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Patrol post

News •• in Briefs
(Continued from page 1)
earth in the Soyu&amp; 24 spacecraft ctimcted Uteir course today
for an eiPecled rendezvous with the Salyut 5space station. The
Tass news agency said in a trlef dlapatch tNt Col. Vlktor
Gorbatko and Lt. Col. Yurl Glazkov, had circled the earth 12
times by midday.
"According ID the rep&lt;rts of the crew lllld Ute data of
te~metrlc information, Ute apace ship's onboard II)'Siema are
functioning n~lly, " Tau said. "The cosmonauta are
feeling floe." The news agency said the cosmonauiB bepn
their worldng day at 11:30 a.m. MOIICow time. Gorb!ltko, the
fllght co~der; was quoted as saying the crew fa "fuHIWng
the night program."
WASIDNGTON - PRESIDENT CARTER does not want
his Cabinet or While House staff members to break.up their

families by overworking out of loyalty ID )lim. DeJIIIy Press
Secretary Rex Gr811111l told . reporters that at Monday's
Cabinet meetlilg, Carter cautioned members "not to ignore"
their famUy lies "in carrying out their duties."
"You should watch yourselves and keep your lamllles
together " Carter said. "I don't want your lamllles breaking
up just because you felt a loyalty ID me." Carter said he was
"nottelling them how to run their llvea," Granum said, but had
found White House staffers working late every evening and
said ''you will be more useful ID me and to the country If you
get some recreation, get some exercise, see your children and

spouses.''

(Continued from palle 1)
where he majored In BlolOSYHe Ia a two year vet~~t·an 01
the u. s. Army lllld wu
dl!charged II SP~ with a
MOS u a jlarachule rtuer.
He Ia llllrrled to the former
Diana Jo Boggs, Uma. They ,
have one child, Kyle P., age
two.
·
A 1972 graduate of Zanesville High School, CUrtll Jay ·
Williams attended Central
State University. Trooper
Williams, a three year
veteran of !he.U.S. Milly wu
discharged as Sgt. E-5 In
Infantry. He at"ed in West
Germany one year with the
51st Inf., 1st Dlvlalon. A
native of Zanesville, he Ia
currently residing at Spring
Valley • Gre'en
Apts.,
Galllpolla.
P. D. McCreedy, Gall)polls,
former commander of the
Gallla·Melgs Post, and a
member of Ute patrol's 15th
graduating clasa, attended
Friday's ceremonies.

DIVORC.... AilED
J !))'c:t E. Klell, 11, a mlllor, .
by her motber, Helen Hftffiln, Rt. 1, Langsville, filed
suit for divorce ~ ~ a l111t
; r over Ke!Ut Klein, Rt. 2,
1-.meroy, In Melga CoUDty
COOliiiCIIl Pleu courtroo:n.
Nancy Musaer, Rt. 2
Pomeroy, filed ault for
divorce agalnat Frank
M - same addnN. ReYa
Snyder.' Rulllnd IJid Jame1
Snyder, Mlddleport, fl1ld for
dlaaolullon. Pamela S. Clark
has rued lor support acalnlt
Edward Lee Clark under the
Recelprocal Agreement Act.
Catherine Faye Young wu
granted a divorce from
Gaylrd Laine Young.

Carter hares new U. ·S. policy toward Russia
By PAMELA REEVES
WASHINGTON (UP!) - In
his llrst news conference
llillce taking olllce, President
Carter said the United States
will ''come out better in
dealing with the Soviet
Union" If he speaks out
against repression while
seeking mutual arms
cutbacks.
Carter said his desire to

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesdav. February 9, 1977

ELBERfFIDS

belt
against lawlessness

peace, keeping disorderly
houses, Immoral conduct,
obscene literature, indecent
exposure · and Improper
dress, profanity, restraining'
or Interfering with a pollee
officer, iinpersonatlng a
government pfflcer or em·
ployee,
weapons
and
firearms; gambllng, false
emergency alarms, loitering,
1 One of the ordinances abandoned refrigerators and
1 provides penalties for assault
and b!ltiery, disturbing the other airtight appliances.
MASON, W. Va. - The
Mason Town Councll Monday
evening · studied new city
ordinances which will go into
effect because of the new
magistrate system
established Jan. 1.
Town attorney Ron Stein
=d~~=n~!:. reading of

Local news •• in briefs:I_____A
___re-a__D
___e__a_t_h__s_____ !
I

The Meigs Unit of the
· American Cancer Society will
meet at 7:30 this evening at
the cancer office In the for -

THE MEIG.S Bookmobile
wi ll not vis it schools closed in

bui l di ng, Pome roy . There

the Meigs Loca l Schoo l
District but will sper1d the
time allotted for the vis it in
the general ar..ea served by

Miss Hope contestants from

t he
school.
Residents ,
especially students , are

mer

children's

home

will be a specia l program by
Galll a County and plans wi ll
be made for a sled riding

con test to be staged by the

local Uni t from '1 to 5 p.m .

Sunday on Mulberry Heights.

THE
POMEROY
Emergency Squad answered
a call to Mechanic: St. al 12: 42
a.m. Tuesday for Pau line
Derenberger who was hj ving
difficulty breathing . SM was
taken to Vetera ns 'Memoria l
Hospital. At 6: 15 a.m .. the
squad went to Monkey Run
for Carl
Norton who was
taken to Holzer Medical
Cer1 ter.

asked to be alert for the
mobile uni t ' In the ir areas
when the unit would normally
be at the s~hool.

THE BATON and gyhl ·
nas tlcs classes of Glor ia
Wallace held at !he Orchid
Room in Pomeroy have been
ca ncelled during February .

I
lESLIE BEAVER
Leslie Kenneth eeaver, 60,
Rt. 2. Gallipolis, died at 9:20
p.m. Monday at Holzer
Medica l Center . He had been
in fail ing health about six
months.
An employee of the
Ga ll ipolis State Institute and
a fa rri1er, He was bOrn Sept.
11. 1916 In Harr ison Twp. ,
Ga ll la County, to the la te
Charles E. and Chloe Frances
Drummond Beaver.
He Is survived by his wife,
Audre y Sa nders Beaver :
ch ildren, Delores Beaver.
Ga l li pol is ;

Mrs .

Aust in

OREN L. WRIGHT
Oren L. Wright, 79 ,
Southgate, Cali f.. former
Meigs County res ident, died
Saturday nig ht.
He is survl ved by his wife,
Thelma, and two sons, lloyd
of Pomeroy and Richard of
Southgate, Ca lif. M(. and
Mrs. Lloyd Wright have been
in Callfornla the past week
and will return home later
thi s w ee ~.
MAUDE FULCHER
Mrs. Maude Fulcher, 82, a
former resident of 997 Fourth
Ave .. Gallipolis, died at 8:20
a.m. today following a long
illr\e!.s.
·
She Is the mother of Mrs.
Amyl
(Kay l _ H ~ff elt ,
Ga lli polis.
Funeral services ·will be
announced by Miller's Home

PRECEPTOR BETA { Pa tri,ci a) Evans, Pedro ;
BETA Sorority will meet Mrs. Larry !Faye) Johnson ,
Thursdar at 7:45p.m. at the Gallipolis; Milford Beaver.
home o Rose Sisson. Co- Castalia ; Rodnev Beaver and
hostesses are Teresa ·swatzel f'./v's. ,Joe (Wyllodenel Eskeu.
and Tani .Smington.
both of Gallipolis; 11 grandchi ldren , brothers and
TWO IN IIOS PITAL .
sister's, James Bea ver,
THE
MIDDLEPORT
RACINE - Robert E. · Gallipolis; Mrs. Raymond fOr Funerals.
Emergericy Squad answered
(Oieva) Cremeens, South
a call to Wesl Ma in St .. Waldnlg and Bob, Jr.; of Poin t; Charles Beaver.
WtNNIFREiil VOLL
Pomeroy, at 10:55 a.m. Route 1, Racine, entered Frankfort , Ohio ; Walker
SYRACUSE
Mrs .
Pleasant Valley Hospital, Beaver , Ona, W. Va ., and one Winnifred Wise Voll , 67,
Tuesday for Mrs . Ma bel
Wolfe who had fallen. She Point Pleasa nt, together. halt -br ot her , Ural Sheets, Syrac use., di ed Tuesday
was taken fa Veterans Rober! Sr., is to undergo
Hun tin gton , W. Va. ' One morning
at . Veterans
Memor ial Hospital where she
sister, one Infant and one Memorial Hospital.
surgery Wednesday. Rogert, grandson, Micl'lael Dea n
was admitted .
The daughter of the lale
Jr., a senior at Southern High E va ns , preceded him In Franklin and Anna Marie
THERE WAS STIL L some School, is to undergo testing death.
Messer Wise, she was also
openings for Meigs area and observa tion.
He was a · member and preceded in dea th by a sister,
women to attend the free
dea con of Mlna Chapel Emma Kay Wise.
cervical cancer clinic to be
Church.
Sur~J i vi ng are her husband,
DATES CHANGED
held Wednesday from 1 to
Funera l ser'Jices will be 2 Paul E. Voll ; two sisters.
The regular meeting of the p.m. Thursday at Mine Mrs. Ber tha Lieving, Miners3: 30 p .m . at Ve terans
Chapel Church with the Rev. ville; Mrs. Gertrude Bald·
Memor ial Hospital. Those Rio Gra nde Community
wishing to take advantage of College board of trustees has lson Gibson officia ting . win, Ravenna i two brothers,
the free clinic tomorrow
Burial wi ll be In Ohio Valley Cecil Wise, Ra~Jenna ; Perry
should call 99'2 -3382 Im- been , changed from Wed· Memory Gardens . Friends Wise, Stow, Ohio and several
mediately to get their ap. nesday, Feb. 9 to Saturday,
may call at the Waugh - nieces and nephews.
.
Feb. 12 at 10 a.m.
Ha11ey -Wood 'Funeral Home
poin tment time.
Friends
call at' the
Wednesday 2 to 4 and 7 to 10 Ewing Funera Hom~ after 7
p.m.
this evening. The body will be
. takien to the Shorts Funeral
Home In Ravenna WedFRIEDA GIBSON
nesday where friends may
Mrs. Frieda Gibson, 85, call from 7 to 9 Wednesday
Pomeroy, died Monday e'Jeni ng . Funeral services
evening at Piketon.
wil l be held at 11 a.m. ThursMrs. Gibson, a reg istered day at the Shorts Funeral
nurse, was the daughter of Home. Burial will be In St.
the 'late Adam and Matilda Mary 's
Cemetery
at
Urschel Seyler. She was also Ravenna.
preceded in death by a
brother, Er nes t and her
husband, John.
·
MAY COME HOME
Surviving are two nephews,
Lonnie LeMaster, 8,
E. C. Sey ler, Jr., lakewood,
Fla. and R. D. Sey ler, Darwin, who underwent
major surgery at St. Joseph
Pomeroy.
·
·
Funeral ser~J i ces will ·be 1 Hospital recently, Is In ex·
p.m. Thursday at the Ewi ng cellent condition and may be
Funeral Home with the Re'J. returned to hls home this
w. H. Perr in offic iating .
Buria l will be In Oak Grove week. He was visited Sunday
Cemetery, Marietta . Friends by Mrs. Jackie Brlckles and
may call at the funeral home children, April and Jlmmy,
any time after noon Wed· and by his brother. Tlmmy.
nesday.
Doe~' seem like everybody's g~t a new _car
th~ days-·except you? Then Its about ttme
to/check our Auto Loans. Low bank rates, fast
loan servi ce and convenient repayment plans
can get you behind the wheel' of a new car

mar

You StillOririlf Tll•t

Ill

IEIIP 7

THE INN PLACE
·WednesdJJy Night Special

now !

Loans for fvery Need
Here at Your· Fuii·Siirvlce lanlc:

.

"THE

FRIENDLY BANK"

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veleraad Memorial Hospital Elizabeth Wade, Connie
Admitted - Paul Voll, Wickline, Mae Young,
Syracuse; Marie Priddy,
(Births, Feb. 71
Rutland: Mabel Wolfe,
Mr. and Mr~ . Gary Hill,
Pomeroy; Edna Wiggins, son, Wellston; Mr. and Mrs.
.Minersville; Loretta Atkins, Roger Holman, twin girl and
RuUand ; Myrtle Harrison, boy, Rutlaoo: Mr. and Mrs,
Middleport: Naomi Bentley, William Gill, son, Gallipolis
Middleport; Earl Glass, Ferry, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Middleport; Emmett Hart· Lawrence Radeker,
ley, Athens; Carmel Jewett, daughter, Gallipolis; Mr. and
Middleport.
Mrs. Jack Teaford, .son,
Discharged - Everett Racine.
Calaway, Paullne Hysell,
Floyd Bush, · Billy Brewer,
PLEASANT VALLEY
Rosalinda Qualls, Marvin
DISCHARGES -'Christine
Darst.
Klrwood, West Oohmbia;
Mrs, Steven Greenlee, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Gary Miller,
Hober Medical Center
New Haven; and Unda Sue
(Discharges, Feb. 7)
Scarberry,
Point Pleasant.
Johnny Banks, .John
Berridge, Byron Bunce,
Jenny Dennis, Patrick
Fields, Georgia Frisby,
Ursula Hatfield, Homer
Jackson, ·Katrina Johnson,
John Jones, Courtney
Markham, Mrs. James Mont·
gomery and daughter, Oris
Roush; John Schmitt, Mrs.
Antonio SOla and son, Mary
Sparks, Mark Treleven,

malicious action and public
drunkenness.
Asecond ordinance creates
a city court providing a city
judge and eat~bllshlng the
duties and auUtority of the.
judge and court.
A third ordinance was to
adopt all applicable .West
VIrginia motor vehicles and
West Virginia road Jaws as
contained in Chapter 17 of the
West Vlrglnla Code.
In· other action, Ralph
Johnson of the Appalachian
Power Co. spoke on a new
town lighting contract.
Dayton Raynes moved to
accept the contract and the
molion carried.
Jim Dudding and Ray'
Remnond, representing the
Mason Community Center,
asked council to · help pay
utilities and inaurance lor the
center. Catherine Smith
moved same, but a year·W:
. year b!lsls and also pay all
utilities. Motion carried.
Calvin Smith, engineer,
told the council of current
action on the new water tank
syste\n. The council com·
mended Smith on his work
thus far; Present were Mayor
Fred Taylor, Recorder Car) ·
Cline and councll members,
Smith, Raynes, Edward
Perry and Lawrence Roush.

''
'

.... :'

It's easier than paint,
paneling or· ~:,~~~~~=~~
That's becau se C&lt;
has a miracle adhesive
backing called A-21"' that
makes it incredibly easy to

It's ready to use. Position it.
move it, and it won 't stick till
you want it to.

con-Tact ,.decorative
co~Jeri ngs come in colors,

styles and patterns for e~Jery
room in the house- livi ng
room, kitchen,bath. From

look finishes lo cor11e&lt;"P&lt;"aryl
chromes to elegJ&lt;a~~n~l~~~; ~eq
1
patterns. 59c D.
wide

.,
,\

'

Clear this evening, lows
tonight in the 20s. Warmer
tmnorrow, afternoon highs in
the &lt;lOs. Probablllty of per·
clpitation, 10 pet. tonight, 20
pet. Wednesday by evening.

I

TREMENDOUS SAVINGS

MIDDLEPORT. OHIO
Member Federal Dlpolillnsurance Corparatiar
DIPOSITS INSURED TO •40,000

THE MEIGS INN·
Pomeroy,O.

100-FUtL SIZE MATTRESSES
RETAIL FOR "99.95

"ow

Phone 992"'304
PIZZA SHACK Phont992-6304

==·

By UDIIed Press IDteraadonal
COLUMBUS - AS HE PROMISED IN IUS Jan , 12 State of
the State message Gov. James A. Rhodes today submitted a
bill 1AJ the Ohio General Assembly to "ellmlnate fraud and
corruption by people who hold Jllblic offices."
,
"The bill would deprive any state employe of the state s
contribution to the Public Employes Retirement System u~ By JOHN T, KA.DY
the state's fuel oil, said
conviction of said employe for fraud or corruption actions m Ualted Press Inleruatlonal
Tuesday the fuel oil market
connection with hlsor her employment" said Rhodes in a three
Leaders of the Democratic has started to "tighten up."
paragraph Jetter to minority and majority leadars.
controlled Ohio General
Columbia Goo :·resident
Assembly have rejected a Marvin White Tuesday asked
EASTI.AKE, OffiO - CITY OFfiCIALS HAVE declared a proposal by Columbia Gas of for ,the ' repeal of the law
state of 'emergency because of expected flooding ol the Ohio to suspend a law prohibiting Ute passing on of
Chagrin River and of city streets, possibly as soon as Thurs· prohibiting gas companies e,mergency gas purchase
day when temperatures are forecast to reach 40 degrees.
from charging residential costs to home users.
Councilman Steve Pekarclk said the emergency, declared us~rs for the cost of
"We're in the position of
Tuesday night because of "Ute threat ol dls8iiter"lrom flooda, emergency purchases, which needing ~ddltional gas to
' 1 ' said the a.to-IO.Ioot piles in front of homes will tur~ Into 2-to-3 would be used primarily by keep homes warm, possibly
feet ol water on streets aoo in many basements.
industry.
being able to obtain
Meanwhile, Sen. Howard additional gas in the
SBURY, RHODESIA - RHODESIAN SOLDIERS Metzenbaum, l).{)hio, was SQUthwest, but not being able
the rain~aked hu8h country north of Sallsbury for scheduled to 'be the leadoff ID purchase lhe gas because
ers of seven mlsalonarles intend to bring them in alive witness at a hearing today by we would not be pennitted by
to disprove nationalist claims the gunmen were crack the Ohio Senate Utilities Ohio law to recover our
Rhodesian coi!Uil8ndos, mllltary sources say.
Committee
which . is money," said White.
The search began late Sunday, within hours of the k!Ylng investigating Ute natural gas
However, Sena.te President
of three Roman Catholic priests and four nuns at St. Paul's shortage In the Buckeye · Pf:o Tempore Ohver Ocasek.
mlsalon In the Mangwende trlb!ll trust area 37 mlles northeast state.
D-Akron, and House Speaker
of Sallsbury. But security sources admitted torrentlal down·
The Clnclnnatl Gas &amp; Vernal G. Riffe Jr., D·New
pours were making the iearch difficult.
· Ele~trlc Co . announced Boston, said iltere was no
Tuesday restrictions on n~d to suspend th_e law. .
DENVER - AMATEUR SNOWMAKERS, anxious to help natural gas usage by its
We plan no actton at thts
relieve Colorado's drought, have suggested shipping snow m customers would probably time," the legislative leaders
boxcars from Ute Eaat and firing roclr:et.s to create moisture- continue through March 31. said.
laden clouda, aCCGrding ID ·a state official.
.
.
CG&amp;E has curtalled its 406
But a bill to repeal the law
"I've had about 40 telephone calls this past week," said largest non·domestlc was introduced in Ute Senate
Felix Sparks. "Sane genUeman suggested we load 'up empty custom~rs by IKJ per cent and Tuesday ,bY Republican Sens.
bolC&amp;I'S from the East and tranaportlt (now) out her~. He 16 000 analler non-domestic William H. Mussey of
appeared to be very serious about lt." The stale legislature has c~stomers, ' have · been Batavia and Thomas A. Van
appropriated f189,000 to pay lor cloud seeding in the Color~do cutb!lck by 30 per cent.
Meter of Ashland.
Rockies in hopes of increasing mountain mowpack and ~asmg
In
stlll
another
Hep. Michael P. St1nzl~~ a predlc¥ swruner drought.
development the Ohio D-Columbus, called Whtte s
P~troleum' Mark.e ters allegations ''absolutely
WASHINGTON - DEVELOPEIJS SOLD 17 per cent more Association, whi c h untrue - aile." .
home~~ in t976 Utan in 1975 - at a m~lan price of '",200, a distributes~ to 70 per cent of
Roger · Dreyer;
a
guvernment report shows. An estlmale!l 6.15,000 new-; single'
spokesman lor the Ohio
family homes were 110ld last year ,,according to a joint study by
Pe troleum · Marketers
Ute Censllll ·Bureau, the Commerce Department and the
Association, said heating oil
lloplrlment of Housing and Urblin Development.
dealers could not take on the
The median price of '"'200 was up 12 per cent from 1975's
burden of Ute natural gas
median price of .-,D,the atudy said. Western stales enjoyed
suppliers;
fair anil cold tonight, lows
lite biggest increase In home sales -recording 201,000 new
"Our problem is that we
homes or 1 33 per cent Increase over 11175. NorUteastern home in the upper 3Js. Ooudy and can take care of the needs of
warmer Thursday, highs in our historical customers, but
sales were lhe lowest ,in Ute JilliOn.
the
upper 40!1. Probability of we can't take the burden of
'
WASHINGTON •- SPANISH APPARENTI.Y ' W!LL BE precipitation 10 per cent Ute gas companies 'Ill our
today , tonight and Thursday. shoulders," said Dreyer.
Cnntloued oa pase 14
'

Weather ·

VACATION

WA'Iat FOR
OPENING DATE

CHESTER M. KNIGHT, POMEROY, has retired
alter 23 years with power plants serving as "chief of
time". With many activities and hobbles, Knight will
probably continue to he "chief of time".

d

NEW MISs-MATCHED

MEIGS THEATRE
CLOSED FOR
Plus Tax

en tine

The Meigs County Board of
Commissioners in regular
session Tuesday night
discussed at length broken
water lines and the heating
and cooling system in the
County Welfare building in
Middleport.
It was determmed that it
was the commissioners'
responsi bilit y lo repair
broken domestic water lines.
Adiscussion will be held with
the owners of.the building to
reach a determination a~ to
whose responsibility it is .of
either repa iring or replacing
the hea ting and co ol ing
system in the Welfa re
building.
The commissioners had
their clerk, Martha Cham·
hers, ask all known plumbing
and heating contractors in
the area to submit a bid on
repairing the lines at the
Welfare Building. The only
bid submitted was one from
Karl Grueser In the amount
of $1,110 which was accepted.
In other business Charles
Legar was appointed director
of Disaster Services Agency
in Meigs County.
Meeting with the com·
missioners were -Gene Lyons
and Joan .Culp M the Meigs
County Health Department in
· regard to a request made by
Mrs. Lyons at the first night
meeting of the com·
missioners when she asked
for an additional 115,000. ·
At the time Ute request was
made, Richard Jones,
commissioner, asked that the
cotnmissioners be given a list
of the duties of the employes
of the Health Deparlment.

Mrs. Lyons presented this job
desc ription
lor
ad·
ministration, nursing and
sanita rian duties. She in·
dicated she needs the ad·
ditional money for salaries to
keep qualified people with
professional abilities.
Jones suggested that she
send a letter exp!aining how
she intends to adjust salaries.
After they receive the Jetter
the commissioners will give
her an answer within 10 days.
' Also meeting with the
' com missioners wer e Tom
Closser and Jeff Burt of the
Buckeye Hills Hocking
Regional Development. They
asked the commission to

reduce depeooence on atom!.·
weapons worldwide, he said
ca~r said he thinks !h.
United Stales and the SOviet
Union both must negotlau
SQme weapons cutbacks, an"
he suggested the Kremlli
stop deploying a limited
range mobile missile difficult
for American systems tv
detect.

Fifteen Cents
Vol 28, No. 209

appotnt a n~n·pu~J~c officlal
and two public ofltcials to the
Agenctes Gen era l _Pohcy
Counctl. The appomtment
will _be made at the next
rneetmg. .
.
Pete S&gt;mpson, project
coordinator for a grant for
radw eqmpment for c~unty
law enforcement offtc_e rs
presented.a letter from Mtcro
Com~ umcatton s Inc . ex·
plammg the btd evaluati~n
and cost of each agency ,1n·
vol~ed m the commurucallon
project.
Attending w er~ :enry
Well , Jones,_ an
arne~
Roush, ccmnusstoners, an
Martha Chambers, clerk.

McBride looking
like a winner
•
PITTSBURGH (UP!) Rebel
Ed
Sadlowski
stubbornly insisted he still
had a good chance of
capturing the United
Steelworkers presidency
today , despite his own
charges of hallot fraud and a
strong vote trend toward
opponent Lloyd McBrld~.
Several hundred. thousand
steelworkers cast secret
ballots in the election
Tuesday, ending one of the
roughest election battles in
labor history. Preliminary
returns inidicated the turnout
would fall short of a record.
McBride, 60, a candidate
with strong support from
retiring President I.W . Abel
and virtually every other
American labor leader , was

leading by siighUy less than
2-to·l in an independent vote
tal)y by UP! from union
offices throughout the United
States and Canada .
.At 9 a .m. EST, McBride
was leading by · 147,621 'to
75,796 wiUt about half the
locals reporting. McBride's
aides described it as an
"irreversible trend 1 " but
Sadlowslti backers predicted
it would be reversed as ballot
counting resumed after a
brief overnight lulL ·
Labor De partmen t
observers reported that
Sadlowski hlid complained
formally of vote fraud in only
one Birmingham, Ala., local.
But they expected more
challenges to be filed one&amp; the
outcome was known.

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"There are some factories
that we are going to have to
tell there is just not enough to
go around," said Dreyer.
"These are the ones that
switched late to fuel all."
In other energy related
developmeniB:
sc h oo1
- State

Superintendent Martin Essex
ha 8 Ued for a series of
se!e~ regional meetings of
school superintendents to
di
the energy crisis and
bo~'ft has affected schools.
- The Ohio Energy and
Resource Development
Agency said a studv it has

Reedsville man cited to court
John L. Danewood, 23,
Reedsvllle, was cited to
Meigs County Court for
improper backlog following
an accident at 10:15 a.m.
Tuesday on CR 28, east of SR
7.

The Gallla-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol · said
Danewood's car backed into a
vehicle operated by James E.
~ibble, 52, Sandyville, Ky.

There
was
moderate
damage. .
A Gallia County accident
occurred on US 35, three
tenths of a mlle west of SR 7
where Linda Gerard, 19,
Middleport, lost control of her
car which struck an icy spot
in the roadway. The vehicle.
ran off t))e left side of .the
highway striking an embimk·
ment.

Missed days pose problem
EAST MEIGS - Plans for received and the state Is
making up 14 days of school allowing 15 days pver the live
miss ed In January were calamity days olf schools
dlscusaed, but no decision were closed due to the energy
mat!e, when the Eastern shortage.
.
LoCal School Board met in
The board discUssed at
regular session Tuesday length a 3 mills' renewal levy
nlght.
which must be approved in
Although schools _in the the district in t977. AJSQ
district were closed for 19 discussed was the need for
days , the district's five • additional funds. The board
calamity days reduces the made no decision on when to
time which apparently will place the levy, whether It be
have to be made up to 14 for 3 mills or more, on the
davs. The board took no ballo~.
action on a makeup plan
Dr u Bennett was hired to
because state guidelines to be ha": coal to the Chester
followed have not been school where r: ' and coal are

ROSALYNN CARTER'S
primary interests will be. ·
mental health - she'll
head a aew presidential
com mission
and '
p'roblems or the elderly.
But the new First Lady
does not intend to limit her
activities to officilll
projects. She'll ai r'
continue lo advise h&lt;.
husband and serve as his
surrogate eyes aad ears Oli ·
her travels.

Essex ·
ca11ing
supers
COLUMBUS (UP!) -State
Sc ho ol Su peri ntendent
Martin Essex has called a
series of seven regiona l ,

meetings Thursday and
for
school
Friday
superintendent. to discuss
the energy crisis and its
. Impact on schools.
Essex said th~ conference_s
would be held m Clncmnat:,
'
Cleveland , Co lum bu s .
Dayton, Toledo, YoungstoWiJ
and Zanesville.
Essex said the conference'
were called to :
- Establish on-scene fa ctr
related to school closings an•.
ways to get the maximum:
conducted shows that number open.
- Share success i u.
propane and fuel oil could be
educational
devices in coping
in short supply through
with
the
gas
shortage and
February.
.
severe
winter.
·
-State Energy Chief Robel
Explore
ways
to
insure
Ryan said the state must "go
bac~. to coal and use m?re · the graduation of all high
ccal as a means of me~lln_g school 'seniors wltho;r:
the_energy problems It .ts disruption to prospective
lacmg now and will lace m employment or co llege
entrance exams.
the future.
- Determine any needed
- Three
bills
were
introduced in the state Senate leglslation or policy changes
- Accentuate
th e
to prevent gas, electric and
water companies from importance of citizenship
cutting of! residential service responsibilties .related to
for noniJByment of bills due energy conservation by using
high quality instructional
to the energy crisis.
- The Army Corps of Engl. materials available to the
neers estimates it will be at schools. through out the
least 10 days before barge Department of Education.
" Two comprehensive.
tralllc can move upstream
from the ice·jammed lower surveys conducted by the;
Ohio River as a result of a Department of Educatlo ~t
towboat accident near have been out-&lt;Jf-date whe1:
tabulated because of rapidly
Marlon, Ky.
changing c onditi on ~
througl!out Ohio schools,"
said Essex.
.
"Response ,by Ohio school:t
to the arctic weather and
resultant energy· crisis • haS
exhibited Inordinate
now being used to heat the resoucefulness to sustain ·
under
un, •
building. The reduction of gas education
usage through the parttlme precedented difficulties,' ' :
·
use of ccal has been qUite · said Essex.
The conferences Include: :
successful, Supt. John Riebel
Thursday- 9 a.m. Lunken . ·
said.
The board approved 19 t\lrport In Cincinnati: 11:3tl.
seniors
for
midterm a.m. Dayton Cox Municipal, · ·
graduation and set Feb. 17 as t\lrport ; 2:26 p.m. Toledp .
the date to begin negotiations Express iJrport and 7:30 ·
with teachers of the district. p.m. Gtoveport·Madison ·
Clerk-treasurer Eloise High school in ·Franklin
Boston was authorized to County.
Friday-9 a.m. Burk~
request an advanced draw
Lakefront
In Cleveland; 11 ::IQ
from the .county auditor to
a.m.
Youngstown
Municipal
meet the Feb. 20 payroll.
Airport
and
2:20
p.m.
All board members were
Zanesville
Municipal
t\lrport
.
present.

plea to pass on gas costs

HILOTEMPS
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
. highest temperature reported
Monday to the National
Weather Service, excluding
Alaska and Hawaii, was 83
degrees at Palm Springs,
callf. Today'~ low was 22
degrees below zero at Elkina,
· W. Va.

SANDUSKY,Ohio (UP!)Engineers and inaurance ad·
justers are at Cedar Point
Amusement Park today to
study the damage in the
movie
theater
whlcb
occurred when a valve broke
on a six-inch water line under
the projection room.
.
The incident caused heavy
structural damage to the
theater and the coUapee ol
several rows of seats, park
olllcials said MoOO&amp;y.
'
• About one third of the seats
1n the central aection of tile
building collapsed several
feet when water eroded lUI
under the concrete structure.
When It broke, water
flooded the {UI from under the
building.

who

For now, Carter said the
United States has "superior
nuclear capability" over the
SOviet Union, but that either
nation could destroy · SO
million to 100 million people
in a nuclear attack.
"The threat of this kind of
holocaust Is what makes it
Important that we do keep an
adequate
deterrent
capability," and ~rastically

S

Weather

DAMAGE STUDY

report~r

hamper his desire to reach
"quick agreement" with the
Russians
on
limiting
strategi c arms. And he
repeated his willingness to
reach a new arms limitation
pact in. two stages - putting
off until later the ccntrove&gt;'"Y
over li miting America's
cruise missile aoo the SOviet
Union's Backfire bomber.

\Welfare .building
damage assessed

In 1938, Chet married the former Annette Ashworth, throughout his lifetime.
daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Dayton Ashworth of
As a young man he was out.standing in basketball at
Pomeroy. "Annle," as she Is known about the community, was Chester High School and played football, basketball and
Meigs County's first woman school bus driver and has driven a baseball at Rio Grande College. He once tried out for the
school bus for well over 20 years. A woman with a pleasant baseball major leagues and was one out of 400 young men
smile and always something to talk about, Annie is a popular involved. The 400 tryout. were reduced ID 40 with Knight
figure.
.
·
included and finally, one of the 40wasaccepted.
Mr. and Mrs. Knight moved to canton where Chet worked
Througb the years, Chet has Played with independent
in a factory ID provide an Improved econ«?m~c situation for his baseball and basketball teams and was a basketball' refe ree as
family over that made possible by teaching. He and Annie a spare time activity for a number of years.
·
returned to Pomeroy and he worked for a year at the T.N.T.
•A member of Trinity Church in Pomeroy, Knight has
plant . before entering the U. S. Army in 1943. He was served as a church elder-and he stlll serves as a Sunday school
discMrged In 1946, having spent {!lost of hls service time in teacher, an activjty of his for over the past 20 years.
Germany.
,
. ...l!e.&lt;;enlly, !Wgbt.wa• honored with a retirement dinner at
- From 1946 to 1,&amp;3, Chet was· in the watchmaking and the Holiday Inri.in Ranauga, He was presented several gifts by
jewetry business with his late father-in-law in Pomeroy and In his cowo~kers.
1963 took his first job with the American Electric Power Co. at
Besides having a hobby in clock and watch repairing,
the Kyger Creek Plant, then under constl'Uctlon.
.
Knight is an avid golfer, loves hunting and fishing, and is a
The years moved right along and Knight, who became citizens band radio addict. He is a coin collector and likes to
"chief of time," worked in that capacity at the Phllip Sporn travel. He can do · all sort. of home maintenance .and
Plan~. Graham Station, W. V11. ; Ute Tanners Creek Plant at ·Improvement chores so it is likely that there will be little time
Lawrenceburg, Ind. ; the cardinal Plant at BrUllant, Ohio ; the on his.hands during retirement.
Mitchell Plant at Moundsville, W. Va., and in 1971 was
Mr. and Mrs. Knight bave two sons, Terry, a State
assigned to the Gavin Plantln Cheshire, a neighbor plant of the Highway Patrolman stationed at Marion, and Dick, who is
Kyger cteek Plant where It all began for him.
head o! safety at the Mitchen Power Plant. They have a
Knight has been a sports enthusiast and participant grandson, Steve Knight of Marion.

with . No miJdng, no
mess. Pee! off paper backing.

