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                  <text>12-The'tlailv Sentinel. Middl~rt-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Feb. l7,1977

Vance-Fah·m i talks opened
IIJ JIM ANDERSON

and Zlonllt powers, with the

CAIRO, Egypt (UPI) - · backing of the United States,
Secntary of State Cyrus are atiempling to impose oo
Vance opened talb today the region for hltling Arab
with Egyptian Foreign soUdarity, undermining the
strength
and
Minllter lamall Falun! - Arabs'
who had just met with conspiring against the
PalfiOitinlan - guerrllla chief Palestinian revolution," it
Yasaer Arafat on current said.
Political sources noted
Middle East peace efforts.
Vance, calling Egyptian Arafat
is
generally
considered
a
moderate
and
President Anwar Sadat a
''man of vision " arrived in . said he may have taken a
Cairo Cll the seCCild leg of a hardline public stand in order
not to weaken support among
slx~ation Middle East tour
with an Israeli request 10 find his foUowers.
On his arrival here from
out whether the &lt;\fab world
· might agree to limited peace Israel, Vance ssid President
Carter "is deeply cmunltted
negotiations.
Falun! welcomed Vance at to doing. everything that we
the airport and the two men can to belp in the search lor
began talks a short time later peace."
American and Israeli
at NUHide. Fcrelgn Ministry
building in the heart of Cairo. officials said Wednesday they
j:"'aJmii had met earlier in envision a "Geneva-'type"
the day with a Palestlnlan conference of loosely defined
guerrllla delegation led by bargaining sessions
Arafat, chai1'man of the possibly only involving two
Palestine Liberation cotmti'ies at a time -with the
Organization, who arrived United States as mediator.
Israeli Prime Minister
late Wednesday for hls
second visit to Egypt in tllree Yitzhak Rabin said tbe
first conference should take
days.
PLO officials insisted tbe place sometime late this year
visit was not related to and one Israeli official said
the most likely of these would
Vance's mission.
But the Middle East News involve Syria.
As Israeli
officials
Agency said Fahmi and
deScribed
them,
the
talks
Arafat "acbanged views on
Middle East developments would abnost be a variation
and the current contacts with of former Secretary of ::;tate
the foreign ministers of tbe
major powers and U.N.
Secretary~al
Kurt
Waldheim, which are aimed
at breaking the stalemate."
Arafat later departed for
Saudi Arabia, the agency
said.
Arab-Israeli disagreement
No one was injured in three
on the question of PLO
traffic
accidents investigated
representation remains a
Wednesday
by the Galliamajor stumbling block to the
Meigs
Post
State Highway
resumption of Middle East
Patrol.
peace talks.
The first occurred at 6:45 p.
Arafat's AI Fatah guerrilla
m.
on SR 33 ai Long Hollow
group, on the eve of Vance 's
Rd.
where William Gn~eser,
arrival, said it had not
30,
Pomeroy,
b!lcking his car,
relinquished its objective of
hit
·
a
vehicle
qrerated by
setting up a secular state in
Diana
Phillips, ·
26;
place of Israel. ·
Harr.Jsville.
No
charges
were
"Fatah rejects all defeatist
schemes which imperialist !Ued.
A second mishap occurred
at 8:3l p. m. on SR 7, south of
Milepost 27 where an auto
driven hy Robyn D: Sheline,
21, Cheshire, attempted to
(Continued from page I)
turn right just as a vehicle
excited atx&gt;ut."
Police
and firemen
cordoned off numerous
downtown streets to iaolate WATER LACKING
the area.
COLUMBUS (UPI) - A
Fadley said more than.IOO number of Ohio towns ·are
firemen,
16 · engine plagued by wea\her..-elated
companies , eight ladder water problems, Gov. James
trucks, five snorkel· trucks Rhodes said Wednesday, and
which Shoot water at the be called on the Ohio National
blaze from a height of 40 feet Guara and the Ohio Disaster
and lour heavy rescue units Services Agency to give
were on the scene.
every possible assistance to
There were no seriowi inju· the corrununities.
ries rut several firemen were
Rhodes said additional
taken !rom the scene with communities reporting in
sprained ankles suffered Wednesday wi.th emergency
wben they leU on !he ice water problems are Leetonia
covered streets.
and Salineviile, . both in
Columbiana County.
General James Abraham of
the ohio National Guard said
a 500-i!allon water trailer had
been provided to Washingtonville in Colwnbiana County to
supply drinking water to
residents as that hamlet is
without water.
In Blanchester, Clinton
County, the reservoir is
abnost ' empty, Abraham
said. He said the Disaster
Services Agency had supplied
six miles of pipes and lour
piunps to supply water from a
new source.
Uhrichsville, with 8n old
water
system,
is
experiencing line lreaka, due
to freezing laster than they
can ~ repaired, Abraham
said. The ONG is hauling
water.

.

.

Henry Kissinger's shuttles
between Israel and the Arab
world.
Syria would be a likely
candidate, they said, because
Syria would like to setUe Its
border problems with Israel,
now that It Ia 110 beavUy
involved in Lebanon.
Vance also will visit
Lebanon, Jordan, Saudi
Arabia and Syria l;lefore.
returning to Washington
.Monday.
SERPENTS' YEAR
NEW YORK iUPI) -To
the vllftors who detl!ellll
upon ChlDatewn ,,.. · the
Cblne1e New Year'•
celebration tonight, It's
sheer pandemonium.
11'1 a riot of color, made
up of 11lky col!ume1,
dancing dragons aad
ltreworb. 11'1 New
Orleans &lt;mrblg Mardi Gras
,.. Utile Italy during the
'lilian GeaiUiro FestivaL
But to llle Cbl~~e~e; It' I a
solana family ritual to
realftnn age-old Confucian
teaching stre11ing filial
respect and lamlly unity.
Chlutown (Nbllcly •be"'
In the year tf75, the Year ol
tbe Serpent, with the
traditional midnight
parade and fireworks.

Nobody hurt in
driven by Tammy Anderson,
19, GaiHpolis, began to pass
on the right. Again, no
citation was issured.
A final accident occurred at
II p. m. on SR 588, one and
four tenths miles east of SR 35
wbere Mid!ael R. WilBon, 16,
Rodney,Jost control of his car
which ran off th,· right side d.
tbe highway over an embankment. There was minor
damage.

THE
SHOE·

BOX

DO YOU NEED FLOOD

·uraace.

It's Now Av1i Ia ble
To All Meigs County Residents

See us - we can take care of your needs
also homes - mobile homes- automobile
..:.. health.
·

ARE YOUR INSURANCE PREMIUMS

TOO HIGH?
Try Lightning Rod Insurance
AI Davis Insurance Service

Phone 992-5120

114 Court

Pomeroy, Ohio

St.

·

I
I

MARTHA M. COLE
IoNs. Martha M. Cole, 72.
812 Main St., Belpre, lor·
merly of Coolville, died
Wednesday morning at
Camden Clark Memorial

Hospital following a brief
Illness.
Mr's. · Cole was born

at

Da nvltle, W. Va.; Mrs .
Bertha Celsla , Baltimore,
II&lt;J .; Mrs. Matilda Billter,
Moiestic, Ky ., llv's. Winnie
Guthrie , and Mrs. Mar y
Guthrie, both of Vinton ; Mrs.
Alva Pennlf'IQion, Newark ;
Thomas T. Lambert, Jr..
Hilliards; Tracy P. Lambert,
Gainesville, Fla.; 'Rev . Don
L. Lambert, Obetz; Jl
grandchildren and 2J great.
grandchildren.
Other survivors inc lude
four sisters and three
brothers, Els ie Wallace ,
Stella Wai lace, Rebecca
. Wallace and Juanita Wallace,

Hockingport to the late
Clement V. and Mary Ann
Glover Foster. She was also
preceded In death by her
h"'band, Ernest In 1960 : a
son, Howard, In 1976, two
trotl]ers. and two sisters .
A member of the Coolville
United Methodist Church, she
at!ended St. Mark's United
Methodist Church In Belpre ~~~~~'ce~ i nct~~~t~~ghJ:~~
the past fi ve years. She was a Tenn .; John Wallace, Dorton ,
member of the Three M Ky . and Gene Walla ce,
S""day School Class, Belpre Detroit, Mich.
Senior Citizens and was a
She was a member of the
former member of the VInton Baptist Church .
Eastern Star and VFW
Funeral services will be 11
auxiliary .
a. m . Saturday at the Vinton
She is survived by two 50ns, Baptist Church with the Rev.
Dale, Akron and Leslie, Jerry Neal officiating . Bu.rlal
Belpre; two sisters. lula wi II be in Ebenezer Carmel
Brumbaugh ,

Akron

and

NELSONVILLE A
firelng range to serve all
sottheM!em Ohio law enforcement a~encies is being
plannedatHockingTechnical
College here. A range was
included In the college's
master plan, and a site on the
l50 acre campus has already
been delignated for it.
A committee composed of
membel'!l d. SEO pollee and
sheriff's departments is
studying the proposal to
detennine what type ol range
woold best suit their needs.
. The firing range would be
available to all law en·
lorcement agencies In · the

Pallbearers are
named for
Seth Nicholson

cemetery . Friends may call

Susan Galtreath, Belpre; 01e at the McCoy-IWJore Funeral
half-sls!er. Gertrude Welling, Home from 2 to • and 7 to 9 p.
Athens; silt grandchildren m. Friday.

and six great-grandchildren .
Funeral serviCes will be 2

p.m. Saturday at the White

Funeral Home , Coolville,
with the Rev . Earse Mauler,

Sr. , officiating. BIXial will be
in Coolville Cemetery .

Friends
funeral

Friday.

may call at the
home afternoon

~UTH ROSE COTTRILL
IoNs. Ruth Rose Cottrill n
a native of Galli a County 'and
former resident of 9• Garfield
Ave., Gallipolis, died Wed·
nesday in a Miami Fla
hospital . She had ,.;en 1~
faillf'IQ health lor several ·
years. · Mrs. Cottrill was
preceded in death by her

Surviving is a daughter,
Mrs . .Walter (Ma rianna)

Rl)TLAND - Pallbearers
lor Seth Nicholson whose
funeral will~ held at 2 p. m.
DELMAR .WALLACE
Friday at the Dexter Church
Mr . and Mrs. Dwight of Christ have been named.
Wallac e. Middleport ,
Active pallbearers will be
received word of the unex Irion
Nelson,
Waid
pec!ed death or his trother.
Delmar Wolloce, 5~ . of Nicholson , Raymond Cot·
Chillicothe.
'
terUI, Charles King, Dean
Mr. Wallace collapsed on a Will and Duane Will.
street in Chi llicothe and died
a short ti me later Wednesday Honorary pallbearers wU! be
Green,
Wiliam
In the emergency room.of the . Bill
Chillicothe hospital.
, Nicholson, Vance Higgens,
A former resident o f
Middleport, 1/v'. · Wallace is Roger Riggs, Owen Black·
wood and Rodney Riggs.
survived by a son , Gary,
Friends may £all at the
Chillicothe,
and
four
trothers, , Dwight or' Mid- Rutland Chapel ofthe Walker
dleport ; Doyle of Malta, and Funeral Home anytime this
Clifford and Pearl , both of
evening. The body will be
Beverly .
Funeral
taken
to· the church to lie in
!'lrrangements are being
·
made in Chillicothe.
state at 12 noon Friday.

region 10 train pe111011nel in depsrllnents, and the New
L es In g Ion ,
At h en I,
N1
llle Logan and
Technical College would atso
e sonv •
·
use the facUlty for tralnlng Marietta pollee departments.
otudents In pollee science,
correcU01111 and pollee administration as well as
recreation and wildlife
There's a silent klller in the
otuden•· who-"' be involved
'"
"w
·ghettohigh blood preuure.
In law enforcement in future
it
can
lead to 1troke,
joba as park rangers and
kidney
and
heart !allure.
game protectors. It could he
openedtoo'"rpubUctrap'and Fighting back 11181'11 with
lu
having your blood preuure
skeet shoctlng.
checked
and staying under
Serving on the committee
treatment.
Fight high blood
are members of tbe Hocking,
pressure
hy
helping the Heart
p..,.y, Athens, Meigs and
Campaign.
Washington County sheriffs'
the use ollireanns. Hocking

News •• in Briefs
(Continued from page I)
loss of accreditatloo.
In a showdown over the clmrd!'s recent defiance of South
Africa's apartheid segregation laws, Sybrand Van Niekerk,
administrator of the Transvaal province, said Wednesday he
wl11 begin ''deregisterlng" four Catholic school.i thla week
unless they comply with the whitee - only regUlations. The
church requested an urgent meeting with Van Niekerk 1 who
said he agreed to see Archbiahop George Daniel of Pretoria
and several Catholic educators. But be warned, "I can~
the issue, but'! can't agree to ft."
HOUSTON - A POLL OF TEXAS YOU'Il!S shows most
are well informed about alcohol and know it can be dangerrus
to mix liquor and other drugs. The poll also shows, however,
the knowledge doesn't stop them.
The surver said up to 38 per cent olthe boys and 28 per cent
of tbe girls liked to drink simply because ollhe way il made
them feel; 46.7 per cent of boys and ii.l.2 per cent of the giria
drink for a variety of !tiler reaso1111, including dllflcultles at .
scHool, troubles involving religion, sex or personality, and
more than 40 per cent of both se~:es either admitted mixing ··
alcohol with drugs or left the answer blank on the poll.
Surveyed in the poll were 4,400 southeastern Texas high
school and junior college students between .the ages of 13 and
20. Virtually all admitted they drink occasionally.

S!ephenson of Miami, Fla .; a

SISter, Mrs . Clara Page
Columbus. and a brother:

Wilbur Rose, Erie, Pa.

Funeral services will be

held at 3 p.m. Saturday at the
M:Coy. Wetherholt . Moore

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Fun~ral Home wifh Rev.
Alv1s Pollard off ici ating ·
~r i al will follow in Mound

H•ll Cemetery. Visitation will
be held at the funeral home
from 7 to 9 p.m. Friday .

SPRING SALE
CORnEY CUSTOM MADE DRAPES

ISABELLE COZART
PORTLAND - · Isabelle
Cozart, 68, Portland. died this
morning

at

Veterans

URW PICKS FOUR
AKRON, Ohio (UPI)
International President Peter
Bommarito of the United
Rubber Workers Union announced four appointments
Wednesday to his Union's
international stall.
Bob G. Long · was ·named
organizational director, Ja.;k
Moye
assistant
to
Bommarito, Patrick Glenn as
assistant director of the
pension and Insurance
department, and Harold
Jenkins
as
special
representative lor education
and organizing.

preceded in death by one
daughter , Betty Blankenship,
three brothers and two
sisters.
She is surVived by her

husband, Hobart ; four sons,
Hobart J.. Portland; Virgil
L. , Tuppers Plains ; Lester

M., Athens ; Ke.nneth L..
Ravenswood, W. Va .; thr:ee

daughters, Opal Van Meter,
Gahanna;

Angie

Roush ,

Portland ; Jessie Boggs,

lamont , Iowa; two sisters,
F lnley ;
/lks. Mamm ie Hughes,
Hanoverton , Ohio ; 19

IoNs. Fred Hoffner,

grandchildren ; four great.
grandch il dren , and several
nieces and nepheiNS.
Funeral services will be
Saturday, 1 p.m. at Ewing
Chapel with burial In Morris

Chapel Cemetery . Friends

SAVE·

30%
SALE BEGINS FRIDAY,
FEB. 18TH AND ENDS
SATURDAY, MARCH 5TH.

may call at the funeral home

CINCINNATI (UPI)
Joseph J. Tenoever, vice
president of the Central Trust
Co. and a 1949 Xavier
University graduate, has
been ·elected president of tbe
Xavier Alumni Association
board of governors, school
officials announced Wednesday.
Frank B. Sommerkamp,
Jr ., persoMei manager of
Cincinnati Bell and a 1952
Xavier grad, was elected vice
president.

APPEAL DELAYED

CINCINNATI (UPI) - It
probably wl11 be at least six
months before an appeal is
heard on HusUer magazine
publisher Larry Flynt's
convictions of pandering
obscenity and engaging in
organized crime,
Ohio First District Court of
Appeals Presiding Judge
Raymond E. Shannon
estimates It wl11 be "six or
seven months" before his
court gets to the Flynt case.
Flynt, convicted last week
by a Hamilton County
Common Pleas Court jury,
was !reed on $55,1100 bond
Monday pending his appeal.

EVELYN LAMBERT
Evelyn lambert, 7,, Vinton
Route 2, died at 7: 30 p. m ..
Wednesday at Holzer Medical
Center .
Born Sept. 11 , 1902 In
Majestic, Ky ., to the late

Bring in your measurements • Select the Pattern

Isaac and Matilda Mounts

Wallace, she married
Thomas T. (Doc) lambert

and Color you like - We11 quote J1111 a price and

June 2, 1922, who survives

almg with nine children,
1/v's . Margaret Vickers,

you'll save 30%.

CHIEF ARRESTED
AMHERST, Ohio (UP!) chief
Arthur
Pollee
Koppenhafer and former
policewoman Carol
Ramstead were arre~t'ed
Wednesday on charges ol
theft in office in the theft ol
$2,790 !rom the department's
general fund.

CLOSED FOR

West Virginiilns guilty
in eight smte car theft ring
PARKERSBURG, W. Va. (UPI) - Two West
Virginians have pleaded. guilty to charges in
connection with a.vehicle theft ring spread over eight
states including Ohio.
Harry William Hess, 34, Weirton, pleaded gullty in
U.S. District Court to 13 counts of interstate
transportation of atolen vehicles and one count of
receiving and selling stolen automobiles.
John Shepherd, 24, Wellaburg, pleaded guilty to one
count of transporting a pickup truck from Washington,
Pa., to Weirton.
Hess could face at least 200 charges in coMection
with stolen vehicles, an FBI agent said. However, he
has entered into a plea bargaining agreement with the
federal government, and Judge Charles Haden delayed
sentencing pending presentencing investigations.
The theft ring reached into Ohio, Kentucky, West
Virginia, Pennsylvania, Florida, Virginia, New Jersey
and Wiscon~. authorities said.

ministrations

for

' 'mis·

management, confusion and
uncertain J~dership" of
these laws.
Tifie VI of the 1964 Civil
Rights Act- which llars
federal aid to schools or other
subsidized programs that
discriminate on the basis of

race, color or national
origin-involved Ferndale,
Mich., schools in 1972.
A veteran government civil
rights worker characterized
Califano's statement as the
strongest corrunitment to eh·
·lorcement of civil rights laws
to come out of HEW under
either political party.
Califano has sent personal
representatives to Texas and
Arkansas to see if six school
districts "are still ripe lor
cutoffs,'"' a government
spokesman said.
The two representatives,
lawyer David Leeman and
civil rights staffer Frederick
Cioffi, were in
the
Southwestern states this
week to update Information,
not to negotiate with the
school districts,
the

spokesman said .
" Lengthy delays can
undermine the purpose of the
civil rights laws and destroy
confidence
in
the
government's will to enforce
them," Califano said.
He ordered a review within
30 days of recommended fund
cutoffs for the Marshall,
and
Uvalde
Marlin
independent school districts
in Texas; and Sparkman No .
3, Marion No. 3 and Hughes
No. 27 school systems in
Arkansas.
The cases are at least one
year old and oome were
decided as long ago as 1973,
HEW said. Califano , a
lawyer, wants to determine
whether information in tbe
cases is fresh and legally
correct.

NO. 216

•

•

enttne

at y

e
VOL. XXVII

. FIRE TINGED LETTERS - Pomeroy Postmaster James Soutsby displays singed
pieces o( mall, part of some 200 pieces rec~ived by tbe Pomeroy Post Office lor distribution
to patrons. The mail was wet and partiaully rumed in the crash ol a plane which was carry.
ing it. Pomeroy Post Office personnel are drying the mail and in most cases putting it in new
envelopes for distribution to !he addresses.

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1977

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

. PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

•

Sharp price increases crimp economy

•

per cent in January while transfer payrnen\8 for veterans,
WASHINGTON (UPI)- Higher prices for food, shelter and eastern portion of the nation."
welfare recipients, unemployed and retired persons increased
"While
it
is
difficult
to
quantify
the
impact
of
the
weather
on
energy boosted the cost of living 0.8 per cent in January lor the
biggest increase in 18 months, the Labor Department said wages and salaries, fragmentary evidence indicates that ... 2 per.cent.
The Federal Reserve Board said factories cut back tbeir
about $2 blllion was lost," it said.
today.
usable
machinery and equipment about I per cent in January.
The department said workers lost another $1.9 billion
The federal agency also the average worker's spendable
Only
80per cent of the nation'g productive machinery was in ·
income was reduced by 1.1 per cent last month. The blame was because of an increa.se in !he Social Security tax base from
~e
,
the
lowest level since auto and tractor ind~try strikes last
placed on higher payroll and income taxes as well as layoffs $15,300 to $1~,500. .
By United Presslnternatloaal
fall.
The
unpact
was
felt
mostly
by
lower
and
middle
income
CHICAGO - 1WO CHARGES OF HIGH-VELOCITY caused by frigid weather .
explosives went off within one minute of eacholher early today
But the inflation survey still did "not reflect the full price workers. For instance, I!I'OSS income ol workers increased 0.5
at two downtown locations. No one was kllled. "We don't have impsct of the severe winter weather that affected the nation in
motive, we don't have people claiming credit lor it, we don't late JanW.ry," the Labor Department said.
The rise in January's Consumer Price Index was the biggest
have anything else," a police bomb squad Officer said.
The first explosion occurred at I :01 a.m. about 20 feet since the CPI went up 0.9 percent in July,l975.
The price index stood at 175.3 in January, compared to the
inaide an entrance to Olicago's huge Merchandise Murt, in a
Cloudy, chance of snow
public locker along a stairway to the second floor. The second 1967 base of 100. That means consumers had to spend $17.53
tonight
and Saturday. Lows
explosion, at the U.S. Gypsum Building, occurred ati :02 a.m. last month for goods !'(lsting $10 a decade ago.
tonight
in
the low 20s, highs
The surge in consumer inflation followed seven consecutive
just outside the personnel office on tbe ground floor.
Saturday
in the low 30s.
months of moderate price increases and was double the rate of
Probability
of precipitation
NAIROBI, KENYA - AFRICAN CHURCH leaders, the past lour months combined.
:lO
per
cent
today,
tonight and
Prices for virtually every food in the supermarket boosted
shocked by !he violent death of a black Anglican archbishop in
Saturday.
Uganda, say they fear It is part of an anti-Christian terror the food price index 0.9 per cent. The biggest increses were lor
beef, pork, cereal, baked goods, milk, cheese and ice cream,
campaign ordered by Ugandan President Idi Amin.
Canon Burgess Carr, genera! secretary of the All Africa vegtabies, fruits, coffee,. poultry and eggs .
By CHARLES P. WALLACE · "You mayrestassured that Sergei Kovalev , who he said &gt;
Fuel oil'Bnd coal increased 2 per cent, while nal\ll'al gas and
Conference of Churches, Thursday urged churches worldwide
MOSCOW (UP! ) - In an the American people and our has cancer, and four
to "isolate the government of Uganda lor its flagrant abuse of electricity rose 0.9 per cent.
unprecedented break with government Will conlinue our members of a dissident group :
For home owners, property taxes and mortgage intU'est
human rights. We ar.e alanned and terrified by indications
Soviet .:
protocol, President Carter firm commitment to promote monitoring
lliat the murder of the archbishop may be part of a campaign rates rose significantly whlle the cost of household services
compliance
with
the
human :
has sent a peroonal letter to respect lor human rights not
of terror Wlleashed against Olristiana in Uganda," Carr said. such as cleaning supplies contriruted to a major increase in
rights
provisions
of
the dissident Andrei Sakharov, only in our own collntry but
the services index.
international
Helsi
nki
·
pledging to fight for human aloo abroad."
The impact lor renters was less significaant, with rents
WASHINGTON- AMERICANS IGNORE the 55 mlle.per·
security
accords,
who
were
rights in the Soviet Union and
Carter aloo piedged to use
hour speed ·limit in suCh numbers that undermanned state increasing only 0.5 per cent.
other
foreign
countries.
his
"good qffices " to seek the arrested this month,
The department's survey of earnings was taken later in
pollee are confined to ticketing just ''the most blatant
In Washington, White
Carter's letter , sent release of what he called
violators." That is the conclusion in a report made public January and reflected the initial impact of record cold weather
House
Press Secretary Jody
through diplomatic channels "priooners of conscience."
.
Thursday hy tbe General Accounting Office- an investigative east of the Rockies.
Powell
announced Thursday ·
RACINE - Bob J.. Ord was and handed over by an officer
In the post the Soviets have
arm of Congress.
·
The Conunerce Department said Thursday consumer spend- given a new three year of the American Embassy, denied keeping ·political that Carter "very likely" :
· "We believe the widespread use of speeds over the 55 ing dipped'2 per cent in late January and another 3per cent in
would meet peroonaliy with ·
m.p.h. limit indicates the nation's motorists do not think tbe eady February. Earlier the department said last month was contract as superintendent ol appears . likely to further priooners and have labeled expelied Soviet writer :
the Southern Local School strain relations already similar · statements directed
fuel savings or the safety benefits of driving slower are worth the coldest January since colonial days.
District
at an annual salary cooled by the State at Moscow "unwarr·anted Vladmir Bukovsky.
the inconveniences," the report said.
The weakness in consumer spending patterns coupled with
Powell said Bukovsky was of ·$21,000 by the district Department's pu\llic defense meddling'' in internal affairs.
lower food prices had a moderaling effect on inflation, board of education in regular of dissidents.
schedul~d
to see Vice :
Sakharov said in his cabled
government economists said.
·
President
Walter
Mondale .
session Thursday night.
ProUdly displaying the reply to Carter that "defense
The cold weather alone, hased on Corrunerce Department
and
"We
are
in
the
process
of · .
The board approved bil!B White House stationery at a of fundamental human rights
calculations, cost the average worker about $25 in January. lor payment and hired Don news conference Thursday, is not interference iri the working it out ...so he can see :
Higher payroU taxes took another $24 from the worker's Smith as a regular bus the Nobel Peace Prize-winner domestic affairs of other the President. "
·
pockets.
Bukovsky
will
b~
in
·.
driver. The financial and said -the 'tetter was a "great countries but one of the most
The weather, taxes and a $3.4 blllion decline in dividends activity lund reporll and a honor" and the first he has lllajor international affairs, Washington next week.
paid by corporations beld the growth In personal income last girls' sectional basketball received from an American which cannot be separa\ed
month to $3.8billion for the lowest increase in 18 months.
IOumament to be held at tbe president.
from the basic problems of
Even without the taxes, heavy snow• and record~ow Southern High School were
Describing
human
rights
as
peace and progress."
COLUMBUS (UP!) -The burning western coal at rosts temperatures, personal income would have grown only f/. 7
approved.
The
board
adopted
"a
·
central
.
concern
of
my
Sakharov, a nuclear
Ohio Power Co . should refund far in excess of Ohio coal billion in January -or about one-third the rate for December.
a
personal
hygiene
policy
for
·
administration,"
Carter
physicist
who has been ·
'its electric customers $45 prices,'' BroWn said. ,
Corrunerce said wage and salary income grew slower in all students of the district and wrote Sakharov :
refused
permission
to travel
The
attorpey
general's
million according to state
January "due primarUy to the severe winter storms in the · authorized the junior high
abroad
on
grounds
he
Altorney General William J. !Uing was in connection with
school
boosters
to
hold
a
possesses
state
secrets,
Brown who filed a brief with a statutory mandated fuel
•
dance for junior high students
mentioned Carter's offer to
the
Public
Utilities adjustment clause hearing
on Mar. II at the junior high
receive him at the White
Coriunission of Ohio (PUCO) which ended in January alter
OOUdlng.
NOW
YOU
KNOW
House.
more than 1,500 pages of
Thursday.
The board discussed with
The Gonds of India
"Unfortunately, at the prehad
been
The Canton-based utllity, testimony
residents
attending
the
measure
distance
by
placing
sent
time I cannot foresee tbe
pari of the American Electric compiled. Brown's office
meeting
financial
problems
a
wet
leal
in
a
headcloth
and
possibility
of such a trip," be
A seminar sponsored by:
Power System, serves nearly · intervened' in !he bearing on
of
the
band
and
trans·
walking
until
it
dries
out.
The
said
in
the
cable.
Buckeye
Hills-Hocking
half a mUIIon residential behalf of Ohio Power's
·portalioo
to
various
events
distance
thus
paced
is
called
·
Sakharov
specifically
Valley
Regional
Develop· ·
consumers
in
663 residential consumers, tbe
for
cheerleaders.
a
"kos"
and
generally
asked
Carter
to
intercede
on
ment
District
will
be
held at
communities throughout state of Ohio and the attorney
BY PAMELA REEVFS
would
center
on
"how
to
raise
Attending
were
Supt.
,lrd,
measures
about
two
miles.
behalf
of
a
jailed
biologist,
the Senior Citizens Center in
Ohio. Brown accused Ohio general's office.
WASHINGTON (UPI)
money for tbe next lour Clerk-Treasurer ~da
Pomeroy Feb. 24 at 7 p.m. to·
Power of overcharging lts
President Carter'sdecislon to years."
describe the several Federal,:
Spencer,
board
members,
customers $11 .9 million;
withhold concUSSion bombs
Carter also scheduled a
$tate and Local Housing·
using western coal which has
from Israel reflects his visit to the Intert.or Robert Say.re, Dennie Evans,
programs available in Meigs
Jack
Bostick,
Roger
Adams,
resulted in excessive fuel
concern about the sale of Department, the eighth such
County.
Also, a report and •
and
Dallas
Hill;
four
prirr
costs of $18.5 mUlion;
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
"sophisticated and· highly foray be has made to federal
summary ol the problem •
improperly charging $7.4
cipals,
Larry
Wolfe,
Bill
Sunday through
destructive
weapons" agencies since taking office.
recognition seminar last
mUllan in repair expenses as
Tuesday, oold Sunday with
hls
chief
generally,
In Thursday ' s Bahr, Robert Beegle, James
Tuesday will be given.
,
fuel costs; and improperly a cbanee d. mow, mainly In
Adams,
and
representatives
spokesman says.
announcement on the
Jeff
Burl,
Deputy
Director:
charging customers ,4.2 the aonhea1tem section of
of
school
groups.
Press Secretary Jody concussion bomb, Powell
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Dr. about 395,1100 students, but an of Planning and Lance· million for testing low
the state. Hlgbl Sunday
Powell said Thursday all .U.S. emphasized Carter did not
James
A. Norton, chancelior increasing number of "over Decker, Housing Specialist,:
sulphW' western coal.
will be between %5 and 30.
arms Sales are under review view it "in any way as
"In light of the governar's
of
the
Ohio
Board of Regents, :&gt;li" students taking part in both of Bucj&lt;eye Hills, wut ,
Not qalte •• cold Monday
and concussion bomb&amp; in inconsistent
with
his
· call ID burn Ohio coal, we
said
today
the state's 64 what the regents term discuss the topics, "Federal :
and Tueaday will blgbs in
particular are being studied. commitment to the security
Aid in Housing Develop• : ;
found th~t Ohio's . largest
colleges
wili
have to alter' "lifelong learning."
the Sll Mollllay and be"We have no Intention to seD of Israel."
MRS. CARTER'S JOB
ment," "The State's Role In •
producer of electricity is
Norton
said
the
regents
their
approach
to
higher
twet!D 31 and 45 Tueaday.
WASHiNGTON (UP!)
these weapons to any · Powelll&amp;id Carter wants to
Housing
Production," and·- '
expected
a
$1.1
biliion
education
to
meet
the
needs
LoWI Will be In tbe leeDI · country ,"·he said. "We are at provide continuity in foreign First Lady Rllsalynn Carter's
·:LoCal
Action
that Impacti
liennial
appropriation
from
of
a
changing
student
body
Monday aBd In the !Os
this time reassessing ,tbe policy. rut that desire was outspoken interest in
'
Housing.'~
. .
the
Ohio.
General
Assembly
Tuesday.
ileed to retain the weapons in balanced, in the case of the· improving mental health over the next five years.
.CALLED TO DARWIN
The
seminar,
presentect
·
this
year,
about
80
per
cent
~
"There wiU be continued
our own inventory.'~
bomb sales, with the fact that care paid off Thursday,
The Pomeroy E·R Squad
through
a
grant
from
th.&gt;
'
that
paying
f~r
Instructional
The · President, whose Gerald Ford made !he · President Carter named his growth in enrollments for the
wu called to Darwin at 8:54
Appalachian
Regional'
,
II'Qgrams
in
the
state's
major
major pronouncements have conunitment shortly before wife honorary chairperson of ~xt four or five years, then
a.m. Friday for Mrs. Burl
centered
on foreign policy in leaving office and that it was the Commission on Mental there wlll be a dropall," said 111iversitjes and community Commission (ARC), Is open ~
PATIENT HELPED
W~ker who wu taken to
to the public.
and technical colieges.
The
Middleport recent days, gave his a. controversial move in tbe Health, and Mrs. Carter was · Norton at a news conference
ltllzef Medical Center. .At
There wUl be a. queslillfl :
Per-capita
student
spen·
quick to play down the in which he and Chairman of
t:2'1 a.m. Friday, the squad Emergency Squad answered attention to U.S. politics first place.
and
answer period foliowln(: .
ding
is
"substantially
below"
the Board d. Regents Marvin
went 10 the Hemlock Grove a call to the Rawlings-Coats today with ~ ~en•duled visit . He said other weapons "honorary" designation ..
the
presentation.
For further. :
the
national
average,
noted
Asked if she will be the real L. Warner discussed the
•ea, the home of Mr. and Funeral Home at 2: 14 p.m. to the Democratic National promised Israel, including power
Lance:: •
information,
call
Norton,
·
but
!hat
indicates,
beind the panel, she regent's new five year
M&amp;O tanks and 155-MM
Mi'a. Zlba Midkiff, for Thursday for VIrginia Ellis Corrunittee.
Decker,
Housing
Spectslllt,·
"We are getting a mot more
master plan.
Richard Hellman who was who became ill tbere. She , Aldes said the meeting, Howitzer cannons. will be revlit'd "! think if I want to I
at the Buckeye Htlls
for our money."
Norton
said
the
regents
c
•bn."
Then
smilinl{,
she
with
members
of
the
DNC's
solrl as srheda!~,.
taken to Veterana Memorial wu taken to Veterans
(614) 374-9436.
'
anticipate an enrolbn~nt of
;~•1 · 1&gt; ·•1 . "And I intend to.''
EXecutive Financ'tl Courx:ii,
Memorial Hospital.
Hospital .
~
'!(
I
~

Protocol ignored
inS arov note

Utility should refund

$45 million says Brown

Housing ::
•
semmar
planned

Regents want colleges

VACATION
WAlCH FOR
OPENING DATE

to switch approaches

• All draperies Individually cut lo
your size.
• Made in Standard &amp; Deluxe fullness.
• Ma.de lo any le_!lgth.
• All seams S11'9ed and .-lvage
removed.
• 4 inch permanent Beeckram tops
• Blend stitched side hems.
.
• 5 inch botlom hems. Blend stitched.
• All prlng patterns matched.
• Valances available lo match.
• Cut orders available In all ft~brlcs.

