<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="14911" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/14911?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-18T08:56:25+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="47688">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/ebebd158a7989eafb5abbc438e77145c.pdf</src>
      <authentication>4c31b8c2905a756223074242777e7e5a</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="47933">
                  <text>•
10 - The D.aUy Sentinel Middlepori-P01m;roy, 0 .. Tuesday, Jan. 18, 1~77

-.- -· \

Gas ·suppliers to hold to cutbacks
Ulllted Proto llllerlll Uoolll

·three of Ohio's major gas
suppliers said today they
would oontinue weather
related ourtailments on
industry which has foroed the
layoffs of thousands of Ohio
workers. Hundreds of schools
and non-essential buoinesses
were also closed today ,
Colwnbla Gas of Ohio, East
Ohio Gas of Cleveland . and
West Ohio Gas of Uma, the
•

Coal, fuel

three uWities that instituted
near
100
per cent
curtaUments Sunday night,
said today curtailments
would continue until the
weather breaks.
"We are at the mercy of the
weather,"
said
Bill
Chaddook, a Columbia
spokesman. "We are going to
keep our wea !her related
emergency curtaUments on
industry in effect and
continue to ask residential
and c:oiiunerclal cuotomers to
keep gas use to a mlnlmum."
Chaddock said it had not
yet been delermined whether
the utility would ask .aU
schools in the 66 ooilllty area

(Continued frorrl page I )
crawl sout6·of Cairo, m., the junction of the Mississippi
and Ohio - and were at a
near standstUI north of Cairo.
The
Coast
guard
recommended that all tows
north of Cairo move ~o safe
refuge and venture out only in
emergencies. No southbound
Four persons were injured,
tows were departing !rom the none serlouoly, in five traffic
upper Mississippi.
aocidents investigated
The Ohio was reduoed to Monday by the Galtia-Meigs
981 miles of giant i~ubes by Post State Highway Patrol.
subzero c:old.
The first injury accident
"The river is still open to occurred at 10:10 a.m. on
navigation but- only a few White Oak Rd. east of SR 554
tows are moving and they are where cars driven by Gary D.
going very slowly,"" John Groves, 23, GaUipolis, and
Lane of the U.S . .vmy Corps William S. Thornton , 18,
of Engineers at Cincinnati Gallipolis, collided headon.
sal d.
Kathy Skaggs, 26, Rt. 1,
"It 's too diffloult to predict Gallipolis, a passenger in the
if officials Will close the river Thornton- car had minor
to traffic," Lane sald, "but injuries. There was moderate
maybe the river will just 'damage to Groves' car and
close itself. It all depends on heavy dama ge to Thornton's.
the weather."
No charge was filed ,
At least three tows were
Clarice ~Randolph, 29,
known to be stuck in ic:e on Reedsville, a passenger hi a
the Ohio.
cat dnven by Donald W.
There were troubles also on Randolph, 26, ReedSville, was
the
Allegheny
and injured at 10:45 a.m. Monday
Monongahela rivers, which on CR 681, six miles west of
form the Ohio.
The· Allegheny River was SR 7 in Meigs County.
The Randolph vehicle was
ic:ecovereil from Fairmont,
struck
by a car left of center
W.Va., to Charleroi, Pa.,
driven
by Hazel Wiener, 33,
halting crucial barge traffio.
Tuppers
Plains. There was
The Monongahela was
moderate
damage. Mrs.
freezing more slowly because
Wiener
was
cited
for driving
of its luster ourrent and the
left
of
center.
amount of industries on its
An unusual accident ocbanks but heavy ic:e still
curred
at I : 15 p.m. Monday
slol\'ed barge traffio to a
on
SR
180
at Evergreen where
crawl.
a Thaler Ford wrecker driven
by · .:\Hen · L. Wheeler, 21,
Gallipolis, got hung up in the

lt serves to remain closed
Wednesday.
"Even
with
our
curtailments and cutbacks
we have delivered near
record volumes of gas
Sunday and Monday," said
Chaddock. "Our deliveries
both days were in exc:ess of
two bU!Ion cubic feet."
Dave Talbot, a spokesman
for East Ohio Gas, sald that
utility would continue Its
curtailment oo induotry and
had also asked that "schools
continue to be closed down
until further notice."
"OUr reserves are drawn
very low," said Talbot. "In
addition we are not gettin~

gas through the pipelines."
"I don't want people ID
think this is just a case of a
bad winter," he sald. "We
have a gas supply problem."
St at e
S c h o-o 11
Superintendent Marlin Essex
Monday CO!nplied with a
request by· the utilties and
urged all schools to close
Tuesday.
Record breaking lows continued in Ohio early Tue.'!d&amp;Y
with· Cincinnati again the
coldest spot in the stale with a
rec:ord 25 below zero reading.
The Cincinnati school system
was one of those that
remained open.
.
Electric utilities were also

'F our injured _in cars .

MEIGS THEATNE
CLOSED FOR
VACATION

WATCH
. . .FOR
OPENING DATE

:snow.
Wheeler placed a cable
across the highway ln an
effort to get enough leverage
to pull his wrecker out when a
vehide driven by Lola A.
McKinney, 23, Bidwe(l,'came
along and struck the cable.
She suffered minor ·injuries.
There
was
moderate
damage. There was- no
charge.
John L. Sheets, 16.

Ga Uipolis, had minor injuries
in a single car accident at
3:20 p.m. Monday on
Shoestring Ridge Rd. south of
SR 7. Sheets' car stsll~, then
ran off the right side of the
highway before overturning
onto its top. There was heavy
damage to the car.
Both drivers were charged
in a c ollision at 4:55 p.m. on
Floyd Clark Rd. west of SR
180. Troopers said an auto
driven by RiChard K. Theiss,
38, Bi&lt;lwell, struck the rear
end of a vehicle operated by
Victor L, George, 40, Vinton.
Theiss was rhor~erl with

failure to stop within the
assured clear distsnc:e and
George for parking on the
highway.
In a weekend accident
reported today, a DWI charge
was placed agaiilst Otha G.
Wolfe.
48 , Gallipolis,
following an accident on
Georges Creek Rd: four
tenths of a mUe east of Mill
Creek Rd.
Officers sald Wolfe,
traveling west, lost control ot
his car whioh ran off the right
side of the highway, striking
a mailbox.

affected by the cold weather
and Columbuo and Southern
Ohio Electric Co,, headquar.
tered in Columbus and Cleveland Electric Illuminating,
both instituted 5 per c:ent
voltage reductions.
'
Dayton Power and Ught
Co. declared an electric
power emergency Monday
and urged the closing of all
school and businesses in the
arealtser\res. It also reduced
gas aUocations by 50 per cent
to aU induotrlal users.
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric
Co., Ohio Edison and Toledo
Edison also called for
voluntary conserva\lon by
their users but did not
announce 811)' curtailments. .
M a n y l n d us t r I e s'
throughout the state closed
Monday and today or
curtailed
production
drastically.
General Motors .and Ford
had 33,500· idle workers in
Ohio.
The largest layoffs were in
Dayton where General
Motors laid off 28,000
employes when it was foroed
to close its Delco Products,
Delco - Moraine, Inland
Division and inost Frigidaire
plants.
Another 500 workers at the
Chevrolet transmission plant

in Toledo were working
shorlelled six-hour ahifls.
' Ford said abOut 7,000 ·
workers at the Cleveland
Casting Plllnt and at the auto .
aasembly plant in Lorain,
Ohio, were also off the job.
Anchor Hocking closed four
plants in Fairfield County,
Idling 3,000 workers.
In Washington, Sen.John
Glenn, D.Qhio, spoke out
during the confirmation of
Secretary of the InteriorDesignate Cecil Andrus to
plead for development of
natural gas reserves under
public domain.
''Stales like Ohio are on the
brink oi energy tragedy in
pari because the U.S.
government has been
dragging its heels for years
oo development of natural
gas and oU source&amp; within its
control in the west and off
American coasts," sald
Glenn. .
.
Talbot sald Glenn's office
contacted East Ohio Gas and
asked If the utility was
attempting to purchase gas
elsewhere.
"Yea we are and we can't
find any either," Talbot said
he told the Glenn aide.
"And you probably won't,"
the Glenn aide replied.

Pomeroy's budget

(Continued fl'!llll page I)
The mayor's report for the month of December, 1976 showed
receipts of $2,976.
Attending were Mayor Clarenc:e AndreWs, Ralph Werry,
Davis, PoweU, Brown and Globokar, councilmen, Jane
Walton, derk , Ward, Pollee Chief Jed Webster and Captain
veteraosMemorial
Henry Werry. The meeting was opened by prayer by Mayor
Andrews.
(Continued from page 1)
Hospital
Breakdown of the proposed expenditufe$ of the vlllsge
·!mown to be stuck in ic:e.
ADMITTED
l:lolly
"Ori to IS' ""Ounded near McCoy, Racine; Thomas during i~7 shows : General Fund, mayor, $2,400; clerk, $3,000 ;
e w Ky
"" ., and two Cook, llomeroy; Perry treasurer, $360; solicitor, $2,500; elections, $1,500; council,
Carrsville,
_
others are Ice-bound 92 and 94 Carpenter , Long Bottom; $1,620; total, $11,380.
General
Administration,
personal
services,
$5;500 ;
notream
'from
Call'
'
,
Albert
Roush,
Pomeroy;
miles u,...
0'
said Lane. " The biggest Brenda
Templeton , supplies and materials, $1,300; capital outlay, $2,000, other,
problem comes when the Pomeroy; Elizabeth Lewis, $15,000; total, $23,800.
Seourily of Per~ms and PrOpel'ty, Polic:e Department,
tows try to get from the main Pomeroy.
navigation channel to piers
DISCHARGED - Caroline personal services, $82,000 ; supplies and materials, $26,800;
on the shoreline. The lee is Karr, Arley Markin, Barbara capital outlay, $7,()61.20; other, $1,000, total, $99,861.20.
Street Depariment, personal servlc:e,s $21,000; supplies
thicker near the shore where .. Roush, Henry Hartman ,
and materials, $12,000; capital outlay, $16,500; other, $13,500 ; ·
Marte MU!iron.
there is less current."
total, $63,000.
"The worst icing seems to
State Highway, personal services, $100; capital outlay,
be in the lower par\ of the
liolzerMedlcal.Ceater
$2,275;
other; $3,000; total, $5,375.
.
river; where drifting floes are
(DirJcharges,
Jaa.
17)
Cemell!ry
Operation
and
Maintenance,
personal
servic:es,
stacking up. We've also got
Samantha
Bandy,
Delbert
$10,000;
supplies
and
malerials,
$1,200;
total,
$11,200.
some shallow sand bars down
Uillities, electricity, $20,000; total, $20,000.
'\
there causing problems W. Duhl, Judy Guy, Linda L.
Hudson,
Thomas
McClung,
Water
System
Opera
tiona,
water,
pumping,
other,
$12,000;
.
because there's about a slxEmmett
C.
Montgomery,
Lee
water
dist,ributioo.,
personal
services,
$25,000;
·supplies
and
~ight foot buildup of ic:e on
the bottom of mo!ll barges M. Philllps, Henry L. Pierce, materials,. $18,000; capital outlay, $2,000; other,- $5,000; total
Travis M. Saunders, Her· $62,000.
pushing thrQUgh."
.
s
chel Sheets, !tfary Stl'ickAdministration, deht servic:e, $&lt;14,000; other, $800, total,
. A quick warming· trend
land,
Carolyn
M.
Vallance,
$811,1110.
Water Improvement Bonds, $498,000, total $4911,000.'
would not be a good solution
Mildred
Westfall.
·
~wer
Mainlenance, personal services, $12,000; supplies
to the problem, said Cliff
(Births,
Jon.
IS)
and
materials,
$18,000; -total, $30,00Q .. Admlnistration Sew&amp;ge,
Pearson, port safety officer
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Russ
Priddy,
debt
service,
$37,!Xi0;
other, $400; total, $87,450.
for the U.S. Coast Guard in
son,
Point
Pleasant,
W.
Va.;
·
General
Bond
Retirement
Fund, payment of principal,
Clncimiati.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Jerry
J.ohnson,
$7,000;
payment
of
interest,
$3,!Xi0;
total, $10,!Xi0. Federal
"Quick breakup of the noes
son,
Gallipolis;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Revenue
SharinR.
caoltal
outlav.
113.:1Ml.
could send lee crashing into
marinas and with a quick Joe Russell, son, Mason, w. Fire Dept. Fund, personal services, $3,500;, supplies
melt there's the distinct Va.: Mr. and Mrs. Carl and marerials, f2,000; other, ~.080; total, $9,580. 'j'olal all
possibility of a flood, " Buckley, daughter, Racine; appropriations, $495,696.71), water improvement bonds, $498,
Pearson said. "A slow Mr. and Mrs. MlnorB. Leath, total, $m,696.20.
warming trend and a slow son, Wellston; Mr. and Mrs.
melt would be best. Enough Charles E. Patterson,
warmth to get rid of the ice daughter, Rutland.
(Birth, Jan.16)
slowly, but not enough .to
Mr. and Mrs. Mark A.
cause a flood."
Some persons have Johnson, son, Gallipolis.
(Birth, Jan. 17)
attempted to walk across the
Mr. and Mrs. James S.
river, but Pearson warned
Vinson, daughter, Vinlon .
against it. .
"It's very dangerous
because tows have been going
United Preoslnlerllltloaal nati to a minus three degrees
through the middle of the
PLEASANT
VALLEY
Arctic .air continued to at Toledo.
river and what appears to be
DISCHARGES
Mrs.
spread
over Ohio early today
frozen solid may be juol
Sidney
Huddleston,
Jr.,
and
record
low temperatures
chunks and floes with a thin
Gallipolis
Ferry;
Mrs.
Lesley
for
Jan.
18
were shattered
crust over it," he said.
Williams, Gallipolis Ferry ; during the pre-dawn hours
Thomas Oldaker, Jr., Mason ; with Cincinnati again the
Mark Stevens, Apple Grove; coldest s[iot in the slate with a
LO!&gt;GE TO MEET
Mose Cuthbertson, Jr,, West record-breaking 25 below
There wlll be a si&gt;eclal Columbia; Mary Jones, zero.
IN MEMORY
meetlrrg of Shade River Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs. Lester
The record-setting cold IN LOVING memory ol our
dear dad, James S. Hood,
Lodge ~53 Thursday, Jan. ro Leonard, Point Pleasant; spell overloaded gas and
who passed away 21 years
at 7:30 p.m. Work in Mrs. Clarence Taylor, Sr., electric linea, forcing the
ago today, J~.n . 11, 1950.
fellowcraft degree. All N'orthup, 0 .; and Samuel closing of hundreds of In our heerts he will always
master masons are invited. Bennett, Gallipolis.
stay,
businesses, industries and
Loved and r·emernb-ered
schools.
every day.
Cleveland's six below zero But you're In a home that Is
broke the old minus five
brlghl ond fair
·
record which was set in Je!O. And we pray, Dod, lo meet
you tl'lere .
The Akroo-Canton airport's
Sadly mlsstd by daughters
National Weather Service
and grandchildren.
oftll..e says It's six below
reading today broke a 1859
mark. D.aytori 'went to 14
below zero early today,
breaking the old 11 below
record set in 1930.
Cincinnati's 2$ degrees below
zero temperature tOday
broke the old 24 below
lemP!Irature, aet Monday. An
eight-degrees ·- below-zero
mark In Columbus equalled
the low aet on thla day in 1830.
At 7 a.m. alllemperatures
In Ohio were still below uro;
ranging fnm the ~ee·
CNr Salad Bar
belowolei'O reading at Oncln·

Obi0 R'IVer

Hospital News

Arctic temps
blanket Ohio

AUTOMOBILE LOANS
Keep the cost of a new car down by ..
using a bank finance plan. You pay
only reasonable bank loan ·rates and
Improve your credit standing in the
community.

WALK.tJP TELLER WINDOW AND
AUlO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
FRI. EVENINGS 5 to 7 P.M.

..

"THE

FRIENDLY BANK"

lllbens /4ational
.

tNHATt

MIDOL!I'OIIT
~- 1)1110

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal DepOsit Insurance CoriiOIItior
DEPOSITS INSURED TO •40,000

THE INN PLACE
Wednesday Nqptt Special

Ceremonies ·begin or 39th President
WASHINGTON (UPI ) ~ Brass . banda, jazz bands,
.symphony orchestras, folk dancing, hootin' and hoUerin' and
four tons of fireworks are launching the Inauguration of
Jlnuny Carter as the 39th president of the Unite~ Slntes.
. Bitler cold weather kept down the crowds at the opening
events of the "People's Inaugural" !l'uesday, but many of the
Indoor eVII!Its - especially a free aymphony conoert at the
Kennedy Center - drew packed houses.
Carter and dozens of his Georgia kinfolk join the celebration
today and will attend the first of several exclusive events of the
week - a gala tonight at the Kennedy Center, featUring Chev;•
Chase satirizing Carter to his face, and entertainers ranging
from Beverly Sills Ill Johnny Cash.

By Uolted Press Intel'OIItional
WASIDNGTON- THE FEDERAL POWER Commission
sald Tuesday If has approved Itcomplicated emergency deal to
provide up to 250 mUUon cubic feet of gas daily to the ¥idwest
and eastern states. T)le order involves a purchase from Trans);:,~da Plpeijne Ltd. at a pric:e of $t.94 per thousand cubic
The gas would be delivered to Great Lakes Gas Transmission and would find its way through exchanges and
displacement arrangements to the cuotomers o( Columbia Gas
Transmlasion Corp. The firm serves areas in West Virginia,
Kentucky, Maryland, New Jersey, Virginia, New York,
Pennsylvania and Ohio. The FPC sald the 60-&lt;lay emergency
penult will "materially asslat in helping alleviate curtaUment
of high priority customers" of Columbia Gas.
·

•

ICE TESTED - This lone skater gave the new ice
skating rink at,lhe Meigs Jayc:ee mlni1'8rk in Pomeroy a
try Monday evening. The rink Is the first atlempt by any
group to provldun~i:e ska ling facility for residents. The
area buill by the Jaycees has some.blimpa in the ice at this
point. However, Jaycees said Monday night they are
going to add additional water, hopefally to create a better
surface.

.

..

Stepping o~t.,into "
the frigid !ruth
'

.

(Editor's Nole: Monday the· 11\iria and you've never
tbe coldest day II! tiM; heal'd your cit' make llounds
blolory of Cincinnati -minas like this before.
24 de,grees.)
Twnlng the-ltley brings a
By RlCK VANSANT
, low gftimble from under the CINCINNATI (UPI) - It hood. You keep grinding
was, after all, a difference of away · and just when you
' • the c.!
• • IS
' wor~.,.
96 degrees.
IIgure
'"' tery
So, . .you stepped • gingerly on its ninth llfe, the engine
from your 72 degree living, S~if.l !II ~lllr.iS· ' . .
room into Cincinnati's aU- ,Jjlll\9¥'\da like a tank," you
time reco.td low of 24 degrees groan, A tank in need of a
below zero Monday.
tuneup, ' '
'
But lniUally it didn't seem
Sinc:e the heater and fan
all that cold.
only c:ombine to produoe one
, "It's not as bad as they of ,the world's most efficient
say/' you boast at first.. . , air cpnd!\lo~t;~, •.Y.?U have to
"At first" laata .only a few spel)d 10 mlilutes chipping
away at the· ICe. "cube lray
seconds.
Then the frigid ll'!.ltll hits your windshield has becl:me .
FlnaUy, you spin your tires
you - right in the nose. The
brisk cold air swlrla Into your out of a11 jce vaUey and creep
.nostrils, snLpplng yo~ to dD)m the highway. An Igloo
attention.
oo w)}eels.
· And before you can
Y~» )ook oyer at the Ohio
pengutnstrut to your lee- River, where barges uoually
covered oar, the wind are bustling along with the
lllllllehow already has found swifl, qurrent. There sre no
Ita way from the North Pole bargea today. There Ia no
to underneath your coat.
swift current. There Is,
Why do. yout fingers feel however , a ~ry long lcecube
like they 're sllcklr!ll, qp\ . ~ ·ll'nw.e \1\e F\~_,OJICO was.
your gloves? Why didlj't you
A!l!lf.l !'rlm!ng· ~osl of the
wear three pair of socks day laUW1jf wiili. everyone
instead of two?
about how ~ld lt is - but
And you know it's going to do\l)g evl'fYII)lng you can to
be bad when your muotache keep from going out in It - ·
you.flnaUy trudge out to your
freezes.
~~Uh oh," you mutter as you
car.,IUIII.Ililad,llapk to where
get to Y0\11' car and notlei! .a ~t:~ \IIi d,~g~s warmer.
lot of neighbors have the
hoods up on their sleigha.
,t.iS~ered
You hear a lot of exp~lfvea , . "
,.,
,
not being deleted.
"I had anti-freeie put in . ., ... "' , , ..
down to 15 below," complains
'T'I..:!~
one, ldckinga frosty bUII)Il!lr. ". ,' ~~· ~~·' ·
"It's not supposed to get
cold in Cincinnati." .
.. ;.,T ,~'" ' " 11,~ :qdIe port
The only thing hot is the "'mergency ..,uad answered
market flir jumper cables. a call to 749 S. Third Ave. at
You gel into·your ear. and ,·1:~J11m:"¥11!!daY for Arnold
it's like climblng into a re- ·" Hayes who was having dlf.
frlgerator. You try to start flculty breathing. He was
taken to Holzer Medical

'

.....
~

lriftft

.....

tin"
to

Av

!fib .,-... , .,. .. . .

DAMAGES SET t,
RACINE - The Racine
Fire Department was caUed
Monday at 1:71l p:m. to the
James L. Spencer residence ,
CR 28 where an overheated
beater in a pump houoe a!&gt;'
pa rently caused a: fire
resulting ln
damages
estimated at U ,000. Two
trucks and II men answered
the call.

e.

;f1r.tr23 :.~.:

the fire
department · went to 556
Laurel St., where smoke was
comlng from the house. The
family was gone but had left
..~ fumac:e turned to high·
when the power outage took '
plac:e and lhe furnace was
caualng the 1111oke problem.
Firemen turned ·down the ~
thermostat and there were no
damages.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE

BRINGS SAVINGS ·OF

Beef and Olton Steak
Mashed Potatoes &amp; G~avy
Vegetable
Hoi Rolls
·
Coffee, Tea or Milk

.,,

$295
,

Plus T•x

THE MEIGS INN
Pumeroy, 0.

.

APPEAL MADE
Mrs. lola Damewood,
Syracuse, has issued an
appeal to aU Meigo Countlans
uklllg them to feed blrds and
wildlife. The animals and
binla are starving in the cold
weather, Mrs . Damewood
points out. She personally is
dlJtrlbuting 50 pounds of fled
weekly. She asks aU reoldents
to join in providing for the
wl!d!He.
·

VOL XXVII
,_,

NO. 194

;

Inaugural schedule

40%

On men's and boys' slacks, jackets, sweaters, shirts.
Women's sweaters, blouses, tops, coordinate sportswear, ·
evening gowns, winter robes, palamas, gowns and on
children's coats, jeans and slacks, skirts and dresses,
. sleepwear- Save 40 per cent and so per cent on toys.

ELBERFELDS I~ .POMEROY
'
'

I

.'

r

Ford, rides with him to the Capitol and takes the constitutional
oath of offic:e.
Then comes a two-hour parade led by the new president, who
has decided to walk the last leg of the journey to the White.
House he campaigned two years for.
The weather man says it will remain weD below fretzing
throughout the rest of the week - but there will be no snow
until at least after the parade. Snow that night could cause
havoc with the seven inaugural parties.
ft was just 15 degrees above zero Tuesday night when the
Carter inaugural was officiaUy kicked off with a foU{'-ton
fireworks display on the Washington Momument grounds. Just
1,000 people braved the freezing winds, but hundreds of

POMEROY·MIODLEPORT, OHIO

automobiles jammed city streets seeking a warmer vant&lt;.ge
point for the display.
Free events had been staged throughout the day in museums
and galleries throughout the city.
~Uer groupe of between 100 and 250 gathered in 1he seven
muoeums ..of the jlmithsonian for conc:erts by jazz combos,
bluegrass bands and classical artists. Acrowd of 1,800 hooted,
hollered and dancep until midnight at cavernous Union Station
to wind up the first day. The folk dance festiva l were free and up to 8,000 could have been accommodated.
Orie of the first events of the lnaugurai- a fancy horse show
Tuesday afternoon featuring Lipizzaner stallions - had to be
canceled becauoe of the cold.

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS ·

c·ommiS. s·I.on Proffitt talk 'budget'

__ ,
The Meigs County Board
CINCINNATI - HEBREW UNION COLLEGE President of Commissioners meeting
Alfred Gottschalk advocates that Americans not visit Franc:e for the first time at night
or buy French products as a protest of the release of Tuesday engaged In a wide
"suspected PLO oorrorlst" Abu Daoud by the French govern- ranging discussion with new
ment.
sheriff James Proffitt,
"There Is no better way to make the French govenunenl mainly on budget issues.
realize how outrageous we regard their c:onduct in the matter
There
were
apof Abu Daoud," said Gottschalk. "Their act in releasing this proximately six persons
suopected PLO terrorist was unconscionable.
meeting with the com"There is no better way for Americans of all faiths to missioners. The "traffic" at
convey to the French how we regard this act which sabotages the night meeting was not
the International effort to curb terrorism than to shun the nearly as great as at morning
c:ountry and its products."
meetings.
Sheriff James J. Proffitt
CLEVELAND - CUYAHOGA COUNTY Teachers for asked the commissioners
·Trainable Retarded have voted unanimously to ai:cept a about the bUdget. He wanted
rec:ommended ·salary increase of 7.84 per cent for the 1976-77 to specifically know if the
r'F urtherance of Justice"
school year and a 6per cent hike for 1M'I-78.
The vote Tuesday setu!ld a contract dispute. which had (FOJ) was inctm:ed in his
been in arbitration since Oct. 25. The agreed-to salary increase budget. ·
Richard Jone s, comhad been recommended by a member of the American
Arbitration Association.ll brings to.$9,000tbe teachers' annual missioner, told Proffitt that
they will take action on the
base salsry. The board will vote on the proposal Jan. '!1.
budget later this week . He
WASIDNGTON- TilE FORD ADMINISTRATION'S lack also informed Proifilt !hat
of a single organization to coordinate farm trade policy paved the commissioners have
the way for dissension which complicated and delayed the included the .amount mannegotiation of a Sovlel·American five-year grain deal in 1975, a dated by law for the FOJ
program, which is half the
group of Agriculture Department officials say.
Because · there was no single controlling group, "the sheriff's salary, or $6,500.
climate was right for dominant personalities with special
Proffitt also asked the
interests to have a disproportionate effect on the decision while commissioners for paint to
others who should have participated were not involved," a paint the interior of the
department Young Executives Committee said in a report. shetiff's headquarter s.
"As a result, the a;-eement was unnec:essarily delayed Proffitt wants to make a
permitting other factors to magnify the problem," the report room, that. sel'Ved as living
added.
room , for his offioe and fix a
bedroom upstairs for his
WASIDNGTON - TilE AHMY HAS DECIDED to make living quarters, . if needed,
Chrysler Corporation's XMilts main battle tank for the 1980s. and one for deputies, if
Army Secretary Martlrt R Hoffmann Tuesday officially needed. Proffitt commenied
canceled a runoff between the XMI and the West German that he did not feel the curLeopard II that had been staged to choose a main American tains are needed as are rods
tank filr the next decade.
'
and hooks as all rods and
The decision means Chrysler, now in advanced hooks were removed.
engineering development of the XM1, will have no further
Jones explained that
c:ompetition in providing more than 3,000 . of lhe armored anything that Involves office
vehicles for ·the Army. The $4.~ billion program is to start space for the sheriff's
production in ~~~ or 1980 in Lima, Ohio.
quarters the commissioners
would bear the expense ;
BELGRADE, YUGOSLAVIA- YUGOSLAVIA dedicated however, when it is for living
/ today to eulogizing Prime Minister Dzemal Bijedic, kiUed with quarters Jones noted, " l am
seven others when their government plane smashed into a of the opinion that this is not
mountain near Sarajevo during a snowstorm. The highest our responsibility."
Communist.party and government officials gathered to psy
Wells agreed with Jones
homage to Bijedic in a solemn c:eremony led by National and James Roush staled that
Assembly President Kiro Gllgorov. Astate funeral will be held he could see the need for
Friday, a day of national mourning.
deputy
quarters
for
The tone for the eulogies was set by President Josip Broz emergency service when men
Tito, who said in Libya Tuesday the 5&amp;-yr.-old Bijedic's "self: have to work long hours.
sacrifice, resoluteness and enormous energy was an example
IVhen asked about
to other officials." His death , he sald, "leaves a pslnful catering food to the prisoners
vacancy in our ranks ." The twin-engine Lear jet was Proffitt told the comapproaching Sarajevo Airport in c:entral Yug06lavia Tuesday . missl.oners that it will c:ost 16
· when it lost contact with the control tower and crashed into a day per prisoner and the
5,'12o.tool Usin Mountain near .Kresevo, 19 miles west of matter is being studied.
Sarajevo.
Proffitt also asked about
fire extinguishers in the
NEW DEIJU, INDIA - Parliament was dissolved today in sheriff'S building that have
preparation for long-awaited general electiO!IS now scheduled not been checked for several
by Prime Minister Indira Gandhi for March. President years; and some go as far
Fakhruddln All Abed dissolved the 525-member lower house back as 1959.
one uy after Mrs. Gandhi's call for nationwide elections.
Proffitt was Informed that
In her announcement Tuesday, the prime minister also the State Fire Marshall at
JI'Omised to relax emergency restrictions to perlnlt legitimate Marietta was going to be
activities by polltioal partlea "to put forth their polnts of view c:ontacted in regard to ~ fire
before the people."
escape on the buUdlng which
will be instslled by Eddie
SACRAMENTO, CALIF. - A PRINT SHOP owner, who Blake of the R. E. Tracy Fire
advertises in the telephone book yeUow pages "We print Equipment Co. Jones
everything except money,'' has been arrested on charges of suggested that when the fire
counterfeiting.
,
marshall arrives he be asked
-Secret Servlc:e agents reported that Rudolph Martinez, 43, to check out the' fire exowner of Martinez Printing, was arrested on charges of tinguishers and for advice
counterfeidng after agents confiscated plates used to print about fire protecilon for the
phooy $20 bills ancl Ca.llf~ vehicle ownership forms found in jall.
(Contlnued on page 20)
Wesley Buehl, county
engineer, said a road
program could be worked
out.
Gene Lyons of the Meigs
County Health Department,
Carter as president and speaking of Senate B!U :llO
WASHINGTON (UPI) Here ts the scjledule of major Walter M'ondale as vice under Revenue Sharing said
eventa for Thursday, -when ~nt, U.S. Capitol east the Heallh Department can
Jimmy Carter will be plaza. Taking of the oath.and be eligible for a portion of .
Inaugurated (all times EST) : the presidential Inaugural 1978 revenue sharing money.
address.
' Thereupon she presented the
&amp; a.m. to &amp;:45 a.m. 1:15 p.m. to 3:45 p.m. - oommlssloners a written
!nlerdenomlnaUooal Prayer Inaugural Parade down req11est for U5,000 of the 1978
Service at the Uncoln Memo,, • Pennsylvania Avenue from Revenue Sharing money. She
rial. Paftlclpating will be the Capitol to the White stated thai she wished to keep
Rev. Bruce Edwardl of the HOUle.
the present employes and add
Plalnl Baptllt Church; Rev.
9 p.m. to I a.m. - to the sanitation staff.
Martin Luther King, Sr., Iruiugural partlee at Unioo
Jones asked Mrs. Lyons to
lather of the lialn cl¥U rlahts Station, D.C. Armory, and the submit to the comissloners a
leader; and Ruth Carter Wuhlngton
Hilton, list of the duties of the Meigs
Stapleton, the Prealdenl· Mayflower, Shoreham· County Health Department
ellct'a idllllr.
Americana and Sheraton because, according Ill the
11:10 a.m. to 12:10 p.m. Park hotela.
money appropriated, the
Inausuration of Jimmy
greatest percentage of money

..

''

.

The gala costs $25 a ticket for those invited, but will be
broadcast to millions of Americans by CBS, which paid $1
milllon for TV rights.
Carter and members of his Immediate famUy, includin{; his
wife Rosa lynn, daughter Amy' three sons and mother "Miss
Lllllan" arrive late in the day. He will stay at Blair Houoe
across the street from the White House.
Earlier in the day Carter's brother Billy was arriving with a
planeload of 100 Plains, Gq. neighbors and kinfolk. Sill! earlier
Atlanta society arrives in a chartered train. The Carter
relatives have .taken over the top floor of a Washington hotel.
The big event comes Thurday when Carter walks across the
street to the Whioo House, has a cup of coffee with President.

•

'

is In salaries.
Also meeting with the
commissioners was Eddie
Blake of the R. E. Tracy Fire
Equipment Co., ·about
building a fire escape on the
outside of the jail. Blake was
awarded the contract
sometime ago.
Two animal claima were
approved and a third tabled.
Claims approved were by Asa
Hoskms and Rose Jlarris $50
each for the loss of calves.
Tabled was a claim submittect"by Ernest Wingett in
the amount of 1300 for the loss
of a cow.
Rick Crow, prosecuting

attorney, told the commissioners he has a Zerox
(Continued on page 20)

j

l .
'

)·

...

~

·'

.'

"l

"' ···:

'.

ON THE MOVE - The Meigs Unit of the American Cancer Society is on the move in
1977. Tuesday night officers, the board of directors and chairmen met to begin mapping
plans for an aotive yeill'. Officers pictured (at top) from the left are Jan Judge, treasurer ;
Doug Lizon, president, and Jo Ann Newsome, treasurer.
COMMITfEE CHAIRMEN for the Meigs Unit of the American Cancer Society plan a
busy 1977 at a meeting held at the unit's new quarters in the former county children's home
building, Pomeroy, last night. They are, above, front, I tor, Jan Judge, finance chairman;
Patty Fletcher, crusade chairman; Pauletta Harrison, servic:e chairman ; back row, Ito r,
Roger Bailey, public Information, and Mary Boggs, youth against canc:er chairman.

.
DR. E. S. VIU.A]!IEUV A, at right, will be medical advisor and professiona l education

chairman of the Meigs Unit of lbe American Canc:er Soc!ely during 1977. Wtih Dr.
Villaneuva are, left, Mrs. Rheba Hysell, executive director of the local unit, and Mrs. Lydia
Villl\neuva who helpe her husband with his paper work in connection with the local unit.
.
· .,

G-T to expand,
•
•
nnprove servtce
•

ATHENS - Redu~ing the transmitting fac ilities are in
number of people on party the offing throughout tlie
lines is the major target of $68 district. .
million 1977 expansion plan
Enlargement of phone
being announced today by buildings is pla nned in
' - &amp; neral Telephone Co. of Bremenint978andGuysville
Ohio.
.
in 19~ . Bremen's e~pansion
Of that total $1,722,180 is will provide for an equ ipment
snow was c:ontlnulng to fall .
The temperature In many allocated for work in Athens addition in 1979. The Guysparts of the c:ounty read five and Jackson districts. This ville job will pave the way for
above zero .Wednesday figure almost equals the 1976 installation of a new exchange switching system in
morning in contrast to the outlay of $1.8 million.
Robert
M.
Wopat
of
1980.
five to 14 below readings
Tquch Calling will be ofreported on Tuesday mor- Marion, president, said 1,025
projects
are
on
the
fered
at Athens and Logan in
major
ning.
company's worksheets.
May. This optional service
They will furnish cable, will be available to private:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
call-transmitting
and call' line uoers.
EXTENDEDOUTLOOit ·'
switching
equipment
and
Pushbuttons are used inFriday througb Sunday,
other facilities needed for . stead a dial, he said. A one- .
partly cloudy Friday and a
growth and reducing party time hookup cha rge will
chauce of 8DO" Saturday
tines apply. Monthly per-line
and Sunday. Htgbo wm be
Rori R. Reichard of Athens, charge will be $2 fo{
In lbe 288 to lbe upper teens
area customer servioe residence and $2.50 for
aad lows wm range from
manager, said a highlight of business users.
five to IS.
this year's activity wUI be
Athens district's 14 · ex:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: introduction of Touch Calling changes serve more than
(puohbutton) phone servlc:e 29,600 customers.
in Athens and Logan in May,
Meanwhile, at ·Mari ~n:,
NO_DANCING
Major additions of call- Wopat indicated the · romBall room' dancing classes switching equipment are pany's statewide budget is
at the Orchid Room scheduled this year in Ames- almost $6 million higher than
scheduled for this evening ville, Bremen, Jackson and ' ta~ year's. Between 1977 ani;!
have been postponed untO !.!cArlhur. Trunks for more . 1981 some $374 million "is
Monday, Jan. 24.
caUlng paths are earmarked· eaimarked for capital .ad.,
for Oak HiU, Racine and ditions. Athens' portion wilJ
E-R CALLED .
Rutland. Pomeroy is getting amount to almost $7 million.
The Racine ER squad was 1,2110 new lines to replace
"Prospects of continued
called at 8:30 a.m. today for some older equipment.
improvement
of
the
Connie Tucker, RD, Racine, · Additional swltohlng economy," said Woj,at, "give
who was taken to Veterans equipment additions are us lhe confidence to conimi't
Memorlallio$pital.
scheduled for most ex- such a large sum ior e:Jt.
changes between 1978-1980 . . panslon.''
Last year, based on ~Thelargestprojects·willbein
WORKSHOP DELAYED
Athens, Pomeroy and proved earnings and th·e
The health workshop at 'the Jackson.
economy's upturn, the
senior citizens center
Further, said Reichard , company boosted lis · fiv~
acheduled Friday has been wldescale oonstruction of year program tJ;· $22 million.
postponed until Feb. 1&amp;.
cable networks and call·

•
I
d
·
Sch00Is remaJD c oseSchools of Meigs. Southern Meigs County schools will
and Eastern Local DiStricts remain closed for the rest of
remained closed Wednesday this week.
due to weather conditions.
Meantime, this morning
Overnight another inch and a
half of snow fell covering icy
roads and highways.
State Supt. of Instruction
Martin Essex has suggested
schools remain closed for the
remainder of this week.
White local superintendents
Fi~ed in the court of
ate making a day by day
decision on scboul closings, it Middleport Mayor Fred
Is quite probable that the Hoffman Tuesday night were
Jessie W. Browning, 36, Poriland, $10 and costs, Improper
backing; William S. Barber,
31, Reedsvllle, $25 and costs,
disorderly manner; Edward
BONDS FORFEITED
Three defendants forfeited Johnson,. 26, Mason, $15 and
$50 bonds in the c:ourl of costs, speeding ; George
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence McHaffie, Middleport, $50
Andrews Tuesday night. and costs, destruction of
They are Charles Boyles, property ; $25 and costs,
Middleport, po!lled on a no disturbing . the peace; John
operator's license; Kenneth Rouoh, 21, Middleport, $50
cqsts, ·
re~kless
Gilkey, New Haven, $50, and
disorderly conduct, and opention ; $25 and costs,
Brenda Fry, Pomeroy, $50, dlsturbtng the peace, and $50
and costs, destruction of
disturbing the peac:e.
property;. Cloyd Brookover,
M, Rutland, $25 and costs,
disordetly manner.
CALL ANSWERED
Forfeiting bonda in the
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad answered a call to · c:ourl were Robert Smith, 31,
Butternut Ave. at 1:09 p.m. Middleport, $50, posted on a
Tuesday for Emmett Blaok· disorderly manner charge,
burn who was iU. He was and Earl M. Richman , 81,
taken to Veterans Memorial Point Pleasant, $300, posted
Hospital where he was ad- on a driving while intoxicated
charge.
mitted.