•

Visit Our Salad Bar
Pork and Sau.e rkraul
Little Brown Potatoes
•
Hot Rolls
Coffee, Tea or Milk

One resident of uppe·r Minersville recalls going to the
callaway School which served the neighborhood known as
''Monkey,'' a nickname the origin of which no one
apparently recalls. SOld in 1933, the calloway, or Monkey,
school was removed block by block, re-&lt;lrected in Laurel
Clill, and· is used as a residence today. Monkey
neighborhood children went to Dutchtown School in 1934.

Press

frequently wrote about
dissension.
"But I can't go in with
armed forces and try to
cha nge
the
internal
mechanisms of the SOviet
government," he said.
carler said he does not

at y

By Bob Hoefllcb
The "chief of time" has retired but you can bet he won't
have ''tlme on his hands," or wili he ?
The "chief of time" is Chester M. (Chet) Knight of Legion
Terrace, Pomeroy, who has retired from 23 years with the
American Elec1ric Co. at power plant. in Ohio, West Virginia
and Indiana.
However, "Chet" as he is known affectionately in Meigs
County, has many activities so he won't have.time on his
hands. And yet, repairing clocks and watches IS one of h1s
hobbies so, perhaps, it ought to he said that If he does have
time it will be on clocks and watches which he is repairing.
A native Mei~s Countian, Chet was born in Chester, a son
of the late Mr. and Mrs. Burt Knight and graduated from
Chester High Schoollrt 1~29 . He graduated from Rlo Grande
College in 1933 and taught school in Meigs County for the next
seven years. Knight was the teacher lor the last term at the
"Per Monkey" School in Minersville - and hardly anyone
remembers that long-gone school.

.·

Wilbur Ashley, Paul Clifford aoo Wilbur Rowley . Pitchers
were Manley, Diles (now a top ABC sporta caster) and
Searles. catchers were Searles and Ashley. SOme of these
players will he on hand tomorrow illgbt at the .Pomeroy
Legion Hall when OVA players are honored by the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce. The picture belongs to
Henry Clatworthy. It was taken on the old Pythian Park
diamond where the new Imperial Electric CoiJlant
stands.

e

Ginaburg and the Kremlin's
expulsion o! an Associated

•

Chet Knight, 'time man', retires

Maso~ ·tightening
ONE OF TilE CHAMPIONSHIP teams in th~ Ohio
Valley Baseb!lll Association was sponsored by Reiners
Bakery.Making up this Middleport team were, front, 1-r,
Junior Rowley, Yogi Wayland; second row, Ike Wilt, Don
Manley, Charles Searles, Dave Diles, Russell Housh,
Uoyd M. (Dinty) Moore, Ace Wayland, Nibert ( ~ll'St name
unknown); third row, Vern Evans Hatf1eld (flrst .name
unknown), Bobby Nelson, Hook Thomas, Henry
Qatworthy, Bill Smith; fou rth row, Will Meyer, manager,,

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resume negotiations on rights," he said. "!think this Secretary of State Henry
nuclear weapoos reductions can legitimately be severed , Kissinger's "linkage" of the
wUI not deter him from from our inclination , for humau rights issu~ and arms
criticizing. Moscow's .tactics instance, in reducing negotiations 'because , " I
against dlasideniB, and the dependence on atomic don't want to tie everythin(
Kremlin should not link the weapons ... "
together in one package."
two issues..
The news conference
Then, as if to drive home
" I think we come out better Tut!S!Iay centered largely on the point, the President said
In dealing with the Soviet foreign affairs and carter he regret. "very deeply'' the
Unlon If I am conslstenUy and appeared at ease with the SOviet imprisonment of dlasi·
completely dedicated to the subject.
dent IPJHi Pr AIP"""riPr
enhanl'ement of ht1fT' Rf1
He said he rejects .former

�I

2- ~ D&amp;Uy Se..mei;Middleport.Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Feb . ~. 1977

Carter asking Congress for support
By WESLEY G. PIPJ'§RT
WASHINGTON (UP!) Pruldent
Carter
is
detennlned to move lhead
with key domtetlc propoeab
filr stimulating the ecmomy
and reorganizing
the
government - and he
erpect.a Congress to follow

suit.
Carter planned to make the
traditimal visits by a new

p-ealdent to the Labor and
Commerce departments
today, acd to greet the first
White House Conference for
the Business Community.
Carter's
show
of
determination - which he
exhibited frequently in
dealing with the Georgia
Legislature as governor was diaplayed twice Tuesday.
At a news conference. hiS

first as President, carter said
his "sense of Cmgress' attitude" Is that he could accept
congressional amendments
to his economic stimulUs
plan.
But he said if Cmgress
makes "drastic changes"
that would make him doubt
the bill's effectiveness or
Viability, he would veto it.
Some Hou51~ DPn"'~~' "'ats

want to increase tilt number
of new jobs by increasing the
size of the $31.2 billion
package, and to limit the $50
tax rebate to lower income
people instead of giVing it to
almost all Americans.
Earlier in the day, carter
was quoted as telling Demo·
cratlc congressional leaders
that in regard to his go~ern-

Real estate executive held hostage
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By BRUCE COOK

INDIANAPOIJS (UPI)
A former West Point gun
instructor, saying the police
"are lucky they're dealing
wlth me," showed no signs
today of releasing a real
estate executive he took
hostage at gunpoint more
than 24 hours earlier
charglilg he had been cheated
in a mortgage deal.
Pqlice resumed
negotiations with Anthony
Kiritals, who held Richard
Hall, 42, hostage In Kiritals'
apartment with a shotgun
wlred to his neck. Kiritsis
abducted Hall from his
downtown office Tuesday
morning, paraded him along
c:lty streets, commandeered a
pollee car and took him to the
west side apartment.
Kiritals told pollee he had
the apartment wired to
explode. Police confirmed the
wlring and said Kiritals had
recently purchased at least 25
sticks of dynamite.
"You've got 100 officers
trying to gel a shot at me,"
Kiritsis said today in a
telephone call to radio station
WIBC. "I didn 'I go down
there to be a buffoon. I went
down there for vengeance."
Kirilsis said he was
cbeated in a busmess deal
wlth Hall's firms and issued
several demands, Including
one that the compames
cancel his debt of $130,000,
due March 1, in connectiOn
wlth property he was trying

to develop as a shopping
center.
He also sought assurances
from police and the Marion
County prosecutor that he
would not be charged nor
committed lor psychiatric

treabnent.
"They're lucky they're
dealing with me and I'm
stable," he said . ' 1Without

being egotistical, I'm the
strongest man mentally that I
know The average guy who
would have gone through this
would have had a heart
attack or stroke. They're
lucky they're dealing with

me."
SALES REPORT
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
Gallipolis, Ohio
Feb. 5,1917
STOCKER CATTLE
STEERS - 250 to 300 Jbs. 24
to 32.50, 300 to 400 lbs. 22.50 to
34.50, 400 to SOO lbs. 23 to 33.75,
500 to 600 lbs. 22.75 to 32, 600 to
700 lbs. 23 to 31, 700 lbs. and
over 22 to 3UO
HEIFER CALVES- 250 to
300 lbs. 19 to 26,300 to 400 lbs.
20 to 26.50, 400 to 5110 lbs. 20 50
to 25.75, 500 to 600 Jbs. 21 to 27,
600 to 700 lbs. 20 to 29.25, 700
lbs. and over 19 50 to 30.
STOCK COWS &amp; BULlS (by the head) Stock Cows 120
to 200, Stock Cows and Calves
140 to :!10, Stock Bulls 130 to
210, Baby Calves 3 to 36; (By
the pound) Canners &amp; Cutters
Cows 18 to 22.115, Holstein
Cows 19.10 to 25.25, Commercial Bulls (1,1100 lbs. and
over) 26 to 32.75.
PIGS - 6 to 21, Sows 350
lbs. up 33 to 36.50.
VEAL CALVES- Tops 220
lbs. to 250 69 fu 80, Medium
200 lbs.to 300 54 to 68.50, Culls
51 down.

Aspokesman lor llllll's two
firms issued a public
statement Tuesday night on
teleVISion, saymg they had.
influenced two grocery stores
and a restaurant not to locate
on property owned by
Kiritsis

"We publicly state we are
willing to pay Mr. Kirilsis
damages ... " said the
statement s1gned by Hall's
lather, M.L. Hall.
However, Kiritsis said

today, "Those people. are
going to document every
knife they stuck in my back .
I'm going to walk out of here
a free rtum: ·
"I told th1s nan (HaD) that
after all he's do;1c, I couldn't
hate him but I su; c could kill
• him,'' Kirttsts sait1

Deputy Police Ch1ef James
T. McAtee said Kiritsis may
have enough food in the thirdfloor apartment to last four
days.

business today

..
•

siZed compu~r 10 years ago.
The market for JUs! plam
calculators is reaching
saturation pomt, according to
industry spokesmen. The
result is the buyer is being
offered an ever wider
selection of specialty
calculators - such as the
Biolalor.
Designed lor those who
follow the biorhythm theory
of personal cycles, the
Biolator Is described as "a
pockel·sized electronic
wonderthatfor any given day
tells you how you're doing
physically, emotionally and
intellectually." II is just one
of dozens of new calculator
des1gr15 being mtroduced by
manufacturers to keep sales

HARTVIlLE, Ohio (UPI) -Eat worms' You bet.
The Lakes Worm and Ecology Ranch here is offermg
$50 lor the best recipie with worms as its main mgred1ent
submitted to the local office here by Apr1l20.
The wmrung recipe will be announced locally and w1U
then be forwarded to the North American Brut Farm of
Ontario, Calif,. to compete lor the $500 grand prize.
Aspokesman for the North American Ball Farm saJd
worms are a source of h1gh protem and whe)l properly
prepared make excellent eating.
Like snails, the worms must be washed 10 cold water
and then boiled to remove stray bits of bacteria.
Last year's winner was submitted by Patricia Howell of
St. Paul, Minn.
She called it her Apple Sauce Surprise Cake.

going.
Production o! calculators
jumped from 1million in 1971
- when the calculator you
now buy for $15 would cost
$150 - to more than 20 ffiillion
in 1976. Total industry sales in
1976 hit $618 million.
Industry officials pred1ct
production of 30 million units
in 1977 and then a leveling off
followed by a decline m both
sales and production into the

leading manufacturers, said : they are reluctant to discuss
"There is saturation in some details. 1
Otllt'r ' companies in the
areas, but we keep coming up
electromcs
business are
with new ideas. We are
lookJng
away
lro!JI
constanUy making our own
calculators
to
the
work
that
products obsolete.''
can
be
•
done
by
the
basic
Texas Instruments is into
the programmable component that made them
the
m1cro·
calculator, which m fact 1s possible :
processors
known
as
"chips."
~
nearer to being a computer.
"There's
going
to
be
a
"We're also seemg people
use the same calculator at m1croolectronic mvasion into
work and play," said a TI every sphere of life," said
1980s.
spokesman . " We have Rockwell's Robert E.
Several companies have programs tbal allow the Anslow.
been forced out of the retail calculator to work out flight
Already these "chips" are
end of tbe busmess by the plans lor the private flier or a !he elements that ensure
price war of the last two winnmg course lor a yacht more effiCient functioning of
years.
mlcrowave ovens,
racer.' 1
But those who remain hope
The calculator also is telephones, car igmtions and
to produce something to moving into schools in a big secunty systems.
tickle your fancy.
''We began with microwave
\way, despite some warmess
Akira Shimizu, vice- 3\!er tlle danger that students ovens but soon they will
president o! Casio, said will be discouraged from extend into all kmd:r of
recently : "In 1977, calculator learning how to solve household appliances,"
manufacturers wlll compete mathematical problems lor Anslow said.
in terms of product themselves the tlo]d way "
"And if you were to look at
Innovation to expand the
Toys are next . One the mnards of the new
market. There just Isn't company already has electronic pmball machines,
enough room for all mlroduced an electronic you wouldn't believe the difcompanies to brmg out the hockey game based on a fei'enc:e,'' he said.
same products with the same calculator . A number of
From basic math to
features and at the same companies say they are electronic pinball machines
pr1ces."
looking into the possibility of - the calculator has come a
Richard Perdue at Texas more sophisticated toys, but long way.
Instruments, one of the

Ice eater needs checkup

'

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I •
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I

same thing a~ rrulk auer!l)'
which is a reaction to milk
protein. That is why your
symptoms are different. You
were able to use milk .at !he
end o! your pregnancy
because the mcreased hormone production at that time
causes a woman to be lei'S
sensillve to allergies. II IS a
bit like having your own builtin producllon of steroid hormones that we use tc tr""t
severe allergies.
I want to . take this opportunity to caution people
against thinking that soiVlflg
the much more common lac·
lose Intolerance problem will
mean tbey w1U not be allergiC
to milk. True rrulk allergy occurs mostly m infants before
the digestive system
matures. Incompletely
digested protem is absorbed
into the bloodstream and the
body r""t'ls in an allergic
manner. As the child grows
older the mtestine matures so
Owl undigested protein is not
absorbed and the problem
may di!lllppt:w . In loci"·'' .:

•

"very
difficult,
very
difficult." He indicated he
would not try to block
Carter \s bill if most
congressmen favor II.
Carter told reporters he is
working " very carefully,
very closely " on other
proposals - by March I, to
propose creation of a
Deparimenl o! Energy; by
April 20, energy policy
legislation ; and May I,
welfare reform legislation
He admitted, however, at
his flews conference that he
had g1ven members of
Congress some grounds lor
complaints by poor handling
of personnel appomtments.
But he said through "a
constant senes of meetings"
with the members of
Congress "I believe that we
have made a great deal of
progress in correcting those
early mistakes.''

tolerance problems the common form appe~~rs as the
child grows older and is mm.t
severe in adults, not children.
You may be able to use
some of the milk substitutes
that you could lind in the secUon lor mfant foods. Pick one
that has no milk m 11. Some of
these are made w1th S!lybean
products and are a very good
substitute for mdk. Different
·brands !lisle a great deal different so if you dun '!like the
first brand try something
else.
I am sending you The
Health Letter number 7-2,
Milk Products: Good and
Bad, to give you a more complete underslllnding of lactose Intolerance m these
foods. Others who want thiS
infonnation can send 50 cent~
with a long, s-tamped, self•addressed envelope fm 11.
Write to me in care of this
newspaper, FU) Box 1551,
Hadlo C1ty SI«IHIII, New
York, N.Y. 10019.
Treutmg JJ 11i h •111h l.c.~&lt;.l·
Aitl 1s vcr; helvlul lor dll

''

!hose aduiU; whu have symptoms from lactose intolerance. It can make the
difference between being
able to drink and use m11k
and not being able to .
However, its action is limited
to !iphllmg the double sugar,
lactose. It has no actlon on
milk proteins at all. So, while
1t helps people with the most
common type of milk m·
tolerance it does not help the
few people hke you who have
a real allergy loiT\Jlk protein.
Individuals with some
medical problems, parllcuillrly regional entenUs
( Crohn 's disease) and
ult-erallve colitis are tn·
tolerant to IT\Jlk. Milk may
precipitate acute allllcks of
thell' lllress. In some of these
m&lt;t!Vlduals the intol•rance IS
related solely to lactose m·
tolerance as JJaJ1 of the
disease and j}il.'-'ilbly tn others
U1ere may I.Jc rl •enS!Iivlty ot· ullt•rg!t' like - reat'lll•n
winch mav

thl'illne,, s ·

t!al.l.')t~

atLcu·k:-.

111

EPA now pulls cars
off lines for tests

li ~

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Wellston dropped

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By EDWARD K. DeLONG
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The EnVironmental Protection
Agency has added a new technique to its clean air
campaign - pulling cars off the assembly line to make
sure they live up to emission standards demonstrated with
C&lt;Jmpany prototypes.
So far , the agency says, it looks like a ''major gap"
exists between the prorruse of th~ prototypes and the
performance of cars headed to lhjl consumer.
In the initial round of tests last month, production
models of 1977 Ford Granadas and Mercury Monarchs
produced up to eight times the legal maximum of carbon
monoxide.
The EPA ordered assembly lines halted, demanding
carburetor modifications and the recall of 54,000 cars.
Ford quickly complied.
Acting EPA chief John Quarles announccijthe unprece- 1
dented order Tuesday.
He said the new testing of cars off the assembly line is
"Round 2" in his agency's battle aguinst auto pollution.
Round I was setting emlss10n standards and requi.rin,;
auto compan1es to meet them in prototypes before
starling production, Quarles said Round 3 may someday
provide road testmg of cars to catch illegal emissions due
to poor or impl]ll!er maintenance.

Prayers begin for long,

·99-80 by Meigs

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COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Senate Utilities Committee
was scheduled today to begin
hearing testimony on the
natural gas shortBge in Ohio
with
Sen.
Howard
Metzenbaum, D-Ohio,
scheduled as the leadoff
witness.
The state's two utilities
suffering the most from a
lack of natural gas, Columbia
Gas of Ohio and Dayton
Power &amp; Ught, are ' both
served by the Columbia
System, based in Wibmngton,
Del. which is expected to be
the local point o! the
investigation.
Columbia Gas of Ohio, the
largest gas utility in the state,
depends on it lor nearly all its
supply. DP&amp;L is not part of
the Columbia System, but
receives most of its gas from
the system as well.
Both companies have been
hampered
by
severe
shortages of natural gas and
were not prepared to deal
with the harshest Ohio winter
in 100 years. To cope with the
situation, the two companies
have been forced t~ take
everincreasing amounts of
natural gas from their large
and
small
business
to protect
customers
residential consumers and
other top priority users.
'Sen. Neal Zimmers Jr., )).
Dayton, chairman of the
mnemember Senate Utilities
Committee, said his panel
will examine the polic:les and
deciswns of the Columbia
Gas System, Columbia Gas of
Oh10 and DP&amp;L and how they
contributed to the problem.
But Zilnrrlers S8ld his committee will look to the
system's executives for the
cruc1al explanations.
"I don 'I think you can look
at Columbia and DP&amp;L
without looking at the
Columbia Gas System," .he
said.
Board Chairman MarVin E.
White of Columbia Gas of
Ohio asked Zimmers to
postpone the start of his
investigation, but the senator
refused.
"Mr. White asked for the
delay because his people
were In the field searching for
gas," Zimmers said. "My
reaction is that they should
have been looking lor it in
October.''
Zimmers sa1d he does not
want to disrupt the search
now, so he agreed to call
company witnesses later.

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"Common sense dictates that
the
public be kept aware of
United Press Interuallonal
with warm days and cold
the
problem
on a continuing
Shivering VlCtiniS of the night,&lt;; , the ice could releuse
baSIS.')
worst
Eastern
add nicely.''
White said flood~hreatened
Midwestern winter since 1918
But he added, "the
areas
include the Lake Eriemay yearn lor sprmg, but potenllal is !here and we are
Ontario
drainage basin and
officials, mentally converting preparmg for floods."
the
tributBnes
of the Ohio
millions of tons of ice and
A sudden warming trend in
River
in
New
York
through
snow into floodwaters, are March or April, accompanied
Western
Pennsylvania
and
praying lor a long, slow thaw. by heavy rains, could spell
West
Virginia,
all
the
way
to
In the snow-sta rved disaster, with stlll-!rozen
Cincinnati.
Rockies, and along thP ground compounding the
New Jersey, Ind1ana,
parched West Coast where runoff problem to send ice
Illinois,
western Maryland
water rationing is in effect, floes Uke baltermg rams
and
western
Michigan also
potenllal flooding might be a against d9JTIS and bridges
were
cited
as areas of
welcome alternative.
from tributaries of the Ohio
poten
tial
danger.
Howling winds o!f Lake River in New York all the
M1ke Neyer, of the Indiana
Erie have piled snow into 18- way down the Mississippi.
Department
of Natural
foot drifts and streams are
"1be combmation o! deepResources,
said
enormous
frozen from bank to bank in frozen r1vers, high water
snowdrift,&lt;;
tllat
have
snarled
upstate New York. ·
content in the heavy snow
traffic
all
wmter
ironically
"It's really a watch and accumulation and frozen
wait situation," said National grotmd ts of concern;' said may be tlle state's best
Weather Service Dr. Robert White of the U.S. safeguard against flooding
meterologist Ray Wrightson. Commerce Department. because "snow in huge piles
won't melt as rapidly as it
would iflt were spread across

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Alternatives to

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THE DALY SENTINEL
DEVOTED1UTHE

lNI'I!IIEST OF
MEIGS-MABON AREA

CHESTER L. TANNEHUL

Eaec. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFUCH
Cit)' Editor

Published &lt;Wlly excepl Saturday
by Tho Ohio VoU.y PubliiWIIJI Com-

any, Ill CoW1 St., Pomeroy, Ohio
447811, Dllliint.!l8 Offke Phone Wb

2l50. EUltorud Phoot m-21$7,
&amp;!&lt;.'end cla!Jrl pot~tillle paid
Pomeroy, Ohio.
N11UON1l adverti!dng

a~

repre~~en­

lM.Uve Ward · GrlffiUI Company, In·
c , BoUJnelll Hnd Galla~ber Dlv.,
1f»1 Third Ave , New York, N.V
10017

Sub!K.Tipllon

ntl.t!!i

OI!IIYered by

l'al'rler wl1e1e av»IIJtble 75 'ttnts per
w~'k , By Mulot ltoulewhen c&lt;~nier
jt'l \'IC~ uol au!l-.ble, One llllll'lth ,
1:1 :l$. 8) mu!l In Oh.lo 11nt1 W. v,a_:·
Olli' \'ear, S22 00; S•x mooths,
Ill 50, 'T'hree numthM , $7.00;
l·: Lo.l•wherl! SZII.OO ye~r Six munlhs
$1 1~11 ,

lhll'l!

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$750.

.'iull.so rtp!tun [Jilt'' lm:lutlu Swu..la)'•

:r.lfue~.SCuLU•cl.

" If we get good conditions,

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the countryside."

While
Eastern
and
Midwestern officials fretted
over deep-frozen water
surpluses, tbeir collegues In
the West looked on with envy.
Colorado has approprlatod
$189,1100 to lmance a cloudseedmg venture aimed at
see ki ng
ITI EI X.tmum
in creasing a threadbare
communi : Ill\ ,Jvement" m Rocky Mountain snowpack,
the new underlllking.
and one state official said he
"The apologiSts lor has received about 40
commemal TV say that the telephone
calls
from
advertisers who pay the bills amateurs eager to help out.
are only trying to provide
gentle man
" Some
what the majonty want to suggested we load up empty
watch." he sa1d "Even tf this boxcars (with snow) from the
were true, and I doubt tllat it East and transport it out
is, some effort should be here," said Felix Sparks. 11He
made l&lt;l meet I needs of the appeared to be very serious
presumed minortty .
about it.n
'jA cable system, w1 lh tts
In Marin County, just
emphasis on providing a full across !rom San Frandsco 1s
range of programmmg, can Golden Gate Bridge, an acute
offer material directed at the water shortage has mandated
mterests of the hundre&lt;ls and strict home water rationing,
the the thousands, rather and in northern california,
than at the hundreds ol the Bureau of Reclamation
thousands "
has slashed the San Joaquin
Ayres program ming IS Valley 's irrigation allocation
aUlled at three audiences: by 75 per cent.
The " tnner circle " of
"We've never had anything
Cathohcs, the ge neral like this before," said David
religious audience and the Schuster, ch ief of water
general audience.
operations. "We're talking
To attract the latter, the about cutting back california
diocese plans a nightly series agriculture ... by thre e·
on health educa tion and other quarters, and agrlcultur~ is
series on family problems, an eight-billion-dollar-plus
· music , the law , and historical business. It's looking awful ...
views o! various ethnic we may have to reL'uce
groups on Lpng Island.
allocation even further.''

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Ctan

gs 1

E~~!i·~~~on }7~

L0 u an humbles Athens,

5~J~

e

JUMPERS NEEDED HERE - You have to go up lor
tlle ball in the game of basketball. Here Gary Nelson ol
Eastern (44 ) Randy McGwre (25 ) of Hannan Trace, and
Dan Spencer of Eastern scrap for the ball Tuesday night

~J~~t~~e~agamewonbyHannanTrace55-25

Gary

ready .for Ironton five

Den":~~~;s,3:~~~~~;;

HI•

with us!
PLANNING APIZZA PARTY
PHONE
THE ALL NEW

Tuesday's high

MEIGS INN PIZZA SHACK
-Enjoy three sizes of your favorite
pizzas.
-Try our delicio·us subs wh ile yo u
sip your favorite suds.
Eat In Or Carry Out
Phone
992-6304

school scores

;:

Wadsworth 62 Med~na 49
Chardon 57 Berkshire 54

Guernsey Zane Trace 51

Shenandoah 39
•
Cambridge 74 Meadowbrook

W l T Pts GF GA

Mon tr eat
P i ttsburgh

39 7 '? 87 767 171l
'111 27 9 57 173 PS

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N.;.i

:;$::.

Today'

:!::S:

:·:·:·~
:·X~
Cle Chane! 61 Parma Padua
58 (oil
39
Lakewood St. Edward 86 Logan 86 Athens 42
Ashta Har 51
Ironton 69 Waver ly 59
Adam~ Dl'o'ISIOn
.:::~
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I u
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Fairport 71 Kirtland 60
Meigs 99 Wellston 80
W L T PI!. GF GA .;:~
:::::~
31 17 6 70 209 1n :::.:-::
. .,..
Eastlake N 79 Painesv Vinton County 69 AleKander Boston
Bu ffalo
29 17 6 64 188 1o1q ::::::::
·:;:;.~
Harvey 12
54
"21 7 s1 196 175 $$:~
By MILTON RICHMAN
:..~.,: ,.'.:?_
Trln)ty 59 Bratenahl 58
Hannan Trace 55 Eastern Toronlo
Cleve land 16 28 9 " 155 l91 :;:;:3;
UPI Sporll Editor
,
Warrensv . 65 Strongsv. 49
(Me1gsl 45
Tuesday's Resu lt s
··:·:···
Southington 79 Grand Valley North Gallla 52 Kyger Creek NY Islanders 4 L OS Ang I
37
50 (otl
St Loui s 6 Pilt~b urg h 3
NEW. YORK (UP!) -That old delicate touch of his 1s sllll
Wednesday ' s Games
Ridgedale 106 N Un ion 56 , Southern Me1gs 87 South
there.
Buffalo at NY Ranger s
Marion Elgin 75 JCarey 56 . western Gallia 66
So 1s the quickness, only Jerry West uses both a lot
Cardington 88 Norlhmor 67 Belpre 81 Fort Frye 73 (2 oil A l l an t a at Toronto
V&lt;lncouver
at
Montreal
differently now m h1s first season coaching !he i..IJs Angeles
Liberty Union 67 Logan Elm Warren Local IJ&lt;I Wllliams- w asi'H ngton at Ch 1cago
62
town IW. Va.) 54
Lakers than he did playing with them lor 14 years.
Los Angel es at Cleveland
Barberton 103 Akr Ellel 61
Trimble 80 Miller 67
Colori~dO at M •nl'lssota
The special Jerry West touch that was part of his trademark
Cle John Adams 83 Cte East Bay 70 North Olmsted ~•
WHA Standings
as a player becomes immediately eVident watching the easy,
&lt;12
North Ridgev ille 68 Amhersl
By Untted Press tnternattonal
almost off-hand way he runs the Lakers. He has a good, strong
Cle S 62 Cle Max Hayes 54
61
'
East
W' L r Ph. GF GA relationship with his pillyers and that isn't so surprising given
Cle Llncoln-W 78 Rhodes 70 Olmsted Falls 78 North
Quebec
37 19 1 65 137 190
Cleveland Hgts 80 Gartleld Royalton 65
tnd•anapt s' 25 71 6 Sti 183 191 the fact all of them know the kind of player he was himself and
Hgts 71
Lorain Admiral King 58 Ci
ncmnat1 1d 15 'J 50 7'1'3 196 no matter what else, tllis IS an entirely new job lor him.
Cuyahoga
Heights
88 Southview 56
New fnq lnd 70 Jl 6 d6 18A ?19
West has done en'eptlonally well 'so !ar although he isn't
Brooklyn 77
Kenston 61 Aurora 59
Blrmnqhm 71 33 1 43 187 208
Conneout 62 Ashtabula 5~
Well ington 87 Vermilion 79 )( Minn esot 19 18 ~ AJ 136 171? going around taking any bows.
Cle Benedictine 64 Cle .. M Parkersburg (W. Va .J Cath
West
"I make my mistakes," he says.
W L T Pt s. GF GA
Luther King 52
63 Waterford 61
On
occasion, so do the Lakers, who were knocked over by the
Houston
30
17
6
66
11?7
1~
5
Cle Cathedral Latin 88 Seneca East 73 Wyntord 69
San D• eg o
JOn 2 6? 18 5 18? New Yo"k Knicks, 12H07, Tuesday night, but they're still
University Sch 64
Col Mifflin 54 Col Whetstone Wtnnlpeg
79 70 1 59 24 1 18?
Western Res Acad 60 51
Edmonton 22 30 '2 46 149 197 pushing Portland's Trail Blazers for first place in the NBA's
Cuyahoga Val 59
Delaware 53 Groveport 48
Ca lgary
20 77 4 oil4 163 174 Pacific Division .
Cte W Tech 77 Cle Cent Cath Hilliard 85 Chillicothe 69
Phoen•x
21 79 'J dd 181 738
The Lakers have changed their style under West.
64
Olentangy 60 Dublin 55
x-l"eam disbanded
For the past five years while they were being coached by BiD
Tuesday 's Results
Elyria 75 Avoo Lake ~5
Liberty Union 61 Logan Elm
Hou ston 4 lnd•anapolt s 4, ot
Richmond Heights 70 Perry 63
Sharman,
now general manager, ,~ I.akers primarily were
7 Quebec 7
64
Pickerington 98 Millersport Wtnntpeg
an offensive team. Now under West. they concentrate more on
San Oieqo 6 Edm on ton 5
Ashtabula 66 Warren Harding 59
Wedntsday•s Game~
defense. One of West's first moves was to bring in two assistant
65
canal Winchester 85 Lan- Indianapolis a t (lnc:innell
coaches, Jack McCloskey and Stan Albeck McCloakey is lhe
Lake Ridge Aced 76 Grand caster Fisher 62
B•rmtn2_~am at Phoen•x
River Acad 33
Col Westland 74 Franklin
defensive coach and AIbeck handles the offense.
Jnltrnatlonat
Nordonta 70 Ravenna 47
Heights 51
West is big on defense.
Hockey League
51
Edgerton 72 Pettl.vllle 66
Upper
Arlington
"I played for a latta coaches, seven In all," he says. "The one
United
Press
lnternatlona
I
Antwerp BO Holgate 59
Westerville S 50
W L T Pis GF GA ' who made the deepest impression on me was my high school
Spencerville Sharples 59 Col Wehrle 57 Fairfield Union
Kalama , 27 20 6 60 232 196' coach In West Virginia, who stressed defense. Hla name was
Hilltop 56
48
Saginaw 25 20 8 58 222 201 Roy Wllliall)S and he's deceased now but he made me so
Hicksville 63 Tlnora 61 loti Col West 76 Col Readr 52
25 22 7 51 240 217
Fremont !Ind.! 76 Edon 58 Whitehall 74 Co
In· Flint
Musk .
20 24 8 48 203 219 conscious of playing defense, I never forgot it. I thought there
Stryker 65 Fairview 54
dependence 76
Napoleon 13 Swanton 35
Cot Centennial 58 Wor - Pl. Huron 22 28 4 48 111'1 209 were times I was a better defensive player than I was a
South
Weuseon 85 Evergrl!t!l1 47
thlngton Christ 54 (2 of)
scorer.•'
W L T Pis. GF GA That's saying a whole Jot since many considered Jerry West
River View 79 Philo 62
Ohio Deaf 86 Plme 67
Toledo 25 24 5 55 216 237
West Holmes 66 Hiland 58
Highland 66 East Knox 56
Trt-Vettey 66 Maysville 41
Bellefontaine 68 London 48 Cotum. 2t 24 10 52 211 220 tne l(featest shoollng backcourtman in the history ·of
Dayton 24 25 3 51 219 217 professional basketball. He finished his NBA career as the
Indian Valley S 69 Jewell- Springfield N 76 Dayton
Ft. .
Sclo 39
Stebbins 52
league'~ U1ird highest all-t1me scorer with 2:&gt;,192 points.
Wayne 21 23 7 •9 195 215
Ctn Elder 71 Western Hilts 68 Day Meadowdale 74 Dayton
Wl'st n•liml as ~n Hcllve performer late in 1974. lie claims
Tuesday's Result
Cln Becon 73 Cln Aiken 66
Cham Jul 58
111·
.tocsn'tl(uss )JlHylng
Kalamazoo
5
Flint
5
Indian Hill 79 Doer Park 65 Daylon Kiser 86 Hom ilton
. "I dou t ""'" it al all." t.• '•IY' "When I fimshed pl•ying
• Wednesday's Games
Klngl 51 Summit Country Ross 6'1
Port Huron it I Muskeqon
Day 51
Day ion Aller 94 Daylon
l.. ,kctl••ll . 1 w"' fimshl'tl I tiiHil'l H ye•rs. The travel. the
Saginaw at Dayton
Loveland 72 Mariemont 70
Patterson 74
m1uti4 'h Mild tlw pn· ~~m·~· nr pl.t~' Utl ~ tW"I a wmning tt'anl took its
KalAmazoo at Columbus
Cln Toft It Ctn Withrow 71
Wayne B9 West Carrollton 49
lull . 1 ! h11 1k tl•t •l 4' ,,,,.a l1111~t 1Jii1Yt'J':-i "'hu play too lun ~ I don,l
Fort Wayne al Toledo
Cln MoNicholao 63 Cln Xenia 75 Carroll59
Thursd~y·s Games
• Maltier 55
Wayne•ville 71 BeH.bronk 68
... tCmllinuod on l'ag&lt;• 4)
" Medltrl 61 Milford 51
Wonoknnet• 79 Grc'l\n vl llo 70 No QAil'lts 'thedu,led

