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                  <text>li-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O.,Monday,Jan. 31,1977

HOSPITAL NEWS

•

1

~-----A~~~-0-e;th~---! Fuel barges ready to push upriver
l LOUISVILLE, Ky.
The first towboats anti their . ·m~ and Dam 50 near Marlon
Martin f!edt\! ~
ETHEL DILLON
Va .. several nieces and - Towboats and barges barges loaded with fuel oU !Dday.
spokesman
he
ld

0
Johnson, Winchester, Kan· 1
(UP!)
'
sas, and Mrs. Richard
Adams, Wellston.
·
Ethel Ella Dillon . 71, Rt. 2. nephews among whom is loaded with precioUs fuel oU and petroleum products were
More than 35 towboats and Corps of Engineers re,aa
Births - A son to Mr. and Patriot, died at 3: 30p.m. Charles Ta~lor of the and coal for snow~ocked locked thrpugh Dam 52 late thelrbargeshadbeenwalting late&amp;lhdaythatth~uprlver
Mrs. Ronald Waugh, Crown Saturday at her residence . Pomeroy area . Mr. Neece citie. s in Ohio, Pennsylvanl8· Saturday shortly after dam in the ice below Pa4ucah to dasl m poobecals~eofr a lacgvkeryof
was born Feb. 1(.· 1905 was a relirod coal miner .
th lri
II\ lee
ow1y
City: a daughter to Mr. and in She
Glenwood, W. Va. to the
Funeral services were held and West Virginia waited wickets there ard two other begin e P up e
•
ti
d
Mrs. Rodney Crites, Parkers- la te Will and Clara Wil cox at 2 p.m. hxlay at the Ewing · !Dday for an adequate pool to upriver dams were raised to covered Ohio.
upriver precip 1ta on an
Funeral Home wlff1 the Rev . build up at two ·downriver increase the pool and permit
Although the pool at Dam temperatures below freezing
burg: and a daughter to Mr. Reed .
~ 2 at Paducah filled have kept heavy ~ow cover
and Mrs. James Morgan, huS5hebandis, sTuedrv,ivewdhobmy hsheer Andrew Parsons officiating . dams to be locked thron•h. locking.
Burial wlts in the Bradford
~
51 fr
ltina HeS8ldDam50
Pliny.
married July . 1927 In Hun· Cemetery .
Army Corps of Engineers irnmediately,poolsatDam
· omme • ·
tingtor , W. Va .; children.
d , C
spokesmen hoped
the and 50 were lUling more had four feet ~go ~C:e
Teddy Ra~and Earl Douglas,
TliEAOORE F. SMITH
SaM ay s 0 11ege
majority could be locked slowly.
reaching pool te
n Y
Holzer Medical Center
both
of
t.
1,
Crown
City
;
Theodore
F.
Sm
ith
,
60,
died
Ba~~~~~.~~~~~~lls
throu•h
Dam
a
.
Golconda
,
aild
was
filling
at
about
one·
(Births, Jan. 28)
51 1
Mrs , Donovan !Betty) Davis, at his home on· Fisher 5t ,
lsi Round
"'"
half foot every three hourS.
Mr. and Mrs. LaWrence J. Morristown. Tenn .; Mrs. Gail Pomeroy , about 3 p.m.
Hesat'dtheratelsslowerat.
'MadisonSquareGarden
Seymore, son 1 Middleport: (borothyl Green , · Crown Sa1urday .
The Pomeroy Emergen cy_
Classic
Golconda- only six inches
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Camp- Cily : Mike , Patriot ; 11
grandchildren , nin e great. Squad answered a call to the
. Championship
.
every four or five hours.
bell, daughter, Gallipolis; grandchildren ; brothers and homebutMr . Sm ithwasdead Holy Cross 81' Seion Hall 77 •
Pedi•o 881·d, "If they can
Consolation
United Preu lntt~~rrur.tinnAI
Thursday
c
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Phillips, sis t ers , El za .n ee d , H un · upon the squad's arrlva 1. A
T d
Cl
lock
·through 50 heand
51.
tlng
ton
.
w.
va
.;
Dave
Reed,
veteran
of
World
War
II
,
Mr
.
Rutgers
73
Manhattan
70
o
ay
Cleveland
State
at
emson
h
daughter,
Bidwell
.
. Eloise Parsons, Marie
California : Mrs . Blanche SmithwasbornMay8, 1916at
East
Eastern Illinois at ,Wright
FridaY
loday,thatmeanst .arges
(Birth, Jan. 29)
Pickens, Hazel Lee .
Gibson and Mrs . Agnes Beaver Falls, Pa .. a son of Army 68 Air Force 49
State
Dyke at West Liberty
could reach I.ool!ville by
Mr. and Mrs. Curt Coffey, Kin?sbury , both of Hun. the late William H. and Fred Babson 97. Norwich 85
Oberlin al Heidelberg
Detroit Institute at Wilber· midweek and Cincinnati by
Baruch
95 Queens 77
·
Ohio
Northern
at
Moun
t
force
Jr., son, Jackson.
W
V
d
M
P
A
t
ling on , . a ., an
rs.
. Workman Smith . sis er B t
Cl k
d
x1 ek d"
· Nellie Massie, Glenwood , W. and two brothers also
a es 88 ar 86
Union
Satur ay
ne · we en ·
(Births, Jan.30)
PLEASANT VALLEY
va . Four sislers preceded her preceded him in death .
Boston U. 77 ~IU 75
Wooster at Kenyon
Ohio State at Michigan
Wickets 00 the three older
Mr. and Mrs. Jon M. Bums, In
DISCHARGES - Mrs. J}oy
death .
Surviving t3re two sisters, Bowdbin 88 Gordon 5.4
Denison at Wittenberg
Detroit at Xavier
daDls
were lowered initially
Hoffman, Clifton; Mrs. son, Cheshire; Mr. and Mrs.
She was a member of the Mr s. Lewis (Helen) Sauer, Bridgeport90 St. Anselm 's 73
Tuesday
Chattanooga at Dayton
to prevent damage from ice.
Middl eport, and Mrs. Robert Catholic U. 83 Drexel 70
Dayton at Notre Dame
Ohio University at Bowling
vin d
I
Berton Peters, daughter , Danny Grueser, daughter, Sa lem Baptist Church .
Funeral services will be 1 (Ffeda) Wiley of Gahanna ; . Central Conn. 89 AIC 71
Xavier at Alr Fprce
Green
floes mo g ownr Yet.
Point Pleasant : Mrs. Robert Pomeroy; Mr . and Mrs , p.m.
t uesday at lhe Waugh . three brothers, OIJver G., of Colgate 83 Northeastern 81 ot Cl.eveland State at Eastern · Kent State at Cenlral
But becal!lle of Ute energy
Bailey, son, Long Bottom, 0.: James E. Hannon, daughter, H II W d F
I Home Scolsdal". Ariz ..· Robert M. of Columbia 103 Brown 91 ·
Kentucky
Michigan
.
•·· t ortheastem cities
00
a ey unera
t:
Cortland St. 99 Eisenhower 76 Otterbein at Capital
Miami at Toledo
cr~ts 8 n
•
Albert Saunders, Northup, Gallipolis.
with the Rev. Ronald Beaver Falls, and Clifford E. Curry 92 Nichols 89
Marietta at Muskingum I Wright State at Vtrntnla It was decided to raise the
0.; Nellie Willet, Point
L'·
N!cholas officiating. Burial of Pittsburgh , Pa. , and Delaware 92 Nichols 89
Urbana at Mt Vernon
Commonwealth
· wickets and·restore the pool
ASK TOWED
will be in Salem Cemetery. several nieces and nephews.
Pleasa nt : Gunther Weiss ,
A marriage Hcense was Fr iends may call at the
Funerol seryices will be Delaware 92 Lafaye1te 90
Thiel !Pal al Hiram
Buffalo State al Akron
, to let much-needed fuel
Apple Grove: Mrs. Bobby issued to Charles Richard funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 held at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the Dowling 82 Manhattanville 57 Shaw !Michl al Wilberforce Buffalo at Youngstown State shipments start moving
Kinnaird, Southside: Karen
to 9 p m today
Rawl,·ngs .(oats F•uneral Esn . Conn. St. 75 Marist 71
Wednesday
Ashland at Adnan
. B
loaded 'th
· ·
·
Federal City 98 Ruf .. Camden Cincinnati at Pitf
Kentucky State at Central agam. arges
WI
·Jordan, Mt. Alto: Barbara Hysell, 24, Pomeroy and
Home with the Rev. Dwight
B 11 Sf 1
fuels ha
1 lty
II
Henrietta
EHzaheth
Saxton,
RONALD
WELLS
Zavitz
officiating.
Burial
wi
ll
91
Ohio
University
at
a
a
e
State
ve
pr
or
over
a
Johnson, ~ New Haven ; 20, Cheshire.
Ronald (Shorty ) Wells , so, be in Beech Grove Cemetery. Georgetown 78 American 6.4 Kent State at Bowli~ Green Ohio Northern at Baldwin- others nudging their way
Herman Anderson, New
Rt . 1. Ewlngton died at Fri ends may call at the Ceo.
Was·hlngton
86 Toledo at Central ichigan Wallace
slowly uprlver
Haven ; Mrs. Clyde Triplett,
Holzer Medical Center at 6 f
1h
t'
Maryland 76
Northern · Illinois at Miami Kenyon at Heidelberg
. ·
. I
unera ome any lme.
Grove City 63 Geneva 55
Youngstown State at Steu- Mount Union at Oberlin
The
wtcket-rats ng
MEETING POSTPONED
son, Syracuse; Thelma
. ~Or~u~~~Yi2, 1926 in Grand Both eal
Hamilton 10.4 Drew 82
benville
.
Wooster at Otterbein
operation, begun last Friday
A meeting of Mary Shrine aRapids.
Watterson , Apple Grove :
Mi ch. to Howard M.
JOE HALLEY
Hawthorne St. 80 New Paltz Akron at Ashland
Capital at Musklngum
in near-zero temperatures
Dewayne Mayes, Henderson ; 37, White Shrine of Wells, McArthur and the late
J H II
80 Rt 2 C n 64
Shaw (Michl at Central State Den. ison at Martella.
presented a hazard to Army
Ithaca 80 RPI 73
M~ nt Union at Heidelberg Oh1o Wesleyan· at W 1 ttenber~
.
Missouri Robinson, Hen· Jerusalem, scheduled for this Mildred Wiseman Wells , he · oe a ey, ' · ' row
City,4:!Teens
Run Sunday
Road) : died
Dyke at Cl;arion State Pa
Engmeersboatcrews
dersoni Guy Garrison , evening, has been postponed. mar r i.ed- Ruth Williams at
20 p.m.
at lona 102 St. Francis, NY a• Kend,on at Wittenberg
·
f th and
da the
March
10.
19
5
in
Ashland,
Pleasant
Valley
Hosp
ital.
He
John
Jay
68
Brooklr"
Coli
.
64
Bal
wln
·Wallace
at
Wooster
Steubenville
at
Wheeling
IW
dams,
because
o
e
nger
4
Robertsburg: Dr. James
Ky.
had been in failing health six JK~niataN7Y1 . AIBbrig~ 7t0 C II ODeberlin attOOh~~ Nworthl ern
VCadl
I t Mt V .
of ice damage.
Hi· LOW TEMPS
She survives along wlth mon1hs
mgs , 92 arrmg on o .
. nison a •.110 es eyan
e arv.il ea . ·. ernon
The old wood and steel ice·
A reti red farmer. he was 76
Wilberforce at Dyke
Malone at RIO Grande
. . .d · . k ts had t be
NEW YORK (UPI) - The threesonsandtwodaughters,
'
King's, Pel. ~1 Scranton 58
Cedarville at Tiffin
Ohio Dominican at Urbana covere WlC e
O
1896 ·'" Oh
1
highest temperature reported Richard , Vinton ; Robert, born Oct
·Gallia
· 27 · County.
· the
°
King's Pt 38 Trinity 34
Walsh vs IW\0:1
''·lone
Tiff'1n at Wals""
raised with grappling hooks
McArt
hur
;
Mrs.
Steven
Twp.,
to
Sunday to the Nation al IBecky l Smith, Roy , Ohio : late Oscar and (lemma Lehigh78.Bucknell 69
Rio .Grande at Ohio Defiance at Findlay
sluicedoffandthenpla&lt;j!din
Weather Service. excluding Roger and Rita , at hom e. and Caldwell Halley
LeMoyne 76 Assumption 65 Dominican
Wllmmgton at Bluffton
position . Farther uprtver
He married Jenny We~rd Maine 84 Vermont 82
Bluffton at Defian ce
Bethany (W Val at Case newer dams have tam
' ter'
Alaska and Hawaii, was 81 three grandchildren .
Massachusetts 65 Con - Findlay at Anderson 1 (lnd)1 Western
A member ot the Wilkes· May 21. 1923 in Ga llipolis who
te
nd
1
fleeted
b
degrees at Borrego, Calif.
vi ll e Orp han s'
Fr ien d survi-wes along with one nect;cut 64
Manchester
( In 0
a · W &amp; J !Pa} at Hiram
ga sa IV'e essa
Y
Today's low was 17 degrees Masoni c Lodge 275. he was a daughter , Mrs . James Mansf ield 55 Shippensburg 53 Wi lmington
John Carroll at Thiel (Pa)
Ute tEavy ice.
below zero at Williston , N. D. heavy equipment operator, a (Louise) Queen , Middleport ; Middlebury 85 Brandeis 73 Case Western at W &amp; J (Pa)
'
Iarmer and a World War II. two sons. Roberl . Rt . 2, Millersville 82 ' Ku tztown 62 John Carroll at Allegheny
Bn"e~s
WIER PROMOTED
veteran .
Patriot : Roger , Rt . 2, Crown Montclair St. 67 Ramapo St. (Pal
1:
1,
COLUMBUS (UP! )
Funeral services will be I ' City ; 12 grandchildren, 14 ~oravicin 67 Lebanon Valley
(Continued froni page I)
Deputy Ohio Transportation p.m. "Tuesday at ttl e Mc Coy - great-grandchildren , half- 56
Moore Funeral Home w1th sisters, Mrs. Goldie Groden,
ATLANTA (UPI )
As an i ndep~nden
Director David Wier Sunday the· Rev . Jerry Neal ol- Huntington: w. va.; Mf-s. N. Adams St. 83 Bridgewater
.
.
insurance agency, ou
Directors of the .Atlanta Directlll' David Weir.
was promoted to head of his ficialing . In term ent wi ll be in Bertha Sites . .Mrs. Gladys St. 60
Agriculture
Director
John
Stackhouse
said
the
state
primary fur,ction is .t
Mem or ial Park . Si tes, Mrs , Iren e Sites .. Mrs. N. Hamp. Coli. at Adelphi Braves haye, •rtamed three pickup of milk on farms to lie taken to the procesalng plants
prov ide policies ·whictl department. Wier's former Vinton
new vice preside~ts to ruri the .
Friends may ca ll ~ t the - Ger.trude Holle y. Mrs. (cancelled)
afford ' financial protection boss, Richard Jackson, was funeralhomefrom2to4and7
.Pauline Curry, Mrs. Rubv Penn Sf. 74 Pittsburgh 60
club
during the one-year had been hampered somewhat by closed roads, adding that
ln case of IOs.s.
moved to chief of Ute state to 9 p .m . today . Masonic HaiL al l of Chesapeake ; Princeton 69 Penn 56
suspension of owner Ted nearly all the milk was taken to a processbr Saturday . Milk ill
But, we also ha ve a vi tal Department
of
Ad· services will be at 8 p.m . Mrs. Justine 'Wilson .· South Sacred Heart 70 St. Michael's
normaily picked up on farms every two days and moat farms
interest in toss prevention, ministrative Services.
Turner.
today .
Poi"nt and half -brother , Jim 57
as should our clients . We
Bill Lucas, Charles Sanders have only a two-day storage capacity. Stackhouse said H
Halley , Huntington, w. Va . St. Bonaventure at Niagara,
Jackson replaced Richard
encourage care, caution
and Robert Hope ·will jdin trucks could not make it to the farms, then any exira milk
ROY GAIL HARMON
Two ha lf-sis ter s preceded ~f.djohn's, NY 61 Oregon 51
and safety ... preventive Krabach , who earlier Utis
Roy Gail (Tyk e) Harm on, hi m in death .
Braves' Vice President would have to be dumped. He said about 10 per cent of the milk
measures wh ich can keep monUt announced his retire- 16-months
He was an Army veteran of St. louis at Canisius, ppd.
production was dumped Saturday.
old,
was
dead
on
St. Peter's , NJ 61 F .' Henry Aaron in Ute operation
that car accident frOm
ment from state office.
arrival at the Holzer Med ica l World War 1.
Dickinson 48
of Ute club this season and
happening, that building
Center Saturday.
Funeral services wi ll be 2 Salem Sf. 95 Boston St. 94
WASIDNGTON - GENERAL ELECfRIC MUST not
fire from starting; tha t
wiU report directly to the
p.m.
W
edne
sday
at
the
Born September 30, 1975 in
claim
its appliances are better or require less service than
Waugh-Hal
ley
-W
ood
Funeral
Springfield
72
Wagner
70
home burglary from being
board until next year when
Galli pol is, he was the son of Home .- Burial will be . in Stonehill 88 Merrima ck 87
competing brands unless it can prove it, the Federal Trade
committed .
E·RCALLED
Roy E. IDulty) and Sheiia
cemete n ·. Stony Brook 66 Southampton Turner returWI.
Preven tion saves life,
SYRACUSE
The Sue ISputJ Messick Harmon. Provide nce
61
.
Turner was · suspended Commission announced !Dday. The agency iBsued a consent
limb and property . and
Surv1vors. other than his Friends ma y ca ll a1 the S. Ca ro 78 ~t . Joseph 's 59
order signed by GE affirming the company ''falsely advertised
Syracuse ER Squad was
helps co ntro l insurance called Monday at 8:30a.m. to parents , include paternal fu neral home 2:30 to 5 and 7, to Suffolk 94 Worcester Tech 82 earlier this month by that independent surveys showed its color television sets,
baseball Commissioner
grandparents, Mr . and Mrs. 9 p.m. Tuesday . Military Union 85 St. Lawrence ·74
costs aild premiums.
When losseS do occur, the Ern~st Quillen residence , Ray M._ Harmon , Gallipolis: graveside rites wi ll be con- Weslfiel,d Sl. 95 W. New Eng. Bowie Kuhn for allegedly purchased or in use irr 1973, required less service Ulan aU other
our policyhOlders can taunt Third Street, for Mrs. Emest mat e r na l grandm other , duGfed by VFW Post 4464,
69
tampering in the recruitment U. S. brands of color TV sets,'' and agreeing to abstain such
ailv.ertising in the future.
on protec1ion and service in
W. Virginia 70 Duke. 65
(Mary Virginia ) Quillen who Magg ie Stewa rt_, ·Poin t
of Gary Matthews.
Pl easa nt ; maternal grand time of need . But we still
Yale at Cornell, ppd ,
It also sailj Ute firm "unfairly continued to advertise the
was dead· on arrival of the father,
Roy Gai l Stewart ,
say - prevention .is the squad.
,
1973
service performance data while it knew or subsequent
'
Poin t Pleasant ; and great.
WANT FREEDOM
best policy.
South
Richmond 69 Sletson 60
evidence
which conlradicted the 1973 survey data ." The
grandmother, Mrs. El izabeth
Julie Elliott, Pomeroy, and A!a. Huntsville 66 Montevallo Salem 75 Bluefield St . 62
E. Stewart, Poi nt Pleasa nt . William Elliott, Pomeroy , 56
consent order requires that GE must be able to prove such
Shorter 59 Berr.y 59
He was preceded in death
Albany St. 9'1 Savannah St. 69 Southern U. 97 Miss. Valley 67 claims in the future, not only for TV sets, but for "clothes
FIREMEN CALLED
by one brother. Guy Mar vin filed for dissolution of Anderson 68 Bevard 61
S. C. 51. 65 Morgan St. 56
washers, clothes dryers, ralljles, dish washers, trash
The Pomeroy Fire Depart- in 19 76.
marriage in Meigs County Armstrong St. 95 Vald osta St. VMI 88 The Citadel 70
compactors, refrigerators, freezers, room air conditioners,
Funeral services will be Common Pleas Court .
ment was ca lled to the
Va . Tech 99 Wis .-Milwa4kee
86
held Tuesda y at 2 p.m. at the
stereophonic
consoles and non.portable stereophonic sound
79
'
Emmett
Hutton
home
in
Augusta
87
W.
Georgia
74
992·2143
Stevens Funera l Home with
Baltimore 85 Md .,.Balf. Cy. Va . Uni on 93 Hampton lnst. systems and components~::
Columbia
Township
at
9:48
Rev . William Weaver of·
102 W. Main
58
.
85
.
·&gt;·f,
p.m. Saturday for a fire ti ci aling . Burial wi ll foll ow in
BURNS SUFFERED
Pomeroy .
Bluefield 51 ..91 Lib . Bapt. 90 Wake Forest 83 ,P.ppalachlan
the Kirkland Memorial
around a chimney rfue.
The , Middleport E·R was Campbellsville 65 Indiana U. 51. 73
Gardens.
90
Washington,
·Md .
call.
ed ·Saturday at 2:51p.m. SE 64
Friends may call at the
Catawba
8~ lenoir Rhyf!e 81,
Haverford
72
Stevens Funeral Home art er 3 for Dorothy Reynolds who ot
Wash. &amp; Lee 9.4 B'water , Va.
p.m. today".
had sustained first· and· Centre 71 Pr incipia 57
THE~PLACE
76
.second degree bums to her Charleston 80 Wofford 68
w. Liberty 78 W. Va . St. 71
W. Maryland 82 Muhlenberg
anns and legs. She was taken Clemson 93 N. Carolina 73
• NORMAN K. NEECE
Care. 97 Lander 78 81
Norman
K.
(Ken l to Veterans Memorial Coastal
Dillard 97 Xavier 87
W. Virginia 70 Duke 65
Neece, 94, died Friday at Hospital. .
E. Carollna 76 Davidson 56 Wm. &amp; Mary 70 Navy 56
hi s residence a l 880.4. Willard
At 3:19p.m. the squad went' Furman 106 Wsn . Carolina 83 Ky . Wesleyan 86 Evansvtll'e
Ave ., Cleveland .
to
the comer of North Second ·Geo. Mason 84 Salisbury 51. 80
He was a son of the late
Lincoln 88 Westminster 61
and
Main for Maxine Gaskill 82
James Henry and Sarah
Ga . Southern 85 Jac~sonville Luther 101 Buena Vista 81
Taylor Neece. He wps also who had fallen and sustained 69
j·
Marion at Tri·Sfate, ppd .
. preceded in death by 11 .a possible broken hip. She Georgia St. 61 Mercer 57
Marquette · 85 DePaul 64
brothers and sisters .
Georgia Tech 89 Tulane 62
Surv iv ing are a sister, Mrs. was taken to Veterans . Greensboro 90 N.' C.-G'Boro McPherson 102 51. Mary's 91 ,
01
Stella Hart man, St. Paul, Memorial Hospital.
83
Minnesota 77 Ohio St. 67
·Guilford, 100 Elan 98 ot
Missouri 79 Iowa St. 69
High Point 64 Campbell 60
Mo.· Rolla 89 SE Missouri 75
Johils Hopkins 63 Swllr- Nebraska 66 Oklahoma St. 54
thmore 54
No . Ill . at Kenl St., ppd.
Kentucky 87 Alabama 85
No . Iowa 66 MOrningside 6J
LaGrange 83 Piedmont 74
NOrthwestern 99 Michigan 87 ·
Lambufh
67
Freed · Oakland 76 Northwood 74
Hardeman 65
Ohio Wesleyan 75 Musklngum
Visit Our Salad Bar
LeMoyne· Owen 72 Christ. 69
Bros. 67
Purdue 66 Illinois 63
Pan Fried Chicken
LSU 77 Auburn 73
Sag. Valley 80 Lake Superior
Home Made Noodles
' ·
Louisvllle105 Rhode Island 87 69 •
Mashed Potatoes and Gravy
Mad ison 79 Wilmington 59
51. Joe's , Ind. at DePauw,
Md .. Esn. Shore 74 N.C . A&amp;T ppd.
Hot Rolls .
.
73
Southwestern 64 'Bethel 61, ot
Tea or Milk
Coffee,
Memphis St. 81 Dayton 67
Tarkio 70 Central Methodist
Milligan 8.4 Lincoln Mem. 83 56
Mississippi. 90 Florida 83
Toledo at Ball St., ppd.
Miss. St. 102 Vanderbilt 77
Upper Iowa 82 Simpson 75
Morehead St. 59 Esn. Ken- Wayne St. 79 Washburn 60
992-3629
Pomeroy, 0.
tucky 49
l'llsconsin 87 Mich . St. 83, 3
·Newberry 87 Limestone 58 ols
Phone 992-6304
New Orleans 101 S. Florida 72 ' Wis .. Parkslde 16 Wayne St. 71
IZZA SHACK Phone 992·6304
Norfolk 80 Elizabeth Citr 12 William Jewell 73 Ollawa 63
N. Alabama 80 Miss. Col . 68 Youngslown St. 73 Wright St.
N. C. Central 90 Delaware St. 71
64
N. C.. Charlotte 76 Florida St .
65
N. C. 51. 73 Virginia 57
.
No. Kentucky ao Bellarmine
78
Financially,. that is ! How? Just
NW La. 95 Tex .- Arllngton 86
park your money where il can do the
Old Dominion 105 Marshall' 87
Pembroke 68 At I. Christian 71
most tor you ... in one of auf high
Pikeville 81 Cumberland 68
Interest earning savings accounts!
Presbyterian 77 S. C.. Aiken
It 's to your advantage. Find out.
67
Rand.· Macon 79 Loyola , Md.
68

Veteraas Memorial Hospital
Saturday Admissions Audrla Arnold, Pomeroy :
Opal Barr, Langsville :
Gladys Voll, Syracuse.
Saturday Discharges Gerald
William' Musser,
Russell Miller, Charles
Payne, Mary E. Jones.
Sunday Admissions
Edna Muriel Foley, Rutland ;
Dennis Little, Po"\froy :
Victor Diehl, Middleport ;
Emmett Ferrell, Gallipolis;
Floyd !lush, .Letart, W. Va.
Sunday Discharges Meadia Umg, Harry Great·
house, Milford Frederick,

pm.

