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                  <text>. Agriculture and·

our community

Quick look at 200 years of American farming
r'

.

POMEROY - A recent "USDA" newsletter contained the
foll6wing information on our farming heritage. I thought you
might be Interested. This is the first of a two part series .

In 1776, 90 of every 100 workel'll were farmers. In 1976, the
number Is four in a hundred. Technology has been the key not the only reason , but the key - to the increase in total
production and the Increased productivity per man-year of
labor that has characterized U. S. agriculture over the past
need to be taken, though, at two centuries.
the February 10 meeting.
At the time of the American Revolution, most of the tools
To date, t.he list of used on the farm differed little from those known (or 2,000
"Restricted Use" pesticides years. Qrain was cut almost universally with a sickle, a curved
has noi been completed by blade with a short handle, swung lrom a stooped position. It
the U. S. Environmental was not until about the time of the Revolution that first the
Protection Agency. A partial loog-bbided and long-handled scyUie came inw use, soon
unconflnned classification of followed by the cradle, a wicker frame attached to the scythe
pestlctdes report which I just blade to catch the cut ·grain so it could be laid down in
recently received Indicates windrows.
many pesticides used by
The breakthroogh in farm production in the years around
tobacco growers (for the Revolution was the invention of the cotton gin. Upland
example Methyl Bromide) cot too grew well throughout the south. However,the lint clung
have a good chance of being tenadously to the seed. In 1793, Eli Whitney fixed that with his
classified as "Restricted gin which dramatically changed Southern agriculture.
Production of cotton increased from an estimated 10,500 bales
Use."
• As a general rule of thumb, in 1793 to 4,486,000 bales In 1861. The cotton gin led to the
a farmer or commercial expansion of the plantation system, with its use of slave labor.
applicator using a pesticide . The dependence of the South upon a major export crop
with the signal word produced largely on slave-operated plantations set several
DANGER along with a skull forces In motion which led to the Civil War. U it had not been
and crossbones on the label
will probably · need to be
certified. The DANGER word
and the symbol are on the
label because the chemical
I
could cause serious problems
if it enters the human through
breathing, drinkin g or
through the skin.
·Fanners who expect to use
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Jobs, production for over a year,"
"Restricted Use" pesticides
Inflation
and food should be he said. "Our cattle men In
but do not become certified
the
main
concerns of the corn belt are selling their
applicators will need to
Presldentelect
Jimmy cattle at 10 dollars a 100
either:
Carter,
Tony
Dechant,
- Hire a Gonimerchil president of the National pounds. below the break-even
point and grain and corn are
Applicator to apply the Farmers Union,
told selling below the cost of ,
"Restricted Use" pestidde. members of the Ohio chapter
production.
- Trade work with a neigh- Friday night.
"What is happening to
bor who is a certified Private
Dechant spoke to several · coffee prices could happen to
Applicator.
hundred Ohio farmers at
The law defines "Private their 81D1Ual banquet, the other commodities if no one
about
the
Applicator" as a certified main event of a thr~y worries
producers,"
Dechant
said.
a ppllcator who uses or Ohio Farmers Union meeting "We can get along with less
supervises the use of any which concludes Saturday. coffee but what happens if
pestidde, which Is classified
Dechant said, "Jobs are producers of the staple foods
for ~~ Restricted Use," for important because - such as cereal, milk or
purposes of producing any unemployment is still about eggs - go broke?" ~ .
agricultural commodity on eight per cent. Inflation .Is
He said ·Carter should
properly owned or rented by important because it Is rising provide an adequate price
him or his employer, or on tbe to 10 per cent. And food is floor for farm prices and
properly of imother person, if Important because the must .. find
cure
for
applied without com- difficulties producers are unemploymen t if
the
pensation other than trading facing could be translated farmers' situati9J1ls going to
of personal services between into inflation and higher food improve .
producers of agricultural prices.
"ll makes a big difference
commodllies. Private ap"Our dairy men have been to food demands if people are
plicators need to he certified marketlhg their milk at or on a bare subsistent diet or if
by October 21, 19771n order to below the bare cost of they have good jobs at decent
apply "Restricted Use"
pay," he said.
pesticides.
I certainly want anyone
Interested In wanting more
lnforinaUon about aU this to
feel free to call me at the
County Extension Office at
«6-4612, ext. 32.

By Bryson R. (Bud&gt; Carter
Ga Ilia County Extension Agent
GAWPOIJS - Thls week
I am going to depart from my
topic "Fann Partnership$"
t.o discuss with you the
subject; " Pesticide Certification for Farmers."
If you will be purchaslng
and applying "Restricted
Use" pesticides on your farm
to crops and livestock arter
October 21, 1977, you must
become certified by the Ohio
Department of Agriculture as
a Private Pesticide Ap·
plicator in one or more
categories, depending on
your fann . operation. Most
Gallia County farmers will
want . to be certified in the
categOries of tobacco, forage
crops, cereal and grain crops.
Remember , howev er,
Individuals not
using
''Restricted Use'' pesticides

I
·,

Jobs, inflation, food

do not have to be certified.
I have scheduled two
Thursda y evenings
(February 3 and 10) to train
GaUia County farmers in·
terested In becoming certified Private Pesticide
Applicators in the Tobacco
Grower Category.
Another Pesticide Ap·
pllcator Training School wjU
be held In Gallla County later
this winter or early spring for
farmers who are interested In
becoming certified in the
areas of grain and cereal
crops and-or forage crops.
The training sessions for
tobacco growers wUI run
from 7:30 to 10 p.m. each
·evening . Jim Wells, Ex·
tension Tobacco Specialist
will handle the program on
the first night, February 3,
and will cover many of the
tobacco production practices
that he nqrmally covers
during our Winter Tobacco
Meeting plus getting you up
to date on Insect, weed and
disease controls
plus
calibration of equipment and
application of pesticides. On
the second evening of the
tobacco training, February
10, Oren Spilker of the Ohio
Department of Agriculture
will make a presentation on
the pesticides laws and
regulations. I will, then ,
follow with a presentation
concerning safety, labels and
environmental concerns
regarding pesticides. The
remainder of the second
evening will be devoted to
giving local farmers the
exam by a representative of
the Ohio Department of
Agriculture.
I want to pnlnt out that a
fanner can take the exam
without attending the
training program. Extension
bulletins and study materials
for private applicawrs interested In becoming certified for tobacco or the other
categories are available free
of charge at the GaUia CAJunty
Extension Office . These
should be acquired prlor to
the training program so you
can study. The exam would

Carter's big concerns

avai1able
POMEROY - r arms
without a feed train ~llotment
may have an allotment for
the 1977 program established
If they meet eligibility
requirements. An application
for a new farm feed grain
allotment must be fUed with
the county ASCS office at 221
West SecondS!. , Pomeroy, by
February 15.
Feed Grain aUolments for
1977 are automatically
establislted for aU eligible
established feed grain fanns.
The new farm provlslotlll
apply only to farms that do
not have an allotment: To be
eligible lor a new farm
allotment:
..:.. Neither the owner nor
· the operator of the farm may
have an Interest In any other
farm that has a feed grain
allotment ·established for
1977.
- The operator must expect I() obtain .more than 50
percent of his 1977, Income
from farming.
- The farm for, which ~n
appllcaUon Is filed must be
oultable for feed grain
production without undue
erosion.
Interesting producers who
can meet theoe requirements
ahould contact the ASCS
ofltce lor an application by
February 15.

Speaker named for dentists
CHIL LICOTHE - Dr.
Bernard S. S~yder . of
Columbus, President of the
Ohio Dental Association, w!U
be the guest Speaker at a noon
meetilig of the Rehwinkel
Dental Society to be held
Thursday, JMuary 13. at the
Holiday Inn on Route 23, just
north of Chillicolhe. Dentists
practicing i.n f!ighllind ,
Fayette, Plckaway, Ross ,
Vinton, Jackson , Meigs and
GaUia counties are members
of the Society.
A graduate of the Ohio
State University College of
Dentistry Graduate School,
Dr. Snyder is presently a
senior partner of Snyder:
Evans and Allison in the
private practice of Oral and
Maxillo-Facial Surgery in
Columbus,. Ohio. He Is the
Assistant Professor and
Director of Continuing
Education for Oral Surgery
and Anesthesia, The Ohio
State University, and winner
of many professional honors.

DONORS LISTED
POMEROY
Lates t
contributors to-the Pomeroy
Christmas lighting fund being
sponsored by the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce are
Beulah Jones, Jini O'Brien,
Royal Crown Bottling
Company, Ewin g Funeral
Home, Powell's Super Valu,
V. D. Edwanls Insurance,
Tom Goett, C. E. Swatzel,
Debbie Buck and Dr. [fjyls
Telle.

DR. SNYDER

HENSLER PROMOTED
RA CINE - Daniel C.
Hensler, Racin e area
resident, recently was
promoted to shift boss a\
-Raccoon No. 3 Mine in Meigs
County. Hensler Is the son of
Mr . ahd Mrs. Raymond
Hensler, Racine , and \s
married to the former Patty
Smith of Mason, W. Va. Mr.
and Mrs. Hensler have two
sons, James Clair, 7, and
·Kelly Clayton, five months.
Hensler has been working in
coal mines since 1968, the last
five years in Meigs County.

human labor - and a wide variety of implements were
developed for horses wpower. The Civil War stlnwlated the
change and resulted in the first American · agriculture
revolution - the change from hand power to horse powef ·
war4nduced labor shortage, blgb prices, and I aeemlng Y
unlimited demand encouraged farmen to either spend their
savings or go into debt to acquire labor.aving machines. ~
farmers then found themselves conunllted to conuner
:
production.
End of Part I

Adult evening ~lasses

begin week of Jan. 31 .
RIO GRANDE - The Adult
Education staff at Buckeye
Hills Career Center here has
announced winter session
evening classes starting the
week o1 January 31. The
following courses will be
offered:
. Accounting • Bookkeeping
-Monday and Wednesday ..:.
starting January 31 ending
Mareh 14, 3fi !)ours, tuition
$30.
.
Air Conditioning and
Heating I - Monday and
Wednesday
starting
January 31, ending Mareh 23.
60 hours, tuition ~.
Drafting I - . Monday and
Wednesday starling
January 31, ending March 23,
60 hours, tuition $50.
Electricity II - Monday
and Wednesday - starting
Jan~~&amp;ry 31, ending March 14,
41 hours, tulllpn $45.
Forklift . Truck Driver
Training Seminar (OSHA) Tuesday and Thuraday starting February 22, ending
February~. 6 hours, tuition
$5.
First Aid' - Monday starting January 31, ending
March 21. 21 hours, tultioo
$15.
Medical Terminology
(Basic) - Monday and
Wednesday
starting
January 31, ending March .9.
33 hours, tuition $25.
Medical Terminology
(lntermedl~te) - Tuesday
and Thursday - starting
February I, ending March 17.
42 hours, tuition $40.
.
Medication - (Thls course
Is limited to Licensed
Practical Nurses Only.)

Thursday- starting ~·eb. 3, 90 :.
hours, tuition $55 plus text- •
book fee and final eum fee. :
Needlepoint (Beginning )- ·
Tuesday, starting February •
I, ending March 29. 30 hours, :
tuition $25.
:
Personal Auto Meehan!~ :
.- (Formerly ·Auto Me- &gt;
chanica for ' Women) - •
Wednesday starting :,
February 2, ending February :
23. 8 hours, tuition free .
:
Shorthand I - Monday and ,;
Wednesday ·
starting :·
January 31 ending March 28. "
48 houn, tuition $45.
:
Small En81ne Mechanic! - :
Monday, starting January 31, ·
endlilg April II. 30 hours, tuition' $25.
.Typing .,.. Tueaday, star-. ·
tlng February I, ending ~
March 29. 30 hours, tuition ;

D

PREPARING RINK - Bill Young, cen ter, Pomeroy, active in the Meigs
Jaycees, examining a 50 by 60 foot public ice skating rink the Jaycees are
preparing in their mini-park between Mecfianic St. and Butternut Ave. m
Pomeroy. Poles for the project were donated by Fullon·Thompson and

United Presslnleruatlooal
WASHINGTON - THE SUPREME COURT TODAY
PLAINS, Ga . tUPI) - With
agretid to review whether a court-ordered school th ree days remaining before
desegregation plan for Dayton, Ohio, goes beyond what-is he bec omes pres iden t ,
legally required to remedy past Instances of racial Jimmy Carter is putting the
segregation. The justices, in a brief order, granted an. appeal final touches on his inaugu ral
by 'the Dayton Board of Education and will hear the board's addre ss and nos tal gica lly
'ar.guments that the latest Integration order goes too far .
· winding up his affairs in
Theorderwasuphe,ld by the U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals Plains.
In Cincinnati after the same clreuit rejected two earlier plans
Sources said he has named
approved by District Judge Carl Rubin. The appeals court his close confidant - Atlanta
rejected the earlier plans on grounds they did not sufficiently attorney Charles J . Kirbo 1 Integrate the Dayton public school system.

FURNITURE DEPARTMENT, 3RD FLOOR

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

CLEVELAND - FORD MOTOR CO. SAID todsy its Ohio
payroll for 1976 totaled a record $668.2 million, $161.6 million
over 1975 and $9116 million better than the record set in 1974.
A breakdown in salaries and wages for the seven Ford
plants in Ohio showed : Cleveland. $264.4 million: Lorain-Avon
Lake, $137.8 mlllio~ ; Cincinnati, $120.9 million; Lima, ~.7
million ; Sandusky, $37.4 million ; Canton, $30.1 million ; and
Maumee, $11.9 million .
'

.

\•

,_

..·'
-·

•

l •.

798 4 PC. PINE ........................................SALE '649
1799.00 4 PC. PECAN ................. :............... SALE '649
'839.00 4 PC. PECAN ........................:........SAl£ '611 ---.
U.OO 5 PC. PIN. ~ ................................... S&amp;£ '729 '
'924.75 4 PC. WALNUT/OAK. ... :................... SALE ·'749 '
'949.00 .4 PC, PINE .................................I .. SAI£ .'769
'952.00 4.PC. MAPLE .................;...............SM.E '779
'995.00 4 PC. OAK.
SAl.£
'998.00 4 PC. MAPLE ................................ SALE-•109
1

439.00 3 PC. MAPli .................................. SALE '359
'539.00 4.PC..CEDAR ................ ,................. SAL£ ,._.9
'598.00
4 PC. PECAN ....................................SAL£ '489
•
1
719.00 4 PC. PINE ....... ~ ............................ SALE '491
'729.00 4 PC. PECAN ...............,................... SALE '499
'785.00 4 PC. OAIL .....................................SAL£ '639
'798.00 4 PC. OAK ........................,..............SALE '649
'798.00 4 PC. OAIL .................................... SALE '649
1

0 0 I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I 11

•ooo

1

o I ii

1 II

OPEN MONDAY THROUGH ntURSDAY 9:30 TO 5 P.M. FRIDAY 9:;i0 TO 8 P.M. SATURDAY 9:30 TO 5 P.M •.

ELBERFELDS IN .POMEROY JANUARY SALE OF BEDROOM SUITES

to be his trustee and shortly
will make the long-delayed
announcement. To avoid any
con nict of interest, Carter
has decided to place all of his
peanut farm and warehouse
holdings in a blind trust
during his presidency .
Carter scheduled one
appointment today, with
Bobby Smith, his campaign
agricultural adviser.
Otherwise, he worked on
his inaugural speech, which
he has said will be brief, and
also practiced his delivery
with a tape recorder.
But while Carter kept a low
profile in the few days before
his inauguration, he had a
wary eye on the confirmation
hearings in Washington of
embattled CIA Directordesi gna te Theodore
Sorensen.
Carter issued a statement

Sunday saying Sorensen had
his "complete confidence "
and charging "the personal
attacks on Mr. Sorensen 's
judgment and loyalty are
groundl.ess and unfair."
Ca rter expected to make a
final decision this week on his
plans for granting a pardon to
Vietnam-era war resisters.
He also was considering a

plan to broaden the pardon to
include some categories of
deserters and dishonorably
discharged servicemen.
He
was
proceed in g
ca utiously on all fronts as he
prepared to fly with his
family to Washington late
Wednesday afternoon to
attend tbe pre-inaugural ga la
at the KeMedy Center.
On the following day,
Carter will attend Baptist
worship services and go to
(Continued on page 8)

.Ice clOgs ·river

BASS~TT,

LANE,
BURLINGTON _HOUSE, ·coLEMAN
&amp; RIVERSIDE

NEW HEARING
A public hearing related
to the proposed con·
structlon project of the
Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Company at
Great Bend In Meigs
County Tuesday night has
been postpo!"'d, The new
hearing time Is Feb. 10 at
Southern High School.

WASffiNGTON - CARL MIKEMAN IS LOOKING
forward to the next few weeks before Valentine's Day . He
operates a phowgraphic studio that specializes in nude
porlralts, and does his best business before holidays that
Involve an exchange of gifts.
Both Christmas and Valentine's Day are sales stimulants,
he says. So far , however, Mother's Day has been a Hop, nude
photo-wise. Most ol Mikeman 's customers, he says, are
average looking; some are overweight and some, even, are
elderly.
TWINSBURG, OHIO - CHRYSLER CORP. PLANS to
spend $7 million this year for new facilities and
rearrangements at ils local stamping plant, where last year
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UP!)
increases were reported in productioo, employment and - Heavy ice buildup in the
wages.
Ohio River · slowed barge
Plant Manager Leonard Brady also predicts continued_ traffic to a near standstill
high levels of production . "Our employment is now at 4,200, Wday, creating what one
compared with 3,80Q a year ago, and wages and benefits paid in authority called "a touch1976 totalled $90 million, compared with $67 million in the andilo situation whether we
previous year," Brady said Sunday night.
·can keep the channel open."
"We're still maintaining
some traffic movement on
the river and we can lock
•
tows through the dams, if
they can reach the dams,"
said Chuck Schuhmann, . a
spokesman for the Army
Corps of Engineers. "The
subzero temperatures we had
Late Sunday night, the East been forced' to en'act its first this morning are increasing
Ohio Gas Co. joined with the curtaibnents. All large indus- the thickness of the Ice and
West Ohio Gas Co. and Irles will receive only enongh worsening the problem."
Columbla Gas of Ohio, and · gas to k~ phints from
He said the worst idng
announced It too was initiated freezing.
conditions exists in the Lower
Columbia, serving 66 Ohio Ohio River at Dam 51 at
immediate 100 per aent
natural gas c~rtallments counties,' aaid cold weather Carsville, Ky., and downagalnat Ita large induatrlal has caused the most severe stream.
"deUvery problem" it has
cwrtmners.
·
"It Is becoming more and
faced
since the late 1900's.
The action, prompted by
more difficult for tows to ·
. Besides cutting off all move, ,. Schuhmann &amp;!lid .
eztreme cold that Is boosting
industrial
users, Columbia "Upstream at the Markland
the amount of gas needed' for
pleaded
with
resl,dentlal Dam, five tows locked
home heating, will . affect
users·
to
lower
their through going upstream and
about 1,100 customers In East
thennostats
in
a
conservatiqn
Ohio'• IS.counly service
three downstream In the past
effort and asked that . 24 hours," he reported. "That
area.
commercial establi'lhment abou l ha If as much traffic as
Earlier Sunday night West
stay closed Monday unless It we'd ordinarily have goin~
Ohio, serving six counties and
parts of two others, said It has was an emergency.
through the dam.

Big gas users cut

"·
..

equipment for preparing the site by the Meigs Equipment Co. Pomeroy
firemen on Salurday pumped 10,500 gallons of water onto the site with
additions being made on Sundoy. The rink is expected to be ready by this
evening. With Young are James Snider,lefl, and Bill Colmer.

The Southern Loca l School
District, sc heduled for
classes today, joined Meigs
and Eastern Local Districts
in closing as the result of a
power outage that look place
about 7 a. m.
Meigs Countians shivered
In cold weather with tern·
peratures dipping to a low of
15 below zero Monda y
morning. The county courthouse was closed for the
most part as were banks and
other public institutions In
observance of Martin Luther
King Day.
A power outage early today
in Meigs County originated In
two unrelated events.
Last night two power poles
at Bald Knob were broken off,

~~"i;7iriefotln8.llgur81 speechhOned

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

ON DEAN'S LIST
MARIETTA - Three
Meigs County students attending Marietta College
have been named to the
dean's Usl with a three point
average or better for the lint
semester. They are Steve .E.
·Walburn and David B. Wolfe,
Middleport; and Richard· J .
Stettler, Tuppers Plains.

Power .outage in
much of Meigs

Welding - Two classes, ::
Monday and Wedneaday or.;
Tuesday and Thursday, •
Monday and Wednesday, ;
starting Januar&gt;: 31, ending
March 23. Tuesday and
T)lursday, starting February
I, ending March 22. 60 hours,
tuition flO,
Finn Bualness PlaMlng
Analysis - Full time, NO
COST, call 245-5336 ext. 252,
for inlormatloo.
Practical Nurse Program
- ·Filii time - call. 245-5336
ext. 206 for information.Dog Obedience - starts
first week of February ..:.
time and fee to be announced.
30 boon.
Contact
the
Adult..
Education office at 245-5336
ext. 252 am! indicate your
· Adult Education interest.

31.

BY ADA KEELS
Ed Lowrey, . Reuben _Jones
and Ralph Pettiford of
' ChillicotHe· visited Deacon
Cooper aod wife Edna
Wednesday.
Children home from
school due to bad weather are
Sherr! Howard, Christopher,
Andy Howard, Dianna
Howard, the Hurt boys.
There .was no Sunday
School Sunday on account of
weather.
·Mrs. SUva Coleman of
Montgomery, W, Va. called
her mother, Mrs. Daisy Ross
stating she Is well but the
weather Ia very bad.
Dewy Keels bad a had cold
last week.
Elm~s, COfer became
suddenlji Ill last Thursday at
his home and was taken to
Holzer M~lcal Genter where
he Ia doing very .well. He
would be glad to receive
cards from his many frlendo .
Send ·cards to the Holzer
Medical Center, Gallipolis,
Ohiol563J.

SALT LAKE CITY l UP!) - Gary Gilmore was shot to death witness to shake his hand . The warden read a legal order, and apparently the daughter of his uncle Vern Damico - was _ The American Civil uberties Union said it would a poe a! the
decision to the Supreme Court.
kneeling beside it.
shortly after sunrise Wday in the first execution in the United Gary looked at the warden- not quavering.
uJUnore's execution was scheduled for 9:49 (EST) and the
"Gary
looked
up
for
an
extended
period
of
time
and
then
The
killer
donated
his
body
to
the
University
of
Utah
MediC&lt;!)
States in a decade.
appea ls court ruling was handed down at 9:41 lEST) in
Center,
where
doctors
planned
to
use
his
corneas,
skin
and
said,
'Let
's
do
it.'
We
then
stepped
back
behind
a
line
25
fee
t
A prison official announced, "The order of the Fourth
peripheral nerves for transplants and his kidneys and thigh Denver. Acopy of the order was to be wired to .Salt Lak~ City
from him."
Judldal District has been carried out. "
and rushed by a waiting state trooper to the prison at Point-of.
Schiller said prison officials then placed a black hood over hones in medica l research .
Gilmore was shot about 8:05a.m., MST approximately 16·
Damico said a family funeral would be held in Provo, the-Mountain.
the killer 's head.
minutes after sunrise.
Attorneys for the state of Utah and the American Civil
followed
by cremation.
He did not quaver when the hood Was placed over his head.
The state carried out the 36-year-old condemned slayer:s - A black target With a white circle was then pinned to Gary's
Liberties
Union flew to Denver from Salt Lake with the chief
The legal maneuvering preceding the execution was as
death wish after the lOth U.S."Clrcuit Court of Appeals m while tee shirt.
justice
of
the court for -the hearing because of the lastminute
bizarre as most other elements in the case of the convict who
Denver lifted a last minute stay of execution minutes before
stay.
Gilmore
was sentenced to death for a motel clerk's
wanted
to
die.
·
"The warden gave the signal, and then bang-bang-bang. I
dawn.
murder
last
July.
heard three noises - in rapid succession. Gary moved. His
U.S. District Judge Willis Ritter in Salt Lake City Issued a
Gilmore's quest for death seemed thwarted seven hours head turned slightly to the left, but he stayed erect. Red blood
SALT LAKE CITY !UPil - The lOth U.S. Circuit Court of
earlier when U.S. District Judge Willis Ritter stayed his then emerged from the white tee shirt and onto his white Appeals early today overturned a federal judge's stay of temporary stay seven hours before Gilmore was wdie and the
execution (n a desperation suit filed by the American Civil slacks ."
.
execution of Gary Gilmore at the Utah State Prison, removing - appeals court's chief justice ordered the special session to rule
Liberties Union.
Schi ller said Gary's body moved for "15to 20seconds."
the latest barrier to his death by firing squad. The ruling was on Ritter's decision.
The justices participating in the decision allowing Gilmore's
But a three-judge appellate court panel convened at 6:30
Gilmore's body was driven out of the prL&lt;on in a blue station handed down eight minutes before Gilmore was scheduled to
execution
included Chief Justice David Lewis and associate
a.m. in Denver, 400 miles away across the Rockies, and lifted wagon. The body was covered by a blanket and a young girl - die .
justices
Robert
McWilliams and Jean Breitenstein .
the stay eight minu"'s before the time set for the e&lt;ecution.'
U.S. SUpreme Court Justices Byron White and Thurgood
Marshall turned down a final appeal minutes later.
The four witnesses to the execution spoke briefly to newsmen
after the execution. ,
Larry SchUler, Gilmore's agent, said he and the other three
witnesses Invited by Gilmore were tola at seven minutes to
eight that the condemned man was being moved to the
execution site. He said they previously had been told that
Fourth District Judge Robert Bullock had changed his
execution order from "sunrise to any time during the day."
They were driven w a building behind the main prison
compound and entered w lind Gilmore and the firing squad
b
already inside.
;
1N0
POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS
MONDAY, JANUARY 17, 1977
"He was loosely shackled," Schiller said . "(was the third VOL. XXVII
· 192

tao.