ANNOUNCING
We Will Be Open
"'~ESt-y
q)
~
for TheSe•
a: D&amp;IIT (il
Startin&amp; Friday
FDIDS

~

See us at the Pomeroy Bend Bridge

But he said he will try to
reduce
reporting
requirements for public
elementary and high school
systems.
''We must now restore the
discrimination laws, or integrity of HEW'.s civil
unprepared to · assure rights programs .and execute
compliance with laws barring those laws, and all other civil
rights laws, with energy and
sex discrimination.
compassion," Califano said
. Thursday.
He pledged "forceful and
lair" enforcement and criticized recent Republican ad·

his desk.
Califano atso threatened to
withhold federal funds to
schools unwilling to file
federal reports necessary lor
enforcement
of
anti·

Israelis won't
get big bombs

MEIGS tHEATRE

Adolph's Daily Valley

By CRAIG A. PALMER
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Health, Education and
Welfare Secretary Joseph
Califano Jr., restoring tbe
largely abandoned threat of
sch.ool fund cutoffs to Ioree
desegregation, says he will
act swillly on any sud!
.recorrunendatlons that reach

Ord has
•
•
rruse
m
salary

af!er 7 this evening .

ALUMNUS ELECTED

Califano prepared to enforce
school desegregation again

Weather

late Ad and Angie Aumiller
Sarson , she was
a Iso

FebruaiY 18th

Davis Insurance Service

·

Memorial Hospital.
Born Dec . 20, 1900 to the

Fire rages .

CONTINUES

I

husband, Fran cis .

three accidents

SHOE
SALE

~-----A;~a -D~~~h~----! Firing range proposed

·'

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

office: ·

,,

�f

_ ~TheDiilySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O., Friday, Feb. II, 1m

· ~s,,.,,J

ed
off US payroll

Hussein y

~y

THOMAS JOSE,H
: ACRCJ6S
%Indisposed
J ~ ..cit-and- 3 Hebrew
letter
.blue
. •Ar)nor
I Detail
. O:Wibged
5 Fiend
'See
7
' .l.*the
er
Down
i! ., lah"
7 With 6
: daYs
Dolln, in
(2 'wds.)
style
It Flbn
B Climbing

· Yesterday'• Answer

U1ITERY WINNERS
Th11 Mek'l wlllliDC Ohio
U.ltery namben:
Pot 0' Geld
Three-digit number
Zl9.

Three-dl!fl number
95'1.

Flve·diJllt number
72857.

Double Play
Tbree-dlstt 1111111ber
Ill .

WASHINGTON (UP!) - the published report would but did nothing to stop them.
Flve·dlgll number
en
..
ceJordan's
King Hussein was have on Middle East
Neither the CIA, Ford nor
15 Ptrched
plant
30519,
goldsmith
popular
secretly paid millions of negotiations.
members of the Ford . Slr·dlgll number
18 CBtnip
9 Guitarist
zo
SlUy
Kern song
._
administration
told Carter of
A
high-level
delegation
19 Reserve
21 Stratwn
37 Short
uullars by the CIA during a
Paul
Z7Z711.
tile
payments,
the
Post said.
20-year
l!«iod
spanning
the
from
the
Palestinian
: fo~
11 SharpWlnalug eolor - green.
23 Airplane
airplane
administrations of five Uberation OrganiZation was
Payments first were made
: (al&gt;b&lt;.J
shooter
formation
flight
rresldents, the Washm
' gton scheduled to arrive in Jordan In
1957 during
the
Z2 SOuth
13 Gluts
(abbr.)
38 "- Got
...
administration
of
Dwight
D.
almostly
immediately
after
African
IS NativeZ5 "- Bias"
Sixpence"
Post reported today.
Eisenhower,
tbe
newspaper
Vanee
completes
talks
willl
. plknl
%7 Dog pound 39 _ Patch,
President Carter, who did
born
said. Initial payments
2{ qapital of
famous
not learn of the arrangement Hussein.
Israeli
32 Reliance
"apparently ran in the
The
newspaper
report
,
trotter
until a few days ago, has
34 "-o'clock
16 Over
ml!Uons
of dollars but they
written
by
Watergate
ewan
scholar"
40 "We - not ordered the annual payme~ts
wds. )
were
sharply
curtailed to the
reporter
BOb
Woodward,
said
2
is AS sept. 24, 17 (2
wds
)
used"
slopped,
the
newspaper
satd.
(
Skoal or
am
ul have seen Ule report/' Hussein
$750,000 level last year," the
. ·
received
1¥9ls
cheers
35 Bemg (Sp.) 41 Nevectheless secretary of State Cyrus approximately f75(),000 last newspaper said.
r.-""'1::'-,.:--r.-"T.'"Vance told reporters in year from the CIA both for
Ftmds first were given
Hus"''~ wben he was 21, the
intelligence
information
he
1--+--+-+---l
Beirut,
Lebanon.
"I
will
bave
~ Prospect.
no comment, absolutely no provided the United States Post said, at a time when
ive frat
was
heavily
coment."
and to pay other informants. Jordan
member
dependent
upon
the
United
Vance
meets
with
Hussein
The
fwlds
also
aUowed
CIA
zt 1\Wmer's
States
and
Hussem
had
little
Saturday
as
part
of
a
sixagents
to
operate
freely
in
path
' By JEFF Wil80N
money
to
bankroll
a
lifestyle
nation
Middle
East
tour
in
Jordan,
the
reJXJrt
said.
30-Likely
LOS ANGELES (UP!)
search of an enduring peace.
President Ford knew about which won him the reputation
u :Trawler's
Singer
Mickey
Gilley
of
a
playboy.
~+-4--1 It was not known what effect the payments, the Post said,
·equipment
dominated the 12th BMUal
33 Preachment
Academy of Country Music
!r.-++-+(abbr.)
awards Thursday night ,
34 - Gide
taking six prizes including
36 Pentecostal h::--+--+-~+--+­
entertainer of the year and
festlval
male singer of the year.
:(2 wds. )
Gilley's "Don't the Girls
4z'TwnbleAmoco and Conoco.
By EDWARD K. DeLONG
and by the end of 1976 tbe Look Prettier at Closing
down shack
In 1974, the report said, combined rate of (l'oduction Time" took country song of
WASHINGTON (UP!) 43 Ogle
The Interior Department's there were 188 nonprodudng was about 60 per cent of what the year honors and his hit
41 Frank
"Bring it on Home" was
..-t-+-+-1-'--1 report on natural gas gas reservoirs in the five its potential.
45 Prindple
producers off the Louisiana fields with a total757.3 billion
"Production at each field named single record of the
OO,WN
coast stops short of saying cubic feet of gas. It said only could be increased (to the year.
I Testing
they deliberately helJI gas off 19 of th'ose reservoirs had maxlmwn rate) if new wells
Album of the year went IAl
place
the market. But it points in been put into production by were · drilled into currently "Gilley 's Sliloklng" and top
that direction and has the end of 1976.
producing reservoirs," there- touring band of the year went
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It: triggered a new probe of all
SQme held out of production port said.
to Gilley's Red Rose Express.
AXYDLBAAXJI
originally had been scheduled
Gulf Coast producers.
Andrus said the report
Crystal Gayle was named
II LONGFELLOW
Investigators found to go on line in 1975 and 1976, "raised more questions than female singer of the year and
Billie Jo Spears was voted
One letter simply stands lor another. In this sample A Ia evidence that almost a but did not , the reJXJrt said. it answered."
By
December,
counting
new
trillion
cubic
feet
of
gas
lies
"Right
now
it
would
be
most
promising female
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc Single letters.
behind
'
"
shut-in"
wells
in
just
additions,
there
were
Z25
difficult
for
me,
or
for
anyone
singer.
Moe Bandy took the
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different
the five fields that were shut-in reservoirs with 981.5 without a more complete most promising male singer
studied. It also fowtd that the billion cubic feet of proved report, to stand before you award.
CRYPTOQUOTES
and say gas was wiUfully
flow of gas from active wells gas reserves.
The top group of the year
in
three
fields
had
dropped
withheld,"
he
said.
"If
it
has
in
three
of
tbe
Production
was
Conway Twitty and
MJZ RLJ.A ZF DSK OYM MJZSYIK
sharply since J'l74.
four fields had dropped as been willfully withheld, we'll Loretta Lynn. George Jones'
One member of the survey much as .26.3 per cent a year come down very, very hard." Possum Holler won nonMJZL
QXLND
LKYE
EYZRS - YD team suggests "economic in· since 1974, the report said.
touring band of the year
centives"
-the hope for gas
bonors.
Ji.JZLNKEQ . - KDSKE
UYLLMGJLK price decontrol - might lie
On the Shrine Auditoriwn
,:iesterday's Cryptoquote: ONE .POUND OF LEARNING behind the recent reduced
stage
to host the !JO.mlnute
UIRES TEN POUNDS OF COMMONSENSE TO APPLY gas Dow and failure to put
ceremony, which will be
- PERSIAN PROVERB
reservoirs into production .
televised by ABC-TV nation·
0 11111 KJ.q J'eaturu SyDdteat.•. lac.
Interior Secretary Cecil
wide Feb. 24, were Patti
Andrus released the prellmi·
Page, Pat Boone and Jerry
Ollie Atherton has been Reed.
nary report Thursday and
real busy making quilts in
pledged to "come down very ,
The Academy's Board of
,
spite of the bitter cold Directors presented Roy
very hard" on any producers
weather (too busy to com· Clark with. the Jim Reeves
shown In the full -scale
plain) .
investigation
to have
Memqrlal
Award
for
The lU in the community furthering international
-~
deliberately withheld fuel.
Howard
V.
McCoy,
-~
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18,1977
"I don't think anyone in the Geraldine McCoy to Frank are a bout as usual, despite acceptance of country musie.
Carter administration is W. Porter Jr., Parcels, Olive. the wintry weather and the
· . :31&gt;-My Three Sons 3; Partridge Family 4:
Named No. I radio station
well are on the same dally of the year was KLAC of Los
Emergency One 6; Partridge Family 8; Fllntstones
-·
willing to take a conciliatory
John Young, Edith Young
..~, IS.
approach to this question," to Frank W. Porter Jr., routine.
Angeles, and for the 12th
: !i's : ~Big Valley 3; My Three Sons 4, Brady Bunch 8;
Mr. and Mrs. Harold straight year, the Palomino
Andrus. told a news Parcels, Olive.
· ~ Mister Roger~ 20.33; Star Trek IS.
Swartz and family of
conference.
Carl 0. Taylor, Patricia L. Willlanurtown, W. Va. visited in Noeth Hollywood, Calif.,
·oii:31&gt;-Adam-12 4; Nws 6; Family Affair 8; Elec. Co.
Saying
he
will
act
after
the
- ~, 20,33; Adam-12 13.
Taylor to Dell W. Will, his parents, Mr. and Mrs. was named country night
new
investigation
to
force
C6 : ~News 3,4,6,8,10,13,1S; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
Chester Wilt, N 'h Lot 259, Hobart Swartz, since the last club of the year.
faster
production
·
where
Presenters included Carol
.J!f31&gt;-NBC News3.4.15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6:
Alfred news were sent in, Olanning, CoMie Stevens,
necessary, Andrus estimated Middleport.
. • CBS News 8,10; Vegetable Soup 20; VIlla Alegre 33.
Almeda Sheets, Cecil T. before the big snow came.
full production from shut-in
: ;t=~Truth or Cons. J; To Tell the Truth 4; Bowling for
Joe Campanella, Abe Vlgoda,
Sheets
to Dale E. Harrison,
. •' Dollars 6; $128.000 Question 8; News 10; To Tell the
wells covered in the initial
Anson Williams, Donny Most,
Marlene F. H~rrison, Par~ Truth 13; Mv Three Sons IS; Ohio Journal 20;
study could supply some 98
Claude Akins, Le Var Burton
POUCE BACK
•
· ·• Marshall University Report 33.
bllllon cubic feet of gas a cels, Bedford.
and
Ren Woods.
WARREN,
Ohio
(UP!)
Paul Rosenberg dec. to
· ~:31&gt;-Porter Wagoner 3; Gong Show 4; Candid Camera
year . This winter's gas
About
101)
police
oflieers,
on
-~ 6; Treasure Hunt 8: MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33;
shoctage is estimated at some Lucille M. Rosenberg, Cert. strike in· this noctheastern
. , Andy Williams 10; Name That Tune 13; Pop Goes
of trans., Middleport.2 trlUion cubic feet.
Ohio city of 63,000 since
the Country 15.
The 5211age preliminary
· · : ~Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,1S: Donny &amp; Marie 6,13. Code
Tuesday, voted Thursday to
report covered Tiger Shoal,
·
R 8,10; Washington Week In Review 20,33.
obey a judge's order and CARLA PICKED
Vennillon 250, Grand Isles 43,
'!11.:»--Chlco &amp; the Man 3,4, IS; Wall Street Wee~ 20,33.
return to work.
ROSEMEAD, Calif. (UP!)
~ : ~Rockford Files 3.4.15; Movie "Dirty Mary Crazy
East Cameron 271 and SQuth REP. PETI'IS BE'ITER
The officers went on strike
A former
Ford
Larry" 6,13; Sonny &amp; (her 8, 10; Documentary
Marsh Island 48.
GLENDALE, Calif. _(UP!) Tuesday, shortly alter about administration official was
·
Showcase 33; Lowell Thomas Remembers 20.
Those fields, representing - Rep. Shirley Petits, R- ~ 90city Hrefighters walked out elected Thursday to the board
. :31&gt;-The Way II Was 20.
10 per cent of all Gulf of Calif., . will need several late Monday In a wage of directors of Southern
Mexico production, are weeks at her home to dispute with city cowtcU.
California Edison Co.,
-~0:00-{;)ulncy 3,4,1S; Hunter 8,10; News 20; Paul
operated
by 10 oU companies recuperate from an ulcer
Trwnbull County Common replacing one wlto joined the
Nuchlms 33.
and feed pipelines serving the condition, the congress· Pleas Court Judge Donald Carter a!Mlinlstration.
0:31&gt;-Lock, Stock &amp; Barrel 20 .
areas hardest hit by the woman's (l'tss secretary said Ford late Wednesday ordered
:
I :QO-,News 3,4,6.8.10, 13.15; Monty Python's Flying
Former Secretary of
winter gas crisis. The Thursday.
- ~ Circus 20; Black Perspective on the News 33.
.
the police back to work.
Housing
and
Urban
k 31&gt;-Johnny Carson 3,4,1S; SWAT 6, 13; Movie " Kiss
companies are Exxon,
Mrs. Pettis, 52, had been ' The city has offered its Development Carla Hills
Me, Kill Me" 8; Mary Hartman 10; ABC News 33.
PeMzoll, Tenneco, Texileo, hospitalized here for five · safety forces an aMual pay replaced Warren Christo·
2 : ~Movle "The Vengeance of Fu Manchu" 10;
Phillips, Union, Shell, Gulf, days.
hike of f936, only half of what pher, who resigned to become
'
Janakl 33.
they
have demanded.
deputy secretary of state.
· 2:41&gt;-Mod Squad 6; Ironside 13.
. : ~Midnight Special 3.4.1S.
:41&gt;-News 13.
:31&gt;-News 3.
2:31&gt;-Star Trek 3; Movie "Paranoiac" 4; ARA's Sports
:-ovle " The Big Heat" 3.
World 6; Wally's Workshop 15.
:31&gt;-Movle "Looking for Trouble" 3.
3 : ~Pro Bowling 6,13; Urban League 10: We're
:~Saint 3.
Flghtl"'l lor Your ·Lite 15; Soltr Energy 33.
3:31&gt;-Marshall Basketball Highlights 3; Tennis 10;
Book Beat 33.
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 19,1971
4:C»-College Basketball 3,4, 15,6; Bit With Knit 33.
:~Sunrise Semester 10.
4:31&gt;-Wide World of Sports 13; VIewpoint 8; Anyone
for Tennyson? 33.
:Jl)-Matters of Life 6; V Classroom 8; Treehouse
Club 10; Kentucky Afield 13.
5:~Space : 1999 8: Sports Spectacular 10• Calch~3J
: ~Saturday Report 3; Dusty's Treehouse 4,8; U.S.
ByllwreaceE.Lamb,M.D.
DEAR 'READER •• I
S:»--Consumer Experience 33.
. Farm Report 10; Gilligan 13 .
DEAR
DR.
LAMB
Does
suspect
that your doctor gave
6 . ~News 3,4,10; Golf 6,13; Lawrence Welk 8; God
7:31&gt;-Bullwlnkle 3; Children's Theatre 4; Valley of the
Ascrlptln (aspirin with you Ascrlptln because the
Ha.s the Af1Jwer 15.
Dinosaurs 6; Dusty's Traehouse 8; Man from COS I
Maa!QX) have anything to do aspirin in It helps prevent
6:31&gt;-NBC News 3,4, IS; CBS News 10; Lilias Yoao &amp;
10: Oddball Couple 13; Sesame St. 20.
You 33.
with minor strokes - S)llleeh blood clotting. Sctme 11J1a11
: ~Woody Woodpecker 3.4, IS• Tom &amp; Jerry Mumbly
6, 13; Sylvester &amp; Tweety 8,10.·
7.-uslc Hall America 3; Lawrence Welk 4, 15; Hae
mix-ups? After my flnt such strokes are cauaed by !IDiall
Haw 6,8; $128,000 Question 10; Let's Make a Deal
attack, the doctor told me 1 parts of bloodclal8 breaking
13; World War I 33.
8:31&gt;-Pink Panther 3.4.15: Jabberjaw 6.13: Clue Club
was too old for a ~ off &lt;1. larger clots In arteries
8, 10; Mlstef Rogers 20.
7:31&gt;-Dolly 10: In Search of 13; Jeanne Wolf With ... 33.
to accept. Then he gave me In the neck and seeding the
9:~Scooby - Doo, Dynomutt 6, 13; Bugs Bunny.Road
&amp; : ~Emergency 3,4,15; Blansky's Beauties 6,13:
A.llcriptin a;tbout c:Jwtaing brain. The aspirin helps to
Runner 8; Bugs Bunny &amp; Friends 10; Sesame St. 20.
MMy Tyler Moore 8, 10; Childhood 33,
the
subject. After readlnl the prevent tile clota and may
IO : ~Speed Buggy 3,4,1S; Tarzan 8.10; Onca Upon a
8:31&gt;-Fish 6,13; Bob Newhart 8,10
Aacriptln
libel I auume Ills prevent strokes. A naUonal
C!ualc 20
9 : ~vle "Rio Lobo" 3,4,1S; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13;
to repllce Tylenol for my ar- ltudy Ia under WIY 1111 the
O:JO Monster Squad 3,4,15; Kroftt Supershow 61 13;
Allin the Famlly8,10; Nat1011al Geographlc33.
thritil.
benefita and dangers ol using
9:»--Grammy Awards 8,10.
Batman 8, 10; Zoom 20.
1: ~Space Gliosis, Frankenstein Jr. 3,4,15; ShazamIO :oo-Most Wanted 6,13: Piccadilly Circus 33.
My father's family died o! aspirin for this JlOI1IOIIe and to
lsls 8, 10; Consumer Survival Kit 20. ·
II :GO-Movie "The Court-Martial of Billy Mitchell" 6:
1111jor llrokes. My mother pmellt heart attacks.
News 13; Janakl 33.
1:31&gt;-Bia John, Little John 3,4,15; Superfrlends 13;
had minor slnlkea, the yTylenol does not have lhil
11 : 15-News 3,4, 15.
Big Blue Marble o: l.haracterlillcs of Learning
she died at nearly a hwtdred. effect and II not used for that
11 : 31&gt;-News 8, 10; Movie "Trunk to Cairo" 13; PMA
Dlllbllltln 20. .
So
I lilly 11m! yean to 10 yet plll'JI08e. SQ I IUip8Ct your
Pulse 15.
·
12:._Lend of the Lost 3,4,15; Hot Dog 6; Soap Box
and
wllb to nold Cl'lppliJ1I doctor wu doinl JllCIA than
n ·;s-Mary Hprtman 3; Saturdav Nlaht 4.1S.
Derby I; Fat Albert 10; Action News for Kldt 13;
strokes
and llll1llJiy.
. jlllt replacing Tylenol with
Crockett's Victory ldrdtn 20.
12 - ~Peter Marshall 8; Movie "In Harm' s Way" 10.
Too 111111Y docton 111'8 too Alcriplln U I pain reliever.
12:15-Mary Hartman 3.
"
12:»-ARA's Sports World3; American Bandstand 13;
I : ~ABC News 6.
buly to bother with older peoI am lllldlng you The
Muggsy 4,15: Soul Train 6; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10;
I:15-Sammy &amp; Co. 6: Movie "The Incredible Twopie. Could you tab lime to Health lAlla' number U,
Ark II I; Crap Game 20.
Heeded Transplant" 13.
.,
1:00 Movlt "The Ww W-eon" 3; Movie "King Kong
help me avoid a crl!lpUng . Aaplrln and Related
1:45-News 3.
vs. Goclzlllt" 4; Way Out Games a; Movie
stroke? I do not I1ICIIll MedlciPea 10 you can learn
2: 15-Movle "Sirocco" 3.
"=wn" 10; Wr~llna 15; Infinity Factory 33.
· reading about llrokelln your IIIOI'e about the effecta &lt;1.
2:45-ABC News 13.
1:31
ot View 6: Children's Film Fntlval 8;
colllliUI and WGuld areaUy ~ u- common medicines
4
3: 30--Movle ' House of Strangers" 3.
Ntllt Glnlr.tlon 13; Zoom 33.
preciate
any help you cane beyond limple pain relief.
S:._SIInt 3.
:....Col.... llatU!belll; DutciDors with J ullus Boros
give
me.
I
am~ alone.
~ Ia a limit to how lll8l1)'
6 : ~813 .
6; Ir-Ide 13; M..k City USA 15; Nova 33.
It .Leg dary .., On

••tclr

Gilley

~~.)

takes 6
•
pnzes

Gas price ripoff seen

Meigs

:'.l

~'rl"

Alfred

Social Notes

Property

I
.
.
L
e eVISIOD og

Transfers

I

I

3-The Dally Senlinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Feb. 18, 1977
•

Glenn's views
given_to PUCO
By J.R. KIMMINS
:
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Olfl·
c1a1s of the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio wlU be
the next wibtesses before the ·
Ohio
Senate
Energy '
Committee now investigating
Obio's energy crisis.
ThiD'sday, sen. John Glenn,
J).Qhio, took the stand to
outline short-and. long4enn
solutions on the federal and
state level to the energy
crisis.
One answer, stressed Glenn
in a 42-minute opening state·
ment would be federal inter·
venti~n into intrastate gas
supplies to stop what he
termed ''political football"
by states withholding gas
from energy deficient areas.
"We've developed social
patterns in this country
wbere one part of tbe cowttry
does the industrial work of
the land while other parts
have been energy suppliers,"
said Glenn.
"I believe this ... shouid not
be permitted to happen.
Millions of jobs literally hang
in the balance.
"It 's jilsl not realistic to
permit some states to wither
on the vine while others keep
gas in their states."
He said that situation was
logical when there are
different pricing structures
for interstate and intrastate
gas.
"We're going to bave to
look at this as a national
energy problem and solve it
with national legislation. And
if that means we have to
make federal law applicable
to energy sourees within a
state-to the intrastate gasthen that's what we have to
do ," he said.
The senator said the
federal government could
also assist energy-starved
states if President Carter set

Cowens' vigor returned

mandatory production rates
for natural gaa welli on
federal lands.
He said Carter could do
that by implementing a
section of the Energy Policy
and Conservation Act paased
by Congre&amp;l in 1975.
"Under Its (l'ovialona the
President can mandate that
wells on federal land produee
at maximum efficient rates,"
said Glenn.
"Or, by declaring the ex:lst·
ence o! an energy supply
emergency, be could go a
step further and go beyond
the maximum ef!lclency
ratestoanevenhlgherfiow,"
he added.
"The amounts involved
may be great or could be
marginal. But I consider it
vital that the poblic know that
every tool...ls being used to
get gas to Ohio, for jobs and
schools, as well aa homes.
"These provisions (of the
federal law) have never been
tried before, but there has
never been a crisis like this
one," be said.
Glenn said there were lots
of reasons for the energy
crisis and cautioned the
committee "not succumb to
the easy temptation of telling
the people that one bogeyman
created this situation."
Glenn said conservation
should be made a national
"ethic" and that building
standards should be written
to
reward
energy
eonservatlon.
"For the short term-five
to eight years- ! am
pessimistic. We milsl tighten
our belts to keep people
employed. This wlll be a time
of testing for everyone.
"Over the long term, as
alternate fuel sources
become available, things will
lmproVI!," co~cluded Glenn.

Reservations due
for F AC dinner
'

Reservations for the
French Art Colony annual
dinner meeting should be
made by Saturday with a call
IAl Donna Nibert in Gallipolis
at 146-4672 or by calling 4461819.
.This annual meeting will be
held at Oscar's Restaurant In
Gallipolis on Thursday
evening, Feb. 24. The social
oour will be at 6:30p.m. with
dinner following at 7 o'clock.
Reservations are $5.50 per
person.
A unique and delightful
(l'ogram will be featured,
entitled "Shakespeare on
Women," presented by Kezia
Vanmeter Sproat, Ph.D. and
Bronwyn Hopton, both of
Colwnbus.
Dr. Sproat Is a recognized
authority on Shakespeare,
ooth an author and lecturer.
Mrs. Hopton, a member of
the Theatre Faculty of the
Worthington Public Schools,
is well known throughout
eentral Ohio. She had a
lrilliant career as a theatre
major at Ohio Slate and has
appeared ·in
several
professional productions
since receiving her Masters
&lt;1. Fine Arts in Acting from
Ohio State in 1971.
The Women's Resource snd
Polley Devel~ment Center,
a non·prollt organization to
increase economic and

educational opportunities for
women, sponsors this
(l'ogram, which is supported
in part by a grant from the
Ohio Program In the
Humanities, a state based
program of the National
Endowment
lor
the
Humanities.
The French Art Colony
annual meeting is open to
both ~mbers and guests,
and wtll mark the opening of
the 1977 membership drive,
chaired by Barbara Epling.
The theme for Ute one month
drive for members Is " Paint
the Town French."
1HE D.U.y 8II:NTINEL

DEVf11'Dl '10 1111:
IN'IZUII'OF
MEJG8.MABON AREA

aD!li'I'EIIL TANNEIIDJ.
be.l!tl
ROBERTHOBPUat

~=:..bvdly

Publlnl
Comaoy, 111 Cowl 51., - . , ., OliD
167811.
om.. ...
2156. Edll&lt;&gt;rial
~ IIM117.
Second ella pootqe poJd o1
Pomoroy, Oillo.
by The Oblo Vlllty

N1Uonal

~

ii)WW

laUve Wml : Grtflltb ~. II&gt;
c., BotUnetll and GIUaalier Dl:v.,
7$7 Thinl Ave., N.,. York, N.Y.
111117.
~on n..,, DeUvend by
can1er whore ovliloble 7$- per
weei. By Molti Roulawbote""""" nat ovollable, Ooe moatb
lUi. By llllllln Olio ond W. Vo.,
Ooe Yeor 112.111; Sis . f11.50; Tbret monthl, 11.01;
Elaewhere 111.00 - : Sis lllGidbo

UUO: Three months, f7 .$11.