·'fh.is week's . college games

1

1·

PREVENTION

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News •• m·

BEST POLICY

DALE E. WARNER

.

·you too

===·

Til.eSday Nrght Special

$295

Plus Tax

THE MEIGS INN

can be sitting pretty

.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

JUST RECEIJ!ED

0

~ Farmers
t $

a

a1

Bank

POMEROY, OH'IO

for Eac!l
Depositor. Member Federal Deposit
Insurance Corpor~tion.

$40,000.00 Maximum Insurance

•
"EXTRA

CRISPY" Kentucky Frt.d Chicken Now
Avoll•blt ... Crisp On The Outside ~ Moist Inti
Tend or On The Inside.
Now Available At !

CROW'S STEAK HOUSE·D.

-30 Gallon Natural Gas
-40 Gallon Natural Gas

MEIGS THEATRE
.CLOSED FOR
VACATION..
WATOf FOR
OPENING DATE

HOT WATER HEATERS
-52 Gallon E*tric

' - Um lted 5 yr. Warm\ty
- New energy saving pilots or gas models

'

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Meigs Local schools
will open W~dnesday
SclMloiJ II. Ut~ Meigs Local start . me hour later than
Scbool Dlltrid, will reopen normal.
In a statement today,
Wecmeaday, Supt. Charles L.
·Dowler said thla morning. . Dowler said:
According to plMB made
today,. every effort wUl be
made to have the schools
open for the remalrder of this
.week. Clasaes, however, will

"Our schools have been
drastically interrupted by the
current severe weather
oonditions. In this energy
crisis, otir natural gas

Flood insurance offered
at aHordable rates is good
buy in Ohio in 1977
,,,
OOLUMBUS (uPI) - The Ohio 11iSurance Institute
!Dday advised all Ohioans ·to consider Ute purchase of
flood insurance. .
"The National Flood Insurance Program is a
cooperative effort of the federal government arxi the
insurance induslry that provides flood protection at
affordable rates," said Jolm C. Winchell, executive
director or the institute.
''The perU of flooding Is n9t covered by standard
insurance pollcles such as Ute Homeowners policy,"
said Mitchell. "To n:old peraonal financial dlaaster
when floodlllg occurs, flood insurance must be
purchased tl)rough the nadonal plan."
Wincbell said flood insur•nce is avaUable to property
owners in cOmmunities that have applied to the federal
government and have been declared eligible.
.. Since flooding can occur anywl!ere and not just.in
flood prone areas, any communlty ' can apply for
eligibility, said Winchell.
. He said once eligible, community residents can then
purchase the cOVerage from any property arxi casualty
insurance agent or broker.
"The Houalng &amp; Urban Development Act of 1968 was
the basts of the present flood insurance program," said
Winchell. "Rates are subsidized by both the federal
government and the insurance induslry. The insurance
industry alone has provided over $60 milllon in capital
to Ute program."

allocation has been reduced
to almost unmanageable
IO'Iels, with possible further
cuts. Compounding the
JI'Oblem is the lack of any
concrete relief from th e
nstiooal and state levels.
School buildings were not
built to be 'mothbaUed' in the
winter. The lrnplicatims of
winterizing are not com·
pletely known because it has
not been done before.
"Meigs Local has been in
session only two days since
the Christmas . break. It is
linperative that the students
be brought into sdmol to get
their textbooks and assign·

ments for the possibUity of an
extended shutdown of
schools.
"It is therefore my decision
that the Meigs Local Schools
will open t&lt;rnorrow (Feb. 2).
Buses will run as much of
their routes as road con·
diUons permit. If parents
Iring their children to school,
they must )&gt;e prepared to
come and pick them up.
"Room temperatures wiU
vary from · building to
!Jullding and even room to
room. students should dress
accordingly. It is my hope .
that conditions will penni! us
to open Wednesday, Thurs-

day and Friday this week at
which time further an ·
nouncements will be made.
"Remember to dress
warmly. We solicit ~our
cooperation
and ' un·
derstailding in this time of
crisis. Buses wiU pick up
students one hour later than
normal on Wednesday,
Thursday and Friday.
Classes wiU start one hour
later than normal. However,
we wUI dismiss at the normal
time."
Kindergarten classes
throughout the district have
been cancelled for·the rest of
the week.

BuNDLED UP IN OOAT, GLOVES - Many homeowners and business houses of the Big
Bend area are cooperating with the requests of the Columbia Gas Co. and Gov. James
Rhodes In keeping heat Utermostats turned down. Typical of the cooperation being shown by
some businesses is Ute Elberfeld Department Store in Pomeroy where most sa les personnel
wore coats and sometimes gloves about Uteir duties. Pictured in coat and hat at her station
in Elberfeld's is Mrs. Catherine Welsh who manages a big smile for The Sentinel camera .
Businesses and offices which apparently were heatihg higher than the recommended
temperature were being criticized by the "man on the street" Monday.

WASIUNGTON - GOVERNMENT SUBSIDIES will be
avaUable !Dday in certain states to help poor families· pay
heating and other utility biDs, according to Health, Education
and Welfare Department officials. HEW has taken several
stepa to meet President Carter's demands for a coordinated
federal energy policy, they said.
The U. S. PubUc Health Service has created an energy
cr1111 reporting system to identify adverse effects the weather
Is havlnc on the health of the elderly, poor and the
handicapped. The AdministraUon on Aging sent telegrams last
weekend to state agencies on the 11ging saying that certain
HEW funds can be used to pay the uUUty bUis of older
. Americans.
' WASHINGTON - TilE SOVIET VNION SEEKS military
supilriDrlty over Ute United states and its present programs
could allow most of Its urban population to l!llrvive a nuclear
exchange, according to the Joint Otiefs of staff.
The laaden of.the military services offered a rare public
view of their uaeument of Soviet lnteg)ions in a nine-page
statement glVIIn Sen. William Promlire,"t&gt;-Wls. The document
and other recent discloaures In the debate over U. S. vs.
U.s.S;R, capabilltles were ezpected lo figure In testimony
toclily by Defenle Secretary Harold Brown and the JCS
chairmall, Sen. GeorgeS. Brown, in a Senate appropriations
defense aubcommlttee hearing.
CHICAGO- THE 13 LEMON siiARKS WERE NO trouble
at Ill for daredevil Evel Knlevel - It was the landing that
nell'ly ltiUed him. Knlevel suffered a fractured right forearm
and left callllrbone Monday when he lost control of his
motorcy¢e and ~asbed whUe practicing hla plannl!(i jumP
over a pool of ajlarks.
·
The jump at the International Amphitheatre on the city's
South Side which was to be televised nationally Monday night,
Will
A spokelman at Michael Reese HOIJilital, who
· liUd KDievel'1 condition u good, said the fractured forearm
li1U require 11111ery. The spokesman said Knievel also bad
~Merna~ bleeding in hla right calf.
Knievel had cleared the lhark tank when hla motorcycle
llnded on the esit ramp, skidded and crashed through a

Clllcelled.

bmttr, throwing him to the ground.
PARIS, KY. - · LOUISVILLE &amp;: NASHVILlE Railroad
wridt crenlllinllarge ~ran11late Monday cleared the main

.Cindnnati-Atlanta track wblc!l was bloclled when 24 cars ol a
'lklr narlhbound rrelgbt tralD derailed here late &amp;mday.
Molt o1 tbi derailed can contlliled coahn route to Ohio.
Smral of tbt overturned etra atruc:lt buUclln8s and one
111dpd q11n1t the Old Frtlaht Houae, now used aa a beer·
dlltrlllltlon Wlnboule,llaiucklnl br1cU !rom a waD. Another
Cllllllll I'IIIIPIDila storap bulldlnl of Woodford Spean &amp;
11aa1, .,..m dlalen. a-bon Colllty Judie Guy Ormsby Jr.
lllldlan on..U. necotialloll to buy 101111 tl the coal to heat the
Cllllllt}' ~. wbldJ had ltl heatlna Qllem converted
frGm lillura1
to coal mr the -llend.

au
WAfimNGTON- THEc.utml ADMINISTRATION will

,,.., IICihaol d1131f'lllalian !rom kindergarten to coDege "with
. all thl ponr "' haw," according to Joaeph Califano, new
(0 II ed 1111 Pill' 10)

~~i,,.
,_,

__

enttne

e
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

House stalls on
~;i;fol emergency.bill
By United Press International
:r&lt;lKYO- VICE PRESIDENT Walter Mondale, ending 10
@ays of talks with major American allies, said today the
United States will gradually withdraw Its ground troops from
South Korea but "does not Intend to turn its back on Asia."
Mondale told Fukudll the United States "will phase down our
ground forces only in close consultation ard cooperation with
the govenunents of Japan and South Korea .... The vice
Pfellldent aJao l8ld the Unlted.States will keep 'its Air Force
units in South Korea and "continue to assist in UPI!rading
Korean self-defense capabilities.''
·
CINCJNNATI - OffiO OFFERS THE LOWEST TAX
environment among 12 states surveyed for the Cincinnati
Chamber of Commerce. The survey, conducted for the
chamber by Arthur Andersen &amp; Co., Clnclrmati, showed Ohio
residents pay 9 peu'81lt of their persooal income tax toward
state and local taxes, the lowest percentage In the study. New
Yorkers paid the highest at 15.5 per cent.
The study was done to assist the chamber in economic
development efforts. The other stattls" rurveyed · were
Callfornia, Connecticut, Dlinols, Maryland, Massachusetts,
Michigan, .Minnesota, Ne\V Jersey, Pennsylvania and
Wlllconsin.

.'*.

•

.

VOL XXVII NO. 203

'·;

:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:::;.;:::;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;.;

By WilLIAM E. CLAYTON worked out .
Wright
wrote
House
WASHINGTON (UP))- In
A spokesman for O'Neill colleagues. "fn the crisis of
a move that could delay said that he realized it would the moment, there is time
p r e s i d e n t C a r t e r ' s he quicker to take the Senate on}f&lt;te throw out a IHeline."
emergency natural 'gas version and speed Ute bill to The biU, he said, is "the best
•
legislation, the House Ute White House, but "we had we can do and Ute least we
On
preVIOUS
Democratic · leadership to respect our committee's can do "
(See.earlier stOry on Page 2
decided today to stick witlt a deliberations."
11
·
·
House committee's version
This bill must pass ,'' today)
instead of acting on one
All curtslled 1nduslrlal
passed Monday by the
Senate.
and Commercial gas
The Senate refused to put a
customers of Columbia Gas
ceiling on natural gas prices
of Ohio with previously
but tl!e House Commer~
established
monthly
Conunlttee has voted a· top of ·
aliocati.ons will be required
approximately $2 per
to Umlt gas use to only
growers will decide whether
thousand cubic feet for
those volumes needed for
WASHINGTON" (UP!)
emergency gas compared The Agriculture Department to continue quotas for the
plant protection until at
with the . current national today aMOUnced plans to . next three crops. If two-thirds
least 8 11.m., $aturday,
ceiling of $1.44.
continue federal marketing or more of the voters say yes, February 5.
All'· oiher custo111ers
The House scheduled a conlrols for .burley tobacco ·quotas' and price supports
Including residential users
noon session to consider through 1977, 1978 and 1979 will continue . If quotas are
are urged to keep their
President Carter's subject to approval by disapproved - which has
thermostats set as low as
emergency request to easily farmers in a refererxium never happened in burley
tobacco areas - there
possible without jeopar·
shHt natural gas across state Feb. 22-25.
Simultaneously, officials would be no oonlrols and no dlzlng property or health
Ones to relieve the crunch
and are urged to keep
caused by one of the nation 's announced a 4 per cent cut In price supports.
Burley
tobacco,
the
usage to a bare minimum.
the
1977
marketing
quota
worst winters. The Senate
This action is necessary
pasaed its vera ion ·Monday. which will be enforced if nation's second~orgest type,
is
used
in
both
cigarettes
and
to
protect gas service for
growers
as
expected
Speaker Thomas P .
pipe
tobaccos
and
is
grown
residential
customers and
.
approve
continuation
of
the
O'Neill, D-Mass ., and
mainly
in
Kentucky,
human
need
customers.
lraditional
marketing
conlrol
Democratic Leader Jim
Tennessee,
North
Carolina,
'and
price
support
program.
Wright, D·Tex ., asked
Officially, Ute 1977 sales Virginia, Ohio and Indiana. :;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;.;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;.;:;:;:;:;.:.::;.:
coUeagues to approve the
quota
will be 637 million · In 1976, formers produced
HOW!e version. Th&amp;t could
mean a delay while House . pounds, about the same as the about 663 million poonds of
MEETING CANCELLED
burley compared wiUt 1.3
and Senate dlffe~ences are basic quota for 1976.
A
meeting of the In·
. A~tually, however, officials billion pourds of fluecuted
ternational
Union
of
explained the "effective farm tobacco, the main cigarette
Operating
Engineer
s
quotas'' for 1977 will total type . .
~heduled
for
Feb.
3
at
the
'EarUer, officials had anabout 100 million pounds
because of a carryover nounced a 12 per cent cut in junior fair building on the
feature which allows growers the 1977 marketing quota for Athens County Fairgrounds
to urder or over-sell their fluecured because of a has been cancelled due to the
weather.
(Continued on page 10)
quotas in any single year and
to make sdjuslrnents In the
Meigs County Sheriff
following season. This is
James J. Proffitt disclosed
about 4 per cent less than the
Mond,~y his . 4epartment
effective quota for last
worked 24 hours in solving a
year.
breaking and entering that
In the marketing quota
occurred at · the Ridgeview
referendum opening Feb, 22,
Carry Ou't on . SR · 681
someti.m e late Thursday
night or Friday morning.
l
. .Proffitt reported four
By EDWARD K. DeLONG
the Alcan Pipeline Co.
persons taken Into custody in .
WASHINGTON (U!'!) ' - · Arctic Gas proposed
coMectlon with the breaking
Rejecting two competing building a i,ootknile pipeline
and entering are In Athens
proposals, a Federal Power from Alaska's NorUt Slope
County jaU today.
Commission judge today en- ulrough Ute Alaska~ wildlHe
. Proffitt explained · two
oorsed a $8.5 mliflon range and down 'Canada's
breakings and enterlngs in
pipeline system to bring Mackenzie River to southern
Bacon,
32,
fonner
Judith
Athens County and one in
natural
gas from Alaska Alberta, where it would split
·
of
Middleport
,
resident
Meigs County occur·red
across
Canada
to the lower 48 with one le@ going to Antioch ,
arrested
recently
In
Clinton,
aimultaneoualy. Proffitt and
stites.
Calif., and Ute other going to
Tenn
.,
waived
extradition
his deputies worked with
and
has
been
returned
to
Administrative
law)
udge
Dwight, Ill.
Athens County Sheriff
NahW'I
Lltt
said
the
proposal
The 48-inch diameter line to
Meigs
ColDity.
Deputies In solving the case.
by
Arctic
Gas
~tudy
Groupbe
built between Prudhoe
Sllerl,ff
James
L.
Proffitt
Entry wai gained by
the
largest
private
Bay
m the North Slope and
said
Mrs.
Bacon
was
indicted
· breaking In the front ~oor. An
undertaking
In
the
nation's
Caroline
Junction
in
Jan.
13
by
the
Meigs
County
undetermined t~mount or
hlatory-would
make
more.
Alberta-burled
in
Grand
Jury
charging
her
mercharxilse was. taken.
with two foorth degree felony gas avaUable sooner, result permafrost and chilled to
counts of Issuing bad checks. in less environme~tal keep It from melting the
Sle had been sought by Meigs damage and cost cmsumera permafrost -would be the
ONE GAME ON TAP
authorities since May 211, IQ76 less than the other two largest ever used to transport
The ~der • Federal after she passed a check for proposals.
gas.
Hockin&amp; baaketball game .-ro at Goessler Jewelry and
Utt recommended that the
El Paso's rejected $6.54
ICheduled lor thia evening another for $150 at New York FPC approve the Arctic gas' blllion plan called for
~~ bea~ cancelled. Federal Clothing Hou.se. She Is proposal
and
reject construction of an lll9-mlle
Hoc:klt~l' and Eutem wiD ternporarUy being held in the competing proposals . from pipeline from Prudhoe Bay to
play at Eutem In a makeup women's quarters at Gallio ·the El Paso Alaslca Co. and Point Gravina on the south
g1111e tonight.
· County jail.

Cutback holds
for customers
gas allocation

Burley controls
to be continued

Four jailed
in robbery

Suspect is

returned on

felony counts

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1, 1977

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thursday through
Saturday, a t:hance of snow
flurries Thursdoy and
agoin Saturday. Highs wlii
be in the upper 20s or lower
30s Thursday and Friday
and In the 20s Soturday.
Lows will be in lhe teens.

.,

Weather is
moderating
vice's Ohio extended outlook
for Thursday thro ugh
Saturday cails for "chance of
snow flurries Thursday and
again Saturday. Highs will be
northern and eastern sections in the upper 20s or the lower
of the Buckeye State during · 30s ThursdHy and Friday and
Ute night, along wiUt a few in the 20s Saturday . Lows will
snQw flurries . Brisk souUterly be in the teens.
winds kept t e mper~ ture s
rather uniform during the
night, averaging amurd the
lo.degree mark.
A · deep low pressure

United Press lntematloool
Moderating temperatures
were · reported in many
sections of Ohio ea rly today .
Cloudiness spread over

State store
hours are
reduced

disturbance centered in
southeastern
Canada
continued to dominate Ohio 's
weather picture today . The
cold air circu lating around
Utat low pressure ceU is going
to be bringing somewhat
warmer weather to the state
through Wedne sd a y .
Although
the
general
temperature trend is upward,
light winds, clear skies and
an extensive snow cover wiU
drive the mercury down to
Ute zero-to-IG-&lt;lbove range
tonight.
Today's clear conditions
will continue into Wednesday ,
but cloudiness may return
late Wednesday as another
low
pressu re
system
approaches Ohio from the
northwest.
The National WeaUter SerNow you know
ST. AUGUSTINE , Fla.
At 83, Kathleen Evans is the
oldest ~lerk in the oldest store
in this ' oldest city in the
United States.

·

COLUMBUS - Director
Clifford E. Reich of the Ohio
Department of Liquor
Control has announced that in
accordance with Governor
Rhodes' plea for energy
conservation , all state liquor
stores will be on a reduced
schedule of forty hours per
week.
The reduced schedule
began today .
Store hours will generally
be 12 noon to 6 p.m., with
some adjustment of hours
toward the weekend. All
stores will post Uteir daily
hours: 'customers should
check with their local stores
for the schedule.
Director Reich said that the
few state liquor stores that
are heated by other than
natural gas may he open
more than the forty hour.

Natural gas pipeline acro~s
Canada ·4,000 miles approved
coast of Alaska, where the
gas would be chilled and
shipped by tanker ~.ooo miles
to Point Conception, Calif. It
would ~nter U.S . pipelines
there. The $6.28 billioo
Alcan proposal,also rejected,
proposed a i,SOiknile pipsUne
from Prudhoe Bay along the
Alaska oil pipeline route and
Ute Alcan Highway. to a
connection with Canadian
pipelines in British Columbia
and Alberta.
The FPC has been directed
to submit its proposal to
President Carter by May 1. A
spokesman
said
the
commission will hold
hearings
on
Litl's.
recommendation
before
iBsning its decision .
If the President approves
whatever Ute F~ ultimately
decides, Congress will then
have 60 days In which it can
overturn the President by

adopting a jomt resolution
requiring a majority vote in
the House and Senate.
The line proposed by Arctic
would be built during the
winter seasons,' employing
2,4011 workers at its peak, and
would begin carrying
between two billion and 2.5
billion cubic feet of gas daily
in 1982 or 1983.
That volume represents
about one-twentieth of total
U.S. consumption.
Lltt said transportation,
costs for a thouaarxi cubic
feetfOl'the Arctic Gas system
would be about $1.60 in the
fifth year of operation,
compared t~ $2.15 for El
Paso's pt'oposfll and $1.911or
Alcan.
Utt rejected arguments tl&gt;e
construction would Bel'iously
damage tl!e Alaskan wildlife
ran@e. He also ~ld tlte state
( Conllnued on pace 10'

�3- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. 1'uesday. ~·eh . 1 1H77

2- The Da tly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday. Feb. 1, 1977

Senate
By JOHN LESAR
United Press IDterua.tlooal
Snow and bitter cold
sh~ed most o'f the eastern
hall of the nation today and
Congress and government
agencies hurried action to
ease a cold-induced energy
crisis that has thrown about 2
milllon per110ns out of work.
New squalls Monday
battered cities still paralyzed
by a weekend blizzard and
another S!Drm tbat swept
over the South, dropped up to
13 Inches of snow.
In Washington, the Senate
Monday passed up debate on
long-term energy problems
and approved emergency
legislation to spread more
evenly the burden of energy
crises.
The bill - essentially that
reconunended by President
Carter
authorizes
emergency ~puchases of
natural gas and grants
authority to force interstate
pipelines to share supplies
wiUt each other.
The Department of Health,
Education and Welfare also
said government subsidies
would be available beginning

approv~s

today to help poor families
pay heating and other utility ;
bills.
Oh io's we ath er -and ·
energycaused layoffs pas~
the !-million mark Monday,
boosting the number of
persons idle across the East,
Midwest and South to, 1.6
million to 2 million workers.
• Key Ohio utilities asked
nearly 43,000 industrial apd
conunercial users of natural
gas to shut·down at least until
Saturday.
Nearly 61,000 auto workers
were idled in eight states and
Canada Monday because of
Ute frigid winter.
Watertown , N.Y. was
buried by the worst storm in
its history Monday . More
than 4 feet of snow was piled
into 15-foot snowdrdts by
. howling winds at Watertown.
Nearblizzard snows · swirled
anew through hard-hit
Buffalo, where National
Guardsmen had snow
removal equipment airlifted
in lD help clear drifts.
All cars were ordered off
Ute roads and hundreds of
motorists were stranded at

relief bill

barns and stores in Jefferson
and Lewis counties, N.Y.
Forty per cent of New
York's public schools - those
heated wiUt gas - were
ordered closed to conserve
gas.
Indiana Gov. Otis R. Bowen
souRht federal dis:1~t or "r"n

designation for his state,
beset by bitter cold and still
crawling out from unde r
snows dumped by a weekend
blizzard. Northern Indiana
Public Service Co. said ·its
natural gas curtailments to
2,500 industrial customers in

Dependent children get
• February
$34,425,526 m

COLUMBUS - 'State month's total to $36,251,687.
Auditor
Thoma s
E.
Ferguson added that the
Ferguson's office announced ADC distribult?n does not
today the February con· refl ect
foo d
.stamp
tribution of $34,425,526 in Aid allowances to the rectptents.
to Dependent Children (ADC) The state welfa re department
to 553,128 recipients in Ohio's dtstnbutes food stamps. and
88 counties.
ADC payment s to those
Ferguson said the amount reetptents choosmg to rewve
does not include the weekly stamps are redu ced ac·
ADC auxiliary payments C'tJrdmgly.
''
which will be made primarily
Ferguson noted ·iltlle - printo new recipients throughout cipal Februar~ -!tp'ayment
tile month.
went to 1,082 more recipients
The auxiliary payments in than the one in January, and
January totalea $1,906,976, increased by $80,617.
and coupled with the main
ADC payments are made to
January di stribution of fallllhes with one parent or
motels , restaurants, fir e $34,344,709. boosted that one unemployed parent on
the basis of family size and
financial resources. The ADC
I AUDITING SPIRO
program is funded primarily
WASHINGTON (UP! )
Lawyers for Spiro Agnew by federal and state governtOday were under a court ments.
Dtstnbuttons thus far for
o~der to produce one sheet of
paper the Internal Revenue February to counties (a~d
Service says it needs lD number of rectptents) mcomplete an audit of the eluded Athens $162,129 for
former vice president's 1973 2,635, Gaiba $91,533 for· 1,482,
Hockmg 165,441 for 1,073,
tax return .
Federal Judge John H. Ja~kson $139,020 for 2, 433,
Pratt ruled Monday the IRS Metgs $56,104 for 944, Vmton
HUNTINGTON - Col.
has a right to see Ute paper - $33,626 for 547, a nd
Scott B. Smith , District
a file copy of a bill from from Washington, $141 ,083 for
Engineer the past 2\2 years
a legal firm for 1973 servtces 2,363.
for the Huntington Dtstrict of
to Agnew - in order to
the Anny Corps of Engineers,
complete a routine tax audit.
has been selected to be the
Two of Ute firm's attorneys
Commander of the Support
argued the bill is a
Command, 1st Vavalry
confidential client
Gallipolis, Ohio,
Diviston , at Fort Hood,
communication because it .,
Jan. 29, 1977
Texas. Lt. Col. Samuel L.
contains notations about
Sales ReportM ·
Britten has been named
' Agnew's
pr1vat e
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
District Engineer until a
arrangement for paymg the
STOCKER CATTLE .''!cessor to Sm1th is aplegal fee.
COL. BRfiTEN
STEERS- 250 to 300 lbs. 24
' .utted. Col. Britten has been
to 31. 75; 300 to 400 lbs. 23.50 to
Deputy DIStrict Engineer
3350; 400to 500lbs 24 to 34;
during Col. Smtih's .tenure. from the University of
500 to 600 lbs. 24.25 to 32.50;
Col. Smith has headed a llhnois, and Is a graduate of
600 to 700 lbs. 22 to 31j 700 lbs.
multimillion dollar program the Command and General
and Over 22 .50 to 31 50.
here in a 45,000-square-mile Staff College, Fort Leaven·
HEIFER CALVES- 250 to
area reachmg into five states. worth , Kansas. He is a
300 lbs. 19 to 23; 300 to 400 lbs.
Lt. Col. Britten is a native member of Tau Beta Pi
19.50 to 25.25; 400 to 500 lbs.
of Vinita , Oklahoma. He engineering organization.
16.75 to 26; 500 to 600 lbs. 20 to
PJ'iOt to joining the Hun·
graduated
from
the
26.50; 600 to 7!10 lbs. 16 to 25;
Universtty of Oklahoma in tington District, Lt . Col.
700 lbs. and Over 19.50 to 27.
1955 wtth a Bachelor of Britten served as an engineer
STOCK COWS &amp; DULLS
Science degree in Chemical officer in the U. S. Army,
tOy The Head)- Stock Cows
Engineering . He also holds a Pactllc. at Honolulu, and
m to 175 ; Stock Cows and
Master of Sctence degree in earlier served in Germany.
Calves 140 to 235 ; Stock Bulls
Mechanical Engineering Greenland and Vietnam.
135 to 210; Baby Calves 7 to
34 ; (By the ·Pound)- Can·.
ners &amp; Cutters Cows 18 to
21 .75; Holstejn Cows 21 to
24 .75; Commercial Bulls
(1 ,000 lbs. and Over) 26 to 31.
VEAL CALVES - Tops 220
lbs. to 250 69 to 76.50; Medium
200 lbs. to 300 54 to 68; Culls 51
down.
POINT PLEASANT - The
The order ISsued b~ the gas
SOWS - J:iO lbs. up 32 to
Mason County School system company extends until6 a. m.
36.50.
was ordered closed for the Saturday. It stated :
PIGS - 7 to 19.
''Columbia Gas directs
remainder of the week, effective at 1 p. m. Monday as a everything off the line with
result of a mandatory the exception of residential.
dire ctive iss ued by the small comm er cial and
Columbia Gas TransmiSsion maintenance gas to prevent
Co.
irr eparable damage to
The direc tive came property, life and limb. This
LOTTERY HEARING
GHOSTt V nying object
Monda y mormng and went is effective for pooled gas as
CLEVELAND (UPI ) - A
into effect imm ediately , it Is in the Mason County Isn't from another world
public
hearing on proposed
Superi ntend ent of Schools School System . The order is but Is going to one .
rules
for
a new instant·
Parachute designed to
Lowell Cook said that besides efft~ t!v• immediately.
winner
game
will be held by
classroom a cllvity brulll'n-ig___,,.:.':..
'r r.ls authonty is under the lower Instruments Into
Ute
Ohio
Lottery
COmmission
. cancelled , all athletic and · PubliC Service Commission Venus'1 dense atmosphere
March 3.
.
extracurri cular activities Tariff to protect residential in NASA's 1978 probe of the
The
hearing
will
begin 10
dealing wtth schools have and small commercial plahet ha~ its first flight
.
a.m.
at
lottery
headquarters
test over White Sands, N.
also been ca ncelled.
business."
in Cleveland.
Mex.