JANUARY SALE of BEDROOM SUITES

New ~ope

grante

14

'

FILING .DEADLINE
POMERY - January 31
lo the deadline lor !Ding
applicaUoas for IDcentlve
paymeot under the 1976
wool program. ·
Aoyone who oold wool or
lambs daring tbe 1976
marketiD&amp; year (Jaaaary
through1&gt;ecember) should
bring oales slips to the ·
Melgo County ASCS Office,
:121 Weot Second Street,
Pomeroy, before January

'WlS

n;"

ELBERFEL-D$ IN POMEROY

Feed grain ·
allotment

for Eli Whitney, cotton gro~ing might not have become
profitable, slavery could have declined and disappeared, and
the Civll War might never have happened.
The availability of low-cost cotton, together with the new
spinning and weaving machinery adopted from England, Jed to
the rapid Industrialization ol the New England economy. The
demands of the mill towns offered New England farmers
expanding markets for their products. This . stimulus to
Northern farming, In turn, encouraged experiments with new
tools, Implements, and methods. .
.
Land for farming has always been plentiful In America and
comparatively less costly than labor. Any devi_ce or technique
permitting the cultivation of more land.with the same amount
of labor usually was stressed.
In the early years, the horse was the logical replacement for

•

The Weather Service ·
National River Forecast
Center at Cincinnati . said
Sunday near and below-zero
temperatures, accompanied
by moderate surface winds
should result In another one
to two inches of ice formin g
all along the Ohio.
Sunday's reports indicate
ice up to six inches th(ck out
from the hanks, with an
average thickness of about·
four inches. It said the
buildup Is continuing in all
the rivers i(l the Ohio Valley.
The center said the threat
from ice to structureS near
the rivers is Increasing dally.
II suggested persons having
property or whose activities
are near the rivers moniwr
news broadcasts this week.
· Since late last week, only
the Ohio's channel tios l:Jcen
navigable in the Louisville
area along much of ils 981mile len~ h.
"These tows are keeping
the channel open," he added,
but they also cause ice to
break off from the banks
causing "trains" of ice noes.
to move downriver .
''These can he dangerous lo
river traffic as some of the ·

apparently by an automobile.
There were no details of any
vehicle accidents on highways available this morning
as the Ohio State Patrol was
keeping all lines open for
_.emergency assistance ca lls.
The snapping .of the power
poles cut electricity off from
the Letart Falls area . Then at
6:50a.m. the Lick substation
in Jackson County , which
serv iceS street lights in
Pomeroy, all of Middleport
and Gallipolis, went out
because of overload, according to John Weeks, River
Dist rict mana ger of the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co.
By 9:30 a. m. power was
returned to Letart, except for
isolated areas, when Athens
was cut into the system, and
approximately the same hour
repairs were completed at
Lick. Power thereupon was
restored to Pomeroy, Mid-

dleport. and Gallipolis.
The Ohio Power Co., according to Manager Fred
Morrow, had little difficulty.
In the Rutland area where the
company serves the Rutland
REA su bstation, a few
customers were out of service
for a brief period Monday
morning.
The weatherman reported
no break in weather con*
ditions with low temperatures to continue and
more snow predicted.
A spokesman for the
Buckeye Rural Electric Co.
(Co-op) said power was off up
to fi ve hours for some of its
customers in Gallia and
Meigs Counties.
Aproblem developed in 'the
western part of Meigs when
the · compan y's RutiJ!.nd
substation suffered a break in
a transm ission line. Power
was restored in most part by
10 a.m., officials sa id.

, , , , , , , , , , ,, , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,:, ,,,, ,,,, , ,,,,,,, Water projects in Ohio
Sorenson
withdraws
his name
WASHINGTON (UPI) Thoedore C.. Sorenson said
today he Is asking ~
President-elect Jimmy
·carter to withdraw his
nomination as CIA director
because of substantial
objections
to
his
nomination holh In the
Senate and from · outside
organliatlons.
"Ills ... with deep regret
that I'm asking Governor
Carter to withdraw my
deslgnailon as director of
Central Intelligence,"
Sorensen said. "My regret
stems not from my !allure
to get this pnst but from my
concern for the future or
our country."

may get $57.3 million
WASHING TON (UP! ) Ohio water resolU'ce projects
were earmarked for $57.3
million in President Ford's
Fiscal 1978 budget submitted
to Congress today, with $21.7
million for construction work.
The largest amounts were
for three flood co ntr ol
projects : Caesar Creek Lake,
$5 million;
Ashtabula
Harbor, $4.3 million; and
East Fork Lake, $3.4 million .
Other projects budgeted for
construction money were :
Willow Island Locks and
Dam, $1.4 million, and Huron
Harbor, $1,195,000, both
na vig ation proj ects ;
Lakeview Park heach.erosion
project, $540,000; and sever : 1
other flood control fa cilities :
ChlllicQthe, $2.6 million ;
Cuyahoga River Basin,

$290,000; Mill Creek, Sl
million; Muskinghum River
Lakes rehabilitation, $1
million ; and Newark, $1
million.
In addition , the budget calls
for $1,335,000 in general
investigation work in Ohio;
$1 ,645,000
in advance
engineering and design, and
$32,587,000 for operation and
maintenance of existing
facilities .

Ruby Dunlap

died Sunday
HARTFORD - Ruby Alma
Dunlap, 78, of Hartford, died
Sunday In Spencer, W. Va.
Born August 18, 1898, in
Hartford , she was the
daughter of the late Franklin
A. and Mary Alice Hanna
Chapman.
Survivors include two
nieces, Marilyn Jewart
Taylor, · El Dorado Hill,
Californi a ; •Judith J ewart
Piette, . Los
An geles,
California ; one ·nephew, ·
James Jewa rt , Fairfield ,
Ohio ; and two cousins, Mrs.
Dorothy Po·»ell, Clifton, and
Mrs. Pauline Newton,
Hartford.
Funeral services will be
held at the Foglesong
Funeral Home on Wednesday
at 10:30 a.m. with Rev.
William " Bud" Hatfield
officiating. Burial will follow
In the Graham Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home from 7to 9 p.m.
on Tuesday.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
large ones are just like
Wednesday th[!)ui_b
colliding with a floating hunk
Friday,
fair Wednesday
of reinforced concrete,'' he
and
Thursday
and a chance
said.
' •.
of
snow
Friday.
Slowly
With so much ice In the
moderating
temperatures.
river, towboat and barge
High Wednesday I~ teens,
traffic has dropped 75 to 80
Thunday
Ill 20s and Friday
per cent below normal.
Ill
30s.
Lows
near zero
At frigid McAlpine Dam oo
The
Pomeroy
Fire
Wednesday
ind
Ill
the teens
the Ohio here, one towboat Department was called toW .
Thursday
and
Friday.
and its barge were locked Main St. at 8:30 p. m.
downriver Sunday morning, Saturday where a van owned
but flOO!ing ice had to be by Jim Reibel, Clifton; W.
locked throngh first before Va., had caught fire. Fire
the craft could go through. Chief Charles Werry.said that
James Gross, Louisville, a damages were held to $150 to .Very cold and a chance of
spokesman at the dam, the wiring of the vehicle. The snow flurries throu gh
sald,"They are still getting fire started when the car- Tuesday. High today zero to 5 .
through but it's a little rough . buretor backfired.
below. Low tonight neor 5
We put one through
At 2:31 a. m: Sunday the below. ,High Tuesday .near 10
downriver and there ardour Pomeroy squad went to the above. Chance of snow 30 per
walling to go upriver. It's no Eagles Club for Helen Miller cent tnday and 40 per cent
problem for those going who was taken to Veterans tonight and Tuesday.
upriver for there's not much Memorial Hospital. At4 : 12 p.
ice below the dam.
m. Saturday, the squad went
"As Joup as they keep the to Route 7 near the skating
channel open, they can get rink for Timothy Shlorendo
throU~h," Grn" ad4ed. "But
who was taken to Veterans
if th1s below-zero weather Memorial HospitaL
Ameeting o~ the Meigs Local School District band boosters
conlinues, no one knows what
scheduled tllis evening has been cancelled.
may happen."
Lt. Donald Stansell, JefferNOW YOU KNOW
Due w the cold weather, the Mothers March of Dimes
sonville, lnd:, marine safety
The
average Englishman program Jchecfuled for this.evening will not be held. Women
officer lor the U.S. Coast
drinks about 2,000 cups of tea making up the marching group will solicit their areas later in
(Gc!ntinued on page 8)
each year.
the week as the weather permits.

Damage minor
in van fire

Weather

J

Postponements. ••

•I

I
I

�•

:1.-'lbeD.oySenlinel Middleport Pomeroy 0 MOOday JIQI 17 19'7'1

~::::~:~ Natioit i-eady for President Carter
can prevent a race

By Rly Cromley
WASHINGTON - Some of the most knowledgeable techm
dins working~~ SlrategJc Arms Limitation Talks (SALT)
now believe a "'l"'nhlgful agreement between the RU!ISIIII1S
and ourselves is unposs1ble
It s impossible even if no one breaks the rules - which is
lllllikely g1ven the Russian record m such IIIB!ters And it s
Impossible even if the treaty IS airtight - unlikely coJISidenng
the lmprecision of the English and Russian languages and the
extreme complications of advanced technology
No IIIBtter what limits the Soviet Union and the Uruted States
agree to regardless of what weapon system iJbprovements
1 are banned the range of po&amp;'llble mtercontinental nuclear
weaponry IS so broad and the possible alternate ways of carry
mg out worldwide strikes so nwnerous that no treaty language
could prevent or contam an arms race
The truth of this thesiS has been demonstrated m USSR and
US military developments smce SALT I was signed Neither
COWitry has been held back by the tenns of the treaty
Instead both countries have pursued a variety of patha not
covered or not adeuately covered by the treaty but which could
change the balance of power 1111Bglll81ive researr.h on anti
ballistic missile systems Tbe cruise mlsslle Radically new
radar Advanced bombers Satellite systems Missiles With In
dependently targeted warheads An array of superior missiles
Most Importantly there have been great strides m the accuracy of mtercontmental miSSiles Remember that a signifi
cant improvement m accuracy can do more for the offens1ve
capability of a nation than adding SIZ8ble numbers of emting
missiles Accuracy that IS IS making ceilings obsGJete
Most certainly restrictions on some of the new weapons or
techniues could be mcluded m a new pact That would change
nothing R\ISSillll and Amencan SCientists would unmediately
tum !hell' talents to maJor Improvements m current weapons
not covered by the treaty or to new weapons which are today
little more than gleams m the eyes ol scientists m both
countries Laser technology for one IS already more than a
gleam but too little advanced to control effectively
Note m this regard that cruise miSSiles the subject of hot
discu.!IS10n today between the RIISSians and ourselves were
considered too mslgniiiCent to cover at the time of SALT I and
for a considerable time mthe LT II discUSSions
Despite the above I for one do not despall' While an effective treaty may be unposs1ble econonuc prohlems may even
tually force the Russians to ease up on thell' military expan
slon
For the RU!ISian economy IS not strong enough by 1taelf to
handle the growmg costs of defense which her present programs will nnpose m the decade ahead Moscow IS able to
spend Increasingly large swns on military men and weaponry
in considerable measure because of indirect assiStance from
the Uruted States and other Western nations Western
technology has been of prune Importance in bolstenng key
Civilian Industries (the base for military strength) and in in
directly provuling the know bow which has enabled the Russian military to solve certam complicated DIISSile problems
Tbe Soviet Umon has also made effective use of credits from
Western nations - enabling 11 to shift resources from the
private economy to the military buildup
CUrrent restrictions on the export of technology to the SoVIet
Uruon are wumagmative and meffective What s rewred now
IS a study to deterrrune which of our assiStance programs and
technology exports and those of our allies enable the Soviet
Uruon to build the kind of mdustrtal base essential for eliBg
gerated military mvestments

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UPI ) Junmy Carter of Plams Ga
has the high hopes and great
expectations of the nat on
nding on h1m when he
becomes the 39th president of
the United States
Taking office at the start of
America s thll'd century rn an
atmosphere
of
rare
tranquility Carter hopes to
mspll'e a new spirit and
revive old values after the
torment of the recent past He
has behind him a UIUted
country and a willing people
The 52-year-old millioorure
peanut farmer an AnnapoliS
educated nuclear engmeer
and former governor of
Georgia is proud of his
Southern rural heritage
whtch has given h m a
platform for h s populiSt
appeal
Complex and aloof
Carter s closest friends do not
pretend to really know him or
to fathom his personality
Some attributes come
through loud and clear He IS
a liberal on social ISSues but
a fiscal conservative His
highest adminiStration JObs
appears to be reserved for
good managers
He is a perfectionist and
demands perfection of others
He is orderly Bemg on time
IS an obsess on He does not
like to have his time wasted
Most of all he has an
amazmg self assurance that
prompts hun to say
and
mean I d6 not intend to lose
and I do not mtend to make
a miStake
Overr ding n h1s life style
IS hiS devotion to his Southern
Baptist religion and hiS com
rrutment as a born aga n
eva.~gelical ChriStian His lay
miSSions around the country
to help smners find salvatiOn
made a deep unpresswn on
him
He reads a chapter or two
of the Bible each evemng w th
his Wife Rosalynn
HIS mother M1ss Lillian
explains that durmg Carter s
growmg up years and even
today his SOCial life revolved
around the Plaii'IS BaptiSt
Church
Carter plays to wm and he
does not like to lose There

are varymg verSions on his
read on when he lost h s first
gubernatorial race m 1966
HIS sister Ruth said that he
was deeply depressed He
admits he was hurt deeply
and was determmed to wm
the nell time around He d d
Show me a good loser and
I 11 show you a loser 1s his
credo
Soon after he became
governor of Georgia he set
his sights on higher political
goals Wth a small clique of
loyalists a. strategy to wm
the While House was worked
out
Carter says his desll'e to
run was bolstered by the fact
that he found out that he was
as smart - maybe smarter
than the Democratic
candidates he mel m 1972
wben they were h s guests at
the governor s mansiOn
Wthan equally deterrruned
Wife by his side and many
true believers on his
bandwagon Carter waged a
triumphal campaign There
were tunes on the trail when
his gaffes and apologies
made the outcome uncertam
He was unprec se perhaps
deliberately on the ssues H1s
mwn theme was I want a
government as good as kind
as compassionate and as
f lied w1th love as the
Amer can people If we can
only have that I w ll he a
tremendous achievement
It apparently hit home with
the voters
He 1s not an elqquent
speaker H1s low-key staccato
style stands n the way But
he gets his message across
Senous most of the time be
lacks the w1t of John F
Kennedy and the folksky
humor of Lyndon B Johnson
On the family Side the love
and affectiOn Carter and his
wife Rosalynn have for each
other IS there for a to see He
adores their daughter Amy
9 and has strong bonds w th
his spr1ghly mother and his
popula Irreverent beer
drmk ng brother B lly
Despite the exh larat10n of
his v ctory CBPter proceeded
methodically to sel ect a
Cab net
Although he
campa gned agamst the
Wash ngton establishment
he selected a predominantly

male Cabmel With two
women one of them black
many of them With long
credentials in the federal
government and all of them
persons of achievement

Carter chose hiS Cabinet
w th an eye toward
technocrats He said that
he w11l make policy but
wants each member to nm
his own department with
There were safe cho ces broad independent powers
As for his working style In
arousmg the ll'e of some ol his
the Oval Office he expects to
liberal backers
Blacks and labor have been heaths desk at 7 15a m to
d1sappomted both by his have lunch at his desk and to
hig h~evel appomtments and walk over to the mansion for
an economic package that supper with hiS family early
focuses more on tax cuts than m the evening On relaxed
weekends he will wear blue
JObS
carter has sa d he owes jeans
Soc ally the Carter White
nothmg to any group for his
election But he has felt the
pressures and has taken
them into consideratiOn from
time to tilDe
His White House staff IS
almost pure Georgia Maf a
young loyal sts who served
~Bern co Bede Osol
him long and well m state
politics and m the campaign
Fot Tuetday Jan 11 1177
He wants a small staff
AAIE8 (March 21 April 111 Be
accessible to hun like spokes p epa ed to do mo e g vlng than
m a wheel w th no all
tak ng today Un ass you e
dominating chief of staff ready to make majo con
ruling the roost Still 11 eeas ons don t expect coope a
seems clear that Press t on omales
Secretary Jody Powell and TAURUS (Aprtl20 May 20) No
Harrulton Jordan h1s former rna y you don ook down you
a anyone bu today you
campaign manager Will be nose
rn gh lee us a notch o two
at the top of the heap
abo ve you cowo ke s P de
Carter has made strong goe hi.efo e a a
moves to assure that the vice
GEMINI (Moy 21 Juno 201
president Walter F Mondale Shou
d anyone attempt to
will play an unportant role as P esaure you n comma cal
his No I ad ser and as s tuat ons today be prepa ed 10
nearly a co-equal m access to back off qu ck y You e dealing
w lh the w ong guy
the nations top secrets
CANCER (Juno 21 July 221

AstroGrapt-1

Counse w th the. entre tam ly to-

day

TIIEDALVSENTINEL
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF

MEIGS-MASON AREA

CHESTERL. TANNEHILL
Exe&lt; FA
ROBERTHOEFUCH
CUy Ecll o
Published daily except saiUrday
by The Ohio VaUey Publishing ComlillY 1 Court S Pome oy Ohio
t~ 69 Bwnness Off ce Phone 1m

2 56 Ed ona Phone99'.i! 2 57
Se o d class J)O'tage paid at

Pomeroy Ohio
Nauona ad\'erUsilij rep esen
ta e Ward Grtf th C mpany nBo Unelli and Gallsghe D
$7 nurd Ave New Yo k NY
Ill

Subs ption rates De vered by
a e whe1 e 11vaUab e 5 cenl!l pe

week By Mo or Route whe e carfle
sern e no available One month
$3 25 By rna I tn Ohio and W Va
One Yeu $22 00 Six months
S 50 Th ee month! S7 00

Elsewhe e $W 00 yea SIJ: months
$ 3 50 Thee mo hs 150
Subsc np1 on p ce m udes Sunday
Tunes-Sentine

House will de-emphasize for
mality and gather people m
for Southern lood and square
dancing He wants to cut
down on the ceremonials and
the Imperial trappings that
have made the Wltite HoiiSe
awesome
He also plans to stay In
touch With the people by
having open house at the
White Ho1111e from time to
time by making trips around
the country and by operung a
telephone tie-lrne where those
who have problems with the
federal government can
make their personal appeals
for assistance
Iii foreign affairs Carter
Intends to run his own show
There will not be an all
powerful Henry Kissinger
wbo will dominate the scene
He has picked veterans like
Secretary of Stat~esigllllte
Cyrus R Vance and National
Security Adviser Zb1gruew
Bnezlnsk1 to steer him m
foreign pohcy
carter will travel his first
year in office - to an
economic summ t and
perhaps other places Mostly
he wants to stay In the

Sport Parade

countrY clurine the -ly pari
of his presidency He allo Ia
planning a summit meeting
with Soviet Leader l.eoold I
Brezhnev before fall
preferably in the United

By MILTO!Ii RICHMAN
UPI Sporta Editor

State!!

He IS keenly aware of the
campaign promiles he hu
made Reorpnlzation of the
federal gonrnment to ellml
nate dupUcation and to make
it more reiiJIOrialve to hlliiiBn
needs is high on his Ust He
also has pr(llliled to bal8nce
the bodget by 1980
His first majll' act In office
will be to islue a blanket
llliUleS!y for Vietnam war
resisters a move to heal the
wounds that divided the
country In the 618 and the
early 7011
Carter has his own sense of
destiny and if he were to
wr1te his own motto for the
pr~sldency it probably wou1!1
be I do not Intend to fall

IAGITTAIIIUI (Nov 23 Doc
21) Auuma no f nanclal
ob gst ons fo othe s today

w lhout p ope legal backing

La er you may f nd you reg ad to
have the documentel
CAPRICORN (Doc 22-.lon 11)
There a a poss b llty you cou d

an mportanl dec a orflS be oo self se v ng Ioday f th a

to be made f everyone sn t
hea d you have a p ob em

s t ue pe sons n a pos on o
b ock you prog esa w 1 do so

8 8

AQUARIUS (Jon 20 Fob. 11)
You have a way of pult ng

LEO (Julr 23 Aug 221 The
w ong att ude toward tasks o
day ould make them both d f
f cuh and dange ous Keep your

~:'~' veness and lampe

you se fat ad sadvan age today

You cou d hurt no on y you sa f

GENER AL MOTOR S

but othe s who have fa th n you

ACCEPT ANCE
CORPOR AT ON

n PIICEI (Pob 20 Morch 20)
Even f a t end vouches to

t

VIRGO (Aug 23 lepL 221 Let don I buy a p g n he pokeloday
common sense p eva I You be bette otf o make Ike a
moneyw sa tcx:lay I you have a M ssou an and ell em to show
few bucks left ove sock t away me
~ou

nstead of b ow ng t

LIBRA (llept 23 Ocl 23) You
d p omacy and tac may be un
used n dea ng w th members of
you own tam y A b ary ac
ons cou d cause a donnyb ook

Jan II 1977
SCORPIO (OCI 24 Nov 221 I
may be ease to dea wth m Th s comng yea you ae key
po tant assoc atas today t you
memory bank tor
a s about hem you Q.dm e
Accentuate the pos ve

p obe you

o be a mo e amb ous han
you have been n he pas n
o de o assu e success keep
f om sp ead ng you se th n

LAS VEGAS Nev (UPI)
Leon Spinks scored a
techmcal knockout over Bob
Smith and Howard Davis Jr
outlasted Jose Resto during
the weekend as the two
Montreal Olympics gold
medalists won their fll'st
professiOnal bouts
DaVIS earned $17 1100 and
Spmks $10 1100 m !hell' first
professiOnal outings

Historically, Presidents gave optimistic inau1gural speeches
WASIDNGTON (UPI) - H
Junmy Carter 10 h s
mallgJII'al address were to
strike the themes other
preSidents have struck m
the1rs he would say
something like this
I m not up to the task I m
about to asswne The burden
IS awesome But Amer ca IS
mgreatshape -goodm most
respects and gettmg better
We ve got to cut down
spendmg and keep the
general government from
encroachmg on the aovere1gn
SUites Taxes are too high
We ve got to be wary of a
large standing Army We
want to be a good ne1ghbcr to
exher countriews God has
blessed thiS country and wttlt
His help we shall advance
Those themes recur rn the
47 maugural addresses U S
preSidents have delivered
Generally they ve had an
optimistic expans ve tone of
the
character s!Ic
country s history
Richard NIXon m 1969 saw a
criSIS of the spll'll bot most
presidents Sllld all was well
and getting better m this best
of lands calvm Coolidge In
192:i for example said No
one can contemplate current
conditions without flndmg
much that IS satiSfying and
st II
more
that
IS
encouragmg
Most pres1dents on taking
office were poor prophets
barely seemg what awaited
them
Some used such flowery
language that readmg !hell'
speeches today IS almost an
act of translatiOn One
sentence m John Adams
Inaugural address of 1797
nearly fills two pages of pnnt
Most new presidents
e!~Ilecially lboae of the 18th
and 19th centuries
expressed modesty about
their own capaoties Some
were
humble
some
do'WIIl'Ight self-effacing
Conscious of my own
defiency I cannot enter on
these duties without great
anxiety for the result
James Monrcll! SBid in 1817
Said Frank~ P erce m
1853 It 1sa relief to feel that
no heart bot my own can
know the personal regret and
bitter aorrow over wh1ch I
have been borne to a position
10 aultable fll' other~ rather
than delirable for myaelf
Andrew Jackson m 1829
put it this way A diffidence

perhaps too JUst m my own
qualif cations will teach me
to look With reverence to the
examples of public wtue left
by my illustrious predeces
sors
Only a few maugural ad
dresses con tamed so eloquent
a phrase that people would
remember 11 for a long time
Everyone knows what John
F Kennedy sa d m 1961
And so
my fellow
Americans ask not what
your country can do for you
Ask what you can do for your
country
And m tht same speech
Let the word go forth from
thiS ume and place to friend
and foe eiike that the Iorch
has been passed to a new
generation of Americans born 10 this century
tempered by war disciplined
by a hard and b tter peace
proud of our anc1ent
heritage
The generosity of spii'II of
Lincoln s second maugural
m 1865 after four years of
fraternal war stU! shmes
With malice toward none
with chanty for aU with
f1rmness m the right as God
giVes us to see the right let us
striVe on to fmish the work we
are m &lt;W bmd up the nation s
wounds to care for him wbo
shall have borne the battle
and for his widow and his
orphan to do all which may
achieve a just and Jastmg
peace among ourselves and
with all nauons
And Franklm D Roosevelt
reassurmg a frightened
nation In 1933 Tbe only
thmg we have to fer IS fear
Itaeif
Four years later FOR still
coping with tbe crisiS I see
one-third of a nation ill
housed
ill-clad
ill
nourished
But there was scant
foretaste 10 FOR s first
address of what the New Deal
was to bring
Instead like many pres!
dents he ra1led agamst
gove~ent
expenditures
The man who was to become
the greatest spender of hiS
day urged Insistence that
the federal state and local
gove~ents act forthwith on
the demand that their COlli he
!lrastically reduced
Herbert Hoova- In 1929
failed to ...., evidence of
economic troubles ahead
Ours Ia a l!llld he Nld
filled witt millions of happy

homes
embarrassments that d sturb
Wilham McKinley m 1119'7 our tranqwliity at home and
made no mention of the threaten t abroad yet m all
tens1ons that were to brmg on the attributes of a great
the Spanish AmeriCan War a happy and flour shmg people
year later
we stand without parallel m
In his second maugural he the world
S81d Four years ago we
Few matched James K
stood on the brink of war Polk s e aborate sat sfact on
without the people knoWing m 1845 In Amenca he sa d
It
Mmd no longer tasked m
Likewise Woodrow Wilson deviSing
means
to
m 1917 barely mentiOned the accomplish or res st schemes
mternallonal SituatiOn that of amb bon usurpation or
dragged Amer1ca into a conquest is devol ng 1Lself to
foreign war m h1s second mans true Interests in
term Lyndon Johnson d1d not developmg his faculties and
used the word VIetnam m powers and the capa ty of
his speech m 1965 as he nature to rrun1ster to his
started a
presidency enJoyments Geruus Is free to
dommated by that war
announce 1ts mventions and
Begmmng With George discoveries
Wash ngton
m
1789
The masses of our
presidents exclaimed over people
said BenJamm
the burden they were about to Harr son m 1889 are better
assume
fed clothed and housed than
Sa1d the father of h1s thell' fathers were
No people on earth have
country to the Senate and the
House
Among
the more cause to he thankful
viciSSitudes incident to life no than ours said Theodore
event could have filled me Roosevelt n 1905
We should not let the
with greater anxieties than
that of which the notification much that IS to do obscure the
wu transmitted by your much which has been done
order and received on the S81d Coohdge
L ke
Taylor
many
14th day of the present
presidents
said
God
had
month
chosen
to
bless
Amer1ca
The taak IS above my
talenlJI said Jefferson m Madison m 1809 said God s
blessmgs
had
been
181)1
conspicuously
diSpensed
to
Anyooe wbo has taken the
thiS
riSing
repobl
c
Warren
oath I have JUst taken must
feel a heavy weight of respon G Hardmg m 1921 spoke of
sibllity
sa1dJ_ w,~liam the God-giVen destiny of our
Howard Taft m l~f not repubhc
Most
pra sed
the
he has no conception of the
ConstitutiOn
and
a
few
powers and duties of the
office upon which he IS about suggested chan~es
One of the defects m the
to enier or he is Jacking In a
Constitution
SBid William
proper sense of the obligation
Henry
Hamson
m 1841 Is
which the oath imposes
the
eligibility
of
the S3111e
Presidents found much to
Individual to a second term of
be satisfied with
presidency h
J
I congratulate you my the
power was a corrupting
fellow citizens upoo th~.ffigh
state of prosperity to wh1ch pass1on which once in
possession of a mmd like
the goodness of Div1ne the love of gold it becomes
Providence has conducted
our common country sa1d msatiable
Harnson said be would
Zachary Taylor in IM9
serve only ooe term and ~ept
John Quincy AdaDIS In 1825 the promise He also S81d t
S81d All the purpo!iel of
was a great error not to
human aS80Ciation have been have made the head of the
accomplilhed as effectively Treasury mdependent of the
as under any other pres dent and removable only
government on the glohe and by Congress
at a cost little exceeding m a
Rutherford B Hayes m
whole generation the
1877
called
for
a
expenditure of other nations
constitutional
amendment
In a single year
limiting presidents to a s ngle
Martin Van Buren In 1837
stx
year term
Though not aliogether
Perce
warned a gainst
exempt
from

keepmg a large standing
army That he said would be
not only dangerous but
unnecesssary
Taylor endorsed
Washmgton s adVIce to shun
entangling alliances With
fore gn nations
Harding wanted uniVersal
serv ce where every man
and woman IS called under
the flag for assignment to
duty for whatever serv ce
m htary or CIVIC the
ndivldual is best fitted
Jefferson bragged m h s
second maugural that only
those who bought fore gn
lWiuries had to pay taxes
What
farmer
what
mecharuc what laborer ever
sees a taxgather m the Uruted
States• he asked