=e:.rce

lncludel &amp;mdly

(

DR. LAMB

'

-.

r

1

I

recovering from a sprained
back and he scored tl.e
Celtics ' last six points in
regulation time and added six
JXlints, two assists and three
rebounds in overtime as
Boston gained its fifth victory
in the last six games.
''This is the first good game
he has had ... where he was
wheeling and dealing,"
Boston Coach Tom Heinsohn
said. "When we need him he
plays real well."
Cowens was helped by ~m
Laeey's sore knee , which
allowed the Kansas City

Today's

Sport Parade
By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Editor
NEWYORK (UPI)-Going, going, gone! In the shape it's in
now, hockey doesn't need a benefactor so much as it needs an
auctioneer because a couple of more teams look as if they're
about to go wtder and as soon as they do, they're going to take
a whole league along with them.
Twoyears ago, it was the World Football League that folded,
and last year it was the American Basketball Association that
went out of business after being absorbed by the National
Basketball Association, so it doesn't lake any great effort for
you tD determine who 'II figure in tbe next merger.
It will be between the National Hockey League, which is 60
years old, and the World Hockey Association, barely five years
old, only they won't refer to it as a "merger" because of the
legal complications involved. Tbey'll caU it an "expansion," as
the NBA did when it added four of the ABA's teams, an
"absorption," or something else along those lines.
Atlanta and Pittsburgh in the NHL and Phoenix and In·
dianapolis in tbe WHA all have had serious finandal problems
this season . There has been one easualty already in the WHA
wbere the Minnesota Fighting Saints quit fighting and slinply
disbanded. Another WHA team, !be Houston Aeros, is
struggling to survive right now and so are the Cleveland
Barons in the NHL.
No one with tbe Aeros got his pay check last Tuesday except
the three Howes, Gordie, Mark and Marty. The fact they were
paid wasn't so much beeause they demanded llleir money, but
rather because the other Aero players felt that would keep the
Howes' from breaching their contract and that in turn would
demmstrate to Houston's hockey fallS how much that meant to
their t.eannnates.
Cleveland's situation is even more critical.
The Barons were losing money when they were the
California Golden Seals, owned by Charlie Finley. The league
bought the team for f6 million from Finley, butlfyou think he 's
laughing now, you're wrong because he hasn't gotten paid yet. •
Mel Swig, a San Francisco hotel man, bought the team and
kept it in Oakland last season, moving it this season to
beautiful Richfield Coliseum, which lays smack in the middle
ol Nowhere, Ohio, between Akron and Cleveland.
When the franchise was moved, tbe players were told their
troubles were over, they were set for two years, and tbey felt
so good about that, many of them went out and bought homes
in the area. Capacity for Richfield Coliseum Is 18,544; the
Barons have been averaging a little over 5,000, so figure it out
for yourself.
·
In Ute two seasons he has had the team, Swig has lost nearly
$3 million. Two weeks ago, he met with his players and told
them he didn't want to fold the club and that he'd go for
another half million if they'd go along with him part of the way
and take a quarter-million salary deferral. Most of them said
okay. Four or five said no.
Before Wednesday night's game was the first time tbe
Cleveland players had been paid since mid.January. That was
back pay. Now Swig owes the players their salaries for the past
two weeks and has twomoreweeka to pay them or else they all
beCOille free agents. The players met Thursday trying to
decide what to do.
SQme came up wllh the Idea of wearing black arm bands on
Utetr wtiforms for Friday night's contest with the Colorado
Rockies mourning the death of the team although technieally it
Is still breathing.
To show you the unimaginable turn this whole thing is
taking, the coach &lt;1. the Colorado Rockies is Johnny Wilson,
who used to handle the Cleveland Crusaders in the WHA last
season. When they didn't draw any people in Richfield
Coliseum, the Crusaders moved IAl St. Paul and became the
Minnesota Fighting Saints, and after the Saints couldn 'I make
It, Wilson was named coach of tbe Rockies, who were the
Kansas City Scouts last year until they moved to Colorado
because they weren't making any money.

center to play only 19 Rockets 113, Spurs 99:
minutes. Kings' Coach Phil
Houston converted . three
Johnson alternated baakup steals by Ca lvin Murphy into
Jim Eakins, who fouled out, six points during a 14-0 spurt
and reserve· forward Bill midway through the last
Robinzine in Lacey 's place. quarter to put the game
The Kings ted, 114-112, with away . The Spurs trailed, 8226 seconds left when forward 81 , with 9:31 left, when the
Scott Wedman grabbed. an Rockets began their tear.
offensive rebound . But Rudy Tomjanovich topped
instead of passing the ball Houston with 24 points.
outside and lettlng the ~ Bucks 99, Warriors 97:
!IOCQnd clock run , Wedman
Swen Nater hit a baseline
attempted a shot and missed. jump shot at the buzzer IAl win
Cowens got the rebowtd.
the game for Milwaukee. The
Then with 14 seconds left, lead changed hands II times
Cowens hit two free throws to m the last five minutes.
tie the score and force the · Golden State's Phil Smith
overtime.
topped all scorers with 28
John Havlicek added 22 points. Brian Winters led the
points for Boston. Ron Boone Bucks with 24 and Bob
and Brian Taylor scored 22 Dandridge added 18.
points each to pace Kansas
City.
Elsewhere, it was Buffalo
112 Cleveland 103, Houston
MILWAUKEE (UP! ) 113 San Antonio 99, and
The
Milwaukee Brewers
Milwaukee 99 Golden State
Thursday
unconditionally
97.
re
leased
second
baseman
Braves 112, Cavaliers 103:
Gary
Sutherland,
obtained .
Adrian DanUey scored 17 of
last
swnmer
from
Detroit
in
his game-high 28 points in the
,
the
trade
for
Pedro
Garcia
.
second half as the Braves
Sutherland,
32,
batted
only
broke a two-game losing
streak and won their first .217 in 59 games with Mil·
game under new Head Coach waukee. His release reduces
Joe Mullaney. Danlley also the Brewers roster to 39 for
spring training.
had II rebowtds .

NEFII

SEOAL FRESHMEN
TEAM
W L P OP

GallipOliS

A

2

2AA

2 18

Logan

"

2 285 235

Wellston
Jackson

6
l
3
1

"
J
3
2

Mei gs

o

TOTALS

s

420 .408

2"2 229
263 2-15
129

139

UJ

252

·::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:::·:·:::·:·:·:·.·:·:·:·:·:·.·:·:·.·:·:·:·: :·.·:·:-:::.

SEATILE (UP! ) - Seattle
Seahawks running back Sherman Smith underw ent
success fu l knee surge ry
Thursday at
Swedish
Hospital in Seattle .

By GENE CADDES
UP! SJXJrts Writer
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Tbe
Ohio North-South High School
All-Star Football Game is
back home in Canton's
Fawcett Stadiwn after a
disapJXlinting two-year run in
Ohio Stadium.
Beset by weather problems
- scorching heat the first
year and a driving rainstorm
last swnmer - th.e games at
Ohio State lost money both
years for the sponsoring Ohio
High School Football Coaches
Association.
"! have no doubts we'll
have a crowd m Canton,"
said Terry Ross, head coach
Jit Cuyahoga Falls and
president of the association.
"The pre-game sale at
Fawcett Stadiwn was always
around 9,000 or 10,000, " said
Ross, "and that pre-sale
would financially make it
go."
At Ohio Stadium, with its
80,000 plus seats, pre-&lt;!8le was
almost non-existent, with
those planning on attending
the game not worrying about
getllng a good seat at the
gate.
Faweett, however, seats
only 17,000 and Ross says
"our goal is to .fill tbe
stadium."
The game, which matches
squads from the northern and
southern parts of the state, is
scheduled lor Friday, Aug. 5

at 8 p.m.
But, the association has set
aside a rain date just in case
motber nature deeides IAl do a
repeat of last year's deluge
which turned the Ohio
Stadium Astroturf into a lake.
Putting more pressure on
the already financially hard·
hit association was the
cancellation
of
PeMsylvania's Big 33 Game ,
which for the past five years
had matched top players
from the Keystone and
Buckeye states.
"That is going to hurt us
financially ," said Ross . "We
made $6,000 over and above
expenses from that game last
year."
In past years, some of the

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Joe
Morgan, two-time National
League most valuable player,
has sent a message to the
Cincinnati Reds : Don't look
for him when spring traming
opens March 2 if he hasn't
come w contract terms by
then .
"I won't be there if I'm not
signed," the Reds' second
baseman declared Thursday.
If the club renews his old
contract, which it can do
March 10, Mo~gan said he
will report to camp then but 'will stop contract talks.
"If that happens (contract
renewal) , then that's it." he

was the case during the
many years the game was
held in Canton previously, a
three:ctay coaching clinic is
scheduled in conjunct10n With
the game, with some of tbe
lop collegiate coaches in tbe
nation already lined up w
speak.
"It 's almost identical to the
way it was before," said ,
Ross. "I think thls rs gomg w
bring the coaches back to the
game.''
Lou Venditti, former coach
at Canton Lmcoln and now
As

pt

IOI1Ie

fllllllr .....

111 eYWit tbl1 cr1pp11nc 11nJU
for many yean, I am 1110

aendlna )'011 The Hel1th 1M-

Jie live very p!'liductlve llvett let nWDber H, 1111....,.1o
lor years, u In the cUe of Rive you men lnfCII'IIIatiGIL

your mother. Adenlaer of
Gennany wu.UU
. dllnc:ellor
.

,.

And lilly you 11V1 to be allllldred and enjoy Mdl day.

• il

said. "I will not continue
conb:act negobations once
I'm in uniform. I'll have only
one thing in mind ... get
myself ready IAl have an even
better season than last year."
That statement porn ts up
the JXlssibility of Morgan, the
National League's MVP m
both 1975 and 1976, playing
out his option
Morgan complained the
Reds ''have had four months
to sign me.' '
"Since we haven 't come to
terms , I can't see how the
preces can fa ll mlo place
Within a few days or a week,"
he said. " If the club had

..'

with us!
PlANNING A PIZZA PARtY

faculty ma nager at McKinley
and newly-elected secretary •.
trea surer of th e coaches
association, IS servtn g as
game director .
So uth
players
from
Southeastern area arc Rocky
Jorgenson, New Lexi ngton;
Dave Moore, South Point ;
Jim Turner, Lancaster , and
Doug Donley, Cambndge.

THE ALL NEW

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

Inter national

lop players in Ohio turned
down invitations wplay in the
27 22 10 64 248 223
North-South Game to take F l 1nt
28 21 7 63 262 225
Saginaw 264:2 9 1 237 219
part m the Big 33.
But, this year (before the M us kegon '}'] 25 10 5d 226 235
Big 33 was canceled), the Port Huron
'l'l 30 5 49 198 131
coaches association put m a
South
new rule to prevent such
W L T Pt s. GF GA
Tol edo
27 25 6 60 235 255
action.
The North-South coaching Col um bus 21 25 12 56 233 238
staffs were given names of Dayton 'M 27 3 55 23 7 230
players to select their squads. Ft Wayne 23 2.5 8 54 214 23.4
The new rule stated that no
Thursday's Result s
boy eould pass up the North- No g am es scheduled
Today 's Game s
SQuth game and play in the Port Huron
at Musk~go n
Saginaw at Tol edo
Big 33.
ton at Co lu m bus
"We did it this way Day
Fort Wayn e at Kala mazoo
pucposely because we want to
Saturday 's Games
yton at Fo rt w ayne
make the North-South Game Da
Fl 1nt at Muskegon
the primary game m the Columbus at Port Huron

state,' 1 ~aid Ross.

Toledo at Sag1naw

Black &amp; OecksP®
e

C HWI

/ DEWAL.T

Mr Friend ly

10'' DELuxE
POWER SHOP

WARRANTEDFORASLONGASYOU
OWN THE CAR...as low as...

No. 7744

Wellston 43 Ga ll ipolis 39 {ot)

BUFFALO, N.Y. (UP!) The Buffalo Sabres said
Thursday goaltender Gerry
Desjardins, struck in tbe
right eye by a JX!Ck a week
ago, wJil be examined at tbe
Masaachuaetts Eye and Ear
Infirmary In Boston to
determine the extent of the
injury.

REGULAR 329.95

ROYAL CROWN
BOmiNG COMPANY

ANNOUNCING
We WiD Be ()pen
For The SeiDl
Starting Friday
februaiJ18th

Adolph's Dairy Valley
See us 1t the Pomeroy Bend Bridge

INCLUDES:

__,,

llGSTAIID

Metal stand for steady

~

IOOKLn

I

63-pogt boo;. let showiQI
best usooe ot power shop.

1 ·r.~- .
"

POMEROY
CEMENT BLOCK CO.
THE DEPARTMENT STORE OF
BUILDING SINCE 191.1

Rodial orm sow feotures big,
2 HP motor and hllldy on-top,
up-front controls. Blade cuts a
full 3" deep. Quick-stopping
manuol broke.

Our best battery for
ultimate electr·ical
car service life.
Resists overcharge
damage. Has tough
plastic container
and oil treated ·
neg. plates.

..
,,
. ,,
' ·'

PHONE

Hockey L eague
United Press lnt r.r na tiona I
W L T Pts . GA GA
Kalamazoo

Logan 48 Athens 45 r

such u walldul _.. dly.
This may llretdl your yean
ol enjoJment and help JOU

.

21 21 1726 17.21

Wellston 39 Wa ver ly 32

many other cultures people
cmunonly live from llO to 100
years of age. In fact,, the
average lifeapan of the flnt
IeVen presidents of the
United States aftet: George
Washinl!ton wu 81 years. '
The beet things that YOII
can do to avoid stroke~ are
the same things we do to
avoid heart attadtB. Controll·
ing blood ~ to
be c1 areat importuce. You
can do lhll by keeplnc your
weight down. ~ on a diet
moderately low In fat and
choleaterol, don't IIIIIGke and

his hitting but becauae he fll4 : .
a very important apot for Ill'.
at third base."
Madlock exuded optlrnl.mi.
lllat he would have a blC year~
"I feel 1 can hit in any ban,·
park," he said, when ukecL
whether things might be. different for hlm at :
Candlestick Park than they: , ,
were at Wrigley Field,.- . ,
generally conaldered kinder • ,
to hitters.
: ~'
"I don't mind Astro -Turf '" ~ '
he added. "I led the league 1t.t :
hitting on artifldal turf, and I' , like a big park like ·
Candlestiek becauae I !ike to:
spray the ball around."
:
During the past three years .
with the Cuba, Madlock hif ,
.313, .354, and .339. He batted· ...
made me a realistic offer at in 54 runs, then 64, then 84. . '
the end ofthe season, l'd have
But the 1'&gt;-11, lll().pound .
been signed already for a lot Madlock, said he cannot;
less than I'm asking now." change the Giants from an
Morgan, considered by aiso..-an to a winning club by' •
oome to be baseball's best all himself.
aro und player, reportedly
"One guy can't do that, but
earned slightly mo~e than I will do everything I can to·
$200,1100 last seaoon
help the Giants win."

indicated that Thursday 's
signing came after friendly
negotiations. Nobody would
comment on terms, but
Madlo ck reportedly had
sought $1.25 million from the
Cubs over a five-year span.
Grants owner BOb Ltirie
was beaming when he
introduced the soft-opoken
Madlock to the local press.
"! like the way he handles
himself, both on and off tbe
field . I think he can do more
for this ball club than
Murcer, not only because of

Joe has deadline for Reds

League results:
Wellston 43 Waverly 36 IJan .

In his 1108 ana was VIgorolll
wttll he died of pneumonia. In

SAN FRANCISOO (UP!)The San Francisco Grants
have signed twO{ime batting
king Bill Madlock, to a liveyear pact estimated to call
for approxi.motcly $1 mrllion.
Madlock had only arrived
in town Wednesday after a
makeor-break trade that sent
Bobby Murcer to Chicago.
One key to the swap was that
the Cubs had not signed
Madlock IAl a contract and the
Giants had not rome to terms
with Murcer.
But a Grants' SJXlkesman

HALF

6)

of these you or anyone should
take. Women should avoid
any of these medicines before
childbirth. Others who want
more lnfonnation on these
medicines can send 50 cen1s
and a long, stamped, self·
addresaed envelope for the
lasue. Write to me in eare of
this neW~P&amp;per, P.O. Box
lli61, Radio City StaUon, New
York, NY10019.
I hope that doctors are not
taldng the attitude that older
people like yourself don't
MMi help. I know many 1ood
neurolotlllts who do - pa.
tients in c:onsuliiUon, like
yourself, to 1'1!80lve what the
bulc problem Is and usually
send them bldt to the family
doctor.
It II a mlslake to UIIUIIe 1
pii'DI will only live a few
men years beca111e of the life
npecllncy !actor. Some peo-

Giants sign Madlock

Big Prep game returned to Canton

Frosh standings

Waver l y
Athens

Aspirin does not cause strokes

r

By GREG AIELLO
UP! Sports Writer
Dave Cowens, wbo took a
leave of absen!:lJ for two
months because he could not
motivate himself to play
bssketbaU, seems to have
gotten his enthusiasm back.
Thursd~y night the 6-foot..!l
center scored a season-high
33 points and grabbed 22
rebounds to spark the Boston
Celtics IAl a 126-125 overtime
victory over the Kansas Crty
Kings at Kansas City.
It was Cowens' third game
since his return alter

STA RT IN MARCH
The
Mrlgs
Lnral
F.lrmrntary Schonl s'
basketball program has
bt•rn slow in starting its
season due to the limited
use of buildings. It Is In·
leoded thai play start early
in Marrh and continue
thrnu~h April, a cco rdln~ to
John Arnott.

$
12-VOLT
F·22FM
EXCHANGE

FO REV ER BATTERY LI MITED WARRANTY
Put.. the FOitEVER tuuter y in you r car. lf 1t ever f~~o ii R lb hold a chttrlle for
you In tha t car, J.'irl!llto ne w11l n:phu:e it FHEF. w11h fWlof of puu:hall! ,

JlrUV Idin" th e ~altery h11.11 nut l~oe n d Rnlllj(et\ ri m~ ln 11~1rlt'm t or ahu11e
1111Uin e \UMJ el(d udecl.

Commerdttl or

Pomeroy Home &amp;Auto
BRAKE SERVICE-FRONT END ALIGNMI;NT

�~---P~---1

t- The Daily Sentinel, Middleoort-Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Feb. 18, 1977

.'

Peace in sight in ·pro football

By SAM FOGG
:t:JPI Sperll Wdler
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Peace was In prospect on the
Jll'O football labor front today
with the owners am! the
players tentatively agreed on
~ collective bargaining pact
featuring a new draft system
of college stars and more
money and lteedom for
veterans.
The
NFL
Players
3• Association
and the owners'
Management Council
3 Withheld details of the new
''agreement in principle''
until the union members and
i team owners can study and
vote the proposals. But the
response from both sides
sounded like a sigh of relief
that a three-year negotiating
dispute would end as soon as
the contract was ratified.
·'JuSt coming this far is the
best news in pro football in
the last decade," Peter
: : . Hadhazy, general manager of
. . . the Cleveland Browns, said
from the management camp. '
"I think the fans and players
will benefit from it. It will
make the sport more stable,

too."

Bell signs to attend OSU

Driessen
expectmg
o

Massengale is still red hot

big year

From
the
player
CINCINNATI (UP!) standpoint, Jim Bakken, Danny Driessen's dream
veteran St. Louis cardinal becomes reality in a couple of
placekicker , commented: ; weeks.
"We just had too much to lose
When _the patient, soft.
to be destroying the · spoken 25-year.old WTives at
cont inuity of professional, the Cincinnati Reds' spring
which the dropping of the training camp, he will be·
draft would have caused us." preparing for his eighth year
Ed Garvey, executive of pro ball.
director of the union, who
But it will mark the first
made a joint announcement Iinne Driessen has started a
season the way he has always
wanted it - as the Reds'
regular first baseman.
"I'm going in confident,"
Dri~n declared Thursday.
"No doubts, no worries."
That's Driessen's way of
preparing for the pressure he
knows will come. After all,
he's replacing the tradedaway Tony Perez, the goodnatured, unassuming Reds'
Coll ege Ba~ketball flesulh
BY United. Press International
star of a dozen years that
Ea st
Cincy fans seemed to adore
. Bloomfield 99 Nyack 80
'Catho l ic 81 Mt St . Mar y's 77
even more than Pete Rose.
J;. .w. Post 87 H artwick 77
"What can I say about
.Gl assbor o St . BO Ram aPO 71
replacing Tony? " Driessen
.H am il ton 104 Rochest er 71
-+&lt; ing 's NY 87 Phil a Bibl e 50
wondered . "I know how
'lafayette 79 F ordham 65
popular he was. I hated to see
t.IU 89 CCNY 87
Notre Dame 80 Manhattan 7tJ
him go too, because he was
.. NY Tech 88 Bk lyn Coli ~9
the type of guy you liked to be
Pratt 66 dohn JCl y 6'1
:51 Fr an NY 72 St. Mich l's 59
around.
·St Peter ' s 99 Monmouth NJ 98
"But," he added softly,
• ·st . Thos . AQ . 104 Com::rdia 54
"every ball player wants the
..Scranton J9. SuSQUehann a 62
.• :.5hepher d 80 Domi nic an NY .49
chance to play regularly.
, . ..syracuse 70 Rhode Island· 47
This is the way my chance
·T hie l 61 Be tha ny W .V9 . 58
• "Wheeling 90 w L ibe r ty 77
has come and now I have to
-•
South
make the best of it."
~ Albny 51 Ga . ~02 M. Brown ~6
Ever since popping out of
• Cit adel 78 Baptis t S.C. 74
- Clark 7tt Tu skegee 71
Cincy's
Tampa-Three
~ - Ersk i ne 68 Cha r leston 57
Riverslndianapolis farm club
·L.a . Tech 81 Arkans as St . 72
M CN C'ese Sf 71 Lama r 64
circult.and joining the Reds
Montev allo 71 S1i l lman 51
in 1973, Driessen has been the
)~e wb erry 113 USC Spr tn'bg 61
.st Mary's M d 93 Geo M ason 86
club's biggest Jl'edicament.
· Th i el 61 Bet hany 58
He was too good a hitter to
• To wson Sl. 86 Salsbr y St . 68
sit on the bench, but too poor
• Va .. C'weal th 97 R . Mor r is 70
• Va. Union 147 Bowie St . 71
a fielder to play anywhere but
•
M itiWtSt
first base. And Perez was
.Illinois 73 trd ia na 69
- Joh n Brown, 103 Mid -Am N.:l z.
established at first.
. 81
.
So, in a move the Reds are
" Michigan 91 Iowa 80
~ M i n n es 0 1 a 99 Michiga n 51. .J7
counting on t~ deliver
Purd ul'! 90 Oh io St . 61
dividends the next decade,
SI U 93 New M exico St . 64
Perez, obviously with more
: SW M issour i 71 Eva ngel 70
• Wic hita 51. 91 Br adley 88
good
years behind him than
~
Sou1 hwest
ahead, was unloaded to make
• Alc or n 86 Ar~c - P ine B lu1f 70
:Ark Tech 63 Harding 61
room for Driessen.
• •• (('(\t Ar k 70 Sthrn Ark , 69
Predicts Anderson, "I think
# Hen dr ix 96 Ark. CoiL 81
Danny will be one of,the real
· • H Payne 69 East T~;.c:as 67
· : M! lsaps Co li. 71 LeTrneau 70
top hitters jn the le~gue when
• Midwester n 81 McMu rr y 73
he starts playing every di!Y ."
· . No Texas 110 No . Ca r . A&amp;T 80
: Phi ll ips 75 OklahOma S&amp; A 66
" It feels good 'going to
.. SW Louisiana 99 Texa s-Ar l 87
spring
training knowing I'll
~ Texas A&amp; I 55 SW Texa s 46
.. Tex as A&amp;M 79 Rh;e 61
be playing first," Driessen
West
said,. adding, "and playing
• • Ar izona 64 Br ig ham Yo ung 67
regularly."
• East . MonL 6r Wes t . M ont 6d

®

ByJlMCOUR
UP! Sports Writer
LOS ANGELES (UP! )
Rik Massengale, the pro golf
tour's hottest item, can't
explain it but then again he's
l)Ot sure he wants to try. ,
·" Everything, " said the

Eastern Local
honor lists
are

BASKETBALL

•
·

"
•

• Fu llrtn St. 68 Fr esno · st . 54
: : Geor ge Fox 97 Wh itman 92
. .. Lng Bch St . 75 San Og o St . 73
. . Or eCJ)n 60 So uthern Cal. 51
'"· Redla nds 87 Cl r mnt -Mudd 85
: . San Jse St . 74 ca t-Sta Bar . 71
• • Sant a Cla r a 89 P epper d in e 81
· • UCL A 89 Or egon 51. 76
· ..
, Utah 71 Ar izona St. 72

Local Bowling
Thursday Rejects.
Week of Feb. 10, 1977
Standinqs

Team

W. L.

Team A

'•

38 18

Tea m6
31 25
Team 5
29 27
Team 1
26 30
Team 2
2432
Team 3
20 36
High team 3-games Team 6 718 : Team 4 715 :
Team 1 702.
High team game - Team 1
264 : Team 6 257 : Teom 2 250.
High lnd . 3-garnes - Patti

SYMPATHY
ruMERS
TENDER MESSAGE
OF COMFORT

~

Williams 424; Charlene Doczi

416: Laura Carpenter 392.
High Ind . game - Patti

IC/.i!

William s 154; Charlene Ooc:zi

152; Patti Will iams 148.

992-5560

•

announced

EAST ME lGS -

The

Eastern Junior and Senior
High School honor rolls for
the second nine week grading
period are being announced .

Spe n cer ,

Tracv.Sa yre . Ji m

Eighth -

Bahr. Richard Bearhs. Carla

Chi chester , Laura E ichinger ,

Ton y Kenned y, April Parker,
Mela nie

Root ,

B r e nd a

Werry ,

Ba r ba r a

Wel ls,

Tamm y

Sta r che r ,

Marcy

Ruc ker , Greg Wigal. Ray

Se~C. son .

Fr eshman Becky Ed·
w'a rds , Ter esa Spenc er , Todd
Bi!S se! l, Laur i e Pr ove nce ,

Lita Young , Sheil a White.

Da wn Sor ·

Balderson , Sherr i Starcher ,
La wrence Poo ler , Ja,.,es
Ryan , Lauri Ma tthew s,
Lowell Rid enour. Joe Boyl es,
Terr y Brown. Howie Dor.st,
Sherr i Bu chan,an , Shir ley
Benn ett I Su san Hannum
Vi da Weber , R u sty Wigal.
Junior D a v i d Brown,
Becky Win don , Dor ot hy
Run yon, Sheil a Buchanan .
Karen Fick, Sonia Bea ver .
r

Kei th Brooks, Mary Mora.

Tammy Pitzer, Rocky Van
Meter , Diana Massar , Lori
Young , Joe Kuhn, Dennie
Rucker .
Senior Jeff Hed r ick ,
Ter esa Buckley , Carol yn
Harper , Merlin Evan s, Jayne
Smith, Jul i Whitehead , Kevin

Sa rton, Susie Goebel , Pam

Cong r ove,

Tere sa

Debbie Conn oll y.

Carr ,

Sports Briefs
Press
By
United
International
CIUCAGO (UPI) - The
Chicago Cubs Monday announced they have signed
contracts from slx more
players, including pitcherS
Ray Burris and J.Uck
Reuschel, to bring their tntal
tulder agreement to 26.
Both Burris, 15-13 last
season, and Reuschel, 14-12,
signed multiyear contracts,
the Cubs said. Others signed
were catcher George
.Mltterwald; shortstop Mick
Kelleher and pitchers Ramon
Hernandez
and
Mike
Krukow.

ST. LOUIS PARK; Minn.
(UPI) - Tom Reed, defenseman for the Minnesota North
Stars, underwent surgery ,
Monday at Methodist

•
•

..
..

•

iO

0 0 0 0 0 0 00

'3.60

·•.an

0 •••••••••••••

0 •••• 0 ••••••••••• 0 •••

.' .

. .
.; ' ' ·. :: . ..

.

O.;. 0 0 O 0 0 0 0

1,. ..........................
1 1/~ '.'•••• • ••••
•7.20
2': .. ...
'9.60
All in 4 x 8 sheets

•
•

O O O 0 I j

'

, '

' '

'

• •

"

I '

DISCOUNTS AVAILABLE FOR CASH
AND QUANTITY Pl;RCHASES

BAUM TRUE VALUE
J

985-3301 ~

...,..

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

· ·1 ·

.

Nl

\.ollptam, am referrmg your
den, Karen Probert, Debbie case to a termite ex·
Spencer , Cindy Pit zer , Kay terminator.''
Sophom ore· -

CHEST£R,O.

25 27 6 56 176 200
21 '19 10 52 184 208
18 31 9 45 176 213
M innesota 13 30 15 41 17'2 234
Van couver 16 37 6 38 160 230
Wales Conference
Norris Di\'ision
W l T Pts. GF GA
M ontreal
42 7 10 94 285 138
Pillsburgh 25 23 10 60 182 184
Los Angel es •20 27 11 51 186187
Washlngtn 16 ,32 11 44 161 237
Detroit
15 34 8 3·9 146 21 0
Adams Divls.ion

Hospital for a fractured right
cheek bone.
"The operation was .a success," said Dr. Frank Sidell,
team physician.
Reed was injured last
Wednesday in the (:olorado
Rockies
game
at
Metropolitan Stadium when
he stopped a shot With his
face. Dr. Sidell said Reed's
jaw will be wired lor about
six weeks but that he
JI'Obably will return to play in
about two weeks.

~

I Us ••.

Cl e Ma x H ayes 72 Cle Lin .
co ln · W 58
Hawk e n School B3 Ber ksh lre
7A
P al n e5ville
Harvey
67
Fairport 1.1
P i~ e Ees ter n 92 Min f ord 37
Ric h mon d H t s .5 8 Beachwo od

-

NEW YORK (UPI) - New
York Ranger high-scoring
rookie riuht wing Don
Murdoch wiU be sidelined 10
days to two weeks with a torn
tendon in left ankle, the NHL
club announced Thursday.

!)ear

Pts. GF GA

makes a donation to charity in each person's
maintains we have too much already and this
t.achel the children generosity.
.
Since the charities don't tell us how much she gives, I have
. a bunch she does this In get by cheap : a donation of one dollar
per penon ill an easy out, (We all give her expensive gifts, and
she can alford to reclprocale.)
Perh&amp;pa I'm judging her wrong, but she's proved her
chintzlnesa before In many ways.
Don't you think she should at least send toys to the
youngsters? - NEEDS A "CARE" PACKAGE TOO

WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind.
(UP!) - Purdue took a 10.0
lead before Ohio State got its
first point on a free throw by
Larry Bolder , then went on to
hand the Buckeyes their ninth
straight Big Ten loss, 90-61,
Thursday night.
Saturday 's Games
Purdue had the height
NY Rang er s at NY Islander s
Ph iladelphia a t Montreat
advantage with 6-foot-10
Pilt sburgh at Toronto ·
center Tom Scheffler and 7Butta to at Detroit
Chica_go at Minnesota .
loot center Joe Barry carroll
Washrngton at St , Lour s
and
took the ball inside, with
Atlanta at van couver:
the two centers accounling
Boston at Los Ange leS
for 16 of the Boilermaker's 37
first-half points. Ohio State,
whose largest man is &amp;-foot.lJ
reserve center Mork Hetz,
WHA Standings
d
• Bv United Press International manage 24 points the first
east
hall, never getting closer
W L T Pts . GF GA th
Quebec
34 21 1 69 146 20d
an f'tve .
Cin cinnati
28 26 2 se 154 20B
Purdue, which had seven
lriO ianapls 26 26 6 sa 196 217 players in double figures,
~fr%~~~~d g ~ ~~ ~~
spurt"ed away at the
x.Minnesot 19 18 S 43 136 129 i beginning. of the second half,
~·~\ Pts. GF GA but Ohio State - which is in
Houston
J2 11 6 10. 208 160 the cellar of the Big Ten with
San Diego o3 23 2 68 200 l93 a 2-11 record - managed to
Winnipeg 31 12 2 6d 257 201
·· .
Edmonlon' 23 32. 2 •a 159 20'1 close tn 49-35 before Purdue
calgarv
21 29 5 •r· 173 189 ran off nine straight for a 51i- ·

But what I think won't cha~e a woman whose charity
doesn't begin at home.
At least "help" organizations are benefitting, h()JMlfuliy
more than you suspect. - H.
Dear lielen:
You aSked readers to share their parsimonies, stating that
you were a catsup bottle rinser, yotD'Sell. I guesa everyone has
his or her little economies, and how true your words : they dale
back to the way we were raised. They also make us feel
worthy.
I wouldn't throw away a pin, even if it is bent, probably
because of the old adage, "Seta pinandpickit up, good luck to
you all day." I also ssve my Christmas cards and make gift
tags from them the following year. My latest is to cut out the
decorative parts and glue them on plain white boxes, making
very fancy containers. - ANOTHER PARSIMONIOUS
PERSON

n

;n

PnoeniM
22 33 2 46 194 ?.61
M·Team disbanded
Thursday's Results
New England d Phoenix 2
Wi nn ipeg 4 Indianapolis 2

35 8dvantage.

