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Area Deaths !Load limits

:• · ·Tile~ Seallllll. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., W~ntsday, Feb. 2,1977

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

I
1

State Institute, he was born
Qc:t. 2~. 1921 in GClil ipons to

husband, Onnle, formerly of

Langsvlll.e, and a son. Dorsey
Jarrett France.
·
Surviving
are
five
daughters, Mr$. · Louise
Templeton, Huntington, with
whom Mrs, France- made her
home ; Mrs. June Douthat,
Tampa, Fla. ; Mrs. Lillian
Chapman, Mobile, Alabama ;
' Mn. John (Oorma Dean)
• Utterback. Flemingsburg,
Ky., and Miss Clara Jean
France, Mlddlep&lt;H't; o son.

Wallace Funeral Home In
. Barboursville, W. Va .. with

the Rev. Bill Davis and the
Rev . Mr. Wickline officiating.
Burial will ba in Oeklawn
Cemetery at Barbounvllle.
Friends may colt ot the

' funeral home this afternOOI'!·
,..

....---..
Our Interest Is
Greater For You

:~

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:

pen111tw;

Columbus .

icing on the Ohio River which

One

brother

war 11.

gasoline outpu t in barges

· Funeral arrangements will
be announced by the Wa ugh ·

ha ve decreased

He wa.s a veteran of Worlc;f

her husband , Clark Jividen ;
four brothers and one sister .
A member of the Racin e

Methodist Church. the ·Happy

Hustlers Sunday School Class
and a 50-year member of th e

Order

of

Eastern

Star

Charles J ividen , Athens , one

is

accounts withdr•wn prior
to the d11te of m•turity .

g~s oline

deliveries to tank loads over
lrlalley-Wood Funeral Home. the highways. The situation is
further complicated by the
fact that continuing winter
storm
s have delayed .the
. LILLIAN M. JIVIDEN
movement
of tank trucks.
RACINE - Li lli an M.
Ashland Oil of Kentucky
Jividen , 79 , Ra cine , d ied
J:uesday In Al&amp;any .
told ODO T tha t Friday's
Mrs. Jividen was born Aug . storm caused a backlog of 700
15, 1897 to the late Robert a nd
Sarah Jane Burt Gorslin . She loads at its operations. An
w"asalso preceded in death by average load is 7,500 gallons.

is survived by a son , Dr .

certificate

o

storage facilities . Tra nsporta ~ion delays caused by

CertHicates

~II

emergency in Ohio.
Restrictions on fuel oil
loads have been eased for
more than two weeks, but
petroleum producers in Ohio
and adjoin ing states say
productionoffueioilhasbeen
held up because back logged
gasoline stocks are tyine up

Spencer, Gall ipolis ; Bill y,
Tucson, Ar iz., and Herman ,

daughter . Mrs . Otis Mc CIIhtock , Racine ; lwo

A subS:fintial

grandsons , Thomas Ji vi den ,
Cape Coral , Fla .; John

McClintock , Racine ; tw o

granddaughters ,

Ellen

Jividen , 01icago, Ill .; Mrs

larr'J: Wiles, Racine ; seven
.great -grandchildren ; two
sisters-in-law ,, Edith Jivi den.
M iddleport
and • Grace
Jividen , Racine, one niece .
and three newphews .
Funeral services w ill be
Friday, 2 p.m . at f he Racine
Methodist Chur:ch wi th the
Rev . Timothy Smith of ficiating . Buria l will be in
Wells Cemetery . Fr ien d s
may call at Ewing Funeral
Home after 7 lhis evening
until noon on Friday .

The Athens County

Savings &amp; Loan Co .
296 Stttnd St.

Pamerov , Otllo

~
~

I '

grand -

On 90-0ay

invoked on

•.

one

gasoline have ~ been raised

ca rries the bulk of the

5.7 S per cent paid on
90 day Certificates of

.

five tons temporarily t o
alleviate
the
-heating

Chapter No. 134. Racine, she

, Deposit. Sl.OOO.OO
· Minimum. . Interest
Payable Quarter! y.

Tr ansportation

preceded him in dea th .

5.75% .

'

State

Now you know
Although cultivated by the
ll.rabs as early as 600 A.D. ,
coffee was•not widely known
in Europe until 1650 or in
North America until about 20
years later.

TJIE·INN PLACE
Thursday Night Special

The produce rs sa id increas ing the load limits··wilJ

help to move out the gasoline
so that fu el oil producti on can

be continued. Ashland Oil,
whi ch supplies 35 to 40 percent of its production to Ohio,
told ODOT that an increase of
about 17 percent in the load
limit would allow an increase
of 20,000 barrels a day over
the 70,000 barrels norma llY
moved out by tank truck.
Director Weir said tank
load limits on both fuel oil and
gasoline are. being allowed to
go from 80,000 to 90,000
pounds on issuance of a

special overload permit. He
sa id the situation will be
reviewed at the end of each,

week fu r the duration of the
emergency.

••
RAW COURAGE
DALLAS (UP! ) - The
president of the Adolph Coors
Company edged out the wife
of golfer Lee Trevino to win
Ute annual Bonehead of tbe
Year Award .
William K . "Bill" Coors
will accept the award FridaY.
for his company's new press
tab beer cans . ..
JoU!ing Coors will be !he
runnerup, Claudia Trevino,
who disrupted her husband 's
professional g~ifing plans in
1976 bv asking him to move a
potted plant - a chore that
left him with back trouble .
Brad Angers, Bonehead
award chairman, cited Coors'
raW courage" in hitting the
market with a beer can tab
dr inkers "couldn't rip off and
· toss away. ...This is the
Bonehead process working in
the tr adition t)la t makes
America great. "
11

'
VIsit Our Salad Bar
Baked Steak
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gra'i'Y
Vegetable
Hot Rolls
Coffee, Tea or ,.Milk

"

••
"

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$295
.
.

Plus Tax

THE MEIGS INN

t

Pomeroy, Q,
Phone 992-6304
Pl;lZA SHACK Phone 992·6304

992-3629 '

"

MEIGS THEATRE
CLOSED FOR
VACATION
WATCH FOR
OPENING DATE

••

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of

interstate

•

JAMES SCHLESINGER;
the new admlDlstration's
energy czar, bas rua into
fire from conservation
interests. Critics are
concerned that the former
Defense sec~tary and CIA
director, wbo. bas a
reputation for toughness,
may push development of

new energy resources
without regard to the effect
·on the elvironmenl.

OHIOAN NAMED
WASIUNGTON (UP!)
Rep. Chalmers P. Wylie, R·
Ohio, has been named to the
Joint Committee on Defense
Production .
House Speaker Thomas P.
O'Neill · selected Wylie
Tuesday .

OHIOANS VOTE
WASHINGTON "-l ilPI )
The vote by which the House,
on a 367 to 52 roll call,
approved Its version of an
emergency natural gas bill
Tuesday:
· Voting for were 258 Demo.
crats and 109 Republicans.
Voting against were 24
Democrats
and
28
Republicans.
Ohlo1 10 Democrats, 13
Republicaas
Democrats for : "'shley,
Carney, Luken, Mottl, Oakar,
Pease, Seiberling, Stokes, ·
Yanik,
Republicans for: Ashbrook,
Brown, Devine, Gradison;
Guyer, .Harsha, Kindness,
Latta, Miller, Regula, J.
William Stanton, Whalen,
·Wylie.

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RIB
STEAKS

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,,

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t'roouce
Specials

c
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l

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Rich N'"Ready

ORANGE
1p?:s~~~n
DRINK............................

LB. ·~_ 39

I

· BettyZane

·

SMOKED

~\ '

PICNIC

~

HAMS

J

t

1
~

10

lb. $}

.

..

billlon cubic foot deficit in
naturalgassuppliesforhome
owners and hwnan needs
customers by March 31.
However, gas suppliers
have said there should be
enough gas for residences
lllrough the winter season if
conservation and some
curtaihnents are continued.
Rhodes also asked U.S.
Agriculture Secretary Robert
Bergland
to
declare
"emergency condiitions" for

Ohio'sfoodstampprogramto
help rural families obtain
food when they are evacuated
from their homes.
The state Development Deperbnent said today Carter's
declaration Wednesday night
of a weather emergency for
Ohio will give the state
immediate federal aid to help
reopen vitsl supply routes to
agricultural educational
goverrunentai, commercial
and
industrial
establishments.
Rhodes said Carter could
declare a natural gas
emergency in Ohio under
terms · of the newly passed
Emergency Natural Gas Act
of 1977.
A
spokesman
in

Three m8keup games set
tonight, Friday, Saturday
U there's enough fuel to keep pipes from freezing who cares aholll the people? -and if present plans bold
up, the red hot Mara.uders will host three league
opponents tonight, Friday and Saturday.
Coach Ron Logan has indicated Waverly (34, .f-7)
comes l&lt;l RockSprinp tonlgbt, league leadiug Logan (7·1,
10.1) plays at Meigs Friday night and Saturday. Dlght it
will be Wellston (1-5, 1-9) coming ID.
The Marauden, rldlDg a streak of four straight wlas,
all in the upset category, are soUdly in third place of the
Soutbe.R8Iern Ohio Coaference, f-3 lD the league and 5-4
overaU.
The reserve game start at6 tpoigbt and at 6:30p.m.
Friday and Soturday.
Wear plenty of winter clothing, as the g)m will oot be
beated.

•,
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VOL XXVII

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49e

S lb. bag

e

"59

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MOVING AHEAD FOR SUMMER
THE HARD WAY
- R&lt;iy Young, employed by Roger Hornsby who has the
coritract to erect the Syracuse Swirnmin@ Pool, is laying
water line inside the bath house Wednesday. Young said
he had to use a jack hammer oo dig up the ground to lay
the lines as the ground is frozen over two feet deep.

4 Way Diai·A·Nap to clean any carpet

~~"ll~fai

from lowest nap to shag-edge cleaner
-removable disposable dust bag

United Press International
COSHOCTON, OHIO - POUCE, FIREFI~liTERS ,and
National Guardsmen dynamited· the Muskingwn R1ver
Wednesday in their search for the body of a 12-year-old boy,
believed drowned alter falling through the ice-coated river.
Gregory Scheetz and a 14-year-old classmate, Mark Madison,
were walking on the Muskingum Tuesday looking for
~clmena for a science fair project when the ice gave way and
both boys !ell-into the freezing water.
·
·
Madison managed oo scramble to shore and run a quarter
mile _,his clothes freezing to his body - to a downtown
ambulaii~ station. He told police he had last seen his friend
clinging to ~ piece of ice.

lncludee deluxe
attachment,.

gge
Plus tax &amp; deposit

OPEN.
9 til 7
Mon.-Sat.
10 "til 5
Sunday

WUISVD..LE, KY. - MOVING SLOWLY BUT steadily, a
group of 30 tows !elided with critical· fuel supplies were
successfully negotiating the i~o~~trewn Ohio River, leading the
way for a resumption of regular barge traffic on the waterway.
"There is no reason why they can't make it the rest of the way
up to Piltlburgh," said Martin Pedigo, a spokesman for the
Army Corps of Engirieers. "The barges moving upatream
seem to be doing pretty well."
He said the 30oows, each pulling about 10 barges, had moved
tlpatream of Uniontown, Ky. Wednesday, hea~lng on toward
Louisville. Pedigo explained that of the 300 barges, tiP-&amp; were
loaded with fuel oil, ao carried coal, 2().25 had rock salt and the
rest were tr81Ulporting grain, chemic~ and other
commodlties.
WASHINGTON THE FOOD ANll DRUG
Administration proposed today oo ban the coun~·s most
widely used lood coloring -Yellow No. 5 - In ~rtam drugs,
wt not In food. Foods containing the dye, it ~d, shquld be
labeled to alert persons of possible allergic reactions. Tbe
.Uergy occurs mostly among a small percentage of thoee
persons who alao are allergic to aspirin.
·
· ·
The dye would be banned outright in five types of non' preiiCI'iptlon dnJga '- pain relleven, antiblstamlnes, coughcold remedies anti-asthmatic drugs and . oral nasal
deroriges&amp;anta. Oilier truga, still allowed to use the coloring.
would have to state on their labels: ''This product contains
FD&amp;C Yellow No. 3which may cause allergic-type reactions in
certabi iiiiCtpllble people."
COLUMBUS, OlllO- LAWJIEI':ICE FRIEND, a SZ.year·
old machine operator whO is not making TV tubea this. week
becallll the Owena·fillnois plant here has closed due oo the
naiural ps ~ortage, listelll!d hard Wednelday night .wben
J'relldlnt' Carter begaq talking about unemployment and
welfare lind tu reform.
Friend IBid carter's words were reasaurlng. Hia wife,
Wilda, 1gned, adciing, "We both voted for Carter and I feel
now like he's reaUy going whelp the country. He's what we
need· to br1JC Ute country out,of this unemployment and the
situation we're in." .
.
• .
"I liked ti!JI part abolll refonnllll the tax sltuatio~,"
(C.tlmled on pqe 10)

COllAGE
CHEESE
24 oz.

gas supply problems.
Wednesday while Cincinnati
"We must proiect people in Gas &amp; Electric Co. said its
their homes and provide cutback to large users would
them the help they need even be extended until Feb . 12.
if we have to make a major In addition , CG&amp;E
reallocation for natural gas announced 30 per cent
now used for industrial curtailments to small,
I'JI'poses in other stales," nondomestic users.
said Rhodes .
The earllec curtailments
The shutdojVIl of Utousands were scheduled to be lifted at
of Ohio factories, schools, 8 a.m. Saturday.
churches and business
All illree utllltes said the
continues, meanwhile. Three additional cutbacks were '
of the states's leading natural necessitated by curtailments
gas companies say they will instituted by their supplier .extend a nearly 100 per cent Columbia Gas transmission
curtailment
to large Corp.
industrial and corrunercial
East Ohio Gas Co . of
users until next week.
Cleveland said it would
Columbia Gas and Qayton decide later this week
Power &amp; Light Co. extended whether to continue a
Uteir cUtbacks to a a.m. . sh utdown of its large

a1 y

POM EROY·M IDDLEPORT, OHIO

10

•

industrlal customers. Eut
Ohio's curtailment to maintenance levelli was scheduled to
end Friday.
In other energy . rna ttera
Wednesday, the state
Development
Department
reported about 1.5 million
Ohioans temporally laid off
because of the energy crlJis
while the Ohio Manufactuers
Association said 4,500 of the
state's 16,000 plants had been
forced to close.
John M. Stackhouse, state
director qf agrirulture, asked
the U.S.' Agriculture Department to survey Ohio counties
to determine if disaster relief
is warranted for rural areas
because of the severe
weather.

•

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enttne

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1977

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Carter wore ·a sweater, slacks and tie as he delivered the
chat seated before a wood-burning fireplace in the White
House Family Library.
Noting his signing of the Emergency Natural Gas Act a few
moments earlier, Carter said he would propose creation of a
Department of Energy later this month and ~ comprehensive
energy program around April 20.
He will ask Congress this week, he said, for a bill allowing
him to start ~organizing the federal goverrunent. He said the
administration already is · reviewing the 1,250 advisory
committees and commissions to see how many can be abolished.
He said he has asked his Cabinet to follow his lead at the
White House in cutting the number of top staffers by a third ,
and that he will put a ceiling on tbe number of persons
employed by federal agencies.
"Government officials can't be sensitive to your problems if
we are living like royalty here in Washing Inn," Carter said,

recalling·his decision to eliminate limousine service for his
staff and other officials.
.
Carter said he was "determined to have a strong, Jean,
efficient fighting force, " ·and added ''I want our nation's
actions to make you proud."
"We will continue to express our concern about violations of
human rights , as we have during the last week, without
upsetting our efforts ooward friendly relations with other
countries/' Carter said.
'
He referred to the controversial State Department statements about Czechoslovakian liberties and Soviet disaident
Andrei &amp;jkharov, but again, he did not name them directly.
Carter said !bat during his brief time in office he has learned
there are "many things" a President cannot do.
.
"There is no energy policy that we can develop that would do
more good than voluntary conservation," he said . "There is no
economic policy that will do as much as shared fai th in hard
work, efficiency and Ute future of our system."

Schools to stay
open this week

YOU SAVE '29.95

FOOD.STAMP
SHOPPERS
I
.

.

7 billion cubic feel is needed
oo meet the needs of Ohio's
residential and other prio~ity
one customers to prevent
serious outages in Ohio."
The deficit was calculated'
from figures supplies
Rhodes' office by II of tbe
state's 32 natur~l gas utilities
responding to · Rhodes '
request for an energy crisis
status report. '
"These calculatio ns are
based on nonnal weather
patterns," Rhodes said. " If
sub-normal weather occurs
we will need more than the 7
billion cubic feet ."
Tom Moyer Rhodes
executive assistant said he
had no idea whether the .new
federal ·act would help Ohio's

•

By WESLEY G. PIPPERT
WASIUNGToN (UP!) - In his first informal talk to the
American people, President Carter called lor a renewal of the
fighting spirit of World War II to restore a .,.nse of "common
interest" that can help solve the nation's, problems .
Carter also outlined in a "fireside cha\" Wednesday night a
vigorous agenda for cutting the number of high goverrunent
officials,' putting a ceiling on the number of goverrunent
·employes and moving to fulfill a ·host of campaign promises.
"With Ute help of my predecessor, we have come through a
very difficult period in our nation's history. But for almost 10
years we have not had a sense of a common national interest,"
'
Carter said.
Recalling the unity and spirit of World War II, he added :
"I believe we are ready for that same spirit again- oo plan
ahead, work together, and use common sense. Not because of
war, but because we realize we must act together to sol )'I! our
problems, and because we are ready to trust one another."

··•

'6495

WE WELCOME

In

Carter.asks renewed .sense of unity

'

sl9.95 ATTACHMENTS

COLA

NO. 205

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AND

CoCA

I

Washington for the Federal
Disaster Assistance
Administrtion ilaid Robert E.
Connor, the Chicago regional
director of the FDAA , has
been
named
federal
coordinating officer and will
marshall the federal relief
effort in Ohio.
At a briefing Wednesday
afternoon, the governor said
gas utilities had projected a 7
billion cubic foot deficit in
natural gas supplies for
priority one customers homeowners hospitals and
low-volume retail stores through March 31.
"It is clear that Ohio nteds
7 billion cubic feet of natural
gas not now in the utilities' ·
forecast " said Rhodes. "This

e

EUREKA $74.95
UPRIGHT SWEEPER

Broughton's

carton

·I

By JOHN T. KADY
Ualled Pn11 Inlernatlooai
President Carter declared
an
Wednesday
night
emerJ!ency exlsta in Ohio
because of the accumulation
ol lee and snow in the state
oot has not yet acted on a
request by Gov. James A.
Rhodes to declare a natural
gu emergency in Ohio.
Rhodes, In a telegram to
carter Wednesday night, said
natural gas suppliers told
him they would have a 7

SPECIAL SALE

.BOTH FOR

•

mergency .

,

Pl1TSBURGH- U. S. STEEL CORP. says it discussed
with "officials in the new administration" its latest 4.8 per cent
increase on the price of til) plate but had "no idea" whether
President Carter knew of the action beforehand. The incr~ase,
which becomes effective March 13, is on tin products used to
manufacture. beer and soft drink cans and other food
containers.
Other tin producers, such as Jones &amp; Laughlin Steel Corp .,
National Steel Corp. and Bethlehem Steel Corp, said today
Utey were "studying" the U. S. Steel price action. Industry
sources said an 8 per cent increase had been expected, and tliat
tin makers and buyers alike were surprised U.S. Steel's bOost
was lower .
U.s. Steel blamed unrecovered production costs for the
increaSe, the first on tin products since February 1976.

I

' Cross Sons Store .
vVaid
Expires Feb. 5, 1977

~

WASIUNGTON- THE.F~DEJ'tAL GOVEERNMENT has
Injected $10 million into six states to hire workers to battle
snow, ice and the energy crisis. Labor Secretary F. R:tY
Marshall said the department allocated the funds to hire
workers for snow removal fuel transportation and emergency
repairs. The funds are' being given New York, Ohio,
Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Maryland and Virginia, Marshall
said.
Marshall said Tuesday he also has imltructed state
unemployment offices in a total of 18 states to implement
emergency mass layoff procedures oo handle unemployment
insurance claims. The procedures include weekend operations
if ne~sary.
·

Pnces Effectilll Thursday lhru Sunday ,.

FLOUR

Ll.·st~

(Continued from page I)
igriculture Department says.
BU\ it may be too soon to tell if th~ shortage of hay will
i)oost meat prices later this year. Heavter rations are needed .
to help animals maintain body heal in the bone..:hilling "
weather officials noted in a weekly crop .weather report
Tuesday'.
Farmers in many parts of the nation .r"llorted hay supplies
shrinking fast," the re;loft said. James Nix, a department
livestock economist, said the tight hay supply may not rmse
prices if the winter is followed by a moist spring to improve
forage productnn.
\

09.

ORANGES
ior

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79.

Maine

ROBIN HOOD
All PURPOSE

•

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·News •• in Briefs

8-16 oz.
~ttles

US No.1

COUPON

I

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All information rqust be In
the Middleport Mayor 's office
by Monday , February 7.
Said Hoffman : "Your help •
is needed. Without the
complete cooperation of
businesses and residents, •
total damage estimates will '
oot be accurate. This will be
the only way Gov. Rhodes
will know how much damage
has been done in Ohio and will .
determine whether federal ·
assistance can be obialned."

¢ · POlATOES

Ilb.· 25~

POPCORN ................~~.~:.

•

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NASHVD..LE, Tenn. (UP! )
- Billy Carter, the beerlmrinn"i.. r,. fun-loving, downhome brother of the
president, has hired a high·
powered agent to market hi,s
''celebrltyhood.''
Tandy Rice, president of
Top Billing Inc. of Nashville,
said Tuesday Carter signed
an exclusive agreement with
him.
"We are going to represent
Mr. Carter
in
th e
marketplace - in the area of
personal appearances and
with the media," Rice said.
" If Billy Carter's not a
celebrity, then there's not a
peanut in Georgia.;,

mall.
Businesses are requested to
list any damage done plus
business hours which have
been lost due to the weather
and approximately how mur:t&gt;
business has been ,lost m
comparison with January,
1976.
-lndwllrles and'businesses
are requested to report · the
number of their employees
who have been out of work
due to the severe weather.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

USDA CHOICE

••

A STAR IS BORN

HOLLOWAY MENDING .
LAGUNA BEACH, Calif.
(UP!) -Actor Sterling Holloway. 72, has been released
from the hospital upon a
complete recovery from a
heart attack last month.
The bushy-haired, highvoiced comedian is best
known as the voice of Winnie
the Pooh lor Walt Disney and
lor playing Waldoin Ute "Life
of Riley" television series in
the 1950s.
rates
of
5
percent
or
above
be
Ohio's energy shortage is
permitted
a
5
year
variance
worsening and prospects for
the future are not bright as · as far as federal air pollution
long as we labor under severe restrictions dealing with high
winter weather conditions. sulfur coal are concerned. In
The lack of energy is not the other words, Ohio .and ot~er
result of a conspiracy or states with high unemanything as sinister as that ployment rates · would be
although some might suggest pertnitted to burn high su llur
otherwise . The plain truth is coal irrespective of the Clean
that ther~ is not an infinite 'Air Act.
Naturally I am concerned
·supply of .fossil fuels like
about
clean air and the en·
natural gas. oil, etc. We are .
vironmental
conditions of
running out because we
Southeastern
Ohio. I was
consume so much. Part of the
botn
in
Southeastern
Ohio,
shortage
prbblem
is
raised
here
and
I
know
of
our
unreasonable ' government
area's
unique
natural
beauty.
regulation and control, including artificial pride But when I see Southeastern
controls on natural gas, Ohioans out of work, when I
which inake it economically see school children cheated
impractical to produce new out of their education, when I
see rising utility bills and
supplies.
President Carter has called people shivering in cold
for federal decontrol and homes all because of an
Members of Congress, in- energy shortage , I am
cluding myself, have called determined to do aU I can
for federal decontrol. We within my power to correct
mu;1 have it to try to meet the situation.
,P,erhaps we will have a
our needs.
little
more sulfur in tlie air by
I receive letter after letter
burning
Ohio coal but after.
in my office asking this
checking
the climate of
question: why is it'when Ohio
opinion
in
the
loth District, I
needs energy to heat our
have
come
to
the conclusion
homes , our schools, our
that
we
would
rather have
places of busine.ss and we are
more
s~llur
in
the
air during
sitting on billions of dollars
the
winler
season
than risk
worth of Ohio coal, we can't
use that coal because of unemployment, school
federa l environmental closings and long term
regulations made pursuant to economic decay.
We rnust continue to seek to
the 1970 Federal Clean Air
develop less environmentally ·
Act'
I think the Sou~stern harmful energy som-ces like
Ohioans who have written to solar energy, etc. so we can
me have proposed a very strike a reasonable. balance
pertinent 'Question worthy of between environmental
11oncerns and economic
serious consideration.
Consequently, I am concerns. For the present, we
working on legislation, now in should be able to use our Ohio
the final drafting stage, that coal.
As always, I solicit y0ur
Y;ould mandate that states
like Ohio with unemployment guidance and suggestions.

Shedd's

••

Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman today requested
assistance or' businesses and
residents in assessing
damage which has occurred
In property and business
losses during the recent
sever;e storm and win ter

t&lt;ansportatlon of stolen
property Tuesday .
The FBI said McKeever
tried to sell a customers' list
belonging to Safeguard Busi·
ness Systems Inc., King of weatHer.
Prussia, Pa., to Reynolds and
Gov. James Rhodes has
Reynolds Co., Dayton, for requested
that
this
$450,000.
information he compiled and
The FBI said McKeever · forwarded to the Director of
was arrested a!IA!I' agents Disaster Services In order
found about the proposed sale 'Utat federal assistance may
''through oormal chanels.
be requested by the governor.
"There will be no other
The mayor · asks that
charges in this," said an FBI anyone having damage to list
spokesman. "It was strictly a it and approximate cost of
one-man operation."
repair . This infor.mation can
either be left at the mayor 's
Office in person or sent in by

Director , David Weir , has

GOf"don , Allan and Cynthia
Harris and Mrs . J ack
I Renee ) Pasha!. all of

daughter; brothers and
sisters, Mrs . Thompson
(Lucille) Casey . Gallipol is;
Mrs. Frank I Loretta l Digg s.
Coalton ; 'Mrs . Raym ond
(Virginia) Ra toliff. Berry·
vi lle.
Va .;
Ke~neth ,
Chillicothe ; Wen dell ,
Gallipolis; Dale, Tul sa.
Olcla.; Mrs. James {Betty)

12 grandchildren and 10

'Iii

charge

.

announced that load limits on
· of f ue1 01'I an d
transportatton

Columbus ;

lyle L. France of Kanauga ,

grea t-gr andchlldren.
Funeral services will be at
• 2 p,m . Thursday at the

arrested by FBI agents on a

.

the late Charles and Blanche

Morton
He IsHarris.
survlve\j by his
children , Rebecca, Ronald ,

parents, Mrs. France was
protoded In d.,.th by her

l

Michael J . McKeever, 31,
Warminster, Pu.. , was

Paul R . Harris, S5, 84 4

Nl-5. France was bern on

~

·'

lifted for
Fourth Ave ., Gallip.olls, died. emergency

et 7:30a .m .. this. morn ing at
his residence .
A fireman at the Gallipolis ..1

Damage list needed in Middleport .

PF.NNSYLVANIA!'I
ARRF.sTED
DAYTON , Ohio tUPI )

~-~'

PAUL HARRIS

. Jan. ~2. 118~ In Wayne
County, W. Va .. a daughter of
the late Vlrgtnus end Lovrt
Lovejoy. S"- was a mtmber
ollhe A/llloch Bop list Chllt'ch
at Ona. W. Vo . BesideS her

:

..;:~

1

DORA MAY FRANCE
LANGSVILLE - Mr&amp;.
Dora• May France, 91 ,
Hunllll(jfan, W. Va., formerly
. of Langsville, died Tuesday
In Hunllnglon.

