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8--'n. Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport·Pomeroy, 0 .. Monday. Fet&gt; 7. 1977

---------------------- -----,

··!

Area Deaths

Three injured

!
I

Otis Reckard Fulks, 92, a
resl-1 of Scollown, died
Sunday In Holzer Medical
Center.
•
He wu lx&gt;rn Sept. 15. 188~.
In Lawrence County, son of
the lalo Jimmie and Buena
Lewis Fulks.
· ·
Mr. Fulks w&amp;s a retired

farmer and a member of the
Guyan Valley Missionary
Bapllst Church .
· He was r· .receded In death
by his wl e, M.oggle Kerns
'Fulks In 1957. Two daughters

preceded him In death , Mrs.

Harold Blrcham and Eunice

THEADORE .SMITH

Funeral

services

Three persons were injured
In five traffic accidents ln'vestlgated .over the weekend
by the Gallia·Meigs Poat
State Highway Patrol.
The first Injury mllhap
occurred at 6:30 p.m. on the
· Falrfleld-Vanco Rd. west of
Rt. S88 where vehicles clrlven
by Wesley Young, 22,
' Gallipolis and Lena Haney,
25, Gallipolis, collided at a,
hillcrest.
Both drivers, were taken to
the Holzer Medical Center lor
treatment of Injuries. There
was heavy damage to both
vehicles. No charges were
filed.
Richard E. Van Gundy, 41,
Gallipolis, was injured In an
accident at 7:05 p.m.
Saturday on Rt. 35. The patrol
said his auto was struck in the
rear by a vehicle operated by
Oscar Smith, 71, BldweU.

for

Theodore Smith were held
Tuosday at the Rawlings.
Coats

Fun~ral

Home with fhe

Rev,. Dw ight Zavilz of.
tlclatlng.
·
Mr . Sm ith, 60 , died
Saturday at his Fisher S't.
residence In Pomeroy . Burial
was
In
Be~ch
.Grove
Cemetery . Pallbearers were
Lewis Sauer, Robert Wiley,

Robert Smith and Giles
Smith. Dul·of.town relatives

attend ing wer e Mr. and Mrs.

' Robert Wiley , Gahanna ; Mr.
Fulks.
and Mrs . Robert Smith,
Three sons survive ; Grover
Beaver, Pa ., and Clifford
Fulks, Scottown : Harlow Smith, Pittsburgh, Pa .
Fulks, Portsmouth, Va .. and
Armond Fulks, Gallipolis:
, REV. ORVAL HALL

four daughters: Mrs. Frank

(VIrginia)

Rev. Orval L. Hall , 93, a

Harshbarger , resident of Columbus, died
Barboursville, W. Va .; Mrs . Saturday
morning
In
Andy
(Eileen)
Null , Riverside Methodist
.Columbus: Mrs . Lyndall Hospllal, Columbus.
(Flee fa) Dial. Scottown and
Hall was a minister of
~s .
Dayton (Evelyn) theRev.
Ohio West Conference of
Williams, Gallipolis ; two the Uniled Methodist Church
brothers, Burt ~nd Jimmie
69 years .
Fulks, both of Proctorville ; forRev
. Hall refired in 1952.
five sisters:
Fulks

Mrs . Flossie

and

Mrs.

Gladys

He served many churches

· Johnson, both of Scollown:

In the Gallipolis area .
He was a member of the

Pleasant ; Mrs. Buena Kerns.
and Mrs. Vlrgia Scheff, both

Roseville Masonic Lodge No.
566.
.
He was preceded in death

Mrs . Marie

Kerns,

Pt.

of Hunti ngton , Seventeen

grand

and

23 great.
grandch ildren survive.
Fur:.eral ·s ervltes will be

held

2 p.m . Tuesday at
Schneider Funeral Home In

Chesapeake with Rev. Leon
Holderby olfl ~ iallng . Burial
will be In Perkins Ridge

Cemetery.
·
Friends may call at the
funeral home tonight from 6
until 9.

BERTHA KAETZEL
MrS. Bertha Kaetzel passed

away on Feb. • 4, 1977 at
Copeland Oaks, a Method ist
Retirement Home, Sebring ,

0111o where she and the Rev.
Kaetzel had resided for the
past. eight years.
Mrs.

Kaetzel

was the

daughter of the late John and
M.ory Miller of Pomeroy,

Ohio and she was a teacher in
the Pomeroy Elementary
Schools for 20 years. She was
a life ti me member of the

United Methodist Church and

a Past Matron of Pomeroy

Chapter No.

186,

O.E.S.

She was preceded in death
by her parents , seven
brothers, three sisters,, five
nephews and three nieces .
She Is survived by her

by hts· wife, Sadie, and two

sons .
Survivors Include one .
brother, Sherman A. Hall ,
Largo, Fla .; f our grpnd .
children and 10 great.

grandchildren.

Funeral services will be
hel-d 1 p. m. Tuesday at the
Wheelersburg
Uni ted

Methodis t

Church.

Of·

fic lating will be Rev. Charles
CeciL Rev . Richard Teller ,
Rev . Roland Fierce. Rev .
William Turner and Dr .

. William E. Smith.

Burial will be in Mem orial
Burial Park in Wheelersburg .
Friends may call af file Brock
Funeral Home today frofTI 2· 4
and 7-9 p. m.

EARL SAUNDERS
Walter Ear l Saunders, 82,
105 Chillicothe Rd .. died at
8: 15p.m. Saturday In Dalton
Nursing Center , Ironton. He

had been in !.ail ing hea lth

approximately two
years .
He re tired in 1970 from the
Haskins-Tanner Co. after 49
years . Born sept:" a·; 189.4 in
Crown City to the late James
Wa lfer and Sarah )ane
Dailey SaundeFs, he is survived by his w.ife, Stella
Smith Saunders, whom he"

married July 3. 1923 at New
husband, the Re,. S. E. . Cumberland,
W. Va .
Kaetzel ; two stepdaughters,

one stepson ; f i ve step
grandchildre.n ; one sister .
Marie Custer of Pomeroy ;
seven nephews and nine
nieces.
Funeral services have not
been' comple ted pending
arrival of her stepson, Dr .
Samuel Kaetzel. from South
Africa. Interm ent will be . at
Caledonia , 'Ohio, where the
Rev . Kaetzel served as a
minister ' for several years .

Also surviving are .two
daughters,. Mrs. Paul (Jean)

Pullins, Gallipolis; Earlene

Saunders, Cincinnati ; one
son. James. Pikev ille, Ky .&lt;
nine grandchildren: one
greaf-grandchild;
f ive
brothers, Oyer, Evergreen,
Co!o. ; Rav. Ashlev , Ohio :

Lloyd. El Paso , Texas;

Lester , Topeka , Kansas ;
Howard, Denver, Colo.; two
sisters, Mrs, Georg ia Clark,

Gallipol is, and Mrs. George
(Mabel) Moore, Delaware.

One brother preceded hlri1 in

MEIGS THEATRE
CLOSED FOR
VACATION
WATCH FOR
OPENING DATE

death.

A veteran of World War I,
he was a member of the First

Baptist Church and was

active with the Boy Scouts,
Funeral services will be 1

p.m . Tuesday a! the. Waugh.
Halley.Wood Funeral Home

.

TO BE HONORED - Tracy Whaley, Pomeroy, an

outstanding sportsman, will be one of several to be
honored at the old .Ohio Valley Baseball Association
dinner Feb. 9 at Pomeroy Legion HalL Whaley was a
staunch supporter and assisted in the promotion of the
Pomeroy Merchants Baseball team from 1946 to 1948.
Whaley never ~ssed a game during that period.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday Admissions Vivian J ohn son, Racine;
Elizabeth Bartoe, Long
Bottom; Cloyd Brookover,
Rutland; Rosalind Qualls,
Pomeroy ..
Saturday Discharges Wilbur Whaley, Goldie Hawk,
Audria Arnold, Ralph
Radcliff, John Newell.
Sunday Admissions - lvor
Logan, Coolville; Sharon
Card, Racine; Albert Roush,
Pomeroy; Charles Smith,
Middleport; Robert Manley,
Middleport ; Ava Gilkey,
Harrisonville ; Judith McCoy,
Pomeroy; Everett Dailey, ·
!Someroy; -Betty Williams,
Pomeroy; Carol Dailey, Long
Bottom; Eugene McDaniel,
Middleport; Richard Met·
zger, Middleport ; Earl
Riggs, Langsville; Wyatt
Radford, Pomeroy; Charles
Conger, Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharges- Elsie
Roush , La\ie Dodd, Wesley
Buehl , Max ine Brumley ,
Emmitt FerrelL
Holzer Medical Center
(Births, Feb. I)
Mr. and Mrs. George E.
Evans, son, Jackson ; Mr ..and
Mrs, James Montgomery,
daughter, Gallipolis; Mr. and
Mrs. ~effrey Folmer, son,

Wil lard Leedy.
FLOWERS GO DEAR
Plan on picking your own
flowers this spring. Columbus
florists predict the cost of
flowers this spring may jump
by one-third because increased fuel prices have
boosted greenhouse 'heating
expenses.

Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Wickline, twin
daughters, Jackson.
(Births, Feb. 5)
Mr. and Mrs. Robert A.
Andrus, daughter, Mid·
dleport ; Mr. and Mrs.
William Hager, daughter,
Gallipolis.
(Births, Feb. 6)
Mr. and Mrs. Laren E.
Beaver, son, Gallipolis; Mr.
and Mrs. Benjamin Brown,
sOn, Jackson ; Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Grate, son, Rutland;
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Marcinko; daughter, Reedsville; ·Mr. a nd Mrs. Lewis H.
Vance, son, Jackson.

Deal, Apple Grove; Patricia
Waugh, Ashton ; Rossie
Thaxton, Leon; Mrs. Jesse
Likens, Gallipolis Ferry;
Mrs. Robert Darst, Point
Pleasant; Joseph While,
Cheshire; Matthew Long,
Ashton ; and Mrs. Ora Clagg,
Apple Grove.
Births - A son of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Hatfield, Point
Pleasant ; a daughter to Mr.
and Mrs. Uoyd Durst, Leon.

•

Columbia wants restrictions to buy gas lifted
l1lllell Pnu llllenalllu1

~

..
ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY ..
...
W_RANGLE_R®
~

--~

"

News •• in Briefs
CLEVELAND- THE CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY, in a
recessio~ for three and one4laU years - worst and longest
since the Great Depression - reportedly will spring forward
by mid-llummer because ol the current housing shortage.
Charles Pinzone, executive director of the Greater Cleveland
Building and Construction Trades CouncU, ·also predicted
Saturday 50 per cent of the 10,000 unemployed Construction
workers in Greater Cleveland will he working by mld«&lt;llU!ler.
"It's the start Qf a building boo!l) that will last for several
years," said Pinwne, who bases his optlmisrn on planned
construction of four new office buidllngs in downtown
Cleveland later this year. "Home builders and rehabllitators
will have a good season because there is.a housing shortage."

Sears
SILVER BRU)GE

PLAZA

...

BOY·O·BOYS
JEANS FOR GIRLS.

•

lng them for the higher coat of !he em~rgency gas," said
Tiro of Oblo'1 largeet natural gu suppUera have
White.
.
curtallmenll on lidlltrlal and large cmunerdal users and
"We're In the position of needing additional gas to keep ·
Columbia Gu ol Ohio todly ubd for ~~~~pension of a law homes warm, poaslbly being able to obtain additional gas in
which IWirlcll the company In the p!1'Chaae ol higl).prlced
the Southwest, but not being able to purchase the gas because
emergency gu,
we would not be permitted by Ohio law to recover our money,"
Meamrhlle, twollateagencleahavevoted to investigate lour . said
White.
Ohio natural 8111 dlmibutors and their IRIJIPUera.
The
Columbia Gas Co. of Ohio and the East Ohio Gas Co. of
· Marvin White, preeldent of Columbia Gu, today asked the
Cleveland
Monday announced the easing of the curtailments,
•
.
.
effective Wednesday. The firms said they took the action after
OOWMBUB (uPI) - Sea. Nelli F. Zfmmen, 1).
the National Weather Service predicted February iyould be
Dlytoa, llld today U.S. Sea. Honrd Metaeabaum, 1).
wanner than January, when temperatures were near or below
Ollie, woald be tbe flrlt wilD- WedDelday before hill
zero most of the month.
Oblo 8eaate Ellel'IY l!ld Publle UIWtle1 Cemmlttee
Columbia Gas said users of natural gas for boiler fuel, along
~11\lptllli tbe of the llate'• energy crlall.
with industries and conunerclal customers who can use
H.ae!lbloum, ID oatapoba erllle ttl utllltlet, Will begin hill
alternate fuels, wiD continue to be curtailed nearly 100 per
~Y at 11:30 a.m. Wedaellday.
oent.
.
The utility saldbirge commercial users will get only 15 per
Ohio General Aasembly to suspend a law which prevents cent of their usual gas allotments for a winter month and Sf!lall
residential 8111 customera from being ch8rged for short term commercial users will get 70 per cent of their allotments.
emergency gss that also goes to Industrial and conunerplal
The company said many schools fall into the 15 per cent and
CUitomi!n.
70 per cent categories and, II they have exceeded tbeir
"This winter emergency 8111 that Columbia and other Ohio aUotmenta, they will be cut off.
distribution cornJ)enles are now authorized to obtain. under
Columbia serves about 5,000 large industrial and conuner·
newlf-enacted federal laws Ia needed to assure adequate cial users and 9,574 Slll8ll commercial users. The large
supplies for residential users," said White .
Industrial and commercial users had been curtailed nearly 100
"Yet even II Columbia IJlii'Cbases emergency, gas for per cent since last week.
residential users, the Ohio law prohibits Columbia from cbargEast Ohio Gas lifted the near 100 per cent curtailment

•

.

.
'

Correction
of
Sunday's
Advertisement

.,

Free Standing_ Franklin
Fireplace ... use as a
fireplace or room heater.
Brass
knobs.
Sold
Separate: 38" size.

·:: $14999
'189"

Early One Fire Detector
Alarm shown In ad should
have been without cord.
Battery operated.

PH. 446-2770 tl

NAME GATHERER
Do111111 Tborntoa, Route 1,
These are the first boy's jeans that really !If girls.
Sized by waist and Inseam, they fit perfectly at both

walshnd hips. Straight 11111 or flare leg In Wrangler No.
Fault 100 Per Cenll~ oz. colfon denim with Sanfor-Sel
(Freedom from shrinking, wrinkling and puckers) .
Waist sizes 261o 38, Inseams 30.,32, 3~ and 341.
Wrong lor. Wromombtr the "W" Is Silent.

ELBERFELDS
IN POMEROY .
--~-

HILO TEMPS

NEW YORK (UP!)- The
highest temperature reported
Sunday to the National
Weather Service, excluding
Alaska and Hawali, was 79
degrees .at Presidio, Tex.
Today's low was 21 degrees
below zero at Hibbing, Minn.

entine

Delder, daugbter of Mr.
aad Mra. BID Tllomtoa; hll
beea employed by tbe firm
of FlemiDg, Pale. Stolte,
Inc., Matyavllle, to aAIII
111 111e Meigs COIIDty hoaae
numbering project. Ac·
cording to Jim. Page,
project ea1laeer, Ml11
Tbofl!toD, wm be ttavellq
tbe roa"' ptberiDg name•
of mldeall, eoordlnatlq
various local adlvltleo
relatlq to tbe eouly·wlde
aumberlug project,
uoiiiiDC toWDiblpa wltb
tbelr road naming aad
other work with the
preject. Milo Thomton lo a
1111• gndaate of Meigs
High School and has
otudled drafllllg two yean.

A tie vote on a. motion to said.
Cemetery he surveyed and
accept
the
bld
of
A weak trap door on the see what other lots are
Southeastern Equlpinent Co., sidewalk behind Stifflers on available for sale. This in
of Gallipolis for a tractor, Second Street ·is roped off. itself would justify hiring
loader and backhoe, wao Residents are advised to walk another man to work at the
.broken by Mayor Clarence around the area until council cemetery,. he said.
Andrews' vote, "yea/' at a can take care of it.
Boyd Ruth of the Meigs Soil
meeting of Pomeroy council
Harry Davis suggested and Water ConservatiOn
Monday night.
another man be hired to work District asked if council
The bid of $15,500 less trade in the cemetery only. He said would sign a petition to be
In of the old tractor, loader the cemetery is in the "worst included in the soil and.water
and backhoe and street condition" he has ever seen. district. They signed the
sweeper, making the total bid Roy Brunty .was hired, all following:
$ll,IMIO. Davia, Werry and voting yes but Brown.
"Petition the Ohio Soli and
Lou Osborne voted yes, Brunty wlll work with the Water Conservation Com·
Brown, Phil Globokar and street department until the mission to include Pomeroy
Larry Powell voted no. This weather breaks.
incorporated land area not
was the second time council
now situated within the legal
had advertised for bids,
Osborne proposed the · boundaries of a Soli and
having rejected the first bid&lt;! finance committee meet with Water Conservation District
received.
'the Meigs County Board of into the existing Meigs Soil
Others submitting bids Commissioners to seek and Water Conservation
were King Equipment, financial support for the night District.
Dublin, $25,'175, leu trade In, watchman. Globokar
Council approved the third
l!llklng a total of $12,719; · suggested that w~en the reading of an ordinance
Reasor Equipment, Hamden, weather breaks another whereby Pomeroy'Ctiffs Ltd.
$18,895 leu trade, making portion of Beech Grove ·
total of $11,9&amp;5, and Robert
· Aley, Charleston, who submitted ·a bid for the tractor
and sweeper of $2,51%.34.
Mayor Andrews told
council he bad received a
letter from Gov. Rhodes as
did other towns and villages
asking that the people of the
area conserve on gu. He also
reported that Charles Legar
had lleen appointed to work
with the commissioners In
regard to energy and in case
of a severe flood.
Dr. Harold Brown, coun·
cilman, S1181!ested that where
possible relatives move In
with other relatives and close
one dwelling to conserve
energy during the crisis.
Council will · appreciate ,
cooperation of residents he

ONE, TWO, THREE, HEAVE ! -Orville Jarrell, Rt. 2, Racine, escaped injury Monday
evening In an auto accident on Rt. 62 near Clifton when his 1973 Volkswagen turned over.
,The accident was investigated by the Mason County Sheriff's Dept. Volunteers from the
area (above 1uprighted the car.

!fNews.
• •in Briefgl
,,

lt"§UWM"ybce that"swh~ ifi gttting more "nt1 m1;u~ popular to
~end I,J i you r dPposlt "long with the de posit slip. "nd we·ll send your receipt right back to you the very
~mt&gt; d"Y· It's the most convenlt&gt;nt wro.y to s"ve going! E.ven 'child could do it! Now don"t misunderstand us. We like to see
you come In ollen. But we like to re ceive mo\11 too . So. on thoM~
dc1y~ whe11 yoU co\n"t get to Ui, let the postmrtn lf'nd rou" hMd
lfs just &lt;'.r'lo thf'r way fo r us to s~rv e you beuer.

do b.mklng by mail. lust

Exdasl"Ve

ror ,.,,_,,.m,

JOantl-dna .,..u btarh•a"

POMEROY, OHIO

540,000.00 Maximum Insurance for Each
Depositor . Member Federal Deposit
lrisura~ce Corporation .

'

"EXTRA CRISPY" Kentucky Fried Chicken ,Now ·
Available ... Crisp On The Outside - Moist and
Tender On The Inside.
Now Available At :

CROW'S STEAK HOUSE

AUTOMATIC
DRYER
,

Elcb """""r ol the Board ol
·~·
' a.pervilorl travals wl~ a

.ONLY·

'-n11pr•11lo•

AUTOMATIC
WASHER

beciiUH of bomblngJ and tlnall by the terrorllt New Wtl'ld
Liberation Front.
·
Eztraordlnary leCUrity meuure1 went Into effect Monday
at tbe building on ordert of Pollee Olief Charlel Gain after a
car lleJonlq to Dlltrlct Attorney J!Jie]Jh Frellal wa blown
up at hill home. Pollee funneled penona Into City Hall thrOUih
only two doon. Ofk:en Ullng hand-Mid metal detectors
cbecDI Ylllton fll' -po!ll and aeerched lOme of lh-

POl

RINGS Of ..UALIT\'

Farmers Bank

SAN FRANCISCO - 'GOVERNMENT OFFICIAI.S are
wcrkiDC under armed guard at San Francllco City HaD

BOTH

INIOIRIGIEI

111

By United Prell IllternaUoaal
SACRAMENTO, CALIF. -TilE FEDERAL govermnent
Is slaeblng waier allocation to fanneR. in one elf the natloo's
biQOII food producing areas by 75 per cent because of the
Cllllcrnla drought. The drastic action, trdered Monday by the
U.S. Bureau of Reclanllltion, Will affect the fertUe San
Joaquin Vailey, which supplies tlie nation with vegetables,
fruit and cotton.
·
Bureau officials said the water reductloo would apply to
fanners aoirved bY the Central Valleya Project. They said the
only hope fll' modlllcatioo of the cutback Would' be If northern
California li!IUJl8Ciadly received average raiD between now
and swnmer. "We've never had anything IIIJe this before,"
said David SChuster, chief of water operati0111. "We're talking
about cutting t.ck Callfornla agriculture In the region we
aerve by three quartan. And agriculture Is an t8 bllllon.pl111 a
year buslnela In California.

lOlb.
.... city

periOJIII bodnulni. Freltu and Mayor Georp M0100111 allo
blve bodyparcla.
·

$499

INGELS FURNITURE

WA8HINGTON - W. GIWwt CLAYTOR JR. ol
Norfolk, Va., ... been named IICHtary ol the Navy by
Pull~

·
aa,-.Cll'ter.
wbo .-ve~~ u a leluWianl cammant1• 1n the

NEW PATROLMEN -The Gallla·Melgs Post, State Highway Patrol, has three new
patrolmen bringing the local unit up to full strength according to Lt. Ernest Wigglesworth,
post cotnniander. Members of the patrol's looth graduating class last Friday are, left to
right, Steve Jagers, Donald Hendren and Curtis Jay WIUlams. The patrolmen asswned
lheir duties in the Gallla-Melgs area Monday.

MIDDUPOIII, O.
•I

,,

.

~-a
~ loP\

· ~

THREE GAMES Despite the natural gas
shortage tonight 's three
Southeastem Ohio League
games wUI be played as
scheduled, but In buildings
heated by means · otber
than
natural
gas.
Logan wUI play a.t Athens
In the old Athens gym In
dowDIOWII Athena. Waverly
will host Ironton In tbe old
Waverly gym next lo the
new Tiger lleldbouoe.
Meigs plays at Wellston In
the other contest. Wellston
does not use natural gas In
Ito
gym.
None ol the SEOAL
schools Is In session, due to
gas problems.

Schools

Patrol post beefed up closed
s:

Trooperi John
Jagers,
Donald L. Hendren and
Curtis
Jay
Williams,
IJ'aduates of the Ohio State
. Highway Patrol's tOOth
Academy Class, have been
Ullgned to tile Gallia·Mejgs
Post, State Highway Patrol,
Lt. Erl)est Wigglesworth,
post commander, announced
today.
.
The three new troopers
graduated
Friday
In
ceremonies attended by
nearly 1,200 friends, relatives
and special guests. Guest
apeaker was Woody Hayes,
head football CQ&amp;ch at Ohio
State University.
JohnS. (Steve) Jagers, 211,
resides at Lower River Rd.,
GaUipolil with his wile, the
. former Robin Roblnaon of

Mil¥)' durin&amp; World War D, ~ II cbllrman and chief
IUCUIIw olllctr of tbe 11411tblrn Rallwe' Syltem. He II a
INTO FOUR111 DAY
...-..alllamnl Law kbaalllld wu camandlng officer CINCINNATI (UP!) a1 1 1111rm1r1nt dlaw and two atblr ah!JIIIIarllll Wcrld War Juron In the obscenity tnal
D.
of
Hustler
magaalne
publllher laii'Y nynt went
MOI!IOOW - TWO SOVIBT:COIIMONAUTS orli~ tblo Into 1 fourth day of
(Continued on Jlllt 10)
dellberatlona today.

..

Vol: 28, No. 208

conveyed to the viUage 0.146
acre strip along Osborne
Street, and the second
reading of an ordinance
providing a blanket easement
ior storm and sanitary
sewers along Osborne St.
.chief of Pollee Jed Webster
su bniitted the following
report for his department in
January: issued 53 tickets;
collected 161 in tickets,
collected ·$1,198 irom the
parking meters, investigated
28 accidents, made 29 arrests,
and dro~e 4,413 miles.
The Rev. William Middleswarth opened the meeting
with prayer. Attending were
.Mayor Andrews, Werry,
Osborne, Davis, Globokar,
Brown and Powell, councilman, Chief Webster, Rev.
Mlddleswarth, Donnie Ward,
Jack Krautter and Jane
Walton, clerk.

~:::::m::::::::::::=::m:::~·~:;:;:::;:•~:;:•:•:!:!:~:::~::::::::~::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~~:::::::::::::~::

Anyone.Can Do It ·

Fifteen Cents

Gallipolis firm granted equipment hid

tUT 130 to 140

Was $m.99 Now

ERDA Deputy Director Peter Susey said Colwnbia ne«&lt;a
againSt 1,100 of Us large Industrial users and instituted a 10 per
cent across-the-board cutback to aU commercial and about seven mllllon cubic feet of addltlonal gao for homes and
hospitals, an Increase of three bllllon cubic feet over last week,
industrial CliStomers who caMot use alternate fuels.
Firms using boilers and customers who can use alternate while DP&amp;L need&lt;! six billion cubic feet, a jump ol 3.5 billion
fuels wlll be cuthack 100 per cent, East Ohio said.
~stweek.
.
Columbia Gas spokesman Wllllam Chaddock said the utility
The Ohio Energy and Reso~~rce Development Agency
Monday voted unanimously to join the Public Utilities Corn· believes it can meet most of the seven billion cubic feet deficit
miasion of Ohio in an investigation of the "management of the through continued conservation methods.
Columbia Gu Transmission Co., the Consolidated Gas Co. and
In other energy related developments:
-Columbia Gas of Ohio President Marvin White asked for a
their four distribution companies."
The Columbia Gas Transmission eo: supplies gas to delay In the start of Ohio Senate hearings into the state's
Columbia Gas of Ohio, the Dayton Power &amp; Light Co., energy crisis.
"Such a proceeding at this ttme would require the time and
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric and the West Ohio Gas Co. of Uma,
talent
of the very individuals who are working hard to alleviate
Consolidated supplies fuel to the East Ohio Gas Co.
the
hiU'dship
of the people of Ohio resulting ltlom the .natural
Meanwhile, a spokesman for the ERDA said Colwnbia Gas
of Ohio and Dayton Power &amp; Light will need 13 billion cubic gas shortage," said White.
,-The State Controlling Board approved partial payment of
feet of ad(litional natural gas to protect supplies for their
winter.related
emergency expenses of the Ohio National
residential customers and other top priority customers.
Gov. James A. Rhodes lllst week asked the Federal Power Guard. The board also took steps to increase the emergency
Conunission to allocate about seven bllllon cubic feet of fund to take care of anticipated flood expenses.
-A judge has lasued a temporary restraining order to allow
additional natural gas to provide heat for human needs
the Bay Village school system in suburban Cleveland to open
customers.
''The request for seven billion cubic feet was based on Its schools in defiance of Columbia Gas of Ohio's maintenance
nnormal weather, and we've not had normal weather in .the level gas curtaihnent.
--Some 4,000 workers al the General Motors Corp. assembly
last week," said ERDA Director Robert Ryan.
ERDA Deputy Director Peter Susey said East Ohio Gas and plant in Norwood, a Cinci1Ul8ti suburb, laid off since Jan. 28
Ciricinnati Gas &amp; Electric do not need additional supplies at · because of the natural gas shortage, went back to work today
after GM located propane to use as an alternate fuel .
this time to protect human needs customers.

at y

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesdqy, February 8, 1977

Now,
when the hips fit,
the waist fits,
too.