Dear Helen:
Here are my Hsavers":
I put junk mail to good use. Almost every piece comes with
an addressed, unstamped return envelope and paper with
blank sides.! pasted a gununed file label over the address, add
postage and reuse the envelope. Then I use the blank side of the
paper for scratch, or cut it uuw•l for memo pads:
When mtpantyhouse give up, I trim the elastic and use it
to replace tired elastic in panties. The old bose themselves can
be used to stuff toy animals or pillows. - SAVER .

~11:)

• Edge Kleoner cleans that

lilt tough Inch along the
bsoeboordo
• Brilliant headlight .
Reg. Upright

-\ ..- \o':'\

Dear Helen :
1scoop out the last ·. ~ t of egg white from the shell, with my

~f~;.;~~~~~~usedtndoit.Couldn' tsavemuch,

)~

$89.95~

~

Social
Calendar

Tool Reg. $19.95 ~
Total Reg.
~
$109.90

M014D54EL

NOW
ONnY
L.

$7995
INCLUDES 6 PC.
ATTACHMENT SET

INGELS FURNITURE
Middleport, 0.

106 N. 2nd Ave.

Phone 992-2635

L-----~--------------~

Friday ' s Games
Birminqhem at New England
Sa n Diego at Houston
Cincinnati a! Cal gl'!ry
Winn ipeg at Edmonton

Saturdty's Games

Quebec at Cincinnati

MARTI~SV!LLE,

Va.
(UPI) -A record $80,180 in
prize money will be at stake
in the March 20 running of the
annual Dogwood 500 at
Martinsvllle Speedway,
officii!Is announced MOI)day.
H. Clay Earles, speedway
president, said the prize
money is more than f1 ,000
higher than last year.
Posted awards are divided
equally at $40,100 lor each
race. The NASCAR national
champio!llhlp doubleheader
consists of a 251Hap late
model spOrtaman race and a
251Hap modified event.

Phoenix at Indianapolis
San Dit'QO at Hou., tcfl

For all your-home
Entertainmeni and
Appliance Needs

DOXOL
SIERVICE

RID,ENOUR'S
TV &amp; Apf, lia nee
Gas Sirv ce
Racinf', Ohio
Chester, Ohio

WINTER PLANT SALE
3 Days on~ Fri., Sal, Sun.

complete
horses

'•

Purina• Horse Chow• Checkers•
horse food packs all the nutrition
horses are known to need under
normal conditions. Each pellet provides protein, vifamins, minerals,
energy and roughage-all blended in
the proper amount and balance. You
vary the feed ing amount according to
the way you use your horse. Fed as
directed. Purina Horse Chow .
· Checkers delivers the level of ·
nutrition recommended for horses
.of every breed and size by the
National Research Council.

We are making room for Spring Plants .
Foliage and Cacti in pots and hanging
baskets must go.
Sale 35c
3" Pots, Reg. 50c
Sale 60c
4112" Pots, Reg. 75c
SaleSI.OO
6" Pots, Reg. $1.50
6112" Hanging Baskets, Reg. 52.75 Sale 51.75
10" HanginO Baskets, Reg. 55.50 Sale 53,75
Combination Foliage 13"1!6" .
Sale u.oo
Reg. S5.oo
Glo11inias in bloom S2.50. Many more
Specials.

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE
992-5776

Syracuse,

o.

planned by council
. CHESTER - Plans lor
draping the charter for Lucy
Kim were made when
Chester
Council
323,
Daughters of America, met
at the hall with Mae McPeek,
rouncilot, in charge.
The charter will he draped
in memory of Mrs. Kim on
March 1and all members will
wear white. At that time a
silmt auction will be held by
the good of the order coml!littee and practice will he
held for the rally.
The deaths of Mrs. Kim and
Howard Caldwell, Sr., were
· noted and a thank-you note
read frill\ the Kim family. It
was reported that Hattie
Frederick has been moved
. from Holzer Medical Center
to the Pleasant Hill Convalescent Center. Box 3:14,

When you bUy

one 50-lb.