~

. . .~

age
I

'

t

tendance Wednesday In the tonight. There will be no heat
district was over 84 percent. in the gymnasium for the
Classrooms were monitored games, Dowler said.
through the day and at the
Dowler indicated that he
junior high building . in _,and the board wtll be
Middleport, temperatures In Oj)e~ating on a day to day
the classrooms ranged .from basts in regard to additional
40 to 68 degrees.
s~hool closings. However,
· The Salem Center School, when students reported back
one of two buildings In the to classes Wednesday they
district having heat other . were given long range
than natural gas, was closed . assignments by the faculty so
today due ·to a sewage that work can be done at
problem. It was reported that ho~e should additional
the Bradbury School remains closmgs occur. ·
open but all activities have
been moved to the rear
portions of the building due to
the low temperatures (In the
30s) In the front portions.
Meantime, a basketball
game was played last night at
the Meigs High School and
another game will be played
Columbia Gas of Ohio, inc.
announced today that it
would be necessary to con·
tlnue to liffilt it,s curtailed ·
Industrial and commercial
customers to only that gas
needed to protect plant
facilities until at least 8:00
a.m. Wednesday, Febl'llllry 9.
The company continued Its
EAST MEIGS - Steps to use styrofoam insuiation at
conserve energy, par- most windoW., with plastic appeal to all other comticularly in the natural gas covering at some, In order to mercial, residential, and
heated Chester Elementary allow S()me natural light into human needs customers to
School, were taken Wed· UW rooms. Worlt on this at keep thermostats set as low
nesday night by the Eastern both Chester and Tuppers as possible and to otherwise
Local Board of Education in a Plains schools was to begin keep usage to a bare
minimum.
today.
special session.
aMouncement came
The board learned that only
· The session was called
when It was learned that the two of three burners of a coal following notification by the
. Chesier building was near or furnace were CQnverted to company's supplier,
over lilt natural gas allot· gas some 10 years ago, Columbia Gas Trsnsmission
ment. The board decided to , leaving one coal burner on Corp. that, under directives
hand. ·The board decided to of the Federal Power Comput the remaining coal mission, it would deliver only
burning unit 'Jnto operation enough gas to · "meet
Road damage ib and
priority
I
use coal heat to sup- essential
plement gas heat. It was requirements and !et'Vlces to
M~igs estimated
agreed to order coal today customers which cannot
Damace to rodo In and to make a test run of the sustain natural gas curMelia C011nty hal been plan over the weekend.
. taihnents and. !et'Vlces to
Hilma~ tbll weelt at
It was also agreed that customers which cannot
"17 ,IH dae to 1torm there will be no recesSes at sustain natural· gas currellted. caum ..
the elementary sch!)Olli ol the taihnent without irreparable
'Tiie eellmltte waa -de · district since the weather Is injury to life or property unlil
II lbe req-t of M8jor bad anyway and this will cut that date. This action was
GeMra1 JUiet C. Clem, down the heat loss caused by necessary in order to
ldjatat ce.eraJ director children moving in and out of ehentlal requirements
ol Dllaoter lenltel, ud the buildings.
throughout the remainder of
forwarded to lbe diluter
· the winter.
1ervlce. . 1be period Now you know
Priority
I . delivery
Royalists took Oliver ·restrictions was 11rat imposed
eovered wa• alaft Jaa. ·n.
Tbe
eatlmate
waa Cromwell's bot)es out of his liy Columbia Gas Transu lbe C!ClUiy Is to coffin and hanged them on a mission CorporaUon on all of
reeetn federal 111flluee. public gibbet alt~r the Its customers on Friclay,
English Restoration tn 1660. January 28. •
Schoolli of the Meigs Local
School District, which
reopened Wednesday, will
remain open the rest of the
week, according to plans
made by the district board of
education In special session
Wednesday night.
Supt.·Charles L.'Dowler led
a discussion of the natural
gas problem In the district. It
wail the feeling that buildings
are being kept at tern·
peratures as low as possible
and that no more natural gas
is being used In keeping the
schools open than would· be
used in closing the buildings
and maintaining them.
The only way that addltJonal gas could be saved
would be by winterizing the
buildings with no heat at aU
going Into them.
Dowie~ reported that at-

CurtaiJment

continued by
gas company

Board moves to
conserve energy

The

meet

-·17

·~

,.

SCRAPBOOKS COME OUT ·- The current near .
freeze ?f the Ohio River bas sent resideni!J of the Big Bend
scurrymg to their phooo albums to look up snapshots
dating back to January, 1940, when tbe river was frozen
solid and residents walked across on the ice. In the group
pictw:e ·from the left are Don HerbeJ;t Powell, Jinuny
Webb, JoAnn Webb, Mrs. Cora Webb, Pauline Alexander
and Lawrence Balser. The woman with the dog is Mrs .
Leona Hensley, Long Bottom. The other two photos were
provided by Mrs. Ray Pickens of Clifton, W.Va .

Kaiser lays off

1,000 employes
About 1,000 employees of the on temporar)llayoff from day
Kaiser Aluminum Raven· shift Tuesday, unless otherswood plant have .been given wise notified.
A plant spokesman said
indefinite layoffs as a result of
i~tiJt'Iit'IHi:j;j;j;:;:::::;:::::n::::::::j;f the
energy crisis, a employees on temporary
spokesman for- the company . layoff would be advised when
announced.
to resume their normal work
FISH FRY WITH
The layoffs, primarily al- schedules. Nearly one·thinfof
PRESSURE TESI'
feeling the fabrication the plant's 3,400 work force
Who says you ean't operations at the plant, were will be affected by. the cutcombine bualneu wllb effective 'at a a.m. Tuesday. hack, McAdams said.
pleasure?
The cutl!ack was caused by
The necessary propa!le for
Saturday from 11 a.m, severe curtallrilents of nattiral nonnal operation of the plant
until I p.m., at !be Mid- gas and the plant's jnabllity to is available and had 8!ready
dleport Fin Departmeat
.. -~·--' by KalJe but
Headquarters you can obtalll propane shipments at a been pw"'""""'
r,
attend a llab fry otaced by level necessary for normal the problem Ia In tnportlllon
tbeltnmen and also· have operations.
of tthe gas to the plant.
your blood pressn~ taken
According • to L. J,
The conditions of the
while you're there. McAdams, manager of the roadways In West · Virginia ·
Emerceney medical Ravenswood works, all and the factathataomestalel
tecbnlclans will be on band reduction, maintenance, plant prohibit the haufing of
w provide the free blood protect!on, casting and flammable on explosive ·
pressure service to stor~room employees a~ to materials on huardoua roac1a
Cllltomen.
report for work as scheduled. i! causing the dellvery of the
w.-.·.·.·:·:·:·;·:·:·:·':·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·;·:·:·:·:·: Allother employees IIi . the gu to the plant to nm con.::::~;:;:;:;:;:;;;:;:;:l:~:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;::;:::;:;:; fabrication plant were placed. siderably behind schedule.

�i

%- The Daily SenUnel,Middleno':l·l'ooleroy, 0., Th~y, Feb. 3, 1977

3- The DaUy Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Feb. 3, 1977

Assembly moves to ease natural gas ·shortage
By LEE LEONARD
conaullation with alate
UPI Statebaaae Reporter
education olfldals and achool
(X)LUMBUS (lJPI) - The lobbyists, received 79-14
Ohio General Asaembly, House approval about sii
a~Ung with unusual apeed,
hours after the Senate had
haa approved In two days . a cleared it WIBnimoualy.
pair' of measureo designed to
The leglalative leadership
blunt the effects of the pualu!d the bill through Intact
- natural gas shortage lor despite widespread critici1111
public schools ·and laid-off that it would encourage unworkers.
necessary achool closings and
Tuesday, the lawmakers offered no relief for days
provided a shortcut for those missed because of heavy
-made temporarily joblesa by snows or floodlng.
the energy crisis lo claif!l ·· ' Attempts to exempt from
unemployment benefits.
makeup requirements the
Wednesday, the legislature school days lost to snow and
completed
action ·on Ooodlng failed, as sponsors
emergency temporary relief Insisted the legislature can
·for Ohio's 617 school districts, always act If those disQters
giving them an extra lo days · occur later this year.
lor ''fuel shortage" closings
"! believe we ought to
without having to make them anticipate the prospect of
up.
extensive flooding around the
Both chambers were to state an deal with it now,"
roomvene at II a.m. today, argued . House Mlnbrlty
but no major floor action was Leader Cbarles F. Kurfeis,
anticipated before weekend ' R-Bowling Green. " Why
adjournment.
should we sit here six or eight
The school relief bill, weeks from now facing a
draft!'&lt;~ late last week by similar situation ... ? U we
majority Democratic should escape the flooding,
legislative leaders
In nothing Is lost."

\

Legislators from areas
hardbit with snow and high
winds agreed that weather
calamities for their scllools
should also be relieved.
ltJI written, the bill lllows
the state Department of
Education . and school
superintendents to decide
what constitutes a: closing due
to a fuel shortage . It
empowers local sc~ool
officials to adfust their
sclledules according to fuel
supplies and close when
necessm.
Under the bill, school employes wiD be paid on
schedule for days · lost
because of fuel shortages.
But they w!U be required to
work makeup days without
additional pay.
Furthermore, the
legialatioo encourages school
districts to arrange for
alternative educational
programs when schools are
closed.
·The regular minimum Ohio
school calendar caUs for 180
days but allows five days olf
for hazardous Wfl!ther and
.

other "calamities."
The bUI, introduced
Tuesday and rushed through
tile Senate, subtracts up to 15
days If scllools run out of fuel.
The
pFovisions
are
retroactive to last Jan. 3 and
expire witll the end of the
school year June 30.
Rep. Robert J. Boggs, [).

Jefferson, chainnan of the
Howe Ed~~Catloo Committee,
said the legialatioo would
eliminate "a short~hanging
of education," adding that It
also Hbuys time" 10 the
lawmakers can see If
maklji!P.free closing days for
snow or floods need to be
accommodated later in the

days" to the makeup-free list
wu defeated by 211 to 7.
Democratic •leglslatlve and
school
leadera
authorltlet were COilCtl'IMIII
that If the bill Were not
enacted, large IIJIIOIIIIII ot·
unemployment c«npeellllion·
would have to be paid school
employ• laid· olf by fuel
shortages.
Under the bill, the
employes will be Ineligible
• •• for benefits since they are
being paid for up to 15 days'
off and must work makeup
Carter's approach differed· energy progr8l111.
days without pay.
sharply from that of Gerald
"! know we can meet this
Ford, who stresaed ~r energy challenge If the
CAI,L ANSWERED
coosumer prices and· more burden is borne fairly among
The Middleport
atomic power. It signaled aU OU1' people," Cai'ter said, Emergency Squad anawered
probable major changes In "altd if we realize that' In a call at 4:33 a.m. Thuraday
the $14.2 billion energy order to solve our energy to ·North Second Ave., for
budget submitted by Ford . problems we need not Brenda Jeffers, a medical.
last month, which ellminated sacr!Oce the quality of . our patient, who wu taken to•
some conservation and solar lives."
Holzer Medical Center. AI
10:14
Wedilesday, the
squad took Carl Stewart,
Route 7 below Middleport, to
the Holzer Medical Cellter.
SChool year.
"I'm sick and tired of
voting for bills because it's
the best we can do." said
Rep. Norman A. Murdock, R·
ancinnatl. "We can do far
better than this."
.Republican amendments
adding closing days for
weather and floodlng were

tabled on 1 50-41 vote.
Some la'WIMkers nrned
the bill would encourage
llchool dllt(jcts not to bolher
to try to make up da)'lllost to
energy shortages.
On the Senate Door, an
amendment offered by Sen.
Anthony J . Celebrez:r.e Jr., [).
Clevela_nd, adding five "snow .

Community Mental Health
and Mental Retardation
" ~" Board is beginning its
grant review cycle for the
distribution of a limited
amount of local levy and state
funds to. community based
agencies providing services
to the developmentally
disabled and the mentally ill
and retarded.
The grants are for fiscal
year 19!8, which runs from
July 1, 1977 to June 30, 1978.
Each year the Board
submits a plan to the Ohio
Division · of Mental Health

stating what services are
planned In the area.
Grant applications ue
available to agencies m
·Gallla, Jackson, and Meigs
Counties and can be picked
up at the Board's offices In
Gallipolis, Jackson or
Pom eroy , Ohi~. Completed
app11cat 1ons must
be
ret~rned to the "648" Board's
off1ce by March 31, 1977.
_The Program Committee
wiU review the applications
Aprd 11·12, · 1977, with the
final committee meeting
April 14, 1977. They will then
be rev1ewed by the full Board

.

WASfUNGTON . (UP!)
problem. But thts winter bas
President Carter says energy made us aU realize that we
shortages are permaent and have to act."
Amerlc~ns must
mak.e
He offered no easy solution,
conservation their saylrig· the real problem,
watchword, but he intends lo which started long before this
find out which of the winter and will take longer to
shortagesarerealan(jwhich solve, is a failure to take the
are artificial.
shortage seriously and plan
Carter's pledge comes at a for the future.
time when many people, out
of work or worried shout
home beating because of tbe
natural gas crisis, find It hard
to believe repurta thai the
devastating shortages were
'
sylvania 90,000 and Indiana formed over the Southwest
caused simply by demand
By JOHN LESAR
60,000. In aU, 20 states were Wednesday spread snow over
· outstripping supply.
UDIIed Pressllltematioaal
"We will find out · the
A new winter storm affected.
New Meiico and Colorado
In Wasliln~rton. Tresaurv before sweeping east to the
difference between real spawned in the Southw~
shortages and artificial headed for the winter-weary Secretary W. Michael Plains and the Great Lakes
ones," th~ President said in East today, threatenin&amp; to Blumenthal invoked on a route that could take it to
··
his first ''fireside chat" to the end the area's brief respite emergency powers to allow Buffalo.
at its April 18, 1977, Board nation Wednesday night.
from bitter weather that has foreign ships to move natural
The storm brought UghtTHURSDAY
meeting.
He outlined a three-phase Idled more than 3 million gas from Gulf ports and fllng and snow to Peoria, m.,
EVANGELINE Chapter
The Board presently funds battle against u.s. fuel prob- workers and left more than 70 Alaska to the Eastern and knocked out puwer to 172, Order of the Eutern
the Gallla.Jacksqn·Meigs !ems, starting with hls new persons dead.
Seabord and !he Labor some 50,000 persons In the Star, 7:311 p.m. Thursday at
Commu011Y Mental Health emergency powers to deal . Blizzards and sulrlero cold Departm·ent approved $10 city's South Side ..
the Masonic Temple; Mid·.
Center which includes with tbe gas crisis
· subsided Wednesday but million ·to hire workers to
Freezing drizzle feU In a odleport. There will be a
clinic~! services, drug abuse,
He said he wm ~unch the could not ease the crippling battle snow, ice and fuel wide band across the
practice lor the new officers.
carehne, Senior Friends, second phase within the presaureon dwladtingenergy shortages In six .storm-belt nnidlands; leading the apMeigs Copunty CltlzenMs Ad- month, asking Congress to reserves.
.
SATURDAY1
states.
proaching storm.
voca·cy
rogram,
eigs create
an
Energy
President Carter WedA new winter storm that
HYMN SING Saturday at
County Program on Aging, Department and end present nesday
night
signed
Freedom Goape~ Mlasion at
emergency meptal health bureaucratic chaos and tbe , emergency legislation to
Bald Knol18. Gospel Tones to
services an.d .mental health third phase on AprU20 when divert vital natural gas from
be featured. Public Invited.
outreach serv1c~s.
he proposeS a long-range low priority uses to homes,
·• HARRISONVILLE Lodge
The ~rd IS also the energy policy
hospitals and other high ·
411, F. AND A.M., 7:311 p.m.
plannbig and funding agency
The Pre~ident listed priority areas.
Saturday with work In the
Veterans Memorial Hospltal
PLEASANT VALLEY
for aU capital improvement conservation as the keystone
Carter declared states of
ADMITTED - Norman
DISCHARGES - Mrs. fellowcraft degree. All
funds m the area.
in his lon,g-range plan..,.aying • emergency in . winter- Russell, Pomeroy; George Arnold Marcum, . Leon; master masons invited.
the United States wutes - pummelled Indiana and Ohio. Eastman, Pomeroy; Andrew Bernard Bennett, ReedavUie,
nJESDAY
and could save - more Winter's latest onslaught Manning, ·Racine.
0.: Mrs. Clifford Kerwood,
MIDDLEPORT Chamber
DISCHARGED - Gladys Cottageville; Mrs. Rodney of Commerce Thursdiy,
energy than It now Imports. has left 76 persons dead -in the
He said Increased coal past six .days, with New York Barber, Gregory Crites; daughter, Pllrker&amp;- 12:25 at the Columbus and
production, with a new strip. reporting 31, Indiana 21, Ohio Winebrenner, Dorothy burg; Mrs. Garland Mayes, Southern · Ohio Electric
. mining law to protect the n ; illinois 6, ·Georgia 3, Wright, Charles Schoonover, Gallipolis Ferry; Sam meetln8 room.
environment, and more solar Oklahoma2 and Virginia· and Nellie Utsinger.
Nichols, Pqlnt Pleasant;
'
puwer also wiU be important. Pennsylvania one each.
Rosa Cottrill, Leon; VIrgil
"There Is no way that I, or
Few cities were afflicted as
Harper, Galllpolls Ferry;
anyone else ln
the greatly as Buffalo, N. Y.,
HolzerMedlcalCeater
Timothy Litchfield, New
government, can solve our buried by 102 inches of snow
(Blrllu, Feb. I)
Haven: ~- Orville Cuto,
energy
problems
If
you
are
In
45
days,
bringing
the
total
Mr.
and
Mrs.
William
F.
Leon; Robert Smith, Hen·
of the Department of Health,
dl.rson
·, Bry.an Vickers, Point
not
willing
to
help,"
he
said.
\
for
the
winter
to
16011
Inches.
Walton
, SOn , Jackson; Mr.
Education and Welfare,
ATHENS
Ohio
"!realize
that
many
of
you
The
Air
Force
began
and
Mrs.
David
Rees,
son,
Pleasant:
Lucy Hunt, Point
predicted the principal cause
University
student
Edith
Pleasant: Clarence Blesatng,
of death b, 2000 will still be have not believed that we operation "Shovels-off-to- VInton. •
King, Rt. I, Middleport, .
really
have
an
energy
Buffalo"
to
fly
emergency
(DIIcharges,
Feb.
I)
l,etart;
Mrs.
Edison
heart and bloodvessel
equipment and personnel to
Tonya L. Bowman, Thelma Edington, Gallipolis; Mrs. received an honor student
disease. But he said it will
the blizzard-stricken city. M. Calloway, Doretha D. . Doris Bonecutter, Point award presented by the
.then be a disease of older
Some 300 Army .regulars Campbell, Ira Clark, Anthony Pleasant; and Clayton Miller, Central Ohio ChaPter of the
people.
Financial Encutives In·
were flown In to help ci.ear the Coyan, Barbara Detty, Nola Southside.
.
"I think we 'II begin to see
Mlas King, a senior In
sutute.
snow.
Eggers, Glenna Fetty, Lena
BIRTHS - A daughter to
the catastruphes that mark
finance,
received the award
Buffaio · Mayor Stanley Foglesong , Lowell Mr. and Mrs. Timothy
·death arising at a later and
presented
for the first time at
Makowski, In appealing to Glassburn,
Albert E. Mayes, · Henderson; .. a
later age, though I don't think
a
recent
meeting in
Carter for help, described Goeglein, Rosa L. Griffith, daughter to Mr. and Mrs.
we will have solved the
Columbus.
Buffalo as "a city fighting for. Clyde W. Hammons, Lona A. Jeffrey Holley, Middleport;
problem of longevity by that
The Financial Executives
its
life."
Herdman , Bessie Hern, and a son to Mr. and Mrs.
time."
'
Institute
is a national
The New York State Hobart Mullins, Melissa Randall Parsons, Leon.
Dr. George Thorn, noted
organization
whose mem·
Thruway was reOpened be- Nance, Judith L. Roush,
internist and director of
t: .
bershlp
Includes
9,000
tween Rochester and the Laura Mae Sams, Jorce See,
medical research at the
financial
officers
from
U.
S.
Pennsylvania line but
Howard Hughes Medical
Carol 'Mowery, Dolly motorists were warned they Joyce Ann Sharp, Donna Lou
and
Canadian
companies
plua
CLASS CANCELLED
Sheline, Fred Smith,_Mary
Institute, said be did not Mowery to. ~ George Luster,
Balltoom
danclr\g cla.ues representatives from
faced
arrest
if
they
ventured
visualize a significant Jr., Dale -:Luster, : Lot 103,
Taylor, John. Thompson,
Into ·snow-ravased Buffalo. Mary Lee Van Sickle, Vernal conduc:ted by Gerald Powell colleges and unlveri!ltiea. The
increase in average age by Middleport:
have been cancelled until Central .Ohio Chapter
The hamlet of Hooker near
1990 but predicted improved
Frances J. Whittington, Watertown, N. Y., has had Wallen, J,'ilizabeth White.
March. The dance party members represent moot
preventive measures· and Frances J:ispencer, Howard
companies
In
scheduled for Feb. 12 at major
64.2 inches of !now in.the past
new drugs will decrease pain
•·
Spencer
to
Leslie
L.
Whit·
Columbus
and
several
area
Royal Oak will be held,
and disability and thus tington, Parcels, Salisbury. week and 320 inches during IXlLSON'S SIN
univeri!lties.
however.
the winter.
increase tile overall period of
(X)NCORD, N.H. (UP!) Paul Larry Smith, Georgia
In Ohio, where some U
a person's useful activity.
M. Smith, to Harry James mQllon workers are Idled Charles Colson says his
· "As for the year 2000, I
conversion to C~rlstianlty
SHOWER MOvED
honestly believe the tremen-. Cunningham, Br~nda Sue because of the weather- began during Watergate, a
Cunningham,
1·2-3
ac.,
The
layette shower for Mrs. International HO&lt;key League '
related energy shortages, scandal that was to result In a
dously accelerated increase Chester.
'
Roger
Rouah will be held at. United Pre•s·Inr.rnatlonol
Columbia Gas of Ohio and 21'..-year prison sentence for
in biomedical knowledge preRay
Riggs,
Mary
Riggs
to
NORTH
the
Letart
FaU. Elementary
Dayton Power and Ught Co. President Nixon's former
cludes even the slightest
w II pl1. af go
John
M.
Wells,
Jr.,
Parcels,
School
Instead
of
the
comextended their nearly 100 per counsel.
glimmer of what may be
Kalamazoo27 18 4 58 220 1110
Olive.
munity hall Saturday, Feb. 5 Klint
. cent curtailment to large
possible in the healtll-related
25 20 l 55 225 190
Ronald
tee
Wagner,
Betty
at
7:30p.m.
Sagjnaw 22 20 B 52 203 191
Industrial and commerdal
fields as the n&lt;rN century
SERVICE SET
L. Wagner to Ohio Power Co., users, including schools, for
MUskegon 20 22 7 47 192 202
dawns.'-i
POR TLA'ND
The
Port Huron 20 27 4 44 181 204
Ease, Lebanon.
one fuU week.
SOUTH
Reorganixed Church of Jesus
ASK TOWED
· But Marvin E. White,
w· I I ~Is. 'tt go
Christ of Latter Day Saints,
A marriage li~ was Dayton
24 24 1 49 212 209 ·.
chairman of Columbia Gas, Portland-Racine Branch, has
22 24 s 49 196 224
issued to Denver Ray Bush, · Toledo
which serves 06 Ohio counFort
cancelled
its
morning
wor20,
Rt.
4,
Pomeroy,
and
ties, said home owners will
21 23 7 49 195 215
shipservlce for Sunday, Feb. Rhonda Sue Cook, Iii, Wayne
have heat.
Columbus 20 23 9 49 200 209
6.
Its
communion
service
will
Syracuse.
Wednesday's Rtsu111
"We are going to win the
be-held
at
2
p.m.
after
which
'Fort Wayrte 7 Toledo 1
ball game this winter," he
Sharon Russell will speak on
Dayloo 10 Muskogon 1
predicted.
,
Kalamazoo 7' Port Huron 4
stewardship.
DIVORCE ASKED
New York reported 2ilo,ooo
Flint at Columbus, ppd.
Templeton Grueser,
workers laid off because of
Thursday's Games
No
games
schedu led
Pomeroy,
flied
suit
for
weather
woes
and
another
your
husband
nas
gout.
One
.
use any driiuti that contain
NO
MEETINGS
Friday's
Chtmes
divorce
against
Suuana
any caffeine. This includes of the major complications of SOO,ooo Idled because they are
The Meigs County PTA Grueser, Minersville, In Muskegon at PDI'I Huron
Saginaw at Flint ·
coffee, tea, colas and gout is coronary artery unable to get to their jobs. Council will not meet untn
Meigs
County
Common
Pleas
New
Jersey
reported
350,000
Dayton ·at Kalamazoo
disease.
chocolate drinks. I think with
further notice.
Columbus
at Toledo .
Court.
weather-related
layoffs,
I
usuaUy
ri!C()mniend
that
the severity of his problem he
should also avoid the decaf- patients with gout stay on a Tennessee 140,000, Penn·
./.'
feinated• brands of coffee, low-fat, low~holesterol diet
to
help
prevent
artery
since the flavor oils and other
ingredients are irritating to disease. Of course, a doctor is
111E DALY IIEHriNEL
'
.
often faced with the lesser of
some people.
,
DEVO'ITJJ ronm
IP!mll!lr 01'
The ilenernid may irritate evils in deciding what to® to
MEIG&amp;MMON AREA
the stomach. It does so even help a patient. If your husCHESTEIII. TANNEIIIIL
in people without ulcers if the band permits I would prefer
l!lo&lt;:.Ed.
IIOBERTHOEPUCII
..
dosage is on the high side. to see him on a high protein
Charlea
D. Tabor, general 1\Jecbanical Engtnemng,
diet,
ualn3
fortified
sldm
milk
You might talk with your doctroacopy, the American
of
Goodyear Alomlc
manager
by
The
Ohio
volley
c.mand
·
antacid.!.
Medlclnea
to
tor about pulling him on
He
realdea
at
210
Redondo
Ill Cwrt st., l'amlroy, Ohio
Corp., Piketon, has been Drive In Jackaon with his Society for T..uhc ~teriall,
Zyloprlm (allopurinol). The block the ,vagus nerve · any,
45181. Ollie&lt; Pboile .,...
appointed a member of the wife (Mary Lee) and their ·and the Inltltute of Nuclear
2111. EdiiGriaiPhaloM-2117.
dirlerence is that Benennid stimulation of acid digestive
Materilll Manqemeat. Mr.
cl111 pootace pold of
board of the GaUia.Jackaon- SOli (Terry Lee).
helps the kidneys wash out juice might also be used.
Pmneroy, Ohio,.
Tabor
II a repnuntaUn to
Mefga Mental Health and
Avoiding excess stress,
excesa uric acid from the
Tabor II a member of the the Atmllc lndaltrtal FOI'\UD
•
NtUonll ~it*
-·Word· Grlllilh
lJ&gt;.1 Mental Retardation 1148 board Jacklon Qity· School Board,
body and aUGpllrinol prevents which sometimes means
and tile Natlanal Aoaodatlan
c., BotUneW am Ga1lalher
.,
by Timothy B. Mortlz, M.D., pall president of the lllio
changing'
jobs
or
correcting
it' from being formed by the
757 Third Ave., New Yort, N.Y.'
ol Manufac:luJwa.
10017.
._
director of the Ohio Depart· School Board&amp; Auodatlan, ·
body cells - the main source . home situations, entirely
Tabor IIIII bll famiJJ are
S..bo&lt;ripiJDIJ role" Delherod by
ment of Mental Health and and a· member of the Pike
eliminating
cigarettes,
cofol the uric acid. Zyloprim is
c11rrk:r where-avaUable 75 'c enta per
memben
of tile F1nl 11apt111
Mental Retardation.
week. By Motor- Route where ca~rrler
not known to Irritate tije fee, tea, colas and alcohol
County, Jackaon County, and Churdllll Jacklon.
,
eervice not av.U..W., One m~Mth,:
Tabor graduated from Portsmouth Area Chambers
permanently and eating a 13.-.
digestive system.
'
Mal:lnl Plummer II
By moll In Olllo ood W. Vo.,
The milk and cream diet sensible diet is a way Of life &lt;me v"'!t IZ2.ot: l!h .....u., Temeuee Polytechnic In~ of Commerce, the Jacbon . aeetlift dlrtctor of the (W.
fll.1tl; 'tnrtt month•. f7.00;
slltute (now Tennessee · Rltlry Club, SYIJII)OIIarcha. M Mllllal H1111b and Ma!ta1
has been used for years but · for anyone who has or has .l'.loewhon
111.10 yoor: 8h 11111111111· Techoolocicai Unive~y) In
bad
an
Ulcer
or
acid
indige,;.
many doctors n.ow questioo
fiUO; Thrtt moathl, t?~ $0 ,
and Tau Beta Pl. Ha II i Rtlardatlan Ill s.d, IIIII
its value. I am concenled lion if they wish to avoid I n Nprice lneludel Sundly:I Cook1!91Ue, Tenn., In 1944 member of the America! Harold Mca11r1, II board
with a B.S. degree in Society for Man Spec- cbalrmaa.
about the cream becaUS~o symptfJ!118.
.

•

NEW YORK (UPI) - Frank Lane had a birthday the other
day. The book says he 's 81. He says the book is wrong, he's only
?7. Be;'ides, he_argues, chrD~~ological age doesn't mean a thing
If you re young at heart, and nobody but nobody is any more
so than Frank Lane.
'
'
About to embark on his 47th season in baseball, Frank Lane
· brings_to his job the same ageless enthusiasm, the same
msoucl8llce, Maurice C hevali~r used to bring to his when he
was still around. He works special assigrunents scouting for
th e California_~els, moving all over the hemisphere from
Mexico to Califorma to Chicago and loving every minute of it.
To Frank Lane, what he's doing isn 't-really work, It's pleasure .
You name some rookie in the majors or some obscure kid in
the minors with only a couple months' experience and Lane
munediately will tell you everything you'd like to know about
him , rattling off his virtues, his faults and the way he likes his
eggs. Lane knows little things like that because chances are he
had breakfast with the boy and talked with him someplilce
along the line.
Whatever the Angels are P,yingLane, be's worth more. His
boss, Harry Dalton, will tell you that himself. But Frank Lane
isn't that co?cerned with money now. The big thing with him is
keepmg active every day, being in the mainstream. With his
contac_t.s, he m~re than earns his keep by scouting players,
obtammg the kmd of information few others could and then
passing it along to the Angels. He does all this while
Sllllultaneously serving as a one'man clearing house for
anything that's going on in baseball.
Little_gets by him. H~ keeps up with everything, even wi!h
something like that delightful valentine Johnny Bench got the
other day from his estranged wife.
"I notice she didn 't say he played ping pong ALL night,"
Lane chuckled over the phone from Acapulco, proving once
more how he always thinks young .
:·Knowing Johnny as I do, I don't believe those things she
S81d about him ," Lane said, growing serious. "He's a
tremendous ballplayer and a helluva fine guy. All those things
his wife had to say ahout him reminded me of another
ballplayer, who shall be nameless. He had just gotten married
m Chicago and was going to Florida by train on his
honeymoon . I went to the railroad station with both of them to
see them off . While we're standing around waiting for the train
to puU in, he says, 'Wait a minute, I gotta get some magazines.'
He went inside the terminal and got himself Playboy,
Penthouse, Hustler and two or three other magai:ines like that.
He damn' near missed the train. When I saw the magazines he
hough!, I said w him , 'What are you planning to do, read aU
mght ' Boy, tlla\'s gonna be some lively honeymoon!'"
~'rank Lane can't wait for spring training to start, especially
now.that the 'Angels have picked up Joe Rudi, Bobby Grich and
Don Baylor, and should make a run for it in the American
League West.
·
"We'll be one.two," Lane said. "If not, we'd better bang up
our cue. Gene Autry (the Angels ' owner) was not in favor of
going out and buying free agents, but he had to do it in selfdefense. For the last live years, we had the outstanding farm
system in basebaU. We spent $1.5nnillion a year on it, and what
we've done now is bought time . About four.five years for $5
nnillioo. Rudi, Grieb and Baylor were the three top free agents
available. If there were three guys I'd want to pick because of
tlleir ability, temperament and whatever else tlley could contribute, those would be the three I'd go for . I think Harry
(Dalton ) hit it right on the nose."
Always outspoken, Lane feels Phil Wrigley of the Cubs had
the right idea when he let go Rick Monday and said he's ready
to do the same thing with Bill Madlock because of what he felt
were th~ir excessive salary demands.
"Monday got about $120,000 from the Cubs last season and
struck out t20 times ," said Lane. "He got paid $1 000 a
strikeout. This year he'll probably get $250,000 fro~ the
Dodgers, which means he's gotten a raise to $2,000 a strikeout.
Good God, Almighty' Whither are we drifting ?"