Six fined

by mayor

•

I

•

1

.I

•

�2- The Daily Senllnel, Mlddleport-Pooleroy, 0 , Wednesday, Jan 19, tm

Protests get results

Coffee countries make
squeeze even tighter
By KENNY R. CLARK
Untied Press Inlernalloual
The Brazilian Coffee In·
stltute, unruffled by the international uproar over
soar1ng coffee prices,
tightened the squeeze
Tuesday with another boost
in export taxes, then agreed
to join a producers' summ1t
meeting to "explain" the
move to consumers
Across the Uruted States,
jlOnsurners mobilized to drive
1iome an explanation of their

O'll'll - " summed up by one demand, are on their way up
urudentifled New Yorker who as well
said II prices go any hither, , Brazilmflamed the already
"a person Will need a second fevered e&lt;&gt;ffee market by
job to afford a second cup or u!)plng 1ts export tax from
coffee."
IIIlO to 5103 per 132-pound
The nallonw1de boycott sack Smce the tax- a major
initiated by New York source of government
Consumer Affa1rs Com· revenue- ls added to pr1ces
missioner
Elinor by Braztlian exporters, the
Guggenheuner appeared to move was sure to ralse coffee
be gaining momentum, but C&lt;&gt;sts for U. S consumers
two tea broker~_sounded a beyond the present range of
disturbing echo to the cry of $2.50 to $3 a pound
"switch to tea ." They said tea
Brazilian ofl1clals have
prices, spurred by mcreased

Axis Sally
makes no waves
ARMAO

By- ROSEMARY

COLUMBUS (UP!) While Iva D' AqUinO has been
fighting to clear her
reputation as the traitorous
broadcaster Tokyo Rose,
Mtidred GD!ars has been
living here qwetly, g1ving
German lessons and avoiding
reporters.
Mlss Glllars, now 76, was
Rose's honey-voiced German
C&lt;&gt;Wlterpart, "Axls Sally."
Sixofthel2yearsshespent
In federal prison In Alderson,
W.Va., for treason were w1th
Mrs. D' Aquino They were
friendly.
Uke Mrs D'Aquino, Mlss
GD!ars always sa1d she was
mnocent. But she appears
more mterested now m books
aM flowers than m seeking a
preSidential pardon.
She greets visitors to her
apartment m a student neighborhood near Ohio State UniverSIIy, rushmg them out of
the e&lt;&gt;ld into a book-lmed
room crowded with kruckknacks and old drawings
But at the hint of any
question she smiles and says
"I'm not giVlng any
Interviews. No, no questions
at all."
Ane1ghbordescr~besher as
"a very ruce person" who still
takes occasional courses at
OSU, tutors students who
C&lt;&gt;me to her apartment m
German and enjoys fooling
with a small flower garden
She IS reported friendly
With several OSU students
and still keeps up on
theatrical events
She does not dqve a car or
have a phone. One of her few
relatives, a haUollister m
Conneaut
sees
her

infrequently and wasn't even
sure she was alive. Her name
IS printed on her mailboxbut under the lid
A sensation m her youthfrom 1918 when she dared 1to
become the first co-ed at Ohio
Wesleyan to wear knickers
through her 1948 treason
trial- she has sought privacy
m her later years.
When she left Alderson
where she had directed the
Catholic chmr, she went to
the sisters of the Poor Child
Jesus in Columbus, fiving ina
small apartment m their
convent and teaching mus1c
m their private g1rls schools
until 197~ when she moved
near OSU
The sisters now say they
don't know where she ls or
what she's domg or even if
she quit or just retired.
In 1973, she got one paragraph notices m national
Journals when she fmaDy
finished her degree at
Wesleyan and graduated m
cap and gown at 73
One of the parole oll1cers to
whom she had to report until
last July S8ld "This has been
a running battle for 1ti years
She's never g1ven an
interview that I know of
Even to g1ve her s1de "
Friends explain her s1de
She was, they say, "Midge at
the Mike" who continued to
broadcast from Berlin even
as the Allles bombed the city
and she was s1ck to her
stomach 1n order to get any
word posalble home to the
worried parents of American
soldiers.
She admits The NaziS did
force her to add some
propaganda.

Tax favored on cohabiting

She sa1d she was confused
With a woman broadcastmg
from Rome, playmg records
by "der Bmgel Crosby" and
teasing like "! just wonder u
your glrllSII'I sort of runrung
around With 4-F's "
But after a tr1al, that
fr1ends say was set up, MISS
GUiars was conVIcted of one
count of treason- for '
broadcast in wh1ch she
played an Amer1can mother
whose son was killed man
mvas1on of the continent.
A black-haired beauty in
coDege, MISS Gillars liDitaled
Theda Bara and longed to be
an actress.
She quit school m 1922 to
tour for a year w1th stock
comparues in the U.S and
Canada and eventually ended
up In Europe as an artist's
model and teacher
According oo reports at the
time of her trw!, she fell m
love with a German fore1gn
off1ce official who got her the
highiJIIying broadcast!ng job
that fmally brought her
fame- of a sort
She was returned to the
United States after she
reported to Allied soldiers m
Berlin m 1946, mistakenly
thmkmg she had been
granted amnesty

expressed belief world
demand for coffee Will
remam stable, whatever the
pr1ce, and that a consumer
boycott w1ll do little to brmg
pnces down, but not all coffee
producers were happy w1th
the s1tuat10n.
Dow..Jones News Servtce
quoted a Colombian coffee
man as saying, u a nervous
and volat1le market like th1s
""''t good for anybody."
Brazilian mst1tute d1rector
Delaura Baumgratz sa1d h1s
country, with Colomb1a, wiD
propose a spec1al meetmg of
the 62-nallon international
coffee orgamzatwn m London •
on Feb
Dow-Jones sa1d
both U. S and Braz1ban offlclals at first were wary of
the sesswn, billed as an explanation of soarmg pnces
An unnamed U S olf1c1al
was quoted as saymg the
meetmg would be of httle
value "1f all producers do ..
IS condemn the boycott "

14

''But tf they say, 'Yes, we

deplore the Situation and wlll
do all we can to hold down
pr1ces,' then 1t would he
useful," he satd
In New York City, a Consumer Aifa1rs.. Department
survey found that.S2 per cent
of shoppers mterv1ewed sa1d
they e1ther had cut coffee
consumphon or sw1tched to
other beverages, but only 7
per cent expressed optumsm
-that pr1ces would not go
higher
In Cleveland, about 50
consumer·actton volunteers
passed out leaflets 1n front of
supermarkets urg1ng
customers to keep coffee out
of their market baskets, and
1n Cmcmnat1, a supermarket
chain launched an ad cam·
pa1gn brandmg coffee priCes
11
Ulterly r1d1culaus ," and
offermg llkent-off coupons
&gt;n purchase of cocoa, fru1t
ju1ce or tea
But m New York, Wall
Street tea broker Herbert
Thomas sa1d L1pton - "the
leader m the trade" - w11l
ASK TOWED
A mamage license was ralse pnces 10 to 15 cents a
1ssued to Ronnie Ray Eakw, pound m February
"The riSe will be peanuts
:!n, Racme, and Karen Sue
compared
to coffee," he said
Buchanan, 17, Racme.

---------------------------.
Letten of oplnloa are welcomed. Tbey should be
lf:llolhiD • wordo lmll (or be suhjeol to reductlou by
tbe editor) aad IDIIIll be siped wltb !be signee's ad·
dreu. Namet may be withheld upon pabUcaUou.
Howevl!l',,OD request, names wUl be dlsciOied. Letten
should be Ill good lule, addressing lauf:ll, Dot perIOUiitlel.

home."
Tyer said his bill would
apply only to persons who
lived together and passed
themselves oil as man and
wife and was not aimed at a
man and woman who only

spent the mght together.
Tyer, said the couple would
have to obtam a blood test
and a court penni! in addition
to paying the tax for "the
privilege
of
hving
together"
The couple also would be
reqwred to register with the
county sheriff The penalty
for living together Without a
pernut would be a $2,000 fine.
Tyer sa1d he was not
worried about unmarried
persons livmg together m his
0'11'11 Randolph County, "but
I'm worried about the rest of
the world.''

1

I

lI

:testo

'

been identified
By CHARLES S. TAYLOR
ATLANTA (UP!) - Six
montlls of medical detective
work have unlocked the mystery of what caused the
''LegiOnnaire's Disease~''
which killed 29 persons last
summer, and also may
prov1de
answers
for
unexplained d1sease outbreaks m the past.
But sc1entlsts still don't
know how the newly
discovered germ
was
transmitted to 180 persons
who visited a Philadelphia
convention hotel, or how it got
there Research to solve the
remamder of the puzzle has
already begun
"We don't know how it was
transnutted,'' Dr David Sencer, director of the national
Center for Disease Control,
S&amp;ld Tuesday, "but we now
know what to look for "
What CDC scientists found
was a large, slow-growing
bactermm that appeared to
be a gram-negatiVe bacillus
The germ has not yet been
g1ven Its own name
"We don't know 1ts place m
the bacteriological world,"
S&amp;ld Dr. Charles C. Shephard,
Chief VIrOlogist at CDC
But he said comparative
tests Indicated it also was
behmd the mysterious
d1sease that kllled eight
mental patlents at St.
Ehzabeth's Hosp1tal in
Washmgton, D.C., 1n 1966 He

l

I

said tests would be made to
see 1f 1t also was involved in
the "Pontiac Fever" that
caused Widespread Illness 1n
Pontlac, M1ch , in 1968
"~e are dealing w1th a
very real phenomena, wh1ch
has been present in the past
but has never been
recognized," Sencer said.
Dr Joseph E McDade,
wbo discovered the organism
and began experunents w1tl1
11 last month, said tests of
blond samples from 33
patients who came down with
the pneumonia-like Ulness
confirmed that 29 "were
infected With the organism "
McDade concluded the
germ was the "most probable
cause" of the disease and any
other conclusion was "highly
unlikely."
M1Crobwlog1sts at CDC
sa1d the organism was
difficult to grow 1n ordinary
laboratory cultures, wh1ch IS
why 1t was not diSCOvered
sooner.
Those who came down w1th
the disease had been m the
Bellevue-Stratford Hotel
around the lime of a state
American legion convenlloo
last July. They mcluded 149
Legionnaires, 30 other
VISitors, and a hotel
repairman The hotel was
later forced to close because
of the adverse publicity.
The CDC said that the

Dear Sir.
As I read about the Flora Bailey fund I thought, "How
lucky I am.'' I can walk
I have known Flora Bailey and she has known me for many
years. She was always a good, hard-working woman, and
deserves help. Hall of us would give even a dollar, we could
help thiS lady walk. We could g1ve up a couple packs of
c1garettes, a few bottles of beer, or even go w1thout food a dsy
to help. Yes!
"Count yollf BlesSings "
I Sighed because the day was dark and then I met a ch1ld
who had no eyes.
"!complained because the walk was long - until! met a
man who had no legs.
"I prayed for wealth beyond my need - and then I met a
poor soul with no bread at-all.'' - Thelma Berry, Middleport

The sympathellc response
causes an oulpounng of
a(lrenaline, the f~ghl or flight
honnone. The heart rate may
~ up, you may feel shaky
and you will sweat. This IS the
typical adrenaline response
thal1s also tr~ggered wlth an
attack Qf low blood sugar and
also With attacks of 811Xlety.
In some patient.rwith your
problem low blood sugar IS a
major factor in causing the
symptom complex.
You can help manage your
prqblem by followmg the program for low blood sugar
(hypoglycemia) and I am
sending you The Health Letter number ~ to g1ve you
more infonnation on lhls
Others who want thls mformalion on hypoglyceffila
can send 50 cents With a long,
stamped, self-addressed
envelope for 11. Send your let·
ter to· me m care of this
newspaper, P 0. Boz 1551,
Radio City Station, NY 10019
The drowsmell!l 1s part of
the picture and people With

thls difficulty often need to lie
down after eatmg Ills unportant for you to limit your concentrated carbohydrate ln•
take by avmding sweets,
sugar and starches and foods
that contain them You can
eat leafy vegetables and
bulky foods Salads w1ll hel~
here They are emplled more
slowly
You Wlli need to eat more
protem foods because these
Will not trigger these reactions and can be used for
energy Although there are
few conditions where I
recommend increasmg the
fat In the diet this is one place
where 11 IS helpful You w1ll
need to use more fat for
calories smce you won't be
usm~ as much caroohydrate.
Small frequent meals rather
than large ones, avoiding li·
quids for an hour before and
an hour after tho• meal and lymg down after eatmg all help
prevent this react10n AvOid
1tobucco, alcohol and cuffee

By RICHARD E. L'ERNER

WASIDNGTON'(UP!) PreSident Ford, m a fmal
gesture of "compasa10n,n
may be prepared to grant
relief to limited categories of
V1etn~era offenders bit not
!Jlanket amnesty for all draft
evaders and deserters,
according to White House
sources.
The sources gave no details
and said Ford was expected
to reveal his deciSion today his last full day m office after word was sent to Mra
Jane Hart, widow of Sen
Philip A. Hart, O.Mich.
Ford's schedule today was
filled w11h priVate staff meetmgs, but he also was
expected to ask Congreaa to
lift federal controls from
gasoline prices
Mrs. Hart ra1sed the
amnesty issue Dec. 28, the
day after her husband's
deatll, by asking Ford to
order across-the-board
anmesty as a memorial to the
senator. Ford promlled to
reconsider it after owoslng
the
dramatic
move
111EDALYSENTINEL
DEVOTEII TO '1'IIE
INTEREST OF
MEIG&amp;«ASSN AREA
CHEBTEIII. TANNEHILL
Elec.l!d.

ROBERT HOEFLICH
~ltfEdllor

Publlshod dally "'cept· Slturdaj
by The Ohio V•lltl 1'll1&gt;lllh1nl Cm&gt;
any 111 Cwrt St, l'llmeru7, Olllo
4$189 Editorial
Olflce
llll2llill
Phone
iJ92..2117
Soccnd cllll pootoge pold ot
Pomeroy, Ohio
Nalional advert.lslni tepr4iliftDtaUve Ward· Griffith Ccmpany, Inc , BotllDeW ond Gallallher Dlv.,
7$7 Third AVe, New \'orlt, NY.

10017

SUbecrtoUon rola Dtlhoered by
carrier whert IVtillble 15 (entl per
week By Motor Route whe1 e can1er
lei'Vice not availlble, One ~.
11 21. By moll In Oltlo IJid w Vo.,
S1z - ·
$~1.50zYearhrl!lllO,
. T ee monlha,
'7 oOi

One

Six-

E......,.. !IIIlO yeor,
11! i0 1 Thr" montbl, f7 611.1
SUbocrlptlon priC&lt;! in&lt;llldu Sundoy
~el.

•

oldest~

3- The Da1iy Sentmel, M1ddleport-P~;;;.qy, o, Wednesday,Jan 19, 1977

Bearcats take on Louisvill~ five tonight

now a lawyer,
ejected by Navy

Today's

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN

UPI Sporlt Editor
NEW YORK ( UPI) - Herb1e Stem leads a double hte and
he'sso accustomed to hoth , he 'd he lost if they took one away
For 24 years now, he has been a maJor league scout, mostly
for·the Mmnesota Twms, and for 22 of those years, he also has
been a member of New York's transit Police Department,
working' on the Pickpocket Squad
Somehow the two jobs never have e&lt;&gt;nflicted, Chlefiy because
Herb1e Stem has one of those 1ron e&lt;&gt;nstitutlons along w1th a
will to rnatch He worked the 6 a m to 2 p m shift for years on
his pollee Job so that he was able to scout any game m the
metropohtan area that began 3 or 4 p m , or later m the
evenmg at 8 Now he works m1dmght to 8 a m. steady and that
leaves him all the extra tune he needs, too
He and hiS. partner, James Armstrong, were dr1vmg to their
nextass1gnment at 5m the mormng the other day and the snow
was commg down hard when they got a call on the two-way
rad1o of their squad car
"Car 398 Car 398,'' came the call.
Herb1e Stem picked up the hand m1ke
"398, go ahead,'' he sa1d
"Have report of a 10-34 at Woodhaven Blvd and Jama1ca
Ave Looks fike a stabbmg by two youths on the subway statiOn
tllere respond unmed1a teiy "
Herb1e Stem gave the police dispatcher a 10-4, s~gni!ying he
and h1s partner were on the1r way to the scene, and when they
arr1ved there , they found a man lymg in the snow, bleeding
Two other pohcemen were there already and they told Stem
and Armstrong that the 41-yearo()ld victim had been mugged
and' robbed by two younger men, who stabbed h1m once m the
ba ck, agam m the stomach and then fled on foot
The two cops who had arr1ved hrst found tracks 1n the sno\\
leading to an aparfmenthouse not far away Herbie Stein and
Armstrong followed the tracks and apprehended a 17-yearo()ld
lnStde the house Then, acting upon mformallon rece1ved, the~
were able to track down the youth who allegedly d1d the actual
knifing He was 20, and after they got h1m out of bed and down
to the precmct, w1tnesses came forth to Identify hun.
" It wasn 't anythmg that unusual," says 59-yearo()ld Herb1e
Stem. "Just another day 's work."
Herb1e Stem's record with the Transit PoHce IS excellent, the
same as his record 1s m baseball
As a shortstop,lle never made 11 to the maJors, but he put m
12 years m the mmors, playmg m such places as Milford, Del,
Greenville, S C , Erwm, Tenn , Chattanooga, Charlotte, N C .
and Poughkeepsie and Bmghamlon, N Y
When he fm1shed pla) mg, he managed Stamford, Conn , of
tlle Coloma! League and Jessup, Ga , of the GeorgJa SUite
League, after wh1ch he began scouting for the Washmgton
Senators m 1961. When the Senators moved to MmnesoUI, Stem
was reU.med as a scout by the Twms and 11 was wh1le he was
employed by them they s1gned five-tune battmg champ Rod
Carew
Three years ago, the Twms,like many other clubs, trunmed
their scouting staff and joined the Major League Scouting
Bureau, to which most clubs belong The Twms recommended
Stein to the bureau, run by Jun Wilson ana Don Pr10s, and he
was taken on m 1974
Only a short tlrne before, he had rece1ved the A.B "Turk"
Karam Award here as Scout of the Year and during the
summer of 1975 Stem received a letter of commendation from
Prws that sa1d, "Your work durmg the 1975 scouting season
certainly was of quanty cahher, and w1thm your sphere of
respons1bhty, weD done We are pleased to have an employee
w1th the enthusiasm ~nd ded1callon you have displayed and I
expect 11 to continue "
Not long ago, though, Stem got another letter, saymg the
bureau was reahgrung, and 11 was sorry, but hls serVIces no
longer would he requ1red for 1977
Smce then, Stem has written to a number of clubs, trymg to
catch on as a scout, but all of them are cutting down, not taking
anybody on
"I've been scouting 24 years and been m baseball nearly 40
years," says Herb1e Stem. "It 's part of my life What do I do
now?"
He does about the only thmg he can do.
When he fmlShes h1s pollee job every day, he wntes letters

program, Anderson quoted
Jack Carter as saying the
mc1dent occurred just before
his father was to be sworn m
as governor of Georg1a. Hls
Ia ther earlier had been in a
submarme commander In the
&gt;Navy's nuclear program.
treated
me
"They
somewhat deferentially,"
Jack Carter ls quoted by
Anderson
The columniSt S8ld Adm.
Hyman Rickover, head of the
Navy's nuclear program,
wanted to be sure the Nayy
had ev1dence that young
Carter smoked mar1juana
before dlsmiasing him with
the general dlscharge
'Anderson sa1d Jack Carter
chuckled and said, "they
did. 11

TOM TIEDE

The sadistic side
'c alling th_emselves
historians" - to pump him for
data. "I knew nothing' of
course; they wasted their
time ~·

Thus spurned' perhaps the
bureaucrats got angry Who
knows the mobvations of
robots" When the McCiellans
f1rst began to protest the
state's reluctance to act on
the VlSS request, there was
some dark suggestiOn that
the wife knew Sov1et secrets
(her mother had been a clerk
m the KGB; she had been a
ranslator m a government adVISory off1ce). Other than this
lame excuse, the state has
merely explamed that 1ts
laws pernut it to keep 1ts
reasons m conf1dence
Apparently, Sov1et law also
pernuts the state to compound its sadism by harassmg Irma McClellan. She 1s
now all but alone, save for a
17-year-oid daughter from
another marriage, and easily
tormented. McClellan says
she 1s not allowed full-lime
employment. The daughter IS
not allowed higher education.
And both are followed
everywhere by the KGB
McClellan believes the of&gt;.
ject of thls bedeVIlment ls to
break his wife's sp1rit And
then again It may JUSt be for
the sport One hero 4&gt;f the
KGB has advised the wife to
divorce McClellan, marry a
SoViet Jew, go to Israel,
divorce the Jew, and remarry
McClellan. Ssys the professor· "How the Russ1an of.
fleer loves the tiste of

STANDINGS
NBA Standtngs
New Orlea ns 99 Boston 89
Press lnternattonal
LOS .Anc~ e l es 113 Kan Ct ly Ill
Ei'lstern Conference
Cleveland 101 Mtlwaukee 93
Atla nt•c Otvtston
Phlla at Btlo ppd cold snow
W L Pet
GB Golden State 107 Denver 101
Philadelphia
25 15 625 Wednesday's Games
NY Kntcks
20 20 500 5
Porlland at NY Na ls
Bosto n
20 21 .taB 5' 1
A flant a at Phtlad elphta
Bu ffalo
16 26 381 10
Boston a• Houston
N Y Nets
12 28 300 l3
C htc ~go at sa n Anton to
Central Ow tston
Buffalo .!I I WaShington
W L Pet
GB NY Kn tcks at PhOen t)(
Houston
23 17 575
Indian a a! Seattle
Cleve lan d
24 18 571 Thursday'-; Games
Wl!Sh lnglon
71 19 525 2
Porlland at Cleveland
San Anton to
21 21 500 3
NY Nets at Kan sas Ctty
New Orl ea ns
20 2~ .rl 65 •P ,
• Phoent X at Gold e n State
Allanta 16 29 356 9' ?
Western Conference
Mtdwest Otvtston
W L Pet
GB
Denver
79 13 690
NHL Standtngs
Oetrott
2.r1 16 571
5
By Umted Press lnternatt(lnal
tndta na
21 22 488 81' ?
Campbell Conterence
Ka nsas CtiY
20 23 465 91 ?
Patnck OtVI SIOn
Cntc ag o
17 24 415 1J1 7
W L T Pts GF GA
Mtlwt'lukee
IJ 33 283 18
Phtla
27 9 9 63 175 121
Pactftc Otvtston
NY l sla ndrs 27 10 1 61 160 109
W L Pet
GB
All ant a
21 16 1 5 I 152 142
Portland
29 15 659 NY Rangers 11 18 12 .46 173 167
Los Angeles
21 15 643 1
Smythe Otvtston
Seattle
24 20 545 5
W l T Pts GF GA
Gol den StiJte
22 19 537
S1 1
19 'll 5 43 131 154
Phoenlll. ~
17 22 436 9' '7 Sl LO UIS
Chlc.!lgo
16 23 1 39 147167
Tu esday's Results
Mtnnesola
10 1.1 10 30 127179
Hous ton 103 Cht cago 85

By

nusery "
So far, McClellan say~. the
Soviet outrage has not work·
ed to crack the couple's will.
The wife is growing thin, McClellan says. She smokes too
much, she may be developing
heart trouble and she doesn't
sleep well. "But she is strong,
She's like a ,woman of good
Russian history We correspond often to brace \l8Ch
other''
Meanwhile, the months and
the years go by The wUe's
mother has deaerted her. The
KGB may be working on the
da-r to do the same. The
professor cannot vlslt, cannot
~send support mooey ("It
would be confilcaled" ). And
Irina McClellan Uves from
hand to mouth • an Intermit.
tent tutor of the Kglish
language.
When wl!l It end? Next
year? The year after?
Never? The couple can only
wall to see, half the world
apart from one another.

United Press International
Cmcmnati's unbeaten and
third-ranked Bearcats can
rest assured LouisVIlle won't
use a slow-down strategy
agamst them tomght as St
Louts d1d m nearly upsettmg
Clncy Sunday •
"You only do that when
you're under.personneled,
like St LDwa was.'' satd
Louisville ass1stant coach
Jerry Jones "And I don't
think Cincmna 11 has got us
beat m talent "

L ee

"Good Morning, America"

mc1dence of the disease was
associated not only with time
spent m the hotel, but also
with lime spent in the lobby.
Shephard said that the
organism
was
not
transmitted from person to
person, because those who
came in contact with Vlctuns
of the disease did not catch it.
The CDC S81d nothing has
been ruled out as the
tr ansmiss10n medium. "It
doesn't appear to be a usual
orgarusm of unportance In
tuman disease," Sencer said,
and Shephard sa1d 11 was
totally unrelated to any
known agents employed m
germ warfare.

.•::•'' •
•

PLAINS, Ga. (UPI) - situation "
All three of Carter's sons
President-elect Jimmy
Carter acknowledges that bls have admitted smoking
oldest son, Jack, was marijuana but they say they
dismissed from the Navy for have stopped.
During the campaign,
smoldnil marijuana.
Press Secretary Jody Carter acknowledged that his
Powell said a report Tuesday sons had smoked marijuana
by columnist Jack Anderson but he never said anytblng
was "consistent with the about Jack being dismissed
governbr's recolleolioo of the from the Navy for domg so.
situation regarding Jack's He said he favored
general discharge , for decriminalizing marijuana
smoking but wouldn't favor
smoking marijuana."
Anderson sa1d Carter's son, legalizing it.
Rosalynn Carter, in the
now 29, and 54 classmates
were caught smoking latest lssue of Ladies' Home
marijuana In 1970 wh1le Journal, is quoted as saymg
attending the Navy's nuclear she and her husband have
power school at Idaho Falls, had long arguments with
their sons "about whether or
Idaho.
The columniSt said thls was not pot ts good for you."
the reason for Jack's "abrupt
The sons lnslst marijuana
dlsmlsasl" from the Navy 11is no worse than alcohol,"
With a "less than honorable Mrs. Carter said.
discharge" t,he last week of
Jack Carter later attended
the University of Georgia and
that year.
"I'm not going to comment rece1ved a law degree. He
further," Powell said m con- now practices law m Calhoun,
firming the story. "I've sa1d Ga
as much as I know about the
In a report on ABC-TV's

By Tom Tiede
WASIDNGTON One
year ago, while m Moscow,
Henry Kissinger paused m
h1s d1scuss1on of crwse
miSSiles and Backf1re
bombers to approach his
hosts with a matter more
human He wondered why the
Russ1an wife of an American
professor was not bemg
allowed to JOm her worried
husband m the Uruted States.
In effect he was told: Don't
ask.
That was the last nonword,
.
even if !Jidirect, that Uruver·
sity ol V~rgm18 historian
Woodford McClellan has
rece1ved from the Sov1ets
throughout his presidency. regarding his Wife. He met
The sources said Ford's her as a tourist f1ve years
response ''will not he a flat ago, he mamed her 1n May of
turndown" of Mrs. Hart's 1974, but he hasn't seen her m
more than two years Her
request
But they also sa1d his aclion VlS8 is m pennanent freeze,
was likely to affect a and no good rea'son IS forrelatively small nlllllber of thcoming.
Unfortunat&lt;Jly, 1! IS not unthe estimated 80,000 young
men who illegally resisted the corrunon for the Sov1et Uruon
draft during the war and then to detain the Russ1an spouses
chose not to lake adVantage of Amencan citiZens. At any
of Ford's 1974-75 clemency given moment, McClellan
reports, there are about two
program.
dozen U.S.-Russian families
Ford ruled out a general thus separated. But the Mcamnt!IIIY· early thls month, Clellans are rudely specwl
!be sources said, but then No other couple on record has
studied "many options" for been divided for so long a
lesser steps.
time.
One possibility was said to
And even yet the ouUook is
be restoration of veterans not bright. Moscow shows no
rights to ex-G!B who were sign of thaw. Last week the
wounded in the line of duty ._ professor received a cable
and later lost their rights from his wife that sa1d her
after deserting or e&lt;&gt;mmltling visa application had not only
another offense.
been derued agam, but that
1
the bureaucralm charge had
President-elect Jimmy advised her not to bother
Carter has said one of bls first reapplymg WJtll 1978. Twelve
official acla will be to grant a more months lmagme the
pardon to all VietnJm draft bleak emotion.
evaders, and was conaldering
It is of course a detested
some aclion to deal with sport, as William Cowper
deserters.
wrote, that owes Ita pleasure
to others' pain. But the RllllFord told an intei'viewer slans lead the league. And
last week that "there might concerning Woodford and
be some further compuaicm Irma McClellan they have
shown," and some aides said outdone themselves. It would
he wanted to leave olllce with have been one kind of cruelty
a 1a1t "gesture" of goodwiD. to have deruect the couple permission to marry But In
The Praddent planned to allowing 1t, and then prevenOy to California lrnmedlately ting their union, the Soviet
after ,Jimmy Carter's barbarism IS doubly
Inauguration Thursday to loathsome
'
begin private llle by
McClellan suspects the
attending a golf tourrwnent Russians may have pennitat Pebble Beach.
ted ' the nuptials for intelligence reasons. AI the
1111 plans Include renting a time he waa courtinc Irina, as
., 1uae near Palm Sp'lnga, a visiting prof88SOr, be was
:..-aru.,lecturlng tine mtmlhs friendly with several
a ytm on varioua college members of the American
campuaea and making embassy. McClellan says the
ap· Rusaiall secret pollee (KGB)
numeroua
public
approached him often
pe~~nnces.

! Vietnam sinners mercy

Problem after ulcer surgery

:am

Legion hug has

1

DR. LAMB

: By l..awrenC. E. Lamb, M.D. tor did something wrong
• DEAR R LAMB - I ann 50 About a third of people who
years old and seven years ago have operations for ulcers
:1 had an operation for a have a durnpmg syndrome
duodenal ulcer The surgeon after surgery. Lesa than f1ve
inserted a plastic tube to act per cent of patients operated
.as the stomach outlet and upon continue to have difremoved part of the mtestine. ficullles such as you eJ&lt;• : Since the operation, when I perience. The others recover
' eat anything that has sugar m Within a few months after
· 1t an hour later I become very surgery.
sleepy My heart \humps like
Apparentiy the mecharusm
;a bongo drum and I shaj&lt;e aU IS to empty (dwnp) the con·
•over. My skin feels like 1t ls tents of the stomach too
: on f1re and I sweat tel'l'ibly I rapidly Into the small m; have to lie down and I go to teatlne, bel~ there Is time to
•sleep lrnmedlalely. When I dilute the food with the acid
out somewhere I don't eat d1gest1ve juiCe of the
;because I never know when stomach.
•thls will happen. I've had
Concentrated sweets such
for diabetes and they as sugar are the worst. These
:don't show anything. Could draw flwd into the mtestlne
•you po88ibly give me any from your bloodstream In an
;clues to what this could be' effort to d1lute the solution.
:Other than thls I am m very This decreases the arnolDII ol
•good health
,
fluid m your blood and
! DEAR READER - You decreases the volwne ol
' have what doctors call the blood ava1lable for circula: "dwnpmg syndrome " It IS a tion. This and other hormonal
·, complication of your surgery. responses stimulates your
: That does not mean the doc· sympathetic n~rvous system

l--------------,..,------l

! Ford may grant some

without benefit of license
UTTLEROCK,Ark (UP!)
- An Arkansas legiSlator
wants to require unmarried
C&lt;&gt;Uples living together to
reg1ster with the county
sheriff and pay a $3,000 tax.
"The problem with the
C&lt;&gt;Wltry today IS people are
disregardmg the home,"
Rep Arlo Tyer, sa1d
Tuesday. "Our nation was
bJilt on the goodness of the

1

. CAIRO (UPI ) - Students and workers stoned shops
and cars today and fought with police who were
ordered to shoot on sight The rioters won their point
and the government revoked food and fuel price
mcreases of up to 50 per cent.
The downtown section of this city of 7.S million
persons was a battleground for the second day Sslvo
after salvo ot teargas shells boomed through the
streets as mobs of well dressed students and workers m
khaki marched on police lines, hurlln.a bricks, cobblestones and rocks.
"'
The rwis had raged more than lour hours before
President Anwar Sadat ordered Prime Mlnlster
Mamdouh Salem to rescind the pnce mcreases ordered
mto effect Monday
At the same time the government ordered a dusk-to-dawn curfew to begm at 4p m. and told police to shoot
noters on s1ght.
The M1ddle East News Agency said the "economic
s1tuation w1ll be reconsidered" by various government
bodies A vice premier earlier told parllilment the
government was concerned about "the totilng classes"
reaction to mcreases that would hike the pr1ce of
butane gas by 45 per cent and bread by SO per cent.
The government blamed Conununisls and followers
of the late Gamal Abdel Nasser for the disorders,
which left clouds of teargas 8Wll'ling through downtown
Cairo's fashionable streets and the smoldering rubble
of bonfires that burned through the mght.

C.arter's

Untte ~

Yanks will talk
to balky Munson·

l

I
.,I
I

!

NEW YORK (UP!) - A
spokesman for the New York
Yankees Tueway sa1d club
officials would be willing to
talk w1th catcher Thurman
Munson, the American
League's most valuable
player last season, concerning his threat to leave the
team
Munson was quoted in
Capada on Mondsy night as
saying he was displeased
with Yankee owner George
Steinbrenner's failure to Uve
up to two verhal agreementa.
One ol tbem is said to Involve

matchmg Munson's contract
with the one awarded to free
'agent Reggie Jackson, signed
by the Yankees in late
November. Munson indicated
he might ask to be traded or
attempt to buy up h1s e&lt;&gt;ntract.
"II came as a complete
surprise to us,'' said the
spokesman

11

Thurman

apparently indicated he
wanted to •sit down with
George Steinbrenner and talk
and I'm sure they11 be able to
do that in a few days.''

Jones scouted coach Galt
Catlet t 's
undefeated
lleat cats m thetr conVIncuig
&amp;Hll v1ctory over Dayton last
week and was 1mpresseJ by
the fact they used a fuli&lt;ourt
press throughout the game
"We've got to handle their
press,'' he srud ' [f we don 1tf'
our chances of Wlnnmg are
Zilch We can't let them force
us mto a lot of turnovers the
way they d1d Dayton "
He srud one of the keys to
the game 11111 he the battle of

keep them from shootmg that
well We've got to wm the
batlle of the boards and keep
from making a lot more
turnovers than they do "
A sellout crowd of mort
than 16,000 is expected m
Freedom Hall lor the clash
between th e two team s
cons1dered to be the leading
contenders for the Metro-7
champ10nsh1p. Cmcmnatl, lZ.
0, 1s ranked lt11rd nat10naily
while LoUISVIlle, 11).2, 1s 16th
Among other battles on

tnmght 's 17-game schedule,
Oh10 Umvemty hoslS Ball
State m Mld·Amencan
Conference achon ; Cleveland
State entertains Bowimg
Green , M1ami plays at
Dayton; and South Caroima
tangles WJth the Rockets at
Toledo
In Oh10 Conference achon
Tuesday rught, Mount Umon
edged Baldwm-Wailace SHl ,
Wittenber g downed Cap1tal
62-56 a nd Deruson defeated
Otterbem 88-85 m overtune

's goal saves Marquette

United Press International
Marquette, ranked e1ghth
natwnatiy, nearly got shot out
of the top 10 by Drake
Tuesday mght but Butch Lee,
the JUniOr guard who may be
the Warnors ' best pro
prqspect, hit 11 of hiS team's
!mal 19 pomts, mcluding a
layup 11 1th SIX seconds to go,

Matthews,

Banks in
•

'F arne vote
NEW YORK (UPI) - Two
of baseball's most feared
sluggers from the 1950s and
'60s, Erme Banks and Eddie
Mathews, are the leading
cand1dates today for electiOn
mto the Hall of Fame by the
Baseball Wnters Association
of Arner~ca .
The two power·lutters, who
are t1ed for runth piact on the
all'lune homerun list w1th
m, need to be named on 15
per cent of the ballots cast by
the BBW AA to gam electiOn
If Banks makes 1t, 11 would
Dlake hun only the e1ghth
player to be elected to the •
Cooperstown, N Y shrme on
the f1rst try smce the first
year of mduct10ns
Banks, who spent hls entire
19-year career ( 1953-71 ) as a
shortstop-first baseman w1th
the Ch1cago Cubs, had a
lifetune batting average of
274 and hit more homers
( 293 ) than any other
shortstop m baseball history.
A slender and graceful
athlete, he also drove m 1,636
runs and tw1ce won the
National League's Most
Valuable Player Award
(1958-59 ) Five times he hit
more than 40 homers m a
season and he was named to
tbe NL All-Star team 10
times
Mathews, who played 15
seasons w1th t1 '' Boston,
Milwaukee and Atlanta
Braves before cloSing out his
career wttll Houston and
Detr01t, teamed w1th all-tune
home-&lt;un kmg Hank Aaron
for 11 seasons to g1ve the
Braves the most, potent onetwo punch m the NL.
Named to the NL All-Star
team at third base II times,
Mathews compiled a 271
lifetune batting average with
1,453 runs-batted4n and, hke
Banks, hit more home runs
(,482) at his pos11lon than any
other third baseman ever
Other players expected to
rece1ve a good deal of Hall of
Fame support from the
wnters mclude the late
Brooklyn-Llrs Angeles
Dodgers first baseman GU
Hodges and his longtime
center.f1eld teammate Duke
Snider, former St LoUis
Cardmals outfielder Enos
Slaughter and the late Nelbe
Fox, the pepperpot second
baseman w1th the Ch1cago
White Sox m the 19!ills and
'60s.