Have Read •••

43" FIREPLACE

wed

'

.Franklin Fireplace Should

Pleasant.Valley Hospital
Discharges - Mrs. Cecil
Massie, Northup; Edwin
Thomas, Leon; Gracie
Warner, · Eleanor; Mrs.
Randall Parsons, son, Leon ;
Mrs. Dennis Flowers, Letart;
Terry Daugherty, Point
Pleasant: Mrs. Robert
Freeman, New Haven ; Jerry

(UP!) - Fenner Prealdent ·
Gerald Ford left hla aumy
deeert home SUnday fer New
Haven, Conn., to lecture as a
Chubb FeUow at vile
Unlvenlty'o law ~ehool.
Ford retums to the warm
duert envlrona Tuellday
night In time to tee off In the
Bob Hope Deaert Golf
Claalc. Rounding out the
Wednesday morning
fouriiOIIle with Ford Will be
Hope, Sammy Pavia Jr. and
pro Johnny MWer.

liON IIIIOilN

SYRACUSE ~ Mr. IIIII •
Mn. CIJIII Trlplllt of bin
announce the birth of a - ·
Adam Clyde, Jan. rr, 111 •
PIIIJint"'\'alley Hoapltai..::O
'lbe laful welgbld -enpoundl and elcbt 0\IIICtl. :
Maternal IJ'andlatber, II Bill !
Hubbard, Syracuse; •
maternal
1r11t· ;:
grandmother, . Vlr11e-:
Stewart, Point Pleuant, :::
paternaiiJ'andmolher. !lett)' ~
Triplett, Racine, paternal ;.,
IIIU\-sl'andmotbel'l, Gllllle :
Dalley and MarT Triplett, :.
~ of Portland. 'lbe lafant ~
was welcomed home bY an ~
older sister, Wendy, age IlL:

There .,.. minor damace.
Smith waa charged with
faUure to stop within the
usured clear diatance.
Another Meigs County
mishap occurred at 3 p.m.
Sat~y on CR 35, north of
SR 124 where Ruth A. Sellers,
56, Portland, lost control of
her vehicle which ran off the
rtght side of the highway
striking an embankment.
was
moderate ~ped Injury in an accident
There
damage.
·
at I :40 p.m. Sunday on SR 7ln
A single vehicle accident Meigs County. The left front
occurred at 5:45 p.m. Sunday tire blew out cal!llng Qrueser
CANrEI I ED OUT
~
on Bob McCormick Rd. six to lose control of his veblcle.
The Dlaabled American ~
tenths of a mile aouth of SR The truck struck a barricade. Veter'lf&gt;s meeting to be held ~
160 in GaUia County. Edwin There wu heavy damage. Tuesday, Feb. a lw been:
Ricketts, 26, Rio Grande, lost
canceUed due to the weatber. •
control of his vehicle· on an
Icy spot in the hiRbway, His
- -----vehicle ran off the roadway
•
into an embankment.
,
Matthew P. Grueser, 25,
Shade, clrlvlng a tanker truck
Men's and Boys' Department-1st Floor
•

(Continued from page II

with the Rev. Charles Lusher
and Alvis Pollard officiating . · l'ul\ins , Dusty Saunde r s,
Burial will be in Ohio Valley Jimmy Sau nd ers , Col i n
Memory Gardens . Fr iends S!lunders , Bernard Sum ·
may call at the funeral home mer vi lie and Roger Hood.
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Hon orary pallbearers are
today. Military gravesides Morris
Hask ins. Lesl ie
will be conducted by VFW Brewer . Thompsson Casey,
Post 4464.
Clay Ha lley, Emerson
Pallbearers are John Corbin, Raymond La ne And

p------------------..

.

LECTURER FORD
PALM SPRINGS, Clllf.

Galllpolls.
A 1970 graduate of GaUia
Academy High School, he is
an Anny veteran having
served from June of 1971 until
June, 1974. He was
discharged S~-4 with
specialty in mechanics. He
served in West Gennany two
years and "as In the 3rd and
Mth field artUlery. He was
employed at the Goodyear
Tire &amp; Rubber Co. located at

Apple Grove, W.Va. prior to
joining the patroL
.
Donald L. Hendren, 27, was
born in Galllpolll to Uoyd
and Rose Marie Hendren who
now reside in Fort Recovery.
Prior to joining the Patrol,
Hendren resided in Lima. A
1967 graduate of Ft. Recovery
High School, he attended
Olivet Nazarene Colleee In
Kankakee, Ill. for two y~ars
(Continued on page 10)

The GaUipolls City Schools
were closed today due to a
threat from the Colwnbia
Gao Company to shut off gas
to Its buUdlngs. However, the
city schools will reopen on
Wednesday and continue
operation for the remainder
of the week.
Superintendent Don Staggs
,
said that th'e scbQola will
approve of Carter s plan to operate until their gas
reorganize federal agencies allotment Is used up. At that
subject only to the veto of time they will be given a five
either house of Congress.
day notice during wlllch ttm~
Aa for the sweeping. IIChoola will prepare to close
govenunent reorganluUon for an Indefinite period of
promlled bY Carter when he time
ran for the White HoUle, he . su;ggs uld that there lllill
lw ulled Coaareu. to give are many uncertalntl• In·
him power to make the volvlng the gu curtailment
changea subject only to veto and u ..oon as we are notified
b)&gt;eltbertheHouseorStnate. by th .. gas company of
~n. he says, he wUI make · ch8f\P.o!l we wUI announce
the changes step by step.
them to the ]ibbllc.

Reorganization studied
WASHINGTON (UP!) President Carter dlscuased
hls . government
reorganization plan with
~onal leaders today
and ane of Its chief opponents
acknowledged afterwards the
proposal wUI be very difficult
to block.
Chairman Jack Brooks, 0.
Tu., of the Houoe Govern. ment Operatlolll Comml~.
which IIIIIII take Initial action
on the plan, uld he belieVed
moat concreulonal l'"'&lt;l~rs
~

one day

•

Warm air
on the way I
United Presolnternatlonal
Sub·zero temperatures
were reported again in Ohio
early today with Columb\18
recording 13 below and
Zanesville 12 below, both
records for this date. But
warmer weather Is on the
way.
Cold . temperatures early
today were the result of a
high pressure ·ere a centered
over Ohio. Clear skies and
light winds also helped drop
readings.
At 7 a.m. temperatW'es
over the state ranged from
that minus·l3 at Columbus to
a 9 degrees above at
Cincinnati. Other sub-zero
temperatures were also
reported at Cleveland,
Mansfield and Dayton with 4
below while the Akron·
canton airport and Findlay
had 5 below readings and
·Toledo had 1 below zero.

The high pressure area was
to move to the east of Ohio
today,
allowing
a
southwesterly flow of air to
sweep over the state,
bringing some milder
temperatures. Highs today
are expected to reach the
lower 3til along the Ohio
River.
A warm frontal area will
move acroSll the state tonight
and Wednesday, resulting in :
cloudy skies and the chance .
of some light snow to !!11 but
southern counties. Temperatures will continue to
moderate with lows tonight
ranging from the upper teens
·In the north to the lower 20s In
southern Ohio.
Relatively
balmy
temperatures will prevail
Wednesday with the chance
of 4lki!!Kfee readinp along
the Ohio river counties.

Flood insurance
available Feb. 9
The
Meigs
County
prosecuting attorney's office
has been notified that flood
Insurance for the unln·
corporated portions of Meigs
County ls available effective
tomOCTow, Feb. 9.
The community nwnher for
Meigs County Is 390387.
Residents are advised that U
they obtain insuranCe within
30 days from FebrUary 9 their
Insurance Is effective
Immediately. II however,
residents walt until after 30
days expire to· ·obtain In,

surance, then tl)ere Is a 15
day waiting period before the ·
insurance policy takes effect.
Any Interested &lt;!ltlzens
may call the following ton
free number to verUy that the
Rood Insurance program has
been Initiated and that the
effective date Is February 9,
1977, at l-MO-l24-8872.
Official notification "ill be ·
11ent to the County Com· :
mi!IBioners by the Federal
Insurance Administration
shortly.
~·

�'

.

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-P~~peroy, 0 .. Tuesdloy, Fl!b. 8, 1977

.

This one they want to be right
By LEE LEONARD
UP! Slatebo,.. Reporter

COLUMBUS (UP!) -The Ohio General Assembly
was to reconvene In regular session today with a
variety of conunittee meetings sched\tled, including
the opening ol hearings on Gov. James A. Rhodes'
proposed •14,5 billion budget for fiscal 1978-79.
William W. Wilkins, director of the stare Office of
Budget and Management, is to discuss the governor's
budget before the House Finance Commit reo following ·
today's 1:30 p.m. floor session.
One hearing slated for later this week is on a bill
which could be the focils for a major attempt by
legislators to separate school financing from real
estate taxes.

The House Ways and Meana Conunltree holds an
initial hearing Wednesdloy on the bill empowering local
boards of education, with voter approval, to repeal
operating levies based on propel ty tues and lnatall
levies raising the same amount ol money from
personal Income and corporate franchile tues.
Rep. George D. Talilack, [).Campbell, committee
chainnan, said Monday the legislation will not be a
major policy bill of HOWle Democrats but will probably
require a lengthy series of hearings.
"We're going to have to sit down and take a close
look at this," he said, pointing out it I"OUld entail a
vasUy different directioo In taxation, "We want to
make sure that anything that comes out of here is in
complete accord with the wishes of the people."

Meat prices may soar in '78
ily BERNARD BRENNER
WASHINGTON (UP!) Drought and bitter winter
.cold in recent months have
added "a new dimension" to
beef supply prospects. The
weather could mean lowerthan-expected consumer
prices In the short run but
sharply higher prices next
year, a cattle industry leader
says.
Richard McDougal, first
vice president of . the
American National
Cattlemen's Association, said
in an interview that even

before the bad weather

· •truck, cattlemen were iri the

annual average was $1.46 In
1975.
"But it's hard to make
predictions. Weather could
have sucll an effect that it
could through (all forecasts )
out the window," the
cattleman said.
McDougal said cattle
producers don 'I like the wide
swings fro m low to high
prices.
"We'd rather have things
stable with a modest profit,
not a .windfall. We don't want
to drive consumers off," he·
said.
It may be ; McDougal
added,
that
research
programs IInder a proposed
farmer-financ ed checkoff
program will help producers
tailor a stable level of beef
output geared to consumer
demand.
Agriculture Department
econoritists, meanwhile,.
agreed in a report that bitter
wiriter weather and reduced
hay supplies "may force a
larger movement of cattle to
slaughter or to feedlots."
"If dry conditions persist
this spring and summer, herd
liquidation will accelerate.
This 1\'0uld increase Ute nearterm supply or beef but
reduce the longer term
supply," the report said.
Experts said that- on the

process of reducing their
herds because cattle prices
were at red-ink levels.
"We've been looking for
beef supplies (which were at
. record levels last year) to
· come down more in line with
demand than they've been
Ute past two or three years,"
McDougal said.
Now, he said, the process of
reducin{ herds may be
speeded up by bad wea_ther as
cattlemen sell off some of
their animals because of feed
shortages or other weatherrelared problems.
·
This wotild put more beef
on the market in the short
run, but it would mean
deeper-!hanexpected supply
cuts next year, the Lovelock,
Nev., cattle producer pointed
out.
Even if weather conditions . GOLDEN HAUL
improve, McDougal added, it
CINCINNATI (UP!) - It
appears that cattlemen who appears to be the work of
have been losing money for some cold-hearred thieves.
most of the last three years
Cargill Salt Co. officials
may be able to get hack Into report that 50 80-pound bags
· the profit column later ii) of rock salt, a street and
1977.
sidewalk de-icer iri short
In 1978, he said, Smaller supply this bitter winter,
ca tUe .supplies will mean have been stolen from the
higher prices for consumers. firm's warehouse here.
"Right now the ret.{lil price
Warehouse manager Jim
: average for Choice beef is Carpenter said the 4,000
. around $1.40 a pound. It's poWlds of salt is worth $300,
stricUy a guess, but f think but added that in light of the
we could see it around $1.60 to current demand for rock salt,
$1.65 in 1978 and 1979,'' "They're calling it white
McDougal said. The record gold."

bas~

of current prospects,
beef · production from
January Utrough March will
be 2 per cent below a year
earlier, and the April.June
supply will be I per cent
under a year ago.
But total consumer meat
supplies through the first six
monthsofthisyearwill be the
biggest in history because of

a !I per cent increase in pork
production, officials said.
Overall, allaiysts said, consumers will get 10 billion
pounds of red meat in the first
quarter, up 4 per cent from a
year earlier. Second quarter
supplies were forecast at 9.7
billion pounds, up 6 per cent
from the previous year,

Capitol Hill is the
last pbmtation
By Martha Agle and Robert Waiters
WASHING TON - Although ethics reform is .the height of
fashion on Capitol Hill these days, Congress is still resolutely
clinging to one of its most shameful practices: widespread
discrimination in the treatment of its own employees.
With approximately 17,000 workers and a billion~ollar
budget, Congress ranks as a big business indeed. Yet, unlike
the rest of the goverrunent and all of private industry, it remains exempt from laws prohibiting discrimination in
employment. Why? Because that's the way it wrote those
laws.
Furthermore, the movers and shakers on Capitol Hill show
every intention of fighting growing pressures for change.
Jlll;t two weeks ago, House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill and
GOP Leader John J. Rhodes asked the Justice Department to
intervene on behalf of fonner Rep. Otto Passman, D-La., in a
sex discrimination case now pending in tile federal courts.
Athree-judge appellate court in New Orleans last month ruled that notwithstanding Congress' efforts to exempt itself from
fair employment laws, Passman was not immune from a
discrimination suit filed by a fonner employee he had fired in
July 1974on grounds he wanted to fill her job with a man.
··our ConStilution," the c-ourt said, "protects individual
tights, even against the mighty."
A struggling group of reformers within the House reacted
with astonishment and rage to the discovery that the leadership satraps were seeking Justice Department help in defending Passman's (a nd their owni right to discriminate. They
plan to notify the court that not all members of Congress share
this above-!he-law attitude.
The group is the ·House Fair Employment ptactices Com·
mittee, an unofficial and completely voluntary' organization
established last yea r in the wake of the Elizabeth Ray-Wayne
Hays sex scandal which focused so much attention on Capitol
Hill employment practices.
..
·
So far, the committee has ca joled 95 House ll'embers into
signing a pledge that they will not discriminate by rac'e, sex,
religion, age, national origin, handicap, marital or parental
status in hiring, paying and promoting their employees.
But that leaves 340 House members free to exercise their
REVIVAll TO START
A revival Will begin this
evening at the Middleport
Pentecostal .Church, S. Third
Ave . with a:: M. Allen of
passages af swine. Infected Gary, Ind., to be the speaker.
pigs "lose interest in eating Services will be held at 7'30
and cannot gain weight p.m. beginning tonight and
quickly,"
an
official will continue 1hrough Feb. 20
with the ·excemlon of Monday
explained.
evening.
The Rev. Willlam
Officials said the vaccine
Knittel,
pastor,
extends an
was invenred by Dr. William
invitatioo
to
the
public.
· P. Switzer of Iowa Slate
University after studies
dating back to lll:i3. The
Chromalloy firm , which
OPEN DOOR
financed part of the research
A representative from
beginning In 1970 , later Congressman Clarence E.
obtained world manufac- Miller's office wlh conduct an
turing and marketing rights open dqor session .from 10
after Iowa Slate patenred the a.m.-12 noon in the court·
vaccine.
house· in Pomeroy on Feb. 9.

Pig vaccine perfected
NEW YORK (UP!) -The
Agriculture Department has
licen se d Ch romalloy
American Corporation, of St.
, Louis, to market a vaccine
which the firm says
immunizes pigs agsinst a
disease currently costirig hog
farme rs more than $100
· million a year,
·
The disease , atrophic
rhinitis, affects about 45 per
. cent of all hog herds in the
country to some degree,
C)lromalloy chairman Joseph
Friedman said in a statement
prepared for a news
oonference called here to

announce government
approval fof sale of the
vaccine. .
A spokeswoman said the
vaccine will cost $1 per hog.
Friedman
said
a
Chromalloy subsidiary,
Bums-Biotec of Omaha,
Neb., would make the
vaccine and expects to sell at
least 10 million doses this
year. Eventually, he said,
American sales may reach
about ~ million a year.
Atrophic rhinitis, caused by
a bacteria, Inflames and
often destroys air filtering
mechanisms in the nasal

DR. LAMB

Shaving·won't change hair
By Lawreoce E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - Can a
WOrll;ln shave her [ace like a
man does or will shaving
make her facial hair dark and
bristly like a man 's
whiskers?
I read that it is beneficial to
the skin to shave wiUt a blade
because it removes dead skin
and extraneous material. But
what are the after effet1s of
shaving for a woman ?
I've tried lotions and
creams for fa.ciaJ hair
removal, but my skin breaks
out terribly. Please help me. I
have so much hair on my
face.
DEAR READER -Shaving
: does not make hair any more
: coarse. The hase of the hair is.
stiffer. When i lis cut short, as
wit'' ·&lt;having, the base is like
• ,ff stubble of freshly cut
.u.rse grass. A beard feels
softer only because you feel
'he softer full length of the
hair. All an example, a close
very short cnow-cut will
v
II

make !he hair on the scalp ceUs. Inpeoplewithoilyfaces
seem stiff, but the base of the this might be beneficial but
hair is no stiffer than it was you can accomp]\sh about as
before the hair was cut.
much with good soap and a
Aman's whiskers are stiff washcloth.
· in part be&lt;;ause they are the
You should see . a derbase of the hair for his beard. matoiogist. There are ~gs
Awoman has just as much that can be done for too much
hair on her lace as a man. Or- facial hair. In a few instances
dinarily the hair is so .fine it is from hopnonal inthat It cannot be seen r.eactily. fiuences that can be treated.
'fhese soft, fine hairs give the A woman who is low on
impression that a woman estrogen may develop liner,
does not have facial hair. In less noticeable hair with adesome women the hair is quate hormone treatment. I
coarser and may be darker. hasten to adq that in many
These coarser hairs are then cases the hormones are com·
noticeable. Cutting these pletely nonnal and additional
hairs will leave the short stiff hormones do not help at all
base of them and whether or
In other instances elec·
not they will be like a man's · trolysis done under
whiskers at evening time - knowledgeable hands is very
the so-called five o'clock helpful. To determine what is
shadow - depends entirely on bell! in any one case it is bet·
how coarse the hairs are in wr to have a recommendsthe first place, not un the ·lion, frorrl a dennatolugi;t
shaving itself.
who hass~en your face.
Shaving the skin does effecI'm nnt Sure whatyuu me.an
tively remove oils and sur- by your skin hrcak i n~ out
face accwnuJntiun uf cxt:cS!:i

j

a fl~r

you have iliitd lotions

v

and creams to remove hair.
This oould be a chemical
reaction to the products you
used. Or if the products are
greasy you could be descrilr
ing acne problems. Anyone
who has acne problems
should avoid all creams and
lotions that contain any oila
or fats. The problem is
related to an excess production'of skin oila to begin witlt
Acne problems can be
treated successfully in most
cases. I am sending you The
Health Letter number 8-2,
Ame Can Be Treared. Others
whu want this infoMlllltion
can send 50 cents with a long,
stamped, self-addressed
envelope fur it. Write to me in
" care of this newspaper, P.O.
Box 326, . San Antonio, TX
78292. If there· is a honnonal
imbalance you c'Uilld be more
sw;ceptible to having both illcreased facial hair and incrcasctl oiline.s.s of your Nl\m
le"&lt;lingtollcJJe.

•

Carter calls in
By HELEN TIIOMAS
IJPI While H - Reparler

WASHINGTON (UP!) President Carter today
followed up last week's
meeting with Ruaaian
Ambassador Anatoiy
Dobrynin by summoning
Hua118 Chen, China's chief
envoy, to the White HOWle for
a conference.
Carter alao scheduled a
. meeting with Democratlr

Air different
•m committees
•
By DREW VON BERGEN

WASHINGTON (UP!) They were unusual words,
indeed, for government
witnesses.
•;The need for tough
surface mining regulations is
long overdue,'' from John
O'Leary, head of the Federal
Energy ·Administration.
"We can aHord to declare
certain areas off limits to
strip mining ... ," from
Interior Secretary Cecil
Andrus.
It was the · Carter
administr11tion on: Capitol
Hill.
The two appeared Monday
before a Senate Interior hearIng on strip mining
legislation. A similar House
hearing was scheduled today.
After six years of
!X'esidential vetoes, industry
efforts to defeat the bills, and
hordes
of potentially
weakening amendments, the
senators noted the change.
"For those of us wbo have
been struggling over the
years to enact legislation
which will meet the need for
preservirig our land and our
Water
resources,
for
sts bilizing our coal industry
... the President's words of
encouragement have come
like !X'Overhial music to the
ears," said Sen.~ Metcalf,
D-Mont., chairing the
session.

Twice durtng the 94th Congress, the lawmakers sent a
strip mining bill to the White
House. Twice it was returned
with a veto. . ·
Now Carter is expected to
· sign a similar bill as soon as
Congress gets it ready .
Sen. Henry Jackson, DWash ., chairman of the full
committee, predicted that
could come "within the next
few months."
Both Andrus and ·O'Leary
strongly endorsed standards
for the strip mining which has
ravaged the mountains of
Appalachia in the past and
Utreatens vast areas of the
West where .new coal
reserves are being extracted
virtU.Iiy uncontrolled.
"Coal is abundant' in Utis .
country," Andrus said. "We
can afford to be particular
about wbere and how we
mine it."
O'Leary said the cost of
reclamation was not high
"and we should nl)l be misled
to believe Utat . concern for .
our environment and lbe
productioo of energy are
incompatible."
·
The bill would require
reclamation
of
most
disturbed lands to their
approximate original
contour, and sets various
regulations for mining and
reclaiming the land.

with Its ~ per Jll&lt;·;.,n tar
rebate; his controversial
nomination of former
Pentagon official Paul
·Wamke as hill chief anna
' negotiator, and his request
for authority to .-gsnl!e
the govemnent.
The subject matter of hill
meettng with Huang Chen,
Peking's No. 1dlplomatin the
United States, was not
announced. But Secretary ol
State Cyrus Vance has
indicared that Carter intends
to pursue normalization of
relations between the United
States and China.
Carter also moved ahead
on filling all of the remaining
top government vacancies by
naming Adm. Stansfield '
Turner as CIA ·director and
coordinator of all the
government's intelligence
apparatus.
The ·regular Monday
Cabinet meeting was filled
with caveats on the need for
members to trim the
government bur&lt;;aucracy, to
cut out frills, travel abroad
only when necessary, and
send him memos each week .
oo what's going on in their
departments.
At the same time,
according to deputy Press
Secretary Rex Granum,
told
Cabinet
Carter
members, and his staff, that
he did not want their
"loyalty" to him to be

; •..nonstrated

=
...

-~k.
"You lbouid watch YfNl·
selves and k!'"P your,funill•
together,'' Carter said. "I
don't. want your famUiea
breaking !IP just becauae you
felt a loyalty to me.''
Carter alao told Ute ~linet
he will reduce the "e!IOI'IIlOUI
military display" during

-

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...,
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~
;
:
.; :

state .visits.
"There will not be the l8llle ··•

nWI)ber of people greetlnc, or
the same number of tnimpetl
sounding, that hai been dane
in the past,'' in welcuntng
heads ol state, Carter said.
The firsl visitor Carter will
try out his rllltricted
ceremonial policy on is
Mexican President Jose
Lopez Portillo, wbo arrives
Monclay oo a state viall.
In ' another area, Preli
Secretary Jody Powell told
reporters Cat;ter wishes "to
reserve the right to go place~
for $"ictly lamlly or penonal
reasons without prior
announcement.''
Carter slipped out of the
White House Sunday with his
family to visit the l{ennedy
Center. Reporters were told
by the ~nal Corpa that be
was still in the mansion.
Powell said the corps
"perhaps overzealously"
iriterpreted the President's
wishes.

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from England.
The
only
victims
lnunediately identified were
Rev. Martin Thomas of
E118land ; Rev. ·Christ!lJ)ber
hpberd-&amp;Dith ol Kenya and
, Rev.Johil Conway of Ireland.
All were worktng at the St.
Joaeph's Mission on the
Mangwende tribal trust land
40 mlle1 eut of SaUsbury.
The Rev. Dunstan MyerfiCOUih, 116, of Preston, England, laid be lllrvived only
beca111e he feU to the ground
"from lll8tincl" when the
guerrilias started shooting,
My&lt; 'scough said that
shor:•; before IOp.m. Sunday
the1··! was a knock on his door

and "I opened the door ·and
walked.into the ..,.ong end of
a gun."
One of the guerrillaa ruahed
the group out of the building
and 100 yards down a dirt
road snd ordered them to
Bland there.
He said the guerrUiaa then
appeared to be diaculling
wjlo should do the llhooting,
· "Eventually they had three
people there and they aaid (to
the other guerrillaa), 'right,
off you go' or IODII IIICb
worda, and the real ol the
bunch ilcampered fill north.
"Then these three opened
fire,'' Myeracough said.
"All soon as I saw the

Meigs travels to Wellston
tonight for a regularl y
llcheduled game.

wanama

F~ RB . TP ·

FG FT
10-5
0-0

Bob Nicewander 3-4
T i m Da llisJO

~-

7

4

4

10
14

2

5

14

M ike Goldsberry 12

B-6
11 -1

3-2
I ·0

Ti m Sayre 20
T im Smith 14

14-4
16-4

0-0
8-.4

3

4

6

2

6

12

5-0

3-2
1·0
2· 2

Greg Blessing 40
Todd J;lawli ngs A2
Ph i! Hobbs 31
Totals

t-0

1-0
66-26

Meigs
9-6

Dale Browning
Alan Dodson
Allen Stewart
Steve Randolph
Kenny Young
Tim Scites

13-6

Brian Hamilton

Dan Granda II
Chuck Fofl rod

J. 1

10-7
9-4
J. J
5· 2
2·0

4-2
3-2

20

3-2
1·0
0·0
0-0

2

I

0

0
11

0

2

35

62

17

J
I

9
9
8
4
I

0
0

2
5

2

2
2
I
2
J
3
16 46

4-1
66-33 22 -13

Totals
Pel . 50

8

1
0
3

5·5

3-1

7-4

2·2

Gregg WiHe

lS-10

I

0

13

9

16
10

6

0
4

2
79

(4 30 40 62
19 37 65 19

W
M

Bobcats end jinx

~

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:
:
HEY! THAT'S MINE - That's what Bob Nicewander, White Falcon senior center,
appears to be saying Monday night at Meigs High where his team, the Wahama ·White
Falcons, lost to the Marauders 7~2. Nicewander bested Dale Browning (22) for the ball. Gary Sisk picture.

.

Joe, Marty

..•

on college
campus ·tour

.

'

.•

~9,500

when he was Hoi!S"
Republican leader imd seven
months at $62,500 when he
was vice prellldent.
Nixon's top three years
came when he was ' ylce
president and the salary lor
the post at that ttrne was
$43,000.
Ford served four years in
the Navy and 25 years in the
House, giving him aredit for
29 years of service at 2.5 per
cent of $52,600 or f37.,854,
Nixon served four years in
the Navy; four in the House,
two in the Senate and el8ht ~
vice president, a total of 18
years. His 18 years at 2.5. per
cent of $43,000 provides him
with $19,350.
l!esides the pensions, the
former presidents receive
pal&lt;! office apace, more .than
$90,000 for office staff
salaries, and Sea'et Service
protection for life.

getting just 26 of 66 shots to go
through. They netted 10 of 18
free throws ,

;:

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:~

CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
nel'est oflering at several
colleges could be called
"Baseball 101."
Cincinnati Reds' officials
have ilned up a "campus
caravan" in which their radio
play-by-play announcers will
tour several colleges
promoting baseball in
general and the Reds in
particular. .
The tour begins Wednesday
when announcers Marty
Brennaman and Joe Nuxhali,
a focmer Reds pitcher, visit
the University of Kentucky in
Lexingtoo.
Other stops include Miami
University in Olford, Ohio,
on Feb. \5, Ohjo State
University In Columbus Feb.
18 and Ute University of
l. Dayton Feb. 22.
The broadcasters are to
"rap" with students and show ·
Utem a movie of the 1976
World Series, which was won
by the Reds.
The "campus caravan" is
coepoosored by the IIA!ds and
a beer company that
advertises heavily oo the
Reds' radio broadcasts.

