-2331.
STEREO: AM·FM· FM stereo· radio,
8 trock tope combination .
. SPECIALS ct 0 &amp; J House ot .CASH! I ! for 1unk carS. Frye's
Bolonce due $104.20 or terms.
Fabrics, Iorge blanket pieces ,
Truck and Auto 2.. HOUR
Phone 992·3965.
reg . $1.50 lb. now $1 .00 lb;
WRECKER SERVICE I Phone
Crvsh.d velvet p1ect1, reg.
742-2081.
USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT.
$2 50 lb. now $2.00 lb . I lablo
BelOit 3008 Skidder: T1mberjack
of poly knit reg. 12.49 yard. NOW BUYING Scrap. Pomeroy
360 Grapple Sklddlf, John
Auto Retyeling , high prices
now $1 39 yard. 1 mile below
DHre 360 Crawler Loader wag
paid , auto bodie1, motors,
Middleport on S.R. 7.
forks
; 8ush .60" Metallurgical "
scrap, Iron, matols baHaries,
Chipper. Contact Don Groves,
REVIVAL NOW in progrets, thru
open 8 till " :30 Monday thru
or Lrons Equipment Co. , Inc.
Jon 9 ot Pomeroy Wesleyan
Saturday, Old 33, just above
Circleville, Ohio 43113 . Phone
Holiness Church on Rt . 1..3 .
fairgrounds, Pomeroy , Ohio ..
(614) 596-A769.
Sp.ahr ts Rev. Wm . Owen .
Will also pickup cart.. Phone
Oist. Supt . Special singing each
'192·1&gt;337 .
TWO 900 lb . steers, 2 mixed
evening. Pastor Re'l. Oewey
Hereford hailers to freshen
W.O.NTED
.
CHIPWOOD
.
poll$
Kin~ lnv1testke public.
'
around
Feb. I , rear wheel
maw iumum diameter, 10 Inches
weights for Formall A troctor.
GUN SHOOT at the Racin
on largest end, $8.00 per ton.
Phone S.3·235J.
Club every Sunday,
Bundled slabs. $6.00 per ton
Assorted mevts.
~ll'lered to Ohjo Pollet Com· TWO 878 • 15 snow tires . $25.
Pony, Rt. 2, Pomeroy. Phone
Phone W ·38'15.
SHOOTING MATCH , Sunday ,
'192·2689 .
January 9, starUng ot noon.
HONEY FOR soli: Phone
Rutlof!d l.glon Hall
j2LO TYPE peddl, sewing
985·3555.
SHOOTING MATCH . lu•l off Rt. 7 "machine, type used In shoe SCHOOL SEWING Machines.
thop. Caii7A2·2656.
by·pass near Rock Spring
Singers in walnut consolette,
Cemetery Every Sunday, 12
$46. Phono 992-5146.

Pomeroy

L1ndmarlc

soften &amp; condition your
water with 1 Ca-op. water
soHontr, Model UC-XVI ..
Now Only '279.95
ltt

u~

.......

test your wafpr .

NEW 3 'bedroom house , 2 baths,
aU elec., 1 amt, Middleport,
close o Rutland. Phone 992.

NEEO CASH? Turn that older fur·
nlture Into cosh today We pay
the Highest possible pricus on
"ntlque Furniture and Collec·
tib.les. Ask about our complete
ouctlon ond appraisal services .
Coli collect, Athens , (614 )
592 47 ..3, 592·4929 evenings.
AUCTION, START your new yetlt
out the auction way m 1977. Fn·
day, Jan . 7, at
Auction
House . New an used mer·
chontdse
Consignments
welcomed. Horton St., Mason ,
W.Va. ~hone (304) 773-S.71 .

1/.m.

3 BECROOM home , bretiewoy
a nd garoge oroun d I a Cr.
located in ArbovgA Edit ion Tup·
pers
Plains ,
Ohio .
$15,500.Phone992·7292.
f
NEW 3 bedroom house , built·ln
· k1tchen. both and 1/ , , Phone
7.. 2·2306 or contact MilO 8. Hut·
chlson , Rutland, Ohio.
4 ACRES UNOEVELOPEO IOnd near
mines ,
r•duced. ~ Phone

742·2867.

HOUSE AND lot , 128 Laurel St.,
Pomeroy Ohio . Contott Doc
Eblen.
3 BEDROOM, FULL basement,

SINGER GOlDEN Touch N' SEW
naturol
gas , forcedlilling
air furnace
Iorge ponneied
room,,
RACINE FIRE Dept. will htJve a
does it alit ZISJ·Iogs , sews on
wa
ll
to
wofl
carpet
fireplace
,
Gun Shoot every Saturday night IF YOU hove o ltrvice to offer,
knlh , outomotic buttonholer,
e.:cept hall , modern kitchen,
6 p.m at tl'\eir building in
want to buy or aeH something,
moket designs. many other
Bothon. Oh1o.
lots of cobtneh. Steel siding.
ae looking for work . . . or
features . Phone992·5146.
Condor Street . Pomeroy, Phone
whatever ... you'll get results
992-3708.
faster with a Sentinel Wont Ad. FREIGHT DAM.o.GEO, Oclowr 19.
1976. Zlg-rog sewing mach ines,
Call992·2156.
buttonhole, monovrom·, e}c.
REWARD FOR rhe return of fodies
Originally $179.95 will sell lor
purse and conltnfl loti in
$59.95 ccnh or terms . Phone
Racine or.o. Phone 9"9· 25oa6.
992·5146.
3 AND 4 RM. furn ished and un·
Virgil B.·Sr., Rtollor
tPhone
m.
furnished
opts.
LOST · Beagle , mole, brown h.od.
FIREWOOD. PHONE 742~131 or
. J16 E. Second Street
white top on toll, onswers to
543&lt;.
985·3813.
Pomeroy, Ohio 457"
nome of "Wheeler." lost on COUNTRY Mobile Home Park, Itt.
NEW
SNOW
tir8s
,
700
x
15
Pho~o m-1125
Sumner . Rood , reword. Pl'tone
33, ten miles north of Pomeroy.
Goodyeor'1 Custom ea:tro grip 4
Frod J(orshntr, 985·3874.
Large loll with concrete patios,
pi~ nylon cord, interlubes ar•
'DEXTER - Large lot on
LOST. RED Irish Setter , male,
1idrewalks. runners ond off
stHI and pockogltd. 'h price.
sntall brook, 3 bedroom
strHt parking. Phone 992·7479.
vicinity of Hemlock C.ro'lle oreo .
$80. Contoct 742·2538 .
mobile home and garage
9 months old . Call 992·2433.
FURNISHED two b.droom opt., CONSOLE STEREO and albums. · with •;, bath .
' odults only. No pefl . MidPOMEROY - 2 bedroom
TUt bock rocker, gold with
dleport. Phone 992-387.. .
vibrator, ond heat, 10 Cote
modest home, Nice bath,
pOckel knivtl , birdcage on
kitchen, f-JII basement and
ONE BEDROOM Aptt. at VILlAGE
sland. Phono 99:!·6021 .
gas furnace. S5,.500.
GU.O.RANTEED JOIS·LOOITION:
MANOR in Middleport for $104
$3? t .40 Slf11le; $502 .80 mar·
HEMLOCK G.RO)IE - 3
monthly plu1 elec . Or $130 In· BIG OEAL OAYS 5.t.LE. make your
ried. Army Recruiting, Cafl Col·
bedrooms with closets.
cludhtg eloc. LOWER RATES le&lt;
be1f dtol befOJt Jonuory 28,
loct (614) 593·3022 385-6318.
SENIOR CITIZENS. Con~tnlent
m )dern
bath,
eat.ln
1W7 on Massey Ferguson trot ·
to shopping on Tl'llrd and Mill
Jars, balers and lmple~ts .
kitchen and full basement.
MAN NEEDED lhat can dii body
Sts. In Middleport. Brand new
No. I C01h RoboiM, $11)0 lo . $20.000 .
repair work. Contoct Hc:rrotd
htgh quality oportmenta. See
$500. No. 2
Robolos. $40
NEAR ROCK SPRINGSHysell ,
Rutland ,
Phone
tht manager at A,pt. 28 or call
to f250, with no finance chorgt..
742-315-1 oher 5 p.m.
One
3 bedroom home,
·m.n21 . An Equal Houting till May 1 dep.ndlng on pro· nice floor
both, gas , F .A.
SOMEONE NEEDED lo •lay with
Opportunity.
ducts. No. 3 No Finance charge
furnace and level lot,
my Invalid husband and 100.
till July 1 on tractor Implements
BEDROOM
trailer,
real
nice.
2
522,000.
.
Phone '192·32S.,
or
Sept.
1
on
balers
.
Come
on
In
Phone 992·332 ... adulta only.
SYRACUSE
4
lots,
3
and make your bett deal n'ow ,
bedroom all electric home,
AV.O.ILABLE AT Alvenld&lt;o Aptt. I
Shinn's Troctor Sale1 , Laon ,
bedrm, apartment, $100 per
nice kitchen and dining,
W.Va . Phone (304) 458·1630.
month, :Z Mdroom opt.. $133
bodacious view of river,
I* monlh. Equal Opporlunlly POLOROIO SX70 comero, $100 ,
$37,500.
Phont 99:!-735A .
Housing. Phone 992-3273.
2
'LINCONL HTS. -

rooms, 3 bedrooms, bltft,

GOT AN EYE Rl A.BUY1
Speed

nice kitchen, gu,

·

Tvt APPLIANCE

GA sEIYicl

Cllltftr ns.uot

F./I.

