<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="14954" 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/14954?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-19T07:32:00+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="47731">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/6cc3805d474d244bce529a3924d9c431.pdf</src>
      <authentication>b8ee5a2d5dec5529b6b9796329197f84</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="48062">
                  <text>10-Tbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Feb. l4, 1977

\

Hospital News

~~-----Ar----e--a--D~;th~---- Meigs woman
1

1

JOS"tf'HINE DILLON
JOMphlne Rachel Dillon.
11, a raldsnt of Crown City,
llled Sunclly morning at the
J.ame of her son, Harold
Dlllan, of 2216 Eastern Ave .•
Glolllpolls.
She was born Aug. 26, 1895,
•I Gallipolis Ferry, W. Va.,
daughter of the late Albert
end Lucy Meek .
She married Kirtley Dillon.
He pr~ her In death on
Dec. 5, 19n.
Survivors Include two
deughten, Lucy Powley and
Katherine Park@r, both of

Columbus; three sons :
Harold. Gallipolis; Clyde,
Lebllnan, Tenn., and James,
Orient, 0111o. One daughter
preceded her In death. Ten
grand - and tour great.
grandchildren survlva.
Funeral serVIces will be
held 2 p. m. Wednesday at

Willis Funeral Home with
Rev . Willard Blankenship
officiating. Burial will follow
In Miller Cemetery, Miller,
Ohio. Friends may call at the
funeral home an Tuesday
from 2-~ and 7-9 p. m.
Pallbearers will be Robert
Stem, James Holley, Garland
Buck'ley, Jake Holley.
Michael Camden, OtiS
Greene and Leon Greene.
MAMIE GWINN
Mamie Mabel Gwinn, 85.
Rt. 1. Gallipolis (Mill Creek
Rd.) died Saturday at Holzer·
Medical Center. She had been
In falling health about two
yrars.
An employee of the Bob
Evans Steak House tor 20
years, she was born July 6,

at White Sulphur
Springs, w. Va., to the late
William and Rebecca Terrv.
She. was twice married, to
William Masters and Loma
Gwinn .
She Is survived by one son,
Ripple Mead, Virginia ; 14
grandchildren; 39 great1891

grandchildren ,

brother,

Mason

and

one

Terry ,

Covington. Va. One son. five

brothers and one sister

preceded her-In death.
Funeral services will be 3
p.m. Tuesday at the WaughHailey-Wood Funeral Home
with the Rev. Willlilm Curf.
man officiating. Burial will
be In Gravel Hili cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2 to •and 7
to 9 p. m. Monday.
LOTTIE . ROUSH

MASON, W. Vo.- Lottie C.
Riley Stewart Roush , 87, of
319 Williams Street, Middleport, died Saturday In the
Veterans Memorial Hoopltal
Pomeroy.

Born April 13, 1889, In Spilman, to the late Marion and
Jennie Harris Riley, she was
a member of the Hobson
United Methodist Church .
She was preceded In death by
her first husband, Archie
Stewart. allOsecood husband,
Ernest Roush.
Survivors Include a
daughter, Mrs. Robert
(Mary) Riggs. · Langsville,
0111o; two grandchildren. two
greet-grandchildren, several
step.chlldren. several step-

MEIGS THEATRE
Q.OSED FOR

VACAnON
WATQt FOR

OPENING DATE

grandchildren, and many
nieces and nephews.

Funeral services will be

held at the Foglesong
Funenl Home a1 l o.m. on
Tuesday with Rev . AmQ~
Tillis officiating. Burial will

(Continued from page I)
Nobody could get it for them. I got a !tame and started
calling," she said.
Scotl Stipp, son of the owner of District Petroleum
Products, Inc., 1832 Milan Road, was the name she got.
Stipp called Mrs. McNally the "coordinator." She's to be
credited. She's the one who called us and coordinated everything. She did a really good job," Stipp said.
He added that approximately JJO Ill-wheel rigs were
stranded between Perkins Pancake Houae and Erie ChryslerPlymouth on Route 250. All tbe rigs had their motors running
for hours and most were out ol fUel. Many ol tbe drivers were
sleet!ing.
Stipp said the call came in for the die&amp;&lt;ll fuel about 3:30
a.m. by 5:10a.m. nearly 3\HO rigs had received up to 50 gaUona
of fuel. The trucks had number-two fUel in the tanks which lend
l&lt;l get wSiy and thick in cold weather, Stipp explalped. He and
a fellow District Petroleum driver !Wed up a huge truck with
number one fuel that would thin the already present fuel or fill
the tanks enough l&lt;l get the trucks on the way.
Stipp went from truck to truck pouncllng on windows to
waken the drivers and see who needed fuel.
"She's Ill be credited lor this," Stipp said of Mrs. McNally.
In addition to the time spent on the phone and CB getting
the trucks filled with fuel, Mrs. McNally. answered calls
requesting other, aid. Snowmobiles and four-wheel drive
vehicles were dispersed to pick up nurses, deliver
medications, take four pregnant women In the hospital and
bring patient home from the hospital.
Members of REACT keep a log book. Mrs. McNally's
reads lor the weekend : 523 requests for road conditions; 592
stalled and abandoned vehicles; 62 road obstructiona; 29
major traffic jams;· 110 accidents with injuries but no
fatalities .
·
'She logged 514 hours on the CB during January.
.
Mrs. McNally reported that she slept three hours during
the weekend and ate cheese sandwiches and drank milk
brought tn her by her husband.
She finally went In bed at 6 a.m. Monday and slept until
10 :30 a.m.
"This has been the first crisis I've been Involved In," she
said. "I've had my license. eight years and this won't be the last
one. Just think what will happen when all this Ice and snow
melts.
"The Ohio State Patrol, the Perkins ;IDd Huron Police
Departments were sweethearts during all this."
Why does she do it?
" I enjoy working with people. I am confined and .this keeps
me going. I enjoy it. It's my me," Betty McNally said.