McKmlcy struck a common
chord m calling for econm
m government
The
severest economy must he
observed m all public
expendllures
and
extravagance
stopped
wherever 11 IS found and
prevented wherever m the
future 1t may be developed
HarriSOn wanted to cut
government revenues
Wbile a Treasury surplus IS
not the greatest evil he
SBid 1! IS a ser ous evil
Harding n h1s lll8ugural
used a word of hiS own
comage
normalcy He
smd We must strive for
normalcy to reach stability
And Harry S TruiiiBn m
1949 gave histOry a new
phrase
Pomt Four
m

DR. LAMB

laying down a four pomt
program worl4wide recovef)
from World War II Point
Four
became a term
meaning technical aid
through which the Uruted
States shared Its scientific
genius with the world No one
remembers pomts one two
and three
Four presidents John
Tyler Millard Fillmore
Andrew Johnson and Olester
A Arthur assummg office
upon the death of a premdent
and never elected m their
own r ght delivered no
maugurals Gerald R Ford
offered some remarks
when NIXon resigned 'Our
long national mghimare IS
over he S81d In that brief
speech
another
presidential phrase likely to
become historic

Unexplained bleeding
needs quick check
Dr Lawrence E Lamb M D
DEAR DR LAMB - About
six months ago I began
havmg bnght red blood w th
my bowel movements There
was no pam of any kind This
went on for about a month
Then as suddenly as 11 started
it stopped I never thought t
could he serious because
"there was no pam Now a
friend tells me it could be
cancer Is this true• What
should I do• There never was
any pain and there has been
no bleed ng for five months or
more I am 36 years old and
have three ch idren
DEAR READER - Don t
take a chance Have a
medical eJIBmination as soon
as possible Anyone who has
bleeding from the rectum for
no readily apparent cauae
should get medical attention
as soon as poss ble Your
friend is right It is one of the
signs of cancer of the rectum
Probably you have hemorr
hoida Childbirth IS apt to
cause them but even hemorr
ho da ~an be brought out
because of a mass in the
rectum and the mass may be
cancer
I d I ke to take this opportunity to remind everyone
that the second most common

cause of cancer death n both
men and women IS cancer of
the colon and rectum It Is
exceeded only by cancer of
the lung m men and cancer of
the breast m women
The early signs of cancer of
the rectum and colon are not
associated w th pam
Bleeding is one sign Any
unexplamed change In bowel
habit is another If a person
starts havmg more frequent
stools smaller ones or
diarrhea or constipation and
has not had these fmdmgs
before run to the nearest
doctor - don t just assume
you
have
common
irregularity Let the doctor
find out for sure He may
save your life
The person who is a real
challenge even to the
physician Is the one who has
had bowel problems for life
Intermittent attacks of
constipation diarrhea and
symptoms that are stmdar to
spastic colon may make It
dlff cult or mposs1ble to tell
if a change In bowel habit has
occurred
There is some mdicatlon
that a normally functioning
colon may prevent cancer of
the colon WhY' The theory Is
that chemicals that may

Irritate the lining of the colon
and start a cancer are m
contact w th the colon wall
longer if you have con
shpation
or
slugg1sh
movement of food residue
through the colon This 15 one
reason advanced for in
eluding bran and other
sources of cereal fiber in your
diet For whatever reason
cancer of the colon is far less
common in populations
where constipatlons and
sluggish bowels or spastic
colon are uncommon
Hemorrhoids can be
aggravated by a spastic
coloo Straining Increases the
pressure and may precipitate
the bleeding For both 1
reasona It Is Important to eat
rtght and develop normal
bowel habits To give you
more Information on this I
am aending you The Health
Letter number I 2 Spastic or
Irritable Colon and Con
stipation othen wbo need
this inlormation can send 50
cents for it With a long
stamped self addressed
envelope for mailing Send
your letter to me in care &lt;if
thla newspaper P 0 Box
lilil Radio City Station New
York NY 10019

ba~EW YORK UP! ) People say Steve Cauthen looks like a
f Y which he does but all you ha ve to do IS talk with h m a
ew mmutes OI; better yet watch h m handle a horse and you
ij"n see unmed1at~iy he sno adolescent at all He s more Ike a
It1e old man uncommonly w se beyond h s years
At 16 S eve Cauthen already IS a v rtuoso at what he does
He s still an apprehtice jockey havmg been ndmg less than a
year but fa- all the poise and proficiency he shows at ~uch an
e~riy age he could be th s country s answer to Romama s 15year-old Nadia Comanec1
Young Cauthen does everyth ng so easily so smoothly so
well the railbll'ds can hun SteVIe Wonder
Last Saturday at Aqueduct the 95-pound riding sensatiOn
from Walton Ky rode f ve wmners for the second day n a
row setting a record for New York with 23 WIMers m SIX days
Angel Cordero put ogether 22 VIctor es m the same per od of
ume two years ago but Cordero was 32then
Cauthen s fourth wm of the day on Sa turdays card came m
the featured »4 1110 Interborough where his horse IIi terate
was on the rrul lour lenglhs off the lead gomg mto the s retch
With many among the crowd of 15 518 holler ng at h m and
pleading with him to nake his move Cauthen remained nght
where he was It was as If he was cast n stone He d1dn t move
a muscle He rode so low he looked as if he was pa t of the
horse
Fmally at the SIXteenth pole cauthen felt t was lime He
had no room to ge hrough yet somehow he did He shoe
horned Dliterate between two horses m front of hllD and won by
a length and a half The kid from Kentucky then went out and
fmished his work by brmgmg home h s fifth wmner m the n10th
race
I ve been m rae ng more than 30 years and Brauho Baeza 1s
the best rider I ever saw but some tunes when I see thiS hoy n
the saddle I thmk It s Baeza says Lenny Goodman the agen
who books the mounts for both Cauthen and Baeza
Goodman 1sn t g ven to superlat ves He has been around
race tracks a long lime and has seen a lot of overrught fireballs
burn out prematurely He s absolutely sure however young
Steve cauthen the son of a Kentucky blacksm th s anyth ng
bot a fly-by.,. ghter
Everybody s say ng he s gonna be W lhe Shoemaker s
successor and maybe he will and maybe he wont but Ill tell
you this there was never a Jockey of 16 11ho could r de like
thiS kid says Goodman Right now there sn t a rider n he
country that thinks any be ter than he does He s like an old
nder He s ts there and wa ts He wa ts as long as he has o
Some 16-year olds don even know how to cross the street and
look at wha th s k d Is do ng He s unusual He s not a kid who
talks a lot He listens
Lenny Goodman 55 s one of the better JOCkey agents
around He doesn t handle any bums because he doesn have
o lles des representing Baeza for the past dozen years he has
also gotten moun s for such topno chers as B II Hartack
Bobby Ussery and Johnny Rotz The last t me he eve handled
an apprentice was 25 years ago so he was some vha
restramed when Steve cauthen s father approached him abou
taking on h1s son a few months~g
Goodman asked the elder Cauthen ow he came o see hm
and wa• told that another agent Edd e Campbell of C nc nna 1
had recmtmended hllD Good
hked wha he seruor
Cauthen had to say abou h s son so he look h m on
Steve Cauthen rode h s f rst Winner las May 'll and has
ndden 268so far S nee arriVIng a Aqueduc toward he end of
November he has had 57 wmners All the a ent on and
publici y he has rece ved hasn t urned young cauthen s head
Not so f anywa~ Goodman doesn hmk It will either
Se
' ery polite kid he says He comes from a good
famil
'e sn your usual 16 year-old
Not
long shot
With Ihe kmd of performances he gave at the rack Friday
and Saturday Steve cauthen hadar gh o ve t up a I t1 e on
llunday his day off If he wanted o but you know what he did
He stayed n I s motel room by h mself bonmg up on history
so he wouidn t fall beh nd m his high school correspondence

course
s

Satu d
A k on Bu h

AQu na s 56
A k on Ea s

e

Mm as

an e
A k on Hoban 68 Ra cnna 5
5 A

Ak on S V nce n

cc

J Can on

6 Wayne s e d S
A sh abu a
As S
ohn

A nna

AV' on a c e L u he an we s 62
e a be on 96 Cuyahoga Fa s
55

Bay 80 Be ea 55

B ea hwood 8!!

cou

When ~ hou!e a er has a
s us n h s s a e as prov ded
n h s sect on on the st dav
a anuary he fu amount o
he p o a e o!IK s due and
payab eon o befo e he 3 s
day of anuary
When a house I a le
acqu es as us n h s s a e as
p ov ded n h s sec on efte
he s day of Janua y and on
o p o o he 3 s day o
Decem be
he fu amoun o
he pro a e ax s due and
payab e mmed a e y upon the
exp a on of a 30 dav-per od
commenc ng w h he da e he
s us s acqu ed

PENALTY

he paymen o he ax s
no made es p ov ded above a
pena ty of f ve do a s o ten
pe cen of he axes due
wh che'lle s grea er Sha 1 be
mposed and co ected n

ace on o he ax ,due and
ow ng

DEL NQUENT TAXES The Coun y T eesure
n
add on o any o ~e
emedy
prov ded by aw fo the
co ect on of
axes and
pena t es
sha
entorce
co ect on of such 11xes and
penet es by c v a,c on n he
name of such
reuure
aoa ns the owne
o
he
recove y o lh~ unpa d axes

RESPONS 8 LTV
OF
HOUSE TR~ LER OWNER

A owners of hOI.lSt ra ers
hav ng a s us n Jhe S ate of
Oh o and subfed o h• ex as
p ov de&lt;!
!lbOve
MUST
r•g s e such t a er w h he

Covn y Aud or on o pr or o

he date
payab. e

~e

tnt

s due ll!nd

No person who s he owner
of a house ra er and Wl'\0 s
~~l! red o eg s e a house
ra !er sha fa to d sp av on

he rro()t of

ce

t cafe or
by he Coun

·~~h

v

tr,u.r

oeea

he

ssued
Tre11ufer

OPERATOR OF A HOUSE
1RA LEI!, &gt;9VR"T E vt y ope Alor pf 1 house
a e cou o p"rk or every

owne~

of property used tor
such purpose when he e s no
opera o sh~J keep a reg ster
of a I house trailers wh t"h

make use ot the cQur park or

property

I FRANK
COU~TV AUDITOR
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
II 3 10 1 l4 31 5 c
HOW~RD

Be

e oom c a o 63 Be

ksh e 5?
e Un on

62

8 oom f e d 67 L edgemo
B uc key e 6 Co um b a 6
Buc y us 59 Be v u e 55
Ca mb dge 70 Cosho on 56
Ca n on M e K n ev
.t T o
L b be y S
Ca n on Sou h &lt;16 P e y J!l
Can on T m ken 94 Ca n on
Hoove 3
C n No hw es
Baden 60

6

Ha m

on

c e Ben e 6 w Res Acad emy

65

c e Cen 11 Ca h 78 T n y 9
C ee o k 64 F ede c k own

so

C yde 60 H u on 56

Conneau 64 Mad son S.t

Con nen a 83 A en Eas 58
Cov ng on 5 M am E as 48
cuyahOga He gh s a G and
Va ey 51
Dav Ro h 70 Day e e son 55
De phos S Johns 83 L ma
Shawn ee 'i
De phos Je ter son 62 Wayne
T a e 60
E da 3 s Mary s
o

e

y a 62Lora n sou hv ew 36
E y s Wes 75 Obe n 5
F re ands 66 K e ys on e 65 o

F ank o Adena 51 Jam es
own G eenv ew s
Free po Lake and 60 z ane
T a e 54
Ga on 70 Sh e by s
Garaway 56 nd an va ey N

53

Geneva
38

4 Ash

abu

Pa c s
e R e s de 58 A sh
E d gew ood S
P a d ng a Fa v cw 68
P ym o h
On a o 69 o
Po
C n on 00 M a ga e a

••

R chmond H e gh s 6 Ca
dna
0
R ve da e 86 R dg c m on 6
Ro c ky R e
u 1'1 E
Hawk e
oo 0
&lt;; andu sky Pe k ns
f n
ca e 6

RIVERSIDE Calif (UPI)
As Ca le Yarborough saw t
he was a VIC! m of racmg
fate
In

the

new

sea son s

NASCAR Gra nd Nat onal
opener Sunday Yarborough
lost o an old riVal David
Pearson when he should
have 11 on
I had 18 seconds on hlffi
when I spun out exp a ned
he defend ng NASCAR king
f om Timmonsville S C I
was JUSt at the wrong place at
the wrong tune
Yarborough who wound up
rune seconds behmd Pea rson
lost his lead and the race
on turn 8 of R vers1de s
arduous 2 62 m ie road
course 15 laps from the end
of the Wmston Western 5110
There was sand and d rt
all over the turn this
partiCular tune he sa d I
saw
but I couldn do
anyth ng about t I hi It and
spun
Pearson winner of 10 of 22
Grand Nat onal e enls last
year pos ted h s four h
s ra ght Cal forma stock car
VIctory He won the two
R vers1de NASCAR races m
1976and he Ontar o 5110-m er
last November
On a beau ful Southern
cat forma wrnter day when
the temperature h t 76 and an
es 1ma ed 60 000 fans urned
out Yarborough led from he
second lap unt 1 the 104th m
the 119-lap race
R ers1d e Jn ernat onal

Raceway Pres den Les
Richter lh1s year cu the ra l"e
f om 500 m les o 500 Ry FRED U EF
UPI Sports W ter
kilometers
approxunatei)
B I y Kn gl who has las
310 m les because he felt f ve
become
a one-r n wrecking
hours of dr v ng around the
crew
n
the NBA ]eve ed
ght road course was too
every
th
ng
bu Coby D etr ck
hard on cars and dr vers
and
the
San
A on o Spurs
I knew If I could push liD
afternoon
Sund!Jy
I could lr) o ~e t him to run a
Ave ag r g ovc 24 po nts
I ttle harder Pearson sa d
of Yarborough But tha per game Kn gh scored a
a n t what done t He JUS go seasonhigh 43 po nts bu
n o tha corner a ht le wide was D etr ck s 20 po nL' n 26
I kep ta lkmg o my crew m nu es tha prodded the
dur ng the race on my ca Spu s o a 22 15 cto y o
ado and ask ng them where end a four gam e os ng
Cale was and how many st eak
Coby as g ea sa d Sa
se onds he was ahead But I
An
on o Coach Doug Moe
was dr v ng as hard as I could
whose
cub fled s record lo
w thout earmg my car up
S x me NASCAR driVIng th e 500 nark th the w n
He got I ngs go ng so we
king R chard Petty fm shed
h d but had tire problems er h m In the e
Die ck h t n ne of t sho s
all day and never "as a
fa or He f mshed one lap to run up h s season-h gh
po n o al
do"n
La q K non he 6 foo 9
Pearson averaged 10 060
m es pe hour n h s Wood ag ie forw rd opped Sa n
B os 976 Mercury a race An ono " h 32 pa n s
The Spurs ed 55-37 at he
record Pet y held he old
record of 105 516 mph se n half bu the P e s rna ched
their f s ha lf produ on rn
969
There were no yellow flags the h d quar er o pu
and the race took under ti ree w h n s x pu s w I 4 17 o
hours 25445
o fn sh
Yi:Jrborough " I ge a re

rna ch " Ih Pearson Feb 20
n the Daytona 500 the second
event on he $4 3 m on
NASCAR s ock car c cu
The s ocks cars Will compe e
n a 4110-t ier a R ve sde
June 12

~P

nq d N E

e5

How top
teams fared
de

ou he n Me QS

35

p

nq

L be

v

a

o a

a od
•• d

d

0 p

"

d

d

d e c ed
d
"
d

college games
Un edP es

ne n&lt;1 onrt
M on d il
e a Da y on
a e a Ce e e.d
a c
q s ow
S a e a
No

de ca

d e ca ed
0

k

dw

0

5

on s n
F\

d

d e ea
de ea

d
d

n

A

d
d

6 Hann an

h 0 Cen

NW

d

d

1

T a e s
Sp ng d So

e

e
Wc s

68

y Sa e m 58

Sp nq e d Ca h 6l
hawhcc 60

p

gt d

ow d No don a 41
T a n adg e 9 F ed 59
T I n 5 Uppe Sandu sky .t 3

To

Bowshe

66

To

oM s

a

6
i o

Ma omb e 6 To Wh
me 58
To S o 60 To Wa e J
To
F an c s 66 To
Woodwa d 55
T o wood Mad s o n
78
F a bo n B ak ~
d o
Tu sk y Cen Ca h 6 Benne
da e 42
Tu sk y V a ey 6 S au sb u g
6

v an Au en

M

Vanda a Bu c

e

ackson d3
Gue nsey c a tl o c 6 Bea s

m ld threat when they got
with n II of the 5 00 mark m
the last quarter at 56-45
Sayre was the fifth Tornado
m double f gores w th II
The team sank 28 of 56 from
the floor n contrast to outs de
temperatures for a hot 50
pet and hit 20 or 30 free
throws
The hosts outrebounded the
WIdea ls 32 26 Swa n had s x
caroms for the losers
Southern had II steals and 16
ass sts
The losers were led by
McGu res 24 and Swa n s 10
The Baby Tornados opened
w th a b g f rst quarter
enroute to an emotiOnai 53-IO
v ctory Tim Brina ger led the
Funnelclouda with a big 18
po nts and Scott Soude had 9
Roome Pack led HaMan
Trace with 10
HaMan Trace G bson 2-4
8 Swam 5-{).10 Wtt J-{).2
Campbel 1-3 5 McGu re 9~
24 Mooney 4-0-8 Totals 22 13
57
Brown 6-2 14
Tornados
Teaford 4-l\-14 W nebrenner
448 Brauer 4 2-10 Dunnmg
6-2 14 F niey 2-&lt;H Baker Il-l
I Sayre 2 7 11 Totals 26-20
76

DuMmg set the pace for
the w nners n the second
per od when r ght after the
t p he stole the ball twice for
baskets then had an ass st to
open the gap to 26-11 ot the
6 110 mark It was 34 21 at the
half and 50-32 at the third
rest
The Wildcats mounted a

go
The Spurs m fourth place
In he Centra l D v slon also
got 15 po nts f om George
Cerv n Kmgh t s standou
performan e ommg on 15 of
24 sho s from the floor was
ba ked by WI Jones 2t
pon s
E se11 here n the NBA
Ph ladeiph a pped New Or
eans 97 76 Boston took the
New York Nets 106-91 the
Ne" York Kn cks stoppc&gt;d
C lden Sta e Ill 97 Den er
dumped Seatt e 109 10
At an a bun ped Portland
125 120 and Ch cago humped
M i" aukee 102-83
16&lt; rs 97 Jazz 76
Hen y B bby scored 21
po n s as Ph !adelphia oiled
lD Is fourth s ra gh v c ory
George MeG nn s and Ju us
P:rvmg added t8 each for the

dropped on 10 of h s season
high 14 pomts m the th rd
quarter as Boston handed
New York 1Ls lOth straight
loss S dney Wicks was high
for he Celtic. with 18 while
John W lhamson topped the
Nets w th 17
K u ks Ill Warriors 97
Wa t Fraze r scored a
gameh gh 24 points and Jun
McMilla n added 22 as New
York broke open a close
game m the second hail Ear
Monroe chipped n w h 21
po n s and Bob McAdoo had
20 and 17 rebounds as he
Kruck:; push ed their record to
the 5110 mark Robert Parrish
led the Warr ors w th 18
pom s wh ie h ghscormg
R ck Barry was held to JUS!
sx

Nugge ts 109 SuperSoni&lt;S
lOt

Dan Issei pumped n 23
po
nts and David Thompson
whi e Pe e Ma aVIch had 22
22
as Denver fought off a
ro
fo Ne Or eans
fur
ous fourth-quarter dnve
wh h has now dropped s x
by
Seattle
to take ts four h
st a gh
Vlctory
m
a
row The Somes
Celt cs 106 Nets 91
who
Ira
led
by 15 gomg mto
J m Ard eplacmg fou
th
e
las
period
were paced by
plagued Dave Cowens
rook e Bob Wikerson s 20
pomts The loss snapped
Seattle s s x.game wmrung
strmg
John Drew had a game
high 33 pomts rncluding f ve
stra gh m d" ay through he
fourth quarter to propel
So " hen
arne IIDe to A lanta o ts third w n n s
1u t L e zke ons de ed a do last four con ests The
or.ct e effor
B azers had a chance o e
I don
kn ow wh)
tl e game w th 14 seconds left
Lie zke sa d bu J turned bu Uoyd Neallost the ball on
my ba k on he pu t and I a dr ve Lou Hudson added 20
didn know had gone n pomts for the Hawks while
un I I eard he crowd roar I the Pac1f c D v s1on leaders
st didn bel eve thad gone were led by Larry Steele with
n and I m no so sure even 28 and Bill Walton w th 26
ow
Bulls 102 Bucks 83
I zke had a f nal&lt;ound 69
M ckey Johnson scored 27
nd I tier a 67
pomts and Artis G !more
1he effor t "on Lie zke a added 20 as Chicago beat
$40 OliO check and a spo rn he M !waukee for the second
Mas ers he PGA Champ on
me m two n ghts The Bulls
sh p and the Tournamen of ran off 14 strwgh po nts
Champ ons
oward the end of the th rd
I m happy about all that
penod to come from behind
he sad bu I m happ est and take a 72~2 lead The
abou w nn ng a p ace n he Bucks who have now lost
Mas ers Tha s been one of
hree consecut ve games
nv goa s and now that I have were led by Bob Dandr dge
ach eved t I U have to go to and Qu M Buckner with 15
the next ournamen this pon s ap ece
A an c D v s on ead ers

Lietzke's 82-foot putt
•

149 South Third
Middleport o
Phone 992 7155

wrns Tucson Open title
ft CSON A z UPJ
1he e see n o be some
confu on h w long B u ~

a

du sk y
F em on S
Shady s de AA
&lt;; o h e as e n
~a

n ght s h gh of 24 pomts
Juruo Teaford retaliated
at the 2 I po nl to rega n the
ead for Southern and from
then on twas a downhill for
the fa vored 1 ornados as they
got out to a 10 2 lead before
the s to s narrowed t to 16
It At th e f rst buzzer
So uthern led 20 11

Pearson triumphs Spurs end losing streak

I e ke s w nn ng b d e pu
as n he $200 OliO [ ucson
Open
Mos people who saw t on
he 18
Io e
Tucson
Na onal Sunday I gored t
as fro 65 o 70fec La e
a PGA Tour off c a marked
off I I sta nce and sa d 1
was 32 fee
S x y f ve 70 o 82 com ng
on he fou th hole of a sud I n
playo ff w th Gene
dea
I e

see ned t-ven longer

o tl e man "ho made t
I eally doh knoll ho"
ong wa. sa d i e zke
All I know s the ba went
n I won and I n g ad t s al
over I was so ncr ous I don t
know even ow how I h lhe
ha I knew houg I I d o
make a grea pu even s nk
or I had no chance o w n
because Gene was n suet

good posit on
I etzke a hrd) ea r pro at
25 and withou a s ngie au
VI C ory and 1 ttler a 46
yea old our egular s nee
t954 and I e wm1 e of 26
ou naments o place seventh
on th e al me none) I st
had pa red e 15 h 16th and
17th holes in the p ayoff On
18 "he e I Ie ke had m ssed
a f ve foo er a half hour
earl er o se up he playoff
IJlt e wa s on y 15 feet away
aft er a grea second sho
I was a beau 1ful shot
lJtezke sa d of I tier s h t to
he g een When I saw thai
my Jea t sank If gured I had
no chan ce un ess I could ole
ou But who expects to hole
out from that d stance '

p 7 9.,0

week &lt;1nd reorgan zc my

goa s
Andy North wound up th rd
" th a f nal&lt;ound 66 f o 276
and won $14 2110 wh le L tier
von $22 800 for a second
pla e Tom Watso n was

lou h a 279 and Gary
McCord B U Mallon and G I
Morgan tied fo f fth at 280
It was the second playoff rn
as many Tour events th s
year Last week U S Open
champ Jerry Pate edged
PGA champ Dave Stockton
oo he f rst extra hole a
Phoerux
Los n the shuffle of
L e zke s first v ctory was the
lac Jolmny M ller who had
won here the last three years
didn even f1msh p ck ng up
after four holes when he
became Ill

This month
you can help us
realize a
200yearold dream.