Colo rado
1176 8 30 128169
Vancouver 13 30 4 JO 130 187
Wales conlerencc
Norrts Dtvt sto n
W l T PIS GF GA
M ontreal
J&lt;~ 1 6 7.rl 228 108
Plttsbur Qh 18 18 8 44 141 147
Los Angeles 15 22 10 &lt;tO 147 159
Dctrotf
13 26 5 Jl 120 161
wa shlngtn
12 17 1 Jl 115 174
,
Adams Divt ston
\,..
W l T Pts GF GA
Bu ffa lo
28 11 .t 60 165 118
Boston
28 13 4 60 173 137
Toronto
21 19 6 48 166 153
c; l f!\leland
14 24 7 JS 135 161
Tuesday's R ~s ulfS
N Y Island ers 7 Mmnesota 2
Montr eat 3 Washtng !on 0 \
Chlc:ac10 1 Color ado 1
L O!. AnQc les 6 Toronto 3
ro nty pames schcdulccl)
WC'dne !.day•s Games
NY Ritr1qcr s (II Clf:'Vf'l and
Wash1nqton at Ruffalo
Ci t Lo uts at Clucaqo
Ptii Sb urCih a t Vancouv er
ro nty oamcs ~chcdulccl)

Thursdi'IY s Gam('S
l~os t on
Ph llt~ c:lf'lphta

NY lr,landcr.., at

Montr caiJ'I

the
p1vot
between
Cmcmnall 's 6-tO Bob M11ler
and l.oulsvtlle's 6-11 Rlr.k)
Galion
As a native or LOUlSvtlie,
M1iler should be e&gt;lra
psyched up retllfnmg to h1s
hometown Galion has had
flashes of bnlhance th 1s
season, but not enough to
sa\lsfy Crum
"We'll need a standoff tn
the middle/ ' Jones sa1d
·Also we've got to shoot
better than 40 per cent and

fl tl(tn ti'l at Mtnn t:'soiA
Color.1t1o at ()rotro l t
Ptll &lt;ih urat'l a• l o.-. /lnqrlcs
ronty oamt '1 .,ctH•du lrd'

to clinch a SUO VlciJ:lry
Lee's !mal shot , whoch
came after Marquette
controlled a Jump ball at
Drake's end of the court,
capped a rally that brought
the Warr10rs back from a
rune-pomt deflc1t. Lee fmlshed w1th a game-h1gh 19
pomts, mcludmg 15 m the
second ha lf

Co lle ge B"!&gt;k etbilll

Rc ~ utt ~

By Umt('d Pr ess 1!11c rn il ttO ni'l 1
Eas t

Alb any Sl N Y 7 7 UIIC il 57

Bo ston U 77 Vi! C wi th n
Conn 76 Nev. Hamp 56
Co r nell 73 RPI 67
Curry 'il Cooo;t Gurlrd 51

De trod 70 St Peter s 68
GlenvdiP B8 Beck1C'y 55
Ph Ia Ph arm 01 Ei!sl rn 6 !
Fit~ Cit hrn 87 Brockport 7?
Gco twn DC 69 Holy Cross 65
l nfayette 91 ColumbtJ 7~
M Hnrvev 59 DV1s&amp; Eik ns 5B
On eon ta 8 1 Else nhOWf'r rl9
P e nn S1 7~ Delawar e 73
Pllt sb qh St 78 L eh m an 63
Pr att HO NY Mantmw 7?
PrOVId Cf'l CC 82 RIU 71
Rilmapo 65 1&lt; 1n&lt;l s NY 55
R1chmond 81 Am lJ 75
o; ,,l ,sbury 71 Sheph erd 70
Seton Hall 72 Fordham 57
';I M tchl s 96 Norw ch 75
w va Tech 75 Sal em sa

South

Auou!&gt; ti'l 177 Ol d Wstbry 8 1
Ber ea 7J Cumber la nd 71
B mm e 79 Campbtl &lt;; vl 71
Ber ry 101 Gt'Orq1e1 Col 7 t
Furman 7~ Jac k.so nvtllc ~ 5

Lt nco~n Mcm 89 Tusc ul um 60

Lo yolil Md 69 J Hopkm s 65
Mo ra v1an 77 WP~tern Md 61
NaVy 68 CatholtC U 60
5W La 7t c; letson 67
Towson 78 Md Rail Co 70
wash Md 119 Gal lu det 6S
Wm&amp; Mary 79 E Ca roli n a 5.1
Mtd west
Av ila ~8 Wm Jf' well 'i t
Bnar Cli ff 83 Coe 7f!
Cr e•ohton 8 1 Ccnl ('nar t 61
McPh.:rson 87 M o Wcstrn 7?
Empona St 64 Wshb rn 61
J= 1ndlay 77 Manch est er 68
F rn ktn 8 1 G twn Ky 68
K ansas 7:1 Iowa St 6i
Ka n Nwmn 61 Sterlmo '17
Ma rqu ene 6? Drake 60
Mt Umon 6&lt;1 f3 ld WI Ic e 61
Ncb W ~ lyn 59 Ml Mrty 57
Not r e Dam e 98 Stonch1ll 70
Rose Hulman 79 De Pquw 75
Taylo r 86 And e r son 65
W m nstr Ulilh 79 CcntMf' th 75
Wtt tenberq 62 Cap le~l ~"
Sou ttl west
Ark a nsas 67 TC U 15
Houslon 95 Texa s 81
N ew Mcx 110 Easte rn N M 70
Okla Chr1s 11 4 Blhn y Naz 80
Pnhndl f' 70 l ubboc k Ch rt S 56
SMU 75 Aaylor 71
Te)l, Wsly t'l 101 Dat Bapt R8
Tex Sthr n 86 Pram.• Vw 71
TC'X Tech 66 Tex fi&amp;M 6~

west

Roola 104 I A Rap! 'iS
Cal Lulh 110 l1 fc Coli 67
Cal Poly Pom 71 Lyla Cal 67
Carrol! 8? W Mont 71
t.n Fa ll s 89 Mont Te ch 81
No Mt l 7!l Grnd Canyn 6 1
PI Lorna 90 Cal l.\apt 81
Rocky Min 79 E Mont 07
UC lr v1 ne 80 Northr dgc 66
Weoer $1 89 Utdh St 76
W., tmnr 85 Dm 1n~z Hil s 57
Wyom 1nQ ) 4 Oenvrt 6?

Poquette MAC
player of week ·
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( UPI I Ben Poquette, who sparked
Central M1chigan to 1ts key
VIctory at Miami last
Saturday, has been selected
the Mtd-Amen can Con·
ference basketball player of
the 11eek
The 6-9, 235-pound seruor
scored 21 pomts and had II
rebounds m the 78-76 Central
wm wh1ch gave the
Chiwewas undisputed f1rst
place m the conference.
Poquette hit seven of e1ght
shots from the field m the
second baH and e&lt;&gt;nverted
three of four free throws m
the fmal 31 second~ to keep
the Chippewas ahead.
Others nommated for th1s
week's honor were Tom
Cutter of Western M1eh1gan ,
Jun Hahn of Ball State ,
Tommy Harris of Bowlmg
Green; KeMy Harmon of
Eastern Michigan; Burrell
McGhee of Kent State,
Randy Ayers of M1am1, Steve
Skaggs of Ohio UruverSity ,
and D1ck Miller of Toledo

Marquette 112-2 ), m
wmnmg 1ts e1ghth stra1ght
game, led 33-31 at half but
Drake 14-101 JUmped to a 5243 advantage w1th II 15 ieftm
the game. Lee then went on
his scormg spree to rally the
Warrtors to v1ctory
Ken HarriS and Napoleon
Gm thcr scored 17each to lead
Drake, whtch shot 70 per ce nt
from the f1eid m th e f~rst half

and 60 per cent for the game.
Elsewhere, Arkansas beat
Southwest Conference riVal
Texas Ci1rtsllan, 6245, Providence d,,, Jicd Rhode Island,
82-71. Sou.hern Methodist
toppe&lt;l Baylor, 75-71, Houston
beat Texas, 9~1. Texas Tech
edged Te&gt;as A&amp;M, 66-04, m
overtone and Kansas beat
B1g E:1ght nval Iowa, 73-Jl2
Sidney Moncr1ef scored 11

pomts and grabbed e1ght
rebounds to power Arkansas
over TCU Moncnef h1t e1ght
of 10 shots from the f1eld as
the Razorbacks ran thetr
league record to 5-0 and the1r
season record to 13-J
Bruce Campbell scored 22
pomts and grabbed II
rebounds to lead Provtdence
over Rhude Island Rhode
Island took a 11).2lead m the
opemng two mmutes but
Campbell rall1ed the Fnars
as they took leads of up w
e1ght pmn ts before th e
mtermiSSion
Rhode Island regamed the
lead, 44-42, early 1n the
second half but two free
throws each by Campbell and
Bob Cooper put the Fnars m
front for good
Pr ov1den ce!s
n1nth
consecullve v1ctory unproved
its record to 13-2 while Rhode
Island 1s now 8-5

Islanders sail past

North Stars, 7 to 2
R) MARTIN L •\flF It

UPI Spor ts Wnlcr

Two members of the New
York lslandei s 11 ho could
have been p1cked for the
National Hockey League
game, but weren't, are Bryan
Trottier and Boti Nystrom
The ~~overs ight, " as 1t wer e,
proved W be the mam IAlplC of
d1scuss1on Tuesday mght
followmg New York 's 7-2
VIctory over the Mmnesota
North Stars
The Islanders, who clunbed
to w1thtn two pomts of flr~t­
place Philadelphia m the
Patnck D1V1s10n, felt
somewhat shghted when
Flyets' Coach Fred Shero
felled to mclude any of them,
but d1d mclude two of h1s own
players m completmg h1s
team for the All ..Star game at
Vancouver Jan 25
Islander Coach AI Arbour,
who at f1rst shrugged 11 off,
Ia ter made a stronger
defense for h1s players
'They do that to us every
year ," he exclauned "
Coaches are makmg a JOke ol
the All Star game All Star
teams are supposed to have
the best players Th1s kind of
favonllsm 1s hurtmg the AllStar game"
Ne1ther of the two affected
players expressed strong
disappomtment
"!was disappointed a httle,
but not to an) great extent
where it'll get me down or
bother me," Trotller, who
netted two goals agamst Mmnesota, said
Nystrom, who leads the
Islanders w1th 22 goals, sa1d
he d1dn't really give makmg
the All-Star team any
thought
"The guys who w1ll be there
deserve 11 because they are

Little Joe
\.....

best pro

of the year

BUFFALO, N Y (UPI )Bruce Jenner, the 1976
Olympic decathlon champion, and Joe Morgan, the
Cmcinnati Reds second
baseman who was p1cked as
the Nahonal League's most
valuable player last year,
were named Tuesday as
wmners of the Dunlop
trophies for the best amateur
and professional athletes of
tbe year
They wtll rece1ve the1r
troph1es at a pro-am awards
dmner here Jan. 31
Jenner, 27, won the gold
medal with a record total of
8,618 points in the 10-event
competition at the Montreal
Olympics last .summer
- Morgan batted .320 for the
Reds a~d helped lead them to
the World Senes and a
nallonal championship
BUFFALO, NY (UPI) In previous years, the
The National Basketball As- awards were not announced
SOCiation Buffalo Braves will until the dinner 1tself, but a
be forced to make a roster cut spokesman said there was a
following the acquiSition better chance the winners
Tuesday of veteran center would appear 1f they were
George Johnson from the known ahead of lime. Both
Golden State Warriors
Jenner and Morgan have
Johnson was expected lA:! accepted mv1tatlons to attend
Join the Braves for Fnday the dmner
rught's game at Chicago

All Stars," he sa1d
Along w1th Trotller , Andre
St Laurent also had two
goals for the Islanders whtie
notchmg one each were B1lly
HarriS, Lorne Henmng and
J P Panse Sconng for the
North Stars .. ere Erme H1cke
and B1ll Fatrba1rn
In other games, Montreal
blanked Washmgton, 3-0,
Chicago raihed to gam a 7-7
tie agamst Colorado, and Los
Angeles beat Torohto, 6-3
Black Hawks 7, Rockies 7:
Ch1cago, after falimg
behind 7-3, got one goal from
Grant Mulvey m the closmg
mmutes of the second penod
and then salva ged a lle on
th1rd penod · goals by D1ck
Redmond , Cluf Koroll and
Ivan Boldirev Dave Hudson
had a pall' of goals for
Colorado
Kings 6, Maple Leals 3:
Linemates Marcel D1onne
and Frank St Marse1lle each
scored a goal and added two
ass1sts to allow Los Angeles
to beat Toronto for the first
ltme m s1x meetmgs and
clunb to w1thin four pomts of
second-place P1ttsburgh m
the Noms DlVlswn tan
Turnbull scored two goals for
the Leafs

At Berea , Dave Scarpltlt
netted J5 pomts and Tun ( Jp
added another 14 as Mount
Uruon unproved 1ts overall
mark to 8-7 and conference
rec"Drd to 4-1 With the wtn over
Baldwm Wallace
Baldwm Wallace, now 4-10
and 1-3, was paced by Dave
l.Jmg, who scored "" gamehtgh 18 pomts and pulled
down a. similar number a£
rebounds
The Wi ttenberg T1ge!S got
16 po1nts from Clyde
E:berhardt and 12 rebounds
from Greg Seay as they
downed Capttai to remam
undefeated after fou r
co nfe rences games th1 s
season The Tigers are II 2 m
all games this season
Captlal, paced b) Rtck)
Lee's 17 markers, IS 8-7
o1erail and 1-3 1n th e
conference
At Westerville , rese1 ve
center Kevm Kurg1s scorec\
e1ght pomts tn an overt1me ·
penod to lead Demson w
VICtory over Otterbein
Kurg1s had 14 marker s for t11e
game.
Demson, led by Todd
HarriS' 25 pomts, unproved
1ts season records t.o 5.-9
overall and 2-3 m the loo p
Otterbetn, 7-7 and 2-2 gbt21
pomts from Doug Add1s and
16 from Don Brough

%

SVAC standings
7 Pet per year on a 4

SVA C STA N D INGS
All GAME S
TF A M
~ ou ther h

Hanni'tn T ra c "
Sym Valley

Southwestern
K yqe r Cr ef'k
Nor lh Gal loa

Eas ter n

W ~ P OP
7 0 SM\ 396
J 1 3o9 100

J
J

I

31 ~

'} ~ ~08 4 16
1 I 307 :161
0 6 773 3Q9

SVAC ON LY
TEAM
W L P
t1 0 3.18
Sou thern
Hann an Tra ce
2 I 181
&lt;;ym Valley
7 I 18?
N orth Gall1a

Soulhvvesl e rn
East er n •
K yqer Cr eek

:'ISS

1 131'\ -11 ?

1

1
I 1
0 1
0 3

OP
24 1
287

181

129 176

188 176
71 116

ye ar certlfocale ol
de po s1l
Sl.OOO 00
mm1mum
de po sol. ml ere sl patd
quarter ly
A sub stan l 1r:tl p e u di'V ~~
In voked un all c~ r ldt (. i! l e
accou nt s w tt hdr.,.wn pno r
to th e dat e oi ntatunt v

Meigs

-@

172 232

SVAC RESERVE S
TEAM
North Ga111a

W L P OP
'l 0 9'l 51

So uth e r n

3

Sym Va lley

2

I 130 131

Southwestern

?.

I llJ 110

Kyqe r Cr eek
Eastern
Hannan Tra ce

l
o

2 106 124
1 61 100
3 liZ 13J

to. Branch

1 198 163
The Athen s Count¥
Sa v nqs &amp; Lo~ n Co

0
Thts week s games

296 Second St
Pomeroy Oh1 0

I r 1day
North Gil ll1a a t
SouJ hwe s tern
Eastern at

Souther n Symrnt&gt;S Valley a t
Hannan Tra ce
Sa turday
t&lt;yQ c r c r eek A!
H a nnan W Vii
Wahama

'1oulhern nt

SNOW*ICE*MUD
WEATHER-MASTER 400
PLY WINTER TRACTION
DEEP POWERFUL TD llt"TJIIUI
WI. u tread with traction
cleats to grip and go on mud,
ice or deep snow, and designed to
receive metal traction studs.

FREEl
SELF-CLEANING AND QUIET
Mounting &amp;
Wide, flat tread designed
so that traction ~llements
Bala ·
automatically kick out snow or mudncmg
helps keep tread open,
ready lor action.

SEE US FOR
BAnERIES
AND SPARE WI:IEELS~

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

KEEP OLD MAN WINTER OUT
Willi TliESE HARDWARE SUPPLIES
• Storm Window Kits
• Weatherstripping • Anti-Freeze

�•

.1

7-l'he O.Uy StnUnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, Q,, Wednesday
:.&lt;'R::::::::,~::::::::::::::::::::;;:':·:~:·::::::::::::::::::'&lt;':':'&lt;':'*'-'m~~~w

6-- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday, J~n.l9. 1977

•

EO. NOTE: The article below
;about Dave Diles is by Tom Keys,
:Columbus Citizen Jou rnal Sports
·Editor. in the Jan. !Blssue. Diles, son of
;the late Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Diles,
;Middleport, has built a hideaway home
.off the Bashan road about three miles
;from .·~cine. It is Diles' announced
&lt;intention to retreat to this Shangri La as
:soon as possible to spend more •time
;doing his favorite work, which is
1Writing.

•

did out of India napolis a few years ago
was hailed the best field reporting eve;
seen by ABC's top man in sports, Roone
Arledge. It was so good that Indianapolis officials ·told Diles he would
never be permitted on the grounds
again if the show was aired. Roone
ordered "roll it" and Diles is dead at
Indy.
Dave Diles has speht much of his
time in television in · the "bullpen,"
always ready to bail out someone at
ABC but never very sure of his next
assignment. He had 13- and 26-week
contracts. But that isn 't exactly steady
work.
. WHEN AN ASSOCIATE with far
less ability signed a juicy contract, the
kid from Middleport gave ABC an
ultimatum. A good contract or forget
Diles. There was a 60-&lt;lay option. On the
59th day he was contacted by Arledge.
Result : Atwo-year contract, and a very
good one. "I do the Prudential
Scoreboard (football) show and every·
thing else they want me to do." Diles
told me over a brew at the Sheraton.
"I bave nothing on my (TV) schedule
this montl\, I was supposed to do a
bowling show but plans were changed."
,Such gaps leave Diles time for his
first love ... writing.
HE RECENTLY CAME OUT with
his third book, "12th Man I• the Hud·
die," and in July will hit the market
with a book that presently has no title

•'

TOM KEYS SAYS :
AB&lt;;·TV's Dave Diles, now of New
;York. bas a lot of the Midwest left in
;hirri.

.

.•
Perhaps !bat's one of the reasons
;'the Middleport, 0., native who got into
·~e levision almost against his will can
~point a finger of guilt at his own in·
~dustry .

·

,
~&lt;sure , there's violence in sports
•and TV has helped create it," says the
:tan. handsome, black-haired son of a
;railroader who learned his journalism
.•here at the ·knee of the fabled Fritz
;:Howell while both wqrked lor the
';Associated Press.
;,
Diles is a TV veteran. But he
·'remains a joumalist and that's a trick
f:mastered by few .
.• HE SAYS Ti'LEVISION is "geared
;.to mediocrity anti wlU remain that way
•', unless the people (viewers) demand

.

. , •more ."

;:

,.,.

Di les calls the Indianapolis 500

although it _ mi~ht be ''Archie
Heisman."
SURE YOU'VE GUESSED the
subject matter. two-time Heisman
trophy winner Archie Griffin .
The man who wrote "Duffy" (as in
Duffy Daughe rty) an d "Nobody's
Perfect," ttie story of Denny McLain. Is
excited about the Archie book because
he's excited about Archie.
"The book will deal more with
Archie the man than Archie the athlete.
It's his philosophy, the way he is and
has been and will be no matter what
success he achieves.
"We hear about the decay in th e
morality of our Cl)untry, of corruption .
To see an Archie Griffin float in on such
a high plateau is a great experience.
· Here is constancy. Success could not
change him. He is one of the most
refreshing persons I've met."
DILES LOOKED FOR CHINKS in
the Griffin armor. Finding none, he told
hi s editor at Doubleday, "We might
have to launch this one at Lourdes."
The book will be found in the sec·
lionfeaturing sports. Actually, though,
it will be Doubleday's top book in the
religious category for the summer.
That will surprise some people ... but
few here who really know Archie.
We're iooking forward to. the book,
Dave Diles. I know I can count on an
henest job from a TV man who can't
and won't kick hi s old journalistic
habits.

BASKETBALL
Ohio High School

Register for free pure bred
Beagle puppy to be given away 1-

Report

scheduled Jan. 25

Basketba 'l Resu lts

MONTREAL (UP!) - .Tbe
United Press Internationa l
Montreal Canadiens and
Anderson 64 Milford 50
PhUadelphia Flyers battled it
Beaver Loca l 84 Llsb'on 54
out in the stanley CUp finals
Caldwell 67 Belpre 66
Cin Aiken 80 Cin Wi throw 7.4 last spring and now they are
Cin Western Hills 80 Cln carr ying
ove r
their
Hughes 65
dominance
of
the
National
'Cq! Hartley 75 New Albany 62
Forest Park 90 Norwood 35 Hockey League into the
Garaway 65 Hilcind 57
annual All.Star game.
Indian Hil l 69 Mariemon t 54
The two teams will dress 13
Lake Ridge 57 ·arunnderda le
of
the 40 players that will take
52
part in the game Jan. 25 ·in
Ashl and 63 P.or tsmouth 52
Lock land 63 Taylor 59
Vancouver when the Prince
New Philadelphia .49 Cam - of Wales Conference . meets
bridge .SJ
Ridgewood -51 Tuscar awas the Campbell Conference.
The Wales' team will be
Cath 48
·
Tri -Valley 57 River View ·47 coached by Mon.treal's Scotty
Union town lake 71 M inerva Bowman and the Campbell
67 I otl
team will be coached by
Philadelphia's Fred Shero.
Ohi.o College
The two coaches rounded
Basketball Resutts
out their 20:man rosters
United Press International
Mount Un ion 64 Baldwin· Tuesday by making eight
supplementary picks apiece
Wa ll ace 61
Wi ttenb erg
64 Ba ldwin - in guaranteeing that each of
Wall ace 61
the 18 NHL teams are
Wi ltenberg 62 Capi tal 56
Denison 88 Otterbein 85 loti represented lit the game.
Sl)ero picked two more
Ohio Domi ni can 71 Mount.
Vernon 70 ( of)
Flyers, defenaeman Torr
Hiram 99 Case Wes tern 85
Bladon and right wing Gat'!
Find lay 77 Manchester [ lnd.J Dornhoefer, while Bowma1
68
.
added one extra Canadier

defenseman Serge Savard.
The two aildltional . Flyers
gives Phl)adelp!Jia a high of
seven players in tbe game
while Montreal Is right
behind with six representatives. 1
· Shero'li alsQ added to his
squad defenseman Harold
Snepsts of Vancouver,
centers Garry Unger of St.
Louis and Phil Esposito of the
New York Rangers, right
win g Wllf · Paiement of
Colorado and left wings Tom
Lysiak of Atlanta and Tim
"'lung of Minnesota.
Bo wman 's add iti onal
.1oices were defensemeD
1m Schoenfeld of Buffalo,
enters Peter McNab o£
loston and Guy Charron of
Nashington, left wings Nick
Libett of Detroit ru\d AI
MacAdam o£ Cleveland and
right wings Marcel Dionne of
Los Angeles and Jean
Pronovost of Pittsburgh.
Players previously chnsen
to l;lke part in the game !rom
the Wales Conference were·
goalies Ken Dryden of

'.

ups lead
!i in girls ratings

New Orleans whips Celts

United Press International
; ; By GENE CADDES
the top ten.
"l&gt;ete Maravich, top scorer
; : UPI Sports Wrlter
In Class A, however, all ten in the National Basketball
, . COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Un- teams which made up the Association, ran off 44 points
;: beaten Columbus Bishop first week's top ten came Tuesday night to help the
•; Watterson stretched its lead back for an encore, although New Orleans Jazz beat the
:. in this week's United Press there was a shu{fling of BosllJn Celtics, 9!HI9, after
; :Inte rnational Ohio Hi~ positions.
getting whipped six times on
• School Board of Coaches
New Riegel jumped from an 18-&lt;lay road trip.
:· Class AAA girls basketba ll eighth to third behind Adena
But Coach Elgin Baylor ·
•' ratings.
and Delphos St. John, while kne w il was not just
; . The Eagles, boasting a 7~ Convoy Crestview slipped Marvich's performance that
; ·.record, picked up 10 of 13 fir st . from second to fourth.
guaranteed the win.
• ' place votes in the second of
The rest of the top ten list
·•we firi ally played smart
i· eight weeks of balloting in consisted of Minster in fifth , basketball," Coach Elgin
UPI 's new girls ratings and followed by Russia, Rocky Baylor said. "We played
; . soared to a 49-point margin - River Lutheran West, to ugh. offense a nd good
: · 114·6&gt; - over runnerup Lancaster Fisher, West Unjty defense. I only wish we could
:, Cincinnati Sycamore.
Hilltop and Tinora.
play like that all the lime."
; ; Another Columbus Catholic
Fisher, 3-2, bas lost only to
Bos t~ n Coach 'Tommy
;· Le ague 1eam, Bishop AAA Westeville South and Heinsohn agreed that it took
! ' Hartley, remained No. 1 in Watterson by seven and nine more than Maravich to beat
Class AA with its 4-2 record, points, respectively.
.. his team.
: with losses coming to AAA
After Watterson and Syca"We lost the l:!::trl.., in fl'lp
. powers Watterson and No. 5 mo re in AAA comes
: Columbus Walnut Ridge .
Kettering Fairmont East in
• And, in Class A, Frankfort third, followed by Struthers,
t Adena held on to its top.spot, Columbus Walnut Ridge,
Division II NCAA
but picked up a new Toledo · Centr al
and
BASKETB/ILL RATINGS
! ch allenger in unbeaten Middletown tied for six th,
UNITE D PR ESS IN i Delphos St. John , which GahaMa -Lincoln in eighth, TE RN ATIONAL
1. Sacred Hea r t Conn . (14\ actually polled one more first Medina and 'Cincinnati
01
118
; place vote than Adena but Mother of Mercy.
2. Wiscons.i n-Green Bay ( 15' finished behind in points 80Running down the AA 1I ·
11 4
: 68.
teams, it is Hartley, Warren J. Virgil'1 ia State ( 13- 1)
104
ams ma de Cha mp ion,
Ca mp bel l 4. North t.labama ( 11·01 96
: . Tw o ne
Tennessee -Cha t tanooga
• appearanc sin he )l.lf!Lin 1\!.emOrial, Warsaw River 5.
111 ·11
f AAA th i wee , ToleQO-"View, Cortland Lakeview,· 6. Ken tucky State ( 1 0~ 21 80BB
{ Central tholic and Medina, Akron Our Lady of Lords and
7. Manka to State Minn . (! J'.
62
' both 4-(), placing defending Bellbrook tied for sixth, New J)
8. Hartwick' N. Y. (9-ll
60
; loui'nam t champion Toledo Concord John Glenn, Ontario 9.
tie Towson State Md . ( 11 • Woodwa d, a lopsided loser to and Harrison.
1I
40
! Central Catholic last week, Again, the weather cut into 10. Bridgeport Conn . (11 21 40
,. and B ling Green. .
the schedules of many of the 11.Texas Sou thern lll ·1 33
; Th e were aiso two new state's teams. Bellbrook, lor ,
' tea in the AA list, Harrison instance, has yet to play a
; 13 ) and Ontario (IHJ) , drop- game because of. weather: . ping Dresden Tri-Valley and forced cancellations.
PHILADELPHIA (UP!) • Oregon Cardinal Stritch from
•
For mer heavy weig ht
'•
champion Joe Frazier was
1 CLEVE LAND (UP! ) one of three ex-hoxers named
Tuesday nig ht to the
MILWAUKEE (UP!) Mil wa uk ee Br ewe r s Pennsylvania State !foxing
1 contract with the Cleveland President Bud Selig was Hall of Fame.
• Indians and has already been married Tuesday in a private
Named, in addition to Fra~ designated as the starting left ceremony to Mrs . Sue
zier, were former lightweight
• fielder and No. 3 hit!er, tbe Steinman, at the home of lhe contender George Benton,
, club announced Tuesday.
bride's parents in Mequon. manager of ranking middle} Signing of Grubb, acquired Ra bbi
weight Benny Briscoe, .and
1 in trade from San Diego, plus officiated. Barry Silberg the late Pinny Schafer, ex, shortstqp Alfredo Griffin and
Selig was divorced last manage r of heavyweight
• pitcher Bob .Grossman, both year ~ from his fir~t. wife, Leot\s
Martin
and
·• minor leaguers last season,' Donna, after 20 years of fea therweight' Sammy Goss.
~ brought llJ 14 the number of m8'riage. Mrs. Steinman
The three will be honored at
"' players under contract for was divorced in 1969 and it is a testimonial dinner March
l the 1977 season.
the second marriage for both. 13.

1

•
first hall on the "boards,"' be points each.
Elsewhere, Houston ripped
said. "Pete Maravich is a
great player and you know he Chicago , i03-ll5, Los Angeles
is going to get· his points, but edged Kansas City, 113-lll,
it's the other players that Cleveland beat Milwaukee,
beat you If you don't stop 101-93, Golden State kayoed
Denver, 107-101, and the
them."
Maravlch, averaging 29.3 Philadelphia game at Buffalo
points per game, led a drive was postponed because of a
early in the secood quarter snowstorm.
that put the Jau·out front by Rockets 103, Bulls 85:
Calvin Murphy, Houston 's
10 . points. The Celtics
mini-guard
at 5-feet-ll, scored
threatened the Jazz lead late
2&gt;
points
in ·helping the
in the game, but Marovich
jwnp
slightly ahead
Rockets
sparked another dri~e that
of
Cleveland
in
the very tight
beld Boston at bay.
Ron Behagen followed in Central DiviSion race. His
Jazi scoring with 16 points playing prompted Coach Tom
and Otto Moore led in Nissalke, to say, "Murphy is
rebound s, collecting 17. John really playing All-Star
Havilicek led Boston with 28
points. Dave Cowens, Jim
Ard and Curtis Rowe had 10

.

i ~e~e;r:~e~oh:~ ~~~y~:~

•

12. Bal fi.more (11 .2)

3o

13. Gannon Pa .·( lO-ll
24
14. Jackson State Mi ss . (JJ.

21
23
15. tie Puget Sound Wash. ( J2.
4)
13
Flori da Tech 11 2.21
13
Other s rece i v ing voteS :
Assumptio n
Ma ss .;
Bl ooms bur g St ate, Pa .;
Cc1mpbeiL N.C.; Clar i on
State, Pa.; M issouri -.Bolla ;
Moor ehea d Sta te Minn .;

Q

Norfolk Sta te. Va .: North

Dako t.:i; Nor'thern k en tuck y ;

Roll ins F la .; Sea ttle Paci fi c ;
Souther n La .; Valdosa Sta te
Ga . and Youngstown S1a te.
OhiQ .

DIVISION Ill NCAA
BAS KETBALL RATINGS
l. Scr anton Pa . (1 0-4)

120

2. Wittenberg Oh io ( 10-21 113
J. Aug uslana Ill (13-21
110
4. Monmouth N.J. 19-51
90
. S. Bradeis Mass (7.1)
85
t.. Muskingum Ohio 110·21 76
7. Occiden tal Calit.l 11 ·31 53
8. Hamil ton N.Y. I7·21
39
9. La ne Tenn. IB-31
36
10. 10. Willi am Perin Iowa ( 11 -

31
11 . Boston Sla te 19·01
12. Ashland Ohio 110·31

30
25
23

13. Frankli n &amp; M arshall Pa.

[JO.JI
. 14. Widener Pa (9.4)
15. Glassboro N.J. (H I

20
14

10

Othe r s r eceiv ing votes:
Cent r al l ow.a : Ja m estown
N. D.;
Kno)( vi l le Tenn .;
LeMoyne -O w e n
Ten n . f
Suffolk Mass-. ; Transylvania

Uf ica.

~y .;

N.Y.;

Washington and -Lee Va. and

Whittier Cali f.

16 oz.

SMOKED

Giant

LB.

_
,
e
.
5

KIDNEY
B~ANS

2

30 oz.
Can~

Size

2

LIGHT RED

6-8 lb. Average .

Fami~

BREAD
39~

JOAN OF ARC

PICNIC HAMS

MISSION , Kan. (UP! ) Sacred Heart University
(CoM.) is the new Division II'
leader, and the University of
Scranton (Pa.) tnps the first
Division m ratings of the
season in the National
Collegiate
Athietic
Associa t ion 's w·e ek-ly.
basketball ratings released
Tuesday.
·
With a 14-() record, Sacred
Heart moved into the No. 1
spot from second last week,
replacing Wisconsin-Green
Bay (15-1) which dropped to
second after losing to
Northeast Missouri State, 6863 . .Virginia State (13-1 )
moved intn third from eighth.
North Alabama (12-0)
joined the Division II poll for
the first time in placing
fourth, while 1976 National ·
Collegia te Division ll runnerup Tennessee-Chattanooga
(11-2) moved up a notch to
filth from sixth last week.
Scranton, (l0-4 ), the
defending National Collegiate
Division III champion,
received a uiiaminous 1211
points. The Royals have won
-24 straight games against
Division III opponents, and
three of their losses this
season were to Division I
members St. Francis ( N. Y·.),
Bucknell and Army.
Wittenberg ( 10-~). which

Golden Isle

.·THIN
SPAGHETTI

'••

Hamburger

3 LB. PACKAGES

.'
COLUMBUS
(UP II - This
week's United Press In ternational Ohio High School

lost to Scranton, 60-57, in regions will lie ranked by
overtime in last yea r's re g ion a I ad vis .o r y
cl)ampionshlp, is rated committees. The regional
second, Augustana (Ill,) (13- chairman then form the
2), which placed third in the Division II voting boards
1976 championship, ij third in which will rank .the top 15
the poll.
teams in the weekly poll.
Each week through March · Teams are rated on their
I the top teams in ll!l' ~ght won -loss
records
a nd
Division II and ni basketball strength of sch edule.

Board

OW" ''~

~ ' J, Qlr .

,

m

~57 4 3

3.011

· --·---~

•- - -·-··-·

89~

20 oz. loaves

•

79~

CORN

$1
4
16oz.

Cans

RC or Diet Rite Cola
8-16 Ol·

Bottles

.,~.

YAMS

·~" 49f

Pius Tax

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

298 Second St
NO SALES TO DEALERS
QUANTITY RIGHT~ RESERVED

BUCKET .
.

~alrmont

GROUND CHUCK ••L~·

•••

BONELESS

SHOULDER ROAST •• ~~
COUNTRY STYLE

(2) 15·01 80

(3) 17-01 68
3. New 'Riegel Ill 18-01 64

FRENCH CITY

4. Convoy Cres tvi ew

1n1 54

7. Rocky Ri ver Lu ther an

(1I 12-01 33

121 ( 3 ~ 21 20
West Unlly Hill top
.
(5-I) 18
lO. Tinora
13~ 1) 17
9.

Othe-rs wi th f iVe or~ ore
poi nts: l r\onton ~ f . Joseph,

Cardington, Ridge)'non l. Wesf
Salem NorThwes-tern , Hill s-

dale . Bethel. Arc anum .
Miller Ci ty, Ada , Millersport
a nd Newark Catholi c.

FRESH

TOMATOES .........~a~ ••
YELLOW
ONIONS ••••••••••••••••
3 LB.- BAG

$ 99 MEOW - MIX .... ~.~~~: •••
DOG CHOW •• !~~~!~......
u::Z~ $ 19
-PURINA
.
$ 49 TIDE
PURINA

__.

SHOPPERS

~

"All-WEATHER"

~

~~

. ' 00;!1,9~ ..

$26~t::fw,.,
.. '

s~nday .;,
I

.

Price$ Effective Thursday lhiu Sunday

Amp Haolr Ca.,.clty 36 . .. up to
AW·24 .. . priced slightly hlghtr.

CAT CHOW ············~··
rotJPO"i

DOMINO
AHC~

with Group .
·

5

••

l

.,

DETERGENT•••••••• ~ ••••••

·

•

\

1

'

FRANCO AMERICAN

SUGAR '

LBS.

79*

.......,.y

,.

SPAGHEnl ·

W/C.

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires : 1-22-77

MEIGS TIRE CENTER,' INC.
992-2101

.

.

- DrY cllartt4 tar dopond .. lo Jont·lnll,. pow.r.
_,.,.,.., ..... c.M ond covtr tor high power-to,..llhf ratio . • • Ileal onct lhodl ,.lttonce.
-Nan-1pll1h gong vent cop&amp;, lorgo P'!'tos, plastic-rib
llfllll'llan.

3

.·

10 LB. BAG

BAmRY

•

10 lilts~:~

$ 69

PURINA

,..

91il.' 7.,~··
M • ..

$ 19

8. Lancaster Fi sher Catholi c

O~EN .. ,

WE WELOOME
.FOOD stAMP

.LB.

BACON ••••••••••••••••••••

17-0l 53
I 11 14·0) 48

LOW PRICED "GO·POWER"
,l

LB.

SAUSAGE ...............

Points

2. Delphis St. John

West

CHUCK ROAST ••-. :~~ •••

PORK

Sandusky .

5. Minster
6. Russia

$ 49

LB

CUBE STEAK ••••••• :••••

Utica , Urbana , Ri ver Valley,
Wes t Jeff er son and Upper

Class A
Team
1. Frankfort Adena

POMEROY. OHIO
Prices Effective Thru
.
January 22. 1977

\

TRIAL CONTINUES
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Tbe
coln Wes t , Clnclnna1i Oak
slow-moving
obscenity trial
Hills and Delaware.
o£
Hustler
magazine
publisher Larry Flynt ·
Class AA
Team
Points dragged on today in a second
t. Columbus Hartler
lllralght week of trying to
(3) •. 2) 61
pick a jury.
2. Warren Champion
(5· 11 54
At the end of an all~y
3. Campbell Memorial
seuion Tuesday in HamUton
(31 17-01 42 Coun_!)l Conunon Pleas Court,
~;. Warsaw River View
a total of 22 prospective
(I) (J.OI 40
jurors had been challenged
5. Cor tland Lakeview
(11 (7·1) 39 bY attorneys and excused,
6. (tie) Belbrook
(0~0) 32
each side using II of Its ro
6. (tiel Akron Our Lady
ofEims
15-ll 32 penllisllble challenges.
Testimony might begin
B. New Concord John Glenn
(4.0) 22 Thursday.
9. Ontario .
(6·0) 18
Flynt, aloog with his wife
10. Harrison
(1 ) (3·0) 16
Althea,
his brother Jimmy,
Others with five or mroe
points: Dresden J'ri-Valley, and AI Van Schalk, all
Perry (1), New Lexington, staffers of the magazine, are
: ·Madeira, Wyoming, Copley. charged with panderinH
• Teays Valley, .Springboro,
Dayton Jefferson, Lima obecenlty and ~aging in
Bath. Watf&lt;lns Memorial 111. crpniled crime.

&amp; Depg~it

, i

·

ROYAL PRINCE

(2-

East
(4·0) 50
(3·11 48
&lt;. Struthers
s. Columbus Walnut Ridge
(J.O) 46
· 6. (tie l Toledo Cent Catholic·
121 (4·01 42
6. (ti e1 Middletown
Ill (4·01 42
8. Gahanna Lincoln (J.OI 40
9. Medina
(4.01 29
10. Cincinnati Mother of
Mercy
12-01 25
Others with five or more
points: Bowling Green .
·Toledo Woodward. Eas t
Liverpool. Fairfield , Perrys.
burg , Greenvil le, Westlake,
Bay Village, Win tersville .
Mentor (1) , Madison, Eastlake North, Cleveland Li n-

" '· ~-....!_1.7. 44

WHOLE KERNEL

Class AAA
Tum
Points·
1. Col umbus WatterS&lt;m
1101 17·01 114
3. Kettering

CHES TER TOWN SHIP
Twp Clerk
Meigs Count y

GREEN GIANT

g ir l s

2. Cincinnati Syc amore
0) 65

Itt ~&lt;"l&gt;&lt;ll•o"' Jo l't I lll lillh•O O&lt;te.... '&gt;flr 31 lil~

long Botto n. Oh io

Coaches'

place v otes and w on-l ost
records In parentheses ):

.,

CH ES TE R TOWNSH IP

, ·""Y"-"'"'•'"'11

of

bosketba li ratings (wi th first-

ACTUAL USE REPORT .

Plll&lt;!"!:tlotdG'""14~~·~~"11

H -76. No pur chase necessary,
need not be present to w1n

Girls' ratings

·.,·

DELMONICO

·•:--

the second half in handing the
Bucks~wh o played without
Bob Dandridge and ·center
Swen Na ter- theif fourth
straight defeat. Br ia n
Winters had 18 and Scott
Uoyd 14 lor Milwaukee.
Warriors 101, Nuggets 10,1 :
Cliff Ray grabbed two key
rebounds and made a pair of
_free ihrows with 14 seconds
left and Rick Barry hit two
free throws with eig ht
seconds to go to clinch tbe
game for Golden State. Barry
topped all scorers with 26
points and made seven steals.
Jamaal Wilkes added 24
points. Dan Issei paced the
Nuggets with ~ points.