Col. Smith

transferred

to Ft. Hood

LAJnget gets 30 dJJys for shooting lover

no rUt west Indiana's steel belt
would co ntinue through
February.
Up lD 13 inches ·of snow
clogged parts of Texas
Monday. Dozens of vehicles
piled up in one mammoth jam
on a I().mile stretch of U.S. 75
between Denison and the
Oklahoma border.
Ice 11nd snow snarled
traffic and closed roads over
wide areas of Georgia,
Alabama, MisSissippi and
Louisiana . Schools closed in
much of Alabama Monday
and air travel was muddled
at Shreveport, La. Snow also.
fell over. northern Florida.
Alabama Gov. George C.
wallace ordered· state
workers to begin a four-day,
J(l-llour work week today in
efforts to save energy.
Virginia Gov. Mills Godwin
informed President Carter
Utat his state's fuel oil supply
may be eldlausted in five to 10
days.
Chicago's
s c h o o1
superintenden t sought
emergency goverrunent aid
to cover rising costs of
heating schools. Cl]icago was
in its 36Ut unbroken day of
freezing weather.
The National Weather
ServiCe also reported
4'"uary was the coldest
month ever in Pennsylvania
where some 90,000 worker~
have been idled because of
energy
s h 0 r tag e s.
Temperatures there
averaged only 20.1 degrees.
Btlter cold froze Ute ground
seven feet deep in NorUt
Dakota. Frozen water pipes
pla ~ued Novinger, Mo., and
water was being trucked in!D
the town .

Market Report VietCong will
disappear for
good this time

Colwnhia order closed
Mason County schools

Bearcats drop 88-82 Metro-7 tilt

-·
'

BANGKOK , Thailan,d
IUPI) - The Viet Cong,
formed 16 years ago to lead
the war against Americans in
South Vietnam, ts to be
phased out Utis week during a
five.(!ay meeting that began
today in Saigon.
The deaUt of the politicalmilitary orgat~izatwn that
nominally directed Ut~ war m
lhe south will give North
Vietnamese leaders firm
control of all political
organizations in the reunified
nation.
Accordmg to offi'i"J broadcasts from Saigon '!I'd Hanoi
momtored in Bangkok, the
Vtet Cong and two other front
organizations will be merged
int o the National United
Front.
If past pei-formance is
followed Utis week in Saigon ,
the new front organization
will be directed by veteran,
hardline Communists from
the northern and certral
areas of Vietnam.
Southerners have gained
only nominal roles in the
government and other
organizations merged smce
lhe Communists won the war
on April 30, 1975.

By DEBORAH FRAZIER
ASPEN , Colo. (UP! ) - Claudine Longet says her three chil~en may be sent to
visit their father , Andy Williams, while she serves a JO.day Jail sentence for the
shooting death of her lover.
·
.
'
h-bo
District Judge George Lohr passed the sentence Monday m the Frenc
m.
singer-actress' conviction of negligent homicide in the shooting death of former pro
skier Vladamir "Spider" Sabich . Miss Langeland Sabich lived together for two years
before his death last March.
.
.
,
Miss Longe!, J:i, asked Ute judge to put her on probation for her chtldre~ s sake.
The three children - Noelle, 13, Christian, 10, and Bobby, 8 - were m school
while Miss Looget was sentenced and she said she would break the news to tltem when
they returned home.
· .
.
•
"My children and I are very close and they firmly believe m my ~no~pl-"': I
wonder what Utey will Utink of a system they believe in sends me to priSOn, MISS
Longe! told Ute court before Ute sentencing.
•
.
'
"They are beautiful, they are happy, they are open and ~entle and wtth all my
heart I would like Utem to stay tbat way," she said softly. Williams, her ex.lJusband,
wept in Ute back of the courtroom.
'
~e asked to be permitted to serve any sentence on .nonco?sec4tiye days ao she
could care for her children, as recommended by a probation officer. Mtss Longet SBid
Ute alternative wsa sending Utem to California with Williams.
.
.
While denying the request, Lohr said he considered the children's welfare m
passing the sentence and gave ~er until Sept. l to se~ve the time, pernuttillg the ,
children lD spe!ld part of their summer vacatwn wtth Ute1r father."! came to the conclusion that by not innposing incarceration, Utat such an act
would undermine respect lor the law," said bohr. He alao granted a stay of sentence
pending a possible appeal.
·•
.
. '-Defense attorney Charles Weedman said an appeal was under discusSion brlt th~
final decision would rest lj'ith Miss Longe!, who wiped tears from her eyes and htd her
face on Williams' shoulder as Utey left Ute courUtouse.
.
"I just have to give myself a little Iinne lD think, " she said. "I don't know wbat ·1,
am going to do yet."
"'' •·

'

'

SANTA MONICA, Calif.
(UP!) - Elton John, Loretta
Lynn, Stevie Wonder and
Johnny Cash were the big
winners in the fourUt annual
American Music Awards
Monday night.
John, Wonder and Miss
Lynn were double winners.
Cash was presented a
distinguished merit award by
Tennesee Gov. Leonard
Blanton for his career~ong
contributions~ to music.
Previous recipients were
Bing Crosby, Berry Gordy
and Irving Berlin.
John, the Briton with the
spectacular spectacles, took
Ute male pop-rock singer
award, besting the other
nominees, Barry Manilow
and Peter Frampton, and
shared Ute best single pop
recording honors with
protege Kiki Dee for "Don't
Go Breaking My Heart."
Miss Lynn won top female
vocalist honors in the country
category and also was part of
the best country group ,
teamed with Conway Twitty.
Olivia Newton-John was
named best female pop-rock
singer, over Helen Reddy and
Linda Ronstadt.
Best male coootry singer
honors went to Charley Pride.
In the soul category,
Wonder took the male
vocalist award and his
"Songs in the Key of Life"
was chosen best album.
Aretha Franklin was
named top female soul singer
and the best group honors
went to Earth, Wind and Fire.
In the first deadlock in the
history of the awards, the top
soul single record award was
a tie between "Play That
'Funky Music, White Boy" by
Wild Cherry and "-You'll
Never Find Another Love
Uke Mine" by Lou Rawls.
Chicago was chosen the
best pop-rock group and "The
Eagles Greatest Hits" Will'
named the best pop album.

sp~cial

NEW YORK (UP!) - When he was in baseball A) Lopez wa s
the kind you set your watch by. He wanted to pl;y so much, he
~as so all fired-up anxious to get started, he 'd always he the
ftrst one out on the field wiUt a bat in one band and a ball in the
other,looking for someone to play pepper with him.
Back in the '309, when Lopez was catching lor Ute Brooklyn
Dodgers, " Robbie (Wilbert Robinson ) and (Casey) Stengel
(who managed the Dodgers then) would get mad at me
because I wanted lD play pepper before catching a
doubleheader," Lopez laughed Monday. after the first flush of
excttement over havmg been elected to Baseball's Hall of
Fame had subsided. "They thought I was gonna wear myself

''
--

.

.

,.,"
'

,-

out."

;;

r'
,',

.l

honore

Willie Nelson's "Blue Eyes
Cryin in the Rain" • was·
named best country single
and
Glen
Campbell/s
"Rhinestone Cowboy" · best
country albtun.
The awards, based on
balloting by 30,000 record

By MILTON RIDIMAN
UP! Sjiot'tl Editor

,,

:

Cash wins

Sport Parade

.

",

.I

Wyers on nominations taken
from the topseller Usts of
·"Cashbox'' and ' !'Record
World" · maga;lnes, were
presented in a nationally
televised show hosted by
Campbell, Rawls and ' Miss
Reddy.

,,

I
'I

"

''
'I

..

.,' I

'

HUA KUO-FENG appears to have lhings going hls
way in China's continumg dissension between moderate
and radical leadership.factions. ReportS from the
. provinces indicate Hua 's moderate group bas the upper
hand alter" 'quelling outbreaks following the P,Ur.ge of
'radical leaders. 'l'
• •
•
:t. "', ~

' '

By BilL MADDEN
UP! Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UPI) - One
made strikeouts his bread
-and butter. The other made a
career of avoidlnl! them.
Together, Amos Rusle, one
of baseball's first great
fastball pitchers, and Joe
Sewell, a hard-hitting
shortstop with the Cleveland
Indians and New York
Yankees in the JIJ3)s and '309,
have earned their niche in the
Baseball Hall of Fame by
virtue of their strikeout
statistics.

"

Rhodes giving sto~ facts to Carte~
•

1
· ''
,.
"'
.,

Man's unexplained weight loss
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - My
husband has been losing
wetght so fast the last two
years that he has lost 40
poWJds. He eats well' and
sleeps well. You can count his

ribs.

The doctor doesn 'l seem to
know wbat causes him to lose
weight. He bad a physical not
long ago. I am so worried,
afraid of cancer. My first husband died from cancer. His
head hurts in the back. Could
it possibly be a tapeworm'
DEAR READER - Weight
loss follows the same prin·
ciples of weight gain. Your
body uses as many calories of
energy a day ~s it needs to
maintain itself and the
number of calories used to do
'lysical work of va rious
1 · ;,u t.ke in more
. than your body uses
, store the excess energy
M. If you use more energy
n you take in you deplete
e cner~y store(] as body fat.
1\ll~r the fat I. gone you suut

If your insurance agent can't give you
"worry free" service, fire him and hire
Mick.

ulef Mick Do It!';

ME==

u..

'

_,.1

'

_ Rusie and Sewell along
with former American
League Manager AI Lopez
were elected to the baseball
shrine Monday by the special.
Committee on Veterans,
which annually votes on two
former players previously
considered by the Baseball
Writers Association of
America and one former
manager or executive.
Rusie, a turn-of-the·
century right-hander who
compiled a 243-156 won-lost
record from 169(}.1901 mosUy
wiUt the New York Giants.

l

.,I

' never have to worry about
You may
insurance again.

t

l

DOWNING CHILDS ~
INSURANCE AGENCY INC.
Middleport, o.

One thing Yates l&gt;.•i&gt;es lw
doesn't have to do unyrnorc is
play in Riverfronl Coliseum .
Unfortunately for Yates, the
Metro-? will hold its postseason tournament there to
determine which team will
get a bid lD lhe NCAA
playoffs.
" I can 't contemplate
balding the Metro-? tourney
here," said Yates. ~~ It 's a
poor fa cility. The players
were wearing blankets on the
bench. It's too cold to play
here."
"In Utis energy crisis, Utey

managed fo get Ute temperature up to 65 degrees at game
tim e,
and
that's
respectable," replied Catlett.
The victory was Ute 15th
aga inst two losses for Cincinnall, while Memphis Sta te,
which was led by Rooney Lee
with 20

po ip ~&lt;:

.,,.,,,

Bradley with 16, dropped to
17-3
Elsewhere Monday mght,
Wittenberg whipped Dentson
7:H!B and Heidelberg downed

and a 7-0 mark ag•inst
conferencel foes.
The Students Prices of
Heidelberg shot a sizzling 62 7
per cent from Ute field in
downing Oberlin in another
Ohto Conference game at
Tiffin.
Heidelbe rg was led by
Chris Reichert with 2l! pomts
and a game-high. mne
rebounds . Dave Wi nck
C'tJntributed 24 markers.
The .Yeomen hit 57.9 per
cent from the fl oor in
dropping th ell' ninUt game of
Ute season, against seven
VIC!Dries. Oberlin, paced by
'Jinn Jones' 36 counters, ts
now 1-6 in the loop.
Heidelberg is now 9-9 for ~U
games and 2-5 in the OAC.
In other games involving
Ohw teams, Tennessee Tech
breezed by Cleveland State
D4-80, Easte rn llh n01 s
thumped Wright State· 74-li1,
and Htram burned BeUtan y
I W Va ) 102-l!B

Oberl in ~-

At Springfield, Rt ck White
dumped m 17 points and
teanunate Clyde Eberhardt
added 16 to spark Wtltenberg
to its Ohto Conference v1c!ory
over Denison.
The losmg Big Red, :&gt;-11
overall and 2-5 in the league,
was paced by Kevm KurgtS,
who tallied 21 points and
hauled m 16 rebounds, and Gil
Spencer, wh o scored 16
points.
Wtttenberg led all the way
and enjoyed as much as a 16pomt advantage, 62-46, wiUt
10 minutes left in Ute game.
The Tigers now own a 14-2
record agamsl aU opponents

•w-n"s

OSU to complete winter card
COLUMBUS (UP! I - Ohio calendar despite Ohio 's pians to cancel any ev~nt.. or
· change thr loca tions rr any
State Athletic Director Ed- energy crisis.
" At this time we have nro scheduled contests," Weaver
ward Weavrr says the
university expects to complete its winter sports
. ·::·.·:·:::·::;;::···:··-:;.· ;.·.:: :·;.: ··:'&lt;:· :·:·: .:·.·.

Miller to be
Denver coach

GAME CALLED
Meigs High Marauder
head basketball coach Ron
Logan said today the
regularly scheduled league
game at Athens tonight has
DENVER (UP!) - Red
been Indefinitely post·
Miller, offenSive coordina tor
poned, with no makeup
of the New England Patriots,
date set because of the
apparently will succeed John
natural gas curtaUments.
Ralston as coach of the
Athens High School,
Denver Broncos.
which like Meigs is closed,
Gerald and Allan Phipps,
has a policy of not pracUte owners of. Ute Broncos,
ticing or playing athletic
scheduled .a mornmg news
contests when schoolls not
conference
today,
in session.
preswnably to announce the
···:·:-:- :·::·:·: ·:.. -: .,.,.,,.. ,...... ,.. ,,._.,.,.. ,. ::· : new coach 's appointment.
Ralston, who guided
Denver to the only three
SEA TILE IUP! I - Seattle winnmg seasons it has
SuperSonics guard Frank known, resigned as coach
Oleyntck was sent!D Swedtsh Monday, six weeks after he
Hospital
Monday
for was stripped of much of his
treatment of a severe case of power as well as his general
manager's job. Fred Gehrke,
Ute flu .
Ute new general manager,
said he would meet this
LAFF • A - DAY
morning wtth MUler.
r-_:::....::...:..._:...:..._:::__ _,
Miller, 50, was an offensive.
coach in Boston, Buffalo,
Denver. St. Louis and Baltimore before joinmg the
Patriots in ' 1973. Last
December he directed a New
England victory over a
Denver defense that had been
among Ute league 's best.
"When a team beats you
like he did us, with material
-(0'
we feel is no better than ours
··~· -·. _ • • • • • _ _
• , 1
in m~y respects, you've got
"I'm the new boss JAWS to to Utmk he knows what he's
' doing, " Gehrke sald Monday
you .. "
of Miller.
"He's matured the last 12
years and reports from
around the league ir)djcate
he's regarded as one 'of the
top three offensive coaches m
the business right now, "
Gehrke said .

elected to Hall of Fame

'a

DR. LAMB

Yates. "The outcome of Utis
game wo ul d have been
different if we played at home
or at a neutral co urt."
Meanwhile, Gale Catlett,
the Cincinnati coach, was
about as tmpressed with
Yates' deme11110r on Ute court
as Yates was with the
officials.
"I get a chance to rate the
conduct of the officials and
th e other co ache s as
1
excellent, good, fatr, poor,"
Catlett said. When he wa s
asked how he would rate
Yates, Catlett replied, "You
can bet it won 't be excellent
or good.
·
"Gosh, gee, you can coach
your team, but he was up (off
the bench) all night. It 's
something I did when I wa s·
immature. Hopefully, I don't
do that anvmorf' ."

Rusie, Sewell, Lopez are

.

. OLD WOUND FLARES ,
1
,WASHING:roN (UP!) - Naval Hosi!ital. '
Teague,
66,
l:iemocral,
JI
Gangrene developing in an
wbo
has
served
In
Congress
old World War II wound
resulted in the amputation of for 3ll years, was hosplta~
the left foot of Texas shortly after· Chrlstmas.
Congressman Olin Teague in Doclors decided to remove
an operation at Bethesda the foot Monday.
. '·