56

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Va

6

Ca o
n~

d

a

PA

an

• c

C y 6J

h
k

ng

63 T pp C y

59

Wa en W
G a f e d 60
Wa c

w

ck

Res

o d 6

e

w

90

Ak o

kyvu e 5
ou ghby sou h

FOOT LONG &amp;
FRENCH FRIES

"

w

a d 5 No wa k 42
Younqs own Rayen
Beavc
0 •

3
G rts

a Ha bo

G en Oak 58

v e 58

H

The balanced scor ng was still the Tornados were n
led by fl ash) Er c Dunnm~ s rontro most of the way
14 pomts and s x ass sts Jun or John Sayre put the
Jumor Richard Teaford and f rst po nis on the board w th
sen or Joe Brown also got 14 a free throw at the 7 23 mark
pomts High scoring center but then the WIdeals got
Ch p Brauer was held to 10 the r only lead of the n ght 2
1 when high scor ng R
points and 8 rebounds
Play ing one of the r most McGu re netted a f eld goal
He ended the ga me w th the
slu g~ I s h games of the season

e ps

o awa G a do

Oh o H gh Sch oo
Ba ketb~ P.' e u

Coun y

RACINE
The Southern
Tornados found another way
to win th s t me a balanced
scoring attack as they
whipped VISiting Hannan
Trace handily Saturday n ghl
76 to 57 That left the Tor
nados record unblem shed at

Thzs week's
Boy s

Oh o 1-1 gh Schoo

BasketiJa

Oh

Rel u h

Un t ed Pres S&gt; ntcrnat onat

Med pa 6 C e

F

n co n w es 41

H gh and 67 No hwes trn 45
nd an Va )ev S 75 Mad son d
Ken on 6.&amp; E. g n 46
Ke e nq A e
11 '1 To edo
c a ho c 74
Lake 84 Ctaymon 55
Lemon Monrw: s Ea on 52
L ck ng Val ey 76 U ca

PHOENIX Anz (UP!)
James Warren Bakersfield
Cal f sped through the
quarter mile m 5 95 seconds
Sunday to win the top fuel
L ma
Cen a
Ca h
72
ehmma tor title 1n the
Det anee 60
Loudonv e 6'f C cs ne 5 &lt;~
Professional Racers
Man~ Chr s a11 66
nd afl
Organization
Wlnternational
H ! I
Nationals
at
Beeline
Mans M(Jd son 53 Mans S
Pee .t7
Dragway
Mar ng on 71 \J Ov ~~ c
Tom Hoover Minneapolis
Morvsv • 7 ~._ P an c Y ~9
Mass on dO vvoo~ f!' 38
Mmn m a Chevy Mooza won
Maumee 54 0 eq on c ay 116 the funny car eiim l!lltor
Mendon Un on ~d c; Henr'y 7
M d Mad \On 17 Gc man own division
Va ey V ew ,. ~
Billy Williams Torrant"
M t c spo
13 Oanv e
J
Calif In a Chevy powered
0
N ew
A rn ""
71
New
ilragster won the pro C(lllp
KOOIIV
61
draRster division and the pro
Nr.wa k p rov:c ·.r. V sO
No ""'
t'f
6·~ 'AI l be v !!lock title was taken by Lee
~ atem .sa
Oranq c. ~ 6
n vc
v r:hOo Hunter Orange Calif m u
Ford Pmto

••

'

Tornados flatten Wildcats 76-57

Today's

an c s

Ch cago

ks de

a

Ba dw n

W m n

on

w

0

o

No

1'\c n

R o G a de 9
N a cnc 8
T

n

Htt M a

one

9 Ke n yon

M
A

To ed o 68 Ea s c
M
Was h 3 nd a na S
W -cnbe q 0 Ma c
Woos c
5 M u o
W q h S R:t A m
Ga

Ve non

99~

h 5

Pa 6
a 5~
6
o q

8

DENVER UPI BurU te
Haldorson former Colorado
Uruverslly basketball star
AAU standout and OlymPIC
champion w II be nducted
mto the Colorado Sports Hall
of Fame Feb 7
Haldorson called The B g
Burd by his fellow athletes
averaged 21 3 and 23 9 po10ts
per game m 1954 and 1955 as
he led the Buffalos to
consecuhve B1g Seven now
Big Eight) champ10nsh ps
He was a member of the US
Olympic tear wh ch woo the
baske ball g ld 1edal a
Melb&lt; ur 1e Aus ral a 1956

TRY OUR
NEW DELICIOUS

"HOT FUDGE CAKE"
McCLURE'S

I
atry 1s
-..-.

+

••••••••••••••••
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5(X I 62 Is
N Yo ~ :\ Y XJ? I

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1

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u

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\-

I

1

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•••••••••••••••••
Am nd 1s a ternble th1ng to waste

"' '

!1

�•
~TileDailySentlnei, Middleport-Pnmeroy, 0, Monday, J81W'1. 19TT

r-----------,

:I Pro II
!Stnnllings !
NB A Shndt ngs
By Untted Press tnter nattonal

Eastern Contertnce
At lanttc Dtv tsi on
W l Pet
Pht ladelphta 25 15 625

GR

NY Kn1c ks

1() 20

500

Boston

10 ?0

500

5
s

8Ufflll0

16.16
12 18

300

13

12 11

564 -

23 18

561

N Y Ne ts

38 1 10

Central Otvtston
W l Pet
Houstoo

Clenland

525

GB
P

~

Wash ing ron

71 1(1'

Sa n Anlonto

21 21 500

New Or le&amp;ns

19 23

452

41 ~

At l anta

16 2Y

35 6

9

21 :;

Weste rn Conference
M tdW U f OI VIS tOn

Denver
DelrO tl

W L Pet
GB
29 12 707 '2 4 18 57 1 S1 1

~ nd t ana

2 1 22

488

9

Kansas (tty

70 21

47 6

91 ~

Oucago
Mtlwa ukee

11 23
13 32

425 11 1)
289 18

Pa c tt tc Ot vtston
W L Pet
GB
Portlanct
79 15 659 Los Angeles
26 15 634 1' 1

SeaTtle
24 20 54 5
Golde n Stat e 21 19 525
Ph oen nt
17 12 436
Saturday 's Res ults

5
6
91,

K an Ct ty 115 Atl anta 90
Houston 121 Los Angeles 11 6
Wastn ng ton 113 Por tla nd 101
Detroit 121 Buffa lo 105
Ch tc ago 96 M il w aukee 93
P hoentx 9&lt;i Cl eve land 79
(Onl y games sc hedu l ed )
Sunday '$ Result s
Boslon 106 N Y Nel $ 91
Pht l a 97 New Orl ean s 76
Sa~ Ant on to 122 lnd• an a 11 5
NY Knt cks 11 1 Go lden St 97
Denver 109 Seattle 101
A11ant a 125 Por tland 120
Ch ica go 102 M tlwauk ee 83
I Only ga mes sch edu led )
Monday ' s Gam es
( No ga mes schedul ed-"'~
Tuesday ' s Games
Ph•ladelph ta at Buffa lo
Ch tcago at HousJon
Bos ton at N ew Orlea ns
Lo s Angeles at Kans as C•ty
Cl evel and a t M 1lwau kee
Denver a t Golden Stat e
(Onl y ga mes schedu led)
NHL Stand1ng s
By Umted Preu lnternaflonat
Campbell Conference
Palnck DIVISIOn
WLTPis GFGA
P h da
21 9 9 6J 175 121
N Y l slandrs 26 10 7 59 153 107
22 16 7 51 152 142
A tlan ta
NY Rangers 17 18 12 46 173 167
Smythe DIVI SIOn
W L T Pts GF GA
19 21 5 43 131 15.d
Sl LOUIS
Ch1cago
16 23 6 JB 140 160
M 1nnesota 10 23 10 30 125 ]72
Van co uver I J ~ 0 4 - JO 130 Hl7
Col or.,do
11 26 7 '19 12 1 16'1
Wales Conference
Norns Ot~ISIOn
W L T PIS GF GA
Montrl 33 6 6 7'1
2'12 101
P1tt sburgh
18 18 8 44
141 147
•
Los Angel es
14 22 10 38
141 156
DetrOit 13 26 5 31
120 161
Wa shing ton
11 5 17 1
12 26 7 31
Adams DIVISIOn
W L T Pts GF GA
Buffa lo
'18 12 4 60 165 118
Boston
27 13 4 58 166 13.d
Toronto
21 18 6 J8 163 141
Cle\le land
l .d 74 7 35 135 161
Sa1urday ' s Resul ts
M 1nrtesota 3 Bos ton 3 t1e
NY Islander s 2 Wash 1ng ton 1
Ph1ladelph ta 5 Colorado 'i
M ont real 6 L os Angeles 0
P tllsburgh 5 Buffal o 2
Ch1cago 4 Tor on to 1
Cleveland 4 Va ncouver 2
$1 LOUIS 4 D etrOit 0
!Only g a mes schedu l ed )
Sunday 's Res ul1s
NY Is land ers 2 Wash 2 t1e
Phtladelph l a 4 M inn esot a 2
Atl anta 6 P 1tt sburgh 5
Buffalo 3 Color ad o 0
NY Ranger s 5 Ch1 cago 2
!Onl y g am es scheduled •
Monday ' s Game s
M ontr ea t at Boston
(On ly game schedul ed \
Tuesday ' s Games
Mm ne sota at N Y tslandr s
M on tr ea t at Washtng ton
To ron to a t Los Angeles
Ch 1cago at Co l orado
(Onl y gam es sched ulecO

Reedsville
News Notes
By Mrs. L. Baldenou
Holiday guests of Mr and
Mrs. Gene W1lson were Mr
and Mrs Charles Congrove
and Mr and Mrs Gary
McMerney and Janson of
Zanesville, Mr. and Mrs
Jerry Palmer, Mike and
Matthew of Burbank; Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Sams, Mr.
and Mrs. Gale Sams ol Jane
Lu, W.Va., and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert L. Sams of Alum
, Bridge, W. Va
Mrs. Rose Thomas was
recently honored on her 80th
birthday with a surprise
dinner party held at the home
of her sister, Mrs Gllldys
Baughman at Gahanna.
other guests Included her
brothers, . Frank, Jack and
Tom Gale and a niece Patty
of Gahanna. Mrs. Opal
Randolph transported Mrs.
Thomas to Gahanna. A
decorated cake was served to
the guests and Mrs. Thomas
received many gilts. Sending
gilts but unable to attend
were Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Hauber and family
Mrs. Earl Humphrey has
returned home after spending
the holidays with her
daughter, Mr. and Mra Len
Stone at Cleveland.
Mrs. Bess Larkii\s estenda
thanks to those who
remembered her with cards
and glfta during her lllnw
and stay In the hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Chevalier visited with Mr.
and Mrs. Guy Spencer and
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Reed and
family of Tuppers Plains
during the holidays.
Mrs Harold Sauer visited
with Mrs. Roae Thollllll and
at the Williams-Balderoon
home recently
Mrs Denver Web., :~~

Cage Scores
Atb lon

~J

MidWest
Sr ena H ts 70

Alm a 81 Adrt lln 65

Ande-rsn 65 Wdmt ng ton 60
A.shliiU"'d 63 Xav t("t' 0 ~1
e..ltd Wa llce RJ Ober tn 7~
Bethan y Ken 88 sw Kl'fl SJ
Buller 4..1 Va lpa r aiso 59
Celvt n 76 Ohvt"l 71
Ced arvl 11 0 Dom•ncn 65
cr-nrr,al 67 Buena Vtst a 60
C M 1Ch 78 M ta ml 0 76
Cent Mo 90 SW M ISSSOU rt
Cle11e Sr 78 Wt.ty ne St 60
Oelroll U 65 Da yton 63
~ E m p n " St 97 K arny St 9Q
EvM s...-.lle 81 o e Pa uw 7fl
Fer r ts St 96 Hills dl e 63
F1ndlay 13 EMih am so
Gosheo 71 Marion 69
Gr acelnd Si Wm Jew ll 49
Gr ndV aiSI 85 N M ICh 12
Hano\ler 83 Taylor 66
H er dl'lbg 77 Ohi O Wslyn 76
111 Tec h 81 Roosev elt 79
Ill Wes 126 Carll W1S ~8 .
Indiana 79 W 1scons1n 64
lnd Cent 65 Man an 56
tnd St T H 17 Mo Wstrn 58
Iowa 8d l ll tnoiS 81
K alamazoo 73 Hope 64
Kent 51 77 Ohto U 74
L•n coln Mo 83 Ark L R 61
Lu ther 81 Dubuqu e 76
M1 Ch 83 M tChtg an 51 70
Mo Rolla 80 NW Mo 6 ~
Monmouth Ill 105 Coe 96
Muskmgum 63 Ollerbem 61
Nebra ska d9 Iowa St 48
No Cent 78 El m h ur st 75
No Oak 9S Mornmgsde 77
No ttl 86 Bwlng Gr een BO
NW Iowa 73 Stoux Fal l s 68
N E Mo 82 SE M tSSSOUrt 7J
Oh iO St 69 Nor l hw es trn 57
Pur due 66 M innesot a 64
Roc khu r st 60 Dr ury 56
St Jos l nd 87 Tn St 66
S Oak St 78 No Iowa 68
Tark10 60 Bake r 51
Tt fftn 86 Malon e 78
To l edo 68 E Mt ch lg an 51
Wa r tbur g 73 Upper Iowa 57
w ash br n 64 F T Ha ys St 59
W M 1C h1g an 71 Ball Sf 66
Wtch tt a St 87 Br adley 74
Wil liam Penn 75 Si m pson S.d
Wd tenberg 70 Ma n etta 58
Woost er. 75 M t Un 1on 61
Wn gh l Sf 83 Ar mstrong Sf 81
Southwest
Ab Chr1s 92 Te:.as A&amp; l 76
Ang elo St 82 S F As tn 7.4
ArkanS'a s 12 R 1ce J5
Ar k Tech 80 Ou achtta 75
E Cent Okla 89 SE Ok la 70
E N M 70 Su i Ross 68
E Tex Bapt 85 St Ed s 65
Housll:l'f'l 78 T CU 74
H Pa yne 94 Sa m Hous 71
J Br own 98 Oz arks Scht 6'1
Lu bb Ch rr s 75 T e:. Wsl y n 70
New M CXI CO 85 Ari ZOna St 81
New M ex1co St 86 drBk e 8'1
Ok lahoma 71 K a nsas 67
Ok la Chns 82 Cam er on 75
Okla C1 l y 102 T ex A r l 73
Ok Pnhndle 96 Col Coli 66
0 Rober! $ 8A Ill St 75
Ph tlll ps 55 M idweste rn S4
St Mr y ' s 106 Hous r ·sn 52
Sthr n U 95 Prcm 1e Vw A&amp; M 91
SW Ok la 74 N E Ok lahoma 71
Te'l! as 73 Tex es Tec h 72
T e)laS A&amp;M 57 SM U 53
Te)l El Paso 60 Art zona 59
W Tex as 92 T ul sa 69
Way lnct Bapl 84 Dlta s Ba pt 80
W N M 79 N M H dand s 60
' West
A 1r Fo r ce 75 Denv er 61
Baker sfld 89 F r es no St 81
Bng ha m Young 97 Wy om mg 6J
Cal 1f 8-'1 Soulh ern Ca l 76
Cal L Uih 118 Ca l T ec h 80
C"l Pol y SLO 79 Wes tmont 73
Cent Was h 68 Or e T ech 57
Chapm a n 76 Red l ands 11
Ch 1co Sl n Cal Dav 1s 70
Colorado 78 K an sas St 75
Cre1ght on 100 Gon zag a 83
Geo Fox 80 Idaho Col 78
Humbold t 77 Sacto 51 60
L ew1s&amp;C irk 87 P ac L ulh 74
L1 nf1 eld 100 Wh tt man 88
L ong Bch Sl 84 UC Sta Br b 72
L A St 10? Azusa Pa c 87
M ontan a 79 M on tana St 66
Ncv Reno 65 Seattle U 64
No Col orBdo 6'1 CBI lrv 'i9
Nor thr 1d1;1 e 89 L A Bapt 71
Or egon Cot 78 E Ore 67
PI Lem a 80 So Cal C&lt;J ll 75
Ponlnd St 86 E M on t BJ
Puget Sou nd 78 W Wash 64
San D1ego St 73 Fu ll erton 70
San Fran 90 Loyola Cal 63
San ta Cl ara 74 Pepp er d1ne 70
Se att le Pac 17 Roc ky M tn 60
So Colo 82 Weste rn St 71
So Utah St 88 Ada m s St 72
St an1S \aus S! 71 SF St 70
UC L A 100 Stanford 86
U t ah 67 Co l or ad o St 6&lt;l
Wa![) hlngton 90 Or egon 51 76
Washmg ton St 49 Oregon 45
We ber St 97 No Ar1z ona 73
Wh tllter 64 Pomona P1tz er 56
Wdl ame t te 95 Pac Ore 88
Sunday ' s Gam es
Amba ssador 99 LeTo urn ea u 78
Ct ncmnal t 54 51 Lou ts 52
Gannon 89 St F r an N Y 7'1
Geo Wash 80 DuQ uesne 75
1 f"hm.:&gt;'" 91 Medgar E ve r s Bl
..... ..
.., yne 72 Rochstr U 67
Ma r qulfe 78 Notre Dam e 69
W1s Gr ee n B&amp;y 57 Depaul 50

In 1974, Egypt and Israel
reached agreement on
separating their forces along
the Suez Canal and lunitmg
arms

~ Ute

~

TOM TIEDE
•

Great lady in advance
of her time recalled
By Tom Tiede
WASHINGTON
Pres1denttal maugurallons
are nothing if not occas10ns
for eccentriCs to flower Pe~r
pie have attended the
ceremonies impersonatmg
clowns, kings, Ahe Lincoln,
Napoleon, even H1tler. And
then there was Dr Mary E
Walker - a century ago she
came to some of the part1es
dressed as a man.
It seems Dr Mary always
wore male atllre She once
donned tuxedo and top hat to
astomsh Chester A. Arthur at
a White House recept10n
Besides Ibis she was unsympathetic . w1th the
beWJldenn.:,t she wrought
When a Chines.; minlSter inqwred why she wore pants,
she retahated umned1ately
by asking him why he wore
skirts.
Who was Dr Mary Walker'
A great lady In advance of .
her tune, some say. Others
feel she was an aberration
and fool. In any event, as the
natwn pauses to change lis
governmental gears, 1t IS as
good a time as any to
remember one of the mostly
forgotten faces that helped
shape the outrageously
diverse repubhc of this mauguralseason
Mary Walker was a small,
slender and obscure physlcran from rural New York,
come to Washington to do her
patnot1c part m the ClVII
·war. It was still a century
before women's Uberation,
and the nuhtary authorilles
!ned to direct the woffilln mto
the nursmg corps. She'd .
have none of 11, demanding
'mstead a surgeon's JOb, and
not m Washington but out
where the JVar action was.
There was much consternauon and gnashing of teeth in
the War Department, not to
say the medical profession,
but Dr Mary was sent to Tennessee, W!lh the rank of
lieutenant, to become the
[lrst ass1st.ant surgeon to
serve m the Anny m tune of
combat. She wore the male
unilonn, of course, right
down to the underwear
There is some quesllon as
to whether !he doctor's service was as pos1t1ve as It was

His body: a
blood machine
BALSAM LAKE, W1s
(UPI) - What vamp1re
wouldn 'I wish for a friend like
H.!rry Loomer•
Loomer , who describes
himself as a fanatic donor,
has given up 19'h gallons of
his blood - his most recent
contribution coming Friday
In Eau Cla1re, Wis. Loomer,
41, S8ld he started m college
"I don't know exactly why,
but I gave," he sa1d "Then I
was In the service and I gave
I was In the Philippines. It
just kind of snowballed."
A
new
process,
plaomapheresls allows
nurses to draw blood, remove
the plasma, and pwnp some
of the remaining flu1d back
mto his body
" With plasmapheresis,
sometunes I've given two
unlta, but then I get half ollt
Mro. Ernest Whitehead
violted with Mrs. Eunice
Sprague at the Arcadia
Nursing Home at Coolville,
recently.
Mrs. Helen Archer visited
with Mr. and Mrs. Don
Coleman and family at
Columbus
during the
holidays.
Garral Chevalier of Mansfield recently spent several
days with his parents, Mr
and Mrs. Edward Chevalier.

was evodenl Sunda y when
Marquette lieat Notre Dame,
7U9, m a nauonally televised '
game
"Bo played the second hall
like he's capable," McGuire
said after Ellis scored all 12
of his points after a scoreless
f1rst half ,
Ell1s, plagued by fouls In
the (irst half, scored four of
his "big ones" at the start of
the second hall to key a 13-4
spurt that broke open a tight
game arxl gave the ninthranked Warnors a 1:!-pomt
lead
Lee
topped
Butch
Marquette w1th a game-high
'!I pomts.

back," he said. Without that
process, his 200 units of blood
would have totaled 25 gallons
instead of 19\\.
'
Loomer says he lS only the
l!econd most Jl"Oiillc donor m
the nation. He sa1d an Illinois
man Is f1rst wtth 25 gallons,
but the Illinois resident lS
about to rel1re

controversial. Be that as 11
may, she was active enough
to be captured as a pnsoner
of war, then important
enough to he released In exchange for a rebel maJor.
Eventually she became the
f1rst woman to he awarded
the Medal of Honor.
Alas, at war's end, Dr.
Mary became more of a
character than a herome to
her nal10n. No doubt because
she ms1sted on dressmg as
well as actmg hke men As
Amelia Bloomer, her contemporary, Dr. Mary believed
that the female garb of the
day - cnnollne and w1re
hoops - was unhealthy and
unsafe. She prefered sllff
wmg collars, long coats w1th
talls and pantaloons
Hence she was a sensation
m the worse sense of the
word. When she entered
ladies restroorns there were
screams of protest. Young
lads and proper women hissed aI her on the streets
Several tunes she was ar-

rested lor "unpersonatmg a
male." Even colleagues m
the suffrage movement considered her something of a
freak, and leaders spread
wide the word that Dr. Mary
was wholly self-servmg.
It 1s probably true that the
doctor was self-servmg Indeed her promollonal efforts
crushed any des1gn she may
have had on respectability
When she lost a small clencal
job w1th the government penSion office \allegedly lor msubordinabon ) she look to
tourmg dune museums as a
Sideshow attractwn Even
near the end of her life, st1ll
cravmg attention, she cabled
Kaiser Wilhelm to offer her
New York fann as a s1te for
World War I peace talks.
For all of 1t, according to
her bwgrapher, Charles . McCool Snyder, and her grandmece, Helen Wilson, Dr
Mary was a woman to applaud. Her philosophy of sexual equality lS Widespread t~r
day, her 1deas on dress are m
every fashion store. Had she
been born a century later she
would m large part be in main
line wolllllnhood
But she was born m 1832
And wben she died, m 1919,
she was penmless, ostraciZed
and once more obscure Also
she died w1thout her Medal of
Honor; two years previous a
nulitary review board had
revoked it along with those of
some 911 other Civil War rec1p1ents.
There lS now a small move
m Congress to restore Dr.
Mary's medal Also, some
feel history should favor her
with greater digmty So what
if she was a bit balmy? As we
await our first pres1dent of
our third century, It's recalled that the founders were that
way too

The wm was the seventh in
a row for the Wamors and
ra1sed the1r record to 11-2
Don Wilharns had 22 pomts
to lead Notre Dame, wh1ch
lost for the fourth straight
time alter opening the season
with seven stra1ght VlCiorles.
Toby Krught added 19 for the
lr!Sh and Bruce Flowers 16.
In another major game,

played Sunday night, Bob
M1ller, a 6-10 junior who was
Cincmnati's most valuable
player last season, scored 18
points and the second-ranlied
Bearcats surv1ved a pressure
defense by a determmed St
!Jiuis Umversity team to
come from behind and defeat
the B11likens, 54-52, in Metro-7
Conference action

The wm gave the Bearcats
a lUI season record , Ul m the
conference. St. LouiS fell to 112, Go~ in the Metr&amp;-7.
On Saturda y, four lop
teams were upset : Arizon a,
6().59, by Texas-El Paso , No.
I I Mmneso ta, "66-64, by
Purdue m overtime : Oregon,
4 1-12, 0-4 m the Metro-7
On Saturda y, four top

NFL Pro Bowl to end
1976 grid campaign
SEA'ITLE (UPI) - The
369th, final, ultimate and
hopefully last football game
of the season unfolds tonight
with the NFL Pro Bowlin the
Kingdome, but NFC Coach
Chuck Knox 1s already
plotting to give h1s Los
Angeles Rams a head start on
next.fall
••If I can't be at the Super
Bowl, I enJOY bemg here," he
explained. "TillS gJVes the
coaches a chance to compare
players with other clubs and
helps m-evaluatmg players."
John Madden, who has
handled the AFC squad SlX of
the last seven years, claims
to be living proof that Pro
Bowl coaching 1s healthy for
your wmnlng percentage and
the Super Bowl victory of h1s
Oakland R&amp;ders has made
Knox a believer

Madden's scr1pt 1s being
memorized around the league
because Chuck Noll of the
Pittsburgh Steelers, the AFC
coach for the nationally televised game, has his lines
down, too.
''This thmg 1s secood best
(to the Super Bowl)," he sa1d
"You get to know some of the
people and tl's helpful to
compare your players with
players m the game."
The coaches may be
lookmg for helpful t1ps, but
they and the players are
lookmg for a Iaugher - as
long as thetr s1de has the last
guffaw.
But Art Shell, Oakland
Raider tackle, calls the game
"a ma tter of pride - nobody
wants to come here and get
whipped"

Bucks prepare
for Indiana
COLUMBUS I UPI) - The
Oh10 State basketball rookie
coach Eldon Miller feels "we
have to. unJI"ove m many
areas" and put hlS Buckeyes
through its f1rst pracbce of
the week today m gettmg
ready for the B1g Ten home
game w1th Indiana 's NCAA
champ10ns Saturday
··we've put three pretty
good halves together, the
second half Thursday agamst
W1sconsm and both halves
Saturday
with
Northwestern ," M1ller said
"Sure we have to 1mprove m
many areas but I feel very
good about the two road
VICtories "
The Bucks, who heat the
Badgers 6().58 and then the
Wildcats 69-07, had a hard
workout scheduled today and
a rest planned Tuesday m
order to keep the 6-5 squad
fresh for the weekend
Contest
Thanks to Tony Hall, Ohio
State already has won as
ffillny season and conference
games as it did all last
season
The walkon freshman
tipped in the wmnmg basket
Wlth three seconds left m the
Thursday game and tall1ed 14
oomts and got 12 rebounds m

the
Saturday
ro ad
appearance
"He showed up at my off1ce
last fall and sa1d, 'I want to
play basketball, "' Miller recalls "I told h1m the tryout
dates He was one of 50, a
slickou t from the start He's a
very mature young man "
Oh10 State took a 35-24 lead
m the flfst 20 rrunutes, but the
W1ldcats cut the deficit to 4943 The Buckeyes then closed
11 out, after a hasket by Mike
Daughterly and two free
throws by Larry Bolden
Bolden leads" the team 1n
ass1sts w1thh 554 and his 11.3
ppg averi:Jge IS second to
freshman Kelvm Ransey at
13.9.
Freshman
J1m
Elhnghausen 1s the rebound
leader woth a 5 4 average to 5
for Hall and 4 6 for junior
Terry BurrlS

tea ms were upset . Arizona ,
~9, by Texas-El Paso; No.
II Mmnesota,U.), 90-63, No. 3
Kentucky defeated Auburn,
75-68, No. 4 Alabama edged
MISsissippi State, 65-63, No. 5
North Carolina stopped Duke,
77-68, No. 6 Michigan downed
Michigan Stale, 83-70, No 8
Wake
Forest
shaded
Clemson, · 84-82 , UCLA
defea ted Stanford, 100-86,
LOuisville Whipped Marshall,
104-liS, Tennessee beat UlU
108-102 and Providence
topped Hawaii, 94-76.

Noll clauns the pride factor
1s the reason so many players
turn down Pro Bowl
mv1tations each year because
of reported lnJUrles This
year the dropouts mclude
hoth startmg quarterbacks Ken Stabler of Oakland and
Fran Tarkenton of Minnesota
- who complamed of aching
knees.
The oflen&amp;es , naturally,
will resemble those of the
Rams and Steelers, but the
defenses w1ll he hampered by
rule changes to keep the
game Wide open - onty
lun1lod wne pass coverage,
bas1c 4-3 hnes and no blitzmg
by outs1de !me backers except
on third-and-5hort s1tuat1ons.
"We let the quarterback
call the plays," Knox sa1d.
"We'll g1ve him some help
but 1t's his game "
The contest to break a 3-3
lie between the AFC and NFC
will be played before the first
sellout m the Pro Bowl's 27year h1story - 114,752 fans,
Including 57,000 seals that
Seattle Seahawk season
ticket holders were required
to reserve before the season
began.