Contribution
rruJde for party

· A contribution WaS voted to
Miss Erma Smith, ejghth
district conununity service
chairman, to be used lor a
SUNDAY
party at the Athens Mental
MEETING TO establish Health Center on March 17,
Meigs County Council on when the Ladies Au:xiliary of
Alcoholism, 1:30 p.m. Sunday Lewis Manley Post 263,
at Trinity Church, POmeroy. American Legion, met at the
Richard Davis, Ohio Dept. of home of Mrs. Ernest Bowles
Health,
division
of in middleport.
alcoholism, and Sharon
Mrs. · Allen Hampton,
Elliott, director of Region 8 Jl'eSident, Was in charge Of
Council on Alcoholism, will the meeting with Mrs.
be present to ~onduct William Smith, national
meeting with Rt~~~. W. H. security chairman, assisted
Perrin serving as local by Mrs . Frank Washington,
chalrman. All persollll con- giving a report. Mrs. Bowles
cerned . with any alcohol presented the jegislature
problem Invited.
. program giving aspects of
CQUNTY-WIDE prayer veterans affairs and she
meeting, Hiland Chapel, 2 reported that the legislative
p.m. Sunday ; Glen Bissell, bulletin has been ordered.
clasa leader.
Mrs. Ruth Brown spoke on
VFW SfEWART Post 9926 veterans
affairs and
will hold a bean dinner rehabilitation and Mrs.
Sunday, 2 p.m at the VFW Hampton conducted a quiz on
trailer, Mason, W. Va.; all the State of Ohjo. Mrs. Will
111\lmbers and guests Invited. Winston, chaplain. reported
that six get-well cards had
MONDAY
· been sent to shut-ins.
RACINE Elementary PTO
A bulletin from the eighth
Monday at school at 7:30 p. district · president, Mrs.
m. Boy Scotts in charge of Arnold Richards, was read
Jl'ogi'Bm.
and Mrs. ·charles Saunders
gave a report (J1 the veterans
Christmas party held at
Cltillicothe and on Christmas
gilts given a veteran by the
BIRTH ANNOUNCED
group. A report was given on
Mr. and Mrs. Ron Cowan . the unit's Christmas party.
are Middleport are announc- !Wund-robln get-well cardl
ing the birth of a son Samuel were signed to be sent tn Mrs.
Jon at the Holzer 'Medical . Harrison Bentley and Arnold
eenier on Feb. 9. The baby Richards. Mrs. Bowles
weighed 1i1J: potulds, live · served refreshments. The
ounces. They have another next meeting wiD be held
. Ryan three Grand· March 8 at the home of Mrs.
100
~~~ a~ Mr, ~nd Mrs. Rlth Brown in Gallipolis.
' James . Brewer, Middleport;
Mrs. Betty Whltstlne, ColumFIREMEN, NOTE
bul; Mrs. Guy Cowan, MI.
Boys between the ages of 12
· Alto, W. Va . Great-.
and 18 who are Interested in
._. grandparentl are Mr. and
.
. Mrs. L. M. Brewer, joining the Racine Junior
Fire Department are asked to
· Gallipolis; Roland Terrell,
meet Saturday al 7 p.m. at
PooleroY, and Mrs. Blaine the home ol Jack Lyons, Sr.,
• Cowan, Eleanor, W.Va.
Third Street, Racine.

" .

Purina Horse ""~···
Checkers. (Get details

New arrival
Special friends
enterltlined with
vakntine party

Drive still underway

~

(';

Apublicfund drive for Mrs.
Flora Bailey to be c,ontinued
through Feb. 28 now has a
total of $414.
The money is being raised
to pay on a hospital bill which
Mrs. Bailey, Middleport ,
incurred over her insurance
covered in a fall over a year
ago. The first $100 raised in
the fund drive was to have
been paid on a special shoe
and brace prepared for Mrs.
Bailey by a Columbus orthopedist. However, recenUy
the Crippled Children's
Society paid the $100 which
was the cost which Mrs.
Bailey was to have paid.over
her insurance coverage.

YOUR

GIFT/

FLOWERS ·
For All Occasions

Nursing symposium set
COLUMBUS - "The Nurse
in Oncology : Support
SyStems While Caring and
Coping" will be presented to
over 1,000 Ohio nurses at the
Third Annual Cancer Symposium for Nurses, May 2 and
3. Sponsored by the American
Cancer Society, the symposlwn will be at the Fawcett
Center for Tomorrow here.
Keynote speaker will be
Ann Paulen, R.N ., M.S .,

Clinical Nurse Specialist in
Oncology at the University li
Wisconsin , Center for Health
Scien ce s ,
Madison,
Wisconsin, on "'!be Rights of
the Nurse in Oncology." For
further information and
·reg istr a lion, contact the
Meigs County Unit office of
the American Center Society
at Mulberry Hill by calling
992-7:i31 or the Gallia Cotu~ty
Unit at 44&amp;-7470.

(See page 10)

We Wire Flowers
EveryWhere

992-2039
Pomeroy Flower Shop

• Detouptge
• Candlemak ing

• Re1in cu tl ng
• A r t s u pplies
• and ma ny mare

Mrs. Millard Von Meter
Ph . f9H039
Ph. m.s111

AMERICAN
HANDICRAFTS
ASSOCIIIt

SAVE 25%

De;r~ler

!I

A tA ~ II·
C0 ~ ' 0 U II0 l!

ca,.u•n

DURING FEBRUARY
~

bit ct babyhood caM br per-

manenU~

~cu n ..•

a

grtCIOi/1

pwon!l treasurt . Your .bab1 '!
shon n ~ hl) prutr~ed 1n $0110

metal ..... tn e.,.u 1· crea~e. cr1nk le

and sc utt retarned roraver

l'our 'ho1ce of

bOo~ends .

por·

trail !land! an~ man; o!Mr
sty les . , . Now At Great Sa• 1nRs.

ONE FREE PRINT

All styles a¥allable In
Bright Bronze,
Antique Bronze, Silver,
"Pewter", and Gold

Fro~ a Specl~l Stltetion of

Prlnh

Only o ne print per cust omer ll le.ue.

Strle

Re&amp;. f'rices
BriRhl Bronze

SALE PRICIS

Bri&amp;lll Bronre

45 Potlrait Stand
50 Bookends - pair

$3 1.95
19.95
6~ Oval M
iniature
17.95
8~ A
shlray
16.95
31 Walnut Paperwelihl 15.00

$23.96
22.46
20.96
12.71
11.25

P~US MANY MORE A1k for Free Fol1~el
'i

WERNER RADIO

o.

399 W. Main St.
992-2164
Pllmii'Oy,
THE STORE WITH "ALL KINDS OF STUFF"- FOR PETS,
STABLES, LARGE &amp; SMALL ANIMALS, LAWNS AND GARDENS.

DANCE PLANNED
The Belles and Beaus
Square Dance Club will have
a dance Saturday night from
8 to ll p.m. at the Royal Oak
recreation building. Cecil
Sayre will be caller for the
dance. All western dance
clubs are invited.

on BABY SHOE BRONZING

BRING SHOES

Middleport, 0~

!"ll''"·l ng Olllf t!lc per lentt

Itt NoW ••• SALE ENDS FEB. 28

CRAFTY LADIES HANDICRAFTS
Pomeroy,

804 W. Main St .

Quasar QMX-t chassis with micro·
clrculllechnology. Weighs 35 lbs.
Uses less power than a 100 watt bulb.
"Qulntrlx"ln-llne Matrix Picture Tube.
One Bullon Color Tuning. AFT .

MODERN SUPPLY

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK STORE

VISIT OUR
AND PICK UP

QMX•1 13" dlagonal .
Solid State Portable Color TV

at participating Purina dealers.)

at Werner home

·Draping charter is

Dear Helen :
..
What's m~ little econ(lllr?_S,l'V_!lral !_
Year round, I save all my garbage and coffee and tea
grounds for my vegetable and Dower garden mulch pile.
Coffee and tea groW\ds has an acid PH that is great for
azaleas, rhododrendron and lllac bushes.
Also, I save newspapers, autumn leaves and grass
cllppings for mulch in organic gardening, 81\d friends and
neighbors help by contrlwtlng theirs. Don't laugh, you should
see my beautiful Dowers and bountiful vegetables. - LEE
ffiOMMASS.

5

MIDDLEPORT JUNIOR TROOP 39
AValentine party was held by the Middleport juniors Monday night at Heath United Methodist Church.
Assisting in distributing valentines was Eddie Crooks, a
guest. Cake, cookies and candy, and Kool-Aid were served.
The refreshments were prepared by Laura Horsely, Susanna
Wise, Karen Goggins, Zandra Vaughan, Missy McMillion,
Joyce Stewart, Paula Horton , and Jennie Meadows.
The room was decorated "ith valentine hearts with the
name of a scout on each one. Making these were Cindy Crooks,
Kris Snowden, Stephanie Houchins, Cathy Arnott, Beth Ann
Wolfe, Kim Fraley and Margie Miller.

·.

The Electa Circle of the and ice cream were served by
Middleport First Baptist Mrs. Werner and Lo uise
Church met Tuesday at the Davis to those named earlier
home of Alwllda Werner, and Isabelle Winebrenner,
president.
- Pearl Hoffman, Cathy Riggs,
Sara Owen led the Gwinnie White, and Helen
devotional period using Bodimer who gave the
"Your Garden of Prayer" as treasurer's report .
·her topic. The Lord's Prayer
in unison cl osed the period.
Texa nna Well presented
POMEROY TROOP 1276
correspondence directed to
The Pomeroy juniors met Monday night at the home of Mrs . the B. H. Sanborn Missionary
Betty Lane,leader for a valentine party.
Society of which the cit:ele is
The meeting opened with each girl giving the girl scout pro- a part.
mise. Work on the hospitality and health badges was conBernice Baker reported on ·
tinued. The Ho house was decorated in the valentine theme. the Christmas project
Assisting in serving heart-shaped valentine cookies and through whi ch the circle
koolaid were Mrs. Carolyn Reeves, Mrs. Betty Lane, Mrs. hough! footies for women of
Sharon Stark, and Mrs. Pat Thoma. Others attending were the infinnary and Mrs. Owen
Crystal Lane, Suzan Thoma, Debra Werry, Karen Spencer, oonated socks for men of the
Jaye Roberts, Sandra Mattox, Kelly Ginther, Candy Davis, infirmary. Fruit was also
Trina Reeves, and guests, Tommy and Chris Lane.
sent there for Chrisbnas.
Ulllan Hubbard reported
SYRACUSE JUNIORTROOP 121M
that the white cross project
Usa Willis opened the mee\ing with the Lord's Prayer with was completed and the loveChrissy Arnold leading in the pledge to the flag, and all of the gift offering was dedicated.
girls giving the scout promise.
Plans we re made to
Cookie order sheets were turned in. Shari Cogar read a story remember shut-ins of 'the
_to complete the story teller badge, and Jennie Bentley church on St. Patrick's Day.
presented three requjrements for badge work.
During the program, Mrs.
After the meeting a valentine party was held with Well conducted a Bible quiz
refreshments of cupcakes, candy , cookies and potato chips be- with Beulah Whit~! , winner.
ing served. The refreshments were provided by Kim Mora,
Refreshments of cherry pie
Shari Cogar, Sherry Ritchie, Becky Arnott, Jennie Bentley,
Piketon, Ohio, 45.661. Practice and Debbie Michaels. Trisha Michaels was a guest.
for the district rally was
annoWJced for 2 p.m. on Feb. ·
PATIENTS NEEDED
'll and March 6 at the St.
The Meigs County cerMark United Methodist
vical cancer clinic Is in
OlUrch, Maple St .. Belpre. A
trouble unless there is
Mr. and Mrs. William P.
cake. walk was held by the
Hager, the former Michelle better response from
borne and orphans committee
Buck ,
Jackson
Pike, women of the area.
with Zelda Weber, the win·
Tbe cancer clinic Is held
Gallipoiis,
are
announcing
ner.
free
of charge and any
the
birth
of
their
first
child,
a
The kitch en committee
woman
regardless of
daughter
,
Kelly
Renee,
Feb.
5
served refreshments to Ada Forty fri end s and adHnancial status is welcome
Neutzling, Jean Frederick, vocates met at the Meigs at Holzer Medical Center. She
Mary Kay Holter, Erma Community Mental Health weighed seven pounds, fiv e to attend. By attending a
clinic 1101 only can a woman
Cleland , Leona Hensley , Center for a Valentine party ounces and was 20 inches
feel
reassured In getli!lg a
long.
Maternal
grandparents
Dorothy Ritchie, Margaret recently.
repofl
on her condition but
No other Kin g James
are
Carol
Buck,
Cheshire,
Tuttle, Ada Bissell, Mrs.
There was a Valentine and William C. Buck, Point
v er sion Bible offer s so
she
can
sav
e
medi
cal
McPeek, Esther. Ridenour, decorated table centered by a
much comp r ehensi ve and
charges, at least $30, by
Pleasant, W. Va. Paternal
.c omp let e· in format io n for
Mrs. Weber , Ada Van Meter, lar ge
Box
Valentine
tr ue pe r sona l i n - depth
attending the lree clinic.
Doris Gruerer, Julie Rose, representing an outdoor mail grandparents are Mr. and
Sc r i p tu r c;~ l
appreciati on
Clinics are held at
and lf nd er standing
Thelma White, Betty Roush, oox with open door and flag. Mrs. John M. Hager; BidwelL
1 h a nd y v olu m e
Opal Hollon and Sadie This was made by Mrs. Jesse Great-grandparents are Mr. Veterans Memorial
8 Departm ents
Hospital
and
th
e
next
one
and
Mrs.
William
C.
Buck,
57 Features
Trussell.
Might and Mrs. Rea Roush. Sr., Rutland; Mrs. Stella - with many openings H 48 pag es
There were games and group Devault and Mrs. Sarah
7000 n ames , plac es a'nd
will be Feb. 23 from 1 to
topi cs . 100,000 reterenc essinging and prizes given for Hager, both of Galllpol is and
3:30 p.m. Women wishing
an a l yled and · cla ss if ie d.
the games went to Judy Mrs . Lillian Dawson, Akron. an appointment may call
McHa ffie , Don Buffington
992·3382 at any lime or 99~
and David Diddle.
7531 the Meigs County
Barbara and Treasa Van
Cancer Office from 1 to 4
Meter, Lula Beli Hampton,
DAUGIITER BORN
p.m., Tuesday or ThursLates t contributors for Jessie Mi ght and Rea Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Friend day.
Mrs. Bailey are Louise Hall, made decorat ed heart of Middleport are announcing
L. D. Hartinger, Frances mokies whi ch l!'ere served the birth of a daughter,
M IDDL E POR'T
!Wush, Gertrude .K!oes, Joe with red pun ch and pink and Stacey Oawn; Sunday, Feb. 13
Swan, Alice Globokar. Mr. white sherbet.
at the O'Bieness Hospital,
and Mrs . Leslie Hawley,
The special friend§ were Athens. The baby weighed six
Mildred Ann Souders, Betty David Might . Hugh Roush. · poWids, 13 ounces. GrandWise Brown, Mr . .and Mrs. Timmy Jones, Mary Jones, parents are Mr. and Mrs. Pat
. Chester Erwin, Reva Beech, Billy Neutzling, Debbie Jolmson, Middleport ; Mr.
. Dorothy Yeaug er, Harold Atherton, Etta Mae Ellis, and Mrs. Richard Friend,
Thomas and David Thomas. Ma ggie Hoy, Oscar Price, Pomeroy R. D., and the
All contributions are being Virgil Sa under s, Charles great-grandmothers are Mrs.
deposited in the Citizens Bush , Charles , Gru eser , Marjorie Ball, Chester; Mrs.
National Bank and are Maurice Smith. Benny Mabel Johnson, Clifton; and
earmarked for the hospital Skinner, Dav id Qlddle, Don Mrs. Edna Faulk, Mid·bill of Mrs. Bailey. Mrs. Buffington; Angela Eason, dleport. Mr. and Mrs. Friend
Sanford Thomas,
315 Denise Tillis, Li~da Watson have a son, Brian Keith , 18
Broadway St. , Middleport, is and Judy McHaFfie.
months.
chairman of th e drive and is
accepting the contributions.

and a gifl of money was sent
to the group' s scholarship
st udent. Than k-you notes
were read from recipients of
.Christmas gifts provided by
the B. H. Sanborn Missionary
'Society.
The
program
was
presented by Mar y Hughes
who used "Early Baptist
Work in Burma" as her topic.
Prayer by Frances Smart
closed the meeting aft er
whi ch time refr eshment s
were served by Mrs. Fultz to
Mrs. Hall, Mrs. Hughes,
Mar ge Walbu rn, Ethel
Hughes, Lillian Demoskey,
Freda Edwards, Freda Hood
and Mrs. Smart.

shut·ins with vAIPntinP hnnk~

+++

INCLUDED :
• E•cluolvo 11-way Dlai·A-Nap•
6 PC.
rug height adjustment
ATTACHMENT
SET
• Top-tilling dlsponble dull
bag prevents clogs, keeps
ouctlon atrong.
J;;-~·•,,1\ ~&lt;' ~ ~

Mrs. Hall also presented
the scripture from Job 38 :1634. Ouring th e busin ess
session It was reported that
bandages for the white cross
project have been completed
and an offering taken for the
scholarship fund. The group
agreed to send a tray of fruit
to a Pomeroy re sidence
where several elderly people
make their home. A report
was given on remembering

It would be the grandmotherly thing to do - yes!

COMBINATION UPRIGHT
AND ATTACHMENT OFFER

34 17
34 19
28 ~ 3
18 30

Fultz.

!)ear. Needs:

Purdue shames

Big Ten match

Helen :

motber.U.~aw

--------------------"

Bucks 90-61 in

Rhoda Hall, chairman , led
the devotionals on the theme,
11
Services on Snow" when the
Love Joy Circle of the Middleport First Baptist Church
met at the home of Marilyn

.-

.,

used for devotions

\i\

name. She

St . Lou is

Ch icago
Colorado

By Helen Bottel

AI glftl to her famlly - even the Utile grandchildren - my

{See page 10)

SAVE •29'

I

II She Cbbltzy or Charitable!

Ten's leading scorer with a
23.5 per game average , 55
Sale m R eal U t e 77 Gea uga
scored 26 points and Chr ls1lan' 35
teammate Ray Williams 28 South W ebster 96 Green T w p
hi1
dl
against Michigan State w .e Wad sw orth 75 Brunswic k 70
Michigan had six players m
double figures, led by Rickey
Green and Phil Hubbard with
18 each.
Elsewhere, .It was No . 3
UCLA 89 Oregon State 76,
Arizona 64 Brigham Young
62, Notre Dame 80 Manhattan
0 Rhode
76, and Syracuse 7
Island 47.
Also ll1in · kimmed by
,
OlS S
Indiana , 73-69, Purdue
defeated Ohio State IIG&lt;il,
T
A&amp;M bet Ri -•1
exas
a ce t&lt;MJ '
Lafayette won over Fordham
-,....,
'", and Oregon topped
Southern California OO&lt;i7.

j,

6 74 210 157
6 74 226 189
8 64 223 196
9 45 169 203
Thursday' s Re!.ults
Philadelphia 7 NY Rl'tng er s 1
To r ontc 2 Detroit 2
Washington 4 M innesota 4
..!l:::~X.::C..l!bb~ At l anta 4 Los An geles 3
c::
Friday's Game
Col orado at Clev eland

Snowden , Scot1 Skinner . ·

Available in 4 ~izes
3
/. ~~O

United Pft1llllnlematfonal
Michigan should be
excused if It fe els 8 bit
frustrated.
The fourth -ranked Wolverines, never out of first
place in the · Big Ten race
since the season 'bjlgan, have
to keep proving their right to
the top rung against
Minnesota. They will have to
do it again Saturday, but
Mmn
' esota has other ideas for
the conference's biggest
game of th
e year.
"We're back to where we
were 8 week ago Monday,"
Coach Johnny Orr said,
W. L . Pet . GB
~ Los Angel es 3S 19 .648 referring to Michigan's 86-80
Portland
. 35 23 .603 2 victory at Minneapolis, which
Goldon state 31 25 .55d s
seattle
29 21 .509 7' , knocked Minnesota out of a
Pho&lt;ni•
25 29 .463 10 tie for first place. Saturday
Thursday's Results
h
Buffalo m Cleveland 103
the two teams meet on t e
Boston 126 Kansas City 125, ot
Michigan rourt and once
Hous1on 113 San Antonio 99
again Minnesota ·can take
Mi l waukee 99 Golden State 97
Friday ' s Games
first place if lt wins.
Seattle at NY Nets
Mic h'1gan roue
t d Iowa, 91•
Phoeni x af Philadelph i a
Portland at Ch ic •go
80, Thursday night to run its
Washington at Detroit
league record to 12-2 and its
NY Kn icks at Milwauk ee
overall record to I", while
Gold en State at Ind iana
.,.....;J
Atl anta at Los Angel es
Minnesota, with 8 1~2 overall
Saturday ' ' Games
NY Nets
at NY Knlck s
mar k, wh'tppe d M'tch'tgan
Phoeni x at Cleveland
State, 99-77, for an 11-2 Big
De1roi t at Wash ington
Ten record.
~~aut;i~"a~'e~rf~!~s ot v
Mirutesota beat Iowa Satur·
Porll and at Denver
day so Coach Lute Olson of
the Hawkeyes was in position
to predict the outcome of
Saturday's . GophersNHL 5tandii!9S
Wolverines contest.
By United PreSs International
"I would pick Minnesota,"
Campbell Conference
he said, "except for the fact it
Patri ck DivisiOn
W L T Pts. GF GA will be their seventh game in
Phil a
35 11 12 82 238 158
NY l standr s 34 16 B 76 198 143 14 days and I think that will
Atlan ta
25 22 11 61 191 189 work against them. That
NY Ranqers 21 25 13 55 207 214
makes it awfully tough."
Smythe Division
W L T Pts . GF GA
Mike Thompson, the Bi~

Buffalo
Boston ·
Tor onto
Cleveland

T erry

Cha grin F all s 62 Chard on A1
Cle L a tin 71 Cle St Jonp h 68

I

E11fern Conferenc e

. WL T

Kil a Young , John Riebel.

FOAM BOARD

•

wire-to-wire victor in the Bob
Hope Desert Classic, "just
has jelled and I really haven't
figured out why. l just bope it
keeps going like this."
On the heels of his tournament record 337 in the fiveround HoM last week at
Palm Springs, Massengale
came through with a si12ling
six-under-par 65 in the
opening round of the $200,000
Los Angel~ Open Thursday.
That was good enough for a
one-shot lead over Lanny
Wadkins, the 1970 U. S.
Amateur king still trying to
regain his touch, and a twostroke edge over Bob Gilder,
the 1976 Phoenix finalist

Unlt~:~,~:.·~~~ir'nationol Michigan claims

Circle holds meet

r 'iJ;i~-, Services on snow

Thursdt y
Buck ey e 73 A&gt;Jon 71

.

Aflontlc Dl,lslon
Philadelphia ~- ~ "~io .GB
Boslon
20 28 .500 7
NY Knlcks
25 29 .A63 9
Buffalo
20 35 .36A 1d' ,.
NYNelS
17 38 .309 17' ,.
Central Dl,lslon
washington ~- ~i ~M3 ~ 8,
HouSi on
31 23 .574 1
Cleveland
29 25 .537 3
San AnlMio 30 26 .536 3
New Orleans 2A 31 . ~36 a• ,
Atlanta
22 35 .386 n•·,
western conference
Midwest Division
w. L. Pet. G8
Den ver
35 19 .648 Delrolt
33 2&lt; .579 3"•
Kansas City
29 19 .500 B
Ind iana
26 JO .A6A 10
Chicago
24 33 .421 111;,
Mil waukee
19
.311 191,,
Pacific Division

Named to the rol ls with

Ta m m y

Gophers blocking

I

By

grades of 8 or above in all
subi ects were :
Se venth Roger Gaul ,

'

•

of :!!Hi.
Bell, wbo said he had "lost
track" of the number of
schools competing for his
services, said he chose OSU
over Southern California.
"Woody Hayes gave me the
okay to run track," said Bell,
"and I have already talked to
the track coach (Frank Zubovich). But, education was the
most important thing I was
after."

. MIDDLETOWN, Oh io
(UP!) - Todd Bell, one of the
nation's most sought after
athletes, has signed a football
letter.of.U.tent at Ohio State.
Bell, a &amp;-1, J9().pound allOhio defensive back at
Middletown High School the
past season, is also .an
outstanding track performer,
having broken Jesse Owens'
long-standing record in the
long jump last spring at the
Mansfield RelAys ..·ith" leAp

Cage Scores

:Standings I

ending the three-year
deadlock marlred by two
preseason player strikes and
legal battles.
The new draft system was
described as "complex" and
Jll'Obably will aUow each club
fewer choices than the 19
rounds exercised in recent
years.

pleased" at the progress of
the negotiations but declined.
to say anything f)lrther until
executive bodies of both sides
had a chance to meet .
A ruling by U.S. District
Judge William B. Bryant last
fall striking down the draft as
an antitrust violation
apparently was the key to

of the big breakthrough with
Sargent Karch, exe cutive
director of the council,
convened the NFLPA 's ·
Executive Council Thursday
to be followed by a meeting of
the player representatives
from each team the following
day.
An estimated 7W duespaying members of the union
are to vote on the proposed
contract. It also would have
to be approved by at least 21
of the 28 owners. Neither side
indicated there would be
difficulty in obtaining
ratification.
NFL Conunissioner Pete
Rozelle whose powers may be
diminished under the new
contract said he was "very

I

s-Tbe Dilly Sentinel, Middleoort-Pomeroy, 0., FridaY, Feb. l6,1977

o.

'

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

OPEN

....

_......,

Monday thru Wed. &amp; Friday
&amp; Saturday 10 A.M. to 5 P.M.
CLOSI;D THliRSDAY
•l

'

•

'

�Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Friday, Feb . 18, i977

"'

CALVARY BillE CHURCH, 20~1.-

'-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Fridav. Feb. IB, 1977

TRINITY CHURCH , Rev. W. . H.
Perno, po1 tor, Roy Moy•r . •Sun·
doy school Supt . cnurch School.
9:15 0 m., wor1hlp strvlc:t. 10:30
a .m. Choi r reheorsol , Tuesday,
7.30 p .m under directton of Mrs
PouiNease.

There is no denYJng that there's much sadness 1n
the world. And 11 we let pessim1sm ~t the better ot
us-well, it gets mighty dart&lt; sometlfTles!

POMEROY CHURCH OF THE PRES8YTERIAN ,
NAZARENE. Co mer Union ond
Mulberry, Rev. Clyde V Hender.
son , pastor. Sunday school. 9:30
a .m ., Glen Mc:Ciung , supt. ; morn·
ing wo rshi p, 10·30 a m , e11ening
servtee, 7 30: mld·week service
Wednesday . 7:30p.m .
GRACE EP ISCOPAL , The Rev
Harold Deeth, rector Church services, 10·30 a.m .. Holy c:omrpu·
nion first Sunday of month, church school , 10 30 o .m for nursery
through 12
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST ,
R1 chord EvonsoJ'l, pastor, Brble
school , 9 30 o.m , wonhtp , 10·30
o .m.: adult worshtp service and
young people's meeting, 7 30
p.m Combined Bible study and
praye r meeting, Wednesday, 7:30
p.m .

But some of the darl&lt;ness IS self-inflicted. The eyes
through which we're !lying to see are obsessed with
our own problems. The light of hope is hidden by the
frustrations of life
Jesus Christ should never be thought of as a sad
ma~en though He was cruelly executed . And
the apostles are seldom thought of as tragiC figures
even !hough they all became martyrs. And Chnstian•ty has been a source of strength and comfort to

millions in time of sufter1ng or sadness h has always
~n

am ; .Sunday evongell1tlc
m. . tlng , 7 .30 p.m. Proy•r
meetinv. Wednesday , 7:30 p .m .
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN
MINISTRY OF MEIGS COUNTY,
0\Ntght l. Zavlt1, dire&lt;: tor .
HARRISONVILLE

hailed as a joyous religion '

Come wllh us Sunday and lace the Light

Rev .

Ernoot

Strlckhn , pastor. Sunday church
~ehool. 9:00 a .m., Mr.s . Homer
Lee, supt .. morning worship , '
10&lt;'10
MIDDLEPORT, Su nday 1chool.
9.30o .m, Richard Vaughan , sup! .
Morntng worship, 10·30
SYRACUSE, Mormng worshtp , 9
a .m .; Sunday school , 10 o .m . Mrs .
Sampson Hall , supt.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOO,
Rev. James D. Guynn , pastor.
Sunday school, 10 a m .. Sunday
worshtp. 11 am , Sunday evening
serv1ce. 7 p.m.; Wednesday war ship service , 7.30p .m .
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH,
Near Long Bot tom, Edsel Hart,
pastor. Sunday "School , 10 a .m.;
Church , 7·30 p m .; prayer
meeting, 7·30p.m. Thundoy .

THE SALVATION ARMY , Envoy
Ray W Wining , off rcer rn charge.
Sunday , 10 a.m .. Holineu
meetmg , 10.30 a .m., Sunday
School. Yovng People's Leg1on , 7
p m .; Thursday . 1 to 3 p.m ..
Ladies Home league . 7 p.m. ftrep
classes.
BURLINGTON SOUTHE RN BAPTIST CHAPEL , Route 1, ShadePoster Bobby Elkins . Sundoy
schQOI , 5 p.m ; Sunday worship ,
5 •S p.m , Wednesday prayer ser·
11ice, 7:30pm .

MIDDL:PORT

PENTECOSTAL,

Thir..: 1\v u., the Rev . William Knit·
te} , pastor Ronald Dugan , Sun·
day School Supt Classes for oil
ages , evening service , 7:30 Bible
study , Wednesday , 7 30 p m. ,
youth services, Frtdoy, 7 30 p .m .
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPliST , Corner Ash and Plum ; Noel
Henman , pastor Saturday even·
mg Sei'VIce, 7 ·30 p m., Sunday
Scl-lool , 10 30o m
MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH

ST. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH ,

METHODIST CHURCH

Corner of Sycamore and Sec:ond
RobertT. Bumgarner ,
Sts , Pomeroy. TI-le Rev Willtam
Director
Middlesworth, Pastor. Sunday
POMEROY CLUSTER
Sthool at 9 . ~5 a .m . a nd Churc:h
Rev. Robert Hoyden
Services I I am .
Rev . James Corbitt
SACRED HEART , ReY . Father- CHESTER, Won hip 9 15 a .m.
Paul D. Welton , past or. Phone Church SchoollOo .m
POMEROY , Worsh1p , 10·30 a .m.
992-2825. Saturday evenmg Man,
7 ·30 SundoyMass t 8and lOam ; Church School 9:30a.m . UMYF
Confesston Saturday , 7-7:30 p.m. 6.30 p.m.

POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH

ENTERPRISE, Worsh;p 9 o m.

OF CHRIST, 200 W. Matn St , Jerry
Paul, m1n1ster, phone 992 -7666
Conservative, non ·•nstrumentol.
Sunday worship , 10 a .m ., Bible
study, 11 am , worship, 6 p m
Wednesday Btble study , 7 p.m.

Church SchooiiO o m
ROCK SPRINGS , Worship 10
a .m . Church School 9 ISo .m.
UMYF6&lt;)1)p m
FLATWOODS, Worshtp , 11 a .m .
Church SchoollO a.m.
'

OLD DEXTER SIBLE CHRISTIAN
CHURCH , Rev . Rolph Smith ,
pastor Sunday school, 9·30 om ,
Mrs. Wo rley Francts, supennten
dent Preoc:hing serv lc:es first &amp;
thi rd Sunday' follow tng Sunday
School
GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST ,
Preaching 9 30 a .m .. first and 58 ·
cond Sundays of each month,
1t·11rd and fourth Sundays each
montl-l wor1h1p service at 7 30
p m Wedn.esdoy evenings at
7 30. Prayer and Btble Study

SEVENTH ·DAY

.

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
&amp;SERVICE, INC.

MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC.

IRE F[N t~l IN MOBILE HOMES
Pomeroy
Ph. 992-7034

Pomeroy

Jonn F Fulll

Ph . 992 -2 101

1100 E. Main

.
BIG JIM'S PLAZA

SUNDAY TIMES.SENTINEL
Serving Meigs, Mason
And Gal lla Area
Phone 992-2156

Middleport, Ohio

LINDA'S LADY FAIR BEAUTY SALON

"HE lL " DEAL ER

Ca\1949-2838 For An AppointmenT

' Racme, Ohio

Ph. 949-2882

Racine

.

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE
SERVICES

PAUL'S BARBER SHOP
Open 8 to 5- Closed Thurs.

Ph. 992-5130

Po•merov

214 E. Main

Racine, Oh•o

'

WAID CROSS SONS STORE

ELLIS &amp; SONS SOHIO

GROCER It: ~ &amp; Gt:Nt:KIIc
MERCHANDISE
Racine
Ph. 949.2550

COMPLE TE AUTOMOTIVE SERVICE
Locust &amp; Beech Sts . Mi~dleportPh . 992-9921

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

BETSY ROSS BAKERY

Na honw •de Ins. Co. of Columbus, 0
Pomeroy
Ph. 992-2318
804 W. Mam

BAKERS OF GAY90 BREAD
Middleport
Ph. 992-3030

HEINER'S BAKERY
BAKERS OF GOO D BREAD

WE FILL DOCTORS
PRESC RIPTIONS

Huntington, W. Va .
'

992-2955

DUDLEfS ,

LOU IS W OSBORNE
220 E. Maon
Pomeroy
Ph. 992-2178

TWO LOCATIONS
39 N. Second St .
Middleport, 0 .
46 Court St.
Gallipolis, 0 .

MARK V STORE

lWIN CITY GATEWAY

Middleport, Ohio

Middlepo"rt, Ohio
WE HANDL E ONLY
U.S.D.A. CHOIC E MEATS

GOEGLEIN SAND &amp;GRAVEL

.

Pomeroy

' 11T

SEAR's"' CATALOG M...

I For a real auction call the Rea l McCoy)
1.0. IMicl McCoy
985-3944

RALL'S BEN FRANKLIN STORE

Pomeroy,

Ph. 19l-l582

Middleport, Ohio

Mason., ,

~RKFT

ntE DAllY SENTINEL
Mei9J·Ma1011 ArH

K&amp;C JEWELERS
'

Keepsake Diamond Rings
212 E. Main St.
Pomeroy
Ph . 992-3785

Phone 99:1-2156
, COUNTY

SALEM._ SIREET MARKET

THE ATHENS COUNTY ~·
'

&amp; WIIN

296 W. Second

CO.

PamtrOy

Ph. 992-3~3

Gerald &amp; Melva Elbln, Owner
Open81o7dally; 12-5Sun
Rutland
Ph. 742-24,24

RIICINE PLANING MILL

· ROSEBERRfS PENNZOIL
•

Ph. J49-91l0

Rac•ne

•

BAPTIST

RACI"E tOOD MARKET

Syr&lt;~~LUMf

RIDEMOUR

r Hc STOR-E WITH A HEART
Ph. 949-2626
Racine

FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH ,
So1ley Run Road Rev . Emmett
Rowson, pastor . Handley Dunn ,
supt. Sunday school . 10om Sun ·
day even1ng servtce 730, Bible
teaching . 7:30p.m . Thu rsday.

DYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHUR·
CH, Roger C Turner, pastor.
Sunday school . 9·30 o m., Sunday
THE SALVATION ARMY, liS

SUTTON, Church School 9;30

MIDDLEPORT
W.Onoodoy 8 p m.
MT. MORIAH BAPTIST, Corner
LONG 80TTOM , Su~doy school

thesttr

Ph. 992-39ll

TV &amp; APPUMCE
GAS SERVICE

ladnt

r

m.:

CHURCH OF GOD OF PRO·
PHECY. O.J. White Rood oH 110,
Rev . George Groyle. pastorSvn·
day School. 10 a .m.. Arthur Hen·
10n, Supt. ; Morntng Worship , 11
a m.; Young People's servic•. 1
p,m.; EYenlng leNice, 7:30p.m.:

Wodnesdoy

Mld·Weok

Proyor

Servic:e, 7 .30 p.m; Youth
mHfing, 6:30 p .m. bening wor-

ohlp.7 30p m.
CHESTER CHURCH

the Sennonette

pastor Worship service, 11 a.m

-kly , 9·30 a.m. on Sunday.

DEXTER CHUIICH OF CHRIST,

MIDOLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST, Preaching first and third Sundoy1
Corner S1xth ond Palmer, the Aev. of month by CIIHord Smith, 9·30
Peter Grandol. pastor: Manning o m
Kloes . superintendent Sunday
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION.
School WMPO Rodlo program Oarrtll Doddrlll, pastor. Sunday
1·45 a .m.; Sunday School, 9 15 School, 9 :30 a .m.;
Leonard
am .: Morning Worship , 10:15 Gilmor•. f1t1t elder; evening str·
a .m. Yout h ac:tlvlt ies and vice, 7:30 p.m . Wedn•tdoy
fellowship fo r junior and senior prayer mHting, 7 30 p.m.

ChQrles Russell , Sr., mtnlster;

dleport. 5th and Main , Gear~

Roclne Route 2 The Rev . Charles
Hand , poator. Sunday school, 9:45
a .m.: morning worship, 11 a .m.
Evonlng oon~ICM , Tuoodoy ond
Friday , 7:30p.m.

Glozo , mlnlotor. Miko Gorlotn,

BEAIIWALLOW RIDGE CHUIICH

CHURCH

OF

CHRIST, Mid-

IU~rintendent . Terry Yankty,
youth mlni1ter. Bible school, 9:30
a .m .) morning wonhlp , 10:30
a .m .; evening worship , 7:30;
prayer 1..-vlce, 7 p.m. Wednes·

OF CHRIST, Doug Seaman,
minister . Bible 1tudy , 9:30a .m.,
morning wonhlp, 10.30 a .m.:
evening worship, 7 r;tD p.m.
WednHdayllbl•atudy. 7:30p.m.

NAZAMENE.IIte'&lt;~ . Erie Cox , supply

morning MtVIce, 9:30 a .m with
preaching on first and third Sun·
day of month by George' Pickens
ST!VERSVILLE COMMUNITY

d9y
,
MIDDLEPOIIT Ct!UIICH OF THE

pastor; Mrs . Mary La they , Sunday

· tc~ supt Sunday schom . 9·30

10:30

KENO CHUIICH OF CHRIST,
George Frodotick. oupt. Sundar

v

-~

''YOUR FUTURE CAN
DEPEND ON WHAT
LIES IN THAT HOLE
IN THE SNOW.''

bAPI'AIN EASY
r--r· uov., NOW HOLD Ot.J, WA&amp;HL. VOU

THU5-, CAPTAit-l t=A?Y SHAL.L.
. RECEIVE MV VOTIN6 P~O)(.IE &amp;
• TO

IWN

CAN'T L.ET McKEE'&amp; DE&lt;;IS ION
BU&amp;T UP A IIES AUT IFUL.

TH~ Flt=u~~~· AND WA .S!-1

YOU AND!
BUDDIE5&gt;
LON G BEFORE WE
EVE'R Ht:ARD OF
McKEE INDUSTR·

A5 5EN 10R VICo·PR E&amp;I Dt;,t.I T
OF \lcKEe; l"lDU5TRIES-- Ltot.
ME TELL YOU THIS MEHING
I~ NOT YET OVER.J

W~Rt:

F~IENDSHIP\

TUBB-5 &amp;HAL.L. I!&gt;ECOME' HI&amp;
A5SISTANT MAIJAI!JIN(J
01/tECTOf(J

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-NO EN
YO\J SAY HE'S
A QUACK? GAO 1

J1'1CE WE G01
jfR i&lt;SIO€ MY
HOSPITAL, I'Ll.

ttJ:Y

WCK'( YOU

CAME lt-1 TIME 1
HOW COME
YOU'RE HERE?

AN'fONE. lO

ftE'r HER OUT •

LITTLE ORPRAII A.NNII£-IIITERCEPTIOM

TRANCE

HollO, NELLIE:
GOT A
PI\TIEIIT! STOLE
HER FROM

IT'S A LONG,
DULL STORY A~ D

IT 'S OOLY

MY IDEA THAT

ELDEEN ••

E:LOfEN'S A

QUACK '

HOLD
SP~L-T 30M5TH1t·Y
Wr&lt;.ON6! ~BODY E:VER HS::RD 0 '
NOTHIN' E:XTRA-TC::F&lt;REGf"RIAL rr-

lifetime is spent doing certain things? In tltls day of TV th~
figures may be changing but a couple are rather close to' the
::: :
norm for today, I would think.
The average age of 70 years is used aa a Hfellme. I t1t1n1i It
was the Ladies Home Journal that bad tltls IIBtlng. Tltlnk cj
this, 24 years of yoiD' Ufe In sleeping, that's fhe biggl!llt chill!);:
eating takes ali years, but worshipping Ged only UJeS up
mooths of yoiD' 70 years of life.
, ,';,:
How can we truly know God when we spend so little tllll~
with Him? And tltls figure is for thole who know and love~
Lord. Think of the many who tenore Him? Imqlne, ali ~rs

I CAN U6E BOV\EONE LIKE &gt;tJlJ
TO KEEPll-IE PLACE NEAT; RUN
CARE OF

J!M AN INDEPENDENT
..JU()T WHAT PO '.'OU DO FORA LIVING; FILMMAKER 1 BILLY.
MIL lER AND 'MJAT DO YOU
M05rLY lDW-fJUDGET

J:Exi&gt;KTME'\i:i DOlO

5TLFF ... BUT I

' '"''"''"MY OOOM AND
WARD AROUND

DAE'&gt;BLE IN A lDT
I
!

11-1

IN 11-IAT

CA6E YOU'vE
GOTYOURSELFA
DEAL I

v•.,.... , :

~CIBELY:tHE LEFT

rellclo•

1 ' Ever1.1 Monda1.1· niqht
t~ere's a silent movie
with subtitles'

You could
be readinq
improvinq "n"r ~­
m1nd!

WIN AT BRIDGE.
Silence golden for South
18

NORTH
"' A 10 9 7
• Q8 1
t KJ 4
oi&gt;Q10 6

Amerlca!llloday? Too fat physically and too thin lpirltually.
when things w1ll be topsy-turvy.

.

.,

.AK963 2
+1073

AUJ,(JJ.I&amp;OtJ,~ ~s

MARTIAIJS lCOI&lt;- W-8

o~&gt;K8 2

1

SOUTH
.KQJ61
• 10 7
+A 9 8

1"'::"_....__ _:_

o~oAJ9

Both vulnerable

t~~~~~;~~-~~~~::

Wes\
Pass
Pass

North East South
Pass Pass l •
3 A Pass 1 4

Pa ss

Pass

succeed A Review of Lhe biddmg found that West had been
totally qu~et hke the dog IJJal
fa1led to bark m the nighl.
W1lh six hearts Lo Lhe ace-king
and the kmg of clubs, West
wouid surely have opened the
bidding 1f he held the queen of
diamonds
There was still a ray of
hope Wesl could hold the diamond 10. So South won the
club w1th dummy's 10 and led
Lhe jack of diamonds . East
covered with the queen It
wasn't gomg to do him any
good to duck Easl took hiS
ace, led a second diamond,
finessed dummy's nine and
was home

The Almanac
By
United
Press
International
Today is Friday, Feb. 18,
the 49th day of 1977 wiiJJ 316 ro
follow.
The moon is between its
new phase and first quarter.
The morning stars are
Mercury and Mars:
The evening stars are
Venus, Jupiter, and Saturn.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Aquarius .
American
philanthropist

1111\INl ID1l

George Peabody was born
Feb. 18, !79S.
On this day in history:
In 1861, Jefferson Davis
was sworn into offtce asresident of the Confederate
States of America at
Montgomery, Ala.
In 1930, IJJe planet Pluto
was
discovered
by
astronomer Clyde Tom
Baugh at
the Lovell
Observatory in Flagstaff,

Ariz.

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD G.lME

~ ~ ~~ ®
Unscramble these four Jumb!es,
one letter to each square, to form
tour ord1nary
,, words.

byHenrl ArnoldandBobLee

Are you
suggeating •• ?

'I[

Pass

Opemng lead - K •
1

By Oswald &amp; Jame• Jacoby

.
-BARNE\'
'

I CAN'T PITCH
HOSS SHOES NOW.

PAW--I GOT

GIT BACK TO 1/0RE

AW--JEST
ONE GAME
MAW

.. r

ev•ning Nrvlct 7 p.m. WednMday evening pray« services, 7·30
p.m.

',' I
I,'

8ETHLEHEM BAPTIST, RIIY. Eorl

'4 ' I

Shuler, pastor. Worship t4H'VIc:•.

''

9:30 o.m. Sunday school, 10:30
a.m. lib\e Study ond prayer Str·
vlceThurodoy, 7:30p.m.
'
CARLETON OtURCH. Kl,.t&gt;ury
Road. Gary King, poator, Sundoy

I'

''

achool. 9:to a .m. , evening wor·

Walloct

EAST
•• 3 2
•JS
• Q 65!
.. 7 54 3

WEST ID I.

"•

lng worship, 10:30 a.m.; Sundoy

pastor.

IN THE PLACE
AREN'T YOU?

eating and feeding olD' belly and ali months feeding our .oul: II

lt any wonder the morll,
tone of America Ia so lfl'll:t
We say we want to llfl!lld et.nlty with the Lord God" tn
Heayen·llit spend 12 Umea more houn !Jiting than pra~.
Cmslder how long crace Ia at IDMI lime and how long we
spend eating. Tltlnk ol the time preparing the meal and the
lime preparing the bible Jll'llYtr,
C'ooslder well wbat we 1111 and then wbat we do. The
Chlaese say one picture is worth 1000 words. So In our Uvea
also. G\ldandprayervs. food and eating. Gedcomes out a very
poor HCond. On a scale of 12, ea~ would be 8rst on the list
and God would be last, 12 lengtlta behind.
I thlhk this is an Interesting 8111lyals on the life Ume of an
average per10n: 24 years aleeplng, 3 years in conversatlo~ 5
years eating and at the t.U, just 6 months In worshipping Ged.
Can we not see the cause of the condition of America and

William Rou1h , pa~tor. Denny
EYanl, Sundar. School Director
Sunday Schoo, 9:30a .m. ; Mom·

lruce Smlth,

A!?e I NTERE~TED

iii

Rick Mocombor, oupl. Sunday
sctlool. 9:30 o .m , wot5hlp ser·
vice , 10:30 am · Bible Study,
Tundoy , 7:30p.m.
REORG"NIZED CHURCH OF
JESUS CHIIIST OF LAITER DAY
SAINTS, Portland RociM Road.

ahlp , 7:30 p.m. Proyor t'flfttlng,
Wodn01do¥ , 7·30p.m.
LONG 80ITOM CHRISTIAN.

DETAILS COMPLETELY
UP TOME! YOU

' 1 DON'T KNOW WHAT KIND OF
PROBLEMS THE PREVIOUS
! OVVNER HAD HeRE 1 ,_ / Tu,,rl&lt;.
13UT H M05T
ANXIOUS 1lJ GET
RID OF ITI

Comes a fiood, a lot of people w1ll be talltlng with and 1bout
OF THE
Ged.
What are they doing now? Setting aside food for the fiood
NAZARENE, Rev. 1-ierbert Grote,

Roclne Route 2, the Rev . James
SILVER RIDGE, Wonhlp 10 a .m.
M. Munty, pa1tor Sunday school , Church School9o.m .
9,30 o.m., Sunday School 10120
Supt. : Morning
9:.4S a .m.. morning wonhip , II
TUPPERS PLAINS, Worship 9 School
a .m. ; Wednesday
PrayerWorship
ond BIa .m .. evening worship , 7:30. a .m . ChurthSc:hooiiOa.m.
ble Study 7:30 p.m.: Sunday
Prayer muting. Tutsday, 7 30
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, evening worship 1.30 p.m. ; Choir
p.m . : Yaung people's meeting, George Frederick, ~upt . Service -Practlc:e Thurtdoy, 7 p.m.

evening worship , 7:30p.m. Mid·
wpk prayer ser&gt;Jice•, Wednes·
day , 7.30p.m.

. ... .

.'
Have you ever given-much thought to how much of &gt;:our

Wodnotdoy IONico, 8 p.m.
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH, Rov. Floyd F. Shook,
pol!or; lloyd Wright, Sundoy

MT . MORIAH CHURCH Of GOD.

Iii

·.- ·-.:.·

,'

Wednesday prayer meet ing, 7:30 a .m . Woi'Ship _7·30 p.m . ; Prayer
p.m.
Meeting 7:30 p.m . Tu11doy;

high Sludonto, 6 p.m. Sundoy

~

-

doy School 9:30 o.m., morning
church 10.30 a .m , Sunday e&gt;Jen·
ing
urvlce, 7:30
p .m.

REEDSVILLE, SundoySchool9.30

'

---.. -~~

..

lawrence Manley . po1tor, Mr1 . "b m.; Worship 10·•5 am . : Pray•r
Russell Young , Sunday School mHtlng Wednesday 7:-45 p.m.:
Supt Sunday School 9 30 o m UMW 3rd Tuesday B p.m.

7:30 ,.

,.

-!:30

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF a.m.; Church SchoollOo.m. '
CHRIST IN CHRISTIAN UNION,
ALFRED, Sunday School 9 00

worship ,

FliGHT, GROOVY! THAT IN ITSELF
VVliULD EL.IMINAT!; PERFUME,
),~~~NOT THAT 61'&lt;1GHT.

7

ond 7:30 p.m. Sunday . Sundov
What about God? . Anyone setting aside anytblng or
School. 9·30 a.m. Richard Borton, anytime for Him? The Lord of allis most Ukely taking a back
supt.
Pray•r meeting ,
aeatagaln. One Day lt w1ll not be tbla way. Remember I told
Wodnoodoy, 7:30p.m.
BRADFORD CHURCH
OF you. -Rev. WUUam Mlddli!II"WBrtlt, Sl Paul Lutheran ctturcli:
CHRIST, Jock Porry. mlnl&amp;tor. Sun·

Even1ng

.
·:-,

.

a .m. Worshtp 10·30 a .m . 2nd and
4th Sundays,
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST.
APPLE GROVE, Sunday School located at Rutland on New ltma
9 30 o .m Worshtp 7:30 p.m lsJ Rood , nex t to Forest Acre Pork ,
and 3rd Sundays: Prayer meettng Rev . Roy Rouse , pastor , Robert
Wednesday 7 30 p.m. F~tllowshlp Muner, Sunday School supt , Sun
supper ftrst Saturday 6 p .m UMW day sc:hool. 10·30 a .m.. worship
2ndTua!doy7 3Qp,m
p m . Bible
Study,
7 : 30
EAST LETART. Chruch Sehool Wednesday, 1 30 p.m.; Soturdov
ht , 2nd, 3rd Sundays , 9 JO am
ntght prayer service, 7•30 p.m
Fourth Sunday 10 30 a .m . Wor·
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN.
shtp 2nd Sunday 7:30 p m. •th Roger Wat1on, pastor; Jente
Sunday 9:30a.m.. Prayer meeting While , Sunday schoolsupt. Morn·
Wednesday 7 30 p.m. UMW ht lng worsh1p , 9:30 a .m , SunTuesday 7 30 p m
dayschool. 10:30 a .m , evening
WESLEYAN (Roctne) , Sunday service , 7 30. Wednesday Btble
School 10 o .m. Worship 11 a .m.; Study, 7.30 p m .
Jr. UMYF Wednesday 3 30 p .m.,
MT . UNION BAPTIST, Sundoy
B1ble Study Thursday 7 p m . Chotr school 9:45a.m ., Sunday evening
Proct1ca Thursday 8 p.m
wor1hip , 7.30 p.m.
LETART FALLS , Church School
TUPPERS PLAINS CHRISTIAN
1st. 2nd , 3rd Sundays 10:15 a .m. Cl-iURCH, Eugene Underwood,
&lt;th Sunday 9 IS o.m.; Worship pastor; Howard Caldwell , Jr ..
ht , 2nd, 3rd Sundays 9 ·15 a .m.: Sundo( Sc.hool Supt.: Sunday
•fh Sunday 7 30 p.m
Sthoo , 9 30 o m , Morning SerMORNING STAR , Worship 9 30 mon, 10 30 a m , Sunday e&gt;Jenmg
o ,m ••, Church School 10 30 o .m.; service, 7 p.m.
Mtd-Week Serv1ce Wednesday a
LETART FAUS UNITED
p m.
'
BRETHREN, Rev , FrHiond Norm ,
MORSE CHAPEL . Wor5hp 11 pastor. Floyd Noms , supt. Sunday
school , 9 30 a.m ; morning ser·
a .m .: Church School9.30 a .m.
PORTlAND, Worsh ip 7 30 p.m.; mon , 10:30 a .m .: Prayer service,
Churcl-l School9 30 a m.
Wadn01doy , 7i30p.m.

Butternut Ave., Pomeroy. Envoy a .m . Worsh ip 1st and 3rd Sundays
a nd Mrs Roy Wining , otfic:ers in 10 30 a.m .
charge Sunday holiness meeting,
NORTHEAST ClUSTER
10 o .m , Sunday school, 10 30
Rev Richard Thomas
a .m. leader YPSM Eloise Adams;
Poator
7 30 p m solvation meettng.
Duane Sydenstncker
Lodies Home league , 12 noon to2
John Douglas
p .m ., Thursday. prayer metttmg
Associates
and Bible study , Thursday, 7 30
JOPPA , Wo11hip 10 a .m. ; Churp m.
ch School 9 a .m.. Prayer Meeting

a .m .: mornln; worship,

;I

SOUTHERN CLUSTER

CARMEL . Chruch School 9.30

POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST ReY .
Peter Grandall . pastor . William
Watson , Sunday sc:hool 1upt ,
Sunday school , 9:30 a m BYF 6
p.m ; 81ble study Wednesday , 7
p.m .: chotr prac: tlce. Wednesday ,
8 :30 p m,
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, 282
Mulberry Ave , Pomeroy . Paul J
White, Pastor; Gary Basham, Sun·
day school supt. Sunday school,
9:30 a.m., mornmg worsh1p ,
10 30, eventng worship , 6 ·30 p m
Midweek prayer serv ice, 7:30
p.m
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CENTER ,
Oe)(ter Rd , Longsv1l le , Ohto, Rev
Clyde Ferrell, Pastor. Sunday
School 11
a .m . Saturday
preaching 1ervicvs 7.30 p.m.
Wednesday evenrng Bib le study
ot7 30 p m.

7.30 p.m. Thurodoy.

..;.stceNd to tht Inltretls of

1-

FIRST

MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD , Vlsltotlon7i30p.m. lot Thursday .

F~~~~VENIENT MARKEi~S
"'IDWAY MARKET

RUTLAND

CHURCH- Orewy Gore , supt
Rev Timothy Smtih
Cluster Leader
Sunday School, 9 ·30 a .m.: morn ing worship , 10:45 a m.
Rev Steven W1lson
THE 1HILAND CHAPEL , George
Assoctate
Casto , pastor Su nday School,
BETHANY , (Dorcas), Worship
9·30 a m. : &amp;Yening worship , 7:30. 9 30 am Church School 10 30
Thursday evenrng prayer servrce, a .m .

Fourth and Main, ~iddleport. ot 9:30 am. Worsl-l ip service• at
Rev , Henry Key , Jr. , pastor Sun· 7:30p.m . Bible 1tudy and Youth
day School. 9:30a.m. : Mrs. Erv1n meeting a1 8 p.m . on
Baumgardner, supt., Marnmg Wednesdays
worsh ip, 10 ."5 a m .
NORTH BETHEL. Wor•hip 11

McCOY AUCTION SERVICE

Middleport

Ph. 992-3284

ADVENTIST , 7'30 p.m

Mulberry Heights Rood , Pome'roy .
FOREST RUN , Worship 9 am .
Pas tor . Gerard Seton , Sabbath Church School lOam
School Superintendent, Claro
MINERSVIllE, Worshtp 10 a .m.
Mcintyre Sabbath School . Sotu r· Church School9 o.m
day afternoon ot 2.00, W1th WarSYRACUSE, Chruch School 9 30
ship Sefllice followmg at 3 15.
o m Worshtp servtce 7·30 p m

mommg worship , 10:30. Sunday
evening serv1ce , 7 30.

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE PHARMACY
/

Rev Robert Bumgarner
HEATH , Robert Bumgarner.
Pastor. Worshtp 10 30 a .m .
Church School 9.30 a m. UMYF 6
p.m
RUTLAND , Wilbur Hilt, Pastor
Worship 10:30o .m. Church School
9.30a m.
.SYRACUSE CLUSTER
RaY . Richard E. Joryis
ASBURY , Worship 10 40 o m.
Church School 9.30 a .m . UMW
ftrst TueSday Btble Study Thurs

7 30 p.m.

RACINE PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
Third St .

MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER

CHURCH , SDnday School •ervin, Damewood , Supt Blblo Sc'-1,
1
10 a .m .; Prayer mHting , Thun· 9:30 a .m . Preaching ..,vlc:e, Sec:ond, Middleport; pastor, C " ' ~
tis
St•phen
.
CMurch
Khool,
t
.
0t
day , 1 p m.; Sunday evening s•r· 10:"5 a .m. No evening strvlce.
viet, 7 p.m.
HYSELL RUN FREE METHODIST a .m .; preochln; ••rvlcll , 1~~..;.!
ZION CHUIICH OF CHRIST, CHURCH, Rtv. Horbott Alllna, o.m. ond 7.30 p m. Wod~
· '"
Pomeroy· Horrilonvillt Rd .; Don pastor. Sunday School9:30 a .m., ...,ening Bible study , 1:30 p.m . ~
INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CH
Konnody, poaior, Sill McElroy. Morning' 11rvlc:e , 10.30 a.m..
:
Sunday school supt , Sunday youth . service , 6 •5 p .m . CH, INC , - Corner Fourth a
school , 9:30 om.; mOf'nlng wor· Evangelistic serv ice 7:30 p.m. Lincoln Sts ., Middleport: R•v. 1
ship and communion, 10 30 a .m.; Preyer mHtlng , Thursday , 7:30 O'Dell Manley, pottor; Sony Hud· •
aon , Sunday Sc:hool luperlnlel\· :
Sunday evening youth Christian pm
Endeavor, 6 p.m .; worship ter·
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION ot dent. Sunday school, 9:30 a .m .; 1
VICe, 1 p m W.dn•sday evening Bold Knob . ReY . Lawrence evening worship, 7:30 p.m:;--J
)1
prayer m11ting and Bible atudy , Gluesencamp, Sr , pastor; Roger prayer and prai1e Hrvic, ·,,~·
'
7 30 p.m.
Willford. Sr .. Sunday schocl supt. Wednesday, 7:30p.m. ,
THE PEOPLE'S CHUIICH OF :
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH , Sunckly school 9 30 a .. ; Sunday
Pine Grove. Tht Rey , Will iam ...,.ening seNice, 7 p.m. Prayer POMEROY - Corner Main and 1
Middlesworth , Pastor. Church mHting , Tuesday , 7&lt;)0 p .m Court Sts.. third floor o&gt;J•r :
HtllJV...I
servic.. 9.30 a m. Sunday School Ernest Deeter, c1oss leader lighthouse R-stoUrant
10 30 a .m
Youth meeting , Wednesday, 7:30 Cook, po1tor. Sunday 1chool,, 1~
8RADSURY CHURCH
OF p.m with Don and Martha a .m .; morning worship , 11 0
evening · service , 7 · 39 \
CHRIST, Mr. Donald Roley , pastor. Meadows , leaders.
$undoy school , 9 30 om., wor.
WHITE'S CHAPEL, Coolville RD. Wednesday evening, s•rvlu;
ship service 10 30 a .m., Sunday Rev Roy D.. ter , pastor. Sunday 7:30. Interdenominational , full
· ~
services , 7 p.m .; youth group , school9:30 a .m.; wonhip seN tee. gospel .
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD ~
Wedne1doy , 7 p.m .
10 30 a .m . Bible study and prayer
Pastor Dennis lales. Sunday
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST , Rev, Eorl service, Wednesday , 7·30p.m.
School, 10 a.m. ; worship strvic. :.~
Shuler, pastor. Sunddy school
RUTLAND
9 30a.m , Church servtce , 7 p .m .;
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST, 11:30 o .m. and 7:30p.m. PraytrA
youth meet ing , 6 p m.Tuesday Bi- Oenni1 Smith, pa1tor: Frank meeting, Wednesday, 7:30p.m. :..,.:
RUTLAND "POSTOLIC CHURcH,
bl• Study, 7 p.m .
Young ,Sunday school supt . Sun·
011
RACINE CHURCH OF THE doy school and communion , 9·30 OF JESUS CHRIST, Tl-lom&lt;K l. ~
Holmes,
pastor.
Bible
study&lt;t,
NAZARENE . Rev. John A. CoH- a.m. Wor1hip and comunton.
SaturdaV . 7·30 p.m .; Evangelist!~
mon, pastor, Sunday Scl-lool , 9:30 10 30a m
o .m ., Gerald Wells, supt. MornRUTLAND COMMUNITY p.m.; prayer mnting, TuesdaY!
Ing worship 10:30 om .: Sunday CHURCH , Sundoy School. 9·30 7 30 p .m. ; Sible Study, Thursd~,.evening worship , 7.30: Prayer a .m., worsh ip serviCe , 11 am .. 7·30p .m.
POMEROY
WESLE-YAiii:
meeting, Wednesday, 7 30 p.m.
Wednesday prayer meeting, 7 .30
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, Don L. p m. youth seflllc:es , Sunday , 7 HOLINESS - Harrlson&gt;Jillt R~
Walker Pastor , Ronnie Salser, p m., Sunday night worship , 7 30. Dewey King, po5tor; Edl~
Sunday school svpt.. Sunday
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE Weaver, anlstant; Henry Ebllnt.
school, 9 30 a .m ., mornmg wor· NAZARENE , Rev . lloyd D. Grimm , Jr., Sunday sthaol supt. Sunday ,
ship, 10 •o a .m.: Sunday evening Jr. pastor. Sunday school, 9 XI school , 9·30 a .m .; morning wor·•
wonhir. , 7:30: Wednesday even· o.m., wonhlp 1ervic:e, 10 : ~ a .m. shtp, 11 a .m. Sunday evening :
ing Bib e study , 7 .30.
Broadcast live over WMPO: young safi/ICe, 1 30; prayer meeting, 1
Thursday , 7 30p.m .
:
DANVILLE WESLEYAN , Rev R people ' s
urvice ,
6 . ~5.
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF,
D. Brown , pastor Sunday School, eyongelistic service , 7:30 p.m.
9·30 a .m.: mornmg worship Prayer meeting, Wednesday, 7 30 GOD - Not Pentecostal , Rev. •
10.45, youth service, 6 45 p .m .. p m , Missionary meeting, 7 30 George Oiler. po1tor. Warship:
service Sunday, 9 45 o m , Sun·4
e'&lt;~ening worshtp , 7:30 p m
p.m. first Wednesday ol month
day school , 11 a .m .; worship ser-:
prayer ond pratsa, Wednesday ,
MASON COUNTV
7:30p.m .
MASON FIRST BAPTIST, Second v1ce, 7:30 p.m. Thursday prayer.
•
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST, and Pomeroy Sts. , Stan Craig. meeting, 7.30p.m .
MT. HERMON United Brethren:
Miles Trout, pas1or
Sunday pastor. Sunday school , 9:"5 a.m.;
school. 10 o m , Stave little, supt. worship serYice, 11 o m , troln tng Church Sunday School 9 30 a.m .•
EYening service. 7 p.m.; prayer un ton , 6·30 p m, evening wor - Worship seN ice 10.45 a .m.;
meeting, Thursday, 7 p.m
ship service, 7:30 p.m. Mid Week Preaching ser11lces every Sunday•
CHESTER CHURCHOF GOD. prayer servrte. Wednesday, 7 30 alternating with C. E. Wednesday:
prayer meetmg 7:30 p m . Rev .,
Re11 Bobby Porter , pastor. Sun- p.m.
day school, 9:30 a.m., worship
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST , P James Leach , pastor . Da&gt;lidl
-;:
serVIce, 11 a .m.; evenrng ser'&lt;~tce , 0 . Box 487. Miller St. , Mason. W Holter, lay leader.
JIHOVAH'S WITNESSEs, 1 mile
7·30 youth ser'IIICe, Wednesday , Va. Sunday Bible Study 10 am .,
7:30p.m .
Worship 11 a .m. and 7 p.m. Bible east of Rutland, junc:tlon of Route
lAt&gt;IGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHUR· Studv Wednesday 7 p m., Voc:al 12~ and Noble Summit Rood- {L..
17~) Sunday Bible Lecture, 9::.1'
CH , Ted Jones , pastor. Sunday music.
school , 9 30 a .m., Roy Sigman ,
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST , Cor- o., Watchtower 1tudy, I'Cl':'30
s upt .; morning worship, 10.30, ner of Second and Anderson , a .m.; Tuesday Btble study , 7 cirql
Sunday evening service, 7 30. Mason. Pastor, Walter Cloud 8 15 p m , Thursday. theoc{q~
m•d -week ser&gt;Jice, Wednesday, Sunday school9 45 a.m .; worship school , 7 ·30 p.m. ; servtt!
' .,...
7:30pm.
service , 11 a .m. and 7 30 p m. meeting, 8.30 p.m
HOPE BAPTIST - 570 Grant St.,
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE Weekly 8tble study. Wednesday,
Mtddleport . Bobby Elkins, pastor.
NAZARENE , Rev Dole Boss , 7 30 p .m
pastor; Bob Moore, Sunday
MASON ASSEM8l Y OF GOD, Sunday School. 10 am , worship
serYlce, 11 o .m., even•ng ••rvice ,
School supt,, Sunday school Dudding Lane Mason , W 1/o
clones for all ages , 9:30 a.m , Chester Tennant Pastor . Sunday 7 30 p m. Thursday pr_pytr
morning worship, 10 45 o .m , Sc:hool 9 : ~5 a.m .; Children's meeting and Bible study,
NYPS , 6 30 p m , evangelistic ser· Church 6 :45p.m. Young Peoples p.m
"
RUTLAND FREEWILL S"P•iil
vice , 7:30 p .m. Prayer and Serv•c:e 6 •5 p m Evan9elist1c
fasting Tuesday. 10 a . m ., Service 7:30 p.m Women s Mis- Churcl-l - leland Holey, pastor.
Mtdweek
prayer
se rv•ce , sionary Council 10 a .m . tint and Sunday school , 10 a .m.: evening
Wednesday, 7·30 p.m ; men '! th)rd Tuesdays. Prayer ond B1ble service, 7 .30 p .m. Pr~
meellng , Wednesday, 7·30p.m .
prayer meeting, Saturday, 7 p m
Study, Wednesday, 7·30 p m .
CHURCH OF GOD of Prophoc~
mtnionary meeting, second
HARTFORD CHUQCH OF CHRIST
Wednesday , 7 30p.m
IN CHRISTIAN UNION The Rev . located on the 0 . J. White R
UNITED
FAITH
NON Wll lram Campbell , pastor Sunddy oft highway 160, Sunday Sc
DENOMINATIONAL. Rev. Roberl Sc hool , 9 30o m, James Hughes , 10 a .m. Superintendent Joh~
Lo11eday F1rsl Wednesday nlghi
Smtth , pastor. Sunday School , supt . even1ng service , 7 30 p m
9:30am., Closs leader, leo Hrll , Wednesday eyen ing prayer of month CPMA servitel, set:on~
worshtp 1ervic:e, 10 30om .; cl-lur- meeting , 7 30 p.m . Youth prayer Wednesdor WMB m.. ting , thir~
through
rflh youth servtcet
ch 7:30p.m.
serv•ce each Tuesday
•
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
FAIRVIEW SIBLE CHURCH . George Croyle, pastor
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL - 57~
Cl-iRIST, Elden R Bloke, pastor Letart , W.Va .. Rt . 1, Rev. Charles
Sunday S«:hool 10 a .m : Howard Kargro\les , pastor . Worship ser · Grant St ., M1ddleport , Rev . Bobbt
McCoy, supt .. Morn •ng sermon , viCes, 9 ·30 a .m .. Sunday school , Elkrn s. Sunday school 10 o "'"
11 a .m .. Sunday ntght sen~ices 11 a m ., evening worship , 7:30 morning worship. 11: e...eni~J
Chnstion Endeavor, 7·30 p .m .. p.m. Tuesday cotloge prayer worshtp , 1 30 p.m .; Thurada~
Song servtca, 8 p.m. , Preochmg meeting and Bible study, 9,30 eYeninliJ Bible stu dy and proy81f
8:30 p.m. Midweek Prayer o.m Worship service, Wednes· meeting, 7 30 p l'fl Affiliated wit~
meeting, Wednesday, 7 p m ., Roy doy 7·30 p.ni
s a.c
Adams, lay leader
·

'I I

DAD8URN CHORES!!

East stgnalled with the jack
of hearts at trick one so West
contmued w1th the ace and
anblher heart. East ruffed and
South overruffcd
Soulh cashed one of hiS high
trumps , led a second tromp Lo
dummy, led the queen of clubs
and dropped h1s jack under lt.
Wesl gathered in the third
defenSive tri ck w1th the king
and led a club back
With three tricks down Lhe
drain, South paused Lo study
the d1amond sltualion. He
could take a simple finesse
against Lhe queen but th ~t

linesse wasn ' t going to

lf=.:=::=:.:.:::;;:::.:

-

.,

A Canadian reader asks
whal we respond to partner's
one-diamond openmg bid
With
4Xx.Kxx tKQX.IlXXXX ?

We raise to two diamonds.
This bid IS generaily superior
Lo our second chmce of one
notrump.

I KX

IKABETS
t
J
I I I :t:
\LORMAN~
I .1 I K

HOW YOU M!C&gt;HT
• SR5AK "THE NEW8u
iO AN INTI.\I\4TE .

FRIEND.

(Do you have a queslion
tor fhe experts? Write "Ask
Now arrange the c!rcled lener!IJ 10 .
the Jacobys " care ol this
form tne eurprlse answer, as sug·
newspaper The Jacobys wrff
gested by the above cartoon. .
answer md1v1dua l questions
'' stamped. sell-addressed A=r JU
IT..
envelopes are enclosed The
(Answers tomorrow}
most interestl'ng quest1ons
w•ff be used m this column
Jumbles. GAILY CHOKE SATIRE QUORUM ·
and will receive copres of Yesle•day's Answer: What Shakespeare's vllla~e might •
.
JACOBY MODER/'1./
haue been-A " HAMLET'

I ·I

sr"·~r~x---x~1'"""117"'&lt;17I"'""'II?""I~J'~

I

-

�__.

•

.

•
••
••

FORA

~·
••

VALUE
RATED

••
••
••
••
••
~·

ON GOOD USED

"
••
••,
••
••
••
,.••,

.

76 Chew Mafibu 2 dr...................... '3795
74 Pontiac Catalina 2 dr................... '2995
74 Ford Galaxie 2 dr............... ........ 12695
74 Chevy Malibu Classic ...••....•.......... '2495
76 Ford Pinto AM/FM...................... 12495
74 Ford Mustang 11 ......................... 12495
73 Buick LeSabre Custom ..................12495
74 P~. FUIY Ill 4 dr........................12495
73 Chevy Impala 4 dr...................... 12295
73 P~. Duster 6 cyi........................ '1995
73 Ford Wagon 4 dr........................ 12295
73 Ford LTD 4 dr........................... 12095
74 Chevy Vega .............. ..................'l995
72 Ford Galaxy 2 dr.........................11595
70 MercuiJ Montego 2 dr............. ...... '695
68 Pontiac 4 dr............................. 1495
70 VW 2 dr. Squareback ................... 1795
5
66
4 dr.
••••• ••••• ••••••• 295

~.

NOW occ.ptlng piano 1tud.nts,
b.ginners, intermediotes , ad·
992vanced stuQents . Call

mo.

Business Services

3 AND 4 RM. furnish.d ond un- Will do odd jobs, roofi!"'g, poin ·
ting, gutter work . Phone 992furnish.d opts. Phone 9927AC'I.
SAJA.

--.-loti
..
111-

Totals

77,761.00

Tot• I Receipts &amp; Belences
General Fund
58,010.92
Motor Vthlcle License
Tax Fund
15,913.62
Gasoline Tu Fund
17,477.92
Federal Revenue
Sharing Fund
3,694 .92

Totals

Bat .. Dec. 3\,1976 58.010.92

Motor Vehicle license
. Tu: Fund
Bal ., Jan. 1, 1976
2,379.75
.
Receipts
Motor Veh ic le license.
Tax
9,533.87
Transfer
4,000.00
Total Receipt_s
13,533.87
Total B~lnnlng Bal&amp;nce
Plus Receipts
15.913.62
Expenditures
Total Expenditures
-Miscellaneous - 2.6~6 . 50
- Maintenance
9,09-4.38
Grand Total Exp . Motor Vehicle License
Tax Fund
11,7-ot0.88
Bal. , Dec . 31,1976
4.172.74
Total Exp . Plus Bal.
Dec . 31 , 1976
15,913.62
~uollne T•x Fund
Balance, Jan . 1, 1976 2,071 .92
Reulpts
Gasoline Tax
'
15,400.00

Total Receipts
Tot~l

15,AOO.OO

Beginning Balllnce
Plus Receipts
17,477.92

Exptndilurts

Total E~penditures Miscellaneous
1,742.26
- Maintenance
9, 205 .55
Grand Total EKp . Gasoline Tax Fund 10,947.81
Bal. , Dec . 31 , 1976
6, 530.11
Total Exp , Plus Bal.,
Dec . 311 1976
· 17,477.92
Federal Revenue
Sharing Fund
Bal. , Jan. 1, 1976
1,203.92
Receipts
Grants-Federal
2,381 .00
Anti -recession
110.00
Total Receipts
2,491 .00
Total Beginning Balance
Plus Receipts
3,694.92
E)!lptndltures
Mtint. end Operellon
Ecwulpment
3.300.00
Total Exp _
3,300.00
Bal., Dec . 31 , 1976
39~ . 92
'rotal Exp. Plus Ba l:,
Dec. 31', 1976
3,694. 92
Township Debt-Notes
Purpose For Which Note
Debt Was Cre11ted
Equipi'T1enl - Gradtr
Outstanding Jan . 1,
·

NOTICES
ALL HOUSEWIVES
ATTN ,: II

All Y1rd Sties, Rummage,
Porc;.tt and Basement Porch
and Basement SaiH, etc .
must bt: Jll ld In· ldVIflet .
Get yours In earl
by
stopping by our office af
Tl'le Daily Sentinel , 111
Court St. or wrlflng Box
729, Pomeroy , Ohio 45769
with your rle-m ittance .

v

6 ROOMS AND bath, corner lot in
Middleport.

GRACE EPISCOPAl
PARISH HOUSE

furnace ,

phone 992-5141 .
2 BEDROOM house in Rutland.

Coll992·:185lf.
2 BEDROOM TRAILER. S30 week .
All

East Mlin Slroet,

New

utilities

paid.

Phone

992-332A.

Pomeroy,O.

SMALL APT. In Middleport. C::oll
992-5262, tcoy Cecil.

Evoryono Welcome

NEW 3 bedroom house , built-in
kitchen , both and 1h, Phone
742-2306 or con tact MilO B. Hutchison, Rutland. Ohio .
ONE LOT in Syracu5e . Phone

992·37\A.
TUPPERS PLAINS, Ohio. New
three bedroom house , living
room , Iorge kitchen . ceramic
both , . carpeted, attached
goroge, Iorge lot. $22 ,900-

Phone(61A) 667·630• .

3 BEDROOM, 2 112 bath bi·level ,

SALE, SATURDAY, Feb. 19th .

COAL, limestone , and calcium
AUCTION, FRIDAY. lots of ~ew
chloride ond calcium brine for
and used merchandise ot the
dUst control and special mbdng
s~lt tor farmers . Main Street ,
'
h
Auction House , Hor1on St ..
WE WA N T to t ank our friends.
·
Pomeroy
. Ohio or phone 992·
and neighbors lor their kir'ldMason . W.Va. Phone (304)
3891.
ness during the illness ond · m -S47l ·
death of ovr loved one Helen SHOOTING MATCM , Rutland COAL for sole , Open 6 days per
wMk ond evenings. For further
Radford. We also wish to thank
lagion Holt . Every Sunday, 12
information call {614) 367-7338.
the Pomer.oy Emergency Squod,
noon.
Or •.Arnold Sattler, Dr. J~seph · --'=:::__----~-­
APPLES, FITZPATRICK ORCHARD.
Do\111 , Rev. Jame:s Corbitt and
SlATE ROUTE 689. PHONE
the Ewing Funeral Home. May
WILKESVILLE , (61A )669·3185.
God bless you all .
A
CANE
lolf
Friday,
Feb
.
lOth,
In
FULLER Brush Products for sale.
HOMER RADFORD AND fi4NIIL Y
the vicinity of Elberfetds. Will
Phone992-J.410.
identify. Moy :1ova left it by
NOTICE
OIL AND GAS
ei.Ctricity pole. KHpsoke. CAMPER, $600. Also. har~e
troller , $450. Phone (61-4) 698LEASE 'FORFEITURE
Phone 985-3'152.
TO : Petroleum Ser vice Co.
3290.
NEW-BED mattren,twin site. Los.t
5124 Beechcrott Road
Columbus, Ohio
in street near (row's. Fell from STEREO, new om -fm lm stereorad io combination $129.95 or
Gentlemen :
truck . Phone992-3265.
terms. COII99'2-396S.
You are hereby notified that
the
Undersigned lessors
USED
FORESTRY EQUIPMENT.
hereby elect to declare a
Timber jack 2300 Skidder ;
forfeitu-r e ot the fo llowing oi(
Beloit Skidder Model 300;
&lt;!!nd g&lt;!ls lease betwe"en you as
lessee and the undersigned as
Franklin 130B Skldder : John
lessors :
Deere 3.50 Crawler loader:
Lease dated the 28th day of
Morbork 636 DeMrker; Contact
December , 1977, between
Graves. Phone (614) 596 -4769 .
Herold E. Cowdery and Ida M.
Cowdery , husband · a11d ·wife,
ELECTROLUX AUTHORIZED Solos
as lessors, an d~ Petroleum
·ond Service, 1917 Ovdley Ave.,
Servi c es Co ., as Lessee,
Parkersburg, W.Va . Phone
covering 1~0 acres, more or
(304) -428-9661. Free home
less , situate in Olive Town demonstrations . pickup and
ship , Me igs County, Oh io, and
delivery service, new and
being bou nded on the Nort~ by
W . J . Warner and Albert
repossitssed 'sweepers and
Schultz , on the East by the
shompooers. ,Complete financOh io River, on t he Spu th by
ing available. 'A lso, Most&amp;f
Russ ~tl Rllndalph, and on the
Charge and Bank Ameiicord .
Wes t by Webster Reed , said
lease being of record in the
1952 BN FORO tractor in 90od co~­
office ot the Clerk or the
dition. With brush -hog. Phone
County Recorcter in . Me,gs
992·708A.
County . O~lo, In Lea se Book 58
~AR OR 1helled corn, Phone
at fa ge 781. said Ieese being
assigned to Southern Triangle
Elmer Newell , 985-3537 before
Oil Company .
lOa.m.
'T:he abov e: lease is hereby
declared forfeited by the
MOBILE HOME , 1972 Rebel 12 x
und ersigned lessors because
50. Coll985·3531 after 6 p.m.
of the non -payment of delay
ren t a l as required by the
FIREWOOD. phone 992·3658.
terms of seid lease.
ONE SIDE-BY·SIOE Gibson
It is the intention of the
refrigerator. l 1!. yrs. old , ex·
undersigned Lessor to file and OLD lurnHure, ice bo•es. brass
beds. wall telephones and
cellent condition. Phone (304)
recor d an affidavit of for ·
ports , or complee housaholds .
t ei ture for t~e above tease
877-2340.
with the County Recorder of
Write M. 0 . Miller, Rt. 4.
$2S.OO PER Hundred stuffing
Meigs County , Ohio, as
Pomeroy, Ohio . Coll992-7760.
envelop.ea.
Send
selfprovided by ta w .
Signed : Harold E . Co wdery , . CASH paid. for all makes and
.addressed , stomped envelope.
lessor
model&amp; of mobile homes .
Edroy Mills, Bo• 188, Albany,
Ida M . Cowdery, lessor
Phone oreo code 61-4-~23·9531 .
Mo. 64402,

-

••
••
••
••'

....

••• •••

Phone
MODERN CHEMICAL
614-992-2798
AllOO ~err St.
Pomeroy,D,

-REASONABLE

RATES
Reedsviite, 0. Ph. 371-6250

1•15 Washington ~lvd.

newly remodeled home , a
, room1 and both . Phone
7•2-2336 .
3 BEDROOM house , carpeted ex·
capt kitchen . utility room . tota l
alec. , aluminum siding, fenced
bock yord , tully insulated ,
washer and dryer. Hook-ups.
See at 169 Beech St ., Middleport or call 992-7 120 or '
9-49·21 SO from 8 tillS.

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

Belpre, Phone (614) 4237564 d1y, · or 992~6039

evenings.
Blown In flbergl•is wells
1nd 1ttics. 20 P&lt;;t. Savings
on Vinyl and Steel Sidings. ,
RtPiatemtnt 1nd storm
windows. ll yHrS actUIII

••
••••
•

IEJt GROVER .
(6141915-4155
Chestor, Ohio
10-17-1_1119 (Pdl

'

Sentinel Carrier
Wanted In
s,acuse Area.

Free Prizes.
Phone 992-2156.
L---------...1

(21 18, ltc

truly deserves 11. uon't fear being
too lavish If you are sincere.

TIMBER 1 Pomeroy Forest Products . Top price tor standing
sawtimber . Call Kent Hanby ,

I·AA6·8570.
LEO (Jutr 23-AIIII. 22) This Is a COINS, CURRENCY, rokens, old

good day to talk to key people
regarding conditions you'd like
to have changed that affect your
work or career.

YIROD (Aug. 23-Sopl. 22) The

odds are tilted a bll in your favor
today In situations Where you
hope to strike a bargain on a
one-to-one basis.

pocket wotche• and chains ,
silva~ and gold, We need 196-4
and older silver coina. Buy, aell ,
or trade' Call Roger Wamsley ,

7A2-2331.

·

CASH I! I for junk cars . Frye'•
Truck ood Auto. 24 HOUR
WRECKER SERVICE! Phone

742-2081.
WOULD
LIKE to lxly 350 boles ol
LIIRA (Bopl. 23-0cL 23) Serhoy. Phone 7A2·3182.
vice rendered may not pay an
lmmeqlate dividend today, but it
will give you something on account that you can draw from
later.

SQUARE OR round baled hey . Coli

I BEAMS and H Beqms . 8, 9, and
10 Inch . Call 992·703-4.

ALUMINUM JON Boot, 12 II., like
new . $140. If new, would cost

S\95. Phone 992- 737~.
ALUMINUM SEMI-V Boar, 12 II.
good condition, $175 . It new,
would coat $300 . Phone

992-7375.
SHOTGUN, 20 go. single shot
Winchester, $38. Very good
shape . Phone 992-7375.

$25 plck"P lood.

FI~Ey.'OOD ,

Del ivered ot reasonable
distance . Phone 949-2590.

REMINGTON

1100

20

go .

