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10-TheDaUySentlnel,Middleport-!Wleroy,O., Tuesday, Feb. !, 1977

·March I hid opening set
Bleil will be opened March I
the lpr~~..a wilted Point
~ water system lm·
)I'Ovement project and also
for construction of the
propoaed new Muon County
. lnduatrial Park, It Wall announced today.
·
"AU the 'paper work Is
completed and autborizatlon
has been given by both the
·Economic Development
Administration and• the
. Farmers
Home
Ad·
mlnlllration for advertising
on the · water project,"
Musgrave Mid.
The estimated $4 million
project, which Is being un·
dertaken with the ald of a
nearly $2 mlillon EDA grant
as well as · FmHA loan
financing, wlli be.constructed
slmultaneolllly with the 60.7
acre Industrial Park to be
located In the TNT area.
• , The
Mason
County
Development Authority , a
non"Proflt (lt'ganization which
Is heading the Industrial
Park development, has also
been authorized to open bids
on I~ project on March 1,
according to President
Robert Wingett.
Bids for both proJects will
Ill

be opened at 2 p.m. on March
I at the City Bufidlng in Point

Pleasant.
The Industrial Park,
acheduled lor construction
along Fairview Road • just
beyond tbe Mason County
Fairgrounds, was used as
justification lor the city
obtaining its almost $2
million EDA grant through
Sen. Robert ~· Byrd. The city
will serve the Industrial Park
with water.
Construction of the In·
dustrial Park, which carries
a total cost In excess of a hall·
million dollars, Is being
financed by local bank. and
West VIrginia Industrial
Development Authority loans
and a $191,800 grant from the
Farmers
Home
Ad·
mlnistrallon.
1The city water system
project will in.clude a 2,100
ga~ per minute water
treatinent plant, two 750,000
gallon storage tanks, two new
waUs at the existing treat·
ment plant and new main
distribution lines.
The Industrial Park pr.ojoct
bidding encompasses a 25,000
gallons per day package
sewage system, lift station,

Curtailment notes:
By Uolted Presslntematlonal
OOL~BUS CITY SCHOOLS, with an enrollment of 96,000
students, will be open Thursday and Friday but will close until
March 7. ' ·
·
•:we.haw to close schools," said Columbus School Supt
John Ellis. "'llhe gas is just not there."
· ·
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT CARTER'S plan to boost
tile economy through tax.rebates and jobs appears certain to
move speedlly thro~h Cong_ress,' but not before efforts are
made to change 11. Liberals will try to provide more money for
job-creatmg progra~, and to re-direct proposed busineSs tax
cuts toward com~mes that a~ually increase employment.
At the same time, Republicans Ukely will attempt to
restructlD'e the . jobs programs to put more emphasis on
locen~ves ~ pnvate Industry to locrease employment. Top
admin~ation economic experts were to testify in the House
~roprtalion~ Committee today. The Senate Republican
Policy Comuuttee scheduled a meeting this morning to
attempt to draw up an alternate 'economic stimulus program
·rter's $31.2 billion program was formally sent to Congre.,;
n.onday.

. OO~UMBUS . - AN OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY
IDlcrobiloglst In studying the feas.ibility of putting hordes of
acid-eating bacteria to work removing sulfur from Ohio's high·
sulfur coal. If succ:es&amp;ul, .some processing could eliminate
much of the sulfur d1onde mr pollution from combustion of the
coal, Dr. Patrick R. Dugan, profesSor of microbiology said
today.
.
'
SUccess also .might'ease the threats to Ohio's fi!XJ.n)illion·
a-y.ear colll rrurung industry and to coal.fired power plants
which are lacing new stricter air qualitY standards. ·

See all
the

·NEW·

! Area Deaths !
MARY QUILLEN
SYRACUSE - MrS. 'M.ary
VIrginia Q&lt;JIIIen, 66, died

lines and manholes, a 300,000
gallon
water
tank,
distribption lines, fire
pumping station and fire lines
. and asphalt paving for Byrd
Boulevard and Windon Ave.,
two of the r.
· reels inllide the
Industrial ark compler.

Monday a1 her

In

Syracuse.

hi5 home on Salem St. ,
Rutland . Mr. Forrest was

was a member of 1he
Syracuse Church of the

survives. Also. sYrvlvlng are

Nazarene.
Surviving are her husband.

and Happy, Mount Vernon.

Ernest ; two sons, Ernest Lee

Natnral gas

'

the cash fast, and our low

bank

rateS will save you money• . .maybe

grandsons , and several
nieces and nephews.
Funere~l services will be

the Ewing Funeral Home
with the Rev . Dale Bass of.
ficllltlng .. Burial will be In
Gilmore Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home·

any time.

MinersvUle
needs giJS too
says Diddle
SYRACl)SE - Syracuse
residents were asked today' to
keep their thermostats
turned down to at least 65 by
James Diddle, president of
the Syracuse Home Utilities
Co.
Diddle said Minersville
residents · received their
natural gas through the same
lines as Syracuse residents.
However, unless Syracuse
residents keep their t~er·
mbstats turned · down
thereby lowering their us~
rate, there is npt enough
pressure for the people in
Minersville. Residents should
close off unused rooms and
even lower their thermostats
to 60 if possible, he said.
Cooperation will be •I&gt;'
preclated, Diddle added.

Burley

(Continued from page 1)
buildup in' un'lOid supplies of
that type.
In
companion
developments today, the
Agriculture Department
announced 1977 acreage
allotments for several minor
types of tobacco.
Allotinents for Kentucky·
Tennessee l)ark . air-cured
·leaf were raised by about 10
per cent to 13,218 acres .
Allotinents for 5 other types
will be about the same as in
1976. The others with 1977
allotments in parentheses
are ; Virginia !Ire-cured
(11,174 acres) and sun-cured
(1,576), Kentucky-Tennessee
lire-cured ( 32,733 ), cigar.
Iiller and bindef(l9,518), and
cigar binder (4,833).
For some individual fanns
producing the minor types,
allotments will be reduced
where growers have not .Sed
• 75 per cent ·or more of the
allotment 'in recent years.
. Also, officials said, a mail
referendum will be held Feb.
22-25 to determine whether
Virginia sun-cured growers
favor continued 'controls on
the 1977·79 crops.
Spokesmen said referenda
will also be held Feb. 22-25 tC
determine whether )l'oducers
of Maryland tobacco and
Pennsylva.nia cigar-filler
tobs,cco want to accept
federal controls and price ·
supports. Maryland growers
have . been rejecting the
control program since 1965
and controt. have never been
in ~~for the Peimsylvania
crop -

First session
held Thursday
Trustees of the Corpqratlon
for Health Education in
Ap(llllachla Ohio, Inc. m~t in
Chillicothe Jan. 'IJ In their
first session for the newly
expanded CHEAO board
which now numbers 4:i
persons who live or work in
the 28 Ohio Appalachian
Following dinner, the
trustees heard a brief in·
traduction to the Corporation
and its current projects and
approved the second reading , ·
of the CHEAO bylaws.
The next quarterly meeting
will be In Athens on April 28.
~ntU that time, sew rill of the ··
newly appointed members
will be asked to ·serve on the
executive and nominating
committees. Election of
officers will occur at the
aMual meeting and will also
draw their terms of office.
CHEAO is a private non·
profit organization ~bleb
offers ...... health ' education. ·
programs to health prac·
titioners and the public. It
serves the 28 Ohio Ap·
palachlan counties under
funding from the Ap·
palachian Regional Com·
mission!
·

MEIGS THEATRE
CLOSED FOR

OFFICE CLOSED
'!he
Meigs : County
Tuberculosis Office, located
in the COW11Y children's borne
building, will be closed
Wednesday and Friday due to
skin te!ting to be conducted
- the Riverview 'School on ·
those days.
.._..,._ _ _

WATCH FOR
OPENING DATE

._.,..J

THE INN PLACE ..
Wednesday Night Special

"THE

ATI

French Fries
Coffee, Tea "'r Milk

We~nesday .

Hospital News
Holzer Medic•I Center
(Diochargeo, Jan. 31)
Boyd Akers, Marjorie
Bechtle, Kathy Blall, Kathryn
Call, Gertrude Carter, Paul
Q!rter, Carl . Davis, Allen
Dill, Jr., Gifford Egnor, ·
Glennie Fo&lt;, Maude Fulcher,
Jolm Haggerty, April Knapp,
Mrs. Oshel Patterson and
son, Mrs. &amp;bert i.. Phllllpo
and daughter, . Betty Sue
Rodgers, Patsy K. Runyon,
Mrs, Lawrence J. Seymour
and daughter, Alva Shafer
Ronald Topping, Edith
Womeldorf.
(Births, Jan. 311
Mr. and Mrs. Charles R.
Lambert, daughter, Rutland:
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Rhea
son, Jackson; Mr. and Mrs:
Mark Childers, son, Crown
City; Mr. and Mrs. James
Broyles, son, Vinton; Mr. and
Mrs. James Blain, son, Apple
Grove W. Va.

where an auto driven by :
Samuel L. Hurlow, ::1111, Mdln, •
lllld lldeways Into 1 veblcle :
operated by Linda S. Flle, 191 :
Cheslilre. There wu beavy •
!famage to bolb vehlclel. No :
chargu were ·ffled.
~

. James Diehl, Meigl High
· School principal, Ia confined
to Holzer Medical Center
room 211-B. His condition ~
excellent.
·

BARGAIN DAYS SALE

Children's Dept.,

VeterBIIS Memorial Hosptlal
Admitted - Cheryl Ann
Long, Rutland; Gregory
Winebrenner, Coolville; Elsie
Roush, Portland; Everett
Calaway, CoolviUe; George
William Collins, Athens;
Oscar Imboden, Middleport;
Charles
Schoonover,
Rltland.
Discharged - Amanda
Hawk, Nancy Smith, George

~\~~~~~u~u~~~t ~!~:~

'

:~~':'~'!fiR~ :

DIEHL IN HOLZER .

Women'S Dept
Men's &amp; Bcrjs' Dept

Winter coats, winter hats, dresses.

Week Days 9: 30 tci 5
Friday Til 8:00

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

'
REPORT OF CONDITION
,,

..

Consolidating domestic subsidiaries ~f the
' .

1

\-

"'

,._ •

J .•

r

•

HOME.NATIONAL BA.N K ..:: •

Miss Perrin ~s
_;

citizenship award
Faith Perrin, daugbter of
the Rev. and Mrs. W. H.
Perrin of Pomeroy, Is the
Meigs High School recipient
of the Daughtera of the
American Revolution Good
Citizenship Award.
The tests on government,
history, social studies, and
citizenship are
given
annually at local high schools
by the Daughters of the
American Revolution, with
R~turn Jonathan Meigs
Ola~ter as ~ponsor.
Miss Perrin, along with
Patricia Autherson of ·
Southern !Ugh. School, and
Carolyn Sue Harper of
Eastern !Ugh School, will be
a guest at the BJUiual Charter .
Day luncheon oi Return
Jonathan Meigs Olapter to
be held on the second Friday
In March. At that time all
three of the county winners
will be presented good
citizenship
pins
and
certificates. Mrs. Harold
Sargent is clullrman of tbe
DAR project for the local
chapter.
Enrolled in the sclentlllc
program at Meigs High
School, Miss Perrin will
attend Ohio University
following graduation this
spring, She is a member of

- - , . - - Statement of Resources and Liabilities

Thousands

--

Cash and due from banks
U.S. Treasury securities ...... " .. · .. ·
· · ........ " · """" .............. 654
Obligations of other U.S. G~~;t: ~ge·~~i~~ ·~~d ~~~~ · ·"" .. "· ····" .. ··.. .. ···.... 1,669 ·
Obligations of States and political subdlvi SIOnS
· .............
· .. · .... " "" " " .. " " " " · ·........2:J6
11
Federa I Reserve stock and corporate stock .. .. .. .. .. .. . .' " " " · ' .. " .. '." .. " ' 8·
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
· " .... "" · " · """" " "·
under agreements to resell
·
Loans, Total (excluding une~·r;;ed ~~~~~)· · · · · · · ' · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · 550
Less: Reserve for
ible loan 1
.. """ " "" ·' .. "" .,.. • S,564 ·
Loans Net
pass
asses" ........ " " .. " • .............. 90 ,
I
" • '• • • " • • , " • • • ' •
Bank premises
.. " .. d.... · · · · · · · · · ' .. " · ·• · · · · .. · · · .... · · · · "· 5,474
, , furniture and fi'xtures,an
other assets representing bank premises
,.
•, . .
·•
--+-'-- Other
assets.
"· """ · "· · .. " · · · · ' · · • · · ·' · · ; · ' · ." . : .13
TOTAL ASSETS ... ...... ......... ..... ............... . ...... ,
.
t'
·
· ··············:· .' .' .' .''.' ::::.'.' :: .'8,si6 - - Ill
Tune and savmgs deposits oflndtviduals ·'
rp ...... " .... " " " " " "· .... · 1,1168 · ', '.
Ill
prtnsi hps., and corps . ... ............ :. .. .. . . . . . . . .
••
....,...... ' " .... · • .. · .... · 5•7""
Depos ts of United States Government
Deposits of States and political subdiv~i~~; · ' " · ' " · · · · · · · " · · · " · · · .. · " · · · · .. · · · · 56
liD
certified and officers' checks
..... ....... .. ' . .. ..................... 450
4(
TOTAL DOMESTIC DEPOSITS................ ... ,•, " ............... ' ............ 20
Total demand deposits
· · · · ' · " .. " · · · ' · · " " · · · .. · · " · · · · • · · • · .. : .. ... 7,949
• Total time and savlngs'ct~~~ · · · .. " · · · · · · · " ...... · · · · · · · .... · · · 2,194
57
TOTAL UABIUTIES (e&lt;cluding ~~~;.dih~i.;,j ~~~~ ~d ~be
.. n"tur"8's" " .. • 5li
._. _.
Common stock·•
... 7·H9---.-.,
.;.- ...... ""· '·"
r
o'
•
1- 4(
a. No. shares authorized 5 000
' .,....
.
' '
:::: 1b. No. shares outstanding 5:000 (par value)
·
,
..,[
Surplus.
"
··. ····· • ··············~··· • ··•··•• \ •125
4(
Undivided·p~~f~~·: :::: :: :::::::::: · · · · · · · ·· ·· · · · · · · · · · · ··· · · ·• .. ....... .• : .... . 125
U
Reserveforcontingenciesandother c~pii,;l·;.;,;;~ · · · .. · · · "· ·: ·" · · · · · • .... · .. · · · . 418
-+-TOTAL EQUITY CAPITAL
es .... · · · · · ....... · · ... ............. 1·
TOTALUABILITIESANDEQUiTYCAPiTAL .. ''' '' ... ' ... ' ... "'' ;: ' · /: ·' · · · 1': 661_,_~Average for IS or 30 calendar days ending with ~ll da't~·. · .... " · • · · · · · · · • · '1. .... · •8,616
Cash and due from banks
.
·.
Fed. fm1ds sold and secunli~; ·p~~~ed ~~r" ' . ' ' ' .. ' ' · · .. · · · " · · " .. " · · ".' · · · · 1125
"~':Tt"~~to resell ........................................ :, ................. 550
Total dennoii,; : : : .. · · · ' · ...... · · · .. · .. ' " " · · ' ' ." " · " · " • " · • .. · , • · , •...... 5,497
r................ ...
, ·,·· •• ••. ' ... ' ... ' ..••. ' .. '.' .. · ' ·~·· ··· .... 7,825

Dell)llnddeposiu;~ii~di~id~~~;· p~h~ ·~~d ~~· ~·

-:::....
.-.

~.

THE MEIGS INN

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

992-3629

·

.,

VOL. XXVII NO. 204

.

r

, FEBRUARY 2
.,

•

PUNXSUTAWNEY PHIL EMERGED from his
burrvw on GObbler'aKnob today at euctly 7:'lla.m. and
what he IIW ..-his llhlldow - doomed the nation to li:t
more weeki ol winter.
Plill'a unwelcome )l'ogROiil wu greeted by a chorus
ofbooi!I'OOl theaev•alhandred blgh !Choollludenll who
braved the 12-degi'ee temperatures to view the
groundhog'• prediction.

'

..

lt\1JJ
OGDAY

'•

,,

.Mason, Oilton short of. gas
• • MASON, W. Va. 1 .James and lower their thermoatats

i

•
!•

•

I

1

Dklle, prealdent ol the lntenllll Wllt1 Co., Maaon,
aiiiOIIIICed toda' thin II I

... ibortlle

In the Maaon

and Clifton area. Diddle
. . . .. - - in the
are~lotum tltalr thtrmoltall
• to n degree~. Re1ldenta
llhould close off unused 1'001111

IT WAS A BIGGIE - The 1913 flood, as measured al
Pomeroy was ~he highest ever according to official U.s.
Corps of Engmeers records. Above is a picture of
Middleport's North Second Avenue, looking south toward

•

' POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

to eo lf polllble.

COFCTOMEET
The Middleport Chamber of
Cammtn:e wW llltlt Thul'lday, reb. a at 11:15 at the
afllcu of the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric . r.o.

the "T" in the distance. That Oood crested March 29 at
65.9 feet. This picture is taken from a postcard in a
collection owned by the late Edna E. Carlton of Syracuse,
school teacher and member of the Southern Local school
board, and widow of tile late Judge Emory Carltnn.

entine

at y

·
.
Elder IYmay
call for aid

WASHINGTON- THE RUGGED WINTER has drained
the nation's already lll1lall supply of hay as farmers step up
feeding. to belp cattle wilhatand record low temperatures, the

·•

Freeland S. Norris

-,-"--'' GeorgeJ. Neigler .

the National Honor Society
and the lllstory·Club. She is
also a member of the
Candystripers at Veterans
ll'if111orial Hospital, Triliity
Chllrch where she sings in the
choir, and plays piano for the
SUnday School.
Miss Perrin was alternate
to Buckeye Girls Slate, has
been. oo tile student council,
and Ill a member of the Latin
Club and Marching Band at
Meigs !Ugh.

OOLUMBUS- GOV. JAMES A. RHODES broadened his
reqnest to the State's 32 natural gu utilities Tuesday and
asked them to give him by noon today a detailed status repor1
on supply problema which may threaten Interruption of
resldentlalsetvice. Rhodes, joined In his request by Democrat
and Republican leaders of the leglalature 1111d PubUc Utilities
Commission of Ohio Olal!Tnan C. Luther Heckman; further
asked for updates on pipeline prj!S8Ul'es, curtallments lilld
rationing plana.
Rhodes emphaalzed his need to know "lf any conununlty
served by your system is In danger of 1081ng Priority 1
(resldentlalhollpltalam other buman needa) gas supply. The
people of these C&lt;IIIIJlunitles have a right to know now," said
Rhodes In his requell. Last week Rhodes asked utilities lor a
dally update on their energy IUpplY lltuatlon.

2

J. W. Weaver, Jr.- Directors

FAmt PERRIN

WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT CARTER'S chief
economic advisers are moving from c(llllll(ttee to committee
on Capitol lUll to ID'ge quick pesailge of the (X'Oposed $31.2
billion (lliCkage of tax cull and rebates and job-creating
(X'ograms.
By Thursday afternoon. Treaaury Secretary Michael
Blwnenthal, Budget Director Bert Lance and chief economic
adviser Charles· Schultze will have iestlfled before lour
congressional conunittees In three clays. The mO!lt Important
appeerance today was before the House Ways and Means
Conunittee opening CORiideratlon of Carter'S !all plan, which
InCludes a $50 tal rebate or $50 payment to Social Security
beneflciarlea, a small tal cut lor low and moderate income
person~, and business Ia• Incentives.

National Bank Region Nwnber 4

natural gas for heating MYS
that district'• bQard of
education will meet early this
evening to discuss tbe cur·
!ailment problems ..of Meigs
Local. Students returned to
!classes today and Dowler
Mid that he hoped to have
them in ~lasses today, Thursday and Friday.
However, accurate figures
on the amount of natural gas
lell in the district's allotinent
are not avaUable and it may
he the district will not even be
able to CO!ftplete this week of
classes. Dowler says he does
. no! want to run the schools
completely out of natural gas
because the buildings will
have to be winterized and
that process will take five ·
days. Winterizing without
any heat would be an added
problem.

e

By Uolted Pn!lllnteruatlonal
WASIDNGTON - PRESIDENT CARTER. keeping a
~omise
"to
conununicate
with
the
folks"
was expected to strese the need for 11crlflces to save energy iii
his fb:st televised "fireside chat" from the White House
tonight. The btoad~, at 10 p.m. Egf, will be delivered
beside a crackling wood fire In the fireplace of the library on
the mansion's ground floot and is one of a series Carter plans
over the nell three months.
.
Asked Wlzy {)!rter Wall going oft the air 80 early in the
· ."
pre~qcy, an aide uld; "He !Jlllde, a, rornmltment to
;..! . OOlJIIIluntcate wi~·tltl'folka. tniiii ill an O()(iortutllty for him to
'
.. lay out, In ~ re'liiieil way, hil.hopt111lid iipiratlollS.!' Early In
the lilly Carter waa to receive a firsthand report from Vice
President Walter F. Mmdale as•slng his ef8lil&lt;lay, six·
country journey to Europe and Japan aro a rundown on the
leaders he met in his travels.
•

in the state of Ohio, at the close of business on December 31 1976 publlshed · ,
call made by Comptroller of the Currency, under title 12, Unit:m states Colle, ~~rii~ to
Charter number 9815

Lut to retum to their Southern and Eastern
claarooma were Meigs Local Districts ha vlng resumed
students with cl._. at tlie c;Jasses on Monday.
Trouble appeared 'on the
. brim of the openfngs,
however.
John Riebel, superin·
tendent of the Eastern
'Local District, reported that
he has received a curtailment
on the Chester Elementary
School arid that most or all of
the natural gas allotted to
that school has been used .
Chester is the only school in
the Eastern District using
natural gas lor heating
purposes. A special meeting
of the Eastern Local Board of
Education bas been set for
7;30 p.m. tonight to work out
a soluUon to the problem.
Supt. Charles L. Dowler of
the Meigs Local District
where aU but two schools use

Long sleeved shirts, jeans. jackets,
sweaters and dress slacks.

'--...iiiii.iiii.iiiiiiiii;;;,;,;;-;;,;;;;;;.;;..:.:.;:.,.::.,;:::;.:~:,:~:;.:,---1

~ACINE

AD Melp CountY scboob
opened today lor the fin!
time llince Jan. 5.

Pant suits, long dresses, maternity
wear•. dressy Jalouses, ' long skirts,
coordtnates, and casual tops. ·

STORE tOURS:

.

' I

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

'

MIOilEPORT. OHIO .
DIPOSITS INIUIID TO •40.000

family will receive friends
from 2 to 4 and 7 to lj1 p·.m.

Highs Wedne1day will be
between 30 and 35. Clear
tonight with lO'II'll between
live and 10. Probability of ·
precipitation 20 .per cent
today, near zero per cent
tonight and 10 per cent
Wednesday.

· We, tile undersigned directors attest the correctness
'
.
liabilities. We &lt;leclare that it has been ewnlned by us ~thlstothestabeatternenoft of resoureu and
belief Ia true and correct.
•
our knowledge and

Vlsll Our Salad Bar
Sea Food Platter

Plus Tax

M1111ber Fedentl Depidit Insurance t;OrpOratilr

at the funeral home any time

after 2 p.m . Wednesday. The

Weather

I, Jolm T. Wolfe, President, of the aboVHl8111ed. bank do
hereby declare that this Report of CondlUon is true and COl'
re&lt;rt to the best of my knowledge and belief: ·
·
JohnT. Wolle
January 26, urn

FRIENDLY BANK"

.

Funeral Home wi th Mr .
Oenn. Is Smith officiating.

DIVORCE ASKED
{)!thy A. Tyree, Middleport
llled suit for divorce In Meigs
County Coo!mon Pleas COW'!
against Larry D. Tyree
Ml~eport A suit seeking
$1,568.111 h's been filed by
Capital Savings and Loan
Co., Pomeroy,. against
Harold D. and Virginia
Davis, Minersville.
Appointed deputy sherlffs
of Meigs. County were Jill
Pugh, Alan Pugh and Gary
Grllfith.
-Add "Hoose stalls" Sent PI
eal

~·~

,

No one wu Injured In two :'
tralllc accldentl lnvelllPied '
Monday by the Gallli·M~ ~
Poll State Highway Pa . :
The flnt oecurred II 2: r
p.m. on the A~ :
Rd. one tenth of a mile 10uth :
•of US 36 when ftblcl• '
driven by Richard G. Sleelt,..j
35, GaUlpolll, and Garland\\
Parsons n, It, GalllpoUa, •
collided on ' a curve. 'lber'e :
wa1 minor damage. l!lo :
charges were rued.
•
Offlcen 11ld a second :
milhap occumd at 5:il p.rfl: ~

and

several cousins. He was

!Awe.

,probed, no
one injured

lteCHiary of Hellth, Educalioo and Welfare. In an emotional
appeel Monday, Califano ID'ged HEW eWCIIUon worken no! to
ytlld an Inch on the prlncipleofachool de~egregatlon and equal
eau~~tlonal opportunity for everyone. .
.·
Pleaee, please, on that llllOre go all the way " CalltanO
said In his ftra meeting with rank-end.&amp;e ' education
employes. "We'w loat lOci many yean In that ligbtand I lntllld
to push you lf you don't puah ·rno," he illld In a 1Peech
interrupted by severali'OIIIIda of applause. {)!Ufano a1ao hu
meetings scheduled later with other groupe of HEW employes.

,.

-+-

-

lltbens lfatior.al

grandchildren,

Two mishaps

News
•• in Briefs
(Continued from .... 1)

counties.

DEPEND ON US FOR ALL BANKING
•
N,EEDS

••

sl~

Burial will be In the Wells
held at; p.m. Wednesday at Cemetery. Friends niay call

enough for some auto "extf'as. ".
.

two sons. Robert of Athens.

of Addison, a~d James Ray. proceded In death by his
Rt . I, Middleport ; two falhor and two half brothers.
sisters. Mrs. Hazel Taylor,
Funeral services will be
Jackson, and Mrs. Carrie heldal1 p.m. Thursday atthe
Ross, Mason , W. Va., two Rutland Chapel of the Walker

VACAnON

You're seeing the "77" beauties...
the all-new cars. Now get the show
on the road. Come in ana talk to
us about an Auto Loan. You'll get

ROBERT L. fORREST
RUTLAND - Robert L.
Forrest, 52. died Monday at

.l!orn Sel&gt;t. 10, 1910, a born Apr I! 2, 192.4, a son of the
daughter ol the late Millard Ia te Adam Forrest a~d Lela
•nd Rose Gibbs Riffle. she Stiles Forrest, Rutland, who

'
(Contlnuld from page I)
of Alaskr, which had
supported
El
Paso's
proposal,
had · been
influence~ . .
In
Its
environrne~
argtrrnents
against the Arctic proposal
by lls ~nomic hopes for
developin!l !"ntral Alaska.
"This ~dable goal for
Alaskans, unfortunately, Is
not alwats consistent with
the publi~ Interest of all the
people of the U.S.," Lilt said.
The nine
interstate
pipelines Involved In the
Arctic Gas Study Group
primarily serve California,
Ohio, Michigan, Illinois,
Minnesqta, New York and
Pennsylvania.
·
Uti said without Alaskan
gas and otller gas supplies,
those pipelines cannot meet
their 19115 requirements for
homes and large commercial
establislunents.
CaNida must also give its
approval to the Alaskan gas
route. The Canadians would
use the same pipeline to bring
gas frolll their MacKenzie
· Delta Field on tile North
Slope, and would share in the
cost of transportation.

home

J

I

WEDNESDfiY, FEBRUARY 2, 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

~;:;:;: ,:,,,:,:;:;::':'':':'::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:,:;: :::''': :'::;:;::':::::::: ,

MARIETTA - The Ohio
Commission on Aging,
through its network of twelve
Area Agencies on Aging, has
set Into motion a plan to make
sure that none of Ohio's
elderly and handicapped
persons suflerr needlessly
because of this severe winter
weather. The Commission
and the Area Agency on
Aging, · Buckeye Hills·
Hocking Valley Regional
Development District in
Marietta, urge every Senior
Citizen in the eigbt-county
area covered by the a~ency
-,ho may be having problems
with utilities, lack of food.

heat or any other problem to
contact the Area Agency on
Aging (614) 374-9436.
Buckeye Hills-Hocking
Valley Regional Develop•
ment District will notify the
appropriate agency and send
help immediately . The
.Marietta-based Area Agency
on Aging takes in Athens,
Hocking, Meigs, Monroe,
Morgan, Noble, Perry and
Washington Counties. The
number for the Buckeye
Hills-Hocking Valley
Regional Development
District is (614) 374-9436, '
Persons who have an
8fl\ergency, or who are trying

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Friday through Sunday,
a chance of snow flurries
Thursdny, mnlnly in south·
ern Ohio. Highs will be in
the upper ~Os or lower 30s
Friday and generally in the
mid to lower 30s Saturday
andSundoy. Lows will be in
the upper teens· or lower
~os.

·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::·:

to help someone in trouble
may wish to directly contact
the local service agencies
such as the Welfare
Depal'lment, Community
Action Agency , Sheriff's
Office or Highway Patrol.
The Ohio Commission on
Aging and the Area Agency
on Aging urge every Senior
Citizen In the eight-county
area to caU other elderly and
handicapped friends to make
sure they are all right during
this bl!1er winter weather.

Flood·insurance for
whole county asked
Dorset Larkins , Long .
Bottom. Tuesday night In a
regular meeting asked the .
County Commlssbn why he Is
unable to purchase flpod
Insurance. He was told that at
the time the National Flood
Insurance beeame available
It was not adopted by the
county.
Following a lengthy
discussion the commissioners
asked
Rick
Crow,
prosecuting attorney, to
contact the Housing Urban
Development In Washington
to lind out what action ts
needed by Melgs County to
make the Insurance avaUable
to all citizens of the county.lt
Is available in Rutland,

Middleport,
Pomeroy,
Syracuse and Racine.
Also meeting with the
commissioners was David
Vaughan of Appalachian Ohio
Regional Transit Association
(AORTA) In regard to bus
service between Pomeroy
and Athens. .
The commissioners (lllssed
a resolution approving the
hiring of a bus 'driver for the
service through the CETA
program. It was thought bus
service wlU begin in April.
Commissioner Richard
Jones suggested the bus be
routed on · old U. S. 33 to
benefit more people. The
commissioners also named
James Roush, commissioner,
tciserveonth~AORTA board.

Pete Simpson, project
coordinator for the grant for
Micro Communications and
Sam Boyd, representative of
General Electric, met with
the commissioners in regard
to the General Electric bid,
the lowest, In the amount of
$15,930.
The bid is for upgrading of
radio equipment and for the
installation of ne"' equipment
that will be purchased
through the grant for vUlage
and county law enforcement
officers. The bid was ac·
cepted by the commissioners.
Attending were Henry
Wells, Jones, and Roush,
commissioners, and Martha
Chambers, clerk.

