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10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Tuesday ,'Jan. 2li, 1971

Ohio Assembly meeting on natural ga

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Budget exceeds $1.5 million

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and a
40.hour-a-week will be m~ndatory ·steps : : :;:;: :;:;:;:;:;:;:;: : : : : : : :;: : : : ~i.: : : : : : : : : : : : : :~:~:::::~:~::::::::::~:::::::::::~::::&lt;:::::~::::::!:::~::::;~:;::::::::: ~
dim or dark. Thermostats in mandatory conservation con- be implemented.
By J .R. KJMMINS
limitation
of hours of taken and widespread
trols
,
including
the
cloaing
of
The Ohio Energy and ReCOLUMBUS (UP!) - The Rhocies' office were turned
operation
lor
buainesses. It hardships will result. "
&lt;llio General Assembly was down to 60 degrees . The heat schools and lbnitations on source Development Agency
•
could
be
Implemented
II
Sen. Neal F. Zimmers, [).
(OERDA) scheduled a 2 p.m.
to convene today in 60-Cegree in vacant state offices was business hours.
~
.
Senate President Pro Tem- meeting today to "fine tune" Rhodes decided to again Dayton, chalrman of the
chambers In a special session cut off.
By Ualted Prtu lalt;i1ia1MII81 '
contingency
plan · upgrade Ohio's energy Senate Energy Committee,
••
to ratily Gov. James Rhodes'
But no one could estimate pore Oliver Ocasek of Akron Its
situation
to
a
crisis.
briefed
the
five
members
of
.
Gu,
po-w«
11114 nter ....,pee., dnjled by
presented
and
House
Speaker
Vernal
G.
by
its
staff
to
the
declaration of a natural g~s whether the public was
House
Energy
and his nlnemember committee
IDlrtleollag bitter cold, were d•. I lit~
lllllllQ'
emergenc!y and debate the heeding Rhodes request for Riffe, Jr ., of New Boston said board of the agency &amp;lnday
Environment
Committee
who
showed
up lor a session.
areu
today
ud
eilerJY
crllea
QIGIIIIIed.
closing
schools
was
last
on
morning.
•
state energy agency's plan to cooperation. Without
Power ud pa cutbeckl aDd allier -Iller
That draft plan called for chairman. Rep. Thomas J.
•
deal with the emergency if it voluntary cooperation, their list of mandatory
problem~ Idled aearly !18,0!10 worken Ia Temlenee,
Rhodes might have to order controls which may have to mandatory school cloaings Carney, DBoardman, told his
becomes a crlsls.
'"'
panel Monday about the
•
PeDDJylvula, Weal Vlrglnla,· ~, Jtorldll IIIII
Energy committees of each
CERDA contingency plan
Mlullslppl.
.
chamber were briefed by
•
and summarized the weekend
'l1le Federal Energy Administration said Monday
their chairmen Monday on
t.
meetings held by lhe
It will order live refiners to produce more iera~ene lor
borne heating, possibly reducing fuel aviilable for
•
governor.
. '
....
More than 390,000 bonus
this
all
amounts
to
Is
''What
airlines.
•
Rhodes' declaration Sunday
POINT PLEASANT, W. eluded in the curtailment are firm is being curtailed 100 that the governor and leglsla· payments have been made to
Gov. Odl R. Boftil declared ID "eael'JY
evening.
Va. - At least 164 j&gt;ersons Stauffer Chemical Co., percent on Its processed gas live leaders are making a Ohio Vietnam Era veterans
•
emergency
emts ID lbe stile II(, Wlu•" ud Ohio
In a separare development will be out of work In Mason Goodyear Tire and Rubber, and up to .0 per cent of Its
and
next-ol·kln
of
deceased
Gov.
James
Rhodes
called
lbe
leCJ,IIatare
Into
apeelal
lastdltch attempt ro convince
::
late Monday, Colwnbia Gas County as a result of Point Pleasant Marine Co. plant protection gas.
veterans since the first check
the
public
that
absolute
seaolon
lqday
to
deal
wllb
emerJeacleil
posed
by
the
The company has 184
of Ohio, the state's largest Columbia Gas Co.'s statewide and the Pantasote Co. None
voluntary cooperation Is was Issued two and one-half
worst energy crlll• ID lbe llate'l blllory.
natural gas supplier • curtailment of natural gas to was plaMing layoffs this employees, and most are required," said carney .
years ago, according to Ohio
1be Pblladelpbla Gila Worb Aid more ealbecb
expected to he laid off by Feb .•
a n n o u n c e d h i g h e r Industrial and commercial morning.
Vietnam Veterans Bonus
~'If we cannot do thi~. there
mtgbt be nece11ary despite Mayvr Jl'ruk llluo'l belief
curtailments to industrial users.
Malleable Iron has no 1.
commission director, Ran·
the city ·11 being ''ripped off."
and conunerc;ial customers.
West Virginia Malleable alternate source of energy, While Stauffer will remain
dall W. Sweeney.
Tom Green, a Columbia Iron Co. was one of live area Vitantonl said. He said the o!ien at the present time, its
In Gallla County, 648
general man~ger T. R. Friar
spokesman, said 2,763 schools industries to receive up to
clalins totalling $243,111,39
said this wiD depend upon the
In the utility's 62-county 100 percent curtailment in its
have been paid while 823
Holzer Medical Center
availability of fuel oil which
service area would "be in natural gas supplies. The
claims
amounting
to
(Births,
Jan.
24)
Is the company's alternate
trouble" because of the plant will begin laying of(
;!
$222,660.80 have been paid In
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Samuel
energy source, as well as lhe
higher curtailments. Green . employees Friday, general
Hurlow, son, Mason, W. \ja.; Meigs.
weather.
said those schools ''might manager Tony Vitantoni
Henry Rzemplouch, Mr. and Mrs. Arnold jivlden,
have to close."
'd
NEW
HAVEN,
W.
Va.
581 .
daughter, Gallipolis; Mr. and
" I know Colwnbus and
The other comparues in- Carson Roush, 59 of New general manager at Pan· Mrs. Ronald Wright, son,
Toledo (schools) are in trouHaven was dead on arrival at tasote, said his company will Vinton.
.
.
A!J lor how the cookie
_Me1gs. County g1rl scoul3 "crumbles", each box costs
Pleasant Valley Hospital definitely remain open by
ble,'' said Green.
(Discharges,
Jan.
24)
The Energy Emergency
will begin. taking orders for 51 cents, 58 cenls goes to the
Monday. Born May 22, 1917 In sw_itchi!lll to fuel oil.
'Judy Bateman, Mary
Management Committee,
LOUISVILLE,
Ky.
(UP!)
.
cookiesFnday.
.
. Council toward general ::::
Letarl he was the son of the
Broyles, Elijah Estep,
which Rhodes created when
Barge
traffic
outnumbered
·
~e
the
sale
will
begm
operating expenses,. i5 cents .
late Ernie and Olga Roulsh.
Kathryn Grose, Ronald Hens·
he declared the statewide
pedestrian
traffic
on
the
Ohio
Fr1~y,
the
closmg
date
lor
.
goes' into the tri&gt;op treasury, ~
He was a bus driver for the
ley, Ida Householder. Elsie
emergency Sunday, began
River
Monday,
reversing
the
taking
orders
has
been
ex·
.,
and,
one cent is for adMason County Board of
King, Toldy Markham, Mrs.
operation Monday . t.o deal
tended
from
Feb.
6lo
Feb,1l
,
·minlslrative
costs, making ,
situation
.In
the
Cincinnati
Education many years. He
Charles Masters and son,
due
to
the
snow
and
co\d
the
total
$1.25
lor each box of ~
area
Sunday
.
with iocal energy problems
GRAHAM STATION, W. was a member of the Hustlers
Geraldine Mayo; Lula
ft
as they arise.
Safety officials hope it weather.
Bible Class and the New
CHARLESTON, W.Va . McGhee, Beulah MUls, .John
The committee off ices, Va. - Loss was estimated at Haven United Methodist (UPI) - Without a break in
Cookies
this
year
will
sell
cookies.
Ord, Edra Proffitt, Chad stays that way because they
within the regular offices of 110,000 from a fire at the Church.
~
the weather, officials say the. Saunders, Benji Shenefield, say the thin ice makesit very lor $1.25, the same as last
the Ohio Development Foote · Mineral
Plant
t
Surviving are his wife, specter of a production crisis Mrs. Ronald Stevens and dangerous to try walking on year. Delivery will be made
Department and its director, Saturday·
•
sometime
between
March
17
the
river.
James Duerk, will be staffed
A call was received by the Wilma .L. Roush ; one son, looms in West Virginia's daughter, Alden Wedemeyer.
1
In the Cincinnati area and April 9. Varieties to be
24 hours a day .
New Haven Fire Dept. at Eugen~ C. Roush, Parkers- coalllelds.
Sunday, there were so many sold are trefoils, vanilla and
(Continued from paae 11 ; t
burg ; a daughter, Gloria B.
"The· coal Is there, it's a
The committee was noon and when the depart·
pedestrians out on the river chocolate sandwich c00kies,
Roush, New Haven ; one problem of moving it/' says
directed by Rhodes to ment arrived, one corner of grandchild,
two sisters, Mrs. spokesman Dan Fields. of the VeteraiiS Memorial Hospital
that they were blocking a samoas, peanut butter sand- clear sidewalks. Mayor .:
monitor whether his call for the plant was engulled in Clara Parsons, Letart and West
Virginia
Coal
Admltted - ArthurTucker, tow, prompting the towboat wiches, mints, and peanut Hoffman said that Ia a good;.;
voluntary natural gas lames. ·
Mrs.
Chlorus . Webb, Association . "There's the Rutland; Sharon Bing, skipper to complain to police butter patties or Tagaiongs, Idea but pointed out that the. ;
conservation was working.
The lire was extinguished Westerville, and a brother, possibility It could reach Pomeroy; Helen Bartels, about it.
Mrs. Mary Dorst is Meigs town has a pr,oblem In'-'
Its first report is due Wednes- within 25 minutes, ·and there Clawson Roush, Letart.
County's cookie chsirman.
keepl!lll the streets clear, letit.
critical
proportions
unless
Syracuse;
Holly
McCoy,
Capt.
John
Beatty,
a
da
were no injuries. Four trucks
"Everything's Coming Up alone"sidewalk.s too.
··
Funerai services will be the weather cooper all'S very Racine;
Wilbur
Hilt, 1 Cincinnati river salvage
6ther state agencies and 22 men responded to the Thursday at 1:30 p.m. at the soon.''
Attending were Mayor:'
Rutland; Sally Sauvage, operator and one of the Cookies" is the theme of the
responded ·· to Rhodes ' call.
Foglesong Funeral Home · . As many as 15,000 miners, Racine; Mary Marcinko, foremost authorities on Ohio cookie sale, the profits from Hoffman, Clerk-Treasurer
Monday the department with Rev . John Campbell about one-fifth of the rota! Tuppers Plains ; Brian WIUis, River lore, said it was the which are used for troop ac- Gene Grate, and councllnlei!-declaration .- Corridors in
state offices buildings were . received a caU to Jane's officiating and burial to work force, were turned from Pomeroy ; WiUiam Russell, Hrst time in his halfcentury tivities, camp development Horton, Kelly, William ~
Amoco on Fifth St. where a
Walters and Carl Horky. ' '
follow in the Kirkland the pits in West Virginia Pomeroy ; John Sebo, river career thst he had ever andtroopserllice.
. .- - - - - - - . . . . small lire had broken out in · Memorial Gardens. Friends Monday due to the cold Pomeroy; Donna Lauder· seen pedestrians
the ceiling above the furnace.
· milt, Rutland; Marion Hall,
Two trucks and 14 men were may call at the funeral home weather.
after
3
p.m.
Wednesday.
Fle.lds
said
coal
began
Reedsville; Sandra Johnson ,
on the scene . Loss was
backing up at mines mainly Racine.
'
'
estimated at $400.
because of problems at east
Discharged - Carolyn
The department rushing to
coast ports and with rail lines McCoy , Mary · Quillen,
a house owned by Danny
that broke down under the Clarence Hayman, James ·
Sayre here Friday morning
weight of .the severe cold. Lawrence, Perry Carpenter.
found lire under the floor of a
Miners
in West Virginia have.
fireplace . Damage, kept to
an
estlnuill!d
$8.5 million
lost
the front room, floor and
PLEASANT V.,LLEY .
ln.
wages
sinte
Jan.
17, and
basement, was estimated at
DISCHARGES
- Mrs.
coal owners have lost
Ga!Upolls, Oblo,
11,500. Four trucks and 18
Charles
Ellis,
Vinton
, 0.;
1,175,000 rons of coal,
Jan. 22,1971
men answered the call.
Mrs.
Granville
HiD,
Point
according to Fields.
Sales Report of
Pleasant; Carl · Schultz,
Ohio Valley Llves~k Co.
Racine; John Laver, Hun·
STOCKER CATTLE tlngton; Mrs. Ira Potts,
STEERS- 250 to 300 lbs. Z4
Henderson and Thomas
TAKENTOHOLZER .
to 33; 300 to 400 lbs. 23 to
The Middleport Brown, Bancroft.
33.50; 400 to 500 lbs. 23 to 34;
500 to 600 lbs. 21.50 to 32.50; Emergency Squad answered
600 to 700 lbs. 22 to 31; 700 lbs. a cllll to 732 Sycamore St. at COP GIVF.S TOW'
MANSFIELD, Ohio (UP!)
I :44 p.m. Monday for
and Over 21 to 31.50.
'lliree youths suspecte4 ·of
Woodrow
Call,
Sr.,
a
medical
HElFER CALVES- 250 to
burglarizing
a borne near
Wrangler No-Fault Blue Denim, pre •
patient,
who
was
taken
to
3001 . 19 to 24.50; 300 to 400
Mansfield got stuck in the
washed - flare leg style' or straight leg.
lbs. lui to 26; .400 to 500 lbs. Holzer Medical Center.
snow in their · victim's
20 to 26. ,
to 600 lbs. 19 to
Waist sizes 29 to 36 -,-length 30 to 34. Stop
driveway and called for a tow
25.50; 600"to 00 lbs. 17.50 to
truck for assistance.
in the men's department, lst floor and
27; 700 lbs. and Over 17_to
The . tow truck operator
select your needs now.
..
27.50.
turned out to be a special
STOCK COWS &amp; BULLS
NO MEETING
deputy for the Richland
(By The Htad)- Stock Cows
There will be no meeting County Sheriff's Department.
125 to 215 ; Stock Cows and this week of the American
Take advantage, too, of the special
Deputies said neary $1,500
Calves 130 to 240; Stock Bulls Legion Auxiliary of Feeneyworth
of
gooda
were
taken
170 to 230; Baby Calves 7 to Bennett Post 128 due to the
sale prices durlf'!g our annual
from the Winston Q'ossno
39.50; (By Tbe Pound) weaiher. The. meeting was home near mansfield Sunday
l lt~rewlde January Clearance Sale.
.Canners &amp; Cutters Cows 18 to originally scheduled to be
night.
23.25; Holstein Cows 23.50 to held Wednesday night.
The S1JliiM!cls face charges
26; Commercial Bulls (1,000
of
breaking and entering and
lbs. and Over) 27 to 32.75.
grand
theft.
VEAL CALVES - Tops 220
·~
•
lbs. to 250 69 to 80; Medium
E-RCALLED
~lbs . to30051 to 68.50; Culls
· The Pomeroy Emergency
•
50 down.
Squad · was called to Salem
SOWS- 350 lbs. up 33 to 38. Center at 8:17p.m. Monday
It doesn't matter how you're
PIGS - 8 to 27 .50; Tops 90 for Wendell Barrett who
PHONE 992·5560
lbs. to 110, 46 to 48.50.
dressed, because you don't have to
refused treatment.

••

It's cold lots of.places_
. ..

The Meigs County Commissioners approved appropriations for the year 1977
of $1,647,054.48 in their first
regular night
session
Tuesday.
Included in the grand total
are CE TA fund s of
$127,720.82, TB 0 funds of
$40,000 and Mental Retardation funds of $43,121.74, all
provided by levi~s or Federai
grants.
General
fund
appropriations is $814,389.99
with ot her appropriations
coming from funds other than
the general fund.
The county highway fund
has not yet be en appropriated.
Meeting with the commissioners were Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Win gett, Ra~ine.
who had submitted an animal
claim for the loss of a cow in
the amount of $300 which
Wingett asked to be tabled
until he could meet with the

.••:

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i.rr

•

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k
184
·
t
f
=~~e:rto~~ud~~~r wi~
pu ou 0 wor .

390,000 bonus
payments made

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Hospital News

"a

Carson Roush
died Monday

Ice hazardous .

t
Scouts to start
taking cookie orderJ

fire put out
On Saturd
· ay

ESKIMO HUT - Not really. This igloo was built by Lori Kloes and her sister, Lynne,
assisted by the1r parents, Mr. and Mrs. Manning Kloes and Mark and Teresa Davis. The
(approximately) six loot igloo is located in the Kloes front yard, South Secona Ave.,
Middleport. Left to right are Kathy Blake and LyMe Kloes. This Is only one of many built in
the county this week.
,
.

~

in Ohio River

Foote Mineral

commissioners.

Crisis possible
in coalfields

r

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Horton

MEIGS THEATME
CLOSED FOR
VACATION

f

VOL. XXVII NO. 199

i ...

~ - ,;a,o,o,o.....o,o,

OPENING DATE

Pre-Washed Denim Jeans

OUR CONVENIENT
COME-AS-YOU-ARE

leave your car- so you can do your
banking at our drive-in window in
your curlers, when you're dressed
for housework or cleaning out the
garage, on your way to or from
shopping - or at any time during
our convenient - drive-in banking
hours from 9 a.m. til 3 p.m. Fridays
9 a.m. til3 p.m .. and 5:00p.m. til 7:00
p.m. and Saturday 9 til Noon.

.ELBERFELD$ IN

MEROY

SALE
30%

TO

50% OFF

FRIENDLY BANK"

5lh INCH

HANGING
BASKETS

$295

REG. '6
NOW

Plus Tax

CASH 'N CARRY

• Mem!Mr Federal Dt!posit Insurance Corporatior

.Pomeroy, o.

·'

DIEFFENBACHIA
AMOENA
REG~: . .

$18

''

USE YOUR CREDiT CARDS
AS CASH AT DUDLEY'S

, Phone 992-6304
PIZZA SHACK Phone 992-6304

· .DEPOSITS INSURED TO '40,000

$3

QECORATOR SIZE

Sale Jan. 26th thru Feb. 5th

THE MEIGS INN
992-3629

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Icy roads were blamed for
six traffic accidents in veitlgated Tuesday by the
Gallla-Meigs Post State
Highway Patrol.
• Mlchae"l L. Rosier, 20,
Fairmont, W, Va . was
charged with lallilre to yield
right of way following an
accident at 7:15a.m. on CR 5
In Meigs County al 'its junetion wllh SR 124. Rosier's
vehicle 11ld on Ice across the
intersection strlk.inl! an auto
oper1ted by Clarence Skeens,
65, Wellston. There was
minor damage.
•
A Bingle car accident occuiTed 11 7:3G..a.m. Tue.day
on SR 7
lhe Sllyllne
Lines Bo"ll"l Alley In
Kanauga · ·,.llert Oru J.
Stewart, · :11, Oalhjlolla, lost
cmlrol of hla c•r Of! ICil. The
vehicle ran off lhe left side of
t11t highway and overturned.

neu

•
·,,

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Stare
Finance Director WiUiam W.
Wilkins said Tuesday a major
part of the financing of the
Rhodes administration's new
two-year budget is based on
an expected 10 per eent
growth in personal income in
Ohio.
Wilkins said the state is
anticipating a 35 per cent
grqwth In person·ai income
tax revenues and a 25.3 per

Would you believe
that ice is slick?

ON ALL FOLIAGE PLANTS

"THE

I

J

"'=:
~

entine
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 26, 1977

n 0: 0

5TH ANNUAL HOUSE PLANT

.•.

MIDDLE.PORT, OHIO

i ,

CLEVELAND - A BUDGET REQUEST for almost $1
million to buy lottery ticket vending machines was submitted
Tuesday by the Ohio Lottery Commission. Lottery
Commission Director Gerald Patronite said the machines
could be set up to sell tickets In drug and grocery store chains
that have thus far refused to sell tickets. He estimated the
yearly income from such sales would be at least $10 million.
Despite the budget request,.Patronitesaid no firm decision
has been made on the machines. He said negotiations are still
going on with the stores that have refused to sell tickets over
(Continued on page 16)

59 N. SECOND ST.

THE INN PLACE
Wednesday Night Special

Visit Our Salad Bar
Chicken Chow Mein
Hot Rolls .
Coffee. Tea or Milk

'S

ALBANY, N. Y. (UP!) - A CHARITY FOUNDATION
association with the Rev. Sun Myung Moon has lost Its permit
to solicit money in the state because practically none of the
money collected went to charity.
The Korean Cultural and Freedom Foundation collected •
$1 .5 million In the year ending June 30, 1975, bul spent only 7
per cent of that money on purposes lor which It was collected,
the state Board of Social Welfare said Tuesdsy in announcing
it had cancelled the foundation's registration.

'

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'''
•

COLT,JMBUS (Uf'l )- Gov. James A. Rhodes today asked
Ohio residents to pray this Sunday for an end to the energy
emergency. and took steps to end it himself by authorizing
mdustry to burn high-sulfur Ohio coal indefinitely.
"We're trying to keep every segment of Ohio pulling together in this," said the governor at a news conference with
legislative leaders from both parties.
The governor also announced a contingency plan is being
prepared for flooding on the Ohio River should the weather
suddenly turn warm.
"The Ohio River can have the most devastating flood s in our
history," said Rhodes, pointing out that thick ice on the river
and huge chunks on the banks could break loose in a sudden
thaw.
''We stand a chance of losing some bridges," he said, adding
that motorists may have to be kept off the spans.

cent growth in sales taxes to
.underwrite $951 million o{the
$1.4 billion increase in state
spending during fiscal 197379.
He warned that an
unexpected downturn In the
economy, or a · long-term
energy shortage, could
severely dama ge projections ·
by ,curtailing personal
income tax and sales tax
revenues, and boosting

COLUMBUS - THE OHIO ENERGY and Resource
I;levelopment Agency and the Energy Emergency
I
' Management "drnlmittee Tuesday set up five ''hotline"
telephone nwnbers which will be staffed by persons to answer
questions about the state's energy emergency.
The following numbers are to be used by the persons
CENTER CLOSING
MEETING TONIGIIT
specified and will be staffed 24 hours a day :
.
The
Gallia-Jackson-Meigs
The Meigs Soil and Water
Mayors, 1·800-282-9433; News Media, 1·614-466-6660:
Mental
Health Center will
Industry, 1~14-400-7590, and Business, 1~14-400-7573.
Conservation District Board
close
at
3 p.m. for the
Members of the public can use the following toll-free · of Supervisors will have their
·remainder
of
this week due to
number, which will be answered between 8 a.m.-6 p.m. week- annual program planning
the
energy
shortage with
days, Public Hotline, 1-800-282--9234.
meeting Wednesday, Jan. 26
regular
hours
to be resumed
at 8 p.m. in the second fl oor
Monday,
Jan.
31.
CORONATO, CAUF. - TURKEY FARMER Robert conference room of the
Ryckebosch hurled a piece of dried cow manure 124 feet 10 Farmers Bank- Building.
inches Tuesday, defeated 50 other entranis for the right to Public ·officials have been
JURY CALLED
compete in the finals of the International Cow Chip Throwing . invited to 'attend and anyone
A
Meigs
County grand jury
else who is interested in the
Contest.
hss
been
called
to convene
RyGkebosch, of Lancaster, Calif., a 111ember of the program lor .soil a~d water
Jan
.
?:1
at
9
a.m.
in Meigs
Antelope Valley Fair Board, won the semifinals meet at the conservation in the county is
County
Common
.Pleas
Court.
Western Fairs Association meeting. The finals take place Aug . welcome. ·
· 4at the Montana State Fair In Great Falls.

WRANGLER MEN'S AND
YOUNG MEN'S

DRIVE· IN
BANKING

'

By United Press International
WASHINGTON - THE AVERAGE RET AIL cost of a
market basket of American-produced farm foods for an
""' -age family edged up to a record $36.44 a week in 1976, an
i,ncrease of one per cent ovel"1975, a preliminary estimate by
Agrleulture Department experts showed today. ·.
The retail increase was the smallest since 1967 when tlul
market basket cost dropped I per cent. It followed gains of 7.2
per cent in 1975, 13.9 per cent In 1974 and 17,3 per cent in 1973.

JUST RECEIVED
SHIPMENT ·

WATCH FOR

0 ;y,-.0°0°o 0°0°0:o: o~o~O:o:O:o:O .I. b::~:o:.:o~o:o~~.o,o:o,o:&gt;,

resolution to conform with
Gov . Rhodes request to
curtail energy in all county

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter

1News. • .ln Bnef~ Growth expected in economy

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Market Report

..¥a'.0o0(0: .....'o'o'•'•'•'•'•'o'o'
o!•' o'o'&lt;;o;o•o•o••·•·•:o:• o·o·o·o;-.o-..u,:••
0

'•~•,w,..,..,.. ·,•,

last

commissioners adopted a

at y

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

exception of the county In· Wells, Richard Jones, and
finnary which will he set at James
Roush ,
com·
65 at ·aU times.
mission ers and Marth a
Attending were Henry Chamb€rs, clerk.

The appropriations were as
follows:
GENE RAG EXECUTIVE
Board of Counfv Com ·

(Continued on page 16).

Rhodes invites prayer
to end energy crisis

night's meeting the claim
was "approved.
In other business i:he

•

e

At

'

buildings. Thermostats will
be set at 65 during the
daytime working hours, 55 at
night and weekends, with the

·on the idea - of reqwrmg
unemplo)'T)lent.
The state is depending on a accelerated corpor ation lax
25 per cent increase in payments. "We are not
recommend ing them this
corporate net income taxes worth $202 million over two time," he said, adding that
cash flow problems will be
years.
Wilkins
said
the solved ·by pooling resources
administration has given up from other stare funds to get
through low cash periods.
Th ese revenue growths
CALLED BACK
were
projected for the next
The Middleport Fire
two
years
on·which to build a
Departmen! started a run
major
portion
of the extra
into Galll:i County near
spending
:
Vinton at 5!15 p.m: Tuesday.
SALE.S TAX- Up $532
However, the lire was out of
million
.
the territory of the MidPERSONAL
INCOME
dleport department and the
TAXUp
$391l
million.
Vinton Fire Department was
CORPORATION TAX di spatched to the scene with
Up
$202 million.
the Middleport Department
PUBLI
C UTILITY
returni ng to station.
TAXES- Up $143 million.
LOTI'ERY PROFITS - Up
SCHOOLS CLOSED
$24 .3 million .
All Meigs County schools . FOREIGN INSURANCE
remain closed today due to TAXES-Up $30 million .
the inclement weather and
A,LCOHOLIC BEVERAGE
bsd roads. Most of the schools AN'D GALLONAGE
have been closed since Jan. 5. TAXES- Up $5.7 million.

The governor emerged from tus office where he had met
with legislative leaders and cabinet members in private.
He annoWJced a prayer meeting in the Statehouse rotunda
for Saturday at 11 a.m.
·
.
"We are going to pray for the strength to endure the coldest
days of our time," said Rhodes ·.
The governor sa1d he is issuing a proclamation calling lor
·prayer in church this Sunday .
"We're not praying for ourselves ," said RhOdes . ·~we're
praying for those who have to make sa crifices in this hour.''
The governor said an old oil refinery in Firidlay is bein~
reopened to process-high-sulfur oil. He added he is looking
around for additional steps to 1 ke .
. "The most devastating thing we could do in Ohio would be lo
close the schools, " said Rhodes .
" B~t we're not going to show our hand on everythi!lll we do,"
he sa1d . The governor said he had not asked permission of tht'
fede ral goverrunent to burn high,sulfur fuels.
"The federal goverMJent has no pr ogram whatever," h~
said . ''We're not worried. There 's no r isk."
Rhodes said the emergency rlirective to burn high-sulfu r
fu els is extended to •·a ny facililty that needs heat." He said it
would last indefinitely .
"The governor and &gt;he legislature will back anybody using
Ohio coal. " he said.

Rhooes said the state wanl'l the federal government to
fu rnish illore gas to Ohio. "We don 't wan t a redistribution of
gas," he said. "That way we would stand ro lose some.
The stare's uattle against continually decreasing energy
supplies was fought Tuesduy by the legislature, the state's
energy agency and th e new Energy E:mergency Management
Committee.
·
•
CQmpu nding Ute efforts was a below-zero weather prediction
for the end of this week by the National Weather Service.
The Ohio E:nergy and Resource Development Agency
( OE:RDA) was told by its staff Tuesday that to make it through
the winter heating season, Ohio's homeowners, industries and
commercial operations would require 297.5 billion cubic of
na tural gas.
Through last weekend, the OERDA staff computed thst only
244.1 billion cubic feet of natural gas was left from the Ohio 's
Original allocation of 454.7 billion cubi c feet.
"The picture is no less critical than what we were told over
the weekend," said OERDA board chairma n William
Ferguson of Colwnbus.
In extraordinary session, the Ohi o General Assembly passed
a resolution endorsing Gov. James A. Rhodes' weekend
declaration of an emergency natural gas crisis, and urged all
Ohioans to voluntarily conserve energy .
'
None of the efforts underway on various fronts were mandatory. Rhodes has decided to try.and weather the emergency
by tnaklng a plea to ci ti&gt;, cn~ Q.! the state .
.
Ferguson complained in an OE:RDA board meeting Tuesda y
th at the news media had not convinced Ohioans of the severity
of the crisis.
Before adopting an energy emergency contingency plan for
use by the governor, Ferguson said a public relations campaign was urgently needed to put the point across to the state.
Rhodes sent telegrams to President Carter, both of Ohio's
senators and all 23 congressmen. Rhodes asked the senators
and congressmen to assemble in his office at 11 a.m. Thursday
to meet with utility executives and state legislative leaders to
work on a solution to the state's energy crisis.
"I will hsve a state aircraft at Page Aviation at Washington
National Airport at 8 a.m. Thursday to bring you to
Columbus," Rhodes said.
'
. (Contlnu~ on page 16)

Ohio Power sees
worst temps past
PORTSMOUTH - "Winter set on January 6 and January
isn't over yet, but we hope the 13.
·
worst is behind us," Said W.
There is no question
A. Leuby, Jr., Portsmouth that our internal peak
Division manager for Ohio demand would have set
Power Company .
another record on January 17
Extept for p few locallzeci · if natural gas curtailments
cases where power was in- had not : hu t · down many
terrupted during the most factories l•flO if schools had
recent cold spell, he pointed not beer closed, " he said.
out that Ohio Power was able Temperatures that day, he
to keep electricity flowing to recalled, were in the neighmeet the demands of all its borhood of minus 20 degrees
customers.
through most of Ohio.
,;Our customers have been
-The manager stated that
using more electricity than the record low temperatures, '
normal since last October," which at one time stayed
be said, adding that tern- below zero for 54 consecutive
peratures were well below .. hours, will cause higher
in
, October, electric bills because use of
normal
November and De cember electricity was greater.
before dropping to record
He concluded , "This winter
lows in January.
·
emphasizes the importance
Twice during the past few of proper insulation and other
weeks, Ohio Power's Internal energy
conserv a1 ion
peak demand - that elec- measures. While these steps
trical energy supplied to won't make the temperatures
customers to meet their rise. they can help reduce
demands - set all -tim e energy. use and cost."
records. Those peaks were
· · '

•

11

Three accidents occurred
in minutes of each other at
the same location on SR 7 at
Hobson. The first was when
an auto driven by Keith
Drummond, ' 26, Cheshi•o,
struck the rear end of one
operated by Robert H. Hyselti
'50, Pomeroy . Donald L.
Siders. 21, Gallipolis Ferry,
attempted to stop his vehicle
but was unable to do so. It
struck the rear of · the
Drummond vehicle. Shortly
Orders are being accepted
thereafter, an auto operated in the 1977 tree and ground
by Frances Gibney, 24, Ad- cover plantln~ program of
dl8011, struck the rear end of the Meigs County Soli and
,the Siders vehicle.
·Water Conservation Service.
Another accident occurred
Orders, which must be
on US 3&amp;, east of SR 160 where prepaid can· be mailed to the
an auto drlven~byRonnle 0. conservation oflict located at
Johnson, 21, Pom~roy , 221 W. Second St.. Pomeroy.
f.i!!llllllled, strlkln~ a v•.·hio-\c There is no ~n lf',"i ta:r&lt;.
operated by Santlr• S, r 'ohb,
1l1e plantih~ pa&lt;'k•-t&lt; will
:11. of Syr~r.use. Thcrt were · Ill' received in the rlislrid
oo Injuries' or citations'
offite :II Pomeroy ubout the

TRACKS CLEANED - The monster grader brought
into Pomeroy TueSday afternoon by the Chesapeake and

Ohio Railroad Co., was used to clear the railroad tracks In
Pomeroy's business section of ice and snow which hsd
been loosened by the rising temperature.

Orders b~ing accepted for tree, ground ·cover .packets

'

first week of April where t~ey
Offered by the district this
1
can he picked up bY the yea~ are:
purchaser. Purchasers will
Assorted Wildlife Packet
he notified by phone when the flarge $16, small $8), White
pa ckets arrive. Purchasers Pine, 3 yr. seed ling·
should make sure their or- tra nsplants , 5-10"; Scotc-h
ders contain name. address Pine, 3 yr. seedlings. 10..16";
uno telephone number, There Norway Spruce. 3 yr.
is an order blank included In seedlings, 8-16"; Colorado
iodav 's edition· of The Sen- 111ue Spruce. 3 yr. seedlings.
lim•l whic-h nmv be filled out 1\-12": White Oak, seedlings,
;md 1Wdlrd. · Th(l . order R-t2": R~d rorlar. :1 vr.
seedling~ , 8·12", Whit e llir~h ;
d1•Mdli.r1t' is ft'rb.rofS·

2 yr. seedlings, 16-24"; Black seedlings, 8·10"; Redbud
Locust, seedlings, 8-12" ; (Eastern) , 4~" seedlings ;
Tulip Poplar, seedlings, 12- Bittersweet, 12-18"
18''; ,$weet Gum, s~edlings, seedlings ; Fl ow eri ng
12-18. Totai!JO"pieces large, 42 _ Dogwood,' 3 yr. seedlings, 12pieces small.
18" ; Mountain Ash, 6-10"
Ground Cover (in 50 crown seedlings; j?hlnese Chestnut.
lots ), Crown Vetch ft:, 2 yr. seed(ings, 6-12". Total.
Myrtle $10, F.nglish Ivy $10, H pieces.
.and Pachysandra, $10.
Quantity Orders (cannot be
"Song Bird Packet" ($7) mixed within the" order) 25 for
Red f,cdar. ~yr. seedlings, 8- $7, White Pine. F.RStrrn Red
12"; A\~mn .Olive, 3 vr. Ce&lt;jar, Autum'lo Olive . Black

•

Locust.
5 lor $4, Mountain Ash.
25 for $6 Colorado Blue
Spruce , Scotch Pine. Norway
Spruce.
5 for $6, White Oak, Black
Walnut, Forsythia .
10 for 16. Chinese Chestnut,
Tulip Poplar, Bittersweet, Sweet Gwn. White Dogwood.
Eastern Redbud, White
Birch.