Sacred .Heart tops Division 2

Small college cage ratings

t

caliber ball. .. .And he has
become a floor leader. He's
making things happen ."
Lakers 113, Kings 111 :
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
scored 26 of his game~igh 36
paints in the second hall to
rally t,os Angeles from an 11·
point deficit. The Lakers also
received 17 points and seven
assists from Lucius Allen.
Roo Boone led Kansas City
with 25 points and fiv e
assists.
Cavs 101, Bucks 93:
Austin Carr scored 19 of a
total 22 points in the first hall
as Cleveland took.a 5H3lead
at the intermission. The Cavs
led by as many as 19 points in

By Clarence
Miller

I am sponsoring legislation children to support .pays up to
that amounts to a significant 10 percent more tban the
refonn of the Ia• code. T!W -married couple with one
presently constituted tax income. An $8,000 income,
achedul es di sc ri minate the single pa rent pa ys $1,4811
aplnat unmarried persons, - $100 mote in taxes than the
widows and widowers, and ma rried couple with one
lltOI'~ing marrted couples or, income. At $16,000 income,
In other words, ap- · the penalty is $280; and at
·proximately 54 million $44,000, the penalty is $1,280.
Awoman who goes to work
taxpayers. It i.s time to
eradicate this unwarranted to supplement the family
distinction which causes income Is now penalized by
widoWed and single people the tax system for such
who work to pay ilp to 20 inltlatlve, For example, if a
percent more in taxes than a woman goes to work to
taxpayer with a non-working supplement her husband's
spouse flltng 8 joint return. $5,000 Income, and her m
·
PenaliZed in the same way come is $5,000, the couple will
as single people is the pay $200 in ta•es more than if
working married couple they were two single persons
filing ·separately or jointly on filin g their
lr.dlvldual
two incomes who in some returns. This Is a 10-percent
·cases are more highly taxed . surtax on the · amount they
than two single persons could ·be paying if single.
earning the same income and Take another example:
maintain ing
a single Should the husband make
household. This Is because $20,000 a year and the wife
the ta1 schedule used by $10,000, the couple will pay
married couples filing $780 more in tax than if they
separately has higher rates were two single people filing
than the single schedules, separately.
even though the single
I believe these high rates
schedule Is more costly than for married w0rkbig couples
the joint return schedule. The are a result of the mistaken
actual cost to the single belief .that salaried work by a
taxpayer and working wife is a luxury. While it may
married couple can best be be true that some family
illustrated by a few eiBm· incomes are substantially
pies:
increased because of a wife's
A single taxpayer wpose work, the great majority of
taxable income Is $12,000 working women come from
pays $2,630 in taxes before lower and middle -income
credits; if he were married families, and they are
and the sole wage earner In working often at personal
the family and !Ued a joint . sacrifices to their family to
return, he would pay $2,260 - meet toda y's high cost of
a difference of $370. The tax living . Certainly. taxes
penalty for being single at should reflect dl!ferences in a
$8,000 Is $210: at$14,000, $450; taxpayer's responsibilities
at U6,000, $570; at $20,000, for child rearing, but the way
$850; and at $50,000, an in· to do this is through deduccredlble $3,130.
lion ~ for dependents, not
Even those single people through different tax
who file · as head of the schedules.
household are discriminated
There is no doubt that this
agalnBt.· A widowed, divor· Congress must act on this
ced, or single parent with reform.

Montreal
and
Gerry
Desjardins of Buffalo,
defenseman Larry Robinson
and Guy Lapointe of
Montreal, Borje Salmlng of
T?ronto and Brad Park of
BOston, centers Darryl Sittler
of Toronto and Gilbert
Perreault of Buffalo, right
wings Guy Lafleur of
Montreal
and
Lanny
McDonald of TorontD and left
wings Steve Sbutt of Montreal
and Rick Martin of Buffalo.
The previous • Campbell
Conference selections were
goalies Bernie Parent of
Philadelphi a and Glenn
Resch of the New York
Islanders, delensemen Phil
Russell of Chicago, Denis
Potvin of the New York
Islanders plus Joe and
Watson
of
Jimmy
Philadelphia, centers Bobby
Clarke and Rick MacLelsh of
Philadelphia, right \vi ngs
Rod· Gilbert and Don
Murdoch of the New York
~gers and left wings Eric
Vai\otof Atlanta and Clark
Gilll'fs of the Islanders.

,.

~Watterson

.

NHL All-Star .tilt

®

Diles has fourth book·in the boiler

-s. ;

"

14¥4

oz.

I

PURINA

DUNCAN HINES

CAT FOOD

CAKE MIXES

6/$1W/C oz. 6/$lw;c

Limil1 Per Customer
Good Only AI Powell's .
. 1

CUfl(IN

6.5

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only AI Pow~ll's
Offer Expires: l-22.'77.

~~ 2/$1 W/C

1

Limit 1. Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires: 1-22-77

�mendatlon• made by local
service stalioQ and garages
wlll certainly prevent dozens
of auto failures encountered
by motorists during the
current arctic cold spell. Odie O'Donnell lB a partttme
sportswriter lor th$-Sunday
Times-Sentinel ana Is em·
ployed by the G&amp;J .Auto Parts
check list Is completed. Co. as a sale8man.

'

Nation hurt
by hitter chills
United PreiiiDI(I"'IIItleael
Snow and bitter cold closed
industries a11d IIChools and
· lro.ze crops in the South and
an Arctic chill drained power
and gas in the East, forCing
New York City to set up
emergency shelters for
persons without heat.
Alaska was warmer than
parts of Florida.
Snow feJI on northern
Florida Tuesday and · the
temperature leQ to 17 at.
Tallahassee as th~ state
suffered Its worst cold wave
in sill years. Citrus fruit .and
vegetables froze in the
usually wann fields. Snow
continued today.
The temperature dipped to
the 20s Tuesday at Klssbn·
mee, Fla.,' and residents of
the Cypress Cove Nudisl
Camp donned clothes to keep
warm . .Gainsville, Fat.,
stores did a brisk business In
coats and cold-weather gear
as temperatures dipped to the
20s lor the third straight day.
In Washington, soldiers
used jackhammers to chip Ice
from the route of Thursday's
inaugural parade for Jimmy
Carter and Sen. Ted Stevens,
R-Aiaska, invited Carter to
"move
the
inaugural
festivities to Anchora ge,
where the high was in the 40s
compared with the :lMlegrcc
chill in Washington.
" It's warmer there in
Anchorage than in Daytona
Beach, Fla.," a National
Weather Service spokesman
said.
Snow piled five to six inches
deep in Alabama Tuesday,
· closing schools and high·
ways, and snow virtually

Tips offered owners
of balky car~ in cold

Eure~a

•

hatted traC!ic in Mississippi.
The
New
York
metropolitan area shivered
through Its coldest winter in
59 years and city officials set
up emergency shelters in
churches and commu nity
centers lor persons without
heat in their homes. The
temperatur e hit a record 2
above for the dare in New
York Tuesday.
Bitter cold closed stores,
businesses aM industries in ·
much of Ohio Tuesday,
though most planned . to
reopen today. Hundreds or
Santa ·
schools closed.
Cinci nnati had ba ck-toback records for the coldest
dsy In history. The mercury ·
plunged to 25 below !eio
Tuesday - coldest ever. The
previous record was 24 below ·
- set Monday. Schools there
· were closed for the rest of the
week.
0 Miles 100
200
Pennsylvania Gov. Milton
J. Shapp declared a state of
emergency because of energy
EARTHQUAKE CONCERN in California currently
shortages
that
Idled
focuses on tbe~.called Pabndale.Bulge northeast of Los
thousands of workers in
Angeles where rising ground near the San Aadreas fault
western Pennsylvania sig~als
sub-&lt;~urface stress. Seismologists warn that a
many in the steel industry of
maJor
quake,
registering eight or more on the Richter
the
Pittsburgh
a·rea.
scale,
could
come
within a decade.
Numerous school s" and
colleges were closed.
A criticel na tural gas
shortage hit Tennessee,
closing hundreds of factories
amJI schools. Gas supplies
were cut to all major in- barge traffic on the worsening ice conditio"".
Chicago had a brief respite
dustries in Nashville and Mississippi, Ohio, Allegheny
from
days of edreme cold as
Chattanooga and and Monongahela rivers. and
temperatures climbed to ihe
emergencies were declared stalled key shipments of fuel 20s Tuesday bot sub-zero
in Dyersburg and Clarksville. or power plants.
weather was expected to
Gas and power shortages also
Shipping was ordered
return
by week's end. The
idle thousands of workers · halted
between
Lake
rity
hasn't
had an above
Georgia.
Superior and the rest of the freezing temperature since
Huge ice floe
rled Great Lakes because of Dec. 27.

Desegregation of Cleveland
schools in two main plans
By JOHN SPI!:TZ
CLEVELAND ( UP!)
Desegregation
plans
submitted lor the Cleveland ·
public schools Tuesday
virtuaUy excluded suburban
participation, offering eight
alternatives to widespread
busing on one hand and
busing of 'nearly half the
system's ·121,000 students on
_the other.
The plan presented to u.s.
District Court Judge Frank
Battisti by the Cleveland
Board of Education was an
eight.part program to begin
Sept. 1978, that would affect
37 per cepl or the system's
121,000 pupils.
The eight desegregation
method&amp; were: elimination of
optiooal attendance zones,
closing some schools and
changing the use of others,
pairing 18 scrnols, clustering,
magnets schools - and
programs, voluntary school .
se lection, reciprocal
arrangements with other
school systems and review of
apecial student. transfers.

Livestock
report
SALES REPORT
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
Galljpells, Ohio
Jan. 15, 1977
STOCKER CATTLE STEERS - 200 to 300 lbs. 23
to 3Ui0, 300 to 400 lbs. 22.50 to
32.75, 400 to 500 lbs. 21 to 3-4,
500toll00lba. 23to:J.4.50, 600to
· 700 lbs. 21.50 to 33, 700 fbs. and
over 22 to 33.25.
HEIFER CALVES- 250 to
OOii Ills. 19 to 24.7~, 300 to 400
lbs. 18.50 to 24.50, 400 to 500
lbs. 19.25 to 211.25, 5oo to 6110
Ibs. 20 to 27, 600 to 700 lbs.
31.25 to 27.25, 700 lbs. and over
20 to 29.'15.
STOCK COWS &amp; BUL!.'l (by the head I Stock Cows 125
to 240, Stock Cows and Calves
l3S to 255, Stock Bulls 140 to
210, Baby Calves 5 to 44; (by
the pound) Canners &amp; Cutters
· Cows 21 to 26.50, Holstein
Cows 24 to 2UO, Commercial
Bu1J!·24.7§ to 31.50 (1,000 !bs.
•nd over).
PIGS - ~ to 27 .r;o.
VEAL CALVES - Tops 220
lbs. to 250 74 to 82, Medium
100 lbs. to 300 821o 73, Culls 55
down.
SOWS - ;150 lbs. up 2811&gt; 33.
BIRMINGHAM, Ala.
(UPI) - The Birmingham
Bulls '
World
Hockey
Auocllllan aame Wednelllly
ntaht with the Quebec
Nordlquu
h&amp;a
been
postpooed unUI Friday bight.
1\

'

The Ohio Board of EducaUo~·s desegregation plan in·
eluded widespread pupil
reassignment, specifying the
busing of 26,469 elementary "
school pupils ned faU. The
pian also called · for
transporting 12,6~0 junior
high school student. in 1978-79
and 12,993 high school
student.' the following yeaar.
The state .plan did not
Include bosing of suburban
school children and the city
board's plan merely pledged
to set up voluntary programs
with "other school systems,
public and nonpubllc."
Battisti ordered the local
and state boards to submit
desegregation plans when he
ruled last year in an NAACP
desegregation suit that both
were guilty of maintaining a
segregated school system in
Cleveland.
The judge's key guideline
was that the racial
composition or each school
should • not
deviate
substantially from the racial
composition of the sysrem as
a whole . The system Is
roughly 611 per cent black and '
40 per cent whire.
Asked if phase one of'the ·
local plan satisfied tbe main
guideline, school board
member James Tanner
replied :
"No. Not at this tbne."
Asked if the plan would
mean a racially balanced
enrollment at esch scbool,
Tanner responded, "Phase
one does not provide racial
balance at every school."
Tanner said the secOnd and
third phases of the three-year
plan were incomplete
because they would depepd
on what was worked well
under phase one.
Board member Berthlna
Palmer outlined reservations
about the plan alter voting to
approve lt.
" It does appear that a
substantial portion of phase
one involves lntegrared
experience · rather than
integrated l)ducation," she

and considered his guildines
beyond conslitutional limits
recently set by the U.S.
Supreme Court.
When asked how many
pupUs would be transported
under the local board's plan,
Tanner estimated the total
would beabout40,000. He said
transportation would involve
use of the school system's
present transportation
facilities, public
transportation and parents.
The, stare board estimated
its program's . one-time
startup cost would be $9,8
million, Ill .~ million of It lor
the purchases or buses.
Cleveland would pay $5.8
million of the total under tbe ·
terms of the plan.
Ongoing costs for the stare
plan were estimated at $12.5million dollars a year
following
full

BY ODIE O'DONNELL
connection.
The current frigid blanket
9. Do not leave your car sit However, the
recom·
of cold that has gripped the for two or three days without
Ohio Valley area lor the past starting the engine if the car
week has created many is. parked outside or in an
problems lor local motorists. unheated garage. The engine
Due to the severe cold, the should be started every day
worst in some 40 years, many and permitted to run for a
car owners were caught minlmumol20minutes. (llin
unprepared which resulted in a garage don 't forget to open
toia! ·failure of their family the garage door while the
cars. .
. engine is running).
The h'undreds of stranded
10. To prevent freeze ups of
CHIPPEWA
car owners has created .a the cooling system install
INSULATED BOOTS
critical service problem for enough anti-freeze to protect
LADIES
local garages and service it to minus 30 degrees below
FASHION BOOTS
stations, many of which have ' Zero.
·
over 20 service calls "backed
11. All heater hose, radiator
RUBBER
up," and in some cases have hose, and by-pass hose should
OVER THE SHOE
referred the caller to another be carefully checked along
BOOTS
station or garage.
with the hose clamps to
OVER THE FOOT
Here are some cold prevent loss of anti.freez e.
BOOTS
weather tips that should
12. Some type or ~'OOiing
FELT LINERS
eliminate many starting system rust preventative
RUBBER
INSULATED
problems and prevent a lew ·contain ing ·a water pump
BOOTS
FOR MEN
aeeldents:
lubricant should be installed .
WOMEN&amp;
I. Make certain the engine in the cooling system to avoid
CHILDREN
has been properly tuned up possible clogging or th e
by a qualified mechanic who .' radiator or heater core.
can Install top quality spark . 13. The proper thennostat
plugs, points, condenser, and should be installed at least
wiring.
every two years to insure
2. The engine crankcase proper circulation of cooling
should not have motor oil system liquid and provide
Installed that Is heavier than heat. ·
10-W-30, or straight 20-weight
Since anything that is man·
NEXT DOOR TO ELBERFELDS
oil, and a new top quality made is not a)ways perfect
filter.
your car may still fail you If
992·2815
Pomeroy, 0.
104 E. Main
3. The gasoline filter and ee1v:e:r~y~th:in~g~o:n~th~e~a~b~o:ve:..!:::::::::::::::::::~
air filter sbould also be 1
replace&lt;f-inore often and not
permltled to remain in
operation longer than 3,1100
miles in severe weather.
4. Try to avoid using any
gasoline that Is not recom·
mtnded lor your particular

I

....

..

·'•

..,
...
...
...
••

.•."'
,_

'"..

.,

-"

....

·"
"'
!

.'

...'

~c.g lne .
~. Make

absolutely certain
your car has a good battery
that will produce a minimum
of 2,300 watts cranking power
at zero degrees.
6. Should you p~rchase ~

••'
•

What with the cold weather which has cancelled out most

WITH
COUPON!
Dtluxt Chrom1color con.

jI

aole with Zoom Spacal
~::.~~nd 1000 Romote

1
I
I
I
I

r--------..........
save.$ ~~~od~!!~w
~

Kight now, til e S in g~ r * sewin g
mat.:hinl' you\· ~ ;llw~y s Wl.l nkd
i' 0 11 sak . Which mea us your
1&gt;1knt for scwittg c~tn now b ~
mjTl·h,,:d hy your fl air for :..~t Vi llg ,

I
I
I
I
I

• AMIFMIS!troo FM

·lunar-Amp.
• Staroo Proclalon
Rocord Changer
• Allagro Speekerl
• Top Quatlly

AT

TilE FA~HION MAT.E' ZIG·ZAG
MACHINE SAVES YOU ll0.9S
REG. I'I29.9S li sd r"l'·ill bubb ill
is so easy lo usc yo,u 11 cv ~r gl' t
womH.I up rcpl;t ~i n g iL . And tl h.'
hu (ll, l11 hliml hCtll sti l ~.: h gives
the mnst JHI'li'L·ss ional. 1iltt'abk
hems ever. C' arryin g~a St' or
~.:~Qin ~· t C.'&lt; lra:

"

INGELS FURNITURE

The Fabric Shop
. McC.II's, Kwick.· Sew.

Simplicity Patterns

'"""'"""'"''

..~1;iS~W;·~Se;;con_.d~....-Ph._.•rn~-2;28•4._.....P.o•m•e•ro•Y-.. . . . . . . . . .~

..

'I

;

.

.\,

of town ... :who drop in uninvited, With not even a warn ing call :

For Martha McPhail, .rr·s a time lor sitting in front of the '
fireplace working puzzles given to her lor Christmas by her
children. ~ major activity of ber day consist. of pulling on
boots, helping take off boots, putting wet coals in the drier, and
wanning the cold lingers and \oes of her three youngsters.
Catching up on some post-holiday cleaning and just relaxing
is how Linda Mayer is spending these cold days. With "The
Town Kiln" closed by the energy sbortage, Linda Is enjoying
the extra lime with her two children, Bethany and Michael.
While Rose Ginther of Pomeroy, Route 3, admits to really
missing her church and club activities, she's occupying her
time with quiliing and knitting, and an occasional outing with a
neighbor for necessities.
Pat Thoma confesses that she's enjoying doing "nothing"
except housekeeping necessities and cooking for her husband,
Earl, hQme from his construction employment, and children,
Kelly and Suzan.
Mrs. Ella Smith, Pomeroy, says she's not h;!ving a bit of
trouble keeping busy. She is spending her time worklng on a
baby quilt for a friend.
Marion Michael is conce)ltrating on warming her soul during
these cold days. Almost daily she is joined by a couple of young
converts for Billie study.
Addalou Lewis finds sitting around with a blanket around
her knees comfortable although she's experiencing a bit of
guilt because she's not making better use of her time off the
job. She is a cook at Meigs Junior High School.
Middleport's Martpa Childs is crocheting a little, going to
church, and generally staying close to home.
"Sitling on top of the register" is what Mary Rinehart enjoys
most these cold days. But then she also enjoys having her
granddaughter, Lydia Johnson, here. Lydia lor the past couple
of years has been in Virginia with her mother, but is now back
in Middleport to stay, Eddie, her brother, remains in Virginia
with hlB mother.
Retired teacher Maxine Philson finds it nice just to stay Inside and keep up on her reading , and not have to worry about
whether school is on or off.
Naomi King of Bradbury doesn't even complain too much
about weather. Her time is going toward recuperating from
the holidays, a little cooking and baking, and some houseclean·
jng.

some evening, bu t, in all the years we've known you, we've
never gotten the chance: you always show up before our
invit.at.ion .
We're Very fond of you , but when you arrive unannounced
you prevent us from :

Dear -:
You're just the guy (guys) we'd Uke to invire for dinner

also passes."

Polly's Pointers

By Polly Cramer
DEAR POLLY•- After you
DEAR READERS
l1ave done some handy launPerhaps there Is no Pointer dry , precious time is wasted
that I have passed on to trying . to clear the basin of
others more tbnes than the detergent suds . I found that a
following one that has proved little lathering of bar soap
invaluable to me and my under the running ap will
friends · and lB especiaUy cause the suds to clear like
timely now when some of us magic. II they are very
are having to let down our heavy, spread a bit of the
skirt hems a bit.
·
soap !'ather along the sides of
DEAR POLLY - I think the basin. Hope this helps
mothers will bless this idea. others with their rinsing proAfter a hem is ripped out, blems.
sponge over the hem crease
Polly will send you one of
with two parts of white her . &lt;~ pea chy ~~ thank-you
vinegar and one part water cards; ideal for framing or
and then team press. The placing in your family scral&gt;'
crease will press right out. book, if she uses your favorite
This works on wools as well Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
as cottons. (Polly's note - ~er column. Write Polly's
When using thisfabrics that I Pointers in care of this
do not want to put the iron on newspaper.
directly, I wring.a thin pressing cloth 1a piece of old sheet
is good) out of the vinegar
water solution, put the cloth
over the crease and then
tiress with a hot iron, being .
very sure the iron . never
touches the fabric. When such
tines are very stubborn I have
often used straight white
vinegar on the cloth.)
The birthdays of Sheila
DEAR POLLY- When tak·
Reeves,
Larry Walker, Dave
ing tnddlers to the beh take an
Dodson,
and Kay Walker
pld playpen · along that has ·
were
celebrated
Saturday
had the floor removed. When
night
with
a
dinner
at the
this frame is placed on the
Meigs
Inn
and
a
party
at the
lleach, with baby in it, he is in
Reeves
home
in
the
Baum
a sale place, within reach and
can still play in the sand like Addition, Route3, Pomeroy.
At th~ Meigs Inn a birthday
,lhe other youngsters. ·
cake
was served following the
· DEAR POLLY - Always
dinner
while at the Reeves
caiTy some small paper.
home
Mrs.
Walker presented
•plates In the car. When a
the
honorees
with a cake
•child eats an Ice cream cone
decorated
with pink
br ice cream bar on a stick I
elephants,
each
inscribed
'tut a slit in a small paper
.with
a
name.
:ptare and slip the stick or end
Attending were Sheila and
of the cone through II. This
Bob
Reeves, Mick and Twila
prevents a lot of spills, spots
Childs,
Rex and Cathy Ctimand stains on their clothing.
mings,
Guy and Sandi
, PEAR POLLY ~ , Place a
Sargent,
Connie and Dave
clean clothespin in the lhwnb
Dodson,
and
Carol and Den· and each finger of gloves
nisAult.
·
lifter washing to keep them in
good shape as they dry. Use
only clean or plastic pins or
•stains may dry into the glove
FIRST CHILD BO!\N
Iabrie. (Polly's nore- This is
HENDERSON, W. VA, 'super for chamois gloves _ . Mr. and Mrs. Michael Fetty
mine never looked so good.)
of here announce the birth of
• DEAR POLLY _ tJse a their first child, il son, David
·lollipop as a tongue depressor Michael Fetty, II, Jan. 10, at
when checking a child's sore Holzer Medical Center. The
: throat and you will have a infant weighed eight pounds
more willing patient.
and 13 and % . ounces.
DEAR POLLY _ I used to Parernal grandparents are
juat grin and bear It 111hen Mr. and Mrs. Harley Fetty,
lady dinner guests blotted Point Pleasant; paternal
their lipstick oo my Unen great-grandparentS, Mr. and
· napkins. Now 1 have solved Mrs. Ernest Fetty, Point
' the problem. Pour about a Pleasant; paternal greatteaspoon or more of salad oil grandmother, Estyl Clark,
oneachstalrrandrubthespot New Haven; maternal
, unW the cloth is saturated grandparents, Mr. and Mrs . .
through to the other side. The Robert Couch, Pomeroy;
greatoUseemstomeltlhelipstlck maternal
and launderln&amp; removes the grandmother, . Mrs. Ellen
,_ oil, I apply this about five or Couch , Pomeroy, and
: ten minutes before putUng niale\'nal great-grandfather,
· thenapkinsinlhewash.
, .Be~ Stobort, Racine.

Birthdays
celebrated
With party

I
I
I

.
I Affairs of the famous

what lo do and what not to do , Meigs County
housewives have turned lo a variety of activities until "this

governin~

By Polly Cramer

"

By Helen Hottel

Straighwning the house to make it look presentable.'
Reading our fayorite books or watching our favorite
educational TV (instead of your lavoriw sports program).
Stocking up the fridge in anticipation of your visit.
Making love,
Going out.
Having the necessary light we needed to clean the air.
Kissing and making up.
Painting the dining room furniture or scrubbing tbe floor.
Catching up on our correspondence, bills, etc . •

KRmTO~HERSHRADER

Observes
birthday

Sleeping - we work tomorrow, remember ?
And on and on and on.

NEW HAVEN, W. Va . Krtstopher Wayne Shrader,
S&lt;)n of Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Wayne Shrader of 172 Mayo
Drive,
New
Haven,
celebrated his third birthday
with a,party at his home on
Dec. 3.
A Snoopy theme was used
lor the party. Cake, ice
cream, potato chips and KoolAid were served to the guests.
Attending were Sharri
Roush and R: J.• Melanie
Fry, Leisa Edwards, Betsy
Simonton, Jeanne Larch and
Sammy, Becky Long anacre
and Matthew, Diane Fields,
Kelly a.nd Jill, Connie
Thompson and Sam, Susan
Kincaid, Bobby, Jason and
Kristie , Linda Snodgrass,
Michael and Bethany, Mrs.
Emil Shrader, Lynn Mann
·and Gabrielle.
Many gills were received
by Kristopher. Sending gifts
were Vicki Keathley and
Heather, Rita Pitzer, Heidi
a'nd Paul, Mr. and Mrs.
Marvin Jones and Mrs.
Lathey French.

r·"'social'
I Calendar

Yes, kids, we like you a lot. And we 'd like you a helluva lot
more if you'd let us decide just when we 'll play bost. - J. and

J.
P.S. Since everyone has this kind of drol&gt;'in problem,
our letter, displayed prominently, would get the hint
across. - JANE AND JIM
may~e

Dear J and J:
The world ha s two kinds of people : those who drop in, and
!hose who call first (or wait for an invitation). Mild hints won' t
convert the former, and an all-out blast will probably lose you
their friend ship . (They ca n't fathom "programmed
relationsh ips.")
If you truly enjoy these spur.of-lhe-moment folk, then
resign yourselves . Alter all, they DO save you tbat wild burst
of housecleaning which follows the warning calL- H.

+++

:(;·.:·:·:·:·:-:::..:·:-:::.~·~~~~;:-!*'•

SPECIAL MEETING of
Shade River Lodge 453
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. Work in
fel!owcraft. All master
masons invited.

PAST FORGETTING : MY
LOVE An"AJR WITH
DWIGHT D. EISEN HOWER
by Kay Swnersby Mvrgan
!Simon and Schuslcr, 285

j)&lt;lges, $9 .95.)
MY PARENTS: A DIF~"ERIN G VIEW by James
Roosevelt, with Bill Libby
IPiayboy Press, 369 pages,
$12.50.)
.
A LOVING GENTLEMAN
by Met. Carpenter Wilde and
Orin Borsten ISimon.and
Schu.ster, 334 pages, $9.95 .)
Affairs of the fam ous
By Carol Felsenthal
Being fam ous has its
drawbacks - not the least of
which is that after the
celebrity dies, some relative,
lover, or servant invariably
writes a book and invariably
bills it as the first and only
''insider's'' account.
Kay Morgan was Gen.
Eisenhower's wartime driver
and later, she claims, his
lover. Morgan, who di ed last
year , explains that she
delayed writing '' Past
Forgetting". until after Ike
died and she knew she was
dying : that same sense of
decorum and delicacy runs
throughout this affectionate
and affecting book.
Ike 's

outburst,

" God-

damnit, can't you tell I'm
crazy about yo"u" is ::~bout as
passionate (:IS their aff::tir
ever got. Since the couple

Dear Helen:
Why is it that news stories so often use age to describe could rarely be (l Ssured of
people, as in, :'John Smith, 55, was named Man of the Year ." privacy, their lovemaking
wa:S usually limited to exM o~.•-rewspapers don 't discriminate between black and
changing
mei!ningful gla nces
white any more 1unless color is relevant to the event). and
and
notes.
"Ms." 1or first name, no title) takes care of marital status.
So why must people be boxed into age brackets' - . As a memoir of a love affair, "Past Forgetting" is
PROTESTER
worth forgetting. But as a
rare personal look at a
Dear Protester:
military
man's life, it's very
Beats ME - except that readers are somehow avidly
definitely
worth reading.
interested in how old - or young - a newsworthy person is,
A
member
of Ike's official
and reporters give the public what it want..
wartime family, Kay met
dignitaries ranging.from
"Georgie" Patton to King
George VI. Indeed, some of
the best parts of her book are

Black family meets
'·for annual gathering

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT .· First United Presbyterian Church,
family night potluck at 6:30
p.m . with meat, beverage
and dessert furnished .
Members to take a covered
dish. Congregational meeting
to follow.
THURSDAY
MARY SHRINE, Order of
the White Shrine of
Jerusalem, 8 p:m. Thursday
at the Pomeroy Masoni c
Temple.

About ·books .
'

Wait To Be Asked , Mr. Drop-In!
Dear Helen :
TI1is is to the Good Old Buddy, relatives, friend s from out

social acti\ities, and the energy crisis which is more or less

Vinegar presses.
crease in hems

you drive your car at least!~
or 20 miles before parking it
for the night, as your alternator is the best battery
charger in the world.
7. Check the alternator belt
and make certain it is not
cracked, glazed, or loose on
the pulley. The alternator
belt must be very tight at all
times in order to properly
charge the battery.
8. Check the battery cables
and battery terminals, and
remove all corrosion from
around the . terminal and
battery post to Insure a clean

Helen Help-

~ US • • •

new battery, m8ke certain

COUPON! ' .

,,

t.~:::::::::::x::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::;:=!=~:::·:·::::::::~:::;:~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::•:::::::=::~;~;:;:;:w.~.

•,•

CHAPMAN- SHOES

implementation.
- Under the state plan, tbe
maximum distance pupils
would .be bussed one way
would be 13.6 miles and the
·average distance would be 6.5
miles. Maximum travel time
was set at 41 minutes.
State board member
Anthony J . Russo of
Cleveland cast the only
dissenting vote In the IS.t
decision to submit the stare
plan to Battisti.
.for integration of the
"I have yet to hold In my system's instructional staff,
hand a lull copy of the plan," administrative staff and
Russo complained, adding custodial stall by 1978 and its
that approving the plan clerical staff by 1979.
would be tantamount .to
According to Arnold
endorsing busing.
Pinkney' president or the
The local board's plan c:eveland school board, the
specified a cost of $14 million local plan represenwd "A
the first year, or phase one. good faith effort on the part of
or the total, $9 million .would the board of educatioo" to
be for pupil tranSportation. meet desegregation
The local plan also called guidelines set up by Battisti.

.said.

Under the plan, she said
liOIJle student. would be Involved in an integrated
experience one or two dilys a
week and others would be
InVolved only two weeka of
the year.
"I have a very serioua
question as to whether the
guidelines are being met,"
she added.
Charles Clark, attorney for
the G1eve land school board,
· maintained the plan "goes
fartlier In the ftl'lt year than
many plans that have been
adopted and put Into Ioree."
He added that the board 'traa
appejillng BaiUati's decision

•
·~

RUTLAND - The annual
Christmas dinner of the
Black family was held on
Dec. 19 at the American
LegionHallinRutiand.
A buffet dinner at I p.m.
was followed by a gift exchange and social time. At·
tending were Mr. and Mrs.
Burdell Black, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Black, Sr., Mr. and
Mrs. Warren Black, Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Black, Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Black, Mr. and
M1·s. William Black, Mr. and
Mrs. Jerry Black, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Black, Jr., Mr.
and Mrs. Walter France, Mr.
and Mrs. Mike Gibnore, Mr.
and Mrs. Elza Gilmore, Mr.
and Mrs. Joe Jones, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Eblin, Mrs. Belie

Lanning , Mrs. Dorothy
Groo1ns.
Mrs. Alice Boling, Mrs. Annie Davis, Lynn Black, Greg
France, Suzy Grooms, Missy
Black, Keri Black, Lynda
Black, Brynda Black, Jason
Black, Sbelly Black, Tammy
Black, Chris Black. Mandy
Black, Laurie Black and
Angie Black.

Dinner honors
family visitors

Dawn, Mt. Vernon; Mr. and

VISIT ENJOYED
Holiday guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Stanley Trussell were
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Trussell
and Nancy, Newport News,
Va.: Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Trussell, Reedsville; Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Trussell and

Mrs. Ralph Trussell and
lamlly, local; Mr. and Mrs.
John Ridenour, Jason and
Jared, Chester; Mr. and Mrs.
LESSONS ASSIGNED
Students enrolled in the
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Van Richard Kerns, Belpre, and
real estate course being Vranken entertained Satur- Robbie and Deidra Cowdery,
conducted at the Meigs day night at their Spnng Ave. Newark.
Junior High School through hOme with a dinner honoring
Rio Grande College taught by their son and daughter-in·
HOSPITALIZED
Virgil Teaford are to read the law, Mr. and Mrs. Scott Van
Mrs,
Joe Turner of
next four chapters before the Vranken, of Jacksonville,
Bucyrus,
lonnerly of Midnext class meeting, the in· Fla.
dleport,
is
a patient at the
structor said today.
The dinner. also honored Bucyrus Community Hospital
Titles of the chapters are : Matthew Van Vranken on his
Real Estate Ownership and 12th birthday. Scott, st.tioned where she is undergoing exInterests;
Lines,
En- with tbe U. S. N~vy ai amination and treatment.
cumbrances and Other Jacksonville, and his wile are Cards may be sent to her
Encumbrances to Owner- here visiting their parents. there or to her home address,
ship; Plamling, Zoning and others attending the dinner 212 E. Lucas St., Bucyrus:
other Public Limitations to were Mr. and Mrs. TRacy The Turners moved from
Ownership; Land Survey and' Whaley, Mrs. Floyd Oxley, Middleport to Bucyrus last
Property .Descriptions. Last Mrs. Gladys Cuckler, Mr. and spring to be near their son,
night's meeting of the class Mrs. John Werry, Mrs. Mark Robert, and his family.
was postponed due to the · Werry, Bill Young, Mark
energy crisis.
Boyd, ~nd Jan VanVranken.
MOVED TO HOME
RUTLAND
- Miss Eliza
OTHER SURVIVORS
Adams
of
Rulland
who
other survivors of Frank
CANCELLED
rec'elltly
fradured
her
hip
in
M. (Penny) Dill, 66, Roure 3,
A meeting of the Afternoon
a
fall,
has
been
moved
to
the
Pomeroy, for whom f"1'eral Circle and Class 12 of Heath
services were held today, United Methodist Church Sharon View Nursing Homeat
include II step-grandchildren scheduled for Thursday has South Vienna, 0. Cards and
and several nieces and been cancelled. Plans for the letters may be sent to her
nephews. Burial was In Beech • annual valentine project of there. ·
.Grove Cemetery.
remembering shutins of the
community will be n\ade at a
later meeting of the church
NO MEETING
groups.
ELECTION CALLED
The meeting of the Alpha
Omicron Chapter of Delta
RACINE - The Racine ER
Kappa Gamma · Society
squad wlll meet Monday,
WON'T MEET
Jan. 24 at 8 p.m. at the fire
scheduled for Saturday at the
1'h&lt;! January meeting of the Methodist' Church in McArstation. There will be · a
Middleport
Clfild Conserva- thur has been cancelled by
special election of officers
and everyone wishing to vote tion League has been cancel!· the severe weather and the
ed.
... energy crisis. Members are
is urged to attend.
in Meigs, Jackson and Vinton
Counties.
TURNPIKE FIRE
HOURSSHORTENED
BROADVIEW HEIGIITS,
The Meigs Mental Health Ohio (UP!) - Fire, resulting
Center In Pomeroy will be from a boiler room explosion,
CANCELLATION
open only from 9 a.m. to 3 · brokeoutinthebssementola
Special meeting of
p.m. lor,the remainder of the service plaza on the Ohio Pomeroy Chapter, Order of
week due to the energy turnpike Tuesday.
the Eastern Star, scheduled
The Ohio Highway Patrol lor Friday nigh! has ' been
shortage . Regular office
hours wUJ be resumed on said, however, there were no cancellc'!l due to wealbcr conditions.
Monday, Jan. 24 .
reports of injuries.

her comments on the leaders

of the day .
About the P.M . (i. e. Prime
Minister Winston Churchill)
she writes: "I always used to
think how shocked the P.M.'s
nanny would ha vc been if she
could see the way he behaved. He would slurp his soup,
spill things, pick up food with
his fingers. He would pick his
nose while listening to the
rare person who managed to
get a word in edgewise."
• Not

ev~~on~ W:l:i rvnd

Kay . Gen. George Marshall,
Until now, nearly 15 years
Army Chief of St.ff and Ike's alter his death, his passion
boss, apparently pressured lor privacy has been ·
Ike into scrapping plans to respected . Ye t Meta
divorce Mamie and marry Carpenter Wilde's book is an
Kay . Marsha ll threatened ·explicit acco'llll of her nearly
that if Ike "even ea1ne close two decade affair with
to doing such'a thing, he'd not Faulkner.
Wilde was a secret.ry and
only bust him out of the anny,
he'd sec to it tha t never for script girl to director Howard
the rest of his life would he be · Hawks when Faulkner left his
able to draw a peaceful home and alcoholic. wile in
breath."
Oxford, Miss; lor Hollywood
The children of Franklin and a job writing
and Eleanor Roosevelt have screenplays. Their affair
slid into obscurity, surfacing startedabnostinunediately.
now and then to justify their
Wilde, unfortunately, is an
involvement in a seemingly inveterate nam e-d ropper.
ceaseless series of business She sometimes forgets that
and marit.l sca ndals (among her story is of interest only
them, the Roosevelt children because of her link to
have been divorced 17 times) Faulkner - not because
or to write he "rcill story" Maurice Chevalier tried to
behind their parents' al&gt;' seduce her on a cross-country
paren tly miserable mar- train trip.
riage.
But . anyone who cares
"My Parents" is James about the man behind such
Roosevelt's refutati on of classic American novels as
brother Eliott's rece nt book "The Sound and the Fury"
in which FDR was portrayed will want to read this book.
the ultimate Don Juan and Faulkner as the hard·
Eleanor
the ultimate drinkmg, hard-loving loner is
prude: Ironically, James' beco ming legend.· Wilde
book provides a nearly iden- presents the essentially
ti cal, rather than a "differing romantic other side.
vi ew," as its subtitle promises.
The book offers little that's
new about the Roosevelts'
Uves, and it's written in a
style that's an affront to the
r ea der . The book's

as

as

disorganization and redun-

dancy make reading it
frustratin g a nd sometimes
boring.
But it's also ofte n
fa sci nat ing , sin ce J; My
!'arcnts" i• an excellent
analysis ot what it's like to be
the child of a famous person.
James wa s only 13 when his .
father was crippled by polio.
As the eldest son, he was soon
eased into the role of
"glorified errand boy," serv·
ing as his lather's legs and
alsoas his whipping boy.
When a Uraguayan president hesit.ted to join FDR in
a 1!Jontevideo parade (or fear
of. being shot, FDR reassured
hun by suggesting, " I'll let
my little boy Jimmy ride in
the jump seat dJrectly in front
of you so yo u'll be shielded."
As public servants, FDR
and Ike probably accepted
the inevitability of afterdeath ' di ssections. Nobel
Prize winning noveli st
William Faulkner refused to
accept the invasion of his

JUST
RECEIVED

MEN'S
GREEN
INSULATED

BOOTS

of

HOME MADE HAM SALAD ...................... ~~:. ggc
Wetkers

·

CUT UP FROZEN fRYERS ....................... ~~: __ 59'
Superior 1 lb . Pkgs.
·
LUNCH MEATS ........................................... :.~~:.. 99'
French

Arnerican ·· Single
~ MAINE
SLICED
'
,.
10 lb.
CHEESE ...... .:..8••~~:...
POTATOES ..... -.-~~?..
Quarters
'
.
59~ RED
.6 oz
NUMAID
1 lb.
2 pab
MARGARINE .......... _
RADISHES ............... .

79

.

98

FROZEN

12 oz. Welch Grape Juice .................~.~.

2
69t
·

1 lb. Crlsc6 Shortening ••••• ,,.,., •• , •••••••• 65~

16 oz. Clarion Pink Salmon ...~ ...........•1.79
10 oz.
Maxwell House lnst. CoHee ... •3.59 Limit 1

24 oz. Armour Beef Stew................... 93~
3 oz. Armour Potted Meat ............... 3/59•
d

17 oz. Del Monte. Whole Ke~el .
or Cream Style Yellow Corn ............. 2/69~
12 oz. Bakers Chocolate Chlps ............. 79~

29 oz. Del Monte Pumpkin ............ ~.... 49~
30 oz. Sweet Brier Purple Plums ..... ~ ... 61~

. '

·'·

~
,.