Directors elect. Hobstetter
..
bank president 36th time
Edison
Hobstetter,
Employees at the main
Pomeroy, was elected office are Arthur W, Nease,
president of the Pomeroy ' Jr., James W. Hobstetter,
National Bank lor the 36th Doris Snowden, Barbara
year when sharebolders held Dugan, Emilia Midkiff,.,
. their . annual
meeting Ronda Dempsey, Mae
Tuesday. He was first named Gilliam, Dorothy Seth,
to the post in May, 1941.
Connie Fields, Bonnie Welsh,
All
directors. were Rebecca Anderson, and Irene
reelected. they were Dr. R. Ba~ter. Rutland Branch
E. Boice, Edlson Hobstetter, employees are Ruth Ann ·
Horace Karr, Roger Morgan, Graham, Sharon Lee Barr,
Warren Pickens, and Orion and Georgene Grate and
W. IWuah.
Mary Grover Is employed in
Officers reelected by the the Tuppers Plainll Branch.
board were Edison Hob·
Year • end assets were
stetter, president; Walter $tl,814,154.92, an Increase of
Robb, vice president; Muine appro1 tmately $1,647,000.
Grlffith, cashier; Lera K.
Hobstetter S.ld, "We ai&gt;'
Jones, assistant cashier; predate the patronage of our
Joan Wolle, assistant customel'S which have
cashier;
Marilyn Wolle, enabled us to maintain this
Ulistant cashier, and at the · growth over the years.
Rutland Branch, William J. Doring 191tl, we continued our
Hobstetter, vice president . efforts to Bei'Ve tbe com·
and branch manager; and munlty by offering extended
Joan May, assiltant branch hours at the Auto Bank 011
manager.
East Second Street for the
George S. Hobltetter was . convenience
of
our
reelected vice president and customers."
branch manager at the
"It is now open from 8 a.m.
Tuppets Plains Branch. with to ~p.m . &lt;laily, with the ex·
Marilyn IWblnson. as~llllant ccption ' of Thursday and
branch manager.
Satnntay when t11c hours are

Ohio Power wlll
average charges
Anew payment plan to help will average bills lot the six· have been using more
residential customers pay month period of January electricity than normal since
unusually high electric bills through June. This will last October , adding that
c;aused by the· severe winter permit residential customers temperatures were . con·
weather has been announced to spread out their electrici ty siderably below normal in
by Ohio Power Company .
costsasevenlyaspossiblefor October, November and
"Because of the coldest. the high-use . months of December before plunging to
weather in more than 60 January, February and record lows in January.
years, many customers are March and the lowcr·use
He said that Ohio Power
·using more electricity than montha of April, May and · was able to maintain the flow
normal and will he seeing a June.
of elec tricity during the
significant increase in their
In addition, the manager bitterly cold week of Janual'}
bills," according to F. A. said, Ohio Power has a long· 17 without having to ask an)
Morrow, manager of Ohio standin g 12-month equal customer to curtail usage .
Power operations in th is (lllyment plan under which . "With a considerable
area .
the customer pays the same portion of winter still ahead
He said ·the company monthly amount lor electric ,f us, I think all of us now
recognizes that these bills service.
recognize more than ever
may be an additional strain
"Customers interested in before the importance of
on the family budget and has participsting in .one of these energy
conservatlo·n
taken steps to ease the planscanobtaindetallsatthe measures," he pointed out.
burden. -

nearest Ohio Power office/'

"The vital role proper in·

Under provisions of the new he sa.id.
.
(lllyment plan, Ohio Power _ The manager added that

sulation plays in this con·
servation effort caMot be

the company's customers

overemphasized .''

Action Group projects.
in Pomeroy reviewed
Pr~gress io 'this 'point in
Pomeroy's, clean-up project
was reviewed for the
Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce Tuesday at the
Meigs Inn by Walter Robb
andBlllYoungofthe Citizens
Action Group.
Introduced by President
Fred Crow, Robb, the first to
speak, explained that the
Pomeroy Citizens Group was
formed last Sept. 27 . Projects
now in force, or will be when
weather permits, includes
Beech Grove Cemetery,
riverbank cleanup and
restoration and maintenance
of Main Street buildings.
Robb said on Dee. 22, 1976,
application was made with
the National Trust for
Historic Preservation for the
Main Street project to en·
courage the economic, social

and aesthetic restoration of
central business districts.
Three National Trust Main
Street Communities will be
selected from the 10 state
areas served by the Midwest
Office to receive the special
attention of the Maln Street
staff and architectural,
planning, public relations,
marketing
and
mer·
chandislng consultation from
outstanding specialists
selected by the Trust, Robb
said.
The three communities will
pay $11,000 for their par·
tici(llltion in the three year
project. The local share does
not Include funds for physical
improvements. The trust will
seek necessary private and
public development grants
and loans from downtown
businessmen and loca 1

government. . The three
Nati9nal Trust Main Street
Communities chosen will be
announced on March 4.
Jim· Wine b r e ~ n e r ,
professor of architectural
design at Ohio University,
and appro&lt;imately 30 of his
students have made a study
·of Pomeroy and posters made
by the students wer e
displayed at the meeting.
Bilt Young commented that
the buildings will not be
changed, rather , they "just
need cosmetic surgery."
Crow commented that he
would like to see some of the
posters put on postcards for
Pomeroy.
Robb also stated that some
of the posters will be selected
for letterheads and post·
(Continued on page 16)

0 VA history recalled
The old Ohio Valley
Baseball Association (OVA)
organized in 1938 which sent
44local boys into professional
basebaU, will be alive again

-, if only briefly - the sponsored by the Pomeroy
evening of Feb. 9 at the Chamber of Commerce, Fred
Pomeroy American Legion Crow, president, will pay
respects to the surviving and
Hall.
(Continued on page 2)
An Oldtimers Banquet

Three guilty pleas taken
in arraignments by court

EDISON HOBSTE'ITER
8 • .m. to 3 p.m ., and on

Friday, 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. This
means an additlonall5 bours
each week that our customers
can tr.ansact their banking
bilslness , or a Iota 1of s~ hours
'per w...k," Hobstetter said.

Three of four defendants money. Coffey's bond was set '
charged with two counts of at $20,000.
robbery by a grand jury last
The fourth person, Wendell
week have entered pleas of Therogood Derricks, pleaded
guilty when arraigned before not guUty and posted a $2,000
Judge John C. Bacon In the bond.
Meig., County Common Pleas
Alan Robinson pleaded
Court,
Rick
Crow, guilty to trespassing and was
pro se cuting attorney sentenced to 10.· days In jail;
reported.
·
James . D. Council pleaded
Arr.Atgned before Judge guilty to breaking and en·
Bacon were John David terlng and was released on
Mankin, Robert Lewis Coffey his own recognizance; Floyd
and Randy Daw10n all who Cleland, • pleaded guUty to
pleaded guilty. Mankin was . breaklnK and entering, was
released under $1,500 bond, released on his own
Daw11011 on $1,000 bond, and recognizance pending preCoffey Wall lodged in Meip' aentenclng Investigation and
County jail fr lack of bond the report of Greg Markley,
adult parole authority of

Atbens: Bruce Beech pleaded
not guilty to breaking and
entering, receiving and
concealing stolen goods and
Interfering wit)l an In·
vestigation. His bond was eel
at $1,500. He is lodl!ed In
Meigs County jaU.
Bond for Judith Bacon, 32,
arrested recently' In Clinton,
Tenn .. who has been returned
to Meigs County, has been set
at $1,500. Iter arraignment
will not be held antil an at·
tomey Is appointed. She Is
lodl!ed in Gallia Co1¥1tY jail.
She was charged by the
Meigs County Grand jury
with two four!h degree felony
counts ol issuing bad chec\tS.

�.'
2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb. 2, 1977

Fuel oil, coal, salt
making way thru ice
LOUISVD.J.E, Ky. (UPI) - AbychaUc llDa faHure
temporvtly llaJted I~ lhnugb of low.... ta IIIII their
llarges early today at Ohio River Dam Slat GolCOIIda, ru.,
Ill loot before 30 barges l•ded wltb fuel on, coal aad rock
salt begaa movlag upetream to Ohio, Kentucky, West
Vlrgln.la aad l'eDDiylvaola cities.
Martlll Pedigo, a spokesman for tbe Army Corps of
EDgllleen Lousvllle dlltrlct, said tbe hydraulic llnes
hoHure affected tbe operation of the lower lock gales.
"The trouble Is underwater and we won't know how bad II
Is until we gel divers dowa to look alii," he added.
Sii barg.. of a 15-barge low loaded with coal were
locked through before the laHur'e occurred but the other .
Dine coal barg.. were stiU Ill the lock. 01 lbe 30 Iowa
locked through Dam 51 before Ilk bydranUc failure, It by
mld-moralng were between Dam 51 and Dam 541 ·at
Marlon, Ky., 10 were above Dam 541 beading lor
Uoiontown, and one bad been locked through at
Uolootown,
An ..tlmated 25 berg.. and their tows stiU are below
Dam 51, walllllg lor the locks to beeome operable.
.
.

School relief hi!~ up for Senate·vote today
By LEE Ll!lONARD
UPJ SlaldiOUie Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI) Legislation offering
temporary relief to school
districts for.ced to close
because of natural gas
shortages was to come to .the
Senate floor for a vote
today.
The bill, drafted by
majority Democratic leaders
in the Senate and House with
guidance from the state
Department of Education and
school lobby groups, was
rushed through the Sena..te
Education Committee
Tuesday night.
Committee approval was
unanimous although there
was some grumbling that
weatherrelated school
closings ought to he afforded
similar protection,
The btU's sponsors and the
education groups kept the
agreed legislation virtually

intact 'lind said there iB a shortages without having to
possibility snow clolings may make up the days if the school
be ol!ered similar relief later year ruM out on them. Under
the bill, lhe state Department
this year.
!be bill, drawn up' late last of Education would
week, would provide 15 determine what da)'ll off are
makeup.lree cloaing days to actaally the result of fuel
any of the state's 817 !lcllool shortages. Local school
districts forced to close authorities would be allowed
because of energy shortages. to budget their fuel and close
Gov. James A. Rhodes has schools In their districts
pledged to sign the bill when accordingly.
They would be encouraged·
· it reaches hill deat.
to
conduct alternative
As written, the bill will
education
programs and
allow school districts to close
make
up
the
days if possible.
for up to 15 day§ for fuel
School employes would be

WilLIAM E. CLAYI'ON
WASHINGTON (UP!) Congressional backers of
President Carter's
emergency natural gas
legislation hoped to get it to
the White House helore his
"fireside chat" :o the nation
tonight.
The Hollse and Ser.a te disa·
greed over price C(•ntrols
'Tuesday and sent their differing versions of the bill to a
conference committee. The
temperatures, tra!lBportation conferees met late Tuesday
problems from impassable before a flickering lire in the
highways and frozen rivers fireplace of a crowded
that are stopping deliveries of Capitol room, and reach~
fuel, all are combining to agreement in 10 minutes.
reminq us of past omissions . It opened the way for
· and
House
in energy planning," Rhodes Senate
consideration · of
the
said.
compromise today, a week
after carter sent his proposal
to Capitol Hill.
"What we're doing is
reaching agreement in time
for the fireside chat," said
Secretary· Treasurer (a ll Senate Republican leader
Howard Baker. Baker was
years), Don WoUe.
In II years, 44 players were oot a conferee but was In on
signed by major league several consultations about
scouts to mlno~ league tile bill earlier Tuesday.
The bill does two main
contracts. Most outstanding
.
were Mel Clark with National things:
-It allows pipelines
League Philadelphia Phillies
for live years as a regular operating across it ate Jines to
outfielder, and Wendell buy gas wherever they can
Mossor as pitcher with during the emergency,
Philadelphia Athletics and
New York Yankees.
Others had various lengths
in various classifications in
the minor ·leagues.

Coal is Rhodes' answer to
energy supply problems
COLUMBUS, Ohio( UP!) .Gov. James A. Rhodes told
President Carter in a
telegram Tuesday that the
answer to Ohio's energy
supply problems could be
increased use of coal.
Monday, Carter asked
Rhodes and the governors of
other energyo()epleted states
for their suggestions on how
the federal government could
best help states solve their
energy problems.
Rhodes also suggested to
Carter 1 that federal sulfur
oxide emission standards be
relaxed "until such time as
practical , technology is
available" and that all
boilers burning natural gas
be converted to coal by 1987.
Rhodes' telegram was sent
to Jack Watson, the
president ' s energy
coordinator.
He noted that most Ohio
industrial and large commercial users of natural gas have
been curtailed by 85 per cent
for the rest of the winter and
that "Ohio schools will he
closed for the month of
February."
"The one fuel we have in
abundance within our
naUon's boundaries is coal,"
wrote the governor. "All
other fuels · must be
seoondary, supplemental and
used
for
premium
purposes.''
Rhodes recommended total
reconversion to coal-fired
boilers over a !().year period
and the relaxed sulfur oxide
stamards. He also proposed:
-Combining the U.S. Envi·
ronmental Protection Agency
and all federal energy
agencies under a single
cabinet-level department.
- That the federal govern·
,ttent
solve
nuclear
generation, processing, spent
fuel and storage problems
and supply an adequate
amount of nuclear fuel.
, -Strong controls over the
: emission of particulates into
· the air "to protect the
' environment."
- Development of solar,
shale gas and geothermal
· energy.
: "We need energy for Ohio
; and America and we cannot
' stand by and igoore our most ,

' abundant energy resources,"
:
·;
:
:
'

Rhodes said.
In his telegram the
governor reviewed past
emphasis on gas as a clean
source of energy. "A simple

solution," he wrote, "but one
tllat igoored energy problems
tllat were well known at tllat
time."
"Unprecedented winter
conditions have brought to a
locus problems that have
been generating for years. A
shortage of gas, e•treme cold

OVA histocy
(Conllllued from page 1)
depsrted members of that
semi-pro league.
Chamber President Crow,
who perhaps could have won
a golden glove at first base
and wielded a fearsome piece
of lumber at the plate for
Pomeroy in the years im·
mediately following WW 2,
has prepared an outline
history of the associatiOn . It
follows:
(OVA) OHIO VALLEY
ASSOCIATION formed 1938,
Operated 1936, 1939, 194{),
1941; suspended war years
1912, 1943, 1944, 1945 ;
operated 1946, 1947, 1948, 1949,
1950,1951, 1952. Total years of
operation, 11.
Charter members and
managers were Racine, Bert
Grimm ; Bradbury, Harley
Rife; Gallipolis, Stanley
Evans, Hohe Wilson, Howard
Hardway; Point Pleasant,
Clarence Fisher; Hartford,
Herman Layne, Harry
Layne, and Clifton, Bernard
Somerville.
Pomeroy, Middleport and
Syracuse had applied for
charters but could not field
teams. All joined later, as
some dropped out.
other clubs to join in later
years, replacing others were
Leon, .Gallians, Portland,
Stiversville, Ravenswood,
Reedsville, Twin Cities,
Mason, Tuppers Plains, and
New Era. Only clubs to
operate entire II years were
Racine, Gallipolis and Point
Pleasant. Hartford withdrew
lor a short time.

April, or whenever Carter
declares the natural gas
emergency has pasaed.
The House passed the bW
Toeoday afternoon, 387 to 52,
or 87 more votes than needed
lor passage under the
1.
- !I leta the President order emergency conditions by
the bill was
one interstate pipeline to which
share ita supply with another, considered. It added a price
to protect homes, small limit of approximately $2.02
bu'sinesses, hospitals and per thousand cubic feet on the
other top priority gas users. e~ergency sales.
This authority would end in
bidding prices abOve the
federal conlrols if necessary.
The prices would stiU be
subject to Carter's approval,
and the emergency sales
authority would .expire Aug.

The State of Ohio and
Buckeye Hills .Hocking
Valley Regional Development District, through a
grant from the Appalachian
Regional Commission, are
sponsoring two housing

Weather
Cloudy tonight and Thursday, occasional snow, mixed
with rain Thursday, likely.
Lows tonight between 25 to 30
and highs Thursday in the
mid 30s. Probability of
precipitation 10 per cent
ay, 60 per cent tonight, 70
r cent
rsday.

.

conllllues.
"Don't feel this iB final"
said Jackaon. "We CBMot
roreaee what the weather Ia
going to be. We realize we
may have to cOme back later
after we see wbal the total
situation Ia."
·
"This btU wW take care of
us through ·the end of this
!liOOth," agreed Dr. Paul
Spayd~ of the Ohio School
Boarda A.UOClation. 1'11 will
depend what happelll this
month on whether you will
need to c1111e back and add
something else."

. Southern goes to -10-0
The Southern Tornados
took another step towards the
SVAC crow n when they
visited Symmes Valley
Tuesday ni ght and came
away with another im·
pressive victory, this time
scoring 51 points in the
second half to down the
VIkings 84-53. It was the
Tornados' loth win without a
loss, and this week they were
rated .lith in the state.
The running, pressin g

seminars in Pomeroy this
month.
Object of the meetings is to
recognize problems unique to
each locality and to the
region and to inform
localities of the various
federal , state and local
housing program available to
them.
The first session at 3 p.m.
on Feb. 15 at the Senior
Citizens Center in tbe former
Pomeroy Junior High School
is for all perso!IB involved in
tile housing industry of Meigs
County. Purpose of the
meeting will be to determine
how various organizations

perceive housing In the
county, what speclflc
problems can he Identified,
and which of the problems
are most critical.
The second seminar wW be
at 7p.m. on Feb. 22 also at the
Senior Citizens Center in
Pomeroy. II is open to the
public to describe the various
federal, state and local
housing programs available
in Meigs County. In addition,
a report and swrunary of the
problem recognition seminar
representing the opinions of
those groups most closely
associated wilh housing will
be given .

Co ll eqe Basketball Res ult s
By U n1ted Press 1nternaltonat
East
Aabson 77 Coas t Guard 7?
Rapt Rtble 96 Pha . Bible Sti
P.eckley 89 Oh•o Valley !I
Rflo St at N1aqara . ppd
Can1StUS ill Ru ff alo , ppd
Howard 98 Md E "&gt;h BB
Hol y Cross 89 N H Un•v 78
H unter 80 Pace 56
1tha ca 7 1 Hoba rt 69
K 1nq s Pt 83 51 F r an Mr 6H
L ebanon Val 81 W Md 71
M crr1 mac k 10? Lowcll 91
N or theastr n 71 Assumo tn 70
No .Adams f. t t.9 Wrcstr "' M
Nyack 76 Dom•nican NY f.1
Phil a PMrm 9R Mf'~ Si ilh fl~
Prov•denc e 87 "' Ronn•f' 7~
~c r anton 6Q [1{'1 Va ll{'y 6?
Wf'SI l •ber ty 69 Sa lf'm 67
W lmnqtn 63 L•ncoln Pn til

which he tried unsuccessfully
to get the Senate to ado~t.
would "give some measure of
protection to tbe conswner."
House
and
Senate
conferees agreed to erase the
specific limit, leaving price
approval to the president but
specifying
that
the
emergency sales prices
would
not
trigger
renegotiation of existing
contracts at higher prices.

TAKEN TO VMII
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad a!lBwered a call to
Browntown at 7:32 a.m.
Wednesday for Norman
lj,ussell who was taken to
"eterans Memortsl Hospital.
At 3:26p.m. Tuesday, the lire
department was called for a
minor lire at Gene's Body
Shop on Condor St.

Sout h
,
1\rmst rnq St 7 1 C.outhrn Tch
Rf'rry 78 Co lumbus 77
C'vdl(' 10] ~y
Clf'mson 60 N

MAKES LAYUP - Mike Smith of Eastern ( 20), gets
past Jim Dillinger (45) of Federal Hocking Tuesday night
in Eastern High's game . against Federal Hocking.
Dillinger's team won, though, 66-40, handing Eastern its
loth straight loss this season without a victory. - Picture
by Gary Sisk.

The year 1976 was a busy

by 3.6 and 3.7 respectively precipitators and completion
one for Columbus and over 1975 figures, the number of 8 gas desulphurizalion
Southern Ohio Electtic Co. of industrial customers was· system (scrubber) is ex·
BOND FORFEITED
•Sales improved; the 2,634 in 1976, down from 2,678 peeled by the end of 1977.
One defendant forfeited a ' number of customers in· in 1975.
Both of these environments)
bond and three ot]Jers were creased, cleaning up the
On Aug. 11, 1976 the com· controls will meet state and
lined by Middleport Mayor environment continued, new pany was granted a rate federal environmental
Fred Hoffman 'J,'uesday nigh!. officers were elected, and a increase of $44.1 million. This protection standards.
Forfeitlilg a $50 bond posted new generating unit went on rate case had been pending
Total cost of the unit in·
on a trespassing charge was line'
since 1974. The compj\ny curred during 1976 was
Roger Butcher, Pomeroy.
Kilowatt hour sales in· expects an annual increase In estimated at $32,865,000.
Fined were Edward E. creased in 1976 by 3.6 percent revenue of $23 million J&gt;Ver
During the semi-annual
Kitchen, 38, 'Middleport, $200 or 8,133,368,000 compared to the amount which had been fuel hearings with the Public
and costs and three day jail 7,851,329,000 in 1975.
collected on an emergenc~ Utilities Commission of Ohio,
'sentence, driving while in·
John Weeks, a native of . basis since March, 1975.
· tile hearing examiner con·
loxicaled, and $100 and costs Pomeroy, is ~uperlntendent
The company delayed eluded
that
alt~ough
and a 30 day suspended jail of the River Division of construction on units No. 5 Columbus and Southern
sentence on a disorderly Columbus and Southern and No. 8 al Poston occasionally pays its. submanner charge; Larry which consists of Meigs and Generaltng Station In Athens sldlary (Simco) more for coal
Tyree, 24, Middleport, $50 Gallia counties. The division County until 1983 and 1985 than it psys independent
and costs, disturbing the experienced a 7 per cent reopectlvely. The delay I• due suppliers, the utility's mining
peace, and Roger K. Han· increase in kilowatt hour to the compaay experiencing operation benefits customers
dley, 22, Cheshire, $10 and sales during 1976. ,
lower load levels than m a long term basis.
costs, defective exhaust.
In 1976 the '·overall predicted and the related
R. J. Gru..er was elected
number of customers In· problems of financing tbe chairman of the board upon
creased to 435,490. In 1975 cash requlremenll.
the retirement of A. G. Green
SEVERAL F'!"ED
customers totalled 426,952.
New Plant Proposed
al the end of 1976 and B. T.
Fined in the court of
Revenue was $280,285,000 in
Columbus and Southern Ray was elected pr..ident
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence 1976, an 8.2 percent increase also submitted a letter of and chief operating ollicer.
Andrews Tuesday night were over 1975.
intent to the Ohio Power
A new division office is
Other managers were
Frank Mathews, 25, Albany,
The average residential Siting Commission for con· under construction in
Leon, Dorsel Smith, J. E. $50 and 'costs on a shoplifting usage declined to 7,362 KWH struction of a new generating Gallipolis and will he ready
Crookham; Gallians, Bus at Kroger's charge, and tn 1976' compared to 7,390 plant. The Newbury site In for occupancy 1n April, 1977.
Lee; Portland , Bill Stewart;
Harold Rickard, New Haven, KWH in 1975.
Washington County near
During 1976the Rio Grande
Stiversville, Bill Cozart; $150 and costs, assault.
On July 15 at 4 p.m. the Belpre on the Ohio River and area got a new substation
Ravenswood, Bill Buffington; Forfeiting bunds in the court company reached Its system the Great Bend site In Meigs that was put in operation in
Reedsville, Dorsel Rei~J and were Michael Taylor, Mid· peak when 1,776,000 kilowatts County are being considered. May to Improve the service in
New Era, Harry Leonard.
dleport, $30 posted on a were generated, an ail time Hearings on the planned site the western and northern
OVA presidents were John charge of running a red light; high. It surpassed the are still being held regarding area of Gallia County. A new
Gilmore, Bill Bowie, Virgil Palrlck Durham, Middleport, 1,749,000 kilowatts generated the plant's environmental station in the southwestern
Campbell, Charles (Grand· $150, reckless operation, and Aug. 1, 1975.
il)lpact. Construction of the area of Gallipolis and a new
dad) Shain; Vice President, John Landaker, Pomeroy, 'J While industrial and first- unit will not be com· Coolville station will be
(all years) George B. Lerner; $30, no operator's license.
commercial usage increased pleted until at least 1985.
completed in 1977.
Columbus and Southern
Upgrading
major
installed over S10 million_in.-dl,mlbt!tlon lines In Galli a
electrostatit-preetplta1ors on and Meigs Counties took
Poston unit No. I and No. 2 place during 1976 and ~on·
last year. These devices structlon will continue in
remove 99.65 percent of the 1977.
I
smoke particulate matter
During 1976 Columbus and
from the g~ses before they Southern began rebuilding its
reach file a1r.
.
distribution system in
A new 375 megawatt umt, Gallipolis to a higher
Conesville No. 5 was added to distribution voltage which
DEAR DR. LAMB- I am a urine. Adiabetic whO is losing the compan~ 's sy.stem last will give lhe area more
The sinuses and even the
lungs are able to clean 17 year old boy and would like sugar in the urine will drink Nov. 24. ~IS urut Is also capacity, more reliability
themselves within limits. The to know if a person can drink Jots of water to dilute the equipped w1th electrostatic and allow' lor future growth.
secretions in the air passages too much water. II seems as sugar content. Eating ice in
&lt;'During the Novem'ber
amounts can
overwhelm the dust and you though I am always pouring large
~-------:---,""'
el&lt;dloo._the
COJn(lllny sesimply cough it out.
some water over some ice sometimes he a symptom of
nD!
DALY sBNTt!.a f
lively
supported
the efforts of
I would expect that with cubes or drinking lemonade if pica - a disease related . to
DEVOI'EDTOTIII
the
"Vote
No
on
4 lhru 7
this one epiBode you will not it's In the refrigerator. I've Iron deficiencies. This pro-~c:.'REA
Committee."
The
issues
(4-7)
have any residual dust in heard rumors a person could blem is l'eadily treated by
~&gt;~ESTBBL. TANNEIIILL
were
defeated
by
a
3
to I
• your lungs bul if you or others get drunk on water.ll so, how taking iron. You can get
ROIIER~tio~..,
majority.
must work in a real dusty much would it take? Not that enough iron eventually by us~-..
With public understanding
situation you would be wile to I want to get drunk or btg a daily vilamin tablet that
by~~Volle
hbll!J:,~
in
\ni~d , a company
has added Iron:
wear a damp cloth over Ule anything.
any,
111
CQort
~.
P........,,
Ohio
speaker
s bureau was
More likely you jullt have a
face to help filter the~r
DEAR ADER - No, a per·
~::'i:cus:~
i:w"lir.'
m.
. .ta bUshed at the beginning
1
before you inhale it if you son can't get drunk on water. water drinking habit. Most
IIOc:tod claa pao~.o 1 , paid at
Of 1976. The bureau is
people
would
benefit
if
they
don't have other protection.
It Is what one mixes with the
~,Olio.
currently comprised of 15
To give you more informs· water that makes him drunk drank a little more water
tauv:;:tnl
.-:\':~'"'I!
speakers, employees have
lion on how your lungs work I and 'that has to be an than they often do. Buill you
c.,
BotlintW
lll1d
Gtllo!her
!ltv.,
eagerly volunteered their
are concerned, see your doc·
am sending you The Health alcoholic beverage,
Thlrd Ave., New Yon, N.Y.
talent&amp;
l1lld free time to this
17
It is aimoal impossible for a tor and let him make some
Letter number 2-4, Keeping
SabocriDU111 _ ,
by
worthwhile company effort.
Your Lungs Fit. Others who. healthy person eating a nor· tests for possible causes.
carrterwhor..voUablt'llcootaper
Nearly 80 presentations have
In the summer, drinking
- ·By Mola&lt; Roook " ' - corrilr
b
d
want this information can . mal diet to drink too much
"'"""
ootov.U.blt,
0no
.
.
een rna e to service
send 50 cents with a long, water. The kidneys will lots of wate1· and not getting
IUS. By mou tn Olio llld w. Vo.,
organizations and other
enough salt in your tiiet can
One y,., ~110: SIJ monllll,
h h
---&gt;
stamped, self-addressed eliminate the excess.
111110:
Three
moalhl,
I7.IO;
I!J'OU(l8 w o ave expre"'""' a
There are a few medical cause salt depletion 1f you are
envelope for it. Write to me in
E......,.. 131.111 - : 811 """""'· desire to know more about
care of this newspaper, P.O. conditions that 'stimulate a iusmg salt from sweating a
ltJ . ~ : Thr.e montlta, lUll.
energy In general and the
Sulwlcriptlon price includea Sundly
Bo• 1551, Radio City Station, person lo drtnk lots of water Jot.
rn.....sonUnot.
. l
company's Olleratlon
New York, NY 10019.
and result in passlnR a Jot of .

rl:

De-

CLASS CANCELLED
Balon classes of Mrs. Judy
Riggs scheduled for this
evening at· Royal Oak Park
have been cancelled.

13,000 given aid
on Ohio highways
Ohio Department of hospitals and power utiUties.
Transportation highways
Director Weir said the
crews and backup personnel highways crews and backilp
in every section of the state personnel have been on the
have assisted an estimated · job without a day off since
13,000 persons
either December 27th when the
stranded by drifting snows on current winter stonm began.
highways or in need of other lfhese employees have
tra!lBportstion help since last averaged working about 12
Friday.
hours and up to 18 hours a
Tra!lBportatlon Director, day. The road crews alone, an
David Weir, said the north· average of 630 a day, put in
western area of Ohio aiOtie more than 280,000 manhours
· called lor assistance lo 8,000 since the Christmas weekend,
persons in some way affected according to Weir.
by Friday's blizzard or the
In District 10, Trans·
heat fuel emergency.
portatlon personnel have
Weir praised the more than assisted 13
motorists
5,000 ODOT maintenance stranded in snow dt:ifta since
employees including the road . 8 a.m. Friday. There were 3
crews, backup mechanics, in Gallla, 3 In Athens, 5 in
garage workers and radio Noble, and 2 In Meigs
dllpatchers for keeping the Counties. Gallla County
state's highways open while • personnel tra111ported one
also responding to thousands family from their unhealed
of requests for help. In ad- home to another location.
dltlon to assisting motorists, ODOT personnel cleared a
ODOT persoMel have been county road ·and an in·
clearing roadways for fuel oU dividual's driveway In Noble
trucks and emergency County in order to tra~pot1
vehicl.. as well as delivering an injured man to the
special equipment to hospital.