Frigidaire

Laundry
Pair

OHIO

v .,

-''"'" \.j"'J '

,~. , ,

Officers installed
••
••• at council meeting

•• •
•• Thumb
••
••• Notes
kly feature of Me1
••• Garden
Club members
' A .,..
County

"'""" '

••
••
•
•
•

g,

BAI&lt;ER
'FURNITURE

CULTIJRE AND TYPES OF BEGONIAS
BY RUBY DIEHL
'
Star Garden Club
Beg?mas are slowly, but surely creeping up the ladder of
populanty toward flrst place as a ch01ce among house plants.
For the tuberous-rooted begomas which are the fnlled and
fancy ones, the sml should be plentifully ennched with
compost, leaf mold, decayed manure, hwnus or peat moss II
should be course and well drained, but always molSt. Tuberous
begonias may be planted any t1me from February unt1l sprmg
Water sparingly untli growth starts, mcreasmg the amount of
mmsture as the pla nts develop Do not plant them until the
pmk swelling appears, and do not cover the top of the bulb w1th
soil. Too early or too deep piantmg 1S apt to cause the bulb to
rot. They grow best at a temperature range between 65 and 70
degrees, and in partial shade
The fibrous-rooted begomas. Th1s branch of the begoma
family ~eludes a lot of beimbes, and they are eas1er to grow
than the1r larger flowermg brothers and sisters These are
often called wax hegooias and , hke the tuberous type, may be
used e1ther for pot culture or as beddmg plan ts
Most begonias of this type grow an average of 12 mches
hi~h Although one- the angel-wmg- grows 12 feet ta ll It 1s a
clunber and looks very mce growmg on w1res fixed to a home
greenhouse roof.
The Rex begonia 1s even more pracllcal for wprkmg folk
and aparbnent dwellers than aey of the others. They have
short &amp;luzomes, or rootstocks from wh1ch arlSe the longsta!ked wrmkled leaves, averagmg about SlX mches m
diameter. The beaullfully marked leaves may be s1lver and
green, hghl and dark green, red , and purple
The "Iron Cross" has leaves distmctly marked w1th
rad1atmg bands of ch ocolate brown, very pretty
The so1l requ1rements are much the same as those of other
I
types. Add some charco al to keep the mox ture ••sweet. "
PropagatiOn 1s easlly accomphshed by dlVlswn or by leaf By Polly Cramer
. cu ttings
·
BY POLLY CRAMER
~~~*':~&lt;*:::::::~,·~::::::::::::::: :::.:-:-: :•.:-.·:·. &gt;.·: .·:::.-:•.,.,:,:.::::::::::::&gt;,::::::&gt;.::::::::::::::::&gt;.::&gt;,::&gt;,~ or ::~n~~r~~~nter~~~:

Middleport

r Helen Help
&lt;

i

0.

~~j

DENTURES- DENTISTRY
' OR RONAL D F RIVI ERE
OR YICT OR Y LIANG - OF\ G J STOMB AUGH

One or two day full
denture servtce parttajs,
extractions, x-rays , cleaning

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personal reasons There 1s

1

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sadist, or a crook?

FOR PRI CES CAL L '~
OHIO TOLL FREE 'i iiiiii1

1-800-282-6411

I

949 E. LIVirfgston Ave , Columbus
Weekdays 8 30 A M to 6 30 P M
' y olO If Srru fe Tomorrou•l f You f akt&gt; Cure 0 1} our l er i/1 l odu~

RIVIERE CENTER

Install weatherstnppmg
:w!'ilily,an d storm doors

(

~ WHA Standtngs
By Untted Press lnternat1onal

Ea st
W L T Pts GF GA
25 15 1 51 18 5 145
Quebec
Cm cmnalt n 18 2 -'16 19] 149
lnd1anap1 s 22 18 2 116 142 152
x M mnes ol 19 18 5 43 136 179
New Engine! 17 25 4 38 1-'1 8 173
B•rm nqhm ~5 31 1 31 15 4 189
West
W L T Pts GF GA
San D1ego
25 17 ? 52 ,148 1110
Houston
22 16 5 .d9 1~8 133
Wlnn1peg
23 16 1 47 18J 142
Edmonton 19 '15 1 39 121 158
Calgary
18 11 'l 38 129 1'19
PMent x
17 'ld 2 36 146 194
x-Suspended operations '"
deltmtely ~
Saturday ' s Re5ults
lndtanapol•s 6 Edmon l on 3
Calgary 5 San 0 ego 3
!Only gam es scheduled )
Sunday's Results
Calgary 5 Phoenl)( 4
Houston 3 Edmonton 1
Cmclnnalt 6 Wmnlpeg .s
San D1ego 5 81rmmgh"m 1
!Only game s scheduled )
Monday's Games
(No games scheduled l
Tuesday' s Games
All Star Game m Hartford

By Helen Bottel

;_:j:_;

1

4. Townspeople close thelf doors agamsl "ou ts1ders?" And
they're all ''characters,' ' that IS, bwnpkms, boobs, grassroots
sages who talk funny, oversexed nymphets, craZies w1th
skeletons m the1r closets ihterally) , but never, NEVER
ordinary persons?
Our fnends thought we were msane, leavmg the c1ty of
"HicksVille," but we've met more real people here than we
could ever 6nd m ChiCago or New York They 're helpful,
honest , hard-work1ng, and they CARE about one another
They're also just as mtelhgent and hberal as our former
neighbors But how would anyone know this about small towns,
havmg been fed a diet of TV PROPAGANDA ?
Why don't small towners form a coalition and complain •
- VICTIMS OF DISCRIMINATION

DA AI \IIERE

~~~r!:a:~~s
u~a~~~~s~e:;~d~~
forgotten and often for very

;:, ~~h ~o~:~\~~~s~~~a~~~
r_-l[_'

Small Towner Ired by TV
Dear Helen ·
We think our small town 1s great People here are NOT all
those thlrlgS TV says about them TillS 1s my gnpe Why 1s 1t that on teleVlslDn I. Private mvest1gaU&gt;rs almost always get shafted by
"Village Vlllams," out to make an illegal buck or turn a mean
bribe '
2. Members of the C1ty Council are corrupt •
3. The local sher~lls a hostile redneck, a bumbhng fool, a

OF\ A J STAEH U - OA K H CHUNG-

my many old favontes
"DEAR POLLY - Do not
thro" away that old umbrella
that ha s a worn top. Remove
the spilt fabn c and use the
frame as a clothes dryer to
use Indoors on ramy days
Hang tl upstde down on your
.{1:·:~:·:::-:~:::=~..:::::xm~~~=·

1:1

I
::::

Social
Calendar

shower rod or m the garage.
It w11l hold a week's wash of
undoes or the baby d1ape rs "
About the same hm e
another wrote to say that the
umbrella she carried on the
back led ge m her ca r had no
cover so 11 had faded When
she bought a new one she
found that one end of a man's
neckl!e was JUS! nght for an
urn brella cover
Not too long after rece!Vlng
these letters I was mv1ted to
be on The M1ke Douglas Show
and to bring along some
Pointers that could be
illustrated I cotnbmed these
two Ideas as a solution for the
shower g1ft problem I
removed the s1lk from an old
umbrella w1th a crooked
handle (so 1t would hang over
a shower rod) and had my
" laundry rack " After
covering the closed skeltcon
frame w1th one end of a
neckhe I hated to waste the
other end, so I made a bow
out of 1t and to wh1ch I attached small mult1-colored
plashc chp-type clothespms
Th1 s was fastened to the
handle of the umbrella , so
when not m use 1t would
appear to be an attracl!ve
umbrella standmg in a corner
of !he bathroom It was a
shower g1ft that cost practlca lly nothmg
As I packed my bag to go to
Ph1ladelph1a the umbrellaclothes dryer would not go m.
I removed the bow w1th the
clothespms, put them m the
bag and dec1ded to carry the
umbrella, smce it looked like
any other in a case When we
landed there, the ram was
pourmg m sheets Passengers
leavmg the plane were
grabbmg newspapers and
anything they could put over
the1r heads to ward off the
drenchmg ram. Imagine my
embarrassment and the looks
cast my way as I walked with
the rain pouring on me,
carrymg what appeared to be
a closed umbrella in 1ls case
Never wlll I forget that day or
those Pomters.
Polly w1ll send you one of
her "peachy" thank -you
cards, !deal lor frammg or
placing in your family scrapbook, if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem m
her column Write Polly's
Pomters m care of th1s
newspaper.

MONDAY
MEIGS County Pioneer and
Historical Soc1ety meetmg 3
p m Monday at Me1gs
Mu seum, Butternut Ave
Pomeroy
'
SPECIAL meetlng of
Racme Lodge 461 to confe r
the master mason degree,. at
7·30 p.m All master masons
welcome
CANDYSTRIPER Monday
Dear Victuns :
at Veterans Memor1al
They should . they should 1
Why do slllllll towns so often fiel bad TV press• The Hospital 7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT Busmess
stereotype can be partially blamed oo such books as Babbltt,
and Proless1onal Women ,
Peyton Pla ce, Huckleberry Fmn, hundreds more.
Also, most TV movers and shakers bve m b1g c111es, 7 30 Monday, Columbia Gas
therefore see "v1llllgers" as a strange breed who make great Co Program by the pubhc
copy because they f1t mto the molds needed by Rockford, relat10ns comm11tee w1th
Mrs Wanda Ebhn, cha1rCannon, Hee Haw, and those steamy Southern potboilers.
man
As a former small towner, I know most of this stuff isn't
TUESDAY
any more typical of rural hvlng than the TV show, "Holmes
GROUP II , Middleport
and Yoyo," was of pollee work But 1t sells, and !hat's tbe
F1rst Umted Presbytcmn
bottom line.
Church,
7.30 Tuesday mght at
Pity - H
the home of Mrs. Dw1ght
P.S. But take hope we now have ?lams , Ga.'
Wallace, w1th Mrs. Thomas
+++
Rue,
co-hostess. Mrs. Paul
Dear Helen ·
- - ~ saw a bumper st1cker that really caught me up short It Haptonstall, devotional
leader Bible study to be the
asked, "Have you hugged your k1d today 1 "
f1rst
chaper of Book 3.
- I hadn't - formany, many days' So I went home and tr1ed
DREW WEBSTER Post 39,
11. Amazing, what a sincere hug and a lew words of pra1se w1ll Amer1can Leg1on, regular
do.
meeting, 8 p m at the hall,
I'm asking your readers try 11 soon Hope you'll prmt my Tuesday Initiation for new
request. - "IN TOUCH" AGAIN
members w1ll be held.
WEDNESDA·Y
Dear ITA:
MIDDLEPORT Firsl
Let's don't stop with "Have you hugged your kid today' "
How about: "Have your hugged your parents today '" Umted Presbyterian Church.
fam1ly night potluck at 6:30
"Have you hugged your mate today?"
p
m. w1th meat, beverage
Extend that also to "friend" - unless he or she 1s a shghtly
and dessert furnished
lecherous married neighbor. - H
Members to take a covered
+++
d1sh Congregational meetmg
Dear Helen:
Last mght my husband and I had an unexpected house- to follow.
guest, a 19-year-old student of mme . She called up distraught
and hysterical, having just taken several tabs of speed m a
feeble (thank Gnd) swclde attempt.
We brought her down,listened to her problems, and let her
know she could count on us.
Whal makes this Incident depressmg is that the girl's
parents live only a half-hour's drive away from her donn
room. But she came to us, because she had no one closer who
would listen. Her family is too caught up in their own
bickering and ego trips to realize this young woman
died lor lack of love and understanding. She's not a wlld:;::;:;;.:o.-~
just a quiet, hardworking college student.
For God's sake, parents out there, LISI'EN all you
without judging your children. Put as1de your money troubles,
PHONE
and menopausal jitters, and personal wornes long enough w
let those kids know you love them. Maybe they won't be lucky
THE ALL NEW
enough to ftnd someone else. - MOTIIER CONFESSOR (Age
25)

'

\

,.
'

.. '

Gas
Put thetn all

tips.
~;

· ~ ~"1!.&gt;

. ' -:;- -r-t
~

'-;

----·-------~~-lA

HOM E FROMTRIP
Mr and Mrs Harry Baliey
have returned from a two
week vacatwn m M1am1, r'la
w1th her brother-m-la" and
Sisler, Mr a nd Mrs Hugh
Daruels and family Thcv
came hom e Thursday

N WCOMPT:QN
QD
I'
1

1

1

WITH
COUPON !

" PYROL YTIC SELF CLEANING OVEN

* AUTOMATIC CLOCK CONTROLLED OVEN

• S.teetor owitch for preheat, broit or bake

* Removable top elements

Prevention is the
best policy...
FOR CURBING
CRIME LOSSES
You can he lp c ut down on
crime loss es
losses that

directly affect you ,
whether they happen to you
or not
Take the cnme of arson
You ' re
paytng
an
In c reas ingly heavy su bst dy

for deliberately set fires
i nsurance

are
by
and
car thefts
plus the
countless CB radios and
bicycles t h at turn up

Insuran ce costs
advers e ly affect e d
burglarie s, robber ies

CA1e

thing you can do ts to
support
programs
prov tding st1fter penalties

for

wrongdoers

and

proposa ls for strengthened

crime mvestlgatloJJ efforts
You can also mak e it
tougher tor c rooks, U$e

service when crime-losses
oc cur
but many can be
pr e vented That s wh y w e
say - pr ev ention Is the

best jlOIIcy

Main

\

INGELS FURNITURE

DALE C. WARNER

I~ ~~~2~3

1

____.
;:·h:ln:•s:e~h:a~ve:l:•:ke:n~o:v:er~m:os:t~~=S=T~. :P:O:M:E:R::Y:.:::::::::::::~

0

through your
premtums

1

OFF ICE Ho'ilrl&lt;?tt!~r,J.Slto s (CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.I- EAST COURT

•
Our agency prov l ~es
financial protection and

992-6304

'•

GRANDSON VISITING
Bobb y Loga n, son of "
Dw1ght fSkip) Loga n, Jr of
Norfolk. Va lS here fo r a
several w ee k s v tslt Mr and
Mrs Dw1ght Logan, Sr drove
to Cha rleston for lh e1 r
grandson Saturday

possessions with vour
social security number.

-En joy three sizes of your favorite
pizzas.
-Try our delicious subs while you
sip your favorite suds.
Eat In Or Carry Out
Phone

GAII

death, the U S Alr Force,
and Nonnan Mallet servmg
as war correspondent for the
na· t"1011a 1 med ta
Meanwhi le the humorist
mopes He Simply cannot pull
himse lf together and so
spends seve ral chapters
searchmg for a lost strand of
hls lover"s bca ul!ful black
ha tr
And that, unfortunately. 1s
the whole sad ;tory

good, strong locks Mark

MEIGS INN PillA SHACK

•

qua
up rters
dunng a sea rch of her
Later, wh1le Raven romps
on the rumpus room couch
w1 th Quaw Quaw Tralaralara
( a native Amencan prmcess
who's ma rned to a busmessman p1rate and becom es a
med1a eve~~ t when she llghtrope walks N1aga ra Falls
backwards), thetr passion 1s
mterru pted by tel evlslon
co verage of Abe Lmcoln's
assassmahon at the Ford
Theater
Reed wntes radt cally
re vlswm st h1story, w1th
events unfoldmg m a surreal
t1m e crunch, h1 story that
features slaves reapmg
vengeance upon th e1r
masters by subst1tullng
Coffee-Mate for ' thm usual
'"two gallon s of slav e
mothers' m1lk "
Unfortun ately. h1s hflh
novel 1s not as loose and
R1 ghty as some of h1s ea rher
fantas1 es. but 11 does
bea utofully, 1! at ltm es
ted10usiy, prove h1s pomt "It w11l always be a mystery,
history New disclosures are
as b1zarre as the most biZarre
fantasy "
Slapsttck ," Kurt Vonnegut's e1ghth novel, has
about as much gomg for 1t as
a poorly directed slapstick
fllm - Rashes of w1t,Joads of
energy, but too many m1ssed
cues and too few laughs
W1lbur Rockefeller Swam
1s a one - hundred . yea r - old
pedta tr1c1an and former U S
Pres1dent of a now defunct
Umted Stales He tells h1s hfe
story from h1 s home 1n the
lobby of the rumed and
abandoned Emplre State
BUlldmg on a rumed and
abandoned Manhattan 1sland,
now more commonly known
as " National Skyscraper
Park" or "The Island of
Death "

orthe world, mcludlng w.hat's
left of the U S And tl s all
downhill fr om the re, for
W1"lbur for his cou ntrym en,
and for Von~egutfans
For humor s sake, II would
have been better tf Rtchard
Braullgan were s1ill hving
ha pp ily
ln
north ern
Cahforma - undiscovered by
the mass media and mass
d
au lences - Wfltmg Simple,
whimsica l stofles and poems
for h! S small devoted
followmg H1s new novel 1s
d
hi d
ownng epressmg
• Sombrero Fallout " 1s
I l . "
11k
il JOu
a very we - nown
Arne r tcan
h u mor~ s t''
rBraullgan ) whose beaubful
Japanese lover has left h1m
"be
th
k
cause e llp eep was too
comphcated " He can't stop
crymg and he can't start
wnlln g The sto ry he's
1
b
s1rugg 1ng over, a ou t a
fr1 g1d sombrero !alhng out of
the sky, fmally ends up m the
waste basket ,
A gooamace for tl But a la~
11 has a hfe of 1ts own and"
through a wetrd sencs of
events tnggers a not _
com pl ete w1th violen ce
'

mtssing

PlANNING APillA PARTY

and save a

By Peggy Barber
Have the disl liuswntn g
events ol the '70s sapped
oornense of humor • Probably
not · yet 1t's mterestmg to note
thai the latest novels from
three of Amenca's leadmg
humonsts sltmu late few
giggles, much less lau ghs
Even the satlfe sags.
Ishmael Reed's "Flight to
C d "
t II
f c· I
ana a, a re e mg o lVI
War hi story from the slave's
pomt of Vlew ls the most
'h
conv mcmg or t e 1ot
Poet Raven Qu1cksei1 1s the
f1rst slave on Arthur Sw111e's
p1antahon to learn to read ,
wnte, and take night He
rmds farne and fort une when
h
"FI ht t0 C d ..
lS poem
lg
ana a
1s pubhshed, but he makes 11
all the way to freedom only to
r10 d .. . .
h
neon Slgns Wlt
clashmg letters advertlSlng
hamburgers, used car lots
wtth t he customar ba n ~
fr
t hy
ners,
t ks w ere you
t d co ee ]Oln
~ an up an a ,~ yWh
our Ja va
ere lS
r'o":t wax cups ,

·a

with us!

"'

Humorous novels lack laughs

W11 • d h 1 . "st
1 mr an ts ~m Sl er
Ehza w;;e born Neander
thaiOi ds
(outrage tously
deformed m·utants ·· w1th
massive brow·rldges, slopmg
CHESTE R - Mrs Erma
Games were conducted by
foreh~.a ds , a nd steamshovel
Clela nd was installed Mrs Enna Cleland and Mrs
Ja
ws I Rants hed to a
secre tary and Mrs Ada Opal Hollon w1th pmes gm ng
country
. estat e by thelf
Neutzhng, treasurer, at a to the winners Mrs Ada
tembly
n
ch and heartbroken
recent meell ng of the Past Morrts won the door prtze.
parents,
the
hideous palr soon
Counc1lors' Club of Chester
Mrs Ridenour and Mrs
diScover
that
although when
Council 323, Daughters or J ean Su mmerfield,- coapart they're typical V
on·
Amen ca, held at the home of hos t ess, served re freshnegut
du
lla
rds,
wh
en
Mrs Esther R1denour
Clements to Mrs
together they form a smgle
t
·
Mrs Goldi e Fredef!Ck , land, Mrs Pauline Rideg1an gem us.
Mrs
Dorothy
pres1dent, mstalled the of· nour ,
Soon they've dashed off the
fl eers. Mrs R1denour was Myers, Mrs Neutzling, Mrs
best-selimg child rea r1ng
reinstated to membership Mae Spencer, Mrs. Gold1e
manu ul "So You Went and
'
"
The February meeting w11l be Freden ck, Mrs Letha Wood,
Had a Ba by, • htchhecomes
held at the hall w1th Mrs Mrs. Hollon, Mrs. Mom s,
the thIfd most popu 1ar boo k
Mary Holter a nd Mrs Mrs lnzy Newell, and Mrs
ever wn tten after " The
Doroth y
Lawso n
as Opal E1chmger. a guest
Bible" and the " J oy of
"
hostesses
Cookmg La ter, W1lbur 1s
eleded Presi dent of the U S
by vtrt ue of hls bnihant
c a m p a 1g n 5 1 0 g a n
..
,
,
Lon esome No More. Th1s
prom!SO •s 1o be fuIf111 ed bY
HARRISONVILLE
comm1t1ees needed and other
the computenzed ass1gnment
Sprmg carn1val plans were facets of the carn1val A boy
of a m1ddle name to every
discussed at a recent meetmg and g1rl from each class w1ll
r: om ~n YWllY
person , thus creatmg arof the Hamsonvlile PTO held be selected as king and queen
eanwh l1 e, mean mast~r llflclal extended famihes and
'at the school.
and prince and prin cess SSWI l1e IS ot hon 8ave n 's tra 1l a su re cure for Amen can
Date for the annual event candidates
wt11 e lS l e epitome 0 1 loneliness
was selfor Friday, Feb 25. A A report was g1ven on the decadence . lnl~ amon~
Vt ctory proves sou r.
d1scuss1on was held on lhe membership dr1ve
other P rvfrt!Oiil , in· howeve r, smce Wllbur fmds
res t and r~~~~~
•nd himself com petmg for power
wh1p e lh """'"';;''i, Itt• •ltha Kmgo! Mt chlgananda
ter on his ''1 tl!M' ~- Ouke of Okla homa and ruhng
Victoria whfn • ropy ?I ove r a plague-ravaged,
Harriet Re.che r StotOe s quickly
d1mmishmg
---~~-~-------- "Uncle Tom'• Ca bin" turns popul"'e Besides, mlmature

Umbrella does
doubk duty

$569

" ~CCCM.II01 1110 U 1 053 OSl

POMEROY,

,..

idl\.IUI~IJUlt.•a..., u ot;•uJ 1

Polly's Pointers

IIIII !*;ocl

MEIGS COUNTY
COUNTY lt.UDITOJt

n

I t'l,

Carnival plans made

ACTUAL USE REPORT

""'triG

~t:lt~

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
••
'Green

Wa1-.iors knock off Irish. 78-69
By KEN ROSENBERG
UPI Sports Writer
If you graduate w1th honors
from the AI McGUire
basketball school, better
kn ow n
as
Marquette
UruverSlty, you usually can
expect aU the frmge benef1ts.
That 's because McGwre
"believes anyone who can
withstand foor years of his
shenanigans deserves to be
rewarded . And the way
McGuire
goes
about
rewarding his seniors lS to
bu1ld hts offense around
them.
According to McGu1re, Bo
EUis, this year's "designated
star," has a problem · he 's
not selfish enough. That !art

uauy

Pomeroy

I

�7- Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy: 0 ., Monday, Jan. 17,1977

.'

'

DICK TRACY

Television log for easy view.i ng

DESTINY 15 TAAT OF
QUE.EM OF COMMERCIAlS!

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

• 5:0Q-B ig Va l ley 3; My T~ree Sons 4; Brady Bunch 8.

ORD1NANCE~N~0~.~~0~5~0~·7~7~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~::=:::::::::::::::::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-=~~~~-:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Sal....
(Villagrl
RE SOLU TION 10 make
appropr i at ions for Current
Expenses and ot her Ex ·
penditures of the Village of
Middleport, , Sf ~te of Ohio,
during the fiscal y~u endino
December Jl. 1977
Section
1.
BE
IT
R ESOLVED by the c ouncil
, for the Vlll~ge of Middleport.
St at e .of Ohio . That . to provide
for the current expenses and
other expend1tures of the said
V ill age of Middleport during
the
fiscal
year
ending
December JL 19 77 , t he
following sums be and they
are hereby set a.s ide and
appropria ted as follows . viz :
Sect ion 2 That t hert be
app.ropr.ated
from
the
A

GENERAL FUND
GENERAL
GOVERNMENTAL

Pete £or Salt!

DUOLlNES

5
PM .
oa.,. Before
P'Ubllcetlon .
Canulletions ,
correc
lions accepted first dav ot
publication
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves
t he rlont to edit or reject
any ads deemtd Ob ·
jectlonal. The publisher
will not be responsible for
more than one incorrect
1n.sertlon

RATES
For Wlnt Ad Service
s ctnfs pe-r word one
1nsert1on
Minimum Charge- $1 .00.
14 cents W' word three
consecutive fnsertlons
26 cents per word six

consecutive Insertions.

25 Per Cent Discount on
paid ads 1nd ads paid
w ithin 10 days.

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

n .oo

tl""

tor

so

tires.

BLIND ADS

AddlfiQnal 25c Charge
per Advertisement .

'

moldings. rear step bumper. V-8, automatic, power
steering and brakes , radio, real clean.

S199S

1971 CHEVROLET lfz TON

197 1 HONDA

NOTlCES
ATTN. : ll
ALL HOUSEWIVES
All Yard Sales, Rummage ,
Port.h and Basement gorch

and Buement Sales, etc

must be paid In advance
Get vours In early by
stopping by our office at

Pomeroy landmark
soften &amp; condition your
water with a Co-op water

GUN SHOOT at thv Racine Gun
Club every Sunday, 1 pm
Assorted meats .

1969 CHEVROLET B•squoine 1966
BUICK Electro , 225 2 Rokon
trtolb1kes Phone 949. 2432.

softener, Model UC-X \11 .

RACINE FIRE Dvpt . will have o
Gun Shoot every Saturday mght
6 p.m. ot their bu1lding m
Boshon , Ohio

196-4 Chevy •;, ton pickup, good
condtt•on , new t~res , call
997-3994

The Da lly Sentinel , Ill
Cou rt St or wr i ting Box
129, J)omeroy, Oh io 457 69
w ith your remittance .

1972 &lt;GRAND To rino . ps . ond
p b ,
01r
condli10ned
outomohc. new A· I cond•hon
$1400 Phon e7~2 - 2008 .
1970 PLYMOUTH FURY Gran
Coupe, 383 eng1ne p ' ~ p b ,
oulomot1c transmiSSIOn steel
belted r od1ols bugler alarm
system, Lafayette C B. whi p
antenna . $750 Phone {b14)
667 -3682, Clyde Kuhn Tuppers
Ploms Ohio

F-or Rent
3 AND 4 RM furni shed ond un·
furm shed opt s Phone 992

Section 17 . And the Village
Clerk is hereby authorized to

per boll" to
win the. 30&amp;-kllimeter 1118mUe) race by 18 seconda.
raged 9U3'1 miles

Ak'Kfiiss!J'Rii''··

·~·p'

422-4080

Pomeroy, Ohio

Located in Langsville

992·7034
Hrs . 9:00a.m .
To Dusk

Box

Rutland, Ohio 45775
Ph. ( 614)742 -2409
We 8ellver
,
12 22 4 mos .

1·9-77 1 mo.

Jack' W. Carsey, Mgr .