that nattiral glls cur\aUments already closed because they dramatically" by midweek.
By LEE LEONARD
be lifted from food and, dairy are unabl~ to obtain an
Duerk ' sald one .mlUfon
UP! Statehouse Reporter
Ohioans- 2!i per cent of the
COLUMBUS (UP[) - Gov. processing industries to adequate fuel supply.
He said 36 per cent of the work force
- "Were
James A. Rhodes today was assure an ·adequate food
supply
in
the
stale.
birds
in
weekend
poultry
"temporarily
.
forced
out of
lD furnish President Carter
The federal disaster inves- shipments in Ohio were dead work" by the fuel ahortage
with
·specific
recommendations for federal tigators Dew a)ong the Ohio on arrival and had to be and cold weather. He said
this included persons who
help in solving Ohio's energy. River with Rhodes Monday scrapped.
'
and said preliminary
Stackhouse al110 said the missed a single day of work
'related problems.
At Ute same time, a pair of indications were Utat the dairy industry has lost and may or Inl!Y not ~ve
state does not qualify as a between $250,000 and $500,000 ' been paid.
fed~al inve~tigators sought
of
milk · These other 're/lorts were
information from various disaster a'rea because of the because
severe
winter
weather
last
.
transportation
problelllB.
made during a brlellng by
state agencies to determine if ·
weekend.
They
emphasized
Carter
asked
Jlhodes
in
a
Rhodes' ·cabinet !')embers:
is
federal , assistance
usmg the muscles lor body calories.
' '1nus mcmdes an why anyone WI Ib tjlis prO. warran~ to repair weekend they were not spea~ing ,abQut telegram Monday to furnillh' • - "Fiienard d. J•ckson,
energy.
.
fl(el
sbortag~ • specific information about dfrectoi- of administrative
'l)hio's
overactive thyrOid gland Utat blem deserves a complete ex- S!Dnn damage.
Anyone who has unexplain-. is like turmng up the ther- amination. The cancer cells
problems.
, ,
Ohio's energy-related services,!Ifid the'U.S. Labor
Meanwhile, Rhodes said
ed weight loss must have an mostat causing the body cells multiply and form new the
However,
Leo
McNamee
problems and said he was Department has promised an
Public
Utilities
exammation. The most com~ to use lots more energy and growth . New growih requires Commission of Ohio would and Dennis Kwiatkowski of "deeply concerned about tho! unspecified amount of mooey
mon cause is an madequate release more heat. These in- energy. The best example respond today to his request the U.S. Disaster AssistanC'[ ~uman
suffering
and. lot I!UmpoWer programs and
diet - not taking in enough dividuals usually eat a lot and here is the energy consumpAdministration said there is a economic problems."
a. waiyer: of paperwork to
calones. After that you need still los weight.
"serious ,.problem" with
McNamee
and eRIJ!loytliOeeputoutofwork.
tion of Ute growmg child. It
to look at problems that preTIIEDALYSENTINEI.
potential flooding , wh~n Kwiatkowski said Utey were . ;;.Ned-E.WUliams,tlirector
The infectious diseases, In- takes energy to hook togeUter ·
vent absorbmg your food - cluding tuberculosis, cause Ute chemical compounds tbat
DEVOTED TOniE
SlOW&amp; begin to melt and Ohio assigned to look at Ohio'l '.of 111~ Olllo Environmental
Utat hterally prevent the tissue destruction and in the form new tissue. In cancer
'_faEA
may qualify lor federal help storm damage and not fuel ~ . Agency, said 45
·calories of energy from ever replacement process you use the combinahon · of new
o1IEBTERLTANNEIIIIL
at that time.
,
. ,
supplies.
..mduatdea are considering
gettmg mto your body. A host more calories. The increased growth and cell destruction
Exo&lt;. Ed.
Rhodes agre,ed and said he
"We're not certain that ll)ii b)lmedlate convenlon to coal
of mtestmal problems are in heat production with a fever IIUlY lead to rapid weight loss.
Rotnt.~::ruCH
hoped , to convince federal sltuation warrants - ~n '~J!ltng - lreeing enough
this category, includm~ and the repair processes use
Published a.uy ,.':,';1:! saiurdoy '
authorities assistance is emergency declaration,'' · natural gas to heat 100,000
You didn 't say how old your
paraSites which could be calories. That is why you are husband is, but occaslonany ~~y~~~~~~~u;(,P~:rn~%~~hro
needed to prepare for, .said f,!~Namee. "Frankly, It &amp;mea.
worms. Wonns still extst in a correct in feeding a fever. I disease of the arteries supply- .4.\769 s"'"'"" oruce P"""' 192·
massive flooding ,
doesn't look llke .lt at this ,7 Davld L. Weir, state
·• The •governor said it was time. There is apparently not, d!teetor of tranaportatlon,
surprising number of people am sendmg you The Health ing the digcsltvc systein 2ti6.Edilorlall'hono99'2-2I57.
but a simple stool examina- Letter number i-&lt;l Body prevents 11 from func1iunm~ ""~::~. ~~liiHOpold · ,r "urgent" that Ohio's basic physically, a lot of public s8icl89 roads are stW closed
tion and competent examina- Temperature and Fever, lo normally and prevents al&gt;Notionot ''"'""'"' ,.,,,....
food processing industri~s, damage."
,.
in Ohio and the moat Hrioua·
wlive
Ward
Grlftilh
COflllJ'ny
,
Insuch
as
.
meat
packing
McNamee
said
it
would
problems are in "'""'•""
tion of the' dtgesttve system give you more informatfun'on sorption of food. Pancreatic t'.,
BotUneUI wnd Gallagher Dlv.,
.. ~ ........ and
will demonstrate them.
facilities, bakeries and dairy take several days · to Putnam eounttw.' • t'
th1s. Others who want th'" m- disease may also affed air 757 Th~rd Avo., New Yorlc , N.v.
The calones may be lost fonnation can send 50 cenl~ sorpti on. You might talk w1t11 1~\;..,rrpli.,, '""'" Delivered ~Y
processors, be exempted determine what services the
- Martin A. Janl., tllrpctor
from the body in the urine, as with a long stampe-d, self- your docto&gt;· again and see tf '"" " ' whmmU.~Ie7lc"'b,.,.
from gas cuts.
.
federal government can of the Ohio Colllllllillitn on
·in a diabetic losing sugar i~ addressed envelope for 11. he has any further sugges- ~rvJcc
w"k By Mot"' Route wh"' ""'"
"We want to make sure furnish w~ich the st,"!'te 12
A&amp;l!lll. saldllf.l.~-'lta
not l:IVIIiblble, One month, ,... t
~
the urme to cause weight loss. Send your rilifuesl to me In tions. You may need tu talk 1.1.25. uy '""'' '"Ohio ••d w va.,
there is an · adequate food camot. .
, ,
regtvna11 :; !1! Ia
II you are eating enough, C81'if- uf Uus newspt~pcr, P 0 . with tl nutritwnisl to Uc !o; Url' "'"' Ycac, moo. Six, n...
supply (or Ohioans," said the
James A. Duerk, ctireclilr att"!"ptlbg'IO conllei it'd~ of
l 50; Three months, 17 .00 :
'
f
·
d --.mnMtu 'Ohl • t« '"n'lllflt..
1
absorbing the calories and Box :126, ~an All tumu, TX he i ~ I'Pr.ill y ~cltiu ~ cuougll Sl
governor.
.
0 · ~COnODUC 111! ~'"1-""JO&gt;
0 8 ..•
' "'Or
l·:l&lt;owhcoc 126.00 yc"; Six monlh•
11.\ ,,,, .,.,, ,.1· month•. 17.50 .
John M-. Stackhouse, state development; • predicted ' cililenatptnj;)&amp;e:atte .lfifJdo
notJoslnK them, the next pn~ 78202,
r;:tiUI'H'" rn lilt• lwnl11f fuod Ill'
~~~e~~~\';~
~
'
.
ll
•'
mdul!c~
SuiMiuy
·
director
of a~icu1ture. said temporory
loss
of oot suffer from lack ol food
blcm cotild be Uungs tlialmpa
ts.
11'
Orr
·n
·
,Jrt•
nu
rm!1l1n
d
I'Hnt'CI CHII be H Cllll~t.' of
11
1
tTcw.;c th(' l)qd) 's, usc of W('tgh t JUS!i tllld l.'i IJill' l\'/J S11I I , n •t,\ 1111, fur /;r;, Jus~ of wldglll.
47 meal packing plants haye , employment would "inql'ease heat or medicai' attt!ht'Ulh • •

NeiUter bad any reason to worry because AI Lopez caught in
the majors 19 years and when he finished catching, he
managed for 16 more.
Now tbat he's no longer in baseball, you can still set your
watch by AI Lo~ . He lives in Tampa, Fla., where the local
ballpark is named after hini, and every day, including Sunday ,
he goes out and plays golf with two of his buddies, Tony
CuccineUo and Joe Valdes.
It was Valdes who broke Ute news to Lopez he had been
elected to Ute shrine in Coopers!Dwn by a special Veterans '
Collllnittee along with tittle, eagle-eyed Joey Sewell and the
late Amos Rusie. Valdes, a well-known restaurant owner in
Tampa, had received a call regarding Lopez' electton from
from Bill DeWitt, a member of the Veterans' Committee.
AI Lo~ never was one lD get unconunonly excited about
anyUting, and he didn 't do any cartwheels over going into the
Hall of Fame. Not on the outside, anyway, Inside, though, he
did . I've known hinn more tban 30 years and I've talked with
him many times, including those times he won with the Indians
m 19M and the White Sox in 1959, and he never- sounded happier
Ulan he did speaking from Tampa Monday_ Like so many of
those voted in, Lopez chose to talk about his baseball
beginnings, his roots.
•
" As a kid, I was brought up m Yhor City, right here in
Tampa," he said. "We came from poor folkS, and we played
ball because we liked to play ball. We didn't have enough
money for a mask. We were lucky lD have gloves. My older
brother, EmUio, gave me my first one. One day when I was 12,
I was catching wiUtout a mask and I got hit in the nose. It's still
•crooked from that accident. I didn 't tell my dad or mother
about what happened because I knew Utey'd be mad .. I qwt
catching for awhile but one day the fellow who was supposed to
catch didn't show up. So I had to catch again. It was eiUter that
or Utere wouldn't be any ball game. I caught. Without a mask
again. The fellow who didn 't show up that day was Ute only one
who owned a mask."
A SJl(lrtswriter for a Spanish newspaper saw him him catch
and arranged a tryout wtUt Ute Tampa Smokers m 1925. Lopez
didn't figure he was going to make tt, so he didn't tell his father
"" mother about the tryout.
"What do you bave in mind in the way of a contract?" the
Smokers' general manager, Doc Nance, asked Lopez after
watching him awhile.
"I don't !mow anyUtmg about contracts," replied the 17yearold receiver,
"How about a hundred-andftfty a monUt'1" asked Doc
Nan\'".
,
~'Great'" answerOO Al Lopez, and a star was born.
That was better than a halfcentury ago. Now 68 and a Hall of
Farner, AI Lopez wants nothing so much as to make sure all
tllose players he had wiUt the Indians and the White Sox are
given the credit for any success he ha&amp; had. He also wishes to
make sure,everybody knows how much he owes such men he
~layed for as as Wilbert Robinso~. Casey Stengel and Bill
McKechnie.
Few know AI Lopez better than Tony Cuccinello, who
roomed with htm as a player with Ute Dodgers and Braves,
coached WJder htm wiUt Ute Indians and Whtte Sox and IS a
neighbor of his now In Tampa . Tony Cuccinello moved his
family from New York years ago and his house ts less \han 100
yards !1-om AI Lopez '.
"The only reason I moved was lD be near AI,' ' he says. "I
couldn't lind a betterfriend in the whole world."

By
United
Press
International
The Metro-7 ctmference is
one of th~t newest m the nation
and iQ;r ivalries are building
up quickly .
That was evident Monday
night when Bob Miller and
Mike Jones each scored 21
points to guide HUt-ranked
Cincinnati to a hotly-disputed
BB-ll2 victory over Memphis
State in Cincinnati's chiUy
Riverfront Coliseum.
The gam~ was tied 16 times
and the Bearcats obviously
won the game at the foul line,
connectmg on 20 free throws
lD just six for Memphis State.
That fact was not lost on
Memphis State coach Wayne
Yates, who Implied the
officials were influenced by
the home crowd. '
" If they (the officials) can
sleep tonight. so,... ~..., r" "~ "; ..J

led the National League m
strikeouts for six straight
seasons. Although his career
was curtailed to just over 10
years, he woWJd up wtth 1,856
strikeouts.
Sewell, a career .312 hitter
in 14' major league seasons
from 192().22, was most noted
lor his ability to avoid
striking out. In 7,132 lifetime ,
at-bats, he fanned only 114
times and In 1925 set a season
record lor fewest strikeouts
(4) in 155 games.
"I'd have to say the fewest
strikeout records were my
most significant
accomplishments in baseball
even though at the time I
never put any extra effort
into It," said the 78-year old
SeweD, who still works at a
milk distributing company in
Tuscaloosa, Ala.
Lopez, who as manager of
the Cleveland Indians and,
later, the Chicago White Sox
from 1951 through 1969
compiled
a
winning
percentage of .562, had the
distinction of twice breaking
up the pennant-winning
streaks by the New York
Yankees. His 1954 Indians,
who won an American
League record Ill games,
snapped the Yankees' string
of five straight AL peMants,
wldle in !959, he led.the White
Sox to their first AL flag in 40
years after the Yankees had
finished first four more
straight times.
"I'm very happy, this is
something every ballplayer
would like to do m his
lifetinnc," said Lopez from
his Tampa, Fla. home where
he now lives m seuu ~
retirement.
"My first ;u'nbitwn was to
become a proless•on•l hn tl·
player. I had no ideil 1 •'1!\1 /d
do that ;\) I ei' YIIU bel'IJin&lt;· II

ballplayer, you ·want to
manage and alter you
manage , you hope you can
make it to the Hall of Fame."
Lopez, Sewell and Rusie
will be enshrined along wiUt
Ernie Banks, the Baseball
Writers ' selection. at
ceremonies in Cooparstown,
N.Y. Aug. 8.'
"It's a long, long way from
Tuscaloosa to Cooperstown
and rve never been there,"
said Sewell. "But I'll be there
this year if I have to walk it."

Allan Phipps said he and
his brother were aware of
Ralston 's decision to resign ,
"since just before last
weekend," and inst ructed
Gehrke to unmediately begin
searchmg for a new coach .
Denver divided the roles of
head coach and general
manager Dec. 16, elevating
Gehrke to Ute GM post wiUt
overall authonty . Ralston
mdicated in hts resignahon
statement Monday the
intervenmg six weeks have
demonstrated it would work
better tf he restgned.

said Mond ay.
Weaver said he met wtth
OSU Pr eside nt Harold
Enarson and other university
officials earlier Monday to
discuss the energy crisis and
its bearing upon athl etic
program.
"I left that meetillg with
the understanding tha t,
barring an unforesee n
emergen cy, we would
complete the remainder of

THI S WEEK 'S SPE CIAL

.

~~~~~
USED CAA.S

73 OLDS CUTlASS

S. CPE.
Gr een With viny l roof.
bucket seats , fa ctor y ai r ,
good t ires

•2795
Karr &amp; VanZandt
You ' ll Like Our: Quality
Way Of Doing Busjness

GMAC F INANCING
992 ·5342
Po,meroy
Opening Evenings 'til6 : 00

Tits p.m. Sat.

MASON FURNITURE

STORE I-lOURS
Mon ., Tues., Wed . l4 Sat .-8:301il5:00
THURSDAY TIL 12 ~DON

FRIDAY UNTIL 8 PM

our schedule-,'' Weaver sa id.

MASON FURNITURE

He said St. John Arena and
French Fteld House, both
heated by fuel oil , would be
kept at ~ conSiderably
reduced temperature dunng
the energy shortage.

773-5592

Mason, W.Va.

Herman Grate

Baseball
returns to
Shelby
SHELBY, N.C. (UP! ) Professional baseball returns
lD Shelby Utis spfing for the
first tinne in etght years.
The Cincinnati Reds signed
a player development
agreement wtth a lo cal
group, Cleveland Sports, Inc.,
Monday, gtving Shelby a
team in the Western Carolina
Lea gue.
Under the agreement, the
Reds provide the players and
manager for the team , and
the local organizatron
provides the facilities .
,
The Shelby team does not
bave a nickname yet , but
local sponsors say it will be
identified with the RedS.
Other teams in the Class A
Western Carolina League are
Gastonia , N.C.. Asheville ,
N.C.. Spartanburg, S.C..
Greenwood, S.C.. and
Charleston, S.C.
Shelby will play its first
game April 16 at Asl!eville.
The first home game will be
the following day. also
against Asheville.
The agreement gave
Cincinnati six minor league
teams . The others are at
lndtanapolls, Tampa, Fla.
Eugene, Ore., Billings,
Mont., and Three Rivers,

/~

v'l. .
'/1;

Shout Them from the Classifieds!
Searching for the cleve r· wa y to ~a y " I Love You? "
Our Hapf)Y Valentin e Ads will lw published on
February 14·, and otl'e r you a truly unusual way to
proclaim your love and best wi shes. We,havea sizr
to fit every lo\• e r'~ hudge l an•l our frie1Hlly Advi·
sor~ willl)l&gt;ltappy to lwlp yon wrilc yom· m essage.

(DEADliNE WILL BE FEBRUARY 9TH)

Que.

"The simpler
your return,
the less
·we charge."
Reason No. 2 why H&amp;R Block
should do your taxes.
·Block didn't become America's largest
income tax preparer by charging high
prices. For example, if you quality for the
short form, we charge a very low price.
And our price always 1,hcludes your
resident state return. '
·

D

D

To Mom and Dad .•. ·

To My Wife , Ann .•.

W e couldn' t hc"'e picked o
nlcer pa ir o f p c;m iHl ls in rhe
wo rl dl Hove o Hopp y Vol ·

of mord o ge , 1 m shll head
o~er · h ee l 1 in lo\le w1th yo ul

Aller 15 wond erful

entine ' Da yl

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

years

W olte r Z.

Mike a nd Sue

To Our
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Mn Smith Thank~ for
mok1ng Scle n~ e fun to learn .
W e th,nk yo u 'r e IOf:HI

.,.. Clou

To Jan e -

I won t you fo r

rny Volenli ne, and I w on ' t
to~e

Your

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Love , 1o m

•

H&amp;A BLOC~t
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PHONE 992-2156

618 EAST MAIN
Open 9 a.m 6 p.m Weekdays, 9 SSat.
Phone 99~ 37qs

NO APPOINTMeNT NECESSARY

••

'

THE DAILY SENTINEL

�...

•

• 4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-rmueroy. 0 .. Tuesday. Fo•h. I. l!l77

i ..

\

.

. .

.

Ohio totJJ'ltaments will
'

;be played as S
•'
.

•

•
.!
;
&lt;

:

'
•

~

1

''

....,
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'·
~~

t:
;·
•·

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t:.·:
~

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'·'~·-'
•
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•·
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••
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:;
•'

~ ~.

COLUMBUS (UPil - The
Ohio High .School Ahtletic
Association (OHSAA) plans
to go ahead with all its spring
sports tourna ments as
scheduled.
OHSAA Comm issioner
H&amp;rold Meyer said the State
Board of Control, in a con·
terence Monday, decided not
to cha nge the alreadyscheduled dates.
"The dates wUl remain the
same,"t said Dr. Mtyer ..
" Now, It's just a question of
securing facilities."
·Meyer said it would he up to
local tournament officials of
sectional, distr ict and
reg iona l events to find
locations. He sa id the
associ ation had received
calls from colleges offering
their facilities.
Meyer said the State
Board, during the conference
call, also voted to e~tend the
season for both gi rls and boys
ba sketball to all ow the
makeup of ga mes canceled
because of the bad weather.
" We are also asklug
schools to share facilities,"
said Meyer, " both for
pmctlces and games."
The Ohio decision means
the boys state gymnastics
tournament will be Feb. 25·
26, the boys swimming and
girls gymnastics March 4-5.

•(;
'

boys wrestling March 1J-12,
boys basketball March 24·26
and girls basketball Aprill-2.
The. OHSAA board .extended the regular seasons of ·
boys and girls basketball.
The boys final regular season
date was moved from March
4 through March 12 and the
girls finales from March ll
through March 19.
"We are doing lbal to
accommodate l eague~ to
determine their ehampions.
The only thing we ask is that
regular season· games do pot
conflict with the tour·
nameots," said Meyer.
Ross Fleming, Executive
secretary of the Ohio
Association of Secon dary
School Administrator., sat in .
on the conference call and
appraised the OHSAA on
resu lts from a Saturda y
meeting with the State Board
of Education. '
The administrators want to
mainta in as many school

dee lston;'

Leafs' go11lie brilliant

·
d
I
d
Ch e U e
said . Mt"yer .

"There would be no penalty
applie-d to next yeJ;~r's tou r·
naments if a srhnol' does not
play."

ATLANTA 1 UPI 1 The Atlanta t'lames beat Toronto, 7-3,
M11T1d&lt;Jy ni ght ;1m I h~Jth sides agrtoell Maple l.eafs' goalie Mike
P"lmatl't'r wus brilliant.
Although seven shots got by him, he turned back 41 others.
Toronlo Coach Red Kelly said Pa lmateer "was one of the
few playfu~ well toni ght. We were slruggling."
Palmateer agreed . "''m not too upsel al my performance.
Our guys weren't ready tonight/ ' he said.
The Flames agreed there is considerable dtfference between
playing Toronto on tlic road and at home.
·
"Titey don 't forecheck on the road like they do at home."
said Flames Coach Fred Creighton .
·
"'Th ey played the old style tonight," said Tim Ecclestone,
"with one man fu forecbecking. At home they do the opposite."
Tite game went in to th e third period tied, 3-3. "f was worried
when it was lied," Creighton said . "All the pressure was on

The boys baskethall
plaxoffs arc scheduled to
begin Feb. 2J. and the girls
basketball elimin ati ons
Marrh 7..

UCLA .moves to us~~t
second in poll

t~

then Curt Bennet! scored :pen a four-goal Flames'
binge . Rey Comeau got two goals in the third period and
Ecclestonc scored the other.
Willi Plett also scored iwo goals for the Flames and the big
rook ie said "it 's a real thrill'' lo reach 20 goals in his first NHL

season .

••
••••

..•••••;;

'VASillNGTON iUPI ) -

...r. .1\lter three years of labor

.•
::
·•
.•••
:;

.'ltrife, two strikes and a
series of costly coUrt cases,
pro football's players and
owners are close to signing a
new collecti ve bargaining

:: a gr eem ent ,

so urces

.. indicated.
::
Neither side, however, is
•' overconfident of a settlement
i •' before the announced target
1
:: date of Feb. 15. Nonetheless,
·• both the NFL Pla yers
•• Association and the owners'
••
;: Management Council have
•• Indica ted "encoura gin g
",, progress" after a four-day
~; bargaining. session at New
.. Orleans last week.
~:
Ed • Garvey, NFLPA
: ~ executive director, goes to
_, Mil waukee this week to
;; confer with lawyers on
f.l proposed language for a new
"' contract to replace the one
!! that expired Jan. 31, 1974.
of th e
,.~,: ,Representatives
players and owners have
"' agreed tO meet next week
" either in Wa shington or
i, where NFLPA
,,•.~• Miam
President Dick Anderson is
~ recovering from surgery.
.1
Consider ation is being
:1 given to increa sin g the
·' regular season by two games
:; and revising the college
:: player dr aft, UPI ha s
learned.
,,
Th e current 14-game
'· reg ular season schedule
might be enlarged at the
., ·owners' urging, but the pre/. season schedule would shrink
" from six to four games.
:: Sources said the question of
;; adjusting players' salaries is
making the issue sticky. .
The draft, struck down last

1946 through 1949.
All three , as well as some of
Ute others named, went on lo
oull;tanding professional careers but they were accorded
this honor for their · perfor·
man ees in college .
Also named to the shrfue
were Francis Bag ne ll ,
Pennsylvania, 1948-50; Bill
Banker, Tulane, 1927-29; Joe
Be limo , N a vy, l 958~0 ; Ziggie
Czarobski , Notre Dame, 194243 and 1946-47; Jim Daniell,
Ohio State, 1939·11; Sam
Francis, Nebraska, 1934-36;
Hod Franz, California, 194549 and Century Milstead,
Wabash, 1920-21 and Yale:

;g;

g

1

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,_t

;J

PRODUCE SPECIALS
'J

IDAHO

.,I

CALIFORNIA

POTATOES

'.
I

10 LB.

BAG

5th &amp;Pearl · Racine, 0.

I

'
I

•'

9:00107 :00

Saturday 9 to 7
CLOSED
SUNDAY

DINTY MOORE

·

BEEF STEW ..............:..............'. ..................~,- ~?: - ~A~. 89c

_DAIRY
VALL£Y BELL
•

•
,,
•

I,~

..

2%

MILK•....... :~~..~

'192o.

Sayers, whose professional
career was cut short by a
kn ee injury , was considered a
broken field runner in a class
with Red Grange and Tommy
Harmon. H~ currently is the
athletic director of Southern
illinois University.
A 6.&lt;1, 190-jlound wingback
during the .old days of the
sin gle-wi ng formation,
McLeod was an outstanding
runner. especialiy on Blaik's
patented double,. reyerse .
Rivals said the "whole
student. body blocked for
McLeod" when he took the
ball on the deep reverses.
McLeod ·later · ~as an
outstandin g runner for the
Chicago Bears, although he
isn'i much remembered for ·
his feats as a pro.
Nomell ini was . a perfect
example of a two-way tackle,
surprisingly quick on offense
and a .tower of strength on
defense. He served in the
Marines during World War II.
played pro football with the
San ~' rancisco 49ers and
wrestl ed professionally.

39

Bill Wilford . women : Betty

Sm llh 20 0, Lent Howard 193.
Bess HendrickS 188, •
High seri es ,.... M~n : John
Tyree. 519, La rry Dugan 5)2 ,
Bill Wilford 50 .. . Women :
Belty Smit h I Sol7 , Marlene

w~~o;m52~i:;;ar~ 8v~:s ~~9d

Serle! - Jack's' Dairy Bar ,
704 and 1992 .
Early Wednesd ay Mixed
Jan . 26, 1977
Pts .
Smith Nel son M trs
34
Young'S SUpe,r Mkl
26
Zid e's Sport Shop
24

Oilers Fou r
·
Net son Oi.Jrg Co .
Tenth Fram en
Hi gh Ind . Game -

20

20
18
M en : A .
L. , Ph e lps , Jr . • 2!)3. Lar ry
Dugan 202. L arry Dugan 195.

Women : M ax ine Dugan JSB ,
Caro lyn Ba chner 180 , Pa t
Carson

170.

H igh Se r ies - Men : Larry
Dugan 574, A L . Phel p s. Jr
572. Tom Sm it h 543 ; Women :
Pa l Carson 497 , Caro l yn
eachner 493. Betty Sm i th 488 .
Team
H ig h Game Young 's Super Market 667 .
Tea m High Ser ieS - Zide's
Sporl Shop 1919 .

Tri Coun fy Leag u e
Jan uary 25 , 1977
Clin e's Cons t . Co .
Pom C'n t Blk Co .
H&amp;R Firestone
("! a g l ~s C l uJ~ •
Co m~ u te r

Services

Ph
26

24
22

14
.
14
High In d . G am e - K eifh
Pl'la tln '!76 , Bert Bod ime r 213.
Ron T oler 209 .
High S eries - Jerry Cline
585 . Ray Roach 554. Bill
Radford 531.
Team H igh Game and
Series - Com pu ter Services .
919 and 2526.
Strikers

SIU CrbndlC 76 st. Louis 73
Wi11 Cnberq 75 Denisdn 68
North
South west .
,
W I t p ts . gf ga
Ka tama100
Ab . Ch r ist ian 85 S\'V Te)l as 62
'
26 · 17 4 56 211 112
Arkan sas St . 86 Te)l Arl . 75
..
East Texas 95 Sam Houslon J9 Fl tn.t
25 20 5 55 "5 190
Gramblin~ 87 Prairie View 80 ' Sag maw 2'2 20 8 52 203 191
Howard Payne 96 Te)l as A&amp; I 7! M us k eg on 20 21 7 47 191 192
North Texas 90 Sam torcl 7'l
Port H ur oo
Ok la Chr is 82 Midwstrn 80
20 26 4 44 17? 197
S W T&lt;'x . 80 T r i n i ty Tex . 62
So uth
C.W Qk l&lt;i 95 Okla S&amp;A 78
W I t pts . gf g a
St Mrv 's 65 E Te x Bapt 59
Columbus 20 23 9 49 '2 0Q 109
Da yto n
1l 24 7 47 202 208
Toledo
21 23 5 47 191 . 215
West
Ft W ayn e 20 23 7 41 188 214
A l A 94 San Fra n 51 13
'
M ond ay'! R esult
Cui Poly Pom 89 L a vrne 64
Col umbus 6 Saginaw 1
Cent Wash 77 Ala ska Frb nk s 63
Tu es day's Ga m e
Chapman 71 Cal St . Ch Jco 60
K&amp;la mazoo at To l ed o
Mesa 74 So Utnh St. M
Wedn es day ' s G am es
No Monl. 99 Ro c ky Min 87
To ledo at For) wayne
Portland 74 Sen !lie 65
..
j\'luskedon at Oavton
Sl M r v',\ 10/ U C cS D 7) . ·.
F li nt at,&lt;otumb us
San Dgo St ?6 UC 5 8 66 '
Port Huron at Ka l(\mazoo
5() Co l o n No. Co lo '68 ·

OPEN
SUIIIlAY 9 AM 10 6 PM

QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED

USDA

Boneless ·chuck

SHOP EARll

Tenn essee Te ch 94 Clevel!!nd
$ 1 80 '

Boneless English
USDA

USDA CHOICE

SHOULDER . LB
ROAST •••••••• ~.
FRESH &amp; LEAN

FRESH .·

'

1
r :,:.;....."

STORE MADE

/1(

PI

LONGH.ORN
CHE-ESE
•

Mixed Vegetables
Cream Style Corn
Whole Kernel Corn
Cut Green Beans

·4·.

••

'

i,

.

.

GOLDEN ISLE

MACARONI &amp;
DINNER

No. 303
cans

$1'

being held by tile
psychoi09Y depertment of Ohio Unlv,rsity .
Free treatment for mild and moderate
clepreulon will be available to the public .
Tlltre will be 6 evening sessions beginning
the flnt - k of Febru1ry. This treatment
A"19r1m Is for those who consider ·
themselves to have a Christian philos~;~phy
of life. Further lnforri'lallon can be obtained
by ceiling 594-8906 after 3:00 p.m . 'or

..

••

I

and
~e at s
th ro u g ~ s tr on 9 , r elia bl e

costl y m istak e of assum i ng
th at lnw t ance poli cies ar e
a ll the sa m e. Th'e t r u t h Is
they a re not . Not onl y dOes
the quamv of coverage
v ary from p olicy t o po li cy .
b t th
st otte n var ies
u
e co

1n su ran ce.

too.
Re m emb er that price is
not th e onlv buls
tor
'

hi
eP

co mpt'nles.
T~ m ak e sure .v.ou halle
an tnd epe nd en ! tns u rance
ag.ent on your Side, IOik for
th tS sy mb ol or con su lt your
Y ello w P agn . If h e ca n' t
y ou .
nob od y ca n.

" The lnsuntnce Store"

-

991-5130

BEANS

cans

4

TEEN QUEEN

Ot.$ 1 MARGARINE
boxes

7%

U.S. NO. 1 ALL PURPOSE

BANANAS

99e

10 LB. BAG

-·--·';-- ------

Siz~

Fa mi ly
Box

w.c &amp;

'

·~

Pom eroy ·

LB. $100

---

COU-PON

R HONEYCOMB CEREAL
59e

SOA

No. 105

9 oz. Box

SS.OO Purch ase
Coupon Expires Feb . 5, 1977

----

TW IN CITY GATEWAY

COUPON

I

I

Coupon Expires Feb. S, 1911

I-----

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

I

1

i
1·
I

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

·.

,,

----

,,

69$

Coupon EKpirts Feb. 5,1 977

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

SPRAY STARCH
2os
49e
22
No.

Ol.

~·
I

COUPON

NIAGARA

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

·

----

TWIN CITY GATEW:.t.Y

No. 155
9 ot . Ca n

-- ~--··--···

I1
I
I

Coupon Expires Feb. s, 1971

MAZOLA NO STICK

I

1

........

1s oz. Jar

I

Coupon Exp ires Feb. 5, 1977

Feb. s, 1917

~EANUT
aunER
79e

11

N o oos

C oupon Exp-ir es

No.

I

64 01. Btl

HUNGRY JACK

SKIPPY

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

I .
NU SOFT
I fABRIC SOJ1TENER
I
S 1 29
I
Coupon Expir es Feb. s. 1971

1·1

'·

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

COUNTRY STYLE TOP CHOICE

~
-~~

5

POST

I
INSTANT POTATOES I
.\1 ~·~2~.. 49e

........, ___.,.