Epling heading
Scout fund drive

,,
'

c+

o:; t

71
&lt;;9

Cli nch Va ll ey 9rf Rad for.d RH
Copptn \08 Rutq er s Cilrndrn AI
E Kf'n tu cky 67 Clrvr " ' M
Gr ('ens boro 89 Coke r R"i
~ nnt p &lt;:. ydny 87 R'wi'll er v.1 ~ ll
Jc ksn v t\ e st 7A Mt~ s Col 7?
Loyola Md M wa sh Md 'ill
Md 8 11 Co 86 Gf'O Mil SO n !7
l\15bu rv 79 Mt ~ · Me~rv 's .-,,,
T enn essee 106 G&lt;'OrCiti'18?
Wash 8. Lee 96 M f'n nQnll&lt;' 1'11
W Caro lma 6.7 Mnrs Hdl (.1
W Va 86 Vtr~ t n ia TPc h 711
MldW ~S I

specifically. As a result of its encoprage research and
success during 1976, 15 ad· development programs by
ditional speakers will be the Electric Power Research
trained during 1977. The Instilute and the Edison
company believes that ex- Electric lllBtitute. Advance
panding its person to person plaMing through research is
contaJ:t will continue to in· just another aspect of
crease public understanding. Columbus and Southern's
During 1976 the company role in meeting the energy
continued to support and challenge of the future .

Leo . MacCourtn~y.
sustaining membership
enrollment chairman for the
Tri-State area Council, Boy
Seoul of America has an·
nounced appointment of
Miles T. Epllnc of Gallipolis
aa chairman of the MGM
district lund drive.
The MGM district includes
Melp, GaUII and Muon
Countlel. Thlt extenalve fund
railing effort klcb off Mlrch
3, with a leadenhlp dlnaer
and wW conclude In April
with aolfcltaUona of the many
frlenda and ICQUIIng In the

h.fifls

&lt;;~

RPi h £&gt;1 9? Tn n1t y Ch r 15 87
Rrnedc tn c 611 Kan NC'w mn ~R
F\ ell evue 7n Tarkto 7.1, ot
Ooane 67 Dana 'i7
Drury 78 E Cen t Okla 51
F 1nd la y 73 1\nderson 70
Gosh en Hl Gr ace 7A
He1dc lberq 83 Ml Un•on M
Iowa W'yan 9? Cornell I t~ 77
Kf'arney l lY C h~d ron 73
Lor as 7? Uppe r Iowa 70
Mt ch Te ch 4·1 No M1c h 38
Mt VrM Ni17 93 tl r hann AS
Mus~tnqu m 80 Mar •eltn 13
N evada LV 107 P.radlcy 100
Nrb wr;lyn \OS Conc ord til 97
No1rc Damr 97 £l ayton 6•1

Otterbem 59 Cap,Jal ~ 1
Pr ru C. l 89 M1d Amr r Na t AR
S•mpson 7J Gr mnell b6
Swst rn Ka n 87 Tabor 8? ot
Wilberfor ce 13 !' haw 61
So uth west
fo ust• n Col \ 11 P Ou1nn 83
Hou ston 9&lt;~ Texas Trch 87
N M " ' 99 Hardtn C. mm ns 9R
Or il l Rbts 90 C..t Fr an N Y 67
Ponland &lt;;J 78 P an f•n'l 71
R1 ce 73 naylor 60H
T('II.CI S 105 Cen ten ary AI
Trxas f&lt;&amp;M 761C\J 69
We or, I
u c; r. rAJ Xav•er' 0 711 ?n ts
P.iola 46 fo n.J sa .13
( AI Ply ~ LO RO Cal c; 1 Hywd f.Y
(Mro ll Mont R'i Monl Tc h 71
Great Fall 'i HI Rf'dlilnds ~7
&lt;:. nn Jose' ' 1.1 Hawa11 f.?
t;f'a lll Pa c 60 W Wilsh &lt;; t 'ill
I I( lr vnf' 'il (&lt;tl c:.t ( htCO ~~
\1'/f'S tmonl 7) Cal Luthr ra n 7?
I VJht l ll('f 9 .1 \f t', f l! 7A

Columbus &amp; Southern ·baa a bu.s y ·year

Inhaling dust isn't healthful

r-

'

When the bill got to lbe
Senate, sen. Adlai Stevenson,
D-ID., chief sponsor, said he
could not accept the price
Hmits because they "could be
too low to enable producers to
sell to interstate buyers."
That would mean little or no
gas could come out of the
emergency provisions, he
said.
Sen. James Abourezk, DS.D., contended the price lid,

Housing seminars planned

DR. LAMB

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - The
: other day two of us were us' ing an eleclrlc sander to get
• the paint off the garage. The
: dust surely was flying. My
; hair was covered with paint
1 dust. No doubt my face was
; too. I forgot to put on a mask
: so I must have inha~ a lot of
• dust.
;r;. ·
; Now I IIJII'IOoit ering how
~ much dust got into y lungs.
· U I did Inhale a lot, how long
; wWitbebeforeltsbowsup?
' DEAR READER - I don't
: recommend Inhaling dust of
; any type If you can avoid it.
; However, nature planned on
, protectinc people frllll this
; p(oblem. YOW' respiratory
. lyJiem beginnlnl with your
Ia lined wltlumall hairs
: 18 belp iDler the air you
. lnltbt. Alao, the air you
' breathe pasaes oVC' moist
l llll'faca that catch the dust.
·

paid for the "eoorgy" days iilloWing makeup-free da)'ll
ol! but would be unable to for weather related clollngs.
"Aren't we dlacrlminatln8
collect for any makeup days.
The
regular
school against dlllrlcts that have to
calendar iB 180 days with five clOiie becaWIO tbe snowbanks
days off for "calamities" 'are piling up?" he asked. "I
such as storms Ooods or fires. can't see the fairness in this."
Gaeth
offered
an
The bill, retroactive to IMt
amendment
providing
for
:1»
Jan. 3 and good lllrough June
makeup-free
days
either
tor
30, would reduce the
mlnbnum calendar year to fuel shortages or weather bul
It was defeated 6 to 3.
160 days.
Jackaon said there Is a
Son. M. Ben Gaeth, R·
chance
tile lawmakers will
Defiance, whose district has
have
to
amend Uie plan to
bf!en hard-lilt with blowing
include
snow
closings later
snow complained ·the
legislation was unfair by not this year If the severe winter

Carter's natural gas bill hurried in House
By

Brauer getting eleven and
Teaford nine. They com·
mitted sixteen turnovers , not
bad for a ruMing team.
Synunes Valley was led by
Ralph Ingles' 16 and Justin
Mille4.dded 10, but it wasn't
enough as the VIkings hit
barely 40 percent, 20 of 54,
and sank 13 of 211ree throws.
They had 21 turnovers and 34
rebounds.
· .
The Tornados are going 1o ,
be around lor a few more
years as evidenced by the
Bafiy Funnel Clouds' 9-1
record alter trouncing the
Baby Vikes, 73·33. The
Southern Reserve defense
allowed the Synunes Valley
reserves just 12 points in tile
second half enroute to the
although the first half
ended with the Southern lads
leading just 26-21.
Dwight Hill's 17 points led
the winners' attack while
Da ve Findley and Scott
Souder each added 12.
Southern's next game is at
Hannan Trace Friday night.

3- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb. 2, 1977

_

district's community.
Epling, an · exparlenced
IICOUter and board member
for the Tri-State Area for the
pall 30 yeara, Ia eltremely
·optimlltic about ~ear'a
campaign.
The
MGM
dlltrlct
pr-.Uy baa over 700 boya
enrolled In 3S cub pacb and
aoout lroopl. 'nita put faD
broqbt a record number of
boys Jato aooutlnc and It II
Epling'a hope thai cantlnued
quality 1rowth wiD be In
, mdence 1n 1977.
I

to a 33-22 lead at half ltme. te~m never faltered, and but still ended with 12, and
Then came that awesome once again the strength of juniors Richard Teaford and
second hall, and it was easy their bench was quite Kelly Winebrenner each
to see why the Tornado evident. A balanced scoring ·. connected for 10.
It was a slzzhng night from
defense and offense is con· attack also proved the un·
8.
.
the
floor lor the winners as
dmng
of
the
hosts
as
Southern
sldered tough all around.
For three mmutes starting They held the Vikings to just placed five men In double they shot a hot 54 percent (38
of 70), and actually fared
the second period, the win· ten pomts in the third pertod figures.
Brauer led his team with 16 better than at the foul line
ners didn't score a pol~t. but while scoring 24.
after a few words from Coach Even with seniors Joe markers while speedy Eric where they canned just etght
Carl Wolle, the Racine lads Brown and Chtp Brauer in Dunning netted 13. Brown sat of 16. They dominated the
caught fire and pulled away foul trouble, the Southern out nearly half of the contest · boards with 38 ca roms with

Tornados were never really
tn trouble as they jumped off
to a t0..2 lead. At that point the
hosts slowed down the tempo
and the first period ended 16·

drop ·'Cats

High~anders

Playing live players in two lonner Gallipolis Blue a 2()..11 lead at the end of the
double figures, Coach Wayne Devils players, led the attack first period b~t only held a
Bergd oll's Southwestern wtth 19 points each. Others in three pomt advantage, 3()..27
Htghlanders evened their double figures were Larry at the hall.
However, the Highlanders
season record at 5-5 (3-3 in the Carter with 12 points, Keith
ca
~ght fire in the third per10d
Grate
canned
II
and
Gene
SV AC) Tuesday night with an
behind
the shooting of Carter
Layton
added
10.
impressive 81.fl3 vtctory over
Southwestern jumped into and Jackson . Carter con·
Hannan Trace. .
Don Bush and Ron .lark!':""

Flyers drop 97-64 tilt
to Irish; Pioneers lose
United Press International
The
Day to n Flyers
continued their downhill slide
Tuesday night, dropping a 9764 decision to Notre Dame .
The Flyers, who had an
impressive 10.3 record two
weeks ago, lost their ninth
game against 10 wins.
Playing at South Bend ,
Dayton jumped out to an 8-4
lead in the first 31h rmnutes
but then the Irish took over
and moved out to a 60-33 lead
at halftune.
Notre Dame Sophmore
center Bruce Flowers scored
20 poinis and grabbed II
rebounds tn leading the Irish
to their lith win against five
losses.
The Insh shot 65.8 per cent
and lOOper cent from tile free
throw li~e durmg the ftrst

hall.
Forward Toby Knight and
guard Don Williams both
chipped in 17 points for the
Irish. Erv Gtddings led the
Flyers w1th 14 points.
At New Concord, four
players, led by Dave Smith
with 22 points, scored in the
double fi gures to power
Muskingum to an 8().73
overtime wtn over Marietta
in Ohio Conference action.
In the winnmg effort, Pete
Ltptr ap netted 16 points ,
Dave Bronston 15 and Marvin
Smalley 10.
Manetta led 34-27 at the
half and had the game
snarled at 65-GS at the end of
regulatton play. Muskingum
outscored them 15·8 in
overtime, however.
Jeff Faloba of Marietta

Pacers edge 76ers

'I

nected for 10 pomts while
Jackson dumped \II six. With
two minutes left in the con·
test, Bergdoll emptied his
bench as the Highlanders led
81·51.
Coach Dan Corn ell's
Southern Roush 2·0 4.
Wildcats now 3·5 overall and Brown 6-0-12, Teaford 5-0-10,
2·3 in the SV AC were led by Brauer 6·4·16, Dunn ing 6-1-13 ,
4 2 10, Johns t on
David Campbell's 16 pomts. 4Winebrenner
0 8. Findley 3·0· 6, Bak er 1 1
Frank lylooney and David 3, Sayre 1·0·2. Total s 38-8·84 .
Sy mm es Valley - Miller 4
Swain scored 14 points each.
No game statistics were 2· 10, Wilso n 4 0-8, Geswe tn 2·
4·8, Ingles 7·2· 16, W tseman 0
available.
12. M.tler 2·3·7. Myer s I 0·1.
Hannan Trace took the Totals 10-13-53.
By Quarters
reserve game, 41·36 behind
16 33 57 84
the shootmg of Pack's 20 Southern
s.
Valley
8 21 32 53
points. Steve Beaver chipped
in with 13 pomts. Sherm
Potter led the Little Logan 108
Highlanders with 14 points
while Darrell Baker added 10.
Southwestern will host Wellston 45
North Gallia Saturday night.
LOGAN (108) - Russell. 5
Hannan Tra ce will pla y I II. HawK, 1·5 19 ; Me ·
Southern Friday.
Broom, 8-5·21. Bragl 1n, 6 315 , Gasser , 4 2 10 ; Hal lett , Q.
Box score:

scored 22 points to share
gamehigh honors with Smith.
The win left Muskingum
with a 13-4 record, 1&gt;-2 in the
Ohio Athleltc Conference'
while Marietta fell to 7-10
overall, 2-5 in the OAC.
In another OAC game, Don
J.J; Doll ison , 2 0 4, Da vi d son,
HANNAN TRACE {631 Kegerreis scored 14 points as
0-4·4; Kemper , 31 -7 , Tucker.
bson , 3·2-8; Swai n, 4·6·14 ; 1·1·3, Da lton , 3 1·7: Bush . 1·0
Heidelberg swept past Mount Gi
Wh1t t. :t 0-2: Campbell. 3 10
Hors&gt;y, 2·0 4 TOTAL S 42Union during tile second half 16 ; McG uire, 2.1 5; Wlooney, 224·, 108.
5-4·
14,
Beave
t,
1
0
2
and
ill an B3.fl6 vicillry.
WELLSTON
(45)
Mount Union led 40..JB at the Neal , 1·0-2 TOTALS 20·23·63. Swtng le, 2-0· 4; Mar11 n , 5-1-11 :
SOUTHWESTERN (811 Gilland . 3· 2 B; J Royster. 3
intermission, but Heidelberg Gra
te, 5111, Ca rt er, 6·0·1 2. o.6, Hudson , 3 I 7 : R Roy
came out shooting in the Blanton, 2 4-8 ; Layton , 3-4-l Oi sler . 306, Conley , 1 0·2:
second stanza, netting 63 per Bush , 7-5-19 ; Jackson , 8 3·19 Pugh , Q.t . t. TOTALS 20·5.45
cent from the fteld and 69 per TOTALS 36-17-81 .
Score by quarters:
By Quarters
Logan
24 30 25 29- 108
cent from the line.
Hannan 'lract:e 11 27 36-63
Wel
lston
16 14 to 5- 45
The win gave Heidelberg a Southwes t ern 20 30 .str:-81
Reserv e score Logan 83
Re
se
rv
es:
HT
41
SW
36
1().9 record, :h'i m the OAC's
Wellston 45
northern diviston . Mount
Union stands at JQ.8 overaU,
5-.1 in the OAC.
In the night's other OAC
contest, Otterbein, paced by
&amp;-7 junior center Ed Williams,
won its fourth conference
game in seven starts with a
59-51 victory at Capital.
The OAC Southern Division
win for the Cardinals was
secured by William's 19
points and nine rebounds.
Mike Wohlhater also hit for
10.
PHONE
Capitals' leading scorer
was Napoleon Allen with 15
THE ALL NEW
points.
Otterbein is now iHl overall
while Capital's record
dropped to 1().7 and 3-4 in the
-Enjoy three sizes of your favorite
OAC south.
pizzas.
In other games, Air Force
Try our delicious subs while you
beat Xavier 113-76 in two
sip
your favorite suds.
overtimes, Eastern Kentucky
Eat In Or Carry Out
edged Cleveland Stale 67-65,
Phone
Wilberforce whipped Shaw
992 -6304
( Mich .)73~1,andMt. Vernon
Nazarene tripped Urbana 11366.

By MARTIN LADER
Lakers
crushed
the
UPI Sports Writer
Milwaukee Bucks , 136-115.
When Billy Knight returns Spurs 92, ()avallers 87:
to his natural position at
George Gervin took game
forward, it won't he wi~out a honors witll 32 points and
fond look backward.
teamma te Larry Kenon
The adaptable Knight, al- scored 12 of his 16 points in
though forced to fill in at the final quarter to give the
guard with Indiana, still is San Antonio Spurs its
the third leading scorer in the trtumph over the Cleveland
National Basketball Cavaliers. Qjmpy Russell led
Association and on Tuesday Cleveland with 16 points.
night he notched a -game-high Kings 97, Bulls 86 :
35 points to carry the Pacers
Guards Ron Boone w1th 21
UNIONDALE, N.Y. !UP! ) to a 110-109 home-co urt pomts and Brian Taylor with
- John Williamson, the New victory over the Philadelphia 20 led the Kings over Chicago.
York Nets' leadmg scorer 76ers.
Forwards Scott Wedman and
this season, was traded ill
Immediately following the Rick Washington added 19
Indiana Tuesday for the contest, Indiana _acquired and 18 pomts respectively.
Pacers' No. I pick in the 1977 high-sciring guard John Chicago's WiliJitr Holland Jed
co llege
draft
and Williamson from the New all scorers with 24 points.
und ete rmined future con- York Nets and announced Knieks 108, W~rrlors 107:
stderattons.
Earl Monroe ,. after forcing
that Knight would be
His acquisttion allows the returned · to the front court. the game tnto overtime with a
Pacers to return Billy Knight,
Knight, who is averaging pair of free throws, hit a
LOOSE BALL SCRAP - Dan Spencer is fishing for a
one of the National 26.5 points per game, baseline jump shot with three
loose ball in Eastern's court Tuesday ~ight against
Basketball Associatton's clinched the victory for seconds left in the extra
Federal Hocking. In the background ts Jeff Goebel, also of
leading scorers, to his natural Indiana by hitting four free period to give the Knicks only
· Eastern. F .H. won 66-49. - Picture by Gary Sisk.
!lOSition at forward.
throws in the final 40 seconds their fourth victory In thetr
I
..
of play. Mike Flynn added 17 last 14 games. Bob McAdoo of .
points for the Pacers wh,ile New York led all scorers with
Henry Bibby had a high of 24 24' points, while Rick Barry,
for Philadelphia, which is who missed a potential game·
comfortably atop the' Atlantic~ winner at the overtime
BUFFALO, N.Y, (UP!) buzzer, also had ~for Golden
His grandfather, Lester The National Basketball As· Division by seven gal)'les.
LANOOVER, Md.' (UP I) In other NBA games State.
was general socia(ion Buffalo Braves
Si•-year veteran Craig Patnck,
Patrick, a right wing who manager of the New York have postponed their Tuesday night, The San Pistons 95, Hawks 92:
Bob Lanier led a well·
bears one of hockey's most Rangers m the 1920s and '30s scheduled game here tomght Antonio Spurs beat the
famous names, will join the and is a member of hockey 's with the Houston Rockets Cleveland Cavaliers, 9U7, balanced Detroit attack with
Washington Capitals ton ight Hall of Fame. His father, because of the poor weather the Kansas City Kings 18 points as the second-i&gt;lace
defeated the . Chicago Bulls, Pistons closed to within 410
for their game at Los Ly nn, is a senior vic.e conditions.
president
of
the
St.
Louts
The Braves have postponed 97-l!G, the New York Knicks games of idle Denver tn the
Angeles.
Blues
and
his
younger
Patrick, who was with the
three games because of the nipped the Golden State Midwest Division race. John
108·107,
in Drew ·and Len Robinson had
brother,
Glenn,
is
a
Minnesota Fighting Saints
storms, which hit the area Warriors,
28 and 26 pomts respectively
overtime,
tile
Detroit
Pistons
defenseman
m
the
Cleveland
before the team folded In
since last Friday. The games
for
Atlanta.
heat
the
Ailanta
Hawks,
95Barons'
organization.
will be rescheduled at a later
mid.January, signed with the
Laten
131, Bucks 115:
92,
and
the
Los
Angel
..
Capi; Tuesday.
date.
Kareem Abdui.Jabbar had
34 points and 14 rebounds and
reserve . forward Kermit
Washington added 18 points
and 13 rebounds to lift Los
Angeles to Its 20th
consecutive home court
underneath, Gary Nelson, while Goodfellow had eleven. victory and first place in the
With upset In tneir minds, lead to stay at 21·20.
the Eastern Eagles threw a
Eastern pulled to within was in foul trouble as he 'I'!ie reserve contest was a Pacific Division. Seven
scare ln1o the visiting three at 27·24 with I :46 picked up his fourth person real bamburner as the Baby Lakers•hit in double ligures
Federal Hocking Lancers remaining in the period, but midway through thai period. Eagles had a balanced as the club set a season high
Tuesday night when they when the half 'ended, the · By the six minute mark of scoring attack , but the lor points.
stormed out to a Hi-13 fir st visitors were on top, 29·24. the last period the Lancers visitors staged a rally and
quarter advantage, then to Butcher and Spencer ee~h were in command 54-39, and came from behind to win 37·
falter in the second hall as connected .for
twelve with two minutes remaining 33. Rhsty Wigal led the losers
CINCINNATI (UP! )- 'fhe
they were downed by the ' markers in that first half, and ih the contest the winners had with nine while Mike World Hockey Association's
Lancers for the second time each team committed l!Ome their biggest lead of the night, Hayman, Brian Bissell, and Cincinnati Stingers traded
this season, 66-49.
costly turnovers as both 21 points at 62-41, when the Don Eynon .each chipped In center Jacques Locas to the
Sophomore Dan Spencer teams were pressing. A big benches were cleared.
eight. The hosts $hot only four WHA Calgary Cowboys "for
led that Eagle attack in the dilferenc~ was at the foul line
Spencer led his team's free throws, slt;t,king three, future considerations."
first period as he ca nned 10 where the visitors sank live of attack with his· 14 while while the visitors canned
In a separate deal with
big points to lilt his team, and twelve whtle the hosts were collecting II of his team's 23 three of eight.
.Calgary,
the Stingers reache ended the ni ~ht with 14
none for one.
rebounds. Nelson chipped in
Eastern .. Nelson 4·1-9, quired right-wm ge r Dale
'1'114! Eagll"' al'led like they
The third period Ofl"ned with nine points while Dave Little 1·0 '1 . Carn a han 1-0.4,
"future
weren't going to let up as with Federal Hockin~ storm· Brown added seven. The Spencer 70·14. Smit h 2 I 5, Smedsmo for
considerations.''
Brown 3, I 7. Goebel Q.S 5,
Steve Little dropped in th e ing out tQ a :13-24 lead before
hosts committed 42 turn· MAIIhcwsQ. f. \, Tru~~e \1 1 0 ?. And in another player trans·
first two points of the second the Eagles could lind the
overs, but did shoot well from Totals :1'0 -9-49.
action, the Stingers sent
nntO to give thl) hosts UIPir ran~e . Thelead continued to
Feder•l Hocklnp
But
the
noor,
hilling
21
of
46 for 45
goalie Paul Hoganson to
biggest lead of the night, lB· widen, but at the 3:12 mark
pen·ent.
They
&lt;hot
only
fif. &lt; hl•r 9 6 14. Puc;'il;' ll ~ 'J 12. Binghamton of the North
13, at the 6 : ~ mark of that the hosts had narrowed it t&lt;;
C(l •'lt'll ullow 1 3 I I , Simle r 3 J
ll'.Pn
f110L~.
· coOnccttnJ..:: on 9, Olllnl!'Jf&gt;r .1 n t-. , RoWley 1 0 Amertcan Hockey League
.
I
period.
six , ~7·~1. The quarter end••d 111111
'
.
~ . T.lt~ 10? l 1· liliS 24 H 61! ,
un&lt;l brou~ht up ~oalie
Then the Lancers cau~(ht with the F:agles still wtlhin
~v Ovart;•ro;
llukher lect nil srorers as
~ Lit·qu cs
Co•ron
from
fire, and ai the~ : ~1 mark, .foe striklit~ &lt;h,tun•·•· . 47-:17 Om·o • llf' tos..~t in 24 pumt:-; for Hll' h1r.l\-'rn
J,l, A 11 17
,
~'YnJI'usu
of
lhe
&amp;Jme
lt•~t~m
·
Butcher put his team io Ill" ag;Jin lh1 · hfl ·~l.l)' Lt11-: 1n;m l.;uwcr~·L I! usst11l ii&lt;ldcd 12 F ~.:rl H o&lt;:~ 1!\.Q
16 1'1 10 '9

Eastern falters, losing again

wm,

with us!

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�.

4- T)le Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Feb. 2, 1977
.

Basketball Results

Late Ironton surge
tops GAHS, 54 to 45
Host Ironton broke away
from a scrappy Gallipolis five
during the final six minutes of
play to post a 54-45
Southeastern League
triumph over Coach Jim
Osborne's visiting Blue
Devils Tuesday night in the
IrontOn .Field House.
The league-leading Tigers,
now 10-2 overall with seven
straight wins, and 8-1 in
conference play, held a slim
one point advantage, 33·32,
with 6:15 remaining in the
contest.
The Fighting Tigers of

land Sl
Riller View 51 MaysviU'e 45
Rocky River 81 Fa irview 55
Si dney l e hm a n 67 Fort

United Press International

Mayfield 57 Maple Helghls 49
Miami sburg
71
Wes1
Carrollton 44
Montpelier '68 Bryan 65
New
Bremen 69 Fort
l' •
Rt coverv 63
New Lebanon Oix le 63
B•y Village 7; Olmsted Falls . Dayton Norlhridge 58 • ·
43
New Richmond 73 Veteran
Beach wood 57 Clevela nd Brown 67
Lutheran East 36
Nordonla 60 Walsh Jesuit 46
Br oo klYn 96 Cleveland Peebles 58 Portsmou th Clay
lutheran.West 58
57
Brookside
70
lorain
Cath
69
Ravenswood (W. Va .) 77
GAHS BLUE DEVILS (45)
Coach Buddy Bell outscored
,
Cadiz
d8
Indian
Valley
Sou
th
Warren
Local 73
.
Tp
PLAYER
FG.A
FT·A
PF
R
B
TO
GAHS 21-13 during the final Herb Ef)ling
47
Richmond Heights 67 K1rf 1·2 . 0·0 2 2 3 2 CambridgeJ!4
Bellaire 76
s_ix minutes of actioQ.
Gar\'~, Swain
8·13 6·8 3 3 4 12 Carli sle 98 Bel lbrook
57 ·
Ironton led IHl after one Keith McGuire
0·0 0-0 I
4
3
0
Cincinnati
Elder
66
Dayton
3-11
'4-4
2
3
period . The score was tied 16- · Brent Johnson
7 1
Fairview 46
1•
0
Terry
Wa
ll
3·6
o.o
5
0
0
all during the halftime in- Mike Dresse l
6
Cincinnali
Hughes
80
(
in·
IDgS
1·3 o:o 2
2
0
termission. Ironton Jed 31).28 Jeff Brown
2 ci.nn~ti W~!nut ~ I lls SO
.
NEw vORK fUPil - The
0·3 0·0 2
2
I
0
Cmcmnah Xav1er 67 ~In - u n 1 1 e d Press Interna tiona l
going into the final stanza. Dav id Warren
.J
0·0 0-0
0
I
Board of c oa c:'hes ' coll ege
1-1 1·2 0 0 3 0 cinnati Western Hills 6
Gallipolis led briefly in the Kev Jackson
3 Cleveland East Tech 53 ba ske t ba ll ra tings with won.lost
Keith
Jatkson
0·0
0.0
I
0
0
second stanza. Gallia's TOTALS
Cleveland · John Adams 47
recor ds through games of
17-39 11 -14
20
17
22 450 Cleveland
Holy Name 70 1sarurday , Jan , '19 , and number
biggest lead was three points,
I RON TON TIGERS 1541
Cleveland Rhodes 53
of first place votes In paren 13·10, with 4:061eft in the half. PLAYER
FG-A FT·A PF RB TO TP Cleveland
K. ennedy
71 theses :
·\
3-8 0·1
4 10
Ironton's biggest lead was 12 Dean Roval
6
. f Nin1h Week )
7
Cleveland
East
63
Team
Points
Sesher
2-3 2·3 I
2
points, 48·36, with I : 33 Dave
2
6 Cleve.!and
Ma·rshall 56 1. San Francisco (31 ) 121 -0l 402
Robin Fitzpatrick
1·4
3·5
5
8
remaining in the contest.
· M ike Brown
0
5
Cleveland Max Hayes 50
. 2. UC LA (.7 J (15 ·2J
303
3-10 10-13
I J
16 Cleveland St. Ignatius 85 3_ Nevada -Las Vegsl2)( 13.1l 191
Gallipolis connected on 17 Rick Howard
10-16 1·3 2 I 6d 21
Cleveland South 45
4. Marquette ( 14-i l
1'85
0-0 0·0 0 0 . 0 0 Cleveland
of 39 field goal attempts for Tim Kitts
Wesl
Tech
7.;
5. Mic hig•n 115·21
1
!4
Bob Williams
0·0 0·0 0 I 0
0
6. Ken tucky (I ) {14 -2)
167
Cleveland Lincoln -West 66 7. Louisville (1 5-1J
165
Kev Fairchild
0·0 o.o 0
0
I
04 Clermont Northeastern 89 ·a. Wake Forest ll l ( 16-21
162
TOTALS
19-41 16-25 13 25
20
5
Bethel Tate 46
9. Alabama (15-2)
103
Score by quarters :
Conation Valley 54 Jewett - 10 . Tennessee (14 -21
82
GAHS Blue Devils
10
12
17- 45 Scio 39
11 Cincinnafl ( 14-2)
64 .
Ironton Tigers
a 14 2454 Cuyahoga Heights 79 In - 12. North Carolina ( 11 -4)
Sd
13. Arkansas (17-H
45
dependen'"e 64
"'
14 . Purdue (13 -d J
3d
El-;ria 91 Sandusky 55
15. Arizona os J l
30
Federal Hocking 66 Eastern 16. Minnesota (15-11
26
43.5 percent. The Blue ·Devils pomts. tlrent Johnson added Meigs 49
17 _ Providence (17 .2)
2-d
Franklin 77 West Cbester 18. Clemson (15 -3)
22
were II of 14 at the foul line 10.
19 . Missouri (1 6-31
tB
Rick Howard popped In 21 Lakota 61
for 78.5 percent. GAHS had 17
Gilmour 61 Un iver.Sity School 20 . Utah ( 15-4 )
16
reboun(js, four by Keith points to pace the Tigers. 53
Colon Abraham's pair of free McGuire. The losers had 22 Mike Brown added 16.
Grandview d8 Olen tangy . 43
throws "with nine seconds left costly turnovers.
Gallipolis dropped to 4-5 Hawken 77 Bratenahr d3
You' II
gave Clemson a 60-59 victory · Ironton hit 19 of 4lfield goal overall and 2-4 inside the Hilliard 77 Reynoldsburg 71
Ironton
54 Gallipoli s 45
over North Carolina State. attempts for 46.3 percent. The conference.
tract it down
Jackson
Center
103
In other games, Holy Cross Tigers were 16 of 25 at the foul
Friday, the Blue Devils will Waynesfield 63
much faster
defeated New Hampshire, 89- line for 64 percent. Ironton host Waverly. Saturday, Logan 108 Wellston 45
78; West Virginia beat had 25 rebounds, llrby GAHS will host Jackson at Louisville 67 Mass illon
with a
Jackson 41
Virginia Tech, 86-78; Houston veteran Dean Royal. The Rio Grande in a 6 p.m. Malvern 70 Hiland 69
WANT AD
defeated Texas Tech, 94-ll7; Tigers committed 20 turn- makeup contest.
Mason 67 Clinton -Massie 52
New Mexico State edged oVers.
Hardin..Simmons, 99·98; Oral
·I
Gary SjVain paced Gallia
'
Roberts beat St. Francis Academy'k attack with 22
(NY ), 90-87; Rice topped
Baylor, 73.00; Texas defeated
Centenary, 105-lll, and Texas
A&amp;M beat TCU, 71Hl0.
Boys HighSchool
Basketball Results
Archbold i4 Stryker 70 (of)
Brtpfi$1 Chr istiifn 77 Tr ini ty 67
Barberlon 80 Massll/on 62
B?lrnesvil le 14 Woodsfield 65

Ra

Loramie 63 .