•

�10-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday,Jan.19, 1977

Boats frozen solid in
icy Mississippi River

JR·ocky, old fashiQned
•
movze, may prove tops
. .
By VERNON S001T
HOLLYWOOD (UP!)
The most exciting actor in
Hollywood
today
is .
newcomer Sylvester StaUone,
the writerstar of "Rocky," an
oldfashioned movie which
may well become a classic .
Rocky is called the Italian
Stallion, an appelation which
applies to StAllone himself, a
raw, handsome stud of a
man.
The son of an Italian
immigrant, Stallone was a
street kid with a penchant for
trouble. He stralght..ned out
enough to graduat.. from the
University of Miami in 1969.
He became an unsuccessful
~

Scott's world
actor and an undistinguished
television writer.
Then he wroie "Rocky.''
United Artists wanted the
prizefight picture for James
Caan or Burt Reynolds .
Stallone said no. He would
play Rocky or it wouldn't be
played at all.
"They offered me $265,000
and live per cent of the
profts," StAllone said. "When
!turned it down 1had exacUy
$106 to my name and my wife
was pregnant.
" It wasn't a matter of
courage . I wasn't templed to
sell the story. My agent, my
parents and fri•nds said sell.
But something told me not to
let it go.
"I believe it was destiny. I
always wanted to play a
fighter and this was a big
• opportunity. Maybe the only
opportunity.
"If I'd sold my script 1
wouldn 't have gone for the
whole shot - which is what
'Rocky ' is all about. It was
my ,chartce to shoot for the
top. I become very stupid
when 1 become adamant.' '
.Thus far "Rocky," an enormous hit, has played in only
16 theaters in seven cities.
Patrons interrupt the film to

CAPE GIRARDEAU, Mo.
(UPl)- A "hugeice gorge"
measuring 38 mlles formed in
the MlssiJaippi River south
from Cape Girardeau to
Cairo, Ill., Tuesday, further
complicating the traffic jam
that h1111 virtually frpzen all
boats in place ~r the nearest '
safe port.
John Wild, information
ol!lcer lor the Coast. Guaid in
St. Louis, said the newest
gorge to form on ihe river
should be moving slowly
northward
towards
Cape
. d
H
'd
G. trar
eau.
e
sal
·t·
· · ht f
cond1 wns are rag
or
fonnation of another large
gorge
neara Ch
estelee
r, nl
·
"Thi
. ·sis
huge
gorge,"

.

'

stand and cheer. "RockY" is accents.
a throwback to better movie
Success hasn't really
days. It has a happy touched Stallone yet . He
remains the outsider,
ending.
Rocky is a hero to root for somewhat defensive, vutly
sell-&lt;1ssured.
- and lll is Stallone. Both
His sex 8AJ08l is instantly
underdogs who rise to the
occasion against impo~ble apparent. Women dinen in
the Sunset Strip 's most
odds.
Stallone and Rocky share famoils restaurant could not
little other than their take their eyes from the
triumphs
and
broad laconic new star.
'"Rocky' is going 10 be a
shoulders. Rocky is a
tough
act to follow," he said.
plodding, inarticulate .third"l
think
he is the 19'108
rate boxer, a gentle soul, a
answer
to
Charlle Chaplin's
misfit. Stallone is bright,
tramp.
He
gets
kicked around
ambitious and coofident.
but
he
finally
shuffles off
"I saw the first day's
down
the
road
on
his own.
rushes at4 a.m. on location in
"I
doo't
know
what
I'll do
Phjladelphia," Stallone said,
"and I knew this would .he nell. Maybe I can't play
better than 'On The Water- anybody but Rocky. 'Rocky
Wears a Suit.' •RockY with an
front .'
"To me this picture is a Arrow in His Back.' 'Rocky
miracle. It touches people· Goes To Mars.'"
Stallone earrred only $600 a
and holds them. It's opened
week
during the brief ftlming
the doors of obscurity to
of
"RockY."
He continues to
many people. It's generated
live
in
a
single
bedroom walk·
excitement and a desire lor
up
aparlment
in a rundown
new faces.
section
of
Hollywood.
He's
"Ughtweight critics say
still
making
pa)'lllents
on
a
'Rocky' is preposterous and
four-year-old
Volvo.
could never happen - a ham
"I've got $704 to my name,"
and egger lighting for the
championship. The hell It he said. "I borrowed most of
can't. It has happened. You that and I'll be getting
can't critici~e the Jliclure another loan. I've gotta buy a
technically because it was house , My son, Sage, is eight
made in 28 days for a million monUis old now and he~s
bucks.
neVer seen a blade Or grass."
Stallone will be able to
"Why fault camera angles'
borrow
as much as he likes.
Why argue lighting. There
He
owns
10 per cent of the
were· no more than three
takes for any scene. Most of profits of "Rocky, " a
prospect which should bring
'em we got in one take.
. "People don't go to pictures him mlllions. .
The house he's thinking of
to see camera angles. The
don't care if the mike boom buying is a $400,000 Beverly
casts a shadow. They want to Hills mansioo.
care about the characters on
At least one room in hls new
the screen.· They're paying to dwelling will have a desk and
see faces."
typewriter.
"I write a couple of hours
Stallone's face is one they
should .be ~ing for years to every morning," Stallone
c~me. He ts a muscula; ma.n said. "It's a release. ! feel if I
, ':"'th black, tousled hall'. H1s do nothing else all day, I've
)aw bears the blue shadow of accomplished something now
a heavy beard. DeceptiVely matter how miniscule .•'
soft bro~ . eyes bracket a
bold aquilme nose. His deep
baritone betrays streetwr

are

Denominational in, •~n.o .....ing

Wild said. "We might as weD
tell people . to bring their
martini glasses and
the
booze, bee ause we •ve got
plenty of water
1 and ice."
ff
Wud 581'd rver
Ira dlc 'I00
1
1
·
.
th e · MISS ss PPI an 1 s
· fr
lllin ·
trlbutanes
om
o1s was
Iet e1Y
Jus t · da bou'I t tcomp
ffi
1 11
stym1e ••Virtu
1 no11 o hln
c a ·Y
cIosed· '
a Y not g 18
moving on the ·river in" this
he
whoi e area r Ight now,
sai~e 26mile stretch that

LAW AND ORDER is a big responsibility which
.Sheriff Kath.YCrumbley of Saint ClalrsviUe, Ohio, e;.pecls
to have no difficulty handling. The six-foot officer is Ohio's
first woman sheriff and the third in the entire nation.

Independent rigs

County reinaln~d aground
near Chester.
Four towboats were
reported stuck in a gorge in
the Olain ol Rocks Canal
between Locks 26 and 27
north of St. Louis. ·
Along the fllinois ruver
gorges were reported about
every 20 miles between
Grafton and La Grange, IU.

•'

Wild said stations along the
Ohio ruver reported that.
pel'IOilS can wallt acr0111 the
river on banlr:-t~ lee at
Louisville and Cincinnati,
and a lock with its gates down
near Paducah, Ky ., will
remain down because of a
fear that Ice would break the
gates If efforts were made to
close it.

Amtrak schedule noted :
Copies of n•m· trak's ChessleSystem (B&amp;O) tracks
regio.nal · rail passenger between Washington and
timetAble ll.stlng fares and Cincinnati. The James
schedules
for
the Whitcomb Riley makes area
Was"lngton
•
Cincinnati
••
stops at Charleston, Hun"S.h en and o a h" , the ling ton, Tri-State Station
Washinl{(on-Chlca~o "Jame. (Catlettsburg, Ky.), and
.Whitcomb Riley'.', and the South Portsmouth, Ky. on its
Norfolk·Chl'ca-go "M
. oun- washington-Chicago route
taineer" are available at the over Chessle System (C&amp;O)
Pomeroy Chamber of tracks. The Mountaineer
Commerce ofl1'ce .on the rna kes area stops at Trl.State
gro~nd floor of the Me1'gs
Station and South Ports- .·
County Court House 1' n mouth on its NorfolkPomeroy.
Chi
cago route which operates ,
Timet•btes
for
this
region,
•
pa rt Ia 11 Y over Chessle ;
other regions, as well as Sysiem (C&amp;O) tracks and
nation-wide timetables may
.
partially over Norfolk and
also be obtained at the Western tracks.
Amtrak station, Sillth Street, HABER MOVES
Parkersburg or by writing
LOS ANG
Amtrak, 955 L'Enlant Plaza
ELES (UP!) Joyce Haber, former
North, S.W., Washington,
D.C. 20024 . Information syndicated Hollywood
regarding si:heduies, fares, columnist, has been hired as
nd ti ket
.
a C&lt;lntribatlng editor for Los
a
c
reservations can Angeles Magazine to write a
also be obtained by calling monthly C&lt;!lumn.
toll free in Ohio l-800&lt;&gt;2Hl317
or in West Virginia l-aoo.8'74Seth Baker, chairman of
2775.
pathereboant~mopalth
nye, CHmaCgaCzineorp·.s,
'"
The Shenandoah serves the ·said Tuesday the new feature
area wi.th stops at Parkers- will
be similar to her fanner
burg,
Athens,
and column and will begin in the

FALL AND WINTER

had been closed because of a
Sunken barge Was reopened
near Cape Girardeau with a
marked channel'250 feet wide
and 12 feet deep.
Wild said about 50 towboats
. he
and
250 ba rges were m t
By LeROY POPE
th
.
UP! Business Writer
o er costs are borne by the river,someinportandothers
NEW YO.RK (UP!)
indHeilpel ndlednt;
th
Tstuckdin the ~ceh, aboudt ~oon
sa s1nce e truckers
ues ay, wtt con lllons
About 25 ,OOO independent have no voi.ce in setting the deteriorating s(eadi.ly . A
truckers have bee·n for ced out rates the split doesn't work bltrge tarrying salt rieeded to
of business in the past three out fairly. The certt'fa'ed .
1 'sh
li · St Loui
years and ooe result has been carriers and· the shippers ·set rep_en_l•s•up-p.es_m_._ _
• .;Chl;;;;lll;;,;cot-he;,.;;o~n,;;itsililiiii:;.o::,;v~e:,r~":;;o•;;;"-ii'iii"ii-io'
a poorer selection of produce the freight rates, which are 1
regulated by the ICC.
at supermarkets.
"The citrus; tomato, potato
And since the trucker is an
an(j some other crops were independent cootractor, the
hit hard by the independent •Justice Deparlment says he
truck shortage this year, and cannot form an organization
somll&gt; of the harvests never that resembles a union
reached the' major markets," without
violating
the
according to William J. Hill antitrust ta
of Pittsburgh, chairman of
So . d ws.
the National Independent
me m ependent truckers
Truckers Unity CounciL
' try to survtve by haulmg
Hill 'd th'
· he cargoes thatareexempt from
~~~ . tngs may
ICC regula~ ons and dealing ·
worse IS year·.
direcUy with shippers but
The 25,000 mdep~ndent ltnexi&gt;ected costs such as
tt:uckers fore~ OU! lll. th\!,. having to hire . union
past three years were 20 per stevedores to unload and
cent of a national fleet that above all, a high percentag~
?'lee numbered 125,000. The of empty backhauls, can •
l~depende~ts ~ ha~e; b!~" . ll'ltke this~&lt; bu!li1!~• .. un, ·.
responsible for hauling allo~l profitable.
·
•
40 pe~ cent of the coltntry s
"The situation is likely to
CANNON '
m~~rctty truck ca~go..
get worse before · it gets
'
. But a combmauon of . better," Hill said . "The
inflation and governmental independent trucker is being
restramls .that keep them squeezed and \he conswner is
fro~ orgamzmg ... Is dnvm~ being squeezed. Something \s
th.e md~pendents to the wall, · going to have to give in the
SOLID COLORS
Hill said:
.
mooths ahead or we may be
I.
He S3ld an .mdependent headed for a really critical
OR
Short and long si'eeve.
trucker typtcally mvests situatiort ,
BLAZER
STRIPES
Former ,values to. $5.99
$75,000 in his rig includlpg
·
Fall and hol iday stqck.
finance charges, works a 75Regular and XL sizes .
hour sevenday week and is
luckY if he clears $300 a week.
· Hill says the. time has gone
when a man could make a
living out of small truck.
"There's just no more small
load, short haul business
aroltnd."
If he's going to haul
produce, the irtdependent
needs a $45,000 diesel tractor
•PANTS •SWEATERS
and a $20,000 refrigerated 4tlfoot traDer. Such a rig gets
about lour mlles to the gallon
CASUAL LOOK
of diesel and the price of fuel
has jwnped from 30, to 50
TEENS AND WOMENS
cents in three years.
Added .to these · problems .
are government rules that / 7fl''-"
Hill says deprive the
independent trucker of any
real voice in his affairs.
He usually cannot deal with
Values to $9.99
the shipper. He 'has to lease
his rlg and his services to a ?.:':'-u4'v'l
carrier certified for the route
by the Interstate Commerce
Commission. The .Sua! split
of the shipping charge is 75
per c-ent· to the independent
trucker and 25 per cent to
holder of the route
PRE.WASHED ,
certificat...
. The certified carrier pays
the liability insurance but aU

victims of times

:.0-----.

OUR

CONTINUES··· WITH GREAT SAVINGSI

marked by prayer ~Or umt y ,
•

.. l

By D.\VID E• .\NDERSON
UP! R•llglon Writer
At hut ~ lance , 1976 did not
appear to he a t:ood year for
the ecun:enkal forces
seeking to rer.uce religious
divisions ,.,Jd tensions and
foster interfaith harmony and
rea,_Uty.
Among Lutherans, for
example, there was formal
schism, with moderate
dissidents in the 2. 7 million
Lutheran ChurchMissouri
Synod finally breaking with
the denomination and
forming the Association of
Evangelical Lutheran Churches , bringing yet another
body
to
American
Protestantism.
Ironically, the new At;;LC
announced as one of its
primary goals the unity of
American lJJtheranisrn.
The split in the Millsouri
Synod also threatened the
fraglle fellowship that has
been achieved over long
decades between Missouri
and her sister Lutherans,
most notably the middle-ofthe..-oad American Lutheran
Church.
Nor was Lutheranism the
only branch of Americart
Protestantism to be touched·
by internal dissent and
possible schism.
The cootroversial decisioo
of the Episcopal Church to
· allow the ordination of
women to the priesthood
continues to deeply· divide
that denomination and
threatens it with schism.
Dissidents who say they
cannot live with the idea of
women priests· have called
lor meeting later this year
and formal schism is
conSidered a very live option
by a minority of the
dissidents.
In addition, Southern Presbyterians are fighting over a
new confessional statement,
Homan Catholics are
troubled by differences
regarding the ordinatioo of
women and the place of
dlv'orced and remarried
Cathoiia in the church, and
Southern Baptists are divided
over the explosive presence
of charismatics in the
denomination.
In the midst of these
internal troubles comes the
70th annual Week of 'Prayer
for Chriltlan Unity, 'set this
year for Jan. 16-25 with the

theme "this hope does not
dis~ppoint us ."
Co-sponsored by the
Commission on Faith and
Order of the National Council
of. Churches and the
Graymoor Ecumenical
Institute, the week of worship
and prayer also enjoys the
blessings of the Bishops'
Committ;,e for Ecumenical
and Interreligious Affairs of
the National Cooference of
Catholie Bishops.
"Hope is an appropriate
response to the various
moods prevailing in church
and society today," says the
Rev . Arthur F. Gouthro,
director of Gray!floor.
"These moods .'ll:"ge from

Laurel Oiff
News Notes
BY BERTHA PARKER
Due to bad weather Sunday, Jan.16 the attendance at
services at the Free
Methodist Church was 44.
Mr. Pearl Jacobs remains
a patient at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mr . Harmon Fox was
returned home Friday from
Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Howell,
Asten, spent the weekend at
their home. While here IIIey
helped to care lor Mn.
Howell's lather, Mr. Fox.
Mr. Vern Story, Cohatnbul
spent the week with his wile,
Fern Dora and son John.
This coffee talk gives me 1
pain In the neck. I don't ben
a word about potato chip~ and
pop which I think are very
expensive. ·
Mrs. Dora Holley and Mrs.,
Evelyn Thoma visited
recently with Mrs. Mall!arel
Sinclair who is a patient In a
Rest Home at Wellston.
KENTUCKY BOUND
CINCINNATI I \)PI)- Wll·
liam Mascusls to be returned .
to Kentucky to finish serving
a robbery sentellce there
before he serves a ilfe
sentence in Ohio, Harnlltoo
County Common Pleas COurt
Judge Thomas Heekin ruled
Tuesday .
Mascus was one of three
teenagers convicted in the
murder of Cincinnati service
station attendant Charles
Pomerantz, an Eider !Ugh
,School student:

•·

,

cautious optlmism to
downright skepticism about
the possibilities for justice,
peace and reconciliation
among the nations and the
Christian churches."
Gouthro, who counts
himself amoog the optimists,
notes that despite the grounds
for despair on many !roots,
"dialogues between the
Christian ch!D'ches, though
slow and tedious, are
progressing steadily. There,is
now greater wlllingness to
negotiate and discuss once
forbidden topics.
"Even where strong
disagreements among the
churches remain," he said,
"there .is an eagerness to
maintal!) friendly relations
all the same."
Celebrated primarily with
interfaith worship and prayer
services, .the Week of Prayer
has lost for some Its
controversial aspect· as
ecumenism has become an
accepted part of the
American and worldwide
religious agenda.
But with a whole new rOWJd
of ecumenical dialogues
scheduled for 1977, many of
thernto touch on issues that
have divided churches for
hunonda of years, the Week
ol Prayer for Chrlillan Unity
expresses the hope that
*iv- eeumenilts forward
~ , ~n whrn the moods in
... c elt and aoclety would
Mom to prohibit any

proc;resa.

·BATH

WOMENS
TOPS

TOWELS .

~,9 $}44
·MENS

DEEP PRICE CUTS
ON PANT SUITS

TUBE

SOCKS

77~

FASHION
TOPS

DRESSER
SCARFS

DMIFTWOOD

HARTLEY'S

Up To

~~,1~1111111
CONTINUES
MEN'S -DEN'S -atiLDREN'S
-""'-..!.

•

NATIONALLY ADVERTISED cBRANOS

HARTLEY'S SHOES
Middle Of Upper B.lock. Pomeroy. 0 .
Store Hqurs - 9 a.m : to 5 p.m .

Monday thru Thursday
Open All Day Thursday

Friday Night Till&amp;
Saturday 9 a.m. til5 p.m.

.

Beautifully styled, perfectly
matched wedding rings by
KeePsake, mastercrafted In

elegant HK gold.

Long

79~

.

JS~P.~~~
.,

lf'

Dol lies . . . 69c

JEANS
NEW ARRIVALS
MANY STYLES
Sizes
7
To
16
'

$899

To $1~.99

DOZENS
OF
.·
.
'
CLEARANCE
ITEMS
e SILVII IIIDGI PLAZA

jBANKAMERICAAD

IIG IAVINGSI

e POINT PUAIANT e MAlON

''"'"' .... ,4_.,.

,j

B·LUE TAG.

..
'

l'

.

L~

MERCHANDISE
.
ONLY

"""··

'.

NOT ON AD
AT

1

LADIES'·WEAR,· MEN'S WEAR, GIRlS' WEAR, .BOYS' WEAR

'DENIM

'! !!!

1

GREAT BUYS FOR-THE ENTIRE FAMILY!

�•

-

14 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday, Jan. 19, 1977

Millions ·will
watch switch
'

.

'

.. '

.

''

..
'l

"·'

•·

-.' ''
...'''

'

'.

-

'

'.
'' '

..

''

.

'

-- •, '

''
-;\

.' .
' '
1. '

I

'

'

..'' . '

.,
• I

By JOAN HANAUER

at the Capital anchor boolli
while Howark K. Smith will
be across from the White
House when Carter leaves
Blair House around 10:30
a.m., and with vice
pr esidentelect Walte r
Mondale breakfasts with
President Ford and Vice
Presiden Neison Rockefeller.
Alter Carter and company
leave for a fast motorcade to
llie ·Capitol, the . action will
switch tO Harry and Ba rbara
and the aCtual inauguration.
The ceremoni~s are to begin
at 11 :30 a.m., willi ~immy
Carter being sworn in at high

UPI Televlllloo Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) ~ On
Jan. 20, the natioo's capital
wUI becune Jimmy Carter's
W&amp;VIingtoo and millions of
Americans will watch the
televised changeover tn
inaugaratioo ceremooies that
wUI be essentially traditional.
There will be · small
changes that are apparent the reviewing stand has ·been
canted 4~ degrees so it
doesn ' block the view of the
White House, the presidentelect will be ·sworn in as
Jimmy Carter, not J3Jl)es
Earl , there will be six . noon .
inaugural parties instead ol ~"Th en Howard will carry
fi ve inaugural balls. · But the ball while Harry gets in to
there will be few surprises. a car with a hand-held radio
"lnailgurals are always ex- frequency camera," Pfister
citing~ although admittedly said, "He'll ride down the
my excitement quotient is parade route behind the
rather low," said Walter President and describe what
CrOOkite, who has covered all it is like to ride in the
of them for CBS since Ha rry motorcade . He'D get off at
S. Truman was sworn in for La fayette Park to join
his first full tenn in 1948, Howard."
which also was the first
·-Meantime, back at ABC's
television inauguration. "! Connecticut Avenue bureau,
enjoy that kind of symbolic Miss Walters will be getting
pageantry.
interviews ready. ABC hopes
''There is high drama in the to
in tervie w Lyndon
inauguration i!;self, and that's Jo.hnson's da ughters and
P"rticularly true when the others who have lived in the
• inccrning administration is of White House, but so · far
a different party."
Ca rolyn Kennedy; Julie
Crookite will anchor the Eisenhower and Tricia Cox
CBS coverage and he is have refused.
dubious that it will come
also will have two sets
. across very different - or of NBC
anchors - John Chancellor
even very much more
and David Brinkley will
inf!I1Ilally - than previous cover the morning activities
swearing~n ceremonies and
and the inauguration
•celebrations.
ceremooies, but wljen Carter
" Of course, it could be," he
leaves Capitol Hill to return
said. "If it turns out to be an to llie White House, Tom
Andy Jackson people 's
inaugural, tha t obviously Brokaw and Jane Pauley will
ta ke over from Lafa yetll!
would make the story."
Park
to anchor the parade
Looking back on his
an
d
Carte r's
fa vorite inaugurals, he said : reviewPresident
of it.
"The most exciting was
"There's been an awful loi
John F. Kennedy's, perha ps
of
talk about ·how different
because of the youth of the
th
is
inaguration is going to
p-esid•nt and his · bride. It
be,
but
I don't see too many
" gave the iJ;augural a kind of
differences
as far as
gaiety that was probably a
television
is
concerned,"
said
little mare intense than at the
Frank
Jo
rdan
,
executive
olliers.
"T he Eisenhow e r produ cer of the· NBC
ll!levision coverage of the
inaugural was quite well done event.
- quite formal, I thougiJt, but
"! lliink the major change
well done and certainly
in
the way this inauguratioo
glamocous. Richara Nixoo 's
is
being
handled won't show
was a little less ionnal than
·
o~ television. They have
Eisenhower 's but also
opened up a lot of buildings in
glamorous.''
AU three networks will be Washington to people lliat
covering the inaugural entire week, and added a lot
activities from 10 a.m. to 4 of free events that will take
place over llie week. That
p.m. CBS will cover the woo't show on television .
inaugUration eve gala from
"When you get to the
the KeMedy Center for the bottom line, inauguration day
Arts
in
Performing
oo television is going to look
Washington, D.C., Jan . 19, !1- like
a
traditional
11:30p.m., Eastern time, for inauguration in just about
which it reportedly paid $1 every r"espect, and I'm not
millloo. ABC plans special sure thafs bad."
coverage of the inauguration
Jordan said he detected
parties from 11 :31knidnight. more
interes t in this
"Harry Reasoner and Bar- inauguration than in Nixon's
bara Walters will be covering
inaugural four years
the parties," said Walter J . second
ago and he added:
Pfister, ABC News vice
"There's a lot •1 curiosity
p-esident in charge of special about Carter and what kind of
television news programs. person he's going to be in the
"Carter will attend all six White House. Then there's
parties. Black tie is optional the presence of Jerry Ford.
and there will be cash bars, His very presence as a loser
which is a change. Carter will makes
th e
situation
make a little speech and interesting,
dance at each,"
- ~~ w e' v e watched on
Pfister said lliat ABC will tele vision
before
as
operate during the day with a
presidents
who
hadn
't
run for
three-person anchor . tea m
and two anchor boollis, ooe at re-Election rode up the Hill
the Capitol and one in willi their successor - Ike
Lafayette Park overlooking willi Kennedy , Johnson with
Nixon . Bu t this lime a
the White House lawn.
defeated
incumbent will ride
ABC will open wi th
with
his
successor."
Reasoner and Miss Walters

TV••.in Review
• r'

.' .' '
.

''
';

''j '

,, .
'I

.!l
)

'

...
I ''

r .,.,

,,

.,:; I
:. f ••

·..

"'
' '

r1

By JOAN HANAUER
UPI Televlsloa Writer
·
NEW YORK (UPI) - Advertising agencies are finding that
· there lsn't enough prime time network television to go around,
and two of them are trying tD do something about it.
The term "fourth network" has been used to describe what
BeniDn &amp; Bowles and Ogilvy &amp; Mather are planning, although
the term reaDy isn1 accurate . 'There would be no network
structure at least not in the foreseeable future.
·
There ~ould be no new chaMel for viewers to tum to - the
"fourth network" would sign up existing stations in existing
.marketa for Its programs, to be sponsored by natlooal
advertisers instead of the local advertising usually seen on
independent stations.
.
.
Both ad agencies are atarting lheu- thinking with
Metromedia, a broadcast group, wblch consists of five
· Independent atatiooa and an ABC affiliate.
Metromedia has the "technical equipment to aupply
to atatlooa signing up for them, and the wiUing~aa
to try to sip up statims for the p-oject. ·
.
The adverllaing agencies have quite different plana, but they
cwld dovetail if aU goes weD.
Benton &amp; Bowles, with General Foods aa a major inlereltetl
party, would like to program two ~- on Sunday nlahll d.
what Michael Lepiner, vice prelidelll and director fl
brOidcaat prosr8Jilllling, calla "procr~ in tbe famUy
dramatic vein, lint run and of network quallty. 111pported bJ
budltll comparable to network budpll,"
Lepiner !llld tbe p-oject wqald require llr&gt;-'10 per cent llatiCIII
clearance, which would mean algnin&amp; up Just about aU 1be
· natlall'l Independent lllatlona and a portion of the network
dlllill as weD.
.The Otlllvy a. Mather project calls for progr~ Mondly
lhroueh Saturdl)', a.8 :30p.m., Eutem lime_.Tbe plana targtl
in ooan OctDber air dtite and would include 78 half.boun Gl
GolhJc drllllll (II'IQiced by Dan Curtis Productlooa, the folkl
w1» gave tellrrilkJn "Dark Shadows" and, lalt .year, ABC's
•'"''riioon' of terror" ~ial .
'i

rrocrama

-~IIUIIIY

1~ - The Daily Sentinel, MiddlePort-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Jan. l9, 1977

CLEIRAICE SALE -

- JAIUIRY CLEIRIICE SALE-

SALE SElECTION - 60 INCH WIDE
ASSORTED PLAIN AND FANCY

t"O\tl\

By LEE LEONARD
UP! Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP! ) Some random observations
abou t Gov. James A. Rhodes'
"State of the State" message
to the General Assembly last
week:
Al though he dwelled at
length on pet subjects welfare, jobs and energy - ·
and claimed credi t for

SPECIAL SALE SELECTION!
NAME BRAND BLEACHED

24x72 BROADLOOM

TWIN AND FULL _SIZE

RUG RUN"ERS
24

That very popular fabric at a very special low January Clearance
Sale price. Big selection of colors, 60 inches wide. Polyester
doubl~nit fabrics. Regular values to $2.99. This is a great sale, so

s:~~; and save: .

. . .:. JAIUIRY CLEIRAICE SALE-

REG. '2.99 VALUE

DOUBLEKIITS

Governor was
kind to Derus

$ 00

Reg . S2 .99 Va lue beautiful new
colors blg 24 x 72 size stock up

•

~

now at th is low low price at

YARD

2

IO~IROI
Don't misa this special January Clearance Sale Value! Famous
Cannon brand twin and fuU size no-iron white sheell with matching
pillowcases. Now is the time to stock up at these low, low clearance
sale prices.

Ohio politics
reducing government waste,
bureaucracy an\t,corruption,
he did not a ~na te hi s
opponents as he sometimes
does.
Reasons?
Rhodes resorted to some

your trlendt y Stiflter Store. .

Once a
--........;:~. once a Year!

- JIIUIIIY

\

v .. ~;.,n,

RY CLEIRIMCE-

MEN'S MAVERICK BRAND
BLANKET LiltED
DENIM COATS &amp;

SPECIAL GROUP
MEN'S BETTER
WARM WINTER

.v
..

I

.9 BIG DAYS! SALE STARTS THURSDAY, JANUARY 20, AT 9 A.M; SHilRP! HURRY!
FAMOUS CANNON BRAND
lWI N &amp; FUU: SIZE FANCY

SPECIAL CLEARPINCE SELECTION!
NAME BRAND f~(L AND WINTER

NO-I RON SHEETS

SPORT SWEAR

Do n't mi ss thi s spec ial Ja nuar y
Clear ance Sa le Value! Fa mous Ca nnon
Prand tw in and full size fancy no-iron
sheets in a; big selection of colors and
fancy pa Herns. Match ing pillow ca ses .'

$

FOR
MATCHING
1.
PIUOW CASES

2

PAtRS$5
FOR

A clearance ·group of ladies' famous
brand footwear, faD and winter styling,
in dress and casual stylea. Shop earl)
for best selection during this sale !

OFF

1

REGULAR
PRICE
- JIIUARY CLEIRIICE-

Special sale group olladiea' regular $5.00
and $5.99 new fall anq winter polyester
doublelmit slacks in yow' choice Of fashion
colors.

ONE LOT MT. MIST
81 "x96" COTTON

QUILT BATTS
81 ,.; 96 inch size Mt M ist ·cot ton qui lt
batt s. Uhf olds In one large sheet. Save

$. 88
PAIR

99

REGULAR
PRICE

'S

now! Stiffl er's Januar y Clearance Sale.

'177
,

EACH

2

LADIES DRESSES

1 2 PRICE

CLEIRliCE SALE-

- STI

JAIUIRY CLEARAICE-

'S JIIUARY CLEIRAIICELu.n.·uUT SELECTION MEN'S

·sPECIAL GROUP GIRL'S BETIER

SCHOOL DRESSES girl's
Special January Clearance Sale selection

of
better school dresses in the seasons best colors, pat·
terns and styles. Save now !

/2

1
- STIFFLER'S

WINTER CAPS

Special cloee-out selection of men's faD and winter .
caps and hats of' aU ,kin~, styles and colors. Stiffler's
January Clearance Sale.

OFF

IEIULII
PRICE
CLEAIIAICE-

SPECIAL SALE GROUP CHILDREN'S

,.WI ITER COATS

OFF

REIIULIR
PRICE

-S

MILL ASSORTMENT 'iz to7 /8 YARD

UBLEKIIT REMNANTS

Special JaDUiry Clearance Sale group d. chlldren's
wann winter c:oata in tbe IWOIII latest styles and
colors. Shop early and save!

Special mill assortment of 10 to % yard length
polyester doubleknit Iabrie remnants. Both plain and
fancy. Shop early for best selection.

, -STIFFLER'S JAIIIRY CLEIIAICE-

- STIFfLER'S JIIUIRY CLEARIICE-

LADIES' BETTER STRETCH NYLON

CLOSE-OUT LOT BOY'S ASSORTED

PANTY HOSE

FASHION JEANS

y3 OFF

Stifller's January Clearance Sale Loti Ladles' lirst
quality stretch nylon panty hole in tbe aeuona best
shades. One size fib aU!
- ·

Your guys will go for these leisure favorites! Special sale selection
of men's nam• brtllld polyester doubleknlt leisure separates. Your
choice of jacket~~ and slacks styled ID your preference.

Special ciOBIHlUt sale lot d. boy's twill and denim
fasblon jeans In your choice of styles. Stiffler's
January Clearance Sale.

OFF

OFF

REGUL!R
PRICE

- STIFFLER'S JIIUARY CLEARANCE~
SPECIAL SAL.E SELECTION
CHILDREN'S f1UL &amp; WINTER

SPORT!SWEAR

Special clearanc.-e sale group of children's
sportswear. Coo.sists d. ~ieee slack suits,
jackets, slacks and tops. Sizes• 2 to 6X.
J.anuary Clear ance Sale.
·
.

ll OFF
··12 RE&amp;. PRICE
ll OFF

&amp;ROIP .
10. DIE..
GROIP
10. TWD ..

~SKEIN

E SEPARATES
REGULAR PRICE.

SHIRTS

"

SHIRTS
'

Don't misa this special group of men's
dreaa and sport shirts in 801118 of the
seasons best styles and colon. Now ia tile .
time to save at Stiffler's,

Special. JanUB!l' Clearance Sale group of
boys long sletve·dreu and &amp;pori shirts.
Penn press and latta Included. Shop early
for best selectibnl . •

DO

·-/3 IE&amp;.

ICE-

SALE GROUP-REG. $2.99 VALUES!

SPECIAL GROUP
MEN'S LONG SLEEV.E
DRESS AND SPORT

SP.ECIAL GROUP
BOY!S LONG SLEEVE
ORE-SUND SPORT

~IIUIII

- STIFFLER'S

- JAIUARY CLElRIICE-

- JIIHR.Y:·cLEARIICE-

EACH

EACH

SPORT TOPS
Great values! Special sale group of lldles' faD and
winter tops. Fine selectioo ID ~ from during
this clearance sale I

-STIFFLER'S JIIUIRY CLEIRIICESPECIAL SALE GROUP-BOY'S

W~ITER JA~KETS
Outstanding values! Special clearance sale group of
boy's warm winter jackets. Save one-third off regular
price now !

FOR

,

-STIFFLER'S JIIIIRY CLEIIAIIE-

JIIUIRY

liCE-

ONE GROUP-MISSES BETTER POLYESTER

ONE GROUP MEN'S. DOUBLEKNIT

KilT SUCKS
Special January Clearance Sale aelectlon of ml.lles

DRESS SLACKS

polyester knit and gabardine alacu in your choice ot
fashion colors. Sbop euly and ~ave!
.

Special group Gl 1118D's . polyester doubleknit dress
alacks in your choice d. fashion colors. Sizes 30 ID 42.
Regular $10.99 values.

$ DO

.:_JANUARY
CLEARANCE,
SPECIAL GROUP

~IIUIRY

~ -·

SALE SELECTION MEN'S
~~;~;·POLYESTER DOUBLEKN IT

FOOTWEAR

Out they go! Outstanding values ! Special January Clearance
Sale selection of misses wann name brand fall and winter
sweaters d. aU kinds, styles and fuhion colors. Shop early
for best selection! ·
•

SLACKS

Now is the t ill)·e to stock up on Coats and
Oaa Red Heart Wintuk yarn. Your choice
of fashion color s. Shop early for best
sel ection during Stiffl er 's Big January
Cl earan ce Sale ! Big savings for you.

OFF

SPECIAL GROUP LADIES'
. FALL AND WINTER

SWEATERS

SPECIAL GROUP MISSES
POLYESTER DOUBLEKNIT

KNITTING YARN

-JIIUIRY CLEIRIICE-

SPECIAL SALE SELECTION
MISSES WARM NAME BRAND

- JAIUIRY

2

JIIUIRY CLEARIICE SALE-

'

Outstand ing clear anc e select ion of f .,,n ous name
br an d faiL holiday and wi nter spertsw« •ar at one -off
reg.ular pr ice. Choose from blazers, sli lrt- jacs.
slacks , skir ts. b louses and shells to create your own
m i x and mat ch 'outfit s -at tr ue ' Stiffler _Savi ngs.

3

OFF

REGULAR
PRICE

EACH.

SPECIAL CLOSE.OUT SALE LOT
COATS AND CLARK RED HEART

1

1

-STIFFLER'S JIIUIRY CLEIRIICE SALE-

~ STIFFLER'S

CLEIRIICE S.ALE-

style jackets in a variety of
colors. Save plenty on your
winter jackeis.

$ 99

.

- STIFFLER'S

Ch001e from a big assmtment of zipper and buttoo

January Clearance~ GIWp of
Maverick brand blanket lined
. blue denim coati and jlcketa.
Regular $12.99 value ! Sav• now!

'

'

JACKETS

JACKETS

PAIR

-.IIIUAIY ·CLEIIAIC.ESPECIAL SAL£ LOT
FANCY NO-IRON

9
BIG
DAYS .

·PIU.OW CASES
'

BIG

O!le tpeclal sate lot of
Ca nnon

f1n cy

no-ir on

pillow cases In your choice
of colors and patterns.
January Clearance Sale !

PAiRS$5 .
FOR

PAIR
OL~ IIIIICE­

.IIIIIIJ

JIIUIIY

CLOSE-OUT-REGULAR 29'
ASSORTED 72 INCH WIDE

SPECIAL GROUP-REGULAR $1.99
MEN'S FRUIT-OF-THE-LOOM

IYLOI lET

POCKET TEE SHIRTS

,o;n,.

Special cJoae.oilt sale lot Gl regular 28 cent nylon net in'
your choice of colon. 72 tncl»a wide. SIDell up now and
save !

ChootM from white and solid colors in Fruit of the LOom
poCket tee !lblrtl. AU fint'quaUty ! AU siJes. Save It
Sttfller's JanUlry Clearance Sale.

lively humor and frequenOy
departed from his wepared
text to -make off-the-cuff remarks. At one point, he even
jolte!l a daydrea ming House
member by . ca lling out his
name.
The governor was also
prudent enough to mention
some programs espoused by
the Democrats , no tably
men tal hea lth, consumer
protec tion and "s un set"
legislation re quiring s tate
agencies to justify their
existence .
Rhodes
gave
the
lawmakers a glimpse at the
skeleton of his budget, which
is forllicoming in a co up le of
weeks. Bu t he teased them by
avoiding spec ifics so he
wouldn 't upstage himself.
In fa ct, th e governor mentioned close to two dozen
programs which he wants
started or completed wi thoul
getting into the cost. At the
S3Jl)e time, he called for
legislation demanding cost
estimates of any future
pr~fsa~P~~h was 50 wt"de·
ranging and fu ll of so many
proposals that one Democrat
was prompted to call him
"llie Patton of the skies _ he

:.~ped the whole load

011

But at the same time,
Rhodes demonstrated a
willingness to cooperate with
the legislature and a
knowledge of timely issues.
" Th e sp irit
of· a
government must reflect the
spirit of her people," said the
governor· "Ohio ans, like
most

Am eri cans,

ar e

dem;mding not more but
better gove rnm ent. The
people of Ohio do not wan!
ever growing governmeni
whose
usefulne ss
is
mMsured ,by bigness. "
They do not want more
taxes, either, he noted .
Although his large-scale
en ergy and industrial
development plans are still

afoot, Rhodes was rather lowkey on another pet subject highways.
·
His giant transporlation ·
bond issue having failed, the
governor po.inted out that the
Department of
Transportation had scraped ·
together $375 million worlli of
highway user fees to devote
to highway construction this
year .

And lacking the money to
repair all the .dangerous sections of roads and bridges,
. Rhodes turned instead to a
new "life light" program to
mark· them with high
intensity reflectors.
Wh ile
he
preached
consolidation of government,
. Rhodes found room !or a
couple of new agencies - a
credit union division in the
Department of Commerce
and separate departrnenis for
mental hea llli and mental
retardation. Democrats are
likely to favor lliose ideas.
The governor cont inued to
fight against involvement by
llie attorney general's office
in organ ized crime and
consu mer protection. He
proposed lliat the ·'fuaUon
Depa rtment go
after
cigarette smugglers and that
county prosecutors be given
illcreased powc.rs to battle
consumer frauds.
[f
Rhodes' message
provides any clues to
u P c 0 rn i n g b u d g c t
disagreements, it is in the
con tinual strugg le over
spending fo r education
versus welfare.
The govern or virtua lly
wrote off welfare, proposmg
lliat it be taken over by the
federa l government.
As for education, he adva nced ideas which may
collide with lli~se of ma jority
Democrats. '
Rhodes said there would be
more money for primary and
secondary education, but he
called for more local control
of spending and fewer state
ma nd a t ~s.
He
also
em pha sized the need for
better teacher education , and
he has made no secret of the
fact lliat he favors higher
salaries for ll!achers and
fewe r educational "frills."
In sum, the governor's
speech eontained all tJie key
phrases he felt people want to
hear -

no new taxes; no

higher college tuition ; more
jobs; an end to government
wa ste, bureaucracy and
scan dal; more fuel·, less
weua·re; more education.
Rhodes set forlli his ideas
in a non-abrasive manner and
invited the Democrats . to
cooperate willi him. The next
few months should reveal
whether lliey will.

Test developed.
to know yourself
By JAMES J. DOYLE
LOS ANGELES (UP! ) - A
new
c u s·t o mi z e d
psy chological test has been
deve loped which ca n be
unders tood and used by
laymen to get a thorough
profile of their
c h aract e ri s t i cs a nd
personalities.
It's a way of knowing
yourself and how you relate
to other peopl e.
"Generally, self-awareness
is behind everythin g we do,
lliink and say,': said Dr. Kelly
BeMett, a psychologist and
family counselor.
Bennett said most people
have ooly undefined views,
about the kind of person lliey
are being at differen t times.
" It helps to ha ve a
reference point to sta rt
growing, to have ways to
objectively portray yourself
in terms of strengths and
weaknesses."
Rennet! is co-director of
"Insight," a computerized
test scoring and interpretive
service that developed the
psychological test after two
and a ha lf years of
preparation .
The uniqueness of llie test ,
he said, lies mainly in
customiling.J.t to individual
needs. It a1so· is" different· in
that i: can be taken home and
used by the person tested.
Historically, tests given to
clients and the results have
been kept by professiooais
and oo ly given to the client
ver bally and in~ general
ll!rms, he said.
"Now they have something
in llieir hands , something
lliey elm walk home with and
review and ta lk- about and

-n.etnod was being made
available to industry,
schools, churches, the
military - organizations
where a psychologist may not
always be oo hand, The cost
averages $15 a person.
Bennett said the melliod
involves a "whole person "
test, rallier than the usual
fra gmented approa ch to
testing .
Some people, he said, want
to measure only ce rtain
personality characteristics,
such as attitudes about their
interests, jobs, Love , etc.
others want a more complete
understandin g of th eir
abilities, likes and dislikes.
The test fiJves a behaviDr
preference swrunary profile
willi scores measuring the
intensity of interesis in
several areas, a nd the

percentage of persons in the
same age and sex group who
scored lower than the person
taking the test.
For instance , John Smilli '
disliked power-seeking and
his score was two on the
intensity of inll!rest" scale.
Twenty per cent of persons
tested scored lower than lie
did. He liked bargaining,
however, scoring 10, and 96
per cent scored lower in that
area.
Another area of the test
show how attracted he is to
general tasks, s.uch as
busi ness,
mec hanical,
outdoor activities and so on. ·
On task descriptions, John
found extremely attra ctive
" philosophical pt oblems
investigative.'' His score was·
10 and 97 percent of other.
people taking the test scored
lower !hall' he did. . .
·
criticize .~~
It was'one of many seriea of
U professional guidance' is questioos building up the
oot available, the teat can profile of John Smith 's likes
still be used,
.. he said . The and ,!~ikes . , -~.

�'

•

•

1~- The DaUysentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday,Jan. 19,

1977

"The river is esentlaUy
frozen over all the way from
Pittsburgh to the Mississippi
River," he said. "Although
the river remains open to
navigation , only a few
towboats are moving and
they are moving very slowly.
"Several rowing companies
have stopped operations
completely. Only the bigger
horsepower tows - 6,000 ro

"Layering is occurring
when water flowing under the
ice raises' a block of ice and
shoves it on top of the next
block of ice downstream,"
weathermen said. "River ice
is expected to increase in
warming finally comes is thickness in the next two
increasing with each day of days.''
continuing
low
air
Said Lane, "It's going to
temperatyres.
get worse before it gets
"Tile nver ice movement better.''
will be abrupt when it begins
and has the capability ro
cause serious damage to all
installations on or near the

!Danger lurks in river
I

•CJN\:lL'INATI (UPI ) Cold weather has made the
Qhio River "inconvenient,"
hut a sudden wanning trend
ci&gt;uld make it "dangerous."
:r he 981-mile river is
wrtually frozen over ail the
!fay from Pittsburgh to
&lt;firo, Ill., where it empties
ilto the Mississippi River,
· a,\ld has brought barge traffic
If a near standstill.
, John Lane of the U.S. Army

happen beca.use nobody has
really had much experience
with this kind of ice
the

Corps of

Engineers in Cincinnati said the "current inconvenience"
is
nothing
compared with "the potential
danger" a sudden warming
trend could bring.
" H it gets wann aU of a
sudden, and if we'd also have
some rain, the ice would be
flushed out in a hUJT)'. And
moving ice cim do an awful
lot of damage. We reaDy
don 't know what all could

m

river.''

Ice on the river !Dday
averaged six inches thick and
is expected ro get thicker.
"The Ohio River ice
condition is very serious,,.
National Weather Service
officials said, echoing Lane's
fears. "The potential for
destructive ice release when

7,000 horsepower - are able
ro push r:Et the ice blocks.
· And they re only going about
a mile an hour,11
The Ohio River is one of
America 's main water tho-

Weather officials also said
the ice is getting thicker
because of ·&lt;~lay ering . "

·Kingsbury

-· ..

lVews
Notes
.

I.
I
I

Spotlight
Bean Coffee

...

$

I.

VOIDAfTeRSAT,. JAN.22, 19iJ'
SUBJECT TC)"'PPUC,6..RLE STATE &amp; LOCAL TAXES

LIMIT 1 COUPON PER FAMILY PLEASE

JUDGE SENTENCED
CLEVE LA ND (UPI ) Municipa,j _(;ourt Judge
_Charles w:-F~erning was
given a 30-&lt;lay •uspended jail
sentence Tuesday for failing
to support his son, Carlos, 6,
Jrom June of 1975 to June of
;1976.

Lumber and ·

Builrlin; Supplies
NO. 2 PRJ·
CUT ·STU6S

vOID AnER SI&gt;.T., JAN. 22, 1977

. SUBJECT TO API'llCAilE SIA're &amp; lOCAL TAXES ·

LIMIT 1 COUPON PER FAMILY PLEASE

fDi'l

1,;.1

r:"'l

L!!J ·I·

·---------------------

.,

$7.50 01 MOIIIPUICM$1

Witt! Couoon
.. ,. Till PltiCIIISI Of SIJ

I

IllS lmNZ JUNIOI

I
I

llkY Food

I

rat• mr1Ja11. n. 1111

29~
With

an

LIMIT 1 COUPON PER FAMILY PLEASE

TOTAL SAn5FAaiON
GUARANTEE

We Ht~ whd we Hwertkt, if at all pos·
siblt. If, du• to eonditioris btiyond ou r
eontrol, w1 ru n out 1:1f on odvertis, d spe,tiol,
we substituie o tl:l!liparo61e brond at o
similar sovir.g or give yo1.1 a RllN CHECk for

the' advertised special at the speciol prict
any time withir. 30 dovs. We gvorvttt

wht we wll. If you ore ever dissatisfied
with a Kroger purchase , we will replace
your item or refund your money.

I~

Round Steak .....
Ground
~ . 79
Beef~ ... ••••
IIGUUA .. CII!JifAK

KlOGil

I

2%

I

•.oz.-.
Kruer &amp;tltHI
YIIIIFTU lilt n. 1111

1

Lowfat Milk

SIIJlCT Tl mi.ICIIll
STill &amp;Lilli TillS

30, OFF

With CovDOn
•• TMr PUICIIASI or 011

I
II

TH lep
nrt mEl n11. n;ttn
SIIJUT TII,UCIIU
sun &amp;LKAI. T&amp;m

1
1

•oo.a. ,.,,,.,..

,-- I
1

io-:r.:sroP' · SJII

121

With Couoon
ANt TMl PUKNIII Of FOil

1
I
I

GUlli.

Fruit
'i¥1 Cocktail

-:o20,
------------·
OFF I
I

I'OTIOAIT-11· 101NI.AVII.--WIIOU

·-

Coupon

19

hi.
Cta,

IISIIII Rice
"'' na JAI. n, 1111
Slllrcl Tllf'llliUil(
~--· ~sun: ltiCIL um

Wltll

I

l3
•

DF

c.v...

I . TM PUICII&amp;II Of- .

I

..,.,.........
Instant C.lfit · '

ltiUFTtiMI. Il, 11!1

13!

-----------·

l

.

-nTtllflll:.llll
niiU ltUL TIID

I
I

I

If

S•w• Sa•L59c
·1111- .
89
c
.
...........
~-:f. 3:89c
~

UJIAI.

..2 ..... $1
n...

----·---·
,..
....
----------·
...,..__
..... ~~··
25, OFF ·II:

I
I
1

1·
I

: Dllners ••••
-

... OIIMML CUID

c

'11.
Wieners
•• ,...

CVII,

:o2~~c!!F : Ba1111M1
'"\'.~~:~~.::...

a:

Inger Meat -

_____ ,. ____ _EJ
oF

:

,

*1

fi0¥1.

OFF : Saltines

I
l
I
1
- .. llrtltr SplcH
I
Will Anti 'A• . 211tn
I
I
Slllllt'l' TllPPLIU.Ili
1
nm &amp;LOCAl uus
· - - - - - - - - - ••L:;J

I

.
49 r..yi;~a.ickc:n-,,g
·
lou.. Steak •• ._
.
U.t
GIADIO C-11111 CIIIJCK, SHOUUIII
Dr.nstlcks •.• ~
·~~~~~
. r..Yi:ii'LD,L INIII(nD,
Boneless Boston . O&amp;
1
Roll Roast
•~. ·
·Chlc0n Thighs ~·

Tuna ••
@
VG
121 Kroger

Ul TMI Nl&lt;Mlll Of AMY
....L .

l"o,·
L.:.

---------------------· -------------------LIMIT I COUPON PER FMI!LY PLEASE

:~.I

1

------.
.-------------·
SDII£CT lG ll't\IUIU
SUB I LIW. fUU

,

VOID AFTER SAT., JAN . 22, 1977 t
'
SUBJECT TO APPliCA8LE STATE &amp; LOCAL TAXES

,. .

Polar Pak
Ice Milk .....
s..-Kist

10! OFF ":I

cashier; Carl E. Smith and
William F. Hannemann, vice
presidents; Hazel G. Westfall and Maxine Rader, asst.
cashiers; Dixie L. Sovei,
controller, and Cecilia
Murphy, bookkeeper.

UMIT I PUS. Wll1l COUPON AIID

. .89c

-------------·Ill

MATERIAL_S ·co.

$7.$0 0 1 - PU1&lt;1A11
vOID AFTER SAT., JAN. 22, 1977
SUlJECT TO-APPLICABlE STATE &amp; LOCAL TAXES

_

executive vice president and

TinS IS HOW IT WAS IN 1968 - Mrs. Tom (Carolyn)
Grueser, Lincoln Heights, Pomeroy supplied the above
snapshot that shows how had snowconditions were in 1968.
The temperature was 15 below zero and there were 17

Large Eggs

·~

G&amp;ZUSPAN

A.

II
II
II
II
II
11
II

..

II

Buttered
Steak.s

A

I

601 Sixth Av e.
Huntington , W. Va .
Phone 525-7221

Ill

roge1r
Better

I

Hearint Aid Center

.a ..z.

·--

Graham, Carl E. Smith and
Jack E. White.
In an organizational
meeting that followed, Lamp
was elected president ;
Kenneth
W. Stealey,

IIOHII

I
c

inches of snow, Carolyn reported. Telephone and electric
lines were down i.n severa"l areas of the county and the
heavy snow split trees in the Grueser yard in hall.

By IIELE:N THOMAS
- · · UPI White HoUJe RepOrter
PLAINS, GA. (UPI) Juruny Carter may never
know what some of his
predecessors were talking
about when they called the
White House the loneliest
place in the world. He plans
to have most of his family
· around him during his
presidency.
When Carter and his wile
Rosalyn~ move into the
EXecutive Mansion on Jan.
2Al, tbeY will bring along their
daughter Amy, 9; two sons,
Ollp, 26, and Jeffrey, 24, and
their wives. The family will
get larger soon: Cblp's wile,
., Caron, is e~pecting a baby in
7.' March.
~ •· The eldest son, Jack, 29,'
• will remain In Calhoun, Ga.
where he Ia practicing law,
hut he and his wife, Judy, and
"'!. their oneyear-old son, Jason,
are npeC!ed to be frequent
house guests. The presidentelect dotes' rln Jaaon,
Carter plans ro tap Chip,
who has campaigned for him
for the last two years, for
-· many chores in Washington
,.. and around the country. Jeff,
"!' 'lthoae father calls him a
_ ''professional student," has
0:. enrolled · In George
- Washington University for
- his senior year to complete a
major in urban geography.
,
Nme of the family appear
' to be unhappy w be heading
" for Washington. But the
I J"
Carters plan to return often to
.;:, their rancl&gt;lltyle home in
::.. south Georgia, which they
:::. have dubbed the "Little
White House".
'"
Carter's 78-year-old
~ mother, ~~Miss Lillian/' and
his brother, Billy, will hold
the fort in Plains. Both "Mil¥!
UUlan" and beer'&lt;lrinking
Billy are media stars In their
own right.
Neither "Miss Lillian" nor
Billy hesitate ro speak their
mlnda. Billy, in a recent
teasing jab at his evangelical
brother, says "I was only

All -

born ooce.' '·
Tourists Dock to Plains, not
~,

.only to see the future
president, but just as
hopefully to get an autograph
lrom his mother or brother.
''Miss LUUan," who stili

has a hard time realizing her
son has been elected
president of the United
States, will visit the White
House occasionally. She and
Jimmy have a deep bond and
she was the. family 's guiding
spirit In teaching racial
tolerance.
Mrs. Carter's mother,
"Miss Allie," stays in the
backgrouild and is no match
for the sprightly, whitehaired, feisty "Miss Lillian."
But she also will be paying
visits ro the White House to
see the family.
Amy is used to big
mansions and formal
trappings. She lived in the
Georgia governor's mansion
with her famlly from 1971 Iii
1975 ..
She will have a room on the
second Roor of the family
quarters across the hall from
her parents' bedroom suite.
She likes the room because it
has a pink rug, reminiscent of
Tricia Nixon's all pink
bedrOOI!l .
Amy will be the youngest
·presidential chUd to live in
the White House since the
days of Caroline and John
Kennedy in the early 1960s.
She has already been enticed
with word .that .the White
House has a ~ig swinunlng
pool and a movie theater.
Fourth-grader Amy will be
attending
Steven s
Elementary School, an
Integrated public school a few
blocks from the White House.
She has an IQ that "Miss
LUllan" brags about, and she
II rarely without a book or
magazine In her hand. An
avid reader like all of the
Carters, she seems at times
oblivious to the gawking
world around her.
·Or perhaps li is her way of
shunning the limelight, which
was thrust llpon her so
coostanUy during the early
days of the campaign. She
was gregarious then, seUing
lemmade in front of her
house and giving lntervl&amp;ws.
She now appears shy In
public and slaYTI solesmly
close to her mother or father,
rarely lllllillng.
Jeff Carter appears to be
the most irreverent of the lot.
' On Chrlstnwl · Day when

Let the ·Sentinel

AJl .fun
·
ds

,.

Want Ad pages do

balance at

_... Carters have antidote to. loneliness
reporters and photographers going places and doing things
gathered on the street near in anonymity. HNo one knew
the home of "Miss Allie" who I was" he said,
indicating that he liked it that
w~ile the Carters were
having Christmas dinner , way .
But living in the White
Jeff wandered over to chat.
"How do does your fat~ e r House will be a different
fee I about a11 of this press story and the world will come
coverage," Jeff was asked. to recognize him and all the
' '!have no sympathy," Jeff ·other carters on sight.
Asked what he thought of
·replied. "He asked for it."
Chip worked in Washington the White House, Chip
during the transition period quipped : "It's adequate ."
and had the time of his life

the walking for you•.

$200,191

Balance in all funds of the
Village of Pomeroy as of Dec.
31, 1976, totaled $200,191.10
according to a report submitted to Pomeroy Council
Monday night .· by Jane
Walton, clerk.
Receipts, expenditures and
balance respectively in the
active fu nd were, general
fund , $21,380, $12,534.15,
• $16,139.87; revenue sha ring,
no receipts, no expenditures,
$22,:j51.67; water well improvement, no receipts,
$13,606.1!5, $2,705.44; sewer,
COLUMBUS I UPI I - The
$5,442.32, $2,367.93, $38,016.66;
aver age cas h grain pr ices per
cemetery , $150, $836.64,
bushel pa id lo farm ers by
gr ain elevators in the p r in • The third and final test date [$428.54); stre et $2,806,
ci pal mar~eting areas of Ohio of the 1976-77 school year for $3,479.27 , $2,181.90; water
a fter the marke ts close d
prospective tra ck and field operatin g, $11,731.73, .
Tuesday unti l the ma r kets
and baseba li-so ft~a ll officials $11,621.28, $29.231..99; fir e
close today .
Nor thea st Ohi o. No. 2 will be sponsored by the Ohio $1,265.04, $248.83, $3,443.95 ;
whea I $2.45 ; No. 2 she ll e d
High School
Athletic guara.nty meter, $75, $165,
corn S2 .26 i No .2 oats S1.75 ;
Association on Feb. 28, 7: 30 $5,438.27; parkin g meters.
No. I soybeans $6.88 .
$1,845, no expenditures,
Nort hw est Ohio : No. 2 p.m. Varsity contests in track
whea I $252 ; No.2 shelied co rn and field and in boys basebali $21,564.44 ; utility , $2,670.63,
$2 .29 ; No . 2 oa ls $1.70 ; No . 1 require OHssA Rated of- $1,495.41, $4,771.55. Receipts
soybeans S6 .95
expenditures and balance in
.
Central Ohio : N o. 2 wheal ficials.
All men and women in- aU active funds respectively
$2. 54 ; No. 2 shelled corn
S2. 30 ; No. 2 oa ts $1 .72; No . 1 terested in becoming Rated were $47,365.72, $46,355.36,
soybeans $6 .93.
officials in either sport must $145,417.2tl.
Wes t Centra l Ohio : .No . 2
Receipts, expenditures and
w hea l $2 .57 ; No. 1 shell ed have an application on file balance in the active fund
corn $2 .38 ; No. 2 oats $1.69 ; with the OHSAA by Feb. 7.
No. 1 soybea ns $6.99 .
Applications can be olr respectively wer111 Sanitary
construction, no
Sou thw est Ohio : No . 2 taiTied by writing to the sewer
whea l $2 .56 ; No . 2 she lled OHSAA, 4080 Roseiea Place, receipts , no expenditures,
corn $2.36 ; No.2 oats $1.77 ;
Post Office Box I 43Q8, · $12,101; bond retirement,
·No. l soybea ns $6 .95.
Trend : No. ?. wheat, un- Columbus, Ohio 43214 or by $3,795.10, $8,811.35, $37,838.64 ;
changed ; No. 2 shelled corn , ca liin g 614-267-2502. Late sewer bond, no receipts, no
expenditures, $4 ,734 .2 6.
uncha ng ed ; No. 2 oa ts, un ·
changed ; No. _1 soybeans, applications are not ac- Receipts, expenditures and
cepted.
sharpl y hi gher .
balance In ali funds
respectively were $51,060.82,
$55,166.71, $200,191.10.

-- -----; .

'
Take off your shoes and relax while you look
through the Want Ad pages of the Sentinel. If you
want a job, or someone lo fill that job, or want to
buy, . rent .or sell anything from aardvarks to
zeppelins, chances are that you'll find whatever
you're looking for in our Want Ad pages. Let the
Want Ads do the walking for you - arid get
results - for those who are looking as well as
those who advertise_

Final test

Grain report

date Feb. 28

WANT AD ORDER

Writ e vou r- compl et e
ad in th e space
below . One word to
be wr i tten in eac h
space l e ac h initial is

co n sidered

CLIP and MAIL This Handy

Ord~r

To

one

w or d) . BE SURE TO

IN CL UD E AS M UCH
OF

YOUR

NAME .

A DDRESS
OR
P HO N E
NUM BE R

The Daily Sentinel

AS I S TO APPEAR

IN THE AD.

Pomeroy, Ohio

SPECIALI

15 Word
Minimum
15 Word Cash

Rate

3 Days 1.50
6 Days 2.90
4' Per Word
Per Day All
Over 15 Words

STANDINGS

Name - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - C l a s s i f i c a t i o n - - - - - International
· Hockey League
United Press l'nternational
Norlh
w I t pts. gf g~
Kalamazoo
23 15 3 49 189 148
Fl in t
22 18 4 4S 193 167
Sag1naw 19 18 8 46 181 172
Pod Huron
19 22 4 42 160 174
Muskegon 17 20 7 41 167 180

WHA Standinqs

• • • • • • • • • • • • \

~·c'r1 Pts.
GFGA
51 185 145

Quebec

75 15

Cincinn ati 'J? 18 1 .t6 1?3 149
lndi ~ n a p l~ n 1a , .16 1~ 2 1so
&gt;&lt; Mtnnesor
19 18 5 4l 1J6 D 9

Toledo

19 20 5 43 .175 185
Dayton
20 21 1 41 170 182
Fort Wayne
17 22 7 41 173 203

Ncw

E n~lnd

,

Air bagged cars coming on by 1979

San Qi ego

2.S 17 7 52 \48 140 •

••

e
e

Wmn1peg
Edmonton

2J 16 1 4 7 183 147
19 15 1 39 17 1 158

Ca loarv

18" 1 38 119 131 •

Ph oeni x

17 74 2 36 146 194

• ·Suspended

opera lions

definitel y
TtJesday ' s Results
All -Star Game

Ou c at Birmnghrn , ppd .. cold
snow

fO nl y qame sc heduled !
Thur sday Is Ga mes
Quebec al New England
Cincinna li at PhOen l){
E dmon1o11 a t San D i ego

fOnlv games schedUled 1

e

in- •

ln Harllord. Conn.

·Ea s t 4 w esl 2
Wedn es da y's Games

Post Office

Amount Enclosed 5 - - -

Phone

Phone 992-2156

e

• • -•

sua le :

l ! a h I•C~
-IM'IIM •'1--

1775 A 38 148 171

· 21 16 5 49 1• 8 133

•-

~