New stonn is heading east

Social
Calendar

HOSPITAL NEWS

Medical scene in ·year 2000
By AL ROSSITER Jr.
UPI Science Editor
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Imagine a world· where_
inherited diseases are
following infectious diseases
into oblivion, prevenUoil of
mental illness and arthritis is
possi)Jle, and cancer deaths
are being greatly reduced.
This . is the medical
scenario· for the year 2000 as
o;ompiled by the doctor's
m_agazine Medical World
News on the basis of forecasts·
from a panel of authors and
editors of leading medical ·
textbooks.
By 1990, only 13 years
away, the experts predicted
sudden cardiac deaths
largely will be phenomena
thanks to the development of
highly effective drugs. The
main cause of diabetes will be
known
and
artificial
bladders, hearts, kidneys,
pancreas and livers will be in
use.
Even in 1980, the panel
predicted the haza.rds of
premature births will have
been eliminated and doctors
will be able to save 10 Urnes
as many infants than five
years
earlier .
Joint
replacement surgery will

.have improved to a point
where patients accept it
willingly. .
' 'l!ly feeling about the
future oi medicine, right or
wrong, Is that there are
extremely · exciting
breakthraughs just around
the corner ,n sa~d :Or.
Christian de Duve, Nobel
Prizewinning cell biologist
from Rockefeller University,
in analyzing the panel's
predictions.
He said he noted an
emphasis on transplantatioo
in some of "the panelist's
forecasts and said : "My hope
is not that we're going to
·replace aU our tissues and
organs with protheses but
rather that we will keep them
healthy or bring them back to
health.''
.
De Duve also raised the
question of how will society
cope with the advances · in
health care that medicine is
expected to make in the years
ahead.
"Suppose we find a way of
increasing the human life
span to ·no .or 120 years or
more," he said. "What new
problems will future society
have to face as a result?"
Dr. Theodore Cooper,
outgoing_assistant secretary

DR. LAMB

Edith King is

award winner

Property
Transfers
..•

Bowa signs pact
for five years

"

..

Ulcers' really a-re seasonal
By Lawrence-E. Lamb, M.D,
DEAR DR. LAMB- I have
always heard ulcers come in
the spring and fall but believe
this tQ be an " old wives' tale"
as they say. My hu$band, who
has retired, has had one
several Urnes a year for the
past few years. He had one
.last March and·is now again
suffering with one. I have him·
on nnilk and cream which is
what his doctor suggests. He
bas gout and is taking one
Benernid daily. I'm wonder·
ing whether there cwld be
anything in that medication
to affect the stomach and
perhapa cause an ulcer to
return so soon alter being
cured. He was X·rayed last
April and ·was completely.
cured. Would you advise a
diet at aU times after one is
CI!J'ed to prevent future attack ?
DEAR READER - Some
"old wives' tales" turn out to
be true and this is ooe of
~. Peptic ulcers ol the
duodellwn
the corrunoo

'

type - are m~re likely to occur in the spring and late fall.
No one knows .why but it Is
true of the North American
population.
Peptic ulcers were relatively uncommon before 1900.
What few ulcers did occur
were usually of the stomach
and not the duodenum. All of
this S\188eSts that our CI!JTent
lifestyle has a lot to do with
the incidence of ulcers. To
give you more information oo
this and what your husbarld
can do about It I am sending
you The Health Letter
number I·S, Ulcers Duodenal, Stomach. Others
who want this informalioo
can !leJld 50 cents for it with a
long, stamped, self·
addressed envelope for mailing. Write to me in care of
this newspaper, P.O. Box
1501, Radio City StatiQO, New
York, NY 10019.
The most important thing
your hUsband can do is to quit
smoking if be smokes, avoid
all fonns of alcohol and not

Industrialist named
member of area 648 board

--~=~

.

Sut!:t:

"

Sport Parade
By MILTON IUQIIIAN
UPI Sperta Ulllr

a.m.

shows a· much better warld

.

'

By Greg Bailey
The word "ups~t" is
becoming a misnomer when
applied to ihe Meigs Marauders wins lately, their
The Meigs Reserves made latest victim being the oncea clean sweep of things In favored Jackson lronmen
dealing tbe Jackson Ironboys who fell to host Meigs
a 36-31 defeat Wedilesday Wednesday night 76-57.
·That was Meigs ' fourth win
night at Meigh High. After a
close first quarter the hosts in a row, all over favored
bullt up a relatively safe five opponents - two over
and i!lx point lead in the Jackson and one each over
second · quarter and were Vinton County and GaUia
Academy. That raised their
never headed.
Brent Stanley paced the overaU record to 0-4; and 4-3
winners with 11 points while mleague play' in undisputed
Tim Coates and Greg Becker third place. Jackson is 6-5
hit double figures with 10 overall, 3-4 In the league.
each. The team hit 17 of 43
shots from the field for a good
39 per cent, but managed only
2 of 6 successful free throws.
GAME TONIGHT
Jackson was led by Rader's
The Eastern-Kyger Creek
10 points. They hit a
respectable 15 of 41 shots SV AC basketball game slated
from the field but missed a for Friday qight at Kyger
chance to win it at the foul Creek will be played tonight.
line as they could manage to The reserve game will begin
net only one of seven free at 6:30p.m.
throws.
MEIGS - SianleyS-l-11, T.
Coals S-0-10, Becker 5-0·10,
Hawley 2-0·4, Yeauger 0-1-1.
Total 17-2-36.
JACKSON - Evans 1-0-2.
Martin 3-1-7, Rader 5-0-10,
By GENE VADDES
Dawson 4·0-8, Waugh 2-0-4,
UP! Spurts Writer
Morgan 0.0.0. Total ll-1-31.
IXlLUMBUS (UP!) - What
is
it going· to take to beat
!b )
..,.
Barberton's
Magics'
College Basketball Results
By United Press Internat ional
Warren Western Reserve
East
tried just about everything,
Alfr ed 60 Houghton 58
including ..using six players
A l leg h£'ny BJ John Carrol l 69
Case -Wstrn Res. 65 Wash&amp; Jeff
for a couple of minutes, and
still came out on the short end
C.W. Po st 68 NY T ec li 62
Carngie -Mun n Sthny W .Va . 73 by
100-83 margin last
Cheyney 06 MiHersville 57
night.
saturday
Cortland 90 New Pa ltz 75
E li zabethtown 55 Lycoming 53
Tuesday night, the Magics
E lmira n St , John Fisher 70
made it 40 wins in a row over
Fordham 68 CCNY 53
a two-year period with an 8().
Frankln &amp; M r sh ll 61 Hav erfrd
54
62 decision over Massillon
Lafay ette Bl Bucknell 63
which also marked the return
La Sal le 71 Villanova 70
Lehman 52 John Jay 47
of coach jack Greynolds to
Ma ss. 89 Boston Colt , 65
the
Barberton bench.
Montclair St . 68 Trntn St. 57
Moravian 75 Gettysburg 63 ·
Greynolds suffered a heart
Old Dom , 103 St . Fran Pa . 79
attack three days ptior to the
Oneonta 73 Utica 57
start of the.season.
·
Oswego 76 Br9 c k~rt 66
Phil. Tell 86 Albrtghl 58
The
win
bver
·
Western
P itt 65 Cincinnati 64
Reserve, unbeaten untU that
Pill .J'twn 93 Fro stbg St . 84
Pr att 68 Manhattanvill e 63
game, had a bizarre finish.
Queens 62 Medger Evers Sljl
Reserve had six players oo
St . John's 82 Georgetown 66
St . J.os . Pa . 77 Amer U. 70
the court for a two-minute
St . Peter 's 87 lana 70
stretch late in the game. The
St . V ince '83 Grove Ci ty 75
officials never did catch it,
Susquehanna 80 W i lkes 7 t
Union 75 RP I 61
nor did Barberton's interim
Wa ynesburg 94 Geneva 79
coach, Joe Subotlld, and the
Wid ener 60 Swart hmore d5
South
sixth player finaUy went to
Barber -Scotia 75 Knoxvi l lc 60
the bench.
Bcrea 81 Cumber land 78
Ca tawba Bl Guilford BO
The Magics were again the
Charleston n Cstl Caro lina 71
solid
choice for the top spot In
Chattanooga 99 Livingston 75
this week's United Press
Davidson 62 Citade l 60
E . Ill inois 79 Bellarm ine 77
International Ohio High
Fla . Southern 63 St . Leo 57
School Board of Coaches
High Point 78 Al l. Chr is 59 ·
K entucky St. 89 Chicago St. 67
Class AAA ratings, with a~
um·es tone 96 U SC-Sprtnbg 89
217
inargln ·over runnerup
Longwood 67 ·Mary Wash . 64
Columbus Unden McKlntey.
Mad ison 96 Catholic 83
Maryland 8 2 V irg inia 67
II] Class AA, Akron South
M emphis St . 97 W . Kentucky 75
regained the top spot,
M iddle Tenn . 94 Marshall 87
Moreh ead St 82 No. Kentucky dropping West Lafayette
74
Ridgewood, last week's
Navy 104 Johns Hopkins 61
N1ch!ls St . 113 Sprn g Hit 91
leader, into a second place tie
No,rth Ala . ~ ~ Tennesse e St . 51
with Bellefontalne.
N.C. Cent 84 Eliz . City 76
While in Class A, Morral
Pembrke St . 59 Fran. Mar ion .t9
Short er 77 Oglethorpe 65
Ridgedale
maintained its
So. Caret ina 95 Ri chmond 63
lead over Indian VaUey South
S C. St ale 121 Benedict 92
s E Missour i B6 Ky . Wesl eyr1 79 in Class A.

Meigs reserves
click 36 to 31

Carter . ~1 probe shortages ·

·
d
·
un
erway
Grant review
.The Gallia.Jackson-Meigs

Marauders win fourth straight;
in third place
.

PffiLADELPffiA (UP!) - Jerry Kapateln. "It gives me
Shortstop Larry Bowa of the !lecurity and the possibility of
Philadelphia Phillles has finishing my career right
signed a five-year extension here In Philadelphia."
· of hi s contract, through the
The new contract stipulates
1982 season, reportedly worth that Bowa w!U play the I977
ahout !1175,000.
.
!Ieason, the last under his
The agreement, signed by current three-year contract,
Bow a Wednesday, is the at his present salary, which Is
longest extension of a con- believed to be about $100,000 a
tract given to any Ph lilies' year. It was understood the
player. Slugging third extension provided for a
baseman Mike Sclunidt, who substantial salary increase
is still unsigned, Is reported when it takes effect the
to be asking for a 10-year following season.
pact.
The. Phillles refused to
"I'm happy about what we release salary figures.
were able to work out," said · "He:s an integral part of
Bows, who was represented the team," General·Manager
In ne~otiations by agent Paul Owens sald. "It
•
wouldn't bother me to give
six, seven or eight of our
players five-year contracts
PREP SCORES
that would give them
H.B. Girl•
security."
Rocky River Lutheran-W. 49
Brunswick 22
Cle. Uncoln-W. 46 Cle. John
Adams 30
Southwest
Madison 06 Geneva 28
Arkansas 81 SMU 58'
Bi shop 106 t-:lu$ton T llitsn 101
Hubbard 40 Boardman 30
nc: v c;:o11 . 66 Tu l!ia 59
Canfield 82 Warren Kennedy Oui
Samford 57 West Texas St . 56
Te;w: as Luth 88 Trinity Tex . 66
50
West
Girard 43 Uberty 38
1 WiUamette 103 So . Oreoon 87

HARDWARE

~

In a fine aU-around game,
Randolph had eight big
assists and Browning five ,
with Meigs once again Meigs

MEIGS

Name
Brown ing

FG

FT RB
2·2 4
1·2 7
0·0 8

6-9

8-lo
4-11
6·16

Dodson
SteWa rt

Rapdolph
Young

2·2
0-0
0·0
0-0
0-1
0-0
O·Q·,. 0·0
~3 -68 10-13
~- 8

Hamil ton

2·2
1-1
1-3
1-2
0-1

Scites

Foil rod
Witte

Grandal

Owen
Totals
FG Pet. - 48 Pet .
Name

/
JACKSON

FG
2-4
2-9

Har less

McDonal d
Oll er

3-11

7-14

Jones

0-0
0.2
l-2
,.1
0. 1
1-1

· Paug h

Butner
Forsyth
Conger
J . Dorsey

Totals
FT Pet . - 40 Pel.

l

•
'

EBERSBACH HARDWARE
Main ~•· .

~'n-2811

. o.

IS

RB

4-6
2· 2

2

2
3

1-J
S-7 15
0-1 15
o.o 2
0-1 I
0-0 0
0-0 2
0·0 0
1·2 0

5-9

T . Dor sey
Buchana n

2
0
2
2
1
0

FT

22-54 ll-22 42

PLANNING APIZZA PARTY

South Florida 89 E c kerd 71
Tr an sylvania 77 Centre 75
VMI 94 Hampcten .Sydney 78
va . U.nicn 114 Fayettvl St. 97
Wa k e For est 89 Duk e 80
Wm . &amp; Mary 83 Geo Wash . 70
Midwest
Ad r ian B2 Kalamazoo 79, ot
Akrcn 91 AShland 70
Albion 67 Hope 62
Alma 100 Calvin 84
Ba ll 51. 65 Ohio 64
Bow ling Grn 83 Kent St. 81
Buller 65 Valparaiso 60
c en . MichiQi!(' 88 Toledo Bl
Centra l St 106 Shaw Mich . 7.a
Defiance 98 Bluffton 72
Detroit 87 E. Michigan 82
Detro it Tech 104 Mercy 9B
Ear lham 85 Taylor 84
Ind iana Centra BS Wabash 76
K ansas 60 Okla . St . SB
Kansas St . 70 Iowa St . .51
Loyola Ill. 67 w. Michigan 63
Loyola 67 w. Michigan 63
Marymounf 77 Avila 62
McPher son BS Bethany 79
Miam/99 No. Ill. 91, 2 ots
Nebraskll ·73 Color acto 62
NW M issouri 80 Wm . Jewell 77
North Central 104 Carroll 97
Oberlin 73 Ohio Northern 65
0 . Wesleyan 89 Denlsn 81 , ot
Oklahoma 66 Missouri 63
Rio Grande 92 0 . Oominicn 67
Roosevelt 85 Sf , Francis SO
Sag 'W Va l St. 82 Aquinas 77
Tiffin 70 Cedarville 69
Walsh 74 Ml!llone 66

PHONE

Elyria, 13-0, remained a despite a losa to No. 2 (AAA)
distant third m the AAA Linden McKinley, jumped
ratings ,
followed
by from sixth to fourth , witll
Cleveland East Tech, up from Cleveland Cathedral Latin
seventh last week, and ( 12-2), the early season
Springfield South. Then came leader, tumbling from fourth
Warren Western Reserve, to sixth.
Lebanon, Dayton Roth,
Bockeye South remained in
Newark and Cincinnati the fifth spot and the rest of
Elder.
the AA list was comprised of
Ridgedale, another Wheelersburg in seventh, folcasualty of the weather, lowed by Columbus St.
managed a 177-143 margin Charles , Elmwood and
this week over No. 2 Indian Millbury Lake.
Valley Suuth ( 10-2), which
suffered a 48-47 defeat at the
hands of Cadiz Tuesday
night.
Rounding out the A list is
Ada, Cardington, Stryker,
Versailles, Archbold,
Southeastern
(Ross)
Windham and Oak Hill.
In other action Tuesday
night, No. 7 Archbold (12-0)
edged No.5 Stryker (12-2) 7470 in overtime.
The AA ratings remain the
most changeable of the three
classifications.
Besides the shakeup at tbe
top, Columbus 1\lifflin,

"

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HOMELITE CHAIN SAWS

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After

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THE DAILY SENTINEL

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;

..'

seven.

cutting down its turnovers,
committing just 10, only four
in the first half.
'
Playing at a fast pa ce,
Meigs hit on 48 per cent of
their shots sinking 33 of 68 .
They were also hot at the foul
line netting 10 of 13.
Jackson was led by
Buchanan's 14 points while
Oiler and T. Dorsey each had
11 . The Iron men hit 22 of S4
noor shots but could cash in
on just 13 of 22 free throws.
They outrebounded Meigs n30.
.
•
Meigs is going to try to
squeeze In its remain ing
home gam"'l in the next few
days, that is if they have
school, depending on the fuel
situation.
Tonight they host powerful
Waverly, Friday Logan
comes in, and Saturday
underdog Wellston visits.
Thursday's reserve game
begins at 6 o'clock while
Friday's and .Saturday's
contests begin at 6:30.

Magics. high in saddle
.

. XL
•

Meigs started the game on
a hot note, scoring the first
five polnU but then the
visitors came right back and
scored the next six. The Jead
then seesawed untll midway
through the second period
when Meigs began inching
ahead, and by the end of the
third period they were in
command 35-42.
All five starters contributed in some big way
Wednesday, with four of them
placing In double figures.
Seniors Alan Dodson and
Steve Randolph led all
scorers with 17 apiece while
senior Dale Browning and
junior Kenny Young got 14
and 10, respectively. The .
other starter, Allen Stewart,
had eight points and led in the
rebounding department with
eight while Dodson had

�r-----------,

4-,..noUvSontlnel,~y,O.,tbonday,Feb.3,19'n

I

I1

Bearcats upset 65-64.
By POlliA SMml
UPI Spertl Writer
The Cincinnati Bearcala
lOIII a game tlley del!lerVed to
loee Wednesday night and
ellen Coach 1 Gale Catlett
ccinceded that If bls team had
defeated Pittsburgh ·~t would
have been crlminal-'cause
we played that bad."
The Beercats, now 1~.
dldn't; they lost to Pill , ~ .
Cincinnati was leading, ~
63, with just 11 seconds
remaining wheri Bearcat
Steve Collier stepped to the
foul line In a one-and-one
situation. Collier missed, and
the fight lor the ball ended In
a jwnp hall won hy Pitt's
Larry Harris.
Harris tapped the ·hall to
freShman Sonny LewiB, who
called time out with :07
remammg. Alter
the
inbound&amp; paas, Pete Stickland
worked the ·ball downcourt,
passing it with three seconds
left to Harris, who paused In
the corner, then lofted a 22foot jumper that swished
through the hoop as the
buzzer sounded. to give Pitt
only its fourth victory in 18
gsmes.
"We figured with seven
seconds left they'd go to
him," said Catlett, referring
to Harris, who led all scorers
with 31 points. "We just
wanted to guard him close
and not foul him. We just
dldn't feel there'd be lime lor
him to get off a good shot; we
figured he'd have to make a
desperation shot.
"But he hit it dead center.
He's a great player. They
deserved to win."
Harris, who is averaging
21.8 points a game, shrugged
off his role in the upset. "It's
more important to me that we
won; we needed It," he said.
Bob Miller was high for

Clnclnnatl with ~ points.
Elaewhere Wednesday
nlght, Rod Grillin acored 28
points to help eighth-ranked
Wake Fll"elll defeat Duke, 119.Ml. Arkansu got a career.·

Ancient Emile
wins another,
wants title
NEW YORK (UPI) - EmU
"Griffith, gUttering In gold
lame, bright lights glancing
off his bald head, stepped Into
the ring of Madison Square
Garden Wednesday night a
few hours before his 39th
birthday like a resurrected
old gu!lflghter with one more
score to settle. ·
,
He waved to acknowledge
the warm applause from the
crowd of , 10,930, some of
whom were standing. •
The scene could easlly have
been Griffith's last hurrah,
but he wasn't playing the
role. His opponent. Christy
Elllott, at 165 lour pounds
heavier than Griffith and
holding advantages in height
and reach, could have moved
from victory ·to title con·
tentinnc
But .after 10 rounds and
much blood leaking from
Elllott's noSe, Griffith banged
out a ID&amp;jority decision, his
85th victory in 109 fights, and
immediately he was talking
about going after another
world championship.
"I'm ready for anyone,
junior middleweight, middleweight, anyone," Griffith
said. "I think tm ready lor a
title."

high 30 points frml M.atvin
Delph to cruah SMU, 81-58,
and remain undefeated In the
Southwest Conference. AI
Beal's tlp4n and two free
throws by Cary Carrablne in

Celtics
may. not
make it

By CHRIS SCHERF
UPI Sports Writer
The defendlng cbampion
Boston Celtics are in danger
of not making Ute Natlm!al
Basketball Assoc'iation
playoffs.
The Celtics lost to the New
York Nets Wednesdsy night,
99-$, for the sixth defeat .ln
their last seven games and
dropped to third in the
Atlantic Division.
Fortunately Ia- Ute Celtlcs,
there still are 32games to go
this season. U!lfortunately,
for them , there is no reason to
anticipate a drasti_c improwment.
Without Someone to
complement Jo. Jo White, tbe
Celtics are unable to play
thell'· USua1 breakneck stY1e.
Andwith CharlieScottoutlor
Ute season with an injury, the
Celtics ·are unable. to piBy
pre ssure defense and faStbreak offense.
"You've got to have the
peroilnnel," CoachTornilelnsohn said after the game.
"We've only got one guard.
We're hurt now where we
hurt the most- where we're
most · vulile~a~le."
.
The Nets exploited the
Celtics' problems at guard,
too, spreading out the offense
so Bubbles Hawkins and AI
Skinner -could go one-on.(Jne
White and John
ATLANTA (UP!) - With with
Havlicek, respectively.
Georgian I;Jan Reeves out of
· · 1 Ha kin had
the running for the Atlanta · Surprwng y, w 8
Falcons' top coaching job, tremendous success against
White and scored 18 of his 22
another Southerner, Lee points
in the secood half. He
Bennett, a Los Angeles also scored 10 straight points
NEW YORK (UPI) - assistant coach, is,the leading lor the Nets in the closing
World Team Tennis polished candidate.
to th"{art any
"I'm a Southerner too, and minutes
its ln\age today with the
possible comeback by the
acquisition
of
the li would be nice to return to Celtics.
· ,
" sweetheart team" of that area," Bennett said
Skinner
was
the
Nets'
top
Wimbledon champion Bjorn recently,
scorer with 24 points.
Reeve's , offensive coorBorg of Sweden and his
Dave Cowens had 29 points
Romanian girl friend hy the dinator for the Dallas and 17 rebounds for the
Cleveland-Pittsburgh Nets. Cowboys, officially turned Celtics in his best scoring
Joe Zingale signed the down the job Wednesday, but performance since returning
Swedish star to a three-year said he had advised Falcons' to Ute club and White finished
contract estimated at $1.5 General . Manager Eddie with 19 points.
,
million and sweetened the pot LeBaron the day before that . In
other
games,
by adding Marina Simione.CU he dldn't want the job.
Philadelphia beat· Detroit,
"Let me say, I talked with 138-116; KaMas City topped
to the roster.
"I chased Bjorn around the my advisers and reached the Portland, 119-107; Phoenix
world the last four years, conclusion·there were certain defeated Milwaukee, 13G-113;
trying to sign him," said things I needed to have a Denver beat Washin•ton,l19~
Zingale, Nets' owner who also chance to win iri Atlanta," 105; Seattle ·defeated New
sits on the board of directors Reeves said.
Orleans, 126-95, and Houston
"The proposal they made at Buffalo was postponed by
of the Indians and Cavaliers
in Cleveland. " It's a major dldn't' cover all the things I had weather.
breakthrough for the WTI', felt were necessary in order 76ers 138, Pistons 116:
which ha s become a to be successful. I turned
Julius Erving scored 25
dominant force in tennis ." down the job Tuesday, but points, Lloyd Free 24 and
The 20-yea r-old Borg, ·hero told them I'd thlnii it over," George McGinnis 22 to pace
of Sweden's Davis Cup he said.
the 76ers' romp over the
' Pistons.
championship victory over
Czechoslovakia, will devote
Kings 119, Trall Btazen 107:
his 1977 efforts exclusively to
Ron Boone scored 28 points
WTI', with the exception of
and Brian Taylor 24 to lead
MOSCOW
(UP!)
Nottingham, Wimbledon, ·the
the Kings over the Trail
Olympic gymnast Olga
U. S. Open and Swedish Davis Korbut is studying at the Blazers, who played without
injured Bill Walton.
Cup competition.
Polygraphic Institute In
"Europe really holds no Minsk and may be planning SuDB i3o, Bucks 113:
Paul Wes(phal scored 29
challenge for me," says
to get married - but not just
points
and blid 12 aasists and
Borg.
now.
Alvan Adams hlid '11 points
and 11 assists as the Suns had
little difiiculty in beating the
Bucks, who now have the
wa-st record in the NBA.
Nuggets 111, BuUeta 1~:
David Thompson's 37i)Oint
performance ted the Nuggets
to victory over the Bullets.
Elvin Hayea had 26 points to
lead the Bullets.
SuperSonics UO, Jm 95:
Henry w. Block
Mike Green replaced Tom
Burleson at center early in
the game and sc(Jfed 16
points, while Burleson came
back to score 17 in the second
half as the Sonlcs d.efeated
lhe\Jazz. New Orleans' Peoo
Reason No. 15 why H&amp;R Block
Marovich was held to only 15
should do your taxes.
points by the Sonlcs.

Bennett.is

Borg~

girl ..

·

friend sign

top choice
in Falcon job

with Nets

"Even if you.
use the short

Pro

_].
t.Annm~s

~ ·s

!

the last 15 seconds left gave
OIUahoma a iJ6.Q victory
~ver Mls.sourl and a 'share of
the Big Elgbt lead.
JoJo HWlter, a freshman
guard, Scored :11 points as
Maryland ripped VIrginia, 8267;'Kansas State topped Iowa
State, ro-61, behind 24 points
by Mike Evans; George
Johnson's 21 points led St.
John's over Georgetown, 8266; Mike Doyle scored 24
points and Nate Davis 23 as
South Carolina pounded
Richmood, 95-63; and guards
Alvin Wrlgbt and Dexter
Reed scored 18 points apiece .
to lead Memphis State over
Western Kentucky; 97-75.

Boy ratings
·basketball
COLUM1lUS (UP I)_ This
week 's United Press In ·
ternotlanal Ohio High School
Board of Coaches' baskelba ll
ratings witi, firsl.place voles
and won .los t records in
parentheses :
Class AAA
Team
Points
1. Barberton 23 (" ·Ol
255
2. Col. Linden (11 -0l
217
3. Elyria 1 (13-0)
166
4. Cleve. E. Tech (9-11
105
5. Springfield 5. (11 -1l
98
6. Warren West. Res. (11-11 96
7. Lebanon 1 (11 .0)
94
8. Day ton Roth ! 1o-n
n
9. Newark (12-11
76
10. Cin. Elder (10-21
52
Second ten : 11 . Middletown
33; 12 . Bay Village 23 ; 13.
Canton Tim ken 20 ; .1,4. Cincl nnali LaSalle 19 ; 15.
Defiance 13 ; 16. Cincinnati St.
. Xavier 12 ; 11. Columbus
Marion Franklin 11 ; 18.
Toledo Bowsher 9 ; 19.
Cleveland 51. l9nalius 8; 20.
(tiel Canton IV\CKinley and
Toledo St. John 's. 7 each .
Class AA
Team .
Points
1. Akron So. 4 (10.11
137
2. (tiel Ridgewood 7 (1 2·0) 125
2. (tiel Bellefontaine
,
2(11 .1)
125
122
4, coi.MIIfl in 1 (1 0·11
5. Buckeye South 1 (10·01 100
6. Cleve .' Cath. Latin 1 112·
2l
•
·
88
7. Wheelersburg 2 (B-01
73
8. Col. 51. Cha rles (8-2)
52
9. Elmwood 18·11
39
10. Millbury Lake (11 ·21
32
Second ten : 11 . Warsaw
River
View
28 ; 12.
Washington Court House 21;
13. Coshocton 19 ; 14. Ironton
17 ; 15. (tie l Elyria Catholic
and Columbus Hamilton
Township (1), 15 each; 17.
Ottawa GJandorf (1) 14; 18.
Wellsville{ 1J; 19. Johnstown
lh&gt;nroe (11 10; 20. Be&lt;ley 8.
Class A
1. Morrall Ridgedale
15 ( 11-0l
1i1
2. Indian Val. So. 3 (10-21 "3
3. Ada (11 -11
93
4. Cardington (10-11
75
5. Stryker (12-21
74
6. Versailles {11-01
n
7. Archbold (12-0l
59
8. Southeast. (Ross) (10-01 47
~owd\~7.\'1 IT i{021',
~;
Second .ten : 11. Mansfield
St. Peter 's 26 ; 12. Patric k
Henry 23 1 13. New Riegel 21;
14. Cuyahoga Helgh1s 18: 15.
Mapleton 15 : 16 . Liberty
Union 14; 17. (tie) New
Bremen '•and Norwayne. 12
each : ·. 19. Bristolvill e
(Bristol l 9; 20. Riverdale 8.
ClllCAGO (UPI) - Bill
Veeck, president of the White
Sox, said Wednellday the
chances of sTugger Riehle
Allen returning to the
Chicago team were highly
improbable.
Veeck said he had talked
briefly with Allen, who
played three seasons for the
White Sox and woo the 1972
American League's Most
Valuable Player Award while
with the team.
"That was about six weeks
ago," Veeck said. "It was
purely routine. We tried to
contact all Ute free agents.
We just didn't want to
overlook any opportunities."

