<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="14933" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/14933?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-19T06:13:44+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="47710">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/2e389f5abfc2b4fe164044309f31555f.pdf</src>
      <authentication>b56f88a7f15be47d31a1da982c7bea1d</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="47999">
                  <text>10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thlll'ldly, Feb.IO.I977

.

r----A.;~a -De;th~----! Contract
I

..'

·

. NAOMI M. JACOIS
Mrs.
John
TerrelL
Pomeroy, received word of
lhe dNfh of INs. Naom i M.
Jacobs, 80, ~ 751h St..
Holmes leach, Fla .• on
Wednesday. Jan. 19, at
Mllna!H Memorial Hospital.
INs. Jacobs was preceded
In dNfh by her husband. Carl
and one daughter , Margaret.
She .Is sur.vlved by one
daughleri Mrs . .Mayzetta
Hunftr Holmes lliach, thr"
grandchildren and several
great gr,anckhlldren. ·

'

Funeral services were held

af Griffllb Cline Ivan Chapel
on Salurday, Jan. 22 with the
Re¥. Frank 'Lyerly o( the
Gloria Del Church officiating.

·

I

approved
HARTFORD, W.
Charles A. Varian.
of
Harlford, was dNd on arrival .
at Pleasant Valley Hospital for gas
Wednuday . Born February
CHARLES VARIAN

•

Va. 52.

12, 192~. In Spilman. W. Va ..
he was !be son of Charles G.
Va•lan and the late Eva V.
Stewart Varian.
A veteran of World War II.
he was a member of the
American Legion. He was an
employ" of Foote Mineral
Corp. at Graham Station.
Surviving are his wife,
Geraldine J., Hartford; three
daughters , Mrs. Esther
Bacon , Middleport ; Mrs .
Alberta Maiors, Huntsville,
Ohio, and Charlotte Varian,
Hartford ; three sons,
Raymond G. and Charles A.,
Jr., both of Mason, and David
R.. stalloned In Hawaii by the
Army ; three brothers.
Franklin, Columbus, and
Harry and Eddie, bolb of
Clifton ; six slslers, INs. Lora
Anderson, .Clifton ; Mrs. Rose
Bills, Columbus; Mrs .
, Joanna Council, Langsville;
Mrs. Laura Clark, Kirkland,
Iii. ; Mrs. Ada Council ,
Benton, Ky ., and Mrs. Carol
Lee, Lancaster, Ohio: .13
grandchildren, and .two stepgrandchildren.
.
Funeral services will be
Salurday at 11 p.m. at the
Foglesong Funeral Home
with Rev. Ira Wellman offlclating. Burial will follow In
lhe . Adamsville Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2 to • p.m.
and 7 to 9 p.m. on Friday.

IVA IARCUS
Iva R. Barcus, 70, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis, -led at 6:30 a.m.
Thursday at Holzer Medical
Center. She had been In
falling health the past nine
months.
A retired employee of the
Gallipolis State .lnsittute
where she was employed for
011er 19 years . .she was born
March 30: 1906in Ohio Twp..
.Gallia County to the tate
Jesse and Erie Adkins Eblin ,
She married Harold Barcus
Dee. 31, 192• at Bladen. He
preceded her In dealb In
August, 1937.
Survivors Include children,
Melvin, Crown City ; INs. J.
Owen (VIolet)
Lloyd,
Gallipolis; Mrs. Paul (Alma )
Mllrlln, Crown City ; Mrs.
William (Erma) Adkins and
Mrs . Larry (Margaret)
Cromtlsh, both of Gallipolis;
21 grandchildren and 11
PEARL IROGERJ SEARLS
great.grandchlldren . Two
Pearl (Roger) Searles, 61 ,
grandchildren preceded her died Thursday morning at his

r"' death.

,

r

Other survivors are ··
brothers and sisters, Mrs.
Maggie Lanthorn, Mro .
WIIOam (Effie) Crouse, Mrs.
Everett (Naomi) McGuire,
ali of Gall ipolis; Russell
Eblln, Cheshire: Mrs. Ferdie
(Rosie !.Jones, Eno; Edward.
Willie and John, all of Crowr
City.
spent her entire life In
Gallla County. She was a
member of Chr ist United
Methodist Church and also
attended Elizabeth Chapel
Church.
Funeral services will be 2
p.m. Salurday at the Waugh·
Hailey-Wood Funeral Home

S..,

with the Revs. Alfred Holley

residence In MlnersvHie.

He ·wos a son of the late
Asel and · Edna Borham·
Searles.
. Surviving Is his adopted
mother, Ella Borham.
Mr. Searles was an em pioyee of the Excelsior Sail
Works for a number of years
and was a cili1en band radio
enthusiast.
Funeral services will be 1
p.m. Saturday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev .
Russell M. Cline ottlcialing .
Friends may call at the
funeral home after 7 this
evening.
·O

MARGAR'ET SINCLAIR

Funeral arrangements are

and Larry Poling officiating . being completed aHhe Ewing
Burial will be In Bethel Funeral Home for Margarot
Cemetery near Bladen . Sin&lt;lairwhodledThursday In
Friends may call at fhe Wellston .
funeral home from 2to 4 and 7
to 9 p.m. Friday.

Bookmobile
to travel
'
school district

The Meip Bookmobile wlll
be traveling through ·the
Meip Local School District
while achooll are cloeed.
New Haven Town CoWlCD
The unit wiD vl.!il in the
approved a new 10-ytar area served by each sthool
lltreet lichtlng COI'ltract wlth during the time slot that It
Appalachian Power Com· would nonnally be at the
pany at l! regular atbecluled reapectlve sthool. The unit
meettDc of counclllbil week. wlll start at the school and
Re,presentlng the power then travel in the area served
company at the annual by the school.
aeulon were Dick RoUsh and 'Mri. Vilma Plkkoja,
Ralph Jobnson.
· · · director, aald abe has access
Bill Flowers of the Em· to
books t0 b 1
lo""'.nt
Security
Di·"·'on
many
new
eP
P , .. ..,,
....
meet the problem. Included
addre.M«&lt;. tOIIIItil regarding are many "how to" books and
the Veterans advisory 100 sets of informational
conunlttee, the purpoae of sheets on how to make
which is to put more veterans . puppeto have been secured by
tolJOl'kin Muon County. The the unit for anyone incounclllliened a propoaal to teretted.
help veterw receive jobs.
Propoaed ordinances were
read and the coWlCU decided
Anyone intereste·d in
to accept the 18Dle 011e1 as specific requests can can the
Muon did wlth regard, to unit headquarters, 99}3745,
establlaiUng Ill own town or drop a card to the unit ao
court.
the requeala can be liiled and
Dick 'Grinstead dl.!cussed · on the unit when the book·.
flood preparatlona the Civil mobile vl.!ill the area from
Defenae 1.! undertaking. In which the request originated.
cue of flood, the council
E-R CAl-LEO
members voted io give the
T h e M 1d d I e p o r t
Civil Defenle full use of aD Emergency Squad "as called
town equipment.
to 50 CUller St. at 8:15 p.m.
Present were recorder Wednesday for Christine
Wendy Divers, and COWlCD Branham, a medical patient,
members, Donald Kay, VirgO who was taken to Veterans
Weaver, WIJUam Bird and Memorial Hospital where she
Bernard Ueving.
was .admitted.
·

News •• ·in Briefs
(Continued from page I)
recently impoled by on expor#ng countries.
WASHINGTQN- THE NATION NEEDS A break from
the weather and strict conaervation to make It through Ibis
winter without a "bitter ruman tragedy," according to the
Federal Power Cornmlaalon.
The prediction Wednelday by FPC thainnan RlchaiV
Dunham came in testimony before a House energy
subcommittee studying the winter energy crisis. Dunham told
the panel the national gas law enacted last week may not be
enough. "Even the additional g~ supplies we can expect. to
ri!sultfrom the )l'Oviaions of the Emergency Natural Gas may
· feU lar short of what is needed to' )l'event a bitter human
tragedy in wblch homes are depri~ of heat from natural gas
during the coldest winter of modern times," be said.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Vetera111 Memorial HIIJIIIal
ADMITTED - Anthony
Hudson, Mtnernllle;
Christine Branham, Middleport.
'·
DISCHARGED ' - Charles
Smith, Ivor Logan, Mary
Searles, Lydia Ebersbatb,
Kenneth Braun, Ruby Walta.

Rhodes

Pleaaut Valley Rotpltal
DISCH~RGES Mrs.
Cllarles Halfleld, 11011, Point
Pleeaant; Campbell Stevena,
Apple Grove; Albert Boyles,
Point Pleuant; Mra. Walter
Spears, Point Pleaaant; Joe
Williams, Leon; Mrs.
Gregory Hushes, Point
Pleuant; Mrs. Roy Young,
Maaon; Mrs. EmD Hoffman,
Point Pleasant; Harold
..Woyan, Southside; Mn.
Robert Wallace, Pliny; Gary
Rollins, Point Pleaaant;
Patty Woomer, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Wllliam
Flora, Apple Grove; Pamela
Sisli:, New Haven; Brian
Vickers, Point Pleasant ;
Lucy Hunt, Point Pleaaant;
Mrs. Ma"ln McGuire,
Pomeroy ; Mrs . Warren
Miller, Point pleaaant; and
Mrs. Uoyd Durst, daughter,

Great Bend Atomic power plant .15 years ·away

Apartn&amp;ent dwellers in
'

'

'

Iowa jump from
DES MOINEs - Temlrllrlcken aputmllll dwel1erl,
trapped by faatmovln&amp;
flames and chotlng IIIIOb,
bung .... leaped fnm wlndowa in attempll to escape a
blue wbleb k1lled fear llld .
injured at leul nine others

.

Hotel damaged
in Athens fire

Wedn"'day.
,
VIYian Rand, 2111, burned to ~
death in full view of
byllaDien u firemen tried
to l'MCIIe her from the thirdfloor fire escape landing ol
the once-arand Coronado
Apartmenta.
.,
"God, , the look on her·
face," said Jim Fumll, II,'
who had watched the trageclr;
from the ground. J{er flnll,
·crtes, before lbe coUapaed,: '
were for reacuera 19 "Save_
my baby! Save my baby I"• ·
Fumaa said Mra. Rand;
"Held. her baby out llldcaullbl on fire. By the time
flrea)en Rot there, she was ;
burned up. They tooli: the 1
ch8d and went after 110111e0ne 1
elae who was allve."
1
'lbe rescuing fireman r
. palled ~yeaMid Sonya from
the flame-shrouded fire ,
escape and she was flown by · 1•
belkopter to the University •
Hoapitala bum center, Ion ~
City, where she waa llated in .
critical condition early today, '

l

(Contin~ed from page 1)
Co. was e1penenclng a
ATHENS, Obio (UPi) -A
"critical;' energy deficit but
fire early today damlse&lt;! the
that be would . receive
Athelll Hotel and forced the
updated figures from the
evacuation of about 50
stale's "big four" natural gas
periOill.
!
distributors by II a.m.
The hotel COilliatl malnly fJ
Friday.
apartments for · Ohio
"U we have to go to
University students.
Washington we wiU"
One fireman wu treated
)l'Omlsed Rhodes.
for
IIIIIOIIe lnbalatioo at a
Robert S. RY!III director of x-..
local
boapltal and released.'
Birth- A son to Mr. and
the Ohio Energy . and · Mrs. Lester Hall, Pliny, and a
Authoritlu aald · two
Resource Development
to Mr; !lrid Mrs. residents crawled aloog a.
Agency 8!KI one of three stale daughter
Thomas Berry, Point narrow lqe outelde their
officials who accompanied
third story window to reach a
Rhodes to · Canada aald an Pleasant.
fire escape,
.
addlti001l Jl'Omlse secured
. by the trip was the dellvery of
4000 barrela of crude oU for
the Standard OU Co. of Obio.
"The presence of the
at
these
governor
places .. they realize the
JUST RECEIVED LARGE SHIPM~NT
seriousness. It's not jUJI me
the governor of lilY slate
could !lo that'.' said Rbpdes.
Rhodes ai.!o said "one .or
two" representatives of
governors of states along the .
Ohio river would attend
Friday's 2 p.m. mee~ in
Cincinnati to discuss what
measures might be taken to
avert widespread damage
from )l'editted flooding along
the river when it thaws.
Rhodes aaid he did not
expect any other governors to
atteDd the meeting which ·be
requested last week.

!

t·
r

By Bob Hoeflich
RACINE - "We believe
Great Bend 1.! one of the finest
nuclear power plant sites
we've seen," Michael L.
Elkins, manaser of the en·
vironmental division of
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. said Thursday
night at a public meeting held
by the company at Southern
High School here.
Over 100 Interested citizll!ls
were on band for the "Input
session" with Columbus and
Southern .Ohlo Electric Co.
environmental consultants.
Concerns

expresse d

covered a wide range. Some
were over the disposal of the
radio active wastes· from

nuclear !)OWer plants, others
over the apparent !~ · years in
the future of such a plant on
the site, and still others over
the relatively small employment boost that the plant
would provide while oc·
copying a great many acres
of the county.
Elkins presided over the
meeting and fielded practically all of the questiOQ,,
asked. Repeatedly be assured
residents that the Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric
Co. wants. to work with local
people in working out plans
for the good of the county,
Elkins also stressed that
Congress is working on air
quality and that changes

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Friday, February il, 1977

made by Congress could
cause tbe c:ompany to move
up its target dat~ of the mid
1990s for.the nuclear plant at
Great Bend.
He pointed out that a coal
plant would not be placed at
Great Bend in the interim
years before the nuclear
pla nt is buill because the!
would ruin the site. He said,
however, that the company is ·
working on plans for best
·utiliza.tion of the land
bought or optioned in Great
Bend during the years before
the plant would become a
reality.
The nuclear plant would
occupy 200 acres with other
acreage to be used for ex-

elusion area.
Questioned about the waste
from a nuclear plant, a
consultant said that disposal
of radio active waste is a
problem recognized by all.
He stated that there are two
levels of such waste - high
and low - and currently a
study is being made on
placement of the waste in a
geological formation where it
would stay for many, many
years.
Congress has funded a
study to come up with a such
a geologic formation and a
correct method of disposal
wiD be found, he said.
On resident raised the
question of problems as

•

at y

e

•OCCAsiONAL cHAIRS •PlATFORM ROCKERS ·

MEIGS THEATRE
a.osED FOR

SAVE 40% .

WAlQt FOR

SAVE 50%

OPENING DATE

DO YOU NEED FLOOD

n1uraace?

SAVE 50%

FOR THIS SALE

lfl OFF
SALE I

"

.

PLAYTEX .
BRAS AND GIRDLES

BAlH 'RMELS HAND

'ftMA$ WASH . cto1HS

Davis Insurance Service

.1/2

PRICE ·

NEW LOCATION ·

' :

'

ELBERm HOME
FURNISHINGS ANNEX

Cancer Society

'.

mLL PL.Em OF BARGAINS
tHROUGHOUT THE STORE!
' I

Due to tfte Energy Crisis Our Store
Hpurs Will Be 10 "Til s Monday thru
Saturday Until Further Notice.

heritage house
N.2nd Ave.

Middleport,

o.

Now located on the lsi Floor,
Main Store.
Exceiient selections of Shuts •
Towels - Draperies • Curtains - ·
Area Rugs • Kirsch Drapery
Herdwere - Window ShidtJ •
Furniture Throws - Bed Pillows Mattress Pads and Covers
Custom Made Draperies.

....-::

SALE PRICE ·

CUS10M MADE DRAPERIES

Slop In on the Ill floor - let lbt Rne ·
aaftctlon of P"lt.rna ond color custom '
mode .d" rles - for every room In your
house. lluy wtoot you netd.

SAVE 30%
..

SALE ENDS
SA1UIDAY FEB. 12 AT 5 P.M:

Elberfelds ·In Pomeroy

thlak It fair for 'the company
to hold the land for that long
without action . Roush
stressed that the planned
Ravenswood, W. Va., bridge
wiD be a shot in t,be ann for
the area in question.
' He was assured that the
land won't sit idle over the
years.
Frank Cleland, president of
the Southern Development
Corp., formed in 1966, caine
to the microphone to. present
a speech urging the company
to act "now" on its plans.
Cleland said . that by
waiting. until 1995 to develop
the nuclear plant, t)le com·
pany is actiQg as a land
holding company as a coal

en tine

company did . in Letart
Township where the land was
sold later for ·its gravel, and
its once fine farm land now 1.!
dotted wlth gravel pits.
Cleland urged that the
community needs indUJiry
now and wants the company
to develop the land now.
He charged that the utllity
was the biggest objector to
the feeder road plans to the
new Ravenswood bridge
announced recently by the
hlghway deparbnent.
E. A. Wingett also expressed concern that the
company might sell the land
for purposes simUar to those
for which the land was·used in
(Continued on page 12)

Fifteen Cents
Vol 28,

No. 211

Inflation remained
at 6% rate in January

CHAIRS • SAVINGS OF s30 TO sao

VACAnON

problems develop.
. Residents were .assured by
Elkins that the people dohave something to say about
the construction of a nuclear
plant and be indicated that
Meip County residents will
have that opportunity during
the licensing period. The
company will keep the public
well informed, Elkins
promised,
Meigs Commissioner
James Roush commented
that the land which the
company has secured at
Great Bend has a lot of other
potential and it appeared that
Meigs County was going to
have to walt a long time for
the plant. He said he doe:o not

'

Elbertelds In Pomeroy

. ROBEIITSONS SPLIT
•SWIVEL ROCKERS •RECLINERS · i
Lno! ANGElES (UP!) Actor Dale Robertson, 53,
•ROCK.Q.LOUNGERS •WAll-A-WAYS
was su~ for divorce ·wedLARGE SELECTION OF FABRICS AND COLORS .
CLEVELAND ~ A DALLAS-BASED operator of 6,000 nesday by bla fourth wife,
FURNITURE DEPT. 3RD FLOOR
convenience food stores has pgrcbased for an undisclosed Lulu Mae, ~. They were
prlte from the Standard 'Oil Co. . 113 gasoline stations married. In 1959 and
separated last September.
throughout Ohio, it waa revealed today . .
EXTENDED OUTLOOit
Southland Corp., a $2.1 billion company, 1.! not expected to Her divorce petition said they
Saturday through
lake over .the stations until late May. II intencia to convert as had reached agreement on
Monday, mOd through the
many of the aerviee stations to 7-Eieven brand name food property settlement and
period ~th a tbaDct ol
custody of their daughter,
, showers uortheul each stores with selfoteJ'VIce guoUne piiiJIIIS.
Rebel J,ea, 16.
day. HJ&amp;l-wm be ID the th
· lNDIANAPOUS- T0NY KIRITSIS, whO has held a real
or lower lOti and lows wiD
•
range from the mid 101 to estate executi~ hostage in an apartment he says Ia rigged
the mid •••
' with dynamite since Tuelday lllOI'nil)g, today said he was
turning an offer of "complete' and total" bnmunlty over to.
CHAIILES SUES
Men's and Boys Dress Shirts
three attorneys to decide if It is valid.
LOS
ANGELES
(UPI)
He said he would not make any move until the three
atlmleys, who he deacrlbed as among the bell in the country, Singer Rlly Charlea filed suit
Sport Shirts - ·Knit Shirts
against
had read the Jetter of immunity and told him It wasletlal and in Wednesday
proper lorm. Klrltala, ~. made the statement in a telephone producers of a television
Men's and Boys Sweaters
callll'oadcaat by radio station WIBC in wblch be alao rattled shoW, "A .Truth of Gold II,"
saying
they
faDed
to
pay
him
off another aertae of complaints acalllll the mortgage
a $5,000 fee promised for
Men's and Boys Deni!ll and Jean
company controlled by RlchaiV Hall, his hostage.
"lw111t vengeance -I want thole people eapolled," be'said. appearing on the show two
years ago. Charles demanded
Jackets · Selected group.
Klrlllia cootends the mortgage company cheated him . .
$500,000 in compensation and
from
SRO
WASHINGTON - . BUOYED BY . ENTHUSIASTIC damages
~oductlons. Sam Riddle and
reeeptiona al the labor and commerce Wildings Wednelday,
·
It's Now Available
·
President Cartet today charted two more forays to federal Kip Walton.
buildings- goingpartoftheway by foot . .
To All Meigs County Residents
• Women's casual Tops
White H~ aides said the President, who surprised
everyoae by walking the lull length of bla Inauguration parade
• Girls Dresses
last monlll, would hoof it from lhe Wlite House to the Treaaury
• Girls• Skirts
PATIENT HELPED
Department a block away. He'D go by motorcade, however, to
COMPL£TE STOCK OF JEWELRY· ·
The
Pomeroy
Emergency
the Department of Holl8ing and Urban Development, located
• Children's Coats
Squad wu called to Pomeroy
near Capitol Hlll.
2ND FLOOR
VU!age HaD at 9:09 p,m.
• Evening Wear
Wednesday for Paul Montgomery who bad suffered a
See us - we 'c an take care of your needs
SALE! DISCONTINUED STYLES
BAlANCED BUDGET
possible heart attack there.
FUTURE FARMERS
also homes·- mobile homes- automobile
COLUMBUS ( UPI)
· He wu taken to Holzer
Q)LUMBUS (UP!) - .Both
-health.
Democratic
legislative
.
Medical Center.
· Houae Speaker V~l G.
leaders
)l'omlaed
Wednelday
Rifle Jr., O.New BOlton; and
ARE YOUR INSURANCE PREMIUMS
Senate President Pro to "lead the effort" to enact a
Tempore Oliver Ocaaek, 0. balanced stale budge\
TOO HIGH?
Beautiful floral pattern- famous
Akron, dressed for the without new or increased
adding
that
any
taxes
brand
- extra heavy weight - 85
occ11ion Wednesday as
Try Ughtning Rod Insurance
will
be
appropriations
per
cent
cotton, 15 per cent
Quantities are limited - good
legions of Future Farmers of
At Davis Insurance Service
supported
by
documentation
polyester .
overall selection of sizes. Bras
America
visled
the
a a to "purpose. need.
leglalature.
regular
price
$5.95
to
$9.95
and
52.99 size 24"x24" Bath Towel
Rllfe 1111 Oca&amp;ek donned efficiency and legislative ·
Girdles Sl4.95 to $18.95.
·
intent.''
the famillar blue jackets of
SALE 12.00
SeRite President Pro Tern- '
Lingerie Dei&gt;ortmant-2nd Floor
·the FFA wlth lhelr names
52.29 size 16"x26" Hand Towel
written on the froot in gold pore Oliver Ocaaell:, !).Akron,
114 Court 5t.
Phone 992-5120
and Houoe Speaker Vema) G.
SALE e1.50
script.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Rifle Jr., J&gt;.New Bolton, aaid
99c size 10"x12" Wash Cloth
lhelr finance cbainnen wQUld ...the fi•e minute hrtosl conrer
be "the !root-line architects," chO&lt;k. It's a simple examln• ,
tlon 1 woman un lli"e herself
1·-·---.,---·---"M-~-·.,..+-·-·.,.
oI a Iean no-~,onaense that
00 ,.,. .. early slqns of
responsible budcet.
breast ran«r. Thou•ndo of
THIS WEEKEND
"No fat wl11 be pennltted to · women 111 bel n• ...,d bt·
tlblorb illelf into any final &lt;Ou.. their breast &lt;lll&lt;tn ...
bucJcelact" they aald calllng deteckd and treoltd torly'
M
for ....l..tlc estlmafel 00 the , · Bruit ,.ll.. xamlnotlon, lt'o
.,... • ...,.,..
1 we•an'A bHt prot«tJoa,
el!ecta of fuel shortages 011
DECORATOR INDUSTRIES
revenues.
American

depicted
recently
on
televl.!ion of radio active
waste leaking out of con·
tainers. The consultant an·
swered that the television
report was not presented
properly. He assured
residents that the scientific
community "does have a
handle on it (the· problem)."
Another resident cOmmented that he saw no reason
to bulld nuclear power plants
· when present containers are
holding such wastes now for
only about 40 years.
He was told, however, that
· the overall disposal system is
important , not just the
container, and that the
containers can be changed if

TEMPERATURES BREAK - With the break in cold temperatures, work began Thursday on preparing for the construction of the new Stiffler Deparbnent Store in Pomeroy. The
store was demolished in a blaze in January,\976. A jack hammer was being used Thursday
preparing for the foundation of the new structure. Debris from the fire wiD be cleaned up
next. The Court Street section of the store was repaired following the fire and business is
being carried on in that location.
·~:f''''~''~''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''':·,,,,,,,.,,,.,.,.,.,.,,,.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,~~~:

Relief will

I!JNews • •• in Briefs\\! come to low,
By Unlled Press International
WASffiNGTON - PRESIDENT CAR1'ER wants to
accmnmod&amp;te his predecessor, but allowing Gerald Ford the
use of big military planes Is drawing considerable criticism,
White House sources indicate. The sources said Thursday
there have been objections to Ford's use of 41J.&lt;ieat planes in
trips from his Palm Sprin8s, Calif., residence to New Haven,
Conn., and Houston.
Smaller planes are available, but they haven't been
requested.
The law permits providing such transportation to past
)l'esldents for six months, but members of Congress and
others have been upset about the us.e of the cosily big aircraft.
Granwn said he expects "these requests will decrease."
.WASffiNGTON - MORE TIIAN HALF of President
Carter's pian fAJ spur the economy with $50 cash rebates to
most taxpayers may be offset by the winter's high cost of
beating, government figures show. If the bitter cold reswnes,
Federal Energy Administration analysts say, the average
home beatin8 bill will be about $290 - $93 higher than it was a
year ago.
·
Even if the weather returns to normal in February and
Marth, higher conswnption from October through January
plus increased fuel costs wl11 boost the average home biD to
$210 - $73 higher than last year. About two-thirds of the
increase 1.! due to the extreme cold; new FEA figures showed
Thursday. If the winter had been as mild as last, the average
home beating bill would have risen only $23 due to higher fuel
)l'ices.
. ,
.
. CX&gt;LUMBUS - AN INVESTIGATION .nto vote fraud
charges in Hamilton County in connection with the November
presidential balloting turned up no evidence of fraud and bas
been dl.aconllnued, Secretary of State Ted W. Brown said
Thureday.
'"!be invesilgaUon failed to disclose any conspiracy ~r
Intentional fraudulent voting," said Brown. "There waa no
evidence of double voting in Hamilton county." However,
Investigations ln three other large counties wl11 continue, said
Brown.
CLEVELAND - U. S. ATTORNEY GENERAL Griffin
BeD has been· asked by U. S. District Court Judge Frank J.
Battisti to intervene in the Cleveland stbool desegregation
caae, the judge announced Thursday when be 9rdered the
school board to prepare a new desegregation plan. Battisti
aald he wants Bell to declare the Cleveland case a JDBiter of
national importance and to explain what the federal policy Ia
011 d-.rt~~tion of pabllc schooll.
·
The judge wu known to be dlsaatl.!fled with the
dedeaecJ-eption plan sutrnltted by the achool board last month.
The plan, allbmitled in responae to bla deciJlonlast summer on
an NMCP IUit that the city achools were segregated, relied
heavily on volunlary integration and ignored Baltlsti 's call for
ractel balance in each lcbool. The school board mll8t submit a
·
IContinued on page 12)

mid incomes

.

WASHING'rON (UP!) - Wholesale prices rose 0.5 per cent
in January to continue the recent trend of moderating
inflation , the Labor Deparbnent reported today. But the figure
does not reflect the lull impact of the frigid winter.
"The 6 per cent annual rate of increase is in the general
range of what we'll be seeing for several more months," said
Dr. John Kendrick, one of the government's leading economists.
Kendrick said only food prices, which will reflect the
January freeze , and building materials prices are eXpected to
incr~;ase at a faster rate.
.
Kendrick noted fuel prices actually declined in January
despite increases imposed by the Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries.
The fuels and power groUp of the Wholesale Price Index
declined .0.4 per cent from December.
The index stood at 188.0
compared to a 100 base in more moderate rate than
1976. That means goocia which De ce mber despi t e
cost $100 in 1976 cost $188 in predictions that the severe
cold weather over much of
January .
The January increase was the country would lead to
the lowest in five . mooths, increases.
"The January WPI does not
matching the 0.5 per cent
gain in October. Prices were ·reflect the full price impact of
only 4.9per cent higher than a the severe winter weather
year ago, which is moderate that has affected much of the
compared to the rampant nation over the past several
weeks," the deparbnent said.
inflation of 1974 and i975.
for
most
Construction materials ''Prices
such as concrete and wood commodities were those In
products, steel, aluminum effect as of Jan. II."
Although the January inand other metals were the
primary upward forces in crease was modest, there waa
January , the department distubring news in the report.
Raw farm prices were up 1.1
said.
Prices for processed fooda, per cent and they will
cereals, cheeses and baked eventually be passed down
goods actually increased at a the cost chain to the
conswner level.
But consumer food prices
should remain moderate for
several more months since
the category of constmler·
ready fm fell 0,2 per cent
from December.
The deparbnent said raw
farm prices rose faster
because of big increases for
bogs, green coffee and live
poultry that offset declines
for eggs and vegetables.
The decline in the overaU
index for consumer-ready
foods was attributed to lower
)l'ices for beef and veal and
dairy products. ·

WASHINGTON (UP!)
President Carter says low
and moderate income
perSQns wl11 benefit from his
tax reform package.
Meeting with Housing and
Urban Development Department employes Thursday,
Carter said his package will
include proposals to shift
from , regressive
tax
deductions wa system of lax
credits.
The adminis\ration' s
economic stimulus package
was a first step wward a
l
comprehensive income tax
DAN L WILL
reform proposal forthcoming
Dan L. WID of Boy Stout
by Y"ar's end, Carter said.
"Surely one of those Troop 2Ct wm receive the
)l'oposals wl11 be to give a Eagle awahl, highest iq
standard credit on your scouting, at 2 p.m. Sunday
at the TriDity Church In
incm~e tax to be paid and not
Pomeroy. Friends aud all
a standard deduction.
"The standard deduction members and their
helps much more the very famllles of Troop !C9 are
high income family," !It said, Invited to the presentation
"A credit ... is of much more which wiD be followed by a
benefit to those who have low reception In the social
room of the church.
incomes.''
The poor benefit from tax ·
credits rather than tax
•
deductiOI!S because credits
are deducted from the
·
amount of tax dve. •
Deductions simply enable
bigb4nclllle families to drop
their taxable income into a
Classes began at the ,Salem
lower category.
Center Elementary School
White
House
J;'ress today. The school has been
Secretary Jndy Powell later closed a day longer than
sal~ Carter's reference to other sthoois of the Meigs
"standard deductions" .was Local School Diatrict du~ to a
reference to "personal sewage problem which bas
exemptions."
been corrected.
Ail elementary schools
were functlonini today
although there were no
kindergarten classes. High
BOARD .TO MEE.T
A special meeting of the school students attended
Meigs Local School District claaaes on Thursday and
Board of Education will be today junior high school
held at 0 p.m. Monday to students wert' in session at
discuss bicia on sthool buses. the high school building.

All schools
•
m husmess

Train wreck
cuts city in

half Thursday
POIN'I' PLEASAN'I' - This
city was vtrlually "cut in
half" four hours Thursday
night when a 7~ar Chessle
System train deraDed and
blocked the streeta at the only
location in the city where
traffic can move from one
end of town to the other. ,.
Two cars from the train
derailed several hundred
yards beyond the intersection
of Eleventh and VIand Sis.
According
to
Point
Pleasant Pollee Chief Jim
Gaskins, a broken raU caused
the derailment ·at approximately II p.m. Police
and fire protection were
· aimoat entirely located in the.
downtown section of \he city.
A fire truck was,dispatched
to the .northetn part of the
city by leaving Point
Pleasant on Rt. 2 and
returning by way of Jericho
Rd., and the lire department
from the General .Services
AdmlnlatraUon OMS Depot,
also known u the Navy Yard,
waa placed on lllandby alert.
Units from the Mason
County Sheriff's Deparbnent
aided the local police force .

Will there be a '77 flood
an}'thing like the '37 one?
Marietta officials have had their a ntiBy RICK VAN SANT
flood program in high gear for a week.
United Press lnlerrullloual
"We got wgether with officials from the
Those who recall the big "Flood of '37"
bope more than anyone there won 't be a city, county, utilities, the National Guard,
the Army Reserve , the Red Cross and the
"Flbod 0~ '77."
schoqls
last Friday," reports Mrs. Jane
That's becall8e they remember vividly
Schwartz,
a 20-year veteran of the Marietta
just bow bad a flood can be.
Civil
Defense.
"I'll tell you, it was a session.
"Back in '37 I saw a house go flooting
"We
set
up
our
flood information center.
down the river," recaJis Leland Siders.
We're
watching
the
rivers (Marietta sits on
"When the water finally went down, I
the
Ohio
River
and
Is bisected by the
beaded downstream to see where that house
Muskingum
River
and
therefore has a
had ended up.
double
flood
threat).
We've
got our
"And there it was," says Siders, the
~vacuation
plans.
image still locked in his mind, "that bouse
"We've got our maps marked with red
was sitting out by itself in the middle of a
lines
t~lling us what.areas wevacuate when
cornfield."
the
river
bits certain levels. We've got
Will there be a "Flood of '71?"
coordination
plans for taking people and
The only answer flood experts can give Is
their
furniture
fAJ IIi~ same place. The Red
-"It ali depends." They cite two big "ifs."
CrO!IS
has
made
shelter arrangments.
"U we get a lot of rain and if we get a rapid
"II
lsn
't
any
harder
to )l'epare for the
warmup then we could get flooding," said
worst
than
it
is
to
prepare
for a tittle bit and
Carl Relyea, hydrologist in charge of the
then
get
a
helluva
lot,"
she
adds. "We know
National Weather Service's River Forecast
what
flooding
tan
do
because
we've had
Center.
some
devils
in
here."
"Throughout most of the Ohio Valley
.Ten miles up the Ohio River from
there's not enough snow on the ground to
Marietta,
Leland Siders, who recaJis that
produce floOding by ilseU," he explained.
house
becoming
a boat back in "SI, is
"It would take additional rain.
lockmaster
at
Willow
Island Jock and dam.
"True, he conceded, "the snow pack has
's
got
to
think safety," he
"Everybody
laid a moisture base, so it wouldn't take as
says,
"and
that's
easy
to
do when yoU think
much rain to produce floodin8 as it would
what
could
happen."
otherwise. And, a very rapid warmup also
Planning for potential flooding all along
would contribute to the flood potential."
the
Ohio River was the subject of a special
Relyea not only makes forecasts for the
meetin8
called by Ohio Gov. James A.
entire 981-mile Ohio River, but also for
Rhodes
in
Cincinnati today. Rhodes, who
rivers like the Chagrin, Cuyahoga and
flew
over
about
half the length of the river
Maumee lbet.flow into Lake Erie. He said
last
week,
met
with governors, or their
tile two big "ifs" of potential fiooding cover ·
of
seven Ohio River:border
representatives,
those rivera alao.
states
.
''The best thing that could happen to us Is
Meanwhile, river ice presents a special
a very gradual warmup and no rain," he
hazard
in front of the flood potential.
added. "But it's all a question of weather.
"Ice
conditions
along the Ohio River and
We're just going to have to wait and see."
its
tributaries
remain
critical wlth the
ilut flood-wary persons in Ohio River
potential
for
ice
breakup,
movement and
comnwnities like Marietta, Ohio, the oldest
jamming
expected
to
increase
during the
settlement in the Northwest Territory which
next
several
days,"
warned
River
Forecast .
has been subject to floods ever since it was
Center
officials.
founded back in 1788, ~an 't afford to wail
and see.
11

PARKS CWSJNG
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Ohio Deparbnent of Nat~ral
Resources said today it 1.!
closing lodge and cabin
facilltie8 at Punderson Stale
Park in Geauga County and
at Shawnee State Park in
Scioto County from Sunday
until Aprll I due to the excessively cold weather and
.the
resulting
energy
emergency.