furnace, and rural w8fer~

Queen and 5ome

lr1nd ..W mocltls, refrlter.ton, frttztrt, w1tlte" .
,lltrywrs, ""'"· All 1re le.tvrt111cll• to .... you
work &amp; lime. Somo unllllrllflglllly scrotchld. lllloro
'
pricod to Mil. Sot tlllm todly 11:

wdroom home with nice
bath, dining, basement at'td
furnlturo. 112,9011
GALLIA-MElGS LINE -6

model VC · XV I Only 1279 .95
Ont tood uUd Glbton Side ·
lby·Sidt Rtt{ittntor 12~0

PCIII..;·Landmalk
Mgr.

122,000.
RUTLAND - Garden,
· utility building, gar ago and
2 bedroom hon)e with beth
and gas heal. $11,000.
LOTS- Nice large wooded
and cleared pnes. S2,500.00
up .
'NOW I~ THE TIME TO
PUT THAT PROPE·RTY
ON THE MARKEY. CALL

m·l325.

CHINK IN. THE ARM OR-f.'tiD $0 1H15 O NE

DIED HERE ·- ,. •

WORKED THE MINE
W\111 IN.DIAN
5U\'1' E5 --

SHB IJJ/IS A GHit..D.

Bll..t- TO H'f.R MDTHBR'?

dlt,..

·-·

7

. ,..

HOWERY
lfiVER VIEW - ,3 large
bedrooms , bath , dining
room ,
large kitchen,
basement, natural gas

furnace, hardwood tloors.
ASKING ONLY $12,500.00
BRICK - 2 bedrooms,
bath , dining room. finished
back porch, natural gas
' furnace , garage, lovely

level lot. S$,9011 .00.
NEAR
VETERANS
MEMORIAL HOSPITALNew lovely split entrance
home, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths,
sewing room or den. dining
room, Utility room, large
recreation room. garage,

carpeted. located on double
lot. $40,000 .00.
MIDDLEPORT - Corner
lot, s bedrooms. dining
room. 2 baths, utility
space, natural

gas furnace,

carpeting, eKiro building
used for offld! or storage.
S22,000.00.
'
RUTLAND- 4 acres wllh
older home, 3 bedrooms.
din! ng
room.both,
alumlnum

siding ,

ANO

ULABNER

Aliff.9\SY7001/P

,

re · flnl•~od.

In

11.01l--Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; Weekday 4; Edge of
Night 6; Double Da re 8, 10; Morning with D.J 13.
II:Jil--Shootlor The Slars 3,4,15; Happy .Days 6,13;
, Love of Life 81 10; Sesame St. 20,33.

11 :5:-.--C BS News 8; Ms . Flxil10.
12:01l--News 3,6,8, 10; Don Ho 13; Bob Braun 4; Name
Tha t Tune 15
12 : ~Q-Lover s &amp;

Frie nds 3; Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Search

for Tomorrow a,10.

1.3(}-Days ol Our Lives 3,4, 15 : Family Feud 6,1 3: As
The World Turns a, 10.
2:01l--$20,000 Pyramid 13; Dinah 6.
2:3o--Ooctors

3 , ,., 1~ ;

0ne Life to Live 13; Guiding

L1ghl 8,1 0.
3:1l0--Anolher World 3,4,15: All In The Family 8,10 :
Crocke ll's VIctory Garden 20.
3 15-General Hospital 13.
3 Jll--Bewllched 6; Malch Game 8,1 0; Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 20 .
4.QO-Mister Carloon 3; Marcus Welby, M.D. 4; Gong
Show 15; Howdy Doody 6; Mickey Mouse Club 8;
Sesame St. 20 ,33; Movie ' The
Lieutenant" l O; Dinah 13.

Hor izontal

4·30-Mv Three Son s 3, Emergencv One 6; Parlridae
Family B; Flinlstones 15.

5.1l0--Big Valley 3; Merv Gr.lftln 4; Brady Bunch 8;
Mister Rogers 20,33, Star trek 15.

l:Jo--NewS6; Family Atfair a; Elec . Co. 20.33; Adam.
12 13
6-Cl&lt;l--News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom. 20,33.
6:31l--NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; AndyGrlfflth 6;
CBS News8.10: Vegetable Soup 20; Villa All!llre 33 .
7·IJO--Truth or Cons. 3; Jenny &amp; Me 4; Bowling for
Dollars 6: Andy Williams 8; News 10; To T'lllhe
Tr ulh 13; My Three Sons 15; Ohio Journal 20; Black
Perspecllve on l he News 33.
7:3Q--Porter Wagoner 3;· Movie " Brian's Song " 4;
Candid Camera ·6; Treasure Hunt a; MacNell l:ehrer Report 20,33; Andy Williams 10; Name
Thai Tune 13; Pop Goes the Counlry 15. ·
8:1l0--Sanford &amp; Son 3,15; Donny &amp; Matie 6,13;
Lawrence Welk 8; WiishlngtO{I Week In Review

20,33; Assault on MI. Everest 10.
8: 31l--Chico &amp; the Man 3, 15; Wall Slreel Week 20,33.
9:1l0--Rocklord Files 3,4,15; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13;
Mov ie " Man on a Swing''

a. 10 ;

Documentary

Showcase 20,33.
IO :tlt)-l&gt;rplco 3,4, 15; ABC News Closeup 6, 13; News
20. Paul Nuc hlms 33.

10 :31)-Lock, Stock &amp; Barrel 20.
11:01l--News 3,4.6 ,8, 10, 13, 15; MacNeil-Lehrer Report
33.; Monty Python's Fly ing Circus 20.
11 :Oil--News 3,4,6; ,8, 10, 13, 15; MacNeil -Lehrer Report
33. Monty Python 's ·Flying Circus 20.
11:31l--Johnny Carson 3,4,15 ; SWAT 6, 13; Movie " The
Spy with My Face" 8; Mary Hartman 10; ABC
Ne ws 33.

4:3Q.-Movle 'The Family Secret" 3.

6:1l0--FBI 3.

'iliJ\i~jl;)l} ~THATSCIIAIIBLI!DWOIIDGAME
~ ~ ~~biHonriAmoklandBobleo
Unscrwnble lhesa lour Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to form
four ordinary words.

LOBAT

is

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

One lette r simply st:mds for ano th er. In this sample A is
used for th e three L's, X for th e tw D O's, dr Sing le l etters,
a postrop hes, the length a nd formation o f lhe words arc all
hmts Ea0h day the colic le tters llrC tll ffc rcn t.

CRYPTOQIJOTES

WINNIE

IB P.&gt;EING I&lt;'\"ZED ? 11 1

BELIEVE IT !

MY FIRST
IMPUL~ WA(L_
TO FIGHT IT...
..

I

CAN 1 1

MOM,BIJT
1Ti5TRUE!

BUT I UNDER5TAND IT'&amp; NO UE&gt;F.: .
~E 5TATE HAB ALREADY FUNIIEO· '""==;::!"~
~E HOJSING Pi&lt;tlJECT AND
OTHER lFNANTB HAVE
6TARTED MOVII\K3 OUT !

I

ZS LD
U IE M

P IJ

!. V M

..

DI · NM,

FMKMWF C

USLVLUOMV

I, A

IV

J KI W

P I J V

N MDSM

V M C I-

G JORIWC .
ZLGDMV
ELDDSMZC
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: KEEP SO BUSY HELPING
OTHERS THAT YOU DON'T HAVE TIME TO FRET ABOUT
YOURSELF. - O.R. COHEN, JR .

Phone •
•

."WttLt:NN£1- elderly woman

10 : 15--General Hospital 6.
10 .3Q-Hollywood Squares 3,.4, 15 .