Skyvue 71 Sistersville IW.
Va .l 68
Sou thern {Meigs) 8A Symmes
Valley ~3
.
So uthwestern ( Gallla} 81
Hannan Trace 63
Sl. Marys 1W. Va .l 58
Fron tier 48
Tri -Va lley , 6~
We st
Musk lngum 57
Tr f.VIIIage 90 Anson ia ~~
Twinsb urg 70 Clevela nd
Benedictine 57

Uniontown · Lake 71 Canal
Fulton Nor thwest 6~
.
Valli?-y Forge 59 Brecks\l ll le
49
Wapokaneta 85 St. Marys 5I
Warrensv Uie 60 Cleveland

Chanel 43

UPI Sports Writer
The University of Tennessee had its weaknesses
exposed to a national
television audience Sunday,
but the loth-ranked Volun·
teers were invincible in the
Southeastern Conference
Tuesday night. ·
UCLA exploited the Vots'
lack of bench strength in
Sunday's game, but Ten·
nessee 's starters have been
able to handle the job by
themselves in the SEC and ·
Tuesday night was no exception .
Ernie Grunfeld and Bernard King combined for 58
points in leading the Vdls to a
1~2 romp over Georgia as
Tennesse e impro~ed its
conference record to 9~.
COLUMBUS IUPII - This
Grunfeld finished with . 32 · week 's Unit ed Press' In ·
points and King 26. Fres.hman lerna tiona I Ohio High School
dd d Board of Coaches' girls
· J h
center ReggJe o nson a e
basketball ratings with first .
14 points and senior guard pla ce votes and won -lost
Mike Jackson 12 as the Vols' records in parentheses: •
starting five turned over a 30·
Class AAA
'th Team
Points
h
bs
point lead to t e su WI
I. Col . Wallerson 7 19·01
88
eight minutes left in the 2. Medina 4 16·0)
82
game.
3. Col. Walnul Ridge (6·0} 67
The Vols now are 15-3 ' · Tol. Cent. Cath . 15·01
55
5. Middletown ! 6-1l
d6
li
overa ·
6. Gahanna Lincoln Id-1) dO
Greg g Ewaldsen led 7. Slrulhero 14·11
23
Georgia with 16 points an~ a. Men lor 15·21
21
Opvid Reavis had 15.
9. Kettering Fairmonl East
Robert Smith, a rare :ci:lJreensburgGreen 18·1) ~~
passing artist in third-ranked
Others with five or more
Nevada-Las Vegas' run-and- points : Delaware, Cincinna ti
gun offense, sank a pair of Syca more, Cincinnati Mother
of Mercy , East Liverpool,
free throws Wit· h f"Jve secon ds · Greenvi
lle , Westlake. Toledo
left to give the Rebels a 107· Bowsher, Springt ield Norlh ,
106 victory over Bradley.
Cambr idge.,
Fairfield ,
The Rebels, now 17-1 , tied Eastlake Nor th , Bay Vil lage ,
the . game, 105·105, before Cle,eland Rhodes , Cleveland
Smith scored the winning free Lincoln West and Madison .
throws . The··5·11 senior led
Class AA •
the team in assists last Team
Poin1s
1. CoL Hartley I 16·21
79
season .
Campbell Memorial2 (7 ·
Eddie Owens scored 31 2.
I)
73
points and Glen Gondrezick 3. Warsaw River View 2 (5added 14 to enable the Rebels 0I
56
to overcome Roger Phegley's 4, New Concord
Glenn 17·01
55
46-point performance for. 15. John
Warren Champi on (8.1) 49
Bradley . Bobby Humbles 6. Ontario (9·01
•a
added 26 for Bradles, which is 7. Cortla nd Lakeview (9.1) dl
8. Swanton(7.J I
31
7·12.
28
9.( tiel Perry 2 (4·01
Providence downed St. 9.
(lie I Oregon Stri lch (6·11 28
Boiraventure , 82·75, and
Others with five or more
points : ,· Oimsled Falls II),
Madeira Ill. Akron Our Lady
of
Elm s,
Harrison,
Springboro , Dayton Jef ferson , River Valley. Upper
Sandusky, Akron St . Vincent St. Mary , Lima Bath ,
Colum bus Hamilton Town ship, Perrysburg, Cincinnati
Deer Park, Va lley View,
West
Musk ingum
and
Coventry.

Girls' ratings

Hicks is

honored

in MAC

176

190
191
192
197
.
ga
217

Sport Parade

209

By MILTON RIOIMAH
UPI Sporll Edllor

208
21•

NEW YORK (UP! )- Twelve days ago, when Darryl Carlton
was brought into the hospital, he looked like a piece of overburned toast. His eyes were swollen shut, his head bandaged
and his face so distorted, no~y could recognize him, but he 's
up and around again and doin!(fine now. That's youth for you .
An offensive tackle with !he Miami Dolphins, Darryl Carlton
is 23,and wben he gets out of the Burn Unit of Miami 's Ja ckson
Memorial Hospital, he should hurry to !he church of his choice
and give thanks he still has a chance to make 24. Two weeks
ago, be came close to not having anymore birthdays at all.
When Darryl Carlton finally is discharged, and hospital
officials can't fix any date yet because he still has second
degree burn,&lt;; on his left hand and left leg , it also wouldn 't be a
bad idea for him to sit down and talk wilh Marvin Barnes of tbe
Detroit Pistons. They're likely to find theY have a lot in
common. Each got too much money too soon, neither was
equipped to handle it, and now both are in trouble.
Carlton, 6-6 and 270, .was fhe Dolphins' first-round choice in
·_1975 coming out of the University of Tampa and while be didn't
get anywbere near the $2.2 million Barnes did for signing with
the Spirits of St. Louis in the ABA, he did get a nice chunk of
change with his first contract adding up to somewhere between
$60,000 and $75,000.
·
The Seattle Seahawks grabbed Evans and Carlton was
supposed to take over the starting right tackle job Ja~t year.but
came into camp at nearly 3110 pounds, later had some calciUm
deposits removed from his l~g. and ne~er really came ~long
tile way fhe Dolphins felt he would. Sllll, he was prom1smg
enough so Ulat they were willing to wait. Now they're not even
sure waiting will do them any good after what happened last .
Jan. 22.
Carlton was at a lounge in Miami !hat evening wben a
security guard saw him breaking a glass·door with hls fist. The
guard told Carlton he would have to pay for !he glass, and tried
to take him to the manager, whereupon the guard says Carlton
punched him, ~nocked him to the ground, kicked him and hit
him with a chair.
•
Other el.Jiploycs in the lounge tried to subdue Carlton , but he
got into his car and was headed home when he went through a
red light and caused a seven:ear smaSh-up. Carlton's car
caught fire and he was burned pretty badly . .
To the Dolphins' credit, they d1dn'J turn the1r backs on
Darryl Carlton. They didn't abandon him. Their first thought
was he was hurt, and they wanted to help him if they could.
Don Shula visited Carlton in the hospital the day after he was
admitted but !he big tackle from Bartow , Fla ., couldn 't tell
who it was liecause his eyes were swollen shut. He could hea r,
though.
"Darryl, this is Coach Shula ."
"Thank you for coming over," he replied .
.
Seemg Carlton in pain, Shula spared h1m any more of It by
not asking a ny of the defJlils.
When he fi rst came to the University of Tampa , Darryl
Carlton was almost self:eonsciously shy . Gradually, however,
he became more out-going, more sure of himself , and
everybody in the sch09Liiked him.
.
Marvin Barnes sfJlrted out the same way as Carlton, quJel
and shy, but changed somewhere along the line and now has a
·year in the slammer facing him after fhe basketba ll season
ends because a handgun was found in h1s suitcase. I still
wonder why Marvin Barnes had to carry a gun;
.
·
By the same token, I have to wonder what s eatmg Darryl
Carlton .... My own feeling is that he's going through some
changes in his life-style, like Marvin Bar~es is, a~d that he 's
allowing himself to become "distracted ' by outs1de mfluences the same 3s Barnes.
.
What's the answer ? I'd say education. Not necessarily the
kind you get out of books, either .

Tuesday's Result

Toledo

Kalamazoo 2
Todar's Gamu
Toledo at Fort Wayne
Muske9on at Dayton
Port HUrO!"' at Kalamazoo
Flint at Columbus, ppd.
4

Thursday's Games

No games scheduled

lnllenl·or1 perform1nce tor today'l Clr&amp;. ~~..,.~§;:~

~~

'iii:warHER"

~:.Itt

BAnERY

$269~'.. '" r:::AtLATION~
,~ ,.,~

.....

I;IO~P A"'·Uf

,

·

.

Amp Hour Capacity 36 •.. up to AHC45 with Group
· AW·24 ... priced slightly higher.
- Dry charged for dependable long-lasting power.
-Polypropylene (ase and cover for high -•r·10 •
wei ht ratio , .. heal ·and shock r~slstanct.
-N~n-splash gang vent caps, large plates, plutlc-~ib
separators. ·

MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC.

"

JOHN FULTZ, MGR.
992-2 101

Pomeroy

Red01en play
this evening
Coach Art Lanllam's Rio
Grande College Redmen will
travel to Columbus tonight to
battle Ohio Dominican in a
Mid-Ohio Conference
basketball game.
Rio 13·3· overall and 6-1 in
leagu~ play, will return home
Saturday for a contest with
league-leading Malone. That
will be· part of a tripleheader
at Lyne Center. The
Gallipolis-Jackson reserves
will play at 4:30 p.m.
Saturday, followed by tbe
Gallipolis-Jackson
varsity
game at 6 p.m. The RioMalone tilt is slated for 7:30
p.m.
Last night, the Rio Redwomen upped their record to
·8-0 with a 78-48 victory over
Urbana.

Important Message for Ohio Power Customers

Special p

entplan created
· · to ~ le~sen
·.
cold weatlier ~act of
· higher electric bills.
..

STANDINGS

j

HURRYI

PLANT SALE
ENDS
FEB. 5th

30%
to

50%0FF
Cash &amp; Carry

On All Foliage

Points

1. Frankfort Adena 315-01 88
2. Minsterlfi·OI
74
and Foliage Gardens
3. Delphos St. John 3 18·01 73
- COLUMBUS,Ohio (UPI)- 4. Russia 116·01
67
Matt Hicks, Northern Illinois' 5. New Riegel 2 I10· 1)
57
.6-4 Senior forward, has been 6. Convoy Crestview (6-ll 46
'
7. Rocky River
unanimously selected the
Lulheran West 2 (4.0!
43
• Mid-American Conference . 8. Wesl Uni ly Hill lop 16·1 l 34
basketball player of the 9. !tiel Lancaster
k
Fisher I IJ.21
22
~ .
9 . ~1·~
·n
Hicks scored 26 points in
Others with five or more
the Huskies' surprising 82-80 points : Tinora , Ironton St.
Temp. Store Hours
conference victory at Central Joseph, Rldgemonl, North.
9A.M.to4P.M.
) . Michigan Wednesday night, western, Hillsdale, Arcanum.
'
h Miller City, Zane Trace
· Monday thru
including a dunk shot at t e (Guernsey) , Carey. Miami
Saturday ...
buzzer which provided the , · East and Peebles.
winning margin.
The leading rebounder and
second leading scorer in the
conference, Hicks hit 11 of 20
sho\s from the ·floor arxl four
of live free throws and scored
six of Northern's final 10
points . He also had 17
rebounds .
Hicks' selection marks the
second time this year and the
fourih the last two years he
·has been selected.
Other nominees this week
included Robert Sims of Ball
SUite; Bowling , .Green's
Tommy Harris; Central
Michigan's Leonard Drake;
Eaatem • Michigan 's Bob
Riddle· • Miami'a Chuck
Mason. W. Va.
Goudy.,;.r: Ohio U's Bucky"
Open: Mon.- Thurs. &amp; Sat. 8-5 :30
Walden : Toledo's Dick
Fridey 1-8
M = an. d . Western

.

·r:.::t-JJ~

~ Second St. '

•

•

J

Central Di v i sion
W L Pe t .
Was h inq ton
"}? 19
587

Houston
Cl evel and

$an l'ntonio
New Or lean s

?6

') 6

70

SM

t

SSJ

11

511

11 17

.1 .19

1'
61
· 111

n

P!lanl a
18 33 353
western Conf (l rencf'
Midwe st Divi sion
W l Pel . GB
. Denve r
31 15 681
Detroit
19 71 SRO &lt;1 1
Kans asCi ty ?6 ?5 510 A
Ind iana
73 'n J60 101
( hi caqo
70 79 •tOB IJ
Mil waukee
15 JB ?83 ?0
Pn cif ic Di vi sion
W l Pet. GB
Los Anqrles
13 16 673. .
Portla nd
Golden Stall'

&lt;&gt;ra ttl e
Pl10enix

J .l

I7

667

?6 ?i .54? 61
~6 7&lt;1
570 7'
?? 75 46A 16

T,ues day 's Resulh

Kni cks 108
Golden St. J07. ot
Detroit 95 At tanla 9'l
San .A n-tonio 91 Cleveland 87
Ka nsas Ci ty 97 Ch ic aqo Rt.
Ind iana 110 Ph i tadLif.lllia 109
Los Anqelcs 136 Milwaukcr IJS
Wednesday 's Games
Houston at Bllo. pod • Wf'~
o os ton at NY N f'f(,
Detroit at Philad elph iil
Portland al t&lt; ansas Cjly
washinq ton a t Den ve r
MilwauKee al Phoeni x
New Or l eans at Sea Pie
Thur$d a v's Gc1me s
Houston at NY Knic ks
Buffa lo at Alt anta
Cni caqo at San _Anton io
Por tland at ln d1ana
, ·New Orleans at Golden 51
NY

,..
"

\

"'
"

•

OhiO Power

••n

Working togPther is the only way.

PICKENS HARDWARE CO.

..

M _ ~ri's Herm!,n Randle.

ll

...

POMEROY, OHIO
NO SALES TO DEALERS
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

Prices Effective Thru
February 5, 1977

BALLARD'S SAGE OR
HONEY BEE

SAUSAGE ••••••••••••• ,l!·.
FRENCH CITY TASTEE

BOLOGNA••••••••••••••l!·.
GROUND CHUCK.... ;~-.

..

0

•

USDA CHOICE ARM
'

CHUCK ROAST. •••••••L~-.

$ 09

USDA' CHOICE BONELESS

CHUCK ROAST•••••••• ~s•••
BACON ••••••••••••••••• !~·.
'

'

,•

WH A Sl and inq s

By Uni ted Press lnt ~rniltion&lt;t t
F.nt
w L T Pi s. GF GA
Quebec
J 1 16 1 6) ?19 169
l nct i an&lt;~pt !&gt;

?J n

.1

~0

Cincinnati
?1 13 1
Nf'W Enct lnd 70 ?9 5
)( MinnPSot 19 IR 'i
f\i r m n(lhfll 19 1? 1

,tfJ

163 175
717 18 4
17~

.11
19

136 17q
17" ?0 1

wrst

Houston
'; an Di('QO
Wi nn ip eq

Edmonton
Cal qary

Phof'nix
ll -l cam

~

?R 10 ')

?6 :10 1
?1

.63

1~ 6 111

SR
~3

169 ltd
170 17·1
1.10 IR9

.17

1&lt;;\ 11&gt;1

oi?

1 7~

79 7 ,1,1

19 7S

o1

?0 7A ?
d1 sbanded

$

VELVEETA CHEESE ....

W l T Ph . Gj:; GA

79 16

32 oz.

KRAFT

701

,j~

5

79

?:ll

Tu r.sdi'ly' s R{'sutt s

Houston t. CatQ;uy I
AirminQh itn1 ' New Enq l"nd 1
Que brc ~ lndial-'\apoli s ·•
Wi nnipcq 11 Ed mont on 1
c.an Qi cq9 S Phoenix 1
wcdnesclilv' s G"m ('&lt;,
Ri r minq hil f11 at Cil".ci nni' 1i
N F'W EnQtnnd at l!id ianaoolls
Calqarv at C. 11n D i('(IO
Thursdav 's Gam£'
. Hou ~tof1 at Phof'n h:

NEW ORLEANS !UP! )
Bill Banker, a star halfback
for Tulane in the late 192Cil,
said he was proud to be
named to the National
Football Foundation College
Hall of Fame.
"I was shocked because I
NBA Stand1ngs
didn't
expect it, '' Banker said
Bv United Press lnternat1on.11
u
csday
. "I had been voted
T,
campbell Conference
Patrick Division
on so many times."
1/11 L T Pts . GF GA
Banker, one of 11 new
Phila
79 10 11 70 195 \dO
NY lslandrs 30 ld 7 67 18 1 117 members in the Hall of
A tlanta
13 17 11 57 171 160
NY Rang ers 18 '}') _13, ."9 185 19? Fame, played for the Green
Wave from 1927-29. He scored
Smythe Otv•s•on
W L 'T Pts . GF GA
259 point.s and carrie&lt;j the ball
Sr Lou is
21 15 6 48 I dO 119
Chicaqo
18 ?to 9 115 1 ~ 5 111l 515 times, both Tulane career
Colorado 15 18 9 39 1'i l 190 record~.
Minnesota 1? 17 11 3'; w; 10 1
"I'm very honored, very
vancouver 15 37 s 35 1&amp;? 199
Walf;'5 Conference
hapJlll," said Ba~ker.
Norris Division
A
W l T Pts . GF G
Mon Jreat ( 38 7 8 fl d ?'iJ 111
P illsburqh 7'J ?0 A ~ 1 1110 161
COLLEGE PARK, Md.
Los AnQelcs 18 ?1 10 .t 6 :~~ : ~~ IUPI) - Greg Vanderhout, a
Washinqtn 16 ?R 8 .t 0
DClrOif , 1 ~ ?9, ~ . 3.1 1?R 176 linebacker and fullback from
Adams OIVt)lon
W l T Pts . GF GA Concord High School in Wil·
BO!!-IOn
30 16 6 66 1Y6 160 mington, Del., has signed a
BuHe-lo
?S 16 ~ 61 171 139 letter of intent to attend the
Toro{llo
?.t ?0 7 S'i 1R1 167
Clf!vCJMd ~~ ~li P. 1A lS? IH9 University ot Maryland.
Tuesday'!. Rf'SUIH
Va~derhout, a ~oot-2, 231).
~v Js l and~r s 6 l.~ vf!iliO 3
pounder,
scored seven t.ourh·
MonJrr.al 1 C tc~J~Iand J
down• •nd led his te&gt;.on m
AOiiiOn 1 '.1 LOIW. 1
Colorado 5 N V Rl'ln&lt;l t' r S?
tackles lui· lhrl't' su·~ighl
W1 1dnf's d •1V ' !o G;tmf' o,
years.
.tt\ tn,n•a at r n ir iwo

••

298 Second St.

GB

?1

7fl

Sundij 10 am-10 pm

~· ·

Bv United Pr es~ tntern.11 1a nat
Ea stern Con lcrcnc.-.
Thur s d~y· s Gflm r·s
Aflilnlic 01Vi510 n
.
W l Pe l .
GB NY Ra nq cr s at N V lsl ndrs
(h oc&lt;lqO "' Ph i lad etph ii'l
Phi ladelPhia ?9 18 617
Pil!shu rqh at (I Pvctand
Rosto n
?3 ?t&gt; .Jo'l9 7
NY Kn ic k s
1? 1S t68 7 · '- ' Louis ;p Ao.,ton
P.uff illo a1 Colorado
Buff alo
17 10 167 t?
. Mont r f'ill o11 von( ouvrr
N Y N ets
I) 1.1
777 16

No one could do much upcoming bills. You can
about the amount of elec- make arrangements for us
tricity used to get us through to average your electric bills
recent frigid weather which .for the high-use months of
gripped our part of the . January, February and
country. Nearly everybody ' March with the lower-use_ _
needed more power. And,
months of April, May and
fortunately, we were abl~ to June.
\
supply it.
The year-around or 12We know the hard part month plan isn't new, but
for some ~ paying for it - is ·it offers the same advanstill ahead; Because of high tages over a longer period
usage,.electric bills most
with the.twelfth month
certainly will be higher.
being "settle-up" or fmal
We r~cognize this and are payment month. We call it
trying to help make it just a the Equal Payment Plan,
little bit easier. Here's how: but some prefer to call it
1\vo budget billing
budget billing.
options to choose from.
The idea in both plans is
L Six-Month Plan
to" allow residential custom2.Year-Ar0und Plan
ers to spread electricity
The six-month plan is
costs as evenly aS possible
brand new and especially
over a specified period.
created to help our customFor details, call our
ershandletheseimmediately nearest office.

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

WILSON'S SAVORY

Mo nn('ISola a t Pill sbli roh
{)pl r oi t at Toronto
w;,o;hinqton at t.,os An urtrs

N BA Stilndinq !&gt;

Plants, Terrarium

Class A
Team

go

__.
LOW PRICED "GO·POWER"

Vols ·romp
106 to 82
By CHRIS SCHERF

International HocktV
League
North
w 1 t pis. gf
Kalamazoo 26 18 4 56 213
Fllnl
25 20 5 55 225
Saginaw 12 20 8 52 203
Muske&lt;lon 20 21 7 "" 191
Pt. Huron :10 26 4 •• 177
South
w fl pis. gf
Toledo
22 23 5 49 195
Columbus 20 23 9 49 200
. Day lon
23 24 I 47 202
Fori Wayne
20 23 7 47 188

PRINGLES .......... :~:.
CAMPBELL'S
CHICKEN NOODLE

19'

:
oz.
SouP.••••••••••••••••••
10.75

ARGO

FLAVORITE

PEACHES.-........... .

·MARGARINE ••••• ~s~.

r OIJ PON

j~-

•

~- 1

~:. [~~
DOG FO
_ OD ~.:r
TENDER

L _ COU PON

ELF

25 LB.

BAG

J

$299.

I ~.

W/.C ;::.

Limit 1 Per tusromer

~

Go d Onl At Powell's

~fer E:pires 2·5-77

.· ·'

PEAS

.vtnLES

1
:k:·

4/$1

OZ.6 FOR$}

l
CAN ,

W/C

Urnit 1' Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's
Offer Expires 2-5-77

....

W!C

Limit 1 Per Customer

Good Only At Powell's
.

.................................. ,.~

:;~ . -

....

CLOROX

'!!"'" .......... ....-

Offer Expires 2-5-77

GAL

5'9¢

W/C

Limit 1 Ptr Custon(er

Good Only At Powell's

�-·- 6- The OaUy Sentinel, Middleport·Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , Feb.

Priorities Hsted during

den talk

Trapping, hunting
'

•

·proposals heard
at wildlife -h earing
.
·
By Greg Dalley
11:; the outdoorsmen know ,last SUndsy the Ohio Division of
Wildlife held its annual District 4 Wildlife hearing at Athens. It
was nice to learn that Meigs County was well represented.
Besides several adjustments in the Se&amp;!!Ons for legal game,
tllere was a variety of Interesting proposals.
One motion from the floor was that trapping seasons for
fox, coori, muskrat, mink, etc. begin and end together . This
motion well received, will be offered at the slate level hearmg.
An~ther floor proposal that evoked warm discussion
advocated the use of rifles, and even pistols, in deer hwlling.
This proposal was voted down , there were indications its
backers wiU circulate petitions for it. &amp;&gt;if you would like to s~
tllis implemented, stay awake for petitions coming your way.
Another proposal that passed by a big majority was that
startirig next season aU deer must he checked by noon
following the day they are killed , I think this is a fine idea.
There was heavy opposition to the crossbow season, but
nothing was settled. This seems to he an unpopular new
season but only time will tell if it will continue in following
years. As of now there are no reported crossbow kills In Meigs
County.
,
It should be understood that none of these proposals or
adoptions are final , On Feb. 4 the final statewide hearing wiU
be held at the Division of Wildlife Office in Building C at
, Fountain Square in Columbus. At this hearing aU tlle data,
pro.posals, and adoptions of the five districts in the state will be
C&lt;Jmpiled. There will be more discussion, there may even be
some changes and final decisions "1U he made public later.
An area of concern to farmers and local fishermen should
be the conditions of the local farm ponds, _There will
undoubtedly be some fish kills as all this snow on top of the ice
will make it impossible for the fish to survive the winter. The
plants and algae that fish thrive on and that flroduce oltY~en
, cannot get light when the snow accumulates on the tee.
. : Therefore the plants and the fis~ will die, and some of y~r .
I iavorite fishing holes may be nearly barren next spring.,
A couple of the things that yo~ can do to relieve_this
problem is to clean the snow off the tce and break holes tn tt,
keeping them open, as much as possible. A few people have
been using tractors to clean the snow off but this 1l' dangerous,
so don't try it.
Did you know that 170 species of animals are endangered
in the United Slates as well as 1,700 kinds of plan Is', and th'at
the automobile continues to be the number one source of air
pollution?
•I mll leave you with the wording of the proposed
constitutional amendment to abolish trapping:
Section 1: No person shall use in any manner in the
trawing of wild birds or wild quadropeds any leghold trap in
this state.No person shall use any trapping device in a manner
which will caitse continued, prolonged suffering to a wild bird
1 or wild quadroped in this state.
l
Section 2: Each separate violation of this amendment
constitutes a crinne. In addition, any person may bring a civil
action in any common pleas court for an injunction to stop
: violations of this amendment. Such person may recover the
' costs of the action and reasonable attorney fees.
L More on this contioversial subject in the next den talk ,
.

••

7 Cage standings
l
ALL GAMES
Pt . Pleasant

'

Por tsmou th

t

Jackson

2 670 55J
6 4 659 626
6 .:1 604 627

Meigs

' '

Waverly

4 7 657 674

•

'

.,.
I,,

•97 525

4 5

509

543

Pt. Pleasant 75 Ripl ey 55
Rock Hill '61 Sou th Point 58

Wheelelsburg 67 Lucasvi lle

•

66

:
'

SEOAL VARSITY
Tea m
W L POP

t
. ,.
~

\ '
~ ··
I"

•
"
•
:

•

t·
~
~&lt;

. (1

;

t

~

. 1;

f,

;.

(·

•

l

f.
i

t
~

~

~~

h

r.

~

~

Ironton

8 l

Meigs
Jackson
Waverly

3
3
3
2

Gallipolis
Wellston

Athens

TOTALS

3
3
4
4
1 6
0 5
27 27

389
344
41•(
3'2

41 1
367
428
360

351

569

Action group projects

cinnati Reds in the World
Series.

Attending were Crow,
Robb,
Young, Scott ,Lucas,
(Continued from page I)
much needed economic
Helen
Teaford, Virgil
cards. The Pomeroy Citizens development as well as highTeaford,
John Anderson,
Action Group meets every way Improvements in Meigs
Vernon
Weber,
Jones, Mayor
other Wednesday at 7:30p.m. County.
Clarence
Andrews,
Ja ck
attheMeigsCountyMuseum.Jones .explained that the
Kerr, Bill Grueser, Ferman
Crow announced that the State Highway proposal is in Moore, Jim Frecker, Jack
chamber had six new conmct -with the Co.lumbus Carsey, Fred Morrow,
members and stated that and 'Southern Ohio Electric Thereon Johnson and Bar·
anyone can join the chamber. Company. Thereon Johnson, bara Chapman, secreta ry.
Dues for individuals is $25 a president of the Regional
year from the time they join P-lanning · Commission, inand $50 for businesses.
formed the chamber they
·
The chamber went on plan to endorse the resolution
record in support of the Meigs approved by commissioners
e
County Board of Com· in regard to the highway to IS- av
SYRACUSE
Flood inmissioners resolution to urge the proposed Ravenswood
surance for . home and
the Stale of Ohio and Depart· bridge.
ment of Transportation to
Crow announced that the business owners is available
ta ke necessary steps to awards banquet had been in Syracuse Village, village
confer with the Columbus and postponed due to the weather officials announced today.
Residents may purchase
Southern Ohio Electric Co., to but hoped to hold it the last
determine an alte rnate week of February or the first the insurance from any Meigs
connection to the proposed week in March, depending on County insurance agency .
Rates lor the·insurance which
Ravenswood bridge other the weather.
tha n· the one presently
Crow announced an are set by . the federal
planned .
"ol dtimer s baseball government af1l, $2.SO per
The
Columbus
and banquet" and reunion will be $1,000 on the structure and
Southern Ohio Electric held Wednesday, Feb. 9, at 7 $3.50 per $1,000 on contents on
Company has expressed a p.m. at the Pomeroy Legion residential category and $4
per $1,000 on property and
desire to develop, as an in· Hall.
dustrial site the property they
Crow said the reunion is for $7.50 per $1,000 on contents in
presently own In the im- former ball players of the the commerCial cli'ss.
Insurance mUst cover
mediate area.
Ohio Valley Association .
The electric company has · Tickets will be at a premium, building and its contents. The
expressed publicly that the with only 150 ~va ilable at $5 . coverage includes mud
proposed rerouting of Route each. Tickets may be pur· damage, and- a two week
124 will adversely affect the chased at New York Clothing, waiting period is required
development of said in- Athens County Savings and and cannot run less than $25 a
dustrial site.
Loan, Barbara Chapman and year
Richard Jone~. a county from Crow.
·
commtss10ner, reviewed
Special awards will be
action of the commissioners given to such players as
in urging the State Depart· Harry Lane , New Haven ;
ment of Transportation to Bert Grimm , Racine; Hobe
take necessary steps to . Wilson, Gallipolis ; Mel Clark,
confer with the Columbus and Point Pleasant; Tra cy
Southern Ohio , Electric Whaley, Pomeroy; Jack
Company to determine if an Carr, Gallipolis ; Ancil
alternate connection can be Thomas, Gallipolis; Guy
determined with proposed Guinther, Syracus~; Donald
State Route 824, the proposed Wolfe, Racine, and others.
·approach to the Ravenswood
Gordy Coleman will attend
Bridge. It would allow for the and show a film of the Gin-

Flood insurance

•

ailahl

TO

Friday s games :
1

Ironton at Jackson
Loga n at Meigs

Athens at Wellston
Waverly at Gallipolis ·
Pt. Pleasan t at Barboursvil l e
Wheelersbu rg at Minford
South Point at Fairl and

SEOAL RESERVES
Team
W. L POP
I ron ton
9 0 4'7 283
Log an
6 2 4'9 339
Athens
' 1 223 20•
Waverly
, . 3 285 281
Jackson
1 ' 266 3.26
Gallipolis
1 5 221 250
Meigs
1 5 197 2•2
Well&gt;ton
o 7 256 &lt;19
TOTALS
21 27 2228 2228
Tuesday ' s results:
lr_on·ton . 51 Gal lipolis 43

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

JOSEPH CALIFANO JR.
plans to give top priority lo
ridding present welfare
and medical programs of
abuses and making them
· more efflclent when he
takes office as secretary of
Health, Education and
Welfare. He Is expected to
delay action lor a time on
one of his chief's campaign
proposals
federal
assumption of the cities'
share of welfare payments.