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

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Sunday through
.Tuesday, mild Sunday,
MODday and Tuesday with
a chance of raiD daily.
Hl&amp;bs wiD be ID the cetl or
low ill aod lows wm range
from the upper zts to the
mid 308.

-Patrol reports three
accidents .on hlghways
Patricia Jean PhJison, :U,
Syracuse, said she waa injured but was not im·
mediately treated in a traffic
accident at 8:20 a.m. Thursday on SR 124, ibree tenths of
a mile well of Racine.
The Gallia·Meigs Post
State Hlgltway Patrol said
the Philson car. traveling
east, went out of control on
the icy roadway. Her tar
apun around and overturned.
was
moderate
There
damage. No charges were
filed.
Another Meigs County
accident occurred at 9:M

a.m. oo SR 12C, U6 feel east
of Racine where an auto
driven by Roy W. Dowell, :U,
Rt. I, Racine, skidded on lee,
striking a maDbos 01yned by
Ernestine M. Flaher. There
was minor damage; no
·chirge was filed.
A Gallla County mishap
occurred at 7 a.m. on SR 160,
one and seven tenths mll.es
south of the Vinton County
Une. Troopers said Eugene
Akers, 52, Lake, W. Va. 1011·
control of his car in a curve.
The vehicle ran off the right
side of the road and overturned. There was severe
damage. He was uninjured.

Vaccination
program here
partly resumed
Due to an outbreak of AVictoria influenze in Florida,
the federal government bas
recommended a limited
·resumption of the influenza
program and the Meigs
County Health Department
will resume giving immunizations.
The recommendations
state that 'the ban baa been
Ufled for bivalent vaccine
(vaccine containing both A·
swine and A·Victorla antigens) and monovalent BHong Kong vaccine. The
monovalent vaccine program
(vaccine containing A..Swine.,
antigen only ) is still
su~pended .

Resldenta can receive free
bnmunications at the Meigs
Health Department office
from 9 to 11 a.m. and I to 3
p.m. on Mondays.
CONTEST CANCElLED

A sled riding contest
planned for Sunday in
Pomeroy by the Meigs Unit of
the Amertcan Cancer Society
bas been cancelled.

�..
2-TheDally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Feb. ll,l9'17

•

!I-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Feb. ll,1977

•

Rhodes asks for compromises on .use of coal
Ullited Press lnlerii81101U11
Gov. James A. Rhodes,
warning that Ohio's energy
crisis will worsen next
winter, says a compromlse
must be reached on the use of
coal.
" We have to have a
compromlse," Rhodes told
the
Ohio
N' ewspaper
Association . Convention
Thursday night. "There is no
natural gas in abdundance ·
for Ohio. The solution is going
to be in coal."
~
Rhodes said a compromise
must be made with environmentalists and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
regarding the burning of high
sulfur coal. ·
"This is just not the winter
of 1977; it 's going to be worse
in 1978 and could carry over
into 1979 or 1980.
"We're not out of it because
it's going to get worse, There
. will be very little natural gas
this smnmer," the governor

said, reiterating that coal,
which Ohio lias in abundance,
seems to be tbe only answer.
He also said the slate
cannot depend on alternate
fuels, such as oil.
"The fuel oil we burn today
would have been the gasoline
of tomorrow. And we're going
to have a gas shortage this
swmner."
Earlier Thursday, Rhodes
asked the Federal Power
Commission to provide 3.7
billion cubic feet of
emergency gas to the Dayton
Power &amp; Ught Co. where
residences are in an
"extremely precarious
position" because of the
natural gas shortage.
Rhodes, in a telegram and
a telephone call to FPC
chairman Richard Dunham,
said the utility had recently
put 16,000 industrial and
co rn~ercial

custonners on

maintenance level usage.
. "This means supplies

to

residential rustomers are in
an extremely precarious
position," said Rhodes. "We
urgently appeal to you to do
everything poaslble to ease
the residential shortfall by
providing emergency natural
gas supplies immediately.''
Meanwhile, Assistant Ohio
Attorney General Marvin I.
Resnik told the Public
Utilities Commisslon of' Ohio
in an informal opinion 'that
the state's utiility companies
"will be able to recover the
costs" of emergency natural
gas purchases.
Columbia Gas of Oh io
maintained earlier this week
that the law prevented tbe
utility from recovering tbe
cost of emergency gas
supplies during Ohio's energy
crisis.
Resnik said the biU "seems
to assure recovery by a gas or
natural gas distributon
company of the costs ·
associated with a purchase o£

only "a few welis that were
shut-in:"
He said this means they can
be tapped for gas but have no
pipeline available for
distribution.
Wilson said the U.S.
Geological Survey has
estimated that only 50 per
cent of natural.gas. resources
have been tapped. The
remaining sources are
expensive and difficult to
reach, he saia.
"The shortage is not contrived," said Wilson. '.'It is
real. The shortage has beim
created because of the price
of gas."
'
Wilson said there is plenty
of gas in Ohio but there are no
incentives to drill and lay. a

President going home
By HELEN THOMAS
incll!lling a scheduled session
UPI White House Reporter
with the League of Families
WASHINGTON (UP!) - to discuss further pursuit of
President Carter's first trip infocma lion from Hanoi on
to Plains, Ga., as President Americans missing in action
was planned in a style that in Southeast Asia.
could serve as a reminder to
Carter was prepared for a
the homefolks of the low-key weekend with his
awesome war and peace family in their rural Georgia
responsibilities now in his setting, and his spokesman
hands.
said he planned no
Carter was set to fly this announcements for the twoafternoon on the "doomsday" day retreat.
747 jumbo jet National EmerHe was expected to be
gency Airborne Command working mostly on possible
Post., at the request of the cuts or additions be may want
Joint Chiefs of Staff. He was to make in the last federal
to get a full briefmg en route budget
Gerald
Ford
by a battery of military submitted before leaving
officers on its top secret office.
equipment and operations.
Spreading love and
The mammoth plane, one goodwill with promises to
of three at Andrews Air Force federal workers their jobs
Base, has never been flown will
become
more
by a President before.
" meanin gful/ ' Carter
The top secret communica- Thursday contioued his droptions gear can keep him in in visits to two more major
touch with the Pentagon, the Washington buildings - the
underground bunker at Ft. Departments of Treasury,
Ritchie , Md., and other and Housing and Urban
outposts in a military crisis. Development.
Before departing Carter
He repeated some of the
was heavily preoccupied with inspirational cominents be
a series of meetings , made in visits to the Labor

11

DR. LAMB

nounced in Chicago a
shortage of natural gas has
caused the firm to shut down
ils plant in Chatham, Onl.,

indefinitely and curtail
operations of ita truck body
and assembly ·plants in
Springfield, Ohio. ·

Nighttime sun could save

millions of crop.dollars

. By AL ROS'll'l'ER Jr.
UPI Scieace Editor
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Could the recent freeze
damage to Florida's citrus
and vegetable crops and to
Brazll's coffee trees have
been avoided? ·
Perhaps - by night
sunshine, by placing huge
clusters of miirors in orbit to
reflect sunlight back to
specific areas of the
darkened sid.e of Earth.
That's tbe futuristic idea of
Dr. Krafft Ehricke, longtime
space scientist and now
executive adviser for
advanced projects at the
space division of Rockwell
International, which built tbe
space shuttle rocket plane for
the National Aeronautics and
Space Administration.
Ehricke , who left Germany
pipeline for distribution . He attthe en~ of World War II
said the cost to drill and with Dr. Wernher von Braun,
distribute gas from a single is directing one of two
well would be about $100,000
NASA
study
contracts
on
space
$100,000.
wilson said he could not industrialization. The. solar
estimate how much of an reflector is one of the future
incentive would be needed to possibilities looked at.
encourage more production.
He calls it Soletta - small
He also said there is ''very sun. There are a lot of
little" the slate could do to different possibilities, but one
alleviate the problem, that idea would be tD place such a
price deregulation by the Soletta in a 22,300-mile high
federal government would be orbit where its ocbital speed
would match Earth 's rotation
the answer.
"We definitely believe and the array would remain
.there would be 'more gas if over one point on Earth.
"It would he as ~ the sun
the price were deregulated,"
said Wilson."! can't say we'd were to stand still in the sky,"
have all '(le want, but we'd Ehricke said in a telephone
have more than we have interview from his office at
Seal Beach, Calif.
now."
At the stationary orbit
altitude, a 16,1lll(H;quar&lt;Hilile
cluster of relectors would be
able to illuminate a 36,000square-miie ellipse on Earth
- enough tD cover most of the
Florida Peninsula , which was
and Commerce Departments hard hjt during the recent
the previous day, and said cold wave that swept through
there is an urgent need to the South. '
convince the public the
The reflected sunlight
government is once again would not have as much
"competent" and honest." energy as sunltliht at any
" We're not bosses to moment during the day, but
anyone," he said. "We are Ehricke said that during one
servants to the American full night an orbital mirror
people."
could provide an energy input
He also tried to reassure equal to eight hours of full
the workers that he will not sunlight.
reorganize them out of jobs On a clear night, the
reductions will be made reflector cluster would
through failure to fill appear haU as bright as the
vacancies which occur sun, or perhaps as bright as
naturally ..
the sun appears through a
On the folksy side, Carter . thin cloud layer indaytim~ . It
preached a bit to startled would be much brighter than
HUD employes, saying the full moon.
"Those of you who are living
"II is clear that such a
in sin, I hope you'll get system could have prevented
married."
the night frost in Florida as
Then, as the crowd lroke well as in Brazil," Ehricke
into laughter, he added: "We said. "You just want to
want to protect the integrity prevent the local ground and
of the family."
plants from getting very
He got another big laugh cold."
when he told employes at
Such a solar reflector
Treasury - which includes would be able to direct its
the InterfUI) Revenue Service beam anywhere within its
- lhat they touch ''more sight and thus Ehricke said
people in a sensitive way " environmental changes
than any otber government would be minirriized. When
agency.
such a sun reflector was not

Gas is underground,
waiting on profits
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
vice president of the Ohio Oil
and Gas Association says
there is plenty of gas .under
Ohio but no incentives for
companies to drill for it.
Furthermore, said Vernon
J . Wilson, president of the
Wilson Petroleum Corp. of
Columbus, he knows of no
Ohio producers deliberately
holding back fuel to wait for
higher prices.
Wilson made his remarks
Thursday on a television .
news panel show taped for
airing Sunday '\ on WCMHTV, Columbus).
Wilson said a survey made
by the · Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio showed

natural gas."
In a related development
Thursday, International Har. vester's .Truck Group an·

needed to avoid freeze
damage, it could be used to
enhance food production on
'land or at sea, providing
"light fertilizer."
Cost of such an assembly
would
vary
greatly,
depending on its orbital
beight and if oxygen rocket
propellant were obtained
from the moon.
·
Ehricke Said a 240-Bquaremile array in a lower, !)lreehour orbit would cost roughly
$36 billion over 10 years and
three would be required to
prevent climatic damage to
crops. The large stationary
orbit assembly mi~ht cost $1
triUion or more ov.er 10 years
and probably would have to
be a multinatimal endeavor.
Each cluster would last 30
years, however, and Ehricke
' said the cost per kilowatt
)]our of energy received on
Earth would be . low. He
predicted each reflector
would pay foc itself within 10
years.
Ehricke estimated in a 1975
report to Congress that two.
Solettas in the three-hour
orbit could .result in a 3 to 5

per cent increase in world
food production by its
photosynthetic enhancement.

The company said Umlted
gas supplies to its giant truck
'l'anufacturing facility at
Fori Wayne, Ind., forced the
rutbacks because it supplies
hoth plants with basic parta
and components to C(Jllplete
the manufacture · and
assembly of certain IH

models.
The layoffs will becune
effective Monday and will
idle about 1,:110 at Cbalha.m
and 1,500 al Springfield.
An lll spokesman said the
layoffs willl'llll at least two
days.

Sport Parade
NEW YORK (UPI) - Status, that's the big thing now, not
money, and if you can somehow wind up getting both, then
you're King of the Hlll. That's why so many people are beating
their brains out today. They want to be King of the Hill, Top
Man on the Mountain, Nwnero Uno .... You find this ·situalion
especially prevalent in sports where the participants are
weaned on competition aimostfrom the time they can walk ....
Every athlete wants tD be the highest paid, mostly because
that makes him the best in the eyes of all tbe others: You see
that happening on so many clubs.... When he was with the A's,
Reggie Jackson always wanted to be the highest paid and
eventually reached the point where he was. Now that Jackson
is highest paid with the Yankees also, MVP Thurman Munson ·
says what about me ? With lhe Mets, Tom Seaver is the top
earner, and the noise you hear in the back is Dave Kingman.
Status, that's the big thing now. If you're not getting at least
two million, then you're all by yourself down there, cold and
burigry. at the bottom of till' hilL ...
'
Joe Louis never turns down· anybody for his autograph. He
wasn't the least bit upset when a woman came rushing over to
him not long ago, handed him a pen and piece of paper, and
gushed, "My goodness, Don Newcombe! I saw you pitch and
always wanted your autograph." The former heavyweight
champion took the paper from the woman and quietly asked
Madison Square Garden matchmaker Teddy Brenner,
standing next to him , "How you spell Newcombe?" Brenner
told him. Always the gentleman, Joe Louis made the lady
happy by signing the ex-Dodger pitcher's name ....

Marshall is

reopenmg

next Monday

breaat.

The first step is public
awareness. As I have mentioned before only five per
cent of the Q1811 with prostate
cancer found in civilian
populationaiW'Vive, whilo 50
per cent of tbolle found and
treated at Walter Reed Army

••

. .. dical Center are cured. We are not goin~ 1o save the
The difference is early detec- thousands of men dying from
lion.
·
cancer of the prostate until
In this regard I am disap- this is understood and acpointed in the American complished. There is no
Cancer SocietY,. Normady useful public education prothey do an excellent job and I gram about it.
am a strong booster !If their
The American Cancer
efforts, but they have done Society predicts the total of
almost nothing to educate the deaths from proetate. cancer
public about the third most ·in 1976 will be 19,300 and ooly
common cause of death from 7,700 from cancer of the cercancer in men. There are vtx and 3,300 from ll:ancer of
more deaths from prostate tile body of the uterus. With
cancer in men than from these kinds of ligures why is
cancer . of the uterus in there no Pl'Gtlr&amp;m for public
women.
education and a program for
Yet, in an otherwise good , early detection and treat·
publication, The Hopeful Side . ment of prostate cancer?
of Cancer, that points out how
There iJ also a great need
many people can be cured of for education of physicians
cancer, there is no mention of about changes in treatment
cancer of the prostate at all concepts. The old lllea was to
or the best method to find it. net try to cure or eradicate
The wa~ to find it .is '"th a the cancer, but to live female
almple fmger eXlllllllllltJOn of hormones and 111e castration,
the rectum. Every male if needed, to control sympneeds to know this and needs toms frm~ extension of the
to know' lhat ~ should have cancer. Things have changsuch an ellllllliUIIIon once a ed. If the cancer is found ~ar­
year after he reache~ ~&lt;~. a 40. ly enough, radiation treat·
men! will cure 'lhe cancer

Apple Grove

News Notes

11

specialists" miss more conversions in one season than a

Self-improvers interested in their lifeline as well as in their
waistline will find it well worth reading "Keep Your Heart
Running," by Paul J. Kiell, M.D., and Joseph S. Frelinghuysen. Kiell and Frelinghuysen kept meetiog at marathon
races in which they were competiog, began exchanging ideas
on nuirition, exercise and the relationship -between physical
and mental health, and the book is the result . ...
Look for 8ome deals next week when the baseball interleague trading period starts ~'e b. 15 and runS uotil March 15.
It'll be the first one ever this time of the year and was written
into the new agreement between the owners and player after
the players originally had kicked about it. Texas Rangers deny
the Yankees have renewed talks with them for Toby Harrah,
and the Rangers aren't going to give him up, anyway. Yankees
haven 't quit trying tD get a shortstop. Their prime target is
Bucky Dent. The White Sox could have Ken Holtzman, Oscar
Gamble, Ron Blomberg and Fr~ Stanley in return ....

I

If there's one candidate for Baseball's Hall of Fame getting
the cold shoulder, it isn't Gil Hodges, but Mickey Vernon .
Without knocking Hodges, Vernon had it over hini lh every
. offensive department except home runs. He out-hit Hodges,
.286 to 273, drove in more runs, scored more runs and had
nearly 600 more hits. Along with that, Vernon w~n two batting
titles and is only one among a small handful who played during
four different decad ~s, the '30s-'60s. In spite of all this, he
finished way down in 18th place in this year's balloting with
only 52 votes while Hodges was third with 224. Batting coach
for Montreal now, Vernon is 58, and you know something? He
can still hit. ...

·

~~res:~~~:.~

\

a

FallVI•"ew

s-s ·News

Purdue coach Fred Schaus
wouldn't take anything away
from WisConsin's victory, but
he bad a few words to say
about his own 'team .
"Wiseonlin played well," he
said, "but this has to be our
poorest perfonnance of the
aeaaon. We didn't do anything
right."
The Boilermakers shot only
3S per cent from the field in
the game.
'
Wiaconaln coach Bill
Cofield, ,mO hu lllld it was
" )Uil a matter It time"
, before hla Badgers earned a
majCI'uPiel,lllld ''We needed
the victory for our PI'Gil'am. I
think tbil will give us
confidence. We've been
coming cloae to the gre.at
leama, but we haven't been

-

able to beat them until this."
Northwestern coach Tex
. ter declared Illinois won
Win
on "a shot from left field ,"
but added ''we should have
had someone on him
(Leighty ), someone playing
at least a token defense. It
was just a mistake."
The victory, Illinois coach
Lou Henson said, was "great
for the players" because "it
belps them gain confidence.
We came through when we
had to. We beat a team
Michigan couldn't heat."
Billy McKinney got 23
points lor Northwestern and
James Gregory had 17 to lead
Northwestern.
Thompson retained the
league lead in individual
scoring,
his
average
remaining at 23.6 points per
game.
·
.

Notes

By'Mra. Herbert R-b
Mrs. Don Manuel visited
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Pyles
and Earl Ha!'l at Racine
Wednesday.
Gilbert Hart was returne&lt;l
home Thursday .from Holzer
·Medical Center . He was ·
visited Thursday by his
sister, Mrs. Joyce Manuel.
Ronnie .Ford, Letart, W.
Va ., visited Don Manuel
Saturday . Miles Childress
and Carl Dewitt of Mt. Alto
visited Don Sunday and they
enjoyed playing music.
,..r. and Mra. Frank ·
Hudaon of J!aclne visited Mr.
and Mrs.
Mnn uel Thursday. Mr. anrl Mrs Rus~ell
}lolsiORer and children 0f

Joe

'

Certificates
5.75 per cent pa id on

$3 million round

7-6.20 ; Price, 9-3-21 : Ja mes.

77..S7 1 to move within a game

Hardy kept Jones away from
the boards, Boynes leaped in
from his guard position to
grab 14 rebouods and forward
Marlon Redmond had 11.
The Wolf Pack took an IIHl
lead in the first five minutes
and the Dons spent the rest'of
the first half just ca tching up,
pulling into a 39-39 tie at
intermission .
Then, the WoU Pack ran
into "Trouble. "
Second-ranked UCLA remained atop the Pacific-8
Conference with a · G5-62
victory at Washington State.
David Greenwood was the
high scorer for the Bruins
with 14 points.
. Eighth-ranked Nevada-Las
Vegas romped past Denver,
106-84 , as Eddie Owens
scored 20 ·points and set a
school career scoring record
with his total of 1,968 points.
Arkansas trouncerJ R;wlor,

of clinching the Southwest 1-9 ; Robinson . 3-1·7. TOTALS
Co nference title . Mar vin JS. J6 .86 .
TIF FIN (80) ~ Huss. 3 ~0 6 ;
Delph led the Razorbacks Hunter,
ll -2-2J ;· Haralson , 3
with 18 points and Steve 0-6: Broccierri. 9-4·72 ; Gase .
Schall had IS.
o. J.9 ; Coake. 6 ~ 1 - 13. TOTALS
Minnesol,a rolled to a 91-65 36 ·8·80.
Halftime score~ Rio 52
victory o.fer Ohio State as
Mike Thompson scored 24 Tiff in 39.
points,
Earl Williams' 10-foot jump
shot with one second left gave
Utah a 61Hl7 victory over
Colorado State in a Western
Athletic Conference game .
In other games, Creighton
MUNCH,;. tnd. IUPI )
defea ted North Texas Stale,
101-83;
Illinois edged Ball State University basketNorthwe s tern, 65-6 3; ba ll Coach Jim Holstein has
Wisconsin topped Purdue , 7&amp;- resigned effective March 31,
74; Houston beat SMU, 115- "for the good of my family,
83; Texas topped TCU, 81-69; myself and Ball Stale
Brigham Youn g defea ted University ."
The sc hool Thursday
Wyoming , 82-72 ; Oregon
State edged Stan! ord, 7&amp;-75, released the letter of
and Washin gton defea ted resignation written by
Southern California , 72-58. Holstein, who was in his fifth
yea r at the school.
Ball State Athletic Director
Ray Louthen sa id Holstein
"brought many fine things to
the prngram and it is very
unfort unate tha t better
results were not achieved."
have to play your options and
The Cardinals, members of
if another man is open, go
the Mid·America n Con·
with that," said Chenier, who ference. have an. S-11 overall
ended up with 21 points. "At record and are currently
tl1at particular time I was seventh in the MAC , at 4-6 ,
open.''.
·
with six leagu e games
Mitch Kupchak and p; lvin
remaining .
Hayes to pped •Washin gton
The only senior on the team
with 22points each. The Suns' . ·is Holstein's son, Jim, who
Paul Westphal led all scorers has been used as the sixth ·
with 29.
man most of the campaign.
Elsewhere,
it
was
Cleveland 116 Indian a 101,
Milwaukee 112 Kansas City
A thought for the day :
102 and Golden State 114.
h wri ter Samuel
Britis
Denver 101.
Johnso
n· sai d, ' The first
Cavaliers 116, Pacers 101 :·
ye
ars
of
a man must make
Jim Brewer scor_ed 18
provision
for the last."
points and Austin Carr 17 to
pace Cleveland. Brewer , who
also grabbed nine rehow1ds,
tossed in 14 third-period
points as the Cavs opened a
25-poinl · lead. Billy Knight
topped the Pacers with 26
points.
Bucks 112. Kings 102:
Swen Nater had game
highs of 28 points and IB
rebounds and keyed a secondhalf comeback to guide the
Bucks. Kansas City led , 34-17,
after the first quarter and , 5646, at the half. I!JJb Dandridge
had 21 ! points and Brian
Winters IB fo r Milwaukee.
Ron Boone scored · 22 and
Brian Taylor 19 for the Kir\gs,
who dropped their third
straight game .
Warriors 114, Nuggets 101 :
Phil Smith scored 14 of his
team-high 21 points as the
warriors grabbed a 33-12lead
after nine minutes. Rick
REPLACEME
Barry, Charles Johnson and
Jamaal Wilkes each added IB
GUARANTEE!
for Golden State. Denver's
David Thompson topped all
scorers with 29 poi nts,
including 27 in the second
TRUE VALUE
half.
Chester, 0.

Holstein has

5.75%

LPGA opens its

7 3 17 , Swain, 3-2-8; Royse, 2

0 4; Vic;kroy, 0-0-0; Gibson, 4

Our Interest Is
Gre.a ler For You

On 90-Day

and Cartwright had 15. While

with 25 seconds tD go .
By GREG AIELLO
"We had excellent shots.
UPI Sports Writer ·
A 12-point lead with 4:54 to Every shot 'we had was an
play in your own home court. open shot ," Phoenix Coach
What more could the Phoenil&lt; John McLeod said. "It wasn 't
a case of Washington griving
Suns want?
. But the Suns went scoreless u.s totally out of our Offensive
dur.ing that time Thursday pattern. We had the open
night and the Washington shots. The ball ·jusl didn 't go .
Bulle(s scored 16 straight in.''
Despite his poor shooting
points lor a 109·103 victory.
With Phoenil&lt; leading, 101- through most of the game, the
89 and 4:54 remaining, the Bullets looked for Chenier
Bullets began their rally. The down the stretch.
"Basically , it was planned
key was Phil Che nier's three
but
in a situation like that you
straight jump shots that gave
Washington a 105-101 lead

·

·
ClflCAGO (UP!)- Slowly
Michigan is getting some
breathing room in the Big
Ten basketball race.
Wisconsin, in last place
heading into the game,
turned in the Thursday night
upset, tripping Purdue 76-74
to knock the I!JJilermakers
into third place ·in the
conference chase with an 8-3
record
compared
to
Michigan's 11-1.
But Ohio State couldn't
offer similar aid to the
Wolverines and Minnesota,
beaten by Michigan Monday
for its second loss, trounced
the Buckeyes 91-65 to move
into the runnerup position
with an 6-2 conference
record.
In the third game
Thursday, Illinois moved
cloaer to a first division
berth, winning its third
straight league contest ·on
Rick Leighty's 2f&gt;.loot shot at
the buzzer for a ~decision
over Northwestern. Tbe win

James finished with 17
points and led the Redmen on
the boards with 15 caroms.
Rio connected on 35 of 63
fie ld goa l attempts, 16 of 26
r·harity losses and had 40
rebounds and 18 turnovers.
The Dragons were led by
Keit h Hunter's 24 points.
Mike Boccierri added 22 and
Hod Cnake 13.
Tiffin hit 36 of 87 field goal
attempts, eight of 10 charity
tosses and picked off :ll!
rebounds. The Dragons had
22 turnovers.
Saturday, Rio plays at
Urbana. ·
The Redmen will hos t
Ceda rville at Lyne Center in
a makeup game Monday
night.
Thursday's box socre :
RIO GRA NDE (86 ) - Noe,

James, pulled back in front
by ten points, 75415, with 7:0:l
left.
Keith Hunter and Larry
Gasc cut Rio's lead to three
with 24 seconds left, 83-l!O.
. Don Gibson's three-point
play with six seconds to go
iced Rio's victory.
Gil Price led Rio Grande's
attack with 21 points. Jimmy
Noe added 20.,and passed the
2.000 point mark as a Rio
Grande Redm an.

PLAQUE TO ROGERS
Jack Rogers of Point
Pleasant received a plaque
Wedne•day evening on tbe
occasion of the Oldtlmers
Baseball Reunion at the
Legion home In Pomeroy in
recognition of his playing
days iD the OVA when he
pitched aod caugbt Wendel
Mossor, the latter going on
to a career lo the major
leagues. The report of the
event Incorrectly said
Rogers accepted a plaque
for Mossor. Mr. Mossor,
fri ends have reported ,
resides in California where
he Is an Invalid.

MIAM i IUPl) - The
Ladies Profess ional Golf
Associ ation opened its $3
million !917 scheduled here
today as proof that the tour's
explosive growth of the last
few years is still continuing.
The tour grew from about
$1 million in prize money two
years ago to $2.4 million last
yea r and is up another
whopping $600,000 this year.
"I think we'll keep growing
although it won't look like it is
growing as fa st ," says J udy
Rankin, servi ng her first year
of a two·year· term as
presi dent of the LPGA
Players Council.

90 day Certificates of
Deposit .
$1.000.00
Minimum .
Interest
Pa ya ble
Quarterly.
A

substan tia l

pcnilll y

'1 5

.n11oked on all cert ificat e
accou nt s wi1 hd rawn pn or
t o the da te of m aturity ,

Meigs Co. Branch

_.@
TtJe Athen s County
Sav mgs &amp; Loiln Co .

H 6 Se co nd St.
Pomeroy , 0~10

had it at BS

Bullets rally whip Suns

·

·~

'

By CHRIS SCHERF
UPI Sports Writer
Nevada-Reno's highscoring Edgar Jones ran inti&gt;
''Trouble" Thursday night.
According to the figures,
the University of San
Francisco r e mained
uobeaten with a 92-76 victory
over Nevada-Reno. But when
the
most
impressive
statistics of the Dons' 24th
victory thtS season are listed,
James Hardy 's name is
absent.
However, Jones' name also
is missing from the list of top
scorers and that's because of
James "Trouble" Hardy.
Hardy, who does yeoman
work while sophomore teammates Bill Cartwright and
Winford Boynes rack up most
of the glamor statistics, held
Jones to only 13 points.
Hardy, a burly 6-10 center,
finished with 14, but Boynes
led the Dons with 21 points

Michigan gets North Gallia is winner
•
breathmg room

Electric cars practical

'

mark to 10-1.
Coach George Janson's
crew dropped to 10-13 overall
and 8-5 inside the league.
Rio, in recording its eighth
.ltraight victory, was riding
atop a 52-37 lead seconds
before intermission when the
Dragons
began
their
comeback.
Mike Boccierai's goal with
nine minutes left cut Rio's
lead to five, 64-59.
The Redmen, behind Greg

Hardy's tough defense
.keys Dons '92-76 win

fellow like Jack Manders did in his entire career. ...

/

'

Tiffin's Dragons, down 16
points just before the halftime intermission, bounced
back In the second half to give
Coach Art Lanham's Rio
Grande College Redmen a big
scare before dropping an 8680 decision to the Mid-Ohio
Con ference and NAJA
District 22 leaders Thursday
night.
The victory left Rio Grande
with a 17-3 season mark.
Inside the MOC, Rio upped its

Recent death of Jack "Automatic" Manders , who used to
kick extra points foc the Chicago Bears in the '30's, brings to
mind how acclirate pro football's place kickers used to be when
all they got was a couple hundred dollars a game .. They hardly
ever missed a conversion and usually played a position as well.
Manders was the l)est of the lot. Steady as a metronome, he
once booted .76 straight extra points. That's how he got his
nickname. Now the teams go all over the world for
placekickers, pay them fancy salaries and some of these

Warn men on prostate cancer
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - My
husband was one of those un- ·
fortunate men ' who
discovered he bact' cancer of
the prostate too tate. He was
ooly !i4 and hls last months
were terrible, both
payChologicaliy and medically. I appreciate your warning
the public about this. Isn't
there some way the men can
be made more aware of this
danger?
DEAR READER - I am
sorry to bear about your husband. It is a needless waste in
most instances. Cancer of the
proeta te can be cured if it is
·detected early enough - the
outlook may be even better
• than the cure rate in early
treatment of cancer of the

short, Rio wins 86-80

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor

Swallows flapping wings
in anticipation of spring ·

By Ulllted Preu latemallollll
The swallows were flapping their little ~gs and
heading back to Capistrano, a sure sign that spring
couldn't he far behind . But much of the country acted as
though it had already arrived, as temperatures beaded
•
toward record highs.
By tradition and legel)d it is a sure sign of spring when
flocks of swallows arrive March 19 at the San Juan
Capistrano Mission in California. And a mission spokes.
.
man announced Thursday that tbe . swallows were
HUNTINGTON , W.Va .
(UP! )
Marshall ' proceeding on schedule.
. The approach of spring canle as no surprise to the
Uni~ersity, closed for nearly
Midwest, where temperatures hit the 5th and 6(6, Even
two weeks because of natural
Minneapolis, a traditional iceberg, recorded a record ·~
gas shortages•, will reopen
degrees.
·
under stringent conservation
Snow drifts that had measured as much as 20 feet
measures, college president
began melting in northern Indiana, but the melting of
Robert B. Hayes said today.
snow
in the Chicago area nearby caused some problems.
Classes will resume at 8
Serious
flooding.s · of roadways was reported in
a.m. Monday following a I~
northeastern
Illinois, and motorists were. advised to
day suspension but Hayes ·
exercise
extreme
care in low~ying areas.
.,
said the energy crisis has not
ended.
The
university
is
implementing a total energysaving program that includes period sCheduled lor March 7electricity as well as natural 12 and two "study days"
gas requiring thermostats in during final examinations
all buildings to be set at week. Hayes said students
reduced levels, Hayes said. will be given a ·previously
By Mrs. Herbert Roasb
The l:klay shutdown has unscheduled day oft Monday
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Pickett
forced Marshall officials to APril II for a four-day Easter
and daughter Tracy spenf
cancel the . sprjng vacation Weekend.
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Max Pickett at Grown City.
Mrs. Eula Wolfe and son
Aaron spent Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. John Ord, Letart,
W. Va.. .....
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bowers
of Parkersburg spent Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Spencer, Tracy and Doug.
Mr . Tracy Spencer of
f
Grantsville, W. Va. is
recuperating at the home of
his son, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Spencer
after
being
hospitalized in Parkersburg
for some time.
Joey Roush, Dolly Hill,
Tracy Norris, Mrs. Dolly
Wolfe attended a birthday
party at the home of Mr. and
.I/
Mrs·. Carl ·Wolfe,, Jr. at
Racine ·Sunday in honor of
their children, Tricia Wolfe '
who was five years old aQd
Megan Wolfe who was two
years old.
Mrs. David Gleckner,
daughter, Carrie, spent two
days with her father, Russell
Lockhart and daughters at
Parkersburg.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Hayman spent Thursday with
Mrs. Phyllis Young at
Middleport and also visited
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Seymore
and children.
Mrs. Lillie Hart, son Brice,
spent Sunday afternoon with
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Hayman
and Keith. Mr. and Mrs. Gene .
Jewell and children spent
Friday evening with the
Haymans.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Brutvum and children of Cin"I'm sorry, Mr. President, I ,e.an't 'see the future until
ciMati and relatives spent
tbe weekend with Mrs. Vashti
the present thaws out."
Grimm.
Mrs. Pearl Whitman of
Athens visited Mr. and Mrs.
Andy Cross Friday.
.
Paul Cross of Ohio State
University, Columbus, spent
using
other
materials
that
the
l.eekeod with his parents,
construction of factories that
By EDWARD K. DeWNG
would
provide
produce
more
power
per
Mr.
and Mrs. Andrew Cross.
ultimately
WASHINGTON (UP1) 'Mr. and Mrs. David
Electric utilities and their electric car batteries as well. pound of battery weight,
The new battery deslgna Pezdirtz said.
Beaver, son Abram of New
customers may reap the first
"Electric vehicles with Matamoras, spent the
big benefits from super may . give electric cara a
batteries now coming off tbe range of 100 miles between these advanced batteries will weekend '"th Mr. and Mrs.
much
better Charles Mugrage, Sr. Mr.
drawing board, but elperta charges in the early 1111101 and have
say the development . will · allow them to travel for 250 performance than anything and Mrs. Chuck Mugrage and
make electric cars practical miles at a stretch mthin the we see today," said ' Dr. children of New Matamoru
next decade, experts uy.
Albert Landgrebe, clief of are spending some time '"th
within a few years.
Car owners might lease the battery development pro- the Mugrages while he IJ ·
completely anu "' swile mAuthorities at the Energy
getting his mobile home
stances surgery may be used Research and Development batteries instead of owning gram.
The typical electric car rrady to move into.
to obtain a complete cure. In Administration say It may them, tbey say, s'"tching
Mr . and Mrs. Herbert
thelle instances it ill not take orders from the uWlties, battery packs at service sta· today has a range of 50 to 70
necessary to have either a where batteries can help lions much as they now fill miles at a speed of ~ miles Roush visited Mrs. Betty
perhour,butcangoonly25 0r , ' Roush at Pleasant Valley
castration or take female hor- solve power generation gasoline tanka.
mones. Radistlon even cures problems, ·to
prompt • George Pezdlrtz, head ()( M miles at liG m.p.h. It takes Hospital Monday .
ERDA's work on energy about 1,100 pounds of
Joe Holman, Terry Spawn,,
some cancers of the prostate
that have extended outside ,...----------'-, storage systems, says by the batter~ to achieve that kind NlU Knight, Racine, attended
end of this century "a of performance in a 3, '150- Sunday School at the local
tht prostate gland.
THE DALY SENTINEL
significant number" of cars pound car.
Methodist Church and visited
The public needs to know
DEVCJIDJT0111E
INTDIDTOF
-perhaps moet - should be
Within
five
years, Cindy, David and Edward
about this. Any man who is
MEIG&amp;IIAiON AlitA
quiet electric vehicles.
Landgrebe said, improved Roush .
not getting a finger examina·
CHESTERL. TANNF..IIIU..
l!ioe. Ed.
At the same lime, he said, lead-acid batteries should let
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
tion once a year by his doctor
ROIIEIITIIOEFUCH
large verliona of the same cars drive up to 100 miles on a Roush spent Monday evening
needa to be sure he starts getbatteries can belp solve the single charge. He uid that mth Mr. and Mrs. Dana
Publ!Jhod c:r~cepl Soturday
ling it.
by Tho Ohio Valley l'llbU.hiD&amp; c.m.
problem of nuctua ling would allow serioualllsllnl! of Lewis, Clifton.
The prostate is no more
lin)', Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
COIII\IIIIer power demand by fleets of electric vehicles.
417!11. s....... 0111.... Phono ..,.
mysterious than the uterus.
21116.
Edlloriol
f'llone
tiJ.III7.
storlnl!
electricity .generated · New battery materials
Wives should see to it that
Stcerld clul PQ!Ntle pakt at
by
power
plants at night and such as lithium and auJfur,
!heir husbands take the pr"'
Pomeroy, Ohio.
NaUonal
adv~
iiPl•nreleulnl!
it ~tiring the day may let cars run 180 miles
blem seriously. Those who
tiUvll Ward ~ GrtffUh Company, Inwhen
demand
II high.
between charges at~ m.p.h.
want more infonnation about
c., BotUntW and Ganut.r Olv.,
Pezdlrt2
and
&lt;Klier ERDA before 1910, Landllrebe said.
n1 Third Ave., New York, N.Y.
No one is sale from heart
the prostate gland, in regard
olficllll told • DeWI brieftng tntimately, he uld, they may disease.lt hits old and young,
to enlargement, infection and 11»17.
Subo&lt;.Tiption rile" llellvend by
Wednelday the government provide a 2IMHnlle range.
and anyooe In-between. The
t.111T~ where avtUtWe 75 ~'«&lt;tl per
cancer can send liG l'l!nts for
w
....
ByMu!orllouU!wherecarrier
spent
11 million Jut year and Landgrebe uid the new Heart Association has free
Tbe Health Letter nwnber I-ll
.!jtrvk:e noll avlilltiNe, One month,
expects to apenc1 •10 milllm batterlee might occupy a.a information on hellrt disease
Send a long, stamped, self·
$:1.25. By mall ill Ohio and W. Vt .,
Otw
Yt!&lt;Ar
,
f22,00;
Si1
rnontlw,
this year to lpul' the dealgn cubic feet of IIP&amp;ce - pouibly that may change your
addressed envelope for mail·
$il.SG; 'fhrt&lt;' montb1, 11.110;
and
te1ting of new batteries. under the seata - and wei&amp;b thinking, and your"'healtll
ing. Write to Dr. l-11rnb in
f;;L&lt;tL•~IM!I'e S215.W ye~ r , Sis. munthli
ERDA'•
goal Ia to improve 100 pounda .at first, mth the habita. Ask your Heart
1
1
:\
.
o~jl
:
Thn·c
rnontha,
•1.60.
care of this newspaper, j&gt;.O.
Sulll!LTL~IL• Ifl pm·t! includt-!1 Sundly•
exiP•
;ng
lead
..cid batteries Weight dropping to 500 polllda AllooiaUon and give to the
Box 1551, Radio City ~llltion.
~Mitlf».&amp;u1U.KU,
and
~reate
new batteries by the late IIIMls.
Heart Campaign.
New York, NY 10019.