·

.
Even the short form is more complicated

\

'

.

this year. So to be s·ure you pay the
smallest legitimate tax-it could pay you to
see Block. And if switching to the long
form will save you money, we'll show you
just how much.

E•stern

Conferenc~

Atl1nt ic Division
W. L. Pet.
Philadelphia
30 18 .625
NY Knlc;:ks
1'1 25 .468

II&amp;R BLOCit
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

618 EAST MAIN
Open 9 1.m.• , p.m. Wtokdlys, 9·5Sal.
Pllont192·37fl

NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY '

GB

11h
'23 27 .460 I
Buffa lo
17 JO .362 121h
NY Nets
1.4 3.4 .292 J6
Central Division
W. L. Pd. GE
Washington
27 20 .574
Houston
26 20 .565
'h
Cleveland
26 21 .553 1
San Antonio
26 23 .531
2
New Orlean!
22 28 .440 6'1.1
Atlanta
18 33 .353 11

Boston

w estern Conference
Midwest Division
W. L Pet .
Denver
33 15 ,688
Detroit
29 22 ·. s69
Kansas City
'17 25 .519
lnd "iana
·
23 27 .460
20 29 .408
Chicago
Milwaukee
15 39 .278
Patltic Division
W. L. Pet.

Los Angel es
P.ortland
Golden State

33 16

GB

5'12
8
11

11•1.1
21

GB

673

34 18 .654
26 22 .5.&amp;2

'h
6!h

Sea ttle
27 2.&amp; .529 7
P'hoen ix
23 25 .479 9'h
'
. Wednesday's Re sults
NY Nets 99 Boston 89
.
Phiilldelphie 138 Detroif 116

Kansas City 119 Portland 107
PhOenix' IJO M ilw aukee 113
Denver 1. 19 Washington lOS
Seattle 120 New Orleans 95
Houston at Buffalo. ppd .. wea
. Thursday's Games
Housfon at NY Kn'icks
Buffalo at Atla nta
Chicago at San Antonio
Portland at Indiana
New Orleans a t Golden St

Frldav·s Games
Los Ange les at Boston
Indiana at Buffalo

NY Nets at Philadelph ia
Denver at Detroit
Cleveland at Kansas City
Golden Sta te at Phoenix
·Wash ington iu se attle

NHL Standings
By Uni t ed Press Inter nationa l
Campbe"ll Conference
Patrick Division

Ph ila

W l T Ph . GF GA

29 10 12 70 195 1&lt;i0
NV lslandrs 30 14 7 67 18 1 127
Atlan ta
23 16 11 57 173 164
N V Rangers 18 22 13 49 185 192
Smythe Division
W L T Pis . GF GA
St . Louis
21 25 6 AB 148 179
Chic ago
19 24 9 47 169 180
Co lorado
15 28 9 39 1S 1190
Minnesota 12 28 11 35 147 204
Vancouve r . 15 32 5 35 142 199
Wales Conference
Norris Oivisian
W l T Pts. GF GA
Mont r ea l
38 7 B 84 253 121
Pittsbur gh 23 20 B 54 165 163
Los Angeles 19 23 10 48 17 1 167
Washingtn 16 29 e 40 143 199
Detro it
14 30 6 34 129 185
Adams Division
W l T Pt s. GF GA
Boston
30 16 6 66 196 160
Buffalo
28 16 6 62 177 139
Toronto
25 20 ~ 57 19 1 168 ·
Cteve(and
15 28 B 38 152 189
Wednesday's Results
Chicago 4 Atlanta 2
Pittsburgh 5 Minnesota 2
Toronto 9 Detr oit 1
Los Ang eles 1 washington 2
Thursday's Games
N Y Rangers at NY lslanelers
Ch ieago at Philadel ph ia
P ittsburgh at Cleveland
St . Louis a t Boston
Buffa lo a t Colorado
Montrea l at Va ncouver
Friday 's Gam es
• Bos ton at A ll ante

WHA Standings
By Un it ed Press International
East
~
W L T Pts . GF GA
31 16 1 63 219 169
74 12 A 57 169 180
Cincinnali
23 24 2 48 214 187
N ew E nglnd 20 30 5 45 180 2QB
x -Minnesot 19 18 5 43 136 129
Birmnghm 20 32 1 41 178 203
West
W L T Pts. GF GA
Hous ton
~9 16 5 63 186 145
San Dfego
29 20 2 60 175 165
Winnipeg
26 20 1 SJ 220 11.4
Edmon ton 21 29 2 44 lAO 189
Calgary
19 26 4 42 155 .167
.PhOenix
20 28 1 42 115 2J 1
x- Team disbanded
W@dnesda -y's Results
Birm ingham J Cincinnati 2
Indianapol is 6 New Eng 5
San D iego 6 Calgary 4
Thursday ' s Gama..
t-;~ouston at PhOeni x
Friday 's Games
New Eng land at Houston
Quebec at Birmingham
I San Di ego at Winnioeo

Quebet

lndianapts

PROVIDENCE, R.I. (UPI )
- Former goalie Ross
Brooks Wednesday took over
as coach of the Rhode Island
Reds of the American Hockey
League.
Brooks, 39, who played with
the Boston Bruins of the
Natiooal Hockey League and
the Reds and Rochester
Amerks of the AIIL, succeeds
John Muckier, who remained
as general· manager of the
Providence-based club.

Miami all but skinned
Ulllted P~teruaU01111I
Miami's Darrell Hedrlc
knows what you have to do to
win
basketball
championships. He also
knows what you can't do and
still win them - .lose at horne.
"We were lucky to get out
of this game alive," said the
Miami boM Wednesday night
after the Redskins eacaped
with a double overtime ~1
win over Northern Dllnoi.s in "
a battle for first place in the
Mld~Arnerlcan Co!lference,
"Thls, as a home game, was
more important for us than
for them."
He&lt;lric's Redskins now
stand alone atop the MAC
wiUt a S.t mark, tlleir lone
setback dealt them .by
Central Michigan in the
friendly co!lfines of Millett .
Hall a couple of weeks ago.
Another home loss could have
been very costly.
"We had chances to pot the
game away 1" said, Hedric,
"but they always fought
back."
Miaini had the last shot at
both the end of regulation
play and the first overtime.
In fact, Rich Babcock, an 83
per cent free throw shooter,
missed a pair of charity
tosses with three seconds left
in the first overtime.
But, the Redskins left no
doubt in the second extra
period, reeling off seven
straight points to break ah 8989 tie,
Despite tile loas, first year
iluskie coach John McDougal
was proud of his team.
"We played with great
determination and desire,"
said McDougal. "We have
shown improvement and
played as well as can be
expected. When they went up
by four In the second
overtime, we came down and
took two poor percentage
· shots. That hurt us." ·
In other Mid-Am games
Wednesday night, Ball State
edged Ohio University 65oM,
Bowling Green nipped Kent

state SUI In overtime 'and clock ran out.
Central Michigan beat Toledo
Ernie Whltua with 18 *I
IJ8.81.
four Ohto playen ill dOuble
So, the MAC standings now figure&amp;.
lind Miami on top at 11-1, ' At Pittsburgh, Larry
Ncrthem Illlnois and Western Hatrla aank a 22-loot jump
Mlchlgan at 5-2, Bowling ohot frDII! the corner to give
Green and Central Michigan Pltllburgh a IJ6.IK win o- .
at ~2 and the rest of the field nUt-ranked ClncimaU.
just about out of cmtentlon .. Pitt, trailing ~ with 11
with at least four loues.
second&amp; remaining, got a
Tonuny Hatrla led Bowling chance lor victory when :
Green to its win over Kent Cincinnati 'a Steve CoUler •
Sta.te with 22 points as the missed the first of a one-end- :
Falcons' balanced attack one lree throw slt111tion.
overcame a 34-polnt effort by
Harris, a fonner Ohio UPI '
Kent's Burrell McGhee.
Class A player of the year at :
At Mount Pleasant, Lorain Clearvlew High
Leonard Drake pumped in 20 School, led all scorers _with 31
points, all. of them in the points, whlle Bob' Mliier wu ,
second hall , to spark Central high for Cincinnati with 24. ,
Michlgsn to its triumph over
The victory was only the
Toledo.
fourth in 18 starts lor the •
Ted Williams scored 32 Panthers, while Ctnclnnati II '
points to lead Toledo, hitting now 1~.
,
11 of his last 12 shots !rom the
In other games Wednesday •
floor . Dave Gra02er shared night it was Akron 91 Ashland ~
Central Michigan's scorillg 70; Central State 106 Shaw .'
honors with 20 points.
(Mich.)74; Dellance98IDuff·
Jim Hahn scored 17 points ton 72; Oberlin 73 Ohio :
and made a last second steal Northern 65; Ohio Wesleyan •
to provide Ball State with ita 89 Deni.lon 81 In overtime; ~ ·
squeaker
over
Ohio Rio Grande 92 Ohio ·
University.
Dominican 67; Tiffin 70 ·
With Ball State leading ~ Cedarville 69 ; Walsh 74 .
64, Hahn was fouled with 16 Malone 66; Wittenberg 83
second:! left and missed the Kenyon 73; Wooster 73
firSt of a one-and.(Jne. Ohio Baldwin Wallace 70;
grabbed the rebound and · Youngstown
State
72
called lime out. Hahn, Steubenville 63; Allegheny
however, managed to steal (Pa.) 83 John Carroll 69; and
Ute ball as the Bobcats were Case Western 65 Washington
taking it down court and tt.. &amp; Jefferson (Pa .1 62. -

SEE US FOR
ALL YOUR

SUPPLIES
vou"ll find everything you need for
decoupage when yoU visit your nearby

American H1ndlcrlfh .. ,. prl nta, wood
Items, ralnt, lacquer ~nd bttt Ol all,
persona

how-to. Sn us for 111

other craft

s~o~.ppllu

too :

t"na

• C.andltmaklnt

DETROIT ( UP! )
Forward, Marvin Barnes of
'the Detroit Pistons has been
placed on probation for two
years after pleadlng guilty to
possessing an unloaded gun.
It was this offense that
constituted violation of
Barnes' problition in Rhode
Island, for which he has given
a one-year jail sentence due
to start at the conclusion of
the National Bask~tball
Association season.
Wayne County Circuit
Court Judge Joseph B.
Sullivan, who handed Barnes
his latest probation Tuesday,
turned down the
basketball
I
star's request to work with
community youngsters.

• C~pper Toollnt
• .. nd many morel

History will know it as the winter of '77
By JAY GmJAN
UDited Pmo Iaten~~tl-1
:"It's dim(.'ult to keep a
JJtl1l)lOCI!ve on history when
you are Uving it - but the 31
days just past - known as
January - will probably
beccme known to future Ohio
generations simply as "The
Winter of '77."
There have been several
''winters or• iJ\ Ohio history,
nearly
of them are
infamous for record snowfall.
The first month ol1977 4idn't
Oh io
much
bring
precipitation - but, Oh Those
TlllllJ!ef&amp;tures !

all

CRARY LADI~S
HANDICRAFTS.
Main

Pomeroy, 0 .

JUST BELOW THE JONES BOYS IN

OPEN FRIDAY ANDSATURDAYTIL8
p.m .

keep their record book's
pages turning - recording
the coldest first monUt of any
year in that city's history .
The average temperature
at Toledo during Jairuary was
9.6degrees- another record.
And officials report . the
temperature never reached
30 degrees during the entire
month - with 15 dayg of zero
or below readings.
Even more records were
established last month at
Cleveland, where
the
National Weather Service
reported a record low of 17
degrees below zero on Jan.
17. There were 18 days of zero
or below temperatures In
Cleveland, an all-time
record.
The Lakefront
City
averaged 11 degrees for the
month, 15.9 degrees below
normal lor the month.
in
Y o un gstown,
Northeastern Ohio, also ha•

WALLCOVERING

20%

Discount
On Slle Now

Register
For Wallpaper

1

Clinic To Be Held
Feb. 16th

POINT PLEASANT PAINT &amp;
L WALLPAPER CENTER

Coach Art Lanham's Rio attack with 23 markers.
Rio Grande hit 41 of 88 field
Grande College Redmen
moved back into undisputed goal attempts lor 46 per cent.
675-6020
first place in the Mid.Ohio The Redmen were 10 ol17 at
Monday Nite Mixed
ll4
Main
Point
Standings
Conference with a 92-67 the foul line lor 58 per cent.
Team
W. L.
triumph
over
Ohio Rio picked off 56 rebounds
Team No. I
HI 14
Domlnlcan Wednesday night and had 29 turnovers.
Team No. 2
18 6
The Panthers hit 28 of 75
ill Columbus.
Team No . 3
6 18
No. 4
12 12
The victory upped Rio's field goal attempts for 37 per oiiiooiiil-i.iiiO..·____ Team
Team No.5
18 6
season mark to 14-&gt;1. Inside cent and 11 of 22 charity
Team No.6
8 16
the MOC, Rio Grande in· toases for 50 per cent. OD
Te am high series - Te~m
. L
I
Pomeroy Bow ong anes
No. 4 2146 : Team No.5 2121 ;
grabbed 34 rebounds.
creased its record to 7-1.
January 22,1977
Team
No . 2 2077 .
Prior to Saturday's RioWalsh College knocked
Saturday Afternoon
Team high game _ Team
Malone's Pioneers out of Malone contest, Gallipolis's
St~ndings
No. 2 741 ; Tearn No. -4 739 ;
Pt
undisputed first place last varsity and reserve squads Team
· _s. Team No. 5 735.
26
Men 's high series night with a surprise 74116 will host Jackson in makeup Nile Owls
Bowling Stones
22 Raymond Roach 530; Mose
victory over the previous contest~ at Lyne Center.
Super Stars
20 Norman 494; Bob Sou thern
Wednesday's hox:
league leaders. Malone, Rio's
Road Runn ers
18 473.
RIO GRANDE ( 92) - Noe, Red Barons
nezt opponent at Lrne Center
10
M en's high game - Mose
0 Norman 189; Ra y m ond
Saturday at 8 p.m. dropped to 15·1·31 ; Robinson , o.o.o; Gutter Busters
Price. 5·2-12 ; James , 5.1.11 ;
HI.gh Windtdvid ual gamShe
Roach 18~ ; larry Hendrick s
1().2 inside the conference.
.
Bise. 3-0-6; Swain. 9·4·22 : Chns oo s 17 8;
ane 180.
The Redmen bullt up a 43-26 Vickroy. 2·1-5; Royse , 1·0·2: Smith 164; Fra nk Haggy,
Women's high series halftime lead over the Gibson. 1·1·3. TOTALS 4t -IO· Lan!'ly L oniJ:s.tr~th 158.
_M yr tle Norman 459 ; Mary
H1gh s~ rt es Lanny Ennis 432 ; Bess Hendrick s
Panthers Wednesday night 92.
OHIO DOMINICAN (671 Longstreth 427 ; Dave Smllh 379:
enroute to their 14th victory. Rauch
. 2·0·4: Tumbl ison , 10· 393; Frank Haggy 39 1.
Wom en's high game Jimmy Noe picked off 21 3·23; Nash , 2· 1-5; Loedendlck,
Team high game Nite Myr tle Norman t8A ; Mary
reboundsandscored31 points · 2·0·4; Ketlinger, 1·0-2; Lang , ONis 757.
Ennis 153· Lu cy Hendri cks
Team high seri es - Nite 151 .
'
lor the winners. Mark Swain •·0·8: Stenge r. 1·4·6: Wilson.
added
. 22points GUPrice 12 6·2·14 ;
Ehrbar, 0·1·1. Owls 2256.
•
TOTALS 28·11-67 .
and . Greg James 11 . Ken
Halftime score: Rio 43 OD
Monday Nite Mixed
Tumbllson led the Panthers 26.
Jan. 24, 1977
Standings
ON FINE CLOTHING
Team
W. L,
LOS ANGELES ( U~I ) Team No. 1
8 8
12 4
Walt Alston will he at Vero Team No .2
FOR MEN AND WOMEN!
6 2
Beach, Fla ., when the Los Team No.3
No.4
4 12
Angeles Dodgers open spring Team
Tram No.5
10 6
training camp March 1, but Tedm No.6
8 8
Women 's high game . EXTON, Pa. - Foote not as manager.
Alston retired as manager Bess Hendricks 160; Bess
'Mineral Company reported
Hendric ks
and
Myrtle
of
the Dodgers after 23 years
ilet earnings of $6.6 mllllon,
Norman 159: M yr tl e Norman
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
N. 2ND AVE.
.
)!qual to 79 per share, for at the end of the 1976 season 154 .
MIDDLEPORT
Tt
high series - Tea m
but
remains
with
the
club
in
1976 compared with $9.8
N.o. 6 • ,09; Team No. 2 2128;
mllllon or $1 .24 per ~at:e in the capacity of "special Team No. 5 2116.
consultant."
team -high gam e - Team
·1975. Sales for 1976 were
The Dodgers will he under No. 6 784 ; Team No. 4 7411;
$116.4 mllllon compared with
No. 2 738.
aales of $103.9 milll!lllln 1975. the management of Tom Tea111
Men's high series LaSorda,
who
was
promoted
1 Net earnings for the year
Raymond Roach 570; Bill
were adversely affected by from his spot as third-base Marcum 480 ; Mose Nor man
coach.
479.
.
high~r production costs
Men 's high game below
resulting · from
Raymond Roach 212; Bill
capacity operations at cerSEA'ITLE (UP!)- Now it Marcum 203 ; Larry Enn is
taln locations, in part Cl!D he told how Slick Watts, 197.
becauae of temporary shut-' the do-everything guard of · Women 's high series Norma n 466 ; Bess
downs of ferroalloy furnaces the Seattle SuperSonics, gets Myrtle
Hendricks 447 ; Naomi Fl oyd
lor instillation of required all the energy he spends in 377.
pollution contt·ol equipment. NBA gsmes.
Tuesday Triplicate .
Net earnings lor the fourth
"I generally eat spinach
Jan. 25. 1977
quartet 1976 were $1.5 mlllion and fish before each game,"
Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Company will hold two public meetings
Standings
or
per share compared he disclosed whlle discussing Team
Pis.
to discuss with area residentS'the Company 's iotention to build two 375 megawatt
42
.with $1.6 milllon or $.19 per menus with home economist ' Shamrock Motel
34
Roya
l
Oak
Park
coal fired generating units along the "Ohio River. The first unit is proposed to be
share lor the same period in Janet Stout in preparation lor
20
ROya l Crown Cola
1975. Sales In the fourth the " Heart'A - Fair" Shirts.
10
in service early in 1985.
·
Lid .
quarter 1976 .were $27 million sponsored by the WashingiOJ! New York Cloth ing
12
10
compared with $25 million in chapter of the Ameri can
Ruth's Beauty Shop
The primary site is known as the Newbury site and is located in Washingto':'.
High ·individual gam e
the 1975 quarter.
· Heart Association Feb. 3-4.
County near Belpre, Ohio.
alternate site is in the Great Bend area across the Oh1o
Helen Ph elp s 180; Belly
,------------:-----~-&lt;'' Smith 176.
River from Ravenswood, West Virginia .
High ser ies Betty
Smith 490 : Pat Carson 479.
Team high game
Complete copi~s of all the Company's work to date and their Letter of Intent
Shamrock Molel 455.
are available for revie~ at the following locations:
T ea m high , series
Shamrock Motel 1325.

BOWLING

Winter Clearance
I

I

I

=

I
IL._\:::\t:·

JANUARY

'

'

'

NOW IN PROGRESS

SHOE
SALE

SAVINGS FROM

20% to 50%

CONTINUES

Foote earnings

down to 79c

THE

sltare in '76

GET

AnENTIOI

BAHR CLOTHIERS

SHOE BOX

C&amp;SOE Reschedules Public Meetings for Proposed Plant Construction

u•

Say you care

Athens Public Library
,
Washington County Library, Belpre and Marietta Branches
Pomeroy Public Library
Jackson County Library, Ravenswood Branch
Parkersburg- Wood County Library

Food stamp
cutback is

NOW IN PROGRESS

'

Great Saiings f01 JOU ·During the Entire Month Of februiiJ

withdrawn
BETTER

LADIES
PURSES

LADIES' DRESS SHOES
1 GROUP. .................... •5 00

'3

2 PAIRS FOR

MEN'S
DRESS·SHOES
WEYENBERG

'6.00 PR.

WINTER WEAR .

one month .
Columbus, located at the
center of the state, had an
average January
temperature of 11.4 degrees,
or 17 degrees ;below normal.
That made the month the
coldest since records began
In the capital city in 1873.
The temperature failed to
reach the freezing mark at
any lime dl\l"ing January and,
in fact, has remained below
freezing at Columbus since
Dec. 28, setting another
record.
Sub-zero temperatures at
Columbus occurred on 14
days during January and
readings remain ed below
zero from 6 a.m. Jan. 16 until
2 p.m. on Jan. 18.
Columbus weathermen re·
corded record low readings
on three days - with a 19
below zero temperature on
Jan. 17 the lowest at
Columbus this ~entury and
only on~egree short of an
all~ime record low.
And NWS officials in
Columbus report the average
temperature lor the four·
month period fr om October,
1976, through January, 1977,
was 29.4 degrees - colder
than any corr esponding
period in the record books.
Toledo meteorologists also

The

CARDS

'5

s~

•

SHOES

'

I ,

middle 1800's.
when the thermometer
Cincinnati also received tlje 'dipped to 21 degrees below
most snowfall of any area in zero. That outdid the ea,rlier
Ohio, and the only major city all~ime weather reco'rd·of 19
reporting
a
record below, set In Dayton during
precipitation total1Cincinnati 1963.
received 30.3 inches of snow,
The average Dayton
erasing the Queen City's old temperature was 11.6
record - or 21.4 inches , degrees, and tha t outran
recorded in 1914.
every December.JanuaryThe average temperature February average back to
in Cincinnati during January 1900.
was only 12 degrees - 19.1
Dayton had 57 consecutive
degrees below normal.
hours of zero or below
i\nd for all but one day of temperatures during the
the
month,
readings month jlist ended, surpassing
remained below freezing in the prevlous consecutive
the Queen City - another · Daytoq record of zero or
record.
below temperatures, set Jan .
Traveling northward, wea- 24, 1963. In all, Dayton had 13
thermen in Dayton reported ' days with temperatures
an all·time record low dipping to zero or below temperature on January 17, another record in that dty for

at the AkrorK:anton Airporl
recorded a low of 11 decreet
below zero oo Jan . 17 - tile
·coldest oo record for any
January and IU degreetl
below oormal for that mooth.

®~~[K] [DJ~~v~[KJ@J~

WOMEN'S &amp; CHILDREN'S

GREAT SAVINGS

1\ecord upon record fell
serosa the stste - and nearly
all Utose records were for low
temperaures.
Cincinnati recorded the
lowest official temperature in
the entire state during the
mooth.
Early on the morning of
Tuesday, January 18 ,
National Weather Service
meleorologists Inked a 25degree below zero readlng
into the Queen City record
books. That was the coldest
temperature ever recorded in
Cincinnati . since weather
records began, back in the

Redmen in first alone

1 GROUP

NOW IN PROGRESS

just completed its coldest
mooth on record with an
average temperature of i0.3
degrees - 15.4 degrees below
normal.
Officials at the NWS office

'

-

s.

• Pl•stlc cuunt

1 GROUP. .................. •6"

ON ALL
BOSTON (UPI) - 'The
liljuryiJlagued SOliton Brulna
Wednellday called up left
wtncer John W...mk !rom
their Rochester American
!ann club.
Wllllllnk, who had 11 goals
and 14 lullll in t8 g111Il1!8
with lbe Americana, wu
apected to be In uniform for
the BruiN' Tlllrllday night
cmtest agalnalthe St. Loul.s
Blu~ •.t Boston pardel':

I
t

NBA Sllndlns
8v Un ited Press International

form, it
could pay y()u to
see us."

II

5- The Dilly Sentinel, Mlddleport.P0111eroy, 0 .. Thutlldav. Feb. 3. trn

00

MEN'S DINGO

BOOTS

JV;WOACXX;·
CANDIES

·~[0~

·~·
,~,~.\

MISCEUMEOUS

115," PAIR

I

'1.00

iii;;;~FIR~Sl WW OF IALl iiiii;;iiiiiiii
WOMEN'S DRESS SHOES

. ".

Auditionl, Naturatlttf'. Vttt~t and Jollnt
All from our rt~uiJr stock.

2

1 00

IIOULAI

I

' MARGUERITE'S SHOES

'

.. .

...,,.,,•• Further Notice_·
We WiU Be Open From
9: 00 a.m. to 8: 30 p.m.
rhru

Dutton Drug Store

BETTY OIIUIICEI
POMEROY, 01110

•

.i,

m N. 2nd. Ave.
. Phone 9112-:11 OG

Middleport, 0 .

WASIDNGTON (UP!) Agriculture Secretary Bob
Bergland Wednesday of·
l!cially withdrew a Ford
adnnlnistration food stamp
cutback proposal which
would have knocked three to
iour mllllon people off the $5.6
blllion stamp program rolla.
Bergland said in a
statement he was taking the
long-expected action so the
Carter administration can
start with a clean slate in
developing food stamp policy,
"free of any encumbrances
that the Ford proposal might
have lmpoaed ."
The Ford plan ' was an·
nounced as a final regulation
last May 7. But it was blocked
by a federal court injunction
and never went Into ellect.
Ronald Pollack, director of
an organization which
spearheaded a suit againSt
the Ford pinn on behalf of
dozen s of national and
regional churc~, labor, antJ..
hunger and other public
groups, said he will now move
to drop the case.
"The first thing we 're going
to do is pop the cork on the
champagne bottle," Pollack .
joked . "Then we'll formally
ask the court to ·dismlas the
case .. . and we intend to
play an active role In trying
to see that we get decent food
s!amp reform legislali6n." ·

Columbus and. Southern is interested in public input before the formal
environmental work program, needed to prepare an application, begins. Representatives
from the consulting firms hired by Columbus and Southern to study the environmental
and economic impacts of such a plant will also be present at the meetings.

All interested persons are urged to attend.
Wednesday, February 9
•

r-, .....

'

'

Little Hocking Elementary School

'
.I
--- --- - -~ -,"'

. 7:00 P..M.

I

•

I'

I

I

OR

I

I

•..,

Thursday, February 10

I
I

'I

(l)ATII£1.1~

'

ATWb"NS co.
~YIU.fo

I

Southern Local (Racine) High School;"- ... ---·--------

7:00P.M.