Logan 83 Well ston 45

Meigs at Athens, ppnd
Jackson at Wa verly , ppnd

with Major Hoople

_

.. •

•

•

/,

./(

,,
I

•
'

,

$199

!&gt;O~Rl',

MAJOR,
BUT

-ro

$

HECK'S REG: .
$8.99 ...

OWENS-CORNING
FIBERGLASS
FOIL FACED INSULATION '.

115

HE

:TM.:K ING

TrlROUGK HI!&gt;
SOMBRERO'!

..

MASON, W. VA.

88

D42 5 r...:...

ri4

... ·'

HECK'S REG.

$3.19

!''"":' .

I

KODAKDUAL8

CIOC

MOVIE PROJECTOR
1.

l ow · ~ r o tile 11~lin9 .

'l .S moke· linted

d ~ 1 1 {O ~e r

ollow1 wore&lt;I•O" ,..hJie in ploct Mounred or pull ·
owo~ hong el lor e o 1y remo .. ol ] . Aul omo l rc

CURITY

threodirlq 4 Cluol pro1rcllon copa~rh t y (Iuper 8
.:~nd

8 mm l5 400 loot •eel copocr ry .

BABY PRODUCTS

/

A.SGITW£N£rmoa
S3· 88
127127)BIDS£Y!DIAPUS .... .....
B.nTTIDCRISIUIS-IOOI'o $198
COTTOIII PASTU llll'IIIWTS.. .. ... ,

Searching for t\te clever way to say "I Love You?''
Our Happy Valentine Ads will be puWshed on
February 14, and offer you a truly unusual way to
proclaim your love and best wishes. We have a size
to fit every lover's budget and our friendly Advi·
sors will he happy to help you write your message.

0To Mom and Dad •••
We couldn't hove pltk ed o
nicer pair of parents in the
world! Hove a Happy Vol·
enli ne's Day/

C.TEJRY WASH Cl071lS .. . .. . •..

5 8(

D.l!DIIALRECMCBAIIET . -

$1

l ItOOOED BABYTOWO.S .. .. .. ..

2
$_ S

'.
. ''

'

100 COUNT HECK'S

I

EXTRA STREIKiTH
PAll RELIEVER

77(

D

HECK'S
REG.

To My Wife, Ann •••

$1.18

After 1.5 wonderful years

COSMETIC

ttl marriage , I' m still head·
over-heels i11 love with voul

DEPT.

Wolter Z.

Mih and Sue

a oz.

vos

" NON-AEROSOL
:-

,riJ HAIISPRAY

To Our
Favorite
Teacher

I _= '

Mn. Smith . - Thanh lor

To Jane -

ma• i ng Scien(e fun to learn.'
We think you 're lopsl

my Valent ine, and I won 't

I wont yov for

toSMI'IIC

lon, Torn

••'
'

•
"

THE DAILY _SENTINEL
'

7:7(
,,

from

PHONE 992-21.56

REO. &amp; UNSC.

HICK'S REG .
$1.09

take " no" fer on an1werl

Your Clan

/

/'

ARGUS

POCKET CAMERA
WITH CUIE EXTfNDIR

You'll enjoy great eolor tH B&amp;W pict"'!~· Ecnr
film odvon~ , double upos~o~re prevention and
tool-proof cortri~e loodint. Clip·oll
shoe" flash f~Jiis " AAA '' batter••• to fll-.
; ,.~n.;.,.. Hotftbibrt1.

"':-o'

98

HECK'S
REG.
$11.99

2

CL01HIIIC DEPT.

•'

(DEADLINE WIU BE FEBRUARY 9TH)

.OTHER WIDTHS
AVAILABLE

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO•.

,,

FOR KODAK CAROUSEL CAMERA

3 on~

'

ONLY '7.60 :~~L

AIREQUIPT
CIRCULAR TRAY

CLO 1HIIIC DEPT.

'

6 inches x 15 inches
40' square feet IJet' roll

Jewelry Dept.

patte rns. Sizes 5· 15 ond 6· 18.

ONLY '7.70 :~~L

IH

T1 ~1E

Heck's Reg. '59.96

HECK 'SIEG .
$2.99

Jvr1ior ond Mi~sy ~kirts ere OYo il oble in solids and

HOME INSU(ATION SALE

inches
. x 15, inches
70 square feet per roll

eoucrtz·halogen lamp for brillia nt pic·
hire~
·

NOVELTY SKIRTS

I

3~

lM

e Remote locuscontrol

•·

LAST WEEK OF SALE

'44''

e Quiet , dependable gravity feed

e Remote control , forward and re¥ene

LADIES'

CONSERVE ENERGY-CUT HEATING COSTS
•

.SLIDE PROJECTOR

SUNSET
800R90MIN.
BLANK 8 TRACK
TAPE

JEWElRYDEPT.

•

Ironton 54 Ga llipolis 45
Logan 108 Wellston 45

at Waverl)f. ppnd

CAROUSEL

Shout Them from·the Classifieds!

Tuesday's results:

Jackson

·

MEMO
RECORDER

KODAK

~

275 327
3170 3170

Meigs at Athens, ppnd

·PRICES IN EFFECT T~ROUGH SUNDAY, FEB. 6, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST

Eight listed in Who's Who

508 400
7 I 692 '35

Logan

OPEN DAILY 10 TO 8-SUNDAY 1to 1

•

Soulh Point 2 9 626 655
Wellslon
I 9 508 781
AI hens
0 9 &lt;81 599
Non -S EOAL results:

'

:n

:• RUTH PARSONS. •
•
iHAPPY BIRTHOAY,f
; GRANDMA. ;
; I LOVE YOU. :•;
LENA
;
1•••• ~........J

10

Gallipolis

ON mE ICE - Ralph Webb, now of Racine, Is pictured on a frozen Ohio River 37 years
ago. Webb, a resident of Letart Falls at the Iinne, had a mail contract. In 1940 when the nver
was frozen he made three trips daily.across the frozen Ohio to Letart, W.Va., m connection
mth his work as a mail carrier ,

•

4 1 34.:1 304

Ironton

:•·

The State Department of Information or req
1 1 I·7S rescued, placed In Wood
Transportation has an- they occur when •P:~h:r County fair building.
nounced priorities lor special roadway clearing~r
re
Roadway cleared for food
assistance during the heating transportation se ces a
truck to Portage County rest
crisis and winter trans- . needed.
,
haslzed borne. About three mUes of
ponation probielJis.
·
D1rector, Wetr e;pkee ing Inflrtnary road plowed clear
Transportation Chief, that openmg an
p
of snow drifts.
David Weir said health and open the state h\gh~~~
Jn northcentral Ohio,
safety of pe;sons tops the list, system will rema n rt· · family of five transponed to
with transportation of fuel constant task of the_ Depa
their snowbound home.
Cleared road of ambulance to
supplies and bulk milk ment of Transportatt~ t
supplies following second and
ODOT Emergency , n ro1 transport heart attack victim
third respectively. Other Centers in the ~~strict~ to hospital. Cleared roads and
critical areas wiU be ad- throughout _the s a e
assisted several fuel trucks In
dressed after those needs are Central Office, :'u';;. is, delivering fuel to homes in
met.
rep~ned some 4,
ca ~r need.
Announcement of the asststance since 1 p .th~
In Ross County _ south·
priorities was made following Saturday. Typtcal ~mong
central Ohio, four "'';_es of
consultations with petroleum requests expedt!~ . st Ohio county road clearr d '·• •·each
producers
and
milk - Belmore In nor\ we
' 40 'persons stra.:~ •• and
procfucers representatives. ·town cut off by drifts , no fond taking tefuge •In a school.
Weir said he asked the -- tn town. Only roadway to
In Toledo, Toledo Edison
cooperation of the Ohio town now being clea~ed: F~ needed emergency equip·
Cou nty Engineers and clothing sen tn Y men\ to keep Bay Shore
organization in providing snowmobtle.
station on line . Moved
equipment In 4 hours. All
•
power In Northwest Ohio
would have been Ion If not
completed.
·
,:
South~m are Becky Crow,
In Ashtabula County in
RACINEThe
1977
edt
bon
Racme,
- . Jaye Ord , Syracuse·• northeast Ohio, power outage
,
Wh
,
M
.
'll
of Who s o m ustc .w~. Bobbie Chapman, Syracuse; for 24 hours in Windsor
carry the names of etght Heidi Ashley, Route 2, Township. Power company
st~dents from Southern Local Racine; Steve Coffman, and county engineers largest
Htgh School ~ho have been Racine; Brenda Lawrence, equipment stuck. OQOT
selected, as betng among the Portland; Lori_ Guinther, snowblower spent 8 )lOurs
count_ry s most outstandmg s·
se. and Penny Smith opening road to move in
. h sch~I mustc
· st uden ts. Ri)ute
yracul, •Racine.
'
htg
equipment and restor e
Jess W. Browning, Jr._,
power.
band director, head of the
In Holmes County, eastern
sc hool 's nominating comOhio
, Winesburg Fire
mittee and the editors of the
.
Department
lighting a
annual directory have inbusiness
house
fire
called for
NOT IN FEBRUARY
cluded the names of these
assistance.
Extra
salt _put
sht d~nts b~s·~ on their The Southeastern Ohio
down
to
assist
movement
of
mustc abtltty , academtc Garden Tractors Pullers
vehicles,
A
Columbiana
achievement, service to the Association will not meet
community, leadership in during the month of County child with an Injured
extracurricular actiyities February. The nerl meeting leg prompted roadway
and future potentiaL Students will be held the first Wed- clearing so the child could be
driven to the hospital.
n ~ m ed this year ·from
nesday In March.

•••••••••••••••

' Team
W L POP
•· Wheelersburg 9 0 610 471
·• Logan
10 1 95 1 639
:·

heating cri~is ~ ??.!~reezingcattleon

I

... ...
I

240Z. liSTERMINT

ClOTNHIC

,,

toSMinc

htra wide ponly holt ore
a..allab~ in ~i ru l d~-l ~ · ol.o; .
lolo•s &gt;Pocilic . CinJXImon or~ d

oz.

11
WHITE RAIN

on~

.

-~
~- ----~~~
DOMIJI!tON

LADIES'
EXTRA WIDE

PANTY
'HOSE

HECK'S REG.
. $1.66

17

A -m~_

""·

MOUTHWASH

$119

21DI ____ "'-

6rown .

LADIES'
POLYESTER
PANTS

The~

stylid1 polye.tef pallll

ore iult right lor sprin9. Double
knit pan" with fly Iron!

Olll!!

avoilable in 1olid colors and

eomelnsite58-11.

·. $448

LADIES'
TUNIC
TOPS
Atir(l ct ive shd fl ilee ve iiJ fl it
tops comf with matchi ng bel t

and art a vai lable in
s1ripe1. Slm S·M-L.

LTnLEMAC

HAMBURGER COOKER

STEIIOOICI
LOCK MOUNT
HECK'S

HECK'S

REG.
$19.96

ouort~

$15''.,,.,,,$~~~

..

$366 ·

HAIR SPRAY
UEG.e UNSCINTED
etXlRAHOLD

79~

\

HECK'S REG.

,,
$1.14

toSMITIC

CLOTHING
JEWELRY • COSMETICS

HICK'$

•••

$2.99

NICK'S

IIG.

$6.00

$ 4' 79

�&gt;O-Tbe Dilly Sentlnei,Middleport-Pcmeroy, o., w•sdiii-. Feb. 2.1977

..'

DeMo lay plans annU&lt;Jl ~. •r
•
.sweetheart compe~ition

~---~;&lt;:»•;&lt;•,•
•VAWAWo'•W·"'
~
~....-.~v. • •x..-:.!-.".;.;
••..,;o;•.•.•........x~- - - - -. .

.T

·Winter projects are dis~ussed.
at recent garden club meeting

~....

·Helen :Help
i Us; , , By Helen Bottel
.w...

w

Plans are being made by
the Meigs Chapter, Order of
DeMolay, for the annual
sweetheart competition.
The contest has been set for
Feb. 19 at the Middleport '
Masonic Temple. Interested
contestants must not be over
19 years of age or under 13
and must be a Job's Daughter
or Rainbow Girl or a blood
relative of a MaSter Mason or
Eastern Star member, not to
exceed two genenlllons back,
i.e., mother, rather: grand·
mother or grandfather.
The rules also specify she
must be able to travel
throughout the State of Ohio.
Judging will be done in the
categories of personal in·
terview with judges, talent,

11 - .Tbe Dally Sentlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Feb. 2, 1977

poise and personality. While
there wlll be no bathing suit '
competition, there wiil be
competition in formals ,
according to Biij Quickel,
chapter advisor. ..
,,

various trees, shrubs and' treasurer's , reports. Mrs.
Big Brother Has Competition
ground coverings at a Birchfield gave the devoDEAR HELEN :
reasonable cost She said that lions.
I'm a Big Brother to a great 13-year-old who lives with his
the packages are small
For roll call members nammother and three other kids. I've thoroughly enjoyed the year
enough to permit almost ed birds they have seen a\
•••
we've been friends. He's a good, clean, energetic, ,smart boy
anyone to use the plants. their feeders. These includeo
with a lot of potentiaL
Packets can be order.ed by cardinals, grosbeaks, gold
"'
But a 15-year-old boy has latched on to Ned. He smokes,
mailing payment to the local finches, blue jays and
drinks, skips school, gets mad easily, and won't accept my
office by Feb. 25. The plants snowbirds.
OESTOMEET
•·
friendship, although he wants to tag along everywhere we go.
will be ·available for pickup · An educational exhibit and
Racine Chapter 134 OES, . ,
He's a lonely outcast.
there wometime during commentary on bird feeding,
will meet Monday night at 8 ~
lliy "Little Brolher" is torn between who w choose, but
April. Mrs. Carpenter ways and means, was given
p.m. at the Masonic Temple.
seern8 to spend more time with the 15-year..,ld (who has no
reminded members that by Mrs. Barr. She showed
It will be a "go to school"
other friend) .
trees not only increase pro- milk jug feeders made and
ni ght.
Members
are •
l'v~ spent much energy, effort and money on Ned, and it's
perty value but also enhance decorated by her children,
reminded that dues are ••
been worth it, but I'm wondering if I should quit. Ned wants his
the appearance of the land pinecones stuffed with a mix·
payable now and the deadline •
friend wbe my friend, but it doesn't work that way .
and contribute to food and lure of oatmeal, seed and
is
April 4. Refreshments will &gt; •
Where
could
the
older
boy
go
for
help?R.G.
SON BORN - Mr. and
protection for wildlife and peanut butter which can be
be
served by Charlotte ·,
DEAR
R.:
Mrs.
Samuel
Lloyd
bi$.
tied to a tree limb, porch rail·
Wamsley
and Kay HilL
·&lt;'
If
ever
a
boy
needed
a
Big
Brother,
the
older
kid
does!
Why
Hurlow; Mason, W. Va.,
Club members arranged to ing or any place safe from
not
present
his
case
to
the
Big
Brother
Organization
and
find
a
are announcmg the birth of
conduct the Mothers' March animals which might harm
volunteer? He may accept this kind of help if he realizes it is
their son, Ja'l'es Lloyd
of Dimes in Rutland when the the birds. Other feed mix·
the only way to keep Ned's friendship.
Hurhiw Jan. 24 at 5:15p.m:
weather pennits.
.
tures suggested by Mrs. Barr , He weighed 8 lbs., 2 oz: and
I'd suggest you continue taking both boys on outings,
Mrs. Larry Barr presided included corn meal, corn,
except
that mutual jealousy may cause too many
was 20 mcbes long. He WIS
at the meeting with Mrs. Fet· oats, barley, bread and
complications.
born at Holzer Medical
ty and Mrs, Bill Willford giv· crumbs of cereal, cookies or Center ol Gallipolis.
However, if you could make it a foursome , some of the
ing the secreta ry and other food which can be mix·
problems might be solved. (Lacking an organization Brother,
ed with grease or peanut putbow about one of your adult friends - who welcomes a
ter to increase the energy
challenge')
value for birds. It was noted
Whatever, don't give up on Ned. "Good kids" need strong
that plain peanut butter can
male guidance too. And trying to rehabilitilte his 15-year..,ld
FREE
when you buy this
be harmful. Suet placed in
pal is part of it. - H.
(
mesh bags, she said, can be
+++
1976 ·ZENITH 100% SOLID-STATE
suspended from limbs.
DEAR HELEN:
During the extreme cold
"Tammy's Friend," who doesn't have the money w get
and layers of snow, Mrs. Barr
her Mama cat fixed, should write to Frierids of Animals, Inc.,
said that feeding tbe birds is ·
II West 60th Street, New York, N.Y. 10023. This is a national
especially important. She
organization that has volunteer representatives all over the
Said that wise gardeners
U.S., and they can put her in wuch with one. After sh~ fills out
The HALIFAX • G4740W
plant trees and shrubs with
the necesSary form, her cat can be spayed for $23 by a
Vinyl -c lad me tal cabine t fi nished
WEDNESDAY
the birds in mind and men·
participating veterinarian in her area .
in simu lated Walnut. Chroma tic
MIDDLEPORT Firemen's
I'd love to contribute the money if you'll send me T.F .'s
One-but ton Tun ing. Auiomatic
By Poily Cramer
worked. Every trace of the boned th3t birds. in sunurier Auxiliary, Wednesday, 7:30
are a great help to the
name and address. - ANIMAL SHELTER WORKER
Fine ~ tun ing Conlrol. Prov!sro n lor
Polly's Problem
dye disappeared and then two gardener in that they rid p.m. at the firehouse. Mrs. DEAR
ASW
:
.
,
C{lble or master anten na
· '\ Zenith's
DEAR POLLY - I wonder coats of car wax made the top
co nnectron.
gardens of hannful insects as Patti Kloes, Nonna Jean
I'd love to help Tammy and he• friend , but I can'! accept
'\ Vldeo Guard
if there· is a way to remove like new. -ED.
Stivers, and Kathryn Metzger contributions via the column. However, with the SPCA and
well
as
lending
beautiful
Tuning System
crayon stains fi'Oill clothing
Polly will send you one of
wlll be hostesses. There will Friends of Aniinals both-offering affordable prices, I trust
sights
and
sounds
to
alL
that has been washed in the her " peachy'' thank·you
• 100% ~olid state
For the program , Mrs. Bir· be a silent auction bake sale. Mama Cat will soon lose her sex appeal. - H.
·washer and dried. One of my cards, ideal for framing or
chassis with ,
POMEROY Lodge 164, F.
+++
grandchildren had a crayon placing in your family scrap- chfield showed slides which
patented Power
in · a pocket and it ruined hook, if she uses your favorite were winners in the, OAGC· and A. M., regular meeting, DEAR HELEN :
Sentry
voltage
Our daughter is 20, working and living in an apartment.
several new pants and tops. Pointer, Peeve or Problem in slide contest of 1972. Avariety Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. All
regulating
system
She wants to spend her vacation visiting her boyfriend up
Some of them are made of a her colwim. Write Polly's of subjects was included in Master Masons invited.
north. Says she'll stay with his sister.
jean type fabric in yellow and Pointers in care of this the sets such as floral ar·
• Brilliant
rangement,
spring
flowers
She and her young man are semi-engaged.
TIRJRSDAY
pink and some · are double newspaper.
Chromacolor
and foliage and common and
Is this proper, and safe? Should I write to the sister' Or
EVANGELINE Chapter
knit.- MRS. E.L.E.
picture
.
DEAR MRS. E.L.E. - Test :::·:::·:::·:;.;:·:;:;:;:,:;.;:·:::·::::::.·:·:·:·:::·.·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·: · exotic matenaL Included 172, Order of the Eastern call her !lance? - WORRIED MOM
• One·knob VHIF/UHII'
were modern designs along Star, ?:30 p.m. Thursday· at DEAR MOM:
first, and if your fabrics will
with free fonn sta·mobiles, the Masonic Temple, Mid·
channel sell ecllol'li"
Your daughter is 20 and on her own: Neither write nor
PICK UP WORK
take it, try washing with hot
stabiles,
and
mobiles,
as
well
call.
(But
in
the
interest
of
goods
future
in-law
relationships,
,dJeport.
There
will
be
a
Parents of chlldren at·
water, laundry soap and a
• Chromatic one·
tending Pomeroy arid as abstract, traditional, practice for the new officers. the young man should call you.) - H.
cup of baking soda. Or you
button tuning
Mlddlepart kindergarten triangular, mass and line
might try loosening the stains
THE QUALITYGOES IN BEFORE THE NAME GOES ON
classes may pick up the design.
with kitchen shortening. AppArrangements
suitable
for
HOSPI')'ALIZED
workbooks of their children
ly detergent on the stain,
Lewis Johnston, Route 1,
during regular school holidays thrpughout the yea r
working until outline of the
as
well
as
for
everyday
use
Long
Bottom, a patient at the
hours through Friday.
stain is removed and launder
were
shown
including
church
Holzer
Medical Center for the
as usual. If it's necessary to Classes resumed in tbe
and
wedding
design.
Creativi·
past
week,.
was scheduled to
Meigs Local School District
repeat, first apply a
ty
was
demonstrated
in
many
undergo
surgery
today. His
today with the exception of
household cleaner (liquid),
of
the
arrangements,
su,
c
h
as
room
number
is
207.
use a bleach safe for your kmdergarten classes.
one which featured flowers
106 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, 0.
fabrics and colors and
.................................................
,,.,·,·,,,·
•
.
...
........
rruide
of
dried
sweet
potato
.
launder. These are recom- ·············•·················· '·' ·······• ·-· ·-· ·-· · ... ·.·.· ·y . chips and pinecoryes.
ATHENS - "Turning Day competition in Columbus
mendations from two laundry
·'
Gardening tip s fo r · PointsinHistory"willbethe in May.
laboratories. -POLLY.
Funding
for
the
History
February
were
given
by
Mrs.
theme
of
the
History
Day
'77
DEAR POLLY - When I
CLINICS SLATED
Davi s who r e mind ed Region Eleven Competition Day '77 state and regional
bake something that is to be
The
next
two
free
cervical
members that heavy snow scheduled for April 16 qn the competitions has come from
sold at a bazaar, bake sale or
the Gund Foundation, which
cancer
clinics
for
M~igs
area
and
ice must be removed Ohio University campus.
benefit I include the recipe
has supported the event for
women
at
Veterans
Memorial
from
shrubs
and
low
tree
Last
year
60
students
from
written on a card. People like
the
past three years. The
Hospital
have
been
set
for
branches
to
reve'lt
breaking.
the
Southeast
Ohio
schools
to know what is in the recipe
She
also
suggested
that
ted
·
h
National
Endowment ror the
Feb.
9
and
Feb.
23,
from
I
to
t
e
event
participa
m
and if they like the article
Humanities
has alsi&gt; granted
3:30
p.m.
There
are
mulches
be
checked
and
.
which
includes
entries
In
both
they have the r~ipe to make
the
state
committee
$17,500
n'bmerous
appointments
open
secured
to
prevent
thaw
junior
(grades
7-9)
and
senior
it. Goodies sell fast when the .
for
a
planning
project
to
and
Meigs
women
are
asked
damage.
Now
is
the
tispring
!grades
10-12)
divisions.
recipe goes alon&amp; with them.
explore
the
possibility
of
to
call
992-3382,
any
time;
992·
and
order
seeds
Coordinator
for
this
year's
gardening
I always buy a large turkey
· making the competition a
Thur., Feb, 3 thru Sat., Feb. 5
since they · are usually :&gt;832, evenings, or 993·7531, and plants, and also to give History Day competit! on IS
Tuesdays
or
Thursdays
from
some
extra
ca
re
t
o
R
R
h
b
three-state
event.
Dr.
oy · ausc en erg ,
cheaper by the pound. 61
·
Registration forms may be
"'
associate pro f essor of
course, we do not want to eat 1 to 4 p.m. to make an ap- hon'epiants.
pointment
at
their
earliest
obtained
by writing Dr.
1
The
traveling
prize
provid·
history,
who
aMounced
the
turkey every night for a week
~.~~~.
4.95
Rauschenberg
at
Bentley
convenience.
ed
by
Mrs.
Bob
Bishop
was
1977
.
contest
is
not
limited
to
so when the main turkey dinHall, Ohio University, Athens
won by Mrs. Willford, and American history.
ner is over I cut up the lef45701.
Forms must be
Mrs.
Robert
Snowden
won
the
Entries
will
be
accepted
in
tover turkey and put it in the
returned
by March 18.
hostess's door prize . three categories : historical
remaining gravy. Cool and
MEETING
SET
·
Counties
in Region Eleven
Refreshments were served papers,. individual and group
~:.
freeze in containers acHARRISONVI
LLE
A
are
Athens,
Gallia, Hocking,
buffet
style
by
Mrs.
Bir·
projects,
and
performances.
. cording to the size of your
of chfield assisted by her
meeting
Ten awards will be given in Jackson, Lawrence, Meigs,
family. When we feel we want stated
~-~: 1 1.09
Harri
sonville
Lodge
Ill
,
daughter, Kimberly. Mrs.. the Region Eleven com· Morgan, Perry, Pike, Ross,
turkey again a container is
Vinton
and
thawed and heated and the F &amp;AM, will be held Davis will host the February petition, five in each division. Scioto,
~~?:.
at
7:30
p.m.
Saturday
Washington.
meeting and will be instruc· Winners will also be eligible
turkey and gravy served on
.
work'
in
the
fellowcraft
with
tor
for
a
workshop
on
making
to
go
on
to
the
state
History
rice, noodles or potatoes. The
kids love it this way. - degree. All Master Masons macrame plant hangings.
f
are invited.
Mrs. Jack Walker, club
JUDITH.
2 lb.
.
librarian wUl have an educa·
DEAR POLLY ~ My Pet
tiona! exhibit of the club's
10 Lb.
Peeve is with the people who ·
hooks and materials. Mrs.
send in for things through the
Box
Bolin will give gardening
mail, and then write their Wi lliamsburg 58 Fel ici ly 57 Joe
tips
and
Mrs.
Birchfield
will
1
lb.
NuMaid
IWJle and address so sloppily
Wi lliam,stown IW. Va .l 64
donate the traveling prize.
the person who tries to ad- Belpre 52
1 Lb.
dress the envelopes cannot
.. .. .........
read them. These past weeks
BABY SHOE BRONZING
I have been typing addresses
FROZEN
for a company. When you get
32 oz. Banquet
A bit of babyhood t ~n be per.
to one where the writing is
man en ll)' 10ur s.... a pr eCtQU
almost illegible or the .zip
pe1sonal tr e l ~Ui e . YIH!t bab(&amp;
sho e~ r t ~ hlf .prc m veo tn ~oltll
code is forgotten, It really
metal Wt iM e11ery crease. c1inkle
slOws you down. Sometimes
&amp;M ~c u!1 rcl at n ~Q fO!hCJ .
.r our c,otce or b oo lo.~ncs , por
you cannot make It out at all.
Irati s la:wa ~M man; oiher

RUTLAND - Winter projecla and plantings were
dlaclllled at the recent
meeting of the Rutland
Fri~y Gafl)eners held at
the home of Mrs. Howard
Birchfield.
The garden therapy plans
,; for Janilary were revised
since schools have not been in
session. The club members
wori&lt; with two classes of Jn.
dividual instruction students
at the RuUand Elementary
School, and the project for
January; to make seed pictures, will be carried out in
February if classes reswne.
Mrs. Dick Fetty will have
cliarge of the lesson with Mrs.
Robert Snowden providing
wood plaques, . and Mrs.
Bruce Davis and Mrs. Harold
Wolfe the refreshments.
Mrs. James Carpenter
noted that the Meigs County
Soil and Water Conservation
Office is offering packets of

,.

Polly's Pointers

Social
Calendar

Try baking sod4
on crayon stain

$599

Pro duce heavy t100ding

Hospital News

Phone 742-2100

3 lb. Argo Canned Hams...................................

Homemade Ham Salad ..........................................~~:.. ggc

The

PLEASANT VALLEY

5gc

DISCHARGES - Mrs.
Donald Owen, daughter ,
Point Pleasant ; Clarence
Strow, Henderson; Mrs.
Morrll Starkey, Glenwood,
and Viva Wamsley, Point
Pleasant.

lib. Racom Sliced Bacon ....................................

age

$}25
.VELVEETA
$219 IDAHO .
POTATOES .............. ..
CHEESE SPREAD......

~nt'

DURING FEBRUARY

59~

PARSNIPS...... ~~~....

firm

announced

sty lu .. • Not~ At Grea t

DEAR POLLY - I used
thoae non-skld appliques
made for use in the bathtub
on my son's high chair. They
not only decorate it.but prevent baby from slipping and
sliding around .•
Pretty pot holders folded in
half and sewn together on two
sides make nice eyeglau
cues that are very protective
for the glasses. - CATIIY.
DEAR POLLY - Blllck
shoe dye was spilled on our
copper-tone washer-dryer
and nothing would remove it,
Willi we applied a rubbing
compound used on cars in
Inch size circular motions. It

HOBPrrALIZED
Beule Rudlalll, Pomeroy,
· Ia 1 patient at Holzer Medical
Oenter. Her room nwnber .II

•••

1

Kitht now,lh~ £ill~!!,;! •
m~d1111 c )"ou ' w tllw~ys

!itwlng
wa nt ed

1s on suk . Which mcuns your

tJient for sewi ng ~~n now be
match~tl h)' your tlm lo r s.a~ h1 1 .

AT

11-IE l~i\S ii iQt-1 Mhi6' ZIG-ZAG
MACHINE SAVES YOUIIH.U
Rl!G. mt.U Ia dru p-j n ~ obbln
11 10 tu~ to 1ue Y1JU nfve r 11e1
wuund up replld n&amp; h. Ano;l the
built-In bhnd hem !titd111vn
tht

11 10~

proreulrmal , durllhlt

ttetnr ever. Cmylna u• or
~bltrf l txlrJ .

The Fabric Shop
h

McC.I'a. K*k:k·S.W,
stmplldty Pltt•rns
Plt. tn-H14
115 w. S.cend

PoMo

e
---

All styles available in
Bright Bronze,
Antique Bronze, Silver,
"PeWter", and Gold '
Reg. l?rtm

Strlt

Brighl Bronre

45 Portrait Sland
50 Bookernls - pair
62 Oval Miniature "
82 Ashtra y
31 Walnut Paperweight

SALE PRICES

Bttgftt Bronre

131.95
29.95
27 .95
16.95
15.00

$23.96
22.46

20.96
12.71
11.25

PLUS MANY MORE Ask for Free
Et~vr••lng

Folo~e·

onl)' 15c pei' '-11"

BRING SHOES IN NOW ••• SALE ENDS FEB. 28

Som&lt;Zon&lt;Z Spqc:ial

LIMIT I COUPON PER FAMILY PLEA5E

-----

posing "an immediate threat
In the health

and safety of all

Ohioans.''