12 IJO--Mov le .. The 4D Man .. 10; Janakl 3:1
12 :41l--Mod Squad 6. Ironside 13.
1:IJO--Midnlght Special 3.4.15.
2: 3(}-News 3.
3 IJO--Movie " The Gunfighter" 3.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here'" how to work it :
. A X Y D J, B A A X R

Will DO plumbing, heati ng, roof· '
lng , remodeling ,
free
•stlmattl , Coli
Charles ;
Sinclair, 98'·o41'21.
,

GUN STOCKS
99:!·7168.

10 oo--sanlord &amp; Son 3,4, IS; Price is Right 8, 10; Mike
Douglas 13.

t

shelter

e 1frnE OONNA7 E&gt;UILDING

:

Douglas 10
9: 31l--C ross W1ls 3; One Life to Live 6; Good Day,B.

38 Peas'

~

.

ACROSS
39 Jacob's
I Texas school
brother
5 Nine-lifer
DOWN
8 Biblical
1 Blushing
country
2 False god
9 Enchant
3 Try to
13 Cupola
unpress
14 Cahf.
(colloq.)
desert
(3 wds.)
15 Quadrages4 Ed u
Yesterday 's Answer
imal
5 Umle
12 Used tire
24 Fell's
!i Egy ptian
firmly
16 Prong"'
tagalong
6 Soon
20 Give 26 Embarked
weight
18 Chief
1 Dervish
1discharge ) 30 - lily
Norse god
headgear
12 wds.)
31 Tea ge nus
19 Go, wrmig
10 Break the 21 E ntered
33 Weaken
20 Inhabit
ice
slowly
35 Long22 Boundary
(2 wds.)
(2 wds.)
necked
23 Celerity
11 Bridge
22 Imbue
bird
24 Newspapers • .,.,....,.....,.,....,...television,

partner
32 Tree
decoA
34 Bodily
symptom
36 H1re
:n Come down
in buckets

EXCAVATING ,
8ACKHOES, •
DOZER . TRENCHER . LOWBOY. ;
OUMP TRUCKS . BILL PULLINS. •
- PHONE 992·2478 . DAY OR :
NIGHT.
,

7..C19.

~~

29 Conunohon
30 Butler or

Ex· 1
covaling , septic systems, :
dor:er , backhoe , dump truck, ~
llm.s1one, grovel , blaCktop ;
paving. Rt . 143. Phone 1 (61 ..) ,
698·7331.
I

Will do odd job1, rDofing, pain- :
ting, gutr•r work. PtM:ine 99'2· 1

taken ove r comple tely

mater

MARTIN

CHRISTMAS SPECIAL: S•wlng '1
Mochlnes cleaned', oi led and :
odjusrad, $5.98. Sewing,
Cent•r. Middl eport Ohio.
:
OIL ANO GAS furnO(e service and '
Tro•ler or'ld homttS, 24
65.

the new game had almost

25 Punta del
· -, Uruguay
26 was m the
army
21 Bonn 's
country
(abbr.)
28 Before ·

cE-LE~C~TR~O~N~I~C~T~.~V.~C-LI~N~IC-.-N~e-~

6. 4:f--Mornlng Report 3.
6:51l--Good Morn ing . West VIrginia 13.
6· 55--Good Morning, Tr l State 13.
7:tlt)-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning, America 6, 13; CBS
News 8; Chuck White Reports 10.
7 o:-.--Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10.
7·31l--Schoolles 10
8:01l--Lassie 6; Capl . Kangaroo a,1 0: Sesame Sl. 33.
8:31l--Blg All ey 6.
9:0o--A .M. 3; Phil Donahue 15.,13: Lucy SHow 8; Mike

ce ntratlon 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For
Women Onl't 15.

etc.

m -5858.

6: 3D-Col umbus Today 4; News 6; Sunrise Semester 8;
Overseas Mission 10.

1:tlt)-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6,13; Con·

by IHOMAS JOSEPH

1~- 1\lAT CPS'f., IJJOUI.-D 40l!
CONSlDBR ~1-\DIJ.lb 1\lB

•,

Contract was invented in

~
..)ll!T ~r; SKOU~D HAVB HAD
ll-19$1.'- TClJS'iL..S COT WHEON

6: 1:-.--Far m Reporl 13.
6:21l--Not For Women Only 13.

1925 and started to supplant
auction around 1930 By 1935

news paper The Jacobys w11/
answer mdiv1dual quest1ons
If stamped. sell-addressed
envelopes are enclos ed The
most tnferestmg questiOns
will be used m th1s column
down
.
,
and w1ll receive cOpieS of
or course. South' s _!!_a te· _ .JACOBY MODE RN )

'"

~~
~
,·
~
m~
o~
n!t
~·~--------~

A Mississippi reader wants
to know whe n contract bndge
succeeded auc tion bridge.

dia mond finesse Wes t cas hed
tw o clu b tncks and got out
wi th a t rump After t ha t most
ma usp1c1o us sta rt . the 4-2 dm·
mond bredk left South gasp tng
fo r breath as he wen t one