Visiting Kyger Creek overall record io 5-6. Inside
finally ended the home court 'the SVAC, the Bobcats have a
Eastern jinx Mooday night 3-4 slate. Eastern dropped its
. but had to survive a 11ast lith straight game wit110ut a
quarter Eagle rally for a win.
hard-fought 51..43 victory.
The Little Eagles bombed
The host Eagles, playing a KC 48-27 in the reserve tilt.
strong game, missed five BiSsell led the winners with 14,
layups in the waning minutes. points. Greg Smith had eight
The victory was the Bobcats' for the Bobkittens.
first on the Eagle planks in 10 .Kyger Creek travels lo
years dating beck to the North Gallia tonight and
championship days of Coach Symmes Valley Wednesday.
Johnny Wickline, (1961Hi7 ).
Eastern plays Hannan
The Eagles, behind 14-10 at Trace this evening.
the end of the first canto, fell · Box score :
even further hack, 27-16 atthe
KYGER CREEK (51) hall.
Sa lem 6-2-14 ; Sands 4-3-11 ;
pS0!"1 4-l -9; Bavlor 3-3 -9 :
During the third period, ThOm
Ba ir d 4-0-B. TOf&amp;IS 21 -9-51 .
however, Coach Keith Car- • EASTERN ( 43) - Nelson 4·
ter's Bobcats bad Eastern on l 9; Ca rnah a n 2-0-4; Spen ce r
Smi t h 2-2·6: Goeb el 3the ropes leading as much as 5-2-12;
0-6; Barton 2-2-6. Totals 18 ·717 points only to see the 43.
Eagles chip away to cut the KCBy qu arter s :\ 4 13 12 12- 5 1
lead to nine going into the Eastern
10 6 14 13-'- 43
final period.
In the fourth quarter, the
Eagle press forced KC Into
Til E DAL \'SENTINEL
some costly mistakes. Clutch
DEVOTED TO THE
rNTERESTOF
foul shooting by senior guard
MEIGS.MASON AREA
Mitch Salem, guard Doug
CHESTER L. TANNEHilL
Sands and center Jon
Exec.Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICll
Thompson kept the Bobcats
City Edftur
going.
Published daily except Saturday
by The Ohiu Valley Publishing ComEastern's Gary Nelson and
any, 11 1 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
Mike Smith got hot keeping
45769. But~iness OffiCe Phone 992Eastern's hopes of winning
21!)6. Editorial Phone99'H ~~7 .
StlL'tlnd cla ss po&amp;tage ' paid at
its first game alive.
Pomeroy, Ohio.
The Eagles' Smith was
Nt~tion~:~ l adverti:ling represenllltive Ward- Griffith Company, In·
credited with holding KC's
c., BotUneW 1md Gallagher Oiv.,
high scoring Ralph Baylor to
7~7 Third Ave ., New York, N.Y.
10017.
just nine points. Baylor had
Subscription rates : Delivered by
33, 31 and 24 points in _his last
carri~ r where available 75 centa per
week. By Motor Roufe Where carrier
three outings.
·
not avallaWe, One month,
Sale01 led the Bobcat service
$3 - ~- By mail In Ohio and W. Va .,
scoring with 14 points while One Year, $22.00; Six. munths,
$11.50 ; Three monthS, $7.00;
Sands canned 11. Baylor and
Elsewhere $26.00 year; Six monthti
Thompson added nine each.
$13.50; Three months, $7.50.
Dan SP.ncer topped Eastern Subscription price includt!s Swutaywith 12 points. Nelson had ~~s-&amp;ntlne l.
nine .

.,

"
Swine tlu
"'..'
architect asked .
to resign his '""''
HEW position '",.
'"
~

WASIDNGTON (UP!) - -~
Dr. David Sencer, director of
the nationa I Center for .:
Disease Control in Atlanta '
and a chief government ~
architect of the troubled •
swine flu program, has been •
asked to resign, the Depart- ',
ment of Health, Education and Welfare said Monday.
Se~cer's
requested
resignation follows the
resignation of Dr. Theodore ,
Coopet a~ HEW assistant '
secretary for health, Sencer's
former boss.
Both officials were involved In development and ~
Implementation of President '
Gerald Ford's $135-million
swine flu immunization "
program
which · was ~ ~
suspended temporarily on '~
Dec. 16 because of "a "'
statistical association" ~ ·
between the flu shots and a .;.
sometimes . paralyzing !:!
disease known as Gulllain- "'
Barre syndrome.

.Seven of eight missionaries killed
MUSAMI, Rhodesia (UP!)
- Black guerrillas herded
eight Ronum Catholic
missionaries together and
shot seven of them to death In
the worst attack against
clergymen in the Rhodesian
guerr!lia war, the only
survivor said Monday.
"We want our COW1try,"
one of the guerrillas was
~ed as telling n11111 at the
missioo ~re the llaughter
lllok place.
Three of the dead were
priests from England,
lreiMd and Kenya. The other
lkud included three nuns
from Wt•st Ger&lt;uany ~i.d une

~

turouch

.

Sales, earnings
set new records

The Meigs Marauders going when the second period
One of the keys to Meigs '
sweetened their rerord to 6-S started.
success was that they stayed
But then Goldsberry and 'out of foul trouble as no
overall Monday night when
they handily whipped the Nicewander starter hitting Marauder got more than
W~hams White Falcons at
for the Falcons and with 2:03 three personals. They
Morrison Symnasium, 7~2 showing before intermission, dominated the boards by
for a non-league match. Once and Falcons were back in the gleaning 46 caroms while
again balanced scoring hall game at 31-30. But the Wahama managed just 35.
proved ooe of the big keys in Marauder defense stiffened Browning and Dodson were
the victory as Meigs placed and by the half time buzzer, the big board men as they
four men in double figures. the hosts were in control :rl- llauled in nine caroms each
Senior Dale Browning led ali 30, shutting out the Falcons. while Alien Stewart had
scorers with 17 points while Meigs' Steve Randolph eight. The Marauders shot a
teammates Steve Randolph, poured in 12 of his 16 points in hot 50 percent from the floor.
Alan Dodson, and Kenny that first half. Dodson had 10. canning 33 of 66 attempts.
Young had 16, 13 and 10,
The Meigs defense stayed They atso cashed in on 13 of 22
respectively.
tough when the third period charity tosses.
Jumping out to a quick :HI began and started controlling
Tim Davis and Goldsberry
lead, the Marauders let the boards, giving the led the Falcon scorers with 14
Wahama get back to 5-4
Falcons just one shot at the points api ece while Tim
before they turned on the basket. Wahama didn't score Smith and Nicewander had 12
steam and started running .another point until 4:54 was and 10, respectively. Greg
away with the game. By the remaining in the third period, Blessing had the most Falcon
end of the first quarter the but by that time Meigs had rebounds with eight. The
hosls bad built a 19-14 lead, put it out of reach at 47-32.
team was cold from the floor,
and they just kept right on

canninC family relationlldpl . .
by putting .in lone bOUI'I! at ...,

t

By .STEVE GERSTEL

Marauders knock off Wahama 79-62

....

NIXOD and Ford~
in for raises

WASHINGTON (UP!)
Richard NW.n and Gerald
Ford will get a raise when
members of Congress and top
government officials do,
probably later this mooth.
Although rarely mentiooed,
the proposed pay increases
for top-level officials in the
executive, legislative and
judicial branches alao benefit
biases, not to mention 100 senators who have shown absolutely the two fanner presidents.
no interest in.reforming their discriminating -ways.
The pay increase, proposed
"What we have here on Capitol Hill is the las\ plantation," by Ford and endorsed by
said Colleen O'Connor; a top staff aide to Rep. Shirley President Carter, goes Into
Chisholm, D-N.Y., who is chairing the fair practices plmel.
effect Feb. w unleas vetoed
Not a single member uf the House leadership has signed the by either the Senate or-HoUle.
voluntary non-discrimination pledge. In fact, the bigwigs are
Neither plans action before
dOJng their best to ignore the existence of the fair practices the deadline although a
eonunittee and to make life difficult for the panel by denying it special House Post Office and
office space, funding and so forth.
Civil Service subcummitree
.. , think they;re hoping that we just wear down," said Rep. holds a second day of
Patricia Sci)roeder, D-Colo., one of the c-ommittee's original hearings , on the proposal
urgani~rs. ·'We had hoped the Passman case would make toda
them realize th.ey're going to have to do something, but •!&gt;"
nTe' Nixon and Ford
parently not."
. • presidential pensiona are
"Personnel practices," she added, ·"are the last thing geared to the pay of Cabinet
anyone attends to around here. Em~loyees are 1\eated like members, now $63,000 a year.
lamps or typewr&lt;ters- you.JUSt wear em out, tum em m and
The proposed increase
get a new one."
.
would boost the salaries of
The fair practices panel, however, is about to solicit some Cabinet members to $66,000
hard facts from aU 17,000 of Utose ··lamps and typewriters." and give Nixon and Ford an
The committee, using privately c-ontributed funds, is con- additional $3 000 per year in
dueling a delailed survey of Capitol Hill employment practices pension beneftts.
as seen by the drones, not the drwds.
.
The presidential pension is
"A statistical hase is crucial if we're going lo convince the largest part of the
anyone that change is really needed," O'Connor said. "We're retirement benefits accorded
going to build a case for bringing the Congress into the 20th the only two Hvirig former
century in terms of employment pral'tices and civil rights."
presidents. But both receive
other federal pensions from
military and government ser·
vice.
Although the Civil Service
Commission is prohibited
under the Privacy Act from
disclosing the pensions FOI'll
lind Nixon get, the formula
under which it is computed is
I;ANCM'J'ER, Ohio (UP!) an extensive review ol its
well-known on Capitol Hill.
- Anchor Hocking Corp. an- domestic
operation
Uairig the formula, Ford
nounced today it had record undertaken during the third
will get roughly •104,000 a
sales of ~. 7 million aild quarter and the requirement year and Nixon slightly over
record earnings of $27.4 for a major expenditure for f85,000 when the Increase
million in 1976.
environmental control goes into effect Feb. !!.
Board chairman John L. equipment, management
The formula for the
Gushman said sales were 'rl recenUy decided to phase out congressional pension fund per cent over 1975 sales of the lAs Angeles glass which gi vea credit lor
~93.6 million while net
cootalner plant's operation in military service - provides
income was up 211 per cent the near future.
for 2.5 per cent for each year
over the 197S figure of $21.7
All previously aimounced, of an average of the top three
milllon,
two of the plant's three earning yeara. M~mbera of
Guahman lndlcared the ad- furnaces were shut down in Congress contribute B. per
justed record earnings were 1976.
cent of their salarieS to the
achieved despite a significant
Gushman said this decision . pension program.
adjustmeht to provide a resulred In a reduction in riel
Ford's top three-year
reserve for plant phase out income lor the year and average was ~2,060 - two
expell8es.
fourth quarter of nearly $4 years and five months. at
He said that as a result of 'mUUoo.

"By JANET DAMEN

--..
"'"'

Chine~e e~voy

coogreuionallellden lind hla
first nationally televi~ed
news conference, set for
early afternoLil (2:30 p.m.
EsT) In the Executive Office
B~ilding auditorium, next
door to the White HOWle.
The leaders were expected
to give Carter 111 Ulelllllenl
of chances of quick pu~~ge
of hla $31.2 million two-y...
economic stimulus package .

Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Feb.8, 1977

-'"
"

bunta fired frOm, I tbink, the :;'
middle gun, hort of -14on'l '"
know whether lnallnctlvely or
imagining I wu hit or what- ,
.I lellllat down."
·
"::
. Myencoqb said whln the ,;;
flrinll stopped, ht dllcovtred .~
'he had lilt been 1*.
· He said the enllrt incidont :;
lui about half In hour..
,
At the m1u1an 87-yw-old ,.
Sister Anna llid lbl Wll
~pared becaiR 11M WUII'ipplad wltlllll'lllitll.
.
'
Policl llltpL Jolm Palter ::
said the perriiiM plbbed ~
ooe Afriean IIIIer IIIII shovad i.
her into another room wilii 1 .
gro"' of novietl, ..,q "" ;
want our COIIIItry."
·•

TORONTO · (UPI)
Anders Hedberg, who scored
11 goals in his last three
gsmes and broke ·a major
league hockey record by
scoring 50 goals in fewer than
50 games, Monday was tbe
unanimous choice as the
World HOCkey Association's
Player of the Week. ·
In addition to his 11 goals,
Hedberg notched three
assists to lead all WHA
scorers fll' the week with 14
I points . .

I

Kyger Creek sank 21 of 66
floor attempts for 32 pet. and
nine of 16 free throws. The
Eagles connected on 18 of 67
tries for 27 pet. and seven of
seven of 12 charity tosses.
The victory pushed KC's
UP AND IN FOR 1WO - AilenStewart (30) of Meigs
drives for the basket Monday night against Wahama . His
nine points helped the Marauders put another win on the
board, 79-4i2, over their West Virginia neighbors, the White
Falcons. No. 14 is Tim Smith of Wahama. - Gary Sisk
picture.

Michigan stops
Gophers, 86-80
I

I

BY KEN ROSENBERG
UPI Sporla Wrller
. Steve Grote · of fourthranked Michigan isn't among
the most naturally gifted
basketball players in the
country. He doeln't posseas a
particularly accurate jump
shot, he doesn't jump very
high -and
he
isn't
exceptionally quick.
What Steve Grote does
e~:cel in
is . intensity,
lntelllllence and the ability to
wtthltalld presaure. Tbpse
three auets aU came iJi
handy Monday night wl!en
Grote hit 1 clutch jump shot,
followed by a key steal in
Micbipn'all&amp;-80 road victory
over MlMMOta.
"I've had I bad !'1P of not
being a good lhooter," Grote
said after he lll1k a biHllne
)umpllr with 1:311eft to llliiP
an f).IO tie: "Buhver since
hi&amp;h acllool, I've loved lo play
the ~e. When I got the
I.U 1dilkl't even think. I just
lei it.~...
'l1ie win pve Michigan,
~ to IDdlana lor the

..lionll cbmpimlbip 'last

Jill', all o.wnJlrteard of 11-2

and a Bi11'11H1adinc record

"' 11·1. '1'111 lOll ..... the
-.1 for Mlmtlota in 16
11me1· and dro'pped the

probation-plagued Gophers'
to 7-2 in the Big Ten.
Phil Hubbard led Michigan
with 21 points, while John
Robinson contributed 20,
Rickey Green 16 and Grote
10, Minnesota's attack was
paced by Michael Thompson
and Ray Williams, each of
whom scored W points, and
Kevih McHale, who added 18.
No Ione has to , tell Ray
Mears, coach of loth-ranked
Tennessee, how hard it is to
visit "Alligator Ailey" and
come away with a win
against Florida. He found out
Mo~day night when AI
Bonner scored 19 points,
including six in the closing
minutes, to lead the Gators to
an 80-76 upset of Tennessee .
"This was really a special
game," said Florida Coach
John Lotz. "I tried not to say
ao before the game, but it
really was. Thla is a special
group of players who really
delel've a win." '
Bernard
King
led
Tennessee with 28 points and
Ernie Grunleld added 211.
In other games involving
top teams, Jack Givens
scored 211 points as No. 5
Kentucky crushed Florida
State, 97-67, Rickey Browv
scored 24 points and ninth-

ranked Alabama withstood a
late rally by Mississippi for a
72-68 victory, Arkansas
battled back from a 14-pclint
deficit behind Marvin Delph's
23 points to beat Tulane, 7&amp;73, and Syracuse got 19 points
from Jim Williams and 18
from Roosevelt Bouie to rout
Bentley, 104-$.
Elsewhere, Notre Dame
ripped Xavier, ~. Auburn
beat Georgia, 83-74, LSU
topped Mississippi State, 7166, Iowa downed Michigan
State, 87;79, and LSU
defeated Mississippi Slat..,

CHICAGO (UP)) - The
cost of replacing_ the firedestroyed grandstandclubhouse building at
Washington Park would be as
much as $30 milli on, a
racetrack spokesman said
Monday .
Thomas
Rivera ,
a
represents live of the irack
owned by the Madison Square
Garden company, said it is
too early for • decision on
whether the track facilities
will be ret."ilt. Fire swept the
g rHndst~nd
and
the
nlubhuusc Saturday night.

Searching for the clever way to say " I Love You? ' '
Our Happy Valentine Arls will he publisher! on
February 14, a'n d offer you a tr)lly unusual way to
proclaim you r love ami best wishes.

SAY "I LOVE YOU" WITH A
$1.00 SENTINEL VALENTINE AD;

VAWE
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if your insurance agent can't give you

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DOWNING CHILDS ~
INSURANCE AGENCY INC.
992-2342

hav~

Alter 15 wonderful yean
of marr iage , I 'm ~ t ill heod over -ht!els in lo" e with you!

por~nl1

Wolter Z.

To Our
Favorite

Teacher
To Jooe -

MU. Smith Thanks lor
making Sdence fun to learn .
We think you 'rt to psf

I wont

~ou

for

my Volen ti ne, and I won 't
toke " no " f o r on on1 wt'fl

from
Your CloSI

lo v ~ ,

Tom

Write your message below and bring It
or mall It with $1.00 by February 11th to
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the Dally
Sentinel, P. 0. Box
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o.
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15.

,,

To My Wife, Ann. , .

Mik e ond Sue

Karr &amp; VanZandt

Middleport. 0.

D

pick ed 0
in th e
world l Ho ve o Happ y Volent i ne'!. Do y l

73 OlDS ROYAL
4 DR. HT

CLEVELAND (UPI) Free agent Paul Dade, a third
baseman-outfielcter, has Green with viny l roof, nice
signed a multiyear contract Interior, good tires. power,with the Cleveland Indi!llls, factory air.
the . American League
baseball· club announced
Monday.
Dade, 25; was Ute leading
hitter in the Pacific Coast ·
League last year. The Indians
chose him in the draft from
You'lllike Our Quality
the ·California Angels along
Way Of Doing Business
with pitcher Wayne Garland,
GMAC FINANCING
who earlier signed a 10-year 99Z.S342
Pomeroy
Opening Evenings 'til6;00
contract believed to total $2
TitS p .m . Sal.
million.
·

•

(Umit 16 Words-Sizes Illustrated Below)

To Mom and Dad , ..

71~ .

"

lt

THISW'fEK' S SPECIAL

Shout Them from the Classifieds!

•
•

10.
12.

14.
16.

PHONE 992-21 56

THE DAILY SENTINEL

·•

•

,,..

�4-'TheDali:Y Sel~l,Mlddleport·Pmlei"Oy,O,, Tuetday, Feb.l,lrrT

$-The Dilly Sentinel,MI~~POOJeroy, 0., Tuesday,Feb. a, 1977

Basketball Results

·Miami wallops Eastern Michigan

Colltll l•lllttb•ll Rtsults

Rhodes asking

' Old DOminion 17 E . Car. 71
SW La. Ill Arkansas St. , ..
..-.. -.., St. l2 Livingston i.:
11 97 Marshall 90
: 1edmont 93 Augusta 92
Pfe lfftr 75 HIGh Pf. 1A
PrMbV SO M1r1 Hlll12
R:nd. -Mecn IS Saltbry St. 73
St. Aug . 8J J .C. Smlth·IO
Stetson 60 Jacksnvl S-f
VII , C'WIIh Ill W . Car . 63
W. Ky . lOt Tenn. Tech 86
MldWHt .
Cent St. 70 Steubenvl65
Cle. St,. 7.5 F. Ocknsn 6.5
crelgl'lton 90 Ok . City 71
Ind . St 117 Wls,-P'slde 73
Iowa 87 Michigan St. 79
Kenyon 76 Ohio Northern 75
U!l .crosse 51 Eau Cl,lre .50
ro. Lincoln Mo . 17 SE Mo . 57
Loyola HI. 1• Oh io U. 73
Ml11m l 0 . 86 E . Mich. 51
Michig an 86 Mlnnesotl so.
Noire Ome 94 Xavier 0 . 63
Quincy 112 ~W Mo . $1. 81
River FaUs·82 Stout 14

ly Unlttd Prtulnttrnltionel

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor ,
NEW YORK (UP!) - Lefty·Gomez, recovering fr001 open
heart surgery at his h001e in Novato, Calif., turned In some
magnificent pitching performances during his 13 years in the
maj(J'S and made the Hall of Fame-after he was all throush,
but with it all, nobody ever called him a "superstar."
The reason is simple. They didn't use the term In his Ume,
from 1930 to 1943. There were superstars then but things
weren't so overblown and people merely called them stars. Not
ever having been labeled a superstar doesn't botber Lefty
Ganez, though, and it •shouldn't.
Here's a man who was beaten so seldom that only flve ri the
38 other pitchers In the Hall of Fame own a better winning
' percentage than he. Lefty Gomez still holds the World Series'
record lot most Consecutive victories, six, without ever having
~n defeated and if he wasn't a superstar In the lruest sense,
then Elton John isn't either. I can just see Lefty wrinkling his
brow and asking what team did this guy ever play for? .
Now for the first time since Gomez, the New York Yankees
finally have a starting le!thanqed power pitcher in the
superstar class and his name Is Don GJ!)lett.
Don Gullett reminds me of Bob Feller when he ~t came up.
He walks the same way Feiler did and has that same intensity
about him. With the Reds, Gullett kept to himself pretty much.
He'd work•on his glove, read , and generally mind his own
business, 'seldOJII if ever participating in the backand.forth
that goes on in every clubhouse. I can't see him changing his
style much with llle Yankees,
It'll be interesting to see how two entirely opposite personalities like Gullett and Reggie Jackson fit it with the Yankees,
bow they and their multimillion ·dollar contracts will be
. .[ accepted by their new teammstes as well as by the fans In New
t York. Each will have to adjust to a club which isn't at all like
1 the one be's c~ming from. Gullett, who bought a home in New
' Jersey the other day, is the type who'll leave Yankee Stadium
I after the game every night, cross the George Washington
Bridge and go straight home so he can be with his family,
.; Reggie Jackson, much more outgoing and flamboyant, won't
cross the bridge unless he absolutely has to. He's strictly down•.,·, town.
1
• Then there's Thurman .Munson, who figures tq be
; somewhere in the middle. He won't necessarily set the tone for
l how all the Yankees will act but you can bet he'll be·watchlng
1 to see who does. If he doesn'tlike what he sees you can also bet
' he'il speak right up the same 11f8Y he did a coople of weeks ago
; when be felt that in view of the mooey Jackson was getting, he
~ wanted his salary readjusted.
If the Boston Red Sox feel inclined to start laughing about aU
f this, they bad better stop a minute and think. about their own
situation, then maybe they won't feel like laughing.
'
The Red SOx are getting ready for a well-heeled newcomer
~ also . George Scott isn't exactly new l!ecause he has been with
•r Boston before, but he has been away more than five years now.
:; The Red SOx signed him to athree-year contract for mare than
•· $600,000 three months ago, and he 's bound -to discover a lot of
'· things have changed since the iast time he wore a Boston
~.~ uniform.
'
1For one thing, the manager has, It's n9t Eddie KBsko

~ anymore, it's Don Zim1oer. For another thing, George Scott
• will find the personality of the Red SOx has undergone a change
~ also since he last was there. A couple of. young fellows, Fred
'• Lynn and Jim Rice, have come along and they have some of
1: their own ideas. They're not afraid to voice them, either. Rice
, said recently the team would be better off if Carl Yastrzemskl
' was the D!L and not him. Yaz said, well you know bow it is,
~ Jim
Rice is a litUe young. ·
. Yet Carlton Fisk had only come up from the minors. Now
he 1sflrlllly established, and speaks ujl when he feels he has to.
Luis Tiant isn't bashful about doing that, either, and George
Scott will find.Yankees and Red SOx look exciting oo paper.ln
the clubhouse, too.
''

Preu Bend.
By
Ualted
The lrillh moved out to a f4.
lnte-u-1
Mlaml coasted to an fill)' 24 halftime load and coasted
16-511 victory o...- Eutem the 1'811 of the way.
Sophomore guard Nick
Micblgan Monday nl8ht lo
Daniels
paced theliX!II!ra with
take a allm lead in the tlgJj
MldAmerlcan Conference 16 points.
AI Cleveland, center David
race.
The ~. paced by _Kyle scored 31 points and
Archie Aldridge with 19
points, Improved their
conference mal'k 19 7~ and
now hold a onehalf game lead
over runnersup Western
Michigan and Northern
Dllnols, who were both Idle
Monday night. Western and
Northern. both have 6-2
records, while another
INDIANAPOUS (UPI) contender, Central Michigan, Rookie Todd Gibson of Rich·
Is 11-2.
wood, Ohio, bas been named
The RedskinB bad !IItle driver for the first entry
trouble with the wl~less received f..- the 6lst running.
Hurons (0·9 In the of the Indianapolis "500" May
.conference) Monday nl8ht, 29.
.
grabbing tile lead for good
The Indianapolis Motor
with less than seven mlnulea Speedway announced
gone in tile game, Including a Monday evening that Gibson,
33-26 advantage at halftime. 40, was named to drive a 1974
Mlaml, playing at home, Eagle with a four-cylinder
also got 14 points apiece from turbocharged DGS engine,
Chuck Goodyear and Randy owned by Richard Routh of
Ayers as they won their 13th Tiffin, Ohio.
'game overall against four
It will be Gibson's first
defeats.
attempt to earn a starting
Bob Riddle netted a game- position at Indianapoljs, al·
high 22 points for the losing though he drove the car in the
Hurons, now ii-13 overall. ·
Pocono 500rnile race last
Elsewhere Monday night, June 'll, finishing 17th, He
Loyola edged Ohio University also drove It In seven other
74-73, Notre Dame thumpj!(! USAC racesdurinP thp '"JM:~t of
xavier ~ and Cleveland
State downed Fairleigh
Dickinson ~AI Chicago, the Loyola
Ramblers turned back a late
Ohio University ,rally to
squeeze bY the Bobcats in a
nonc~ference game.
The Bcibcats scored the
first eight points of the second
hail to take ·a ~ lead but
the Ramblers scored the next
six points to regain the lead
NEW YORK (UP!) ~With
which
they
never less than a month remaining
relinquished.
to the regular campaign, the
Ohio, now 7·11, came within University of San Francisco
one point at the 64-&amp;, and fast is approaching nitty·
again when Steve Skaggs gritty time in its dual bids lo
scored on a jump shot at the capture
the
national
buzzer.
· besketball championship and
Loyola, 11·7, had five men complete a perfect season.
in double figures, paced bY
The Dons adiled two more
Tony Parker's 16 pllinta. victims to their list last week,
Game honors went to Ohio's routing botiJ St. Mary's, I~
Bucky Walden with 22.
77, and Nevada-Reno, !IS.'Il,
Notre Dame got balanced lo remain the only unbeaten
scoring including 21 points major coilege team with a 23from center Broce Flowers to 0 record through games of
easily whip Jtaiver at SOuth Feb. 5. They have only seven
games remaining,
Despite doing as much as it
possibly can on the basketball
court, San Francisco actually
lost ground in the latest UP!
· .
ratings released today. The
Dons remain No. I, but lost
six points from the previous•

&lt;

I.ATER Tl&lt; EY
Dioc.IDE

TO 9()y...

1

lOX :t31,

,
.