~i.·r~,~~~~" ill~ 'i l! mm~\!:~

AUTO PARTS
COMPANY

:•:0:0:0

Sport rna ... ~de ~\\~

NO. 275 R

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HANDS appear quicker than thF camera eye.
Actually, It's a multiple exposure demonstrating stepa
involved In bullding the tiny tires used for lawn mowers.
Assembly, similar to that lor automobile tires, takea place
at Madis~mville, Ky ., plant of Goodyear.
'

Southern rips
Highlanders

\

1

television asked
By DAVID E. ANDERSON
UP! Religion Writer
The Rev. Donald E.
Wildmon, minister of First
Umted MethodiSt Churc h,
Southaven , M1ss., 1s so upset
with the sel&lt; and violence on
commercial television he
wants everyone to turn their
television sets off m protest.
Wildmon has called for a
Turn the TelevisiOn Off Week
Feb 27-March 5 to protest
what he calls "very poor
quality network
programmmg m general and
excessive v1olence and sex in
particular."
"Those responsible lor network programmmg have
totally ignored tlle1r moral
responsibihty to their fellow
Americans," he said. "They
have used the cheap and the
sensatiOnal m purswt of the
dollar without regard to the
deSJces of the vast majonty of
Amencans or the effect of
their programming on our
society."
The mimster also 1s asking
that Feb. 27 be set as1de as a
national day of prayer lor
network officials and advertisers.
"We are asking that a
prayer be uttered in every
place of worship that tllese
people will begin to assume
their moral responsibility to
their fellow Americans," he
sa1d.
Turrung off the tube, however, IS not the only
alternative churches are
looking a I because of their
unhappmess with current
programmmg.
On l.lmg Island, the Roman
Catholic diocese of Rockville
Centre has started its own
television programming.
Father Bill ~res, dir'ector
of radio and telev1s1on lor the
diocese, said tllat the diocese
is scheduling 45 hours of
programming a week,
including 15 hours of family·
time television, for the 65,000
people who get the area's
cable television system.
"We may not be perceived
as a serious threat to the
networks," he said, "but we
do believe that we will he able
l&lt;l offer programs which 'wUl
be more involving and
satisfying to some cable
subscribers tha n many o! the
big-name shows aga1nst
\~ hir:1 Wl' will be competing ''
A res Haul tht' diocese IS
" · . king w1th a !mu ted
bJ,J~t · t anti smal! staff and is

MEIGS
The Meigs Marauders
FGA FTA RB F TP
picked up the1r third win in a Browning
26
1·2 ' 5 J 5
row raising their seaso n Dodson
6 14 8-9
6
3 20
record to a respectable IH! as Stewart
5 14 55
8
I
15
they rolled over the host Randolph
111 1-3
2
16
79 3-4 2 I 17
Wellston Golden Rockets Young
Scites
23
2·2 1 2 6
Tuesday night 99-l!O.
1-3 1-4 6 ~
3
Scoring a whopping 58 Hamilton
04 1 2 ~ 0
points in the first hall, the Granda!
Foil rod
34
03 2 I
6
Me1gs crew breezed through W•tte
26
8
4
5·6
9
the second half with lis bench &lt;men
0-1 0-2
2
3
0
•
gelling most of the actwn Stanley
0-0 1·2 1 I
I
Meanwhile the Marauders TOTALS
35-7S 29-44 49 25 99
Pet - 47 Pet
were holding the Rockets to
WELLSTON
just 38 points in that inilia I
FGA FTA RB F TP
half to put the game out o!
Swmgle
6· 11 7-10 16
4
19
reach.
Mart in
8-21
18
2·8
5
17
It was a run-and-shoot Gilliland
05
00
4
5
0
contest all the way With lots Royster
4-23 2 2 I
4
10
of fouls being called on each Hudson
1!23 5-6 8 4 29
team - Meigs with 25 and Conley
17
00
1
5
2
Wellston with 29. Wellston Buckley
00 2·3 J 2 2
had three players exit via the Pugh
03
0-0
0 0
0
00 00
0
0
0
foul circuit while Meigs hpd Aberts
31-93 18-29 50 29 80
none, and the Rockets' high TOTALS
Pel - 33 Pd.
scoring c~nter Gilhland was
Quarters :
THE BOX TRAP PRESS - Jeff Goebel (14) with the help of another Eastern player,
held scoreless the ent ire Meigs
29 58 82 99
puts a box press on Frank Mooney o! llllnnan Trace in a SV AC game at Eastern Tuesday
game before fouling out. Wellston
19 J2 52 80
night, won by the Wildcats, 55-45. Gary Sisk picture.
Meigs trounced the Rockets
just last Saturday 92-62 at
Morrison Gymnasium, but 1t
r-----------~ - looks hke the Wellston club good night with 15. Stewart
and managed just 18 o! 29 free
I
I will have to wait until next also led in rebounds with throws. lludson paced all
I
I year lor revenge.
·
eight, but the Marauders scorers with 29 points while
I
I Four of the Marauders hit were outrebounded 5~9.
Swingle had 19, Martin 18,
I
_]ffi•
1 double figures in the contest
Meigs connected on 35 o! 75 and Royster ten.
I~
. (I
w1th se mor Alan Dodson floor attempts lor 47 percent
Due to inclement weather,
topping them w1th 20. Junior and put the game away at the the new Me1gs schedule reads
NBA Standtngs
Kenny Young was right foul line as they netted 29 of 44 like this:
By Un1ted Press lnterna11onal
behind as he played one of h1s free throws. (You heard
Eastern conference
Saturday, Feb 12, at Point
Atlanhc D n.:•sion
G
strongest
games
by
dumpmg
Pleasant;
Tuesday, Feb. 15,
right')
8
Southern captured at least Layton were the only other Philadelp hia WJ l l20 Pel.
in 17, guard Steve Randolph
608
Wellston was cold from the at Ironton; Friday, Feb. 18.
a share of the Soulhern Highlanders In double figures Bo ston
'15 '17 .J81 6' , netted 16, and pivot man floor as they hlt just 31 o! 93 at Waverly, and the one with
2~ 77
~71
7
Valley Athletic Conference with 18 and 12 respectively. NY Kn1 cks
Bulfalo
18 32 360 1?' , Allan Stewart had another attempts lor a poor 33 percent Athens is still undecided.
Iitle Tuesday night w1th 'an
Southwestern's record NY Net s
16 35 314 15
Central On 1s1on
easy 87-66 v1ctory over South· dipped to 5~ overall and 3-6 In
western.
w l Pet GB
the SVAC.
The Tornados are 11).{1 in
1
The Highlanders host
'1]
1
the SV AC with just two Eastern Friday . Southern Su n Anton to 27 }3J
15 51'?
league games left.
N e w O rl er~ns
24 28 A61
6
goes to Trimble. .
Atlanta
'10 J&lt;l J70 II
'
Symmes Valley the second
Box score:
place team has already lost
two games. Overall, Southern
Southern (87) - Brown 9 J.
GB
has a perfect !:HI slate.
21, Roush 2-0-4; Wmebrenner DetroiT
J1 22 58 5 4
} •
Tuesday night, four players 3·0-6, Teaford 5-4-14 ; Brauer Kansas C1 TV 27 27 500 8 1
1
: Johnston J-0·6, lnd •ana
2.1 18 467 10
hit double ligures in the 4-110
Dunning 5 3 13, Findley 1-1 3 Ch 1caqo
27 31 415 IJ
Victory over Soulhwestern. and Sayre J 4 10 Totals 35-17- Milwaukee
With 14 players con· reduce the lead to 21-20 but each grabbing nine.
16 •H 78 1 71
PaCifiC
01\'ISIOM
Joe Brown, senior forward, 87.
Athens connected on just 31
tnbuting to the scormg the Logan then ticked off 15
W l Pel
G8
Southwestern (66)
un&amp;nswered
pomts
and
led the way with 21 points.
pet.
from tbe floor on 17 of 51
Logan
Chieftains
raced
past
Pnr tla nd
'35 20 636
3-0-6; Layton 6-0-12 ,
Richard Teaford had 14, Enc Carter
Lo&lt;; Anqele5
33 19 635
zoomed
back
into
a
36-20
lead
and
converted
just eight of 19
the
Athens
Bulldogs
Tuesday
Blanton 6-9·21: Jackson 8-2·
Stal e
79 23 558 4'
Dunning, 13 and Chip Brauer, 18 , M1iler I 3 5 and Grate 2 o Golden
which
bloomed
to
44-27
at
free
throws.
AHS
netted only
mght
by
an
86-42
count
m
a
St&gt; rlttle
26 25 528 6
10.
22 rebounds with Meek and
4 Totals 26-14-66.
PhOen t11
25 26 d90 8
game played in the old intermission
Tuesday'S Results
Reserves Southern 51
Monte Blanton led Coach
After three auarters Lo~an Arthur Chonko each naihng
Athens high school.
Bulfal o 99 Phlladelphln 89
Southwestern
28.
led
58-31 and Coach Fitz- six
Wayne Bergdoll ' s
The victory en a bled Coach
NY t&lt; n •cks 125 L, os Ang 107
8y Quarters
Houston
97
Clev
eland
81
gerald
mserted his subs and
Highlanders with 21 points. Southern
The hox score:
Scott Fitzgerald's Chiefs to
22 22 19 24- 87
Ch 1caq o 111 San Anton1o 89
tney
continued
the bombard·
Ron Jackson and ·Gene S Swestern
8 16 17 25- 66 Mtlwaukee 100 NY Ne l s 97
remain hot on th~ heels o!
LOGAN 1861 - Myers 0-2
Pt10 en1x 117 Atlanla 104 ,
Ironton for the SEOAL men! by hitting on 12 of 20 2, Russell 3·2·8: Hawk 5-2-12 :
Golden 51 128 Washing Ton 104
: Bragl 1n 36·
leadership as Logan went to field goal attempts in the McBroom6-0-12
Denv er 119 Portland 111
12 ; Gasser 2-2-6; Hallett 3 0
final
period.
·
Wednesday ' s Game s
12-1 in all games and 9-1 m
6, Armstrong l 0-2; Dollison
Los Ang eles at Buffalo
Brian Hawk, Mike Mc- 2 0 4,
loop
competition. Logan w1ll
Davidson J-0-6 :
New Orlea ns at NY Net s
Broom, and Jay Braglln Kemper 3-0-6: Dalton J. O6:
host Ironton Friday.
Milwaukee at Phllad elph •a
Bush 0-2·2; Horsk y 1 0-2.
Ch1cago at Houston
Coach Fred Gibson's Bull- shared the Chieftain scoring TOTALS
35-t6-86.
San AnTon•o a t D etro•!
dogs, now winless in l1 lead as each tallied 12 points
NY Kn •cks at lnellilni'l
ATHENS (421 - Hensler 0·
Atla nta at Sea ttl e
outings, made a line showing while Bob Meek Jed Athens 1-1; Topping 1·0-2; Chonko~
N HL Standmgs
0-8; Holtor 1-0 2: Goldsberry
m the first period as they w1th 14 points.
BV UniTed Pre ss InternatiOnal
Logan lin1shed with a 1 3 5: Wa lton 1 0 2, Meek 5-4·
patiently played the high
Campbell Conference
14: Wallace 4-0-8. TOTALS lJ.
P.Hnck Or\'tSIOn
scoring Chiefs and were down sizzling 58 pet. shooting 8-42.
'
W L T Pts GF GA
BOYS
Ripley 57 Turp in 53
just 21-18 alter the first e1ght average on 35 of 60 fielders
Score by quarters:
Phtl a
32 10 12 16 ?Hi 149
Ohio High School
Zanesville Rosecrans .12 Col NY 1s1andr s J2 15 8 77 19d 136
and 16 of:&gt;.:&gt; free throws. They Logan
21 23 14 28-86
minutes.
Basketball Results
Watterson 38
At l an ta
?A 1911 59 183 17J
18 9 4 11 - 42
The Bulldogs hit a goal also hauled In 45 rebounds Athens
United Press lnternaiJonal
West Muskingum 71 Morgan NY Ranger s 19 2'3 13 51 197 198
Reserve
score:
Logan 47,
Oak Harbor 87 Gibsonburg 48 62
Smythe DIVI Sion
early in the second stanza to with Braglln and McBroom Athens 43
W l T Pts GF GA
Cle E Tech 68 Cle JFK 53
Crooksville 59 New Concord J
St L ouis
23 26 6 57 IM 192
Bedford 82 Brush 66
G 50
19 17 9 J7 171 ~ 92
Willoughby S 58 Maple Hgts Sheridan 74 New LeKington 65 Ch 1cago
52
Sky vue 62 Ca Idwell 56
~o~~~:~0°1 a ~; 1~ ;~ ~ ~~ ~~~ :~:l:l~:j:~:j:;~:j;~:~l~:~f:tl~~it'-l~ii.~t"=~~~l~~~~;~~f:~~~~~~t~lr~;if:l~:l:~~;fJ.~
Lorain Cath 71 Cte Holy Woodsfield 93 Beallsville 65 vancouver
15 311 6 36 153 213 :~:3:~
;~i:~
Name 51
Guernsey Cath 82 Conotton
w~~~;~~b.~:~~~~~e
~i:i::
S
:::~;:
Hawken 58 Cardinal ~9
Valley 63

•

I

today

3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb. 9, 1977

lI

Hearing slow .thaw of snow, ice
hegins

Wonn recipe wanted

DR. LAMB

By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB -I have
read In your column about a
product called Lact-Aid
which splits milk lactose into
digestible sugars, The symptoms that accompany intolerance to lactose were
described as gas, diarrhea
and indigestion.
I, too, am allergic to milk.
My symptoms are sneezing
and congested sinuses. The
only times I have been able to
~ milk were the last two
months of my pregnancies
and the first two mcnths after
delivery.
If ills protem in milk that I
am sensitive io is !here some
way that it can be treated to
make it more agreeable?
Alao, I have been refused as a
blood donor because of the
allergy. I sure would like to
be able to use cow's milk.
Thank you for any assistant-e.
DEAR READER- Lactose
Intolerance results from being Wllbl~ to split milk sugar
(lactose). 11)at is nut the

mental reorganizatlonal
plan, " I'm not asking for 100
per cent of what I requested
- only 9!1 per cent.''
Senate DemocraUc Whip
Alan Cranston, who reported
on the meeting, said carter
told the leaders he "wouldn't
even attempt" governmental
reorganization if he had to get
affirmative action by
Congress for each move.
Carter is seekmg renewal
of preVious reorganization
acts that permitted a
president to reorganize the
executive branch, except
Cabinet departments, subject
only to !he veto o! either
house of Congress.
Chairman Jack Brooks, )).
Tex., of
the House
Government Operations
Committee, which must act
on the plan, favors
affirmative congressional
acllon on each specific
reorganization proposal.
Brooks acknowledged to
reporters alter the meeting
with Carter that defeating the
President's bill would he

By KENNETH R. CLARK

Hand calculators have come long way
By JOHN F. SIMS
UP! Bualness Writer
NEW YORK tUPI) -The
electronic calculator has
come a long way. The handheld machine that used to just
add 2 and 2 has developed to
tlle point where it can do the
work that needed a room-

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,,

96

'

�•'•
4- The Dally S!!ntlnel, Mldlleport-Puneroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Feb. 9, 1977

Ohio college

.

Girls scores
GIRLS
Ohio High S&lt;hool
S.sk•lboiiScor•s
Unlled Press tnlernolional
Akron St. Vincent-St. Mary -13

cage records
Through games of Feb. 1
Unittd Press tnttrNtionol

Marietta 2 6 .250 7 11 .389 lantaster Fisher Cath 71
Denison 2 7 .222 5 13 .278 Canal Winchester 32
bnio Wes 2 7 .222 7 J1 .389 Norwayne 47 Northwestern 25
Cllhlrs
Tinora 51 Ayersvl lle 20
W L Pel. Carey 67 Marion Pleasant 32'
Cincinnati
16 3 .842 Ada· 47 Paulding 28
Rio Grande
15 3 .833 Perrysburg 17 Anthony
Yngstwn. St.
IS 4 .789 Wayne 20
Hiram
11 3 .786
Ashland
12 5 .706
Findlay
13 6 .684

Mid-Amtrie~n Confer~tnce

Conference All GamH
WLPciWLP&lt;'I
Miami
7 2 .778 13 4 .763
WMich 6 2 .750 12 5 .711/
N Ill

6 2 :750 9 9

.soo

CMich
5 2 .714 10 8 .556
Bwg
Green
• 3 .571 7 10 .411
Toledo
4 4 .SOO 13 6 .684
Bail St
4 5 .444 8 10 .444
Ohio U
3 6 .333 7 10 .411
Kent St 2 6 .250 6 12 .333
E Mich
0 9 .000 5 13 .278
Ohio Conference

Malone

14 7 .6/J7
t3 8 , 619
12 8 .600
10 8 .556
11 9 .555
11 9 .555
9 10 .m

Central St.

walsh
Blufftoi1
Dayton

Defiance ,,

Northtrn Division
Conference All Games
W L Pel. W L Pel.
Wooster 6 1 .857 14 5 .737
Mt Un ion S 3 .625 10 9 .526
Ohio Nor 4 4 .SOO 11 8 .579
Baid-Wal 4 4 .SOO 7 11 .389
Hdelberg 4 5 .444 11 9 .550
Kenyon 3 5 .375 11 9 .550
Oberl in 3 6 .333 9 9 .SOO

Southern Division

Green J3
Tinot"a 51 Aroersville 20

Wilm ington

Akron

Tiffin
Ohio Sl.
Wright St.
Cleve. Sl.

9 12 .429
1· , .389
8 13 .381
7 12 .368
7 13 .JSO

s.teuben'o'ille
John Crrll.
Xavier

-

5 10 .333

Dyke
Urbana

Confertn&lt;:e All Games

W L Pet. W l Pet.
8 0 1.000 16 2 .889

Ohi o Doml,lcan

Wittbr .
Wilberforce
Musk . 7 2 .778 14 4 .778 · Case Western
Ottbrn. 5 3 .625 11 8 .578 Mt. Vernon
'Capital 3 s .333 10 9 .526

6 12 .333
7 14 .333
6 14 .300
5 14 .263
3 10
3 11
3 15

.231
.214
. 167

College results
College Ba sketball Results
By Un ited Pr ~ss International

East
A tba nv St . 101 Bf lo u . n

Bostn St. 95 w. N ew Eng 66
Bt lo St . 88 Geneseo St. 75
Ca thol ic 95 Wagner 68
D ick inson 85 Get tysburg 82
E . Naz . 92 St. Fran Me. 79
F&amp;M 75
Mar viand 66
Gannon 85 Youngstown St. 68
Jottn Jav 76 Nwr k-Rutgers 63
King ' s NY 6~ Nyack 63
Kings Pt . 78 Brk lyn Coli 6.5
Mari&amp;t 83 Concordia NY 61
Mass . 87 Ha rvard 45
N ichOlS 80 MIT '79
Nrll1east r n 79 Maine U. 71

w.

RI T7 1 Hobarl67

West
Air Force 84 No . Colo. 78
Qomngz Hills J(){, Cai .Luth 82
E Mont . 92 R&lt;Jcky Mnln 76
Mon tana 73 Utah St. 67
Point Loma 94 USI U 77
San Oiego 83 Chapman 76
S. Fraser 97 W. Wa sh . 83
So Cat Col . 64 Biota 63
U C-Rvrsde 68 UC -Irvne 48

.

NOn-SEOAL results :

Chesapeake 51 South Poin t 47
Pt. Pleasant 62 Nitro 58
SEOAL VARSITY
TEAM
' W L P OP
lrolronton
10 1 651 496
logan
9 1 844 529
Gall ipolis
5 4 509 496
. Meigs
6 5 772 745
Waver ly

Rockhurst 80 Kan . Newma n 63
Tarkio 73 Grace! and 53
Ti ffin 73 Oh io Dom 69
Wil brfr ce 84 W.Va . s·t. 79
Southwest
Ar"- .- Pine Blff 114 D i l tr ~ 98
Te:.c . Wstyn too Da llas Bapt 79
Te:.cas 79 SMU 69
Texas Tech 72 TCU 54
Texas A~M 1'1 Ba ylor 57

RPI 79 Williams 60
Pha . Tex 61 Villanova 57
South
Berea 110 Geo town ·Ky 105
Birm . Sthrn 98 Roll ins 85
Cle mson 70 W~Ke For est 66
Copp in St . 107 Wlmn gtn 58
Twin Va lley N 70 Northridge
F la. Tech 94 Biscayn e 91
57
Ky . St . 10 2 Union Ky . 62
Md .- Blt . Co . 61 Loyola 66
Lakota 94 Volley View 12
Method iSt 62 Green sbor o 53
Edgewood
83
Oxford
N .C. Cent 77 N .C. A&amp;T 65 S.C. Taiawanda 69
'St. 90 UNC -Witm 73
Lemon -Monroe 74 Franklin 67
Twsn St . 97 Frstb.g Sf . 88
F r a nklin - Monroe
93
Voorhees 79 Ctafflin 55
Mississlnawa Valley 63
Midwest
Trl · Village 88 Newton 72
Cedarv il le 61 Urbana so
E mPOria St. 79 Wshbrn 66
St. Henr y 106 New Knoxville·
Ha sti.ngs 81 Dana 73
62
Iowa Wsly n 89 Gr inn el l n
Miam i East 72 Ind ian Lake 61
Mo.-K .C. 66 Wm Jewell 64
Ve rsa il les
59
Lehman
Musk ing u.m 71 Ott erbein 69
·Catholic 47
Neb wesleyan 73 Mdlnd 63
Marion Local 63 Parkway 44
N'w strn Iowa 76 Dordt 59
Dzarks 72 Col umbia 70
Preble Shownee S3 Eaton 52

Sports Parade
Continued from page 3
think I did.l'm 311 now and stopped at 36. One more year and it
would've been too long."
After West retired as player with the Lakers, he filed a
breach of contract suit against team owner Jack Kent Cooke,
charging hinl with reneging on an agreement that would've
paid West $1 million in his retirement There were some hot
words on both sides. Then one day, West says, he was sitting in
Cooke's office with Sharman, Pete Newell and U.kers'
announcer Chick Hearn, when Coloke asked him if he 'd be
interested In coaching,
"I was shocked," West remembers. "He didn'task me for
yes or no immediately, but he asked me some of my ideas
about the team and among the things I !old him was that I
wanted to see it improve its defensive play . We left it like
that." ...
Jack Kent Cooke called him again a week later and spelled
out his offer.
"Would you accept the job under these terms ?" he asked .

a

Ironton maintains lead Pir~tes defeat Bo~cats ~
•
prepares for Logan f lve
·

Mike Brown, Rick iiowand,
and Dean Royal combined
with 48 points Tuesday night
in Ieiding the Ironton Tigers
to an easy 69-69 verdict over
the host Waverly Tigers In a
game played in the old Tiger

gym.

.

4 6 587 614
Jackson
3 7 529 649
Wel lston
2 B 575 836
Athens
0 7 393 495
TOTALS
39 39 4860 4860
Tuesday ' s results :·
Logan 86 Athens 42
Ironton ~9 Waverly 59
Meigs 99 Wellston 80

SEOAL RESERVES
TEAM
W l P OP
Iron ton
11 0 56/J 373
Logan
8 2 546 424
Athens
5 2 332 295
. Waverly
5 5 392 384
C&gt;aii lpolls
4 5 335 341
Meigs
4 7 402 452
Jackson
2 8 407 519
Wellston
o 10 393 585
TOTALS
39 39 3373 3373

enroute to their twelfth
victory in 14 outings.
The I· Tigers fired in 23 of 52
fielders and cashed in 23 of 38
free throws while pulling off
' 32 rebounds with David
Sesher grabbing nine.
Waverly gu1111ed it up 65
times and hit just 20 but did
wellatthe charity stripe on 19
of 23. Big Robert Holsinger
picked off 16 of Waverly's 32
rebounds:
Mike Brown's 18 points
topped Ironton arorers with
R;ck Howard adding 17 and
Dean Royal13.
Holsinger took game

Friday' s games :

Athens at Gall ipolis
Ironton

at Logan

Wellston at Waverly
Wheeling at Pt. Pleasant
South Point at Ironton St. Joe
Saturday's games :

Meigs at Pt. Pieasanl

Gall ipolis at Well ston

CHICAGO (UP!) - The
Illinois Racing Board
Tuesday voted to cancel
Wa s hington Park's
Thoroughbred racing dates
and scheduled doubleheader
harness races at other parks
to make up some of the
state's lost revenue.
Washington Park's grandstand-clubhouse building was
destroyed by fire Saturday
night. The park 's winter
Thoroughbred racing season
had been scheduled to run
through May 6. The state's
loss of revenue is estimated
at $1 million.

Coach Duane Wolfe 's
Eastern Eagles again · sur·
prised their competition
.when they hosted the Hannan
Trace Wildcats and didn't
how out until the waning
minutes, finally falling 55~.
Eastern, still looking for its
first win of the season, trailed
the Wildcats most of the way,
but always stayed in reach:
By the end of .the third period
they had climbed to within
one at 39..1ll, and when the
fourth quarter started the
hosts finally overtook the
visitors 41-40.
But it was short-lived as the
Wildcats began drawing the
fouls on the pressing Eagle
defense , and before the
contest was over, two of
Eastern's starters . G;~rv

Nelson, the big man inside,
.and Mike Smith exited via the ·
foul circuit.
The Eagles' man-to-man
defense must have surprised
·the Wildcats as they are UBed
to seeing the zone. Eastern's
Kevin Barton came off the
bench to play a strong game
as he got 10 points while Jeff
Goebel got eight, all in the
first haH.
The Eagles were led by
Sopho!l)ore Dan Spencer's 13
points While the two Eagle
seniors, Nelson and Smith,
got nine and eight rebounds
apiece. The Eagles cut down
on turnovers once again, this ·
time committing just 16
miscues. They shot 30 per·
cent, connecting on 19 ' of 63
attempts, and hitting 7 of 13

11

It was the play of the three

centers on Jabhar that really
made the difference. Though
he lopped the Lakers will&gt; 22
points, Jabber, the league's
second leading reboundet,
finished with six rebounds.
McMillen , Shelton and
Jack son, meanwhile ,
combined for 33 points and 12
rebounds.
. "Wbe_n you ·play against a
guy like Kareem, it takes 10
guys lo slop him." said

59
•
Mason 72 Blanches ter 65
Cilnton -Massl e 67 Lillie
Miami 64
Bethel 71 Southeastern 60
Fort .Recovery 87 Anson ia 49
Arcanum 64 Covington 47
Northwestern 63 Mechanicsburg 43
Houston 77 Bradford 87
Fort Wayne Ond .l 80 Delphos
St. John 64

StOKLEY

TOMATO
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North Gallia also took the,
reserve tilt, 43-28 as Colach .
Ted Lehew's squad recorded'"'
its sixth victory in seven:;~
tries.
·, '
Henry Sievert led the
winners with 14 points. Von '":
Taylor had 10 for the"'
Bobkittens.
Kyger Creek, ~ overall,.~
and 3-5 in the SVAC goes to
Sytrunes Valley this evening.""
North Gallla, •U overaU ,
and 4-3 in the SVAC, will hoSI : :
Miller ThursdaY,.
'""
Box scar~,;_,._ _
·
Kyger Creek (SO) - Sa lem , ~"
5-5· 15 ;
San ds,
5· 0· 10 &gt;'"
Thompson, 2·3·7; Baylor, 2-'l&gt;; .o
11 ; Ba lrd, l -1-3andWil ll s, 2-0·
' · Totals 17· 16-SO.
North Gallia (S2 ) - logan~'· '
6-J -15; Justrce. 3·1·7; Mtnn i51 '~
3-1-7 ; Tackett , 2-Q04; Mundell,u

7::

'

· Plants, 3-0-6 and Sisson,
21- tl -52.

:_

"

Carnahan 3-0-6, Spencer 5-313, Sm ith 1-0-2, Goebel 4-0-B."
Brown 1-0·2, Barton 3·4·1 0.
Totals 19·7·45.

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NO SALES TO DEALERS
QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED

Prices Effective· Thru
February 12, 1977·

FRENCH CITY
24 Ol PKG.

$ 29

WIENERS ••••••••••••••

Noe

·8-6-22 ; Price 11 -4·26 ; James 4-

Swa in S-2·12 ; Royse 7-l·
Fitzpatrick
0-0-0;
Robi nson 1-0-2; Blse 1·1·3;
Gibson S·0-10; Vickroy 3-2-B;
Purcell 2·0-4; Miller 1-0-2.
TOTALS 46 -22 ·114.

0-8 ;
17 ;

Meigs reserves

are j,Jvored

in 51-47 win

•WEST
AYETTE, Ind.
(UP I)
Defending
c!jampi Ohio State has
"en Ia led the team to beat
In the ' Blg Ten women's
b'asket all tournament,
Wltich "" scheduled to open
at ~e today .
Mlc igan . state,
NOrth tern and Indiana, in
that or;de.r , were ranked
beblnd ,the Buckeyes.
) owa lplayed OUnois and
Wiscondn met Purdue in first
round kames today. Ohio
Slate,, Klchlgah, Indiana ,
?!!Inn~, Northwestern and
Michiga/t State drew firstrOund
All ,es.
I entries will play
Friday. , be 15-game lourney
'lllnda u~ Saturday.
'()hJo State, winner of the
flrst •plonship last ya~r ,
sports a)~ record. Michigan
State is ~-2 and Northwestern
II un~ten In 10 ·games.
Indiana Is ~-

••

BANANAS

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TOTALS 31 -14 -76 .
RIO GRANDE (114)

OSUwomen
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Mon.·Sat. 8 ·am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

SMOKED

PORK CALLIES ...~·••

"':~•International

·. Energy s,.,,inn&lt;&gt;t

Jackson, who scored 11 points
and liad five rebound&gt;; in 23
minutes. "On defense you
help out against him; on
offense you help out."
•
Elsewhere, Denver beat
Portland, 119-111, Milwaukee
edged the Nets, 100-97,
Houston downed Cleveland,
97-31, Chicago defeated San
Antonio, lll-39, Buffalo beat
Philadelphia, 99-39, Phoenix
lopped Atlanta, 117·104, and
Golden State ripped Wa·
shington, 128-104.

points and 10 rebounds. Bffi
Bradley added 14. ,;
Ri.oGrande hit 46 of 89 field
· goal attempts for 52 percent.
The Redmen were 22 of 55 at
the foul line for 88 percent.
Rio picked off 55 rebounda
and bad 18 turnovers.
Mt. Vernon hit 31 of 81 field
goal attempts for 311 percent,
The Colugars were 14 of 26 at
the foul line for 53 percent.
MI. Vernon had 34 rebounda
and 28 tuf!lovers.
Tbunday, Rio wffi play
Tiffin al TUllo. Tbe Redmen
play at Urbana Saturday
night before returning lo
Lyne Center Monday for a
makeup contut with the
always-tough Cedarville
Yellow Jackets.
Tuesday's box :
MT. VERNON t76) Freeman 10·1·21; Ba llmer 3·
0-6; Bradley 6-2-14 ; Justice 3·
3-9 ; Ward 3-0-6 ; Bacus 0-1-1;
Oettra 1-0-2; Flem ing 1·2-4;
Simpson 0-1-1; Lee 0·2-2;

Ualled
matched in a drive by the
'l'he Musij!gum Muskies Muskies' Marvin Smalley .
Otterbein came back again
stayed aflol -in the Ohio
Conference Iouth title ra ce with a jump shot. Muskie
Tuesday dght , downing Pete Liptrap then hit a
O!terbein 7169 in ovel'lime. jumper from the left side. But
:The victey enabled the with 1:49
remaining,
Muskies, n111 3-2 in the loop · Williams picked up his flflh
and 15-4 oveaU, to remain in foul and Hall made. the most
second placl in the OC South of the opportunity.
behind undefeated
Williams and Liptrap
Wittenberg~.
shared game high scoring
'"We had phave this .one if honors with 16 points each.
we wa~ to catch
·The loss dropped Otterbein
Witten bert," said Muskie to 5-4 in lhe league and 11·9
COIIch JimBurson.
overall.
,J,.arry tall's two free
In other Ohio college
throWll wi~ 1:49 left in the basketball action Tuesday
overtime 11riod [rovided the night, Gannon (Pa.) whipped
winning nargin for the Youngstown State 8S-68;
.t.JUskles. 1
Cedarville defeated Urbana
Both terns exchanged 61·50; Tiffin edged Ohio
buckets udii the final buzzer Dominican 73-69; Wilberforce
found the ~ tied at 65-65. The downed West Virginia State
Cardinals 1pened the scoring 84-79; and Defiance easily
In the oveitJme with a layup handled Indiana-Purdue 98~ Ed j lliams that was 58.