Tiffin comeback falls

Today's

PORTLAND, Ore. (UP!) Freema n Williams, the
nation's lesding collegiate
basketball scorer, SCII'ed 71
points- the fourth highest
single game total in NCAA
history-to lead Portl• nd
State to an easy 141,.8.\ wm
over Southern Oregon
Wednesday night.
The highest single gaml
total by me player in NCA!,
records is 100 points by Frank
Selvy of Funnan against
Newberry in 1954.

Coach Ron Twyman's
North Gallia Pirates jumped
into a 23-6 lead at the end of
the first period Thursday
night enroute to an easy 82-53
non-conference win over
Miller.
·
The victory avenged an
f'
· t 1 t th
ear11er tve·poJn oss 0 e
Falcons at Miller.
In posting their second
straight win, the Pirates
improved their season mark
to S-6. Miller's record

dropped to 1-14.
Fred Logan, senior center.
was the game's top scorer
with 23 points . He also
grabbed a game high of 20
rebounds.
Other Pirates getting
double figures were Steve
Mundell with 12 ; Rex Justice
had 11 and Doug Sisson
ca nned 10 points. The Pirates
hit a blistering 50.6 pet. from
the flooc connecting on 35 of
69 floor attempts.
Pacing Miller's attack was
Mik e . Thompson with 20
RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil · points on six baskets and
(UP!) -The Brazilian yacht eight free throws. Dave
WaWaToo III has been Burgess added 13 points and
declared winner of · the R. Toth tossed in 11 .
Miller won the reserve till,
Buenos Aires-Rio de Janeiro
~-29
.
Yacht Race, the Rio de
North
Gallia resumed
Janeiro Yacht Club anaction
in
the SVAC ihis
nounced Wednesday.
evening
at
Hannan Trace.
The WaWaToo ill crossed
The
Pirates
will play
the finish line just outside
Wahama
Tuesday
and SouthGuanabara Dai in the 1,200western
next
Friday.
mile ocean race on Monday,
Box score:
winning the blue ribbon, with
a real time of seven days, 21
hours, 50 minutes and 30
Miller (Sl) - Stree t. 2·0·4;
seconds and a corrected ·time
Ma rk
G l'e a so n,
0-1-1,.
of seven days, four hours, 33 Burgess, 5·3·13; Thompson , 6·
minutes and 30 seconds.
8·20; Tolh, 5·1·11 ; Gaddis, 1·0·
Second and third-place 2; Starling , 1.0.2. TotalslO·ll•
.
winners have not been Sl.
North Gallia 1821 - Logan.
calculated.
11 · 1·23 ; Justice. 3-5·11 ;
Minn is , 2-0-4; Tackett. 2·2-6;

Mundel l, 5·2·12 ; Hash. 0·2.2;
Chester visited the Manuels Plants, •·0·8: Sisson , 5·0·12 ;
Payne. 3·0·6. Totals 35·12·82.
recently.
•
By Quarters:
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Miller
6 11 16 14- 53
Roush, David and Edward, N. Gall Ia
23 21 20 18- 82
Rocky Hupp, Mr. and Mrs . .
Ronald Russell, Mike and
Mandy, Wolfpen, .were dinner
guests Sunday of Mr. and
For allvour home
Mrs. Dana Lewis at Clifton.
Entertainment a,d
Mr. and Mrs . . Arthur
Appliance Needs
Warner and Lisa of Racine
visited Mr. and Mrs. Homer
DOXOL
Warner Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Lawson
SERVICE
and family, Mr. and Mrs.
Edward Lawson spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Lawson and Wilda.
Til &amp; Appliance
Eric Lawson, Michelle
Gas Service
Lawson were over Saturday
Racine, Ohto
night ~uests of their aunt,
Cl'les1er , Ohio
Wilda Lawson.

r--------.,
·RIDENOUR'S

1

4..ply polyester cord
DELUXE CHAMPIONQ\
Si:z.e

Price

$24.50
25.50
26.50
27.50
:10.50
:11.50
:13.50

A18- 13 Blackwatl
Plus $1.7:2 F .E.T.

and old tire. " A" size
5·rib design.

:~2.50

• Fou r fu·ll plit'f; of
Lou).{h pol yei'~ Ler cord
re!)ist impacts. hn1i:H.!8
and ~ives n S11\01 l th

34 . 50

36.50

rid e too .

s685 $1f25 off our
Y
to
reg. prices
StlA11E

Double Belted

STRATO..STREAK ~
• Two LDUJ.l h fib er!(IMs
belt s u nd er the trea d
. ancl two pvly el't CJ cord

BAUM

as
low

body pl ies f'Jr eal'(v
hanrll ing il nd u s mo ot h .
qu iel l'i rl e.

878-13 B1ackwa ll
Plus $ 1 .RO

F.E:r. and

Size

with us!
PLANNING APIZZA PARTY
PHO.NE

'

C78-13 .
C78-14
E78-1 4
~'78 - 14

G78-1 4
H78-14
G78-15
H78-15

o ld tire.

$2.0 1

$35.85

2.11 I
2.26 '
2. 42
2.58
2.80

37.10
38.65
41.35

43.15
46.40
44 .25
47.50

'
THE ALL NEW

MEIGS INN PIZZA SHACK
- Enjoy lhree sizes of your favorite
pinas.
- Try our delicious subs while you
sip your favorite suds.
Eat In Or Carry Out
Phone
992-6304

All prices plus tax ~11HI nld Lire. Whitt•wttlls
at ·
l1ighcr pl'i n•s.

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

BRAKE SERVICE - FRONT END
ALIGNM ENT
Pomeroy, Q.
992-20'14
600 E, Main .

.

,,

�•
4-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Feb. 11, 1977
College Bastc~tban Results
By United Press lntern1tion11
Eut

Bible expert has·
lead at 14 under

Baruch 89 Brooklyn Coli 83
Brandeis 81 Lowell 71
Bridowtr St . 87 NichOls 55
Clarion 87 St . V incent 71

Glenvi l IS Ald .- Brddus 96
H(lrtwick 70 Utica 63
John Jay 59 York NY 48
LeMoyne 78 Clarkson 65

Manhattan

Slocltton are back in the
JOE SARGIS
• PI Sports Wrttet
pack.
Palmer sliot a 68 Thursday
PALM SPRINGS, Calif.
(UPI) - The last time Rik and Player a 71 to stand at
\1asaengale, the I'GA tour's 141, while Miller had his
Bible Study group leader, second straight 74 for 148 and
won a tournament was in Ia te Slocltton, playing in a group
Augusl1976 when he look the with former President Gerald
Greater Hartford Open Iitle. Ford, had a 77 and was at 149.
After' two rounds of thai The cut here won't he made
event, the slim 'rexan was at Wllil after the fourth round.
130, 12 under )lll!' and one shot
Stockton was two under
, in front of J .C. Snead. ,
after seven holes while
He thought about that playing before a gallery of
tournament Thursday after more than 10,000, but he said
shooting a six-under 66 on the "then the course wept out
par-72 Tamarisk, CC course from under me.
for a 36-hole score of 14"Playing
with
the
Wlder-par 130 and , a four- President and the huge, huge
stroke lead over two-time gallery had nothing to do with
1977 winner Bruce Uetzke in my score," he said. "I simply
the $200,000 Bob Hope Desert puttediousy.lhadseveneasy
birdie chances and made only
Classic.
"These two rounds here are two of them."
better ,'' Massengale .said,
"because the courses , they
use in this tournament are
tougher to score on than thE
one in Hartford, The fairways
are very tight here and you Tonight's games
can't afford to make a
mistake. If you do, a six will Athe·n s a1 GallipoliS
come' quite easy."
Ironton at Logari
At 134, Lietzke leads Wally Well ston at Waverly
Armstrong by two shots while Wheeling at Pt Pleasant
Sou th Poin t at Ironton St . Joe
,\Jan Tapie and Hubert Green Ravenswood at Wahama
are at 137 and Paul Moran Eastern at Southweste rn
,and Ron Cerrudo are at !38. N o r th Gal ll a at Hannan
Steve Melnyk, Jerry, McGee, Trace
Symmes Valley at Kyger
Gay Brewer and Dave Hill Cr
eek
are at 139, and while that is Southern at Trimb le
Saturday's games :
five under par, they trail by
Wahama at Southern
nine shots,
Symmes Val·ley at Coal
Meanwhile, five-time Hope Grove
winner Arnold Palmer, two- Meigs at Pt . Pleasant
time defending champion Gallipolis at Wellston
Johnny Miller, Gary Player Athens at Logan
and PGA champ Dave Portsmouth a t Wheelersburg

This Is For The Birds

n COnn . 69

Mass. 8'1 Rutgers 81
Mar ist 102 New Paltz 87

Mercy NY l t5 Cncrdla NY 82
Messiah 82 Gettysburg 7.c ,
Morris Harvey 70 Beckley 110
Phila Phrm 9.t Ph llll Bible 59
Phila Tex 86 Del. Valley 51
Roc hester 83 RIT 69

Salem St . 72 Mass. Mr itme 66
Seton Hall 89 Cayton 72

Slppry Rock 7.. Ed inboro 11
Wilkes 73 Madison 57
S()Uth

Baltimore 80 Geo. Mason 50
Beltarmine 84 Ky . Wslvn 80
Bowie St. 108 Fed City 99
Car~n - Nwmn 97 Tusculum 80
Centre Ky , 81 Campbllsvl 80
D.C. Tchrs t;~6 Lbrtv Bapt 82
Geor.g ie Coli 7~ Berry 66
Geotown t&lt;y . 99 IU -Stheast 81
High Point 87 Campbell 79
Ky . St . 76 CUmberland 70

Lander 70 SC-Sprlf'lb9 63

Lin coln 111 W . Forest 6J
Lv ngstne 63 Wnstn -Salem 56

Melh 60 N .c . wesleyan .58
Miss. Co li 81 , W. Carey 67
MI . St. Mry•s 77 Md.-811 7'1

Newberry 110 USC -Aiken 87
N .C. -Grnsboro 80 E lon 72
Satsbry Sf . 89 Md-Esn Sh 83
Towson St . 68 Lo yola Md . 64
Wm . &amp; Mary 70 E . Carolina 66
.
Midwest
Arkansas St . 7~ SE ·Mo. 72
Bapt Bible 96 Calvry Col i 64
Beth el 64 Tabor 63
Creightn 101 No. Tel( . St. 83
lllinQiS 65 Northwestern 63
IOwa Wstvn 10~ Mt . Mercy 82
Minnesota 91 Ohio St. 65
Qu incy 102 Cu lver -Stcktn 13
Rio Grande 86 T.ift in 80
SW Baptist 16 Evangel 75
So. Ill . 76 W. Te,.; , St. 58
Spr ing Arbr 88 Oet Tech 76
Wayne St . 101 Hill~da le 86
Wiscons in 76 Purdue 74
Southwest
Arkansas 77 Baylor 57
Ark".-P .S . 66 WHey Coli 59
Ark . Tech 60 Ouach"i ta Sl
Be thany Naz 75 Phill ips 63
Cen t Ark . 80 Ark .-Mntcllo 70
Cenlef! ary 92 Hrd n -Simmns 90
East Texas 57 Angelo 51
Hendr ix 82 Harding "73
Houston 115 SMU 83
H. P&amp;yne 88 Tarl tn St. 66
Mdwsln Tex . 72 Wylnd Bpt 63
New Mex . St. 107 Pan Am 105
Tel&lt;aS 81 TCU 69
Tulsa 71 Wi chi ta St . 64
West
BYU 82 Wyom ing 72
Calif. 107 Oregon 102
. Fu llrt n St . 80 Cai ..St B. 7'l
Grand Cn yrt 69 Cal. Bapt 68
LngBch St . 101 SanJse St . 69
Nevada -LV 106 Denver 8~
Oregon St . 76 Sta nford 75 .
Prllnd U . 78 Lyla Cal. 72
St.Mry•s Cal. 93 St.Cira 91
San Francisco 92 Nev -Reno 76
Seattle 77 Pepperdine 62
UC LA 65 washington St. 62
U. of Pac 66 Fresno St . 511
Utah 69 Co lorado St . 68
Wash . 72 Southern Cat. 58
Weber St . 8~ Idaho 53
Whtwrth 81 Ida .. Colt 62

Owners,
players
to meet
WASHINGTON (UPI) Failil)g to reach agreement in
three days of talks here,
negotiators for the NFL
owners,and players will meet
again Mooday in New York.
Ed Garvey, executive
director of the NFL Players
Association, and Sargent
Karch, executive director of
the owners' Management
Council, issued a joint
statement which sounded a
slight note of oplimism in
hopes of settling the threeyear old dispute.
"We are still hoping to
achieve an agreement in the
near future," they said in
, announcing Monday's
session. ,
The two sides met for only
an hour Thursday morning
and neither Karch nor
Garvay would go furthEr than
the brief statement setting
the next meeting.
But this note of promise
followed a glwn declaration
by Garvey on Wednesday in
which he said that "after two
days of negotiations, there is
absol~tely no progress. ...
There is UtUe. optimism on
our side."
After
two meetings
Wednesday and informal
talks that lasted beyond
midnig~t ,
.a
source

Jets may leave
New York City
for Jersey

MILWAUKEE (UP!) ~
While Milwaukee Brewer
baseball fans have been
suffering through one of
Wisconsin's coldest wintera,
several Brewers have been
having fun in the sun playing
"winter ball. n
Sixto
Lezcano,
the
Brewers' young right fielder,
hit ".366 in the Puerto Rican
League, the highest league
average since , the late
Roberto Clemente hit .396 in
the league two decades ago,

SAY "I LOVE YOU" WITH

Give flowers to the
one you love for
Valentine's Day.
We have a lovely
assortment of c ut
flowers , orchids.
long stem roses,
potted flowers . plants
and hanging baskets,
Free del ivery service.

0

Quantities Limited While They Last

ROSES '15 &amp; '20

DOZEN

~---p~

ALL GAMES

-'
.
Mae_ ~leland h~sts• Girl ScOut Diary
aUXtltar1JJ meetznu
By Charlene Hoeflich
6

---l Redwomen swimmers

I
W L P OP ,I
Wheel..-sbg. 12 0 828 647
Logan
12 1 1103 733
Ironton
12 2 813 649
Pt. Pleas.
1 1 5~ -168
NBA Standtnts
Galllpol l5
7 5 694 679
By Unl1ed Press International
Eesttrn Conference
Meigs
B 6 959 921
Atl•ntic Divi1ion
Portsmouth 6 1 820 823
w. ~ , Pet. GB
Jackson
6 9 tu9 992
l l!l
37 '20 .615 Waverly
6 9 913 920 Phllad~lph
Boston
25 27 .481 7
Wellston
2 11 73'11048 NY Kn ic ks
2A 28 .462 8
S. Point
2 11 736 no Buffalo
18 33 .353 13 1h
Athens
0 11 599 767 NY Nets
11 35 .321 15
Cen,tnl . Div ision
Wedntsdoy '• resutt5:
w. ~ - Pet. GB
Wheelersburg 59 Portsmouth
washington
JO 21 .588
West 55
Houston
29 2'2 .569 1
Huntington High 67 Ports- Cleve
lond
28 23 .,..9 2
mouth 52
San Antonio
28 25 .528 3
Tum

~The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friqay, Feb. ll,

Thursday's resvH:

Jackson 60
Makeup gomeo:
February 14 :

W~verty BJ

Greenup at Wheelersburg

Februory 15 :
Jackson at Athens
Logan at Gallipolis
NOflhwest at Wheelersburg
February 18 :

Wheelersburg at Portsmouth
East
·
February 19:

Jackson at Wellston
South Webster at Wheelersburg
Gallipolis at Athens

Tiantin
mood for

I

•

new terms

RIO GRANDE - Coach honors in two long distance
Cannen Pennick's women's events, the 1,650 yard
swimming team from Rio freeat}'le and the 500 yard
Grande College-Community freestyle. Currently Perry
College will enter state ranks third in the !late In ,
tournament action this distance swimming. She will
weekend at Ohio State also enter the 100 yard
University In Columbus.' freestyle, :m yard butterny ,
Three members of the team, and :m yard freestyle eventa.
Cindy Schultz, JeMy Perry
Coburn, a freshman fnm
and Sarah Coburn, will Newark will compete in both
New Orleans 2-4 29 .-453 7
represent the Redwomen in the 200 and 100 yard breaatAtlanta
21 3-C .382 11
11 different events.
stroke.
wesrerl'i conference
Midwest Division
Schultz,
a
sophomore
from
Coach Pennick says the•
W. L. Pet. GB
Portsmouth, will compete in records of all three women
Denver
3-4 18 . 65~
Detroit
ll 23 . 5.7~ 4
the 100 . yard butterfly, :m give tlie Rio team a~ n:·
K"Msas Cit y
21 28 .491 81/ 2
yard individual medley, 100 cellentchanceofscoringhigh
Indiana
25 29 .463 10
Chicago
22 32 .407 13
yard
freestyle and :m yard honors.
Milwaukee
17 -42 .288 20 1h
freestyle.
She placed in the
The state meet lnvolvea
P•cific Division
W. L. Pet. GB top 12 during last year's state . some f!{ Ohio's top schools
Los Angeles
34 -1 .9 .6.42
meet.
• Including OSU, Mlamj.
Portland
35 20 .636
A freshman from Parkers- Bowling Green, Kent State
Golderi State 30 23 .566 4
SeaHie
28 26 .519 61h burg, Perry will try for and Wright State. Sanctioned
Phoenix
25 27 .481 8111
, by the Ohio Association of
·
Thursday's Results
Intercollegiate Sports lor
Cleveland 116 lndlaM t01
M ilwaukee 112 Kan City 102
Women, the tournament
Washington 109 Phoenix 103
begins with preliminary
Golden St . 11-4 Denver 101
Friday's Games
events Friday and Saturday
NY Knicks at Boston
mornings
and
fln.als
Buffalo at NV. Nets
Indiana at Philade lph i ~
sch~uled for Friday and
GIRLS SCORES
San Antonio at Houston
Ada 96 Bluffton 30
Saturday evenings.
New Orleans at Chicago
Andrews 59 Wickliffe JB
Cle\leland at Detro11
Campbell Memorial 65
Washington ef Kansas CitY
Boardman 59

Oen\ler at Los Angeles
Atlanta at Portland
Golden State at Seattle

Cardinal Mooney Jl Hubbard
21
Cleveland Lutheran W 52

Saturday's Games
(No games scheduled)

Lorain Clearview

29

Frankfort Adena 57 Unlonto

29

NHL Standings

. By United Preu lnternaflonal

Campbell Conference

Patrick DiviSion
w ~ T Pts. GF GA
Phlla
33 10 12 78 224 Ill
NY lslandrs3215 8 72 1941JS
Atlanta
24 2011 · ~9 184179

NY Rangers 20 24 13 53 198 204
Smythe Division

w L T Pts. GF GA

Lou is 23 26 6
Chicago
19 27 10
Colorado
17 29 9
Mlnnesola 13 29 12

Sl.

Vancouver

52
48
43
38

164 192
115 196
168 204
161 219

15 35 6 36 153 219

Wales
NorrisConference
Division
w L T Ptl, GF GA
Montre•l 40 1 9 89 268 128
Pittsburgh 24 22 9 57 173 175
Los Angeles 19 25 11 49 178 180

b

Greens urg
26

G

reen 69

H d.

u son

W~
32 18
ll l7
26 21

T

Mohawk 22

19~ .

Colorado et Cleveland
Saturday's Games
Phila at NY Islanders
Boston at Montreat
Washington at Toronto
Colorado at Chicago
Atlanta at St. Louis
Detro it at Minnesota
PiffSb!Jrgh at Los Angeles

Harless,
l -4- 1.4;

Thursday's Results
No games scheduled
Friday's

Games

ForfWayne at Flint
Dayton at Saginaw

Muskegon at Kalamazoo

Toledo at Columbus

Saturday's Games

Flint at Muskegon
Toledo at Port Huron
Saginaw et

Kalamazoo

Fort Wayne at Dayton

Thursday's result:
J8

WHA Stillndings
By United Press International

East

'
••
'

DUE TO THE ENERGY
,CRISIS WE WILL

•

'

Frldly' s G11mes
Edmonton at Calgarr
Quebec at lnd lanapo is

BE CLOSED SUNDAYS

Winn i peg at Cln.clnnati

sen. Diego at PhOen i x

Saturday's Games
Indianapolis l!f New Eng land

Quebec at Houston
Birmingham at San Diego

QMX•1 13" diagonal
Solid State Portable Color TV

International·

Hockey League
United Press International
W LT Pis GF GA
Kalama. 27 20 1 61 235 199
Saginaw 25 21 B 58 223 206
Flint
25 22 7 51 241 217
Muskegon21 24 8 50 211 219
Pl. Huron 22 29 4 A8 189 217
South
W L T Pis GF GA
, Toledo 26 24 s 57 221 237
Dayton 25 25 J 53 224 218
Columbus 21 '24 11 53 214 223
Ft. Wayne21 24 1 49 195 220

RACINE BROWNIE TROOP 12t7
Spatulas to be sold for $L25 each were distributed to the
horwnies·at this week's meeting of the troop. Alana Lyons held
the flag for the pledge led by Tammy Holter and all of the
Brownies sang the Smile song, Snacks next week will be provided by Alana Lyons, Lori Adams and Tammy Wolfe. Wanda
Atkins had grace before refreshments were served,

NOTICE

.

Quasar QMX-1 chassis with microcirculi technology, Weighs 35 lbs.
Uses less power than a 100 wan bulb.·
" Qulntrlx" in·llne Matrix Picture Tube.

THROUGH THE MONTH

•••

•'
'.•,

OF FEBRUARY

One Button Color Tunin g. AFT.

WERNER RADIO

CSteamboilt In11

l...-~~0!;_.-.....11

OPEN SUNDAY
FEB. 13TH

·,

9 AM- 4 PM
59 N. COURT ST.
Pendants and. Locket~ · •.
with or without diamonds.

992-5560

SPECIAL
l .

FLOWERS and CANDY

Rose Cul. Diamond
Sterl!na Silver

One dozen spring flowers and one
pound heart shaped boK of
Whitm•n candy

c 197e Florltfs' Transworld De11very

..

•

,

. O c a s h .'n Carry
$12.50 Delivered

1-------------~ -------------~

BLOOMING

We Accept BankAmericard &amp; Buckeye Gold Cards
Free Parking

·,

•

AtlltLJ/4-1 FLORIST
~rsa

I.

MAIN • POMEROY, OHIO

'

20%OFF

20% OFF

992·2644 or 992-6291

•

TERRARIUMS

PLANTS

PHONE

Cash 'n Carry

"'1.576,

Azaleas and tulips
tn Valentine Red.
!,

.i •

1

Cash 'n Carr;y
.I

Decorated in Valenline retl to win
her heart.

answer,- MRS. E.W.S.
DEAR POLLY - To make a
stronger joint when lashing
kite sticks,together, coat the
string with white glue.
To store posters and maps
without folding them, roll
them up and put in gift wrapping paper tubes.
So as not to lose or trip over
tent stakes wrap reflector
tape around the tops. The sun
reflects the light during the
day and the light of your
flashlight at night makes
them easy to see.
Medicine capsule lutlves
can be used to represent
radial cylinders on mndel
airplane engine cowls. Wrap
threads, evenly spaced,
around the capsules to represent fins.- MRS. M.K.
DEAR POLLY - A friend
came up with the following
Pointer tlutt we would like to
pass on to others. He raises
many delicate plants from
seed. It was always a problem to set them out in thE
yard without bre&lt;~king the
roots, until he started making
disks out of cans. He places
ooe in the bottom of each tiny
foam pot before planting the
seed. When transplanting
time comes, he pushes the
disk up through a hole in the
bottom of the pot. The tiny
roots are preserved during
the removal from the pot. The
whole plant and the soil come
out neatly.- MRS. O.D.
· DEAR POLLY - I want to
thank Mary V. for her advice
about checking our buttons to
see if any are old ones. I did
not know one could learn
about them at the library
either. I find I have some o\d
treasures from a , grandfather's coat worn during the
Civil War, as well as some
other old, old buttons. Polly,
you ,really do a lot of good
work.-HELEN.
Polly will send you one of
her "peachy" thank-you
cards, ideal for framing or
placing in your family scrapbook, if she \L!eS your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem In
her colllliU1. Write Polly's
Pointers in ·care of this
newspaper.
TORME'S MONEY
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
Mel Torme asked a Superior
Court Thursday to uphold an
"oral contract" with his
estranged wife, British
actress Janette Scott, that
she would not claim his

·

retire~ent ~: US. • •

A fiim on cooking with gas
economically was presented

at the Tuesday night meeting
of the Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority held
al the Columbia Gas Co, of·
fice in Middleport.
A short installation was
held for Maurisha Nelson ,
new recording ,secretary,
Mrs. Nelson was appointed to
fill the term of Lynn Crow.

the refreslunent table was
covered with white linen and
featured , a large pink and
wlute cake inscribed "Happy
Retirement, Mom and Dad",
flanked by pink tapers.
Shrimp coc~tail, pink and
white ribbon sandwiches, a
large platter of assorted cold
cuts, assorted cheeses and
crackers, pink and white
frozeh salad, pink punch with
a floating rose, ice cream and
homemade pink and white
mints were served.
The napkins were pink with
rocking chair repli cas also in·
sctihed "Happy Retirement,
Mom and Dad", and gifts
were presented to the couple,
Others attending the
celebration , were Mr. and
Mrs. Jerry Swartz, son, Toby,
Mrs. Pat Slavin, and Mr. and
Mrs. William Matlack,

By Helen Bottel

I!
Ill

No Lying Down on the Job ...
Dear Helen :
I've been working six years for a large machine shop as an
assembler. My foreinan told me to go back to school and earn a
certificate in machine shop inspection and he we'tlld give me a
better job,
1 enrolled in 'evening classes, but I seldom finish what!
start, and my husband says if I goof up again it will be the last
straw - he'll leave me. I was determined to keep at it, but so
far , my work has been failing . I really try : I'm nol lhat dwnb,
but My teacher is a creepy little married man who wants me to
go out with him. He implies if I'm nice I'll get a passing grade ,
If my husband finds out he 'll kill him, and if I quit school,
he 'll leave me.lf I stay in the classes, I'll fail unless I do my
homework lyin ~ down. Help ' - SCARED
Dear Scared :
Why nollutve a talk with the night.~chool principal? Even'
if charges can't be proved, I think your marks may riSe from
fail to pass : Educators come down hard on teachers suspected
of grading on the lay-away pl~n. - H.

+++

Dear Helen :
We discovered a really great cruise package . It's a
bargain, hil5 all the right places, and one other couple, good
friends, are going along with us.
I made the mistake of mentioning it in a letter to my
widowed aunt, who "ails" constantly. She expects the whole
family to care for her.
·
·
Surprise' She announces she's going on the cruise with us!
I know what will happen' I'll be stuck waiting on her and
listening to her never-&lt;&gt;nding complaints. She'll include herself
in our party - the fifth wheel that squeaks, squeaks, squeaks ' '
It's too late to cancel.
There's just one hope , She asked that I make reservations
who resigned due to other . for her. Would I be forever damned if I lied and said they
duties.
were full up?- GET THEE BEHIND ME, CONSCIENCE
Linda King, socia l chair·
man, reminded members of Dear GTBMC :
the skating party to be held
Why not wait a couple of.weeks, and perhaps you won't
Feb, 17, 7 to 9:30 p,m. at the need to lie ? Abargain cruise fills up fast.
Skate-a-Way Rink , Mrs.
And , if your conscience hurts, you can book Auntie on the
Sheila Reeves, ways and next one, - H.

neithl'r would bt~ enti!lcd to

"

means chainnan, announced

a dance to be held in March.
Mrs. Janet Downie, presi·
dent, conducted the meeting.

+++

DeQr Helen:
I am a supermarket cashier who is appalled at the number
of customers who leave perishable items in the aisles, or near
the check-out stands, Every night we must throw away much
of this overlooked merclutndise because of spoilage. That
means: higher prices.
Please, column readers, next time you're shopping, and
go to Athens for a hockey decide nol to buy something, either hand it to the cashier or
game and then will stay over return it where it belongs. Don'lleave ice cream to melt all
for the moonlight skate. Choir over the ~gazines, etc. - ELLEN
practice was held preceding
the meeting. DevotiOliSWere Dear Readers :
taken from Philippians,
If the shoe fi ts, use it to trot back and deposit perishables
in freezer compartments.
Okay' - H,

Collection plans made
A bottle cap drive to be con·
dueled on Saturday, Feb, 19,
was planned during the
Wednesday night meeting of
the youth of' the Bradbury
Church of Christ at the home
of Desi Jeffers.
While no house-to-house
canvas for caps will he made,
residents with some to contribute are asked to telephone
992·2276 or 992-5192 and they
will be picked up. Bottles will
"I so be collected by the group
which will use the money for.
a contribution ~pward the .
public address system of the
church and toward a youth·
sponsored revival being plan·
ned for early sununer.
On Feb. 25, the youth will

COLE MARRIED
HOLLYWOOD (UP! )
Singer Natalie Cole, 25,
daughter of the late Nat
"King" Cole , disclosed
Thursday she has been
married since last July 31 to
record producer Marvin
Yancy, 31, who co-produces
her albwns.
It was the first marriage
for both.

by Gill Fox

SIDE GLANCES

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

SERVICES RESUME
RUTLAND - Regular
services wlll be resumed
Ibis Sunday at tbe Rutland
United Methodist Church.
Sunday school will be at
9:30 a.m. and the worship
service at' 10:30 a.m. with
the Rev . Wilbur Hilt,
pastor.
;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;.;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;::":::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

BARTY'S SON HURT
LOS ANGELES (UPl )
Braden Barty, 6, son of dwarf
actor Billy Barty , was hit by
a car when he darted into the
street in front of the Barty
home in North Hollywood
Thursday night, police repor.ted.
The boy was listed in good
condition at a hospital with a
broken leg and bruises, The
driver was not cited.

•

INCLUDED: 6 PIECE ATTACHMENT SET

.

,- A
Daily

·

I~Ni
books h.ft alwayl

i

been an apprtciated part of one's time aiOI\e
with God. But no devotional book
should ever be thought of as a substitute
lor scripture reading ... and study.
ailly Graham's new devotional book,
DAY-BY-DAY, edited by joan Winmill
Brown, is intended to complement daily ,
Bible reading. Irs part of a well-balanced
spirilual diet. Compiled from over 25 years
of Dr. Graham's ministry, each daily
reading includes a Scripture selection, a
meditation, and a closing prayer.
Man truly cannot live by bread alone .
DAY-BY-DAY fulfills
' pah of your ,minimum
daily requirement. $2.95 (Paper) available
from your bookseller.

money if their marriage
broke up.
Ml!l.'l Scott's divorce suit
asks for half of Tonne's
property, including their
expensive home and an
Interest In a Hawaiian hotel.
Tonne said that · after
losing a lot of money in two
previoliS divorces, he made
ana~reement with Miss S&lt;·o~ t
ocfore their marriage in 1\166
that if it did not work ''"'
ptot:•l'l) ,,w·n"l by lhe uthH

11

upon

~ Helen Help

Cooking economically
discussed at meeting

Disinfectant dampens
smoke odor in room

SEOAL FRESHMEN
Team
W L P OP
Gallipolis
4 1 205 176
Waverly
J 1 17~ 147
Logan
3 2 237 190
Athens
3 2 218 197
Weitston
3 4 296 301
Jackson
1 2 129 139
Meigs
0 5 143 252
TOTALS
17 17 1402 1402

W l T Pts. GF GA
Quebec
32 19 1 65 232 190
lndlanapls 25 23 6 56 183 200
Cincinnati 25 25 2 52 232 196
New Englnd 21 Jl 6 .48 190 222
Birmnghm 21 34 1 43 190 212
x -Minnesot 19 18 5 43 136·129
West
W ~ T Ph. GF GA
Hous1on
30 17 6 66 197 155
San D iego 30 22 2 62 185 182
Winnipeg
29 21 1 59 · 2~4 188
PhOenix
22 29 2 ~6 185 241
Edmonton 21 30 2 46 149 197
Calgary
20 27 4 ~4 163 174
Jt:·Tearo disbanded
.
Thursday's Result
New England "6 Winnipeg 3

Mrs. Jane Coates, treasurer;
and Mrs. Esther , Mays,
historian.
Members
exchanged
names for secret pals. Mrs.
Coates reported on what was
Plii'Chased and given to the
Phillips family at Chrisbnas.
The Feb. 15 meeting will be
held at the Mays home. Mrs.
Hawthorne won the door
prize. The meeting opened
with the Lord's Prayer.
Others attending were Mrs.
Sara Bailey and Mrs. Lila
Van Meter. Refreshments
were served.