.,.,..!« "'

G~llUOE
AAYL.~,

l MONI'.OE,
~-

sold for the National
League season opener April 6
between the Cincinnati Reds
and San Diego Padres, Reds
officials announced late

It marks the earliest
opening day sellout in the
history of Cincinnati, the
traditional host for the
National lA! ague opener. ·
Standing room tickets are
'-o~W go on sale at the Riverfront
Stadiun\ box office March t
Following the 2:30 p.m.
opener on Wednesday, April
6, the Reda and Padres lake
the next day off, but cmtinue
., .., ..... their four-came series here
with games Friday, Saturday
and Sunday, April8, 9 and 10.
Preceding the Sunday,
April 10 game, Reds players
will be presented world
championship rings for
winning the 1976 World
Series.

So A WEEK

'

I Rlverfro1nt Stadium have

N.Y.

l
J

Brandeis 76 Babson 70
Cathedral77 NY Poly 76
Cheyny 77 Llncln Pa . 50
Colvate 91 Clarkson 70
D.C. Tch rl103 Feet Cty 86
Edinboro 90 Clarion 89
•
Grove Cty 59 Alliance 58
Hofstra 76 Vlrglnle 69
Lehigh 68 Muhlenberg 60 .
Manhattnvl 13 vassar 36
NY Tech 91 Sacrd Heart 87
NV Maritime 85 Yesh iva 63
Richm ond Sl Geo. Wash . eo
Rutgers 90 DuQuesne 70
Siena 74 Canis Ius 66
SE Mass. B.ol B'weter 5.4
St. Jno Fshr 101 Oswgo 6.5
Syracuse 104 Bentley 86
Vermont 58 St . M'ct'la~'s 51

West Va. 69 Wm .&amp;Mery 58

Vikings
topple

·Le Mayne 66 Rchstr U. 51

South

Ala llama 72 M ISSiSSippi 68

Appy St. 83 Baptist 70

Arkansas 76 Tulane 73
Auburn 83 Georgia 74
Blmnt Abby 84 USC -A ikn 65
Catawba 68 At t. Chris 58
Campbell 96 F . Marion 46
Erskine 56 Lander 50
Flor tda 80 Tennessee 76
Furman 92 New Orleens 82
Ga. Swstrn 83 Ga . Coil 67
· Ga . SOuthern 85 Samford 82
Hampton 79 Winston -Salem 61
Huntsvl 73 s . Bndctlne 65
Kentucky 97 Florida St. 57
La Gmgtr 14 Oglethorpe 60
. La . Te en 81 Ga . St, 69
LSU 71 Miss. St . 66
M iss. COL 76 J ' vl St. 74
Mt.St.Mry's 86 Roahoke 82
Newbrry 82 USC-Sprtnbg 76
Ncplls Sf 78 S'estrn La. 72
No. Georgia 69 Berry 66
Norfolk St . 92 F'vl St . 69
No . Alabama 83 Oelfa St. 77
No . K.,. ~R UT CtHitt 76

~Tfive

Coach Gary Salyer's
Symmes Valley .Vikings took
a !inner hold on second place
in the SVAC Monday night
with a 56-53 victory over the
· host Hannsn Trace Wildcats.
Big 6-6 Ralph Ingles led the
Viking attack with 22 points.
Mark Wilson, senior forward,
had 12 points. With the vi"'
tory, SV has a 64 overaU
mark and 11-2 record against
league competition.
Hannan Trace was paced
by the shooting of junior
guard David Swain. Swain ·
had 16 points, David Campbell scored 14 and Frank
S.lurday Beginners
Mooney, 13.
Team
·
.
W. L.
The loss lefttbe Wildcats of No. 2
24 0
14 10
Coach Dan Cornell with a 443 No.5
N~l
1014
overail record, 2-5 mark in No.
4
10 14
the SVAC.
No. 6
10 u
Hannan Trace goes to No. 3
• 20
No. 4- 2461 -886.
Eastern this evening.
No. 2 - 2452·846.

-, Southwest
Arkansas 76 Tulane 73
Ark. Tech 78 Ozarks 66
Austin Col . 92 Wiley 89
Dillard 95 Ark .- L.R . 81
E.IISt Te)(aS 70 Ab. Chris 67

Henderson 83 Cent Ark . 76
Lamar 76 Tex.:Arl74
New Mex. St. 96 Bradty 85
No. Tel( , 99 Nwstrn u . 72
Okla . Bapt 65 J . Brown 61
sw Te)(as 81 Sam Houston 68
St. Mry 's 56 SW Tex . 44
Tex A&amp;183S. F . Austn 19

west
Adams St. 99 N.M. Hllnds 17
Fort L~wiS' 99 Wstrn St. 86
Grnd Cnyn 65 No . Arizona 61
Mesa 73 Regis 66
Ore . Coli 89 Western Bapt 79
Pac Luth 70 Whitworth 62
seattle P~tc 18 E. wash . 67
So . Utah 73 So. Colorado 62
W'mnstr Utah 79 Col. M!nes 67
Wlllamette 94 George Fox 92

CINCINNATI (UP!) -Cin·
cinnati Reds' offlclala have
llned up a "campus carava.n"
in which their radio play-byplay announcers will tour
several colleges promoting
baseball in general and the
Reds in particular,
The tour begins Wednesday
when announcers Marly
Brennaman and Joe NlllhaU,
a .r...mer Reds pitcher, visit
the University of Kentucky in
Lexington.
Other stops include Miami
University in Oxford, Ohio,
"" Feb. 15, Ohio State
vniversity In Columbus Feb.
16 and the University of
Dayton Feb. 22.

Meigs reserves

defeat Wahama

42-28.l:~~~~~~~~~~§~~~i~

32 11 6 70 209
29 17 6 6A 188
Toronto
. 25 21 7 57 196
Cleveland 16 28 9 41 155
_ Mond1y's Ruults
Philadelphia 1 Atlanta 4
Toronto.at 'Bflo, ppd., wea
Tuesday's Glmts
Los Ang .at NY Islanders
Pittsburgh at Sl. Lou is
Wednesday's Gtmes
Buffalo at NY Rangers
Atlanta at Toronto
_ Vancouver at Montreel
Washington at Chicago
Los Angeles 11t Cleveland
Colorado at Minnesota
Boston

Buffalo

112
1.49
115
191

A. Mic higan (.17 ·21
{1) 06 -21
6. Wake Forest {1) {18 -2)

5. Kentucky

228
211

119

7. Marquette (lA -21
10.4
8. Nevada-las Vegas {lS-21 87
9. Alabama ( 17-21
86
10. Tennessee {16-3)
82
11. Cincinnati (15 -3)
68
12. North Carolina (13·4)
51
12. Arkansas (19-ll
51
lA. ArllOn&amp; 06-3)
45
U. Minnesota !16-1 I
45
16. Prov idence 118-2)
26
17. Utah (16-A)
18
18. Missouri {17-4)
13
19. Syracuse (18.2)
9
20. Clemson C17 -3l

Meigl BTHm
Stanley 1-2-3, T. Coates 7·2·
16, Blake 1-0-2, Becker 6-10·
22, Elkins ~-2-10, Gerze 0-0-0,
Hawley 3·0·6, Triplett o.o.o, ·
Andrews 0·0·0, Kennedy 0-2-2,
Tolals 22·17-61.

........ I.....
· 214 E. Main

Wahlma

, POMEROY

"QUALITY and
SERVICE"

Charles Zuspan 1·2·4, Phil
Hobbs 5·7·17, Kelvin Honaker
9-2-2,
Bob Barnllz 5-6·16,
Todd Rawlings J.J.9. Don
R6ssell o.o.o. Totals 14-20-48.
9 Wahama
15 21 28 48
Meigs
10 23 42 61

lb bow
2
MARGARINE .............•.....:......1•••••••~1. 19

All PURPOSE OR SElf-RISING
ROBIN tllOD FLOUR .. .J~.!~:-~~ .....!3.29
ZESTA 1~b. box
.

.

.sth &amp;. Pearl

Racine, o.

lfREBE'STORE
FEB. I-FEB. 12
Right Rtslf'Yod To Limit Quantities
WI Glodly Accept Fed. Food Stamp1
Monday lhru Frida~
·
9:ooto7:00

i

~lurday flo~

I.I

CLOSED

DAIRY
VALLEY BELl

CHOCOLATE MILK

2 age
®ARTS

·~

I

SALTINE CRACKERS ......................... 49'
3-0IAMOND · ·
cans
2/M'
PINEA.PPLE ········ ··••·•• •••···••· ····•·•••
.
SMUCKERS
. 3 lb. jar '1A9

GltAP_E.JEUY ································
uaars ax:KTAIL
·
303 can
39•
·FRUIT
..........•..................

SAUERKRAUT................ " 303 cans •1.00
PIN10 BEANS ................. 4 lb. ba1 99'
BOB EVANS lARD......•••.....•• 2 lb. pq. 79'
PRODUCE SPECIALS

'MAINE
POTATOES
10 LB. BAG

*1"

HEAD
LETTUCE
HEAD

39'

BOSTON BUll

PORK

PORK

ROAST. .........~·..... 79~

LOIN
QUARTERS

SUCED
TASTE~

BOLOGNA
2 LB.

liAr

FRENQI CITY
•

IJW

WIENERS
12.oz.
PKG.

59t

"• . ,· l:B;

·

advance for
unemployment•

MOll. lMIW SAT.
9AMT09PII

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Gov.
James A. Rhodes said
Monday he is asking
for an advance in federal unemployment funds
to help furnish payments to
llerBOOI who have lost their
jobs during Ohio's fuel' shortage.
Rhodes said the state
IUiemployment COOJpenastioo
trust fund balance is $140
mllllon but that it will he
' exhausted · bY mid-March at
the espec!ed rate of
withdrawal.
The 1overnor said lnllial
applications lor
unemployment payments
r"!lc~Jt6 a record 69,979 last
week - a rec(J'd Ill' one
week. He said 45,981 were
related to the enetgy crisis.

OPEN
SUNIJAY 9 AM TO I Pll

"1irtSf£R$ .PI EHFI

FLOOD ALBUM (1913) ..., Pictured is the Uewllyn Wiillams home and store as it
appeared March 30, 1913 in Clifton, W. Va. This old old home was torn down when the
highway was PJI through .Cllfton. Another homwtore and post office, all under one roof,
was built i,tl Clifton lo replace the one torn down. The Uoyd Williams family, descendants of
Uewilyn Wllllama, operated the store until a few years ago. The post office at the same
localioo serves the people of Clifton. Mrs. Denver Blake is posbnistress.

Fonl slashes

March, April pose threat

prices of its
smaller cars

of heavy midwest flooding

DETROIT (UPI) - The
Ford Motor Co . Monday
lowered prices of its small
cars up to $50 while inc
creasing the cost of its larger
VB engines and air con·
ditlonlng to encourage sale
ofsmaller,morefuelefflcient
cars and engines." 11,
Ford Vice President
Bennett E. Bidwell said the
price change would widen the
difference between the price
of small and large cars and
make the smaller, slow·
selling models more at·
tractive to buyers. General
Motors recently Increased
the price of optional large
engines lor the same propose.
The price cuts ranged from
$22 on the Ford Pinto Pony,
reducing its price to $3,077, to
$SO on the Ford Granada,
Mercury Monarch, Ford
Maverick and Mercury
Comet models.
Ford said it will begin. of·
fenng a smaller VB eng me on
1ts Ford LTD model, m· .
creasing the fuel efficiency of
the standard•sized cars.
Customers will have to ask
dealers for the smaller

.,,,.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - ,
The Commerce Department
warned today that sections of
the Northeast and Midwest
ravaged by severe · winter
storms may he plagued with
a new problem in March or
April - heavy flooding.
"The combination of deepfrozen rivers, high water
content in the heavy snow
accumulation, and frozen
ground · Is of concern,"
according to Dr . Robert
White, administrator of
Commerce's National
Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration.
A spokesman for the
National Weather Service
said the potential flooding
mayc(lllparewithfloodlngln
four other. years that were
proceeded by bitterly cold
winters, 1918, 1936 , 1948 and
1

~te said it is "too early to

predict if 'flooding will
occur,',' but said the country
is In the midst of "its worst
winter since 1918" and
"common sense dictates that
the public be kept aware of
the problem 00 a continuing

engine.

basis."

The LTD will be available
with a 302 cubic inch VB at a
price $92less than the cost of
the standard 351 cubic inch
powerplant. The small.er
engine was rated at 17 miles
per gallon on the Environ·
mental Protection Agency 's
combined city-highway test
cycle while the larger engine
obtained 15 m.p.g.

He said the flooding lhreat
would be
diminished
considerably
if
the
threatened areas experience
a "gradual thaw of ice and
snow in the coming mooths."
The worst thing that could
happen, according to the
weather Service spokesman,
would be rapid thawing combined with heavy rain.

Wlllte said the areas with
the highest flood potential
were the basin that drains
into Lakes Erie and Ontario;
oo tributaries of the Ohio
River I!J western Nel" York,
western Pennsylvania and
West Virginia, and on the
mainstem of the Ohio, south
to Cincinnati.
White
also
said
"moderate"

floodin~

Pomeroy • Middleport the Ohio Valley Area
public libraries want to help Ubrarles. Using the catalogs
during these long, .cold days . which · are mal\ed to rural
when schools are closed. route box holders, you may
Children's books on almost order, free of charge, any of
every conceivable subject more than a thousand books
are availllble at the libraries lor adults and children. If you
In Pomeroy and Middleport do not have a catalog, call the
Pomeroy library at 992-5813
and on the bookmobile.
A well-chosen book offers
houn of pleasure - and may
help sharpen reading , skllls
which can suffer from lack of
use. Material on science,
DETROIT (UPI) -Team,
history, art, geography stero President Frank
provides enrichment for Fltzsinunons' eldest son and
school work.
an associate surrendered
And if you are "at your Monday to federal authorities
wit's end"lor something n~w and were arraigned for
to do with the children, alleged misuse of union
borrow a game book or one pension funds.
which shows how to do a new
Richard Fitzsimmons, an
craft project.
officer with Teamsters Local ·
Reading aboud to young 299, and former business
children is satlllylng to both agent Anthony Sclarotta
child and adult. At the stood mule In U.S. Magistrate
libraries you can choole from Court to charges of illegal
famllilr loUt-tales or modem
books for chlldren and take
them home to llbare with your
DANCE IS SET
child. Or children from ages 3
A dance will be held Satur·
to 6 can come to the read- day night from 8 to ll:30 p.m.
aloud story times at the at the Senior Citizens Center.
libraries. These are on The dance is for senior
Friday from 2 to 3 'at the citizens and their guests.
Pomeroy Ubrary and 1:30 to There will be an ad.mlssion
' 2:30 at the Middleport Ubrary charge of $1.25 each. tree col·
fee and tea will be served and
on Mondaya.
Your libraries alao provide each member is asked to take
the booka•by-mall aervlce sandwiches 'or cookies for
through U. memberlhlp in refreshments.

potential exists in central and
eastern Pennsylvania and
New York; all of New Jersey;
and the Ohio River drainage
of Indiana and Dlinois and
western Maryland.
The Weather Service
spokesman said western
Michigan, northwestern
Indiana and northeastern
Dlinois may also experience
flooding problems.

Whales perform
suicide rite
·!ljAYPOnt, Fla. (UUP!)
- About lOll dead pilot whales
were strewn across the Fort
George Island Beach Mon·
day
and
about
40
more of the Iierd were
pushing themselves to·
ward shore In the second
day of the mysterious
stranding.
11
We have no actual count,
but I'm afraid there are
upwarcb of a hundred dead,"
said Florida Marine Palrol
Lt. Glen Keefer. "Many of
them were in a state of shock
when we returned them to the
water and we don 't know
whether they survived.
"Forty are milling around
and acting like the ooes tha'
beached themselves Sunday
and early this morning," he
said.
Marine patrol officers and

There's this about reading

volunteers kept a vigil
throughout the night,
spraying the whales with
water, putting wet blankets
on them, and turning them so .
they could breath. The
rescuers were lrying to keep
them alive until this
morning's high tide, when
they could be refloated.
Hundreds of Whales swam
Into the shallows near the
mouth of the St. Johns River
east of Jacksonville Sunday,
and the call went out lor
volunteers to help in the
rescue.
.
Marine Patrol Sergeant
Williard Palrick said the
biggest problemwas keeping
young calves in deep water,
"They hear their mothers'
call and they come back to
the beach,;' he said of the
whales, which measured
from six to 20 feet.
·
The whale stranding was
the third in Florida in the past
six mooths and left marine
experts puzzled, as in the
other cases.

or the Middleport llbr~ry at · First' communist
992-5713, and one will lie
mailed to you.
•
k
·t
During the cold weather the garns ey pos
libraries are open from 10:30 in Union group
to 5, six days a week and the
Pomeroy·library is open from
PARIS (UPI) - A Com·
2 to 4 on Sundays.
munlst was elected Mooday
to a key post of the Western
European Union Assembly
for the first time. Sergio
Segre, foreign affairs expert
of the ltaUan Communist
conversion of union funds. An party, was named spokesman
innocent plea was entered for for the Political Committee,
them and they were freed on the key IMidy handling In· ·
$10,000 personal bond each. ternatlonal and defense
They surrendered earlier lo · issues.
FBI agents as promised
The Italian Communist
Friday when they were party is bitterly denouncing
indicted by a federal grand SOviet bloc repression of civil
jury. Another defendant in rights dissenters. Segre, a
the case, attorney Stewart confidant of party leader
Sinai, was arraigned Friday. Enrico Berlinguer, was the
Fitdimmons and Sciarotta first Communist WEU
were charged with using ASStmbly member to be
$5,000 of local pension money given a responsible post. He
in 1972 to buy personal is due to deliver his report to
insurance policies for · the seven-nation Assembly In
themselves and other local June. French Communists
officers. Slnla was accused of also are represented fll the
!'OVering up the transaction. Assembly.

SIRLOIN $ 49

STEAK
T·BONE

STEAK ••••••••••• ~~ ••
WHOLE

BEEF LOIN ••••••• Jl.••

$159

$119

$
BONELESS... , •••• ~... 179
.

TOPSIRLOIN

.

Fresh Cut-Up Cl•ickens

LEGS&amp;

~~-

THIGHS •••••• •.
MEATY
·
BREASTS,, ••• ~B•,

69
79

~

PORTERHOUSE
BONELESS •

FILET MIGNON •• ~8~ ••

39¢

'&gt;0 I ''

C:HUNK
SUPERIORS NO. 1

BACON

&amp;FOR

,

12

·

oz. PKG.

'

'

Ll.' ~~l59

89~

5 $1 ·
LB.

SAVE BIG ON THESE GROCERY SPECIALS
DAIRY LANE

ICE
CREAM
All FLAVORS
% Gallon

Carton

----

89~

CAMPBELl'S .

TROPICA~A

CHICKEN NOODLE

ORANGE
JUICE

OR

VEGETABLE SOUP

4

CANS

89~

64 oz.
bottle

EVERYDAY LOW PRICE
SPECIAL

RC COLA
8-16

· 89~ .

I

Gallon
Limit One i
Coupon Expires Feb. 12, 1977

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

.· with us!

\,

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bottles

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992-6304

',.

f'

BANANAS

-Enjoy three sizes of your favorite
piJZIS.
-Try our delicious subs while ~ou
sip your favorite suets.
·
Eat In Or Carry Out
Phone

HAM

39e
gge

GOLDEN RIPE

MEIGS INN PillA SIW:K

BOILED

99

•••••••••

PHONE
THE ALL NEW

FRENCH.
..,. ... .CITY

$

2
·
Lunch Meat Specials

DELICIOUS APPLES

.

$

LB

BEEF TENDERLOIN

RED OR GOLDEN

HEAD LETTUCE

l

New Yor~ Stnp •••• •.. 199.

LARGE

FRESH CRISP

Head

.

BOLOGNA •• ~B••

~

$169

LB

STEAK ••• ~ •••••• ~ ••

PRODUCE SPECIALS

large

.

PlANNING APIZZA PARTY

'

I

,/

QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED

Court holding Fitzsimmons

BWE BONNET

'

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Bloomsburg 81 Wilke-s 69

week and had their margin
SYMMES VA'LLEY 1561 No. I - 2425-885.
over runnerup UCLA reduced lngl•s 22. Wilson 12, Eslen a,
Bobby Williams 413, 161.
Miller 5,. Geswein 5, Myers 4.
Dlno Papadopoulos 373, IJ8.
from 99 points to 35.
HANNAN TRACE Cn1 Jerry Howard 325.
San Francisco drew 31 Swain 18, Campbell 14,
Bil l Jelfers 188.
13 .- Whi.tt 8.
flrstplace ballots-the same Mooney
Coach - Paulelte Butcher,
$core by quarters:
total as laSt week-from the s.v.
9 l7 12 lB-56
10 15 12 16- 53
42 members of .the United H.T .
Press International Board of
OUR BOARDING HOUSE
with Mojor Hoople
Coaches, but lost support
elaewhere to wind up with a
UM, YA6.
total of 396 points. UCLA, a
FI\MOU~
winner of three games last
AAVE SE&amp;GED ME
week to raise its record to 16TO DO .SPO~T5
2, was the No. I choice of
T&gt;IERAPY
eight coaches and had a total ·
P~O FES510NAI.LY!
of 361 points. .
BUT OF GOU!i'5E T~E
After taking a 15-13 first
1\ M 1\. WOULD
Louisville, which woo its
period
lead,
the
Wahama
"E.VER PERMIT
only game last week for a 11;.2
·
reserve
team
blew
it
as
·
the
--...~IT!
record, jumped from seventh
place to third with 230 points, Baby Meigs Marauders came
two moce than Michigan (17· back in the ~ond hall to
2). Kentucky (!1;.2) Is fifth take a . 61-48 victOry. ' Greg
with 211 points, followed by Becker's 22 points was just
Wake Forest (lil-2) with 179, too much for the Falcons to
Marquette (14-2) with liM, overcome. Becker sank 10 of
Nevada-Las Vegas (15-2) 10 attempts from the free
with 67, Alabema (17-2) with throw line and caMed six
86 and Tennessee (16-3) with field goals.
NHL Standlnvs
The game was still close at
By United Pren International ~the
hail as Meigs had taken a
campbell Conterenct
Louisville, Kentucky and
Pttrlck Division
23-21
lead, but by the end of
W L T Pts. GF GA Wake Forest each received a
the
third
period the hosts
Phila
32 10 12 76 215 149 single Hrst.place vote while
NY tslandrs 31 1.5 8 70 190 137 Nevada-Las Vegas dropped
Atlanta
2&lt;f, 19 11 59 183 174
Meigs's Tim
,.~
NY R.angers 19 23 13 51 192 198 from third to eighth place as
opened
the Coats
gap also
to made
Smythe Division
double
figures
as
he
scored
the result of an 8&amp;ll4 loss to
Vi l T Pt.. Gf GA
sixteen points while Elkins
St . LouiS
2226 6 50 158189 Dllnois State.
had ten. Meigs hit 22 of 53
Chicago
19 27 9 A7 171 192
Colorado
16 2f 9 41 160 198
attempts
for 41 percent and
NEW YORK (UPII - Th ~
M inn!sota 13 28 12 38 155 211
"The Insurance Store"
U
n
i
I
e
d
Press
lntenuHional
got 17 of 24 from the loulllne.
Vancouver 15 JA 6 36 15J 21J
Board ot Coaches ' co llege
W1lt1 conference
Complete
Wahama was led bY Phil
bnketball ratings wltM won -lost
Norrl~ 0~~~~~:. GF GA records through games of Hobbs' 17 markers while Bob
Insurance Service
Montreal
39 7 9 87 -262 128 Saturdlly, Feb . 5, and number Bamltz had sixteen. The
Pittsburgh 24 21 9 57 170 169 of firsl -tllace votes In paren .
team hit only 33 percent from
LOS Angeles 19 23 11 49 lU 110 theses. Tertth Week :
Points the field (14 of 42) while
Washif'lgtn 16 30 9 41 148 207 Team
Detroit
1! Jl 6 36 1JJ 190 1. San Frar~clsco (311 (23-0 l 396 connecting on 20 of 34 . from
2. UCLA (81 C18·21
361
Adems Division
230 the charity stripe.
W L T Pts. GF GA 3. Lo uisville (1 t {16-21

f,
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Baruch 103 Mercy N"' 89

BOWLING

• on top
rema1n

(UPI)- All
r~ r~~;;:;~;;;~;;;:;;:;;;;;;-J~-_.:.--.,,.'CIN~CINNATI
I k.eN~S C.UEfJTS I'OOH·~EO
at
51,963-seat
OTHERS ARE
lfJTERESTEO .. 50 1r:
\OJ REAL.L.Y WAAT IT,
M A $100 BI&gt;IOER
TO T~E IT OFF Tl&lt; E
MARKET···

the
season,
earning
championship points In three
events.
Glblon was chief mechanic
for the car when It was at the
SPeedway last year. Several
drivers practiced in lt and
Jan Opperman qualified it
with an average four-lap
speed of 181.717 miles an
hour, good enough only for a
last-row spot in the 33-&lt;:ar
'lineup.
Opperman was ronning in
16th place when rain washed
out the race after 2S5 miles.
Speedway President Tony
Hulman said he expects
about
·70
entries,
accompanied by the $1,000
enjry fee, will be filed by
midnight April 15.

Unbeaten Dons

all sold out

Albr ight PO Mortvlan o5

115.

entry in Indy 500

Opemng" tilt

East

at the balf and then opened
their lead to 41-32 in the first
90 seconds 6f '"" aecond hall.
Cleveland Slate boosted ita
record to 7-12 and Fairleigh
Dickinson Is now &amp;-11.
In other games, Kenyon
aqueaked bY Ohio Northern
76-75; Marietta do'IJIIed
Denlaon 76-al; Cenlral State
defeated Steubenville m.e5;
Wilmington zapped Earlham
(Ind.) SUI; and Kentucky
State dumped Wilberforce !IZ-

Ohio driver first

They'll Do It Every Time

1-l~R ADVICE .. ·

grabbed II rebounds to load
Cleveland State to ita nonconference victory o...- Fairleigh Dicklnlon.
Kyle made 12 ci 18 from the
Door and aeven of eight from
the free throw line u CSU
snapped a live-tame losing
streak. The Vikings led 41-32

- -·

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�I-:- Tile DIJ4r !lenllnel, Mlddleport-Pcmeroy, 0., 'l'lleedof, Feb.