~~~:t
1 31 ll4 189
W l T PK GF GA

Hovslon

Street or R. F. o. _______ Number ot Consecutive Days_

:a;; UHII ,II•e
• ·

Birmn ghm
,,

in shut.
WASHINGTON (UPI) - · Same date.
Coleman · had originally
In
all,
there
will
be
502,:1.10
Transportation Secretary
cars
available
to
the
public
in
proposed
that the two year
William Coleman Jr. said
the
1980
and
1981
model
test
program
should begin in
1'11elday he has signed
September,
1978,
but he said
years.
GM
will
offer
the
with
three
contracts
alrbag
across
the
entire
front
the
automakers
has
1utomobile companies to
coovinq.i
him
an
'additional
lUI
on
3011,000
intermediate
begin producing alrbagequipped cal'S, but one yur • cars. Ford wW offer the. six montha were needed for
liter than he had originally IIDll optioll 011 till drlwr's retooling and as a result he
llcle 01117 for 140,0110 oompact decided ro poetpone the start
plamed. .
of the project one year.
cars.
'lbe tine ctmplllles are
He also announced that
Mercedes
will
offer
the
General M&lt;Kors, "Ford and
three insurance companies alrba&amp;
Cll
·the
drlvera
lide
foi~•Benz, aU of wbom
Allstate, Nationwide, and VW
wW begin oller!lw the cars mlJ fot,.. ...... the 1110 Insurance, will offer
madll
,...
and
for
1,100
of
· for a two-year period
the 111M cars in 19111 model premlmum reductions of up
~in Stptember,li'IV.
ro 30 per cent for ct'rivers who
In addition, Volkswagen of year.
The VW passive seat belt, buy airbag equipped cars.
America ·~ ro (rOWce
. Allstate offered sirtlllar
" not leu than 80,000 cars already oflered as an option premium reductions during
on
the
Rabbit
and
in
use
in
equipped with (lllllve MIL
years GM unsuecessfuiiy
belt tlyUnl - the type about 110,000 of them, Ia an the
tested the airbag in some
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
allldlellto
wl*h c:lole in'"' the *'....... lldta the cars.
tUiiOIIIII&amp;Iellly . . . the door . . *l-In
j)llte
when the door
Ia liNt - begiJnllg 111 the

Golf Classic ITic., a nonprofit
organization dedicated to
raising funds for charitable
or ga nizations
and
encouraging minority
participation in golf.

Bv United Press Intern ational

w I t pts. gf ga
Columbus 19 19 7 45 175 172

·

by the Herman A. English

Tuesday 's Re sults
All -Star Game in Flint
South 3 Norlh 2
Today's Gam es
Colum bu s at Dayton
Flint at Kalamazoo
Thursday's Game
Columbus at Da yton

South

~ ......_

...3E-'I

Save your
shoes. • •

secretary, and Daniel K.

COST CUTTER COUPON

ul
I
I
II
II
II
II
II
II
II
II

LIMIT 1 101 WJ111 C-All)

--------------------· ·-------------------·

To repair and service
hear ing aids -

BELTONE

Morton
Salt

$7.50 0111011 PIIIOWI

B:

Paula Rowe .

Mr . Mattingly wil l be
g lad to give you a tree
hea ring test wit h the
latest - Bellone
Electronic
equipment .

UMIT 1 PH. IIIIT1t CDUI'IIII

PHONE
THE ALL NEW

·--···-

COST CUTTER COUPON

It

c

I
I
I

$7.50 01 MOll PUICIIASI

·--·

BaRquet
Buffet Supper .

I
I
I
I
I

liMIT 11AG l'!ITlt COUPON AND

Hearing Aid
Service Center

tteries
and
s upplies for all makes
for sa le .

Mason, W. va:
Open: Mon.-Thur.s. &amp; Sat.&amp;-5:30
Friday 8-8

I

BELT--ONE

Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. John Dean were Mr. and
·Mrs. Pa ul Paynter of Garpcnter, Mr. and Mrs. Garold
(_;ilkey, Tammy, Cindy, Rick ,
Jason of Athens, Mr. and
Mrs. Nathan Arnold and son
Qf Chester.
Mr. and Mrs , John Walter
Dean and Jeremy visited
recently with Mr . and Mrs,
Bill Spaun and Shannon ,
Pomeroy.
Recent visitors of Mrs.
1
!&gt;Iizabeth Murray were Mr.
~nd Mrs. Dana Murray, Tina
and Greg of Rock Springs,
Mr. and Mrs ,o .ftlchard
Houdasheit and Audra.

/

COST CUTI!R COUPON

I
I

'

-Enjoy three sizes of your favorite
pizzas.
- Try our delicious subs while you
sip your favorite suds.
Eat In Or Carry Out
•Phone
992: 6304.•

PICKENS HARDWARE CO.

111

I
I
I
I I
I I

'

COOLVILLE - The rest of
the nation may have
struggled in 1976 with
recession , high unemployment and a siuggigh
GNP but not the local Tri
County Bank.
Chairman of the board J. S.
Lamp, presiding over the
recent annual meeting of
stockholders, reported: ·
"The bonk has completed
its best year to date with good
grow th in deposits and
eaniings at an antime high."
Once again, stockholders
were paid a 20 percent
dividend during the pasr
year. Directors elected were
J . S. Lamp, chairman;
Kenneth
W. Stea ley,

MEiGS INN PIZZA SHACK

I

---····-

11 •

I

J :I!51 I ·1'/pj i i i ~ ifJ

Reinhold,
- John f
D.D.S., Stark County, $642.
- Herbert Kern, M.D.
Summit County, $570.
'
Ferguson said audit reports
on the 38 providers have been
sent to the Oljio Attorney
General, Ohio Department of
Public.
Welfare,
the
applicable licensing bOards,
the county prosecurors and
the providers.

••••••• COST CUTTER COUPON

.

PLANNING APillA PARTY

Findings ·made against 38 Medicaid providers
such .payments on a larger,
scale in an audit of some of
the bigger providers.
Some larger findings in the
reports released today
included :
. - Max A. Malkoff, D.M.D.,
Mahoning County, $4,290.
. -:- Frank J. Kysela, D.D.S.,
Cuyahoga County, $2,916.
- A. R. Simon, O.D., Inc.,
Montgomery County, $1,762.

bank ·~njoys

with us!

•

' COLUMBUS State Auditor of the stale's 30,000
Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson medicaid service providers
1nnounced toda y findings for revealed duplicate payments
~very totaling $12,943.07
ranging from $10 ro $4,290.
~gam st
38 physi cians
DuJ)i.ka.le payments ,
~roviding medica id services · according to~erguson, could
, In paaents as a result of a result from a provider
~om pu ter check for duplicate submitti ng a claim for
payments.
payment more thad once and; The check, the first of a or the Ohio Department of
": ·ries of checks to be Public Welfare honoring such
~nducted periodicaUy by the
a claim more than once.
"The computer check
entailed a comparison Or
payments to each provider
•
•
during th.e period Sept. I, 1972
through June 30, 1976;"
.
Ferguson said.
Although 38 audits of the
:Spending ' New Year's Eve
different
homes across the
with Mr. and Mrs. Olen
state were released today,
fjarrison were Trevor and the Auditor said more will be
Jodi Harrison. Visiting New
released in series form
Year's day were Mr. and periodically "in this phase' of
Nlrs . Phillip Harrison , Trevor our auditing of public welfare
llfl&lt;l Rodney, Mr. and Mrs. money ."
Gale Harrison , Scott and Jodi
FerguSon said his welfare
&lt;(nd Ottie Scholl.
audit section developed such
~ M r . and Mrs. Roger Young
a program under his auspices
and family had as recent and expects to imcover more
~isito rs Mr. and Mrs. Homer
~ailey, .Mr. and Mrs. Kirk
Ghevaiier, Mr. Rodne ~'---1-.-_·•,
&lt;;hevalier, Mr. and Mrs. .
Russell Well, all of 'Chester
and Mr. and Mrs . Wayne
aeal.
.
: Recent visitors of Mr. and ·
Mrs. Frank Douglas who
celebrated their 59th wedding
anniversary were Mr. and
Mr. H. w. Matt ingly
~Irs. Homer Bailey, M·rs.
Will Be At
Wendell (Bessie ) Williams of
Meigs Inn
fortsmo uth, Mr. and Mrs.
Pomeroy , Ohio
Gary Adian. Scott and Sta cy,
On
~lr . and Mrs. Curtis Williams
Thursday, Jan. 20
and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Beal
From
had as recent visitors Miss
9 A.M. to 12 Noon
Denise Hendricks and Miss

Coolville's

.,

I

river."

•

IJ-; The Dally Sentinel, Middleport.Pomeroy, 0., We(inesday,

l'OUI!hfares. Each year, rowboats push strings iJf barges
CUltaining more than 140
mUlloo toos of cargo up and
down the river. Half thst
cargo is coal.

finest year

•

•

•

e
e

·•

·

ee

~
1

The Daily Sentinel

,-

,-

111• 1 ~

~ ~ .~

Now In Progress

•

e
e

•

e

COME IN &amp; . •
BROW
. SE 1·

Not Just A.

•
e
e

WANT ·

•e
•

Place 'JiO Shop- e•
e
But
A
Shop
•
:
p1ng •e'
•·
. I ·••
• Expenence.
•

e•
•

•

- LOS ANGELES (UPI) Lee Eider, pro golf's moet •
prominent black. player , will
be honored at a special ~inner •
at the new Bonaventure Hotel
in downtown Los Angeles
Feb. 14.
·
Redd Foxx, star of televi·
sion's "Sanford and Soo,"
will be honorary chairman of
the event, which is sponsored

•

OPEN
11 A.M. to5 P.M.

•

.·

••

ADS

•••

••

'·

•

•e

t

Simon's
Gift Center

• • .OVER 20.000 VIEWER$ DAILY

'

•

Ponwroy

_,

.

,,, .
_( ,

•
••

"

.

�~~~i:~ Sentinel, Mlddle~rt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Jan. 19.1m

Television log for ·easy viewing

~

•I

.

•
•

¥ANT ADS

D.ADLINIS
DIY

Before

canctllltiOftt,

corrtc .

Publlclt lon .

'tlons tcctptR first Cit y of

publltltlon .
•
UGULATIDNS

the rloht to edit or· relect

1

1ny ads detmtd Ob ·
1tetfonet . Tt'le publlsta rwlll not bt rttpontlble for

mor.e then one Incorrect

RATES

'or Want Ad Service
5 cents per .word on ..
Insertion .
Minimum Charge $1 .00.
H cents per word three

cons.c:utlve Insertions .
26 etnts per wOfd six
conatcutlve ln11rt1ons.
25 Per Cent Discoun t on
paid ldl end ads pa id

within. 10 doys.
. CARD OF THANKS

.•a.JII..ITY.!\~Y.
2,..,0 to.r .~o word\

1
~ ' · 1\)lm~maCiditiOT.;.r -........

l

.· .r

.,1

cents .

I LIND ADS
.
Additional 2!c Charge

.per

"~vertlse, ,; .,nt .

OFFICE HOURS

1:30 a.m . to 5:00 p.m .

Oallv . 11 : 30 t .m . to 12 : 00
Noon Saturday .
Phone today 992 -2156 .

NOTICES
ATTN.: II
ALL HOUSEWIVES
All Ytrd Sales, Rummage ,
Por~h

and Baume-nt Porch

end Basement Sales, etc .
must be paid In advance .
Get your1 In early by
stopping by · our office at
Ttit Dally sentinel , 111
Court St. or writing Box
729, Pomer.oy, Oh io 45769
wfth your remittan ce.

BODY Shop, 26 Rollroo.d

St. , Middleport would like to
remind customers that Dec. 31
is the last day: to take od·
vantage 9f the pall'}! jobt • all
over in I color . $100, 2 tone
$125 without body work . Stop
in or phone 985·4174 for ap·
pointment ,

TAURUS (Aprii-20-Moy 20) The
day Is loaded with opportunity.
You may not appreciate the advantages that abound, but you'll
still come out In the plus column.

GEMINI (Moy ~1.- Juno 20)
Friends and associates wlll dig
your Ideas more loda)' if you
keep them simple. It's rio reftec ..
tlon on your lntelllg~nce to do so.

experts In the field .
. AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 11) Be
more persistent regarding your
goals today. Yp u have been too
prone to wither under crltlctsm
and this Is not wise.

PIICI!S (Fob. 20-Morch 20)
Think for yourself today rather
than accept as gospel the words

ol olhers. It's pooslble you·re givIng them credit tor being
brighter than they are.

Oh . .
GUN SHOOT at the Racine Gun
C.lub every Sunday , 1 pm
Assorted .meats.

742·208
='~
· ---'-~-~·
NOW BUYING S,;rap:. Pomeroy
Auto Recycling, high prices
patd. auto ~dies , motors,
scrap. iron , metals, batteries.
open 8 till 4:3o. Monday thru
Saturday , Old 33, just above
fairgrou nds , Pomeroy. Ohio.
Will also pickup cars. Phone

ltACINE FIRE Dept. will have a
Gun Shoot e'lery Saturday night
6 p.m. of their building in
Bo shan, Ohio .
'T STUD; I . Phoebus, 16 1H. If
you want o good performance.
A halter cah w· bloodlines that

Jtn. 20, 1177

Some surprising Changes are In
store for you this year . You'll b'
exposed to .an abundance of opponunlty, but you must react

quickly.

·

~

992·0337 .

sell. 2. TRIBAL CHIEF. APHC. WANT ED:

CHII?WOOO, poles
maxiurnum diqll'lefer , 10 inches
an largest end, $8 .00 per ton.
Bundled slain. $6 .00 per ton
delivered to. Ohio Pollet Com·
pony, Rt. t. Pomeroy. Phone

1S.2 H. has sired lomlil of the
top performance and halter
horses, (Tribal Win , Tri bal Foal.
de .). Also. horses &amp;o ld . tra in·
3d . conditioned , boarded . Cole
Stables, Home of Champions,
Box 25, Tuppers Plains. Ohio

992-26119.

45783 . Phone (614) 667-3405.

.

.

WANTED TO buy · 40 acres plus,
cash, must be r•osonable .
Phon e 992 ·7178.

S1QO REWARO

for onyone gi ~i ng
information where to fi11d Mike
McDonald , age 14 , Jdme$ Ar·
thur McDonald , age 11 . Rewcrd
wi ll be paid when we find
child• ren. LMother's
nome Is
h
Oor~s , Falner as custody of
Mi ke . Phone 742 . 2722 .

.

Estate Wagon, locall owner e:~r, .whlfe radial tires, air
condltlo~lng,

V-8, automatic, power steering and
brakes, radio, dark red fini sh, black vinyl lnter!or.

SID!~SGifiTT

t975 CHEVY EL CAMINO
$3995
Classic. 350. V-8, automallc, power sleerlng and
brakes, rally wheels. radlp ••black and very attrar+tve.