VetenuM-"al H01pllal
Saturday Admlulons Anna Crislip, ~..on!! Bottom;
Roberta Marshall,
Parkersburg, Patricia
Plumley, Pomeroy: George
Foss, Pomeroy; Richard
Duclrwoc1h, Syra~Wit.
Saturday Discharges Olarles Conger, Paul Hudaon, Georce Eutman, Earl
Riggs, Chrl8tine Branham,
Emmell Hartley, Marie
~~~~~!· Jo
Ann Conkle, Cheshire :
Richard Dean, Middleport;

-••
-

a

Rampage

Four persons have been
charged In the alleged anned
robbery late Saturday night
at the Ohio Valley Uvestock
Company, 52 Vinton Ave.
Clarence Al-o Lawson,
· 11, Rt. Z, VInton, ud James
Toodore Lawson, 11; Rt. Z,
VIDtoa, have been eharged
witll aggravated robbery
while compUclty to commit a
felony charges have been
flied a~inlt Robert Sgears.
ss, GaUipalll, and Herbert
Rife, te, Galllpalts.
The Lawson cousina entered not goUty pleas this
morning In Gallipolis
Municipal Court · upon the
recommendations of their
· court-appointed counsels, D.
Dean Evans and Thomas D.
Moulton. A preliminary
hearing was set for 9 a.in.
Thursday. Bonds were fixed
at $30,000 each.
Spears and Rife requested

Rio cops title

THE MEIGS INN

There drt rMny convincing rei\SOn~ ~or .1 s,.,fe deposit boiC. Bu11ht:
besl ~ we know ~~ the complt•t pe.\t:t ol mind ir giYes 'fOti to
realiZe th.lt your w.luilblt's .ut: ~feguo\rded d"Y ln. d"Y out tvtl'f
day or the ye.nl The tOSI i:\ fnsignitk ..nlly sm~ll when you comp;ue
11 with the replo\ctmtnt vitlut o l your posstssiOno; ... if 1nd~ they ·
can be rtr&gt;I.Ktd! We w•~ be hAr&gt;r&gt;y to M~&lt;~nge lur the remctl of c1 box
with you. W~n )"'tire here . cW&lt; ilboul o ur 01~1 serw:es.

Save on Set• of Serta MattreP&amp;I and Box Springs.
Choose .Twin or Full, Queen or King, Built
. for Long Wear
and Lasting Comfort. Serta Quality Construction.

Reg. '138 Twin Set ••••••••••••••••••••••• Salle '40
Reg. '178 Full Sill Set ................... Salle '60
Reg. '279 Queen SeJ ....~ ................ Sale '100
Reg. '399 King Set ....................... Salle '132

(SJ Farmers Bank
A•

1
•

I

POMEROY, OHIO

Maximum Insurance for Each
Depositor. Member Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation.

$40,000.00

RUTLAND
Seth
Frederick Nicholson, 86,
Route I, R!ltland, 8 school
teacher lor over 50 years and
a local history buff, died
Tuesday morning at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Nicholson was born
Nov. 30, 1890 In Rutland, a son
of the late William and
Cynthia Hunt Nicholson. He
married Gladys McHaffie,
who survives, on Aug. 28,
1915.
A teacher in Meigs County
schools lor .47 years, !tlr.
Nicholson spent eight additional years doing substitute teaching. He was a 30
year meinhe~ of Star Grange
1734 and was an elder ol the
Dexter Church of Christ for 30
years. He was a director and
SETH NiCHOLSON
strong supporter of the Meigs
County
Pioneer
and
Funeral services will be
Historical Society and was a
held
at 2 p.m. Friday at the
member of the Meigs County
Dexter
Church of Christ with
Retired Teachers Assn.
Mr.
Charles
Russell ofSurviving besides his wife
ficiating.
Burial
wiD be in
are a sister, Mrs. Allee Epple
of Dyesv!Ue; and several Meigs Memory Garden .
nieces and nephews including Friends may call at the
Norman and Allegra Will who Rutland Chapel ol the Walker
lived on the same farm of the Funeral Home any time after
Nlcbol8ons for 29 years and 2 p.m. Thursday. The family
. Mrs. Robert (Betty) Musser, wiD receive friends from 2 to
4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday.
Route I, Rutland.
Besides his parents, Mr. The body will be taken to the
Nicholson was preceded in · church at 12 noon Friday to
death by a brother and three lie in state until time of
services.
sisters.

Tuesday Night

$295

"EXTRA CRISPY" Kentucky Fried Chicken .Now
Available ... Crisp On The O..tslde - Moist and .
Tendet On The Inside.
Now Avoilabto At:
.
-.

CROW'S STEAK HOUSE

Ph .

Sale '98

Sale '118
Sale 1179
Sale '267
•

SHOP WEEKDAYS AND SAlURDAY 9:30 TO 5:00 FRIDAY nL 8:00
.

'

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

0.

-.'

and oW' curtailment program now In effect."
Despite an extended weather forecast which calls lor colder
than normal weather through February and March, a report
Chaddock says Is ''not encouraging", he said the utility "still
doesn't forsee any difficulties in meeting our seasonal
commilmenls.
"The real problem, If one develops, will be in peak day
delivery," be said. ' 'That means on any given day there Is only
so much gas avaUable."
Meanwhile, the Public Utilltes Commlsslon of Ohio has
ordered Columbia Gas In divulge Information about its gas
supply by Wednesday Ill aid In deterrltlning whether the utility
·will reap excessive proftts because of the colder-than-normal'
winter. '

Seth Nicholson
died Tuesday

Cohimhia denies

SPECIAL PURCHASE ·AND SALE
SERTA MAnRESSES AND BOX SPRINGS

•

By JOHN T. KADY
Valted Prell laienalloaal
Columbia Gaa of Ohio said today It baa not asked tbe Federal
Poww CUnmlulon I~ emergency shlpmenla of natural gas
because It beUeva It baa enough gas "to meet OW' seasonal
requlremenlll", although more cold weather Is forecast for
February anci March.
Aaslstanl Oblo Attorney General Samuel Randazzo said
seeking help frtm the FPC seems to be "something that so
obvloualy needa to be done ~y the company."
Columbia spokesman WOllam Chaddock disagreed.
"We haven't (asked for FPC help) because we, at this time,
do not beUeve we have a def!cllln that area," Chaddock told
· UPI COO.y. "The deficit that we are including in OW' daUy
.reptrt is ooe that we feel can be handled through conservation

•

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

t

um Ia sure o .enoug

•

contin111nces in their easel! in
Sh~rlff Montgol'l!!!!...ll!:. :
order to secure counsel. !her credited the p""""'u""-&amp; •
follow ln the Riverview
Their next court appearance attorney 's office for Ill :
Cemetery, Middleport.
wos aet for 9 a.m. Wed· 8s•istance throughout the "
Friends may call at • the
funeral home from 2 to • p.m.
nesday. Municipal Court Investigation. The sheriff '
and 7 to. 9 p.m. today.
Judge Robert s. Betz IIlli said he had been further :
bonds at $30,00~~ each. advised by the proaecutor's :
ROBERT SHOEMAKER
Complicity carries uoe same office to make no other •
CHESHIRE Robert
Shoemaker. 67 , Cheshire.
penalty as the aggravated statements regarding the
died Saturday at Holzer
matter beCause oflhe fMr of :
robbery charge.
Medical Center following a
Dawn Greene, Racine;
SberUf James W. .Mont- unla~.orable pre-trial ,.
lingering Illness.
.
Delmaria Kirk, Deiter; Jack
gomery today Issued the publicity.
·
~
He was born Feb. 17, 1909 at
Oiler, Pomeroy: Florence
foUowlng ac~ount concerniDg
Freedom, Pa. to the late Guy
'
Horton, Middleport; Roger
tbe alleged armed robbery of
and Erna Wilson Shoemaker.
•
&gt;
He was also preceded in
King, Pomeroy; John NeweU,
tbe Ohio Valley Livestock
•
death by two brothers.
&gt;
Long
Bottom;
Nan
Moore,
Yards.
"
Surviving are his wife,
•
CLASS TO MEET
Middleport: Allee Kautz,
The incident oceurred at
Marie Smith Shoemaker ; two
The WUUng Workers CIIISB •
11:30 p.m. when two men
Pomeroy; Charles Humsisters, Mrs. Robert ( Erna l
Cornelius , Cheshire ; Mrs .
of
the Enterprise United
phreys, New Haven;. Goldie
wearln• stocking mask s
George (lucille) Jellyman.
MethodiBt
Church will meet
Lawson,
Mlnersv!Ue,
Cleo
entered
a
room
armed
with
Beaver, Pa .; three cousins,
at
7:30p.
m.
Thuraday at the •
DeTray,
Cbeoter;
Howard
shotguns
and
·
h
eld
up
the
two nieces al)d four nephews.
apartment
of
Cordelia Bentz
Funeral services will be
Phillips, RuUand.
persona there.
11 :30 a.m. Tuesday at the
•
Sunday Di~charges
, Sheriff Mongtomery and at the Meigs Inn.
Rawllngs .Coais
Funeral
Mildred
Mates,
Sharon
Card,
the
Galli&amp;
County
Home with William Uber
Angela Jones, Eber GUUian,
Prosecuting Attorney's Ofo11Jclaflng .. Frlends may call
•
~t the funeral home any time .
Helen Jeffers.
lice did not reveal the names
IN HOSPITAL
Holzer Medical Center
of tbe Individuals robbed. It
Joan
McLain, Racine, •
(Discharges, Feb. II)
was reported, however, the
Josiah B. Allen, Helen
robbery occurred long after entered Holzer Medical '
Center today where she will •
Arnott, Mary M. Bennett, Swisher, Jay W. Tom, Ell1ffi8 the llvestockksales ended.
AI J Bl ir M J
h A M. Waldren.
After Ia lng an un- undergo surgery Thursday. .•
ec
·
a
•
rs.
osep
·
determined
amount of cash
(Continued from page I)
Burris, Jr. and son, Edmund
(Birtld, Deb. U)
•
M. Campbell, Gladys F.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank and wallets, the gun-toting
WHERETO WALK
marvelous job" of acting and
Casto Roger L Casto FarTar, son, J ackson; Mr. men left.· The Lawsons. were
Middleport
Pollee Chief J. ·
'
·
'
taken
Into
custody
early
Imogene Crabtree, Lawrence and Mrs. Thomas D. Jenkins,
"expressed himself well to
J.
Cremeana
asks
Middleport ;
Depriest
Gle
A
F
tt
daughter,
Jackson.
Sunday
morning.
E
Indicate he really was his
residents
walking
dogs to •
M
Wtllia'
GnnW
·de
y,
(Discharges,
Feb
..
13)
On
Sunday
night,
a
search
son." Then .Brown added to
rs.
m
an son,
wa's made of the Colony Inn, walk them in the area of the •
Mrs. Delbert Donald Goad
Mrs. Thomas D, Baird and '·
the pitch by telling Coulter,
and son, Vernon Grumbling, daughter, Mrs. Randolph formerly the Queen . Bee railroad tracks along the •
"Your son iB here, you should
Mrs. John L. Hamric.and son, Baker and son, Margaret B. located on Second Ave. and river, not on the personal
come out and be with your
Clara
F. Hatten, Mrs. Gary Haney, James R. Keams, the alleged getaway car. property of other residents. '
son."
Lynn
Hill and son, Edw'ard H. Koster, Paul H. Warrants to conduct the
"He really believed his son
Carl
J.
Horky, Sarah Montgomery, Fawns L. search were signed late
was here," said Police Capt.
Nibert, Sherry Quinn, Sunday by Judge Betz.
Robert Morgan.
s~-rtH M
ld
.E · La yne, Wlbna M· Lewis •
REVIVAL IS ON
Lori Kay Undamood, Brent Richard L. Richmond,
""
ontgomery sa
WCPO-TV reported Sunday
RUTLAND
- A revival at •
D.
McCreedy,
James
L,
Suzanne
M.
Roush,
Mae
C.
tbe
prompt
arresiB
resulted
night that Coulter's search
the
Rutland
Community
Mink, Ullie E. Myers, Larry Thomas.
from CIH&gt;rdlnated efforts of
for his son apparently had
Church
will
continue
through '
Birth,
Feb.
13)
seven!
of
his
deputies
who
(
been motivated somewhat by
·E· Ousley •Jeffrey T· PhiUIps,
'-ed with th G m Us Wednesday evening with ·
(Continued
from
page
I)
Mrs. George Samuel Rodgers
Mr. and Mrs. James wora
• a po
the book and television
serVices at 7:30 p. m.
see In (bankruptcy court) hav~ been able ID get along at all. I and son, Mabel Saunders, S w Is h e r , d a ugh I e r , Pollee Dept.
program 11 Roots."
Jennings recalled that don't know how they kept from being bankrupt as long as they Joyce Ann Sharp, Mary B. · Gallipolis.
Coulter told him he had been did."
Shropshire, James S. Souder,
looking for his son "because An agreement between Chosocton County Memorial. Mrs. Jack R. Teaford and
PLEASANT VALLEY
he bad ~n trying to get his hospital and the Coshocwn City schools wiU mean the resump- son, Mary M. Varney, Floyd DISCHARGES - Rolland
.
roots back together and go to tion of classes by Wedensday. .
Wallace, Olive M. Watson, Morris, Rutland; Mrs. James
School Superintendent Ronald Cramblett said enough gas Lucille Wight, Margaret' E. Durbin, West Columbia;
Rhodesia."
bad been secured through an agreement with the hospital to Wilbur, Brenda Wills.
Odessa Greenlee, Point
see the school system through April I.
(Births, Feb.ll)
Pleasant; Janette Varney,
~pecial
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Point Pleasant; Mrs. Miles
Farley, son, New Haven, W. . Carpenter, Vinton; Mrs.
Va.; l,lr. and Mrs. Albert William Capehart, New
Dunn, daughter, Ewington; Haven; Mrs. Lester HaD,
Mr. and Mrs. Donald M. Pliny: Mrs. Risden Miller,
Gordella, daughter, Albany; Lakin; Diana Filter, HenMr. and Mrs. Troy Mlller, derson; Emmon Selby, Point
Coach Art Lanham's Rio Grande College Urbana 14-2 'to start the son, Jackson.
Pleasant; t.jrs. Charles HW,
(Dtlchargea, Feb. I%)
Point Pleasant; Cecil Byer,
Redmen captured the Wldisputed championship of second half, then won going
the Mid-Ohio Conference Saturday night by awri'~eg Jarites paced Rio's
John H. Adrian, William R. Cottagw!Ue; Jamie Sheets,
attack with 25 points . Beaver, Leslie L. Bennett, New Haven; Mrs. James
turning back host Urbana, 86-74.
Dana M Benuey Wesley T Burdette, Point Pleasant·,
·
'
·
Jimmy Noe· tos·•d In 14 and
The victory ieft Rio Grande with an 18-3 Gil
Price added 16 . ·
Brown, Beth A. BUBkirk, Mrs. · Kevin Ubry, Middleport;
season mark. Inside the MOC, the Redtnen
'Ronald Cowan · and son, · Mrs. Thomas Berry, •Point .
Ron
Stoner
led
the
Blue
Ronald D. Davis, Helen M. Pleasant; Mrs. Franklin
clinched their &amp;econd title with a 11-1 record. Two
Knights with 29 points. Dave Dempsey, Pamela J. Hen- Meadows, son, Southside;
home games remain on Rio's 1977 schedule.
Gustin added 18.
derson, Mrs. Roger Holman Mrs. Artie Wray, Ashton;
Visit Our Salad Bar
Roast Beef
Malone's Pioneers were makeup contest to com. Ur~na was 31 of 58 from and son and daughter, Sylvia Gibeau!, ' Point
eliminated from ·the title plete the regular cam·
Mashed Potatoes and Gravy
the_ fleld for 53 percent. The wendell T. James, Chad M. Pleaaant; Mrs. Elza Powell,
chase Saturday night. The pa!gu.
Kmg~ts canned 12 of 2! Jordan, Joseph W. Long, Ashton; La...-y Pearce, Point
Mexican Corn
Rio Grande will host the chanty tosses lor 57 percent. · · Patricia S. Marcinko, Pleasant; Mrs. Charles Ord,
defending champs were
Hot Rolls
Plus Tax
stunned 81-79 by Mt. Vernon 1977 Mid-Ohio Conference The. losers had 21 rebounds. Michael A. Marcum, Alva H. Hartford; Mrs. Orville Casto,
Coffee, Tea or Milk
40
73
and
District
Tournament
Nazarene. The Pioneers
RIO connected ~n
of
Martin,
Marcella
M. Leon; Mrs. John Corriveau,
Post-Season shots from the fleld lor 54 McGowan,
finished leal!lle olav with • tn. NAIA 22
Dolly
D. Point Pleasant; Wilbert
Tournament. The MDC event ~rcent.. The Redmen made Morrison, Okey C. O'Neill, Porter, Point Pleasant, and
4 record.
Is slated to begin Feb. 19. The s~ of etght free throws and George Petty, Ellie P. Lewis Burton, Mason.
Tonlgh~ the new MOC
Pomeroy. 0.
champs wiD bost Cedar- District 22 playoffs are ptcked oil. 40 rebounds.
Purcell, Robert Rankin, Mrs. Birth _ A son to Mr. and
Phone 992-6304
ville's Yellow Jackets at scheduled to stat;! Feb. 28.
Urbana dropped to 5-17 Richard c. Roderick, Jr. and Mrs. Joe Plants, Letart, and
PiZZA SHACK Phone 9'12-6304
7:00 In a makeup contest. The district winner will overall and 3-10 instde the son, Mrs . Johnny Lee Shep- a daughter to Mi. and Mrs.
TIHin wUl play at Rio advance to the NAJA Tour- conference.
herd and daughter, James K. Nelson Jones, Point Pleaaanl.
Wednesday lu another nament, to be held in Kansas
City, Mo., later in March.
In Saturday's contest at
Urbana, Rio Grande had a
In 1903, President Theodore
sluggish first hall, tra iling
Roosevelt
signed a law
the Blue Knights 4().37 during
crealing
a
Department of
the ha iftime intermissi on.
FURNITURE DEPT. 3RD FLOOR
Commerce
and
Labor.
The Redmen outscored

_

•

Suspects are c~arged
with armed .robbery

'

•

at y

en tine

· TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1977

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Jobless
in Ohio
still .up .

Press
By
United
international
About 295,000 Ohioans are
still temporarily out of work
due to the natural ·gas .
shortage,
the
state
Development Deparbnent
says, and 125,000 of those are
in manufactW'ing trades.
Meanwhile, COlumbia Gas
of Ohio Monday denied
allegations by some smail
Ohio gas producers that the
utility was "unwilling" In
utilize Ohio's natW'al gas
reserves to belp ease the
state's natural gas shortage.
"In fact, there are some 67
industries and school
· districts in Ohio that either
already are, Qr soon will be,
using native Ohio gas
produced under an innovative
self-help program Columbia
pioneered some lour years
ago," said Marvin E. White,
hoard chairman ol Columbia.
White said that through this
program, Columbia has
assisted industries, and ·
more-recently schools, in
contracting . with ·• Ohio
producers for up io 22 billion
cubic feet of gas a year.
He said a second program
By United Preoalnternallonal. .
COLUMBUS - ERNEST A. SKIDMORE, 37, South Point, deve)oped by Coluinbia in
Ohio, was sentenced in U. S. District Court Monday tn 25 years 1975 was designed whelp the
in prison for plotting to bomb an Alleglteny Airline plane on utility compete for native
Nov. 4, 1975. Skidmore was sentenced to 20 years In prison lor Ohio gas on a more equal
causing a bomb ID be put on an airplane and to live years lor basis with other Ohio gas
conspiring l&lt;l put a bomb on an airline. The sentences are to w companies.
run coo currently.
· · "Although we never
Hubert Irwin, 52, of Toronto, Canada, Skidmore's haH- expected this program to
lrother was to be sentenced In U.S. District Court today on the produce vast quantities of
same charges. The two men were convicted of checking two gas, we did anticipate the
suitcases onto an Allegheny Air lines flight from Columbus to price of $1.90 per thousand
Buffalo, N.Y. The plane left Columbus at 12:45 p.m. on Nov. 4, cubic feet that we offered to
pay any producer lor gas
1975 and landed safely at I :30 p.m.ln Buffalo.
Authorities said the bombs were set to detonate at I: 15 dellvered ID our distribution
p.m. while the plane was over Lake Erie, but malfunctioned. line would attract more gas
than It has," said White.
He said much of that gas Is
FLATWOODS, KY.- JAMES H. BACK, 30, Coal Grove,
purchased
by
Ohio, was killed Monday evening in a one-&lt;:ar acciilentln this being
industries and schools under
northeastern Kentucky community.
.
Stale Pollee said the car slammed· inw a tree on South the self-help program. Ohio
Powell Lane and overturned, throwing Back and another industries are, in most
occupant !rom the vehicle. They said they had not determined · instances, paying In excess of
whether Back or the ~er man, Woody Watts, 33, Ashland, $2 a thousand cubic feet lor
Ky., was driving. Walls was hospitalized for treabnenl of self-help gas, and in many
cases, are paying lor the
injuries.
wells, pipelines and other
WAHREN, OlflO -ABOUT 90 MEMBERS of FirMighters facilities necessary Ill deliver
local :lj)4 w.alked off the job Monday night in a pay dispute, the gas Ill market.
''It's simply a case qf the
leaving only tbe fire chief and two assistant chiefs on duty in
producers
accepting the most
this Northeastern Ohio city of 63,000.
profitable
offer,"
said White.
Fire Chief Bruce Labaugh told residents that the lire
"We're
tremendously
department would not be able to provide any rescue or
paraniedlc service and those that need such service should call proud of the self-help
program and the job it has
private ambulances.
done helping the state of Ohio
and
its economy," White
WESTLAJ(E, O!flO - ABOUT 100 BAY Village High
said.
"If
producers prefer Ill
School students carried pickets In front of Columbia Gas of
sell
their
gas ·under this
Ohio offices Monday protesting Columbia's shutdown of the
program
rather
than others
nearby Bay VU!age school system. .
·
we
have
available,
that Is
Students marched in front of the offices for 2'&gt;2 hours,
their
choice."
carrying signs on which were printed, "Columbia Gas, let us
haveclaaa." Eventually, Columbia officials met with a student
delegation . ."1bey just gave us the runaround," said Patty
NOW YOU KNOW
Koqln, 16, a Bay High junior. "They said they will probably
The
portrait of a living
shut down the schools until April! but they are trying In find
person
may not appear on a
gas."
United States postage stamp.
(Olntinued on page 10)

THE NORSEWORTHY WAS ONE of two small boats moving
constantly above the Racine Locks and Dam Monday to keep ice moving
over one wicket in the dam. From the dam upriver there was an ice jam
which made it impossible for boats to move on downriver through the

locks. It was reported that there were 13 boats between the locks and dam
and Ravenswood waiting to get through the ice jam and through the
locks.

Sharing funds ·raised
New and released rules
controlll~g how federa I
revenue sharing moneys can
be spent were outlined by
Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate
Monday night to Middleport
Village Council In a regular
session. According to Grate,
for the next nine month
period, Middleport will
receive an all time high of
Ui ,203 In such funds .
However, 'instead of council
outlining the uses for spending the money and advertising the use in the news-

K-classes
resumed
Kindergarten classes In the
Meigs Local School District
were resumed today on the
basis that parents. must
provide part of the transportation.
Supt. Charles L. Dowler
said that morning class
children can ride buses to
school but must be picked up
by parents at noon . Afternoon kindergarten
children must be taken to the
school by their parents but
will be returned to their
homes on the regular bus
routes in the evening.
Bus drivers. during a
·dispute in November agreed
only to drive the kindergarten
routes until Feb. I.

What price tag on unemplQyment?
By DONAW H. MAY .
WASHINGTON (UPI)- It
CGitl ail average of f8,300 Ill
give an unemployed person a
pubUc eervlce job for a year.
It COlli $4,000 to ~.2110 "'
provide that peraon with job
trailllng lor a year,
depending. (II . the type of
tramtn&amp;
'
Alld·ft cOlla an average of
$1,710 to pay hbn cr her
11111111Plo)'lllllllt CCllllpenulion
lor a year.
·
Wldch II tile best bargain
lor the tupayen?
That qUIIItlon waa poled
Mclldly In a report by the
CcnJI'eNlOOII Budget Office,

Gov. James A. Rhodes, who will travel to Houston, Texas, Any suspenaion of the bon would have to be done by the
Thursday in 8 search for natural gas, met Monday with legislature.
representatives of 33 Cuyahoga County suburbs in Cleveland.
- '!lie 'state Development Deparbnent said Monday about
He urged the officials In lobby with Washington w have the 295,000 Ohioans are st!U temporarily out of work beCause of the
state declared a disaster area.
gss shortage.
.
Ohio Environmental Protection Agency Director Ned
- Akron City CouncU Monday night enacted an ordinance
WUliams, who was with Rhodes, said his agency would work on forbidding East Ohio Gas Co. and the Ohio Edison Co. from
a plan In convert all large gas~ired boilers In the state to coal shutitng off service between Oct. 15 and AprU 15 because of
over it IO.year peirod.
delinquent peyments.
·
If the federal EPA accepts .the plan, "Ohio should be in good
- Barges laden with fuel began moving upstream on the
shape on energy."
lower Ohio River.
In ~er energy related developments :
- About 100 Bay Village high school studeniB picketed Co- Rhodes' office said the governor could not rescind a ban on lumbia Gas offices in Westlake Monday, protesting the utility's
drilling for gas in that part of Lake Erie controlled by Ohio. shutdown of the Bay Village School system.

e
VOL. XXVII NO. 213

gas

which analyzes policy choices so far, CBO says, and it tends governments, the report
lor Congresa but makes no wbypass the uneducated, the says: "Since little training Is
unskU!ed and the victims of involved, It is doubtful th~t
recommendations.
parUclpsnlll gain any lasting
CBO suggested this is a dlacrimination.
increases
in
annual
The
report
makes
clear
choice Ccngreu should begin
earnings."
'
that
the
choice
between
making soon, because
A
new
law
is
supposed
Ill
approaches
IS
more
than
a
unskllld Americans are
prevent
a
local
govenunent
question
of
money.
golpg to have an even harder
time finding jobs during the . On a yearly dollar basis, from merely shifting
neiiiaur years than they do unemployment compenaatlon someone who would have
now. Mere jobs will require Is the cheapest. II also II the beeit working anyway from
education. The fact that an closest tn being a dead end. the local to the federal
increasing percentage of And Ills only one of the coats payroU. ButCBO said it Is not
w&lt;men want to work lliakes society pays lor unem- known how that would work
ployment; some others are In a much expanded
the competition toucher.
welfare
and increased program.
General economic stimulus
CBO estimated that
crime.
such as Prelldent Carter's
an
training
raises
A.•
for
federally.flnanced
lu rebate can be used to
(Continued
on
page
10)
.
public
service
jobs
in
local
redJJCO unemployment only

paper, council will discuss
and set tentative ways to
spend It, and then will hold a
public hearing where Middleport residents may express their views on the
proposals.
A plan for expending the
funds wiD be adopted by
council after the public
hearing.
Before Jan. I, 1977 funds
could not be used as matching
funds lor grants but they can
now he used lor that purpose,
Mayor Fred Hoffman said.

Three new .buses
bought by board
Meeting In special
session Monday eveotng
the Meigs Local School
District
Board
of
Education agreed to
purchase three new. school
buses.
Tbe board also set this
eveotng for the first session
of negotiations between tbe
Meigs
Local
Ohio
Anoclatlon of Public
Sehool Employes and tbe
board.
Representing tbe board
will be Mrs. Jennifer
Sheets
and
Rob~t
Snowden. Others atten g
tbe negotliltlons -st
along
wllb
OAPS
representatives will be
Supt. Charles L. Dowler,
bll asslllaut, Dan Morris
and John Mon, Meigs
Juntor Hlgb Principal.

'

NEW OSMOND
PAYSON, Utah (UPI)
The wife of Alan Osmond, one
of the si~glng Osmond
Brothers, gave birth Monday
wtheir second child - a b.oy
.who will be .named Nathan.
Osmond, 28, and his wile,
Suzanne, 23, who live with
other members of the
entertainment clan In a
cootplex at nearby Provo,
h:tve an older boy, Michael,
l&lt;orn in t975.

Council approved the
mayor's report for January
showing receipts of $1,569.70
In fines and fees and $132 In
merchant police collections
lor a total of $1,701.70.
Lowell Price asking help,
said he has been without
water service lor a month due
to the freezing of a one-half
inch service line leading to
his home. He said be is not
critical of any workers of the
town but asked that council
give restoration of water
service to his home a No. I

priority.
Price said ~ he has been
carrying 2() gallons of water a,
day to· his home and volunteered w help in any way he
could. Mayor Hoffman said
that attempts to unthaw the
service line have been unsuccessful, but indicated that
efforts will continue.
Grate read a letter from
Columbia Gas ol Ohio indicating that the rate !or gas
In Middleport will be increased 2.47 cents per 1,000
cubic feet for the March 3

billing as a part of the fuel
cost adjustment agreement
the company has with the
town. Grate reported tl'.at the
gas biD for village hall In
January was $262.29 and
$270.76 for the fire station.
Mayor Hoffman's appointment of Mick Childs to the
Middleport Recreation
Commission was approved by
council. Childs will replace
Richard Hovatter who has
resigned.
Council voted to join the
(Olntinued on page 10)

Meigs top seeded
in .tourney play
Meigs High School, top
seeded, opens Sectional AA
basketball play Feb. 28 Monday - at Federal
Hocking ·against Belpre.
Meigs Is 11-7, Belpre 4-IR. The
Marauders are defending
champions.
-First game is three days
earlier, Feb. 25, pitting
Sheridan, 7~, against New
Lexington :l-10.
Warren Local~lo.3 second
seeded, plays t~e winner of
the Sheridan-New Le• game
March I.
,
Nelsonv!Ue York, 5-4, plays
'{finner of the Meiga-Belpre