Weather jeopardizes heart drive

Fun With Food
Rv Charlene Hoeflich
. ZUcddnl 1111 'hn everyday food around most homes, but U
Ia cme of thole fooGI wblcb carl be p~ in a variety clwaya
IDd add a Uttle ..tlo m.la. You can fry U, bake it, uae it in
~.or In lnada.
Long-Ume neilclr, C. C. Cudller, who Uvea at Long
!Wtrcn, ealled lbe other day to aay how much be lilted the
bul:tencotcb bars, ~ lot which appeared in IIlia colwnn a
week or ao ago, llld told 18 of Esther Bukey's receipt for
zucclllnlnut bread. lndclenlllliy, It waa nice to hear from Mr.
01.~.
•
And the recipe ZUCOIININUriiREAD
3 ecp, I cup of oil, 311p. vanilla, 311p. cinnamon, !lip.
salt, 2¥. cups ~~~gar, 2 cupa grated zuccblnl squash (peeled), 3
cups fiour, !lip. aoda, and~ cup chopped nub.
Mix IIIPI' and oU together, add the eggs and mill: weU. Add
the lqll8lb alternattnc will! lbe other lngredlenb. Bake at 325
in two loaf pms for about «n hour.
Americana of aU agel aend valentine greetlnfls to nearly
, everyODe, but what with the high cost of card&amp; and the postilge,
yqu might thla year like togo the do.lt-yOW'Ielf, back-to-basics,
route.
·
Make a batch of valentine cootie card&amp; and write a name
or message with sweet frosting. Now that's practical - food
for both body 1111d soul, and who wouldn't rather get a cookie
than I card.
One recipe you might use Is thla:
VALENTINE COOKIE CARDS
% cup ( 1% sticks) margarine, % cup finnly packed dark
brown sugar, legg, 211p. vanilla, 2 cups unsifted flour, I'• tsp.
baking powder, % tap. salt, red food coloring, % cup finely
cbopped peiii!Utll, and ccnfectioners' sugar frosting.
Cream margarine and brown
togetller until light
and Duffy . .Beat ln eu and vanilla. Combine Dour, baking
powder and salt. Stir Into creamed mixture to fonn a soft
dough. Remove 'ft of dough to
bowl. Tint with red food
coloring to alight red color. RoU out the tinted dough to \0 inch
lhicknesa between two sheets of waxed paper. lay Oat iii
freezer 1D!til ready to uae. Mb: pearuts iiito remaiillng dough.
Wrap tightly In waxed paper and chlll si&gt;t hours or overnight.
Roll out nutlf!d dough evenly on a 15~ by l2lnch baking
sheet to cover entire surface. With a straight edge, deeply
mark dough Into 3 indl squares. Bake at 375 degrees about 12
minutes or untllllgbtly browned. Cool oo baking sheet.
When ready to frost, carefully break cookies into three

joanne

ENGAGED - The engagement of Joanne Erbele,
daughter of the Rev. and Mrs. Walter Erbele, Salem,
Oregon, and Richard Nease, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Nease, Route 3, is being announced. Miss Erbele wiU
graduate in March from the Seattle Pacific University
where abe is a mathematics and computer majar. Mr.
Nease graduated from Tulsa University with a bachelor of
science in Education and is a fonner teacher at the
Wahama High School. He is In his second year at the
Seattle Pacific University where he is studyind dramatic
arts. AJuile.weddlng will be held in Salem, Ore .

sugar

smau

inch squari'JI.
Remove the tinted dough frcm freezer. Working quickly
with a smaU heart-ohaped cookie ·cutter, cut out 20 heart
shapes. Place oo ungreased bilking slteet. Bake at 375 about
eight minutes. Remove from baking sheet and cool on wire
rack.
. Frost the peanut squares with confectioners' sugar
frosting to within 'lo inch of the edges. Presa a heart onto each
square before frosting hardens. Use the froSting to write on a
name or message or ta create a design.

Polly's Pointers

By

How to stop
soap build-up

DEAR POlLY ..; I would add moisture by putting a
like to know how the other tiowl of water close to each
readers remove the soap )lester or on top if possible. I
build-up from the inside of find I can also keep the heat
their washing machines. ~ • lower and save on energy. SUSAN.
J.T.
DEAR POLLY- I keep a
Howaboutthis,readers?
DEAR POlLY- Pet Peeve clean pot scrubber near the
is with that celophane tape sink • for scrubbing
we all use so much. This is a vegetables, especially
wonderful product if, and I potatoes. I buy the. colorful
mean If, you can get it off the ones and they last indefiniteroll. It is so frustrating when ly. -JANE.
you wlint a piece of the tape
Polly will send you one of
and it breaks or unrolls her "peachy" thank-you
crooked'and you geta narrow cards, ideal for framing or
strip that breaks or sticks · placing in your famUy scraptogether. If one has short book, if she uses your favorite
fingernails ii taltes a lot cl Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
picking to get the tape started her cohunn. Write. Polly's
again. Then, often, the same Pointers in care of . this
thing happens again.
newspaper.
Another Peeve is to fiiid a
brand of pantyhose that fits
beautifuUy, and then go back
to get more of the same and
find they have changed
something, like shorteniilg
from the crotch to the waist
or omitting a gusset, etc.
·FRUSTRATED SENIOR
DEAR POlLY -,1 hope I
can help Mrs. E.M. who
washed her favorite jeans
with glass fiber curtains. My
husband works at a glass
fiber shop. To get the glasa
out of his work clothes the
shop sends them to the
·cleaners to be dry cleaned.
This has always done the .best
job on his clothes. I hope it
. works for Mrs. E.M. - DON·
NA.
DEAR POlLY - I.Jke Mrs.
E.M.I washed my son's jeans
and shirts with glass fiber
curtains. My niece was a
secretary at a plant where
they used glass fiber and told
me to run the clotbea through
a live minute cycle with a cup
of fabric aoftener.l did and It
worked.like inagic. The men
:)Who worked at IIlia plant also
took batha Wltli some of IIlia
liquid fabric softelier in ·the
water and . were · n~ver
botllered with itching. MRS.J.S.
DEAR POlLY - Do tell
Mrs. E.M. who washed jeans
·with glass fiber curtainll to
Iron them on both slclea'with a
hot Iron. Thla WGrked tor me
on shirts 8lld sllpa. - MRS.
E.D.
DEAR ' POlLY . - When
llllking rolled cooldes that
have to be sliced ·I use a
· cbeele slicer that baa wires in
.It It cull throuP the dough
eu,Uy IIICI you can cut them
any dellred tldckneaa- much
beUer than U8lng a knife.
-CANDY...
. DEAR POlLY- When the
llr illdoan Ia dry, you can

..

FRIDAY
RETURN Jonathan Meigs
Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution, wiD
meet at I :30 Friday at the
Meigs Inn. Mrs. Everetl
Hayes will have the program

Youth enjoy
swim party
Youth of the Bradbury
Church of Christ enjoyed a
swimming party at Rio
Grande College Saturday.
In the group were Don
Raley, pastor, Kathy Miller,
Sherry King, Kevin King,
Des! Jeffers, Rita and
Rodney Bailey, Dave Cole,
Stephanie Radford, April
King, June Hutton, Cathy
Hess, Ruth Caney, Tina
Miller, Mike M!Uer, Sherrie
Barnhart, John Blake,
Tammy Blake · and Mike
Wayland.
sack lunch following the
meeting. Others attending
were Mrs. Amber l,obn, Mrs.
Donna Gihnore and Mrs. Iva
Powell.

tana."

The members enjoyed a

:::::::::@-::X"~::::;;;:::::.:;::~;~::::.~:-;:~::~::::::::::::::::~::::x:::::;::~:;:;:;:;;;::;.o;;.;:;;;.;.:·:·:·:·:::;~~~ r::?-:::::::::::,:;:::;:::;::::::::::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:::::::::::::;:;:;:::::;:-;;~::?.:~=~~~'X.:~~fel$1

Valentine

{l

'

Goessler Jewelry Store
113 Court Sl

PameniJ, 0.

and Blue Shield Plans
are doing about ·
·health care costs.

CJ,aims Audits
We screen all hospital and doctor bills and
compare them agamst established guidelines
to assure that the treatment was appropriate
and that the charges are correct and reasonable. We also make detailed checks into
claims that fall outside the guidelines to be
certain that any apparent irregularities are
justified. Then, if necessary, we review the
medical records of patients to be absolutely
certain that all treatments and services were
absolutely-required.

Hospital and Doctor Charges

+++

NOTE FROM SUE : A talk with your priest will show you
hat nullS must be motivated far beyond a sense of failure and
he lear of la cing life. U you're truly called, then enter a
unvent - but be very sure.

CANCER

Answer line

Cost·Saving.Programs
It's often possible to provide quality health
care without using a hospital bed. We encour·
age and pay for home health -care following
early hospital discharge"', same-day surgery,
pre-admission testing, and post-discharge
testing in cases where money ean be saved.
We're als~ exploring the .alt~rnative of a
Health Mamtenance Otgamzat10n (HMO) to
determine the feasibility of an HMO in Central
Ohio. The Jlracticality and consumer accept·
ance of HMO's have not yet been proved, but
we believe the concept may have merit and
should be thoroughly researched.

I!SlWciation in laboratory animals, bas been studied and
debated for a long tim~ . However, despite the fact that the
original develop~ and marketer of the cbeinical compound
said that it would ask for further bearings, the Federal Food
and Drug Admlnlstrati6n issued another ruling in October 1976
that makes lt,extremely unlikely that cyclamates will return to
supermarket shelves.
A rancher explains: "I was sorry to hearn that Senator
Hubert H. Humphrey had to be treated for bladder cancer.
What can you tell me about this fopil of ca~er?"
ANSWERiine: Bladder cancer will strike some 22,000
American men and ~.ooo ·Amerlcan wome.n iii 1976, making it
one of the .less common forms of cancer. Over the past 25
years, the'lricldteilce of bladder cancer has been dropping for
women and 'InCreasing in men. Fortunately for both sexes
there baa ,been improvement In survival thanks to better
treatment and ~arly diagnosis. Early detection of bladder
cancer is crbciBI becuase there is more than a three times
better chance of surviving at least five years If bladder
cancer Ia .first treated in an early stage. Early diagnosis can
be accompliahed in il routine way - by having regular
checkups including urinalysis - 1111d by seeing a physician
irrunedia,tely if you notice something that is not routine such as
difficulty. in urinating and-or ' blood in the uline. Please
'remember that theSe · symptoma d011't necessarily mean
cancer, btit the pojlsibillty exists, 1111d it might save one's life to
have such symp!oms checked by a physician.
For mare' infortnatioo contact the Meigs unit of the Cancer
Society at 992-7531 or .\he Gallia Unit, 446-7479.

Coordination of Benefits

The purpose of coordination of benefits is to
We sit down with each hospital in our cover· preverit duplicate payments for the same .
age area to discuss any proposed increase in service from two or more health care plans.
charges. Increases must be absolutely neces· Collecting more than the actual cost of a serv·
sary before we'll honor them. As a result of . ice raises the cost of health care for everyour reviews of proposed increases during a body else.
recent twelve month period, 23% were - - - -·---....-...
reduced, rejected or withdrawn.
The cost of everythin(f \~ i~l continue to rise
1
With doctors' fees, we compare charges with as long as inflation sLjs \''(tl, us, as long as
what has been paid in the past, both in Central there are advances in mer:tical science, and
Ohio and statewide. If the charges are more as long as _people continue to use the health
than what we think they should be, we find care benef1ts they need-as they should do.
out why. And we never pay more than is
Working together, though, we can slow down
usual, customary, and reasonable.
the increases in health care costs. ·
Find out what you can do to help hold down
Working Wrth Others
the rising cost of health care. It's in this free
We work with whomever we can- hospitals,
booklet, along with the rea~ons. whyhealth care
doctors, professional groups, associations,
costs so much and what hosp,tals and doctors
ar~ doing about it. Send for your copy toda•·

_________

.

,\\\·,:' REVIVAL ·

•
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••

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UNITED PENTECOSTAL CHURCH
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. Middleport, 0...

· 'South 3rd Ave.
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Please send my free copy of

How All of Us Co" Help Each of Us
Hold Down Health Care Cost to:
Address ___________- ; - - -- -

Mon ....Tuts.; Wta. II S.t.-:JOtll5rOO
THURSDAY tiL 121()0N

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All of us helping each.dus.

Columbus, Ohio 43216

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.h:
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Gai-y; bld.

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"'""In Gtatt

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FAMILY FETED
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Oliver
and family of Pomeroy en·
tertained members of their
!emily to celebrate the birth·
day of Mrs. Chester Oliver on
Monday evening. Ice cream
apd cake were served to Mr.
and Mrs. Chester Oliver of
Clifton, W, Va .; Mr. and "!rs.
Luther Tucker and sons of
Mason. Slides of a recent get
together were shown. Gifts
were presented to Mrs.
Oliver.

Sixty-four on
Jr. High honor
roll at Meigs
Principal John Mora an .
nounces the th ird six weeks
gradin9 period honor roll at
the Me1gs Junior High School
In Middleport . 'The 64
students who made a grade of
B or above in all thelr 1 sub ·
jects to be named to the roll
are : '
Seventh - Terry Adk ins, ·
Kristin A'Oderson, Rhonda
Barnhart, Johri Beaver ,
Jimmy Boyer , Dale Brlckles,
Mark Cline, Pam Crooks ,
Phyllis Davis, Vicky DeBord ,
Kimberly DeMoss , Melanie
Dillard, Mike Edwards,
Tammy Eichinger, Dav id
Hoffman. Tracy Hysell ,
Unrecka Johnson, Dickie
King, Roger Kovalchik, Eric
Lipscomb, Teresa . McCoy,
Charles McCloud. Mark
McGuire, Gary Nakamoto,
Jeff · Nash, Lynn Oliver ,'
Kathleen Parker, Helen
Slack, Laura Smith, Melissa
Spencer , Greg Thomas ,
Becky Tillis, Tim Tillis, Fred

Young .

~

OPENDAILY
9 TO 10
SUNDAY
10 TO 10

CORNER MILL &amp; SECOND ST.
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
We Accept Federal Food Stamps_ We Reserve the Right To Umit Qoanmies

•-----'1

t-----•

MINUTE
STEAKS
FRESH &amp;LEAN

'.

. j

5 LBS.

GROUND OR MORE
BEEF............
FRESH &amp; LEAN

.,

LB.

·.

¢

69

LB.

LB $109

GROUND ROUND ••••• ~.
FRESH &amp; LEAN

FRESH &amp; LEAN

GROUND

CHUCK.........

99¢

,.

gge
SLAB BACON ••••••• ~.
SLICED
gge
LB.

BY THE PIECE

\

LB.

LB

I

e

79

:

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•,.
'

SCOT LAD

JOY
LIQUID •••••
I

•

1-LB. BOX

CRACKERS·

f

BROUGHTON'S

VAUEY BEll

BROUGHTON'S

2% MILK HOMO MILK BUTTERMILK
plastic

gallon

~

lh gallon

$149

carton

79~ ~:·· 69~

FROZEN FOOD SPECIAL

"If we make
an error on
, your taxes, .
we pay the penalty.
And the interest!'
Reason No. 14 why H&amp;R Block ·
should do your taxes.

618 EAST MAIN
Open 9 A.M.·6 P.M. Wookdoy1, f.5 Sol.
Ptlont 992·3795
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY

I•

•

.~.

DIET RITE.

R.C.
COLA
8-16

COLA
'

8-16 OZ. BOffiES

oz. somEs

$129

'1"

COKE t

DR. PEPPER

8-16 oz. bottles

8-16 OZ. BOm.ES

99e

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NO WASTE

·

Eighth - Conn ie Bailey ,
Kenda
Braun,
Charles
Collins, Dean Colwell, Rob
Davis, Shari Diehl, Tim Gore,
Katrena Hale, Dave Harding,
Herald,
Jayne
Robin
Hoefl ich, Sheila Horky, Tim
Kauff, David Kennedy , Brian
King, linda Kova lchik,
Becky Long, Terry Mayes.
Mike Miller, John Morris.
Sjeve Ohlinger, Beth Perrin ,
Joan Roberto , Lori Rupe,
Camlil~ Swindell , Barbara
Thomas, Jena Welker, Darla
Wilcox, Darla Williamson
and Dav id Wilkes.

THE IN&lt;;:OME TAX PEOPLE

William Knittel, Pastor

,.

•

H&amp;R BLOCit

El!eryone Welcome

SUPER
MARKET

Angela Hatfield, Jim Hoyt,
Bri ll King, Nataline Lam ·
bert, John Lyons , John
Sm ith , Greg Taylor.

H&amp;R Block doesn't make many mistakes.
Our ~pie are trained not to. But if we
should make an error that costs you
additional tax, you pay only the additional
tax. Block pays any penalty and interest.
We stand behind our work.

Spiritual Singing.

eRfgister~ marks Blut&gt; Cn1~s A SS41Cialinn •Rel(i~tertd strvict mark•. crftht NalicHlal AsSIOatitm ·,., Bluf Shittd Plans

I

"

1,

'

Apostolic Preaching and

Box 348

'

1

.- dLFro'm

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.
Blqe Cross and Blue Shield in Central Ohio

MASON FURNITURE

77a-5592

State _____ .Zip ____

r

••

Evangelist Rev. G: M.. Allen

Mail this to:
Free Booklet

FilMY UNTIL 8 PM
'

City

"'"'

l

7:30 &amp;dl:NW!l Ei~ Mooday

Name ________________- ,

1

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Salisbury Elementary School
honor roll being announced

Pri t1Cipa I Jotln Usle has
announced the third six
weeks ·honor · roll at the
Salisbury
Elementary
School . Making a 9rade of B
or above in all the1r subjects
to be listed on the roll were :
FIRST - Davi d Beegle,
Bill
Brothers,
Michele
Folmer. Sue : Ellen Fry.
Charlotte
Hart, · Audra
Houdashe lt, Artie Hunne l .
~
Canc&amp;r
Erica Johnston
_American
____
_ _Soc'"""
_-_.,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Kevin
Victor . Alison
King, Jones.
Angie
Sloan.
Tamra
Vance
.
SECOND ~ Brenda Sinclair , Sally Radford, Ph illip
A regular feature, prepared by the American Cancer King, Todd Cullums , Heather
Cullums, April Clark, Lin
Society, to'lhl!lp' l!l!v&amp;')iour llfe from cancer. . ..
'Chase, Melanie Arnold .
A disc jockey"writes: "! am a cigarette smoker and I get
THIRD - Jodie Harrison,
angry at all the pressure non-smokers put on people like me. Barbara Hatf ield, Kevin
Mowery, Scott Pullins. Cindy
Don't other smokers share my feelings?"
Tim Sloan. An ita
ANSWERline: This year, the National Clearinghouse for Sauters,
Smith. Tammy Terry, David
Smoking and Health·rel!"'sed a major study on the adult use of Warth, Rodney Harrison :
FOURTH ~ Ruth Fry,
tobacco and found that a large proportion of smokers share the
attitudes of nonsmokers!' f01' example, people in both groups Sandra Hoyt, Shawn Johnson,
e Lyons, James
want to see smokil)g allowed in fewer places; many are in Charlott
Parker, Teresa Pratt , Kim
favor of a total ban 011 cigarette advertising, and they feel that Roush, Den ise Stegall , Jackie
business management is right in prohibiting smoking in the Welker .
FIFTH ~ Rhonda Jeffers,
workplace. Also, one-third of the smokers questioned said that
Mike Kennedy , Christy
they found i! annoying to be near a person smoking a cigarette. Quivey , Cra ig Sinclair, Paula
A dieter askS: "Are they going to bring back cyclamates'" Swindell.
ANSWE;Rllne : What to do about cyclamates, tbe artificial
SIXTH - Scott Harr ison ,
sweeteners tbat were taken off the market because of a ~ancer

health planning agencies, employers, regula·
tory agencies-to encourage c~st-saving
programs and help make sure the nght health · ·
care facilities and services are available
where they're needed without unnecessary
duplication.
,

....

r-~-----~::7

I

ar Helen • .!'~~ge Is Just Too Floal ...
Hoeflich
~
I've been going with my boyfriend for two years and I
Illy love him. He's the greajest. So why do I feel I'm not
The Mason City Historical Society at its meeting Thursday
1(1y for marr_iage?
,
started a quilt which will be soict soon and made plans for the
~ haven't dated many different feUows, and I keep
•rrying about what if I marry and then discover I should dinneronFebruary12atsp.m.foractivemembers.
Mrs. Fred Taylor presented the devotionals Psahn 119 and
vo dated more?
verse 105, and closed with prayer. Mrs. J. Marshall gave the
I tort awfully guilty because at times I don't want to be lied secretary's report and Mrs. Oelwon Roberts the treasurer's.
one person . Hope you can help me cuz I'm ~ ALWAYS
Notepaper with a picture of the Virgil A. Lewis-Rousb
:JRRIED
home bas been received and will be sold at $1.25 per package.
Many packages of this bas been sold in the past. Mrs. Landon
!ar A.W.:
Smith, president, presided.
Nery few people make it to the altar without having second
Mrs. Earl Irigels reported that she had n.ot heard from Mr.
oughts. Marriage is ooe of the biggest steps in IUe. Naturally Leonard Davis in regards to having the home put on the
·u'lli;KJth wonder , " Are we ready?"
·
National Register.
Share these worries with your fiance . Perhaps he feels as
Lunch was served at noon. Those attending were Mrs.
•U do ~ that you should sample a bit of freedom firs t.
Delmar Alexander, Mrs. John Marshall, Mrs. Landon Smith,
U you ·~~. right for each other. a trial separation will make Mrs. Fred Taylor, Mrs. Earl Ingels, Mr~-· Ray. Proffitt, Mrs.
•u more sure of it. ~ HELEN
Oelwon Roberts, Mrs. Cecil Smith, Mrs. Dennis Harris and
' '·' . '
+++
Mrs. Norman Reynolds.
- NoTE"f!li}M SUE cAnd if you're wrong for each other ~
you 're r""ymg togetl)er out of habit, duty , safety, convenient
NEW HAVEN- The Jr. OUAM Lodge No. 175 qf New
indness; a-trial separation. should open your eyes.
Haven has discontinued its meetings until Thursday, March 3,
When a·young woman is always worried about her coming at 7:30p.m . in order to conserve energy .
arriage, I'd guess abe 's not ready. Give yourselves time to
.ink. ., .
.
Clifton Personals
+++
Ricky Robinson , employed as farm manager at Boys
ear Rap :
Industrial School. Prunty Town, W. Va., visited his parents,
, I am 19 and confused . My parents wan t me to be a Mr. and Mrs. Harrison Robinson over the weekend.
lautician and I went to school to please them , but didn 't like
Dorothy Blake of Point Pleasant visited over the weekend
. When I quit, Dad said, "Get out if you won't learn a trade." with her mother, Mrs. Wilma Blake.
Now I'm Jiving with two beautiful people, bull can't keep
Mr. Oscar Johnson was taken to the Veterans Memorial
'lfting.
. ,
,
~
Hospital on Friday where he remains a patient.
I broke up with my fiance because I wanted to become a
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Wilson and family of Atlanta, Ga.
un. He can 't understand how I could love the church more visited recently with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bliss Wilson in
1an him. ·~
1
Mason.
· Eyeryone wants to make my decisiollS. Even my former
Also recent visitors at the Wilson home were their
igh school principal kee'ps bugging me to finish school.'
daughter and family, Mr. and Mrs. James Dum and children,
I have a mind but they all wark it for me. They all tell me Stephanie, Peter and Lori.
·hat to do until I'm pulled apart. What do you suggest'' - roo
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Smith of Lexington, Ky. visited over
IUCH ADVICE
the weekend with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Granville Smith
of Leon , and with Mr. and Mrs. John MarshaU in New Haven.
&gt;ear TMA:
Mr. Thomas Oldaker, Jr. is a patient at St. Mary's
You complain over "Too Much Advice" and in the same Hospital in Huntington. His room is 300 Oldaker was taken to
'tter, seek ours ! Perhaps people try to make your decisions Pleasant Valley Hospital following an auto accident. He
eca use you ask their help - which·indica oos you 're not sure reportedly received a broken right leg. He was later transnough about your life to plan it lor yourself.
ferred to St. Mary's Hospital where he is now hospitalized.
We'd suggest 1not advise, remember ) that you sort out
our various choices; analyze the bad and good points of each .
r none of them is a clear winner, then maybe you should
!tempt an entirely differ ent career. -' HELEN

t yOur Blue Cross

The first goal of your Blue Cross and Blue
Shield Plans is to provide the benefits for the
health care you need. And, as health care ·
costs have gone up, rates have had to go up
accordingly. We don't like that any more than
youdo.
·
For years, we've been working to resist in·
creases and hold down health care costs. Here
are some of the things we are doing.

iJ: lif

By Helen and Sue Uouel

fop

Her

•

Community
I jlj Corner By Charlene

. Generation Rap

without hope. '"!'be
people of Central Uluu hqo
a~yl betiiiDOit pnerou(lb
the Heart cauae, and we llllow
that they will continue to 8lve
"" not only tbetr financlal
wert not

.

TUESDAY
SYRACUSE PTO TUesday,
7:30 p.m. at the school. Steve·
Dawson wlll speak on
alternatives for . drug
problems In elementary
schools. Third grade mothers
will serve refreshments. '
OHIO Eta Phi Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30
p.m. Tuesday at the
Columbia Gas Co. for
demonstration by Betty
Newton.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY • Middleport
Lions Club, .Wednesday noon
at the Meigs Inn.
POMEROY Chapter 30,
RAM, stated convocation,
Wednesday, 7:30p.m. at the
Ponleroy Masonic Temple.
All RAM's urged to attend.
Bosworth Council 46, Royal
and Select Masters, will meet
at 8:30 p.m. at the Temple.
THURSDAY
SOUTHEASTERN Ohio
Regional · Council
on
Alcoholism, Thursday, I p.m.
at Trinity Chapel, Third and
Wooster, Marieita.
ELEANOR Circle of Heath
United Methodist Church
Thursday at the church at
7:30 p.m. Co-hostesses, Judy
Fraser and Pauline Horton.

w,orld Day of Prayer to be
observed in March was pJan.
ned during a meeting of the
Missionary Society of the
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church held recently at the
heme of Mrs. Doris Shook.
Mrs. Jean Wright read a
letter on stewardship from
the stewardship chainnan of
the district and several
members were reported ill by
Mrs. Ann Mash. Members .
fonned a cirolt for a time of
prayer for the sick and aged,
the weather and the energy
crisis.
For devotions, Mrs. Wright
read from Romans, and
several articles Including
"When Hall ~ulned the Crops
in Berunda," ueartons for
CARE" and "I Don't Under,..
.

·~·

Social
Calendar

Society
selects
date

CITIZEN.

J::.rtJ(~te

that a lot of people
won't be home be·
cnse tbey are staying
with frlendl or ,t.iilva.''hi
only thing we can do then II
hope they will 11e11d In a
contribution to the Heart
Fund in the 'not at home'
envelope left by the volunteer.
"Our Central Ohio Chapter
goal for the 47 co111ltlea far
Heart Month Ia $100,000, and
at IIlia point II looka like we
might not make it. Without
these lunda, we will have to
severely curtail oilr activities
In research and education,
which include the life-eaving
programs of high blood
preasure screening, the Heart
Saver program of early
wamlng signs of heart attack
and stroke, and traiillng In
CPR (mouth to mouth
resuscitation and closed
chest massage) . As a
voluntary bealth agency, our
only source of Income Is
support from the publlc.
''The bad weather and the
naturalgassbortagearebard
011 aU of us, but whatever the
weather, people still have
heart attacks and strokes. It
Ia vital that we continue our
research and educati011 ef.
forts; they're the only
CANCELLED
weapons we have in our flgtit
A meeting of the Mid· against
heart
and
dleporl Literary . Club ·cerebrovascular disease."
scheduled for Wednesday has
Murnane added that the
been cancelled.
Heart Campaign leaders

Dr. Robert T. Murnane,
president of the Central Ohio
Heart Cha~ter, announced
today that the Central Ohio
Heart Campaign Is suffering
the effects cl bad weather
and may faD drutlcally short
ul Its 1971 goal.
" During February, Heart
Month, our door-to-door
solicitation provides more
than one-third of our cam·
Jlllgn goal. To do this, we
need 55,000 "Volunteers to
reach 1,000,000 homes In the
Chapter area. Unfortunately,
like everybody else, we are
being burt by the bad
weather. Volunteers who had
plamed to help are now
. cancelling their commit·
. ment ; Heart Campaign
leaders · have large areas
throughout the Chapter
where they are In need of
volunteers to give one hour of
their time to contact about 20
neighbors."
Nurnane noted that In
addition to· a shortage of
volunteers, the campalgp,,
faces another problem. '
"Since the schools are cloSed,
and some ofthe huslnesses·as
well, our volunteers may find

--·'.2
I

The Daily Bentlnel, MiddlePQrt-Pomeroy, 0 ., TUesady, Feb. 8, 1977

•

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�8,

I -The Daily Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday , Feb. 1977

PUBLIC NOTICE
Publlt Hearings on the Ana
Aoing PIAn for the us~ of funds
from Title Ill of the Older
Americans Act wflt be- htl d
Febr uary 22, 1977 , at · the
Athtns Ci tv -Countv Hulth
BuildinQ , y/tst Union Street,
Athens. Ohio. from f :30 a.m .
• Bernice Be&lt;lt Oool
to H : JOp .m ., and on FebruAry
23, 1977, at the Noble County
For WedneodiJ. Fob. I, 1117 Sen
ior
Citizens
Center ,
ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll1i) Your Cumberland Street, Ct!lldwell ,
to 3:00
tendency is fQ split hairs today. Ohio, from ll :OO
ThiS causes problems tor all p.m . Testimony w i ll t!llso be
taken on the Plan tor 1he use of
concerned. especially ll money funds from Title VII of the
is an issue.
same Act , which is the Sen ior
i tl9n Program .
TAURUS (April 20-MIJ 20) Nutr
For further Information
You'll set the pace tor coworkers Pleas"e contact : Ms. Mary
today. If you slack off , don't be Alice Varner . Buckeye Hills·
surprised if they lay down their Hocking VAlley Reg ional
Development Dl!trlct , 410 St.
tools early.
Clair Bui!din~ . 216 PutnAm
GEMINI (MIJ 21-Junt 20) Street , Mari etta , Ohio A5750
Pleasurable diversions usurp (6141 37&lt;-9&lt;36.
your productive time today .
Consequently you 'll do half as
much as you intend to do.
NOTICE CiN FILING

AstraGraph

WANT ADS

DEADLINES
s
P .M . Day
Before
Publlcltlon .
Cancellations ,
correc
lions accepted first dav af
publlcatron . .