-

T.V. sho~, Electronic T.V. Clin ic
Service call , $5.95. Color, 8 &amp; W
onrenno systems stereos , ett. ,
572 South T!,ird. Middl e port,
P~one 992·6306, Corry in and ;

~~~~~

North cards after hiS partner although undoubtedly there
made that remark a t tr ick are a few people who still play
auction today.
one
The partner took his ace of
(lJo you have a quest1an
clubs, entered dummy with lor the e&lt;perrs? Wrote "Ask
th e nine of trumps and lost the th e Jacobys " care of this

!

=====;::::;;::::;;:

Pass

enough ''
Th is IS what happened to the
unlucky expert who he ld the

Til E ARROW FOUND A

A SPANIARD - NO DOUBT ONE
OF THOSE WHO

Sweepers , toasters , 1rons , a ll
small appliances. Lawn mower , ~
~481 .
next to State Highway V.Orog a ' "~
on
Route 7. Phone (614) 985· ·,
SMALL farm for sole , 10"1. down.
3825.
ownei- financed . Monroe Covn·
ty. W. Va . Pho•e (lOA ) n2. REMODELING , Plumbing, heating.• ....,
~102 or (lOA) 772·3227 .
ond oil types ol general repair .. ........&amp;
Work gvaronteed 20 year s ell ·
COUNTRY tormland with seciud·
perience . Phone 992·24b9 _
&amp;d woods. woter ond good oc·
ce-ss in Monroe County, W.Va . SEWING MACHINE Repairs , sur· ,:
$1 ,000 down , call (lOA) 772vice, all makes, 992·2284, . The H
3102 or (304) 772·3227 .
Fob pc Shop , Pome r o y
Authorized Singer Soles o nd
Commercial property oppr'ox . 17
Service . We sharpen Scissors.
1
acres, level lond. located at
I
Tupper5 Ploin5 on Ohio, Route EXCAVATING, do1er, loader and I
7. Phone (614) 61o7-630A :
backhoe work; du mp t ruck~ ~
,and lo·boys tor hi re ; will haul
3 bedrooms , IV,, baths, Iorge liv·
fill d1rt , to soil, limestone o nd
ing room, din ing room on~ kif·
gravel . Call Bob or Roger Jef.
chen, tully carpeted. Phone
·fers
, doy phone 992· 7089,
992·3129, or m-5.43..
· night phone 997.3525 or 992·
59 acres , 6 room hovse, both ,
5232.
portly corpeted, two out·
EXCAVATING,
dozer, backhoe
buildings, dug basement,
ond ditcher. Charles R. Hal·
one·th1rd tillable , minera l
field , Bock Hae Servic e.
rights located n.or Conville .
Rutland , Oh1o . Phone 742·2008.
Redu ced for quick sole ,
$23 .500. Phone 742-2766.
SEPTIC Systems mltolled by
licensed msto ller
Shepard
TUPPERS PLAINS · three bedroom
ContractorS.
Phone
742·2409.
house, 2 baths, living room ,
family room , flreploce. carpet , SEPTIC TANKS cleaned. Modefn :
Sanitolion , 992·3954.
...
dishwasher, disposol, ronge ,
: ~~: $26.500. Phon~ (61 .. ) WILL do roofing, const ruction,"" ..
plumbing ond heat ing. No job •
LARGE HOUSE on q.good size lor.
too Iorge or too smoll. Phon...,.
Oul of high wCihrr. dow to
7A2·2348. .
~
shopping area Priced to sell . CARPENTER , flooring , ceiling. :
phonem·5786.
ponaling. Phone992.2759 .
•
HOUSE. 3 B. R.. bolA, Lr .. dining
work and welding. Cott- :
and kitchen , gas keot , base· DOZER
tact Jomn Parsons , Rt , 1, ,
ment, 2 car garage ,.,large fenc·
Racine, on Cormel Rood
ed yard with gorden spot. See
at 2.. 2 Condor St., - Pomeroy, MOBILE Ho m• Repair, Elec., ·..
plumbing and heal ing, Phone 11
~=O::hl:o:.

TEAFORD

HOUSE. 5 ROOMS and bolh In APPLES, FITZP.O.TRICK ()-chard ,
Stote ~te 619, Wilkesville ,
ltocine area. Phone992·5858 .
Phone (614) 669·:1785.

IN

HIS DAY,
JUDGING ~ROM
HIS RICH AI&lt;M O~ -

BRADFORD, Auctioneer , Com·
plate Service Phone 949·2487 ....
or 9.. 9.20()(). Raci ne, Oh1o, Crill "";:
Bradford.
•
~ ·-

Pass

Pass

" Maybe we didn ' t bid

-

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

2•

Pass

partner as declarer remarks ,

GfNTLE~AN

Call992-7481

Pass

One remark that causes. an
otherwi se unemotional bndge
player to weep is when hiS

WHAT MUST HAVE:
PASSED FoR j:\

tiOMESITES for sale , 1 acre and
up. Middleport , near Rutland .

North East

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

LJTI'LE ORPHAN ANNIE
LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-ANCIENT HISTORY

Ph.l75-3469
?-30·5:00 Dally
~liU·OOO_Frlda)'s _,

Wes t

Openmg lead - 3 4

Pt. ~leasanl

._:o3 1 mo.

the dtamond finesse and play

out th e ace a nd que en of
diamonds imm~iate ly after
one trump lead . This w9uld
leav e Sou th with three entries
to dummy, two would allow
him to set up the fifth dtamond, the third would •ilow
him to use that fi fth diamond
to get nd of his losmg heart.

A A7 5
Netther vulnerable

DIRECT
FABRIC SALES:
------na-Miin Street

, ....,.,.

PROBLEMS?

that would be to forget about

• KQJI06 3

maHAssn, padding . Ideal ;
for campers. Variety of1 "\!
!sizes .
'•'
Velvets, nylon prints,
~·
herculont, vinyl solids, and
...
,lancr .P_rjn!•· _ac.c~ssorles r'

IN LOVING Memory of 0(0Jtl
Jocob Goul who paued away
• Januory 6, 1973.
Nott·ung but memorl" os we
journey on ,
LonQing foro smile of a loved on&amp;
gone,
None know the dep ths of ovr
deep regret ,
But we remember when others
for9Qt .
Sadly missed by wife, son,
daughter and four grand·
ckildren .

to make game The way to do

SOUTH IDl
• J5

_ p_~m\~

RIDENOUR

+K9

(614) 985-4155
Chester. Ohio
10-17-l_mo (Pdl

-For sola; cna1r

d1amond s had broken 3·3,
South would have been able to
set up two good d1amonds m
dummy to di scard two losers
and he would have made six .
What South failed to see was
that the best play for four
would De to give up six and try

EAST '
. 54
•K 1094
+ J 10 8 6
"' QI08

• KJ 4 3

KEN GROVF.R
PHOTOGRAPHY

1J._.., mo.

Gibson, HardWlck.

WE ST
. 72
• Q87 32

FRIDAY , JANUARY 7,1977
6:00-S unr lse Semeste r 10.

mond finesse had worked and .

• 96 2

.....1
....•

12 .3G-MoOJie '' Necro mancy'' 8.
!' : ~Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.

ment was correct. If the dia-

6

• A9 8
• A6
+ 754 32

~

Aerial
Commercial

Tennyson? 20;

WIN AT BRIDGE
Finesse try proves costly

OUINTZ

PR Oj!oAB LY-- .VHAT'

....,•

'

I I K J

IUPDINTj I I
I I K

t
I I I :0

IZEEMYN

Print anewer here:

lT

Vv11EN

TIME/0
UP IN THE

~E'T
· MO~NIN6.

Now aoan~ lht clrclect lllttn to
lonn 1he surprllt ..._, u oug·
geatect by lho obove cartoon.

"[Irr:rrxJ!'

(...,...eraiOmOrrOW)
., Jumbles : STOOP ELDER CORNER BUTANE
Ye&amp;10(da,·s Answer: "IVE It~ the ploln,~olhelmlll 19 ftnd thingl_
outi".,.-"DETECr'

() 1977 Kin&amp; F••twe1 S)lndlca\e, Inc.

my home. Phont991·731• 1 ,

BARNEY

out

collar , storage building ,
trailer hoOkup to rent .

115,500.00.
WANT TO fhL? (TIME
IS MONEY) LET US SE~L
YOUR PROPERTY NOW.
!SERVING · MEIGS
COUNTY FOR SEVERAL
YEARS)
HENRY E. CLELAND
BIIOKER,
APPRAISER,
CONSULTANT.
9fl·225t or m.u.-

MVPORE

'

WK:K HOMES Is .. pandlng to all "'
orH of Ohio. NO FII:ANCHISE
FEE. llg money opporNnlty, '~

'-"

merchandised

ACHIN' BACK!!
SOME JOGGERS
ARE A NUISANCE !

lro!l'

your model home. For frH
dealer ~ett , send to WICK :

HOMES PLANT , 125 1 SOulh ,
Michigan Av8nue, Coldwor.r, :
Michlgar) 49036.
·

ONE IE~~OOM opl. fu~nlsltod. '
Pllone Rondy flvnl. 992·6197
~
~er~6~p~.~~·~~----'
~~

--·
. '
"

'

YOU EXPECT

ME TO SIT $fiLL
MEEKLY A"D Ln
HEI&lt; STEA L

~H I VAUN SHAFTOE:

PHOTOGRN'JIY

Racine; Ohio

Refrlger1fors, Rl!llles, W1slters &amp; Dryers.

,
"Your ChntDealtr"
· 992-2f2t
Ina. Till 1-~ ''~

$ !E:Mo$ RATHER

DRA$T IC·· FIRI&gt;J6

J0 -240t

tor

Gelling On 33
7:30-Hollywood Squares 3,4; Ohio :lft.1e. Lottery 6;
Price is Right a; MacNeJI .Lehrer Report 20./3; Wild
Klnodom 10; Nashville on lhe Road 13; Dolly 15.

PROFESSIONAL

RACINE
CARPET SHOP

OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.

OFFICE HOURS

Wntlnghoust.

.POMEROY MOTOR CO.

(61~ )

Do llars6; Muppe1Show8 ; News 10 ; ToTelllheTruth
\3; My Three Sons 15; Anyone

CAPTAlNEASY

Rutland, Ohio 45HS.
Ph .

1:00- Truth or Cons 3, ToT ell th e Tru th 4; Bowl ing for

- .'

Southedl1f 011111
Truss Rafter Co,,

Movie " Oo Not D ls tuturb" 10 .

9 .3o--feanne Wolf Wllh ... 20 .
10:tlt)-Best Sellers 3,4,15; Slreets of Sen Francisco
6, 13 ;, Barnaby Jones 8; News 20.
10 :31l--Woman 20.
11 :tlt)-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; MecNeii· Lehrer Report
33.
11:3()--Johnny Carson 3,4,1 5; Bunny of th• Year
Pageanl6, 13: Koj ak a; Mary Hartman 10; BC Nows
33.
.
12: tlt)-Movie " Ride the Tiger" 10; Janokl 33.

6:3(}-N BC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; ·Andy Grllfllh 6;
CBS News 8,10

word!

Think Chevrolol ... Think Pomeroy Motor Co.

*We have the right deaUor JOU
~Reliable service after the decil

/·

r==~~~~~~::~ ,.,"

' I •

ANY
ANY SIZE

9:tlt)-BarneY. Miller 13; Hawa ii! Flve-0 8; VIsions 33;

6 : ~News 3,4,8,10, 13,15; ABC N~ws 6;"'nce Upon a
Classic 20,33.

•

~

r.osn

Cheyenne Blam w/Hndtop

''

Box28-A

"We Care" •
Free Est.
Work Guor.
Rutl1nd 12·9· t mo. 742-2328:

VIsions 20 ; Mas ter piece Theatre 33 .

8:31l--Whal's Happening ! I 13.

5:31l--News 6, Family Allalr a; E lee. Co . 20.33 ; Adam .
'II.
. 12 13.

Located'" Langsville

AL TROMM CONST.

~DIII5-SOITm

12995.

noon .

NEW 77 CHEVROLET

WI-I DOIIIIS

brakes.

Ot&lt;t"''"' ,,76

M1nn ln; 0 Webs ter
Jvdge
(Ourt o r Comm on P leas,
Probate Di11 1S10n

-lotiA-

-11111-lAIIics
S10itl

Local 1 owner car, blaek vinyl roof, green Interior,
white wall tires, air , automatic power steering and

- '"E'ieh additional word - 3
cents .

.

IM.P.8.0IEMEN1j

Pratoct your lnvntmtnt
plus add to lht YllUI of
your home. Trust lhoto
,n,ctss.ny fix.lt, room
~ llldiHon and remodlllng .
labs to · your friendly,
neighborhood, quolilltd
bolldOI'.

llllllatioll Senic•

ll9t5.
"74 DATSUN
210 2door. local car , 4 speecltransmlsslon. 4-4,200 miles,
good !Ires, dark green finish , reel oconomy .

OBITUARY

t~IJ '"

lHQM~

l

B. tlt)-Movle "The Call of lhe Wild" 3,4, 15 ; Welcome
Back, Kotter 13; Colll!lle Basketboll6; Waltons 1, 10;

THURSDAY , JANUARY~ . 1977
5:1l0--Big Valley 3; Merv Griff in 4; Brady Bunch 8;
Mister Rogers 20,33 ; Sta,r rek 15.

'

' lf74 CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO
SittS.
Local I owner car, green finish, green vinyl roof, radlaf.
W· W tires, air conditioning, V-8, with automatic power
steering end brakes.

RATES

&amp;

Business Serf,kes

Pomeroy 1
Motor Co.

Television log for easy viewing

IN YOUR EXPRESSIVE
FACE r SEE THE
VERV V18RAN'T",
EMOTIONAL

•

!i

~~

"jjl"
-;
h
ii

I BETTER TA~E .--1'-U' , ,..
A DOSE OF
LOWEEIV'S Ot.:
HOME REMEDY

I

•I
'I

II

j.

,.

,.
"

�'

,