Polly's Pointers

Waverly 6-4

Athens 41 Gallipolis

f

A surprise retirement party
hon oring Mr. and Mrs.
Chester Knight was ,held
S.turday night at the home of
Mrs. Dorothy Young in Middleport,
The party was hosted . by
the couple's sons and
daughters-in-law, Mr, and
Mrs, Dick Knight of Bellaire,
and Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Knight and son, Stevie,
Caledonia,
Mr. and Mrs. Knight were
greeted with a large sign
reading "Congratulations
Mom and Dad": Mr. Knight
has already retired after 23
years with thE American·
Electric Co. and his wife, An·
nette, will retire as a school
bus driver in the Meigs Local
School District, at the conclu,
sion of this school year.
MIDDLEPORT JUNIOR TROOP 39
A pink and white color
Meeting Monday night at the Heath United Methodist
scheme
was carried out s:~nd
Church, Troop 39 planned a valentine party to be held Monday,
In the event school is not in session the P"rtY will be held at
2:30. If school is in session it will be held at 3:30p.m. at the
church.
' The sixth graders of the troop continued their work on re·
quirements for the sign of the arrow and the sign of the star
badges. The fourth and fifth graders worked on the cooking
badge. Scouts were reminded tlutt their cookie order fonns are
due Monday.

SON BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Seymore
of Middleport are announcing
the birth of a son at Holzer
Medical Clinic Jan. 28.
Grandparents are Mrs.
Phyllis Young, Middleport
and Lewis Young, Letart, W.
Va. Great-grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald By Polly Cramer
Hayman, Racine, Rt. 2, and
STEPHANIE
SAYRE . Mr, and Mrs. Leo Young,
DEAR POLLY - I would
was honored on her first
Letart, W, Va. RD, .
like to know if there is a way
birthday recently al , the
to remove the smell of smoke
home , of her parent., Mr.
DANCE SLATED
from a couch and chair that
and Mtl.. Aaron Sayre,
A dance will be held Satur· were in a house fire. They
Syracuse. Refreabmeots of
day night at the · Senior were not damaged by the fire
· lee cream and Mickey
Citizens Center, 8toll :30 p.m. or water - just the smell of
Mouae cake were served to
The dance is for senior smoke. The fabric covering is
her maleraal graadcitizens and the, their guests nylon and cotton, ~ MRS.
parenls, Mr. and Mrs.
and the admission is $t25, R.R.
Gene Co1111o, Long Bottom
There will be free coffee and
DEAR MRS. R. R. - Try
and her palei'DIII grandtea and those attendllig are to spraying a household
'rhatlf, Mr. aad Mrs.
take either sandwiches or disinfectant in an in·
Clulrla Balley, Portland.
conspicuous spot to see if it
cookies.
affects the materiel. If not,
spraying the pieces aU over
might help. The following letter from a reader has another
good suggestion. -POLLY.
DEAR POLLY- At first we
hild trouble with our new
fireplace smoking and leaving an odor of burning wood,
so I put dishes of ainmonia or
vinegar aU around (keep out
of the reach of children and
pets) This did the job.
My Pet Peeve is With stick
deodorant. There is always so
much.left thaJ one cannot get
loso it is wasted . .SHIRLEY.
DEAR POLLY - Perhaps
Mrs, G.G. 's problem with the
strong wood smoke odor in
her house may be from the
same cause that mine was. I
checked and found that I was
hot opening the flue draft
damper all the way. - MRS.
L.S.
DEAR POLLY AND ROSE
- Kerosene will remove tar
from ANYTHING. Both my
husband and my lather work·
ed with tar for many many
, years and we had tar
"Real Old· fashioned Home Cooki11~"
everywhere in the house and
on the clothes. I tried all
3rd 51., RACINE, OHIO
kinds of solvents and cleaners
PHONE 949-2515
of all descriptions and prices
and found ·kerosene was the

Frosh sumdings

176
153

176

McDonald,

Reserves Jackson 46.

Pts. GF GA

6 70 212
6 68 194
Toronto
7 59 201
Clevelend
l7 28 9 ~3 161
Thunday's Results
NY Rangers 5 Detroit 4
Philadelphia 9 wash ington 2
Buff&amp; to~ Boston 3
Friday's Games
Pittsburgh at Vancouver ·

CHESTER-New officers
were elected at a recent
meeting of the Young Wives
Club held at the home of
Karen Young.
Elected were Mrs;Nonna
Hawthorne, president; Mrs.
Linda Well, vice president;
Mrs. Marilyn Spencer,
secretary and news reporter;

Jackson 60
JACKSON (60) -

- ~~r:::::::=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:::;:;:;:-::-:-:,::::::::::::.:=:=:=:::=:::;:::::=:=::::~:=:::::=:=x::::=:~::~:::::::•:~:o:•:::;:'-

j Couple honored

S\RA\,USEJvMvli'J'IMJPLZ04
Avalentine party was planned and badge work completed by
Mrs. Enuna Lyons, Mrs. several scouts at the Tuesday night meeting of the Syracuse
Carol Triplett, Mrs , !dae JW&gt;iors at the school,
Kim Morrow read a story to the troop to complete her story
Cleland, Mrs. Maxine Rose,
teller's
badge work. Work on ~he health aid badge was comMrs. Judy Bird and Sonny,
Grace Roush, Mrs. Beverly pleted by Debbie Michaels, I,ori Michaels, Christy Arnold,
Dowell, Mrs. Johnson, Mrs. Kim Morrow and Slutri Cogar,
Bimlah Autherson, Mrs.
Serving as lutby sitters for the PTO meeting Tuesday night
Mary Sloter and Tina, and a were Lisa Willis and Debbie Michaels, A bowling party
scheduled earlier was cancelled when the valentine party was
guest, Brian Cleland.
The next meeting will he on planned, Becky Amott opened the meeting by leading the
March 8 at 8 p.m. at tbe home scouts in the Lord's Prayer. The pledge was led by Dreama
of Mrs. Grace Roush, with tbe Owens and all of the girls recited the scout promise.
birthdays of Jean Cleland,
SYRACUSE BROWNIE TROOP 1120
Mrs. Bird and Mrs. Pat ForDecorated valentine card boxes were made by each of the
rester to be observed.
Brownies at a meeting held Thursday night at the Syracuse
Elementary School.
The' meeting opened with the pledge to the flag led by Wendy
Fry, the Lurd's Prayer led by Karen Cook, the girl scout promise by Tracy Hubbard, and the Brownie smile song by Jane
Jell, Refresll(nents were served. by Wendy Triplett, Sherri
Sisson, and Alisha Van Meter.

Young Wives elect
new club officers

McDonald 52 Columbiana 31 Dorsey. 4•6-14; Buchanan, 7Dak Hills 44 Norwood 28
•, 1-15; Oller, ·4·1-9; Stover, 0-2·
Olmsted Falls 59 Fairview J5 2; Forsyth, 1-0-2; Butner. 1-0·
Sf VIncent Sf Mary 48 2. TOTALS 23·14·60,
Firestone 18
WAVERLY (8Jl _ Davena,
Struthers 70 Ursuline 19
2-2-6; Th ompson , 5-.2- 12 ;
Stryker 45 Tlnora 38
Holsinger, 10-5-25; B. Fyffe,
Walnut Ridge 91 Briggs J2
2-0-4; Fielder, 8-8-24; Rick
Waverly 83 South Point 58
Thomas, 1-0-2; Freder ic k, I·
, Cardinal Middlef ield 36 Rich· 2-4; C. Fyffe. 1-0-2; Randy
mond His 29
Thomas, 2·0-4. TOTALS 32-19·
Medina 60 Westlake ·39
83
Swanton 51 Na~oleon -u
~.r
·Score by quarters :
Lakeview 63 C amplon 44
Jackson
8 13 19 2Q-,-66
Upper Sandusky JB Sycamore Waverly
19 27 11 2()-SJ

WashlnQtn 16 ~1 10 42 154 220
Detroit
15 32 6 36: 137 195
Adams Di\llsiOn
Boston
Buffalo

RACINE--The Racine
Firemen's Awdllary met in
regular se!l.'llon Tuesday
night at the home of Mrs. Mae
Cleland. The meetings usual·
ly held at the fire house were
changed to a home to conserve gas.
Jean Johnson presided at
the Session during which time
a jitney supper was discussed
but postponed due to the
weather. The birthday of
Mllxlne Rose was observed
with a washcloth shower.
Refreshments were served to

Waverly 83

1-0-2;

1977

~~~;~;:::~·: :::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;.;:;;:;:::;:;:;:;;:::;;;;::::::;:::~;:;:•:::~;:~~-:;:~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~

:Standings : to enter state meet

By GIL PETERS
UPI ~ports Writer
BOSTON (UP!)
The
dispute is simple to
understand,
Pitcher Luis Tiant, 36,
commmentect· "there's wants the Bos\on Red Sox to
disagreement all over thE stretch his present two-year
place" but both sides were contract through 1979and add
willing · to keep
the a no-cut clause.
.
negotiations alive.
The club is reluctant to
There has been no contract , meet the terms of the pitcher
between the union and the and his pitcluilan, attorney
owners for more than three Bob Woolf.
years.
"But we're quite cloSe, let's
say reasonably close," said
Woolf, the pioneer sports
attorney, at a R~d Sox
luncheon Thursday.
"I'm sure it is going to be
resolved, But Luis is
adamant. He wants the club
to give him added security
and the figure he is asking is
NEW YORK (UPI) - New completely reasonable."
Woolf contends Tiant's twoYork lost one of its
year
pact, renegotiated last
professional football teams to
year
is outdated in light of
New Jersey last season and
federal
rulings that opened
the other may follow. The
the
way
for the free agent
New York Jets reportedly are
draft.
Since
the ruling, many
close to an agreement with
other
Red
Sox
players have
the New Jer~y Sports and
signed'
long-tei'm,
lucrative
Esposltlon Authority to play
contracts,
their home · games in the
"Luis is still working under
Hackensack Meadowlands'
the
old system and everyone
Giants Stadium, accordjng to
else
is under the new
sources close to the talks.
system,"
Woolf said, adding
The Giants moved Into the
he
will
recommend
that Tiant
new ~6,50Q-seat stadium,
join
the
Red
Sox
in spring
designed specifically for foottraining
later
this
mooth,
ball, last season. '
even
if
the
contract
The Jets have played in
60,000-seat Shea Stadium, discussions are still going on.
Tiant, however, is vague
owned by New York City,
about
his plans, if the dispute
since 1961, but must negotiate
is
not
worked out.
their $500,000-a-year lease
"I
don't
know what I'll do,"
with the New York Mets
he
said,
chomping
on an everbaseball Glub, wlllch has
present
cigar
and
waving
control over the stadlwn. In
reporters
away.
"I'll
wait
the past, 'the Mets have
and
see."
prevented the Jets from
Red Sox officials have been
occupying the stadiwn until
nonc&lt;mmittal
on the subject,
the end of the baseball
saying
discussions
are still
se880n.
going
on.
.
The Jets, under their
While talks ·continue, Tiant
present arrangement with
throws
dally at nearby Brookthe Mets, have been unable to
line
High
School . He
play exhibition games at
appeared
to
be
in good shape
home and have heen on the
and
ready
to
begin
training
road for the first four or five
camp.
games of each season.
"But Luis is an emotional
person/'
added Woolf, uand
BOSTON (UPI) - Infielder
you
can't
clearly predict
Steve Dillard and three minor
what
he's
going
to do."
leaguers have
signed
contracts with the Boston
Red Sox, leaving the club
with five unsigned players, it
BOYS SCORES
Waverly BJ Jackson 60
was announced Thursday.
Also signing recently were North Gallla 82 Miller 53
Nelsonville York 61 Federal
pitcher Jim Wright and Hockin!
53
shortstops Eddie Ford and Cte Collinwood ,9 1 Cle E"'t 67
Ramon Aviles. Ford Is the
COLLEGE SCORES
son of former New York
Minnesota
91 Ohio State 65
Yankees pitcher Whitey Seton Hall 89
Dayton 72
Ford.
Rio Grande 116 Tlflln 80
CHICAGO (UP!)
Olicago White Sox President
MONTREAL (UP!) _ The
Bill Veeck has made a second Mootreal Alouettes of the
offer to President Jinuny Canadian Football League
Carter, and says it was one "I announced Thursdav rug' ht
hope he can't refuse."
'
Earlier Veeclt invited thE completion of their coaching
staff with the addition of 44Presideqt to atteoo the White year-old Cal Murphy as
Sox' opening game against offensive line coach.
the . Boston R~ . Sox , m , Murphy replaces Dan
Comiakey Park Ap~ 12.
Sekanovlch, who earner tills
Thursday be invtted lhe week joined thE New York
~esident to throw out the Jell of the National Football
first ball at the game.
League.

.

•WILD BIRD SEED
•SUNFLOWER SEED
.CRACKED CORN

Cage standings

,..........

\
GREAT CLEANING FEATURES!

• Exctuolvo 6-war Olai-A·N•Ii" rug height
a~j.,.tment cleona anr carpel from 1ht
laweol nap to the thlckeot ohag
Top.flltlng dtopooabte duot bag prevonl•l
cloga, keeps ouctlon strong
• Edge Kittner cleano thallaot tough
Inch along tho baooboardo
Reg , Upright 179.95 - Tool
Reg . 119.95
Total Reg . S9UO

FOR ONLY .

J

INCLUDES 6 PC.
ATTACHMENT SET

INGELS FURNITURE
Midcn.Port
99 .Mill St .

~

992-2641

Store
Middloport, O.·

106 N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, 0.
Phone 992·2635

�6-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Frulay, Feb 11, 1m

....

~-~~~ ,,_,~;,'l':;~:&lt;:·~«:.'·

Social
Calendar

.1.·

By VERNON SC01T

RETURN Jonathan Meigs
Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution, will
meet at I 30 Friday at the
Me1gs Inn Mrs. Everett
Hayes Will have the program
HARRISONVILLE Lodge
411, F&amp;AM, special meetmg,
7 30 p m. Friday, work m
feilowcrafl degree , an
Master Masons mvted
BLACK LUNG Assn of
Southeastern Ohio, 2 to 4 p m
Friday at Semor C11lzens
building, Pomeroy James
K1dd wdl speak on progress
mWashington and Les Pastor'
of the Social SecurLty Off1ce
to speak
SATURDAY
GOSPEL SING, 7 30 p m
Saturday at Guysville
Commuruty Church feBturmg
the Adkms Family of East
Lynn , W Va , and the Gospel·
tones of Chester Pubhc mVIted
SUNDAY
Meetmg of Pomeroy Youth
Baseball League Sunday at 2
p m , Pomero) LegiOn Hall
Team managers, mterested
parents urged to attend.
CO UNTY-w ide
prayer
meetmg 2 p m Sunday at the
Hiland Chapel with Glenn
Bissell to serve as class
leader

TUESDAY
GROUP 2, M1ddieport F1rst
Umted Presbyterian Church,
7 30 p m Tuesday at the
home of Mrs Dwight
Wallace Mrs Thomas Rue
will be co-hostess Bible study
Will be from Book 3, chapter 1
Mrs LewiS Sauer will have
devotions

Ethel Orr serves
as hostess
Mrs Ethel Orr hosted a
meeting of the Past Co\Ul~ilors' Club of Chester Council 323 , Daughters of
America, Wednesday mghl
AssiSting hostess was Mrs
Opal Hollon
The meetmg presided over
by Mrs Orr opened With the
Fourth Psabn, the Lord's
Prayer and the pledge to the
flag m uruson Mrs Orr read
the by-laws Mrs EI'TTIH
Cleland gave the secretary's
report, and Mrs Ada Netuzlmg the treasurer's report
Mrs Laura Mae N1ce
thanked the club lor a gift
while she was hospitalized
Mrs Esther Ridenour on
behalf of the club prese~ed
Mrs. Jean Summerfield
Fredenck wllh a bndal gift.
Others attending were Mrs
Betty Roush, Mrs. Pauline
, RidenolU', Mrs. Mabel Van
'. Meter, Mrs Thelma White,
Mrs. Letha Wood, Mrs lnzy
' • Newell, and Mrs Mary K
Holter

Is your hlestyle leading to
trouble'
Your
Heart
Assoctabon can tell you how
to modify your lifestyle to
reduce your nsk of heart
attack and stroke Call your
local Heart Assoc1at1on
Please help your Heart
' Association in the fight lor
• your life.

'

Delay can be deadly The
' average heart attack vlol!m
watts three hours before
seeking help - und most
victiml who die, die before
• tiley get 19 the hospitlil Know
the warning stgnais of heart
1t11dt. Ask your Heart
ANGI:i8Uon
'

"Seven Beauties." William Spacek !Came ) and L1v
Holden lor ·'Network·· and UlimJnn !Face to Face)
Sylvester Stallone for the role
Nommabons for best
of the boxer m ''Rocky."
supporting actor were Ned
Slallone also receiVed the Beatty (Network), Burgess
writing nommalion lor h1s Meredith (Rocky ), Laurence
screen play of " Rocky " OliVIer (Marathon Man) ,
actor to
rece1ve
a makmg hun only the tlnrd Jason Robards (All the
posthumous nomination smce man to receive acting and PreSident's Men) and Burt
Spencer Tracy got one lor wrLting nommabons m the Young (Rocky)
Nommated lor
best
"Guess Who's Commg to same year
Best Actress nommees SI!Pporting actress were Jane
Dinner" m 1968
Other nonunabons for best were Mane-Chnst1ne Alexander(Taxi Driver), Lee
actor of 1976 were Robert De Barrault (Cousm, Coosme) Grant (Voyage of the
Ntro for uTaxi Dr1ver," Faye Dunnaway (Network), Damned), Piper Laurie
Gtancarlo Giannini fnr Taiia Shir, (Rocky), Sissy (Came), Beatrice Straight
!Network) and Jodie Foster
"All the President's Men,"
the fLbn venion of the bestselling book.
Peter FlliCh won a posthumous nomination for best
actor for hiS performance m
''Network " He is the first

UP! Hollywood Reporter

FRIDAY
RETURN Jona than Meigs
Chapter, D.A.R , I 30 p.m
Friday at the Meigs Inn.
li'RIDAY
MARY Shr111e 37, Order of
the White Shrine of Jerusalem, w1ll meet at 8 p m
Friday at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple

MONDAY
UNITED
Methodist
Women of Heath Church,
Middleport, 7 30 Monday
mght at the church Mrs
James Brewmgton to have
the pro~ram, Mrs. Nan
Moore the prayer and self
demal serv1ce. Hostesses will
be Mrs Jeanne Bradbury,
Mrs Jean Cooke, Mrs J udy
Fraser and Mrs V1cky
Houchins
MEIGS Chapter, Order of
DeMolay 7 30 p m Monday
at the Middleport Masoruc
Temple w1th practice lor
degree work
'
BETHEL 62, International
Order of Job's Daughters,
7 30 p m Monday at the
Pomeroy Masomc Temple.

Rocky, Network each claim ten 0 SCa...s
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif
(UP! ) - "Rocky ," about a
second-rate lighter, and
"Network ," a biting satire of
teleVISIOn, each captured 10
Oscar nomll18tions Thursday
to lead the race lor the 49th
annual Academy Awards
Both
pictures
were
norrunated lor best f1im of the
year along with "BoWld for
Glory," the biography of
Woody Guthrie, "Taxi
Driver," a sleazy story of
contemporary NPw Vnrk and

OUvier topped all nominees
for previous Olear bids This
was hia nlllth notnlnation but
first uu supporting category.
He won the Oscar in 1948 for

plclllre ol \lie year, came
away ll'lth a disappointing
two nominations - for
cinematography and OOWid .

"Hamlet "
Nominations for best
original songs went to "Ave
SaUna" (The Omen), ''Come
to Me" (The Pink Panther
Strikes Again), "Evergreen"
(A Star is Born), "Goona Fly
Now" (Rocky ) and "A World
That Never Was" (Half Day
House)
"All the PreSident's Men"
was third m the balloting of
the Academy membership,
Cousme," France , "Jacob. WUIIIlllg eight ' nominations
the Liar," Germany; "N1ghts " King Kong," perhaps the
and Days," Poland, and most successful boxoflice
"Seven Beauties" Italy
Only Charles OlapUn, for
"The Great DictatOr" m 1940,
and Orson Welles for "CitiZen
Kane" m 1941, matched Stallone's feat 10 Winning actorwntor nommatlons m the
same
year
He declared "It was either
Mr Sprague or the etistence
of Ute commtttee."
While Sprague - who
planned to go to work today
as usual -hasn't said much
on the dispute, h1s allies on
the comnuttee were quick to
Side with hun
Walter Fa\Ultroy, District
of Columbia congressiOnal
delegate, quickly cootacted
the 10 other members aro\Uld
the country to rally their
support
The members directed
Sprague to "disregard Mr
Gonzalez' order" and sa1d
"The entire cormruttee, apart
from the chairman, so directs
you 1'
Some co n gressiona l
sources said the dispute
rrught create enough extra
opposLilon to kill the panel
once and for ail
The comrruttee has been
endangered for months
anyway
Led by Sprague, 1t
ongl/lally wanted $13 milllon
for two years That ran 111to
strong oppOSitiOn, but I/IStead
of kilUng 11 outright, the
House gave the conuruttee
$84,000a mooth to reorgaruze,
come up wtth new budget
proposals, and find fresh
arguments to JUstify 1ts
existence before April 1.
The next committee
meetmg IS scheduled for
Wednesday
(TaXI Driver)
The ltve nominated
directors were John Avildsen
(Rocky ), lngmar Bergman
(Face to Face), Sidney .
Lumet (Network), Allan K.
Pakula (All the President's
Men ) and Una Wertmuller
(Seven Beauties)
Best foreign language film
of the year nominees were
"Black and White m Color,"
Ivory Coast, "CouSin,

7-TheDellySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, F!'lday, Feb.ll, 1977

doy of month by Georgt~ Plck.ns

STIVERSVILLE COMMUNITY

CHURCH
VICe,

or be removed forcibly by
Capitol police, then left for
his home district m Texas
But ail II comnuttee members spurned hia deciSion,
declared the firmg to be
Illegal, and told Sprague to
hold fast, that Gonzalez had
no authority for his move.
And Speaker Thomas
"Tip" O'Neill told the pollee
not to eVIct the conunittee
counsel as ordered
Before leavmg, Gonzalez
threatened to dissolve the
comrruttee formed to mveshgate the deaths of John
Kennedy and Martin Luther
King.
In a letter to House Rules
Ghatrman James Delaney.
D-N Y , Gonzalez said II

attempts to resolve the
problema fail, "I will not
recommend that Its life be
continued beyond March 31"
-the date the House set for
the panel to justify Itself.
Informed on amval in San
Antomo of his colleagues'
action, Gonzalez snapped :
uThey 're not the chrurman
He (Sprague ) can work for
free. He IS not gomg to work
Wlder the payroll." He said
before leavmg Washington he
had certified to the chief
clerk of the House to take
Sprague off salary
Sprague, Gonzalez said,
created "an intolerable Situation an&lt;t "embarked oo a
calculated course of deceit,
deception and diVISIVeness "
11

Promises tricked Kiritsis
By BRUCE COOK
INDIANAPOLIS (UPI )
Anthony KirltsiS, who held a
real estate executive hostage
for three dsys With a shotgun
Wired to his neck, let the man
go Thursday mght m return
for promiSeS of $5 million
ransom and unmWIIty from
prosecution - which were
muned1ateiy Withdrawn.
As Kiriisls stOOd on a
balcony and fired the shotgun
1n the air m apparent
celebration of a victory over
the real estate company he
clauned cheated him and the
pollee who surrounded hun,
officers sprang and subdued
him

He was held today at the
Marion CoWlly Jailm heu of
$250,000 bail ' on state
kidnapmg charges
The "dynamite " wh1ch
Kir1ls1s, 44, clauned he had
booby-trapped hiS apartment
wLth - keepmg pollee al bay
- turned out to be two onegallon cans of gasoime
The hostage, Richard Hall,
42, was taken to Wishard
Hospital but he was released
quickly His only mjunes had
been a bad cut from the strap
that had been wrapped
around his neck and brwses
to hiS wrists
A doctor there said Hall

was m "excellent spmts" and
hungry He asked for some
soup, which he ate while

Henderson
e

IS

signed

CINCINNATI (UPI)- Joe
Henderson, a 30-year old
righthanded \nlcher who was
the earned run average
champLon of the Amerlcan
Association last· year, hr.s
signed his 1977 contract with
the Cincrnnati Reds, club
officials announced
Thursday
Henderson had a 7-3 record
and a 2.31 ERA for the
IndianapoliS Indians in 1976,
appearing in 54 games, aU but
one in rehef He received a
late-6ellson promotion to the
Reds where he had a 2-0
'd ll 1
1
recor, a owng ony one
earned tun ln 11 mnmgS
The Reds now have 29
PlayerS under CODtraet fOr
the coming season, but those
uns Igne d Inc Iude sue h
regulars 8S Pete Rose 1 Joe
Morgan, Davey Concepcion,
George Foster Ken Griffey

laughing and talking With readmg 11 himself Each
Mayor Richard Hudnut, the paragraph was pWlctuated
With ohscemties
doctor and hiS wife
And then he ISSued a new
Less than an holU' earlier,
KiritsiS was still holding a demand - for a $5 milhon
shotgun to Hall's head as he ransom from the Meridian
faced teleVIsion cameras 111 a Mortgage Co , Hall's fll1Tl
Kir1tsis cut off the news
live
news
conference
punctuated With obscemties . conference abruptly, and
He kept Hall on the deadly went With h1s capllve -and
leash while he reVIewed a list authorities mto the nearby
granting all his demands, police command post
mcludmg mun\Ulity and a $5 Reporters were evacuated
million ransom from Hall's and SWAT team riflemen
firm "Looks fme, looks scurried to take up poSitlons
fme," Kirltsis sa1d. Then he
released Hail, ran to a
balcony and hred the
Don't gamble wtth your
shotgun Pollee rushed him hfe lgnorm~ the risk factors
and subdued him
of heart attack and stroke IS
A lew mmutes after that, really takmg a cha nce Free
offLcrals withdrew all the mformation from your Heart
prorruses that had been made Association Will tell vou wh)
to KirltsiS.
It was unknown whether
federal charges would be r=~~~~~~~-,
filed agamst Kirits1s U.S.
Attorney James YoWig had
refused to bargam with
)Gntsis while Hall was a
captive.
KiritsLS abducted Hall at
8. 30 a m Tuesday from
Hall's office in lndianapoUs
and took him to h1s
apartment He clauned Hall
had cheated him br trying to
ROYAL CROWN
force him to default on a
BOffiiNG COMPANY
mortgage ISsued on land L.:~..:....:...=T,iifn~_,.:::;:id
Kintsis wanted for a
'---'M-'1d-'d-'le;.:;p...;.o.;...rt'----...J
shoppmg center
The break 10 the apartment
house Siege came Thursday
evenmg, when KLritsiS,
screaffil/lg, dragged Hall out
of his own building on a
forced march through a
phalanx of newsmen to the
recreation room of another
They're new They're un1que. And
building nearby
every
western boot wearer m the county
Fac111g the cameras, 150
needs a pa1r
reporters and
famLiy
T1ngleys
exceedingly
members, Kiritsia let loose
ah ·t w•&gt;iaht. thin walled, lhick ·soled
With a rambUng diatribe
W1th sweat beadmg up
They' re made from unbeatable,
torm .fittl
through hiS crewcut brown
hair and a three-day beard on
his lace, he shouted he was "a
goddamned national hero and
don't you forget it."
A few minutes later,
Klritsis pull out a prepared
statement of complamts
agalnst Hail's firm
"Read it, you son of a
hitch," he ..-dered, but then
be stopped Hall and began

FLOWERS
TRINITY CHURCH Rev W H
Perrin pastor Roy Mayer Sun
day school 1upt Church School
9 15 am , worship 1ervlca 10 30
am Chotr rehearsal Tua1doy
1 30 p m under direct ton of Mn1
Paul Nease

For All Occasions
Wt Wlrt FI0-1
Evtf'yw. .re

992-2039
Pomeroy Flower Shop
Mrs Millard Von Motor
Ph. Wl·2039
""· Wl·5711

WESTERN

1-.T,\Tf

ot

1111111 Htii'AKnn..'I:T

\Nev. 1tum11

m

m INHUH

~~~ (11\11'11 \NtJ.: r1~

un r ht ~l~l'll" r1 lllllll"rllllrmknl II( lrllllltNIIet Of
~ I RII II( Uhlu lll tl'h) r~ r l l ftn IIIII ltlflilll

Tift"

~jlll ll• llrt l u~nr~llll

I ll Ill l ndlllllllhll~ Hllh
11f 1 1111111 1~1 llU l"l• nt~l h II 111111 Hw ln. o ,f 1111~
~lltl ¥ llftllllralll~ lull s •roll~ Klllh01l t •d 1k1rhJM
Ill, curn ul )UI '" lt~ll!.itfl In I hi~ ~1111 ~ ~~~ Ill

11r1111rlah hudllfit'l 1.r iii!IUII!It'l 1111 1111 \lulu~l
" '•It 11~ th1111M"tal f"' n!lllllrn t~ Rhr1 11n 11, u~ •11

lftlal ~l lltft Ill Ill hHII ht lll as fullull ~ 111l (Itt
I I ! IIT 'i Arlm lllell \o~Ktb $11L!Ili" IIK ~i011
1 hd•II U II~ ~~" "111 r. -.~ 1111 Silr,,lu' flu lilt 1

*

'

Gary Nolan and Rawly
Eastwlck

14111or luloiJ!IIotll

If lll"llrl lll'i' ltf Ull~1

IK ~AI I

"Biske1 of the Month" of your Cholet Wtnntrs tn
J1nuary lnd February were· Don Collins, Pomeroy

Walter Z

HUBBARDS GREEHHOUSE
"RACUSE, OHIO

POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH

Deuteronomy
6 I 25
fr~doy

Thursi:l oy
Deuteron omy

OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN

Joshua

3 1 20

24

14

28

1

Sulu rduy

Ruth
18

1I

CHURCH
Rev Rolph Sm1th
pastor Sunday school, 9 30 o m
Mri Worley Francis, supennten
dent Preoch 1ng servtces first &amp;
thtrd Sundoys lollowmg Sunday
School

GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
&amp; SERVICE, INC.
THE FINEST IN MOBILE HOMES
1100 E. Marn
Pomeroy
"" 992-7034

Ph 992·2101

RACINE PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
"HEll' DEALER
Ractne
Ph

9~9

2882

I'll. 949·2S50

Racine
To Our
Pavorlte
Teacher

Ph. 992·2318

Pomeroy

81H W. Ma1n

Caii949-2B38 For an Appointment

FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST 282

Ractne, Ohto

Mulberry Ave Pomeroy, Paul J
Wh1te Pastor Gary Basham, Su"day school sup! Sunday school
morning worship
9 30 a m
10 30 avenmg worsh•p 6 30 p m
Mtdweek prayer serv1ce 7 30

PAUL'S BARBER SHOP
Open 8 to s- Closed Thurs.

pm
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CENTER

Racme, Ohto

HEINER'S BAKERY

'

•

Love, Tom

COMPLETE AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE
locust &amp; Beec:h Sis Middleport Ph 992·Wl1

BETSY ROSS BAKERY

'

•

BAKERS OF GAY90 BREAD
Ph 992.3030
Mtddtepart

-

Write your meuage below and bring It
Qr mall It with $1.00 by February 11th to
the Dally Sentinel, P. 0. Box 729, Pomeroy,

o.

SEAR'S CATALOG MERCHANT

'!

LOUIS W OSBORNE
Pomeroy
"" 992-2178
220 E. M1un

•

'

-:

16 WORDS Sl.OO-CASH WllH ORDER

•

2.
4

·wE FILL DOCTORS
PRESCR IPTIONS

992·29S5

Pomeroy

DUDLEY'S

TWO LOCATIONS
!9 N Second Sl
Middleport, 0 .
46 Court St.
Galllpol!•· 0 .

MARK V STORE

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

Mrddleport, Ohtp

Middleport, Ohio
WE HANDL E ONLY USDA. CHOICE
MEATS

I
'

~:
.

1'11.992-3284

•;

FR_E_SH PRODUCE &amp; PLANTS
l CONVINIENT MARKETS
Pomeroy,
MIDWAY MARKET "" 992 2582

..

.

..

.

Mtddleporl

;

i ,,

'

GOEGLEIN SAND &amp;GRAVEL

BOB'S MARKET

SUNDAY TIMES-SENTINEL
•

·~.

Servin! Mtlgs, Mtson
An Gellia Area
Phone 992 2156

~.

~~·
i;

Mason,~

Ph. 773-5721

ROSEBERRrS PENNZCIIL

Pomeroy, 0.

'Ph. 949-9130

"

DAILY SENTINEL

RACINE FOOD MARK[T
;'
"

De&lt;Jicated to lhe Interests of
Melg&gt; Ma10n Area
PhOne Wl·2156

RIDENOUR SUPPLY
Hardware

Homellte Saws

Chester

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE
Kerm's Korner
Kermit Walton
Pomeroy

MIDDLEPORT BOOK StORE
Church and olflce supplleo gills
Middleport
99 Mill Sf

RIGGS USED CARS, INC.

THE STORE WITH AHEART
Ph.949 2126
Racine

r -

THE DAILY SENTINEL

&amp;

' .

Ray ~1ggs
Roger Riebel
Chester
St Rt 7
Ph. 985·4100

.

Ba1ley Run Road Rev Emmett
Rawson pgstor Handley Dunn
1upt Sunday school 10 am Sun
day evemng serv1ce 7 30 81ble
teaching 7 30p m Thursday.

DYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHUR

CH, Roger C Turner pastor
Sunday school 9 30 o m Sunday
morning worsh1p 10 30 Sunday
evemng service 7 30

THE SALVATION ARMY I t5

Bu11arnu t Ave Pome roy Envoy
and Mrs Ray W1nrng. off•cers m
charge Sunday ~oltnen meehng
10 o m Sunday school , 10 30
a m Leader YPSM Eloise Adams
7 30 p m solvot1on meeting
Ladles Home League, 12 noon to 2
p m Thursday, prayer mHflng
and B1ble 1tudy Thursday 7 30

pm

MIDDLEPORT
MT. MORIAH BAPTIST Corner
Fourth ond Main, Middleport
Rev Henry Key Jr , postor Sun
day School, 9 30 a m Mrs Ervin
Baumgardner
supl
Morning
worship 10 ,.5 a m

HAZEl COMMUNITY CHURCH

OF

MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAP

liST Corner A$h and Plum No•l
Herrman pastor Saturday even
1ng sarv1ce, 7 30 p m
Sunday
School 10 30om

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
METHODIST CHURCH

NAZARENE Re11 John A Coft
man pastor Sunday School 9 30
a m , Gerold Wells supt Morn
~ng worsh1p 10 30 o m Sunday
evemng wonhip 7 30 Pray er
meeting Wednesday 7 30 p m
RACINE FIRST BAPTI ST Don L
Walker Pastor Ronme Salser
Sunday
Sunday school supt
school 9 30 o m mornmg worship, 10 ~0 a m Sunday evenmg
worsh1p 7 30 Wednesday even
1ng B1ble study 7 30
DANVILLE WESLEYAN Rev R
0 Br own pastor Sunday School
mormng worsh i p
9 30 o m
10 .45 youth serv1ce 6 45 p m
e11en1ng worsh ip
1 30 p m
prayer and praise Wednesday
730p m

Sll VER RUN FREE BAPTIST

Robert T Bumgarner
O~rector

POMEROY CLUSTER
Rev Robert Hoyde n
Rev James Corbitt
CHESTER Wonb1p 9 15 am
Church SchooiiO om
POMEROY Worsh1p 10 30om
Church School 9 30 o m UMYF
6 30p m
ENTERPRISE Worshtp 9 a m
Church School1 0 a m
ROCK SPRINGS Wor!h p 10
om
Church School 9 15om
UMYF6 30p m
FLATWOODS, Worsh1p 11 om
Church Schoo/10 a m

MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER

Rev Robert Bumgarner
HEATH
Roberl Bumgarner
Pastor
Worship 10 30 o m
Church School 9 30 a m UMY F 6

pm

RUTLAND, W1lbur Ht lr Pastor
Worsh1p 10 30 o m Church School
930a m

SYRACUSE ClUSTER
Rev R1ch&lt;1rd E Jorv1s
ASBURY Worsh1p 10 40 a m
Church School 9 30 a m UMW
t 1rst Tuesday B1ble Study Tkurs
7 30p m
FOREST RUN Worshtp 9 o m
Church School10o m
MINERSVILLE Worsh1p 10 am
Church School9 a m
SYRACUSE Chru ch Schoo l 9 30
a m Warsh1p serv1ce 7 30 p m

SOUTHERN CLUSTER

Re11 T1mothy Smtth
Cluster leader
Rev Steven 'l,'•lson
Assoc1ote
BETHANY, (Dorcas), Worsh•p
9 30 a m Church School 10 30

om

CARMEL Chruch School 930
a m Worsh1p 10 30 am 2nd and
lith Sundays
APPLE GROVE Sunday School
9 30 o m Worsh1p 7 30 p m lsi
and 3rd Sundays Prayer meeting
Wednesday 7 30 p m Fe11owsh•p
supper f~rst Saturday 6 p m UMW
2nd Tuesday 7 30 p m
EAST LETART Chruch School
Ist 2nd 3rd Sundays 9 30 o m
Fourth Sunday 10 30 om War
ship 2nd Sunday 7 30 p m ~th
Sunday 9 30 o m Prayer meeting
Wednesday 7 30 p m UMW 1st
Tuesday7 30p m
WESLEYAN (Rac.ne) Sunday
School 10 a m Worsh•p 11 a m ,
Jr UMYF Wednesday 3 30 p m
Bible Study lhursda)f' 7 p m Cho1r
Practice Tkursdoy B p m
LETART FALLS, C~urch Sckool
1st, 2nd, 3rd ~ndoys 10 15 am
~th Sunday 9 15 a m , Worsh1p
1st 2nd, 3rd Sundays 915 am
~th Sunday 7 30 p m

MORNING STAR Worsh1p 9 30

am Church School 10 30 am
M •d Week Service Wednesday 8

pm
MORSE CHAPEL,&lt; Worshp

serv1ces 7 p m youth group
Wednesday 7 p m
ANTlQUITY BAPTIST Re11 Earl
Shuler pastor Sundoy school
9 30 o 0'1 Church serv1ce, 7 p rn ,
youth meeting 6 p m Tuesday B•
bleStudy, 7p m

• RACINE CHURCH OF THE

MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL

tl

a m , Church School 'I 30 a m
PORTLAND Worship 7 30 p m ,
Cllurch School9 30 a.m

SUTTON, Church School 9 30

o m Wonh 1p 1st and 3rd Sundays
10 30om

NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev Richard Thomas
Pastor
Duane Sydenstrlcker
John Dougloa
Assoc•atvs
JOPPA, Wonh1p 10 a m • Chur
ch School 9 o m Prayer Meeting
Wadnesdoy 6 p m
LONG 60TTOM, Sunday school
at 9 30 o m Worsh•p serv•ces at
1 30 p m Bible study ond Youth
meet1ng
ot
6
p m
on
Wednesdays

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF
NORTH BETHEl, Worsh1p
CHRIST IN CHRISTIAN UNION a m Church SchoollO am
Lawrance Manley postor Mrs
Runall Young Sunday School
Supt Sunday School 9 XI a m
Evening
worshtp,
1 30
Wednesday prayer meeting , 7 30
pm

CHURCH

tl

ALFRED Sunday School 9 30
om Worship 10 ..sa m Prayer
meeting Wedne1day 7 AS p m ,
UMW3fdTuesdoy8p m
REEDSVILLE Sunday School9 30
a m Worship 7 30 p m Prayer

Miles Trout
pastor
Sunday
school 10om Steve L1ttle supt
Evenmg servke 7 p m prayer
meehng Thursday 7 p m

CHESTER CHURCHOF GOD

Rev Bobby Porter pastor Sun
day school 9 30 om worship
serv1ce 11 am e11enlng se r111 Ce
7 30 youth serv1ce Wednesday
7 30p m

LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHUR·

CH Ted Jones postor Sunday
school 9 30 a m Roy S•gmon
supt , mornmg worsl'up 10 30
Sunday eventng utrvtce 1 30
m1d week serv1ce Wednesday
7 30p m

SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE

NAZARENE
Rev
Dole Boss
pastor
Bob Moore, Sunday
School supt
Sunday school
clones for all ages 9 30 a m
mornmg worsh•p 10 "'5 a m
NYPS, 6 30 p m evangeltshc ter
v1ce, 7 30 p m
Pra~er antJ
fa stmg Tuesdc;~y
10 am
M•dweek
prc;~yer
serv1ce
Wednesday 7 30 p m
mens
prayer meeting Saturday 7 p m
m1ss•onory meeting
second
Wednesday 7 30 p m

UNITED

FAITH

NON

DENOMINATIONAL Rev Robert
Sm1th pas tor Sunday Schoc;~ l
9 30 am Closs leader Leo Hil l
wonhtps8rv1ce 10 JOg m chur
ch730pm

EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN

CHRIST EICien R Bloke pastor
Sunday School 10 am Howard
McCoy supt Mormng sermon
II o m Sunday ntghr serv1ces
Chmt•an End&amp;avor 7 30 p m
Song serv1ce 8 p m Preo chmg
B 30 p m
Mtdweek Prayer
meehng Wednesday 7 p m Ray
Adams loy leader

MT UNION BAPTIST Sunday

school9 ~59 m Sunday ~wenmg
worship 7 30 p m

TUPPERS PlAINS CHRISTIAN

CHURCH
Eugene Underwood
pastor, Howard Coldwell Jr
Sunday School Supt
Sunday
School 9 30 a m Mornmg Sermon 10 30om . Sunday even•ng
serv1ce 7 p m

lETART

FAllS

UNITED

BRETHREN Rev Freeland Norris
pastor Floyd Norris, sup! Sunday
school, 9 30 o m morn1ng sermon, 10 30 a m Prayer service,
Wednesday 7 30 p.m

CHURCH OF GOD OF PRO·
PHECY 0 J Wh1to Rood off 160.

Rev George Groyle, postorSun
day School 10 a m Arthur Hanson Supt Morning Worship 11
a m Young Peoples service 1
p m E"enlng serv1ce 7 30 p m ,
Wednesday Mid-Week Prayer
7 30 p m , Youth
Serv•ce
meetmg 6 30 p.m. Evening worshJp 7 30p m

CHESTER CHURCH OF THE

NAZARENE Rev Harbert Grata
pastor Worship servka 11 o m
Sunday
and 7 30 p m Sundoy
School 9 30 o m R1chord Borton
1upt
Prayer
meellng,
Wednesday 7 30 p m

BRAOFORD

CHURCH

ChoriH Rullell,

Dorrell Ooddnll poator Sunday
SChool
9 30 am
Leonard
Gilmore flntelder evanir'lg ser·
v1ce
7 30 p m
W.dne1doy
prayer meeting, 7 30 p m

Tue1doy, 7 lOp m

youth min•• tar Bible 1c:hool 9•30
am
morning worthip 10 30
a ""' , evening wOrship 7 30
proyer serv1ce 7 p m Wednes ·

Of CHRIST
Doug Seamon
mlnlst•r Bib~ atuclyo , 9 30 a.m
morning wor~hlp 10 30 a m
evening wor~hip, 7 SO p m

Shular, pa11or Wonhip aervlce,
9 30 om Sunday tehool, 10 30
a m Bible Study and prayer ser·
vice Thursday, 7.3D p m.

Sr

min ltter

Rick Macomber. supt Sunday
school 9 30 a m wontHp ser·
viCe 10 30 am Boble Sludy.

REOIIGANIZED CHURCH OF
JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY
SAINTS Portland Racine Rood
William Roush pastor Denny
evening worship, 7,30 p m Mid·
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD Evans Sundar. School DoriiCtor
week prayer servlcea, Wednet· Rac ine Route 2 The Rev Charlet Sunday Schoo . 9 30 a m Morn·
day 7 30 p m .
HGnd po1tor Sunday 1chool 9 45 •nv war}hlp 10 30 am . Sunday
CHURCH OF CHRIST
Mid o m morning worship 11 a m evening service 7 P m w.dnes
dlapor1 5th and Moln George Evening sarv!cat, Tueldoy and day evening prayer sarvlcat 1 30
Glo1e mlniater, Mlk• Gerlach , Friday 7 30 p m
J pm
BtTHLEHEM IAPTIST. R"" Eorl
supttrln lendent T.,ry Yankey
BEARWALlOW RIDGE CHURC::H

~ge FreHr1ck supt Sunday
morning ser11lce 9 30 a m with
pr.ochlng on f1rst af\d third Sun·

'

.'

•

the Sermonette
"By lbe grace of God I am what I am, and this grace ' 11
toward me was not m vain.'' I Corinthians 15: 10
'!

"
"

CARlETON CHURCH. Krngsbury

Road 1,#ary King pastor Sunday
schMI, t 30 a m evening wor
sh•p 7 30 p m Prayer m"flng

We&lt;inesd'lo 7 30 p m

If any one quality characterized the faith of the Apoetle &lt;
Paul, It was his conviction that God's grace Ia greater than '
man's Sill. The Church - understood here as all the people ol ,:
God -has cons1stenUy endorsed Paul's view of God's grace. •
If any one thing characteriZed the Ufe-&lt;ltyie of Paul the
Apostle, it was an overwhelming compulsion to put sin llllde '1
and to Uve as nearly a perfect Ufe of Christian discipleship u
,r
possible The people of God accept the words "commitment" ,,
and "discipleship" to describe the ongoing reaffirmation ol
what faith in Jesus Christ really amoW!Ia to in dally Ufe
The word which describes Paul's Ufestyle most clearly ill
"excellence " The conunibnent and discipleship to which he • 'l
called the early church was not half-hearted or parttime. It ;\ ;1
was not cheap or easy, rather, costly and difficult. It •";t
demanded that Paul literally spend hlmseU: "Forgetting what)~ ..
Ues behind and straining forward to what Ues ahead, I press ~&lt;if
toward the goal for the prize of the upward call ol God In Clrlsl ' ,:
Jesus." (Phil 3:13-14) '
, II
The word which describes the type of conunitment and
dlsciplelhlp practiced by most of us 19'n-ltyie Christiana Ia
"mediocrity." By and large, Christianity has become a
"hobby" rather than a way of Ufe. If Paul were around today,
he might well dlaown the overwhelming majority of WII
~
But !here's hope for us all Because of God's grace, there Ia
both an opportunity for forgiveness and for a change in
attitude and action among those ol us who have been mediocre (
in our discipleship. Most of 1m is still In front of WI. The ••
results would be astounding if each of ,. were to becmle 1
comnutted to giving nothing leu than hll or her best to Je1111
Christ- from now on! -Rev. RLchard W. Thomas, Northelll
Cluster, United Methodist Olurch

1

OF

CHRIST Jock Perry m1mster Sun
day School 9 30 o m. marntng
church 10 30 a m Sunday evan
lng
ser11lce
7 30
p m
Wadnesdov service, 8 p m

Preaching f1rst and third Sunday•
of month by Clifford Sm1th 9 30
om

NAZ~RENE Rev Er1e Co" tupply
postar Mrs Mary Lathey Sunday
school supt Sundow school, 9 30

"

HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN

Roger Watson
pastor Jessie
Wh1te Sunday school supt Morn
1ng worsh1p 9 30 a m
Sun
doyschool 10 30 am evenmg
ser111ce 7 30 Wednesday Btble
Study 7 30p m

Corner S~:~dh and Palmar, the Ra..,
P•ter Grondal potter, Manni ng
Kloes
superintendent Sunday
School WMPO ~odla provram
1 45 a m Sunday School. 9 15
am
Morning Worstl lp 10 IS
o m
Youth activlllet and
tellowahlp for junior and senior
high students 6 p m Sunday

day
Wodnotday llble study 7 30 p m
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE
KENO CH~H OF CHRIST.

••

CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST

LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH Rev Floyd F Shook.
Rac•ne Roule 2 the Rev . James Vlsitatlon7 lOp m lstThundoy.
pastor Lloyd Wright Sunday
School Supt. Mormng Worth•p
M Muncy pastor. 'Sundoy 1chool
SILVER RIDGE Wors~lp 10 am
9 30 a m Sunday School 10 :10
9 AS a m morning wor1hlp 11 Church School 9 a m
o m , ev~ning worship 730 ' TUPPERS PLAINS Worship 9 a m WednesdaY Prayer and a.
ble Study 7 30 p m . Sunday
Prayer mMIIng Tuesday 730 om Church5(hool10o m
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST
p m , Young ~MQpla't maatlng
....aning worsh•p 7 30 P m • Choir
7 30 p m Ttlundoy
George Frederick, supt S.rvlce Practice Thursday 7 p m
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST,
MIDDLEPORT FIRST IAPTIST , wHkly, 9 30 om on Sunday
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION

...

Located ot Rut land on New L1mo
Rood ne)lt to Forest Acre Park
Re11 Roy Rouse pastor Robert
Musser Sunday School supt Sun
day school 10 30 o m worsl·up '
7 30
p m B•ble
Study
Wednesday 7 30 p m Saturday
ntght prayer serv1ce 7 30 p m

MT MOIIIAH CHURCH OF GOO , Meollng 7 30 p m Tuosday

'

THE ATHENS COUNTY SAVINGS ,
&amp; lDAN
CO. Ph. 9f2.JII3
2tl w. Soconcl
Pomoroy

ICiciM

I For a realau&lt;tlon call the Real M&lt;Coyl
I.O.IMacl McCoy
9B5·3944

Ph 985·1301

MltiQS COUNTY BRANCH

PHONE 992·2156

McCOY AUCTION SERVICE

Furmture

FAITH TABERNAClE CHURCH

-

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY

BAKERSOFGOODBREAD
Huntington, W Va

DeJ~ter Rd Langsville Oh1o Re11
Clyde Ferrell Pastor Sunday
School
11
a m
Saturday
preo chmg service• 7 30 p m
Wednesday evenmg B1ble study
at730pm

ELLIS &amp; SONS SOHIO

I wont you l or

my Volentine, and I won I
take no for gn onswe1 l

!rom
You, Clau

Co of Columbus. 0

Peter Grondall pastor Wdllom
Walson Sunday school supt ,
Sundoy school 9 30 a m , BYF 6
p m Bible study Wednesday 7
p m choir practice Wednesday
830pm

LINDA'S LADY FAIR BEAUTY SALON

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
Nai1onw1de Ins

supt
morn-

POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST Rev

.

Ph 992 5130

Pomeroy

BAPTIST

Casto pastor Sundgy School
9 30 a m evening worsh1p 7 30
Thursday e11enmg prayer serv•ce
7 30 p m

Mtddleport, Ohto

REUTER-B"OGAN INSURANCE
SERVICES
E Main

Pomeroy

BIG JIM'S PLAZA

SMALL ENGINE SALES II. SERV ICE
Moddleparl Ph 992 3092
098 Lotus! Sl

21~

John F Fultz

RUTLAND FIRST

CHURCH- Drewy Gore
Sundoy School 9 30 a m
Ing worship, 10 ~5 Q m

THE HILAND CHAPEL George

GROCERIES II. GENERAL
MERCHANDISE

To Jane -

Mulberry Hu1ghts Road Pomer oy
Pastor Gerard Seton Sobboth
School Supertntendant
Clara
Mcintyre Sabbath School, Sotur
day ofternoon at 2 00 w1th Wor
sh1p Serv•ce following at 3 15

MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC.

WAID CROSS SONS STORE

,

RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD

Rev James D Guynn pastor
Sunday school 10 a m Sunday
worship II o m Sunday even ing
sei"\\ICe, 7 p m Wednesday wor
sh1p servtce 7 30 p m

Th1rd Ave the Rev William Knit
tel pastor Ronald Dugan Sun
doy School Supt Classes for all
ages eventng serv•ce 1 30 B1ble
s1udy Wednesday 7 30 p m
youth serviCes Friday, 7 30 p m

OF CHRIST 200 W Ma•n St Jerry
, Pgul mm1ster phone 992 7666
Conservof•ve non mstrumenlol
Sunday worsh1p 10 o m B1ble
study 11 a m worship 6 p m
Wednesday B1ble study 7 p m

Wednesduy

I frmolhy
2 1·8

WILKINSON'S

M1ke and Sue

'

5 I 28

•

To My Wife, Ann, ••

6.
. 8.
10.
12.
14.
16.

4 I 18

Tuesday

,

Thtrd St

1.
3.
5.
7
9.

Monday

I Th essalomans

BRADBURY

am Sunday school 10om Mrs
Sampson Hall supt

Roy W W1nlng officer m charge
Sunday
10 om
Hol.ness
meetmg
10 30 o m
Sunday
School Young Peoples Leg ton 7
pm
Thursday , 1 to 3 p m
Lod1es Home L&amp;:ogue 7 p m Prep
classes

SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST

ond Conely Hill, Chest•r

THE STORE WITH "All KINDS OF
STUFF" - FOR PET&lt;, STABLES. LARGE
&amp; SMALL ANI';IAL S. LAWNS AND
GARDENS

Sunday
Cploss10ns

serv1ces 9 30 o m Sunday School
10 30om

Sunday school

pm
THE SALVATION ARMY Envoy

Preochmg 9 30 a m fnst and se
cond Sundays of eock mon1h
thtrd and fourth Sundays each
month worsh1p servtce ot 7 30
Scnp1u1v5 Stllecled by The Ameuca n Bltlle Soctcly
Copyright 1977 Ketsler A~ert1s1 ng Serv ce Strasburg V1tg1n1a
m PrayerandB1bleStudy
Wednesday evenmgs at
_..__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 7p 30

'
992·2164

s bhnd?

kmd of car someone dnves or th e cost of the1rclolhes
or the lavishness of thea home It IS th e person who
counts
A blmd person knows fa 1th lao- becQ. use he has
needed 11 desperately bec.1use he s. had to grope for 11
because 11 s become verv limg•blc vt&gt;ry prec1ous
when fmall y he has found 11
We could take lessons

.

J"W. Main 51

who

In a dark world people come to the truth by the
sound of YO Ices Ihe feel oflh1ngs the lauch of oth ers
Much ofhfe IS a sham Ha 1rslylt!s don 1matter, nor the

r=o==--=--__,1

T1res of lh'e Cold Weather and No Place to
Go? It's Spr~ng in Hubbards Green Houses.

DERN SUPPL

to someone

You may fmd thai they "see" a lui more than we

do 1

Altu 15 wonderful }'eon
or momag• I m shll head
o~er ~eeh 1n love w 1lh you!

15.
Lots of lollage pl~nts lnd &lt;ICf,. plus blooming plonts
tn pols 1nd honurng boskets. 0,0.. dolly' to 5 p m ond
Sunday ottern0011 Whtle yov•ro hero roglstor for lht

tal k

Someone who depends upon lh etr fmg ert1ps to get
the message and knows th alli's late afternoon only
when the warm sun ktsses the1r ch eeks~

(limit 16 Words-Sizes IUustrated Below)

11.
13.

.!'111 ~~· I nti ml tl'l~ 411'1~~~~ 110 ~.li~III!IIUtl ~
I .Ni I ll Ill~ on IN \\ITNtSM "llt:UI':m I
111111 !~ rtlllllll Nlllll!tr!htil m, llllm• IIWI t"IU~fl
I'l l~ ~• I lot l1 atrj,,,.j 111 I uh1111 h11~ lll lu lh\~
~ ~ ~ • " l'llh
Jul y I 111111 ll~rr) \ .1'1111111

Ever talk, really

$1.00 SENTINEL VALENTINE AD.

Smtih Thanks for
molr:1ng Sc1ence fun lo learn
We lh1nlr: yau re 10p1l

MIDDLEPORT

Wtll•om
Chun:h

9 30 a m Richard Voughan supt CHRIST Mr Donald Roley pastor
Mornmg worsh1p, 10 30
Sunday school 9 30 a m wor
SYRACUSE Mormng wonh tp 9 sh 1p sarv1ce 10 30 a m Sunday

Near long Bottom Edsel Hart
pastor Sunday tchool , 10 am
Church
7 30 p m
prayer
meetmg 1 30 p m Thursday

Corner of Sycamore and Second
Sts Pomeroy The Rev W1lllam
Middlesworth
Paslor
Sunday
School at 9 45 o m and Church
Serv1ces 11 a m
SACRED HEART Rev Father
Paul D Welto n pastor Phone
m 2825 Saturday a11en1ng Moss
7 30 Sunday Mass 8 and 10o m .
Confess ton Saturday 7 7 30 p m

ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH
Pine Grove The Rev
Middlesworth Pastor

10 30

5T PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH

SAY "I LOVE YOU" WITH A

Mu

HARRISONVIllE

BURLINGTON SOUTHERN BAP

Sunday evening youth Chnstlon
Endea vor, 6 p m worsh1p ser
vice, 7 p m Wednesday evenmg
prayer meet ing and B1ble study
730pm

Ow•ght L Zovttz:, dtredor

PRESBYTERIAN
Rev
Err,ast
Stricklin pallor Sunday church
schoo l 9 30 o m , Mrs Homer
Lee , supt
morning worshtp

liST CHAPEL Route 1 Shad eSunday
Pastor Bobby Elkins
school 5 p m Sunday worshtp
5 45 p m Wednesday prayer ser
VICe730pm

Wr rouldn t hove p1&lt;ked o
n1ter pcm of porenh 1n the
worldl Hove a Happy Val
en,tul e 1 Dayl

m

Sunday school supt Sunday
achool 9 lO o m morning wor
sh1p ond communton 10 30 o m ,

UNITED PRESBYTERIAN
MINISTRY OF MEIGS COUNTY

NAZARENE Corner Umon and
Mulberry Rev , Clyde V. Henefer
son pastor Sunday school , 9 30
a m Glen McClung supt morn
mg wonhtp 10 30 o m evenmg
serv1ce 7 30 mid week seNice
Wednesday 7 30 p m
GRACE EPISCOPAL The Rev
Harold Deeth rector Church ser
vices 10 30 o m Holy commu
nlon first Sunday of month chur
ch school 10 30 am for nursery
through 12
R1chard Evanson pastor Btble
school 9 :,10 am worsh•p 10 30
om adult worth lp service and
young peoples meet ing 7 30
p m Combmed 81ble study and
prayer meatmg Wednesday 7 30

Searching for the clever way to say "I Love You?"
Our Happy Valentine Ads will he published on
February 14, and offer you a truly unusual way to
proclaim your love and best wishes.

To Mom and Dad •••

7p

Pomeroy Harrisonville Rd Don
kenn~ pastor 81U McElroy,

o m
morning worship 10 30
a m
Sunday
evangeliStiC
meeting
7 30 p m Prayer
meeting Wednesday 1 30 p m

POMEROY CHURCH OF THE

POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST

Shout Them from the Classifieds!

D

School service,

ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST,

Assassination committee wracked
By DANIEL F. GILMORE
WASHINGTON (UPI) The future of Richard
Sprague as chief counsel of
the House assassmahons
committee left the panel
embroLied today m an
acnmomous tug-of-war
between Its defiant chamnan
and equally rebellious
members
Chairman Henry Gonzalez,
D-Tex , said Thursday he was
firmg the controversial
Philadelphia prosecutor
"because of a consistent
attempt to undernune my
chairmanship and malign me
personally" with the staff
Gonzales ordered Sprague
to clear out his desk bv 5 p m

Sunda~

10 om ' Prayer meeting, Thurs
day 7 p m Sunday e~ten l ng ser-

LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN. day . 730pm ,

CAlVARVIIIlE CHURCH 26 N
Bruce Smith, pallor Wallace
Second, Middleport, pastor, Cur·
Damewood Supt 81ble School
t 30 o m Praoching ..rv lca 1 t l1 Stephen ehurch tchool, 9 30
a m •• preaching NtVICH , 10:30
10 45 a m No evening "''"'Ice
HYSEll RUN FREE METHODIST a m and 7 30 p m Wednatdav
evenmg 81ble study, 1 30 p m
CHURCH Rev Herbert A•ling
postor Sunday School 9 30 a m
INDEPENDENT HOliNESSCHUR· :
CH INC - Carner Fourth ond
Morn ing 1ervk e, 10 30 a m.
LlncDin Sts
Middleport, Rev
youth
aarv lce
6 45 p m
0 '0•11 Manley, pastor, Sony Hud·
Evongall5hc Sfrvice 7 30 p m
Prayer meeting, Thursday 7 30 son Sunday School su~rlnten ­
,~
dent Sunday sthool 9 30 a m ,
pm
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION ot evanmg worshtp, 7 30 p m
Bo ld Knob
Rev
Lowrance prayer and praise service,
Gluesencamp Sr , pastor Roger Wednesday , 1 30 p m
THE PEOPLES CHURCH OF
Willford Sr Sunday school supt
'
Sunday sc:hool 9 30 a
Sunday POMEROY - Corner Main ond
th1rd floor over
evenmg serv1ce 7 p m Prayer Court Sh
Lighthouse R•stourant
Henry
meetmg , Tuesday 7 30 p m
Cook pattor Sunday school 10
Ernest Deeter don leader
Youth meeting Wednesday 7 30 o.m mornmg worsf11p 11 o m
service ,
7 30
p m w1th Don and Martha eventng
•
Wednetdoy evening service
Meadows leaders
7 30 lnterdenom•notlonol, full , ... ~,
WHITES CHAPEL Coolvd le RO
•
Rev Roy Deeter, pastor Sunday gospel
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD school9 30 o m worsh1p serviCe
Sunday
10 30 a m Btble st udy ond prayer Pastor Oenn1s Bolas
School 10 o m wonhlp s.ervlca,
ser111Ca Wednesday 1 30 p m
11 30 a m and 7 30 p m Prayer
RUTLAND
'
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST meel•ng Wedn•sdoy 7 30p m
RUTLAND APOSTOliC CHURCH
Carl Peak pastor B•ll Brown
Sunday school supt
Sunday OF JESUS CHRIST, Thomas l
pastor B1ble study
school 9 30 om wonh1p and Holmes
communton 10 30 am Evening Saturday 7 30 p m Evangell1tiC
serv•ce 7 30 p m Regular board p m prayer m"tmg Tuetday
7 30 p m B•blv Study Thurtdoy
meet1ng, Saturday 7 p m
RUTLAND COMMUNITY CHUR 730pm
POMEROY
WESLEYAN
CH Sunday School 9 30 o m
HOLINESS - Harrisonville Road,
worshtp urviCe
11
o m
pastor
Edison
Wednesday prayer meet 1ng, 7 30 Dewey Kmg
p m youth servtces Sunday , 7 Wea11rtr ass1stant Henry Eblin
Jr Sunday school sup! Sunday
p m Sunday mght worsi11p 7 30
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE school 9 30 o m morning war
ship II o m Sunday eYanlng
NAZARENE Rev Lloyd D Gnmm
Jr pastor Sunday school 9 30 serv•ce, 1 30 prayer meet•nG
Thursday 7 30 p m
a m worsh1p serv1ce 10 30 o m
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF
Broodcost hve over WMPO young
GOO - Not Pentecostal Rev
peoples
service
6 45
George 01ler pastor Worship
evangeliStic serv1te 1 30 p m
Prayer meet1ng Wednesday 7 30 serv1ce Sunday 9 "'5 a m , Sun
p m MISSIOnary me&amp;f lnQ 7 30 day school ll o m worshtp sar
VICil 7 30 p m Thursday prayer
p m f1rst Wednesday of month
meetmg 7 30 p m
MASON COUNTY
MT HERMON Umted Brethren
MASON FIRST BAPTIST, Second
Church Sunday School 9 30 a m
and Pomeroy Sts , Ston Cra•g
Worship ser11 lce 10 45 a m
pastor Sunday school 9 ~5o m
worsh1p serv1ce 11 a m lrommg Praochtng serv1ces every Sunday
o lternot•ng w1th C E Wadnesdov
un1on 6 30 p m evenmg wor
sh1p serv1c:a 7 30 p m M1d Week prayer meet1ng 7 30 p m RaY
pastor
Oavtd
prayer serv 1ce Wednesday 7 30 James Leach
•.
....
Holter loy leader
pm
JEHOVAH
S
WITNESSES
1
mile
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST P
0 Box 487 M1ller Sf Mason W east of Rutland 1unct•on of Route
124 and Noble Summ•t Rood (T.
Vo Sunday S1ble S1udy 10 o m
Worshtp 11 o m and 7 p m B1ble 174) Sunday B•ble leclure 9 30
Watchtower study
10 30
Study Wednesday 7 p m Vocal o
'
a m Tuesday B1ble study 1 and
mUSIC
8 15 p m Thursday theocratic
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST Cor
school
7 30 p m
serv1ca
ner of ' second end Anderson
meeting 8 30 p m
Mason
Pastor Wolter Cloud
HOPE BAPTIST - 570 Grant St
Sunday school 9 ~5 a m warsh1p
M•ddleport Bobby Elkins pastor
service 11 o m and 1 30 p m
Sunday Sci1ool 10 am , worshtp
Weekly 81ble study Wednesday
ser111ce 11 o m evenm~~t serv1ce
730pm
MASON AS5EMBL Y OF GOD 7 30 p m Thursday prayer
meehng and Btble study 1 30
Duddtng Lone Mason W Vo
Chester Tennant Pastor Sunday pm
RUTLAND FREEWill BAPTIST :
School 9 45 a m
Chtldren s
Church 6 45 p m Young Peoples Church - Leland Holey pastor
Servtce 6 45 p m EvangelistiC Sundoy sct!oo l 10om eYen1ng
SfHYI Ce
7 30 p m
Pr ayer
Serv1ce 7 30 p m Women s M1s
s1onary Counc il 10 am first ond me&amp;flng Wednesday 7 30 p m
CHURCH OF GOD of Proph«y
th rd Tuesdays Pro yer and Btble
located on the 0 J Wh1te Road
Study Wednesday 1 30 p m
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST off htghway 160 Sunday School
Supermtendent John
10 o m
IN CHRISTIAN UNION The Rev
W•lltom Campbell, pastor Sunday Loveday F1rst Wednesdoy mght
of month CPMA serv•ces setond
School 9 30 o m James Hugb_as
Wednesday WMB meehng thmJ
supt evenmg servtce 7 30 ~m
Wedn esdoy evemng p rayer through f1fth youth serv1ce
meetmg 7 30 p m Youth prayer George Croyle pastor
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEl - 570
serv1ce each Tuesday
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH Grant St M1ddleport Rev Bobby
Letort W Va Rt 1 Re11 Charles Elktns Sunday school 10 om
morning worsh1p 11 ...,.emng
Hargraves pa!tor Worshtp ser
Thursday
worsh1p 7 30 p m
v•ces 9 30 a m Sunday school
11 o m e"en)ng . worsh1p, 7 30 evenmg B1ble study and prayer
p m Tuesdoy co ttage prayer meeting, 7 30 p m Aff•l•oted wtth
meeting ond 81b le study 9 30 SBC
a m Worsh1p serv1ce Wvdnas

Carmel News, Wolfpen
By the Day

-.r.•
ii.

News Notes,j'
PI~~;t~

Melvin Circle and son Mark
of Columbus spent the
Mr. and Mrtl. Paul
weekend with his mother I
Mary Circle. Olhers at the and SOIUI of Muon, W. Va.
Circle home on Sunday were were Sunday viaiton ol Mr. • 'I
Mr and Mrs. George Circle and Mrs. Larry Johnlon and ~
and Mr and Mrs. James family also ll'lth Mrs. Gene,. "i
Circle of New Haven, W. Va. Shumate.
}
W •t
be lad
Mrs.
Jack
Elam,
Blll,
;~
beon eve ry "'!~. g
Carolyn, Mrs Paul Darnell, •
• W n nonna 1 We&amp;wacf comes
10 we don't have to wear a Jeff were Monday vllltorl Of ;
sweaterallthetime and wrap Mr.
and Mn. Fred 11
up In a blanket to ,_ to be Tuckerman and Mrs. Eq- .
w 1
•
comfortable. Hoping for a Haning and family.
lltrthl Ruuell l'lllurllad , ;
Change.
Patrick Johnso~ apent home alter apendlN -at '
Saturday night -ith hil dayl with Mr. lllll Mra. Earl )
"
1
grandmother, Eunle Brinker. na.Jl in Ktntucqo.
Mn. Jack Elam lltd Mn., ·'
W. A. Elam IN vlliiiDC witb
Mr. W. A. Elam, IIIIo Ia ill •
1:
You can feel good and stlll holpitalat Marietta.
Mr.
and
Mn.
Doyle
Knipp
.
'
have high blood presaure are
IIJ)IIl4lq
a
lew
daJI
In
,
even if you're young and
apparently healthy Have Cheaapeake wbere Mr.
your blood preture checked. Knapp Ia doing dry nlllnl-

J

"

�•
•
L
.
eVISIOn
og
Tel

for assistance totaled 135,~
in 1976 - an increase of 171
per cent over 1975 figures.
The Ohio State Patrol
presently maintains 9)2
mobile and 60 hase CB radios.
"There are signs posted at
the state line advising
motorists that we monitor
Channel 9, " Col. Reiss said.
"WehopethatnewCB license
plate will serve as an added
reminder to all motorists that
we stand ready to receive and
act upon their calls for
assistance."

,_..The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Feb. 11, 197'7
THE SUCiHTEST

SAYS
WAS, HER

SHE SAID, I!IETWfEN
O~t MILL MAD

SHOT: ..

DIRECTOR

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 11 , 1977
5:1»--Big Valley 3; My Three Sons 4; Gunsmoke 6 ;
Brady Bunch 8; Mlsier Rogers 20,33; Star Trek is.
l : ~Adam- 12 4,13; News 6; Family Affair 8; Elec.
, .Co. 20,33,
6:1»--News 3,4,6,8, 10. 13.15; ABC News 6 ; Zoom 20.33.
6 : 3~NBC News3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
,. CBS News 8,10; Vgetable Soup 20; VIl la Alegre 33.
7:1»--Truth or Cons. 3: To Tell the Truth 4: Bowling tor
Dollars 6; $128,000 Question 8; News 10; To Tell the
Truth 13; My Three Sons IS; Ohio Journal 20 ·
· . '
Marshall University RepOrt 33.
~:~-~~~~:~:~,,~~~~ 3; Gong Show 4; Candid Camera
6;
.
8; MacNeli -Lehter Report 20,33;
·Andy
lams 10; Name That Tune 13; Pop Goes
the Country 15.
~ : DO--Sanford!. Son 3.4. 15: Donny &amp; Marie 6,13; Coce
, R 8; Washington Week In Review 20,33; Ten Who
• Dared 10.
8::~Rockford Flies 3,4,15; Wall Street Week 20 33.
li_l'l':-Movle "The Last Dinosaur" 6,13 : Sonny &amp; Cher
,., 8, 10; Documentary Showcase 33; Lowell Thomas

/
CAPTAIN EASY
wO~DER

EASY, NOW THAT I HAVE THIS
CtiANCE TO ~PEAK TO 'IOU ALONE TH·THEP:E'S !IOMETHIN(l l WANT
t-r::=;::""~=--~ TO SA'/~

THATS NOT

HOW THE

wHAT

&amp;OARD OF DIRECTORsWILL LIKE ·IT IF I.I&lt;KEE
111{1 PICK ~A~' 0"1. ME
TO &amp;OSS THE COMPANYJ'

Z'M

IT JU~T OCCURRE D
TO ME ,. IF DADDY DID
CHOOSE ONE OF YOU

WONDEfl iNG
~

OVER THE OTHER TO
RUN M&lt;KEE INDUSTRIES-

AISOUi

AR!! YOU SURE

YOU

AND WASHAND SHIVAUN
. SHAFTOE!