Critical fuel oil shortages
were reported developing in
norllleast Ohio because ice on
the Ohio River has stopped
barge traffic.
In addition, · gas cutbacks

:I

COST CUTTER COUPON

Detergent

. I

fo4trol

·--•Ja ---------·
food " • •

:e 15~ OFF
I
I

121

:I

With Thlt Coupon
AND Till JUI(IIA$1 Of' tiN(

I

J.tl., 4-0l. I'll. tt\INIS

I CHatry SIJII Top Cholet

I

I rttumrsn. HI. 5, 1117. SIIIJ£CTTas'

·-------- -·
--- ------·
1

UPI.IWU mn &amp;lOCAL run

vo

. 40; OFF

121
I
I
I
I
I

With This Caupan
• • TNt ~ASI Of' ONI

JU CAN Vt\CUUM ,ACIID

IIIWIII HDIIH Co!IH

"13"

·- ----- ----·
I ,.. Ami UT. ,{ll, IIH. SIUI:T

I

mtiUIL[ Sfllt lliiUl T.UU

YG

________ _
BUY ONI 111
li&lt;T..... rmzn "'"" I
Ice Crtlll llrt
I
Gn ONE "'· I
FREE I

eo.,....

1

...

LIMIT 1 JAI WITH (OUPON AND
S7.SO 0! MOlE PII•CHAII
VOID AFTER SAT., FEB . S, 1977
SUB JECT TO APHICA~lE Sl ATE &amp; l0CAl1A~ES

r::"1

I!!J I

c

l·lb.
1·01.

---

COST CUlTUI COUPON

-

·--1!1

s
Country Sausage

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

l·lb.

Roll

liMn I lOX wnH COV,OH AND

LIMIT 2 PKGS. WrTH COU,ON AND

S7.SO OR MORE PUICHAU
VOID A.F'TER SAT., fEB. 5, 1917
SUBJECT 10 APFUCABLE. STATE &amp; tOC.A.t lAXES

$7.SO OR MORE PURCHASE
VOID AFTERSAl ., FEB . S, 1977
SU BJECT 10 APPliCABLE SlATE &amp; LOCAl lAX'S

LIMIT I COUPON PER FAMILY PLEASE .

LIMIT 1 COUPON PER FAMILY PLEASE

r:::'1

I.!! I

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

Kroger
Belt r
kr111rOiadly
Welclftlls

--~···· ,;;"-

'

I

------------·

Copyrhht 1977- '1M Kr'!l" Co. lltms
ond Prkll Good SU11doj, Jan. 3G thro
Sahlr.IJ, Feb. 5, 1'771n
Wo ....,... !111 ri~t 10 Rmll qoantl~~
NONE SO,ID TO DEALERS.

Dayton Power &amp; Light and
Cincinnati Gi"' &amp; Electric
have forced the closing of
hundreds of schools- some
for as long as a month.
Even
Red
Cross
bloodmobile visits have been
affected. As school buildings
and churches used as
collection sites have closed tn
conserve natural gas, blood
collection have fallen off and
the Red Cross has asked for a

ans
I

LIMIT I COUPON PER FAMI LY PLEASE

for 'f ~Yr
;
ma nufoetyre r, vou are not 1a ti1lled, Kr oc;jer
will re plou you r i l ~rn wit h the 1amo b r&lt;;~~d o• o
tomporcblt brand or ,.fund ypur pureho1e pr l~e

We olw guarant ee thot we will do everything
·in our power to hov e ample wpplies of oil
advertised special s on our shelve'l when you
\hop lor them . II , duo to co11 difion~ beyond ou1
control, we run out of on advertised special. we
will iubstilu te the somf! item in o tomporoble
brand (whe n such on item is ovoil oble)
·
reflecting the some savings or, if you prefer,
give you o " RAIN CHECK " whi'h entitle5 you to
rhe ~a me odver ti ,ed spf!ciol ot the 'orne special

30

U.S. GOVT. GRADED CHC)ICI!-&lt;;

4

Tail-less
T·Bone Steak

1-llt•• .•

c••

Alax
Cleanser •••
Palmolive
Detergent • • • 111.
.•
Kror.r . a~~~. a6 U.LIIOVT.-CIDCI
App esauce
c.
~" lo•less lop
. ·.
!~~n Steak · ~~. · .
Avondale
::~·1 ·
Sweet Peas • •
c.
10' Ofr LAIIL-4JQUtD ,

4

KROGIR

Hi-Nu 2%'

Lowfat Milk

19

Ctn.

c

ii~~U.S.U INSPICTID

*I''
~:l.1ogna ~79c
·
&amp;::.:z:UDPQ, 79c

Fryer Parts ..•

~~.

49
89c
.

~i:,tchl:k:GUDI•
Drumsticks ..••• tL

1111 •••••••.

== ... ~89c
-

_ , . " ' CllmJI

\; IIIIT tun IY COUHI

PM'k

~·

cvn,

.., .

... ·. . . .~

Q".,."';;;

t

~ ...
Pork Loin ~ • : • I
Serve N' Save 2
I!NiaNOatOOS

I.U.fU.rt'

GENUINE

Idaho Baking
Potatoes .

+
'f

Annour VIenna Sausage with 3e oH•• 2/79e.
28 oz. Whitehouse Apple Butter••••••••• 69e
7% oz.
.
Kraft Macaroni &amp; Cheese Dinner...... 2/59e
8 oz. Hershayl Cocoa ••••••, ,. •••• _••••••••••••••
79'
I
2 lb. Poly
Brown or .C onfectioners .Sugar •••••• .65e pkg.
15% oz. Hunts Manwlch.... ~.~ ......... 2/'1.G9
. 5 lb.
Martha White Plain Corn Meal ••••• 89e bag
10 oz.
Maxwell House lnst. Coffee ... •4.29 limit 1.
I .
16 oz.
&lt;
Bordenslnst. Mashed Potatoes .... 83c box

15$ 59·

•

,o

•

SUBJECT TO APPLICABLE STATE &amp; LOCAL TA:-:ES

moratorium through this
week on all elective
surgery.
Rhodes said neither the
state of Ohio nor local
governments have sufficient
manpower and equipment to
clear snow-drifted roads,
transport needed food and
fuel,
perform
resuce
missions, provide temporary
shelters, repair broken water
mains and save milk and
other agricultural produce.

by Colwnbia Gas of Ohio ,

~ ~ .. . G~~~;;,
!. "hi;' "110
!

11

Miracle
Whip

U~~.~Dc::::~::~~HD
YOIOAnEi SAT., FEI. S, 1977

major supply firms in the
Buckeye State shut down,
"llle ripple effect ... will
exceed state boundaries ,"
In a three-page letter
directed to Robert E. Connor
regional director of the
Federal Disaster Assistance
Agency in Chicago, Rhodes
said, "between 1.2 million
and 1.5 million Ohioans are
out "'f work ... "
"I Hod that the situation is
beyond the capabilities of the
affected· local governments
and or the state of Ohip to
effectively alleviate the
existing disaster situation ... "
"Ohio's level of natural gas
is at a crisis level and other
fuel sour ces are in
dangerously short supply,"
said Rhodes . He added that
impassable roads have cut off
fuel supplies to Ohio homes,

·--··------

KRAFT SALAD DRESSING

Gal •
Paper

v;~g,;r~~·~...~~~-

39~

~

l

5 oz.

Sa~ tngs

COST CUTlER COUPON

Ql.
Jar

Tuesday that I!lennan will
replace Alvin Richer, who
recently resigned, and will
also serve as a vice president~ I
of City Stores Co., of which
Loveman's is a division.
w111&gt; thh
Loveman 's operates stores 1 fill ann ur., FU. 1. 11n. smtcr r1
in Binningham, Montgomery I IIMIIIIIIIT! l LKIL TAliS
and Huntsville.

10 pc. Fried Chicken Dinner.•••••••• !2·.39 box

- BONNIE.

II

99

~b.

1
I
I

ATHENS, Ohio (UP!) possible damage to docks,
.
geographical experts moormgs
a nd water in take s.
Local
'
~ay uncommonly .heavy
Damage from ice floes to
snowfalls this year, coupled areas surrounding the
with extensive freezing pf the Hocking is "a definite
HockingRiver,could produce posSibility," he said.
.
flooding in low~ying All)ens
Mold Ahmad pf the Ohlo
County areas If a warmiiig University Geology
trend develops soon.
Department
said
the
According to the experts, possibility of damage from
the brealdng up of river ice Hocking River floes rests
and subaequent damage from heavily on weather conditions
ice floes might also be a · • in the next few weeks.
problem for local residents,
" It depends on the velocity
Charles . Mcintyre of the of the river," he said, "and if
U.S. Af!IIY Corps of there are heavy rains and
·EngineerS said the corps is wanning temperatures."
monitoring Ice floes on the
About four inches of
Ohio River and
Its precipitation in 24 to 18 hours
tributaries, Including the Is needed to produce flooding
Hocking·, to minimize conditions locally, estimated
Ronald Isaac of the OU
Geography Department.
About one inch of
precipitable moisture is now
on the ground as the result of
Veterau Memorial Hospital snows, he said.
· ADMITTED - Clarence
"So, now we're about 25 per
Adams, Racine ; taura cent of the way there," Said
Fowler, Middleport ; Nina Isaac.
Yates, Racine; Asa Hoskins,
Athens' last major flood, in
Pomerqy; !(ena McDaniel, 1964, caused an estimated
Pomeroy; Allee Lezotte, $1.3 million damage . .
Vinton; Dona Parsons ,
NEW PRESIDENT
Middleport.
BIRMINGHAM, Ala.
DISCHARGED - ,Mary (UPI) - Theodore T.
Marcinko, Dennis Little, Biennan, former head of
Clarence Adams, Everett Cincinnati's H&amp;S Pogue Co.,
Gilkerson, Freda · Deeter, has been named president of
Gerald Donohue.
Loveman's Department
Stores in Alabama.

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT STORE

CEUO

·--· '

tJ '" Federal Power Commission and congressional
testimony ove~ the past few
years to indicate known
natural gas supplies were
kept from produ ction by
producers.
Metw\baum said thai in
1963, Gulf Oil Corp. agreed
with the Texas Eastern
pipeline system·for delivery
Of between 500,000 to 625,000
million cubic feet of natural
gas per day for 20 years.
Metzenbaum said by last
· sununer' the deliveries bad
dropped to 35Q,OOO MCF per
day.
Metzenbawn said Gulf told
the FPC delivery of the
agreed
amount
was
physically impossible , but
after a Nov. 7 order requiring
delivery of the maximum
amount "within a month they
were delivering 625,000 MCF
per day to Texas Eastern
pipeline system.''
Ken Drum of the State
Development Deparl!nent reported Tuesday that up w 1.5
million Ohioans have been
forced out of work by the gas
shortage. He said that as

Kroger
Coffee

3$

I

- ~----~----~--~

SAVE
25%·
on

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

COST CUTTER COUPON

Hocking watershed may!

INGELS FURNITURE

.

!0

.

;II':""

1 lb. Superior Pkg. Wieners ... .. .. .. .. .. ... .. ... .. .. ... ... .

·------

a

25:..,. . Table Model TV

Welkers Cut Up Frozen Fryers .................................

By JOHN T. KADY
United Press lntemalional
As state development
officials warn other states
they may spun be ~fleeted
economicall y by Ohio's
wllh me publicly (Bench's natural gas shortage, Gov .
public annoll{lcement a year James A. Rhodes has again
ago about the mamage asked that Ohio be declared a
breakup), I was brok· 11major disaster " area and
en
In · spirit ,
had given federal aid to clear
.lost my confidence, my roads, rurnish temporary
health and subsequently, my housing and compensate for
appearance as a model . I had unemployment.
been out or competition for
Sen, Howard Metzenbaum,
more than a year and time DOhio, also asked for help
had moved on.
from the federal government
"I did have one offer : Tuesday. He called on the
'Hustler' magazine offered Interior Department to
me $25,000 to pose in 'Hustler' investigate what he says is
style. I rejected the idea but evidence natural gas
Johnny said, 'Why not, it's producers have hoarded iuel
good money.' That pretty to
force
government
much showed the respect he deregulation .
. had for his wife and the
At a news conference, Mel·
dollar .
zenbaum said he discussed
"I hope this shows that the matter by telephone witll
there may be 2 dies of the President Carter, but got no
story of poor Johnny Bench's commitment.
·
marriage problems... Johnny
In a letter to Interior
Bench is 11 great athlete, a Secretary Cecil Andrus
mediocre everything else and requesti ng the study,
he is a true tragedy as a Metzenbaum cited
15
person."
"sources of evidence" from

CINCINNATI (UPI) - alimony (or a marriage that
Baaeball lltar Johmy Bench lasted 11 'months.
took hla best man heme with
"That is my statement and
him on his wedding night and I don't want to go into any
they played ping-pong, more details as to her
Bench's estranged wile charges since that would only
Vickie Ia quoted as saying in a hurt her more," said Bench .
copyrighted
story
in
Said VIckie iri her. comTuesday 's Cincinnati plaints :
Enquirer.
"Johnny broke my heart
Iiench, the Cincinnati Reds' and my spirit - he ruined my
power-bitting tatcher, and health and that has kept me
Vickie Oteuer Bench are from resuming my career.
currently going through Acareer that I gladly gave up
divorce proceedings. They . to marry, for keeps, the man
separated leu than a year I love. Right until our
after their. Feb. 21, 1975 wedding night, I thought he
was the man he seemed to be.
wedding.
"After the wedding' party,
"lie certain-ly has no
he (Johnily ) took his best res)lect for any woman, and
man home with us - and they probably not for any man.
"He can lose $10,000 on a
played ping-pong," VIckie is
bet and ~ppear to be
reported as saying.
Vickie, a model who had unconcerned. Yet, .when I
done nationally televised was sick, he told me to delay
toothpaste commercials seeing a doctor until the team
before the marriage, made physician came to town - hls
several other complaints services were free. Wben I
about Bench and their asked If I could hire a maid
one day week, Johnny said
marriage.
Told of her complaints, no It would cost too much.
''When we were married,
Bench said, "With regard to
her statements, there is no Johnny was already a super·
basis m fact and I believe star. I was a nationally
they are motivated by her known, successful model
disappointment when the about to reach .the top in that
(divorce) referee did not field. I gladly gave all that up
grant her request of almost to become his wife forever .
"When Johnny was through
$100,000 a year for temporary

(III~IIIIOMA(OlllOft . . . . ~.

Theme selected for
annual History Day

Disaster area rating asked for Ohio

Vickie Bench says Johnny
·broke her 'heart and spirit'

SpeCial people bring 1 very s,.clal plusureinlo our
llvu. Thoy dl11rvo spoclalallontlon and a IJie&lt;lal
memory at the Vatooitlne Juson. ·
Romomblr somo !lpiCitl ~moone wit~ a gift of
flo"'rl ttuot willllnforln llliir hUrt llkt 1 preclou•
memory.
lltcaluM you ctrt, order your gift nrly and begin •
grand- memory. Our floral I(IICilllst• will http
you Mltcllhl rlghlgHI. JultiiGP In or c•ll.

Pomeroy Flower Shop_
Mrs. Mildred Van Mtltr
106 Butlernut Avo.
Pliant m-21:19

m.sm

Pomeroy, 0.

Wt AcCIIII All Mil or Crtclll C1rcl1
Wtre Flo"'rs Evorywhtro

w•

I

~~~~
•
'

•

--------?ruJ, 84&amp;4"

i:wn
&amp; Serve .ft
Krvsty Rells •••• ~ ,.,.,:
12.,

White

+

3~··

...
,.... .....5M 'I
*I
3 *I

. ~~ ~

i:i·r;;~tft!!
••ad .. -~'••••••

89c

•1111nw- 01

GraPefruit

Washington
State P111rs.. . .
...
lraen Top
· ft~

c.nts ........ov

.a~·1 ~ilhrnl
.YII hnges •15 *1
M

�'
2,19'11

0.,

.

15- The DaUy Sen!~I, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , Feb . 2,1977

II

DIQ&lt;T.RACY

Television -log for easy viewing

J,
I

'

)

WEDN ESDAY , FEBRUARY 2,1977
7:0&lt;&gt;-Truth,or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
Dollars6; Pop Goes the Country 8; News 10; To Tell
1he Truth 13 : My Three Sons IS; Consumer Survival
Kit 20; Big Green Magatlne 33.
7' 31)--Dolly 3; SIOO,ooo Name Thill Tu ne 4; Match
Game PM 6; $2S,OOO Pyram id 8; MacNeii .Lehrer
Reporl 20,33; The Judge 10; Break the Bank t3;
Wild Kingdom 15.
8:00-Movle "The Adventures of Front ier Fremont"
3,4,15; Bionic Woman 6,13; Gunsmake 8; Nova
20,33; Good Times 10

"

• I

~

"I

•I

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
5

DIAO~INI$

P .M .

D1y

LOST • LENS out of eye glosses in
Racine crtta . PhOne 94$9-2386.

'Before

'Publlcltlon .
, canctllltl~ns,
corrtc ·
tlont eccepted first dey of
publication.
·
'For ThuradaJ, Feb. 3, 1177
ARIES (March 21 · Aprll It} '
Don't demaAd unswerving loyal·
ty from friends today beCause
·you won't get it. Wh.tyou will get
are severe disappointments- It
you try.
.:
' (
TAURUS CAprll 20-Mor 20) A '
serlous domestic crisis can arise
today If t.he powers that must be
reckoned
with
a d o pt
dlameterlcally opposed views.
Don't t.ake any hard stands.

QIMINI CMor 21.Juno 20} Don't
. , pressured Into signing . 9'
be
agreeing to anyth i n~ against
your better Judgment. Tell the
other party you'd like to sJeep on
it

REGU~ATIONS

The Publish er ' res,rves

OLD furniture , ice bous , bran
beds, wall teleph onel and

' ~hne/lgah~ 1 10 ::~mo:drel:~~
l•ctlonal . The publ is her
will not be responsible far
mor.e than one Incorrect
insertion .
I AYES
For Went Ad Service
5 cents per word one
Iriser t ion .
Minimum Cha rge Sl .OO .
1.4 cents 1).8r word three
consecutive lnsertlons .
26 cents per word six.
consecutive Insertions .
1.2s Per cent Discount on
paid ods and ods pold
'wlth l r'! 10 da~ts .
CARD OF T~ANKS
:
&amp; OIITUA,RY
·u .oo tor so word
·l", l.nl mum

of

mobile

TIMBER , Pomeroy Forest Pro·
duch . To p pric&amp; fo r standi ng
sawtimber . Call Kent Hanby .

l -44b-8570.

.

..

~

CASH!!! lor junk ca rs . Fr ye's
Truck and ~ut a . 24 HOUR
WRECKER SERVICE! Phone

cen ts .
I~IN I) ADS
21.Julr 22) An , ,
AddiUonat 25c Charge
may de man d
.
Take care of I~ per Advertisement
OFFICE HOURS
away,
8 : 30 a .m. to 5 :00 p.m.
Da lly , 8:30 a .m . to )2 : 00
LEO (Julr 23·Aug. 22) This I• Noon saturday .
one of those days when yout
P'hone today 992 - 21.~6 .
mote ls going to be zigging when
you're zagging. Someone's go ..
' tit
NOTICES
ing t.o have to &lt;;:omprom Ise . .,...e
·ATTN
.: 1t
be you.
· f ALL HOUSEWIVES
VIRQO CAifll. 23·Stpt; 22) The All Yard Satos , Rummago,
of frustration will ~ Pon;h and Basement Porch
blggeot source
·
end Basement Sales, etc .
lie within you yourse!f today. At ' mus1 be paid In advance
least you'll knqw who tQ, blar:ne. G' t yours fn early by
stopping b~ our offfce it
LIBAA(Stpl23·0CI.23)trylng ' The Do lly Senllnel. Il l
to Impose your will upon your Court St. or writ ing Box
peer grou p today can have dis· 7'29 , . P'omerov . Ohio -45769
astrous repercu ss lo·ns . Lei with your remittance.
others manage their own a'ffalrs.
CANCER (Juno
old obligation
attention today.
now. It won 't go

IF YOU hove a service to offer ,

wont to buy or sell some th ing ,
oe look ing for work ... or

whatever ... you'llget results
fo ster with a Sentinel Wont Ad .
Call9q2 ·2156.

~~~~~~~h~~~~~·~~~o~:e v~'~; ~¥f;~~;~~i~g~~~t~

ForRent

heated . Hur1 tEtellngs would
result.
CAPRICORN.' (DeC. ~2-J1n . 11)
Com mercial situations pould
have. some hidden plttalls today ...
Tread very carefUlly so you won't
be snared with a def icit.

NOW. accepting piano students , .
furn ished
and un ·
heginners, intermediates, od · 3 1ANb. 4hedRM opts
Phone
992 '
d
d
c II =2
UfniS
•
77
. 2~~~~ stu ents. q
.
543-4 .
--r·--------, --·-·- ---NOTICE ,' Pratt's Meal ~k t. COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork. Rl.
33. ten miles north of Pomeroy .
(Pleasanton M eQt Pro.cess,ng ,
Lorge lots with concrete patios.
Inc .) Custom slaughtenng , and
sidewa Uo.s , runners and off
~
"processing . Retail. wholesale.
stree t park ing . Phone 9&lt;12 ·7479.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20~ F1b. 11)
No appoinment necessary . Call
Know how to differ entiat e
\61 4) 593-8655 . hou rs, 9:00 ti ll ONE BEDROOM ApiS . al VILLAGE
betwee n persistency and
6 :00 7 Pomeroy Rood . Athens .
MANOR in Middleport lor $1 04
obstinacy today. II you butt your
Oh. _.___ _
mon th lv plus elec . or $130 in ·
eluding elec . LOWER RA TES lor
noggin against B waU you can GUN SHOOT at the Racine Gun
SENIOR CITIZENS. Convenient
only come up with a headache.
Club ever~ · Sunday. 1 pm
to shopping on Third and Mill
PIBCIB CFtb' 20·Maich 20) -~"a':e_d meoiS
.. _ .
Sts . in Middleport. S;rand new
Pace yourself wisely today and · RACINE FIRE Dept. will hove o
high quality apar tments. See
use common sense · regarding
Gun Shoot eve ry Saturday night
the manager at Apt , 28 or coli
heaJth matters. Don 't overdo Uh· .6 p.m. at their building in
992·7721 . An Equa l Housing
lesS you want to overpay the ·''' ,Boshon . Ohio .
Opporiu ni ty ..
. AT'S TU0 :- 1. Phoebus . 16 1H . If 2 BEDROOM trail er. real nice.
piper.
you wont a good performa nce ,
Phone 992·3324, adults only.
. A halter colt W · bloodli nes that AVAILABlE AT Ri'11enide Apts.. 1·
I mf7 . .
I.:JU
sell . 2. TRIBAl CHIEF, APHC,
bf!drm . apa rt ment , SlOO per
f7)A~tfl ~
·
15.2 H. has sired some of .the
mon
th , 2 bedroom . opts. $133
L!JUIJUWL!Jffi
top performance and halter
pe1 month . Equal Oppor tunity
horses , (Tribal Wi n, Tribal Fool ,
Housing . Phone ~92 · 3 27 3 .
et c.). Also, horses sold, troin ·
FtJ&gt;. 3, 1t77
ed . condi tioned, boarded . Cole 'i. bedroom unfurn ished aport Something you've hoPed fo r but
Srobles. Home of Champions.
merit in Middleporl . Phone
thought was out of reach could
Bo.: 25, Tuppers Plains , Ohio
992·3129 or 992·5434.
be realized this coming year. .45783 . Phone (614 ) 607·3405.
NICE COMPLETEL V furnishe&lt;:l 1
Your dream can come true
bedroom apartment with Iorge
because of tne groun dwor k
potio, porch 011er'looking river.
~-waliMT'- oc' ' '' ' '
you've laid.
Adults only . Phone 992-2606.
. (Ani
an Aqusrlus_? 8~r~ FEMALE ~avE~ c~-~nte; - Soles . FURNISHED TWO bedroorri opt .
nrce Osol has written s spec,al
sma ll amount of bookkeeping .
odulls qnly , Middleport. Phon e
Astro~Grsph Letter for you. Far
App ly in person . o &amp; o Meats ,
992 ·387.4 .
your ·copy send. 50 cants and s· Inc .. 830 E. Main Si .. Pomeroy ,
MOBi lE HOME , unfur nished in
selt·addressed , stamped
Ohio
cou ntry . Nee ds small
envelope ro· A.Stro-Grsph, P.O. .
·
mai ntenance . Co 11 992·b337 .
Box 489, Radio City Station. Now

•

You

York, N.Y. 10019. Bs sure to ask
for Aquarius Volume 4.)
INEWSP o\Pf.;R ENTERPRISE ASSN .I

Tlie Almanac
Unlled Press Interualloaal

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

7&lt;2 2081.

F!LEASURE HORSES and poniQii ,
al so . will buy ho rse~ and
ponies . Phofle (614 ) 698·3290,
Ruth Reeves .
1KC COLLIE Pups . Soble and
while, $75 . Phone 949·2571 ,
aft er"' p.m.
RISING STAR Kennel Boarding ,
IN LOVING Memory of Gro~er
lndoor·Outdoor ru ns , grooming
Salser who passed away Feb. 1.
all breeds . clean san itary
1973 . Sadl.y missed by wife . Em ·
faci lities . Chesh ire . Phone (614 )
rna , chiiClre n and grand ·
367·0292 .
·- children.
---·------ --· ·-~ __ ~

'{®

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

Laurel Qi££

'

COAl. limestone. and calcium
chloride an~ · ca l dum brine lor
dust control ,And spe&lt;tol rrlixing
salt lor fa rmers. Main Slreet .
Pomeroy . Ohio or phone 992·
3891.
1971 HONDA Cl ·.450 . 12.000
miles . sissy bar . crash bars.
puU bock handle bo n; , new ttre
ond seals , Scrambler side
pipes. $650. Call949·2480
COAL for sole, Open b day s per
week ond eveni ngs . For fur the r
tnlormotion coli (614)367 -7338.
APPLES . FITZPATRICK ORCHARD .
STATE ROUTE 689 . PHONE
WILKE SV ILLE, [614 ) 069-3785.
FULlER Bru sh Produc ts for sole.
Phone 992·3410. ,
CAMPER. $600 . Also. horse
trailer. $450. Phone (614) 698·
3290.

FOR SALE
One good used Gibson side·
by-side ·retr"-erator ... suo
New
c cifop
water
softeners, model vc.svt .
Only S279.95
One good ~hain Homeli1e
Chain Saw ·.•... . $130.00
Save ,S50 •.00 on a new
Holpaint Refrigerator .

Pomeroy Landmark

9 .. _Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Phone992-2181

Nt.f.D A

Today is Wednesday, Feb.
Due go gas Shortage iney
2, tlie 33nfday of 1977 wtth·332 were no services al the Free
1o follow.
,, : !l'lethodist Church , laal
·Tire· moon. is.. ap~oachlng Sunday . Several persons
lis fUll phase.
attended services tit the
Th~ , morning stars a ,re Methodist church, En·
Merail'y, Mars and Saturn. terprlse. .
r1 The evening stars are
Mr . Hannon Fox's funeral
•• ~Jlll
Jupiter.'
was held at .lhe Ewing
' niOse born iln this date are Funeral Home on Thursday.
'-:under the sign of Aquarlua, He had ,lived In lhiB comt · \ Austrian .viollnisl ·B!ld communlly lor a number of
· po~er Fritz !Ueisler was born. years.
.
'f,l!b. 2, 1875,
Mr. Pearl Jacobs has been
f ,, Alao mlhill day ill history: returned
home
from
', ' In 1848, Me&gt;ico signed a' VeteraM Memorial Hoapltal.
. 'lt'eaty l!lvlng Tel88, New
Mr. Mark Stahl and (rlend,
·Meslco,
Arizona
and Stockdale and Mr. Russell
; California lo the United Jackson, Racine, visited
( States
''~ millioo .
recently with Mr. and Mrs.
In 18761 the Nalional Norman Schaefer. .
'
BNeliaU League was formed'.
Mr. Wilber Leifheit w1io
Ii WBa cunprised ieal!lB In prellche~ over WMPO every
· cago, 'Cincinnati,
s8turdaymom'ftd a16 .a .m. is
o .......:., Chi

WATER SOFTEN[R 1
Let Pomeroy undmark
soften &amp; condition vour
water and a Co-op water
softener, Model UC·XVI.
Now Only

•279.95

Let us test! your1 water

ana

Free.

..Zr.tPomeroyw. Landmark

Jack
C.rsey, Mgr.
Phone 992·ll81

59 acres . 6 room house . bo th.
portly carpeted. two out ·
b!,! ifding s, dug basement .
one -third tillable , mineral
rights located nea r Don11ille.
Reduced for qu i'c k sa le .
523 ·500 · Phone ?&lt; 2. 2706 ·
NEW 3 bedroom ho use , built·in
kitchen . both and v,, Phone
7 '2-&lt;~Q6o, con laCIMI IO B . Hut·
chison , Rutland, Ohio .
BUILDING SITE S. 3. 11 acoes, al
Boshan T. P., water .fop , gas
top , minimum soi l limi tations .
Phone985-4102.

r. , ·

POTATOES . c. w. Proff itt . 2 STORY FOUR Bedroom brick
home in Middleport. Pflonr
Port land , Ohio . Ph one
IWJ.22SA.
9'12·3&lt;51.
FREIGHT DAMAGEp , onl1 S lelt .
1977 Dressmak er zig·zags sewing machines , buHonholes,
monog rams, etc. Will ~e ll for '
Virgil B. Sr., ·Realtor
S..8 .95, originally 5209 .95 . Cosh
or term s avail ab le . Call
216 E. Second Stree1
9'12·51Ao.
· PomOl'oy, Ohio 45169
Phone 992-3325
FOR SCHOOL Sew ing Mac hine&gt; ,
Singers , leatu1ing bunan hole ,
DUIIWII
.
u15
·blind hvm, sews on knits . NATIVE BUILT - Old 4
bedroom frame with bath,
-N'ew York, .Philadelphia, St. the son of Mr. Victor Leifheit $31 .50 cosh o' te,ms . Phone natural
gas1 city water,
.!Au~J, ~ •. Ky ., llJ!d and the llite Luuan Leifheit.
m .suo.
carport, anrt aarden.
Hartford, Coon.
' Mr, Leifheit waa born and NEW SEAR"S Roebuck 100,000
In 1933, ·lwo days after reared In the community. His
BTU Gaj lumoco , 10 yeo ' WQ'·
·gaining
office ,
Nazi friends wish him the very
'only. Sell ceosonoble . Phone
Chancellor Adolf Hiller beat luck and may God bless.
q"·23 ' 8· ·
ordeHd dliloiutioll of the
STEREO · om·fm lm sle,eo·,adlo
combination. Balance $109.95, IN TOWN - 2 bl!drooms,
Rlchslllg " - 'the German
0 , 1e,mo. Call 992-3q65.
nice bath. dining, ~porches
and
levellDt.
~
Mo-•••n
CLARINET lo' sale. Excellent con·
FREE FUEL - Good
1•-dition , $85 . Phone 992.2..41 3.
fishing and hunting, 90
· halgned as American
,·llltlbail8dor
1o the 'United
,•
•
•
12" GAUGE SAVAGE pump acres of fenced pasture and
• "--'"'-=------.,.--, shotgun . vent · ribs, doubl, woods. Old barn and house.
~ J,
sights . Sell for S100. Phono
BUILDING LOTS- Five
l.
......___,..
2-"7·2b6.4 .
. Points area and SyracuSe.
tlloughl · fer !he day:
3 GyERNESY cowo , 2 i"'' '' ••h. MINERALS - 136 ocres In
·
~-~-~
~-h . -rsa- Lebanon township.
be 1onc1. ~lovable . "
9&lt;9·2m.
NEW
LISTING
1971 MOBil E HOME, 6{)' x 12', 2 Wondertu I 3 bedroom home ·
bedrooms, very good (Or,Pt · with large living thol has a
tion . pay off . 1966 Chcve!te wood burning fireplace .
Cunv., 327 A speed , $750. 870 Kitchen has dishwasher ,
' W'I1D_
Remingtori, 12 go ., 2 barrels, . dbl. • sink; disposal!, and
•w-a.u 'I
JO". 3&lt;'' lull , $200. Call (oU) breakfast
nook,
lull
667·3866 between 5:30and 8:00 basemenf and large lot.
evenings .
0p1
e
GOOD QUALITY co'n iod h ee••• . SNOW BOUND, LEAVE
~ "'l'l'ie ntunben an rOlll' cndit
be•l . .o~p,ox . 1000 lbs. Steen~ \US YOUR WORRIES, AND
~-nt are all worn nat."
Wilt de lver to your processing GO SOUTH .
ftAB~
. .
plani, Phone8AJ ·2ll l
t,-,--------.....;1

·TEAFORD

far

614-992-2798
At 100 Kerr 51.
Pomeroy, O.
1·17·1mp..