game on March 2. The
championship game Is March
4.
AU games start at 7:30p.m.

At Ironton on Feb. 24, Rock
HUl goes against Coal Grove
at 6:45p.m . .and South Point
gets Fairland at 8:30 p.m.
Chesapeake plays the
winner of the Coal Grove Rock Hill game on March 11
at 6:30 p.m., and Gallipolis
takes on the winner of the
South Point - Fairland ganle
at 8:30 p.m. The championship game Is March. 4 at
7:30p.m.
··
In AAA at the Convocation
Center in Athens on Feb. 24 at
6:30 p.m. Chillicothe goes
against Athens and at 8 p.m.
Logan Is up against Lancaster. At 9:30 p.m. Portsmouth plays Miami Trace.
On March 2, Marietta plays

the Chillicothe-Athens winner
at 8:30 p.m., and the two
winners between Logan,
Lancaster, Portsmouth and
Miami Trace play at 7 p.m.
March 2.
Two winners of this Jeer
tiona! move to the district
tourney at Marietta.
Wellston and Waverly are
in the Paint Valley sectional
near Chillicothe.
Feb. 25, Vinton County vs.
Washington · CH; Feb. 26,
Wellston vs. Hillsboro;
Greenfield plays the winner
of the Vinton CountyWashington CH on March 2,
and Waverly plays winner of
the Wellston-Hillsboro game
March 3. All gap1es at 7:30
p.m. Final is on March 5. One
team to the district at Athens.

Blood donated Monday·
Seventy-eight persons
reported to an American Red
Cross bloodmobile at the
Senior Citizens .Center in
Pomeroy Monday to contribute 73 pints of blood to the
Meigs County American Red
Cross blood program.
Sixteen persons . gave
replacement blood and nine
persons were first time
donors. Becoming gallon

donors during the visit were
Joyce Bartrum and Mark J .
Matson with Wallace P.
Hatfield and Karen L. I'yles
becoming two gallon donors.
Henry P. Logan became a sl•
Kallon donor and Clara M.
Mcintyre an eight . gallon
donor. Howard P. Logan
beCame a five KBllon donor
and Howard Parker a nine
gallon donor.

Nurses working were Mrs.
Vern Story and !,enora
' Leifheit and Dr. L. D. TeUe,
Dr. E. VWaneuva and Dr.
Raymond Boice were the
attending medical staff. The
American Legion POit
AUilliary, Feeney-Bennett
Post 128, Mrs. Albert Riluah,
president, waa in char;e of
the canteen.
(Continued on page 10)

�. 2- The Dally Senlinel, Middl~it-Porneroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Feb. 15, 1977

Talks conclude today

Sparky says Driessen
only change in lineup

•I

17 IIELEN ,THOMAS •
our sharing of a common e~emplary ·"
"There i$ only so much
UPl Willie a.... Reporler
....,..., has always bound us • The President bore down deficit that we can accom·
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - · together."
!bill week ' 00 propoeala for modale so 1dool want 1o get
l'relldent Carter and visiting
Then in a lighter vein, the amending the Ford 19'18 fiscal your hopes up " Carter
Mexican President Jose Georgian President told his year budget which he must replied
'
Lopez
Portillo,
who guest of honor "The Melican submit to C«&lt;gresa by Feb 21.
In other developments the
lj)pal'ently hit it olf ~U in people know what Yankee
At a Cabinet meeting President will resume' hiS
their lint encounters, were imperialism means, and Monday,
Carter
told drop··in, get-acquainted
wrapping I!P their talks today being from Georgia ... I have members he would Osten to sessions at government
with a promise iJl closer also heard the same phrase their . appeals lor budget departments Wednesday
relatioos between the two used."
changes over the next two starting at Agriculture
neil!bbors.
"But we also share the days, but warned that far government worl!e~s in
. Carter's fir• state ·visitor reall2ation that this Is a time increasing the spending tabor Cornmerce Treasury
was to pay a farewell call this of a~cient histo~y, a~d outl~y Is, "I!Olllethlng I just and 'HUD hav~ gotien
rooming, with a substantive "'',uality of opportunity wlthm cant do.
.
perSOIIai pep talks in his
statement IsSued afterwards. our own nation in recent . '["wo members !old him visits
The .President also ~des is th~ same sort of their .department budgets · Th~e was a good chance
IIITaJI8ed a meeting with splfil that elists among the were madequate.
that Carter will spend the
former Defense Secretary nations in our hemisphere,"
"We are a starved depart. coming weekend at camp
Clark Clifford wh_o . is he ~ald. .
.
ment," said Houaing and David, ~d. u would be his
·departing on a fact.fmding
Speakmg m Spanish, Urban De~~lopment first trip to the presidential
mission to seek a solution 1o Carter quoted an old Mexican Seer~ PatrtCia Roberts retreat in Western Maryland.
the Cyprus dispute.
saying: "Poor Mextco. So Harns.
So far Carter and Lopez distant from God, so close to
Health, Eduucalion and
have pubHcly discussed only . the l)nited States."
Welfare Secretary Joseph
their shared goals.
In turn, Lopez said that Califano Jr. alsO complained ·
In a toast at the state with a man of Carter's nature that the Ford budget was $4
dinner honoring Lopez '\the role of the United States billion below the level
.Mooday night, Carter said in the history of humanity required to maintain present
"our sharing of history and will be outstanding and services.

s.; •

•.

(Editors Note : The
following lo Cincinnati
Manager Sparky Anderson 'a
slzeup of the 1977 defending•
World Champion Clnclonatl

.

--·
-

CARS

... "'

·.

picture album

72 CHEVY IMPAlA

&lt;XlAL FOR THE BOAT was taken across'jbe Ice in a
sled.

4 DR. SEDAN

DAN SPENCER of the Eastern Eagles has the ball
and wiU pass off to a teanunate in the makeup game
Tuesday night between Eastern and Southern won by
Southern 13-28to remain undefeated. - Gary Sisk picture.

NEW ROCHElLE, N.Y.
(UPI) - Fred Cowan raised
the automatic rifle and
shouted to his co-workers:
"Get out of here. Go home
and tell my mother not to

cmne."
In the next few frantic
seconds, bullets spewed from
the gun's barrel. Four men
fell dead to the floor. A police
car · screeched to a halt
outside. Shouted warnings,
another burst of gunfire, and
now a patrolman was dead.
Five persons, three Of them
policemen, were wounded,
Nearly seven hours later,
Cowan, a twice court·
martiaied Army veteran who
idolized Adolf Hitler, who had
sw&amp;stikas tattooed on his
arms, collected Nazi
souvenirs and often said he
"hated blacka and Jews," put
a .45-caHher pistol to his head
and ended his own life.
Cowan, 32, returned to
work from a two-week
suspension Monday morning,
vowing to "get" the man who
. had him suspended. When he
got to the Neptune Worldwide
Moving Co. in the New York
City suburb of New RocheUe ·
. shortly befoce 8 a.m., he was
dressed in an Army field
· jacket and sported a German
' militarY helmet.
· He carried the automatic
rifle, the pistol, a bandolier of
ammunition and what pollee
described as "a couple of
explosive devices that looked
like hand grenades."
Police said Cowan's
intended target - cm~pany
dispatcher Norman Bing escaped unharmed. Bing had
suspended Cowan because he
was recently ' rude' to a
customer. The customer had
called to complain and
. "sounded scared."
· When it started, Ronald
·Cowles, one of Cowan's co·
workers for the past nine
years, said the gunman
shouted at him: ''Get out Of
here. Go hm~e and tell my
mother not to corne."
"He let me go, so I got out
Of there right ~way," Cowles
said. "He started to raise the
rifle. I saw foot other people
fall to the floor ."
As he left the building'
Cowles said, he saw
Patrolman Allan McLeod
drive into the parking lot.
. "We shouted at him not to
come in/' Cowles said. uAs

he' was walking up the steps number, his only direct link
authorities.
He
we heard a shot and saw him with
demanded
lunch
potato
faU."
McLeod, the father .of two salad and cocoa .- and
children aged I and 6, lay in apologized for "causing the
the driveway for two hours city so much trouble."
At 2:40 p.m., while hiding
before police were able to pull
his body from the gunman's behind a makeshift barricade
range, using an armored in a vice president's office on
the building's secmd floor,
personnel carrle.r.
The
three
injured Cowan apparently put the
patrolmen lay nearby, each pistol to his temple and fired.
pinned down by gurillre until At the time, pollee did not
they, too, were rescued two know if he had any hostages ;
he had nme.
hours later.
At 6 p.m., they broke into
Scores of heavily armed
police
from
nearby the office and found his body.
communities and New York Rigor mortis had already set
City
surro~nded
the . ln.
Cowan's acquaintences de·
warehouse complex, experts
in hostage negotiations were scribed him as a man who
caUed, and Cowan's mother, idolized Adolf Hitler. He often
father and two brothers tried shOwed of! his collection of
memorabilia . to
unsuccessfully to get him to Nazi
neighborhood youngsters and
give himself up.
At 12:10 p.m., Cowan called talked incessantly of guns
the pollee department's and another of his hobbies emergency telephone bodybuilding.

f

Polite rapist suspect is

in custody of Dallas cops1
,,

j/(a·r ll ll- $;(Qfcs
''L

BERT GRIM!&gt;!, Letart Falls, The Fleet in the
background, attempted to ice skate. The pholll shows him
sitting, but he assures everyone he was up more than he
was down.

Woman guarded 'round clock

DR. LAMB

In the 18montha since there
DALLAS (UP!) -The first
report came in October of have been 50 more attacks,
!914: A young, single woman each rape similar to the first.
was raped by a man wearing But police hope with the
a pillow case over his head. arrest of a public relations
He held a knife at her throat, executive Monday, the case
tied her to her bed and Of the "friendly rapist" is
closed.
attacked her.
"He was kind of poHte
Then, before leaving, he
about the rspes," a police
apologized.
spokesman said. "He told his
victims he didn't want to hurt
them and never has hurt one
of them, other than raping
them.
"He hasn't beat or killed

Relatives here

ct.scription of three Of the Ralph Spen~r. 14; Raymond
attackers, believed to Spencer, 18, and Gregory

forced their way through the
front door and probably two

mother 01
count robbery as a motive ~rooks and stepmother of the
because, although some other three, said two gunmen
mooey was taken, a color
television set and stereo
equipment were left tn plain
view in the front room.
"Wedonlreallyknowwhat
the mQtive was, although
·
Two persons were injured
approximately $30 was
taken" Knlmreich said. "I in a traffic accident at 2,35
don't know If you would caD
that a motive for four brutal pV.aml1.eMy onDrda
. Y00 Rt. 35 at Sun
murders or not."
The Gallt'a·Meigs Post
The gunmen forced all five State Highway Patrol said an
to lie on the 11oor of the auto driven by Mildred· A.
trailer, police said, thEm Johnson, 47, Oak Hill, struck
blasted them "execution the rear end of a vehicle
style" with one or more operated by Asa Adkins, 78,
shotguns.
The
blood Bidwell. Mrs. Johnson and
splattered off the ceiling of Kevin Johnson, age four,
the living room and sopped were taken to the Holzer
Into the carpet by the cocktail Medical Center for ireatment
table.
of minor injuries.
The home was ransacked
Mrs. Johnson was charged
and telephone lines cut. The with failure Ia stop within the
gunmen fled in the Spencer assured clear distsnce.
family's 19'13model Thunder·
A truck driver, Donald A.
bird. It later was found Roshon, 43, Amanda, escaped
abandoned along another injury in an accident at 1:10
county road.
p.m. on SR 33, seven tenths of
Killed outright as they lay a mile west of Rt. 1 in Meigs
on the floor of their home County.
were Reeve B. Spencer, 16;
The patrol said the right

others came in the rear about
12:30 a.m..EST. "
Police questioned two sus·
pects ~ut later released them.

Two inJ"ured z"n accident
.
front tire on Roslion's truck
bl
ew out causing him to lose
cont'l'l 01 the loaded dump
truck. The vehicle overturned
. si d e. There was
on 1ls
moderate damage.
No one was injured or cited
in a traffic accident at 8:50
a.m. Monday on SR 7, eight
tentha of a mile south of CR 52
in Ohio Twp. ·
State troopers said an auto
driven by Monte Shankwiler,
35, ProctorviUe, pulled out to
pass just as a farm tractor
operated by Charles D.
Dillon, 19, Crown City, made
a left tum. There was minor
damage.
Another accident occurred
on SR 7 in Clay Twp. where a
parked auto owned by Dennis
Haner, 19, Lower River Rd.
rolled fro m a parking space,
through a yard arid over an
embankment.

them."

Police identified the
suspect ·as Guy Willi•m
Marble Jr ., the 29-year-old
vice president-business
manager of Public RelaUons
Advisors, Inc. Fellow

Several out-of-town
relatives were here for the
Sunday funeral services for
Miss NeUe Bing, 92. The Rev.
Carl Hicks of Belpre, former

:;~~~the~~:~·~~~~~:~
~:.~~[:ha~~n ~ ad:::
t th
I
d b ri I
di

a e serv ces, an u a on the statewide me a
was in Miles Cemetery at campaign of the Baptist
Rutland.
General Convention of Texas.
Here for the services were
BylateMondayMarblehad
Mr · and Mrs. Harold Russell been charged with five rapes
(Phyllis . ~hase)
of wilhboodsof$250,000on01lch
Everglades City, Fla.; Mr. count.
.
and Mrs. Howard Waldeck, · . Officials
said
his
Mark and Marsha, Ashland, fingerprints matched those
Ky.; Mr. and Mrs. Keith taken!romtheapartmentsof
Thomas and son, Steve, at least 20 vktims of the
Gallipolis; and Mr. and Mrs. ''friendly rapist."
Robert w te
d da ht
1
th · II
ug
For
B th p ak rsban
d J er,k
d thsevera
h d mon s Ipo · ce
e , ar ers urg, an ac
sai ey a been ana yzmg
Chase
of
Dayton.
F 11 0 wi th f
1 th
° ng e unera e

block means that the bottom
part of the heart, the pumping chambers, must run on
their own, independent of the
faster beating rate of the top
two chambers of the heart. It
can occur as a birth defect or
It can occur after an inflam.
matioo of the heart, as a com·
pliction of an infectious il·
!ness.
Yoor letter indicates that
your son has no symptoms at
aU except he noted his slow
pulse. lt reminds me Of a very
good jet pilot I saw as a result
of a routine electrocar·
dlogram who also had corn·
plete heart block. We exerci..
ed him to full capacity and'he
was able to increase his heart
rate. ·to nearly Ml beats .per
minute and do a lot of exer·
lion without any difficulty.
I repeat this story to you \Q
emphasize that your son may
not be greaUy handicapped.
The importance of his sl&lt;&gt;w
heart rate depends upun

the crimes, trying to predict
where the assaUant would
strike next. They said for
several weeks they had been
staking. out lvarious·
apartment complexes.'
Sunday night and pn Into
Monday morning they staked
out The Season's, a cW!plex
of about three hundred apart·
ments, A plainclothes officer
said at about 1:10 a.m.
Monday he noticed a man in a
jogging sweatshirt and jeans
walking in front of the
apartment complex,. looking
into windows from the street.
The officer said he approached th.e man and asked
him for identification. The
man fled, but the officer ran
him down after a brief chase ,
Police said Marble •Is
married and has one child.
At one time Marble was a
police reporter with ·a
Lubbock newspaper and
police said what he may have
learned of police tactics as a
reporter may have · helped
him evade ollicers lor the
·psst several mooths.
'
Persons at the newspaper
who remembered Marble
said he had worked there for
about six months in 1911.
They described him as
''friendly and good at his

work."

R
. edm· en n•ddle
~~'::t":u~f c':tome~oy Un~ed

·'
·
urc serve a ·
dinner for the out-of-town
relatives.

j aCk ets, 10'~'f •89
·

··

Cedarville Coach Dr. Don game with 18 markers. Noe
ACTIONS FILED
had nine lor .the Redmen
The Farmers Bank and Callan opened with some before fouling out with 7:59
Savings Co., has filed for mighty tsll timber (zone remaining in , the game.
judgment of $2,786.84 against defense) in an effort to stop Royse added 10 markers for
Michael R. Hubbard, Rio Grande's big scorl!lg the winners. Don Gibson
Syracuse, in Meigs County guns, Jinuny Noe and Gil tossed in eight.
!Common Pleas Court. Price, at Lyne Center
Jeff Reep, 11-4 jUDior forCredlthrift of America Inc., Monday night.
ward
paced lbe wbmers with
Before Callan and the
Belpre, is suing for $1,418.96
Z9
points.
Steve Lones a 1-7
· from Ethel Connor, Mid· visiting Yellow Jackets knew Junior forward added Zl.
dleport and James L, Connor, what hit them, Mark Swain
The Redmen hit 44 of 83
Beverly. The marrlsges of and Greg James, along with field goal attempts for 53
Lenora Lee Stewart and Dale Royse had scorched the percent. At the foul line, Rio
Rudy ADen Stewart, and · nets both from alar and close sank 13 of 19 for 68 percent.
Ernest Lee Richmond and up to push Rio out in front 19 Rio picked off 48 rebounds, 10
SERVICES HELD
Irma Jewell Richmond were points, 26-7, during the first by James and eight by Noe.
TUPPERS PLAINS
eight minutes of action. It
Funeral services were dissolved.
was all over but the shouting. Dan Bise added seven
conducted on Jan. 28 for
Coaeb 'Art Laabam'• caroms. The Redinen had 23
Howard Caldwell, Sr., at the
Redmen
rolled · over turnovers.
Tuppers Plalni Church of
CedarviUe hit 34 of 74 lield
CedarvDie 101-69 to poet llleir
P~ YERS PLANNED
Christ wltb Mr. Eugene
·
gdal
attempts for 46 percent.
A county-wide prayer 19111 victory ID a atarll. 1be
whether he has any fainting llad a rate in the middle 10s . Underilood and Mr. Richard
The
Jackel8
were ~1 Of 31 at
.meeting will be held at 2 p.m. win ldt Rio, aewly-crowned
episodes or has any lack of before he trained lor the four· Thomas officiating.
the
charity
line
for 87 per·
Mld·Oblo Conference
exercise tolerance. It might minute mile and a resting
Pallbearers were his. sons, Sunday at the Hiland Church cbamploDI, with a 1!-1 loop cent. Cedarville Jiad 30
he advisable to have a stress rate in the upper 30s when • Howard Caldwell, Jr., and with Glen Bissell as clasa
rebounds, eight by Lones.
mark.
test done under monitored trained: That was Without Jinuny CaldweU; his grand· leader.
The
visitors had 26 turnovers.
conditions to see how his · heart block but it points out sons, Howard Caldwell, m, ..-------...;.....;;~;. Tiffin plays at Lyne Center
After
Rio built up that 19. Wednesday at 7:30p.m. in a
heart behaves dufing exer· that a slow resting rate alone and Robert Caldwell, .and
polnt
advantage
early in the
~~=~EL
makeup contest. It wUI be the'
else.
is not that important.
nephews, W. H. Chapman and
OOI!RE8T or
regular sealon finale lor Rio first hall, closest the Jackel8
Fainting episodes can ocThese individuals are able Kenneth Caldwell.
Grande.
The MOC tour· could get was nine points, 5().
cur in people with complete to increase their heart rate
CHEBTll!IL T.INNEHDJ.
Eu&lt;. Ed.
nament wiD begin Saturday 41, just before the !/Blf!ime
heart block because the heart during exercise, sometimes
intermission.
'·
ROIIERT:::UCII
night at Lyne Center.
isn't beating fast enough to to Ill heats per minute. Also,
Blggesi Rio lead was 23
Pub~
mep&lt;
S.turdoy
Meanwhile,
the
Yellow
pwnp enough blood to the your son may be able to in·
byTheOhloVaUeyPui&gt;IJJND&amp;ComJackets dropped .to 11-11 polnto, 86-33, with 8:47•
STUDENT HONORED
brain. Fainting, "however, is crease his heart rate enough
Ul)'. tu a-t St, l'llmeroy, Oblo
overall and S-7 lDslde the · remaining in the contest.
Based on the selection of
caused by many things ..: during exertioo for normal
ti'Ttt, 8ulinell OffiCI Pbone Here's Monday's box:
2lii. Edll«ial-ln-2117.
conference.
some important, some not. I activities but probably not to the Medical Technician
CEDARVILLE lUI _
Second olou poo~~&amp;e pold ••
Swain 8·0 sophomore
am sending you The Haith the high rates seen in normal College and as one of the moat
Pomeroy, OI*J.•
l
•
I
Riggs t ·O· j ; Allen 1-1 · 3 ·
Nab1111l IClvl!l'llllnl "''"-· guard from Crown City, Kauffman 1.3.5 ; Lanu 1-0-2;
outstanding seniors, Robin
Letter number ~2. Fainting aUdetes.
lalive Ward • Grtllllh ~. ,,..
punctured the hoops with 26 Lones· 9·3·21; Potter 2-1·5;
Humphrey,
daughter
of
Mr.
(Syncope). Othel"l! who want . If your son's heart is in
Reep 11 ·7-29 ; Smith 2-o-4 .
c.,
"""
Gollalhlr
lllv.,
.I
ints, ..
in the first half Strletmetttr
~1 Third AYfl., Nn fork, N.Y.' I po
11J
0·0-0;1 Thack•r 3.
informatioo on fainting and goOd shape otherwise and he and Mrs. C. Ed Humphrey Of
1·9;
Wolters 1·1·7. TOTALS
tOOt!.
·
.
•
:
while
James,
11-4
freshman
what It means can send ·50 is able to increase his heart ReedsviHe will be recognized
_ . . , no.: DeUvond by'
f
•----• 11-21·19.
RIO GRANDI! 1101) _
carrlerwberuvallll*!'llci!Dllper
orward from Bid" eU ,WG~~~:N
cents lor it. Send a long, rate with exertion, as his bY Prelldent Harold Enarson
Fitzpatrick
2-0..~ ; Gibson 2·• · ,
.ByMotarlloulnherecorrtor
In
11
markers,
eight
In
the
stamped, self-addressed history of a rate of 46 now Of Ohio State Unlverilty lor
I ; James 7.J.J7 ; Not 3·3-f J
~,"!:.re":;
~
~:
lint
half
u
Rio
rolled
to
a
52envelope lor mailing. Write to might suggest, he may never her scholastic achievement.
BIU 3·0-6; Price 1· 2· ll ·
Rob lnaon 0·0-0: ROUII 5·0·10;
0ne Y"'!. ta.lll; Sll l!lllMI&gt;I,
41 lead.
me in care of this newspaper, lwve any ti'Ouble with his Misa Humphrey has received
111.10; nree .mUIIIha. 17.00:
Both Noe and Price former swain 13·0-26; Vickroy 1-ll ·
P 0 . Box 326, San Antonio . . ·defect. However, I w&lt;&gt;uld an invitation requesting her
Mc(orm lck 0-0·lll Oaborn .. o'.
EJMwhere puo ye~r; Slr monthl•
'
113 .51 1 Three montho, 11.10. GAHS stars, were In foul 0·0. TOTALS 11·11·101.
TX78292.
r(!CU!Ii lllt!lld periotl il' evuhte:t·
presence at the 20th amusl
Score et half;
~eludi!l &amp;alday. trouble early in the contest.
The slow r~t.e alone will uot twn., C:f.S to nis sWLus antll':wr· Scholarship Recognition
R io 52 Cectervllle Al . ·
'
Price, however, I~ the
dimJ•'r on Monday, March 1.
hUrt him. Rogtr Bnruufo)tt:i' ti "i l' f'ttp&lt;.~ ei t y ..

Coping with heart block
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.·
DEAR DR. L.AMB - About
two years ago our son, age 22,
noticed hiS pul8e was 36. His
doctor put him in the hospital.
He was placed on a heart
monitor. His pulSe did go
down to 28 when asleep. He
was transferred to a larger
holpital and a . temporary
: pacemaker was inserted for a
. fewdayi.
They diagnosed his condi·
tiGn as complete heart block.
Because of his age they advised him to get light work and
hold off oo • pacemaker. I
lhould menUon he is not in
· favor of a pacemaker. His
. pulle Is around 46 now. He is
holding down a fuU·tlme job,
.aliodolnll...-ne sports.
What are his chances Of goIng through life without a
pacemaker?
DEAR READER - Coni·
plete heart block in young
people is rare but It does oc·
cur: The complete form of

..

I

.,

n~~:. f:'veinte"n~~ to dis- Br~~~· ~pen·.'cer,

Karr &amp; VanZandt

-AREA
c:t;

f

I

=:,:,:r•

v

•

11

agles shot .down 73-28
.

IN 19441 A BOAT, The Fleet, was icebound on the point of the island Of Letart Falls. Otis
Knopp, who supplied these pictures, was njghtwatchman on The Fleet.
·

for services

By R.J. GilLEY
HOLLANDSBURG; Ind.
(UP! ) - State Police have
posted ar. around-the-clock
guard on a wounded Parke
County woman who survived
a modern St. Valentine's Day
massacre of her son and
three stepsons, who were
tined up and blasted with a
shotgun.
Betty Spencer, 43, was
listed in
satisfactory
condition at a Terre Haute
hospital today after she was
shot and left for dead in her
family's doublewide !liObile
home, when .the blsst which
hit her .knocked the wig off
her head.
After the Mooday morning
shoutil)g, she managed to
travel about a quarter mile in
below.freezing weatller to get
help at the nearest neighbor's
home.
"We hope to be able to talk
to her more" today,
Communications Officer
Mark Krumreich of the
Indiana State Police post at
Terre Haute said, noting she
had been sedated.
State police said they are
''fearful another attempt will
be made on ber life" because
she was able to prqvide a

'1295

ADEFENDER'S HAND gets in the way of a Southern
player trying to get Off a shot. Eastern, which has not won
a game thts season, lost again Monday night to the team
tJ:tat has not lost a game, Southern Local, 13-28. - Gary
Stsk ptcture.

·Hitler greatest to killer
By HAL DAVI$

any question.
"Danny bas good hands
and good range at first base "
said Anderson. ''All soon ~s
he gets used to playing every
Reds.)
day with Joe Morgan, who
has such great range to his
CINCINNATI (UPI) - Cln· left, I know Danny is going to
cinnati Manager Sparky be an outstanding fir st
Anderson said the only lineup baseman."
change the World Champion
Anderson said the two
Reds will have this year will questions he has been asked
be Danny Driessen at first more than any others are
base and Anderson predicted what Is he going to do without
Driessen will turn into "one a· lefthander in the bullpen
of the real top hitters in the and can the Reds still be
1
league."
'hungry" after winning tWo
. Driessen takes over first consecutive World Cha mbase from Tony Pere~ who pionships.
was traded to Montreal
"I really·hope those are the
during the winter for pitcher two biggest problems we 've
Woody Fryman.
got;: because I'm sure not
"Even with aU the fine worried abou t either of
hitters we have on this club 1 them/' said Anderson.
think Danny will be one of the
"I used Rawly Eastwick as
real top hitters in the league my key guy in the bullpen last each year ."
when he starts playing every year anyway, whether he was
" I"m looking for great
You ' ll Like Our Quality
day, " said Anderson. He facing a righthanded hitter or things from Johnny Bench "
Way Of Doing Busines~
can hit. I know that beyond a lefty," said Anderson. said Anderson. "Here is the
GMAC FINANCING
992 -5342
Pomeroy
"Rawly and Dale Murray are guy who will turn it around
Opening Evenings ' ti 16 :00
going lo be my short men. this season. He didn't have a
Til S p.m. Sat.
They can hoth get any kind of good year until the World
hitter out. Pedro Borhon and
Manny
Sarmiento will be our
.
long men.
If your insurance agent can't give you
" We will have two
lefthanders
in
our
starting
"
worry free " service. fire him and hire
kept their head of steam and
Mtck
.
rotation,"
said
Anderson.
actually looked as if they
"Going
into
spring
training,
were getting stronger while
the Eagles had an'!lher cold I'd say that Woody Fryman
spell, scoring just seven more and Fred Norman are pretty
points. Big Chip Brauer of the .solid as starters along 'with
hosts began hitting th e Gary Nolan and Pat Zachry . .
boards better as he pulled We'll have to take &amp; serious
down 14 of his team's 38 look at Jack Billingham,
re.bounds . The Tornados Santo Alcala and the two kids
up
from
altogether had 18 steals and coming
lndianapolis~Larry
Payne
II assists. Brauer led all
scorers with 21 points while and Tom Hume- too see
Dave Roush continued his where we go from there.
" As for our mental outlook,
comeback by tossing in 12.
well,
l think that getting the
Joe Brown added ten . The
proper
attitude should be the
winners hit 30 of60 attempts
easiest
thing of aU," he said .
for a good 50 percent, due to a
,._.4.fter
all, now we have a
strong second half. Thev had
chance
to become the first
only eight turnovers. ·
National
League team in
Eastern hit the boards for
history
to
win
three straight
Ul rebounds, led by Spencer's
World
Championships.
eight while Gary Nelson had
uNo, I'm not worried about
seven . The Eagles hit just 35
our
mental outlook" said
percent while committing 30
You may never have to worry about
Anderson
. ~'We have to prove
turnovers. Spencer led the
insurance again .
Eagle scoring with 11 while we can win again and I know
that mentally, we 'll be