I

M ~I'GS

Newbury Site
-~

'

co;

I

I

I-· .... _... ___

-#~

~

~(]-

Great Bend Site

~"

~

~~~

.

'

.

: II

�7- The DaUy Sentinel, Mlddlepart-Pomeroy,_0 ., 'I11ursdayLFeb. 3, 1977

Nicki Van Meter given party

8- The DIUy Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pcmeroy, 0., 'l11Ul'lday, Feb. 3, 1977

Ashland Conservative
makes political mark
.

PIONEER
MODEL P28

~
Professional type
ant1·v1brat1on
Powerful 3.1 cu In
16" sprocket nose bar
Heavy duty clutch

Ultimate ltghtweight

cha.1n saw

Reg . U20 .00

NOW ONLY 205
1

HOMESTEAD HEATER

Reg. $396.95

NOW ONLY '321.95

Opl l ona l

blowe r

k;t

pro vi des
a manually
controlled
blower
to

blankel the
warm air ,

Of the Bend

I

COLUMBUS (UP!) -Four have retired to their IBw
years ago a tall Dutchman practlces in dismay at the
wl!h curly red hair joined the shjlpe of the party.
"The name of the game is
state Senate with all the
Impact of a snowflake faDing hustle," explains Van Meter
oo Ohio.
who in two years of
Today Sen. Thomas A. Van barnstorming the state for
Meter, R·Ashland, Is a Republican candidates has
member of the Senate quietly built the nucleus of a
Republican leadership ; has campaign staff in half Ohio's
carried out a munber of high- 88 counties.
level aSsignments for Gov.
Senate Republican leaders
James A. Rhodes and is in the minority found Van
preparing to run for Meter a wiUing worker and
lieutenant governor
turned his antagonistic
Rhodes ' energies toward DemOcratic
perhaps
as
teammate.
opponents whom he Is able to
When Van Meter joined the anger and frustrate ro the
Senate in 1973 he quickly point of distraction.
.
acquired the reputation of a
He served on a select
noisemaker; · a hard-bitten committee on clvU service
conservative rabbl...-ouser practices in 1974 and became
wbo bearded his own party familiar with the law which
leadership to .the point cr qualified him to defend the
ostracism.
Rhodes adminiStration IBst
one of his first acts was to year.
propose a Senate rule
Rhodes named Van Meter
requiring a two-thirds vote vice chairman of a special
for any meeting Including a colllll)isslon to weed out onparty caucus to be closed. He necessary government agenwas shouted down.
cies, a prime goal of the
Van Meter also violated an governor. The senator also
unwritten rule - he opposed became an expert on
a back-&amp;:ratching bill for Medicaid and was named by
venerable . Sen. Oakley C. Rhodes to a controversial
Collins, R-lronton, with the Nursing Home Advisory
result thai Collins will not Commissi'on.
speak to him and voted
Van Meter also worked
against him for leadership. with
the
Rhodes
The new senator rattled the administration's energy bill
walls with his vocal "no" and became a legislative
votes ; he looked on in suUen member of the Ohio Energy
disapproval as his coUeagues and Resource Development
caved in on liberal Agency - . which is very
legislation; finally he much a newsmaker these
survived as Democrats took days.
control of the Senate .
- Having been elected to a
How has Van Meter ~ an full rerm in 1974 Van Meter
unknown in a Republican was free last year to
majority in 1973 and a campaign for the re-election
member of the conservative of Rep. John M. Ashbrook, a
wing - built himself into a top GOP conservative.
Early in the campaign Van
realistic candidate for
lieutenant governor in 1978 Meter decided with his backand a potential runningma te ground as a · former Army
for Rhodes?
infantry,: lieutenant in
There are several. reasons Vietnam that Ronald Reagan
the greatest of which is that was off base on fa-eign
Van Meter has worked affairs and that Presideot
tirelessly for Rhodes and Ford was the man to back.
other GOP · candidates and . "For too long conofficeholders while his peers servatives here poked at
and punched at from the
, outside Instead of trying to

floors

wUh

WILKINSON

SMALL ENGINE
SALES &amp; SERVICE

IUPI J A
glance at activit-y Wednesday in
the Ohio General Assembly :
. . Senatl!!
1
· ·
Bills Introduced
S852 Bowen - Requ ires State
Tax Department to collect
municipal income taxes and
levies the local income tax
against the same base as the
state persQnal income tax and
corpora te franchise tax .
SBSJ Aronoff Requires
local government lm pl!ct state.
ments for bills introduced in
the legislature.
SBSA Aronoff - Permits all
dr iver's licenses to be renewed
.wlfhin
90
days of
the ir'
e~pirat i on da te.
SB55 Butts .Celebrezze .:__
Eli minates jury duty exemption
for all menbers of the Otiio
National Guard, the Ohio
Defense Corps and the Ohio
Naval Mil iti&amp; .
SB56 Malon ey - Cr eates a
legislati ve program rev iew. and
evaluation committee with the
legl~la t ure service commission.
SB57 Maloney .Cerney
Gives co~nties and certain
townships limi ted leg isl-ative
powers .
SB58 Maloney - Authorizes
township contracts with other
po litical subdivisions for police
protection to be paid for by a
. special pol ice levy rather than
from the townshi p general fund .
, SB59 Maloney - ReQuires the
s~ l ection of a back -up parlia ·
mentary manual for the ll'gisla ·
t~re and req uires a copv to be
Qtven to each rnember .
SB60 McCorm ack - Prohib its
discr im inati on based on age.
SB 61 Celebrezze - Grants
attorney general powers to
invest igate organ ized crime.
SB62 Cox - Clarifies th e

LUMBER, HARDWARE &amp;
BUILDING SUPPLIES
FOR ALL YOUR BUILDING NEEDS

ATHENS - The people of Claire Carpenter, retired
work from the Inside,'' said
southeastern
Ohio are Invited riverboat captain,
Good news at this point from eight-year-&lt;Jld Lonnie
Van Meter. ''Sootetlnies you LeMaster
to
participate
In five reminiscing "42 Years Up
who Is In excellent condition following additional
just draw them Into tighter
seminars
on
the
history
and And Down Tbe Ohio.''
circles by throwing stonea." brain surgery at St. Joseph Hospital In Parkersburg.
culture
of
their
region.
On Feb. 17, Dr. Ivan M.
Lonnie ls to get out of Intensive care',any day now following
He campaigned for Ford
Sessions
will
be
on
five
Tribe,
instructor of history at
the ~jor operation. Doctors are encouraging at this point to
and was a member of the Lonme's
consecutive
'rhursday
Rio
Grande
College, wiD talk
parents, Mrs: Bonnie LeMaster and Edward
President's Ohio Advisory
evenings,
February
3-March
about
"GuUded
Age Social
LeMaster. Mrs. LeMaster has teen at the hospital almost .
Committee.
He
alao constantly
10,
from
7:30-9
:30
p.m.
in
Life
In
Hocking
Valley
since Lonnie's IBst hospitalization over a month
coordinated the campaign now.
Morton
Hall
on
Ohio
Mining
Towns.''
, ·
·
efforts of Republican
On Feb. :14, WIU!am D.
llY
the
way,
LoMie
wtU
be
looking
forward
to receiving University's main campus.
candidates for the state
The
series
Is
being
coorHerron
wiD talk on "The
cards now so do remember to send them along. There's no
Senate,
dinated
by
Dr.
George
Bain
of
Development
of Education in
room number at this point but just address !bern in care of the
Now it Is lime for Van
the
Office
Workshops,
Southeast·
Ohio.''
Herron has
Meter to reap some rewarda hospital. LoMie's been a patient at St. Joe for so long that all Conferences .and Institutes. a Masters Degree In
the staff will know where to find him.
and he can base a statewide
The schedule Is as Edqcatton and Is a retired
campaign from a sprawling
APRIL BRICKLES, A THIRD GRADER at the Salisbury follows : On Feli. 'a, Dr. · Athens teacher.
19th Sonate DiStrict which
School, went to school Wednes4ay with a rarity to show her Hubert WUbelm, Professor of . On March 3, Dr. James W, ·
takes a chunk out of · the ~laSimlates.
Geography, will discuss Scholien, Associate Professor
center of northern Ohio
The other morning, April was going to fry an egg and "Settlements And The of Music Education, will
stretching from just east of·
inside the egg another egg - about the size of a Religious Patterns And ln- discuss " Traditional InColumbus to just south of discovered
In Southeastern strumental Folk Music of
jelly bean -in a separate shell Inside the first egg. So she nueilces
Cleveland.
Ohio. 1'
Southeastern Ohio."
saved the goodie to take to ciBss. .
"I have made the most out
Feb. 10 will feature E.
On March · 10, Emmett A.
of a bad situation," says Van
•
MEIGS RISTORIAN 'MiKE GERLACH a teacher at
Meter, acknowledging that he
Meigs High School, reports that 200 years ag~ Meigs County
has worked six days a week had Its first settler. He was Nathan Burnell who lived around
for the party despite a wife
and two young daughters at what Is now Chester. Mike says that Burnell was known as
"the great bear hunter" and was IUegalln settling in Meigs
home. "I eat and sleep my County on what was Indian land at the time.
job. 1'\-e campaigned places
nobody else would go."
GENE AND JUDY . RIGGS HAVE RECEIVED their
Van Meter thinks Rhodes
"CAKE" packages from her parents In Albuquerque, New
will run for re-election and MeXIco. Received were electric biBnkets,lugs for the firepiBce
handpick bls running mate.
He doesn't know whether he and even -some cough drops. Cost for sending one box of the
logs alone was over $8. Judy's parents, monitoring national
will be the one but offers
television, have been quite concerned about the Riggs' family
some reasons why he should and telephone daily to find out if the Riggs are surviving the
be.
WASHINGTON (UP!) - all grains ready for sale at
. "The governor has an hard winter - and they are.
co-ops, hoplrig to win any time and a network of
Farm
endless capacitY for work and
THE
1977
INAUGURATION
WILL
HAVE
special
an
Increasing
sh;U'e of tbe foreign facilities and sales
he likes tha.t in other people," memories for Ralph Dean Johnson, son of Ralph Johnson,
nation's
multi-billion
doliar offices.
says the senator, adding that
Barbe~n, and grarxlson of .Mr. and Mrs. Linioul Johnson,
"Foreign buyers say they
grain
export
business,
must
at 33 be fits Rhodes' current
Reedsville.
When
Mr.
Ford
inspected
a
ceremonial
cordon
at
would
like to trade with U.S.
coordinate
opera
lions
and
preference for adding youth
Andrews
Air Force as he left as a private citizen Dean made perhaps create a single co-op cooperatives, but that they
to his administration to offset the trip to the jet carrying the former president.' Dean bopes
foreign sales agency to make would like to deal with one
his own age (67) .
that
he
was
successful
enough
at
handling
the
aSsignment
of
a
any
headway, Agriculture cenlral cooperative organizaRhodes denies he is
ceremonial.
guard
that
he
wUl
be
called
Into
the
tole
in
future
Depar1ment
economists say. tion that can speak for all
favoring Van Meter as a eve~ls . Dean is embarking upon a service career with plans to
In
fact,
economists
Stanley U.S . cooperatives and
running mate. There was one continue mthe llllVf his studies in criminal law which he began
K.
Thurston
and
Robert
.J. provide prices and supplies
report he rold party officials
as
an
Akron
University
student.
for all grains," the
Byrne
added
in
a
report
he doesn't want anyone from
economists
said.
published
by
the
the legislature as his
DOROTHY AND TED DOWNIE WERE INVITED to the department's Fanner Coopteammate.
home of their son and daughter-in-law Cbuck and Donna erative Service, "improved . One factor hampering coVari Meter says he will not
ops, they said; is tile fact that
be a "yes" man. for Rhodes . ~wnie, for ~er one evening recenuY, Dorothy says the coordination will be needed · co-op members are not
young_er
~wmes are ~ng ho on conserving and the older
and won't run unless he S Down1es JUst ahout froze before the evening was over. Chuck just to maintain the usually bound to sell !ill their
convinced he will win, and Donna have been camp leaders during the summer cooperatives' present grain
through
the
ptisition In grain, exports.''
pointing out his Senate tenn
cooperatives.
AS
a
result,
comonths
for
years
and
undoubtedly
have
plenty
of know how in
Currently, grain co-ops
expires in 1978.
op
managers
can't
tell
in
"making ,do".
make only about 7..5 to 9 per
"I'm not in a position ro
advance hilw much grain
So - if you'd like some knowhow,letmeadviseyou phone
want to make a kamikaze toll free, 1-1100-282-9234 which is the Ohio Energy and Resour~ cent of all direct grain export they'll have to sell.
sales in an industry still
miSSIOn for
anybody
Development
Agency,
Columbus,
and
you
will
not
only
receive
dominated by giant trading
including the governor," he
your
answer
to
li c:onservation question but you'll receive in the
companies
like
the
says.
~I an excellent_ free manual on energy-ll&amp;ving home
Continental Grain Co.,
unprovements. Incidentally, the toll free number is a 24-llour Cargill, Inc., and Cook Indushotline.
tries. But the co-op share of
Ohio Legislative Briefs
sales h~ expanded in recent
'

992-2709

HOURS:

'

requ ir ement
that
drivers
making left t urns yield the
r igh t of wav to appro!ching
traffi c.
SB6J, CoM - Perm its data
processing storag e of reg istra "t ion record_s to serve as
permanent office records for
l;x&gt;Brds Of elect ions .
5664 Jackson - Increases
the travel allowanc:;e for leg isla tors from 15 cents to 18 cents
per mile .
SB65 White Confirms
agreements of the Lake Lands
Administrator at Grand lake
St. Marvs . Mercer County.
SB66 , White Confirms
agreements of the lake l!mds
Administr ator at Indian lake.
Bill Passed
Am . S851 Jackson - Grants
an add itional 15 calamity davs
for school closings due to
en ergy shortages . Votes
Emergency : 32-0. Bill : 32 -0.

--

MousE:.

HIP BOOT,S

'

Ao English teacher asks: "If mammography is creating a
problem, why don't they stop doing it altogether? "
ANSWERllne : The establistunent of 27 Breast Cancer
Detection Demonstration Projects centers . using
mammography hBB occurred for a compeUing reason: breast
cancer is the number one cancer killer of American women,
and early detection - which mammography can achieve can help save more lives. Routine mammographic 'screening
ooce a year is a must for .women over 50, and there is total
agreement in the scientific community about this fact In the
Tl ACS-NCI screening centers minimal breast cancers have
jleen found that have a high cure rate- and this is the reason
lhat mammography is so Important, because the benefils far
outweigh the risks.

By United Press International . years and co-op leaQers hope

. . f
th .
f
state or more grow m the uture
Sen. Neal F. Zim mecs Jr ., o. to help expand returns to
Dayton, chairman of the Semite th · f
UTILITY INQUIRY . .
coLUMBus !UP I 1 -

/:.
sessions to be recorded.
Energy and Public . Utllitlts
etr anner-members.
HB114 locker - Appropriates Comm ittee, announced WednesThurston and Byrne said
516 1000 to construct a 'bikeway dav his committee will open an
1 f
· 1 •
along Rou te 119 in Mar ia Stein, investigation of the gas pro- Oily our regtona gram co~
Mercer County ,
curement and management ops curtently make sizeable
HB 175 Netiley - Provides 22 policies of Oh io utilities next exportsales.Andthey'reata
closing dav~ for Ohio schools week :
for weather or other "ca lami Zimmers said the purpose of disadvantage in competing
ty" as determined by local the inQuiry iS to determine the With . established major
school superintendent, but re- causes and Scope of Ohio's exportersbecausethey'·cka
quires any energy closing days natural gas ~ortage .
U1
beyond that to be made up.
_
" Hopefully , these hearings good
int er n at ion a I
HB176 Baumann-Tranter will bring to ljght causes for 1 f
t'
t
AuthOrizes tbe determination of Ohio's current crisis situation
orma 100 sys em, 8
e~ igibilitv f~ de-velopment ser - and enable the Senate to guaranteed large' supply of
vtces for children under Title develo'p legisl ation which could
XX of the . Social Security Act prevent a recurre nce of the
on a geographic ra ther than an disaster we are now experlern:: ·
individual basts.
ing thl!!o winter, " said Zimmers.
Bill P3$!.ed
.·
·
Am . 5851 Jackson .- Grants . LEFT TURNS
an add itional 15 calamity days
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Biparfor school closings due to !lsan leolslation was introduced
energy shortages . votes •n the House Wednesdav to
Emergt:ncy : 82-11 . Bill : 79-U .-. perrrylt left turns on red lights
TRAVEL PAY
m , limited ci~c umstances onCOLUMBUS (Ur;tl) _ State Ot,to streets.
Sen . M . Morris Jackson 0
The proposal , offered by
Cleveland , proposed a ' bili ~~~~j
No~!"an A- Murdock, A1
Wednesday 1ncreaslng travel
nna 1, and. Arthur R.
a!lowances of stale legislators :g~~r~MI D·1Steubenvllle , would
from 15 to 'l8 cents a mile
dr
Y O proper left turns
Lawmakers are paid. for ma. e on to one -way streets.
round .trip mlteage from their ~rt ~e~s would ~ave to..stop and
homes to ;, Columbus on
Ye
O oncomtng veh tcles and
wee~ when trye lelglslature'?s ~~ ~geslrlans before turning on
sess1on, prcv 1ded they a t 11
e ·.
make the tr ip
c ua Y Oh iO law currently allows
E)(penses 'tor rooms and rigllt _ turnS on red after
meals are outlawed by the Ohio .s,toppmg untess prohlblflng

. ~.·;w-."No······.....,.,.,..._,.,, ...,~-:-.-:·:·x.x•:«·~llmf/llll$mi'IIIMIIIIWIIMIIIIIIIIIMII-ai
..........?fl'. •.•.o:•:axwoc&gt;»~

I

•"

t,.;

.,l

-

Requires

\

Son and Dad Compere for Girl

Rap:
My father thinks he's got it, and he spreads it around thick.
Whenever I bring my girlfriends home to meet the folks, he
lays on the charm. He's the big attraction, and I'm in the
shade.
·
· · I think 80m~ of them have gone with me, just so they could
see Dad. He invites them to family things so he can Impress
them. And they spend the whole lime flirting with HIM!
I ask him to lay off, and he says I'm talking nonsense .he's just being a good parent
Could you say something to parents about not belpg quite
·that good? - OVERSHADOWED
Dear Overshadowed's Father:
... and other parent. who shine so bright they put their kids
in the shade!
Watch It!
Your son needs self-confidence at this (in fact, at any)
stage In life. Don't lower it by making him look second rate
compared to your older-man cbann. You're a parent, not a
competitor! - SUE
·
·

RED FOIL HEART
ILB. $3.75

1c~oiii"ii"o;;tO.Ut.loll";.·""'""'""'""'""'""'•',;,g.ns•o•r•e,;,po;,;s;;;te;;d.;l;;oc:;•;;,llv;,·;- ...

stroets Into onewav

By Helen and Sue Hottel

~:

rYkmday February 14

1

Generation: Rap

+++

A WORD FROM HELEN: Are you sure you aren't

overreacting? Perhaps your Dad is a naturaUy outgoing man
·who likes young people.
Don't waste lime on jealousy. Instead, practice up on some
of his chann.

Friday &amp; Saturday Only

SATIN HEART 2 LB. $'9.45
SELECT TABLE OF

+++

SPORTSWEAR

I

OFF
BOYS &amp;GIRlS
SIZES
INFANT THRU SIZE 14

Dear Jeannie:
It won't be easy, but ifyou~re dead sure about this relationship, then level with George. It's not fair to continue seeing
him when you love someone elae. - HELEN .

DON'1 fORGfrl I

+++

Accumulate your .points now. Person ·or
persons buying the most merchandise will
receive I $50 gift certificate. Your
purchases count from 1-31·77 thru 2-19-77.

•

ALSO COME IN AND SIGN UI'TOWIN A

+++

•10 • •u . •2s • •so

KIDDIE SHQPPE
175 N. SECOND AVE.,
MIDDLEPORT, OH. 45760

·----~!1
I

.

NOTE FROM StlE: U George's father hasn't mentioned
11181'riage, then don't count on It, It's a "far piece" between
being In love with a younger woman and making her the stepmother of the son who wanted her as his wife. - SUE
Rap:
.
.
.
Mom aays If 1 want the pill, go to PIBnned Parenthood, but
just don't tell her anything.about It! Why? - NOT ASHAMED
.

PRIZE TO BE GIVEN AWAY .FEB. 19th

\,

+++

. Dear Helen and Sue:
I've fallen In love with my fiance's father! And he loves me
too. We didn't mean it to happen. His wife (qeGrge's mother)
died six months a,go, so we included him In a lot of our piBns.
. Suddenly we discovered we were together and George was the
third party.
.
Is there any hope that! can make It as the srep.rnother of
my former fiance? '- JEANNIE

ASSORTED
CHOCOLATES
I LB. $2.95

'- l h McCullabgll, !1. Ph. chlrtet RIRit, ·R. Ph.
Ronotd Honning, R. I'll.
'
Mon.lllriS.I.I:OOo.m.to•p.m, ,
SundiV 1t:30to 12:30ond sto' p."'"
.
PRt;5CRIPTION5
PH. 992-~
Frl101dly s,rvlce
·
UU. MAIN
lllltaJillltlCJIItP

Not Ashamed:
Becauae, like many ostrich-type _parenta, she'd rather
avoid than face fpcl.l. Pity. - HELEN

+++

River side
Methodi st.
Hospital, Olentangy River
Road, Columbus. Cards may
be sent to him there at Room
568. He is a medical patient

bottom, Scoop this out with a
kitchen dust pan, wipe clean,
replace food in this section
and do likewise in the other
sections. I defrost a large
freezer in thlr1y minutes. MRS.W.W.
DEAR POLLY- Mine is a
first aid help. Pour one-half
cup water into a small plastic
bag, tie shut very tightly with
a rubber band and lay out nat
In the freezer. This makes a
handy ice bag for bn, cuts
and bruises. I found it a life
S&amp;ver when I burned myself
in the kitchen. The cold compress brings relief and works
better than cold water or ice
cubes.- A.D.
DEAR POLLY - I found I
still had the clipping that
once appeared in your col·
umn for making a sugar
syrup to use for stiffening
crocheted doilies. The paper
had started to yellow so it
must' have· been a long time
ago that thi,s appeared. Boil
one-half cup suga~ and one-f
fourth cup water imtil it bubbles. Remove from the fire
and when cool enough to
touch inunerse the dolly.
When saturated wring it out
and shape while it dries. The
doily should be very stiff
when dry and may I add that
this ls the best way I have
ever used. Hope this will help
Ruth. -CLAIRE.
Polly will send you one of
her "peachy" thank-you
cards, ideal for fr)lming or
placing In your family sera(&gt;'
book, if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her colwnn. Write PoUy's
Pointers In care of this

'

NOTE FROM SUE : Why not alt your mother down and
MAKE ber talk about the plll and all that jau. It should be an
!!flllghtenlng conversation for both of you.
.. •(And which one changes her mind- well, that's up for
8fabo.)

u

CHAPMAN SHOES
NEXTDOORTO~LBERFELDS

104 E . Main

Pomeroy, 0.

992-2815

· - Starts Friday
lOam All Stores

A TIME FOR YOU TO SAVE - New Spring
Merchandi se is arriYing and we need room .
Take advantag e of ihese low ·prices
weekend. Come, Seel ' '

VACUUM
WANER
BAGS
lnclut~es Hoover1nd most
•II upright ' or tank
models. Sl.DO Velues, J.4.s
!Mtk 'IHigs.

2

DRASTIC REDUCTIONS

. Regular 79'

175 PIECES.

BOOK

OF
VALENTINES

'MENS
DRESS
SOCKS

While Ther Last
For School Kids

Baillon or
Nylon

$}00

'

WOMENS
fASHION TOPS
BLOUSES
SWEATERS
Values To

'8"

2 ·$} 00
PAIR

00
WE NEED
SPACE!
New Spring
Items
Arrive Dai~!
You
Get Barptim

PANTY and PANTY HOSE
ALL IN ONE

2 Sizes

PetHe Medium and Medium Large
As Seen on TV - White panty has soft
cotto n crot ch, with attached · nylon
seamless hose. No more tell t•le

OMm1RT TOP
or QUEEN SIZE

Knee-Hi
NYLONS

3

PAIR

$} 00

New Spring Selection Has Arrived
WASHABLE , ARTIFICAL

FLOWERS
Hundreds To Select From
Give Your Home
A New look!

8¢ 17¢

DO YOU NEED FLOOD

Dear Readers:
And then tbere's the third side of the coin. Read on:

4,

Pomeroy , is confined lo the

PRICES DUMPED DURING OUR

Try moth spray
on cats that stray
Polly's Problem
DEAR POLLY - I would
like to know how to keep cats
away from my flide yard. II is
landscaped with rock and my
neighbors' cats use it for a litter box. Commercial sprays
do no good.- M.S.
DEAR M.S. - I am sure
readers will be sending In
ways they have solved such a
prDhlem, but I would try
~'Praying the rocks with a
moth spray. The odor mfght
keep the cats away .. This
would have to be replaced
often if you find it works. POLLY.
DEAR POLLY - It really
peeves me the way too much
food coloring pours out when
I only need a few drops. It
seems they could have plastic
lids like those on Worcestershire sauce hollies so only a
drop or two will shake out at a
time. This would save both
coloring and disappointment
-UNDA.
DEAR POI,.LY - A cat
urinated on one of my mattresses so to eliminate the
odor I soaked up as much as
possible with paper towels.
Then I spread moth balls over
the area, covered with layers
of newspaper and in about a
week the odor was completely gone.- B.D.
DEAR POLLY - Perhaps
those who still have to defrost
refrigerators and freezer&amp;
1would be interested in the
quick and easy way I do this.
Buy a rubber hanuner at the
hardware store. Turn the
freezer off, !)love food out of
one section and tap the lrost
IJGHTLY wth the rubber
hammer. It will fall to the

HOSPITALIZED
Gary Hysell , RL

The Boss Says · It's Got To ! !
Too Much Merchandise left From The Cold January

Polly's Pointers

A women's club president writes: "Some ol tbe younger
members of my club are yecy upset because there has been a
lot of publicity a!Jout th~ dangers of mammography for women
under 50 and they have had manunograms. What are the
dangers?"
ANSWERllne: The word "danger" is the wrong one to use
because the recent decision to limit routine mammography to
women over 50 was based on a largely theoretical minimal
long-tenn risk-of develo~ing cancer because of radiation. The
National Cancer Institute and the American Cancer Society
have sought to keep exposure to radiation to a minimum of
women. What is the "danger"? Think of it this way: according
to mathematical theory, which is all we have to go on in
assessing risk,lt would take 100 manunograms for a woman's
risk of developing breast cancer to go from 1 to 14 to 21n 14. To
reduce even tiJ&lt;II risk, the NCI and the ACS are also
encouraging the technology necessary to produce
mammography equipment using the least possible amount of .
radiation.
For more information contact the Meigs Unit of the cancer
society, 992-7531 or Gallia, 446-7479. •

"'

"

While only a few troops are meeting, the cookie sale is going
great,
according to Pat Thoma, service unit director.
served with ice cream, mints,
nuts, Kool-Aid, and coffee.
SYRACUSE JUNIOR TROOP 1204
The door prize was won by
The
Syracuse
juniors met Tuesday night at the Syracuse
Ada Van Meter. Games were
Elementary
School
and began work on valentine gifts for their
played with prizes going to
mothers.
Flint Greer, Theresa
Meadows, Kimberly Ward, · Sherry Ritchie led in the pledge to the flag, Kim Murrow in
and Billy Long. The Rev. Mr. the Lord's Prayer, and all of the girls recited the scout proand Mrs. Gluesencamp mise.
The girl scout cookie sale was discussed and the girls were
hosted the party.
encouraged
to get out and selL Anyone in the Syracuse area
Attending the party were
wishing
to
place
an order may telephone 992-7662 or 992-54£5.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Wilford,
Plans
were
made
for another bowling party . The first party
Eva Walls, Mr. and Mrs. Ted
was
held
Jan.
16
at
the Pomeroy Lanes. Shari Cogar read a
Bailey, Michael, Beth and
story
which
she
had
written
for a badge requirement Guest at
Christa , Mr. and Mrs.
the
meeting
was
Trisha
Michaels.
Lawrence Theiss, Mr&amp;. Ada
Van Meter, Melinda Dailey,
Mary Wise, junior troop advisor, has come up with some
Kimberly Ward, Diann Ward,
suggestions
on how to keep scouting on the move despite the
Theresa· Meadows, Keith Circold,
snowy
weather,
and the energy crisis.
cle, David Talbott, Jimmy
Her
suggestions
include
dividing troops into patrols and havMeadows, Larry Cundiff,
ing
meetings
at
homes
where
mothers are willing to.supervise
Tammy Meadows, Belinda
while
badge
work
is
carried
out
Mrs. Wise has suggested that
Deeter, Terry Norris, Rob
troop
leaders
solicit
adults
in
their
neighborhoods to teach
Wilson, Billy Long, Alicia
some
skill,
such
as
knitting,
crocheting,
macrame, etc.
Evans, Cindy Evans. ·
She
also
suggests
that
every
troop
have
a valentine party
Sending gifts were Mr. and
somewhere,
particularly
if
school
is
not
in
session. Skating
Mrs. Lawrence Gluesen•
camp, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Gen parties and field trips in the imlnediate area were also sugCarpenter, Jimmy Cundiff, gested by Mrs. Wise as a way of keeping the troops alive during these times when regular meetings cannot he held.
Cindy Patterson and Debbie
Pickens.

a

4 &amp; 5 BUCKLE

,..

Nicki VanMeter

Southeastern Ohio." Herron research, will talk about
has a Masters Degree in "The Fabulous Scioto Salt
Educa lion and is a retired Licks at Jackson, Ohio."
The cost for tbe series Will
Athens teacher .
he
$15 with a reduced rate
On March 3, Dr. James W.
.!"hen
Iwo from the same
Scliolten, Associate Professor
family
attend.
of Music Edu cation, will
Further information can be
evenings, February 3 · March discuss " Traditional In10, from7:30- 9:30p.m. in the strumental Folk Music of obtained by calling : Th.e
·Office of Workshops, 594-3765,
Morton Hall on Ohio Southeastern Ohio."
University's main campus.
On March 10, Emmett A. or by writing to 301 Tupper
The series is being coor· Conway, consultant in Hall, Ohio University,
dinated by Dr. George Bain of forestry and hi storir•l Athens, Ohio, 45701.
the Office Workshops,
Conferences and Institutes.
chedule is as follows:
0
eb. 3, Dr. Hubert
W m, Professor of
Geography, · will discuss
"Settlements and the
Religious Patterns and Influ ences in Southeastern
Ohio."
Feb. 10 will feature E.
Claire Carpenter, retired
CHIPPEWA
riv erboat cap t ain,
BOOTS
INSULATED
reminiscing '~42 Years Up
LADIES
and Down the Ohio."
BOOTS
FASHION
On Feb. 17, Dr. Ivan M.
RUBBER
Tribe, instructor of history at
OVER THE SHOE
Rio Grande College, will talk
BOOTS
about "Guilded Age Social
OVER THE FOOT
Life in Hocking Valley
Mining Towns."
!lOOTS
On Feb. 24, William D.
FELT LINERS
Herron will talk about "The
RUB .BER INSULATED
Development of Education in
BOOTS FOR MEN
WOMEN&amp;
CHILDREN

Southea s t ern Ohio
residents have the opportunity to participate in
five seminars on the history
and culture of the region.
The sessions will be held on
five consecutive Thursday

i~
::::

Training sessions for junior and brownie leader• have been
scheduled, caneelled, re-scheduled and again cancelled, but
new plaru; for this training program are being made and will
be announced.
·

A physlciBn notes: "There are a great ntimber of women
under 50 who should have mammography done but who may be
uncertain about their need for such ell&amp;minallons. Please tell
your readers when a younger women should definitely have
mammography:'
ANSWERllne : Women between the ages of 35-:iO, who are
either very frightened about developing breast cancer and
might be reassured bv havln~ manunOI!raDhv done to eaBe
their minds; or women in this age group with any of the
following conditions should be examined: · chronic .cystic
mastitis; lumps and thickenings in the breBBt; nipple
discharge and other nipple abnormalities; a personal history
of breast cancer; a family history of breast cancer on the
maternal or pa.ternal side; a family history of breast cancer in
sisters; early onset of menstruation ; no history of pregnancy;
first full-tenn pregnancy at age 30 or older; or breast surgery
schedul~d for diagnostic pur:poses. Also, some physicians may
feel that it is important for woman between the ages of ~
ro have a basic set of mammograms done so that they can be
used on a comparison basis to note any changes as the woman
grows older when mammograms wtU be routinely done
because the risk of breast cancer increases with age.

"

History
seminars
available
Girl Scout Diary .I
Thinking Day usually held the last Sunday of this monlh has