SMAll fo rm for sole, 10% down ,
owne r fi nanced . Monroe Coun ·
ly . W. Va. Phon e [30&lt;1 772·
3102 0' [304 ) 772·3227.
COU NTRY lormlond with secluded woods . water and g9od oc·
cess in Monroe County . W, Vo.
$1 ,000 down, ca ll (304 ) 772·
3102 or (304) 772-3227.
Commercial property approx . 17
acres , l ev~ l land, located at
Tuppers Plains on Ohio. Rou te
7. Phone [61&lt;1067-030&lt;.
3 bedrooms , 1';, baths, Iorge li11·
ing roOm . di ning room and kit·
chen . full y car peted . Phone
9'12·3129, 0' q92-5&lt;34 .

This Space
For Your Ad

LAFF A DAY

N....
l-

lh

0.D:V ,
th

l':::'r-=~.,=-~-,·.=-"-"-""'-"--';''::!'

I.

Located in Langsville
Box2S.A
A utland, Ohio •sns..

DADDY .., ., NORMALLY IT WOULD
&amp;EC&gt;IN$ - BE UP TO THE 1!\DARD
$0.ME&lt;l~ E TO

DIRECTOR$

• KQJ7 6
"' J9

t K 84

• K Q 10

EMERGENCY

PLAt.i X.. ,

PHOTPGAAI!HY

'II

C!htshr' Ohio
J9:17.:11!!2_( 1'!11·

-. ·-

l1111tlltloll.Stmces

.

IIIIIIIIMS I DOOIS
lt:'IACQIII

IIIRDIIIII
IWIIIRIIM
SllliK.SGifm

• A
"' A K Q 10 8 7 3 2

t 72
• 85
East· West vulnera ble

· ALLEYOOP

Automatic
,
service '

~ Transmission

..... htWI.. &amp;Aitlco
ST8III

SOUTH I DI

·-

SWAIN'S

AH WONDER IF AH

COULD BORllOW 'O,JR

·1

PARTs - lABOR
GUARANTEm

EAST
. 942
. 54
t A Q 10 5
.J 973

WEST

. \0853
"' 6
t J 963
•A642

(614} 91J.4155

Ph . Cll41 Ul·l&lt;Of
We Deliver
12 -22--4 mos .

chair. Here he was with a
sound opening bid of his own
and a partner who had opened
with a lwo bid . He just bid two
spadeslo start with, but when
South 's next call was a jump
to four hearls Norlh jusl had
to bid Blackwood . South
responded with five hearts lo
show just two aces. All Norlh
could do was to gulp out a
pass.
It was bad luck lhal South
went down al five . Wesl opened the ace of clubs and shifted
to a diamond, but those things
'" happen to players who gel inlo
that never-never land between
game and slam .

2

NORTH

A)( FOR A LITTLE
WHILET

··•

.. :AH'LL HAVE ONE
OF MY SOYS 6~NS
IT I!ACI( 'TO Yi.JH
AS SOON AS WE'RE
FINISHED Wl'nl IT!

West

No rth East

Pass
Pass

2•
Pass
4N . T. Pass

South

2"'
4¥

REASONABLE

Pass Pass
Opening lead - A. •

·~

RATES -

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
How many high-card points
do you need for y0ur hand to
qualify as a forcing lwo bid ?
The general answer is 18,
although you may shade It to
17 or 16. Wilh less, jusl bid
one . The bid won ' t he passed
out
Today 's hand represents
real tough luck for North and
South , but the fault lies enlire·
ly wilh the South player . He
did hold two aces and he did

Reedsville, 0. Ph. 371-6250 1
1·23·1 mo. Pd. '

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Siding,
Storm
Windows
&amp;
Insulation·.
Call Professiona Is

UTTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-THEY CAME LIKE SWALLOWS

BISSEll SIDING CO.

1~~v pr~i··!l have nine playing tricks in his

A local contractor

CoMIN ' IN ·· hand . At least he had nine

Phone 949·2801
or 949-21160'
Free Estimatts
No Sunday C. lis Please
1·30· 1 mo.

playing tricks, unless an opp&lt;&gt;nent showed up wilh four
the jack. Anyway, he
ope,ned two hearts.
North almost fell off his

' ~"

'7

-~

HOMESITES lor sole, 1 ocre ond BRADFORD , Auctioneer, Co.m·
up. Middl eport . near Rutland.
plete Service. Phone 949·2.ol87
Call992·7481.
or 949·2000. Rqc ine, Ohio: Critt
Bradford.
NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 bat hs,
all elec'., I acre , Middleport, ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR close to Rutland. Phon e 992Sweepers, toasters , irons, all
smo ll appliances . Lawn mower,
7-"81 '
nex t to State Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone (61-4 ) 985·
3825.
REMODELING , Plumbing, heating
and all types of gene ral repair ,
Work guaranteed 20 years ex ·
perience. Phone 992·24(Jq.
.
SEWING MACHINE Repairs . ser·.
No. 190 - Country stqre
vice, all molo.es , 9&lt;12·228..4 , The
and home, has 4 adjoin i'ng
Fabr
ic Shop , Pome roy .
lots, living quarters has 10
Autho_rized Singer Soles and
rooms and all equipment
Service. We Sharpen Sc~s.sor~ .•
and inventory In store,
EXCAVATING . dozer, loodet .,rrd
under present owner for 35
bockkae work; OOrilp trucks
years , wants to ret ire .
arid lo·boys for hire: will hau l
Price $33,000
fill di rt, to soil , limestone and
grovel. Call Bob or Roger Jef·
Hause Overlooking River
fer s. day phone 992·7089,
~
3 bedr·ooms . lull
night phone 992·3525 or 992·
bas ~ ment , new heating ,
5232 .
plumbing and wirelng on
double lot. Price $40,900.
EX CAVATING, dozer, back hoe
ond ditcher , Charles R. Hat·
field. Back Hoe Service ,
We have several business
Rutland , O~io . Phone 7-42 ·2008 .
properties tor sale. Call for
further Information ,
sEPTIC sy; t.\ m; lnstoil; d -b~
licenud .installer. Shepard ,
No. 184- Tavern business,
Contractors . Phone 7-42·2409 .
real estate all stock
SEPTIC TANKS cleaned. Modern
Included, has apartment
Sanitation , 992 -3954,
and other business. lady
.
·---·-......
wants to retire . Price
Will do roofing, construction .
sso,ooo.
plumbing and heat ing. No job
too large or too smoll. Phone
742·23-"8.
No . 167 - Tile black
business building Jot 30x100
CARPENTER . flooring, ceiling ,
with 12,060 sq. ft. has living
paneling . Phone992·2759 . .
quarters . Price $20,000.
MOBILE 'Home Repair, Elec .,
plumbing ond heoflng. Phone
No. 193 - 33 Acres has
992·5858 ,
'
modern 3 BR home, also
ELECTRONIC T V. CLINIC , New
12 ~60 mobile home J5K27
.._T.V. shop . Electronic T.V. Cllnlc
barn, cl ose ln. Price
Service call , $5.95 , Color , B &amp; W
S37,500.
antenna systems stereos , etc.
572
South Third , Middleport.
804 EW Main
Phone 992·6300. Corry In and
Pomeroy
992·2298
save money.
Aller Hours Call
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·
992·7133
coveting , septic systems ,
CONTACT :
dozer. backhoe , dump truck ,
Lois Pauley
limestone , gra11el, blacktop
Branch Mlnager
pavi ng, Rt. 143. Phone 1 (b14)
. L"--------~--'
698·7331.
-r----::":'~':"':"":":"':'::-~.,---il OIL , GAS Furnaces, oil burner~ ."
repair , and ports for trailers
ond homes . 24 hour service .
Phone 843·23&lt;1.
RIVER VIEW - 3 ·l arge
bedrooms , bath. dining
room , large kitchen ,
basement, natural gas
heat. porches. $12,500.00.
RUTLAND - 4 acres with
older home, 3 bedrooms,
beth, ·natural gas heat,
alum . siding, f)orches ,
trailer hookup. $15,500.00 .
MIDDLE PORT - Nice
level lot, P/ 2 story frame, 2
bedrooms, bath, din ing
room, porch'es, N.G. heat.
Good neighborhood . Asking
iust S14,ooo.oo .
POMEROY - 111, story
frame. 3 bedrooms. bath ,
d in ing room , hardwood
floors, porch, utilily In
kitchen and basement.
About
25
yrs.
old .
512.500.00.
NEW LISTING 3
bedroom frame home with
11:1 acre ground , yard
fenced for children. Elec.
baseboard heat. Financing
available .to right parties .
Sl7,500.00.
NEW LISTING - 103
Acres , 25 ti lla ble, 15
pasture. 60 timber . Approx .
3,000 lbs . tobacco base . 7
room house. S bedrooms,
kitchen. living room , bath .
Barn and · 2 sheds .
131,666.00.
NEW LISTING - Large
lot. 3 bedrooms, sewing
room or den. Njce liv ing
room
and
kitchen ,
carpeting. Full basement, 2
00 .
car garage. SI9~M
.~.
WE HAVE A LOT OF
HOMES _ BUT MANY
MORE BUYERS - LET
US SELL YOUfl HOME
NOW. A BROKER AND 3
ASSOCIATES TO SERVE
YOU .
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
_
• _
992 1259 992 2568
' 985-4112

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
ll Not live,
I Pundit
on TV
5 Scragliu
~~ Gaelic
10 Resti ng
DOWN .,
11 Expunge
1 " Thef
12 Actress
Divine - "
Tu shing2 Tolera te
ham
l Be rarin ' to
13 Banished
go (4 wds. 1
J4 Hwnan
4 Duteh
being
cheese
16 Son of Bela 5 Jinxed
11 Child of
6 George
Loki
Foreman's
18 Ribbon
conqueror
color
7 "Fireman"
19 Spanish
(2 wd s.)
queen
8 Everlasting
20 Unfrieixlly 9 Go-between
look
11 Disincline
22 From a
dis lance
Man·
handled
25 Answer
Presently
Italian city
U Voigt of
lhc Vikings
29 Took the

; .BORN LOSER
llllllltt . .

•
-

~

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8e..mii&amp;o00ereil
. :·,.._:;...:.:

'
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~,;.::~ 1

Will do odd job5 . roofing . poi~ ·
ti ng , gutter work . Phone 99?·
l
7&lt;Q9 .
SEWING · AL TE RATION1 '
Up ho lster ing ,
drapes
reaso nabl e. 572 South Tl'rtfd
Ave .. Middleport . Pho~e
9'12-6306 .
.
-INCOME TAX Service . Wo ll~e
. Russell , Bradbury . Co~l
9'12·722B
I

C 191 1

...,

I needs
a knife!
I ain't
qot one!

\
I

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~~
. .. ;~~,~~~
.-.
. ,
., .

.

2 BEDROOM partially furn i sh~ ,
12·.: 60 1973 Parkewood mob!le
home, underplnni11g porch and
owning . $6800 , Ph olte
9'12·6124 ,

title
30 " It" game
33 One of 100
t abbr.)

'

"I

'

.

COOLVILLE- Nice mod. brltkEme containing three
bedrooms, dining room, living r m with fireplace, lull
baMmenf with garage, large
porch, nat. gjls.
furnatt, city water and well wat.r, a btlullful home
with opprox. $'12 acres Of land, trulf ,trteS and llhadt
lroes turraundl!!g II. Plenty of garden apace, good
· fishing area claw by, loc:oltd In Cool vii It, Cillo. Price&lt;'
'at only 132,0011. Cell . - .

-

..

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I'VE: (;:liVEN IT l?ACKlD
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IT BE NIC~, SAILIN6
ALOJ&lt;S ~ MEDI-

INSTALLED
Rfllulor$14.95

10.95 sq. Yd.
I Evervllltv
- money
1

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AN

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one letter to each squa~t , to IOf)n
tour Ofdinary words.

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CRYPTOQUOTES

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NOT ONLY 16 6HE

~!COKE, P.JUT 6f1E'S

RUTLAND ·:

ILL. I DON'T Kf'!OW
WHElHEQ SHE~

FURNITUB ~'

Mon., Tues., Wed.
B:OOtiiS:OO
Thursday 8tll noon

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Yesterday's Cryploquote: IF PEOPLE KNEW HOW HARD
I HAVE TO WORK TO GAIN MY MASTERY IT WOULDN'T
SEEM SO WONDERFUL. - MICHELANGELO

e 1.17'7 Jt1u r..awu SJncUcat.e. Jar:.

BARNEY

·

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t

NUSS!! TEll TH' DOCTO

FRIDAY TIL 8
Close §at, At 5 p.m.

S LT M L

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. ARNOLD GRATI
. RiiflANDJ
1 ·t 1 1 1 e e e t t t e t t t U ~ f l ~ e

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j·

One Jetter simply stands for another. In th is sample 11 is L-f~'lvry~,...~r'"1V"i""'J'\I
used for the three L's, X for the Lwo O's, etr. Single letters.
~_A~
~apostrophes, the length and formation of the words arc all
hints. Earh day the code letters a re d iflere nl.
~=:::::-:-::-:--:-,

••••••·••••••·
·IIU1IAND
PURNITUIII!

742-2211

LUCQT

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DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here'" huw to work it :
It

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A XY DL H A A XR

....................,

·

'

CHESTER - 113 acres farm, 80 ecr.. tillable land,
nice 2· story farm houoe, 1 rooms 1r1d bath, · an;
hardwood floors ltld baMmonl. Bam and other
outbuildings, 2 ponds. A nice laying farm prletcl to go
Localtd near Chnter, tall lor appl,

~THATSCIWIB~WOIIDGAII!
1At-t--t---t ~ ~ ~~·
by HoM Arnold lnd Bob Lit

itlflir.\.OIDit

CEERTMATPW

NEW AND used merchandise, Fri·
da~ . 7 p.m. ot the Auction
Hause~Horton St., Mason.
Phone (
-5.471 .

6:31)--QSU Overview 4; News 6; Sunrise Semester I ;
Urban League 10
6'45--Mornlng Reporr 3.
6;50-Good Morning, West VIrginia 13.
6'55--Gaod Morning, Trl State 13.
7'0&lt;&gt;-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning, America 6,1 3; CBS
News ·a.
7'05--Porky Pig 10 .
UI)-Sthoolles 10,
B:lJO-Howdy Doody 6; Copt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesome
St. 33.
8,31)--Big Valley 6 .
9,tJO-A .M. 3; Phr L Donahue 4, 13, 15; Andy Griffith 8;
Mike Douglas 10.
9:30-Cross-WIIs 3; Edge of Night 6; Concentration I .
10:0&lt;&gt;-Sanford &amp;. Son 3,4, 15; Dinah 6; Price Is Right
A Tennessee reader wanls
8, 10; Mike Douglas 13.
to know why the forcing two
10, 31)--Hollvwood Squares 3,4, 15.
bid is called the Culberlson
11 : 0&lt;&gt;-Wheel of Fortune 3;4, 15; Double Dare 8.10;
two bid if he didn't invenl il.
Morning with D.J . 13; Elec. Co . 20.
The answer is that his first
11
:31)--Shoot
for the Stars 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13;
blue boo~ in.cluded lhe forcing
Love of Life B, 10; Sesame St . 20.
two bid at a time when other
11 ·55--CBS News 8; Ms. Flxl t 10 .
writers were using different
12 :0&lt;&gt;-News 3,4,6,8,10; Don Ho 13 ; Name That Tune
forcing bids. Incidentally, his
15; Divorce Court 8.
original two-bid rules are just
12,31)-Lovers &amp; Friends 3,15: Ryan 's Hope 6,13; Bob
about what should be followed
Braun 4; Search fOf' Tomorrow 8,10 .•
today .
l 'oo-Gong Show 3; AII My Children 6,13; Young &amp; the
(Do you have a quostion
Restless 10; News&amp; ; NotforWomenOnly 15.
for fhe experts? Write "Ask
1:31)--0ays of Our Loves 3,4, IS; Family Feud 6,13; As
the Jacobys " care of this
The World Tuns 8.10.
newspaper. The Jacobys will
2:0&lt;&gt;-$20,000 Pyramid 6,1 3.
2' »--Doctors 3,A, 15; One Life to Llvo ~. 13; Guiding
answer individual questiOns
Light 8, 10.
if stamped. self-addressed
3'0&lt;&gt;-Another World 3,4,15; All In The Family 8,t0;
envelopos are enclosed. The
Antiques lO.
most interesting questions
3:
15--General
Hospital 6, 13.
will be used in this column
3:31)--Match
Game
8,10; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
and will receive copies of
4' 0&lt;&gt;-Mister Cortoon 3; Little Rascals 4; Gong Show
JACOBY MODERN.)
15; Mltkey MouseCiub6; · Lucy ShQW 8; Sesame St.
20,33; Movie "Crossturrent" 10; Dinah 13
&lt;:31)--My Three Sons 3; Partridge Family 4,1;
Emergency One 6; Fllntstones 15.
5' 0&lt;&gt;-Big Valley 3; My Three Sons 4; Brady Bunch 8;
Mister Rogers 20,33; Star Trek 15.
5:31)--Adam.12 4; News 6; Family Affair 8; Eelec .
Co.20,33; dam .12 13.
6:0&lt;&gt;-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; A\IC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:JG-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13;Aiidy Grllfltl16;
CBS News B, 10; Once Up&lt;in a Classic 20; Boy Scout
Training 33.
7:0&lt;&gt;-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4;
Bowling
tor Dollars 6; Muppel Show 8; : News 10; To Tell
the Truth 13; My Three Sons 15; Almonac 20.
7' »--Hollywood squares 3,-4; Ohio State Lol1ery 6;
Yesterday's Answer
Price Is Right 8; MacNeii ·Lehrtr Report 20,33;
Wild
Kingdom 10; Nashville on the Rood 13; Dolly
15 Exasperate d 27 Used a dril l
15. .
21 Poet's
29 Receded
8,0&lt;&gt;-Fanfastlc Journey 3,4,1S; Weltome Back, Kotter
nightfall
31 Gangland
6, 13; Waltons 8, 10; VIsions 20; Masterpltct Theatre
22 Chalice
moniker
33.
.
veil
32 Painting
9:0&lt;&gt;-Barney Miller 6,13 ; Hawaii Flve'O 8; Ten Who
~3 Di stribute
style
Dared 10; VIsions 33.
12 wds.)
35 " The
9' 31)-Movle " Yesterdoy'sChlld" 3,4,15; Tony Randall
6,13; Jeonne Wolf With 20. "
24 TV adjunct
Emerald -- "
10
'
0&lt;&gt;-Streets
of San Francisco 6, 13; Barnaby Jones I ;
25 Bombastk
37 Ending for
News
20.
talk
treat
10, 31)-Woman 20,33.
11 :0&lt;&gt;-News 3,4,6,8, 10.13, 15; Mot+ Nell-Lehrer Repori
33.
.
11 :»--Johnny Carson 3.4.15; To Be Announced 6.13;
Kolak 8; Mary Hortman 10; ABC News 33.
12 ,01)-Mavle " The Postman Always Rings Twice" 10;
Janakl 33.
. 12:41)-Movle "The Story of Pretty Boy Floyd" 1.
' 1:0&lt;&gt;-Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.
Chonnel Five
7:lJO-Paul Gaudino Family Fitness
7:30-Coach's Corner
8:0()-(;able Journal
9, oo-consullorlon
9' 3G-High Adventure
IO ,tJ0-700 Club

offering

RACINE - Good 3 bedroom ond dlnlny r.oom, IQW
utilities, even a garden space. Priced at only $8,500.

~~;.~HhJ,~&amp;~¥~

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 3, tm
6:0G-Sunrlse Semester 10.
6' 15--F arm Report 13.
6' 20-Not for Women Only 13.

or magazine

SAVE ON
CARPniNG

CENTRAL REAlTY ai

SPECIAL- 3 bedroom and aTTaChad ' go rage, totaf
electric home under construction on 112 acre lot, Owner
will finish In 30 days lor buyer or wlllaell "as Is". May
take frode . Locotod near Chisler.

.

34 Newspaper

..........__

LANGSVILLE- 561crn modem 3 bedroom l'lt ito,.Y
farm house with llro pl.ce, sevtrol fruit trees, ·
approxlmotety 15 ltros lflloblt, bltlanct In Pttlluro.
Loca1td noor Longsvllle. Prlcol'lductcl lor quick nit
$22,500.