3 $1
l~b.

GOLDEN RIPE .

WHITE POTATOES

TWINCITYGATEWAY

Rauter-.B rogan Insurance Service
. 214 E. Main

KIDNEY

! I GOLDEN GRIDDLE
1 PANCAKE
SYRUP
0
1 ~ ~,'_2~ 1 . 89e
!I 1----...:I

2 . H e 1S ava 1taDi e d ay and

Ot $159

48
bottle

No. 303$

ET PEAS

~ ~---

night
nee ds to respond t o your
pa "M tes he deals with .
J H ·e· handles a ll types of
Many p e ople mak e th e . '

A depression clinic

..

tU,J I

~

l
I
I
l

I th e most suitable of th e
:...--------. 1 se v e ra 1 1n surance c om .
~

...

STORE MADE

I
~0~2~
.. DOG9F9~0D
l

f How to Get
.
the Best lns\U'allce Buy for
Your . onev

,29

9~

MEAT LOAF ••••• ~~.

!

'

7
69¢·
9¢

LB.

SAUSAGE.~\.

POLISH

in most beautiful race

FRENCH CITY
SMOKED

SAUSAGE

89~

GROUND BEEF•• e

Twiggy overtakes Liz

TASTEE ·

~. 99~

USDA

into flood talks

-with us!

tl

NO DEM.£RS PI ElSE!

WE ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAMPS
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU FEBRUARY S, 1

Bureau likes new farm hill .

•

LB • •

UM 10 9 PM

governors

Ea stern Ill inois 74 Wr ight St .
61
•
Hi ram 102 B:et ha ny ( W Val B6

O hio College

MON. lHRU SAT.

During 1976 approximately
$13,000 was spent for street
resurfacing. This was done
by the Shelly Co. and included
Chestnut St., BroiJllell Ave.,
Plum Street and portions of
Beech Street and So. Fifth
Ave. The street committee of
council after an inspec'.lon,
deci ded that th ese were
streets most needing .
resurfacing. With the additional $12,000 which will he
available for streets from the
tax levy, itis anticipated that
at least $15,000 oan be used in
1977 for resurfacing. Of the
$13,000 which was spent for ·
, resurfacing in 1976, $9,000
was taken from the street

Rhodes calling

UC Davis 6l' UC Rv r sid e 6 1.

Ba\ke tb a ll Resul ts
1
U n ited Pr ess I nt ernation a-l
Ci nc innati 88 M em ph is State
BJ
'
.,
Witt enber g 75 Denison 68
H ei delberg 90 Ob erlin 83

salaries and $880 went to the
Pub I rc
Em p 1o y e e s
Retirement Service.
Mainte nance of village
equipment totaled $5,640.
This Included tires, parts and
repairs to all village equipment, with the exception of
the water department truck.
Equipment owned by the
village fucludes three pickup
trucks, one dump t ruck, a
backhoe, road grader, street
sweeper and several other
smaller pieces of equ ipm eh~
AU malntenaru;e and repair
work Is done by the village
mechanic, Dave Ross, which
results fu substantial savings
1JJ the_ village.

Guidelines given for new claims

20

I nternationa l H ockey
leag ue
United Pr ess I nternati ona l

1111 [ 1

1

GREEN BEAN$... .................. ......... ,......................6/' 11111
LIBBY
PUMPKIN
.... ... ... :.................... ?~~·Jg~
..~~~.. 2/99c
.
'
I

John Tyree , Larry Dugan ,

- Enjoy three sizes ot your favorite
pizza ~ .
,
.
- Try our delicious subs while you
sip your favorite suds.
Eat In Or Carry'Out
Phone
992-6304

HOME MADE

ASSORTED BRANDS

26
26
20
U
U
1.4 ·
Men :

MEIGS INN PIZZA SHACK ·.

FRESHLIKE

CREAM STYLE CORN .................... )~Y.2..9.~..~~-~ ..3/'1
PRINGLE$ TWIN PAK ......................................... 79 ~

Ind . Game -

Ph.

PHONE
THE ALL NEW

CHICKEN NOODLE SOUP .................~~:.L~~ - 4/'1110
00

~igh

1976

fund and $4,000 from revenue
sharing funds.
Expenditures for equip·
ment totaled $843. A new
compressor was purchased,
the cost divided between the
sTREET DEPARTMENT
street, water and sewage
Maintenance and care of
departments. The cost to the
village streeta, as are an
street department was $750.
other departments, Is under
One lawn mower was also
the direct supervision of Bill
purchased thro ugh the street
Durst and · Is performeil by
fund.
Gas.oline expenditures
· using an village employees
when needed .
·
totaled $8,451 , which was
used in all village equipment.
During 1976 a t$11 of
t37,368 was spent from the
During 1917 we are pur·
chasing gas from Ashland Oil
street fund for operation of
at a savings of four to five
this department. Of this total,
$7,534 was used for employee
cents per gallon over 1976
prices. The village has two
undergro und storage tanks
with pumps supplied by
Ashland, one at City garage
and one at City Hall.
1977 Wildlife Planting Packet Program
Materials cost the village
.,. $3,069 . This included blacktop
used for patching, limestone,
and
other .miscellan eous
ORDER. BLANK
NAME, _ __..;_ _ _ _ ADDRESS,_ _ _ _ _ _Tfi:LEPHONE NO . - -I mat.e ria ls. Building ex• .
penses, mostly utilities at t~e
PACKET _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ PRIC E - garage, totaled $1,382.
Operation and main·
tenance costs of the four
traffic signals in the village
tota led $367. Miscellaneous
expenditu res were $110.
Tota l recei pts in to .the
'
Total paid - - street maintenance fund for
Mail to Meigs County Soil and Conservation Service, 221 W. Seco ~d St., Pomeroy, Ohio. " 1976 were $34,270. Income into
this fund is from gasoline tax
and
motor
vehicle
registra tion fees , which are
distribu ted from the state
go vernment. Tra nsfers of
$3,667 from the safety fund to
the street fund were made for
bring the foll owing in- gasoline used by the police
COLUMBUS - With the Tuesday,
4 or 5, should report on formation to the OBES office: department. ·
likelihood of additional job
- Your Soci al Security
layoffs because of the current Wednesday .
Patching of streets has
6 or 7, should report on ca rd or other ident ification been carried out on a regular
energy crisis, Albert G. Giles,
carrying your Social Security llas is during the past few
Administrator of the Ohio Thursday.
8 or 9, should report. on number.
Burea u of Empl oyment
years whenever it has been
'
- Be able to furnish OBES nee ded. Streets are swept at
Se rv ices, today offered Frida y.
The Admioistrator ex- with names and addresses of least once a week, weather
guidelines to help facilitate
the filing and processing of plained that new applicants all employers that you have permitting. Streets were kept
claims for unemployment reporting during the latter worked for fu · the past 52 in good condition during the
part of the week would have weeks. You also should know past year, but as a resul\ of
benefits.
Administrator Giles said the sam e eligibilit y, for the da tes of your employment the severe winter, there will
that rece ntly unemployed unemployment compensation and the reason for separation be much repair work to be
; workers or those who may be benefits as those reporting from each job.
done when the weath er
Those who . have filed a becomes suita ble for patch·
laid off in the near future and earlier in the week.
OBES
is
makin g claim for ·benefits in the past ing.
want to llle cla ims for
In
its
many yea r shou ld bri 0g their
arrangements
unemployment compensa tion
offices
throughout
the
state
to yellow claims . booklet. This
with the Ohio Bureau of
do
eVerything
possible
to will help facilitate loca ting
.' E mploym ent Se rvices ,
meet
the
needs
of
the
work
ers
their present claim.
should. report to the nearest
in
the
event
of
possible
mass
Administrator Giles asked
OBES offi ce handlin g
layoffs
during
the
energy
the
coopera tion of jobless
unemployment compensation
crisis.
workers
in filing their claims
claims. He suggested that
Administrator
Giles
urged
a
ppli
ca
tion
on the days
· new applicants could reduce
employers
laying
off
50
or
,
designated·
so
that
each office
wa iting time in the local
more
employees
to
notify
will
.
be
able
to
adequately
offices by voluntarily
reporting according to the · OBES in advance if possible ha ndle any excessive cla ims
to help the Bureau serve the load.
following schedule:
. The OB ES Administrator
CINCINN ATI (UPI) Those Individuals whose jobless more elfieiently .
For'
those
jobless
work
ers
sa
id that .if the claims load Gov. J ames A. Rhodes sa id
last digit of their Social
filing cl ~im s for unem· warrants it, all OBES offices tod ay he will invite the
Security number Is :
0 or I, should report on ployment benefit s, some for handling claims will be open re prese ntatives of all
the first time, Administrator on Monday, February ,21, governors of Ohio River
Monday.
2 or 3, should report on Giles suggested that they President's Day, norm ally a states to meet in Cincfunati in
holiday for state employees. mid-February "to discuss the
(anticipated) flooding of the
Ohio River. "
"We want to make every
attempt to prepa re fo r
COLUMBUS (uPI) - The includes a five-year extension provts10n s determining protecttion of g.roperty and
Ohio
Farm
Buteau of the food stamp program, production costs.
Rhodes said alter a 4511-,
wan levels th9t are too low . life,"
Federation said today It is Food for Peace program and
mile areial to ur of the iceencouraged by a new !ann other f!lfld and agricultural would be of no help to clogged Ohio River fr om
program bill in!toduced in programs and the creation of fanners - too high and a Steubenville to Cfu cfunati In
the U.S. Senate which calls a new charter for the nation 's government surplus would his DC-3.
result, a situation Farm
for a Hve-year !ar:m and food agricultural research.
"We want to plan now and
Bureau
trustees wa nt to get fu whatever equipment
Bureau
President
Wallace
policy which would, for the
first time, tie federal price Hirschfel!l of New Bremen avoid, Hirschfeld said.
we think we might need,"
Provisions of the bill would
supports w farmers' cost of said the loan levels indicated
Rhodes
said.
in the bill for 1978 appear take effect for 1978 crops of
productloo .
Spring flooding is expected
The
Farm
Bureau reasonable but careful feed gram, wheat and cotton to be severe because of
Federation aald the bill also analysis must be made of and guarantee farmers a unusually thick ice which has
target price to cover
form ed an average of 8 inches
production· costs.
thick along the Ohio 'River.
"Our trustees are very
"I wish we had an ice cutter
pleased with the updates in
to
break this stuff up,' Rhodes
targ et prices and loan
said
from his plane: "When
levels,"· said Hirs chfeld.
the
water
comes down from
" Our only cancern is that
the
mountains
its really going
loan levels don't get too high
to
come.
The
river
situation is
LONDON (UPI) - 'ThO for instance, TWiggy pushed an\! farmers build up stock
worse
than
what
I had
skinny former model named Miss Taylor from first pla ce which might interfere with
ecpected
it
to
be.''
·
Twiggy 15 more beautiful to fourth, behind Brigitte market prices."
Bardot and Marilyn Monroe.
than Elliabeth Taylor.
Sophia
Loren, second in last r~~~-------~~-~~-~~~,
John F. Kennec!Jr has reyear's
poll,
was nowhere this
placed Robin Hood as the
Simple facts everyone who
year,
although
Raquel Welch
third greatest hero or heroine
owns
a home. car or business should know I
of an time. Joan of Arc Is now squeaked into fifth place.
•• the greatest., replacing Sir The "hero or heroine of all
time" listed Joan of Arc,
Winaton Churchill.
Churchill,
and .then KeMedy
.President ldl Amln of
in
a
tie
with Jesus and
Ugan&lt;la II the world's second
.M.
se lect ing your covera ge. A
,.m~•.n v·· re pu ta tion . '"
most hated map, after Adolph Admiral Horatio Lord
scr v1ce
an d
c1a1m s
Hitler.
•
· Nelson.
Th ~ :D e stw_av to get a _t r~e p a v~ e nt is critic al.
Ltza
Mlnnelll
,replaced
a
barga•n o~ tnsu rance • sar~ ~ And it you ha v-e a cla tm,
Who says 10?
sho p for ''·· But th ere
vour i nd epende nt age nt is
The 2 mlUion annual pair of British comics at the
more.. th~n thr ee ~hou s a .nd In a posit ion to suppo r t you .
top
of
the
"entertairunent"
visitors
to
Madame
compant es. selltng tn · To be on your si de i n
Tussaud's wa~:works in section, and another British . surance p olic ies to pr otect helping yo" obt ai n a ju ~t .
cars .
.a n~ e qu i Ubl ~
set11 e m e nt
comedian pushed Frank' hOft:'e s,
London, that's who.
I
bu.sm esses, and 1t 1s.n t Pr omptly
Each year ThiiiUd's polla Sinatra from second place w pract i cal tor you to ch eck , Becau s~ he is a self ·
each and ev ery one.
employed local b us iness
its vlsltorsoo fa...nte heroes, fourth.
That ' s why it's a go ~ d man , a n independ ent agerit
Churcllilland Kennedy tied
heroinea and .uJalna, both
id ea to cons ~lt a~ l n. know s h is r espon sibility is
. • those wiiOII llprtnre In the for firlt place in another
d e pendent
1n s uran ce
his c u stom ers . w
Inde pend ent to
. IS
-wu worlll 1114 thoee not category , " politics , ' ' :;:~,t -do eAn
s
no1 work tor an s ~c cess is ba se ~ on se rv1 ng
rep! nted there. 'lbe 19'16 dumping Amin and Henry A.
I n surance c om pan ;~ . He h1 s cu st om ers 1n thr ee key
I
poll, 'l'elealed today, showed Klssini!er out of the running
works fo r you . ·Wh i ch areas .
..
•
mean s h e can pl an the
1: He pr ovi des th e bes t
entitely.
I
10111e surprilel.
co ve ra ge tha t protects you ins ur a n c~ cov erage at th e
,In the "beauty" category,
best. And t hen plac e it wi th low es t ! ru e c~s t to yo u.

PlANNING APIZZA PARTY

WIENERS
20 .CT; I.

CAMPBEU'S

Jack 's Dairy Bar
Cl ine 's co, s. Co .
Pomer oy Flower ShOp
Tom's Carr y Out
Town Kil n
Mark Fjve
,

Lincoln
.
SE Mo .. 70
Mo Rlla
'mnstr Mo . 77
NW Mo 91 5 Mi&amp;sour i 70

SPAM ........................................... .... .. .'...... ~.~- ~~ .~~~- 99~
LIBBY'S TOMATO JUICE .......................~..Ql:. ~N . 59~ FRENCH CITY
IDAHOAN INSTANT POTATOES ........... .. : }~.~: 59c

PHEBE'S STORE
FEB. 1-FEB. 5
Ritht Res,rved To Limit Quantities
Wt Glodly Accept Fed. Food Stamps
Monday thru Friday

I

$}19 ·,

NAVEL
ORANGES 6mR59~

Early Sunday Mixed

D Ll pscornb 78 Trevecc a 64
E . Tenn . 77 Appy St . 56
Flor ida 83 LSU 6B
Fla Tec h 135 Fla Mem 83
Flor ida St . 66 Mercer 65 '
Georo la Col 86 Pie;dmonl 63
Georqla "Tech 81 Wolford 37
J C Smi th 'i6 Lvng stne 73
Ke n tu c ky 92 Miss . St 85
Lamar 107 La . T ech 103
Mci r sha ll 82 The Citadel 73
M c Neese 82 sw Louis iana 75, .
Mntevalo 75 Athens St. 67
Nichlls St ~~ Dlta 51 63
No . Ga BB Oglethorpe 59
NW ST L a 6'2 Ga Sl. 60
No Ala 70 livingston 67
N C ( h\!T e 83 N.C Wton 70
Old Oom . 17 Austin Peay 68
Pc"ibroke 96 Fay elfeville 76
Pfe i ff er 104 S .C. Sprlnbg 76
Pdc. evil le 95 Ber ea 83
So. Car 64 Rhode Is. U . 54
So Alaba ma n Birm _So. 66
So. Miss . 89 UNC Ashvl 79
Tcnn Tech 94 Clev e Sl. BO
Tem ple 55 Biscay ne 51
V M t 'i 'i Furm an 86
W ·Ga 39 Sou ther n Tec h 34
w Car 91 Bapt ist 75
W K y 90 Robert Morris 70
Midw es1
Butl er 84 Ind iana Ce ntral 76
Ce nT Mo 75 NE M iso;.ou r i 60
Cincinna t i 88 Memphi s St. 82
Crei gh ton B.t De Paul 75
De Pauw 116 St Joe' s 103
Drury 69 Mi s ~ou r i western 54
E Ill. 74 Wright St . 61
Heidelber q 90 Oberlin 8 ~
lnd Sl . 100 Ill St 84
Wa bas h 9·1 Carroli 97
Iowa St B2 Dr ake 61
J Brown~
S W Bapr 80

Nomellini are honored

W

Tbls Is tile third In 1 oerits
of repo rt• by Middleport
, Mayor Fred Hollman ex·
plalutac operation ol tbe
mullklpal governmeot.

POMEROY LANES

coneqe Ba sk ~ tball Results
By United Pres s lnttrnafional
Ea st
Army 74 Roches ter 66
Rloo m f icttl 89 Marist 80
Clar ion 81 Calif. Pa . 77
Duk e 76 Duquesn e 49
E Stroudsbq 73 W ilkes 60
· Fairfield 94 Boston U. 14
Hol slra 71 St. Peter'! 15
Juniat a 65 Lo ck Haven 57
La Salle 82 Dic kin son 61
Manst ld 74 Pill Jhns tn 63
Muh lnbg 70 f'l lent own 63
New Path 1·1 NY Mr i tm~ 67
Shepherd 60 Fai r man! SB
Phita Te)( n Trenton 40
Pratt 58 Ston y Broo k 55
Si ena 78 Wagner 61
Wh ee l ing 7B Gt envi lle 71
South
Allen ·ss Fra11. Mar ion 52
Alabama 96 Va nder bilt 87
Auburn 72 M is sissippi 65
Belmont Abbey 68 E lon 61
., Cr sn Newman 67 Mll ign 48
Chttnooga 10 1 Mid Tenn . 90
DavidsOn 6'i wm 8. Mary 52

Sayers, McLeod and

on new contract

[

•
Streets·: a $37,368 business m

''

BASKETBALL BOWLING

Borje Salming and Jim McKinney scored for Toronto, but
goals from Plell and Bill Clement matched those and !ell the
score lied , 2-2, at the end of the first period. Plett and Toronto's
Lanny MacDonald matched goals in the sec.ond penod.
Itwa s the only game scheduled in th e NHL Monday night.
There were no games in the WHA .

~; Agreement near

~
ti

.@

.