'

�3- The Da1ly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 • Wednesday. J~n 26, 1977

Crusaders edge Pioneers 66-61 {lJr 1Oth hardwood victory

2-The Daily Sentmel, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0.. Wednesday, Jan. 26, 1971

Assembly, Rhodes ·u nited in
By LEE LEONARD
UP! StatebOUJO Reportor
aJLUMBUS (UP!) - The
0100 General Assembly has
I'll on a united front with
Gov James A Rhodes 111
baciing the declaration of a
!IJltewlde energy emergency
and tile call for voluntary
natural gas conservation by
individuals, busmess and
industry.
Acting m special seSSion
Tuesday, the lawmakers for·
mally endorsed Rhodes •
proclamation, but declined tn
support a reductiOn m
lwlness hours and pnority
!hipments of propane gas tn
individual reSidences
The legislators decided to
stick around an extra day tn
see if they could lend further
assistance in solv1ng the

SUit's fuel !hort.age. The
Senate was tn convene at I!

a.m. today and the House at
) ·30 p.m
As finally adopted, the
resolution merely urges all
natural gu conswners IQ
comply wlth Rhodes '
declaralioo of an emergency
and mstitute voluntary
conserva11011 measures.
The House coocurred, 75 ro
7, With Senate removal of
provuioll5 which would have
urged a reduct1111 Ul business
hours and pnonty in propane
gas distribution tn homes.
The House Energy and
Env~ronment Committee had
mserted those provmons
pr1or to 85-2 floor clearance,
but the Senate str1pped them
out (XI a vo1ce vote.
The proVISIOns would hove

urged :
- Reta i l
stores ,
restaurants, grocery stores,
taverns. theaters, shopping
malls and recreational
facilities to reduce their
operating hours tn )0 hours a
day f&lt;r a max1n1um of SIX
days a week.
- The Ohio Energy and
Resource Development
Agency to ask the federal
govenunent f&lt;r additional
vehicles 1D transport propane
m Ohio and give residential
eustnmers first priority Ill the
use of propane.
The resolution was drafted
followmg a day of legislative
comrruttee hearmgs on the
fuel shortage and a weekend
round of meetings mcluding
the governor and legislative
leaders

CriSIS

T.. Umooy In the House
rtvtalrd that at least toe
lamlll.,. In Gallia County art
•i tbout ~·· berause they
cal:lDOt serure propaoe.
Two opponents m the House
were Reps. Sherrod Brown,
[).Mansfield, and James W
Rankm, !).{;inCIJlnatl, who in·
dicau,d Oh1oans were being
Vlcllrmzed by natural gas
utilities.
"The people of this staU,
are facmg a• senous
challenge, " said Rep
Thomas J Carney, D·
Boardman, chairman of the
House Energy and Environ·
ment Committee who
sponsored the resolution.
"This IS the coldest wmter
rn 100 years, federal energy
poliCies have failed for the

Carter 'ready to act in crisis
•

By PAMELA REEVES
WASHINGTON ( UP! )
Movtng tn ease a natural gas
C!'lSJS so severe that supplies
for homes are endangered,
President Carrer was ready
today to ask Congress for
authonty
to
control
distribution and dereguJaU,
gas pnc~
A White House offiCial sa•d
the mam thrust of Camr's
request was fpr standby
power to make natural gas
&lt;;ompanies shift supphes tn
the most needy areas " Ill a
crlSls s1tuallon."
He said a second major
aspect of the emergency
proposal would enable rnterstare gas comparues to buy
supplies for the next SIX
months at a higher pnce than
they now are allowed to pay
under Federal
Power
Conuruss•on rules
That would mcrease gas
prices to consumers, a
spokesman sa1d, but 11 also
would result m liKl eased
supplies
Today , the President
planned til atterrl swearrng•n
ceremomes for Attorney
General Griffin BeD at the
Justice Dep Jrtment, and hold

a series of meetings With
labor leaders George Meany
and Lane Kirkland, and with
U N Ambassador Andrew
Young and Sir Peter
Ramsbotham, BritiSh
ambassador.
The natural gas shortage
apparently IS caused by
heavy demands for heal m
unusually severe -wmter
wea !her and has forced some
schools and industries to shut
down
Wh1te
House
Press
Secretary Jody Powell sa1d
Carter cons1ders It a Hcrlsts"
situation, and a h1gh
administration offiCial sa1d
even gas supplies for homes
are endangered
"The really seriOUS thing IS
the prospect of closmg off gas
w homes," the off•c•al sa1d
'You run rntn ser1ous salety
threats cutting .gas off on a
maj&lt;r scale," because of the
possibility of explosiOns.
The offiCial sa1d concern
over lack of gas for
res1dences ts seriOus enough
that
" It
would
be
IrresponSible for a government not to take actiOn" to
head 1! off.
While the fmal touches

• •

were put on lhe energy CriSIS," the OffiCial said,
package Tuesday. ca .U,r met covers contingencies such as
w1th congress1onal leaders a governor seeking gas on
and diSCUSsed the econOI!UC groWlds of danger to "life,
stlnlulus plan he will unveil health or property."
by Jan 31
In a related development,
fntenor Secretllry Cecil Sen. Howard Metzenbaum,
Andrus Tuesday attempU,d to D-Oh10,
asked
the
'jawbone" natural gas admmJStration to mvestlgare
mto
quick whether producers "are
producers
production mcreases He withholding s ubstantial
urged operators of federal amoWJts of naturill gas rn
leases, which produced 24 per their contmumg effort to
cent of all U S marketable decontrol the pr1ce of natural
gas last year, to step up gas ,,
production and suspended for
more than 50 offshore ml
operators rn the Gulf of
Mexico a rule limiting
production tD the "maxunum
CLEVELAND ( UPI) eff1c1ent raU, "
Steel Improvement and
Camr's leg•slatiVe packet Forge Co. Tuesday laid off
will seek dear emergency 300 of 600 productiOn
authority allowing employes until at least
government regulated Monday because of a
mterstaU, compames to buy curtailment of natural gas
natural gas from intrastate
A spokesman sa1d East
compames, which charge Oh10 Gas told the flrffi it will
higher pnces and are know by Fr1day if the
unregulated
company will be able to
The authority to force resume full producUon on
companies to transfer Monday .
supphes to needy areas If
The firm manufactures,
there IS a "certificatiOn of a steel cast mgs.

More laid off

last four years, and this tslhe
most seriOus energy shortage
m the histllry of Ohio,"
Carney sa1d
"We the members of the
General Assembly must
make it clear to the people of
Ohio that at least an energy
en~ts ,"

emergency

Today's

Sport Parade

said

Carney ''There Will he a lot
of buckilaSSUlg over the nert
couple of weeks as to who is tn
blame. But we must adopt the
slogan of Harry truman
which sa1d 'the buck slops·
here."'
Mild complaints were
regisU,red durmg the debate.
"We're•st•cking our necks
out and after 1t 's over,
everybody's gomg to scatU,r
to the four winds,"
complamed Rep John P,
Wargo, O.Usbon "! want to
know who IS responSible for
thts I want tile1r names "
Rep. Troy L. James, [).
Cleveland, sa1d 11 would be
"disastrous" for people rn hts
area to reduce temperatures
til 60 degrees Ill their homes.
"You almost have to keep 11
at 80 w stay even, those
homes are so dilapidated," he
srud
, Rankrn said rnner-dty residents, rncluding the Sick,
elderly and shut•ns, would
suffer the most because if
they conserved they would be
"stuck w1th a hidden
escalation clause" by the gas
company .
He explamed that mrn1n1al
users would have tn pay
more, especially 1f they cut
back
"We don 't need to get
mvolved m the battle of the
g~ants - the gas comparues
and the reta1l merchants,"
srud Rankm "We're for the
people, the conswners and
th1s (resolution ) 1s not the

answer "
Brown sa1d he oppcsed the
resolution because no long·
range energy plans were
proposed on the House floor .
"And there should have been
some mention made about
the gas comparues holding
out for deregulatiOn I of
natural gas prices ). " sa1d
Brown

I

GIFT TO lJBRARY -Copies of a new history of Meigs County entitled, "A Study of the
Histllry of Me1gs County" were presented tn the Pomeroy-Middleport Libraries at a
luncheon meetrng oflhe library board Tuesday at the Meigs !M Making the presentation IS
Mike Gerlach, writer of the book, to Miss SUaan Fleshman, left, librarian, and Mrs. Pat
HolU,r, president of the library board. Servmg as the rev1ew conuruttee for the book were
Mr and Mrs. Gayle Pflce, Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Blakeslee, Mrs. Patrick J.;ochary, Mrs
Howard Knight, Mrs. Kenneth Chaney, Russell W Moore, Grella M SUttle, Mrs. James
Sheets, Mr. and Mrs. Theodore T. Reed, Jr., and Mrs Margaret Parker

Mondale shaken by the wall
l!f CHERYL ARVIDSON
BERLIN (UP!) --' V1ce
President Walter Mondale
stared at the Berlin wall for
the f1rst tlnle rn his life tnday
and walked away VISibly
shaken
The v1ce pres1dent, on an
emotwnal tour of the City,
pledged to uphold AmeriCa 's
comnutments to Berlin With

D D

@ 19r7by tl EA lf'lc

~~

''See 11 you can get hold of 811/y. I've got thiS
temble cravmg to talk about peanuts'"

not a country club "
Despite the judge's harsh
words, Dummar, 31, of
Ogden, Utah, stuck to h1s
story He admitted he
delivered the strange
document to Monnon church
headquarters m Salt Lake
C1ty but mslsted 11 had come
to h1m just as mntenously,
denymg he had any part in
preparing 11
At the hea ring Tiuesday he
sa1d a well-pressed man m hiS
40s appeared at the serv1ce
stat10n he formedy ran m
Willard, Utah, on April 27 three weeks after Hughes
d1ed - and levt an envelope
behmd after making ve1led
reference to h1m and Hughes.
"What d1d I thmk of
Howard Hughes dying - I
remember h1m saymg that,''
Dummar sa1d.
"! remember h1m saying,
wouldn't it he nice If a guy
like me were m Howard
Hughes' Will."
After the man left, he
discovered a sealed envelope
oo the counter, Dummar
said.
''I steamed tt open," he
sa1d, "and read 1t and 1t has
been a mghtmare ever

DR. LAMB

Don't wash with yogurt
'

:: By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
;• DEAR DR LAMB - Lately
.; I have been on a d1et, con·
:: SISting of yogurt, d1et cola
:· and one meal at dinnertime. I
': have lost some we1ght and
J: my compleXIon IS 1mprovmg.
you think !hat this un;: supervised d1et 1s wise?
' : Also, I recently read thai
:' washing one's face with plam
:: yogurt can enhance the heau1; ty of the skin and clear up
I· blemishes, even mor~ so than

:-Do

!: •~~~~~~~~r::~~
of~.!~~
smg' Please tell me its value.

': DEAR READER - I am
I: sure people who sell yogurt
' •would be delighted with the
: treatment and it might help
: them a great deal. It Will do
!nothing for you. You might
get some moisturizing effect
.,:lhllt you could get from any
•oil or cream if you should be
' 'using such a substance at all.
Most compledon problems In
youngiJpeople are ~elated to

!
I•

acne probiems To clear up
your skm from these pr«&gt;blems you need to keep your
skin clean and keep it free of
any oily creams or lottons.
Acne can he treated m most
cases and It may reqwre tak·
mg medicme To give you a
betrer understanding of aene
problems and tn keep you
from making it worse lrl!ltead
of better I am sendmg you
The Health Letter 8-2, Acne
Can Be Treau,d Others who ,
want this mformatlon can
send 50 cents With a long,
stamped, self-addressed
envelope for lt. Wrlre to me in
care of this newspaper, P.O.
Box !liS!, Rad10 City Station,
New York, NY 10019
Whether or not yoor diet
plan Is safe and sane depends
ent~rely what is In that one
meal a day you eat. There Is a
good cha111.-e that your diet Is
madl'qUate. The way to
elhnma wexcess weight and

•

keep 11 off •s to lea•" enough
about sens1ble d1etmg to be
able to follow a balanced
calone control d1et for life
that f1ts w1th your lifestyle. I
am sending you The Health
LeUer number 4-7, Weight
Losmg Diet that w1ll help you.
DEAR DR. LAMB- I am 62
years old and about four
years ago I contracted a
heart condition and can no
longer work. MlJ. ,problem Is
this terrible collgh I have.
The doctors say 11 is due to a
heart condition, but I can't
!lee how hecaUBe I have had
this cough for 20 years and
the heart condition is recent.
I cough sometunes for hours
until my chest IS sore
Would you please comment? Incidentally, I haven't
smoked for over 20 years
DEAR READER - When
the pwnping action of the
hea1'\ is not strong enough,
fillld accwnulatcs 111 tho
b•sucs. This canl.'ilusc swell·

ing of the feet and ankles or
even thWhen the left side of
the heart is affected - and it
IS usually affected f1rst m
many forms Of heart disease
1 -the fluid accumulates in the
1lungs. The swelling of the
lung tiSsues results m
coughing tn ~lear the lungs of
flu1d that has accwnulated in
the tiny air sacs.
I dare say your cough was
not as bad 20 years ago as ills
now or you would have done
{!lOre about it sooner. Your
doctors probably think that
even though you have had a
cough for 20 years that it is
now worse because of your
heart &lt;'OIIdibon
If you heart IS the cause of
your cough you sl)ould be on a
salt restrided diet and should
be taking medicme to help
you•· body eliminate S)llt and
also on med1c1ne to
st11mg!hen your heart - the
dlgltahs Ivpc mcditmes

smce."
He resealed the envelope,
he sa1d, explaimng how he
left the fmgerprmt, un·
covered by an FBI laboratory
test , that demolished his
ongmal story that he had

"In the course of history.

there have been many walls
bu1lt," Mondale sa1d "But
most were built to keep the
enemy out. This one has been
built to keep the people Ul."
"We can only pray that
progress will see the day
when thiS kind of wall will
disappear and all people will
be able to share values that
'~ whatever
means we cherish, such as freedom
necessary ''
and democracy ."
"The presence of American
Knots of men and women
troops and those of our all1es applauded Mondale a ~ he
are living proof of our pledge drove through the c1ty on a
to honor thiS cormrubnent," bmf visit that he said was a
he said.
,
symbolic
show
of
Mondale, accompanied by ''Wlswervmg cormrutment''
Wesl Berlrn Mayor Klaus ro a city, divided by the
Schuetz, viewed the wall CommuniSt wall srnce 1961
from
the
•'Kennedy
Mondale later left for
Observation Post" - at a Rome, the next stop on his 10pcmt where the wall cuts a day mternational tnur.
once busy thoroughfare.
At one pomt, Mondale
He stared m Silence.
jumped out of h1s car and
Across the concrere and walked over to shake hands
barbed w1re, two East With some of the crowd.
German policemen stared
The eyes of some women
back
glistened w1th tears as they
Moments
later,
he reached out to much \Jis hand.
descended the wooden sta1rs.
"Tell the American people
Pale and trembling, he I love your pr~1dent," sa1d
strode ro a group of reporters. Margaret Bower, 77, who

never heard of the w11l until II
was found A couple of hours
later, he sa1d, he drove to
Mormon headquarters m Salt
Lake City, tned un·
successfully to see the church
president, "put 1t on a desk

shook hts hand vigorously
"We appreciate how you are
workrng tn keep our country

free."
Mmdale leaned over kissed
her on the cheek.
'
"! could not help but give
her a b1g k1ss, because the
people of my country love the
people of Berlin," Mondale
explained larer
At c1ty hall, Mondale sa1d
Camr asked that he convey
his determination that U S
stand by its eommllment to
see that Berlin survives.
"Let there be no doubt that
the Umted SlaU,s Will stand
by its commltments to Berlin
and use wh~ rever means
necessary to resist any
atU,mpt to undermrne 1ts
security.'' he sa1d.
The Berlm stop followed a
two-day visit to West
Germany, where Monda le
won assurances from
Chancellor Helmut Schrrudt
that West Germany will
consider "additional obhga.
lions" on future sales of
nuclear technology ro third
parties

and left "
Dummar was to resume
testifying today , under the
heavy skepttcism of the
judge.
"! believe the Witness IS
lymg," the judge told

reporters during a recess.
"! think everything he has
told us, other than the fact he
delivered the w1ll to the
Mormon Church and the fact
he had the will m hiS
possesSion, ~as been lies."

Labor designate draws fire from conservatives
By DONALD LAMBRO
WASHINGTON (UP!) The Senate's confirmation of
Gnffln Bell as attorney
general left only one of
President Carter's Cabmet
appomtments
Labor
Secretary·designate Ray
Marshall - st ill to be
dec1ded
The Senate voted, 75-21,
Tuesday to confinn Bell,
after e1ght hours of debate
and despite accusations that
the controversial choice was
rooted in ~'cronytsm" and
marred by the former judge's
"mediocre" civil rights
record.
Bell was scheduled to be
sworn m at a Justice Depart·
ment ceremony today, which
Carter planned to attend. By
that tlnle the Senate was to b.')
debating Marshall's
nomination, which Is far less
controverSial but not without
opposition
Sen Henry Bellmon, R·
Okla ., announced he will vote
against Marshall because of
his support for repeal of
rlght-to·work
laws,
unionization of the military,
arid common situs picketing
- permitting picketing of an
ent1re job site by a union in a
dispute with only one subcontractor

TilE DALY SENTINEL
DEVOTED'IDTIIE

INTEIIEST Or

MEIOS.MASON AREA

CHESTER I. TANNEIIIIJ.
Elec. Ed

ROBERT HOEFLICH
CllyEcUt~W

Published dally exLoept Sllt.urday
Oy Tht! Ohio Valley Publishing eom..
llny, 111 Court Sl, Pomeroy, Ohio
~769. B~meli8 Offlte Phon\! m

2156 Edllorwl Phonet92-2157
St.&lt;tond clus postlgt! paid it

Pomeroy, Ohio
Nallmwl atdvertinng repmen-

U.tive W11rd • Grifftth Company, In·
1.! , Botlinelll 11nd Gallagher Dlv ,

m

11tlrd Ave, New Yurt. N 'i

10017

Su~rlr, tr ou rates Delivered by
t,;iiTier W lelt: IIVMllMbJe 7~ t,;etlla per

W\lek By Motor Rou~ wht.'Te carrl\ll'
KVIIIIt~bl~ , One month,
f:l ~ fly mHrlln Ohro &amp;~nd W Va,
O!a• Ycr.l t Stl 00, Sue IIM.Illhs1
Ill 00 rhn1· month~, S7 00,
lit'tvltc nol

l~ l ~ cWIIt!r!.l $2600
I :ill
J'tu •"
~ull~M1pltttn jll'lt

t;J

fllllfti~n~tcl

S IXII\ollth~

)'fllr

tlll'llll1M

17 ~U

,, hld111lu; l'iwa.l.t'i'
J

Accusing Marshall of being

"a tool of union bosses,"
Bellmon said the designated
labor secretary's tdeas, "If
they should become law or
national pollcy, would
seriously lnh1b1t the natiOn's
economic recovery and
hasten the return of in-

flation "
Bell, 58, who served for
over 14 years on the 5th
Circuit U. S Court of Appeals, wsa Carter's most
controversial Cabinet ap·
pcmtment. ·
Senale opposition, largely
from liberal ~tepubllcans,
centered on objections tn
Bell's school desegregation

deciSions while on the federal
bench, h1s work for
segregationist Georgia Gov
Ernest Vandiver,
his
membership in segregated
clubs and his relationship to
Carter.
"! don't find In his record
one action that encouraged
the march of law toward
equality and justice In a
difficult time," said Sen.
Charles Mathias, R·Md "!
have to say he lacks sen·
sitivlty" toward blacks
Sens. Edward Brooke, R·
Mass., the Senate's only
black, and Don Riegle, n.
M1ch., said they were
"bothered by the matter of
cronyism," noting Bell's long

association with Carter and
his assistance as a speech
writer, fund-ra1ser and adviser in the campaign
Sen W111lam Proxmlre, [).
W•s , citing the Watergate
scandals, said he opposed
Bell because the attorney
gener&amp;l "should not be a close
friend or close associate of
the president's ." ·
But other hberals, in·
eluding Sen Edward Ken·
nedy, O.Mass., and Birch
Bayh, D -Ind ., defended
Bell, saying their doubts
about his c1vll fights r&lt;!!ord
has been eased by h1s pledge
to pursue school de·
segregation vigorously

Ohio GOP needs 'to show it cares
COLUMBUS (UPI) -Ohio
Republican Party Chairman
Kent McGough to~d about 125
Ohlo GOP leaders Tuesday
that the party has tn "give the
people of this state some
pcsitlve, forward looklnt! pro·
grams to let them know we
really care."
The party leaders avoided
dwe~ on the past and
Instead focused on the future
at their first meeting since
the November elections
"I don 'I think this Ia any
time lor describing past
mistakes
or
giving
pessin)Jstlc repcrts abo.ut the
future," said McGough.
11. Democrata
In
the
November election retained
cmtrol of the Ohlo General
Assembly and added enough
seats to give them a veto
proof legislature and picked
up the U.S. Senate seat held
by Robert Ta!t Jr.
The GOP also suffered its
worst losses in years at the
county level.
McGough's only reference
tn the past was a uu,ment
that
the
Republlcan
organization should try to
build on the vote candidates
lor the leglsla\Ure and other
afflces
received
last

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

:I Pro
!St11niHngs !

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPJ Sporll Editor

Berrys World
By MVRAM BORIERS
LAS VEGAS, Nev (UP! ) "Brother Dummar. ! want
the truth," the JUdge
demanded of h1 s fellow
Monnon
And Melvm Dummar
replied w1th sttll another
version - his third - of the
or~gm
of the disputed
"Monnon Will" that would
leave h1m a wmdfall of
millions of dollars from the
fortune of Howard Hughes.
He sa1d a mystertous stranger left it in his gas station
and Probate Court Judge
Ke1th Hayes exploded
"You are a bar," he told
Dummar. "I thmk you are
lymg now. "
"If you are lying, your soul
may be m jeopardy," he sa1d
"But I'm concerned about
your soul. I'm concerned
about your hide You better
be concerned w1th your
h1de,'' the Judge warnep
Dummar, because if he is '
perjuring himself "I will
make 11 my duty to have a
piece of your hide.
"! Will make it my specific
project to recommend you do
pnson time ... You will go to
the Nevada state prison- it's

walked away w1th a SIHil Capital freslunan Todd Swick dropped to 2-4 m the
Ohio Conference wm over the sank hve of s1x free throws conference
At New Concord, R1ck
the rest of the way to assure
Pioneers.
White
tossed rn 22 pornts to
They d1d a good JOb un the Crusaders thelf loth wm
lead
Wittenberg
to a 71-56 wrn
M1tch and we d1d a poor JOb m the 17 starts this season,
over
Muskingwn
and put
rebounding," said Marietta 1nclud1n g 3-3 m the
W11tenherlfon
tnp
of
the Ohio
conft!rence
coach Phil Roach .
Conference
Southern
DIVISion
Marietta Jumped out w a
Swtcli scored 11 pornts on
With
a
6-()
record
the
rught
while
Ricky
Lee
14-3 lead early m the game
Muskmgum dropped to a 5but the Crusaders came back paced the Crusaders With 18
tn take a 31-25 advantage at markers and Napoleon Allen 1conference record and a 12-3
1 halftime.
added f6 Manetta's Jeff overall mark Wittenberg,
1 The Pioneers pulled to Fa loba took ga me-h1gh now 13-2 overall, led by 34-24
at the half and never trailed
w1Lhm one, 59-58, with 41 scormg honon with 21
seconds left 1n the game but
Marlett&amp;, now 1·9 overall, afU,r that

United Press International
Marietta had the 'Miracle'
but nevertheless Capital got
the WID.
The wmning Crusaders
held Manella sophomore
sensation M•tch Miracle w 13
pomts Tuesday mght and

November.
McGough said GOP leglala·

live candidaU,S received 4li
per cent of the vote.

More snow, sub-zero
weather is forecast
Uulted Prrn Iotemalloual
More snow and sulroero
weather is in llore for Ohio.
New snow accumulations of
about two inches are
expected in ,Nortbeastern
Ohio before tonlght with the
chance of more snow
Thursday, as well.
Temperatures overnight
ranged from the mid-teens to
the middle 21M, with most
sections reporting Ught snow.
New accumulations of snow
overnight were generally le1111
than an inch. Some
exceptions
were
in
northeastern counties, where
ooe to three inches of new
9110W have been reported
Temperatures today are
expected to be in the upper
201 or the middle 3(8.
Howeve~. the National
Weather Service says 1 cold
front will he movinR acrou
Oh.. k!Dicht, and b~ early

Thursday temperatures
were expected to range from
five
above
zero
in
Northwestern Ohio to the
upper teens In extreme
Soutbeastem counties. •
And that cold front Is only
the forerunner of even much
colder air which is e:tpected
in Ohio by Thursday night
and Friday.
The Ohio Extended Oudook
for Friday through Sunday is
calling lor very cold
u,mperatures with a chance
of snow flurries Friday,
Saturday and SUilday.
llfgl-s Friday and Saturday
will range from zero to 10
above zero and hlclw SUnday
will he Iii the teena. Overnlgbt
Lows Friday and Saturday
will ralljle 11'001 10 to 15
dearees below.zero, with low
u,mperatures Swtday down
to zero to flve below zero.
~

NEW YORK (UP!) - On the eve of his 39th birthday, when
he should be out enJoymg himself and having a good tune,
N 8 A Stanchnqs
Emile Griffith won't be.
·
BY Un1tcd Prcso:. tntf'rnahon&lt;tl
Eas tern Con! f'r ('nct'
He'll be domg what he has done to make a liVIng the past 1g
Atlantic D IVIS IOn
years of hiS life. He'll be f1ght1ng
W l Pet
GB
HIS purse for next Wednesday mght 's 10-rounder w1th Insh Phlladc l p t·11a Ul l"i 6'i1
Boston
n ?J 178 71
m1ddlewe1ght champiOn Christy Elliott at Madison Square NY
Kn• c ks
21 ?1
177 7'
Garden will be $10,000, only a fraction of the $225,000 he used to Bu ffalo
16 10 148 11 •
11 31 ?9'i l'i '
rece1ve f&lt;r facmg opponents like Italy's Nrno Benvenuti. But NY Nets
Centr;~t DIV ISIOn
Emile GJ:iff1th, who was the world m1ddlewe1ght champwn
W l Pet GB
three different tunes and the welterweight titleholder tw1ce, Cleveland
?S 19 568
Houslon
7 t 19 S'iS
ISII't kicking at all Nor does he think he should quit
Wash•nqton
') j
19 '158
"!love the spprt very much," he says, "plus I'm slill making ~a n fln ton •o ?1 ?? 'i?? 'J
Orl eans n ?1 t89 1'
good money True, not as much as l once d1d, but more than I New
A!!rmt&lt;l
17 l l l'iJ 10
rould somewhere else. Do I ever think of quittmg' Yes,
We stern Conf('rrncc
M1dwc~t D• v •s •on
sometimr~ Like, when! lie rn bed at night,! think about 11 But
W L Pet
GB
then I say tn myself I have one more goal. I want to w1n ti1e title Dcn vrr
l l 13 7 0~
once more. You know I've won five of them - SIX, really, Oc troi!
?6 19 57R ~·
KCinflaS (t t y
1? /I ,l ]!l 10
counting the JU!Uor middleweight - but for some reason they lnd
t.ina
71 7S J57 11
didn't recogmze that ooe."
Chteaqo
\ R 77 .wo 11'
ec
11 l'i 786 19 1
Emile Griffith has compleU, faith in the two men who handle Mtlwa u ~Pactltc
Otvt s ton
him, Gil Clancy and Howle Albert, and that's perfectly
W l Pet
GB
understandable because they couldn't take better care of h1m LOS 1\I"'QCICS 10 I ~ 667
Por tl and
1 1 17 6d6
'
or feel any closer to hlnl if he were their own son ..
Golde n ' tate
1~ 70
~ ~5
.:;t
Clancy and Albert both say nobody will have to tell them '\ r'Cit 11 ~
?'i ?1 'i7 1 6 1
155 'i''
when to make Griffith qu1t They'll know before anybody else PhoentxTue !.diiV!.70 R7J
es ulh
will, they claim
Dctro•t 91 P.o s lon R9
"People say, 'When are you gonna retire Emile?'" ~ys NY Kntck S lOR (htCii~O 91
~iln Atfi'o n•o 11 6 Phocntx 108
Albert. "It aggravates me because the people who ask that are Los
Anqe les 170 ~c at t l r 109
Wcdncsd.w's Gam cs
the ones who haven't seen h1n1 fight laU,ly To me, he's the
at Buffalo
most remarkable athlete I've ever seen. Nobody takes off on Milwaukee
Cold en ~ t a t e a • Wnsh onq ton
him The day Em1le gets beat up for even one JiOUnd, we'll Cleveland at (htcaQo
NY Nets at Dc t rott
make hlm stop fighting right on the spot "
Boston at lnd ana
Griffith IS the same happy-go-lucky md1V1dual today he was Ne w Orl ean s at Kans as (tty
when he started flghtmg professionally here after commg from Portland a t Denv er
les at seattle
the V~rgm ISlands and winning a Golden Gloves title while Los Anqe
Thursday '!. GclmCs
NY Kn tcks al Cleveland
working m a hat factnry Albert once operated.
Dct r otl at Hous ton
From the begmning, he always has helped h1s family with Phdadelphti!l
al Phocn tx
his ring earnings. He was supporting 13 of them at one pcmt San Anlon to at Porl land
There have been stor1es he's broke now
"The money I should have ,! don'thave, but I'm not busted,"
he says, laughing about it. "I'm glad to have done what I d1d
with my money Taking care of my family,! mean "
Griffith's mother, Emelda, one of hts mosi!Vocal supporters,
has never mU,rfered w1th his career
St&lt;lndtnQ s
"She never told me t&lt;J'qult, but she never wanted me to start, Bv UmlNHL
ed Pr ess lntNMitOnill
Ci!mpbe ll Confcrf'nCI!
e1ther," her son recalls "It took her SIX months before she
Pi'ltrtck Otvtston
Signed my first contract. I was 18 and I told her 1! she didn't
W l T PIS GF GA
sign it then,l'd sign 11 myself when I got to be 21 So she stgned NY ISittndr s ?Q 1\ 7 6S 171 11 11
It."