10- Tbe DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pometoy, 0 ., 'Qlursday, Jan. 6,1977

SCIENCE TODAY

Prospectus .for space·colonists
•
By ARNOLD UmBLE
from which we could extract· tion, O'Leary said flatly :
of Earth to manufacture
ST. PAUL, Minn. (UPI) material to build the shell of "A key feature of this concep,\ space solar power stations
'!be pioneeN!Olooists in space the modules, 30 per cent Is that it is technically which could supply the Earth
will find llQ trees to build log silicone from whic!h we could possible to draw 00 resources with virtually unlimited
ca.bins, but eventually they make glass for windows, and aimost. entirely Independent energy by the early 21st
COI!Id llve in communities 30 per cent oxygen which we
Century."
with streains and maybe could use for breathing," he
even a golf course,
said.
The first space colonists
" We
could
have
Steve Hagey ' Staphanje and
might tend solar power communities of several
""
Brad, Mrs, Howard Russell:
stations which could light the hundreds ·of people several
Mrs. Iva Orr. "
ByMrs.HerbertRoush
world, by the year mJ for a miles across with streams
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Burri
Cindy Roush , .• Edward
top price of $100 billion, and lakes and even a golf returned home . Wednesday Hupp, Sharon . Roush were ·
enabling the the United course. Why not?"
after spending the hollday~ New Year's Eve guests of Mr.
stales and all oth~r countries
To refine and smelt the with Mrs. Erma Wilson and and Mrs. Ronald Russell,
to CIJ\ themselves free to a metal, he said, "We could, in family.
Mike and Mandy at Wolfpen.
great extent from fossil fuel. effect, hang up a big
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
David Fox, son of Mr. and
"This is not scieQ.ce magnUying glass and let the Roush attended church Mrs. Bill Fox is staying with
fiction.1t
said
former sun do the work."
services at the Fr~edom his parents while taking over
astronaut Brian O'Leary,
The project to supply
his new employment at the ·
~~u~s
practical.
It's Earth's electrical power Gospel Mission Tuesday . A.S.C.offlce in Pomeroy. Mr.
'reasonable. And perhaps, U would cost less than Rev · 0 · G. Mcl&lt;inney who Fox has been employed in
the political decisions can 'be America's satellite program wa s at his home at Washington County.
.
. worked
out,
it
is thus far "by a considerable Maplewood Lake for the
Mr. and·Mrs. Jim Connolly,
inevitable."
holidays was the speaker . Shelly and Brian were
degree." O'Leary said.
O'Leary, a scientist and
"We'd hang up our solar Rev· and Mrs. McKinney wlll Suoday dinner guests of Mr.
author as well as a one-time power energy producing sta· leave Thursday morning for and Mrs. [;ester Rouish.
astronaut, is presently on the tions at the equaror. The sun Mobtle, AI~ . where he will be .. Mike, Vi cki and John
faculty of the Pttysics depart· would work 24 hours a dsy - evangeliZing durmg the Roush visited Monday till
·
men!
at
Princeton no cJouds and no darkness/' Winter montha.
· c· d R h Ed . d Wednesday With
Mr. and
University. He apJl&lt;!ared at a
He .estimated that once in R '"h y . 'tedousM'
war
Mrs. Don R'ffl
t I,ucasvll, Ie.
d
M
1
e
a
two-day symposium on position, the . solar power
ous vtst
r. an
rs .
New Year's Day guests of
"Space Colonization and generators would be far Rog ~r
Rousb Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Hupp,
Exploration" at the Science cheaper than fossil-fueled· evemng. ,
.
Rocky and Edward were
Museum of Minnesota power generated on Earlh . . New Years vistt~rs of Mr. Megan Manuel, Racine ,
recently.
He said America's power and Mrs. Lewis Pickett .and Sharon Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
The fascinating prospects companies are planning to Tracy were Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Bush, Mr. and Mrs.
of establishing space spend $87 billion on expimSion Max Pickett •. daughter Lynn Kenneth Bass Kenda and
communities and high orbital and new facilities compared of Crown Ctty, Larry and
.
'
. PhT
d
ht
Comnne , Mr. and Mrs.
manufacturing facilities with his top estinnate of $1110 C
1
Tonnte
ldpsM, acug ler Charles Hupp, Tina and
which would make use of billion for solar statiorui.
~nya, Mr. an
rs. har .es Micky, Marengo : Don
materiais mined from the
If all other considerations M1chaeis, Chuck and Becky, Manud, Donna and Billy
moon and asteroids were a are resolved, he said, lhe first Mr. and Mrs. Roger ~oush, Manuel Canton
Jo
concept first propounded by solar power station could be Mr. and Mrs. Don Fmdley, Charles,'Jr.,Denny,' Jane:~d
O'Leary's
P;lnceton In place in the early 1990s and Matt and Angle of Columbus, Jill Manuel, Steve Riffle, Jim
colleague, Dr : Gerard the full system in operation Lmda Strong, Rob10 and /ohn Hupp, Mr. - and Mrs. Tom
O'NeilL
'
by the 21st Century.
·of Charleston , Wtlma Grady, Manuel Te i and To
,
' . rr
mmy,
O'Leary, youthful in a
He admitted that political Racme
tbe Hopps during the
turtleneck sweater and a decisions weighed heavily on
Mr. ·and Mrs.. 'ct· arence hvisited
I'd
M
d M J
1
0
Roush of Winfield were
ays. r. an . rs. oe
tweed
sports
jacket, the project.
explained that the first space
For instance, it was posed, Sunday visitors of Mrs. Till Manuel, Tlm and Std.
modules would have to be could the operators of the Webb, Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Kearney Donohue,
launched from Earth.
Marlm Ha~den, Butch
110lar system cut off energy to Pearson and famlly .
IS f M
Donohue, Marton , 0 ., Sandra
Then, he said, all the enemle.s or
potential . Christ
guesH ·o
r. Burtoo of Columbus visited
manufacturing materials enemies? Would it be an and MrsmaGs
. eorge upp were M
d M
V
could be mined from the international operaiion or Mr. and Mrs. Ted Wilford,
r. an
rs .
erno,n
Donohue New
Years
moon and the .asteroids.
under the sole control of the 11·88 a d Kl be 1 1
'· •
n
m r y, .ong
k d
d
tt d d
11
The moon's soil cooter•, is United States?
Bottom, Mrs. Ray Pl'l&gt;i·lll, wee en
a~
a en e.
made up of 40 per cent metals
.Whatever the final disposi· Karen and Tommy of Canton , funeral servtces for their
Mts Lei d Cl h Lo i
uncle, Clmst Badgely at the
. andan
'
r ' Ewlng F unera l Horne sun·
. Kristi
Johnnyone
of Rutland,
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Wilford, daMy. M -·,. , Gl k
Mr. and Mrs. Don Hupp, Mrs. M' rs . Sargare Gl ock ner.
Grace Knighting, Mr. and
rs .
a 11 y
oc ner,
Mrs. Clarence Hupp, Nor· daughter Came were Sunday
walk 0 M
G d
mght guests of Mr. and Mrs.
,
.,
rs .
or on H rd P k
t Ch t
Proffitt, Dooneita and Greg,
owa
ar er a
es er.
Portland' Mr. and MrB. Wolf They were enroute home
Belt, Long Bottom.
. from Parkersburg and roads
Mrs 1''ll
w
bb
became dangerous and they
. · 1
•.
was a stopped at the Parker home
STARTS THURSDAY, JAN, 6
Christmas Eve dtnner guest
d th
. 't d th
t
of Mr. and Mrs. James Fife, an
ey tnvl e
em o
Cheshire, a,nd was a ChriSt· spend the mght,. They
mas 0
t
M
d returned home Monday
TO
OFF
ay, gues o1 r. ~n morning .
Mrs. Juruor Salser; Racme .
Mrs. Mildred Donohew,
ON All WINTER STOCK
Mr. and Mrs . Hoyt Mrs . Margaret Gloeckner
Ferguson, Pt. Pleasant visited Mrs. Ada Norris at the
~~~~r ~~r~nd p~~;j ~~~r~~ Anchorage Christian Nursing
Sunda
d th
d d and •. Rest · Home; . Inc. at
Y an . ey a11 a 11 en e
Manetta Tuesday.
funeral servtces for Clmst
Robert' 8mt'th Sr. re1urned
.
Ba dgIey at the Ewmg
hor!le
fr om
Veterans
Funeral 'i_ome Sunday.
Memorial Hospital Friday.
Mrs. Pearl Norr)s was a M
d M
J
.
t M
dM
r. an
rs.
ames
dtoner
gues ~1 r. an
rs. Freeman, children Jinuny,
Darrell Noms .and Tracy.
Renae of Irwin, Pa., Mrs.
SHIRTS
Christmas dtnner guests of Dorothy Johnson, Valerie
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold. Hupp, Johnson, Steve Wilson visited
JUMP SUITS ·
Edward and Rocky were Mr. the Smiths during the
GLOVES, HATS &amp;
and Mrs. Kenneth Bass, h lid
Kenda and Corrinne, Mid· 0 . ays.
,
.
SCARVES
dleport , Mr. and Mrs.
.Rtck Rose of Pittsburgh IS
All GREATlY
Clarence Hupp of Norwalk; visiting Art Hill at Racme.
Art has started mto. the
, H
Mr · and Mrs. J un
REDUCED!
upp, Fl
G · B I
Jimmy and Billy, Mary Lou
, ower rowmg us ?ess on
Stewart of Point Pleasant, his f~•ther, Dallas Hills farm
Rosemary Hubbard of alll.! •• oey also ~ISJted Mr. a~d
OPEN FRI. Ttl 8- SAT. TIL S PM
.syracuse , Sh a ron, c·1n d.~ , VISit
Mrs. H11i dunng Mr. Roses
Edward and David Roush .
·
New Year's Eve guests ~~
Mr. and Mrs. _David Kerns
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Russell , son Brad of C!Uton, W. Va.
Mandy and Mike at Wolfpen spent the weekend with Mr.
were Mr. and Mrs. Ru...,:! and Mrs. Jim Young.
Roush, Cindy, David, Ed·
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Spencer
,,
ward Melba Thomas of spent Monday till Thursday
Chester, Mr. and Mrs. at Cape Hatters , North
175 N. SECOND AVE, Ml DDLEPORT, OH
Herbert Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Carohna.
Dorsa Parsons, Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. , ~nd Mrs. Frank Dines
4 5 7 60
Dan Russell Mr. and Mrs. and
werechildren
Sunday ofguests
of Mr. ·
Parkersburg
' ·
and Mrs. Butch Wtlson, Mrs.
Kathryn Hunt. Robin Wilson
accompanied the Dines home
for a visit during the
holidays. .
... Mr' and Mrs. vernon Cady'
Jerry and Lori, of West
Jefferson, Mr . and Mrs.
LartyO'Brien,Jimmy, Linda
and Carol were Christmas
Day guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Marshall Adams and
Raymond.
Mrs. Stella Jarrell, son
Archie Jarrell, Mrs. Ruth
Grindstaff. were New Year's ·
ON EVERYTHING
weekend guests of . Mrs.
IN STOCK!
George Ball at St. Albans, W:
Va.
Mrs. Frankie McKelvey of
Belpre was a New Year's
weekend guest of her sister,
ALL SALES
Mis. Betty Carpenter at
MANY SPECiAL
Dorcas and they both at·
ITEMS ~EDUcED
FINAL tended Sunday School at the ·
MORE THAN
local Methodist church.
NO RETURNS
The community was
saddened by the death of a
, good neighbor and .friend,
Clolst Badgely whose funeral
was Sunday wfth Interment In
SEE OUR FINE SELECTION TODAY!
Letart Falls Cemetery.
Mr. an,d Mrs. • Larry
Groggle anil children of Port·
land visited ' Mr. and Mrs.
Marshall
Adams
tind
N. 2nd Ave.; Middleport, 0.
· 992-5627 ,
Raymond.