NEW YORK ( UPI) - .The Carolina State.
University of San Francisco,
MIDLANDS: Joe Cipriano ,
a
last-second
winner Nebraska; Norin Stewart,
Satur day
night
over Missouri; Denny Crum,
unher alded Sa nta Clara, Louisville; Ted · Owens ,.
remained atop the UPI Board Kansas; Jack Hartman ,
of Coaches college basketball Kansas State; Joe Stowell ,
ratings Monday as UCLA Bradley .
jumped from ninth place to
SOUTHWEST : Guy Lewis,
second.
Houston; Ned Wulk,.Arizona
San Francisco, which beat State;
Eddie Sulton ,
Santa Oara twice durfug the Arkansas; Ron Ekker, West
week to run its record to 21.&lt;1, Texas State; Fred Snowden,
NEW YOR~ I UP[ I - Gale
activities as possible since remafued No. 1 QY a wide Ariz ona; Roy Danforth ,
Sayers
and Bob McLeod , two
teachers will be on the margfu , collecting 31 first- Tulane.
of
U
ie
best
runni ng backs in
pay roll for 15 propose d place votes ~nd 402 poiitts, to
M0 UN T AINS : J i m
history,
and
Leo Nomellin i, a
~a lamiiy days because of the 303 points and seven first- Willia ms, Colorado State;
1~.
o
un
ta
i
nou
s ta ckle , were
fuel shortage, Fleming said. place voles for twice-beaten Jerry Tarkanian, Nevada among
II
pla yers named
UCLA
.
·
Las
Vegas
;
Ken
Hayes,
New
Meyer said it would he up to
tod•y
to
the
National
Football
The ra tings, however, did Mexico
State;
Norm
the six district boards to
Found•tion
and
Hall
of
include
UCLA 's Ellenberger, New Mex ico;
arrange the sites for their not
Fame.
impressive viclory over Dutch Belnap, Utah State;
tournaments.
·
Sayers, a two-time All·
Whether schools J can Tennessee Sunday and with Jim Killingsw orth, Id aho
America
for Kan sas 11962participate is strictly a local another good week, the State.
64),
and
McLeod,
considered
BrufusfigureU!challenge for
PACIF IC: · Bob Boyd,
by
Red
Blaik
th
e
best
pla yer
the lop spot next Monday.
Southern California; Marv.
he
ever
coac
hed
at
The major casualties were Harshma n, Washington;
Dartmouth
I
193fc381,
will
be
North Carolina, which lost by Ralph Miller , Oregon State:
20 points to Clemson and Bob Gaillard, San Francisco; fuducted at the foundation's
dropped from third to i2th; Gene Bartow, UCLA; Bill 20th annual awards dinner,
Dec. 6, 1977, along with
Alabama, which slipped from . O'Connor, Seattle.
Nomelltni
and eight other
fourth to ninth after being
N EW YQRK ! U P i l
The
beaten by . K~ntu ck y; ana United Pr ess l r) ter na t io na l pla yers.
Board o f Coa ch t'S' co l lcct c
Tennessee, which feU from ba~ k e t ba l l rat r ng ~ w ith wOn . Nomellini, a S-foot-3, 255·
sixth to lOth despite winning los• r ecord s throuql1 qa1IH.'S ot pounder, starred for the Uni·
·ts 1
Satur d ay , Jan
77
a ncl
versity of Minnesota lrom
1 . on Y game.
numhc r of f rr s T olac£' v ot rs in
Although it didn 't play last par en lhcsos
year by a federal judge as an
week,
Nevada-Las Vegas
Ninth w oe k ·
WASH)NGTON I UP! ) antitrust violation, could be
.f to third TeaSan
m
Points
Tom IVatson 'sslrea k of sub
ed
I
f
mov
up
roin
1th
r
ran
c
iscotJ
I
\f?
I
'O'
1
settled by one of lwo approa..
.ool par golf has vaulted him to
ches. One ·would be through on the strength of two ·first·
101
171115 "
lace
votes
and
191
points
and
'
u
cLA.
the lop of both the year's
salary arbitration, aft er a 45- P
3
N evada La s
V(' &lt;ld S
Marquette
climbed
fo
ur
money-wfuning list and the
1
"
'
1
111
11
1
U!-&lt;ill day period, for a college
1R':.
rungs
to
No.
4
with
185
points.
.t Marquette f 1~ 71
Winter
Tour P oint Standin gs.
star who refused to sign with
· h.1gan s k'dd
d from
5 M rch•ga n ! 15 ? )
184
Mtc
1
e
Kent
ur!-.
y
!I
\
.,
~
167
~
_
Watson
, who ha_s won the
11
1
6
the team that selected him .
1 L ouisvill e 115 n
t65
Bmg -Crosby ,National ProThe other would a~opt pro second to fifth and was a
16 71
,
shade
ba
ck
of
the
Warriors
~
~~~~~~,~r
f~~
f
Am and the A~dy Williains·
b a~ k et ball 's
appr oa ch,
with
184
JX)intsafter
suffering
10
T ennes"s e c c1J 11
A?
San
Diego Open on suecssive
setting up a sliding mfuimum
1 ' Cincinn6t IJ 1l
a
'99·87
up
set
loss
to
~ -~ weekends now has ea rn ed
wa~e scale for a player
~~rkt:n;~~o~ 1 11~a 1\ 11 1 i ~ $86,700 an'd 244 points.
signfug for periods such as Northwestern last week.
Kentucky rose one step lO 14 Purd ue t l 3 4 1
3-1
Bruce Lietzke, winner of
one to four or five years.
15 Ar•tona ( 15 J l
10
PI
· ·
·
No.
6
on
the
strength
of
its
Minnesota
(
~
11
?
the
1oemx Open, IS second
6
1
16
Also, the draft would be
P rov1dPnc e c 17 7l
in money and poinlS with
reduced from the present 17 victor y over Alab ama, 17
1 $52 550 and 183 7 points
18 Cl emson 115 JJ
Louisville
vaulted
from
lOth
·
rounds to a maximum of 10 or
19 M i sS OUr' l 116 ] )
18
'
·
'
to seventh and Wake Forest 10 u" h 111 .n
lb
12.
LA NDOV ER, Md. I UPII It has also been learned earned one first place vote
and
stepped
up
from
11th
to
Center
Gerry Meehan, who
that th e owners and players
had
two
goals and five assists
eighth
placf.
have agreed on such major
NH l Standin gs
led
the
second
last
week
fu . leading ihe
Cfucinnati
By
United
Pr
ess
l
nlcr
nattonal
issues as fujury protection
Campbe l l Conlercncc
i
O
,
followed
by
12th
pla
ce
Washington
Capitals to two
payments for players signing
Patr i ck D ivi sion
vi
ctories
and
a tie, Monda y
North
Carolina,
Arkansas,
W l T Pi s. GF GA
long-te rm contra cts ;
Ph ita
29 10 I? 70 19 5 t.lO was named National Hockey
Purdue,
Arizona,
Minnesota,
compulsory arbitration for .
'NY tslandrs 29 14 7 65 175 11.1
disputes between a player P r ovid ence, Cle mson, Atlanta
73 1711 57 171 160 League player of the week.
Th e selection was made by
Missouri
and
Utah.
NY
Ra
nqer
s
18 ?1 1J 49 183 187
and his club; and an agency
sm yth e Division
Here
by
sections
are
the
a
special committee vr the
shop, which would require a
W l T P t s . G F GA
coaches
who
comprise
the
'
Professional
Hockey Writers'
51 Louis
? I 2 ~ 5 ~' 14 5 176
non-;Wlion member to pay a
Chica~o
18 _~4 9 45
165 178 Association. ,
UPI
major
college
basketball
certain atnount tothe NFLP A
Colorado
14 78 9 37 ld6 188
ratfugs bOard :
Minnesota
12 2711 JS 14S?01
as a "negotiatfug fee."
EAST : Lou Carnesecca, St .• Vancouver 15 J ? 5 35 1d? 199
The owners are also ready
Wal es Co nf erence
John's;
Chuck Daly, Penn ;
to make retroactive pension
Norris D i11 ision
W L T Ph. G F GA
fund payments for those they Tom Young, Rutgers; Jack
Montr eal
37 7 8 82 746 118
Kraft,
Rhode
Island;
Jack
have withheld the last three
Pittsbur,gh ?7 20 8 57 160 161
years because of the absence Powers , Manhattan, John t..os .Anq cl cs 18 23 10 &lt;1 6 1M 165
w ash inqtn 16 78 8 40 141 197
of a contract. The payments Thompson , Georgetown.
De troit
14 79 6 3·1 178 176
MIDWEST:
Johnny
Orr.
would be. spread out,
Ada m s Divis ion
W L 1" Pts. GF G A
however, over a period of Mi chigan; Bob Nicho ls, BO!J,IOn
JO 16 5 65 193 157 "
Toledo;
Digger
Phelps,
Notre
time.
Bulfal o
28 15 6 67 17 ,, 133 .
7.1 70 7 55 18? 167
Another stumbling block Is Dame; Ray Meyer. DePaul ; Tor on to
IS 77 8 38 \49 182
the "Rozelle · Rule," which Tex Wfuter, Nqrthwestern ; Cl eveland
Monday's Resull
AI
McGuire,
M
arquette.
Atlanta 7 Toront o 3
allowed the commissioner to
Tuesday's Ga mes
SOUTH : Frank McGuire,
set mandatory compensation
Bvffa lo at NY I slan ders
South
Carolina;
Dean
Smith,
for a team signing a free
MOntr ea t at Cleveland
Boston at St Louis
agent veteran. The rule has North Carolina; Lefty NY
Ranqer s at Colorado
Drl
esell,
Ma
ryl
and
;
C.M
.
been held illegal by federal
Wednesday 'S Game s
courts and could cause a Ne wton, Alabama ; Hugh Atlanta at Cl"l i caqo
Du rham , Florida State; Minneso ta a t Pi ttsburqh
negotating impasse.
at Tor onTo
Norman Sloan, North Detro!!
Was.hinqton at Lo s Anq

~ - The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thesday , Feb. 1, 1977

c~~upon Expires Feb. 5, 1977
, TWINCITY'GATEWAY

COUPON-

.
Nchoo.. r
1005

.

- - ---

PILLSBURY

v~.NNED69ER,.O
. STING
..

16 1!~ oz . Can

TWI N CITYili
GnA•
TEii-.wtli/&gt;.
liY
IIII . . . . . . . . ~--~-·····iiiiiii'tii.iiiiji

·DUE TO WEATHER CON

SOME CO

ITEMS WILL HAVE TO BE

.

r

'

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middl•port-Pom•roy,0 .•Tu&lt;Sday. Fob t. l 'liJ
.. -

..

.. .

"

.

Polly's Pointers ·

Fun With Food

r~~

7:- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pom~roy, o.. Tuesday , Feb. 1. 1977

Unemployment tops 1 million

~
·-The Sunday school has from 9:30 to 10:30 each week
The
junior
and
senior
high
Angela
Martin,
Gerald
0v Charlene HOf!flit.h
youth of The First Southern Spencer and Jeannie Mc- three pre-school classes, and the publlc Is invited to
three children's classes, two join ' those of the First
Baptist Church of Pomeroy Clure.
The 'annual Girl Scout cookie sale is on.and .-ben ordering
Southern Baptist Chureh in
met recently at the home of
yolll'll, you might like to know there are special yummy recipes
A prayer time, a discussion youth classes and two adult the study of God's Word.
,
the Rev. and Mrs. Paul While on the various aspects of cla";"es. Sunday sctiool is
&lt;leveloped especially for use with the cookies.
.
at
Syracuse for a special col· prayer life, a'song fest, enter·Bend area scouts will be seiUng cookies through Feb. 11. By Polly Cramer
tage
prayer meeting.
The cold weather makes it difficult to go from house-to-house,
tairunent and refre$ments
covers,
tablecloths,
Attending
were Rena were included in the evenso this year much of the selllng will be done by telephone. DEAR POLLY - Can
Remember when placing your or&lt;ler that this is about the only anyone tell me how to change bedspreads and even pretty Lefebre, Kathy Adkins, ing's activities.
way scouts have of supporting their programs. From each bor the color of an old laundry tub bathroom curtains. Printed Cheryl Lefebre, Cindy Pal·
That same evening Troy
of cooldes, and they sell for $1.25 each, 15 cents remain$ in the from its white porcelain &lt;W'es ·sewn together in such a terson, Debbie Pickens, Jen- Zwilling led the. adults and
troop treasury, and 58 cents goes into the Black Diamond finish to a dull ' black like filshion, and with feather slit· nifer VanOver, Bob McClure, younger children in Bible
Council. Cookies will be delivered March 17 through April 9. wrought iron? I want to con- ching around them, would Ellen·Darst, Curtis,; Spencer. •tudy and prayer at the
A~~d now the recipes .'
vert the tub to a planter for make a striking cotton evenchurch. His study was .taken
ing skirt, too.- POLLY.
BUTI'ER COOKIE FRUIT CAKE
my bl!ck patio.
from Psaim 51.
DEAR POLLY- My. Pet
(Made with butler flavored Trefoils)
Also, does anyone have any
Gary · Basham, Sunday
TO GIVE TESTS
I box Butter F1avored Trefoil cookies, I \l cups sifted flour, ideas about what to do with · Peeve is with the recent Pet
school director, is placing
REEDSVILLE - Mrs. special · emphasis now on
I tsp. salt, 2 sticks margarine, 2 cups sugar, 5 eggs, separated, those pretty printed and lacy Peeve in the colwnn about
ltbs. vanilla extract, o/• cup milk; 1pkg. angel flake coconut (7 handkerchiefs not used in garage sales. I want to say Jane Brown, Meigs County enlisting Sunday school
ounce size), \l cup maraschino cherries minoed and well these days of disposable that my garage sale was not . Tuberculosis Nurse, will be members to com mit
junk and many items were at Riverview School ail day themselves to read the Bible
drained (8 ounce jar), I cup crushed pineapple, well drained tissues?
·
(save the juice for the frosting), 1cup chopped pecans.
I would like to ten the other still in the wrappers from the Wednesday to give skin through at least once during
Place cookies on wax paper .and roll to very fine crumbs readers that I have had sue- . wardrobe of my late husband. tests to ~tudenls. Mrs. 1977, A special poster of
with a rolling pin. Stir flour and .salt into cookie crumbs. Set cess with freezing ' so!Jle of Perhaps my prices were too Brown extended thanks io scheduled readings is on the
aside.
those specialty breads, like high but they were COin· Mrs. Grace Weber, prin· church bulletin board.
Cream margarine and sugar well, Add beaten egg yolks banana bread, so I make it parable with the local thrift cipai, lor her help and
cooperaUon ID getting !be
gradually, mixing well alter each addition.Stir in vanilla. Add ahead to have on. hand for shops.- M.S.
DEAR POLLY - I have skiD tesdng progtam un·
cookie cnimb and flour mixture alternately with milk.
special occasions. They make
derway again. Mrs. Weber
In a separate bowl, combine well the coconut, fruit and . perfect open sandwiches if found that a plastic
TRANSFERRED
nuts. Add gradually to the hatter,stlrring well. Bea t egg baked in a round container. I dishwashing liquid bottle Is bas requested tbat all
Mrs. Pearl Reynolds, conwhites until stiff, but not dry, and fold them into the cake use 12 oz. beer cans with the handy for watering hanging students be ski• tested In
mixture. Pour hatter into a 10 inch tube pan, well greased and tops removed just below the plants. I snip the end to make order to bring their re(ords fined to the Cleveland Clinic
H8P
for the past several weeks
floured. gake for HI hours a t 325 degrees. Cool cake for 15 rims and then spray with a the opening a bi\ bigger. ~ up to dale.
:::: ::::: :::;:;: ·:::·::.:;:: ::: ~::: : :::;:;:;: ;: ;:;:;:; : ;:;:::;: ;: ;:;::::: ;:;: has been transferred to the
minutes on a rack before removing it from the pan . Cook cake whiff of one of the anti-stick OIJVE.
Polly will send you one of
Medlcenter of Akron at 145
completely before frosting.
sprays so the bread comes
Olive St., Akron, 44310. There
out of the can with no effort at .her " peachy" thank-you
sh~ will receive intensive
FROSTING FOR BUTI'ER COOKIE FRUIT CAKE
all. Fill cans one-half full and cards, ideal for framing or
SING PLANNED
placing in your family scrap11&gt; sticks margarine, I box powdered sugar, 3 to 4 tbs. hakeasusual.-K.O.
There will he a hymn sing therapy for the next two to
pineapple · juice, 1 tbs. flavoring (almond, pineapple or
DEAR K.O. - Betty, my book, if she uses your favorite Feb. 5 at 7 p.m.. at the three weeks. Mrs. Reynolds,
vanilla), ¥, tsp. salt, "• tsp. green food coloring (ptional), 3 to 4 righl hand helper, says her Pointer, Peeve or Problem in Freedom Gospel Mission at according to word received
maraschino cherries, 18 to 24 pineapple tidbits (canned ) and 3 husband painted a stationary her colwnn. Write Polly's Bald . Knobs . The Gospel here by friends and relatives,
Pomeroy, 0.
113 Court St
to 4 pecan halves, cut in half lengthwise.
laundry tub with white epoxy Pointers in care of this Tones will be featured. The is doing well and is now able
to walk with assistance.
Cream margarine well, gradually add the sifted powdered paint and it was most sue- newspaper.
public is invited.
sugar. Blend In pineapple juice, one tablespoon at a time unt il cessful. A pa int dealer told
frosting is of spreading consistency . Add salt, flavoring and me that this also comes irr
food coloring, blend all to a smooth light green color. Spread black . Directions for
frosting oo the completely cooled cake. Decorate the top with preparation must he followed
cherries, pineapple and pecans.
~
vel): carefuily. The surface
must be clean with no soapy
FRUIT CUP WITH COOKIE CRUNCH TOPPING
fibn and a. fine sandpaper or
(Made with Vanilla Sandwich Cremes)
liquid sandpaper used to
I can fruit pie fi!Ung ( 22 ounce size), v, tsp. grated lemon break the gloss. After pain·
rind, ¥. tsp. cinnamoll, 1h stick margarine, ' • cup cool tap ting; the surface must dry
water, 2 tsp. cornstarch, and i recipe cookie crunch topping. and cure for 48 to 72 hours.
Blend cornstarch and water until smooth. Set aside. This is har.d to work with, so
Combine aU other ingredients iri top of double boiler, stirring my informant suggested that
well. Alter margarine is melted, add the cornstarch and wa ter you might prefer using a good
mixture. Stir until mixture thickens. Remove from heat. Place hard black enamel after
fruit mixture into Individual baking cups (about 5) and top prepa ring the ·surface as
with Cookie Crunch. Bake at 350 degrees for 12 to 15 minutes. above. He says this can take
the weather outdoors just as
Well and will be far less ex·
COOKIE CRUNCH TOWING
Crush ·10 vanilla sandwich cookies on wax paper with pensive.
Not too tong ago we had a
rolling pin. Place crumbs into a bowl and cut margarine into
them with a fork or pastry blender until well mixed. It will similar question to yours
have eoarse texture . Sprinkle on top of fruit filled baking cups about using handkerchiefs,
and bake as directed. Serve warm with a topping of vanilla ice but the other reader had
many napkins. They can be
cream , whipped cream or hard sauce.
.
sewed together in patchwork
Doctors and Hospitals are the first line of mittees.composed of doctors. These rommittees
style to make brid~e table

r~

By JOHN T. KADY
shutdowns . It will not
United Presi InternaUonal
eliminate the usual oneweek
The numbel' of Ohioans out waiting period for collection
of work because of fuel oU after benefits are approved.
Meanwhile,,the Ohio Senate
and propane gas being
diverted from factories to Education Committee is to
resic!eitcef d.IU'.ing the current b e g I n i m m e d i a t e
ener!D; ~ ~ . lliis. !'limbed consi6er ation of a bill
past I IJllllion.
·~
designed to ease the effects of
And':the state 's maj~r the fuel shortage on Ohio's
naiUI'lll gas firms, in 'hopes 617 school districts.
one of the most severe
And the state Senate
winters in Ohio history will Energy and Environment
abate by then, have told Committee is planning a
thousands of industrial and hearing Wedliesday morning
commercial customers on a resoiuMn , proposing a
inchding schools, to close at long-range legislative study
least until next week .
of teclmiques for encouraging
Th,e [, Public Utilities the use of Ohio coal for
Cominlljl!l'l_n of Ohio Monday electrical generation and lor
denied~\• from several allowing Ohio coal to meet
small,~.'; .eo_.m mercia I and clean air standards.
indus/II:J~t .~'lltural gas
Columbia Gas of Ohio, Inc.,
custom,t'•··~~king relief the Dayton Power &amp; Light Co.
froll)' Ji!Nere curtailments and Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric
impo~y:U~~ .' ,
announcel) cutbacks after
The fii~Q acheduled Feb. !heir major supplier asked
10 hearfl!ts for four of the . that curtailments be kept in
fi~liO'ilecide whether nnal . effect un!fl Saturday.
exemptions from curtaibnent
The East .Ohio Gas Co.,
orderi will be approved.
Cleveland, hlis urged its 1,100
The PUCO approved a industrial users to keep gas
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric Co. usage at maintenailce levels.
req~st to waive the 9(1..day
Columbia Gas of Ohio told
reqwrement for informing industrial and coinmercial
small, industrial ·tustomers customers, including
that their natUral gas service "virtually every school" in
will be terminated:
the utility's 56-county area, to
. The utility asked for the reduce gas usage to faCilitywaiver)fuJ\,Customers using protection levels through
less than .50,000,cubic feet of Saturday.
gas per month . It justified the
The curtailment . affects
request by saying it may need fa cilities that use more than
to terminate service "im· 200,000 cubic feet of natural
mediately" because of gas per month , said a
continuing supply problems. Columbia Gas spok.Sman.
State lawmakers today
"All other customers,
dealt with legislation . including residential users,speeding unemploym ent are
urged
to
keep
compensation payments for thermostat s as low as
those idled by the natural gas P o s s i b. I e w i t h o u t
crisis.
' jeoporadizing property or
The measure is aimed at health," the spokesman said,
temporarily waiving about io "and are urged' to keep usage
days worth of paperwork to to a bare minimum."
speed unemployment
''Thisactionis necessaryto
compensation benefits to protect gas service for
workers idled by fa ctory residential and h,uman needs

Epoxy paint pretties tub

fop

Volsatlos

Goessler Jewelry Store

Doctors andHosp"
are doing about ·
health care costs.

By Helen and Sue Botte)
Don't Try To Run Oad's Ufe
RAP :
Several years ago Mom and Dad were divorced (I'm told
because he was involved with other women). I love him very
much ~nyway .
.
..
·
I see Dad frequently on weekends. White looking for a pair
of scissors at his apartment, I found a picture of his girl friend,
in the nude. I also found a dirty book, and some women's
underthlngs in his dresser drawers. There were other pictures
of w9111en too.
.
These dames want to marry him because he's a successful ·
businessman. U I talk to Mom about what! found, she won't let
me visit Dad any more. How can !'save him' - WORRIED
DAUGHTER
DEAR DAUGHTeR :
You can't "save" your dad from a life he wants to lead.
He's a grown man and you're not his keeper.- Helen

+++

DEAR DAUGHTER :
So shrug . . .
And stay out of his dresser drawers! - SUE .

+++

DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
My best friend Sandy was going with Sam. He wasn't
really cute - she said she just couldn't find anybody better at
the time.
Well, she iound another guy. I was mad at her for being so
heartless about dropping Sam, so when he called me, I went
out with him.
Before I could stop myseH, I fell for him, and it was heaven
for three weeks - until Sandy lost the new guy and went after
Sam again.
·. She got him too! He is so blind ! I really care about him,
and she only uses him. How can !get hack?- D.H.
DEAR D.:
You'll get Sam back - when Sandy bounces him again.
The question is, do you want him on that basis? - HELEN

PENNY LEWIS

Birthday
celebrated

Mr and Mrs. Robert Lewis,
Jr., Middleport, entertained
recently with a party in
celebration of the second bir·
!May of their daughter, Penny.
A Walt Disney theme was
caJTied out in the decorations. Two Mickey Mouse
replica cakes were served
with ice cream, soft drinks
and
coffee.
+++
Attending
were Penny's
NOTE FROM SUE : How about an honest confrontation ? Tell
Mr. and
great-grandparents,
Sam how you feel , whatyoupredict i when Sandy finds another
Mrs.
Ben
R.
Batey,
and
Mr.
replacement)-and that this time you won't be waiting in the
and
Mrs.
Clifford
Thomas,
wings. Why shouldn't girls be as up front as guys about their
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Warner
emotions~
and
Jimmy, Eddie Carson,
+++
Robin
Martin, Dan Lewis and
RAP:
Dari.
Sending
gifts were Mr.
I'm 19 and have a C.B. I met this guy over the radio, but 1
and
Mrs.
Robert
Lewis, Sr.,
only know his C.B. handle. I can talk to him great on the band,
grandparents,
Mr.
and Mrs.
but when he came to see me in person, I was tongue-tied.'You
K~n
ncth
Imboden,
also
see, I'm shy. I'm afraid he'll never come back, and he's really .
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
swell. Wbat do I do now ' - ROAD RUNNER
Julm
Compton, •godparents,
R.R. :
Mrs.
Dan Lewis, Larry
Your C.B. ,buddy was probably as ill at ease as you were.
Tell him how you felt, and ask him back, It never hurts to Lewis, and Mr. and Mrs.
confess shyness - puts others at ease, because they are Roger Spencer.
usually experiencing it too. - HELEN AND SUE

defense in the fight to hold down health care
costs, and they are making major contributions with the encouragement ~nd assistance
of your Blue Cross and Blue Sh1eld Plans. But
they also face a variety of special problems.
For instance, as the professionals in health care,
hospitals anq doctors share a major res~nsi·
bility for both cost.and quality. The deasions
required to achieve an acceptable balance be·
tween cost and quality are often extrl:!mely
difficult.
. .
.·
And both hospitals and doctors face what has
become known as the ''malpractice crisis:' They
pay substantially more for professional liability
msurance than they used to. Rates for doctors
have gone up as much as 600%, and it's not uri·
usual for some specialists to be paying annual
premiums of $35,000. Just within the last year,
premiums for hospitals have doubled nationally,
with ,some premmms for individual hospitals
. almost tripling.
' Despite these and other unique pr~blems,
hospitals and doctors are makmg major con· .
tributions in the fight a~ainst the increasing
cost of health care. Heres how they do it.

Hospitros
Sharing of ServiCes"Hospitals serving the same
· geographic area can often share services and
f~cilities. For inst~mce, on_e hospital m.ay proVIde laundry semces for Itself and other hospitahs. The same with laboratory services. Or
certain types of specialized care. In this way,
all hospi_tals need not maintain and pay for tl'le
same thmgs.
· . ., ·
UtiiU.ation Review. All hospitals support and
encourage the work of utilization review.com·

lntoxilyzer will check breaths

called infr~red abSorption,
the patrol said.
The suspect blows into an
iMtrument and the amount of
alcohol in the blood Is
measured on a weight to
volume
system.
The
Instrument requires no
liN· O.~AN'S I.IST