?7 1011 65
TJ 17 9 q

Ph 18

1

fltl an t"

Emile Grlfbth's meeting with Christy Elliott will mark h1s

NY Ranm'rfl. 17 ?0 11

lloth professional fight He has won 85, mcluding 24 by

knockouts, and lost 21 with two draws and another endmg in a
no-contest. Only once has he thought about qwttlng seriously
- ml962, after kayoing Benny Pare! in 12 for the welterweight
title Pare! d1ed 10 days later.
"! was gomg to retire when I had my accident with Pare!,"
Griffith says, and you can almost see h1n1 gomg back m h1s
mind l5years ago to theep1sode "I sponsored a baseball team
at the t11ne, one called 'Emile Griffith's Grills,' and they were
a wonderful bunch of kids I told them I was gmng tn retire and
they sa1d I couldn't because if I d1d, they would have no one to
help them. No one to get them uruforms, balls, bats, gloves and
shoes It was a very difficult time for me, but m the end 11 was
those k1ds who talked me out of quUtmg."
Few athleU,s persomfy the word professional more than
Emile Griffth does He IS proud of hemg a boxer and add;
digmty and grace to a professiOn which IS short of both those
qualities He feels he can keep fighting another five years.
And then '
"Well ," he says, "I'd like to get a f1ghU,r of my own or help
tram k1ds Any kid who comes behmd me, I'd llke to see h1m
tramed the r1ght way That's the way I was brought up Other
than that, all I'd like would be for some people to remember a
little of what I contributed to my sport."
Emile Griffith shouldn't trouble himself on that account
People are liable to remember far more th, , he thmks -

Campbell Memorial is

181 111
1M 1~ 1
11A 1P.7

17

smv thc O•v •s• on
W l T P h GF GA
"' lOU IS
?/ 17 '&gt; 17 1 11 161
Chtcaoo

1i ? l ,1
11 7~ 11

t7
J3
Colorado
11 78 A 17
vancouv er 1117 t 1?
Will es Conl('rcnce

M•nncsota

l'i'i 11 1
1~7

133 179
117 19'i

Norn~ DIVI S IOn

IN l T Pt&lt;;
Montreal
16 7 7 79
p t lshuron ~0 19 fl lA
LO&lt;; /lnqCI£' ~ 17 77 10 II
\l\a st1tnqtn 11 7R 7 1~
Dl'tro tt
1"1 2~ 6 17
Adam s Otvt~ton
IN l T PIS

Roston

10 1 1

Ru ll o:1 10

GF G A
7 1! 1lt

150 1~1
l~R If&gt;?
1?7 lil t
171 lb~

GF GA
1 '"' lfl l 111

2R 15 1 60 170 1?1i
73 19 ~ S? 17 1 156
11 ?1 R 1A ),11 1/19

Toro nt o
(II'Vf land

Tu esdi\V''&gt; R esults

All Strtr Gtlmc
In Vo1ncouvN
Wal l'S Coni 1 Cam pbell Con i l
Wrdnc s ciav · ~

Games

Mtnnf'o;o ta At Lo ~ 1\ nQcl cs
Thur ~ dily s Gitml"S
Ptlt ShllrQt1 at NY R CH1Qer s
Tor onto at NY l'i iJ ndC'r s
Philad clph a a t t;t

r.nanta a t

Lou•S

Ru ffalo
[)ct r oil a t V' 1a'i!" •nQ ton
Cht ca qo a • Vancouve r
Co lora do at Boston

9 Slrulhers 14 II
Ctnctnna1t

10

Mercy 13 01

new Class AA leader

191

43
Mother of

211

Others wlfh fi ve or more
potnts Bowl1ng Green, East
l ive rp oo l.
Greenville ,

Westlake, Ctn c rnnatt Oak

By GENE CADDES
UP! Sporl8 Writer
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Campbell Memonal has
become the first new leader
in the three-week history of
the
United
Press
International Ohio High
Schqol Board of Coaches girls
basketball ratings.
Campbell, 7·1, replaced
Columbus Bishop HarUey (~
2) as the No.I Class AA team,
dropping the defending stare
champions down to the
second spot. Memorial,
whose only toss is to AAA
ranked Struthers, polled 71
points, two more than
runnerup Hartley and three
more
than
Warren
Champion, which fell from
second place to third.
· Columbus Watterson re·
'mained a solid No. I cbolce in
Class AAA, collecting 11 of 15
first place votes for 134 pcll
points, well ahead of
Columbus Walnut Ridge,
which moved from fifth tn
second this week.
But, the battle for secood in
AAA wu a hot one with only
nine points separating No. 2
Ridge with 69 points and No.6
Kettering Falnriont East
with 60 • •
Frankfort Adena and
Delphos St John continue to
run 1·21n Clasa A, with Adena
holding a 12U&amp; edge over St.
J~ thlsweek. Minster, with
92points,moved backtnto the
third 11pot, dropplnt! New
Rleflel ro fourth, and Rtllllla
claimed fifth.
A couple of the top AAA
lelllllll, Ctncirmati Syeamore
and Kettering ••airmont

••

East, sultered through rough
times the past week.
Sycamore dropped a pair of
games to Mlddletnwn and
Cincinnati Made1ra, while
Fairmont East lost to
unbeaten Springfield North.
FolloWUlg Watterson and
Walnut Ridge in A'AA were
Toledo Central Cathollc,
Medina and Gahanna
Lmcoln, all unbeaten,
Falrffiont East, Middletown,
Sycamore, Str.uthers and
Cincinnati Mother of Mercy.
Warsaw River View
finished a close fourth in
Class AA With 64 pcints,
followed by Ontario, Cortland
Lakeview, New Concord John
Glenn, Akron Our Lady of
ElmB, OlmBted Falls and
Swanton, the latter two
making their first tnp ten
appearanceJL
Convoy Crestview, Rocky
River Luthe118n West, West
· Umty Hllltop, Lancaster
Fisher Cathoilc and Ada a
newcomer, complete the
Class A tnp ten this weok.
COLUMBUS IUPI) - This

.Htlls,

Dela'NJ~re,

Toled o

Greensburg Green,

Bowsher ,

Sprmgfield North I, Ket
ferlng

Alter,

Stow

and

Cuyahoga Fails
CLASS AA
Team

Pts

I Campbell Memonal4 17
II
71
2 Columbus Harlley 3 15 21 69
3 Warren Champion I 15-1) 68
4 Warsaw River View2 (4
0)

5 Ontar io 18 01

64
52

6 Corlland Lakeview 17-11 45
7 New Concord John Glenn

16 01
36
8. Akron Our Lady ol Elms 15
II

9 Olmsled Falls 1 (5 01
10 Swanton 115 II

35
30,

2S

Others with five or more

points Bellbrook, Harrison.
Dresden Tri -Valley, Berry 1
Made&lt;ra, Springboro, Daylon
Jelferson. Utica, River
Valley. Upper Sandusky.
Akron St Vlncer\t St Mary,
Lima Bath, Oregon Cardinal
Slrltch. Columbus Hamilton
Township. Pickerington and
Archbold
1

CLASS A
Team
Pts
I. Frankfort Adena 4 (5 01 122
2 Delphos Sl John 418 01 96
3 Minster I 17-0192
4. New Rlegel2 18 II
85
73
week's United Press In 5. Russia I 15 01
ternat•onal Ohio High School 6. Convoy Crestview (6 II 57
Board of Coac~es' girls 7 Rocky Rrver Lutheran
48
basketball ratings with flrsl West21JOI
place votes and won lost 8 West Unlly Hill lop (6 II 18
9. Lancaster Fisher Catholic
records In parentheses
113&gt;21
30
CLASS AAA
19
Team
Pis 10 Ada I• 01
Other!i wtth ftve or more
I Columbus Wallerson 11 19
01
134 pomts Tlnora . Ironton St
2. Columbus Walnut Ridge 15 Joseph , Cardtngton,
01
69 R1dgemont , Northwestern ,
Hill~date. ArCanum . Mtller
J Toledo Cent Catholic I 15
01
. 65 C1ly M!UPrsport lcmc Tr11ce
BP.II;nre St
4 Medina I 16c01
63 G u Nn~etV
5.. Gahanna Lincoln 14 01 61 John'~ (Areyo..l Miami tr.!it,
6 Kettering ' Fc1trmont f:ASI

I Ill

7 M1ddlolown 116 01
8 Ctnclnnr'tlr SyCflr'YIOrt' r?.

11

t.lkcc;•d~.

U I tl

,,

tncJ1.t n
p. ( bl• ...

II

"'\lddlf!ftnlrt

c,,r

nI
M 11 p I r w o n d ,
1 1rt~,IJ l•Jtlh• Rnslul, Kirll(\nd

60

1

', t l l~· v

Nr1rtt)

it,ci

Eastw~ck
CINCINNATI (UP! ) Trading fellow relief pitcher
Will McEnaney was an act of
" stup1d1ty, " compla1ns
Cincmnati Reels' ace rehever
Rawly Eastw1ck
Meanwhile, Reds' manager
Sparky Anderson says he's
going to ban clubhouse talk
about money, contracts and
playJIIg out opt10ns on the
first day of sprmg trauung.
Eastwick, travelrng w1th

In another OC game, BaJd.
wrn-Wallace's su penor f1eld
shootmg m the fmal half
earned the Yello" Jackets to
an 81-60 w1n over Kenyon at
Berea
B-W, headed by Rob Wrnton
w1th 13 pornts, IS S-10 overall
and 3-3 in the league, while
Kenyon 1s 10-7 and 2-4.

game losing st reak and
evened Its season record at 88 w1th a 75-70 Oh1o Conference
Win over Ohio Wesleyan
Otterhem had five players
m double figures, led by Don
Brough with 14 Geo rge
Moore scored 14 for the
losers
In other games, Ashland
lnd&amp;Vldual scormg honors edged Sprmg Arbor 1M1ch )
went to Kenyon's Scott 75-72, Malone whipped
Rogers who dumped rn 18 Cedarville 75-69, and Mt.
markers
Vernon Nazarene breezed by
Otterbem snapped a four - Kentucky Chnsuan 9~9
Nrneteen ga mes mvolving
OhiO teams are on tap
ton 1ght, highlighted by
Wichita StaU,'s battle at 12thra nked C1ncmna ll

calls trade stupid

the Reds' "Media Caravan"
drumming up publicity rn
surroWldmg ctltes Uus week,
sounded off about last
month's trade by the Reds
that sent southpaw reliever
McEnaney and first baseman
Tony Perez to Montreal rn.
exchange for pitchers Woodie
Fryman and Dale Murray .
"I was surprtsed at the
stup1d1ty of getting nd of
W11l ,"
the Cmcmnati
Enquirer quoterl Eao:hV1r\c as

saymg "It galls me Young
pitchers are at a premium
and he is only 25 I know he
had a bad year (Ill 1916), but
he 's a tough pitcher Name
me a betU,r lefthanded relief
pitcher There JUSt aren't any
aroWld."
Eastw~ek, who hasn't yet
s1gned h1s 1977 contract, also
f1gured the Reds got Murray
rn case EastwiCk plays out hiS
optiOn.

Turner suspension undenvay
leag11e club or 1ts personnel Ill
the absence of pr10r
authonzation from th1s
office "
The Braves also w1ll lose
their first-round pick in the
June free agent draft
Kuhn sa1d he would review
the one·year suspension afrer
six months
Braves' fans protested
loudly
over
Turner's
suspension for tamperrng Ill
the Gary Mathews case.
Specifically,
Kuhn's
ongU18laMouncement of the
suspenswn mentiOned a
Cage standings
stawment. Turner allegedly
made to San Francisco owner
Bob Lone at a cocktail party.
ALL GAMES
was sa•d to have told
Turner
TEAM
W L P OP
Lurie
that
no matter what he
Wheelersburg
8 0 543 411
Logan
8 1 768 542 offered Mathews - then a
Ironton
9 2 6 16 508
Jackson
6 3 552 552

ATLANTA (UP!)
Baseball Commissioner
, BoWie Kuhn has ordered
Atlanta Braves' owner Ted
Turner suspended immediately, a spokesman for
the ream said Tuesday
Kuhn upheld Turner's
suspension
" from
management or adv1smg rn
management of the affairS of
the Atlanta Braves • or
engaging in any assoc1at1on
wharever w1th any maJOr

Portsmouth

6 4 659 626

Metgs

.s

PI Pleasant

Galllpoi&gt;S
Waverly
South Point
Wellston

Alhens

2 1 200 190
4 497 525

4 4 464 489
4 7 657 674
2 7 507 531
1 8 463 673

0 9 dB! 599

Non-SEOAL results .
Boyd County 75 Portsmouth

74

South Pomt 90 Coal Grove J8

Tates

Locke
fired

Giant about to become a free
agent- the Braves would top
II

TO PLAY CARDS
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
Cmcmnat1 Bengals w11l play
the St Loms Cardmals m a
pre-season game Saturday
mght, Aug 27, In St LoUIS,
Bengal officials announced
Tuesday mght
Both the Benga ls and
Cardmals finished w1lh 10-4
regular season records last
season, barely m1ssmg the
NFL playoffs
The Bengals w11l play SIX
pre-season games m 1977, two
at home and four on the road
The remamder of the
Benga Is' pre-season schedule
1s to he announced later
WHA St;~nd t nqs

By Um lecl Pre ss tnt c r nrt ft onttl
E CIS I
W l T Pis GF GA
Qur'brc
28 IS I 57 197 15)
(t n c nna t
23 71 I 11 8 / OQ 170
lndtanapls n 70 .j &lt;18 J.jljl 167
~ M•nncso•
19 \ H 'i n 136 1'1 9
Nr v. E nq ln d 111 77 'i &lt;11 161 188
R•rrnn(] hrn 16 3~1 JJ 161 197

w.

Wl

Pt s GF GA

"I believe they got him only
to back me up,'' he sa1d
Eastw1ck , who complarned
he was "underpaid" at
$29,000 last season, sa1d he IS
seekmg a "four or f1ve year"
contract from the Reds
Talk hke that "111 be
banned from the Reds
clubhouse this season , says
Anderson
"That's one of the f~rst
thmgs I plan to make clear
when 1 meet w1th players the
first day of sprrng trammg ,"
the Cincmnati Post quoted
the 42-year old manager as
saymg "U a player ISD'I
happy w1th the ~onlrct he
s1gned or the one that has
been offered to him, the other
players on the club shouldn't
have to hear about 11
'My feelrng 1s, let 's play
and settle our personal
problems on our own tune As
for myself , I don't know "hat
players on the Reds are
makmg and don 't want to fmd
out
" If I saw some of the
contracts, " he lau ghed,
f1gurrng a lot of players rna ke
more than managers , '' I
might get SICk "

L

INTEREST

On Certificates
Of Depmit
1,000 Minimum
1 Yr. Term

1

N•n ety day 1nte r es t penal1y
tf
wtlh d raw n
before
ma t unty d at e

Meigs Co. Branch

_(!;)
The Athen s Coun t y
Sav tng s &amp; Loan Co

296 Second St
P o m e r oy , OhiO

with us!
PlANNING APIZZA PARTY
PHONE
THE ALL NEW

MEIGS INN PIZZA SHACK

Houston
SEOAL VARSITY
/6 16 'i- 51. 170 IJQ
&lt;; nn [I CQO /6 19 t 5J 156 15?
TEAM
W L P OP
l! ' "'n pcq
?S 17 1 5 1 70 11 57
Ironton
7 1 454 355
-Enjoy three sizes of your favonte
19 73 3 ,11 Ll 5 1r;o
Loga n
5 1 509 338
BUFFALO, N.Y (UP!)- Ci!IQarv
Edmonto n ?0 77 1 41 l J? 169
pizzas.
Jackson
3 2 292 292 Afew weeks ago TaU,s Locke Pho cn•l(
19 76 ? 10 164 ns
-Try our delicious subs while you
Meigs
3 3 389 411 commented on his future as
• TeiHTl d• sb anded
Waverly
J 4 &lt;114 428
Tu esda y ' s Reflulf s
s1p your favorite suds.
Gall•polis
2 3 279 306 coach of the Buffalo (tnCtnnn t t 1 New EnQiand 2
Eat In Or Carry Out
Quebec ? lnd tana"oll 5 1
Wellston
I 5 306 461
Braves
Hou&lt;;tOil 'i Wtnn1peq 7
Alhens
o 5 275 327
"I've got w coach many Caloarv
Phone
7 PM en•x 3
TOTALS
24 24 2918 ms games th1s year, unless
Wcdnesdi'IV s Games
99l-6304
Tuesday's results·
! No qames scheduled I
Ironton 55 Waverly 41
somebody does somethmg
Thur sd&lt;w 's Gr~m es
Gall•polis Athens. ppnd
about that," Locke sa1d, w mntpr' q at P. tr m•nQham
Logan Jackson , ppnd
laughing afU,r his club lost a New E ng land at San iDtego
Wellston Me•gs. ppnd
game to the Boston Celt1cs on
SEOAL RESERVES
Jan. 8 "Maybe that could he
lronlon
8 o 396 240 the lucktest thing that could
Alhens
4 1 223 204 happen."
Logan
' 2 303 241
Locke got hiS "lucky" Wish
Waverl y
4 3 285 281 Tuesday as Braves' co-owner
Jackson
2 3 213 263
Gallipolis
1 4 178 199 Paul L Snyder fired the
Meigs
1 5 197 242 rookie coach and named
Wellston
o 6 211 336 General Manager Bob
TOTALS
24 24 2006 2006 MacKinnon to take over the
Tuesday's results:
Ironton 39 Waverly 28
coachmg duhes on an interun
Gallipolis-Athens, ppnd
baSIS.
Logan Jackson. ppnd
The Braves announced the
Well sion Meigs, ppnd
dismissal of lncke, who had
Fnday's games.
replaced Jack Ramsay after
Metgs at Ironton
CONSERVE ENERGY-CUT HEATING COSTS
Logan al Gallipolis
last season, In a terse
Alhens al Waverly
stau,ment and refused any
Jackson a! Wellslon
further comment.
Pt Pleasant at D1.1nbar
Greenup at Portsmouth
The staU,ment read : "The
Norlhwesl al Wheelersburg Buffalo Braves announced
Soulh Pom1 at Lenore
- they have released Tares
Saturday's games:
Locke as their head coach.
GallipOlis at Wellston
Portsmouth at Boyd County General Manager Bob
Greenup at Wheelersburg
MacKinnon will assume heaq
Wahama at Meigs
col!l!hmg responsibilities on
Nelsonville York at Logan an mterim basis and a search
1 WEEI&lt; ONLY
for a new coach Will hegm
inuned1ately "
A club spokesman said
MacKinnon might coach the
U,Um "for the rest of the
season or just a week."
MacKinnon becomes the
fifth coach in the stormy
WALNUT CREEK, Calif seven-year history of the 1970
(UP!)
Conference expansion club. and will be m
3'h inches x 15 inches
Executive Director Wiles the bench tnnlght when. tqe
Hallock has , disallowed Braves host the Milwaukee
70 square feel per roll
Washington's protest of a Bucks.
I
PER
5
Paciflc 6 basketball game
ROLL
with Oregon on Jan. 13.
Oregon won the conU,st in
6 inches x 15 inches
overtime, 7UB. Washington
Coach Marv Harshman
40 square feet pel roll
HONOLULU IUP!) - Gov.
claimed referee Mel Ross had
Arlyoshl
has
5
stopped the clock in response George
announced
plans
to
name
a
to a call for a timeout by
Oregon
guard
M1ke Governor's Committee on tbe
Drummond, which would Maj&lt;X' !,eagues "to actively
have been an excessive pursue franchises as may he
timeoul and cost the Ducks a deemed des•rable."
"The competition w111 he
tectin1cal foul
sharp,"
he said In Tuesday's
Hallock. huwever, upheld
State
of
the State speech,
Ross' versiOn of the disputed
"but
I
am
ronvmced 11e offer
meutent partly ile{·Ausc of the
an
unbeatable
combiJIIIIIOn of
rtft; ll~'S ''Stt:OOJ~ lnSIStPIIL'C
d1mate
,
glamor
and
I•• &lt;·ulled t nnt,.•ul on tnmself
faciliues," h~ sa1d.
olllll I hJ!o; I n·putatlnn ··~ . til
MASON, W. VA.
He culled the lf..n1onth~'ld
offh wl wltj·~· ('OUrUJ!t h:h
i\Juhd St;1d1wn ~ major
773-SSS4
bt•l•n u JHII tu·ul;u .1 " rthult· ·

•

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'

�S- The Daily Sentinel, Middleporj-Pomeroy. 0 .. Wednesday .Jan . 20. 1977

Visits Spencer Tonight
By CHRIS SCHERF
UP! Sports Writer
Buffalo Braves• owner Paul
Snyder has been l11Ming his
club as if auditioning to
replace Monty Hall as emcee
of "IA't's Make A Deal."
That Snyder see)11S to have
an incredible knack for
choosing the wrong curtain
. was exemplified by the New
York Knicks' 101&gt;-91 victory
over the Chicago Bulls
Tuesday nigh~
Bob McAdoo, who led the
National Basketball
Association in se&lt;rlng three
straight years for the Braves,
\us shuffled off from Buffalo,
afo'ng with Tom McMillen, for
John Gianelli and a large
portion of uncounted cash.
McAdoo ~red 3t points,
had 15 rebounds and seven
assists against the Bulls,
while McMillen came off the
bench In the first quarter to
stop Artis Gilmore from
scoring at will .
McMillen, who reportedly

Ironton 55
Waverly 41
WAVERLY (41) -

was a throw-in forced upon
the Knicks because Snyder

wanted to unload his big hi$ defensive job on Gilmore the first nlrie minutes against
salary, scored 16 points, but was most vi!Bl to the Knicks. Lonnie. Shelton before
Gilmore scored 12 points in ' McMillen replaced the

Coliseum@

BASKETBALL
1
may _ose tops Sycamores
• heat
Its
Boys

Ohio High School

Basketball Results

Akron

East

82

Navarre

Fairless 59.

Amherst 70 Midview 59

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The , Bay Village 84 Fairview 51
Fairgrounds Coliseum and Beachwood 74 Kirtland 54
possibly other buildings on Beavercreek 43 Dayton
.
.
ha
Cham.Jul 40
the fall' grounds. may ve Bellaire 43 John Marshaii iW.
their gas heat shut off next va .l 41
week Columbia Gas of Ohio Berkshire 72 Cardinal 52
said Tuesday
Be&gt; ley 86 Hamilton Twp. 73
,
. '
.
.
Botkins 60 Houston 45
' Themailgrarntsgotngout Boyd Counly (Ky. I 75 Ports.
today and we expect the mouth 74
.
termination date. wiil be Brooklyn 47 Brecksville 46
about Feb 2" said Earl Brunswick 57 Columbia 48
'
'
·
Brush 70 Maple He1ghfs 63
Louks,
a
Columbia Buckeye South 73 Bridgeport
spokes man . " They've 3'1
overrun their allocation."
Cambridge 102 Meadowbrook
State Fair Manager John 50
. · da the Col .- Carey 93 Arcadia 87
Evans wd 'lUes Y
lCeda rvi lle so Greeneview 45
seurn and any other affected Centerburg 77 New Albany 73
buildings will have to be Shut Chagrin Falls 75 Aurora 72
down unless propane or Cin Roger Ba c~m 59 Cin
Purcell 54 .
.
anot her a Ilerna te hea t mg Circlev i lle 50 Madison Plains
system can be installed.
.d6
Davena.
" We ·can 't operate if we
Cle Chanel as Trinity 66

2-0 -4; Thonipson ,
1-2· 4_:
Holsinger , 5·4-14 ; Crace, 3-0.
6 ; Fielder ,. 4-2-10 ; Rick

Cle Collin~ood 66 Cle John

don't have heat," said Evans.

~;",! ~~sl Tech 79 Cle East 53
Cle Glenville 70 Cle Kennedy
63
.
Cle Latin 102 Wesl Reserve
~~'."~u~heran E 83 Richmond
He ights 67
•
Cle South 78 Cle Cen Cath 72
I oil
.
Cleveland He•ghts 80 Berea
~ol Brookhaven 69 Col East

"There's a lot of water in
Thomas . 0-2-2: Randy thereandweevenneedwater
Thoma•. 0-1-1: TOTALS 15· to keep the lee in shape. The
11 -41.
freezing unit runs with water,
IRONTON !lSI - Royal . 7.
5-19 ; Ses.her , 4·0-8; Fitz . and of cou~se ~~re's the rest
patrick , 1-0-2; Brown , 3-2-8; room facilttles.
Howard , 7-2-16 ; Fa irchild , 1·
Moe Bartoli, general
0·2: TOTALS 23-9-55.
manager of the Columbus
By quar ters:
Owls hockey team said
Waver ly
9 9 14 9- 41
lroi1ton
16 11 8 20-SS Wednesday night's game
Reserve score - lrMton 39 with Muskegon at the
.Waverly 28 .
Coliseum will be played.
Bartoli said he ' has been
•
··
told heat m the facility,
however , will be on a day-today
basis.
Coll toqc Baskelb&lt;~ll Rc!tults
• A shutdown at the Coliseum
By United Press lnlernai10n&lt;1 t
E &lt;!Sf
would also affect district
BO st on Coll70 Yale 64
games
in the high school
Bucknel l 58 R ider &lt;~a
Bu ffalo 77 Wis M ilw 76
basketba ll tourna me nt
C w Posl 70 Wagner 62
te ntative ly sche du led
Colgate 83 R PI 73
F"a irmont ·112 Salem 64
between Feb. 21 and March
F D U Mad ison 65 Bklyn Coli 58
12.
.
F&amp;M 'aJ Le banon Val ley 67
Also affected would be the
Ha milton 95 Hobart 87
Har~wick 79 LP Mayne 66
I Shrine Circus
All d. T
Hun te r 88 Bingh mtn St 6 ~
. a m e~p e
It haca 77 Alfr eQ 49
m the Cohseum March 24
Lin coln Pa Bd Howard 82
through April 2.
Md E Shore Bl De l.. S t 67
The termination could
N H Coli 104 St J O!''S Vt 70
Ph ila Phar m 77 Rutqers Cmdn continue until April! unless
11
there is a break in the
Po tomac St BJ Bay Md 68
weaUter.
Prov idence 71 N iagara 63
R 1 Coil 81 Babson 66
Cutoff of service to the
Scranton 77 Osweqo St 51
Multipurpose
Building at the
'&gt; iena 65,U iic a 61
Fairgrounds would cancel the
VH an va 65 St John 's NY 6]
· w or cester Tech 9J Lowel l 76
Sports Vacation and . Travel
Sout h
Show, Feb. 5-13and the Home
Appala chi an 49 Dav id_
son ~4
Centenary Q9 Ha rdin Smmns 87
and Garden Show Feb . 2&amp;Flor ida Tech 7J Georg ia 51 6B
Le Tourn eau 77 SW La 56
Morr is Brown 76 Morehouse 75
Radford 130 Lonqwood 59

Coe t;l l Gracetand 75

Hast inqs iS Doane 74
Ill ino is St 70 lnd St 64

Col Eastm oor 56 Col North 51
Col Hartley 60 Col R~ady 54
Col L rnden 67 Col Mrf11rn 58
Col Marion-Frankl in 84 Col
Central 72
Col Northland 7~ Col In·
dependence 54 .
~~ha~~ ~ ~~~ R•dge 7 Col
Col Wesl 75 Col Whetstone 53
Cuyahoga His' 89 Strongsv ille
- ~fxie 74 Oakwood 62
·
East Canton sa Un iontown
Lake 56
Eat Cle Shaw 72 Lakewood 71
Iotl
Eastlake North 52 Eu.clid 49
Eaton 77 Vall ey View 59
Elyria Catholic 53 Elyria
Wes t 49
Fairborn Pa rk Hills 84
~~i~~r~ 7Jnion a1 c.... ,
Wirchester n

°

Fairmon t W 79 Miat:·dsburg
60
.
Fairmont E 85 Dayton Wr~ght

~'a i rport

68 f;'ymatun ing
Val ley 59
Forest Park 61 Franklin 60

I ol)

Fort Frye 66 Beallsvi ll e 63
Fort Loramie 127 Ansonia 75

· Fostoria Sf Wende lin 67
McComb 60 ·
Gahanna 65 Reynoldsburg 61
Ga l l oway
Westland
68

Grovepor t 52

Shenandoah 59 Skyue 58

Garfield Heigh ts 55 Va lley
Forge 48

Solon 74 Kenston 70
Soutnview 84 Avon Lake 57
St. Clairsvil le 46 Union Local

Geneva

Tri -Valley 57 New Lexi ngtqn

76

Oreqon Te ch 67 Ch ico 51 64
Utan St . 97 Stan islaus St . 61

game for Ntagara :i6-51i. But
Providence scored the firstlO
Indiana State's Larry Bird, points In overtiine to gain its
the 6-foot·9 high-scoring 12th straight victo.ry. The
sopltomore transfer student Friars, now 1&amp;-2, got 16 points
from Indiana, hit for 31 points from Joe Hassett and 13
Tuesday night to help his ~7.9 points and 14 rebounds from
points per game scoring . Bob Misevicius.
Brothers Keith and Larry
average, the nation 's fifth
Herron combined to lift Vilenough help lor lanova over St. John's
,:,:::,:,:,:,:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::
19th..-an ked Indiana State, Junior guard Keith scored a St. John's with 18 points and
however. Dlinois State rallied gamtH!igh 20 points, while 12 rebounds, hit a layup with ,
behind Jeff Wilkins to hand senior forward Larry got the 36 seconds remaining to bring
the Sycamores a 70-64 defeat, decisive points in Villanova 's his team within a point , 62-lil.
, only their second loss in 18 . 12th victory against three Then Larry Herron hit a free
games.
defeats: •
.
. throw and St. John's had a ·
Wilkins, a 7-foot junior
St. J?hn s burst mto a 19•10 chanc-e to tie the score.
center, scored 22 points as lead With 12 :30 remamtng m • But the visitors missed a
Dtinois SIBle came back from the first half • but the ·shot and Larry Herron, who
a 44-40 halftime deficit. With Wildca.ts, led by Keith finished with 13 points, scored
12 :27leftlndiana State led 58- Herron s 10 pomts, .shaved on a breakaway dunk shot to
54, but the Sycamores were the lead to 35-34 by h~lftime. clinch the game for the
held to just six points for the
"We were d?~ n~e and Wildcats. Tom Calabrese and
rest of the game.
could have QUit • . Vtllanova Gle n Williams added 16
illinois State, now 14..1, took coach Rothe Massuruno said. points apiece for St. John's
the lead for good at 60-58 with " We battled back hard, · !2- .
•
5·
5:55 to play.
though."
Elsewhere, guard Dwight
Keith Herron scored on a
Williams scored 17 points as layup and Rory Sparrow and
No. 15 Providence struggled Larry Herron hit jump shots
to a 71-83 oveitlme victory at early ·in the second half to
Niagara.
give Villanova the lead for
Guard Phil Scaffidi hit a · good.
jumper at the end of
George Johnson , who led
United Press Intemattonal

be~t.wasn't

~.

4th Quarter Surge Gives Falcons 70-64 V1ctory

twisted ankle.
Spurs 116, Suns 108:
Larry Kenan scored 38
points and grabbed 21
rebounds to lead San Antonio
pasi Phoenix . George Gervin
added 24 points for the Spurs,
while Paul Westphal led the
Suns with 24.
Lakers 120, Super Soules 109:

B~

GARY CLARK

vault them into the lead so the Bisons began to pull away once
again behind Noffsinger who had scored twenty-four poinL, in
the first thre.. quarters.
With Buffalo leading 62..15 and only 3:12 left to play Duke
Smith was forced to the bench after committing hi s fifth
personal fou l and it looked as though the bend area squad wos
doomed.
Trailng by seven points and their leading scorer on the
bench, the White Falcons scoretl 6 consecutive points to pull
to within one at 61-82. Seconds later Tim Sayre drove the lane
and scored the go-ahead bucket to give Wahama a 63~2 lead
which tliey never relinquished . The bend area red and white
converted on five of six charity tosses in the final min ute to
insure the hard fought victory.
Wahania won lhc game at the free throw stripe by canning
24 of 33 attempts for 70 percent. From the field they were 23 of
67 for a cool 34 percent.
Buffalo hit on 26 of 42 from the floor for 42 percent and
connected on 12 of 20 at the lin e for 10 percent.
The Bisons also outre bound the Mason Countains 47to 31 but
committed some 27 turnovers to just 11 for Wahama.

Trailing_throu1Q1out most of the contest, Coach Jim Scherr's
Wahama White Falcons put on a fourth quarter burst to
outdistance the visiting Buffalo Bisons. 7!kl4.
Wahama's Duke Smith continued to lead the team in
scoring with 18 markers before fouling out midway through
the final stanza. The 5'10" senior sports a fine 21.0 average.
Smith was joined in doui)le fig ures by Bob Nicewander,
Mike Goldsberry and Tim Sayre each finishing with 16, 12 and
12 points respectively.
The White Falcons coughed and sputtered for three quarters of action before blowing the Bisons out in the final canto
t~ post a come from behind win, their fourth of the yea r in five
outings.
The opening minutes of the game were pretty even with
neither team managing more than a two point lead. The score
was deadlocked at 14-14 after eight minutes of action.
Wahama's Bob Nicewander and Buffalo's Chuck Noffsinger
:Carried the brunt of the scoring for their respective teams
)vith Nicewander dropping in eight of his teams fourteen
""ints. Noffsinger was equally as effective for the Putnam
'County school by tallying seven first period markers. .
LITTLE FALCONS
· • Buffalo began to pull away in the second stanza behmd
IIIIPRESSfVE
Noffsinger to open a sizeable lead. With the score 17-16 the
The White Falcons return to
Jlisons reeled off twelve.straight unanswered points to take a action three more times this
21l-17lead and threaten to make it a runaway but the scrappy week due to the postWhite Falcons fought back to within four 30·26 at intermission. ponements while school was
Duke Smith scored two quick buckets as the second half · not in session. Tonitc Coach
began to knot the scotc for the third time in the game at 30-30 Schere takes his flock to
but the visitors fa iled to falter and bmlt an e1ght pomt spread Spencer to" do battle with the
a 42-34.
once beaten Yellow Jackets.
Once again the locals staged a spirited rally to trim the lead On Friday Ed Coon and his
to three at the quarters end at 48-45.
.
Hannan Wildcats visit Mason
Wahama seemingly couldn't come up with the b1g play to before a journey to Meigs on

--Kareem Abdui.Jabhar, the
second string A)I.Star center
in the Western Conference,
scored 22 points to lead Los
Angeles to a club recordtying · 17th straight home
victory.

PICKENS HARDWARE CO.
Mason, W. Va .
Open: Mon .- Thurs. &amp; Sat. 8-5:30
Friday 8-8

schedule is

anno~nced

RIO GRANDE - A new
weekly schedule of public
recreation activity has been
announced a·t Rio Grande
College-Community College.
According to George Wolfe,
director of health. physical
education and recreation, all
area residents are invited to
make use of Lyne Center gym
and pooL
The gym and swimming
pool will be open Tuesday and
. Thursday·, Jan. 25 and .27,
from 7 to 9 p.m. During those
hou rs any member of the
community may use the
gymnasium, weight lifting
room and racquetball court
free of charge. The olympic
size pool will also be open,
however, there is a small
admission charge.
Weekly family recreation
night resvmes at Lyne Center
Friday, Jan. 28. Each Friday
evening from 7 to 9 p.m. ,
families are invited to participate in a variety or ac- .
tivities at no charge. Rio
Grande's recreation students
will be on hand to help

supervise. For family night,
children must be at least six
years old, and no child under
18 will be admitted unless
accompanied by a parent or
guardiaq.
The gym and pool will aiso
be open .to the public Sunday,
Jan. 30. The tym · will be
available from 2 to 4 p.m.,
and the pool from 2 to 4 p.m.,
and 7 to 9 p.m.
A schedule of , public
recreation activities will be
released each week to area
new spapers and radio
stations.

67 -

Leipsic 87 Con t inental 72
Lima Sr 8.4 Dayton Dunbar 67
Lock land 59 Green Hills 53
Lorain 60 Westlake
Madison Butler 86 New

view 71
Norton 68 Highlahd 61
Oberiin 7.4 Vermilion 62
Ohio Deaf 51 Xenia Wi lson 48
Ottoville 82 Lincolnview 57

M iami 55

Pickerington

.

Ma nsfield Ch,ist 74 Can

Hodver 63

Marlington 57
Nor lh Olmsted 60 Olmsted
Fall s 59
North RidgeVTl le 72 Clear.

Fisher 70

73

Lancaster

Brunnerdaleu60
Reading 62 St. Bernard 43
Mariemont 59 L andmark 54
Riverview 70 New Concord 46
Marietta 86 Lancaster 63
Rocky R1ver 86 Cle Rhodes 56
Mentor 45 Mayf iel d 36
--sandy Va ll ey 50 Massillon

Willoug hby South 72 Bedford

70

Wyoming 65 Taylor 46

Miller City 75 Cary-Rawson

Zane Trace 45 Guernsey Cath

55
Norm andy 58 Parma 56 12 oi l

I

CERTIF I CA TE OF
· COMPLIANCE

ST ATE OF O HIO
OE'PARTMENT
OF

Tuslaw 30

Shadyside 97 Buckeye Norlh
58

IN ·

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ready for action.