'

~~~~

5¥

Pass

Rcai-EstateforSaJ.,' -

. '...... AD WAY

---

l!oOARD OF

KEN GROVER .

1

1

• MEI:'T$ .TO
HEAl'. CAROL.
' READ HER
FATHER:S

Wedclifi9S

1·9·77 1 mo.

ol

~~.tDentel

Sauthelsln' Ohio

Truss Rlftei.to.

&lt;

Commercial
Schools

ANY PITCH
ANY SIZE

manufactured housing .
Doub!e wldes &amp; .modular
homtl by Skyline &amp; Fuqua
Homes Inc.
1100 E. Mlln 51.
Pomeroy, Ohio
992·7034
Hrs.9:00o.m.
To Dusk

cCONOLINE HOME
INSULATION. INC.
1815 Washington Blvd .
Belpre, Phone (614) 4237564 day, or 992-6039
evenings.
Blown in tibtrgtass walls
and allies. 20 Pet. Savings
on Viny I and Steel Sidings.
Replacerri~nt and storm
windowS. 3l yurs adUill
expeirence.
Financing Available
C. A. Newman, Pres.
1-25·1 mo., pd .

, INDU5TRII;$

Aerial

Kingsbury tbne
Sales Inc.
We handle only the bast In

~·
~

Mc.KEE

For Sale

....

News Notes

Phone
MODERN CHEMICAL

AuhJ~
1969 CHEVROlET Bisquoine : 1966
BUICK Electro , 225; 2 Rokan
triolbikes. Phone 9..49·2432,
1972 GRANO Torino, ps .. · and
p.b . air co nditioned ,
automatic
., ' new A· l condition .
$1.400. PHone 742-2008.
Jq65 VW. $200 . Phone [30AJ
773 -5688 alter 4 p.m.
DEPENDABL E 1968 BUICK El ectro ,
$295. Phone 7.42·2.460.
1976 CUSTOM VAN , F150 Ford,
verv sharp. Crushed vel11el.
high-low shag. ice bo&gt;~ . bed .
Capt ain's seals , lender flair s,
wide tires, whi te wagoO wheel.
351 V-8 automatic transm ission, p.s.; trdisc . brakes . Take
over payments , mode 10 large
Povments and dow n payment .
Will accept trade in. Call
7&lt;2·2175.

PHO'IOGWJIY .

STRIPPING, ftEPAIRING
REFINISHING &amp;
UPHOLSTERING

1972 AMC HORNET
$1695
Sparf·a·bout wagon, clean Interior. good ti res, rad io, 6
cyl inder, automatic transmission .

COINS, CURRENCY . tokens , old

PROFESSIONAL

NOTICE! ! !

WIN AT BRIDGE
Forcing bid bOmbs at five

Ct\PTAIN EASY

" '· t

$2995
1973 CAPRICE 4 DR . HT
Local 1 owner car. black vinyl roof, green 1nter1or ,
white.wall tires, alr, automatic, power steering and
brokes.

homes .

Ph one area code 6 14-423 -953 1.

pocket watches and chains ,
silver and gold . We need 1%4
and ol der silver coins . Buy, s&amp;ll ,
or· trade ' Calf Roger Wamsley .
742 -2331.

2 SIGNS

1975 CHEVY EL CAMINO
$3995
Cllitsslc, 350, V~8. automatic, power steering and
brakes, roily wheels. radio, black and very attractive,

CASH paid for all makes and
models

Business

Po.meroy
~OF QUAU~ Motor Co.

parts, or com plee households.
Write M. 0 . Millvr, Rt . 4,
~ome~o.:( Ch i~: Call 992 · 77~.

ifa ~fi 8dOntOnlJ I 'truo u 3

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nav. 22) The
path to your goals today is rocky.
Don't make matters worse by
jousting with wll')dmllis along the
way.
SAOinAAIUS (Nov. 23·0tc.
f
b
21) Don't· permit yoursel to e
drawn into a political o r

t:J\

8:30-Jacksons 10.
9' 0&lt;&gt;-Borelta 6,13; Movie "Cage Without a Kty" 1,10;
Great Performances 33; Soull&lt;lstage 20.
10'0&lt;&gt;-Toles of the Unexpecttd 3,4, 15; Chtrllt's Angela
6,13; News 20 .
'
10:31)-Mol)loge 20.
11 ' Qef-News 3,4,6,8,10, 13, 15; MatNtii-Lehrtr ~eport
33; Monty Python's Flying Circus 20.
11 :31)--Johnny Corson 3,4,15; Rookies 6,13; Movie " A
Malter of Wlfe ... and Death," 8; Mary Hortman 10;
ABC News 33.
12,0&lt;&gt;-Movle "Our Man Flint" 10; Janakl 33.
lNI)-Mystery ofthe Week 6,13.
I ' DO-Tomorrow 3.4.
2' 11)--News 13.
Channil F.lvt
7,oo-Poul Gaudino Family Fltneu
7' »--Riple at PPHS Bosketblll
10,JG-700·Ciub
·

1

,
til

• •,.Jio

'

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.• c
I

)

..

�.
.
Area Deaths !Load limits

:• · ·Tile~ Seallllll. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., W~ntsday, Feb. 2,1977

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

I
1

State Institute, he was born
Qc:t. 2~. 1921 in GClil ipons to

husband, Onnle, formerly of

Langsvlll.e, and a son. Dorsey
Jarrett France.
·
Surviving
are
five
daughters, Mr$. · Louise
Templeton, Huntington, with
whom Mrs, France- made her
home ; Mrs. June Douthat,
Tampa, Fla. ; Mrs. Lillian
Chapman, Mobile, Alabama ;
' Mn. John (Oorma Dean)
• Utterback. Flemingsburg,
Ky., and Miss Clara Jean
France, Mlddlep&lt;H't; o son.

Wallace Funeral Home In
. Barboursville, W. Va .. with

the Rev. Bill Davis and the
Rev . Mr. Wickline officiating.
Burial will ba in Oeklawn
Cemetery at Barbounvllle.
Friends may colt ot the

' funeral home this afternOOI'!·
,..

....---..
Our Interest Is
Greater For You

:~

i'

:

pen111tw;

Columbus .

icing on the Ohio River which

One

brother

war 11.

gasoline outpu t in barges

· Funeral arrangements will
be announced by the Wa ugh ·

ha ve decreased

He wa.s a veteran of Worlc;f

her husband , Clark Jividen ;
four brothers and one sister .
A member of the Racin e

Methodist Church. the ·Happy

Hustlers Sunday School Class
and a 50-year member of th e

Order

of

Eastern

Star

Charles J ividen , Athens , one

is

accounts withdr•wn prior
to the d11te of m•turity .

g~s oline

deliveries to tank loads over
lrlalley-Wood Funeral Home. the highways. The situation is
further complicated by the
fact that continuing winter
storm
s have delayed .the
. LILLIAN M. JIVIDEN
movement
of tank trucks.
RACINE - Li lli an M.
Ashland Oil of Kentucky
Jividen , 79 , Ra cine , d ied
J:uesday In Al&amp;any .
told ODO T tha t Friday's
Mrs. Jividen was born Aug . storm caused a backlog of 700
15, 1897 to the late Robert a nd
Sarah Jane Burt Gorslin . She loads at its operations. An
w"asalso preceded in death by average load is 7,500 gallons.

is survived by a son , Dr .

certificate

o

storage facilities . Tra nsporta ~ion delays caused by

CertHicates

~II

emergency in Ohio.
Restrictions on fuel oil
loads have been eased for
more than two weeks, but
petroleum producers in Ohio
and adjoin ing states say
productionoffueioilhasbeen
held up because back logged
gasoline stocks are tyine up

Spencer, Gall ipolis ; Bill y,
Tucson, Ar iz., and Herman ,

daughter . Mrs . Otis Mc CIIhtock , Racine ; lwo

A subS:fintial

grandsons , Thomas Ji vi den ,
Cape Coral , Fla .; John

McClintock , Racine ; tw o

granddaughters ,

Ellen

Jividen , 01icago, Ill .; Mrs

larr'J: Wiles, Racine ; seven
.great -grandchildren ; two
sisters-in-law ,, Edith Jivi den.
M iddleport
and • Grace
Jividen , Racine, one niece .
and three newphews .
Funeral services w ill be
Friday, 2 p.m . at f he Racine
Methodist Chur:ch wi th the
Rev . Timothy Smith of ficiating . Buria l will be in
Wells Cemetery . Fr ien d s
may call at Ewing Funeral
Home after 7 lhis evening
until noon on Friday .

The Athens County

Savings &amp; Loan Co .
296 Stttnd St.

Pamerov , Otllo

~
~

I '

grand -

On 90-0ay

invoked on

•.

one

gasoline have ~ been raised

ca rries the bulk of the

5.7 S per cent paid on
90 day Certificates of

.

five tons temporarily t o
alleviate
the
-heating

Chapter No. 134. Racine, she

, Deposit. Sl.OOO.OO
· Minimum. . Interest
Payable Quarter! y.

Tr ansportation

preceded him in dea th .

5.75% .

'

State

Now you know
Although cultivated by the
ll.rabs as early as 600 A.D. ,
coffee was•not widely known
in Europe until 1650 or in
North America until about 20
years later.

TJIE·INN PLACE
Thursday Night Special

The produce rs sa id increas ing the load limits··wilJ

help to move out the gasoline
so that fu el oil producti on can

be continued. Ashland Oil,
whi ch supplies 35 to 40 percent of its production to Ohio,
told ODOT that an increase of
about 17 percent in the load
limit would allow an increase
of 20,000 barrels a day over
the 70,000 barrels norma llY
moved out by tank truck.
Director Weir said tank
load limits on both fuel oil and
gasoline are. being allowed to
go from 80,000 to 90,000
pounds on issuance of a

special overload permit. He
sa id the situation will be
reviewed at the end of each,

week fu r the duration of the
emergency.

••
RAW COURAGE
DALLAS (UP! ) - The
president of the Adolph Coors
Company edged out the wife
of golfer Lee Trevino to win
Ute annual Bonehead of tbe
Year Award .
William K . "Bill" Coors
will accept the award FridaY.
for his company's new press
tab beer cans . ..
JoU!ing Coors will be !he
runnerup, Claudia Trevino,
who disrupted her husband 's
professional g~ifing plans in
1976 bv asking him to move a
potted plant - a chore that
left him with back trouble .
Brad Angers, Bonehead
award chairman, cited Coors'
raW courage" in hitting the
market with a beer can tab
dr inkers "couldn't rip off and
· toss away. ...This is the
Bonehead process working in
the tr adition t)la t makes
America great. "
11

'
VIsit Our Salad Bar
Baked Steak
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gra'i'Y
Vegetable
Hot Rolls
Coffee, Tea or ,.Milk

"

••
"

-•
~

$295
.
.

Plus Tax

THE MEIGS INN

t

Pomeroy, Q,
Phone 992-6304
Pl;lZA SHACK Phone 992·6304

992-3629 '

"

MEIGS THEATRE
CLOSED FOR
VACATION
WATCH FOR
OPENING DATE

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of

interstate

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JAMES SCHLESINGER;
the new admlDlstration's
energy czar, bas rua into
fire from conservation
interests. Critics are
concerned that the former
Defense sec~tary and CIA
director, wbo. bas a
reputation for toughness,
may push development of

new energy resources
without regard to the effect
·on the elvironmenl.

OHIOAN NAMED
WASIUNGTON (UP!)
Rep. Chalmers P. Wylie, R·
Ohio, has been named to the
Joint Committee on Defense
Production .
House Speaker Thomas P.
O'Neill · selected Wylie
Tuesday .

OHIOANS VOTE
WASHINGTON "-l ilPI )
The vote by which the House,
on a 367 to 52 roll call,
approved Its version of an
emergency natural gas bill
Tuesday:
· Voting for were 258 Demo.
crats and 109 Republicans.
Voting against were 24
Democrats
and
28
Republicans.
Ohlo1 10 Democrats, 13
Republicaas
Democrats for : "'shley,
Carney, Luken, Mottl, Oakar,
Pease, Seiberling, Stokes, ·
Yanik,
Republicans for: Ashbrook,
Brown, Devine, Gradison;
Guyer, .Harsha, Kindness,
Latta, Miller, Regula, J.
William Stanton, Whalen,
·Wylie.

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RIB
STEAKS

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t'roouce
Specials

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Rich N'"Ready

ORANGE
1p?:s~~~n
DRINK............................

LB. ·~_ 39

I

· BettyZane

·

SMOKED

~\ '

PICNIC

~

HAMS

J

t

1
~

10

lb. $}

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billlon cubic foot deficit in
naturalgassuppliesforhome
owners and hwnan needs
customers by March 31.
However, gas suppliers
have said there should be
enough gas for residences
lllrough the winter season if
conservation and some
curtaihnents are continued.
Rhodes also asked U.S.
Agriculture Secretary Robert
Bergland
to
declare
"emergency condiitions" for

Ohio'sfoodstampprogramto
help rural families obtain
food when they are evacuated
from their homes.
The state Development Deperbnent said today Carter's
declaration Wednesday night
of a weather emergency for
Ohio will give the state
immediate federal aid to help
reopen vitsl supply routes to
agricultural educational
goverrunentai, commercial
and
industrial
establishments.
Rhodes said Carter could
declare a natural gas
emergency in Ohio under
terms · of the newly passed
Emergency Natural Gas Act
of 1977.
A
spokesman
in

Three m8keup games set
tonight, Friday, Saturday
U there's enough fuel to keep pipes from freezing who cares aholll the people? -and if present plans bold
up, the red hot Mara.uders will host three league
opponents tonight, Friday and Saturday.
Coach Ron Logan has indicated Waverly (34, .f-7)
comes l&lt;l RockSprinp tonlgbt, league leadiug Logan (7·1,
10.1) plays at Meigs Friday night and Saturday. Dlght it
will be Wellston (1-5, 1-9) coming ID.
The Marauden, rldlDg a streak of four straight wlas,
all in the upset category, are soUdly in third place of the
Soutbe.R8Iern Ohio Coaference, f-3 lD the league and 5-4
overaU.
The reserve game start at6 tpoigbt and at 6:30p.m.
Friday and Soturday.
Wear plenty of winter clothing, as the g)m will oot be
beated.

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VOL XXVII

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49e

S lb. bag

e

"59

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MOVING AHEAD FOR SUMMER
THE HARD WAY
- R&lt;iy Young, employed by Roger Hornsby who has the
coritract to erect the Syracuse Swirnmin@ Pool, is laying
water line inside the bath house Wednesday. Young said
he had to use a jack hammer oo dig up the ground to lay
the lines as the ground is frozen over two feet deep.

4 Way Diai·A·Nap to clean any carpet

~~"ll~fai

from lowest nap to shag-edge cleaner
-removable disposable dust bag

United Press International
COSHOCTON, OHIO - POUCE, FIREFI~liTERS ,and
National Guardsmen dynamited· the Muskingwn R1ver
Wednesday in their search for the body of a 12-year-old boy,
believed drowned alter falling through the ice-coated river.
Gregory Scheetz and a 14-year-old classmate, Mark Madison,
were walking on the Muskingum Tuesday looking for
~clmena for a science fair project when the ice gave way and
both boys !ell-into the freezing water.
·
·
Madison managed oo scramble to shore and run a quarter
mile _,his clothes freezing to his body - to a downtown
ambulaii~ station. He told police he had last seen his friend
clinging to ~ piece of ice.

lncludee deluxe
attachment,.

gge
Plus tax &amp; deposit

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

WUISVD..LE, KY. - MOVING SLOWLY BUT steadily, a
group of 30 tows !elided with critical· fuel supplies were
successfully negotiating the i~o~~trewn Ohio River, leading the
way for a resumption of regular barge traffic on the waterway.
"There is no reason why they can't make it the rest of the way
up to Piltlburgh," said Martin Pedigo, a spokesman for the
Army Corps of Engirieers. "The barges moving upatream
seem to be doing pretty well."
He said the 30oows, each pulling about 10 barges, had moved
tlpatream of Uniontown, Ky. Wednesday, hea~lng on toward
Louisville. Pedigo explained that of the 300 barges, tiP-&amp; were
loaded with fuel oil, ao carried coal, 2().25 had rock salt and the
rest were tr81Ulporting grain, chemic~ and other
commodlties.
WASHINGTON THE FOOD ANll DRUG
Administration proposed today oo ban the coun~·s most
widely used lood coloring -Yellow No. 5 - In ~rtam drugs,
wt not In food. Foods containing the dye, it ~d, shquld be
labeled to alert persons of possible allergic reactions. Tbe
.Uergy occurs mostly among a small percentage of thoee
persons who alao are allergic to aspirin.
·
· ·
The dye would be banned outright in five types of non' preiiCI'iptlon dnJga '- pain relleven, antiblstamlnes, coughcold remedies anti-asthmatic drugs and . oral nasal
deroriges&amp;anta. Oilier truga, still allowed to use the coloring.
would have to state on their labels: ''This product contains
FD&amp;C Yellow No. 3which may cause allergic-type reactions in
certabi iiiiCtpllble people."
COLUMBUS, OlllO- LAWJIEI':ICE FRIEND, a SZ.year·
old machine operator whO is not making TV tubea this. week
becallll the Owena·fillnois plant here has closed due oo the
naiural ps ~ortage, listelll!d hard Wednelday night .wben
J'relldlnt' Carter begaq talking about unemployment and
welfare lind tu reform.
Friend IBid carter's words were reasaurlng. Hia wife,
Wilda, 1gned, adciing, "We both voted for Carter and I feel
now like he's reaUy going whelp the country. He's what we
need· to br1JC Ute country out,of this unemployment and the
situation we're in." .
.
• .
"I liked ti!JI part abolll refonnllll the tax sltuatio~,"
(C.tlmled on pqe 10)

COllAGE
CHEESE
24 oz.

gas supply problems.
Wednesday while Cincinnati
"We must proiect people in Gas &amp; Electric Co. said its
their homes and provide cutback to large users would
them the help they need even be extended until Feb . 12.
if we have to make a major In addition , CG&amp;E
reallocation for natural gas announced 30 per cent
now used for industrial curtailments to small,
I'JI'poses in other stales," nondomestic users.
said Rhodes .
The earllec curtailments
The shutdojVIl of Utousands were scheduled to be lifted at
of Ohio factories, schools, 8 a.m. Saturday.
churches and business
All illree utllltes said the
continues, meanwhile. Three additional cutbacks were '
of the states's leading natural necessitated by curtailments
gas companies say they will instituted by their supplier .extend a nearly 100 per cent Columbia Gas transmission
curtailment
to large Corp.
industrial and corrunercial
East Ohio Gas Co . of
users until next week.
Cleveland said it would
Columbia Gas and Qayton decide later this week
Power &amp; Light Co. extended whether to continue a
Uteir cUtbacks to a a.m. . sh utdown of its large

a1 y

POM EROY·M IDDLEPORT, OHIO

10

•

industrlal customers. Eut
Ohio's curtailment to maintenance levelli was scheduled to
end Friday.
In other energy . rna ttera
Wednesday, the state
Development
Department
reported about 1.5 million
Ohioans temporally laid off
because of the energy crlJis
while the Ohio Manufactuers
Association said 4,500 of the
state's 16,000 plants had been
forced to close.
John M. Stackhouse, state
director qf agrirulture, asked
the U.S.' Agriculture Department to survey Ohio counties
to determine if disaster relief
is warranted for rural areas
because of the severe
weather.

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enttne

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Carter wore ·a sweater, slacks and tie as he delivered the
chat seated before a wood-burning fireplace in the White
House Family Library.
Noting his signing of the Emergency Natural Gas Act a few
moments earlier, Carter said he would propose creation of a
Department of Energy later this month and ~ comprehensive
energy program around April 20.
He will ask Congress this week, he said, for a bill allowing
him to start ~organizing the federal goverrunent. He said the
administration already is · reviewing the 1,250 advisory
committees and commissions to see how many can be abolished.
He said he has asked his Cabinet to follow his lead at the
White House in cutting the number of top staffers by a third ,
and that he will put a ceiling on tbe number of persons
employed by federal agencies.
"Government officials can't be sensitive to your problems if
we are living like royalty here in Washing Inn," Carter said,

recalling·his decision to eliminate limousine service for his
staff and other officials.
.
Carter said he was "determined to have a strong, Jean,
efficient fighting force, " ·and added ''I want our nation's
actions to make you proud."
"We will continue to express our concern about violations of
human rights , as we have during the last week, without
upsetting our efforts ooward friendly relations with other
countries/' Carter said.
'
He referred to the controversial State Department statements about Czechoslovakian liberties and Soviet disaident
Andrei &amp;jkharov, but again, he did not name them directly.
Carter said !bat during his brief time in office he has learned
there are "many things" a President cannot do.
.
"There is no energy policy that we can develop that would do
more good than voluntary conservation," he said . "There is no
economic policy that will do as much as shared fai th in hard
work, efficiency and Ute future of our system."

Schools to stay
open this week

YOU SAVE '29.95

FOOD.STAMP
SHOPPERS
I
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.

7 billion cubic feel is needed
oo meet the needs of Ohio's
residential and other prio~ity
one customers to prevent
serious outages in Ohio."
The deficit was calculated'
from figures supplies
Rhodes' office by II of tbe
state's 32 natur~l gas utilities
responding to · Rhodes '
request for an energy crisis
status report. '
"These calculatio ns are
based on nonnal weather
patterns," Rhodes said. " If
sub-normal weather occurs
we will need more than the 7
billion cubic feet ."
Tom Moyer Rhodes
executive assistant said he
had no idea whether the .new
federal ·act would help Ohio's

•

By WESLEY G. PIPPERT
WASIUNGToN (UP!) - In his first informal talk to the
American people, President Carter called lor a renewal of the
fighting spirit of World War II to restore a .,.nse of "common
interest" that can help solve the nation's, problems .
Carter also outlined in a "fireside cha\" Wednesday night a
vigorous agenda for cutting the number of high goverrunent
officials,' putting a ceiling on the number of goverrunent
·employes and moving to fulfill a ·host of campaign promises.
"With Ute help of my predecessor, we have come through a
very difficult period in our nation's history. But for almost 10
years we have not had a sense of a common national interest,"
'
Carter said.
Recalling the unity and spirit of World War II, he added :
"I believe we are ready for that same spirit again- oo plan
ahead, work together, and use common sense. Not because of
war, but because we realize we must act together to sol )'I! our
problems, and because we are ready to trust one another."

··•

'6495

WE WELCOME

In

Carter.asks renewed .sense of unity

'

sl9.95 ATTACHMENTS

COLA

NO. 205

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AND

CoCA

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Washington for the Federal
Disaster Assistance
Administrtion ilaid Robert E.
Connor, the Chicago regional
director of the FDAA , has
been
named
federal
coordinating officer and will
marshall the federal relief
effort in Ohio.
At a briefing Wednesday
afternoon, the governor said
gas utilities had projected a 7
billion cubic foot deficit in
natural gas supplies for
priority one customers homeowners hospitals and
low-volume retail stores through March 31.
"It is clear that Ohio nteds
7 billion cubic feet of natural
gas not now in the utilities' ·
forecast " said Rhodes. "This

e

EUREKA $74.95
UPRIGHT SWEEPER

Broughton's

carton

·I

By JOHN T. KADY
Ualled Pn11 Inlernatlooai
President Carter declared
an
Wednesday
night
emerJ!ency exlsta in Ohio
because of the accumulation
ol lee and snow in the state
oot has not yet acted on a
request by Gov. James A.
Rhodes to declare a natural
gu emergency in Ohio.
Rhodes, In a telegram to
carter Wednesday night, said
natural gas suppliers told
him they would have a 7

SPECIAL SALE

.BOTH FOR

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mergency .

,

Pl1TSBURGH- U. S. STEEL CORP. says it discussed
with "officials in the new administration" its latest 4.8 per cent
increase on the price of til) plate but had "no idea" whether
President Carter knew of the action beforehand. The incr~ase,
which becomes effective March 13, is on tin products used to
manufacture. beer and soft drink cans and other food
containers.
Other tin producers, such as Jones &amp; Laughlin Steel Corp .,
National Steel Corp. and Bethlehem Steel Corp, said today
Utey were "studying" the U. S. Steel price action. Industry
sources said an 8 per cent increase had been expected, and tliat
tin makers and buyers alike were surprised U.S. Steel's bOost
was lower .
U.s. Steel blamed unrecovered production costs for the
increaSe, the first on tin products since February 1976.

I

' Cross Sons Store .
vVaid
Expires Feb. 5, 1977

~

WASIUNGTON- THE.F~DEJ'tAL GOVEERNMENT has
Injected $10 million into six states to hire workers to battle
snow, ice and the energy crisis. Labor Secretary F. R:tY
Marshall said the department allocated the funds to hire
workers for snow removal fuel transportation and emergency
repairs. The funds are' being given New York, Ohio,
Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Maryland and Virginia, Marshall
said.
Marshall said Tuesday he also has imltructed state
unemployment offices in a total of 18 states to implement
emergency mass layoff procedures oo handle unemployment
insurance claims. The procedures include weekend operations
if ne~sary.
·

Pnces Effectilll Thursday lhru Sunday ,.

FLOUR

Ll.·st~

(Continued from page I)
igriculture Department says.
BU\ it may be too soon to tell if th~ shortage of hay will
i)oost meat prices later this year. Heavter rations are needed .
to help animals maintain body heal in the bone..:hilling "
weather officials noted in a weekly crop .weather report
Tuesday'.
Farmers in many parts of the nation .r"llorted hay supplies
shrinking fast," the re;loft said. James Nix, a department
livestock economist, said the tight hay supply may not rmse
prices if the winter is followed by a moist spring to improve
forage productnn.
\

09.

ORANGES
ior

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79.

Maine

ROBIN HOOD
All PURPOSE

•

•

·News •• in Briefs

8-16 oz.
~ttles

US No.1

COUPON

I

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All information rqust be In
the Middleport Mayor 's office
by Monday , February 7.
Said Hoffman : "Your help •
is needed. Without the
complete cooperation of
businesses and residents, •
total damage estimates will '
oot be accurate. This will be
the only way Gov. Rhodes
will know how much damage
has been done in Ohio and will .
determine whether federal ·
assistance can be obialned."

¢ · POlATOES

Ilb.· 25~

POPCORN ................~~.~:.

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NASHVD..LE, Tenn. (UP! )
- Billy Carter, the beerlmrinn"i.. r,. fun-loving, downhome brother of the
president, has hired a high·
powered agent to market hi,s
''celebrltyhood.''
Tandy Rice, president of
Top Billing Inc. of Nashville,
said Tuesday Carter signed
an exclusive agreement with
him.
"We are going to represent
Mr. Carter
in
th e
marketplace - in the area of
personal appearances and
with the media," Rice said.
" If Billy Carter's not a
celebrity, then there's not a
peanut in Georgia.;,

mall.
Businesses are requested to
list any damage done plus
business hours which have
been lost due to the weather
and approximately how mur:t&gt;
business has been ,lost m
comparison with January,
1976.
-lndwllrles and'businesses
are requested to report · the
number of their employees
who have been out of work
due to the severe weather.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

USDA CHOICE

••

A STAR IS BORN

HOLLOWAY MENDING .
LAGUNA BEACH, Calif.
(UP!) -Actor Sterling Holloway. 72, has been released
from the hospital upon a
complete recovery from a
heart attack last month.
The bushy-haired, highvoiced comedian is best
known as the voice of Winnie
the Pooh lor Walt Disney and
lor playing Waldoin Ute "Life
of Riley" television series in
the 1950s.
rates
of
5
percent
or
above
be
Ohio's energy shortage is
permitted
a
5
year
variance
worsening and prospects for
the future are not bright as · as far as federal air pollution
long as we labor under severe restrictions dealing with high
winter weather conditions. sulfur coal are concerned. In
The lack of energy is not the other words, Ohio .and ot~er
result of a conspiracy or states with high unemanything as sinister as that ployment rates · would be
although some might suggest pertnitted to burn high su llur
otherwise . The plain truth is coal irrespective of the Clean
that ther~ is not an infinite 'Air Act.
Naturally I am concerned
·supply of .fossil fuels like
about
clean air and the en·
natural gas. oil, etc. We are .
vironmental
conditions of
running out because we
Southeastern
Ohio. I was
consume so much. Part of the
botn
in
Southeastern
Ohio,
shortage
prbblem
is
raised
here
and
I
know
of
our
unreasonable ' government
area's
unique
natural
beauty.
regulation and control, including artificial pride But when I see Southeastern
controls on natural gas, Ohioans out of work, when I
which inake it economically see school children cheated
impractical to produce new out of their education, when I
see rising utility bills and
supplies.
President Carter has called people shivering in cold
for federal decontrol and homes all because of an
Members of Congress, in- energy shortage , I am
cluding myself, have called determined to do aU I can
for federal decontrol. We within my power to correct
mu;1 have it to try to meet the situation.
,P,erhaps we will have a
our needs.
little
more sulfur in tlie air by
I receive letter after letter
burning
Ohio coal but after.
in my office asking this
checking
the climate of
question: why is it'when Ohio
opinion
in
the
loth District, I
needs energy to heat our
have
come
to
the conclusion
homes , our schools, our
that
we
would
rather have
places of busine.ss and we are
more
s~llur
in
the
air during
sitting on billions of dollars
the
winler
season
than risk
worth of Ohio coal, we can't
use that coal because of unemployment, school
federa l environmental closings and long term
regulations made pursuant to economic decay.
We rnust continue to seek to
the 1970 Federal Clean Air
develop less environmentally ·
Act'
I think the Sou~stern harmful energy som-ces like
Ohioans who have written to solar energy, etc. so we can
me have proposed a very strike a reasonable. balance
pertinent 'Question worthy of between environmental
11oncerns and economic
serious consideration.
Consequently, I am concerns. For the present, we
working on legislation, now in should be able to use our Ohio
the final drafting stage, that coal.
As always, I solicit y0ur
Y;ould mandate that states
like Ohio with unemployment guidance and suggestions.

Shedd's

••

Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman today requested
assistance or' businesses and
residents in assessing
damage which has occurred
In property and business
losses during the recent
sever;e storm and win ter

t&lt;ansportatlon of stolen
property Tuesday .
The FBI said McKeever
tried to sell a customers' list
belonging to Safeguard Busi·
ness Systems Inc., King of weatHer.
Prussia, Pa., to Reynolds and
Gov. James Rhodes has
Reynolds Co., Dayton, for requested
that
this
$450,000.
information he compiled and
The FBI said McKeever · forwarded to the Director of
was arrested a!IA!I' agents Disaster Services In order
found about the proposed sale 'Utat federal assistance may
''through oormal chanels.
be requested by the governor.
"There will be no other
The mayor · asks that
charges in this," said an FBI anyone having damage to list
spokesman. "It was strictly a it and approximate cost of
one-man operation."
repair . This infor.mation can
either be left at the mayor 's
Office in person or sent in by

Director , David Weir , has

GOf"don , Allan and Cynthia
Harris and Mrs . J ack
I Renee ) Pasha!. all of

daughter; brothers and
sisters, Mrs . Thompson
(Lucille) Casey . Gallipol is;
Mrs. Frank I Loretta l Digg s.
Coalton ; 'Mrs . Raym ond
(Virginia) Ra toliff. Berry·
vi lle.
Va .;
Ke~neth ,
Chillicothe ; Wen dell ,
Gallipolis; Dale, Tul sa.
Olcla.; Mrs. James {Betty)

12 grandchildren and 10

'Iii

charge

.

announced that load limits on
· of f ue1 01'I an d
transportatton

Columbus ;

lyle L. France of Kanauga ,

grea t-gr andchlldren.
Funeral services will be at
• 2 p,m . Thursday at the

arrested by FBI agents on a

.

the late Charles and Blanche

Morton
He IsHarris.
survlve\j by his
children , Rebecca, Ronald ,

parents, Mrs. France was
protoded In d.,.th by her

l

Michael J . McKeever, 31,
Warminster, Pu.. , was

Paul R . Harris, S5, 84 4

Nl-5. France was bern on

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lifted for
Fourth Ave ., Gallip.olls, died. emergency

et 7:30a .m .. this. morn ing at
his residence .
A fireman at the Gallipolis ..1

Damage list needed in Middleport .

PF.NNSYLVANIA!'I
ARRF.sTED
DAYTON , Ohio tUPI )

~-~'

PAUL HARRIS

. Jan. ~2. 118~ In Wayne
County, W. Va .. a daughter of
the late Vlrgtnus end Lovrt
Lovejoy. S"- was a mtmber
ollhe A/llloch Bop list Chllt'ch
at Ona. W. Vo . BesideS her

:

..;:~

1

DORA MAY FRANCE
LANGSVILLE - Mr&amp;.
Dora• May France, 91 ,
Hunllll(jfan, W. Va., formerly
. of Langsville, died Tuesday
In Hunllnglon.

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age
I

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tendance Wednesday In the tonight. There will be no heat
district was over 84 percent. in the gymnasium for the
Classrooms were monitored games, Dowler said.
through the day and at the
Dowler indicated that he
junior high building . in _,and the board wtll be
Middleport, temperatures In Oj)e~ating on a day to day
the classrooms ranged .from basts in regard to additional
40 to 68 degrees.
s~hool closings. However,
· The Salem Center School, when students reported back
one of two buildings In the to classes Wednesday they
district having heat other . were given long range
than natural gas, was closed . assignments by the faculty so
today due ·to a sewage that work can be done at
problem. It was reported that ho~e should additional
the Bradbury School remains closmgs occur. ·
open but all activities have
been moved to the rear
portions of the building due to
the low temperatures (In the
30s) In the front portions.
Meantime, a basketball
game was played last night at
the Meigs High School and
another game will be played
Columbia Gas of Ohio, inc.
announced today that it
would be necessary to con·
tlnue to liffilt it,s curtailed ·
Industrial and commercial
customers to only that gas
needed to protect plant
facilities until at least 8:00
a.m. Wednesday, Febl'llllry 9.
The company continued Its
EAST MEIGS - Steps to use styrofoam insuiation at
conserve energy, par- most windoW., with plastic appeal to all other comticularly in the natural gas covering at some, In order to mercial, residential, and
heated Chester Elementary allow S()me natural light into human needs customers to
School, were taken Wed· UW rooms. Worlt on this at keep thermostats set as low
nesday night by the Eastern both Chester and Tuppers as possible and to otherwise
Local Board of Education in a Plains schools was to begin keep usage to a bare
minimum.
today.
special session.
aMouncement came
The board learned that only
· The session was called
when It was learned that the two of three burners of a coal following notification by the
. Chesier building was near or furnace were CQnverted to company's supplier,
over lilt natural gas allot· gas some 10 years ago, Columbia Gas Trsnsmission
ment. The board decided to , leaving one coal burner on Corp. that, under directives
hand. ·The board decided to of the Federal Power Comput the remaining coal mission, it would deliver only
burning unit 'Jnto operation enough gas to · "meet
Road damage ib and
priority
I
use coal heat to sup- essential
plement gas heat. It was requirements and !et'Vlces to
M~igs estimated
agreed to order coal today customers which cannot
Damace to rodo In and to make a test run of the sustain natural gas curMelia C011nty hal been plan over the weekend.
. taihnents and. !et'Vlces to
Hilma~ tbll weelt at
It was also agreed that customers which cannot
"17 ,IH dae to 1torm there will be no recesSes at sustain natural· gas currellted. caum ..
the elementary sch!)Olli ol the taihnent without irreparable
'Tiie eellmltte waa -de · district since the weather Is injury to life or property unlil
II lbe req-t of M8jor bad anyway and this will cut that date. This action was
GeMra1 JUiet C. Clem, down the heat loss caused by necessary in order to
ldjatat ce.eraJ director children moving in and out of ehentlal requirements
ol Dllaoter lenltel, ud the buildings.
throughout the remainder of
forwarded to lbe diluter
· the winter.
1ervlce. . 1be period Now you know
Priority
I . delivery
Royalists took Oliver ·restrictions was 11rat imposed
eovered wa• alaft Jaa. ·n.
Tbe
eatlmate
waa Cromwell's bot)es out of his liy Columbia Gas Transu lbe C!ClUiy Is to coffin and hanged them on a mission CorporaUon on all of
reeetn federal 111flluee. public gibbet alt~r the Its customers on Friclay,
English Restoration tn 1660. January 28. •
Schoolli of the Meigs Local
School District, which
reopened Wednesday, will
remain open the rest of the
week, according to plans
made by the district board of
education In special session
Wednesday night.
Supt.·Charles L.'Dowler led
a discussion of the natural
gas problem In the district. It
wail the feeling that buildings
are being kept at tern·
peratures as low as possible
and that no more natural gas
is being used In keeping the
schools open than would· be
used in closing the buildings
and maintaining them.
The only way that addltJonal gas could be saved
would be by winterizing the
buildings with no heat at aU
going Into them.
Dowie~ reported that at-

CurtaiJment

continued by
gas company

Board moves to
conserve energy

The

meet

-·17

·~

,.

SCRAPBOOKS COME OUT ·- The current near .
freeze ?f the Ohio River bas sent resideni!J of the Big Bend
scurrymg to their phooo albums to look up snapshots
dating back to January, 1940, when tbe river was frozen
solid and residents walked across on the ice. In the group
pictw:e ·from the left are Don HerbeJ;t Powell, Jinuny
Webb, JoAnn Webb, Mrs. Cora Webb, Pauline Alexander
and Lawrence Balser. The woman with the dog is Mrs .
Leona Hensley, Long Bottom. The other two photos were
provided by Mrs. Ray Pickens of Clifton, W.Va .

Kaiser lays off

1,000 employes
About 1,000 employees of the on temporar)llayoff from day
Kaiser Aluminum Raven· shift Tuesday, unless otherswood plant have .been given wise notified.
A plant spokesman said
indefinite layoffs as a result of
i~tiJt'Iit'IHi:j;j;j;:;:::::;:::::n::::::::j;f the
energy crisis, a employees on temporary
spokesman for- the company . layoff would be advised when
announced.
to resume their normal work
FISH FRY WITH
The layoffs, primarily al- schedules. Nearly one·thinfof
PRESSURE TESI'
feeling the fabrication the plant's 3,400 work force
Who says you ean't operations at the plant, were will be affected by. the cutcombine bualneu wllb effective 'at a a.m. Tuesday. hack, McAdams said.
pleasure?
The cutl!ack was caused by
The necessary propa!le for
Saturday from 11 a.m, severe curtallrilents of nattiral nonnal operation of the plant
until I p.m., at !be Mid- gas and the plant's jnabllity to is available and had 8!ready
dleport Fin Departmeat
.. -~·--' by KalJe but
Headquarters you can obtalll propane shipments at a been pw"'""""'
r,
attend a llab fry otaced by level necessary for normal the problem Ia In tnportlllon
tbeltnmen and also· have operations.
of tthe gas to the plant.
your blood pressn~ taken
According • to L. J,
The conditions of the
while you're there. McAdams, manager of the roadways In West · Virginia ·
Emerceney medical Ravenswood works, all and the factathataomestalel
tecbnlclans will be on band reduction, maintenance, plant prohibit the haufing of
w provide the free blood protect!on, casting and flammable on explosive ·
pressure service to stor~room employees a~ to materials on huardoua roac1a
Cllltomen.
report for work as scheduled. i! causing the dellvery of the
w.-.·.·.·:·:·:·;·:·:·:·':·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·;·:·:·:·:·: Allother employees IIi . the gu to the plant to nm con.::::~;:;:;:;:;:;;;:;:;:l:~:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;::;:::;:;:; fabrication plant were placed. siderably behind schedule.

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