16 33 39 55
12 26 38 45

H
E

Rio Grandt rolled over
..v!JJtlnll Mt. Vrnon Nazarene
114-78 Tuesdi night as the
Redmen poBid their 16th
victory In 19 strts this winter
before approhnately 1,200
fall8.
The Mld.()l' Conference
victory left R~rande with a
t-1 record. be Cougars
dropped to S.l erall and I·
18 Ia theM
Five Rednin scored in
double flgu~s Rio Grande
remained in lldisPuted first
'place in cpnff!ence play.
Jimmy ~e, honored
during halfttae ceremonies
by area fan! and booster
organizations dropped in 22
points and licked off 15
rebounds to mke the evening
most succe!!l.
GU Price, l&gt;e'a teatrunate
at Gallia A'demy in the
early 1970s, captured top
honQrs In ring with 26
markers. Pr e also picked
off IS rebo
for the win·
ner.
Dale Roy ssed in 17 and
Don GibBon ed 10 markers
for the Redl!en while Mark
Swain poppd in 12. ·
Art FreelllD was lbe big
gun for MI. Vernon with 21

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

!·~usL;es win.in overthm

HANNAN TRACE
Gibson 3-4-10, Swain 5-2-12,
Witte 8-2-18. Campbell 3-3-9,
Mooney 3-0-6. Tolals 22-11 ·55 .

SALTINE
CRACKERS

PRODUCE

•LB.

R

I

""
New Miam i 76 National Trail

'

-

With 5:171eft in the game,
North Gallia behind a steal
· and basket by Ron Plants led
44-41. At the 2:15 mark, It was
aU tied at·4S-4S.
Rex Justice then broke the
tie hitting the first half of a
.one-plus situation . KC 's
Ralph Baylor tied it again
with a foul shot. Both sides
missed .attempts during the
next 40 seconds.
Kyger Creek controlled the
boards and had the ball with
just 13 seconds remaining.
Mitch Salem, senior guard,
was foul ed by Sisson. He
stepped to the line and
canne d both en de , however,
the last one which would have
been the winning point, was
disallowed because of a Jane
·
Vlolatlon .
North Gallia quickly took
the ball down noor, passed i!
to Logan who fired away. The

goal was good sending the- game into overtime.
Logan was the Pirates top
point-maker wilh 15 points
and IS rebounds.
Sisson, who did not Start,
finished with eight points and
nine rebounds.
Salem led the Bobcats with
1~ points wltlle Baylor had 11 ...
and Doug Sand!', 10.
• ..
North Gallla hit 21 ol 60 ;;
fl oor attempts and 11 of 21
free .throws. Kyger Cree}\; ~
sank a poor 17 of 61 attempts,.,
for 27 pet. and 11 of 25 charitY.
tosses.
The Bobcats had '1:1 turn.:':
overs while NGHS committed _:

' conve nti onal

BY KEN ROSENBERG
UPI Sports Writer
"The Knicks put on a clinic
and we watched, Los
Angeles' Coach Jerry West
said Tuesday night after New
York played near-flawless
basketball in a 125-107 victory
over the Lakers.
the Knicks · played as a
unit, working the ball around
the perimeter with precg;ion
for open ' jump shots on
offense and collaJEing into
lhe middle on defense lo
effectively contain Kareem
Abdul.Jabbar.
There was no one hero for
the Knicks, although Bob
McAdoo scorl!d 27 points,
grabbed 17 rebounds and
handed out seven assists.
Moe . Layton, Walt Frazier,
Earl Monroe, Jim McMillian
and three centers, Tom
McMillen, Lonnie Shelton and
Phil Jackson , all were
instrwnental in the victory .

.
••
••
• • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

'·; j

free tiiiow:i~ ·
Hannan Trace was led by
Witte's 18 markers, eight of.
those coming in that im·
portant last quarter. The
visitors had 11 of 24 free
throws go in .. Swain and
Gibson had I 2 and ten points,
respectively .
The Eagle Reserves lost a
disappointing contest after a
sfuggish first haH. Eastern
wiil travel to Southwestern
this Friday for an .SVAC
contest.
EASTERN - Nelson 2·0.4,

ba~ .

'

Hicks honored for third time

-FOOD SIVIIOSI ..~j

SA~... _,.;.~

6--18 ; HO'iNa rd 7-3-17; Sesher J.
2-8; Royal 5·3·13; Fitzpatrick
2-0-4; Fairchild 0·8·8; lutz 0·
1-1. TOTALS 23·23-69.
WAVERLY (S9 ) - B. Fyffe
1-1-3; Crace 0-2 ·2; Thompson
4·3· 11 ; Hoi si nger 7-9-23 ;
Davena 1· 1-3 ; Fielder 2-3-7;
R. Thoma s 5-0-10. TOTALS
20-19-59.
Scor~ by quarters:
Ironton
17 22 10 20--1&gt;9
Waverly
9 16 8 26-59
Reserve score : Ir onton 56,
Wa verl y 52 (2 OT)

Clutch foul shooting by
seniors Fred Logan and Doug
SI,sson carried Colach Ron
Twyman 's North Gallia
Pirates to a SZ-50 overtime
win over Kyger Creek
Tuesday night.
Logan sent the game into
the overtime with a slx·foot
shot with just second&gt;; left In
regulation
play.
The
regulation game ended 48-48b
In the waning seconds of
the overtime, Ky.ger Creek
fired three shots at the tying
goal but two of. the three
rolled in and out. Kyger
Creek led 311·37 going into the
final quarter in the see-saw

Knicks flawless in win

NEW YORK (UPI) ~ Tbe
New York Mets say veteran
left-handed pitcher . Mickey
Lolich has told them he is
11
retiring. General Manager
"Yes, said West.
COLUMBUS, Obio (UP!) - IS rebound&gt;; 1n a 9!HH double
Joe
McDonald said Lolich, 36, For the second straight week overtime loss to the
The next morning Cooke called again.
"Are you prepared to take over as head coach?" was the told him be did not want to and the third time thiB year , Redakins.
only question he asked.
· spend another season away Mid-American Colnference
Hicks' selection Tuesday
from his family .
"~Yes, " West said again, and that was it.
basketball player of the week marks the fifth time in the
Lolich had an 8-13 record honors went to Matt Hicks, · past two seasons he has been
Now there have been some suggestions the reason Kareem
and
3.22 earned run average Northern Illinoi$' superb 6-1 voted lhe weekly honor.
Abdui.Jabbar and the other Lakers seem to enjoy playing for
last
season wilh the Mets, senior forward .
West more than they did for Sharman is because he never gets
Other nominees thi$ week
who
obtained him in a · Hicks, from Aurora, Ill., included Toledo's Dave Spel·
, on them, but hljs McCloskey and Albeck do it for him whenever
December 197S trade with poured in 66 points and cher; Jeff Tropf of Central
he feels that is necessary.
"Not so," says Jerry West. "If something needs to he said, Detroit.
hauled down 33 rebounds in Michigan ; Western
I'Dsay it, but I don't believe you can motivate players out of
the Huskies' two games last Michigan's Tom Oilier; Ohio
fear. I don 'tthink it does any good to bitch and scream. What I
week.
University's Tim Joyce;
54 St. Marys 4J
do think is that the players should be quiet when a coach has Celina
Against
·
Ball
State
Miami's
Randy Ayers; Kent
Wayne Trace 83 Van Wert 70
something to say, and whj!ll the game starts, they should make Wilm ington 65 East Clinton 56 Saturday night, Hicks had 38 State's Burrell McGhee ;
a consistent effort to do the very best they ctin. You kneW the Botkins 62 Riverside 47
points and 18 rebounds in Eastern Michigan's. Bob
way it is: the players get the credit and the coacbes get the Yellow Springs 81 Xenia Northern's 83·77 victory. Walden; Bowling Green's
45
blame and I think that's right, but I also think a lot more Wilson
Brookville 73 Northmont 63 Earlier in the week, against Dave Sutton; and Ball State's
players should be fired than coaches."
Miami, he had 28 points and Jim Hahn.

~,(!i ~J~ H

scoring honors with 23
markers while Chuck
Thompson had II and Randy
Thomas 10 for the losers.
Box score :
IRONTON (69) - Brown 6·

Eastern shot down again

Tuesday's results :
Logan 47 Athens 43

Ironton 56 Waverly 52 (ot)
Meigs 51 Wellston 47

'

..

. _5:- The Dalt_sentinel, Mlddleport·P&lt;rneroy, 0 .. Wednesday. Feb. 9, 1977

'

Coach Buddy Bell's Tigers
Cage standings
upped their league record io
Ill- I to remain one baH game
All GAMES
TEAM
W L P OP aliead of the Logan Chief·
Wheelersburg
tains , their next foe Friday,
11 0 769 592
while Waverly dropped to 4-1&gt;
logan
12 1 1103 733
lronlon
12 2 813 649 in league play.
Pt. Pleasant 7 1 534 468
Ironton was never ht
Gallipolis
7 5 694 679 trouble as they led by quarter
Meigs
B 6 959 921
Poritmouth 6 6 768 756 scores of 17-9. 39-25. •nrl 49-33
Jackson
6 8 7lfl '109
Waverly
5 ·9 ·a30 860
WellsfOI)
2 11 732 1048
South Point
2 11 736 770
Athens
o II .199 767

7 8 .467
8 10 .444

Cedarville ·

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Re men zn

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ISSAYJSTS COMPETE
" COLUMBUS (UP!)
lfearly 300 senior citizens
lvlve sent In essays to the
i.udlle Loy Kuck Ohioana
Award 11 for E1cellence In
Uterary Elpresslon contest
apo1180red by the Martha
Kinney Cooper Library

.,

Ute Ohio Commission on
~g which coordinated the
c:antell, said, "The response
llld quality of the literary
11 most ....tlfylns."
'lbe theme of lhll year's

SMOKIES ••••••••••• ~ •••
USDA CHOICE

BONELESS
$ 09
CHUCK ROASJ•••••••·••••
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GROUND CHUCK • •••••
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LETTUCE ••••••••••• :?~.
JOAN OF ARC

Elkins 1·0·2, Becker 3-8-14,
Yeauger 2·1·5, Hawley 2-4-8,
Kennety 0·1·1. Totals 15-2 1-51.
WELLSTON - Satterfield
3-4·10, Norman 3·0-6, Spires 3·
1· 7.
Montgomery 1-0-2,
Swonger 5·2-12. Patterson 1-0·
2, Massey 2-0·4, Pugh 2·0.4,
Royster 0-0-0. Totals 20·7-47.
By Quarters
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KIDNEY BEANS ••••

Meigs Reserves
MEIGS -: Stanley 3-1-7, T.
Coats A-5- 13, Blake 0-1-1,

AsaoctaUon.
Martin A. Janis, director of

•

The Baby Marauders were
outscored from the field, but
notched another victory
Tuesday night ty si.nking 21
of 35 free throws to hand host
Wellston a 51-47 setback. The
Marauders had beaten the
Wellston club in overtime last
weekend.
Meigs' Greg Becker led all
scorers with 14 while Tim
Coats trailed closely with 13.
The club hit 15 floor attempts
of 42 for 35 percent, but won
the game at the' charity
stripe .
Wellston made good on 20 of
62 attempts for 32 percent,
but they got only nine
chances at the foul line and .
made seven. They had four
men foul out of the contest,
but the Rockets never gave
up. They were led by
Swonger's 12 markers while
Wayne Satterfield had ten.

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..',

6- The Daily.Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Feb. 9, 1977

Pornographer Flynt ·gets 7-25 years
BY RICK VANSANT
CINCINNATI (UP! )
HUsUI!S' magazine pobliaher
Larry Flynt, who boasts that
his se~rie nted magazine
outsells Reader's Digest,
today faces up to 2il years in
prison after being convicted
by a jury of pandering
obscenity and engaging in
organized crime.
Immediately after a sevenman, fjve-woman Hamilton
County Commoo Pleas Court
jury returned Its verdi ct
Tuesday,
Flynt
was
sentenced to 7-to-2:1 years in
prison and fined $11,000, then
handcuffed and taken to jail.
A request from Flynt's
attorney that the sentence be
suspended pending appeal,
which alrflldy has been filed,
was turned down and .Flynt

had to relay a post-trial
statement from his jail cell
via his wife.
"I'd lilie to leave the whole
world with one question,"
F1ynt said in the statement.
"MW'der is a crime. Writing
about it isn '\. Sex is not a
crime, but writing about it is.
Why ?"
While the jury convicted
both F1ynt and his publishing
co.-po r ation , innocent
verdicts were refurned for
three co-defendants Flynt's wife Althea , his
lrother Jimmy and AI Van
Schaik, all magazine staffers.
Flynt taunted Judge
William J. Morrissey before
he was sentenced.
··
"You haven't made an
intelligent decision dUring the
course of the trial and I don't

expect ooe now," said Flynt,
standing dtrecUy in front of
the judge. "!want no mercy.
I say the same thing Gary
Gilm«e said, ' let's do it.'"
F1ynt refemd to the last
words uttered by Gilmore, a
coocleml)ed • killer In Utah,
before Gilmore wu ezecuted

Jastmonlh.

·

The 34-year old ~blllber
also told the . judge that
Hustler has just passed
~der's Digest to become
the natloo's lOth best-oelling
magazine. He said 3 inllllon
copies of the magazine are
sold each mooth and be
estimated monthly
readership at 15 million.
Morrissey then sentenced
F1ynt to 7-to-2S years in the
Ohio Penitentiary and fined
him S!O,OOO on the engaging in

"'

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~:

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.
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''
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-.

Adams wants to stay
·with Cleveland Browns
CLEVELAND (UP! ) Offensive guard Pete Adams,
who can become a free agent
May 1, would like to remain
with the Cleveland Browns,
he says - but the Browns
aren't sure they can afford
him.
Adams, from his California
hom e, sa id " I 'd like to

I'

'·

90ntinue playing with the
Browns . We did well last

~

year , it's a young team, and
I'd like to be a part of it. But I

I;;

r..
:;·"·
...'..
,.
'

.· "'~

,.

~·,,.

have to think of my future.
"We can negotiate the dif.
terence. They can go up a
little and we can come down a
little."
But the Browns appear

resigned to losing Adams, it
was reported Tuesday.
They made a final offer to
Adams ' ·agent, Los Angeles
attorney Howard Slusher, exactly two months ago before
the final game in December,
according
to general
manager Pete Had hazy.
"We're not totally giving up
signing Adams, but we have
made our final proposal and
it's nothing to be ashamed of.
Pete is so close to free agent
status, though, that I'm sure
he wants to test the market,"
Hadbazy said,
" If it becomes certain
that's what he'll do, then we
will withdraw our offer.''

He described Adams' de·
mands as "more mooey than
all of our other offensive
linemen combined made last
year.
"It's not so much Pete
Adams that's the problem
here," Hadhazy said. ,"It's

that I wouldn't be able to look
the ·other members of the
team in the eye if we gave
him what he wants.' '
often-injured
The
"University of Southern
California player was a first
round draft choice in 1973.
Last year was the first
complete season he managed
with the team, but it was the
final year of his contract.

.)·

.,.
~·

•'
"
''.

'~:

••.,

,' .

-.;,
··~

•'•'

Clemson jolts\ Wake Forest
By CHRIS SCHERF
UPI Sports Writer
Clemson traveled to Wake
Forest for the latest in its
string of big victories
Tuesday. night and tonight
South Carolina Coach Frank
McGuire hopes to add No. 500
to his impressive list of
triumphs.
The Tigers, who have
embarrassed Maryland and
- North Carolina on the
Clemson campus during their
five-eame winning streak,

defeated sixth-rankecj Wake
Forest, 7().66.
The Deacons, now 16-3, had
their lack of bench strength·
exploited by the 21ith-ranked
Tigers, also 18,3,
"The bench was the big
difference and it has been
lately," Clemson Coach Bill
Foster said. Clemson,
however, cannot participate
in the NCAA · tournament
because it is on probation.
Wake Forest now is 1·2 in
the Atlantic Coast Conference

Laurel Oiff
· News Notes ·

BOWLING
Pomeroy 8owlin9 Lanes

Tuesday Triplicate
Fe b. 1, 1977

Standings
Tea'm

Shamrock Motel
Royal Oak Park

•

Pts.
46
37

•

Shirts, Ltd .
Royal Crown Cola

!'.
•r .

'.

New York Cloth ing
16
High ind ivi dual game El oise Smith 191; Befty Smith

h

181.

..:

High series - Betty Smith
480 , Eloise Smith 477.
Tea m hi g h ga me

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1·:' '

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t.
F

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Ruth's Beauty Shop

23
22

16

Shamrock Mo tel 483.
Tea m hig h se r ies
Shamrock Motel 1334.

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Officials

·sports Briefs
By
United
Press
Inte rnalioHal
LONG BEACH, Calif.
(UP! ) - Ed Youngs, 35, the
defensive coordinator at
Michigan State !or the past
three seasons, Tuesday was
named to the same post at
Long Beach State·under new
49ers ' Head Coach Dave
Currey.
He is the third assistant
coach named since Currey
took over from Wayne
Howard, who left to become
the head coach at Utah , in
December.
CHAROTTESVILI,.E, Va .
(UP! ) - Ed McDonald, a
former University of Virginia
head football coach and an
active member of the school's
Athletic Department, died
Tuesday of a heart attack
while on hllnting trip. He was
68,

AlthoUgh he retired several
years ago, ' McDonald
instructed part time in
Vir gi ni a ' s Physi c al
Education Department. He
was a native of Caldwell,
Tex., and a 19-W University of
Texas graduate. He was a
. two-way end on the Texas
football te.am for three years
and was captain of the 1939
team.

Attendance at the Sunday
morning services at the Free
Methodist Church was 66.
Rev. ~nd Mrs. Floyd Shook
visited recently with Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph Higgenbotham,
. Columbus..
Mr. Pearl Jacobs is a
medica l patient in Camden
Clark Hospital, Parkersburg.
Mrs. Guy Russell, Brad·
bury, Mrs. Gladys Hendricks,
Parkersburg, visited recently
with Mrs. Georgia Diehl,
Mr. Vern Story, Columbus,
spent the weekend with his
wile and son .
Mrs.
Edna Howell,·.
Columbus, recently spent
three weeks with her mother,
Mrs. Nancy Walker.
Mr. Thomas Gene Parker
recently visited with Mr.
Hugh Leifheit.
Mrs. Kathy Pullins has
been returned home from
Holzer Medical Center,

NOTICE .

NEW STORE

race and Clemson is 6-2.
North Carolina is f&gt;-2.
stan Rome led the Tigers
with 15 points and Wayne
"Tree" Rollins had 13. Colon
Abraham again came off tbe
bench to play a key role for
Clemson with 12 points.
Jerry Schellenberg led
Wake Forest with 15 points
l!lld Rod Griffin ~nd Skip
Brown scored 14 each. ·
If the Gamecocks beat The
Citadel tonight for McGuire's
SOOth victory, the native New
Yorker would become the
second active collegiate
coach to win that many
games. DePaul's Ray Meyer
already has won more than
500 games.
South Carolina goes into the
game with a 1~9 record,
while The Citadel's record is
f&gt;-15.
In otller ·games Tuesday
night, Texas defeate~ SMU,
79.09; Texas Tech beat TCU,
12·54, and Texas A&amp;M topped
Baylor, 7U7.

BE ALOVER
Send the LOII·U·BlJINCIHIII
lor St. Volentine's
Februuy 14,
A winsome

HOURS
MONDAY
thru
FRIDAY
10-6 PM
SATURDAY
~. PM

bouquet

bright spring blooms to
chant the most discrimi
nating damsels. And, wheth·l
your flowers convey
love to someone near
our 14,000 lellcJw 1rele,floristsl
make delivery nearly
1wr1ere as simple as a pho•ne(
call. Please order
us soon, or call us

Pomer~

orpniAd a-lmo conviction. how far pornographOrs can
1be judce allo t.nded down a go with their maguln1111," he
cmtcurnl)t m month jaU
said. "Hamilton Coonty hu
leiiiBice on the pandoring said to America, 'Let's stand
obscenity conviction, and up and be counted and let's
tacked on a fi,OOO line.
~t limitations on what they
The Hustler ma1azine can ~bliah .''
cupot11tion was lined a tAltal
But ~' lynt , who faces
of $11,000 on the two pandering obecenlty charges
convictions.
In Cleveland Municipal Court
Severlli supporters of Flynt on Feb. 25, got support from
contended the prosecution tl!e American CivU Uberties
W8ll ovtl'lltellllP!ng Ita bounds Union and from a TeMessee
in presaing the "engaging In jUdge.
organind crime" charge.
"That any political official
However, prosecutors of narrow mlnd'Uikes offense
aplained that Flynt was and can proaecute someone
indicted by a HamUton for selllng materials viewed
County Grand Jury on the by adults only is offensive in
charge.
ltaelf, but to reach beyond the
Ohio's 18· paragraph bounds of his jurisdiction and
"engaging in organized effectively prevent the
crime" law is aimed agalnilt materials from being
live or more persons published in all their
collaborating to conunlt a communities is an outrage
crime for profit, and upon the Ftrst Amendment,"
circulation of Hustler in ACLU National Director
Hamilton County was alleged Aryeh Neier and Ohio ACLU
to have been the organized Executive Director Benson
crime.
Wolman said In a joint
Flynt's lawyer Herald statement.
Fahringer said he will appeal
Tennessee Court of
oo gJ'OIIIIda the jury only Criminal Appeals Judge
convicted two defendants oo Charles Galbreath
the charge, not live u spelled telegranuned F1ynt not to
out In the law.
"lose heart.' '
Deapite Flynt's appeal,
"I am tempted to resign !llY
Hamilton County Prosecutpr judicial post and volunteer
Simon Leis, who personally my ~~ervices gratis to your
prosecuted the case, 1111ld he legal staff.. ., " messaged
was ''very elated" with the Galbreath, who said upon
jury's .decision and predicted learning of F1ynt's conviction
it would have national and sentencing, "I think that
implications.
.
perhaps the Constitution h~s
''! think It's going to set the been banned in that
trend in this country as to particular jurisdiction."

j take part
in search
Gallla County sheriff's
deputies, along with Mike
Swisher, county disaster
director and volunteers from
his disaster agency were
called out Monday night to
~~earch for what was reported
to be a body In a strip mining
pit near Cheshire.
Sheriff James Montgomery
and his department received
a call after two boys found
clothing floating In a pit,
Searchers used flood lights
and other rescue equipment
In their probe but came up
empty handed.
Meanwhile, Gallipolis City
pollee Monday investigated
the theft of · a 22 caliber

IICOpe

a
by
Chatham
Pollee
strument
the wing
truck,
Sammy Thacker,
....,,rted aomeone
took a 23
CB from hil
Ford
from

of the
At
televised ·
Marquette ljlketball
one Cincy
sign at TV cilnl.ras
was
much more tP['(tprlilte than
the usual
mom, send
money"
that usually ·
spring up
televised
collegiate
events.
Said the
"Hi mom,

10:.:~~::.·~~··
Ph 9'71·1039

'

MID WEEK SPECIALS

NEW SOVIET chess
klag, AJiatoly Karpov won
tbe tllle at tbe 44th U.S.S.R.
championship tourney.

HECK'S WILL BE OPFN
MONDAY THRU SATURDAY

AUTOMATIC ELECTRONIC

STROBE LIGHT

23
CHAIIEL
CB'S
• , • ..0-MAftC .ICIACO. AIAHI

'79

JEWELRY
DEPT.

"There is rw way that I, or anyone else in the
government can solve our energy problems, if you are
not willing to help."

5

23''

88

HECK'S REG.

. $29.96 .

HECK'S REG.
'139;96
.
'

The President is talking to all of us.

DEPT.

·ASSOITED SIZES

HECK'S
REG.
'10.99

SHBS•r.

22SHORT

COLEMAN,

•

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275

SHELLS ·

69"

295

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LANTERN

STANUY

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• Ecuy-li'• Valve e Avtomot!c cleaning gt,er·
otor tip e Striped frost' d globe e Rvst·
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$25.99

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CLOTH

Heck's Reg. •2.98

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SPRAY PAINT

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HICK'SIEG.
$1.79
IIAIIJJIAM IJ9T.

HECK'S REG. '1 ;88

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flowc. s

GLORY

SPRAY ROO WANER

SILHOUETTE
LACE

2YARDS

CHOOSI: FROM ASSORTED

$100

COLO!tS

$J59
He~k's

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$1.19YAIID

Reg. •2 •.19

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HARDWARE DEPT.

240UNCE

PINTSIZE
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Wf&gt; dc.ce pt ~II mt1jor credit
ev~ rywhe r e .

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ELECTRIC
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Working together is the only way.

$333

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Ohio 1\Mu-._.
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99' oo•

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SPORTS

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DURAPAK

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JEWELRY

IRON
SIGHTER

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$68

lOJil 7
DEPT.

K201

. 4 ONLY

President Jimmy Carter on February 2, 1977, in his
televised address to the American people.

BLUE
TAG
ONLY

%OFF
KAKO

BETTY WIUfl!: AWARD
LOS ANGEI,ES (UP!) Betty White, who plays man·
hungry Sue Ann Nivens on the
Mary Tyler Moore Show, was
named Monday to receive the
annual Genii Award· of the
Sou!hern California Chapter
of American Women in Radio
and Television .

The President states it dearly and well. There is
a critical energy shortage.
The gas industry·is in crisis..The electric power
industry has generally been able to meet the demands
of its customers. However, the extraordinary cold
weather that has gripped much of the nation has
strained even this industry's capacity to serve.
There is a need to conserve.our energy, and make
"mutual sacrifices;' as the President says.
, And, as we have communicated to him, prompt
conservation efforts must also be accompanied by
immediate steps to assure an adequate energy supply.
In order to develop an adequate electric power
supply, several obstacles must be recognized and overcome. The electric generating plants that are straining
today must be reinforced and supplemented by additional plants tomorrow, both fossil fuel and nuclear.
. The President also said, and we agree, that we
must step up the development of fossil fuel, especially
· coal, as well as other viable resources.
An adequate energy supply is so fundamental, so
vital to us as a people and as a nation, we simply must
fmd solutions th:;:tt people of good will can agree 'on.
All of tis, not just here, but everyone, everywhere,
inust work together to solve this critical national
·
problem. And conserving energy is one effective way
each of us can help.

PRICES IN EFFECT THRU JAN. 13TH

ALL WINTER
CLOTHING

"

Flower Shop
Mrs. Millard VanMeltr

.

:

,,

�Musical relives'showboat era
Workaholic Man May I.Allt Wilt
Dear Helen :
My husband has this Job that requires he be there almost
all week, night and day. Our 2-year-&lt;Jld hardly knows him call.s him Lem instead of Daddy. Never being there when I
need him has put a terrible strain on our marriage.
I've tried everything : begging, crying, yelling, suicide
threats. I've threatened to leave. I attempted to throw him out
of the ho.use but he just laughed at me. I've tried quieUy telling
him work isn't everything in Ufe.
I've tried being a g_ood wife, giving him home..:ooked
meals and lots of se~. Then I've turned the opposiie, with no
~and a cooking strike. His parents have even ialked to him,
but he won 't listen. Nothing helps. What should I try next?- I.

C.

·I

Dear I.C.:
•
You've "tried everything." But have you tried any one
thing long enough tor with enough clout) to make it work?
Threats can't help if your husband knows you won't follow
through . "Being a good wife" might, if he believes it would

last.
The one thing you haven't mentioned, however, may be
your only hope: Try under sian ding!
Face the fact that you're married to a workaholic, a man
whose career is the most important llling in his life.
Jealousy and resentment won't change lllis, but emphallly
might keep him home more often. Presently, I'd guess he
returns to tlle job because he feels more appreciated tllere. So
.. . show interest in his work, encourage him to ialk about it,
help him if you can, and hopefully you 'll become a bigger part
of his life. - H.
Dear Helen :
When my husband and I separated, I was very low, so I
confided in a girl friend who lived across tlle street. She was all
sympatlly. She'd tell me what a stinker Rick was , and
encourage me to go out.
What I didn't know was, she had been secretly dating Rick
·since before we split, and she'd fed hirtl all tlle lies.about me
tllat made him tllink I was no good . He accused me of terrible
things and I couldn't persuade him otherwise.
I fo\llld out what a two.faced liar she was through another
friend . I told Rick, but he wouldn'tbelieve me.
How it stands now is, he comes home about once a week,
siays overnight, and lllen says he still can't trust me. He dates
ar01md, but I'm not supposed to. Says if I "prove myself" for
another year, rruiybe we'll get togetller again. (We were
married eight montlls.)
Why would he P.,lieve a man..:hasing cheat over his own
wife? - ON PROBATION

'·
'

Dear On :
I'd guess Rick wants freedom without guilt. So long as he
can put the blame on you he'll continue tllis part-time, noresponsibility marriage, taking what's offered, and gi;ing
practically nothing. ·
So tell him you're on to his little games and henceforward
he is the one on probation . Adose of his own medicine may get
you a full-time husband - or none at all.
(lf it's the latter, perhaps you never really had him in the
first place.) - H.
·

•
.,•

'

Polly's Pointers

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I

Much ado 'about
billiard balls

By Polly Cramer .
By Polly Cramer
cards this year my sister·inPolly's Problem
law sent out Christmas " post
DEAR POU.Y -What can cards" instead of regular
I do with a set of 15 billiard cards. She cut the picture
balls, regulation size, that are · side of a card to post card
too nicked and-dented to be size, drew a line across the
used on the pool table? Is blank reverse side. Her
there some craft use?- MRS. Christmas greeting was writJ.C.
ten, with red ink, on the left
DEAR MRS. J. C. - I am 1\and portion and the name
sute many of our clever and address of the receiver
readers will be sending in on the right side, in blue mk.
ideas lor' using your billiard The stamp was put on in the
balls. We will be passing usual place for a card. She
them on to you.- POLLY.
had to pay less postage and
DEAR POLLY - My Pef had no cards to buy but still
Peeve is with "free gifts" remembered her friends. such as a sample of a laundry HAZEL D.
product that smells so strong·
DEAR POLLY- I have had
ly it penetrates the rest of the excellent results removing
mail. Such perfumes sicken crayon mark with lighter
me, so, I moved the sample to fluid. I have used it to ren10ve
the garage and tomorrow will such marks from painted,
look for a fresh gopher hole in varnished and enamelled sur·
the yard, push it in and hope faces. I have even removed
the gopher will leave as soon them from wallpaper, but
as it gets a whiff. Strong tbat should be tested first.
odors are far from attractive Simply moisten a paper towel
and even passing a person with the fluid and wipe. wearing a heavy perfume in· JANICE.
dlcates an undesirable perPolly will send you one of
sonality to me. Just had to ex·
her
" ~achy" thank-you .
press one woman's opinion. cards,
Ideal for framing or
MRS.E.J .F.
placm.g
III your family scrapDEAR POLLY -I hope my
book,
if
she
uses your favorite
Pointer will help Martha and
Pointer,
Peeve
or Problem in
her faded navy blouse. She
could hand or machine sew he~ column. Write Polly's
(which ever is easier for her) Pomters in care of this
a decorative lace or em- newspaper.
broidery trim to cover these
lines and dress up the blouse
as Well. I also find it helpful to
band sew appliques on either
tiny burn spots, snags or
siains on damaged items of
clothing that are too· good to
Wow away. Carefully choose
the proper color and design to
compliment tlle damaged
item.
WEDNESDAY
Save broken 9hoe strings,
POMEROY · Middleport
launder them and S&lt;lVe to use Lions Club, Wednesday noon
for tieing up bags, boxes, at the Meigs Inn. · .
garden hose, electric cords,
POMEROY Chapter 30,
etc: when they are not in use. RAM, sta ted convocation,
When my children were small Wednesday, 7:30p.m. at the
I used old shoe laces to make Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
ties for their bibs.- R.M.Z.
All RAM 's urged to attend. ·
DEAR POLLY - Save all Bosworth Council 46, Royal
tllose beautiful Christmas and Select Masters, will meet
cards you received from at 8:30 p.m. at the Temple.
fri~nds. For years many of us
THURSDAY
SOUTHEASTERN Ohio
have been making gift tags
out of them by cutting off the Reglona I
Co uncil
on
nanie or cuUint! out the pic- Alcoholism , Thursda~. 1 p.m.
lure part· with the pinking at Trinity Chapel, Third and
shears. Having sav~ such Wooster, Marietta.

Social
Calendar

The showboat is a mar· sllowboat on Memorial
velous memory for 1Dany Auditorium's stage.
residents of the Ohio River
"Showboat" remains as
area. The music and lights warm and colorful to today's
reached out to the towns audiences as it was to those of
along the river. Children ran SO years ago. Its magnificent
. along the river bl!nks and the score if such an essential part
elaborate cuisine was served of tlle story that even the
with old country flair.
time-worn seqQences stlll
Couples, dressed in elegant have the power to move
costumes of the late 1800s and audiences. By dealing with,
. early 1900s, danced gaily.
at least attempting to deal
The Ohio University with, the seriouS aspects of
Schools of Music and Theater society, Kern and Hammerare joining in an effort to stein broadened the scope of
recapture some of this subject matter and its ,
nostalgic Americana with treatment in the musical
their prbduction of Jerome theater and thus laid the
Kern · and Oscar Ham- foundation for such works as
merstein's "Showboat "in its Hforgy and Bess," uSouth
50th year.
"
Pacific" and other serious
Director Bob Winters, musical plays.
musical director David
The musical wlll be
Stoffel, and choreographer presented Feb. 11 at 8 p.m.,
1Denlse Gabriel have selected Feb. 12 at 2 and 8 p.m., and
a cast of talented singers, Feb. 13 at 2 p.m.
PROGRAM EXPLAINED- The !4is's Hope program of the American Cilncer Society dancers and aclors to help
The School of Theater box
was explained Tuesday night tn members of the Meigs County Unit of the society. reproduce thnse ~ays ofthe
Presenting a slide show were, from the left, Bridget Cloak, Gallia County's Miss Hope;
Mary Snyder and Susy Etterling, Gallia's two runners-up.