SEE US FOR
BAnERIES
AND SPARE WHEELS!

tha t TH OMAC:. J EFFER SON
LIFE IN S CO OF AMERICA
of C H/IM Pf\ IGN . ~ 1a1e of
I LL I NO !&lt;:. ha&lt;:o com plied with
the l aw s of th is &lt;; talc ap
p l iC abt c to i t and is author ized
du r inq l hc cu rr en t yea r to
of

in

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c aoi 1a 1
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IN WITN ESS WHEREOF . I
havl'

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subscribed m.,

nam f"' and caused my seal to
be rtlli~ted a 1 Columbus . Ohio.
this oay &lt;tnd date D ec . ?9.

SMITH LAYS IT UP - It was a race to the basket with Wahama's Duke Smith way
out ·in front of Buffalo's Chuck Noffsinger, whose only recourse left is to grab the rebound,
which never comes. Smith led his team in scoring with .18 poin ts.

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

tran saCI i n th i s st ate its ap
bus i n cs~

• Storm Window Kits
• WeatheJStripping • Anti-Freeze

19 7fl

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~ upNintcndent o f Insurance
of Ohio
(
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11 76 11

MEN
&amp; BOYS

20l.~ MILK
-

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$1

39

11 oz .

FRENCH CITY
USDA CHOICE

40 oz.

BEEF ·
RIB STEAK

FRUIT COCKTAIL

17 oz. '

no payment
.'til you get
your 1976 tax
refund check

WE WELCOME
FOOD STAMP
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INIOIRIGIEI·

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choose from Heavy-Duty 20 lb. capacity
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DINGO

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HOW THEY VOTED
WASHINGTON (UP! )
Both of Ohio's Democratic
senators, John Glenn and
Howard Metzenbaum voted
to confirm Griffin Bell as U.
s. attorney general. Bell was
approved on a 75-21 vote.

M

HINES

PPHS TO PLAY
Despite weather con·
ditions, the Point PleasantRavenswood basket ball
game will he played tonight
as scheduled , Coach Lennie
Barnette sa id . The va.rsity
ga me is schedu led to get
underway a.t 7:30 p.m.

NO WRESTLING
Point Pleasant High
School's wrestli ng match
schedu led at Meigs tonight
has been cancelled because of
no school in Meigs ·County.

KEEP OLD MAN WINTER OUT
WITH THESE HARDWARE SUPPLIES

DINTY MOORE

BOOTS

OPEN
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Prices Effective Thursday thru Sunday

BOYS '7.00

bag

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BAKING POTATOES
I

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and dryers, biggest capacity home was hars and dryers made,

9 til 7
Mon.-Sat.
10 til 5
Sunday

,IDAHO

HEAD LETTUCE

dryers ••• as low as

•49900

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FRENCH CITY

Pomeroy

GAME ~ET

tread with traction
cleats to grip and go on mud,
ice or deep snow, and designed lo
receive metal traction studs.

ce rt ifies

"&gt;u ran ce
ll 'i ri nanc i al condllion is
&lt;; hown b',' i ls annu aLs!illemf'nl
io h.1vc been as foll oWs on
Df"'CCmbcr 3 1. 1975 ·
f&gt;dm i llc d flsscrs S17 .610. 19d 00
L i nh i l ilies
Sl0.7·1d,790, 00
&lt;... urplw ~
SJ .56B .S61 .00
l nroome
$7, 016 .658 .00
E'xpe nd i tur es
$4 ,?33 ,(1 15.. 00

115 W. Second

McCall's, Kwick -Sew,
Simp li ci t y Patterns
Ph . 992-2284

RACINE
Hearl
basketball coach Carl Wolfe
sa id this morning tfic mak eup North Gallia , Southern
High School game will be
played tomorrow night Thursday - here with the
reserve game beginning: at
6:30 p.m.

~r

undefsioned .
&lt;:. l i PER t NTENDENi
OF
tN O:.(l Ril N CEOFTHE ~ TATE
or

The Fabric Shop

THE BIG MA N HITS FROM OUTSmE - Th e
Faicons' tall man 6'4'' Bob Nieewcmder hib this 12 footer
froTh outside cJ g£1 inst.thc Bison de fc ns~s . Nicewander was
8 for 19 from the field in this winning effort.

WEATHER-MASTER 400 .

age,
~BE#EF~S~TE~W__________
24o-z.c-an~

FRENCH CITY
NATURAL

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ltl,;l..' lt1 11L'

t .il l' ll1 l"n t ,c•.vi tl)! c~t tli HI \" hv
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Th e

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North Canton

sa

55

'12 oz. pkg.

po int s re spectively . Don timely assists.
The Little Falcons hkr tJ,
Hussell failed to break into the John Eich and Chip Bayless varsity travel to to Speoce·
scorin g column but made hi~ hit for 14 and 10 points for tonight in search of their
fou rth victory.
prese nce known with some Buffalo in a losing effort..

New public recreation

Hi ll iard 62 Col Wa1terson 57

Indian Lake 70 Bethel 66
Kal ida 95 Pandora Gil boa 51
Kenton 74 Lima Shawnee 69
Lebanon 69 Mllford -37

38
Whitehall 64 Upper Arlington

CASING
BOLOGNA

Saturda y night closes nut the
wCek .
In
Tuesday
nights
preliminary game the Little
Fal co ns of Coach Homer
Preece used a wei! balanced
scoring attack in disposing of
the Buffalo Reserves by a
score of 60-47.
The game marked the best
c.ffl)rt put. {o!"'.!"'. ~~ -:!~tt· tvr the
Falcons and up ped their
record to th ree and two on the ·
year. Kevin Scott, Charley
Zuspan and Kelvin Honaker
all hit in twin digits with 18, 1t
and 10 talli ~s respectively .
Following close behind wa s
Todd Rawlings Bob Barnitz
and Phil Hobbs with 8. 7 and 6

regulation time ' to tie the

54
Hiland' 81 Orrville 75

Wadsworth 77 Akron Garfield
61
Warrensville
80 North
· Roya-lton 62
Wesl Carrollton 97 Ca rlisle 69
• West Geauga 78 CHardon 69
Wesl Liberty 60 Benjamin
Logan 59

41

•

Hill 63
Hawken School 59 Newbur y

Vandalia Butler 42 Piqua 35
Versailles 79 Arcanum 64

Musk ingum .

·

Hannibal River 67 Woodsfield
66
Harrison 66 North Col lege

Stebbins 55
Twin Va lley N 59 Brookville
58
Twinsburg Sl Orang·e 42

Maysvill~

Painesville

Grove·City 82 Westervi lle S 52

53 I ot)

We st

50

Riverside 36

34

Trotwood -Mad ison 61 Dayton

Iowa WSI','n lOS MacMurry 9J
K earn e',' 88 Fort Hay s 86
Malone 7~ Cedarv ille 69
Mid t.m Naz 88 Baker 81
Mo Southern 75 Drur., 65
Mt vernon 91 Ky . Chr is 69
Net~ Wesle','an 67 Dana 61
North ern Iowa 77 Neb Om 70 •
Ot ter bein 75 Oh io Wslyn 7Q
S'wstrn K~n 77 Fricncls 6.:1
St rtnq 6J &lt;i t Mry'S Tl:'x . 5A
Soutt"lwe st
Btl"1n',' Na1 62 Okla S&amp;A 67
S F Aust in 81 E Tex Bap t 80
West
Biol a 86, Ce t St Domnquz 67
Cal if 90 St Mry 's Cal. SO
Chapman 96. Point Lema 75
Fresno St 67, Cal Lutl"1 60
No Ar iz 80 UC I r vine 7J
San Jose St 83 Ca l 51&amp; Brbra 82
Seattle Pac 103 Azusa Pa cific

COLUMBUS !UPII Tom Cutter, who sp11rked
Western Michigan to a 716S victory over Central
Michigan las t Saturday
· which gave the Broncos
sole possession of first
place, has been selected
the Mid·Amerlcan Conference basketball player
of the week.
Cutter, a 6-8, 220-poond
senior center, has nine of
his 13 points and nine of his
· 15 rebounds· In 'the second
half as the Broncos rallied
from a h~tlm e def_lclt.

points the rest of the half as
the Knicks took control of the
game and led by 54-38 at the
Intermission.
In other games, Detroit
. defeated Boston, 91-89, San
Antonio defeated PhoeniX,
IJ&amp;-108, and Los Angeles heat ·
Seattle, 120-109.
Pistons 91, CeiUcs 89:
Eric Money hit two free
throws after being fouled by
JoJo White in the final minute
to give Detroit the victory.
Bob Lanier was high for
Detroit with 22 as starting
Boston center !Jave Cowens
sat the game out with a

65

'

March 6..

Tow sn St 114 Salsb r y St 70
T'v an ia 85 D L ipscomb 79
va 5 t IOJ Hampton 76
Wash&amp;lee 76 Hmpdn Sydn ey 75

Midwes t
Asnland 75 Spr ing Arbor 7?
Bldwn Wall ace Bl _Ken .,on 60
Bapr Bible 90 Ozrk Bib te 75
Benedic ti ne 77 Washburn 64
Br iar ( Iff 19 M I.. Mercy 56
Cap it al -66 Mar iet ta 61
Cen t Meth 76 Mo Va lle., 66

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

DJinois State

United Press International

Knicks' rookie center .
Fronting Gilmore, McMillen
held the 7-footer to only four

.

I

:

.

CONTAINING BISON'S NUMBER ONE MAN - Wahama's Jerry Tqcker. No. 10,
went up with Buffalo's Chuck Noffsinger on the offensive boards. Noffsmger, who led all
S(;orers with 28 points, grabbed the rebound "' T•t .- k~r now etl.ompts to prevent him from
movlng up court with the ball.

MEN'S '12 ·
. '14 . '15

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INGELS
. 106 N. 2nd Ave.

FURNITU~E
Middleport,

o.

�6 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday, JAn. 21i, 1977

rH·;i;;H~ip
f

:~

.;.;

'

Us. • •
&gt;ear Helen :

By Helen Hottel

Keep Affairs Out of FaD!lly

When my wife's sisler visited us, we got something goin~
wtule my wife Marianne worked evenings. Ifigured it was just
to kill time, but Elsa thinks different.
She is moving to ow town, and she expecis us to keep on
seeing each other. If I won't, she'll tell Marianna I seduced her
l I being quite a bit older ).
I don 'l want to risk my very good marriage with an affair,
but if I don't, my marriage might go down the drain anyway
when Marianne finds out. She thinks her baby sister can do no
wrong! She isn't so sure about me. What would you suggest?BETWEEN THAT ROCK AND HARD PLACE
Dear BTRAHP:
A true confession before Elsa geis to Marianne with her
(more or less) false one.
••
Or at least tell Elsa this is the way it must be. I've an idea
that when she knows you'll talk rather than keep on seeing her,
she'll change her mind about moving to your city .~ H.

+++

Dear Helen:
We met a couple on a cruise last year and they seemed
nice, so when they called and said they'd be in our area a few
days, we invited them to stay with us.
What a mistake 1 The wife kept asking us to turn up the
furnace. No wonder they went to Bermuda - she·only thrives
at BS;llus degrees ! He required his food cooked special, and
wouldn't eat anything we like. So he took over our kitchen - at
·OUR expense - ordering all soris of goodies from the store.
Worst of all, they're self-centered bores.
.
· They stayed live days ... and told us they'd be back in three
months when the man is due lor another business trip here. .
Get this : they even bragged they were taking their stay
with us off his expense account, at nearly $50 a day ? They
didn 't spend a red cent ' .
Should we make up a pleasant alibi (if so, WHAT, pray
tell' I or tell them flatly we don't want them as house guesis?
- BURNED UP BUT POUTE
Dear BUBP :
Why lie when the truth will eliminate difiicult bores
sooner ? Suggest a good motel - on the other side ol towri. - H.

+++

PERSONAL TO SCARED : Mark Twain once wrote that
there were three kinds of lies: lies, damn lies and statisti&gt;s.
You say the murder rate in your small town has
"increased 200 per cent." Which only means that in 1975 there
were no killings, and last year you had two. BUT one involved
a h.usband-wife fight , the other a dispute over land. Hardly a
major crime wave:
Why not chec~ With your district attorney - as I did' - H.

Recent dinner
party enjoyed

Social
Calendar
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY · Middleport
Lions Club, Wednesday noon ,
at the Meigs Inn.
OHIO VALLEY Commandery 24: Knights Templar, stated conclave Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. Pomeroy
Masonic TempJe.
THURSDAY '
BIG BEND Service Unit of
Girl Scouts will have
tra ining sessi on Thursday
from 10 a.m . to 2 p.m. at the
Firemen's
Middleport
lounge ." The training will be
for brownie and junior troop
leaders and assistants.
MEIGS Chrisiian Women's
Fellowship meeting_ Thurs·
day , 7:30 p.m . at the
Brad!ord Church of Chris~.
Installation -of new officers
will be held.

a

LESSONS "PL~~Eii
Thursday evening&lt;~\ the
usual time there will be
lessons and workshops lor the
Belles and Beaus Western
Square Dance Club. The road
to the Roya l Oak recreation
building where the sessions
are held is being .,cleared.

Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Van
Vranken, Spring Ave.,
Pomeroy, entertained recently with a dinner party honoring their son, Scott, and his
wife, here from Jacksonville,
Fla.
Also celebrated was the
12th birthday of Matthew Van
Vranken. Guests were Mrs.
Floyd Oxley of Athens, Mr.
and Mrs. Tracy Whaley, Mrs.
Gladys Cuckler, Mr. and Mrs.
Jolui Werry , Mrs. Mark
Werry, Bill Young , Mark
Boyd and Jan VanVranken.

The Almanac'
By
United
Press
International
Today is Wednesday, Jan:
26, the 26th day of 1977 with
339 to "follow.
The moon is approaching
its first quarter,
The morning stars are
Mercury, Mars and Saturn.
The evening stars are
Venus and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Aquarius,
· Ame ric!an Gen . Douglas
MacArthur was born Jan. 26,
1880.
On this day in history:
In 1837, Michigan became
Ute 26th state.
In 1861 1 Louisiana seceded
from the Union.
In 1950, India ceased to be a
British dominion and became
the Republic of India.
In 1971, Russia said it bad
landed
an
unmanned
spacecraft on Venus and that
it was sending data back to
earth.

REVIVAL SLATED
Revival services at the Ash
Street Free Will Baptist
Church in Middleport, ,.; 11
begin Monday night at 7:30
p.m. with se r\'ices to be
conducted· nightly through
Feb. 5. Evangelist will be
A thought for Ute day:
Bobby Toler of Man, IV. Va.
General
of Ute Army Douglas
There will be special singing
MacArthur
said, "It is fatal
each evening. Noel Herrto
enter
any
war without the
mann is the pastor.
will to win it."

FREE
INSTALLATION!

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- Pclypropylene case .and cover for high power-to-

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MEIGS TIR.ECENTER, INC.

PARIS ( UPI) - The house
of Lanvin toned down the
folklore look and made it look
verv French Tuesday in the
sprtng-surruner high fashion
collections.
Yves Saint Laurent's
Russian peasant idea of 1976
has not overturned the
fashion world this year. But
some high fashion as well as
ready.towear houses have
picked up the babushka·
tassel,embroidered lever.
Lanvin Designer JulesFrancois Crahay won cheers
for adapting folklore to his
dramatic style in the
tradition of real high fashion .
Soft, full white skirts ,
drawstring peasant blouses
and boleros were daytime
"suits" all in the color of rich
Cream or eggshell. The subtle
folklore look sometimes
appeared
only
as
embroidered bibs or braided
belts with tassels or fringed
head scarves.
For eve ning quilted
sieeveless jackets teamed
\\iUt pinafores of huge floral
printed pinafore dresses
worn over billowing white
:gowns. One mannequin
hugged a quilted peasant
jacket dropping to a point in
back. She flung it open to
reveal a stiff white ruffled
skirt embroidered in white
and a skinny black top. ·
For those who prefer non·
folklore, Lanvin rolled out
taffeta gowns with wide
mushroom pleated skirts,
$lender white daytime suits
and pleated or nowing &lt;·hil'o"

\

By Polly Cramer

.
Handy-dandy hints..
for household chores

·DEAR
READERS :
Arovrid-the·house repairs
have always been an ordeal
lor many people. Here are a
few hints gathered over the
years that simplify many
chores.
DEAR POLLY - When I
couid not lind a yardstick, I
hit on the idea of thumbtack·
ing my tape measure to the
broom handle. This worked
well, since I wanted to
measure from the ceiling
down . With the extra length
provided by the broom, I did
not have to stand on anything
to reach the ceiling.
DEAl;\ POLLY- Those who
doubt their carpentry skill
can use an old comb to hold
· small nails in position, in·
stead of getting their lingers
in the way of the harruner.
DEAR POLLY - To save
tirile, bruised lingers or even
an uneven rod, when starting
to harruner a curtain rod
bracket on to a window
frame , use 'clear tape on it
first. Drive in the nails and
remove the tape. The bracket
does not slip and it is just
where you want it to be.
DEAR POLLY - Try using
golf tees to stop window rattles in the winter. The tees ·
are easy to insert in the proper places in the frame. They
will not show, but certainly
stop the noise.
DEAR POLLY - Put
several soft paper towels by
the telephone before starting
a painting project. II ·you
have to answer the telephone
while working, pick up a
towel and then the phone.
DEAR POLLY - Before
storing a hot wa~r bottle,
blow lightly in jt (after draining ) and quickly screw on,the
top. The air inside will hold
the sides apart.
DEAR POLLY - Before
driving nails lor large picture
hooks in the wall, first look
and see where the nalls for
the baseboards were driven
in. Nails for baseboards are
put in the studdings which
give support that plaster
alone will not provide.
DEAR POLLY - To keep
pictures hanging straight on
the.wall, put a round com pad
on each bOttom corner of the
back of the frame.
DBAR POLLY - Instead of
discarding old dish dramers,
lve kve them to use in the
win~r. Place the drainer on
several thickne:.ses of old
newspapers, then place wet
boots in the drainer dntil the
water drains off of them. II
plenty of newspapers are used there will be no mess when
the dry hoots are remuvt&gt;d.
Rull up paper and discard.
IJfo;A I! POLLY - When yuu
add•·c~~ l~&lt;~k, wrill' thtr
lliliHCS woth illk but th•! ••I·
dn.:s.lofc~ m rwnc-!1. ,\d~lr~~scs

your

Pomeroy

gowns without a trace of bulk.
One mystery was how
women could climb into taxis
in the folklore skirts. One red
dress was like ll "gigllJ1tiC
bubble from floor to bust.
More Lanvin surprises
were huge gold snoods
rovering Ute hair and a red yes, red - .wedding dress.
Designer Emanuel Ungvo
also tooed down the Tibetan
folklore he began using last
year. Striped dresses had full
· sleeves edged with peasant
prints. Evening . apton
dresses in flaming satins had
painted "op art" scenes of
skyscrapers or Tibetan
scener-y.
.
Andre Co·urreges'
presentatioo was a happy,
bouncing parade of vacation
wear: crocheted swim s¢ts,
shorts, windbreakers, pants
a nd loose tops with
dra\vstring edges, miniskirts
and safari outfits.
The stage looked like a
boat. l'he mannequins plus
Co urreg es' 5-yea r -o ld
daughter whirled around on
skateboards and climbed
rope ladders.
For cruise dancing there
was a lovely blouse ill white
organdy embroidered with
blue flowers and worn with
shorts. A spiral of red ruffles
wound around one girl to
Iori!) an evening gown.
Two salons sprung abovelmee skirts on the first day of
the collections Monday. But
both Lanvin and Ungaro kept
skiris at midcall.

Polly's Pointers

write nCJmcs ctmJa&lt;.hh'csscs 111

JOHN FULTZ, MGR.
992-2 101

Folklore adapted' to
fashion collections

so often change , so you will
have a neater hook if you
follow this Pointer.
DEAR POLLY - When Sl&gt;meone borrows a book from
me, I remove the paper
jacket and write the bor·
rower's name in pencil on it. I
keep this,. If the hook is not
returned in a reasilna ble
time, I know where it is and
can drop a gentle hint to the
borrower.

Home money
management
is discussed

Stylists donating to
., v r.harlene

HoPfli~h

.

•.
I

In a letter this week, Mildred Ihle of Racine shared her

recipe foe: "Cfanberry Jewel Squares." She got the recipe from
her daughler, Phyllis Relyea_, who clipped it from a Flint,
Mich. newspaper. Both are "recipe clippers" and delight in
coming up with new recipes to exchange. As Mrs. Ihle puis it,
'"frying • new recipe is a gOQd way to pass a shu tin day out on

leukemia

will lw with Mrs :'v1:trion
1 Mi.ry 1 Darnel!.

!"By JO~N HANAUER
.UP I Television Writer
·NEW YORK .- Paul Klein
linda television an interesting
buslness to be in ~ and lately
an eventful ooe.
Klein , vice president, programs, lor NBC, is the man
largely responsible for the
n~twork ' s "event" programming, from lis Sunday night
"Big Event" to the weekday
"Best Seller" mini-series.
~ ·You still hear residual
st~tic from people who say
Utere's nothing to watch on
tele'vision," Klein said during
ari : inlerview, tilting back
frOth his littered desk to
co1Jiemplate statistics on sets
in 1 use.
/•Recently I was visiting
soineone who' said there was
n&lt;jthing to watch on
·tejevision, and right in the
middle of the conversation
the guy goes into the other
room to watch something on
television. There's a fantastic
rujlount of things to watch on
tete vision."
klein cited ligures showing
thilt on a recent Sunday in
Ntw York City, by 9:30p.m.,
Etstern time 75 per ce nt of
ll'f sets in the area were In
use.
lrhe
NBC
resident
plt&gt;grammer believes that
n(twork television is in an era
of· increasing quality, with

the Value
You can't Measure
the Joy!

IMII!!IIsure

society

CRANBERRY JEWEL SQUARES

Crust : 2cups quick oats {uncooked) , 2-3 cup chopped nuis,
2-3cup butter, melted, and 1-3'cup firmly packed brown sugar.
Filling: l l&gt; cups sugar, 1 eight ounce package cream
cheese {softened), 3 cups cranberries, finely choppeq
(measure before chopping) one 8V• ounce can crushed
pineapple, I cup heavy cream, whipped.
·
For the crust, toast the oats and nuts in a shallow baking
pan in a preheated 350 degree oven lor 15 minutes. Combine the
9815, nuts; butter and sugar and mix well. Reserve \2 cup of the
crumb mixture. !Tess remaining crumb mixtur,f into a nine
inrh square foil lined baking pan. Freeze.
For the fillin g beat together Ute sugar and softened cream
cheese. Blend in tbe cranberries and pineapple. Fold in the
whipped cream. Spoon into frozen crust. Freeze until linn.
Remove from freezer 30 minutes hefore serving.
Mrs. Illle says that she chops the cranberries in the
blender, one cup at a time, and that frozen topping may be
used in place.of the heavy whipping cream.

'fh\! appeal of ihe hot oven on cold days and the goodies
which can be prepared therein will surely mean a pound or two
in the wrong places.
But wbat the heck 1 Come spring -and remember spring
always follows winter - you can tilke to morning jogging.
So here's arecipe for fruit bars - just delicious.
2 eggs, I cup P.@.Cked brown sugar, 2 tsp. vanilla, I cup
nower, I tsp. baking powder, I&gt; tsp. salt, I cup chopped
Candied fruit and peel, 1 cup chopped aates, I cup chopped
nuts.
Beat eggs until thick and lemon colored; add brown sugar
and vanilla. Fold in sifted dry ingredients, fruit, dales and
nuts. Spread batter in greased 8 x 8 x 2 inch pan. Bake at 350
degrees lor 35 minules. Remove from pan while still warm;
cut into squares.

·Ballet performance set.
IRJNTINGTON, W. Va. As part of its 37th continuous
season, The Royal Winnipeg _
Ballet will perform in Huntington, Feb. I under the
sponsorship of the Baxter
Series of the Marshall Artists
Series.
The Canadian troupe,
North America's oldest ballet
company, will present lour
major works. Curtain time is
8 · p.m. at the Keith•Alhee
Theater.
This performance is in·
cluded in Baxter Se ries
seas on me mbership s,
however, tickets lor balcony
seats are available at the
door an hour and a hall before
curtain , or in advance from
the Kenney Music &lt;;ompany
(Huntin gton and Ashland,
Ky. )· and from the Music
Department office at Marshall University . Adult
balcony tickets are $6; youth
through ·the age of 18, 13;
Marshall staff, $5. Marshall
students may obtain free
tickets upon presentatlon of
second semester activity
cards.
The Royal Winnipeg Ballet
has performed on lour continents .in 23 countries, in·
eluding 250 cities in the
United States alone.
· Arnold Spohr is director,
Neal Kay an ·is orchestra
conductor. and principal
dancers
are
Marina

Eglevsky, Salvatore Aiello,
Gallene Stock, Gary Norman,
and Bonnie Wyckoff.
Included on the program
are "Grand Pas Espagnol"
by Benjamin Harkarvy. to ·
music
by
Moritz
Moszkowski; "Adagietto" by
Oscar Araiz, danced to the
Fourth Movement of the
Symphony No. 5 by Gustav
Mahler; "Family Scenes" by
Oscar Araiz, music from
Francis Poulenc's Concerto
for Two Pianos; and '' The
Hands" · by Paddy Stone,
recorded music collage by
composers Malcolm Arnold,
Mozart and Wood, Forde,
Finden, including the voices
of Paul Scofield, Harry
Secombe, Eric Clapton, The
Beatles, George London ,
Graziella Sciutti , and Cleo
Laine.

Professional stylists from
35 Ohio Hair Happening
styling salons will donate
their time, talents and ser•
yices to a "Hair Happening
lor Leukemia."
,
This event is lor the ''sole
purpose of raising funds to
aid leukemia research and
education. It will be held
Tuesday and Wednesday,
Feb. 8 and 9.
Due to the vast area
covered by this event, it will
he held In various locations.
The benefit will he held right
in the local salmis in Athens,
Delaware, London, La n·
caster,
Zanesville,
Chillicothe, Marion, MI. ·.
Vernon, Marietta., Newnrk .
Heath, Gallipolis, Greenville,
Marysville and Washington
Court Hourse, between 10
a.m. and 5 p.m. each day.
The greater Columbus area
salons will join forces lor one
big central location "Hair
Happening" at the Northland
Mall on Morse Road.
·
For a $4.50 donation to the
ill
Leukemia Society
America, the stylists will
, dampen, cut, style and blow·
dry the hair of men, women
and children of all ages.
All proceeds go to charity.
No appointments will be
accepted, so just walk in.
Work will be done on a first .
come, first serve basis.

LUCY

m~re emphasis on special or

"event" programmming and
leis on series.
: •Naturally anybody with a
hi$ series is going to stick
wtth his series,' ' Klein said .
"liut by definition, if one guy
1$ high ratings at 8 p.m. ,
sq);nebody else has low
ratmgs and he's in the
market lor 'event' programs.
1
' At the moment, I've got 80
hours of mini-series in work
for next year."
Klein is a realist and a
television businessman, and
he smiled at a question about
the public "demandin g"
quality television.
"Nobodv de ma nd s ·
anything except better
quality pictures, irrespective

BAKER FURNITURE'S

JANUARY
CLEARANCE SALE

'·

person has his own idea of
quality. To a kid, the Fonz is
quali ty. To an older
individual, 'Sybil' is quality.
Each person seeks his own
level of sophistication. II kids
have 35 per cent of the money
for a produ ct, then you've got
an easy mark appealing to

..

"

-at low cost to you.

"'.....

SEE US TODAY I

II.,.,

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDOI.EPORT
c

of contenl, 11 he said . " Each

.,,,

Featuring the very finest in home
furnishings and major appliances

1: ...

kids.' '

,

Among the 80 mini-series
projects were James T. Far, r~ll's
"Studs · Lonigan, "
:ud0us Huxley's ~~ Brave New
World" and Arthur Hailey's

'"·
I

"

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT STORE

'' Wheels.''

Phone 742-2100
Thur ., Jan. 27 thru Sat., Jan. 29
Cut Up

FROZEN FRYERS ..............:.......................... !~:.. 59~
HOME MADE HAM SALAD ........................~~: . 99~ '"'. .
By the Piece
,,
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.

NOTICE!

'l'lw -t'r'&lt;h mectinl-(

TV••.in Review

· the fann .''

CHESHIRE - Mrs. 'Bettie
Clark, Gallia County extension
agent,
home
economi cs, spoke at the
January meeting · of the ·
Wayside Garden Club at the
hom e of Mrs. Philip Bailey.
Fourteen members were
present to hear Mrs. Clark
discuss one phase of home
mon ey
managem en t ,
"Stretching the Food
DEAR POLLY - With live
Dollar." She said shoppers children, sorting Ia undry and
should consider changing then putting it away used to
buyin g habits by such he a t.xing chore. I finally
methods as: (I) going to the put up a long shelf in the laungrocery store not more than dry room with the children's
once a week . (2) buying foods names taped on at intervals.
in volume. (3) buying . less Cup hooks were put
convenience foods. (41 buying underneath the shelf to hold
foods In season. (5) planning coat hangers. Now I just put
menus a week in advance. (6) the clean clothes on the shelf.
watching- newspapers lor sale Each child knows which sec·
items and specials. (7) lion is ·his and they put away
clipping and using coupons. their own clothes.
(8) preparing a shopping list
and sticking to it. (9) buying
foods your family lllces. (10)
buying unfam!Uar ilems in
small quantities. (II ) reading
food lahels lor cost, quantity,
number · of
servings,
"freshness and brands. (12)
checking house brands
because they are often
cheaper and just as ·
nutritious:
WILL BE OPEN
In conclusion, Mrs •. Clark
said to keep in mind what
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
your family eats determine
how they feel. For health and
. ONLY
viwlity she urged the women
to keep t!H: four baste food
groups (meat, food , milk and
FROM 12 TIL 5 P.M.
cereal) In lnind.
Mrs. Donald Thomas gave
During the
devotions to open the
'
meeting. The president,
Month
of
Mary Jo Shaver, appointed
Vivian Kirby to prepare the
February.
newspaper article for
January and Mrs. Melinda
Check Us for
Bradbury to do the next one.
itWBB also announced a home
All Your
and ve~eta ble school will be
hdd ot the Production Credit
• Assoriatlon bull.din~ in
Volentine Gifts
G• llipoll~ on April ~1 from 10
a.m. to 3 J).m.
Mr~ . Railey scrv"'t "
dcs!lert eour&lt;e followinr. th&lt;'
me«jtln~! .

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport -Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, j,,n. 21i, 1!17&lt;

SIMON'S

16 oz. Booth Ocean Perch Fillets ... ~l.25 pkg.

GIFT CENTER

Decorator Bounty Towels .....2 roll pkg. 85•
Campbells •Tomato Soup 10314 OL can 3/65c

-

32 OL Ragu SGuca with 1neat or plaln•1.19
OL Welchald Grape Drlnk............... stc
20 oL· Teen Queen Catsup •••••••••••••••••• 59•
8 pak Hefty Trash ~gs (heavy duty) •1.09

22 OL Borclens Creamora ............ '1.39 lar
15 OL Del Monte Spinach~ ........ ~ ...... 2/69C ·
3 OL Nestea lnstanJ Tea ............. •1.591ar

'

~ eg1ster
for fr~ pure bred
Beagle pupp y to be given away 1•
74 .76 . No purcha se necessary ,
_need nol be present ro wirr.

people who never read it."
Klein doesn 't project
everything coming up roses
on the television scene - he
recognizes the syndrome he
ca lls the Least Objectionable
Program. In discussing the
most suceessful series now on
television he said:
'"Happy Days' - I guess it
geis lly! kids and it will get
Ute adulis if there's nothing
better on in that time
period.' '
He pointed out that the
advertiser and his agency
know the" size of the audient-e,
and also its demographic
breakdown - and if the
wrong people are watching, a
show can fail despite its high
numhers in the ratings. He
ca lled the job ABC has done
"fantastic" in going from
bottom to top of the network
ratings game, but raised
doubis about the long-term
value of spin-offs.
He cited "Happy Days,"
"Laverne and Shirley " and
the
upcomin g
" Mrs .
Blansky 's Beauties, n one of
whom is Fonzie's former
girlfriend, PinkY Tuscadero.
"Each spin-plf doubles
again the money spent on the
original," he said, "but you
are appealing constantly to
the same audience. n
The advantag~ of "e vent''
prog ramm ing , and Klei n
believes advertisers know it,
os that a smart time buyer
can appeal to different
audiences with his mohcy.
"We haven't done enough
this year, but we 'll be doing
more next year, " he said.
"CBS played a lot of our 'Big
Events' tha t we should have
bought and didn't - like the
Inauguration eve show, Eve!
Knievel , the All-Star Circus,
the Television Critics Awards

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

298 Second St
POMEROY, OHIO
NO SALES TO DEALERS
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

Prices Effective Thru u
January 29, 1977

r

$ 39
"":

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show."