Ph.lt2-3H3

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

~-~...:.-.;~1-if"

,_ tlto .....

~~~,,~~~3~~::J~~~:

.

-

--

.

Phone l61&lt;) 446-0294 .

1973 PONTIAC LeMons Sports
Coupe. Phone 949-2432.

by·pon near Rock Springs
Cemetery , eYery Sundoy , 12
noon .

1%a CHEVELlE, good .tires . Make
a good work cor in good runn· ,
ing. co ndition . $250. Phone (614)
367 -7675 .

-----SHOOTING MATCH, iust off Rt. 7

99'2·3591.
lOST · 2 BlUETICK PUPS and I old
female bluotick . l ost betw ~ n
Bradbury ond Rutland . Reward .
Phon e 992 ·7894 .

.
COAl, limestone, and ca lcium
chloride and calcium brine for
dUst control and special mi11l ng
salt for farmers . Ma i., Street.
Pomvroy," Ohio or phon~ 992·

.

.

. - ..

POTATOES and pumpkin s. C. W.
Proffitt, Por.tland , Ohio .. Phone

643·2254 .

A thought for the day :
Southern General Robert E.
Lee said, "Duty ls the
aublimest word in our language. Do your duty in aU
things. You cannot do rriore.
You should Pever wish to do

less."

if;itii):
WifireiC"~~~
-·
R.N. NEEDED for public health
nursing with the Mei gs County
Health Dept. fOr special pro·
gram. Ful!time position . Apply
ot the Mfigs County Health.
Dept. Phone '19?:..:·3:.:.7;::;23:.:.·-~-

JOB OPPORTUNITY open for boy
" · girl between ages of 9 and
17 in your oreo. Earn opprol(·
imotely $1 0 or more per week.
Win va luable prizes. Phone
992·2156 for information .

COAL for sole, Qpen 6 days per
week and evenings . For furlher
information
.
. call
. (61~) 367·7338 .

APPlES. FITZPATRICK ORCHARD.
· STATE ROUTE 1&gt;89. PHONE
WllKESVIl~~ (614) 669-3785.
FULLER Brush Products for sale ,
"Phone 992-3410.
·
CAMPER, $600. Al so, horse
trailer , $450. Phone (614) 698·

-YOUR OPPORTUNITY
We will train you to become I llfanch
mlinager ..R.apld advancement; outstanding
11lary opportunities and employee benefits.
Must be at lt1st high school grlduate and
hive a car. Relocation may be necessary
now or in the future. Phone Mr. Mills at
telephone no. ffl-2111.

CAPITAL FINANCIAL SERVICE
ioo Wt~t Stc.ond St.
Pvmeroy, Ohio

Equ.l "'portunlty Employer

PLEASURE HOR SES ond ponies .
ol.se&gt; wi ll buy horses and
ponies . Phone (614) 6'98·.. 290.
Ruth Reeves .
RISING STAR KE NNEL , Boarding .
indoor ·oo1door run s. Grooruing
facilities will be d osed from
• January 16. 1977 until March I ,
1977. Our boarding facili ties
will rema in open. Cheshire,
Phone (614 ) 367 -0292 or

HEAVY GAUGE I Beom5 and H
Be&lt;.1m s for sal e, 8, 9, 10 inch .
Phone 992 ·7034

DACHSHOUND PUPPIES . Phone

7&lt;.2·2694 .

(.:r'R'int
'....
3 AND 4 RM . furnished and uo·
furn ished opts. Phone 9'92·

5&lt;34 .

ONE BEDROOM Apto. ot VIlLAGE

suo

New Ca -Op W1ter Sof .
teners
i'nodel VC -X.Vt OnlyU79.9.5
One good used Gibson Side ·
lby ·Side Ref~igerator $1110 '

Pomeroy Landmarll
Jock W. C.rsoy, Mgr.
Phone 992-2tl.t .

·-'

··'

-·-

MANOR in Middleport for $104
monthly plus elec:. or $1 30 in·
eluding elec . LOWER RATES for
SENIOR CITIZENS . Convenient
ta· shopping an Jhird and Mil(
. Sh . in Middlepat l . Brand new
high quality apartments. See
the manager ot Apt . 28 or coil
992.n21. An Equal Housing
. C?ppo~t~nily . __
2 BEDROOM trai ler, real nice.
Phone 992·332&lt;11 , odults only.

-.

NEW AM·FM Stereo-radio , 8 track
tope combination . $129.95 or
torms . Phone '992·3'965
'

·--

-

.

-

AVAILABLE AT Rive rside Apts. 1
bedrm . oportmenf. · $100 per
mon th , 2 bedroom opts. $133
per month . Equal Opportunity
Hou$in g. Phone 99'2·3273.

--

--

--·--·-·-··-----·
STEREO: AM·FM -FM ifereo· rod io,
8 track taPf combinQtion HOUSE. 5 ROOMS ond bath in
Racine area. Phone 992 ·5858 .
8olance due $104.'20 or term5 : -··--- ··---··
Phone 992-396.5 .
VERY NICE 12 ,... .65 mobile home
-· - .
APPlES, FITZPATRICK Orchard . for rent located ill . Moson,
W.Vc. Adults only . No pets.
State Rou te 689, Wilkesvi lle.
Contact Sandro, 992-5693 Mon·
. Phone (6 1A! ~9·_3785 .
day through Frldgy , 9 till3 p.m.
-. .
SINGER Golden Touch N' Sew in .
2 bedroom un vrnlshed aport·
walnut canso!ette . Original
ment in Middlepor t. Pkone
price, $600. Must se ll . Only
992-3129 or 992·5434.
'
$134 .95 cash or terms. Call
--~...
992-51·46.
LARGE TRAILER tpace. Phone

---

-

~·

.-~

----·--

----

TIM8ERJACK 230 SKIDDER: John

9'/'1-7729 .

Deere 540"A Skld®r: Cater·
pillar 9228 Whvellooder: 42 in .
Tower Edger Maney Ferguson
356 Fork lift . Ccntoct Don

(614) 596-4769.
-Groves.
. ...
1969 INTERNATIONIIL 4
-·---~-

-wheel

drive, Travel -Ali. Good motor .
new battery , 4 new lire•. new
brokf.ls . P.S., p.b. , automatic.
extras. Phone 742 -3061 .
1
sofa, French Provential dining
tobl~ and choirt , 'chond•iler.
antique choi r frame , ontiqu.
glauware, antique reproduc·
lion• bran lamp with glon .
shade ond crystol prlsont .

Pllono 992-3283.

HARD WATER
PROBLEM 5 7
. . !!

•

so"on a condition your
walor "!ilh a Co-Gp wlltr
so"tntr, MotMI UUl/1 .
Now Only

_,.,Q,95

L".......

~· t.or · your Wll,..
.

P0111nr Landm..
'ock W. C..rsoy, Mgr.
Pllone 992-2 til .

p,rints,

.....,....___
ELWOOD SOWERS

ttQM£~1U 1.. .... I CKfO and
l.IP' M11:1dfepott n.or Rutland.

co11 992 14111

NEW 3 bedfaom M ull, 2 baths.
all elet; .. I oc:re-. Middleport ,
close to· Rutland. Phone

992·

7&lt;81.

RANCH . TYPE
4bedroams, bath, natura I
gas heat, · alum . siding ,
public SeWer • large Jof '0 X
120. Low financing ta right

· water , disposal and level
corner lot. 518,000.

3 bedrooms, 111 both•. ta·rge Hv·
ing room , dining room and kit·
chen , · fully carpeted. Phone

992·3129. or 992·5434.
59 acres, 6 room house. bath,
portly carpeted, two out·
buildings , 1 dug basement.
or,e· third 1 tlllobl•. · mineral
rights locottd near Danville.
Red~c.ed for quick •ole,

years

old,

3

bedrooms,

bath. nalural gas heal.

frame home with bath, full
basement and half acre of

alum . siding, lot 60 x 120,
public
water,
sewer,
electric;, lowdown payment

land . $17,500.

lo eligible. St5,650.00.
APPROX . 900 ft. living

MIDDLEPORT - Nice one

area with full basement. 3

on

bedrooms. bath, electric

Broadw~y . Full basement,
furnace and large garden .
St8,000.

baseboard heat, public gas,
electric and water, lot size
.51 acre lh fenced. ASKING

Large new 3 bedroom home

wllh elec . FA furnace .

basement, storm doors and ·
win~ows, natural gas heat.
hardwood floors , large

Dining , 2 car gar age, and
one acre . $32,500.

hilly lot. $14,500.00.
WANT TO SELL YOUR
PROPERTY?
BUYERS
WITH
NO
MONEY?) CALL US AND,
LIST . WE CAN HELP
YOU . G. I. GET YOUR V.A.
LOAN HERE .
HENRY E. CLELAND SR .
BROKE.R
HANK CLELAND
ASSOCIATE

RACINE - Business bldg .
&amp;

PAGEVILLE - 7 room
frame house, 3 bedrooms,
aluminum

siding , front porch and
garden . Only $7500.
WANT IT SOLD TRY US
AT 992-3325.

992-2lS9 or 992 -2' .,.

or

CENTRAL REAlTY al
RACINE - Good 3 bedroom and dining room, low
ulllltles, even a garden space. Priced al only $8,500.

.'

.

.

.

LANGSVILLE - 56 ocres mode;n 3 bedroom 1112 story
form havso with Hre ploct, Hverol fruit lrtos,
opproxlmalely 15 ocrts tillable, balance In puturo.
Louted near Langsville. Price reducod for quick ula
$22,500.

-------- -- - .

_,.

-~

~ACRES

·-

.

-

UNDEVELOPED land near
mines,
redu ce d .
Phone

742-2867 .

- ·- , . --·---

9 ACRES Of undeveloped land,
just off Union A-.e . in Pomeroy.
Contact Doc Eblen .

1970 WINDSOR MOBilE homo. 12
x 65 . 2 bedrooms. Fur ni~hed . I
acre level fot . V•ry ,good condition .
·utilil lts . Phone

•tt

992-77971

I

992-7228 .

-

·sPECIAL- ~ bedroom ~nu enached gara~e. fotar
electric home under constru~tlon on 112 acre lot. Ownar
will flnlih In 30 days for buyer or wJIIsell " as Is". May
lake triode. Located noar Chesler.

Phone

u.s.

.u ,tiOitJ 6)' ....
fhp . qf t. ....
B11tN11 11/Lftlxw 11.riJtk1 kllttilt 61,75.

Bj

Don't jus1 be satisfied with

JOB - Plan NOW for a PJo·
fussional career Driving 8 " Big
Rig:' We are a Private Training
School and if you meet our
qualifications, you wll be trained by Professional lnstruc·
.10rs on modern squipment.
Train on a Part Time ~is (Sat .
&amp; Sun.l and Keep vour job, or
attend our 3 Week Full ' Time
Resident Training.
H..wn TNtiOI Tn~iJ,

1

COOL VILLE- Nice mod. brlc~mt containing three'
bedrooms, dining room,llvln~
·with fireplace, .full ·
basement with garoge, large lronl porch, nat. gas.
furnace, city water and well water, a beautiful home
with ilpprox. 5'12 acrtt of ll!"d, fruit '-"" and lhOile
lr"" surrounding it. Pltnly of gardtn opaco, good
fishing a roo claoo by,l_oc:at.d In Coolville, Ohio. Prlcecl
·at only $32,000. Call now.
CHESTER- 113 acre• farm , 10 acr" t illable land,
nice 2 story far"• house: 1 room s and ba th, aJ.I
hardwood floors and basemen!. Barn and other
oulbulldlngs, 2 ponds. A nfce laying farm priced to go
Localtd nur Chn..r, call for eppt.
·

BUILDING SITEs, 3.11 acres. at
Bo•hon T. P.. wat..- tap. gas
top , ml~lmum &lt;oil lh•itolion&gt; .
Phone 985-"02.
,..__ _

CHRISTMAS SPECIAL: Sewing
Machines cleaned , oiled and
odjusted . $5 .98 , Sewing
. ~~ter.~i_d~~e_port.:. ~-·
OIL , GAS Fu tnoc~s. oil burners ,
Ropoirs, and parts for tra ilers
and homes . 24 hour SERVICE .
Phon e 84 3· 2165 .

$1 ,000 down, coli [304) 772- '
_ 3102 or (304)!72-3227.- - -

• a.

• ~,. .

, •
I

I:,·
I

~ou deliberateh~

to diq! It was

•

spoil m4 fun?

uncanny~

.

•

Tn~iltilflr IJtt .

422-4080

INSTALLED
Regular StU!

'10.95 sCi. Yd.

EveryGIY mOIHIY SIVer.
Good choice colorl . .

501 NYLON
1

.GrHn, gold, red, blue, rust. l
Do' 11 yourooK, with podding, 17.95 "'· yd. With •
podding instolltd 11.95
ICjuart yard.
Caii742-2!TT
TALK TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET COf\ISULTANT

fo r rhe experts? Write "Ask
the Jacob ys '" care of this·
newspaper. The Jacobys will
answer individual questions
il stamped. sell-addressed
envelop es are enclosed. The
mos t in teresting ques rions
will be used in th is co lu mn
and will receive co pies of
JACOBY MODERN )

FURNOUIE.· ~
742·22·1,

Rutland

WELLLlHIS &amp;OJND$ LIKE QUITE A
QIALL.t:NGE! '70..1 NESD A lOT OF'
6PACf:1 BUT YOVIRE NOT

NEW HOME

OONNAZ
VEE&gt;, SE'IEQAL
OF US A12E OUT
&amp;EARCHING-•••

WILLING TOPAYVERY
Mt/CII FORIT.' .

IVA!T!HERE OOMEIHING-

News 8; Chuck White R~po ds 10.

7:05-Porky Pig 10 .
7:3G-Schoolies 10.

8: 0()....-. Howdy Doody 6; Pre ~i de ntial Inaugurat ion 8,10;
Sesam e St . 33 .

8:3(}-Big Valley 6.
9:00-A .M. 3; Phil Donahue &lt;,13,11; Mike Douglas 10;
Andy Griffith 8.
9:3(}-Cross-Wits3 ; Edgeol Nig hl6 ; Good Day ! 8.
IO :OG-Presidentlal I nauguration 3,4,6,8, 10. 13, 15.
II :00-Eiec . Co 20

11:3G-Sesame St. 20.
12 :3(}-Eiec . Co. 9.
I : 00-- Pr esidentlal In augu rat ion 3,4.6,8, 10, 13, 15.
3: DO-Antiques 20.
3: 30-Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
4 :00--Lucv Show 8; Sesame St. 20,33 ; Mov ie " T he
Mag nificent Ya nkee" 10.
4: 30-Emerge ncv. One 6; p·artrldge Fam ily 8; Din ah 13.

5 00- Big Val ley 3; My Three .Sons 4; Brady Bunch 8;

Mister Roge rs 20.33 ; .Star Trek 15 .
5:30-.Adam -12 4: N~ws 6: Family Affair 8; Elec . Co.
20.33; Ada m-12 13.
6:0(}-News 3.4,6.8, 10,1 3,t5; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33 .
6:3G-NBC News J4, 6,15: AB.C News 13 ; Andy Gritll lh
6: CBS News 8.10; Once Upon a Cl assic 20; Boy
Sc out Tr a i ni ng 33.
7. 0~ Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Tr uth A; Bow l ing tor

Doll ars 6, Muppet Show 8; News 10; To Tell lhe
Truth 13: My Three S.ons IS ; Almanac 20.

Q p

Road 13 i Dol ly 15.

8: DO-Monsters ! Mysteries or Myt hs? 3,4, 15 ; We lcome
Back , Kotter 6rl3 : Waltons 8,10;
Masterpiece Theatre 33 .

Visions 20 ; .

9:3(}-Tony Randal l 6,t3 ; Jeanne Wolf With 20 .
10 : 00-Streets of San Francisc o 6. 13; Barnab y- Jones 8;
Honeymooners' Trip
E urope 10; News 20.

tO

;;-+--+--1
- +-+-l
rl-+-+--1

10: 3()--J ea nne Wolf W ith 9\: Woman 20 ; Woman 33
10 : 45- Testi mony Time Today 9.
11: 0o- N·ews 3,4,6,8,10,1 3, 15 ; M ac Neil -Lehrer Repor t

33.
11 : 3().-Johnny Car so n 3,4, 15; Inaugurat ion '77 6,13;
K oiak 8; M ary Hart man 10; ABC News 33 .
12 :0o-Movie " The Barkleys of Broadway" 10; Janaki.

33.
12 : 4().-M ollie " T he Pha ntom of Holl ywood"
1·00--Tomorrow J,4; News 13 .

ON STAVING YOUNG
HOLLYWOOD (UPI ) - A
script girl working on the
Ia ping of a television show to
celebrace American Bandstand 's 25th anni versa ry
asked Dick Clark how he and
Pat Boone managed ID keep
looking young so long.
" ! can•t say ." Clark
reportedly replied .
1
'0ur
systems
ar e
completely d if feren t. He
drinks milk and l drink
whisky."

8.

F'UNSETII'S F AREWEI.L
WASHINGTON ( UPI I Secretary of State Henry
Kissinger 's press spokesman,
Robert L. Funseth, gave his
farewell news briefing at the
State Department Tuesday
and said he had found the job
quite satisfying.
"'I would like wexpress my
deepest appreciation to the
secrelary for giving me the
opportunity to serve as
spokesman at this moment of
diplomatic histor)',.. Funseth
said.

THAT S.CRAMBLED WORD GAME
by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

ZPAWZT
KBC

V H

KZ

LIVIG

±
WHAI "THE T~AMP'~

AK ZE

AV CNKBC

ZPAW 'ZT

AV CN •

AKZE .·- FVQJ

Yesterday 's Cryptoquole: TilE CHAIRMAN 0~' TilE BOAR))
IMPARTS TilE ~OOD NEWS AND 'lllE PRESIJ)ENT THE
BAD NEWS. - WlLLI·AM FEATHER
.
Cl197'f lUna F'e1h.nu $yndiu le. Inc.

ICORVE8
II
KJ
At.::[ I
Yesterday's

L.IFE

STOR'Y WA-5.

Now arrange the circled letters tq
form the surprise answer, as sug ~
gested by the above cartoon.

I IJ "(III I I J"

(Answers !omorrow)

I

Jumbles: FAINT WHOOP STOLEN MISERY
4nswer: Could they be called places ol '"lll"
reJll!le?-HOSPITALS

BARNEY

•:
... •
• " .,.,

•
r~

~ ::

•.
•• . •
~

...- •

':,:

IIU

ND, ~ .

ej!

I KNOW - ~"' TI-IE'i
8ROIJ6~T VS OIJT HERE...
OIJR 501001. IS 0\'EI!CRo.JDED .

nce~ ·~E

I JUST ~EEL

1\L

VS HERE!

L.IKE I'VE
SEEN I-IERE

FORMER LIFE. AND '{OU

GONNA LEAI'E

BEFORE ...

BUt/ THAT! 'IOU WERE

PR06Af!L~ I-IERE IN
~~OZE

.·

9 :00--Movie " Give ' Em HelL Harry! " 3, 4, 15; Barney
Miller 6,13; Hawaii F ive.o 8; Ten Who Dared 10;
lnaugutation of Jimmy Ca rter 33.

...-+--+-f--+--+--1

z

..
•'I

7 ·30-Hol lywood Squares 3,4i Ohio Sta te Lottery 6;
Price is Right 8; Wil d Kingdom 10; N ashvi lle on !he

~ •

Thursday 8 til noon

AIINOLOGRATE

7:00-Today 3,&lt;;15; Good Morn ing, America 6,13; CBS

B: JG-Wha l's Happening 6,13 .

ACROSS
40 River
I Food fi sh
mouth
5 "Le 41 Rex .or
d'Arthur
Donna-10 Do a steveDOWN
dore's job
I Dross
II Miss
2 Zenana
Christie's
3 Turkish city
Express
4 Obstacle
13 Smell 5 Swamp
Y est erday 's Answer
'12 wds.)
6 Russian city
22 Withstand
30 Rousseau
14 Fashioned
1 Border
23 Pu t in
work
anew
8 Root up
31 Large
15 Tom
(2 wds .)
office
Thumb's
24 One kind
spoon
9 Guarantee
title
12 Coupled
of gun
33 Closely
17 Brown kiwi 16 Public
25 Young
confined
34 lnterpre(
18 Former
disturbance
horse
~ Prince of
Yankee
19 Persuaded
27 Rival of
the comics
slugger
(2 wds .l
Athens
19 Student's
''pad "
20 Scandina·
z
. vians in

sp

THAT NAY INTEREE&gt;T YOU
OF COUR&amp;E, IT NEED&amp;
A LIITLt WORK ....

•..,. .

Close Sen. At s p.m.

6: 3()-..()SU Overview 4; News 6; Urban League 10.
6: 45-Morn i ng R'eport 3.
6 : 5o-Good Morning, West Virginia 13 .--~6 : 55-Good Morning, Tri State 13 .

CRYPTIIQ\!OTES

.'

•

6: 15-Farm Rep(, rl 13 ..
6:2G-Nol For Women Only 13.

hint s. Each day tht• rode )('ltcrs are dift'en:nt

1

...'CA~I:~
· L:.:J:..:I!::M:::M::,Y.;.,:D;.;:E::..;£1;;.;M~94.:..;9...:·2.:..;JeO
____J.I
I.I • •• e • e • e e e e e e e e • e e e e. t l •• e

,.

name .
The answer is tha t the Cerm
goes w ay back to whist and
was obviou slv coined by som e
unknown play,•r of that game .
(00 you have a question

THURSDAY , JANUARY 20, t 977

One l ellcr simply stands for anoth er. I n I his sam ple A is
used f ur th &lt;.· th rcr L's , X ( qr till' t wo o· ~ . (·tc. Sin gle l etter s,
apostrophes, the l enr:lh and ·(or-mat io n of I he wor ds are all

80 ~'Rs 1'RWC1QFINDA

RUTLAND

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

e

A British Columbia reader
wa n t s to know why a
"f inesse ' ' is call ed by that

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - II ere's how to work it :
A X ·y II I, B A A X R
Is l- ONGFELLOW

t2or 15FI.

· ~..........
IU'I'I
AND fUINITU![. . ~.!,
I 1aA

~&lt;: : 211t

~·;~~¥

vivre

Hl-lO SHAG

Mary

6: oo-Public Affairs 10 .

.27 Ell's mom
28 Religious
. body
29 Jury list
;12 I (Ger.)
33 Mount -,
Calif.
35 Small
Dutch coin
37 See 1Lat. )
38 Re~ident
39 - Mae
Morse

..

SAVE ON
CARPniNG

FRIDAY. TIL 8

•o

sco re.

21 SCralagem
22 Convened
anew
25 Destined
26 Joie de

Convenient Shoppinq HourS'

•

a

RuSsia

PAR KERSBURG

••~•••••~•••••••

!r

are

1he kid kne.¥
exactlu where

•

•

..-----·

698-7331.
EXCAVATING ,
BACKHOES.
DOZER. TRENCHER . lOWBOY,
DUMP TRUCKS. Sill PUlliNS.
PHONE 992-2478 . . DAY OR
NIGHT.

.
••
.•
:.~.

MOM~IlTUM .

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

992-5858.
ElECTRONIC T.V. CliNIC. New

:•

1'biVEi KIM A L-ITTl.6

· Dri~"H l'wrpluJ'f'fl. "·' t.~ 1rwc.l.U.r ro~~~·
luiJ Utlllal •"'r"'fr o'llf'lliloll !Jf

MOBILE Home Repair, EH~c .,
plumbing and heating . Phone

Commercial property app ro.~e . 17
acres. level land, located at
Tuppers Ploi ns on Ohio, Route

•.. fltJO D'W~'i&lt;\Q-l WN-lTS

JMIIii'J

CARPENTER . flooring , cei ling.
,)~an~ing. Phone 992·2759.

COUNTRYfarmlond wrtii58ciud:
ed woods, wot« and good oc·
ceu·lr1 Monroe ~ounty , w. Vo .

CIJR PReAc.~~R 1~ L-I'Av ~~'
D'c:.HURC.H DIS SU»DAL( ..•-

IN.\TNt/CI"iO~

WILL do rool ing. construction,
plumbing and heating. No job
too .Iorge or too smalL Phone
742-2348 .

HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
cavoti ng , sep ti c $ystem s,
dozer, bock hoe , dump tru t.k ,
limestone. grovel. blacktop
paving. Rt . 1.43 . Phone I (614)

FR IDAY .

THROU GH

Modern

T.V. shop. Eleclronil; T.V. Clink
Service co il , $5.95. Color , B &amp; W
antenno systems stereos, etc.
572 South Third, Middleport.
Phone 992·6306. Corry In and

· f..IJAV/~~ OtJ ~IS \I.JreK ' ~
SAJ..A.R11, bi,.,A..D4?~ UJH~?

----~-

949 ·2322.

Sonilotion , 992·3954 .
.

"

Phone 992·7808 .
Will Dei 8A8YSITIING , MONDAY

SEPTIC Systems Installed by
licensed
installer. Shepard
Contractor$ , Phone 742·2"'09,

.

and all of a sudden West
dou bled .
The double looks insane but
there w as a lot of method in
We st's madness . He was sure
that his partner could ruff a
club'
So West opened a cl ub . East
ruffed and returned a diamond to West's ace . A second
club ruff was the third trick
for the defense and then. as
West explained laler on, It
wa s onlv reasonable to
ass ume ' that East coul d,
produce
trick of his own.
East did . He held th e ace of
trumps and since the game
was match points. We$t'S dou ·
ble had given· th em a top

by THOMAS JOSEPH
BORN LOSER

WilL DO sewing and al terations

ABC News 33 .
l 2 :QO-Movie " Don' t Orlnk the Water " 8:
Hartman 10; Janak i 33 .
12· 30-Movle ' The High Cost of Loving '' 10.

I : oo-Tom or row J ,A.

~

992-loJOio .
INCOME TAX Service , Wallac'
Rus se ll ,
Bradbur y.
&lt;:;all ·

11 : 00--News 3,4,6, 13,1 5: MacNeil · Lehrer Report 33i
Monty Python' s Flyi ng Circus 20.
11 :Jo-Jc&gt;nnny Carson 3,4, 15; Rooldes 6, 13 ; News 8. 10;

~

2 to- News 13.

ti ng, gu tter. wo1k. Pho ne 992·
7409.

7. Phone (61&lt; ) 667;_6304
:::..
. ..,--

$23.500. Phone 742-2766.

NEW 3 bedroom house, buill·ir
kitchen, both ond %, Phon e
742-2306 or contoct MilO B. Hut··
chiton, Rutland, Ohio.

UITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

REPAIR -

Jacoby

North's two-C lub call wa s a
decided underbid . His 19-poinl
hand was really wor th some
sort of jump after his partner
responded with one spade. On
the other hand . North did not
,.._ _ _,.know just what jump to make.
He didn"t like the idea of a
raise wi th j1..1st three
trnmn&gt;&lt; or a jum p in clubs or
with his actual holdings
in those suits. So he · bid two
clubs and hoped his partner
nol pass.
South didn 'l pasO&gt; He raised
to three . North bid three
Ispad&lt;&gt;S . South went on to game

Uph o l s t o ring .
drapes 1
reasonable . 572 Sou th Third ~~
A ve ,
Midd leport . Ph one

EXCAVA liNG , dozer . bock hoe
and ditc her. Charles R. Hal·
fie ld . Bock Hoe Service ,
Rutland , Ohio. Phone 742·2008.

- -·
SEPTIC TANKS cleaned.

Eas1 South
Pass 1 •
Pass 3 ""'
Pass 4 A
Pass Pass

8)' Oswald &amp; James

•'

10: 3D-Montage 20 .

12:5(}12 4(}-Mystery of 1he Week 6,1:)..

S EWI N G - Al TE RAT I ON S :

SEWING MACHINE Repairs. ser·
vice . all makes ,. 992 -2284 . The
. Fabr i c 'S hoP . Pome rov.
Authorized Singer Sqle$ and
Ser vice. We ~h orpe n Sciss ors.

-

North
l¥
24
3•
Pass

Opening lead - Deuce •

~_3!5~0f!~il :~:. =_::

REMODELING. Plumbing, heot;ng
and all types of general repair.
Work guaranteed 20 year$ e)( ·
perience. Phone992·2409.

117.500.00.
POMEROY - l bedrooms.
balh. dining room. part

HARRISONVILLE

.

1

parly. $18,000.00 .
RANCH TYPE - About 4

3 bedroom

baths,

Pass
Pass
Dbl.

-

5232 .

VIrgil B. Sr., Realtor
216 E. Second Street

1112

\'t'e:s t

3625.

EXCAVA:fiNG , dozer , loader ond
backhoe work ; dump truck s
and lo·boys for hire; wi ll houl
fill dirt, to soil, limes tone and
grovel. Call Bob or Roger Jef ·
fers , day phone 992-7089 ,
night phon e 992-3525 or 992 -

TEAFORD

with 4 apartments
recreation room .

''•

Sweepers, toasters, irons, all
small appliances . Lilwn mower,
ned to State Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone (614) 985·

accessories.

Pl. llle&amp;llnl
Pll. 675-3469
9:30-5:00 Dally

Branch

hom e

North-South vulnerable

BRA DFORD. Auctioneer, Com·
piete Service. Phone 949·2487
or 949·2000. Roc ine . Ohio . Cdtt
Bradford.
__,__ - - - ·

0

804 EWMoin
Pomeroy
. 992·2291
Aller Hours C. II
9'12·7133
CONTACT:
Lois Pauley

bed room

o!o K J96

QI.JI"TC AWHILE !

Will do odd jobs. roof ing, poi11·

We hove several business
properties tor sale. Call lor
further lnlormalion .

RUTLAND -

• Q42

I

mo.

1:.!7·1

DIR~1~f!l~\~~~Es:

tuU

ga s F. A. furnace , city

,Chain

Chain hw

bedr ooms ~

9-19-211ol

TIII_ I : OOO_Fri~J!

Phone 992-3325
J.IIODLEPORT
4
bedroom home wllh ba th,

FURN.JSHEO fwo bedroom opt. ,
adults only . No pets. Mid·
-1)· dleport . Phane992·3874 .

·one good used Homelite

IE,. ClOVER
MmlCWHr

Pomeroy, Ohio4S769

, One aaod ~sed Remington ·
. Chain saw
uo
;one good used McCullough

115

Volvth, nylon prlnll
herculons, vi11yl solids, anc
fancy

,_

SAY, '('MIND IF'N WE JOIN
\'IJH? WE AIN'T ET IN

DaVid Pn10n1, \IWfter

ISIIts.

House Overlooking Rlvtt

AKC COLLIE , pups, sable and
~~white . $75 ..~hone 949·2571.

COUNTRY Mobile Home Park , Rt.
33, ten miles north of Pomeroy .
Lorg e lots with concrete patios.
sidewalks . runners ond off
strvet parking. Phone 992•7479 .

saw

Commercial
Schools
Wlddingl

ALLEYOOP

..

olo -

SOl!TII
A K 9i651

Squ1r• Y1rd Instilled

maHres..s, padding. Ideal
for campers. Varlely ol

36J.7112.

3290.
PEARCE SIMPSON C. B. bose slo·
tion. Phone 247·2684 oher 5
p.m.

'6.95 .·

basemen!. now healing ,
plumb ln~ and wlrelng on
double lot. Price $40,900,

3891.
1971 HONDA Cl-450. 12.000

miles . sissy bar ; crosh bors .
pull bock handle bars, new tir e
. and seals , Scrambler side
pipes , $650 . Call9.49·2•80 .

MODERN CHEMICAL

t l098653

o!o 7502

CARPET SHOP
Racine, Ohio

EAST
4 AJ 2
• Q9 6 5

• 10 8 i 3
• AJ 7

••

Phone

-~or sl'JljJ.~:~lo•••·

~rial

t K
"' A Q tO 8

WEST
.. 10

NE
ASSORTEU RU~_BER
BACK CARPETING

Pr ice $33,000.
.3

I

LY-FOAM

PHOroGRAPHY

and inventory In · store.
under prennt owner for 35
years, wants t~ retire .

'

19

¥ AKJI2

mn~ .

STRIPPING, REPAIRING
REFINISHING &amp;
UPHOLSTERING

NOHTII IIJ I
• Q8 3

"

Rutl•nd , Ohto uns-..
Ph. (I tit 742-2409

Times 8, 10; Nova 20,33 .
a.JG-Mclean Stevenson 3, 15; News Documentary A.
9 ·()()-S irota ' s Court 3.1S; Baretta 6, 13; I naugural Eve
Speci al 8, 10; Sovndstage 20 ; Dante in Amer ica 33 .
9: 30-Movie '" Benny &amp; Barney : las Ve9as Un .
&amp;rco ver " 3.4,1 5.
'
IO :QO-Charlie"sAngels6.1i ; U.S A.: Peop l e~ Polltlts
33 ~ News 20 .

HE JU5T

Ae&gt;AIN ~

•
I

Box21-A

NOTICE! ! !

WIN AT BRIDGE
Insane double has logic

f'OR.GET

Located Tn LangsVI.t lt

1-17-1 mo.

PROFESSIONAL

?HAFTOP ... OR '

Wil l

Truss Rlfllr co,,

AI tOO Kerr Sl.
Pomeroy, 0 .

No. 190 - ~ountr 1 "ore·
and home, has 4 adjoining
lois. llvlrg quartero has 10
rooms and all equlpmenl

•

Southtztlrlr tlllfo

614-992-2798

•

COllGH UP!

ANY PITfH
ANY SIZE .

t-9·771 .mo.

~.

1969 Nova, extra sharp, ne.w
paint bu cket seots . air shocks.
_~~gs . Phone 949 -2480.
SMAll farm far sole , 10•1. dawn
owner finonced . Monroe Coun
1969 CHEVROLET Bis'Quoine: 1%6
ty . W. Va . Ph one (304} 772
BUICK Electro . 225: 2 Rokan
3102 or (304) 772-3227.
trialbikes_,
, Phone
.
. 949 ·2432.
--·-.-.
1972 GRANO Torino, ps .. and
co nditioned ,
p . b .,
ai r
automatic, new A· I condi tion .

1970. PlYMoUTH... fuRV·- Gran
· If YOU nave
L
•
Coupe, 383 engine, p.s. , p.b.,
1o o11 er
Q serv1ce
b
1
· •
wont to . uy or sel somethmg, • automatic transmission steef
belted radials : buglor alarm
oe lookmg for work ... or
$ystem ; Lafayette C.B. whip
whatever ... yOu 'll gef resu lts
antenna , $750 . Phone- (614 )
foster with o Sentinel Wont Ad.
667-368 2, Clyde Kuhn Tupp er ~
Ca11992-2156.
Pla ins . Ohio.
........ ·, ~

TH REE l EGGED lONG haired
black cot last seen Tuesdcly in
Suga r Run area. Rewor d. Phone

·--;

&lt;&gt;HOUlD I
CAll DADDY AND
BU6 HIM. ABOUT
FIRI ~" 5-HIVAU~

· We 8ellver

mg.,

Service

:~:=--:-;:-="'""-~-.:::;.;~-~ -:·~: ~

-··---

1-1~1

EXPERIENCED .
.Radiator ,.......-,.

OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
POMEROY. OHIO

OoJOW·· YOU !!olOATED

VULTU RE - .VOU' RE &lt;:;ON~A

monufocturod housing .
Double wldn a modular
hamn by Skyllno a FuqUI
Homts Inc.
·
.
1100 E. Main St.
Pomoroy, Ohio
992·7034
Hrs. 9:00 o.m.
To Ousk

WIIIIIIMSlDOOWS
IEPUI;(IJI!IIT
WIILUIII.UII

14t95

$1400. Phone 742-2008 .

r-:----'-------------....:..--..... G·REE-N ANO- GOtP··,.,.do st;i.

An

t97S CHEVEL.LE

8;

Kit 20; Big Green Magazine 33.
7:3G-Dolly 3; $100,000 Name That Tune &lt;: Match
Game PM 6; 125.000 Pyramid B; The Judge 10;

sales lr~..
Wo hondlo only 111o boll In

llolo htlll .... l Altics
ST1HIII

radio, 3~ V·l , automatic, power steering and· brakes.

CASH I ! I for junk c;:ars . Fry•s
Truck and Auto. 24 HOUR
WRECKER SERVICE! Phone

6:00 7 Pomeroy Rood . Athen s.

r_,a_

t975 FORO TORIN04 OR .
.
12895
Local c:ar, clean vlnyllnlerlor, green finish, good I ires,

742-2331.

~~

-~

- -

Brady Bun.ch

7:0G-Truthor Cons. 3; ToTell theTruth4 ; Bow ling for
Oollars6; Pop Goes the Cou ntry 8; News 10; To Tell
the Truth 13; Outlook. ' 77 15; Consumer Sur11 iva l

~

Ki1gsbury tbne .

IIIOWR
l1111tlllillll Semces

.

1-4&lt;6·8570.

Tbe Almaaae
Preu
By
United
CANCER (Juno 21-.luly 22) Your
lntenallonal
· practical Instin c ts w i ll be
overridden today by ·wishful
Today is Wednesday, Jan .
thinking. Flimsy substance rs not
19, the 19th day o{ 11177 with
the true stuH that suCcessful
346 to foUow.
dreams are macle of.
The moon ls new.
LI!O (July 23·Aug. 22) ll's very
The morning stars are
slrilple for you to rationalize toMercury,
Mars and Saturn.
day. You're looking for an easy
Tl)e evening stars are
way out. You 'll b8 able to find
some answers. but the~ won't be Venus and Jupiter.
the right ones.
Those born on this date are
VIRGO (Aug. 23·80pL 22) Look under the sign of Capricorn.
beyond your nose today or you'll
Confederate Gen. Robert
miss the big picture. What you E . Lee WBB born Jan. 19,1807.
can find easily Is probably more
On this day in history:
a mirage than reality .
In 18tll, Georgia seceded
LIIIRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) from the Union. ·
BeWare of being reckless today
In 1938, the Spanish
with your resources when they're
nationalist
alr force bombed
coupled with those of another.
You 'll forgive yourself If there are Barcelona and Valencia,
tosses, but the other party won't. killing 700 clvlllans and
SCORPIO (Oci. z•·Nov. 22) wounding .hundreds more.
In 1965, a "cheating"
You're a good opeoer today, but
a very poor closer. You don't scaodal rocked the AI? Force
k now when to stop selling. This Academy in Colorado . A total
could result In no sale at all.
of 100 cadets later resigned.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-0oc.
In 19.75, Conununlst China
21, Verbalizing polorlully co m~s published a new state
easily to yoU today. The only fly
constitution,
which
IO the ointment Is your tendency
to depan from the facts too eliminated the post of bead of
state and ratified the basic
readily.
CAPRICORN (Doc. 22-.lon. 11) precepts and policies of Mao
Tips from well - meaning friends Tse-tung,
shoulcl ~ot be taken at face value
today. Get the aclvlce of some

-

Pomeroy

•
••·'

.

Business · ~.-..

OF.
OUAUTY
Motor Co._
.
.

&lt;;:OINS. CURRENCY, tokens , Old
pocket watches and chains.
silver ond gold. We need 196-4
and older sil ver coins. Buy, sell,
or trade' Call Roger Wamsley,

(614) 593-8655. hou,. , 9:00 t;ll

SWEEPER AND" Sewing Mochines.
Repai r, Porth, Parts , ond Sup·
plies. Davis Vacuum Cleoner;
one-half mile up George·~
Creek Rood off State Route 7.

attempt to ~ all things to all
people . This I~ fraught with
danger, tor. you will hurt rather
than help others .

·-

2 SIGNS

TIMBER, Pomeroy Forest Pro·
ducts . Top price for Jtonding
sawtimber . Coli Kent Hanby.

NOTICE ~ Profr's Meat Mkt.
(Pleasanton Meat· Processingr
Inc;) Custom slau"htering , and
prounlng. Retoll, w~letale .
No oppolnment n.cessary. Call

-"=-"='-'~----

· eBemoce Blede Oaol
For Thlndly, Jon. 20, 1177
ARIEl (Morch 21-Aprll11) You
hav-s a tendency today to

OLD furniture •. ice bous , bro' ,
~s . woll telephones and
parts. or complee households .
Write M, D. Miller . Rt . 4,
Po~·~· Qh~~~.l!_992·7760.
CASH paid for oil makes and
models of mobile homes .
Phone ore-a code 614 -423-9531 .

2270.

'E~SON' o

T.he PUIItl !thtr reserves

l nstrtlon .

~ow· accepting piano. Jtudentt.
beginner~ , lnterrn~iat... ad·
vonced stud~ts . Call 9!(J . ~

4;

20.33; Aqam-t2 13.
6:00-News 3.&lt;.8.tO.t 3,t5 ; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:3G-NBC News J.t5,4; ABC News 13; Andy Grlfl llh 6;
CBS News a,10; Vegetable Soup 20 ; Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 33.

...• I

~ORMATION

P .M.

' 5:00-Bio Valley 1; My Three Sons

Mister Rogers 20.33; Star Trek 15.
·
s: 30--Adam ·12 4 ; Fam ily Affair 8, News 6: Elec. Co.

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

5

Break lhe Bank 13; Wil d Kingdom 15.
a:OQ-CPD Sharkey 3,A,II; Bionic Woman 6.13; Good

WEON ESDAY, JANUARY t9 , 1971

A

TO D€ATH !

·I

.·

�'

• ••

II- The DallySentlnel,Mlddleport-Pomeroy,O., Wednellday,Jan. 19,1977

HOSPITAL NEWS

Everybodv out free of injury

Veteniii Memorial Hospital
Admitted
Lelah
llolll.-., Racine; Emmett
Blackburn, Pomeroy; Walter
Baker, Coolville; George
Smith, Reedsville; Goldie
Hawk, Pomeroy; Wilma
Riggs, Racine; Teresa
Loogenette, ReedavUie.
Discharged - Charles
Boyles, Vlvlan Johnson,
Gertrude Woods, David
Donohoe, Thelma Johnson.

Columbia Gas lifts plea
to\ reduce natural gas use

Holler Medical Center '
Dlachai'Jies, Jaa. U
No one wu InJured ln SIX leel 110ulll of CR 19. Rutter's 33, BellvUie, W. Va. and Billy
Marjorie
Bechtle, Neva L.
infflc accidents lnveotlgated car struck a vehicle operated R. Blackburn, 40, Ewlngtj)n,
Banjamln,
Paul A. Boggs,
Tuelday by the GaUia,Melgs by Pamela J. Morris, 18, Rt. colllded on llle narrow road.
Lawrence
R.
Chapman, Jack
l'OIIt State Highway Patrol. 2, Racine.
There
was
moderate
gaa
eurtallmenta
on all Cleveland •a parochial • '
Ualted Pretolatematlo""l
D.
Garrett,
Mrs. Jerry
Carl E. Perry, 22. VInton,
Alma L. Stauller, 48, damage. No charge waafiled.
lnduotrles
In Ohio.
The
National
Weather
scbaola 'lriU alao be clolled
Johnson and son, Mabel M.
was clted to Galllpolls Patriot, waa cited for failure
A single vehiCle- accident
News from other utilities, unto Monday.
Service
finally
reported
Jones, Mrs. John KrawSCllyn
Munldpat Court lor failure to to yield foUowlng an accident occurred at 5:15p.m. on SR
however, was bleak.
Martin ~. state !IChoOla '
and son, Mrs. Minor B: Leach Tuesday that an Arctic cold
llop 'lritbln llle asaured clear at 5 p.m. on SR 7 one tenth of "3 ln Melgs County where
The East Ohio Gu Cp. lllperintendent, who has been ':
spell baa snapped and with
and son, Thelma R. Leitch, that good newa Clllle word asked that IIChools ln Ita IS- urging compllanct 'lrilll gu •
distance at I :46 p.m. on Mt: amilesoutho!US35. Officers James E. Jasper, 47, ZanesBeatrice Kay McClellan,
Tabor Rd. near VInton where sald the Stauffer vehicle - ville, lost control of his truck
county service area of
· Samuel A. McKinney, Henry from Columbia Gaa of Ohlo northeast Ohio remain clolled utillliell' requeeta, aald he •
bla car slriJt,t the rear end of · puUed Into the path of a car on the ley pavement. The
that
lt
was
wlthdra'lring
Its
would go to tbe ie8111ature
S. Mossman, Elizabeth C.
an auto operated by Olen C. operated by Patricia A. vehicle struck a -snow ein·
for
the
rest
of
the
week.
plea
to
more
than
a
mUUon
and
uk lor a change In the •
Neal, Mrs. Charles Patterson
Wilfong, 53, VInton.
Price, 23, Ga.illpolls. There bankment then overturned
.
T
he
Cleveland
school
board·
residential
and
commercial
statutes
that require a "
and daughter, Mrs. Rus
Jeffrey E. Rutter, 19, was minor damage.
onto its top.
voted
Tuellday
to
comply
will!
customers
to
voluntarily
mlnlm\1111182
days of scbaola •
PLEASANT VAU.EY
Priddy and son, Clara Kay
Pomeroy, was charged wlth
At 5:25 p.m. on Ernest
A lire bccurred In a vehicle
that
requeot
and
shut
down
reduce
gaa
consumption.
be
concluded
by June 30.
DISCHARGES - Samuel . PuUlns, Mrs. Joe Russell and
failure to yield right of way Woodruff Rd. 200 feet north of driven by CsrroU H. Young, Bennett, Point Pleasant; ·. son, Georgia E. Siders,
The giant utility, servlrig 86 all city publlc sehoola unto
Euu said he would aak for
follo,'lring an accident at 4:50 Alice Rd. near Ewlngton cars 63, Huntington, at 8:10 p.m. Mrs. David Wilson, Aahton; Frances Skeen, Mrs. James Ohio counties, abo said that Monday. Superintendent an extension of that deadline "
p.m. Tuesday on SR 33, 11.2 J!riven by Michael F. Na.af, on SR 7, below Eureka. Robert Vickers, Point Vaughan and daughter, Ruby effective 8 a.J!l. today, It Paul Brlua also aald he had becauae of the \Diprecedented ,
Crown City llreml!l! were Pleasant; Audrey Swett, Watts, Linda L. Willlams, would lift emergency natural been aiilhorlzed to say low teJnperaturea and "
called to elllngul81i tbe blaze. Middleport; Mrs. c_laud Lisa Rae Yo_rk.
closings for Inclement' ~
weather.
Reltmlre, son, Pomeroy;
Eaat and Weal Ohio Gu
Mrs. John W. Fowler, PUny;
botb said Tuesday they would
Owen Lyle, Henderson; Mra.
PRICES SLOWED
continue gas curtanmenta lor.
Detner Roush III, Maaon;
WASHINGTON
(UPI) (Continued from page I)
RoMie M. Blazer, Gaillpolls;
lridustrles.
Conaumer price1 ro11e O.t the printing ahop. Marllnez was being held In lieu of fljO,OOO
The • Dayton Power and
.Robert Hall, Point Pleasant;
per cent fa December ud ball.
Light CO. anno\Diced It would
Jude Nowlin, Apple Grove;
4.8 per ceDt tbrougboat
be unable to · provide
.
Betty Walters, Gallipolis, and
1971, provldlag Amerl.cans