REGULATIONS

The Publisher reserves
tne rigttr to edit or reject
any ads deemed ob .
iectlonal. The pubiisher
will not be rtspOnslble tor
more than one incorrect
insertion .

., ,m.

CANCER (Juno 21-July 22)
Don ' t depend on the
oddsmakers to get you on the
right track today. Advice shou ld
be taken with a grain of salt,
even from experts.

LEO (JUIJ 23·Aua. 22) If you fa ll
to ex~l b it patience and consideration today. you won't get
the resu l ts y o u desire .
Associates can be led. but not
driven .

VIRGO (AUII. 23·Stpl. 22) It's
n ne to have options at your dis ~
posal, but you 'll· vac illate so
much to.~ay that you 'll nOt complete a,nything you set out to do.

LIBRA (Sop/. 23;0cl. 23) You
have the faculty today for spen ding money that you cou ld have
kept in your pocket. - like
rushing to pick up the check.

SCORPIO (Del. 24·N0~22) In
your am.:iety to assert yoursel r
today. you may come on · too
strong . A heavy hand will give
yo u naug.hl but a b!ack eye.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dtc.
21) This is one of those days
when you won 't let sleeping dogs
lie. The most e•ercise you 'll get
is the removal of your foot from
·your mouth .

CAPRICORN (Dtc. 22..,on. 18)
Don 't aggravate P89Pie today by
tryi ng to stick them with goofs
you made yourself .

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Ftll. 18)
You are hypersensitive to fueling
the names of your own ambitions
today . Because you blindly
follow your star, you 're likely to
make mistakes.

PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20)
Once yo u've made a deal you
teel ls ad.equate, let it be . In your
Quest for something betler. you ·
could lose all your gains.

~~[!)[1

W

Q~wllirllil\1

Feb. 8, 1177

Be more accurate in your plan ning th is year. If you think in
terms of doing th ings the best
way. rather than the most e•pedient way , you ' ll be
successful.
(Are you an Aquarius? Btrnic;e OsoJ has written a special

Astro-Greph ~erter for you. For
your copy send 50 cents and a
stamped
envelope ro Asrro-Graph, P.O.
Box 489. Radio City SteNon, New
York, N. Y. 1()019. Be sure to ask
for Aquarius VOlume 4.}

. RATES

CARD OF THAN,CS

tl"'. lgim~m

cents .

1975 FORD TORIN04 DR.

You are he reby not ifi ed th at
the
Inv entory
and
1\ p
pra isem ent of the est at e of th e
a·for em ent ioned .
df"cca sc d,
late of ~ai d CountY wa s f ii E' d
in th iS Court Said ln vf'ntor y
and Appr aisr ment w i ll be for
hear i nq be for f th is Court on
th e 12th day of February . t9 77 .
a t 10 00 o'c lo ck A M
Any per son des i r i ng to f i le
exc ept ions th er eto must f i le
th em at lea st f ive d ay s prior to,
th e dat e set for hear lnq
h
Given under my hand and
seal of sa id Court , th is 79th
da y Of January 19 77
M ann inq C'l W£"bs te r
Juc1 qr

automatic,

·-

BL'INO

-For sofa, cna1r C'Dsh1ons,
mattresses, paddln9. Ideal
for campers.

If YOU ho.,.e o service to offer, 1969 ~ HE VROLET Bisquaine; 1966
wont to buy or set! something,
SUlCI( Electro, 225 ; 2 Rokan
' ae looking for work . . . or
lriolbike s. Phone 949·2432.
whatever ... you 'll get results
foster With o Sentinel Want Ad . . 1974 FORD RANGER XLT FIOO
Pickup , 360 V·Boutomotic , p.s..
Call 9n.2156.
om ·fm radio . tope deck , 39,000
miles. Elf t ellen t cond ition ,
Also, 1%8 Plymouth GTX 4-40
V-8 4 speed , 56,000 miles , e.o: ·
FEMALE OVER Counter Soles .
cellen t cond ition . Coli after 5
sma ll amount of bookkeeping.
p.m . 992 ·2967 .
Apply in person, 0 &amp; D Meats ,
Inc.. 830 E. Main St .. Pome, oy , 1973 FORO LTD for sc le . Coli
9'12 -5758.
Ohio.

HELP WANTED
COAL for sole. Open 6 dovS per
week and evenings . For further
informqtion coli (61 -4 ) 367 ·73.38 .

Wanted In

Syracuse Area.
Free Prizes.

Phone 992·2156.

Webster
Judq e

-

The morning stars are
Mercury and Mars.
The evening stars are
Venus, Jupiter and Saturn.
Those born oo this date are
wider the sign of Aquarius.
Union Gen . William
Shennan, who put Uie torch
to Atlanta during Uie Civil
War, was born Feb. 8, 1820.
'lbi.o alao Is the birthday of
actress Lana Turner (1921).
On this day In hlsiory:
In 1587, Mary Queen of
Scots was beheaded after
being
charged
with
murder
conspiring to
Britain's Queen Elizabeth I.

~-

COINS, CURRENCY. tokens . old
pocket watches and chains.
silver and gold . We need 1964
and older silver coins. Buy, sell.
or trade' Call Roger Wamsley,

In 1940, every lOth penon In

742·2331.

two villqes near Warsaw,
. Poland, was lthot In Nazi
reprisal for the deathl of

German soldiers.

---·----~---- c•

NICE COMPLETELY furni shed I
bedroom apartment. witn Iorge
potio, porch OYerlooking river .
Adults only . Phone 992 -2606.
MOBILE

HoME ,

unfurnished- in
co unt r y .~
Needs
small
mOinlritnonce . Co11992·6337.

CASH! ! ! for junk cars. Frye's
Truck and Auto. 24 HOUR
WRECKER SERVICE! Phone TWO BEDROOM mobile home.
Rocine areo . Phonv 992·5858.

two

742-2081.

In !963, Irqq Premier
Karim
Kassim
wa;
overthrown by a military
coup. He was executed the
follo'll'irll( day.

5 BEDROOM HOUSE , frve gas ond
water in Long Bottom orea. For
fu rther information . phone

98H227.
PLEASURE HORSES and poni,s,
also will buy horses and
ponies. Phone (614) 698·3290,
Ruth Reeves .

•

YOUR OPPORTUNITY

3 AND 4 RM furnis hed and un·
fu rnis hed opts. Phone 992·
5434.

LOST. MALE Bossett hound in
Hemlock Grove areo . Reword. ,
Phon 16 992·5872.
COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork . Rt .
33, len miles north of Pomeroy ,
REWARD FOR the finding of o
large lo ts with concrete· polios.
block . while and brown Walker
si dewalks . ru nners and off
coonhound lost In the 'llidnity of
.!. tr ee ! porlc ing. Phone q92.7479.
Hemlock Gro'lle , Coli collect
ONE BEDROOM Apt s. at VILLAGE
[304)675·3707.
-----· ... -.
MANOR in Middleport for $10.tl
MAN's BILLFOLD ,in Middleport or · monthly plus e/ec. or $130 in ·
Pomeroy . Please
ret urn
eluding elec . LOWER RATES for
papers. Phone 992 -7028 or
SENIOR CITIZENS. Convenlerlf
992·3122.
to shopping on Third and Milt
Sts. in Middleport. Brand new
high quality oportment~ . See
the manager ot Apt , 26 or coli
992-7721. An Equal Housing
OLO furniture: , ice boxes . bras s
Opportunity.
beds , wall telephones and
Ports , or co~ple~ households . 2 BEDROOM trailer, reol nice.
Phone 992·3324 , odults only .
Write M. D. Miller , Rt. 4 ,
Pomerov. Ol-lio. Coif 992-77W.
---- --.------ --·- - AVAILABLE AT ~ivers i de Apts . 1
CASH paid for all makes and
bedrm. apartment , $100 per
month , 2 bedroom opts . $133
models of mobi le homes .
Phone area code 61.4 ·.423-9531 .
per month . Equal Opportunity
Hou sing. Phone 992·3273.
TIMBER. Pomeroy Forest Pro·
ducts . Top pri ce for standing 2 bedroom unfurnished oport·
sawtimber . Coli Kent Ho11by ,
ment in Middleport . Phone
1·4.46·6570.
992-3129 or 99'2 -5-434 .

follow.
The moon is approaching
its last quarter.

Kennel

,RISING STAR
6oording ,
lndoor·Outdoor runs , gn:~oming
all breeds, cl1t0n sanitary
facilities. Cheshi,e . Phone (614)

367·0292.

We Will 1ram you tn be~ome 1 branch
manager. Rapid advancement; outstanding
salary opporttNIItles end employ" benefits.
Must be et leasl high school graduate end
have 1 car. Relocation may be necessary
-now or in the futuM . Phone Mr. Mills at
telephone no. 992-2111.

FREE TO GOOD Home . Po,t
Golden Retreiver Puppies ,
Father thv traveUng typv . 3
brown , 3 block . cAll m -3023
nft~r 5 P · ~·
'

In 1774, three Amerlm
Skyiab astronauts ended an
&amp;+&lt;lay orbital f)ight around

' .

the earth.

CAPITAL fiNANCIAL SERVIa

A thought for the day :
American
statesman
Benjamin Franklin ~·~~.

300 West Second St.
Pomeroy; Ohi.o

u'l'bere never wliB a good war

lvt Equal Opportunity Employer

or a bad peace."

APPLES, FITZPATRICK ORCHARD
.

STATE ROUTE 689. PHONE
WILKESVILLE'_ {614) 669-3785 .

~ ..;~~Sale:;~~.~::·.,

'"

Jm.
POT;.TOES

Portlan d,
643 -2254 .

·
W.

Prolfi tt .
'Ph one

Ohio .

NICE HOLSTEINS .
992-5741 .

New

Co-Op

wat~r

Save

sso.n

on a new

Hotpolnt Refrigerator.

Ptmeroy landmark
Jack W. Ca(sty, Mgr.
Phontf92-218l

· Financing Av1il1ble
C. A. . Newm~rn , Pres.
1-25·1 mo .. pd.

EXPERIENCED
Radiator ,.-~._,
Service

Continental Flavor 20; Amer ican Issues Foru.m 33.
M at ch Game PM 8; Macneil-l ehrer Repor t 20,33;

10 :0()-Dean Marlin 3,4,15; Family 6,13; Koiak 8,10;

P1. Pleasanl
Ph. 675·:H6'
9:30-S:DO Dai!Y
TillS :000 Fridays

.......

STERE O. new om -fm lm stereo·
radio combinotion ; $129.95 or
term s, Caii992·396S.
COMPLETE CE RAMI C Outf it
everything to stor t your ow~
busmess . Phone 992 -27iB after
Sp.m.

fORESTRY EQUIPMENT.

Timberiock 240 Skidder: Hough
Skidder Model S78: · David
brpwn Trac Tor Loader Model
990;· 60' Bush Metollurgicol
Chi pper; Contact DOn Gro..-es
Phone (614) 596 -4769.
FOR SALE. Rabbits. dressed or on
loot for meat or pets . Also, 50
gal. drums . Ph011e 992 -2513 .
EAR CORN, $2 .00 bu . Ho'lle 400
bushels. Phone (61A ) 667 ·3967
before 9 a.m. It Che..-alier .
GOOD EAR Corn . Phone (61 4)
667·3544 or conloct Paul life.
on Success Rood neor Tuppers
Plains .
i972 F250 FORO PU .,

.t1

speed .

-

STRIPPING, REPAIRING
· REFINISHING &amp;
UPHOLSTERING
Phone
MODERN CHEMICAL

.

614-992-2798

softener, Model UC-XVI.
Now Only •
•

279 95

Let us test

Free.

your

water

romeror landmark
.~ Jatk W. Corser, Mgr.

MOillE liOME , 12' 11 50' with
applioncos . Also. washer and
dryer , $3500. Phone 7.t2·2856.

Service&amp; OffaeiF -\ -~
Will do odd jobs , roof ing , pain·
ling , gulter work , Phof1e 992·
7409.
SfWIN C · fl.L T[RA TIONS :
drapes
l l ph ld s te r i ng ,
! (jOl,QIIable , 572 South (hird
A . lf.~ , Middleport . Phona
99'J-b300.
INCOMl TAX 3eiVI Cl' , 'IJIICI!lou"
RUJ,o, ell.
8rodbury
Cnf f
&lt;f?J I ~ 'JM .

tKQ104
...10152
SOUTH tDI
"'AKQJ876 5

1-30-1 mo.

;._AK
\\'est

Norlh East

Pass

3•

Pass

Pass

5•

Pass

South

2.

housing.

Pass

mo.

Southeastern Ohio
Truss Rafter Co.
Located in Langsville
Box lil-A
Rutland , Ohio .t577S
Pt1 . (61.tll 742 -2409
We Deliver
17 -22 ·.t mo·s .

7481 .

7. Phone (bl4 )1&gt;67-6304.

3 bedrooms , 1111 botns , Iorge liv·
ing room , dining roo m ond kit·
&lt;.hen , fully carpeted. Phone
992 -3129 , ar992·5434 .
59 acres. 6 room house. both .
portl y carpeted , two oot ·
bu i ld ings, dug basement ,
one -third tillable , mineral
rights located near Danville .
Reduced for quick sol e,
$23 ,500. Phone 742-2766.
NEW 3 bedroom ho~se , b;:itt -ln
kitchen, bo th and 11,. Phone
742·2306 or confoc t MilO 8. Hut ·
&lt;.hison , Rutland, Ohio .
.

.

.

--··--

--~-

742 · 232~ -

GOOD OLDER home . priced for
qu ick 'ole. $5 ,500. Phone

216 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 4S769

'( STOR¥ 4 bedroom bri ck home In
Middleport. Phone 992 ·3457 .

NEW LISTING: Old. but
nltely located, elght.room

Phone99H375

949-2563.

frame house In TUppers

Plains on Rl . 7, ss.ooo.
TUPPERS PLAINS - 1'1&gt;
acres of land rlghf on Rt. 7.
Large old 7 room frame
house . Good Commercial

remodeled nicely . N .G.
· F. A . furnace . Located on a
corner
lot.
All
for

S23,93S.OO.
NEW LISTING -

This. 3

room house has a porch
and basement. Needs some
repair . Located on a large
lot with garden space.

Asking just 56,500.00. .
NEW LISTING
i
bedrooms, basement and
large lot. Allin good repair.
Only $14,500.00.
MIDDLEPORT - 1'12 storr
brltk, 1 or J bedroom,
enclosed back porch. 1 car
garage on
level lo1.

$8,900.00 . .
COOKS DELIGHT ~ Tht
large kitchen In this 1story
bt'lck has everything . A
total of 12 rooms. several

llreplaou oven one In t_l)f
kitchen . 2 corner tots closo
to stores. If you spend most

of your flme cooking tills Is

lor you. ONLY S20,000.00.
WE HAVE BUYERS FOR
ACRE.t.GE AND NEWER
HOMES. LET US SELL
YOUR PROPERTY.
HEN~Y E. CLELAND
BROKER
911-2759 . f'IH56f
985 4117

Blown iniiiWIIII&amp;AHicl
SIOIIM
WIIIIIOIIU DOORS .
mi.At!MEIIT

'

'

'•

1111110111$

ALUMINUM
SIDINi-SOffm
GUTIEIIWWIIING!

tV6 BE'f'~ 0~ A61.!St~r:;ss
TRIP FOR 1'\\JO

.

LA'K1,,,....,
LIIV~DER

~1~1

~t&lt;SI

'

m9

-

-·-- --

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

Sweepers , toO!ters , iron! , all ,
small appliance! . Lown 1T10wer, .,
next to Sta te Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone (61&lt;1) 985-

-

Don't
hurt
Miss

-

Melba1

SEWING MACHINE Repair, , ser·
vice , all' makes , 9ii12-2284 . The
Fobrl c Shop , Pomero~ .
Authorized Singer-Solvs and
. ~! ~We sharpen Seiners: •

TEAFORD
.
VIrgil B. Sr., Realtor

with open spiral staircase.
Carpeted throughout and

fiolncioJA-~~

-

site. Better think about this
at only $12,000.
'MIDDLEPORT - 40x120'
corner lot . Large 8 room

home with 2 balhs . All
utilities and garage. Just
$12,000.
00 YOU WANT An
Investment . We have one

that has 4 apartments and
a

recr eation

center

furnished wllh a good
future .

PAGEVILI,E - 7 rooms. 2
baths. 3 bedrooms,, front

EXCAVATING, do:r:er , backhoe
ond ditcher. Charles A. Ha~ ·
field , Bock Hoe s,rvice, ,
Rv~on~ O~ia . Phonv 7.42·2008. · :

__

SEPTIC systems in,talled C.y :
licensed installer, Shvpord 1
Contractors. Phone 742·24()q . ,1

How's lor $7500.
THIS SPACE
FOR YOUR AD
THIS COUNTY IS ABOUT
TO MAKE A GOOD
GROWTH. WANT YOUR
SHARE, THEN LIST
WITH THE ONES WITH
THE MUSCLE TO SEL.L.

Divorce Court B.

12 .3()-Lovers &amp; Friends 3,15; Ryan's Hope 6,13; Bob
Braun 4; Search for Tomorrow 8,10.

.. ,

1:0()-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6,13; Nei'IS 8;

appear .

Young &amp; the ResHe ss 10; Not For WOm en Only 15.

(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN, send $1 to: "Win
at Bridge . " c / o th is
newspaper. P 0. Bo&lt; 489.
Radio Cify Station. New York,
N. Y. t00t9/

1:3()-Dars of our Lives 3,4,15; Family Feud 6. 13; As
The World Turns 8,10.
2 :0()-520,000 Pyramid 6,13.2: 3()-Doctors 3,4,15; One
Life to Live 6,13; Guiding Light 8, 10.
3:00--Another World 3,4, IS ; All In The Family B,10; On
Aging 20.
3:1 5-General Hospital 6,13.
3·3()-Match Game 8,10; Lil ias Yoga a. You 20.
A: 00-Mister Cartoon 3; Little Rascals 4; Gong Show

15; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Lucy Sbow 8; Sesame St.
20,33; Movie "Don 't Give Up lhe Ship" 10; Dinah 13.
4 15-Litlle Rascals 4.
4:3()-My Three Sons 3; Partridge Family 4;

Circus 20 .
11 : 30-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Rookies 6, 13; Movie

" Fun in Acapulto" B; BC News 33.
11 :35-News 10.'
12:()()-Janakl 33.
12:05-Mory Hartman 10.
12:35-Movle "The Pit and the Pendulum" 10.
11: 4&lt;1-Mystery the Week 6, 13.
2:1()-News 13.

1fj1\jo~ j1j}'i] ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
-+-+-lll::J \!:11 ~~· byHennAmofdendBobLM

=+-+--f--1 one
Unscramble these rour Jumbles,
letter to each square, to form
tour ordinary WOfds.

FAIRE

I WQRNCj

U
THE ATHENA FA(7HION
EIUILDIN0 If&gt; f&gt;TlLL HERE .. .
AND 111&amp; RJo: f&gt;ALE ...OR

')OU 5EEMED RELUCTANT 10 fl,CCEPTf
MY OFFER OF A RIDE. "JU· I&lt;to

AFil~IDOF IIIE1 ARE YOU..

LONC&gt;-TERM L546E!

.--_..,.1..,

JI.RUC

CQRH
CQRH

IUXH

ULR

LUXJYXJ

ER ... NO ... I GUE68
!!M B/0 Er-.ouGH 10
TAKECAREOF ~~

L R UTTH

L.

.

.

V"

-

~

FQRX.....,...,-=---,

I
G-L-...li---LI

L R U L •

K L R N

C Q R Y L

AYPRO . - RAFU .LA

j

I [1

CQV X W

KRZKTR

' cQYXW¥XJ

ULR

j

TEMIKS

CRYPTOQUOTES

IGLLZF

QUETE~A
:=,;~~-~.j.-"1'"'"-,

1-.

--,c&gt;-..a..._.J.._J

IT

TAKE~

BUY, SELL OR TRADE?

BET 'lORE MAN
nut·t:. SHORE WUZ
MAD WHEN SHERIFF

LISTEN TO THE
ONE FALSE INJVE WOULD
SEND f.liM Sl.IDING DOWN

TO HIS DEATH ! Wl-lAT
A PREPICAMENT!

HAVE A R'OW!
Now •~•ngo 1ht drcled lttltra 10
form the surprise answer,. u.-~ug~

gested by thellbo" eortaon.

Print the aurprlee answer here:

tl l n

WHb WOULD RESCUE
Ml( SWEET 6A6600 ?!

I'M NOT '!(OUR
SWEET 6A8BOO !!!

MAO?

HEWUZ

LAFFIN' LIKE A
' WILD H\.IEENY

TAIT DRUG HIM OFF
TOJAIL
•

92 in the O.Unt
r

-I

TWO 'TO

.
(Anoweno'IOmOm&gt;w)
Yeslerday's Cryptoquote: NOTHING REUEVES AND
VENTILATES THE MIND UKE A RESOLUTION. - JOHN YeSierdayaJ Jumbles: SNARL ROBIN BEHOLD PLUFIAL
Anower: Woahlngton deoortled lhlo ond ft'allll ol
BURROUGHS
.
some value-A DOLLAR BILL

t&lt;\'!eEI.FJ

- WMPO • 92.1 FM

Stevenson A, 15.

10: 0()-Taies of the Unexpected 3,4, 15; Charlie's Angels
6.13; Gunsmoke 8; News 20.
10:3()-West VIr gin ia State of the Stale Address 33;
Montage 20.
·
II :0()-News 3,4,6,8,13,15; Monty Python's Flying

apostrophes, the length and formati on of the words are all
hints. Each rlay the rode letters arc different.

No~ ·

'

the Country 8; Bowling for Do llars 6; News 10; To

Tell lhe Truth 13; News 10; My Three Sons 15;
Consumer Survival Kit 20; Big Green Magazine 33.
7:3()-Dolly 3; $100,000 Name That Tune 4; Match
Game PM 6; 125,000 Pyramid B; MacNeil· Lehrer
20,'33; The Judge 10; Price Is Right ·12; Break the
Bank 13; Wild Kingdom IS.
8;00--Gizzly Aams 3.4,15; College BasketballS; Bionic ·
Woman 6, 13; Nova 20,33; Good Times 10.
8:3()-Jacksons 10.
9:0()-CPO Sharkey 3,4,15; Barelta 6,13 ; Great Per·
lormances 33; Movie " Rollerball" 10; Soundstage
20.
9:3()-We Think You Should Know 3; Mclean

Is L o N .G F E L L 0 W
One lctlc r simply stands for ano&lt; her. ln this sample A lo ·
used f or the three L.'s, X for the twO O' s, etc. Single letters,

:•

SWAP SHOP

You 33.

7:DO-Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell the Truth 4;; Pop Goes

ol

plumbing and heating. Phone '

698·7331.

5:J()-Adam·12 4,13; News 6; Family -Aflalr B; Elec.
Co. 20,33.
6:DO-News 3,4,6,8,10,1J,1S;; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:3()-NBC News3.4.1S; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CB.S News 8, 10; Vegelable Soup 20; Lilias Yoga a.

1:DO-Tomorrow 3,4 .

AXYDLBAAXR

1

co110t ing , septic sys tem•·~
dozer , bockhoe, dump truck •
limestone , gra'llel, blacktoP
paving, Rt , 143. Phonv I (614~

Mister Roger s 20,33; Star Trek 15.

1 Copywriter
2 Big game
animal
concern
3 Enterta in
4 A Rhode
13 Landing
place for
Island red
Yesterday's Answer
, Noah's ark
5 Smart
, 6 Congress21 Knight
28 A Barry(2 wds.)
man at ~
of TV
· more
15 Dolt
30 Rancor
7 Gentle - lamb 22 Adams
16 Peruke
8 Wither
of TV
31 Old plains
17 Japanese
9 British •
23 Evaluate
home
statesman
afternoon
24 Slide
32 Lay to
18 Mrs. Ford, tradition
along
rest
Bloomer
( 2 wds .)
25 Much ad· 33 Worship
19 One IScot.)
12 Ezra and
mired Ms. '38 Seize
20 Van Gogh
Lewis
26 Ferber
39 Escort to
as a boy?
14 " The Jumping
novel
a seat
21 Egyptian
Frog" autllor
1,2 wds.)
(slang)
queen .
22 Greek
township
23 PaUid
26 Our feet
have tllem
27 Toboggan
28 Little
Alonzo
29 "To - With

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It: · ....~~===::~=-'

'
fl ooring . ce iling , ;
paneling . Phone 992-2759.
I·
- ----- --------'
MOBILE Hoine' R~~tpoir , Elec. ,

.. _sav_!..!_ll;.o::::n::;ev':.' -::--::-:-:=:---:'-:
HOWERY AND MARTIN h ;

15.
5:0()-Big Valley 3; My Three Sons 4; Brady Bunch 8;

body

- CARPENTER ,

T.V. shop, Electro nic T.V . Clinic
Service calf , $5.95. Color. B &amp; W
onrenna systems stereos . etc.
572 South Third, Middlepo_rt 4
Phone 992,bJ06. Carry in ond,

Emergency One 6; Partridge Fam.lly 8; Fllntstones

answer
DOWN

41 Prophet

WILL do roofing , construction . ;
plumbing and heating : No job :
too Iorge or too smalL Phone" ,
742·2348,
I

porch and garden ln back .

Love of Life 8, 10; Sesame St . 20,33.

one when the new laws

37 Currying
favor
(3·wds.)
40 Legislative

SEPTIC TANKS cleo ned. Modern '
. :
Sonitotion, 992-3954.

·

11 :55-C BS News B; Ms. Flxlt 10.
12:0()-News 3,4,6, 10; Don Ho 13; Name Thaf Tune 15;

pl ay with the provision Lha&lt; an
adjustment can be made if a
pl ayer gains by his revoke . It
is sti ll two tricks in rubber ·
bridge , but will probably go to

receiver

WHO COMMITTED
IS CRI#E~-

8;

Morning Show 13; Elec. Co. 20.
11 :3()-Shoot for fhe Stars 3,4, IS; Happy Days 6, 13;

43 Roll call

domestic
5 Explosion
10 Cupola
ll Dermatologist's

Semester

11 : 00-Wheel of Fortune 3,4, 15; Double Dare 8, 10;

One '~onspicuous difference
is t'he revoke penalty which is
now just one trick in duplicate

30 Kindred
31 Aunt (Sp. )
34 !ke's
command
35 Hawaiian
delicacy
36 Wide

- ~~
23~2~
. ~~~----~-­

T.V. CLINIC ,

di s~

cussion of differences between
rubber and duplicate Jaws.