Brownies to visit
Miss Hope program explained Mr. Cartoon show
to Meigs County society
pe~/'~nto:.~~~~~~nto::s
The American Cancer
Society's Miss Hope program
was explained to members of
th~ Meigs County Unit of the
society at the Tuesday night
meeting of the group.
Bridget Cloak, Gallia
County's reigning Miss Hope
and Mary Snyder and Susy
Etterling, Gallia's two
runners·up, presented a slide
show on the Miss Hope
program in Ohio and urged
Meigs County to join tlle
program.
Mrs. Cloak and Mrs.
Snyder are both nurses at the
Holzer Medical Center while
Miss Etterllng is a student
nurse at the hospitaL They
told the group the Miss HnnP

program, open only to nurses,
was started three years ago
in Ohio. Held annually, the
purpose is to find a nurse who
will ·best spread the word·
about the American Cancer
Society. All the candidates
become ACS volunteers who
spread life saving in·
formation about cancer. A
nurse is chosen because she is
knowledgeable in the field
and represents caring.
Selection is done on both
the county and state level on
the basis of genera I in·
formation about the can·
dictate, personality .qualities
and a two minute speech on

· candidates are winners
because they are all given the
opportunity to become cancer
society volunteers. According
to her, 1'It's rewarding ,
because you get to become
Involved with the cancer
society.''
'
This is the first year for a
Miss Hope in Gallia County
and Mrs, Cloak is currently
' the on ly Miss Hope in
Southeastern Ohio. She
received a special com·
mendation this week from the
Ohio State Senate for her
work with the cancer society
and her selection as Gallia 's
Miss Hope. The resolution
cancer.
was sponsored by Sen.
,. Mrs. Cloak said that all the Oakley Collins.

Pouvoir·to fete anniversary .
The Eight and Forty the Monday night meeting of
pouvoir to be held Feb. 26 and Meigs County Salon 710 at the
'!I at the Neil House in Colum- home of Mrs. Mary Martin.
It was nut~ that the
bus with the 50th anniversary
of the organization to be honored guest at the annivercelebrated was announced at sary eelebration will be Mrs.
Marie Smith, Latrobe, Pa.,
the national chapeau. Mrs.
~thel Va!)., 1Vossen is chair·
THURSDAY
man.
GoiJtt from the local
MEIGS HiGH yearbook
salon
will· be Mrs. Pearl
staff meeting,. 7 p.m. Thurs·
Knapp,
Mrs. Kate Welsh,
day at the home of Crystal
Mrs.
Lola
Hampton and Mrs.
Hall, Middleport; entire staff
Martin.
urged to ·attend. ·
During the meeting conELEANOR Circle of Heath ducted by ;Mrs. Ruby MarUnited Methodist Church shall, chapeau, nwnerous
Thursday at the church at donations .were made. The
7:30 p.m. Co-hostesses, Judy salon voteil a $25 contribution
Fraser and Pauline Horton. to a bed endowment at the
MEIGS County Humane National Jewish Hospital in
Society, 7:30 p.m. Thursday Denver, along with $2 to
at the Thrift Shop, Pomeroy. several hospital funds in·
, eluding the camera dub, the
FRIDAY
MARY Shrine 37, Order of camp fund·, m~idne, birth·
the White Shrine of J er- day fund for parties, gifts, .
usalem, will meet at 8 p.m. cards th . hospital band, the
Friday at the Pomeroy telephone •' fund; and the
mothers' fund.
Masonic Temple.
The Salon also voted to
RETURN Jonathan Meigs send $5 to the American
Chapter, Daughters of the Legion Child Welfare FounAmerican Revolution, will
meet at 1:30 Friday at the
Meigs Inn . Mrs. Everett
Hayes will have the program. Southeastern Ohio, 2 to 4 p.m.
HARRISONVILLE Lodge Friday at Senior Citizens
411 ; F&amp;AM, special meeting, building, Pomeroy. James
7:30 p.m. Friday; work in Kidd w1ll speak on progress
fellowcraft degree; all in Washington and Les Pastor
Master Masons invted.
of the Social Security Office
BLACK LUNG Assn . . of to

&lt;liscussed during a meeting of
the Racine Bruwnies at th~
Racine Church annex recent-

New arrival
Mr. ~net ·Mrs. Wendell
Jeffers, Rt. 2. Pomeroy, are
announcing the birth of their
fourth child, a son, John
MichaeL The eight pound, 14
ounce baby was born Feb. 3
at the Holzer Medical Center.
Grandparents are Mrs.
Dorothy Jeffers, Gallipolis;
Mrs. Virginia Davis, Minersville, and Harry A. Davis,
Pomeroy. Mrs. Viola Jeffers
is a great-grandmother. Mr.
and Mrs. Jeffers have two
other sons, Jim, 17, and
Timmy, 7, and a daughter,
Tracey, 15.

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Feb. 9, 1977

,~
•
:

.:
,;
'
~

,•

7 Pet. per year on a 4
year certificate of
deposit.
$1,000.00
m1n1mum
deposit. interest paid
quarterly .
A sutatantial penalty Is
Invoked on all certificate

accounu withdrawn prior,
to the: date of maturity . •

Meigs rA». Branch

..@,
The Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan Co .

lyA reservation has been
made for June 2. Fund raising . projects were discussed
and the Brownies were asked
to turn in calendars and-or
money at the next meeting.
· Teresa Teaford led in the
. girl scout promiae, and Robin
Sauvage the Brownie "B's."

LOW PRICED "GO·POWER"

"ALL-WEATHER''

BAnERY
$26 ~~.

•·

FREE

INSTALLATION!

••lb tilt~.....
GtG!Ip A'lll·l2f '

AW·2A ... priced slightly higher. ,

- Dry chor90d lor dependable long·llltlng power.
-Polypropylene coso and cover lor high powtr·tli·
wtight ratio ... heat 'and· shock ruist1nce.

-Non.splash gang vent caps, lar90 plotn, p!asllc·rib
separators.

MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC.
JOHN FUL TZ.MGR.
992-2101

•

Pllmeroy

ing. An invitation was read

from the national chapeau's
home salon in Latrobe, Pa.
inviting members to attend il
reception for Mrs. Smith on
Apri115 .
Members signc'll a sym·
pathy card for Mrs. Dale
Kennedy. It was voted to pur·
chase a plaque for $100 to Pe
placed in the National Jewish
Hospiial in memory of Bryan
Marshall who died several
years ago of cystic fibrosi s.
The birthdays of Mrs.
Welsh ·and Mrs. Zuelelia
Smitll were noted , anct Sl't'ret
si;ter gifts exchanged. Valen·
tines were presented to
Sherri Marshall along with
some gifts. Mrs. Marge
Goett, Sherri and Robin
Campbell were guests. To
open the meeting Mrs. Eunie
Brinker had prayer.
Mrs. Martin served cake
and ice cream in the valentine theme followmg the
'!'eeting.

Take Home A Glass Today

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT STORE
Phone 742-2100
Thur., Feb. 10 thru Sat., Feb. 12

FRENCH CITY

JOWL BACON By the piece lb~ 3'

FRENCH CITY

Sliced

45• lb.

HONEY LOAF OR PORK &amp; BEEF LOAF u,~1.69
HOMEMADE HAM SAlAD •••••••••••• Lb. 994
I LB. BLUE BONNET

59
('n$

1-

MARGARINE
· . ,. 3 lb. WINESAP
APPLES • •. • 2":.9• •
QUARTERS ••••••

2 LB. TEEN QUEEN

She

age

CHEF DELIGHT
169. HEAD
Head 39~·
CHEESE SPREAD • • • Box LETIUCE •••••••

For a limited time, with the pun:ha•

1.,_ oz. soft drink you

can ,take home a 16 oz. cartoon glass.
The total price for the large drink and the glass is omy· 4Yc. Start.
collecting your sets of six glasses today! {Empty glasses 'may be,
purchased for 39c).

•

Enjoy your meal
In

our dinine

Drive-Thru

•

•

r:

.,!

River.

The American Electric
Power Service Corporation is
financing the study to be
directed by Dr. Donald C.
Tarter,
professor
of
biological sciences at Mar·
shall.
It will involve a creel
survey of fish taken by
anglers, a spawning study of
fish eggs and larvae, and an
analysis of terrestrial plants
and vegetation In the area,
Dr. Tarter said. The creel
consus will consist of interviews with fishermen and
inspection of fish iaken.
Spawning studies will In·
volve sampling of fish eggs
and larvae gathered with
special equipment tran·

has affected the
economy, social institutions,
and even the religious
complexion of the continent,"
Desowitz said.
He cites a historical event
in the last century when
Muslim cavalry swept from
west Africa to tlle south and
the east, conquering animist
tribes in its path.
"But in tlleir progression
through woodlailds and
forests tlley encountered a
formidable adversary, the
tsetse,!! he writes. 14Swarrns
of these flies attacked and bit
tlle horses, transmitting the
.parasite to them, which
resulted in a le.thal form of
animal trypanosomiasis. In
rapid order the cavalry
became a disarrayed
infantry."
On foot the invaders were
stopped before they could
reach the great population
centers of the Benue and
Niger valleys.
"Thus was Islam, with its
sociopolitical consequences,
prevented from infiltrating
this vast, densely peopled
region o·f Africa for more
than half a century,"
Desowitz says. .
Desowitz notes that about
7,000 persons die yearly from
"It

.

Ohio Leglslativ@ Briefs
Bv United Press International
OVEN WARNING
Per·

GOI

Men$ &amp; Boys

181f2 oz. Duncan Hines
'
Regular Cake Mixes• • • • • • • • • •• 65'

DINGO
BOOTS "

'700

-•aoo

32 oz. Kraft Miracle
.

Whip Sci lad Dre11lna • •••••••••• 89•
16 oz. Karo Dark Corn SvruD • .. • •• ••. 55•
16 oz. Carnation Coffee Mate .. • '1.29 lar
46 oz. Welch Aid GraN Drink • • • • • • • eW

....

51MPLY

J~DEI~?TAND

:··

...

ES

OF

I'.SYCHE.!

51'\NG·BANG WAS
AFRII.ID TO l.l!&gt;E KIS
1'\NE.E! :WHILE
O~T£N51BL'Y' iRIP·
PINGr KIM, 1 Wf&gt;,S

IN .ALiUI\UTY
FORG ING H\M iO

\EST 11 1

liltS trag rant. hvtng rnessaga

•, ·;

ot love A bundle ot trestl

. ·

tlo wers arran ged w1th a b1g

:

•

toveb,rds She It
e'ien

alry·l sl

• Pt;. Pleasant
• Mason
• Silver Bridge
Plaza

L

SPECIALS

WE HAVE
VALENTINE CANDY
AND
SCHOOL KIDS VALENTINES

11

&lt;

'.

.:. ::
:

.

_.....,,__ ,.....

59 N. Second St.
Phone 992·5560

House .
The bill sponsored by Rep .
Harry J . Lehman, 0 -Shaker
He i0hts, reQuires food service
operations to post sigl'!s call ing
attention to use of the ovens tor
preparing or warming food .
The Oh io State Medical
Assoc iation said radiation emitted from the · ovens can

&gt;':
,

:.·;

\

11 .

50
From

{

I

With

Sisal

Stt•rli n ~ Silver·
lh.nd t:naraved

Entire Stock!

GIRLS
SLEEP
WEAR

Rope

Hangers

Decorated
ceramic. Give your
home the greenry

Includes

. retardant. Sizes
\4 .

I

Don't Miss This!

WOMENS
PANT
SUITS
All Fall and Holiday·

GIRLS
JEANS
, AND

PANTS
Entire Stock!

&lt;

to

lhPRICE

12 PRICE 12 PRICE

plant. The Chip General A!ISem biV would have review power
The leglslatlori Is slmll&amp;r to a
proposed nuclear safety consti
tutlonal arr!t!fldment defeated
Dy Ohio·voters last tall . •

4

-

Clean Up!

styles go-Not a Big
Grouf)-But maybe
your size of huge
Savings.
·

pajamas

and long gowns. Fire

'
0
0$1
00
"6&amp;$Pr.

FOR THEONE
YOU LOVE ON
VA LENTINE DAY
Pendants and Lockets
with or without diamonds.

NUCLEAR. FUEL·
COLUMBUS . IUP II - · Sen.

••

BOYS
TUBE
SOCKSto
Fits size

.'

White with stripe top .
Heavy weight. Save

MINING COMPACT
COLUMBUS (UPII 7 Bipor ·
tisan legislation was Introduced
in th e Ohio Sena te Tuesday
· calling for Ohio's participation
in an Interstate Mining Com .
pact .
The purpose ot the compact
ar:cordlng to the bill submitted
b'{ Sens. Sam S pe c~. R-New
Concord, and Kinsey Milleson.
0 -Freeport. is to ensure an
"efficient and producflve
mining industry " while promot Ing
reduction ot pollution
protect ion of . land and w.!lter
and efficient land use .
The legislation also provides
for a tO-member advisory
council the chairman of which
would - be the chie f of the
divis ion of reclamation In the
,Department of Natural Resour ·
ces .

HANGING
CERAMIC
STONE
PLANTERS

Regular 99'

8

dlspo51ng of spent nu clear fue l
before It could construct a

•I '

McCLURE'S

Ca l! o r VISII us 1oday end o rder :· ..

...

red heart and

Neal F. Zimmers Jr .. 0 0avton. · Introduced a bill
TuesdiiY providing for ~t r lct
tegisillflve control over location
of nuclear power plants In Oh io.
The bill would require an
electric utility to show II would
use a safe.methOd ot reprocess
ing nuclear fuel rods and of

f oz. Instant Sanka Coffee Limit 1· '4.49

I

·:.

OUT THEY

~.~

$}21

TRY ONE OF OUR
PINEAPPLE SUNDAES

Thursday- Friday • Saturday

with Major Hoople

-

16 oz. Mullen Elbow Macaronl~u••u2/i9•

BBQ, FRENCH FRIES

WEEK-END

sons with heart pacema~ers
would be warned !bout the
presence of potent ialiy dangerous mlcrowovl! ovens in publ ic
; plac,s under legislation lnlro., duced Tuesday In the Ohio
,,. . .- - - - - - - - - . sometimes inte rf ere wi th
·!'....
pacemakers . Howe..,er , a
spokesman said
both
th e
pacemaker and
microwave
oven industri es are aware of
the problem Md are making
improvements .
,
(
...
'

FEBRUARY 7 THRU FEBRUARY 13

.

.

COLUMBUS !UPil -

residentia1 consumers. The

study is to begin immediately
and is expected to take one

THINK SUNSHINE!

;?Legislative briefs
••'
-~

offer more efficient service to
both
industrial
and

.:·

•

~c

finns serving the region to

~lfTIUJ~~@~{{&amp;f%

mo re tor

~

on the Ohio River.
AEPSC spokesmen said the
unit l"ould enable Ohio Power
and other AEPSC subsidiary

&amp; SLAW OR BEANS

BERNSTEIN PROfFSJ'S •
VIENNA, Austria (UP!)Conductnr Leonard Bernstein
has called off a planned
concert appearance at an
international music festival
in Prague next year to protest
trypanosomiasis but tllat the Cllechoslovakia 's crackdown
infection In domestic animals on hliman rights activists.
Bernstein's decision was
has had the greatest Impact
on African development.
confirmed by a Bernstein
The tsetse fly .belt Includes spokesman in New York, who
about 6 mlllion square miles said Bernstein "has canceled
of African land and forces his appearances in protest
herdsman to :confine their against what is happening to
animals In limited areas. One dissidents and to Pavel
result is overgrazing, which Kohout (a Czec hoslovak
leads to erosion and playwright)."
subsequent loss of cattle to
protein~rved Africans.
Desowitz suggests that in a
paradoxical way what is bad
for 'man may possibly be a
fortunate development for
animal life, heciluse, he says,
"a less antllropocentlc View
might hold tllat by preventing
overexploliation of tllis enormous area, the tsetse and the
trypanosome are the most
stalwart guardians of the
African ecosystem and its
magnificent will! fauna."

love you

18.1nch x 50 ft. Freezer Paper .......·• .,..

1

By H.J. HEILER
NEW YORK (UP!) -(:lossin a morsitans is a .
diminutive insect witll a life
span cif about three monllls.
When it feeds, its intake is
measlirable in almost microscopic amounts.
But any person nibbled by
an infected G. morsitans may
just . as well have been
attacked by a lion or a
tyrannosaurus -so deadly is
its bite.
G. morsitans is the
scientific name for one of the
21 species of African
bloodsucking \~else flies and
the most dange1·ous to
humans. It is one of two
varieties of the tsetse tllat
transmits the flagellate
protozoan parasite
trypanosome causing
sleeping sickness often fatal
to humans within a few weeks
or months after infection.
Another trypanosome
affects cattle that sickens
tllem but is usually faial to
horses.
RobertS. Desowitz, writing
in tlle Feburary issue of
Natural History, says the
parasite trypanosome, only
six tentllousandtlls of an inch
long, has held Africa in
"thralldom since ancient
times.

A Time;" 10: "The Jeffersons!'

•
.••

secting the river at different
locatioos and from speciallydesigned nets towed by boat
at varying depths, as well as
vertical samplings from the
river bottom to the surface .
Oxygen and temperature
readings will be recorded at
each sampling point.
If study results are
favorable, power company
planners intend to seek
Federal Power Commission
permission to install a twinturbine generating unit on
land on the Ohio side of the
river near the locks.
The facility would be owned
by Ohio Power Co., a subsidiary of AEPSC. All electrical power consumers in the
region would benefit, according to company spokesmen. It would be similar to a
unit approved for construction at the Racine Locks

·can be deadly dangerous

S
..;jr,

HUNTINGTON - A team
of Marshall University
scientists has been granted
$39,:WO to study the. possible
environmental impact of a
proposed bvdroelectric
generating faclllty near the
Gallipolis Locks on the Ohio

Blood sucking tsetse fly

.. - AaC picked another winner by putting James Arness back 111
the saadle again in "How The West Was Won." The first
.,, episode of the 11lree1J3rt mini-ser.ies topped tlle Nielsen ratings
._; for the week ending Feb. 6, further bolstering the network's
e;: dommance for the season.
.. lf Sunday night was a triumph for ABC, it was a bitter
disappointment for NBC, which ran its lllree-hour Big Event OUR BOARDING HOUSE
0:' drama about. Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy frOII) SoU. "Tail MII.JO~. YOU'VE TAKEN
, •. Gunner Joe" wound up near tlle bottom of the Nielsen ratings
fOR l&gt;RE.I'.KIN6 A DROUGHT
•• . ..... Ia
• m ""'" p ce.
6E:Ai1N6 A WEATilER DRUM
~: The network also received some flack from defenders of Sen.
BUT Till? liM£ YOU'VE GONE.
(. McCarthy, including his former aide, Roy Cohn, but.Qbv iously TOO FAR! ALL YOU Dl D FO~
l;: the majqrity of viewers just didn't care.
6ANIH31'\N6 BONGLY
•· .The lOtop network television programs for tlle w~ ending
WAS TRtP.HIM ON ·
):' Feb. 6, according to the A. C. Nielsen Co., were:
THE SIAIRS 1
:"' 1: "How The West Was Won;" 2: "Slx Million Dollar Man;"
3: "Evel Knievel's Death Defiers;" 4: "Happy Days; " 5:
"Laverne &amp; Shirley;" 6: "American Bandsiand 25th
Anniversary ;" 7: "M-A..SH;" 6: "60Minutes: '' 9: ~~one Day At

32 oz. Liquid Plumber • • ~ • • • • • • 10' oH 75•
24 oz. Armour Beef Stew ........... • 89•

,,

wonderful

" By JOAN HANAUER
~ UP! Television Writer
; NEW YORK (UPl) - Ca n a fast.talking unscrupulous boy
: from the Lower East Side made good in the Seventll Avenue
- garment business? That's like questioning motherhood. or
chiCken soup . Every~ne knows the answer is yes.
The New York garment center version of rags to riches is the
' basic story line of NBC's latest Best Sellers production, which
dramatizes Norman Bogner's novel "Seventh Avenue, into
' tllree twiHtour productions !&lt;&gt; be broadcast Feb. 10, 17 and
24th, 9-11 p.m., Eastern time.
In case this best seller eludes memory, it made tlle list ten
·, years ago.
lf the story of a young man on tlle make in tlle rag trade
' doesn't tingle the spine with its novelty, "Seventh Avenue"
·.. does offer autllentic New York sets and a whole cast full of
: excellent performances.
~:
Steve~ Keats make a compelling Jay Blackman, a charming
• scoundrel who loves his family, hates tlleir Depression·
• induced poverty and has the morals of a boll weevil as he
• works to escape tlle rats, roaches, hunger and despair in which
grew up.
· ~ The list of talented performers goes well beyond the leading
" man - Dori Brenner is touching as tlle girl he uses and
~ marries, Anne Archer smolders nicely as her repressed sister,
~ and Mike Kellin as Morris Blackman, the fa Iller who can't find
~ work, watches with pathetic helplessness as tlle son he
• distrusts supports tlle family .
•
~ NBC has done everyllling it can to make "Seventh Avenue"
: a suc~ss short of renaming it "Suits " to rhyme witli "Roots."
: The sliow sticks to tlle recipe for successful mini-series by
~ throwing in a generous dash of seasoned performers as guest
• stars - in the first episode tllere's Alan King, Eli Wallach,
~ Hers~ Bernardi and Jack Gilford, with more to come.
~
Alkqf them have a lot of fun shrugging and flexing their
~· intonatfoil'sand the audience probably will enjoy it, also.

'

last

a

TV •• .in Review

:E

of any large

is

: neighbor and ·friend. She is
' always helping people."
.. ~
Another neighbor, Witma
,: Blake, said, "All good I don't
• know anything else to say,
~ except something good abaut ·
"' Mary." ;
·
Clara Williams said, ''She
is the best," and "She has
~ ,,· meant -a lot- to Ine."
:· Her hobbies are taking
pictures and collecting

: he

Amp Hour Capacity 36 .. . up lo AHC45 with Grou1

dation and $5 eaeh to the all
partners projeet, the cystic
fibrosis research fund, the
tuborculosis research fund ,
CANCEU..ED
and the emphesema and
A
meeting
of the Past Counasthmatic funds.
eilors
Club
of Theodoris
Valentines will also be sent
Council,
Daughters
of
to the children at the National
America,
scheduled
for
Jewish HospitaL Scholarship
Thlirsday night has been
and convention funds were
·cancelled.
benefited by an auction of
items held during the even-

11

meetings she would draw
pictures, depicting the lesson
and explained further the
message.
Her husband~ the "late Ray
Pickens, Sr., was an employee
of
Marietta
Manufacturing Co. ·
Besides Dr. Ray Pickens
she had two daughters, Mr.
Uoyd (Wiona) Hoffman and
Miss Bessie Pickens, both
·deceased.
She is blessed with three
grandsons, Ray Pickens III,
Johnny and Kenny Hoffman;
a granddaughter, Mary
Hoffman ·and a great·
MARY PICKENS
granddaughter, Nachoal
Dawn Pickens.
This belov ed lady still
resides in the old homeplace old days when her family was
which overlooks the town of home, and of their 50th
Clifton and the Ohio River. wedding anniversary which
Here I am sure she recalls the. was observed Nov. II, 1966.

plates. Many pictures of
years gone by that have been
seen in local papers, were
photos taken by Mary. She
loves to raise flowers. Her
adventures includes flying she loved for her son, Dr. Ray
Pickens Jr. to take her up In
hiS plane. This they do quite
frequently .
Mary loves to go to Mason
Senior Citizens meetings at
their trailer home in Mason.
She is a mem her of the
Nehaclima Garden Club,
Clifton Unjted Methodist
Church, and the auxiliary of
Veterans Memorial Hospiial.
Her son, Dr. Pickens, is one
of the doctors at this well
known ho~pital.
Mary Pickens always has
been active in the Clifton
·United Methodist Church
where she taught Sunday
School , and the League,
which ·met every Sunday
night. For these Sunday night

•

_ _ ,

9

•
',
'

By Alma Ma,.,ball
CLIFTON - Many have
noticed how much people of
this community truly love one
another. One such person that
Is loved by,her. nelghbors and
frl!1"ds is Mrs. Ray (Mary )
Pickens, Sr.
·
Mrs. Pickens, the former
Mary Natross moved to
Clifton from Middleport when
she was quite small. She has
lived here at least 75 years.
Her neighbor, Mrs. Marie
Smith, had this to say:

~

296 Second St. ·
Pomeroy , Ohio

Impact studies planned

Mary Pickens beloved
in Clifton community

office, located In Kantner
Hall, Ia open·IO a.m. to 5 p,m.
Monday through Friday or
call 614·594·5010. Tickets
must be picked up within 24
houl1 of making the reser·
vatlon. ·

year, Dr. Tarter said.
Dr. Dan K. Evans,
assistant professor of
biological science! at Marshall, l'lill supervise the
team's · study of plant life.
· Michael L.' Little, an instructor of biological sciences
at 'Marshall, and Randy
Carpenter, a chemistry in·
structor at Southern West
Virgtnia Community College
in Logan, will assist Tarter
and Evans.

•

&lt;

�10-

T~Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday,

Feb. 9, 1977

And I weni early In the
morning, alone, to oee ber.
She looked so lovely and at
peace for the first time in ao
long. In memory I still aee
her as in a picture she had of
herself in her home In
Switzerland - ~reen hiUaide.
adopted Armie and me.
Eichenbergers, a Swiss a big red buUdlnj housln&amp;
An East Indian medical family ,lived nearby . She was the family, and cows and
student lived next door on the a lovely person. When she sheep. Armle took the af·
other side. And a Greek, was told she had diabetes she temoon off to go to the
Mary (Papas J second door, a hanged herself in the third funeral with me.
wltlow
who
owned floor stairway. It was winter,
Some folk you juat nev .r
restaurants all over town.
1
cold and snow then, too.
0rget, either for the good o
She wore long dresses and
bad
they are. And we IIU!d•
The girls and neighbors
one had to guess at part of wanied to go with me to see sometimes lVhY am I llou
what she said by her motions. her at the funeral home.
sticking 'round here Uke the
She was a lovely person and a
When our husbands had last rose of summer, a 4rled
good neighbor. She and I gone to work mornings she'd up leal, or rotten apple on the
begged money for cancer, sweep my street ana po~h tree, when younger ones who
polio, etc., together.
and come in before day ljg~t· have so much to Uve lor are
Tbe "Rays" from across and have coffee while r'had gone. But who are we to
the street from Charleston, Postum.
question why?
W. Va. where Annie had
Well, I got 200 gaUons of
She talked of Switzerland
taverns several years before; and school there; spoke and fuel oil ; I've used 400 since
they ca me from West wrote both English and Dec. t2 ($88 a month) . May
Virginia, Ohio, Pennsylvania German. It's written from the freeze the next two months,
and Kentucky looking for right side of the page. Leah or cut wood, or go to the poor
work and places to live.
was one of mv best friends. house.

Looking through a tJ:easure chest
of old memories, clippings, pictures
By GOLDIE CLENDENIN
PORTLAND - Weather is
like Flinnigan's letter to
Flannigan, 'off again, on
again, gone again! Hope the
snow and cold goes and stays,
soon now.
My favorite pastime is
looking through my treasure
chest. Among my souveniers.
are baby certifka.tes, pictures, grade cards. etc. etc.
Rcentiy I found a purse size
journal I started in 1957 when
I first went to my new home
at 60 Smith Place, Columbus.
It is a short street, 77
numbers, all residential older
places, except the "Pill
House" where medicine was

SPIRIT OF WINTER '77 would be an apt title for this statue in almost any North
AmerJcan city. Actually, it's located on the other side of the Atlantic, which has been having
an easier time of it this winter. The statue of Frere Orban, former Belgian premier, stands
in a Brussels park.

Barge traffic held up :
LOUISVILlE, Ky. (UP!)
- Army engineers estimate
it will be at least 10 days
before barge traffic can move
upstream from the icejammed lowerOhio River as
a result of a towboat accident
at Dam 50 near Marion, Ky .,
Monday.
The damage to a ~&gt;:&gt;-foot
section of the dam occurred
wben a towboat, called the
Frank Siegner, got washed
over the wickets, plunging
nine feet but landing right
side up without any injuries
to its cr,j'W. The vessel was
helping to clear away ice that
had accumulated at the dam.
"It will be at least 10 days
before we can get the dam
repaired and raise the water
level high enough so the tows
can· clear some sandbars
upstream of the dam," said
Martin Pedigo, a pUblic
affairs officer for the Army
Corps of Engineers . •
He said a work fleet ,

composed of a towboat, a
floating crane, and a barge
carrying repair equipment,
was being dispatched to the ·
scene ·b11t was expected to
take two !lays Ia travel the
27~ile distance .
"Hopefully, they'll be there
so they can begin work on

repairing the damaged
wickets sometime
Thursday," Pedigo said .
"There were 14 wickets taken
out by the accident."
Pedigo estimated it would
take at least four days to
complete the repairs and a
few more days to get the river
back up to a level where
barge traffic can navigate
through · the upstream
Tradwater Bend and Green 's
Crossing sandbars without
running aground.
He said about 25 tows were
reported in the area dOWQ·
stream of the Dam 50 area
and left with the choice of
turning around to make it to
Ute nearest port or waiting

until the rivei has been
elevated to a safe level.
"We understand some of
the tows are heading back to
Paducah to off-load their
cargoes," Pedigo said.
He said some of the barges
were carrying much needed
coal and petroleum products
for Eastern states left
critically short of fuel, but he
did not know how many.
As for the approximately 60
tows \hat finally were freed to
proceed upstream from the
lower Ohio River last week
after being staUed nearly
.three weeks, Pedigo said
most of them . we re
encountering
extremely
"slow going" in the ice-filled
river.
.
"But we understand most
of them had reached
Cincinnati by Monday," he
said. "Some of them have
been stalled for a time along
the way and they're just
creeping along in the heavy
ice. "

No. 1 writes to Jimmy
'By RICK I)U BROW
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!)Once in a while, James
Robert Collier sits down and
writes Jimmy Carter a letter,
"giving him my thoughts."
Collier is an old classmate
of the President - and a very
special one .
For while Carter ranked
· 59th among 820 members of
the class of '47 at Arinapolis,
and Adm. Stansfield Turner,
his nominee for CIA director,
came in 25th - Collier was
No. 1 academically.
And he gives both the
President and Turner the
highest marks.
"Jimmy has a basic moral
inte~~rity and a lack of
pretense
and
self
importance," said Collier, 53,
now chief operating officer of
a firm that sells mining and
mineral
processing.
equipment.
"And he's got a.good mind,
which, I think, he will use for
the right purposes."
'
As · for Turner, his
nomination ''doesn't surprise
me at aU," Collier said in an
interview Tuesday.
''He always was extremely

weU-rou11ded and very broad
in competence. He 's got the
mental capabilities. He was
captain of the football team,
the brigade commander and
a very well-liked person.
"As a matter of fact, just
about the time Stan 's
nomination came, I had

planned to give Jimmy my
views that he might consider
Stan for chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff.
·
"But I think he picked a
good spot for Stan - no one
c-alls him Stansfield. l don 't
think he could be viewed as a
hard~iner . I think he has a
more open and broader
viewpoint than you normally
encounter in the military."
Collier, who left the
military after seven years
and whose wife worked for
Carter's eleclion campaign, ·
said he did not know the
President when they aitended
the U.S. Naval Academy.
" ! met him fir st when he
was governor of Georgia and
I was responsible for
planning and building a
marine terminal on the
Savannah River ," Collier

said.
"But, oh yes, I was we ll
aware

we

had

answers.

'

One surprise: American
tuna clipper crews actuaUy
manage to free 99 per cent of
the porpilises that get 'caught
in their n~ts. The foreign flag
tuna clippers don't bother.
The most difficult question :
"What is the economic
ImportanCe of the pelagic
porpoise since the critter isn 't
edible'"
"We only know the porpoise
Is important to rna rine
ecology and that to allow him
to be destroyed would be
taking a dangerous risk, "
says Karen Pryor, aulhor and
marine biologist, who has
I

~

spent . years
studying
porpoises and training them
in captivity. "But we don't
yet know precisely bow the
porpoise fits into the oceah's
ecology and we'd better not
destray him without finding

.out."
Mrs. Pryor, who :0 the
daughter of the famed
novelist and sea-Btory writer,
Philip Wylie, has a piece in
the current edition of
"Psychology Today" dealing
with the surprising love of
porpoises for music and their
willingne.-is and ability kl
dance ~' it in unison .
But in'!t.ore porpoises that
can perf,•rm like Flipper in
the television series are. a lot
more intelligent than the
pelagic porpoises that get
caught in the tuna nets
hundreds of miles offshore.
"The pelagic porpoise has
to he guided out of the tuna
net by fishermen in scuba

" Franciscan Court" are

toward High St. There the *0
Franciscan Nurses lived who
help Starling-Loving start the
O.S.U. Hospital. He lived at
Smith Place.
The old blackened stone
building at the north end of
Michigan Ave. on lOth Ave. is
the Clinic now, where folk go
for help, sta nding in line for
hours to see a doctor, then
sitting to wa it for prescriptions.
OSU is an enormous place
now. The General Hospital
with doctors and nurse.-from
all over the world coming to
learn.
There 's a receiving
hospital , TB hospital,
agri~u ltu re building; their
own laundry and a network of
tunnels underneath buildings
and

a

mu seum

with

prehistoric animals un der
ground. The main part of the
museum is above ground.