CINCINNATI - A MASSIVE 137-page court appeal bas additional gas through the
Miss VIrginia Killln, R.N. · Mrs. Leonard Cornell, Pint
with the lowest yeat'-elld been filed to try to overturn the convtctionof former Clncltmatl rest of the .winter to any
Agency Supervisor a.n· Pleasant.
lnllatloa rate ID lour yean, Pollee Chief Carl V. Goodin. Goodin was convicted last year of customer that has already
nounces that the Galllpolls .
lbe Labor Department ·perjury and tampering with evidence.
City Health and Home Health
exceeded Its 50 per cent
reported
today.
· _
The appeal, filed Tuesday by Goodin's lawyen In the Ohio aUowable usage.
Agency recently signed a
The 1978 flgore• ren..,ted Flnt District Court ol Appeals, contends there was Insufficient
contract wlth Blue Cross of
DP&amp;L said telegrams were
a
lui!Uimeat of Presldeat evidence presented at Goodin's 10 day trial In June, 1978, for being sent to these customers·
Central Ohio .lor the "TIUe ' COLUMBUS (UPI) _
Ford's promise to bring the Hamilton County Common Pleas Court jury to convict him. ielUng them to turn off their
Co-ordinated Home Care U lock
Program."
ves
t
lnllation below 5 per ceat Goodin waa sentenced to four months In Jail and fined $5,000, ' gaa unto Marc;h or elae they
This prograin permits aU
Csltle supply 00 per cent,
by lbe ead of bla tenore. but has not served the sentence pending his appeal.
would be mechanically
subscribers and family slaughler steers 00 per cent, · Bot economists uticlpate
disconnected.
SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA- RESCUE WORKERS today
members ellglbllity lor an slaughter heifers 36 per cent,
no further lmprovemeat
Columbus and Southern
lifted
the remaining slab of concrete from a crushed COI1UI!IIter Ohio Electric Co. revoked a 5
earlier discharge from the slaughter cows 2 per cent,
during the next two _years.
train and removed the last of 80 bodies entombed by a falllng · per cent voltage reduction It
hospital lf the attending slaughter bulls 20 per cent.
Visit Our Salad Bar
bridge. Apolice spokesman aald the death toO from Australia's had .lnatltuted Monday but
physician assesses that the
Slau~hter steers : Good
Shrimp
worst railroad disaster 'was expected to rise since some of the Cleveland Electric
patient wW benefit through lowchmce ~ 850-l200 '11·
French Fries
.
9!1njured were ln critical condition and not expected to Uve . IUuminating continued a
.home care. This new 39.75; good 2-4 850-1200 34Coffee. Tea or Milk
EVALUATION
SET
36
85
Killed ln the crash Tuesday were 43 men, 36 wooien and a
program saves hospital days
· ; standard :1-3 000.!300
UMA, Ohio (UPl) - RO$S female child, he sald. The last body, covered with a white slmllar reduction.
Plus Tax
28
2
7
and permits the patient to be
· 5-3 ·
.
Public Utilities
with his family earlier.
Slaughter heifers. Good Caudill, 21, Lima, accused In sheet, was taken to a green tent used as a temporary morgue Commlsalon Chairman C.
"If you are a subacrlber low-choice 2-4 850-1000 33-36. the 1974 shooting death of beside tbe twisted tracks.
· Lulller Heckman and Ohio
Slaughter cows: UUlity 2-4 Lima patrolman William
lnt
ed
k
Energy Chief Robert Ryan
and are erest , please as 850-!6002fi.5().28 .25 , individual Brown, will undergo a 3Cklay
Pomeroy. 0.
met with Gov. James A.
your physician and hospital 2 1390 30.lO; low dressing evaluation at Uma State
Phone 992-6304
Rhodes Tuesday and again
discharge planner. The utility ~ IOOO-l300 Z2.5().25 ; Hospital for the Crlmlnally
PIZZA SHACK Phone 992-6304
told him they did oot think an
referrals will be m~,de cutter 1_2 SOO.l200 21•24 .25 .
Insane as the result of a new
~~energy emergency" for
through proper chaMels, a
Slaughter bulls: 1'21155-1875 plea ln the case.
spokesma~ said.
zs:.a2.90.
born. But as his Inaugural Ohio ahould be declared.
In ADen County COmmon
By !Q:LEN THOMAS
nears,hesays,hefeelsbetter
· In Waahlngton, however,
Pleas
Court
Tuesday,
Caudill
ilPI Wblte House Reporler
Feeder cattle: Steers choice
about
It
aU.
Sen.
Jolm Glenn, D-Ohlo,
pleaded
Innocent
to
the
couple 500-920 34.oo.s5; good
PLAINS, Ga. (UP!) Carter
put
finishing
BMOWICed
Tuesday night he
shooting
by
reason
of
451).650 27.5().29.50; ~710 '!1Jlnuny Carter headed 'lor
touches
on
his
inaugural
baa
lnlroduced
legislation
insanity.
30; standard 42(;.760 23.7f&gt;.
Washington today \0 attend
State No. %23X
address
which
Press
give
the
President
llle power
During
a
1974
court
26.80.
0
some festiviUea luid await his
CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDmON
~c;retary
.
Jody
PoweU
said
to
declare
a
natural
gas
proceeding
he
had
pleaded
no
Inauguration Thursday as the
Heifers choice : 305-450
would
have
a
"r,allstic"
tone
·emergency.
contest
and
was
sentenced
to
39th Preside~! of the United ·
29. 75-32; 650-860 29·29.50;
and would set forth the
Glenn said his bW would
..
good :J85.65() 23.75-27; 650-830 life ln prison. But the Ohio States.
principlea
and
goals
of
the
,
also
empower the Federal
Supreme
court
recently
23.2(;.26.25.
"I feel good and I'm ready
new
administration.
Power
CommiSBion to llhllt
upheld
a
lower
appeals
court
Vealers: Prlp!e 140-220 6().
wgo," Carwr told reporlera · What remalited was for gas from
more forlunate
ruling
that
caudill
was
not
75 cwt., choice !5().270 50-59;
Tuesday when ll!! jogged a
Csrler
to
sign
an
agreement
p!peUnes
to
llloae serving
properly
advised
of
his
rights
good 1115-250 43-48; standard
couple of blocks to :visit his
today
turning
over
his
areas,
ltke
Ohio,
that are
when
he
entered
the
no
14().210 :II-39 cwt. Lot prime
mother. •
financial
holdings
In
the
encountering
.
major ·
contest
plea.
The
high
court
!2(;.145 65 per head, choice
The president-elect
family's
peanut'
business
to
ahortages
and
hardship.
ordered
he
be
rearratgned
125-135 42-49.50 per head; ·
admitted he has been sad
"W11at alarma me ~en ·
about leaving his family and · Atlanta attorney Charles
good 100-120 30-35.50; and enter another plea.
of Pomeroy, Oblo aDd Forelp aDd Domestic Sablldtarles; at the cloae of
Klrbo,
his
cloae
friend
who
more
than the grave present
Brown
was
shot
to
death
friends in the rural southwest
standard 'lf&gt;.IIO 111-29.50.
iJusiJ!ess December 31, 1971, 1 slate blinking illltiiiiUon orpntzed IDd operallng
'lriD
act
as
his
Irustee.
reaUty
Ia that the govenunent
during
an
attempted
service
Georgia vUlage where he was
Hogs: Barrows and gUts l.J
under the banking laws of this State and a member of the Federal Reserve
When
asked
why
he
picked
apparently
does not have the
station
holdup.
200-253 40.45-42.10; 2.:! 212-265
System. Pabllahed In accordance with a caD made by llle State Banking
Klrbo,
Car~r
replied,
legal
means
w thwart an
37.50-39.60; SOWS 1-3 377-538
Authorities and by the Federal R&lt;:serve Bant of IIlla District.
"Because
I
trust
him
...
He
impending
tragedy If
34-36; Ieeder pigs 1-3 40-60 14- ·
knows
our
family
buslnesa."
temperatures
in
the Midwest
18per head, l.J 00.75 ZG-28 per
TWO CElifJFJED
ASSETS
Carter planned to say good- stay at lllelr record low
head.
.
CINCINNATIAN INDICTED
Two Meigs students at bye at llle depot on Main ' levela. Ohio, and several
Cash and due from banks ...... .... .. ... .............. . , ........ 1,895,000.00
Sheep : Slaughter lambs
CINCINNAti (UPI) - · Hocking Technical College Street -which lor two yeara - other states are one step
U.S. Treasury securities . . .. ..... .. ........ ... .. ....... . ...... 4,923,000.00
lew choiee and prime shorn Daniel .R. Bonner of are among 26 recent
~ Obligations of U.S. Government
his
campalJ!n removed
h•om
stark
with No. 2 pelts 107-116 43-50 Cincinnati was indicted by a graduates who . have com· was.
__ agencies and corporations .. ...... ............................ 121,000.00
headquarters
to
some
too
tragedy,"
the
senator
aald.
cwt, Ieeder lambs few choice Hamilton County grand JurY pleted
their
state friends and fans scheduled to
Obligations of States and political subdivisions .............. ..... 1,926,000.00
and fancy 00.79 49-59.
Tuesday on a charge of examinations and received leave on a ~ Amtrak
Federal Reserve stock and corporate stock ..... . ..... .. ........... 24,000.00
second degree murder ln the certification as Emergency train lor Washington ln early
Federal funds sold and securities purchased under
death of his wlfe more than Medical Technicians agreements to resell in domestic offices. . , ..... .... . .......•. ; . . 700,000.00
four
years ago. ·
AmbUlance. They are James alternoon.
· a. Loans, Total (excluding unearned income) .......... . 8,434,000.00
Two hours later, the
Regina Bonner was found Allan Landon, son of Donald Carters were to go by
b. Less: Reserve for poasible loan losses . . : ............. .. 89,000.00
PRESENTS CREDENTIAL'! stabbed to death on LandOn, Tuppers Plslns, and . motorcade to Albany, Ga.,
c. Loans, net.. .. ........ ............ ...... ... ....... . .. ...... 8,345,000.00
(Continued from page I)
Christmas eve, 1972.
Brian Keith Conde, 59n of Mr.
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
and
board
a
charlered
plane
machine
he actuaUy does not
MOSCOW (UPI) - U.S. · Pollee had wanted to · and Mrs. James E, COilde,
other aBBets representing bank premiaes ................. , ...... 405,1l00.00
lor
Washington
for
a
round
of
need
,
as
he has one In his
Ambassador Malcolm Toon question Bonner In the case, Route I, ReedaviUe.
Other assets
3,(!00,00
aodal
activities
on
llle
eve
of
.office.
·
The commlsslon
presented his credentials to and had a warrant out for
TOTAL ASSETS . ..... . .. . ... .. ..•......... ....•.•• .. . ..... . 18.342,1l00.00
his inai!I!W'ation.
sugge"ed Crow make a Ust of
the Soviet Union Tuesday. · him, but were Wl8ble to
IJABILITIES
He pi8nned to attend the all equipment he does not
Toon,
the
15th
U.S.
envoy
to
locate
him
the
last
four
yeara.
Demand deposits of individuals,
gala at tbe John F. Kennedy need.
Moscow since the two
Several weeka ago he was
SING SCHEDULED
partnerships and corporations ........................ .. ..... 4,414,000.00
· Center and '1riU sit in the • C. E. Blakeslee told the
·countries es·tabllshed arrested In New York oo·
There will be a Hymn Sing .,fesidential box with VIce commissioners they are
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
diplomatic
relations
ln
1933,
another
charge
and
routine
at the Hazel Community President-elect Walter membersolthe Meigs County
partnerships, and corporations . .. ..... . .. ..... . ..... .... .... 12,250,1l00.00
formally
handed
·his
procesaing
through
a
national
Church, located between Mondale and their lamlltes. Planning Commission arid
Deposits of United States Government. .... ..... ...... . ............ 33,000.00
credentials
to
President
crime
Information
computer
Long Bottom and Portland,
Deposits of States and politicalsubdivlslons .... .... •.......... . .. . 470,1l00.00
Carter waa aCC&lt;Illpanled to the nell meeting of llle
Nikolai
Podgorny
in
a
turned
up
the
Cincinnati
warJan.
22 at 7:30 p.m. Special . Washington by memPerl of commission Is Monday at
Deposits of commercial baRks ..... ....... . ...... ................ .3,000.00
Kremlin
ceremony.
rant.
.
·
singers 'lriD be the Gospel
Certified and officers' checks ...... ... ....... ... ................. 57,000.00
During the presentation
Cincinnati detectives ·have Echoes of AahvUle, Ohio. the family lilcludlng his wife 3:16 p.m. Blakeslee Invited
Total DepOsits In Domestic Offices ......... .......... 17.227.QOO.OO
Rosalynn, daughter Amy, his the commissioners to
.Toon said the two countries returned BoMer here from Estil _Hart Is the pastor.
a. Total demand deposits . .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 4917 000 00
mother and Rosalynn'a reappoint Pete Shlelda to the
have "taken important steps New York.
b. Total time and savings deposits ....... . ... ....... .. 12,315,!100 00
molller.,
plamlng group aa county at
to . bulld a more stable
Total Deposits In Domestic and Foreign Offices ........ ... . , .... 17.227.000,00
Tuesday was moving day. large delegate and Orlen
relationship"
during
the
last
Other liabilities .. ................. .. .................... . ....
The president-elect loaded Roush aa citizen at large
few years.
CLASSES CANCELLED
TOTALUABILITIES ....................................... 17_ l_llOO.OO
the . famlly'a \ penonal which wu done. Attending ·
Baton classes of Mra. Judy belongings, Including were Wells, Jones, and
EQUJTYCAPrrAL
"
FOUNDDEAD
.
TWINSBURG HEIGHTS, Riggs scheduled lor this · clothing, book&amp; aild toys, on!Al Roush, commissioners and
Conunon stock:
Ohio (UPI) - Dora JackaoJi, evening at Royal Oark Park a truck ·for shlpnent to tbe Martha ChaDibers, cle~k.
J a. No. shares authorized 12,1l00
.
White House.
·
79, Twinsburg Heights, was are cancelled.
300,000.00
b. No. shares outstanding 12,1l00 ... ... .......... (par value)
found dead In her house
Surplus . .. ........ .. .............. ... ......................... 500,000.00 ·
Tuesday night, according to
Undivided profits ........ . .... .......... . .. ........ . .... ... .. .. 291 .llOO.OO
the Sununlt County COroner,
TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL .. . ... . ............
1,091,000.0
who said heat In the woman's
TOTAL UABIUTIES AND
_,.,
. ,.._.,...
home had been turned off and
EQUI1'Y CAPITAL ....... : ... ... ..••••••••••• •• , , , ..• ·.•. . ...• 11,000.00
the temperature Inside was
MEMORANDA
about zero.
Average lor 15 or 30 calendar_days ending 'lrith caD date:
a. Cash and due from banks... •• .. ..... ... •• •... •, .. ........ .. . l,tol,llOO.OO
b. Federal fwlds sold and securities purchued under
MCDIVITrNAMED
agreement to resell •
753,000.00
OXFORD,
Ohio (UPI) c. Total loans ..... ••. .•... ••...... , , •• ••• ••• ••• ••. , , , ...••... 1,542,000.00
The
commander
of the Apolio
e. Total deposits .. ... ..... .............. . .. •..•...•.. .... .... 17,m,ooo.OO
9
space
flight
In
March,
1989,
•
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDA
James
A.
McDivitt,
was
Pledged asset. and securities loaned (book value) :
·
among a dozen persons
U.S. Government obllgatioos, direct and gti8I'IIIIIeed,
Tuesday 'IIIIo accepted ap·pledged to secure depclslts and other liabilities . ... ... .. . .. ...... .. 89!,542.50
pointment
to
Miami
'I'O'I'AL •.••... ·, ..•• ..•• •....... ...•• . •••. ••.•
891,542.50
University's Scho\11 of
MEN'S &amp; BOYS'..:.. Winter coats, sweaters, shirts, $lacks
Business Administration
I, Roger W. Hysell, Csshler, of the above-named bank do hereby'declare
"Business
Advisory
Ceun·
a~jn~.
.
that this report of condition is !rue to the best 111 my knowledge and belief.
dl."
Roger W. Hysell
WOMEN'S- Sweater, coordinated sportswear, blouses,

•

.TJIE INN PLACE

President Carter asks new
By CLAY F. RICHARDS

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Jimmy Carter today intoned the
solemn oath of the presidency and asked the American people
togo forthwith him into the nation's third century with "a new
beginning ... a new dedication ... ~ new spirit."
In a s~ple ceremony almost as old as the Republic, the
Georgia dirt fanner - echoing ·the populist theme that swept
him to victory over an Incumbent - acknowledged the
awesome burdens he laces as the nation's 39th president.
"You have given !fie a great responsibility, to stay dose w

WASHINGTON WPil - Jimmy Carter
took his oath as president today on a Bible his
mother. gave him a few months ago, opened to
what he termed "a timeless admonition from
the ancient prophet Micah."
It read: "He hath showed thee , o man.
what is good; and what doth the Lord require
or .thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and
to walk humbly with thy God." Micah 6:8.

News •• in Briefs

Agency signs
contract with
Blue Cross

ThursdAy Nrght Special

•

Market Report

THE MEIGS INN

Carter's ready

•

The Farmers Bank &amp;
Savings Company

0

O

'

0

0

0

°

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

'

0

0

0

0

'

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

°0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0 &lt;0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

0

I

t

t

I

·/:rq.oo

I

0 0 0 ••••• 0 •••••••••••• •

•

•• •• ••• •

Elberfel~s

•• ••••••

SAVINGS OF 40%

i • " •••• ' •••••• ••• •

Frigidaire
laundry
Pair

I ••• '

'

In Pomeroy

DURING OUR JANUARY CLEARANCE

•••••••• •••

We, the underslgiied directors, attest the comctnes1 of this report of condition and declare that It has been examined by us and to the best of our
lmo'lriedge and beUef is true and correct.
Theodore T. Reed, Jr.
Thereon JohMm- Dlrectora
Fennan E. Moore

$569

State of Ohio County of Meigs, ss:
.'lwom to and subscribed before me IIlla 14th day of January,l977. .
.
' ·, •
JoAnn Crllp, Notary Public
MJ c.. iim•l., EXJilreaJuly 11, 11t1a.

MEIGS Tlf.ATKE
QOSED FOR
, Vfl.ATION
WATQI FOR

'

OPENING DATE

tops, .winter coats, winter robes and pajamas.
CHILDREN'S - Winter coats, jeans, slacks, skirts,
dr~ss_es and sleepwear.
SHOP WEEKDAYS9:30to 5:00, F~IDAYt:30toi:OO

Elberfelds In

Po~eroy
•

'

.'

President Jimmy Carter

Carter 39th
President

you, to be worthy of you, and to exemplify what you are," he
said.
"Let us learn together and laugh together and work together
and pray rogether- confident that in the end we wUltriumph
together."
Carter, his right hand 9n a Blble given _him a ·few months ago
by his mother, "Miss Lillian," Intoned the same 35-word oath
of every president since Wsshlngton in 1789 - swearing to
"preserve, protect and defend the Constitution of the United
States.''

e
VOL XXVII NO. 195

•
ln

at

en 1 e·

~

THURSDAY, JANUARY 20. 1977

PRICE FIFTE EN CENTS

•

Train hits truck
Luc~lly,

what co.uld have
been a major explosion was
averted Wednesday following
a collision between a propane
gas truck and Chessie system
switch engine at the Georges
Creek Rd. crossing In Addision Twp. between Addison
and Gallipolis . .
Due to fire which followed,
Gallla County sherifl's
deputies evacuated the lm·
mediate area lor a three and
one-half hour period until all
danger of ~n explosion had

Dill headS
hi
lOWDS p

3SS0C~ o·tl'On
~

'

cleared.
Listed In satisfactory
condition at Pleasant VaUey
Hospital from facial injuries
suffered in the collision Is the
driver of the Point Pleasant
City Ice and Fuel truck,
James . Buttrick, 33, of
Southside, W. Va. He was
rushed to the hospital by the
Gallla County Volunteer
Emergency Squad.
According to the Ohio State
Highway Patro~ the proJ»ine
gas truck got stuck on the
crossing before it was siruck
by the locol)lotive at 3 p.m.
Wednesday-:--The Impact
knocked the truck off the
tracks and over an embankment near the property
of Mrs. Ruth ' Goody. The

Schools
closed ·

Brre
•

Ualted Presalnternallellll
CIDCAGO - IVA TOGURI D' AQUINO, convicted as a
"Tokyo Rose" who broadcast treason 1(1 U.S. troopa during
World War II, today Is again an American citizen, a
"chllrillhed" privilege taken: from her 27 yeara ago. President
Ford pardoned her Wednellday, returning her cltizenahlp In
one of his last acta ln office.
The ~().year-old clerk at a Chicago Oriental shop thanked
Ford "lor his compasSion and aenae of fair play" and told
newsnen, "The difference now is thai I have regained my·
American cltlzenahlp, a right and a prl.vllege I have always
cherllhed.'; She wu the only American among aome ·aeven
WOillen who we~"&amp; dubbed "Tokyo ROBe" by American soldi~rs
Uatenlng to the Japanes\lbroadcasta Qf music and sweet talk In
llle South Pacific.

Vice President Walter Mondale

~

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Gary Dill, a Chester
Township trustee, was
reelected president of the
Meigs County Association of '
Township Trustees and
Schools of the three .Meigs
Clerks at the aMual meeting
County
Local Districts have
of the group at tbe Rock
been
closed
until Monday due
Springs Grange HaD Friday.
to
the
cold
weather,
ice and
0. J. Pennington, Orange
snow.
Township trustee, was
The schools have been
reelected vice president;
Gloria Hutton, Columbia closed most of the time over
;~:t::i~ d • C~e;~~e t a~y·~ the past two weeks and aU
dlstrlcta have exhausted their
tre~surer, and Forrest Van live calamity days aUowed by
Meter, a Sutton Township the State Department of
trustee, was elected to the Education before make-up
are required.
mlnlslered
by Chief followed
Justice ...............................
. -.~~~~.~~.:.:.:&lt;·:·...:· :· :......
·:-:-:-:-:-:--~··'""
:-:-:-'-'·:·:·: · :-:-"':-:- e'x~~ti~: th~~ 1 ':!"~~~ days
Temperatures In Meigs
Warren
E. Burger,
111e oath-taking of Walter
STAY OFF ICE
several trustees and clerks County moderated to the 18 to
were unable to attend. 00 degree range Wednesday
Meigs
County
Sheriff
Mondale as vice president, ·
·
J Proffitt aaL· that
Everyone preferring to mail allernoon and many temadministered by Speaker J.-es
~·
""
Thomas O'Neill. ·
youagoten stay off the Ice
dues may send-them to Gloria perature readings were
Hutton, ·~teta~-treasurer, rreporled at lour and· llve
Carter chose the Bible Ia the river· ·The .berUI
Route 3, ~·
Albany,''Ohio.
be had to ten lhr..
above Thursday mornlrig.
given hlm a lew months ago said•••ten
at
MlaersviUe
Elected
county
officials
You
Additional snow has been
by his mother , "Miss ·
.....
··
Wednes•-y to get off Ice as
attending the meetln_g were predicted lor the next few
·
Lillian;'' one of the more
""
·
colorful members of the It "dellultely not aafe". Tlie
Henry Wells, James Roush days.
sberlfl'o depa~tmeat
and Richard Jones, county
Carter clan who campaigned Wedneoday traaoferred
commissioners; Rick Crow,
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
lhrougliout the country lor
tin tt
w1
the new president's election: Ronale Ptekeaa, zo, to
prosecu g a omey; es ey
!talurday through
Mondale selected his father's Maaalleld Reformatory.
Buehl,-county engineer, and .Monday, lair Saturday and
::::::::::;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::':';:::;::::::;;;;;::::;::: Howard Frank, auditor.
a cilance of • - Sanday
·:::::ws:::=:~:::~;:;:::•:o:•m:·:-:·:.:~~=·~:::·:::-:::«::::::.o.~. t:rr··· a ; :.\ULJbb
Refreshments provided by and Monday. Highs wru be
~~ JimAilenoftheSoutheastern In tht ZO. aortb and llle 3ts
~
Equipment co., GaUipolis, aonth. Lows 11101Uy wru be
Z=lll
• .t t
·were served by women of In the teelll!.
~
Rock Springs Grange.

J1\Tews

The oath was administered by Chief Justice Warren Burger
moments alter Vice President Walter Mondale was sworn in
by Speaker Thomas O'NeiU.
Carler's address broke no new ground. It was a philosophical
speech, gentle In tone but firm in its commitment to human·
dignity and the American dream. He urged moderation in striving for lllat dream - lest the natural resources of a great
nation be drained.
"~ore is oot necessarily better," he declared.
He.rattled nosabers,but said U.S. military strength must be
"so suflicient that it need never be proven In combat."
He pledged that America will be "ever vigilant and never
yuinerable, and we. will fight our wars against poverty,
Ignorance and mjust1ce - for those are the enemies agaimt
which our forces can_be honorably marshalled."
Carter, as is his habit, awakened early on his big day. With
President Ford at his side, Carter rode In a black limousine up
Pennsylvania Avenue, "The Avenue of Presidents," t.o the U.S.
Capitol for the inauguration ceremony.
Yet to come before the rigorous day culminated at last in the
White House were the 21&gt;-hour parade back down
Pennsylvania Avenue to the White House, and the seven gals
parties expected to draw 80,000 celebrants.
lronicaUy, It was two years ago today that Carter launched
his million-to-one presidential bid with a speech in Baton
Rouge, La.
Then he was "Jimmy Who? "
Now he is "Mr. President."
He pledged that under his leadership , the United States wiD
move this year "a step toward our ultimate goal - the
elimination of all nuclear weapons from this earth."
"We urge all other people to join us, for success can mean
(Continued on page B)

~

'

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Jinuny Csrler assumed the
awesome powers and crushing burdens of the American
presideney on the steps of the U. S. Capiro! today with a simple
oath taken by 36 men before' him.
The Georgia peanut farmer, Navy submariner, nuclear
scientist and lormer governor of Georgia became the first
president from the Deep South since Zachary Taylor in 1848.
His Inauguration marked a major step in the final heating
of the wounds of the Civil War, and the end of eight years of
Republican control of the White House.
Carter becomes the 39th U.
S, president at noon, taking Bible.
.
the oath first · sworn by . After the swearing-m
George Waahlngton in 1789 to ceremony, ~he new president
" preserve , protect and headed a 21'.-hour para~e
defend the Constitution of the back down Penmylvama
United States"
Avenue to the White House,
Carter, wh~se given name while Ford boarded a
is James Earl Carter Jr., was helicopter on the Capitol
sworn In as "Jimmy." It was grounds for nearby Andrews
the llrsi time an American Alr Force Base and a
pre.sldent .had chosen not to government jet to California
use his given ·name In taking and retirement.
the oath.
Tonight the Carters and the
Carter beeomes president Mond~les wlU a_ttend seven
two years to the . date he gala parties expected to draw
launched hls campaign for 60,000 celeb~ants.
,
the office as a politician . Carter ~ .PfOple s
virtuaUy unknown outside the mauguratlon Is fmanced by a
South.
$3.3 million budget funded
lnaugnration Day began at through the sale of souvenir
the Uncoln Memorial with a Items, and the $25_ tickets sold
35-minute prayer .service led to the vanous officlsl events..
by Dr. Martin Luther King
In addition $825,000 is
Sr., the father of the ~!sin appropriat~d b¥ Congress for
clvil rights leader who gave the sweanng·m ceremony,
his lamed "I have a dream" and the District of Columbia
speech on the same site.
gov~rnmenl ~pends $1.4
Ford who inherited the million for pollee and gar·
White 'House when Spiro bage rollectlon - and hopes
Agnew and then Richard to be reimbursed eventuaUy
Nixon resigned in disgrace, by the federal government.
had allnal cup of coffee wlth
The budge~ Is ,lower than
Carter at the White House that of . Nixon s . second
before the victor and the Inaugural and unlike any
vanquished drove together up other the five-day celebration
· Pennsylvania Avenue to the has featured hundreds of free
Capitol for the simple but events for the public. There
moving exchange of power. were almost 200 free musical
carter;·• · oath,
ad· events that extend through

beginni~g

Stockholders reelect
hoard and its officers
•.

Members of tlie board of
directors and the board's
officers were reelected at the
aMual stockholders meeting
of .Citizens National Bank,
Middleport, In the banking
rooms Tuesday.
Dlrectora reelected were
MIAMI- FREIGHTERS CRISSCROSSED ROUGH - • Paul S. Smart, James F.
In !be Gulf of Mellco today aearching for 13 miSiing crewmen Arnold, Rodney Downing,
ofllle Panamanian freilhter Ukola, which snapped In half and Dale M. Dutton, Bernard V.
IIIII! In a gl)e. Seven crewmen were known dead ln the slnltlng Fultz, Jay Hall, Jr., Roae S.
aarly Wednellday. The captain and two other crewmen were Reynolds and Harold E.
teiCIIed,
Hubbard.
The aeareh was concentrated In a 111:-mlle radius from
At the directors' meeting
when the captain wil pldked up, about 2liO miles welt· following, olflcers reelected
northweot of Key Well. Capt. Alejandro Felix, 43, was reacued were Paul S. Smart, chair·
by a COaat Guard helicopter and waa taken to Bay!ront man; Harold E. Hubbard,
Medical Center ln St. Peterlburg, where he was treated and · president; MaMlng l&lt;loes,
'1(Continued on J)lle I)
.~ "
.vice president and callhler;

Bernard V. Fultz, vice
president; Gene Grate,
asalstant vice president; Lois
McEIII!nny, assist. vice
preaid'tnt; Edward Durst,
assistant cashier, and
Cheater King, assistant
caahler.
Other employes of the bank
are Dorothy Anthony, Norma
Wilcox, Nancy Davis, Dortha
Salae•. Slirah Fowler, Mary
Hlndy and Deborah Salser.
Following the directors
meeting, all directors· and
their wjves or husbands were
dlmer guests at the heme of
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard F.
Fultz.

truck's cab then burst Into
flames due to sparks
created when the train
pushed the vehicle down the
tracks. Da1page
wa&amp;'
estimated. at $3,500 to the
truck's cab.
Firemen were on the scene
several hours using water to
make sure the tank did not
get hot and explode. Buttrick
was cited to Municipal Court
for !allure to yleld the riBht of
way ...

Another accident occurred
at I :30 p.m. Wednesday on
CR 35, three tenths of a mile
south of the Meigs County line
where a vehicle driven by
Roger W. Black, 36, Bidl"ell,
slid on the icy pavement
striking ·a car operated by
Julius S. McGhee, 36,
Langsville. There was minor
damage. No charges were
filed.

TAKE APPUCATIONS - ·Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews is shown with Neva·
Jones who took applications for employment In the Jobs Corps the past two days at Pomeroy
City Hail. Thirteen applications were liled for employment and 15 other young people were
interviewed. Tbe jobs W.re for young wpmen and men age 16 through 21 years. While in th e
Job COrps persons are pald whil~ learning but must leave the area. They are given free food ,
housing, medical care, clothing allowance, and spending inoney. Job Corps tra ins males
and females for job skills sue~ as auto mechanics, keypunch, bricklaying, nursing skills,
welding, oflice skills and many more. Those who wish more information should come to the
City Hall where pamphlets are available, or to the Community Action Program in the Court
House.
· ·

'

Cooperation, patience needed
Middfeport Mayor Fred
Hollman tnday asked for the
. continued cooperation and
patience of village residents
in handling the many hard·
ships dealt to residents by the
severe cold and snow.
The mayor also praiSed
village ~mployees and
Maintenance Supervisor Bill
Durst lor their untiring efforts In handUng the many
emergency situations which
have occurred during the
past several weeks.
The water department has
been flooiled with calls
seeking assistance. VIllage
employees have been helping
In every way possible, but
they ask for patience.
The village has _. had two
major water breaks, one on
Sunday at the comer of Grant

and Beech St. and one on
Tuesday on Cole St. Both
were succeSllfully repaired In
the sub-zero weather by
Durst and his crew.
There have been no
problems In keeping plenty of
wawr available for village
residents. A:J usual, a close
watch has been kept on water
pumping facilities to aSllure
that water was available to
residents at all times.
Numerous small leaks have
occurred and there un·
doubtedly '1riU be mO..e due to
the severe lreeztng.
Most of the heavily
traveled streets have been
kept free ollce·and snow, but
slde streets in most
residential areas are very
icy, especially where water
breaks have occurred. The

village supply of salt has been
exhausted and none is
available anywhere. The
village had been obtaining
salt out of Marietta but its
supply is gone. Marietta 's
new shipments are in barges
somewhere on the frozen
Ohio River !
The
State Highwa y
Department in Marietta
contacted by the mayor ,
Indicated that its salt supplies
were also very low and could
not permit. any help to the
village. The only solution is
the use of cinders on hills
where necessary, whlch the
village win be hauling from
the Kyger Creek Plant. The
mayor stressed that no more
salt ls avaUable and will not
be.
Motorists are urged to use

caution if they must drive. In
case of snow. use streets only
when necessary.

The severe weather is also
causing much damage to

street surfaces, the extent of
which will not be known until
some of the ·ice thaws. New
chuck holes are appearing
constantly and it is impoSllible to do anything with
them in this kind of weather.
Much severe winter
weather is still ahead of us so
please be careful and be
patient when asking for help.

Hearing set
on Monday

· Robert Coffee, 23, Wendell
T. Derricks, 36, and John D.
Mankin, 30, all of Belpre,
arrested in connection with
the aimed robbery of the
Thomas
Zano residence Rt. I,
$80,1100.
.
Rutland
early Saturda y
At the organizational
morning,
making
their first
·· meeting of the directors,
appearan ce WediYesday
officers re-elected were
Theodore T. Reed, Jr .• before Meigs County Court
president; Thereon Johnson , Judge Robert E: Buck, were'
exec. vice president; Paul E. advised of th e charges
againsrthem (aggrevated
Kloes, vice president and
secretary; Roger W. Hysell, robbery), advised of their
cashier; Jon P. Karschnik, rights. and . had their
preliminary hearing set on
assistant cashier; JoaMe J .
Monday
at 9:30 a.m.
Wlillams, assistant cashier ;
The
court
appointed Atty .
Evelyn G. LaMing, assistant
William
Connolly
of
· cashier, and.Addie W. Norris,
Gallipolis
to
represent
CoHee
loan officer.
and Atty. David Evan; also of
Gallipolis, to represent
Derricks. Mankin hired Atty .
Charles Knight of Pomeroy
as counsel. Bond was set on
each at $100,000. Mankin's
bond was reduced upon
CAU.ED TWICE
representation of hls attorney
RACINE - The Racine ER to $25,000. All are lodged in
Squid made two runs jail.
Wednesday, at 2:30 p.m. lor
A fourth person, Randy
Pearlene Lee and at 7 p.m. Dawson, 23, Parkersburg, is
lor Freda Deeter,' both taken
awaiting extradition
to Veterans • Memorial
proceedings at Wood County
Hospital.
jail. ._
·

AnQther good year for hank
.

'I

•

Another good year for the
bank was reported to the
llhareholders of The Farmers
Bank and Savings Company
Wednellday at their aMual
meeting In the bank. ,
Directors re-elected were
Theodore T. Reed, Jr.,
Thereon Jollnson, E. Robe~
Schellhaae, Leslie F. Fultz,
Fred W. Crow, Jr., C. Wayne
Swlllher, Dr. Fred R. Carsey,
Jr., Richard C. Follrod and
Ferman E. Moore.
Theodore T. Reed, Jr.,
president, reported lo tbe

shareholders that 1976 was
another good yea~ lor the
bank. During the year the
lending limit of the bank was
Increased from $70,000- to
WRONG TABLER
An animal claim submitted
by Ernest Wingett of Racine
to the board of Meigs County
Commlssloners was tabled at
the requeot of Wingett until
be makes an additional Investigation. It was reported
that the commissioner tabled
the request, which was In·

correct.

Weather
WI d oda
n Y t Y' wlth blowjng
and drifting snow. Cloudy
tonightand Frl.day, chance of
show Hurries. Lows tonight
12 hi h Frida
nd
near ' g 1
Yarou
25.
Probability
ol ·
precipitation 90 per cent
today, 40 per cent tonight, 30
t Frld
per cen
ay.

E-R CALLED OUT
The Middleport J;!.R Squad
was caned to 107 Park St. at
2:33 p.m. Wednesday for
Barbara sinlth, a medical
patient, who was taktn to
Veterans· Memorial Hospital.
At 8:04 p.m.• the squad was
called lor Edlth Abbott, 80, of
278 Ash St., wbo was taken to
Holz~r ~edlca! Center.

i

•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="786">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11270">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="47935">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="47934">
              <text>January 19, 1977</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