disaster.

-····~~· ~·mr~~~~;:~:;.;;"
O~VAL

1ST FLOOR ·

BRAIDED RUGS

• Men's dress shirts . knit shirts leisure
. shirts . sport shirts, Save 30 Per Cent.
• Men 's Double Knit Dress Slacks sizes 29 to
42 waist. Good seleclion. Save 25 Per Cenl.
• Men's and Boys Winter Jar:kets. Entire
Stock included. Save 30 Per Cent. ·
• Entire Stock Boys' Sweaters· slipovers and
cardigans. sizes 3 to 20. lf2 Price.
• Boys Blue Jeans and Fashion Jeans- sizes
8 to 18 in regulars. sli!llS and huskies. Sale
Prices
.
• Special Sale Entire Stock of Boys Knit,
Sporl &amp; Dress Shirts - Save 30 Per Cent.

e~cel!ent selection ot colors : Rust, Gold, Red,
Brown ar Green - comp!Ptc selection of sizes. All at

An

special sale price·s.

Reg . $3.99 Size 2Dx30 inches
Reg. 55.99 Size 22x42 inches
Reg. $9,99 Size J'x5'
Reg. $18.49 Size 4'2"x6'6"
Reg. $43.49 Size 6'5"x10'1"
Reg, $78.99 Size 8'5"xll '1"

$3.19
$4.79
$7.99
$14.79
$34,79

$63,09

Also special sa le prices on all the other are _a rugs- big
selections of colors and sizes - Save Now.

TOY SALE
1ST FLOOR
Arranged in two sale groups for your
easy selection - dolls · games
crafts . footballs - basketballs ·
trucks - guns .

I

VOL XXVII NO. 186

.

'

EVENING WEAR

HENDERSON, Ky. (UP!)

..

JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE

~ . s~~~!~~S~~~_Y~~~c~2?~~

patterns. Regular price $2.99 to $4.99

!

Womens . Juniors and Missy sizes.

l

SAVE 40%

FOUR-YEAR.QLD SEAN JACOBS is proud of this
seven and one-half foot snow man whic;h wears a World
War I heimet. Sean had a wee bit of help from his parents,
Mr, an&lt;j Mrs. Jack Jacobs, Pi~eville, Ky ,, in creating this
"blggle". The Jllcobs are guests of his parenlj, Mr . and
Mrs. Clifiord Jacobs, Laurel Cliff Road,

yd .
Yard Goods- lstfloor

• JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE

JANUARY CLEARANCE 'SALE

$1.39 COTION FLANNEL
PRINTS

BARBARA MURRAY, Left, and her daughter , Joni,
with the sculpted type snow woman they created b•hind
their hQII)e on Wright St. in Pomeroy .
'

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I

REG. 12.39

I

· I

1ST FLOOn

112

YARD

~----------

FURNITURE DEPARTMENT

I .

n
Odds and ends· including Christmas
Cards · Napkins . Paper Cups . Seals
· Desk Pads . Yarn Tye . Novelties .
etc .. etc . Your choice.

--

•]84
...

--·----_..---..--T~· --------

~,Ec•AL SALE TABLE
NOTIONS DEPARTMENT

COATS
SLEEPWEAR
INFANT WEAR
DRESSES·
JEANS

90 inch width - bleached snowy
white. Buy what you need during
this sale . .

l

YARD

..