It's said the grounds
covered 10 acres when I first
went there; since then
there's high rises for
students, etc. and the new
stad ium. My husband had a
dry cleaning plant on
Cleveland Ave., and pick-up
stores in O.S.U grounds and
three others over the city. In
the old clinic and cafeteria,
library and big halls. One has
a bronze plaque of Starling
Loving on the wail.
There were Kroger's,
Alber's and Big Bear Food
Markets a block from us on
N. High St., Ohio Nationa l
front and rear.
These had housed large Bank , drug stores, new car
families of .doctors and dea lers, ·chu rches, etc.
Mostly elderly folk owned
lawyers mostly with back
and
lived in the houses but
stair way to maids' rooms on
there
were students from
the third floor. On the second
OSU;
some malried with
were three bedrooms, nur·
children
; also·folk working in
sery, bath and rna ster
hospitals,
OSU, old White
bedroom, with a small room
Cross
lnow
Riverside) and
beside it. Men ca lled it the
Doctors'
North.
within
ladies' · pouting room: but
walking
distance·
.
women said it .was the powder
When I went to Smith Place
room .
from
an apartment on King
uti lity rooms were on back
Ave. I fe lt like I'd come home
porches.
Smith Place is immediately to Meigs Co unty, al mos t
above 5th Ave. and North every one got to know
High Street, sandwiched in' everyone else. Armie .had
between "4th Ave." on the been there for 10 years. We
South , '' Cla rk Place" on had a widow next door raised
north side - east side North in a convent in Germany
High St., and bounded on the whose mother died when she
was born. Her tena nts were·
west' by Denn ison Ave. ·
The
Thompson all the family she had and she
Recreational renter is

classmates. Class news
travels pretty fast and we all
keep track of each other
pretty well. It's a very warm
thing among Naval Academy
classes."
Collier said he has seen
Carter about four times in the
last few years, "and l do
The Area 7 Reg iona l
write to him giving him my
·
Manpower
Service Council
thoughts."
(RMSC
)
will
hold an orien·
Turner, the highest·
tation
session
Thursday,
Feb.
rilllking midshipman in the
10,
at
the
Ohio
University
Inn
class of ' 47, was an
in
Athens.
acquaintance of Collier at the
The one-day sess ion ,
academy, and although they
starting
at 9 a.m., will include
have not seen each other in
an
explanation
about the
about 10 years Collier recalls
Comprehensive
Employment
him vividly .
11
He was the sen ior and Training Act (CETA )
midshipman as far as the and the RMSC's role in its
military organization was implementation In Ohio.
The structure of CETA at
concerned, aitd I was one of
the battalion commanders. the national and state levels
We had to meet frequenUy." and · the organization of the
of
Ad·
Collier makes no bones Depa rtment
about his partiality towards ministrative Services' Office
of Manpower Development,
Carter.
"! clearly voted for him," the state agency ad·
he said. "He has outstanding ministering the · CE TA
qualities."
circumsta nces. Bu t pole
fishing for tuna no [(lllger is
economic in the Atlantic or
the Pacific.
Under pressure from ecologists and sentimental lovers
of the dolphin, as the porpoise
often is called, the federal
governme nt recently
proposed a rtew limit of about
30,000 p6rpolses that can be
destroyed in tuna nets in a
diving gear beca use he year. Last yeaf the limit was
doesn't realize he easily could 78,000,
jump out," she explained.
This
ca used
some
Why yellowfin tuna always operators of U.S. flag tuna
are found accompanied. by clippers to threaten to
large numbers of porpoiseS in register their craft under
the open sea is not yet foreign flags . But an
completely understood, she administrative law judge of
said. "The probability is that the Maritime Administration
the tuna follows the porpoise then recommendect the Umit
because he is such a good on porpoise slaughter be
finder ."
raised to 96,000. Final
At any rate, ·boih Mrs , decision is up to the National
Pryor and Anthony Kimmick, Maritime Fisheries Service,.
president of Neptune Packing
Until the limit is settled,
Co. of New York and head·of U.S. flag cli ppers are
the
Tuna
Research virtually stopped froril
Foundation, agreed it is fishing for yeUowfin and are
impossible to catch yeUowfin forted to fish for the less
in nets without catching por- valuable tuna , skipjack and
poises. Under the old pole ' albacore.
fishing method of catching
The tuna fishermen said
tuna, which still is practi~ed lhe proposed limit of 30,000
in the Mediterranean, oo por- porpoises killed would be
poises were killed because reached so early in the year
even pelagic porpoise is lhut al least 90 of lhe l:iO
much too smart ever to hit a clippers in the U.s . flag fleet
hook or bait under any would have lo Kive up ~oinK
I

Porpoises complicate
.
tuna .fishmg fleets
By LeROY POPE
UPI Business Writer
NEW YORK ( UPI) - The
dispute between the U.S. flag
tuna fishermen and the
government over killing
porpoises in their nets poses
some interesting questions
with some surprising

bee n

made and an all night
'' Laudramatt" on Smith and
N. High St.
We used to call it "77 Sunset
Strip .." Streets - were lined
with big old trees, and houses
three storied red brick with
full-sized basements, porches
along front and one side.
Fireplaces in every room ,
even the kitchen. Mostly they
were duplexed then, with five
room apartments upstairs
and down, and sleep ing
rooms on the third floor.
Ours on the third floor
wasn 't finished. There were
old leather and meta l trunks
filled with pictures, books,
certificates and, things from
generations long since gone.
Some books dated back into
the 1700s.
There was brick in back
driveways where outdoor
toilets and ba ms had stood. A
large backyard with fruit
trees, clothes lines and steps
to the second floor in back as
well as front. All were inside
black iron fences with gates

situated there, a block south
Is the hospital I Dr.'s North l
beside it. Battelle's Institute
is two blocks away on King
Ave.
"Wall Alley" and the

}: last year fu the bureaucracy
CHARLESTON, W.Va .
(UP!) - Last year waa a bad
. one for Appalachian coal.
• Or at least that's the way
""• the West Virginia Senate
"" Mines and Mining Committee
.
i't.
,),, VIews
,.' ·rn a report Tuesday, the
• panel said the federal ·
r
bur...ucracy didn't turn a
hand in prompting coal mined
• , by Appalachian workers, but
J gave a substantial boost to
· · western coal and nuclear
.. energy to boot.
Strong clean air measures
that would have limited
industrial pollution in the
West were effectively
blocked by the Rules
Conunlttee of the Hous€ of
Representatives, the report
said . .
And, , the
chamber
neglected to enact a strip
mine bill that would have
; been ''vital to insuring that
- West Virginia ooal is as
attractive an Investment as
.. Kentucky and Virginia coal."
v

companies.'·'

.

Spot market sales of coal
ran~ed from $28 and $56 a ton
from May to November.
Ovejll high-sulfur coal gained
a better price on the spot
market than low-sulfur coal.
The committee also issued
a warning for those
interested in reduced , air
quality standards: " ... Due
partly to long term contracts
and partly to utility
management decisions, the
modifications of the state's
air standards, even if finally
implemented, may not result
in increase use of West
Virginia coal."
Last year, West Virginia
continued to lead the nation in
mining accidents, but not
fatalities.

r.----1
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Shortening
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12

10; OFF

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Wltfl This Coupoft

~0~-----.

D
To Mom ond Dad •• •

To My Wife, Ann , ••

We couldn ' t hove picked o
nicer pa ir of parent&amp; in the

All~r

15 won d ~d-.1 yeon
of marriage, I'm 5li ll head -

world! Ha ve o HOI'PY Vo len ti ne's Dayl

'•

'•

.,

y

fo Jane -

I wan t you lor

my 'w'olenllne, and I won')

tab " no " fer an answer !

from

lou , Tom

Your Cion

Write your menage below and bring. It
or mall It with S1.00 by February 11th to
the Dally Sentinel, P. 0. Box 729, Pomeroy,

o.

16 WORDS 11.00-CASH WITH ORDER.
•

5.

..

15.

"
'

8.

.

10.
12.
14.
16.

'

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GUOI AA MAIKET ..SKIT 01

Gra~e A.Large Ens
I nta mll m, rEe ,lti9J1. s~s1m TD
1 AP'I.ICA~U SUI£ &amp; tDCAL rms

:

Ei]'
12

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45; OFF :
•

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¥~1U AFTU SAT.. fEB. I Z. 1m. SUIJECT TO

r:1

AND Till PU.CHAII Of OMI
UN VAC PAC C01fll

,.u.

Maxwell Hone

mmuLt srm ILOUl rms

1

L!!J IOUNO
K TOP

----------roger
.i -----------;1 White Bread

needed argues Andrus Ia $1° OFF
0

1

~h ,..c:ltAu&lt;•••••
1

'

:

This

AND Tttl
o• oNE
I·OE. lAI fiEIU DIIID

I

cost jobs," Shapp added. "An
economic benefit has resulted
while the scars of ' coal
production have been
reclaim ed into valuable
public
and
private

I
I

KrOKtr Colin

VOID &amp;flU SAl. m. tl, 1117, SIIEIEtT
muc&amp;~L( SUI~ ' LOCAL TAXES

Country Club
1I Ice Cream • • •
·
n [!]I
Pork 'N'
:

-------------------- Beans
VAN CAMP

lV

OFF

•....

l Sliced

""'

Peaches

---- -----·
----------~~~ ~:=-

"""':.;~~~~~~"'""r.:::'lv

PHONE ft2-2156

~

THE DAILY SENTINEL

The bill would requ ire
reclamation of most lands,
disturbed by surface mining
for coal, to their approximate
original t:ootour, and would
set regulatlonl for mining
and reclaimlng the land.
Shapp said 13 years of
esperience In his state with a
strong swiace mining law
had shown coal coulrl be striR
mined cleanly, elflcienUy and
relatively inexpenalvely with
proper env!rorunental safe·
guards.
'
"If we ruah to strip mine
our coal without providing
adequate safeguards to our
environment .. , we wUJ end
up ~cbln&amp;in&amp; lhe current
crtsil of 111 eneriiY llhortage
for an ewo greater future
land, water an~ health
._~·cr1111," ShaPP said.
j'Oilr law hal not haii1POred
prOduction', attOed prollis or

FRIDAY &amp;SATURDAY
ONLY
FROM 12 TIL 5 PM

"El

TOTAL
SATISFACTION
GUARANTEE

. sSha
..v.

WJn(r

it;..Osr ~·1.ITT1'R\

Motor 011

putcho ~e

Wt abo g1Joro11tee rlloi WI wlll do tveryrhlnv

odvertlted tpedail on our tflelvel when you
•hap for them. If, due to co~irlont beyond our
conlrol, WI run out of on advertised 1peclol,
wt will IUbllitute the tame item Ill a comparablt
brand' (•Mn wch on item Is available) ,
telltctlng tht 10m1 1ovln;1 or, II you pr1ler,
9ive you o "RAIN CHECK " which entlrlet you to
th wm1 mllerliMd 1pedol at the tome 1pedal
price any rime wl!hln 30 doy1.

•129
C
4
1.....

"lot

~

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....,

0

~~.59c

·-

... t $198

...2~ *1.

"'"'

T. Y. Dlnntn
PIOIIN
Avondale
French Frits

IHIISt...,;

79c
*left

10•

..,
t!".. .L "!~--·- ~
{(J, ~life rpwi--

Morton

,.....

$.19

Picnics

....

jlliCit'T- -

Kr...,tiiMiy
WtlltiMI

Do •.

I

PAC....

0

Morton
Frltd chicken

11'1 ot~r power to hove ample tuppliel al all

*-29

$1

'1..1-~.lt ,.,____ .w_.

price .

. . .. .
Glazed
Donuts

.

Pork '" ,... c"''" '"""'
Chops ...... 10.
IIGUUI 01 CHUI .....:
Ground oo yzc
Bt,ef

1

~~,--;..

Roast •....

FRISH MADE

Serve 'N' Save
Sliced Bacon . ~

~ t

::

IONIUIIIOITOM IOUND 01

.

1

• •

C Rump

Meats . . . ,.,.

fiiSH , lS501TfD Y1 CINftl CUtS,

•

Bone-In Beef
Rib Steak ...... .
' U.S. OOV'f. GilDED CHOICl

r:.;h:~ .... ·:~::~ale

i';ier
Meat
Bologna • • •

. . GuHprlcle uM;:.~:t"

I

U.S. G0¥1'. GIADID CHOKI 7" CUT

Fryer Parts "·

C.m.

79c
2

~f'

4ac

ii~:dU.S.D.A. INS..CTID

•••••••~.

_......_,~w...

I

Sho9lder Arm or
English Roast to.

12....

...00

f\oerythlng you buy ot Kroger i1 guaranteed
lor your totol110tisfo ction regordlt!n of
manufoChlrtr. ll you ore not wtisfied,
refur.d your

U.S. GOVT, GUDEO CHOII: IIEU

2.~;- 88c

Brown 'N' Ser ve'
Biscuits . • . • . •

lomebrondorotomporoble brondor

40 &amp; 50%
OFF

•

Milk • • • . • •• ~.~

-----~-----

Boston Ron ...
CHUCK IONI-IN

$1

~

,,.. .,wiii"P~" yoodlomwithlho

MANY GIFTS

l•nes

~~·79c
1~0.
4 "'"

::::.----;;1 ii::g;;i~;.

SIMON'S
GIFT CENTER

morning,''

a

a·

·------ -.........

!

CH•i;)tC:!

l-to.$ 1
.....

Mrs. Filbert'
Margarine

15; OFF

~~ght ~u~:; ~~:S~a~~~,

, ,

1

WASHINGTON (UP!) 12 I
Interior Secretary Cecil
I •._..,
Andrus , backing proposed
federal strip mining laws,
With This Coupon
says l)le nation "cannot
• •
1
•MD
"'r'•~~:~~,~~~·
1
afford" to let past practices resources."
I
KrOKII
Spices
.
I
Although the Democratic 1 ~otD mum .. n1. n. tm s~11m u
continue and argued that U.S.
on
the I mmmt S!Uf ll~CAl lUU
IV
energy needs could be met majority .
subcommittee applauded the
with the safeguards.
Andrus and PeMSylvania words of Andrus and Shapp, ~-'.:.~
121
Republicans
Gov , Milton Shapp both testi- some
t
I
fied at a House . Interior especiaUy Reps. Joe Skubitz
I
subcommittee hearing of Kansa s and Robert
With Thl~o Coupon
Tuesday and were welcomed Bauman of Maryland - I ANP TME ruttHASI oF THill
. ed th~ need for a bill · I I
•·" · ""·
·
wannly by Democratic questton
lroKer
Gelatlll
Bauman ctted. President I vu1a mEl sar., rEa. n.1m. s~JEC1 ra
members who have sought
·~ for six years to enact mine Ford's veto message which I mucm£ snrE&amp; LOCAL uns
··~~
forecast a decrease in coal •
•• • • Lreclamation laws.
BUY ONI
Andrus said Americans production under the law, and 1
n.u. na. nmnl"lln:u
"cannot afford to permit said before passing a bill''we 1
11
historical mining practices to
if
GIT
continue, particularly since
environmentally sound
1
mining can meet the nation's losses."
:I
II~MAIU SIAn I. LIIC~l tms
I!:J IIOIIIIf.NU , . I'OWIAT
energy and economic needs."
"You cannot Imagine how
your words .are music to our
ears," Interjected Rep. John
I
Seiberlinl!, J).(Jhio. Chairman
·
I
With This Caupo• ·
I 1110011
Morris Udall, 0-AriZ., said,
0 0
I
'"'"'"""'"
I1
"! really never felt the
to.... ""· ' "'
I JubiiH Cal Lllttr
1
Impact of the el~on last
I
"" IFT!I m.. fO . " · '"'· ,.,"
OPEN
November
until
this
1 ArP'dUIU sr)n 1 tam TAm
n
,

29~

GOVT. GRADED
. BEEF CHUCK

Center Blade .
Chuck Roast

DF

.

With Thl1 Coupon

New strip mining laws 1I

U.S.

1

- ---·

I

I
I
I

I

I

With This Coupon

AND THl PUtCMAu oF rwo oor:.

NOTICEI

2.
4
6.

7.
9.
11.
13.

lPPLJC.UU SUTll. lOCU. TAXES

SUNDAY:
11 AM-7 PM
MON.-SAT.:
9 AM-9 PM

[!!]'

Smith - fh onlr.1 for
Making Science fun to learn .
We th ink yo .,'re tops l

3.

I

I

'

M rs .

1.

Wheatles Cereal

I
t

By PREW VON BERGEN

Frank Knox , .

I

1-1.1., 2-01:. lOX

I

, Walter Z.

To Our
Favorite
Teacher

AND Tllll'tJICMASi Of ONI

OPEN THESE HOURS

-:----------.
----------·
20, OFF :

••
n

over-heel! in lowe with youl

Mi ke ond Sue '

I

I n1a AFTER m. F£8. n. nn susucr ro

TWO WORDS sum up his situation - fire and ice.
Grandview, Wash ., .volunteer fireman turning out to
battle a blaze in 15-degree weather ended ·up well iced.
(Photo by Tim Graff, Suimyside, Wash ., Daily News).

(Limit 16 Words-Sizes Illustrated Below)

Can

Co,yright 1977 -The Krogtr Co. Items
and Prices Good Sundoy, Fob. 6 tltou
Sttvrday,leb. 12, t977 in 1
We resern the rithf to hmit quontites.
NON! SOLD TO OIALERS.

"

SAY "I LOVE YOU" WITH A
$1.00 SENTINEL VALENTINE AD.

.

o

a

(

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

'

A CELEBRITY in ber
own right, tbe President'S
sister, Rutb Carter
Stapleton, Is a weli.Jmown
faith healer and the author
of a new book, her seeond,
" The Gift of Inner
Heallog."

COST CUIUR COUPON

COSI CUTTIR COUPON

" .

:

i

Shout Them from .the Classifieds!

RIO
GRANDE
f.oremost
freelance
Comedia n, author ' and humanitarian."
humanitarian Dick Gregory
Black Student Union
will
headline
Black President, Paul Walker,
Awareness Week which announced a fuU week of
begins Monday, Feb. 14 at special events including
Rio
Grande
College- appearances by the Central
, Community College. Gregory State Jazz Band Tuesday
will speak Monday, 9 p.m. at evening; Alvis Moore and the
the college dining haU in an Columb us Youth Choir
appearance open to the Wednesday ; a Thursday
public.
perfonnance by the Ohio
Gregory began his career University Dance Depart·
in 1961 as a professional ment and a Friday slide
. comedian and then turn- presentation on Africa by Rio
ed
his
attention faculty member Bob Rogers.
human
to
support ing
Black Awareness Week is
rights causes . One of an annual event ·at Rio
his most recent actions was Grande designed to help
an 800 mile "run against students gain an awareness
STATEHOOD Sl, but not hunger" from Chicago to of black history and culture.
quite yet is the policy of Washington , D. C. to call
Puerto Rico's Gov, Carlos attention to the problem of
Ro111ero Barcelo. Elected hunger in the world.
TO SERVE COOKIES
Gregory lectures yearly at
on the statehood tlekel last
Employes
of the Pomeroy
November, he nevertheless more than 300 college
National
Bank
wiU serve
favors a go-slow approach campuses. He is an author,
cookies
and
coffee
to patrons
to changing the common· · with nine books to his credit,
Saturday
morning
in ob·
a recording artist and is
wealth's status.
servance
of
Valentine
Dav.
known 8!'1: ''th,.. ,.,nr1A• ..

Kentucky hurt West Virginia
coal sales to local electric

A proposal was on the South African coal.
ballot in California for
The Federal Energy
restricting
nu c lear Administration has refused to
expansion, and the federal put Into operation the small
government saw to it that operatQrs' loan guarantee
literature against th e program authorized by
measure was passed out.
Congress in 1975. This
At the same trne, the report concept was founded largely
said, the government refused to help Eastern coal mines.
to take a stand on the
The report said, however, it
Tennessee Valley Authority's is optomistic that the
nuclear building program. administration of President
"Federal promotion of Carter wiU ·support Eastern
massive western coal coal, but Is waiting to see just
movement into areas what action he will take.
naturally
served
by
Other items in the report
Appalachia and other coals said West Virginia has
was intense during 1976," the estima.ted coal reserves
report said.
totaling 57.6 billion tons.
It charged that !be federal
The report said 1976 was "a
government had decided to very mixed year for West
renew federal coal leasing in · Virginia coai...Low sulfur
the northern Great Plains, sales declined... Continued
even though billions of imports o( coal from
unmined Western coal is Virginia, Ohio and eastern
already under lease.
Also, as a crippling move
against Eastern ooal, the
State Department has plans
to increase Austraila and

l
l

manager of the Gallipolis
office of the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services;
Clarence Johnson , Gallla
County commissioner; Otto
Shaw of Logan; Darrell Detty
of Oak Hill; Courtney McCoy,
Ja ckson County com ~
missioner; and James
Hoov er, Jackson County
auditor.
Also, Pavld Ridge of
Jackson ; Ray Bentley of Coal
Grove; Jesse Brammer,
Lawrence County Com missioner; Jack Crisp ·of
Rutland; Raymond Cottrell,
Vinton
County
com·
missioner; and Henry Wells,
Meigs County commissioner.

business.

:Appalachian coal did poorly

l

program in Ohio, and its
relationship to state and local
councils will be reviewed.
Topics for discussion include
the role of council members,
planning and management
information systems. This is
the first meeting of the newly
organized council.
The RMSC is an advisory
group to the State Prime
Sponsor Council, which in
turn advises Governor James
A.
Rhodes · and Ad·
.ministrative Services
Director Richard D. Jackson
on the expenditures of CETA
funds. The local RMSC
covers Athens, Gallla,
Hocking, Jackson, Lawrence,
Meigs and Vinton counties.
Chainnan of the council Is
Dr. Richa rd Mitchell of
Hocking Technical College in
Nelsonville. Other members
include : Don Barrett, mayor
of Athens; Howard Parsons,
superintendent of Tri-County
Joint Vocational School ln

'I

Dick Gregory scheduled.
to speak at Rio Grande

(

scheduled Thursday

after yellowfin.
About a dozen natioos catch
yellowfin tuna In netB and the
fisheries ·service estimates
that , all told, the'Se fleets
kiUed 188.000 porpoises in
1976.
The .3 billion tuna catch
Is the fl!l'gest U.S. fishing

II-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, q., WedneSday cFeb. 9,1977

...

,-.

Orientation session

N e lsonville~

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_12-Tbe Dally Se.U.I, MlddlePori-Pomeroy, 0., Wednelllloy. Feb. 9, 1917

13-TheDaUySentinei, Middleport-Pomero• 0 Wednesday Feb 9 , DICK TRACY
.
·" .,
'
. ' "'

'

Te!~~~!.~~Jog fo~"easy Viewing

llrin&amp; Yaul'\. ·
lo ~ Dlily

Sentinel

Before Feb. 12.
'1.00 For
16 Words
111111. i:!:l11.!iH!!JI'. il!l' - ~ · 1 1111!111 .1'1111 1 9111' 1':1 1 . JII:Ii! . 11111:11191i!!llli 9!1111il! •

WIN AT BRIDGE
.

Grand slam is there if ... ?

111! 1111.11111[11 ~!llllll .li flliil.llllllll. l:lilll'l.lllllllll.lllll!il9

NORTH
. A9643
¥ K 32

' '

WAin ADS
IN,.ORMATION
DIIADLINIS

5

·P . M.

DIV

Before

Publlcetlon .
Cenullatlons,

correc -

tions •cctpttd first dav of

p~o~bllutlon.

REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves
the rlgtlt to ecllt or nject

anv ads dttmtd ob .l ecttonal . The publisher
will not be rttponslble for

fltor Want Ad Service

S cents per word 'one

lnltrtlon .
Mlnim1,1m Charge S1.00.

u cents per word three

consecutive lnurtlons .
26 ctnts per wotd six

consecutive lrtatrtlons .
25 Per Cent Discount on
paid IdS lnd ' IdS Plld

'

NOTICE , Pra U's Meat Mkt. . RISING STAR Kennel Boarding ,
{P!eosonton Meat Procening,
Indoor-Outdoor runs. grooming
Inc:.) Cu.stom slaughtering , and
'all breeds. dean sanitary
processing. Retail, wholetole.
facilities. Ch•shire. Phone (614)
No appoinment neceuory. Call
367-0:.2~9:-'2_
. :-::c:-:-- ; - - 6:00 7 Pomert~y Road. Athens .
Oh.
GUN SHOOT at ttie Recine Gun
Club every Sundav . 1 pm
Assorted meats.
RACINE FIRE Dept. wilt ho~e o
Gun St&lt;tOot every ~turdoy night
6 p.m, at their building in
Bashon , Ohio.

RATES

RuthR..vn.

_'!.'!JO::,·-~-·~-­

(61&lt;) 593-8655, hours, 9:00 till

mor.t than one Incorrect

lnnrtlon .

NOW accepting plono student•. Plf"SURE HORSES and ponies ,
aiiG will buy horses and
beginners , lntermediOtes, ad·
ponies. Phone {614) 698·3290,
vonced ttudents . Call 992-

FREE TO GOOD Homo , Port

top. like new tires, V-8, automatic, power steering and
power brakes, faclory air, really ouf$landlng.

1973VW2 OR .
S169S
Clean vinyl lnlerlor. good tires, runs fine , radio.
$3995
l97SCHEVYELCAMINO
Classic, 350, V-8, automat!c 1 power steering and
brakes, rally wheels, radio, black and very attractive.

within 10 days .

CARO OF THANKS

n

I OIIT~.~RY
.oo tor 50

, l~lm~m

word

aC aita.ttona t wu• u
cents .
ILIND ADS
Additional , 25c

...

·

Charge

per Advertisement..

OFFICE HOURS

8 : 30

a.m. to s:oo p.m.

Deily , 1:30 a .m . to 12 :00

Noon Saturday .

Phone today· 992 -2156,

NOTICES

LOST, MALE Bauett hound In
Hemlock Grove oreo . Reward .
Phone 992-5872.
lEWARO FOR the tinding of a
block. white and brown Walker
coonhound lOst in the ¥idnity o~
Hemlock Grove. Call cDIIect
(JCM) 675-3707'
MAN's BILLFOLD in Middleport or
Pomerov . Please return
papers. Phone 992-7028 or

'192-3122.

:ATTN .: It

ALL HOUSEWIVES

All Yard Sales, Ru,., mage ,
Port;t'land Basement Porch
and Basement Sales, etc .
must b• peld In advance .
Get yours In early by
St9PPino by our office at
The Dally Sentinel, Ill
Court St. or writing Box
1'1.9, Pomeroy , Ohio 45709
w i th your remit tance .

f)LD furniture , ice boxes , brass
beds , wail telephonts and
parts , or complee households .
Write M. 0 . ,Miller , Rt . 4,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Coii992-776JJ.
CASH paid for oil makes and
models of mobile homes.
Phone area code 61 ~ · 423 · 953 1.
TIMBER . Pomeroy Fo;est Pro·
ducl5 . Top price lor standing
sawtimber. Coli Kent Hanby ,

1· .. 6 ·857.~0~,-~

AT STUD: 1. Phoebus , 16 1H. If
yov wont a good performance.
A halter colt w· bloodlines that

sell. 2. · TRIB~l CHIEF. APHC .
15.2 H. has sired some of the
top performance and halter
horses, (Tribal Win, Tribal Fool,
etc.). Also, horses sold , train·
ed , conditioned , boarded. Cole
Stables, Home Qf Champions,
Bow 25. Tuppers Plains. Ohio

COINS , CURRENCY . tok ~ns, old
poclcet . wotct&lt;tes and chains.
sll\ler and gold . We need 1964
and o!d,enilver coins . B:uy , sell ,
or trade' Coil Roger Wams!ey .

7&lt;J.233l.
CASH ! ! ! for jUnk cora. Frye'&amp;
Truck and Auto . 24 HOUR
WRECKE~
SERVICE! Phone

742·2081 .

•5783. ~hone (61,)667-3.005.
TRADER's DAY , Saturdov. Feb . 12
at Fox Chaser 's Cabin . Sign at
Rt . 7 and Rood No. 32. Just
above Five Points Grill . Bob
Clonch.
'
LAND OWNE~ seeks hoy. shOring
orrangment in ewchonge for
cultivation . 50 acres hoy . con
area code. 216, 296·2267 or
673-8478 evenings collect .

3 AND 4 RM. furnished and unfurnished opts . Phone 9CI2 ·

5&lt;:1.0 .

coUNTRY 'Mobile H~.;. PorGt.
33, ten miles north of Pom-roy ,
Large lots with concrete patios.
sidewalks . runner.s and off
street park ing . Phone 992-7•79.

Coll992·2156::.·_ _ " __ "-

SHOOTING MATCH , just oft Rt . 7
by-pan near Rock Springs CARPENTER NEEDED to do
remodeling , work on two
Cemetery, every Sunday , 12
houses beg inning o roun~ ,
noon. Will have heat .
March 15. Floors , trim work ,
SWEEPER ~NO Sewing Machine's
drywall , etc. Call area code
Repair, . Port, and Supplies .
216. 296·2267or673-S.78even·
Povis Vol:uum nleoner ; one·
ings collect .
half mile up George's Creek
Road off State Route 7. Phone REGISTERED NURSE , porttlme for
(614) ..6-0294 .
area preventive health care
ogency . Office in Pomeroy.
Must hove mode of tronsporto·
. tion, knowledge of oreo , and
able to -.iary hours . For informa·
tion, coli 992-~912 between
8:00 A.M. and ~ : 00 P.M. An
Equol Opportu~~~Emp~o~
WANTED : MANAGER and ex· '
perienced hair stylist wanted
for Steppes Hair Happening
Styling Solon in Athens. A uni·
sew and lomilv type talon .
Good benefits . Paid vacations.
Edu cotionol program . Contldential intenliew. Phone (6U)
593·7711 or Box 788. Athens ,
--~hlo •570~~~~-~HOMEMAKERS
ARE you in need of
Refrigeration and
part or fulltime year around
Washers &amp; Dryers
. work with un expanding com·

ponv . Coli 9•9-2111J3, '192-3618
Good pay &amp; benefits. Send
resume to &amp;ox 12:9-G, c-o

(

O.ily Stnti .. l, Pomeroy,
Ollio 45769.

TIRED OF
COlD WEAtHER?
Join tho UNITED STATE$
AIR FORCE lnd do your
blsic tr~ining in sunny
warm Sin Anton to, Taos.

Tilt Air Fore. hu just
lnstllutod sevtrll now
progr.ms which give

•cceltreted promotion.

..
,.

IIUirHietd tr.lnlnt and 1
gulrlftleed lniH1I INN of
Cholet. If you art beiWHn
17-27 and 1 hlgll school
grtduote. you moy qualify .
Coli yilur loctl recruiter
II: (614) S93-4n2.

~o!!49·2!_~_!~_uppoi~t~.!~· _
TEXAS OIL Company nHds
dependable person who con
work without supervision in
Pomeroy. Contact customers .
Age unimportant , but maturity
is. We train . Write L. B. Dick ,
Pre s. ,
So u thwestern
Petroleum , BoK 789. Ft . Worth .

.... Tx.
. . 76101.

Free Prials.

Phone 992·2156.

We will train you to become a branch
manager. Rapid advancement; outstanding
salary opportunities and employee benefits.
Must be at least high school graduate and
have a car. Relocation may be necessary
now or In the future. Phone Mr. Mills at
telephone no. 992-2111.

..

CAPITAL FINANCIAL SERVIa
30.0 West Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
An Equal opportunity Empl11yer

A local contractor
Phone 949-2801
or 949-2160

windows. 33 years ach,.l
ex pelrenct.

Fln•nclng Avlilablt
C. A. Newm•n, Pres.
1-25·1 mo., pd.

EXPERIENCED

or 992-5&lt;34 ,
·
.. '192·3129,
. -'--·-- ------__,..-

---~~---

NICE COMPLETELY furn ished I
bedroom apartment with large
patio, porch overlooking river.
Adu !ts only. Phone m .2606.
.
---.-----'--.---....- -----.
MOBILE HOME. unfurnished in
coyntry .
Needs
small
maintenance. Co11992·6337.

-

59 ceres, 6 room house , bo th,
portl~
c:orpeted , two ouf·
bu ilding! , dug basement ,
One.th,ird tillable . mineral
rights locoted near Don11ille.
Reduced for quick sole,

~

----TWO BEDROOM
--

------mobile home.

S23.500. Phone 742-2766.
. - - -·-· - - - ---.----

-~-·-

Ro:_i ~e ~'!~!~~n~ .9~·5858 . _

985-4227.

NEW 3 bedroom house , built·in
kitchen, both and %. Phone
7.42-2306 or contact MilO 8. Hut·
chison , Rutland, Ohio.

MAIN
POMERO_Y. 0.
NEW
LISTINii
Excellent neighborhood,
room ,

11h

story tram

house with 1112 baths .
bedrooms , rami l y room
COAL ,· timvstone. and calcium
chloride and colcium brine for
dutt control and .speciol miKing
salt lor form•rs . Main Street ,
·Pomeroy, Ohio or phone 992-

·

3891.

COAL tor sole. Open 6 day' per
week and evenings . For further
__i_
nl_
o_
rmo.ti~l_i.~1 ~)_3~7_·~3~~
APPLE S. FITZPATRICK. ORCHARD,

STATE ROUTE 689. PHONE

WILKESVILLE , (61~)669 ·3785 .
- ·--------FULLER Brush Products for sole .
Phone992 ·J.410.
~

~

..

------CAMPER, $600. Also ,
~-

-----~-··-

horse
trailer, $.450. Phone (6141 698-

3290.

- ·_...,.-----· ---.-· -----·

POTA TOES . C, W. Proffitt ,
Portland , Ohio . Phon~

8&lt;3-225&lt;.

with open spiral slalrcase.
Carpeted thioughoui and
remodeled ni cely .. N .G.
F.A. furnace . Located on a
corner
lot .
$23,935.00.