~~~

wrn~

pow-er brakes, V-8. New front
tlr" ond battery . Moke o good
work car , $550. Phone

..9·2660. •

.

--- -~ --

hourly doily or wwkly . Loti of
room, educational toys and
Iorge yard. Morning anocks and ,
hot lunch, . provided. Call

HA VE YOUR toxtt done by an accountant. Also. now occepting

bookkooplng. Phone 992·6206
41MIIIt , ..., 11·~une ZD)
lrh Sr.. Middleport.
or992-6173.
E-ll bthlnd 1M ICeiiN today
---- -·- -1971 FORD LTD, air condltlonifl9. INCOME
TA)C Service, Walloca
' Ire -king In your behiiK, 0\'en
, .... 11, 1177
Am·Fm radio In~ rnn~i 1 on .
Ruuell ,
Bradbury ,
Coli
though you mtY not be IWirt ol
1.1.1'• ~ :0-o.;
Phone
or
phone
,
Lay the grounawork eerly this ~; ,,t.;tM1.
99'2 -7228.
tlleln. You'll be wrpriNdl
coming year for ways fo .add lo
.
ALL TYPES of upholstering. We
CMICIII (,_ 11_..., 22) A your resources. Sensible plan- 1973 fOliO Rongor XLI. Stm·.
speciolire In antique$ , Phone
lrtendlltlp - be cemented to- ning will yield a surprisingly Pliono 992·3'15&lt; .
m .3373 or 985 427-4 an)' lim•.
hAlf.
'"'"' Jf vtM' .,.,,... tomeont who ,......... ,.,,. • ., ;,.. tM
'
--- - -·~-

1

-- -- --- ·-~-

1-.f~tr

I ------

MAIN
POMEROY, 0.
NEW LISTING - 2 or 3
bedrooms,

k itchen

range aM rei.,

has

bath,

carpeting, full basement
storm doors and windows.

NEW 3 bedroom house, :2 baths,
all elec., I acre, Middleport,
close to Rutland. Phr .,e 992SMALL farm for sole, 10•1'. down.
owner final;lced. Monro&amp; Coun·
ty , W. Vo . Phone (30-4) 772-

Vetera ·n s
Memo'rlal
Hospital, approx .. 41f2 .
acres, ·· almost
level,

Virgil B. Sr., Realtor
216 E. second StrHt
Pomoror, Ohio 45769
Phone 992-332S
Rt. 7 &amp; 33 - Is near thlo
one. Hao }.bedrOQms, bath,

financing to qualified
persons. $21,000.00.
LOOK - BOUT 5 acreo In
Pomeroy , some woods,
nice 3 bedroom house,

bath, Iorge kitchen wllll
plenty
of
cabinets,
stolnle" steel sink,
porches, natural gao heat.
Just $7,900.00.
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

and dHcher . Chorles R. Hotfield , Back Hoe Service,
Rutland , Ohio. Phone 7•2·2008 .

3102 or (lOA) n2-3227.
COUNTRY farm land wlth secluded woods , water' and good occeu in Monroe County, W. Va.
$1 ,000 down , call (lOA) n2~102 or I~) m-:r.m.

carpeted throughout, about
1 acre of ground, very low

n;ghr phone 992·3525 or 992·
5232. EXCAVATING. dazer , backhoe

7481.

alum . siding, porches.
Asking just SlO.SOO.OO.
N'EW LISTING - 0, old
Rt. 33 just 5 miles out, 10.7
nice laying acres. Good
blacktop road, close to
schoo ls, utilities available.
NEW LISTING - Near

utilities available, just
18,250.00.
.
STOP PAYING RENT You can own this newer
home. 3 nice bedrooms,
bath, utility room , garage,

backhoe work : dump trucks
and lo-boys for hire; will haul
fill dirt , to soil. limestone and
gravel. (:all Bob· or Roger Jef·
fen , dov phone 992-7089,

SEPTIC Sy.stems ins foiled by
licens'ed Installer, . Shepard
Contractor$ . Phone 742 -2409.

.

WILL do roofing , conlilruction,
plumbing and heating. No job
too large or too ~mall . .Phone
742 -23-48 .
CARPENTER, flooring , ceiling,
ponellng . Phone 992-2759.
MOBILE Home Repa ir, Elec.,
plumbing and heating. Phone

TEAFORD

gas furnace,

city

m -~ 58 .

near

~·

~ -- -..

Quality Work At
Reasonable Rates

.'

AI. TROMM Q)NSJ

1

Fret Esllmotn

'

Work ·Guar~ntHCI

742.2__3l8

.

·

L...---:...:.:.:;::;:__ _ _J

..
BRADFORD , Auctioneer, Com- "'N
plete Service. ,Phone 9-49-2487 _1 1
or 949 -2000. Racine , Ohio. Crill
Bradford.
•..
ELWOOD BOWERS . REPAIR - ,, ,1
Sweepers, toasters . -irons, oil
small appliances. Lawn mower ; ~ •
neMt to State Highway Gorage . " '

on ~ovre 7' Phone (6l&lt;) 9SS· ••

r~

3825

;•u

house

stores

Homes Built '

T.V. shop_, Electronic T.V. Clin ic
·
Service call. $5.-95. Coler, 8 &amp; w REMODELING, Plumbing, heating ..i,- 1
ontenno systems stereos, etc.
and all types of general repair .
572 South Third, Middleport.
Work guor·ont~ 20 years ex:
Phone 992-6306. Corry in ond
perience. Phone 992·2-409 .
••
sovemoney.
.
SEWING MACHINE Repolrs, ' ••r- - ~
-IOWERV AND , MARTIN Exviet, all makes, 992-22fW. The ' ' ·'
cavoting, septic systems ,
Fabric Shop , Pomeroy . •1
dozer , backhoe , dump truck,
Authorized Singer Solea and
limestone . grovel, blacktop
Service. We sharpen Scissors. · ~
paVing, Rt . 1~3 . Phone 1 (614)
-:

wllll bath and lurnoce. Aloo
a 2 bedroom mobile home
unfurnished. Only 12-M.
BRICK APTS. - 3 units,
one furnIshed and 3
garages

I

ELECTRONIC T.V. CLINt( New

water

near school .22 - M.
4 LOTS - New river front
property, 3 bedrooms. nl&lt;e
kitchen. dining room, 2
baths, and double garage
.Js.M.
NEW LISTIN.G - 21
h
acres, 2 bedroom

"

SEPTIC TANKS clean~ . Modern
Sonitatlon, 992 - 39~ .

698-7331 .

OIL. GAS Furnoces, oil b,men,

repair, ond ports for trailers
and homes. 24 hovr service.

In

Middleport .20-M.
ON THE LINE - Of Meigs.
Gall Ia. A 3 bedroom frame,
bath, furnace and over 2
acres ol land. 22-M.
KENO.BASHAN RD. - 3

Phone~-2165.

HOUSE PAINTING, Interior and
exterior, Qual ity work · ot
reasonoble rates . Phone

7A2·2328.
FROSTY'S C.B. Rodlo Eq,ip.,

bedrooms, 7 room house,
furnace, basement, T.P.

everything in two-woy Radio 's,
Antennas, and acce5. Phone

992-22S9- 992-2568 •

water, carpel and garage.
2S·M.

HANK CLELAND
ASSOCIATE
fiS-4112

Porrlond, BA3-21B1.
oXCAVATING, Boekhoeo, Ooxor,

WATCH THIS AD TO SEE
THE NEW CHANGE.

trencher , low Boy , dump truck,
trucks, septic syst•m•. Bill
Pullins . Phohe 992-2478 day or
nivht.

outomatlc light""eight (one of
the beat) . $180. Like new .