He pointed ollt that even if
30 per cent - or even 40 per
cent - of the television
audience was watching a
single shoW, that left 70 or 60
per cent that was· not.
"Whether it's Entebbe or
the circus or 'Roots, " those
are a II one-time only
programs,'" Klein said, "but
they give the advertiser a ·
chance to spread his money
over more of the audience,
which might be heavily made
up of people buying his
products:''

USDA CHOICE BONELESS
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LETTUCE ··-············
HEAD

Crazy Carl

YELLOW

runs agam

3U
ONIONS ••••••••••••••••
BAG

BANQUET

Barge traffic

stopped cold

'·

•

CUBE STEAK ·············~

Mayor peels to
·underwear
before cameras

Klein
calls
these
NEW BEDFORD, Mass.
dramatizations of famous
(UPI)
- Mayor John A.
novels •'presold," but not
Markey
peeled to his underbecause vast numbers in the
wear
before televison
audience have read them.
~a mera s Tuesday to express
"Theile are pre-sold to the
press,'' he said. 1 'The·read.ing his belief that an arbitration·
public might account for a award to the city's firemen
tenUt 61 a rating point. All the will strip the city 's budget
media feed on each other, bare.
"It's tragic to have to do
pre-selling ea ch other 's
things
like this to get things
products. You ~ ave to
across,''
Markey said. 11But
remember that in television
it's
a
disaster . Unless
terms the audience lor
something
happens and the
evening the biggest movie is
legislature
responds to tbe
small. And as lor books hard cover and paperback real j&gt;roblerns of arbitration
sales of a million are great. there is no way we can
But in television the worst survi ve. ~~
With television ~amer a s
fa ilure of a program still has
recording,
Markey ·stepped
20 million vi.ewers. But a bestaway
lrorri
his desk and
selling book is pre-sold by
began
disrobing.
He handed
reputation to millions of
his sportcoat, tie, shirt and
trousers to city labor
negotiator ArUtur Caron.
"Wait until my wife sees
me," he added , standing in
his underwear.
An arbitration panel
awarded firemen $800,000 in
I
higher pay under a state law
which provides for binding
arbitration of dispu tes
inVolving public employes'
AUSTIN, Tex . (UPI ) - contract negotiations. ·
Crazy carl the flower peddler
listed
some
unique
qualifications lor public
office: Four days in the city
jail, live in the county jail and
10 semesters . at the
CINCINNATI (UPI )
University of Texas, nine of
them
on
scholastic Ohio River barge traffic was
halted today near Carrsville,
probation.
carl Hickerson, who an- Ky., because of an ice jam,
nounced Tuesday he is but a lew towboats managed
running lor the City Council, to push b81"ges thrdugh crusty
sai d· his previ ous jobs ice on most other parts of tbe
included artist's model , go;go river.
The ice jam, a thick, sh o~
dancer and a mari juana
to shore buildup of ice
salesman in Holland.
Hickerson, 32, lmoim to his chunks, "completely blocked
frieqcJs us °Crazy Carl, 11 the river to traffic near the
balances carnations in the Carrsville area," reported .
pabns of his . hands al his John Lane of the U.S. Army
Corps of Engineers. ,
street-corner ·sales stand ,
"The time has come lor . Carrsville Is 425 river miles
dancing in the streets," said downstream from P ncinnati
who
ran and 40 miles upstream from
Hickerson,
unsuccesalully. for mayor in Paducah, Ky . "The rest of the
river is open, but only a few
1971,
Hi' platform for the City barges are opera tlng and
Council campaign includes Utey are moving slowly,"
Lane.
HWa rmer
stopping city •growth, arming said
pollceme? wiUt tranquilizer temperatures than last week
dar\.8\lfl• and creating nude have helped break up some of
the ic~. but ,the weekend
swinjming are BB.
•
•"!lley don't call me Crazy weather forecast Is for lower
Carl for nothing," Hickerson temperatures which probaiJiy
said .
will ct:~ usc some refreczin~ . "

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8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, J7n. 26, 1977

Asia is

Meigs
Property

complex
problem ·

.
· By FREDERICK H. MARKS

TOKYO (UP!) - Since
i952, when the late Dwight D.
Eishenhower assumed the
presidency in the midst of the
Korean War , every new U.S.
president has enli!red office
burdened with problems in
Asia - in most cases,
problell'S encompassing
active
Am e riean
participation in a war:.
1'l ow Jimmy Carter has
entered the Whit.! House, and
it would appear that he wUl
not be weighted down by the

Foreign news
commentary
Far East burdens of his
predecesso rs . Vietnam is
over and there is no

sign ificant figh ting going on
anywhere in Asia.
Yet appearances can lie
deceiving, and Carter may
find that he will have w cope
with a far more complex
situation in Asia than the

relatively sim ple wars his
predecessors faced. For the
fa ct is th?t while ther.e is
peace in Asia, the region is
undergoing a subtle transformation. The post-World War
lJ era appears ro have ended,
and what lies ahead could
ver.y well take it.'l final shape
during
the
Carter
administration.
In China, there is an
internal struggle which is far
fr om resolved; in South
Korea, where 39,000 U.S.
troops continue to confront
Communist fqrces , bilateral
· relations are at an all-time
low i in Japan, there are
potential. economic confron·
in
the
tatto ns, and
Philippines , crucia l
negotiations are being held on
the status of U.S. forces.
Vietnam, of cour~e. is now
Commurlist, as are Cambodia
and Laos. Thailand continues

national origin , sex (except
·where sex is a bona fide
occupational qualification)
age, political affiliation, or
handicap (provided physical
limitation does not prevent
job l&gt;erfonnance ).
It Is our policy to take af·
finnative action to Insure
that aU training programs
and , all personnel actions
such as rate of compeusation,
benefits, transfers, and
promotions, layoffs and ter·
mlnations be administered
without regard.Jo race, color,
religion, national origin, sex,
age, political affiliation.
Henry Wells, chainnan will
have the overall respon:
sibillty of admlnlsterlrig the
program. If a program
participant or applicant feels
he-she
has
been
discriminated a~ain st in
employment, seeking employment aJ.d·i&gt;C training

'

includes a s uit for alimony

the

agreemf'nt art ctP.Rin!lt

DRASTIC REDUCTIONS FOR MEN &amp; BOYS
This is the one sale you have been waiting for . Remember

SAVE ON MEN'S SUITS

~

PRICE

:i

~~Lkrn

Plaids &amp; plain colors in all
Polyester &amp; Polyester and
wool blends. · Some are
vested.
·
Regular , shorts and longs.

Y2 PRICE

Regular Price 5100.00 to
5150.00

are contradictory and sooner
or later- short of taking no
action whatsoever - Carter
will have to choose one or the
other.
Leaving
aside
the

with this Meigs County
Commissioners he-she should
immediately contact Naorpa
Brinker, 992-5526 to pursue
the proper discrimination
complaint procedure.
· EEO is a legal, social and
economic necessity ior Meigs
County CETA Programs. All
employees are asked to assist
in this effort to achieve equal
employment opportunity.
Any' willful or deliberate
violation by any employee of
this Meigs County CETA
Program of this equal em·
ployment opportunity policy
will be cause for appropriate
disciplinary action.

VOLPE RETURNS
BOSTON (UP!) - Retiring
U.S. Ambassador John A.
Volpe, 68, says he plans ro
keep busy, perhaps li!aching
or writing a bonk. But after :M
years in public life, he says he
is through with politics.
Volpe flew home Monday
after four years as U.S.
ambassador to Italy.
"I don 't say I'll retire
completely," he said. " I
expect to keep busy."
lle said he would also
consider serving on the board
of some national firm .
"But as far as going back to
the con•1rudion business or

'" '" ' '

275

Small charge for al terati(lns .

~ , ,.,...,..... o ... ltiiH

U ,,,., , ,..

ol ,io.oof,og !Jiot&lt;:IW"O . l"9&lt;y '"'~ ol •1 . Irom

b.J I! to muttl o, h&lt;Jo beOA •• ~•''' "utlod ..,.., """"""'glw"' ""~ d to pr~ .,d•

£., ,.,,,.

d"O&lt;II~ I&lt;I

btl" oi

10122

NOW JUST

·

10 ONLY

HECJ( 'S REG . $149...

LEISURE JACKETS
1/3

OFF

All polyester in navy
brown.
·
Reg . 529.50
1

blue &amp;

Sale Price 1!f
Sizes S. M. L &amp; XL.

These ma.lch the Ja ckets
mentioned above. Sizes are
broken .
·
Reg . 516.98

DRESS SLACKS
¥3 OFF

$20.00
Sizes are broken but these are all
from our regular stock of High
Quality Coats .

Plaid. chec ks and plain' co lor s.
Sizes 29 to 50.
Reg. Sl2.95 to $27.50

Valu!!S to SOOO

Sale Price s~ to s18

1

Small charqe for

ions .

Pl aids and plai n colors in regul ars, shorts

MENS TIES
%OFF

You will wdnt several of these . A ll from
our rack of high qual ify ~ies . Both Ready
Tied and Ti e You r Own sty les.

Reg . $3.00 to $7.50

Sale Price 1ZX' to 1500

Reg . Price ~6.98 to $14.98
1 66

Sale Price 4 to s~

LEISURE SHIRTS
%OFF

ENS WINTER JACKETS
liz PRICE

MENS SW.EATERS
lJ2 PRICE

NYLON JACKETS
¥3 OFF

A small quantity but a big buy.
Reg. $14.98to $17.98

Sale Price 1749 ·to sg99

Sale .Price 111 :rz to 113:rz

BOYS DRESS &amp;
CASUAL SLACKS
1h PRICE

BOYS SHIRTS
%OFF

MENS

ODD LOT

Size 25 to 29
Reg. Prlces8.98toS14 .98

You will want more than one of 1hese . A
very good name in_shir1s. Sizes 10 to 20.

Reg . $2.98 io $6.98

Sma ll charge tor alterations .

Small through XL. Round neck
and button placket styles .
•
Reg . $4.98 to $10.98

MENS NUMBER

All MENS

NOVELTY TRANSFERS

MENS
BLUE JEAN SALE.

FOOTBALL JERSEY
¥3 OFF

AFTER SHAVE
LOTIONS AND
COLOGNES

You mav put these on your own ,
shirts or we will put it on any shirt
you purchase from us for only 99c

Sale Price '14.98
Sale Price 111.98
Sale Price '9.98

Both Pre-washed and reg . heavy
weight styles .

ODD LOT

ODD LOT

CUB SCOUT &amp;
BOY SCOUT PANTS
•2.00

CUB SCOUT &amp;
BOY SCOUT SHIRTS
•2.00

Sizes are broken

Sizes are broken

ODD LOT

80% POlYESTER e 20% COTTON PRESHRUNK

and storage.

•

1/3

88

SPORTS.DEPT.
SEAWAY

4 PLACE-GUN
RACK
WITH DRAWER .

$799

We are sure you can find
something you win! in this group .

in luggage

DRAPES COM E IN 30". 36"
AND 45". ASSORTED COL·
ORS , PERMANENT PRESS
AND FOAM LINED .

BOTI-J rE ~ SHIRTS AND BRIEFS ARE
DACRON AND 50% COTTON. COMES
SIZES2 -1 6
,

PIG. OF J

leT.

VINYL
PONCHO

gge

$218
HECK'S REG.
TO $4.99

HECK'S
REG.
TO $2.99 ....

CLOTN/1/C
leT.

CI.OTNIIIG

DISPOSABLE DIAPERS

· Heck's Reg. '1.99

.,.

BATH SETS

Allrodive both 1e! 'de11QMd tor uny
ba throo m de(or. Available in ,olid
color1 .

2PC.

Spods Dept.

JPC.

2 5

5 99 5 99

$13"
.

SPORTS DEPT.

TROUT
NET

77~

HECK'S REG.
T0$6.99

C/.0fiiiii{/J91i
IATES FliER II

CARPET
MATS

BED PILLOW
EXTRA PLUMP AND PERMA·
Nf~J PRESS.

DURAPAK
ASSORTED SIZES

HIC~'S REG.
.

9'

6(

SHBS•r.

21" ~ ~6 ' 1 SHAG
OR 21" X 42'' FRING-=

11''
u ..
15" X 27" REM.NANT

'

BAIT HOLDER

IIOADLOOM .

EXTRA PlUMP, NO III:ON, PERMA, NENT PRESS.

HICK'S
lEG.
$3.99

$244

TERRY
WASHCLOTH$

HECK'SIEG.
SS.99

U ' )( "'!Z' RUNNER

$2'6

$166

DOl II

"''-•1.

I

HICK'S lEG.
$2.99 DOZ.
CIOT/IIIIf

»r.

polities, per sc , no ."
I

HECK'S
REG.

SPORTS DEPT.

This is a real buy
,.

TENNIS
RACKET

HECK'S REG.
'1.18

MENS
LIGHTWEIGHT JACKETS·
Y2 PRICE

!f we ·have your size lhis.is

GARCIA
MAGNESIUM

$23 .9~

ODD LOT

.MENS WHITE PAINTER
&amp;CARPENTER OVERALLS
Y2 PRICE

.88
SPORTS

FRlftT (J THE LOOM
WHITE RIB BRIEFS
OR T-SHIRTS

SHirs

LUGGAGE ·Avery good name

IRON
SIGHTER
HECK'S tREG.

BOYSi

SHORTIE DRAPES

HEI;:K'S REG.
$14.18

OFF

% P~ICE

'99.88

HECK'S REG.
T0$15.99
ClOTHING DEPT.

ODD LOT OF

CUB SCOUT &amp;BOY
SCOUT EQUIPMENT
lfz PRICE

HECK'S REG.

e MACHINE WASHABLE e NO IRON

HICK 'S
IIG.
$14 .99

Values to s5.98

Small through 1Extra Large in
Reg ., Green ana Blue.
Reg . $5.~8-Sale Price $3.99

ODD LOT

Siles are broken .
a real buy .

~orrying

These have a fancy design· on
front or back. Sizes are broken .

Sale 'Price s4.49 to s7.49

Reg. 19.98
Reg. 114.98
Reg. '11.98

BEDSPREAD

hot plates, gas burne rs. Feofuru adjustable 5teel boke rock and tO~)' to
read the rmometer. Fold, Hoot for
ea5y

1577

FULL BED SIZE

Coleman Como Oven .

$2.50 each· ·

.Sale Price J332 to s7 32

Of Your Choice gge

COLEMAN

MENS FANCY T-SHI

KNIT SHIRTS
¥l orr·

Sale Price 11!II to W6

1

5

HECK'SREG.
$24.99

Work~ on Colem a n 'tove\, electri&lt;

Reg. $1 6.98 to $18.98

Sale Price 11SOO to 2J'il

8oth short sleeve and long sl,eeve in group.

~· ~

CAMP OVEN

Light weight but warm.

Sale .Price s~ to su 99

1

DAISY RED RYDER
BB RIFLE

~~.:::::=:iilliiiiiliii~ONLY

Plain colors. stripes and fancy patterns In
pol yester k.nit, dacron &amp; cotton . Blends
that ne ver need ironing . A nice run of sizes
tram 141? to 111 :-.
·

MENS &amp; BOYS

Reg . S12 .98toSI7 .98

.

DRESS SHIRTS
¥3 OFF

. ODD lOT

Reg. 536 ..00 to $55.00

19

99

$2218

· 2 ONLY

4 POWER SCOPE
most popular fixed power
model
Compact,
' defield
economical . Offer s the versat ility
needed fo r both close in and
moderate long ranges . Nearest thing
to an all -purpose, all ·around fixed
po wer scope.

CROSMAN

. HICK 'SREG. $37.11

S/'OITSDgT.

MENS

ODD LOT

throug h XL .

5

&amp; lOngs. Not as many as usual but fhis is a
real buy

MENS

very good name in shirts. Sizes S

.

34

'·

.HECK'S REG.
$25.99

5988

BB RIFLE

Eo5y· li1e Val ve e Au tomatic cleaning generator ·tip e Striped froited globe • Ru~t ­
resi~tcnt finish e Wide ventilator

Sale Price 32!&lt;1 to 14QOO

Sm al l charge for al terati on .

MENS

6 ONLY

Reg. $65 to $80
1

Now Just s4.99

Small charqe tor alterati ons.

e

SPORT COATS
1f2 PRICE

Just 24 in lot so sizes are broken .
Reg. $9.98

Sale Price $11.32

MENS SPORT COATS

A

STYLE P
1f2 PRICE

JEANS

ODD LOT

MENS

ODD LOT OF MENS

. HECK 'S REG. $15 .11

EASY LITE
LANTERN

REDFIELD

RUGER 22 AUTOMATIC
5

COLEMAN

Small charge for alteration . All from our
regu lar stock of high qual ity le isure suits.

MENS WESTERN STYLE

s11911

v-""11

'""'QUI' •No• ....,.,.y

- . . . - -· .

MENS WESTERN STYLE

WINCHESTER
PUMP SHOTGUN

U""""'' "' '~It,. """' l&gt;&lt;lrdnt hotto"'... ln&gt; l&lt;!tl '"''"11'"11 · llrotglllul
ro~ b.,y lo. l ••l..,blo. lo~~""""U 1 ~d. ...-"""
/mnl loo i +&lt;&gt;&lt;J ho ofO k boh &gt;1 "'"1"" """-d .,.,~ IO"""f h,tocl lodong

Reg. , shorts &amp; longs. Not every s ize in every
color. but this is a real buy .
·
Reg. $85.00 to $100.00

' 'Koreagate'' sca ndal
I alleging Korean bribes of

.

'

we only have 2 Sales per year . Practically every item in store is on sale.

Doors open prompt.ly at9 A.M. Closed all day Thursday . Jan. 27 preparing for this event. All Sales Cash.

other.

Vietnam prevent Carter from

JANUARY

FRIDAY, SATURDAY &amp; MONDAY-JANUARY 28th, 29th and 31st

Basically, hoWever, the two

U.S. congressmen in return
for support of South Korea ),
the cr ucial . question for
Carter in Korea will be not
only the status of U.S. troops
there Ihe has proposed a
phased withdrawal), but just
how far the American
commitment ro South Korean
security extends. Will he be
willing to become embroiled
in a war to ctefend South
Korea , or will the tragedy of

.J4)hn

CANCELLED
Lee Davis, Middleport .
Louis Vaughan, Carl Hysell
and Mandy Lefebre .were - The January meeting ofthe
appointed deputy sheritrs of American Legion Auxiliary
Meigs County. The marri~ ge of .F'eency·Bennett Post 128,
of Jeffrey Joe f(arr and Middleport, scheduled for
Beverly Ann Karr wa s Wednesday night has been
dissolved.
cancelled.

SEMI-ANNUAL CLEARANCE SALE

co mmitment to Taiwan's

security on

York , Philip and Alice
Globokar. Pomeroy against
Robert Ougan. The petition
rlaims the defendant, Dugan,
negli~ently operated his

motor vehielr into the porch
and foundation o( a home
owned by the pl!li!J!iffs on
June 6. 2976.
Beverly Kay ·Davis ,
Midland, Pa. , filed for ~UJ&gt;­
port under the reciprocal

NEW YORI( CLOTHING HOUSE

Carli!r has been fuzzy in his
China .stali!ment.'l- pledging
acceptance of the terms of
the Shanghai C9mmunique on
the one hand, while not
reneging on the U.S.

.

to race , color, religion ,

Racine Home National Bank.
Another suit asking $1 ,040
was filed by tile Preferred
Mutual Insurance Co. . New

his control.

for equal opportunity

equal emp loyment op·
·portunities for all applicants,
participants and employees
in all facets of its CETA
operations; and where
deficiencies are noted to take
affirmative at1ion to correct
such deficiencies. In addition,
it is our policy to recruit, hire
and promote in all job
classification without regard

F:. Morris, Pomeroy and the

filed by Sh~rley Ann Morris,
Rt. 1. Rutlanrt 'l)!:Jin't Roland

J . E. Lyons Corp. to Jay
Hall Jr ., Parcels, Salisbury,
Robert M. Hill, Evelyn Hill
·to Wendell Grate, Donna
Grate, Merrills Add .,
Rutland.
Robert Hill, ~velyn Hill to
Wendell Grate, Donna Grate,
Merrills Add ., Rutland.
Bonnie M. Whittington to
Denzil !,. Proctor, Lot,
Middleport.
Mary Hazel Frances, Af·
fidavit , Salem .
Gladys F. Cains, Affidavit,
Pomeroy.

Commission poll~y is

missioners is committed to

The Meigs Co unty Common
Pleas Court docket today

Transfers

responding to such a threa l'!
, In Japan, the economic
confrontations will no doubt
continue - confrontation is
inevitable g;ven the gigantic
size of the two economies.
Carter, however, obviously
attaches great imporU!nce to
Japan and it appears that his
devotion to the U.S..Japan
relationship will override the
inev
itabl e economic ·
to waver in the wind,
difficulties.
spasmod ically undergoing
In the Philippines, the
cou ps and democratic
Carter
administration will
experiment.'l as it tries W
have
some
hard decisions to
adapt to · the prevailing
make
.
PreSident
Ferdinand
forces . Countries like
E.
Marcos
has
threatened
to
Malaysia, Singapore and
renounce
his
treaties
with
the
Indonesia are trying to cope
with cha nges brought about U.S. if he dosn 't get his way
by both the oil crisis and the with regard·. to U.S. bases.
political changes wrought by The basic question Carter
the Communist vic tory in faces will be just how
important U.S. bases in the
Indochina.
Finally, there is India, Philippines are - and will the
where
l11dira
Gandhi United States be willing to
continues wforge ahead with pay Marcos'· price for
her peculiar brand of power keeping the bases?
So, the United Stali!s is
politics which encompasses
faced
with a new evolution in
not only a heavy domestic
Asia.
It isn 't a question' of
hand but her experiments
ignoring
Asia, pecause that is
with atomic weapons.
impossible.
Rather it. is a
It is, "then, a delicate
question
of
adaptation situation Carter faces. Some
adjusting
to
the
new realities
aspect.'l, such as the Chinese
which
have
taken
shape internal struggle, are beyond
and are still taking shape.

An official statement of
policy requested published by
the County Commission today
is as follows:
The Meigs County Com·

Alimony suit on docket of Meigs court

..

•

22SHOIT
SHELLS

69
·
,,. .... .
HICK'S
lEG.

S/WTSIB'T.

C

�. I

12 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday. Jan. 26, 1971

13 - The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday. Jltn. 2fi, 1977

Chinese picture symbols .return by

'" . .~-,'ilMore market power needed by potato growers in U. S.

government .order in 'Nippon writing

By BERNARD BRENNER
Farmer Cooperative Service, said.
Thev blamed the failur e of
UPI FARM EDITOR
said the nationa l group could
FCS experts said farmers the groups to get better prices
1
~:; ' WASHINGTON !UP!) _ help existing
regiona l have already set up lor farmer s on fa ctors
~
By
Bob
Hoeflich
~
!
!
Potato
growers,
who
lind
a
bargai
ning
associations.
b.rgalnin~ groups in severa l including a lack of adequate
'· ~ .
· growing proportion of their
Economist Michael J. Phil· ma jor prod ucing regions ma rket information and
crop now going to a compara- lips , one of the authors of the bemuse they fow1d - as an ana lysi s, and on th e
lively small number of big report, says the result could increasing proportion of the insistence of some farmerWllarever h.appened to Bruce and 'l -~·ry ?
Bruce and Terry are the sons of Mr. and Mrs. Harley corporate processors, should be to give farmers a bigger na tiOn 's polatoes began members on dealing directly
with processors.
Stalnaker, RouiJ! 3, Pomeroy, who a few years back graduated set up a national bargaining share of lhe dollar consun1ers
Also . Phi llips pointed out ,
from Pomeroy High School. Through their high school years association to bolster their spendfor processedfoods like
Bruce and Terry displayed unusual musical talent and took bargaining power, a team of frozen french fries. But it
part in the Big Bend Minstrel Association shows. Following Agriculture Depa rtment shouldn't increase conswner
prices, because the farm
high school,armed forces service and the like, Bruce at tended experts says.
The
proposal,
included
in
a
gains would come out of moving lhrough processing
college an~ gol his degree. Terry attended barber college and
report
by
the
departme
nt
's
current
processor profits, he plants in stea d of fresh
began working in the trade.
markets - that ind ividual
However, with both of them, the gnawing call of "show
farmers were at a
biz" continued. They fooled around with music as a "spare
rli sadva ntage in negotiating
CLEVELAND I UP! ) time" activity, and then both made the plunge into the field of
wnh processors.
F . Gustafarro,
Joseph
professional entertainment.
•
"While
produce
rs
are
director
of
the Natural Gas
from the grvss sales of any
For a time, theyworked as l team, then decided to go their CITY TO DRILL
limited
to
only
a
few
buyers,
A
ction
group
of the U.S.
natural gas found on the city
CLEVEJ,.ANO I UPI)
separare ways to try to make lt up that difficult ladder of
processors
buy
from
many
Commerce
Department,
said
Mayor Ralph Perk said Tues- property.
succes• in the world of show business.
producers.
The
ability
of
Tuesday
the
gas
shorta
ge
is
Each of !he fi ve wells is
Both have done well. Bruce is currently enrertaining in a day that drilling for natural
processors
to
offer
contracts
not
contrived
but
is
a
very
Chicago club and following a few days break will go to Georgia gas on Cleveland&lt;~wned land estimaWd at being able to
a ta ke it or leave it basis real problem.
on another engagement. Bruce sings well (do you reme mber in Warr ensv ille Township produce 80,000 cub ic feet of on
encoura
ges produce rs to
Gustafarro is in Cleveland
gas daily for up to 10years .. U
his smash version of Elvis in the Big Bend Minstrels) and uses will begin 10 days .
organize
,"
the
report
said.
to
speak on the ene rgy crisis
successful,
the
drilling
The gas explotation to be
the guitar, piano, organ and saxophone in his act.
But
the
regional
bargaining
at
Case Western Reserve
projec
t
would
provide
enough
Terry also sings well and leans heavily on guitar conducted by Mona rch
groups in Idaho , Oregon, University, Gustafarro said
gas
to
heat
300
to
:;oo
homes-aEnergy
Corp
.
will
include
accompaniment. He is at Fort Myers, Fla. now and wiU go to
New Orleans in February for a three week engagement before drilling five wells, according month during the wint er Washington, Maine and the Americans are going to have
Red River Valley have not to be more concerned about
returning to Fort Myers for March and April at the Holiday Inn to Perk. Monarch has agreed hea ting season .
been
effective, experts said. the lOng term gas situation.
to pay the city 15 .6 per ce nt
there.
Bruce married the former Linda Chapman of Pomeroy.
She Jives in Gallipolis with the couple's two children, Mark and
Julie, while Bruce plays gigs over the country. Terry's wife,
Teresa, travels with him on his jaunls around the country.
IncidentaUy, Bruce u~ the stage name, HBruce Stone"
and Terry uses the name, "Terry Star,"
·The music of the two young men just didn't come from no
where. There has been natural talent on both sides of the boys'
COST CUTTIR COUPON
COST CUTUI COUPON
12
parents, Harley and Jo Stalnaker.
I I 1
"11.
1
Bruce has cut his first record of two original songs, "No
11 • .
I I
One WiU Ever Know" and "I Wish You Happiness, I Wish You
I
I I '
.
Love." The record shows Bruce has come a long way sinc.e his
local appearances. His voice and his music are pleasant on the
recording. By the way, a copy has been giyen to WMPO so,
perhaps, you'll be hearing the songs by Bruce on the local air

'

By ROBERT CRABBE
TOKYO (UP!) - Using his
country's simple alphabet, a
Japanese cllild can wrliJ!
"kutsu," the _Japanese word
for "shoe," with two strokes
of a pen.
But it wiU get harder this
year. By government decree ,
the proper way to write
"shoe" will be with a
co mpli ca te d Chinese
character that requires 12
pen strokes.
China's age-old way of
writing with picture-like
symbols , which most
Americans and Europeans
see only on Chinese
resi&lt;Jurant menus, is making
a comeback.
Predictions after World
War II that written Chinese
was headed for the gra veya rd
of dead scr ipts such as
Egyptian hieroglyphics so far
have not come true.
Chinese 'characters today
remain the tool of higher
literacy for close to one
billion people living in China.
Japan , the two Koreas ,

Tai wan and pa rts of
Southeast Asia . More people
write with them than the
co mbined popula tions of

North America and Europe . Chinese
characters using them .
In Asia's vast wne of permitted .
Even such essential com•
in
daily
Chinese culture, the Chinese newspapers be extended to munications , as labels on
writi ng system has been . 1,900. Il had been held lo 1,850 Japanese medicines often
ousted only in Vietnam , since 1948, when a reform of employed Chinese symbols
where the Western alphabet the written language was that children theoretically
was substituted during carried out. A high school were not taught
in
French rule.
graduate will be expected to elemrntary and high school.
In South Korea, where the know all 1,900. ·
In North Korea, studenls
language is written with a
The council's recom- going throilgh the lOth g ra~e
co mbination of Chinese mendation is expected to are wught only the Korean
symbols and a na tive preva il. It will restore · alpha bel, and Chinese
alphabet, an official attempt com pli cated Chinese symbols are not used in the
to get rid of Chinese and rely · characters for words such as press. However, all children
only on the alphabet was "s hoe ," " umbrella," and selected for higher education
J
dropped in 1972.
''soup" that co uld be written are required to master
Ia¢ • .
" Knowing Chinese with far )ess effort,. in the Chinese writing.
characters is essential to alphabet.
•
;l!ll!il .
· China
itself
has
better undersi&lt;Jnding of the
Strangely, Japanese seem experimented with writing its
Chinese culture which to prefer it that way.
language in Western letters t· ·
I
encompasses China, Japan
"The connection between and a Chinese alphabet ·~:~::;::;:,
a nd Korea ," said Shim words and symbols is very during the Communist rultt · Chang-yu, the South Korean strong among our people," that started in 1949.
education minister at the said Tokyo's Yomiuri
Because of the country's
time . Now high school newspaper in a comment ,on wide varie\Y of dialects,
graduates are expected · to the decision. ·
· Chinese in Peking, Canton,
know !,BOO of them.
and
other
To Japanese, "shoe" Shanghai
In Japan, a post-World War writt en in the alphabet important cities ca nnot
n trend to restrict use of simply does not look like a understand each other's
Chinese symbols, which ·the "real" word. "Shoen written speech.
MOVING CAUTIOUSLY - George Goff, a Belpre
Japanese call ''kanji, " has with a Chinese symbol does.
The picture script enables resident, watches as the CapUlin Briscoe, a tow from
just been reversed.
Even when Chinese them to communicate by · Houston, Texas, makes ils way through the ice in the Ohio
The
gover nm e nt 's symbols were banished from writing. It is sure to be
River this past week. Before the "Briscoe" broke the ise. it
Adv isory Co uncil on the school
books
and retained until some day a
Japa nese Language newspapers, people went long way off when Chinese
recommended tha.t the list of right on learning them and speak a common language.

in

~enied

by

had been two days since a tow had passed the tight bend here '
at Belpre. The vessel, with four empty gasoline barges, •
cleared the way for others coming southward behind it.
(Sheppard photo).

·------

Wm. Cossler

may not veto a.bortions for regulated company is
immune from antitrust
Wlwed minors.
attack
gQes to the U.S. Court
- Refused to schedule a
of
Appeals
here.
quick decision as to federal
Agreed
in a New York
court jurisdiction in the
government's giant antitrust case to deeide whether city
suit against the American officials can be sued under
Telephone &amp; Telegraph Co. federal civil rights law if the
The issue of whether such a money sought as restitution

comes out of public funds.
- Agreed to decide
whether federal judges may
authorize FBI agents to
record numbers dialed at a
particula r telephone and
whether the te lephone
company may he ordered to
cooperate.

waves.

Doing one's part to keep

Mr. Carter's common touch

Young allowed

Woman

' MRS. lOLA DAMEWOOD, WHO is one of our thoughtful
residenls who urges everyone to feed the wildlife during the
IJ!rrible weather, has quite a menagerie included in the 50
pound of feed served out of her Syracuse home each week.
Among the menagerie are two rabbits and a small skunk. I
~pe that skunk is grateful, ,don't you?

'

i

Mason County

Shout Them from the Classifieds!
Searching for the clever way to say "I Love You?"
Our Happy Volentine Ads .will be puhlis)led on
February 14, nnd •offer you a truly unusual way to
proclaim your love and best wishes. We have a size
to fit every lover's budget anrl our friendly Arlvi·
~ors will he happy to help you write your message.

(DEADLINE WILL BE FEBRUARY 9TH)

D

D

T11 Mom an&amp;! Dad •• •

To My Wife, Ann . ; ,

We touldn 't hav e pi cke d o
nic er pa ir of po re nh in the
world! Ho~e a Ha ppy Vol ·
en line 't Doyl

15 wondtrfLP I yeon'
of marriage , I'm 1lill head ·
After

o~er- he eh

•

in love wi!h yo u I

Wallet l .

Mike and Sue

.hired

in priesthood

To Our

Favorite
Teacher
Mn.• Smith -

!

information needed . to
formulate a bargaining
straiJ!gy ."
For the long run, the report
said farmers could consider
furthe r steps including
possible development of a
single national bargaining
agency to sell potatoes for
growers in all paris of the
counll'\' .

•

To Jane -

Thank1 for

I wont

yo~o~

for

my Vole~ tine, ond I w~n 'r
take "no" for an a n,werl ·

ma ki ng Scienc• fvn lo le arn .
W e th in• you 're !op1l

·~

from

lo'le, Tam

Your Ctau

.

'

PHONE 992·2156
.,
I

THE DAILY SENTINEL
I

I

{

w.

Va. - Today we are asked to conserve
energy, and rightly so. We all know that som.e day our
resources will be gone. What about lhe next genera~ons ?
Many of the pioneers burned much of the best timber as
they needed the land more than the timber. Good trees were
siacked and burned . Today, as many of us know, good timber
is scarce and expensive. Much wood in pioneer days was used
to keep their dwellings warm.
·
.
According to a very old West Virginia Geological Survey,
an article by Mason County's Hon. Virgil A. Lewis, Sl&lt;lte
Historian and Archivist, gave the condition in Mason County
about the beginning of. the Civil War:
·. •
.
·
"Many of the finest trees were used Ill the butldlng of
'worm fences.' I have no doubt, if the present value of lumber
should be placed upon the timber burned in the clearings in
Mason County, on the hills, along the stra~ and on the
bottom, from the beginning of the white man m 1774 down to
the year 1880, that it would amount to many miUlons of
dollars."
Ordinary rail cut from which the ralls were split was
usually 11 feet in length. Oak, poplar, and even walnut trees
were used for this purpose. "I yet remember," said Lewis,
"how readily the walnut cuta split and how many hundreds of
pan'els offence were split of this valuable wood.''
A two story house, he said, "was built near the present
·town of Ashton, was constructed almost entirely of walnut
logs. The house was in a remarkably good state of preservation
wben it burned a few years ago.''
.
In the years inunedlately afrer the war, mills using
circular saw were introduced and remained until the timber
was practically exhausted.
,
Most of the mills were small. At Point Pleasant and 'some
other places, however, there were larger operations, .
Comstock's miU opera)J!d at Point Pleasan~ in the 1860s,
succeeded by Benedict's MiU, and his by Fehon'i Mill, the last
to manufacture in quantities for shipment.
My husband's father, the late Robert Eastham Marshall,
was in the timber business and brought logs off the hllls back of
Clifton with oxen.
Mason Penooal Mention
.
Charll McDaniel and nephew, Shawn, visited in Colwnbus
with Mr. and Mrs. Stan Saunders and family on Saturday and
with Mr. and Mrs. James IAlyd at Nashport on Sunday and
Monday.
Mr. McDaniel returned borne on Monday and Shawn
McDaiuel remained for a longer visit at Nashport.
. On Sunday, Mrs. Rhoda Yeager, was a dinner gueat of her
daughter and son4n~aw, Mr. and Mrs: James Diehl and ·!Q
EDen.
IN SPITE OF RECEN,T bad weather, the Mason· City
Historical Society has cootinued to meet .every Thursday.
Bllliness meetings are held on the first and third Thursdays at
the historic home on Brown Street at 10 a.m. The group is busy
knotting two ccmlorters as a money making project.
'
Future activities wiD include a family dinner for active
members February 12 at 5p.m. at the home and continue work
meetings to comPlete the comforters to sell.
Mrs. Landon Smith, presl&lt;!ent, presided at the meeting on
Thunday, Jan. 20. She gave a readlng entlUed, "Take Time.''
Mrs. J . R. Marshall gave the secretary's report which was
approved and Mrs. Delwoo Roberts, treasurer, reported. Mrs.
Earl Ingels read scripture Matthew 13 :1-9 verses. She also
gaveareacllng, "ThlsistheBeglru&gt;lngof a~• .· ne ·•
liom11111de soup waa served. Atrendin~ 11 "re Mrs. Earl
Jngela, Mra. Delwon Roberta, Mrs. Cecil Smith, Mrs. Landon
• Smith, Mrs. Delmar Alexander, Mrs. Ray PJ;offitt, Mrs. John
Marshall, and Mrs. Dennis Harris.
'~

APPLICAIUE STATE &amp; LOC AL

r.-.x E ~

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With Cou.an

YOII IIIII Ul JU :t. ltn Mlft110EJO
l~ •c ••u su,, uo lOUl w1 1
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·------------------ ----·

1. . . Rill~. rvt~l ' o•lm
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mu su .. JU. :t 1tn l~IHC! ro I
$1111 AMO Uti\ lUll
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COST CUHII COUPON

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LIMIT 2 PKGS. WITH ( OU,ON AND
57 ,SO 01 MOl£ PURCHAU

'IIRCH~~~

VQtD AFTE~ SAf . JAN. 19, 1977
SUBJECT TO APPI IC "'m ST AlE &amp; LOt AL TA),f S

REPORT CONFmMED
MONTPELIER, Vt. (UPI)
- Reports that exiled
Russian author Alexander
Solzhenitsyn plans tn make
his home in Vermont have
been confirmed by Gov .
Richard Snelling.
Snelling told a news conference Monday he had a three·
hour lunch Saturday with the
1970 Nobel Prize-winning
author . He said Solzhenitsyn
told him he plans to live in
Vermont until he can· return
to a "free Russia."