Nelson had eight.
In the reserve contest, the ready. "
"We had a fine bench last
Baby Funnel Clouds had an
seasonwith Bob Bailey,
easy time in their 4S·30 vic·
Mike
l..um,
Doug Flynn. Ed
tory . Jim O'Brien led the
Arm.
b
rlster.
Bill Plummer
winners with 12 points while
992-2342
Middleport, 0.
and
Joel
Youngblood-and
Dwight Hill had II.
Brian Bissell's 18 markers we'll he solid there again,"
was the game high, but his
individual effort wa sn't
enough.
Eastern
travels
to
Waterford tonight, and then
Friday night will come a
return match with Southern
this time in the Eagl~
territory.

•

"""":

Series. He had a lot Of Utile
injuries that are cleared up
now, but the big thing is thai.
the Wocld Series let him get
his confidence back.
"Sometimes people forget
that even a great player like
Bench can lose · his
confidence," Andeson said.
"Anybody can. I think John
said Anderson.
will
"As for the regulars, 1 ye;rr."be back with a super
smile just thinking about
them," he said. "There's no
doubt in my mind we have the
best outfield in basebaU in
George Foster, Ken Griffey
and Cesar Geronimo. And I
mean the best allaround, not
only from an offensive
standpoint. These three are
USED
solid in evey part of the
game.
" In the infield, well, Joe
Morgan has won two straight
MVP awards," he said. ' 11
don 't know how he could
possibly get any better.
Inte r ior
Gold,
vi nyl
"Everybody knows Pete
factory air .
ijose is going to get his 200
hits," he said. "He does it
every year . He's like a
machine the way he swings
the bat . And Davey
Concepcion .just gets better

I

Sport Parade

In the annual rivalry be·
tween Southern and Eastern ·
Monday night at Racine, the
host Tornados must have
thought they had it wrapped
up before the game began
because the visitiqg Eagles
jumped out to a quick 4-&lt;l lead
before the hosts got on the
boar\i. But before the night
was over, The Tornados, now
16-0, came out on top 13-28!
In that first quarter Dave
Carnahan and Dan Spencer
pumped in a pair of twin·
pointers and Jeff Goebel got
· two of his own to give the
Eagles a 6-2 lead with 3:01
showing on the clock.
Although the taller and
favored Tornados of Coach
Carl Wolfe got the opening
tip. their shooting was cold,
and the first quarter ended in
a 6-6 tie when Tornado Dave
Roush sank a jumper to give
the hOsts their first tie.
Southern missed four layups
in the waning minutes of that

By MILTON RICHMAN
. UP! Sports Edilor
NEW YORK (UP! ) -People love a cause, any cause. They
have one now here in this city, where they 've decla"red open
season on M. Donald Grant.
Grant is the Mets' chairman Of the hoard their chief
exo;cutive ?'fleer, and from the .way he's bctng ' publicly pil·
lorted, you d think he was Genghts Khan, Benedict Arnold and
Ivan the Terrible aU roUed into vne. .
.
Donald Grant's critics say he's trying to drive the football
Jets out Of town. He's being stiff-necked, they claim, by his
r$sal to. comprol)lise over terms of a lease the Mets
ociglnally signed with the city as. primary tenants at Shea
Stadium 13 years ago.
· Now, sure my brother is with the Meta. Certliinly l know By
United
Preii
people in the organization, the same way I do those in other lnternaUonal
"':ganizations, and sure, some are going to think anything they
Ohio State gave its fans
wish to think, but there comes a pomt where common ordinary something to . cheer about
latrplay compeisme to speak up for sOmeone I think is getting Monday night but in the end
an unfatr ktckmg around and, in my opinion Grant is getting the cellar-dweiling Buckeyes
that plus a little more.
'
had lost another one.
To start with, the city was extremely eager to have the Mets
Iowa handed Ohio State its
sign as tenants. The figure generaUy given as to what the Mets eighth straight loss, downing
pay a year is $550,000 but it comes closer to $725,000 because the Buckeyes 74· 70 in
they also pay the city for scoreboard maintenance and for overtime at Columbus.
some parking spaces. The city owns the parking concessioo,
The struggling Buckeyes
not the Mets.
played brilliant defense in the
Secondly, the Mets have put in $3 million in improvements second hall, overcoming a 14since moving in; the Jets have put in zilch.
point Iowa ad van!age to knot
Thirdly, the lease specifically says the Jets will not play any the score at 113-all when
Of their games in the stadium during the baseball season. The . regulation time ended :
Jets knew that when thj!Y signed as secondary tenants.
OSU
senior · Mike
Finally, .Grant already has compromised by giving the Jets • Daugherty, substituting · for
three playmg dstes. Now, they're sayillg how about giving us the injured Kelvin Ransey
another?
.
:
led the Buckeye surge which
. Like any\&gt;ody else, Grant has faults . Blowmg his own horn wiped out a 51-37 Hawkeye
lSO't one Of them, though. Let me tell you some things he has lead. Daugherty's bank shot
done·
.
.
with 33 seconds left tied the
When It was trough! to his attention that some kids in Long game and sent it into
Island had no place to play, he personally saw to it the Mets put .overtime
,
up the money to have a Utile League field built where they
But t~ young Buckeyes
could play thetr games.
.
.
ran out of gas during the
'!'hen some ,people in Harlem bad an tdea. They wanted lo extra period and stayed in the
build a bank but needed fiDSnctal help to get started. Grant Big Ten cellar with a 2-10
made the 1011n ~lble, without any interest.
record. They are 7-14 overan.
You ask ~Qe Christophe~, the forll)er Mets' outfielder, about
Substitute guard Dick Peth
Grant. Christopher wasn t wtth the Mets anymore when his paced the winners now s-:; in
mother died. He wanted to have her buried in the Virgin the loop and 14-6 o~eraU, with
Ialands, whe~e she me ~rom, but he ~lad no money. You know 15 markers including. four
where he got 11, doo t yoo . From Donald Grant.
free throws in overtime
At the cor~, Grant, whoworkedhiswayup.from a hotel room
Bruce ''Sky" King l~wa's
clerk to IJemg what he is today, is a sensitive individual. 6-8 senior center and' scoring
Deeply sensitive.
leader who hit 31 points in a
Waiting for the etev~tor at Shea Sta'!!um one dsy, he noticed Hawk~ye win over the Buck·
another man also watting wtth two httle boys, obviously his eyes earlier this year was
110ns. One wore a Meta,' cap, the other,a Yan~eecap. One_OI the held to 13 points, but ~ed
boys had trouble walkmg. There was something wrong wtth hts two big baskets in the
legs.
overtime .
"Y~¥ have a divided family, " Grant !,oked with the lather, . OSU's Larry Bolden Jed all
noUC11)8 the dlllerent caps on the boys. Yoo must have a tug scorers with 19 while
of war at home."
.
·
Daugherty had 15 ~d Terry
"Both boys like baseball, but this one," said the J!i~~r. Burris added 13 for the
touching the boy with the Yankee cap, "Is a litUe shy. He's ·Bucks. Bolden's 19 markers
having hlllegs operated on tomorrow."
· put him ahead Of Jinuny
Grant asked the boys and their father whether they'd like to Cleamons as the eighth
go into the clubhouse and meet some of the players. They leading scorer in OSU
couldn't believe it. Inside, they visited with the players and history.
then Grall! took them over to Dr. James Parkes, the Mets'
Elsewhere Monday night,
physician.
Bowling Green whipped
"I want you to meet a young friend · of mine," he said to Loyola (Ill.) 91-68; St.
Pllrkel. ''Thia boy is going to have an operation on his legs Francis (Pa.) edged Kent
tomorrow."
.
·
State 66-63; Youngstown
Parkes talked with the boy about his handicap, had him walk State squeeked by West·
acrou the room and then talked with him some more, telling minister ( Pa.) 54-53 in
him how t.o turn his toes, how to help himself and how to walk overtime · Cleveland State
more nalurllly. Healso talked with the boy's lather and said to beat W~ight State 73-37 ·
him, "II he were l1lY son, I wouldn't have him operated on Wooster· tripped Renyoo 1&amp;.
tomorrOw."
'
7::; Mount Unioo handled
That was a lew ye~~rs ago. The boy never had that operation. Ohio Northern 1~; Ashland
He walks line now.
u.wnped Wilberforce 9u.6
.. ·•

quarter to add to their
frustrations.
Then Coach Duane Wolfe's
Eagles hit a disastrous
second period when they
scored only one point, a free
throw by Spencer with 1:41
remaining in the haU while
the hosts were regaining their
form to go into the locker
room with a . 23·1 lead. It
wasn't really a stall type ba II
game, although Eastern tried
to play ball control while the
Tornados just looked nat. By
the end of the hall, the bench
of the hosts gave a revived
look to the eventual winners.
In the third period, Eastern
started slow and the Tor·
nados picked up where they
left off, building their lead.
But the Eagles began
looking better as they scored
14 points in that period. But
the damage had already been
done.
In the last period. the hosts

"Let Mick Do It!"

DOWNING CHILDS ~"i)

INSURANCE AGENCY lNC.

Bucks drop
74-70 tilt

;a

Wilmington

deleai e d
Manchest~r (Ind. ) 82-73;
Walsh downed Mount Vernoo
87-78: Steubenville beat AI·
liance (l'a.) 84-75; Marietta
thumped Urbana 102-00; Rio
Grande jumped on Cedarville
101-39; and Anderson (!rid. )
blasted Bluffton 16-59.

Eastern N elson 3-2-8,
Carnahan 2- 1·5, Spen c er .t .J .
11 ; Smit h 0·0 ·0 , Goebe_l 1-2-4h
Br own 0-0·0. To tals 10·8· 28
Southern - . Ro ush 5· 2·12;
Brown 4 . 2. 10, Teaf ord 2-4·8
Win eb renner 2 -0 ·4, Br aue r 9'
3·21. ·Johnston 2.0 . .1 , Dunn ing
2·0·4, F indley 2-1-5, Say re 2-15. Tota ls 30-13.73.

Baseball rules
meeting Feb. 23
Temporary and registered
umpires and coaches In the
Gailia-Meigs County area are
reminded that the annual1971
baseball rules. interpretation
meeting will be held Wed·
nesday, Feb.' 23 at Ohio
University's Grover Center.
Bill Newman of Ports·
mouth will be the interpreter.
· A second area meeUng for
officials and coaches will be
held March 15 at Rio Grande
·college.
By state board of control
ruHng, any school sponsoring

interscholastic contests in
baseball must have the
varsi.ty coach . or his
representative (member of
coaching staff preferred)
attend one of the meetings.
Any school failing to meet
this requirement will be
ineligible for tournament
competition.
Officials who fall to attend
one state meeting will he
suspended the following year
and are ineligible for tour·
nament assignments In 1977.

LOCATION: PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.
4 MILES NORTH ON RT. 62 AT NATIONAL GUARD ARMORY
TIME:

DATE: FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18

6:30 P.M.

Sale Items can be inspected one hour before Sale Time!

AUCTIONEER: KENNETH SWAIN PHONE: 256-1967
FLOOR JACKS • AIR COMPRESSORS · TABLE SAWS . ROUAROUND
TOOL BOXES
II

; IIil

. . .llll.l(l.!tiMIS fZ.9
--~~~~llliS

iiSAil

lj:~

HIGHEST QUALITY, NATION AUY ADVERTISED
NAME BRANDS!
Rockwell · Rodac · Fuller · Cummings· Miller Falls . Brown •
Ma_rflow • .s~opmate • Wright · Channel Lock. Remington. McGraw
Edtson ·· Dramond Loy · Waterloo.
. Ingersoll Rand. Wen. .

WE HAVE THE LARGEST SELECTION OF ALL NEW TOOLS AND
ACCESSORIES ON WHEELS

with us!
PLANNING APIZZA PARTY
PHONE
THE ALL NEW

MEIGS INN PIZZA SHACk
-En joy three Siles of your favorite ·
pinas.
·
-Try our &lt;lelicious subs while you
sip your favorite sUds.
Eat In or Carry Out
Phone
992-6304

..

1•

.

'l 11ll 1" ."11 1 ~.....,.,

A coll!P_Iete selection of hand fC?OIS for the plumber, carpenter, mechanic, welder.
electr•c•an, trucker, farmer, patnter, contractor, shop owner or serious tool user in
.any profession. We ha:ve it all - drill bits t~ air tools, hacksaw blades to table s1ws,
patnt brushes to compressors, sandpaper to grinders, exte"sion cords to torch hoses.

AU HAN.D TOOLS CARRY A LIFETIME,GUARANTEE - POWER TOOLS
A FULL FACTORY WARRANTY
'
TERMS OF. s.tLE

C.sh or. approvad the&lt;k with proper 1.0 .• if Ia• exempt must show numbtr. N~t
responstble for changes due to strikes or shipping schedules. Not ,responsible for

accidents or property 1fter sold.

IN HEATED BUILDING
(REFRESHMENTS)

This is the largest sale of this kind
ever to be held in this area!
•

�t - ~Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Feb. 15, 1977

~

SVAC slllndings

Bench, Adams co-recipients

ALL GAMES
W L P OP
South~rn
IS 0 lilt 784
Svm . Valley
8 S 763 780

TEAM

of top award at '77 banquet
. OKLAHOMA CITY (UP!)
- ClncinnaU Reds' catcher
Jobnny Beach and Phoenii
&amp;Ina' center Alvan Adams
Mooday night were COo&lt;'ecipient.s of the top award
presented at the Sports
Headliners' Banquet.
Tbe aex barrier fell at the .
tradltlooa,lly all-male affair
jullloog enough f&lt;l' Olympic '
II)'IIIIIUI Kathy Howard to
eat dinner and receive her
award. She left hnmediately
after the presentation and the
banquet returned to ita stag
fnnnat.

Results
(Girls)
Ohio High scnoot

Basketball Results

United Press International
Ada 86 Lima Sr 34
·

Bloomfield 50 Farmington 29
Cana.l Fulton NW 54 Magno l ia

Vall~y 46
Canfield 52 Girard 41
Cardina l M iddlefi eld 46 New.

(IeaSOn.

bury 16
East Canton 4.5 Claymont 43

East Liverpool 6.5 Ste uben .

ville 32

Fi sher 72 Amanda Clear .
:: reek 27.
Greensburg 68 Canton Glen
Oak 45
Ham II ton Twp SO Grandv i ew

20

Ketterin·g

Fairmont

Northmont 38

E

64

Lowellv ille 32 Berlin Western

Rsv 20
McKin l ey

53

Massillon .

Jackson 47
Oak H il ls 53 Anderson 28
Riverdale 44 Mohawk JS
V il a Mar ie 60 Youngstown
Raven ~3
Warr en Western Rsv 56

Map I ewood 40
Westlake

n

Youngstown

.Howland· 40

Avon Lake 28
Ursuline 67

A small group of women
carrying · pl acards
demonstrated outside the
Myriad Convention Center In
protest of the aclusion of
females.
Howard, a freshman at
Oklahoma City University,
said it was unfair she and
other female athletes could
not attend the awards
ceremooy, but added "unUI
they get something w&lt;l'ked
out, I think It's the ooly thing
they can do."
Bench, a native of Binger,
Okla., was honored for
ha~ing been named most
valuable player in the World
Series. It was the second time
the banquet committee has
chosen him Ill' its top honor.
Adams, a former Putnam
City; Okla., and University of
Oklahoma eager ,led the Suns
into the National Basketball
Association finals against
Boston. He also was named
NBA rookie of the year last
Former Daily Oklahoman
sports writer F.E. Wally
wiillis ,received a special
award for being one of the
founders of the Headliners'
Banquet.
Chuck Fairbanks, former
University of Oklahoma
football coach and now coach
of the New England Patriots
of the National Football
League; was the guest
speaker and received special
recognition
for
his
acc&lt;mplishments during the
past season.
Fairbanks guided the
Patriots to the NFL playoffs,
where they lost to. the

Basketball Results
Ohio College
Basketball ResulTs
United Press International
Iowa 74 Ohio St 70
Bowling Green 91 Loyola
( Ill. ) 68
St . Francis (Pa . ) 66 Kent St .

63

.

Youngstown 54 West minster
(P~ . ) SJ (of)
Cleveland St. 74 Wr ight St . 67
W~ster 78 Kenyon 72
Moun t Union 7B Oh io Nor .
therf'l 63
Ashland 92 W ilberforce 56
WHmlngton {Ind .) 82 Man .
ch ester 13
Wa lsh 87 Mt . Vernon 78
Steubenville 8.. Alliance ( Pa ,)

75

'

Marietta 102 Urbana 86
Rio Grande 101 Cedarville a9
Anderson lind . ) 76 Blufffon

59

Co)lege Basketball Results
By United Press International

East

~

·~
•
,
4

!

'

..

Bentley 82 Babson 56
Brandeis 78 Tufts 76
Colgate 80 Ithaca 61
Del. St. 80 Bowie St . 79
Fairflcl92 Can is Ius 81
Fairm nt 93 S.,lem W .Va . 54
Geneva 71 Carngle ·M lln 66
Husson 93 Thomas 76
LIU 73 F . Dick inson 61
Mercy NY 9j NY Poly 65
Mercyhrst 68 Slppry Rc k 63
New Haven 97 N ichols 77
N .H. Unlv . a1 N 'east ern 71
Niagara 70 Buffalo Sf , 64
Queens 101 S't evens Tech 71
Rbrts Ws lyn 72 Freclon ia 70
St .Fran Pa . 66 Kent St. 63
· St Anselm's 75 Bryant 7J
York Pa . 71 Juniata 66
York NY 90 Mdgr Evers 58
South
Albny St . Ga . 84 Al a . A&amp;M 83
Alcorn St. 100 Southern 94
Armstrong St. 80 Columbus 74
Athens St . Q6 Huntingdon 58
Austin Peay 72 E. Tenn . 59
Auburn 76 VMderbilt 71
Berry 72 La .Grange 68
Campbell 78 Cstl C&amp;r . 12
Chrtnooga 82 J acksnvl Sf . 72
0 . L ipscomb as L ambuth 56
F . Marion 68 St . AndreW 's 65
Frnkln,.Mrsh l 80 J . Hopk ins 7J
Furman 90 Appy St . 83
Ga . Southern 6A E . Car . 57
Georgia Sf . 85 Samford 80
G'town (K y .) 68 Centre 66
Huntsvl a6 Auburn .Mntgmry 84
Kentucky 10.. Florida 78
Ky . Wesleyan 111 Camo ' vl 92

Lenor Rhyne 100 UNC-Asnvlli9
LSU 75 Georgia 69
La . Cot I 73 N ichol ls St. 61
Mars Hi ll 82 Elon 81
Marsha !I 76 M. Harvey 73
Morhed St . 74 Mid Tenn , 67
Murray St . 79 Tenn . TeCh 77
N E La. 80 New Or leans 7a
Pembroke 47 Fayttvl St. 46
Sf , Vince 97 Frostbg St . 77
St Louis 67 Memphis St . 64
Shaw 95 Livlngtone 66
So . M iss . 83 Mer cer 81
So . A la . 78 va . C'wealth 76
sw La . 83 McNeese St. 69
SE La . 62 North Ala . 59
Tennes~ ee 87 Mi ss . 75
Tex .Sthrn 81 M iss. Va l 75
Troy St . 92 Delta St. 78
Union Ky . 96 Trnsylvnia 70
Vldsta St. 88 Sthrn Tech 56
Va . Tec h 122 Birm . Sthrn 70
V M.I a3 D.:lvidson 68
Voor-tj~s 81 Bened ic t 64
\'t . Ky . 85 E . Kentu cky 76
Midwest
Anderson 76 Bluffton 59
Ashland 92 Wilberforce 56
Bwlng Grn 91 Lyo la Il L 68
Cleve St. 74 Wright St. 67
Detroi t 86 w . Michigan 64
De Pau I 77 MarQuette 72
Drake .91 Bradley 83
Esn . Il l. 92 Ark .-L.R . 12
Ferris St. ae. Nor thwOod 81
· Grand Va l 71 Lake Spr iOr 65
Ind . St . 87 E . Michigan 68
!owa 74 Oh io St . 70
Linc ln Mo . 79 Cent Mo . 59
Marietta 102 Urbana 86
M ich . Tech 76 Moorhed St . 69
Mo.- Rolla 85 NW. Mo. 69
Mt . Union 78 0 . Nrthrn 63
Notre Da me 94 Butler 74
Nrt hrn Mich . 74 Oak lnd 65
Okla . Cty 81 Wichlla St . 63
R io Grande 101 Cedarvl 89
Sag . Val St. 73 H llsdle 66
SW Mo. 81 Pittsburg Sl . 79
So. Ill. 79 Evansville 67
Va lpara iso 19 Tulene 76 .
Vincenn es 93 Lakeland 57
Wooster 18 Kenyon 72

Oakland Raiders, who went
on to becCille Super Bowl
cljampion.
·Football Coaches Barry
Switzer of Oklah011l8 and Jim
Stanley of OklahCIII8 State
also received special.
recogniUon.
OU and OSU were cochampions of the Big Eight
Conference and both teams
won post season bowl games,
the Sooners defeating
Wyoming, 41-7, In the Fiesta
Bowl and the Cowboys
beating Brigham Young, 4921,

in the

Hannan Tract 6

Ky ger Creek

Southwestern
North Gall Ia
Eastern

6

719

783

8

89J

916

5 7

llS 881

0 13

597

X- South!rn 10
Sym . V~lley 6
Norlh Gatlla 4
Hannan Tract •

Alio honored were football .
all-Americans from OU and
OSU,
OSU 's
NCAA
championship golf team,
NCAA heavyweight wrestler .
champioo Jimmy Jacloton of
OSU, professional golfer
Mark Hayes ahd defensiVe
tackle Jerry Sherk of the
·.
Cleveland Bro"•""
The ninth Headliners'. Banquet, being held after a twoyear hiatus, was coS!JOIIIOi'ed by the March of
Dimes and Sportscast
Productions Inc.

&amp;••

o 936 586
3 630
5 555

606

591
661

5 531

southwestern 4 • 64S 630
Kyger Creek • 6 533 559
Eastern
o a 346 495
X Clinched
c ham plonsh tp
SVAC RESERVES
TEAM
W L P OP
southern
9 1 539 367
North Gatlla 7 2 4S3 36S
Sym . Valley 6 4 434 496
Eutern
5 3 325 279
southwestern 3 7 330 •21
Hannon Trace 2 7 365 41S
K vger creek

1 9

303

.436

At no surprise to anyone,
Southern was top-seeded
Monday in the Class A·sectional Tournament which
hegins Friday, Feb. 25 at
Meigs High School. .
Coach Csrl Wolfe's Tornados are 16-0 overall .
Southern opens the tour-

starting lineup this late in the

year."
Claytor hit on 7-ol..!l from
the field and made all eight
free throw attempts in
playing ooly 24 mirwtes.
The Wildcats had scored a
'13-71 win at Florida last
month, and Gator Coach Lotz
had some mixed feelings
about Kentucky after the
game,
"I agree t!ley probably
should be playing in the
NBA," said Lotz, whose team
fell to 14-7 overall and,7-' in
the SEC. "I suspect that when
we come back next year we 'll
see another NCAA banner
hanging from the rafters."
· DePaul upset sixth-ranked
Marquette, 77-72, in double
overtime, Tennessee
defeated Mississippi, 87-75,
Notre Dame walloped Butl.er,
97-74, Detroit ran its winning
• streak to 21 games with an 8&amp;64 triumph over Western
Michigan, Iowa topped Ohio
State, 74-70, Louisiana State
downed Georgia, 75-69,
Auburn beat Vanderbilt, 7~
61, in overtime and Drake
toppled Bradley, 9HI3, In
other games.

BOWLING
Pomeroy Bowlinp Lanes
Tuesday Triplicate
Feb. &amp;, 1977

Standings

Team

Pis.

Shamrock Motel
Royal Oak Park
Shirts, Ltd .
Roya l Crown Cola
New York Clothing
Ruth 's Beauty Shop
High

individ ual

54
45
29
22

game

18
16

Betty Smith 192; Pal Carson,
Helen Phelps 189.
High series- Helen Phelps
544; Pat Carson 509 ,
Team high game
Shamrock Motel 503.
Team

high

series

Shamrock Motel 1453.
....

.

,.

c

•'

W. L.

CUi

E.RN\e:,

nament against North Gallia,
5-7.
.
Kyger Creek ~7 overall and
1M3 against Class A competition was second seeded.
Coach Keith Carter's Bobcats
will play Saturday, Feb. 26
against Coach Wayne Bergdoll 's Southwestern
NHL Standings
By United Press International
Campbell . Conference
Pa1rick Divlslcn
W L T Pts. GF GA
Phi la
34 11 12 80 231 157
NY ls landrs 34 15 a 76 198 140
Aflanta
24 21 11 59 187 186
NY Rangers 21 24 13 55 206 207
Smythe D1vision
W l T Pts. GF GA
St . Louis
2~ 27 6 S~ 171 199
Chicago
21 27 10 52 183 ioo
Colorado
17 31 9 43 170 211
Minnesota 13 30 l3 39 165 227
Vancouver 16 36 6 38 157 223
Wales Conterenre
Norris Division
W L T f'1s . GF GA
Montrea l
~2 7 9 93 281 134
Plltsburgh 25 23 9 59 118 180
Los Angeles 19 26 11 49 180 183
Wash lngtn 16 32 10 ot2 154 230
Detroit
15 33 7 37 142 202
Adam s Division
W L T Pts. GF GA
Buffalo
33 17 6 n 207 157
Boston
33 19 6 72 219 186
Toronto
27 23 7 61 216 191
Cleveland
18.29 9 liS 166· 198
Monday ' s Results
Buffalo 7 Toronto 2
Philadelphia 6 St . Louis 4
NY ISlanders 2 Vancouver 1
Tuesday's Games
NY Islanders at Los Ang
M innesota at Washington
Ch ic~go at St . Louis
Detroi t at Co.lorado
Wednesday 's Games
Monlr eal at P ittSburgh
Boston at vancouver
Chicago af' · Buff~lo
Toronto ht Cle 11eland
International Horkey

Roadrunner s
46 18
Salem St . Mkt.
34 30
Seldom ' Rest Ceram ics 34 30
Team No 1
32 32
Farmers Bank
32 32
Ed 's Crossroads Gro . 1 14 50
Men 'S h iQh series - Tom
Crisp 518 ; Ron Hanin g 478 ;
Charles Sear les 462.
Women 's high seri es La ura Carpent er 410 ; Shi rley
Haning 403. Sue Searles 382 .
Men's high ga me - TO"m
Cr isp 19a, 19 1; Ran Han ing
181,

Women 's hi9h game Laura Carpenter 162 ; Shi r ley
Han ing 149, 148 .

I
I

College ratings
NEW YORK (UPI) The
U n I t e d Press l International
Board ot Coac~e-s '
co lege
basketball ra tlrigs with won-lost
records · through games ' of
Saturday, Feb. '12, and number
of f lrst .place votes in paren theses :
( Eltvtnth Week)
Team
Points
1. San Francisco (34 } ('2J.(l) 380
2. Kentucky (2) 08-21
2A5
3. UC LA (21 (1 9-3)
241
4. Michigan Cll {18.21
156
s. Lou isv il le (18-3)
145
6. Marquette 06-3)
144
7. Nevada-Las Vegas (20-2) 1.&amp;3
8. A labama (19-2)
131
9. Wa1c.e Forest C19-3l
125
10 . Arkatlsas (22" 1)
96
11 . North Carolina (1) {17.•0 69
12. Cincinnati {18-3)
51 13. Tenryessee (17-4)
47
14. Arizona (18.Jl
44
15. Minnesota (1a .2J
39
16. Providence (20-3)
26
17. Notre Dame {15.51
10
18. Syracuse (19 -3)
9
19. Detroit ( 20· 1)
?0. Clemson (18 .4)
1

Highlanders.
Southwestern has s 6-8
record. The winner of the
Southern-North Gallla game
plays Eastern (0.14) March 2.
The Kc.&amp;uthwestern winner
baWes Hannan Trace (IH&gt;)
March 3.
The winners wlll meet In
the championship game
Saturday, March 5. The
Meigs Sectional winner goes
to the District at Chillicothe.
Charles Chancey is the
tournament manager.

..

e

'

I OREAl WAY
-TO SHOPI

BASKETBALL
Natlon•l l.sketball Assorlatlon
By Unlte(t Press lnterniltlonal

. E111irn Conference

Games

wayne

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

The

MASON FURNITURE
· 'terman Gtate

SHOP FOR THE BEST
BARGAINS RIGHT
FROM YOUR ARMCHAIR •• .IN THE PAGES
OF THE

N
Stiversville 'News otes
Bllly Brewer is a patient at
a Parkersburg, W. Va.
hospit.sl at this writing.
Mrs. Ada VanMeter, Mrs.
Mike Evans, Elaine Lehew
and Leota Birch shopped in
Parkersburg on a recent

Washing to n at Butla!o
Portland at Cleveland
Seattle at San Anton io
NY Nets l!lt Chicago
PhOen i)( et KansaS City
New Orleans at Ml!~ilukee
A,flanta !!t Golden .Sta te
Wednesday's Games
Ch icago at NY Knlcks
Buffalo at Phllladelph ia
Seattle at Houston
· Boston at Washington
Portland at Det ro it
Phoen i ll. at Ind iana
NY Nets at Denver

Monday 's Results
(No games sc hedulecll
Tuesday's Games
Detro it vs. BOston at Hartford

SIDE GLANCES

bv Gill Fox

Dai~ ·Sentinel

~.-.-~~"-~~~J. ~~--~-----+--~

''

Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Bryant,
Debra and· David called on
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Talbott and
faniily on Friday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. BUI Middleswart visited their
daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Bobby Price and family,
Long Bottom on Tuesday.
Tom Durst is now residing
at Miami, Florida, where he
has secured employment.
Leota Birch purchased a
new Chevrolet Chevelle last
week.
Mr. and Mrs. Melvin ,
Lawrence and J. J. were
Pomeroy visitors on Thursday afternoon.
Mr . .and. Mrs; Thomas
Birch, Waterford, Mr. and
Mrs. Elza Birch, Racine,
were Sunday guests of Clint
Birch and Leota. •
W. 0. and Mrs. Ronald
Albritton and children,
Millington, Tenn. have heeQ
visiting her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Wesley Allen and family
during the past week.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Middleswart, Mrs. Fannie Durst
and Mr. and Mrs. Ron
Albritton and family villited
.Mrs. Nell Middleswart this
week.
Mrs. Fannie Durst, local,
and Mrs. Nita Cozart, Long
Bottom, spent Wednesday
with Mr. and Mrs. Tim
Wilkinson, Shawn and Kevin,
at Columbus.

High blood pressure, a
major contributor to heart
attack and stroke, has no
usual symptoms. You have it
an not know it. Have your
blood pressure checked
regularly, and follow your
doctor's orders. Join the light
to save your llle.

11011-1HitU SAT.

I think part of her interest In
her husband ill the fact that
he's a lleutenant colonel.
Margaret is impressed with
rank.
,
"She'd probably like him a
lot better II he were a
general."
Off screen, Loretta has
never been married. One
assumes her love llle ill
considerably more discreet
· than Houlihan's.
Certainly, she doesn't dig
military brass. At least she
hasn't been seen in public
with anyone in uniform.
But Loretta may beat Hot
Lips to the alt.sr. Loretta said
she has fallen In love and will
be married soon herself.
"The race is to the Swit,"
was the way she put it. 'l:he
man In her life is a New York
stock broker and they plan to
he married in Rhode Island.
''The date hasn't been set
yet. But I just may gel
married before Margaret
does. We'll make our home
here in Southern Calllornia."
Loretta.said there are few
parallels between herself and
Houlihan.
"Margaret and I look a lot
alike but we don't have much
ofanythlng else In common,"
she said, laughing.
"Margaret has rio sense of
humor . But she's a great
nurse. I wouldn't he much of
a nurse. She likes war games.
And she's impressed with
superficialities.
"But when push comes to
shove, Margaret is a good
kid. She loves children and so
do I. She can never have a
child on the show llllcause
they'd send her back to the
States and that would be the
end of Margaret on the

9AM109PM

OPEN
SuNDAY 9 AM 10 S PM
'QUANTITY RIGHTS
· RESERVED
· WE ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU FEBRUARY 19, 197~7~~;==~~iii;;;;:-.,~~

ON

QUARTERED