1'166 PLYMOUTH IN good running ._992,,:;:-3382==,:·:,-----,condition Asking $250. 1967
Ford Xl, o.e ~ .. , ;ng condltlnn , $:.\A. . .. uo be ...., ot l.t9

~XCAVATING , dozer, loader and

the end, it was a vote to
-adjourn the House for a
three-day weekend that
finally ensured a $13,ooo..a.'
raise for Congress and
government executives
will take effect SUnday.
Reeommended by Gerald
u ~·or&lt;llleforo he left office, the
will raise imnual
pay for an estimated 2,496
top-level government
employes including federal
judges, Cabinet members,
the vice president, congreS8Dien and two fonner
presidents by an average 28
per cent.
. The raise takes effect au·
tmnatically SUnday because
neither the Senate nor the
HoUBe voted against it .
. The Senate, recessed aU
week, earlier tabled a resolu·
t1on disapprovlnl! the pay
hike, thereby avoiding an up
or down vote on the raise. The .
HoUBe completed busine511
Thursday and adjourned until
Monday without bringing up
the _disapproval resolution .
House opponents, irritated
by
the
Democratic
leadership's refusal to push
lor a vote on a disapproval
resolution and una~le to

.FLOWERS

:

THE TRADITIONAL
SYMBOL

4

H··

••

:

INSTALLED
Rogullr $14.95

:
.:

~
!II

OF SYMPATHY

'10.95 S.. Yd. ·•!

Evaryot.y montY

~

SIYtr.

Good choice colon. ·

secure the vote through
normal means, .attempted a
symbolic protest Thursday.
They asked all who opposed
the raise to vote against
adjourrunent and keep the
House going until · the
proposal could reach the Door
for action .
Although Speaker Thomas
O'Neill -branded the move
"high schoolish," the House
initially voted 224-109 against
adjourrunent.
. But the leaders said they
woulp not bring up the
resolution even if the House
stayed in session aU weekend,
and opponents eventually
realized "there's nothing tO
be gained by staying here,"
as Rep. John Ashbrook, R·
Ohio, put it. They agreed to a
unanimous corisent request to
adjourn until Mopday.
One of the stipulations
.voiced by President Ford and
later by President Carter,
was that any substantial pay
raise should be coupled with a
strict code of ethics. The hope
for Congress was that outside
income such as bonor!ll'ia an~
legal fees would be outlawed.
Committees ln both the
House and Senate are
working on ethics codes, and
stronger regulations on
income sources and fin8ncial
disclosure appeared likely.
Salaries for the vice presi·
dent, chief justice, speaker
and Senate president pro tern
will be increased from $65,600
ro $74,000; Cabinet members
and Supreme Court justices
from $63,000 to $66,000;
majority and minority
leaders of Congress from
$52,000 to $65,000; members
of Congress, deputy and
assistant secretaries and appeals co11rt judges from

$44,600 to $57,:i110 ; federal
judges and level-3 executives
from $42,000 to $52,500.
Because the pensions of

12or15Ft.

Do 11 yavrsolf, wllll ptd'
dint, S7 .95 sq. yd. Willi

Polly's Pointers
White vinegar can
erase old hem line
DEAR POLLY- When !let
a hem down in askirt or dress
I am left with a ring where
the hem was turned up so -I
would like to know how to
remove lt.- MRS. C.L.
DEAR MRS. C.L. - U the
ring is a soil line you will have
to pre-treat that line before
IBundering the gannent or
point it out to the dry cleaner
if the gannents have to be dry
cleaned. When such a line is a
c~ line wet a cloth with a
mixture of white vinegar and
water, wring out and use as a
pressing cloth. This has never
tailed to work for me and
when line is very stubborn I
have used pure vinegar alone
after testing on an inconspicuous place, -POLLY.
DEAR POLLY- For many
years I have used the follow·
lng so as to cut down on so
many trips to the dry
cleaners. Often I take a clean
cloth or brush and dip in rubbing alcoholl keep in a glass
container and clean spots of
g~. etc. Hang gannent
for an hour for the wetness to
evaporate and I have never
been left with any stains or
circles. Test first to see effect
on fabric. -AUDREY.
DEAR POLLY - My
Pointer is for those who do a
lot of knitting or crocheting. I

.".i
!
'*

OFFICE
AT NOoN

sus ;

poddln1 lnstolled
SCitllre yorcl.

5 (CLOSE

ON THURS.I-EAST COURT

Clll 742-2211

New Lis11ng - ·Nice 2story country home. containing t
room• and lV2 bath, mostly carpeted. Kitchen has all
new built-In ceblnt!ls with .bronze _stove &amp; relrlg. lo
match. New porches and all new alum. siding and
storm windows. FA nofurol ""' furnace and drilled
well, garden opace. This houso to worm and roody for
Immediate occupancy, come toke o look lust $18,900.

RISING STAR Kennel Boarding ,
Indoor-Outdoor run1, grooming
all breed1 , cleon sanitary
focili tle1 . Cheshire. Phone (6U)

367-0292.

HOOF HOL(OW. Buy, sell, trodo
or train horsts . RLiTH RE'EVES ,
trainer. Phone (61-t)

698·3299.

Racine - Good 3 bedroom and dining room, low
uttllttes, even o garden 'PI""· Prlceq at only $8,500.
Special - 3 bedroom and attached geroge, totai
tlectrtc home under c:onstruc:tton on If• acre lot. Owner
will finish In :10 cloys for buyor or will soli "as Is"'. May
take trade. Located near Ch!llttr.

' -113acres
Clltlttr
farm, 10 •cres tl lt•bltland, niCe 2
story form hoUM, 7 rooms . and beth, all hardwood
f!oors and bastment. Barn and other outbuildings, 2
ponds, A nice toying form prtc:td to go. Located noor
Chtsttr. Clli lor Appt.
Cltosttr - E- dream of owning your own goll
courst? Htn's your chance tor you or your friends to
own 1 nice rolling golf &lt;011r11, 50Vt acres, 9 ar-s, nice
modern dub hou11. outbuilding wllll ell spraying ond
seeding equtpmont, nttds somo mowing and 1 lllllt
repair .work on golf courso. This could be purchased
wllll tho 113 1cres llsttd above 1nd dtvotoped Into •
beautiful .II hole golf c:ourH. call for 1ppt.

cau

LAnd

W• Nttd Farm
Jimmy Detm At ,4,·2318

.

TALK TO
WENDELL ORATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

RUTLAND

ACTUAL USE REPORT

PUINITU.

IIIII II

F42-2211

--............

· RUTLAND TOWNSHIP

•

••
••

•
.
'
.••·-·~··-- ....... .

ConvPt~ient

:•.e

.

. •·

•.

Mart., Tues., Wtd.
1:001111:10
TllunciiY 1111-

•

:

-

•

."

•
e
\

Close Sit. At .5 P... ,

11

IIUTLAND PURNITUB

742·2211
'

'·

-

AIINOLD GRATE ·
. .
'
.

1111~

o.r..tr.bM 31 1171

RUTLAND TOWNSHIP

TW,, CLIIK

MEIGS COUNTY

.a

.

RUTLAND. OHIO 4!175

~=

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

ILIIy 1, 1171

./ ACCOlllff 110, Jll 053 011

•

FRIDAY TIL 8

: · ~.,

·

.... •

i1:
tF ·
: ··. ·~······.. :

:=~f

illllrlrlt fie Ml'locllrOIII

Shopp11HJ Hours

•

RUTLAND :

-.

1.

•

'

.

.. "'J~"' XI. •n•
••~----''"''r.,
llc....,
L'tr-"""
.. "*~~~~I. 1111""
~....
~ J\, 111t ··- - - - ''"''''-""'--).._

•

...

former presidents also are
pegged to the salaries of
Cabinet officers, Nixon and
Ford wlU get a $3,000 raise.

USED CARS,,

~

•CoM~MfN't1.11111W~......-~I .l l1il

II _ _ _ __

t , J""" ......... ""'~IIfANYI
•· '""'" IIMII , 1. a. 4

1 -===:Yiii:
Y)1.._,
'-

s

S- - __

'

J,!!"-.--

.

CAN DEPEND ON,
SEE
DAN THOMPSON

74 Cadillac Cpe. DeVille .................. '5500
Full power and air .

76 Olds 88 HT Cpe., air ................... '5795
76 Ford Granada, PS ••••. ••••...••..•••••• '4695
74 P~. Duster, PS, air ..................... 12795
74 Olds Cutlass Cpe., Was '3895 ........ '3695
74 Vega GT Cpe................. ........... '1995
74 8MC Homet2 Dr...............:••••••• '1995
73 Old Torino, power &amp; air ................ 12695
73 Cutlass 4 dr., air ................ :....... '2495
73 Olds 98 Lux. Cpe....................... 13495
73 Olds 88 Roval, air, 4 Dr••••••••••.•••.• '16.95
73 Olds 88 4 Dr., power &amp;air •.•••.....• 1595
73 Buick Re~l HT Cpe................... 13495
73 Olds Cutlass S Cpe., power &amp; air •.•.••12795
72 Chevy Impala 4 Dr., air .................11295
12 Olds 98 4 Dr., air ••.•.......••..•••.•• 12295
72 Buick Elec. HT Cpe..••.•.....•...•••••• 12495
72 Ford Torino 2 dr......................... 11395
71 Chevy Caprice HT Sedan ••••••......•.. '1795
71 Olds 98 Lux., power &amp;air •.•••••••••• '1995
71 Ford LTD 4 Dr., power &amp; air •.•••••...• 1795
70 Ford LTD 4 Dr., power &amp; air ........... '895
70 Cutlass S Cpe~ power ••••••••••..••.••• 11295
69 Ford LTD 4 Or., power &amp; air ••.••..••. .'795
67 Cadillac HT Sedan, air ...................'995
65 Olds 98 Power &amp; air ....................1395
1

See one of these courteous salesmen : "Pete
Burris. Lloyd Mclaughlin or Marvin
Keebaugh ,

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

501 NYLON
OrHn, gold, red, blut, rust.'

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

By CHERYL ARVIDSON
WASHINGTON (UPI.I - In

iill••••••••
sA· VE ON ...•:
CARPniNG
n ft.l~
rLU .11ft1

RIGGS USED CARSRay ·Riggs

13,000 year raise assured lawmakers

'

-

Roofing &amp; Siding
Room Additions
Garages

Pomeroy, 0.

Roger Riebel
_ 985-4100
.
. on 51. Rt. 7

-...

. .,

TRUCKS
73 Ford Ranger F·100 ......................12695
73 Ford Custom F-100 ................ ..... 12695
73 Ford Ranchero ......................... '2695
71 Dodge Sportsman 9 Pass. Van ...•....11995
59 Ford FIOO................................ 1295

Phone 992-2174

-..

1-r-n 1 mo.

$1795
$1995

D. Story or Bill Nelson .

500 Main St.

~

Hrs. 9:ooo.m.
To Dusk

No Sundoy Calls Please

J,

-'

$2995
$2695
$2495

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS

••
•••

992-7034

F.-ee Esttmatn

Colvert,

••
••

homes by Skyline &amp; Fuquo
Homos Inc.
noo E. Mlln St.
Pvmoroy,Ohio

$4595
$3795
$2695
$1995
$4295

forget before you buy any car new or used, you
owe it to yourseH to check with us. We are the Friendly
Dealer, we have sharpest pe11cil in town. See Ceward

...•..•
•

PHOTOGRAPHY

$5395

Don't

••
•
•••

manufactured housing.
Double wldts &amp; modular

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860

1·25-1 mo., pd.

••
••
••
•

•" '
••

Kingsbury Home
Sales Inc.
Wt honcllt only lht bell In

SIDING

expeirence.
Financing Availlblt
C. A. Newmen, Pres.

.•.•••••',

Aerial
Commercial
Schools
Weddings

1 ~ 17 - 1mo .

l-23-1 mo. Pd.

is ACRES, Also about 5 acres with

~ .

••
••

PHOTOG~

STRIPPING, REPAIRING
RERNISHING &amp;
UPHOLSTERING

1976 Pontiac Sunbiard
1976 Pontiac Grand Prix
blue &amp; while
1975 Buick Regal
Extra clean &amp; loaded
1974 Chev. Camaro
1973 Dodge Pickup
1972 Chrysler Newport, 4 dr .
1975 Oldsmobile Cutlass. 2 dr.
1973 Opel GT, low milage
Sport Car
1973 Ford Mach 12 dr .. low mileage
1974 Opel Manta 2 dr .. low mileage
1972 Chev. Imp. 2 Dr. H.T.
A Good Buy .
1973 Chev. Imp. Cust. 2 Dr. H. T.

•••

of

• bln.i.tlon could produce a s~o~b­
select activity that Is fun and
stantlal return.
dtfferent even If It means lravelTAUIIUI (April M·MIJ 20) lng a short distance 10 do lt.

toward tomorrow and tomorrow.

NOTICE!
!!
'

PARTS - lABOR
GUARANTEED

ECONOLINE HOME
INSULATION, INC.

~-.

you thaka ttle cobWebl lrom

-Automatic
Transmission _Service

Co,nry. Aks ing $46.500. Phone
992·2A92.

-l.i;P91111111J

. YQUr thinking. llfNm ond look

.

••
••
••••
•

MOTORS,.mo..

WBF~ in family room , 2 cor
garage. dishwasher , nice location on I acre lot in Meigs . . - - - - - - - - - - - - ,

Homemade soup and chili.
Please bring containen. Meigs
County Humane Society Tlvilt
Shop located across from
~omeroy Post Office.

992·5668.
1976
10,000.00
POMEROY AUTO RECYCLING.
Redeemed During Year
Phone 992-7375,
1976
5,000.00
NOW BUYING SCRAP. Turn WESTERN AUTO, 3 speed. \2 volt
Balance Outstanding
junk oufos into cosh. Also buy·
(Del. :!A-NDY- 22) One
elec. trolling motor, $50. Phone
Dec. 21,19766
5,000.00 SCORPIO
ilig metols . botterit1 , etc.
who
holds
you
.
In
high
esteem
Rate of tnt ,
'pc1 .
992-7375.
. .
Open MondOy , Tutsdoy .
Oate of Final Mat.
12,31 -77 will do all that's possible to make
Wods.,
Friday,
8:00
·
4:30:
.
thir:~gs happier lpr YOL! today.
Total - Rtdeemed During
Saturday 8:00 . 12:00. Phone
Year .1976
5.000.00 This ally has considerable clout.
992-6337 . Old Rt. 33 just across
". f : A
Total - Balance Outstanding
Dec . 21, 1976 ·
5,000.00 8AOITTARiU8 (Now. 23-Dtc.
Grueaet'sChipper.
· ,
ll.nliF ,flllfNfR 1
21) Insights pertaining to the
(71 ta, He
outcome or an Important event
should not be Ignored. They
Lot Pvm.,.y Londmortc
Could enhance your tactics and
soften &amp; condition yovr
IF YOU hove o servke to oHer,
strategy.
Wlttr lnd I Co.op Wlltr
wont to buy or sell something,
sollontr, Modtt UC-XVI.
CAPRICORN (Dtc. 22-Jon, It)
oe looking for work . . . or
The Impression you make toda')l
whatever • . . you'll get r"ults
·Now Only t279,95
Will be favorable and tasting .
faster with a Sentinel Wont Ad.
Lit us tnt your water
Saying ond doing the rlghllhlngs
Coll992-~l 56.
FrH.
comes usy.
AOUARIUI (Jon. 20-Fob. 11) Be
Landmark
alert tor the possib ility of
• . ,JI&lt;k w. eo....,, Mlr.
material
gain
lhrough
one
who
Fat .........,. , .... 11, 1111
Phontffi·2Til
has been your benefactor in the 1'169 CHEVROLET llsquolno: 1'166
BUICK Electro, 225: 2 llakan
AIIIII (Mirch 11 •April U) past. He'tl provldt oppOrtunity
lttalblklt. l'hone ..9.2A32. .
Observe all the pertinent trends, again today. ·
-----.-·=
. .
but follow your hunches in finan- PIICEI (Fob. :IG•Morclt 20) It 197i /4NIC MATADOII. Fo"' door, -.
cial mlftors todoy. This tom- smitten with restlessness tod8y,
outomotk, power stHrlng, 'wtLL DO dllldallllng in my home,'

Frelh hoi* will be awokened If

....

T,.. Rifler eo.

SWAIN'S .

992-3129 or 992-SAJA.

Tuesot.y, Fob. 15, 1977
7:30p.m.

95,097.38

Expenditures
General Fund
42,519 .3~
Motor Vehicle License
Tax Fund
11,740.88
Gesollne Tax FUnd
10,947.81.
· F~deral Revenue
Sharing Fund
3,300.00
'Totals
68, 508.03
Bal•nce Dec . 31, ltU
General Fund
15,-491 .58
Motor Veh lc te L tcense
TaJcFund
.
~ . 172 . 7-4
Gasoline Tax Fund
6,530.11
Federal Revenue
·Sharing Fund
39-4.92
Tot at
26,589 .35
Cnh lelance,
Receipts And
Expenditures
By Fund
Gtntl"ll FUnd
Balance, J11n. 1. 1974 11.67-4.76
Receipts
General Pror,erty TuReal Esta e and
.
Trailer (Gross)
31,674.49
T11nglble Personal Property
Tax: (Gron&gt;
8,272:.-47
' local Government and
2,989.80
State h1come Tax
Cigarette License FeeS
and Fines (Gross)
89'.29
Gifts and Donations ~3 . 06-4 . 81
Fees, Zoning,
Cemetery, etc .
245. 10
Total Receipts
46,336.16
Total Beginning Balance
Plus Receipts
58.010.92
Expenditures
Total ExpenditureS
-Administrative 28,785.77
-Town tlalls , Memor ial
Buildings &amp; Grounds
10,95-4 .09
- Cemeteries
2,756.11
-Lighting
22.77
Grand Total Expenditures General Fund
42,519.3-4
Bal ., Oec . 31 , 1976
15,-491.58
Total Expenditures Plus

••

Box

MAJOR OIEMICAL
-MEETING

All Previous
One Owner Used Cars

••
••

Southusflm lJfllo

LARIIl,.~~~DER

NEW OR USED

••
••
•

NOTiCE-.

Summ .,, of Cnh
aetences, Receipts
And Expenditures
Bill net J1n . 1. 1976
General Fund
· $11 ,674.76
Motor Vehicle license
Tax Fund
2,379.75
Gasoline Tu Fund
2,077.92
Federal Revenue
Sharing Fund
1,263.92
1
Totals
17,336.35
Total Rtcetptt
Ge_n eral Fund
46,336.16
Motor Vehicle License
i3,S33.87
TaK Fund _
Gasoline TaK Fund
15,400.00
Federal Revenue
Sharing Fund
2,491 .00 '

SMilH NELSON MOTORS INC•

::

,COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork. Rt, SEWING-ALTERAT ION S:
33, ten miles nort~ of Pomeroy. Uphol s t9r i ng , dro pes ' - - - - - - - - - : - - , . . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - _ , ; ._ _ _ __J
- Pratt's M;;t'--:w;J.
reasonable. 572 South Third ~-,;;;'lllti""''IX'
Lorge
~ts with concrete patios,
(Pie-atanton Meal Processing,
Ave ., M iddlepo rt . Phone •r
sidewalks, runnen ond off
Inc. ) Custom slo.ughterlng, and
992-6306.
street porklng. Phone m ·7-479.
·processing. Retail , whalesole.
No ~polnmenl necetsary. Call ONE BEDROOM Apls . or VILLAGE PORTABLE WELDER , lofge ond
lltllllltil!t Stnlcts
small jobi. Con al so !how
(61Aj-593-86S5, ho,rs, 9:00 lilt
MANOR In Middleport for S104
t.en water pipes . Phone
fro_
6:00 7 Pamaray Rood . Athens.
monthly plus elec. or $130 in·
ANY PilCH
Oh.
'
9A9.21&gt;16.
&amp;Allies
eluding alec . LOWER RATES for
$10111
SENIOR
CITIZENS.
Convenient
ANY SIZE
GUN SHOOT at the Racine Gun
liHIIIOIIS I 0001$
to shopping on Third ond Mill
Club every Sulidoy , 1 pm
Sts . in Middleport. Brand new
1£1'\N:l•m
Assorted meots .
. ---"'---~~~
tligh quality apartments . See
RACINE FIRE Dept . will have a
the manager ot Apt. 28 or coli
IUIIIII~
Located in Langsville
Gun Shoot every Saturday night
992-n21 . An Equal Housing
SIDIIIC-aii!T
6 p .m . at their building in
21-A
Opportunity,
;uTT(I$MIIIIKS
Commercial property of)proJC. 17
Boshan, Ohio.
AVAILABLE AT Riverside Apts. I
or.ras , level land, located at
badrm . apartment , $100 per
Tuppers Plains on Ohio , Route
monfh, ·2 bedroom opts . $133
7. Phone (61A) 667-6304 .
"'- lti.ZI74
rh. ttz.Jttl 4-IB-1
per month, Equal Opportunity
3 bedrooms, 11/r baths , Iorge livHousing. Phone 992 -3273.
ing room , dining room and kit2 bedroom unfurnished oportchen, fully carpeted . Phone
PROFESSIOIIIAL
ment in Middleport. Phone
9'92·3129, or992·5A34.

USED CAR YOU

"You'll Like Our Quality Way
Of DOing Business'
992.5342
GMC FINANCING
Pomeroy
Opeo Evenings Untii6100- Til5 p.m. Sat.

FORD
1976 LTD COUNTRY SQUIRE WAGON

4 door. demo .• 9 passenger. automatic transmls!iiOn.
power steer ing , air condit ioning , power seats, cruise,
luggage rack , power windows , electr ic power door
locks, landau luxu ry grp.

$AVE$

1976 ELITE 2 DR. DEMO

400, 2V, VB, half vinyl roo f, pawer steering, air
condition ing, AM-FM B tra ck stereo, dual sport
mirrors, light grp.
1

1975 GRAN TORINO 4 DR.

2995

351, 2V, V8; power steering, automatic transm ission,
air conditioning, AM radio, 28,000 miles, vinyl roof,
good fam ily car. clean.

2175

1974 SUPER BErnE VW

1

4 speed, rear window defogger, like new VW, orange
fi nish, a real gas saver, good tires .

1395

1

1972 PINTO WAGON

4 cyli nder , automatic tr ansm ission, l ug~age_ rack ,
another gas saver.

1972 PONTIAC GRAN PRIX SJ MODEL

steer i ng , automat ic transmissiOn, air
con ditioning, bucketseats, console, vinyl top, excellent
body, good clea n interior. shows good care.

1485

1

1972 FORD GALAXIE 500 4 DR.

302 VB, power steering, automat ic tran smissi on . air
con ditioning .

1495

1971 PLYMOUTH SCAMP 2 DR.

1

va,

318,

automatic transmission, power steering,
facotry air, ful l \l inyl top, radial tires, very good
vehicle, don' t miss th is one.

12895

1974 FORD f.IOO PICKUP

302, VB, 3 sp~d tr ansm ission, new tires, nice running
truck .

1

2195

1972 FORD F-100 PICKUP
302,

va, 3 speed transmissiol l, t u-tone paint, low miles.

See: Pat Hill, Rocky Hupp
F
or Darrel Dodrill
or a good deal on a new .or used vehicle
Open Evenings Til6:00
·
Except Thursday and Saturday
Closed Sunday

DAN THOMPSON FORD
Middleport, O- .

by Gill Fox

~
--~
-·

'2695

VB. power

. 992-2196

SIDE GLANCES

'5695

-

§I
buy yam when I see it on sale
and save it for future use so
have many many skeins to
store. I get several of those
divided boxes from the liquor
store (most have 12 dividers
for quart bottles) cover them
with adhesive backed paper
and pile them one on top of
the other after each box division is fllled with one color of
yam. It is easy to see how
much I have on hand of one
kind or coiGr and little space
is required for the stacked
boxes.
Many of my hobbies require the use of minute sized
beads and to keep them
separated as to kinds and colors I plaCe them in old ice
· cube trays and they are easily stacked for storage. A
piece of cotton is put over
each section to keep them
from spilling out and I cover
each entire tray with a clear
plastic wrap. -P.J.W.
P.tl. 011
DEAR POLLY - I am .a
freshman in a new school and ."I'm convinced it's called an 'annual checkup' because
every year I have to UP the amount of the CHECK.''
was wasting a lot time havinll
to be constantly consulting
my schedule which meant
digging through my purse to
find it Many seem ro.have
the same problem but I have
solved it by taping my
schedule on the inside flap of
my purse and the idea is
working great with no more
!wnblingaroundandnomore
COLUMBUS (UPI) _Sen. "the most promising means
belnglatetoclasses.-KERI.
John Glenn, ~hlo', urged yet fopnd to burn coal
DEAR POLLY - Winter Thursday that the ute and directly without releasing
time means slcknw and federal Environmental sulfur dioxide as a
often one needs a steam tent. Protection Agencies work combustloo process is the soOne can he quickly made by more closely ro implement called 'fluidized bed prousing an open wnbreUa and sulfur dlolide standards.
cess.'"
then putting a sheet over itto
"It has not
been
One such process is under
fonn a tent. When I buy a gift encouraging how Ohio and development by Battelle
for a baby shower I buy u.s. Environmental Memorial Institute,
things in Size one or two as Protection Agencies have Columbus.
babies get 1M! many gifts that worked together," said Glenn
Glenn mentiooed two other
just fit a new born baby and in telltimony before the Ohio areas involving coal where he
· are so soon outarown. The Senate EnerBY ComJnjttee. thought the resource clothing I buy In such cases
In about two moritha. the Ohio's largest fossil fuel
will rtt when the tiny Ohio EPA is expected 1D reserve - could be better
1
garment&amp; will no longer fit. 1- decide what ro do about the utillUzed:
clean IllY IM!iled rubber proposed federal aullur
- Increased research lnlo
gasket&amp; lhatlook dingy with a dioxide standards, which coal
gasification
and
cleaner . made for white have been stayed pending liquefaction ..
sidewall tires on a car. They . dllipolltioo of 8 lederal civil
-Better mining methods ro
really come wlllte again. - suit broUght by ,major Ohio meet the predicted I bUllon
MARGARET.
electric utilities.
ton 4e1118nd for coal by 1985.
Polly will send you one of
'lbe Ohio EPA could'declde
Earlier this week, Gov.
her "peachy". thank-you ro adopt and enforce the James A. Rhodes called for a
carda, Ideal for framing or propoled federal ttllndarda, speed-up in Battelle's
placing in your fll!llly ICI'ap- ask for modlllcalions or research
Into
Its
book, if she uaes your fa~ reject the standards as too desulfurisatlon tedmolocr ln
Pointer, Peeve or Problem .tn stringent
and
leave order ro install nonpolluting,
he~ colWM. Write Polly:s enforcement up to the federal coalfired boilers ln Ohio
Pointers in care of thi8 g'uvenunent.
industry.
neWip&amp;per ·
Glenn told tho coounittee

Glenn sees need
for cooperation

· 2 SIGNS

OF
Motor Co.
QUALITY
1976CHEVELLE MALIBU CPE.
S3895
Green finish, good tires. V-8, automatic. power
steering, radio, factory air.
1975FDRD TORIN04 DR.

S2895

Local c'a r, cl ean vinyl interior , green finish , good tires,
radio, 351 V-B, automatiC, power steering and brak.es.

1975 CHEVELLE

$419S

Estate Wagon, locall owner car. white radial tires, air

conditioning, v.8, automatic, power steering and
brakes, radio, dark red finish, black vinyl interior.

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

w--1 MEIG$

JAMES NAMED
COLUMBUS (UPI) -State
Rep. Troy L. James, DCleveland, was named
Thursday to the Ohio
POMEROY, o.
Commission on Aging by ·I
PH. 992-217t
House Speaker Vernal G. I
I .
Riffe Jr ., D-New Boston.
James is chainnan of a international
House subcommittee on IHarvester
aging and was the sponsor of
ldH Equipment
legislation forbidding IMcCullo(JI
Chain
discrimination on the basis of I Saws
age.

I

i;quipment Co.

!1

tNew

FUNNY BUSINESS
f31..)T IS HE.

----- ----...

~-~~?
.

.

�~

11).:..The Dally Sentinel, Mlddi~·Pomeroy, 0., Friday, Feb.l8, 1977

Carter settling into
his own living style
a tuna sandwich and 5:30; drinks his juice and
WASHINGTON (UP!) - . buttermilk brought to his spends an hour or so reading
and studying before his first
He and .Amy tried out the desk.
On
Valentine's
.
Day,
appointment, generally a !$outdoor White House
swimming pool Wednesday, though , he broke a regular minute briefing by National
and he has taken his wife Monday date with VIce Security Adviser Zblgnlew
Rosalynn to the KeMedy President Walter Mondale lei Br!e!lnski.
slip up to · the residence for
Carter, who has leild his
Center twice in 10 days.
cabinet members to spend
A stereo set plays classical hmch with Rosalynn.
He referred lei the White time with their families ,
music in his office throughout
House
State Dinner for works a basic 55-hour week.
the day. He does little smallMexico
President
Jose LDpe• He spends much of ~Is time in
talking during the day.
11
Portillo
as
''supper.
a small office next lei the
His breakfast is always the
President carter is setUlng fonnal Oval Office.
same-a glass of orange
He enda his work day at 6 or
juice- but his noonday into the White House and
eating habits vary. He often living his own distinctive 6:30, occcasionaUy watches
has a working lunch, perhaps lifestyle.lt's one that reflects the network evening news,
with a congressman or the informality of his eats dinner with his family,
Secretary of State Cyrus Southern rural roots, the .and reads for a couple of
Vance or an old Georgia precision of his Naval holD's before retiring. After
friend , Budget Director Bert Academy days, and the hours, he slips in lei slacks and
propensity for planning a sweater, bUt so far, no
· Lance.
intrinsic
to all engineers.
staffers have seen htm in his
Two or three days he has
He
arises
each
morning
at
Georgia jeans.
gone.to the White House mess
for a sandwich or cup of soup.
Thilrsday, a busy day. he had
By WESLEY G. PIPPERT

TOM TIEDE

Fire finally
gotten out
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)A lour-alarm lire led by
natural gas from a broken
main raged out of control
oowntown for nearly 10 hours
Thursday destroying five
businesses and snarling
traffic around the state
capitol.
More than 100 firelighters
poured about 10 million
gallons of water onto -the fire.
It quickly froze in the streets,
on the buildings and across
telephone and power lines.
Brad Qulcksall, a fire
department
media
gpokesman, said damages
would probabl y range
between $1 million and $2.5
million.
''It's going to take quite a
while before we determine
the cause," said Quicksall.
"We're going to have to get
the lire out and then
everything is going to have to
thaw and that's going lei take
quite a while."
The fire started shortly
after 12 :30 · a.m. in a
basement tavern , then
spread to a card shop, a
women's apparel store, a wig
shop a!Kj a drug store.

---------------------------1 HOSPITAL NEWS
! Area Deaths .' i
I

I

HAROLD CIIAMPER
Harold

Cham per , 79, a
resldenl of Gallla County
died In a Portsmouth nursing
home Thursday.
Born Nov . 3. 1997, he was
preceded In death by me son .
He was a member of the
Grace Un ited Methodist

Church.

Survl11ors include brothers

and sisters, Mrs . Lyman
Barcus, Walter Champer • .
Mrs. Nell le Lowks. Mrs.

lawrence Smeltzer, all of

Gal lipolis and · Gomer
O.amper, St, Albans, W. Va.
Funeral services will be 11

a.m. Saturday at the . Brant

Funeral Home In Sciotoville .
Friends may call at th e
funeral home from 7 to 9 thi s
evening .

DUDLEY . GANDEE
Roscoe
Fowler ,
Mid dleport, Thursday received
word of tht d~ath of Dudley
Gandee, f ernier res ident of
Spiller in Meigs County, on
Jan . 24 in Mar ion.
Mr . Gandee left Meigs
County in 19.17 as a member

Mr . Sheppard was born In

Sandy Ridge, N. C. on Jan . 20.
1888 , slii\ of the late Beulah
and Kelly H. Sheppard.
He marr led the former
Rose Frances Mlkul k on Oct.