Banquet
Fried Chicken

r::1

L!!J I

VO ID .AFlfR SAT., JAN . 29, 1977

sul~~~r 1T ~~~~~~~:Es~~~:r~~~~~:~~Es [!]

--------------------· -------------------1

roger Means
Better

1~~.!.~ L,.~!~ I ~.F.~~.~ ~~~,.~,~~ RA NTEE '
lo• '~" ' ·~•al '""''"''' "" " 9"'~' •" ~~

"'"'''"''"'' ' "'"" "'' ""' •Q"•' ,,~

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,., ., ,.p lo&lt;• '~ " ' ' ''"' • &lt;'• '"• '"'"' b •ood "' o
'*'""o•oblo ~•ono1 o&lt; •o 0 u nd • •• • O Y'&lt;~ D•o OfOf O

We ol.1o q voopr tce !ho i "' e ,. ,11 do e•· e r y !h i ~g
tn OJf oo,., f.r 10 llo •e am ple 1uppl ie1 of o il
&lt;XI•~•! ~~d •p.,&lt;toll on our , h.,l•el whe n you
11&gt;0p !or 1nem 11 due 10 condOI&gt;OI'II beyond oLPr
cont1ol , we ru~ 0~ 1 of on od11e r1o 1e d lpe&lt;iol, wt
w•ll w b!hlute 1he 1o me •Iem . ~ o t crnpclfohle
brond •.. he n 1uch on •!em '' o•oiloble l
•eUe( hn&lt;J 1h ~ IC'M ,.,.,,;9' or, il ~c u p• efer
g.. e you o " RAI N CHfCI( " ,.h,ch entitle \ you 10
1he 1ome od•ert •ted ;pttiol ot 1he 1cme 1peciol
pnce or r ""'e ,., ,,n,n 30 doy1

'