~~~. . . . .~~~1 09
RIB END

LOIN

~~:s . . . . . . ~.! 119
EXTRA THIN

U!retta doesn't think Hot
Lips' marriage will seriously
alter the inle\'relationships of
the characters in "M-A.S-H,"
She believes Houlihan's
marital status will open new
avenues of comedy.
.
"The
emphasis
is
distributed among so many
characters on our show that
Margaret's new status won't
- disturb the point of view that
much," she said.
"I really don't know what
the pro&amp;lcers have In mind.
But you can bet whatever
happens to Margaret will he
lurmy."

PORK CHOPS ••••• ~~~ ••

SlAB

By the Piece

BACON

LB.

•••••••••••••••

Ll BBYS CALIFORNIA

49¢
69¢

CLING .
Llrge
30
oz.
PEACHES •.•••••• ~:~ •••••

~~~;~~EAF

Personal!
By cqmbining rour Auto
and

$149

BREAKFA~T

series."

20 oz.

.

PIE FILliNG ......::: •••

Homeowners

insurance into ONE policy
... You may be able to

Save 10% to 25%

Grape. Punch or Orange

On your rearly insuranCe

HI.C

MR. FILBERTS

3
ge
MARGARINE
.E~:~.3
ge
DRINKS...................
·

premiums .

We will review your
insurance program
with you free of
charge any day of the
week .

·.

. i'.:'

PRODUCE SPECIALS
CALIFORNIA

CALL OR STOP
AND SEE US

RED DELICIOUS,
GOLDEN DELICIOUS
OR WINESAP

NAVEL
Reuter-Brogan ORANGES ,-----"The
Insurance
Store"

I

DOZEN

I

,

Hupt's Prima Salsa

89~ ! SPA~:¥.!:~~~~~

Phone 992-5130
214 E. Main
Pomeroy

I
I

...

VlASIC DILl CHIPS .................... ~~.~~:.49'
PORK 'n BEANS .................~'.~.·:.7~~.·.4Pl 111
Bes-Pak .

TRASH BAGS ............................~~.~~: .. 99'
Fresh like

5th &amp;Pearl ' Racine, 0. ·
· ~ PlfEiiE'STORE
FEB. 15-FEB . "

'

•.

t

!·

,'

,.
~

~

Cr~Mchy

Right Rtttr"'d To Ltmtt QuonHIIts ,
We Glldty Acctpl Ftcl. Food SliMP&gt;
·
Mondoy lhru Frldoy
! : oo to 7: 00
......:::::;;;;;:
S.turdey 'fo 7

CLOSED

I

CELERY

39~
STAIJI

SWEET PEAS ...................~:::.~~ -~.~~~ 2179'
1
WHITE
POPCORN
.........
:
.......
:
.......
:~~·.. 29' .
Jif
PEANUT BIJTI'ER ...................... ~~.~~·.. 1.39
Lucky Lui
1

APPLESAUCE ..............
~~~~~~~.?~~-~.~:~....59'
.
IttII

YEllOW

PINK ,

FRENCH CITY

LIVER
$
PUDDING .•........~·.

FRESH

09

JOWL
. '$139
2 LB. TRAY
BACON•...•.....•.•.
~ ..,. ..'
PORK

00

NECK
••••••••••••

VALLEY BEll

~------

Coupon Expires Feb. 19, 1917

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

(

BEEF

SLICED

ta

'

''I heard somebody HICCUP!"

FINAL NOTI'
CE
'

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
~alties to unpaid Taxes.
MEIOI COUNTY TREASURER,
I

GIORGI M; COUINS

Block didn't become America's largest
income tax preparer by charging high
prices. For example, if you qualify fc;&gt;r th~
short form, we charge a very low pnce.
And our price alwaystcludes your
resident state return.

H&amp;RBLOCit
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

618 .EAST MAIN

I

L------

NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY

CoupOn Expires Feb. 19, 1977

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

I

1-

3-LB. BAG

89~

'

I

I

I
I

PEANUT BUnER

.

I
L
I
I

!
I

TOociUDS
28 oz . Box

79~

38 oz . Btl.

No. 4SS

CouP«iii Explrtt Feb. 19,1977

S129

No. 125

Coupon Expires Feb. 11,1977

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

------!

I
I

I
I

I I
I •

LIPTON TEA BAGS
100 ct. Box

I!
Ii

S119

No. 355
Coupon Expires Feb. 19, 1977

I

I

I •
I '

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

1

69~

II
I
I

WESSON OIL

------+-------------------------1 ,1

Golden Isle

18 oz. Jar

II
I
I

I
I

I
I

I

I
Open la.m .. 6 p.m. Weekdlys, 9-S Sal .
Phone lf2-l79S

APPLES

·

-------1------"'

:we charge." I LUCKY CHARMS CEREAL
I 9 oz. Box 49~ No. 85
Reason No. 2 why H&amp;R Block
l
should do your taxes.

59~ 49~: 79~ $ ~ BEEF....~!.;.~~. . .~sr LIVER.........~..~;
'I,

the less

•·for t~e EOO~Of\\ft'- M

APPLES TOMATOES GRAPEFRUIT 2' MILK GROUND~

LB.
BAG

55

FOOD $AVING$

C..mpbells

l
I
l

------------~~-------.!!!.!tS,I!~~LE~,a!,._..,. .... ____ J.. ___________ _

II HUNT'S KETCHUP
"The .,.Lot.,~&amp;IIJ.L"' I 14 oz. Btl. 29~ No.
your return, I

I

------~

COUPON

I

PHONE 992-21 56·

Milson, W.Va. ·

seduced, or tried to !educe,
everyone above the rank of
maj&lt;l' who ever stumbled
Into the hospital.
Once she becomes the bride
of Lt. Col. Dooald Penobscott,
wl1l Hot Lips remain l!lithful,
or wU1 she revert lo her old
alley cat procllvltles?
"That's hard to say," said
LoreUa Swlt, the lush blonde
who plays Hot UP! to a tee.
''It all depends on the writers.
"!do know that if Margaret
fool.tl around she will be the
first prime time married lady
to cheat on her husband. But
then she was the first prime
time lady to carry on a hot
and heavy affair and get
away with it.
''She may eveh remain true
to her husband. Margaret has
mostly been a one-man
woman, even II it was the
wrong Inan.''
Swit ill a curious actress.
She defends Hot Lips as if the
nurse were he~ twin sister.
U!retta, incidentally, refers
to HouUhan only by her
Christian name, Margaret .
Never Hot Lips.
.
"The producers tell me that
Margarel's bridegroom
returns to Tokyo where he's
stationed," Loretta said .
. "That means she will he
separated from him for long
periods and probably will
take her sexual frustrations
out on the poor gu)'S in the MA,S..H groUP.
"I'm not sure Margaret is
capable of a really deep love.

·

NOR'I'IIFIELD, Ohio
rUPI) - Betsy Jo earned her
third victory in four season
starts Mooday night, winning
the featured $1,600 eighth
race at Northfteld Park.
The five-year-old mare,
driven by Robert Uppiatt,
W. L, Pet. GB covered the 8\it furlongs in
Denver
34 19 .642
2:20 3-6 and returned $5.00,
Detroit
32 23 .582 3
Katl!&amp;S Clry
28 28 .500 7lf2 $4.00 and $3.2(). Ohio Den Mar
Indiana
25 30 .455 10
·was second and paid $6.40 and
Ch icago
23 32 .418 12
Mi lwaukee
17 42 .288 20
$3.40and Roger Farr finished
Pacific Division
W. L. Pet. GB third for a $2.80 pa:foff.
The tenth race big triple of
Los Angeles
35 19 .648
Portland
35 21 .625 1
3-1-2 was worth • .40.
Golclen State 30 24 .556 .5
A crowd of 2,478 wagered
Seattle
29 26 ,527 6'h
PhoenJ)(
25 27 .481 9
$297,140.

Tuesday's Games

Mon .. Tues., Wed .• S~t.-&amp;:lOtit 5:00
THURSDAY TIL 121i0()~

Hot Lips Houlihan, the
naughty nurse In ''M-A,S..H,"
wUl be married on the aeries
next month, ending prime
time television's longest
· extramarital affair.
Maj. Margaret Houlihan
has been horsing around with
Major. Frank Burns lor lour
years now. But this year they
~~gone Increasingly to bed
·
Hot Lips has found a
lieutenant colonel In Tokyo
and on March 15 the final
show of the ~t season
the happy couple wUi
exchange vows In one of the
wackiest ceremonies In the
annals of the tube.
The rites will be conducted
by Father Mulcahy the
show's not-too-bright ~car .
Major Burns, near hysteria
atthelossoiHotUpe, will act
as best man. Col. Sherman
Potter will give the bride
away.
Corporal Klinger, the
. we.irdo transvestite of the
field hospital group, will
challenge nurse HouUhan for
best dressed member of the
wedding party. He will he the
bridesmaid in a Duffy silk
robin's egg blue empire gown
and pearl necklace, carrying
a nosegay of violets.
Leave it to Hot Ups to
make a mockery of the
solemn nuptial ceremony.
The brazen hussy has the gall
to wear white . She who has

Atlantic Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Philadelphia 33 20 .623
Boston ·
26 27 .491 1
NY Kn icks
24 'l9 .453 9
Buffalo
19 33 .365 13112
NY Nets
17 36 .321 16
Cebtral Division
.
W'. L. Pet. GB
. Wash ing ton
30 22 .577
Houston
29 23 .558 1
Cleveland
28 24 . .538 2
San Antonia
29 25 .537 2
New Orleans 24 30 .444 7
Atlanta
22 34 .393 10
Western Conrerence
Mlctwest Division

K alamazoo at Muskegon

STORE HOURS

for Mrs. Velma Barnhart was
held recently at the home of
Mrs. Frances Reed. Thls was
given by members of the old
Club.
They
Birthday
presented Velma with a pin
aod a decorated cake.
Refreshments were en)9yed by the honored guest
and the following members·
Mrs. Mary Allee Bille M ·
na Osborne M ' 1 rs.
' · rs. nez
Boring, ,,Mrs. Nell Wilson,
Mrs. Helen Archer, Mrs.
Erika Bortng, Mrs. Evelyn
Spencer• Mrs. Ruth Tuttle,
Mrs. Helen Blake, Mrs. Reed
and a.guest, Mrs. Ermalene
Johnson. Unable to attend
were Mrs. PhyllliJ Hetzer,
Mrs. Mary Jamison and Mrs.
Gamet Jo~on.
H. E. K1bble is a palient
at the
Camden-Clark
Hospital, Parkersburg, W.
Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sams
of Jane Lu, W. Va. spent the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
Gene WUson.
.
Richard Boring, Warren
Pick~ and Lyle Balderson
attended the OVA old timers
baseball dinner at Pomeroy
Wednesday evening.
Visitmg at the Williams Balderson home recently
were Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Day and Chrissy, and Mrs.
J{athryn Dietz of Belpre.
Mrs. J. D. Hayman i.s a
patient at Holzer Medical
Center at Gallipolis.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Barnhart and Gary have moved to
Montana.
Roger
Meredith
of
Beaumont,! Texas visited
recently with Mr. and Mrs.
·Warren Pickens, Mr. and
Mrs. Denver Weber and Mr.
:and Mrs. Ernest Whitehead.
-Mrs. L. Balderson

®,

22 25 8 l2 207 233

MASON FURNITURE

773-5592

A aurprlse farewell psrty

Monday's Results'
No games schedL!Ied

Kalamazoo at Fort
Col umbus at Toledo

Southwest

1\T
1\T
By VERNON sOOrr
1 leWS 1 lOfeS HOW.YWOOD (UP!)

United Press International
W L T Pts . GF GA
F l int
28 22 7 63 262 225
Kalama zoo
27 21 9, 63 246 215
Sagin,w
26 22 9 61 237 219
Mus_kegon 22 25 9 S3 22S 234
Port Huron
22 30 s 49 198 23 1
Sou1t'l
.
W L T P1s. GF GA
Toledo
26 25 6 58 228 249
Col umbus
22 24 12 56 227 231
Dayton
26 27 3 55 237 no
Ft . Wayne

Wednesday 's

Ark . St . 83 TeX .. Arl 64
Cent Ark . 77 Ark : Col. 67
Henderson eo Harding 65
La mar 85 La. Tech 83
MidW'Strn 94 Hrdn -Smmns 90
Ok la. Chris 75 E . N.M . 70
S. F . A ust in 93 SW TelC . 70
S.Hous St. 76 Tex. A&amp; I 74
So. Ark . 65 Ark . Tech 55
SI .Mry's 85 E .Tex .Bapt 70
.
UA..Pine Blff 104 xavr La . 93
West
Hwa 11-H ilo 71 Alas -Anch . 54
Pa c. Luth 93 Lewis&amp;Ciark-69
San Diego 91 Dmnguez Hil s 57
W'mnstr Uteh 88 Mesa 81
Wstrn . Bapt 87 Whitman 76
Westmont 62 Socal College 59

Re~dsville Hot Lips Houlihan to wed

dropped .to ninth after ill ~
Mloaa to Clemson early in the
week, and '!:eon.-, No. 10
last week, fell out C'l the top
ten to No. 131~ Ita IKl761DMin "Alligalor Alley" to
Floridll.
Mlchigan,l13 Sunday alternoon lo.la to Indiana not
Included in thill week's balloting, remained fourth ,
whlle Marquette improved
one plaCe lei sixth. Alabama
was eight!!, Wake F&lt;l'est
ninth
apd
sutprlslng
Arkansas, qow 15-1 and the
Southwest Conference champion ~ out the eUte
gro.{p with \IS first Top 10
ranking ever.
.

league

Pick 'N Shovel
Feb. 13,1977

by Jon Petenon

P.o..t.~i

· UCLA, which held the
secondplace rating last week,
achanged placet~ with the
WUdcall after tlllfferinC a '1&amp;73 upset to Washington
Saturday night. Prevloully.
Michigan, Cincinnati and
North Carolina all held the
No. 2 posltioo · In recent
weeks.
The Top 10 waa throwJI into
a shambles following a series ·
of surprises and UJMts:
lAtulsville dropped two notches to fifth after being
defeated 99-96 by Nevada Las
.Vegas, which moved up from
eighth to seventh; Wake
Forest, sixth last week,

for Meigs Sectional event

32 in loop.win

YOU'D BEllER
"T'HIN YOUR

NEW YORK (UP!) About the ooly thing tlult
remains constant in the
college basketball ratlnp ia
the University , of San
Francisco, which remains
undefeated and top-railked.
Other than that, · there ia
liWe ooe can be sure of
acept that everything else ia
coostanUy changing.
Garnering 34 first-place
votes in the eleventh week of
the
United
Press
International · Board of
Coaches poll, the imbeaten
(25-11) Dons compiled 3lll
points, 135 better · than
runnerup Kentucky.

Announce Class A pairings

Wildcat sub nets

MR. FLUGG

6

6 7 U9 '&amp;:41

'
SVAC ONLY
TEAM
W L' P OP

TanePr1tlP Rnwl

By
United
Press
InternaUonal
Sophomore guard Truman
Claytor says he can see why
Kentucky Coach Joe Hall
doesn't want to break up a
good thing this late in the
season and Florida Coach
John Lotz still feels the
Wildcats "should be playing
in the NBA."
But Hall and more than
23,000 fans at UK's Rupp
Arena Monday night believe
Claytor may yet crack the
starting lineup lor the secondranked Wildcats before the
season is over.
Averaging only four points
per gsme, Claytor came off
the bench Monday night to
score 22 points and lead the
Wildcats to a 104-78
Southeastern Conference
victory over Florida.
Kentucky, however, still remains one-half game behind
Tennessee, which defeated
Mississippi. Kentucky, which
has won lOin a row, is now 192overall and 11-11n. the SEC.
"Well, about starting, I
really haven't been thinking
about it," Claytor said .. "! can
\mderstand where Coach Hall
doesn 'I want to break ui&gt; the

Dons remain on top in UPI ratings

SVAC STANDINGS

'

5- T!)e DaUv Senlinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday,Feb. l5.1977

I
I

1 t

Betty Crocker

I PIE CRUST STICKS

Ii

I

I :
1 ~

I
t

22 oz. Box

__:+ _____

J'ft~
:1/_ -No. 7S

I .

Coupon Expirts Feb. 19,1977

..:_l~·!!~!,Y_G,!~!!,Y________ ..,

I

!
I

~

I ~
I ~

I
I

Ii

MAX PAX COFfEE
12 oz. Can

$249

No. 305

Coupon E•pires Fob. 19, 1977

,

~------~!~~~~~!~W~~--------1-----~-~!~~~~~!~~t-------

TWIN CITIES GATEWAY
I

•

I~
t

�'

.'

7-Tho Dally Sentinei,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Feb. 15.1977

6- '1'hO Oally Sentinel, MidcDeport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Feb. 15,_1~7
~~

.
~l

~

r

Generahon
. Rap

.&lt;
!] .

By Helen and Sue Bottel

:::

Answer ·•line
American Cancer Society .

Sbe'• If, PreiDIDI, ,and Mad!
Dear Helen and Sue:
·
I was mad and frustrated when I read the letter from .the
hi8h and mighty pei'SOI\ who said pregnant girls are "easy."
I'm 14 and pregnant.I woUld never call myself easy. Ilove
·,
' . !be boy Ilost my virginity to. He was the first and only.
I went on the pill before we decided. ( lncidentaU~ ,
Planned Parenthood isn1 a "free" clinic - it's a nonprofit
organlzaUon.) Whatever went wrong, it wasn't because we
didn't care. Most kitk Uke us take precautions, but things don't
always work out.
Whoever calls me "easy and hot to trot" should really try
to understand that leenagers can be in love too. - CAN'T
BELIEVE 'EM

~

•l •

+++

+++

Dear ,Rap:

.

'

•

.

\

'

Dear Can't:
Letters like yours are frustrating too. We know most
pregnant teenagers aren1' "easy" typea : perhaps you fall
more deeply in love than do some of your older siSters because
love is so very new to you, And for the same reason, you make
more mistakes In birth control.
But: what are your plans? You and the father have an
adult problem which won't go away : Please let'"' know how
you're facing it. - HELEN AND SUE
NOTE TO READERS : For copies of "What is a Crush?,"
~~What is a First Love1,"" 1'What is Getting to Know
Yourself?," send a stamped selv-addressed envelope Ill Helen
and Sue Bottel, care of this newspaper. - H. and S.

I

~

......
.•

"

•••

..