.

I WANT TO

HEAR THIS~

At£\:1

;...... Rem-ember!i 20.

tacular 10 ..
S:()O--Wide World of SpOrts 6,13; Space: 1999 •.
6:1»--Lawrence Welk 8; News 10.
6 : 3~ NBC News 3.15; News 4,6; CBS News 10; ABC
News 13.

7:1»--Muslc Hall America J ; Lawrence Welk 4,15; Hee
Haw 6,8; $128,000 Question 10; Let's Make a Deal
13; WMUL Program Previews 33.
7 :~Dolly 10; In Search oll3; Jeanne Woll With 33.
8 :1»--Emergency 3,4,15; Blansky's Beauties 6.13:
College Basketball 8; Mary Tyler Moore 10; Great
Performances 33.

6,13; Bob Newhart 10.
9:1»--Movle "The Wild Party" 3,4,15; Starsky &amp; Hutch
6,13; All In the Family 10.
9 : 3~AIIce 10; Amerlc.ana 33.
10:1»--Most Wanted 6.13; Carol Burnett 8.10; VIsions
33.
.
i 1: 0~ - New s 3,4,8,10, 13,15; Movie "OSS 177- Double

8 : 3~ Fi sh

Agent" 6.

Hartman 3; Track&amp;. Field 4,15; Peter
Marshall 8; Movie "The Adventurers" 10; College
Basketball 13; Janak! 33.
12:00-Mary Hartman 3.
12: 3~Mary Hartman 3.
1:DO--ABC News 6.
1: 15--Sammy &amp;. Co. 6.

11 : 3~-Mary

SPECIAL TAG - Col. Adam G. Reiss, Ohio State Highway Patrol
superintendent, is affixing the first CB CH-9license plate to a patrol car . Each
marked patrol car equipped with a CB radio will display this plate on the rear of
the vehicle to inform motorists the Highway Patrol monitors CB emergency
channel 9.

·

9- ~ulncy

3,4,15; The Way If Was 20.
14\DO--Execullve Suite 8, 10; News 20: Pau l Nuchlms •

McBride claim?

u•JJ

13~~Lock Stock &amp;. Barrel 20.

1J::jl0--News 3,4,6,8,10.13.15; Monty Python's Flying
~. I reus 20; Slack Perspective on the News33.
,..,~Johnny Carson 3,4,1S; SWAT 613 · .Movie
:!'"Jailhouse Rock " 8: Mary Hartman 10; A'st News
-33:
12:1»--Movle "The Incident" 10; Janak I 33 .
12 : 4~Mod Squad 6; Ironside 13.
l :1»--Midnlght Special 3,4,15.
; •~News 13.
! ; 3~News 3.
f:oo-Movle "Games" 3.

.:.we'LL OI&lt;LL HiM
... AI'TEI2 AH

LPiTE~

MAKE ONE OF T140SE
H~D-Pl~ES FU"' 'IM!

union victory .
Pl'ITSBURGH (UP!) Uoyd McBride has broken
his silence and claimed
victory over insurgent Ed
Sadlowski in the election for
the United Steelworkers
presidency.
.
McBride, 60, who promised
to continue the policies of
retiring President I.W. Abel,
cautiously waited until
Thursday - thl'l!l' days after
the balloting - to claim
victory. His own final tally
showed an 86,000 vote edge
with about 562,683 ballots
counted woofficlally . He said
the returns were from 4,772,
or 90 per cent, of the union's
5,301\ocals.
" We have won the
election," McBride told
reporters in St. Louis, where
his office was piled with
paperwork neglected during
the long, bitter campaign.
"Sadlowski has been rejected
by all sections of our u.nion .
"I think my election can be
construed as approval of the
union's present leadership .
Sadlowski linked me ·with
Abel, so he made it the

.4 ;30-Movle "Great Guns" 3.

Moo-Saint 3.
••
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 12,1977
) :oo--sunrlse Semester 10.
,:~Fun for Everyone 6; TV Classroom 8; Kentucky
" Afield 13.
: 7:1»--Saturday Report 3: Dusty's Treehouse 4; Eddie
" Saunders 6: Treehouse ClubB: U.S. Farm RepOrt
~ . 10; Gilligan 13.7:15--Davey &amp; Goliath 6.
z: 3~Bullwlnkle 3; Children's Theatre 4; Valley of the
.~ Dinosaurs 6; Dusty's Treehouse 8; Man from COS I
.10: Oddball Couple 13; Sesame St. 20.8:3~Plnk
Panther 3,4,15; Jabberjaw 6.13; Clue Club 8,10;
Mister
20.
~ : oo--Sc:ootly -'cloo, Dynornutt 6,13; Bugs Bunny-Road
Runner · Bugs Bunny&amp;. Friends 10; Sesame St.
20.
10 :00-Speed Buggy 3,4, 15; Tanan 8,10: Once Upon a
Classic 20.
3o---Monster Squad 3,4,1S; Krofft Supershow 6, 13;
Batman 8,10; Zoom 20.
l:lJ; ~~:Spa,ce Ghosts, Frankenstein Jr . 3,4,15: Shazam ,10; Consumer SurvlvaiKII 20.
:30--Big John, Little John 34,4,15; Superfr)ends 13;
Marble 6; Characteristics of ' Learning
lsabllltles 20.
lw.I"!W"--La·no ot the Lost 3.4.15; Hot Dog 6; Fat Albert
I News for . Kids 13; Crockett's VIctory

' UlH'I1AN IU~ l~ ltc

ITTL.E ORPHAN ANNIE-THEY'RE OFF TO SEE TH.E BLIZZARD

LITTLE ORPHAN AMNII- AIR BOUND
n•s HAADltl

THE !lEA!~-· IT'S A
SWILL FinD. BUT I

6AY· - 1'11\lT-T~f

0!1

AADIO IS

KNOW IT wELL ··IF

AGA~--

yjE

CAN JUST ltOI.D •

THE l!t'Afol WE'LL BET
HER .DOWH EASf··· '

..,'!::i!f---1\R~•'s SP.,rts World 3:

A SKINNY

YOU WANT" MY

WITH HUSE: SCRAWI.rf _,...J.E6S ~;tPE:RMISSION 1b

IT WAS AN
HOIWRTOBE
CHOSENrr

Amer ican Bandstand 13;
Muggsy 4,15; College Basketball 8; Soul Train 6;
Gomer Pyle, USMC 10: American Bandstand 12;
"1 Crop Game 20.

W~V¥\t:

KNOCKOFF-

PIDN'nrHER ANI&gt; eRJNG
HE~ 1-lERe rr-

Prooram Previews 33,
: !· : ~Point of VIew 6: Next Generation 13.

• 'i :oo-:-Marshall Basketball Highlights 3; Antique
: :; FurnltureWorkshop6; Movie "The Young, the Evil
:,: and the Savage" 13; Music City USA IS.
• 2' ~ollege Basketball 3.4. IS; Outdoors with Julius
'J· Boros6) Antique Furnlhlre Workshop'11.
~:00-Mecilx 4; ARA'~ Sports World 6: ViewpOint 8;
, CBS Youth lnvltatlonai .. Skateboardlng 10.
3G---'Pro Bowling 6;13; To Be Announced 8; Call It
Macaronl10 4:~utdoors wllh Ken Calloway 8:
,
Urban Leogue 10; WMUL Program Previews 33.
•- ~ : 3~olf 3,4,15; YMCA Activities 8; Sport~ Spec-

llUT, WINNIE:1_YOU'Re JNSANE
IFYOI.JIHINK GRE60RY
KON'TDS WILL RENT 10
Vc5 ... AFTER WHAT WE
DID 10 RUN HIM OUT
Of' 10WN'!

.aM1.. ~•~~"'

IM NOi RICH eYANY M.&amp;INS,
HAVE AB/6 HOUSE AND

em- I

It-, THOMAS JOSEPH

I NEED SOMEONE 10 LOOK

DOWN
1 One

,4CROSS

. AFTEf21HINGO! ,· -----..:..
YOU ...

Soviet lake
1 told you
sol

Muske'teer
! Queen (Sp.)
3 " Rags to
riches" hero
4 " 02" lion
5Son of
Poseidon
6 Endearing

lt:Brain
IV

tissue

~l'Ac19r, ·
'. Gilbert -

tenn

wds.)

.....,

GASOLINE ALLEY
The Almanac

Papa. speak t'
lj€r po' mix' up
li'l chi!'!

BORN LOSER

AU. ~y u;,Jb r'~ liE~
ASKI~ WAI AND I

fiE~,

BRUTUS I WHAT
T1Mr3 IS IF

!(EE:p b&amp;TTI~' ~FFfREt-ll'

On this day iu J1i~Lury·:
In 1937, General Motors
United Press International agreed to recognize the
Today is Friday, Feb. 11, United Auto Workers Union
the 42nd day of 1977 with 323 ( CIO) as the bargaining
.to follow.
agent for GM workers.
The ·moon is between its
In 1945, President Franklln
last quarter and new phase. D. Roosevelt, British Prime
The morning stars are Minister Winston Churchill
Mercury and Mars.
and Soviet dictator Josef
The evening stars are Stalin ended a weeklong
Vellllll, Jupiter and Saturn. World War II conference at
Those born on this dste are Yalta.
under the sign of Aquarius.
In 1965, U.S. and South
American inventor Thomas Vietnamese planes staged the
Alva Edison was born Feb. first bombing raids on North
11, 1847.
Vietnam in retaliation for a
Viet Cong attack.

'iJ!}\lM l]}'it

"'

WIN AT BRIDGE
Old way prove~ bilt way

I

DRt:d

Pass I '
Pass
Pass

5t
Paas

Pass

5•

Pass
Pass

7'

Opening lead - A •

BARNEY

COMEV·ISIT

AG'IN REAL
SOON,GALS

WE SHORE WILL,
PATOONI E JUNE

I'LL GIVE PATOONIE
JUNE CREDIT- -SHE DON'T NEVER
BAD-MOUTH

NOBODY

. "'EP·· A PLUMB

BORESOME FEMALE
IF THAR EVER

wuz

I
[ _hJ I t
-n
]
t
LY¥W.LS

BUESAD ~"'l.,.--,1
_A

WHAT THE SANI:'WICH
MAN WA':J .
Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
gested hy the above car1oon.

A= t~J..,....,=rL""""_~J l . LLUJ"

(,Answers tomorrow)

y,."''"'
1

' ·•v·~

.lumbles: YOUNG

l

TIGF.~

SPONGE PALATE

An'iwf"r: f-low the animal r.1eeder· accumul11ed his
'w•~Hh · -O VEil

."

·-

byHonriArnoldandBobloe

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each sQuare, 10 fOtm
. tour ordinary words.
&gt;

. .....

• 1 .. ...

be reached after Nwth
NORTH
responds with a negatlve;1~
• 9z
notrump.
:l ~
U76Z
North 's two-notr")Tip
• A 9 75
response followed by the flise
• 872
from three .hearts to four
hearts are normal. saoftb
WEST
EAST
might well follow up by "'~­
•J3
.1075
ly
bidding six hearts, but ihm
•t
•JB
is
some chance for North ''fh
.KJBZ
tQI061
• AJ9 613
• K Q 10 5 hold the ace of diamondt. •111
any event, assuming Norlh is
SOUTH (DI
a
good player, South raft Ill.AKQ864
ford to bid five clubs. ·!
'A KQ 1053
North knows that this is '1!11
t3
effort to reach six or seren.
East-West vulnerable
He has shown nothing at li)I.I!P
to this itolnt so he bids-five
We11 Norell East Soutb · · diamonds. This can only iie ina
te:;;reted as showing the, p,
Pass z N. T. Pass 3 '
ar..i South bids seven he~~
tl

~ THATSCAAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~l.,!:l ,.,

'"'
--

By Oswald &amp; Jamo1 Jacoby
There is a convention known
as " Aces over two bids" that ·
rears Its ualy head from time
to time. When you play this.
convention you respond two
notrump to deny holdi"'! an
ace; with one ace you bid th~t
suit; with two a&lt;:e!l you ju~p
to three notrump, and so on.
1be convention would work
beautifully with today's hand
wh~~ South could bid two
spades and jump to ~even
hearts after partner responded with three diamonds to
show that ace. However. with
most hands the normal
.reapondi"'! system wort• out
much better . .But' even with
' this hand the grand slam can

LlENERATII)NS
.

t

llo'lm-

plirated and controversial
new duplicate rules concerns
the correction of scorea .
Under the old rules, if the
IICOre waa entered aa four
spadi!S making .five and both
sides agreed later on that it
was four lfllldes IJ1&amp;kina •JUst
four , the ICOre could be' blrrected. The new rule will be
explained tomorrow .
(Do you htvt a qunllon
lor lhe tKptrta? Write "Aal&lt;
the Jacobya" cart ot ·thil
v
n•w•pa(1flr. Tha Jacobyl will
answer Individual qu11q0111
'' -stamped, ltlf-addrtlseo

envelo{1fls ire enclosed.. rite
most lnteresung qu11w0111
wm be uttd in this column
and wut rectlve copitl ot

JACOBY MODERN.I

•

•

7 Note by
Guido
17 Sparoid fish 8 CatUeman
I Place in
II Plaything
offlce
II Chance
11 "Dangerous 1% In manner
abstruse
-McGrew"
14 Lethal
!!Bridal
ZO Klkl qr
symbol
Sandra
2Z Swjss city
ZS
Take
the
.,.

.

" ' 'VOWS

1'f'Siie (Fr.)
:1 On·a

~~,~~

Vi'~ -

·'·".-.
.......
.......-a-!1
..."'nI

.J,t,,lnlerdlct
Jt CoJorleu
• Solicited
~~

llvotes
·M On horse-

'back
.. i.egltimate·""!Y (3 wds.)

!'. ~In

.,',; €Dada
Stink
I 'Sbakespear-.-r:..t~n forest
"1f'Bhlp'l
...' ·blckbone
lttt..,

:w

.

.

1uu 1

Mrs. Frances (Knopp)
Saunders
formerly from here
Yeatenlay's Auwer
had
a
kidney
transplant at
%1 Large
29 Vermont city
University
Hospital.
Her
container 30 Brandon
brother,
BW'
Knopp,
was
the
!Z Take
Dedonor, both are doing nicely.
courage
31 Muim
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Glson
(2 wds.)
32 Stairway
and daughter Robin of
%3 Neighbor
poet
Columbus spent the weekend
of Greece 35 Smell Uke
with the Bob Alkires.
Z4 Traduce
an old
Mr. Hlel French received
!5 Time
stogie
word
hls brother, David
period
37 ShrewFrench of California, had
:1 Be quick
mquse
passed away.
·
David Carr and son, Lima,
Ohio, visited Mr. and Mrs.
Earnest Carr over the
f--+--+--+-1--t--t weekend.
It is reported Guy Bolin
who is in a rest home near
f.o-1-t-; Springfield, is progressing
slowly.
1-+-+----1 Mr. and Mrs. Clinton
-+-+-t--1 Gilkey are spending two
weeks in Clearwater, Fla.
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Babe
Whaley and Mr. and Mrs.
Don Updegraff:
Camess (Tiny) Leedy, who
-1--t--1 had a kidney apd his sjlleen
removed, because of a sled
--1---+-+-:-+-+-+-; accident, is home now and
::::-+-+-+----1 doing fine.

CINCINNATI (UPI) - Joe

•

t "" One leiter limply atandl lor another., In thi•

11mpile tAt.

Henderson, a 30-year old
Ia righthanded pitcher who was

" llled for the three L's X for the two 0 s, &lt;tc. 81 ng 1e e ers. th
d
· t'h d formation of the wordl are all e earne run average
I
h
'"" .,..trophel, t e en&amp; an
·
cham 1
f th An' 1 ·

.. ]tints E ch day the cnde lett era ore different.
~ on o
e
1er can
·• n · 1
.
A.ISOclatlon last year, has
'" "
CJtYPTOQUO'I'ES
signed his 1977 contract with
'.v,"DX MYKI PHJX OMJX
EXMEKX the Dnclnlliti. Reds, club
#'
officials announced
;~~ZMNA
KHAX
C DMNGX HG . ZDXY Thursday.
,.
Hendenon had a 7-3 record
IIH t.
' "'
NIIFXG
PDXJ . - and a 2.31 ERA for the
~~:r I&gt; X , 0 M G.G
Jndllllapolis Indians in 1976,
·•.--'"Qc· O N H X K _ D X C p p X N
appearing In 54 games, all but
one in relief. lie received' a .
'"
dl , c.,
11 M06T PEOPlE ARE ABOUT A.~ late-season prmnotion to Ihe
'" ,,!~ ~1
UP '111Elllo MINDS TO RE. Reds and had a 2-U recv•·d . ·
BArr I

.l

,..

;cxE

l"'ln.w.,.

AIIRABAM IJN....,-..

Last day to pay Real Estate Tax,
Trailer Tax, and purchase Dog
Tags, is Feb. 19, at 12:00 noon.
Books, will close at this time to add
Penalties to unpaid Taxes.

MEIGS COUNTY TREASURER,
GEORGE M• .COLLINS

Special p

entplan created
· to eJp lessen
colq:weatfier llw.aptof .
.higher electric bills.

Society News

AXYDLBAAXJt
L 0 N G F B L J, 0 W'

During 1976 the Patrol
received 18,459 citizen band
radio ra lls reporting accidents, 9,842 drivers under
the influence reports, and
6,100 calls reporting ,objects
lying in the roadwa;•. Ca lls

FINAL NOTICE

Important Message for Ohio Power Customers

Harrisonville

,

11

road."

!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~

\

'"DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
••
'"

said. "Response time to
emergency si tua tions has
been substantially reduced as
ma ny CB calls are taken
directly by troopers on the

.J

But Sadlowski refused to
accept defeat. His attorney
said Sadlowski would decide
shortly whether to challenge
the legality of the elec'iion.
In Chicago, Sadlowski's
aides angrily rejected the
tally showing McBride the
victor. "We won this one," a ··
spokesman said, !!Jlecifically
questioning returns giving
McBride a virtual · clean
sweep in the South and
Canada. ·
But Sadlowski's attorney,
Joseph Rauh , said in
Wilshington his client had not
yet decided whether · to
challenge the outcome or

" Fathom" 10; To Be Announced 15; WMUL

: ~

"play the Boy Scout role."
COLUMBUS - Ohio State
rules
require
Union
challenges to he filed within · Highway Patrol Col. Adam G.
10 dsys of an election.
Reiss Thursday announced
USW headquarters here specially marked li cense
said with one exception plates will be displayed on the
involving 47 votes in re ar of each patrol ca r
Alabama, "no charges of equipped with a Citi zens
significant election ir· Band Radio. The license plate
regularities were reported ." reads , "CB CH 9."
"It is very evident that the
A winner will not be
announced formally until CB radio has become an
May, alter the uniori has dealt important tool in our en·
with all elections challenges. for cement effort ," Co). Reiss

issue."

::l': oo-Star Trek 3; Movle ,"lsland of Terror" 4; Movie
i

Patrol cars using CB
marked by spe~ial tag

NORMAN, Okla. (UPI).Four University of Oklahoma
assistant football coaches
· were asssigned new positions
in the Athletic Department
Thursday to bring coaching
staff in compliance with an
NCAA requirement limiting
coaching staffs.
The Oklahoma Supreme
Court earlier this month
ruled against the university 's
attempt to overturn the
NCAA limit of eight full-time
assistant coaches. The
Sooners had 10 fulltlme
. assistants.

'

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

Ohio Power Company
Working together is the only way.

allowtng ,,~o ly unc I:!Rfflf'&lt;l nm
it• 11 onninl!l'

·

•·

•

••

�u..,.lbe Dilly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0.LF!Ld!J:&lt;,J:~b. l_l, 19?7

: :· ...

··~ -~"~::

,

The Poet's
.
Corner

Brinl Your
Valentine LM 'Liles
1D Th• Daily Sentinel
Before F'l!b. 12.

FORA

TOMYFAMILY
AND FRIENDS
Deamt O{'les , when

I am

lying
Cold In dealh , please do nol
weep,

'1.00 For
16 Words
·Or Less.· lftlllft•rillllll•

Think of me as one that 's

res ling
In a calm end pea cef ul sleep.

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
OEAOLINIIS

Not let Is htrebr given that
b i ds wil l be recelvtd bV
Columbia Townsh ip Trustees,

Mtlgs Co ., At . 3 lo,._ 12,
Albany , Ott l o 45110 unt il
March 1, 1977 .
Bids will be opened March 3.
1977 II I P.M.
Bids will be rect lved tor One
1917 model 2 ton dump t rwck at

least 9' bed .
~x20 12 ply fron t tires

900x20 12 ply mud and snow

nar tires

Spare· r im
Heavy duty holst
Heavy duty bu m per and front
Tow hooks
Heavy duty clutch

Powtr steer ing

Cab l ights
Oinctlonal signals
Horn
Heater and defroster
W indshie l d
w i per s

and

washtrs
L.H . and R.H. west coast
mirrors

Undercoating
2 speed reer axle
350 cu . In V-1 gas enolne or

larger

\it cab protector w ith 2" wings

Heavy du ty factory reinforced
fnme
7000 lb I beam front u le
Mud flaps
The Board of Townsh lp

TrustHs re$erves the r ight to
r e/ect any or all bids .
By order of the Board of
Twp . Trustees.
Gloria Hutton . Twp , C l ~rk
(2 ] 11 lfC

TO THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT,
PROlATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF SET·
TLEMENT OF ACCOUNTS ,
PROBATE COURT , MEIGS
COUNTY , OHIO

Accounts and vouct't~rs of
the
follow i ng
named
fiduciaries t'tave been filed in
ttl~ Probat~ Court. Meigs
County, Ohio , for approval
and settlem•nt :

5

P . M.

Day

Before

Publ ication .
Cancell•tlons,
correc tions accepted first day of
publicat ion .

REGULATIONS

The Pubt lsher reserves
the r ight to ed it or r eject
an y ads deemed ob .
i ec tl onal. Th e publisher
will not be rtspons lblt for
more than one Incorrect
Insertion .

RATES

For W1nt Ad Service
cen ts per word one ·
inser ti on
M ini mum Charge $1 .00.
14 cents per word three
coMecutlve Insertions .
26 cents r,er word six
consecut i ve nsertlons .
25 Per Cent Discount on
pa id ads and · ads paid
w ith in 10 days

s

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

S2 .00

i rr inimum

for

BLIND AOS

Additional 2Sc Charge
per Advert i sern~nt .

OFFICE HOURS

8 : 30 a.m . to 5· 00 p ~ ..:
Dall y. 11 : 30 a.m . to 12 00
Noon Sa t urday .
Phone today 99 2·2156

NOTICES
ATTN.:II
ALL HOUSEWIVES

All Yard Sales, Rummage ,
Porr;;h and Basement Porch
and Basement Sales, etc
m ust be paid in advance
Ge t yours In early by
stopping by our office at
The Oai ly Sent inel , 111
Court St or writ ing Bo•
729, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
w ith your rem ittance .

CASE NO 20833 - Fourlh

Current Account of Betty
Donovan. Guardian of the
Guardianship of Nettie Sm lt, ,
an incompetent person
CASE NO . 21163 - First
Current Account of Me ~ lorle
Walburn. Guardian of Dana R.
Hamm , an lmcompetent
person

CASE NO . 21882 - First and

Final .Account of Svbll Ebers baC:h, Admlnistratr iK. of tt'te
Estate of 0 . W. Wlsem an .
Deceased .
Unless exceptions are flied
thereto, said accounts will be
for hearing before sa id Court
on the 12tt't day of March , 1977,
at Which t ime sa id accounts
will be considered, and con ·
tinued trom day to day until
flnallv disposed of.
Any person !nterested may
file written exceptions to sa id
accounts or tO m etters per
talning to the execution of the
tru$t, not less than flvt days
prior t o the date set for
hearing .
MANNING C . WEBSTER

JUDGE
COMMON PlE~ S COURT,
PROBATE DIVIS ION
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
(21111tc
Case No . 22021
Gladys Hlyman

Estat@ ol
Oecund .
Nonce 1s hereby giv er-1 that
Emmogen ~
Ho lst ei n
of
Syracuse . Ohio , has been duly
appo in ted Adm l ni s tr&amp;tn ~~: of
th~ Estate of Gladys Haym an .
deceased . la te of Sy racu se,
Meigs County . Oh io
Creditors are reQ Uired to
f i le their cla 1ms w1th said
tudu c iarv
w it h 1n
t hre e
months .
Dated th is 25 th da y of
Jan uary 1977
Mann ing D Webster
Judge
(1 ) 2! 121 '· 11. Jtc

AstraGraph
~

Bernice Bedt Oaol

For &amp;olurdoy, Fe. t2, 1177
ARIEl (Mirch 2t·Aprlltll You

NOW accepting plano stud.nts
beginners, intermediates. od·
vonced students. Call
992.

2270.

NOTICE , Pratt's Meat Mkt .
(Pleasanton Meat Prcx•n•ng ,
Inc.) Custom sloughter~ng , and
processmg .. Retell. wholesale.
No oppoinment necessorv . Call

(61&lt;) 59J.8655, houro , 9:00 Jill

6:00 7 Pomero, Road . Athens ,
GUN SHOOT at the Rac1ne Gun
Club every Sundav . 1 pm
Auorted meats .
RACINE FIRE DeRt. will hove o
Gun Shoot every Soturdor night
6 p.m. at their building ,n
Bashan. Ohio
LAND OWNER seeks hay sharing
orrongment in exchange for
cultivation . 50 ocres hav . Call
area code , 216, 296·2267 or
673.B.-78 evenings collect
SHOOTING MATCtt . jus I off Rt . 7
by -pass near Rode Spr.ngs
Cemetery , every Sunday , 12
noon . Will hove heat
SHOOTING MATCH , Rutland
Leg•on Hall , everv Sunday 12
noon .

MAJOR CHEMICAL
MEETING
Tuesdoy, Feb. 15, 1977
7:30p.m.

GRACE EPISCOPAL
PARISH HOUSE

TAURUS (Apill 20-Moy 201

Eut Motn SlrHt,
Pomeroy, 0 .
Everyone Welcome

GEMINI (M1y 2t-Juno 20)
You're. tactful , cooperative and
considerate today when dealing
with other s These qualllles combine to provide a very rewarding
day tor you .
·

CANCER (Ju111 21·JUIJ 22) Ser·
ving the Interests ol others has
resi dual benefits today, although
your motives are not at all self·
seeking.

LEO (Jul' 23-Aug. 21 If there's
someone you know i'! business
or professionally and you'd li ke
to shore up the relationship, do it
today by arranging something
social.

VIRGO (Aug. 23·11tpt, 221 You

CAPRICORN

(Doc. 22·Jin. 18)
You could be a bit antsy today
b'eca use something you're Involved in is controlled by others.
It will all work out fa1 rly

influences that have an eHect on
building your resources ere still
quite powerful Gains could
come from HY8ral dlreelions

IAGinAIIIUI (Nov. 23·Doc.
11) t.lokelloi)Oinl to wrlle or call
an o'd trten&lt;t from whom you're
"Pirlttd by d i•• ~ f'I Ce . Ae ·
Olloblllhl""' IIIia c:onlact oon be

benetlclll.
;

lo do

REGISTERED NURSE , parttime for
orea preventive health tare
agency . ' Office m Pomeroy .
Must hove mode of tronsporto·
hon, knowledge of area, and
able to vary hours For informo·
lion, coli 992-5912 betwHn
8:00 A.M . and 4:00 P.M. An
Equal Opportunity Employer .

WANTED . MANAGER and ex·
perienced hair stylist wonted
for Steppes ttau Happening
Styling Salon in Athens A uni ·
sex and family ~pe solon .
Good benefit$, Pai vacations.
Educationol progrom . Con f•dentiol interview. Phone (614)
593·77 11 or Box 788, Athens,
Ohio 45701

COAl, limestone. end ca lcium
chloride and calcium brine for
dust control ond special mixing
salt fo r formers . Mom Str&amp;et,
Pomeroy , Oh1o or phone 992·

~·~·--~~----~---

COAL for sale , Open 6 days per
week and ev11mings. For further
information coli (614) 367· 7338.

APPLES, FITZPATRICK 6RCHARD,
STATE ROUTE 689. PHONE
WILKESVILL.!:._(61•)669-3785_. _

329&lt;1.
POTATOES . C. W, Prolfill,
Portlon'd ,

O hio

Phone

Sl3·1254
GOOD QUALITY corn fed freezer
beef. appro~~: . 1000 lbs Steers. ,
Will deliver to your processing
plant , Phone 843·2111

-

STEREO , new om·fm fm stereo·
radio combination $129.'95 or
terms . Call 992-3965.

NtED A

\'lATER SOFTENER 1

DtREct -FABRIC 'SALES

---nt Mlln Street

I'lL tt!-1174

NOnCE!!!
STRIPPING REPAIRING
'
REFINISHING &amp;
UPHOLSTERING

-•lfoOse&amp;iiht'f"
TRUSSES
ANY PIKH
ANY SIZE •

that has 4 apartments and
a recreatl.on
center
furnished wllh a good
PAGEVILLE - 7 rooms, 2
baths, J bedrooms, front
porch and garden In back .
How's for $7500.
THIS SPACE
FOR YOUR AD
THIS COUNTY IS ABOUT
TO MAKE A GOOO
GROWTH. WANT YOUR
SHARE , THEN LIST
WITH THE ONES WITH
THE MUSCLE TO SEll

1

'

MAIN
POMEROY. 0.
NEW
LISTING
Excellenl neighborhood, 6

J:.iPorn~ Landmark

Jock·w. C..rsey, Mgr.
. Phone 91'2·2181

room , Ph story frame
house with 11!2 baths . 3
bedrooms , family room
with open spiral sta1rcase.
Carpeted throughout and
remodeled nicely . N.G.
F. A. furnace. Loca ted on a
corner
lot .
Atl
for

COMPLETE CERAMIC Oulfll,
everything to start your own
business . Phone 992-2718 otter

~~-P~.~ -·.... -- ------ - .

USED

FORESTRY EQUIPMENT.

T1mberjock 240 Skidder, Hough
Skidder Model S7B, David
brown Tractor loader Model
990 ; 60' Bush Metallurg•cal
Chipper ; Contact Don Gra11es

S2J,935.00.
NEW LISTING - This 3
room house has a porch
and basement . Needs some
repair. Located on a large
lot with garden space

bo1hels. Phone (614) 667·3967
before 9 a.m. R. Cheval ier.

Ask;ng just $6.500 00.
NEW LISTING -

- ~~!.~..:..Pho~._~~~.!~~.:._- -~

FOR SALE

COINS. CU.ORR:::Ec:
NC::Y
:c.-1--,
ok-e-ns, old
pocket watches and chains,
stlver and gold . We need 1964
and older silver coins . Bu)' , sell ,
or trode ' Call Roge:r Wamsley ,

solleners, model VC-SVI.
Only $279.95

Ca -Op

New

water

One goad chain Hoinelite

Choin Sow . ... . . SllO.OO
Slve $50 .00 on a new
Holpotnl Refrigerator .

Pome~ ~ndmark

·-·---·

a
IF YOU hove o service to offer ,
want to buy or sell something ,
ae looking for work .. . or
whOtever ... ~ou 'll get results Commercial property approx . 17
ocret, level lond, located ot
taster with a Sentinel Want Ad.
Tuppers Plolns on Oh1o, Route
Co11992·21S6.
7. Phono (61•l 667-630• .

2

bedrooms, basement and

large lot. All in goo~ repair .
Only 514,500.00.
MIDOLE PORT - 1•;, story
brick. 2 or 3 beQroom,
enclosed back porch . 1 car
garage on
level lot .

S8,900' ()() '

COOKS DELIGHT - The
large kitchen in lhls 2 slory

bri ck has evervthing. A
total of 12 rooms, several

llreplaces even one In

lh~

kitchen . 2 corner lots close
to stores. If you spend most
of your time cook ing this is

for you. ONLY S20,ooo.oo.
WE HAVE BUYERS FOR
ACREAGE AND NEWER
HOMES. LET US SELL
YOUR PROPERTY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER

FinancinG Available

C. A. Newmon, Pres.
1-25·1mo., pd.

SEWING MACttiNE Repoirs , s8f' ·
vice , all makes, 992·2284 . The
Fabric Sho p, Po m eroy .
Authorized Singer Soles ond
_ S e~~~~~eshorp~Scissors ._

T.V . shop, Electroni~ T.V. Clinic
Service coli , $5.95 Color, B &amp; W
antenna systems stereos. etc

S72 South Third, Middleport .
Phone 992·6306. Corry in ond
•ave money .

CARPENtER , flooring , ceil ing,
. ~~~~e ling . Phone_9!~ · 27c;.S.:;
9 ·__
MOBILE Home Repair , Elec ..
plu mbing ond h&amp;oting. Phone

992·5858.

992-2259 - 992-2568
985-4112

143•:·::::-:ce7:--:c-

992-312'1, 0' 992·54:14.

portly carpeted , two out·
buildings , dug ba1ement,
one -third tillable , mineral
rights located near Danville.
Rtduced for quick sole,

--

992·371•.

2 BEDROOM tralter , real nice. GOOD OLDER home. p~iced fo1
. ~~".!.9??:~-2~:_odult• .only .
quick solt. $5,500. Phone
9•9·2563.
AVAILAILE AT Riverside Apls. 1
bedrm . apartment , $100 per 2 STOftY .&amp; bedrOf" tn brick home in ·
month, 2 bedroOm apt1 . S133
Middleport . rjnone 992-3457 .
.. ~per month. Equal Opportunity
TUPPEllS P~ AINS , Ohio. Now
Housing. Phon41 992·3273.
thrH bttdrogm house. living
2 bedroom unf~rnished aport·
room , lor~ kitchtn , ceramic
ment 1n Middleport. Phone
bath , ' carpeted , attached
992 312'1or.992·5•3•.
garage . lorg• 'at $22.900·
..

--.

.

MOBILE HOME . unfur"'dled in
cou n tr y .
Needs
small
ma,ntenonce . Ca11992·6337
TWO BEDROOM mobile ho;ntt
Ra~i ne arAO . ,;.one 992· 5858.
I

5 BfDRCrOM HOUSI- , It ee an·. :u•d
wo,er m l o•1; ftl'\ 11om 01'~o ~ b t
fur thll!r mformCIIIIJO
phone

965·•227.

CENTRAL REALTY

- - - - - - - ----,--,-.
59 acres., 6 room house. bath,

__ -- _._._

-

-·

.

Phone (614) b61 63~ ,

5 ROOM HOUSE , 2 b~droom1 with
modern kitchen . bosem&amp;nt,
garage, n•w !uti oil furn nct ,
ntw hot wot•r heoter, port • lly
· ronn~tle d and corpeted , ol... m.
~~ ~ ' 1 119 .

!1 /(: (!o h OHIC
rut~ghl'IM h ood w•th

' ''

(ll)lf' '

beo:, l!h;/
VI8 W . f'! I011tl lfY1·3b1 Y lJefpre 1.
and ofltl 6 p.rl'l

(

'

f&lt; .

OIL, GAS Furnaces, oil bUrnen ,
repOir , ond parts for trailers
ond homes . 24 hour servi ce.
Phone 843-2165
HOUSE PAINTING , mterlor and
exterior . Quality work at
reasonable rotu , Phone
7 &lt;2· 23:02::.
8'-::-::--=-'-::--,:--:-FROSTY'S C. B. Radio Equip .,
everyth1ng in two·way Radlo'1,
Ar1tennos, and occes. Phone
Portland, 843·2181.