All

NEW LISTING -

8UilOING SITES, 3. 11 acres . ot
' Boshon T. P._, water top , gas
top, minimum soil lim itations .
Phone 985 .4102 .
-. - ONE LOT in ~yrocuse . Phone

'19nm.

. ~oo'o bLDER-ho;,.~ .
quick

This 3

and ba.semen1 . Needs some
repair . Located on a large
lot with garden space .
be~rooms,

2

NEW LISTING: Old, but
nicely located, eight-room
frame house In Tuppers

Plains on Rt. 7, $5,000 .

br ick. 2 or 3 bedroom ,
enclosed ba~k porch. I car
garage on level
lot .
$8,'100.00.

TUPPERS PLAINS - l 'h,
acres olland rlgkt on Rt. 7.
Large old 7 room frame
house. Good Commercial
site. Better think .about this

The

large kitchen In this 2 story

Lei Pomeroy Landmork
soflen &amp; condilion your
water and 1

Co-op water

soflen.,.,
Model UC-XVI ,
N
0
~ Only '279.95

test rour water

let us
Free.

_!omeroy Landmark
9
.Q Jack W. Ctrsey,Mgr.

brick has everything . A

al'only $12,000.
MIDDLEPORT -

several

fireplaces even one In tM

close

home wllh 2 baths. All
ulll illes and garage. Jusl
$12.000.
DO YOU WANT - An

to slores . If you spend most
of your fime cooking this Is
for you . ONLY S20,000.00.
WE HAVE BUYERS FOR
ACREAGE AND NEWER
HOMES. LET US SELL
YOUR PROPERTY,
HEflRY E. CLELANO
BROKER
992-2259 . 992-2568
985·4112

, • cntrrr · shliins;
ma«rollll ~ pocldlnt. Ideal
r.r umpors. Variety of
~liltS.
.
VtiYtll, nylon prlnll,·
htrculons, vinyl solids. and·
t1ncy prints, ICctltorles.
-l 'or

AI 100 Kerr St.
Pomervy, 0.
1-17-1 mo.

----~

-- --

-~

COMPlETE

--

~.

CERAMIC Outfit ,

everything to start vour own
bus iness . Phone 992-2718 ofler
5p .m.

-.

--·-FORESTRY

, USED

and all equipment

PAGEY ILLE- 7 rooms, 2
baths, 3 bedrooms, front
po'rch and garden In back .
How's for $7500.
THIS SPACE
FOR ·YOU'I AD
THIS COUNTY IS ABOUT
TO MAKE A GOOD
GROWTH. WANT YOUR
SHARE, THEN LIST
WITH THE ONES WITH
MUSCLE TO SEI L,

S78; Dovid

House Overlooking River
- . 3 bedrooms , full

brown Tractor Loader Model
990; 60' Bush MetallUrgical
Chipper; Contoct Don Graves

plumbing and wlrelng ""
double lot. Price 140,900,

-~· (6~). 596-4769.~,- - -

We hav~ several business

Tlmbtrjo' k 2-'0 Skidder: Haugh

Skidder Model

EAR CORN, $2.00 bu. Hove •oo
bUshels. Pkono (61&lt;) 61J7·3967
1972 F250 FORD PU .. ' speed,
p.b.. 11200. 1974 F250 FORD
front end, cob wittl olr condl ·
tloninQ , '*f. 1976 F250 frame .
p.s., 'p.b., 4 1peed trontmis·
Sion . Phone 9'97.·7757 oft•r 5
p.m.

FOR SALE
Ont good uted Gibson slde· ~w·side rtlrlgorttor ... suo
Now
Co-Op
w•lor
softeners, model vc.svl.
Only 1279.95
Ont good chi in Homellto
Chain S.w , . , , •• 113G.Of
Slvo uo .oo on a now
~otpolnl Rtfrigortlor,

Pome111J t.ldmark
Jtck W. Corsay, Mgr.
l!hont 992-2111

basement, new !leafing,

properties for sole. Call for
turlher Information ,

No , 167 - Tile' block
bu!llne,ss building lot 30x100
I 12,060 sq . II. has living

quarters. Price $20,000.

No. 193 - 33 Acres ·has
modern J BR home. also
12x60 mobile home 35x27
barn. close ln . Price
104 EW Mlin
992·2211
Pomeroy
After Hours Coli
m -m3
CONTACT:
lois P1uley
Branch Mani'tqer

WILL do roofing, C:Oillfructton,
plumbing and heating. No job
. too large or too tmoll. Phone

7•2·23•8.
CARPENTER. flooring, c•lilng ,
paneling. Phone 992-2759.

in my home ..

T.V. shop, Electronic T.V. Clinic
Service coli, $5.95. Color, B &amp; W
antenna systems st•reos , etc.
572 South Third, Middleport .
Phone 992-6306. Carry In and
so11emonev .

HOMESITE$ for ·sole. 1 acre ond
up. Middleport, near Rutland.

Collm-7481.

-·----

HOWERY

AND

MARTIN

7.181.

Phon• 8&lt;3·2165.

---HOUSE PAINTING, Interior and
7•2 -:1328.
FROSTY'S C.l. Radio

Equip.,

everyt111ng In twa-way Rodlo't,
Antennas. and acc4tl. Phone

Portlond, 843·2181 ,

slorm windows. FA natural gas furnatt and drilled
well. garden space. This house Is warm and ready for

lmmedlale occupancy, come lake a look lust $18,900.

1973 M081lE HOME, 12' x50' wllh
appliance•. Also, washer and

dryer, $3500. Phone 742·2856.

Racine '- Good 3 bedroom and dining room, low
ulllltles, even a garden spoce. Priced at only S8.500.
J bedroom and attached gorage. total

construction on 112 acre lot . Owner

will finish In 30 deys for buyer or w!ll sell " as is". May

trade. Located near Chester.

Chtslor - 113 acres Iarm, 80 acres tillable land, nice 2
story farm house, 7 rooms .and balh, all hlrdwood
floors and basement. Barn and olher outbuildings, 2
ponds. A nice laying farm priced to go. Located near
•
Chesler, call for Appt .
Chutor -

coune?

Eve( dream of own ing your own goll

Here's your chance for you or your frlend1 to

own a nice rolling golf course, 50'1• acres, 9 grttnl. nice
modern clu~ house, outbuilding wlfh all spraying and
saedlng equlpmenl. netda somt mowing and a ll«le
repair work on golf course. This could bt purchlaed
with the 113 acres listed 1bove and developed Into a
beautlful - 18 hole golf course. call f!&gt;l" eppt.

wr: GErNOTHING L.IKr=

HJ.lO SMAG

'., Tl-iATr- YE c30Af3Ct.JTCXJR
t:U:;rNt=55, THEY 60

INSTALLED
Rogullr s14.95

$}0.95

698-7331.

SMALL form for sole, 10~. down , OIL , GAS Furnaces , oil burners,
owner finonc~ . Monroe Counrepair, and porb far troller-S '
tv . W. Vo. Phone (304) n2:
and homes. 24 hour s•rvice.

3102 or (304)772-3227.

SAVE ON
CARPETING

coveting , septic systems ,
dozer, boc::khoe, dump truck
limestone, gro11el. blacktoP
pavini, Rt . 143. Phone I (6U)

NEW 3 bedroom house, 2 baths,
all elec., 1 acre, Middleport,
do•• to Rutland. Phone 992·

match . New porches and all new alum . siding and

take

EXCAVATING , dozltr, backhoe .
ond dlrcher. Charles R. Hut ·
fletd , Bock Hoe Service.
Rutland, Ohio. Phone 7.42·2000.

Ex·

rooms and 1112 bath, moslly carpeled. Kllchen has all
new buill-In cabinets with bronze stove &amp; refrlg . to

electric home under

backhoe work; dump trucks
and lo-boy' for hire: will haul
fill dirt , to soil. limestone and
grovel. Call Bob or Roger Jef .
fen , day phone 992-7089,
night phone 992-3525 or 992·

ElECTRONIC T.V. CliNIC, New

New Listirig-==.,Nice 2 story country home, containing 1

SpKill -

I is a
roostn't speak
liar an' a r--~ ill o' th' po·
scoun'rel
d'parted!
jes' like
m4 Papa!

EXCAVATING, dozer, loader ond

949·26&lt;6.

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

1

SEWING MACHINE Repairs, ser·
vice. oft makes, 992·22S.. . The
Fabric ShOp , Pomer9 y .
Authorlutd Singer Soles and
Service. We sharpen Scissors .

5232.

PORTABLE WELDER , Iorge and
MOBILE Home Repair, Elec .,
smol! jobs . Can also thaw
, plumbing and heating. Phone
froz.en water pipes. Phqne
m -5858.

No. 114- Tavern business.

real eslalt all alock
Included, has apartmenl
other business, lady
Is to rellre. Price
I S50,(JOO

Sanitation, 992·3954 .

exterior. Quality work at
rea1onoble rates . Phone

under present owner for 35 ·
year.s , wants to retire .

-----·~

EQUIPMENT.

740'1',- SEWING · AlTERATIONS : SEPTIC TANKS cleaned. Modern

News 8; Chuck White Report s 10.

7:05- Porky Pig 10.
7: 30-Schoolies I0.
8 :1)()--Howdy Doody 6; Capt . Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame

Sl. 33.
8:30-Big Valley 6.
9·00-A .M. 3; Phil Donahue 4,13,15; And y Girff lth 8;

will give the more

Mike DoUglas 10.
9 :30--Cr oss.Wits 3; Edge of Night 6; Concentrat ion 8.
10 ·oo-Sanford &amp; Son 3,4, 15; Dinah 6; Price is Right

(Do you have a question ·
fo r rhe 6J(perts? Write "Ash
th e Jacobys " care or th•s
newspaper. The Jacobys will
answer individu al questions
it stamped, sell-addressed
envelopes are enclosed. The
most interesting questions
will be used in rh is column
and will receive copies ot
JACOBY MODERN)

Lra cl although very bad
breaks mi ght beal it. South
takes dummy's ace of spades
and cashes two of hi s high
trumps . Then he must play his
king and qu een of cl ubs and
ace and king of diamonds.
Next. he ruffs a diamond : dis·

8.10; Mike Doug las 13 .
10 :JI)-Hollywood Sq uares 3.. 4, 15;.
11 :OD-Whee l of Fortune 3,4, IS; Double Dare 8, 10;
Morning Show 13; Eiec . Co . 20 .
l " 30-Shool for the Stars 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6, 13;
Love of Life 8, 10; Sesame St. 20.

l1:Ss-&lt;:BS News 8; Ms. Fixlt 10 .
12:0o-News 3,4,6, 10; Don Ho IJ; Name That Tune 15;
Divorce Court 8.
12 :30--Lovers &amp; Fr iends 3,15; Ryan's Hope 6,13;
Search for Tomorrow 8, 10.

THSIRS-

Sq. Yd.

Evorvd"•v money s.tver.
Good chalco colors:

20 Like a
recruit
21 "Blessed the meek "
22 Noggin
23 Mama 's
boy
26 - metal
21 Arrow
poison
28 - whiz !
29 Holiday

Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women Only 15 .

1:30-Days of Our Ll&lt;es

4':00-;Mi ster Cartoon 3; U1tle Rascals 4; Gong Show
15; Mi ckey Mouse Club 6 ; Lucy Show 8; Sesa me Sl.
20,33 ; Movie "Lost in a Harem" 10; Dinah 13.
4:15-Little Ras cals 4.

Yest erda y's

19 lnslance
22 Pound or
Frost
23 Snooze
time in
Sonora
24 Futil e
(2 wds.)
25 Lass
with
ESP
26 Subway

Answer

28 Bauble
, (var. )
· 30 - Domingo
31 English
city
32 Disintegrate
36 Snarl
38 Gaelic
John
39 French
. marshal

30 Colonize
33 u.s.
patriotic
group
34 Chalice
veil
35 Work
unit
37 Getting
tipsy
(3 wds.)
10 Crux (kind of

Emergency One 6; Part ri dge Family 8; FlintStone!

~

IS.
5:00-Biq Valley 3; My Three Sons 4; Bradv Bunch 8;
Miste r Roge rs 20,33 ; Star Trek IS.
·
5 : 3D-Ad~m - l2 4; News 6; Fam ily Affair 8; Elec. Co.
20,33; Adam 12 13 ,
6 DO-News 3,4,6 ,8,ll,i3,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.33.
6;30- NBC News 3.4,6: ABC News IJ; Andy Gr iff ith 6;
CBS News 8. 10; Once Upon A Class ic 20; Boy Seoul
Train ing 33.
7.00-Truth or Cons . J; To Telllhe Truth 4; Bowl ing for
Dollars 6; Muppet Show 8; News 10; To Tell lhe
Truth 13; My Three Sons IS; Almanac 20 .
7:30- Holl ywood Squares 3;,4; Ohio State Lottery 6;

12 :01)-Movie " Shadow on the Land" 10; Janak! 33.
12 ;4D-Movle " Mousey" s.
1:DO- Tomorrow 3,4; News 13.

1:.;-4-+-+--1 li'Jt\i~ ~jl l ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~~ ~~

I

••

•
t

'

:

·

Mon., Tuos., Wed.

·

1!001115 :00 '
ThursdoyiHINoon

:.

t

•

one letter 'to each square, to fornl
four ordinary words.

-.J.....JL....J.,...-J

• DAILY CRYI'TO!!UOTE - Here's how

lo ;vork it :

JZP

JPKJ

BK

J WI

RIFAY

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW
stands

for

ano th er. In this sample A is

WN

T SJ

RXQ

DWWQ
ST

WU P K

YXU UPMK

TFPXKXUJFV

G P U_Q P F F

~

tJ

rl-;::-:::..,-,=,..,--.
•

CQNTH

rJ

1

IDOCEEDt

II I J
IMIDYOF I
Prlntanawerhere:

e 1117 Klnl r .. lure• SYDdleat•,lnc,

·•

t

••
~

~.·

: ...

•

We Need Farm Land
:
..-4--C•a•ll•J•im_m_y_Dee_m_A•t-94•9--2•388---....11 \

v

Cllle Sit. At 5 P.M.

•,. :

RUTLAND FUMtUIURE

742-Dtt

ARNOLD OIATI

Ytsltrday's
BARNEY

I

•
t

STANDING OVT51DE IN
THE HAL~ 15 THE 6RAVE
1-lELICOI'T'ER f'II.OT ~0
PUFORMED THE li:ESCUE ~

NO, MA'AM ... '"E'5
NOT MARRIED ...

byHehriArnoldandBoblee

f=+~f-+-1 Unscramble these four Jumbles

41 Icelandic
classic

7~·2211

...........
.
.
. ..
. '•
..: ~ FRIDAY TIL 8 ::
..
••
• •
: ·······t·-·· :

HEARTELL

'/ORE MAN SNUFFY
BAREL'/ GOT PAST
TH' SECONT GRADE I
LOWEEZV ·,_.
· _.-

THAT'S A
BALD -FACE
LIE 1! HE

WHAT CANPIPATE5 FOR:
OI"FICE ARE, RI6HT

FI\'CI\1 1'HS. 5TAR r-AT
L.EA6T WE HOPE,
Now arrange lht circled leners 1o
form ttla surprise answer, as suggesled by lhe above caltoon.

"(J J XX J )"
(AIIswnlomorrow)

IJumbles: AFIRE

CROWN KISMET EQUATE
Answer: II lakes lwo to hive a rowi-OARS

HE DONE TH' SECONT

THREE TIMES!!

DONE SIX

GRADES

17-

:

RUTLAND t

················~········

'·'

e-

u
8

s.
r
It

Pri ce is R ight 8; MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33:

News 33.

GBFFCBP

:

'..

·•

·I

33.

cross)

:1·~-~~~~~AM

e
r

.t

ll:JD-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Gulnness Book of World
Records 6,13; Koiak 8; Mary Hartman 10; ABC

CRYPTOQUOTES

· RUTLAND
FURNITURE

e

4:30-My Three Sons 3; Partridge Fam ily 43:

9:OD-Best Sellers 3,4, 1S; Bar ney Miller 13; College
easketball 6; People's Choice Awards 8,10; Visions
33.
9:3D-Tony Randall 13; Jeanne Wolf With 20 .
IO :OD-Streets of Sa n Francisco 13; News 20 .
10:3D-J eanne Woll Wilh 9: Woman 20.33.
11 :()I)- News 3,4,6,8.10,13, 15; MacNeil -Lehrer Report

time

GBJZ

~

Wi ld Kingdom 10; Nashv ille on th e Road 13; Dolly
15.

hmts. Each day I he code INters arc d i fT~rE'n l .

Do it yoursoli, with poddln9, 17.95 sq. yd. With
podding lnstolltd sus
lqHrt yard,
Call742·2211
TALI&lt;TO
WENDELL GRATE
CARPET CONSULTANT

e
8

a:oo-Fantas ti c Journey 3,.4 ,15; Welcome Back, Kotter
6, 13; Waltons 8, 10; V isions 20; Masterpiece Theatre
33.
B:Jo-What ' s Happen ina !! 6,13.

One letter simply

GrHn, gokl, , ..., blue, rust.

Family Feud 6,13; As

The Wor ld Turns 8,10.

used for the lhrec L's, X ·for th e two O's, etc. Single ietlers,
a~oslrophes. lhe length and form ation of lhe words are all

120r1S Fl.

3,4,1~;

2:0Q-120,000 Pyramid 6,13.
2:30-Doclors 3,4, 1 ~ ; One Life to Live 6,13; Gu iding
light 8,10.
3:0D-Anothe r World 3, 4, 15; All In The Family 8, 10;
Anllques 20.
3 · !~-General Hospita l 6, 13.
3:30-Match Game B,IO; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.

r:--,.,.....,~,_

Is

_501 NYLON

,•

I :00-Gong Show 3; All My Children 6,13; News 8;

42 Ski-resorl 's
. deli ght
43 Ri ver to the
North Sea
DOWN
I Male voice
2 Old Turkish coin
3 Hire
4 Va rnish
ingredient
5 Withdraw
6 Rock
formation
7 Coffee
holder
8 The basilica
of St
John II Nullify
12 Mason's
need
14 Coru ndum

ACROSS
I Poor pitch
5 Aulhor
Bellow
9 Plowing
the- waves
10 Wandering
13 NASA
complex
at Houston
( 2 wds.)
15 His (Fr. )
16 Opera.
for short ·
17 The big

"I"
18 Draw back

3825.
'
REMODEliNG, PlullJbing , healing

SEPTIC Systems ' tns tailed by
licensed installer. Shepard
Contractors. Phone 7.42 -2409.

Will do odd jobs, roof ing , pain·
ting, gutter work . Phone 992·

m .m8.

l

and all types of general repair.
Work guaranteed 20 yean ex·
perlence. Phone 992·2.4~ .

center

future.

and inventory In store, ·
Price S33,000.

SIDittiPSOffm

1-23·1 mo. Pd.

m -6306

;t-,.,

Switep,ars ~ toasters , Irons , pll
small appliances . Lawn ~wer,
nex! to State HlghfOY Garage
on Route 7. POOne (6U ) 985-

HPlACl,!IIT
WIROOIIS "
AWIIIlllll

l.)ornln g, Tr i State 13
7:oo-Today 3,4,1 5; Good Morn ing America 6,13; CBS

6 : ~&gt;-Good

by THOMAS JOSEPH

"'
'
ElWOOD BOWERS R&amp;,AiR -

STOIII
WIIIDOIIS I DOOIS

THURSDAY , FEBRUARY1tlH7
6:0Q-Sunrise Semester 10 .
6: 15-Farm Report l J.
6: 2o-Not for Women Only 13.
6 : 3~SU Over view 4; News 6; Sunrise Semester 8;
Urban League 10 .
6:45-Morning Report J.
6;5D-Good Morning , West Virg inia 13.

tomorrow .

001 'f~LL cards ~IS last diamond on
HOT
dummy s ace of clubs, ruffs a
LOOIG
YOO~ .

TRAVEL 1$
EDGE 'CATKlNAL 0

WI(.(.. -rniS WU~T AbA.I ~ST Me WHE'Il
1 APf'l),' F0F. 1/.li, I&lt;AISI:i- ':1

..... iollf-.Uitia

REASONABLE
RATES
Retdsvllle, 0 . Ph. 371-4250

•~· •..

"THEY SAY

tltOiin
lntulllion Semces
riOIMioiA-

PARTS - LABOR
GUARANlJED

No. 190 - Country slore
and home, hao 4 adjoining
lois, living quarters has 10

roomi

742-2321

Automatic
Transmission Service

- · -----~----

BUT DOI'i'T

(614)915-411S
Chester, Ohio
10-17-11M(F!dl

·Work Guaranteed

SWAIN'S

GO WHERE . TOV GO"

12 :40-Myslery of the Week 6.13 .
1:00-Tomorrow 3,4
2: lG--News 13 .

~

KE_NGROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY

• Ftee Estimates

Ph . I61C) 742· 2409
We Deliver
12 ·22 -4 mos .

furnished wllh a good

HOlSTEINS . Phone

- -

recreation

Aerial
Commercial
Schools
Weddings

TROMM ·CONst

Rutt•nd, Oh·io 4S7H

Investment. We have one
a

PHOroGRAPJtY

ANT' A
W'ELL, MA'1'BE,

Eli?OII.LOTS
Of PLACE$ 1 \
IMAGINE··· GOT
50toiE PEOPLE
' To SEE···

PROFESSIONAL

Quality Work At
Reasonable Rates

Located In Langsville
·
·l!ox 28-A
.,

INCOME TAX Sendee , Wallace
Ruu&amp;ii ,
Brcidbury .
Call

J.IT'l'LE ORPHAN. ANJUE-"W

12:05-Mary Hartman 10.
12:35--Movie " The Pi1 and the Peudulum" 10.

complicate(] duplicale rul e

Seven hearts is a good con·

UTILE OR!'!JAN ANNIE

12:00-J anaki 3l.

di ng by giv ing th e rubber
bridge ruling wh1ch is Lhal you
can demand a review of th e
bidd ing a ny Lime 1t is your
turn to bid during the auction
or when lhe bidd ing is over
and before the opening lead is
We

Mclean

Montage 20 .
ll :00-News 3,4,6,8,13, 15; Monly Python's Fly ing
Circus 20.
11 :30--.Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Rookies · 6.13; Movie '~ Fun in Acapu lco'' 8; BC News 33.
11 :35--News 10.

Recently, we answered a
review of the bid·

made.

3;

6, 13; Gunsmoke 8; News 20.

questi on on

notrump. At notrump there
are jusl 12 lr icks and no way
to collect 13.

Know

10 :30-West Virgin ia State of lhe State Address 33;

~~~~~

seven

Should

10 :00-Tales of lhe Unexpected 3,4, 15; Charlie's Angels

North is ready and bids il

poinl bidders might find their

MODERN CHEMICAL
614-992-2798

9: 3G-We Think You
Stevenson 4, 15.

South is interested in seven

seven hearts. There are even
mor e ways to stop at six or
even at a r.nere game and
some enterprising matchimpossibl e

formances 33 ; Movie " Rollerball " 10; Soundstage

20.

North doesn't know wha l
South holds in clubs , bul if

There are probably a lot of
ways lo bid loday 's hanu to

way to an

9;0Q-CPO Sharkey 3,4.15 ; Baretia 6,13; Great Per-

invite seven at the same time.

5.
6t
Pass

8y Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

••

Roofilg &amp;Siding
Rooni Addililns
Garages
Homes Built ·

••

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Opening lead - 2 •

Ph~ne

1-9-771 mo.

South

2¥

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

REFINISHING &amp;
UPHOLSTERING

ToOutk

Nort h East

West

Tllll·oOo_Frl~n

m -70:14

Truss Ratter Co.

Upho!$tering,
dropes
rea5onable. 572 So1.1th Third
Ave., Midd leport. Phone

North-South vulnerable

I'll. 675-3469
9:30-5:00 O.lly

Hrs. t :001.m .

that has 4 aparlmenls and

GOOO QUALITY corn fed freezer
~et . opprox. 1000 lbs. Steers."
Will deliver to your processing
_p!~nt . Phon_e_~~- ~~~ ~ _ . ~-- ,

STEREO, new am -fm fm stereorad io combination $129.95 or
terms . Coll992-39f.&gt;S.
··- -- -

40x120'

corner lot. Large 8 room

Phone 992·2111

3 NICE

. 107654
SOUTH .(Di
t A K6 2

pt, lllel$111\

Pom~n~y,Ohio

• 9 76
• J 75

• KQ

KinpbuiJ Home
NOTICE!! !
STRIPPING, REPAIRING
Sales
Inc.
Wt hondlt only the boll In

Southeastern Ohio

216 E. Second Slreel
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Phont 992-J32l

large lot. Allin good repair .
Only $14 ,500.00.
MIDOLEPORT -1'12 story

kitchen. 2 corner lots

Phone

Virgil B. Sr., Realtor

basement and

total of 12 rooms.

$5,500.

TEAFORD

room house has a porch

COOKS DELIGHT -

NEED A
WATER SOFTENlRI

sale.

~~~~ad for

q49-2563 .

for

Asking just 16,500.00 .
NEW LISTING

• 10
t Q L0 8 4

TOOK. A VO TE !

DIREI:T
F•R.iRIC Uus:
12n.\a"'FnStrHT-

manufactured housing.
Doublt wldH • · modutor
' homes Ill' Jkyllne &amp; Fuqua ,
Homes-Inc:, ,
1110 E. Mlln St.

EAST
"'K J

¥ AQJ854

Freo Estlm1tes
No sunday Colis Plttse
1-30-1 mo.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

-·'192-3 129 or ~92·~•2 4 , ------'-

WEST
• Q 10 8 52

A'

-~--~

befOre 9 o.m: R. Ct&lt;te11olier.

YOUR OPPORTUNITY

BISSEll SIDING CO.

1969 CHEVROLET Bi5quaine; 1966
BUICK Electra , 225 ; 2 Rokon 2 ST.ORY 4bodroom brick home in
tr lolbikes. Phone 949-2432 .
.·~i~~~!~~t :.f!'~~ !9~~~?.:_"""
. ---·----"-'---'-·
197' FORD RANGER XLI FIOO COUNTRY farmland with secludPickup. 360 Y·8 automatic . p.s..
ed woods, water and good ac·
... 112·2174
, _.
om·fm rad io, tope deck, 39,000
cen in Monroe County . W. Va .
miles . Excellent c:andilion .
$1 ,000 down, c;;al,l (:xl4) 772AlsO , 1968 Plymouth GTX '440
3102 or (304) 772-32=27~._ __
V.-8 4 speed , 56:000 miles , ex ·
AVAILABLE AT Ri\lerside Apts . 1
Commercial
property Oppro:w .. 17
cellent condition . Call after 5
bedrm. apartment , $100 per
acres. level land , located at d"""~
p.m.
m
-2%7.
month. 2 b!tdroom opts. Sl33 - - - . - - - -.,. &gt;'--'--~'- ·- - Tuppers Plains on Ohio . Route
per month . Equal Opportunity 1973 FORO LTO for sole . Coli
7: Pho~!J.6':4). ~6304.:.. _ _
'192.5758.
_Ho~i!:!g.:. Pho~ 992_:33~3~ --~
3 bedrooms , 11/r baths . Iorge livANY PilCH
Z bedroom unfurnished apart·
ing room . dining room and kit·
ANY SIZE
ment in Middleport. Phone
chvn , fully carpeted. Phone

m -57&lt;1 .

Sentinel Carrier
wanted In
s,racuse Area.

li:'
~

MANOR in Middleport lor $104
monthl~ plus el~tc . or $130 in·
eluding elec. LOWER RAtES tor
SENIOR CITIZENS. Convenient
to shopping on ThirCI and Mill
Sts. in Middlltpnrt . Brand new
high quality apartments . See
the manager ot Apt. 28 or coil
~2 - 7721. An Equal Housing
-~~p!'ortun ity,
~-- __ _
2 BEDROOM trailer , real nice.
Phone 992-3324,
adults on I-f .....:._.
...............
_________

HELP WANTED

APPUMCE
REPAIR MAN

OPEN EVES.8:00 P.M.
· POMEROY,OHIO

..

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

ECONOLINE HOME
INSULATION, INC.
lf15 Washington Blvd.
Belpro, Phone (614)423·
7564 day, or 992 ·6039
evenings.
Blown In flbtrgtoss wells
ond lltiios. 20 Pel. Slvlngs
on Viny.l ond Steel Sidings.
Repilcement Hd · storm

ONE BEDROOM Apls , ot VIllAGE

5 BEDROOM HOUSE , tree ga5 and
wotSr in long Bottom oreo. For
further intormotion , phone ·
IF VOU ho\l e o 5ervice tQ offer .
wont to buy or sell somett&lt;ting ,
ae looking for work
or
whatever . .. you 'll get results
faster with a S8ntlnel Wont Ad .

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
.