•

MR. AND MRS. CONRAD OHLINGER

Conrad Ohlinger honored
for servtce to church

Last year I found out the girl my daughter (26 ) 15 iivmg
The Pomeroy Church of
witb is a lesbian. They've bought a house lllgether - the bank Christ recently honored Congave the mortgage because both have good jobs.
d "C · " Ohl 10
' ger
She has always dated men before, the isst being married, ra
oome
•
ed h
· 1bl nk sh
Pomeroy with a dinner party
with a had break-up. But when I ask
er pom - a ' e as a tribute to his faithful
admitted she's in love
with
this
woman.
f
·
id f
I've begged her to see a doctor. The result is, she won't years o serviCe as an e er o .
th e churc h·
visl't or contact us. I pray for her. She resents it.
· g the d1'nner • Biii
FoII owm
This Problem has begun .to take its toil on my husband 's
h
hale McDaniels served as master
and my sex ilfe. We're so ashamed of our .da ug ler. We
of ceremonies for a "roast".
the thought we'll never have' grandchildren; and that she's . ·Gt . g comments on even· ts
. against God.
·
vm
gomg
·
Ohi1' nger's life were
put
on
a
lot
ofwei•ht,
from
nervousness,
since
I
heard,
rn
I've
'"
=
Eskew • Eveiy1r
'm
not
well.
Howcanwesave
her'
NEEDS
HELP
·r
ranees
and I
Smith, Janet Venoy, Richard
Evanson, Elizabeth Duffy,
Dear Nll.:
Concencrate on saving yourself and your marriage! There Eileen Bowers, Lou Osborne.
Two of his favorite hymns,
is only one way lor parents to face the decisions of their grown
children: accept what you can't change and get on with your "How Great Thou Art" and
"Through It Ali" were sung
live.s.
But remember this : your daugliter's ilfestyle might b)' Mrs. Venoy, Peggy
change as suddenly as it began. Having been hurt by a man, Brickles and Shirley
she may be retreating into temporary homosexuality. Stop
brooding and accept her as she is. Seems to me you're feehng
·4·:·::.:-:.:.:.:.::(.!......:.X«...........'\N'IN\o:..
sorrier for yourself than you are for her ! - HELEN

Bumgardner.
A gift certificate was
presented to him by Thelma
Osborne from the congrega·
lion. At the conclusion of the
program he was presented
. a
cake with the inscription
taken from Matthew 23:ll.
Four of the couple's
children attending were
Michael of Albany, Sh'eila
Cozart, Pomeroy, and Jlla_omi
artd Katherine at home.
Unable to attend were Mele of
Texas, and Wilma of Newark.

Unusual

.r. .....,.,"~·:· 1. P·roaram
~&lt;

&gt;',

&amp;:

Polly's Pointers

By Polly Cramer

Bake potatoes in
half the ust141 time

By Polly Cramer
DEAR POLLY - Did you
· ever wish you could hake
potatoes in only 13 minutes?
You do not even have to heat
·· the oven to do it. Wrap the
potatoes in foil, place them on
a rack in your pressure
cooker and add water up to
the rack. Cook !0.15 minutes
depending on the size of the
potatoes. -G.M.
DEAR POLLY- I have a
lime saver for anyone making any cookies that are roll·
ed out. Cut with a pizza cutter
as it cuts right lhiough the
rough nuts, raisins, etc. and
does not pull the dough. UIIBY.
,·
.. DEAR ,POLLY - I wanted
to send a bottle of perfume
out of town and as the bottle
was glass I worried about it
being broken. I put the
original box in a larger box
that was packed well with old
nylon hosiery cut in strips. I
was told the bottle arrived in
·. perfect condition. - DONNA.
DEAR POLLY - I store my
. , garden hose in a car tire. I
have jllst put 100 feet in a tire
and it is easy to move around.
-EDITH.
DEAR POLLY - When
there is not enough room in
. your refrigerator for a
· ·watermelon store it in a picnic cooler packed with ice.
Plastic bread bags are useful
for carrying small game
hume,from a hunting trip and
save blood stains on game
P.,uches and clothing. Burned
fingers will be avoided if you
use a wooden spoon rather
than a metal one for stirring
foods on the stove at home or
over a campfire. -HANNA.
'
DEAR POLLY ::. During
these days of saving coupons
I got tired of searching for the
ones needed as even the
coupon keeper did not
separate them enough. So I
bought a recipe file with a set
of dividers. Now · mine are
•
separated Into sections such
:. as beverages, dessert, clean,. ing aids, canned goods, etc.
so it is fast and easy to find
before I go to the store. DIANA.
'
DEAR POLLY- To have
an odorless bunch of
:: marigolds I 'Strip off the
.· leaves. Sprinkle cat litter on
oil and gresBe spots 011 the
driveway, let it stand and.
!ben sweep clean when you
see the litter has ablorbed the
stain.-ARLENE.
DEAR POLLY- My lhreeyear-&lt;lid was going through
the feet of his sleepers so they

were past the mending stage.
I cut off the. feet on the
sleepers an&lt;! the feet on a pair
of red socks he had worn out
but had good ribbing. I sewed
these to the ankles of his
sleepers to make them more
cornlortabie to wear and the
project meant he had another
winter 's wear out of them.
With clothing costs sksaving
(or us.- GLENDA.
DEAR POLLY - When
crocheting rugs I find they
lay Oi&gt;l if I crochet three
rows, turn over and crochet
three rows, turn back and
crochet three rows, etc. until
the desired size is reached. DOROTHY.
Polly will send you one of
her . " peachy" thank-you
cards, ideal for framing or
placing in your family scrarbook, if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her column. Write Polly's
Pointers in care of this
newspaper.
·~~:::::::::::~-=::.-=:=~:=::;::::;;;;;;::::;:.-:;:;::;:~:~:~::8:~·

. Social •
TUESDAY
MEETING OF Salisbury
School PTO scheduled for
Tuesday has been cancelled.
WOMEN'S Au xiliary,
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
2:30 p.m. Tuesday at the
hospital. Service pins will be
awarded.
GROUP 2, Middleport First
United Presbyterian Church, ·
7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the
home of Mrs. Dwight
Wallace. Mrs. Thomas Rue
will be C&lt;&gt;-hostess. Bible study
will be from Book 3, chapter I.
Mrs. Lewis Sauer will have
devotions.
LEWIS Manley American
Legion Auxiilary 263, 2 p.m.
Tuesday at the home of Mrs.
Ernest Bowles.
Jrr' Gamma Mu Cllapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
Tuesday at the home of Mrs.
Ruth· Riffle. Pizza party will
be held. The cultural report
will be given by Mrs. Doris
Ewing and Mrs. Carolyn
Grueaer.
WEDNESDAY
KNIGHTS Tempiar, Ohio
Valley Commandery, 7:30
Wednesday at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple . Special
meeting to confer the order of
the temple. All Sir Knights
should be in uniform.

Pomeroy
Personal Notes ·.

Miss Jeanne Hines of Columbus spent the weekend
here visiting friends.
Mr. and Mrs . Karl
Grueser and Larry, and Mrs.
Welby Whaley went to
Caldweii Sunday for the third
birthday ce ieb ralio~ of
Kimberly Grueser, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Grueser. A Winnie the Pooh
cake was served fo liowing the
dinner.
"
Mr. and Mrs. Myron
Miiier were Monday visitors
in Waverly with their son,
James, and his family.
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hammer of Colwnbus spent &amp;.turday here visiting Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Hoeflich and Jayne
Lee.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilson
. Carpenter spentthe weekend
in Cincinnati visitin Mr. and
Mrs. Denni e Carroii and son,
Matthew.
Mr. and Mrs . Harry
Young of Ga li on were
weekend visitors of Mrs. W.
0 . Barhitz.

Grates announce
birth of a sop,

6

slated

Integration
may
be
'
too late in big cities

An exciting program of
dramati c readings and
discussion relating Shakes·
peare's plays to our lives
today , entitled "Shakespeare
on Women," will highlight the
Annual Meeting of the French
Art Colo ny on Thursday
evening, Feb. 24. at Oscar's
Restaurant in Gallipolis.
Kezia · V~nmeter Sproat,
Ph.D. , and Bronwyn Hopton,
both of Columbus , will
present this unusual and
delightful program.
Dr. Sproat, a graduate of
Vassar holding a Ph. D. in
Englis h from Ohio State , French Art ·colony Annual
University, is a recognized Dinner Meeting should be
lecturer, teacher and author. made before Saturday, Feb.
Her doctoral dissertatioQ, "A 19, by calling DuMa Nib!!rt.at
Reappraisal of Shakes- 446-4672 or calling· 446-1819.
peare's View on Women;" at The cost is $5.50 per person.
Ohio State in 1975 won for her The social hour will he at 6:30
the Florence Howe Award · p.m. with dinner at 7 o'clock
from the Women's Caucus lor on Thursday, Feb. 24.
the Modern La nguages, The annual meeting will
Modern Lan gu age aisomarktheopening ofthe
Association of America. She 1977 membership drive,
.ha s published numerous chaired by Ba~bara Epling.
poems and a selection will The theme for ihe one month
appea r this spring in effort will be "Paint the Town
"Righting," an anthology by French."
Argus · Press. She has

[i~:~:g~~~i~u~

By JoHN NEEDHAM
VIKHROU,Indla (UPI )Lillian Carter returned today
to the town In India where she
nursed the sick 10 years ago
and received a touching welcome of flowers, embraces
and (dases that broucht teara
Ill her eyes.
Healthy chlldren she had
Inoculated as infants stood in
clean, neatly pressed dresseo
and trousers and sang a song
written specially for her to
Uie tune of "Battle Hymn of
the RepubUc."
Old friends draped sandalwood garlands around her
neck and pressed bouquets of
red roseo into her ha'nds.
"Do You remember me?"
scores of people asked ils the
78-year-old mother of !be
American president hogged
them.
''Of course I do," she
replied. "I remember
everything about this place ."
Vikhroli is a company town
owned by Godrej, a famllyowned lnduatrtsl concern that
makes locks, typewriters,
soap and steel furniture such
as fUing cabinets.
It is middle class by Indian
standards, with skilled
workers earning more than·$4
per day In a natloo where the

A regular featiU'e, (l'epared by the American Cancer
Society, to help save your life frllll cancer.
Apostal worker asks: "What is 'Make Today Cwnt'?"
ANSWERline : "Make Today Count, Inc." is a natl01111l
organization for advanced cancer patients and their flmilles
which was formed In 1974 by Orville E. Kelly, a journalist, a
year after he discovered that he had cancer. The group, which
has a number of local chspters ·throughout the country (some
of which work with American Cancer Society units In the
community) offers emotional bo!Jterlng and the chance to
share problems among people ronlrooted by cancer. Kelly
himself travels widely and speaks to the ·public frequenUy
about his own emotiooal reaction to cancer and the importance
of living to the fullest, rqardless of how long one has to live .
He is a spokesman for more hooesty when dealing with
pstients. He believes that many patients don't realize that
medicine ~an oflen extend their lives even if they cannot be
cured. He also has called public attention to the sellers of
unprovem remedies who prey on frightened cancer patients
and their families.
·
A housewife writes : "Several yeara ago my cancer was
treated by a physician called a therapeutic radlologiat and now
I know someone who is being treated by a radiation oncologist.
Are they same?
ANSWERilne: Yes. The terms therapeutic radiologist,
radiation oncologist and·radiallon therapist aU have the same
meaning: a physician who has received specllic training In
therapeutic radiology; ooe who Is certified by a recognized
medical specialty board, and usually llrnlts his or her p~actlce
Ill radiation therapy. The radiation oncologist has a particular
interest in cancer, although the others also treat the disease.
Aman in his 40's explains: "I am a bartender and my work
puts me right in the middle of a lot of cigarette smoke. Is there
anything that I can do to protect myself?"
ANSWERline : First, it is important lor you to be a ROO•
smoker because if you smoke you wiD compound the harmful
effect of Inhaling your customer's tobacco smoke. Second, try
to make sure that your work area is well ventilated. A study
done at the University of Cincinnati showed the bartenders
inhale the equivalent of 36 cigarelles during an eight.bour sl)lft
if they W9fk in a stuffy area but tha.t number drops to 10e
equivalent of 12 cigarettes if the area has a good airflow.
For more informatioo contact your local Cancer Society at
440-7479 or 992-7531.

By DAVID E. ANDERSON
WASHING TON UP!) Housing integration wiH
come too late to solve the
problems
of · racial
segregation · of the nation's
schools, the U.S. Commission
on Civil Rights said today.
The commission, In a 128psge report on metropolitan
school desegrqalion, said
most minority children who
live in large cities·continue to
attend ~acially isolated
schools.
"It lias become abundantly
clear in recent years," the
Cortunission said, "that much
of the racial segregation that
exists In big city school
systems
violates the
Constitution."
And it said sole reliance on

;:, . . . . ,. ,. . ,. . . .

~~~~~~~:;!:;:~~~ ~~: ·:

PAST PRESIDENTS,
Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion Auxiliary,
7:30 Wednesliay night at the
home of Mrs. Veda Davis.
TIIURSDAY
MAGNOLIA Club, Thursday, 7:30p.m. at the home of
Mrs. Doris Grueser with Mrs.
Gladys Cuckier, Cl&gt;·hostess.

man."

She looked at a plcture
taken of her wearing a aarl,
the traditional dress of Indian
women, when she worked
here with the Peace Corpe In
1967 and 19611.
"I've gained i!Ome weigbl
since then," she said.
A gardener Mrs. Carter
had treated for uthma
stepped forward. She bad
asked about him In letters
from Plains, Ga. to India and
today she was told he seldom
comes to the dispensary
nowadays.
·
"I cured him," she said.
Mrs. Carter rode In a car
along . streets lined with
towering 304eetllig)l ashoka
and palm trees to visit three
schools and the dlapensary
where she worked treating
patients, Including lepers,
and he)ping with family
planning program.

Eleven-year-old Christina
. Smith reinains on the critical
list at Burns Center,
Children's Hospital, Columhas, although she is reported
by relatives here to he.
responding to treatment.
Christina was severely·
burned on Feb. 6 when her
nightgown caught fire as she
was warming herself by the

fair housing eltorcement as a
cure for school segrqatlon
problems would come "far
too late to benefit children
attending school during the
20th century."
The commission called on .•.
both the President and Congress to (I'Ovide whatever
assistance necessary to
assure that court-ordered
REVIVAL SET
. metropolitan desegregatloo
GUYSVILLE
- A revival
provides maxim\In educatloo
will
be
held
Thursday
benefits for all children.
through
Sunday
at
7:30 each
It
suggested
that
evening
at
the
Guysville
metropolitan desegregation
- incorpating both cities and Community Church wiUi the
·suburbs in a school Rev. Merlin Teets speaking.
desegrqation plan - can be The public is invited.
workable.
"In the 40 years between
1932 and 1972," the
commission said, "more than
116 per cent of Uie country's
school districts have been
eliminated through reorganization/' it said.
In the South and West
particularly, it
said,
eStablishment of a single
district incorpora ling both
the central city and its
suburbs was not uncommon.
The conunisaion also said
the amount of busing
necessary to accomplish
metropolitan desegrqalion
is not extensive when
compared to busing for other
purposes within a district.

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

,TI~ ~

,~;

.

~~~ivai

.:'::!··''....:··_;.
::

at Stratford, On- '. :, :. _:'

The Women's Resource and
Polley Deveio~ll)ent Center,
a non-profit organizatjon to
MIDDLEPORT Child Con- increase economic and
servation League, Thursliay, educational opportuntiies for
7:30 p.m. at the Colwnb'"' women, sponson this
and Southern Ohio Electric
Co.
WJLUNG Workers Class,
7:30 Thursday night of the
E:llerprise Unitcu Mcthodi&amp;t Program of the , Nationhai
for
I e
f.llllreh, at the ap.rtment of Endown~ent
Mrs. Cordelia Bcrrlz, Meig.&lt; Hurnamt1es.
Reservat i ons for the
Inn.

~:~;j,;~~~~~~t"~r::rt~
~~~ni~!;,g~~tat!n Ba~

;;::
,;:::
: ;:

i:'

}

:i:
:::
{

t

:'i

ONE FREE
l'rem 1

s....lll

.IN WASHINGTON

l

'
I

I

hltcilon,ot

Only one print pet cuaomw pluM.

~~~!!!I
::;:
.:.',i._
:::j::

-·
::::
::;:

::::
::::
}·
.::;:

'i'

GOESSLER'S
I
ELRY STORE
I:,_.: :
, JEW
.
.
POMEROY O
..
•

I
l

'. : '_,:·'_:';.:

.
, •
. ~:;:
·~~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:~:::~:;:.:::::::::~:::.-;::~::::•:&lt;·:::::~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::~::::::::::::::.:~·&gt;

::::

Carter's first 'crisis'?

.l

long sweater sleeve, circled about a
slender wri.st, inched up upon a bare
arm . In three compatible fashion colors:
Ivory, rust or black with contrast cnlor
'
dials. Each. just $39.95.
Come see how intriguing a reliable, ·
precision jeweled watch can be.

shoes.
"Women loved him," Roth
said. "He looks like a makeout guy."
Roth, 39,, a collector of old
pictures, said be spotted the
photograph at the Chicago
gallery amoog a lot coming
up for aale. The name John
Wilkes Booth is written on the
hack of the picture but Roth
said it was not Booth's
signature.
"A bunch of oUier so"'ailed
Lincoln experts ssid it was
their estimation it wasn't
Booth. I just took it home.''
Rolh said he checked many

finally found opposite page
300 of Carl ·Sandburg's
Abraham Lincoln, The War
Years, Volume IV.
Booth, a member of an
acting family and a Southern
sympathizer, shot Lincoln
April !4, 1865, at Ford's
Theater In Washington.
Leaping to the stage, Booth
shouted "Sic semper tyrannis
(Thus always to tyrants) ."
He broke his leg rut managed
to escape out a hack door.
He was hunted down and
killed in a barn near Port
Royal, Va., at the age of 'n.

9:30p.m.; depending on shift
schedules.
The business college is
approved by the Ohio State

·· C1W1Y LADIES ~DICIWlS
804 W. Main St.

. Pomeroy, o.

Just below the Jones Boys In Pomeroy In the
Nationwide Ins. Building.

.

'

Monday thru Wid. &amp; Friday
S.turdly.IO A.M. loS ... M.
CLOSED THIIRSDAY·

&amp;

OPEN DAILY

9 TO 10

SUNDAY

CORNER MILL &amp; SECOND ST.

Flynt
defiant
as ever

Prices for
roughage
driven up
WASHINGTON (UP!) Prices for hay and other
roughage are being driven to
record levels this winter, the
Agriculture Department
says.
Department economists
said in a feed situation
s=ry that hay and forage
supplies for the current
season were reduced by a
dr ought-shortened 1976
harvest
The situation was worsened
by farn.ers stepping up use of
hay and forage because pastures were dry last fall and
because cold weather
increased the need for
supplemental feeding.
The report said the
resulting high price of hay ,
coupled with high (l'ices for
oilseed meal followin g a
reduced 1976 soybe!ln crop, is
forcing fanners to use grain
in place of meals and
roughages.
·
The report added that corn,
.sorghum and harley prices
currently are running slightly
below year-ago levels in the
wake of a record 1976 harvest
o!livestock feed grains. But
oats are in tight supply with
prices over year-ago levels,
officials noted .
For the next few mooths,
the report said, feed markets
should show a normal
seasonal increase in prices,
at least until prospects for
1977 production and demand
begin to influence the
market.
Analysts noted that
January surveys Indicate
farmers intend to plant about
the same feed grain acreage
as a year ago. But the report
cautioned that many grain
growing areas are short on
soil moisture reserves at
present - and this means
that unless farmers get
ample rain during the spring
and summer, produciion
prospects this year coold
suffer.

.GIVE

j
'I

'I
i'

l_

'

'·~

USDA
CHOICE

CHUCK
ROAST

69!

Bucket
~~
USDA CHOICE
~
Steak

ARM
ROAST

79

S

pence

rviJl

e

Funeral services were
conducted Sunday for Mrs.
Nwma Montgomeroy, 40, of
Spencerville, the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Fell of
Washington Court House,.
former Meigs County

¢
LB.

:~~~

GROUND
BEEF

~

USDA CHOICE

ENGLISH
BONELESS ROAST

GROUND
ROUND
FAMILY SIZE
- lO LB . llOZ. -

7iJe $419
ONLY

••
UNIT I COUPOI'I PER PURCHASE

SNOWDRIFT

SHORTENING
BANQUET

09

FROZEN 32 OL
8 Varieties
SUPPERS••••••••••••••

BROUGHlON'S

2% MILK .....:~~L~-~ . .

BROUGHTON'S

· HOMO

SCOT PRIDE
Service held .i n

29

ICE CREAM
OR

.

$}lg

7gt

$

139

2% MILK....&amp;~~~~ .......

ICE MILK .....~~~~~ •.

Following the services in
Spencerville, the body was
taken lo Washington Court
House for burial. Attending
from here were Mrs. Fred B.
Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
Windoo, Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Ritchie, Ml'l!. Alvin Tripp and
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ritchie .
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ritchie
spent the weekend in
Pataskalll visitlllg Mr. and
Mrs. Darrell Chevalier.

MILK:~.!~~~.".

VALLEY BEU

DIET-RITE
COLA

reslden~.

County,
"Many ol .the~ilers may
be too lnUmida
auae.of
this maniac yo ave for a
prosecutor," he said of Leis.
"The b'liY has got a very
serious .QI'Oblem.''

10 TO 10

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

We Accept Federal Food Stamps - We Reserve the Right To lim~ Quant~ies

Board of School and College
Registration and is Accredited by the Accrediting
Commission of AICS For
information, call Randy
Nicewonder, Admissions
Director, between the hours
of 8 a.m. through 7 p.m.,
Monday through Friday and 9
a.m. to 12 p.m. Saturdays.

'
f

m

If the lady has a flair for the dramatic
give her a Bulova Caravella bangle
bracelet watch . She'll wear it in many
imag inat ive ways ... cuffed around a

on the shoulders, ruffled books on Uhcoin. A copy of
shirt, white hose and buckle · the picture of Booth was

By RICK VANSANT
CINCINNATI (UP!)
Free on $55,000 bond after
spending six days in jail ,
convicted Hustler magazine
pu blisher Larry Flynt vows
to keep distributing hi s
magazine "to anybody who
chooses to read it. "
"No hwnan being alive can
keep me from seUing my
magazine anywhere," Flynt
shouted at a fever .pitch news
conference just minutes after
being rel~ased from the
Hamilton
County Jail
Martha Angle and
r-,londay.
Robert Walters
D '~In order to sell my
magazine · i~ Hamilton
County, or anywhere in the
By Martba Angle and Robert Waiters
country, if I have to I'll stand
on the street co171er and do
By Martha Angie and Roher! Walters
it, " declared the 34-year-old
WASHINGTON - (NEA) - In the early days of his ad· publisher of the controversial
minsistration, President Carter appears to have grasped one sex-o ri ented
men 's
·· painfulles;&gt;on which his predecessor learned only in the heat of magazine .
last year's campaign : the Panama Canal is first and foremost
Flynt was convicted last
a domestic.political challenge.
Tuesday by a Hamilton
, .. Accordingly, Corter is moving quickly ·and quietly to build County Common Pleas Court
· public support for a new treaty with Panama and to defuse jury of pandering obscenity
'' CQngre\jojional opposition to such a pact.
.
, and engaging in .organized
., The 1,5Sue is receiving "top priority" attention at both the crbne.
. While !louse and State Department, administration officials
Sentenced to 7-to-:&gt;.1 years
tell us,
in prison , he was refused
The last thing the new president needs is a violent foreign bond by his trial judge and
policy crisis at the country's very doorstep - and such a had to walt Six days In jail
( blowup is almost inevitable unless a new and more equitable before his lawyers convinced
1 treaty is quickly concluded.
the First Ohio District Court
!·· Carter has told Congressional leaders he hopes negotiations of Appeals to allow bond.
: with Panama can be wrapped up by June. Panama's foreign
Exactly one hour after the
; minister, Aquilino Boyd, is in Washington this .week to ~in appellate court set bond at
, down the timetable and lrrunework for completmg the talks $55,1100, Flynt emerged from
; begun under Presidents Nixon and Ford.
the jail, quickly signed his
But Carter is not devoting all his attention to diplomatic bond p.apers an~ launched
channels. H.e understands that a new treaty won 't be worth the into a scorching sermoo for
~paper it's written on without public support and ratification by news reporters.
.
' twcHhirds of the U.S. Senate.
"Hustler will be available
: As a consequence, Carter will discuss the Panama Cahal to anybody who chooses to
1
isaue in a televised "fireside chat" within the nexttwo or three read it," he snapped.
'! weeks, according to White House of,ficials. He will try to drain "Neither Fred Cartolano or
off some of the emotionalism which Ronald Reagan and other Sbnon Leis (the. Hamilton
political conservatives stirred up in last year's campaign.
County assistant prosecutor
1
Even before he goes public, the president - through and prosecutor) nor any
: Secrelary of State Cyrus Vance and admini•tration allies on human being alive can keep
; Capitol Hili- is seeking to head off problems in the Senate.
me from selling my magazine
: Last year, 37 senators -three more than the number who in Hamjlton County or
'! could block a new treaty- signed a resolution sponsored by anywhere."
'
Sen. Strom Thurmond,, R.S.C., calling for continued U.S.
Last week, the appeals
; sovereignty over the Canal Zone and insisting upon prior ar- court judges had asked
, proval by both the House and Senate of any new agreement Flynt's attorneys how Flynt
( with Panama.
might react if haltin g
1
A new versioo of the Thurmond resolution, essentially un- distribution of the magazine
t changed, is now in Uie works, but the Carter administration is in Hamil\on County was
~ wisely maneuvering to keep the number of co-sponsors well made a coodition of bail.
r below Uie dangerous 34 mark. Eight of last year's signers . In a jailhouse Interview
retired or lost their seats in November, but, several new Friday, Flynt said he would
members could take their places on the Thurmond resolution. not agree to such conditions.
· The most oul!ipoken freshman foe of a new treaty is the ir- There were no conditions
repressible Sen. S.l. Hayakawa, R.Calif., whn said during his atta ched to Flynt's ball
own campaign that the Panama Canal belongs to the U.S. Mooday, which wlll keep hbn
! because "we stole it fair and square."
out of prison while his
According to Senate sources, Vance has already privately lawyers
appeal
the
, begun contacting a number of senators who signed the Thur• oonvlcUons.
'1!Jond resolution last year but may he w1Umg to reconsider
1n the jury convictions, 11
, their stimd!i. He and other Carter operatives will also work on previous issues of Hustler
: most of the is new senators, these sources said.
were judged obscene in
\ Targeted.forlobbyingefforts are: Sens. Herman Talmadge Hamilton County. The
i· and Sam Nunn, both ·Democral!i from Carter's home state of convictions.do not pertain to
!'Georgia· RusseULongandBennettJohnston, bothD-La.; Jen· t'l!rrentorfuiiU'eisaues of the
• nings ~o(ph, 0-W.Va .; Thomas Mcintyre, 0-N.H.; Ernest magazine that may be
F. Holllo«s; n.s.C.; Wendell Ford, D-Ky ; Pete Domenici, R· dlstrlruted in the county.
• N.M.; Dewey Bartlett, R-Okla.; Edward Zorinsky, D-Neb.;
"For every American to
1Dennis DeConcini, ().Ariz.; H. John Heinz III, R-Pa. ; John have the right to choose
Danforth, R·Mo. ; Harrison J. Sclunilt, R-N.M ., and Richard whatever books or magazines
·1 Lugar: jl,·lnd.
he wants to read , isn't that
~ the American business community is contributing as well. what freedom is aU about?"
1lt;'eouncll &lt;( the Americas~ a group of 220 major corpora- Flynt shouted, his voice.
, 1008 wjth beavr, investment,S in Latin America, is intensifying echoing down the hallways of
' .. "edycatwl" campaign in support of continued treaty the Hamilton
County
I ~otlaOons, aiid Vance has already conferred with the Coun- Courthouse.
I ell's pfeS!dent, Henry.R. Geyeleln.
"I'm not defending Hustler
: 1: ConJervatives flghUng a new treaty are far from finished, magazine, only the principle
liowevep Thunnond, five other members of Congress and a of the right to publish it. To
Canal Zone labor leader have filed suit in federal court in · people who accuse me of ·
Washington seeking a judicial declaration that only the full hiding behind the First
1 Congress has the right to dispose of U.S. territory of property, Amendment, thank God we
and the case cool throw a monkey wrench into the treaty pro- have the First Amendment Ill
1
gress. '
'
hide behind or where woUld
I But for now, Carter seem!ilo be oo !be right tra~k. He has people · like William
aJreaay persuaded Senate Majority Leader Robert C. Byrd, (). Morrissey (Flynt's trial
· W.Va., one of the signers of last year's Thurmond resolution, judge) have us?"
to stay off the new version, and most other Senate Democrats
Deapite his vow to continue
1 are expected to follow suit. This doesn't guarant~e the two- publishing and dlllributlng
! thirds support for ratification of a new treaty, but it should HIIS!Ier, Flynt conceded he
l give the President the neceSIIary elbow room to negotiate a might have some dt.tribution
pact that can he sold to the public and theCongress alike. .
problems ·in Hamilton

!

il

Company, Inc., of which she :::·
is a founding memher.
:;:,

Public Schools, Mrs. Hopton
leada two student tours each
year to the Shakespeare

approved for Veterans who
want to take advantage of
their G.!. Benefits. GBC is
also approved for Federal
Student Assistance Funds for
qualified students.
Classes are condu cted
daily, Mon~ay through
Friday, from 8 a.m. to I p.m.
Evening classes are also
available and are held
Monday through Thursday
from 6 p.m. to 9:30 p.m. An
Alternating program for shift
workers Is offered Monday
through Thursday from 9
a.m . tol2 :30 p.m. or 6 p.m . to

Is Panama Canal

VISIT OUR
AND PICK UP
YOUR

i:'·

F:Cu~;n'o~~f ~:rt~:~ f

,.. The 1971 Spring Quarter
,., ,will start bn March 10 for day
~. students . alld March 14 for
evening' and alternating
·•·students at the . Gallipolis
Business College.
GaWpolis Business College
..located at Second Avenue and
·•·Locust Street, Gallipolis,
, offers a ·two-year Associate
, Degree Program in Business
, Administration and
~ Executive Secretarial. Also
ooffered are 9-and 12-month
..diploma courses in General
Office, Secretarial, and Jr.
Accounting. All courses are
•

fireplace at the home of her
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Roush. Mr. Roush's
hands were burned when he
tried to pu\ out the fire and he
.remains confined to Veterans
Memorial
Hospital.
Christins, whose mother died
in 1975~ made her home with
her grandparentS.
Mrs, Roush, in Columbus
since the accident, was home
for the weekend to see her
husband and to handle
business mstters for the
family . She returned to .Cot·
umbus Sunday evening with
her son-in-law and daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Flowers.
Christina is bandaged from
her neck to ·her ankles. She
enjoys cards and may now
receive fruit and l!BndY
although flowers a"'' not permitted at the Burns Center.