been postponed until the Sunday of Girl Seoul Week, March 13.
Just where it will be held will depend, of course, on t})e
availability of a building with heat
Becky Mankin is chairman of the international Thinking
Day program with Joa• Ml'Liiughlin as her C(}-Chainnan.
Troops are being asked to select the country lliey will be
representing and plan costuming, a game, song or skit for
their presenl&lt;!tion.

A regular feature, prepared by the American Cancer
Society, to help save your life from cancer. Today : a special
ANSWER!lne on mammography, an x-ray examination of the
breast for posslble cancer, which has raised many questions
and some public confusion about when women should have
mammography done .

..

n:u

By Charlene Hoeflich

AIMflc:an Cancer Soc illy

For Your Valentine

.

0

'

RECEIVED!

·

Answer line

°

Bills Introduced
HB15B Mclin - Perm its the
exemp tion of business expan .
slon ln impact ed cities from
real and . tangible personal
property taxes.
HB159 Mclin - Extends the
scope of the Oh io Building Code
to one , two, three . family
dwellings and t o require all
newly constructed residences
have minlmu11r insulation .
HB160 Hinig P'rohlblts
lottery commIssion · from ope.
rating instant games.
HB161 Be ll Returns a
percentage ot lottery r evenues
to municipal corporations with
a population of over 100,000.
HB162 Jones - Requires high
schools to offer motorcycle
education courses . ·
H B 163 Baumann -Pemberton
lncrecJses thf member
conti'"lbution ra te In the state
Highway Patrol
retirement
sy·stem from 7 to 8 per cent of
annuel salary .
H B 164 lenoard.O' Nelll Ex tend s to Aug . · 1, 1977, the
time for holding a hearing to
rev iew the Matus of menta lly 111
persons who were indetermi nately hospitalized before Aug .
26. 1976.
HB16S Maddux - Requires .
unt!'mPioyment . compensation
benefit year begfn with the
week in which the claiman t
receives his first benefit check .
HB166 Maddux - Creates a
new category of noncommercial
motor veh icle and establishes
new registration tee for non ·
commercial motor vehicles and
motor homes.
H B 167 MadduX - Requires
each bill introduced In the
General Assembly to conta in a
statement or is purposes .
.
H B168 Maddux - Increases
amount pl!id ·to counties tor
administering the homestead
exemption.
1:'1 B 169 MaddU)( - EstabliSheS
minim um educational stand arQs for persons who train
paramedics · and emergency
medical techn iclans.ambulan-

HBI12 Locker

'

JUST

A party in celebnrtion of
her birthday was held recently at the Po~nd Elementary School gyni. Adecorated
birthday cake inscribed "To
Nicki, Sweet Sixteen" wBB

CANCER

Conway, consultant In
forestry and hlotorlcal
research, will talk about
"Tbe Fabulous Scioto Salt
Uclta At Jackson, Ohio."
The cost for the series will
be $15 with a reduced · rate
when two from the same
family attend.
Further Information can be · ~
obtained by calling: The
Office of Worltahopa, 594-3765, ·"
or by writing to 301 Tupper. "
Hall, Ohio University,
Athens, Ohio, 45701.

1

HB173
ReQuir es
a!sem
bly locker
floor and- committe£'

'

,,

increase sales

proof of llnonc;ol respooslbll lly
~~.~~ ~!7:~. o! ourchm of

7:00 to 5:00 Monday thru Friday
7.:00 to 4:00 Saturday

...

organization to

~~r~:v

I

t

I

. · Nicki Dawn Van Meter,
\laughter of the Rev. and Mrs.
Lawrence Gluesencamp and
the IBte Rev. Ross VanMeter,
observed her 16th birthday on
Jan.l6.

Farm co-ops need

HB170 Ml!ddUlC - Prov ideS
for forfeiture and cancellation
of an oil and gas lease upon.
fai .l ure on ttle lessee to usc due
dlllg~ce in operatln'iiJ a well
and marketing I he product .
H_8171 Murdock·Bowers Permits dr ivers, after stopping,
' to make left turns on red from ·

Middleport, o.

923 S. 3rd Ave.
'

.,

-~

ce.

VALLEY WMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.

·seminars begin_February 3

By Bob Hoeflich

Assembly acthity at a glan~e
'
COLUMBUS

Regional history, culture

Beat•••

.e..aemw

AND

I

NEW STOCK

NIM on SAL£!

teens and Womens
See us - w~ can take care of your needs
' also homes- mobile homes- automobile
-health.

ARE YOUR INSURANCE PREMIUMS
. TOO HIGH?
Try Lightning Rod Insurance
At Davis Insurance Service

.PRE-WASHED
DENIM
JEANS
Eltflre Stoc~ . .Manr
American made. Sires
•to " ; )21G H. All the
Mw tuhlon trims.
NIVy llul.

, V1lua To 12•

..

7~

Davis Insurance Service
114 Court St.
Phone 992-5120 ·
Pomeroy, Ohio

\

•

�...

•••

. '•

I

....'

·······························~··••!••••••

AstroGrapt-1
• BtmiCI Bide 0101
For Fr~qJr. Fob. 4, 1t7r
ARIES (March 21·AprU 11) You
are generilly lucky today In love,
trl~ndshlp or getting along with
people , but money· matters
aren't Included In 1hls good tor-

tune.

TAURUS (April 20-Mar 20)
You're sitting on top of the world
In most endeavors today, but the
ftaw Is you don't capitalize on
your good fortune. You take too
mUch for

9ranted.

QEMINI (Mar 21-.lune 20) Joint
\lentures bring out the best In
your Ingenuity today, but avoid
boasting about yOur prowess.
Let others sing your praises.

CANCER (june 21-.luiJ 22) In
financial dealings today, let the
other party set the price. If you
call the shots, you could realize
less than he would have offered.

LEO (Julr 23-Aug. 22) Tho
greatest rewards for you today
come from what you do lor
others. Put your Interests last.

VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sapt. 22) Those
who care about you are doing
quite a bit in your behalf today.
You may not recognize this now,
but you 'll appreciate it later.

LIBRA (Sapl. 23-0ct. ·23) ll's os·
sentlal to observe the line of
demarcation between social and
business sltuaitons. like water
and oil, they won't mix well to-

day.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You
can readily accomplish _what you
put your mind to today, Provided
you don't rely too heavily on
others. Allies Will be little more
than dead weight.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23·DIC.
21) Heed your own best judg·

ment in matters having to do wllh
your work or career today. SeekIng diverse opinions wllf onty
mess up, your sched ~le .

CAPRICORN (Dac.

1

~2.Jon.

11)

You're mU"ch sharper in business
than usual today, as long as you
adhere to your normally prudent
tnstincts.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob. 111 II
you're negotiating an agroement
today be fair , but don 't be
foolish . If you make a concession , make sure the other party
concedes equally.

PISCES (Fab. 20·M•ch 20) You
have the ear of your superiors
today and you can easily ad\lance your own cause . Don't
belabor yo~r point, however, or
you m1ght lope out.

#:l.l10m

W

mnm~ffi\7

Fib. 4, 1177
Overall conditions look e~treme 1y promisinQ for you this coming
year. However, your gains will
not come about 1n an expected
fashion .

(AffJ you an Aquarius? B•fnice Osof has written a special
Astra-Graph L&amp;tter for you. Far
your copy send 50 cents snd a
sell- addressed, stamped

envelOpe fo Astro-Greph, P.O,
Bo• 489, Radio City Stafion, 1/ew
York, N.Y. 10019. Be suro to ask
for Aquarius Volume 4.)
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE .\SSN 1

...

The Almanac
Uolted Press Inleroatlonal
: . Today is Thursday, Feb. 3,
• the 34th day of 1977 with 331 to
follow.
The moon is full :
The morning stars are
Mercury and Mars.
The evening stars are
Verws, Jupiter and Saturn.
Those born on this date are
under the sign Of Aquarius.
Pioneer
American
journalist· Horace Greeley
•• was born Feb. 3, 1811.
', On this day in history:
In
1913, . the
16th
Amendment, creating the
Income tu, became a part of
the U.S. Constitution after
ratification by Wyoming.
In 1917, the United Slates
lroke off diplomatic relations
with Germany after German
declaration of unrestricted
submarine warfare in World
War I.
In 1924, Woodrow Wllaon,
2llth president of the United

,

••

States, died in Washington,
D.C. He was 68.

In 19118, the Rusailllll p1i1 an

UlliiiiJIIIed aatelllte on the
1110011 wiUi 8 lOft landing.
In 1975, President Ford
submitted hls receailon
budget to Congress and ·
predicted that the nation's
unempioYment·rate would hit
eight per cent in 197f&gt;.76.
A tiJou&amp;ht for the day:
Horace Greeley aald, ''The
lliullon that tlmel tbat wen
... bitter t11an tiDe thlt are
bu probably pervaded all

......

WANT "DS
INFORMATION

Legal Notice
FINANCIAL REPORT

OF TOWNSHIPS

For Fi!.CII Ye.r Ending
Dtctmber :u, 1976
Orangt Township

Mtits County

Rt. 2 (oilville, Ohio
January 21 1977

I certify the fOllOwing report

to be- correct ,

Nin a Robinson
Township Clerk
Tel No . 1-985 ·3869
Summary of Cuh
1111nce5, Recelpt1
And Expenditures
Balance Jan . 1, 1976
General Fund
6,452 .62
Motor Vehicle L icense
Tax Fund
251 .31
Gasoline Tax Fund
1,081 71
Fire Pr otection Fd .
109.23
Federal Revenue Sharing
Fund
Totals

1,588 .66
9,483 59

Total Receipts
General Funcl
9,845 .72
Motor Vehicle l icense
Ta~ Fund
8,485 BS
Gasoline Tax Fund
1.4,200 00
Fire Protection Fd
2.466 99
Feder!!l i Revenue Sharing
Fund
2,532 .00
Totals ,
37,53 0.56
Total Rectipt~&amp; Balances
General Fund
16,298. 3A
MOtor Vel'1 1cl e L l cen~e
Tax F u nd
15,281 77
Fire Protection Fd .
2,576 22
Federal Revenue Sharing
· Fund
.4 ,120.66
TOUIIIS
.47 ,014. 15
Expenditures
General Fund
10,643.00
Motor Vel'1 1cle l icense
Tax Fund
4,331 09
Gasoline Tax Fund
11 ,744 .56
Fire f&gt;roteclion Fd .
2,485 .33
Federal Revenue Sharing
Fund
1,590 oo
Totals
30,793 .98
Balance Dec. 31, 1976
General Fund
5,655.34
Motor Veh icl e license
Tax F und
4,406.07
Gasoline Tax Fund
3,537 . 21
Fire Prote ction Fd
90.89
Feder a l Revenue Sharing
Fund
2,530.66
To tal
16,210 . 17
Cash Balance , Recetpfs
And Expenditures
By Fund
General Fund
Bal. , Jan . 1. 1976
6,45 2.61
·
Receipts
Genera l Property Tax Real Estate anct
Trailer (G ross)
4,544 23
Tangible Personal Property
, Tax .(GrOS 5.)
81 37
· Estate Tax (G r ossJ
60 06
Local Government and
St ate Income Tax
2,646 48
liquor Permit Fees
99 .37
Ci garette license Fees
and Fines (GrossJ
74 .25
Intangib les
2.339.96
Total Rece lpts
9,845 7'1
To t al Beg inn ing Balance
f&gt;tus Re ceip ts
16,798 34
Expenditures
Total Expenditures
- Administrative
9,336 47
- Town Halls , Memorial
Build ings and Grounds 78 00
- Cemeteries
505 40
- Lighting
723 13
Grano Totai ' Exp . Genera l Fund
10,643 00
Bal. , Dec , 31, 1976
5,655 34
Tot al Exp Plus Bal .
Dec 31t 19 76
16,298 34
Motor Vehtcle License
Tax Fund
Bal. , Jan . 1, 1976
251 .31
Receipts
Motor Vehicle License
Ta)(
8.485 .85
Tote 1 Receip t s
8,485.85
Total Beginning Ba lance
PIUS Receipts
8,737 16
Expenditures
Total Expend itures
4,331 .09
- Misce l laneous
Grand T ot al Exp Motor Vehicle License
Tu Fund
4,331 .09
Bal. , Dec 31. 1976
4,406.07
Total Ex.p Plus Bal
Dec . 31, 1976
8.737 16
Gasoline Tax Fund
Bel. , Jan . 1, 1976
1 1.08177
Reuipts
Gasoline Tax
14,200 00
Total ReCleipts
14,200 00
Tot$1 Begi nn ing B~lance •
Ftlus Rec eipts
15, 281 .77
Expenditures
Total Expenditures
- Miscellaneous
11 ,744 56
Grand Total E~e.p . GasolineT,H: F und 11 ,744 ~6
Bal ., Dec . 31 , 1976
3,537 21
Total Exp Plus Bal.
Dec . 31 , 197ti
1~.281 77
F i re Protect1on Fund
Bal., Jan 1, 1976
109 23
Recelp1s
General Property Tax •·
Real Estate and
Trailer (Gross )
2.466 .99
T ota l Rece1p ts
2,466 .99
T ot al Beginn ing Ba ltmce
Plus Re ceip ts
2,576.22
Expenditures
contracts
2, 125 .00
Auditor's 8..
Treasurer's
60 .33
Other E~t.penses
300.00
2,485 33
Total Expendllures
90.89
Bal. , Dec . 31, 1976
Total E~t.p . Plus Bal .
Dec 31 , 1976
2, 57612
Fedenl Revenue
Sharing Fund
Bal. . Jan . 1. 1976
1.588.66
· Receipts
Grants- Federal
· 2, 532 .00
Total Receipts
2.532.00
Total Beg inning Balance
Plus Receipts
4,120.66
Ex pendifures
equiFment
u9o.oa
1, 590.00
Tota E Xpend itu res
2,l30.66
Bat . Dec . 31 , 1976
Total Exp . Plus Bal.
.. . 120.66'
Oec . 31, 1976
(2l 3, 1tc

DEADLINES
5
P .M .
Day . BeforePub lication .
Cancellatlont,
correc tions accepted first day of
publication .
The Publisher reserves
the riOht to edit or rttect
any ads deemed ob iectlonal. The publisher
will not be r11ponslble for
more th~n one Incorrect
insert jon

FROM

E[THER
SIDE!

I·

For W1nt Ad S.rvice
cents per word one
· insert ion .
Minimum Charge $1 .00.
14 cents per word three
consecutive Insertions .
26 cents per word srx
consecutive In sertions .
25 Per Cent Discount on
paid ads and ads paid
within 10 days .

s

CARD OF TH,.NKS
&amp; OBITUARY

Business Services

Pomeroy
_M otor Co.

1176 CHEVELLE MALIBU CPE .
Green flnl$h, good !Ires. V.8.

l

autoniat i c,

power

197l FORDTORIN04 DR ,

Local car, clean vinyl interior, green finish , good tires,
radio, 351 V-8, automatic, power steering and brakes.
«1~

Estate Wagon, locall owner car, white radial tires, air
.c onditioning, V-8, automatic, power steering and
brakes, radio, dark red finish , black vinyl interior.

Commercial
Schools
Weddings

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY

Truss Rafter Co.

r
I

Lotated in Langsville
Box28-A
Ruttand , Ohio 4577SPh . ( 6141 742·2409
We Del iver
12 ·2'2 ·11 mos .

(614) 915-4155
Chestar.onlo
10·17·1 mo(Pdl

SWAIN!$
Insulation Ser~ices

Addltion.a1 25c Charge
per Advertisement . -

ALL tiOUSEWIVES
All Yard Sales , Rummage ,
Porc;,h and Basement Porch
and Basement S8ies, etc .
mus t be pa ict t n~dvance .
Get yours In early by
stopping by our office at
The Dally Sentinel. 111
Court St or writing Box
129, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
with yo ur remittance .

~Ill'[~~?~[ t~' ' '
1N lOVING Memor~ of our infant
daughter, Jody lynn McCar ty
lfolhO went to be with our Blessed Lord, one year ago today ,
Feb 3, 1976.1
Thou ort gone Jody dear ,
Gone beyond this ve•l of tears .
But the memories linger on ,
Throughout the coming years .
Sadly missed by parents , Mr. and
M rs. Joe McCarty ond grand parent s Mr and Mrs. Lewis
Smith . and Mrs . Olga McCorry .

1976 CUSTOM VAN . Fl50 Ford ,

NOW oc(eptmg piano stude nts ,
beginners. intermediates . od ·
vonced students. Call
992 ·

2270.
NOTICE , Pratt 's Med't Mkt.
(Pleasanton Meat Processmg.
Inc.) Custom slaughtering, end
processing. Retoil , who lesale
No oppoinment necessary Call

(6" 1 59J.8655. hours . 9.00 fill
6 :00 7 Pomeroy Rood . Athens ,

Oh
GUN SHOOT at the Roc 1ne Gun
Club every Sunday , I pm
Ass6rted meats .

on,o

3891.
1971 HONDA CL ·&lt;SO , 12.000

lOST - lENS out of eye glosses in
Racine oreo . ~hone 949- ~386 .

APPLES . FITZPAtRICK ORCHARD .
STATE

•

843·2254 .
OLD furn 11ure , Ice boxes brass
beds , wall telephones and
FRE IGHT DAMAGED . only 5 left
ports , or. complee households .
1977 Dressmaker z1g· zog s sew
Write M D. Mi ller, Rt. 4.
mg mo c hine~ .
but!onholes ,
Pomeroy .' Ohio . Coll99~ 7760.
monograms , etc. Will sell for
$.48 ,95 . onginol 1y $209 .95 . Cosh
CASH p01 d tor oil makes and
models of mobile homes ,
or terms ovoiloble . Col i
Phone oreo code 614·423 9531
992·5146.
TIMBER . Pome roy Forest Pro - FOR SCHOOL Sew1ng Mochmes,
Singers feoturmg buttonhole,
duels Top price for standing
blind hem. sews on knits .
saw timber Call Kent Hanby ,
$31 .50 cos h or !erms . Phon e
I 44H570.
992 -5 14t:l.
COINS, CU.RRENCY , token§ , old
pocket watches and cha1ns. NEW SEAR "S Roebuck 100,000
BTU Gos furnace , 10 year war ·
silver and gold We need 1964
r only . Sell reos.o noble Phon e
ond older silver co ins . Buy , sell,
or trade' Coli Roger Wams ley ,
949 ·23o•8
742·2331 .
CASHI!! lor junk cars . Frye's
·Truck ond Auto. 24 HOUR
WRECKER SERVI CE! Pho~e

742·208 1.

RISING STAR Kennel Boarding ,
!ndoor·Outdoor runs, grooming
oH breeds , clean sanitary
facilities . Cheshire. Phone (614)

NEW AND used merchandise, Fri ·
day , 7 p.m. at the Auction
House . Horton St . Mason .
Phone (304) 773-547\ ,

PHONE

POTAT OES . C. W . Prall itt .
Port la n d . Ohio . Phone

SHOOTING MATCH, just oft Rt 7
by·pos s near Rock Springs
Cemetery. Eve ry Sunday , 12
noon .

Auction

b89.

3290.

;A.KC• COLLIE Pups Soble and
wh• te, $75 . Phone 949·2571 .
after 4 p.m.

{61&lt;1446·19&lt; .

ROUTE

WIL KESVILLE . (6 141669·3785
FEMALE OVER Counter Soles .
small cmount ol bookkeeping . FUllER Bru sh Products f6r so le .
Apply tn person . D 8 0 Meots .
Phone 992·3410 .
Inc . 830 E. Mo in St. , Pom eroy .
CAMPER . $600
Al so, horse
Ohio .
!railer . $450. Phone (614 ) 698·

legion Hall , Su11dcy, &amp;!orting ot
noon .

SWEEPER AND Sewing M'ochines
Repair, Porh , and Supplies .
Da vis Vocuum Cleaner , one·
half mile up George's Creek
Rood off Stole Route 7. Phone

miles. ~issy bar . crosh bcrs.
pull bock handle bars , new tire
ond seals, Scrambler s.1de
pipes. S650. Coll949·2,.80.

lOST . MA,LE ~asse ff hound in
Hem lock Gro\le oreo . Phone COAl lor sc1e , Open P da~ s pe1
992.5872.
weelc ond evenings For furth er
in formation call (6 14) 367 ·7338.

W8Bted to Buy

367.02'12.

FOR SALE

fu rnished

9'.. -Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Ail Phone 192·2181
STEREO · om ·lm fm ~lereo · r odi o
comb motion . Bolonce $109 .95,
or terms . Call992·3965 .
CLARINET for 'ole. EJ&gt;O;celient con·
ditio11 . $85. Phone 992·2-4 13.

SAVAGE

pump

shotgu n, vent ribs , double
sights . Sell for $100. Phone
2&lt;J.2664 .

1971 MOBILE HOME . 60' , 12', 2
Phone

~2 ·

5434.

Qedrooms , very good co ndl·
lion , pay off . 1966 Chevelle
Conv .. 327 4 speed, $750. 870
Remington . 12 go .. 2 barrels .

COUNTRY Mobile Home Pork . Rt.
30" · 34" lull . $200 . Coli (61&lt;1
33, ten miles north of Pomeroy .
biJ7·3866 between 5:30 and 8.00
large lots with concrete patios,
evenings,
sidewalks . runners and off
street perking. Phone 992 -7479. GOOD QUALITV corr'! fed freezer
beef , appro)! . 1000 lbs, Steers .
ONE BEDROOM Apts at VILLAGE
Wil l deliver to your' processing
MANOR in Middleport for $104
plont Phone 843·211 1
monthly plus elec. or $130 in·
eluding alec . LOWER RATES for TWO H~?8 stE!el rodiol snow tires ,
11ery good. Harold Brewer,
SENIOR CITlZENS. Convenient
long Bottom, Ohio. Phone
to shopping on Third and Mill
985·315&lt; .
Sts. in Middleport Brand new
high quolil~ oportmenh . See
the manager ot Apt. 28 or coil
f
992·7721 'An Equal ' Housing
Opportunity .

N f0 A

2 BEDROOM trai ler, real nice .
~hone m ·332•. adults only.
~VAilABlE

AT Rivers ide Aph . 1
bedrm . apartment , $100 per
month, 2 bedroom opts . $133
per month . Equol Opportunity
Housing , Phone 992-3213.

2 bedroom unf~,:nished aport·
rnent m Middleporl Phone

99H12'1or 992.5.. 34.
NICE COMPLETEL V furn ished I
bttdroom apartment with Iorge ·
polio porch overlooking river .
Aduh s only . ..,hone 992· 2606.
TWO b'--droom apt .
odulh or•l~ . M1d~ leport Phonl'

FURNIS~ED

99'J . Jtl 7~

MOBflE HOM~ . unlurnltohed lh
ro untry
N eerh
small
mc1n]enarH.C Coli f.i9:1 -C&gt;J:•7 .

WATER SOFIENERJ

Let Pomeroy Landmark
condition your
w•ter •nd 1 Co-op Wlt..soflener, Model UC-XVI .
Now Only 1279.95
soften &amp;

Lot us teol . your water
Free.

'

,9 _!omeroy Landmark
.:i, Jack W. C.ruy, Mgr,
Phone 992·2111

Real t:otalc fur Sal~
SMALL lurr n fur sole, JO•t. ·down,
owner hnom ed Monroe Coun·
tv , W Vo. Ph one (30.4) 77'1.3)02 01 \304 ) 772 'J'J'l7

manufactured housl•l·
Double wltlos &amp; ml'dular '
'homos by Skyllno &amp; Fuqua
Homn Inc.
1100 E. Main St.
Pot~~eroy , Ohio
992 7034
'
Hrs.9:00a.m.
To Dusk

/

TV COMMERCIALS,

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 3,1177
5:00-:Big Valley 3; My Three &gt;ons 4 ; ~rady Bunch 8;
MISter Rogers 20,33; Slar Trek 15.
5 : 3~Adam · l7 4; New• 6; Family Affair 8; Eelec.
Co.20,33 ; dam .12 13.
6:00-:News 3,4 ,8,10.13,15: ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6 : 3~ NBC New• 3.4.15; ABC .News 13: Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Once UpOn a Classic 20; Boy Scout
Train ing 33.
7:00-: Trulh or Cons. 3; To Telllhe Trulh &lt;; Bowling
for Dollar$ 6; Muppel Show 8; ; News 10; To Tell
the Truth 13; My Three Sonsl5; Almanac 20.
7 : 3~Hollywood squares 3,4; Ohio State Lottery 6:
Pnce IS Right B; MacNeil · Lehrer Report 20,33;
Wild Kingdom 10; Nashvi lle on the Road 13; Dolly
. 15.

-..

expeirence.
Financing

...

.

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2860
Free Estimates
No Sunctav Callo Please
1·30·1 mo.

Available

CO.UNTRV farmland with secluded woods , woter and good ac·
cess in Monroe Count~ W. Vo
$1 ,000 down , call (304 ) 772

OIL , GAS Furn~ ces , od burner s.
repair . ond port s for tra ilers
and homes . 24 hour service.
Phon e 843-2341

Sale

Commercia l properly oppro.11 . 17 Re81 Eotatelor
acres . le11el lend, located cl
HOMESITES for sale. I ocre ond
Tuppers Plains on Ohio . Route
up. M1ddleport . neor Rutl and .
7. Phone (614) 667 ·6304 .
Coll9n·7481 .
3 bedrooms, l 111 bath s. Iorge li11·
NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 bath s
ing room . dining room and kit ·
all elec. , 1 acre . Middleport ,
chen, ful ly ccrpeted . Phone
close to Rutland. Phone 992·
992·3129, or 992-5434
74Rl
59 acre s, 6 room · hou se. both
portly carpeted. two oul·
building s, dug basement ,
one -th1r d t11icbl e. minerol
nghts located near Danville.
Virgil H. Sr., Realto
Reduced for quick sole .
216 E. Second S1reel
$23 ,500 Phone 742·2766.

Pomeroy, Ohio 45761
Phone 992 .J32S
NATIVE BUILT - Old 4
bedroom frame wllh bath,

This Space
For Your Ad
IN TOWN - 2 bedrooms,
nice bath, d ining, 2 porches

and level lot .
'FREE FUEL - Good
flshlng an&lt;l hunting, 90
acres of fenced pasture and
woods . Old barn and house .

- Five

Points area and Syracuse.

MINERALS -136 acres in
RIVER VIEW - J large
bedrooms. balh , dining
room ,
larg e
kitchen,
basement, natural gas

heal , porlches. $12,500.00.
RUTLAND - 4 acres with
older home, 3 bedrooms,
bath , ·natural gas heat,
alum . siding, porches,
trailer hookup. 115.500.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Nice

lf2

acre

ground,

Ph.9!W74

car garage. $19,500.00.

WE HAVE A LOT OF
HOMES - BUT MANY
MORE BUYERS - LET
US SELL YOUR HOME
, NOW. A BROKER AND 3
ASSOCIATES TO SERVE
YOU .
HENRY E. CLELAND
' BROKER
992·22S' · 992·25611
111·4112

• Qx Y QJx t Q !Oxx oloQx XK

NEW
LISTING
Won&lt;lerful3 bedroom home
wilh large living lha1 has a
wood burnif)g f ireplace .

Kilchen has &lt;llshwasher.
&lt;lbl. sink. disposal!. an&lt;l
breakfast
nook. lull
basement and large lot.

mere two notrump.
! For a copy or JACOBY
MODERN, send $1 to: " Win
at Br~dge ," clo this
news paper. P 0 Box 489 .
Radio Clly Station. New Yori'
N Y 10019)

• f'l1tl

••

~

~I

STRIPPING, REPAIRINGJ ·~
REFINISHING &amp;
,:
UPHOLSTERING
.
Phone
"
MODERN CHEMICAL ,

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
40 French
I Hindu deity
river
5 Compel
41 Deserved
10 Swedish
42 Freshly
wmc
DOWN

I

-

~'

•

614-992-2798

BORN LOSER

r-~~~~----7~~~rrw

t

1-\f&gt;,IJB TO ...
Slle fOI',WT TO

~W

ReMe:M8!iR
ID Mf&gt;,ll-f&gt;. L6mR
FOR He[&lt;.

AI 100 Kerr St.
Pomeroy, 0.

1· 17·1 mo .

measure

~~T

"\IJ~

II Circa
13 Wee bit
13 wds. 1
15 Creche
ann nal
16 SunnileriFr. )
17 Deserter
18 Hold it I

tTTO Ml3.

:·
BRADFORD Auctioneer, Com pl ete Se1vice. Ph one 949 ·2.. 87
or 949-20Xl. Roc 1ne, Ohio , Crill
Bradford .

19 C:SA

1

~eneral's
mono~ram

20 Star pitcher
21 Moham-

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers , toasters, irons , all 1
smo 11 appliance s. l awn mower , _;
ne xt to Stol e Highway Garage
on Route 7 . Phone (614) 985· •

medan

3825.

saint
r:::----.., 22 Roman
highway
23 Manitoba
. lndian
25 Entreated
(var .)
26 Drooping
Public
office
candidate
Dwelling
(abbr.)
Son of Bela
Vehicle
Wiley
Post's
"Wmme -"
34 Lillie
Solomon
35 Actress,
Mary · 36 Precisely
·
(3 wds.)
39 Go on
pension

Papa saL~

REMODEliNG . Plur'nbing , heoting :
ond al l types of general repair , '
Work guaranteed 20 yeo rs e.11 ·
perien ce Phon'e 9q2 -2409

40U. is home

·,n bed!

SEWING MAO-liNE Repl:lirs , set- ;
vice . all makes. 992·2284 , The .,.
Fabric Shop , Pomeroy . : ,•
Authorized Singer Soles and •
Service We sharpen Scissors . .l~
ExCAvATING , dozer. loade r ond ;::
bcckhoe work, dump tru ck J
ond 1o·boys for hire ; will haul ~
fill dirt , to sod, limestone and ,.
gro\lel. Coli Bob or Roger Jef-, ~
!ers , day phonE:' 992·7089, •
night phone 992 ·3525 or 992- '
5232.. '

1
....
backhoe "

EXCAVATING . dozer .
end ditcher. G:horles R. Hotlleld , Bock Hoe Serllice , '. ~
Rutland , Oh1c Phone742·2008..... .

ULABNER

'

'

SNOW BOUND, LEAVE
1US YOUR WORRIES, AND
GO SOUTH.

We bid three notrump, but
with some trepidation. On the
other hand , with 9 high-card
points including all four
queens , we just can't bid a

•
..
·""'..,

NOTICE! ! !

SEPTIC Sy stem s installed by 1
licensed installer. Shepard ~ :
Con tractors. Phone 742·2409.
'

Service• Offered
Will do odd jobs , roofing, po1n·
ting, gutter work . Phone 992·

7409.
.
SEW IN G · AL TERATIONS :
Uphol s tering ,
dr.Jpes
rea sonable 572 South Third
Ave .. Midd le por t. Phone

99H306
INCOME T1\X Servke, Wolloce
Russ ell .
Bradbury .
Co li

99H228.

· Mobile Home~~ tor Side
2 BEDROOM portJolly furnished .
12 1t. 60 1973 Porkewood mobile
home. underpinning porch and
own ing .
$6800 .
Phone
992 -6124 .

-

· --- ·

~

SEPTIC TANKS cl eaned . Modern •
Sani tation , 992 -3954 .
,:

IF '&gt;ttJ, F05DK:K,
CAN TUI&lt;N ')OUR eACXSE
THGY CAN HA.VE: MINE' ~-

WilL do roofing , construction ,
plumbing and healing . No 1ob ·
too Iorge or too sm all . Phone
CAftPENTER t. flooring, ceiling,
paneling. Phone 992·2759.

h ·

~:--r;-...,.,....

•tM'AM CANI

MCIN YQUf2 lAWN,

•

'

,

I

GO AWAY...
tJEFORti

WE KNOW1HAT
MIGHT HAVE

CALL 'fflE

N-DNEY?

POLICE!!/

ONLY ONE I CAN THINK OF IS
aefGaeY~/NOWIF
WINNIE AGIC!EES 10 MAflrN

MIM

OUR Tli!Oli/3LE5 11rr..,.....,..--r~
WOULOI3e

QIIER!

lUG

b+.....jf-

THAT SCRAMBLED WORO GAME
I'll~.-., r,;..-... ~
by Honn Arnold and Bob Lee

1-4--..&lt;1--1 Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to lorm

=+-f-+-1 lourordlnaiywords.

how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
L 0 N G F E I. L 0 w

UOVMC

T CG
KGMJTC

HMYG

"

l,lt.~ttt StOO

fltllt Ufftll. a,.

N• .

-' .

MASOft fURNilURE
ns.sm

•
I

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

c~•r

-~
-----

CMDI'

c•or

,,..

'"""

---- cuor -' ·•·

•

'
•
•

'

-.~~~~~~..~~--~~~~~~~~~~.. i

r: (]

i(()IJ'lE /1. 6000 PILOT ...

C'c,G,.

~·o '1'01.1 LEI\RN 10
Fl~ A CHOP~~ ?

'

I

~~::-~~:=-,

\REVOND

[j I I . I

ONE WOULD E5c
eoot=~ AND L.AiE

10 6Ei THERE!

TCEB

M CS

I UM I

'

BARNEY

'

THURSpAY t1Ll2

I I

j

HGMEEB

•

·

1"1

e 11~1 KiDI , .., ......,DCUeaa.. Jae.

.,'
Mon •.,Tuts~; Wtel.•.•

UMN

_;:~:;:::~-=G
L~l~N~Sr-E~-d-"""1/""::1

IGH. - VMHF
IKMAC
Yestenlay'a Cryptoquote: AFFUCTION IS TilE SCHOOL IN
WHICH GREAT VIRTUES ARE ACQUIIU:D, ' IN WHICH
GREAT CHARACI'ERS ARE FORMED. - HANNAH MORE

Af(YTHIN6.. ?

•

33.

CRYI'TOQUOTES

WHO ELSE DO

,

10:30-l.ock S1ock &amp; Barrel 20.
11 :00-:News 3.4.6.8. 10, 13,15; MacNeii .Lehrer · Reporl
33; Monty Python's Flying Circus 20.
11:30-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; SWAT 6,13: Movie
"Cancel My Reservation" 8: Mary Hartman 10:
ABC News 33. ·
12:00-:Movle "Pendulum" 10; Janakl 33.
12 :40-Mod Squad 6; Ironside 13 .
1:110-Midn lght Special 3,4,15.
1:4o-News 13.
2:30-News 3.
3:00-:Movle "It Should Happen To You " 3.
&lt;:30-Movle "Urider My Skin;' 3.
6:00-:FBI 3.
.

WINNIE

CLEA1~ YOUR
!YI~EMENTt
PAINT....

coveting,
septic t ysleml ,
dozer , ba ckhoe , dump truck1
limestone; grovel. blacktop
paving , Rt. 143. Phone I (614)

698·7331.

29 French
river

14 Eagle's
nesl
21 V1gor
22 Badly

One leiter simply stands lot another. In this sample A Ia
used lor the lhree L's. X for lhe two O's, rtc. Single letters,
aposLrophes, lhe length and formation of the wordo are all
hin1s. E~ch day the rode leiters are different.

- -·- '
ELECTRONIC T.V. CLINI C. New ,

MARTIN

Yesterday's Answer

30 interrupt
12 wds.l
23 Dry31 Revolted
24 Egyptian
32' Begin
down
city
afresh
l hyph. wd.l 25 French G.I. 37 SRO
9 Twined
26 Knightly
show
aboul
gear
38 "Ode 12 Stop
27 Investigated
Nightingale"

It

MOBILE Home Repair , El&amp;"c.,
plumbing and heating. Phone '
9?~-5858. . I
..~

HOWERY ·AND

I Malayru&gt;
prince
2 Entertain
3 Clurnpish
I On ~ · of the
humanilies
S Hesitate
6 Window
style
7 Tonuny
or dry
8 Marked

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

742-2348 .

T.V. shop, Electronic T.V. Clinic Sen1ice coli , $5 95. Color , 6 &amp; W ,
ontenno s~stems stereos. etc .
572 South Third , Middleport . •,
Phone 992·6306. Carry ln and ~,
s.ove money:
""
- - ··"· ..... ~ '

6 :00-Sunrlse Semester 10 .

6: 15-Farm RepOrl 13.
6:20-Not For Women Only 13.
6:3D-Columbos Today 4; News 6; Sunrlse 'Seme•ler 8;
Overseas Mission 10.
6:45-Mornlng RepOrt 3.
6:50-Good Morning, West Virginia 13.
6·:55-Good Morning, Trl Slate 13.
7:00-:Today 3,4,15; Good Morning, America 6.13; CBS
News B; Chuck Wh ite Report• 10.
7:05-Porky Pig 10.
7:30-Schoolles 10.
8:00-:Howdy Doody 6; Capt. Kangaroo 8,1 0; Sesame
St. 33.
'
8:30-Big Valley 6.
9:00-:A.M. 3; Ph il Donahue 4.13.15: Andy Grlffllh 8:
Mike Douglas 10.
9:3D-Cross·WIIs J; Edge ol Night 6; Concentration 8. ·
10 :00-:Santord &amp; Son 3,4,15; Dinah 6; Price Is Righi
8, 10; Mike Douglas 13.
10 :30-Hollywood Squares 3.~.15 .
11:00-:Wheel of Forlune 3,4, 15; Double Dare 8, 10;
Morning with OJ . 13.
11 : 3~Shoot for the Storo 3,4,15: Happy Days 6, 13;
Love of Life 8, 10; Sesame St. 20,33.
11 :55-CBS News 8; Ms. F'lxlt 10.
12 :00-News 3,4,6,10; Don Ho 13; Name That T~ne 15;
Divorce Court 8
12:3o-Lovers 1!. Friends 3,15; Ryan'• Hope 6,13; Bob
Braun 4; Search lor Tomorrow 8,10.
1:00-:Gorig Show 3: All My Children 6,13: News 8;
Young 1!. the Restless 10; No1 For Women Only 15
I :30-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; Family Feud 6,13; As
· The World Turn• 8,10.
2:00-:120,000 Pyramid 6,13.
2:30-Doctors 3,4, 15: One Life to Live 6,13; Guiding
Llghl 8,10 .
J ·OO-:- Anolher World 3,4,15; All In The Family 8,10;
Crockett's Victory Garden 20
3:15-General Hospital 6.1 3.
3:30-Matcr .Game 8.10: Lilias Yoga e. You 20. ·
4:00,...Misler Carloon 3: Ll111e Rascal• 4; Gong Show
15; Mickey Mouse Club 6; Lucy Show 8; Sesame St.
20,33 ; Movie "Die! Ole! My Darling" 10; Dinah 13.
4:30-My Three Sons 3; Partridge Famlll' 4;
Emergency One 6; Partr idge Family 8; Flint.
stones 15.
1
5:00-:Big Valley 3; My Three Sons 4; Brody Bunch 8;
Mister Rogero 20,33; Slar Trek IS .
5 : 3~Adam · 12 4; News 6; Family Affair 8; Elec Co.
20,33; Adam ·12 13.
6: 00-:News 3,4,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.33.
6:JO-N BC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Grlffllh 6;
CB.S News 8,10; Vegetable Soup 20; VIlla Alegre 33,
7:30-TrulhorCons. 3; ToTelllheTrulh4: Bowling for
Dollars 6; 11211,000 Question 8; News 10; To Telllhe
Truth 13: My Three Sons 15: Ohio Journal 20; Black
Perspective on 1he News 33.
7: JO-Porter Wagoner 3; Gong Show 4; Candid Camera
6; Treasure Hunl8; MacNeil·. Lehrer Report 20,33;
Andy Williams 10; Name That Tune 13; Pop Goes
lhe Country 15.
8 :0~Santord &amp; Son 3, .. ,11; College Basketball 8;
Donny &amp; Marie 6, 13; Washington Week In Review
20,33: Co&lt;le R 10.
8:3D-Chlco &amp;· the Man J, .. ,1l; Wall Street Week 20,33.
9 : ~ulncy. 3,4,15: American Bandstand'• 2S1h
Anniversary 6,13; Documentary Showcase 33;
Sonny &amp; Cher 10: Lowell Thomas Remembers 20.
9 : 30-T~e Way It Was 20.
10:00-:Execu11ve Suite 8,10; News 20 : Poul Nuchlms

A Nevada reader asks us
what we respond to partner 's
lwo-spa~e opening bid with

)

,_

FRIDAY, F.EBRUARY 4,1977