U.S. GOVT. GRADED
d&lt;OtCE BONI·IN

loin

Strip Steak

9

' "'""'9::!$1
4 ·i:·~~· $1
2 !! $1
~~~

Fruit Cocktail .
leans . . .. . .
Del Monte

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. . . . . . . . . ., ., . .sac

Catsup .. .. ..

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!MUIUT llSKn

----------·-----------·
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G,atle A
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LIM IT 1 COUPON PER fAMILY PLEASE

!liMIT'""" 11.10 .. ""''

GET
ONE
. • .(T , , . ,,
Eskimo Pies

sUOO• MOlE

-------- ___ .. __ --- ---·L!J

--BUY----ONE -·
111 Del Monte
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LIMIT ll&amp;li WITH COUPON AND

VO ID AfTER ~AI JAN . 19. 19?7
JU BJECI TO APPl lC ABlf STAlE !. IOC Ali.AX( S

Country
Ice Cream
Co~tyrloht 1917 - The Krtifr c·o. lttmt
aft• Prlcts Good s.,ruloy, J.,, 2l thru
Saturday, hn. 29, 1977 in
W• ,.,."" tl.e rinl.t to limi! qu,antities.
NONE SOlD TO OEALE!S.

---···------

c

·lb.
Bag

\7.50 DR MDII PURCHAH

liMIT I COUPON PER FAMil V PLEASE

~-~==

5

UMIT 1 IU. WITH COUPON AiriD

VOID AFTER $.4.1,. JAN. 29, 1977

~~·~;;;•

"This is nothing compared
with what we eould face in
1990 and on, the way we use
energy," Gustafarro said.
"There are 73 milion dwell·
ings in the U.S. and it is
est ima ted that 58 million of
these will be in place in the
year 2000. Just think how
many do not have proper
in sulati on now a nd have
aluminum ca sement
windows, which conduct heat
in notoriously the wrong
direction," Gustafarro said .

Flour

c

)'/, pt.
Btl . .

liMIT lUG WITH (tMJ'liN AND
S7.SO 01 MOll PUIIOIASE

News Notes \:

By Alma Marshall

•• MASON,

time to plea

to indictment

--------------------·

~

Coffee addicts
to swallow price

.

.,
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q

Wesson
Oil

c

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~-:::::.::::::~:~,~~,~:,~::~::m:~:;:o.~:?.::;:,~:?.:&lt;::&lt;':':&lt;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

the lighter side

Domino
Sugar

LONNIE LEMASTER, 8, A TiliRD GRADER at the
Salisbury Elementary School, was scheduled to undergo brain
surgery again today at St . Joseph Hospil&lt;ll in Parkersburg, W.
Va., where he has been a patient for several weeks now. This
was the second surgery during the most recent hospitalization.
Lonnie was visired on Saturday by Mrs. Lou Hemsley, Mrs
Jackie Brickles and children, April and John, and his brother,
Kim LeMaster. Kim is staying with the Brickles family for the
time being. Mrs. LeMaster, of course, is living at the hospital
practically (she's been out of the hospital twice since Lonnie
was admitted.)
Today's surgery - if it went off'as scheduled - was to l&lt;lke
over nine hours but Mrs. Brickles reports that Lonnie is in good
spirits.
By the way, Lonnie has received some 430 cards'B ince his
hoSPitalization. Thanks to all of you for your kindness to a child
who has undergone a great ordeal and may have many other
problems in the future.

~U IJECll O

·--···------

·--I ·-··•••

iO

Small_hope in high court's rulings

WASHINGTON (UP! ) Women 's righls advocates
see only a small t"Y of hope in
the
Supreme
Court's
agreement to look into sickleave pay and seniorit~ rights
for
pregnant women workers.
school
level.
·
AKRON , Ohio (UP! ) ,
Cos.sler, defeated for segregation."
The
high court Tuesday
Testifying
in
the
Former sl&lt;lte school board
reelection to the state board
U.S. District Court Judge
refused
to reconsider its
president William Cossler re- Youngs to wn sc hool last November, consistently Leroy J. Contle Jr. finally
recent
General
Electric Co.
deseg
regati
on
trial,
(he
peatedly denied Tuesday the
referred to racial balance in interrupted, saying, "We've
decision
that
employers
may
Youngstown
builder
engaged
state had the authority to
gone over this for the last half
his a~wers .
lawfully
exclude
pregnancy
in
several
bitter
exchanges
intervene to correct cases of
" I'm not talking about hour. He!s going to give the
from worker disability
racial imbalance at the local with NAACP attorney James racial balance," Hardiman same answer. " ~
Hardiman over terminology. sa id. ''I'm talking about
.Hardiman r eminded insurance plans; But the
Cossler of a letter he wrote to justices .accepred two cases
the editor of the Youngstown dealing with denial to women
Vindicator calling busing a 6n maternity leave of acwaste. He asked Cossler if he Cumulated sick leave and loss
still felt the same way about of seniority for job-bidding
purposes.
busing.
Kathleen W. Peratis of the
"That can't be answered
American
Civil Liberties
yes or no," Cossler said and
Union
said
anything
different
Hardiman cut him short,
from
the
GE
decision
is
saying he had no . further
bound
to
be
a
gain
because
questions.
such as editorial Writers.
By DICK WEST
touch .
The
second
witness the justices "couldn't do any
WASHINGTON (UP! )
Some diffident ex perts
Other authorities on Tuesday was Nathania( Lee, worse" !han they did in that
Having opened the floodgates recommend tha t Ca rter nonpretension suggest that a former Youngstown opinion.
of humility with his inaugural refrain fr om referring to the playing of "Hail to the NAACP president who
But she said, "We all get a
walk down Pennsylvania himseU as "the president" Chief" be restricted to state testified he ·worked as a little nervous when the court .
a nd li kewise avoid the functions or other highly teacher with the old WPA and takes a civil righls case these
cerernooial occasions.
imperial ' 'we.' '
applied for a teaching job days/ '
After a time, they said, all
Linda Colvard Dorian,
By definition , the use. of
with Youngstown schools in
"we" when the first person that musical genuflecting 1936, but was never called for general counsel for the
Avenue, President Carter is singular is ind icated should tends to go in both ears and
International Women's. Year
an interview.
now awash with advice ·on be reserved for kings and stay !here.
and
a former attorney at the
Lee produced a list of 78
how to keep the common other types of sovereigns,
These points may be well
Equal
Employment
black college graduates from Opportunity
l&lt;lken, but they only touch one Youngstown
Commission ,
and Warren be,
side of the problem. The tween 1938 and 1962. NAACP spoke in !he same vein. She
presidency has so much built- attorney
E.
Winther said legislation to overcome
in grandiosity, it probably is
the effect of the GE decision
McCroom said the list showed will soon he introduced in
too strong for one person to qualified
black teacher
resist.
·
candidates were available Congress and backed by a '
Since Carter has said during the period when school broad coalition of labor and
repeatedly he needs and
officials said it was women's interest groups.
..,ants the hPlp of .the
The court's actions, before
to find them.
American people in carrying impossible
recessing
until Feb . 22,
The final witness was
by KENNETH R. CLARK. ICO London headquarters, a out his duties, it behooves us William Wayson , an Ohio included another refinement
Unlled Press International
department store was selling to do our part in keeping him Slate University education of the "Miranda warning"
The International Coffee instant coffee for $7.51 a humble.
professor who testified about requirement for criminal
Organization, which is to the pound _ $1.88 for a fourWhile 1 make no claim to techniques of drawing school suspects. It held that a
who
comes
coffee break what OPEC is to ounce jar. .
expertise in this field, I do bound.aries to either promore suspect
voluntarily
to
the
police
the car pool, carne up today
Mount Sinai Hospil&lt;ll and happen to be a natural born segregation
or
dese.
station to discuss a crime
with a Madison Avenue-style Medical Center in Chicago · Texan, and therefore I think gregatwn.
solution to the problem of said Tuesday it will stop it can be said that I recognize
The NAACP intended to ne~d not he told of his right to
escalating prices- get coffee serving coffee in its cafeiJ!ria modesty when I see it.
rest ils case this afternoon. silence and to an attorney ,
even though he is lied to and
addicls to swallow.the price one day each week in protest
Here, then, for what they
interrogated in private.
as well as the product.
of spiraling prices.
may he worth, are a few tips
The justices ordered
In the United States, the
" By
follow ing
this on how ordinary citizens can
reconsideration of decisions
coffee boycott spread to approach," said Steve help our new president avoid
involving school busing and
include a hogpital in Chicago, Stefanski , director of ~ aggrandJZemen.t :
housing in Toledo, Ohio, and
a drug. store in Mount Ayr , facilities at the medical . --:- The prestdent pays .a
Indianapolis respectively, to
Iowa, and a New York City center, "we ca n hopefully VISit to your. home town . Jom
determine whether there was
delicatessen.
work toward curtailing the ti!e welcommg crowd at the
intentional discrimination
Represenl&lt;ltives of the 62- trend in price increases."
airport, preferably getting
against blacks. Intent is the
nation ICO, comprised both of
George Gralstein, who sells the;e at least 12. hours ahead
key, since the court has ruled
producing and consuming na- coffee for 30 cents a Cl!P at his of time so you will be assured
that a constitutional violation
lions, have been huddling in Second Avenue Delicatessen ?fa place ~p front. Try to g~t
may not rest on effect alone.
London this week under the in Manhatl&lt;ln, is pushing tea mto a position to shake hiS
The court also:
POINT PLEASANT fire of worldwide outrage as a competitor at a nickel a hand and as you do so
over coffee costs that have cup.
con.gra tulate him on his Al.tQrneys for John Lewis
- Denied a request by
multiplied sevenfold in the
"Results have been fairly chmce of Theodore Sorenson Young, 32, of Mason, who has Indiana to reconsider last
past 18 months.
good," he said. " We're to be head of the CIA. ·
been indicted for the first year's ruling tltat parents
Tuesday, the ICO's 16- selling a hell of a lot more tea . - Save up $!,000 for a degree murder of 58 yea r-&lt;Jid
ticketto a fund ... rusll)g din~r Mary Berry, also of Mason,
nation executive boar,d now than ever before."
ordered two new studies of
At .Mitchell's Drug Store in at which Carter speaks. ThiS has received additiQnal time
the supply and demand Mount ,Ayr, owner Steve will ent!Ue. you to attend the. before entering a plea.
situation in the world coffee . Mitchell also sells coffee for a VJPre;eption. When It comes
Terry ' Lee Brainard, 16,
market.
nickel a cup but cream and your, tune to go through the Mason, who was arrested
"To the extent that betiJ!r sugar raises the price to a receiving b.':'e, address the along with Youn g, in
information will affect or dime.
. chtef executive as Prestdent Pomeroy , entered a plea of
steady the mar~et, this
"I'm not in business to Mondale. .
.
guilty to second d ~g ree
CLEVELAND {UPI) should help ," said an make money on .coffee,"
- Sa~e sttuat!OO as abpve . murder late Monday .
The Rev. Mary Sterrett
American delegaiJ! to the ~ Mitchell said. "It's no o!g Only !his time as you go
Judge J ames Holliday Anderson, the flrl!t woman
summit conference.
deal to me . 1 view it as a .through the li.ne , tell hliii ordered, the youth, indicted ordained to the priesthood in
Today, the 'J~O will map co nve nience
to
the what a. cute little gU:l you for aiding and a bettin g the Episcopal Diocese of
out a multimillion-&lt;lollar customer."
think his daughter Ami Btrd Young , to Huttonsville for Ohio, has 'been hired as a
pr omotion
ca mp aign
is.
dia·gnostic lestin~ lor not part-time assistant at Clrist
to
couvlnce FIRST VISIT
-. Send a Ietter to the .Jl!!1j:f than 60 days. Brainard Church in Shaker Heighta aqd
desig ned
consumers that coffee is good
MEXICO CITY I UPI ) - preSident. to his home town ~ could receive a five to 18-year will begin her new duties Feb.
at any price.
President Jose Lopez Portillo address. m Des Plames.•.m. sentence, for his alleged part 6.
•
That move - to be financed · will be the first foreign chief . - Wrtte other letters g1~ng in the stabbing death of Mary · On two Sundays each
by both consumers and of state to meet President ()is home town as PlamVIew, Rerry .
month she will help cooduct
producers under terms of a Carter during a state visit to · ~k ., Plainville, lnd., PI~ inJu clgc Holliday granted the the worship service, along
six-year international coffee Washington next month , the fteld, lo.wa, Pia~ Dealing, continuance of Young until with Rev. Johh Sanders, the
agreement that went into Mexican Foreign Ministry La ., Plamwell, M!Ch,, Plam, Februarl" l5. at whirh tier.' it rector, and Rev. Gregory
effect in October - followed announced Monday.
Miss., Plainsboro, N.J ., Plain is believed he will ent er a Taylor, who has been serving
general agreement thai
"This visit ·... underlines City, Ohio and Plano, Tex .pka .
as a Sunday . asaistant at
neither study wiD do much to the imporl&lt;lnce that (Carter )
- In OM of the letters, tell
Younl''.'i t'(Junsd a:-okl'fi Christ Church for two years.
halt the rise of coffee prices and his government are the ~resident how mud! you hn· 11 Hi ll qf Pal1kulin'S :~tid During !he week Taylor, an
tl&gt;ward,a predicted U.S. retail givio'g to the strengthening of adm1re ~1meone who reaches ~1 ;1lPIJu•Pl !.i Hf)d IJ !I'TIH•nll'· ordained Episcopal priest, is
level of $4.25 to $5.11(1 • onund relations with Mexico," a · the \VIuw . Hou.•e from J
d11 111 of iut, •n- iP"'!i nf wi1 - an attorney with the U.s.
by the end of the year:
Forei gn ;.:u1 istry press ~u mbl e hegmmng as a potato • p~..:t • &lt;.; fn w 1h1• pn l '-l('f' I Jtu.,.··. Department of Labor in
Just across the street from com rnunioue said .
.armer .
nfft1 '1•.
Cleveland.

segregation

City to drill own gas wells

I;

1

a
R

some ma jor processin g
corporations operate in both
!he east and west and can
"play one group off against
another."
The f' CS study team said
some past bargaining flaws
could be corrected by setting
up a new national group "to
coll ect all appropriate

Shortage real says gas group

,•r ~~_a_f_ . .

BY CHARLO'ITE MOULTON

_. ' , · 1;:;:!1

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On e
£ann front

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Power to intervene in Akron school

0£
the Bend.
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AND TMI PUICII.UI •' 1o111 J.OZ. not.

lrocer Gtl•lln

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SAT !UTI""
' 1.1 '1. ooo' i~&amp;i'fiiii .;;,".. IIA,.,
lUlU

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Kroger
White Bread

Armour
Sausage
C:LUI 01

Kahn's
Bologna .

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'

•

�15 - The Daily Sentinel, Middle port-Pomeroy, o., Wednesday , Jan . 26, 1977
DICK

Television log for easy viewing

••••••••••••••••••••••••
WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DIADLIHII

Pl EASURE HORSES and ponies ,
olso will buy hones and
Ewing Funerol Home , Re....
Pubii Cit ion .
James
Corbitt,
the
pallbearers
ponlu . Phone (614) 698·3290.
ClnttllltiOnl.
corr tc
Ruth litftves ,
ond eve ryone who sent flowers
tlons acc:epttcl first Cll&lt;t Of I'
and cared so muck dur ing the RISING STAR KENNEL , Boo' dlng ·
publlcat ion .
deoth of our daddy, Fronk M.
II EGUL&amp;TIONS
indoor·outdoor runs. Grooming
Tt'le PubiiSh~ t reurv r s
Dill .
focilitiM will be d osed fr om
the righ t to edit or rtlect
The Famil y
January 10, 1977 un til March 1.
an y ads deemed Ob ·
1977. Our board ing focilitivs
!tct lona l. The publ isher
will remain open. Ch~u h lre,
wil l not be rnponslble fo r
WE WISH to than k Racine Fire
mor.e than one Incor rec t
Phone (bl4 ) 367·0292 or
De pt. Emergency Squod .
inser tion
367·7112 .
friends and relatives for the ir
UTES
help and tl"le ones who offered AKC COLLIE pupo , soble ond
For Went Ad Strvlct
to help during our fi re.
5 cents per word one
whi te. $75 . Phone 9~9-257 1.
Mr . and Mrs. Joe Manuel and
inser tion .
A
KC
REG. Doberman pups . Good
lono
M inim um Charge Sl.OO.
pedigree, block and rust, sell
u cents per word three
con.secut lve Insertion!. .
rea1onable. Phone 742·2961 .
5

P .M.

Oe r

Beto r~

2 SIGNS Pomeroy
Of_ .
OUALITY Motor -CQ_
.

25 Per Cent Dlscoun t on

pa id

CARD OF THANKS
I OBITUARY
$2 .00 fOr
) I) · word

1""'

lnl mum
Each add itional word 3

cents .

BLIND ADS

Add it ional 25c: Charge
per Adver ti semen t.

oFFICE HOURS
8 ' 30 a .m . to 5 :00 p.m .

Dally , 8: 30 a .m . to 12 :00
Noon Sat urday .
P"one today 992-2156.

NOTI'CES
ATTN. : II
ALL HOUSEWIVES
All Yard Sales , ~ummage ,
Por ~h and Basement Porch
and Basement Sales , etc .
rn ust be paid In advance.
Get yours In early by
stopping by our off ice at
The Dall y Sentinel , 111
Court St. or writi ng Box
729, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
w.if h your remittance .

For Thured8J, J1n. 27, 1177

ARIES (Morch 21· APrll 11) Be
very careful when shopping to-

day not to spend your hardearned cash on $Omethlng that'S

more novel than necessary.
TAURUS (April 20-lloy 20)
Even allies of long-standing can't
be relied upon to back you up today .. Thi s holds d~u.bly true for
persons you've recently met.
GEMINI {Moy 21...1uno 20) It you
find yourself in a problem area
today, don't try tOwriggl8'around
and· make matters even worse.
Out ollhe trying pen ...
CANCER {Jun• 2t.July 11)
Strive to be as attentive to old
friends as you are to new ones. If
you show partiality , someone's
nose Is going to b8 bent out of
shape.
LEO {July 23-Aug. 22) Success
is likely to elude you today. You
tend to change course once the
goal Is In slghl. Stick to the
original plan.
VIRGO {Aug. Z3·Sopl. 22)
Uncharted shortcuts could prove
to be the long way around today.
You'll do a lot boner by staying
on the beaten path.
LIBRA (Sop!. 23-0ct. 23) One
who has perennial financial
problems could try to put the
bite on you today. It you let your
guard down, you cou ld give ln.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22)
Problems will result If you
become too closelY tied In with a
person whose Sims are not In accord with yours . Take care who
you team up wl1h.
SAGI'h' ARIUS {Nov. 23·Dtc.
21) The workload you'll have to·
day will be a heavy one because
others wi ll be trying to shlfi lhelr
burdens onto your capable
shoulders.
CAPRICORN (Doc, 22...Jon. 11)
A well-Intent ioned friend may
come up with a bus iness tip for
you todey. Llslen politely, bul
probe thoroughly before using .
AQUARIUS {Jon. 20-Fob. 11)
Bar negative outside Influences
and Ind ividuals fro m your
doorstep today. Don't let others
palm off their troubles on your
-household .
'
Ptici!s {Fob. 20-Morch 201
Seeing only the d~rk side means
'you're getting half the picture to·
day. Look tor the bright aide as
well

~\70(1)&amp; .
W'Gltl~Mln\7
Jon. 27, tl77
You will have some very unusual
oppo'rtunhlas pr~ented to vou
this year. The real skill comes In
your ability to separate the wheat
from the chaff.
(Are you an Aquarius? Ber~
nfce Oaol has trritten ,a sp&amp;elal
Astro-Graph Letter for you. For
}'Our copy ~end 50 cents and a

NOW accepting pia no students,
begi nners , intermed iates , ad·
vanced students. Call 9922270.
PERSON 's BODY Shop, 26 ROilrood
St., Middleport would like to
remind customers that Dec. 31
is the last day to toke ad·
vantage of the pa int jobs · all
over in 1 color, $100, 2 tone
$125 without bod~ work . Stop
in or phol'!e 985-41 74 for Op·
poi ntment.
NOTICE , Pratt's Meat Mkt .
· (Pieosonton Meat Processing .
Inc.) Custom sla.ughterlng, and
processing . Retail , wholesale .
No Oppoiriment necessary . Call
161&lt;) 593.8655, hou rs , 9,00 !ill
b:OO 7 Pomeroy Rood . Athens .
Oh.
GUN SHOOT at the Raci ne Gun
Club every Sunday , 1 pm
Auorted meats.
RACINE FIRE Dept . will hove a
Gu n Shoot every Sot u rda~ night
0 p.m. at their building in
Bashon , Oh io.
AT STUD: 1. Phoebus, 16 1H. If
you wont a good performa nce.
A halter colt w· bloodlines tl"lot
$ell. 2. TRIBAL CHIEF. APHC,
15.2 H. has. sired some of the·
t.op p&amp;rformance and halter
horses , (Tribal Win , Tribal Fool ,
etc .). Also, horses sold , train ·
ed . conditioned , boo rded. Cole
Stables . Home of Champions ,
Do• 25. Tuppers Plains , Ohio
&lt;5783. Phone [614) 667·~05 . ·

r.. iiiO ...

-...

-lttltl--~

1974MONTE CARLO
. RED\ICEDS3895
Local! owner car, green finish. green vinyl roof, radial
w.w tires, a ir cond., V·8, with aytomatlc P. steering &amp;
brakes.

..
SMITH NELSoN
MOTORS, INC.

1973 VW 2 D~.
,1695
Clean vinyl Interior, good tires. runs tine, radio,
OLD furniture , ice bans, bran
beds·. wall telept,ones ond
ports, or complee _households .
Write M. D. Miller, Rt . ~ .
Pomero~ . Ohio. Call992·7760.
CASH paid for oil mokes and
models of mobile homes .
Phone area code 61-4·423-953 1.

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

--@:

ln111lltion Smicn

Q

Sentinel Carrier
Wanted In

rk

••----!!!!!!!11!!1!!

TEAFORD

-

----

Syracuse Area.

lOST, CLASS ring last SoL night ,
boy_'s ring. l ost between
Wil kesville and Pomeroy witl"l
initals O.R,B. 1977 ~ ear . 3 AND 4 RM . furni1hed Ond un·
Reword . Phone 992-3141 ,
furnished opts . Phone 992·
54~ .
LOST . MALE long haired g re~ cot
wearing red collar wh ich COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork . Rt .
a, swers to the nome of "Muf .
33. ten miles north of Pomeroy .
fin ." Lost seen li~coln Terrace·
Lorge lots with concrete potios,
Butternut Ave. oreo . Pomeroy.
sidewalks, runners and off
Coli 992-6066 o' 992·2672.
street parking . Phone 992-7479.
Reword .
FURNISHED two bedroom apt.,
adults only . No pets. Mid·
dleport . Phonem - 387~ .
ONE BEDROOM Apls . ol VILLAGE
MANOR in Middleport for $104
1976 TRAVEL Trailer , 17 YJ ft. lully
contoin&amp;d . Will sell with 550 lb.
monlhly plus ·elec. or $130 in·
Reese hitcl"l and jocks ,
eluding elec . LOWER RATES for
SENIOR CITIZENS. Convenient
reasonable. Phone 992·9981 .
to shopping on Third and Mill
Sh . in .,Middleport , Brand new
l"ligh qualify oportm-enh. See
the manager ot Apt . 28 or call
992·7721. An Equal Housing
0 portunit~ .
:Z BEOROOM troller . real nice.
Phone 992·332-4, adults only .
AVAILABLE AT Riverside Apts . I
'fl±l;:\\1- badrm,. apartment, $100 per
month, 2 bedroom apll . $133
per month. Equal Opporfunit~
Ho.using. Phone 992·321-'3"-.-,-HOUSE, 5 ROOMS ond both ;n
Rocine oreo. Phone 992·5858,
bedroom
aportm&amp;nt in
. Phone
11
·
992·3129 or
The
are
alphabetical order ."
-tOUSE FOR rent , unf urn ished , 2
bedroom house, 11/t bath , liv·
ing room , dining room , kitchen
·long se,·addressed, stampe_d
and utilities . Comp l ete!~
onvolopo to Altro-Graph, P.O.
carpeted , cherry wood, panBo• 489, Rodlo City Stotlon, New
nelllng downstairs , elec . heat,
York, N. Y. 70019. Be •ura to ask
inust ' " to appreciate. Phone
{~) 8113·3235 .
lor AQuarlua Volumt 1.}
NICE COMPLETELY fu,,nlohod I
Mdroom apartment with Iorge.
patio. porCh overlooking river .
Adulttonly. Phono992·2606.

LAFF- A. DAY

Well Stocked-Doing Good Business ·
Wonderful opportunity to own your own
business. in fast growing field.

CONTACT BILL CHILDS
Middleport, Ohio

FOR SALE
One goqd used Gibson Side·
by . side~efrigerator ••• 1150
New .
co.Op
water
sofleners, model VC-SVI.
Only 1279.95
One good used Remington
Chain Saw••••••••••S55.00
One good used MCCullough
Chain Saw·········· uo.oo
One 900d used Homellle.
Chain Saw••• • •• ••• SUQ.RO.
1

Pome!IIJ lilndmark
Jack W. ·c;.,.ey, Mgr.
Phone 9'12·2181

a.!di'~~lnr:
sai;,'; ;
;; .,_ ·...=
!!:. H.:.;; • ~·

.••

GALL!A.MEIGS LINE oVer 2 a cres, , 3 bedroom
frame home, bath. Gallla.
water, and garage. 122,000.
RUTLAND - ,5 room
res idence, 2 bedrooms,
bath, gas heat on corner
lot. 111.000.
BUILDING LOT - Rock
Springs area, water and
electric ity available.
15.000.
,NEW LISTING 3
bedrooms ,
bath , • oi l
furnace, full basement,
garage and 2 acres on
school bus and ma ll Rls.
T. P .
water,
Chesler
Town;hlp. 125,000.
WE HAVE A CALENDAR
FOR YOU. DROP IN AND
PICK IT UP.
"'----------'

PARTS -

WIIIDOIIU DOORS
lf'IAC£,!111
WIIIIOOWS
~UUJI

Reedsville,

'---==;,;.;.;;........;..""""-'

PHOTOGRAPHY
Aerial
Commercial
Schools

Weddings

{614)98$-4155
Chesler, Ohio
10·17·1 mo(Pdl

--

--~

--

--

__

_

----~·

House Overlooking River
3 bedrooms, full
basement, new heating ,
plumbing and vilrelng .on
double lot. Pr ice 540-900.

• A 52
4 J 76

Both vulnerable

ECONOi.iNE HOME
INSULATION, INC.,
lBT! Washington Blvd.
Belpre, Phone (614) 423·
7564 day, or 992-!0ll

·

. 'uiTLE ORPHAN ANNI E

Blown in flbergllss wolls
and aHics. 20 Pel. S.vlngs
on Vinyl. and Steel Sidings.
Repla~ment ond storm
windows . .33 years actual

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-BACK
WHAT~ HE

do odd jobs , roofing, pain·
ting. gutter work , Phone 9927409.
SEWING · AL TE RA liONS ;
Upl"lolstering ,
drapes
reo1onable. 572 Soutl"l Third
· Ave .. Midd leport. Phone
992·6306.
INCOME TA)( Service , Wollt~ce
Rusnll , Brctdbury . Coli
992·7228 .

RACINE - Good 3 bedroom and dining room, low
ulll111es. even a garden space. Priced at only 58,500.

IF YOU have a tervlce to offer,
want to buy or
So"!ethlng,
w looking for WCM'k . . . or
whot•ver , , . ~Ou ' ll get results
foster with a Sentin•l Want Ad.
~qll 992·2156.

COOLVILLE- Nlctmod. brl~homtcontelnlng three

ba....,tnt with goroga, lorg front pordl, net. gos.
furnoce, city w1ttr •nd well
r, 1 belutllul home
wltll•pprox. S•h teres of lond, fruit t r - and shod•
l r - surroundlnti lt. Plenty of gerdln apoct, gooc
fllhlng arM clost by, located In CoOlville. Ohio. Priced
'It only m,ooo. Coli now.
CHESTER- 113 acrei farm, 80 acres llllablt land,
nlco 2 story term house, 7 rooms and bath, all.
tiardwood floors and baMment. Barn ond other
outbuildings, l ponds. A nice ltylng larm prlctd to go.
Locattd nur ChHitr. cell for· oppt.

WE DCJt.1 1l KNQW· BUT n-i SOME WA'(

· PO! SON GAS ~

'THEM A HULL
. RIVER Po&lt;JReD
, IN ON. H!M -

Financing Avalloble
C. A. Newman, Pres.
1·25-1 mo.., pd.

'11\EY 6ROKE

THEY'RE TRAPPED
IN A Bl1ND CAHYON -,_.A'(8E
YOU COU LD HELP

' THOUGHT

GET THEM OUT-

THROUGH SHOW··

TRACK

rr==-:===::::::-7----..
HEliE':; TliE
MA1N ~paf ..

HERe

1HEY ARE-·
NO TRAIL ..

TRUSSES
.
ANY PITCH

ANY SIZE

Southeastern Oh"to
I

Truss. R-"Co•
Gllll

; BORN LOSER

' I&lt;: . so 1\U&gt;Ft&gt;RME'R

located in Langsville

I

i

Box

28~ A
Rutland, Ohio 45775·

SAl D, ' ! Cl\UbHTE'R

I -rnlfJI&lt;. I WT THE'

THAT'S,~"

Ph. (61t) 7U. U09

We ellver

PU~H-~INE'

12 -22-.4 mos .

BA&lt;A&lt;Wf.RDS 1&gt;i»J '"·

......,~,

BRADFORD. Auc tioneer, Co~ ·
plete Service . Phone 94Q-24B7
or 949-2000. Racine . Ohio, Cr! tt
Bradford .
ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers , toasters , Irons , all
small opplionces. lawn mower ,
ned to State Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone (bl4 ) 985 ·
3825.
REMODELING, Plumbing, heating
and oil types of generol repoir.
Work guaranteed 20 years experience ..Phone 992·2409.
SEWING MACHINE Repol~r·
vice, all makes , 992 ·2281 . The
Fabri c Shop , Pomeroy .
Authoriled Singer SaleJ o,d
~C!!.;_"!!e shorpen Scissors .

~
t- l" .

Cl 1i77 or11£-. 1ne . 1 t.1 Ae~ u ~ f~T 011

A person kin feel his
presence... jes' li lt.e he
wuz real f leGh an'
blood!

""~'~""

. . ....,

:

501 NYLON
12 or 11 Fl.
GrHn, gold, red, blue, rust.·'
Do II younelf, wltlo pod·
ding, $7,., sq . .yd. Wltlo
podding lntl&amp;lltd SUS
squo .. yord.
Clll742-22tl
TALK TO
. WENDELLGRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

742-2211

JACO B Y MODERN .)

Mon.,
Tues., Wec1.
8:00tll5:00

Close Sat. At 5 p.m.
,.

25 ~pl:um;~rday'1;

Yesterday's Answer'
9 Aerial
navigati on
system
10 Qua rtet's
favor ite
gal
16 Toward
shelter
19 " The
Hostage"
playwright
20 Analyze a
sentence

23 Hurling
24 Cathe r
heroine
25 Golf stroke
27 Frankn ess
30 French r iver
31 Presbyter
33 Wing
{Fr .)
36 Lofty

mountain
37 "- God's

Chillun ... "

6-+-+-

BUT NOT ONE WORD FROM
YOUSE OJ TJ.1E TRIP r~­
I'M THINKIN' -

by HenriArnoldand B.

~e

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, 10 form
tour ordmary words.

....,, .,,,•• ...' ••...!....

VORLE

I

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFEI.LOW

NOFET

I

('RYPTOQUOTES

XRlXJXlHMW

BPU

KUWS · AUWXMRB
KURKU ,
UWKU

MRI ,

XR

M

KUWS -,. KHSSXFX U RB ,
P U

T L UK

-

I ICJ

Q U

GHKB

0

TAPECK

KJCJ

IL E R . -

WHBPUA
QHAQMRV
Yesterday's · Cryptoquote: TO DEVELOP EASE AND
CONFIDENCE IN DOING, YOU MUST DEVElllP ABILITIES
AND THEN DEVElllP EXCELLENCE IN THE USE OF
11lESE ABILITIES. - RHODA LACHAR

f

.•

33.

B:3Q-Whal 's Happening 6.13.
9:00-Movie " Jo hnn y, We Hardly Knew Ye" 3,11, 15;
Barney Miller 6; Hawa ii Flve-0 8; Visions 33 ; Ten
Who Dared 10; Focus on VD 13.
9 ,3o-Tony Randall 6; Jea nne Wol f Wl lh 20.
10:00--- Roots 6,13; Barnab y Jones 8; Honeymooners'
Tr ip to E urope 10; News 20.
10;3Q-Woman 20,33 .
1UQ- New"- 3,4,6,8,10, 13,15 ; Mac Ne il · Lehrer Report
33 '
11:30---Johnny Car son 3,4,15; Geraldo Rivera 6,l 3;
Koja k 8' Mary Hartman 10; BC News 33 .
12 :0G-Mov ie " The Proud and the Profane " 10; Janilk l
33.
12 :4Q-Toma 8.
1:Oo-Tomorr ow 3, 4; News 13. .

Q:U ~ ~~'-!3 ~

/1==138 Metal-

LA

· ·•

L

'iJj'flf~ ~'\t ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD I., ME

(abbr.)
35 Type of
linoleum
37 Unfruitful

One lett er simply stnnds for nno.thc r. In th is sample A is
used for the three L's., X for the two O's, 'clr . Si ngle letters.
apostroph es, the length and fo rm n li ~) n of lh e wnrds are all
hints. E 01rh day the rode lett e rs arc dtffere nt.

HotTr~

.

.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
• ACROSS
39 Consona nt
I " Litlle
40 One who
Sir - "
puffs and
5 Volcanic
pants
reluse
41 Chilling •
II Panegyrize
look
12 Punished,
DO~
Captain
1 Hearten
Bligh style
2 Took an
13 Composer
interes t
of " Rule
3 Flock
Britannia "
together
II At reduced
(3 wds.)
prices
4 Poem
{2 wds. )
5 What
15 Asian
Juliet did
holiday
6 Tarzan's
16 King Kong
male
17 Self (Scot.)
7 Ending
18 Palatable
for
20 Prefix for
lion
meter or
8 Cornered
soope
14 wds. I
21 Require
22 Moslem
prayer
call
23 Hide

Is

Rutlond

I

•

Prlntlnewerhere:

~OMETIM ES

ONE C.ETS
'

INTO II 6 Y MEANS
OF PA6G!;~.
Now arrange the circled leiters to
form the surprise answer, as suQ·
geSted by the above cartoon.

A

rIll XI J

(Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles: KNELL AMUSE GLOOMY TAUGHT
Yesterday's
.
I A~swer : Wheeled aboard ship- THE HELMSMAN

J.UHN RV

4•

WQ('.J"T
PLAY HOUSE WI F

JUGHAID

ME NOR NOTHIN;
MIZ SMIF

f' ••
~·

NOW, AFTER
WE GIT DONE

PLAI.fiN'
MOPPIN',
WE"LL PL flY ,....f&gt;.o'
WINDERWASHIN'

••

;
:.
RUTLAND
PURNITU•
·
I 742·2211
AIINOLD ORATE
Riii"LAND

L - - - .f-.::A!!I::!:L:.::J.::IM:.,:M:.:.;.;.Y....;D....;I;....;J;;,;..M_94_9·_2388
_ _ _...,.,

envelope s are enclose d. The
most in terestin g questions
will be used in rhis co lumn
an d wiJI receive cop1es of

THURS DA Y, JANUARY 27,1977
6:01}-S unr ise Semester 10.
~
6: I)-F ar m Report 13.
6: 2o-Nof For Women Only 13.
6:30--CSU Overview 4; News 6: Su nrise Semester 8;
Urban League 10.
6: 45-Morn ing Re po rt 3.
6:5o-Good Morning , We st Virg inia 13.
7: 00----Today 3,4, 15; Good Mor ning, Amer ica 6. 13 ; CBS
News 8: Chuck Wh ite Reports 10.
~' 05- Porky Pig 10 .
7:3o-S chool ies 10.
8;QO-Howdy Doody 6; Cap t. Kangaroo 8. 10; Sesilme
51. 33.
8.3G-Big Va lley 6.
9 OQ-A .M. 3, Phil Donahue 4,13,1 5; Andy Gr iffith B;
Mike Doug las 10.
9:30-Cross.Wits 3; Edge of Nighl6 ; Concen1ration 8.
IO :OG-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,15; Dinah 6 ; Price is Righ t
8,10; Mike Oouqlas 13.
10 :31}- Holl ywood Squares 3,4,15.
11 :0()-..Wheel of Foftune 3, 15; Weekday 4; Double Dare
8.10 ; Morning wi th D.J . 13; Elec . Co . 20 .
11 :30----Shoot fo r the Stars 34, 15; Happy Days 6, 13;
Love of Li fe 8,10; Sesame St. 20.
11 :55-CBS News 8; Ms. Fixit 10
12 :00----Ncws 3,6,10 ; Don Ho 13; Bob Braun 4 ; Name
Th at Tune 15; Divorce Court 8.
12 : JG-- Lo ver~ &amp; Fr iends 3, 15: Ryan's Hope 6, 13 ;
Search lor Tomo rrow 8, 10.
1,oo-Gong Show 3; All My Ch il dre n 6, 13; News 8:
Young &amp; the Restless 10; Nol For Women Only 15.
1:3o-Oays ol Ou r Lives 3,4,1 5; Fam ily Feu d 6, 13; As
The.Wo rld Turns 8.1 0.
2:0o-$20,000 Pyram ld 6, 13 .
2.3D-Doctor s 3,11, 15 , One Life to Live 6, 13.; _Guiding
Ughl 8,10 .
'
3:00-Another Wor l~,4 , 15 ; Al l in the Fam ily 8,10;
Antiques 20 .
·
3 , 15-General Hospil I 6, !j ,
3:3o-Match Game B. 10; Lil ias Yoga &amp; Yo u 20.
4:00-Mister Cartoon 3; Litt le Rasc als 4; Gong Show
15'; Mickey Mouse Club 6 ; Lucy Show 8; Sesame St
20.33; Movie " That Te nnessee Bea t" 10; Dinah 13
4:30- My Three Sons 3; Pa rtridge Family 4;
Emergency One 6, Par fri dge Fam ily 8; Flints tones
15.
S:OQ-Big Va lley 3; My Three Sons 4; Brady Bu nch B;
Mister Rogers 20, 33 ; Star Trek 15. ·
5:30--Adam-12 4; New s 6; Family Affair 8; Elec. Co.
20.33; Adam .J2 13
6 · 0~ N ews 3.4,8,10, 13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6,3o-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13 . Andy Gritt;th
6; CBS News 8, 10; Once Upon a Classic 20; Boy
Scout Tra ining j J _
J :OQ--Truth or Cons . 3; America : The Young Ex .·
per ience 4; Bowlina for Dol lars 6; Muppe t Show 8;
News !O ;To Tell the T rulh 13; My T hree Son s 15;
Al manac 20.
1: 3[)-Holl ywood Squa res 3.4 ;, Ohio Sta te Lotte ry 6:
Price is Right 8; MacNeii .Lehrer Report 20,33;
Wild Ki ngdom 10; Nashvi lle on the Road 13; Dolly
15.
8:00--Parent hood Game 3,4,15; Welcome Back, Kot1er
6, 13; Waltons 8, 10; Vis ion s 20; Maste rp iece Theatre

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It :

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

Tllvrld1y 8 til noon

..

answer individual q uesti ons

,, stamped, sell-a ddressed

decorating
art

.
·•~!•• FRIDAY TIL 8 •~·••
•
'.••.. .•• •···•••••·••.. •.:•
·•• •

(o'a you have a q uss tio n

lor the e&lt;perts' Write "Ask
the Jecobys " care o l this
newspaper. The Jacobys will

liT

-THAT WAS B'INSY
YOKUMS /vi£5SA6!;, GooDBYE,
MR. EVIL..-E:YE FLG'A6LE ~: - 0-~C:CI6RI:I.ll:'H

Convenient Shoppinq

·e .

with :
4 .4QIO ¥ J 65 t AJ 109 4 K 104.
We open one notrump.
Although the hand onI,. :. . s 15
high ·card points the th1.e lOs
and the one nine are worth an
ext ra point

Celebes..o;;xxf-ll l
Point; a1
Stupefy
Comfy
{i wds.)
32 Outdo
33 Ending for m--r-rconsult
34 Part of .

_

••

know what our opening bid is

26
27
28
29

. . . . . . . . . . . .. .

...........................
:. ..........'•
••

WE

ARe .. THERE

~~ ~~~

A Ca lifornia reader want s to

One of the best defenses of
the ·recent tournament was
pul up by Dr. John Fisher a nd
Cha rles Gab ri el of Dall as.
Charles ' double of the lwo·
heart overcall was for lakeout
in line wilh modern experl
practice which differs from
s t a ndard bidding in thi s
respect. John decided to con·
vert the doubl e lo business
1 KKOW
since he could not bid eith er
1HI\1 PLACE - bl k 'l
df ) h
RECKOM I
ac SUI an e l t at even a
KIN Gil IN one·lrtck penally would mean
THAR
a very good score.
AGAIN Charles opened the king of
spactes and shilled to the 10 of

1WsAm

••II

SPECIAL - · 3 bedroom' and attached goroge, toter
electric home under construction on 'h ocrelot. Owner
will tlnllh In 30 days lor buyer ~1 wlll Mil "a&amp; Ia". May
take tredt. L.ocoted near c,.,.er.

btdt 001111, dining room, living oom wllh fireplace, full

HOW THEY ESCAPeD

CAN'T BE 1

~~fill

$22.500.

South
2¥
Pass

By Os'wald &amp; James Jacoby

•
~ IlL ABNER

LANGSVILLE- Slocres modorn 3 btdreom IV. story
larm hoilst wllll lire ploct, averol fruit trees,
approxlmltely 15 ocres tllloblt, belonce I~ posture.
Locattd neor Longsvllle. Prlct ncluctd lor quick Hie

., •

Db!. Pass Pass
Opening lead - K •

c 1011011" ' '"' """''"" .

804 EW Main
Pomeroy
'
992-2298
Aller HOUri can
992-7133
CONTACT :
Lois Pauley
Branch

North East

Wu t

We have several ' business
properties for sale . Call tor
further Information.

---_,.,........_.,..---~-_,..-

·POMEROY - Ranch lype
home - J large bedrooms,
large ' living R.. · large
kitchen with dlshwaaher,
dining bar, air cond., large
living R., carpeting. full
beMment with shower~ 2
car garage. 119,500.00.
MIDDLEPORT - LIWely
Ph story frame. 2 or J
bedrooms, 2 belhs, dining
R.. nice kitchen, N.G. heel.
·small buemenf and
CAMPER , $600. Aloo, hone , utility . Nice level lot In
troller, $450. Phone (614) 698- good
neighborhood .
3290.;
.
$22.000.00
.
- · - -~~-·-·- -·-...- Is your houst
too smoll w
1974 5TARCRAFT Golox ;o · 8
too Iorge? Let us Mill! ond
Camper wtlh owning ond Reese
hitch, $1200. Also, 1975 Su:cuk l furnish you wllh what you
... 00 T.S., 1800 miles, e•cellent
need . We have. greot
condition.
$650.
Pl"lone
ctomond for now homes 992.2514 .
lei us sell yours today.
HENRY E. CLELAND
POTATOES . C. W. Protlill ,
!IROKER
,
Porflond , Oh io . Phone
HANK CLELAND
843·2254 .
ASSOCIATE
SlEREO·NEW Am .FM · ste r•o
992·2151 or "'1·2561
r,odio combination, $129 .95 or.
or 115·4112
term•. Coii992·396S.

EXCAVATING . do&lt;e&lt; . looder ond
backhoe work; dump trucks
ond lo·boys to, h;,., will haul
lilt dirt, to soil, li'!lestone and
groveL Call Bob or Roger Jeflers. day phone 992-7089,
nigh! phone 992·3525 o' 992·
5232 .
EXCAVATING, d;;;~ckh;
ond ditcher . Charles R. Hot·
field , Back Hoe Ser vice ,
Rutland . Ohio. Phone 742 -2008.

-

No. 190 ::-'c:oiiiitr'V'StOrt'J
and home, has 4 adlolrlln~
lots, living quarters
rooms and all equ ipment
and Inventory In stor-e,
under present owner for 35
years , wants to retire .
Pr ice S33,000.

. A

44
• KQJ I0 96

.ALLE Y OOP

mo.

evenings.

t KQ J 864

410 9 8 5
SOUTH

'

l·llol

EAST ID)
• 85
¥A B7 3

diamonds . John played the
ja ck Sou th took his ace a nd
promptl y led a t rump lo
.fohn 's ace
Dr . Fis he r proceeded to
analyze the possibil ities or the
hand thoroughly and fi nally
cashed hi s ace of clubs. Then
he led the queen of diamo nds .
South followed and now il
was Gabnei's tur n to thin k.
F in a lly he fo ll ow ed t h e
pat tern of the angel Gabrie l
and played a lrump to ga tn lhe
lead, A club was led a nd ruff ·
ed , a fte r which another dia ·
rriond ruff and club ruff left
declarer two tricks down on a
contract he would have made
if the defense had sli pped.

~

SEPTIC Systems installed by
ticenseQ insta ller. Shepard
Contractors . Phone 742 ·2409.
SEPTIC TANKS cleaned . Modern
•s_oni totion , 992 -3954,.
WILL do roofing . constrUction ,
plumbing and heating. No job
too larg9 or too smoll. Phone
742·2348 .
CARPENTER . flooring , ceiling:
paneli ng. Phone 992 ·VSQ.
.
MOBILE Home Repair . Elec ..
plu mbing ond heating. Pflone
992·5858.
ELECTRONIC T.V. CLINIC, New
T.V. sbop , Electronic T.V. Clinic
Service coli , $5.95. Color , 8 &amp; W
antenna systems stereos . tJic.
572 . South Third, Middleport.
Phone 992-6306. Corry In and
sove money .
HOWERY AND MARTIN
covoling , septi c systems ,
c;tozer , b9ckkoe , dump truck ,
limestone. grovel. blacktop
pavi ng , Rt . 1~3 . Phone I (614 )
698·7331 .

CENTRAL .REALTY co..

'" --

1

--~---

----...---'------·- --

WEST
A A K 962
• 542
• 10

expeirence.

·
--

• 9 73

+K Q432

Squoro Yord lnstolltd
Dovld P1r10ns. owner
IU-2114

1·9·71 1 mo.

HOMESITE S for sole, I acre ond
up. Middleport , near Rutland .
Coll992·7481 .
... ·~----..,-·---NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 baths ,
oil elec., 1 acre, Middleport ,
d ose lo Rutland . Phone 9927481 .•
.....- "
...............
SMAlllorm for sole. 10'1. down ,
owner financed . Mon roe Coun ·
t~ . W. Va. Phone (J04) 7723102o' 130&lt;1)772-3227 .
COUNTRY farm land with seclud·
ed woods·c: water and g~ ac·
cess in Monroe County . W. Va .
$1,000 down i call {304 ) 772~ 3_102 o_,_I30
_
A ) 77 2 · 32::..
2'~·- -c:
Commercial property oppro ~r:. 17
acres, level land , locoted ot
Tuppers Plains on Ohio, Route
7. Phone [614 )667-6304 .

·-

4 Q J I0 73

Racine, Ohio

Ph . 371-6250
1·23·1 mo. Pd.

1100 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
"2·7034
Hrs.9:00a.m .
To Dusk

PHOTOGRAPHY

NORTH

~ IM!

'6.95

Homes Inc.

KEN .GROVER

TO

ASSORTED-RUBBER
BACK CARPETING

Wo handle only llle best In
menulectured housing .
· Double wldes &amp; modulor
·homes by Skyline &amp; Fuqua

26

HAPPE'NEO

'

CARPET SHOP

LABOR

KingsbUIJ Home
Sales Inc.

PROFESSIONAL

DISAPPEARAN CE!

NE

RATES
o.

LARRY LAV~INDER
~,......, IAI1o .
Pl. 992·3993 410·1

THE E:MER6oNCY
PLAIJ DADDY DREW UP
FOR RUt-JNIM G TH E
COMPANY ... 11.1 CA~E'.
ANY THI !-JG EVER

THAT'5

1-17. Jmo.

REASONABLE

SIDIR-SOFFin
Wflti$-MIOOIIit

A5SUREO WE SHAL~

THE'

,BOARD OF Dlf&lt;E CTORS ,
C
OUR ABLEST V.R TO
;IR5. Tli ~ ~S -- WE' OFFER CAR RYON lt-J HL5 A6SEMCE!
OUR SVIIIPATK'I OVER
lt'-on,..,
YOUR FATHER '!&gt;

Match Go me PM 6: S25,000 Pyram id 8; MacNeil ·
Lehrer Report 20.33: The Jud ge 10. Break fhe Bank
13; Wild Kingdom 15.
8:00--Bionic Woman 6,1 3; CPO Sharkey 4,15; Gun.
smoke 8; Nova 20,33 ; Good Times 10.
8:3Q-Mclean Stevenson 4,15; Jacksons 10.
9:00-Baretta 6, 13 ; Sirota 's Court &lt;1, 15; Mov ie " Helfer
Skelter" 8, 10; Great Perfor man ances 33; Soundstage 20.
9 3(}--We Think You Should Know J; The Practice 4,1 5
10 ·QO-NBC Reports 3,4,15; Roots 6, 13.
10 3Q-Monlage 20: B'ook Seat 33.
li .OQ-News 3.4,6,8,10,13,1 5: MacNeii .Leh rer Reporl
33; Monty Pylhon 's Fly ing Circus 20.
11 :3Q--.-Johnn y Carson 3,4, 15 ; Rookies 6, 13; Movie
" Zig-Zag " 8; Mary Hart man 10; ABC News 33.
l2 :0Q-Mo vie''TheSeven Hills of Rome' ' 10 ; Janak i JJ .
33.
12 ·4{)-Mystery of lhe Week 6,13.
1:00-Tomorrow 3.4 .
2: 1(}-.News 13
A:

WIN AT BRIDGE
Inspired defense sets hand

AI 100 Kerr St.
Pomeroy, 0 .

GUARANTEED

3 bedrooms .. IY,, baths, Iorge liv·
ing room , dining room and kitchen, full~ carpeted . . Phone
991·31 29, or992·5434 .
--- --- -·-· 59 acres, 0 room house, bath ,
partly carpeted , two out·
build ing, , 1 dug basement ,
one·lhird tillable . minera l , . . . - - - : - - -....- -............____:-'__:"'....--ry
dghl• locolod
Reduced
fo r neo'
qu ickConville.
sole ,
$23, 500. Phone 742·2766.
~---·

614-992-2.798

Transmission

Free Prizes.

Phone 992-2156.

Phone
MODERN CHEMICAL

Automatic
Service

financiAl Anilablt
Blowll Into Weill lAHicl .
STORM

CAP'I:AlN EASY
~PEAl&lt; lNG FOR

STRIPPING, IEPAIRING~
REFINISHING &amp;
'
UPHOLSTERING

SWAIN'S

-----

!OIIieroy Land rna

NOTIC£111

P'Ut2·ZI74

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

TIMBER , Pomeroy Forest Pro· • • • • • • • • • • • •. .
ducts . Top price for standing
sawtimber. Call Kent Hanby ,
l·«b-8570.
.
COINS, CURRENCY , tokens . old COAL , li me~ tone , and calcium 1969 CHEVROLET Bisquoine; 1966.
BUICK Electro , 225; 2 Roko n
pocket watches and cl"lains . chloride and calcium brine for
dust control and special mi xing ~ lbikes_. Phone949i2432. ,.
silver and gold. We .need I~
and older silver coins. Buy , sell , salt lor formers. Main Street, \972 GRANO Torino , ps ., and
or trade' Call Roger Wamsley , Pomeroy, Oh io or phOne 992.
p .b . . a ir condi t io ned .
7•2·2331. .
:3891.
oulomolic , new A·1 cond;Hon./
CASH! I ! for junk cars . Frye's 197 1 HONDA CL ~450 , 12,000 _ $~1 '~
00:!~&lt;:~•}.' 2:200.!_~~
miles . sissy bar , crash bars , 1973 JEEP CJ.S. 3(1.1 v.a, 26,000 .
Truck cind Auto . 24 HOUR
pull bock handle bars , new li re
WRECKER SERVICE I Phone
miles . Phone (b14} 667-3759 or
ond seals, Scrambler side
7'2·20liL
667 -3022 , James Chodw~ll .
pi pes , $650. Coll 949 ·2'480.
WANTED: CHIPWOOD . pole!
1967 FORD LTD, $525 . Also, 1973
OAt for s;le, Op8~-6days-p~~ CheYy 'l r ton pickup, $1695.
mo xiumum diameter, 10 inches C
on largest end, $8.00 per to n. · week and eYenings. For further.
Call evenings, 992·5947 .
Bundled slabs . $6.00 per ton • information coli (614) 367·7338.
1964
CHEVY 1/ r fan pickup, good
·- ·---- --- --··-··- ~
delivered to Ohio Poll&amp;! Com· -~"
APPLES.
FITZPATRICK
ORCHARD
,
tires.
Runs good . body in good
pony , At. 2, Pomeroy . Phone
STATE ROUTE, b89 . PHONE
condition . Phone 992-3994 .
992·2689.
_I'I'IL~~S III~t~J6Uj ~9·3?~~ .
WANTED TO BUY or toke over FUllER Brush Produc ts for sole .
payments on a Dodge ·
0.
Chev.rolet·OR Ford Von. 1970 -Ph0ne992·341
· - - --------"--·-·
NEW 3 bedroom house , ' bui i
model. Must run good. Phone
kitchen , both and y, , Phone
__
992
_ ·_2917_. -.,--~·
742·2300 or contact MilO 8. Hut·
chison . Rutland . Ohio .
Nt.lD A
- . ·--·----- - BUILDING SITES. 3.11 acres. at
WATER SOF1ENER 7
Boshon T. P.. wafer top , gos
top, minimum soil limitations.
HAV.E ROOhM for helderlody lohd~ in
Phone 985·4102.
pn vofe ome w o ne s ome ESTABLISHED POMEROY In · Let "Pomeroy ,Landmark
· instead ol o resl home . Phone
suronc• Age.ncy is seeking o soften &amp; condition your
HOUSE FOR sole: ,6 1/ 1 acres, 2
(6U ) 667-3305.
d
1
1
water
and
a
Co-op
water
bedrooms, Iorge kitchen ond
soles ~r.son . Goo so cry .Pus softener, Model UC-XVI .
living
room . utili ty neor
comm1UI0!1S, many fr1nge
SKATE·A.WAV ANNOUNCES due
1
hospital and town. $19,500.
tO the energy cri!is , will be
benefits. paid vacations . car re· Now Only '2:79.95
Phone 992·5947 .
quired, Area opportunity for o
dosed Weds . nigl"lts thru tl"le
month ot February . Open Fri ·
sales minded person who let us test your water
day ond Saturday nig hts .
wonts the best . Send resum&amp;to Free .
Box "b72, Pome roy , Ohio 45769,
MIDDLEPORT CAB CO . he,eby
SMALL
ART ond des;gn firm needs ...
serves notice that in the past
full time or porttime book ·
Jac:k W. Catsey, Mgr . .
year . we · hove been operciting
Virgil B. Sr., Realtor
under prices set down in 1975 .
keeper, receptionist, typist. .__ _ _P_ho_n_e_9_'12_·2,.1.-B1_ _.
216 E. Second Slreet
Salary according to e)C perience,
· Due to l"ligher cost of gasoline
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
benefits . S&amp;nd resume to P. 0 . USED FORESTRY EQUIPMENT.
and overa ll e•peneses. we ore
1
Bo)C 272 , Middleport. Ohio
forced to raise the price to
Phone 9'12·3ll5 ·
John Deere 440B Skidder; Pel·
45760.
meet the ov&amp;rheod in order to
tibone Su per 8 Co.ry lilt;
TUPPERS
PLAINS
mai ntain 2:4 hour dependable
Timberjack 230 Forwarder,
Large
7
room
house
in good
services, ~ igned Lewis lee ,
Cos e 000 Skidder : Hydro
location on ·Rt. 7, l'h acres
owner .
. Sawbuck Model 1000-A ; Con ·
level. Just si2.000 .
tact Don Groves, phone (614)
596·4769.
SWEEPER AND SEWING Mochines
i2 YRS. OLD - 3 bedroom
Repolr , Ports and Supp li ~5 .
29 GALLON FI SH tank with stand .
frame home, Bath, · city
Davis Vac uum Cleaner ; one·
all acc~s sories including fi sh .
water, nat . gas furnace &amp;
half mile up George Creek
5125. Phone 992·5833.
·
level lol. Near Rock'
.
---·Rood, off Stole Route 7. Phone
Springs. S22,000.
FREIGHf DAMAGED . only 5 lell .
[614 ) 4&lt;6·0294.
1977 Dressmaker zig -zags sew·
SHOOTING MATCH . jusl off Rl . 7
ing machines. buttonholes,
3 YRS . OLD Brick
b~ · p05!i nea r R9ck Springs
monogra ms, etc, Will sell for
veneer 3 bedroom all elec.
Cemetery . Every Sunday , 12
$48 .95. originally $209.95. Cosh
home 011 the river With 4
noon.
or terms ovoiloble . Call
lots . Copper p lumbing S. 2.
992·5146.
car garage. Now S3S,OOO.

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
Radio Shack Dealership

•

Racllator ~~
Service

1973CAPRICE4DR. HT
12995
local 1. owne.r car, black vinyl roof, green· Interior,
whlte.wall tires, air, automatic. power steering and
brakes .
·

26 ctnts pei' word s ix,

paid ads end ads
with rn 10 days,

Business S..,i~

WE WOUL 0 like to sa~ thoh ks to

consecutive Insertions .

WEDNESDAY, JANUA RY 26,1977
5,1J0-Big Valley 3; My Thretl Sons 4 ; Brady Bunch B;
Misfer Rogers 20,33 ; Star Trek 15.
5:3Q-Adam .12 4 ; News 6; Family Alta ir B: Elec . Co .
20,33; Adam ·12 13 .
6,1J0-News 3,4,8, 10, 13.15: ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:3Q-NBC News 3,4,15 ; ABC New s 13: Andy Gr itt llh 6;
CBS News 8,10: Vgetable Soup 20 ; Lilias Yoga a.
You 33.
7,oo-Truth or Cons. 3: To Telllhe Tr uth 4; Bowl ing tor
Dollars 6; Pop Goes the Country 8; News 10; To Te ll
the Truth 13; My Three Sons 15; Consumer Surviva l
Kit 20; Big Gr~n Magaz ine 33 .
' ' 30.-Co lle~e Basketball 3;; $100.000 Name That Tune

ti
•It

e 111 111 1 111 11111 1 11111 e. 1 · I

-r

-,

·-

�'

'

/

Lance unveils
stimulus plan

16 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday. Jan. 26. 1977

---------------------------1

Il

Area Death s
.

Beatrice Vining
. Bea trice Hal l Vining , 69.

Miam i. Fla .. d ied

unex

pec ted ly at 11 : 45 p ,m
Tuesday at the home of her

sister, Hazel Spencer . 7145
Eas t ~rn Ave .
Born Nov . 9, 1908 in Roa·ne
Coun ty, W Va . 1o the late
James and Nancy Justice
Hall , she mar r ied Tom
VIning In Miaml. Fla. who
survives.
In addition to her sis ter ,
Mr s. Spencer , other su r .
vlvors are one daugh ter ,
Nancy La wler, Georgia , four
grandch i ldren , and t wo

brothers, Cecil, Bidwell and

t&lt;lone , Loonyville, W. Va . Two
brot"'er s and t wo si ste r s
preceded "'er in dea th .
F uner al ser vices will be
Fri day at l p.m . at the Me·
Coy .M oore Funeral Home
wl th the Rev . Elmer Geiser
officiating . Burial will be in
Vin f on Mem or i al Pa r k .
Friends may call at the
funer~l home from 7 to 9 p.m .

lI Rhodes
(Continued from page

,

AC"al dwell . Pomeroy . and
several nieces and 11ephews.
He was ~ member of the
Tuppers Plains Church of
Christ and r~ Jj telong resident
of the Tupper s Plains area
where he spent most of his
lite farm ing . He had 10 years
service at Eastern High

School.
f unera l services will be
Fri day , 'l p .m. at the Tupper's
Plains Church of Chris t wit h
Euge ne Underwood and
Richard Thoma~ off iciating .
Buria l will be in the Church of
Ch r iSt Cemeter y , T uppers
Pl ai ns. F rie nd s wl"ll be
received at th"e Ew ing
Fu neral Home any time until
l 'l p.m . Fnday when the body
w ill be taken to the ch urch to
lie In state unti l ser vices

In a telegram to C..rter, Rhodes urged the President "to take
all steps possible" tn provide Ohio wit&gt;1 additional supplies of
natural gas.
•
At the Energy Emergency Management Committee offices
in the Stale Office Tower, spokesman Ken DrwTI admitted tllal
guaging the success of Rhodes' call for volunta ry conservation
was still several days off.
Rep. Thomas J. Carney, !J.Youngstown, sponsor of tbe
resolution which cleared both chambers of the legisla tUre late
Tuesday, told his L'O IIeagues tllat tile state's energy emergency
wes llil! "most serious energy shortage in tile history of Ohio."
The house added two amendments to Carney 's original draft
of the resolution befQre sending it to the senate 85-to·2.
The senate stripped the amendments from the house version
and returned it tn the lower chamber on a unanimous voice
vote. The house hacked down and rc.passed the unanemded
resolution.
Four of the five "hotlines" set up by the state to field
questions from the public were installed Tuesday. The fifth , a
toll-free line for use by the public (1-80().282·9234 ), was
scheduled tolbe in operation today.
The other lines were for mayors, the news media, industrial
officials and businessmen.

Lewis]. Fox

Lewis J ( Harmon) Fox, 6a ,
Rt . 2. Pom er oy, died Tuesday
af ternoon at Hol zer M edica l
Ttwrsday .
Cen ter .
Bor n Oct . 'l'l , 1908 the son of
the ·la te Lou1s and Sarah
Kisor FQ)c he was preceded
in death by one da ug ~ ter ,
El oise Roush ; Mike Burke,
gr ea t gr an ds on an d two
Howard Caldwell , Sr .. 70. sisters , Helen Lewis and
Tuppers Plains, died Tuesda y Viol a Co rnell , on e half .
afternoon at his re si dence. br other and one half .s is ter.
Born Aug . 8, 1906 son oJ the
Surviving are his wife,
late Clyde and Lola Baker Emma Bai ley Fox ; two
Caldwell , he was preceded in d ~ ughters , M rs. Roy ( lola 1
death by one sister , Doroth y Howell , Pomeroy , and Mrs .
Cowdery .
John (R uth! Douglas, Rt. 1.
Survi ving are his wi fe , Guysv i lle; one brot her . Ben
Rubal Kincaid Caldwel L two Fox , Dunc an Fal ls ; two
sons, Howard Ca ldwell, Jr . sis ter s, Gladys Dott, R avens and his wife , Ma ivene, and wood,! W. Va , an d Ol ive
Jim Caldwell and his wif e, Mundy . Newar k: one h,;~l f
Sally ;
fo u r
grand sons, b r other, George L em ley.
Howard Caldwell II I, Bob, Chesh ir e, nine g r and
Jimmy and Jeff Caldwell ; c h il dren ,
11"
great
three g r- anddaught ers grandch i ldren , and sever al
Christy , Martie and Jodi nieces an d nephews .
Caldwe ll ;
one
gr eat .
Fu neral ser vices w i ll be
granddaugh t er.
Rabert a Thursda y, 1 p rn . at the
Ca ldwell ; two sister s, Maxi ne . Ewi ng Cha pel wi th the Rev
Chapman, Tuppers Plain s, Fl oyd Sh ook off iciating
and '
Pauleta
Dean ,
Bu ri ~l will be in th e Rock
W.Jshington Court House ; two Spr ings Cemetery. Ca ll if1 g
brothers . Ceci l Caldwell , hours wi ll be af ter '1 p .m.
Tuppers Plains, and G~rl and Wedne sday .

Howard
Caldwell, Sr.

Five fined in

No injuries

mayor's court

reported in

Mother, two sons burned to death

I)

First w~ter
meeting set in
West Columbia
WEST COLUMBIA, W. Va.
- Water meetings in several
Mason County commu nities.

ha ve been announced by
Public Service Distri ct
Chairman Vitus Hartley, Jr.
The first will be held at the
West Columbia Elementary
School on Th ursday, January
27, at 7 p.m.
The count y's proposal for a
water system along State
Route 62 betwe.en Lakin and
West Columbia will be
presented. People livin g back
of West Columbia are also
invited to attend, since the
water system to be discussed
is the one most likely to serve
them in th e future.

Hospital News
·Veterans Memorial Hospital

Budget
(Continued from page 1)

m issio ne r s,
$d5,854. 59 ;
Count )' Aud itor , $50,580:49 ; .

-County T~ea su rer, $32,900 ;
Pr osecu,t1 n g

A tt or ne y.

Firemen from three Athens
shooting out of the building
ATHENS, Ohio IUPI ) - through the window:"
County
volunteer fire depart.
Adkins said Barry could not ·and tllen went to a neighbors
Unda Barry, 31, and her two
ments
fought
the blaze,
,
sons Gabriel , 4, and Daniel, get throu gh .the flames and called authorities.
nine months, died in a fire
\
early today at their rural
home, authorities said.
Firemen said the blaze
swept through the tw~ory
frame borne on South Canaan
Road about ·six miles
STOP IN ON THE 1ST FLOOR AND SEE THE EXCELLENT
southeast of Athens.
Richland Area Volunteer
SELECTION OF
Fire Department Chief Tom
Adkins said Mrs. Barry
awoke her husband , John ,
shortly before 4 a.m. and said
'
she saw a glow in the
downstairs ar'ea.
"He was in hls pajamas
. ·and barefooted and went
down to check it out," said
Adkins. "There was so much
fire he couldn't get' up tbe
stairs to where the bedrooms
were. He set a ladder up and
tri~ to get into the house

Elberfelds In ·Pom.eroy

FANNY FARMER VALENTINE CANDY

Vaccm'e may
•
SOOD
FORTY YEARS AGO - Preci.sely 40 years ago yesterday (Jan. 26, 1937)
the Ohio River proved again it had no mercy as it crested at 64.5 feet, the

CANDIES

$25,680.24

their children to the health
departrn ent oIf'1ce f or 1he
Boa rd oI Elec I10ns, 146 ,989 .
1'
. h ld h k b
Bu il ding a nd Gr o und s
po IOVaccme s ou c ec
y
$44,000.
' phone to see 1f the vaccine
Sher iff , $1'23, 180; Recorder , . has arrived before coming in,
S2A'· gncu
ll 9.2ll.ture, 123 ,485 .
Mrs. Lyons said.
HEALTH AND WELFARE
Gener al Hospi tal and Care,
speech and hear ing , Veteran s
Me mor ial H os pital. $700;
Tubercul osis Hospital Ct'ini cs
and Care, $40,000 (levy) ;
Ot her
Hea lth , cr i ppled
chil dr en, $3 .73 9: Count y
Boar d of Mental Retarda ti on.

143.121.74 llevyl.
CHARITIES AND
CORRECTION
Count y . Hom e, $4.5, 177 ;
Chil d
Welfare
Boa rd ,
Chi ldren Serv i"ces, $32, 762. 40;
Sold ier 's Re l ief, $1 3. 100;
Ve ter a ns Se r v ice, $1 0.57 5:
Public Ass1s i ance, $7, 500 ;
Wor khouse , $4,000 .
Educa tion, Hi stor ica l. Soc.,
$1,800 ; Insuran ce, Pens1ons
an d
Taxes.
$72 ,395 .06;
F ami l y Pla nn1n g , $1 ,000;
Senior Ci tizens, $5,000: Soil &amp;
Wa ter Cons., $4, 800 ; Con .
lingencies. $6,733 31; Total

BONDS FORFEITED
RACINE - One defendant
was fined and three others
forfeited bonds in Racine
Mayor Charles Pyle's court
Tuesday night. The arresting
officer was Alfred Lyons.
Fined was Robert M.
Richard, Rt. I, Long Bottom,
$29.70, speeding. Forfeiting
bonds were John E. Blake,
Rt. 2, Pomeroy and Milton
Gary, Cleveland, $3S,
speeding ; Thomas Burnside,
Pomeroy, $50, disturbing the
peace.

VOL XXVII

TilE INN PLACE
Thursday Night Special

, Pomeroy, o,
Phone 992-6304
PIZZA SHACK Phone 992·6304

992·3'29

·==

==·

WATCH FOR
OPfNING DATE

TAKF..N TO VMH
The
Middlep·orl
Emergency Squad was called .
to 227 S. Fifth St.. at 10 :54
p.m. for Mildred Milborne
who was ill. She was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospi t t~l.
CANCF.LI.F.Il
A meeting of the II .M.W.A.
Supporters ('tub schcdulcrl
for Friday at the F.a~lcs f'tuh
'1•s lx'c n r;~ rweiiL-d dur to h;~rl

0

~

Ill

~

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

FOSTORIA, OHIO - ONE OF THE largest food
warehouses in Ohio faces a shutdown of natural gas Feb. I,
endangering $65 million worth of perishable foods, James
Adams Sr., president of Fostoria Distributing System, said.
Adams said the company has been notified by Columbia
(;as thai on Feb. I it will be cut hack to 15 per cent pf its gas
allocation. "We can 'tmilke it on that," said Adams. ·
Adams said he does not know what will happen when the
cutback comes and that no solution has yet been found on how
to save the food.
•

enttne

gas cutback~
face local board
The energy. crisis in the
Meigs Local School District
will be discussed by \he
district board of education in
special session at 7:30 p. m.
Friday at the Meigs Junior
Hi gh School in Middleport.
Supt. Charles L. Dowler
has learned of additional
natural gas cutbacks ordered
in the district. The high
school cutback of 85 pet. will

begin Feb. I ; elementary
schools cutback will be in·
creased to 30 pet.
Previously the high school
curtailment figure had been
50 percent and it was doubtful
if the district could keep the
building open at that figure
without the additoinal 35
percent increase in the
curtailment figure.
Elementary schools were

for the ice

I, Maxine Griffith, cashier, of the above-name&lt;j bank do hereby declare 11\at this Report
of Condition is true and correct to the best'of my knowledge and belief. '
Maxine Griffith
·
January 19, I977

We, the undersigned directors attest the correctness of this statement of resources and
liabilities. We declare that it has been examined by us, and to the best of oor knowledge and
belie! is true and correc~.

..

- - - - - , - -..... ....- wefltlll'l'.

•

CINCINNATI (UP!) Ohio River icing is "serious"
and "all persons with any
property or any activities on
or near the river should begin
to take protective measures
now," the National Weather
Service's River Forecast
Center advised Wednesday.
Meanwhile, John Lane of
the U. S. Army Corps of
Engineers echoes that the
iced-&lt;&gt;ver river "is potentially
dangerous."
"We could have more ice
jams and we could have some
flooding when melting
cornell," he aaid. "But it's
hard to accurately predict
just what will happen until we
get some real thawing."
Said the weather service's
river forecasters: "The
serious ice condition con·
tinuea along the Ohio River.
Although
some
local
weakening and thiMing of ice
II expected today, no general
breakup or large sea Je
move"'ent Is ldrecast. Cold
air forecast to move into the

Ohio Valley today will
probably slow the current
weakening trend."
The
981-mile
river
remaine d open to barge
traffic, but only a few
towboats were pushing
harges up and down the river.
A major ice jam hindered
tows near Carrsville, Ky.
"A few small towbo~:s
without barges have been
able to push through the big
ice jam there, but it's still
holding up heavy traffic,"
reported Lane.
ASK DISSOLUTION
Roger G. Theiss, .Rt. 2,
Racine, and Myrtle E.
Tbtiss, same address, have
filed for dissolution of
marriage in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court.

'

'

HOURS, ADJUSTED
Hours at the senior citizens
center will be from 9 a.m.
until 3 p.m. until further
notice.

'

•

;:::;:;::·::::::::::::::::::;::::·::::;:;:;:;:;:·::::·::·:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Saturday through
Monday,
very
cold
Saturday, Sunday and
Monday. Highs will be iO to
15 above and lows will be
zero to 10 below ·zero
Saturday and Sunday and
near zero Monday.

Extreme caution advised in driving

Prepare

travel.
The director emphasized
the warning to motorists to
exercise extreme caution
while driving in hazardous
road conditions, particularly
where the. driving seems
especially rough because of
the dangerous frost heave
breaks in the pavement.
Frost heave is caused by
expansion of freezing
moisture
under
the
pavement.

Weather
Very cold, chance of snow
tonight and Friday. Lows
tonight near zero, highs
Friday 10 to 15 above .
Probability of precipitation
30 per cent today, 60 per cent
tonight and Friday.
CALL ANSWERED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad answered acall to Wolf
Pen at 1;29 p.m. Wednesday
for Amanda Hawk, a medical
patient, who was taken to
Veteraris Memorial Hospital
where she was admiUed.

A story so untrue, farfetched, goofy that
no one in his right mind could believe it
:·PORTLAND
Ever read a
story so untru.e, unreal, un·
believable,· unreasonable, so crazy,
foolish and Impossible you felt like
kicking yourself to wake up and bum
the bOOk?
These last two weeks or so have
. brought back to.mind one.such book
I ready In the early 19208. I was on
leave of absence lr9m Homer
Laughlin China Co. in East Liver·
pool, and waiting for my first haby.
After reading ail the baby books
from ·Food and Clothing stores,
doctors' offices, etc., etc., along with
Sunday Sc.hool lessons, church
literature, catalogs, newspapers and
magazines; Frankinstein's books
· and Bob Ingersoll ti)eory, I picked
up, "Weird Tales Magazine," my
husband . was reading at the
moment. ·
Historr is my favorite subject,
though I can't remember dates,
except Columbus dis~overed

America in 1492 ·(silmetimes I say
i942) .
This article was half way
through the book "End of the world
in a hundred years," and I read it
that day - look,ing back over it to
see If I read what I thought I did. I do
not recall the mad scientist's name
now, but the words are vivid in my
mind: He wrote, and I summarize ;
We are picking up l)le pieces of
W. W. 1; worst we've ever known,
bu\ there's worse to come ;
describing closed and shut down
factories, mills grinding to a hall overflowing warehouses and no one
or money to buy wares.
Servicemen would pound the
streets seeking work and there
would be none i soup lines, welfare
kitchens, war chests empty - theft,
murder, etc., etr .. through several
generations to come.
. He said each generation would
experienc• new w•ys of life, some to

parents' f or ms .

- About four million of tbe
poor who essentially fall
through a crack- they have
no Social Security, no
children and do not earn
enough to pay any t"" .
The rehate, if ills approved
by Congress, basically will'
work this way :
- Those whO pay tax will
get $50 for themselves and
each dependent, no matter
howmany dependents and no
matter how much they make.
However , the payment may
not be greater than actual
1976 taxes paid. If they paid
only $10 m taxes, they would
get back only $10.
- Each benefi cia rv of
(Continued on page 10)

Commission

earlier at 10 percent and it
had been hoped that the
elementary schools could
ACTION FILED
conserve enough fuel to give
Garnishment action was
the high school building some filed in Meigs County Com·
belp:
Besides the energy crisis, mon Pleas Court by
the board will p~y bills and Homemakers Loan and
Discount Co.,
will discuss prod dures to be Consumer
Toledo against Richard and
followed in the evaluation of Doris J. Swanson, Mid·
administrators.
· dieport.

Bob Clark, Meigs County
Supt. of Ohio Department of
Highways, said today Ohio
motorists are being warned
to drive with extreme caution
because of dangerous £rost
heave on some highways
throughout the state and
because of depleted road salt
supplies in southern Ohio.
State Transportation
Director , · Richard
D.
Jackson, said in all instances
driving anywhere in Ohio, the
motorists are reminded , of
their responsibility to
exercise caution while
driving in the extreme
weather conditions.
Jackson noted the deep
freezing conditions of the past
· several weeks which have
caused highways in scattered
areas to crack upward from
the pressure, creating
dangerous breaks of jagged
· pavement sometimes a foot

supplement al security
income recipient.
The approximately eight
million Americans who would
not get the rebate break down
basically into two groups:
-Students wbo are claimed
as depende nts on their

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY, JANUARY 27, 1977

or more in height. The sa it supplies to meet im·
Departmeni is patrolling mediate·needs. Northern tier
state highways under its counties obtain salt from
DETHOIT :- SOME 9,000 WORKERS AT Chrysler Corp.
jurisdiction to discover and Cleveland area mines. The
and General Motors Corp. workers were poised to leave their
mark the most serious of entire salt production is being
jobs today if there were no agreements orNocal contracts that
these break, said Jackson, used as it becomes available.
have been pending since last fall 's national negotiations.
Shortage of salt in the
But the motorist must be
GM faced an 11 a.m. ·EsT strike by 7,700 members of
wary of these breaks and southeastern counties is due
United Auto Workers Local 668 at the two foundries that
comprise the Cbevrolet Metal Casting facility in Saginaw,
potholes which occur as a . to abnormal weather con·
result of freezing moisture ditions and the frozen Ohio
Mich. Chrysler could be hit by a walkout of 1,300 clerical
under the pavement. He said River northward froffi Cin·
employes at its highland Park, Mich., world beadquarters at 10
there is no way to determine cinnati. Director Jackson
a.m. EST. Strikes at either facility would have no immediate
says some 30 to 40 barges
where they may occur.
effect on other au!Qmotive operati; ns, spokesmen said.
Salt supplies in nine south· carrying some 36,000 tons of
ern Ohio counties are salt have been held up. He
CINCINNATI - CITY MANAGER WilLIAM Donaldson
reported depleted. These said the salt suppliers have
says this winter's record cold weather and snowfall figures to
District 10 counties include : been notified of their
oost the city of Cincinnati 6etween $2 million and $2.S million.
Hocking, \'inion, Gallia , responsibilities to deliver
Donaldson told City Council late Wednesday that overtime
payments and other costs related to snow removal would total
Meigs, Athens, Morgan, under contracts with the
Washington, Noble and State and that both the
between $800,000 and $900,000, with another II miUion to $1.5
million eltJleCted to be spent to repair roads and bridges
Monroe. District 9 which Department and the supincludes Brown, Highland, pliers are attempting to work
damaged by the snow and iee. Temperature dipped to an all·
Adams,
Scioto, Lawrence, out alternate plans for
time record low of minus 25 here last week and by mid-month,
the city already had seta record for snowfall in January.
Pike •. Jackson, a~d Ross delivery using railroad
Counties report salt supplies facilities.
Meantime, Jackson said
nearly depleted. In addition ,
ODOT
county crews are
· Pick away
and
Perry
continuing
the plowing and
Counties just to the north
spreading
salt
where
report practically depleted .
and
sand
and
grits
available
road salt supplies.
GAME TONIGHT
(
granuiargravel)
to
keep
the
The northern threeThe Southern • North Gallia .quarters of Ohio, north of a highways open for motorists
basketball game will be line from Cincinnati lo getting to and from their
played this evening.
work or other necessary
Bellaire, reports mlnirr