GIFT/

1864 and is worth about n.ooo.
The photograph shows
Booth in colonial dress,
apparenUy for a play. His
hair is slightly long, covering
the ears and would be
fashionable today. His mustache is twisted up at the
ends, Unlike the more
familiar, moody sho.ts of
Booth with a turned down
mustache and face to one
side.
" It may be the only known
front shot," Roth said,
probably made "as a
publicity shot."
The bnage is sharp, with
Booth appearing handsome in
a long silk coat with rlbbons

SUPER
MARKET

"Business college will open quarter March 10

Youngster remains
on critical list

i: B

~an~~a~f ~~~~ wit:ea~~:

KILLEN
OIICAGO (UP!) - An
orlllnal photograph showing
Abrlham Uncoln's assassin,
John Wilkes Booth, full faced
with an upturned mustache.
has been found by a Oricago
' collector.
Hy Roth, a freelance
cartoonist-Illustrator, said he
purchased the 11-by-14 Inch
" photograph of the actor for
t25 nearly two years ago at a
local auction. 1
, Cliff Krainek, owner of
Graphic Antiquity in
' 'IIID'burhan Arlington Heights,
· auUienticated· the picture a
· ·week ago, He said he believed
: the photo was taken in 11183 or
By PATRICK J .

average per caplts Income Ill
about t130 per yeer.
"Oh my1 I've nev.- been .,
happy in my 111
.,.e,II Mn·
Carter Uld In her brill
apeec11 upon arrival.
There was 1 pic:tun of
Pre.lldenl Carter In I l8gh
school she visited and the
President's mother laughed.
"My, isn't he a good looklna

~~~~}~~~:.~:!~~:5~: on the Cuff. ::

Rodald and Jeannie
!Ill
Harrison Grate, Security,
Colo., announce the birth of a
son, TraviS Eugene Grate on
Sunday, Feb. 6. The infant
weighed eight pounds and ~::~e~t 0bhi~h~o!"~~=~ :::
four ounces. Grandparents College.
are Mr. and Mrs. Gwrge
Bronwyn Hopton's brilliant
Grate, Rutland, Mr. and Mrs. career as a theatre majo~ at
John T. Wolfe, Racine, and Ohio State included starring
Mr. and Mrs. Don E. roles in Romeo and Juliet,
Harrison, Rutland. Great and As You Like It, as well as
grandparents are Mr.· and The Lark, Lysistrata, A
Mrs. Nick Grueser, Rutland, Streetcar Named Desire, ::::
Mrs. Mae Foul, Marion, Mr. Mother Courage and many ..,.,
and Mrs. Floyd Harrison, others. Since graduating with :;:;
Rutland and Marion Rife, a Masters in Fine Arts in :;::
Col umbus . Great great
in 1971, she has apgra ndfath er I• Ernest Acting
peared
in . several ::::
Harrison, Rutland. This is the profession&amp; I productions, ;::;
couple's firl!l child.

Original Booth photo found

Mrs. Carter goes
back to her town

CANCER

:::::::: :.ol'grts···"'-..,"""""*"':;:::~::::&gt;:::::::::::::~::::::::-:·:·:·:·&gt;:·.~

RC
8-16 oz. bottles

8-16 oz. bullies

PEPSI
8-16 oz.
bottles

8-16 oz.
. bottles

99~

89~
'

'

�.

0., TUesday,Feb. 15,1971

9-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Feb. 15 1977

,..•

-••.

DICK

GO PUT ON YOUR

••••

AstroGr:aph

because at U1e lerge vo lume of

ceses antic ipated during thiS
period of a severe natural gas
shortage , that nearing! on
applications tor relief from

• Bernice Belle Oaol

For Wectnndey Feb. 11 1177 oas curttllment and petitions

'
•
ARIES (M1rc11 21 · Aprll 11)
You 're the type who makes
, . d
·
ten sand contacts mall walks

tor stay of term ln,tlon, filed
with the comml5slon , and
which
the
Commissi on
determines requ ire public
hearings will be conducted In
1- ' of life. Today, one could help you the ottlces of the Com minion,
wrth a current problem .
110 East Broad Street,
Columbus , Oh io, on Tuesdays

TAURUS (April 20·Mor 20) and Thursdo ys , beginning

Conditions favor you today lf1
any actfon having to do with your
career . Take advantage of 8
.
c h ance to progress In th15 area.
GEMINI (M•y 21.June 20) Have
f 'th 1
·
a1
n your own 1deas today,
because they are sound. You
also have the knack of adapting
the best of what others offer.

February 10. 1977. Hnrlngs
will be set by Entry In 1{'1 dlvldual cases, but specific
notice of the hear ings will not
be p ublishe d . Informat ion
with regard
to specific
hearings may be obtained by
contacting the commission et
1-800 -282 -0198 .
THE . PUBLI C UTILITIES

CO MM ISS ION OF OH IO
CANCER (J,uno 21-Julr 22)
BY o Rendall G . Applegole ,

Joint commercia l ventures can Secretary
put money In the bank for you tO- .
day, provided one of the parties C2 l 15, ltc
doesn't do something outlan-

LEO (JUIJ 23-Aug. 2211n one-to-

BOARD OF
one dealings. play a secondary
SUT TON TOWNSMIP
ro le. Today you r associates can
TRUSTEES
do more for you than you can do
Notic e to Motor Vehicle
for yourself
Oe.-lers :
tn acco rdance with Sect ion
VIRGO (AUlJ. 23-Sept. 22) You ]0781:
of lhe Ohio Rev is ed
will work wilh el(tra diligence to- Code, sealed bids will be
da y if you ~ re materially received by
the Su lton
motivated . Zero In on the poten- _Township_ T_rustees in th ei r
Ual profit . not how hard the task office
1n
t he
Sy ra
cu se Mu nici pal Bui l d ing ,
IS
Syracuse . Oh to 45179, unti l
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 23) If a pal 8 00 P .M on March lsi , 1977 ;
comes up w.ith a b usi n ess at whic h li me a nd pla ce th eproposition today. better put him bidS Will be opened and read
aloud for lhe following
off . You 're more attuned to fun : lfeh ic tes .
your financial know-how Isn't too
B id s. must be s ubm itted in
sharp.
separate p r oposals , each
proposa 1 to meet the con .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) d1tions and spe-c i f ications , as
Keep your priorities in order to- fo l lows :
PROPOSAL NO I
day First protect the Interests of
1 - One 1977 model dump
those under yo ur wing , th en
truc k w ith a Pe-abody Galion
worry about others.
or eQuivalent dump body,
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc. 108 " x8.4' 1xJO" head and Ia If with center door in gate ,
21) Obstacles won 't bother you gale
min imum size 16" x. 10"
at all today. The alternatives you open i ng .
select will be better tha n tne
2 - Heavy duty 8" hOi st with
P.T .O . and Ie--wers .
original methods
J - 1. cab protector wi th 2"
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon. 19) wings .
Cab tigl1ts , 4 co rn er
4 Opportunittes exist to enhance
you r reso urces today but they li9h ts a nd 6 reflecton
5 - Mu d flap s.
w!ll not come through cold , hard.
6 - Wheel base 72 " cab to
prudent types. Look for your axle or suitable for bod y
gains elsewhere .
7 - 24,000 lbs G.V.W or
ier
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 19) heav
8 - 7. 000 lbs . I Beam fron t
The resu lts' you're looking for to- ax le
day will come only thro ugh your . 9 - 18,500 lbs . 2.speed rear
personal touch Others wo uld · ax te
10 - 5-speed synchrome sh
only trip you up.
transmission , d irect in f ifth .
ll - 360 cu . in . V-B gas
PISCES (Feb. 20-Morch 20) In
order to rece1ve today, you must engine or larger
12 - d,OOO lbs . mi n1mum
f1rs t be prepared to g1ve. What fr ont spri ng ca pa city
you tender unselfishly will be
13 - 11 ,000 l bs m1nimum
rear sp r ing ca pa c1ty .
returned manyfold .
14 - Auxil1a r y rear springs
15 - Comb ination r ea r and
front directiona l Stg M1 !lght s.
16 - Traff ic ha1ard swi t ch .
17 - Dual e tectr ic horns .
18 - Hea ter and defros ter .
19 - Two_ spe ed windshield
wiper s and wast1ers .
20 - Powe r ste e-ring .
21 - 900 X 20 10 ply front
Yo u're apt to have the soul of a ti re s hig hway tread , 7" rim s.
wande rer th1s year. The lure of . 17 - ~oo X 20 10 ply rea.~
places far and near will beckon ~~~~; _on. and off road tr ead , 7
to yo u. Happily, opportunities for 23 - - One add i tiona l 7" r im .
tra vel will exist.
24 - - Cas t spoke wheels .
25 - Heavy du ty cl utc h .
(Are you an AquariUs ? Ber26 Heavy du ty brake
nice Osol has wr;rren a specia l booster with 7" r ea r brake s.
'Astro -Graph Lerrer for you. For 17 - Heavy duty bumper
.
your copy send 50 cents and a an d fron t ~ow hooks .
sell-addressed s lamped 28 - L
. ~nd R H sen tor
'
west coas t mtrrors .
envelope fo Astra-Graph, P.O. 19 - 70 amp batter y .
BaK 489, Radio Ciry Staf/On, New 30 - 50 amp or la rger
YorK, N. Y. 10019. Be sure to ask a lt ~rna tor . ·
for Aquarius Volume 4.)
31 - Cab grab handles . L .
and R .
32 - Full depth foa m bench
sea t , heavy duty tr i m.
33 - Heavy du tv fa ct ory
re i nforced frame
PUBLIC NOTICE '
34 - Color : Yel lo w.
Publ ic Hearings on the Area
35 - A . M . RadiO .
Ag ing Plan for t ~e use of funds
36 - The f ron t of the en ·
from Ti tle 1t 1 of the Older 11e lope enclosing the bid must
America ns Act will be held be marked " Dump Trucks,
February 22 , 1977, at the Propo sa l No 1 "
Athens. City . County Hea lth
Building, West Un ion Stree t , ~ 2) 15 , 22, 2tc
Athens. Ohio . from ' : 30 a .m .
to12 :30p .m .', andon Febru ary
23. 1917. at t he Nobl e County
Ce nter ,
Sen10r
C i tizens
Cumber land Street, CaldwelL
OMio , from 11 :00 a.m . to 3:00
p .m . Test i mony wil l also be
Heart attack and stroke
taken on the Plan tor the use of
funds from Title VII of fhe will
kill about 850,000
sa m e Act . wh ich is the Se-nior
Americans
this
year.
Nutrit ion Pro gr.am .
F or fu r ther i nf ormation Thousands of these deaths
please c:ontact : Ms . Mary could be prevented by
Allee Varner., Bu cke ye H il l sHock ing Val ley Regional knowing and recognl!lng tbe
Oevelopm ent Distr ict, 410 St . early warning signals. Allk
Cla ir Suilding, 216 Pu tna m
Street , Marietta , Ohio "5750 your local Heart Assoclatiou.

&amp;~

(61&lt;) 374 9'36.

'

)
P .M .
Dev
Befor e
Publication .
Cant:&amp;ltatlons ,
corr:ec tions accepted first dey of
publication .

2 SIGNS

OF

REGULATfONS

QUALJlY

The Publisher rtserv es
~ ~e right to edit or reject
any .ads de-emed ob jec tional The publisher
wil l not be responsible tor
more than one incorre ct
insertion ,

By

Bollen

'IES ... 1 BEUEVE \OE 1Ve MET..
l(e::MEM6ER? ... OJCE (.)PQt.J A
TIME? I..ON6 1 WNG AGO -p...

1976 CHEVELLE MALIBU CPE.

RATES

For W1nt Ad Service
S c ent~ per wor d on e
insertion .
Minimum Charge Sl: O(I
1J cents per word thre e
consec ut iv e Insertions .
26 cents per word six
consecutive tnsertlons .
15 Per Cent Discount on
paid ads and ads pa id
w ith in 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
' .!.00 for
50
word
&lt;1!' ~ illm:ll m .
- £iCFI -&amp;ddT,10na1 word J
cents.
BLIND ADS
Additiona l 25c Charge
per Advertiseme nt

$2895

conditioning, V-6, automatic, power steering and

POM~~~!E~~!~~ CO. '(ii\·
..

ALL HOUSEWIVES

Sentinel Carrier
Wanted In

WE WISH to thank everyone who
was so kind and thoughrlu l during the death_ of my mather ,
Thelmo Wo ldnig. We olso wllh
to thank those who sent cords
and ond anyone else who
helped in any way .
Robert Woldnig and Family .

Syracuse Area.

Free Prizes.

----~--

WE~WI SH to thank everyone who

Phone 992·2156.

was so kind and helpful after
the death of our beloved
mother, Lucy M . Kim , We
especi ally w1sh to · thank all
friends end neighbors lor their
~
floral oftermgs , food . White's
Funeral Home and anyone else ~~uy
who helped in any way . Your
kindness will never be forgot- OLD furniture, ice boxes . bra ss
bed s, wall 1elephones and
ten.
ports , or complee households .
Daughter . Thelma ond sons ,
Write M . D. Miller. R1. 4,
Donald and charles.
Pomero~:....'?.hto Co 11992-77tiJ.
•

•

-

•

.;_,;:-

r

CASH paid for oil mOkP.~ ond
models of mobile home$.
Phone orad code 61"·423-953 1.
NOW accepting piano students ,
beginntns. inlf!rmedtates; od IIOnced students. Call
992-

2270.
NOTICE , Pratt's Meat Mkt.
(Pleasanton Meat Process ing ,
Inc .) Cu5tom slaughtering , and
processmg. RetaiL wholesale.
No oppoinment necessary . Call
(614 ) 593·8655. houn , 9:00 till
6:00 7 Pomeroy Road . At hens,

Oh .
GUN SHOOT ot the Rocine Gun
Club every Sunday, I pm
Au orted meats .

----- ----

TIMBER , Pom eroy Forest Pr oducts. Top pnce for standing
1
sawtimber .! Call Kent Hanby ,

1·•46-8570.

cOINS~ uRfENCv.-tokens ,

196'1 CHEVROLET Bisquome, 1966
BUICK El ectro , 225 ; 2 Rokon
!rio /bikes. Phone 949 -2.. 32
1971 AMC MATADOR . Four door ,
automatic , power steering,
power brakes , V-8. New I rant
t1res and bonery . Moke a good
work cor , $550 . Phon e

-

1966 PLVMOUTH IN good running
co ndi tion Asking $250 . 1976
Ford XL, o.c., running condi tion . $300 . Con be seen ot 149
7th St., Middleporl.

--

COAL, limestone, and calcium
chloride and calcium brine for
dust control and special mi)(ing
salt for former s. Main Street,
Pomeroy. Ohio or phone 992-

3B91 .
COAL for sole, Open 6 days per
week and e11ening5 . For further
information coil (614 ) 367 -7336
---,

STATE ROUTE 669. PHONE
WILKESVILLE , (61 4) M&gt;9·3785

FULLER Bru!h Products for sole.
Phone 992 -JA 10.
CAMPER , $600 . A lso, horse
tro ller , $450. Ph one [614) 698 -

3290.
84 3 ~ 2254 .

GOOD QUALITY corn fed freerer
beef . opprax 1C()O lbs . Steers
Will delilfer to you r proce ssing
_p~o_n_!Y.~~~3..:_~1_ _ _ _
STEREO, new om-tm l m ste reo
radio combination $1.29.95 or
terms . Coll992-3965.

----------------'--

USED

CASH ! 1! for junk cars . Frye's
Truck and Auto . 2" HOUR
WRECKER 1 SERVI CEi Phone
742 -2081 .
-

WOULD LIKE to buy 350 boles of
hoy . Phone 742 -3182 .

NEED A
WATER SOFTENER 1

--...

-'-··--

_r

for

landmark

us

test

your

three bedroom house. living
room, Iorge kitc hen. ceramic
both , car peted . attached
garage. Iorge lot. $22.900-

Phone (6") 667·6304 . -:--- 3 BEDROOM , 2'h both bi -leve l.
WBFP in fam ily room, 2 cor
garage, dishwasher , nice loco lion on 1 acre lot In Meigs
County . Aksing $46.500. Phone

992·2•92.
__.:...

___

,

·TEAFORD

ANY PilCH
ANY SIZE

SIOIM
WIIIDOIIS l DOO!~
REPI.AC£MENI

Rl. 1 &amp; 33 - Is near lhls
one. Has 3 bedrooms. bath,

.

gas furnace.

For Sale
ELECTROLUX AUTHORIZED Soleo
and Service , 1977 Dudley Ave.,
Pork•nburg , W .Va . Phone
(304) · ,•26·9661. Free home
demonstrations, pickup and
delivery service , new and
repos't e~&amp;ed sw'eeper~ and
' 5hampooers . Complete financili g available. Also. Master
Charge and Bonk A(Tier icord .

&amp;

LOOK TRIM ! Toke Algmess d1e t
pion 1 and Aquo11op "water
p1lls". Vii loge Pharmacy , 271 N .
StKQI'd'Ave., Middleport .
LIVING ROOM Suite, choir, J
tables , $60. Elec . sto11 e in good
working c.o nd ttlan
$50;
breakfast bor with J ! t oo l ~ .
$70. Ladies coOt . sire 12. $10
Rodter recliner . S!lO Se~ o l U'l
Condor St. Pomeroy
"I've (orgol1en the fioor but ' 19578Nf-'OHOtroctot tngi.)od tllll 't
de
•• pop. ' "
dition w ,th brush hog . ~hon\1
.
I ast I Jmttt ma my-n
.
991 .7oa• .

c lfy

water

near school .22 . M.
4 LOTS - New river Iron!
property, 3 bedrooms, nice

kitchen, din ing room, 2
baths, and double garage
.35·M.
NEW LISTING - 2'1&gt;

WINDOIIS

ALUMINUM

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC, ·

_

I.ARifYI.AVFNDER
srracuse, ft"hio .
~10.1

mo.

P~j

Ph.!92-2174

l

SWAIN'S

NOTICE! ! !

Automatic
Transmission Service

STRIPPING, REPAIRINGJ.
REFINISHING ·&amp;
UPHOLSTERING

PARTS - LABOR
GUARANTEED

REASONABLE

Phone
MODERN CHEMICAL
614-992-2798

RATES

Al100 Kerr 51.
Pomeroy, 0.
1-17-1 mo.

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

f-tOMESITES l or 5ale, I acre and
up . Middleport . near Rutland .

Co li 1&gt;92 ~ 7&lt;61 .
-~-

NEW 3 bedroom house , 2 ba ths ,
oil elec ., 1 acre , Middleport ,
close to Rut land. Phone 992 7-481.
SMALL form for sole, 10% down ,
owner fina nced. Monroe Coun·
ty , W. Vo. Phone (304) 772 -

_3102or (30&lt;11~·3221___,__ __
COUNTRV farmland wi th secl ud ed woods , water and good ac·
ceu In Monroe County . W. Va

$1 ,000 down, call (30&lt;1 ) 772·
3102or (3041772-3227. ---'Commercial property1 appro x. 17
acres , level land,\j ocated ot
Tuppers Plains on Ohio, Route

acres, 2 bedroom

house

with balh and furnace , Also
a 2' bedroom mobile home
unfurnished. Only 12·M.
BRICK APTS. - 3 units,
one

furnIshed

and

3

gara~es

near stores In
Middleport .20~ M.
ON THE LINE-Of MeigsGall Ia. A 3 bedroom frame,

bath, furnlce and over 2
acres of lend . 22-M ,

KENO.BASHAN RD. - 3
bedrooms, 7 room house,
furnace , basement, T .P .
water , carpet and garage.

25-M.
WATCH THIS AD TO SEE
THE NEW CHANGE .

.
•

OIL , GAS Furnaces, oil burners ,
repoir , and ports for trailers
ond homes 24 hour service.
Phone 8A3-2165.

-:::-'-:---c-

HOU SE PAINTING, interior and
ex terior. Quality work of
rea son able role s. Ph one

7•2·232B.

ALLEYOOP

FROSTY'S C.B. Rad io Equ ip .
everything In two-way Radio 's.
Antenna s, ond occes. Phon'e
Portland , 843-2181 .

t AK2

------ ---

-

~---

1
/,

ing room , dini ng room and kit ·
chen, fully carpeted . Phone

1'92·3129. or 992 ~ 5•34 .
59 acres , 6 room house, both,
portly carpeted , two outbui ldings , dug basement ,
one -third ti llable , minerol
righhi locoted near Don11llle.
Reduced for quick sc le,
$23 ,500. Phone 7"2 -2766 .

MAIN
POMEROY, 0. ·
NEW LISTING - 2 or 3
bedrooms , kit chen has
range and ref., bath,
carpeting ~ full basemen1,
storm doors and windows,
al um. siding, perches.

Asking just $10,500.00.
NEW LISTING- On old
Rt. 33 jusl5 miles out, 10.1
nice laying acres. Good
blacklop road, close to
schools. utilities available.
NEW LISTING - Near

utilities ava ilable , lust
$8,250.00.
STQP PAYING RENT You can own thi5 newer
home, 3 nice bedrooms,

both, uti Ilty room. goroge.
carpeled lhroughout, about
1 acre of ground, very low
qualified

persons. $21,000.00.
LOOK - BQUT 5 acres In
Porn eroy , some woods,
nice 3 bedroom house,

both, large kltcllen wllh
plenty
ol
cabinets,
sink,
slalnless steel
porchoa. notural gu heel.
Jusl $1,900.00.
BUYING OR SELLINGTHE ANSWER TO YOUR
PROBLEMS
CAN
PROBABLY BE FOUND
WITH US - LET US SELL
YOUR HOME NOW. 3
SALESMEN AND
A
BROKER TO HELP YOU.
HENRY E, CLELAND
BROKER
fH -2259 . fH-2561

HANK CLELAND
ASSOCIATE
"5·41T2

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

7.09.

SEWING - AlTER A liONS ,

..
"•
•
.,'

after

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

I.I'I''I'I.E ORPHAN ANN.IE-IHARP PRACTitE

..•.

.

KEN .. GROVERPHOTOGRAPHY

•

evenings.
Btown in fiberglass wa lis
and aHics. 20 Pet. SAvings

on Vinyl and Steel Sidings.
storm·

windows . 33 years actual
eKpeirence.
Financing Available
C. A . Newman, Pres.

mo., pd .

'' .
M'{ ,Ml{ , M'l,

I'U- ,JIJST Bt;T
'{OU Al&lt;E: lfJ
l't\B lOP 11AL.F
Cf VOUR C.LAS'&gt;I

BRADFORD, Auctioneer. Complete Service. Phone 9-49 -2-487
or 949-2000. Racine, Ohio , Crill
Bradford .
'

-

GASOLINE ALLEY

3825.
drape s
reason abl e. 572 South Th1rd REMODELING, Plumbing, heating
A ve .. Midd leport . Phone
and all types of general repair .
992-6300.
Work guaranteed 20 years ex·
perience . Phone 992 -·2.t09 .
PORTABLE WELDER , Iorge and
small jobs Con also thaw SEWING MACHINE Repairs, serfro xen water pipes . Phone
vice , oil mokes , 992-228A. The
949·2646.
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Soles ona
WILL DO bobvsitting in my home ..
Service. We sharpen Scissors .
Phone 742-2846 ,
·

1here are two
re on at the
same time~
movies I want to
watch tonic#~ /~=.,1'

Ma4 I borrow

----

bid s a minor sui t or fou r

(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN. send $1 fo · " Win
a r B r iage , " c l o /his
newspaper. P. 0 Box 489,
Radio Cify Sfarion, New Yor~.
N. Y 10019)

~Mf·~by THOMAS JOSEPH

•.

Sweepers. toasters , Irons, all
small appliances . Lawn mower,
ne)(t to Stole Highway Garage
on Route 7. Phone (61") 985-

has

spades if he bods spades. If
thi s cue bid is too rich for your
blood . try two spades or tw o
notrump. A bid of just one
spade or one notrump is inadequate.

INSIDE 'lET clubs . East discarded two
·,~i'r6~'jr~~~ diamond s and Soulh ruffed the
!.ll!l""':=:i
th "d cIub
Sou1h thought aboul lhe fate

. ••,

ECONOLINE HOME
INSULATION, INC.
1815 Wuhinl!lon Blvd.
Belpre, Phone (614) 423- '
7564 day, or 9!2·6039

South to expect that dummy
would produce two Ln cks for
him and unless he could lind
those 1wo !ricks he would no t
be able to bring home the
game . Stil l. South did bid it
we have to sympathize
,..---"'lvlith his deci soon.
51
~u West slarted proceedings
HAVEN'T for the defense by leading out
GOT HER. the k i ng, ace and queen of

•

(614) 9BS-415S
Chester, Ohio
10-17·1 rna (Pdl

bidding

pass.
The expert bid and the one
recommended by teachers 1s
lo bid two hearts . This forces
partner to bid aga in and you
woll try three notrump if he

'iJI6ff

,.•'

the

proceeded one heart·dou ble-

was definttely an overbid. H e

U ~ h ols tenng ,

-

• 874 3 ¥ Axx t Kxx .a. KJx

dod hold a tremendous hand ,

.'

~EPAIR

A California reader asks
what you shou ld bid with

but ther e wa s no r eason for

Aerial
Commercial
Schools
Weddings

ELWOOD BOWERS

•: as l

Hy Oswald &amp; Jal)les Ja coby
South's jump lo four spades

PHOTOGRAPHY

. 1 ~ 25-1

North
Pass
Pass
Pass

~~Q~e~

So uth
I N T Db!.
2•
~•
Pt~ ss
Pass
Opening lead - K 4

PROFESSIONAL

EXCAVATING . Backhoes. Dozer.
tr encher. low Boy, dump tr uck,
tru cks . septic 5ystemS , Bill
Pullins . Phone 992-2478 day or
n1ght.
- - -.---'--

10 9 8

olo J5
Both vul nerable

Wc!&gt;t
I¥
2A

12oOD-Movle "Che !" 10; Janak ! 33.

Yes , there was . Maybe West
held the sing leton king of
spades. Soulh played his ace ,
and sure enough the king
dropped. Now it was a simple
mailer lor South to cash the
ace and king of di amonds , ruff
a diamond and make hos lucky
game

. Al

L.IOU r TV• .-=o-J

Chip?///''"-""

WILL DO childsilt1ng m my home, EXCAVATING, doJer, looder and
backhoe work, dump trucks
hourly do il y or weeklr . Loh of
and lo-boys lor hire; wilf haul
room, educational toys and
fill dirt, to soil , limes tone and
large yord. Morning ~ nocks ond
graveL Coli Bob or Roger Jefhot lunch, provided . Coli
~er5 , doy phone 992-7089,
992·3362.
nigh t phone 9C'I2·3525 or 992HAVE YOUR taxes dane by on ac5232.
countant. Also, now accepting
bookkeeping. Phone 992 -6'206 EXCAVATING , doter , backhoe
ond ditcher. Chorle&amp; R. Hotor 992 -6113.
field , Back Hoe Service ,
INCOME TAX Ser11tce, Wallace
Rutland, Oh)o. Phone 742-2008.
Russe ll ,
Bradbury .
Ca ll
SEPTIC Systems Installed by
992·722B.
licensed installer . Shepord
Contractors . Phone 7A2· 2.t09 .

1· oo----Tomorrow 3,4.
1. 1~News 13.

WEDNESDAY, FEB~UARY 16,1977
6 :0Q-Sunrise Semester 10.

6o15-F arm Report 13•
6:2o-Not lor Wom en Only 13.
6 : 3Q-AG~ U SA 4; News 6: Sunrise Se mester B:
Christopher Closeup 10.
6:45-Morn ing Report 3.
6·5o-Good Morning. West VIrg inia 13.
6.55-Good Morning, Tri State 13.
7:oo-Today 3,4, 15; Good Morning America 6,13; CBS
News 8; Chuck While Reports 10.
7o05-Porky Pig 10 .
7:3Q-Wlnter School 10.
8.00..:.Sc hools without Schools 6: Capl . Kangaroo B:
Sesam e St . 33.

Bolo-Sesame St . 9; Winter School Continues 10~
9:oo-A. M. 3; Ph il Donahue 4,13,15; Schools without
Schools Continues 6; Andy Griffith B; Ph il Donahue
13.
9 :3o-Cross-Wits 3; Concentrat ion 8; Winter School
Continues 10.
10: 00---Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 15; Schools Cont inues 6; Price

is Rig ht 8: Mike Do ugla s 13 .
10 :'3Q--Hollywood Squares 3,, ,15; Schools Continues
10.
11:oo-Wheel ol Fortune 3,4,15; Double Dare B:
Morning Sh ow 13 ; Elec. Co . 20.
1UQ--Shoot tor the Stars 3,4, IS; Happy Days 6,13 :
• Love of Life B; Fary&gt; ily Aflalr 10; Sesame St . 20,33.
1155-CBS News B.
12oOD-News 3,4,.6.1 0; Don Ho 13: Name That Tune 15:
Divorce Court B.

12 o3Q--Lovers &amp; Friends 3,15; Ryan ' s Hope 6.13:
Search tor Tomorrow 8, iO; Bob Brau n 4.

1ooo-Gona Show 3; All My Children 6, 13 : News B:
Young &amp; the Res tless 10; Not for Women On ly 15.

1o3Q--Days of o our Lives 3,4,15: Family Feud 6.13 : As
the World Turns 8.10.
2o0Q--S20.000 Pyramid 6,13 .
2, 3o-Doctors 3,4, 15; One Life lo Liv e 6, 13 ; Guiding
Light B.10.
J oOQ--Another World 3,4,15: All In The Fa mily 6,10;
Pau l Gaudino Fam ily Fitness 9: On Aging 20.
3' 15-General Hospital 6, 13 .
3:30--Match Game 8,10 : Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
4oOD-Mister Cartoon 3; Little Rascals 4; Gong Show
15: Mickey Mouse Club 61 Lucy Sh9w B; Sesame S.
20,33: Movie -': Run. Silent, Run Deep" 10 : Ca ll It
Macaron i 13.

40 Southwest
ACROSS
'wind
I Wimbledon
'DOWN
champion
5 Account·
1 Resource
book entry 2 Beatie
10 Tarry ·
name
II Moon
3 Outdo
goddess
(4 wds.l
12 Except
4 Evil 13 Nebraska
5 Morariver
toriwn
14 Before
6 Old musical
15 Inlet
note
16 Downing
1
Improve
Street
(2
wds.l
address
8
Meantime
11 In a hack·
neyed way 9 Adolescence
(2 wds.)
19 Initials of
11
Tumble
equalily
15
Trust
20 Cultivate
21 Bluenose
22 Prepare
24 " Ethan -"
25 She (Fr.)
26 Night light
27 Worth
(abbr.)
28 Tempter
31 Japanese
statesman
32 English

4o15- Little Rascals 4.
4o3o-My Three Sons 3; Afterschool Special 6,13;
Parlrldge Family •.B.
s ooo-Big Valley 3; My Three So ns 4; Brady Bunch B;
Mister Rogers 20,33. Star Trek 15 ·
S o 3Q--Adam ~ 1 2 4; News 6: Family Altair 6; Elec. Co.
20.33: Adam-12 13.
6oOD-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13,15 ; ABC News 6,9; Zoom 20,33 .
6o3Q--N6C News 3,4,6, IS ; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith
6; CBS News B. 10; Vegetable Soup 20 : Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 33.
,

Yesterday's Answe'r
18 Current
21 Stage phone ,
lor example
22 Brought
back
23 Causing joy
24 Configura·
lion
26 U.S. labor
leader

28 Actress,
Gia 29 Of
Norway
30 German ·
city
3&gt; Hospice
36 "&amp;bby
Sbaltoe 's
gone lo - "

7 : ~Truth or Cons . 3; 'To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for

Dollars 6; Pop Goes the Country 8: News 10; To Tell
the Truth 13: My Three Sons 15; Consumer Survival
Kit 20; Big Green Magaz ine 33.
7:3o-Dolly 3,$100,000 Name That Tune 4; Match Game
PM 6; $25,000 Pyramid B; MacNeil-Lehrer 20,33:
The Judge 10 ; Break I he Bank 13 , Wild Kingdom 15.
a :oo-Grlzzly Adams 3,4,15; Wonder Woman 6.i3 ;
Gunsmoke B; No va 20,33; Mont e Carlo Circus

Festival 10.
9:oo-CPO Sharkey 3,4, 15; Baretta 6,13; Movie "A Man
Called Horse" 8, 10; Childhood 33: Soundstage 20.
9o3o-We Think You Should Know 3; Mclean
Stevenson 4,15.
10oOD-Tales of the Unexpecled 3,4,15; Charlie's Angels
6,13; Rock Sonatla lar Piano and Ampllel led Cello
33. : News 20.
I0 ,3o-Monlage '20: Book Beat 33.
11:oo-News 3,M.B. I3,15; Monty Python 's Fly ing
Circu s 20.

1uo-News 8.10.
li :Jo-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Rookies 6,13; ABC News
33.
11 :So-Movie " The FBI Slory" 8; Mary Hartman 10.
12:DO-Janak l 33.
12•2Q--Movle " The Pumpkin Eater " 10.
i2 :4o-Myotery of the Week 6, 13.
1: DO-Tomorrow 3.~.
2o1o-News 13.

river
33 Composer,
Fernando 34 Vance

Hart ~

man 10; ABC New s 33 .

could do about It?

A2

SUUTH
• A QJ

• ::

Rutland, Ohio 45775
Ph . ('14) 742-2409
We Deliver
12-22-lmos

and

F.AST
•117 4 32
¥ K 10
t Q10 B 6 53

• QJYH 5
• J4
"' A K Q 10 9

- .....

Box 28-A

Replacement

7. Phone (614) 667 ~630, ,
·--3 bedrooms , 1 baths . Iorge liv·

to

-

WEST !OJ

Report

The People Gone? " 6,13: Columbo 6; Mary

there was nothing he could do
about ot. He had bid four
spades and had to play 11. He
had lost two clubs and was
still looking at a sure spade
loser. Was there any1h ing he

•K

Ma c Neii ~ Lehrer

11 : JQ-Johnny Carson 3,_., 15; Movie " Where· Have All

reserved for overbidders , but

15

NOH Til
• 65
• 91
"' R7643

Located in Langsville

SIDIN&amp;-SOIIm
GUTIERUWNINGS

financing

FRQM THE BOARD OF DIRECfOR5
ARE ALREADY HER!:!
'11""':..-.j

Sootheastem Ohio
Truss Rafter Co.

Veterans
Memorial
HospitaL
approx .
41!:~
acres,
a imost
level,

Virgil B. Sr., Reollor
216 E. Second Slreel
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phone 992-3325

COME RIGHT lt-J , PL.EA$E- \,,.
AND MR. SMOGS

MR , MEI'CHI\~1

• G4 3 2

~.-_....:....:::..:;;:.;~---'

Blown inlo Walls &amp;Attics

wafer

TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio . New

W~l.~ , WE'l-L. ?00'-! 6ET THE'
FATEFUL &lt;;COOP ON WHO Mc~EE
PICKED TO RUN TH6 (,01,\PA~Y'

News 20 ; Decades of Decision 33 .

10 o3Q-Biack Journal 20.
11 ,DO-News 3,, ,6,8, 10, 13,15:
33.

WIN AT BRIDGE
Play to make your bid

CAPTAIN EASY

Free Estimates
Work Guarionleed
742-lnl

F'm~ncinl AVIillblt

.J;i JackPhon,
W. Carsey , Mgr.
992-2111

-

.

Insulation Sef'fites

Ph. !!l-3!193

•

l~'!i
- ~ ·'1

EXPERIENCED

·

Pomeroy Landmark

REDucE sAFE fast wilh Gahte
Tablets &amp; E-Vap "water pills"
Nelson Orvg.

2-1'5

BlOWn

Free.

6 ROOMS AND both , corner lot in
Midd leport. New furnoce,
phone 992 -5141.

-

FREE ESTI MTES

ONE LOT in Syracuse. Phone
992-3714.

Let

.•. .•••.

Continenta l Flavor 20; American Issues Forum 33 .
7:3G-Hollywood SQuares 3, 4; Let 's Deal With lt 6;

Al. TROMM CONST.

1-9-771 mo.

soflener, Molle! UC ~XVI .
Now Only •279.95
.

Pomeroy

Telllhe Trulh 13; My Thr.. Sons 15; Cooking with a

. ....,.,_

C l ll'II'I T&gt;oo~;~oic'010 "' -®

• •'

Quality Work At
Reasonable Rates

992-7034
Hrs. 9:00a.m.
Too..k

water and a Co-op wafer

lef

--- _...__ -·-

ONE BEDROOM Apts. at VILLAGE
MANOR in Middleport for $1 04
monthly plus elec . or $130 includi ng alec. LOWER RATES for
SENIOR CITIZENS. Con~~e nient
Eosl Main Street,
to shopping on Third ond Mill
Sts . In Middleport. Brand new
Pomeroy,O.
high qual ity apar tments . See
Everyone Welcome
111e manager of Apt . 28 or call
992-7721. An Equal Housing
_Opy~r_!_~n_itr.___ - - - - · - __
SALE, SATURDAY , Feb. 19th . 2 BEDROOM iroiler , rea l nice.
Homemade soup ond chili.
p~~·~~-~2... _odu~ts o!II Y·•. __
Please bring conta iners . Meigs
County Humone Society Thrift AVAILABLE AT Ri ve rside Apls. I
bedrm . apartment , SlOO per
Shop located across from
monthJ 2 bedroom oph . $133
_Pomeroy P~s t O~fic~ .
per month. Equal Oppor tun ity
MEIGS COUNTY Fish a'ld Game
Hou ~'2.~ Phone 992 -3~~:_ __
Assn. will hold a meeting at
Coon Hunter's Club Room , Feb. 2 bedroom unfurn ished oportm•nt In Middleport . Phone
17th at 7:30 p.m. Elections of
992 -3129 or992-S.t34.
officers will be held . Members
onlv.
MOBILE HOME, unfurnished in
cou ntry .
N eeds
sma ll
maintenance . Call qq2.b3J7.

GRACE EPISCOPAL
PARISH HOUSE

Double wldes &amp; modulor
homes by Skyllnt &amp; Fuqua ,
Homes Inc .
1100 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

NEW 3 bedroom house , built-in
kitchen, both and 1/ , , Phone
74 2-2306 or contact MilO B. Hut·
chis on , Rutland , Ohio .

.soften &amp; condition your

COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork, Rt.
33, ten miles north of Pomeroy .
large lots with con crete patios,
stdewolks, runn ers and off
street parking. Phone 992-747'1.

.

FORESTRY . EQU IPMENT .

Timber jock 2300 Skidder ;
Beloi t Skidder Model 300,
Frank lin 1306 Sk1dder, John
Deere 350 Crawler Looder;
Mo rbork b36 Deborker: Contact
Grolle~._P~~~e~1~L~~-&lt;17~9 .

543, .

Tuesdoy. Feb. 15, 1977
7•30p.m.

Proff ttt .
Phon e

old
pocket watches and _chai ns,
..
5ilver ond gold . We need 196-t COLEMAN GAS Furnace. 70.000
and older silver coins. Buy ,.sell,
BTU for trailer . Like new,
or trade' Call Roger Wamsley ,
_c_h!ap~ Phone ~~2~~:· __ _

7&lt;2·2331.

\

Garages
Homes Buift

----APPLES, FITZPATRICK ORCHARD,

3 AND " RM. furni shed and un ·
furn1shed opts Phone 992 -

MAJOR CHEMICAL
MEETING

~------·~

POTA TOES. C. W.
Por r l on d , Oliio .

7 :QO---- Truth or Cons 3; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
Dollar~ 6; Let ' s Go To Th~ Races 8; News 10; To

••
..

Room Addi&amp;ns

housing .

manufactured

949 ~ 2660

RACiNE FIRE Dept . will have o
Gun Shoot e11ery Saturdov night
6 p.m at their buildi 11g fn
Bashon , Ohio .

l,AFF ·A· DAY

~.

~-w~!s;;::: --;,~;;,~ ~
, REGISTERED NURSt . parttime for
orea pre11entive heolth core
agency. Office m Pomeroy.
Mus t have mode of transportation , knowledge of area , and
able to 11ary hou rs. For information , call 9"12 -5912 between
8:00 A .M . and _. :00 P.M. An
_E~~a l ?fe.,a__r:~n i t~_Emp~_'t~: _

'

Room&amp; &amp;Sidinl

KingsbuiJ Home
Sales Inc.
We handle only 1t1e best In

Free Estimates
No Sunday Calls Please
1-30-1 mo.

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

All Yard Sates, Rummage,
Pon;,h and Basement Porch
and Basement Sa les, et c: .
must be paid in advance .
Get yours in ear:ly by
stopping by our offi ce at
The · Da ily SentineL 111
Court St or writing Box
729, Pomeroy . Ohio 45769
w it h your remittance .

C~IL.DREIJ,

A loca I contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860

$4195
Estate Wagon, local 1 owner ca r , white radial tk'es, air

ATTN .: !!

FOR

BISSELL SIDING CO.

1975 CHEVELLE

Coli collec l (6141 373·5070.

~oeR
~s

power

Local car , clean vinyl Interior, green finish, good tires,
radio. 351 V-8, automatic, power steering and brakes.

NOTICES

urgent

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

,

POMEROY, OHIO

M ister "Rogers 20,33; Star Trek 15.

5o. .Adam ~ l2 , ,13; Elec. Co. 20,33 .
6oOD-News 3.4,8.10,13. 1S; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6:. . NBC Newsl,4,15; ABC New s 13; Andy Grllflth 6:
CBS News 8,1 0: Vegelabl e Soup 20 : S1udlo See 33 .

•

$3895
automatic,

1975 FORDTORIN040R .

B: JO a.m . to S:OO p .m .
Daily , 8: 30 a.m . to 12 :00
Noon Sa turday .
PhOn e today 99 2 2156 .

Fronk Stanley ,
school.

co.

Motor

Green finish, good tires, V -B,
steeri ng , radio, factory air.

LOST - EYE GLASSES riding wi th 2
elderly ladies from around
Racine in Co tolino who ptcked
me up while hitchhiking from
Lancas ter to AtHens, Feb. 5.

GOOSEY

Business Services

~ Pomeroy

\

OFFICE HOURS

dis~

FUNNY BUSINESS

'

FORMATION
DEADLINES

Match Go me PM B·; MacNeil. Lehrer Reporl 20,33;
In The Know 10; Wild Kingdom 13: TV Honor
Soci ety 15.
8oOD-Baa Baa Black Sheep 3.• . 15; Happy Oays 6. 13; .
Who's Who 8,10: Nat ional Geeograph lc 20,33.
Uo-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6, 13.
9oOD-Police Woman 3,4,15;• Rich Man , Poor Man 6,1 3:
MASH 8,1 0: In Search' of the Real America 20,33.
9·30--0ne Day at a T i me 8,10: Anyone for Tenny50n?
20; World War I 33.
10 oOD-Pollce Story 3,.1., 15; Family 6,13; Koiak B, 10;

TUESbAY, FEBRUAOY H . 1971
5:DO-Blg.Valley ); My Thr.. &gt;ons ' ' O&gt;rady Bunch B;

.""'..'

WANT ADS

I~

The Pubic Utilities Com minion of Ohio has ord~re-d.

CLOTHES, Pt:RFUJYIE.

....,.. .'

··········································~
PUCOCIII No .
11· 16t-GA-U NC
Lo,ll N Otlct

Television log for easy viewing

' .

b:-+-+-

-

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned . Modern ;
San itation, 992-395A .
.•
WILL do roofing, construction,
plumbing and heating. No iob ...
IF YOU hove o service to offer ,
too latge or too small . Phone
want to buy or sell something ,
oe looking for work ... or
742 -2346.
whatever ... you 'll get results
CARP.:~NTER , flooring.
ceiling, 1
faster with o Sentinel Wonl Ad .
~~nellng . PAone 992-2759.

Call992·2156.

MOBILE Home Repair , Elec ..
plumbing and heating . Phone

1

992-585B.
ELECTRONIC T.V. CLINIC . New
RISING STAR Kennel Boarding,
lndoor -Outdoof runs , grooming
oil breeds, clean sanltory
loci lilies . Cheshire. Phone (614)
367-029'.2. - - --::-cc-FREE PUPPIES, port Poodle . Phone
992·7671.

T.V. shop, Electronic T.V. Clinic
Service call , $5.95. Color, B&amp; W
antenna systems stereos, etc.
572 South Third, Middleport.
Phone 992 -6306, Carry in an~ 1

___!OVe mon.!.Y
c'' - - -- - -c--

HOWERV AND MARTIN EX· ;
coveting , septic syatema,,
dozer, bOckhoe, dump truck , ;
HOOF HOLLOW. Buy, sell, trade
lt meslone, gro11el , blacktop
povlng, Rt . U3 . Phone 1 {61~) •
or train horses . RUTH RFEVES,
'rainer . Phone (614 } 698-3290.
698 -7331 .
'

·auv, SaL OR TRADE1

CRYPTOQUOTES

WELL, BI LLY1

THIS IS IT ...
THE PLACE I

CALL HOME!

· M £'!1N- 00 YOU'RE MRS . WRK3HT !
L HAD NO IDEA YOU'D C&gt;E
oo ...f70 117TRIICT!VEl I
HOPE YOU AN D I CAN
GET WGHHEQ ... AND
MAKE A DEAL!

'J'SG WGYBB

ATHENA
FASHION

PROPERTY!

- WMPO • 92.1 FM
92 in the Counby

C G.J

UFVAQ

NYAQSXXYW

~~::~ :.xvs:s

XC

XFY,......-=--,.-:-:-::::-'1

_ x;uvxvulcYKE;::soJJ::I

Br]su,e I I

NoW arrange the clrele61eners to
form the surprise answer, as sug gested by the above cat1oon.

n

I

'.
''

...

XF Y

XI I I

Yesterday's Cryploquole: THERE IS ONLY ONE TASK,
Y'
'l
AND THAT IS TO INCREASE THE SI'ORE OF LOVE WITHIN
Print anawer here: ,1:LJ 1-..
..A
US. - I.FA.l TOLSTOY
,
'
(Answer~ tomorrow)
0 1' 77 Kinl ,.,,.,., SYodleao•. loe.
Jumbleso WEIGH DITTO HEIFER ASTRAY
,
Yesoerday's Answero Score under a hundred I-EIGHTY
BARNEY

LISTEN TO THE

SWAP SHOP

S B

YES, ON THE

WHO KNOWS? MAI(BE
'{OUR WARRANT'( 15
STILl.

6000!

TH' FILLIN'
THURLOW AIN'T HOME, STATION?
LUKEY -- HE JEST
IT AIN'T
WENT DOWN TO TH'
OPEN THIS
FILLIN' STATION
TIM~ 0'
NIGHT

FILL 'ER UP,
SNUFFY '

�--------------------------- 1

10 - The Dilly Sentinel, MiddlePort-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Feb. 15, 1977 ~

Young's request for
ve;nue change pending
POINT PLEASANT ~
Ded.llon on a motion for a
chanie ol venue ordered by
attorneys repreaentlng Jolm
Yoq, Muon, 32 yeaM~Id
accused knife-slayer of
Malon resident Mary Berry,
thiJ morning was delayed by
Ma!IOn County Circuli Couri
Judge James Holliday.
Yoq, Indicted for the
December 1, 1976, stabbing
death of the Mason grocery
store o'll'!ler, was In court
with his attorneys Barry
Casto and John' Anderson to
enter pleas to both this
charge and a charge of
burglarizillg the Berry home.
However, no pleas were
entered, and instead, the
attorneys fUed five additional
motions besides the ch~nge of

Three of the motionS were much deeper."
granted. These were:
He said he believed
- Testing by a private Young's problems were more
psychiatrist.
deeply rooted and hinted that