Phone 992 ·2181

24

Hour

Dependable

FULLER Brush Products lor sole
Phone 992-3410
CAMPER
SbOO Also , horse
tra1ler $450 . Phone (614 ) 698-

Phone
Phone

992·7729

PEARCE SIMPSON C 8 ba se sta tion . Phone 247-2684 after 's
p.m

FENCE

POSTS

$1 00

Also

!1 re wood three-four th ton
pickup loads delivered, $25
w1lh1n 25 miles
Ph one

985 4197
HEA VY GAUGE I Beams and H
Beams for sole. 8, 9 10 mch
Phone 992 -7034
NEW AM·FM Stereo·'rod1o , 8 frock
tope combmot1on $119 95 or
terms Phone 992-3965
sTEREO AM -FM FM stereo r od1 o_.
trac\o. tope combmohon
Balance due $104 20 or terms
Phone 992 39 65

a

FIREWOOD

PHONE 742 -2131 or

98S 3813
APPLES FITZPATRICK Orch(Jrd
Stole Route 689 , Wilkesv1lle .
Phone (614 } b6q·3785
SINGER Golden Tou ch N' Sew m
walnut con~Diette
Ongmol
pnce, S600 Must sell Only
$13-4 .95 cosh or terms Call

R N NEEDED for publ1c health
nursing w1th the Meigs County
Health Dept . for speci al pro·
gram Fullt1me position Apply
at the Me1g s Cou nt,- Health
Dept . Phone992 3723.
PART TIME SPEAKER . Teaching
sales supervision or publ!c
relations back ground? leading
service cOmpany requires ottroct •~~"' artlculote pvrson for
local
pub l 1c
speaki n g
on1gnments before women's
groups. Extremely interesting
work Prepared motenol fur nished One evening per week
Send informof\on on your
background to Personnel Dlrec·
tor, P. 0 . Bo• 20222, Columbus
oh.o 43:;no

·-

Sentinel Carrier
Wanted In
Syracuse Area.
Free Prizes.

Phone 992-2156. ,

1-17-1 mo

Heal £state £or Sale-

SMALl form for sole 10% down ,
owner lmonced. Monroe Coun·
ty , W. Vo Phone (304) 772·

3102or(30&lt;1772-3227

'

COUNTRY farmland with sedud
ed woods water and good ac cess 1n Monroe Cour] ly -W Vo

Commemol property oppro:K 17
acres level land . Jocated ot
Tuppers Plain s on Oh1o , Route
7 Phone (biA ) b67 ·630A
3 bedrooms 116 bolhs , large liv
mg room , dm ing room and kif ·
chen. fully carpeted Phone
992-3129, or 992 -543-4

991-1&gt;306

PHONE 992 2478
NlGHT .

WARBUC~SI

three

HERE BEYOND

111E

1

,•
..

•••

9'12·7465
MEN's USEO dothmg for sol e.
Open 4 till9 everyday . Proff1tt's
Recreahon Center , Portland .
Ohio45770.

WESTINGHOUSE

WASHING

mochme opt s1ze $25. Phone

9'12·5955
TlMBERJACK 230 SKIOOER , John
Deere 540A Skidder Co ler·
pdlor 9228 Wheel Loader: 47 1n .
Tower Edger Masser- Fer guson
356 Fork lift. Contact Don
GrO ... es , (1-.1-4) 5'il6·4769
H &amp; N DAY old or started leg,orn
pullets. Both lloor or coge
grown e~vailab ! e . Poultry Hous·
ing onci Automot1on , Modern
P~&gt;l•ilry 399 W Mom Pomeroy

Phone 992·2164 .
1969 INTERNATIONAL 4 wheel
drive, Tro"Yei·AII. Good motor,
new bottety -4 new tires , new
brokes P.S•. p.b., automot ic~
extras. Phone 7-42 -306-4
REDUCE SAFE and fa$t w1th
GoBese Tablets &amp; E·Vap '' water
pills Nel~~h ~rug.

OR

NEW 3 -be.droom house , bu1lt ·1n
kitchen . both and 1/ : . Phone
742· 2306 or con tact MilO B. Hut ·
ch1son, Rutland Oh1o

lEAFORL'

Pome!OJ Landmark
Jock W. Clroey, Mtr.
Pholtf 992-2111

Real [state for Sale
.
·-

59 acres. 6 room hou•• . both,
portly' carp&amp;ted, two outbuildings , dug basement,
one·thnd tillable , mmeral
rights located near Oonv!lle
Reduced for quick
so le .

$23,500. Phooe 7•2·27110.

~

ELWOOD
- •
Sweepers , toasters 1rons . oil
small opphonces . Lawn mower,
n&amp;ll.l to Sto le Highway Garage
on Route 7 Phone (61 4) 985 -

3825 .

.

- -

~~·

RANCH

TYPE

4

MIDDLEPORT
4
bedroom home with bath ,

bedrooms, bath, natural
gas heat, alum . sidtng,
public sewer. la'r ge lot 70 x
120. Low financing to right

gas F. A. furnace, city
wafer . disposal and level
corner lot $18,000

party . ua,ooo.oo.
RANCH TYPE - About 4
-years old, J bedrooms,

~B S B!'&amp;fl
1

ti,E:AH, M 001'

CAI\R41~b M'-1
6COKS HOM ~.

AS MtX.H AS
. OIRT'i EDr;&gt;Jfi.

... --

-------

EXCAVATING , dozer, backhoe
and ditcher Charles R. Hotfield . Bock Hoe S~'fVice
Rutland , Ohio . Phone 742-2008.

Q

Broadway . Full basement,

bedroom

home

on

furnace and large garden .

baseboard heal, public gas,
.51 acre V"onced. ASKING
117,SOO.OO.
POMEROY - 3 bedrooms,
b&amp;th,. dining room, part

742·2807

-

HOUSE FOR SALE , 5 rooms and
both, atr&amp; of land . Phone

7•2·2769 .
9 ACRES OF undeveloped land,
just off Union Ave . In Pomeroy. '
Contact Oa&lt; Eblen .
Par sole by owner, newer 5 room
house on I acre lot in country ,
15 minute~ from Athe01 , 10
minutes from Pomeroy on Rt.

1970 WlNOSOR MOBILE home . 12
x OS, 2 bedrooms Furni•hed, I
acre le11ellot Very good cqndi·
lion
All utd 1t1es
Phone

9'12-7797.
BUILDING SITES. 3 II ac.res, ot
Bo~Mon T P , water top , gas
tOfl,. minimum soil Hmltations.

Phone 985 ·&lt;102

Q
~
l-t1

GASOUNEALI£Y

·His papa know
~~1\wher'jillions more
is bur4!

Large new 3 bedroom home

l€S

two-

m.

RACINE -

Business bldg.
4 apartments &amp;

with
recreation room .

WANT IT SOLD TRY US
AT m.ms.

.::.
•

•
•

I

•

e

e

••

under
my

I

2S

most mterestmg quest1ons

Consumer Survival Kit 20

w1il be used m rh1s colu mn
and wrfl re C91V8 cop1es of

3. 15-General Hospital 6, 13.
· -3. 31)-Malch Game 8,10, Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20
4:01)-Misler Cartoon 3, Gong Show 15; Mickey Mouse
Club 6; Lucy Show 8. Sesame St 20,33 , Movie "Kill
or Cue" 10, Dinah 13
4 31)-My Three Sons 3, Partridge Family 4;
Emergency0ne6; Partridge Family 8; Fllntstones
15.5: 00-Big_ Valley 3; My Three Sons 4; Brady
Bunch 8; MISler Rogero 20,33 ; Star Trek 11.
5·31)-Adam. 12 4; Family Affair 8; News 6; Elec. Co.
10,33, Adam 12 13
6 .0Q-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,1 5; ABC News 6; Zoom 20 .
6.31)-NBC News3,4, 1S; ABC News 13; Andy Grlft lth 6;
CBS News 8,10; Vegetable Soup 20; Washinlngton :
Ci ty oul of Wilderness 33 .
7·01)-Truth or Cons. 3;; To Tell the Truth 4; News 10;
To Tell the Truth 13 ; My Three Sons 15; Cooking
with a Continental Flavor 20; American Issues
Forum 33

JACOBY MODERN I

province

I4 wds.l
4 One·time

Yesterday's Answer

Rep.
perhaps
S H1dden
6 In plain
sigh I
7 Hiding
plaee
8 Bnbe
{ 3 wd~ 1
9 Beauty
lover

10 ll~&lt;elll'&lt;l
16 Glass.

25 Sk• tin~
arf'a
27 IJell dwrllrr
29 Bclgi•n

pa nel

19 Swampy
ground
22 Spar

7:30-Hollywood Squares 3,4 ; Let's Deal Wlth It 6·
Match Game PM a, Mac.Neil -Lehrer 'Reporf 20,33;
In The Know 10, Wild Kingdom 13; V Honor Society
15.

provinrl'
30 Awaken

23 Shon' em- 31 Expl osive
1n~rechrnt

bankment

36 Pop
31 Golf term

24 Fairy
queen

8:0Q-Baa Baa Black Sheep 3,4, 1S; Happy Days 6,13;
Gunsmoke 8; National Geographic 20,33, Who's
Who 10.
8.31)-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6, 13
9 .QO--Police

Woman 3,4, 15 ;

R ich

Man ,

Poor Man 6, 13;

MASH 8,10
9 3o-One Day at a Time 8, 10; WHA All -Star Game 20;
World War I 33.
10:01&gt;--Pollce Story 3.4,15; Family 6,13; Ko)ak 8,10;
Decades of Decision 33 .
·
11.01)-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15 ; Mac. Neli . Lehrer Report
33
11 ·31)-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Movie " Hey, I'm Allee"
6, 13; Mary Hartman 10; Columbo 8; ABC News 33
12 : ~~Movle " Day ofthe Wolves" 10; News 20; Janakl

AppraiSed

·'

1 - ~Tomo rrow 3,4 , News 13

monogram
Exasperate
34 Luau goody
3S Garland

GJLY ONE MAN IN
WORLD KIN DO /Tl"t-

-

3'1

38
39

to

Mon., Tues., Wed.
8:001115:00

lit

-:.
•

Thursd1y I Ill n0011

ARNOLDGRA'FE

1}\r~Nr~'\l ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

b::-+-+-

C:!J \9 ~~~ ®

byHenriArnoldandBoblee

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
onelener to each square, lo form
fou r ordinary words

CRYI'TOl!liOn;- Hrre's hun to

work

I

DUNET

I

it:

A X V I) I. B A A X R
I. 0 N G F E I. t . 0 W

One \('Iter simply !il ,tnds f111· anoth('r I n this sample A is
u!'E'd fur llw thn•(' 1 .'~. X fell' l hl' l \\n lf ~ t'lt• Sin gle l(•tter s.
apostrophes, t he l C' IIJ,!th :lnd rN m,tlion oi thr \lo r ds nrc a11
lunts. Ea&lt;'h day \ h(.' &lt;'o d(' h.•1tl·r s an· chfTerrnJ

GOOD LU CK;
EVERYWD'/1

LEJ\5 AlL MEET BACK AT THE
OFFICE IN Tl-IE MORNING'
AND REr-DI&lt;T ON HOW

WE lv'ADE OUT

BLE

KI.GH

IWB. -

WM

BLE

ULQMCMY,

I

'J' ·L Q

c x.

XPH

· OPCMHGH

PLEQ

PWOH

CM
XL

'1. T

QHGX

XPH
P EM X
XPH

HQLDHQV

Yestentay 1s Cryploquote: I WISH THERE WAS A LAW TO
KEEP PEOPLE FROM BEING NEGATIVE. - CHl\RLES.

:
..
1f.

.•t

RUTLAND

CT

SI!\1MONS

•

•
..

RARNl'Y

-

............
....... ""'......
I

THOU6~T

'10tJ LIKED

I

'fi)U lbLD ME 1/0U LEARNED

SOMETHING VER~ IMPORTANT

QN OVR LAST

•

DID!

l

LEAR~ED

SICK RIDING

TI&lt;AT 1 GET

ON THE 8U5!

BASU&lt;a

(]

0
WHERE THE EXHAUSTED
KAt-i6Afi:'OO
FOUND HIMecl.F..

II I
IOLDBOY±

I ICK J I

Now arrange the circled letters to
form ttl.fl~rprise answer, as aug·

gesled by the above cartoon.

At.::'( IIJoF[II IXIJ
SalUrnoy·al Jumbles· NOBLE

MILKY

(AnswerslOmOrrow)
BODICE NOVICE

Answer: What the Sponllh dmqr..dld wllh her '

'

audlence-"CLICKED"

LIKE THEV ALWAVS

AWI&lt;Z!THAT'$ THI

~­

I

LETHAH

('RVPTOCtllOTE~

cWJNNIE

!iiiiiiUUII Ill II II Ill

.

j.,.,.+-f-

Is

CLASSIFIEDS
CALL 992-2156

••1111111..

h+--t-

High-strung
Amount of
printed
matter _
Instead
Carpenter's
L-..J-...L--JI.-J-..1..need

DAII.Y

RUn.AND FUININIE

742-2211

self-addressed

envelope s are enclosed The

house!

' '

. .••••••••••••• I.•
•

ans we r mdi v1dua l questions

27 Angle
28 Conswned
29 1.tght

AH SHOULD'VE TI-iOJ6HT
Of= JHAT BSFO' !r-

: ~ FRIDAY TIL 8 :·:
•: •• Close Sa·t. At 5 p.m. .•• •:
• •
• •
:

the Jacobys " care of th1s

musik"

burtJ

~~·······
Convenient
···················~
Shoppinq Hour
·

:•

for Tomorrow 8,10.

1:01)-Gong Show 3, All My Chi ldren 6,13, News 8;
Young &amp; the Restle ss 10, Not ·tor Women Only
15.1:30-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15, Family Feud
6, 13; As The World Turns 8, 10.2:0Q-S20,1100
Pyram id 6, 13
2:31)-Doctors 3,4,1 5; One · L i fe to Live 6,13; Guiding
L1ght 8,10
3 01)-Another World 3,4,15 ; All In The Family 8,1Ci;

ne wspape r Th e Jacobys w1 1/
d stamped

15; D tvorce Court 8.

That Tune

12 .31)-Loers&amp; Frlends3,1 5; Ryan 'sHope6,13; Search

roo you have a Questron
for the experts ? Write "Ask

Nacht-

22_ .-:----.....

unwanteds
in the

7 room

and

t Spamsh

bits

Sell those ~· '

frame house, 3 bedrooms,
1'12
baths,
aluminum

siding, front porch
garden . Only S7SOO.

eas1ly to slam whil e the
ba seba ll term comes from the
simple word "slam "

26 "- Kleine

your
attic and
bastment.

one acre. $32,500.

PAGEVILLE

which was given to certain
forms of wh1st. It shortened

v. ' 1 Z3 Prov1siori

,UNLOCK1

with elec . F.A. lurnace.
Din ing , 2 car garage, and

hltly lot . SU,$00.00
WANT TO SELL YOUR
PROPERTY?
, {GOT '
BUYERS
WITH
NO
MONEY? I CALL US AND
LIST. WE CAN HELP
YOU . G.l . GET YOUR V.A.
LOAN HERE. '
HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
BROKER
HANK CLELAND
ASSOCIATE

4 ACRES UNDEVELOPED land near
mines ,
reduced .
Phone

~

HARRISON\/ 1LLE

basement, storm doors and
windows. natural gas heat,
hardwood floors , large

versa

There is no connection The
bridge term "s lam" comes
fr om the word " Slamm"

Harriman's t,.,---t-+ - 1--

S18.1100 .

electric and water, lot size

'

~

mecca
S Boarder

or " The
Terrible"
14 Arltcles
of la1th
IS Rocket
expert
W1lh
16 For each
17 Ved1c sky
serpent
18 Inflexible
20 But { !.at I
21 •'uzz
22 - out
(apportion )

Q

ULABNER

area with full basement. 3
bedrooms. bath, electric

.

CARPENTER . flooring , ceiling.
paneling . Phone 992 -2?59 .
·-.
-·-

from baseball or v1ce

12 Disinclined
13 "The Great" 3 Free -hmt·e

,

SEPTIC S~stems ln!tolled by
l•censed installer
Shepard
"ton tractors , Phone 7-42-2409,

WILL do roofmg . construction
plumbing and heating No job
too Iorge or too small . Pt)one
742 -2348

A Connecticut reader wants
to know 1f the bridge term :
" Grand slam ' was denved

2 Survived

~

Q

EXCAVATING dozer loader and
backhoe VIIOrk, dump trucks •
and lo-boys for hire ; will ' houl
fill d1rt . to soil , l1mestone ond
grovel. Call Bob or Roger Jef·
leni, day phone 992-7069.
n•ght phone 992 -3575 or 992 .