~~~~~

-1

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

room house, 5 bedrooms,

kllchen , living room, balh.
Barn
and 2 •hods.
$31,666.00.
NEW LISTING - Large
lot, 3 bedrool"•· sewing
room or den. Nice living
room
and ' kitchen,
carpeting. Full basement. 2

Pass 2 •
Pass 3 •
Pass 4 +
Pass S •
Pass Pass Pass
Openmg lead r A ol'

.•'

yard

fenced for children. Elec.
baseboard heal. Financing
available to rlghl parties.
$17,500.00.
NEW LISTING . - 103
Acres. 21 tillable. 15
pasture, 60 tin1ber. ApProx .
3,000 lbs. 1obacco base. 7

Soulb

~

level lot, l 'h story frame, 2

bedrooms , bath. dining
room, porches. N.G. heat.
Good neighborhood . Asking
lust $14,000.011.
POMEROY - 1'12 story
frame . 3 be&lt;lrooms, bath,
dining room, hardwood
floors, porch, utllily In
kitchen and basemen!.
About 21 yrs.
old .
$12,500.00 .
NEW LISTING
3
bedroom frame home with

2.

North East

'}

natural gas, city water,
ca rport, (lnd garden.

~OTS

Both vulnerable .

..

TEAFORD

BUILDING

tAKQ864
oloAKJ 93

•

-

Business Scni&lt;"cs

BUilDING SITES, 3. 11 ocres. at
Ba shan T. P.. woter top, gas
1op, minimum soil limitations .
Phone 985·4102

·-

SUI':!; IS, BEEBOJ
NOw GO TAKl! MR.

Ideal

RcafEstlit..-f~r Sak '· =. ,. ~

742 -2306 or con tact MdO B. Hul ·
ch ison, Rutland , Ohio .

oloS
oi'KQ

t-----...,----1 .......
1·25·1 mo., pq.

328 Main Streel
'Pl. Pteasan\
Ph. 675-3469
1:30·5 :00 Daily
Till8:000 Fridays .

NEW 3 bedroom liouse. bui lt -1n
kitch en . both and 11, . Phon e

• K to s 3
t1092

SOUTH iDI

"I

C. A. Newman, Pres.

DIRECT FABRIC .SALES

3102 or (3041772·3227.

• J s 42

: West

for campers. Var1ety ot
sizes .
Velvets, nylon prints
herculons, vinyl solids, ant
_fancy prints, accessorie5.

BISSEll SIDING CO.

EAST
ol' J 10 8 3 2

.OOPS AY. 1BACk
TO'JM.

cnatr CUshion~.
paddin~.

wEST
ol' A 9 7 6

t75
oloQ72

·'

. FABRI~

mottre•ses,

t J3
olol0 864

....
_......

UPHOLSTERY

.for sora,

• 54
y .A Q 8 7 6

..,
• •
.. l
,..,

9 :oo--consultatlon

9:30-High Adventure
10·00-:700 Club

that same seven points. Our
general rule would be that
some six·pointers qualify and
that you should not make a
negative response with as
many as nine high -card
points.
Now for loday 's hand. North
wanted to know why his
partner had to jump to the
slam ; South wanted to know
why North responded two
hearts with just seven high·
card poinls.
Naturally enough , if the
slam had made everything
would have been smiles, but
Lhat does not change the fact
that six clubs was the right
contract. lt would make about
55 per cent of the time. Today
was one of the unfortunate los·
mg 45 per cent .

3

NORTII

. ..'

Blown in fiberglass walls
and allies. 20 Pel. Savi1111•
on Vinyl and Steel Sidi119s.
Replacement and stor.m
windows . ~3 years actual

7 : J~Coach's Corner

·8 :QO-Cable Journal

Percentages cause fiilure

:~

ECONOLI NE HOME
INSULATION, INC.
181S Washington ·Blvd.
Belpre, Phone (6141 423·
7564 day, or 192-6039

1: 00--Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.

Channel Five
7:00-:Poul Gaudino Family FllneSI

WIN AT BRIDGE

•

1-9-771 mo.

6, 13; l'va1tons 8,10; Vl•lons 20; Masterpiece Theatre
33 .
9:00-:Barnoy Miller 6,13; Hawaii Flve'O 8; Ten Who
Dared 10; VIsions 33.
9:30-Movle " Yesterday's Child" 3,4,15; Tony Randall
6,1 3; Jeanne Wolf Wllh 20.
10:00-:Streel• of San Francl.co 6,13: Barnaby Jones 8:
News 20.
10 :30-Woman 20,33.
.
11 :00-:News 3,4,6.1,10,13. 15; Moc +Neii·Lthrer Repon
33.
·
11 :30-Joh nny Carson 3.4.15; To Be Announced 6.13:
Kolak 8; Mary Hariman 10; ABC New• 33.
12 :00-:Movle " The Postman Always Rings Twice" 10;
Janak I 33.
·
·
12 :40-Movle "The Story of Pretty Boy Floyd" 8.

8: 00-Fantastlc Journey 3,4,15; Wel come Back, Kotter

THE COMPA~V ~

I'
J

v

ACTOR

IF HE DOE5&gt;fJ'T TRUST
JUDGME'~T·· WHO
HE WISH TO R:UrJ

L_Y·FOAM

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

Lebanon township.

Pomeroy Landmark

12 GAUGE

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

4·10·1 me

Hofpoint Refrigerator.

949 ·2179.

oph

RATES

LARR~~J!~f!DER

One good used Gibson sidetiy-side refrigerator ... S1SO
New
co .Op
water
softeners, model vc.svl.
Only S279.9S
One good chain Homelite
Chain Saw ...... sno.oo
Save 150.00 on a new

$350 each , others $325, Phone

3 AND -4 RM . furnished onl un-

REASONABLE

GUTTEIUW~IN!S.

2 STORt FOUR Bedroom brick
home in M1ddleport . Phone .
992.3457

3 GUERNESV cows , 2 just fresh.

t'or Rent

WINDOWI
WIMINUII
SIDINS.SOflffi

1969 CHEVROLET Bi squaine; 1966
BU1t:K Electra . 725; 2 Rokan
triolbikes . Phone 949-2432

Pickup , 360 V-8 automatic , p .$.,
cm -fm radi o, tape deck . 39.000 For Sal~
mi les . Excellen t condition .
Al so , 1968 Plymouth GTX 440 COAl , limestone , ond colc ium
V-8 4 speed , 56,000 miles , e.11 ·
ch loride ond coic,um bnne for
ceilent condi ti on . Call oher 5
dust conlrol and special mi~mg
p.m. 9n·2967
salt for farmer~ . Moin Street.
or phon e 992·
Pomeroy ,

RACINE FIRE Dept. w1ll hove o
Gun Shoot every Saturday night
6 p.m. of their building in
Ooshan. Ohio .
•. 1F VOU hove o serviCe lo offer ,
wont to buy or sell somethmg.
AT STUD: I. Phoebus . 16 IH . II
oe look ing for work ... or
you wont a good perlormonce .
wha tever . . you 'll get result s
A halter colt w- bloodlines tho!
fos ter wdh o Senl1nel Wont Ad
sell. 2. TRIBAL CHIEF , APHC ,
Co11991·1156
15.2 H. hos sired some ol the
top per~ormance and halter
horses, (Tribal Wi n, Tr'•bol Fool ,
Peto' for Sale
etc .) Also. horses sold . from ·
ed , conditioned , boarded . Cole PLEASURE HORSES and ponies
Slobles , Home of Champion s
oi!&gt;o will buy ho~ ses ond
Box 25, Tuppeu Plains, Ohio
pon1es. Phone (614) 698-3290.
45783 . Phone (614 ) 667 ·3405
Ruth Reeves.

SHOOTING MATCH ol Rutland

IEPLAC£~00

very sharp. Crushed velvet ,
h1gh- low shag , icebox , bed ,
Captain 's seats , fender flo1rs
1972 GRAND Tor ino , p5 ., and
wide t1res. white wogon whee l.
p . b .,
air
co nd i ti one d
351 V·8 outomo tic trons mis ·
outomotic , new A· l cond1t ion
ston , p.s., disc brakes. Take
$1400. Phone 742·2008 .
over payments mode 10 Iorge
payments ond down poyment , 1965 VW $200. Phone (304 )
773·5688 after 4 p m.
W1ll accept trade in . Coli
742·2175.
DEPENDABLE 1968 BUICK El ec tro
$295. Phone 742 -2460.
197&lt; FORD RANGER XLT FIOO

Lo!it and Found

AN

CAPTAIN EASY

evenings.

PARTS .., LABOR
GUARANTEED

STORM ·
WIIIIIOWS &amp; DOOIS

~utoSalt&gt;s

Help Wanted
WE WISH to express our groti!ude
and thanks to our friends.
neighbors and · relat ives l or
flowers food and cords durmg
the death of our dear one . Also
thanks to Veterans Memorial
Hospitol and nurses , dottors
and to Benn~ Ew1ng for his
kindness and help . We wtsh to
thank Re\1 . Floyd Shook and
anyone who helped in any way.
Tha nk you.
The Family of Rolph R. Foster

Automatic
Transmission Service

f~ancin&amp; Allilable
Blowll intt) W.Us I ~ttics

OFFICE HOURS

NOTICES
ATTN .: II

WERE

....,••

Sales Inc._
We handle only lila bol1 In

• I
Ae rta

Southeastern Ohio

1289S

19HCHEVELLE

PHOTOGRAPHY

HO SE&amp; BAR~ -,
TRUSSES
ANY PITCH
ANY SIZE

$3115

steering, rad io, factory air.

Auto Saleo

r

I THINK I'D AIM FOR

&lt; 1 ' --------------------------~--~~~
~------------~ r---------~---1· ~
PROFESSIONAL
l("mgsbury Home ...

BLIND ADS

8 :30 a.m. to s:oo p .m .
Daily , 8:30 a.m . to 12:00
Noon Saturday .
Phone today 99'2· 21S6 .

IF

Telepision log for easy viewing

AND I HONEST~Y BELlM
Pl'fiFUME PLENTY 15
DESTINED TO BE ITS
VERY RICHEST

LIZZ THE
TOVAY 15
''BREAD·AND•BIWIS" CIRCUIT
OF

•

S2 .00 · tor
50 · word
tr-lnlm__ym
Eacfi aCfa1110na1 word J
cents.

I
TI-lE HI'II.L OF F/'.ME 9UT
'/ALE BEG6ED ME iO I'&lt;F.EP
ii-IE DESI'6N SEC. RET!

S~OT!&gt;

2 SIGNS
OF
QUALITY

1

R"TES

li WOULD H.&amp;.VE GONE

PERMIT5 .SL"-P

Auto Sales

REGULATIONS

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

1't~E: DOU8LE C.U~E

I AutoSal..

9 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy 0 Thursda• Feb 3 1977
DICK TRACY
' ·•.
· ''
. '

AIN'T THAT A ClJTE
LEETLE BIRDIE,PAW?
HE LOOKS JEST LIKE
HIS . DAI)DV

HE SHORE

DO:·MAW

A CHEEP
OFF 'TH' OL'
BLOCK

�.I

10-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Feb. 3, 1971

•

·

•

·

Langsville woman r----A;~;-i)~;d;;----! _Powers given Carter in emergency .
I

I

hurt in accident
Rita Maust, 30, Langsville,
was taken to the Holzer
Medical Center for treatment
of lrijurles suffered In a
traffic accident at 3 p.m.
Wednesday on SR 124, four
tenths of a mile east of SR 7.
The Gallla-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol said
she was a passenger in a car
driven by Carol Daniels, 28,
Ewlngton. His car went out of
control on Icy pavement, ran
off the highway, striking a
culver1 1 and overturned. No
charge was filed.
·
One hour later, a vehicle
driven by James H. Large,
·53, Langsville, slid on. the icy
pavement striking the
Daniels car.
Jeffrey S. Nelson, 17,
Gallipolis, was cited to
Juvenile Court for failure to
yield .while turning' left
following an accident at 1 :45 ·
p.m. Wednesday on SR !60 at
GleM· Dr. The patrol said
Nelson's car turned into the
path of one driven by Earlene .
Smith, 21, Gallipolis. There
was moderate damage.
~one of the passengers on a
loaded Gallia County Local
School bus was injured in a
traffic accident Wednesday
afternoon on the Eblin 'Hollow
Rd. three tenths of a mile
north of the BladenMercerville Rd.
Troopers said the bus
driven by Mary E. Waugh, 50,
Crown City, and a vehicle
operated by Herman R. Silns,
32, Crown. City, collided In a
curve. There 1' was ·minor
damage; no charge was filed.
A single car accident oc·
curred on the Scottown-Lecta
Rd. one tenth of a mile south
Of SR 775 where Donald ·R.
Saunders, 25, Scottown, lost
control of his car on icy
pavement. The vehicle slid
off the left side of the highway
over an embankment and
struck an outbuilding. There
was heavy damage.
At3:1~ p.m :onSR 790, four

tenths of a mile west of SR
216, Avery N. Flannery, f;T,
Scottown, lost control of his
pickup truck on the snow
covered highway. His veHicle
ran off the right side of the
highway into a ditch resulting
In minor damage. !o!o charges
were filed.
Heavy damage resulted in
an accident at 2:10 p.m.
Wednesday on SR 7 near
Shoestring Ridge where Boyd
M. Burnett, 19. Gallipolis, lost
control of the icy roadway.
Hls vehicle spun around, ran
off the right side of the highway striking a guardrail and
telephone pole. Burnett was
not in jured.
:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;::::::::::

EXTEND!'D OUTLOOK

Saturday through
Monday, a chance of snow
nurrtes Saturday, mainly
In northeastern Ohio. Fair
and cold Sunday and
Monday. Highs wlil 11e In
the %Go Saturday but falling
to the upper teens or lower
20s by· Monday. Lows will
be In the teen s early
Saturday and between zero
and 10 above zero early
Monday.