chemicals to operate and
l'HF;Sn:
l&lt; - Mric11 ne
ment.
pennit.s officers ID process
1 rtd~nd y. ('hest~r
Y.
N
1 l."&gt; on
The intoxilyzer measures suspected drinking drivers "t
llw
I
Jran's
li
~
t
t:l 4
the
blood
alcohol a savings of cost and time,
r11
inimun11
Ht
Kent
'
,'\f:t!l
·
cmcentratioo of a suspect~ , the patrol iaid .
.
(IIJivcr.&lt;Jty
drinking driver by a melhod
C()LUMBUS (UPI ) - The
OlnoState Highway Patrol1s
bnplementing a new blood
lllcobol breath-testing instru·
ment which will be used in ali
patrol statioos in Ohio.
The equipment, called an
intoxllyur, will replace the
present breathalyur equip-

'

.

M

F.

Stover ,

Cert . of

trans .: Rut land
· Ruth F Stov er , W illiMn T .
S to ver to Cly d e Eu ge n e
Dal.' i 5, A l ic e L o ui se Da v is, .19
ac r e , Rutl and .
· Ru lh F , s·tov er , Wi ll iam T .
Slover ro C lyel e Eu ge n e
Da vis . Al ice L ou is e Da v is.
Correc l ion De ed , Rui land
John R B uchanan , de c ro
Ma r y L . Bu c har:1 an . Cerl of
lrans ., Ol ive .
Dougla s
A
Ho se lron .
Elai n e Sue Ho se l ton lo
Clif f ord Rol and Wood , L et u r a
Ed ie Wood . Charl es S. Beller .
Lo t \ 5, t-!lo c kory A c r es .
Orange .'
Charl es s . Bel re r . Aft.\ ot .•
Death . Ru tland
W ill ia m E . Turner , Jean
Turn er ro ' Harv ey E . Gog el.
Mary Lou G og el. 57 acr es .
·
Colum bi a .

the National Fire Research three feet clearance in all
Center said Friday that using directiOns around space
gas ranges , ovens or other heaters, use screenS arow1d
unvented fuelburning fireplaces with open flames ,
appliances for heating rooms avoid using space heaters in
can produce excessive bathrooms and never touch
carbon monoxide.
one while wet, and keep
The same resul t may _come, yo ung children away from
they said, from burning char- space hea ters , especially
wh en they are wearing
coal mdoors.
The '' agencies
also fi amnmble nightclothes.
suggested that people ke ep

A thought for the day :
American poet Ralph Waldo
Emerson said, "To be great
is to be misunderstood."

BALTIMORE (UPI ) Eddie Khayat, former head
coach of the Philadelphia
Eagles, Monday joined the
staff of the Baltimore Colts as
defensive line coach.

YQU CAN'T BEAT OUR VALUES
SUP.ERIORS
SEMI-BONELESS

HAMS
19

HAM
SLICES

LB.

LB.

•1 49

SUPERIORS

.SLAB BACON •••~~·. 89~
SUPERIORS

SLAB SLICED
BACON .•••••L.B:

99¢

79¢

SUPERIORS

Al.LMEAT

WIENERS .. ~~-.

EGGS....................... ~~E.~ ••
MIRACLE WHIP

SALAD

ENGLISH
WALNU-TS

DRESSING.~;.
CARNATION

Men 's

89

1 Group

DRESS AND
SPORT SHOES

WOMENS

Values to $21.99

Values to $18.99

1 LB. PKG.

COTTAGE240L
CHEESE .....~!l!'~

T.V.
D NER .. ~~~h···
SCOT LAD
_FRENCH s lb.
FRIES .........b~L

VALLEY BELL

SCOT PRIDE

SHOES

PURSES
'5.00

BROUGHTON'S

2%

$ 39

MILK........c.a~~~.. .

lHURSDAY ONLY

RC
1 Group

HOSE

5

,.

pa1r I

$}

.. •

SALE STARTS WEDNESDAY, FEB. 2
1

HURRY IN WHILE THE SELECTIONS ARE GOOD

heritage house

t

N. 2nd Ave.

••

I,

1 Group Women's

SAMPLE
SHOES

Middleport, 0.

8-16 oz.
BOTTLES

ICE
MILK ....... ~~~~~ .. .

19

COKE
SPRITE
TAB
OR

Sized 4-6

~.00

All of us helping each ofUL·

$

All other Purses

40%off

. &amp;

'
.• Reai~tered Marks lllu e Cruss Associat inn • tiReJt"lstered
Service Marks of the Natinnlll Assncia tinn of Blue Shield Plln1

..

Ruth

Values to 121"

. Columbu~. Ohio.4:J216

...

A n de r son

K ath e rine

Ja cobs , P t. Lol .96, f&gt;om erov
Wayn e Vanh oo se to l;: lza
Pullin s . 1.44 acr es ~ Ora ng e
·
Elmer Wh i tt ing t on , dec. to

WOMENS
SHOES

Name·----------------------~-----

Mail this to:
F: ree Booklet
Blue Cross and Blue Shield in Central Ohio
Box 348

to

1 Group

Find out what you can·do to help hold ~
the rising cost of health care. This free bookltt
has many practical suggestions, along with the ·
reasons why health care costs have gone atp
so much and what your Blue Cross and Bl'"
Shield Plans are doing about it. Send for your
copy today. .
· ·

-';-- -

Ma r gu er i t e
S lagle

1 Group

Hospitalization and Peer ~ Programs.
Ma.ny do~tors serve ~n hospital, committees
which revtew the quahty of medical care and
. seek ways to.reduce costs without sacrificing
quality. They watch for, and look into, what
appear to be incidents of unwarranted treat trent
or ~rvice such as·unnecessary admissions, ex.
cesstve stays, over-use of x-ray and laboratory '
services, and delay$ in consultation or referral.
li .~ducing Owrhea~. Doctors eire looking forway~ to reduce th~1r own overhead, often by , •
f?rmmg partnerships ~r professional corpora- ,
tlons. And doctors frequently share office space .I
and employees.
· . .. , '

City·----S tate~_;__
· - -ZiP'-

ac r es . Chest er .

NO MAnER WHERE YOU LOOK~ -

BANQUET

Hold Down Health Care Cos/ to:

VARIAN DEPUTIZED
SYR ACUSE - Robert
, fl1 ilton Va ri~ n, Syracuse
Police Chief, bas been appointed deputy of the Meigs
County Sberifl's Department
and sworn in Monday.

Georg e A
W oll e, Fay e
Wo lf e to June A Bea r ns,
Ri c hard L . Bearh s Jr ., 10.0 13

To Umit

FR

Doctors

Address_
· --------,-----------------

ac r es, Chest er .

The Almanac
United Press lnleroational
Today is Tuesday, Feb. I,
the 32nd day of 1977 with 333
to follow.
The moon is' approaching
its full phase.
The morning stars are
Mercury , Mars and Saturn.
• The evening stars are
Venus and Jupiter .
Those born on this date are .
under the sign of Aquarius.
American composer Victor
Herbert was born Feb. I,
· 1859.
On this day in history :
In 1790, the United States
Supreme Court convened in
New York City for its first
session.
In 1899, the first insurance
policy
co vering
an
automobile driver was issued
to Dr. Truman Martin of
Buffalo , N.Y.
In 1970, two trains collided
near
Buenos
Aires
Argentina , killing 14l
persons.
In 1974, fire In a high-rise
building in Sao Paulo, Brazil
killed 179 persons, two of
them American bankers.

OPEN DAILY
9 TO 10 ,
SUNDAY
10 TO 10

o.

·HOT
COCO A Jo oz. $
.MIX ............ !~~..... .

Please send my free copy of
How All nf Us Con Help Each of Us

+++

John A And er son . Joan H .
A nd er son to Jon Ka rsc hni k ,
Constance K'ars.c hnik , 7.06

'

WASHINGTON 1UPl) Three governm ent agencies
are warning that deadly
levels of carbon monoxide
can · result from some
meljlods peopl~ use to keep
warm.
The · Consumer · Product
Sa!~ty Corqmis &amp;iqn,, \h ~ •
Natlooal Fire Prevention and
Control Adfr.i'MStrfaiiOri cind '
·
·

''serious problem," however,
with potential Oooding when
Ohio snows begin to melt and
a greater possibility of
federal aid then.
Gov. James Rhodes, in a
related development, took a
flying tour of the ice-locked
Ohio River to assess the
possible flood situation.
Rhodes said in Cincinnati
following the aerial survey
that
he
will
invite
representatives of all river
states to meet in Cincinnati in
mid-February "to discuss the
(anticipated) flooding of the
Ohio River . .
"We want to make very
attempt to prepare for
protection of property and
life," said tbe governor.

Property
Transfers

Some ways of keeping warm are dangerous

meet regularly ·to review individual hospital
admissions and help make sure all patients receive the care and services they need, no more.
and no less.
·
.
·
Staff Evaluations. All hospitals have fonnal
programs to review staffing needs. Such
programs are designed to help assure that each
of the estimated 200 job categories iA large
hospitals are properly filled with enough
people to do the job. They also assess produc·
tivity and work towardgreater efficiendes.
Group Purchasing. Hospitals · ~. a given area
will often combine their pur hasing power to
obt~in the lowest possible price on supplies and
eqmpment.

-

customers," said the
spokesman.
Dayton Power &amp; Light said
curtailments will cimtinue for
tllousands of its customers,
also including schools, and
that 4,800 users will not get
any more gas until March.
Cincinnat Gas &amp; Electric
continued the shutdown ol
hundreds of major users and
urged thousands of others to
conserve as niuch gas as
possible.
·
Two federal disaster investigators said Monday
preliminary indications are
that Ohio will not merit
~ · ·emergency:'' status because
of last weekend 's severe
winter weather.
They said there is a

SUPER
MARKET

pair

-DR. PEPPER
DIET RITE

·coLAoz.
8-16
BOTTLES

$ 29

H-16 OZ.
BOTTLES

.,'

..

�•
9- The Daily Sentinel , Moddlepor t-Pomeroy, 0 . Tuesdav. Feb I, ~:~;;
TRACY
.
·

8-Tbe DaUvSentlnel. Mlddl•oort-P.tneroy,O .. Tuesday, Feb. I, 1971

Mr. Dd

••••••••••••••••••••••••

TOM TIEDE

Conclwion is harsh
but long overdue
By Tom Tiede
WASHINGTON- One year
after World War n the
govenunent was able to
declare without problem that
all 6,0M men missing in a~
lion were dead. Proper
benefits were distributed to
survivors and so the concerned relatives were officially
set free to begin new lives.
The same quick action was
taken after Korea.
But four years after the nation stopped fighting m Vietnann, and two years after the
last G.l. left Saigon, nearly
. IDI men continue to be listed
as M!As, and hundreds of
anguished families continue
to dangle on a _gossamer
thread of faith they may still
be alive.
They are almost certainly
not alive. The United Slates
has conducted an MIA search
unparalleled in history, and a
thoroughly efficient Congressional probe has recently
decided there are no living
MIAs. Yet the casualties are
not laid to rest; the families
argue over small odds, and
the wretchedly sensitive conendless.
troversy
There IS a culpnt mall this :
The National League of
Families of Pnsoners of War
and Missing in Action. It IS
the group formed to offer SUP'
port and group therapy for
the war. families, and for
many YC\lfS it did just that.
Now, according to U,creasing
numbers of Washington
observers, its origmal good
purpose has turned sour.
"The League's usefulness
has nm out," says Rep. G.V.
(SOnny) ' Montgomery (0.
Miss.). He chaired a 1f&gt;month mvestigation of the
MIA ISSue, concluding that
the men "lost their lives in
the service of their country."
He says extending the debate
now is "dragging 11 through

seems

I

,..

I
I

~
,.
,.
I

I
!
~
~

'i,.
,.
,.

,.

QUALITY
1975 CHEVY ELCAMINO

a man 10 a BangkQk bar who

P!TISBURGH (UP!) The Pittsburgh Penguins
were down to three healthy
defensemen Monday .
The Penguins lost two of
their defensemen over the
weekend. Don Awrey hurt his
shoulder playing against the
Philadelphia Flyers Saturday
night, and Dennis Owchar
strained a knee in Sunday's
game with the Boston Bruins.
Two other defensemen,
Dave Burrows and Ed Van
hnpe, have been injured for
some time. 8\D'roWS had a
knee injury, while Van hnpe
had shoulder surgery last
week.
•

disband "in dignity."
Montgomery does not rap
the League with any relish·
Nor does he do it lightly.
When it was organized in ·the
WIIOs the League was a
selfless effort by courageous
wives lc bring ~ plight of
therr husbands into the public
arena. As such the group was
sentimentally adopted by a
concerned nation. Many still
't this light
remem be r I m
·
But the Wgue has changed - for the worse. Many of
its officers are now salaried
instead of volunteers. Its
director, formerly With VIVA

NOTICES
ATTN. : !!
ALL HOUSEWIVES
All Yard Sales, Rummage,
Porc_h ~~~nd Basement Porch
and Basement Sales, etc
must be pa 1d In advance .
Get yours In early bY
stopplng by our office at
The Dally Sentinel, 111
Court St or writ ing Box
7l9, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
with your remlltann.

white-wall tires, air, automatic, power steering and

Bede Osol
Far Wodnoodoy, Fob. 2, 1177
ARIES (Morch 21-Aprll 111
There will be some frustratoons
early In the day, but thM things

you were uncertain about wlll

turn out to be lun

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20)

Patience Is your greatest asset

today Look to emerge .,ctonous
in the long run, and you probably
will.
GEMINI (MIJ 21-J..,. 20) You'll
see viable alternatives today In
areas whera you were slymted
Put them to work promptly and
you'll come oul on top.
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Your
material prospects look very

magazme, is of no relation to
a POW or MIA. A member of

admitthedeathofthelrsons.
IMonlga!nery says be is concerned mGstabout the wives.
" I talk with them and get letters frotl! them - they say
they want to get on with their
lives, but ean't until this thing
is setUed." Al\d here is where
the League's fault is blatant. '
It *on't let the matter seitle. ·
It won't cicise ·the books. The

PHOlOGRAPHY
Aerial
Commercial
Schools
Weddings

League. rwnot

traced \0

...

11'8S

d•e .

In our hearts our memor1es ore
kept,
Of the Father we loved and '1'11
never forget ,

Sadly mts:sed by w1fe, children

KEN GROVER

1969 CHEVROLET B•squa•ne, 1966
BUICK Electro. 225, 2 Rokon
tnolb•kes Phone 949 2432 .

-----

PHOTOGRAPHY

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

~

1972 GRAND Ton no , ps., and
p b ,
atr
condtt•oned.
automatiC new A· I condtl•on .

(614) 9115-4155

1965

VW $200 Phone
773-5688 alter 4 p m

follow1n~ as are res idents or

Manning D Webs trr

'"rifle
Ay An') B Watsoh
Deputy C1crk
f?l 1' j:j , 71(

~------~ .

OUR

5EFOREHAIIO WHAT
WOULD HAPPEN IIIlTH

NIIRTH lUI

A A KQ J865
¥ A

Mc KEE ~···:..-:1

t A74
" 93

EAST
" 9 72
¥KJ 97 6
• Q 10 5

" lO 3
¥ QB 2

We Deliver

! ~~~5 '4

.. AQ

---- ----.

.

SWAIN'S ,

-'

DEPENDABLE J%8 BUICK Electro ,

and grandchildren
------·-- --- -------

$295 Pho~!?4_~ :._2~~-- ~-- _

Automatic
Transmission Service

PARTS - LABOR
GUARANTEED

REASONABLE

RATES

IF VOU have o serv1ce to offer ,
wont to buy or sell something
ae lookmg for work ~ .
or
whatever , . you 'll get result5
laste r with a Se ntinel Want Ad.

__ - GUN SHOOT ol the Rac1ne Gun
Oh. - . - . .

_,

Club every Sunday,
Assorted meats .

1

pm

-- . - - -. -·---¥ -RACINE FIRE Dept w•ll have a
-·~

~

Gun Shoot every Saturday n1ght
6 p m . at the11 bu1ldmg in
Bashan. Ohio

---- -------

AT STUD: 1. Phoebus. It;, 1H . If
you want a good performance.
A holler colt w - blaod hne-s that

•ell. 2. TRIBAL CHIEF APHC ,
15.2 H. has sired some of the
top performance and halter
horses . (Tribal Wm , Tnbof Fool .
etc .) Also horses sold , fram ed. conditione-d, boarded . Cole
Stables. Home of Chomp1on~
SoM 25. Tuppers Plains, Oh1o

45783. Phano (614)667-3405

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

Call992·2156

n:.t~tei
m;saJ~-=
=
::.---=.._-::::-:;:-~ ~

-CASH
. -- -, ,.--- - ---po1d for all makes ond
models of mobile komes
Phone oreo code 614·423-9531 ,

TIMBER Pomeroy Forest Pro ducts. Top pnce fpr standing
sawtimber. Call K,ent Hanby ,

' •
- 1·446-8570.
------ _,_ ...... ~
~COINS, CURRENCY, tokens , old
pocke-t watches and chains ,
11lver ond gold. We need 1964
and olde-r 11lver coms 8uy , sell,
or I rode' Call Roge-r Wamsley,

742·23:11.

--- . --·CASH! l l for

- ~~---

Truck and

---

iunk con. Frye's
Auto 24 HOUR

WRECKER ' SERVICE I Phone
742 208'1.

---,- --

_str~t~kl"!:!..h~'2_•-~·!•79
ONE BEDROOM Aplf ol VIlLAGE
MANOR i" Middleport tor $I 01
monthly plu1 elec. or f.130 in·
eluding elec , LOWER Ar\TES tor
' SENIOR CITIZfN$, Conve"1ent
to shoppmg on Third ond Mill
Sts. •n ~iddleport, lfand n~tw
high qUGI•t1 •rtmenls kP
tiM _
"fPJ"'Q•' ot Apt 28 or call
99'2·7'11 . An Equl Ho us 1ng
Oppo\ lunlty
2 BEDi'OOM trailer real n1ce
Phon, ?92·31?4, adults onlr.

7481

-~------.-

SMALL farm lor sole, 10% dawn ,
owner t.nanced Monroe County , W Va Phone (304) 772-

3102 or (304) 772·3227.-:.:----:--;·

cOUNTR_Y_far~~~d ~ith secluded woods water and !)ood oc·

oil occessones mcfudmg fiSh

$125 Phone 992.5833
FREiGHT DAMAGED. ~n~ -5-1; ~

cess 1n Monroe County , W Vo

$1 ,000 down , coli (304) 772·
3102_o; ~~~) !'1}·3227 ,-~.__
Commerc•ol property opprox 17
acres level land , located of
Tuppers Plom~ on Oh1o Route

7 Phone(614)667·6304

-

-- ---.....

~-- - - ~~

1977 Dressmaker zig z:og5 sew·
•ng marhlnes , buttonholes,
monograms , etc. WtU sell for
$A8 95, or~g •nally $-209.95 Cosh
or terms available . Coli

BISSEll SiUING w.

evenings.

Blown In libergloss wolls
and attics. 20 Pet. Savings
on Vinyl and Steel Sodlngs.
Replacement ond storm

__ _______ _

--992
- 5146. ..,_
NEW SEAR"S Roebuck tOO 000
~

BTU Gas furnace 10 r,ec r wor·
ronty . Sell reasonab e . Phone

949·2348

Pomeroy Lindmark
soften &amp; condition your
water and a Co~p water
softener, Model UC·XVI .
Now Only '279,95
Let

Let us lest your water
Free.

.

'

Pomeroy landmark

J;t JackPilon•
W. Carsey, Mgr.
m-2ta1

STEREO - am -fm fm stereo-radta
combination . Balance $109.95,
or terms. Call992-3965
CLARINET for sale- Excellent con dition. $8S Phone 992-2413.

-----12 GAUGE

SAVAGE pump

shotgun, vent ribs, double
51ghta . Sell for $100. Phone

247 2664.

~-~"'-a.:. Mtddle-por.:;'·- - - -

FOR SALE
One good usod Uob- sldo.

by-•lcle rtfrllltrolor ... $150

Now
Co·OP
wotor
solleners, model VC-SVI.
Only$271.95
Ont good &lt;Ill In Hamtlilt
Choln Sow . : .... 1130.00
Sove 150.00· on 1 ntw
Holpolnl Rlfrillfrolor.

Pome18J landmat
'· JICk W. Carsoy, Mtr.
Phone ,112·2111

1

__

Free Estiln•tes

expeirence.
C. A. Newman, Pres.
1·25·1 mo., pd

Will do odd 1obs , roof•ng , pa1n·
tmg . gutter work Phone 9'92

7409

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

.

. '.

L ·FOAM

: •,

FABRlr-"hl

.

HOLSTERY

.. .

based largely on hope that his
partn er "auld b1d another

-~--~

: . . : ,: :._

3 bedrooms , 116 baths, latge li vmg room , dming room and k1t ·
chen , fully carpeted · Phone
992-3129 or 992-543.4
59 ocres 6 room house bath ,
portly carpeted , two out
budd•ngs
dug basement .
one-ttwd tillable, mi neral
nghts located rJeor Danville
Reduced for qu1clc sale ,
$23 ,500 Phone 742 2766

ACROSS

----------

NEW 3 bedroom house , bu1lt In
k1tchen , bath and 1A, Phone
742 ·2306 or contact MilO B Hut
chiSon , Rutland Oh1o

- ---

BUILDING SITES 3 11 acres , ot
Bashon T P , water tap gos
tap , Mll11f11Um SOli llmltOtlons
Phone 985·4102
Phone

large

kitchen,

basement, natural gas
heal. porches. $12,500 00
RUTLANO - 4 acres wllh
older home, 3 bedrooms,
beth, natural gas heal,
alum .

siding.

porches,

trailer hookup. $15,500.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Nice ·
level lot, llh story frame. 2

bedrooms, bath, dining
room. porches, N.G. heal.
Good neighborhood . Asking
tusl $1A,OOO.OO.
POMEROY - l'h story
frame . 3 bedrooms, beth.
dining room, hardwood
floors, porch, ullllly In
kitchen and basement
About 25 yrs. old.
$12,500.00.
NEW LISTING 3
bedroom frame home with
112 acre ground, yard
fenced for children. Elec.
beseboard heal. Financing
available to right IJ'Irtles.
$17,500.00.
NEW LISTING - 103
Acre5, 25 tillable, 15
pasture, 6011mber. Approx .
3,000 lbs . lobecco bese. 7

VIrgil B. Sr., Re111or
116 E. Second Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Pholle 992·3325
NATIVE BUILr -Old 4
bedroom frame wllh bath.
n~lural gas, clly water,

I:
=:.li

-

1

_________

EXCAVATING dour . loader and
bock hoe work , dump truc~s
and lo·boys for hire. will hour
fill dirt , fa soil. limestonv and
gravel. Calf Bob or Roge-r JeJ -' .
fers
day phone 992·7089.: ,
11ight phone 992·3525 or 992-,

.'.
---·- -----EXCAVATING.
bockha:a. .
and d1tc her . Charles R Hot-'
l1eld , Back Hoe Ser.,.lce ."
_Rutland.:._~hone!£ 2_?08,
SEPTIC Systems installed by
licensed installer
Shepard
Contractors. Phone 742·2409

room

and

kltch~n,

carpeting Full besemenl. 2
car garage. $19.500.00.
WE HAVE A LOT OF
HOMES - BUT MANY
MORE BUYERS - ~ET
US SELL YOUR HOME
NOW. A BROKER ANO 3
ASSOCIATES TO SERVE
YOU.
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
"2-2259 . 992-!568
915-m2

I E'NuOY A VACATION

CF THE CITY-

~ · -,...

1

'
------Otl, GAS Furnace5 , oil bumers, ,

BUY, .SELL ·
•

I

smt after a negative response ,

responder may drop the btd·
ding there

a copy ol JACOBY

MODERN, sand $1 to " Wm
at Bfldga " c l o th1s

newspaper. P 0 Box 489,
Aad10 City Slatton, New York.
N Y 10019)

698·733t.'

ond pt~rfs for trolle,.'
hour servke

stones 15
s oo-Big
Valley 3: My Thhree Sons 4; Brady Bunch 8,

~

Coffeecart
offcrm g

Star Trek 15.
s·3!f-Adam·1 2 4,13 : News 6. Family Aflalr 8; Elec.
Co 20.33
z 20•33 .
6 oo-News 3,4,8, 10.13, 15; ABC News 6; oom
6 31f-NBC News 3,41, 15, ABC News 13; Andy Grltfllh
6; CBS News 8,10, Vegetable Soup 20, Lilias Yoga &amp;
You 33
7·110--TrulhorCons
3, ToTelllheTrulh4 , Bow 11 ng for
Dol lars6. Pop Goes the Counlry 8; News 10: To Tell
the Truth t3; My Three Sons 15; Consumer Survival
Kil 20; Big Green Magazine 33.
7 3!f-Dolly" 3: $100,000 Name That Tun• 4, Match
Ganie PM 6; $25,000 Pyramod 8, MacNeii·Lehrer
Report 20,33; The Judge 10; Break the Bank 13;
Wild Kingdom 15
..
a OO-Mov 1e "The Adventures of Front ier Fremont
3,4 ,15 ; Bronte Woman 6,13; Gun•moke 8; Nova
20.33 , Good Times 10.
8 31).-,.Jacksons 10
..
9. oo-Baretta 6,13; Movie "Cage Wllhoul a Key 8,10;

Yesterday's Ans\\cr

18 Mmc
entrance
21 Greek
. mounta1ns
22 Small

."
33 Much used
35 Recioro.oallv 1•
in motion h-:'-t-t-38 Bll'd dog
39 Region
40 Diamond
theft
n Swiss
city

- MENTION
ITS NAME', AN'

THERES ONE LI'L 5ECriON THOSE YFEU.OW

'iN TQWN - 2 bedrooms,
7A2 2348.
nice beth, dining, 2 porches ' --- ---~-T -j
CARPENTER,
llooring, calling, •
and level lot.
:
panel mg. Phone 992-2759
FREE FUEL - Good '
llsh lng and hunting. 90 ·~ MOBiLE Ho~;-R~;~~;-, :
acres of fenced pasture and
plumbmg and heating. Phone "
woods. Old bern and house.
- 992·SBSB
....__ _· _ _ _ _ ..,. _ _ -+- .
BUILDING LOTS - Five
ElECTRONIC T V. CLINIC , New, '
Points area ond Syracuse.
T.V. shop . Electronic T.V Chnict
MINERALS -136 acres In
Service calf. $5.95. Color, 8 &amp; W
Lebanon township
ante-nna systems stereos , etc ·
NEW
LISTING
572 South Third, M1ddlepor\ ,
Wonderful3 bedroom home
Phon~t ~~- 6306 . Carry m anC,
wllh large living thai has a
save money ,
1
,,
wood burrylng flreplac~. ' HOWERY AND MARTIN ...-e,. ,
Kllchen has dlshwBcsher,
cavatmg, septic system 1 '
dbl . sink, disposal!. and·
do~:e-r , backhoe-, dump truck ' :
breakfut nook , full
limestone, gro.,.el. blacktoP
basemen1 and large lot;
~vlng r Rt. 1.43. Phone I (61.t) '

""'·?1.,!2,.

Braun 4, Search for Tomorrow 8,10

1 oo-Gong Show 3. All My Chi ldre n 6,13 ; News 8:
' Young &amp; the Restless 10. Not for Women Only 15
1 31f-Days of Our Loves 3,4,15 , Family Feud 6,13; As
The World Turns e, 10.
2·110-$20,000 Pyramid 6,1 3
2·3!f-Doclors 3.4,15 , One Llle lo Live 6.13 . Guiding
Light 8.10
0
3·oo-Another World 3,4,15. All In The Family 8.1 ;
On Ag rng 20.
·
3 15-General Hospotal 6,13.
3 31f-Match Game 8,10, Li lras Yoga &amp; You 20.
4·oo-M1ster Cartoon 3; L1t1le Rascals 4; Gpng Show
15 Mickey Mouse Club 6; Lucy Show 8; Sesame St
20,33 Movre "Paper Man " 10. Dinah 13.
' 30.:.Mv Three Sons 3. Part~ldge Family 4;
l:mergency One! 6. Part ri dge Family e, Fllnl·

Great Performances 33 ; Soundstage 20 . ,

1O:Oif-Tales of the Unexpected 3,4,15; Charlie s Angels
6,13; News 20
•o 3!f-Monlage 20.
11 ·olf-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13, 15; MacNeil -Lehrer Report
33 , Monty Python's Flying Circus 20.
..
11 ·3!f-Johnny Carson 3,4,15: Rookies 6,13; Movie A
Matter ot Wife .. .and Oealh.'' 8; Mary Hartman 10;
ABC News 33.
12 O!f-Movle " Our Man Flint" 10; Janakl 33.
12· 4!f-Mystery ofthe Week 6.13.
1·oo-cTomorrow 3,4
2·10:..N.ews 13.
·Channel Five

7 oo-Paul Gaudino Fam ily Fllness
7 3!f-Rrple at PPHS Basketbal l
10 ·31f-700·Club

"?J:::;;::;J;~:;~~~. 32 tuffet
"Sal ii
.

~

do~:er ,

Divorce Court 8

12 3!f-Lovers &amp; Friends 3,15; R,yan's Hope 6,13, Bob

name

5232 .

room house, 5 bedrooml,
kitchen, living room. beth.
Barn and 2 sheds.
$31,666.00.
NEW LISTING - Large ·
lot, 3 bedrooms. sewing
room or den. Nice living

LjOU kin
use his~

I

SEWING MACHINE Repairs , ser· ·
v1ce oil makes 992-2284 . The
Fabnc Sho.p . Pomeroy : 1
Authonzed Si11ger Sales and ,
Serv1ce We sharpen Sciuon., ,

~-

8,10 ; M 1ke Douglas 13

10·31f-Hollywood squares 3,4,15,
11 .0Q-Whee l ot Fortune 3,4 ,Jl , Double Dare 8,10;
Mornong with D J 13 ; Elec. Co 20
11 ·3!f-Shoot lor the Stars 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6,13.
Love ot Life e.10 , Sesame S 20,33
11 55-CBS News e. Ms Flxll 10
12 o!f-News 3,4,6, 10; Don Ho 13; Name That Tune 15;

Several readers have asked
us of a two bid JS forcmg to
game. The answer 1 S that 1t
should be with a new partner ,
but an established partnershrp
should play so that, 1f opener
merely rebods to three of his

(For

.

Mike Doug las 10
9 3!f-Cross W•ls 3, Edge ot Night 6; Concentration I.
10 O!f-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4,15. Dinah 6, Price Is Righi

21 Mole's
QUins 12 wds I
equal
H Before
12 wds )
I~ It follov. s
28 Mushroom
6 Anagram
prmle11tps
29 ~·renclo
of era
16 Part of
11ver
crown
7 Felt, old
H S.V P.
30
Young eel
23
Short
style
17 Paont
34
Ca111pus
operaiH'
8 Tooth
19 Peoo Gynt 's
song s
off1 c1al
9 Fasluon
moUie1
24
Tower
~
P1lo!'s
11 Eueharost
20 Oxfonl tu~or
of
tcc
abbrevia·
plate
21 Sooux
26 ' Sh1p 's
tion
13 Shade of
22 On~mal
"ears"
37
Cafe b1ll
yellow