land . $17,5110.
MIDDLEPORT - Nice one

~~~~~.

7·oo-

Cuchulamn

DOWN

11 OdlOUS

basement and half acre of

to eligible. 51S,650.00.
APPROX . 900 fl. living

•

6· 21)-Not For omen Only 13.
6 Jo- Teacher 's Classroom 4; News 6, Concerns ., &amp;
Comments 10.
6 45-Mornlng Reporf 3
6 Sf)-Good Morning, West VIrg inia 13
6 55-Good Morning, Trl State 13.
Today 3,4, 15; Good Mornlng Amer ica 6, 13, Lo"
News 8.
7:05-Porky Pig 10
7. 30-Schbolles 10
B.OQ-Howdy Doody 6; Capt . Kangaroo a, 10; Sesame
St. 33.
a·31)-Big Val ley 6.
9·01)-A.M . 3; Phil Donahue 4,13, 1S, M ike Doug las 10
9. 30-Cross·Wits 3, Edge of Nlghl6 ; Good Day B
·
10 .00-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,15; Dinah 6; Magazlne 8, 10;
M 1ke Douglas 13.
10 :31)-Hollywood squares 3,4, 15
1/ 11 ·Of)-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15; Weekday 4; Double Dare
B, 10; Morning with D J 13.
11.31)-Shoot for the Stars 3,4,15, Happy Days 6, 13;
Love of Life 8,10, Sesame St . 20 11·55-CBS News
8; Ms F1&lt;lt 10
12 ·01)-News 3,6, 10; Don Ho 13; Bob Braun 4; Name

41 W1fe of

ACROSS

RUTlAND - 3 bedroom
frame home with bath, lull

bath , natural gas heat,
alum . siding, lot 60 x 120,
public
water,
sewer,
electric, low down payment

7A

aces "

I Sk1ers'

SEWING MACHINE Repo1rs , ser·
v1ce. all makes , ~2 - 2284 The
Fobr•~
Shop
Po meroy .
Autbomed· Singer Sole$ and 'Servi ce. We sharpen Sc1ssors.

--

4N T

TUESDA:t, JANUARY 18,1977

6 OQ-Publlc Affairs 10.
6 15- Farm Report 13.

by THOMAS JOSEPH '

REMODELING , Plumbing, hlliloting
and al l types of general repo.r
Work guaranteed 20 years ex perience . Phone 992-2409 .

----

J·QO-Tomorrow 3,4.

1 3G-NP.wo: ,.,

~
BORN LOSER

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned Modern
_ S~nllotion , 992 -39S4_,_ _ .

Virgil B. Sr ., Realtor
216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 4S769
Phone 992·1325

'" '

Chailt Saw
sso
; One tood used McCullough
" Chain SiW
, S7S
· one good used Homellte
Chain Saw
SlSO
New co-Op Water Sof teners
model vc . x VI Only 1219.9!1
One good used Gibson Side·
Iby -Side Ret(lgtrator
n.oo·

.

-- BOW ERS REPAIR
--- -

r----------, · ·

99'2-2259 or 992-7' .,

On~ .good used Remington

~
'
:

BRADFORD, AUctioneer , Com·
plete Serlf•Ce. Phone 949-2-487
or 949-2000 Racine. Ohio. Cntt
Bradford.
~

2.

J1m · " This u se of
Blackwood w1th a v01d IS not
generally recommended , but
i t worked well thi s time . Unfortunately , the comb mation
of a careless play at trick one
and a ba d trump break
nu lhf1ed the good bidding "
Oswald 'All South did at
tn ck one was to play dum·
my ' s ace of diamonds . Then

MOUNTAIN~

11'5 IMPOSSIBLE I

5232.

(614)2566601.

e:.cellent - cond1t1on

DAY

CHRISTMAS SPECIAl : Sewing
Moch 1nes cleaned oi led and
adtust e d, $5 .98
Sew1ng
Center , Middleport . Ohio

TOMATO STAK ES, lour and sue It ,
lengths JOe ond 12'h c Phone

rang&amp; ,
Phone

BA CKHOES

DOZER , TR.ENCHER , LOWBOY ,
OUMP TRUCKS BILL PULLINS

HAV , TWO 16 5 rims , se t of
staml ess hubcaps · fmme h1tch
and me tal tool box for truck
Phon e 992 7201 or 992 -3309.

go~

AND

EXCAVATlNG .

$1 000 down coli (3041 772
3102 0 0 1304) 772·3227

33 $18,500 Cof1'192-5231

Uphols te ring .
drapes
reosonoble 572 South Third
Ave ., Middleport
Phone

MARTIN Ex covo t•ng
se pt iC systems ,
dozer. backhoe , dump truck .
l1mestone, grovel
block lop
paving , Rl. 143. Phone 1 (614 )
698-733 1

HOWERY

WHITE POODLE housetromed.
Coli 992·3722 durrng the day .
949 2498 after 4 30 p.m

7409

S!WlNG · AL TE R AllONS ·

ASSORTED RUBBER
BACK CARPETING

1-17 -1 mo . "'•
L,_._ _..;.,;,.._--J

9'12 ·5858

South

Oswa ld · " South was pretty
proud of hiS b1dding . He had
opened w1th just one spade
and m erely rebid two
diamonds w1th a hand that
m 1ght well have been opened
w1t h a lorr mg call Then alter
North had jumped to t hree
spades , South went into
Blackwood a nd bid seve n
alter h1s partner had shown

Racine, Ohio

949-2114

HOMESITES for sole 1 ocre and
up . Middleport , near Rutland . ELECTRONIC T V CLINIC, New
· T V shop Electron •c T V Clm1c
Co11992-748l
:
Service coil $5 .95 Color B &amp; W
NEW 3 bedroom house . 2 bo1hs,
an tenna system s stereos etc.
oil elec . I acre. Middleport .
572 South Th.rd, M•ddleport
close to Rutland. Phone 992·
Phone 992 -6306 Corry 1n and
7481
save money .

East

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

David Parsons, Owner

0.
1 17-1 mo

Jim · " Just a liltle though t
at trick one was all he had
needed Then he would have
let the d1amond ride around to
h1s own hand , led a spade to
the ace, cashed one high club
to gel rid of h1s heart loser .
led a second spade, covered
the jack or ten , returned to
dummy with the ace of
d1amonds, held h1s breath un·
til East followed , led dum·
I· my 's last spade, !messed and
cla1med ."

lA

SQuare Yard lnslollt!cl

MOBILE Home Repo1r , Elec ,
p lumbmg and heo tmg Phone

992·5146.

needs 36 INCH Magic Chef

TEXAS Ofl COMPANY
dependable person who con
work w1thout supervision in
Me1gs County area Contact
customers Age unimportant,
but motunty 1s We tra1n Wnte
P K. D~ek. Pres .. Southwestern
Petroleum, Ft Worth , TX.

Pomeroy,

North

2 .._
Pass
3A
Pass
5A
Pa ss
Pass Puss Pa ss
Openmg lead - 9

6.95

News 20.

10 :30-Farm Digesl 20
J1oOI)-News 3,4, 8, 10, 15, Mac Ne ii ·Lehrer Report 33 :
Monty Python's Flying Ci rcus 20
_
'
11:31)-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Ko)ak 8; Mary Hartman
10; A~C News 33
12 01)-New s 6,13; Mo v1e " Edge ot Doom" 10: Janakl
33
12 31)-FB I 6; IronSide 13.
12.41)-Movle "Vendetla f or a Saini" B.

than once ''

·-

Pa ss
Pass
Pas!)

CARPET SHOP

AI 100 Kerr 51.

Portland , 0 .

A.I I0 5 4

\\'esl

3290 .

HEAVY DUTY truck chams , 700 ~~:
16or 750lt16 Ne"Yerused $25
Phone 742 275-4

Help Wanted

PICKENS HDWE.

A -

Bo th vulnerable

RACINE

614-9'12-2798

843·2165_

EAST

• A2
+K Q J 10 I

Ph. 912-2174

MODERN CHEMICAL

STATE ROUTE 689 . PHONE
WILKESVlLLE . (614 1669 3785

2 bedroom unfurnished aport

WilL DO plu mbing, heating, roof •
ing .
remod el i ng .
free
"'"motes .
Coli
Charles
S1ndo1r, 985·4121 .

;:

MOTORS, INC.

NOTICE! ! !

Furnace Service.
Oil or Gas Burners

WEST

YK 965:1
YQJ 8
. 9876
+ 53
o!- 10862
"'Q Y7 1
SOUTH ill )
A KQ9763

SMITH NELSON

28-A

APPLES , FITZPATRICK ORCHARD,

VERY NICE 12 M 65 mob1le home
for rent located In Mason .
W.Va . Adults only Nv pets
Contact Sondra , 992-5693 Mon ·
r;ta'll through F.ndoy , 9 11113 p m

Will do odd JObs. roofing , pain·
tmg , gutter work , Phon e 992-

1100 E. Main 51.

Phone

HOUSE . 5 ROOMS and both in
Racine or ea . Phone 992 -5858

Service• Of£CRd

810' THE TURN·

F.,. lilt lqlll
- I I lilt •IIIII ~loll

Southeastern Ohio
Truss Rafter Co.

Homes Inc.

843·2254

AVAilABLE AT R1vers1de Apls 1
bedrm apartment SIOO per
month , 2 bedroom opts . $133
pe1 month Equal Opportumlv
Hous•ng Phone 992·3273

"""••, - -1 •

Double wides &amp; modular
homes by Skyline &amp; Fuqua .

9 ooo-Movle " The Man in lhe Iron Mask" 3.4, 15, AFC ·
NF C Pr o Bowl!, 13; Maude 8, 10; Community Called
Earlh 20,33 .
9:30- AII 's Falr 8,10
10 ·01)-CB·s REporls8 ,10: West V lrg ln lalnaugural3l ;

he stopped to cons1der the
chance of a 4-0 trump break,
but it wa s too late to do
any thing about 1L. He could
play dummy's ace of spades,
get the bad news and then go
down because he could not
lead through the Jack· te n more

17

+A 2
"' AKJ 53

516N OF A
TAIL .. A-&lt;JK TO
PROCESD!

OF~ !

L--...!~~!!!!~;!!!.:!:..1

ANY PITCH
ANY SIZE

housing .

COAL lor sole, Open 6 days per
week and evenrngs . For further
informot1on ca ll (614)3b7-7339.

2 BEDROOM trailer. real n1 ce.
Phone q92-3324 , adults only

space

.. ALONE'
IN CAR, NO

Radiator ..---..
Service

STRIPPING, REPAIRING,
REFINISHING &amp;
UPHOLSTERING

ONE BEDROOM Ap.ts ot VILLAGE
MANOR 1n M1ddleport for $104
monthly plus elec or $130 1n·
eluding elec LOWER RATES for
SENIOR CITIZENS Conven1ent
to shopping on Th ird and Mill
Sis in Middleport . Brond new
h1gh quality apartments See
the manager at Apt 28 or call
• 992 7721 . An Equal Hous1ng
Oppartun•ty

TRAILER

""· 675·3469 .
9:JO.SoQO Dally
1---T:.:I:.:.I)~B.-'0""99'-'-F;.;rl,;;d,;;av;.•;..._..

We handle only lite beot In

•279.95

POTATOES ond pumpk1ns c w
Proff111, Portland Oh10 Phone

FURNISHED two bedroom opt ..
adult s only . No pets Middleport Phone 991 -3874

LARGE

MoK!EE JU&amp;i

Pomeroy Landmark

~

COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork , Rt
33 ten miles north of Pomeroy
Large lots w1 th condete patiOs .
s1dewolks . runners and off
street pork.ng Phone 992-7A7'l

ment 1n Middleport.
992 -31 'JfJ or 992·5434

QUEEPE~!

IWIIIIUII

Sales Inc.

'
Let us test your wafpr
Frft.

5434

..... $18,300 ,,;

S
l42o,t4UO

Now Only

1971 FORO XLT Ranger truck , &amp;M ·
ce ll ent cond1t1on , reasonab le
pnced Phone 949-2545

sa

'""'"'

Let

DARN QLI,IJTZ

~OR Til

A A8 2
• 10 71

TUR~ED

SCARECRO W··
50 THI5 MUSr

.51015501fm

Kingsbury Home
manufactured

1969 Novo, extra sharp new
pomt bucket seats, air shocks ,
mags Phone 9-49-2-480

bed•.

APP~OI'~IATlON

PROBLEMS?

Ace HE TH l ~K S
AMUT 1$ THAT

5T~AW '-'AN
REPOIUI~6! ...

i'-----'---:--::-""1 '" '

popes $650. Co11949·2&lt;80.

~

POMEROY, OHIO

Wt-IDOOIS
IIPI.ICQI!IIT
WIIIOIIIIS

TOO RI6H~ CAROL DEAR:.. HI''S NOW
HEAD1N 6 FOR A SECRET M~ETIN6 TO
6ET 50ME SNEAK INFO ON THE QU~EPER!
THeRE'S THE

Pl. Pleasant

12,000

HARD WATER.

S1QIII

20,33 .
B: Jo--Bust ing Loose 8, 10.

Start with brain in gear

CAPTAIN EASY
1 MI(!;HT'VI' KNOWN DADDV
WOULDN'T R~M~MS~R TO
Flii.S SHIVAUN S HAFTOS!

lllnioiOWIIIUttia

DIRECT
FABRIC SALES'
-ne Main Street

(614) 98S-41S5
Chester, Ohio
10·17·1 mo {Pdl

miles, sissy bar, crash bors
pull back handle bars new t.re
and seals ' Scromblet" side

POM!~~Jv~~!~~ CO. fi\

m

CL 450.

cnlir" Cllshlons,

oola;

mattresses, poddln9. Ideal

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY

COAL . limestone, and calcium
chlon de and calcium brine for
dust control and special mi xing
salt for formers M01n Stre&amp;t
Pomeroy, Oh•o or phon e 992

1 owner, good tires, c ustom cab, 8' Fleetside.

- -

TOTAL ALL

f~rSale

u~~tLSTEW
'fABIHl'.

10, Candid Camera 13; Fr iends of Man 15
8 :QO-LIHie House on the Prairie 3,4, 15; Wonder
Woman 6, 13; Jeffersons 8, 10; Meet In of the M inds

WIN AT BRIDGE

•
•

IIIIIIR
Insulation Stitk"
Fiuoolot-

for campers . Vanety of
sizes.
Velvets , nylon prints,
her.:ulons, vinyl solids, and
fancv orints. accessorit5.'

Weddings

U495

Cheyenne. white and green finish , chrome bumper and

Dally , 8 ·30 am to 1'2 · 00
Noon Saturday .
Ph.one today 992 2150 .

.For

Schools

lt74CHEIIROLET&gt;;,TON

AT STUD 1 Phoebus, 16 IH If
you want a good performance.
A halter colt w - bloodhnes \hot
Pollee Departmentsell. 2. TRIBAL CHIEF , APHC ,
SJI ,SOO 00
Personal Serv ices
15 2 H. 1-oos !med some of the
Other
11.79270
Total for POI!ce
top performcnce ond halter
Departmen f
$43 , 292 70
horses , (Tnbol Win . Tribal Fool ,
Fire Departmentetc.) . Also horses sold trainNOW
acceptmg
piano
stl,!d!i'nls
,
$690.00
Personal Serv ices
ed . condi tioned , boarded Cole
beg1nners, mtermed1ates, adOther
4,fl36 00
Stables, Home of Champion s.
vanced students Call
992To ta l fer F~re
Box 25, Tuppers Plo ms , Ohm
o)\P artment
SS.Sl6 .00
2270,
45783 Phone (614) 667 ·3405
Total fer Secur1tv at
PERSON 's BODY Shop, 26 Railroad
P erso ns and Proper ~
St .. Middleport would l1ke to SHOOTlNG MATCH, Sunday .
tv
S48.8lB70
Jonuorv 16th , starting at noon.
L: EISURE TIME
remind customers thai Dec J1
Rutland legion Hell
ACTIVITIES
15 the lost day to toke odParks and PlayII'Ontoge of the pamt JObs · all $100 REWARD for onvone gilfmg
groundsO'-.'er 1n I color . $100, 2 tone
information where to find Mike
$4.500 00
Personal Serv ices
$125 wilhDul body work . Stop
Mc~ano ld , age 14 , James Ar Other
21 ,800 00
m or phone 985--4174 for op
thur McDonald , age 11 Reword
Total for Parks and
po1ntment,
Playgrounds
526,300 .00
will be pa1d when we find
.
~
Total for Le1sure
children . Mother's nome ~~
NOTICE
Pratt's Meat Mk!.
S'l&amp;, JOO oo
T1me Act1v1ttes
Dom, Father has custodv of
(Pleasanton Meat Processing
COMMUNlTY
M•ke Phone 742·2722
Inc
.)
Custom
slaughtenng,
ond
ENVIRONMENT
processing. Retail , wholesale
P Ianning Com m l!i!iionPersonal Services
SSOO .OO
No appoinment necessary . Coli
Other
500.00
(614) 593 -8655, hours 9.00 til l
Total for Plann1ng
._,anted to Rt!DI
6·00 7 Pomeroy Rood Athens
s1,ooo.oo Oh
Com m is.s1on
.
Total for Communitv
2 BEDROOMS , UNFURNISHED
Envtranment
51.000.00
house or apartment Close to
draw
his
warnwts
on
the
Street LightingPomeroy
or Middleport Phone
Treasurer
for
s12.000.00 Village
Oth er
992·5327.
payment! trom any of the
Tot a I for Street
s12.000.00 forego1ng spprapriations upon
L1ghflng
receiv i ng proper ce rt ificates
Total for Transpor- tation Facilit1es
S12,000 .00 and vo\Jchers therefor , ap
sect1on J · That there be proved by the board or of - OLD'•furniture . ice boxes brass
~pproprlated
from • the ficers authorrzed by law lo
well telephones and
G ENER A L FUND for con - approve the same , or an or
ports
,
or
complee households
d•n~nce
or
r
eso
l
ution
of
t i ngencieS tor purposes not
Wnte M D. Miller Rt. 4
otherw1se prov1ded for , to be c oun c il to make t he ex
Pomeroy . Oh1o. Calll/92-7760.
ex pended in accordance w 1lh pendilures . pr ov ided tha t no
the provisions o f Sect1on warrants Shall be drawn or
CASH
po1d for oil makes and
5705 40 , R c , the su m of p~ 1d for salaries o r wages
models of mobile homes
E'JC,Cep t top~rsons employed by
Sl , 275 .00
Phone areo code 614 - ~23 9531
Grand Total GENERAL authority ot and In accordanc~
l llw or
ard1n~nce
FUND
Appropriation with
Provided further that the TIMBER , Pom ~roy Forest ProS169,ll1 70
ducts lop price for standing
for
con
Section .4 That there be appropriations
sawtimber . Call Kent Hanby .
appropr1ated
from
the t1ngencies can only be ex
1 &lt;46·8570 .
STREET
CONS TRU CT ION . pended u pon appeet ot two
MAINTENANCE
AND th i rds vote of Council tor
COINS
. CURRENCY, tokens , old
REPA I R
FUND
CAUTO items of expense co nst tlu!lng
pocket watches and chams .
LI CENSE A ND GASOLINE a legal ob11gi!lt1on ega.nst the
vi l lage , and for purposes other
silv\lr and gold. We need 196-4
TAX I
than those covered by the
ondolderslllferco1ns Buy , sell ,
Street Maintenance
other spec 1tic appropnat1ons
Fundor trade Coli Roger Wamsley
Persona I Ser vices
58 ,300 00 herein made .
7&lt;2 2331 .
18
Th
1
s
resolution
Section
01her
40, 500 00
shall t ake effect at the earliest CASHI!! for jun\o. ( 0,. , Frye s
Total for Street Maintenance and Cons1
S48,80D 00 per.od allowed by law
Truck and Auto 24 HOUR
Total for Street constroct1on, P'assed January 10 , 1977
WRECKER SERVICE• Phone
M. L. 1&lt; elly. Presld~nt
Maintenance and Repildr Fund
742 2081.
ot counc11
. $48,800 .00
Attest
:
Gene
Grate
Sec t1on 6 T hat there be
NOW BUYING Scrap Pomerov
Clerk of Council
appropr i ated
from
the
Auto Recycling, h19h pmes
CEMETERY FUND
pa1d . outQ. bod1es motors .
The State of Ohio
PUBLIC: HEALTH
scrap •ron, metals , batteries ,
SERVlCES Meigs County, ss .
open 8 till 4,30 Monday th ru
1. Gene Grate. Clerk of the
Cemetery Operation
•
Saturday , Old 33, 1ust abo'-.'e
and Mamtenance
U ,700 .00 V1J1age of Middleport 1n sa1d
fo 1rgrounds . Pomeroy. Ohio
O the r
5,000 00 County , and in whose custo dy
the F i les. Jo urni!lls and
W1ll also picll:up car•. Phone
Total for Cemetery
Records ue requ .red by the • 9'12-6337
Operat1on end Mainten ance
511 , 700 .00 Laws of the State of Oh io to be
kept. do hereby certlty that WANTED o CHlPWOOD . poles
Total for Cemetery
maxiumum diameter. 10 inche~
Fund
S11,700.00 the foregoing Annua l Ap
Section 9 . That th ere be propriatlon Resolut ion IS
on lorglitst end
00 per ton
appropriated
from
the taken and copied from the
Bundled slobs, $6 00 per ton
WATER CREVENUE J FU ND orig1nal Resotut 1on now on tile
del1vered to Ohio Pollet Com ·
w t th said Vill.5ge . · that the
Adm inl5tratlonpony. Rt. 2, Pomerov. Phone
for
egoing
Resolution
has
been
Water9'12
·268'1
com
pared
by
me
with
the
said
523.300.00
Personal Serv1ces
36 •.570 00 origina l and that the same is a WANTED OLD upr~ght pianos 1n
Debt Service
jJ,630 00 true and correct copy thereof
Otl'ler
any condit1on. Will poy $10
Witness m".~ signature, this
Total for Adminis ·
each. First floor on lv Write g1v·
sn5oo .oo lOth day of January, 1971,
trat•on- Water
lng
d•rec!lons to W1tten P1ono
GeM
Grate,
Clerk
of
Total for Water
the Village of Middleport
Co , Box 188, Sardis , Oh1o
(Revenue) Fund
Stl,SOO.OO
Mf!IIIS County, OhiO
sec tion 10 That there be
•39•6
appropriated
from
the Jan . 1J
WANTED
TO buy • AO acrell plus.
SEWER IREVENUE J FUND
cos h. mu1t be reasonable
Administration Phone992-7178.
SewageORDlNANCE NO . 1051 ·17
Per sonal Services
S19r•4a 00
An Ordinance to Amend COAl BURNING cook stove m
Debt Service
2-4 ,360.00
good conditiOn PhOf"'e 991-5798.
Other
17 ,272.00 Ordinance No . 10-tB 76, An
Ordinance to est~blish Village
Total for AdmtniStra USED
TANK type sweeper .
hon - Sewo~cge
S6t,OBO 00 lobs and wage rates , and
iuitable for ga rage At ..
establishing
legal
holidays,
Total for Sewer
toc hments. not reqUired . Phone
(Revenue) Fund
S6t,OIO .OO vacation and sick leave.
Be It ordained by the
992·3346
Section 12 That there be
appropr i ated
from
the Council of the Village of
POLICEMAN'S
RELIEF M idd leport as follows .
Sec . J That Section 1 of
AND PENSlON FUND
Other
SI.457 .JO Ordinance No 5051 -17 Shall
Total tor Policeman 's Relief Include the follow i ng .
INCOME TAX Serv1ce . Wallace
Custodian
s~0 . 50 per month
and
Ruuell ,
Bradbury .
Coli
Sec
II
.
This
Ordinance
shall
Pension Fund
S1 ,4S7 .JO
992·7228
sec110n 13. Tha t t here be take effect and be in for ce
approp riated
trom
t he from and after J~ nuarv 10, WILL DO sewing and alterations .
GE NERAL
BOND 1977
Phone 992 -7808. - Passed the lOth day of
RETIREMENT FUN 0
Pllymenl of Princ1pal S8 ,000 00 January 1977.
Attest Gene Grate, Clerk
Payment of Interest
1,905 00
M L . Kelly
Oth er
500 00
rfii!TIUK 110N
President of Council
Total for General land
Jan
.
17
,
2-4
,.~.,,.,.,
RetirementFund S1D,40S .OO
,..~ Ml · - • .,..,. _,.,y .J1
ADD1T10NAL FUNDS
Sect1on 15 That there be
appropriated from the Mt!lter
Oeposlf Fund
52,500 .00
Other
., , ..~ •.r ,., us fklt 11/ .......
Total for Meter
Deposit Fund
S2,50G .DO
I .••,.,... wz..w .,.,u,~r~ ~~t.un•• l,r.~.
Total tor Meter Oet:foslt
Fund
S2,SOO.OO
RIVERSIDE, CaUf. (UP!)
Doo't juot bo oatilfiod with •
Section 16 Thai there ' be
appropriated
from
the
Ivan "The .Terrible"
JOB- Plan NOW for 1 Pro·
Federa l Revenue Sharing
, _ career DrMng • "Big
Baldwin won his second
Fund
Rig " We •e 1 PriYIIe Traming
!ilraight NASCAR late model
Federal Revenut S!"•rinvSc:hoo4
and if you meet our
IPOftlman
stock
car
race
Oiher
Sl?: ~70 . 00
quolificltions, you wil bo trainTota.l tor Federal Revenue
Saturday by defeating Jim
ed by Profession~! lnllfuc·
Shar ing
Slt,l70.00
Sanderaoo in the Pennatex
Anti - R ece ssion Asshtante
ton on modern equ1pment.
' Fund~
300 at Riverside lnternatiooal
Tratn on 1 Part Tll'llt~ (Sa1.
Other
12.000.00, Raceway.
&amp; Sun.) ond Keep your job, or
Tof•l for Federal ••vtnue
Baldwin, winner of the
Shulnt ud Anti-Recession
ottllfld oor 3 Woeic Ful Time
Aulstance Fund
121.171.00 CaUfCirllla 150 last June, aveRe!ident Training.

PERSONS AND
PROPERTY

PHOTOGRAPHY
Aerial
COmmercial

word

OFFlCE HOURS
8 : 30 a.m to 5: 00 p

PROFESSIONAL

3891

lnlmum
~•en additional word 3

cents

••

RISING STAR KENNEL boord1ng
indoor and outdoor . Groom 1ng
all breed s, complete sooilory
foc1li11es . Chesh11e. Phone (614)
367·0192.

197S CHEII . lTON
$4500
292 Englne, 15,000 lb., 2 speed. r . a&lt;le, lOB" cab lo axle,
clean cab. like new, 825x20

5·31)-Admam ·12 4; ; News 6, Famlly Alfalr 8; E lec
Co 20,33 ; Adam· 12 13
6.oo-News 3,4,8,10,1 3.15; ABC New s 6; Zoom 20.
6.31)-NBC News3 ,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Grilf llh 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Vegetable Soup 20.
7 oo-To Tel lhh e Truth 4; Bolwling lor Dollars 6, Buck
OwensB; News 10, To Tell the Truth 13 ; My Three

•'

Business Services

PLEASURE HORSES and ponies,
also w1ll boy horses and
pon ies. Phone (614) 698·3290,
Ruth Reeves.

CARD OF THANKS
L OllTUARY

5ERV1CES
MayorPerson al Services
52 .500 .00
Other
s.ooo 00
$7,500 .00
Total for Ma~or
Clerk · Clerk·
Treasurer If comb•nedi Perso nal Serv1ces
S'l. 5DO 00
Other
2.000 .00
Total for Clerk ·
S4 ,SOO .OO
Cl erk ·TreasurH
SoliCi tor- Legal
Advisor$1.000 00
P ers onal Serv 1ces
Total tor Solicitor.
$1 , 000 .00
l egal Advsior
CouncilP ersonal Ser ,nces
5576.00
1576 .00
Total tor counc11
Buildings and Misc .Other
S66 ,362 00
Total for Buildings
S64 ,3U .OO
and Mi!ic.
Total for General
Gov't . Servites
S19,938.00
SECURITY OF

A~

WANT ADS

INFO~MATlON

7 30-ThatGoodOieNashville Muslc3, ln Sea r chol4 ;
Gong Show 8, MacNe11 Lehrer 20.33; Price Is Right

M ister Roger s 20. 33 ;. St ar Trek 15.

..

ANNUAL
APPROPRlATlON
ORDINANCE

Sons 15; know Your School$ 33; Charac ter i stics of
Learn)ng O lsabllttces 20 .

MONDAY,JANUARY 11, 1977

SAY··

HOTTEST DADBURN CHILl
·I EVER LAID TONGUE TO!!

FIGHT b

FIRE WITH

~---t-'-"

0

FIRE~!

FIELD TRIP...

:
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'

•

••

l

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�$-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Jan. l7, 1977

Mercury hits -24 ii1: Ohio
Temperatures dropped !Q

,At 7 a.m. today readings
ranged from 22degrees below
Ohio early !Qday, forcing · zero at Cincinnati to a minus
energy cutbacks throughout 13 at Youngstown.
the state which resulted in the
Te mp e r a ture s
are
layoffs of thousands of expected to
recover
workers. 0a)1on Power and somewhat today and those
Light Co. declared an electric temperatures will continue to
power emergency for 24 rise into Tuesday but it will
southwes~ern.io Counties. still be very cold.
Dayron P er and Ught
Highs today are expected to .
began
off pcwer for be near zero . and highs
short periods of time ro all Tuesday are expected to go
bl!sinesses and residences in up to 10 degrees above zero.
. the area it serves. The utility Lows tonight will be between
also called on all businesses zero and 10 below zero.
and schools to close imBrisk westerly winds will
mediately.
result in frigid wind chill
Columbia Gas of Ohio, East ·factors today. !Carly today,
Ohio Gas and West Ohio Gas with wi nd gusts up to 23 miles
announced near 100 per cent an hour and a minus-IScurtailments to aU industrial degree temperature, Toledo
~sers which· · forced the · recorded a OO&lt;Iegree-belowclosing of numerous plants. zero wind chill fa ctor.
Columbus .and Southern
Highs Sunday were all
Electric Co., headquartered below zero , exct::pt in
in Columbus, today instituted southeastern Ohio near the
a five-volt reduction ro all Ohio River. Dayton and
users and asked they impose Mansfield reported Sunday
further , voluntary afternoon high temperatures
reductions.
of 10 degrees below zero.
Power shortages were Some light snow fell over
repcrted in northern Ohio, the Ohio during the past 24 hours.
Athens area ·and the bu t tha t snowfall has been
Gallipclis area because of very light with little or nii
broken power lines and accumulations reported.
overloaded transformers.
The Ohio Jextended Outlook
The cold weather also for Wednesday through
forced the closing of Friday calls for fair weather
numerous
schools
in Wednesday and Thursday,
Northern Ohio.
with a chance of snow Friday
Cincinnati had the lowest and slowly moderating
~perature in the state with
temperatures during the
a record-breaking 24 below period.
zero reading.
Highs Wednesday will be in
New record lows also teens, rising to the 20s on
included Columbus with a 19 Thursday and to the 30s by
below reading, breaking the Friday. wws will be near
old mark of 11 below set in zero Wednesday and in the
1965 while Dayron had a teens Thursday and Friday .
reading of 21 below breaking
In Columbus, the frigid
the old record of 19 below set temperatures iced car batin 1963.
teries, kept .service station
Toledo had a reading of 15 attendants on overtime and
below roday eclip;ing the old overtaxed taxi ·companies.
record of nine below set in
One . firm in Upper
1965. Mansfield had a minus Arlington, a Columbus
20ro tie the record set in 1963. suburb, reported a three-fold
Numerous · other low increase in business, and
records were repcrted from waits of several hours for a
throughout the state.
cab were not uncommon. The

as low as 24 below zero in

Highway building

taxi company said it was
trying to give priority to
e!l'ergencies and to the
needy.
···
Hours~on g waits for rowtruc~s were also reported in'
COLUMBUS (UPI) - State studies Involved In road
the city. Gas pumps at some road construction this year building plans.
service stations were also will total a record $342
A federal regulation temrepcrted frozen .
million, nearly twice as much porarily banning takirlg part
School closings because of as in 1976 when new federal of a school property for a
the cold were reported across regulations and state laws highway is being appealed in
the state. The school hoard in postpcned some plafi!l.
Cleveland coutt now. The
Cambridge approved a fourThe prior record high C!U1le case involves four segments
day school week through in 1966 when $342 million of an. interstate highway
March 28 ro conserve gas. worth of highway building which would require taking a
Students will ro to school was done after voters ·· recreatiooal part of a school
Tuesday through Friday then approved
a
massive property.
make up the eight lost transportation bond issue.
Brace said the state had
classroom days by going to
Benjamin Brace, deputy sufficient money ro cover the
school during Easter director for finance, said part record
size
highway
vacation and on Memorial or last year's road work had construction because of
Day and June 8 and 7.
to be postponed because of increasing gasoline tax
.· ing of
new
and State collections and retir
Meanwhile, a researcher at
· . federal
.
Ohio State University's Polar restrictions.
.
construction bonds.
Studies Institute had some , ·Federal- regulations
The department official
advi&amp; Sunday for coping &lt;iecreed a ·25-foot bndge said the 1917 highway
with booe-aching cold.
clearance over mam strea~ building program involved a
lan Whillans, a research and . complete flood plam variety .of,programs, ranging
associate at' the institute, said studies for all streams under Jrom interstate construction
that persons going outside.,,. highw~ys. New .state laws to maintenance. work. They
shouldwearloose.filtingwool '' required
hiStoncal are financed by various
or down-filled clothing:
pres e r vat 1on
and highway taxes along with
He said sweets supply architectural .preservation federal funds. ·
needed calories in cold
weather and breaks from
outside work or snowmobile
rides for a jog will help keep
you warm.
Finally, Whillans
suggested a technique used
by institute workers in the
Antartic and Alaska : think of
tropical beaches and palm
trees.

Ohio River full of ice

double ·1976 rate

Tlie

Appalachian

system
favQred
-.-

Inaugural

•

m ·budget

BRINGING BAIL UP- John Sayre, Southern High guard, brtngs the ball up against
Randy McGuire, one of Hannan Trace's top guns Saturday night at Racine in a Southern
·Valley Conference basketball game won by Southern 7S.S7 to remain undefeated after seven
outings. See Page a.for Greg B;Iiley's account of the game. Picture by Gary Sisk.

Hospital News Stella McDaniel 87 is

Veterans Memorial Hospital
LITTLE HOCKING 'Saturday Admissions (Continued irom page IJ
Stella
May McDaniel, 87, Rt.
Dorothy Wright, Rutland;
I
,
Little
Hocking, died
the White House for coffee
Barbara Roush , Dexter;
Saturday
evening
at Marietta
with President Ford at 10:30
Harry Greathouse, RaCine;
following
an
extended
illness.
a.m. Afterwards, the two
WASinNGTON (UPI) But it added that "to Carl Hoffman, Middleport;
Mrs.
McDaniel
was
born
at
men will ride rogether in a President F.ord today partially compensate for the Timmy Chick, Middleport;
Proctorville,
Ohio,
the
limousine up Pennsylvania propcsed in his fiscal 1978 Increased highway program, Cloyd Brookover, RuUand;
Avenue ro the Capitol for the budget that construction the 1-978 appropriations Henry Hartman, Long daughter of the late Samuel
and Sarah Hamlin Ward. She
swearing-in ceremonies.
work on the Appalachian reques ted for nonhighway Bottom.
was preceded in death by her
Carter atteno.ed worship .development highway system programs are reduced,
Saturday Discharges husband,
Oscar, in 1969, one
services at the Plains Baptist he emphasized in aid to reflecting the commission's Everett Ward, Eliza Adams,
grandson,
three sisters and
Church Sunday and was en- A I hla wi'th a red ct 'ion relative priorities."
· Guy Bolin, Lois Schoonover,
gulfed in emotional farewells
ppa ac •
u
tWo
brothers
..
with memllers of the in nonhighway programs.
Highway funds would jump Robert Bowen , Edwin
.She
was
a
member of the
Total assistance for the from!
he
estimated Wehrung, Barry Theiss,
Center
Point
Union Mission
congregation
and the
••os .2 m1'II'Ion, $197,348,000 forfiscall977, to Mary Kazee.
whom he has known
for choir,
many year wou ld be..,
Church
and
had been a
years.
with $205.3 million going $205,300,000for the nextfiscal
Sunday Admissions- John
resident of Ohio the past 57
Rev. Bruce Edwards told toward the highway system. year, while the overall figure Bailey, Racine; Louise years having moved here
The Appalac"•,·an program ' would decrease from the Eshleman, Pomeroy; Stella
Carter- 11nd his wife,
Pomeroy;
Rosalynn, the congregation administer,ed by the Ap· estimated $331,112,000 total to Ebersbach,
Meadie Long, Long Bottom;
would pray for them.
palachian Regional Com- $:103,200,000.•
The document said in fiscal Mary Quillen, Syracuse; Iva
"We enter inro a covenant, mission, 'Includes 13 states:
Frank M. t Penhy) Di)l, SS,
Jimmy and Rosalynn, to pray New York, Pennsylvania, 1976 area development · Stewart, Minersvi)le; Jean
Rt.
3, Pomeroy; died &amp;mday
for you in the tremendous Ohio,, ~aryla.nd, Kent~cky, programs would be funded in Sheets, Chester; Eloise
at
his
home. He was born
responsibility you will have · VIrgmia, \Y;est VIrgmia, a manner " permitting Parsons, Parkersburg, W.
April
28,
1910 to Mrs. Walter
as president," Edwards said North Carolina, South greater state flexibility in the Va.; Floyd Bush, New Haven.
Walker,
Pomeroy,
and the
as Carter leaned forward, his · Carolina, Georgia, Ten· amount and kinds of projects
Sunday Discharges ~ 1\ose
late
Robert
Dill.
He
was
also
head bowed, and Rosalynn . nessee, Mississippi and undertaken."
Ellen Lee, Myrtle Durst.
.
preceded
in
death
by
two
appeared close ro tears.
Alabama.
They would include health
brothers;
Glenn
and
Earl.
The President.. lect's Bible
"The 1978 budget places and child development,
Surviving are a son, Virgil,
class gave him a silver increased emphasis on eommunity development and
PLEASANT VAlLEY
Syracuse;
a daughter, Mrs.
bookmark as a going away construction of the Ap' housing, vocational and other
DISCHARGES _ Robert
Harold
(Penny
Lee) Brinker,
gift.
paiachian development high· education, energy and en· Smith Ifl, Henderson :
Pomeroy;
stepfather,
" Everyone here knows way system, which Involves terprise, natural resources Delbert Allton, Gallipolis Walker, Coolville; Walter
two
whal my class and my home corridor highways as well as and environment, and rural Ferry;
John
Tucker, grandchildren, Scott Brinker
rown have meant to me," he access roads," Ford's budget transportation.
Pomeroy; Mrs. Clayton and Jeremy Dill,.Syracuse; a
Visit Our Salad Bar
told the members. "lhQpe ... document said.
Miller, Southside; Robert sister, Mrs. Marion Howell,
B-B-Q Chicken
this class may be proud of
Ayers, New Haven; Stanley Columbus; two stepsons,
Little Brown Potatoes
everything I do and my
Alshlre, Middleport; Irene ·Dale Willis, Racine , and
performance in God's eyes
p
White, Point Pleasant; Alice Robert Willis, Syracuse; two
Vegetable
will be satisfacrory in his MR. FLUGG
by Jon etenon Sprague, Bidwell; Jackson stepdaughters, Mrs. Darrell
Hot Rolls
Cqtlee. Tea or Milk
kingdom."
..-----------~-----, Fairchild, Point Pleasant; Jen~ins, Columbus; Mrs.
Plus Tax
Peter Ford , Southside; Roger Holman, Rutland; and
Eunice Hesson, Point two sisters-In-law, Mrs.
Pleasant; Mrs. Ronald Glenn Dill, Syracuse and
In 1806, the first baby was
Deverick,
Galllpclis Ferry; Mrs. Eat! Dill, Racine.
born
in
the
White
House.
He
992-3629.
Pomeroy. o.
Villa
Lee,
Mason; Ross
was
the
son
of
Thomas
and
Mr. Dill was a retired truck
Phone 992-6304
Winebrenner,
Letart;
Harley
Martha
Randolph
and
the
driver
and a disabled veteran
PIZZA SHACK Phone 992-6304
Swisher, Middleport; Earl
grandson of President
CORRECTION
Conrad, Point Pleasant;
Thomas Jefferson. ·
SYRACUSE - Syracuse
Lillian Brannon, Point emergency chief Is Ralph
Pleasant; KerriSlinde, Leon; Lavender not Eber Pickens
Judith Wilfong, Point as was repcrted. Pickens Is
Pleasant; Mrs. Floyd Siders, the assistant chief. The
~~~-.:41f:j~dJHf:~D"'\'I=-1f.)tl'~k w..t1i£!1f88E:ti .~ :~·-1
Henderson; Verna Wedding- Syracuse ER Squad Sunday
.
N'l · 69937 •
ton, Vinton; Mrs. Alonzo 'transported Myrtle Durst
.. ·, ' .
Dickens, Point Pleasant ; from Veterans Memorial
,,._
Michael Kincaid, Point Hospital to her home in
~
Pleasant; Timothy Ham- Syracuse.
mack, Point Pleasant;
Sherry and James Johnson,
Births - A son to Mr. and
Middleport; and Mrs. Mrs. Jeffrey Wells, Northup,
Everett Watterson, Point 0.; and a son to Mr. and Mrs.
ntlf,._l . . . . 6. IAVJHQI CO.
Pleasant.
Claud Reltmire, Pomeroy.