Love"

EXCAVATING , dozer, loader and
backhoe work: dump trucks
and to·boys for hire; will haul
fill dirt , fo soil, limestone and ·
grovel , Calf Bob or Roger Jef·
fen , doy phone 992·7089 ,
night phone 992 ·3525 or 992-'"l

992-5858.
---ELECTRONIC

Mike Douglas 10 .

42 Insurgent

ACROSS
I Asian

FROSTY'S C.&amp;. Rad io Equip ..
3825.
everything in two -way Radio 's,
Antennas , and occes . Phone REMODEliNG. Plumbing, hooting
ond off types of general repa ir .
Portland , 843-2181 .
Work guaranteed 20 years ex·
perience. Pl-lone .992 ·2~09 .

ONE LOT in Syracuse. Phone
99'2 -3714 .

room , Jlh story frame
house with 1V2 baths. J
bedrooms, family room

-

Sunrise

-9:3&lt;1-Cross-Wi ts 3; Concentration B.
10:0()-Sanlord &amp; Son 3,4,15; Dinah 6; Price Is Right
8,10; Mike Douglas 13.
10:3()-Hollywood squares 3,4,15.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Blown

Ph. 112·3193

We continue with our

News 6;

Christopher Closeup fO.
6:45-Mornlng Report 3.
6:5()-Good Morning, West Virginia 13.
6:55-Good Morning, Trl State 13.
7:00--Today 3,4,15; Good Morning Amorita 6,13; CBS
News B; Chuck White Reports 10.
7:05-Porky Pig 10.
J:3()-Schoolles 10.
B:DO-Howdy Doody 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame
St. 33 .
8:3()-B ig Val ley 6.
9:0()-A .M, 3; Phil Donahue 4,13,15; Andy Gr/lllth B;

~

01L , GAS Furnaces , oil burners , BRADFORD, Auctioneer, Com·
plete Service . Phone 949 -2487
repair , ond pofts for trailers
or 949·2000. Racine . Ohio, Crill
ond homes . 24 hour !er ... ice .
Bradford .
Phone 8-43·2165.
HOUSE PAINTING , interior and
exter ior . Quality work at
. reasonable rates . Phone

rebid in your sui t you are

'

lnsulaliott Seni&lt;et ·

(614) ?85-4155
Chester. Ohio
10-17-1 mo ( Pdl

BUILDING SITES , 3.11 acres, at
- Bo shon T. P,, water top,l gos
top . minimum soil limitat ions .
Phone 985·4102.

MAIN
POMEROY. 0.
NEW
LISTING
Excellent neighborhood, 6

~;r--~

FREE ESTIMATES

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY

-

6 8 E.

response. In the next few ar·
LIT'l"LE OR PH AN ANNIE- THUND!i: .RBOLT EXPRESS
tiGles we will show e&lt;amples
----'-/'~--""":"""lr::===:-:-;;:;.;;o~~=;;;;:::;of s.uccessful rebidding and
rr'===":":;-r~-"";;~1?'"-:-------.;:-;,---~rsuggest a few conventions to
ll'LL TAI&lt;E FOUR
lAM , ANN tE -· ·
u se with yo ur regular
1
OR FIVE OAYS
6lJl I PI.A~ 10
BACK 1"0 THf3.
GO ON ONE OF
partners.
PLA.rn a'f CAR
CuR BR~D
LJI-"The first valuable convenANO TRAIN NO W BOMBERSl==o\
i is•• tha t when you jump

,,'

Free Estimiltes
Work Guaranteed
742-1321

Aerial
Commercial
Schools
Weddings

NEW 3 bedroom house , 2 ba!lis,
oil elec. , l acre, Middleport ,
close to Rutland . Phone ~2 ·

•

"

AL TROMM CONST. .:

PHOTOGRAPHY

hea rd a positive

UTI'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

Quality Work At
Reasonable Rates

PltOFESSIONAL

HOMESITES lor sole , 1 Cere and
up. Middleport, neo r Rutland .
Coli 992 -7461 .

h ave

Garages
Homes Buik

ANY PI"F(H
ANY SIZE

Pomeroy, 0 .
1-17·1 mo .

very good hand. Hence, you
should · try to bid delicately
and not always leap into a
slam m erely because you