- Filing of a ~ill of Par· only a private psychiatrist
ticulars.
could discover them.
- Production of statements
When asked by the judge If
of memorandum obtained he had any objections,
from witnesses by the Mason Prosecutor W. Dan Roll said
County Prosecutor's Office. he had none, only that Young
Judge Holliday continued · be kept under proper
the other three motions, security.
which included one to quash
A new plea date was not
the Indictment of murder and set.
to set baU until March 18.
In
January,
Terry
Attorney Anderson, while Brainard, 16, Mason, pleaded
seeking
a
private guilty to second degree
. psychiatrist, as opposed to a murder In coi)nectlon with
public one, told the judg~ that the Berry case. He faces a
public Institutions, such as sentence offrom 5 to 18 years
Lakin, can only determine In a state penitentiary.
right or wrong "but this ~oes
,

' (Continued from· oa~e I)
Meigs Soil and Water Con·
servation District which will
provide the services of the
district In such matters as
land use, drainage, resource
data and others to lhe village.
·There is no cost involved to
the village and the agreement
can be terminated upon 60 ·
days notice.
The salary ordinance was
amended to Increase the pay
for the town mechanic from
five percent to 10 percent in
accordance with provisions
for all employes who have
been with the village for five
or more years.
Mayor Hoffman said that a
disaster report on damages
suffered by the town due to
the cold weather had been
prepared and sent to the
proper government agency.
Council discussed the
parking of school buses.in the
Ash St. area and a junk car·
lot on Locust St. Mayor
Hoffman said he will discuss
the sitUation with the owner
of the lot.
Councilmen attending were
Dewey Horton, Carl Horky,
. William Walters, Allen Lee
King and Marvin Kelly.

MEIGS nt.EATRE
'CLOSED FOR
VACATION
WATCH FOR

OPENING DATE

I

(Continued from page 1)
LOUISVILlE, KY.- AFTER AWEEK OF WAITING for
the water to rise, barge traffic began moving upstream on the
lower Ol)io R iver again Monday with some vessels carrying
ct'itically needed fuel for Eastern states.
The Army Corps of Engineers completed repairs early
Monday on a ~foot section of Dam 50 damaged Feb. 7 when a
towboat washed over 16 wickets while trying w clear away
accumulated Ice in the frozen river. The dam Is near Marion,
Ky., some 275 miles downstream from Louisville. "Actually,
the river has risen high enough so we did not have to raise the
wickets to allow the rows to get past the sandbars upstream of
the dam," said Chuck Schwnann, a spokesman for the Corps'
Louisville District.
WASHINGTON - THE UNITED STEELWORKERS tried
unsuccessfully to discourage publication of a govenunent
report portraying steelworkers as the nation's highest paid
industrial workers, according to union officials.
The foreCflSI report oo collective bargaining In 1977 was
published by the Council on Wage and Price Stability just
before the opening of talks Monday in the basic steel industry.
The rewrt noted that steelworkers currently earn more than
the average worker, and even more than workers in the
autnmobile industry. The average steelworker earns about $8
an hour.
CHARlESTON, W. VA. - THE UNITED MINE
WORKERS union Is not a profit-making corporation and won't
behave like one, UMW President Arnold Miller said Monday.
But he did predict the union·will have to hold a convention next
year and vote on increasing dues.
And Miller said he will talk with Joseph Brennan, head of
the coal industry's bargaining arm, today In an attempt to
crank up the 1977 coal contract talks. He also said he will
officially begin his re-election campaign next feekend with a
swing into-western Kentucky . Miller balrned shortsightedness
and in-fighting for the failure of the last convention In
Cincinnati to raise union dues to meet increased costs of UMW
programs.
PARENTS VISITED
Mr. and Mrs. Don Brown
and children, Chris and
Stacey, of Columbus. were
weekend guests of her
par~nts, .. Mr . and Mrs .
Everett Bachner.
VISIT SUNDAY
Visiting with Mrs. Alice
Robeson, Middleport, Sunday
were Mr. and Mrs. Gary
Bamitz and daughters of
Veto Lake.

ON TARGET

• ••

WITH A
CHECKING ACCOUNT

'At Citizens National Bank
Open a checking account lor yourself or your business today. Your
cancelled checks serve as receipts
lor all of your transactions, Including
tax-deductible expenses.

Area Deaths

HARRY H. WEHRUNG
Herry H. Wehrung , 95,
Pomeroy , died Tuesday
morning
at
Veterans
• ~orlal Hospital.
MT . Wehr ung was born
Feb. 15, 1882 to the late Ed ·
ward and Lydia Genhelmer
Wthrung . He was also
preceded In death by his wife,
Barbara Rapp Wehrung ; one
son, Detphl n1 one daughter ..
The! ma
Spencer ;
one

News •. in Briefs

venue motion . . ·

Sharing

!

\ Officer kicked in head

POINT PLEASANT - A
Feb . 9, at Communily
Pleasa nt policeman
Point
Hospital.
She Is survi ved by one son. was severely beaten after
Robert E. ·w oldnlg, Racine, placing three men under
one granddoughter, Melanie arrest late Monday al·
Waldnlg and one grandson,
temoon, according to Point
Ro~&gt;ert Waldn ig . Jr .. both of
Racine. Mr . Wa ldnlg and his Pleasant Pollee Chief Jim
son were both pat ients at Gaskins.
Pl easont Valley Hospital
Officer Hugh Burris, 36,
when they received ~ord of
Point
Pleasant, was treated
his mother ' s dea t h and
at
Pleasant
Valley Hospital
surgery was postponed.

for head 'Injuries apparenUy
infilcted 11y repe•ted Idea
when he undertook to tr8JIIIo
port three prlloners w the
Mason County JaU In 1U
cruiser. Burri&amp; baa since been
relellsed from the hoi!Pital.
Arraigned on various
cha rges, Including ob·
structlng an officer, were
Sam Nibert, 19, 1721 Jef·

feraon Ave.; Fred Nibert, 21,
Lot 5 Lew11 st., IIIICI Elmer
~inl. 21, 314'fl Maill St.,
an Point PleaaanlBealdea being clw1ed with
obltructlng ID officer, . all
three men were c:Prged with
public tntoneatlon and Sam
Nibert was cha11ed with
poaseaslon of a controlled
substance.

grandson , Marvin Spencer ;
four brothers and two sisters.
He was a member or the
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church .
Survivors Include two sons,
Edwin and Harlan, both of

Pomeroy ;

two

sisters.

Henrietta
Burtonshaw ,
Cleveland and Aaa Morrison,
Youngstown ; one brother ,
Oakley , Pittsbu r gh , Pa .;
seven grandchildren and 10
great-grandchildren .
Funeral, services will be
Thursday, 1 p.m . at Ewing
Chapel with the Rev . Wilbur
Perrin officiating. Burial wil l
be in B~c h Grove Cemetery .
Friends may cal l at the
funeral hom e after 7 this
evening .

THELMA WALDNIG
SPRINGFIE L D - Mrs .
Thelma Waldnlg , 67, 1005 Alta
Road , Springf i eld . died
unexpectedl y Wednesda y,

Blood
(Continued from page 1)
' The RSVP personnel of the
senior citizens loaded and
unloaded the unit. Clerical
workers were Jean Nease,
Juanita Sayre, Jean Sayre, .
Macell Barton, Erruna K.
Clatworthy , Grace Drake,
Joyce Hoback, Lula Hampton, Beulah Strauss, Pat
Ingels, Enna Roush, Alice
Wolfe, Eleanor Lawson,
· Martha Lou Beegle, Paul
Smart, Rena Simms, Dorothy
WIU, Bernadine Meier, Mary
Shuler, Clarence Struble and
Susan Oliver.
Donations ·were made by
the Quality Print Shop,
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
Meigs Local School District
and the " Senior Citizens of
Meigs County.
Donors by community
were :

Market Report
Galllpoll•, Ohio,
Feb.l2,1977
· Sales Report ol
Oblo Valley Livestock Co.
STOCKER CA-TTLE STEERS - · 2:i0 to 300 lbs.
22.50 to 34.75; 300 to 400 lbs. 23
to 36.50; 400 to 500 lbs. 24 to
36; 500 to 600 lbs. 21.75 to 35 ;
600 to 700 lbs. 21 to 33.50; 700
lbs. and Over 21.50 to 32.
HEIFER CALVES - 2:i0
to 300 lbs. 20 to 24.50; 300 to
400 lbs. 20.2$ to 25.75; 400 to
500 lbs. 21 to 26.50; 500 to 600
2U!5 to 26; 600 to 700 lbs. 22 to
28.50; 700 lbs. and Over 21 to
30.
STOCK COWS &amp; BULLS
(By Tbe Head) -145 to 235 ;
Stock Cows and Calves 170 to
290; Stock Bulls 150 to 300;
Baby Calves 3 to 37; (By The
Pound) - Carmers &amp; Cutters
Cows 18.75 to 23; Holstein
Cows 23.10 to 25.:)0; Com·
mercia! Bulls (1,000 lbs. and
Over) 23.75 to 29.85.
Veal calves-Tops 220 lbs.
to 250 74 to 80; Medium 200
lbs. to 300 63 to 73; Culls 60
. down.
..
SOWS - 350 lbs. up 31 to
:i4.75.

PIGS - 39 to 42.50.
LAMBS - Tops 90 lbs. to
110 39 to 42.50.

POMEROY Robert
Cou ch, Harry E. Clark,
Robert W. ' Smith, Rolland
Neufzl i ng .
Robert
W.
Vaughan, Tim King, David
King, Patty J. Barton , MIJry
Starcher , George W. Nash ,
Jeff
H i lleary ,
Leon
McKnight , Charles Salser,
Nan White,
Dav i d J .
Koblentz, Barbara L. Fields,
Arthur J . Slusher . H~r l an H.
Wehrung , Barbara Thompson, Lawrence D. Leonard,
Leo Vaughn , Howard P.
Logan , MIJrl~n Michael. Gerl
L. Walton, Franklin H. Casto,
Janet M. Ambrose , Debbie
Windon , Virgil Windon.
'Richard Shuler , Marvin E.
Tay l or . Wa llace Hatf ield.
Larry Lee Bailey , James
Dailey . Rebecca Farnsworth,
PhylliS Gai ner, A. F . Gainer .
SYRACUSE - Donna J.
Aleshire , Milton Roush ,
Kathy Fry , Everett J.
Michael. Darla Thomas .
CHESHIRE - Charles W.
Searles .
MIDDLEPORT Shorty
Wright, V. Joyce Bartrum.
Leafy Chasleen, Robert V.
King , Sarah J, Fowler, ~d ­
ward W. Durst, Norma G.
Wilcox , Randall
Davis ,
James Whitlatch, Martha
Hackett.
REEDSVILLE - Linda
Wil son , Richard Barton ,
Granf Smith, Macel Barton ,
Hugh Martin.
MINERSVILLE - Carolyn
A. Charles, Clara Mcintyre.
Mark Matson.
Virginia
Davls, Brenda Davis .
RACINE - Ruth Lutheran ,
Dorothy P. Badgley, Esther
Smith,
Dorothy
Sayre,
Loretta K. Hill, Lawrence
Wilcoxen, Martha M. Dud·
ding, Jim Hupp, Karen Pyles,
Charles F . Pyles.
LONG BOTTOM - Henry
Bahr, Howard Parker .
LANGSVILLE - Ellis E.
Meyers.
HARTFORD, W. VA. - Bill
camgbell .

THE INN PLACE

OVAL benefits, services to
Meigs County are listed ..

received by the local libraries bookmoblle service In~
were purchased by OVAL. and borrowed 59,431
Since 1973, OVAL has ex· from Its collections. Regional
pended $15,747 for bookS for bookmobile service through
use 1n Meigs County.
OVAL has meant the con· ·
· FILMS~ - OVAL has tinued provision of this ex· ,.
provided equipment and tension service In Meigs
contracted with a regional County which would olhe~·
!Ibn library to lend films and wise not be possible.
'
filmstrips to area rellldents.
SPECIAL PROBLEMS
In the first six montbs of this GRANTS - OVAL makes
service, 6,541 people In Meigs direct grants to member
h
County have viewed these libraries who ave ex·
materials.
traordlnary financial needs.
BACKUP REFERENCE - A total of $10,679 has been
INTERUBRARY LOAN - granted to Meigs County
OVAL operates a backup since 1973.
reference and interlibrary
In \977, $265,000 of OVAL
loan service by contract with operaUng funda come from a
bleb
1
Ohio University, enabling federal grant w
exp res
OVAL area residents to at the end of the year. This
obtain needed materials not money supports the MaD·A·
available locally, and Book and regional book·
reducing the necessity of mobile service. Unleaa state
duplicating lesser used ond lunda replace these feder.al
expensive materials. In 1976 funds for 1978 and 1979, the
bookm bll
this service handled 131 Maii·A·Book and
o e
requests from Meigs County. service will end and the
CONSULTANT SERVICES number of books available to
Three professional Meigs County residents
In
Adult, throUgh the local library will
specialists
Children's
and
Extension
decrease drastically, the
PLEASANT VALLEY .
DISCHARGES - Mrs. Services are provided to library supporters warn.
Dorsett Bonecutter, Point supplement overburdened
Pleasant; Grace Church, local staff. These apeclallsts
Maben, W. Va. ; Mrs. Charles spend much of their time in
Holley, Ashton; Mrs. Joe local libraries.
PROGRAMS - Storyhours
Flinch and son, Letart; Mrs.
and
film programs bring
James McCarty and son,
children
to the libraries and
Pomeroy; Mrs. Russell
(Coq,timied from page 1) ·
bookmobile
stops · .. and
Hinkle, daughter, Leon; Mrs.
Individual's flirnings by f400
Ronald , Dailey and son, heighten their enjoyment In a year. &amp;lrprill.ngly, studies
Racine; Mrs. Cecil . Smith, books. During 1976, OVAL show that after a few years
Mason; Tommy Harrington, provided 72 storyhours for this gain disappears when
Gallipolis ; Mrs. Claude 1,604 children, and rented those who received the
Lewis, Point Pleasant; fdrs. films for 39 programs at· training are compared with
Gerald Young, son, West tended by 1,559 children. similar persons who didn't.
sponsored
Columbia ; Lona Jones, Point OVAL has
CBO suggests the figures
traveling
art
.
exhibits
and may be mlaleadlng. It Is also
Pleasant, and Sara Smith,
several adult programs such possible the training waa bad.
Mason.
as a poetry reading program
In practice, most training
from Marietta College and programs do not last a year.
bicentennial fllnis for adults. So, whUe $1 billion would ooy
E·RCALLED
PUBLIC . INFORMATION 1~.000· more pubUc ffei'VI~
SYRACUSE
The
Aid to the Meigs County jobs, It would provide
Syrac~e E·R Squad was
library's
pubUc lnfonnatlon training for 632,000 persons,
called Sunday at 5:45a.m. for
program
is
available through CBO said.
Titus Pickens, a medical
.
the
design
and printing of
pa\ie.nt, who was taken to
Laat year the govenunent
Veterans Memorial Hospital. flyers , bookmarks and spent $3.9 billion on public
Saturday the squad was schedules highlighting joba, $1.1 billioQ on training
called at 6:10 p.m. for Ubrary services. OVAL also and $17
billion
on
Richard Duckworth who was purchases bookbags to help unemployment comtaken to VMH. Thursday, patrons carry their books In pensation. CBO suggested
Feb. 10, they transported inclement weather.
eongress take a new look at
BOOKMOBILES - 21,253 tholie Hgures,
Oma Hysell to VMH.
Meigs County residents used

Some people claim Ohio county orea (Athens, Gallli,
Hocking, Jackson, Lawrence,
libraries are well-funded. In Meigs, Plckaway, Pike, Ross,
fact , the 1975 state-wide Scioto, VInton ). OVAL's
average per capita Income operaUng lunda come from
from the intangibles tax wu the State through the State
$6, but in Meigs County the Ubrary of Ohio.
per capita ' Intangibles
WbatdoesOVALdowithlts
distribution to libraries was . funds? Items:
on~~j: level of fun~g In . MAII.rA-BOOK - In .1976,
Meigs County tesidents
Meigs and neighboring received 9,820 of the over
counties has led to the
development of cooperative 148,000 books mailed by
OVAL's " Maii·A'Book"
services among public Service. This was an increase
libraries.
over 26 percentfrom 1975 and
The Ohio Valley Area represents service to county
Libraries (OVAL ) is a residents unable to use other
cooperative regional system library services because of
of autonomous public
libraries lri southeastern Ohio isolation, lack of trans·
portation, handicaps, or ill
which have joined together to health.
share resources, improve
BOOKS
IN
LOCAL
existing services, and to LIBRARIES - OVAL pur·
provide essential library chase~ books which are used
services ~bleb an individual in member libraries. In 1975,
county may not be able to
provide. OVAL serves an 11 40 percent of all new books

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Gertrude
Kloes, Middleport; James
Meadows, Long Bottom; Lois
Schoonover, Rutland; Lenna
Brinker, Racine; Glenn
Grueser, Po!lleroy; Jennie
nes, Pomeroy; Gilbert Mees,
Pomeroy ; Francis Rizer,
Mason, W. Va.
DISCHARGED - Donald
Husk, Richard Metzger,
Lloyd Hoffman, Katheryn
Metzger, John Dailey, Rena
McDaniels.

Schedules
revised at
Rio Grande
RIO GRANDE . - Rio
Grande College-Community
College (RGC-CC ) today
announced a revised class
schedule lot winter and
spring quarters. The changes
were made necessary by the
energy emergency in Ohio
which caused cancellation of
several days of classes.
According to the new
schedule, winter quarter
Classes will end . Friday,
March 18, one week later than
. originally planned. Spring
break will be from March 19
to 27.
Registration for spring
quarter classes will be held
Monday, March 28 with
classes beginning the evening
of that date. Spring quarter
will end June . 3. Com·
mencement · exercises at
RGC-CC will be held Sunday,
June 5.

TWO SUITS FILED
Two suits 'for divorce have
been fUed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court. FlUng
were James W. Batey,
Middleport, against Margie
Smith Batey, Middleport, and
Sheila M. Reeves, Mid·
dleport, against Robert L.
Reeves, Rt. 3, Pomeroy.

CABLE REPAIRED

G:r~lo~~~e~:~.&lt;~~',and

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
Ohio Bell continued work · 1-•----------------~
today to repair a cable break
$
5
which occured late Saturday

E 2gg·

and disrupted service to a
wide area of north-central
.Ohio. General Telephone said
100 circuits in a cable located
between
Marion
and
Delawate shorted out when
moisture seeped Into the
cable.
AUTO DAMAGED
Two cars were damaged in
an accident on Pearl St.,
Middleport, at 6:50 p.m.
Monday. Middleport police
said a car driven by Diane M.
Smith, 16, Route 2, Pomeroy,
struck a parked car
belonging to John E. Partlow,
17, Route 2, Pomeroy. There
were mnderate dan\ages to
the Smith car and minor to
the Partlow vehicle.

Wednesday Night Special

.

PRIGHT SWEEPER
SALE
Home Furnishings Dept.
1st

COMBINATION UPRIGHT
AND ATTACHMENT OFFER
• Ekclullve 8-WIY 0/lf·A·Nip&gt;
height ld]uetment

rua

• Top-lifting dlepoooble dual
bag prevent• ctago, kHpo
oucllon otrong.

INCLUDED :
6 PC.
ATTACHMENT
SET

~m 1fii.' 11~' Edge Kfeener cleanolhlt
1111 Iough inch 1tong the
btubotrdo

~

~
(~ ')~

Upright $84.95~

FRIENDLY BANK"

$295

Visit Our Salad Bar
Veal Patties
.Mashed Potatoes and Grt~vy
Vegetable
Hot Rolls
Coffee. Tea or Milk

Featuring the very finest in
home furnishings and major
appliat~ces at lo,w cost to you.
MODEL
1424

Plus Tax

Elberfelds In

DIPOSITS INSURED.TO '40.000

..

,.

'

ON'1LY

Then the two drove off in the same car for lunch in the prime
minister's office with Rabin.
'
Vance was also to meet with President Ephraim Katzir,
former Prime Minister Golda Meir and Defense Minister
Shimon Peres.
The secretary, who will also visit Egypt, Lebanon, Jordan,
Saudi Arabia and Syria, Is making his first diplomatic tour for
the Carter administration and has emphasized that he has
come to learn and has no new peace Initiatives o.r propOsals.
"It will be kind of a history lesson," one Israeli official said
of the talks with Vance.
· The secretary Is making his first diplomatic tour for the
Carter administration and has emphasized that he has come to

.

'•

learn and has no new peace initiatives ofpro~ is. .
"It will be kind of a history lesson," one Israeli official said
of the talks with Vance.
The secretary will also visit Egypt, Lebanon Jordan Saudi
Arabia and ·Syria.
·
'
'
Vance, wearing a haltered brown felt hat arrived at BenGurian airport and was met by Allon, woo' emphasized the
need for a newdrive for a Middle East solution. "
" It is high time that we resume the momentum toward
peace,:· Allon said.
.
In his airport remarks, Vance tried to allay suspicions he
had come to pressure the Israelis Into a·settlement.
"!come with one simple message," Vance said. "The United
States Is convinced that a funda menta l underlying principle of
our search for this peace is the enduring trust and confidence
between our two nations, which has been the foundation of our

l!llNews • .• in Briefs\~\
~

By United Press International
WASHINGTON - THE INTERIOR DEPARTMENT has
fecei ved 8 report on whether natural gas producers are
deliberately holding fuel off the !llarket, but the. findings are
still secret and parts may never be released. Depsrlrnent
spokesmen say Interior Secretary Cecil Andrus, who ordered
the investigation, is reviewing the hall-inch thick report.
"Where we go from here depends on what the secretary's
review of the document indicates," one official said Tuesday.
"I'm certain those findings that are not .proprietary ...
eventually will be public. He may decide, depending on his
review, to present it to the White House first and let the White
House decide whether wmake it public."

at y

e

"

\

VOL. XXVII NO. 214

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OH 10

relationship for three decades,"
On the eve of today's talks, American and Israeli officials
agreed that the major issue in the Middle East involves the
Palestinians and how they should be represented at any
. Geneva peace conference.
The last formal meeting of the Geneva talks, between Israel
and the Arab co~mtlres, was held in December 1973.
Israeli officials insisted Tuesday night that Israel wiU pot
accept the sealing at Geneva of the Palestine Liberation
Organization, which Israel considers to be a terrorist
organization .
Israeli officials said the only thing that could change their
stand would if the PLO was to change lis charter at its forth·
coming congress in Cairo and eliminate the caD for the
destruction of Israel as a stale.

•

•

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

enttne

WEDN ESDAY, FEBRUARY 1&amp;, 1977

•

WAsHINGTON- THE AGRICULTURE DEPARTMENT
Is attempting to devise a better emergency food stamp
distribution system to cut abuses, Secretary Bob Bergland
says. Responding Tuesday to reports of widespread food
stamp abuses in weather-ravaged Buffalo, Bergland said the
overwhelming majority of free food stamps are going to those
in need.
.
To assist in U•e Buffalo effort, officials said New York
authorities are sending in 300 additional temporary stamp
enrollment workers Thursday. Bergland told reporters he
intends to have aides study the emergency stamp system to
find ways to'curb abuses, but without red tape which would
delay getting food stamps to disaster vicUms.

•

Residents have been told to get ready to shut off all gas
appliances ·exL'epl their furnaces and to lower their
thermostats to 55 degrees if there is a gas emergency. A
Columbia spokesman in Columbus said Tuesday the company
decided not to ask the FPC for emergency gas- shipments
because it belleves it can maintain supplies for residential
customers through Its present conservation and curtailment
program.

cern that Columbia would not
be able to meet its priority
one customer requirements,"
said Sweet. "There will still
be curiallrnents, but peOple
should be more at ease that
residential or priority one
customers would have their
gas needs met during the rest
of the winter season."
Columbia
Gas said
Tuesday it believed the 4.3
billion shortfall could be
made up by continued
conservation. A spokesman
was asked today if the exira
4.3billion to be received from
lis supplier would mean a
lifting of industrial and
commercial curtailments.
"We don't know yet," Wil·
liam Chaddock of Colwnbia
told UP!. "At the present
time we are studying the
situation. It will be a few days
before we know what, if any
difference, it will make In our
supply picture. We have some
cold weather moving in and

By JOHN T, KADY
United Presslnteroatlonal
A member of thti Poblic
Utilities Commission of Ohio
said today Columbia Gas of
. Ohio will get about 4.3 billion
cubic fe et of gas from its
supplier, which should enable
the utility .to meet the
requirements of its human
needs customers for the rest
of the winter.
''The Indication that we had
yesterday (Tuesday ) In a
meeting on the emergency Is
that Columbia Gas of Ohio
was4.3 billioncubicfeet short
in meeting the needs of
priority one (residences and
hospitals) customer s, "
PUCO member David Sweet
told UP! today. "And it was
estimated by our staff that
· this release of 10.7 billion feet
of gas by the Columbia Gas
Transmission Corp. would
give Colwnbia of Ohio about
4.3 billion cubic feet.
"That should ease the con·

CANFIELD, OHIO - RESIDENTIAL CUSTOMERS of
Columbia Gas of Ohio drew little comfort Tuesday from the
utility's statement that It thinks it can get through the winter
without emergency gas from the Federal Power Commission .
Columbia has told the city it could .be affected by low line
pre~ure if the current cold gpell lasts another five to seven ·
:::~ because CAmfield is at the end of l.hc gas transmission

we want to take a look at
that."
Chaddock emphasized that
conservation of natural gas
should be continued.
"We don 't want people to
think that, just because we
have that 4.3 billion cubic feet
of gas, our problems are
completely solved, because
they are not," said Chaddock.
Columbia gas presently has
100 per cent curtailments in
effect on all large boiler and
industrial customers which
can use an alternate fue l, an
65 per . cent curtailment on

large industrial and lar&amp;e
commercial users nnd a 30
per cent curtailiuenl on small
indusirial and conunerclal
users.
''We.still havea long way w
go this winter and we can't
relax," said Chaddock. "We
still
need
continued
conservation ."
Meanwhile, Gov. James A.
Rhodes told t he Fede ral
Power ·commission Tuesday
that customers of the Dayton
Power &amp; Light Co. were in
"dire need" of emergency
natural gas.

In a telegram w FPC
chairman ·Richard Dunham,
Rhodes ¥id new forecasts
indicate
t hat
DP&amp;L
residential customers would
require three billion cubic
feei of gas to maintain
service the rest of the winter.
Rhodes scheduled a news
conference today· at Battelle
Memorial Institute ,
Columbus, after touring a
pilot program the laboratory
has developed for burning
high-eulfur Ohio coal without
serious pollution problems.
~ In still another energy

·

Hy WESLEY G. PIPPERT

Education and Welfare, and
Agriculture.
Powell also said Tuesday
there has been "no formal or
Informal request" for a presidential decision on whether
Richard Hebns, the Nixon
administrati on's CIA ·
director , should face possible
indictment.
The Wilmington (Del.)
News Journal has reported
that a federal grand jury
wants w Indict Helnis oo
possible charges of .perjury
and conspiracy for testimony
about the CIA and
International Telephone &amp;
Telegraph Co. activities in
Chile.
Both Caddell and Rafshoon
have their o'll'll businesses.
Rafshoon has been Carter's
advertising hdviser since he
first ran for . Georgia
governor in 1966. Caddell Is a
pollster who served the
Carter presidential campaign
as he had the 1972 McGovern
presidential campjlig~ .
Powell o•· .Jan. 28 called
0\ddell "o frtend and confidante •h1d sometimes
drinking buddy" of White
House staff members, and
said he, Powell, sometimes
(Continued on page 1~)

PINS AND PATCHES - These women received pins
and patches in recognition of their volunteer service with
the Women's Awdllary of Veterans Memr_ial Hospital
Tuesday afternoon. Making the presentation of all the
awards was Mrs. Janice Daniels, past president of the
auxiliary. Receiving awards were front row,! to r, Betty

Christopherson , 500 hours; Shorty Wright, Donna
Aleshire, Frances Sinart, an 100.hour pins ; bsck row, I to
r, Mrs. Daniels, Carrie Kermedy, Ethel Hatfield, Mack
Herald, all 100 hour· pins; Joy White and Donna Good,
pat.ches for 60hours. Earning 100 hour pins but not present
for the picture were Mildred Hawley and Emogene
Simrris.

ExTENDED OuTLooK
Friday through Sunday,
lbere will be a chance of
snow ill northern COIIDties
aDd rain In soutbero· areas
Fiiday and again Sunday.
Hlgbs will be In tbe mid 30s
or the mid 40s and lows wiD
range from the upper teem
to tbe middle ZOs.

Kizzee sentence•·
to jail, fint l
Brian Kl!zec, 19, Middleport, Tuesday was sentenced to 30 days confinement
and fined $200 pius court
costs by Probate Judge Manning D. Webster on
conviction of contributing to
.the delinquency of a minor. ·
Carl Hysell, j uvenile
probation officer said this
caae Is one of several In
connection with the same
Incident.

Five forfeit court bonds

· Ohio this sWIUller.
TilE BAD NEWS: A reduced number of storms could
mean the beglmlng of a drought.
Marvin Miller, chief meteolroglst In charge of the National
Weather Service's Cleveland forecast office, iaaued that
outlook to UP! today - but warned it was strictly a
"climatological guess. I'm expecting basically above normal
temperatures and below normal precipitation in Ohio this
summer," said Mlller. "And using that criteria, we mar be
headed Into drought conditions, with less severe storm activity
this year."
COLUMBUS - THE CHANCES OF PLACING A
constitutional amendment erasing Ohio's ancient debt limit on
the ballot are better this year than they were last year, accord·
1ng to the Senate sponsor of the resolution.
Sen. Marcus Roberto, D-Raverma, Tuesday told the Ohio
Senate ·ways and Means Committee that removal of the
f'/50,000 debt limit was necessary to provide a better mellUI to
fund Ohio's capital Improvements. If adopted by the
legislature, the propoeal would be placed on the November
general election ballot.

related development, Rhodes
directed Peter Susey, deputy
director of the Ohio Energy
Resource and Development
Agency, to find ways to
dduble Ohio's "self-help"
natural gas drUUng program.
"This program has already
been successful for 70 compa,
nies that have developed
their own sup piles of gas,"
said Rhodes, "We can and
must double this program.
Rhodes said at least 5,000
new wells a year are
necessary to keep schools and
factories operating.

Aides checked.
for .confl.icts

WASHINGTON (UP!) The White House and the
Justice Department are
checking whether there Is
any conDict of interest in the
relationship that campaign
aides
Patrick Caddell and
TilE RETURN OF WINTER'S HARSHNESS PROVIDED
~ra id Rafshoon have to
both a curse and 8 !&gt;Iessing for the eastern half of the nation,
dropping temperatures to zero and below but relieving flood President Carter.
White
House
Press
threats on ice clogged rivers. The National Weather Service
Secr~tary Jody Powell said
' confirmed that January , already inspiring legends lor brutal
cold, was the coldest ~anuary in at least 177 years for the he does not llelieve the two
eastern two-thirds of the nation. The Federal Reserve Board men are covered by the 1963
added that the deep freeze and energy shortage reduced law under which Charles
Kirbo, long-time Carter
Industrial production one per cent in that area .
adviser
and financial trustee,
And If ,February and March temperature&amp; live up to
deemed
a "special
was
expectations, the weather service said, "this winter would be
of
the
employe"
the coldest since the founding of the Republic." Today
government.
temperatures were expected to maintain the tempo, with near
Kirbo
advised
the
or below norma I temperatures through most of the nation. The
President
on
the
possible
National Weather Service forecast also Included snow from the
Great Lakes eastward into northern New Englarld and rains upgrading of less-than honor a b l e Vietnam
over southern Florida and the northern i&gt;calfic Coast.
discharges - in effect,
COLUMBUS - TilE FAIRFIELD SCHOOL for Boys near receiving a presidential
Lancaster has opened Its doors to the 550 students arid 24 " commission." He add~d
teachers In the Berne Union School District In Sugar Grove that Caddell and Rafshoon,
which was faced with closing because of a lack of natural gas, on the other hand, do not now
Ohio Youth Commission Director William K. Willis said have official relationships
with Carter.
Tuesday.
·
Carter planned to continue
"Fairchild is the only correctional facility for youth in
today
the traditional visits by
Ohio, or maybe in the nation, to offer Its facilities to an entire
a
new
chief . executive to
school 'distriCt closed' by the energy crisis," said Willis.
Fairfield Supterintendent Ralph Starkey offered Ute use of the Cabinet departments facility alter learning that Berne Union would close because Its stopping by at the
Departments of Health,
gas supply would be cut off Feb. 3.
"These people are our neighbors and many of the students'
parents work at Fairfield," said Starkey. "We felt we had to
come to their rescue." Fairfield is heated with coal.flred
steam.

(

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Gas
assured to meet human. needs

COLUMBUS - REP . ARTIIUR R. BOWERS, D.Steuben·
viUe, told the Ohio House Public Utilities Conunittee Tuesday
a bill he has inlr.oduced is designed to "save jobs in Ohio" by
prohibiting utilities from charging their custo!llers for the
higher cQst of low-!!ulfur ·coal .
"They would he forced to use Ohio high sulfur coal," said
Bowers, leading off advocate testimony on his biU, which
committee chairman Rep. William E. Hinig, D-New
Philadelphia, said would he the subject of one more hearing
before being assigned to a subcommittee. Bowers said he
would come back to the committee next with an addition to his
bill wadd language to double the state severance tax on coal
and fund a "coal research center," perhaps to be located at
Ohio University.

INCLUOES 6 PC. .
ATTACHMENT SET

Shcip Week Days and Saturday
9:30to5 P.M. Frlday9:301olp.m.

Insurance CGrporatior

'I

state."

THE GOOD NEWS : T)lere llli!Y be less severe storms in

"THE

~~ !lllber.Federi Depilit

the American secretary said .
Allon addea, "I would not disagree with the secretary of

JERUSALEM (UPI) - Secretary of State Cyrns Vance
today began hia Middle East fact-finding mission with "very
useful and friendly talks" with Israeli leaders and a deeply
I!loving visit to a memorial to Jewish vicUms of Nazi persecution . .
Vance, who arrived Tu~y night from Washington, had a
two-hour breakfast meeting with Prime Minister Yitzhak
Rabin at·his three-story whitestone residence.
Rabin told Israeli reporters afterward, "I was very, very
satisfied" with the discussions.
''There Is a trend to have a special relationship based on- a
searching for peace and the strengthening of Israel," he said.
Later, Vance met with Foreign Minister Yigal Allon in the
Foreign Ministry and the two men emerged from the talks
togefher.
.
.
'!Let me say we had some very useful and friendly talks,"

What

• Brtlll•nt heldliflhl

MJDil.EPORT,
OHIO
.
.

Vance deep into talks with ·Israelis

Five defendants have spinning tires.
Fined were DanielL. RUey,
forfeited bonds . and four
23,
Mason, $10 and costs,
others were fined In the court
of Middleport Mayor ••red speeding; Ronald E. Atkins,
20, New Lexinglon, $25 and
..Hoffman.
costs,
lllegalllcense, and $50
Forfeiting were Robert M.
and
costs,
petty theft;
Powell, 32, Reedsville, $25,
Charles
Wheeler,
52, West
posted on a charge of
traveling the wrong way on a Columbia, W. Va .. $200 and
one-way street; Kenneth E. costa and three days In jaU on
Rader, 20, Nitro, $50, ch~rges of driving while
disorderly marmer; Mitchell intoxicated and $100 and costs
G. P•rsons, 26, roflddleport, for driving while under
$23, speeding; Phllllp suspension; Arthur Brad·
Bradbul')', 24, Cheshire, $50, shaw, 19, Mason, $25 and
disorderly manner; Jimmy costs, reckless operation.
Older, . ~4. Racine. s~.

Four cases in mayor's court

One defendant was fined store.
Forfeiting bonds were Okey
and three others forfeited
Kiser,
Racine , $30, in·
bonds In Pomeroy Mayor
toxication
; · Raymond Bar·
Andrew' s court Tuesday
MEETING SET
Now you know
'
nett,
New
Haven, $30, run·
The Democrat Central Every penon on earth night. Gloria McCarthy, nlng red light : Franklin
conunlttee will meet Thul'!l· &amp;hares his birthday with at l.etart, W. Va., was fined $200 Wolfe , Syracuse, S3l.
day at 7:30p.m, a\lhe Meigs , least nine million other and costs on conviction of
petty larceny at the Kroger speeding . .
Tnn.
persons.
\~
11

. Ii&gt;NG sERVICE - There are 14,000 hours of volunteer service to Veterans Memorial
Hospital among theae seven women who were honored when the Women's Auxiliary met at
the holpltal Tuesday afternoon. Receiving pins for long service #ere front , I tor, N~ttie
Hayes, 8,tl011 hours; Ina Massar, 3,000 hours; .Etta WID, 1,000 hours; back row, I tor, May
Weber, Gilda Baxter, Clara Burris, Louise McElhinny, 1,000 hours each.

Police make 33 arrests in January
Thirty-three arrests were disturbing the peace and
made by the Middleport three for destruction of
Pollee In January •ccordlng property.
to the monthly report of ' Two persons were charged
Pollee Chief J. J. Cremeans. with driving whil~ In·
The charge for which the toxlcated and there was one
most arrests were made was arrest on charges including
disorderly marmer, slx, with Improper backing, rwmlng
four persons arrested on stopsl!in, leavlng the scene of
speeding charges and lour on an . accident, ·defective
reckless operation cha r~es. · exha u~t. 111egal · u c~n s e ,
There were thrE-e arrests for improper registration, F.our
1(1.

Weather
Clear and cold tonight with
lows between five and 10.
Sunny Thursday morning ,
cloudy in the afternoon, highs
2S;M,
Proba blllty . Of
precipitation 20 per cent - .
today, 10 per cent tonight and
Thursday .

cases were dismissed.
The pollee department
Investigated only three acAIDMENCAUED
cidents · during the month
The
Pomeroy E·R situad
whi ch was marked with Ice
Tuesday
at 7:42 p.m. transa·nd snow. The cruiser was
ported
Clarence
Longstrelch
drivep 5,719 miles. Parking
to
Veterans
Memorial
meters would not function
Hospital
and
at
9:511 p.m.
due to t~e cold weather, so
Hattie
Barringer
wu
taken
.
receipts were not removed
to Veterans Memorial
from them.
Hospital.
"

�</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="48064">
            <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="48063">
              <text>February 15, 1977</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="599">
      <name>nicholson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2887">
      <name>wehrung</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