• A 84

QUit&amp; L . A!IIO WHtL..E
YOU WERe TMK IN(&gt;,
THE D I RE CT O~$

Woman 6, 13 ; Nova 20,33; G.ood Times 10.
8 :3o-Jacksons 10.

spade lo get b• ck to his hand
and claims.
The bidding as shown is
worth study. North starts
proceedings by showing he
wants to play in hearts . South
merely bids on to game . ~e is
looking at a ralher sk1mpy
lwo bid .
Now North invites a slam by
biud ing fou r spades and South
responds with five diamonds .
This bid shows lhe diamond
ace but denies the club ace.
North know s abo ut the ace
of clubs and shows tt, where·
upon South bids six diamond s
lo show the diamond king and

9

• 93

• J 92

1973 MONTE CARLO
$3495
Local1 owner car, landau model. dark blue, blue vinyl

Golden Rfl'lrelver Puppie5 .
Fotl'ler the troveling type, 3
brown, 3 block . cAll 992·3023
after 5 p.m.
FREEPu'PPIES , port P~le~P~
992-7671.
-- - - - - · - ~- - -

CAPTAIN EASY
VES ·INDEED, MRS , T LJ8~S~ ...VOU ~
FATHER LEFT AIJ ENV.fLOPE lN MY
SAFE LABELED "ADOfNPIJM TO
PLAIIJ X "I

Business Services

. ®~SfGNS

7:oo-Truth or Cons . 3; ToTelllheTrulh ~;;Pop ~005
the Country 8; Bow Ung for Dollars 6; !'jews 10; To
Tell the Tr ulh 13; News l Or My Three Son• 15;
Consumer Survival K 1120; Big Green Magazine 33.
7:30-Dolly 3; $100,000 Name That Tune 4: Match
· Game PM 6; m.ooo Pyramid 8; MacNeil -Lehrer
20,33; The Judge 10; Price Is Right 12; Break lhe
Bank 13; Wild Kingdom 15.
a:oo-Gizzly Aams 3,4, 15; College BasketballS; Bionic

5:30-Adam-12 4, 13; News 6; Family Affair 8; Elec.
Co. 20,33 .
6:oo-News3,4,6;8,10,1J,IS;; ABC News6; Zoom 20, 33.
6:3()-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News1J ; Andy Grllfllh 6;
.
~BS News 8, 10; Vegelable Soup 20: Lilias Yoga &amp;

Vah ntinl l.ole Liles ·

••

'

'
r.

a
p

n
b

~-

•'

'

�Hospital News

Rh0 de·s shopping
for Canada gas

Veterau MemorboiHOiplt.t
ADMiTTED • Angela
Jones, Rael~e; Gary Guln.
!her, Long Bottom ; John
Krawsczyn, Pomeroy; Helen
Jeffers, Syracuse; Lloyd
Hoffman, Pomeroy ; Eber
Gillilan, Chest~r ; Paul
Hudson, Pomeroy ; Mary
Rathburn, RuUand.
DISCijARGEtl - Paul
Voll, Stella Ebersbach, By JOHN T. KADY
McCoy,
Judy United Preas !JIIenlatiooal
Judith
Gov."James A. Rhodes was
Krautter. Wilbur HUt, Asa
tD leave today for Canada and
Hoskins, Andrew Manning. a meetin~ with Canadian

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, Feb. 8)
Willis'\\ Bowman, Frances
Casto, Lula Christian, Arvil
MASON, W. Va.
Crab!J'ee, Mary Davis, Amy
Elkiqs, EUjah Estep, Sr., Wahama tied with two other
Mrs. George Evans and son, schools in this state for the
Doldle Ewiug, Mrs. Jeffrey distinction of having the most
Folmer arid, son, Harry Hill, · musicians in the 1977 West
Lewis Johnston, Lee U.yne, Virginia All-State Band when
Roy Lewis. Martha Milburn, nine members of the White
Truda Mollohan, Louise Falcon Band were chosen on
Morrison, Amer Myers, the basis of recent auditions
tD right, are Oleryl Adams, Mary McFarland, Judy Needs
NINE SELECTED FOR ALL-STATE BAND- Nine
Parkersburg
and
Velma
Parsons, Mrs. James in
and
Linda
Test.
Back
row,
David
Waybright,
assistant
·QleiJ!bers of the Wahama White Falcon Band were
Scurlock and daughter , Charleston.
sel~ asllleJil~rs of the West Virginia All-State Band,
band direc!Dr, Doona Marr, John Froendt, Robert Jarrell
Parkersburg High School
aft« giviniJ an iuditton In Januai'y. Shown, froot row, left
Carolyn Rickard, Keith Goldsberry, and Charles Yeago: · Stephanie Stout, Thoma s
'
'
Walker, Dorothy- White, and John Marshall High of
director.
·
Glendale also had nine
Wendi Young.
members chosen for the
I Blrlhs, Feb. 8)
-----------------~---------,
Mr. and Mrs. Roger hon01 . Students from all over
Henderson , daughter , West Virginia were eligible to
Jackson ; Mr. and Mrs. try for the band.
•u
I George Rodgers, son, HenThe All-State Band will
(Cootlnued from page I)
GERALD NEASE
two grandchildren sui'vlve.
derson , W. Va .; Mr. and Mrs. perfonn at the West Virginia
RACINE - Gera[d Dale
Funeral services will be
the First Family's second language. President Carter is fluent Nease. 58, Racine, died held 2 p.m. Friday at the Randolph Baker, son, ,.Educators ' Conference ln
in the language - going so far as to read the Bible in Spanish - Tuesday at Holzer Medical Moody Funeral Home In MI. Wellston; ~ Mr. and Mrs. April, under the direction of
Airy . There will be no calling Delbert Goad, son, Pedro; Fredrick Fennell, lounder of
and.now First Uldy Rosai)'IU) Carter will study it three days a Center.
Mr.
Nease
was
born
April
8,
hours at Miller's Home for Mr. and Mrs. John L. the Eastman Wind Enweek beginning next week.
1918 a son of the late Timothy Funerals.
,
Hamric, son, Bidwell; Mr. semble.
So!l Chip and his wife Caron also will sit in on the lessons at Michael and Marlnda ~rtin
Wahal)la band members
and Mrs. Joseph Burris, son,
the White H01!5e; aloog wltjl Mts. Grace Vance, wife of the Neas~ . He was also precedett
HARRY NEVILLE
chosen
include Cheryl
Gallipolis.
'
I
n
death
by
two
sisters,
Cora
Harold
M
.
(Harry)
Neville,
· secretary of !!tale; Evan Oobelle, expected tD ~ named chief
Rit&lt;hle
and
EH
zabeth
Harris
86.
a
resident
of
Gallipolis
Rt.
of protocol, and Dobelle's wife Kit.
. PLEASANT VALLEY
, and two brothers, DOn and 1, died Tuesday at 10 a.m. in
Howard .
Athens: He resided In the
DISCHARGES - James
. WASHfNGTQN - TRANSPORTATION TIEUPS caused
Surviving are his wife, Twin Maple Rest Home In Wilson, Jr., Point Pleasant; NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
by icing oo the MIMisstppi and Ohio rivers north of Cairo, IU., Anna : two daughters, Mrs. McArthur the past two years. Mrs. Edith Searls, Rutland,
· . case No. 12011
Brig itte Soles and Mrs.
He was born March 30,
won't halt the movement of American farm products tD foreign Barbara
Chad
Tipton
Galll'polis·
ES!ate
ol
George Sc hu ler
.
Sheets, both of 1890, In Wvoma , W. Va .. son 0 .,
'
. 'Deceased .
cuatomers, IJle Agriculture Department says.
Gallipolis: two brothers. or the l ~ te Smith and Sara Doris Bonecutter, Point Notice is ner eby given tha t
lbe department's Foreign Agricultural Service said it Oren of Renton , Washington, Jane Doss Nevi lle.
Pleasa~t; Mrs . Robert ~~~rpno~~? o~io , Fh~l~z beo:n ~~~Y
He was one of 10 children,' Shamblin,
~ reviewed the bnpact of recent severe winier weather on export and William of. Racine; a
Henderson i Mrs. !PPointed Executor of t he
Mrs. Bessie Picken s of
the youngest and last of his
moveinent and concluded that overseas buyers "can be sister,
David Thomas Cottageville· Estate ol George Schu ler.
Rochester, Pa ., and several immediate family.
. ':l eceased , l ate of ~ . D . .
assured of cootlnued sllpplles ofU. S. farm products." Experts nieces and nephews.
He r:narrled the former Mrs. Cec1.1 W1!lli ams, pomt
Middlepo r t , Me igs Co u nty ,
conceded that some' corn and soybean fXPOJ:IS have been
Mr . Nease served for 26
Zenna Shahan In 1910 in West Pleasant; Beatrice Jenkins, Jhio
Virginia and she _preceded Lak , . M J hn B
Credi tor s are r e-Quired to
~owed by weather JI'Oblems and transportation costs have years in the U. S. Army,J'art
m, rs. 0
Urton, fil e their claims with said
of
the
time
in
Europe
an
the
him
in death in 1961.
increased in cases where shippers had tD use railroads instead
Pacific. He belonged to
Three children were born to Point Pleasanti Jua'nita fiducia r y w ithin three month s.
of barges to get grain to New Orleans and other Mississippi South
Date d this Jrd d&lt;~y of
Veterans of Fore i~ n Wars, this union , two d.led In in· Henry, • Kanauga·' Robert Februa
ry 19 77 .
Riyer Gulf ports.
·
Chapter 4464 , Gallipolis; fancr . One daughter. Mrs. Walnlg, Jr., Racine; Robert
American legion Post 602, Pau
(Jewell) Martin. Walilul Sr Racine· Mrs
Man ning D. Webs ter
'
''
•
·
Judge
CLEVELAND - CUYAHOGA COONTY Common Pleas . Rac i ne , and the R.a cine Cheshl rie , ·survives. One ·
Harold
Plantz,
Point
Masonic
lodge
.
He
had
been
granddaugh
ter
and
one
Judie George McMonagle ruled Tuesday a parent is liable for an employe Qf the Southern great-grandson survive.
Pleasant ;
Mrs.
Paul 121 9, 16, 2l. Jtc
the acts of his chlld even though the child may be married and local School District the past
The lamlly moved to Gall Ia McKinney, ·west Columbia ;
10 years .
·
liviniJ away from home.·
County ;n 1932. He owned Michael Halley, Henderson ; , NOTICE ON FILING
Funeral
services
will
be
shares
in the Gall ipolis
The ruling came in a suit filed by a 28-year-old Cleveland
at 1 p.m. Friday at the Produce, Co., and ran a William Krebs, Polnl ANgF.~NPVREA~~~,!!~NT
woman who was kidnaped and raped June 29, 1975 by Gregory held
Ewing Funeral Home with grocery store at one time In Pleasant; Joseph Chapman, The Slate of Ohio. Meigs
Meyers, who was then 17, and Gerald EUis, 23, Obnsted Twp. burial to be in the Greenwood Pt. Pleasant and later In Gaillpolis·
and Willa Tom- County. court ot . Common
1
.
.
Pl~as, Probate DIVISIOn
·
Myers was married and msintained a home separate from his Cemetery. Friends may call Gallipolis. He later pur·
bhnson,
Crown
C1ty.
T o the Adm ini s trator of th e
paroots at the , time. The judge ordered Meyers' father, at the funeral home anytime chased a farm on Bulavllle
BIRTH - A son to Mr. and estate , to ~ u c h o f the following
Rd .. before retiring 10 years
WIWam Meyers, of O~d Falls, to pay Ute woman $2,000 after 7 this evening.
· L 11 p I as ar e r es idents o f th e State of
ago.
.
Mrs. I rvm
.Ya ,
0 nt Ohio , 11 iz : the su r v iv ing
damages. .
.
He was a member of the Pleasant.
spou se , the nex t of kin , th e
CECIL LITTLE
Jordan ,Baptlst Church in
' ben ef iciaries under tt1 e wil l;
Cecil Little, 71 , Middleport, Galllpols
1 Ferry. '
CINCINNATI - CINCINNATI Gas &amp; Electric Co.
i:;.;~•:•:;:;:;:::::~::~::::::::::::::::::!::::::::::::;::::::::::::::: fo~dne~~ ~~~r:;;~~~n~J a0~y a~f
died
Tuesday
a.t
the
Funeral
services
wil
l
be
President WUI!am H. D!ckhoner says restrictions on natural o•ateness Memorial Hospital held 2 P·'l' · Friday at Miller's :;:;
;:;: the afor emen t ion ed Per son s:
gas ·· e by CG&amp;E. CUBto111t)rs are expected to continue in Athens .
:~:
~e
Cly d e
David
F r ye,
,
Home for Funerals with Rev. :;&lt;
. /.1
;:~Deceased , Ruttand, Ohio R
through March 31. .
.
Mr . LIHie was born ln
William, Uber and Rev . ;;::
:;:; D., Rut lan~ Township , No .
And, adda D!ckhoner, "If weather continues to be colder Meigs County. a son of the Alfred Holley officiating . .~~
:::: 2198 1.
late
Otho
and
Kathryn
C
asto
Burial
will
be
In
Mound
Hill
:·:·
7\ TeWJ
:
: lheYou Iare
here by nbHt ied ·th lllt
than nocmal cr if further reductions are imposed by CG&amp;E's Little. He ls survived by Cemetery.
1
V~
::::
nventory
and
Ap.
suppUer, Columbia Gas Transmiaaion Corp., !lddlttonal several cousins.
Friends may call at the ~::
:::: pra isement of the es tat e of the
·'·' afo.r ementioned .
dece~sed ,
.curtallmenta of CG&amp;E customers may be necessary." In
Funeral services will be at funeral home from 2-4 and 7·9 .....
late of said Coun t y , was t il ed
CG&amp;E's current reatrictlons, its 406 largest non-domestic 2 p.m. Frida y at the p.m. Thursday.
' Mrs. Tom Foster, the in this co urt Said Inventor y
.Coates Funera l
customers have been cut back Ill per cent, while 16,000 smaUe• Rawlings
former
Jenny Menchini and Appraisement w ill be for
Home. Friends may call at
r ing before ttl is Co ur t on
non-domestic cuatomers have been curtailed 30 per cent.
Clinton, Iowa received a 4.0' hea
the funeral home from 2 lo 4 .
the 22i1d da y of F~: bru arv .
and 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday .
average for the fall semester 1977. at w,oo o'c lock A.M.
TOWN $1,050 RICHER
Burial will be In the Gravel
at Loyola University in
Any per son desiri ng to fi le
Three
defendants
forfeited
e~~;c:epltOr1S thereto m ust ff le
Hill Cemetery. Cheshire. The
bonds
of
$350
each
in
Chicago,
Ill.
Mrs.
Foster
is
.
them
at lea st f ive day s prior to
Rev. George Oiler will of se t tor h ear ing
tlclate.
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence studying for .her masters th eG .d&amp;te
•ve n under my hand and
Andrews Court . Tuesday degree in Nursmg.
sea l of said cou r t . 1h is 7th day
ot Febru ary 1977.
night, all three posted for
IDA FULCHER
Manning D . Webst er
Ida Maude Fulcher , died in driving'. while intoxicated.
Jud ge
TWO FINED
Centenary around 8:20 a.m. They w~re Suzaru1e Sigerson,
By
Watson
Tuesday.
Ulngsvtlle; Michael Pierce, Fined by Middleport Mayor
Oepu t v Clerk
She was the daughter or the Middleport, and Donald Fred Hoffman Tuesday night (2 1 9; 16, 2t c
late John Thomas and
were Billy Lee Wallace, 38,
Amanda Morris Monday. She Deskin, Columbus.
Middleport,
$25
and
w'\s born In Carroll County,
Va.. one of eight children .
costs
oo
a
disorderly
E-RCALLED
Two sisters survive, Mrs. D.
The
Pomeroy
Emergency maMer charge, and MarkS.
C. Beamer, Mt . Airy. N. C.
and Mrs. Claggett Pattie, Squad answered a call to the Lawson, 18, Minersvllle, $15
Washlngt011, D. C.
Basil Haynes residence in and costs, speeding. ForShe married Troy Fulcher Pomeroy at 6:04 a.m. feiting his $32 bond posted for
or Mt. Airy on Apr il 30, 1919. Wednesday for Ruth Dailey speeding was Leonard G.
To fhls union , one daughter
was born, Mrs. Amyl (Kay ! who was taken to Pleasant Morris, 47, New Haven, W.
Va.
Haffell, Gallipolis. She wa• a Valley Hospital.
Foroafety,
member of the Central
'c;:onvenleuce or just plain
Method ist Church In MI.
tun; you need a 2-way
Airy. She was also a member
radio if you drive today.
ASK TOWED
or the DAR and the Mt. Airy
SERVICES CHANGED
And we have a complete
Legion Auxiliary.
A marriage license was
Poplar Ridge F .W.B.
line of dependabl•
She had resided In this area issued to James Paul Fisher,
.vlth her daughter since the 38, Middleport, and Bessie Chu~ service has been
Cobras .. . ; for immediate ....;::::::~~~J~.....,_,:
chauged due to Ute weather.
jea th of her husband In 1%1.
installation in anything
Mae
Dowell,
31,
Middleport.
In
addition
lo
the
dauqhter.
Sunday
school will begin at
from a compact car to
an 18-wheeler.
I :30 p.m. and evangelistic
service will follow immediately after Sunday
COBRA 19 MOBILE
school.

"extremely difficult" comlQK
weeks and months. ·
~
Leaders of the Oemocratle
controlled General Assembl~
have rejected a proposal ~.
Columbia Gas of Ohio ~
suspend a law prohibiting ga
companies from charg~n­
residenlial users for the cosf
of emergency purchase$~
Adams, Mary McFarland, which woul~ be use~
:
Judy Needs, first chair, primarily by industry.
Rhodes was to be accom.
Donna Marr, John Froendt,
first chair, Robert Jarrell, panied by Stale Oevelapmen!
tied for first chair, Carolyn Director James Duerk, Oltkl
Rickard, Keith Goldsberry Energy Chief Robert Ryan;
.and
Public
Utilities
and Linda Test.
Commission
of
Ohi6
Chairman
Luther
Hecmutll
;
on the trip to Ottaw·• ;
canada.
•
GmBS OMITI'ED
. "We are trying In ev"!!
Kevin Gibbs, an eighth way possible to improve ~
grader, should · have been fuel supply situation we
listed with students of the · face in Ohio," said Rho~;~
Meigs Junior High School, "The weeks and months
Middleport, named to the ahead will be extremely
honor roll for the third six difficult for our state, and an~
additional supplies we fin~
weeks grading period.
will ease the problem." •

government officials In an
attempt to obtain additional
gas, fliel oil and propane to
help Ohio through the

Wahama in tie

News.. in Briefs

·j

Area De~ths

l

..

c·of'Je·

now

•

~

Elberfelds In Pomeroy. '.~

a
llear~ .
. . oq, . . l1 t

~entine's 'Daf
. NEXT MONDAY

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MEIGS THEATRE
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''

. INGELS FURNITURE
116 N. 2Jid Avt ..

992·2U!

Now you know
There are more bengal
tigers In captivity ln
American zoos t~an lhere are
Uvlngln Ute wlld.
CERTIFIED EMT
TUPPERS PLAINS
Ja~ Allan U.ndon, son of
Mr. and ¥rs. Doo Landon,
has COIJlpleted his state
euminJUon and has been
certil!ed as an emergency
medical technicilln.

COBRA·21 MOBILE

COBU 29 MOBILE

159.95

'69.95

TilE INN PLACE
Thursday Nigh.( Special·

HAllMARK VALENTINE DAY CARDS
See the excellent se lection of Valentines for
everyone on your list - Va lentine Candy
and Hallmark Cards on 1st floor.

Middleport

THE MEIGS INN
Phone 992-6304
PIZZA SHACK Phone 992·6304

VACATION
WATCH FOR
OPENING DATE

·Elberfelds In Pomeroy

OF

TRIMS ·
Values To $%.49
f'4ow

204

Oldtimers
honored
" ... Let every oldtlme ball .folks like you In this area we
player be forgiven for saying , wouldn't have big league
be never hit less Ulan .400.
baseball as we know it VOL. XXVII NO. 210
· ".:. Have mercy upon today." Coleman pointed
these most rapid afoot, base out · only four ,out . of 100
stealing - never. less Ulan 50 prospects e.ver get to the big
per season - one tlme leagues, and only one of the
diamond stars, now ad· four stays in the major long
mlttedly slow afoot, grey at enough to get a pension (four
the temples (and above), years).
whose memories may' be
Coleman said he still loves
short, but vivid .... "
the garne more than
Words of invocation anything, and added. "I can't
resembling these were ut- believe anyone ever paid ole
tered by 'veteran baseball to play baseball." ·
writer, teacher, and coach of
The speaker compared
T wen I Y 0 f f Ice r s
Polnl Pleasant, Wl)dnesday Pete Rose, Reds captalil, to representing six departments
evening openiitg the"
baseball's greatest hitter, Ty attended a se minar on
Words of Invocation Cobb, who had a .366lifetime Uniform Crime Reports
resembling · these were ut- batting average in the WMedn.esdaycat the Meigs IM.
tered. · by veter11n baseball majors.
e1gs
ounty Sheriff
writer, teacher, and coach of
"Competition Is tough, but . James J. Proffitt !IBid the.
Point Pleasant, Jack Rogers, it's the grea'test family sport seminar was conducted ~y
Wednesday evening opening in America today," Coleman personnel from, the Ohto
the ' 'Oidtimer's Baseball said. And despite of what you At~or~ey Gener~l s B~reau of
Reunion" sponsored by Ute hear, see and read lil the Crimu~al ldenltf1cat1on . and
Pomeroy Chamber. of media, baseball is still a fun lnvesllgatton. The off1cers
Commerce.
game, and the Re&lt;ls hope to were furmshed. necessary
Rogers' wol'ds set the tone make lt three straight world forms and matenals to set ~P
for the event attended by championships this fall ."
the ~~cords to assist tn
more than 125 former players
Concluding the evening a complhng the monthly crune
and fans of the long defunct fUm of world series highlights reports.
Ohio
Valley Baseball was shown.
. Attending were Deputies
Association (OVA) who' dined
Those honored wiih'plaques Mandy LeFebre; Ra~dal
on food prepared and served were Donald Wolfe, league Carpenter and Du~ne W1ll of
by the Pomeroy American secretary-treasurer and the off1ce of Shenff Proffitt,
Legion Post No. 30.
statistician; Mel Clark, Ollef Jed Webster of the
Following dinner master of Tracy Whaley, baseball fan Pomeroy Police Department,
ceremonies Pomeroy at- and supporter of the league in
. !Drney Fred Crow - himself its leanest days ; "Bear"
an old tbner who once got a King of Syracuse; Wandel
foul tip off the immortal Mossor, accepted by Jack
Bobby Feller in his prime Rogers;
Jack
Carr,
during WW 2 in an FBI Gallipolis, manager of the old
exhibition game - in· Gallians; Harry Layne, New
traduced 13 former managers Haven, Hartford Ti ge r
and players and other figures manager and outstanding
The Columbus and SouthImportant in operation of the AAA player and manager in
OVA. each received a Risque his ·playing days; Vern ern Ohio Electric Co. will host
and a round of applause.
Grins\ead, of the old Hartford a public meeting at the SouthThe former managers Tigers (who introduced his
among the 13 introduced the players );. Hobe Wilson ,
players present who had been Gallipolis, manager of the
on their teams In the years Queen Bees; Mrs. Dale
1938 through 1952. In that Gllkey, wldow ofDaleGilkey, UNEMPLOYMENT UP
COLUMBUS (UPI) - More
span, excepting three war Queen Bee owner and
applied
for
years, 44 players were signed manager; Emil Thomas, Ohioans
to professional contracts. Gallipolis, of the Queen Bee unemployment benefits
Two ol them played In the team; Guy (Rabbit ) Guin· during the week ending Feb. 5
major leagues, Mel Clark of ther, manager and player for Ulan during any other week in
West Columbia, who at- Pom~ro y teams ; Dorset Ute history of the Ohio Bureau
tended , and Wandel Mossor, Reibel, Reedsville manager, of Employment Services.
G.
Giles,
of Point Pleasant.
accepted by Vern Pickens, · Albert
After an lntermlulon and Bert Grim, of Racine, the administrator of the Ohio
former Cincinnati Reds fonner ~AA pitching great Bureau of E;mployment
slugger Gordy Coleman and. wily manager of the Services, said Wednesday
that 69,306 newly unemployed
spoke humorously and In· Racine OVA entry.
workers
!Ued lilitial claims,
llmately of his years in the
Among lhose taking special
an
increase
of 108.4 per cent
majors, and of the baseball bows were Earl Knight,
over
Ute
previous
week.
personalities on past and Howard Knight, Chester
Giles
said
nearly
55 per
present Reds' rosters.
Knight, Vic Wlpple, Jake
cent
of
Ute
clain\s
were
due to
He spoke highly of Jarvis, Dinty Moore, Eddie
energy-shortage
layoffs.
Gallipolis' Tommy Spencer, Guinther, Bernard Guinther,
traded thia year by the Reds Leo Valentine, Richard
tD the White Soxorganizatlon, Duckworth, Fred Burdette,
predicting that Tommy would Jim Vennari, Bob Grbnm,
. make the one more step from fanner sports writer who
. AAA ball at Indianapolis to covered national events whlle
the White Sox.
a member of United Press
. Tommy responded liiter International staff in
with remarks about his hopes Cc!lumbus, .Dr. Clyde Ingles,
In baseball, admlitlng he Mlck Mlller,Aldo Jeffers,-Jr.,
hated to leave the Reds byt · Toin , Spencer and . the ·
knowing he had more of a following members of the old
chancetogoupwherehe dld Gallians baseball team: Pat
not hav~ to compete against Strodder, Jim Spencer,
K~p
Griffey,
Ceasar James Mitchell, Jack Carr,
Gl!ronbno and George Foster Forrest Borden, George
in the outfield.
Gilmore, Olarles Saunders,
Coleman, who "cut my eye Charles (Foi) Grant, and
teeth on a baseball, " Dale Fields.
COLUMBUS - A report
1'11)18~ed, "If It weren't for
. showing 'potential natural gas
~ 1 "~"
...YN.I'o....~..'JI'Ji'J.~'.t.·!.:.o;···;·;·;o;·;·;·;·;·;·,o;•.•.•:•.·.························'-'························.r.;.··········:···: resources in eastern OhJo,
·'·'·'""'"'.w.w,wh··-····
····· ·· ·.w.....·.····.·.·.•.·.w.•.•.······························ ........... :;:: publfshed by the 'ohio

•I

•

•

a1 y

e
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

her late husband ; second row, Harry lAine, Bert Grimm, Hobart Wilson Sr.; :
thjrd row, Jack Carr, Emil Thomas, Fred Crow, Bear Kiug , Vernon
Grinstead, Mel Clark, Warren Pickens who accepted for Dorset Reibel and
Jack Rogers who accepted for Wandel Mossor.

enttne

THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1977

Area Iawmen .m
•

'

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

'

·M·eigs Local classes
are partially resumed

·

•
local semmar
officers from Athens County
Sheriff's Department ,
Harrison County Sheriff's
Department, Fairfield
County Sheriff's Department
and Logan Police Depart·
ment.
Sheriff Proffitt extended
his thanks to the Meigs Inn
fo r furnishing a meetin g ·

room.
A seminar on Crime &amp;ene
Search and Evidence
Collection cancelled earlier,
will be held Saturday
beginning at 8 a.m. at the
Meigs Inn. It is for officers of
the sheriff's department,
village police, and conducted
by personnel from Hocking
Technical College Police
Services.

two power plant sites.
em High School in Racine at 7
this evening to discuss ihe
company's intent to build a
plant housing two 375 coal
fired generating· units along
the Ohio River.
The primary and preferred
site for the units is
Washington County and an
alternate site is Ute Great
Bend area across Ute Ohio
River from Ravenswood.
A detailed environmental
impact study is necessary
before an application lo build
the plant can be prepared.
The company is interested in
public Input and as result is
. holding the public meeting.
Members of the' Columbus
and SouUtern Ohio Electric
Co. environmental staff as
well as representatives from
consulting environmental
finns will l&gt;e on hand for Ute
meeting.

Elementary schools of the returned to ·our 115 per cent
Meigs Local School District curtaUment at Meigs High
reopened today on a regular School and 30 percent cur·
schedule while junior high · !ailment at the junior high
and senior high students were school and elementary
placed · on a different schools.
schedule.
" It is my decision that
Charles Dowler, Meigs High School and all
· superintendent of Ute district, elementary schools, except
announced .Wednesday night, Salem Center, will be in
plans to be followed for the session Thursday (today ) at
next two days. He said :
nonnal hours.
"We, at Meigs Local, IJi.ve
"There will be no school
been patiently awaiting sMne at Meigs Junior High School
~ncrete viable guidelines to and no kindergarten cillsses
help plot the future of our In the district.
students and our school
"On Friday, Meigs High
dlstrict.
School students will not be In
"After conferring with our session . However, Me(gs
major utility supplier, Junior High students will
Columbia Gas, I have been have classes at Ute high
infonned that the minimum · ~hool at the nonna.l time. All
maintenance level cur- elementary schools will be in
!ailment has been lifted ef- session at their regular time.
Miss Nelle J . Bing, 92, a fective _today.
The only exception is Salem
registered nurse who worked
" This means that we Center School where there is
in Meigs County over 50
years, with 18 of those years
spent with the Meigs County ~
Health Department, died
Thursday at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Miss Bing was an active
member of the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church and
the Women's Christian
The Meigs County Sherlfrs
Temperance Union. She was
Vernon Nease, chairman
Department
Investigated iwo
a daughter of the late Ernest
ol
the Meigs County
accidents
Monday.
M. and Samaria (Mate)
Amerlcaa
Red Cross blood
The
first
occurred
at
6:30
Skinner Bing and was
program,
reminds
p.m.
at
Chester
on
SR
7.
preceded In death by four
residents
that
the.
location
Lewis
Miller,
65,
Tuppers
brothers and Utree sisters In
ol
the
aext
bloodmobUe
Plains,
travellng
north
In
a
addition to her parents.
Surviving are several pickup truck, turned into unit has been changed from
the Pomeroy Elementary
nieces and nephews among Newell's Service Station and
School
to the Senior
struck
an
oll
display
and
gas
whom are Mrs. Phyllis Olase
Citizens
Ceater
ln
pump.
Russell and Allen Chase of
Pomeroy.
Millet
was
arrested
for
Leesburg, Fla.; and several
Houn ol the villi! which
great nieces and nephews. driving while under Ute lilwill
be Monday, Valeotlue
fluence
of
alcohol.
Funeral services will be
Day,
will be from 1 to I
The
secqnd
accident
ocheld at 2 p.m . .Sunday at the
p.m.
The
location bas been
culTed
about
midnight.
David
Ewing Funeral Home witlt
cbanged
d~e to !be energy
L.
Beets,
30,
Grove
City.
the Rev . Carl Hicks ofcruach.
ficiating. Burial will be lil traveling east on SR 124 in
Syracuse
when
he
lost
control
Miles Cemetery. Friends
::::::::::::::~:::;:;::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
may call at the funeral home of his vehicle owned by Ph!Up
anytime after noon on Moxley, Rt. 2, Racine. The
car wool off the road and
Friday.
struck and broke off a fire
hydrant and corporation sign.
Beets, who left the scene,
was later located and
charged with faUing to furnlsb infonnatlonlollowing an
.
'
accident. He will appear in . Makeup
days In Southet']l
County Court friday.
Local School District will
begin this Saturday, Bobby
Ord, superintendent announced today. The makeup

Nelle Bing
is dead at

age of 92 ·

Dnvers
•

charged

a sewage problem . An·
nouncement of Ute reopening
of Salem Center will be made.
later.
"In view
of
the
astronomical consequences
facing us, I am again
pleading for your UQ·
derstanding and cooperation.
I, of all people, can understand your feelings cf
frustration and irritation ,
"Paramount in mind is the
concern for students and the
staff. Again I apologize for
the situation we are facing,
but every superintendent that
I taUt with who relies on.
natural gas is having thesame problems. We are all
victbns to something that is
completely out of our hands
at the local level. ·
"When I have any further ·
lnfonnation, 1 will release it
Immediately."

Bloodmobile
coming to

new location

Saturd~y is

m akeup d ay

• Southem
m

Rhodes
ready to
hit road
for gas .,
.

By J.R. KIMMINS
.
COLUMBUS (UPI )- Gov.
James A. Rhodes today saW
he was prepared to make I:W)l ·
other personal visits on
behaU of Ohio's utilities fD
secure additional suj,plles :ot
natural gas.
:
F\hodes flew to Ottawa;
Canada Wednesday and met
with five Canadian officials ·
and
the
American ·
Ambassador and secure!!
promises that the Canadian
government would try anCI,
assist Ohio during the state's
energy crisis.
''They demonstrated a
good neighbur policy" salll
Rhodes at a morning neW!I
conference.
:
Rhodes said he might go til
Ute southwestern ,. United
States to meet w!Ut gas
producers and travel f!&gt;
Washington D.C. to meet with
the
Federal
Power

Meigs' shale gas
resource mappedTwo actions =~f.~~ ~~: '::~ .r~:n~n

LARGE SELECTION

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HONORED -. G·iven plaques and specilll recognition Wednesday night
at Ute OVA old timers baseball dinner were first row left-right Guy
Guinther, Dooald Wolfe, Tracy Whaley, Mrs. O.:Je Gilkey, ~ho accep~ for

Discussion invited on

Ann B.

Super-compact. Weighs

GUESI' SPEAKER - Gordy Coleman, left, with the public relations department of the
Cincinnati Reds, was the guest speaker of the old Ohio Valley Association (old time ball
play~s ) Wednesday night held at Ute Pomeroy Legion Hall. WiUt Coleman is Fred Crow.
!l'esident of tl)e Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce who did aU the planning for the occasion.
Coleman also presented a film showing Ute highlights of the World Series.

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THE FABRIC SHOP
MCCALL'S, KWICK-SEW. SIMPLICITY PATTERNS
115 W. Second
Ph,o ne 992-2284
Pomeroy,

o.

Department of Natural
ftl!sources (ODNR), Is now
.
.
.
·~ available to the public.
ByUIIItedl'reii!DterMUOIIIll
The report maps the
CLEVELAND - THE STANDARD OIL CO. (Sohio) .distribution, · depth and
announced Wedneeday that at 12:01 am. today, 8 1 cent per thickness of Devonian shales
gallon pice lncreue ll'tlll Into effect on all grades of gasoline and outlines present Ohio gas
101t1 at ClliiiJllftY opentted 1taU0111 In Oblo.
·
producing areas. These areas
1'111 wbolelale price to dealer llatlona allo wu lncreued are in Melga, Washingtoo,
by I c.niperllllon,upolrelmanaiiiiOUIICed Wedne...y.
Monroe, U.wrence, Jackson
1'lwt railel prices to IU centa per canon for regular
9 and Licking counties.
for Wlleltled and IIU for premium, although pump
iJ. "The publication wlll be of
, regular ll9d unlllded may vary In IOIIIf! areas because of Interest to all Ohlotllll during
competitive t.cton.
· the present su shortage and
The lpClileeman uld Ute lncnaaea were allowable under 6f special inter~ to infederal replatl0111, l'lllectlng higher foreign crude oil COlts ~viduals in the oil and ~as
(Continued on page 10)
mdustry and public utilities
\~
.
,\j

pncn;o

do Is visit
people" said Rhodes again;
The schedule for makeup denying that he could
daysare as follows, subject to mandate and enforce strict
change If nece~~ary :
energy
couervation
Saturday, Feb.
12; ~~~easures under crial,s'
The Athena County Savings Saturday, Feb. It; Saturday. powers he assumed when be
and Loan Co., Pomeroy, has Feb. :II; Saturday, March 12; declared Ohio's energy crisis
filed two actions lor Saturday,
March
19; 15 daya ago.
·
judgments in Meigs Cowiy Saturday, March 211; ThursRhodes said Utat 15 bWlm
Corninon Pleu Collrt.
day, April 7; Friday; April cubic feet of natural gas sold
One was agllnlt Ronald D. 8; Saturd•y; April 23; to Ohio utllltles by · t1!e
Thomas and Karen , L. Saturday,Aprll30; Saturday, Canadian govenunent unt1ar
Thomu, Rt .. 4, Pomeroy, for May7. Theechedlllefor bu1ea a previously necotlatell
$18,312.11; the other against and.elasses will be the 18me contract 1s being deUvered •I
Charles D. Hatfield and as In the put.
a somewhat Iuter rate lhall
Kaaron Hatfield, Middleport,
expected.
.
lor _.,4311.'16.
MEE'Il'li r, " M..LED
"We don't want to ralle lirj
Fletcher Welch, Rutland
There will lX' meeting of false hopes" cauUonecl
was granted 1 divorce !rpm the Pomeroy Y"' . BasebaU Rhodes.
Stella Welch, and GObert Le~«UeSunday, February 13, · The governor said !hit
Plants and Darrell Slone at the Pommy Lealon HaU,
Dayton and that J11ri Iii
wep. appointed deputies of at 2 p.m. Don Hunnel, SOiidlwellern Ohio --s 117
the Mell!ll Coanty Sheriff's president, asks all teanl
the I111J1on Poww 111t1 Lilli
denartment In other entrllll man11er1 and ' Interested
.
'
(
ConlinUed
011
Pile
10)
,
01,· the court docket.
parents to attend.

g o to court
and also to manufacturers
and community planners,"
sald Horace R. Collins, Chief
of ODNR's Division of
Geological Survey.
Shale gas wells have a
small InitiaL yield . bul con·
tinue ~o produce at low
pressure for many years,
according to the report
compiled by Andrlann
Januens, · a geologist with
ODNR's
Division
of
Geological Survey and
Wallace DeWitt Jr., a
geologist with the U.S.
Geolog!cal Survey.
As much u :l50 million
cubic feet ol gas have been
produced from single shale
wells in Ohio over • period of

ltli

40 years. Ohio has a Potential
of producing 67 trlllloo cubic
feet of shale gas if the entire

shale sequence ls productive
and If new or Improved
stlmulaUoo techniques are
used to obtain the gllli, accordlitg to the report.·
Copla of Geological NQte
No.3, "Potential Natural Gas
'Resources in the Devonian
Shales," are available for a
fee from the Divlsjon ~ of
Geological Survey, Ohlo
Department of Natural
Resources, Fountain Square,
Columbus
43224.
The
publication cOli $1.25 plus 5
cents tu and a 13-cent
maililll! ~harge, for a total of
$U3.

,

1J

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