Pool manager at
Syracuse hired

l

Take advantage of the tremendous
savings on Living Room Suites, Bar
and Steel Units, Upholstered Chairs,
Di.n ing · Room Furniture · and
Bedroom Suites.

,.

SAVE 30%

9:92:·:3:58=6=====~-B!o:b~R~uss=el~I,~M:r:.~a~n~~~M:r:s~.
:
:
:
:
========
~

LINGERIE DEPT.
SAVE 20%

TRACY LYNN. MANLEY, 5, and Crystal Dawn Manley, 7, daughters of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Manley, 50 Riverview Drive, Middleport, show off their snow woman created with a
bit of help from "Uncle Steve".
•
·

ON

GLIDDEN PAINT .
OUR COMPLETE STOCK

IS INCI.UDfDI

WOMEN'S
COORDINATED SPORTSWEAR·

20%0FF

Includes our entire stock of slacks,
skirts, vests, blouses and jackets in
large and regular sjzes.

25% OFF

20%

CHILDREN'S DEPT.
GIRlS DRESSES, SKIRTS,
SLEEPWEAR, WINTER COATS,
lOPS, JEANS.AND SlDS

SAVE 25%

'OPEN SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. 10 5 P.M.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

· heritage·:house·

'

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

ON

WOMEN'S. WINTER ROBES,
GOWNS AND PAJAMAS

~undred

million dollars If fertilizer use.
Baske tt community near
ERDA approves funding for
At the completion of Phase Henderson, would produce
all three phases of the I, U it is determined that , 1,200 tons of ammonia a day ,
project, the Kentucky among other fac tors, the utilizing some 2,300 tons of
officials said. The first phase plant is econom ially and western Kentucky coaL
is scheduled to be completed environmentally feasibdle ,
ERDA also announced
within 18 months.
ERDA will then decide Thursday Phase I approval of
The plant will convey coal whether to continue its a gasification plant proposal
to produce medium-BTU fuel Involvement in su bsequent submitted by Memphis Light,
gas to be used in producing phases of the project, they Gas and Water in a project
ammonia for industrial sa1d.
· . expected to use 2,800 tons of
The plant, to be bUilt in the . western Kentucky coal daily.

l

I

~I

I

.,~

.

-~

. ~~
FISHERMAN OF THE YEAR - Jim Crow, right, vic"ilresident of the Big Bend Bass
Anglers Club, received the traveling trophy and a plaque Wednesday night from Bill
Grneser, center, president, for the greatest total weight of fish caught in duo rournaments.
Jim Anderson, left, secretary-treasurer, was last year's winner. Members have erected a
clubhouse on the west hranch.of Shade River that will be ready for their next meeting at 7:30
p, m. on Wednesday, Feb. 7. They previously met at the Grueser Block Pian,! at Forest Run .
The club held its annual dinner at the lzaak Walton Lodge on Dec. 18. Anyone interested in
joining is invited to attend any of the meetings,

SYRACUSE · ~ Town
council Thursday night hired
Jesse Brownlng as manager
of the Syracuse swinuning
pool. Bro"ning, instrumental
. mu~lc instructor at Southern
High &amp;chool, is qualified as a
water·safety instructor, Red
Cross lifesaving and has a
pool operator's . certificate.
MARIETTA - A District •
In ,other business council wide public meeting on Jan . contents which, in fact is a
increased garba ge rates from 18 at the Washington County summaryoutlineoftheeittlre
$2.50 to $3 a month except for Courthouse here will discuss process of developing a
low income senior citizens, how the Ohio Department of transportation project from
agreed to advertise for bidS Transportation develops inception to construction.
' A preliminary draft of the
for a sewage disposal system transportation projects.
Transportation Development
for the swimming pool, and
Up
for
discussion , Process
is
presently
, authorized Mayor Herman be the public response to the
available
for
public
review at
London to enter lrito a con· department ' s newly
The
Ohio
Department
of
tract with Ohio Power designated, "Transportation
Transportation
District
Company to provide three Development
Process,"
phase power service for the renamed from last year's Office in Marietta and the
ball park and swimming pool . 'jActioil Plan," whirh was offices of County Engineers,
Council approved a blanket found to have several City Mayors, County Plan·
appropriation untll the final ·deficiencies with respect to ning Commissions and at
Public Libraries in County
(Continued on page 2)
chan~lng interpretations of Seats.
environmental law as well as
Distrlct 10 of , The Ohio
too much bulk and com· Department of Trans·
plexity.
portat ion encompasses
The name was changed to Athens, Gailia, Hocking,
reflect a truer image of the

Public invited.to take part
in highway planning process

PRICE. . .--------+......._..__
SALE. _.. . _PRICES
!
.__..,___,______.
!
.

WAREHOUSE

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

..

:;,;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;-:.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;•: •:•:•:•: ·:O :O: •:•:•:•:•:•:•:• :•:•;. ;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.

---------~-·------

'

sn~w.

W!th schools dismissed there is plenty of
time and with Mother. Nature providing plenty
of snow, building snow people became an
activity for many Meigs · County youngsters
and adults Thursday,
Needless to say, the activity brought out
the creativity of··those taking part. Pictured
here are so me of lhe snow people which made
the scene Thursday,

'

•

three companies has received
a $5 million federal grant to
design Phase I of a coal
gasification ~emonstration
plant near this Ohio River
, ·city in western Kentucky.
Announcement of the
award from \he Energy
Research and Development
Administration· (ERDA) was
made jolnUy Thursday by
. Gov , Julian Carroll and U.S .
Sens . Wendell Ford and
Walter "Dee" Huddleston
both Kentucky Democrats:
The consortium includes
Ebasco Services, Inc., W.R.
Grace Co., and Texaco.
Total project . costs are
expected to be several ·

Creativity irt

BLEACHED QUILT LINING

36 ind1es wide - 100 per cent cotton,
excellent pattern selection : .
For This Sale

FRIDAY, .J8NUARY 7, 1977

- A consortiwn comprise'd of

DOUBLE KNIT

GOWNS - BLAZERS
- LONG_SKIRTS
•
- DRESSY BLOUSES

for New York City , spearheaded a national boycott of coffee
and called for a 50 per cent reduction in consumption to drive
down prices,
·
Christine Sullivan, Maasachusetts' top consumer alfalrJ
official, asked consumers to cut coffee drinking iii lujlf for the
next !oar months to protest prices.
Supermarkets jumped on the boycott bangwag·
on,.exhorting consumers to switch to tea , cocoa., or natural
juices. Major retail grocery c~ains in Chicago announced a 4~
day price freeze on coffee.
Housewives in Michigan and Connecticut , who led a revolt
against high sugar prices in 1975 and the meat price bulge in
1973, declared war on coffee by launching a national "coffee
brake" to Ioree down spiraling prices.
Some consumers, however, were prepared to pay the price
for their coffee craving.
(Continued on page 2)

Pilot coal to gas plant
going to W. Kentucky

COMPLETE STOCK OF WOMEN'S,
JUNIORS AND .MISSES SIZES ON SAL£. .

-----------·-------·--t-----------------~

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

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

40% OFF

I
I

SAVE 40% AND 50%

WOMEN'S

'

·

The branches of his 300,000 trees were frozen and killed
.. during the night by severe winter frost. Then he discovered
that worse still,.the trunks were hit and entire trees would have
lD be replaced.
That one night o( freezing weather damaged or destroyed
all 900 million coffee trees in the southern,Brazilian state of
Parana where Schauff's farm is located.
The fr,ost affected 73.5 per cent of Brazil's 1976 coffee crop
and slashed the harvest to 6.4 million sacks of 132 pounds each
from an expected 28 million sacks.
The1oss was total, and was the major event in a series of
natural disasters and political turmoil that would reduce the
1976 world coffee supply by roughly 14 per cent and make
Schauf! and his fellow grower·• very rich men.