TUPPELURCSY KPtLMAINS Lucy Kim, 77, Tuppers
Pla ins. died at her home
early Wednesday morning.

wa~"';~i~a~~~!rc~t~~~- ~~~:

Edw in and Stella Kelly
Baker. She was a member of
the DauQhtersot America 313
and
the United Brethren
Church.
Survivors include three
sons. Joe. Lancaster; Donald
and Charles, both at home ;
one daughter, · Thelma
Vanderpool, Marietta ; nine
grandc~lldren and five great·
grandchildren.
She was preceded In death
~J.62~e;n~~s~~~~ht~;rnon .i n
Fu~ral services will be
Saturday, 1 p.m. at the
Tuppers Plains Christian
Church wilh the Rev. Elden
Blake and Roger Chase of·
ticlating. Burial wllltoltow In
the church cemetery. Friends
may call attheWhlte Funeral
Home,. Coolville. atter 16 p.m.
loday

.
Baptist Church with the Rev.
Alvis Pollard officiating .
Burlat will be In Of11o Valley
Memory Gardens. Friends
may call at the funeral home
11o 4 and 7 to 9 p,m. Friday.
GEORGE BALL
George Reece Ball , tlol,
Ewl ng ton, a former resident
0 f Huntl ng 1on. died at 10 p.m.
Tues~ay at the Holzer
Medical
Center.
He was born March 9, 11191
In Millon, W. Va . He married
the late Clara Tinkham.
Survivors Include one stepdaughter, Mrs . Claude
(Roberta) Russell . Colum bus; one brother. Broddus,

~~~:'b~~~~a~:n;/~~eton~~:

va .. and several nieces and

~phews .

Amember ot the St. Joseph
Catholic Church In Hun·
tlngton, he was a veteran of
World War 1 and a retired
purchasing agent for St.
Mary's Hospital In 11unling
ton. services will be
Funeral
11
a.m. Friday al the McCoy -·
Moore Funeral Home with
the Rev. Chester Lemley
MINERSVILLE - Donald officiating. Buria l will be In
E. Kavff, 49 , Minersville, Vinton I. Memorial Pa rk.
died at Holzer Medi cal Center Friends may call at the
funeral home fr om 7 to 9 this
,Wednesday night.
·
Mr . Kauff was the son of
the late William and Rosie
Morhs Kauff. He was also

preceded In death by one
brother, Herman.
Surviving are his

~i~

BLANCHE DAVIS
Blanche Davis. 17. 1132
Second Ave., Gallipolis. died

wi fe; at the Hol ter Medica l Center
Anna ; one daughter, Dia na; around 7: 15p.m . Wednesday.
two brothers, EarL HemloCk

Grove pnd George, Pomeroy:
one sis ter, Ma x ine , ' lndillnapolis, Ind. and severa l
nieces and nephews.
·
Funeral services will be 1
p.m. Saturday a the Ewing
Funera l Home. Burial will be
in . Rock Springs Cemetery .
Friends may call at the
funeral home after 7 this
evening .

TAKEN TO HOLZER
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad answered a caD to the
Senior Citizens Center at
,JOHNNY GAUTHIER
11 :42 a.m. Wednesday for
Johnny Ray Gauthi er. 12.
Lavinia Ebersbach who 2020 Bay Drive. Largo, Fla .,
became ill there. She was died Tuesday. ·
·
taken to Holzer Medical , He was born Jan. 11, 1955 in
Mich. to John and
Center. At 1:10 a.m., the Detroit,
Blanche Stover Gauthier . He
Pomeroy squad went to the is also sur viVed by his
Texas community for George grandparents , Mr . and Mrs. ·
Eastman, who waS taken to Elmer Stover , Gallipolis .
survivors include. two
Veterans Memorial Hospital sisOther
ters and one brother , Jerry
where he was admitted. AI Lee, Taylor , M ich.; Mrs
7:J68.m. Thursday the squad Larry (Lihdal. Gibson ,
went to Cave St. for James Fremont, Ohio, and Brenda
Kay Ga uthier; Clearwater,
PhiUips who was ill. He was Fla
.
·
taken to Holzer· Medical
Funeral ser vices will be 1
Center.
p.m. Saturday at the First

--••••••••••••••••••••••••••••II
~

She was born in Walnu t

Twp.. Ga llla County Jan, 24.
190(1 to the lo te James M. and ·

By WllJ.IAM E. CU YTON
WASHINGTON (UP!} -

e«nppl1iee to alw'e their
supplies, and pipelines to buy
CongresshaaglvenPresldent gas outside the nonnal
Carter the extraordinary federal price controls.
powers he said he _needed to.-' "'lbll is our swine Qu bill,"
help ease critical winter Rep. Bob Eckh!lrdt, !).Tex.,
short.ages of natural gas.
told the House Wednesday
By overwhelming margins, afternoon. "We have devlaed
both House and Senate ap- a cure worse than the
proved legislation disease. We don't know that
Wednesday aUowing Carter any significant amount of gas
to order natural ~as ~lpeline will go Into llilerstate

News •• m· Bn·eis

(OIIIdnued from page I) .
Friend said. "The way things are now, it does m~re harm than
good. And unemployment and welfare ... that all has to be
changed.''
CINCINNATJ - 1S HUSTLER MAGAZINE obscene?
Seven men and five w001en began trymg
·
to answer that
question today. Those 12 persons make up a u.mllton County
Common Pleas Court jury charged with resolving two Charges
~ whether Hus\ler publisher Larry Flynt and three other
magaz1ne stafl ers are guilty of pa nd ering obscenity and
engaging in organized crime.
.
Judge William J. Morrissey waa to send the case to ·the
jurors after .flamilton Count)' Prosecutor Simon Leis and a
fourth and final defense attorney presented their closirig
arguments. Threeotherdefenseattorneysf!Uldetheir closing
slatffilents Wednesday.

commerce that would not

oiJierwia."

'!ben he voted ••·'·"' II,
.......aiOII(I with most of his Texu
colleagues.
The HOUle approved the
bill, 3381o 82. The Senate.had
done 10 by nearly unanimous
voice vote a ·few hours
earlier. Carter signed It
shortly before his ''fireside
Chat."
''l'hla IIIOIJUI'e will not
solve the energy problem,"
• -"Senate Democratic """""'
Robert Byrd, P-W.Va., said.
"It Is a very temporary and
emergency measure, meant
only to d"'!l as best we can
with 1·the current energy
crisis."
The bill has two main
parts:
- Authority for Carter to
order one Interstate pipeline
which has gas going to lowpriority UBe', to share -'-'
w•th
another pipeline pinched for
llshigheJI-priorLty customers
such as homes and hOilpltals
·and small buslne&amp;8e8. That
authorltyrunsoullnApril,or
. whenever Caner declares the

•

•

Califomia gas offered Ohio

IIIDII'gency tNflt.
-Authority 'for
the !
lnl«aaale plpellnes to ll'y to •
tr ''
bid aome PI away 0111 •
other polenUal cuatomen '
wltbln the producing alBIA!. '
That wlthln~te mmet
Is not prlce-eontrolled, and l
the bill would give the '
lllterstale p'-llnes 1 chlnce
.,.. fedfltl 1 pr1oe -.
to go beyond
b 11 ea•·
ceillll(ls to uy ·
•~r ·;
would baye authority to cut 1
the emergency prlcellf they '
~~d~ That authority
gel too ,...,.,,
!
runs outlri Auguat. ·
•
There ailo was t.nguage to •
prevent existing conlrlctl ,
froin belngof ~~!!nedrl to :
negotlation
•-eo- P eel &lt;&gt;
Just because the emergency ~
sales were being done at .
~
~··~er prL
ces.
•q&amp;•
wUlha
'
Carter has said he
ve "
a
long-term
and :
comprehen.tlve energy plan ':;
before Congre;~~~ 1n AprU . ' ~
Many voices In Congreu ~
have been raised for a long- ' ·
term lifting of fedflt81 price ~
controls on natural gas, to ~
·spur new· dlscover1es and •'
production.
"
J

Cold, snow-filled days ·bring back
memories_of.an earlier January day

•

states like New Jersey and ··had been notified. He said if
New · York and second, 10 Columbia dld purchase some
billion cubic feells not a lot of California gas it could be
gas. Columbia Gas of Ohio, shared with Dayton Power &amp;
Ohio's largest natural gas Light Co. and Cincinnati Gas
supplier, distributes that &amp; Electric Co . •
amount in five days. ,
White, in Wilmington Del.,
Rhodes said California Thu~sday ,
was
not
Gov. Edmund G. Brown immediately available for
llllephoned him to say he had comment.
"be ~ n reading about the
"They pretty much leit it
short.ages in Ohio and other up to the utilities to negotiate
eastern states and wanood to · but it is our understsnding
1help."
that Columbia is qullll certsln
I Thomas J . Moyer, Rllodes' to get some of it" said Moyer.
executive assistant, quoted
If utility spokesmen were
BASETBALL NOTICE
The Melgt M.arauder Brown as · saying warm not ·optimiStic about gas
illoketball team, trying to weather and conservation purchases, they . were
gel In 11 many games as efforts had made some extra similarly wary about the
federal emergency gas
poulble wbUe lhe school Ia gas avaUabLe.
Moyer said the California legislation signed into law
opea wW boallhe powerful
Logan Cbleflsln.a tonlgbt · Public Utilities Commission Wednesday.
alld blltlle vlslllng Wellston had authorized several . It gives President Carter
Saturday. Reoerve contests utililil'8, inclnding Southern authority to declare national
start 1t 1:30 with lbe California Gas Co. and pr regional natural gas
Varsity. gelling together at Pacific Gas &amp; Electric to emergencies and to order gas
8. Saturday wUI be !be negotiate with utilities from moved from state to ~late to
fourth day Ia a row that eastern and midwestern serve high priority customers
such as residences.
Melgo bas hosted an states directly.
Moyer
said
Marvin
White,
Columbia Gas said it has
SEOAL toe.
president of . Columbia Gas, been Informed by the Federal
but no other Ohio gas firms Power pommlssion th at

By JOHN T. KADY
Ualled Prest lnternatlonal
Gov. James A. Rhodes says
Ohio haa been offered the
chance to buy some of the 10
billion cubic feet of gas
California natural gas
utiliUes are making available
to eastern states this mooth.
But utilities spokesmen
here caution thet· first, Ohio
would be vying for the supply
;with other energy-starved .

••

..
VOL XXVII NO. 206

INSURANCE COVERAGE
The following ad has been paid for by the following Meigs County
Independe nt Insurance Agents.)

MUu.EN INSURANCE AGENCY .INC.
DALE C. WARNER INSURANCE
V. D. EDWARDS INSURANCE AGENCY
DAVIS INSURANCE SERVICE ·
·DOWNING-CHILDS INSURANCE· AGENCY INC.
REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE SERVICE INC.

United Press International
eastern half of the nation by
Millions of Americans east Saturday, with daytime
of the Mississippi got a remperatures only In the
weather break today but single digitflgures across the
forecasters warned them it upper Great Lakes region
won't last long.
.and the upper Mississippi
Temperatures in the valley," the weather service
eastern states "moderated to said.
near rionnal values," .the · Ahead of the froni was
Natlonal Weather Service .snow, extending from Fargo
said, and arr emergency to Cleveland, · with travel
energy bill opened the valves advisories moving with it.
for fresh supplies of natural
Estimates of the cost to the
gas to flow to the eastern nation's economy mounted,
states.
and a UPl count showed that
since
the worsi of the weather
But new snow again
crisis
began roughly two
crippled traffic at hard-hit
.
weeks
ago , more than 3
Buffalo, N.Y., and a new cold
mUiion
workers have been
front l)eaded towa~d \he
Idled
at
one time or another
Midwest and East from the
by
weather
and energy
western mountains and
problems.
northern Minnesota.
"This new surge. of
Suow and colder weather
unseasonably cold air
threarens to cover most of the are returning to Ohio.

man

Marengo, Ind. Tw in sons died
In infancy .
Fuherat arrangements are
incomplete. Burlal ·wi ll be in

Indiana . The body is at

Miller's Home for Funera ls.

Weather

NOW IN

AARON HONORED
SYRACUSE, N.Y. (UPI) A sellout crowd of 600
honored baseb&amp;ll great Henry
Aaron aa the recipient of the
"clasSic champion award" at
the second, annual Genesee
sports dlnn'er Wednelday.
Sparky Anderson, mana1er
of the world champion
€1ncinnaU Reels, accepted the
award In beh!llf of Aaron,
who was.unable to atteild, a
spokesman said, because
Aaron's slsleJ' was Involved
In emergency surgery
Wednelday.

RESS

.

heritag·e ~ouse
N. 2nd Ale.

0.

. 992-5627
i,

'

MEIGS THEATRE
. a.osED RlR
V1t.AOON
WATCH FOR
OPENING DATE

ceremony will be Gladys Silo
Mbua, 16, whose mother sings
in the church choir and works
in the Liberian Embassy.

NOTICE!
SIMON'S
GIFT CENTER
WILL BE OPEN
FRIDAY &amp;SATURDAY
ONlY
FROM 12 TIL 5 P.M.
During the
Month of
February.
'

'

Check Us For
All :Your
Valentine Gifts

·SAVE DU.RING·OUR

BIG CLEARANCE SALE
QUANTITIES LIMITED

ON THESE
ITEMS
WOMEN'S EVENING WEAR
WOMEN'S CASU~ TOPS
CHILDREN'S WINTER HATS . ..
MEN'S JEANS JACKETS
' MEN'S DRESS SHIRTS
MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS
BOYS' SWEATERS
MEN'S KNIT DRESS SLACKS
MEN'S WESTERN SHIRTS
MEN'S KNIT SHIRTS
CHILDREN'S WINTER
COATS
•
INFANTS
AND GIRLS DRESSES
.
.
LARGE GROUP WOMEN'S COORDINATES
IIQYS' KNIT SHIRTS
BOYS' ·SPORT SHIRTS,
MATERNITY WEAR

I

I

$60,000 Grants
appropriated
.
.

I

.

.

'

eastward, across the south~ flurries and colder air will
ern Great Lakes area, today. spread back over Ohio.
Th e National Weather
Mild weather during the
past 24 hours push~d Service says temperatures
drop to a low near
temperatures ipto th e mid or tonight
upper 30s in some counties zero in northwestern Ohio
Thursday and today's wUI and to between 10 and 15
range from the upper 21_ls in degrees in extreme southern
northwestern Ohio to the coutnies.
Daytilne highs during the
upper 30s in southern
weekend will be in the teens
counties.
However, as the low or 20's with overnight lows
pressure moves across the near the zero mark over
state today snow wiD taper to much of the state.

will

.

SYRACUSE - Syracuse.· dinance to enter into a con.Council Thursday night tract with Ohio Power Co., to
approved appropriations for supply electricity for the
this year of $139,347.50. Of waterwork3.
this figure, $60,000 ,is comlng
it was also pointed out py
from outright grants. The some residents that the
general fund appropriation ls reception of cable TV is very
$97,435. ·
poor. Some even stated they
Meeting with council were would rather do without the
residents of the Rustle Hills cable than put up with the
Subdivision In regard to ice reception they are getting.
on the street leading to the
Also brought up was geople
area. Residen~ asked co~ncil , driving the wrong way on a
to correct the problem etther one way street, College Rqad .
hy UB!ng cinders or salt or Pollee Chief Varian warned
clearing the street off. They thai if they are caught they
said they were seektng help will be arrested
for the, health and safety of
Mayor Her~an London
the restdents of tbe .area.
read the following ap•
Councilmen resp~mded that propria lions for 1977 ,
TUPPERS PLAINS they have pla.ced ctnders and
General r governmental
Carolyn Sue
Harper,
salt on the htll and that the services, $!,600 ; clerk,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
' village
receives
ap- personal services, supplies,
Drury Harper, Is the
proximately $6,000 a year for and
materials, $660;
recipient of tbe Daughters of
street maintenance. Council treasurer personal services
the American Revolutlon
contended that money ls used and supplies, $375; solicitor,
Good Citizenship award for
each year tn paving streets $50; elections, $400; council,
Eastern High School.
and that council has paved personal services and supShe was selected on the
the streets in Rustle Htlls,
pUes $600· utilities building
basis of scores on the D.A.R.
Co~cil agreed to pla~e and 'gro~, $1 i,o00; mainCAROLYN HARPER
tests on Citizenship, history, addillonal cinders on Rusttc tenance, building and
government and soclal
Hilts for residents to use. The grounds $6 435 . police
ltludles given at Eastern oil of tbe Tuppers Plains Church delegaUon was told that all departrr{enl, per;onal serOct. Tl . Miss Harper, along of Christ and Is secretary of towns and viUages are faced vices and supplies,. $),400;
with Faith Ferrin of Meigs the Teenage Sunday School with the same problem as no flre department, supplies and
High School, and Patricia class. She is president of the one was prepared for such a debt retirement, $2,500;
Autherson of Southern High National Honor Society at severe winter.
public health, $750 ; social
•
School, wiD be a guest at the Eastern, president of th.e " Jay Brown, Dick Karr and services, corrective inaMual Charter Day luncheon Better Office Employes Club, Richard Bailey met with stitutlons, $200; parks and
of Return Jonathan Meigs and a library aide.
counclllnregardtoltsseptlc playgrounds, $20,500 ;
She Is a fonner editor of the system for the swinuning swimming pool, personal
Chapter, D.A.R. In March. At
that time she will receive a school newspaper, treasurer pool. Brown explained that services , suppiles, pool
good citl~enship pin and of the Language Club, served they are Interested tn the construction and sewage
POMEROY FIREMEN batUed two homes burning on Condor St., Thursday aftllrnoon.
certificate from Mrs. Wilma on the' student Council, and .jlroJecl and will bld when It Is system, $GS,OOO; planning
S.:rgent, D.A.R. ehalrman. was ·on the scholarship team advertised In March.
commission, $200; conMiss Harper Is a member for Eastern.
Council passed an or- tlngenCies for purposes not
otherwise provided for, $500;
grand total geperai fund,
$97,435 .
following numbers: 992.-7886, get out. The staff have been citizens who might be without
By the Center Staff
busy calling senior citizens healdurlng the energy crisis.
Transportation facllltles,
Senior Citizens In Meigs 992.-7884 or 993-7311.
street paving, $9,000; street
Although most of the who ·normaUy come to the Anyone in the county who is
County Who need assistance
Center, especially ones who willing to do this is asked to
repairing, $4,000; street
In any way, due to conditiOns scheduled activities have
repair, supplies, $600; street which have been caused by been cancelled due to the are Isolated or who live alone. call the Senior Citizens
There are senior citltens Center so that a listing of
ilghtlng, $4,000.
the severe weather we have weather, the Center Is open
Warer system operations, been experiencing, are urged Monday !~rough Friday who have no telephone. In available ho'l'es in different
water supply, personal
tbese cases, one of .the staff
of the county can be
'
to caD the Senior Citizens · every week. If the Center has has either contacted a close areas
made.
·
services
and
supplies,
$2,550;
The Middleport Chamber of bualneas hours due to the Wilson, secretary, ln adCenter. Call one of the to be closed for any reason an neighbor or gone to the
Also,,
we
would
like to. have
waler
filtration,
$2,000,
water
announcement will be made
Commerce agreed
to energy crunch and lower vanee, so that lunches can be
home
.
Senior
person's
pumping,
personal
services,
names
of
persons
who are
over WMPO, the local radio
· Bloodmobile in
recommend a ~hOur week during the closed periods.
brought ln.
·•
volunteers
have
been
supplies,
·fuel
and
light,
able
and
willing
to help
station, and home telephone
During the , meeting
Edison ·Baker urged
for Middleport business
telephoning
and
helping
in
$4,$00;
water
dlstrlbutlon,
elderly.
persons
In
other
numbers of staff wiD be given
houses,
In
houses and a careful watch en presided over hy Emerson business
on
February
14
many
ways
other
seniors
who
fixtures
and
equipment,
emergency
situations.
If,
for
which senior citizens can call
thermOIIat settings at a Heighton, president, It was cooperation with Middleport
are
home-bound.
,
$3
,000
;
administration,
example,
high
water
Is
meetlni held at the Colurnbua decided to have a n~w Mayor Fred Hoffman, to persmial services and sup- Meigs Countlans wiD really in case of emergency.
,.
d
A
public
announcement
predicted
for
certain
areas,
a
Lunches are be mg serve ,
hav~ a chance to show they
and Southern Ohio ·Electric category of membership lobe compile a list of damages and .
was
made
during
the
blizzard
lot
of
time
would
be
saved
if
plies,
U
,610;
water
debt
have a heart come· and meals are being
Co. buDding Thursday af- known . as an "associate other losses resulting from
retirement, trustee services, Valentine's Day, Feb. 14.
delivered to shut-Ins where alert asking people in · the there was a list of persons
This
group
membership."
the
weather
conditions
and
ternoon. J
FHA
bonds
and
interest,
A bloodmobile will visit the the roads are passable. The community who had elderly ·&lt;Who 'could help those senior
The cnamber agreed to wlil Include non-business tum·the lists over to Mayor
Provident
Bank,
.
bond
and
county from I to 6 p.m . and daily · bus routes . were neighbors to try and check on . citizens in that area who
recommend to aU Middleport people, especlaUy those In the Hoffman 10 that they may
Interest,
$7,602;
revenue
residents are asked to discontinued most of the them periodically. Even needed assistance In moving
merchants a reduction of profeuions . The lee for participate In · any disaster
ihe weather has out. Young people especlaUy
sharing,
$4,000
;
total
all
bullneas bours to 40 a week memberaltlp will be $5 an· relief programs arranged by approprlalioris, 1139,347.50, · become donors. The unit this month of January due to bad though
abated
somewhat.
we . are COJuld be very helpful In such
time wili' be at the senior road conditions. ltowever,
with each Individual bualness nuaUy.
Gov. James Rhodea.
asking
that
you
continue
to do instances. Senior citizens who
Attending
were
Mayor
citlzens ~ooms in the · transportation was provided
The chamber agreed to
to Ill the hoan to make up
Atlandlng the meeting were
this.
It
might
save
an
elderly
have no family to fall bsck on
Herman
London
,
Eber
Pomeroy Junior High School, to senior citizens who had
that 11111011111 of 'time each meet on the first Thursday of Heighton, Mn. Wilson, Mrs.
person
from
having
a
bad
fall
are the OQes we are most
Pickens,
Robert
Wingett,
E. Main St., Pomeroy. The doctor appointments or who
week. The chamber ailo went · each month all2:15 p.m. at Alwllda Werner, treasurer;
Barry
McCoy,.
Jimmy
Joe
should
be
attempt
to
~et
out
concerned about.
·change of location was made for any valid reason needed
111 record 11 recommending the Columbus and Southern Don Wilson, John Werner,
Hemsley
and
Kathryn
Crow,
for
help.
·
Uvlng In a rural area such
that all business houses set Ohio Electric Co. buDding. Baker, Carl Horky, George council. members, and Chief necessary due to gas curtail· tr ansportation . Groceries
One
person
has
offered
to
as we do has disadvantages
ment at the Pomeroy and medicine are being
their thermostats at 85 Members plaMing to attend Ingels and Richard S. Owen.
(Contmuea on page 12)
share
her
home
with
senior
Varian.
Elementary
Sif!ool.
delivered
to
those
who
cannot
degrees or below du~lng art asked to notify Edna

Help is ,on"call to senior citizens

Chamber urges 65 degree
settings ·on thermostats

SelectiO!Is are
All seles ·fln11. No
exchanges or ref;~ds.

•••
I'

to three mcnes 1n some
sections by tonight.
The snow is the result of a
developing low pre.ssure
center which will move

DAR award

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Elberfelds~ ln Po~eroy
''

Snow began falling in
northern and central Ohio
early today and is expected to
produce accumulations of one

•
to receive

AMY'S DAY

WASHINGTON (UP!) .:.._
Sunday wiD he a special day
for AmY l;ar.)er.
Th~ President's 9-yearo()ld
daughter and a black girl
from the Cameroons wiD be
baptized at · Washington's
First Baptist Church.
Joining Amy in the

Losses· were estimated a t detected the entire living
$6,000 as the result of a fire room was in names.
which destroyed two frame
The group fled from the
house and nothing was saved.
The lire was completely out
oi hand when firemen arrived
at the scene just after noon
1alf hours battling the f1re. and quickly spread to the
l'hey were hampered by low next door house. unoccupied .
water pressure that existed The two properties, heavily
at first and then by power gutted and termed a com•
lines which exploded as they plete loss. were owned by
were struck by the leaping Milton Bartram of Van, W.
Va.
flames.
Cause of the blaze was not
Pomeroy Fire Chi ef
Charles Legar said that fire determined and Fire Chief
started in the home of Mrs. Legar said that a prelilninary
Sandy Distelhorst. Mrs . report show s that there was
Distelhorst was not at home no insurance. Power coma! the time but there were pany employes were on the
· several adults and children iri sce ne late Thursday afthe house when the fire t&lt;:'o von replacing lines which
started . One occupa nt said were destroved in the blaze
that when the fire was first and restorin-g service.

Miss

•
BOARD \IIEEnl
Bus driver certificates
were Issued to Thomas
Gumpf, Jr., Eastern Local
District, and Roger Hill and
Thomas HUI, Southern Local
District, '!'hen the .Meigs
County Board of Education
met In regular session
Tuesday night. Bills were
paid during tbe routine
session . Attending were
County Supt. Robert Bowen
and board members, Robert
Burdette, Gordon Collins, and
Harold Roush.

PRfCE FIFTEEN CENTS

·

'

ALSO CHECK WITH YOUR AGENT ABOUT FLOOD

FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 4, 1977

Weather break is shortlivedE;.:;;~

~

· All homeowners policies do not cover loss caused by "weight of ice,
snow or sleet:' and "freezing of plumbing", Please checl with your
insurance agent to see if you have these coverages.
,

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Fire -guts two
Pomeroy homes

enttne

at y

e

.
By Goldie Clendenin
I've wondered since then bow I got dreued, made phone "
PORTLAND
I
wish
I
could
look
outside
and
see
a
who preceded her In deatn .
heatwave like in summer.~ me Irish Mither used to say, "If calls and whaoover needed to be done and got on my way to ·
Su rv ivors Include one
Meigs County by 4p.m. Juanita came with me. ,
:
brother , Cyrus B. Drum - wishes were horses beggers would ride .. .''
·
I remember her calling his brother at Charleston from ~
monds, Pafriot ; one sister ,
so I put on two sweaters, dress like Santa af teh North Pole
Goldie
D rummonds,
except for hat and beard, sit by the furna~e,lind wonder bow Lancaster, and Georgia and Larry Smith going to EWings with ~
Chesa peake and several
us that night. The nexl morning we 1fllded In snow nearly kliee .
nieces and nephews. T~o long until it will be useless again.
deep
in the cemetery to show them where to dig the grave. I'D ;
sisters and one brot her
We hear barges carrying propane gas are frozen in river
al"(ays
be grateful to lhe trustees, Aaron Turner, and the road :
~receded her in death.
. Ice. Empire waD furnaces are no good without gas and
1
She was a member of
crew
who
cleared the snow away In lhe cemetery and even sent ·
Walnut M. E. Church. electric, as I fo,und out when electric was off 10 how:s.
flowers;
Larry
Smith and whoever helped lodlgthegrave,
~
1
I love to see the clean whilll snow cover the earth, makes lt
Mudsock. and the · Patriot
For
thr!J(l
days
I
fell
like
a
zombie
:.
walked,
answered
;
Grange.
look new and beautiful. But it brings sad memories at this time
questions, I guess, and fell like lhe ground was glvlrig way •
Funera l services wJII be 2 Of year. Nine years ago on Saturday, Jan. 8 tllis year, I lost my
p.m. Sa turday at the Willis husband, not to another woman thls tilne !
under my feet; too numb to care, really.
.
:
·
Funeral Home with the Rev.
Afoor
the
funeral
we
went
back
to
Columbus.
There
was
~
At the Smith Place in Columbus that Monday morning
John -Jeffers · officiating .
stU!
cold
.
a
nd
snow
and
I
only
felt
weak
and
tired
But
as
I
•
Burial will follow in Mound lhere were seven inches of snow and four degrees below z~ro.
walked In the door of the living room I stllrted to hurt! Seeing ~
Hill Cemetery . Friends may He went to work and !'was home with the flu; I'd been sick two
call ,at . the -funeral home
days, could not eat or take medicine ; had cancelled my his chair with lamp and cigarettes, telephone and deak, It hit :
Friday from 7 to 9 p.m.
•
volunteer work for the week. He left at 7to go to Shoe Corp. of me for the first time : hewoulcbl'tbecornlngbomeqalri.
PallbearerS are Michael
In
those
10
years
we'd
gone
together
to
sick
beds
and
Davis, Larry Davis; Wendell - America on !Mis Rd.
Davis, ~ ugene· carter , James
At 8 his boss caUed lhat he'd ll)3de it to the warehouse funerals of our parents. Today l'm alone because I choose to
Boster and John H. Davis.
where he was assistant floor manager, but was sick and in the be, except at this time of year I remember plAces we went on
dispensary with first-aid men, and be'd send hiln home with a weekends, crazy things like the zoo and hackroads., eating at
PAUL BYERLY
parks, and glad just tD be home.
Paul Alva Byerly, 71, was
to drive.
Mustly I keep busy, sewing rug rags, making scrap books
I could see the porch he had swept off before he left was
fo~:~nd
this morning
dead .atonhi sRthome
. 2, Vinton,
early
and
stuff, and reading, especially poetry. For example :
piled high with snow again. I tried to get up, but had to lie
by his grandson, Don .
WHEN I MUST LEAVE YOU
Mr . Byerly was born in down.
By Helen Steiner Rice
'
Indiana on Dec . 25. 1906, son
'{he man caUed again and said he wasn't responding to
When
I
must
leave
you
for
a
little
wliile,
of the late Will ia m and Eva- first aid and an ambulance was there and he was sending a
Byerly .
man with hiln to Riverside Hospital nearby to be checked Please do not grieve and shed wild tears
He was a retired farmer ·
And hug your sorrow to you through the years.
.
an.;:! saw m ill and stone before he came holl!e.
He knew I was sick and called two Of my daughlllrs,
quarry worker .
•
liut start out bravely with a gaUant smile,
He is survi ve d by two J~anita of Nationwide and AMe at Mt. CanneL They were
sisters a'nd three brother s:
And for my sake and in my name
•'
Mrs . Margaritte Jones, lhere In a fe)V minutes, but I sent them to see about Ormie.
Live
on
a~d
do
all
lhings.
the
same.
••'
He had the second stroke just before Christmas, the first
Grace Mills. Darrell . Byerly,
Dallas Bye rly and Cart five years befor.e. He had been under a doctor's care eight
Byerly, all of .Marengo, Ind . years before we were married; the doctor told me when we Feed not your lonllness on empty days ,
Four brother ~, and siste r s had our blood oosts he may die of a stroke any time. We were
But fiU each waking hour In useful ways;
preceded him in death .
•
Reach
out your hand in comforl and In cheer.
He marr ied Ol i ve Denton of both 50, then.
•
His wife had died of cancer after more than a year and he
Milltown. Ind . She survives.
••
Six chi ldren were born to was alone except for a brother with cancer. In less than a year , And I In turn will comfort you and bold you near;
this union . Four surviving he seemed much better.
And never, never be afraid to die,
•
children are John Paul ·
For
I am waiting for you In the sky!
But
this
was
101'
.
!
years
later.
He
died
at
2
p.m.
that
day
Byerly, . Ga lli polis; Stanley
Warner Byerl y, Nashau, N. his lhird stroke. Hls poor tired heart gave out, and'! was alone;
HE NEVER SAID THIS, bull think he may have I only
Y.; Mrs . Ma x (An ita) again. More alone than I'd ever been in my life, even with my
know
there's no red rose buds for ChrlstmU any more, for me.:....
Manship, .Piola, Ind .; Mrs . girls there.
.
.
Barry (Rita) Nich olson ,
Harr iett Whi te Drummonds .

She marr ied Robert T. Davis

BLINDING UGHT SHOT from power lines near the ~ondor St. fire Thursday as fire
burned the lines. This "hand is as quick as the eye picture \on her camera shutter trigger! "
was taken by Katie Crow. "It was enough to scare the livin' daylights out of you ," said
Katie.

•

•

·•

•.,
••
•

"there is little, if any , near • to be back to: normal by
lllrm prospects for restoring Monday and to have all
gas availabiity for industrial workers back," says a GM
consumption in areas heavily spokesman.
GM, the city's largest emhit by plant closings."
ployer,
had to lay off 10,500
"While supporting such.
workers
earlier this week.
l eg islation , Columbia
GM
will
be able to get
believes it will not
vaporized
propane
through
significantly ease the
the
Dayton
Power
&amp;
Light
Co.
(overaU) gas supply crisis for
to
reptace
the
natural
gas
it
the balance of this winter,"
usually
receives
from
DP&amp;L.
Colwnbia Gas said in a
the
GM · spokesman
statement.
explained
.
Dayton Power and Ught
A
DP&amp;L
spokesman exofficials were also gloomy 'in
plained
that
it
was vaporizing
their eva luation of the
propane
procured
by its cussituation, indicating that 100
.
tomers
as
an
alternalll
fuel
per cent gas. curtailments
and
delivered
to
DP&amp;L
against its 16,000 commercial
and industrial customers will facilities .
He said about 250
probably be kept in effect for
Customers
have purchased
· the rest of the winter heating
season, thai Is, through and delivered about 5 million
gallons of propane.
March 20.
But, he added that 150
But there also was good
news out of Dayton. Running customers have already used
on vaporized propane Instead up their propane allotment,
of natural gas, ·General over and above their natural
Motors expects to have aU gas allocation.
In other energy-related
33,000 of its Dayton workers
developments:
back on the job by Monday.
(Continued on page 12)
"We expect aU operations

•

,I

. .

)

,~,-

~.

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