1HE INN PLACE
Tuesday Night Special

.•·t==

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~·

~, OHIO..,..

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't!O&amp;.I.2•05~"':

.The Farmers -Bank
Money Order

a

a

Farmers Bank
POMEROY, OHIO

•••••••••••••••••••••••••
I

The Almanac
Rv .
Ifni ted
Pren
United Preoslntematlonal
Today is Monday, Jan. 17,
the 17th day of 1977 with 348 ro
follow.
The moon is approaching
Its new ·phaae.
The morning stars are
Mercury, Mars and Saturn.
The evening stars are
Venus and Jupiter.

MEIGS THEATHE
CLOSED FOR
VACATION

1

$40,000.00 Maximum Insurance For Each Depositor
Member Fedet:al Deposit Insurance Corporatipn

I

0

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d~d

from Indiana .
. She is survived by three
daughters, Mrs. Arrena
Coulson, Mrs. B~thel O'Neill,
and Mrs. Eleanor EP.ling, all •
of Little Hocking; five
grandchildren and 13 greatgrandchildren.
Funeral services wiD be
held Tu~sday at 2 p. m. at the
White Funeral Home in
Coolville .with the Revs. Ray
Deeter and George Gill of·
ficiating. Burial will be in
Coolville Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
at anytime.

•

I

WATCH FOR
OPENING bAli

--·-

of World War II.
Funeral services will be I
p.m. Wednesday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev.
James Corbitt ofriciating.
Burial will be in Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call
· at the funeral home any Ume
after 7 thi's evening.

Ice.••
(Continued from page I)
Guard here, said, "We're in
contact with the Army Corps
of Engineers daily and
watching the situation very
carefully . .We no longer have
any boats here except for
small ones which can he
brought in ori trailers.
"Our riverfront floating
station here was transferred
to the Jefferson County
Pollee safety patrol several
years ago.'' He said the
station probably would just
"float out" any possible .
freeze. The/Coast Guard also .
has a buoy tender downriver :·
at Owensboro.
The Coast Guard has issued
a warning against attempting
ro walk out on the ice despite
its apparent thickness.
Snow and Ice clearance
could be seriously affected U
the Ohio freezes. Most of the
salt and abrasives for clUes
and highway departments in
many slates are shipped &amp;y
barge.

ELBERFEloS IN POMEROY

1·1"7

Cl1977 by NEA,InC.

INEXPENSIVE WAY TO SEND MONEY

•

9

•

THE SAFE, CONVENIENT,

t

..

WASHiNGTON - IVA ToGURI D'AQUINO - better
known to ,millions of World War II servicemen as "Tokyo
Roee" -ls)n line for a pcssible pardon from President Ford.
The Washingron Post repcrted today Ford has decided ro
pardon the 80-year old Chicago resident, bOt administration
officials contaCted by UPI 'w(iuld not go that far, saying only
that her name is on a list of those recommended by the Justice
Department for pardons.

'

Those born on this date are
under the sign of capricorn.
American statesman,
scientist
and
author
Benjamiil Franklin was born
Jan. 17, 1727.
On this day In history:
In 1950, nine bandits staged
a $U million robbery of a
Brink's armored car In
Boston.
'l'iCKETS ON SALE
An award• dtooer lor
Robert WID8tU. Charlet
Legar and Pe" Shleldo 11
Thunday, Jan: :10, at f:30
p.m. at the Melp IDD
1p01110r~d by lbe Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce.
Tickets to the dlaner,
which are ~ tach, may be
reserved by calllq Barbara Cbapmaa at the
Pomeroy Chamber ofllce,
tn-M or coallct Fred
Crow, preoldeat of the
chamber.

SAVE 40%
MEN'S AND BOYS' WEAR- Jackets, sweaters, shirts;
dress slacks, fashion jeans. '
- WOMEN'S READY-TO-WEAR - Sweaters, blouses
and· tops, coordinated sportswear, evening gowns and
blazers, select groups of junior dresses, pant suits and
half- size dresses.
.
:~~
-CHILDREN'S DEPARTMENT- Winter coats, jeans ..
' and slacks·, skirts and dr'esses, sleepwe~n. · '
- LINGERIE DEPARTMENT- Woma~s,wj"ter robes, ...
winter gowns and pajamas.
'
. -TOYS
ON THE 1st FLOOR - Save 40 per cent and 50
.
per cent.
.·

..

Elberfelds January Clearance
.I

... .

•. : ..

.

.

.'

.

HONOLULU ~ A 60P-i'T. LffiERIAN. FREIGHTER en
route froril Venezuela ro Japan with 100,000 barrels of oil
aboard roday was reported breaking up in the Pacific Ocean
204 miles southeast of Midway Island.
· ~e .!lonlulu Coast Guard Search and Rescue Ceriter S!lid
28 of the 31 crewmen of the ship, tlie Irenes Challenger, have
been picked up by a passing Japanese container ship, the
Pacific Arrow. The other three crewmen were still on board
the Challenger' battling ro prevent her from sinking.

' ''

Frank M. Dill died on Sunday

TtiE MEIGS INN .

~

By United Press International
MOSCOW _; SOVIET LEADER. LEONID I. Brezhnev '
Wday labeled "absurd and totally unfounded" allegations that
the Soviet Union is striving fQr superiority in the arms race ro
be able In deliver the first strike.
"Of course, comrades, we are perfecting our defenses,"
Brezhnev told a m~tlpg in the city of Tula south of Moscow.
"It cannot be otherwise. We have never sacrUiced and will
never sacrUi~ the security of our country, the security of our
allies.
"But," he said, "the allegations that the Soviet Union is
going beyond what is sufficient for defense, that it is striving ·
for superiority In armaments with the aim of delivering the
first ~trike ~re ~bsurd and totally unfounded."

'

WASffiNGTON- TilE AGRICULTURE DEPARTMENT
estlmflled a record 1976 corn production of 6.216 billion bushels
in ItS ,final crop summary, up 153 million bushels, or 2.5 !&gt;'1r
cent, from B November forecast.
,
The new estimate Monday put production of the key
livestock feed grain - which plays a major role in shaping
consumer food prospects because it is the chief raw material
for meat, milk and pcultry products - 7 per cent above a
revlaed 1975 eStimate of 5.797 billion bushels. Ohio corn
production in 1976 reached a record 396 million bushels, 23 per
cent above the reoord high of 1975.
·
In an Annual Summary of Crop Production, the Ohio Crop
and Uvestod&lt; Repcrtlng Service said Monday yield per acre
was 101 busbels, nine bushels above the previous record of 92
bushels in 1975 and 1972.
COLUMBUS - OffiO'S NEW WORKERS' col)lpensation
reform law went into operation todily and It gives broad new
powers ro the atrorney general to leyestlgate any evidence of
corruption •In the system.
. It .allo calls on the state audiror to annually audit fiscal
.aspectsilftbe program while actuarial audits of the $1.5 bUlion
State Insurance Fund are to be conducted every two years.
The law al!o changes the name of the Ohio Bureau of
Workmen's CompensaUon to the Ohio Bureau of Workers'
Compensal!Jn.
'

'

.

..

Inaugural hoopla
underway tonight
By CLAY F. RICHARDS

WASHINGTON (UPI) The Inauguration of Jimmy
Carter will be launched
tonight with a · green and
white bang that can be heard
for miles aroiUld.
· A five-day Inaugural
festival ofllclally gets under
way with a firework! display
- In the Carter·Mondale
colors of green and white .on ·the mall :between the
Unooln Memorial and the
Washington Monument.
The opeiling salvo will he so
loud It can he heard for 12
milllll, organizers said.
The fireworks are Just one
aspect of Carter's "people's
Inaugural" that wUl be
unique In many respecta.
Among · them Ia Carter's
decision to walk the IIIII two
blocks of . the Inaugural
along
parade
route
Pennsylvania Avenue so
campaign workers and
lrlenda who paid ~ eadt for
special seats can get 11 I!IJ!ld
look at him.
Allo breaklni! tradition, he
will walk from Blair House
ICl'OII the atreet ro the While
· House Thurlday mornlns for
a' cup of colfe with President
Ford before the two men
~rive iAI the capitol lor the

sweartncln.

While the fireworks marka
the offld~ aart of lnalii!W'al

week, the actual festiVities
open earlier in the day with a
dozen free concerts around
tnwn, a film festival, poetry
reading, cl)lldren's theater
and a horse show - all free to
the public.
Before the fireworks there
will be Just about every kind
of live mu.slc Imaginable
outdoors on the mall. For the
first 2;000 wbo get tickets and
want ·ro stay inside, away
from Icy winds, the AUanta
SymPllony and the National
Symphony will present a joint
concert - free - In the
Kennedy Center.
Alter the co9cert the
Kennedy Center roof offers a
ringside seat for the
llreworka.
Forecaillers say It's going
to be a dtUJy week. The 1977
Inaugural Committee just
hopes Carter won't he · t~e
llrat president Iince Wllllam
Howard Taft In 1909 ro be
driven Indoors by a blizzard.
Soldiers anned with everything from lhovell to name
throwers are ready to attack
any 11110w that may 'fall.
The National Weather Ser·
vlce~sllrst lnlllii!W'atloo Day
forecast Monday doean 'f
mentloo snow llld predicts
the temperature will climb to
"nell' 20 decrees" by the
Thunday noon swearing-ln.

NOT SOLID YET Ohio River between Meigs
and Mason Counties appeared to be frozen solid in some
places Monday. afternoon. However two downriver boats
pushing barges made their way through the Big Bend
after this photo was taken. The river has not been frozen
solid here for some 30 years. However, at Cincinnati and
other prints, It is frozen solid enough for walkers. With the
continued low temperatures that are predicted, perhaps,
~me of the younger set of the Big Bend area once again
will know the feeling of walking across the Ohio River.

VOL. XXVII NO. 193

By RICK VANSANT
aU-time record low of minus
CINCINNATI (lJPI) - The 24 degrees, intensified the
Ohio River today was 'mostly icing.
·
981 miles • of gigantic
"The effect of roday's sub· icecubes.
'zero temperatures will be felt
The usually fast-fiowing, In the days ahead as floes
major tributary of the Missis- begin jamming rogether and
sippi River was a victim of forming bigger floe s,"
subzero temperotures. And, explained Lane. "It's going ro
victimized in turn was the get worse.
thriving cargo industry that
"It's too difficult ro predict
uses the river like a if officials will close the river
superhighway .
ro traffic. But maybe the
Only a few barges managed river will just close itself. It
ro crack through the jagged all depends on the weather
floes of Ice.
ahead."
"The river is still open ro
More.than 140 million tons
navigation, but only a few of cargo is barged on the Ohio
rows (barges linked rogether River each year . Half of that
and pushed by a rowboat) are cargo is coal and another 16
moving and they are going per cent is petroleum. Steel,
very slowly,'' said John Lane sand and gravel and
of the U.S. Army Corps of chemical products also are
Engineers.
barged.
"On a normal day, ahout 20
Much of the coal is from
tows come past Cincinnati," · Pennsylvania and West
said Lane. "In the last 24 Virginia and is shipped ro
hours, we've had three. power stations along the
Normal speed is about eight river.miles an hour. But !Qday, it's
"lcing conditions on the
a slow crawl of about one Ohio River have virh!iiily
mile an hour."
hailed all shipments of coal
And, added Lane, the river ·and·oil needed ro operate our
is going to get worse for electric generating units,"
commercial traffic.
complained William H.
·Unseasonably cold weather Dickhoner, president of the
has been freezing parts of the· Cincinnati Gas &amp;Electric Co.
·river for the past 10 days and While CG&amp;E has a three
Monday's brutally cold tem- month supply or coal on hand,
peratures, like Cincinnati's . it has only a two week supply

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Coal, (uel ·
stranded m
river's ice
e

Press
By
United
International
Thousands of tons or ice
cl)oked off commerce on the
nation's mightiest rivers
roday and left urgently
needed coal and fuel stranded
in seas of ice .
The one-two pWich of a
summer drought and one of
the coldest winters on record
has stymied barge traffic on
the Mississippi, Ohio,
Alleglieny and Monongahela
rivers.
William Dockhoner,
president of the Cincilmatl
Gas and Electric Co.,
complained that icing
conditions have virtually
halted all coal and oil
shipments needed ro operate ·
generating Wilts.
He said the utility had only
eno ugh oil . to last two
week:!.

"We've got a millioni!aDon
barge shipment of oil locked
in by the ice on the Ohio and
another million and a half
(gallons ) mQvlng very
slowly," a·CG&amp;E apckesman
said. "We've also got three
mUilon gallons of oil locked in

on the Mississippi River."
Heavy Industrial oil oozed
into the Mississippi near
Cape Girardeau, Mo.,
Monday from a barge
ruptured by a craggy ice that
split its stf&lt;el side like a can
opener. Traffic slowed to a
(Conlin•l•1 on page 10)

TUE~DAY,

of oil.

Ohio, whic h starts at
"We've got a million gallon Pittsburgh and empties inro
barge shipment of oil locked the Mississippi at cairo, Ill.,
in by the ice on the Ohio and In 14 yea rs. Similar
another million and a half conditions existed in 1963 but
moving very slowly," said a the river remained open then.
CG&amp;E official. "And, we 've The last time the river was
also got 3 million gallons closed ro traffic was in 1958,
locked in on the Mississippi lor one day.
River."
At least three rows were
This is the worst icing of the
(Continued on page 10)

Postponements •••
1

Meigs High School c.anceUed its game tonight at Wellston
High School. It has been tentatively set for Jan. 25.
•

. The awards dinner to be held Thursday, j an. 20, at the

M~1g5 Inn, to honor Robert Wingett, Charles Legar and Pete

Shields has been postponed until Wednesday, Jan. 26.
_L,_

Group Two of Middleport Presbyterian Church meeting at
the home of Mrs. Dwight Wallace, Middleport , ro be held this
evemng has been cancelled.
A hymn sing planned Jan, Teaford, Pomeroy realtor, IS
29 by the Meigs Unit of the instructor.
Arnetlean Cancer Society has
The
Mei gs
County
been cancelled. other plaps
Historical
Society
meeting
will be announced later.
scheduled for Thursday has
t n introductory real estate been cancelled until further
·
course offered by Rio Grande notice.
College and held at the Meigs
The Third Friday Club
Junior High School in Midscheduled
for Friday, Jan. 21,
dleport which was to have
met this evening has been has been cancelled due to
cancelled this week. Virgil weather conditions.

JANUARY 18, 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

C&amp;SOE has
the power now
John Weeks, manager of
the River Division for· the
Columbus and Southern
(lhlo Electric Company,
ihls morning released the
following dispatch lrom the
firm's Columbus 'Office.
"A comblaatlon of
moderating temperatures
and assessment of the
preseat system ca...~llltles
has eosed !he temporary
el~clrtc shortage In this
area.
. ' ~We are now In a poslttoD
to supply all eleclrk
energy services. However,
the situation still dictates
that prudent conservation
efforts cobtlnue."
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::

Holdup suspects
are in custody
Four men were ap- were Wendell Therogood
prehended on aggravated Derricks, 36, and John David
robbery charges Sunday in Mankin, 30, both of Belpre.
Belpre and Parkersburg, W. Awaiting extradition
Va. In connection With the proceedings at the Woo d
early Saturday mornmg · Count~ jau in Parkersburg is
anned roboery of the Thoma·s• ·· Randy - Dawson,
23,
Zano residence.' Rt. I, Parkersbprg.
Rutl~n~, the Meigs County
Meigs County Sheriff
Sherirf s Dept. reported James J. Proffitt thanked the
today.
.
Belpre
Police
Dept. ;
Bemg held 10 the Washington County Sheriff's
Washington County jail is Dept., the Parkersburg
Robert Lewis Coffey,, 23, Police Dept. and the Wood
Belpre, and book.ed in the County, W. Va. Sheriff's Dept
Meigs County Jail Monday for their cooperation during

.

the 60 hour investigation.
Through infonnation obtained from unidentified
witnesses , Sh,eriff' s Deputy
' Jim Grisp traced the suspects
to the Belpre-Parkersburg
area. Upon positive I.Oentification by the robbery
victims, warrants for the
arrest of the four men were
signed and taken to the
Belpre and Parkersburg
pclice departments.
Derricks was arrested irt
Belpre and Dawson, who
refused extradition and

~:;~:rs~~r"g~P~~~erif~~rt~

·P. rohi
. ems, problems, problems ~~:.~:·~n~~H~~~ ~~~~~ .
With temperature readings
in various parts of the county
ranging from five to 14 t.:Iow
zero Tuesday mornmg, '
schools of the three districts
in Meigs County remained
closed.
·Tw? of the district had
remamed closed Monday m
observance of Martin Luther
King Day but Southern Local
had been scheduled for
classes Monday. However, a
pcwer outage Monday led to
the closing of the Southern
District schools on Monday.
All districts of the county are
now well over the five

calamity days permitted by
the State Department of
Education without make up
time required.
In the Meigs Local District
problems of the cold and ic~
were multiplied by additional
damages to the high school
building at Rock Springs.
At the last meeting of the
district's board of education
it was reported that 14
radiators of the heating
system had burst, causing
various-degrees of damages. .
Since then several other
radiators have burst ·in·
eluding one over ·a w~lk-in

food freezer unit In the schools in the district.
cafeteria. Water. flooded the
At other schools of the
freezer unit ruining a district custodians are
quantity of foods stored there maintaining a "safe" !emMonday. A radiator in a perature so that, hopefully,
shower room burst flooding no damages will Incur in
the voca tional agriculture those structures.
room on the floor below.
It is likely with the cold
Workers of the A. J . Stock- weatjler and the energy crisis
meister firm, Jackson, have . that Schools may not be held
been at the high school to at all this week. However, the
correct the situation. decision on this is being made
Meantime, the furnace at the on a day by day basis by the
high school has had to be run respective superintendents.
at a high level, thereby using Snow and cold weather are
aU of the natural gas which predicted with· a promised
might have been saved from ris.e in the temperature to 30
the many recent closings or degrees on Friday.

Meigs County Prosecuting
Atty. Rick Crow reported he
will start extradition
proceedings for Dawson
immediately.
In other matters, Sheriff
Proffit reported his depart·
ment has received word from
the Anderson County, Tenn.
Sheri(f's office that Judith
Bacon is being held there.
Mrs. Bacon was indicted last
week by the Meigs County
Grand Jury on two felony
counts for bad checks. Crow
said.he will start proceedings
immediately if she refuses to
waive extradition.

Pomeroy'S 1977 budg~t- held to inflation rate
Pomeroy Village Council Monday night approved Its percent. Utlllties are up due ro the increase in electric rates.
81Ulual appropriation ordinance lor 1977 in the amount of Personal services are 43 percent of the budget without
$993,69ti.:JJ, of which $481i,iMlla for water improvement bonds. extraordinary items, and cost of materials is 25 percent of the
Councilman Harold Brown pointed out that the $498,000 is for bUdget without extraordinary items.
Council discussed at length bids submitted and opened
. water improvement bonds that were invested and notes will be
Monday for the purchllse of a new tractor, loader and backhoe.
paid olf in April, a paper transaction,
Submitting bids were Brown Tractor Sales in the amount Of
Brown a11o emphasized \hal 84 percent of the budget Is lor
debt retirement. Theactua( .,torking budget of $498,352.45 is up $13,935.72. Brown Tractor Sales. also submitted a bid ro
$1,000 over last year due In inlla lion of approximately two purchase the old tracror, loader .and backhoe for $3.001.

·Praise given
worken with
electric finn

Home, most .belongings destroyed

CHESTER- The two story
frame home and most of the
.belongings of 94-year·old
DIJ:Ie Smith has nothing but Mrs. Bert Smllh, Silver Ridge
praise for the employes of the Road, were destroyed by fire
Columbua and Southern Ohio
Electric Company. She
EXTENDED OU'l'LOOK
repcrted that In the Portland •
'l'buriday through
StlversvlUe area the pcwer
Saturday,
partly cloudy
was off 19 houn. It went off .
Thursday
wllb
hlg~s In the
Sunday atlO: 30 p.m. and was
Zh.
A
chaace
of snow
resumed Monday at 5:30p.m.
Friday
and
Saturday
and
Mrs. Smith said emturnlq
1barply
colder
wllb
ployes of the Electric Co.
blgba lD the teeos. Lews
worked the long hours In the
wlll
be - r 10 above zero
sub-zero temperature to
Tllanday,
aear 20 Friday
restore pcwer. She reported
menlq
aad
dropplag to
that the extreme cold bro~e
zero
to
10
above by
two pcwer pcl.es at Bald
Saturday.
Knobs. In her home, the
temperature was ~ degrees.

.

about 1:25 p.IJI, Monday. ·
On the scene were the lire
departments of Chester and
Orange Twp. which were
hampered by their pumps
freezing In the zero weather.
Some personal belongings
apd a small amount o( furniture were Sj!Ved. Cause of
the blaze was an overheated .
stove In the kitchen. There Is
some Insurance coverage .

The monetary losses had not
been set Tuesday.

E-R CALLED
RACINE - The Racine ER
squad wa~ called Sunday at
11 a.m. for Charles Wagner,
Racine, a medical patient
who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center. Monday at
9:30 ·a.nt. the squad · transported Holly McCoy, RD,
tladne
who was injured 1n 1
CALL AI'!SWER!!:D
fall
Veterana Memorial
The Pomeroy Emergency
~ita!.
At 11:30 a.m. Albert
Squa~ answered a caD at4:»
~toush
Slivers ville an
p.m. Monday to the Edgar
employee
of the Col~bus
Vap lnwagen home 11 1174 ,
and
Southern
Ohio Electric
Uncoln Heights wiiert an
co.
was
taken
to VMH
infant was Ill. The child wu
fullowlng
a
fall
from · an
taken to Holzer Medical
electric
pole.
Center.

w

Southeastern Equipment Company submitted bid of
$19,867, less trade in of tracror, loader, backhoe and one street
sweeper in the amount of f7,117, making the total bid $12,750.
Council also received a bid from Robert L. Aley,
Charlesron for the old tractor lor $2,109.87. . .
Brown moved ro have the old tractor repaired, seconded
by Larry Powell. On roll call, all c~ilmen. voted no exC!!JII
Brown.
Jim Allen of Southeastern Equipment lnfonned council
that his company offers a one year warranty and would furnish
a tractor until the new one arrives at no cost to the village with ·
delivery date to be between seven and 14days.
RulseD Brown, Brown Tracror Sales, who was not at the
meeting, said by telephone he also gives a one year warranty,
but l)ll)d give no delivery date until he called the Ford Moror
Co. Brown does not bav.e a piece of equipment for the village In
use until the new equipment Ia received.
•
After COtuicil atudled the blliB they determined that
actually they were paying approximately $1;300 ro have
Southeastern Equipment take the sweeper. Council bas been
to)'!n8 with Idea ro get rid of the sweeper for sometime since in
U!e past year they have spent several thousand dollars In
· repair·
.
Councilman PhU Glohokar suggested they table the matter
tuiUI both Brown and Allen can cbeck the old tractor to see If
repairs ro It can be made. A moUon was made to mee~ Friday
and malte a deds!on on the blda. Dol!nle Ward, who operatea
the lractor said its eligiiie has no COQipresalon.
MEET TRUSTEES
,
Councilman !larry Davlasuaested that council meet with
the cemetery ~ In reprd ro eellq price .of lola and
what lots are available for sale. Davis alao reported that the
villase has ~~ a conliderable amo.unt of money for lee.
control this wmler ..
(ConUnued.on page 10)

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