- The war in Angola, a major supplier of the U.S. Instant'
But now ,vith coffee approaching $3-.11-pound, there is talk
of a "'!lsumet t 9ffee boycott and some countries, notably -'coffee market, led lD a ban on its exports to the Free World .
Colombia ,fear that a boycott may hurtthelrfarmers.
- The February 1976 ear!hquake in Guatemala disrupted
The frost in Brazll, the largest producer of coffee and delivery to suppliers.
- Coffee shipments from Uganda are hampered by transsupplier of 60 per cent of all U. S..coffee imports, disrupted
portation problems, and leaf rust is threatening 10 pet. of
~nternatlonal coffee markets and triggered an almost instant
rise in American coffee prices.
Nicaragua's crop..
·
The heat was :.rln the kitchen, the supermarket sheU, and
Ten days after the frost , General Foods, the largest U. S.
coffee wholesaler, boosted prices on ground coffees by 20 cents the restaurant. F.ach new round of price hikes made the
a pound. Other processors promptly brought their pricing in morning coffee mystique more of a luxury. U. S. consumers
line with the industry trend setter ,
...
grumbled but continued to buy even when wholesale prices
On the' heels of the Brazilian frost, Mother Nature and broke through the $2-ai&gt;&lt;&gt;Und mark in July 1976.
By late December, the U. S. consumer, finding coffee a
human nature joined to shrink the 1976 world supply of coffee
to an estimated 45.5 million bags from 53.3 million in 1975and hard habit to kick, learned prices would top the $3'il-jl0und
push coffee prices to record levels.
mark in early 1977.,Breaking the $3 barrienpparently was too
- Rains and floods destroyed roughlv 20 per cent of the much for the psyche of the nation 's coffee drinkers.
coffee crop in Colombia, the worl&lt;\'s second largest producer. , Elinor Guggenheimer, commissioner of consumer affairs

JANUARY SALE PRICES
WOMEN'S .
FALL &amp;WINTER COATS

SAVE 40% &amp; 50%_

20% 50%

.

· Uolted PreoslliternaUonal
At dalm July 18, 1975, Brazllian farmer Marcos Schauf!
walked through his coffee plantation and knew at once it was

Special Clearance Sale Prices now on ;~II three floors of the Main Store - at the
Home Furnishings Annex and the Warehouse on Mechanic Street.

ANNIVERSARY CLEARANCE
SALE

I

and
ROBERt E. SUlLIVAN

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

SAVE!

KIDDIE SHOPPE

ByROXlJSTON

JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE

Apple Grove
News Notes

·'

·30-cent cup ~f coffee traced_to disasters, political turmoil

ELBERFELDS ·1N POMEROY -

NO BABY YET
As yet there have been no

applications flied In the
Dally ·Sentinel's " Baby of
the Year" contest.
By United PreosiDternanonal
OOLUMBUS - IT'S BUNDLE·UP TIME for the 7,400
Some 33 gifts from
students attending ll)e nearby Upper Arlington School system
business houses or the areu
which iB trying to save ita gas supply by lowering thermostats
wlll be given, to the parents ·
to 60 degrees.
.
·
.
and Meigs County's flrlit
&amp;lpt. Homer Mincy said thermostats in the system's nine baby of 1977.
buildings were lowered from 66 to 60 degrees in an effort to
Under lhe rules, parents
stretch the district's gas allocation and provide maximum . of the first baby must he
clasa days thil winter, T1 \Jpper Arllngton system is one of
legal residents of Meigs
many hit by 'cutbac~ In nli tural gas ordered ~Y Columbia Gas
County and present a
statement from the at·
Co.
lending physician showing
CLEVELAND - A COOPERATIVE OF NEARLY 00 the Ume and date of the
tomato growers In Medina, Lorain and Cuyahoga counties baby's birth.
I
tblnka Columbia Gas of Ohio,. Inc., has overstepped lawful
boundaries In imposing Its latest round of natural gas cut· ,,,, ,, ,,,,;,,"i':ti~:;s:~\.,
backs. "Legally," said C12veland Greenhouse Growers
Cooperative President Calvin Kraushaar, "I don't think they
Cloudy, cold tonight, lows
can do this to' us. Certain growers that don't have· substitute
near
10 .{minus 12 Celsius).·
fuel fac:e crop 18llure,
•
·
Chance
of snow Saturday,
"There Ia no way you can grow tomatoes colder than 60
higha
around
30 (minus one
detJreel and e~peet to bave any productioo," Kraushaar said,
Celsius).
Probability
of
whoae members have under gjau between 180 and 200 acres of
precipitation
90.
per
cent
croP*. DlOIItly !Dmatoes.
·
today, 20 per cent tonight, 50
WASHINGTON - AN INDEPENDENT PANEL of per cent Saturday.
experll tllld today that "an unfortunate" desigt{ ' and
NOW YOU KNOW
Inadequate -Ung of cracks caused the collapse of the Teton
New York City's boarding
Dim In ldabo, The earlhfill dam, built by Ute U. S. Bureau of house owners made a pact In
Rllcliul!atlon, failed last June at the cost of II llves and more i824 to serve their tenants
than $1 billion In damages.
just four prunes each for
'!be panel, headed by Los Angeles entdneer Wallace L. breakfast because of the high
cost of living.
(Continued on page 2)
,!
'

Lack of money
closes health
office one day

accomplished through the
Wood , Washington, Wirt
Interstate Planning Com·
mission and its working
agency - the Mid·Ohio
\'alley Regional Cou ncil
(MOVRC).
The public . is urged to attend this mee!ing which
starts at 7 p.m. and voice
concerns for improving the
process of developing trans·
portation projects. If attend·
ance is not possible, written
comments w•ll ,be accepted if
received at the District
Deputy Director's office, P.
0 . Box 6.\8, Marietta, Ohio
45750, before January 25,
1977, said Glen A. Smith,
district deputy director.

...

Ice, snow cause nine accidents

Due to the lack of funds, the
offices of the Meigs County
Department of Health, East
Bad driving conditions
Main St., Pomeroy, will be were blamed for nine traffic
closed on Saturdays, Mrs. accidents lnvestlgated by the
Gene Lyons, admlnlstratlve Gallla-Meigs Post, Ohio State
assistant, said today,
: Patrol. Thursday,
.
The office in the past has
The first occurred at 8:15
been open each Saturday a.m. Thursday one tenth of a
from .8:311 a.m . to 12 noon.
mile north of Melgs County at
Mrs. Lyons also announced Meigs Mine 11 where Ben·
the 'appointment of Mrs. jamin L. Wigal, 23, ·Rt. 1,
Pearl Scott, Pomeroy, as Athens, lost control of his ca r
depw registrar and deputy which slid on ice sideswiping
clerk by the Meigs County an auto operated by Dennis
Board of Health. A part-lime Tlllls, 21, Rutland.
employe, Nali\:y Byrd, has
Terry Layne l!upp, 20,
been named to assist with Gallipolis, suffered abrasions
record maintenance ·in the and la cerations in ·an achealth nurse office .
ctdent at 12:20 p.m. Thursday
\\

Meigs, Monroe, M o r g an ~
Noble,
Vinton
and
Washington Counties. In
addition to the above coun·
lies, The Ohio Department of
Transportation, the cities of
Marietta and Belpre and
Washington County are in·
volved with the West Virginia
Department of Highways ,
Parker.s burg, Vienna ,
Williamstown, and Wood and
Wirt Counties in West
Virginia in a Metropolitan
Planning Organization as a
. result of being designated a
Standard Metropolitan
Statistical Area (SMl\j\). .
This designation . requires
an Urban Planning Process
lin contrast to the remainder
of the District) which is

on White Hollow Rd. seven
tenths· of a mil• west of SR
'n5. An auto driven by Loren
D. Stumbo, 36, Rt. 2, Patriot,
slid left of center into Hupp's
westbOund car. There was
moderate damage.
Two persons were inJured
In an accident at I : 15 p.m. on
SR .248 In Meigs County, two
and two tenths miles east of
SR 7. Willhim A. Connolly, 67,
Rt. I, Reedsvllle, lost control .
of his car on the snow cuvered
highway. The vehicle ran off
the highway striking an
IIJIIbl\nkment. Injured were
two passengers, Erma M.

Connolly; 63, and Erma Jean
Connolly, 12, both of Rt. I ,
Reedsvllle.
A three-vehicle accident
occurred at4:45 p.m. on SR 7
north of the junction to SR 35
where an auto driven by
Kenneth W. Hughes, 48,
Vienna, W. Va. slowed in a
line of traffic for an unknown
vehicle to make a left turn .
Kimneth L Wise, 45, CheShire,
attempted to stop but his
truck pulled off the highway
onto the berm. to avoid an
accident,
Charles C: Jones, 33, Rt. 2,
Barboursvllle, W. Va.

traveling behind Wise, was
unable to stop. His truck
plowed into Wise's truck,
then struck the Hughes car.
There were no Injuries. Jories
was ·charged with failure to
stop within the assured clear ,
distance.
Melba M. Sheets, 54,
Eureka Star Rt., Gallipolis,
was taken to the Hol•er
Medical Center for treatment ·
of . Injuries suffered In a
collislonat6:25 p.m. on SR 7,
two tenths of a mile north of
SR 218.
'State troopers said an auto
(Continued on pa1e 2)

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