~~~~~i:~tiritii &lt;'~~~~~.n~g·;~b.;;di~-~t~-~~;~; ~~d·d~b.;~i~~~·)· :::::: : i2i.JN~:!~

Edison Hobslelter
R, K Boice - Di1·ectors
- - ---'-- Orion W. Ro11•h

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

By United Press International
WAS!fiNGTON - IN LESS THAN A MONTH Watergate
burglar E. Howard Hunt is expected to leave a federal prison,
the result of a decision by the U.S. Parole Corrunission.llunt
was granted a parole Wednesday effective Feb. 2S, provided he
pays the $10,000 fine included in his sentence. His lawyer said
that would be no problem.
·
In another decision, the commission refused to release
convicted swindler Billie Sol Estes from parole status. Instead
it referred Estes' case for hearing before a parole examiner in
his native Texas, at a time and place yet to be determined.
Estes, 51, was convicted of mail fraud in 1,963 in a widely
publicized case in whi~h he built a $150 million fortune by
mortgaging nonexistent fertilizer storage tanks.

lllc
u

c
z
c
Ill:

THE MEIGS INN

•

jNews .•• in Brief~ New

-...t:
-.

- ...

NO. 200

~::::::::::~:~:~:=:::::;s$:~:::~:;:~:::·: :::~·8·8~::::·::::~::::::::::::~:::::..::::."*~).:::$C~

'

Plus Tax

at y

the number of public service
jobs in the country before
next December.
President Carter 's top eco·
nomic offi cials- Budget
Bert · Lance,
Director
Treasury Secretary Michael
Blumenthal and chief
economic adviser Charles
Sc hultze - outlined the
program to·the House Budget
Corrunittee, saying it was
necessary to put the economy
back on track.
The $11.4 billion in tax
rebates
and
special
payments- the heart of tbe

ELECTIONS
.

News .. in Briefs

MEIGS THEATHE
CLOSED FOR
VACATION

second worst Hood in history. Official U. S. Corps of Engineer figures show
the river crested at6:&gt; plus feet in 1913. Above is a scene looking upriver on
that day in 1937 in Pomeroy.

•

e

Parents planning on taking

ADMITTED - Velma
Parsons , Ra cine; Sharon
Petrie, Pomeroy; Florence
Karen Werry, Racine ; J udy
Our January Clearance Sale brings you savings of 40 Per Cent and
Krautter, Minersville; J.ydi a
more on many items of wearing apparel for men , boys, women and
Fined in the court of two
Ebersbach, Pomeroy.
children.
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
D I S.C H A R G E D
No injuries were reported Chri stopher Wolf, Arthur
Andrews Tuesday night were
'. Timothy Thomas; Pomeroy, in two accidents mvestigated Tucker, Sharon Bing, Sandra
$100 and coS\s, petty larceny; by the Pomeroy Poli ce John s on , Kimb er ly
Mabel Sprouse, Portland, Department
Cremeans.
At 12 :45 a.m. Wednesday a
$100 and costs, petty larceny;
General Fund, $8 14,389.99.
Carl Stewart, Middleport, $30 car on West Main St. , driven
Dog and Kennel. 58,445;
by
Barry
Stewart,
19,
Mid·
and costs, ruiUling a stop
Coun ty Board of Education,
dieport,
slid
on
th
e
ice
into
a
sign; Sheila Edwards,
$740, 981.84; F ood Se r v ice,
REPORT OF CONDITION
Pleasant \'ailey Hospital
$1,394.87; Public Ass istance,
Pomeroy, $100 and costs, utility pole. There . were
Disch argi'" - Marlin $2 56 ,70 1. 41 , Co mmu f1 it y
Consolidating d'omestic subsidiaries of the
peUy larceny at Krogers and heavy damages to the car.
Mental Hea lth . and Retar ·There
were
no
charges.
Th
o!llpson,
Northup
,
0,.
;
Sharon Ichenhow'e r ,
da tion Fund , $20, 099.04; Real
'At 5:03p.m. Tuesday at the Glady s Smithson , Point Esta te Assessme nt Fund ,
POMEROY NATIONAL BANK
Pomeroy, aiding and abetting
Sheila Edwards in petty theft. intersection of Main and Plea sant ; Mrs. - Russell $20, 000; So i l and Water
OF POMEROY
Forfeiting bonds were Carl Court, two vehicles received Hinkl e, Le on; Mrs. Lee Conser va·fion Specia l Fund .
$9,698 .13; Regiona l Plann ing
Wroten
,
Glenwood;
Teresa
minor
damages.
A
vehicle
Stewart, Middleport , $30,
Com m ission, $1.97 9 90;
in the state of Ohio, at the close of busines.• on December 31, 1976 published in response to
posted on a charge of ruiUling driven by Charles Butcher La mp, Point Pleasant ; Glen Ge neral , $~4,74h74 ; CETA
Paxton,
Point
Pleasant
;
Mrs.
call
made by Comptroller of the Curreltcy, under title 12, United States Code, Section 161.
Fund , $127,720.82; Civil
a stop sign; Nelson Wise, 88, 53, Pomeroy, skidded into th~
Delense
Fund
.
1500
;
Federal
Delbert
Nichols,
Leon;
rear
of
a
car
driven
by
Steve
Pomeroy, $30 for failure to
Reven ue Sha r i ng Fund ,
Charter number 1980
National Bank Rogion Number 4
yield right .of way ; Teresa Daily, 27, Racine. The Dailv Everett Gillispie, Ashton; $37,
280; Gran d To tal of All
Mrs.
Timot~y
M
ayes,
Hen·
Branham, 20, Mason, $100, car was stopped at a traffic
Funds, $1,647,045.48.
Statement of Resources and Uabilities
s ignal. Th ere were no derso n, Chad Tipton,
petty theft at Kroger's. \
Gall ipolis; Mr s. Willia m
arrests.
'
Voight, Point Pleasant; and
Cashandduefrombanks . .. . . .... .... .. . ... ;., .... ... . ..... . .. .... ...... $1,199,775.01
Shortened
hours
U.S. Treasury securities . .... . . .. ............. . .. . . .. .... .... .. ... ... .. .. I0,063,897.21
Mrs.
Garl and Bos tic ,
Gallipolis Ferry.
Obligations of States and political subdivisions ... ... .. .. .... . ...... .. ...... . 1,749,303.29
Other honds, notes, ijnd debentures ....... .......... , , .. , . . ......... . ......... ·.1,742.li0
Births - A son to Mr. and to sa\'e energy
Federa1 Reserve stock and col'JI(Irate stock .. .. .... . ...... ....... ...... . ...... 42,000.00
Mrs. Daniel Rhodes, Cot·
RUTLAND
Effective
(Continued from page 1)
tageviile, a son to Mr. and
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
the counter. If the negotiations fail , Patronite said, serious Mrs. Robert Bailey, Long J anua ry 26 , th e Leading
under agreements to resell . .. ... .. .. . , .. . .. ... , . ... . ... .. .. . .... . .. . ..... 5SO,OOO.OO
tllought would then be given to installing the vending Bottom and a son to Mr. and · Creek Conservancy District
Loans, Total (excluding unearned income) . ... .. ... . .. . . ..... 9,944,904.76
machines. He indicated the machines would be built in Ohio Mrs. Ri chard Mead ows, and the Leadin g Creek
Less : Reserve for possible loan losses ....... . ....... .. ........ 69,039.97
Watershed Association, Inc.,
and would vend only regular weekly tickets and install winner , Glen wood.
Loans, Net .. .. . ............. .. . .. ... . . .. ... . .... ...... . .. . ........ .. . 9,875,8&amp;4:79
offices are setting new hour~,
tickets.
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
opening at 9:30 a.m. and
other assets representing bank premises . .. . . . •.. , . . .. ·.'. . .. .... ..... . ... . .. 312,831.47
dosing
at 4:30p.m. until the I - --+--Otherassets ... : .. . .. . . . ............ ... .... ...... . .. . ..... , , , , ...... . · '· . . 18 740.65
HONG KONG - CHINA HAS CALLED for rapip develop.
1
end of Februa ry, du e to the
men! of Its troubled coal industry and has set estimated
TOTAL ASSETS .... ............. ... .... . ............ . ..... . . .. .... ... $23,814,154.92
energy shortage. This is
production goals this year at a half-billion tons. At a 1 ~y ,
being done to conserve
Holzer
Medical
Center
conference that .just ended, the Chinese leadership also
Demand deposits of individuals, prinshps., and corps ................ , .. .. ... 4,804,366.05
Ill
energy, to prot,ect sources of
(Discharges, Jan. 25)
established "an inspiring Jong.term target" for production,
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
Ill
Arm inta Ball , Marilyn energy to heat homes,
Peking Radio reported today.
·
prlnships, and corps . . .. .... ... : . .... .... . . .... . .. .. .. ... .. , , .. . .. : . .. 15,193;426.83
Coal 1.5 China:s main source of energy, supplying more Barron, Mrs. Alvin Curtis hospitals, and schools, and to
Deposits of United States Goverment ..... ...... . ..... . .. , ..... ... . . ... . .. ... 72,849.12
!han two-thirdS of national needs. Production has been and daughter , James rJavis, preserve jobs.
Deposits of States and political subdivisions .. . .. .. ......•........... , .... . . 1,649,522.86
1111
hampered in recent years by industrial unrest connected wi th James fisher, Evelyn Fitz.
Certifiedandolficers'checks .. .. ........ .. ·. .............. ... ........... .... 59,626.40
oC
J)olitical infighting and also has suffered from earthquakes water, Larry Frasher 1 Judith
TOTAL DOMESTIC DEPOSITS ... . . .................. . ..... . .... .. ..... 21,779,791.26
that shut down the country's largest coal mining complex for a Gilliland, Matthew Gilmore,
BONDS FORFEITED
Total demand deposits .... ........... : .. . ... ... .. . ...... .. 5,817,868.22
prolonged period last year. Despite th·ese problems, official Mrs. Jeanni e Hampton ,
Three defendants forfeited
Totaltime and savings deposits .............. , ... . .... . .... 15,961,923.04
reports early this month said the state plan for production last Chr is toph er Hoffman , bonds in the court of Mid·
TOTAL DEPOSITS IN DOMESTIC AND
year was "overfu1filled."
Freeman Jones, Sarah dleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
FOREIGN OFFICES ..... . . . .. ... .. ....... . . , .. . . . . ... ......... .. .. . 21,779.791.26
Layne , Michael Ma ssie, Tuesday night. They are
Mary Milhoan , Jeffr ey Roger Butcher, no age or
~ ...
Moles, Mrs. Paul Myers and address recorded, $100 posted
t-C
dau ghter, Daisy Osborn, on a destruction of property
Conunon stock:
;:)Richard Pickens, Carl Reed, charge ; Robert M. Swick, 19,
a. No. shares authorized 8,000
Edna Reibel, Jerry Remines, Middleporl", $27, posted on a 1 OD.
b. No. shares outstanding 8,000 · (par value ) ............ : ..... . .......... $200,000.00
Chester Sheaves, Reda speeding charge, ~nd Denny
Surplua . .. ... .. .... ... .... . . . ... . . .. . . ... . ... .. ..... ..... . .. .... ... . .... 1,300,000.00
Spencer, Videila Stipes, L. Roberts , 4!, Middleport,
Undivided profits . . ......... . , . ... . . .. , .. , . , . .......... .. . . : . . . . .. ... .. .. , """•"'"'·"'
.. Carolyn Ward, Ronald Wells, $50, posted on a disorderly 1----+-- Reserve for contingencies and other capital reserves .. . , . .. .... . .. . , . .. .. . :
~
Terri Wimer.
maMer charge.
TOTALEQUITYCAPITAL ........ .. .. . .. ...... .. .. .. . ...... . .. , ...... 1 ~ !!!!~
!Births, Jan. 25 )
TOTALUABIUTIESANDEQUITYCAPITAL .............. . :.. .. .. .. .. . ,ffi 54 92
==
Mr. a nd Mrs. Edward
Slagle, daughter, Gallipolis;
Average for 16 or 30 calendar days ending with call dale;
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Pugh,
Cash and due from banks ....... . ...... . ................. : ...... . . . ... . $1,476,371.76
· SQUAD CALLED
daughter, Wellston; Mr. and
Fed. funds sold and securities purchased
The Pomeroy Emcrgeocy
Mrs. Ma rty Mora rity,
1lllder agreements to resell ................ . ... . . .. ... .... .. . .. . .. .. . . .. . : 455,000.00
daughter, Racine; Mr. and Squad took Lydia Ebershach,
Total loans ..... .. . . ...... .. ..... ·... ... . .. . ... . ..... .... .. ... .......... 9,871,999.35
Mrs. Da vid L. Arthur, Mulberry Ave., to Veterans
Time deposits of $100,000 or more in domestic offil'cs ................... .. .. , ~.000.00
daughter, Oak Hili ; Mr. and Memorial Hospital at I :S3
Total deposits .. .. ..... .. ...... .. ... . .. .. ... . , .... . ... . . ... ........... 21,864,128.7i
Q
Time deposits of 1100,000 or more (outstanding as of report date)
Mrs. Kenneth Patrick, son, p.m. Tuesday. She was ad·
mitted.
Time certificate!~ of deposit in denominations of 1100,000 or more ....... . • , . ... 250,000.00
Gallipolis.

accidents

II is also aimed at doobling

~entine's c:nay

$45,800; Budgel Commission,
Wh'l P.-1.
·
h
SJOO · Board of Revis ion SJOO ·
I e o to vaccme as
B ur~au of Inspection, s2o.ooo : still not arrived from the Ohio
Cou nty Planning Com. Department of Health in
miss ion, 12.650.
Columbus back orders to the
JUDICIAL
'
.
Com mon Pl ea s Court ·health departments of Ohio
$37 ,4 34 .61 ; D o m e st i ~ maybelilednextweek, Mrs.
Rela ti ons a li d Juvenil e Court , Gene ~yons, local health
12 1. 469.23 ; Pr oba te Cou rl, department administrative
$ 13,.417.77 ; Clerk of Courts,
.
.
139,848.08; Coroner, $7,000; asSistant, satd today.
County and Muni cipa l Courts,

income .

eaptu~a l{,eart

be here

program- would be sent out
in April, May and June
according
to
high
administration officials who •
ootlined the plan to reporters
prior to the Capitol Hill
testimony.
Some 9e pe r ce nt of the
American people would
receive the payments, tbe
administration officials said.
"This program ... will add a
modest general stimulus In
the economy through $5()-per·
person rebates, tax reduction
and larger countercyclical
grants to states and
localities," Lance said.
Lance
sa id
the
administration proposed "tax
rebates on calendar year 1976
liabilities of ~ for each
taxpayer imd each of the
taxpayer 's dependents as
well as a $50 payment for
each earned income credit
recipient.''
He said the cash payments
would also go to each Social
Security recipient and each

By DONALD H. MAY
WASHINGTON (UPI )
The Carter administration
today unveiled a _two-year ,
$31. 2·billi on ec onomic
stimulus program which will
send~ to almost every man ,
~oman 'and child in the
country reg ardless of

help, others to hinder. and people
would become so puffed up with
their own Importance and keeping
ahead of others they'd lose their
sense of fair play, honesty, decency
and consideration lor others.
But there would be a few, a
small group, who would be pushed
back, like the Indians when the
white man came. And they would ·
bold with the old ways, and live in
peace and comfort, close to' God and
nature; not dependent on. cities for
tbeir livelihood.
They would tUI the soil, build
their homes, bring ,up their families
just as their ancestors had - all new
techniques would mean nothing to
them, and especially through hard
work and plain Jiving, they· would
have healthy bodies and lives.
But ones In cities would suffer
from the pollution, disease, over·
crowding, over-eating, all sorts of
(,Continued on Jll&amp;e 2)

' i'

asks action
The Meigs County Commission ers Tu esd ay night
urged the State of Ohio and
Department of Trans·
portation to take necessary
Steps to roofer with the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co., to determine an
alternate connection to the
proposed Ravenswood bridge
other than the one presently
plaiUled.
A resolution submitted by
Richard Jones was approved
Tuesday night.
The resolution emphasises:
The State of Ohio ,.
Department of Trans·
portation has expressed a
willingness to participate in
the construction of a new
bridge across the Ohio River
in Meigs County, ·presently
known as the Ravenswood
Bridge.
The
Columbus
and
Southern · Ohio Electric
Company has expressed a
desire to develop, as an in·
dustrial site, the property
they presently own in the
inlmediate area .
The electirc company has
expressed publicly that the
proposed re-routing of Route
124 will adversely affect the
development of said in·
dustriai site.
Meigs County desperately
needs the 3,000 construction
jobs and the 400 permanent
jobs that. would be derived
from said development.
The Board of .Com·
missioners strongly urges the
State of Ohio, Department of
Transportation to take
necessary steps to confer
with the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric
Company to determine if an
alternate connection can be
determin ed with rroposed

New officers
accepted by
police order
Three new members were
accepted by the Gallia·Meigs
Fraternal Order of Police in
its January session at Mid·
dleport Village Hall this
week.
The three new members
are Andy Lyle, Meigs County
Game Protector; Gene
McDaniel, and Harvey
Hoffner, both of the Mid·
dleport Police Department.
A report of activities for
1976 was given in reference to
the sponsorship of a circus by
the group irt June. From the
proceeds, tbe group made
donations to the Guilding
Hand School, the Sid Little
fire fund, Holzer Medical
Center toy fund ; Gallia
County Jaycees, the Meigs
Local sports fund, Pomeroy
tennis court work, Middleport
Fire Department Auxiliary
and to two officers from other
F.O.P. lodges in need of
financial aid . The local
F.O.P. is discussing again
sponsoring a circus.

The group is composed of
officers of all police and
sheriff departments in Meigs
and Gallia County.

State Route 824, the pr~pose d
approach to the Ravenswood
Bridge, which would allow for
the much needed economic
development as well as high·
way Improvements in Meigs
County.
The State of Ohio,
Department of Trans·
portation also is strongly
urged to begin at once the
formal study of corridor or
. corridors to link U.S. Route 33
and SR 7 at Five Points and
continu e to the Ravenswood-

OhiO Bridge and its approach
via proposed SR 624 .
Lawrence Manley met with
the commissioners and iniormed them that his garbage
pickup service wa s being hurt
by county containers located
so close to villages. Manley
suggested they be moved a
greater distance from the
villages he serves.
Jones told Manley that the
commissioners would take
hi·s su ggestion under ad·
visement.
Th e
com·
mis si on er s discus s ed
problems of trash be1ug piled
outside the containers which
occurrs when the truck is out
of service due to repair.
Jones asked that a meeting
be set up with the people
picking up the trash from the
containers to discuss the
situation.

Business
places are
singled out
The Pomeroy Citizens
Action Group toda y an·
nounced
displays
of
photographs, drawings, and a
short history have be en
placed in four Pomeroy
businesses in conjunction
with the group's renovation
plans.
The photos, drawings and
history were done by the
graphicai'ts department of
Ohio. University in con ·
junction with the Pomeroy
group's program for im·
provement of Pomeroy
Village. The displays are to
show the influence of the late
1800s in the architecture of
buildings in the Pomeroy
business section. It has been
reported !bat 90 percent of
the structure~ have been
determined "interesting and
soun~ " and will be listed in a
national historical ·register . .
The displays are located at
the Farmers Bank atid
Savings Co., the Meigs
Branch of the Atliens County
Savings and Loan Co,, the
Pomeroy National Bank, and
tbe Ughthouse Restaurant,
formerly the Blue and Grey.
They will remain in the
business houses two weeks,
The citizens action group is
planning a renovation
program for the busitiess
section. It has been indicated
already that owners o! two
business houses have said
they plan to make lm·
provements
in
their
buildings. ·

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