Roofing &amp; Siding
·Room Additions

6:30-AG-USA 4;

~~~~

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
In rebidding after you start
with a forcing two bid, you
should try to keep in mind that

Hrs. 9:00a .m.
To Dusk
1-t -771

••

Pass
Opening lead - K •

m-1o34

6:15-Farm ReP.Ort 13.
6 : ~Not lor Women Only -13.

after South 's rebid takes the
fotm of a jump in hi s own suit.
Still. North .feels that he
shou ld bid beyond game .
North also knows that South
does not need trump support
so North invi tes the slam by
bidding live spades.
South looks at his two quick
diamond losers and passes
right there.

East. West vulnerable

We handle only lilt best In

WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1977
6:00--Sunrlse Semester 10.

some danger , somewhere

•r
t8 6

Kingsbury HOme . ,
Sales Inc. .

' -' I

EAST
"'93
•Q l094
tA 75
... 9863

•J 52

Fret Estlmotft
No Sunday Colis PINH

T

AIIOO Kerr St.

,,

let Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; condition your
water and ' Co-op water

• J 932
"'Q J4

Phone 949-2801
or949-2860

NOTICE!
. .. ! !

front end . cob with air condi tioning , bed . W76 F250 from• .
p.s.. p.b., 4 speed tronsmis·
sian . Phone 992·7757 after 5
p.m.
.

NEED A
WATER SOFTENER 7

,p
•AK8 6 3

WEST
"'10 4

33.
11: JG-Johnny Carson 3,41 .Si Movie ''The Gian t Spider
I nvaSion " 6,13: Movie " Hus tling" 8; Mary Hart.
man 10; ABC News 33 .
12 :00--Movie ''The Naked Runner" 10; Janakl 33.
J·oo- Tomorrow 3, 4.
I ' 1G- News 13.

showing both a solid suit and
an opening two bi.d that is
rather shy on high cards.·
South will make a grand
sl~m if West opens a spade or
a cl ub. He will make six
against a heart lead and will
be held to five if a diamond is
opened .
Nortll knows there must be

·8

you have already shown a

p.b .. $1200. 1974 F250 FORD

LOOI&lt;: TRIM! Take Afglness diet"
plan and Aqut:lvO p "' water
pills". Village Pharmacy , 271 N .
2nd Ave ., Middleport .

NORTH

A local contractor

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC. · .
,h, 11!·2171

DON'T YOU SEE 1... EVE~ IF SOMoON&amp;
TAMPERoD WITH THf!j .. HIS LAWY~R
WILL BE AB LE TO CERTIFY DADDY'S
FINA L CHOICE';

BISSEll SIDING CO.

manufactured

News 20 ; Decades of Deci sion .JJ .
10 :3().-Biack Journa l 20.
11 :00--News 3,-4,6,8, 10. 13, IS ; MacNeil · Lehrere Report

WIN AT BRIDGE
Second jump shows weakness

Double wldts e. modulor
·homes by Skyline &amp; Fuquo ,
Homes Inc.
1100 E. Mlin St.
Pomeroy,Ohio

'""' lho ......
- I I lion.- I~

DIR£CT
FABRIC SALES
'328 Main Street

Phone

i~73

sofftfttrs. model vc.svl.
'Only ~71?. 95
One gaod chain Homelite
Chain S•w . . •. .. 5130.00

on Vinyl and Steel Sidings.
Replecement and storm
windows. 33 yurs actual
expeirence.

1971 MOBILE HOME . 60" x 12", 2 SMAll form for sole . 10 ~. down ,
owner linenced . Monroe Coun·
bedrooms , 'llery good condi·
ty , W . Vo. Phone (304] 772·
lion. pay oft , 1966 Chevelle
3i 02 or {304).772 -3227.
Conv ., 327 4 speed. $750. 870
Remington, 12 go .. 2 borrel s, COUNTRY farmland ~ifh··~~-ciud ~
30" · 34" fu ll , 5200. Call (614) ed woods. water ond good OC ·
667 -3866 between 5:30 on d 8:00
cess in Monroe County , W. Vo .
e.;oenings .
$1 ,000 down , coli (304) 772·
3102 or (304) 772 ·3227.
GOOb bUALITY corn fed freez~r
beef . appro~&lt; . 1000 lbs. Steers . Commercial property opprox . 17
Will deliver to ypur processing acres . level land . located at
plan t. Phone 843 -2111
Tuppers Plain s on Ohio , Route

,_ Molille · ~~. ~

One good used Gibson side.
by.slde refrlger~tor ... 5150

Blown In llbergloss w•lls
and attics . 20 Pet. 'S.vlngs

~---

3

8: J()- Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,1 3.
9:Q0--.,Pollce Woman J,.o4, l5 ; Rich Man. Poor Man 6, 13;
Mother's Lilfle Network 20,)3; MASH ~ . 10 .
9:30--Cne Day at a ·r i me 8, 10; Anyone for Tennyson?
20; World War I 33.

U O-·Hollywood Squares 3,4; Lef's Dea l With It 6;

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

·

12 GA UGE SAVAGE pump
sho tgun , '\lent ribs, double
sights. Sell lor $100. PhOne
247 -266-A .

I

'

·
C

COAL , limestone, and colcium
··
•
chloride and calcium brine for 2 BEDROOM partially furnished , '
dust control ond special mixing
12 ~~: bO )973 Pa,kewood mobile
salt fof formers. Main Street,
home , underpinning Porch and
PQmeroy, Ohio or phone m .
awn ing .
$6800 . Phone
3891.
'1'12-612&lt;.

FOR SALE

evenings.

CAMPER . $600. Also. horse
trailer . S450. Phon!! (614 ) 698·

Phone 992·2181

•

Var1ety of

Velvets, nylon prints,
herculons, vinyl solids, and
fancy prints, accessorle:;.

FULLER Brush Products lor sole .
Phone 992 -3410.

USED

FudlentLOST · LENS out of eye glosses in
Rac ine oi"ea . Phone 949-2366.

sizes.

Auto~f ~~ ',-,~~~i

APPLIANCE
REPAIR MAN

ECONOLINE HOME
INSULATION , INC.
1115 Washington Blvd.
Belpre, Pllone (6141 423·
7564 diJ , or 992-6031

Reedsville, 0. Ph. 378-6250
1-23-1 mo. Pd.

I'OlY-FOAM
UPHOLSTERY
-FA BRit: .

Sentinel Carrier

f2l 1. B. ? t c

RATES

~DS

accepting piano students.
beginners , intermediates , ad ·
vonced students. Coli
~2 2270.

Ry Ann R ·wat son
Depu t y Cler k

REASONABLE

1975 CHEVELLE
$i115
Estate 'Wagon, local I owner car, white radial tires, air
conditioning, V-8, automatic, power steering and
brakes, radio. da rk red finish , black vinyl Interior.

--

['l

GUAR~NTEED

power steering a~d brakes.

NOTICE , Prot!"~ Meat Mkt.
By Ann R Wat son
!Pleasanton Meat Process ing ,
Deput y Clerk
Inc.) Custom slaughtering , and
·processing . Reto il. wholesale.
en 1, e. ~ ~ c
Refrigeration and
No oppoinment necessary . Coli
(~14) 593·8655, hours. 9:00 till
Washers &amp; Dryers
NOTICE ON Fll,ING
6:00 7 Pomerov Rood . ~.t hens ,
OF INVENTORY
Oh.
AND APPRAI SEME NT
Good pay &amp; benelils. Send
The State of Ohio, Meig s GUN SHOOT ol the Radne Gun
resume to Box 729-G, c-o
County, Court ·of CommOn
Club 'ifV&amp;ry Sunday , 1 pm
Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy ,
Pleas . Probate Di visi on
Assorted meats .
Ohio 45769.
To th e Adm ini sTrat or of t he
est at es . t o su ch o f th{' RACINE FIRE Dept . will hove o
fo l low inq as are r esidfnts o f
Gun Shoot every Saturday nigh!
th e State of Oh io. v iz
th e
0 p.m. at their builQing in CARPENTE R NEEDED to do
surv ivinq spous e. th e next of
remodel ing, work on tw o
Boshan . Ohio.
kin . th e bfn f f ic i ari es under
··- --~--houses beginning around
th e w ill ; and to thf a tt orn ry or AT STUD : 1. Phoebu s. 16 1H. If
March 15. Floors, trim work ,
&lt;tiiOrney s repr esent i ng any of
you wont o good performance .
drywall. etc. Coli areo code
the aforr m f nt ion ed per son s
A nailer ~olt W · bloodlines that
216, 2fU,.22b7 or 673·8-476 e~en ·
St ev en Eblin , D eceased ,
sell . 2. TRIBAL CHIEF, APHC ,
ings co llect .
Pom er oy , Ohio . c; cllis b ury
15.2 H. has sired some of the
Town ship . No ?7 .000
top performance and holler
M a r y Ebl i n , D ec ea se d .
Pom er oy , Obio , Sali sb ury
horses . (Tr illo! Win•, Tribal Fool .
Town ship . No ?7 .001
etc .). Also , horses sol d, tra in·
You are her eby noti fied that
ed , con ditioned , boarded. Cole
)h e I n v en torie s ~ nd A p
Stables , Home of Champions ,
pra isements of th e estatf' of
Bo x 25 , Tuppers Plains , Ohio
the
afor eme- nt i one d .
.15763 . Phone {6U ) 667·3405.
decr.asec!. tat(' of sa i d Co unt y .
were fil ed i n this Cou rt Said TRADER 's DAY, Saturday . Feb . 12
In ventor i es
and
/\p
at Fox Choser's Cobin . Sign ot
pra isem en ts will b e tor
Rt. 7 and Rood No . 32 . Just
hearing befor e th is Court on
abo..-e F i ~e ·Points Grill. Bob
th e 11 th day of Febru ary . 1977 ,
at 10 : 00 o'cl ock AM
Clonch .
Any per sor] deslr lnq to f il ri
LAND
OWNER seelu hoy shoring
ex ception s th ereto must f il e
·orrongment in exchohge lor
th em at least five days prior to
th e datf! Sf! for hear i nq
cultivation . 50 acres hoy . Call
Given under my hand and
Oreo code. :116. 2C16·2267 or
seal of said Courl. this ~ 9T h ~ 6?~-8-4_7~ ~~~ings_ collect .
day of January 1977
Mann inq

PARTS - LABOR

52895

Local ca.r. clean vinyl Interior, green finish, good tires,

word

All Yt!lrd Sales, Rummage ,
Porc:h and BAsement FJorch
and Basement Sales, etc .
must be paid in advance .
Get yours in . early by
stopping b~ our 'office at
The Daily Sentinel. 11 1
Court St. or writing Box
729 , Pomeroy . Ohio 45769
'tllith your remlt·tance .

Today is Tuesday, Feb. 8,
the 39th day of.l977 with 326 to

i

50

for

NOTICES
ATTN .:!!
AlL HOUSEWIVES

71 964 .

Automatic
Transmission Service

steering, radio, factory l!! lr .

AdditiOnal 25c th arg e
per Advert lsement .
OFFICE HOURS
8: 30 a.m . to 5: 00 p.m .
Daily . 8 :30 a.m . t o 12 : 00
Noon Saturday·,
Phone today 992 .2156.

United Press International

, I

SWAIN'S

' $389$
1976 CHEVELLE MALIBU CPE.
. Green finish, good· tires. V-8, .automatic, power

radio, 351 V-8,

Tellfhe Trulh 13; My Three Sons 15; Cook ing wifh a

7 :ro- Truth or Cons. 3; To Tell th e T r uth 4; Bowling for
Dollar s 61 Let's Go To The Races 8; New s tO; To

·.

aCJdilionet wora ~

- - ac

County , Court of Common
Pleas ; Probatt [!iv.i sion
. To the E~&lt;ecu t or of the
es ta te, to su ch of th e tollowinq
aS are resi dents of th e Sta tt" of
Oh io. vir
the surv iving
spouse . the ·next of kin . th e
benefic iaries und er the w·ilt :
and to t he a, tt orn ey or at
to rne ys representin g any ot
the aforemfntion ed person s
Am elia
M.
Ba v er ,
D ec eased , Pomeroy . Qhio .
Sal isb u ry Town ship . No .

QUALITY

In fh~ Know 10; Wild Kingdom 13; Til Honor
Soc iety IS.
B:li~- B~a Baa Black Sheep 3,4,1 5; Happy Days 6,13;
Who s Wl'oo 10; Piccadilly Circus 20,33..

Business Services

OBITUAR'Y

&amp;
S2.00

Tbe Almanac

dusb1eo.

·

For W•nt Ad service
5 cents per word one
insertion .
M inimum Chllroe 51.00.
1~ cents per word three
consecutive insertions .
26 cents per word six
corfsecut ive InsertiOn$ .
25 Per Cent Discount on
paid ads and ads paid
within 10 Clays.

OF INVENTORY
AN D APPRAISEMENT
Th~
5tilte of Ohio , Meigs

long sell-addressed,

SEC·
'RETARV
Cecil
D.
Andl'lll bas a repui!JHott ••
aa eavlreltlneatallst. Ao
. coveraor of Idaho, be
paabod .....,gb protecUve
leclalaUa"' acalasl op·
poaltloa of tbe state's
limber and mining In·

or

TUESQ.!IY, FEBRUA'RYB, IIIl
b·JO- NBC News 3 .~ . 15 ; ABC News 13; Andy Gr iffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Vegelable Soup ' 0; Sfud lo See 33.

••

Pomeroy
Motor
Co.
..

2 SIGNS

USED TO LOSING MY ..JOB
TO A TEEN·AGE NOVICE 1

1 .'.):~,\

'
•••
•
•
"•
''
'

AuloSalco

INFORMATION

Television log for easy viewing

HATE HER! r'M NOT

i'
i
•i

"

I'

'

�•

Patrol post

News •• in Briefs
(Continued from page 1)
earth in the Soyu&amp; 24 spacecraft ctimcted Uteir course today
for an eiPecled rendezvous with the Salyut 5space station. The
Tass news agency said in a trlef dlapatch tNt Col. Vlktor
Gorbatko and Lt. Col. Yurl Glazkov, had circled the earth 12
times by midday.
"According ID the rep&lt;rts of the crew lllld Ute data of
te~metrlc information, Ute apace ship's onboard II)'Siema are
functioning n~lly, " Tau said. "The cosmonauta are
feeling floe." The news agency said the cosmonauiB bepn
their worldng day at 11:30 a.m. MOIICow time. Gorb!ltko, the
fllght co~der; was quoted as saying the crew fa "fuHIWng
the night program."
WASIDNGTON - PRESIDENT CARTER does not want
his Cabinet or While House staff members to break.up their

families by overworking out of loyalty ID )lim. DeJIIIy Press
Secretary Rex Gr811111l told . reporters that at Monday's
Cabinet meetlilg, Carter cautioned members "not to ignore"
their famUy lies "in carrying out their duties."
"You should watch yourselves and keep your lamllles
together " Carter said. "I don't want your lamllles breaking
up just because you felt a loyalty ID me." Carter said he was
"nottelling them how to run their llvea," Granum said, but had
found White House staffers working late every evening and
said ''you will be more useful ID me and to the country If you
get some recreation, get some exercise, see your children and

spouses.''

(Continued from palle 1)
where he majored In BlolOSYHe Ia a two year vet~~t·an 01
the u. s. Army lllld wu
dl!charged II SP~ with a
MOS u a jlarachule rtuer.
He Ia llllrrled to the former
Diana Jo Boggs, Uma. They ,
have one child, Kyle P., age
two.
·
A 1972 graduate of Zanesville High School, CUrtll Jay ·
Williams attended Central
State University. Trooper
Williams, a three year
veteran of !he.U.S. Milly wu
discharged as Sgt. E-5 In
Infantry. He at"ed in West
Germany one year with the
51st Inf., 1st Dlvlalon. A
native of Zanesville, he Ia
currently residing at Spring
Valley • Gre'en
Apts.,
Galllpolla.
P. D. McCreedy, Gall)polls,
former commander of the
Gallla·Melgs Post, and a
member of Ute patrol's 15th
graduating clasa, attended
Friday's ceremonies.

DIVORC.... AilED
J !))'c:t E. Klell, 11, a mlllor, .
by her motber, Helen Hftffiln, Rt. 1, Langsville, filed
suit for divorce ~ ~ a l111t
; r over Ke!Ut Klein, Rt. 2,
1-.meroy, In Melga CoUDty
COOliiiCIIl Pleu courtroo:n.
Nancy Musaer, Rt. 2
Pomeroy, filed ault for
divorce agalnat Frank
M - same addnN. ReYa
Snyder.' Rulllnd IJid Jame1
Snyder, Mlddleport, fl1ld for
dlaaolullon. Pamela S. Clark
has rued lor support acalnlt
Edward Lee Clark under the
Recelprocal Agreement Act.
Catherine Faye Young wu
granted a divorce from
Gaylrd Laine Young.

Carter hares new U. ·S. policy toward Russia
By PAMELA REEVES
WASHINGTON (UP!) - In
his llrst news conference
llillce taking olllce, President
Carter said the United States
will ''come out better in
dealing with the Soviet
Union" If he speaks out
against repression while
seeking mutual arms
cutbacks.
Carter said his desire to

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesdav. February 9, 1977

ELBERfFIDS

belt
against lawlessness

peace, keeping disorderly
houses, Immoral conduct,
obscene literature, indecent
exposure · and Improper
dress, profanity, restraining'
or Interfering with a pollee
officer, iinpersonatlng a
government pfflcer or em·
ployee,
weapons
and
firearms; gambllng, false
emergency alarms, loitering,
1 One of the ordinances abandoned refrigerators and
1 provides penalties for assault
and b!ltiery, disturbing the other airtight appliances.
MASON, W. Va. - The
Mason Town Councll Monday
evening · studied new city
ordinances which will go into
effect because of the new
magistrate system
established Jan. 1.
Town attorney Ron Stein
=d~~=n~!:. reading of

Local news •• in briefs:I_____A
___re-a__D
___e__a_t_h__s_____ !
I

The Meigs Unit of the
· American Cancer Society will
meet at 7:30 this evening at
the cancer office In the for -

THE MEIG.S Bookmobile
wi ll not vis it schools closed in

bui l di ng, Pome roy . There

the Meigs Loca l Schoo l
District but will sper1d the
time allotted for the vis it in
the general ar..ea served by

Miss Hope contestants from

t he
school.
Residents ,
especially students , are

mer

children's

home

will be a specia l program by
Galll a County and plans wi ll
be made for a sled riding

con test to be staged by the

local Uni t from '1 to 5 p.m .

Sunday on Mulberry Heights.

THE
POMEROY
Emergency Squad answered
a call to Mechanic: St. al 12: 42
a.m. Tuesday for Pau line
Derenberger who was hj ving
difficulty breathing . SM was
taken to Vetera ns 'Memoria l
Hospital. At 6: 15 a.m .. the
squad went to Monkey Run
for Carl
Norton who was
taken to Holzer Medical
Cer1 ter.

asked to be alert for the
mobile uni t ' In the ir areas
when the unit would normally
be at the s~hool.

THE BATON and gyhl ·
nas tlcs classes of Glor ia
Wallace held at !he Orchid
Room in Pomeroy have been
ca ncelled during February .

I
lESLIE BEAVER
Leslie Kenneth eeaver, 60,
Rt. 2. Gallipolis, died at 9:20
p.m. Monday at Holzer
Medica l Center . He had been
in fail ing health about six
months.
An employee of the
Ga ll ipolis State Institute and
a fa rri1er, He was bOrn Sept.
11. 1916 In Harr ison Twp. ,
Ga ll la County, to the la te
Charles E. and Chloe Frances
Drummond Beaver.
He Is survived by his wife,
Audre y Sa nders Beaver :
ch ildren, Delores Beaver.
Ga l li pol is ;

Mrs .

Aust in

OREN L. WRIGHT
Oren L. Wright, 79 ,
Southgate, Cali f.. former
Meigs County res ident, died
Saturday nig ht.
He is survl ved by his wife,
Thelma, and two sons, lloyd
of Pomeroy and Richard of
Southgate, Ca lif. M(. and
Mrs. Lloyd Wright have been
in Callfornla the past week
and will return home later
thi s w ee ~.
MAUDE FULCHER
Mrs. Maude Fulcher, 82, a
former resident of 997 Fourth
Ave .. Gallipolis, died at 8:20
a.m. today following a long
illr\e!.s.
·
She Is the mother of Mrs.
Amyl
(Kay l _ H ~ff elt ,
Ga lli polis.
Funeral services ·will be
announced by Miller's Home

PRECEPTOR BETA { Pa tri,ci a) Evans, Pedro ;
BETA Sorority will meet Mrs. Larry !Faye) Johnson ,
Thursdar at 7:45p.m. at the Gallipolis; Milford Beaver.
home o Rose Sisson. Co- Castalia ; Rodnev Beaver and
hostesses are Teresa ·swatzel f'./v's. ,Joe (Wyllodenel Eskeu.
and Tani .Smington.
both of Gallipolis; 11 grandchi ldren , brothers and
TWO IN IIOS PITAL .
sister's, James Bea ver,
THE
MIDDLEPORT
RACINE - Robert E. · Gallipolis; Mrs. Raymond fOr Funerals.
Emergericy Squad answered
(Oieva) Cremeens, South
a call to Wesl Ma in St .. Waldnlg and Bob, Jr.; of Poin t; Charles Beaver.
WtNNIFREiil VOLL
Pomeroy, at 10:55 a.m. Route 1, Racine, entered Frankfort , Ohio ; Walker
SYRACUSE
Mrs .
Pleasant Valley Hospital, Beaver , Ona, W. Va ., and one Winnifred Wise Voll , 67,
Tuesday for Mrs . Ma bel
Wolfe who had fallen. She Point Pleasa nt, together. halt -br ot her , Ural Sheets, Syrac use., di ed Tuesday
was taken fa Veterans Rober! Sr., is to undergo
Hun tin gton , W. Va. ' One morning
at . Veterans
Memor ial Hospital where she
sister, one Infant and one Memorial Hospital.
surgery Wednesday. Rogert, grandson, Micl'lael Dea n
was admitted .
The daughter of the lale
Jr., a senior at Southern High E va ns , preceded him In Franklin and Anna Marie
THERE WAS STIL L some School, is to undergo testing death.
Messer Wise, she was also
openings for Meigs area and observa tion.
He was a · member and preceded in dea th by a sister,
women to attend the free
dea con of Mlna Chapel Emma Kay Wise.
cervical cancer clinic to be
Church.
Sur~J i vi ng are her husband,
DATES CHANGED
held Wednesday from 1 to
Funera l ser'Jices will be 2 Paul E. Voll ; two sisters.
The regular meeting of the p.m. Thursday at Mine Mrs. Ber tha Lieving, Miners3: 30 p .m . at Ve terans
Chapel Church with the Rev. ville; Mrs. Gertrude Bald·
Memor ial Hospital. Those Rio Gra nde Community
wishing to take advantage of College board of trustees has lson Gibson officia ting . win, Ravenna i two brothers,
the free clinic tomorrow
Burial wi ll be In Ohio Valley Cecil Wise, Ra~Jenna ; Perry
should call 99'2 -3382 Im- been , changed from Wed· Memory Gardens . Friends Wise, Stow, Ohio and several
mediately to get their ap. nesday, Feb. 9 to Saturday,
may call at the Waugh - nieces and nephews.
.
Feb. 12 at 10 a.m.
Ha11ey -Wood 'Funeral Home
poin tment time.
Friends
call at' the
Wednesday 2 to 4 and 7 to 10 Ewing Funera Hom~ after 7
p.m.
this evening. The body will be
. takien to the Shorts Funeral
Home In Ravenna WedFRIEDA GIBSON
nesday where friends may
Mrs. Frieda Gibson, 85, call from 7 to 9 Wednesday
Pomeroy, died Monday e'Jeni ng . Funeral services
evening at Piketon.
wil l be held at 11 a.m. ThursMrs. Gibson, a reg istered day at the Shorts Funeral
nurse, was the daughter of Home. Burial will be In St.
the 'late Adam and Matilda Mary 's
Cemetery
at
Urschel Seyler. She was also Ravenna.
preceded in death by a
brother, Er nes t and her
husband, John.
·
MAY COME HOME
Surviving are two nephews,
Lonnie LeMaster, 8,
E. C. Sey ler, Jr., lakewood,
Fla. and R. D. Sey ler, Darwin, who underwent
major surgery at St. Joseph
Pomeroy.
·
·
Funeral ser~J i ces will ·be 1 Hospital recently, Is In ex·
p.m. Thursday at the Ewi ng cellent condition and may be
Funeral Home with the Re'J. returned to hls home this
w. H. Perr in offic iating .
Buria l will be In Oak Grove week. He was visited Sunday
Cemetery, Marietta . Friends by Mrs. Jackie Brlckles and
may call at the funeral home children, April and Jlmmy,
any time after noon Wed· and by his brother. Tlmmy.
nesday.
Doe~' seem like everybody's g~t a new _car
th~ days-·except you? Then Its about ttme
to/check our Auto Loans. Low bank rates, fast
loan servi ce and convenient repayment plans
can get you behind the wheel' of a new car

mar

You StillOririlf Tll•t

Ill

IEIIP 7

THE INN PLACE
·WednesdJJy Night Special

now !

Loans for fvery Need
Here at Your· Fuii·Siirvlce lanlc:

.

"THE

FRIENDLY BANK"

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veleraad Memorial Hospital Elizabeth Wade, Connie
Admitted - Paul Voll, Wickline, Mae Young,
Syracuse; Marie Priddy,
(Births, Feb. 71
Rutland: Mabel Wolfe,
Mr. and Mr~ . Gary Hill,
Pomeroy; Edna Wiggins, son, Wellston; Mr. and Mrs.
.Minersville; Loretta Atkins, Roger Holman, twin girl and
RuUand ; Myrtle Harrison, boy, Rutlaoo: Mr. and Mrs,
Middleport: Naomi Bentley, William Gill, son, Gallipolis
Middleport; Earl Glass, Ferry, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Middleport; Emmett Hart· Lawrence Radeker,
ley, Athens; Carmel Jewett, daughter, Gallipolis; Mr. and
Middleport.
Mrs. Jack Teaford, .son,
Discharged - Everett Racine.
Calaway, Paullne Hysell,
Floyd Bush, · Billy Brewer,
PLEASANT VALLEY
Rosalinda Qualls, Marvin
DISCHARGES -'Christine
Darst.
Klrwood, West Oohmbia;
Mrs, Steven Greenlee, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Gary Miller,
Hober Medical Center
New Haven; and Unda Sue
(Discharges, Feb. 7)
Scarberry,
Point Pleasant.
Johnny Banks, .John
Berridge, Byron Bunce,
Jenny Dennis, Patrick
Fields, Georgia Frisby,
Ursula Hatfield, Homer
Jackson, ·Katrina Johnson,
John Jones, Courtney
Markham, Mrs. James Mont·
gomery and daughter, Oris
Roush; John Schmitt, Mrs.
Antonio SOla and son, Mary
Sparks, Mark Treleven,

malicious action and public
drunkenness.
Asecond ordinance creates
a city court providing a city
judge and eat~bllshlng the
duties and auUtority of the.
judge and court.
A third ordinance was to
adopt all applicable .West
VIrginia motor vehicles and
West Virginia road Jaws as
contained in Chapter 17 of the
West Vlrglnla Code.
In· other action, Ralph
Johnson of the Appalachian
Power Co. spoke on a new
town lighting contract.
Dayton Raynes moved to
accept the contract and the
molion carried.
Jim Dudding and Ray'
Remnond, representing the
Mason Community Center,
asked council to · help pay
utilities and inaurance lor the
center. Catherine Smith
moved same, but a year·W:
. year b!lsls and also pay all
utilities. Motion carried.
Calvin Smith, engineer,
told the council of current
action on the new water tank
syste\n. The council com·
mended Smith on his work
thus far; Present were Mayor
Fred Taylor, Recorder Car) ·
Cline and councll members,
Smith, Raynes, Edward
Perry and Lawrence Roush.

''
'

.... :'

It's easier than paint,
paneling or· ~:,~~~~~=~~
That's becau se C&lt;
has a miracle adhesive
backing called A-21"' that
makes it incredibly easy to

It's ready to use. Position it.
move it, and it won 't stick till
you want it to.

con-Tact ,.decorative
co~Jeri ngs come in colors,

styles and patterns for e~Jery
room in the house- livi ng
room, kitchen,bath. From

look finishes lo cor11e&lt;"P&lt;"aryl
chromes to elegJ&lt;a~~n~l~~~; ~eq
1
patterns. 59c D.
wide

.,
,\

'

Clear this evening, lows
tonight in the 20s. Warmer
tmnorrow, afternoon highs in
the &lt;lOs. Probablllty of per·
clpitation, 10 pet. tonight, 20
pet. Wednesday by evening.

I

TREMENDOUS SAVINGS

MIDDLEPORT. OHIO
Member Federal Dlpolillnsurance Corparatiar
DIPOSITS INSURED TO •40,000

THE MEIGS INN·
Pomeroy,O.

100-FUtL SIZE MATTRESSES
RETAIL FOR "99.95

"ow

Phone 992"'304
PIZZA SHACK Phont992-6304

==·

By UDIIed Press IDteraadonal
COLUMBUS - AS HE PROMISED IN IUS Jan , 12 State of
the State message Gov. James A. Rhodes today submitted a
bill 1AJ the Ohio General Assembly to "ellmlnate fraud and
corruption by people who hold Jllblic offices."
,
"The bill would deprive any state employe of the state s
contribution to the Public Employes Retirement System u~ By JOHN T, KA.DY
the state's fuel oil, said
conviction of said employe for fraud or corruption actions m Ualted Press Inleruatlonal
Tuesday the fuel oil market
connection with hlsor her employment" said Rhodes in a three
Leaders of the Democratic has started to "tighten up."
paragraph Jetter to minority and majority leadars.
controlled Ohio General
Columbia Goo :·resident
Assembly have rejected a Marvin White Tuesday asked
EASTI.AKE, OffiO - CITY OFfiCIALS HAVE declared a proposal by Columbia Gas of for ,the ' repeal of the law
state of 'emergency because of expected flooding ol the Ohio to suspend a law prohibiting Ute passing on of
Chagrin River and of city streets, possibly as soon as Thurs· prohibiting gas companies e,mergency gas purchase
day when temperatures are forecast to reach 40 degrees.
from charging residential costs to home users.
Councilman Steve Pekarclk said the emergency, declared us~rs for the cost of
"We're in the position of
Tuesday night because of "Ute threat ol dls8iiter"lrom flooda, emergency purchases, which needing ~ddltional gas to
' 1 ' said the a.to-IO.Ioot piles in front of homes will tur~ Into 2-to-3 would be used primarily by keep homes warm, possibly
feet ol water on streets aoo in many basements.
industry.
being able to obtain
Meanwhile, Sen. Howard additional gas in the
SBURY, RHODESIA - RHODESIAN SOLDIERS Metzenbaum, l).{)hio, was SQUthwest, but not being able
the rain~aked hu8h country north of Sallsbury for scheduled to 'be the leadoff ID purchase lhe gas because
ers of seven mlsalonarles intend to bring them in alive witness at a hearing today by we would not be pennitted by
to disprove nationalist claims the gunmen were crack the Ohio Senate Utilities Ohio law to recover our
Rhodesian coi!Uil8ndos, mllltary sources say.
Committee
which . is money," said White.
The search began late Sunday, within hours of the k!Ylng investigating Ute natural gas
However, Sena.te President
of three Roman Catholic priests and four nuns at St. Paul's shortage In the Buckeye · Pf:o Tempore Ohver Ocasek.
mlsalon In the Mangwende trlb!ll trust area 37 mlles northeast state.
D-Akron, and House Speaker
of Sallsbury. But security sources admitted torrentlal down·
The Clnclnnatl Gas &amp; Vernal G. Riffe Jr., D·New
pours were making the iearch difficult.
· Ele~trlc Co . announced Boston, said iltere was no
Tuesday restrictions on n~d to suspend th_e law. .
DENVER - AMATEUR SNOWMAKERS, anxious to help natural gas usage by its
We plan no actton at thts
relieve Colorado's drought, have suggested shipping snow m customers would probably time," the legislative leaders
boxcars from Ute Eaat and firing roclr:et.s to create moisture- continue through March 31. said.
laden clouda, aCCGrding ID ·a state official.
.
.
CG&amp;E has curtalled its 406
But a bill to repeal the law
"I've had about 40 telephone calls this past week," said largest non·domestlc was introduced in Ute Senate
Felix Sparks. "Sane genUeman suggested we load 'up empty custom~rs by IKJ per cent and Tuesday ,bY Republican Sens.
bolC&amp;I'S from the East and tranaportlt (now) out her~. He 16 000 analler non-domestic William H. Mussey of
appeared to be very serious about lt." The stale legislature has c~stomers, ' have · been Batavia and Thomas A. Van
appropriated f189,000 to pay lor cloud seeding in the Color~do cutb!lck by 30 per cent.
Meter of Ashland.
Rockies in hopes of increasing mountain mowpack and ~asmg
In
stlll
another
Hep. Michael P. St1nzl~~ a predlc¥ swruner drought.
development the Ohio D-Columbus, called Whtte s
P~troleum' Mark.e ters allegations ''absolutely
WASHINGTON - DEVELOPEIJS SOLD 17 per cent more Association, whi c h untrue - aile." .
home~~ in t976 Utan in 1975 - at a m~lan price of '",200, a distributes~ to 70 per cent of
Roger · Dreyer;
a
guvernment report shows. An estlmale!l 6.15,000 new-; single'
spokesman lor the Ohio
family homes were 110ld last year ,,according to a joint study by
Pe troleum · Marketers
Ute Censllll ·Bureau, the Commerce Department and the
Association, said heating oil
lloplrlment of Housing and Urblin Development.
dealers could not take on the
The median price of '"'200 was up 12 per cent from 1975's
burden of Ute natural gas
median price of .-,D,the atudy said. Western stales enjoyed
suppliers;
fair anil cold tonight, lows
lite biggest increase In home sales -recording 201,000 new
"Our problem is that we
homes or 1 33 per cent Increase over 11175. NorUteastern home in the upper 3Js. Ooudy and can take care of the needs of
warmer Thursday, highs in our historical customers, but
sales were lhe lowest ,in Ute JilliOn.
the
upper 40!1. Probability of we can't take the burden of
'
WASHINGTON •- SPANISH APPARENTI.Y ' W!LL BE precipitation 10 per cent Ute gas companies 'Ill our
today , tonight and Thursday. shoulders," said Dreyer.
Cnntloued oa pase 14
'

Weather ·

VACATION

WA'Iat FOR
OPENING DATE

CHESTER M. KNIGHT, POMEROY, has retired
alter 23 years with power plants serving as "chief of
time". With many activities and hobbles, Knight will
probably continue to he "chief of time".

d

NEW MISs-MATCHED

MEIGS THEATRE
CLOSED FOR
Plus Tax

en tine

The Meigs County Board of
Commissioners in regular
session Tuesday night
discussed at length broken
water lines and the heating
and cooling system in the
County Welfare building in
Middleport.
It was determmed that it
was the commissioners'
responsi bilit y lo repair
broken domestic water lines.
Adiscussion will be held with
the owners of.the building to
reach a determination a~ to
whose responsibility it is .of
either repa iring or replacing
the hea ting and co ol ing
system in the Welfa re
building.
The commissioners had
their clerk, Martha Cham·
hers, ask all known plumbing
and heating contractors in
the area to submit a bid on
repairing the lines at the
Welfare Building. The only
bid submitted was one from
Karl Grueser In the amount
of $1,110 which was accepted.
In other business Charles
Legar was appointed director
of Disaster Services Agency
in Meigs County.
Meeting with the com·
missioners were -Gene Lyons
and Joan .Culp M the Meigs
County Health Department in
· regard to a request made by
Mrs. Lyons at the first night
meeting of the com·
missioners when she asked
for an additional 115,000. ·
At the time Ute request was
made, Richard Jones,
commissioner, asked that the
cotnmissioners be given a list
of the duties of the employes
of the Health Deparlment.

Mrs. Lyons presented this job
desc ription
lor
ad·
ministration, nursing and
sanita rian duties. She in·
dicated she needs the ad·
ditional money for salaries to
keep qualified people with
professional abilities.
Jones suggested that she
send a letter exp!aining how
she intends to adjust salaries.
After they receive the Jetter
the commissioners will give
her an answer within 10 days.
' Also meeting with the
' com missioners wer e Tom
Closser and Jeff Burt of the
Buckeye Hills Hocking
Regional Development. They
asked the commission to

reduce depeooence on atom!.·
weapons worldwide, he said
ca~r said he thinks !h.
United Stales and the SOviet
Union both must negotlau
SQme weapons cutbacks, an"
he suggested the Kremlli
stop deploying a limited
range mobile missile difficult
for American systems tv
detect.

Fifteen Cents
Vol 28, No. 209

appotnt a n~n·pu~J~c officlal
and two public ofltcials to the
Agenctes Gen era l _Pohcy
Counctl. The appomtment
will _be made at the next
rneetmg. .
.
Pete S&gt;mpson, project
coordinator for a grant for
radw eqmpment for c~unty
law enforcement offtc_e rs
presented.a letter from Mtcro
Com~ umcatton s Inc . ex·
plammg the btd evaluati~n
and cost of each agency ,1n·
vol~ed m the commurucallon
project.
Attending w er~ :enry
Well , Jones,_ an
arne~
Roush, ccmnusstoners, an
Martha Chambers, clerk.

McBride looking
like a winner
•
PITTSBURGH (UP!) Rebel
Ed
Sadlowski
stubbornly insisted he still
had a good chance of
capturing the United
Steelworkers presidency
today , despite his own
charges of hallot fraud and a
strong vote trend toward
opponent Lloyd McBrld~.
Several hundred. thousand
steelworkers cast secret
ballots in the election
Tuesday, ending one of the
roughest election battles in
labor history. Preliminary
returns inidicated the turnout
would fall short of a record.
McBride, 60, a candidate
with strong support from
retiring President I.W . Abel
and virtually every other
American labor leader , was

leading by siighUy less than
2-to·l in an independent vote
tal)y by UP! from union
offices throughout the United
States and Canada .
.At 9 a .m. EST, McBride
was leading by · 147,621 'to
75,796 wiUt about half the
locals reporting. McBride's
aides described it as an
"irreversible trend 1 " but
Sadlowslti backers predicted
it would be reversed as ballot
counting resumed after a
brief overnight lulL ·
Labor De partmen t
observers reported that
Sadlowski hlid complained
formally of vote fraud in only
one Birmingham, Ala., local.
But they expected more
challenges to be filed one&amp; the
outcome was known.

••'
•
•
•

:''

•

l

••

"There are some factories
that we are going to have to
tell there is just not enough to
go around," said Dreyer.
"These are the ones that
switched late to fuel all."
In other energy related
developmeniB:
sc h oo1
- State

Superintendent Martin Essex
ha 8 Ued for a series of
se!e~ regional meetings of
school superintendents to
di
the energy crisis and
bo~'ft has affected schools.
- The Ohio Energy and
Resource Development
Agency said a studv it has

Reedsville man cited to court
John L. Danewood, 23,
Reedsvllle, was cited to
Meigs County Court for
improper backlog following
an accident at 10:15 a.m.
Tuesday on CR 28, east of SR
7.

The Gallla-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol · said
Danewood's car backed into a
vehicle operated by James E.
~ibble, 52, Sandyville, Ky.

There
was
moderate
damage. .
A Gallia County accident
occurred on US 35, three
tenths of a mlle west of SR 7
where Linda Gerard, 19,
Middleport, lost control of her
car which struck an icy spot
in the roadway. The vehicle.
ran off t))e left side of .the
highway striking an embimk·
ment.

Missed days pose problem
EAST MEIGS - Plans for received and the state Is
making up 14 days of school allowing 15 days pver the live
miss ed In January were calamity days olf schools
dlscusaed, but no decision were closed due to the energy
mat!e, when the Eastern shortage.
.
LoCal School Board met in
The board discUssed at
regular session Tuesday length a 3 mills' renewal levy
nlght.
which must be approved in
Although schools _in the the district in t977. AJSQ
district were closed for 19 discussed was the need for
days , the district's five • additional funds. The board
calamity days reduces the made no decision on when to
time which apparently will place the levy, whether It be
have to be made up to 14 for 3 mills or more, on the
davs. The board took no ballo~.
action on a makeup plan
Dr u Bennett was hired to
because state guidelines to be ha": coal to the Chester
followed have not been school where r: ' and coal are

ROSALYNN CARTER'S
primary interests will be. ·
mental health - she'll
head a aew presidential
com mission
and '
p'roblems or the elderly.
But the new First Lady
does not intend to limit her
activities to officilll
projects. She'll ai r'
continue lo advise h&lt;.
husband and serve as his
surrogate eyes aad ears Oli ·
her travels.

Essex ·
ca11ing
supers
COLUMBUS (UP!) -State
Sc ho ol Su peri ntendent
Martin Essex has called a
series of seven regiona l ,

meetings Thursday and
for
school
Friday
superintendent. to discuss
the energy crisis and its
. Impact on schools.
Essex said th~ conference_s
would be held m Clncmnat:,
'
Cleveland , Co lum bu s .
Dayton, Toledo, YoungstoWiJ
and Zanesville.
Essex said the conference'
were called to :
- Establish on-scene fa ctr
related to school closings an•.
ways to get the maximum:
conducted shows that number open.
- Share success i u.
propane and fuel oil could be
educational
devices in coping
in short supply through
with
the
gas
shortage and
February.
.
severe
winter.
·
-State Energy Chief Robel
Explore
ways
to
insure
Ryan said the state must "go
bac~. to coal and use m?re · the graduation of all high
ccal as a means of me~lln_g school 'seniors wltho;r:
the_energy problems It .ts disruption to prospective
lacmg now and will lace m employment or co llege
entrance exams.
the future.
- Determine any needed
- Three
bills
were
introduced in the state Senate leglslation or policy changes
- Accentuate
th e
to prevent gas, electric and
water companies from importance of citizenship
cutting of! residential service responsibilties .related to
for noniJByment of bills due energy conservation by using
high quality instructional
to the energy crisis.
- The Army Corps of Engl. materials available to the
neers estimates it will be at schools. through out the
least 10 days before barge Department of Education.
" Two comprehensive.
tralllc can move upstream
from the ice·jammed lower surveys conducted by the;
Ohio River as a result of a Department of Educatlo ~t
towboat accident near have been out-&lt;Jf-date whe1:
tabulated because of rapidly
Marlon, Ky.
changing c onditi on ~
througl!out Ohio schools,"
said Essex.
.
"Response ,by Ohio school:t
to the arctic weather and
resultant energy· crisis • haS
exhibited Inordinate
now being used to heat the resoucefulness to sustain ·
under
un, •
building. The reduction of gas education
usage through the parttlme precedented difficulties,' ' :
·
use of ccal has been qUite · said Essex.
The conferences Include: :
successful, Supt. John Riebel
Thursday- 9 a.m. Lunken . ·
said.
The board approved 19 t\lrport In Cincinnati: 11:3tl.
seniors
for
midterm a.m. Dayton Cox Municipal, · ·
graduation and set Feb. 17 as t\lrport ; 2:26 p.m. Toledp .
the date to begin negotiations Express iJrport and 7:30 ·
with teachers of the district. p.m. Gtoveport·Madison ·
Clerk-treasurer Eloise High school in ·Franklin
Boston was authorized to County.
Friday-9 a.m. Burk~
request an advanced draw
Lakefront
In Cleveland; 11 ::IQ
from the .county auditor to
a.m.
Youngstown
Municipal
meet the Feb. 20 payroll.
Airport
and
2:20
p.m.
All board members were
Zanesville
Municipal
t\lrport
.
present.

plea to pass on gas costs

HILOTEMPS
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
. highest temperature reported
Monday to the National
Weather Service, excluding
Alaska and Hawaii, was 83
degrees at Palm Springs,
callf. Today'~ low was 22
degrees below zero at Elkina,
· W. Va.

SANDUSKY,Ohio (UP!)Engineers and inaurance ad·
justers are at Cedar Point
Amusement Park today to
study the damage in the
movie
theater
whlcb
occurred when a valve broke
on a six-inch water line under
the projection room.
.
The incident caused heavy
structural damage to the
theater and the coUapee ol
several rows of seats, park
olllcials said MoOO&amp;y.
'
• About one third of the seats
1n the central aection of tile
building collapsed several
feet when water eroded lUI
under the concrete structure.
When It broke, water
flooded the {UI from under the
building.

who

For now, Carter said the
United States has "superior
nuclear capability" over the
SOviet Union, but that either
nation could destroy · SO
million to 100 million people
in a nuclear attack.
"The threat of this kind of
holocaust Is what makes it
Important that we do keep an
adequate
deterrent
capability," and ~rastically

S

Weather

DAMAGE STUDY

report~r

hamper his desire to reach
"quick agreement" with the
Russians
on
limiting
strategi c arms. And he
repeated his willingness to
reach a new arms limitation
pact in. two stages - putting
off until later the ccntrove&gt;'"Y
over li miting America's
cruise missile aoo the SOviet
Union's Backfire bomber.

\Welfare .building
damage assessed

In 1938, Chet married the former Annette Ashworth, throughout his lifetime.
daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Dayton Ashworth of
As a young man he was out.standing in basketball at
Pomeroy. "Annle," as she Is known about the community, was Chester High School and played football, basketball and
Meigs County's first woman school bus driver and has driven a baseball at Rio Grande College. He once tried out for the
school bus for well over 20 years. A woman with a pleasant baseball major leagues and was one out of 400 young men
smile and always something to talk about, Annie is a popular involved. The 400 tryout. were reduced ID 40 with Knight
figure.
.
·
included and finally, one of the 40wasaccepted.
Mr. and Mrs. Knight moved to canton where Chet worked
Througb the years, Chet has Played with independent
in a factory ID provide an Improved econ«?m~c situation for his baseball and basketball teams and was a basketball' refe ree as
family over that made possible by teaching. He and Annie a spare time activity for a number of years.
·
returned to Pomeroy and he worked for a year at the T.N.T.
•A member of Trinity Church in Pomeroy, Knight has
plant . before entering the U. S. Army in 1943. He was served as a church elder-and he stlll serves as a Sunday school
discMrged In 1946, having spent {!lost of hls service time in teacher, an activjty of his for over the past 20 years.
Germany.
,
. ...l!e.&lt;;enlly, !Wgbt.wa• honored with a retirement dinner at
- From 1946 to 1,&amp;3, Chet was· in the watchmaking and the Holiday Inri.in Ranauga, He was presented several gifts by
jewetry business with his late father-in-law in Pomeroy and In his cowo~kers.
1963 took his first job with the American Electric Power Co. at
Besides having a hobby in clock and watch repairing,
the Kyger Creek Plant, then under constl'Uctlon.
.
Knight is an avid golfer, loves hunting and fishing, and is a
The years moved right along and Knight, who became citizens band radio addict. He is a coin collector and likes to
"chief of time," worked in that capacity at the Phllip Sporn travel. He can do · all sort. of home maintenance .and
Plan~. Graham Station, W. V11. ; Ute Tanners Creek Plant at ·Improvement chores so it is likely that there will be little time
Lawrenceburg, Ind. ; the cardinal Plant at BrUllant, Ohio ; the on his.hands during retirement.
Mitchell Plant at Moundsville, W. Va., and in 1971 was
Mr. and Mrs. Knight bave two sons, Terry, a State
assigned to the Gavin Plantln Cheshire, a neighbor plant of the Highway Patrolman stationed at Marion, and Dick, who is
Kyger cteek Plant where It all began for him.
head o! safety at the Mitchen Power Plant. They have a
Knight has been a sports enthusiast and participant grandson, Steve Knight of Marion.

with . No miJdng, no
mess. Pee! off paper backing.

•

Visit Our Salad Bar
Pork and Sau.e rkraul
Little Brown Potatoes
•
Hot Rolls
Coffee, Tea or Milk

One resident of uppe·r Minersville recalls going to the
callaway School which served the neighborhood known as
''Monkey,'' a nickname the origin of which no one
apparently recalls. SOld in 1933, the calloway, or Monkey,
school was removed block by block, re-&lt;lrected in Laurel
Clill, and· is used as a residence today. Monkey
neighborhood children went to Dutchtown School in 1934.

Press

frequently wrote about
dissension.
"But I can't go in with
armed forces and try to
cha nge
the
internal
mechanisms of the SOviet
government," he said.
carler said he does not

at y

By Bob Hoefllcb
The "chief of time" has retired but you can bet he won't
have ''tlme on his hands," or wili he ?
The "chief of time" is Chester M. (Chet) Knight of Legion
Terrace, Pomeroy, who has retired from 23 years with the
American Elec1ric Co. at power plant. in Ohio, West Virginia
and Indiana.
However, "Chet" as he is known affectionately in Meigs
County, has many activities so he won't have.time on his
hands. And yet, repairing clocks and watches IS one of h1s
hobbies so, perhaps, it ought to he said that If he does have
time it will be on clocks and watches which he is repairing.
A native Mei~s Countian, Chet was born in Chester, a son
of the late Mr. and Mrs. Burt Knight and graduated from
Chester High Schoollrt 1~29 . He graduated from Rlo Grande
College in 1933 and taught school in Meigs County for the next
seven years. Knight was the teacher lor the last term at the
"Per Monkey" School in Minersville - and hardly anyone
remembers that long-gone school.

.·

Wilbur Ashley, Paul Clifford aoo Wilbur Rowley . Pitchers
were Manley, Diles (now a top ABC sporta caster) and
Searles. catchers were Searles and Ashley. SOme of these
players will he on hand tomorrow illgbt at the .Pomeroy
Legion Hall when OVA players are honored by the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce. The picture belongs to
Henry Clatworthy. It was taken on the old Pythian Park
diamond where the new Imperial Electric CoiJlant
stands.

e

Ginaburg and the Kremlin's
expulsion o! an Associated

•

Chet Knight, 'time man', retires

Maso~ ·tightening
ONE OF TilE CHAMPIONSHIP teams in th~ Ohio
Valley Baseb!lll Association was sponsored by Reiners
Bakery.Making up this Middleport team were, front, 1-r,
Junior Rowley, Yogi Wayland; second row, Ike Wilt, Don
Manley, Charles Searles, Dave Diles, Russell Housh,
Uoyd M. (Dinty) Moore, Ace Wayland, Nibert ( ~ll'St name
unknown); third row, Vern Evans Hatf1eld (flrst .name
unknown), Bobby Nelson, Hook Thomas, Henry
Qatworthy, Bill Smith; fou rth row, Will Meyer, manager,,

-

.

resume negotiations on rights," he said. "!think this Secretary of State Henry
nuclear weapoos reductions can legitimately be severed , Kissinger's "linkage" of the
wUI not deter him from from our inclination , for humau rights issu~ and arms
criticizing. Moscow's .tactics instance, in reducing negotiations 'because , " I
against dlasideniB, and the dependence on atomic don't want to tie everythin(
Kremlin should not link the weapons ... "
together in one package."
two issues..
The news conference
Then, as if to drive home
" I think we come out better Tut!S!Iay centered largely on the point, the President said
In dealing with the Soviet foreign affairs and carter he regret. "very deeply'' the
Unlon If I am conslstenUy and appeared at ease with the SOviet imprisonment of dlasi·
completely dedicated to the subject.
dent IPJHi Pr AIP"""riPr
enhanl'ement of ht1fT' Rf1
He said he rejects .former

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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="47991">
              <text>February 8, 1977</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="204">
      <name>beaver</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7533">
      <name>fulcher</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="411">
      <name>gibson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="657">
      <name>seyler</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2022">
      <name>voll</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="234">
      <name>wise</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="367">
      <name>wright</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