7•09 .
Upholstering ,
drapes
reasonable. 572 South Third
Ave .. M iddleport. Phone

992·6301!.
PORTABLE WELDER . Iorge and
small jobs. Con also thow
frozen water pipes. Phone

well , ~arden space. This hou•e Is warm and ready f~r
Immediate occupancy, come lake a look lust $18,900.

electric; home under construction on V:t acre lot . Owner

will finish In 30 clays lor buyer or wlli sell "as Is". MIJy
take trede. localed near Chester.
Cllosltr - 113 ocreslarm. 80 acres tillable land , nice 2
story farm house, 7 rooms and bath, all hardwood
lloors and basemetll. Barn and olher oulbulldt""'s, 2
ponds. A nice laying !arm priced to go. Lo,ated n.. r
Chester, call for Appl,
Chesler -

Ever dream of ownl""' yO&lt;Jr own golf

course? Here' &amp; your chance for you or your friend&amp; to
own a nice rolling golf course. 501/aacres, 9 greens, nice

modern club house, outbuilding with oil spraying and
seed;ng equ ipment. needs some mowing · end o lillie
repa;r work on ~olf course. This could be purchased
with the 1]3 acres llsled above and developed Into •
beautiful 18 hole goll course, call for appt .

We

Need Farm Land
Call Jimmy Deem Ai 949-2388

• mansion
In our Father's House above.

- Composed by Mrs . Riley
· Pigott, Long Bottom , Ohio
45743
GOD SENT
A MYSTERY

' Twas In the form of ro ll s of
, snow ,
Inside those rolls ther e is a
hole,
It seems , a warning t o each
soul.
There has been tro uble
'everywhere,
And many fo l ks are in

agg renive 5o les minded
distributor to e&amp;toblish dealers
for a hot new auto speed cruise
control. Sells 1·3 to I ·~ normal
cost Astoundmg income. In·
ventory inves!ment $3100. Call
collect 513 372·0880 or write
Freewor . 1386 N. Detroit St.,

despair,
We're fearful of what l'ls

ahead ,
And In our hearts there Is a

dtead.
But God has promised to

Xen;o , Oh ~5385 .

supply
Our dally needs , II we rel y
Upon His everlasting love,
And trust His wisdom from
above.

'

SAVE ON
CARPETING

9~9 · 2~6.

WILL CO babysitting In my home ..
Phone 742·2846.

•

I
•
1

$10,95 Sq. Yd. "
saver.,

'

. 501 NYLDN

e

:.

·~

•

• •e

::

have trials on li fe's

way,
,
~Bu1 1ust ahead is briQ_hter
~ day , '
..Where all is happineS&amp; and

:

joy ,

not a lhlng will e'er

iAn~

annoy .
o, as we view those rolls of

C.. It 742·2211
TALK TO
WENOELLGRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
.Rutionil

742-22)1

Moft ,, Tues., Wad.

'•

14,.1

•i

an appointment, ca

••
·~1 )
1

:+

•:

::

. RmCROSS

..
.,
·••••••••••
:f
.•

949-2588
YOUR
• MEIGS OOUNTY

.~

'

ARNOLD ORAT!

Be a blood. donor

4!'

, .. I \

cq. Sat. At 5 P~.'

.00 yoi,r part

~

·•.

RUTLAND· FURNITUB

1 742·1111

true.