..,..-,,.......,.~:-r;;-,
ktller
24 Prophet
25 Table scrap 1:-::--t-+-t26 Mount, as
a gem
27 Greek
nickname
Z8 Esprit do
corps
' 31 "Three
Stooges"

Papa sal}

plumbing and heating. No 1ob
loa large or too small Phone ,

•

h1re manne-

•

-..~

SNOW BOUNO, LEAVE
US YOU~ WORRI~S. AND
Go soyTH. •

'.

•

REMODELING , Plumb1ng, heat ing
and all types Of general repoit ~
Worio; guaranteed 20 years e ~ ·&lt;
penance. Pho11e 992 ·2409

-

be needed for a notrump

with cargo
I Mmeo's
quest

eg
12 Place lo

3825.

------

6·15-Farm Report 13
6' 21f-Nol tor Women Only 13
6 3!f-AG.USA 4, !'jews 6; Sunr ise Semester 8,
Christopher Closeup 10.
6·45-Mornlng Reporl 3.
6.5!f-Good Morning , West VIrginia 13 .
6·55-Good Mornrng, Trl Sate 13.
7,oo- TodaY 3,4,15; Good Morning, America 6, 13; CBS
News 8. Chyck White Reporls 10
7 os-Porky Pig 10.
7· 30-Schoolles 10
8.oo-Howdy Doody 6; Capl Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame
St 33.
8·30-Biq Valley 6
9:110-Ph il Donahue 4,13,15, AM 3, Andy Griffith 8;

2 !Jean
Martm' s
"Thai's .. "
3 Heav)

1J P&lt;-Jtel fannh.as,

'{OV A ~IJJK!

-~

SEPTIC TANKS cleaned
Sanitation , CXI2 -3954

This Space
For Your Ad

CJ)f..(fi Oil ''L' "~ 6UL/

ELWOOD flOWERS REPAIR .!_
Sweepers , toasters, iron ~. cilt ,
sma ll applia11 ces Lawn mower! 1
next to Slate Highwa1 Gara~ :
on Route 7. Phone- (614) 98St.

--------------·
Modern
--------------WILL do" roof1ng . construction

carport, and garden

5 1-, oundalwn
10 Actor
Sharof

BORN LOSER

BRADFORD , Aucl1oneer, Com·
plete ServiCe Phone 949 2-487
or 949·2000. Roclne , Ohio, Cntt
Bradford

-·.

about that possibility. He also
realized that while nine trtcks
would be one short for a spade
game, that was all that would

llOWN
I Streltli
or run

1 HcadwL'al
of sorts

J!"mi}Ue••.Seni.,cea ~ _ ' •

-·

WEDNESOAY , FEBRUARY 2,1977
6·()()-Sunrise Semester 10.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

·=--=- :

__::;_:_.;;,..:;;:_·~-

rEA FORD
room,

328 MiiifSireel
Pl. lllenant
Ph. 675-3469
9:30-5 :0o Dally
Tll!8 1!19.0 ~rlday_• _

INCOME TAX Service, Wallace
Russell ,
Bradbury .
Coil

suit Had North rebid to three
spades as 99 out of 100 players
would , South would have pass·
ed and North would have
made exactly three spades.

~

r-or soiJ, cnatr ~st ons, t
mattresses, poddin,. Ideal I
for campers. Vartely of ,
sizes.
Velvets. nylon prints. ,
herculons, vinyl solids, and

SEW ING ALTERAT I ONS 1
Upholstcrtng .
drape~
reosonable 572 South Th.rd
laney prints, accessories.'
Ave , Middleport . Pho ne 1
992 bJ()6
I

992·3457

RIVER VIEW - 3 large
bedrooms, batH , dining

Pass

partner 's two-spade bid was

No Sunday Calls Pte..e
1-30·1 mo

2 STORY fOUR Bedroom bnck

FOR SCHOOl Sewtng Mach ines,
Smgers, feotunng bullanhaht,
blind hem sews on knits .
$31 50 cosh or terms . Phone

3 N T Pass

In its ongmal concept a two·
bid was unconditionally for·
ctng to game unless you
stopped to double an adverse
bod
lt dtdn 'I take long for ex·
perts to see that a hand one
tnck short of game would not
make game opposote a bust,
and the experts started playmg that of the two bodder
m~rely reb1d hts own suit
after a bust two·notrump
response . the responder could
pass .
Sou th' s [Jespon se to his

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860

windows. 33 yurs actual

home · m M•ddleport

Pass
Pass

By Oswald &amp; James Ja cob}

Vinyl &amp; Aluminum
Siding,
Storm
Windows
&amp;
Insulation.
Call Prof•·•ionals

'EC.ONOLINE HOME
INSULATION, INC.
1815 Washington Blvd.
Belpre, Phone 1614) 4237564 day, or 992-603t

992·7228
-·.

Norlh Eas1 South
2A
Pass 2 N T

Opemng lea d - 5 ""

1-9-771 mo.

992-5~4·~ --·--- - --- --·

LOOK TRIMI Take Alginttl diet
3 AND A AM furnished and IJn·
p1on and Aquavop "water pills"
furnished opts Phone 992·
VIllage Pharmacy . 271 N. 7nd
~--~

all elec , I acre , M1ddleport,
close to Rutland Phone 992 l

-·- --- -- -- --29 GALLON FIS H tank with stand,

949-217'1.

COUNTRY Mobile Homt Pork , At .
33, ten mil•• north of Pomeroy .
large lots w1th conc,.te patlo1.
s1dewolks, riJnners and oft

--:::::r::::;:::

Col1992·7481 .
NEW J bedr~o,..; ho~se.2-b-;~-;

843 2254

3 GUERNESY cows , 2 just fresh ,
$350 each. others $325. Phone

5.434.

M.UIIRUII

We st

$10111$.$01mT

HOMESITES for 5al., , 1 acre and
up . M1ddleport, near Rutland

NEED A
WATER SOFTENER J
OLD lumtture, 1ce bo1&lt;eS brass
bed~ . wall telephones and
ports, or complee households
Write- M . D Miller, Rt . 4,
Pome-roy, Oh1o . Coii992·77W

WIIIIIOIIS &amp;DOOIS
REPUCQIEIT

DIREct .FABRIC "SALES .

-

-

510MI

-

monutoctured housing .
Double widll &amp; madulor
'homos by Skyline &amp; Fuquo
Homes In&lt;.
1100 E. Moln 51.
I'Gmeroy. Ohio
992-7034
Hrs. I:OOo .m.
To Dusk

Financing Available

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

A-

illlfWIIo &amp; Allies

·oo-Tomorrow 3,4.

7·QO-Paul Gaudino Family Fitness
7 31f-Home Digest
8 31f-Oayl Ime
9 31f-Happy Place
10 ()()-700 Club

game. So North ratsed hts
partner's two notrump to
three
Thts was a calCulated nsk .
but not much of one It would
requore a club lead and abohty
for the defense to gather In
ftv e club trtcks for th.ree
notrump to be set.
Actually, Wost did open the
fourth best of a ftve-card club
suit, but lhe dJStrtbution of the
suit kept West from cashong
fove tricks

,- • tO 5 4':!
t 9632
o!o t08 6 2
Bot h vuln erable

hlllllaU. Seme•
l'lolociot

-

1

1.35-News 13
Channel Five

This particular North knew

WES1

Ph. l6141742·240t

(304)

---· ---

the State of Ohio , vi1 - the
s u rv 1ving spouse , the ne~et of
k1n , the beneficiar ies under
the will , and to the atlorney or
attorneys repre senti ng eny of
the aforementioned persons
Steven Eblin . Deceased ,
P ome roy , Ohio , Salisbury
TownShip , No 22 .000
Mary Eb lin , Deceased,
&amp;~
Pomeroy , Oh10 , Sa liSbu ry
1
Township . No 22 ,001
You are hereby not1fleel that
Inv entories find Ap
l;l~ the
pralsemf1'nts of the estate of
UW\.!J\!J.V the aforementioned.
deceased, late of said county,
Fob. 2, tt77
were f1led In th js Court Said
and
Ap
Generally Improved ccndlllont tnventones
pra1semt!'nls w ill be tor
aro prob-bla for you this coming hear.ng
before tl". ~~ Court on
year Your lila Is In a mora har- the 12th day of Fe bruary . 1977 ,
• monloua cycle. Many ploaunt at 10 00 o'clock A M
Any person desiring to file
dlys,lle ahead.
exceptions thereto must file
(Afl "'" on Aquarlua? Ber- them &amp;t le.,st five d8ys prior to
date set for hearing
nice Olol has written a special theG1\len
under my hand and
Aalro-Gr~ph Loiter lor "'"· For seal of sa id Cour t, thi s 29th
your copy sond 60 cents and a day of Jan t~ arv 1977 -

INtWSPAPER ENTERPR"E I.SS• 1

TO

A ut11nd, OhiO .t577S..

Kingsbury lbne
Sales Inc.
Wo handlt only 1111 bett In

Chnter, Ohio
10-17·1 mo (Pd)

_ $14~ -~.,_~'2..~ 742~~~----

On May 29 1920 Edna Moe
AVAILABLE AT R•vers•de Apls I
Wmdon become the bride of
bedrm apartment $100 per
DDIJid J (Bud) Morgan, to PLEASURE HORSES and pon•e-~ .
month 2 bedroom opts $133
th1s un1on was born , Mn .
a lso wtfl buy horse5 and
pe-r month , Equal Opportun1ty
Jacob M. (Mildred) Gaul ,
ponies Phone (614) '698·3290,
Rt 3 , Pomeroy , 0 Others
Ruth Ree11es .
_Ho~~'" ~!~~_!_!92·32?~--surv•ving are
her husband ,
RISING STAR KENNEl . B&lt;lord;ng · 2 bedroom unfurnished aport
Bud Morgan, o grandson ,
men! 1n Middleport Phone
mdoor·outdoor ru ns. Groomtng
Victor E. Gaul , Metropohs
992·3129or 992·5434
fac
il111es
will
be
dosed
from
Ill
tw o granddaughters
- . ·--- ~ -- - ~ January 16 I q77 unhl Morch 1, NICE
COMPL~TEL V furmshed 1
Mrs
lorry (Potnc•o Gaul)
1977 Our boordmg loc1lities
bedroom apartment w1th Iorge
Clay
Vps•lonh , MICk ond1
will remain open . Chesh1re- ,
pol10 , porch overlookmg r1ver
V1ck1 L
Gaul , Rt
3
Phon e (61.4) 367·0292 or
Pomeroy . Ohio .. Two great
Adults_
only_:_ ~~one~_?!~-7112.
grandd'uldren
Vtdor Jr ~ -367
----------~------and L•so Gaul , o step AKC COLLIE Pups Soble and
daughter ,
Mn
P~ r ry
white , $75 Phon11 9-49 2571 ,
(Glodys) R•ggs , Rt 3
after 4 p.m
COAL , l•mesfone, and calc1um
- --- ----- -Pome roy
0 , two step
chlonde ond calc iu m bnne for
grandchildren and the~r
dust control and spectaf ml~e mg
fom•l•es , Mrs . Nora Riggs
salt for farmers . Mom Street ,
Ea,son
Rt
3 . Pomeroy ,
Pomeroy. Ohto or phone 992Oh1o, and Mrs Joan R1ggs
3891
Johnson , Atlanta , Georg10
NOW occepllng piano students ,
A s•sler-in·low , mrs
Roy
beglnners , mtermedial~s. ad· 1971 HONDA Cl 450, 12 .000
Wmdon , Columb us, Ohto
vanced students. Call
99'2· •' m1les , s1ssv bar , crash bor5
and several n1ece s and
2270
pull back handle bars new l1re
nephews
-- -· - · ·---- - - - ·- - • - and seals , Scrambler ~•de
Eqna
was o
lifelong PERSON's BODY Shop 26 Railroad
p•pes , $650 Call949·2480
St , Midltfeport would l1ke to
- - ~ ~ ~ -me~r' of the Flatwoods
remmd customers that De-c 31 COAl for sole Open 6 days per
Un1ted Method 1st Church
we'ek and evenings For furthe r
1s the last day to take- adand was olwovs faithful in
mformotton call(614) 367·7338.
vantage of the paint jobs . all
allendonce The Flatwoods
Lod1es A1d met weekly and
over tn 1 color, $100, 2 tone A.PPL-ES, F-liZPATRiK- bRCHARO,
she looked forward to this
STATE ROUTE 689 . PHONE
S125 w1thout body work Stop
w1th greot onflcipotion She
tn or phone 985-4174 for op·
WILKESVILLE . (614)669-3785
potnlmen1
- - -·· - -en1oved the fellows hip and
- - -- - - - ' - ---- --FULLER Brush Products for sole- .
the beaiJtlful work of ctudts
NOTICE . Pratt's Meqt Mkt
Phonem 3410.
wh1ch to p1ece them was o
(Pleasanton Meat Proce~s1ng ,
fovonte hobby
She was
Inc ) Custom slaughtenng, and CAMPER ' $600. A l ~o . horut
never tdle , she loved to do
trailer $4150. Phone (614 ) 698·
pracessmg Re-to lf1 wholesale
for others, espeCially those
3290
No oppoinment necessary . Coli
of her fom•Jv
(614) 593-6655 , hour~ . 9.00 till POTATOES . C. W Proff•fl .
6 00 7 Pomeroy Road Ath&amp;ns ,
Port land
Oh1o . f'hohe

Intellectual level You'll find
something lo adapt to your preBy Ann B Watson
Dep'uty Clerk
senl needs.
CAPRICORN (Ooc. 22-JMO. 11) (2) 1, 8, 7tc
11 you're sharp enough to spot
t~em , lhere are several ways to
NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
add to your treasure chest today.
APPRAISEMENT
Be materialistic bul don't be TheAND
State of Ohio, Metts
selfish
County, Court of Common
Probate D:lvlslon
AQUARIUS (Jon. ao-M. 111 Pleas,
To the Administrator of the
You're super gooa In one-to-one estates
, to s uch of the

World War II, as example,
not one has since turned up
living. Of the 5,127 MIAs in
Korea, none have returned.
Montgomery says some V1etL!JIJJ
nam remains (perhaps 150 to
:IJJO) may be recoverable, and
should be recovered, but ahy
higher expectations are il' ,
lW)OI'Y.
.,
Sometimes, unfortunately',
the higher expectations are
nat only illusory but neediestly cruel. The League turns
every rwnor into a hope and
each scrap of non- uJr-oddrtoa-.d, otompod
tnvtlope to A1tro-Groph. P.Q.
information Into ''new Box 489, Rodlo Clllf SIIIJon, Now
eyidence.'' D1!riJ;; the Con- Yoro, N. Y, 10019. s . .uroto sso
gresslonal search, Me lor Aquorlua VOiumt 41

U~EFUL

COMPET ITIO N.. OR SOME '
STOCK MANIPULATOR.

Box21-A

At 100 Kerr St.
Pomeroy,o.
1·17·1 mo.

PROFESSIONAL

wise enough to substitute wit

way ol making beneficial things
happen tor associates.
PISCES (Fob. 20-Mirpll 10)
This could ba a very rewarding
day for you. Don'tlet any chance
to profit slip by. Those stars In
your eyes are really $ signs•

MI GHT¥

A4

NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
promising today, even though
AND APPRAISEMENT
eerty lndlcallons are gloomy. II
The State of Ohto, Metgs
should be a prolltable day II you Countv,
court of Common
keep your cool
Pleas , Probate DIVISIOn
To the Ex ec;u tor of lhe
LEO (July 23-AUIJ. 221 Your first
, to such or the tot1ow 1ng
Instinct today Is to meet force estate
a s are resid ent s of the State of
with force . Fortunately, you'll be Oh10 , viz . - th e svrv•vmg

relationships today You have a

1~15 COMPA~Y ~

'iOU SAID lT·· W6
DIDN'T, $UH~ BLIT
IF 50MEOONE K~ew

SOUTII

Many

League says Montgomery s
investigation was shallow
and insists some Of the MIAs
may still be alive.
Tbe evidence is absolutely
coritrary to the League's pos1tioo. • Of the 6,0M MIAs in

51695

IN LOVING Mt~-mory of James P
Smder wko passed away 7 yrs
ago, Feb 1. 1970
Days and years may all go by ,
But lovmg memones will ne..,er

Hartman 10; ABC News 33

12 .oo-Movle 'The Go. Between" 10; Janakl 33 .

Forcing two bid has brakes
· TH,qT IN FO COULD S t:

Located In Langsville

614-992-2798

Sport-a-bout wagon , clean interior, good tires, radio. 6
cylinder, al,ltomatlc transmission

s po use , th e next of kin. the
bene f•c 1aries und er the w•ll
and humor.
and to the attorney or at
Montgomery's Congressional VIRGO (AUIJ. 23-Sopt. 22) The torneys represenling any of
staff says the group ' 1haS
harder you strive to have fun, the the aforementiOned persons
Ame l 1a
M
Baue r .
become a bureaucracy, and less It's tlkely you will Relax, flow De ce as ed , Pomeroy Oh1o ,
events and have aver; plea· S a lisbury Townsh 1p , No
You have to wonder if its main with
sant day .
7 t964
objective is to perpetuate
Yo u are hPr eby not lf•ed that
itself."
LIBRA (Sopt. 23-0ct. 23) th e Inventory and Ap
Whatever ·the League's Friends are willing to do things pra•sem e nt of the esta te of the
deceased.
for you today you ean't ae- atorement•on ed ,
motives, its influence among compllsh alone Don't buck tho la te o1 said County , was ftled
1n thiS Court Sa1d Inv ent ory
MIA families remains strong. tide when help Is yours for the and
AppraiSemen t )~Jlll be for
It is now particularly influen- ..asking
hearin g before th1 S Cou rt on
day of Febr uar y, 1977 ,
tial among' MIA parents, who SCORPIO (Oct. 2•-Nov. 22) atht e 1012th
oo
o'c lock A ~
see it as their difference bet- Your Inner fortllude today won't Any person
des inn g to f de
ween hope and no hope.
be evident until tho gauntlet Is exceptions th ereto mu st Ide
WIVes have dropped out of the thrown down Your reaction lo a them at least f•ve days pnor to
date se t for h eenng
League, while others slay on- challenge will surprise even you. theGiven
und e r my hand and
ly tp avoid arguments with 8AGITTARIUI (Nov. 23-Dec:. seat of sa •d Court , lh 1S 29th
1977
·~
ts ho f t 21) You 're a fast learner today, day of J anuary
Mann ing 0 Webster
uoose Pl'ren w re use 0 so assocoate with thcioe on a high
Judge

,

MODERN CHEMtt::ALI

brakes.

CAPTAIN EASY
' 'IOU TI'IO
ARE
t MPLVr ~ e THEI'&lt;fe
MAV BE' ~ ~py t~

Sautlleastill'l'Ohill
Truss Raftar Co.·

Phone

Local 1 owner car. black vinyl ' roof. green Interior,

--

11 Bernoce

8, 10 , Copland on America 20,33 .

8 3!f-Laverhe &amp; Shirley 6, t3

ANY PITCH
. ANY SIZE

REFINISHING &amp;
UPHOLSfERIN.G

52995

197j AMC HORNET

8 QO-Cotlege Basketball 3; Happ y Days 6.13; College
Baskelba ll4, Baa Baa Black Sheep 15 , Who's who

WIN AT BRIDGE

brakes, rally wheels, redlo. black and very attractive.
.

TIJESDAY. FEBRUARY I, 1977

Business Ser'l'ic~

'$399.

197lCAPRICE40R. HT

9·0Q-R ich Man. Poor Man 6.13 . Pollet Woman 15;
Mash a. to .
9 31).-{)ne Day at a Time 8, 10; Anyone for Tennyson?
20; World War I 33
·
10 oo-Pollce Story M .l5 , Fam ily 6, 13; Kojak 8,10;
News 20 , Decades of Decision 33.
10 31f-Biack Perspective on the News 20.
11 oo-News 3,4,6,8,10, 13,15, MacNeil Lehrer Report
33.
11 · 31f-Johnny Carson 3.~. 15; Movie " I Walk the Line"
6,13. Mov ie "Thai Certain Summer" 8; Mary

6;
Match Game PM 8 • ..Mac Neil Lehrer Report 20 JJ ·
In Tpe Know 10, Wild Kingdom 13, TV Hdno~
Soc tet y 15

Classic, 350, V-8, automatic, power steering and

in fact knew nothing more
than the color of his beer and so another family was
left with still another disaP'
pointment.
Montgome~y says the '
disappointm'l!lts have been
rept'ated enough. Some wives
have tried to escaPe by taking
secret new h.isbands. Some
families have become so
emotionally confused they
refuse to identify returned reEac aCidiflonal word 3
cen ts.
mains. Sufi~ for many is
BLIND ADS
well into its second decade.
Additional 25c Charge
p~r Advertisement
It's time to bring it to an end.
OFFICE HOURS
The League of Families Is
8,30 am to soo pm
Dally, 8 . 30 a .m . to 12 .00
perpetuating irrationality;
Noon Saturday .
the conclusion is harsh but
Phone today 992 .,2156
accurate.

the mud," and wishes the
League Of Families would

·'I

or

Television log for easy vi~wing

BOARD

1.3!J-Holl ywood Squares 3,4; Let's Deal with If

l

omeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS

/IIILL , O~R

MAS ·a~E N REVIEWING OUR
TV COMMERCIALS.
VOU HAVe A GREAT
TALENT IN THAT
GIRL . PERFUME.

BEL.L.I£::5 QUIT~- r---,

'

.

DAI~Y CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to· work It:

j

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I LIPTQ

A X Y D I. B A A X R
I. 0 N G F I! •• L 0 w

Ia

Unscramble these four Jumbles
one letter to each square, to form
lour ordmary worOs .

-'-+--t--i

·

-

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....J.::..K

Ll

One letter simply stands ror another In this sample A Is
used for the three I.'s, X fo r the two O's, etc Single letters, r-t-:S::"C-::-"Q:::"':F::"I::"H:-,

or

apostrophes, the length and (ormatmn

hints. Eac~ day the code loiters are dlft'er&lt;nt
CRYPTOQ\JOTES
MAYBE I CAN
MON lAWN :3,

v:.·"t::S:~::-· -·

NOTBOGOODr

NC

&amp;TAN . :3HE'.S IN
WOR5E&amp;HAPE
1HAN DONNAZ I

CLEAN OUT

&amp;OM EON f?'8

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BASEMENT

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Gil
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BONA

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MIISHi HAVE !!IESN
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CON61DER'ED AN UN •
1.:-~&lt;L-L.-L"-"'--'-·--'· SOUND 'TYPE OF

the words are aii 1

17

JDZP

N

tGUNSLY

UF

UDI--

I KKU

IH

Or.&gt;ATIIC ...

M H A P K Z C E S . - UN V J -K S D A B K S H

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ENiER'TAINMENi.
Now •••11111 tho circled llflttd by the oiJovo cortoon.

to

lorm the surprise answer, u aug·

if:( XIII XJ[XXX
IJ
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I

Yesterday'• Cryptoquote: A MAN CAN NEVER BE A TRUE
GENTLEMAN IN MANNER UNTil. HE IS A TRUE GENT- Yestarday ,s Jumbles · CRACK SIEGE GRUBBY PARODY
Answet" ' In man~ casea they're cut off
LEMAN. AT HEART. - CHARlES DICKENS
lrom man-BEARDS •

t

·'

BARNEY

t ,.
·~'
'

'

GLORY BE!!

I{

1

TH' CATFISH
ARE 81TIN'

LiSTEN TO THE

SWAP SHOP.

DOWN AT
DRIBBLE.

I'

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- -,

&lt;;:REEK~!

'

·7 PM - ·WMPO • 92.1 FM
92 -in the
•

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:-----.----~

,

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�·----1
----------------------.

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

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

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

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

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

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

See all
the

·NEW·

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

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

Monday a1 her

In

Syracuse.

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

was a member of 1he
Syracuse Church of the

survives. Also. sYrvlvlng are

Nazarene.
Surviving are her husband.

and Happy, Mount Vernon.

Ernest ; two sons, Ernest Lee

Natnral gas

'

the cash fast, and our low

bank

rateS will save you money• . .maybe

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

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

any time.

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

Burley

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

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

MEIGS THEATRE
CLOSED FOR

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

WATCH FOR
OPENING DATE

._.,..J

THE INN PLACE ..
Wednesday Night Special

"THE

ATI

French Fries
Coffee, Tea "'r Milk

We~nesday .

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

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

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

BARGAIN DAYS SALE

Children's Dept.,

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

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

'

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

DIEHL IN HOLZER .

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

Winter coats, winter hats, dresses.

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

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

'
REPORT OF CONDITION
,,

..

Consolidating domestic subsidiaries ~f the
' .

1

\-

"'

,._ •

J .•

r

•

HOME.NATIONAL BA.N K ..:: •

Miss Perrin ~s
_;

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

- - , . - - Statement of Resources and Liabilities

Thousands

--

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

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

-:::....
.-.

~.

THE MEIGS INN

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

992-3629

·

.,

VOL. XXVII NO. 204

.

r

, FEBRUARY 2
.,

•

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

'

..

lt\1JJ
OGDAY

'•

,,

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

i

•
!•

•

I

1

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

... ibortlle

In the Maaon

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

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

•

' POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

to eo lf polllble.

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

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

entine

at y

·
.
Elder IYmay
call for aid

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

·•

Freeland S. Norris

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

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

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

2

J. W. Weaver, Jr.- Directors

FAmt PERRIN

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

National Bank Region Nwnber 4

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

e

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

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

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

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

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

~ACINE

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

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

STORE tOURS:

.

' I

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

'

MIOilEPORT. OHIO .
DIPOSITS INIUIID TO •40.000

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

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

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

Vlsll Our Salad Bar
Sea Food Platter

Plus Tax

M1111ber Fedentl Depidit Insurance t;OrpOratilr

at the funeral home any time

after 2 p.m . Wednesday. The

Weather

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

FRIENDLY BANK"

.

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

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

~·~

,

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

and

several cousins. He was

!Awe.

,probed, no
one injured

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

,.

-+-

-

lltbens lfatior.al

grandchildren,

Two mishaps

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

counties.

DEPEND ON US FOR ALL BANKING
•
N,EEDS

••

sl~

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

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

two sons. Robert of Athens.

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

VACAnON

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

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

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

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

home

J

I

WEDNESDfiY, FEBRUARY 2, 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

nearest Ohio Power office/'

"The vital role proper in·

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

sulation plays in this con·
servation effort caMot be

the company's customers

overemphasized .''

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

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

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

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

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

Three guilty pleas taken
in arraignments by court

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

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

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

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

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