29, 1928,

in Wheel ing, W. Va.

She sur\11 ves, along with one

son, Jason H. Sheppard. Jr .•
Gallipolis. local realtor.
Mr . Sheppard and his wife

were founders an d co-o'M"'er s

of Sheppard Sales and Ser·

vice in Gallipolis in 1937. ,
Two brothers survive,

Tazwell H. Sheppard.
Hamlet. N. C. and Denson H.
Sheppard, High Point, N. C.
Three brothers and three
sisters preceded him in

dealh.

a m ember of the

He was

Sandy Ridge Baptist Church,
Sandy Ridge, N. C.
Pr ivate

funeral

services

Funeral

Home.

of Co. Cof.the Ohio Seventh of

will be held 11 a.m. Monday
,at t~e M&lt;Coy - Wetherholf ·

Co. C of ·the 1121h Signal Bn .

GallipOlis with Rev . Jerry
Nea l offi ciat ing. Burial will
be In Ohio Valley Memory
Gardens.

which Fowler was also a
member . Gand~ and Fowler
trained at Camp Sheridan
and later were tran sferred to

Mr. Gandee was a son of

the la te Mr. and Mrs. D. W.
Gandee , Spiller . He is survived by hi s wife, Helen .
Funeral ser vices were held at
Mar ion.

Moore

There will be · no Visi tation
at the funeral home. The
fam i l y re q.~es t s flowers be

omitted.

FREDA SLAGLE

Freda Mary Slagle,

75, Rf .
(Cadmus Community), died at 8:30 a.m.
Thursday at her residence.
She had been in failing health
several years.

2,

Son of
'union suit'

%

JASON SHEPPARD

Jason H. Sheppard, 89, •
resident of 862 First Ave ..
Gall ipolis. died at 5 a.m.
Friday In Holzer Medical
C.mler . He had been In failing
health the past year .

Patriot

She married Willard Slagl e
in October, 1927 in Gallipolis

who preceded her In death in
November , 1958 . She and her·

de~osil.

mmomum
deposit, interest paid
quarterly.

$1 ,000.00

A

substantia l

penalty

tor several years.
Born March 22, 1901 In
Perry Twp. to the late Vernon
and El i zabeth Mosher Wood,
she Is survived by one brother
and one sister, Bi II Wood, Rt.

2, Patriot and Mrs . Cecil

Is

By Tom Tiede
WASHINGTON - For
nearly a century they were
the staple item in the male
underworld. They were one
piece, 100 per cent wO(!I itchies that were worn day and
nig!-4 by man and boy.
Because many of them were
sold by the Union manufactUring company, they were
known from Bangor to Boise
simply as " union suits."
And today they ·are hack,
redesigned and repackaged
as thermal underwear. The
president of the United States
is wearing them. So are

invoked on all certificate
accounts withdrawn prior
ro the date of ma turit y.

Meigs Co. Branch
4 ) -·

""e"
T·he Ath e ns CoUi11y

Savings &amp; Loan co:
296 Second St.
Pom ei- oy , Ohio

This Is For The Birds

eWILD BIRD SEED
eSUNFLOWER SEED
'

.CRACKED CORN .

millions of others, including
m'ladies and laases, as much
of the nation shivers through
an insidiously frigid winter.
Sales of I.Dng Johns are up
as much as 30 per cent, according to industry
spokesmen. A Maryland
store has reportedly advertised them"as "Jimmy Johns,"
with respect to the president,
and sold its stock out in four
hours. Jack Marshall, a sales
executive for Fruit of the
Loom says this may be the
· blgge;t year for winter
underwear in history.
That history is long, but not
in aU respects delightful. The
original union suit, with its
button up front 'and flap bottom, was an esoteric not to
say physical curse. Going to
·the toUet through one was
novel, and they were so damnably severe in the family
· bed that generations of
lruatrated couples called
them "passion killers "
Then too, they were
unhygenic. Bathing in earlier
Americli was not as prolific
as it is now; and the 24 hour
underwear was said lei have
hiod a life of its own by Saturday night The.wool.fabric retained perspiration and odor.
"When you took them off,"
sars one manufacturing
.· representative, "they walked
to the wash by themselves."
Once in the wash, the union
suits were uncooperative.
They had a predilection for
shrinkage and discoloration.
Homemakers of the time
remember leaving size 44s on
the line at night, and coUecting iwo-thirds of that in the

------~------------------.

..

late h.usband operated a tarm
in Perry Twp .. Gall ia County,

It's 'Jimmy Johns'
vs Old Man Winter

7 Pet.•per year on a 4
year certificate of

BACK AGAIN AT THE INN

INSURED
SOUND

!Margaret) Miller, Patriot ,

Veterans Me11111rlal Hotpllll
Holzer Medleal Ceoler
ADMITTED - Lori Wood,
tDitchlrcet, Feb. lt)
Pomeroy; Ethel Collins,
Ml!fY E. Adkins, Jessie L.
Athens; Brenda White, - Ba1ter, Betty Brickles,
Minersvllle ; Rollte Sayre, Randy Cain, Tracey A. Camp
New Haven.
Blaine Carter, 'Donna J.
DISCHARGED - Betty Claar, Frank Conley,
W'illlams, Robbie De!.Dng, Patricia A. Dawson, Lena C.
Sharon Kuhn, VIncent Dingess, F. EUeen Donnally,
Mossman, Mary Rathburn, Verda E. Dray, Brady
George Foss, Doris Bailey, Duncan, Mrs. Frank E.
aeo DeTroy, Alice Koltz, Farrar and son, Gladys E.
Margaret Davis, Salem Harper, 'Emma E. Herron,
Yates.
Mrs. Thomas Jenkins and
daughter, Lucille Lambert,
Olarles H. McGoon, Patricia
A. NeviUe, Vernle I. Norris,
GILKEY ENLISTS
Kathryn J. Pauley, Arzelda
Mark A. Gilkey, son of Mr. Rile, Phyllis Sargent,
and Mrs.' Bernard Gilkey of WlUiam C. Sexton, Elsie L.
1284 Powell Street, Mid- Sbaffer, Catherine ShU!let,
dleport, has enlisted in the U. Glenn Simpkins, Karl V.
S. Air Force's Delayed Sprague,
Char,les
E.
Enlistment Program. A Stephens, David T. Whaley,
senior attending Meigs High Tracy H. Whaley, Robert H.
School, Mark will enlist June Wolle, Tara L. WoUe.
23. Upon graduation from the
· tBtrtb, Feb. It)
Air Force's six· week basic
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Roush,
training course, he is daughter, Henderson, W.Va.
scheduled
to
receive
tDischarges, Feb. I?)
technical training in the law
Rachel R. Arthur, Barbara
enforcement (military J . Brumfield, Irvin S.
police) .
Brumfield, H~len M. Bu,..
nette. Shelley J . Cantrell,
WOMEN TO MEET
Roth Chaney, Patricia L.
The Middleport Business Diamond, Ronald K. Duncan,
Women's Club wlll meet Ella L. Ebershach, Albert D.
Monday at 7:30 p.m. in the Finley, Huber B. Fulton,
social room of the Columbia Amy "D. Grinun, Larry R.
Gas OHice. The civic par- Grimm, Jr., Lisa M. Hall,
ticipation committee with Elmer E. !hie, Betty J.
Grace Pratt, chairman, will Jarvis, Olloe R. KeUy, pan
he in charge of the meeting. M. Patton, Donna S. Short,
All members are urged to Anna L. Sisson, Bridgett
attend.
Stover, Cynthia A. White.
(Bh1hs,Feb.l1l
Mr.
and Mrs. Cleon Pratt,
MATOMEET
oon,
Pomeroy;
Mr. and Mrs. ,
CHESTER :..._ Founders
John
T.
Fox,
daughter,
night will he observed and
Coallein;
Mr
.
and
Mrs.
Keith
past presidents honored when
Williams,
son,
Gallipolis;
Mr.
the Chester PTA meets at
and
Mrs.
Charles
Blazer,
son,
7:30 p.m. Monday at the
Gallipolis.
school.

Star Rt .; si;.c nieces and
nephews.
One
brother , Homer,

morning. If there was a boy in
the house, fine ; otherwise the
undies were cut for yellowed
rags.
'
Such. were the drawbacks ·
to the union suit that Its passing from the American scene
in the 1930s was little mourned. When Clark Gable appeared in a movie attired in
nothing from the waist up,
hinllng of briefs below, the
woolies quickly went the way
of spats and bowlers.
· But the n..ct for warm
foundation garments had not
gone out of style. Jack Marshall says an improved cotton
knit was created for the Navy
dl\flng World War II, and .
. thermal underwear was the
result.
Thennal1 The properties
are in the weave. Marshall
says air pockets are formed
by the krul, either on one side
or both sides of the fabric,
and these retain body heat.
Fortunately, the air poekets
do not at the same time retain
body perspliatiQn; it is
transferred out of the cloth,
allowing the underwear to remain dry,
Despite ·!1\o&lt;lernization, the
gannen( has in recent years
been merely a specialty item.
Outdoor men covet them, but
the thermal share of the
underwear 11)8rket has never
been above 3per cent. Asales
director with BVD says that
only a haU dozen manufacturers still make the Johns,
and they IIH orders only three
months of the nonnal year.
' Many orders are not being
filled at aU now. BVD sales
are "up at least 25 per cent
over lut year," but no one
foresaw this phenomenon.
The cold weather hit after the
manufacturers had reduced
their inventories, and none
have been willing lei rush
back into production.
And so Jlnuny Johns,
thou,gh newly popular, are
·also newly scarce.
So scarce, actually, that a
salesman in one of
Washington's stores says
customers offer double the
price II a pair can be pulled
from hidden stock. Not only
are · men begging, the
salesman says, women are
too. Thermals now come in
printed patterns for use as
female pajamas. Miz Ul1Jan
Carter, lt's said, has worn
themforyeano.
Preswnably, some of the

Jimmy Johns demand is now
faddish in nature. But what
with America's homes fo1111ing ice inside as well as ·outside the windqws, a man has
written a Washington .
newSpaper that thermal
underwear is in reality a second Declaration of lndependence.
Presumable, some of the
Jimmy Johns demand is now
fadish in nature. Hut with
teeth chattering all across
America , enthusiastic
manufacturers hope that interes! in thermal underwear
is foremost a kind of second
Declaration of Independence
-from worry, high fuel bUls,
and from the 1-1-legacy of the
n-n-nude Clark Gaple.

LODGE TO MEET
CHESTER - A special
preceded her In death .
meeting of Shade River
She was a ·member of the
l.Ddge
453, Chester, has been
Salem Baptist Church and
called for 7:30 p.m. Monday
Salem ladles Aid .
Funera l services will be 1 at the temple. Work will be in
p.m. Sunday at ·the Waugh. Uoe F. C. Degree and all
Halley·Wood Funeral Home
with the Rev. Gerald Brown Masons ar.e welcome.

offi ciating , Burial will be in
Salem ce metery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
from 6 to 9 p.m. Saturday.
se rvi ces

for

Open Friday Night Til 8

Delmar Wallace. Chillicothe.
former ly of Middleport, who
died

une;.c pectedly

Wed -

nesday In Chillicothe have
been set I&lt;&gt;" 2 p.m. Saturday

at the Ware Funeral Home,
Chillicothe.
Burl al will be in Green
lawn Cemetery's SoiQ ier
Circle, Chill icothe . There will
be a mi l itary funer al for Mr ..
Wallace whO was a veteran of

fh,e U.S. Army during World
War I. Dwight Wall ace of

Middleport Is one of sever al
brothers surviving .

KISSINGER SIGNED
NEW YORK (UPI)
Former Secretary of State
Henry Kissinger will moV&amp;
from the councils of government io the television news·
room this fall.
Kissinger has signed a five-year contract with NBC lei
appear on documentaries and
interview shows and act as
the network's special
consultant·on foreign affairs.
The contract gives the
network exclusive rights to
special programs based on
Kissinger's memoirs,
expected to be published by
Little, Brown &amp; Co. by 1979.
NBC refused lei reveal any
financial details of the
contract, which goes inlei
effect in July. Industry
speculation put the sum "in
seven figures."

E~berfelds In Pomeroy

DELMAR WAllACE
Funeral

ASK SEPARATION
Diana Ashley; Middleport
and David Ashley, Middieport, have flied lor
dissolution of marriage in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court

A good time for family ~hopping - Shop
ever,Y' ~partment - Visit every floor .
You 11 fond many, many bargains.
. Save your Cash Register Receipts and
Whole Payment on Account Slips- they are
valuable to you for premiums.

~----------------~1:

MEIGS THEATRE
CLOSED FOR
VACATION
WAltH FOR
OPENING DATE

'

SOUTH CHARLESTON, W. Va.(UPI) ~
A large chemical corporation is
inveootlgatlng reptl'ts that large concentrations ol carbon tetrachloride are polluting
a 'IHnUe stretch of the Ohio Rlyer, a
apolrei!IWI said Saturday,
"
"We have a technical crl!!! (,&amp;nd a
belicopter in the area sampling the water
at this point," said Willlani Currey~ .f~lblic

VOL. 12 NO. 3

rutland

FROM WILLIAMSTOWN, W. VA.
TONIGHT &amp; SATURDAY 10 TIL 2

.........
FDIC

The Meigs Inn·
992-3629

•unurtplah»

Pomeroy

FMC, one of several large chemical
plants in the Kanawha Valley, claimed

GALLIPOLIS- POINT PLEASANT

the Ohio River at Point Pleasant, W. Va.,
had Jl'evented it from performing "'sts. was poUuting drinking water downstream
But Currey said the mmpany agreed to in Huntington, W. Va .
conduct wate. sampling studies at a U.S.
However. a Huntington water offlcial
District Court hearing Friday, and had said he saw no reason for alarm.
actually begun testing Feb. I~ .
" ! don 't think it's something to get
The EPA suit claimed FMC waste put alarmed about," said Phil Bright,
into the Kanawha River, whi ch runs into manager of the Huntington Wa"'r Corp.

" It's already come and gone."

Bright said the EP... was not inl onned
about Ule incident because it wa s not
considered Wlusual.
He said the water was treated , but that
across the river in Ironton, Ohio, residents
were being told to boil their drinking

water.

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1977

MIDDLEPORlPOM EROY

..

PRICE 25 CENTS

OH-

Club hosting
rich coin show on 27th
GAUJPOIJS - Coin collectors of aU
ages, deale!S, and the public from Oblo,
West Virginia and Kentucky will have
their day bere next Sunday, Feb. 'tl, when
a quarter rnilllon dollars or more worth of
rare coins, . paper curre~cy, stamps,
medala and related Items wlU be on
elhibition or for sale In the banquet rooms
rl. the Holiday Inn In nearby Kanauga. ,
The occasion Is the 14th annual Coih
9oow hosted by the OH-KAN Coin Club of
Ml_ddltiporl The event, open to everyone
with no admission charge, will begin at 9
a.m. and continue to~ p.m. Plenty of easy
parking Ia available. This coin show Is the
&lt;11ly one acheduled In this area of southern
&lt;Jolo each year.
Edward Burkett, of Middleport, club
)l'esident, Indicated that 14 professional
dealers secured early display space, and
will bring a vast assortment of coins and
~r material for sale or display. In addition, deale!'ll will buy ' and trade items,
aien such things as old pocket watches,
knives, late dated sliver bullion coins.
Evaluations made to the public wlU be
free ..
DOor prlies of silver doUars wUl be
given · every hour throughout the show.
Speclil souvenir wooden nlckei8, coin
magazines and newspapers will be given
free lor as long as they lest. At $ p.m. a
grand prise of not~ or an uncirculated $20
United states gold coin will he awarded to
lOme lucky person. Last year's annual
sl)ow attracted over 900 registered
vlslton. This yw's show,, largest ev~r
Jianned, ha&amp;•methlng for,all.dtii'IJng, a
rerorct crowd Is anticipated.
The most lmp0\1anl part of the event
will be the ra~e coin and a~~~~~~
~blta. Every type ol U
oolnage In 200 years· of·
available. Individual! w:~~~~~:i~
elhiblt dlotce Items, and
rare large cenll, indian
~orallve hall doDars
PaPer currency will be
tlral laue date In 1863 lei
Clvll War nole8, hall the
lillil, lei the large sl!e Jut
Rare gold coin!l, and an

r1. United Slates postage sUimps, and first
day covers wiU be in the offering.
The public, especially local colleciars in
this area are invited to exhibit any
numismatic material of their own. Ali
compeUtlon In the exhibits wUI be ooncompetltive . . Locked meiai security
display cases will be provided for that
purpose by the host organl!ation. Club
membel'll' wiD be on hand to offer free
appraisal, and identification of any items
rl.fered. Members feel that many persoos
r1. the area, have material at home,
witholt knowing what they own, or its

recent value.
The Oh-Kan Coin Club was organized
in March, 1962 at Point Pleasant W, Va.
with 22 members. For eleven years
monthly meetings were held there, and in
.1973 its headquarters moved to Middleport. Its meetings offer numlsmatlc
education, trading sessions, auctions and
bargains to its 60 members. New mem·
berships are solicited throughout the year.
Other officers are, Felix Alkire, vice
[resident; Donna Davidson, secretary ;
Eric Pearch, treasurer, and John Bryan,
Sgt. of arms .

f/1,..

CLUB OFFICERS·- Officers of the OH·KAN Club of
. Middleport wiUhost the annual coin show Sunday, Feb. 'tl
at the Hollday Inn, Kanalljl(&amp;. Officers are, 1... Jonn

Bryan, Sgt. of Arms, Donna Davidson, secretary, Eddie
Burkett, president, Eric Poarch, treasurer , and Felix
Alkire, vice president.

Swan given

Overcharge denied
by Ohio Po~er Co.

Marilyn Anderson, Marvin Swan and Bill,

Swan. The 65-yea( pin was inscribed as
follows, "Grand !.Ddge of Free and Accepted Masons ci Ohio. AMason 65 years."

.
.
. earnmgs up m.
'

.

our business."

The company also announced the
resignation of Gene D.· Hoffman as
president and director. "Business and
policy differences" were cited as the
reasons for Hoffman's departure_
Herring, who conti nues as board
chairman and chief executive officer, will
assume the title of president.
Kroger opera"'• 1,173 ·supermarkets in
20 states and also &gt;53 "SupeRX"
drugstores.

MR. AND Mrs. MUes Epling are escorted on court by their son, Herb, during
Friday's Parents' Night activities at GaWa Academy High School. Following the
contest, parents and Uoeir sons and daughters were treated wiUo refre$nents by
the Blue Devilj Bo&lt;llter Club. ·

Third shopping

Griffin coming soon

GAIJlPOIJS - The trl-&lt;:ounty area
may soon have a third shopping center
near here. It was learned Friday that
Diversified . Investments Limited of
aeveland has applied tor a buDding
·penntt with the Gallla County Auditor's
Office.
The firm Is negotiating for the Finley
Sentence
Cotton property located east of SR 7 and
between Riverside Voikwwagen Inc. and
I.«JM Transport Co.
The building permit ls for a shopping put
suspension
center to house 104,000 square foot of spsce
oo 10 acres of land.
.
Galllli County already has the Silver '
POMEROY - David 0. Michael, Rock
Bridge Shopping Piau at Kanauga and the !1., Po!Deroy, on a charge of non-support,
Spri v Uey Shopping Center on us 35 appeared before . Meigs County Court
ng a
' Judge Robert E. Buck Friday.
1
west of Gallipo Is.
Michael was sentenced to three
month&amp; confinement in the Meigs County .
JaU. The confinement was suspended and
be was placed on probation for one year.
His case wiU be reviewed In sox moraos
and II he Iaiii to keep hi! .Upport
Weather
payments current, be wW be placed in jail.
Cold today and tonight.
Tbe Bureau of Support and the Meigs
Higha about 3:1, lows tonight
Co111ty Welfare Dept. are cooperating In
in the low lis. Olances II. rain
mforctng rules in ea..s wloere support
or snow abolt haU tonight
paymonls are to be mad~.
aear!ng Monday, but still
cold. Highs around 35.

GAIJlPOUS - Archie Griffin, the
Oeel Clncinnatl Bengals running back Wid
two-time Helsman Trophy wlmer from
&lt;Jolo Slate University, will be the principal
speaker at the Tri-State Area Boy Seoots
Coundl Leadership Gifts Dinner to be held
li Oscar's Reataurant here Thu!'llday,
March 31 at 7 p.m.
•
.The announcement was made by Leo
M. M&amp;cCourtney, vice president and
general manager of WOWK-TV, Channel

Wallet stolen, auto
hit by vandalism

13, In Huntington, and chairman of the
Sustaining Membership Enrollment drive
for the Tri.State Area Boy Scouts Cooncil.
MacCourtney said that the yearly fundraising dinner Is held to supplement lunda
received from United Ways campaigns in
lhe area.
A Columbus, Ohio, resident, Archie
Griffin burst Into prominence at Ohio State
when he won hack-to-hack Heisman
Awards in 1974 and 1975. Under Coach
Woody Hayes at Ohio State, Griffin rushed
for 5,1T7 yerda In ·h f coUeglate footbaU
career Wid rushed for 100 yards or more in
31 comecutlve games, ~ NCAA record.
The 5'-f", 1118-pound Griffbj was Uoe
tlrsl·n&gt;llld draft pick a year ago by the
&lt;lncinnatl Bengals. In his rooide year, he
was the team's second leading rusher gaining 11%5 yards m 131 carries. He acored
three Urnes and caught 16 passes for 138
yerdl. In a game asainsl Kansas City Lsst
year, Griffin scored oo a 77·yard run -the
longut touchdown play by rushing in the
National Football League ln' l9711.

•
center comtng

Jail

is

in

GAIJlPOUS - Two complainta were
investigated Friday by city police officers
here.
Harold B. Hazelbaker, a resident of
the Park Central Hotel, reported Ill!' theft
II. hla wallet containing $100 and his
driver's licen.oe.
A 1&amp;'13 Dodge Dart pao:ked behind
Emplrt Furniture was vandalized. Pollee
HONEST MISTAKE
aid a window was broken, but the car had
GALLIPOLIS - Volunteer fire
POST OFFICE (LOSING
oot been entered.
fighters here responded to an alarm a\3:30
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis PoetArrested Friday night were GreiOfy p.m.lwo mil• west rl. Gallipolis on SR 1118. master Richard Bane announced Saturday
A. Rece, 201 GlllllpoUa, charged with Upon arrival, then waa no tire. Actordlng that the post office wlll be closed Mooday
dllorderly conduct, resisting amtt and Ill Chief ~ames A. Northup, a woman in observance of President's Day. There
having an open flask and Charlh Abe reported a truck was on fire. The alarm will be no delivery or .window .. rvice:
Whittington, 78, Gallipolia, booked for wu listed as an honest mistake. Nine men Dbpatching wtU be norma~ along with
disorderly conduct.
special dellvery and locked box .. rvtce.
lllsWered the 38th alarm of the year.

•

..
l

Others attending the occllsion were

Mrs. Swan, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Price,

last 12 months

lyliJ.

prlmarUJ.
,f

Custer, chaplain.
Mr,. Swan became ~ member Aug. 9,
!9ll at Shade River LO&lt;Ige ~53 .

POMEROY -The Ohlo Power Co.
. rl.!ice in Pomeroy bas released lbe
following statement ao a result of the
doarge last week by Ohio Attorney
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The nation's
General William J. BroWD that lbe
third largest supermarket chain, Kroger,
company should refund Ita electric
earned $48.3 inlnion in 1976, compared
customers U5 miWon:
with $34.1 !illllion in 1975.
"Ohlo Power Company has not
Kroger sales leitaled $6.1 billion in 1976,
overcharged Ita customers. Oblo Power
up from $5.3 billion in 197~, the firm also
fully justified Ita luel adjusiment clause
reported Friday.
during 15 days ot hearll!ga before the
"(Earnings) improvement came from
Pobllc Utilities Commboslon ol Oblo.
the continued strong sales increase, the
· " Adetermination by ihe PUOO on
performance of maturing superstores, the
the ismes raboed by lbe Attorney
success of improved per ishable
General will be made by the ead of
departments and tbe continued growth in
March. Oblo Power bo proud ollbe.fact
sales of Kroger private label products,"
that hs rates are amoug lbe lowest lu . said board cha irman James P. Herrrng.
the Slate and the company Is pledged to
"While this is an accomplishment of
cont1111e to do all It can to I:Hp rateo as
which we can be proud," Herr ing added,
low u poulble."
"we must continue to improve profitability
·in line with the significantly increased
capital investment which we have made in

GAUJPOUS - Parents' Night was
observed prior to Fr!dsy night's GaUipoUsWeUston basketball contest in the Gt\HS
ParenUI fl. the varsity oquad, trainers,
dleerluders and coaches wives were
introduced during pre-game ceremoilles.
Women honorees were present•.i
Dowel'll, sponsored by the GAHS Key Club.
BallretbaD players and parents or
guardian's introduced .were: Brad Abels,
Dr. and Mrs. Gene Abels; Jell Brown, Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Brown; Terry Wall, Mr. and
Mrs. Garner Wall; Mike Dressel, Mr. and
Mrs. WOllam Dressel; Herb Epling, Mr.
and Mrs. Miles Epling; Keith and Kevin
Jackson, Mr. and Mrs. WU!iam Jackson;
Brent Johnson, Mr. and Mrs: Vance
John•n; Keith McGuire, Mr. and Mrs ..
Gene McGuire; Mike Skaggs; Mr. and
Mrs. James stagga; David Warren, Mr.
and Mrs. James Warren and Gary Swain,
Mrs. Lucille Swain.
Trainers and Parents Introduced
were: Pat O'DonneU, Mr. and Mri. Odie ·
O'Donnell; David Sharp, Mr. and Mrs.
John F. Sharp; Bob Cornwell, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert CornweU and Mark Dobson,
Mr. and Mra. Arden Dobson.
Choerleade!'ll and parenUI introduced
were Brtget llenneuey, Mr. and Ml'll. Tim
Hennessey; !.Drt INaskey, Mrs. Frank
Nutey; U.a Niday, Mr. and Ml'll. Wayne
Niday; Lisa Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Justin
Wllltams; Tammy Hemsworth, Mr . .,d
Mrs. !lGa Hemaworth and Darla Ward,
Mr. and Mr1. Btu Ward.
·
Mrs. James Osborne and Mrs. (lene
Oet!cio were introduced, along with their
lloabanda.
Following the basketball game,
parenll, plllyers, coaches and Oilier of·
ftclals euMectecl with the bulretball
prOIIJ'IIII 'll'tre treated lei relrtlbmenll In
the GAHS audltorlam. This event was
apooilored by the Blue DevU Booaten Cl~b.
During the toalflne interrniuion of
the vanity game, the 1m Gallia Academy
High School Valentine Queen wa•

PORTLAND - A distinctive, rare
honor in Ohio Masonry was bestowed upon
Harry Swan .Thursday evening at his rural
residence here.
Mr. Swan, who is 90 years of nge, was
presented a 65 year membership pin from
Pomeroy 'Masonic l.Ddge 164 F&amp;AM.
On hand to make the presentation
were Willis Durst, worshipful master; Jim
aatworthy, district deputy grand master;
Kenny Wiggins, junior warden, and Hugh

Kroger's sales,

Parents'
Night for
cage team

,I

(

Shown with Mr . Swan are 1..-, Wilfu! Durst, worshipful
master ; Mr. Swan, Jim Clatworthy, district deputy grand
master, and Hugh Custer, chaplain . Also attending was
Kenoy Wiggin!l, junior warden.

rare Masonic honor

POMEROY - The Pomeroy Chamber
r1. Commerce will meet·'l\oeeday at noooat
the Melga Inn. The awardl dtnnw lor
Robert Wingett, Charlet Legar and Pete
9olelda baa been reacheduled lor Mareh 9,
li 1:11 p.m. at the Melga Inn.
Ticlrela may be purchased from
Barbara Chapman, le(reUiry of the
dl1111ber, Jtormlt Waltcin, Ralph Werry,
111d Fred Crow, pretldent. Ticketa are $5 crowned.
eedl.
Taking par! In this ceremony ~re Bill ·
Slneltzer and Mike Wigglesworth, !tudent
body leaders.
Crowned queen was Lisa Niday,·
dlucbler of Mr. and Jtlrs. Wayne Niday.
Second Princess was ChriJtlne Boeral and
.COLUMBUS- State Audllnc Tho1111a First Prince• was. M'ndy Dalley.
E. Fera-'s office llu dtltribllted lUI
J]llblle wlllante fuilda · lei Ohio's 18
collltlll for January.
BLOODMOBILE OOMII'IG
GaiUa Comtr received $30,313 lor lbe
GAUJPOIJS - The BloodmobUe will
...,.ra1 relief and admlnlliratloll COlli of
Ill nllan openotlanl. The general rellof visit Gallipolla Tlounday from noon lei I
. . . Ia ct.ind
!late p.m. at lhe Grace United Methodist
llourch. Thelma Shaver of the GaWa
IIIII
y ln!m county r
dlatributlona
eigl, County Red cr.., aaid many dooon are
...07t; Jackaon, 141,7•; tiwrence, needed because blood supples dwlndled
tU!ng tbeaevert _th., In January.
.,d Athw, ~,317.

=:n

ldASON HONORED - Harry Swan, second froni left,
was presented a 65 year membership pin Thursday evening
from representatives of Pomeroy Mason Lodge F&amp;AM 164.

Har~y

funds are received

4 PIECE GROUP

refusing to test its waste waters.·

severe winter weather and a power failure

+

Public a8sistance

•

the ,7l).ton chemical spill, which repor.,dly
stretches 7~ miles in the Ohio River. But
the EPA has been involved in litigation
with FMC, and last week sued the South
Charleston corporation for allegedly

tmts

Chamber meeting Tuesday

I

affairs manager for the FMC Corp.
The Environmental Protection Agency
warned riverfront dties Friday that the
chemical, used ext&lt;nsively in cleaning
fluids had caused cancer in animals and
could possibly contaminate drinking
supplies.
·
. . .
FMC was not named in connection w1th

·~

RACINE - J. Dillon D. Crosa, 74,
!l"''llnent businessman here for 50 years,
died Friday evening at St. Mary's Hospital
In Huntlngtcin.
Mr. Cross .. rved as president rl. the
Racine First National Bank and the
Racine H!IDe National Bank l11ltl1 his
retirement. He operated the Waid Cross
Sons lltcire In Racine many years.
He wu preceded in death by his
parents, 'stanley and Hottle Rtchatda
U'oes; bill wile, Ethel Foss CrMO in Ill/&amp;,
and a brother, MUes.
·
Survivors Include one i!On, WilliamS.,
Racine; ooe daUghter, Mary Rolilh,
Racllle; silt grandchildren and two greetgrandebildren; two sisters, Addle Petrel,
Racine and Anna Gtblon, PalneavtUe, and
several nieceo and nephews.
F111eral ..rvtces wUI be I p.m.
Mooday at Ewing Chapel with the Rev.
Freeland Norris olltctating. Burial will be
in Greenwood cemetery. Friends may call
li the fune!al home afte! noon tciday.

To us ... you're the boss~
The most important person on earth!
You really do make the difference.

...

Chemical spill in Ohio River probed

Racine is dead

STREET TR..o\IN
AKRON (UPI) - An
Akron,
Canton
and
Youngstown Railroad freight
train derailed near the
do,WJ!town section Thursday,
causing massive traffic jams
but no injuries.

-

I

•

SEOOND SESSION HELD
POMEROY - The secood ..ssion of
the Crime Scene Search and Evldmce •
Preeervallon clau wu held Saturday at
the Melga Inn meeting room. ln.otructora
!run Hocking Techrtical Collet• conwcted the clas for Meigs County law
enforcement personnel.

j

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