t

squ•r• yard,

1:00!115:00
Tllurlldayllll N-

. ..
I

:

~~~'

-·r
FRIDAY TIL 8 .•t!l

:.i

you.

. ;:

Conveni1~11t Shoppmq Hours

•
..
• .._

~

q

-

••

will take care of me and .

• will
·'fJe

.: ........ •. ::'
••

-:And trust In Him from day to
a.: day ,
" If we remain steadfast and

INSTALLED
Rogutor 114.95
money

So, let's repent and humbly
pray,
~'He

Hl-l.O SHAG
Everya•r

DAN lliOMPSON

74 Cadillac Cpe. DeVille .................. '5500

FORD

Full power _and air

73 Eldorado Cpe., full power &amp;air ••. ••••14895
76 Olds 88 HT Cpe., air •• ••••••••.••••..• •'5795
·76 Ford Granada, PS... •• •.••••••... •••• •• 14695
74 P~. Duster, PS, air .••••••• ••••.•••• ••••• 12795
74 Olds Cutlass Cpe., Was 13895 ••• ••••• '3695
74 Vega GT Cpe •••••• ••.•••••••••..•• •••••• '1995
74 AMC Hornet 2 Dr....................... '1995
73 Olds 98 Lux. Coe•...•.••••.•........... 13495
73 Olds 88 RUJal~ air, 4 Dr.•••••...••••••• 11695
73 Olds 88 4 Dr., power &amp; air •••.••••••• 11595
73 Buick ReRal HT Cpe.: ................. 13495
73 Olds Cutlass S Cpe~ power &amp;air •. •• ••12795
72 Chevy Impala 4 Dr., air .......... ,......11295
72 Olds 98 4 Dr., air .••.•••••••.. ,••..••. 12295
72 Buick Elec. HT Cpe ••.•.. ••.•••. ,•.•• ••• 12495
2-72 Ford Torinos 1·2 Dr., 1-4 Dr.......... 11395
71 Chevy Caprice HT Sedan •.•....•.•..•• -11795
71 Olds 98 Lux., power &amp;air •••••••..•. •11995
71 Dodge Swinger Cpe.................... '1495
71 Ford LTD 4 Dr., power &amp;air ....••• , ••• 1795
'

70 Ford LTD 4 Dr., power &amp; air•.••......• 895
70 Cutlass S Cpe., power .................. 11295
69 Ford LTD 4 Dr., power &amp;air ••..•• •••.• 1795
67 Cadillac HT Sedan, air ..••.••.•••.•••••.• '995
65 Olds 98 Power &amp; air. ................ .. ,1395
1

See one of these courteous salesmen : Pet'e
Burris, Lloyd Me Laughlin or Marvin
Keebaugh .

Karr &amp; VanZandt
"You'll Like Our Quality' Way
Of Doing Business'
992-5342
GMC FINANCING
Pomeroy
Open Evenings Until6 : 00- Til5 p.m. Sat.

5695

1976 LTD COUNTRY SQUIRE WAGON

1

4 doo r . dem o .• 9 passen ger . automat ic t ransmission.

73 FORD RANGER f·100 ···.. ··········.. .S2695

po wer st eering , air condit ioning, power seats , crui se,
luggage J aCk , power windows, el ec tric power door
locks. landau luK ur ~ grp.

390 V-8, au tomati c, power steer ing and brakes, long wide
bed, 38, 000 miles .

. $AVE$

1976 ELITE 2 DR. DEMO

73 FORD CUSTOM f·lOO ········.. ·· ····· '2695

400, 2V, V8, ha lf vi nyl roof, power steenng, ai r
condition ing, AM-FM 8 t rack stereo. d ua l sport

360 V·B, standard transmission, long wide bed . clean .

mirrors, ·ligh t g r p.

73 FORD RANCHERO·················· .. ···· '2695

2995

1

1975 GRAN TORINO 4 DR.

~ 351 V·8, automatic, 1power steering and brakes, tactory air,

,.itooooE SPORTSMAN 9 PASS WAG.. ~l99{~:..

351 , 2V, V8, power steering, automati c tr.,nsml sslon,
air condit 1on1ng, AM rad io, 28,000 md es. viny ! roof,
good family car , clean.

.,

Car pe ted , V-B. automatic, power steer ing and brakes, long ~

2175

1

1974 SUPER SEEnE VW

speed , rear window defogger, like new VW, orange
finish, a rea l gas saver, good t 1res
1

4

1395

1972 PINTO WAGON

··.~

4 cyl inder. automat ic transm ission, luggage ra ck,
another gas sav er .

condit ioning , buc ket seat s, cons ol e, vinyl to p, excellent
body , good clean interior , sh ow s good ca re .

1972 FORD GALAXIE 500 4 DR.
302 V8 , power steeri ng , automatic tran sm iSSIOn, Blr
conditioning

1495

1

19?1 PLYMOUTH SCAMP 2 DR.
318, va. automatic transmission, power

steer ing .
facotry air, f ull vin yl top, rad 1al t ir es, very good
vehicle, don't m 1ss this one.

'2895

1974 FORD F-100 PICKUP

302, V8, 3 speed transmission , new t i res, nice running
truck .

2195

1

1972 FORD F-100 PICKUP

302, VB . 3 speed. tran sm ission , t u-tone pa int, low miles.

See &lt; Pat Hill, Rocky Hupp
or Darrel Dodrill
For a good deal on a new or used vehicle.
Open Evenings Til6:00
Except Thursday and Saturday I'
Closed Sunday
;,

RUTLAND ·I '

··········~··············· ·

.BlOOD PROGRAM
\!
I

.

'·:~ .,~

1972 PONTIAC GRAN PRIX SJ MODEL '2695
va. power steering, automati c transm ission. a ir

73 P~. Duster 6 cyl. auto.....12195
73 Ford Wagon 4 dr.· ·· ······12295
73 Ford LTD 4 dr.......... .. '2095
74 Chevy Vega .. .. ....... .. ... '1995

76 Chevy Malibu 2 dr. ······.. ·· 13795
Pontiac Catalina 2 dr........ '2995
Ford Galaxie 2 dr............'2695
74 Chevy Malibu Classic .........'2495
76 Ford Pinto AM/FM, M.P.G.!2495
74 Ford Mustang 11. ............. 12495
3 Buick LeSabre' Custom •...•• '2495
74 P~. Fury Ill 4 dr..... .. .. •·· 12495
73
4 dr.•••.•... '2295

68 Pontiac 4 dr................ '495
70 VW 2 dr. Squareback.......1795
69 P~mouth 4 dr...............1395
66 Chevy 4 dr...•..•...•..•••.. 1295
72 Ford
· 4 dr.......... !1295
-

'

RIGGS USED CARS
RAY RIGGS

ROGER RIEBEL
LOCATED ON ST. Rl 7

985-4100

CHESTER, OHIO

DAN THOMPSON FORo·
Middleport, 0.

992-2196

Frontier gunsmith's life

God sent a mystery below.

Will do odd jobs , roofing , pain·
ling , gutter work. Phone 992·

storm windows . FA natural gas furnace and drilled

3 bedroom and alla'ched garage, total

'And He'll lake you to a

A loca I contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860
'
Free·Esttmates
No Sunday C.. tis Pltue
&gt;·30·1 mo.·

)2 or15FI.

New listing - Nice 2story country home, containing 7
rooms and 1•t, balh, mostly carpeted. Kitchen has all
new buiit·ln cabinets with bronze stove &amp; refrlg. to
malch New porches and all new alum. siding and

Spedol -

rise,
.
·And go up to meet our Savior,
When He c'omes within the
sk ies .
So, be ready for hi s com ing,
Thru His sweet redeeming
love,

BISSEll SIDING 00.

GI'MII, gold, red, blue, ru_s_!l,
Do II yourseM, with II!~
ding, 17.95 sq. yd, WI~
podding tnslolled SI.U

SEW IN G · ALTER AT I 0 NS :

Rlcine - Good 3' bedroom and dining room, low
utilities, even a garden space. Priced at only 58.500.

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

Good choice colors.

co.

end.

fill lhe saints of God sh all

EXCAVATING. Backhoes . Dozer.
trencher , Low Boy, dump truck ,
trucks , septic systems. Bill
Pullins. Phone 992·2478 day or
n•ght.

1---------...J

;""'room,
room. and
kil·
chen,
fullydining
carpeted
Phone

'And wUI keep you to life's

698·7331.

3 bedroam1 , P/ r baths , ,lorg_o_l~: ,---------------~
~ ----,
3 AND 4 RM. furnished ond un·
furnished opfl . Phone 992·

MARTIN

covoting , 1ept1c systems,
dozer, baclchoe, dump truck ,
limestone , grovel. blacktop
paving ,' Rt . 143. Phone I (614 )

-'-~~--------

Will do roofing , construction ,
plumbing and heating. No job
too Iorge or too small . Phone
742-2348.

Savior
As your Leader , Lord and
Friend,
Call on Him and He w ill sa ve
you,

ELECTRONIC T.V. CLINIC , Now OUTSTANDING POTENTIAL. Wont

and ditcher Charles R. Hat·
field , Bo ck Hoe Service .
Ruttond , Ohio. Phone 742·2008.

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned . Modern
Sanitation , 992·3954.
-- ·--·--·~:._:_:.c___ _

If you have not found the

:1n the resurrection morn ing

expetrence. '

EXCAVATING, dozer , bockhoe

·
gentl y

; heed .

F-Mijllllllllillo

llowiiiNWIII&amp;Ittlcs

1

Blown in flber~loss wotls
ond allies. n Pet. savings ,
on Vinyl and Steel Sidings.
Replacement and storm

AND

and

my

·And each message kindly

.-IRUI

· evenings.

HOWERY

loo k upon

~ From the pages of yo ur Bible ,

semces

IEriAC(IIEIIT
111100111

ECONOLINE HOME
INSULATION, INC.
1815 Washington Blvd.
Belpre, Pllonel614l &lt;237564 day, or 992·6039

REMODELING, Plumbing , heotm g
ond all types of general repair .
Work guaranteed 20 years ex ·
__ perienca. ~~~!_9_!~:~.4_0'9 .__

-

lmulltion

STOtlll
Wl-&amp;DOOIS

windows. 33 yurs 1ctual

SEPTIC Systems installed by
l1cen!ed installer. Shepard
Contractors. Phone 742-2409

So, please

RATES

3825 .

'

And will show the wa y to
haven,
If they'll onl y stop a nd loo k.

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

Sweepers , roasters , •rons, oil
small appl1ancas . Lown mower .
nex t to Sta1e Highway Garage
on 'Route 7. Phone (614) 985 ·

5232 .

Lei my Bible prove to olhers
That It Is God's Ho ly Book ,

Bible,
Then go hom e
read

REASONABLE

m.

So , orrce m ore , I am
requesting
That vou'H hee d th e .words I
say ,
.
Place. no flowers on my
, casket,
After I have passed away .

Free Esttmates

PARTS - LABOR
GUARANTEED

EXCAVATING, dozer. loader and
backhoe work : dump trucks
ond lo·boys for h1re: will haul
fill dirt , to soil , limestone and
groveL Call Bob or Roger Jef ·
fers, day phone 992·7089 ,
mghl phone 992 ·3525 or

lo'Je,
Thru your tender acts of
' k indness ,
Sh owing th em of t hing s
above .

Work Guaranteed
742·2328

Automatic
Transmission Service

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

Of your friendship and you r

SWAIN'S

(614l 915.4155
Chester, Ohio
10·17·1 mo(Pd)

pJ ve your fl owers to the
, ' living ,
:With a sm i le to cheer them
, on,
•When I'm dead , I cannot see
: them.
•They won't comfort when I'm
· gone .

Al. lROMM CONST.

12-22 4 mos .

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY

"dead .

Roof11g &amp; Siding ·
Raom Additions

We Deliver

Aerial
Commercial
Schools
Weddings

contain s the
joyful
message,
That our Lord will ra ise the

·Bul lhe living need a token

1·9-771 mo.

Ph. ( 614} U2 -2409

PHOTOGRAPHY

future .

'It

Quality Work At
Reasonable Rates

Rutland , Ohio 45775

PROFESSIONAL

'Lay my Bible lhere lnslead,

Homes Built

Located in Langsville
BoK28-A

Pomeroy,O.
1· 17-1 mO.

An

'

Prove to them you r eally
care.
Place no flower s on my
' casket,

Ga~ages

Southeastern Oh10
TrUS$ Rafter Co.·

At too Kerr St.

'"

1100 E. Moln St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-7034
llrs. 9:00o.m.
To Ousk

, _.

);~

Phone
MODERN CHEMICAL
614-992-2798

utilities and garage. Just

Hornn Inc.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

P1. Pleosant
Ph. 675-3449
9:30·5:00 D.olly
TIII8 ;DOO Fridays

home wilh 2 baths. All

Wo handle only lllo but In
monufoc1urtd houotng.
Oovble wldts I modulor , ·
homos by Skyline I Fuquo·

--

fancy prints, acctssorles.

let us lest your water
Free.

One good used Gibson side·
by·side retrlgoro1or ... S150

. -~~?~.'!~:.. ------

Associ ates plav an Important
role in your attain ' thll vear.
Most desirable are those who
are older or wi'IO have esta'blrsh ed their statiOns In tift
(Ari' you an Aquarlul ? Brunlce O~ol haa wrm•ft 1 special
Aatro-Graph Lltltr tor you For
your copy send SO c.nts and a
long ••11-sddress•d. 1tamped
envelope to' Astro-araph, P 0
Bolt 489, Ra(Jlo C/fy Ststion. New
York, N Y. 1001Q. Be aur~ to ask
tor Aquarius Volume of.)

for c•mpers. Vorlety of
Silts.
Velvets , nylon prints ,
lltrculons, vinyl solids, ond

soflener, Model UC-XVI.
Now Only •279.95

_____

FOb. t2, 1877

For 5ofa, crta1r
mattresses, padding. Ideal

BRADFORD , Auct1oneer , Com ·
plate Service . Phone 949 · 2~87
or 949·2000 . Racine, Oh1o Critt
Bradford.

CASH paid .for oil makes and
models ol mobile homes .
Phone oreo code 61_.·,.23·9S31 .

--~----+------

corner lot . Large 8 room

softtn &amp; condition your
water 1nd a Co-op water

COLEMAN GAS Furnace . 70,CXXl
BTU for trailer. like new,

Phone

_uem'R~thions,
l

• bear,

Speak to them so very gently,

Kinpbury Home..
Sales 1~. '

EXPERIENCED

let Pomeroy londmork

Phone (614l 5'10·•769.
------------ -·-EAR CORN , $2.00 bu . Have 400

WRECKER SERVICE!
7•2·:1081.

slle. Beller lhlnk aboullhls
at only S12,000.
MIDDLEPORT - 40x120'

investment. We have one

OLD furniture , ice boxes. bran
bed &amp;, wo ll telephones and
ports , or complee households .
Write M. 0 . Miller, Rt . 4 ,
Pomeroy, O~o. Coll992-77_~

CASH! ! ! for junk calh Frye 1
Truck and Auto . 2.4 HOUR

acres of land r ight on Rt. 7.
large old 7 room frame
house . Good Commercial

CAMPER , $600
Al so. horse
troiler, $450 Phone {614 ) 698·

--....-------'------------------

RADIOLOGIC TECH. lmmedlole

7•2·2331

. TUPPERS PLAINS - 1'12

112,000.
DO YOU WANT -

Mothlne

TIMBER , Pomeroy Forest Pro·
ducts. Top price for standing
sowtimber. Call Kent Hanby ,
1·4•6·8570.

frame hause In Tuppers
Plains on Rl. 7, SS,OOO.

FUllER Brush Produc ts fOr 1ale.
Phone 992·:U 10.

Operator or will troin. Apply in
person , Mead Enterprise, 1922
Gorf1eld Ave., Parkersburg,
W.Va. Feb 14 , IS , and 16th.
opening l or. a registered
Radiologic Technologist. Also.
rad iologic: technologist with e.:·
perience 1n nuclear medicine.
Send resume to Director of Per·
Pleasant . Vollev
sone ls,
Hospital . Vallev Drive . Pt. Plea·
sonf , W.Vo. 25550. Affirmative
oction , Equol Opportunity
Employer

LY.f )AM ·

NEW LISTING: Old, but
nicely localed, el~hl · room

·---- --- I ·

LIIIIA (hpl, U·Oct. 23) Be

heeded and quoled
SCORPIO (Oct- 24-Nov. 22) The

NEEDED

remodeling , work on two
houses beginning around
March 15. Floors. tr~m work,
drywall. etc. Call area code
216, 296·2267 or 673-S.78 even ·
~ngs colle&lt;t .

Lei your tears fal l for the
liv ing,
Who are lett wllh grief to

Business Services

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 992-3325

COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork , Rt .
33, ten miles north of Pomeroy.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20·Fob. 18). large lots with concrete patio1 ,
Don't depart !rom laclics Or
sidewalks, runnerJ and off
str ateg i es l h at have bee n _!treet pork~~:.~.._hone ~ -!~7!~ _ $23
_..__
500
__• Phone 7•2·2766
::::_.-,-successful In the pa&amp;t. They'll ONE BEOf!OOM Apto . ol VILLAGE
NEW 3 bedroom house. built·ln
work as well today as they did
MANOI in Middleport for $10..
kikhen , batfi ond 'II, Phone
previ ously.
monthly plus elec . or $130 in7•2 ·2306 or contact MilO 8 Hut·
cluding elt~ . LOWER RATES for
chiton, Rutland, Ohio .
PISCES (Fob. 20-Morch 201
.
SENIOR CITIZENS. Con't'enlent ·--Accept Im mediately an'yth lng
tUILDING SITES, 3.11 acres, ol
to
shopping
on
Third
ond
'Mill
offered ~ou today that could
loshon T. P., water top, gas
Sts. in Middleport. Brand new
betler your statio n in lite. II
tap, minimum soil limitations.
high quality opartment1. S..
handled property, the ado., anPhone985·4102.
...
the manager ot Apt, 28 or call
lages will be lasting .
992·7721. ~n Equal Houolng ONE LOT In Syracuse Phont

can be remarkably persistent in
tinalizlng a situation that can be
valuable to you and another
T~natity't your middle name.
acutely aware today that the
serious statements you make
carry a lot of weight. 't'ou'll be

CARPENTER

Tx . 76101.
SKILLED SEWING

need a few th1ngs on the drawing
boara to be happy today. This 1s
one of those t1mes you handle
multiple projects well.
Chances lor gain come today
through the collective eflorts of
several people. Joml ventures
lok like a fruitful area for you .

992·5758.

IN LOVING MEMROY of Charles E.
Miller who was killed in luxem·
burg, German,.- on Feb 11 HOMEMAtliERS ARE you in need of
1945. while serving ,with the
port or fulltime year around
United States Armed Farces ·
work with an eKponding comWe do not know the pain you hod .
pony . Coli 9&lt;9·2803 , 992-3618
Or hear your f1nalslgh .
or 9~9"2766 fo r oppo1ntment.
We only lcnowyou passed away,
TEXAS OIL Company needs
Without a last goodbye.
dependable person who can
God gove us strength to face 11 ,
work without supervision in
.And courage to beor the blow.
Pomeroy. Contact customers .
But what it meant to lo5e you .
Age unimportant , bu t maturity
Noone w1ll ever know .
Is. We tro1n Write l. B. Dick,
Sodlv miued by the Ed M1ller
Pr es . ,
So uthwestern
Family . Roc1ne, ohio.
Petroleum , Bo• 789, Ft. Worth,

Oh.

NOTICE OF EMPLOYMENT

TEAFORD

SO · word

Each additional ward 3
cents .

I shall be forever free,
And my spirit will be· living
Wtt~ our lord , eterna lly.

•
RUSS MILLER and FAMilY no PLEASURE HORSES and pon;e,,
HOMESITES for sale , 1 ocre and
longer oparot• the Certified
also will buy horses and
up. Middleport, near Rutland .
Gas Station' in Pomeroy . We
ponll$. PhOne (614) ·6'111·329&lt;1, Coii992-7•8L
wish to thank our old and new
Ruth Re•ves.
fr iends for vour patronage
NEW 3 bedroom hou11, 2 both&amp;,
while we were there , Signed , RISING STAR Kennel Boarding ,
oil ejec. , I• acre, Middleport ,
lndoar·Outdoor runs, grooming
Russ.
close to Rutland . Phone 992·
all brHds, d ean sanitary
7481.
facilities . Ch.shire. Phone (614 )
SMAll form for sole , 10% down ,
367·0292.
owner financed . Monroe Coun·
FREE
PUPPIES,
pori
Poodle.
Phone
ly, W. Vo. Phone (30&lt; ) 772·
MAN's BILLFOLD in Middleport or
992-7671.
3102 or (30&lt;l 772·3?.27.
Pomeroy . Please
return
papers . Phone 992·7028 or THE HST Collies ' · O•bble's Col · COUNTRY farmland with sedud.
l1es, Sable and tri-color, SlOO.
992-3122.
ed woods, water and good oc·
Phone (61~ ) ..6·7'104.
cess m Monroe Countr , W. Vo .
LOST · EYE GLASSES rid;~ with 2
$1.(100 down , coli (30&lt;) 772·
elderly ladies from around
31 02 or (30&lt;)772-3227.
Racine In Catalina who picked
me up while hllchhikirlg from
lancaster to Athens , Feb. 5. 1969 CHEVROLET Bisquoine. 1966
Call colle&lt;t (61•) 373·5070,
BUICK Electro , 225 ; 2 Rokon
Fronk Stanley. urgent for
triolbikes . Phone 949-2432.
Vlrgil1!, Sr.. Realtor
school .
1973 FORO LTD tor sole. Call
216 E. Second Street

USED CARS ·

From all ea rth ly pain and
sorrow,

NOTICE FOR l iDS

USED CAR YOU
CAN DEPEND ON,
SEE

VALUE
RATED

DURING OUR

feature of museum program
MARIETIA - The life of a
frontier gunsmith will be
highlighted in the first of
many special events and
programs planned at the
Campus Martius Museum in
Marietta , Feb. 19-20.
Southeastern Ohio gunsmiths will demonstrate the
craft of building and
engrav ing flintlock and
percussion rifles in the
mu seum's fully equipped
gunshop.
The Company of Border
Riflemen will present a
demonstration of flintlock
and flrelock firings on the
museum grounds Saturday
and Sunday afternoon . Their
program will als include
related pioneer skills such as
tomahawk throwing, flint and
steel fire starting and
powderhorn making.
" The
Gunsmith
st
Williamsburg" and "Long

Rill~ and Revival," two
feature motion pictures on
the famous gunshop at
Colonial Williamsburg, Va .,
will be shown at 11 a.m. and I
p.m. Saturday and at 2 p.m.
and 4 p.m . Sunday.
Finally, as a special salute
to George Washington , Col .
Joseph Crockett's Western
Battalion will re-create 18th
century military drills and
maneuvers at 3 p.m. Sunday.

Tri-State
delegation

to total40

HUNTING TON - Sharing
the spirit of brotherhood with
snow,
khaki-uniform-ed friends
let' s· think of God who loves
from
Maine to Hawail, 40
us so ;
He sent His Son to earth boys, young men and adult
be low,
scouters of the Tri-State Area
To wash us wh i ter than the Council, Boy Scouts of
snow .
- Composed Jan. 31, 1977, Ainerlcs, will be attending
by Mrs . Riley Pigott, Long this year's National Scout
Bottom , Ohio, 45743.
Jamboree at Moraine State
Park near Butler, Pa.
According to ' Edward
Moon, Council Coordinator,
the Jamboree is specifically
designed this time "to offer
boys a chance to learn
STEVE SIGNS
leadership and program
HOLLYWOOD (UP!)
ideas ~hlch they can apply
Uke his father, Steve Fore!, upon their return home to
20, Is going to be a television Improve the quality of
star.
Scouting. It will be a once-InThe youngest son of the a lifetime experience for
former president signed a most of them."
contract Thureday with
A cavalcade af events wiU
~Inn Marlin Productions to
depict the heritage of
appear in a series as a young Scouting and the range of Its
rodeo rider - a skill FIH'd has pro~ram for the nearly 40,000
been practicing, to his young men and their leaders
mother's reported dlamay, in attendance at the ·jam·
for 110me years. His father boree.
recently signed B contract
Major aren~ shows are
with NBC-TV.
scheduled for the opening
"!foe! comfortable with the ni~ht . August 3, and the,
series rodeo background," c losing night. August 9.
said young Ford. "I pian to Vi~itors will be w•lrom• 10
make the most of it as I have theltt.. As they will he to thr.
for the past two and a half jamboret' site· itself doily
years as a member .'/ the from 10 a.m to )(I j1.m . ., .
first famUy ."
Tbt.- lJN''l l-l c:;h iJ \.1.'~' \' ill orrrr

,,

February Used

All events during th is
spec1al weekend will be included in the normal ad·
mission price of $1 for adults.
Children 12 and under are
free with their parents.
Campus Maritus is open from
9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. on weekdays from I p.m. to 5 p.m. on
Sundays at Second and
Washington Streets in
Marietta.

BIG K'S BOOK
NEW YORK (UP!) Utile, Brown and Co. will
publish former Secretary of
State Henry Kissinger' s
memoirs for a reported price
of $2 million.
Arthur H. Thornhill Jr.,
chairman and president of
the publishing firm, in
announcing the signing of the
contract Thursday said it was
for publication in the United
States and canada. Terms of
the contract were not
announced, but The New
York Times reported IDday
other book publishers
"placed the figure at $2
million"
"! expe&lt;:l the book to be
completed in time lor
publication in the fall of1979,"
· Thornhill said. " ,.. I believe
his personal evaluation and
depiction of some of the most
,momentous events in United
States history will make Dr .
Kissinger's book fasc~~ng
and extremely valuable.

CAR SALE
Buy Now Anct Beat The
Spring Price Raise

The RABBIT!

76 Pontiac Sunbird
75 Buick Regal
' 75 Olds Cutlass 2 dr.

You've Got To Drive
It To Believe It!
New Shipment Arriving Soon.
Call Our Showroom Today
For Further Details And
:~et·IUD a Deminstration Drive.-

Phone 446-9HU0

\

'

74 Opel Manta 2 dr.
Was $2495
74 Chev. Camaro 2dr . Was$3895
73 Dodge Pickup
Was 52795
73 Ford Mach I
Was$2695
73 Chev Imp. 2 dr .
Was $1995
73 Buick Elc. 225
Was $3295
12 Pontic Grand PriK Was$2795
72 Chrysler Newport Was $1995
72 Chev. lmp. 2dr.
Was $1995

Now 52295
Now$3695
NowS2595
Now$2495
Now51795
Now$2895
Now$2495
Now$1795
Now 51795

Check with us before you buy any car new or used . We
pencils in town . S@e or call one of these friendly

salesmen, Ceward Calvert, J. D. Slory or Bill Nelson.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS

WHALEY'S USED CARS
W. 681, DARWIN, OHIO
PHONE 992·7013

500 Main St.

Pomeroy,
Phone 992-2174

o.

1974 PINTO RUNABOUT •••••••.••••..•• '1600
• speed

1974 PINTO RUNABOUT ••••.•• •• •• :••• 11700
Automatic

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

,

1975 PINTO RUNABOUT •••••••.•••••••• 2200
1

~

speed ,

1915 PINTO RUNABOUT ••••.••••••••••• 12500
Automatic, V-6, 4,000 miles.

'

'

1976CHEVELLE MALIBU CPE.
53895
Green fin ish , good llres, V-8, aulomallc, power
sleerl""', radio, factory air. •

Automatic, lOtOOO miles.

IJrothcrhoud." M11nn '&lt;a id

Now 53395
Now 54495
Now $4295

are "The Friendly Dealer". We have lhe sharpes1

1976 VEGA HATCHBACK._•••••••.•• ••••• 12300
top name entertainment and
a closing bicentennial
bombardment of fireworks.
Other evening programs will
feature youth-run campfires
on smaller scales.
"But with aU the events,
thousands of young men will
spend long hours trading
patches and memorabilia ,
furthering
International
friendships with some of the
:124 forel~n Scouts who ha ve
been '"vitl'd, and beneath
rlllmcroufl colorful ~.:utew;~ :. ~ .
s harin~ _ the
spi rit 10f

Was $3595
Was $4695
Was $4695

.~----------.
I

I MEIGS
I Equipment Co. I

"ROOTS" AUTHOR IU.
LOS ANGELES (UPI I
Alex Haley, authof of
" Roots," was reported I
POMEROY,O,
rerovering at his·home IDday I
PH. H2-1176
'
from a mild lever , his I
.
promoti on tour suspended on 1International
1
dudor's orders.
IHirvester
llaley··s bvok was turned tNtw klu Equlpm1nt 1
into a . televisiOn serial that · ~McCulloc;ll .
Chlln 1
drew tit• biggest audiem•t• tn
Saws
1
11s histOry.

I
1

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

197S FORD TORINO&lt; OR ,

12195

·Loca l car. clean vinyl Inter ior, green f inish, good t l res,
radio, 351 V -8, automati c, power steering and brakes .

1975 CHEVELLE

54195

Estate Wagon, locall owner car, wh;te rad ial tires. air
condltlonin'g ,
automatic, power steering and

v.a,

brakes, radio, dark red finish, black vinyl Interior.

POM0~~~~VE~?!'!.~. CO.~
POMEROY, OHIO

\CI

1-------·- ----'---------!,
J

�.

-'
2- TheDailySentinel, Middleoort-Pom•roy, 0., Friday, Feb. 11, 1m
Three· calls for help answered
~-------- --- ---- --- ---- --- - -

I

Atomic power plant

Area Deaths

1

The Middleport 7:'11 a"m. today, going to I
Emergency Squad was called Mechanic st. In Pomeroy for
C. H. JOHNSON
to 110 North Second Ave., at Pauline Derenberger who
Clarence Homer Johnson.
difficult y 82, a resident of 87 Division
I :58 p.m. Thursday for Lena was hav ing
Wolfe, a medical patient, who breathing. She was taken to St., Hunllnglon, died at 9;20
. Thursday In St. Mary's
wu taken 1o Pleasant Valley Pleasant Valley Hospita l. p.m
Hospital , Huntington .
The Pomeroy unit was at
H01Pital.
He had been In falling
· AtB :OI p.m. the squad went Dexter on another caD at the health several years and In
to 571 Laurel St. lor Roxie time . The Pomeroy unit serious condition the past two
.
Oiler who wu token to Holzer reported Carl Richards of weeks
Mr, Johnson wa s born April
Dexter was dead upon its 2&lt;" 189&lt;, In Oh io Twp.. son of
Medical Center.
The Middleport unit took a arrival.
the late Joseph T. and Sa ra
Ann Harbour Johnson •
. call for the Pomeroy squad at
He
marr ied
Winnie
Lambert of Bladen . She
survives.
'
Mr . Johnson was a retired

_ (Cootinued from page I)
Letart ToWDJhlp.
Clelallll ud Wlq~U were
111ured by Elklu · that
Columl1111 ud Soalllel'll Oblo
l!'.lodrlc Ia 11M • lallll holdlq
...,.,..,. ud lateock to build
1 power plait ol Greol Bend.
Elklal IIIIa 111nred tbll llle
compeoy wanu 1o work wllb

I

Veterans Memorial Hospita l
In Pomeroy. Born JuM 21.
1879 1il the Union Community,
he was the son of the late
Jacob and Mary Chapman
Jol1nson .

A farmer and carpenter , he
was a member of the Un ion

. United Methodist Church.

MT. Jol1nson was preceded

I

In death by his wife, Nora

lbe petple.

Ellen Van Meter Johnson ; 1

· In conclusion, Elklns stated
as policy that the company Is
not willing to sell any of the
land In Great Bend if that sale
would handicap the planried
nuclear power plant. He
stated .that the company

son, Clifford C.; two grand·
sons ,
one
great.
granddaughter, seven
br:others and a sister .
··
Surviving are a son ,..,. Lester

C. Johnson , Clifton : two
empl oyee of the Huntington sisters, Mrs . Carrie Gibbs,
All oys Div isi on of In· Athens, Ohio, and Mrs. Esla
ternatlanal Ni ckel , Hun- Roush, Portland, Ohio; six
tington. At one 'lime he owned. grandchildren, Mrs. Margie
and opera led a grocery In the Rickard. Mrs. Belly Coil,
Guyandotte
sect ion
at. Mrs. Donna Gavin, Mrs. Joan
Huntington . He was also King. Dennis Jack Johnson

Sometimes, in the day to day operat ions of our bank ,
we forg~t 10 Iel l our customers
how wonderful we ihink t·hey are.
For this reason we I~ ave set aside I his period
around St.Valcm inc's Day as our
"Customer Appreciation Ti me·: .. In lei rn 11 knmr
how very important you rm! to us ..·.
and ro conrey our tlwnks.fiJr.murparronage.

HELEN C. LEWIS

Mrs. Helen C. Lewi s, 82,
Middlepor t, died Thursday at
the. Angel of Mercy Nursing
Hom e in Alban y.
Mrs. lewi s was a rnember

the

Firs t

Un ited

Pres byter i an Ch urc h . i n
Middleport ;
Evangel ine
Chapter 172, Order of Eastern

Star; While Rose lodge 291 ,

Day, Monday, February 14.

and for several years had
wo~ked at the
Imperial
Electric Co. in M iddleport.
She wa·s born ·Feb. 2i , 1894
in Middleport, a daughter of
the late George and Amanda

Hysell Cheatham . Besides

her Parents she was preceded

in death by her husband .
Ar thur E. lewis In 1942; a

Rutland .

MARGARET SINCLAIR
Funeral
servi ces
for
Margaret
Sinclair ,
76,
Pomeroy, who died Thursday

in Wellston . will

Newbury Site near Belpre, Ohio. and the Great Bend Site

across the Ohio River from Ravenswood. W. Va . C&amp;SOE noW
' either owns or has under option about 1.200 acres at each site

Home with the Rev . Dwight

M t ·m bu

FDIC

lqcallon and fully Intends to eventually utilize each site for

Newbury Site first can best be summarized as staled in the
leiter of Intent:
.
"While Great Bend and Newbury were for all practical

purposes equal for the development of a foss il-f ired plant,
Great Bend was clearly the best site for f uture nuclear
development. Any advanta.ge strictly on the fossil . fueled basis
was with Newbury due to su ch maHers as better accessibility.
Since C&amp;SOE must retain the . nuc;:lear option for future
development, since the planned units are coal -fired. and since
Great Bend is clearly the best for a nuclear 'plant. the decision
was made by C&amp;SOE to hold Great Bend In reserve for the
future nuclear option and develop Newbury to meet the 1985
C&amp;SOE system needs."
Accordingly, C&amp;SOE plans to construct and operate two

scheduled In -service in early 1985. The second unl.t would
commence operation about two or three years later . These
· plans were announced ~Y C&amp;SOE r;tn October l, 1976, in a Letter
of Intent submiHed to the Ohio Power Siting Commission

' service on the Great Bend Site would In the mid·1990s. Depend·
tng upon the type· of 1Jeneratjng units selected, site related
activities could begin in the early to mld·1980s.

Prior to the construction ·and operation of the Newbury unit s,
however. both the site and the units must be apprOved ·and

certified by the OPSC. Accordingly, Columbus and South ern

be held

Comp~labillty ~nd

Perrin off icia ting .

Burial will be In Beech

Gr ove Cemetery .
Mrs. Sincla ir was born Oct.

19, 1900 to the late George and

Columbus; two sisters,
Geneva A!ea.s , Chillicothe
and Dora Holley, Pomeroy
and severa l nieces and
nephews .
Fr iends may call at the
funeral home any .time.

been

QUINTESSENCE II

in

one year.

A retired employee of the
Columbus State Hospita l, she
was born July 15, 1901 at
Mercerville to the late Curtis
and Elizabeth Cornell Fry.
She married Marsha ll Sheets
and to this union was born
four children . Mrs. Lena

Belle Williams, Crown City ;
Mrs. Luther (Shelnel Bur.

nett, . Patriot ;

Coleman

Sheets, New Carlisle and
Audrey Hedrick. Patr iot .
Also surviving are eight

grandchildren ; eight great.
grandchildren.

In . addition numerous -construction and· operationa l ·
permits must ,be obta·ined from various other state and fed eral
regulatory agencieS . Therefore, concurrently with the
submittal of the Letter of Intent, Columbus and Southern
awarded a series of major contracts for the conduct of
environmental stud ies related to the con str uction and
operation of the proposed units .
The consultants selected by Columbus and Southern along
with tt"leir respective areas of responsibility Include :
Environmental Research &amp; Technology, Inc., Concord ,
Massachusetts ; NUS Corporation, Ecologica l Sci en ces
Div-Ision , Pittsburgh, PennsylVania ; James Jennings

Associates. Columbus, Ohio ; D' Appolon la Cons ulting
Engineers, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania ; Ohio Historica l Society,
Columbus, Ohio; Air Quality, Meteorology, Vegetative Stress,

and Noise ; Terrestrial Ecology , Aquatic Ecology, Water
Quality. and Aesthetics; Land Use and Socio-Economics ;

Geology, Hydrology, and Solid Wastes, and History and
Archaeology.
.

Preconstructlan ehvlronmental baseline data collected by
the above consultants. Yt'ill be used for two purposes. First, the
data will form the basis-for envlronmentai "Qeslgn and impact
assessment studies directed toward evaluating and select ing
the most appropriate plant design alternatives from an
environmental standpoint . Secondly, the data would be ut ilized

for the preparat ion of the OPSC Certificate Appl ication and

Site development in a well·deflned, logical, and technica lly

failing health approximately

1\.PPEARING THIS WEEKEND AT THE
"INN PLACE''

Public Need lo the OPSC In early.1978 .

other necessary construction and operat ional permits.
It Is C&amp;SO"E's Intent to !=onduct this phase of the Newbury

OSCAR JOHNSON
MARY SHEETS
CL IFTON, W. Va . - Oscar
Mar{.
.Jane Sheets, 75,
Marlin Johnson, 97, of Cllf. Palrlo , died
8 a.m. Friday
ion, died Thursday at the morning at at
Holzer Med ical

·

sound manner . Accordingly , a detailed work plan has been
developed to guide the preparation of the OPSC application
and other documentation reQuired for the prooosed facilities.

Individually and collectively the elements of this work plan

respond to the need to consider a broad range of site speci fic
environmental and engineering constra ints as well as the
regulatory aspects .of several governmental agencies which
have prime responsibility for Issuing envlronmen.tal approvals
or permits under law. In addition, the program reprer.ents an
effort which will function as an environmental design and

impact lluessmenl study directed toward providing the bas is

for establishing certain design criteria for the plant systems.
tComplete . copies of all the company's work to date
Including our letter of Intent and Work Plan are available for
review at the following locations :

Athens Public Library

Washington County Library, Belpre Branch

Pomeroy Public Library
Jackson County library, Ravenswood Branch
Parkersburg -Wood County Library
·

Washington County Library, Marietta

·

We believe that our program will enable the company to
design, construct, and operate the propOsed fac ilities in a
manner which will assure the achievement of m inimum
adverse environmental Impact. In addition, we are int~rested
in obtaining public review and comment on the program
before the formal environentat work program begins ~

She was preceded In death
by two grandchildren. three
brothers and. two sisters. She . Therefore, we would urge, that oil Interested Individuals
had resided In tHe communlfy review the documentation on file at the above libraries and
eight years coming frOm
submit their comments and·or questions to C&amp;SOE.
Coi4mbus . She olfended
E.cludlng land costs, It Is estimated that over. $2,000,000
Bethesda Church.
will have been expended for siting , and environmental design ·

News •. in Briefs
•'

(Continued from page I )
new plan by Feb. :!!i:

COLUMBUS - LEGISLATION INTRODUCED.In the Ohio
House Thursday would set strict guideUnes for the curtallment
of natural gas and establish priorities for making gall available
tO various categories of users . The bill offered Thursday was
sponsored by Reps. Dennis E. Eckart, D-Euclid, and Dennis L.
Wojtanowski, D-Chesterland.
The lop priority would be homes and living quarters In
hotels or motels. The bill stipulates that those consumers could
not be curtailed by .more than 10 per cent. Second priority Is
reserved for schools, hospitals aDd nursing homes. Those
facilities could not be clirllllled by more than 10 per cent unless
Industrial, commercial and other users are cut by at least 50
per cent.
The third priority would be Industrial· and coinmercial
establishments, and the fourth priority would be other users .
COLUMBUS - TilE OffiO GENERAL ASSEMBLY has
adjourned for the weekerxl after receiving legislation
r!'(Julring the Installation of automatic smoke detection and
alarm systems In high-rise apartment buildings and
condominiums. The bill, vetoed last session by Gov. James A.
Rhodes, was reintroduced Thursday by the original sponsor,
·
Rep. Francine M. Panehal, 0-Cieveland.
Meanwhile, 20 House members from boll) parties joined
Rep. Rocco Colonna, D-Brook Park, In sponsoring a bill
perrilittlng local option, liquor questions to be submitted at
primary elections. Currently, they can only be on general
election ballots.
Another heavily-sponsored bill, offered by Rep. Robert W.
Jaskulski, D-Garfield Heights, would exterxl instructional
grants at Ohio colleges and universities to qualifying enlisted
members of the Ohio National Guard after next Sept. I.

County court.
reaps total

of $53,186

gasoline fund.
The court also collected
$5,:al2.80 In the Small claims
division with 219 claims fUed.
'There were 1,515 criminal
cases flied In the court and 68
civil cases ·in 1976.

Receipts for the office of
Meigs County Judge Robert
MA PERKINS DIES
p.m. Sunday al the Waugh . Newbury units beings.
E. Buck last year totaled
Halley·Wood Funeral Home
CINCINNATI (UP!) Similar studies will also be required In order to obta in $53,185.68.
wi th the Rev . Alfred Holley OPSC certification of the transm ission lines from Ihe Newbury
Of the total , $17,192.99 went Actress Virginia Payne, who
officiating . Burial will be In Site to the company's load centers. These yet to be planned
Old Mercerville Cemetery. studied will be th• subject of a sepante OPSC Certllicale In fines to the state; $2,209.70 portrayed the character "Ma
Friends may call at the
Application process . As such, their costs are not included In the
in fees to the sheriff's Perkins" in . a radio 110ap ·
funeral' home from 7 to 9 p.m .
above"figure.
department; $19,9to.87 to the opera for 'rl years, died at her
Saturday .
county general fund; home. WednesQ&amp;y afternoon:
NOW YOU KNOW
Although Miss Payne's euct
Honey Is poured Into the $11,135.10 to the county law age was not known, she was
• Veterana Memorial Hoopltal
DAVID D. FRENCH
· Admitted - Donald Husk, ears of brides In India so they library fund; $5,707.02 to the believed to be In her 70s.
HARRISONVILLE
David D. French. 76. Orange. Hemlock Grove; Roland allegedly will hear orily sweet county auto license and
Calif .. formerly of · Har- King, New Haven, W. Va.; things .
risonville, died Feb. 7.
· Mr. French was born ·MIJy Carrie J11dson, Hartford;
· 17, 1900 In HarriSbnvllle the Oma Hysell, Syracuse;
son of the late Waller and Rolallll Carroll, Pomeroy.
Kathryn Dye French. He was
Dlscha rged
John
also preceded In death by his
Krawsczyn,
Sampson
Hall,
wife, Vi rginia French .
Mr. French. a graduate of Robert Manley, Elizabeth
Ohio Un iversity. taught Bartoe.
school In Meigs County
Funeral ser~Jices will be 2

years;

MEIGS lHEATRE
a.osED FOR
Make Your Reservations. Early and Enjoy the Music
Quintessence II

THE ·MEIGS INN
992-3629

Pomeroy, 0.

OPEN FRIDAY ·NIGHT TIL 8

later

graduatlnq from low school
and procloclng law In Meigs
County, In 1926 he moved lo
Orange. Calif .. and become
. superior court judge there .
He was retired at the lime 9f

VACATION

WAtaf fOR

OPENING DATE

.,

GALLIPOLIS - The Ohio Bell
Telephone Company Friday paid Its Gallla
County llxes, about one-third higher than
In 1975, for the first hall of 1976.
Customer Services Manager Gary
Owens presented the company's check for
$811,1168 to the Galli a County Treasurer. The
company's 1976 half-year taxes are up
almost $22,000 over 1975's payment for tl)e
same' periOd.
·
··
. The telephone company pays real estate
taxes on Its land and buildings and public
utility property tax based' on the wire

his death .
He ls survived by two sons.

John and Robert ; In
Cal ifornia : one doughier,
Mllry Kathryn ; one brother,
Hlel, of Harrisonville and a
niece, Kathryn Jane, who
made her home with the
deceosed . Funeral Hrv l ~es
will be held In Callfllrnlo.
CHAkLES A. VARIAN
Hartford -

Funera l ser-

vices for Charles A. Varian,
52, Har!tord, will be held at 1
p.m. Sa!ur$y instead of 11
a .m. at the Foglesong
Fune~ral
nam~s of

Home . Corrected
two siSters who are
among lh@ survivors of Mr .
Var ian are Mrs. Ida Council,

B•ntM, Ky ., and Mrs . Rose
Dills, Columbus.
·
'

'

mileage distrihot!on within a given ta&gt;lng
district.
Corporate tex dollars are distributed
lo each taxing district according to current
tax rates by the county budget commlssion .

BLOODMOBILE DAY
BloodmobUe Day In Meigs County
ill Feb. 14 from llo I p.m. In llle Setdor
Citizens Rooms ot llle old Junior High
In Pomeroy. Blood Is In short supply. If
at all potolble; give a unll of your blood

The county 's largest taxpayer, the
Ohio Electric Company (James ·Gavin
Plant) paid Its first hall \axes Thursday
totaling $2,597,737 .89. Other large . lor some one. You may save biB lUe, or .
collections were $405,531.28 from OVEC your own, some day.
(Kyger Creek Plant) and $183,404.09 fron\
Ohio P0wer Company.

at 2;30 p.m. 1\jonday at the Grace ·united could possibly be converted In two weeks
Methodist Church to outline plans for a to a month . The board felt that the sooner
move. ·
conversion was completed the better.
The resolutio~ to co~vert the heating
If the transfer plan becomes effective
systems from gas to fu el oil was made as this week, students at North Gallia would
an 'emergency measure, tllerefore being have instruction from 7 a.m. to 12:15 p.m.
speolfic in staUng the board would spend Kyger Creek students would use classno more than $3,999 on each building. rooms from 12:15 to 5:30 p.ll). Cheshire-Kyger students and the
HDwever, in order to Convert an old boiler
which has not been in use for two or three junior high from KC would be \ran!jported
years at Kyger Creek , more funck may be to Addaville School where there w6uld be
needed, a problem to be met when it class sessions from 8 a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
comes.
and 1;30 to 5:55 p. m.
Assistant Supt. David C. Campbell,
Supt. Hairston also reviewed plans to
with Supt. Hairston, reviewed the ad- surv ey teach ing , administrative· and
ministration's 'efforts in trying to obtain classified employees on what steps should
propane gas as an altema~ heating and be taken to make-up all days missed
fuel oil. It was reported that the boilers because of the inclement weather.
The Gailta County Local Teachers'

E-R called out three
times in Middleport

whatever number of Saturdays Qecessar y
so as to comp1ete t he yea r on or near

sohedule.
Board approval will be made before
any rescheduling is adopted.

MIDDLEPORT "" The Middleport
Emergency Squad answered three calls
Satuncky morning. At 9:13 a.m. they were
called to Rt . '33 for Peggy Wolfe, 25,
Racine, who had been involved In an
automobile accident. She was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 9:33 a"m. it went to 6H North
Second St. for Nellie Price who had fallen.
She was transported lo the home of her
sister. At 10:14 a. m. Patricia Sue Plumley
was removed \o VMH with a possible
lractQre of her right ankle.

School schedules set
POMEROY - Ail elementary schools
of \he Meigs Loca l School District will lle
open for classes at the normal time on
Monday.
For the present, junior and senior high
school students will be attending classes

NO. 2

GALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASANT

on alternate days at the Meigs H~ School
building.
Senior high students will he at the high
school on Monday and junior high students
on Tuesday. Classes at that building will
start at the regular hooo•

•

tntmt

tmts
VOL. 12

PRETTY BECKY ROUSH, holding
a huge heart-shaped box of candy, is a
reminder that tomorrow is Valentine
Day . In case you can't afford this kind
of candy, which relllls for $29.95, just
"say something sweet to your sweetheart ." Becky is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs . Greg Roush and Is a third
grader at \he Syracuse pementary
School.

Assn . has conducted a similar survey

among its members. Results favo red a
plan to go to school on the remaining
holidays of the school calendar plus

•

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 13. 1977

MIDDLEPORHOMEROY

PRICE 25 CENTS

Thousands turn to food stamps
COLUMBUS - Ow-ing the energy
crisis marked by astronomical rises In
heating bills and job layoffs, thousands of
Ohio farnllles are turning to the Food
Stamp Program u a possible suurce of
help, according 1o the Ohio Department of
Public Welfare (ODPW).
Local welfare departments are
reported swamped by a large number of

Save 40 per cent and 50 per cent on many items of wearing
apparel lor you and your family. Save 30 per cent on our ~ntire stock
of costume jewelry on the 2nd floor.
Big savings in the 1st floor home furnishings department.
Special towel' sale and 30 per cent off on custom made draperies and
bedspreads.
In thi! lingerie department 2nd floor a Y2 price sale Playtex
disconlinued styles bras and girdles.
SAVE ALL OF YOUR CASH REGISTER RECEIPTS AND WHITE
PAYMENT ON ACCOUNT SLIPS. THEY ARE VALUABLE TO
YOU FOR PREMIUMS.

OPEN SATURDAY 9130 A.M. TO 5 P.M.

ELBERFELDS 'IN POMEROY

inquiries about food stamp ellglblUty. T)'e
Bureau of Food Stampa In ODPW Saturday offered a brief summary of eligibility
r!'(Julrements . The Bureau operates a toll·
free hottine over which Individuals can get
more specific Information about their own
situation. The holllne number Is 1-100-2821190. A aummary of food stamp eUgibility

.City will have school
. GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis City ·sessions) but added, "The schools will
Schoob Supt. Don SUggs late .Satuncky remain open as long as we have gas ....
anrioUnced "we wUI run our schools next
The superintendent said, "We will
week," following a special board· of convert to fuel oil If we have to," and
education meeting In Washington School. added he was given permission by the
Staggs said the board discussed op- board 1o "make a bargain to.buy gas II at
tions brought forth by the current natural aU possible."
·
gas shortage (switch to fuel oil or split

Firemen will meet in Ripley
MIDDtEPDI\T - The regular
meeting of the Area Volunteer Fire and
Emergency Assn. will be held Tuesday,
Feb. 15 at 7;30 p.m.
The host unit will he the Ripley
Volunteer Fire Department, Ripley, W.
Va" For those who have nol been lo the
Ripley station, It Is located on USR 33
(Main Street) one mile east of 1-77.
The program will be f!reground
coordination and will deal with response

Man beaten up,

left in auto

and Impact assessment studies before construction of the,

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

several

Bell's tax check p~id

GALIJPOLIS - Gallla County's Local
Board of Education here Saturday,
following a long discussion, authorized
Superintendent Tom Hairston to proceed 1o convert the existing gas boilers at
Kyger Creek and Chesh!re-Kyger Schools
into fuel oil heating units.
·
'Ibis action was taken In light of the
fact that Kyger Creek high school students
will, In all probabillty, he attending spilt
day classes at North Gailli High School.
Cheshlre-Kyger pupils may ha~ to be
transferred to Addavllle Elementary
School along with junior high sludents
froll) the Kyger Creek BuDding,
No definite date haa been set lor such a
transfer, but school officials said Saturday
the high school has already surpassed Its
gas allocation established by Columbia
Gas of Ohio.
Supt. Hairston said no written
notification has been received from tbe
gas coqtpany r!'(Juesting that the building
be .closed indefinitely.
· However, Hairston has scheduled a
special meeting for teachers In the Kyger
Creek area and North Gallla Hl"h School

.,

will Submit an App.IJcatlon for a Certificate of Environmental

Chapel with the Rev . Wilbur

She had

·

As mentioned previously, C&amp;SOE w ill ultimetely develop
bOth the Newbury and Great Bend Sites. However , at th is point
in time, the plans for development of the Great Bend Si te have
not progressed beyond the po int discussed earlier - l, e., it is
being held for development at some future date . In all
likelihood, the earliest that the generating un its would be in ·

CHECK FOR TAXES - Ohio Bell Commercial Office Manager Gary Owens
JX'esents Gall!a County Trea81D'er Frank Mills, right, a check for $88,868 for first
half year taxes In county treasurer's office.

Beard promoted
at Foote plant
GRAHAM STATION, W. two daughters, -Rachel and
Va. - Appointment of Rhonda .
William D. Beard · as plant
The Graham Plant Is a
manager of the Foote ferroalloys plant producing
Mineral Company Plant here silicon alloys which supplles
was annollliced today by A. J . the automobile Industry,
Primosic, vice-president of many foundries and steel
production, Ferroalloys mills.
Division.
The . alloy plant Is the
Beard Is a graduate of · largest In the Foote Mineral
Lamar University , Company and Is considered
Beaumont, Texas, with a one of the seven largest aUoy
degree
in
chemical · producing plants lri the world.
engineerihg. He joined the It has been completely
staff at the Graham Plant In modernized with air pollution
1975 as general superin- equipment and the lntendent, and formerly . stallation of three large
worked for Beker Industries electric arc furnaces during
Corp., Soda Springs, Idaho, the past four years.
prior to his employment by
There are approximately
Foote Mineral.
375 employed at the plant
Beard lives In New Haven here.
with his. wife, Montez , and

375 MWe coal·fired units on Newbury Site. Construction is
scheduled io commence in early1198li with the first unit

Saturday at 3 p.m . at Ewing

Center.

WILLIAI\! D. BEA1tD

power generation purposes.
:
.
Based upon a consideration of such factors as generat1on
requirements, fUel availability, economics, etc ., the deci sion
was made to construct a coal-f ired gener.;~tlng faci lity on the
Newbury Site . The company's rationale for deve looinQ the

san, El wood , a sister and a· Estu Thoma. She was also
brother .
preceded In death by her first
Surviv ing are a daugh fer. husband , William Durst ; her
Mr s. WilHam
(Lou ise ) second husband , Wilford
Stewar t of Athens ; ,twa sons, Sinclair , and one sister , Betty
Eber H. Lewis of Mason , Tulga.
She is survived by one son,
Oh io, and Fre d A. Lew is,
Cleves , Oh io ; a br othe r, George Durs1. Wellston ; twa
George Cheatham . Vi nton ; a granddaughters, Georgia
Marietta ;
Mary
sister -i ri -law , M r s. Evelyn Rohr,
Lewi s of Middlep ort ; 12 Margaret ·Barcus. Jef.
grandChildren !3nd 18 great- ferSonvllle , Ind. ; one greatgranddaughter. Krlstle Rohr,
grandchildren .
Funera l ser vices will be Mar ietta ; two brothers,
held at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Howard Thoma , Pomeroy
Charles
Thoma,
Rawl ings -Coats ·· Funeral and
Zavitz officiating . Burial will
be In Gra ve Hill Cemetery at
Cheshire . Friends may call at
the funeral home from 2 to 5
and 7 to 9 p ~m . Saturday.

Gas to oil conversion
voted in KC's schools

sites to meet Its future generating needs. The program began
with a gross screening ol 1 the entire State of Ohio and
proceeded through subsequen11y more detailed stages until
two sites were identified as prime sites. These sites are the

Fred, Charleston, W. Va .; 23 (OPSC ).

gra ndchildren , one great •
grandchild, and several
nieces, nephews and cousins .
Funeral arrangements are
being completed at the
Walker Funeral
Home ,

•

financial standpoint, at this
time but repeated that the
Columbus and Southern Ohio Electr ic Company IC&amp;SOE l
began a program In late1972 to Identify and locate power plant

Jimmy
Johnson
acti ve In the Hunti ng ton city and
Ohli nger; . 13
greatmarket.
•
grandchildren
,
and
nine
Mr . Johnson was a World
War I veteran, havi ng served grea t-grea t-grandchlldren .
Funeral services will be
In Fr ance wi th the U. S.
Ar my, He was a member of held Sunday at 1:30 p.m. at
the Paw Pa w Church on Swan the Foglesong Funeral Home
Cre ek and attend ed ·the wllh Rev. 0 . B. Hatcher of.
Second Gu yandotte Baptist flciating . Burial will follow in
the Suncrest -Cemetery .
Church In Huntington .
Fr iends may call at the
Surv iVing In addition to his
wife is one brother, Oak.ey 'uneral home from 4 to 9 p.m.
Johnson , Centenary. Se:veral Saturday .
ni~c es and nephews survi ve.
C.ARL P. RICHARDS
One sister and si x brothers
preceded him in death .
DEXTER - Carl P.
Funeral services will be
Richards, 67, Dexter, died
held 2:30p.m. Sunday allhe . early Friday morning at his
MI. Zion Baptist Chur cl"1 in home. Mr. Richards was
Ohio Township with Rev . Jim
dead upon the arrival of the
Frank lin off iciating. Buri al
Pomeroy Emergency Squad .
wil l be in Oh i o Valley
Born Nov. 4, 1909 in West
Mem ory Gardens.
Virginia , on Oct. 29, 1929, he
Friends may .call from 5 married Verna Hill, who
until 9 p.m . Saturday at survives .
Bear~ Mortuar y, 3001 Third
other survivors are three
Ave .. Huntin gton , ar) d then
sons , Carl Eugene and
one hour prior to the servi ces
Charles Edward, both of St.
at the church .
Albans, W. Va .; Robefl Reed,
Arrangements ar e under
McArthur; daugllfers, Mrs .
the direct ion of the Cremeens
Frank (Ann) Perry, Etnaand
Funera l Home, Gall ipoli s.
Mrs. Carl { Euna Mae) Eaton ,
Woodbridge, Va .; a brother ,

fo

Be our guests for cookies and cn ff~&gt;:t?. ",.,
Satu1day. February 12 and Valenttne s

camot proceed, even from a

company doe s have lntentl&lt;JIUI of buDding tho plant
at Greot Bend.
Durin« peak constriiCIIon
110me 3,000 per11011J would be
employed. There would be
110me 400 permanent employes, Elkins said. The
meeting concluded with a ·
coffee hour,
Following are the contents
of material presented those
attending la st night's
meeting outlining the plans of
the Gompany as well as giving
the reasol18 for the selection
of tho Newbury site at Belpre
for the coal type plant lo be
built there over the Great
Bend site:

· POINT PLEASANT - A Point
Pleuant man was severely beaten and left
laying In a car behind the noodwall for
approximately 16 houra Friday, according
1o Point Pleaoanl Pollee.
·
Larry Pearce, 211, whole condition was
reported sat!Bfaclory at Pleaaant Valley
HosPilll Saturday morning Is tho oubject
of a pollee Investigation.
Pearce apparently was attacked between tand 3 a.m ..ln the morning pod for a
while ·was left unconscious.
. Late In the aftemoo~. Pearce left the
cor, making his way t~ the pollee station.

to, and attack of large fires , during mutual
aid operations.
Fire and emergency units who plan to
attend but have not rrialled their cards to
Ripley are asked to call Gary Wolfe at 9492684 or Bob Byer at 992-2482 no tater than 7
p.m. Monday, Feb. 14. .
The association wants to prepare a Uat
of personnel and !'Qulpment available In
case of emergencies other than Its normal
services. All departments are asked to
prepare such a Uat of Its fire and
emergency personnel complete with addresses an!l phone numbers iiO a file may
be established.

DOOR SHOT OUT
PATRIOT - Gallla Couhty sheriff'•
depuUes early Saturday morning while on
routine patrol here found 110meone had
used a shotgun 1o blast a large hole In the
door at the south end of Southweotem High
School.
Deputies oald the blast broke out the
glass above the doors.

follows:
The mutmum adjusted monthly
Income (Income minus deductions ) a
household can have and still receive food
stamps Is:
illld.
Inc.
1
$245

2

3~

3

433

4
5
6

553
660
787

7

873

8

993

9

1120
Income Is any money received by aU
members of the household, except income
of students under 18 years old. Expenses
that can be deducted from income Include:
ten per -cent of earned lricome, not to ex·
ceed $30 per month; mandatory deducli0118 such as local, state and federal !axes,
Social Security taxes, retirement
payments and union dues; medical costs If
over ten dollars a month; cost for child or
invalid care when care Is necessary for
employment or education ; tuition and
r!'(Juired fees for education; unusual expenses due to a disaster ; and shelter costs
(utilities, service fees; rent, real estate
taxes, mortgage payments and Interest)
over 30 percent of household Income after
aU other deductions .
Households may have resources up lo
$1,500 or. $3,000 If the household has two or
more members and at least one Is 60 or
older. Resources Include cash on hand, or
In checking or saving account; savings
bonds; stocks and bonds; bulldlnga; land ;
boats, campers and other IUXUI')I Items.
To be eligible for food stamps, persons
mual also he U. S. citizens or lawfully
admitted au.,.; have a place lo cook
meaiB (persons 110 or over can use stamps
for home-delivered hot-meals and
congregate meal programs); and any
household member between 18 and 84 must

a

· register

for

employment,

unless

speclflcaiJ uempt
,
When applying for food stampa, applicants mual show ·proof of Income,
resuul'Cell and deductl0118" Pamphlets
about tho Food Stamp Program may be
obtained by writing to Food Stamp, Bo• 41,
Columbw, Ohio 43216.

'\ '1L•.' .
; :tt

.•

ar J.... '
. ..t!-P

/

"'

.

VIRGIL CROSS, above, left, captw-ed this picturesque
winter scene in the Eno area In Gailia County during \he
"Great Winter ol '77 " in which snow rollers measuring up to
four feet In height were observed along the roadside. At right,

Roger Leach, son of Mr. and Mrs. Don Leach, Rt. I, Cheshire,
was captured In the above photo holding one of the large
donut shaped pieces of snow caused by the strong winds In
'. January . Many of them were In lhe yard and field of Ebner
Thle,

Teachers employed in county system
GALUPOLIS - Employinent of three
new Instructors, substitute ieachers,
tutors, substitute bus drivers and supplementary c~ntra ct personne1 were
major Items approved Saturday during the
regular meeting of the Gallla County Local
Board of Education.
Following a brief presentation by Max
Haffelt, title coordinator, the board employed three new ntle I instructors. Hired
by a 4-0 vote were Terry S. Collins and Jyl
Aly110n Zerkle.
·
Daisy T. Cook Smoot was employed by
a 3-1 vote fQIIow!ng an executive session.
Board member James Blevins voted no.
Haffe!l said the board had a $118,000
Title I carryover lroin last year and has
been allocated $141,496 for this year. In
order to utilize the federal money, \he
program moist be expanded. Substitute
teachers hired were Dorothy Ward and
Sandra L. Suiter.
Jessie Lee Fisher and Donna Barnes
were hired to tutor Jeffrey Moles and
Sharon Walters, respectively .
The employment of substitute bus
drivers brought out the biggest

LUNCHEON SET
.
GAWPOUS - The regular monthly
meeting 100 luncheon of the Melg&amp;.Gallla·
Muon Life Underwriters Association will
bo bold at 12 noon Wednesday a\ the
Hollday Inn near Gallipolis. David W.
Field, executive vice president of the Ohio
AJoociiUon Life Underwrlten, will be
opeaker aDd all Interested Ufe lnsu~ance
a1en11 are Invited.
·

disagreement of the day. Transportation Bidwell-Porter ;
Kaye
Michael,
director Haffelt recommended the hiring cheerl eading adviso r, Bidwell-Porter
of two men, one applicant lives in Elementary ; Marilyn Meadows , seventh
Gallipolis. ·
and eignth grade girls basketball coach,
Board member J. E. (Dick) Cremeens Bidwell-Porter Eiem.; La rry Shong,
objected to anyone being hired for a seventh and eighth grade boys hasketbsll
position, who lives outside the district. coach, Vinton Elementary; Gayle Craig,
Haffelt pointed out that the applicant was cheerleading advisor, Vinton Elementary
qualified and would ease the no substitute Ann Dollenmyer, seventh and eighth grade
situation in the Kyger Creek area.
girls basketball coach, Vinton Elemen"Substitute bus drivers are a problem tary; Judy Farney, pep club, Drama Club,
' at Kyger Creek. We just can't get anyone Advisor, Hannan Trace High School;
to drive," Haflelt stated. Cremeens said he James Chestnut, Varsity , girls basketball
felt that surely there was someone in- coach, Hannan Trace High School, and
terested in a substitute driving job in that James Chestnut, seventh and eighth grade
area, or If nothing else, a substitute In girls hasketball coach, Hannan Trace
another area of the county could be Elem.
The board also authorized its clerk
dispatched lo Kyger Creek .
Haffelt said only one driver from the Mrs. Naomi Beman to r!'(Juest an adNorth Gallla area would substitute in the vanced withdrawal of 1500.000 in real ·
KC area and on some occasions he refused estate tox collections from the Gallla ·
to come or was not available.
County Auditor's Office to meet payroll
As of Satuncky, the only substitute obligations until final settlement Is made.
driver at Kyger Creek was Roy Gardner, a
Prosecuting Attorney Joseph Cain met
with
the board regarding Investment of
high school custodian.
Cremeens said he was opposed to the imy Inactive funds the board might have
employment of the applicant and that he later this year.
had taken a similar position two years ago
Atty. Cain will prepare a list of
in the hiring of a school secretary.
recommendations regarding funds and
Board member James Blevins joined bank depositories .
the dlsc!ISSion ,at that point :
Due to the loss of Cecil Rice, one of the
''!think your reasoning Is absurd, Mr. major lunchroom suppliers, the hoard
Cremeens. I suppose if a bus load of granted Hilary Gr.!fflth, cafeteria
children has to stay at home because a supervisor, perml-,lon to enter into a
substitute driver Isn't available, that will centrlillzed purchasing plan. All purchases
be all right with you."
will be bundled through Mrs. Griffith.
Board member Bruce Stout then told
As ail emergency measure in order to
Blevll18 tllat he could disagree with get much needed cafeteria equipment for
Cremeens, but "not to start talking that the transfer of the Kyger Creek area
way or it could be a long meeting."
studenta, the board approved a r!'(Juest to
. The hoard did employ Harold V. purchase cafeteria equipment on a sharing
Coughenour as a substitute driver. It did basis with the State of Ohio.
not hire the other applicant.
The state will furnish $25,000 and the
Supplemental contracts were assigned district $4,000 for $29,000 worth of !'Quipas follows: Bruce Gabriel, seventh and men!. The board by a 3-1 vote accepted the
eighth -grade boys basketball coach at
(Continued on page A-2)

Special events. ·coming
Weather
Partial clearing lodly aDd
cold, with 10 pet. chance of
1110w nurrt•. Cootinued cold
Mondoy, chonce of 1now
1ood, but not helvy . Lows
lllnlchl In tho Ill, hlcha
Monday In tho 30ft.

NATIONAL BLACK ' HISTORY WEEK TO BE
OBSERVED - Galllpolla City Manoger Richard T. (Dick)
MUla above proclaimed Feb. J)-1911 National Black Hillory
Week. Pictured .above In the city manager's office, left 1o
. riKilt, are Mll'rls Hoa1111. FOCUS president; Gilbert Craig,

''

.r

NAACP prealdent; Jim Hogan, NAACP representative;
Sandy Hunter and Paul Walker, Rio Gralllle Cbllege Black
Student Union, and Ptg Thomas, Rio Grande College
represen(4ijve. Not p!C\uted - Mn. Olan Gomes.

GALUPOLIS - Several events are
scheduled this week as Gallla Countlans
observer NPUonal Black History Week.
City Manager RichardT. (Dick) Mills'
has proclaimed Feb. 13-19 as Nati0118l
Black History Week. The Rio Grande
Cbllege Black Student Union , FOCUS and
NAACP organ!utlons have scheduled
.activities 811 nights this week.
Monday, at 7:30 p.m. the Black
Student Union at Rio will host Dick

Gregory.
Tuesday, starting at 7 p.m. FOCUS .
will host Mrs. Beulah Johnaon who wU1
speak on black history In Gallla Cbunty"
Both sessions wUI be 'held In the Rio
Grande Coliege Dining Hall.
George Davis, Columbus, will be tho
NAACP's guest speaker on Saturday, Fab.
19, beginning at 7:30p.m. at Paint Croft
Baptist Chut't.-h.
The public is invited.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="787">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11274">
                <text>02. February</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="48001">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="48000">
              <text>February 11, 1977</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="7535">
      <name>cheatam</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1437">
      <name>french</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="633">
      <name>fry</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="126">
      <name>johnson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="54">
      <name>lewis</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="932">
      <name>richards</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="107">
      <name>sheets</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2179">
      <name>sinclair</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="263">
      <name>thoma</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="155">
      <name>varian</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
